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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-08-07 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa.. .. . ~ ~ .... . ·- -- t -- tinda Br6lnlks flown _ at , ,,! .. l • I , -~ • -.. *--* ·~ ' -* tf * ---~-· w .. , . -..c -. ><. ' ! • ' ' • -;;:-., ' . -1 ,..:_ -•. ' . ' ,. .:. ... -- •· • ' " -.. '• 1 ~--. . . • . ' FRIDAY' AF1ffNOoN, 'AUGIJ5T;7', 197.o· . -VOL, U.• NO. '1 .. 4 l•CT~, 4l "AG•S • I eas ruce a . .. Leaders 01( . , _ .ceJ,e~fite 1 li.n~,Sohs At Pictures 7 Pronosal WASffiNGTON (UPI) T h e United Arab R~blic and Israel have agreed to enter ibto a cease-fire beginning at 3 p.m., PDT today Secretary o( State William P. Rogers announced. "We welcome uis !tal.esman-like·action taken by the leaders of the governments concerned. We ~ope this imPortant decision will adv:r.the prospect,, for a just and lasting ce in the MiddJe East." After official s esman Robert J. McCloskey read Rogers' s~tement, responsible officials iodicated ~t a cease-Ure .would also\flfln81IY be JD ef· feet between Isr'ael arid Jordan. The officials said that neither lsrael nor Jordan had ever formally 4isavowed the pertinent U.N. ceas:e-flre resolutions between the two countrl~. The officials were relerring to ~ the original cease-fire which ended the 1987 Mideast war and the ~bsequent Nov. 22 1967 Security Council resolution which tai'd the basis for • future political settlement In the Middle ~st. "We have just been i.Jiformed by ~ governIJlents of the Unitecl Arab Republic and lsraei of their acceptance of the U.S. prqposal for a sland-still cease-f~re to come into effect at 2200 Greenwich Mean Time today, Frididi, August 7," Rogers said in a stateme~ U.S. offlclala-J!."• ~. ~-'·, · Of Victims LOS ANGELES (UPll -l!.inda-KaJo- blan gasped "Ob, God" and sbouled that sbe couldn't believe ber frielllts f could do such ail "animalistlc thing'' when shpwn a picture tOday of OD& of'the victims ln~tbe Tate murder case .. Defepse attorney Irving Kana.rek ~ before her a colqr pbotvgraph of the mptilated body or V~yt~ i FliYiQw•~ a guest of lhe actress Sharon Tate who was stabbedr dozens of times an,d shot in the killings last Aug. 8. Mrs. Kasabian began crying steadily and Kanarek said to her : ''Wtiy1 are you crying· now!" "I just ·~n't believe It." "Yo11 can't believe what?'' ''l can.'t . ~ve they cou{d do such a thing." . . "Are YQLl 4~ you don't mean ~ yoU couldii'l .do such a thlng?" ' · ' "I know) didn't do il I .didn1 have .,· In me to do such an animalistic tbln11.1~ .,, . ' .; . ' " , l(anarek suggested agiiin that she aJao. ran Into the hOuse,with £wo yqunl...,~ 1 .~ ~eodants .of ·.Charles MaJl!Oll lil!;u,io • . ca8e ·and · ctiarles ''Tei"· Watson arid 4 th~ sJie might be unable to remember because she was in a state of aboct at the time. J'' by tbe .agreement to sto , e -on the UAR·lsraeli front which la con- sidered to be the most terious are.a Her voice riaing to a sl>Qut, Mrs. " Kasablan replied, 0 1 just know I didn't ' '" 1 • do it, Mr. Kanlµ'elt." ' , -f · • ' OAIL '( P.ILO,T PIW '" RkUnl ~ , ~~~k ~4· ibe~· tbei ~:~ls~ ~~ 1 of Middle Eastern hostibUea. -The main problem lllong~the lsraell- Jordanli,n front are the Palestinian com- mando 'units which are not controlled by tbe Jordanian government but which operate Jrom Jordanian _~ri~ry. Some PO.Llcir'.(N.RICl'l"OEAR Ll NE'OISNEY~iHJ)'S'l\(AIN STRE ~T AS AuTHOR ITmr o11o f 'R.'PARK CLOSED T.fl'I~_" :V·!p'. ~\ .. ~_ ".:,"' <'tlo~lng . .liy ~~ lll(a-. bla\l.>'a' r _ --: ••Ip• plct\l!e'<1r al)b~ v~.llriit•<O!!'te ~.. . . ' • 'l ., ; heb'es91-AJ:Jt&all F.~ge~~ •prawled oo the ~ P'1,a'•': ._,. iJj I·'~,,.,.. (8ee~'J'li0LI) . •1';,;-. -(See TRUCE, Pose #) ~~~ ~f!turns Qre.~~· ~9de . at Qisneyland To Disneyland · · · _., . -... _ ...... .. Cab Driver'·Spie~ Front a /ice More Stiffened After htvasion On Kennedy .. '.\r: .,,., ~~jbj .... a am::. By rlEVE·"11i111ELt . touilat;1\lia¢ton:ii.. ~ sfu the BARNST~LE Jl!ass {UPI) ~ "'l'be . today wl!Muf.oillcideot:.-In fact, the only ""' ;,,;, ''"'''"' park opened In 1116, came alter the tw driver who took Rpbert F. Kenile<!y difference between today's opening aod .Disneyland ofllclaia have baooed all group ri hlppie-yfpe youths•marcbed up Jr to retrieve a pet falcon July 10 a111 other day wu the fact tht uniformed long-haired y 0 ll t ha from the -Magic Main 'Street. cbanUog obscenl.Ues and w~s an undercover narcotics agent lWhose tecurity ~lice maaned the ticket booth.II ·Kingdom f ilowlng a oonfrontaUon singing songs. 'nle gr o u.p left Tom actlona led to the arrest of the boy along Wlth ticket taters -and had between Orang~ County lawmen and 300 • Saner'• If!l~d' at about 1& ~.m. before and his cousiri Robert Saraent Sbtlver aome De\Y d_resa r~ll[emenlll. Yipples that culminated in the -park headtng ... for the· park'•~ ctfy't Hall in Ill oo Marijuana charges that l\lght, Ofllcia¥ at lhe Maatc Klnldom d~-closing atx hours earl)' Thursday. a line 'Wh!Ch ulended !he length of it WU leJrned today. ) ed that di'eal legnlaliOne rot wt iuests E1~teen Youths were arrested as I the 1trelt. . The lwo youths will lje leavlnc the will be up to tho ..n.u,11on of> te<uiity ruuU ol !he conlrontallon which iooi Wh'1' thoy reacjted tho city ~ll. area Kerrnedy compound.on .Nantucket. ~nd pollce"'lt ·the--ptiU:.-" -• • • ~-• ptaci8 on~ttii' p&rk,.• lfiiiil stteet ar 8:5.S 1+· thef dfanted tor tne""rt1eUe ... or_ Minnie "as IOOn , as possible" to apend ,•tlm• "~will i.·:!'D 111 .. ~a\ionl auch p.m._ , Mouse llld !'!',e 001'1\ ~ mwliilo-a!><l- wtth relatives~ as bait bein& tlltee .ilfehel toq ., the Lona·hi;,..;,t and denlm<lad, the van-. blue bUDtlnl ,pear the. bU1ldl~g, ftf,Jaclng Kennedy, '°" ol the aSS83slnated New ,1~" Ul>lllaed Bruoo YIJW1f publle ~··rd of "!M Ylpple group oonvereed II .with 1 Leg,allle m~rijuana n..r Y91"k senator, wi)l return to McLean. relaUona man foe Tll-laod. 1 0•po-n O'sneyland at noon-11>ul'9day t.o wt\ic\\ partrayed a dark green tr1arljuana Va., while )IOUng Shriver, Kennedy'1 --r-~ ~ lant on U}e black back(round cousin and 800 of the former ambwador "'lile declllon to let a per"°'li into celebrate ''.National Yippie: Day." P • . to France, will go to New Yotk, a the park .~ nol • ~I~ oDe for. Small lucldentl were rePOrted by A group of irate Dist1e.Y g""stl b.ta•n famlly aource said. the tlcktt taler lo mabt. There •re Disneyland -tlty ~ during· the linalnl "God ,Bl ... America" l!ul ware Kennedy'a pet falcoo e9Caped J y I no rules IOI down on how our gueats day ranging !ton\ a lln(-ln art C.plain qufokly booed clovm by lheyoutl>I. and the boy broke his righl wrtst f IU111 are to loot." lle<urlly men w\U do thal. HOQk'• plral• thlp to a di!turbance at One of the . hippies ollouled I" the from a tree when he trtm to mrteve YOUl11 aald that ., ... ...,.U will be the Monunlo display ln.1'oqlorrowland. group to head for Fanlal)'land •nd tho him, Two d•l" later. the bird w11 cap-......,ed by security police bel,..e belnl. Then the Incidents atepped up. crowd . circled Main Sire« for the lttk !Se• SONS, P•&• I) (See DJIESS, Plf• II The ul1@Cheduled CIOIUrt of the lamed (Sea YIPPIF.8, Pia• II .I I I ~~ ...... ( : "'"' . ' ,, ' '5e'J'tli~·. . 't!" . . ... . . Firebombing · ' . ' ' Said Amateu~i$h i ... , ~· •. , Authorities aald today the ~lrellomblng o( . a Pla~ntia bank • br{lDCh 11Jurid4lY was an amate.W'ish,· ju,vepije ji)b. , Damage to the !llln< of;Alllerl<a lacUI\ ty 4t 1831 1'.-Kraeµter Blvdi., . Wfl · esUmaled at. aboul 16,000, bol deanuR 01*"atio11S aljo~ II to oPell.for bul1-. Someone 1 ~:a wipdow .wHh a brick early Tbursd~y ·aw then -t.....i 'in .three.q~ 10ft ,drlnk ,botUes ~ into mololov oocl<talla •With ~·· motor oil ,and wk:ts fasbiooed from a tom ahirl. I 7th Vic tim Found SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) -Another woman wu foUnd stranlled to dealh today, and pollco e:ipresa belle! Ille may have tpeen tJle u.venth v1c:um of a "maniac" who ha.a been on a killing 1pree in thb huge melropolla for the past fow wee.kl. I " Oraafe ' ' -. They'll be 1"!o11Dc a palll to the beach Saturday 1aa: the temwa-~ ture soats-to 96 in the ~ inlud areas. On the COiii tt'U be a coJn. lortable '12 under !wit· lkles. ' . ' . ' . . ' ......... " I .·1 I • ,. INSll,)t; , -TGDAY· ·, The Gteattst Show on Earth 'tradi,iooolllf 'lwla the lorcatest clqWl)S' o!f ,t;crt~. Tile RtJ&Qtmg Broa. Barn\l.m and B«ilev-circu take.s tile-ccn.tf!" rinQ itl today'• Weekender 1ccdo'A. I I I ,, .J DAILY Pll.lll S ..... r-.e J YIPPIES ... lo Git Dlllley cullt. llalhr.., down Malo Street Ibey ...,.. -b)' • Coata 11 ... polJce riot -""""' thot .,..pt onto Main Stroot !tom • employea' entraoce. Screambii ''lier< come Ille pip," tbe hlpples ran down MIJa Street away from tie Colla Mw unit only to be met by a equad of Fllllorton lawmm 'l!ho .... off 11111 ·-..,.... IPallce and Dlan<y oocurlly olllw1 ... --"' the Ylppi<I ond )lllJticll1J lhrow tbem out of tbe park "' -them to the -.ity olllce far -to tbe Anahdm polJc< ..,._ t • Sovtrll --jolnod in the lnil ... cbulng ylpplu a......i tbe town - lhouting, .. Run, Ripplet, Run." The encounter on Main Street lasted only minutes. Riot 1quads ln belm&, lace protedDn and gu masks lined both sides of the street as a loudspeaker &DDOWICed the closlq ol tho park at 7,!Q p.m. Many of tbe 33,000 l)Mlll w ... poalod <>qnaions u thoy ...... ltd out ol the park. Somo _, "What'• blj)- pened! 11 the part really cloeed!" Dillley omploy., and a<clll'ity pcllce nplained tbe -to tbe crowd, many of them chlldre>, and W'Jed guests to koop moving. The ''NaUonal Yipple Day Pow-Wow" began on a li1ht note l'huraday as a inuP'Gf !t YllWJll c:an..rc..i '"1 Ille .--al Floalie'llld. .lht ~ cll9laT. Gen<ral ~. and u;ec;. ~ in 1'omonow&lnd, •inlinl the Klelo!JM .... Clm -· • Lali lo tho ,al-Ill< Ylpp!H loot •-,.... i;..y.,. Island. cba11D& ...,,, d. Ille towlllli all ... atlr-... ...... a Ylst Cgta ~ 11>e.,-•1 .... I ' ~ .#' 'DP ,... ~\I Wil IM'"llet 1 of tho -..-t~~ ---c;pnq ..,. -.; ..,, -• secdrlty guard reported *tni a naked man on the islahd. Jad< B. Liequi>I, l>lsneyll!ld director of marketing, said the ~ncouater on Main Street besan wheJI "OM of the ringleaders !W'Wll at an officer." "The Disneyland security contingent and atta police did an ezcellent job in quelling the disturbanceai," he said. "It's a shame that such a small group has to ruin it for the others, but we bad to think of tbe Sl!e<y ol OW' -ta." be stated. "We are going to eaforce a re_gulatioa prohibiting long-hain from the park. We didn't waot to do it, but this Incident makes it a must." Security police made a complete sweep of the park after the guesta had left to rout any YJppies left after the crowd was HCOrted from Disneyland. Tbt Yippies regrouped outside the park and threw rocks and dehril at officers before beading for the Disneyland Hot.el where they were confronted by more police units. They finally dispened ot t :30 p.m. Tbe oaly other time the park cloled early was a memorial gesture foUowing the assassination of John F. Kennedy lo !!16.l. From P.,e I SONS ••. tured in Cohl••t. about eo mllea: across Cape Cod B1y, near Boston. Young Kennedy toot a tad to Cob•uet to recover the bird that dJy, the 10th. The tai:i driver "was definitely an un· dercover qent" invesUgatin& the rise of narcotk:s uae oo Cape Cod, a police IOW"Ct uid. He declined to identify the driver-11genl or elaborale on the way in which be helped in the arrests. 1be oames of the two youtlu wv-e taken by authorities the night of the JOUl ln a drug raid in Hyannb P o rt but not in the family compound. The incident was no1. reve•led until Wed· nesday, a day after the boys were served with juvenile warTants charging them with Weg&I po5SeSSion of marijuana and conspiracy to violate the state drug laws. They appeared Thursday in the juvenile ae&sion of district court and received a stan lecture from the judge, who con- tinued their case along with those ol 100 at.her juveniles -all reportedly flnt offenders, like Kennedy and Shriver -for a year wilhoul finding. DAILY PILOT H•mri ....... ... .... , ... ., .. ..,. s.. c-. ... ORMGE! a>Aif ~ILl ... iHG (OMl'loNT ••\ert t-1 , We.4 "'"_, ..... """""-.1.,• •. c.rl•v YU ......... -Gulu•I MtMl'I' Th1111•1 Kt•""il (tl1fW TI.•111•1 A. M.,,,hl•• M...a111nf (flltr l lc. .. •'4 P. Nill ... ,fl °"-C-ly lflltt Offl•• Cliff ""1f: UI W11t l•r ''""' ........,, tMdl1 un W•t •••• '°""""ffll ~ -..clil ffl , ..... , ........ ~-._..t "''' ... di • ..........., .... ~---&l<MllllM .... • . DAILY l"l!-Of ti.it ....... . . F!ght tqr ShOIQI U .s·. ·jets Again . ' . Aid ·Cambodians PHNOM PENH. Cambodia (UPI) U.S. jet fiCbler homl>on came to the support today or Cari>hodl'I_ ,..... meeting beavy Communist resialanc.t In a week!°"' eompalp to ,...,.ptun !he town ·,r ~. field nJ!orla laid . ' The ri,Jrt ror s~ raged on as C•m· bodian units report<d hurllng back North Vlelname>e and Viel Coog ~ al- t.ac.king government posllJonl tl paint.! four and ti&bt miles from Phnom Penh -closest tMwt to date ~Y Communist Infantry. Military officlala said Cambodian troops have been tryipg to encircle Skoun, 3.S mJJa northeul of Phnom Penh, but falled to break through because of a powerful Communist defensive ring. A.inertcan pUota, laking ihl!lr dlrecilons from· Cfmbodian outcers on 'the around, Joined tho baWe or Skoun lasl '!Ue!day. U.S. headquarters in Saigon has not reported I.be miulona, verified by American correspondenta on the scene. The CambOcilan rorw trying to ""'P' ture Skoun included men who were train- ed by U.S. Green Berets in Soulh Viel· nam. 1'he strategy includes a pincer move from the north and south but the estimated J,000 Communists in Skoun have frustrated the move. Els where "kt cambod.la , Cambodian Brig. Gen. Sankain Khoy said today ' his forces will soon begin a blockade of an esUmated 300 Communists who have set up headquarters in the Angkor Temple ruins. "Unbelievable1" is the reaction of Coconut (r1&ht)1 5-year-<>ld 'Clown for ~llinf Bros.-Barnum and Balley CU:cu•c u ~ bJs ildeltiiik, Coco the Clown, is l'fP"" u ~n MDOrary DAILY ·PILOT carrier boy. The honest..to-goodnesa carrier boys are 11-year-old Costa Mesans Bob Maur'er· (loft) and Ron McDan- iels, who got a lesson in circus makeup from Coco. For I'tlore clowning around, see Page 8. Cambodian troops ron into heavy resistance today on the southern end of Skoun, officers said, and requested American air liUpport, which waa pro-- vlded. .. ...._.."" " Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, In a statement in Washington today, said American planes bad bombed in the Skoun area in a move aimed al preventing Communist forces from reopening Cambodian sea supply routes, thus protecting American .forces in South Vietnam. He said U.S. planes were not giving close air support to Cambodian units. Khoy, commander or the -ith Military Division based at Siem Reap. said the blockade of the rellglous capit.al of Cam· bodia will be preceded by Cambodian and allied.air strikes. He aaid Amerlcan F4 Phantom jets and Thai T28 flghter- bombers have bombed and strafed Com- munist positions near the Angkor B~ dbisl templ es, one of the religious and archeologlcal treae.um ot Alia. .Pos;tal R~fo~~ Approved, Awaits Nixon's Signature WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress has released its grip on the U.S. mails after nearJy two centuries and the Post Office lookls forward to shedding handicaps that prompted one postmaster general to say the department was in "a race with disaiter.'' More than two years alter a presiden- tial commission recommended it, and more than one yea r after the legislation was introduced, Congreas sent Thursday to President Nixon a bill creating 111 lndepelld<ol U.S. Poot.I Servi.,.. The White House bailed the occasion .as "a landmark day and a landmark piece of legislation for users or the postal service and postal worken" and 6aid Nixon would :&ign the measure next week. It provid~ for eslabl.i.ahment of the corporate-like federal aaency within a year and a retroactive e:lght percent pay hike for postal workers. ll also mates likely a.o incteqe in first clua Jmta&e rates -from the six-ttnt to an ti&bt.-c::ent st.amp -early next year. The new Postal Service will be run by a nine-man, pre&identlally-appolnted board of governors who will select • postmaster general and d e p u t y postmaster general. Rates will be set not by Cona:re11 From Pflfle I LINDA .•• grounds of the Tate: est.ate. Mrs. Ka.sabian bad become almost hy ... rical T!llrsday ~ - Kanarek -prodoced • pbotog1ph of the bloody, almost nude body of Ml.as Tate inside the reJiderJce. When the trial session re.awned again today, Kanarek approached the Zl-year· old blonde with a sheaf of picture• and thrust one toward her. Mrs. K•sa- bian took one look and then "lvtrted her head. Kanarek attempted lo have the, witness take the picture in her band bUl Judge Charles H. Older instructed hlm that W1>uld not be neceS!sry and told him to go ahead with the cross examlnatloo. Kanarek asked her if that was the ''lad~ you say you saw at the house?" ·•Jt appears to be the white gown and the long hair. I never 1e.w her face." The defena-liwyer sought to establish that Mrs. Kmblan actually ran Into , (he· houso henelf'•llh a lmlfe but tho wltoeia ~denied O.Uy .. Lhat she ever had done &01 • "" , "When yoo heard iCreams coming fronl the house didn't you care what happened to anyone i.nalde!" Kanarek asked. "Of course l cared." "Weren't these your friends who were in thert, Charles Watson. Su5an Atklna and Patricia Krenwinkel?" "Yes." "Didn't you run into the house to protect them?" "No, I ran toward the house but I didn't (lo into it." On Thursday Kanarek had just asked Mrs. Kasablan whether she looked through a window Of the house: that llight last August when without another word he ga ve her the picture. Jt showed Miu Tale, clad ooly In panties, lying on her right side with he.r hand erteoded above her head . She war covered with blood •nd there were clearly visible knife wounds in her ob- vioualy pn:1nect body. Mn. Kuablan hod lestlllod previously she saw three slayln11 .11 tilt eslare out.tide the houae Jut. Aug. I btll that she did not witness the kllllng of Miu Tale and hair gtylisl Jay Sebring in the Living room. aJ for the past 181 year-s, but by a five-member rate commission with the approval ol the board of govemota. The postmaster general, frequently in the pa.5t a political handlman of the president rather than a working he.ad of the mail system, will bre removed from the Cabinet. IJ'he new system ls designed to modernize and 1treamJine delivery of the nu.i.ls, and eventuilJ)' to eliminate the huge deficits that have been an annual feature of the Post Office budget for the past UI years. Rather than going lo Congress for higher wages, postal employes will bargain with the board of governors through their imions, which will have all rights given to labor organlzaUooa in private industry e:rcept to •trike and to form ' union sbop., Poital mana4• .-, ntber lban going ·Iiat,tn-hand to Conirw for money to con 1 t r u c t l>ulldlogs and buy equl-n!. can iJsue up to $10 billion in bonds. • $5,000 Burglary From Playhouse ;For Vengeance? DetecUves bellove the 15,000 burglll'f or OOWlcl equlpmoot from tho Llauna Moulton Ptaybouse m1y have had a vegeance moUve, The '1>rinen bur&lory that left tbe new theater temporarily lnoperaUve. in the IOUnd deplrlment WU discovered Tue• vengeance motive. Stolen iltma: included a $500 IOUnd rnJi:er panel, a steno tape recorder, ampliflm, a playback system, 1pe.aker1, mlcropboftu, headpbonea, cabte. and electrical connectors. tt'hitre waa aimilarlty to 'the then of tl,SOO w~.of sound equipment from the audllwium of Lacuna Beach High School la.st month. net. Gene Brooks said today , ''Thi$ possibly could be a vengeance type thlna. They appeared to know what they were looking for.and there was a alight. amount of mallcloua mischief, "things that could delay the show." Brooks said the mischief included scat- te:rln1 of lighting cue cards and removal or batteries from fla1hllght.s. The burglary pccurred just before I.he continuation of the mlllicaJ "OUver" with a new cast. The show did 10 on, after 50llnd equipment wu hurriedly-rented. The new playhouse suffered soot.her selbe.ck earlier wben someone enlered ju!t before the opening of a play and tinkered with wiring and removed labels identifying switches. Girl, Witnesses Disagree Over Cause of Crash A Huntington Beach girJ told Costa htesa police she was following too closely Thursday after a rear-end collision thal lefl her male companion sprawled in a roadside field. Only witnessea dlaagreed. They said the 1•year-old &irl dragged the real dri ver, Steven S. 1Jbby, It, of 180 Brookline Drive, from behind the wheel and shoved him to the ground. Libby WIS 8J1'eSled IJ1d hooked on suspicion of drlvina under the influence and posaession of dangerous dn.lgs, but was Loo Incoherent to understand at the lin1e, police said. No one else was hurl when the car hit one driven by Burdell 0. Prochaska, SI. of 2368 Rutgers Dri ve, Col la Mesa, in soulhbound lines of Fairview Road Jury to Probe Seal Beach Firing Fight? A requut ror a Grµd Jµry m.. vesttgatlon fnto the tumfoU gripping the City of Seal Beach bas been filed with the city attorney's offict, City Clerk Jerdys Weir revealed today. She said she took the action Wednesday In compliance with an eatlier council dlrecU.ve urgln& the Investigation take place. . "I dido't know what to do with the reqUut, IO I forwarded It to the legal counsel of the city for action," Mrs. Weir explained. Jim Bentson. the newly appointed city attorney, coo Id not be contacted this morning about the progress of the re-quest. The posslbillly of investigation was ta.lied at last Monday'1 city council ae.silcla whu Colmcllman Harold Holden r!ad 1 lengthy statement charging iJ- lega.JJUes ln lhe firinJs of City Ma.na:er Lee Rt.Iner and City Attorney Jim C191JS. He lheo moved Jbat tlie document be forwarded to the Onnd Jury for tnvelt:lptJon. Meanwhile , Seal Beach Mayor Morton A. Baum, who voted along with coun- cilmen Thomas Hogard and Conway Fuhrman to flre the tw1> qfficials, has ' lost ltls job as pharmaei.•t for the Llesure World retirement community. The action was ta.ten Tuesday by Jack Davis, prealdent of the Golden Rain l'Ollndatlon, which is tht ldmlnl.stering body of the community. Cited 11 reason was a conflict of lnlerest which could have placed Baum in the PoBlllon o( voting for or against LeiJUre World malttra comin& before the city council . "U there is no American air support, we cannot capture the city," a Cam· bodian battalion commander Aid as U.S. jets pounded Communi!t po1ttion1. PromPflfJel TRUCE ... or UlCse commando groups have Jn- dlc1led they wi ll honor the cea:&e-fire while others gave stated they will not be bound by it. Secrelary Rogers' announcement waa a Orlit step in hi.s Midea1l Peace Wll1Uve of June 29 whlch had been addre.ued to the United Ar•b Republic, Jordan, and Israel. The U.S. peace plan contained two part.!: -The re.establishment of the Mideast 90 days. -5imultaneowly, the res umplion of the peace see kin& mlulon of Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring. the. U.N. peace mediator with the UAR, Jordan ahd Israel. FrOM Pagel DRESS ... .admitted to the park anti undesirables will 1101 be allowed In. "This means that If a person does have long hair, he may be admitted to the park. The hair style.a that are in vogue today te:nd to be longer and we are not going to keep anyone out of Disneyland for lonw hair alone. The decitlon will be baaed on general appearance and attitude," he said. Disneyland officials said they an- ticipate IO further trouble fmm Ylpplea after the dllturbance at the park Thur• day night. SUMMER CONTINUES Henredon Offers "OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION," Complete Occasional, Dlnln9 & Bedroom, ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS! • Drexel Featul'fl "ES,.ERANTOS" Collection. • Entire Herlta9e Re"uces Its Complete "MADRIGAL" Collection . HINRIDON & HIRITAGE UrHOLSTl~Y 15°/o OFF •. ' Judge Declares No Magazine Sale for School The final word -a negative Qlle :_ has been ;tven on the Huntlngto"n Beach City School District's annual magazine sale conducted by students. Superior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron ruled this week thal the district could not C<Jnducl the magazine drive as It has in the past because it was using school time for commercial in- tereats. The magazine sale was taken to court by Seal Beach attorney Jim Bmtson, whose daughter . Lisa Ann, 13, is a student al Dwyer Intermediate School, in the district . The magazine sale was conducted esch year at the district's lwo intermediate sehools, Dwyer and Gisler, to raise funds for the student government. Superior Cou rt Judge Robert L. Corfman had issued a preliminary in- junc1ion on the magulne sale earlier this year. Judge Cameron's ru ling Is the final decision. bringing to a halt the 2:>-year tradition of magazine sales in the district. Boy's lland Run Over By Ice Cream' Truck A Costa !\tesa tot climbed onto an Ice cream truck, Thursday afternoon, fell off and the slowly moving vehiclt" ran ov~r his hand and kept going. Brian L. Ellis, 3\k, o[ 950 Dogwood St., was taken lo Costa P.tesa MemorlaJ Hospital by his parenl.s. where X-rays sho wed no broken bones or other serious damage. DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NIWl'ORT BIACH INTERIORS Proft11lon1I Interior D11l9ners Avallabl....AIO-:.NSID '"' LAGUNA BEACH Mrs. Kasabian 's 1a1p wa1 •udlble lhrou&hout the courtroom. She burst Into lear1 and could not speak. She was lead off to an anteroom whlle the l1wyer1 conferred ln the jud1e'1 ch1mber1. Then the trial was recessed overnight. •I Baker Street. ,. ... f•ll .....,. M• .. o,.... c....., ,.0.t161 The tee.naaed girl was not chuged l -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:'.'.~~=:'.~~~~~~~- 1727 Weatcllff Dr., 642·205q OrEN 'RIDAY 'Tll 9 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FR IDAY 'Tll 9 Kanarek declined to tell newamen why he tuddenly handed tho Jlrl lh• picture. 111 1he scene, but alvtna: false Information 10 • law officer la a misdemeanor crime. l • I l I 1 j I I ! I I • . . . .......... --• ' Du•ti~g-toD .• eae • I • Eb I TIO Teday's Fl..t ' ., VO[ 63, NO. '188, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES , ORANGE COVNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, '1970 • . . eo ens • Ol.llY PILOT· ..... lor •lctlft KMll ... AS DISNEYLAND SHUTS DOWN, POLICE IN RIOT GEAR LINE THE PARK'S MAIN STREET Offlclal1 Orchr Earlv. Cloture of Magk:: Kingdom and Rev iv• Strict. Dress Code Bandits -Hit 2 Huntington Businesses One has a mouaey faoe, the o~er busby red hair and ' the Ulird wears horn-rimmed glaa8es. What they have in common, pollet! believe, is three revolvers and $5,too Jn loot they grabbed in robberies at two Hootington Beach businJ!sses Thurs- day. In bolh holdups -at a restaurant and a market -the bandits posed as customers before puUlng the heists. 1be first robbery occurred about 1 a.m. in Franco~· Restaurant, 181Sl Beach Blvd., when the three men sud- denly whipped out the weapons after slugging down a few drinks at the bar. They demande4. the money tn the safe. Manager Arnold E. Llndquist told police lhe men pulled guns and alked him to provide the ~blna\i9n. He told them he didn't have iL One o( tOe robbers tben said, 1'I'll give you to the count of three." At this, employe Francis Richmond offered to open the 1trongbo1. The men took about $1,<XX> from the safe and relieved several bar J>i\lrOOS of tbeir valuables, including a $2,000 diamond ring and $285 from a couple whp had just returned from a lucky day at the races . . Other valuables brought the total fJ'(lm the robbeiy to 15,200. . Police 9fficers said tqey tied up Lind- quist, Mis{!;. Richmond 'and the others, then cut the telephone line and left. 111ree ~llarly described bandits bit Albertson'• Marke,1Ait lMl Edward.a Ave. Thursday !l!Jli.~ robbing IJ1e Jill_ and employes of '700 cash and valuabl,_. Mai-ket manager Ja~ ff. Tho m a 1 said the men entered ~ mar~~ arol{nd 9,30 p.m.: pushing a shoppljlg earl through tbe aisles and collecting flf.10 of gourmel's delights -Including New York and filel mignon cuts •. Thomas said the men made him fill up a paper "b8.g wiltt bills i ?14 coine, then stripped the three employes or their watclles and wallets and tl~d them up in the back room. Each of the bandits, he uld, 11parted neaijy trimmed · sideburns, p e.r f e ct enough to ·be false. Firebom'bing Said Amateurish Authorities said today the fireb6mblng of a Placentia bank branch nwnc.tay wat an amateurish, juvenile~. Damage to the Bank of Ameiica facili· ty at 1831 N. Kraemer Blvd., was estlm>ted at abou~ 16.0001 blll cleanqp operatlono "119Wed il to .,... rw buoiMU Soipeone 1masbed a wlndilw )'lllh • brlclt early ThW"Sday and then toued ln three quart '°'t drink botllea made toto molotov cocktalls wilh keroeene, motor oil and wicks fashkmed from a torn shirL Edward Kerins Appointed To1f9P.tiJ1gt~-~J~J\o~~ Edward R Kerlnl, :11, ~ -ter lllfqrmaUon& ~ IDCI !lit pr,.ident of Meredith Gli'dem Home ow n er 1 Associatloo, bu bein appointed to lhe Huntington Beach Planning Commission. ·He repla"'8 Michael Bokor who re<lgri. ed to take 1 position In Israel. Ker~ a resident ot this city for 21> years, work& ltir the McDonnell Douglas Ccrporatlon. He bold.1 a master of ·engineering degreo and a bachelor of adeoce-(fegree in lpduttrial engineer· tng.' Kerins ·was among 17 applicants in- terviewed by the city 00\qlcU t.bJI week. After his appointment, Kerins com. mented, "I hope my declalons will reflect all of. the sector. Of. our community.'' Ke•ins waa in the public eye for.several weeks earlier this year when he suc- =fully led a light by the Merdith Gardens Homeowners Association agalnst a oontroveniial development for the cor~ ner of Brooijnnt Strtet and Adams Aveoue. He tp0ke several Ume.s at plan- ning commission and council meetings on the issue. Kerins, of 20081 O>lgate Ave., is a vice president of the HOME Council. DAIL 't ,ILOT Sr.ff , .... APPOINTED TO COMMISSION Hunilngton Beach's Kerins · Linda Kasabian Shocked At Victim Plwtographs ' ' U>S ANOiµ.EII (UPI)..-Linda Kasa· bjan gasped 1'0b,, God" and shouted that she couldn'l believe her friends could1 do aucb an "anlnialistlc thing" when shown a picture t.Oday of one of'lbe victlma in the Tate rpurder case. Defense attorney Irvine Kanarek thrust before her a color photosraph ot the mutilated b:ody of Voytc~ Frykowskl, a guest.. of the ac,tress Sharon Tate who WIJ Nibbed 4oiens of time.s and shot In t11e·1lilii!l&J !alt Aug. a. Mra. Kasabian began crYini atead.Uy and Kanarek Ill.id to her: ' "Why are yo.a, crying now?''' 0 1 just can't believe· it." . "You con'I belle\'.e 11111!!" "I c1µ1'1 believe they could ~ aucb I thing." ' "Are )'OU ~ nur don't moan that you couldn' ~ IUCll<ji tllJn&!" "I lmoW J d)dl•t ., it. l c\ldll'I have In me to dD llUdl., -..iiillc tlllns." -""""""" again lhal.Ahe .... ran into the bou:le •1th two youq women codelendlnla d Clla!IM Mwan ill tho ~ ..and. ~· •!Tu• \Vataoo and 1hal lbe mllfl['iit!\liiiihle to ter1uonber because 1he wu In a 1Llle of &hock at Ibo tlli\<, Her voice rfaing to a lhoot, Mrs. Kuablan N!pliod, "I Juit know I <lldn't do tt, Mt. Kanare.k ." Kanarel< had beaun the day'• q .... , . lloning by showing Mi's. Kasabian_.. 1 color picture of ·another victim, coffee heiress AbigaU Folger, sprawled on tlie grounds of the Tate estate. Mrs. Kasabi!Ul had become almost hysterical Thursday afternoon wben Kanarek produced a photograph of lhe bloody, almost n~ body of Miss Tate inski~ lhe .residence. When the trifl ~ion res1,1med again today, Kanarek approaclled the 21-year· old. ~IOJ!de with a siren! ol plctults and thru~t one toward her . Mrs. Ka:sa- bian took one look and then averted her liead . K~ek attemP.ted to.have. the..witneo IUe th• picture In her hand but Judi• Charles H. Older ltial1'11Cted him that would not be necesaa:ry and told him LO go ahead with the cross examJnatSon. Kanarek asked her tf that was QI• •'Ja.~.Y<!t say y~ .aw at the ~U8e'V'1 :·11 ·ajipears to he the whlle gown and tbe lll!li hair. I nev<r aaw her face." irl>e.'~....,.,. tiDllClit to ..tallllsh thiit · Mra. Ka.ubfan actuaU! tan, lnto the hou,. hetteU with 1 kn)le but, the witness denied flatly that ahe evft' had done so. "When you bemf acrea"" coming from the house didn't you care what (See IJliDA, P•C•-.I) I ' er ssau Magic King,dom Enforces 'Modified Dress Code'· By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille O.lh' , .... Sttff Disneyland o.fficlals have banned all long-haired y o u t hs from the Magic Kingdom following a confrontation between Orange County lawmen and 300 Ylppies that culminated io the park closing six hours early Thursday. Eighleen youths were arresled as a result of the confrontation which took place on the park's Main Street at 6 :~ p.m. · Long-halred and denim-clad, the van- 'guard of the Ylpple group converged upon Disneyland at noon Thursday to celebrate "National Ylppie Day." Small Incidents were reported by Disneyland security police during the day ; ranging from a sing-in on Captain Hook's pirate ship to a disturbance at the Monsanto display in Tomorrowland. Then the hl<:idents stepped up. "'I1ie \IMC eQijJed-cloellit of the famed tourist attraction, the serond since the park opened in 195$, came after the. group of bippie-ytpe youths marched up !>lain Stt'ee~ chanting obs<enities and singing songs. The gr o u p left Tom Sawyer's Island at about 6 p.m. before heading for tbe park's City Hall in a line which extended the length of lhe street. When they reached the city hall ma they chanted for the release of Minnie Mouse and tore down a red-wbite-and-~· blJDtlng ~ tile llujld1lrs,. ~i"' ., •• ~ .,_g,, "~ftY J which, porlr•"4 a dark -1\>&fijuana plant on Ille block bac:kgTGwrcl. A group o.f Irate Disnq ·guests be&an linlinc "God llete America" but were quickly booed· down by tile yonihs, Ooe of lhe l!ippi.. ahoatod for the group to bead for Fantasyland and lhe crowd c~ Main Street for the trek to the Disney cistle. Hallway down Main Street . they were met by a Costa ~esa pollce riot control squad that swept onto Main Street from an employes' entrance. Screarnm, "Here oome the pigs," the hippies ran down Main Street away from the Costa Mesa unit only to be met by a squ,d of Fullerton lawmen who closed olf the escape route. chasing yippies around the town square ihou.ting, "Run. Ripples, Run." The encounter on Main Street lasted only minutes. Riot squads in helmets, face protectors and gas masks lined both sides of the street as a loudspeaker announced the closin.J of the park at 7:30 p.m. Many of the 33,000 guests wore puzzled expressions as they were led out of the park. Some asked' "What's hap. pened? ls lhe puk really closed?'• Disney employes and aecurity police explained the disturbance , t.o the crowd, many of them children , and urged guests t.o ketp moving. The "NaUonal Ylppie Day Pow-Wow" began on a IightJ not.e Thursday as a group of 75 YlpPles converged on tbl carousel at Frontierland. the Monsanto display,. General Electr~. and the Coke (See YJPP!q, 1'tp II · * * * * * * Disneyland Regulations Based on Appearance Disneyland opened its gates at a a.m. today without incident. In fact, the only difference between today's opening and any other day was the fact tht uniformed security police muned the ticket booths along with ticket takers -and had some new dress requirements. Officials at the Magic Kingdom discloa- Mideast Powers Agree to cea8e Fighting Today WASl!INGTON (UPI) -} it e United Arab Republic and l1ra•l baV.. agreed to enter into a ceas~fi~ beginn1Dg at 3 p.m., PDT today Secretary ol State William P. Rogers a~. "We welcome Ul1s statesman-llb a~on taken by the leaders ot the governments concerned. We bope th1s lmporiant decision will advance the prospects for a just and lasting peace in the Ml4dle E.ast." After official spokesman Robert J. ed that dress regulations for part guest,, wW be up to the dl.scretlon of security police at the gates. "There will be no set rtgulations such as halr being three inches long on the sides," explained Bruce Young, public relations man for Disneyland. "The decision to let a person into tbe park is not an arbitrary one for tbe tickel taker to make. There Me no rules set down on how our guests are t.o look." Sec1lrity men wlU do that. Young said that some gue~ wilt be ~ by oec\Jrlty police before beipa ~tilt. l!Ol't and uodtsirables wm ~otbe •llcwed In. '"11\ls means tbat if. a person doe! !Jave long. hatr, he IJlll)' be admltted to lM part Tb& bair styles that are Jn VOCU• today tend to be longer and we are not gotng to keep anyoae ou• of l)!sr>eyiand f"' long bair alone. The decision will be based on geaeral appearance and. attitude," be said. Oiaoe7land afficlals said they an. Ucipate ao furtber trouble from Yippies after the. disturbance at tbe park Thurs- day Dlflht. Hlilltington Bids For City Honors - PoJJce · and Disney securlty officers grabbed doz.e111 of the YipPies and pbyeically threw them out of the park or toot them to the security office for transfer to the Anaheim police depdl'tmenl Several spectators joined in the melee, McCioskey read Rogers' state!Dtnt, responsible officiala, lndJcated that a cease-flre would $0 formally be in ef. feet 'between Israel and Jordan. The officials said that neither Israel nor Jordan had ever formally disavowed the pertinent U.N. cease-fire resolutions between the two countries. Three Huntington Beach citizens wUI ~ carry the city's bid for a national honor Girl, Witnesses Disagree Over Cause of Crash A Huntington Beach girl told Costa Mesa police she was followlng too closely Thursday after a rear-end collision that left her male companion sprawled .in a roadside field. _ Only .. u..,,.. disagreed. Tbey said tbe 13-year-old glrl dragged the real driver, Steven S. Libby, 19, of· 180 Brookline Drive, from behind the wheel and shoved him to the ground. Libby was arrested and booked on suspicion of dr iving under the influence and possession of dangerous drugs, but was too incoherent to understand at the time, police said. No one else was hurt when the car hil one driven by Burdell O. Prochaska. 51, of 2366 Rutgen Drive, Costa Mesa, in aoutbbound lanes ot Fairview Road at Ba~er Street. The teenag<d gtrl wu no~ charged at lhe oc~ but giving falle.lnf~matlon to a,law officer 11 a mlldemwior,atme. Tennis Tourney . Slated Saturday " ' SOme ol Fountain 'Valley;a belt lenl\lf player't will ia1111e In the •~Y'• annuol 'cl1'tmpf0mh1p toumoy startloll at I a.m., Salurday, on the FOuntaln 9alley 11igh Sc\1001 lennls couri,. The !lctlon btllns with women's al111le1, lollowed by Junior and oenlor cUvlslon men's championship matches. SoturdlJ''• competition follows lhe openlf11 ol the tour11<1 l1ot w-od. J• • The officials were referring to the original cease-fire which ended the Ule? Mideast war and the subsequent Nov. 22 1967 Security Council resolution which lai1d tbe basis for a future polltlcai settlement in the Middle ,Est. "We have just been informed by the governments of the United Arab Rep@llc and Israel of their acceptance of the U.S. proposal for a 1tand..UU .._iire to come Into effect at 2200 Greenwlch Mean Tbne tocte.y, Friday, Autust 7/' Rogers said in a statemeot. - Judge Declares No Magazine Sale for School The final word -a negative one -has bej:!ri given on the Huntington Beach City School Dlstric,·s annual m8gll2ine sale conducted by students. Superior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron ruled ~(a week that the.diltrlct . could not conduct the rnaa:azlne drive I as it has in the pail beciuse. Jt was using school time for commetclal ln- ter~ts. The magazine sale wu lakti.d to court by Seal BeaCh attorney Jim BelltaOl'I, wboie daug~ter, lJaa Ann, lS, is a 1LUdent at Dwyer Intermediate' Sch~I,, In lhe district. The magailne sale .wu copclucttd each 1 year at the dl•1'ict'1 l\oo l~te~• IChoolo, Dwy<r al!d Gi*f, to ralM IUDds tor the student gove.rrunent, Supertor Clll\fl Judie Robert L. Corlman had iaiued t preli(ll\llsrY Irr- junction on lhe magazlne "1f earlier this year. Judie Cameron's rulin& ls the ftnal rtecWon, brlnginJ to • tiolt the ~year U'adll\on of mapztne sale1 In th• dislrlct. .. to a confereia in Portland, Ore., this month. They will be in Portland from Aug. 23 to 26 to speak before the AU American Cities Awards jury io the finals of a contest sponsoced by the National Municipal League. Huntington Beach is one o! 22 cilies in the finals. Moote NilzkowW, a member of the citlzenS' steering commlttee of the Urban Land InsUtute, city Public Information Officer William Reed and former City Councilman Dr. Henry Kaufman will go on the trip. ~ The awlll)l "111 • ro to the city thal has done JlKl8t to promote citizen in- volvement in clv.ic development. The projects which put HunUngton Beach in the finals are the beautitication of Pacific Coa.!lt' Highway, propoaed redevelopment of the di;lwntown arq a,nd creation of beach parking facilities. Orange Cout W!'lltlaer They'll be beating a palh to the ~h Saturdaj' ., the tempera.. tore **' ,Ip. il In the illlarid areu. On the cpast tt'il be a com- lortabl• n ll!ldet fair akl ... INSIDE TODAY Th< Greatel1 Show on llarth tradittonauv ha.t tilo • ortat<•t 1 ~to""""°" tat11>. Tho Rlriglh1g Bro•. Barnwm oM BoUe~ cltcus I .19~" tilt. crnttt" ririg In todo11'• • Wtektndtr •tction. ' - I . I . I I • I IWU l'l\JIT • '*"· .... '· "" Seal Beach: On. ·and On Gl'Ullt1 Jury Probe Requesood Polire Chief ; A ....... hr a er..,\! 1...,. i.. Wtlr 'Y'•'U I I • Will .D.~-~ ~-8! ~-~ ~*lh 'Jim-...... , Ilia """" ""'""' 1 dl1 . r un1ue ~., w ~ -ii lilod-~, _ _,, -DOI be cool-611 Ille c:il1 .u-,·s office. a11 Clerk moniol about Iha ....,..... o1 the ,. Jef"1I """' -today. quest. . llbe llld she loot tbe a."lloo w~ The poaibllity al 111.....U,.don wu ln ....._-. willl an earlier council ni9ed at last Monday's city couDclJ ,_... 91!nc tbe inV..U,atlao talr.t ....ion when Camcil!IW> Harold Holdtn ~ , read a IO!lllhy '1>1.emeot <barging i~ .. , dMlbl l:now what lo do with the leplilia in tbe firl0&1 ol City Muaor -• l lorvanled It ., Ibo leall Leo Ri...,. aod City Attorn<y Jim -ol the dty f<lr ttdloo." Mrs. Cameo. - Viejo Marine Third Victim Of Toro Crash A -Y1e)o ~ lllatine officer lllls ...... -the lhlrd lo die ..... injurieS IPS"l!>o! wt>en a KCUO fuelioc -Claol;tld and espl-at El Toro -°"11< Air Slatloo ..... ~.go. Maj. Walter Zytkewtcz, 41, m7t Andriana. father d two, died of ievere burm in tbe intensive are unit to which be WU admitted a week aao. Fellow cmnnan Cpl K e n ri e t b MeUdorf, 1t, of El Toro baJe bousinJ, died .... days ago ol -injurie>. One « the ain:raft'1 cammanden, Lt. Ro(er Mullins ol Htm'""'°" Beach, dled ht !he crash. They wue on the llv&member cttW of the l#k~ ainnft termed by a Marine spnPm•n "an old , relllblt: kind ol ~" Maj. Z)"lbwia. a veteran of two tours in Vletoam, -_.11o111 officer for !he -Aerial )lelliellq Sq1lldroq J.52, at El Toro. A base spokesman Aid the crash was the first accident for a crew of that iquadron in IU,000 flyinc: houri, covering mart than II years, Maj. Zyttewicz:, who had received the Bramt Star ana 11 Air Medals, ii surviv· ed by his: wife, Joan, and two cbildren. FuneraJ arrangements are not yet com- plete. 'lbey will tab place at the Dilday Funeral Home in Huntington Belch. M1j. Zytkewic:Z' death leaves only two men who were «i the W.f1ted practice fliiht ltill alive. lie lhtll moYed that the docwneat bt fanrrWecl lo the Grand Jury for h!VHUpllon. Memrwbile, Seal Beach Mayor Morton A. Blum, who voted a~g with coun- cilmen Thomas Hogard and Conway Fuhrman lo flre Ole two officials has )OSI hh job u )lbann.1cis1 10< tbe ut.ure World rt'lirtment community. Tiie -wu IUeo Tuesday by Jack Divis. )relidoal ol the ~ IWll F ...... tioa. Which is .the admlJtisWing bo4y al the commllllity. Qted IS f'f.&500 WIS I confllct of ht-whldi could have placed S.'"" lb Ult posWon of votloc f« ttr qa!nst 1olaare World maUers comJnr befott Ille dtJ council. Chamber Seeking City Slogan If you have a few choice wordi to say about Huntington Beach, t h e Chamber ol Commeru want! to hear lbem. 1lle chamber Is weighing entrit! In a dty sJoean contul. Entrles must pro. mote Huntington Beach as the bub of Oran&e County entertainment, according I<> chamber M_,.r Ralph KU<.. Many entriel have bet.a received alrudy, They include such suggestiom as "Hun· t.ingtoo Beach -Hub ol Heavenly Hap- peoings", . ."People, Proapuity ind PJeuurt all thrive in HunUngton Beach". .•. "Huntington Beach -Center o( Southland's Entertainment Empire." The chamber is still looking for a prize.winner. A '100 Savings Bond will go to the winner. Entries may be sent tc the chamber office, 1&5112 Beach Blvd., Hunllngton Beoclt, 92M6 . Palace Case By RUDI NlEDZIEl..SIU OI .. DellY ...... , .... Seal Beach Pollt-e Olld Lee ea.. himself will ~· the -qalnst the controversial Marini Pilct, 1 teen- •&e dance ball ia dancer ol losing its Ucen9e for allegedly allo•tna: misconduct by """""'· The hearing. scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Monday In the city council chambers. is expected tc draw considerable interest sinct it has become lnvoh•ed In the dty'1 current poliUcal tempest. Cbargu ta be br'ou4fbt aa:ainst Mary Robertaon, ~rat.or of the palace for UI! past fiYe years, include allowing dnmt aod diJ<ll'detly coodoct 1m<J11i the -aod allowing penona older than Ill to lttquent the pr<misa. Both charaes are in violation of the clt;y charter Ind could mull in the 1111ptmlon o/ the hall's Uctme U tbey are proved. The hearing was to have been con- ducted last month by City Manqer Lee Risner, who was fired by 3-2 vote in a city council seuion nearly two week.I ago. Rumors have spread through the city that the councilmen -Mayor Morton A. Baum, Conway Fuhrman and Thomas Hogard -fired Risner because he would have closed the dance hall. That charge appears to have been re- futed since Risner has been rehired tern· porarily as special oonsuitant IOI' the hearing, a move sugested by Baum. The actual bearing officer will be Den- nis Courte.marcbt, interim Seal Beach · city manager. ".?be hearini could go for more than one day. It depends how many witnesses the licensee presents and what hll defeme coosist.s of," be said. Last Monday, Mayor Baum llld Coon- cilman Thomas Bogard denied charaes that their campaigns wtrt financed by Robert&on and that they were trytn1 to re-instate gambling in the city. Robertson. a (onner Ueutenant with the Los Angeles Pollet Department, operated the aame building u a leJal gambling hall, Ille Airport Club, during the urly 1950s. l{ennedy Jr. T1aipped Up OAll Y l'llOT "'"°" It)' 1"N'!'Y C•vtllt Starting Early L Sue Hobbs of Huntington Beach Parks and Recre~tion Department (back to camera) leads young ladies in her pqni.pon girl class through a drill at Park View School. Program is Offered to girls in t.bJrd through eighth grades and about 60 have taken the class this swnmer. Another class will be oflered in SeplemQtr. Billboard Blight Battled On Busy Beacl1 Boulevard Tennessee Ernie Ford stiU boasts about ''deals 1weeter \han a swiped wa ter melon " along Beach Boulevard, but his pea-pickln' smlle may come down or face tight restrictions if Huntington Beach officials solve the bill board blight. "We have a city ordinance that doesn 't allow billboards period -but that doesn't remove them," Mayor Pro Tem Jerry Matney said today . Matney and several resident<> on a special billboard conunlttee are al· right to operate their busines.s here," .f.1alney erplained. A city ordinance paa3ed five )'ears ago gave the billboard companies until January, 1970, to remove their works. But the big signs are still up. "We \j,'ere prepared to slarl litigation in January.'' City Attorney Don Bonfa says, "but we didn 't want lo interfere "'ith the billboard committee 's work. Voluntary cooperation is always better than litigation -if you can 1et It.'' 'Ibey are Capt. Robert Walls, Jr., 18, ol Tustin aod S/Sgt, KeMeth D. Davi!, 31 , of Santa Ana. 'nley are both on the critical list and a hospital gpokesman wouJd say only they are .. holding their own." LL Mullins WU &iltina in the duel cockpit with Maj. Zytktwlci. The:rt ha& bee no det.e.rminal.ion who wu pilotlne the plane when it went down. B U d C h D • tempting to work out a compromise Y n ercover a ..... ver with the bWboard industry to clean up .I. .I. . the signs, eliminale some and restrict "Our prlmary objective Ls to vtttually ellmiriate billboards along the scenic routes, such as Pacific Coast Highwa y . And there will be none in the ctntral park area," Malney ¥id. ., Linda Kasabian Gets Love Letter LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Linda K11a- bian, the star witneu in the Tate-La Bienc1 murder trial, hu rece.Jved a proposal of m.ania1e from a Pitt.sbursh man who signed himself only as "N.A." Gary Flei.schmcrn, attorney for the mother of two, said today that the letter writer described himstU u 1 oon-druc· using, ~year~ld man. According to the l1wyer, the man "laid he was in love with Mrs. Kasabian, SI, and wanted to know if she would IDUT)' him. Fleischman said she "dug" the letter and said she was glad "at leaast somtbody loved her.'' BAl\NSTABLE, Mal. (UPI) -The tJxi driver who took Robert F. KtMedy Jr. to retrieve a pet !alcon July 10 was an undercover narcotics aaent whose actions led to the arrest of the boy and his cousin Robert Sargent Shriver III on Mertjuana charges that night. it was itemed today. The two youths \vlll be leavine the Kennedy compound on Nantucket Sound "as aoon es possible'' to spend time with relaUves. Kennedy, aon of the aasauinated New York sen1tor. will return to McLean, Va., while young Sbrlver, Kennedy's cousin and ICJfl o! the former 1rnbast1dor to France, wUI go' tc Ntw York, 1 family souree said. .. others to certain locations. ID recovtr tlit-)lrd !W ~. 1-10th ·, E~..:rw;:"'md~3f~~~; The t1xi dtt.J .. t•w •fin!Wy u un-one of acores I.lone •laden Beach dercovu d~t'' invmt111tin1 the rise Boulevard. or narcoUcs use on Cape Cod, a police "The major companies tell us they sourct said. He declined to Identify the are willing to cooperate if they can driver·a1eal or elaborate on the way be allowed btllboardl in some areas in which be helped J.n the arreslJ. of the city. They feel they have a 'Tbe n1mes of the two youths were taken by authorities the night o{ the 10th ln a dnlg raid in Hy!nnl.s P o rt but not in the family compound. The Incident was not revealtd untll Wed- nesday, a d1y afttr the boy~ were served with juvenile warrant.Ii charclJ!i1 them with JllegaJ po6.se!sion of .marUuana and cansplrac7 to violate the st.Ile ttru1 Ltws. Suffragette, 86, Dies NORWALK. Conn. (AP) -Elsie Hill, 86, a pioneer in the fight fur woman suffrage In the United ~late.a, who once went to jail for her belief I, died Thursday night in her home after a heart attack. "We are\r)'ing to dtvelop an ordinanot to set up permissible area,, for billboards. but which imposes certain restrictions and guaranlees they will be properly rnainlalned.'' The billboard committee gave a brief report to the city council this week: and asked for staff help on the matter. City Manager Doyle Miller pledged the support of the planning 1taff. Basically, the committee needs to work out details of an ordinanct which atrikea: a compromise to clean up billboards, but still allow the business. "We've got to get them ~uced. There are too many. but It's 1 Ions battle," Mainey concluded. SUMMER School Sire • 1! For Juarez Relocated The Juarei Colony project In Fountain V11\ey is belni shlfted to 1 new site. The Juarez project involves a pre- school for bi-lingual and bi-cultural children, a park site for the Colony and recreation facil ities. It's 1 program of cooperation between the city. Fountain V1lley School District and the federal aovernmenl. •·we are shifting the proposed park and school site from CaJle f.iadera to Calle lndependencia. because the first site is not available," City Manaser James Neal explained, ''The change is better for our program because It brtngs together a part. a school, recreation center and meeting place:• said Robert S.nchls. assiltant superintendent ol the Fountain Valley 5chool Dlstrlc!. The" small echool bulldln.& •ill aerve the two addilioaa\ functions or recreation center and meeting piece for Colony residenlJ. Originally, the city plaMed to use a wel1 site on Calle Madera for I new city well, a park tile and the school location. ··we own balf·a·lot, SO by UiO fee~" Neal explained. "We planned to buy the othtr haU of the lot, but it's not for sale." Wednesday night, the city's Parks Commission rt:commendtd buyilli two 50 by 300-foot Iott •t lhe end of Calle Independencla, twice the area originally proposed. ctty1 expenditures lOf purchase ol the -land and development oI the site are estimated at $48,000 the first year. The school district has a federal grant for m,tXX> to launch the bl-lingual, pre- school program the fint year as a pilot program for the rest of the nation. District officials expect nearly $500,000 in federal funds for the program over five years. Sanchis said the larger lot size would make it possible for the Office of Economic Opportunity, which currently leases a Colony reside:Jce for a recreation center, to move Into the school building. "The OEO office pays a. pi!rson to run the recreation program. That person could help our program and also ha ve a better recreation facility. The school building could also be used for a. com· munity meeting place at ni1ht," Sanchis said . "I think the whole project is a fine example of governmenlal cooperation on three levels," Neal added. He said the city would probably sell lls or iginal well aite Of\ Calle Madera and shirt the proposed •ell tc Calle hidependencia. "'Tht new site Is really much better becau1e of size and locaUon:· Neal said. "' i t Fountain Vallev . Budget Approved A $7.2 million operating budget for 1970-71 was approved Thursda y night by trustees of the Fountain Valle y School District. The new budget shows an increase of about $700,000 over the 1969-70 figure for day·to-day operations, but is not expected to alter the district's current tax rate ol $3.50 per $100 assessed valua~ ti on. o. >-+---~-7th Victim Found Kennedy's pet falcon escaped July 8 and the boy broke his right wrist fallin1 from a tree when he tried to rtlrtt•e him. 1\vo days later, the bird was cap- tured in Cohasset, about 60 miles across Cape Cod 8,ay, near Boston. They appeered 1bursd1y in the juvenile stS&ion ol district court and received a stern lecture from the judge, who con- tinued their cue along with those of 100 other juveniles -all re~edly first offenders. like Kennedy and Shriver -for a year without ftndlng . I • SAO PAULO, Bra.ill (AP) -Another woman was found strangled to death today, and police expreae belief she may have been the seventh victim of a "maniac" who has been on a killing tpree in this buge metropoll1 for the put few weeU. DAILY PILOT OlloUIC>!" COAST l'U•ltiffl1'0 (OMl'AtrtT -..bert H. W1-4 ,_lftiol •t'MI ,,,.,..,,... Jo(k J:. Cwrl1y VIU l'r.-tltlWll •114 Yt'·""" Mlnlf'1 n.,,,,,, Ket•ll M• .... I .. El- Al1 ~ Oir•i" war o._, c-.1., 1•1,.r Al••rt W. l1tt1 .U1«t.r. t:••I« H11tl .. N1 ..... Ill Offtu 17175 lttch lowlt vt • .. M1lllr19 ,._._.,, .. : ,,0 , ler 1•0, 'J641 Otller OHic" LffUllll ••1cri: Uf ".,"' A-, C.11 -•: Jiii Wet a.y Ml'M ,.._i hrO>i J't'U W..1 a1t"1 ~...,,.,., 1 ltfl (M_....: Xl5 ...,,fl 1!1 ~If.el Young Kennedy took a taxi to Cohasset From Page 1 YIPPIES ... Terrace In Tomorrowland, sinain& the Mickey MOUR Club son&. L.ate In the e.ftemoon Lhe Ylpples took over Tom Sawyer l1Jand, chuing many of the tourists o!f the attraction and raising a Viet Cong flag on the island's fortress. Disneyland officials. said members of Utt group passe<! around marijuana cigan:IJI on the l.sland and a se<:urlty guard reported seeing a naked man on the Island. Jack B. Linquist. Disneyland director of m1rketln1, said the encounter on Main Street beg•n whe.11 "O!le of the rin1leader1 swung at an orflcer." "The Dlmeyland security contingent and area police did an eictllent job in quellfnt the dl!turbancea, '' he said. "It's a aharne thlt such a small group I hu to ruin It for the othett, but we had lo think of the safety of our,..,..,, .. ht .Ulod, .,We are goln1 to eaforce a rtiul1Uot1 prohlbUin& Jon,c-h1lrs rrom the pan . We dldn 1 want to do II, but this Incident maku It a mwit." 'Securjly police made• complete sweep of the pirk after the cuet!a had left to rout. any Ylpples left after the crowd w11 escorted lrom Dlme)'l1nd. The Ylpplet ttlfOOped out.Ide tbe pork and threw rockJ end debris at officers before headlnc for the Dllneyland Hotel where they were contronted by more police unttt. 'Ibey finally diJpened •t l :IO p.m. 'n'9 only olher Lime lhe perk cloled early was a memorial 1t1ture follow1na the 1sau1tn1Uon of John F. KeMedy In 1981. From Page 1 LINDA ... happened to anyone Inside?" Kanar~k asked. "Of course t cared." "Weren't tbete your friend& who were in there, Charles Wet.son, Sus1n At.klns and Patricia Krenwinkel'!" "Yes.'" "Didn't you run into thti house to protect them?" "No, I ran tow1rd the house but I didn't go into lt.'' On Thursday Kanarek hid just uked Mrs. Kasabian whether she looked through a window or the house th•t night last August when without another word he gave her the. picture. It showed Miss Tate, clad only In panties , lying on her right 1tde with her hand extended above her head. She was covered with blood and there were clearly vi sible knife wounds In her ob- viously pregnant body. Mrs. Kasabian had testUled prevlou1ly she saw three slayin&s al the estate outllde the house last Aua. t but that she dkl not wltneu the kUtln1 of Miss Tai. end hair ltyllat Jay Sebrina In the llvlng room. Mrs. Kasabian'1 gasp was audible throuatiout the courtroom. She burst into tears and could not spuk. She was lead off to an anteroom w~lle the l1wyers conferred in the judge'• chambers. Then the trial"'' rtcested overnight. K•n1rek decllnfld to tell newsmen why he 1uddenly handed the girl the picture. Another defense l1wyer, P • u I Fltr.1erald, u ld he believed Kanarek ~·as "Lrylng to show she w11 actually In the house . contrary to her telllmony." "The jury will have to decide whether lhe shock she dlsplayed was a thock of recognltloo or a shock of horror 11 1 blood¥ ph<ltoaraph," Fl!zcerald said. CONTINUES H1111edon Offlrs "OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION," Compl1te Occasional, Dining & Bedroom, ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS! • Drexel Features "ESl'ERANTOS " Entire Collection. • H1rlta91 Rlduces Its Compl1,. "MADRIGAL" CoRKtlon. HENREOON & HERITAGE UPHOLSTERY 15 ~~ OFF DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7ed 111111/l!lurl. " NEWPORT BEACH 1n1 Wottclllf Or., 6;42-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Profe11lonal lnt1r).,. Ooslgn1,.. AnOobl-11>-NSID 3•s Nortfi Co111 Hwy. 49~51 OPIN ,RIDAY 'TIL 9 """-Tell ..._ M_, llf 0..,. C....., IMD-12U _____ .;-..;-;.-;:-;..:;;:;;;;-;.· ~;:.;...;...;..;·.-;.,;-;..;.· .;-;..;-.-;..;-...;..;..;.. .... __ ...,.,._...,~~..;.;.~;...--Z=;.:;..:...;,,.;:;::; __ . ___ ;... " ,, • 1: --..... * • ..... • .... ,rld117, Auousl 7, 1970 H DAILY PILOT :; Congress Passes Postal Reform Bil-I ' ' . Land mark Bi ll S ent to Pre sident WASHINGTON (AP) -CongreM has re.leased its grip on the U.S. mails afler nearly two centuries and the Post Of[lce looks forward to shedding handicaps that prompted one postmaster general to say the department was in "a race wlth disaster." More lhan two years after a presiden- tial commission recommended it, and more than one year after the legi1laUon was introduced, Congress sent Thursday lo iordidont N!IOll I blll cr .. U.g an indepeodenl !>.:!; l'oatal servlc.. The White House-balled the occaston as ... landmark day and a landmark piece of teaislatlon for usen of the postit aervice and postal workers" and said,!(lxon would sign the measure next week. tt provides for establishment of the corporate-like federal agency wlthin a year and a rttroactlve eight percent LAGUNA'S. E RN ESTO LABORS AT HI S F ESTIVAL BOOTH Playing #le Name Gem• and Tea1ing the Tourists Meet Mr. Sculptor Popular Artist Ernesto Last Name Now Reality By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL 01 ni. O.llr 111i.1 lltff Ernesto is a Sculptor. The court decreed it. Ernesto finally got bugged by too many people asking for his last name. He didn·t have one. So he gave in, went through the legal name-change pro. cedure, and wound up as Ernesto Sculptor. He's a popular exhibitor-craftsman at the Festival of Arts. By lhe day he slts in his booth, turning out rings, teasing tourists, and smoking his ever.present thin cigars. In fact , his busine.~s cards are nothing but Erik cigar packs with his name embossed on them. \ Ernesto came to the Festival n 1965, after living in Laguna ior a year. Now, in his sixth year at the e'lhibit, he still keeps curious watchers happy. "Can I sell you some of my junk?'' he quipped as one lady passed by. The junk can cost up to $2,500. Rings in bronze begin as low as $5. He began sculpting 3.f years ago with ceramics. "But it broke too easily, so:·. now I do everything in metal." Ernesto, now 48, has 11een business flourish since he came to Laguna from hia native Cuba via a short stop in Massachusells. "When t came to Laguna, T could only sell two rings a week. People were afr&id to buy them from scuJptors, · because they weren.._ sure of what they were gelling. "But competition has helped. With all the other ringmakers around. all kindi'I • of people are buying rings. Now I sell Nix on about 10 rings a day." Using a welding toreh and some other specially tools, Ernesto can put a ring together in three to four minutes. "But for a good gold ring, It takes about two hours, because 1 have to weigh the gold. One ring took me four hours to finish.'' Sitting in his small booth at the Festival, Ernesto chats with many of the Festival visitors who walk by. From their expressions and comments, they are obviously pleased. And so is Erne5to. "It makes rne fee l proud to think all these people are interested in my work." You might say Ernesto Sculptor has lived up to his name. Colonel Sanders Quits F irm Post LOUISVILLE. Ky. (UPI) -Col. Harland Sanders, whose white goatee and black string tie became synonymous wiUt the "finger-llckln good" Kentucky Fried Chicken he promoted, has stepped down as director of the corporation. Sanders, 80, sold the franchising business he built from nothing for $2 million in 1964, but had remained on as a diiector of the corporation and goodwill ambassador for the firm. The ftew owners, Kentucky Fried Chicken Corp., cited Sanders' age a:nd his outside business int.erests as the reaBOll for his resignation. Nixon :Seive rs Not Good En.ougli, fo r City The sewers of the Westcm While House ttnd of neighboring Cyrus Sh-Ores have been offered f r e c to tbe city of San Clemente. But the city doesn't want them-just yet. The network-which cost the original deVeloper of the posh resldentlal area aLmost $100,000 and the residents about $8,~ave some problem!! which must be . repaired before the city wlll take them over. ty Engineer Phil Peter told coun· cil'm 's week that lmpt:llcrs- (bomllcr ma · s which Improve the flow ) are falling apa nd need repair!!. Until tho job ls done, e added, he recommends thal the M!W tay in private owner11.hip. The dedication of lhe :;;yslem, 1 com• mon practice, Is being offered by th8 Cyprus Shore Community A!m>Clatton, which has borne the cost of maintenance since the system's construction. Tying into that network are mains from the While House Compound. ln offering the dedication this week, Assoclatioa, President· Roy Dickson said the homeowners 'have personally paid for maintenance of the gystem for 10 )'tara, including recent expenses to clean mains and teal the Joints. If and when San Clemente accepts !he network, the maintenance duUe1 will TeYert t.cr"lhe city with t fte -Shores residents paying lhe fees through e1lsting property tax. Dtckson stressed that the sewer gystem wu built to serve an area four Umes as great 11,s the Cyprus Shore C1'1lony U.sell. pay hll<e !or Po•lal worken. n also makes likely an Increase kl tlrtt class postage rates -from the lil..cent to an eight-cent slamp -early next year, The new Poetal Service will be run by a nine-man, pteSidentially~appoinlcd board ol 1overnor1 who will select a postmaster general end d e p u t y postmaster general. Rates will be set not by Congress as for lhe past 181 years, but by a five·member rate commission wi~ the approval of the board of governors. The postmaster general, frequently tn the past a political handiman of the president rather than a working bead of Uk! mail system, will be removed from the Cabinet. The new system is designed to modernize and streamline delivery ot the mails, and eventually to eliminate the huge deficits that have been an annual feature of the Post Office 6udget for the past 16 years. Rather than going to Congress for higher wages, postal employes will bargain with the board of governors through their unions, which will have all rights given to labor organizations in private industry except to strike and to form a union shop., Postal manage- ment, rather than going hat·in·hand to Congress for money to c on s t r u c l buildings and buy equip'ment, can issue up to $10 billion in bonds. Who's a Clow1a? DAILY P)lDT lflfl,,.. i 1, Seats big enough for five big people. ! 2, Over 12 cubic feet of luggage •pace. 1 3 , Steel cargo guard in trunk. 4 . RuSl fighting Hu•h-and-dry rocker panels. 5 . Inner fenders, front and rea r, to protect the ouler fenders. 6 . Low profil• tires on 14" wheels. 7. Springs computer matched to weight of th& car. 8 . 140-hp Six or 200-hp VS. "Unbelievable," is the reaction of Coconut (right), ~year-old clown fqr Ringlin~ Rros.·Barnu1n and Bailey Circus, as his sidekick, Coco the Clown, is tapped as an honorary DAILY P1LOT carrier boy. • •• I ' The honest-to-goodness carrier boys are ll·year.()Jd Costa Mesans Bob Maurer (left} and Ron McDan· iels, who got a lesson in circus makeup from Coco. For more clowning around. see Page 8 . • ,;_.\ rs 9 . Magic·Mirror acrylic lacquer finish. 10. Automatic ignitio n key alann. 11. Rear windows that roll up and down. 12. Foot-operated parking brake. 13. Glove compartment tbat Jocks. 14. Body by Fisher. Your Chevy dealer may still have some left. But you better hurry, because he's offering 5ummer clear· a nee deals.on all new Novu in stock. Putting you first. keeps us first. NovaCou~ • Tiit 1tta1111/11(tu,,r'.t JUftt.Jttd ,,,tall IJ'lcl!J, ltlc/1idln1fµ/trt1/1.td1t1 ta mJ 111!"'"' iNl1tr 11•111 1111/dcl• prtporatiOll char1c1, wrr• rrJwcrd $IJ9 ••wrtJI '"0111 1 •· ranee savings now.· ou're back on, let ·ngs Time. II I I I I I \ j DAllY PllOT . Landon stl'Ollvnan W•lto• co ...... . lkn is lootlnJ! for an attrac\lve •lllile ~ with enouih sinew w cract concrete over his head and help lllll bis dumbbells. The 45- year-o1d Cornelius, who heaves on tht staJ(e. said she will "need to wield a sled.iebammer to crack dibs of conc:rete across my head." ·•'Above all. she must be sinile, '' be said. "I've bad enou,;b trouble with jealous husbands. I just want someone who is nke to look at and allle to help me carry my dumb- bells. u • Police art Oft the lookout fM a ~ Briton who toku daL"' ti1ftt' stroUt Mer a la«. A police spok.ufrklft mid t.ht man WGS sen bv uoo pogs111g motori.ftt. "'lt mwt be the hot ~a.the-r," the spokcennan said. • Somethin2 is crooked at Louis- \rillt City Hall -its tbree-sto'ry century-old to"•er is Jeanini four inches, officials say. L•rry Met· l ingly, superintendent of public l)roperties~ said be wasn't worried about it. however. "If the tower has only leaned four inches in 100 years. I can't see how there could be much danl!er." ~· said. • 1\\•o trained monkeys, Lab.In and Liselotte, set off a burglar alarm in their caie in a Maimoe, Sweden pet shop \Vednesday night. Police found 1\.\'0 youngsters trying to steal fi sh from an aquarium. • T~ wreckage of 7.680 car11 wo.s acattered on the Son Diego rretwa11 \Vedne11day but unly uoa Highwa.y Patrolmen were need.ttd to c/.tar ;1 away. The urrecked vehiclts were toy roe· ing mod.ttL~ which jell off a de· liver11 tntck. • Robert Grqory, 32. of Bradwell, England was injured wben thrown Crom a speedinJ? baby carriaj!'.e. oolice said. Gregory was taltlng part in a village race. • S•m Mo rris, heaa of a n.QJ:'Ql London shoplifting firm. advertis- ed in the Times for retired. con- victed shoplifters. He said he wants to learn from the pros the secrel.! of their trade so he can better design security measures for his clients at the shopWting stage. The 11cript for a movie being shot in downtown Antwerp, Bel· gium la.st week calltd for po- lice to break up a demonstra· tion . The real police didn't grt the u;ord . They brnke up lite dt· molt$trotion cr11d wrre about to to.kt moviem<1ke1 Robb" De He rt ti to jail uihen they discovered ~ their mistake. l • Otto Klemperer, noted German· Jewish conductor. took out Israeli citizenship Tuesday, the Ministry of Jnterior announced. KJemperer, 85, also holds Swiss citizenship, He bas been living in Zurich since HiUer's rise to power in Germany. He plans to take up residence here. Governor's Orders Troopers to Halt , ' Rock Festivities 11 Ualted Prt.n later.1do11I Gov. Dewey Bartlett had sent Ital~ troopm lb JIOP • rock fe!llval planned "" Ibis weeUnd ...,. Sulphur, Oki ... and Mu E. Sulcer, 1pon.sor of the festiv1t, was mad . "All thole geslaJ)O al the 11ate." Sulcer said Thursday after troopen cleared oul the 1ite of tM rock festival. •·You would think it wu bell HiUer day." Firebombing Continuing In Ohio City LIMA Ohio (UPI) -Sniper ftn! and fittbombina: hit this northwe!tern Ohio city of 55.000 again Thursday lor the S«Ond nigh t in a row. Nobody was reported injured. A Molotov cocktail destroyed a linoleum and furniture store and 20 ar· rests for curlew violations v.'ere made . Police said the gt1nlirt:, from rifles and small arms, was aimed at store windows. National guardsmen called into Lima afler a Negro woman's kilting touched off racial disorders Wednesday .,..·11\ stay for the weekend to patrol the souihslde. The 500 guardsmen, all 80 city policemen and sheriff's deputies from l? other counties kept all persons off the streets as an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew was extended indefinitely. Col. J . E. P. McCann. adminislrative assistant to the Ohio National Guard adjutant general. said the troops woukf stay to ensure against a flareup of trouble. '"\\'e expect to bt here at least until Sunday nigh!.'' McCann said . Police: said the sniper fire, which lhey first encountered Wednesday night alter dispersing a gun-carrying mob that started downtown, came mostly from darkened windows or rooftops. The \'iolence followed tht> killing of Mrs. Christine Ricks, 40. who tried to stop two white patrolmen from arresling a black youtb blocking a street with his bicycle. Police said the \\'Oman grabbed patrolman Glen Pierce 's revolver and began firing at him . She was fihOI dead by hia partner, Ted Boop. During that first night o{ \'iolence, five persons v.·ere wounded, including three pol\cemen. Seven others were ar· rested. Eight fires were set and six polict cars hil by snipers. r Severa l suburbs joined in ordering a curfew for Thursday night and Mayor Cbri6:tian Morris continued the ban on the sale or gasoline and carrying Gf guns. ABM Showdown Set Wednesday Y.'ASHINGTON (U PI ) -A Senate showdown on the Safeguard antiba\Ustic missile system (ABM ) has been set for next Wednesday, with. opponents believed to be one or two voles shy of victory in their effort to block expansion of the system. The opposing sides agreed Thursday, the first ann iversary of last year's dramatic 50 to 50 lie vole on the ABM, to end th.is year'' debate at 3:30 p.m . tEDT) next Wednesday. The key vote will be on an amendment by Sens. Philip A. Hart lD"Mich..), and John Sherman Cooper !R·Ky.), to confine the ABfl.1 to the existing two sites in Montana and North Dakota and bar construction of further installations. Headcounlers on both sides believe anotht:r cliffhanger i.& in the makin1. It didlll look Ilk• Sulcer would get his resuvat. but another festival was in full swing before It began near Jackson, Mich., and a federal oourt ap- proved 1 10-hour festival in Philadelph.ia on Sunday. Officials 1n a Pennsylvania township were trying to halt a rock fe$tival there planned for Aug. 2.S-30. Promoters of the festival near Jackson had expected 60,000 young people - each paylng $15 for three days o{ music by 21 bands -but Michigan state police said up to '10,000 persons had come to the 39-acre Goose Lake Park Thursday night -U hours before the first band was Co begin today. Police said lS or 20 of the new arrivals v.·ere arrt:Sted on narcotics chargu, but I.here were no serious incldent.s. A ~ man private: police rorce kept the peace, and watched a 12-foot-hlgh electrified barbed wire fence to keep out usy riders. The Strawberry Fie.Ids Festival begins today in Morport, OnL , 110me 90 miles northeast or Toronto and 150 milea from its original location in Moncton. New Brunswick. Canadian i m m i g r a t i o n authorities are turning back thousands of Americans at I.he border , Queeta of Stnog VPI T"""°"' I After a U.S. district court judge ap- proved a Jl)..hour rock festi val in Philadelphia Sunday rt.ate and local governments asked an appeals court to reverse the decision. Gov, Raymond P. Shafer said he feared "serious harm" from the festival and said the promoters could be jailed for violating a slate The air \\'as rare in a park in Philadelphia Thursday as Debra WoU , 17, was chosen as Miss Smog America 1970 durin& a non ceremony. law which prohibits commercial concerts on Sunday. ~ The promoter of the festival is Peace, lnc., an organization "'"'hich raises cam· paign money for peace candidates. The chairman of the fund d.istribu· lion committee is former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark. In Oklahoma, Dislricl Court Judge Bob Ho"'"·ell ordered the site of the proposed Uruguay Band Kidnaps U.S. Agriculture Expert Turner Falls Rock Festival·near-Sulp,hur-MONTEVlD"E'O, ruguay (UPn--::. padlocked Thursday after Bartlett told him the festival would be held Saturday Tupamaros terroristl kidnaped an and Sunday despite an injunction against American agriculture expert from his it. Jaboratory today only hours before the BarUett mobilized 300 Natio n a I ransom deadline for another American Guardsman and sent 100 Highway d · ·u d 1 Patrolmen to the tiite of the festival a viser and a Braz1 an ip omat ab- in southern Ok1ahoma's Arbuck1e Moun-ducted a week ago. tain and closed highways leading to The U.S. embassy rePorted that Claude Turner Falls. L. Fly, 65, of Fort Collins, Colo., was taken from the lab shortly before 6 Panther Gives Vivid Account Of 'Last Ride' NEW HA VEN, Conn. (UPI) -Black Panther George Sams Jr., who has plead- ed guilty ta murder charges in th• death of one pariy member , said Thurs- day he had been ordered to shoot Chicago Panther Fred Hampton. Sams, a· key prosecution witness in the murder conspiracy and kidnaping trial of Lonnie ~1cLucas, was to be cross-examined loday in Superior Court. McLucas is accused in cormection with the May 21 , 1969, death of Alex Rackley. an alleged police informer whose tortured body was found in a Middlefield swamp. Sams and anoth.er Panther, Warren Kim- bro, have both pleaded guilly to se<:ond· degree murder in the sla ying. • Sams said he "'as present wh en Rackley was tortured "'"'ilh boiling waler, taken for a ride and shot twice 'o'l'ilh a .43-<:aliber pistol. "We went on a road." Sams testified. "The next thin~ I knew, we were pul!inJ: over. I gave Warren the gun and said 'These orders from national -ice him: ''The gun went off and I seen Rackley spin around and hit the ground ," Sams continued. He said he sent , McLucas back t& make sure Rackley was de.ild, and the Panther fired a. second shot into Rackley's head. a.m. PIYI', as he talked with. a grou p of Uruguayan agriculture specialists. An anonymous telephone call to a local radio station said Fly was taken by the Tupamaros and spirited to the seme hiding place where American ad· viser Dan Mitrione, 50, Richmond, Ind., and Bra zilian consul Aloysio Dias GOffifdC-41:-were tieinfherd. The teJephone call said that "jmtice'' 'o'l'ou1d be dealt to all three men If the government did not agree• by mid- night tonight to release an estimated IflO political prisoners in Uruguayan jails. Uruguayan President Jorge Pacheco Areco has stood firm in his refusal to deal with Tupamaros, a left-wing band named for a Peruvian Inca, Tupac Amaru, who led an unsuccessful revolt against the Spanish in the 18th ctntury, Fly moved to Uruguay last January under a private contract with the Uruguayan government after leaving the teaching staff of Colorado State Universi· ty. The ~mbassy said he is a native of Fulbright, Tex., and is employed by International Development Services, Inc. Sunshine Scatters Showers Few Rainswrms As Nation Basks in Pleasant Weather Callfot'tlla U.S. Awaits Hanoi Move In P~i s PARIS (UPI) -AmbllNdor David K. E. Bruce brouaht a whole niW aeritt ot peact propouls ta Parl1 bu~ non1 will aurface in either publie" or leel'et ne,otlaUona until Hanoi aive.s aometbln1 tn return foe President Nh:on'1 ap. polntment of a ran.king ne1ot11tor, an authoritative diplomatic tource aald to- day. The diplomat avoided using the term ••coalition government" in di&cuasing the new and as yet unexplored possiblliliea foe peace, but he mentioned a "sharing of power" that could be diSC\Wtd by Hanoi and U.S. negotiators without the parlici#J.tion of Sailon negotiators. The diplomat &aid the United States would make no attempt to resume aeertt negotiations with Ha noi untll W1shin1ton ta saUsfied it ii dealing with a qulllfied negotiator. 1 American negotiators are confident Hanoi will soon send one of their ranking negotiatora back to Paris, pos!ibly within a few weeks, the diplomat said. The dip!Oiltt noted that the mMt senior member ol Hanoi 's negotiating team in Paris is Nguyen Minh Vy, "who is No. 3 or 4, depending on how )'ou count." 'l1le United States is not ruling oul contacts with Vy "011 the technlcali!y of his rank" the diplomat uld, but he noted that in the eyes of American negotiators "he has never shown that he la anything more than 1 repeat-the- cld-positioo euy'" The diplomat said A m e r i c a n negotiators would happily hold secret talks with Vy, but first they would have ta have "AOme indication that Vy is more than someone who almply (ives statement.s when someone pt1.11bes but- toft." _Only 1 Sextuplet Remains Alive ROME (UPI) -The survivor of 10- tuplets born Tuesday to the wife of a $40-a-week factory worker drank bu first mllk today through a tube runnin& into her Incubator, Doctors at Umberto Hospital said the g:irl, who weigh.s 28 ounces, was fed several grams of breast milk and that her condition remained stationary. They iiid her ch.ances for survival were slim. Anna Maria Petrone, so tiny ahe fit in a doctor's hand , was the last re- maining child of Antonio and Loredana Petrone, who became the parents or sextuplets Tuesday night after 11 childless years . Early apartment dwellers had to live with flames. You don't fo4.tV 1nd S•lll'dlJ. Hll ll llldtV ... C~l.l.lt lt<l'IDt•llU"I ••n•~ ,,.,,,,, ti 10 1• lnl111d 11mMt1tv•11 '''""• lrot!I •1 to N. Wtllr '"""'''"''' 67. IJ.S. Summarv 1.0$ ANGfLl:S fVil'I) -,.~ ft•· flollwlde WhlfW• 1Uml"ll N I ) or .. IN..C b'f' Ii!& IJ,$, WH tlwr 8\ltH U' "!Nwn,, 11,1nnv w11•"8• con!l"llfd to dl)mlnl!, Ill• n1!I011 lodlV w11n ani, ,. ,_ •tt•1 ot ~1rr1~1r111o<1, in an all-electric apartment Step Inside any a\1-eltctric Medallion the ~fun, fmh loo% of the draperies Apartment. You'll see why they' rt set-ind the upholstery. That's because kitchen gleams. Why? Bcuusc Now the bathroom. Tum tht:rt: art: no by-products of on the ~ilttr tap. Note how e.lectric. M1ny Med1nion Ap.artmenta also provide electric 1ir conditionif11. The rent? Like Medallion Homes, Medallion Apartmt:nts are also tvail .. able in 111 price ranges. You can see why more people are choosing to live Sut1, ltlnot1. jllli!IOA'I' Tide• \erond 'l•t~ U SI • ''" ) 1 J,,.rt w•rt Klltere<i '""""'" •ncl 1"'11'Mff"lotm• ''""' '"' nerlftftn G•tl! 1>11•ru. 1no11 111• Mln+u l1>11I V1t••1 "' 1111 Saut11t11t Ttoe•t at• "'•r• WM• !t'l\lnOtrttllf"'' ovt r tt>t ~O(~i••· Coot '"''1tl'ler ro..,ert<I l~r u,,.,., ..,,.,. WfJI IO !II• '1<1•1!•~ll llt!rJt•O ti>-f•tlV rol(lt~lnt "°"" 111;1 •rnlt-IY rebOu<tlltd tJl>(l~r '"' w••mtl\ or •ht Au~~•I tun ... .OI ting the trt>nd. Notice how the • electric hut is clun hut. combustion to dirty wills the electric water heater gives and windows. No opprr:ssive · you hot water-right now. kitchen ht.ill, either. Electricity heats Enter the bedroom. Ste the 1epar1te the 1ood cl"n lif•-•l•ctrially. 1 $1<.,.-.j t~w I 11 "·"'· J 0 r i.11 1\1•~ I' l•I! low ........ tA1U•OA'I' '"" •rw1 • ot 1 .,.,, ,,_ •ll• II •04 '""' 1 """'· • , 4 4 • m. 1 I I M11 m JD Slit I ,. o ,.., Silt tD,ft 11.m. M1ft~ llOttfl)n.I 01 ,..., M>tJl~ft•" e•~tnt l<IW lllt l-•.ll\11'", (l\n<b '" no•r tht 10011 .. •111 ,,..,. wl\llt 1~••11~ l 'tll tt fM ..,.,,ll'lwtal rtmt lnH flo!, the food -not the kitchen. he:1t dial? You can only hive room- Walk into the llving room. Notice by.room temperature control i£ it's sa:; Southern California Ediaon ' • r ' I. I I ' ·-~........--.~-.·- VICTORY KISSES FOR TENNESSEE'S GORE Da~ltr Nancy, Wlfo Poullno Short Triumph Gore Facing Battle From Nixon Forces NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Democrat John J. Booker Jr. Sen. Albert Gore, an anti-Viet-in the general election. Dunn 's nam war Democrat, faces the closest opponent, Nashville in- toughest fight of his Jong dustrialist Maxey Jarman, political life against Rep. Wil-refused to concede, com· liam Brock, a pro-Nixon plaining of "voting inequities" Republican, in the Nov. 3 in Memphis. general election. The Senate race wilt be Gore. who calls himself the watched nationally as an in- No. 1 White House target of dicator of Southern support the off-year elections, won for President Nixon's Vietnam renomination handily o v e r and domestic policies, both op. four opponents in Thursday's posed by Gore and supported Democratic primary. by Brock. · . Vice President Spiro T. Gore, seeking his fout1h six Agnew already has promised year Senate term after 14 to campaign for Brock who years in the House, caned defeated cowboy s,lnger Tex for the "support or all Ten. Ritter and J. D. Boles, peren-nesseans., De m o c r a t s , ln- nial cand\£late, for the GOP dependents, Republicans" jn nomina1ion._ ____ ~~ ____!he_gfill~on... Dr. Cecil Pittard of Knox· Brock said of Gore• s ville was unopposed for the primary victory: ""I don't see American party nomination. how an il)CUmbent who has Winfield Dunn, a Memphis served in the Senate as long df!;ntist who drew heavily on as Gore earl consider himself hometown support, won the a winner when he b!U'1?ly Republican nomination for received 50 percent o( the governor in a minor upset vote." The total was 51 per- that will pit him against cent. U.S. SALT Proposal Registers With Russia VIENNA (UPI) -The Soviet Union has shown "a posiUve interest" in an American plan for curbing the two nations' missile arsenals, dlpl9matic sourees said today. Russian and American diplomats met today at the U.S. Embassy for the 30th fonna1 session of the Strategic Arms Limitation Ta I k s (SALT). The session lasted 40 minutes with an hour of i n f or m a 1 conversation af- Rail Dispute Plan Eases Out Firemen WASHINGTON (AP) -A presidential emergency board has recommended railroad firemen 1s jobs gradually be abolished as a means of set- tling a long-standing labor di!pute. The White House disclosed Thunday the board called for phasing out the job< Of most railway firemen. The recommendation wen immediate approval of the Whit. HDUBe. The board said Ille NaUO!lal Railway Labor Coor......., "-iJlch represents more than 130 railroads with 95 percent of the nation's track, is on the verge bf a sttl.Jemeni-wtth.the Unlte:d "n-ansport.ation Union which bargaJns for t h e firemen. The settlement would com- bine the duties of firemen and brakemen under a new job classification acceptable to lhe railroads and union. No new workers would be classified as firemen but no firemen would be fired. The classifica- tion would be eliminated gradually through retirement and death. GEIST FOR FALL THINK wntct1Pf •LUA R1WPOm1t 1NN tcrwards. The American plan - possibly the most important single event since SALT began here April 16 -was presented July 24 by the chief U.S. delegate, Gerard C. Smith. Although less than a draft treaty, it suggested that the talks focus on a numerical limitation on s tr a t e g i e missiles and bombers, a strict limit on giant missiles of the Soviet SS9 type, and a low- level curb on antiballistic missiles (ABM). The three meetings since then have been taken up mostly with Soviet probing of details of the plan. This pro- bing has hen so extensive that, for the first time, experts from the twc. sides have met in smaller meetings, outside the n o r m a I twice-weekly formal sessions, to swap ciuestions and answers. The Soviets have not yet given a definiUve response to the American outllne o r presented a eotm.teroutline of their own, the source said. Ot..;d-:..i..;hr is iOrtiXii! Truth doesn'l than1e with lime. The truths that Christ Jesus taught more than nineteen centu1ies ago can hive the saTne effect todly they had tilon. They tan cl\ange the course of the world. It's up lo us. We have to understand what he ~ught. to put these Intensely practical teachinas Into use in our daity lives. If each Or us does this. It will have 11 marked effect upon tht world. Hear Howard H. Irwin, C.S.. a membtr of The Christian Science Board of lectureshi~ speak on • "Christianity Is For Today." You and your friends ire most cordially invited to this free pt1bllc lecture. Ovistian Seim lecture S1t11n:l1y, A11t11•t I, ID A.M. ·--.,_ -, ... ," ..... 4 Friday, Au9urt 7, 1970 DAILY~ IS Pact Creates Furor Refugees Warned: Fulbriglit Irate Over Spain Treaty Stay Out WASHING TON (UPI) - The ·flit between the State Department and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hU·been deepened by the new~ ly signed m!lliary a n d eainomlc ogr<ement between the Onltecl State> and Spain. Tbe exemtive •creement, llnalluod Tbundaf d e s p I t e acrenuous obJectkms f r o m Russians, Germans Sign .Treaty MOSCOW (UPI) -Fortign mlnlsten Andrei A. Gromyko of the Soviet Union and Walter Scheel of We21t Germany in- itialed today a nonagresioo treaty pralsed as a foundation for nlaxing tensions and building a lasting peace in Europe. Jt was the climax to the most significant diplomacy between the old World War II foes in 15 years. Diplomatic sources said the S o v i e ts agreed to accept a West German disclaimer that the document constituted a sur· rtnder of the right to eventual German reunification. Scheel and Gromyko in- itialed the four-page document beneath the crystaJ chan· deuiers of a marble ball in Spiridooov Palace, a room built by czarsand used by World War ll allies in plan· njng strategy against Adolf Hitler. .. The goal we set before ourselves has a great political importance," Scheel s a I d . ·~the -treaty-will he-lp-tt!ax tensions and provide the pre- requisities for building a last· ing peaee In Europe." Gromyko praised the treaty and said bargaining over a J<klay period had been tough. He said the Soviets were as glad as the Germans it was over. In a statement released as he prepared to board a plane for Bonn at MMCow airport, Scheel added "With this treaty a new page will be turned in relations between the Soviet Union and the Federal Republic of (West) Germany.'' Foreign Re.latlons Chairman J. WUIJ.tm Fulbr~l, arants Spain ecooomlc and mlll!Jry Qlfstance worth aJ:iout $200 million over five years. It in· cludea a Joan to Spain of I& U.S. wanhlpo and & Iv e s America coottrmed use of four mUllJry lm!allatlolrl lh Spain. The Foreign 11.i.ilons Com· miit.e, piqued by the Slate Italy's New Gover1iment Like Old ROME !UPI) -Jialy has sworn in a oew government so similar to the one that fell one month ago that Italians wondered how Jong it would last The only readily aJlP&""I cbanat in the 32nd pool. Fascist government from the 31st was.the-premier. - Fonner Treasury Minister Emilio Colombo, 50, a scholar· ly looking bachelor, moved up to the premiersNp held for three governments by Mariano Rumor. Otherwise. the same rour parties made up the center· left coalition that has ruled much or the past seven-years. They are Colombo's Christian Democrats. who kept 16 of 27 ministerial posts. th e Socialists, six mlni.stries, the Unitarian Socialists, four, and the Republicans, one. .Department's refusal to agree to public dtacus.-.w or the agr~ btfore It wu sign- ed, voted to go ahead and hold public neartnp anyway in the coming w..U. FulbrlPI bad no ·lmmedlate comment on the llanine: but an aide said the 1enat« con-- tinued in stand by his lengthy statement of Wednesday. Jn tbat statement Fulbright contended the agreement ac· tually was a dJ.sguised com- milment for the defense of Spain; that it had been worked out without. due respect for ihe right of the legislaUve branch to examine the alleged commitment; .i.nd that the Stat. Department had be<n CORPUS CHRISTI, Ta. fUPl) -Mayor Jae k Blactmoo ll a.sting riesktenU wbo lled the city In the fece of H-c.ua to llay any from tbtft bomtl for -~oldeys. Many n:sidmta who ""'llht ...,. """'the dorm In dtiea Ind towns "'1 from the coast now are planning to return home became they have beard Ole cleanup opera- tions. are a.tmc.t complete and the Unrn ii bid to normal. Blackmon said this isn't the cue. ... Eftl'Y other wann body is a problem and we don't need them now," Blackmon saldTbanlay. deceiUul In infcrming him---------------- when Ille agreement would be Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough (O.Tes.), -the city and BUmlUlldJnC cunmunilles by hellcopt<r 'llmsdlly and &aid the damage would r 11 n between l500 m!Dion and 11 bUlioo. B1actmoa sakf it would be t:lOO million in Corpus CbrisU alooe. final ivd State Department a i de s actnowled&ed today that at the end of last week con- sideration wu being given to the possibility of agreeing with the Foreign Relations Com· mitt.ee to hold public bearings on the agreement. But on Monday Fulbright made a speech in which he disclosed some information about the ~gree.ment which the State Department subse- quenUy charged constituted a violation of confident la I testimony given the Senate by administratioo offlcia.Js i n July. Crash Binds Family Trio STANFORD (UPI) -Mr. and Mrs. Fred Saas are shar· ing a room in the maternity secUon at Stanford Univenlty Hospital with their baby - and not just because of strong feelings about family togetherness. Saas and his wife both were Injured in. an automobile ac- cident June 16 and the baby was born 17 days later. .. We are sorry she had to find us in such adverse con- ditions," Mrs. Saas sald of the child, Shawnte Elizabeth. Tot Disearded Mother 'Did It for Vs' A spoke.man !or the city's utility cornpeny said only JO percent of the company's c:wtome:rs have baJ their STANTON. Mich. (UPI) -Probate Judge Guy W•u1rw.r power ttstored. Lim i ted _..... power eervict wu expected A l7·year-old girl, married for scheduled a hearing today on to be restored in an the towns a year and a motber for a peti,tion to take custody of hit by Hurricane Celia today a month, offered only this es.-the bitby filed by MOlltcalm except for Port Aramas. planatlon. "Gerry didn1t like The city is still under a being tied down.'' County Sherifr Thom as 9 p.m. to & a.m. curfew and Mrs. Unda Foor had told Barnwall. PJlice man roadb.locb to pr. authorities Tuesday her baby According to authorities, vent looting and wmecessaz:y daughter. Amy, bad been kJd.. Mrs. Foor led authorities off traffic. Police !mve am:ited naped. She was charged with a niral road to· where liWe 14 penom for Jootmc 110Df1 assault with intent to commit Amy WU found JyiDg in seven--Monday'• hurricane IDd • murder -aft.r Ille baby was foot.lilgb com. ot11en !or vlolaUng -.... found, in good cmdiUon, 28·----=--------------=---- hours later in a cornfield where police say she left It. Mrs. Foor told FBI, stale police and local authoritits, she and her 19--year~ld haJ. band, Gerald. had be<n having marital troubles since the child was born. 1be husband was working in Ohio when the baby was reported mlss· ing. All\borities quoted M r 1 . Foor as saying she abandoned the baby "to save my mar- riage." "I did it for us," she said. "Gerry didn't like being lied down." - She was arraigned Thursday and freed on $2,500 bond after demanding pre·trial fl.· aminltion on the d:Large. ··················-······--·-······························-, I .. ~M~ I AYEAR I I AUGUST I I CLEARANCE!: I I I I I I 79e ITEMS STAI JASMINl-low 9"1Wilt ...... """'~ HIBISCUS fvl .. Ito flowers c11 lit nt4 l111i 1onltot, 11eor1•••e. JAP BOXWOOD EUGENIA MYRTIFOLIA OIANGI GAZANIAS-D1l1y flo .. rs 1IH o • do111io9 color 4!1ploy dorl11 'oak of WAX LEAF PRIVET ASPARAGUS FERN "oo• 11 '"""'a ••--1row •• 1111 2 98 8 HY ,.11, .... S.49 IAll Pll flAf , PHILODENDRON LUE DAISY DICHONDRA flATS-Tlrnt te,.ic• op thott •1--,.....,2,.....,G~A~~L~S~P~E~C~LU..~~~S~---I ~."!:lo yoordlchodra lawo orplaota 11w •. 99 c I JUNIPERS ·1v110111• ASH TRll-Htrt'1 th sale II R19.4.9Slarvepleots 2.98 yoo'n •tt• weltl11 lor to ploot , .. , 2 98 I 7 GAL TREES . ? .. 9 S shodttrtt. Feat 1rowlo1. 7.95 • 101•16.95 rw11s1no JUNIPIR -Pictore1q11, •P•li•t co1 tr, 11perll ch1nct1rl11lc1 fonw, d1n1• I TREE ROSES 111•7•95 3.98 &l•rs•y,dKidt4twl1ttoall•roac•11. 99c I SGALWAXLEAFPRMT 3 98 REDWOODTUB-18"111.6.95 3.98 I 1., . .:u • Pints Quarts ........ 1'' 3'' INSECJ__$PRAY I BEST ALL-AROUND SPRAY I FOR ROSES OR SHADI FLOWERS. I $1.000PFf :· ,.._~~~~~~------· Rrstflme on sale ••• sale! •1.oooFF I BONSAI POTTIRY HANGING BASKET· 1 ... l.65 99c . 1 ·lot Hrc ... plot• .. 1 .. 11 ... 1ram fl 49 ~P~E:::':!:'l:::,r'"S~I=-=I~Q~p~--c·o·s·T·A"'MES--.4-1 1 LAWN EDGER 1.49 oa1, on 5 ,000 Sq. Ft. Bandlnl Plush or Blade. Reg. $5.95 now $4.95 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II DAHLIAS . IJtt •P yHr ii rd to with rwou Chcmfttl Cats ng. 79, colon i• Mnle" 1r c11twt11tri C111bt11td 29c 29< l 20FF I OI cot flower. S•• orihodt. rtf· .69 POOfl1 Colan ' I STEER· I 1n•• •ptime & mulching . 4-'l.OO 11 TAMS-Callf1 fayorlto oll or11otl 1hre•, l1t• 1rowf•1 llaNy; H41 to Hf l•••1c1,.1 ltw • Mli•ttHllCt; 0 .. If fMtffry ...... tWHr. 69C I '••'· I FUCHSIA~tptltr , .. ., ..... -foclttl11 I e0Mti•h•ndred1of•ari1tlu.Kffw.11tlto 89c I jewtlofthuhodo 91nl ... I I I I MAllOEllTIS-ltpll tto•l•t• hl1U ,,..., ceamlp 411wWN ,...,., ....... , tlafq-liko flowers. GrOWI txceptl ... llJ wwll .. rcHst. I PITVNIAS-R19. 79c I I I - .~­BEST - Sulfate ot Amm onia Aquarivnt Kit •2.00 OFF . See Our New Canaries FLOWER SHOP Carwtion 79• Doz. ARTIFICIAl HANGINli USKm 4 ...... .95 ("Wlow Baskets" 12''-14· .... 1.98) 1.00 PATIO SHOP SALE Visit our Patio shop .& see our complete line of Patio furniture, Fire logs, Screens, etc. Plush ••• the long 1 .. t1ng, bale need fertlllz:er that gives dichondra or mhttd llW'ftl a •·spring" look Jn the t~ll. Blade ••. a mineral rich, high nitrogen ferllllzer specially formulated for Hybrid Bermuda. Bluegrass, Zoysia and SI. Augustine. Pick tlttt.r end have a green Fill on B1ndlnl. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ... RAPID &RDWTH Sulfate o( Ammonia- Ideal for npid .,..,...m, rich gteeo foli11e a: impro•~d quality for all plaat•• lawa1 a • s1uwnei1 -----·-· SWI &. Stu.a Pellets -•9riokl~ arou.od ,.,. .. •htuhbeiy ... kill •nUlt a ahap- G't'UDi1bt ,.emu Rta.98< ._ __________ ___,. I I I ·-w liAIBI lllDR Sul late ot Ammonia .._ ~ .............. . 59c ••••••• 11801 Hl?bor Blyd., Garden Grove & Anaheim 543-6774 a...,o~ CllDITTllMSA~:lf~okArnorlnnl-11 Grttl'I fftYtft'I OW11 CAdit Plan. . ••!QI~············~··········-~ · 2123 Ncwport Blvd., Co$ta Mesa 646-3925 I j , ----...:::-. .~ . - •• • aAJJ.1{ PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • ole Town Is Losing • A wind of change was ~ed lo breeze lhrou1b S""1 ~ after the June 2 'tleCuon. .. ·- • _, ':IJort ii was no b~ When cbonge ~ .. It 'cam• willl, llM .force o! a tempe5t ·11114 the stx>rm •~• ere till out. Thty will remain out !Or some tirrie. · '£vents hive hl!]lpe1led so quickly that lilUe but confti!ribn uists. Even so, while it is difficult to draw ~uSions at this stage. there are some obvious les· sons to learn. The dismissals o! City Manager Lee Risner and City Attorney James Carnes, whether justified or not, were poorly bandied. Some of the criticisms leveled against Risner, !hat he was high-handed and difficult 1'> approach, may be valid. But even if so, they would not in themselves be sufficient cause to fire him. Charges that he unduly pushed the plans of apart- ment de\'elopers a.re more serious. But It is y~ to be cle&J'b' shown that this was tbe case. 'Carnes was fired a_....,tly because· he stuclc with Risoer. The ·dismissals were~ so hasty that they ·were un- seem!y. II the new voting bloc of Mayor Morton A. Baum ·and councilmen Thomas Hogard and Conway Fuhrman bad laid a p!'OIJU gyoundwork and waill!d un- W 90 days aft.er the election it would have been more proper, more orderly and would have engendered less ill will. . Going arowid the intent of the Jaw that prevent.! rtaff firinis until 90 days after an election by suspend· Ing the officials until the end of lhat period and then dismissing them was a mistake. 1cters. In the face o! these attack< they hive remain- ed reasonably calm. · Residents o! Seal Beach must be ho!>illi that 9!het• will sh-Ow restrain~ too. The entry o! the Lelsure;World management into the uproar doesn't help. The aitua- tion is deterioratirig so tast that there no lonaer are any whmers or losers. The "'hole town is losing . Mapmaking by Comp11ter Fountain Valley has once again taken a ste'I) for- ward that may pave the way for other Orange County cities to take another step into the future. This time city offlcials are checking out the reliability and feasi- bility of drawing city maps by computer. If projections made by a Long Beach subsidiary of McDonnell-Douglas Co11>Qration check out, the city can riproduce its maps -which have to be revised and u~ dated about every three months -far faster-. far more a'curately. and cheaper, than a draftsman could ever accomplish. The updated maps are essential for many operations -streets, zoning, water. sewer engineering and others. . The main hold-up now is the preliminary cost for developing a computer tape which would ~uide a mech· anical dra~·ing ann attached to the computer. The base computer tape cost is Sl0,000, not out of the question for the city. rri the Lon~ Beach finn hasn't yet set the price for add' g changes to the map. These factors should be worked l in the near future. . . " ~ .... ~~ Nevertheless. sympathy also is due the trio that voted for the change. Since they acted they have been tM victims of a vicious campaign against their char• Cootinua1ly exploring new methods to improve city operations and lower the cost is a progressive approach to government that deserveS to be encouraged. H ''IHlS 1$ THE PROSECUTof( .•.. I MEAN TH~ PR£5l~NT.: Real Hippie Movement Soon Wil-l-Die- In one of G.-lt. Olesterton's delightful Father Browu itories, a crimt is suc- ct.SSfuRy Comtnitted by a waiter in an ei-chuive. private club -because the gu• .ad the wailers .... both d......t in tmedoo, aDd cannot be told apart uoepl ~ their actioos and attitudes. ~ismak­Jng the point that people who dress the 1ame' are · looi:l!!d UPoQ the Wile, ~ tiJ they begin to fun<lioo, I lhooght of _ thia gtmy in re- lation to the hippie costume that is so popular among the )'OW!{ today. The hlwi• -bas been • bJessin& to • whole generation of misfits, loeen and rotten eggs. For. the lint time, they are oow able to disguise t.bemsel11es 31 hippies, permitting the hippie· move- ment to take the blame (in the public eye) for . au their ! oeurotic D'LiscoDdJlct. IJN11L THE ADOPTION of this reguJa. tion uniform a few year& ago, the losers had nof,hing 1o identify Y.ith and no place to ltide. They were forced to Lake inWvidual responsibility for th e i r behavior, and were not coodemned as part of a youth bloc. NIM, by the simple subterfuge of adorning themselves with a few beads or belts, they can be their old 09liou.s &elves and pass the onus along to the movement they pretend to belong to. THE RANKS OF the true flower- children have become 60 infiltrated by these "plastic hippies" that I doubt If more than $0 per<:f!l'Jl of the youth wear· Dear Gloomy Gus: HunliQgton Beach city councilmeft and axmc.ilwoman have t.akeli ~ Gn themselves the, rlght to fluori- tilale the city wilt.er supply, there- by foroing thia po<enUally harmful chemical on all the ciliiehs wbether wanted or . no&... I protest this s:mug acliqa. by the city'.s .. dictators." -P.M. ,.... ...._ "'""9ch ._,,.. """" - Wfllr ...... llllf ,...,,.,.,. Sall -............ •-.rt ..... o.Llr ..... ing these costumes have even the rems>test conception of the original prin- clt>les tha.t animated the movement. Or care at all. Sill>PY by. masquerading as hippies, they 'feel theY can &et away wi1h the mo5t' outrapoos oooduct. in violation (){ all ~ hippie beUefs -Jcnawing lbat ttie atraigt>t Public c a n no l ~ between them and the real tbinf and always mistakes mere form for iubstanoe. THIS ~Y THE movement has to die before very loog. In a year or two, only sub teeii-agers will still be affecting the costume, just as they pick up the disc.arded jargon of the adolescenta a coup)f o(·years later. The okter youths remainlng jn coStume will be the ragtag and bobtail of hoodlwns, sadists, oddballs, paranoids and perverts. But, <:Ull.ural lag being what it is, the public will coot.inue to condemn something it calls the ' ' h i p p i e movement" long after its core has disintegrated. For it offers an easy and obvious target, a safe means of discharg- ing aggression and fru stration and anx· iety and bate. ln different ways, the movement bas not ooly been a boon to the misfits, it has been a blessing to the perplei:ed•public, who otherwise might have been rorted to look inward for the.causes of our troubles. For the Back Bay Trade To the F.ditor' I'm going to go for another year but I wou1d sure feel better about it if )'Olll' paper would wake up and get behind the Back Bay trade so we can get a few mud hens out of lhert1 and open up the area to boatin& 11\e the lower bay i.s. You live big splashes to any miagukled birdwatcher who comes by, making it seem like • sman handful of dlasldents are rJifiting tome courageous batue qaJnat a terrible dragon. WM. P. BOLAND JR. B .. l'Nfle Arithmetle To the Editor: I 1101e th>t the AUIUSt 3 ediUon of the DAILY PILO'.I' aplo refers to the propoeod Omie Coun(y -lrviJte Com- J*i11.laod trade o( lipper Newport Bay tidetands as "a trade ol 1$1 acres of county'1>Wned tidelands for f50 acres of Irvine uplands." This llt.11'111ent has been reptalA!d In )'Olll' poper every time you P"blii;h 00 article 00 tlie IUl)jecl. I I SUBMIT i'BAT )'Olll' arithmetlc ls ln error, and that ft' mlsk!adJ lhe public. lt is a well·known fact that the trade agreement calla for dredging out the titre< Islands lo the bay 1nd deposlling the dirt on the bay oho<,., I• become Irvin. property. 'lllese ialaodJ an "" eluded In lh• ao<llled 4lO ocresl Recent ' . , ailho-x _ ' Lttter1 1rom readtrr art welcome. Normally writers should conveu their nussage1 in 300 word$ or les.s. The right to con<Unse letters to f it space or eliminate libel is rese"'t!d. AU let.- ten must include signature and man .• ing address, but names may be with- held on reque.;t i/ 1uffi.cimt rtaSon is apparent. POttTU will nos bt pub- l!<lud. surveys, according to informaUon sUp- plled to · the Board o! Supervisors, discloses the fact that the islands are conalderably smaller than originally deocribed. Thia further reduces the 4lO acres. IT HAS ALSO been establishtd in conrt that the county owns much more th>n 117 eeres· originally deocribed, In· eluding ·North Star Oeach, the 22nd SL · beach and Back Bay Ori•~· All this new lnfo<ll)•Uon bu been plblishtd In your paper, and It can be veMfied elscwbue, yet the misleading statement ta repeated tvtJ')' time. Sharpen your pucli and add qalnl • ELSIE C. KROESCHE Nixon Misspoke Himself at Press Confet•ence Bruce Will Have 'Something Ne~' SAN CLEMENTE -Oootrary to the express language of Presich!nt Nixon last week on the question of a coalition government in Saigon, language gloomily noted in this column and elsewhere, it can now be authoritatively stated that Ambassador David Bruce will indeed have "something new" to offer the other side in Paris. With respect to the enemy's offer of a coalition which could include some elements of the present Saigon govern· ment, but not President 'lb.ieu or Vice President Ky, the !'resident miss Poke at his Los Angeles press confere!K.'t. IN ANSWER TO a rather complicated question, he said ".Vr.'e are opposed to a 'coalition, whether negotiated or im· posed." He dkf not ·mean to say that at all Returning to San Clemente la tar, an aide pointed out the mistake to the President, and Mr. Nixon agreed. What he had meant to say was that the AdmillistraUon Ls opposed to a coalition which does not includf: any elements of t.he present Saigon government. Tlfe distinction is large and makes the •iniportant point that Mr. Nixon dii:1 not mean in any way to imply that the United States was fighting for the proposition that a South Vietnamese government must be personified by Generals Thieu and Ky . FROM THE m tE the Paris talks began, the U.S. position has been to deny North Vietnam any of its political objectives, The President has determined -as of now at least -that we shall not go on and on repeatiJlg tihd fomtutp, which deeeive the American public more than they do tbe enemy. rtor, for lhat matter, would Bruce have taktn the job merely to r~nact the oJd dliirade, What the new negotiator will be able to offer. m8y not go &0 far as the ce&!e.ftre and stand4own advocated but not offered by his precfece<sors. But he will at the out.set give notice that the United States does not insist that Thieu and Ky stay on. But there Is more in the wind than the explanation of errors which a Pres!· dent may make during a press con· ference. Al)l:I lhere are sound reasons why new initiatives are now essential. according to sources here \\'ho should know, SUCCE$ IN THE Middle East gives the PresiQent a chance to go inlo the November congressional elections wi~h a solid foreign policy achievement behind him, provided nothing untoward occurs in Vietnam. On the other hand, SOOJething untoward seems likely tn Occur · just before the elections -unless there iS progress in Paris. . The rainy season will be over In late Stptembtr. and an enemy offensiVe is al hand. ~ That offensive could take place in Cambodia, in Laos, in Vietnam or in all three at once. The Cambodian ex· 'Peditfun, stiJI bOtly defended 3.f the While House, is also seen in the naked logic of Its aftermath as presenting the enemy with a new fron t where defeat for· "ciur side'' cou)d be inflicted with great ease. 111.E DANGER DOES not lie in "'defeat for our side." With great ease, Norib Vietnam could always have taken over Cambodia. The danger ii in American reaction to "Defeat for our side.," and most important in the White How;e fear of this reaction. The danger is that having made the war in Vietnam a war in Indochina, the President will regard a defeat anywhere there as a defeat for him. Mr. Nixon has made himself perfectly -even painfully -clear on the subject of "defeat" He will not, hf: has said, be the ·first President , io preSide over "defeat." He has talked of "embarrass· ment" and ;,hwniliation ," ,himself pr0<- nouncing words which the nation's poli- tical right could throw ba ck into his teeth. THE D'ANGER, therefore, is that of alftnemy success lo which the President Y.i ll feel he must respand by shutting off troop withdrawals qr carrying ~e war to Hanoi or both. That is why the appointment of David Bruce and the decision to: permit him to offer bargaining positions rather than only to make demands may at last -in the lamented phrase -offer "light at the end of the tunnel." . By Frank Mimkkwia 1ud Tom Braden • Japan· After .the 19·45 Atom Bom·bs Thr. follotving is 011t of flvo cotumns written· for the Chicago De· jender in 1945. a few month.! after mail communication.s betwu11 Japan and the U.S. had been re·estabtislted followhig the Japanese su·rrender. My father and mother, now 86 t1ears old, live in Yamana.1hi City. Japan. Father's 1945 letter was from Osaka. where he was then in the export and import b·usiness. T·n thit 25th anni· versary month after V·J day, it is interesting to reod hi$.commenu and to reflect on · how far-wt haw come in thi$ &hort quarter century, The following are excerpts from a letler from my faUler in Japan. A few weeks ago, I had tbe pleasure of reporling that he and my mother and my two sls1ers. who are all in Japan: are alive and we ll. Towards the end o( March, 1945, my father· says, ~1olhE'r aod the younger of my two sisters moved in to the country to get a\\'ay from the bombings. Father rema ined in the city -his home. is oeat Osaka. After that date. he says, "conditions became worse and worse dfty by day, and our life for tilt next rive months was nothing but fear and desperation, trying to es- cape from perpetual hell fire, death and destruction. "AMERICAN AERIAL attacb were B11 George---. Dear Gtl()rge : You alway5 like the male side on courtship problems. Are you some ltind of a woU? Penonally, I think you could team a lot from either Ann Landers or Abigail .Van Buren! silt Dear Sue: Thank& for trying to help me, Sue. But aren't they married? so complete that 90 percent of an cities of Japan with populations over 30,000 were burned and destroyed. You can imagine the conditions: 10 million people without bomes, clothing, or fbod." · The Japanese public, Father says, had no way of knowing bow the war was going. "The hosUllUes ended on Auwt 15. and we got rid of the danger 'of death by bomb attacks. But Uving con-- ditions could not improve in a , ehort time. The truth was concealed by our mllitary government, and even when conditions were. at their worst, the nation was told that we were winning the war. We were told to stand and bear all hardships in order to win. <;We did not grumble if our homes burned, rations became less and Jess to the polil~ of starvation. But when Japan su~ndered and the real situation became clear before us for the f i r s t time, the whole nation was stunned. Desperation. consternation, and anger followed. "PEOPLE WERE NO longer obedient, law.abiding lambs. Distrust of soldiers and government officials and wrath against war leaders burst out all over the counlry. Social order was broken. Everyone ran to attend to his 011.n needs tu-. food and clothing. Control of prices, dist,rlbution routes, etc., were in a meis. Biack markets opened, infla tion started, a,nd prices of commodities went up by lea~ and ,bounds. "'During the war one could not buy az\YUlini except go:vernmeni ratiens, which gave 300 grams ¢ rice a day 8nd veni little-sait and f'itJ'j • saUce, a little vegetables once or twice a week, ~8~ m;:!;:e?~ f°:a~0~ we can buy almost anything at the black market if you. pay the 1prict. Such price.s are beyond the reach of ordinary citizens. Only wealthy people and those who became rich inlWar industries can afford· to enjoy such food. I am neither, and mosl salaried men ·are in the same position. Flag Desecrators', Ha ven Demonstrators and all the rag·tag ele- me.nl of the new revolutiOn set have a bit of precedent for defiling the American nag, at least Ju.st so long as it's done at a. political demonstration . That was the interpretation handed down by the Pennsylvania Suprtme Court in a case involving the st.ale's law on flag desecration. An AmeriCIJ\ flag be&r· In& the Inscriptions "Make LIM, Not War" end "The New American Revolu· Uonarle:f' had been d.iJPtayed al a July 4 Anti·Vletn.'am demonstration at Pennsylvania State Unlvmlty and the ftag bearer convicted of detecratlon. 'Ale high court ruled. however. tMt the &late law "does not apply to any patriotic or pollUcal demonstratron or decor•· tlons" ahd thie defendant "was obviously parlSclpating In • demOnstralloa con- cernin& a political is.sue." THE COUR'l"s WORDS were a far cry from ~lea Sumner's "He must be cold, lndeed, who can look upon its folds rippling in the breeze Without pride of --colDllry"; or Oliver Wendell Holmes' "One Oag, one land, one heart, one haod .,.. one aation :eve.rmore": or Wpodr\>w Wlllon's "The things that the bag stands for 'were created by the e~peflencta of a great· ,people. Everytl)ing -that tt stands for was written by their lives.'' So, off tQ Pennsylvania. flag burners. Slj il'• poUUcal, and you're OK. · Callforllla Jl'eailu't, Service "f.tANY WHO ARE come.red by starvation are going into the new oc· cupations of gangsterism and hold-ups. I am trying to picture the true conditinns. but can never show you a glimpse of it with limited pages and my poor knowledge ol words. In short, the ma· jority of the city population is near starvation, soc\a\ order is broken, law is disregarded, virtue and refinements are non-existent, and all are hungry beasts on the Vt::ry poim of breaking out into riotlna:. City li fe is extremely darig~rous at -present "Under such circumstances I believe General MacArthur is facing real dif- ficulty In trying to edUcate the country for democracy. J apan never enjayed true democraCy and freedom_ for the people. Feudall.sm is in the na~Ol'.l's·blood, flesh, and bones. They do not know what is the real taste of democl'Acy 'iitbough they are now shcuting the slogans of democracy. Most would rather get 100 grams more of rice a day. The desire and aspiration for democracy must begin alter their belly is filled ." I shall quote more of my father's lette r next week. · By S. I. Hayakawa Prtsldeat, San Francisco State College . . ---- Friday, August 7,_ 1970 The •ditoriat pogc of th< Daily Pilot teeka to tnfO'rlli and stim- ula.U f'tadtrs by ptt.tttttino thi.t newfPOPtr'S opinfom and com. ru11tarti on topics of incerest and tilltJificon.ct. by provldlng o forum for the rzprrttion of our rc:oders' opiniom, and by pre1cm.fng tht diverse t'itw- painu of Info rmed obstrvtrs aikl q)okunun o• tot»c.s of tht doy . Roberl N. W .. d. Publisher 1, CHECKING · • UP • . Panel 6Ks - ' ~Reform h . -' ...__ __ ......_~·.,:,Tax 'Plug' G e'k p t d SACRAMEN'J'l)«AP)-An re s romo e Aulmbly -''" bu •I>' • -od • l40 mllllon cw In .1' ~ ,.,.. p~Md 1t1te lnoame tax 1 Baths o-:n .....:,.,~.ntur. day · ~~:'-~:· :;.::.~ ;:;.~· r'k" · eau:ted by the Sen 1 te · • ltaleinate on Gov1 Reagan'• 'By L.M. IOYD ' l!'!'!"" •tmlr~~ftom'ber •a• bµ!I"" dollar ~ re!onn plan. Titn:EE TIM£S N maey a.re• not foil. 11 nol:ed the noi· . women a.s men a1t•te.mp-t C<mtess de'PoiUttsf "they're Nwly '435 millioa worth • • Two Tots Die In Hot Auto; Sitter · Gone &:\dcid!. ''l'hree" ttme• ,u piany merely added to the aces ol of l.ncome tJi.1 credit. -a p- men as womeo SUCCffd. 1• • other women." proximately to perceil ol 1'70 . TH& BRA;u.IANS •llke CUSTOMER SEl\VlCE -Q. tuea due neat Apcil LI - avocados for break r -· t. "Did , you ever .ride one of fiete fuc:Juded ln the tu plan Sounds all rlghl.,. BB~,. •Jhooe old hlgh·wheeled · A MEDICAL FELLOW wl'<I, <!>!cycles, L<iule?" A. No, young • jo.a~otd what llea&•~.tmned claim1 II<~ fever Is an <.mO' fellow, they came alozii bef<Je dhe "do!W>le laUtlon w\!ich CANOGA PARK (AP) - tional •llmeot, 10lejy • , • my Umt. UndM!an<f ff took ~ll • wllhholdlne w o u Id Two lilUe brothers apparenUy IT T~ nine botUes::1o( an· expert kt -hlndle those con· .... create U imposed nut JIJJ. died of heat prostraUoa after white wb:le·ta make oae botlle trapUons ~tally. No (~"the reform pl~J being left by their babysitter of oognat,·air ••• AM 4SXBD ~ordinary feIJbllir c;ould stay '!tie A!SeJnbly Rev~·.1'od for an hour inside a car where WHERE a hu1band and wif• 'Upright on. obe.Of jam~ Aod T~Qtl Committee .that temperatures rose . to 120 were m_Nt apt to have f!llt ·YQU oullhl: "DOt Calt'J'Mi ~ie, "forgfyenes&" fund to '39S degrees, pcilice said today. r11&ay, A11111st 7, 1970 DAILY PILOT f Author of DUI May !rY Again . ... ' - : ~eFte Nixes Vote on 18-year-olds SACllAMtNi'O !UPI! - The Senate -by fout votea -hu reJu3td to approve a p'"""r'Ojnra-e d -to nst1tu11ona1 • · arMndnwint to aUow Califor- nians to decide ,th.is November wJletber the ~otlng aae should ~art at ta, By a 2U vote Thursday, senat.ors· defeated the measure 'by A$Semblyman John V. · Briggs (R~Fu'llerton), after an hour of floor debate 1prinlded with humor. But Sen. Lewis F. Sherman (R·BerQley), -noor manager for the A.!Sembly-passed pro- po14l, won pe.rmission from colleagues to try again to gain aj>proval. Sherman said Califomian! should decide for themselves . whether youngsten at lhe age Senator.1 and 1&-yfar-old ~ have a dectet: Of judgment of II should .be given the semblymen a.nd an 18--year-okt and maturity, which they ac- vote and all other edult Governor."' Bradley said. "It rupgo!ibilltlu ucept I h e conjures up the vbloo of a quire with the pau.a1e of n·g•l •· drln" In a •·r. time," be lafd. " w .. IHI. coupie of 11-year-qld . Sena tort "'Tbls means that on their in tq;,, -House without t.fie. But 'Sherman ar1Ued that lllh birthday, Calllomians prlvllege of drJntin&.'" ... the ·~mendment. ·1r adopted, would be adults," he iald. ''It's lnlrlguin& 10 think wou ld "male our young people This would include tht 11a:ht about it, bdt• I can 't quite accoon't~le fot' (ht1r actions.·• to sit oo a jury, be tried ptcture il," he added. for a crime as an adult or Bradley also aaid t h a ·t Similar ltgislatlbn in pa,1 even bold public 9fflce. unwanted y,i.ungslert would be: se91ion~ has also falted . Sert. Clark L. Bradley (R· "cast adrifi by parenb •ho The 'Reapn Administration San Jose ), led the assault on no longer care" about them .. has· alr~dy av:vttt noUce 1t the proposal and based his He said they eoold swell does not intend '° eomply with oppoeition rrimarlly on the welfare rolb. the fed'eral la• sJvint the vote new . a..d u t respomiblllties "EighlM'&yea.r.:Olds do not to Jt-year-<tkb. given to youngsters. \iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "We cOU!d ba" ti-year-old TAKATA NUUERY Police Force In Monterey Ou Walkout ancl La~ Co~ • 10°/o OFF SALE met. oni another No doubt bQY, 'lila('• 'bed. • · million Thursday · to offset , Hugh Flynn Ill, and bis about that. Jn 1eh~l. ·l'RU.OSOtJJY ·t ~ On<:e revenpe lo!t from failure to' brother, John Jr., 6 months, On LOVE.pm 1WAR.-Wheti again here's thlt 'nifty ~another one ~n~ to the' sons of Mr. and Mrs. Joh n LOS ANGE~ (UPI) -MONTEREY(AP)-folice No New Polio Cases ip LA a m:\~ figures • ,his merrla1• onlooker, Dr. JOIJiflllh Ptck: atate sales tax begtnn1ng Au&. Flyiln of Canoga Park. were Los A~eles County heaJth of-in this city of 30,000 went 5 GAL TWiSTED JUNIPER Is on Uie ~ks, he'<just wanfl .. By the time you'1e SS,. you I, as proposed in the Re•&p.tl dead on arrival at Northrklge llcers had some good news on slrike Thursday night for 5 GAL. ITAUAN CYPRESS out. With no ~.\.ill will~ can look forw&l1i to m'ny tax bill. Receiving Hospital Thu rsday . to report. Monday. higher pay. 5 GAL YU than necessary. ~ta woman, more fru!Ulll and enjoylble Assemblyman William T. The sitter, Virginia O'Don-For the first time in history, The walkout, which began CCA who decides her ntlf'riage has . years of liviJ)g, if. you lol'°w ~gle~, legisl~li ve ~uthor of. nell, 62, o( Northridge, was the oounty got through an en· when seven men failed to AND ALL FfRNS gone bad , wants toILJ blam~. ~the advice of Aristotle, who t!Je tat Shlft bill, said he had boOked for investigalion of tire ~ar without one new case report on lhe 11 p.m. shift, m And make the old bot pay, t sald., 'It is best to rise from not discussed the prl'.lpOMd cut manslaughter. She told of-of polio being reported.. caught the city by surprise, M'FI • Forever. it possible. Our Love lie as from a banquet, neither with ·Reagan , "but to my ficers she t1ad forgotten he Health officer Gerald A. although negotiations ha ve S•I• Good and War man (inds this un-thirsty nor drunken.' " File knowledge there is no op-children because she wu talk-Heidbreder Wd the news was been going on for two months. ~ Through high school boys should be NEVER MET a man that ...,Bq"1 said f40 million was Mrs. O'Donnell said she from the U.S. Health Serviee. Asspciauon at a meeting April 10th · • l i • ' fortunate. Jt Is his belief all that, too. •' position." ing to her daughter. contained in recent tabulations The Monterey Police Relief Monday BE - required to pass a layman's makes a habit of s~ijng the' .amoUnt the stale would rushed the boys to the hospital The service a1!0 revealed that Thursday afternoon vot ed -· course in alimony and child bis fingertips who wasn't a lose by delaying 'the Sales tax when she returned to the car there wttt no deatm from unanimou.s~>:. for _t_!le _strikeJ . . _. ·-MllJCT T•~• n.r.Tio• .r.T-Mn-T°" ·-~ _ support law berare being lot J)Oetic and a little pompous lifcrea.R until Sept 1. .... . -ahd'fouDCrthem not bfelilhing, poliO anywhere in the United theDon~~~lion,.P"'ld.azdeiit, Sgt. JIG I.AKER ST •• COSTA MESA PHONE S.U.0724 allowed to graduate. Why not? • • • IF THERE'S NO such 11>e tu reform p I 1 n , _1po~lice=._:sa~id:.. ------~S~ta~la~in~l~!l69!·:_ ____ ~~~~~~~g,~~c:.:.:.c:.:.:......:i!~!i!!i!iii!!!!i'!!!!!!!!!!'~!!!!~!"'!"'!!!~~i!!!!~ Can you think of any situation thing aa Et81l• why is it iden-MJopted 56-1~ in Msy_. by thel--· · -· •·· 4 ii besides matrimony wherein an ·tical -twmS-'SO ofter\. saJ ~ ~bly, has been stalled --· 18-year-i>ld boy can be held same thing at the same time three weeks oo the Senate by the courts te· a lifetime even when talking in separate f)oor one vote short_ of the cOnt.ca<:l! _gr~? ... 1'RR. SUJlVEV·.~ 27-voie two-thirds mar & l n IF ALL THE CAPIL-.T.\J(EllS, wpo are willing" lo needed lor (111.'sage. · • LARIES in -'your body -.ask anybody. anything,_report--·The-tu· plan -Reagan's :, were placed end to end, yo ung only three women out ol 10 major legislative proposal of lady, they'd encircle the earth are saUsfled with their bu.st 31/i years in office -cuts four times. However, lhis measureme$. _l,~gree. . local property ta:1es 40 percent would ruin your appearance Your questions a~ com-. by shifting a major portion . • . NO GREEK SHOULD ments are welcomed and of school and welfare support forget jt was his early an-will be US!d tn Checking from local taxes to higher cest.ors who first taught the Up whert1'er possible, A_d-state sales, income and bank western world to take a bath drw letUn to 4 M. Boyd, and corporation taxes. every Saturday night . • • Box: 1875, Newport Beach. The omnibus measure would ''THE YEARS THAT a CaUJ. 92660. also put new limits on local tax rates, impose t> a yr o 11 Smogless Engine Bill Killed By Committee withholding of state income taxes and-make hundreds of lesser ch.an.ges in state tax laws. Ferris Wheel Record Set····. S~CRAMENTO (AP) -A" Assembly commiltee has kill- ed a bill to fo~ the auto Industry to develop a rom· pletely smog(ree engi111e by Jan. 1, 1975. Opponents of the bill thal wou ld have banned from California highways smog.pro- ducing engines rnanufactur¢ art.er thal date said Thursday there_ was no guch thing as a oompletely smog -fre e engine. But ~n . Nicholas Petris, (l}.()aklancl), tbe bill's authoc. said be h84 faith t . .b a't American !Jidustry could. pro- duce .such aw engi•e by that date -and he said it wai; needed to avoid a healt h menace of major proportiolis. Petris 'told the Trans'.. portation Com rn it.tee the.. auto industry bad been .. drag· ging Us feet for years:• though Americans were just begin· ning to realiz..e they }'r'ere In,SanDrego · "bamboozled." The dream of SAN DIEGO (APi ; - NOrman Creamer is 'bearded and niore tanned than When be stepped into the ferris wheel seat but that's because he's been there longer than anyone else. the The 29-year-old bachelor, joblw, decided to bmll the -Id recoro di ~tive d.,.. on • fems_~-~ Guiness -"' ni&>rd'l . automobile ''has turned into a njgtrtmare "nd\ we _ now regard jt u ·lbe DJ.Dl)ber oRe the -mart wls 14 day•, . ' enem•.'' Petri said. "We're n1 J hours by David Trumaine Cahl Cal• continuing to produce more Kent, England. e and more :poison-producing 1By 10:01 a.rri. Thursday, a u t o m 0 b i I es. The good, Creamer had eclipsed that r -h A d mark by one minute. '-.d•3S . W8f Internal Combustion Engine, His plan to get off the ferris should be toppled and replaced wheel today stenu from a T D ? by soi;nelhing that's clean." remark made last week, "All 0 1·op • I want to do is break lbe re~ ord by one full day and then SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -C:HII,DREN get a job." Gloria Sykes' may not get He start& on • temporary much of the fi(J,000 she was LIKE job 800ll as a barker at the awarded for a cable car ac· --.11musement part where the cidwt whidl she said -gave ferria.wheel sploa but be hopes her insatiable &ell&ul desires. UN CLE LEN lo be able 1o· follow up pn City Attorney 'l'bomas M. an offer to 'become • diac O'Connor, who represented the ,'==========!c..!.jockey::::~•~t_:•:_:loc:a::!·:0.1·radin-'..:::'. . ..:1:":tt:1111:·1 city in its unsuccessful case, filed a superior oourt acUon Thursday asking ' judges lO split up the money. He said attorney Harold Elliott, who filed Ult original suit, has a lien of 40 percent on any amount collected. Marvtn Lewi1, the attorney who trled lhe case, also has a claim, O'Connor added . Lewis cla imed during the" trial last April that the 19&1 accident forced Mrs. Sykes inlo t~ arms of more than 100 men. WANTED 100 CIGAREM SMOKERS' If YOll •mci••, yo11 •r• we11t.J M p•rficoip•I• i11 lh• 11ew ... ~; •• tti'"''' P""9r•"' d••itM4 I• •Ii• i11 1t• YO"'' Ul'IO.i119 ••bO. You!' d•1i1• to 1tcip ,.ioltlllf co•ll 1..- co111t .r. r••lity with llt.e 1kl ol fh• '"'•lit'tl) •uJio ¥itu•I YOr-f••· ,or d•l•ll• vl1it •r c;all tft" 111tio111I •11li-s1"oklnt CO\lfltil of• fie;• 1111r,.,1 you. COSTA MESA 1770 OrJ1191 Awt. S11i • D ,42·"4,,l HUNTINGTON IEACH lt51l 111ch 11vcl, Sult• lOt .,2.1•2• There's sometlq 11ry · comforting about the Audi. : • Its seats were designed by an . orthopedic surgeon. THt drive It tOday. It's more of a car . than you think. .. • CHICK IVERSDI PORSCHE I AUDI 900 ~t Cont Hishwly I N.wport IMKfl 646·9391 ·ot1!!1C£'COllllTl"S !UTIIOlllltD DtU!I : Oll'f I RIGHT•NOW KNITS fOR MINI 2 to~300 • uretMn&Olli111 .~ A barra1e af ltartaiosl Aod S.wlo9sl Ao4 ••re hr-\.. 91iosl S•ptr shoppers' speci1ls price · slos~e4 to . \..· moke yHr 4o111r 10 f•rtltar.-We show j.,t • HMpl• of do nos •f terrific b1ys altower the store. Co111e ruitnint for yours. - ~'- SIZES 4.7 in drtt~up ttylt ... cotton/poly~trr 1h•1 111mblr dries wrinkle free. Poc:krr,,. SALE GRANT'S 'DASH' UICTRIC ALARM $244 Prlct cut! Knittl•t worlled lo fashion ·colors Sale84~ ... • .11.n 4 ox. 1k•ln 4-ply virgin wool; band· wa1hable and moth· oof. Stock u now! GAD-ABOUT PlAIDPANTS SALE $3.96 Penno•ent Pr11s SHIRTS . TEEN'S COMFORT-PACKED CASUAlS $ SPICIAL · PURCH'Asi • Smar~ 1117/in,r • ffn'4f lt>itM.lr1• lu111ft•r1 ·96 PR, • • ('nl11no • Sb:i"' 6 !1 GRANT PLAZA e BROOKHURST l QAMS e HUNT.INGTON BEACH ' HOURS: 9:30 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., Dally; Sund•y,, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. • \ ' J I . • . -------------------------------~--,....,....,.-~-----.,..,..,,,,.,.._..,...,,.,...,..,,.,,,...,...,,,,.. ... _~~--~----- t NIL• mot F~ld1y, A119ust 7, llf7Q Pa ~rhoy Tries Clowni~g Pilot Twosome 1'fake Coco H.Q!!orary News Carrier 'lbe truth \s the.rt was quite , a bit of clowning mund when ' two DAlLY PILOT carrier boys met Mkhael Polakovs of Aohland, Ky., and th• Ken- tud;y bog farmer's 5--year"<>ld son. Davy. But ii. was okay. Jn fa ct, it was in the line o{ duty -for everyone involved. Polakovs' "real" name is Coco tbe Clown. And little Davy is ruJly Coconut, a mtniatun: c 1 o w n . And clowinlng around was the i:;urpooe of their meeting with the two DAlLY PILOT carriers who were selected to greei the emissaries irom the ~ Bros. -Barnum and Balley Circus. . 1be carriers-Bob Maurer, II. or UOI Valley Cin:le, Coota Mesa. and Ron McDaniels, also II, of 2110 Federal, Coola Mesa-were delegated t o receive from CocO a n d Coconut some very special tickets for the Aug. 13 through 19 \'Ult of the circus to the Anaheim Convention Center. First, C o c o n u t delivered tickets which will be used as incentive awards for DAILY PILOT carriers, tl1en lH! hand· ed over a set of 50 reserved seat ticket.I which will be given away to 2S lucky readers of the DAILY PILOT classified advertising section. (The first ol those UcJtets will be given away tod}y and five pairs daily will be given away to readers Ylho find their names in special "ads" in the classified section from now through nut Wednesda y.) After Coconut made the ticket presentation, the clown- ing really started. Coco, whose gr-ather origlneted the face and the wardrobe that have gone with the Coco name in tfle clown business for the last 100 years, loaned some of lhe magic of his greasepaint and the skill of his hands In applying iL Carrier McDaniels w a s transformed from professional newspaperboy to honorary clown in a matter of minutes. Then McDanlels and Maurer turned the tables and, throw- ing a DAILY PILOT bag aver Coco's shoukiers, made him an honorary newspaper car- rier. The current Coco was born in Russia and reared in England . He ::peaks with a British accent that is coun- terp:>int to the mild southern accent of his Kentucky-born wile, Hazel, and son Davy (Coconut). Davy has been drilled in tbe drolleries of clowning. He will tell inlerrogators be is 5 years old, then answer the question about how long lH! has been clawing with the quick quip: "Six years." Actually. Coconut has been in clown makeup off and on since he wa1 18 months_ old, ffis father takes him on lhe · road wherever he goes In his role of Cooo as adv~ man for "the Greatest Show on Earth." Only In the big cities where he stays Jong enough for the show to catch up with him does Coco actually work in tbe circus. But he makes up for it with his personal appearances at shopping centers, hospitals, on t.elevlsion shows. etc~ His record is 14 performing ap- pearances in one day. And he once w<n the greasepaint of his profession for 14 COO· secutive hours. Aa the DAILY PILOT's newest canier, be need not worry about having to tote his newspaper bag quite that long on any given day. DA1L' l"IL011"1111"" In ltt fl'1111t DAILY PILOT CARRIER RON McDANIEL$ SICEPTICALL Y EYES STICK OF MAKEUP Coco Gets S.t to Use Magic af His Paints. Skill of His H•ncl• to Tr•nsform Boy to Clown Turnover Beelining . Teacher Supply Growing "Go into teaching. You'll always be able to get a job." For years, college students have been given that advice by parents and placement of- ficials familiar with the seem- ingly never ending complaints of a teacher shortage. That advice may no longer be valid, however. An Aaociated Pre!S s u r v e y shows m a n y metropolitan areas report they have more applicaUons for teaching jobs than positions open and their turnover rate is declining . Personal officials attribute lh.e change to severaJ fact.ors: ! an increase in the number of college graduates going into teaching, higher s t a r t i n g salaries and an economic squeeze lbat has cul industry's need for scientists. The Midrigan Stale Board of Education warned recently that be<:aule or the oversupply of teachers it is "entirely possible that several hundred spring and summer graduates will not find teaching pc>Sitions for the 1970.71 scbool year." In Detroit, a· Board of Education spokesman rtpOrt- ed the city had 11,000 teachers and a backlog or 1,000 appli- cants. "The simple truth," said the spokesman, "is that teaching jobs are hard to come by right now and so teachen under contract .stick with the jobs they have. I know some" of them have looked as far as Colorado or Montana for jobs, but the demand is pretty small.'' Marvin C. Davis. Education Department personnel direc- tor for Baltimore, said the city has "an abundant teacher supply." He said the only shortages are in areas like special education, and in some subjects -ir.cluding foreign languages and social studies -there are three or jour Skirts Not Too Short, Hair Not Too Long· MONTEREY fUPIJ "trif'M\ed at the neck and Shoulder-length hair, beards ears." and micro minis are fine for other queries touched on times as many applications as jobs available. The city has 8,500 classroom teachers. Chicago had so few teachers last year that the Board ot Education hired 1,000 persons with provisional t e a c h i n g certificates. This year, said Edna C. Hickey. director of teacher personnel, uwe have Ph.Os coming to our door for teaching positions that already have been filled." Mrs. Hickey said t h e turnover rate in teachers Ls 6 percent, which she said was ooe of the lowest in the nation and compared to a 15 percent nationai average. Elsie Stone of the Boston University placement bureau said she was having difficulty finding jobs for teaching graduates because a Jot of scientists laid off by industry are seeking classroom work. David Filzpatrick, assistant director of the Massachusetts Bureau of Teacher CerttficaUon and Placement, said there was a general oversupply ·of English and social studies t e a c b e r s , although there were some shortages in the fields of in- dustrial arts, w om e n ' s physical education, math and science. He said Ule Boston area was attractive t o teachers who hoped to do graduate wark at colleges and universities in the areas. how close mustaches and students or the a Ire ad Y beards should be trimmed, if ;===========;II employed. but they ere a at all. definite drag tor new job 0n the temate side, the skirt For ten length choice ran from micro ... That'; what lh• Monterey to iii1'il to knee-length to midi Weekender a(fice of the State Deparlmenl and n)lli. of Human Resources Develop-·Aecording to James Ham-Ad rt" • mmt found out when it mood, manager or the Ve lSIDg surveyed 900 employers on the department's Monterey office. Monterey Ptnlnsula. the short cut to a job for Phone While delving into the long shaggy youths ls l h e and short of what employers barl>ei'shop and for leggy 6424321 . consider when inteni.iewinu:l;o:y~ouag~~gu-"'· "'ls"'J"'t'"'• "'a"'l"'ll"'tl"'e "'!H!"'m~-~~~~~~~~~~ ·~ let"•• young persons ror jobs. the ...... department found that sltirll had better be ~·ithin short hanging distance of the knees ind hair on males well above the coUar and not interfering with ooe'1 hearing. Grooming standards were a key part of lbe wrvey. Learn to help your tan1ily through prayer. Employers were asked to circle the langeat hair style they would accept ror • new L Come to this Chrlalllln Science Lecture toil • C•rritr-to-clown Transformation Betlns COCO'S DEFT HANDS PAINT A FUNNY FACE Ron Isn't Sure About That Mascara Brush STILL LOOKING SKEPTICAL, 'RON THE CLOWN' CHECKS UP ON NEW IMAGE Coco Holds Mirror and Welcorrits New 1st Member to Society of Buffoons WIND HIM UP AND WATCH HIM BRIGHTEN THE FUTURE ) He hun~ hod much experience so you'll have to be a little patient and give him a little extra help at flrsl He's not used to having someone else's trust and confidence so, for a day or two, you may find him a bit watchful and timid. No. one has ever g iven him a chance to prove himself before, so you may have to boot him out at night. He's liable to offend some of your other employees with his enthusiasm, hls many questions and his eagerness to take on any task. Ho's not accustomed to drawing a docent saltll}'-no one In his family Is -so you may find him a bit too graleful for his first pay- chej:k. He's white Ho's black He's Mexician-Amerlcan He's Oriental He's poor. A normal, fun·loving and hope- ful American kld living right hero in Orange County, but poor. "Disadvantaged," they calt it. His prospects for the future are the dim- mest, unless maybe you can give him a hand. Tho summer job you could make for him could brighten his prospects considerably - and make him really normal. Someday. ca11 us and we'll help you hire him. Dial m.JOBS. And huny. He's wailing to grow. National Alliance .of Businessmen .1011 Orange County Metro 1193 North Miiier SlrMt, An1htlm. C.llfornJa 92803 omploye -&boulder length, SATURDAY, AUGUST I, 10 A.M. ovar the earo. over the collar. EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA THEATRE !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ trimmed at the neck and eara FASHION ISLAND or no restriction. Most circJed,1'-------------------~ ' ' ••• ·,,. .( ... • ----~~----.. JOOEAM MAST1Jf0$,.-lil2-4ttl ,J ,,...,, ........ "" • , ... ta New Sailo rs Instructed . 'J· . (' ' .. Getting into the swim of summer with. a splash ""' " youngsters enrolled in the first summer sailing Ptocram to ~~ be s]lonsored by the Huntington Ha.rtiour Yacht"Club. / /. The course is· open to sons -arxl daughters of yacbt ~ club members between the ageS of 10· and 16. Its Pl!U"Pq51 is to promote an appreciation -and understanding tOt ~i yachting principles and develop · Ille skills neceaaq i sale and effective boat-handling; 1 ' In order to be elij(ible to enroll, all young peopl• h to pass a qualifying swimming test. The classes begen with Sabot saillng and also wilt/in elude lessons in Lid<>-14s, Cal-20s, Pacific Handica.p g Fleet boats and power boats. Directing the sailing program · is Chuck Geo , as- sisted by John Salmond, KeUy Snow and Bill Hart Youthful instructors who are contributing th time. to tire sessions are Joe-Hartge, Dave ArmstrOug, Tay- lor, Mike Hatch and Miss Chris Elliott. · • Jim Martin is provi~ini. bis Cal-20, and ':r'(ing .. monitor and instructor is Dr. Chet Haug. "" / •• , , The sailing 1 .. sons, which began the end June, will cootinue each Saturday and Sunday through I. 26. To date 33 youngsters are enroUed in JJ<Oiram. PROGRAM TIED DOWN -Basic boating .akllls are bein& offered. Huntington Ha'1>our Yacht Club ruembers' dlildren durinR a sum• mer program,wbicb will continue tbrough Sept. 26. Leaming the correct way to tie down a sabot, first class of boat used for in- struction, are Susan and Kathy Pickett, 10 and U.year-old daugh· ten of Mr. and Mn. Albert Pickett. . · SAIL SET -Ready to practlee -of Uuu newly· John Salmond~ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Riavold and Mr. acquired skills are (left to right) Sieve Salmond. Randy and Mn. James R. Sllaffer. ' SEAGULL'S VIEW -Randy Sorenson perches on a piling .to discuss basic seamanship instruction with Jeff Eqwards and John Risyold (left to right). Directing the sailing fi;'\f""' are Chuck George as9isted by Kelly Snow, John Salmond and. · Hartge. Rlsvold and Leslie Shaffer, children of Mr. and Mrs. r t. Gluttonous Guests Find Celebration F~.r From 'Gorge-ou·s' . >EAR ANN : Some fol It! we know o are a lot richer than we are 1 a reception to celebrate the 40th iding anniversary of thtir partnts .. ~f served only soft drinks and frutt teh. There Wert a few bowls of potato ps and nuts on the table. Also 30me )d~t sandwiches and cookies. ll g't worth getting dressed up for. wrong to be -DISAPPOINTED AR DISAPPOINTED: Did yoo 1• er 7ov coagratul11U..1 and Mst '~u er to· pt blmbed Hd UU your nacti? Obv5ta1ly the llUer, er ,... IU'I •ave bto 1'D111ppoilled." EAR ANN LANDERS: Herbert con· rs himaetf a good· husband. I'll let decide:. He hands over hia paycheck ANN LANDERS ~ and doesn 'l ny too much unle&a I over- spend. which 1 rarely. do. He workl hard and I koow It. When he come• home at night he eals (with the newspaper propped in front rl. him), then goes otralght to bed all<r "'PP"· TI>ls goes on all weel<. Sundl.y com<t along and Herbert needs "a day to himself." This mew going to bia father 's boost 3fld drinklnc boor unlll 11< 1e11 oo .urr he can't .ee to drive borne. I hav• to ")61R11im:-Wl>erl-complain he aays he mun.. tpend as much Ume as he can with "bts father because the old man won't be aromd forever. (Tbe "old man" la 54.) My queatiOO la lhl•: How can l 1ei Nertlert to kt me in on his activities? -MARR1ED WIDOW DEAR MAllRIED: Mat activities do Y• want to be Id i. ••'? Drtnkblc beer wtdl his father? I """" 700 .,. y.r Jmj1lllllol, T ..... ud -., wt~ .-lof IM. .... of >""' .. .. -............ "' family. B,.. --_,i. r "two lo -ot ,_-. 8'rllen _...,.,,_, ... ? 'l1lere atMt lie tome 1 • a:eft, IC• avru. yoo en nJoy ...-. 1v.,. ~ar....,,..baft-pmes, evtt6i II, UN+kr,- bowll ... &oll, lblilq, plallcktq. lllqcl- hlc -IM lilt Io , endltll. Get wit• It, girl. Herbert's fltbcr ml&'t be wtUt -.m 1 lot kMlger ~ )'OI H )'tu doa't pamp Mme lit IDtt tat 110111 d.n ~ ri11e. DEAR ANN LANDE!f.$· ave nod your colu11111 for yeara a your concepll ol mot1llt,y anlL aeiu .behavior aeem to be 1•Wn&.m«i .lllliquatect and ookll- dale eVtrf time I plclc up iht piper. Please ltate the quality or your credeo· Ua~ •• Wbal cJV .. ~Oll tile right to lmpooe YoUr iitedJ.evaJ code of morality oh ~lionli ~ people? Who 1ave you a license' te" tnject your creating views on ev.tybody wtlO hlppena 'to read! You .show-up~ just about everywhere the Engll&h language la spoken. What In your back.ground gives you the rl~ht tO , pusti yo'ur vte.w1 on people? Who apPolnted you guardian of ~ world'• morals! -MORRIS, MINN. OBAR. MORRIS: 1 w .. 'l nan dl1t "bidlfCl'llld" •• *crtdeadalt" 11ve anyone ~ rtgbt to pusti bl• views oa ,...i.. . J • h&\'e hftn neltlttr uofatr.d nor lfPOlalod. I upreu m7 optlloes .. '. a variety GI oub)e<to wbee I am - · to do so. Many It tbe lllWVI· ... appear In tbe col•ma are die tad fftChtd of COllMlltadoo• wllll tile --hi &he country, I aan 1wwe ., dMi IWotOlllO rHpooofbl1lly GI tfvlaf MM and, I do my best to be lalr.J__dlrect a.O!iiii:CC Whta 1 noc1-n .... ~ I admU It. Do you? .. The Btldt's Ouide," AM IA.nderr' booklet, anawen aome of the JnOll fre. quently ask!d quest.Iona about weddlnaa. To receive YOllf cqpy . o! lhla ...,. prehensive guide, write lo Ann Landen. ln care of your ~wspaper. 1enclo!lnj a Jong •. self..addreued, ltamped envelope and 35 cent. In coin In care of tho DAILY Pnm: • • l I ' . (,• ~ J4 DAILY PILOT frlda1, August 7, 1~70 rt-t---"--Female Guards Pooli ' ' • • , . • l i I - . • . · Women's llberaUOo ls mak.· In& otrldm In Ille busineo1 world bul no proponents have appNrOd on Ille Oranc• Coast beach """"· W epaard stands are eon- rpiououl!J void ol femininity unUI one moves inland \o the oomm1mlty pools. Sun-l>leach- ed, tun-bronzed beauUes klu Ille decks ol pools from Seal Beach lo San Clemente but Ille beach remains oll-limlll to Ille -ladles. "ll'• not a matter of trldl~ lion but one or practkaUty," e1plained Mu Bohman, as.U. lint director ol the Huo- tingtoo Beach Harbors and Beach lloportmont. "A IJlrl is not ptlytlcally capable of swimming out into the surf up to 60 time! a day and haJldJlog 1 poostble 2!0-pound victim." Beach lll'IUl'dl must be able \o acale 16-11 foot waves, overcome rip tides, repeat Jong distance swims IDd sub- due a hysterical vktlm in the water, he cootlrMJed. '1bere la only one g~I In 100 phyatcally o r emotionalJy capable Of tbe Job." Botman noted that a IJWl'd must be abJe to handle a crl1es ~ • Resources • ''We aomeUmet have for hundreds ot feet. !tildes, sad · · eotl on the buch." l'm llOt 1troo1 enou&IL" be add Al>o llllcltlng to Jhe concrete Bo ltd ""pllon to domain Is Kim Stewart, 11, pool g ''ln a pool or-a guild at Laguna High a calm lake, ia can be School. "l enjoy it at tbe efficient. 1bere •re no sreat pool. I thought of working physiUI demands." on the beach. It's ex.citing • Allhough the b t k I led but terribly strenuous. Not beauties may not meet~be~larly s tr o n g pbyalcal d<mands, th~ • eo I prefer that tbe men the attributes and man ·r main Ulal area." are whiling away their s -A an bl.story major men l n s l r u c t i n g and 1a . the fall at California State safeguarding chi ldren ln area ~e1e at Fullertoo. Kim finds poo~. IUelWU!nc tbe "ideol job. Claudia Bryaa, 17, guards ~ retpond so easily and at Hantington Beach High eagerfj'love the water." School pool !or tho parks and Tina~-. 17, gllards recreation department. S h e and ln.stzuC.c almost 40 hours believes fem a 1 e lifeguards a week at the Wewport Harbor have a better rapport with High School poOl'fOl' the parks the children and get more ac-and recreauo.n d~. compllahed. A llfeUme\.. residult, Tina "lncldeata nevE!' o c c u r learned to swlm in •the bay because even a 'tough guy' al Ruby Street and 1f(W in- woold be too embamssod to olnlds childnn ages 3-11-"I d:mllenge a girl in any way ," really enjoy the 'Mommle ~ she uplafnoci. Claudia guardJ Me' cl...,... 1l1e children a;e 40 hours a week and finds so excited -learning t1 it a great excuse to swim, swim." " stay in the sun and enjoy With plans to major in people. biology at UC! In the !all, ' . 1l1e Ediaon High Sc:bool Tina hope.s to renew her -- seniOr ·prefers pool guarding mer profess.ion nert year. lo the beach respom:lbillty. "I've never encountered any ''There ii too much to watch. problems from being a girl. They (Ufeguard.s) have to be Il'a all been great. I'd never acutely aware ol. everythl.ng switch." KIM STEWART TRAIN$ EYE ON YOUNG DIVER . -. • ' • • . . • • • • • • • ' .. TINA ECHTERNACH STRESSES SAFETY RULES Horoscope Pisces: Concentrate SATURDAY AUGUST 8 ~y SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March %I-April 19)' Yoo are Intrigued by m)'>lery. But tt is mostly of your own making. Means an.swers •e available.. However, you Jeem more coolenl to let light shine in another direcUcrt. become loquacioos. You gain ~ by adhering to prin- ciples. GEMINI (May 21.June 20), Work, bas.Jc issues dmnlnate. You are able to ccmplete im- portant mission. You feel bet- ter as a restlL Move ahead, not backward. Strive to im- prove relations with associates, co-workers. lo be confident, versatile . Relatives, nelatmors prove mart attentive than usual. LIBRA (Sept. 23 -Oct. 22)' Jr_ If thorough , you mak e discovery which can b e tra.ns(onned to profit. Add to pos1eS1ions. Pay and coUecl • debt.is. Be willing to make c1Janses that lead to progress. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ), Wearlng apparel takes on ad- ded importance. Taie special care with appearan c e . Imprusion you make could TAURUS (April 20-May 20)' EmJiw;is: o n agreements, assumption of s p e c i a I r e s p o n siblllty. One you thooght aloof could llllddenly CANCER (June 21.July 22)' Your creaUve urges find con- structive outlet. Give and you also will receive. Take in- itiative. Bold s t r 1 t e. s ac· complish what is ttqulred. Refuse to be a wallOower. mean dill....,.,. betw«n sut· CLAUDIA BRYAN ' MAKES HERSELF HEARD ceas and failure. Odds point ----------i·;====================;,11 Outgrown Clothes Fill Bill LEO (July '3-Aug. 22): Your Interests are protected by friend. .Koow this and trust -In rliht directlon. Moans pul faith In those who have clemonstratect slncerlly. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22), Accent on eommunicaUon. Your ideas, plans are ex- amined wla! lnl<reot. Key Is lo """""· SAGmA!Ul.JS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Work 1n quiet but efficient manner. Be discreet. Someone may confide in· formation which is dlfflcull to keep to yourself. Family member a pp 11 e s pressure. ReeJ>Ond tactfully. Nature's Beauty Exh ibited CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Take into account some experknces friends may have Nature's w o n de rs , con- Cleaning out closets and recently undergone. Temper centrated into a small area drawen ror tbe rau sc11oo1 Ta I k Reviews judgment witn mature com· or tand, will be shown when year may mean a windfall prebemkln. Be patient and you the Costa Mesa-Bay Cities :~ana Point Community Drug Problem ~u::. rewanled. Wbb is Branch, Calif~· Fuchsia Good clean clothes of all AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Society meets on Monday, sizes are needed to build stock fDr. Max Rappaport, director 18): Review ambitions. You Aug. JO. for an October thrift sale plan-0 the \'outh Challenge pro-.can get lo top; but be aware "Nature's Hai r Acre," a ned by Ult club. Mrs. Mary gram In San Clemente, will of price. You ge t what you color film, will be exhibited al ~ . 1 address San C I e m e n l e ask for _ know what il is Payne, gener u 1atrman, a so Business and Protessl.onal by Lee Clifton of lhe Hydrex will collect a pp I t an c e s, Women at a ?:JO p.m. dinner you ttally seek. Do some self-Pest Control Co. at 7~30 p.m. jewelry. toys and whi t e meeting CJn Tuesday. Aug. II , analysis. Thi s pays off in long Jn the American Legion Hall, elephants. in Buffy's restauran t. run . Costa Mesa. Proceeds will go toward the The speaker will review the PISCES (Feb. 19-l\.1arch 20): Members also are preparing bui lding fund for t ax e s. current drug situation and ex-Accent on how well yo u are for tbe All States' Festival on paymenta and maintenance. pl ain how his orga nization able to coocentrate. Whal ap. Sunday, Aug.· 16, from II :30 BundJm citn be left at com· helps uaers kick the habit. pears far off rnay demand a.ro. in Cost.a Mesa. Park. munity house by arTanging Businesswomen in t h e almost immediate attention. Those participaUng are. aaked with the caretaker, 496-3187, Capistrano Valley are invited Vbuali1e what It ia you want to bring the ··ntcessary food or i\frs. Thomas Harrison, to attend. Reservations may Lo accomplish. Clear up emo-(or their party. Visitors are 496-5506. Busy Bee Answering be made with ?>.t r. James 1..,.;t;;lonal;;;;;..;croos;..;;;;;-cu.;;..rrents~;;;.· ___ ;..;w;..;e;;;Jc;;;om;;;;;;e·------..,ll Sorvice, ~96-.1717 may be cal~ Conn, club presldenl. at 49&- ed tor pick.up service. 1781 after S'pm. '""' . 'l ,. &:;."' Free Estimates RE-UPHOLSTER Completfl S"lecll.....-of Fabric• lnc lndlng: linens and Velvets Matt# Cr1tttfMft AIWl)'I •• CZYKOSKI lUI NEWPOIT II.VP. COSTA MISA ,,...,. ".,....., ISY·K05-Kl'YI P hone 842·1454 HAYE YOU TRIED Swing 'N Ha ir 0-111-tl'ft "•"'··· YM'll IN ti.t ,_ tNH llllntOOUCTOill:Y Oil'l'llt tl1 VALUI FREE "'" CUT • coHD•n°'" JUST $& WITM •MAMl'OO • SET ...... "", 7 North of 17th SI., Costa Miu LADIES ANO GENTLEMEN, 'THECOUNTESS~' • "Countess" luxury silverplate from ·international Silver Company. Wine cooler, $60. liner. $3.50. Compote, $15. Shrim_p dish with toothpick and sauce cups, $35. ' Cht r9• Aceou11h 111 .. it.d A111•rict11 E1rpr111 l •11kA1111ric1rd 111d M11ftr Ch1 r91, t.o. SLAVICK'S Jtw•l•ra Si11et 1•11 18 Fashion l1 l1nd Newport Baac ft -6'44-1380 o ,_ M1tt1llt, .,.4 Frlll•y •11tll t :JO Musicians Tune Up For Upcoming Year Aclivities for the upcoming year ha ve been planned by new officers of the Orange County AJumn ae Chapter of S i g ma Alpha Iota, in - ternational profe ssiona l fraternity for women in the fi eld of music. Leading the group during the year will be the Mmes. DaVid G. Meitzler, preslC!ent; ~fichael J . Sabot, vice presi- dent; Kenneth Mc Ki n ney , secretary; John T u 11 y • t rea s u r er; Charle s Sandmeyer, e d i t o r and historian; John F. Warner , chaplain, aod James Schulke, parliamentarian. Mrs. Meitzler (L eon a RobertS) was prese nted the rd of Honor during a cheon mee ting in t h e M i.on Viejo home of ~trs. Sandroeyer, where Miss Nan- cy srater, soprano from the UniverSlty· of R e d l a n d s • presented a program of art song1 and arias. Found ed in 1903, th e organization has as its purpos to fur ther the development o music in America and mote a stronger bond musical interest and u derstancling between foreig count ries and America. Through its In ternatlon Music Fund , it has fi nane projects such as presenUn musical instrume nts and gif to veterans hospitals. schoo and hospitals for the ha dicapped and Ule Louis Brail 11usic Institute. Anyone wishing i'llformaf may call 11rs. Meitzler at 2674. 'Hair, Ha i r' Coiffures thl! fall will simple anct flowing, giving softly defined 1llhouette. Ha trends are taking on a ne appreciation fof th e lady-Ii look that has been miss· too long. UNIFORMS AIN'T WHAT THEY USED TO BE! An Ori9 in111 Coll ection of Designs For Profe11sion1 That Require An Identifyi ng Co11tume PANT SUITS-DRESSES-SEPARATES • Fante1t.ically C1re.fr1 e F1bric1 • All Wash & W11r e Tr1d ition1I White or Choo11 From A Ve rit1bl1 Sunbunt of Color1 e Sites 8-18 C1llfornl1 C1re1r Cotti.Im .. ., 7 I ' th e !rpoS ~ot o •d u • entin I glf choo ha !rail nati u i II ing . Ha • I • . . -~. J • • N."f. Stoeks ' VOL 63, NO. 1aa: 4 $ECTIONS,,42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA F~IDAY, AU~UST 7, '1970 TEN CINTS . . . ., . ' ar eo . . • • ' •• • • eD·S • ·:ssau er Magic Kingdom Enforces ' 'Modified Dress C·ode~ Disneyland officials have banned all long-hatred you tbs from the Magic Kingdom ·following a confrontaUon between Orange County lawmen and 300 Ylpples that culminated In the park closing al"I hours early Thursday. Elgbteen youths were arrested as a rUult Qf the conftonlatlon which took ~ place on the park's Main Street at 6:5.5 p.m. Long-haired and denim-clad, the van- guard of the Ylpple group converged upon Disneyland at noon 'lbursday to celebrate "Nation.al Ylpple Day." Small incidents were repcrted by Dlsneyland security police durlng the ' day, rll'lging from a sing-in on Captain Hook's pirate ship to a disturbance at tbi Monunto display in Tomorrowland. 'lben the Incidents srepped up. nie· urw:beduled closure of the famed tourist attraction, the second since the chasln1 yippies aroUJ\d the tc"1l tquare shoutm11 "Run, Hippies, Run." The encounter on Main Street luted" only minutes. Rio\ squads tn belmets, face protecton and gas rnaskl--11.ned both sides of the atreet as 1 loudspeaker announced the dosing ol the 'par~ at 7:30 p.m. Many of the 3!,000 auem wore punted expressions as they were led out of the park. Some uked: "Wbat'1· blp. pened? Is the park really clooed?" Dlmey employes •nd security pallce uplalhed the di!turbance lo the cmrd, mey of thel!1 cbildren, and urged auesta to keep moving. ' The "National Yippie Day Pow-Wow'' began . on a light note Tbunday u a group of 'IS 'Jlpplea converged-oo -the carousel at Frontierland, the Momanto diiplay. General Electric, ml •the 'Colle (See YIPl'IEll, Pap I) * * * * :* '* D~neyland Regulatu.Jns ' . Based on Appearanee . AS DISNEYLAND SHUTS DOWN, POLICE IN RIOT ClEAR LINE THE PARK'S MAIN STREl!T Offlcl11l1 Order E11rly Clolur• of Mllgk Klngd Om 11nd R•vlve St rict Dress Code ' park opened In llSS, came after the sroup of hippie-ytpe youths marched up Main StnoeL chanting obsceniUes and singing songs. The g r o u p left Tom Sawyer's Island at about 6 p.m. before heading for the park's City Hall Jn a line which erlended the length of the streel Disneyland opened Ua gates at,a Lm. today without Incident. In fact,,the only dlHerence between · today'• opemac ..a any other day was the fact tht uniformed security ponce· m&Med the u.c:tet ·b!iotha along with ticket takers -and had some new dresa requlrtmenta. ed that dress regulallons for part aueall will be up to the dlscreUoo of aecuri17 pollce at the gares, Bandits Hit 2 Huntington 8J1.Sin efses one bas a mousey {ace, the other buJbJ red hair and 111< third wean bom-r!mmed alllues. What they have in common. pollct believe, ls thre'e revolvers and fS,900 In loot they grabbed in robberies at twO Huntm&ton Beach businesses Thurs· day, In both holdups -at a restaurant and a market -the bandits posed 85 Customers betore pulling the heists. '!be first robbery ocourred about 2 a.m. in Francois' Restaurant, 11151 Beach Blvd., when the three men IUd· denly wbiPped out the weapons after alugg~g down a few drinks at the bar. Tnef-dtmanded UV: money in the safe. M1Mger Arnold E. Lindquist told poUce the men .,,.ned ~ and "'!:~ hlin lo prnvid<I the comliinatlon. He - them he didn't have it. · One of ' the robbers then said, "1'11 &i'fce you . to tbe' count of three." At thil, employe Fraocll Rirlmv>nd offered ta open the stroogbox. ,,,. men look about $1,000 from _the safe aruL.n~ved aeveral bar pa~ of .the.Ir vafuab1~1 , inclU~I 8 #~ diamond ring and -lii!i/i a couluf! wl1o had jllst returned from a _, day at the racJll. .. Other valuabl'" brougbrthe total !run the robberY ta $5,200. Police officers said tlley tied up Llnd- oullt Miss Richmond aod the others, then ~t the ftlellMne line and left. 'l1tree aimilllrfy described handlts hit Albertson'• Mirket'at 1$51 Edwards Av~ Tl\Ursday ~l&hL robbing the Ult and en\plqyes" of f100. cash and valuables. Market manager James ii. Th.om a s said the mm entered the market around t :!ll p.m.,, puahlng a s~ing earl 1hroUKh the ailles and collecting $74.10, of '1oormet'1 delights -Including New Yorlt and lllet m1-tuts. Thomas siid the-made him nu up > paper hag with blJlJ and coinl, ' th!" slriJ!ped the three employe. o1 thllr watches and wallets and tied them upJn Ule back room. '8cb of the bandits, he said, oported neatly trimmed aidebums, per f e ct e'*1&h ta be-fahe. Firebombing Said Amateurish Authorlli,. said tadar the I-bing ol a Pllceotla bank branch 'l'hunldly w111 .. amateurish. juvenlle·job. Domage ta the Bank ol Americl facUI· ty at 1131 N. Kraemer . Blvd., was atlmated at about $8,000; but deanup oper•Uios allowed It ta opan fir f>uolness. Someone smashed a w1m1w •Ith a brldl fUIY 'll\linday and !hen tossed In three quart-ICJ!'.t dtlni . -made lnlil mololav -Ill with l<er<sene. motor oil and wlck.s fasblootd from a torn lhlrL Edward .Kfil,"ins Appointed . omclals at the Magic Kingdom dlJCloa. Wben they reaclled the city halt area T H .. Pl B ' d they chanted !or the release of Minnie Mideast Power· s 0 untingt;n.n· an' ' oar . Mouse and tQ,re down a red-white-and-, _ · ' iU · ' · , . . , blue bunting near the building, replacing , . ~· . . ~ '.._. ,,. ,.,"-. \ ,, . ~ Edwara • ~If, ~·]Gc ,\<f·1 , , , --··" ' .. " ,~i~~~:! .,A ....... _ tn·GNlte .1 ' .Jllant '"'1he black blckgiliund. -~~ 1" · laloro•tlh• ~-.pl'tbli,,_ lit .Mir.dli\.-fo.m:lft a.,., · -tioli,-tw -~ta~ ll!Jntlllgtao Beach p~ Col!llDlliloa. ' A ·llfDllP'~lrote Disney gtiests began Fi' h..:~ lllA..l-, · sin'g:ing ••Goel .Ble!s America" but were g· w..u.g 1.·ut.U:1y~11 quictllthooed dowp by the youths. · ' , ' ; He replaCl!S ~--wbo resJ&a. ed· 1o 1111e •· poa111on 1n isfaer · Kerins, a rt11denl of -thil dty 10< 21> years, works for the !olcll<lllDell DQuglal COrpqralion. Ill! bolds • mast<r ol engineering degree · ml • bacbelpr or science degree in lnilustrial·tniineer· ina:. I lterlns was ._ 17 •pplieula )n- rervi<!w.d by the dfy O<llllCll tb1l week. After hi.! appolnbn<a~ Kerins oom- mented, "l,bopa DIY.-1on1·wut rellect all of the sectors of our commaqtty." Kerins was In the public eye !Or oeverlt ·weeks earlier this year w~ he SllC- ceS!fuUy led • filht by the Merdlth Gardens Homeowners Association against a controvenial development for. tJie.'COl'- ner ot Broothur1t Street and Adai'nl . Avenue. He spoke several times at plan- ning commilaion and council meethJas on lhe issue. · Kerbl3, of 20061 Colgate Ave., Ls a vice pre11ident of the· HOMB.C*1Cll. • , D.i.ll'f' PJl..OT 1• ..... APPOINTED TO COMMISS I~ Hunting!on Buch'• Kerins -Linda Kasabian · Shocked At Victim Plwtographs ' ' . LOS ANGEllCS (UPI)•..; Linda Kasa- bi.an guped ''Oh, God" and shouted that .she couldn't believe her friends could do such an "animalisUc thing" when shown a picture tod•Y of one of the victbns·luitbe Tate J!lurder case. Defense attorney Irving Kanarek thrust before her a color photosraph of the mutllaW bodJ · of •Vo)'f<k Frybwski, a guest of the. lictrelS Sharon Tate who was stabbed do&eql of times and shot in the tlUJngt•list Aut a. Mrs. Kasablan be11t11 cryin1 steadily . and Kanarek aid to her: Uonlng by' showln& Mra. Kuaol•n, a color pictlll'fl of. another v~. coffee helres.s AblgalL Folger, sprawl"1 oo the puunds ol Ille Tare eatate. Mrs. Kaaabian had become almost h)'!terfcal Thursday afternoon ·when Kanarek prnduced 1 Jl!lolograph of the ' bloody, almost nude body of M1Js Tate Inside Ille' residence. When tbe trjal 1esslon reaumed again today, Kanarek approached the 21-year- old blabde With a abeaf of plcblres and thrust ooe toward her. Mrs. Kasa- " Why are Jou .crying naw?" blan toot one look and then averted 0 t jmt can't believe It." her head. One o1 tt)e blpplea ~led ror the WAsHINGroN (uPJJ · • r•a• group lo,headJfnr Fantasyland and the Unlted Arab Repub!Jc 'Ind -hot crowd ' circled Main street for the trek agreed to enter into a «iJe..:fini"btgtnnibg ta the lllsoey ~. at 3 pan .• PDT taday Secretary of Halfway. clown Main Street tlM!y were St.ate William P. Rogen aonounced. met by a Costa Mesa poli~e riot control "We welcome th.ii atatesznan.llb 'action squad that swept onto Main Street from . . an emp!Oyes' entrance. taken by the leaden of the iovermnenf.a Screaming ''Here come the pigs, ... the hippies ran down Main Street away from the CC.Sta Mesa unit only to •be met bv a squad of Fullerton lawmen who cfosed off the escape route. PoUce and Dlsoey security officers grabbec( doiens of the Yippies and physlcalJy threw them out of the park or, took them· to the security office for transfer to the Anaheim police depa.rtmenl Several apectators Joined in the melee, Girl, Wit nesses Disagree Over Cause of Crash A Huntington Beach girl told Costa Mesa police she was· following too cl~ely Thursday after a rear-end collision that left her male comJ>lnion sprawled Jn a roadside field. Only witoessea disagreed. They said the IS.year-old girl dra.ued the real driver, Steven S. Libby, 19, of 180 BrOokllne Drive, from behind the wheel and shoved him to the ground. Libby was arrested and booked on aw:plclon of drivln& under the influence and poaseasion of dang~rous druga, but wU too incoherent to understarid at the time, polict Aid. No one else was hurt when the car hit one driven by Burdell 0. Prochaska, SI , of 2366 Rutgers Drive, COsta Mesa, in 90Uthbound lanes of Fairview Road at Baker Street. The teenaged girl "" ool charged al· the scene, bu• gtvtng falte lnformatJon to.a llw <1fficer ls 1 mlademeanor crime. conceroed. We hope thla lmporlant decialon will advance the ,Protpeeli for a just and JasUng peace in the Middle Easr." !J'ter official spokesman &bat J. McCloskey read Rogen' stateme!H, responsible olficiala Indicated 1tbat a cease-fire would .1llo formally be In ef- fect between Israel and Jordan. The officials said that nelthe< Israel nor Jordan had ever form.ally disavowed tile pertinent U.N. cease-fire reaolutlona between tbe' two couiitrtes. The oUiclal.s were relming to the original cease-Ore which ended the 1967 Mideast war and the ,ubsequent Nov. 22, 1967, Security Council reaolutlon which lald the basis for a future political setUement in the Middle E!I:. "We have just been Informed by the governments of"tbe United Arab Republic and Iarael of their acceptance of the U.S. proposal for a lland-ttill. cease-fire to come into effect at 2200 Greenwich Mean Time t.odey, Frld1y, Adgu!t ·7," Rogers aaid in a ltltemenl Judge, Declo.res No Magazine Sale for School The fillll word -1 negative one -has been given on the Huntington Beach Cit)' SChool District's annual magulhe sile conducted by student.I. Superior ·court Judge Howard C. Cameron ruled UUa week that the district - cOuJd not conduct the magulhe drive as It has ln the past because It was • using school time for coinmercial lb-, terests. "Vod"tlln'tlbellete"What?" Kanarek attempted tol\ave tfie Wlttleas "I can~ "belteve .tliey ·coulil -do·'lllob tale the, pidure In her band but Jud!Je The magazine salt was taken to court by SeaJ Beach 1ttomey Jim Bentson, whoo• dau&hrer. ·LIA Aoo, ti, la a student at Dwyer ' Jntemediate ,SChoo}, in the dlatricl a thing." Qiarles H. Older Instructed ·him• that • "Are )'OU oure yOU. doll'! mean that1 woUld aoll be neccuary and told him 100 couldn't do_. a thina:?" . to 8n,.at;'ad with the cross examinatioo. 0 1 mow t cHda"t dD lt. f dldn'l~bave ek .asked her tf that was the Iii me ta do lllcllmi anlmoliltlC thine," ·~ellyyoa aay you saw 1t the houM!" k"anaret ..,.at.cf again that' ahe atoo "It ' 1ppeara lo be the wblte i!DWll ran into the houle wi\11 two fc!pDa women and the. king balr. I never aaw ·her coc!efeadan!I_. of Charles MIDIDll In the f1et .'! ca,. ml Oiarla "Tex" Wtlaon· and The deleMe lawyer IOU&ht lo«stabli.th that the nilgbl be un1ble to 'nme.m&er that Mn. Ka11blan actually ran into bee•..,. ahe wu In a atate or ahock the houselimttr with a !mile nut the at lh&•lJme, • witn<u denied flatly that Ille e .. r had Her volc:e. Ttojnc ta 1 about Mn. <iono ao. " • . Kaslblan repli•d , "I Just lmow I didn't "When )'OU bean! oct,.int oomlng do ll, Mr. Kanattk." from the house dktn't you e1re. what Kanarek had belWI the d•y'I -(See.LlflDA, Pqe, ,Z) ' • Ten ni s Tolll'.ney Slated Satur~ay Some of Fountain Valley'a bell rennls playen wUI !angle In the dty'1 aMual cbamplomhlp toumey olorllnl at t 1.m .. Saturday, oo the Fountain Valley Hl&h SChool rennlJ COlll13. The actibn begins wllh women's otnatet, Jollowod by junior and .. 1or dlvlllon men'• dlamplonlhip,,,,.ttba. S.tu!<lay's compeUtloa, follow• , the , opening.of the looroey· fist weekend. The maguiQe s11e was condUctM each· year 1t the dlltrtct'a two: 'lnttrmedlate achoo!~ Dwyer 111'1 Giiier, ta raise fUiids for the 1ludet!I govlriuhollL - SUperlor Coun Judie Hoben L. · Corfman had Issued a prelJmlnar)' in. junction on the mt11a!l.ne sale earUer1 thlt ye1r. Judie Cameron's rullng II the flnal c1ec11100. brlnsJng ta a halt the 11oyeor- 1radlt1od of magulne tales !JI lh• dl1tlld. "There will be no aet regulationJ IUCh as. hair being three lnchea long on the sides," ezplained Bruce Young, public relaUona man for Disneyland. "The decbion lo let a po..;. . Into the pafk is not an arbitrary ooe for the ticket taker to make. There are no rules sel down on bow our sueaLs ar.e to look." Security men wUi do that. Young aal<\ that aom~ ~ w\ll be ... ,.. by iecurlty pallet \>elm belnc admitted ta "!he park and undellrat>lea will llOt be allowed In. "'I'h1' m'eans that if 1 person does "'"! •""''. hair, be, m11 be · "'1DJUed .. Vll part. Tiie llllr llylet that .,. la l'DIUe lodoy_ fend lo be . longer and we are not going to keep anyone oot Of Disneyland for Jong hair atone. The decision will be based on general appearance and attitude," he said. . Disney land olllc"1o Sl'ld they u. Ui:lpate eo further lrolible from Ylpples after the dlsturbanc. at the park '1'11111'> day nlghl HuntingtQn Bids For City Honors Tbree Huntlngtan Beacn dtizens wlll carry U)e city's bid for 1 national honor to a conference in Portland, Ore.. this month. They will be in Portland from Aug. 23 to 26 to speak before lhe All American CJUes Awattb jury In the finak of a cor:itest spolliOl'ed by tbe NaUooal Munldpal Leagu_e. Hunilnaton Beach lo one of 22 cities ln the finals. Monte Nitzkowski; a member .Of the cillzena' steering coinmlttee of ttie' tfrbaa Lend Institute, clty PubUc lnformauon Officer William Reed 1nd former Clty Councilman Dr. Henry Kaufman wW go on the trip. , ot The award will ~ ,the-city lhat has done most t,o.1 ptotne(e cltlzen Io- volvement in civic developrr.ent. The projects wblch pui Huntington Beach In the finals are the beauUfication <If Pacific Coast Highway, pr1opoeed Ttdevelopment of the dQwntown area and creation of beach parking, facllitlea. Orailge Cont ' Weatller Tbey'll he beaUng 1 path to the beach Satw:day as the tem~­ ture soan· to 95 in the tnllnd areas.. On the oout it 11 be 1 com.- f ortable 72 u~ f'"° skies. ~s mi. TOD~ l' The Gr.-Ust •Show .,. l:t:Mh · mzdi(ionaiz~ I MJ the grf12tflf clowna ,oi(.. earth. The ' Rlnglt.Q Bro1.1 BarJtum and Bo~lq circua take.1 the cent1r ring in today'a W tekcndcr 1ection. •---t _,,...... ,,..__ II ' ........ .._ w Ctltallll "' 1 or..-e..,, • , ........ ,... ............. ~ IJ '-" ,,.,, ~ II 1'9dtl Mlfbfl 1•11 PMflt 1...... . "T...._._ ,. 11""1al ..... • .,......,. ,...,. , ......... , ...... . ~ ,4 ................ ,.,, ........ 11. .......... . ,._ ,. W•• •= n.u ~ .... • • ' • --.+-~ I ) I • ' I I WLf i>l\.OT H ' . Sef\} Beach: On and On ' .Graryl lµ,r1 Probe Reque.~ted Police Chief ' . . A ftquesl !er a Cra\id Jury ' 1.. lftlr eipJabled. ' WilJ . n.._ ; vut11auon Into t11e 1urmou crJpr,1ng the ' Jim Benilell, the newly appolnllt lltr C"Wlllle' Qty of Sul Buch hh been fi ed with att«noy, eould not be cont.did" tl\11' ~ ., I lhe clty attorney'• otnce, City Clerk mornin& about the progress ol the re- Jerdy1 Wtlr revet.led today. quest. Pal c She uld she took the acUon Wednesday The Jl08'iblllly of lnvestlf1U0n was ace ase in complluee with .all earlier council raaed at lu.l MODday'1 city council directive :irttni the investigation ta\e session when Council,man Harold Holden place. , read a lengthy sUtement chargina ii· "I dldn'~ Dow what to <lo with the legaUties tn the rtrln&s of City Manaer requea~ SO 1 forwarded It to lhe legal Lee Risner and City Attorney Jim coumel of ~ cl\f fM acUon." Mr&., Carnes. t., ..,, • He tbea moved that the document be forwarded io the Grand Jury fw hlvestigatlon. Viejo Marine Third Victim Of Toro Crash A MiJsion Vle)o career Marine olfiotr tlUs m6rning bec1m• the !bird 14 die from injuries · 11~ned wben a KCl30 lue!inl tanker craabed and ~klded at El Toro Marine Corps Air Statton seven days aao. ' Maj. Wa1te.r Zytkewicz, .ti, 253n Andriana, father of two, dled of severe bums in the intensive cart unit to wbicb he was admitted a week ago, Fellow cnwm•n Cpl. Ke n n e t b Metulorf, 21, of El Toro base boUJlnt , died two days q:o of Identical lnJuriei. One of tbe aircraft's commandm. U. Roger MUlllni of Hunllngtoa Beach, died in the crw. They were on the fiv&-mernber crew of the Locilhe<d atri:rllt termad by a Marine spokesman "an old, reliable kind ol bird." Maj. Zyti.ewlcz, a vetuan of two tours In Vietnam, "tU operations officer for the Morine Aerial Jltfu<llng Sjluadroo 352, at El Toro. A base spokuman saJd the crash was the first accident fot. a crew of that squadron In 1'2,000 flyJna hours, coverhlg more than 11 years. Maj. Zytkewlei. who had received the Bronze Star and 11 Air Medals, is survJv· ~ by his wife, Joan. and two children. Funeral arrangements are not yet com· plete. They will take place at the Dilday Funeral Home in Huntington Beach., Maj. Zytkewicz' death Jeavea only two men who were on tbe w.tated practice tllght atlll alive. Meanwhile, Seal Beach Mayor Morton A_. Baum, who voted ilong with coun- c1lmen Thomas Hogard and Conway Fuhrman to fire the two officials has lost his job as pbarmacist for the L.i~sure World retlrtment community. ~ acUon was ~i.en Tueaday by J1ck DavlS, president of the Golden Rain Foundation. whfch la the admlnj.slerlng body of the· community. Cited as reason was a conflict ol interest which could have pla~ Baum in the position of votlnt for or ap.inst Leisure World matters com!n& bdore the city council. · Chamber Seeking City Slogan If you have a few cbolee words to say about Huntington Beach, the Chamber of Commerce wants to hear them. The chamber ls weighing entrle.s In a city slogan contest. Entries must pro- mote HunUngton Beach as the hub of Orange County entertainment. accord.int to chamber Manager Ralph Kiser . Many entries have been received already. They include such suggestions as "Hwi· tington Beach -Hub of Heavenly Hap- penings" ••. "People, Prosperity and PJeUUl't all thrive in HunUnaton Beach". • • • "Hun't!ngton Beach -Center of Southland's Entertainment Empire." The chaml>er is still looking "for 11 prize.winner. A $JOO Savings Bond will go to the winner. Entries may be sent to the chamber office, 18582 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, 9264'1. • By RUDI Nl)':OZIELSKI OI ~ O•ll'f '1111 Ili ff Seil Beach PoUce Chief Lee Case him&elf will present the cue against tbe controversial Mar\na Place, a teen· qe dance hall in dangu of losing it1 license for alleged!y allowln1 misconduct by peirons. The hearing, scheduled for 9::11 a.m. Monday in the city council chambers, is expected to draw coruiiderable interest since it has become involved In the city's current political tempest. Charges to be brought against Mary Robertson, operator of the palace for the put five years, lnc.lude allowlnl drunk and disorderly conduct among the patroru and allowing persons o\der than 20 to frequent the premises. Both charges are in violaUon of the city ch"arter and could result in the l'UBplllSiOO oI the hall's license if they are proved. The hearing was to have been con· ducted last month by City. Manager Lee: Risner, who was fired by 3-2 vote in a clty council session nearly two weeks ago. Rumors have spread throuah the city that the councilmen -Ma)'or Morton A. Baum, Conway Fuhrman and Thomas Hogan! -fl.red Risner because he would have closed the danct baU. That charge: appears to have been re- futed alnce Risner has betn rehired te:m- porarlly as special consultant foc the hearing, a move suggested by Baum. The actual hearing offiet:r will be Den· nis Courtemarche, interim Seal Beach city manager. "The hearing could go tor more than one day. It depends how many witnesses the llceMee presents and what his defense consists of," he said. Last Monday, Mayor Baum "1d Coun· cilman Thomas Hogard denied char1es that their campaigns werti fli\anced by Robertson and that they we.re trying: to re·instate gambling In the city,_ Robertson, a former Jleutenant with the Los Angeles PQJlce Department, operated the same building as a Jea:al gambling hall, the Airport Club, durln1 the early 1950s. They are CapL Robert Walls, Jr., 28, of Tu.tin Ind S/Sgt. Kenneth 0. Davis, 31, of Santa Ana. They mi both on the critical list and a hospital spokesman would say only they are "holding their own." l\.ennedy Jr. T1·ipped Up By Undercover Cab Driver . OAll,.Y •ILOT,,.,. ~ flfrV Qwlltt Starting Early Sue Hobbs of Huntington Beach Parks and-RecreaUon i;>epartmenl (back to camera) leads young ladies in her pom-pon gltl claaa through a drill al Park View School. Program is offertd 14 girl.I in third through eigbtb grades and about 60 have taktn the ·cla$S tbl.s summer. Another class will be offered in September. Billboard Blight Battled On Busy Beach Boulevard Tennesaee Ernie Ford still boasts about ''deals: aweeter than a flWiped water melon" along Beach Boulevard, but his pea-picldn' smile may come down or face tight restrictions if Huntington Beach officials solve the billboard bligh t. "We have a city ordinance that doesn't allow billboards period-but that doesn't remove them." Mayor Pro Tem Jerry Matney said toda y. Matne y and several residents on a special billboard committee are at- temptJng lo wort out a compromise with the billboard industry lo clean up the 1lgns, elimiqate some and restrict others to certain localiOJl!. righl to operate their business here1" Matney ex.plained. A city ordinance passed live years ago gave the billboard companies until January. 1970, to remove their work!. But the big signs are still up. "We were prepared to start litigation in January,'' City Attorney Don Bonfa !lays, "but we didn't want to Interfere with the billboa rd commitlee's work. Volwit.ary coo peration is always better than litigation -if you can gel It." Lt. Mullins WU sltlln1 ln the dual cockpit with Maj. Zytkewlct. There has bee no detennlnaUon wtio was pllotin1 the plane when it went do~. BARNSTABLE, Moas. (UPI) -The taJi driver who took Robert F. KeMedy Jr. to retrieve a pet falcon July IO was an undercover narcotics agent whose actions led to the arrest of the boy and ha cousin Rpbert Sargent Shriver 111 on Marijuana charges that night, it was learned today. , 1beir effort.I woWd,_~e pea·pickin' to recove~ the bird that day: the 10th. Emle FOfd whole fi\Ubloirded face is "OUr primary objective is to virtually eliminate billboards along the scenic routes, such as Pacific Coast Highway. And there wiU be none In the central park area.'' Matney said. "We are \fylng to develop an ordlnancef to aet up per-D\iltiblt anu for billboardl, but which Jmpose·s certain restrictions and guarantees they wlll be properly maintained." Linda Kasabi.an Gets Love Letter LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Linda Kua· bian, the star witness in the Tate-La Bianca murder trial, haa received a proposal of man'la1e from a Plttsburah man who signed himself only as "N.A." Gary Fleischman, attorney for the mother or two, said today that the letter writer described himseU as a non-drug· uslna, 24-year-old man. ·According to the lawyer, the man said he was in k>.ve with Mrs. Kasabian, 21, and wanted lo know if she would marry him. Fleischman said she "du&" the letter and said she was glad "at leaast somebody loved her." 7th Victim Found SAO PAULO, Bru.ll CAP) -Another woman was found atrangled to death today, and police express belief she may ha ve been the seventh vlcUm of a "manlac" whl) has been on a k1lllng spree in thl1 bua:e metropolis for the put few weeka. DAILY PILOT ORANO'll: COAST 'U&ll.t'llNG tOM.,AN'I' "olieft H. Wee4 ,,...111 ... , ~ ,.,.,_ Jetlc •· Curley M•,...l"I 1!•- Al•ro Oir~i11 W•t 0.1111• c-tr ••1"" Allio rt W. l1t11 .-.-11~ lfllOr HdtllllfM .._.Offic• 111?1i l ooeh l 1Ml1¥1r4 M1IU111 All4r1t1t r.o. l ot 790, 92641 Otlrlrtr Otfkn ~ 1lkft1 m .,..,.., ,....,.., C•I• M•: m WQ1 l •Y l"-f .,......,, u1c11' nu w..t ••ten ""'""""' &.11 ci.-11: as "'"" II """'"* hal The two youth! wlll be leavini .the Kennedy compound on Nantucket Sound "as soon as possible" to spend time with relatives. Kennedy, son of the assassinated New York senator, will return to McLean, Va .. while yOun1 Shriver, Kennedy'• cousin and aon of the former amba1sador to F'ranct, will 10 to New York, a family source said. Kennedy's pet falcon escaped July II and the boy broke his righl wrist falling from a tree when he tried to retrieve him. Two days later, the bird was cap- tured in Cohasset, about 60 miles across Cape Cod Bay, near Boston. Young Kennedy took a taxi to Cohuael From Page 1 YIPPIE S ... Terrace in Tomorrowland, 1ingin1 the Mickey Mouse Club song. Late In the afternoon the Yippies took over Tom SaW,tr lslaiid, chuin1 many or the lourists off the attraction and raising a Viet Cong flag .Qn the Island's fortress . Disneyland oUlclals 1aid members of the group passeC: around marijuana cigaiets on the island and a security guard reported seeing a naked man on the island. Jack B. Linquist, Disneyland dlrtttor of markeUn1, said the encounter on Main Street began when "one of the rintleaders swun1 at an officer." "The Disneyland le<lll'ily contingent and area pollce did an excellent job in quelling the dlJturbances,'' he said. "It'a a ahame that such a small aroup has to ruin It for the othtr1, but we had to think of the safety of our iuesta," be atoled. The taxi driver ,"wuj itflnl~~ un· ...._ one <1f .,;.es ilacf •laden Beach dercover a1ent" invei;Ugatlng the rise ~evard. or narcotics use on Cape Cod, a police "'?be major companies tell us they liOUroe said. He declined to ldenUfy the are willing to cooperate if they can driver-agent or elaborate on the way be allowed billboards in some areas The billboard committee gave a brief report to the city council this week and asked for staff help on the matter. in which he helped in the arre.sts. of the city. They feel they have a City Manager Doyle Miller pledged the support of the planning stair. Basically, the committee needs to work out details of an ordinance which atrlkes a compromise to clean up blllboards, but still allow the business. The names of the two youths were taken by authorities t.he qlght ot the loth in a ·drug raid In Hyannis-P o r t but not in the family compound. The incident was not revealed until Wed· nesday, a day after the boys were served with juvenile warranb chargin1 'them with illegal pcmession of marljUana and conspiracy to violate the state dfug laws. They appeared Thursday in the juvenlle se!Sion of district court and received a stern lecture from the judge, who con- tinued their case "along with those of 100 other juveniles -all reportedly first offenders, like Kennedy and Shriver -for a year without Uncling. From Page 1 LI NDA ... happened to anyone inside?" Kanarek asked. "Of course I cared." "Weren't these your friends who were in there, Charles Watson. Susan Atkins and Patricia Kreowlnkel?" "Yes." "Didn't you run into the house to protect them ?" ''No, I rar. toward the house but I didn't go lnto it.'' On Thursday Kanarek had just asked Mrs. Kasablan whether she looked through a windo,,. of the bouae that night 11!1 August when without 1nother word he gave her the picture. Jt showed Miss Tate, clad only In panties, lying on her right side with her hand extended above her head. She was covered wllh blOOd and there were clearly vlsible knife wounds ln her ob- vious ly pregnant body. Mrs. Kasablan had teaWied previously she iiaw three slaylngs at the estate outside the house last Aug. 9 but that she did not witness the kllllng of Mlsa Tate and hair stylist Jay Sebrina in the living room . Suffragette, 86, Dies NORWALK, Conn. (AP l -Elsie Hi!J, 86, • pioneer in the fight for woman suffrage in the United States. who o~ went to jail for her beliefs, died Thursday night in her home after 1 heart attack. "We've got to get them r!duced. There are too many, but It's a IOl\i batUe,'' Matney concluded. .SUMMER CONTINUES. Helli'9don Offers "OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION," Complete Occosional, Dlnln9 & Bedroom, ALL AT SUISTANTIAL SAVINGS! • Drexel Natures "ESPERANTOS" Collection. • Entire Heritage Reduces Its Complete "MADRIGAL" Collection. HENREDON & H&RITAG! UPHOLST!RY 1 So/o OFF School Site For Juarez Relocated The Juaru COiony project In Founi..ln Valley Js belnl shifted to a new sue. Tbt Juarez project. Involves a pr• school for bi·linsual and bl-cultur1l chUdren, a park site for the Colony and recreation facilities. It's a program of cooperalion between the city, Fpunlolll Valley School O~tricl and I.be federal aovernment. "We are shilUng the propo!ed part Mid school site from CaUe ~tadera to C1lle Independeocla, because the flrst site is not 1vailable," City Maniaer James Neal e1plalned . "Tbe change is better for our program becouse It brb>p toiether • park, • achoo!, recreaUon center ind meetin& p\ace." uld Robert SancltlJ, ... 1.unt superintendent of the Fotintaln Volley School District. . The am.ell llCbool building will .""'' the ·two additional f\lnctlo111 Ol rec:re1Um center and mee:Una: place for COiony • resident&. r Originally, the cily .planned to ,llH a well site on Calle Madera for~ new city well, a park site 4nd the: ~ location. , "We own hali·•·lot, 50 ~Y 150 feet," Neal ezplained. "We planned to buy the other ' half of the Jot, but It's not for sale." Wedne>d1 y night, the clty'a Pub COmmlssion recommended buytnc two 50 by 3QO..foot lots at the end of Calle Independencla, twice the are• originally propoaed. City eipenditures for purchase of the land and development of the site lhl esUm1ttd at $48,000 the lint year. The acbool distrk:t bu a federal arant ,(for $75,000 to lauoch the bl-lingual, pre- achool program the first year as a pilot program for tbe rest of the nal:lon. DiJtrlct officials upect nearly isc>0,000 in federal funds for the proaram .over five yea rs. Sanchia said the lera:er lot siie would make it possible lot the Office of Economic Opportunity, which currently leases a Colony residence for a recreation center, to move Into the school building. "The OEO office pays 1 person lo run the recreaUon program. That person could help our program a·,1d also ha ve a better recrea tion fa cility . The school building could also be used for a com- munity meetina place at niaht," Sanchis said . "I think the whole project is a fine example of governmental cooperation oo three levels," Neal added. He said the city would proba\lly sell its original well site on Calle -Madera and shill lhe proposed well to Calle h1dependencia. "The new site is really much better because of size anq location,'' Neal said. Fountain Vallev • Budget Approved A $7 .2 million operating budget for 1970-71 was approved Thursday night by trustees of the Fountain Valley School District. The new budget shows an increase of about S700.000 over the 19e9-70 figure for day-to-day operaUons, but is not expected lo alter the district's currenl tax rate of $3.50 per SlOO assessed valua· tion. "We a.re aolna to enforce I rt&ulaU011 prohibiting Iona-hair! from the. park. We didn't want to do it, but thia incldeot makt1 it a mu.st." Mrs. Kasabian's g1sp w1s audible throuahout the courtroom. She burst into tears and could not speak. Sbe wa1 lead off to an anteroom wb.lle the lawyers conferred in the Judge's thambera. Then the trial w1s receaed ovtmJaht. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE Security poUc:e Me 1 complete sweep of the pork lltor the gueatl had left to rout any Ylppiea 1<11 Iller the cn>wd WU UCOrtecl lrtm Olaoeyl1nd. TM Ylppleu--rouped oulalde the pork and threw rocb-and dtbtla al of!lctrs before btldln( IOt tlle D1111eyland Hotal where they we:ra con!tunted by mort ~ :""· They finally dilperted It The oaly other time the park cloaed early wu 1 memorla1 aesture following tlle &11wln1Uoa of John F. Kennedy In I~ Kan1rtk declined to tell newsmen why he suddenly handed the &lrl Uie picture. Another defense lawyer, Pa u I Fltzger1ld, uld he belleved Xanart.k wu "trylna to show she w1s actually in the hou!t. contrary to her testimony." "The jury will have to decide whethtr the shock she dilplayed waa • &bock of recognition QI' a shock of horror at 1 bloody pbotosr1pli," Flt11erold aald. • '1ttJ 11111 · N EWPORT BEACH 1727 WMtcllff Or., 1142·2050 OPEN PR IDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA llACH Prol-IOftAI lntorlw l>Mltnora AYlll•lo-Al~llD :MS N.r111 G-Hwy. 4'44551 OPIN PRIDAY 'TIL 9 ""-Tell ft9' M• flf 0...,. c..., .... 11tl "J ' ' 7 7 ' I •• ··-+ • • ... • • ' • • .... •¥f<•-.- ,. . .. • ' . ' r t ..;)l r voi:. ,63, NO. 118, :.. SECTIONS, :t2 PAGES i ' I • ,, " . ' ' • reewiir ' •• . -~· Initiative Threatened ' «"I y ,.,r.l'ltl» H Badham Bill ·ti efeaie d. ' ' Newpcrl Beach ~C~y C o u n c 11 m a n Ho)l'ard Ro_gers said tocjay a group of Plicific Cqast Freeway oppooents is con- aiderin{' an hl1,~\l~e pet i ll 0 0 and a c:hartei" amend:rnent tO bind t h e city muncil on ihe ffeewa~.~ Petitioning procedures to bring the fteeyiay question to a vote of the, people Wili:be tr led il Assembb'man Rob¥1 ~m's bill to delete the freeway dJ& in Sacramento, Rogers vqwed. The jnilia~ve would be lo re>eind the lreetay aplil'nt the COUlldl bas sign· ed With the state Divisfon of Highways * * * .. Badham Delays Freeway Bill For 3rd Time By THOMAS FORTtJNE Of "" D911t "'"" '"'" .The Senate Transportation Committee hearing on a bill to prevent Pacific Coast · Freeway construction through Newport Beach and part of Huntington ~ hu again been postponed at ~ rQQuest o( Aasemblyman Robert Badbam (Mie'fPOrl .Be.acb). Badbam, author of bill, asked fbt the tliinf .auccessive one week delay on. the helll'lni bo<auae ' he sai~ he op 'I ...,it on b,l5 votes being there MOnda:y. He ts·" ilhooting ~ 'Miarilil. lOUowlng Monday, Aug. 17. ' l!;>dlifm said he waola .be ml5'lng the votes of Tom Carrell (D-81.n ,Fernan- dn), -is hospitaliRd, lrid Mllton M"'lts (R-S.n Fra-), wbq wlll be aw;zy from the Capitol Monday. !t takes a seven vote majolrlty Of the 'U-member Ti-'ansportaUon Corrimittee to win a ffi:ommendalion for passage to lbe full senate. The Badham bill (AB 1701) previously passed the As"'"bly 4M. - In another development, Badham said today he has learned the City ,of Costa Mesa has hired a lobbyist to work on the Senate committee memben. "I don't object to it," Bad,ham said, "but I think the fact should be made tnawn to the public." Costa Mesa MayO'I' Robert Wilson, said, "He's right. When we hire we go ~ the top. We hire the best in the business." Tbe city's lobbyist is William F. Marsh, Costa Mesa resident w"o is a fonner wemblyman from the North Hollywvod- Burbank area . Mayor Wilson said' he hired Manb for $500 about 2~ weekll ago. He sald he has told other councilmen what be did and has beard nothing negative. fUson said, ''The re as O'D Costa Mesa is · so strong on this .Js we can do • nothing to Newport }Joulevard (to become Newport Freeway) until tbt r.oistaJ Freeway Is settled.!' ~ said, "You can't build a Newport Fl*w•Y\.•nd have lt end up at the cliff dowd theri; and have all tbe cars !all In the OC<!an. Jn 1963, when the Q;astal Freeway roule ""-" flllt adopted we had aomethlng like 19,000 cars a (tay on N~ .Boulevard, now jt ls 'up to 55,too I day." Badham toot issue ..,.Jth WIJ90n'1 atate- hlent that the seven-y'ear freeway fight had cost Orange Coast area cities in extes5 of. $300,000 of the • taxpayers' JT)Obey. He sakl, "l doo't know where be' got that figure. He must have pulled tt o\lt" of bit bal" "Can be prove we didn't spend that mocb?" 'W.illon retorted ... It may be !500,000. I didn't have tline to figure , (!lee BADllAM, Pap I) . ' ...... liJr . the ~ ~~t ,bf ~. Uppei; ·~y Crossing. . . ' The charter amendment 'J>n>hibill the coundl !!'Om '1gniJ\g • ey: agree!Oeot regarding Pacific Coast Freeway wHb®t ' ' ~ votie of the ~e. 1 Both could ~ '8C'!"Illpiilhed through ' elections brought ibooit by petltlona bear· Jng 15 perC.nt Of ·the city'•· registered ....... -. ' ' , . Rogers aJao .aid be 'plans lo , give an ultimatum to 11:v~'.Qm\pany offlclais In an Inf~ .meetil>B ·Saturday. that they suppart t tie 'Badbam, bill c.-face t.h e consequences· Of popular rej · by cW-,Of Nel']Xlrt. The meeting Sabirday It the Balboa Bay Club will bring tocelher Newport Beach Mll)'<ll' Ed !fu1h, Vice Mayor Rogers and Irvine Company President William Ma!Oll and. possibly some members of 'bis 1taff. llirtll, """ called , the meeting, said be bad no intention of' Clvlng an ultimatum. '''We'll probably Wk about the freeway, the airport, annexations and other things," be Slid. "We get together periodically a<>metlmes sevet;ai times a week, someliµlel eveoi few Weeks.'' I Rogers, who publicly accused the Irvine Company' earlier' this _week of. not having the 'Interests of the peqplc ol N ... wport Besch al . heart, said ·he. belleves the mayor'~ ~ In ~ the,meetlnr ts"•io C•l~·&Olni' be'-..... ~. U..'j"'. ", '. ' '~U(cl!t'ii.e' .. ·.!'IP~· he thinks 1lJe clly, • . studyinfl • alterna'ftve rnula Volihd · ·e · cl\y aDd a lllbsUhlte "~ f~ 1Yllem." II U.. • Badham '!>ill ~•iii le aaJ4,. a group ol ~ II ready lo mnve- forward with 'the Jn.iti1tive and ..city cbamr 1petlUons. ' , I ' ·Ro--memben .of-the group · Include tonne< NewWrt mayor and - chairman of -Harbor Arel Freeway Flghten Paul Gruber; C6nl18 de! Mar homeowners t'OWlcil 5'1°keunan Robert oirct, and Wllliani ·Sjlr-; 'tbe Bay'side Trailer Park managei"wtio wu-ln cbarge Of counting the P<~tlon lzignature. gathered in suppott ofi!he Badhim bUI. The Freeway Fighters ,say they o\>- tainOd 2!,000 signature. on those peti- tlona ' ' ~ ~s 'a' ~'from Newport City Attorney Tully Seymour explaining the I~gal procedure under the 1tate electlonl code and·'tbe dty charter for initiative and charter change actlops. Basically, the petition clrculalorf net<! signatures of 15 percent. of the citY~ registered voters io ~ the city council to hold an eledkm on the inJtiaUve and on the charter amendment. Rogers sald il that is done and tJio public support! the mea~ future council.! will then have to •convlnce ·more than half the voters, ln 'order to take action on the freeway. 'My Fair Lad y' Due at Concert Select.lons from "My Filr Lady" will be featur.I ~L tbe summer pops coocert at Fashion laland Mmday at t p.m. , cbi:iductor -Coibposer Henry Brandon of ·eorona de! 'Mjlr wiU .;nciuct the :is. member orclfestta. AdiritaSion is free to the evening concert, which ts sponsored by the Fuhioa rsland Merchants A!soci· ation. Thft week's coocert will be dedicated to two granddaughters ol James Irvine 11, Mra. Cbarles 'Wboeler Ill Ind Mrs. Keith Gaede. ' ' . . ' ' Ir ' I ' TE~ CEtn'S . ' " " . ' ' . ' . a ' . --· •' ' " I ' , I If I I' ' I ' • • I I •' 1 " ' . ., I • • j i ~ l I ,· ., . ' ' . l "I I a '-, 0· • • I ' . -' ..... .. .. * - ' .. )..fn~~:tlt r ·,l:~·.~L '~'t,"f1. ,, .. , . ..,,1 :.!~~·, . .,,~··· •,. •"i ,f(_ .... -,.t f ·'. :~l.'t'''I ' ,I I,. '1LYftioT "'-" ... ...-.- .. ' 'POLll!E,lN·IRfOT·~~A~ 1.INE DISN£YLM{c ·s M'A:Hil'~Ri'IT AS 'AIJll'ffO,l'l'IES~•lt'".AJ!IC ,c,LO$!P THURSDAY EVENING . , • ·~J~1:•.,;.i1 •• 1 ·,I . , ~~··:;i_',:,~--·o , . , "T~ . .. . \ ~ . . : .'I 1.; '. -. . Mi~d· -. . P ... fire-.~1 , , Y .. --t:,a8t . «>wers Disti.eyland · ·Ousts Yipp·ie~ Agree to Cease F;ighf;ing 'Toda y ~ . ' . . e·y STEVE MITmELL Place on ~e park:a Main street at 8:55 i ottlit o.~-ri•-stltf' p.m. . Dtmeyiand vfficlala ·have· banned all" i.ong,..'halred and denlm:Clad. ,the van- lcint-hillred Y o·u i1hs from the 'Magic guard .of , the Y.lpple , grou~, ~v.er1ed ' Kleglloni Jo1Jow'1g l la · <:<>n~n : -~n . Il\!11~ ~t no.qn .Tbutsday, !o , 1>4ttWeen. 0r8JlPi ~nly ~wmen~apd 1300 1 ceU:btale "N4~il.,~Ie .pay." , , Yippies that· culnlinated in . the -park ' ' Slnafi , : ihsidenb were I' f!potte'd by closing sbr hours wly Thursday. ~y)and sectlt!ty Police 4!urln& the Eighteen youths were arrested as a 1 day. rangihg from a sing-ln on , Captain resu1t of the confrontation wtilct>-took , Hook'a pirate shtp ta a disb.irbanct at * * * *' * * Disneyland Regulatwns B·a,S ~d on Appearance Disneyland ope~ its gates at a a.m. toda:y without incident. In fact, the only dWer.enee, between today'a •opening and any other:day was the fact tht Wtilorined aecurJty pOuce maimed ,t.Jie.tJcket booths =: n:!th ctr!::~::!nt;, and bad Officials ~t \!le Magic Kingdom disclo•· ed that dress regul1tions ror park guests will be up to 'the · disCretion of security police at the ~ates. "There will be no set regulaUon1 such as hair being· three. incl>e.s 'long on ·the aides," e:i.."Plained Bruee Yeung, public relations man for Disneyland. "The decision to let a. pel'80n Jnto the park is not an arbitrary ooe for the Uck~t taker to make. There .ue no rv1ea &et dowr. on how our guests are lo look.".Seeurlty m ... will do •tbal 1 Young said that •IODle guests will be screened by security pollee 'before being a\imltted to the. park · and' undeskables will not be allowed In. "'Thia meani tlllt il · a tleison does hlve11onj hair, hf! may be adriiitted ' to. the park.· The ·hair 1tyles that ·are in vogue· today tend to be longer and we are oot going to keep anyone out of Disneyland for long ha.Ir alone •. The ,Aoilaton will be bued on ,.....1 appearance and attitude," he~sald. Dia'Oeyland officials said they an- Uclpate "' furtber,Jrwble l'rnm Yjpples ati.r the ·dlsturllance at the park Tlllir .. day nlghL the Monsanto diapl~y.in ~rrowland. Then the incldenta a~pped lip. The urscbtduSed1 clolur81 Of>' U>e tamed tourist attmUon, the· ..co,;d suice fr.e park opened IJ\"lt55 ·canJ. all« 1het groop of hlpPit-'ytpe ~-~Up Main St.reel, cban_ting obsctnlUea and singing IOllP •. The g r.o·u p. feft" IJ'Om Sawy.er'1 I eland' at about •e p;m .. ~fore beading for the par.k's City Hall. !n a , line which e:rtended the tenath of the street. Wben they reached the c11y bail' are. they cban'ttd for the rel~ ·of Minnie Mouse and tore· down a rtd-white-and- ' blu~ bunUn1 near lhe building, replidng If with a "Lea:allu mfrlju~i" ~I w~ portrayed• •·dark green ip~juana pl~~~:~~~ebt;=~lli be1an · singing 0 God Bless /.metica'' but were. quidly -down bf tbe:youtlls. One ¢ .the ·hippie,: ahowtea tdr . the rnup to bead ~'·Pa11ta!ylimd ·•nll.lhe· eroWd circled llf.iln 'Street tdr t1ie trek to tlle· Di<ney castle. . · ' ..~way do.,m ~n Street they were n:i~t ~ .a C.O.rta Mesa ponce riot control sqnad' tlµlt "!•pl onto Main Street from ~ emplofeJ' 'entrance. , . Screaming 11~re CqJl!I! the plP.," the hippies ran down MairtStreet away lrom ~e Costa ·Mt14 unit ;ooly to be met b,Y •. sguad-« Fullerton .lawmen who CJOSeq oil the tlfll'< rnui.. · Police and Dlaney securtty oflJcers grab~' -,elf .u.. Y!ppiea· me!• physically tlirew them out of the 1*lt , or took them to the security office for transfer to the Anabetm police WASIIlNGTON (UPI) ' -Tb e tJnlk!d Arab · Republic and ·Israel have 'l'!'ed ·lo enter Into a Cfa>e·f~e.beglnning at 31 P·!D·• PDT today Secretar,y ct Slate William P. Rogers announced. · ~e Wtlcome thl! sla'tesm.rin-llte action tatai1 bY the' leai!eri ol the govermnenta CO~. 'lfe hope , thJ. lmJ>'1rlant decision will advance the pros~t:s tOr · a juil~ •lid lasung peace ·In 'the MJadle EaSt." . . Aller official spokesman Robert ~. McCloskey rµd Rogefs' atateniejrt, respooslble olliclals indlcaled that • cease.fli'e would .:dso 'formally be in ef- fect .bet.ween larael aqd,Jordan. · 'l'be cfliclalt lald that oelther Iarael · not J.ordan had evei fonrially liisavo.wed the pertinent UJ'j. ~se.flre resolutions ~tween 1he two countries. The olficlala were referring to the origiba.l cease-fire wbJch ended the 1917 Midel!st war aJ)d ilie aubseqqent Nov. Z\!, 1967, Security Council resolntioo 'fhich 1aJd the basis for a future poliUcaJ lf!lUement ln •the Middle Est. "We have just been Informed by the govenmie'nts of the Untted Arab RA!pOl>lic and lmlel ol their acceptance of the tl.s. proposal for a stand..UU ceaae-tlra to come into ·effect . at m Greenwich MeftD Time today, Friday, Aurust 71 11 JIOgen said In a statement. . C.Ut .weaU.er .. f ossible Teachers. Strike Loom • department. · ' · Seven! tpeclaton joined In the melee,r chulng yipples around the town aquate 1houtlqg, "'R~. )lipp~et. ~." • ' · • The -eocounW ,on M'aln Street> 1isted1 1 only minutes. Riot aquada in helmets, 'J'h!!y'll )le' ¥·~ a ppth \o tho beacb Salw'day 11 the tempera- ~·.~. )o 9$' iJ) the ~ areas. On the C98s1 It'll be a .. fortable n under (aJr skies. ' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "" 0.llY """ lflfll Pouibllity of a teachers' strike will be among 1tternatlvea discussed in 1n emer-' .gency rnetUng of the. Newport-Mesa Ed- ucation A&soclation Monday nijhl. Bart Hake, N-MEA e.xecuUve teettllry, said today th~t , strike "Is certalniX en alternative and wtU be discussed, ' ·at Monday's session. 1'he teachers' grou~ will meet to dls- C\la • cout1e·of acUon .tollowJng ,Tuu- day'a !Choo! board ....Ung al wh'ch Mrd members voted to spend $125,000 "•000 ln addiUonal Cuodl on 1alary ~t.f. Approximately $92,000 was ..,. • restorinl R"t programs and the f) balance wu returned to district ~· payera. ·HaJra said teadlen are diaiUUsionetl with board member) .,Ule tpey eSi> peeled them to uae more ol the additional fulMI* on.salary -'"1'be1 Jiava uaed IPO¢i>aa argumeJ!ls tn raUonalfzb'lg tbetr•deCbloo,'•·K1ke de- clared. "F• Ii~ ~ tlfey denied sal- ary pr-0!1 they Ill<! th<y Considered legltimale because tiler• were·oo funda. '"lite action they've taken, D!1" thlt the utr:a funds •re available, revea}a that board acted In bad Ulthl' he aald, Hake aald the board's •rgument of gW. Ing a break to·the tupayfrt was a lalll• clOUJ one. "When they voted the overrldt ·' I • In F~, taxpayers Indicated they wanted , quality education. I think the board acted in bad faith,' 'he 1akl. . The additional funds 11located to teach. trs' aalarl .. will be U!ed to adjUll pay lncremonta In the middle ol the t>IY1Cale. Prior ta Tuesday'• meeti11g, board tne!pben had granted AU te1cber1 t 5.8 percent c"t of llvlng .pay tncrwe. Wilh the coe1 of living, ~ase, base pay for a beebinln1 ·.-idary te11cheJ; will be fl,111 ·&00 ">t•i>V with II years' qper: Jenee, ,, iM.( Ck~ and 30 groi!Uate un1t1 la f14,5'5. flake cbaorl'd· board JnC!llben with at.arting 'a--tirrib'te cy'cle'' by not boost- inl aalariu. " _ • 1. . , lace prOteclors· ind ;u· mnkt IU1ell 1 1"1be niorale anionr ieaphets Is de"'r-. bbth .lidt• ot the 1treiet 111 a 'loudlPe•ker • loratlng..I'thlnk they ;'!Ill· po\ ht a.r wJl-· mlnouJlced 1he closing ol tho, .p0rk •t Mg to ~1 .. ~ their fre.• Ume. to dlstrlct 7:30 p.m: , · proJecfs, 1 be said. , Many of the 13,llOO guetls -punlad lfe cited planntng o1 In-~ tra_ln/lli espre9a1ooa aa they were Jed oat ol t ani.1 ~lµm 1'ork 'for l'Qiddle achcioJs, the park Some asked:· 11what'1 tiap- i :-.!\'~~ ""'~~l!i~~AA~~l · , peneil! 15 tlie p.rk•mJli c~1· • ' tencllng· il>ie'lvlce tralplhg'•J!!ilgrµi~,,ljiit • Dl"!l"Y emplo~, nd ~tY, l'Olice 1 Jtak~ uld llle 'pfiMIJ11 '0f •thetf bne)da,. ~o:!:, ~I dren m/Jlo ·u:.i~i conterencu11s dorie in ·Uieif ~ thrieto r!WiY, • ...,· 111 •·' in' • • lt(ll_ ._,.. and withoUt 'Pl11 , · • • ' • ........, mov a. . · • "There are i ~wbber".of Ullnp teac6era1 The, ~;N~ YJpple.Day. "°'·WOW" : are calltcl upon lo·help"1ritli: If lbeTate , bea,n ao a Dgbt n61e Tlitlrl"q ... ,• Jlald adeqnatel)' 1hey• d9n't , niJni1 't!clng' IJ'OllP of 7' Yl'ppla 'cot1Verg<ct .., 1111 , Jhlngs Uke that, but 1'hen tbe1'rt noi· carouael af FronUerlanll, ~ Moolanto J)ald enough, th11:y're likely Jb~ .. , •Jcti dllptiy, Gerieral ~bic,. ~ the,~e , an admlnlstralor dn I~'" Ilda aald. (Seo 'vJPpllt!I, 1'.,. I) INSIDE '[.ODAY Th• 'Gha~sl Sh.,. on' l;art~ 1'1id'l11onGUu 1Jai tl>e _o;ealUI cJOIDlll •°"' edrlh. 7he Ringling Bro1. Bamttm and Baile~ drcN t0kc1 '"'"-centfr rinQ in. todoM't Wttktndtr-1ection. ' . -., Ct ...... L J ' °""""" ~ 1 I ( ....... , ,,... -If (_. 11 --' ••lfltNI ,... • • ~ 1 .. 11 l ......... 14 AM U.... 11 MlllMll a i.. !!!""'-*' I - I 1IAll Y I'll.OT N ~inda Breal{s Down at Death Photos -Ull ANQI,£& (UPI) -Linda X.U. ---"<Ill, Ood" .... -!hit --_, -.. lier - coa14 do ouch .. "utmali>llc lhlnl" -abowo a picture today of one of the vk:tims ln the Tate murder cue. Defe.nae attorney Irvin& Kanattt tbtusl bet.n her • color photograph of the mulllated body of Voytek Frykowtkl, a ptSl -ol the actress Sharon Tate who .... •tabbed doz.ens of times and lhol In the killings lut Alli· I. Mn. Kasablan bellD ~. steadily ud KA!wU. said to 'tier ' ''Wiiy' are you cry)QC now?'' .. l )tit can't believe lt." "Ya Clll't believe what?" 111 eu1& btlltve lbey COllkl do IUcb • tb!Qa.'' I "Art """ ..... ,... doll'\ ,.... 11!11 ,... -~ do such • t111n1· .. ~ "I k11aw I dldn'I do ll I dldoi lino Ill me to do ouch 1n anlm&Us1k thlnJ." Kanarek suggested a.gain that she a.150 ran into the bouu wlth two young women code£endants of Charles Manson .in the case and Charles "Tex" Watson and that she might be unable to remember becauae she was in a state of shock al the Ume. Her voice rising lo a !ihout. Mrs. Koaoblan replled, ·•t jU>t know 1 dldn't do it., Mr. Kanarek.'' K.an1rt:k hid begun the day's ques- Outline Complaints ' tlooil\I by lbowln& !Ira. Kuablan a eolllr Jllc1ln of .-~ ..tfoe -Ablgoll l'oJeor, .,....,ild • 1be .,....moftbehle-.' Mn. Kuoblan bad booome almool hy!terlul 'lllllrsdly ari.n-whon Kanarek produced a pbotoeraph of the bloody, almost nude bocly of Mlss 1at.e Ins.Ide the residence. When the trial session resumed again today, Kanan:!k approached the 21-year- old blonde with a shut of plctures and thrust one toward her. Mn. Kasa- bian took one look and then averted her bead. Kanarek attempted to have the witness take the picture in her band but Judge ·Airport Opponents Meet chamber'• Aviation Committee. waa al· to attended by repreaentaUve.a of the Cost.a Meu, Santa Ana and Tustin Chambers of Commerce. 'Ibey heard a presentation from Daniel Emory, chairman of the Newport- bued Airport Noise Abatement C.Ommit. tee, who cited a number of alleged errors . In the Ralph M. P""°"' r<port com· milslooed by the Orange-County Board of Sup<IVlson. l'roM PGBe 1 BADHAM POSTPONEMENT • • • It out. How maoy boun have tbo cities spent on l.aYeatigaUon? How many trips have there been to bearinp?" Bldbam llJd, "U Wllloo's figure Ja true, whlch ·I doubt, II II oot going to be uythln& compa..dlo the amount thlo froeway, If coottruclec1, will t.ak• off tbe tu hue of school districts. It's up in the millions." 1be Badh•m bill would delete from tbe atat. lreeway ud expressway aytlom the portJoo of Pacific ~ Freeway from Beach BoJuevard In Huntington Beach to the east.rn Newpert Beacb clty limit at Corona del Mar. Bodbam told the Senato TrOllJJIC)rla!lon Commlti.e in partial !alimony before he ubd far postponement lut MondllY he would come back with a bill next year recommendin& • specillc alt.mat. rout.. Badham explained today that it ls his tnt.ntion the language ol t!le rerouting bill "woold imply ll be a route acceptable to the c i t y council of Newport Beach. It would throw It back to the council level." he aa.id. "There can't very well be any freeway right now because the city council has refused to s.ign an agreement," he said. "My action i$ not stopping any freeway, lt is unwinding the bad that baa been done." Badham said in coming up with an alternative route he probably would ct10- sult the legislaJlve counsel, state highway engineer and the Highway Commissjon start. He wouldn't seek aJJother bearing before the state Highway CommlAsion. "Under our independent commission system they doo 't really fiaure as resource pe:ople to us," he said. He Indicated his bill would take the ball away from the Highway Com· miss.ion. Olairman of the state Highway Com· mWian, Fred JeMings, contacted today, agreed with Badham on thal JXllnt. He noted the commission is a quas i· Jeglllalive body, not an administrative one. All powers are delegated by the Legislature and what they give thty can take away. lf the freeway section is deleted the commission would have no more authority to act on route adop- tion. Badham •aid he had talked to new members of the Highway Commission al a reception some time ago in Sacramento and several told him in· dJvidually they do not fetl the adopted rout.fl IJ the best but they wouldn 't change the action of a previous com- DAILY PILOT OllANGE COAST PuaLISMING '°"''AH" lobort N. Wo,4 l'rt.1111..,1 •1111 ''*'lllltl" J1cl: l. Cw1l1v Th•"'11 A. Mvr,hi"' Mlll091rot ElllMr Tho"''' Forlvno N1wport ~City ~nor H~ ..... Oflk• 2!11 W11t t1IN0 to11!1"'"' Moilint A44re1u P.O. low 1171, ,l.,J --t.IN M-: a» WRI a..r ,,,.... lJlllllN hKlll.-ln P...-A-M\Jllflrl91°" ,..,., lllUJ ~ ............. .... ~: * Nini\ ., """""' .... OAll.°" PILOT, ,..!111 ' ""'di t. ctmlllfld Ille Ntwt•,..._ It llC*lltMf tl•lfr ~ S-. O•y I'! t#ltfl'IO Ctllllllllt fllr' ~ IMctt. • H....,..i a.di, C.lo Moto. HWlll"""" lt•t11 onf .._.. ... Vtlky0 •111111 .mi -.... -..1 MllML ar.,.. C:...11 ,,_!1111 ... i:_, ~lfltl '*'"" ..... , 2111 _..... •••M• a:..._, N.....,, """"" .... ill Wat l•f Srr•:. C...11 MeM. T1leJll11• 11141 6,J .. JJI c~ ~·r.t 642.1111 ~. ft.of. ~ c.ot.i "* ...... c-i-r. ... -........ 11""9t< ........ ff-!11 _.. ... "' ,....., __ ., ...... 1111¥ .... ,~ wtlfM¥t -"4 ,,.,. Pftflal&o!-~-. "'°"" &"-.... t ....... ,, ,........., ltl'dll W C..tt Mao. O llt1lrfll.l. ""'*'°"""' •r nrri... 11 • """"'''' .., 11'1•11 a.a -tt11r1 "'llttur 1n11N11-. "'• -•htr. mission. Bac!ham llld he didn't believe be talk· e4 to Jezmlnp personally. Jenninp commented on °thls so-ea.lied policy!' that the commisSion won't cha.nae ltl acUmi. He said he, speaking u . one member, is amt:na.ble1o.recJPeoln& of adopted routes for restudy -When governmenlal jurisdictions jointly re- quest It. In the case of the Coast Freeway, even though he doesn't think the JocaUon the be.st, he opposes a reopening so long as Costa Mesa is opposed. Remarking on the Zl,000 petition signatures Harbor Area Fr e e w a y Fighters gathered in support of the Badham bill, Jennings said he recalls thal at the hearing In El Centro earlier this year they were told there were 1,800 signatures from Costa Mesa in 1Upport of the present alignment. "lf we want to play the numbers game we &hould put It OtJ the ballot," be said. Badham also elaborated on his previous response to the question what will happen to the rest ol the Coast Freeway if a chunk Is cut out of the middle. •·rm not an engineer," he said. "but among the possibilities are furmeling the trafric down onto criunty highways and cily streets or just stopping the freeway like they did in San Francisco." He said another possibility is more lanes on the San Diego Freeway and a Corona de! Mar Freeway down Bonita Canyon past Corona de! Mar . . "Anything is JXlSSible, .. he said .. Young Kennedy Tripped .Up By Taxi Driver BARNSTABLE, M=. (UP!) -The taxi driver who took Robert F. Ketmedy Jr. to retrieve a pet fa\crin July 10 was an undercover narcotics agent whc>Se actiom led to the arrest of the boy and his cousin Robert · Sargent' Shriver Ill OQ Marijuana charges that night, it was learned today. The two youths will be leaving the Kerrnedy compound on Nantucket Sound "as soon as possible" to spend time with relatlves. Kennedy, son of the assassinattd New York senator, will return to Mc.Lean , Va., while young Shrivtr, Kennedy's cousin arid 8011 of the forme r ambassador to Franct, will go to New York, a tamily source said. Kennedy's pct falcon escaped July 8 and Uie boy broke his right wrist falling from a tree when he tried to retrieve him. Two days later. the bird was cap· tured in Cohasset, about 60 miles across Cape C.od Bay. near Boston. Young Ktnnedy took a tali to Cohasset to recover the bird that day, the 10th. The taxi driver "was definitely an un- dercover agent" investigating the rise of narcotics use on Cape Cod, a police source said. School Budget Shows Increase Tht 117G-71 ?Jdget for the Newport- Meaa lJnUled School District, approved Tuesday by district trustees. shows a $3.7 mtlllon increase over the previous budge!. The new budret o! $28,378.~I rectived Opal approval foUowlng a public hearing at Tueaday's meeUn5. Jn approving the budget, trustees ap. proved a 46-cent tax rite incrtase which muna Costa Mesa Lu payera w~pay $5. lJi pu $100 1.ueaed valuatJon and homeowners In Newport 'Stach will pay 14.10 during the coming year. The bluest buclge1 Item b t!le 111.11&.1,. m outJ1y for tn1lnlction, primarily UI· aries. JnstruetJon items re present 69 percent of au bud1et approprl1Uona. The Parwns repart urges airport en- lqe1Dent. Dale Bealud, represenUng tho -ul- tant !inn of Wibey and Ham, hired by the city of Newport Beach to investigate patential noise levels, a!BO reviewed his findings. They cootradlct the Plr'IOOll re- port. The dee.Won that may forever deter· mine tile luturo of lbe airport 11 expect. ed to ..,.,,. at a moetlng of the OC Boarcl of Supervisors Aug. 18 or 11. It could come sooner, possibly next Tuesday or Wednesday; the group was told . In his remarks, Emory also attacked exist e¢imates cited In the ParlOIU ~ port c1 .. ling with t!le llOWl<lproofing of bOmes that would be affected by ID in- creue in jet-airC"alt flighta. Philip Bettencourt, adminilttative u - si.stant to Newport Mayor Ed Hlrth, Olrtoo lined his city's opposition. Mayor Robert Wilson of Coita Mesa and Mayor A. J. Coco of Tustin headfd delegations from both those cities at be meeting. Mayor Coco especially voiced vehement opj)OSltion to e~anslon. The group voted to uk the Board of Supervisors to conduct any future public hearings on airprt apansion in a hill that wiU hold upwards of 5,000 persoM. Mayor Coco disclosed that Tustin is aking steps similar to those already un- der way in Newport Beachh in circulating petitions to homeowners OPPoBing air- Port expansion. He said that .he expects as many as 5,000 j)enOll! will sill!I the petitioD1. Frot11 Pag., 1 YIPPIES ... Terrace In Tomorrowland, ainglng the Mickty Mouse Club song. Late in the afternoon the Yippits took over Tom Sawyer Island. chulng many of the tourists off the attraction and raising a Viet Cong Oag on the island's fortress. Disneyland officials said members of the group passel'.! around mariJ..l@!a clgarets on the Island and a security~ guard reported seeing a naked man on the island. Jack B. Linquist, Disneyland director pf marketing, said the encounter on Main Street began whe• "oae of the ringleaders swung at an officer.'' "The Disneyland security contingent and area police did an excellent job in quelling the disturbances,'' be said. "Ifs a shame that auch a small group has to ruin it for the others but we had to think of the safety of oul guests " he stated. ' "~e. ~e going to enforce a regulat1011 p:oh1b1Ung long-hairs from the park. We didn't want to do it, but this incident mak'es il a must." Security police made a complete sweep of the park after the guegts had left to rout any Yippies left after the crowd was escorted from Disneyland. The Yippies regrouped outside the park and threw rocka and debris at officers before heading for the Disneyland Hotel where they were coofronted by more police units. They finally dispersed at 9:30 p.m. The only other time the park closed ~arly w1s a memorial gesture followl•g ~e assassination of John F. Kennedy Ill 1963. Newport Beaches Uniform Oosing Tin1es Proposed A proposal to establish a uniform mid· nil:ht closing hour for all bays and beache.11 along the city's ooaltllne will be considered by the NewPoft Beach City C.Ouncil ~ionday night. The council will act on a Park, Beach and Recreatlon commlsaion unanimous recommendation to extend the hours, ~hlch now vary (rom 10..11 p.m., depend- ing on the area. ln presentini the recommtnd1tlon lo the council, Jamu: L, Rubel , Jr., PBR Commission chairman, c a I I e d the 10 p.m. curfew at Corona del Mar state and city beach park "far too ~arly." He said that etpecia!Jy cturlng the $ummer, 11 p.m. "Is an unrealiltlc clOI· lnit hour for the bay beaches." In proposlng th~ new mldnlJht cur· few. Rubel stressed that his comm lc;slcn leels the closing hour tlong the beach- front should be unUorm. Charles It Older inttrbctod b1m tbal -14 nol be -.vy """ .told b1m to,. ahead wllb tbo er... •1amlnatlo<. lUnaret uke4 her U t!lat ,.., tbo 111.ady you say you 11w at the house ?" ''It appears to be the white gown and the long halr. I never saw her face." The defense lawyer sought lo establish that Mrs. Kasablan actually ran into the house herself with a knife but the witness denied flatly that sb.e ever bad done so. •·when you beard screams comlog rrom the house didn't you care what happened to anyone Inside?" Kanarek: asked. ••Of courtt I ca.red." 11Weru't U... your frlmda who Jere In lbere, Cllarln w.-. S1llall A~ ancl Patrlcl.t Knnwlnltel?" ~ you run into the house to protect thlm.Z:.' . "No, I rill toward I.he hoUse but I didn 't go Into it." On Thursday Kanarek had just uked Mrs. Kasablan whether ahe looked through a window of the house that night last August when without another word he gave her the picture. It showed Mw Tate, clad on1Y In panties, lying on her rtiht •Ide with her lwld exlanded a!>ove her head. She WU eevered wjt)I blood ud there WU. clMrly vlllhle lm1lo youndt In her ob- v!OuSty pregnant body. Mrs. Kuablan had tesWied ptevi-Ously abe saw three slaylnp at the estate out.side the house 1.ut Aug. ~ but that she did not wltnesa the killing of Miss Tate and hair stylist Jay Sebrin1 In the Jivinj; room. Mrs. Kuabian's gasp was audible throughout the courtroom. She burst into tears and could not speak. She was lead o!f to an anteroom while the lawyers .conferred In the judge 's chambers. Then tbo trlil wos -.sed ovunlgbt. Kana.ret declined to tell newsmen why be suddenly handed the girl the picture. Upper Bay Plai:i Called Disaswr by Stare Aide HE'LL LEAD FUND DRIVE · Unit.cl Funcl'a Hlold ' Robert R. Hield Named Chairman Of United Fund Robert R. Hield, a Newport Beach fj. nancial execuUve, bu been named chair- man for the Harbor Area United Fund's 19'1G-71 campaign, according to United Fund Pr'eJiident Jack Curley. Hield ii executive vice president and managing orficer of Newport Balboa Sav- ~ and Loan Assn. He will head a team of Casta Mesa and Newport Beach execu- tives in managing the campaign for the new combined United Fund organization in Jts first year of operation . The Costa Mesa United Fund and the Newport Beach Uniled F u n d merged earlier this year ~ form the Harbor M<a United Fund. Hield haS been active in civic affairs since 1951 and 111 a past president of the Newport Harbor Kiw~ Club. He is a truilee of Di.strict XII (com- prising California, Nevada, Arii.ona and Hawaii) of the American Savings and Loa• lutitute .and is past president o! the Los Angeles chapter of the institute. Bv TOM BARLEY Of 11141 ll•ltJ l'fftt SMtf Development of Upper Newport Bay by the Irvine Company would have dJ~ astrous consequences for the area's bird. fish and marine life, a CallfornJa Dt- part,ment of Flab and 'Game official waro- ed today. Department supervisor Ronald Heln testified in the Orange COu.nty Superior Court trial of the land awap i:saue that implementation tJf the land uchanie IJe.. tween Orange County and the Irvine Com- pany will add the most serious threat yet to many apecies of wildlife that al· ready rac, extinction. Hein warned that more lhin eo per. ctnt of Clllfornia'a estuary habHat so vital to many bird& which Uae the Upper Bay 1i&1 been t!iminate4 by development. And he repeated his department's rece.nt warning that 80 species of birds will be dJrectly threatened if land awap plans are implemented. Hein added to the wam1n1 the dangers that might result from "very likely" water pollution in the Upper Bay. Hein's testimony came in the closlng hours of the fourth week of the land swap trial. At issue before Judge · Claude M. Owens is the argument of a group of Newport Beach homeowners that the land trade is unconstitutional and represents a breach of the trust created when the State of California deeded the lldelandJ to Orange County. Orange County Supervisors have trans-- ferred 157 acres of tidelands in the: Upper Bay to the Irvine Company Jn exchan~e for 450 acre• of uplands. The stile Lands Commission endorsed the :swap In No- vember, 1967. Hein strts!ed today that many or the blrd! which use Upper Newport Bay as a link In the "Pacific flyway" -the migratory route that ,brings water fo.,,1 to the area from as far away u Canada -would have "now.litre to a:o" if the bay ls eliminated or reduced under land swap plans. He igreed with Irvine Company attor- ney Robert Warren that the 18()..acre San Joaquin marsh operated by UC Irvine could possibly absorb some of the dJs. placed Upper Bay birdJ if It were ex- panded. But he stressed that such manmade etforta; had their limits and would offer no real or permanent solution to the Jon of Upper Bay feedln& and breeding grounds. Hein warned in his teaUmony th1t man's application of technolOI}' to the rapidly increasing los! of natural en· ,SUMMER CONTINUES HeM9Clon Offen "OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION," C111mplet• Occcni-1, Dining & Bedroom, ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS! • Drexel Featvrn "ESl'!RANTOS" Entire Collection. • Herih11Je Reduces Its Complete ",MADRIGAL" CollKtfon. HENREDON l HERtTAGI UPHOLSTERY 15°/o OFF vlronment for wildllfe of all kinds was "encouraging but we have not yet seen any1 reaulll that would justify any gttil optimism in lh1a area." Dredging and bulkheading and the rapid increase in marine activity-in the bay would also mtan ''an unprecedented 1085" of fish and minute ocean life, Heln said. The fish ud game offtcial testiliod that ii wu difficult to see. bow such 1 toll could be 1vokled with implementaUon of the Irvine plan!. Swimathon Nets $9,024; Janess Still Optimistic The million Yard swimathon ended Wednesday at 8:$5 p.m., a.lmOst an bour later than expected. The late finish was due to a 25,000 yard error in the total yardage , not dJacovered unUI 24 Ooura befort the scheduled finish at 6 p.m. "In all the confusion to make up the Jost time," S4ld Dick Janeis, one r.f the swimalhon'.s directors, "we were not even sure who swam the last lap. We gave it officially to Carla Yates, a 16- year-old student at Hirbor High School." The .swimathon wa.s .spon!-Ored by the Olympic Pool Foundation in an effort to raise $87,500 lo help build an Olympir-- s;ze swimming pool at Harbor High School for the communities ol Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Although the foundation only ·raised $9,024, Janess was optimistic that the -money would st.ill be raised . "We have been given another 90 days to try to reach our gos]." he said. The pool ls to cosl $350,000 and 75 per ce nt of It will be funded by the: Newport Mesa , School District and the city of Ntwport Beach. Jn tlie 11-da.y swlmathon Larry Gates, a IS.year-old sponsored bY the Newport Beach S~im Club, did the most swim- ming. He stroked just over 20,000 yards. Pla cing second wa.s Tom Boughey, 17, of Corona del Mar High School Swim Team with 11.750 yards. Kathy Kelly, 17. sponsored by the Coast Clippers Swim Team, was in third pl1ce with 11,500. Theer were ~ Individual swimmers taking part in the long event. sponsored or affiliated with m1ny ditferent teams and schools. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 711111111 '" NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHtcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPIN 'RtDAY 'TfL 9 INTERIORS UGUNA BEACH ProfOMlonal ln,.,.lw De1l1nor1 Avallalot-.AID-NSID 345 North Caoot Hwy. 494-6551 OPIN ,~IDAY 'Tll 9 l'MH fell "-Ill• .t Ol'Wfl c...., MlollU: -- f ' ' ' , I I ' VICTORY KISSES FOR TENNESSEE'S.GORE D•uahter N•ncy, Wlf• P•ullno Sh•re Triumph Gore Facing Battle From Nixon Forces NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Sen. Albert Gore, an anti-Viet- nam war Democrat, faces the toughest fight of his Jong political life against Rep. wu. liam Brock, a pro-Nixon Republican, in the Nov. 3 general election. Gore. who calls himself the No. I While House target of the off.year elections, won renomination handily o v e r lour opponents in Thursday's Democratic primary. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew already has -promised to campaign for Brock who defeated COWbo!fi,. singer Tex Ritter and J. D. 'Boles, peren- nial candidate, for the GOP nomination. Dr. Cecil Pittard of Knox· ville was unopposed for the American party nomination. Winfield Dunn, a Memphis dentist who drew heavily on hometown gupport, won the Republican nomination for governor in a minor upset that will pit him against Democrat John J. Hooker Jr. in the general election. Dunn's clo.sest opponent, Nashville in- dustrialist Maxey Jarman, refused to concede, CGm· plaining of "voting inequities" in Memphis. The Senate race w,ill be watched nationally as an in· t dicator or Southern support for President Nixon's Vietnam and domestic policies, both op- posed by Gore and supported by Brock. Gore, seeking his fourth sl:c year Senate term after 14 years in the House, called for the "support of all Ten- nessean!, Democrats, in· dependents, Republicans" in the general election. Brock said of Gore's primary victory: "l don't see how an incumbent who has fierved in the Senate as Jong as Gore can consider himseU a winner when he barely reeelved 50 percent of the vote." The total wa s St per- cent. U.S. SALT Proposal Registers :With Russia VIENNA (UPI) -The Soviet 1.Jnion has shown "a poaltive interest" in an American plan for curbing the two nations' mi!!lsile arsenals, diplomatic :sources said today. Ru,slan aod American difilomats met today at the U.S. Embassy for the 30th fonnal session of the Strategic Arms Limitation T al k s (SALT). The session lasted 40 minutes with an hour of inform a I conversation ar- Rail Dispute Plan Eases Out Firemen terwards. The American plan - possibly the most important single event since SALT began here April 16 -was presented July 24 by the chief U.S. delegate, Gerard C. Smith. Although less than a dran treaty, it suggested that the talks focus on a numerical limitation on s trategic missiles and bombers, a strict limit on giant missiles of the Soviet SS9 type, and a low- level curb on antiballistic missiles (ABM). The three meetings since then have been taken up mostly with Soviet probing of details of the plan. This pro-- bing has ben so extensive that, for the first time. experts from the two sides have met in smaller meetings, outside W ASIDNGTON (AP) _ A the n o r m a l twice·weekly formal sessions, to swap presidential emergency board questions and answers. has recommended railroad The Soviets have not yet firemen's jobs gradually be given a definitive response to abolished as a means or set· the American outline 0 r tling a Jong-standing labor presented a count.eroutline of dispute. their own. the source taid. The White House disclooed -=========;;::;! Thursday the board called ror ,,. phasi ng out the jobs Of mo.st railway firemen. Tbe recommendation won immediate approval of the White Houst:. The board saJd the National RaUway Ubor Confennce, which represents more than IM railroods with 9$ percent of the nation'• track, is on the verge of a settlement with lhe United Transportation Union which bargaJns for t b e firtmen. The set!Iement would com- bine the duties ol firemen and brakemen under a new job classification acceptable to the railroad• 1nd union. No new workers would be classified as firemen but no firemen would be fired . The classifica· tion would be eliminated gradually through retirement and death. GEIST FOR FALL THINK WUTCLlff 'LAZA HIWPOtTll INN Christianity isfortodaY Troth doesn't change with tim~ The ltuths that Christ Jesus taught more than nineteen centuries ago can have the same effect today they had thoL They CIA change !he course of the world. It's up to us. We have lo understand wnat he buah\ lo put these intensely practical teachings lnlo Y!! in our daily lives. If each of us does this. it will have 1 m1rked errect upon oe wo~d. Hur"""'"' ll hwin, C.S., 1 member of The Christian Science Board of lectureship, speak on ''Christianity Is For Today." You and your friends art m01t cordially invited to this free Jl'bllt lectlln>. Christian Science lecture $1ta,.J1y, Au•u•t t, 10 AM. 111.,,... "...,." ct .... ....... ~ .. w ... • Friday, Au11111l 7, 1970 DAILY I'll~ 1J Pact Creates Furor QUllNIE By Phll lnterlandl Refugees Warned: Fulbright Irate Over Spain Treaty • Stay Out WASl!INGTON (UPI) - ~e rllt between the State Deportment and the Senate Fcnlgn Relall<>ns Commit!~ bu been deepened by the new· ly atgned mllilnry a n d eccmmic agreement between tho Unti.d Slates and Spain. The executive agreement, JJnallJed Thunday d e s p I t e atrenuous ob~ons f r o m Russians, Germans Sign Treaty MOSCOW (UPIJ -Foreign ministers Andrei A. Gromyko 0£ the Soviet Union and Walter Scheel of West Germany in- itialed today a nonaggreslon treaty praised as a foundation for relaxing ·tensions and building a lasting peace in Europe. It was the climax to the most significant diplomacy between the old World War II foes in 15 years. Diplomatic sources said Uie s o v i e t s agreed to accept a West German disclaimer that the document CGnstituted a sur- render of the right to eventual Gennan reunification. Scheel a nd Gromyko in· itialecl the four-page document beneath the crystal chan. deuiers of a marble hall in Splridonov Palace, a room built by czarsand used by World War ll allie!!I in plan- ning strategy against AdoU Hitler. .. The goal we set before ourselves has a great political importance," Scheel said . "The treaty will help relax tensions and provide the pre- requisities for building a last· ing peace in Europe." Gromyko praised the treaty and said bargaining over a JO-day period had been tough. He said the Soviets were as glad as the Germans it was over. In a statement released as he prepared to board a plane for Bonn at MoscOw airport, Scheel added "With this treaty a new page will be turned in relations between the Soviet Union and the Federal Republic of (West) Germany." Foreign Relations Chairman J. w llllam Fulbr!gh~ grants Spain eeonomlc and mlllt•ry wistance worth aOOut $200 million over five years. It ln- cludea a loan to S~in of 18 U.S. warlhlps and gives America contirued use of· four military inltallationt in Spain. 'Ille Foreign Relations Com- mlllee, piqued by the Stale Italy's New Government Like OUl ROME (UPI) .-Jta(y hJis sworn in a new goverrunent so .similar to the one that fell <lne month agi> that Italians wondered bow Jong it would Jast. The only readilY apparent Wna:e in the1 32nd post. Fascist government from the 31st was the premier. Fonner Treasury Minister Emilio COiombo, 50, a scholar. ly looking bachelor, moved up to the premiersblp held for three govenullenb by Mariano Rumor. Otherwise. the same four parties made up the cent.er· left coalition that has ruled much of the past seven-years. They are Colombo's Chri!ltian Democrats, who kept IS of 27 ministerial posts, th e Socialists, siJ: minislrles, the Unitarian Socialist!, £Our, and the Republicans, one. I I I I I I 79•1TEMS Hl~ISCUS. JAP. BOXWOOD EUGENIA MYRTIFOLIA WAX LEAF PRIVET ASPARAGUS FERN PHILODENDRON • BLUE DAISY 1 2 GAL SPECIALS I JUNIPERS I Re1.4.95L111epl1ot1 2.98 I 7GAL TREES I Rtt.16.95 7 •. 95 I TREE ROSES .... 7.95 I 5 GAL WAX LEAF· PRlm I 1.,.,~95 I BONSAI POTTERY 3.98 3.98 I Ste ••r compltt111lectiu. from 1 LAWN EDGER 1.49 11 DAHLIAS· lilt •J fHr tilr4to with Mau colon 111 Mrdm tr c•tllM C•11H1"4 29< I ••cetflowtr. S.11 or••••t. ,....6t I snER- \il 1rt1ooptlo11&mulching. 4-$1.00 tAMS-C1llf'1fnoritt1ll 1rouH s~nlt, It• I , ... , .. hlNJI ........ , , ...... ,., , •• I Ml11 ..... c11••1thr....,.,••••wHr. \)/9c I 1,.1. I fUCHSIA~•J•l•r •"-"'fl••'"' fechslos I comt 111 h111drH1 of y·.,fttln. Know• 11th• 89 < I l•••l 1ftht1hodt t•N••· I I I I MAIGUUITH-hJI• erowl•t• •rl1ht lrttw, CHrttfy 41-flM lll'fft1 •lrln•1wt d1isy-llk1 flowtn. GroWJ txct,.IHally well ltffrcHst. I rnu•tA5-Rtt. 19, I I I Dtparlment'1 refusal to agree to publlc dl!cusslnns of the agreement befort it was sign- ed. voted to go ahead and bold pubUc hearings anyway In the coming weeks. Fulbright bad no immediate comment on the signing but an a.Ide said the senator con- llnued to stand by tu. lengthy statement of Wednesday. In that statement Fulbright oontended the agreement ac- tually was a disguised com· mitment for the de£ense of Spain; that It had been worked out without due respect for the right <lf the legislative branch to examine the alleged commitment ; and that the State Department bad been CORPUS CHRISTI, Tu. (UPI) -Mayor J a c k Bl~moo ii asking resident.I who fled the dty In the fooe of lfurrlacne Cella to . stay away from their bomea for another couplo of days. Many rtsldents who !OUgl!t reflJil from the storm Jn dUes and lowm away from the coast now are plannlng to return home because 1bey have beard the cleanup opera· tiom are almost complete and the town ls back to nonnaJ. Blackmon aald this isn't the case. "Every other warm body ts a problem and we ·don't need them now." Blackmon Hid Thursday. ,. deceitful in informing him --------~----------­ Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough (IJ.Tex.). toured the dly and surrounding communities by hellcopter Thursday and said the damage would r u n between l300 milllon and $1 billion. Blackmon &aid it wouJd. be l300 mlllion In CorpU3 Cbrisli alone. when the agreement would be finalized. Tot Disearded Mother 'Did It for Vs' A spokesman for the city~, utility company aaid only 10 percent of lhe company's customers have had the.it State Department a i d e s acknowledged today that at the end <lf last week con- sideration was being given to the possibility of agreeing with the Foreign, Relations Com- mlttee to hold public hearings oo the agreement. STANTON, Mich. (UPI) -.. Probate Ju..i .. e Guy Wagner power restored. Lim I t e d u.e> power servtoe was expected But on Monday Fulbright made a speech in which he discloaed some information about the agreement which the State Department subse- quently charged CGnstiluted a violation o{conf l d entia I tesUmony given the Senate by edministration officials l n A 17-year-old gifl, married for scheduled a hearing, today on to be re:stoffit in all the towns a year and a mother for a petition to take custody of bit by Huni.cane Celia today a month, offered only this ex-the baby rued by Montcalm e.xoept for Port Aransas. plsnalion, "Gen'y didn't like 1be city ls stUJ under a being tied dawn ." County Sheriff Thomas 9 1 6 _,J d p.m. o a.m ... w .ew an Mrs. Linda Foor had told Barnwall: . . police man roadblocks to pre- July. authorlties Tuesday her baby Accordrng to aull'l?r1Ues, vent looting and unnecessary daughter Amy had been kid· Mrs. Foor led authorities off traffic. Police have arrested naped. she wa; charged with a runl road to .wh~e little 14 persons for looting .mce assault with intent to commit -4JDY was found lying Ul seven· Monday's hurricane and I> murder after the baby wasj. foot.-hlgb corn. others f~r violating curfew. c .. asl1. Binds found, in good condition, ia -----------~--;,,--------­ ' Family 1'rio STANFORD (UPI) -Mr. and Mrs. Fred Saas are shar· ing a room in the maternity section at Stanford University Hospital with their baby - and not just because of strong fee I in gs about family togetherness. Saas and his wife both were injured in an automobile ac- cident June 16 and the baby was born 17 day:J later. "We are sorry she had lo find us in such adverse con· ditiorui ," Ml'!. Saas said of the child, ShaWTlee Elizabeth. hours later in a cornfield . where police say she left It. Mrs. Foor told FBI, state . police and local authorities, she and her 19-year-old b1l!· band, Gerald, had been having marital troubles since the child was born. The husband was worlting 11'1 Ohio when ~ baby was reported miss· Jog. Authorities quoted M r s . Foor as saying she abandoned the baby "to save my mar. riage." .. I did it for us," she said. "Gerry didn't like being tied down." She WIS arraigned '11lursday and freed on ll,000 bond alter demand.mg pre-trial amination on the charge. Thi• wee Ire ad atart• lite 8tJ. 1ftat ••It of Lott'• Golden C.vakade of Comu:ry aw.._ Mud<:. Friday, Eddie Dan, S.1urda7, Slim l'hh. Nan and Sunday, Doye O'Dell rilu• Flreworlu on lhe L.kfl In Fie.ta VW.1e .,.,_,. 11.lcht ••• 0-'taluh! STAR JAIMINl-low 1rnl1t shrwh .... ,~ twl nltt flowen c11 .. 11ord l11ll 1anlt1t, ''"or shodt. OIANGI GAZANIAS-Doi1y flo•trt ,;,. • d111ll•1 color elf splay 41rl119 •••k of Pints ....1.ft Quarts )98 3•• I I BEST ALL-AROUNO SPRAY. I FOR ROSES OR SHADE FLOWERS. I $1.00 OFFI : INSECT SPRAY ltloo111 11 1prl•1 & t11111•er-1row w1ll l1 2 98 , HY soil. 111. 5.49 SAU Pll FIAT , DICHONDIA FLA TS-Tlmt to potch op tho1t holts i" ynr dicho11dra Iowa or ,101t 1111if 99< lawn. •· EVUCIHN ASH TRll-H•rt's tht solt yo•'•• •••• waltl111 for to plant thot 2 98 1h1d1trtt..Fast1rowl119. 7.95 • TWISTED JUNIPll-Plcture1qot, •pright culftr, ••••" charwct1ri1tic1 fonn, d1111t & Hthy, dtcldocl twist to 1ll ltrw11ch11. REDWOOO TUB-18" Rtg.6.95 HANGING BASKET-Rtt. 1.65 PET SHOP Chattael Cats reg. 79c Poodle CoRan COSTA MESA oaJr 29• (20FF Aquarlu111 Kit •2.00 OFF See Our New Canaries FLOWER SHOP CamatiH 79• Doz. ARTIFICIAL HANGING BASKm from 4.95 ("Wilow Baskets" 12''· 14u Reg. 1.91) 1.00 PATIO SHOPSALE Visit our Patio shop .& see our complete line of Patio furniture, Fire logs, Screens, etc. ...... ,. ,._~~~~~~~~~~--.1 Rrsttime on sa1e~ .. sale! · $1.oooFF on 5,000 Sq. Ft. Bandini Plush or Blade. Reg. $5.95 now $4.95 Bandini PLUSH for AU LAWNS Plush ••• the long las ·ng, bafanced lertlnzer that gives dichondra or mixed ISWT\I a "apring"•look in the f1tll. Blade ••• a mi11eral 1lch, high nllrogen fertilizer apecially formul ated for Hybrid Bermuda, Bluegrass, Zoysia and St. Augustine. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Sulfate of Ammooi•-1 Ideal Cot npid arowtt'i, I ,.._ rich 1reen fo liage It m Slu~111il Snall & Slug Pellen -1ptlnkl• a.round 1.., a 1hrobbcty to kill 1aaih a: 1lap- O•erni•hC: re1alts R.a.98c Pick ellhor 1nd have• green Fall on Bandlnt. I I I I I I ~~~~~~~~~~~--J· II 11A1'111,~0WTH improved quality for .... t.11 plants, lawns & I RICll lill!tll Cll.OR \f«So I I Suifalc of Ammonia ~--············· ----···- 59c I 1801 Harbor Blvd., Garden Grove & Anaheim 543·6774 . (S.,~ I 2123 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 646. 3925 I CllDITT11MStv'~u:i'1~.u .... 1c.N-•• ''"" H1vt11'1 Ow• Crtlllt Pl1a • ··~·······················-~ . -. • • • ltJ\D,y PILOT EDITORL\L PAGE .. , ,. ' • The Tax Burden · GroWs 'Will> governmept.al boardl .and eow1cib .and ad-riiiniitr&ll..,. in the ·midst of the l>Udget-adoptlng season • \". the <Harbor :i\rea, It la difficult right now to see • botw 1lietr current actions an going to affect nut year's 1lix blll5. ' 'Wlth the bealthf boosts In assessments from As- s~? Mdrew J . Hinshaw'• office. It's a sale bet thal ridt -property owners are going to find smiles and joy in the. ultimate message. ln many cases, it would ~pear that the taz: ratea may be 1:oing down, but since ~ total tax bill Is caJcula\ed also on the basis of au•ssod value. the out-ol-pocket bill very likely will be up-up substanUally in most cases. Even with this hint of bad news banging around, the tax.pay.er might derive some satisfaction from lea.rnlng that the taxing agencies clO¥st to home are at' leasi doing a better job of holding the line than they're doing In Washington. Small satisfaction, to be sure, but some satisfac- tion. A 1tudy by the First National Bank of Orange Coun- ty: Sbmn us that the tot.al per-capita t.ax bill (exclud· ing special .districts) foT Mr. Average in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach was $1,644 in 19611-69, $1,715 in 1969- 70 and $1.828 in 197~71.-a jump of $184 over three years. But who got the m06t of it! First National's figures look like tbio: PER CAPITA: 1970-71 1969-70 1968-69 U. S. Government $ 964 $ 911 $ 895 State of California 324 314 292 Orange County 145 127 113 City Governmtnt 173 154 140 School District 222 209 204 dips Into tbe lal,-bucket. And, unlortUnately, that I• where !lie taxpayer bas the least leverage In controllini his own financial destiny. These, of course, are the obvious taxes -the ones that butt the most. The filinR of the annual federal and state income tax reports and the annual property tax bill from the court.house in Santa Ana 3":· cnnhin~ re- minders of the unhidden sources of governmental revenue. In swn total, the average Harbor Area family pays about 37\-2 cents of every dollar's income into some form of taxes. In 22 difierent categories of Lraceable taxes. the avera~e famiJy of four with an income of $12,000 will face a t.ax bite of $3,380 -about 28 percent of the in- come. Adding indirect taxes paid lbroullh manufac- turers. wholesalers and distributors of products or serv· ices brings it up nearly another 10 cents. With all of this, we are assured that there are other communities where the bite is bigger. There -as here -the most frequent sound to be beard is that of pro- tracted groaning. Our Swimmers ~eed Help The Harbor Area Swimatbon -a onto-million yard marathon swim to promote funds to build an Olympic· size pool for public and student use -has ended. Only a fractional $11,024.34 of the $87,000 contribution needed from the pubUc was donated. But pledges to be an· nounced later will enhance the total substantially. The unified school district and the City of New1>0rt Beach are contributing nearly $300,000 ; the rest must come from public donations. These are tax deductible. ' "', ... /.II.A.I.>~ Total: $1.828 $1,715 $1 ,644 Obviously, the heavy expenditures at the top -at the !eden.I level -are accounting for the biggest new Contributions may be mailed to Olympic Pool Foundation, P .O. Box 800, Costa Mesa. N ~rr11s 1$ THE PROSECUTOf( ••.. I MEAN THE PRE511>£NT.= Real Hippie Movement Soon Will Die In ..,. of G. K. ChelWloll's delightful Father B~Jl stories. a crime ii sue-. cessfully committed by a waiter in an aelu!ive 1 private club -because the ~ anil Ille wail<t> Ire both Qmsed bl -· . and ..-be told apart .. .,.J>y tb<lr ac1i0111 and attltude3. Cllettalon Is mak- ing tbe point that pej>ple who dress Ille same are looked upon the Al'llt. un. m lh<y beein to lunctioo. I tboo$ht CJI this story in re. lation to the hippie costume that is so popiJar among Ille )'OOlll today. The hippie coelumt hu been a bl..slng to a whole 1enerMloo ·.i mlsfitl, loser& and rotten eggs. For the fiat time, they are now able to disguise .themselves .. hippies,, penniltillfl the hippie -· ment to take the blame <in the public eye) for all their neurotic misconduct. UNTIL THE AOOPnON "' um regula-tion \lliform a few years ago, the lose.rs bad nothing to id<otlfy with and no place to hide. They were fot«d to take iodividual responsibUUy le< th• Ir behavior, and were not condemned u part of a youth bloc. Now, by the olmple subterfu&e ol edomlng tbemoelvt1 wilh a few beada or bells, they WI be their old noxious selves and pass the onus along to the --they pr<lend to belong to. T8E RANKS OF the true flowe~ cb1ldren have become 60 infiltrated by these "pl.utic hippies" that 1 doubt if mc:n than 50 percent of the )'OU.th wear- Dear Gloomv • Gus: ' Why ·all the f11$1 about who Ja go- . Ing to be able to do what with -Newport Bay?· The COW)ty airport ii &o\ni to need it ror a clear U10fJ .ancf . the stingarees 4nd sppt fJn , croak$-, who have lived in 'thtte for CMtttries, will be Jeav· ing .because of the jet noi&e. -H. R. M. 1'1111 ...,_ ~ .... ~ ...... ..... _,.,, ........ -··'· .... -• """' • • ....,,. .... o.ur f'lttt. Ing these costumes have even the remotest oonception of the original prin· ciples that animated the movement. Or care at all. Simply )>)' nwquerading u hippies, t.bey ..... led they can get away wtth the modi£, oolrtgeoua conduct. in violation of eil•genulne hippie beli.ef• -knowing thet the 8traight public c a n o o t dUcrimloate between them and the real thing and always mistakes rmre form lc<.ubstanc<. 11118 ts WHY THE movement has to die before very loog. In a year or two, only $Ub teen-agers will still be affecting the costume, just as they pick up the discarded jargon of the adolescent& a couple of year a later. The older youths remaining in costume wiU be the ragtag and bobtail of hoodlums, sadists, oddballs, paranoids and perverts. But, cultural lag being what it is, the public will continue to condemn something il calls the • • h i p p i e movement" long after ita core has dislrtegrated. For-it offers an easy and obvious target, a safe means of discharg~ ing aggression and frustration and anJ:· iety and bate. 1n different ways, the movement has not only been a boon to the misfits, it has been a blessing to the perplexed public, who otherwise mlght ha.ve been forced to look inward for the cauaes of. our troubles. For the Back Bay Trade To the Editor: I'm going to 10 for another year but 1 would sure feel better •bout it if your paper would wakt. up ud get behind tht Back Bay trade _, we can 1et a few mud hens out o[ thtR and ' open up the area 1o boating Uh the lower bay i.s. I You give bi( 1pluhes to Illy mlsculded bjrdwatcher who comes by, making it ..,._ like a srnllll handful of dissidents ate fighllng eome courageoua batUe apJnlt a terrible dragon. WM. P. BOLAND JR. B•fl Trae Arithmetic Tp Ille FAiior : I .,,. that tbe Au(Ull 3 edillon ol Ille DAILY PILOT again ulera to the pi._i Orin&• Counly -Irv',.. Com- JllnY lllld trlde of Upper Newport Bay tidfiOdl u "a trldt. of 151 aere1 Of -11-tldeiaods fa< 450 acrea or lrrinl uplMMll." Thia st.l~enl has been rlP'al!!d In ·-poper e•ery time you r>W!li!h ... llrlicle .. tbe aubject. r Macrr '111lT .,..., 1ri~ II In ..,..., and tlat II mltltadl u;,:j'!!bllc. il la a wtll-'fact 'Ul.lt M trade -t calll IGr clrtdP>I out the thr11 illandl la Ila boy and d<pooitlnc the dirt oo the 1111 ollons, to become lrvint -V· .,_ bland• .,. !Jl. cludod lo lbe ll>Cll1ed ·'511 otre1l ll«e1t x ~---! -- Letter• trom rtader• or• welcome. Normo:Uv writtrs 1hould convey thrif' me11age1 in 300 word.I or Us1. The right to condeme ktkf• to fit IJ)GCf or 1liminat1 Eibel Is t'cil!!'rwd. AU Uf.. ttr.s must include lignaturc and mall- ing address, but Mmes may be witft.. held on rtquttC if 1ufficient t'ta&on U oPJ>Cltn.C. Poetry will ttot be pub- lUhcd. 1urvey1, accwdln& to lnformat\on wp. pUed to the Board of Supervisors, diacloau tht fact tllat the islands are cmside'rlblY ;,.,tller than orlginally d<Olc:rlbed. '11111 l\lrlller r<duoea Ule 150 acre:a. IT HAS ALIO boal ••tabli•hed in court Ul.at the COU1ty owns much more lllin 117 ama Ofll)nally descrtbe<i, 1 .. c'lixilJic•Noith SIM .Beach,' tbe 22Ni SL buch ood Back Bay Drive. All this new .inlormltlon .lw boen pUbu.hed in your JMlptl'. and It can bt vtrlried eleewbere, yet the misleading .tattmtnl ti repeated evtty time. Sharpen your peacll and add qolo I EIME C.. KROESCJIE Nixon ltJls1poke Himself at Press Co1af eretace . Bruce Will H·ave "Something New' SAN CLEMENTE -Contrary to the express language ttl Presiiient Nixon last week on · the question · of· ·• eoalitiqn governmeot in Saigon, lallguage 110omily noted in thia column and eliewhere, it can now be authoritatively stated that Ambassador-Davld Bruce wiU indeed have "something new" to offer the. other side in Paris. With respect to the enemy'& offer ol a coalition which could include some elements of the present Saigon govern- ment, but not President Thieu or Vice President Ky, the President misspoke at bis Los ,Angeles press conference. IN ANSWER TO a rather complicated question, he said "We are opposed to a coaliUon, whether negotiated or lm· po6ed." He did hot mean to ny that at aJJ. Returning to San Clemente later, an aide pointed out U\e mlatake to the President, and Mr. Nixon agreed. What he had meant to say was that the Admlni&tril.tion is opposed to a coalition which does not ineludt any element.a of tbe present Saigon government. Tbe distinction is large and makes . the important point that Mr. Nixon did not mean in any way to imply that lhe United Statet wu fighting for the propoaltion that a SouUt Vietn!mese government must be personified by Gtnerals Thieu and Ky. FROM THE TIME the Paris talks began. the U.S. position has been to deny North Vietnam any of its pi)litical objectives. The President has determined -as of now at least -that we shall not go on and on repeating tired fonTiula.s which deceive the American ·public more Utan they do the enemy. Nor. for that matter. would Bruce have taken the job merely to re-enact the old chi.rBde. What "-the new negotiator will be able to offer m4y not go so far a.11 the cease-fire and st.and-down advocated but not offered by his pred~sors: But tie will at the outset give noUce that the Unite:t States does not insist tha t Thieu and Ky &tay on. But tbert Is more in the: wind than the explanatjqn of errors wJllCh a Pres!· dent may make duriilg a press con. feretl(e. And there are sound rea90n1 why new initiatives are now essential. according to sources · here who shoUld know. SUCCESS IN THE Middlt East give:; lhc President a chance to go into the November congressional election1 with a solid foreign policy achievement behind him, provided nothing unWiward occurs in Vietnam. On the other hand, something untoward seems likely to O<:CUT jugt before the elections -unless there is progress in Paris. The rainy sea50n will be over in !alt September, and an enemy offeruive is at hand . That offensive could take place In Cambodia. in Laos, in Vietnam or in all three at once. The Cambodian ex· ptdilion, still hotly defended at the White House, iJ also seen. in the nalted logic of its aftermath as pre9enting the enemy with a new front where defeat for "our side" could be inflicted with great ease. THE DANGER DOF.S not lie in ''defeat for our side." With great ease, North ' Vietnam could always have taken ever Cambodia. The d8.nger i& in American reaction to •·Defea.t ,for , qur side," and most important in. tl}e White House fear of this ~action. , The dflnger is that having made the war. in Vietnam a war in Indochina, the President will regard a defeat anywhere :lhtf! J.s a dereat for him. . l\lr. Nixon has made himself perfectly -even painfully -clear on tne subject of "defeat." He will not, he has i;aid, be the first ,President lo pre.side ()Ver "defeat." He has talked of "embarrass· ment" and ':humiliation." himself prcr nouncing words which the naUon's poli· tical right could throw back into bils teeth. THE DANGER, therefore , is that of an enemy· success to which the President will feel he must' respood by shutting: off troop withdrawah or carrying Uie war to Hanoi o.r both. That is why the appointment of David Bruce and the decision, to permit him to offer bargainina positiom rather Ulan only to make demands ·may at last -in the lamented phrase -offer "light at the end of lhe tunnel." By Frank ~anldewlct ud Tom Bredeo Japan After the 1945 Atom Bom·hs The following i.s one of two column.s written for the Chicago Dt· fend.er in 1945, a few months aft.tr m.aiL comniunications between Japan a11d th e U.S. had bttn Te·establi311ed foll.owing lhe Japlfntse I UTTendeT. My father and mothn, now 86 yeaTs old. live in Yamanashi Cit y, Japan . f ather's 1945 letter was from Osaka, w1ure he was then in the ezpoTt a11d ·iniport business. l'n thh 25th anni· versary month aftrr V-J day , it is intertstina to read his con1me11U at1d to Tr,flect on how far we have comt in thi& 1hort quarter century. The: foUowing are ex~rpla from a Jetter from my father in Japan. A <few weeks ago, J had lhe pleasure of reporting that he and my mother and my two sisters, who are all in Japan. are alive and well. Towards the end of March, 1945, my father says, Mother and the younge r of my two sist~ moved in to the country to get away lrom the bombings. Father remained In the city -his home is near Osaka . After that dale, he says, "conditions became woru and wor s e day by day, and our JUe for the neit rive montlts wu nothing but fea r and desperation, lr)'ina to e$- capt from perpetual hell fire, death Ind deWuclion. "AMERICAN AERIAL at11cb wtre B11 George ----. Dear Geor 1111.: • You alway& take the male ;side on courtMllp pn:iblem1. 'Are 10'£ some k1nd of 1 woK? Peraonally, J think you coukf learn 1 lot from ellher Ann Landen or Abigail Van Buren! • SUE Oe:ir Sue: Thanks for trying to help me. Sue. But attn 't they married] so co mplete that 90 percent of all citie.s of Japan wilh populations over 30,000 were burned and destroyed. You can imagine I.he cooditlons : 10 million people without homes, clothing, or food ... The Japanese public, Father aays, had no way of knowing how the war was going. "The hostiliUes ended on Auaust 15, and we got rid of the danger of dtalh by bomb attacks. But living con. d!Uons could not improve in _a .1hori time. The lruth was concealed by our military government. and even when conditions were at their worl~ the nation was told th1t we were winn1n& I.he war. We were told to stand and bear au hardships in order to win. "We did not grumble If our homes burned, raUons became less and less to the point of starvation. But when Japan surrendered and the. real situation became clear before us for the f i r 1 t time. the whole nation was stunned. Desperation, consternation, and anger !ollowe<i. ••PEOPLE WERE NO longer obedient, law·abkiiog lambs. Distrust of soldiers and government officials and wrath against war ·Jeaders burst out all over the country. Social order was broken. Everyone ran to attend to hh!I own needs 'for food and clothing. Control of prices, distribution routes. etc., were In a mess. Black markets opened, lnnation started, and prices of commodities went up by leaps and bounds. "Durln& the ·war one could not buy anything except aoveroment rations, which gave SOO grams of ~ rlct a day and very little salt and llJY sauce, a lillle vegetables once or twice a week, and no meat or tish for months. "But strange to say, nOV' we can buy almost anything at the bh11ck market if you pay the price. Such prices are beyond the reach of ordinary citizena. Only wealthy people and those who became rich in war indusU1es can aUord- to enjoy 11uch ,f90d. I am neither, and most &alariecH men are in tht samt posiUon. Flag Desecrators' Haven Demonstrators and all the rag·lag ele- ment of the new rtvolulion set have a bit or precedent for defiling tht American flag, at least just 10 lon& aa trs done at 1 poUtical demonstration. That waa lhe interpretation handed down by the Penn1ylvania Suprerqe Court in 1 case lnvolvln·g lhe atale'a law on flq desecr1Uo11. An American flag bear. ing U.. l111Crlplio11J "Mate lo¥<, Nol Wlr" Md •"fbe New American Revoll)o tlonariea" ',had bttn displayed' ll a July 4 AnU-Vletnam damonstratlo.n at Pemui1tvanl1 State Untvmlty and the flag beartr convicted or deaecr1Uon. The hl&h court. ruled, however, that the sttte l1w "does not 1pply to 1ny patclotle or pollllc•I demon1tr1tlon or decor•~ lions" and Ott defend1nt "was obviously p1r1lci1>Atlng In 1 demonslnUon con- cernln& a political isaue." Guest Ecli't0ri&1 . · "·~ ,). ·~ TUB COURT'S WORDS were a far cry from Charles Sumner'• 11He mull bt oold, Indeed, who can look upon Its !olda rlppllll& In tho broezo without pdde of ooualry"; or Oliver Weniltll Holmes' 1'0ne llag, one land,, ont heart, «tt h•nd -ooe natlon tv~re"; or Woodro'!f :W118on'• ··The thin5s that the 011 ~an(fs for were created hy the u:perlencts of a grnt people. Everythlnf that It 1tanda for was wr1lt.en b" tMtr ltve1." 'So, off to Peruuylvanle. nag bunters. Sty ll'1 ll0illlcal, and you're O)(. California Feature. Servict ' ''MANY WHO ARE cornered by starvation are aoina into the new oc· cupations of gang.stetism aod ·hold-ups. I am trying to picture the true oonditiona. but can never show you a glimpse of It with limited pages and my poor koowledge of words. ln short, the. ma· jority of the city population is near starvation , social order is broken, law i.s disregarded, virtue and refinements are non-.exlst.ent, and all are hungry beasts on the very point of breaking out into riot1ng. City lilt ls extremely dangerous at present. "Under such circumstances I belie ve General MacArthur Is facing real dif· flculty in trying' to educate the-country for democracy. Japan never enjoyed tn1e democracy and freedom for the people, Feudalism is in the nation 's blood, fle11h, and bones. They do not know what is the real taste of democracy although they are now ihooting the slogans or democ racy. Most would rather get 100 grams more of rice a day. The desire and aspiraUon for democracy must begin after their belly is filled ." I shall quote more of my lather'~ letter next week . By S. J. llayakawa P~1Jdenl, S.n Fraclsto State Colle1• ---- Friday, August 7, 1970 Tht editorial page of the Do.1111 Pilot -1eek1 to inform and stim- vtou rtadtrt bV pre1tntino this newtpa.per'a opinions and com- 1 mtnto111 on topics: Of inttreit and rionif'ccnct, b11 providing a forum /01 tit.I uprta•ion of our re~ers' op(nlQnt. and b11 pr1.smtu1a tht ,dfvn !e i;i1w- pof nU of tnformed ob1£rber1 o-nd ipokumtn cm topic.s of th.t day. Robert N. Weed, Publishe r J " .. Mi " >t " ·d at Jy Cl d, " ,. .,. Ii· h. or nt ,. ,. Id m '" ,, ht "" ,. ' ' >y c- s. •• ol " •· " w ,. ·y •• ly ,. II· ·y •• •• h, ., :h or 00 re in ., .. It 7 I ' • • .. ' . "' " • Bl\A ANDERSON, Editor ,,.,., ...... 1, tf1I ff ..... '* Festiva·I' s A · Picnic The lazy,_bazy·days ol=mmer are an Ideal time !or ~ a:un .. worsh.iping, swirnm.ing, relaxation and family out. ' ings, especially picnics. • With this in mind, Costa Mesa Chamber of Com- merce members, ·with·.tbe aid of its Women's Commit· tee and· other area organizations and businesses are in the throes of plans for the annual city picnic. . Formerly knowp as the Old·limer New,timer Picnic, this year the traditional sea!lOI> salute is t\lled, All State Festival. and it. is .hoped that the event will be even bigger and ~ter than ever. Cost.a Mesa Park Yrjll be bustlin~ with activity from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16, fur billed on the agenda are entertainment, games, prizes a nd an art ~ilow. , Families who preCer to picnic on the lawn are Invited ·to do so, .but those who want to give morn a day oH from the kitc~en may buy spaghetti <!inners. \Vhich are being·prtl)ared by·tbe-Jaycees, or other food which may be purcba·sed at concessions. Cottoo candy will be given free to youngsters. Women's Committee members offering aSsistance include the Mmes. OeMurl · Tosh. Beverlee Secand, Joyce Martin, R. H. Stenge, Margaret Hurtado, Ginger Hemmer, Rm>. Hardy., Robert Fisher, Alvin Piiikley, Nick Zien'er, Goldie TeWinkle and Lola Ander- son, Dr. Hilda McCartney; Miss Virginia Morrison and Miss Betty Rustenbach. ARTISTIC TRADEMARK -P<1>piea. are a favorite subject for artist Virkinin Woolley. She h.as never painted a seascape fee.ling it's "a shame" to confine a· mov"inf iocean in • sma11 fr&Jl\e. The water-colorist ls ' a ll!e exWbitor In the Festival of Arts and member of the National League ol American, Penwomen. . ' UNIFORM OF THE DAY -They may (or) not be carpen- ters but these wives of mayors are willing helpers in all city endeavors. Joining the work force in settfng up booths fur the All State Festival to take place In Costa Mesa Parlt Aug. 16 are (left to right) the Mmes. Claire Nelson. Robert . M. Wilson and. Alvin Pinkley. First Fence Hanger Artist Bears Origin.al Stam .p By BARBARA DUARTE Jt was a tremendou1 cOntrast from the life I.he had been accustomed to -lhe lef'enity of the deep 10ulh and tha accelerated, glamourous pace liie found In Paril. She brushed the dust from her 1kirt, still somewhat rattled from the bumpy bus journey, the last part of which took her down a winding Orange County canyon road. ' And settled down In a chajr on the perch of Hotel Laguna. Alter absorbing the imposing sighl df waves breaking on the shoreline, Virginia Woolley ho-ard an inner voice say, "you're home." So it was 47 years ago when Laguna Beach's first -lady of lhe Festival of Arts an-ived In Laguna Beach. Then a young woman In her 306, the artisl soon was numbered among the locals, painting gear tucked under arm as she trekked across town to paint at artist Frank Cuprlen's home. ART GETS BOOST As naturally as the small vlllage became known as an artist's ct1lony, ao did the FesUval or Arts emerge . ''That year, we decided art could stand a little boost, and U\at's where the Festi~ val of Arta began. We hung paintln11 on fences along El Paseo, on clotheslines and even In A garage. Sort of a garage · gaUery, yoo might .uy. "We charged 10 cents admission, which itl!lo entitled viewers to !lee four Uving pictures and other entertainment," Miss Woolley related. "Since that day in 19t1, festival dates h11;v~ been exteocled to today's six-week 11how. lt's almost unbelievable how it 's grown." Booth positions are no longer drawn nut of a hat and the fesllval may be big business. But Virginia WooUey remembers them all, especially the year ahe had shingles and was unable tD guide her beloved festival. DONORS ARTIST Honored as one of an elite <'litn of 20-year exhibitors by the festival board, Miss Wooley holds the added dl!ldnctlon of being the only orlglnnl exhibitor on the grounds as well as a former director, juror and guiding light of the children's free-for-all art workshop which she and Russ Iredell JJtarted In 1941. Her eyes shine when she thinks of children dressed Jn smocks working in chalk, determined lo express lhemselves. "Girls Ullually draw horses, boys are more mechanical and 110metimes object lo putting on aomethlng they think they should eat in, not wear to protect their clothes," she said. It also probably reminds her or "privileged" Saturdays she 1pent many years ago teaChing children 's art clasSC! while studying at Chicago Art Institute. Laguna Beach is a long way from the gay life of Paris where she studied three years and was chosen to exhibil in the Salon -but it's a plact where the arl.ist, always working from nature. can paint pomegranates 1n fall and ~ pies in summer. PRACTICED EYE Starting in waLercolor, she moved to olt and, while a tradllionalist, is re,,pected by modem artist.! for her judement in their field. The dealh of a dear friend last year stilled the brush of U1e octogenarian. But as painling has been so m~h or her lire since she was an eight-year-old in Atlanta, Ga ., in love \Ylth art, liO has the desire to paint begun to stir again. For the past few years, a single panel reminds fellow artists she Is very much a part ol the Festival of Arts. And, this year, for the first time unable to "'atch over her little chi ldren, she sUll was at grounds manager Mogena Abel's side ·whc.n artists signed up for booths. While missing in physical presence, Vir. ginia Wooley knows art is a matter of !Olli not body, and her soul will alwaya be a part of the festival. Gluttonous Gue·sts Find Celebration Far From 'Gorge-ous' DEAi\ ANN : Some folks we know who art a lot richer than we are had a rcceptloo to celebrate the m wedding aMlversary or their parents. They served only soft drinks and fruit punch. 1'1ere were a few bowls of potato chips and nuta on the table. A1Jo aome dried-out aandwlches and cookie1. It wasn't worth getting drtssed up for. Am I wrong to be -DISAPPOINTED DEAR DISAPPOINTED: Did JIMI I• W otter your concratal.l't.k'U nd btat wl1bea or to get bOtnbed anl un yaur 1tom•! Obvloa1ly tbe l.utr, or rtl w..W.tt Mve been "Dtlappotaied." !>EAR ANN LANDERS : Herber1 oon· 1kten hlmselr a good husband. I'll let you dtclde. He hands over his paytheck A NN LANDERS ~ and doesn't say too much. unlesa l over- spend, which J rarely do. He work11 hard and l know it. When he com., home Ill night he eata (with the newapaper proPPeif in front ot hlm), then 1aoea fltalght to bed after supper. Thli goo: on all week. Sunday comes along and Herbert needa "• day to himsell" 1'hl! "lOfl>f going to his father 's hou,. And drlnkill11 bee.r u1ltil he gets 110 stirf he can't see to drive homt. 1 bav1 -- lo go iet hhn. When I' compl1ln he 11)'8 he must 1pend as .much time as he ciln with hit father because the old m•n· won't be lf'OUnd forever. (The "old man11 ts S4.) My que1Uon ts thl•: ,How can J aet Jietbert to let me in C11 his act.lvltlea? -MARRIED WIDOW DEAR MARRIED: Wbat ICllvltle1 do y11 • want to be let hi on? Drl11kinr beer with bis fathtr? I 1aue1l yoa use yov lm1itn1Uoa, Toot1, •ad tome UP. wltll 1amelhtn1 the twl of JOO CU do -~llted to hit ramll)', U you tavtced 1Htlltr couple or two ii diner at )'W bome, Herbert would Illy 1p, woaldo~ MT 'nert mut be IOIDI CND1•ity ac· tlvtttes )'ti cen enjoy teceaMir. Ever bell' If ball pme1, C0111rts. mOvSea, bowlm1, sott. •-•· ., .. l<ltll, bleycl• 111 -lllo Hot Is Hdlnt. Get wlUo I~ pt. Uorbtrt'1 lttloer llllgbt be wlllr '"" •lot too1u tllu yoa ff,......,, P,amp tome lift lato tbat dull, daU mar· ~.... . DEAR ANN LANDERS: I hsve road ynur column for years and yf)Ur ~ of moraltty And iiexu1l behavior, aeem to be e•Uin& more antiquated and out«· dote every Ume 1 picl< up the paper. Please atale the quality or your creden· tiab. What glve1 you the rl&ht to impo60 yoµr medieval code of · morality on mllljoris 'of people! Who gave you • liceme lo inject 1 your creaking view1t on • everybody wbo, happens to read? You show up Just about everywhere the EnJlish language ii apoke:n. What in yoU:r background 1lvc1 you the right •to push •your vlewl cm people? Who •J>l'Olnl<d you guardian ot the -ld'a morals? -MORRIS, MINN. DE~R l\.IOftRISt J nn'1 twtre Ulat ~blC\srouncl" lallCI ''cf'ede1tle11" 11ve Uy<ln< tbe rlpt lo puU .~ •le'll 00 potpie..- • have been aellhtr 11H)fnttd tor appointed. I erpre11 m1 tplalou on --. a lartety of 1ab.)tcta wt.ea I a• Mted te do 10. ft.tn1 el lite 111W1r1 61• 1ppe1r In the column ate Ute t9Cf "odact of couul~Uon1 wUlr. die bed lni11 tn 1tbe country. I am aware ttf tlte IW ... D)I .. lpGOllblllty ol &lvtq - and I do my llell It lie lllr, 411eet ad -· ll1len I lied I ~ ... med, I admit It. Do )'Olll • . ' "The-Bride's" Oukft.", AM'Landera"' booklet, anrwera IOme of tbt molt ln- quently ••lted quettlona;abou' "eddlnp. To receive your copy of thlJ corn- . preihtTlslve guldt, write to Ann tlnelera, In care ol your ne.•1paper, e:nciotlng a jnag. seU-odd.......i, otampe<l envelooe an<t S5 cenl.I in coin In CIR ol tht DAILY PILOT. ( r i t ·I • • • • r· . , . . . • . . • • . • ; • i· • " Jf OOLY PILOT Frid.Q, Augwt 7, lfJ71) F~male Gua.rds Pooling Resources w-•• llboraUoo ii mak-tile beocb IW1llilll oll-llmlil q -In the -lo tbe --· ·wadd but m proponmta have t1t'1 not a maUer d. tradl- ~· Ol"ull c .. 11 tioo but ..,. of inclicall9." baach "'*"'· apJained llu BMrnan • .-Llf....,i •lands an con-tant dlrec:tar of the H111>-•a10U•l1 void of fezninlnjty tlngtao Beacb Harton and unlli ..,. l!IOVtl Inland ·lo the Beach Department. "A Mirl 1 aimmunlt, pools. SwH>leacb-. Is not pbyaically eapoble of <iii, 1111>-l>roivod beauUes kiss awimmlog out inlo ll>e IUtf '\he doea of pools from Seal up 1o eo tlmel a c1ey and llach lo San Clemeole but bandliag a palble 2IOiJound victim." Bead> IH...-1111111 be able to acale 11-11 foot waves, overcome rip tlclet; n:peat lor'i dltlance IW!mJ and IUb- due • byattriclil v1atim in the water. be oool.inued. •"Ibert ii only Cll10 girl in 100 phyl.ically o T emolionall7 capable of the job." BolmaD noted that 1 itW'd must be able lo -• crises ..... tiooally. "We IOIDet1mes 'hive sad --.. tile beach, .. he added. Bolwnan called ucoptlon lo pool ll\IBl'lini. "Jn a pool or a calm lake, females can be elficilOL Tbert are no great physical demands ... Allhoqh tile b lk i n i e d beauties m1y not med the physical deman:h, they have the attributes and many girls are wbilin& away Uleir sum· mers instructing and safeguarding children in area poolJ. Claudia Bryan, 17, euards at Htmti.,00 Beadl HiP, School pool far the jiIDJ and ,........;on department. sh • belie'Yes f em a I e lHeguardJ have a better rapport with the children and 1et more ac. ~-" Ioddents never o c c u r because even a 'tough guy' would be too embarrassed to cmllenge a girl in any way,'' ahe explained. Claudia 111ard1 40 houri a week and find.a it a great excuse to Pim, stay in tht sun and enjoy people. for hundrecU of feet. Besides, I'm DOI Otmll enoogb." Also otlc:klo& lo lbe concrete dmnain is Kim Stewart, 11;- 1 glllnl al Laguna High School. "I e11joy il at the pool. I thooihl of working on the beech. It's exciting but terribly st.reouous. Not being parUcularly a t r o n g enough. [ prefer that the men maintain 1hat area." A frelhman history major in the fall at California State College at Fullerton. Kim finds lileguardq the ··ideal job. ChUdren respond so easily aod l!!agerly love the water." Tina Echlenacb, 17, guards and instructa almost .a hours a week at the Newport. Harbor High School pool for the parks and recreation department. A WeUme resident. Tina learned to swim in the bay at Ruby Street and now io- &tructs chlldren ages J..12. "I re.ally enjoy the 'Mammie and Me' cl~ The children are so excited -learning to swim." '!be F.disoo High Schon! senior pre!er1 pool 111arding to the beadl responsibility. ''There is too much to watch. They (lifeguanil) have ID be acutely aware ot everything With plam lo major in biology at UCI in the fall, Tina hopes to renew her sum- mer profession next year. "I've never encountered any problems from being a girl. It'• all been great. rd never switch." KIM STEWART TRAINS EVE ON YOUNG DIVE R TINA ECHTERNACH STRESSES SAFETY RULES Horoscope Pisces: Concentrate SATURDAY AUGUST 8 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Yoo are intrigued by mysle'y. But it is mostJ:y or your own making. Means all9Wers are available. However, yoo seem more content to ltt light diine in another direction. TAURUS (April 26-May 20): ElnJil.asis o n agreements, aMl.lJllfllion ()( a p e c i a 1 become loquacious. You gain moot by adlJerinc lo priD· ciples. GEMINI (May JI.June 20): Work, basic issues domina~. You art able to C001plet.e im· port.ant mission. You feel bet- ter as a resdt. Move ahead, not backward. Strive to irn· prove relati onc with aflSOci.ates, co-workers. CANCER (June 21.July 22): to be confident, versatile. RelaUv~. neighbors prove more attent.ive than usual. LIBRA (S.pt. 23 -Oct. 22): Jf thorough, you make discovery which can be transformed to i-i>fit. Add to possessiona. Pay and collect debts. Be willing. to make changes that lead to progress. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Wearing apparel takes on ad- ded importaoce. Take special care with appearance . lmpresrion you make could mean dlffer'ftlCe between suc- - r e s po n sibility. One you thooglll alool could suddenly Your creative urges find con· 81.rudive ootlet. Give an<f you also will receive. Take in· itiative. Bold 11 tr I k e s ac- complish whet is required. Refuse to be • wall!lower .. oesa a..t faUure. OdU point ----------1;==================== to success. Outgrown Clothes Fill Bill LEO (JWy 2S-Aug. 22): Your Interest!: are pnXect.ed by friend. Know this and trust -in right diredJon. Means put fai!il in those who have demonstrated si.nc«ity. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 2%): Accent on communication. Your ideas, plans are ex- amined wlCh interest. Key ill SAG11TARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Work lo quiet bul efficient manner. Be dilcreel. Someone may confide ln- fonnatloo wtildi is difficull to keep t.o younelf. Family member a p p I i e 1 preitiure. Re!lpond tact.fully. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan . 19): Take into account some Nature's Beauty Exhibited eiperieocn friends mey have Nalure·s won de r a , con- aeaning out cl05W! ind recenUy undergone. Temper ce'l.1trattd into a sm1ll 1rea drawera for the fall :id1'lOI Talk Rev iews Judgment wHh mature rom-of land, will be shown when year may mean a windfall pr-ehe111lon. Be patient ind you the Costa Mesa-Bay Cities for Dana Point Community D bl will be rewanled. Wish is rug Pro em I lfllled Branch, California Fuchsia HDuse. u . Good clean clothes o( all ( AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Society meet! on Monday, sit.es att: needed to build stock 1 ~Mt~ Rappaport,\director 18): Review ambitions. You Aug. 10. for an October thrift sale plan-0 outb OiaUenge pro-can get to top; but be aware "Nature's Hall At..'Te," a ned by the club. Mrs. Mary gram in San Clemente, will of price. You gel what you color film. will be exhibited P I ~-•-1 address San CI em en t e ask f-_ know what 1·t 1·5 .,yne, genera uww•uan, a 50 Busioeas and Professional .... by Lee Clirton of the Hydrex will collect a pp 11 an c es, Women at 8 ?::Kl p.m. dinner yoo really seek. Do 30fl'le ttU· Pest Control Co. at 7:30 p.m. jewelry, toys and w h It e meeting on Tuesday, Aug. II , analysis. This pays off In long in the American Legion Hall, eJephttnts. in Buffy's restaurant. run. Costa Mesa. Proceeds will go toward the The speaker will review the PISCES (Feb. J9.March 20): Members also are preparing .. bulldfnc fund for lax es, current drui ai.tualion and ex-Accelt on how well you are for !he All Stales' Festlval on payment! and maintenance. plain how hia organiiaUon -able to concentrate. What ap-Sunday, Aug. US, from 11 :30 Bund&es can be left at oi:m-helps users kick the habit. pean far olf may dftlland a.m. in C-Olta Mesa Park. mtril,y bou8e by an-angina Businesswomen in the almmt immediate attention . Those participeUna are uked with the caretaker, 496-3187, Capistrano Valley are invited Visualize what it is you want to bring the nteess1ry food or Mrs. 'nlomas ltarrison, to atteod. Resuvat.1on1 may lo accomplish . Clear up emo-for their party. Visitors are ~. ~J..Bee Answ«inl be made with Mr. Jame11 ~tional•' -. ... o-.""-"""-..IT;.;.,.,-•. ___ ... w.,e.,tco.,;;m.,;;•.,;;·------,ll Service, f9.Rff7 may be call-Conn, club ~ at flll-1" ed far plcWp eervlco. I71MI alter$ p.m. Free Enlaate. RE·UPHOLSTER Votnplete Selectlo11 of Fabrics lnclNdl.,.: Linens and Velvets Mi .tit Cr1ft1mM Alw1y1 •• C-KOSKI l lJl NIWPOIT .. w. 6 • COSTA MW•-•-• ' I {&Y·Kot.l:IYI · ....... ~ ..... P •o•e 642-1454 • . , ... ...s HA VE YOU TRIED Swing 'N Hoir CNIM • -,,.,. 111 1 try , , , ,,.. ... tlM '" •11111 IMfltODUCTOltY Ol'l'llt tit VliLUe FREE "'" '"' ' ,.......... JUST ~ .. WITM I MAM,-00 ' SIT , •. ••••••·••·· .., North of 17th St., Cotta Meu ..,,. . •• LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, "THE COUNTESS" "Countess" luxury silverplat• from ·international Silver Company. Wine cooler, $50. Liner, SJ.50. Compote, $15. Shrimp dish wRh toothpick and sauce cups, $35. Ch1tt1 Acco1111h l11 ... it1d 1 Am1ric 111 f.,p•en l111kA"'1rlc1t4 1114 M11!1r Ch1•91, t11, SLAVI CK'S Jew1l1r1 Sl11c1 '' 1 l 11 F11hion hl•nd N1wporf B•tch -6 .. '4.1 l tO O!'Q MPdey 111d Md.., llfttll f :Jt Musicians Tune Up For Upcoming Year . Actlvilies for the upcoming year have ~n planned by new office.rs of the Orange County Alumnae Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota.,, in- ternational prof ession a I fraternity for women in the field of music. Leading the group during the year will be the Mmes. David G. Meltzltr, president; Michael J . Sabot, vice presi- dent ; Kenneth McK in ne y, secretary ; John T u 11 y , trea s ure r ; Charle s Sandmeyer, editor and historian ; John F. Warner, chaphtin. and James Schulke, parliamentarian. Mrs. Meitzler (Leon a Roberts) was presented Lhe Sword of Honor during a luncheon meeting in t h e -Mission Viejo home of Mrs. Sandmeyer, where Miss Nan- cy Slater, soprano from the Un:ivenrity of Redlands . preaented I program of art songs and arias. Founded in 1903, th e organization has as its purpose to further the development of music in America and pro· mote a stronger bond or mus ical interest and un- derstanding between foreign countries and America. Through its international Music Fund, it has financed projects such as presenting musical instruments and gifts to veterans hospitals, schools and hospitals for the han- dicapped and the Louis BraUle Music Institute. Anyone wishing information may call Mrs. Meitzler at 539- 2674. 'Hair, Ha ir' Coiffures this fall will be simple and flowing, giving a 110fUy defined sUhouette. Hair treads are ta.king on a new appreciaUon for the tady·llke look that has been mWina: too Jong. UNIFORMS AIN'T WHAT THEY USED TO BE! An Ori9in1I Collection of Cesi9ns For Prof•sliions Th1t R•quir• An Identify ing Costume PANT SUITS-DRESSES-SEPARATES e F1nt11tic1lly C1re.fre• F1brics e All Wish & W11r • T r1dltion•I WhH1 or Choo11 From A Verit1bl1 Sunburst ~f Colors e Si 1e1 8-I I C11ifernl1 C1r.r Co1t11rnb ., Charle~ Ste/an, !J11c. II 1•21 Al11Nme St. • Hufttln1ton 8Hch 5a4~166 OPIN TUii. thru SAT. f i30·J:JO ' I 7 . ' .. • ~· -• . VOt:-63, NO. 188, 4. SECTIQ_NS, ~2 PAGES --' ~' ' - . ' • ORANGE COUNTY, CALJF01tNIA _, FltlDAY, AUGUST 7, 1970 ens ' -. l. "' . ·~ .. DAILY PILOT.....,_ 11'1 ltklwl,., ........ • '' er ssau Magic King do~ .. Enf ore es .,M d.f. 'd D I ' '' . c d ' · o 1 1e --. " r:ess o · e • " ' •r snv& M1TC11ELL OI llt °"" ,.._ lfll!! Disneylaiid offklals have baMed all long·bair~. y o,u t·hs from the Maatc Kthgdom following a confrontation between Orange County lawmen and 300 Ylppi« tllat culmlnaled In the park cloamgAill houri wiy :l'hursday. announcod the closing ol tbe park at 7:30 p.m.' ,,. Many ol the 33,000 gu<Sts wort !lmled expressions as they ·were led out of the part. Some asked: "Wbaf..a ba~ pened ! ls tbe part really cloled?" Dlsne1 employei and security pgllce "l>lalned the disturbance ... ~ """"'· many of them children, and llrJed l\l<ols In teop moving. The "NaUonal Ytppte Day Pow-Wow" began on a light note Tbunday aa a group of 75 Yipples converged on the carouse.I at Frontierland, the Monsanto display, General Elecbic, and the Coke ISee YIPPIES, Page II Eighteen foutp.; were, arrested ·as. a result ·~ the cOntrontation which tooll: pl~ce on ibe part'1 Main Str..t It 1:55 * . ~' * * * * p.m. Loi\f-llall'td and denhlw:lad, the van- 1\lltd of the Ylpple group con"rged uppo Dlmeyland at noon '111ur.t.y to celebrate "National YJpple Day." Disneyktnd Regulations Small incidents were reported by Dbneyland •ecwity police during the day, ranging from a s.iog·ln on Captain Hook's pirate &hip to a disturbance at Based on Appearance the Monsanto displ~y in Tomorrowland. Disneyland ope.l)ed ils latea at a a.m. Then the Incidents sl<:pped up. loday without lnclden~ In !act, the only The uMCheduled cloeurt of the famed dlfCereoce between today's OJ)ening and tcuriat attraction, the aecond since the any other day waa the fact.·~l uniformed no rules tel down on how our pests are to loot." Security men will do thal AS DISNEYLAND SHUTS DOWN, POLICE IN RIOT GEAR LINE THE PARK'S MAIN STREET Ofiici1l1 Order E1rly Closure of M19lc Kingdom and Revive Strict Dress Codt part opened ill 1955, came after the securlly pollco manned lhe ticket bootha group of hippie-ytpe youths marched up -'--Ith · \. t ,_\. --.1 bad Maln Stree' ch.anting obscenltlea and 4l1Klg w ticae ..... en -uiu Y0W1g said that some guests will bt ocreened by S<Cllrlly police before being admitted to the park. and undesirables will aot be allowed in. " aome new dre81 requiftmtnta. 1lnging songs. The 1 r o u p left Tom .. 'Ibis means that if a person does Sawyer's Island at about I p.m. before Officlab at the Magic Kln&dom dilc1oe-have · k>R.c hair, be may be admitted headlng for the park's City Rill in ed that dreu recullUonl fof part pstr to the park. The hair styles that at1 a line which ellonded the length ol will be up to the cliacrollon ol aecurily In vogue loday tend In be iooger and the street. poUee at tbe l~S. . we are not .gob~. to keep atl,Y9oe out When they 'readl'!d the clcy hall .,.. "Then will be no tel reautatlons 111\'h o1 lllmeyland w Jans hair alone. th<y chonted· lar ·the releue ol Minnie •• bllr beln& thtee' lnc\lei ldoll cit, ll>O ' Tile dec!alon will be based oo 1-111 Vote on Freeway Pending? lolouae a..r""° do"'1 a .1*'111\ltHqd-aides,"·~ ~:Yiiuili..'""°°. -andattitudt,"bellkt: ff.oute ·Foes Mav P, .. etitinn.L. ·Cat Q ~·' n.· '' .·, '· .. ~"d.~#Jl;~~·:"1111paa£.,:-.!:"'~r.,._ .~~::ibl~~ · ti -f~. • ,"'fm ~JI'. · ~'lr~1.'mt"~u'ari: tllop•on ii l\i>I an arlilM~ _. af1ili' tlft·dlsturblnce at Ibo 11Vt niur.. Newport Beach City C o u n e 11 m a n How; Roaer• nld 'lo4<y a group of Paci C.Ut tr .. wlf "llf'obenla la eoio-~ apinltaUvepel.ltionanda cbar~ amendment to bind t b e city couneU On 1he freeway. PeUtlooing procedures In brinlf the free1tay que1Uon to a vote of the people wJll !be tr I e d lf Assemblyman Robert Badham't,~ bUI to delete the freeway dies' la Sacramento, Roaera vowed. -The lnlllaliva y;<!Ul4 be lo rescind the freeway -ment*~ hll •Jin-. ed wttll tllt -' lfllhwa;i for the roule •oat Uie pptr Bay cnlSSlng. ; The chart¢r amendment prohibits the oouncil troilt sta:nlna aay agreement regarding Pacllic c.oalt Freeway Without • vote of tbe 1people.· Both could be ac""'1jlllabed through elecUono broughl aboul by petitlono bear• .. * * * * * * Ing 15 parcenl of, Ille city'• retlltm4 pilntonthebla~kbackgroUncl. tbtf'l<hl taker to .. -~ .i.. dAy.qt!. •i • -' A. noP ol Irate DilDoy, """" be&ao ' illld'~. ~ ID ~ llnllbt "Qod -Americt'\ but -b I • • ~ tum to IrvlM <;ampany ~ quickly booed down. by tbe youths. H ' · ' 'T1 1 ' h ' ' M in an Informal metUng• Salurdty thl!t . One o!· the hlpplea ohOllloo for the 8:1' or ..• p .. !JI C er, s to eet they .ouppoi't t be Badbim bill Ot la<e group In head !or F .. W,land and the ~ t b e conteqUefK9 of ~111 1'ejection crowd circled Main Street for the trek • by clUzena, <II Newport., . . to tbe Disney casUe. The meeUng Saturday at the Balboa HaUway down Malo Slreet they were o· ver Strike'. Poss1"bili"ty Bay . Club will bring together ·Newport met by a olsta Mesa police riot cootrol Beach Mayor Ed Hirth. Vice Mayor ..•• Rogers and Irvine Company Pr•klent aquau that ~ept onto Main Street from WWiam Muon . and possibly aome ·~ employes entrance . members of bla.~f. Screaminl "Here come the pl1s," the Hirth wbO called the meettne uJd hippies ran down Main Slrfft away from By JOANNE JIEYNOLDS Of "" Dllr ,..., '"" wanted quality education. J think the board acted In bid filth.' 'he wd. he ba.d nO inttntk>n of glvtn'; an the Coat.a Mesa unit only to be met · Ultimatum. "We'll probably talk about by. a_ squad of F)lllerton lawmen who the freeWay, U>e, 1a..trport; annetaUons c:I09ed off the eM:ape route. He~ings Delayed. Again; Possibility of a teacbera' rtrite will be among alternatlv~ dlscuutd 1n ap emer. 1ency meeting of lhe Ne'fPOl'l-Mui Ed- ucation Assocl•Uon Monday night. The .&lftiooal funds allocated to teach. .... salarles will be uaed In •<IJUlt pay lncremenfl ill the middle of the pay acale. Mesa Lobbyist Hired • By TllO~ FORTUNE .... Oil& ......... The Senatt Transportation Committee holftn1 Oft ~ bill lo prevent Pacl!l\l Coat· Frtt!f•Y coostructlon throqah ' Newport Wh and part of HunUnP.>h Beach ha! q:atn been postpooed at the ' ' reqqest of !J.semblyman Robert Bftdham (R-Njlwport Beac~). Badham, ,uthor of bill, asked for the thlr~ suc~alive one week delay on the. hea&g t>Qcauee he said he can't count on ~ voles being there Monday. He Is ai!iJC>tlnl'for a hearing the followlna ll!onday, .\Iii. 17. .BWMm Mid be would be misalng lhe Votes <lTom Ca.mil (0.San Fernan- do), wbo lo bOtpltaUled, and Mlllnn M"1ts (R.S.n Jl'ruclsco), who will be aw11 !tom the C.pllol lliildlW, ft takes a seyen vote majority Qf the IS.m~mber Trailaportal!on C.mmlli., In win -a ~!ldOttoo !or -e to the lull Senile. J ~.Ba-bill CAB 11IU prevloualy p~~· )yltt.· Iri ' • l!ft'O•~ Bld~am aid todV he iJM J !d lbt Chy ol Cotta M .. boo ~~ a lob\>Ylif lo wotk on tile le9al•~lil<:o m'G>bers. . "f don't t w: It," 'Dadl}am 11aid, "but I. thlftll ·!act •bould be mada kno'"1 \o ~ public.'' CtOtt' M~ Ml!'or Robert Wlltbo, tald, 4'1te'a rlghf. When we-hlrt w• IO to the '°P· We hlre'lhe best in the bualne11." Ti. c1ty'r k>bbylat iJ WUUam F. Marth, Coltl Mm fe1ldent who ii a former 11111mblyman lrom the North Hollywoqlo Bur~nk area. Mayor Wilson aald he hireit; Marsh lor $SOO about 21h weeka ~;-He said he has told olher councilmen What he did and ha• heard nothinl ocaatlve. Wllaon said, "The r e a s on Costa ..... ls &0 attwg on this la we can " nothlng lo Newport Boulevard (to btcomt Newport Freeway) unlil Ute CobtaJ Freeway la tetlled," He uJ:d, ''You can't build a Newport rretWay and have It end up at the cllft doia lhert and have Ill the cani fa)l In !he ocean. ln l9D, "tlen the Coutal J'mway route w11 tlo:t adopted we hid t0melhln1 like 19,000 cars 1 day on Newport Boulevard, ,now it ls up to 55,000 a day." Badham took Issue with Wilson's state- ment that the seven-year freeway fi1ht hid • cost Orange C.Out area clties In el:ceu of $300,000 or the tai:payers' m<lQly. He Aid. "I don't know where be' got that fipre. He must have p!.llled 1 it ·out of hia hat'." • ••can he prove we didn't ~peod. t.hat much!" Wilson retorted. ••rf rilay be $500,000. I didn't have time to figure it out. How many boura have the citiea spent on Investigation?· How many trips hive there been to hearings?" Badham aaJd, "If Wilaon's figure Is trlle, whlcb I doubt. ll IJ not goln1 to be angthlng comr>1red to ~e a~unt this freeway, lf QOJ\llructed, will lake off the til: base of school dlatrlctl. Jt's uf"in \be1miDlona.'" The Bldhilm bill W!'"'d 'delet. from 'tl'ie otalo lrMway 11111 ajll'tlll'•Y •yotem the fJOtt10n of Pacl!IO Cout Freeway from 8each Boluevanl Ill Hunllngton Beach to the 11stern Newport ' Beach city llmll at corona· del tdat • Badhaln told tl¥! Senate Transportation Committee Jri partial tesUmorf1 before he asked ftr. poltponemtfnt }Jst Monday he' Would oorne back 1'ith a bill next year rec(liomendlOI a ·•t*clflc allemtltf rou"' , Badh•in expl1lned today i lhat ll ll. 1111 lntenUon the i.nau,oae of the hlroutina: blU ••would inu>lr. It be a route 1cceptabl~ lo the Cl 't y council or Newport Belich. It -ld throw It back le the councll level," ht old. ''Tbue can't very wel1 be any fteeway right now becaule the cl~DCll ti11 refuaed to •Ian •n alt'eem " he said. ''My acOon ii not ~PPlnl I frteway, It b uawlndln1 tho bid ~t has heeo dOJ'le." • • B1c1Jiam illld I~ oomlna •P with H allernaUve roule h< probably "ould '9"' suit the lqlalaUva co1111"I' ll~lt hfahWIY engineer aind the Hl•hw11 ~million ital!. He wouldn't -aDotl* hearln1 h<fore the 1tat< Hl1hw1y Commlaloft. "Under our lindependent commiaal'on !)lotem thoy don' really aaura .. l'f:IOUrte DllQllle te Ill," he llkf. He lndf11tid hb bill would take th6 !Seo IW>IWI, Pap I) • and other· t)jlngl," he aald. 'IWe· pt eoJJce ·•nd DiJn<y · secutlcy o!llceri together periodically oom<tlmes ...,..al grabbed .dOIOlll ol the Ylppiea and time.a a wee~ ~tlmel every few physically, threw: tbem out of, the pirk weeks." · · · , li • or took them to the security-off tee Rogers, who publicly accused 1he for lranlfer to the Anaheim poJlce Irvlfle Company earlier th.ii week . of dtpartmeqt. not having: the interest! of tbe people Several spec:taton joined in the melee, of Newport Beach at heart, said he chasing yippiea around the town square believes the mayor's pU!'pOSe in calling lhouUng, "Run, Wpplea, Run." the meeUng is "to g et dialogue going 'Ille encounter on Main Street lasted be.fore we drilt too far apa.rl" only minuJes. Riot squads In helm eta:, Rogera aald U the Badham bill passes, face protectors and 111 mu.kl lined he thlnko the city should begin 1tudyln& both sides ol the llreet 11 a ~~ alternative routea around the clly and · 1 a substitute "arterial feeder, system." , II the Badbam bill fail•. he said, Plans w:nd Up a group of people Ls ready to move " forWard with the initiative and city charter petitions. F C ta M Rogers .. 1d membero of the group or OS esa inciuoo former Newport mayor and vice chall11lan of Harbor Area Freeway All F l"IJhtera Paul Gruber, Corona· del Mllr ·Bkltes ete ' hom.Owntr• CO!l"cll •pnlt .. nian Robe!! CUrcl, and WJlliam Sprague, the Bayaide Tr~ler Par~ mal!Uet who WOl In charge of counUne the pe"t.ion 1J1natures ilathered In oupport of the Badh•m bill. The Freeway l?l&htera aay they ob- tained 21,000 slinatures on ~ peU· tiona:. • • Rogen hll a .,.....,ndum from Newport Clly Attor~ My Seymour explaining the leial ~ure tinder the 1tate elecllons code &(Id the city charter for initiative and charter chang_e ad.Iona. Basi<all1:'tbe petttlon circulator• need llignat.ures of JS percent of the city's rejbtered'votera In IJJtco the city council to hold an election on the lnlllaU,. ~ on the charter amendmenl . ftoieto '1ald ·u lhat II· done and tho public supports the measures future couoctla will Ulen have to convince more. than half the voter• in order to take 1_cUoa OQ ihe {Aeway. The final week· of preparaUona for Colla Mea'a new All State. FuUval, an· eVent adapted · from Uie pait Old- Timer New-Timer Picnic,· ls aboot to beiJn. Fe1t(vlUea 1'111.11111 •II day t.n1. 11, In Costa M.ea Pork, with virtually e9'ry club and or1arilaation In the ctty taldni part. Sponsors are the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce Women'• Dlvllion and the Jaycees. Sllrtlnl Ume lo 11 a.m., wlth.IJ'M~• by cky offlcfalt and civic leaden al noon, according to Dr. Hllda M~ey, festival Chairman. SpqhetU dlnnera wlll ho oerved btlJn- nlOI at U:30 p.m., with a variety <JI other fooda, en~lnment and acUviUu availabJe for all agea and enlhualuma. Awarda Wiii be &lven lot the oldell 1nd )'OUhltJt, loneeet c o n 11 n u o u 1 By Ice CrealJl Tnlck · resident. and.th9H comtn( ln>m rartheot ' away. l'reO bellCOl'ter rkln Will be ol· B°.y'& Hand Rqn Over A Colla Mua tot cllmbtd opln '"" lered as 'prlw. , let cream truek Thurld.lly al~. A c r o 1 • -country communkaUona lep of!, and the slowly mqvq vehicle 1y1!tm arran1ed by Paclllc Telej)hone ran over hl1 hlll)d and kept 101111. Company and Col. Ed PelracK, "'m- Brlan L. Elllo, all, of NO llopood mander ol tho CalUornla Afr Naljonal St., was taken to C.0.ta M111 Memorla1 Ou1rd'1 42nd Radio Rt11y $quidron Hotpltal by bla pmnle, 't1111rt X·rtyt wtll be featured. aOOwtd no brollen bones or otber aeriOUI Vl!lton may Uno up and call lll)'ooa •map. In the ClOUDley. ""' I • • Bart Hake, N-MEA uecuUve aecretary, said ~ thlt a.' ~e "la dtrtiln17 an alternative and will be dlscuaaed," at MondaY's session. The teachers' grooe will meet to di. cus:s a Course of •cU<n foll~. Tue.. day•, !Chool board meellri( it 'lhtch board members voted to spend> tm,ao:i of $890,000 In addlUbnal flulcls on ,.1ary adjultmenb. Approxlmat<Jy 1111.000 wu spent on reatortnc cut pl"Olr•ma and the balance was 1'1Umed to d\llri<I tax· ~ pattfa. ' , · Hab uld ttuMra .,.. dllllilllloned with board '!"l!'bel'I becauoe they' el· pected them to GM more of the additional funds on salary Jncreases . "They have used specioua argwnenta ln raUonalWng their decl!lon,'1 Hake de- clmd. "For alli mooths they deoled ,.1. ary Pl)>-1a l!ieY oa)d t'1e1 eenildmd legitimate because there were 119 .fu~. 11The acUon they've 'taken, noW that the extra fuods are available, reve.ala that board acled In baij faith," he Olld. lfake,aa!d t}le board'i arounent or giv- ing a 1br\!tk to the taxpayers was a fall•· cloua one. "Whe'n 1hey voted the override Ill February, tupay'1l Indicated they Mideast · Powers Agr~ to~ Fighting Today ' WASHINGTON (UPI) Th a Unlled Arab Republlo and Imel bava •lilted to entar lnt.t;f.:a ftre bollnnlnl af a p.111.. P.DT y Secretary <II Sta!O, WllUim P. · · anneoijced. ~·we welcome Ud1 itate,,nart-Uk& action taken by tbe leldn ol lhe aoVenmitnta concmiecf. We l)ope· tbla Important decision will advance 1Jie ,prolpe!'il for a J\111 •nd l11Un1 pe1c1 In lhe Middle East II Al~ 'olltclal ipot .. man llobert J, McCloakey read Rocen' 1ta1tmenl, r"ponilbla o!flclal1 Indicated thal a ce19e-llre would .Joo lonnally bo In el· feet betWfftl i. .. 1 and Jordan. · The olflclail 111<1 .111at naltber l1rael nor Jcm!pi had evar lbmlaTiy dl11voncl tho pertinent U.N .. -llH naoJuU.... belw,.. the two <OUntrlel. Prior to Tuesday's meetJni, board membtrt ~ad granted au teachers a S.I percent CilSt of living pay increast. With th9t'coat of Uving Increase, base pay for · a beginning secondary teacher wW be $7,111 and top· pay with 12 years' exper.. ience, a MA degree aod ll sraduate unila ii llf~75. Hake chargtd board membtn with •tarUna a "t<:rrlble cycle" ~Y not boo!~ Jng aalarles. "The morale amo"' teacben Is deteo. loraUn1. l think thol' ,wiU not b< ~ .l')I; Unc In ~ve ol their Im Ume In d11U1C1 proJeett,' he said. lie cited planning ol l....,rvlce tralnln1 and currlctilum work for middle acbools as two projects that teachers regularly do without pay. Teachers are paid for at. tending In-service traln!Qg programs, but Hake aa.id the plannlttt' of these one-day conferences it done 1n their apare time and •wJthout pay. "There are a number of thin.Ks teacllf:r1 Art caUed upon to help with. lt they are paJd adequately they don't mind doing thl!lga like that, but wben they're not palcl enough, they're Ukely In ..; 'let an admbUstrator. do 1.t.' " Hake said. 0r .. ge Ce•• "'eatlaer They'll be beallna a path to tho beach Saturday aa tbe temper• ture aoara to ~ In the Inland ""l'I• On the coast It'll be a com- IOflable '12 under lair 1kles. INSIDE TODAY . Th• Grcal<ol SllOID on .l;drfh ,tmdtHonoUJ ,..,, tlwi gnatt11t <Ciolonl o• enrth. Tho Rlnfln.g BrOI. Barnum end Ballq df"CV ' t4k11 thc •ct"tfr ring fft todaf'J- ,.V 111c1ndcr 1ccUon. I ' • W llAIU '1l01 ,,,..,, -7, I'" h irtda Breaks Down at Death · .Photos LOll.ANGICl.D (Ul'll -.Linlll.IWI-_ .:'l ... , bdl&V..lhey could .do IUCh .....,. bJ -.. Mrs. Kaub1111 • bla IJllllad "Oi, CW" _, --a llllnl·" • -• color plctutt 111 wtller vk:IW; cdfee tllAI lilo . _, -liar -• Aze Y11U _..... -,oo doD't -tllat 11ei-Abl&all Folaw, ·...,.s.d oo tile 001114 do lllCll an "anlmallltlc lhlna" ,..couldo,dolllcllaUU,,.!" .,,.....,lboTolo- when obown a picture '41111 of one "I lamr I dldn\ do IL I dldn't Ila'* • Nl'i. Xuablan bad beqaale .aJmoot ot tbt vlctiml in the Tate murder cue. in me to do u:b 1111 •nbn.tllttk fhlnc." hysterical 'Ibursday afternooci when Del.,,.. attormoy Irving K>naret tbmt Kanan!k ~ qabt that w aifO Kanar<k produced a photograph of th• befwe her • color pbotoerapb c:l the ran into the ho4.lle wlth two yowia women ~Y. almost nude body or Miss Tate mutilated bodY of Voytek Frykowski, codefendanl.! of Charlet ManlOn In the tnside the residence. a pest-of 1lie actrea Shum Tate cue and Charlea ''Tex" Wabon and When the trial se3s1on ruumel! again who was &tabbed dOZULS of times and that she might be unable to remember today, Kanarek approached the 21-year· lhot in1he \Dlln&s last Aue. I . beetuse abe wu la a st.ate of shock old blonde with a sheaf of pictures Mrs .. ~·•bl.In began ctYilll steadily at the time. and thrust one toward bu. Mrs. Ka.sa- apd Karek ald to her: Her voice rlsi.q to a shout, Mr1. bian took one look and then avert.ed "Wh1 are you C2')'lnl now?" K11•bi111 f'flplied, "I just know t didn't ber head. .. I jUlt cu"t belle.ft lt.11 do it, Mr. ltlnl.rtk." Kanarel attempted to have -the witness .. Yoa eaa't bellev1 whatl" ·· Kanarek bad begun the day '1 que. take the picture in her hand but Judge Otltli n e Complai n ts Airport Oppon~nts Meet Opponent& of p-o!X*d eIPllM~ of the Ono&• Coonty Airport ··-,_ again last night. , Top officials of 1ile lour oommunltles moat I directly affected by .. pans;oo plans, Newport Beach, C:OSLa .Me:sa, Santa Ana and Tultin -met for whit wu deacribed a1 a "communications conleronc<" in the officea of the Newport Hartoor Chamber of Coonmerce. The moetinf, •-ed by the Newport dwnber's Aviat.i,on Commfttee. was al· IO liteDded br:leptfJN:llt.atJva of. the e.ta X-, Santa Ana ud Tu I tin Chambers of Commerce:· 'Ibey beard a present.a.lion lrom Daniel Emory, chairman of the Newport. baaed Airport Nobe Abatement CommJt. tee, who cited a number of allqed errort in the Ralph M: Parsom "port CODI· mi.uiooed by the Oranee C«lnty Sol.rd of Supentlaon. Vacationing Mesan's Funeral Service Slated Funenl "'"'""" for Mn. Robert D. Richey, 37, of !080 Fernheath Aw .. who was killed in an automobile accident Wednesday in Wyoming, will take place Saturdly at l p.m. in the Westcliff Mor1u8.J')' ill Coata Meu. Dr. Roger H. Huebaer of the First United Methodist Ch11rch of Colt.I Mesa, will officiate. The family has 1ui1estec1 that dona· tiom be sent to a memorial t.o be establl&bed for Mrs. Richey at the Methodill Oiureh. f'r-P .. e I YIPPIES .• " Tft'T•ce ln Tomorrowland , •ln&inl lite Mlckty Mouse Club 1onf. Tbe WyOJ!Jlni lli1hw1y Palrol 11ld . the accident took place shortly after 1J a.m. Wednesd•y when the car, driven · by Mrs. Richey, suddenly went oot of control in the eoulhbound lane 1!1 miles north of Cheyenne. They aa.ld there was no Immediate indJcaUru1 why she Jo1t control ' A blihway patrol olliclal uJd Mn. Richey wu thron from the vehicle a.a it rolled over. She wu pinned un- derneath. Nelgbbor1 aa.id the family bad been rettlminl from a 1i1·weel!: vacation with Mrs. ruchey'1 family in Sidney, Mont. A neighbor uld they had bee! plannln1 for the trip aince they bouehf. the small travel-trailer lut January. "They had w111ted to ape.Rd a nice IUIJlttier together. It wu M>methiag they had always wanted to do,'' a friend said. J Ric~y is a teacher at Santa Ana H\gh School. 'Jbe Parsons report urees airport en· la<iement- Dale Bealand, represeni.m, the consul· lant !inn of Wilsey and Ham, hired by the dty oI Newport Beach to lr.vesUgate potentia1 noble levels, also reviewed his findings. They contradict the Parsons re- p><t. The. decl&ioo that may forever deter· mine the future of the airport ls expect· eel to come at a meeting ol the OC Board of SUPervbors Aui. 18 or tt. It could come sooner. PoUibly nut 'I\Jeadly or Wednesday, the group was told. In his ·remarks, Emory al5o attacked cmt eitimates cited in the Paraom re- p><t dealing with the aoundprooling of born" that would be affected by an In- crease in jet-aircraft flights . Philip Bettencourt, administrative u- sistant to Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, out.- lined his city'a opposition . Mayor Robert Wilson of Coat.a Mesa and Mayor A. J. Coco of Tustin headed delegations from both those cJtlgf •t he meeUng. Mayor Coco especially voiced vehement oppoaitlon t.o expansion. The group voted to ulc the Board of Supervl30r11 to conduct any future public hearing.a on airport expanaion in 1 hall thal will hold upward! of 5,000 peraona. Mayor Coco di!closed that Tw:tln iJ aking steps similar to those already un- der. ~ay in Newport Beachh in circulating petitions to . homeowners opposlna air- Por1 expansion. He u.ld that he e~ 11 many as 5,000 "'"°"" "ill llill!I the petltJona, "rom Pagel BAD HA M Omles H. Older lallructed him tbat """1d DOI be oeo:•l'J. Ind .Jold bba.. to ao ahead wlth the Cl'Olll eumtnaUoa. K.aMttk asked her if that was the '1lady you say you uw at the house?" "ll appean to be the white gown and the Iona hair. I never saw her fate." The defense lawyer souaht.to establlsh that Mrs. Kasablan actually ran lnto the hau&e herself with a knile but the witness denied fiaUy that she ever had done so. ··when you heard screams coming from the house didn'\ you care wllat happened tQ anyooe iMide!'' KlnarU asked. "Of course 1 cared." "Werto1 tMM your lr1aodl who ....... In tha'e, Omlel Wata. Sul& ·A~ and Patricia Krtnwlnielt" "Yes." "Didn't you run lnt.o the house to protect them?" . "No, I ra.n toward the houae but. I didn't go Into It." On 11tunday Kananl had juat asked Mrs. Kuabian whether sti. looked through a window of the houie that night last Augu!lt when without anolber word he gave her the plcturt. lt ahowed Miss Tate, clad only in panties, lytna oo her nght llde with her hand estended ~~l' her bud. She wu cov!(<ld with blo9d Al'd JllU~, ""'" eleuly vlalble blVo ilWo4a ill bif ol> vloully prepant_body. "' ~ · \ Mrs. Kuabian bad testifttid previoualy s.bt saw lbtte slayinp at the estate outside the house last A~I:. t but that she did not witness the k11tinJ 0/ Miu Tate and halt 11tyllst Jl:f, S.brlnJ )n the llvinl room. Mrs. Ka.sablan '• a:a!lp was audlbl• throughout the courtroom. She burst Into teara and could not speak. She. >VU. lead oU to an anteroom. while the lawyus cooCerred in the judge's charn._bert. Tbelt the trial wu recessed ovenUabt. ' 1 Kanar<k declined to tell newsmen whi' be auddeoly handed the alrl the pfclw« • Upp er Bay Plai:i Called Di-saster by State Aide · 1 HE'LL LEAD FUND DRIVE Un ltod Fund's Hf11d By TOM BARLEY Of ... 0.,.., ,..., ..... Development of lipper Newport Bay by the lrvjne Company would have di ... astroua CQD.Sequencea tor the aru'.i bird. fWt &rid marine Ufe, a CaUforrila De- partment ·of Fl sh and Game offialal warn. ed today. ~ Department aupe.rviaor Ronald Hein terstlfied In the Oran&e~y Superior Cqurt trial of the land rwa blue that implemenLation of. the ICban&e be- tween Orana:e County and the I:rvint Com- pany will add the most aer1ous thr.c_at yet to many spedel ol. wildlife that'll· ready fact utincUon. Hein warned that more than eo per. cent ot CaUforni1'11 alUIJ'Y habJtat ao vital t.o m•nJ birda which use the Upper Bay has ~n ellmlnated by development. And•he repeated bla department'• ttcent .wamlng that eo 1peciel of blrdJ will be dh«Uy Jbreatened II land 1w1p plJJu are implemented. R be t R H• Jd Htln added to the warning lhe dangers 0 r . IC 11111 mt1ht reJult from "very lik•IY" watir poUuUon in the Upper Bay. Named Chair' m an Hein's testimony came in the closing hours of the fourth week of the land swap trial. At issue before Judge Claude M. Of U • d F d Owens is the argument of a group of rule llll Newport Beaeh homeowners that the land ,, trade is unconstitutional .and represents Robert R. Hield, a New port Beach fi. a breach of the trust created when the State of California deeded the tidelands nanclal eie.cutive, ha.s been named chair-to Orange County. ' . vember, 1117. , , 1 Hein atmled today tllat _,. \if• Ille birds .which "" lipper N.,.port 817 ai a llnl ' In the "Pacilio flyol)"' -· tbe mlgratory route tluit brln&a ni« fowl to the area ftom u far away u :i.Canlda -would have "nowhere to go" U·Ule bay ls eliminated or reduced under land "'•P plan1. He agreed with Irvine Company ,attcr. ney Robert Warren that the 1'>-acrt San JO!qUin marah operated by UC Irvine could pouibly abeorb 110me of. the di. placed lipper Bay blrdJ U II ~ ez. panded . . But he streued that auch mlllmlde efforts had their llmJta and would otter no real or permanent eolution to the lolr of lipper Bay feedlna and breedlllll grounds. Hein warned in bis teatlmoey that man'' application of teclonoloa to the rapidly lncreuinl loaa: of natural M- vironment for wtldlUe of all klldl wu "encoura.dng but we have not yet seen any resufts that would justUy any ereat optimism in thls area." Girl, Witnesses Disag ree Ove r Cau se of Crash man for the Harbor Area United 1''und's Orange County Supervisors have tran.'!- 1970·71 campaigh, according to t:n!led !erred 157 acres of tidelands in the Upper A Huntington Beach girl told Cmil.a Fund President Jack CUrley. Bay to the Irvine Company in exchange Mesa police she wa! following too closely s executive vice president and for 450 acres tJf uplands. The state Lands Thursday after a rear.end collision that ComrnWion endorsed the sl"ap In NG-I f h m officer of Newport Balboe. Sav. e t er male companion sprawled in lngs and Loan Assn. He will head a team a roadside field. or Colt• Mesa and Newport Bea.ch eiectJ· Mesa Officials Only witnesses disagrttd. tivea iQ ~·Pll t.Qe. campaign for the They said the 18-year-old &Iii draaed new cOrMfued •Uniled P'Und organization " the real driver, Steven S. Llbb)', II, In Jta firrt year of operation. Will Sni ff Pot of 180 Brookline Drive. from behind Late ln the afternoon the Yippies took over Tom Sawyer Island,· chuing many cl the tourista: off the attraction and raisina a Viet c.cm, na1 on the iJl&Dd'• fortress. Disneyland officials said members of the group passec! around marijuana clgarets on the island and a security guard reported seeina: a naked man on the island. The Richey family has been very active in the First United Methodist Church of Coit.a Mesa. where RiJ:heY ia coordinator of youth membership and Mrs. Richey taught Sunday school. th the wheel and shoved him to the around. ba_ll , away from the Highway Com-T'1e Collta Mesa United Fund and e m1ss1on. N~port Beach United y u n d merged Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson Libby was arreit.ed and booked on Jack B. Linquist., Di1oeyland director of marketing, said the encounter on Main Strfft began whe11 "Orie of the rin&leaders swung at an officer." "The Dimeyland 5eCW'ity contingent and area police. dMI an excellent job ln quelling the dl.lturbancts," be slid. "It'• a ahame that IUCh a amall group ha.a to ruin It for the others, but we had to thinl of the 11fety of our ,uata," be 1ta1ed. "We are aoing to eftforct a regulaUoa prohjbiUng long-hairs from the parl. We didn't want to do It, but this incident makes lt a must." Security police made 11 complete SWttp of the park aft.er the gue1ta had left to rout an)l-Y:1Pple11 left after the crowd was esco~ from Disneyland . The Yipples regrouped oullide the park and threw rocks and debris at tJfflcers before heading for the Disneyland Hotel where they were e<>nfront.ed by more pollce units. They finally dispersed at 9:30 p.m. DAILY PILOT OUNGf COA.ll l'Ul lll HlfrtG (OMl'A"IY 1.•lt••• N. w,,, l'rulttlol ,.,. l'lltll.,.... ......... in. 11116' C..t• ,._ Offlc• J10 w,,, •• ., ,., ••• M1ili11t A'4•1111 ,.0. I•• I il6, '16Jl OtMr Offl&.M HIWPl'I l1tdl1 '711 w .. 1 ltlllot1 ..... ...,,,. L...,... It«~: m J-1 A'*'llt Hlllll"'-""' I••"°' 111'1 l1K11 llllollMr' .. II (1 .. 1'1-ftl .. Htrffl fl C-lflt 11•1 __L .. • The couple's three chlldren , Neil, 17, Donald, 15, and Kay, 12, returned to Costa Mela with the.Ir father 'Itiur5day afternoon. Mesa Mothers P etition City Over Pollution Charging pollution endangers the l!vea of their children, a group of Costa Mesa molhera tw declared war on the neighborhood problem and their first target ii City Hall. Mra. Charles P. Groha Jr., 20M American Ave .• says the problem in· volves stagnant water in a 1utter ln the 2100 block or her street The water is a breeding ground for mosquitos, filth and seeps into adjacent yards, ahe says. "Last night my son. Dean, almost drowned In this gutter," aald Mrs. Grohs today, while deliverlng a copy of • peUtlon deatlned for the m•yor and city council. Sht 11id a large dog knocked the 2-ytar-old tot into the gutter containing about fi•e Inches of water and he struck his head on a chunk of concrete. "U It bad not been for another child only a few months older, lT\)' son mlaht not be here," ahe charged, uylnc the other youngster pulled him out. Mrs. Grohl aald her Utile boy panicked and began choking alld inhaling the water, but his screams brought her alld neighbors running. She uid pleas and demand& for drainage and repair have been un.suc· cessful. ' 0The street sweeper cleans the streets on Wednesdays, but as IOOn as he leaves the water setUea rl.ghl back into the low rpot," she said. "We hive heard doiens of tlCUl88 ," ~ charged. "We have been Janored Joni eooup." Wrong Owner Listed In Theft Arrest Story A sl.Ory 1bout 1 p1ir of automotive WMkmtn being arrested after theft of equipment from • Costa MeH Ure 1hop Wedftetday Usted the shop owner tr· rooooualy. · Don Swedlund la proprietor of C:O.at General Tire Strvlce, SSS W. 10th St., not DeWitt M1>11ier, a Ure shop employe who wu named in the !ncldent report ~ be called police. • ~h~irman of the state Highway Com-earlJer this year to form the Harbor is tentatively scheduled to sniff some .suspicion of driving under the Inf luence m1u1an, Fred Jennings, contacted today, Area United Fund. pot Monday night along with a handful and possession of dangerous dru,s, but agreed wlth Badham on th1t point. Hleld has been active in civic affairs or other city officials -but purely was too incoherent to understand at Ow lie noted the commiPion is a quaJI· for informational purposes. time, police ~aid. legts)allve body, not an admlnlst.riUve since 11161 and ls a past president or the The Costa Mesa Crime Prevention No one el.st was hurt when the car one. All pC>Wers are deleaated by the Newport Harbor Klwartis Club, Committee will convene for Its monthly hit one driven by Burdell o. Prochaska, LegiJlature and what they give they He is a trustee of District XI I (com-meeting at 7:40 p.m. in pollce head· 61, of 2366 Rutgers Drive, Co.sta Miiia, can take away. If the freeway 1ectlon prising California, Nevada, Arizona and quarters at 9SI Fair Drive. in southbound lanes of Fairview Ro•d is deleted the commission would have Nare<>tlc1 officers wUI brief them on at Baker Street. n,o more authority to act on roote adop. Ha.wail) of the American Savings and local drug problems and liabt up a The tee.naged girl wa.'I not charaed lion . • Loan Institute and is put president of small bit of the illicit weed to give at the scene, but giving false information Badham said he bad talked to new the Los Angela chapter of the i.Mtitute. them a firsthand sniff of marijuana. to a law officer Is a mlldeme11nor crbne. members of the mp1y Commission .----"--.....;c_ _______________ .:_ ____ _:_.:::_..:::::::::.::.::.::::=::::==..:::= at a reception aome time 1go in Sacramento and several told hlm ln- divlduaUy they do not fee l the adopted route is the best but they wouldn't ch_an~e the action of a prevlou1 com· mw10n. Badham said he didn't believe he ta!k- rd to Jennings personally. Jenning! commented on "this so-called pollcy" that the commiuion won't change Its action. He said he, speaking as one member, is amenable 10 reopening of adopted routes for restudy when govern_menl1l jurisdictions jointly re- quest it. In the case of the Coast Freeway, even though he doesn't think the location the best, he oppose1 a reopening ao Jong as Costa Mesa is oppostd. Remarking on the 21,000 petition signatures Harbor Area Fr e e w a y Fighters gathered in support of the Badham bill , Jennings said he recall! that at the hearing ln El Centro earlier this year they wtre told there were 1,800 sia:natures from Costa Mesa ln support of the present alignment . "If we want to play the numbers game we should put It 0.1 the ballot," he said. Badham also elaborated on hl1 previoua response to the question what w\11 happen lo the rest of the Coast Freeway If a chunk Is cut out of the middle. Dummy's Poncho Stolen in Mesa A quick-workll\g thief left 1 May Com- pany mannlkln embarruslngly nude Thursday and eacaped the Co1t1 Mesa store wUh an lrl,.blue mini poncho wl'lrth $400, poUce said tod1y. Cle.rk Gall Silverman 11id ahe was walling on a euttomer In the atori at 3333 S. Brlatol St., and bad her back to the mannikin while the thopper 's female companion browsed around. Sht said they left without making 11 purcha1e and • clerk in an adjacent deparlmenl called her attention io the ml1sina fur pit<:,, , The gr•nd theft c11se occurred between 1:30 and 1:45 p.m., said Officer Dick Bertch . SUMMER .CONTINUES. Henreclon Offers "O~ICERS CHEST COLLECTION." Complete Occasl-1, Dlnln9 & Bedroom, ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVIN~S I • brexel Features "ESPERANTO$" Ent ire Collection. • Herlt119e Reduces Its Complete "MADRl~AL" Collection. HENR EDON & HERITAOI UPH OLSTERY 15°/o OFF DEALERS FOR: HEN REOON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7td11111 " N!WPORT BEACH 17'17 W11t<llH Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'T(L 9 INT ERIORS . Prof-lon•I fnllrlor lAOUNA llACH 0.1l9no'1 Avollable-AID-NSID '4$ North Coa1t Hwy. 494-6.151 , OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ,..._. Teft ..... fill• If ~ ... c...., 141-llU 7 I • I' ' ' 7 ;;.,;i;;;::-:::,;::i::::::::;:::;::;;:::lO!!!'""""'"'"""""' __________ '!""' ___________________________________ -- - --- VICTORY KISSES FOR TENNESSEE'S GORE O•u,ntor N•nq, Wlf• P•ullno Sh•,.. Triumph Gore Facing Battl.e From Nixon Forces NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Sen. Albert Gore, an anU-Vi~ nam war Democrat, faces the toughest fight of his long political life against Rep. Wil- liam Brock, a pro-Nixon Republican, in the Nov. 3 general eleotioo. • Gore, who calls himself the No. I White House target or the off-year elecHons, won renominalion handily o v e r four opponents in Thursday's Democratic primary. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew already has promised to campaign for Brock who defeated cowboy 1lnger Tex Ritter and J. D. Boles, peren- nial candidate:, for the GOP t omination. Dr. Cecil Pillard of Knox- ville was unopposed for the American party nomJnatlon. Winfield Dunn. • Memphi s dentlllt who drew heavily on hometown aupport, won the Republican nomination for governor In a minor upset that will pit him ag11nst ' Democrat John J. Hooker Jr. in the general election. Dunn's closest opponent. Nashville in- dustrialist Maxey Jarman, refused to concede. com- plaining of "voling inequities" in ~temphls. The Senate race will be watched nationally as an ii). <l icator of Southern support for President Nixon's Vietnam and domestic policies, both op- pooed by Gore and supported by Brock. Gore, seeking his fourth six year Senate term after 14 yean in the House, called for the "support of all Ten· nessean1, De mo c rat 1, in- dependent5, Republicans" in the general election. Brock said of Gore's primary Victory : "I don't sec how an incumbent who has served in the Senate as long as Gore can consider himself a winner when he bartly recei ved SO percent of the vote." The total was 51 per- cent. U.S. SALT Proposal ' Registers With Russia VIENNA (UPI) -The Soviet Uhion has shown "a poslUve jntereat" in an American plan for curbing the two naUons' mil!ile arsenals, di)llom1llc sources u.ld today. Russian and American diplomat.! met today at the U.S. Embauy for the 30th fonna1 a~slon of the Strategic Arms Limitation T a 1 k 1 (SALT). The session lasted 40 minutes with an hour of info rm a I conversation af- Rail Dispute Plan Eases Out Firemen WASHINGTON (AP) -A prealdenUal emergency board has rec<m1mended railroad firemen'• jobs ;radually be abolished 1s a mea111 of set- tllng a long·standln& labor dispute. The White House disclosed 'ntursday the board called for phasing out the Jobe Of most railway firemen. The rec ommendation won lmmediat. approval of the Wh1ta l!ouae. Tho board aid th< N1~ooal Railway Labor Con!....,., which repa eeenll mor. than 130 ..nr...fs with III pm:<nt of the naUon'1 track, la on the verre of 1 aeWement with lht United Tran.apartaUon Union which b1r1alns for t h e firemen . The aettlement woold com- bine the duties of flrtm.n and brakemen under a new job classificatlan acceptable to the railroads and union. No new workers would be clusllied 11s firemen but no firemen would be fired. The classlflca- tlon would be eUmlnated iradually throqb reUrement and death. GEIST FOR FALL THINK WUTCLlff ,LUA NIWJOITll" IMff. t.erwards. Tbe American plan - paesibly the most important !Jingle event since SALT be1an here April 16 -was presented July 2' by tho chl~ U.S. delegate, Gerard C. Smith. Althoosh Jeu than a drart treaty, il auueated that the talks focwi on a numerical limitation on strategic missiles and bomber•, a strict limit on giant mi55tles of the Sovie t SS9 type, and a low- level curb on antibalJisUc miuilei (ABM). The thrff meetin1a since then have been taken up mostly with Sovi~ probing of details of the plan. This pro- bing has ben '°extensive that. for the flrst time, experts from the two sl~s have met In smaller meeUl'laa, outside the n o r m a l twfce-WMldy formal Miilon.i, to Pap questions-and lnswtts. The Sovieta have not yet given a definitive response to the American outline or presented a counterouUine of their own, the source aald. Christianity is fortoclaY Truth d...,, dlo ... Willi tlm• Th• ll'ltlll U.t Christ JllU1 buiJ>l mort thin ninltetn centurie:s 110 can lllvt th• ""' llfoct Iodly lhty had 111 ... Thty "' chlns:e the course of th• world. It's up to UY. We have to under!!aod what he bu1ht, to JM th .. Inlemely p!1di1>l l11tllinas Into l!l.! in.our dal~ llYIS. II Old! of QI dOOI tllll, l will M ii nrUd llflCt Upol tho YIOl1d. Kur Holllnl H. Irwin, C.S., I -ol Tho Chrbtlon -Bolnl of l,lcluras!i~ •Piii .. "ChrtstianHy Is For Today.• You and your friends art most cordillly l.,,;ild to this ''" flOblle lttturt. Ovistian Scieoce lecture l•h•nl•Y• A11111t I, II A.Mo ----.,....._ Pact Creates -Furor Fulbright Irate Over Spain Treaty WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tllo rift between tbe Stale Deportment and tbe Seoate FcnJin H<latlonl Committee hM been deepened by tbe new- ly lllned military and economic agreement between tbe United State& and Spain. The executive agreement, finalized Thunday d e 1 p I t e &tqnuoua objedlons Ir om Russians, Germans Sign Treaty Fcnlin l!olaUoos Oiainnan J. William Fulbrliht, rranta Spain economic and military assistance wOll'lh about $200 mlllion over flve yura. It in- cludes a loan to Si>aiJJ of 16 U.S. wanhips and g I v e 1 America continued UM of four military inatallationa In Spain. The Foretan Rotations Com- mittee, piqued by the Stat. lleparlmeot'I refuul In qree to publlc dls<uaioal of the agreement belore it was • td, ,.tod . to go llhe.od and hold pubtlb hearings anyway In the aiming -k.'l. Fulbright had 110 Immediate comment on the signing but au aide said the senator con- tinued to sland by his lengthy statement of Wedne.sd.ay. In that statement FUibright . contended the agreement ac- tually waa a dJagui5ed com- mitment for the defense of Spain; that It had been wt1rked out without due respect for the right of the legislative branch to examine the alleged commitment; and that the Stat. Department had been Frldly, AllfUtl 7, 1'70 MOSCOW CUP!) -ForellJll minlsten ADdrtl A. Gromyko of the Soviet Union and Walter SCheel of We1t Germauy Io- IUaled today • nooagresloo lrealY praised ... looildatlon for nolulog ""'""" one! building • lasting peBCB In Europe. deceitful in informing him ------------------- lt was the clima\ to the m .. t 1lgnlflcant dli>lomacy between the old Worla War II foes In 15 years. Diplornalic aources said the S o v I e t s agreed to accept a West German disclaimer that the document constituted a sur· render of the right to eventual Gennan reunlfication. It.al,y's New Government Like Olcl when the •gnoemenl would be llnall>ed. State Department a i de s acknowledgod today that at the end of last week COOi eideratlon was being given lo tho pooslblllly of agreelog with the Fore.ign Relations Com· mittee to hold public hearin;:s on the agreement. But on ~tonday Fulbright made a speech in which he disdosed some information about the agree~t whicb the State Department subse- quently charged constituted a violation of co nfld en t la I testimony given the Senate by administration ol!icials 1 n July. Tot Disearded Mother 'Did It for Us' STANTON, Mich. (UPI ) - A J7-year-0ld girl, married for a year and a mother for a month , offered on.ly this e1- . planaUon, "~rry didn't hie being tied dow n." Mrs. Linda Foor had told authorities Tuesday htr baby daughter, Amy. bed been kid- naped. She was charged with assault wtth intent to cunml.t murder aftu the baby WI! Probale Judge Guy Wagner .scheduled a hearin& today on a petition to take custody of the baby med by Mootcalm County Sheriff T h o m a s BamwaU. According to authorities, ~lr!. FOIX' Jed authorities off a rural road to where little Amy was found Jying in seven- loot.lllgb corn. DAILY PILC'i Refugees Warned: Stay Out CORPUS ClllllSTI, Tu. (UPI) -~ J•ct Blacimoo ta ut1oi rutdenta who fled tbe cll1 In the lace of ...lllllllacne Cella to stay awir-rrom their homes for another couple of days. M1111 mldeols who !OOght noluge Imn the llonn In cities and towns 1way from the coast now an plannlnl to return home becaUfte they have beard tbe clearwp opera· tiom are almolt compiete and the to"" Is bKt to mrmal. Blackmoo aid this Ian 't the case. "Every other warm body Is a problem and we don"t need them now," Blackmon aaJd Tburaday. Seo. Ralph W. Y""'°""'lh CJ>.T ... ), toored the city and IUmJIJ.Dd1q: communities by hellcopter _, and &aid the damage would r u n belw<en l500 mlllon and ll billion. Blacknn> aid It Woold be l300 million In Cor1'J.' Chriatl alone. A llJ)Oboman for the clty'a utility company uid only 10 percent ol the comp1ny's Cllltomus have had thelt po-wer restored. L l m I t e d pow~ service w•s expected to be restored in all the towns hit by Hunicane Cella · today except fer Port Aransas. The city la lllll undtt • 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew and 0011oe ™ n>odbloca 1a,... vent looting and urmeceaary ltalfic. Pl>llce be.. utWd 14 -fer loollll .,. MoodQ-'1 -1111 ·II othen for violatina curfew'. Scheel and Gromyko in- illaled the four·page document beneath the crystal chall- deuiers of a marble haJI in Spiridonov Palace, a room built by ez&rs1nd used by World War ti allies in plan- ning strategy agai~t Adolf Hitler. ROME (UPI) -Italy has sv.·om in a new govenunent ao similar to the one that fell one month ago that lt.iliam wondered bo'lt' long il would last trash Binds Family Trio found, in good Clllldillon, ~.~---------------~-~ "The goal we set before ounelves has a great political importance," Scheel sa id. "The treaty will help relax tension& and provide the pre- requisities for building a last- ing peace In Europe," Gromyko praised the lrtaty and said bargaining over a Hk:ley period had been tough. He said the Soviets were as glad as the Germans It was over. In a atatement released u he prepared to board a plane for Bonn at MO&COw airport, Scheel added "With this treaty a new page will be turned in relations between the Soviet Union and the Federal Republic of (Weat) Gennany." Tbe only readily appartnt chaoa• In tho lllnd JlOll. Fascist government from the 31st was the premier. Former Treasury Minister Emilio Colombo, &O, 1 scholar· ly looking bachelor, moved up to the premiership held for three gove.rnmenta by Mariano Rumor. Otherwbe, the same four parties made up the center· Jeft coalition that hu ruled much of the past seven-years. They are Colombo's Christian Democrats, who kept 18 of 27 ministerial posts, l h e Sodallata, 15\1 mlnillrW:s, the Unitarian Sociallata, lour, and the Republicans. one. STANFORD (UPI) -Mr. and Mrs. Fred Saas are ahar- lng a room in the maternlty section at Stanford University Hospital with their baby - and not just because of strong feelings about family togeLhemess. Saas and his wile both were Injured in an autornoblle ac- cident June 16 and the baby was born 17 days later. "We are sorry she had to find us in such adverse con- ditions," Mrs. Saa1 aald of the child, Sha'M'lee Ellubetb. hours later in a cornfttkl where police say she left il ~trs. Foor told FBI, state police and local authorities. 5he and her 19-year-old hus· band, Gf:rald, had been having marital troubles since the chHd was born. The husband was ·working in Ohio when the baby was reported miss· Ing. Authoriti es quoted M r s . Foor as saying she abandmed the baby "to save my mar- riage." "I dkl it for ua," 1he said. "Gerry didn't uu belna tied down." She was arraigned Thursday 11.nd freed on '2,500 bond after demand ing pre-trial e1- amtna.tion oo the charge. ··················-····--···-·····-·-·········.; ........... ,. I ~ . OUROMCEI I A YEAR I ~· I CLEIRUCEI: INSECT Si»RA Y I 79• ITEMS ITAi 'ASMI•l-l••-•11 ..... lMt•ll· I HIBISCUS lwl w•tto 11 ..... en N-1• •II 1•nl•1, su• or•••••· BEST All·AROUND SP•AY: Pints 1'' .... ~ .. I JAP BOXWOOD EUGENIA MYRTIFOLIA OIANGI GAIANIAS-D•lry flow•n 11,. • I • tl111ll•1 ctl•r dl1pl1, cl1rl11 'tok of I WAX LEAF PRIVET ASPARAGUS FERN •1 .... 1. srt•• & ....... _,_ woll I• QuiltJ FOR ROSES 011 SHADE nOWERS.-1 2 ..... " 3'' $1.00 .,,,, =· I m-~~~ru~ ._.P.H-.ILO-D-EN-.D.-RO._N_.._ __ aL_U_E D-'4,_IS .. Y _ _. oICHoNou F1An-T1 .. ,. __ • ., "'"" .98 ,._.. _______ _____,, I 2 GAL SPE~ ~!: i• , .... ;, ........ , ... or pint• u• -99c I JUNIPDS 2 98 ·1v110lllN ASH Tlll-Mor1'1•••111• I 1 ... 4.tsLatta,l,.h , , ..... •tt• w1lll11 tor I• plHt thl 2 98 1 1 78AL TIIEIS skd.-.r .. 11rowf.,.7.tS , • 1. 's 7 95 TWISTID JUN1Pll-Plmrw1 ... , •P•l1h1 •fl,, • I'-Lh ·. ct11 .. ,, a•ittr• c 1rect1ri1tlcs fonw, de"" I 3 98 & ~ahy, llltcllllMI twist to1ll •rt1•ckts. I TIIEt ROSES ltt· 1.ts , I 5 GAL WAX llAF PlllYET I •tt·'·" 3.98 REDWOOD TUB-18" 111. 6.H I BONSAI POnERY HANGING BASKET· .... 1.6S 99c I """,. .. ,1.r.ot1tc11 ... 1.... '1'9 t-=P~E=T~S~H~"!!Q~p~--co-s-T11.-·MESA ...... -4 1 LAWN EDGER 1.49 on1, II DAHllAl·llt••PJOtrlirth•wlt•M111 Ch•elCat11'19-79c 29' cal•nloknlmor-lotriC.•h•...i 29c I ou•tll•wor.s..or.....,,....6, , .... c.n.n 1 2 OFF I !!".;ti•• & "''lchl•I• 4-*1.00 Aqtllritllll Kit •2 .00 OFF 11 rAMU.11r1 '-"••II-",.,.,,,,. See Our New Canaries , .... 1 .... ....,, ...... .., ......... r ••• I .. ,.,_.,,_..,.....,.._•-· 69c I , .. 1. I PUCHSIAU•p•l•r 1kwy.flow.,.. t.ch1l11 I c••• I• ••Hr.41 of w1rleti ... IC••n 11 tht g9 c I l•wtlof thuhod• 1•nl••· I I I I MAltUlllTll-1~~ ,rowlof, •rlt•t ,,..,., nently 41 ..... , ....... . ••l•y-llb "-.......... ,.1-11y Wlll_rc_, )I •nv•w-1 ... nc I I I I • FLOWER SHOP Cal'lllflot1 79< Doz. AllTIFICIAL HANGING IASKm 4 95 "'"' . (''Wiiiow 8nkets" 12"· t4• ••· 1.91) 1.00 PATIO SHOPSALE Visit our Patio shop & sec our complete line of Patio furniture, Fire logs, Screens, etc. Rrstflme an sale .•• sale! •1.oooFF on 5,000 Sq. Ft. Bandinl Plush or Blade. fleg . SS.95 now $4.95 Plush ••• the long laatlng, balanced Ie~ltlzerthat gives dlehondro or mixed llW!ll • "eprlng" look In the 1,11, Blld1 •.. • rntner•I rich, high nllrogen f1r1lllter 111>oel•lly formulated for Hybrid e.nnuda, Bluogrut, Zoysla •nd S~ Augu1llne, Pick •lillor •nd h• .. • Offfn Ftll on londlnl. I I I I i I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Sulfite o( Ammoal•- Jdnl for npid powth, ricb 1reen folia1• le. impro.-1d qualitr for all plaata, lawn• a .,_ • Slui!.U111il ----·- ' ···~"'"~'' . ' . ,. ,.~ Snail It. Siu& Pdlm -•prinkl• arouod 1"7' It •hrubbety co kW •uaJ.b It dup- o•ernl1bt 1e1Wte .... ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~· I I I I I ~ .............. . ' ·I ":"'''"·I 1··· ti .. ~~' b;....., ·'f..~ .. ·"'. g~!Y~~f~ ~ ' .. '" "'' ........ ' 59c ' 11801 Harbor Bl•d., Gorde11 Grove & Allaheim 543-6774 ,, .. f/°"*"11'*'1 2123 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 646-3925 CllDIT RIMI {v1,(Aru•~nkAMorlctr4-11 '"'" H1tt11'1 Ow• Ctttllt Pl••· ••AIUl••······················~ • I • • ltAb·'Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The Tax Burden Grows With covarnmenw boards and council• and ad- mlnlsttaU-In Ibo midst al the bqdget-a<lopting season here in tbeJlarbor Aru, It is dlfllcull riJ!ht now to see -their CIUftllt actions -1oin& to affect next year's . tax bills. ' . With the beall.hy boosts in asseHI11eots from As- •euor. ~ J. Hin.shaw's olflce, it's a $lie bet that llOt ~ ~Y owt1er1 are going to find smiles and 'jOy in ttt. ·.~ate message. In many cases. lt would ailPear thai the tax rates may be going down. but since the tDtal tax bill is c8lcu1ated also on the basis or assessed value, the out-of-pocUt' bW very likely will be up -up .substantially i.n most cases. Even witb this hint of bad news hanging around, the taxpayer might derive some satisfaction from JeinUng that the ~ing aRencies closest to home are at least doing a better job of holding the line than they're doing in Washin~. Small satisfaction, to be sure, but some satisfac- tioo. A study by the First National -Bank of Orange Coun· ty shows us that the total per"..:apita tax blll { exclud-mr special districts) fllr Mr. Average in Costa Mesa and N""1'0r\ Beach was $1,644 in 196U9, $1 ,715 in 1969- 70 arid •f.1,828 in ~7.1 -a jump of $184 over three yoars. But who got the most of it! Finl National's figu...s loot like ·thi>: 1m11 19611-70 l!J68.69 Pj;:R WITA: U. S. ·GOvemmenl $ 964 $ 911 $ 895 Slilte of caJifofnia 3'14 314 292 C>ranile County 14.1 127 113 City Government 173 154 140 School District 222 209 204 Total : $1.828 $1 .715 $1 ,644 Obviously. the heavy expenditures at the top -at the .federa1 level -are accounting for the biggest new cllps into the tax bucket. And, unfortunately, that ls \\•here the taxpayer has tbe least leverage In controWnz his own financial destiny. , Tbese. of course. are the obvious ta:ie& -the ones that hurt the most. The filing of the annual federal and stale income tax ,..poru and the annual property tax bill from lhe courthouse in Santa Ana are crushln& re- minders of the unhidden soarces of governmental revenue. In sum total . the average Harbor :\rea family pays about 371h cents of every dollar's income into some fonn of taxes. In 22 different categories of traceable tal(es, the average family of four with an income of $12,000 will face a tax bite of $3,380 -about 28 percent of the in· come. Adding indirect taxes paid throu~b manufac-- turers. wholesalers and distributors of products or serv· ices brings it up nearly another 10 cents. With au of this, v.•e are assured that there are other commtinities where the bite is bit~er. There -as here -the most frequent sound lo be heard is that of pro- tracted groaning. Our Swimmers Need Help The Harbor Area Swimalhon -a one.million yard marathon swim to promote funds to build an Olympic· size pool for public and student use -has ended. Only a fractional $9.024.34 of the $87,000 contribution needed from the public was donated. But pled~es to be an· noun ced laler will enhance the total substantially. The unified school di strict and the City of Newport Beach are contributin~ nearly $300.000; the rest must come from public donations. These are tax deductible. Contributions may be mailed to Olympic Pool Foundation, P.O. Box 800, Costa Mesa. N Real Hippie Movenwnt Soon Will Die Dear Gloomy Nuon Misspoke Himself at Press Cont ereiice In ane of G. K. Cllesterton's deligbUul Fii.her Brown storiel, a crime ill sue- ~· committed by a waiter in an aclolt~e private dub -because th~ """' ud lbe wait<n '"' boll! clr<soed ,. -··and -be told apart tippt bY 'lileir -and·-~la male- ing the point that people who drisJ the .a.me are looked upaa the Ame. UD-liJ they begin to lunotlou. I ~ of !his story iD .... llliao lo the hippie -lhat Is .. l'OP!llar ........ the Y"'lll today. '!be hippie coolume b11 been a blos,,lng to ' whole gmenlioo of Jlliaflb, looers and· roUee, ogp. For the finit time, Ibey are ,_ obi, to dbgullO lhemM!lves as hippies. 11<rmlttlnl the hippie mov .. m..i to talJe the 'blame {In the public eye) for all llleir, neurotic misconduct. lJNTIL TllE-ADOPl'ION of lhi• regula- tion uniform a few years ago, the l<>sers bad oothing to identify with and no place to hide. They were forced to take individual l"eSpOr'ISJbillty for t b e i r behavior, and were not coodemned as part of a youth bloc. ·Naw, by the simple subterfuge ol adorning themselves with a few beldl or belts, they can be their old noxious 5elves and pass the onus along to 1he movement llley pretend to beloog to . TBE RANKS OF the true flower- chiklren have become ao infiltrated by theM "plastic hippies" that I doubt H men than SO percent of ibe youth wear- ' Gus: Why all the fuss a.bout who Is g~ lng to be able to do what with upper Newport Bay? The county airport is going to need it for a clear zone and the stingarees alld spot fin croaker, who have lived in there for et:nturies, will be lqv. in& because « the ~et noise. -H. R. M. ftlf frut•rw ~ "...,,. "'""-"" __..IY ,.._ .. ,._ •••••w . ..., .,.. -........ ......, ... n.lty ....... Ing tMse C06fumes have even the remotest conception of the original pn~ clples lhat animated lhc movement. Or care at all. Simply by masquerading as hippies, they feel tllty can get . •way wtth the mcllt outrageous oondud, in violation ci an genuine hippie beliefs -knowing that the straight public c a n n o t discriminate between them and the rta I thing and alway1 mistakes mere form furllll>stlne<. 11118 IS WHY THE movement has to die before very long. tn a year or two, only sub teen.agers v.ill still be affecting the a>st.wne. just as they pick up the discarded jargon of the adolescents a couple of yeara later. The older youths remaining in costume will be the ragtag mt bobtail of hoodlwns, sadists, oddballs, paranoids and pervert.ii. But, cultural lag being what it is, the public will continue to condemn something it calls the ' ' h i p p i e movement'' long after Its core has disintegrated. For it offers an easy and obvloul target, • safe means of discharg- ing aggression and frusltaUon and anx- iety and hate. Jn different ways, the movement has not only been a boon to the misfits, it has been a blessing to the perplexed public, who otherwise might have been f<>rced t.o look inward "for the causes of our troobl"- For the Back Bay Trade To the Editor: I'm going to 1<> for another ye1r but I would tun fetl better about it if your paper would wake up and gel. behind lhe Back Bay trade 80 we can &el a few tnud hem out of there and open up the area to boalln& like the lower bl!y ls. You ctve big splashes to any misguided birdwatcher who cornea by, making it Mtm Uke a small handful of diu1dtntl are fighting '°""' courageoua batUe apinlt a terrible dragon. WM. P. BOLAND JR. Bc1J Tralle Arltllmetle To lf'e Editor: 1 .. 1.e that lhl Au&\111 3 edition "' the DAILY P,ILOT opiD refen lo the ~ Orup County • lrvlne Com· I*')' l•nd trlde of Uppei: Newport Boy Udelends 11 "a V* ol 1~7 acm of cotmlY'°wned tideludl for 450 """" of lntne uplands." Tb.la ltltement his been re~ in your paper every lime you pul>Uab an articlt oo the 1t1bjecl I SUBMIT THAT your arllhmetlc Is In error. and that ll mlllelldl the public. 11 Is 1 well·known fact thtl the !ride apmnent e1lll ror 'dredging out the -i•landl bi the b«)' and depo<ll"'i tbe dirt <WI the bay 1hores:, lo becOme lrvlnl property. Tbe:at islands are i,,. -In the ~lied C50 llCl'al 11«<•1 (~.: .. ~~ - . ---=- l . · Mailliox ' LttkTI jrom rtadtrs ere wetcomt. Normally writers Jhould convtu &htir mtssa.oes in 300 word.I or ~ss. Thi right to condense letter• to JU rpa.ct or eliminatt libel is rtservtd. AU ltt- ttri must include signature and mait. ing addres1, but name.T mav bt with-- held on Teque.st if sufficUnt 1'tason is oppa.rent. PMtr11 will not bt pub- lish«!. aurvey1. according to inronnalion BUJ>- plied to the Board of Supervl5<lrS. diac!Mes the ract that the islands are consklerably smaller than originally dtecribed. Thia furthe r reduces the 450 acn1. IT llAS ALSO ~en estahhshed in oourt that the county <>wru: much 1nore than 157 acres «lglnally described. \n. cludina North Star Beach, the 22rtd SL beach and Back Bay Drive. All this ~ tnfonn•UOn baa been publllhed in ytNT paper, and It can be ver\fled el1eWhue, yet the mlaltlding ataltment is repeated every llmt. SMrpen your poocil ond add ag1 lnl ELSIE C. KROESCl!E Bruce 'Will Have 'Something New'· SAN CLEMENTE -Contrary to the express Janguagt of President Nixon last week on the question of a coalition government in Saigon. language gloomily Ooted ln this column and elsewhere, it can now be authoritatively stated that Ambassador David Bruce will indeed have "something new" to offer the other side in Paris. With respect to the enemy's offer of a coalition which could include some elements of the present Saigon govern. ment, but not President Thieu or Vice President Ky, the President missPokt at his Los Angeles press conference. IN ANSWER TO 1 rather complicated question, he said "We are opposed to a coalition, whether negotiated or im· posed." He did not mean to A)' that at all. Returning lo San Clemente lal.('r, an aide pointed out the mistake lo the President, and Mr. Nixon agreed. What he had meant to say was that the Administration is opposed to a coalition which does not includt any elements of the present Saigon government. The dlstin<:t:ion is large and makes the -important point that Mr. Nixon did oot. mean in any way lo imply that ' ./ ,_ the United States was fighting for the proposition that a South Vietnamese govemment must be personified by Generals~ a.nil Ky, FRO!tt THE TIME the Paris talks began, the U.S. position has been to deny North Vietnam any of its \polltical objective.s. The Pre!ident ha! determined -as of now at least -that we shall not go on and on repeatlng Ured formulas which deceive the American public more than they do Lbe: enemy. Nor, for that matter, would Bruce have taken the job m~rely to re-enact the old charade. What the-new negotiator will be able to ofrer may not go to rar 1s the ceue·fire and stand.down advocated but not offered by hi! predecessors. But he will at the outset give notice that the United States does not ins.i5t that Thieu and Ky stay on. But there Is more in the wind than the explanation of errors which a Presi - denl may n1ake duri ng a press con- ference. And there are sound reasons why new initiatives are now e5$enlial , iccording lo sources here "'rho should know. SUCC~ IN THE fi..fiddle East gives the Presidenl a chance to go into the November oongresSional elections with a solid foreign poLicy achievement behind· him, provided nothing untoward occurs in Vietnam. On the olher hand, something untoward seems likely to occur just "fore the elections -unless there is progress in Paris. The rainy season will be over in late September, and an ~emy offen~ve is at hand. ' That offensive could take place In Cambodia, in Laos, in Vietnam or in all three et once. The Cambodian ex- pedition, still hotly def ended at the White House. is alllO seen in the naked logic of Its a!tennath as presenting the enemy with a new front where defeat for "our side" could be inflicted with great ease. THE DANGER DOES r.ol lie in "defeat for our side." With great ease, North Vietnam could always hav~ taken over Crunbodia. The danger is in American reaction lo "Defeat for our side," and most i.Jnportant in the While House. fear of this reacti<ln. The danger is that having made tilt war In Vietnam a war in Indochina, the. President will regard a defeat anywhere there as a defeat for him. i\1r. Nixon has made himseU perfectly -even painfully -clear oh the subject of "defeat." He will not, he has aaid, be the first President to preside over •·de/eat." }le has talked of "embarra.s~· menl ·• and "humiliation," himself pro- nouacing v.•ords which the nation's poli- tical right could throw back irrt4 bis teeth. THE DANGER. therefore. is that o( an enemy liUCCeSS to whk:h lilt President v.·ill feel he must respond by shutting o!f troop withdrawals or carrying Ule war to J~anoi or both. That is why the appointment of David Bruce and the decision to permit him to offer bargaining pOsitioos rather than only to make demands may at last -in the lamented phrase -offu "light al the end of the tunnel." By Frnk Mlll1dtwlci u d Tom Br.dea Japan After the 1945 Atom Bombs Thr. following is 011e of two colum·ns written for the Chicago De· fender in 1945, a few mouths after mail con1.m.unlcatio11s between Japo n and the U.S. hod been re·established following the Japanese surrender. My father and mother. now 86 years old, live in Yama11a&hi C&ty, Japan. Fatlier's 1945 letter wo., from Osokn. where he toos then in the e:r:port and import business. l·n th is 25th on11i· ve rsory month ofter V·J day. it is i11teresti11g to read his comments and to reflect °" how for we have come in thi.s ahort quarter century. The following are excerpts from a Jetter from my father in Japan. A few weeks ago, I had the pleasure of Tt'pOrting that he and my mother and my tv.·o sisters, who are all in Japan, are alive and well. Towards the end of March, JMS. my rather says, Mother and the younger of my two si.sl'1"1 moved in to the country to get away fro1n the bombings. Father remained in the ci ty -his home is near Osaka. After that d11te. he says, "conditions became worse and w o r s e flay by day, and our life for the next five months was nothing but fear and d~peratJon. trying to t 5- cape from perpetual hell fire, death and destruction. "AJ\1ERJCAN AERIAL attAcb wert: ~--·By Geo"fle ---. Dt1r George : You always take the male side. on courtship problems. Are. }'OU 11ome kind or a wolf? Pertonally, I think you OXJld learn 1 lot from tither Ann Landers or Ablgall Van Buren! SUE Dear Sue : Tb11nks for trying to help me:, Sue. But aren't they married? ·-·----~-.,,..,. ..... _.., • '·rt I , . ,.. Desperation, consternation, and anger \ foUowed. t• nayakawa • • ' ' so complete that 90 percent of all cities <>f Japan v.·ith populations over 30,000 were burned and destroyed. You can imagine t.he conditions: 10 million people without homes, clothing, or food ." The Japanese public, Falher says, had no way of knowing how Ule war was going. ''The hostilities ended oo Au~st 15. and we got rid of the danger of death by bomb attacks. But living con. dlllons could not improve In a short time. The truth was concealed by our military government, and even when conditions were at their worst, I.he nation was told that we were winning the war. We "·ere told to stand and bear all hardships in order to win. "We did not grumble if our homes burned. rations became les:s and less to the point ot starv1tjon. But when Japan surrendered and the real situat}on became clear before us for the fir i; l time, the whole nation was stuMed. "PEOPLE WERE NO longer obedient, law-abiding Jambs. Distru~t of soldiers and government officials and wrath against war leaders burst. out all over the country. Social order was broken . Everyone ran to attend to hi.Ji: own needs for food and clothing. Control of prices, distribution routes, etc .. were in a mess. Black markets opened . inflation started, and prices of C(lmmodities went up by leaps and bounds. "During ~ war one could not huy anything ex~epl rovernment rations, v.·hich gave 300 grams <>f rice a day and very little salf and soy sauce, a 'little vegetables once or twice a week, and no meat or fish for months. "But strange. to !tly, now we can buy almost anything at t.he'black market if you pay the price. Such prices are bevond the reach of ordinary citlztns. orily wealthy people and those who became rich ln war industries can afford- to enjoy such food. 1 am neither, and mn~t salaried men 11re In tht same JXlsition. Flag Desecrators' Haven Demonstrators and all the rag.tag el~ ment of the new revolution se:t, have a bit of precedent for defiling the American flag , al least ju.i;t so long as it's done at a political demonstration. That was the interpretation handed down by the Pennsylvanl• Supreme Court in a case Involving the state's law on flag desecration. An American flag be1r. ing the Inscriptions "Make. Lovt, Not War" and "The New American Revolu- tionaries" had betn dt!played at a July 4 Antl-Vlttnam demonstration at Pcnn.ylvlnla State Unlvenity •nd the n., burtr c:onvlcted of desecration. The high court ruled, howtver, that the state law "doe1 not apply to any pa:triollc or political demonstr1tion or decora. Uona" and the de.feodlnt "'was obviously pat11clpaling in • dtmonstralion oon- cernlng a political lnue." ! _,,... ............ ""~ " ~· Guest Editorial ' " mi: COlfRT'S WORDS were a far cry from 'Charita Sumner's •·He n1ust be cold. Indeed, who can look upon ' 1U folds rippling In the breeie without pride or country"; or Oliver Wendell Holmes' "One Oa.g. one land, one heart, one hand -one nation evttmore"; or Woodrow Wiison's "The thinp that the n1g . ataoda for were created by the exptl'iences of a ifUt people. tvteythq tbal It stands tot wu written by their Uva:" So, o(f to Ptmuylvanial nag bumen. S.y ~·, p0UUcal. ind you're OK. Callfonla Ftah&tt Servklt "flfANY WHO ARE cornered by starvation are going into the nN" oc· cupations of gangsterism· .and hold-ups. 1 am trying lo picture.the lrue conditions, but can never show you a 1limpse ol it with limited pages and my poor knowletlge of words. ln :!hort. the ma· jority of the city population is near starvation, social order 1$ ·broken, lalf is disregarded, virtue and refinements are non-existent. and an art hungry beasts on the very point of bn!aking out into rioting. City life is extremely dangeroua at present. "Under suC:h circumstances I believe General MacArthur is facing real dif- ficulty in trying to educate the country for democracy. Japan never enj<lyfld trnt democracy and freedom for the people. Feudalism is in the nation's blood, flesh, aod bones. They do not know what Is the real taste of dtrilocracy althougl'I they are now •houtin« I.he slogans or democracy. Most woukl rather get 100 grams m<>re of rice a day. The desirei and aspiration for democracy must begin after their belly is filled." I shall quote more of my father '! letter next week. lly S. I. H1yak1wa Prt!tlde nl, 811 Francl1te State Collea• ---- Friday, August 7, 1!1711 The editorial page o/ th1 Daily Pilot seeks to i•form and atim. ulatt render• by prtfflltino tl1i1 11.ewspaptr'1 opinion1 a11d co1n. mentar31 on topic1 of inttrt6t and lfQnifiCGnce. by providin p 0 forum for the ezprrs$icm of our rtader1' cplnions. and by presenting th• diverse t!t r.o- poin.f.t of informed observer• and 1poktnntn Oft topica of the day. Robert N, Weed. Publisher 7 • • Saddlehaek EDITIO,N VOL 63 , NO, 188, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • TodaY'• ft••J ·, N.Y. Steek1 I ' .. ,. . ar eo ens er ""S.sau Disneyland Enforcing 'Modified' Dress Code By STEVE MITCHELL ot tllt DellY ~llfll 51&ff Disneyland officials have banned all long-haired y o u t hs from the Magic Kingdom following a confrontation between Orange County lawmen and 300 Ylppies that culminated In the park closing six hours early Thursday. Eighteen youths Wf're arrested as a result of the confrontation which took place on the park's Main Street at 6:55 p.m. Long-haired and denim.clad, the van- guard of the Vippie group converged upon Disneyland at noon Thursday to celebrate "National Yippie Day." Small incidenls were reported by Disneyland security police during the Peace R eturns To Disneyland Front Once More Disneyland opened its gates at 8 a.m. today without incident. In fact, lhe only difference between today's opening and any other day was the fact tht uniformed security police maaned the ticket booths a1oog with ticket takers -and bad aome new dreM requirements. Officials at the MogjSc l\in&Oo11u!isclos- ed that d~ rtgutationa foe park gdests will be up to the dlacretlon of le:Ctll'ity pollce at the gates. "There will be no set regulations such as hair being three inchea long on the sides," e:rp!Jjned Bruce Young, public relalions man for Dls.ieylaod. "The decision to let a person into the park is not an arbitrary one for the ticket taker to make. There are nG rules set dowr. on how our guests are to look." Security men will do that. Young said that some guests will be screened by security police before being admitted to the park and undesirables will not be allowed in. "This means that if a person does have long hair, he may be admitted to the park. The hair styles that are in vogue today tend to be longer and we are not going to keep anyone out of Disneyland for long hair alone. The decision will be based on general appearance and attitude." he said. Disr#yland officials said they an- ticipate 10 further trouble from Yippies after the disturbance at the park Thw-s- day night. Jackpot Awaits San Clementean Mrs. Elizabeth McDonald of San Oemente ls hoping in the worst way that an angler on the municipal pier hooks a jackpol It's her purse. Mrs. McDonald, dining at the restaurant at the end of the pier earlier this week, strolled to the rail after dinner with her husband, then ac- cidentally dropped her tan leather purse. ll conlalned personal papers, credil card! and 1150. The handbq floated for a few momenta, but the woman's busband fail- ed In tries to anai il Then Jt sank. Now the McDonald! are waJtlng for a luck)' -and honest -fisherman. day, ranging £rom a sing-in on Captain Hook's pirate ship to a disturbance at the Monsanto display in Tomorrowland. Then the incidents stepped up. The unscheduled closure of the famed tourist attraction, the sea>nd since the park opened in 195$, came after the group of hlppie-ytpe youths marched up Maln Street, ch.anting obscenities and singing songs. The g r o u p left Tom Sawyer's Island at about 6 p.m. before heading for the park's City Hall in a line which extended the length of the street. ' When they reached the city hall area they chanted for the release of Mlnnie JA:ouse and tore down a red-white-and-- blue bunting near the buildhl.i, replacing it with a "Legalize marijuana" nag which portrayed a dark green marijuana plant on the black background. A group of irate Disn°ey guests began singing "God Bless America" but were quickly booed down by the youths. One of the hippies shouted for the group to head for Fantasyland and the crowd circled Main Street for the trek to the Disney casUe. Hallway down Maln Street they were met by a Costa Mesa police riot control squad that swept onto Main Stttet from an employes' entrance. Screaming "Here come the pigs," the hippies ran down Malp Street away from the Costa Mesa unit only to be met by a tquad of Fullerton lawmen who closed off the escape route. Pofici and "OO:iiey security officm ·--., of lbe Yl!>lli" and ~ysically threw. thetl out of-the par'r: or toolt them to ~ aecurtty office for transfer to the Anaheim police department. Several spectators joined in the melee, chasing yippies around the town 8QU8rt shooting , "Run, Hippfes, Ruo." The encounter on Main Street lasted only minutes. Riot squads in helmets, face 'protector! and eas mask! lined bclth sides of the street as a Joqdspeaker announced the closing of the park at 7:30 p.m. Many of the 33,CM;l(I guests wore puzzled expressions as they were led out of the park. Some asked : "What's hap- penecl? ls the park really closed?" Disney employe.s and security pol}ce explained the disturbara to the crowd, many of them children, and urged guest& to keep moving. The "National Yippie Day Pow-Wow" began on a light note Thursday as a group of 75 Yippies converged on the carousel at Frontierland, the Monsanto display. General Electric, and the Coke Terrace in Tomorrowland, singing the 11.fickey Mouse Club song. Late in the afternoon the Ylpples took over Tom Sawyer Island, chuing many of the tourists off lhe attraction and raising a Viet Cong nag on the Island's fortress. Disneyland officials said rqembers of the group pa~ around marijuana cigarets on the island and a security guard reported seeing a naked man on the island. Jack B. Linqui st, Disneyland director of marketing, said the encounter on Main Street began when "one of the ringleaders swung at an officer.'' "The Disneyland security contingent and area police dkl an excellent job in quelling the disturbances," he said. "It's a abame that such a small group has to ruin it for the others, but we had to think of the safety or our guests," he stated. "We are going to enforce 1 regulation prohibiting long-hairs from the park. We didn't want to do it, but t.hls incident 18ee YIPPIES, Pl&e lJ .. Unsightly Area At Nuclear Plant Being Retnoved ~yej~·'.·•otel ~~llP!!~Y " . ~:fagu:na -lJrgencyLatfs I : ' ' . l • , , 1 , ' ' ' Repited;· SJttdy Slated · Relocation ol a unslghUy portion ol the nucJear power plant at San Onofre -which Statt Parts Oiredar Wllllam Penn MoU once branOed "a blight onto Two of the controveriiit ·1'Urgeney" the landscape" -is m progress. ordinances proposed by l..lagUna. Beech A power transmission yarcf ww· be Maypr Rkhard G?Jdbe!J, '· ~. la'l!rf after a stormy c1ty 00\.mi:'\ r meewig moved on the southern end of the 84-acre ~ 17 will reappear ·nest' ~k "'r a to m i c reactor site, lt wu discl• ' ~% e • reawAr, non-urgency ordinancts. ed today by San Dlego Gas and Electric At the lequest of 'Councilman E;dward C.otnpany. Grading on the n~w site LOrr, a council sbJ.Cly seuiot1 haa-beea. already is under way. The utility's San Clemente manager. ' Wllllam Webb, said hls company is aware of public disapproval of the appearance of the tra11smission installation. "A lot of people didn't like it," said Webb., who explained that the earth moving will "depress the area to hide the lcansformers." A double purpose of the swltchY.ard re location was noted by Carl Welti, SOG&E, spokesman. We!U said his flnn also is. moving lhe pn!Jellt substaUon to make room for the new nuclear generatcrs. His firm and Southern Calif<¥'1lla Edison Company have applled for permlta to ·build 1 two addiUonal 1.1- milllon-tllo"8tt reactor stations on the San Onofre site, creating a 500-Peroemt increase over pruent power product.ion. PermlLs for the huge reactors are dependent on outcome of public hearihp before the Public ·uw11Jes Commillllon and the Atomic Energy Commlsllon. Dates have not been set for the sessions. but the PUC heirln.g1 are expected th\1 !all. The AEC counterpart would be in the spring of JU'i'L * *· * Stringent New Cycle Rules J)ue In San Oe~ente San Clemente's minibike and trail motorcycle enthusiasts .can expect a strtnaent new city ordinance faclnc Ulem In coming weeks if the city council pas1e1 a suggested "urgency'' code. Coundlmell are peruslilg lbe ooe.pige model Jaw which would fprbi~ riding On privite property closer than 300 feet to the property llne of any residence. The oode •lao would pfovlde uMrt -any rider o( ~ llDd dunebugglet OD private land have In their poueaion wrtllen permbllon from Uie laodown!r 19 ride In the area. tcbeduled for 7 :~ p.m. TUesday to ex- amine: -The propooed ordinance bannln& motorcycle riding on private property. Arother ordinance barring hotel room occupa11cy .by perms under 18 U!llW accompanied b); a parent'or guardian. IArr, this week revived his on ordinance restricting dogs . In parks ~ on beaches, wlllcb alao had been tabletf at the June mfft. He said be felt 'the motorcycle and hotel room laws also We re worthy of further COMlderaUon as regular ordinances. An ura:ency ordinance, de!lgned for emergency situations, requires a 4-1 council vote for approval and becomes l!f!ectlve I m me d I a t e l y • Regular ordinances can be -adoPttd .by a 3-2 vote, but require two readJngs, at separat.e meellng1 ancf ~me effective 30 day1 aft.er adoption. 1 Goldberg aald today he assumes the versions of the ordinancai to be.r1tudled Tuesday will be ·•preUy much the Amt" as tboee preteated ln June,. but· added, "It was Ed's idea to bring theln up aga1n, ao I'm JtJsi auumlnr they'll be about the aame. '' He confirmed hll commenl of the June 17 meettni, lo tho ellecl that the hc>tel room occupancy restriction abou1d not apply \o married couples or servicemen under 11. Marine Flier su~~u111bs 1be code -the second rullng on trail machinel conaidered by councllrnen In recent months -could be-enacted swiftly at the. council's Aug. 19 meeUng. It la patterned, In, essence, 11fter a new county qrdlnaoce . which forblds riding on all unincorporated land jn orange county wlthbut-the owner's The motorcycle ordinance prohlbltl operalloo or any vcJt19le propelled by an internal combustion engine on private properly without the prior writ.ten con- sent of the. property owner. It lurthOr prolilblll opera,Uon of ouch vehlclea withl'n the ,city of Laguna, Beac:b wltl)9ut an approved spark amstor or noise muffllnR device, nod also problblta: 1.belr operaUon on MY ptjvate property wlthln 300 feet of the exterior boli:ndaries of uy realdenUal property, eJ"cept 11.1 nectllll'1 for fngreu and egreu. Third El Toro KC-130 Victim Dies ~t Hospital A Mls!kln Viejo career Marine officer UU. morning became the lhlrd to die from lnjurtes sustained when a KC130 fuellng tanker crashed and exploded al El Toro Marine Corps Air Station 1teven filays ago. Maj. Waller Zytkewlc?, 41, 25372 Andriana , father of two, died of severe burns In lhe intensive care unit to which he was admitted 1 week ago. Fellow crewman Cpl. Kenneth ~1etz.dorf, 21 , or El Toro base housing, d}ed two days ago nf Identical Injuries. One of the aircraft's commanders, Lt. Rager Mullins of Huntington Beach, died In the crash. They were on the twe-member crew ol the Lockheed alraaft tenned by a Mari ne spokesman '-an ~. reliable kind ol bin!." MaJ. Zyt..kewia. • veteran of two tours ln Vietnam, was operatlona officer for the Marine Attia) R.efuellna Sq\ladron 352, at El Toro. , A base spokesman hid the crash was the first aocfde.nt (or a crew of that squa drm In 1U,(IOO flying houra, covering more than 11 years. Maj. Zytkewiez, who had received the Bronie St.ar and l.l AJr Medal1, la sun1v· ed by his wife, Joan, and two children. Funeral arraneementa •re no\ yet com- plet.e. ~y will take place at the Dilday Funeral Home In Huntington Buch. M.tj. Zytkewlci' death leaves only two mes&1who were on the ill-fated practice tligbt oWl alive. They are Capt. Robert Walla, Jr., 28, of Tustin llDd S/Sgt. Kennelb D. Davis, II, of 5anla ADL They are bolb on the crl!l<al U1£ and 1 ho1pllal sPO):esinao 'would sa only they are ''holdin11; lheif' own." Lt. Mull.Ins wa1 sitUng 1n the dual cockpit wllli Maj. Zytkewlcz. 'Mlere has bee no dete.rmlnatlon who was piloting the plane when lt went down. ,, . ,_ ' pennialfon .. But despite the , ''Ursency" label 1n San Ciemeatt. the ,_..i law """°' Wben\the mfnibib mlqnoe blJ tapered off a bll Since 1bo oJ)IDln& ol the Seab<eae MoloroyciJ· pork ""' ' -In the fonner Reever Rach. ::C" by olU-alloul the noiq• neor . their ---chriodled. • Aod .-ructll\JI ropar1s fnltn offlclalo 1 In ,tht comnwntly hlve~1ourided1 the pork lloeU lfnce Ila -">c' urller lbll sumrger .• Cily Manoger Ken Cm bu M1d lbal dt1pl1e the atonn ol pro1"I! belor'e Ille park'• openlna, he -ur !u1«elv· cd oo oor!il•fu!S aboul nolM a.a dlilt. Nelthe havt police. • ~ , A IJnal orovlllon _,Jd.baJI the open> Uon cl '!ho veblclea 1nywbere ~ the no1le YOIUmt lb ''lo loud, raucua "" Jarring 11 to be dJaturblng or a milUnce lo the r.""! or quid ol any ldjacollt ntlghbofhood or a penon realdlnfl Jn an adlooent nellhborhood or c:onduedng J buaine• Ultrtln." · • The bole! room ordinance ti ortiinally presented b aimed at tbt "lar1e.numbtrt ol unchaperoned inlnors (Wbo) have nictntl1 adopted lbelpractlce of renUn1 hotAll and mo1a1 • ....n. In the clly and . •. adopted tho practice o~ leUlnl~ mlnOn occupy said rooms In numbers (Seo LAWS, Pqe I) ' " ' I ' . ' ' < • Mideast Pow~rs ~gree to Cease . Fighting Today WASHJNGTON (UPI) The United Arab -.Republic and Iarael .have agreed to enter into a cea1&-t1re bulmlnl: at 3 p.m., PDT today Secret&rJ fl State William P. Rolan lll1llOWl<ed. "We •elcotne OW: stalesman-llte action taken by the Jea'dera of the governments concerned. We bope this important decision will al:lvance the prospectl· 'fur a just and lasting puce l.n the .MWcne East." After official spok_., Robert J, McCloskey re¥ Rogers' at'ateme:ttt. respopslble oftlclals lndlcated tbat -t ceaae-flre would .USO formall11 be 1ln1 el· feet between Israel a.nd Jordlrt. The officials said· that neither lsrael nor J ordan had ever formally dls.avowed the pertinent U.N. ceue-flre resoluUoos between the two countries. The officials were Werring to the original cease-fire wbich ended the 1117 Mideast war and the subsequent Nov. 22, 1967, Seourlcy Council reoolullon which laid the buis for a. future polliql aetUement in the Middle Est. · J "We have just •been lnlonJ!ed b7 the governments o( the United Arab ~bbc and lsr?el of their acceplano10 OC Uio , • U.S. propasal for a ll1anckW1 'coaaHI& to come inth effect at 2200 Gf'M{(wkit .Mean Time tcJJay, Friday, Aucuit 1 Rogers said In a.at.atemenL U.S. offlcia1a were ex1ttmely Pleulfl (See TRIJCE, Pap 11 I Orange :Weadaer ., l . I They'll be beating a path lo tltt • beach Saturday as the tem~~ lure soan to 9l In the ll)llnd areu. On the COUl It'll be a ccan-J fortable 71 under fair 1tlfa, ! • 1 • I •\ INS~I! TODAY : I ' SC L . t1 11Ct.t~ Congress OKs lndepende~ce ()f Post Office W;\SBINGTON (.\Pl -Coqftsa bu -ltl IJ'ip OD the U.S. mails alter nwlJ two cenlUriel lllld the POii Ol11<:o -fornrd lo lheddlni lw>dlcaps that pnimpled -postmaster ,...m lo .. , tbe departinenl wu in "a race w!tb -·· Non llw! two , .... after a presld ... tlil -ml""'° l'9COllUDellded I~ and mort lb.n C111e )Ur llftu the lo.llllaUOD WU ln!ndleecf, ~ -'lbundlJ' to PreaJdeol Nixon I blll ertltlni ID lndependllll ~.s. ~Oita! Senice. 1be White ~ b&ilod the occufon .. ... landmark day and a lmldmark piece. of le&JslaUoo for """ of the postal· lllNloe ud pOltaJ workm" and Uid -wwJd sip the ......... -.... 11 prvvldN for Ulabl!Jbmeot ol the OOlpOfOfeollke federal -wlt!lln a ,..,, and a mro.ct1.. elibt percent ~ . bike for postal workm. It a1lo mllel 11.tely .. lncreue in llnt dafs postqe: rates -from the ail-cent to an eigbt<'ell1 stamp -early nei:t JW. The ..,. Pootal Senk< will be run b1 1 DiDe-man, presidentially.appointed board of to"ernon who will ielect a ~stm·iter senerat IDCI d e p a l y p0.tm .... general. Rat.. will be ..i not by eo.,,.,, 11 for the past Ill yurs, but b1y a five-member rate commission with the approval of the board of governors. Tbt postmasttt general, frtquently in the past a political handiman of the president rather than 1 workin1 head or tbe mail sy&tem, will be removed from I.be Cabinet. The new system is designed to moderniie and streamline delivery of the mails, and eventually to eliminate the huge deficita: that have been an annuat future of the Post OUlct budget for tbe put 1e years. Festival Chief In 'Fair' Shape Festival or Arts Di~tor Verner Beck. 'TT, rtma1ns in "fair" condition 1t South Coast Community Hospital today. A bospit.al spokesman said there hid been uttJe change in Beck's condition since be was admitted Wednesday even· Ing after oulfering a stroke. A former newspaperman , Beck. 396 Holly St., bu long been aasoctattd with the Feitival, u business manqer and member of the board of directors. He alto is a director of Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Association and rept'elent.s the Festival on the Clamber of Commerce board. DAILY PILOT H-......... ........ ,...,. hi ct ... Ro'bort N. W•1tl """"-"' .... ""'lltflv J1d1 R. C11rl1y Vici ,.,.11-1.,,. GIMr•I M ........ T111011111 Koo.,;/ l'dltor TlnJMlt A. M11rphl10 ~ir. E•llW Ri1th1r4 P. Nill Solllll °""""" C-1)1 ... ,.,. ....... Cod• Mftl: UI WWI •tr$'"'' H""*'f l••dl; "11 ""' t1-.i1 locllf¥' .... ~ lloldl: m ,._,.,.,_ H"'llllt'-'I lhtdl1 1111S ~ Slllllew ... $all '"'"""'~: at NOtfllo (I C-IM lt•I -6ellm they <ouli! do ... ~"lliiil.. Iii'~ l<&Ablan:-1 I tJllo&." color plctllrw If l!iotllor '1elkn, coflet "AN you 11n you don' moao !hat -AW..U ,.,.., -t.d oo Iha you-\do-alJWoil!" .,.._olfMTolew-'1 -I_, do It I _, Uft Mn. K1-n lla4 ·-..,.almoot 1n me to do such .. anlmlllstlc thtnr.· ~· 'lbunday a........., when Kanarek _.eel .,a1n that she .i.o Konarek produced a photoiraph of the ran into the hoult with two YOUJll women bloody, almost nude body ol Miss Tate codeftodants ol Charles Minton in the inside the residence. cut 1nd Oarles "Tex" Wit..900 and Whan the trial &eSSlon resumed 1galn that she might bl unablt to mnember tod-.v. K1narelr: approached the ll·yW'· because she wu in a st.ate ol shock old bk>nde with a sheaf of pictures al the Umt. and thrutt one toward her. Mn. Kasa. Her voice r"1ng to a shout. Mrs. bian took one look ind theri averltd Kaub!'° repllad, "f just !mow I dldl>' her llud. do lt. Mr. Kantrek." Kanarek 1ttempted to b1vt the witness Kanarek hid berun the day'1 que> llkt the picture in her hand but Judge o.r-..H. Oldlr -i.d him that wwld ........... a., lllld told lilm tn ao aheld with the .,,,._t>Amlnallob. Kaoartk uhd her Ir lhat was the .. lldy you .. , you..,. .t the hoUIO!" "'ti 1ppean to be the white gown and tbe long hllr. 1 never aaw her f1ce." The dt!ense 11wyer sought to establlah that Mrs. Kasablan actu.ally ran !Oto \he house herself wllh a tnlle but the witnHs denied flatly U\Sl sbe e\-er had done to. • "When you heard acreams comlng from the house didn't you care what h1ppened to anyone Wide?" l{anarek: 1s1ttd. '' ' ' "Of~ l cared," ---- • 11Wnn1t U.. your tdeQdl who were In lhtre. Cbuloo w-. Suun Atklnl ind Patrkla KrMwtntal!" ''Yes." ''Oidn·t you ntn lnto I.he house to protecl them!'' "No, I ran toward the houJe buf J dJdll't go into It." On n.ursday Kanarek had juat asked Mrs. tCaiablan whether ahe Looked through a window Oil the boull thtt night last August when without another word he save her tbt picture. Jt sho1¥ed Miss Tate, cllld, only Jn panties, 1Ytna on ber right side with her hind extended above har head. She w-U-.,COV,wtl~wl.lh_ blood. __ and I.here-'.'(!re c1wly villbl• w•··iiiluildSlilliii· o~ vloosly prtllWlt boc(y. Mn...kasabtao bad testified previously &be saw three slayinp at the estate out.aide the house last Aug. 9 but that she did not witness the killing of Miss Tate. and balr stylist Jay Sebrina lo the living room. Mrs. Ka.sablan's gasp was audible throughout the courtroom. She burat Into tears and could not speak. She was lead off to an anteroom while the lawyers conferred. In the Judge's c.bambers. Then the trial was recesaed ovemlgh\, Kanarek declined to tell newsmen .why he suddenly handed the girl the. plcturt. City Inspection A Threat to All? A spokesman for Laguna's Woodland Drive an:a said today he is "amazed that the people haven't realized the fact that all citizens could be affected If the Inspection is carried out throughout the city." Artist Andy Wing, who Uves in Victory Walk, also noted that the re&identa of Woodland. the rustic canyon area, wbe~ the inspection will begin , are working on necessary legal procedures W become a community organization. The three-pronged inspection was authorized by the city councU in the. wee hours Thursday morning following 90 minutes of animated discussion. The inspection will be held on a city- wide basis, beginning in the Woodland area, and then move to other priority areas within the city. Building, health and fire violations will be checked out. 11Unbeliev1ble,11 is the react.ion of Coconut (right), ~year-old clown for Ringling Bros.-Barnum and Bailey Circus, as his sidekick, Coco the Clown. is tapped u an honorary DAILY PILOT carrier boy. The honest.to-goodness earlier boys are 11-year-old Costa ~fesans Bob Maurer (left) and Ron McDan- iela, who got a lesson in circus makeup from Coco. For more clownina: arouli.d, see Pa-'le 8. ~ldents of the area fear the in- spection is a prelude to razing their homes. City officia1s say it is to correct housing violations. "There is so much nonconforming housing everywhere in town." Wing emphasized. "Since the city has decided to do thi s inspection on a citywide basis, my feeling of responsibility at thi& point is to the community. l'rom l'qe I YIPPIES ... makes it a must.'' Security police made a complete !Weep of the park after the guests had left to rout any Ylppl~ left after the crowd was escorted from Dime)'land. The Ylppies regrouped outa:ide the park and threw rocks and debrll at 0Ulcer1 before heading for the Disneyland Hotel where they were confronted by more polic. units. They linaUy dispersed at 9:30 p.m. The only other time the park cloled early wu • memorial aesturt tollowilg the ·as.suslnation of John F. Kennedy in 1963. l'rom l'qe 1 TRUCE .•• by the agreement to stop the fighUng on the UAR·IaraeIJ front which ts con- sklered to be the most serious area of Middle Eastern hoatilities. The main problem along the lsraeli- Jordanlan front are the Palesllnian com- mando units which are not conlroUed by the Jordanian government but wllicb operate from Jordanian territory. Some of these commando groups have in· dicated they will honor the cease-fire while olhera gave. stlted they will not be bound by It. Secretary Rogers' announcement was a first step in hls Mideast Peace initiative ot June 29 which bad been addressed to the United Arab Republic, Jordan, and llrael. The U.S. peace plan contained two part3' -The re-establilhment of the Mideast 90,days. -Slmultaneowily, the resumption of the ptact seeking mission of Dr. Gu Mar V. Jarring, the U.N. peace mediator wlth the UAR. Jordan and Israel. l'rom l'age I LAWS ... exceeding the s1fe limitation." This, 11y1 the ordinances. Is "harmful to the hetlth and morals of said m.lnors and to the pubUc health, aafety and weUare .'' t11e ordinance ldentlfles "minors" as penon1 between the ages of II and 21, "adults" as persons over 21 and "minort: child" as per10ns under II. San Clemente Religion Y outh'Ptogram Dropped "I want to see that the city does things in a lawfuJ and equitable manner -everywhere." Wing said that Jn Woodland "paper! are being drawn up" to form a com- munity organlz.aUon. He said that It w:JI be divided into two sections -the home- owners and the residenta. Plans t.o •held an a~o-vi•\111 program for youth cn·1an CJ~nte.'1 beachfront' have been dropped today becauae of reluctant by the city to aulhorize the event. Spake.amen for the San Clemente United Presbyterian Church said the plans for the "Underground Collage" program presented by 1 graduate divinity student wtre abandoned because city approval might come too late for ·the . scheduled Aug. 28 performance. Penni&slon from the governing body of the churcb also had oot been given as or l11t Wednesday night when church Youth Director Nea1 McBride asktd for city perml..aalon. The proeram would have Involved several projection screens and toUnd equJpment facing the sea near lifeguard headquarters. Couacilmen balked when they learned that possibly 1,000 persons, mostly teenagers, cwld be upected for the evening performance of 1 proil'am in- tegrating music and graphics with 1 religious mes11ge. Councilman Tbomu O'Keefe told McBride the title of the program $5,000 Burglary From Playhouse For Vengeance? Detectives believe the $5,000 burglary of sound equipment from the Laguna Moulton Playhouse may have bad a vegeance motive. The brazen burg:lary thtt left lhe new theater temporarily inoperaUve In the sound department was dlscovered Tues- vengeance motive . Stolen items included a $.500 sound mixer panel , a stereo tape recorder, amplifiers, a playback sy1tem, 1peakers, microphones , headphones, cables ind electrical connectors. There wu slmllarlty to the theft of SI ,600 worth of sound equJpment Crom the audltorlwn of Larun• Beach High School last month. ''Underaround teouage" didn't sit too well with him. "That word under(rtll,Jnlt has an un· palatable meaning sometimes," O'Keei'e said. Instead of making a decision, the coon· cil referred the matt.er to parks and recreation commissioners for a recom· mendation, but the commission's meetina. McBride later decided, would be too late lo make plans for the pro- gr1m. The presentation would have been pro- vided by Wayne Lukens, a student at the Claremont Graduate School of Theology. "Woodland Is already intrinsically very beaullful and unique . With a community association, Woodland could be developed b1to something fine ." . To set up the community organization. citizens, with the aid of attorneys, will draw up 1 constitution and by-laws, which are then presented to the state for approval. Wing said that at the present time he doubted "ii too many people will cooperate with the lnsptction." "Of course, we're l!lllll !marting a litlle bit." Clyde Z. Springe. city building and planning director said today that he ex· SUMMER CONTINUES Henrwdon Offers "OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION," Complete Occasl-1, Dining & Bedroom, ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS! • Drexel Features "ESl'ERANTOS" Entire Collection. • Heritog• R4tduces Its Compl•te "MADRIGAL" Collection. HENREDON I. HERITAGE UPHOLSTERY 15°/o OFF peel! to begin the inspection in Woodland in eight weeks. "He will evaluate the individual pro- pertits, identify the deficiencies, and categorize them." Springe said that an(code violations would have to be corrected immediately. There are also "dangerous conditions" which are given a certain period of time in which to be corrected. Non-con- forming features, which were legal years ago, but not legal now. due to chan ges in the Jaw, may remain, he noted. Springe said that there are !ess than.. 4-0 buildlngs in the Woodland area, and that the percentage of non·residcnt land. owners is high. "But we don't think that will present a problem. We 'll notify them of any viulations and give them an amount of time lo correct them . It sho uldn't involve the tenants out there at all." Clay Mitcl1ell Said 'Doing Fine' State Board of Education member Clay f\.fitchell is reported "doing fine " at South Coast Community Hospital, where he was admitted July 27 following: a heor t attack. Mitchel~ 59. of II S. Alta Mira Road, South Laguna, is out of the intensive care unit and should be weU enough lo go home soon. a hospital spokesman said. A member of the Orange County school board for seven years, Mitchell was appointed lo the slate board by Gove rnor Reagan in February. Mamie Given Stamp WASHINGTON (UPI) - A six-cent stamp honoring former President Dw ight D. Eisenhower was presented to hi! widow Thursday in White House ceremonies. T'1c presentation was mode in President Nixon 's office. Postmaster General Wintcn M. Blount ore!'""lted the st.?mo t'l rv'r:o:. :·-"';,. 'r". - Tile proposed law would ban occupancy of hot.el rooms by more than five minors (under 21) unlw a=mpanled by 1n adult who rqilltn for a period equal ta the 1on..,.i otay of any one minor. Det. Gene Brooks said todl)', "This possibly could be a vengeance type thing. They appeared to know whit they were lookinJ for 1nd lhen was 1 allaht amount ol maUcloua mischief, "thlnp that could dtlay the 1how ." DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE It would turtMr bar accupancy by any minor clllld (under Ill unleas ac- compaol.ed by 1 parent, legal guardian or responsible adult (over 21) authorized In writlni by the chlld·s parent or le1a1 11Jordlan. The parent., aum:Uan or rtsponslble adult l1lo would be requlrtd to remain re&lattttd durtna lhe room occupancy of the minor clllld. Broob uid the mlachlel Included acat· terb'lg of li&hlin& cue cards and removaJ of baUar1es from flubllgbtl. The burglary oceurredjult before the continuation ot the muslca "OUve:r" with 8 l'ttW ca!f.. The show did &'0 on, lfter aound equipment was hurrledJy rented. The new playhouse suffered 1nothtr setback earlier when someone entered just btfore the opening of a play and tinkered with wlrlng ind removed labell ldentUyl111 switch ... ( 7ed11111 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 We1t<llff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN fRIDAY 'TfL 9 INTERIORS Prof..,lonal Interior Detlgnero Avalleble-AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 3-45 North CoHI Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FR !DAY 'Tl L 9 I'll• .. Toll "-M ... .t a...,. c...., 14 .. 1J'J I. ' • 7 ' ' ' 1 I I I I I I ' -. J ' - • Laguna aeh VOL 63, NO. 188, 4 SECTIONS, 42 P.AGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALlfORNIA ' ' F«.IDAY, A~ST 7, 1970 ,_ ' ar eo-ens ' • Di sneyland Enf o c~g 1 r .'Modifi ed' Dress 'Code By STEVE MITCHELL Of .... 0.111' ,, .. , llaff Disneyland officials have banned all long-haired y o u t hs from the Magic Kingdom following a confrontation between Orange County lawmen and 300 Yipples that culminated in the park closing six hours early Thursday. Eighteen youths were arrested as a result of the confrontation whlch took place on the park's Main Street at 6:55 p.m. Long.haired and denim-clad , the van. guar:d of the Ylppte group converged upon Disneyland al noon Thursday to celebrate "National Yippie Day ." Small incidenls were reported by Disneyland security police during the * * * Peace R eturns To Disney land Front Once More Disneyland opened Its gates at a a.;n. today without incident. In fact, the only differenC1!: between today's opening and any other day was the fact tht uniformed security police mamed the ticket booths along with ticket takers -and had some new dress requirements. Officials at the Magic Kingdom disclos- ed that dress ~gulations feir rk guests will be up 19 the ~llof! of ae<:\ll"itY police at the gates. ' ''111ett wll1 be no IOI ...... Uons lllCh as hair being thr~ inches long on the &idea," ,1:~ Bruce Youni, publi<: relatioDI man for Disneyi.t, "The decision to let a person into the park is not an arbitrary one for the ticket taker to make. There .are no roles set dowr1 on how our guests are to look." Security men will do that. Youn.a: said that some guests will be screened by security police before being admitted to the patk1 and undesirables will not be allowed in. "This means that , If a person does have long hair, he may be admitted to the park. The hltr styles that are in vogue ,today ten~ to be longer and we are not going lo keep anyone out of Disnefland f~ long hair alone. The decis~n will based on general appearance and at tude," he said. Disneyland au· ls said they an- ticipate BO further trouble from Ylppies alter the dl!turbance at the park 'Drur>- day night. f day, rarmtng from a sing-in -on Captain Hook's }Irate ship to a disturbance at the Mo,santo display In Tomorrowland. The~ the incidents stepped up. The'fun.scheduled clOBure of the famed touri!J attraction, the second since the park/ opened In t!ISS, came after the gZ'Ol!'P of hlpple-ytpe youths marched up Maiii Street, chanting obscenities and sioJing sonp. The gr o u p Jett Tom ~er's Island at about 6 p.m. before heiding for the park's C1ty Hall in a.. line which extended the length of ~street. ~· When they reached the city hall area they chanted for the release of Minnie Mouse and tore down a ml-white-and- blue bunting near the building, replacing it wilb a "Legalize marijuana" flag which portrayed a dark green marijuana plant on the black background. ·A group of irate Qisney, guests began singing "God Bless America" but were quickly booed down by the youths. One of the hippies shouted for the group to head for Fantesyland and the crowd circled Main Street for the ~k to the Disoey casile. Halfway down Main Street they were met by a Costa Mesa police riot control squad that swept onto Main Street from an employes' entrance. Screaming "Here oome the pigs," the hippies ran down Main Street away from the Costa Mesa unit ooly to be met by a squad of Fullerton lawmen who closed off the escape route. Police and Disney Security officers grabbed dozW ol the Yippies •nd phyalcsDy u...w''tiin' Wt ol the part or took them to the security office lor traasfer to Jhe ~ polleO c1epar1menl • S.Veral spedatoa )Oin<d In the me!,., chasing ylpples around the town aquare ahouting, "Run, Jl,ippies, Run." 'The encounter on Main Street lasted only minutes. Riot squa~s in helmets, face protecton and gaa masks lined both sides of the street aa a loudspeaker announced the cloalng of the part at 7:30 p.m. Many of the 33.000 guesta wore puzzled expressions as they were led out of Ufe park. Some 11ked: "What's hap. pened? Is the park really closed?" Disney employes and security pollc:e ezplainei:I the disturbance to the crowd, many of them children, and urged guests to keep moving. • The "National Y.iP,pie Day Pow-Wow" began on a H&ht note Thursday as a group of 75 Yippies converged on the carousel at FronUerland, the Monsanto display, General Electric, and the Coke Terrace in. Tomomrwland~ singing the Mickey Mouse Club song. UbSightly ~ I . At Nuclear Plant Being ·Removed Reloca:Uon of a unslgbily portJon of the nuclear poJ'el'. plant at San Onofre -whidl ·state Parks Director William Penn Mott once branded "a blight onto the landscape" -is in progress. A power transmissjon yard . will be moved on the soutlii'n end of tbe 84-acre a t o m i c reactor site, it was disclos- ed today by San Diego Gu and Electric Company. Grading on the hew site already is under way. The utility's San Clemente manager, Wllliam Webb, said bis company is aware of public disapproval of the appeal'ance of tbe transmission installation. ter ' . ). ssau • - . . ' , ' . ~ C:yt;•efb .. ~;tel o~nu7 . , _, . . Mideast Powe~ 2.tag"fl,ha Vrgency Laws : Agree .to Cease · :, , ! · , , Fighting Today ,R,~'l•,.,ed"' Study' 'S 1-ted WASHINGTON 1uP1> ' Tb• , C' V II ' ' ~ United Arab Republic and l&rael bno ' agreed to enter into a ceue-fire ~..,1, • at 3 p,m., PDT loda1 Secnlarj' Two of the conU"ovenial: ''ura:ency" achediiled for 7;30 p.m. Tuesday to ex-State WlllJam P. Rogers aJ1DOllnCICL onllnancu prorloaed by Lfiuna. Beach amln" "W 1 lhis ta•-~-»•"....._ Mayor n•~-~ Gold~·• ~-t tab•-• e we come , s ,...._..._ -~~· ~"' -~ -The propoled ,onllnonce ba-g taken by the lead<n ol the aove- , after •, ·stomo' city coUnc\1 ,m .. Uni motorcycle riding 'oo private property. concerned, We hope this Jm- June1 17~ will nappear next ifeei:, Jor Another ordlnjtnce ,baninc·b>tel room declllllon wW advance thf ProsPedl~Or atudy·ae·rt,1Ullr, OOD-lH'ler:»w OrdJ:na1ct1. occupanoy by perms under , 11 Wlless a ju:St and lasting peace in qse Jlldi:De At the, '-.·est ot c.owcllman 'F.dward East." • ""l'lu apctlmpinJed by a parent or guardian~ Lorr, a 'COWlcl1 study, seasiOR lial bf#a Aller officl1I spa~·sman ·Robert· ·•. ·Lorr, this week revived his OWi or-'* I* .tf {:( Stringent_ New ordinance restricting dop in par~ and McCloskey read Rogers' statement, on beaches, which also had been tabled responslb)e offlclals lndJcated tlttt a at the June meet. He said be felt the cease-fire would .11Bo formally be in" ef.. , , feet between Israel and lonlan. motorqcle and hotel room Jaw• also 'lbe offldall said that neftber ltbel W.re worthy of further conslderaQon nor Jordan bad ever lonnolly -61 as 'regular on!lnances, , the pertinent U,N, ceue-ffre moio- An ur1ency ordlnanct, dellgned for betweeti tbe. two countries. '· • " ' , .. ~ Jackpot Awaits San Clementean Late in the afternoon the· Ylppies took over Tom Sawyer Island, chasing many of the tourisU! off the attracUon and raising a Viel Cong flag on the Island's fortress. Disneyland officials said members of the group passed around marijuana "A' lot of people didn't like il.," said Webb, who explained that the earth moving will "depress tbe area to hide the transformers." A double purpose or the switchyard retOcation was noted by Carl Welti, SDG&r:E, spokesman. Welti said his firm also is rrwving the present substation W make toom for the new nuclear generators. Cycle Rules Due In San Clemente emergency aituatioM, requires a f..l The oflicials were re.fminl: . to ·the council vote for approval and •beOomea original cease-fire which ended the ltl1' J ·' effecUve i m med l a t e I y •. Regular Mideast war and the 'UtiaeQuent-. NW. • ·' · Mrs. Elizabeth McDonald of San cigarels on the island and a security Clemente is hoping in the ~ way guard reported seeing a naked man that an angler on the municipal pier on the island. hooks a jackpol Jack B. Linquist, Disneyland di.rector It's her pw-se. of marketing, saJd the encounter on Mrs. McDonald, dining at t h e "fain Street be1an 'when "one of the restaurant at the end of the pier earlier ringleaders swung at~ an officer.'' this week, strolled to the rail after "The Disneyland security contingeht dinner with her husband, then ac· arid area pOiice did an excellent job cl dentally dropped her tan leather purse. Jn quelling the disturbances," he a aid. It cootalned pereonal papers, credit cards 'lt'f a shame that such a small group and $150. bu to ruin It for the othen, but we The handbag fioated for a few hOf! to thlnt-.1 the ·1a1ety ol our guests," moments, but the WOman'a husband fail· he stated. ed in tries to snag It. "tWe are 11tn1 to enfOrce a regulatlOll Then H sank, • pnlblblUng long-hairs lrom the park, We Now tbe McDc:lf\Jldl ere waiting for il didp't want to do it, but this incident a luclcy -and --flsberman. 1 l <See, YIPPll!3. ~ I) 1 ' Hll ·firm aod Southern Callfcwnla ~ Company .have applied for penl1lts . to build two additional u. rnllltOl\.klJowatt reactor llatiOOI on the Sin Onofre 'sJte, a-eaUng a 500-perce.mt increase over present power produclton. Permlta for the huge reactors are dependent on outcome of public heatings before the Public UWIUes QimmJaion and the Atomic Energy Commlsalon, Data have no& been aet for the seukms, but the · PUC hearings are µpectecl.thla fail, The AEC cowilerpart woold be in the spring of 1971. San Clemente's minibike and trail motorcycle entl1usiasts can expect a stringent '!!" city ordinance f!cing them In· coming ...,g, il the city oouncll passes a suggested "uraency" code. Councilmen are penaing ·the 00&-pige: model • J.aw wbicli would forbid rtdir\i: an priva~, P.J'Ol)eJ't)' closer .than •300 feet to the Jll'Otiert~ line of any,resl-., The code also would provide . that any rider of cycle• and dunebugglt!I on private ;land have in their poueasion written permlsllon from the 'landowner to ride in the area. Marine ~Flier Sneenmbs The code -the &eCOlld •nllinl on trail machines considered by councilmen ' in recent JhOnths· -couJd -<t>e enacted nlfUy·at the council'• Aug, 19 m .. Ung, ' . . Jt -ls patterned, In elsen<e,. allq 1 new county ordinance which forblda· riding .on all unlnaorporateil land In Orange county without the owner'• Third El Toro KC-130 Victim Dies at Hospital permiSsjon, · , ' • But delplle the "urgJmCY" libel In San C!tm¢0. the propooed law comes, A Mission Viejo career Marlnt officer thia morning became th~ third to die from injuries sustained iwhen • KC130 fueling tanker crashed and ei:ploded at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station seven days ago. Maj. Walter ZytkewlCZ', 41, 25372 Andriana , fath er of two, died of severe burns in the intensive care unit to wh1ch he was admitted a week ago, Fellow 1crtJfTTlan CpJ. K en n e th Metzdorl. II, of El \oi.t -bllusing, died two days ago of Identical lnjurtes. One of the alrcraft'a commanders, Lt. Rager Mulltns of Huntington Beach, dled in the crasb. 11)(}1 were on the .llve-mEimber crew of the Lockheed aircraft tenned by a Marine spokeiman >•an old, relllble kind of bird. ti M•j . Zyttew10: a veteran of two toura In Vlttnam. Wll' _.ti<lnf oU!cer for 1lle Marine Aarla! Refuellnc Sq~adr1>n m, at El Toro: A bue 1pOkesrnan said the crash was the firwt accident for 1 crew of that · aquadf9oi in' 112,0oo_..fiylpg boon, coverin, more _.n 11 yean. ~ Mpj(~lc>. l')lo Jia<f nctlv..t ,the Brand Jtar and 11 Air MedOll, Is """!•· ed by hlt-..tte. loan. and'two cnlldm, • Funeral arranaeme.nts art not )'et oom.. piete, They will take place at the Dilday "hen tbe.mlnlblie nulaaJloe lias tapered FU110ral Home In 11unUngton Beach. oil a bil; • ' Maj. zytkewicz' death leav01 only. two I Slnee .~ ?peninl of' the Seabreem' ho the ill I led · et•-, McllorCjO!e park oo ........ 1n 111e, men w were on ·a pra -formei'-Reel'l!a l\alich, "'*!'pla'l'ts by• IUgllt,.WI alive, clll""' •f?oul llhe noifyr.~ neat' They 'are Capt Rober\ Walls. Jr,, thelr'bomea'ha .. ohtlndled, 23, of Tustin Ind 8151\, Kennetb 0 , And confllcllnif reporta lfoin olfld1l1 Davl1, St, of Santa Ana. Tbey are both lb ihe community hive lurrvtmded the "' the crltical lilt and a hospital -part ltaelf alnce Ila'~ earlier U1JJ apakeman woold MY only lhq are I IWIUl!tr, "holdln!! thdr ...,,,. . •• Cll¥·M>DaM g.,. Can' bu Mid: tblf Lt. r,ruu1n< wu llHinl In tj>e dull a...11a Ille iln o1 ~ ld~ ~ «*kpll willl~-~~ '111ere has, f-."'l.'I lillt•lnf1he-l~bU ~· bee no lle1emllna&'n 'llllO , WN plloliJli o!f !)9, 191NJ'--'ab ahoulllblo\¥,!tjl&llC the J>\'lie wh<n It wmt,dowo. ' i ,lidller'lla••,~. •: ~, i• -, -. • ' • ' 1 f' ~ . ' f '\: ... " ' . • • ' . . ordinances can be adopted by a· 3-1 22, 1967, Security Council tt:aOludon. vote, but require two rudinga, at wbJch laid the buis fur a futuft polWel.I; separate meetings.and becbrne•effecUve Rttiement in the Middle.Est,... 30 da)'I alter adnptioo. "We bave just IM\Oli,lnfonOect 'hl' the . Goldberg salo today he ·aa11uhes the governments of the un!Uil Arab ~Ito verslona of the ordlnancel to i,,, l1Udled and Lsrad ol lbal< ---Or;~ Tueiday will be,'1pretty mucb the aalne" U-5. proposal f°'J a ·~ ~ as U.O.. presented In June, but ·~' .' to come Into effect at 221/0 G~ "It waa Ed'r idea to bring ihem . up l\lean Time today, Fdday, ~. 7, qatn, so I'm just usuming they be Rogers said in a statement. about the same." · U.S. offlclala w_.. emmely · If> "91l(lrmed his c<>nunenr ol :he , • (See 'TRU~ P• I) , June 17 meellng, ,to the affect that , the hotel room occupancy restriction should not apply to married couplel · or service~.~ IL , . The motare,cle on11n .. ce problb/1' operaU011 of any vehicle • P,l'Opejled by an internal combuatioo ~ on prttate property without the prior written con· sent or-the property-owner, • •• ' ' It further prohibits operalio• oh iuth vehlclea Wlthlo·lhe•dty of•LagunalBUch ' wlu.tut an .approved :spark arrestdr ior. noise muffilng device, and also problblta. their operlUcin on any private property w!lhln '30o leer of the merior boondarieir ol any ™idenUal P'"perty, ucep( .,· lleC"""'Y for lngr..a and ..,..... ' A final -bkin would ban the opera- tion ol •the vehielea -amt>ert U the' nol9e" volume • ii· 1W foOd, raOcua orJ Jlning u to 1be ~blnJ' ttt al'nuJunce lo" the ~ or quiet or any id)aceJJI ' neighborhood or •a, Jier11911 residing In an j&dj11<e11t nelJl!l>6t'hoocl' or conduCUng ' I bttsineu therein. 1.1 ' The hotel room ordlnanco u onl!IW!i'' ~nted la aimed at the "larJI! nwnben of unchaperoned mlnor1 (who) !>a .. tocentty adopted the proctlce ol rentlni hoMI and motel l'OOllll In the cit? and ' .~,jdoPJell the 'i*icflq, of lolling ofher mlnart oecu'py' 1A1!!,.reome m murlber•' (lkl•Ll..., Pqt I) . ·r ' ' • Orut1e ~ Ii ., ---~~--L------~-.,_.1t .:.J.. • .,_-#• d<>.• 't '• .,.,,, I s Cf .., E< .. !,,_ • 2 "' e I t ' • . ' ob'm .. ,• ' . ' .. ' SC L ·11da Breaks Dowit at C:Ongress OKs Independence Of Post .Office WMHlllGTON CAl'l -~ 1111 -..i.tti"'1P ao tile U.S. mailJ Iller -11 two -wr!et 111d the Pool Office --lo """"'"' bandk:apo tl>ll priaplOd -)IOllmU!er 1......i lo IOJ the doperlmtDt WU In "l l'ICO with dllNW." ,,.... Ilion two ,..,, alUr a )ftllden- lial CX"'1m!g\M """""""ode4_ It, and more Ilion -year alta Ibo lqillaUoa .... lotrecluced, COl1lretl ... t Tb!ll'lda7 lo Pnsidmt Nill>b a bill cruUna ao ia&pMeot t,,.S. i"<lltal-iervtce.. 11-Whltl Koue. hailed the crxuloa .. ... landmut day and • landmark piece of lep!atloa for ...,.. of the poltll -and poola! worbn" and uld N)mn -tip the ---IL It pnMda for ui.blilhmeot of tl>a ~ I-~ witl>ln a year llld • retroactlft ei,ht percent pa7 hlle for poola! . --· It allo mUel Ul<oly an 1ncr..,. In lint clau post.age rates -from the llx~nt lo an eJchk:ent stamp -early nen yaar. Tbe ntw Poolal S<rvice will be run b7 a -..... presldenlially .. ppofnled board ol aovernon who will oelect a poolmuter -al aod d • p u t y pGltmut« pneral. Rain will be RI not by Co-11 as for tile put Ill yean, but by a five-member rate commilsion with the 1pproval ol the board of 1ovemon. The postmaster general, frequently in the past a political haodiman of the presidtnt rather than a workin1 bud of t.bl mall •Yttem. wW be. rtmaved from tile Cabinet. The .... l)'Slom ~ des(cned lo modernl.&e and IUetmllne dellvery of the mails, and eventually to elimlnlte the huge dericlta that have been an annual IUlure of the Pool Offlce budiet for I.be past It )'tars. Festival Chief In 'Fair' Shape Festival ol ArU Dlredor v.....,. Beck. TT, remains in "fair" condlUon at South Coast Cmnmunity Hospital today. A b01Plta1 1powman .. 1d tllert had been UW. chanre 111 Beck's condition a1Dct be wu adm.Jtted Wednellday even- Inr -1Uffortn1 a 11l0ke. A former newspaperman, Btck, 396 Holly St., ba1 lq been UIOClated with the FUUval, u bua1neu manaa;er and member of tl>e board of dlrecton. He al9o is a dltt.etor of Llaunt federal Savlnp and Loan AUoclaUon and nprtltllU the Fee:Uval on the Clamber of Ccmmer<t board. DAILY PILOT " .............. ......... ,...., .... _ l•'I•'' N. W114 ~ ..... ,l*lltlllr .I••• •· C11rl1v Viet ,,..i.tr,1 -~I Mt,..,., llitM•t K1e•il l[lllo<' Tholfl1e A. Mu,,~/Re M ........ Ell!o>r li1~1r4 ,, Nill 1o11111 ~ c-•r •'"" -c.• MtM1 • Wt1t .. , ltl"MI N~ .. 1dl1 !211 W..t .... , h\t...._1'1111 a..---.11: m ,..,.., "- """"""""' fMcll; ltt7J .. tell • ., ....... .... ClilrMMttl • Hlnlll •• '-"" Iii .. • "I cui bOlirtt U>ey'. could do such ~·';.. ""..r.-• -I )'all_, 4'I Ltlllil!" "I now I didn\ do 11.'1 Ml't lie,. in me to do mcll an an!rnal\ldc \blnl.0 Kanarek suUQt«! a.gain that she also ran into the house wltb two youq ~ coderondanta Ol Oiarles Ma-ill tile case and Charles ''Tex" Wal.ion and that she might be unable to remember becauie she was in a state ol slw>ck at the time. Her voice ril1zt& t.o a shOul. Mn. Kasablall replied, "I just know I 4i<loi do It, Mr. KanarU .• Kanattli had be!UJI tile day'• q- Who'• a Clown: tlootn1 i., -..nn. 111'1. ~blan a Q>arlaa H. Oldtt IJ\Fuclod him tbal "Of cwroe I cOIJd." ..._.......,.al 1 .. lw tldlio.-°"--'!WN-l!Ot lie MC1Nll7 Ind lold lllnl -''W-'t!Ma.)our.~bo....,.., ..._ AWld .... ~•Ille lil&OaJ>eadYltlltbo-enmlntlloa. ·111 there, Olallta 1fl~ S-6Wfta .....,. If* ,.,~.Ii. J..,_ _ JI.a~ uked bar K tllal was tlle and Patricia Krenwtnkel! ' ¥n. 1'•Mat -. Mw PJtolt. t•lacty you A1 you .. .., at lht house?'' "Yes." byit.ericll n.u.day ....,... 'Wbln ''It tppean to be lht while gtiwn "Didn't you Nn Into the Muse to Kanal'et produced 1 photograph ef the and the long hair. I never saw her. protect the m?" bloady, almost nude bod)o of Klas Tfle fact." "No, I ran toward the hou• but I Inside I.he residence. The d6en.se lav.·yer sought lo establl1h didn't eo into IL" When the trial sesmon resumed qain that Mrs. Kasabian actually ran Into On 11\ursday Kanarek hall Ju1t asked today, Kanartk approached the tt·)'tl.!'-the house her!lf:lf with a knUe but the ttlrs. Kasabian wh-=.ther she looked okt blonde with 1 sheaf ol pictures witness denied flatly that she ever had through a wlndow ot tht house that and thrust one ton.rd her, Mrs. Kasa· done 80. night last August wbllt without another bian took one. look and tbetl averted ''When you heard tcreams comin& word he. g1vt her the pfcture. her bead . from the house didn't )'Oil cart what I\ •ho'-"1 Miss Tate, cJlcJ only In Ktn.arek 1ttempted to hive tht wltnes:i h1ppened to anyone inslde1 11 • Kanartll JlllllUU. tying on 1!t ttab* ride with take the plcturt tn htr band but Judie asked. ber hand ntended ~~ )lit head. She • w11 covel'M. wlih blood ,.00 there were clc!atly vialblt knlle wo\!nds 11' htir ot>- vtoo.ly propwll body. , Mrs. Kuablln had tesufied prevlpusly, ahe saw three alayina~ at tbe estate oulllde the house last Aug. 9 but thal ahe did not witness the k\11.ing of Miss Tate and hair stylist Jay Sebrirl1 io the living room . Mrs. leaaabian's gasp was audible throughout the courtroom. She burst lnt!J tears and could not speak. She was· lead oU to an anteroom while the Jawytr1 conferred In the judge's chambers. Tben. the trial"WU recessed overnight. Kanarek declined to tell news.men why he 1uddenly handed tbe &lrl the picture. Woodlatu,: :Spokes111a11 DAll.Y PILOT ltefr ....... I City Inspection A Threat to All? A &poke1rnan for Lacuna'• W09dland Drive area aald today he I.! "alnazed that the people haven't rtalized the fact that all citizens could be affected lf the inspecUoo ii carried out througboot the city." Artist Andy Wlna. who lives in Victory Walk, also noted that the residents ·o1 Woodland, the rustle canyon area, where the inspection wlll begin. are working on neceuary le&al procedures to becom• a community organization . The three-pronged lnapecUon waa authorized by the city council in the wee hours Thursday morning following 90 minutes of animated cUtcuaslon. The inspection wlU be held on a city· wlde basis, btillnnl:ng in the Woodland area, and tben move to other priority areas within the city. Building, health and fire violationr will be checked out. pects to begin !he_ inspection in Woodland in eight weeks. "He will evaluate the indiv idua.1 pro- perties, Identify the deflciericie .9, and categorize them." Springe said that any code violations 1would have to be corrected immediately. There are al50 "dangerous conditions" which are gi ven a certain period of lime in which to be corrected. Non-cOn· forming features, which were legal years aa:o, but not legal now. due to changes in the law, may remain, he noted. Springe said that there are /e 511 than 40 buildings in ilie Woodland area, and that the percentage of non·resldent land- owners i.!I high . "But we don't think that will present a problem. We 'll notify them of any violations and glve them an amount of time to correct them . It shouldn 't involve th e tenants out there at all." 11UnbeUevable," is the reaction of Coconut (rl&bt), S.year-old clown for Ringling Bros.·Barnum and Bailey Circus, as his sidekick, Coco the Clown, is tapped as an honorary DAILY PILOT carrier boy. The bonest-l<>&oodne11 carrier boys are 11-year-old Costa M•san.s Bob Maurer (left) and Ron McDan· iels, who got a le11on in circus makeup from Coco. For more clownina around , see PaJit:e 8. Residents of the area fear the in- spection Is a prelude to razlng their homes. City officials say it Is to correct housing violations. "There i.s so much nonconforming housing everywhere In town ," Win& emphastted. "Since the city has decided to do this inspecUon on a citywide basis, my feeling of rtaponslb!Uty at thla point is to the community. Oay Mitchell Said 'Doi11g Fine' Front Page 1 YIPPIES ... makes it a mu.st.'' Security police made a complete sweep of the park 'after the guest.I had left to rout any Ylppies left after the crowd was escorted from Disneyland. The Yippies regrouped outalde the park: and threw rocks and debris at officers before heading for the Disneyland Hotel whert they wert confronted by more police units. They finally disperSed at 9:30 p.m. 'The only other lime the park closed early wu: • memorlal aesture· followlq the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963. From Page 1 TRUCE .•• by the agreement to stop the flghUng on the: UAR·lsraeU front which 11 con- sidered to be: the most serlou1 area of Middle Eastern hostllltJes. The maln problem alona the Israeli· Jordanian lront 1rt the Pale1Unlan com- mando units which are nat controlled by the: Jordanian government but whkh •rrate from Jordanian territory. Some o these commando groups have In· dtctled they w\U honor the ceast·flre while other.a gave ltated they will not bt bound by It. Secrttlty Roger1' announcement was a Urst step In his Mldeau Peace lnlUaUve of June 29 whlch hid been addreutd to the United Arab Republic-, Jordan, and ISr'1el. , The U.S. pe:ace plan contained two part.I : ·-The re-establishment ·of the Mideast 90 days. -Simultaneously, the resumpUon of' the peace seeking mlsa.ion of Dr. GuMlr V. Jarrlnc. the U.N. peace mediator with lht UAR. Jordan and larael. From Page 1 LAWS •.. exceedlns the 1afe limitation." Thi!, saya the ordinances, Is "harmful to the health and morala of Pld minors and to the pubUc health, safety and welfare." the ordlruinct Identifies "mtoor1" aa pertan1 between the aces of 18 and 11, "adultt:" 11 persons over 21 and "mJnon; child" 11 peraoru under 18. Tbe proposed law would ban occupancy or bbtel rooma by more th~ five minors (uoiltr JI) uni.,, aocompanled by an adult wbo rtf\ltert for a period equal to the Jonaut 1tty of any one minor. lt would fUrtbtr bar accupaney by any minor cblld (undtr 18) unle11 ac· compan~ by a p1renl, Jeaal guardian er reiponaJblt ldult (over 21) authorized in wrilln& by the chUd '1 parent or leaal ,..nttan. Tht partnt, 1u1rdJan or responalble adult allo would be requlrtd to re main nat1i.ered durlnc the room occupancy ofthelllln<>rdl!)t1· San Clemente Religion Youth Program .Dropped "I want to see that the city does ihings In a lawful and equitable manner -everywhere." Wing said that in Woodland "papers are being drawn up" to form a com· murllty otganlzatlon. He aatd that It w;n· be divided Into two aectJons -the home· owners and the residents. Plans to bold an audio-visual procram for youth on ·~ Clemlllle'• ~t ha ve been droflped .. fodaf ~"'au.te of reluctant by the city to authortJt the evtnt. Spokesmen for the San Clemente UnJted Presbyterian Church said the plana for the "Underground Collage" program ptttented by a graduate dtvlnity student were abandoned because city approval might come too late for the 11cheduled Aug. 28 performance. PermlJsion from the 1ovemm1 body of the church also had not been &lven as of last Wednesday night whm church Youth Director Neat McBride uked for city permlulon. The Protr•m would hive involved several projection screen• and aound equipment facing the sea near lifeguard headquarter1. CoLri1cilmen balked when they 'earned that pouibly 1.000 persons. m06Uy teenager•, could be expected for the evening performance of 1 program in- tegratina: music and araphics w\lh a reu11oua messaae. ..Unduground Collaae·• •dn't sit too w;I\ l!ltl> ~·)I' • i "That Word undergroun has an un· palatable meanin& somtUmts:· O'Keei'e 11ld. Instead of making a decision , the coun- cil referred the matter to parks and recreation commiulooen for a recom- mendation, but the comm Iss i on ' s meeUn1. McBride later aeclded, would be too late lo make plllll for the pro- IJ'lm. The presentation would have been pro- vided by Wayne Lukens, a student al the Claremont Graduate School of Theoloty. "Woodland Is al.ready intrinsically very beautiful and unique, With a community asaoclation . Woodland could be developed iJto something fine." To iel up the community oraanlr.atlon, citiunJ, with the aid of attorneys, will draw up a constituUon and by-laws, which ,.re then presented t.o the etate for approval. Wing said that at the present time he doubted "If too many people will cooperatt with the Inspection." "Of course, we're still •marting a little bit." Clyde Z. Sprince. city bulldlnf and plaMin,11'. director Pld today that ht ex· .SUMMER Councilman Ttlomu O'Keef~ told McBride the title of the proaram l $5,000 Burglary, .. From Playhouse For Vengeance? Detectives belJeve the $5,000 bur1lary of sound equipment frotn. the lAicuna Moulton Playhouse may have hid a vtceanct motlvt. The brazen burglary that lefl the new theater temporarily lnoperaUve In the sound department was discovered Tuts- vengeance motive . Stolen ltema Included 1 $500 sound mixer panel, a stereo tlpe recorder, amplifiers, a playback 1yattpl, speaker1, microphones, headphonea, cables and electrical connectors. There wa1 •lmllartty to the theft of St.800 worth of llOUnd equipmenl from the auditorium of U,Una Btladl Hieb School last month. CONTINUES Hetndon Ofhrs "OFFICERS CHEST COLLICTION," Complete Occaslonpl, · DlnlnlJ & Bedroom, ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINCiSI • DNx•I Featufft "ESPERANTO$" EntlN Collection. • Heril'a'J• Reduces Its Complete "MADRICiAL" Collectfon. H!NREDON & HERITAGE UPHOLSTERY 15°/o OFF State Board of Education member Clay Mitchel! is reported "doing fine.. at South Coa st Commun ity Hospital. where he was admitted July 27 fo!Jow\ng a hei.rl attack. Mitchell , 59. of 11 S. Alta Mira Road, South Lai\'na, is out of the intlnslve care unlt ahti ~hould be well ~nough to go home soon , a hospital spokes man said. - A lhember of tbe Otarise County school board for seven years. Mitchell was appointed lo tht state board by Governor Reagan tn February. Mamie Given Stamp WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A •lx~ent stamp honoring fOl'Tlm President Dwight D. Eisenhower was presented lo his widow Thursday in White H o u s e ceremonies. The prescntaUon was made in President Ni.xon1s office. Postmaster General \Vlntcn M. Bl'lunl nrrr""'led the st11mr) tfl ~'r? f'"r.ii,. r • - Det. Gent Brooks 11\d today, "Thia possibly could be a vtn1eance.type thlna. They appearld to know what t.lity were loolclna for ind there w11 a 1U,ht amount of malicious mi&chlef. 0 th Ines that could delay the ahow." DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE Brookl uld the mllchlef Included ocat· terlat of UahUog cue card.I and remov1l ol batterlu from llaahlllbll. The burglary occurrea ·1u•t befort the continuation or the muatca "Oliver" with 1 ntw caat. The 1how dldJio on. after sound equipment waa burrl ly rtnted. 'T'he new pll1yhouse suffered anotbtr tetback earlier when IOmtone entered ju1t before the openln1 of a play and Unkmd with w~IJ1s and removed labela ldenlllyln1 owltcbea. NEWPORT llACK 17'l7 Waotcllll Dr. fl42·2050 OPEN ,RIDAY 'TL f INT·IRIORS 'm..tl-1 l•lvltr O.olgntn Availabl9-AID-HllD " LAGUNA IEACH S45 Nor1h Coaot Hwy. 494-6551 0,IN r~IDAY 'TIL 9 ,. ... t.n ,,_ M• ef °'-tic_, Hl·114J ' ( · . . --' ' . . . . -~~· ............... ·~~-,....~·~-""'~-:--"""'""';:::::-=c=""'""~--.:--::.-..;-:"...,,,,.,,,,,..,.,,,,, .......... ~ ....... ~ ............................................................................. .. LagunaSigft Law Words Meet Mr. ~alptOr .. Popu °l&r Artist Ernesto Get Action L™t Wame Now Reality Apparently accideota! omilalon of the word "straight" lrom an 1mendment to the sign ordinance tias forced the Laguna Beach city council to adopt an urgency ordinanoe with lhe correct wording. Councilman Edward Lorr Wednesday aaid he had mlli.ed, after the ordinance was adopted and printed, that it referred to measurlng wilh "connecting lines" instead of "connecting straight I~." which could make a substantial differ- ence in final measurement. Sign maker Earl Sealrd, who noted this was his Mineteenth meeting in • marathon attempt to accomplish the amendment, said be was certain the: council had voted on the coned wording and suggested lhc city staff had tater manipulated the phr13eOlogy to change its meaning. City Attorney Jack Rimel said that since the ordinance had been formaDy adopted and the wording (even 1f tn.- correel) published, there would be no way to change it except by adopting a new ordinance. "Could we do it in an accelerated way'!" queried Councilman Char1toD •1 FllBDIClllClt km£MEBL .... ...__,..,~ Ernesto II a ~· 'J1le coun decreed U. t Ernollo ftllllly aql (liped by IOO many people uklfts for;~ Wt name. He didn't bavt ont1 h be 1ave in, nnt throuih lhe le1l1 '' lialJ1e.dllnge -ced.,., and w'Jild up u Ernesto Sculptor. 1 I He'1 • popular Ubibltor.~rartaman at the Feotlval of ~ 11J the day ho sits in his booth, ~~ out ring1, tea1lng tourisb, IDd ~ hll ever-present thin cigan. I Jo lid. b~ um. .,.. nolbln1 but Etu. ctil• ,..U wllh hiJ name tmboaed on u,im. Ernesto came to the Fest.iv•! in 1965, after llvt~'t..cuna for • year. Now, in '* 1ur at the ahlbil, ho sllD keeps wllcben hippy. Da"f l;larbor Meons Widening ~ Fo r Del Obispo Boyd. The' dangeroua kinks will be taken "Are you suggesting an urgency out <!}. CapWraDO Beach'a winding Del ordinance?" returned Mayor RiChard ObilPO Road by next year. The revamped Goldberg, u the audience, recalling re-higtN:iy, which also will be widened, cent council problems with urgency will iccommodate the 25,000 ca;s ex- crdlnances, broke into laughter· pectpc1 to travel to the new Dana Harbor The council agreed that in this case ex!/ day. an urgency ordinance would be 1 '11lat was the promise: this wetk madt legitimate methcd or correcting the er-b)~ Orange County Road Engineer Hal ror. ked to Kflzan. He told a committee. or the City Planner Al Autry was as . . ~pMrttano Beach Chamber of Com· read the council's ·approved definition erce that Del Oblspc bas top priority cC "exterior perimeter" once more, describing the measlln!!ment with "con· because of traffic projections. necting straight lines." Tbe data show the road wil1 ha~e "That's what you voled on," said 'a 400 percent increase in vehicle traffic Secord. Goldberg said be thought ao, too, , with the opening or the flrst portions but since the incorrect version has beeq I of the harbor next spring. The Pacific printed, it would have to ~ corrected1 · Coast Freeway also will affect the load with another ordinance. The ci ty attorney,; on the busy roadway, he added. was instructed to draw up the ne In a talk before the chamber roads law. . ~ and signs committee, the engineer said It was further agreed that a d1agD,rn the existing traffic load of 6,100 cars drawn up by the staff and appro.;id per day will soar lo 25,000 vehicles within by the Planning Commission. illustrrg a year or so. the method" of sign measurem~ 1s_o The winding, tw~lane road, Is a major would have to be redrawn, 1111 it north-sooth artery of the west ·Capistrano included curved line!. / Valley. lt will be widened to four lanes I IOl!th of Stonehill. Laguna Coun Voices Suppo t Of Religion • nne The Laguna Beach City C ncil voiced support of the school dlstrl 's proposed released time religion c ses. <?oun- cilmen are working on ~ of waiving city ordinances to acco ate It. They acted in res to the plea of the Rev. Donald H. lrd, mln!st:'r of Christian educaUon at e commumty Presbyterian Church a1 cbalnnan of Lhe released time p am sponsored by nine churches. ed to begin in ted at fourth trailer cla!!room the three elemen4 to four-hour ses- The program, ached September. will be grade.rs and will use to be towed to each tary achooi• ror lhr :&ions each week. At Aliso and El schools, Baird said, the baller ca be parked on the :school groundJ, ·but ause of the dlf· flcult terrain at p of the World it will be neawsary e park on a street near th~ echool. The most -ultabje street, he sald, bas residence ob one side only and is SO feet wide, · tr1Uer being eight. f~et wide. Some rt of parking penn1ss1on would be ed, along with per~ssion The Capistrano Beat:b southbound off. ramp of the Coast Freeway will send harbor and beach tra[fic over this seg- ment of roadway. Extension. of Allpaz, a combined pro. ject of Orange County and the City of San Juan Capistrano, will provide direct access to the harbor and beaches from the central Capistrano Valley over the new widened Del Obispo. When the Victoria extension brid&ing the San Juan channel ind Sante Fe tracks Is completed in 1972, the south segment of Del Obispo abooinay become the major artery for shoppers from the Coast Highway sections of Dana Point and Laguna Niguel who travel to the Capistrano Beach Plaza shopping center. Woman. 26, Injured In County Crash Dies Severe injuries suffered three weeks "l.O in a Buena Park traffic accident pr'bved fatal Thursday night for a Los Angeles woman who never regained con- sciousness. Mrs. Lllllan Ortega, 26, died in the ~ 1intensive care unit to which she was f admitted July 18 shortly after her car ~struck • dividing wall between the Santa Ana and Riverside freeways in Buena Park. NOT SO FUNNY tn plug in an e ·cal connection without liaving the tr !tr classroom considered a dwelling unit 1' 1 City Attome Jack Rimel, wh.o said PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -A funny he was bl 1ym thy with the program, thl•g happened on the way to thf. 8a.id it would be possible to condone Portland 1.oo 'lllurJday morning. violation of an ord!Jiance, particularly Four-year old Royce Lowe of Eugene with regard to traffic. but suigested ~a~ pulling his wagon through the roo 's a parking ZOlll! .90me sort might be ~Ule.s when both he and the wagon established. ; got \ltuc:t. His father, Gayle, was close Baird said the , complete with behbt and came to the rescue. trailer, Is In o Ion In several other ~ ~ father fiJ:ed thlnp ao well il county cities aod el was asked by tooai four zoo maintenance men 30 the c:ouncll to to the next council mtd'Utes to dl.nemble tht wagon and me-eUng Q.ll what · n could be taken rei«iJl:se the father-'°" team. to facWtata its ope here. L on .iixon "Can J tell )'OU IOml of my junk!" be quipped u one lady puaed by • The jllllk can coot up to '2,llOO. Rings In btome belln u low u 1$. He began aculpllng 34 yun ago with ceramics. "But tt broke too wily, ao now I do everything in metal. •1 Ernesto, now 41, has seen business flourish tince he came to Laguna from his native Cuba via a abort stop in Muaachusetts. "When J came to Laguna, I coukt only aell two rings a week. People. w~ afraid to buy them from ICUlptors, because they weren't sure or what they were getting. "But compellltoo bu helped. With all the other ringmaken around. all tindll or people are buying rinp. Now I sell about 10 rinp • day." , Using a welding torch and .90me other specialty IOOia, Ernesto can put a ring together in three to four minutes. "But for a good gold rlng, It takes about two hours, beta.use I have to weigh the gold. One ring took me lour hours to fmisb." SltUng in bis small booth at lhe Festival, Ernesto chats w1th many of the Festival vial ton who walk by. From their eipressions an4 comments, they are obviously pleased. And so la Ernesto. "It makes me feel proud to think aU these people are interested in my work." You might say Ernealo Sculptor bu lived up to his name. • I 1. Scats big e nough for Hve big people. ~ . 2. Over 12 cubic feet or luggage space. 3. Steel cargo guard in lrunk. 4. Rust figbllnJ ftush·and·dry rocker panels. S. Inner fenders, fronl and rc::i r, lo protect the outer fender~. 6. Low profile tires on 14" wheels. 7. Springs computer matched to weight of the car. 8. 140-bp SL< or 200.bp VB . • FrldiJ, A11g111\ 7, 1970 L DAILY Plll11' 3 LAGUNA'S ERNESTO LABORS AT HIS FESTIVAL BOOTH Pitying the Nam• Game and Teasing th1 Tourists • 9. Magic-Mirror acrylic lacque r finish. 10. Automatic ignition key alarm • 11. Rear windows that roll up and down. 12. Foot-operated parki ng brake:. 13. Glove c.ompartmeot that locks. 14. Body by Fisher. Your Chevy dealer may still have some left But you bcuer hurry, because he's offering summer clear· a nee deal~ on all new Novas in stock. Putting you first, keeps us first • rs Minutes Due For Closer City Look Minut.a or La-Bach city C<ldacil meetings aJ>Pirentty are due ror t.IO!ler scrutiny ln the future. Customarily adopted as a routine item, the minutes lately have been sub}ected. to critk:lsm in the press and by c0tm- ctlmen themselves because of alleged omissions and di.screpaocies. Tape recording of the meetings have errors resuhing from con f us i n C dlscus.sion of cootrovenial 3UbjectJ. This week. minutn o( four r.aot meetings were up for approval. lo each case some correction was requested. In two instances. Councilman Edwi!rd Lorr noted that hls minority '"nay" vo~s -one on continuance of lhe hou5ing inspection di!ICUS8k>n, another on a benefit for lhe Free Clinic - bad oot been noted. He asked tha t the votu be placed tn the record. Ci1y Attorney Jack Rimel suggested that any councilman wishing to have such a vote recorded ln the future should request a roll call. ~nles.! a roll call ls taken. said Rimel, It Ls cuatomary to note only that a motion pa.utd. or railed. -·- Sewers ot Good Edbugh for City t I ' Clearance savings now. The sewers Of the Weslr(n Wblte-House . mon etactlc•, .b being offered by the nd of neighboring Cy~ Shoru hav. Cyprus Shore Community Aa.!oclatlon, ~n offered free to lht City of SM \rblcb ~borne the cost of malnten~ Cle.me.nte 1lnce I~ 1Yltfm1s construction . B t th · ·iy doesn't wanl them-JU6t 'f1h'll' Into that network are mains u e c1 from die Wblt. HDUae Compound . yet In oft'trinc the dedication this wtek, The network-which cost the origtnal AaoclaOon. Prttidrnt Roy Dickson Aid tlevek>per of the posh re1l~enUal arta the bort\eCrtlmerl have penonally paid oimosl 1100,000 and the relidents abOot !or ~ er the l)'IUm for 10 ss,800--have some problems whk:h mu.st years, ~udbta ~ Open.Ill to clean ho repa~ed before the city will !Ue matnr ~ ...i the jolnis. lhtm over. II and Wb<n San Clcnente accepll City Engineer Phil Peter told toun• the network. the malnl.nance dutiel will cllmen this week that impellers-revert to the city with t he Shoru tboostet machanlsms which Improve the ruidenta paytna·the lees through ealsUn.g tlow ) are falling apart and need repall'I. propertf t11. UnlU lhe job U done, he added. he Dickson 1tre&sed that the tewer syatm'I recommends that the sewen stay in wu built to aerve aft aru four lhne1 prlvoto o•ner.tllp. u grtat \u ll>e CyptuJ Shore colonJ The dedk».Uon of the system, a com· ltHIL You're let _ on ·ngsTin..e. \ ' (ewi.I ... " .. Dlllff Plllt ll•fO London strongman Wi1lter Com• llua is looking; for an attrac:ti"e sin~t Rirl with e.nough sine"' to crack concrete (Iver his head and help lu2 his dumbbells. The 45-- year-old Cornelius. who heaves on the .sLa.ste. said she "'111 .. need to wield a sled2ehammer to crack slabs of concrete across my head." "Above all. she mu st be sin2le.'1 he said. "J'\'e had enoueh trouble with jealous husbands. I iust want someone "'ho is nice t-0 look at and able to help me carry my dumb- bells." • Poli.cl! art of! tht /ook11u1 for n naked Bnton who UJkts day. time 1tr olls near a lakt .• 4. polict 1poktsman said 1hr rnon UHIS &tt'n by t wo passing motori.sl.,. "It mu.st. bt th t hot weothtr," tht 1pokt sman said. • Somethinjl is crooked at Louis- 'rille City Hall -its three-story century-old to.,.,·er is Jeanin2 four inches, officlals sav. Larry Mat- tingly, superintendent of public properties. said he "'asn't \\'orried about it, ho~·ever. "Jf the tower has only leaned four inches in 100 years, I can 't see ho\IJ there could be much danger," he said. • T'-''O trained monkeys, Lab.n and Liselotte, set of! a bur2lar alarm in their ca2e in a Maimoe, Sweden pet shop \Vednesday nij?ht. Police found 1wo youn.1?sters trying to steal fish from an aquarium. • Thr wrt ckogf' nf 7.680 cor1 wo& 'coUtrf'd on the San D1ef10 frat.wall lVednt sday but 011/y ttDa Highway Patrolmen u•4111 nf'tdtd to clear it owo y. T he 1/'rtckt d vt hiclrs Wf:Tt !OJI TflC· ing mod.tis tchich f ell off a dt· livtrJI truck. • Robert Gregory, 32, of Bradwell. England was injured Y.'hen thrown trom a speeding baby carria.1?e. oolice said , Gre.1?ory "'as taking part in a viUaie race. • S•m Morris, head o! a north London s hoplifting firm. advertis- ed in the Times !or retired. con· victed shoplifters. He said he \vants to learn from the pros tile secrets of their trade so he can better design security measures for his clients at the shoplifting stage. • "'f ,, ••• ·1 $n~trn ·~::~t~1::.n ° A~r~:~P~~~r. H gr um last wt.tic co/lt d for po-h lirt tn brt ok up 0 dtmons[rt2· r tion. Tht "Yt ol policf'. didn't g,.t the word. T ht.11 broke up tht de· monstratio11 a11d were obou! to take movit maker Robbt Dt Htrt ~ to jail u;h t n tht y discovtrtd ~ thtir 1;1istake. ~ • Otto Kle.mperer, noted German· Jey,·ish conductor. took out Israeli citizenship Tuesday, the Ministry of Interior announced. Klemperer, 85. also holds s"'iss citizenship, He has been living in Zurich since Hitler's rise to pov.•er in Germany. He plans to take up residence here. frWQ, A119USL 7. 1970 Governor's Orders • Troopers to_Halt Rock Festivities By llalttd Press 1nteniedoaa1 \..o\', Dewey Bartlelt had 5enl state troopers to stop • rock festival planned for this v•eekend near Sulphur, Okla., and Max E. Sulcer. sponsor o( the festival. "'AS med. "All those gesl.apo at the gate," Sulce:r said Thursday afltr troopers cleared out the site of the rock festival. "You would lhink.1'. was htil HiUer day." Firebombing Continuing In Ohio City LIMA. Ohio (UPI ) -Sniper fj,. ond firebombing hit this northwt!Slern Oh.io city of SS.000 again Thursday for the second night in a row. Nobody was reported injured. A Molotov cocktail destroyed a linoleum and furniture store and 20 ar· rests for curfew violations were made . Police sa id thr: gunfire, from riflr:s and small arms, was aimed al store ll'indows. National guardsmen called into Lima after a Negro woman's killing t.ouched off racial disorders \\'ed~sday will slay for th~ weekr:nd tn patrol the southside . The 500 guardsmen, all 80 ci ty policemen and sheriff's deputies from 12 other e<1unties kept all persons off the-streets as an 8 p.m. lo 6 a.m. curfew was extended indelinilr:ly. Col. J. E. P. McCann. administrative assistant to the Ohio National Guard adjutant general, said the troops would stay to ensure against a flareup of trouble. "Wt expect 10 be here al least unltl Sunday nigh t," McCann said . Police said the sniper fire, which they first encountered Wednesday night aft.r:r dispersing a gun<arrying mob that started downtown, came mostly from darkened windo.,.,'s or rooft ops. The violence followed the kilting or 1rtrs. Christine Ricks, 40, who tried lo stop two \li'hite patrolmen from arresting a black )"outh bloc king a street with his bicycle. Poli~ said the y,·oman grabbrd patrolman Glen Pierre's rt.vol.,.er and began firing at him. She wa s shot dead by his -parlner, Ted Boop. Duri ng that first night of \•iotence, fl\'e persons were wounded, including three policemen. Seven othcr!i were ar· rested. Eight fires were 11et and &ix police car.I hit by snipers. Several suburbs joined in ordering a curfew for Thursday night and fl.fayor Christian Morris continued tht. ban on the ~le of gasoline and carrying of guns. ABM Showdown Set Wednesday 'VASHlNGTON !UPI ) -A Senate ~howdown on the Safeguard ant1ballistic missile 1ystem {ABM ) has been 6el for ne xl Wednesday , \\'ith opponents believed to be one or ty,·o \'Oles shy bf victory in their effort to block ex pansion of the syste m. The opposing sides agreed Thursday, the first anniversary of lasl year's dramatic 50 to 50 tie vote on lhe ABM, to end this year 's debate al 3:30 p.m . tEOT) nexl \Ved ncsday. The key vole Y.'ill bf> on an ainendment by Sens. Ph ilip A. Hart ! O-r..i ich. ). and John Sherman Cooper IR·Ky.), to confine the ABJ\1 lo the existing two sites in Montana and North Dakota and bar construction of further Installations. Headcounters on both sidt.s behe\'e anolber cliffhanger ii in the making. It didn't took like SUlcer would 1et tiil festival, but anolber festival wes in full B'Nlng before it bt:&an near Jackson, Mich .. and a federal court ap- provtd a 10.hour festival in Philadelphia on Sunday. Officials in a Penruylvanla township were trying to halt a rock festival there planned for Aua. 2&-30. Promoters of the festival near Jacbon had expected 60,000 young people - each payin& $1S for three days or music by 21 bands -but Michigan state police said up to 70,000 persons bad come to the 3$-acre Goose Lake Park Thunday night -U hours before the firat band was to )le1in today. Poli~ uid 15 or 20 or the new arrivals were arrested on narcotics cltare:es, but there ~re no wious incidents. A 400- man private police force kept the peace, and watched a l2·foot-high electrified barbed wire fence to keep out easy riders. The Strawberry Fields Festival begins today in Morport, Ont., some 90 miles northeast of Toronto and 750 mUes from its original location in Moncton, New Brunswick. Canadia n i m m i g r a l i o n authorities are turning back thousands of Americans al the border. After a U.S. district court judge ap- proved a 10-hour rock festival in Philadelphia Sunday slate and local governments asked an appeals court lo reverse the decision. Gov. Raymond P. Shafer said he feared "serious harm" from the festival and said the promoler~ could be jailed for violatin1 a stale law which prohibits commercial concerts on Sunday. The promoter of the festival is Peatt, Inc., an organization which raises cam- paign money for peace candidales. The chairman of the fund distribu· tion committee is former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark. In Oklahoma. District C.ourt Judge Bob Hoy,•ell ordered the site of the propol'led Turner Falls Rock Festival near Sulphur padlocked Thursday after Bartlett told him the restival y,•ould be held Saturday and Sunday despite an injunction against it. Bartlelt mobilized 300 Nation a I Guardsman and s.kit 100 Highway Patrolmen to the sit~f the ftstival in southern Oklahoma's Arbuckle Moun - 1a1 n and closed highways Jeadin1 to Turner falls. Panther Gives Vivid Account Of 'Last Ride' NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI) -Block Panther ·ceorge Sams Jr., who has plead· ed guilty to murder charge11 in the death of one party member, said Thurs- day he had been ordered to shoot Chicago Panther Fred Hampton. Sams, a key prosecution witness in the murder conspiracy and kidnaping trial nf Lonnie Mcl..ucas, was to be cross·ex am ined today in Superior Court. Mclucas is accused in connection with the May 21 . 1969, death of Alex Rackley , an alleged police informer whose tortured body was found in a Middlefield swamp. Sam s and another Panther, Warren Kim- bro. have both pleaded guilty to second- degree murde r in the slaying . Sams said he was present when Rackley was tortured with boiling waler, taken for a ride and shot twice with a .4X aliber pistol. "We went on a road." Sa ms testified. "The next lhing I knew . we were pulling over. I Rave Warr en the gun and said 'These orrlers from na tional -ice him.' ''The gt1n went off and I seen Racklr y spin arou nd and hil the ground," Sam.'! continued . He ~aid he sent, Mclucas back to make 51.Jrt Rackley was dead, and the Panther fired a second shot into Rackley ·s head. Sunshine Scatters Showers Few Rainstorms As Nation Basks in Pleasant Weather / UPI f....,_1HI Q11een of Smog The air was rare in a park in P hiladelphia Thursday as Debra WoU. 17, y,•as chosen as Miss Smog America 1970 during a non ceremony. Uruguay Band l(idnaps ' U.S. Agriculture Expert MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay tUPIJ Tupamaros terrorista kidnaped an American agriculture expert Crom his laboratory today only hours before the ransom deadline for another Amer ican adviser and a Brazilian dlplomat ab- ducted a week ago. The U.S. embassy reported that Cla ude L. F'Jy, 65, of Fort Collins, Colo., was taken from the lab shortly before 6 a.m. PDT, as he talked wit h a group of Uruguayan agriculture specialists. An anonymous telephone call to a local radio station said Fly was taken by the Tupamaros and spirited to the same hiding place where Americ an ad- viser Dan Mitrione, :.0, Richmond, Jnd., and Bratilian consul Aloysio Dia.!l Gomide, 41, were bein1 held. The telephone call J;aid thal "justice'' would be dealt to all lhree men if the government did not agree by mid· night tonight to releast: an tstimated 150 political prisoners in Uruguayan jails. Uruguayan President JOrge Pachec-0 Areco has stood firm in his refusal to deal with Tupamaros, a left.wing band named for a Peruvian Inca , Tupac Amaru, \li'ho led an unsuccessful re volt against th• Spanish in the 18th century, Fly moved to Urugua y last January under a private contract wilh the Uruguayan government after· leav ing the teachin1 stall or Colorado State Universi· ty. The embassy said he is a nativt: of Fulbright, Tex .. and Is employed by International Development Services, inc. Early apartment dwellers had to live with flames. Step inside any a\l.elec1ric Medallion the clean, fresh look 0£ the d peries Apartment. You 'll see why they're set· and the uphol,ttry. That's cause ting the trend. Notict how the 11· ele(\tric heat is clean h t. kitchen glc;ams. Why? Because . • Now the b;athroo . Turn there: are no by-products of on the water tap. N le how combusti on to dirty walls the electric wa.ter he ' r gi ve:s and "'in dO"'s. No opp ressive you hot water-right ow. kitche n hea t, e:ithtr. Electricity heats Enter the bedroom. See th cp.aratr: the food -not the kitchen . heat dial? You can only ha e room· \Valk into the living room. Notice by.room te:mJ1:er1tur1: con ol 1£ lt'1 I ... -1 • . __,1 U.S. Awaits Hanoi Move In Paris PARIS (UPI) -Ambassador David 11::-'E. "Bruce brou1ht o1 whole new seriea o( peaoe proposals to Parll but none will 'ur!ace in tither public or secret negotiations until Hanoi glvflll somelhing in return for President Nlxon'a IP' poinUnent of a r111king negotiator, an authoritative diplomatic aource said to- day. "n'le diplomat avoided U!lna the term "coalition government" in dlscLIS.'ling the new and as yet unuplored possibilities for peace, but he mentioned a "sharing of power'' that could be discussed by Hanoi and U.S. negotiators without the participation of Saigon negotiators. The diplomat said the United Stites would mate no attempt to resume secret negotiations with Hanoi until Washington is satisfied it is dealing with a qualified negolialor. American negotiators are conlident Hanoi will soon send one of their ranking negotiators back lO Paris. possibly within a few weeks, the diplomat .1aid. The diplomat noted that the most senior member of Hanoi'! ne~otlating team in Paris is Nguyen MiAh Vy, "who is No. 3 or 4, dependln1 On bow you counl." The United States is not ruling out cont.acts with Vy "on the technicality of his rank" the diplomat said , but he noled that In the eyes or Ameri<:Jn negotiators "he has never sho.,..·n tha t he is anything more than a repeat-the- old·position guy." The diplomat said Amer I c 1 n negotiators would happily hold 1eeret talks with \1y, but first they v.·ould have to have "some indication that Vy is more than someont who simply gives statements when someone pu.1he.s but· ton." Only 1 Sextuplet Remains Alive 1\0ME (UPI) -'I'he survivor of SU· tupltts born Tuesday to the wife of a $-40-a.week factory worker.,. drank her first milk today th.rough a tube running into her incubator. Doctcrs at Umberto Hospital said the girl, who weighs 28 ounces, wa!'i fed several grams of breast milk aDd that her condition remained stationary, They sa id her chances for survival were slim. Anna M;iria Petrone, so tiny she fit in a doelbr's hand , was the last re- maining cblld o( Antonio and Loredana Petrone, ~ became the parents of sextuplets Tuesday ni1ht after 11 childless years . 1"'· ll'"'X t>'W 'f') lt )#I 'llf\11 tj'' '·~· _..,,... .... -.-::-~ , ... -~ electric. Many Medallion Apai rtmtntl also providt •!ectric air co nditionin1. The rent? Like Medallion Homes, ~~edallion Apartments are also avail· able in all price r.ingr:s . You c.in ,et why more people art choosing to live 1hc good c.lean life-electrically. ~ Southern C.liforni• Edi&on I l • • • • • . . ' . ' . I • . • r ' ' 7 Sa1t t;temente -apisirano • .N.Y. Steeb ' YOt.:. 63 , NO. '188, 4 SECTIONS, ·42 PAGES ORANGE COtJNTY, CALIFORNIA . FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, '1970 TEN CENTS • ' ar Disneyland Enf orcin.g 'Modified' Dress .. Code By STEVEoMITCRELL 04 1tle .,.,. ...... l!Mt -Disneyland officials have banned all long-hatred y o u t bs from the Magic Kin1dom following a confrontation between Orange Col{Rty lawmen and 300 Yipples that cutmlnated In the park closing six hours early Thursday. Eighteen youths were arrested as a result of the confrontaUon which took place on the park's Main Street at 6:55 p.m. Long-haired and denim-clad, the van- guard of the Yipple group converged upon Disneyland af ,noon Thursday to celebrate "National ¥:tppie Day ." day, ranP.:\g from ,a sing-in on Captain Hook's ptrate shlp to a disturbance at the Monsant(I display In Tomorrowland. 'Illen lhe incideiits stepped up. The unstheduled clOSUl't of the famed tourist attraction, tbe aecond since the park opened in 1956, came after the group of hippie-ytpe youths marched up Main Stfeet, chanting obscenities and singing soogs. The g r o u p left Ton\ Sawyer's· Island at about 8 p.m. before heading for the park's City Hall in a line Which eztended the length of the street/ When they reached the city-hall area they chanted for the release of Minnie Mouse and tore down a red-white-and- blue bunting near the bUilding, replacing Small incidents fwere rel;'Orted by Disneyland ¥!Cllrit:Yi police during the it with a "Legalize marijuana" flag ' which portrayed a dark green marijuana plant on the black background. * * * Peace Returns To Disrwyland • Front Once More A group of irate Disney guests began singin( "God Bless America" but were quickly booed down by the youths. One: of lhe hippies shouted for the group to head fqr Fantasyland and the crowd circled Main Street for the trek to the Disney ca"ltle. Hailway down Main Street they were Disneyland opened its gates at a a.m. met by a Costa Mesa police riot control today without incident. In fact, the only squl.d that swept onto Main Street from difference. between today's opening 8lld an 'mployes.' entrance. any other day was the fact tht uniformed Screaming "Here come the pigs," the security police ~ed the ticket booths hippies ran down Main Slreet away from along with Ucket\ takers -and had ~ Costa Mesa unit only to be met some new dress reaui?J!ments. ~ sq1,1~d. 9'··~Uerw,o lawm"\ whil .• ·<>If .... _ ... _ • .,.' .. •' Olllcl$1ll the Magic King-disclos--.:-~·-~-· ed that dress re~tions for P{ll'k guests ,._,..Police aiif pllney . s~ olflctr9 will be up to the iil5oretion oi' secUri\y irabl;e4 dozens Gf4i,_tbe ies and police at the gates. Physically threw theJi out lhe part /Jr took them lo . ~ Becurlty oillce ''There will be no set reguliUons •uch for tr.ansfer to the Anaheim police as hair being three inches long on the department. sides," explained Bruce Young, public Several spectators joined in the melee, relations man for DiSl!leyland. chasing yippies arouod the town square "The ~ision to let ~ person into shouting, ''Run. Hippies, Run." the park lS not an arbitrary one for • The encounter on Main Street lasted the ticket taker to make. There are only minutes. Riot squads in helmets, no rules set dowr, on how our guests 'face protectors and gas masks lined are to look." Security men will do that. both sides of the street as a loudspeaker Young said that sop:le gueSts will be announced the closing ol the park at screened by security police before being 7:30 p.m. admitted to the park and undesirables Many of the 33,000 guest. wore puzzled will 11ot be allowed in. expressions as they were led out of "This means that if a person does the park. Some asked: "What's ha~ have Jong hair, he may be admitted pened? ls the park really closed?" to the park . The hair styles th·at are Disney employes and security police in vogue today tend to be longer and explained the disturbance to the crowd, we are not gciing to keep anyone out many of them children, and urged guests of Disneyland for long bair alone. to keep mo'ling. The decision will be based on general ·The "National Yippie Day Pow-Wow'' appearance and attitude," he said. began on a light note Thureday as a Disneyland officials said they an. group of 75 Yippies converged on the ticipate 110 further trouble from YIJ)pies carousel at Frantierland, the Monsanto after the disturbance at the park Thurs-display, General Electric, and the Coke day night. Terrace in.-Tomorrowland, singing the Mickey Mouse Club song. Jackpot Awaits San Clementean Mrs. Elizabeth McDonald of San Clemerite is hoping in the worst way that an angler on the municipal pier hooks a jackpot. It's her purse. Mrs. Mi;Dona1rl, dining at the restaura!lt al the end of the pier earlier this week, strolled to the rail after dinner with her husband, then ac- cidentally dropped her tan leather purse. It Cf)lltained personal papers, credit cards and $150, The handbag Ooated for a few momenta, but the woman's husband fafi.. ed tn tries to snag it. Then it sank. '\ Now the Mc.Donalds are waiting for a lucky -and booest -fisherman. Late in the afternoon the Ylpples took over Tom Sawyer Island , chasing many of the tourists off the attract1on and raising a Viet Cong nag on the iSland's fortress. Disneyland officials said members of the group passe~ around marijuana cigarets on the island and a security guard reported seeing a naked man on the island. Jack B. Linquirt, Disneyland director of marketing, said tile encounter on Main Street began whe11 "one of the ringleaders swung at an officer." "The Disneyland security contingent and area police did an excellent job in 9uelling the.disturbances," he said. "It's a shame that such a small group has to ruin jt for the others, but we had to think of the safety of our guts ls," he stated. "We are eoing to enforce a regulation prohibiting long-hair• Crom the park. We didn't wan~ to do It, but this incident (See VIPPIES, Pap I) ens ' ,. . ~ -- VD.sightly Area At Nuclear Plant Being Removed RelocaUon of 1 unslghUy portion o! the nuclear power plant at San Onofre -which State Parks Director William Penn Mott once branded "a blight onto the landscape" -is in progress. A power transmission yard will be , moved on the southern end of the 84-acre at o m i c react.or site, it was disclos- ed today by San Diego Ga& and Electric Company. Grading on the new site already is under way. The utility' a San Clemente manager, William Webb, said his corripany is aware of public disapproval of the appearance of the transmission installation. "A lot of people didn't like it," said Webb, who ei:plained that the earth moving will "depress the area to hide the transformers." A dolible purpose of the switch.yard relocatlon was noted by Carl Welti, SDG&E, spokesman. Welti said hi9 firm also is moving .the present substation to make room for the new nuclear generators. His firm and Sot:lthern California Edison Company have applied for pennits· to bdild two additional 1.1· million-kilowatt reactor stations on the San Onofre site, cr~ting a 500-percemt increase over present power production. Permits for the huge reactors are dependent on outcome of public hearings before the Public UUlities Commission and the Atomic Energy CommiSlion. Dates·bave not been set for the sessions, but the PUC bearings are expected this fall. The AEC counterpart would be ln the spring of 1971. Marine Flier Sn~~nmhs ' Third El Toro KC-130 Victim Dies at Hospital A Mission Viejo career Marine officer They were on the five-member crew of UUs morning became the third to die the Loc.kheeld air.craft tenned by a from injuries suslained when 1 ~C130 Marine spoke~n "an old, reliable kind fueling tanker crashed and exploded at OC bJrd." • · El Toro Marine Corps Air station aeven Maj. Zftb•~ a veteran of two otoura- days ago. ~· In.. Vltlna),. "" .owtli'!" olllcer for Maj. Walter Z . ewjc~. 41 , I tilt' Mllrllj•·'~ertal ll"i!"'Jl~ 'Squlla'ron ' Andriana. father of two, llied of .J& ~ 852, &(·Ell Tiro. , :k ~ .. bums tn the intensive care unit to ~lch A ba!e •Pokesman. said the crash was he was admitted a week ago. the first aceident for a crew of that Fellow crewman Cpl. K e n n e th squadron in 142,000 flying houra, covering M~tzdort 21, of El Toro base housing, more than 11 years. · died two' days ago of Identical injuries. Maj. ZytJtewlcz, who had received the One of the aircraft's commanders, Lt Bronze Star and U Air Medak, la survtv: Roger Mullins of Huntington Beach, died ed by his wife, Joan, and two children. in the crash. Funeral arranaements are not yet OOID-6 I plete. Tbey will take place at the Dilday Funeral Home In Huntington Beach. Maj. Zytkewlcz' dealh leaves QtllY two men who were on the lll~fated pract.lce Olgbt still alive. 1 • Tbey are Capt. Robert wans, Jr., it, qi Tustin and S/Sg!. Kennelh D. Davis, St, of<&.nt~ Ana.1 They are~bolh on the crJUCf,J list and a hospital spokeman would !&)' only they are "holding their own.'' U. Mullins was sitting in. •the dual cockpll with Maj. Z)'lke!'lci. There h" bee no determination who was piloting Lhe plane when it went down. 1 ' , er s·sau • (tyeleS, Hotel 8,ecnpane1 < .2LagunaUrgency Laws R~vived; S_tudy Slated Two of the oonlroversial "urgency" "ordinances proposed by Laguna Beach Mayor RiCl!ard Goldberg, but tabled after a • stormy city couticil meeting June 17, :Will. reappear next week fO:r study as regular, oon-w-gency ordinances. At the request of Cowl.cilinan Edward U>rr, a council stUdy ·session bas beea * * * Stringent New Cycle Rules Due In San Oemente -· ., San Clemente's minlb,lke and lrail motorcycle enthusiasts can expect a stringent new city ordinance faclng-U>em in coming weeks if the city council passes a suggested "urgency'• code. CouDcilmen ire perUilng the one-page model law whJcb would forbid ridlng on private property closer than 300 feet to the property. line of any reaidenee. The code 8Iso would provide that any · rider of cycles and dunebuggles on private land have in their posseasion written permission from the landowner to ride in the area. The code -the second rullna: on trail machines considered by oounc:llmen in recent monlhl -couid be enacted 1wltuy at the council'• Aug. 19 meeting. It is · patterned, in essence, after a new county ordinance which forbids riding on all unincorporated land In Orange county wJthour the owner's · pennlsaio'J~ . , But despite ·the '"''urgency" label in San Clemente, the proPosed law comes when the1 minibike nill8ance bas tapered otf a bit. Since· the olinini1 of the Seabreeze Motorcy~le park on acreage in the former Ree.Vea ·Ranch; complaints , by citlzens ·1'bout the ll>Oiq maclllner our their • homef hlVJI dwindled. • And confljCUng . rej>orJs from omctals In the communtt1 have' .surrounded the park Jtself since Jta opening earlier this summer. Cit).' Manager Ken Carr has said that despite the · stotrn of protest be.fore the park's opening, he personally has rece.iv- ed oo complalnt.s about n lse and dust. Neilher bave police. ,, j I scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday to ex- amine: -The proposed ordinance banning motorcycle riding on private property. Another ordinance barring hotel room oocupanc;y by persons under 18 unless accompanied by a parent or guardian. Lorr, this week revived his oww ordinance restrlcUng dogs in parks ,and on beaches, which also had 'been tabled at the June meet. He said he felt tha motorcycle and hotel room laws also were worthy of farther consideration as regular ordinances. An urgency ordinance, designed for emergency situations, requires a 4·1 council vote for approval and becomes effective i m me d i a t e I y . Regular ordinances can be adopted by a 3"2 vote, but require two readings, at separate meetings and become effe;tive 30 days after adoption. Goldberg said today he assumes the versions of the ordinances to be studied Tuesday will be "prett¥ much the same" as those presented in June, but added, "It was Ed's idea to bring them' up again, so I'm just assuming they'll be about the same." He confirmed his comment of the June 17 meeting, to the effect that the hotel room occupancy restriction should not apply to married couples or servicemen un<ter 18. The motorcycle ordinance prohibits operation of any vehicle propelled by an Internal combUstion engine on privafe property without the prior writt.en con· sent of the property owner. It fw:ther prohibits o~ratlon oL such vehicles wfthln the city of Laguna Beach without an 8pproved spark arrestor or noise mufOing device, and also prohibits theJr operation on any, private property wUhln 300 feet of lbe exterior boundaries of any residential property, except as necessary for ingress and egress. A final provbdon would ban the opera- tion of the vehicles anywhere II· the noise volume is "10 loud, ·raucua or jarring 11 to be dlaturblng or a nulaanoe to the peaae or quiet of any adjacent neighborhood or a peraon residing In an ·adjacent neighborhood or conducting a business 'lherein/' • The hole! room ordln1nce as originally p~nted Is aimed 1i the "large numbtn of unchaperoned m.tnors (who) have recently adopted the pracUoe of rentlnli! hotel Ind motel rooms In the city and ... adopted lhe practlce of letttn·g other minors occupy said rooms In numbers (See LAWS, P11e I) • Mideast Powers Agree to Cease Fighting Today WASHING TON (UPI) Th e United Arab RepubUc and Israel have agreed to enter lnto a cease-tire beglnnlng at 3 p.m., PDT today Secretary of State William P. Rogers announced. 11We welcome this statesman-like a&tion taken by the leaders of the governments concerned. We hope this iroJ)Of'tant decision will advance the prospects ,fur a just and lasting peace in the Mldd.le East." Aft.er olficial spokesman Robert J. McCloskey read &gers' statement, responsible official• indicated, 'that .a cease-fire would .dso formally be iri ef· feet between Israel and Jordan. Tbe ·officials said that neither Israel nor Jordan had ever formally disavows!. the pertinent U.N. cease-fire resolullons between the two countries. The officials were referring to the original cease-fire which ended the 1967 Mideast war and the subsequent Nov. 22, 1967, Security Council resolution which laid the basis £or a future politiCal settlement In the Middle Est. "We have just been Wonned by the governments of the Unlted Arab Regublic and Israel · of their acceptance oJ yie U.S. proposal for a stand-still ~-file to come Into effect at 2200 · GreenwlCh Mean . Time today , Friday, Allguit 7t" Rogers said in a statement. · U.S. officials were extremely plea!ed (Se< TRUCE, Page I) Orange Coaiit Wea tiler They'll be beating. a path to the ~ beach Saturday as the tempera- ture soars to 95 in the inland areas. On the coast It 'II be a com- lortable 72 under fa1r ·skies. ; INSIDE ToDAY I T~e Greales~ Show .i,. Eart.h tr~1tionall11 hal the oreotcat crown.1· oit earth, Thi ,Ringlmg Bro.s. Bamutn and Bailey circus i take.s the center ring in today's Weekender Jectton . \ I I I ·-·· I • • • • • • It DAIL T Pll01 l,.o& ANGELES (UPI) -Lindt !WI· ~ CiUl>"f ''Qb. God" and ,bout.I lhal Ille -·1 lle1leYe her lttenda could do such an "lnimallstk thing'' •bea awn a plctun today of one ot the vk:Um.s in the Tate murdtr case. Defense attorney Irving Kanarek thrust Wore bu a color photograph of the m1.tU1ated 'tiodY (If Voytek Frykowski. • cuut of the actress Sharon Tate who was stabbed dozerui of times and lhot In Ille lcil1lngs last Au&. I. Mn. ltuabian began crying steadily and ~k said lo her: "Wiiy .,.. you <11'1111 """!" "I Just cen't believe It." "You can't believe what!" Congress OKs ln~ependence ·()f Po~t Office 1\'ASHINGTON (AP! -Cong"u bu rt!~ Us gtip on the U.S. malls after nearl,j two centurin and the POl!it Office lookl forward to shedding handicaps that prompted one postmaster general to uy the department was in "a race with diluter." More than two years after a JJf'sid~ Ual commission recommendtd it, and more than ooe year aft.er the legl.alaUon was introduced, Conguss sent Thursday to President Nixon a bllJ creallng an indepeDdent tl.:s. t'oslal Service. 1be White House balled the occasion u "a landmark .day and a landmark piece of lqialation for users ol the post.al service and postal workers" and u..ld Nixon would sign tbe measurt nat week. It provides for establlahmt:nt of the corporate.like federal agency within a year and a re.troacUve eiaht percent pay hike for postal workers. It allO mUes likely an incre1Se • in first class postlge rat.es -from· tht six-cent to IJI elght;eent stamp -earlY next year. The n<w Postal Service will be run by a ninHnan, JiresldenUally·appointed board of governors who will select a postmaster general l'nd d e p u t y postm1ster general. Rates will be set not by Congress as for the past 181 ye1rs, but by a flve-memlttt rate commission with the approval of I.be board of governors. The postmaster general, frequently In the past a political handiman of the president rather than a wtirk.ing head of tbe ma.ii system , wiU be removed from the Cabinet. The new system ls designed to modemlu and lil.reamllne delivery of the malls, and eventually lo eliminate the huge deficits that have been an annual feature of !he Post Office budget for the past 16 yem. Festival Chief In 'Fair' Shape FesUval of Arts Director Verner Beck. TT, remains in "falr'' condition at South Coast C.Ommunity HospitaJ today. A hospital spoktliman said there had been litUe change in Beck's condition ainct he was admitted Wednesday even- ing aft.er suffering a stroke. A former newspaperman, Beck, ?96 Holly St., has long been assocl1ted with the Festival. as bwtness manager and member of the board of directors. He also is a director of Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Asaoclation and represents the Festival on the Oiamber of Commerct; board. DAILY PILOT N•.,,,..-t l•Kll ....... Inell C-tti ...... HHtf .. tH IMdl hllllt9'• Y.Ji.y S.i1 Cr.•m Olll&HGE COAST ,u,L1$14 1HG COM,AHY .. tbt1t N. Wtt~ ''"l<il"'' ..... ,...,11,1\tf' J1ck R, Cwrl•T V:Ct ,riuto.it lrld '"-• M1~ lho11 11 K11•il EOltor Thtl'lllt A. Mwr,.~int Mlllltll'IO EelMt Rick1rll '· Nill Soulll Drlt!H GMlt, Ed1191' oHJ.., Ctillt M1N1 ,_ W\11 l •Y Str"t N.....,.1 ... di: ftll W1tl •1-.01 .... it'Yl rd ~ lltKll; m l"Wftt A-.,.-Mlll!lflll9t! lltifdl: 17'1S lttdl ._....,,,,, .. n C-•: JOI .....,.. 1 1 c .... 111t 1tu1 l·rl4Q, AUV\Bt 7, 1970 Breal{s Down ill Death! Photos ' "I can't believe Ibey could do auCb I t.b.lq:," "Ate you sure you don't Q'IWI Ut.tt you couldn't do such a th!ng?" "I !mow I dldn1 do It. I didn't have in me to do sucb an anlmallatlc thine." Kanarek suggested again that ihe also ran lnto the house with two yciqng women codefendanls of Charles. Man80n in the case and Charles "Tex" Watson and tbal she might be unable to remember because she Wlll in a state of shock at the time. Her voice rlstng lo a shout, Mrs. Kaaablan replled, "I just know I didn 't do it, Mr. Kanarek." · Kanarek bad beaun the day'• ques- Who's a Clown? Uonlng by lbowin& Mn. Kaaab!IJI a color picture .ol •not!ier •lclltn, coffet he:lrus Abi&•ll Folaer, 1pr1wltd on the. ~ ol the Tato estoto. Mn. Kuabian bad become almoot hysterical 1bunday afternoon wbtn Kanarek produced a photograph of the bloody, almost nude body ot Miss Tate inside the re side.net:. When the ltlal session resumed again today, Kanarek approached the 21·year· old blonde with a sheaf of pictures and thrust one toward het. Mn. Kas1- bian took one look and then averted her head. Kanarek attempted to have the witness take the pl~ture in her hand but Judge Cbarleo IL Older :Wtructed hl\11 thal "Of courae l am1.:· • ~ (lOl be llOCWlrY l!ld told bin> 1 "'Weran' -,. to IO abtod Wlill IJ!e ..... ··-~· ~ to ,there, (lwW ~ec-·-.;::~>C Kanai\k ~ bet ~ uiat w..-·111e • ind Patricia Krtnwlnkt!t• ''tidy you uy you aaw 1,1. lhe house?" "'Yes." .. .. ''It 1ppean to •be the while gown .. Didn't you nm lntc> the bouae to and the long hair. I never saw her protect them?" face :" "No, I ran toward the bouae but J The defense lawyer sought to e.stabllih didn't go into it." that Mn. Kuablan actually ran into On ThurSc:lay 'Kanarek had JUJt 11ked the houlie herfitlf with a knife but the Mrs. Kasablan wbeU.er she looked witneB.fi denied flatly that she ever had through a window of the. bDuae that done so. night last August wbtn wlthollt another "When you heard screams comlna: word he eavt her the. ei<:tW't. ·• from the house didn't you care what It showed Miss Tate, ~ only in happened to anyone inside?" Kanarek panUe.s, J;ytrig on bit ri&bt i Side with asked. her hand es.ttoded above lier head. She ' wai co•u..i_w!J)i blood and !bet• wuo •1"'11 vllible ljni!L 'oond' in bet ob-~ Ftlflllll bod,y. Mn. Kasablan had leltifled previously sbe" saw three slaYlnal at the estate ' '<XQide the house fut -Aug, 9 but that she did not witness the killing or Miss Tate and bait atyliit Jay: Sebring in the UVlng room. Mrs» Kasablan•s; gasp was audible throughout the courtroom. Stie bµrst Into tears and cotild not speak. She was lead oU to an anteroom while lhe lawyers conferred in the judie's cham~rs. Tbtn the trial wt! m:eued overrdgbl K-.narek declined to tell newsmen why ht suddenly handed the girl the picture. Woodla1uf Spokes11ao1a DAii. Y Pll.OT llllf 'M9- City Inspection A Th.real to All? • A spokesman for Laguna's Woodland Drive area said today he la "amazed that the people haven't realited the fact that all citizens could be affected if the inspection is carried out throu&hout the city." . Arti st Andy Wing, who lives In Victory Walk, also noted that lhe residents of Woodland , the rustic canyon area. where the inspection will begin, ar~ working on necessary legal procedure5 to be-come a conununity organization. The three-pronged inspection was authorized by the city council in the wee hours Thursday morning following 90 minutes of animated d.lscuss.lori . The inspection will be held on a city- wide basis, beginning in the Woodland area, and then move to other priority areas wilhln the city. Bulldlng, health and fire violations will be checked out. pects lo begin the inspeetion in Woodland in eight weekli. ''He will evaluate the individual pro- perties, Identify the deficienc.ies, and categorize them." Springe said that any code violations would have to be corrected immediately. There are also "dangerous conditions" which are given a certain period of tim e in which to be corrected. Non-ron· forming features, wh ich were legal years ago, but not legal now, due to changes in the law, may rem ain, he noted. Springe said that there are less than 40 buildings in the Woodland area, and that the percentage of non-resident land- owners is high. "But we don't think that will present a problem. We'll notify them of any violations and give them ·an amount of time to correct them . It shouldn't involve !he tenants out there at all." "Unbelievable," is the -reaction of Coconut (riglft). S.year-old clown for Ringling Bros.·Barnum and Bailey Circus, as his sidekick, .Coco the Clown, is tapped as an honorary DAJL Y, PILOT carrier boy. The honest-to-goodness carrier boys are il l-year-old Costa Mesans Bob Maurer (left) and Rbn McDan- iels, who got a lesson in circus makeup from Coco. For more clowoina: around, see Pa,ite 8. Residents of the area fear the in· spectlon is a prelude to razing their home!. City officials say it Is to correct housing violations. "There is so much nonconforming housing everywhere in town," Wing emphasized. "Since the city has decided to do this inspection on a citywide basis, my feeling of responsibility at this polnt Clay Mitchell Said 'Doing Fine' F'rom Pagfl J YIP PIES • • • makes lt a must.·• Security police made a complete sweep of the park after the guests had left to rout any Yi pples left after the crowd was escorted from Disneyland. The Yippies regrouped outside the park and threw rocks and debris at officers before heading for !he Disneyland Hotel where they were confronted by more police units. They finally dispersed at 9:30 p.m. The only other lime the park .closed early was a memoriaJ gesture followbig the assasslnation of John F. K!nnedy in 1963. F'rom Page J TRUCE ... by the agreement to stop the fighting on !he UAR·lsraeli front which is con- sidered to be the most serious area of Middle Eastern hosUlities. The main problem along the. lsraeli- Jordanian front are the Palestinian com· mando units whlch are not controlled by the Jordanian government but which operate from Jordanian territory. Some of these commando groups have in- dicated they will honor the cease·flre while others gave stated they will not he bound by It. Secretary Rogers· announcement was a first step in his Mideast Peace iniUative Of June 29 which had been addressed to the United Arab Republic, Jordan, and Israel. The U.S. peace plan contained two parts: -The re-establishment of the Mideast 90 days . -Simultaneously, the resumption of the peace see king mission of Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring, the U.N. peace mediator with the UAR, Jordan and Israel. F'rom Pagfl J LAWS ... - exceeding the safe limitation .. , This, sayfi the ordinances. is "harmful to the health and morals of said minors and to the public health, safety and welfare." The ordinance identifies "minors'' as persons between the ages of 18 and 21. "1dults" as persons over 21 and "minon: cllild" as persons under 18. The propoaed law would ban occupancy of hotel rooms by more than five minors (under 21) unless accompanied by an adult who registers for a period equal to the longest stay of any one minor. It would further bir accupancy by 11ny minor child (undc!r 11) unless ac- companied by a p11tnt, legal guardian or r!sponslble edult lover 21 ) authorit.ed In wrlttnj by the child 's partnt or legal cuardi••· . The pattnt, iuardinn or respon11ible adult aJao would be requirtd to remain registered during the room occupancy ol the minor chUd. . San Clemente Religi,on is to the commruyty. ~ "J want to see that the city does lhings in a lawful and equitable manner -everywhere." , State Board of Edu cation member Clay f.1itchell is reported "doing fine" at South Coast Community Hospital. where lte was admitted July 27 follow ing a he&rt attack. Youth Pr.ogram Dropped Wing said that in Woodland "papers are being drawn. up" to form a com· munity organization. He sald that It w·11 be divided Into two sections -the bomc· owners and the residents . Mitchell, 59, of 11 S. Alta Mira Road. Soul.h Laguna, ls out of the intensive care uni t and should be well enough to go home soon. a hospital spokesman said. Plans to hold an atld~vlsual program for youth on San Clemente's beachlront have been dropped today because of reluctant by the city to authorize the event. Spokesmen for the San Clemente United Presbyterian Church said the plans for the "Underground Collage" program presented by a graduate divinity student were abandoned because city approva l might come too late for the licheduled Aug. 28 performance. Permission from the governing body of the church also had not been given as of last Wednesday nlght when church Youth Director Neal McBride asked for city permission. The program would have involved several projection screens and sound equipment facing the sea near lifeguard headquarters. Co1111cilmen balked when they learned lhal possibly 1,000 persons. mostly teenagers, could be expected for the evening performance of a program in· tegrating music and graphics with a religious message. Councilman Thomas O'Kee.fe told McBride the title of the program $5,000 Burglary From Playhouse For Vengeance? Detectives believe the $5,tn:I burglary of sound equipment from the Laguna Moulton Playhouse may have had a vegeance motive . The brazen burglary !hat left the new theater temporarily lnoperaUve In the ·sound department was discovered Tues· vengeance motive. Stolen items included a $500 sound mixer panel , a stereo tape rec:Qrder, amplifiers. a playback system, speakers, microphone s, headphones, cables and electrical connectors. There was similarity to the theft of Sl ,800 worth of sound equipment Crom the auditorium of Laguna Beach High School last month . Del. ~oe Brooks said today. "This possibly could be a ve ngeance type thing. They appeared to know what lhey wert looking for and there was a sllibt amount of malicious mischief. "thlnp that could delay tht show." Brooks said the mischief included 1t1t· tering of li&htln1 cue c1rds and removal of batteries from flashllghla. 'the burglary occurred just befori the ct>ntinuation of the mus\CJI "Oliver" with a new cast. The show d1d go on. Iller aound equipment was hurriedly rented . The new playhouse suffered another setback carller when someone entered just before the opening of 1 play and tinkered with wiring and removed l1bel1 Identifying switches. ''Underground Collage" didn 't sit too well wil.h him. "That word underground has an un· palatable meaning sometimes." O'Keefe said. Instead of making a decision , the coun- cil referred the matter to parks and recreation commlssloners for a recom· mendation , but the commis sio n 's meeting, McBride later (jlecided, would be too late to make plans for the pro- gram. The presentalion would have been pro- vided by Wayne Lukens, a student at the Claremont Graduate School of Theology. "Woodland is already intrinsically very beautiful and unique. With a community as.soclation, Woodland could be developed iJ1to something fine." To set up the community organization, • citizens, with the aid of attorneys, will draw up a constitution and by-laws, which are then presented to the state for approval. Wing said that at the present time he doubted "if too meny people will cooperate with the inspection." · ."Of course, we're still smarting a little bit." Clyde Z. Springe. city bulldlng and planning director said today that he ex- SUMMER CONTINUES Henreclon Offers "OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION," Complete Occasional, Dining & Bedroom, ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS! • Drexel NCltures "ESPERANTOS" Entire Collection. • Heri~e Reduces Its Complete "MADRIGAL" CollKtlon. HENREDON & HERITAGE UPHOLSTERY 15°/o OFF A member of the Orange County school board for seven years. Mitchell was appointed to the st.ate board by Governor Reaga n in February. Mamie Given Stamp WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A six-cent stamp honoring fonncr Pretident Dwight D. Eisenhower was presen ted to hi! widow Thursday in White H o u s e ceremonies. The presentation was made in President Nixon 's office. Postmaster General \Vin to"l M. Blnunt nrrr"1ted the stamn to Yrs. ~ '-n,;,. ~·- DEALERS FOR: HENREDON OR EXEL -HERITAGE 7ed11111 NEWPORT BEACH 1717 Westcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profe11lori1I Interior 0.1lgner1 Avallabl-.AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast H,... 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 I ' ' , • .l UCI Frosh Self Reliant Student Survey Shows 'Cut Apron Strings' Tendencies IRVJNE -Stud~tJ who will '-Oler UC frvl:ne for the first time thla fall are •tron&IY determined to "cut the apron strings" from thelr pirtnls and tend to .disagree sharply with their elders on Wuu ranging from sex. to politics. For their own part, t~ student$' parents want their sons and daughters ta develop lndependence and self reliance at college. but Sff1'I\ reluctant to !Me their iniluence over their offspring. Studen~ and their parenta revealed lhetr dif!u~ces - as well as some ba 1ic agreements -· in a ques- lioMaire distributed in &J. \'anoe to some 1,$00 par~ts and atudenta who are at· tending weekend s u m m e r orientation programs at UCl during August in preparation for enrollment this fall. The surveys are being used as the basis for discu.ssion sessions between the parents, the new studen ts and more than 100 continuing U C I students who are volunt.eering • CSF Library Gets Record Of Festival FULLERTON -The first eighty years of Laguna Beach's Pag.eant of the A-1uters have now become part of the library at Cal State Fullerton. The early years are record- ed in a scrapbook prepared by Roy M. Ropp, who pro- duced the Pa~ant from 934· 12. Ropp presented the book to the college library last week, where it is to become part ()f lhe collection or the C<>m- munity History Program. Ropp detail~ the hardship in putting on the Pageant in those early clays. He developed the practice nf in· eluding several people in the living pictures. painting the backgrounds, Jive na rration, and accompanying music, a.II of which today are integral ti) the production. Death Notl.,e• MAKI!$ "l'nn a. M11<.r1, JU Vi.I Mtni-. N1w· _, ltlCll. 0.lr OI c!Qlh, •v.u1! J. Survtv9d bv llturrirero: Luclndt Lu•lt. CMtt Mtu. tr'ld Mt r!lvn Axtell, StC•t· mrnl<I; 1!11tr. Mtntllt Wtlktr, U1>l1nll; b•Dlhtrl: Frink Greent , Olllt hamt ; 01- c1r G•etn1, lrl!l1h Columbl1; J trt nll· crill.o ....... Gr1v1 1id9 $<1rvlc1t 2 PM St !· u•d1V, AU11Ul l I. 11 P1clflc 'lltW "'"""'" !t i Ptrti;, PtcUJc View Mt1rtu1rv, dlrtc· , ...... MATCMA Ol1nt M. M1tch1, «II Stvlll1 Avenue, .,.,.._, lle1cri. Otte of duth, Av1..n! J. 51.trvlvul 1111 to'rtnlt, Mr. tnll M•I. Morrlt Mtlcht rrl lht l>c>m• 10d•1u; 1ltlt•· Lturlt. homt Mdrtu: rr1nllmot111r, M•· !lldt Mt1ch1, LOI AMtltt, St<Vktl -•• htld 1t 1 PM llllltv II Ptc!tlc 'lltw Cht H!. lntormtnl, P1clllc Vl.w Mtmor- lt t f"trk. OlrKllHI b~ 1"1clfi( 'lltw MOr· ti.ti "'!'- ARBUCl<LE 6 SON Wutcllff Mortuary 07 E. 17t~ St., Co1Ui Meaa MMW • BALTZ MORTUARIES C.Onina del Mar OR S.9450 Colta Mesa Ml l-lU4 • BELL BROAnWAY MORTUARY 110 Bro•dway, Costa Meu u l-l43:1 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1715 l.qu•• Clll)'Oll Rd. 414-HlS • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARlt Cemetery e Morlll•rJ Cllapd 3500 Pacific Vtew Drive Newport Be.act!, Caillontla '44-mt • PEER FAMILY COLONIAL FUNEIWi ROME 1911 lkllH Ave. WHtmla1ttr nw.S2I • SHEFFER MORTUARY IA(u• BtKll 4M-1W Su Oemnt.e ctulM • SMITHS' MORTUA RY CZ'1 M•le SL Ruda,... lleadi - to aasill with th!....2£Jtnt.atlon proerams. Rt.!popses to I.he. li1t of nearly 4e quesUons were received from about 560 new students and 680 or their parents. 'lllUi accoonta ror nearly one fourth of lhe %,JOO new students who are ex· peeled to enroll as freshmen or in advanced standing aa transfers from other colleges this (all, Total enrollment of the {ive- year-cld campus will jump from last year's S,000 un- dergraduates, graduales and medical students to more than 6,000 thb fall. Students and their parents tended to agree on mosl of the basic objectives ol a col- lege education, such aa learn- ing to be a leader, attaining job skills, improving the ablli· ty to think and 'broadening inl.ellectua\ interests. And, while some parenls feared their children might be templed to use drugs at college, 74 percent had no qualms. For the most part, they were backed up b__y their younesi.ers. Sllty·nine percent of the stude-nta agreed or ,1rong1y agreed lhlll they would never try drugs. However, 19 percent o{ lhe students wtre undecided and 12 perctnl already had decid- ed before entering t h e university they might try drugs. three pereent or tlltm vnphatically so. Slud~ts and their parents parted ways over whether It Is important "to learn how to deal with politicaJ and 10Cial injustice" in college. Sixty-two percent of the aludents felt dealing with in- ju.stlce is either "essential'' or "Important." compared lo 47 percent of their parents. Disagreement became pro- nounced over whether "the university should consider that it acts in place of the parent when it formulates stud~t rules and regulalions." Seven- ty-one percent of the students either disagreed or strongly disagreed. while 58 percent of the parents agreed or Mesa Pair Face Suit Charging Food Fraud Tot Picked As Princess For Benefit SANTA ANA -Samantha Grat\am, 31,1; has been chosen to reign as princeM ()f the Cops and Cowboys Benefit Breakfast and Horseshow, ac· cording to Orange County Sheriff Jim Musick. The annual event, to be held at the Orange Cou n ty Fairgrounds on Sept. 13, is for the benefit ()f the local March of Dimes birth defect program. It is sponsored by the Reserve Units of the Orange CouAly She r If f' 1 Department. Samantha. daughter <>f Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Graham, 20:>7 N, Highland. Orange, is a "rubella baby." She waa: bor1 with a hearlng defect because her . -m<>l.he.r con· tracted rubella -German measles during h e r pregnancy. "One important rec e 11 t JN:\entific discovery Is the rubella vaccine," Sherif f Music said. "By choosing Samantha as our Princess. we hope to emphasize the urgency of lmmunizh1g all children under 12 against this common childhood disease." VN ITED STATES NAT IONAL BA NK SOUTH COAST PLAZA !RANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS ' te 1 P.M. MON .. THUll. 16.1 r.M . PllDAYS 10.1 P.M. 1714) 140·1211. ~ l•1 h . C.-t " ... c .. ,. M .. AtH, VK• ,.,...._-MIMtW E. H. LEVAN DAILY "LC7 9 lrvine-Cityhood Studies . Under Way in Committees '"'lll-=-t-1·_..._ "Later, we'll e1tablish com· Burton hudt, iJ compolfd of mlttus to thldy taxation pretidents of nelrbborbood qu~..sUona: and for'llll of a83ociatlona which are localed 1ovemment," he said. wlth!n the 53,000-acre proposed TM CounclJ of the Com· city aru where about 10,000 now Uve. munHlea: of Irvine, which ,---------~-, Derby Victor Gets Honor Free Drawl111! for Solid Sliver Bar (vei l $161.DO Sat., Aug. 8 • 1 PM the ultimate ownership bythe seashore "· a lot in Our proudest achievement at Lagun• Niguel Tha!ie terraces, these few hornesites (79) in Niguel Shores, offer a rarely round ownersh ip oP.portunlty. This privill!', 1ate-1uarded community fronts one of the most be.1ut1ful buthes on either Gmt. Every homesile has vicws to the oce.1n horizon. Nl1uel Shor!!ii Is the newe1t pirt of U1una Niguel by The Seuhotl', C.llfomia's most remark.able new I own. Make It your bu1lneu: to Me Niguel Shores" at your earli!St opportunity. The land endum-tfie1imes and prices ci1,lnge. Niauel Shores homtsltes from $30,000. "• AITIST'S COMCIPT 5•1.s Office Telephont: (114) S47·m1 !'er 1 colorful brodlurt 1bout Ni&utl Shonir and lht new town of U1ufl1 NJ1uel, write: t~1un1 l.,'l~ulll CofJK!r.uion -Dept.OCOI" 'J Mon1rch B•y Pl1z1 l•&urui Niavel, California 92671 ·~ ) • -------~------"""~""-------~---------------------- • I • l DAILY PILOT SC Credit Card Dropouts Move NEW YORK (AP) -A mutadan ln (be ipecles Debtor Amerie1.n111 may be m1kin1 11 s appearance. Sutl!lial evkience of Its emergency ha1 not ytt been oompUed, but an unusual number ol people appear to bal.'e its charsc· terlstl.c1. Amulcans are big debtors and have been since World War 11. Mort than $120 billion Is. now owed by consumers, S36 billion ol It for automobl les and P> billion more for personal loans. That's why the mutation is interesting; it's qyite a contrast to the famil iar species. \Yhat is it caUe.d! The credit card dropout. What are it.s characteristics! A weariness with financial problems that justly or W1justly are at- tributed to the credit card. One mutation , a weU paid lndi~dual wbo enjoys living close to his limit, dt™:ribed his sltuaUon the other day, "i was planning a trip to Europe this October with my wife and four kids. l think il 's wise to let youngsters see aqd observe the places they read about in their books. I thougbt l could •ffurd tl. ·~y wife told me that she and the children needed clothes for the trip •od I didn't nbjecl I told her to go rut and buy them, that she had the cards. 1 dJdn't question her anymore; I make 1 good salary and have out.side lncomr. too. "In fact I fell '° &:ood I went out and bought $120 worth of ties. I know that sounds ab!urd, but I buy tlell every lwo years and never in between. It's not that l'n1 extravagant; I don't keep that kind of money on me, but J do have credit cards." Then lbe bUls came In. "J knew they looked awfully big and I began to get worried about them. But can you im· aglne, when I added them up t found I owed $3,800. Now the trip is off and so art tlr.! credit purchases. I'm paying cash from now on." Cheek with your friends and you'll probably find a slmilar eiperience, although hopefully Penn Central Loans At Swiss Banks Told WASHINGTON (UPI) The Penn Central Railroad quietly borrowed a!mosl $60 million this year from Swiss banks to pay off some U.S. creditors and to conceal its shaky finanClal condition, coir gressional testimony showed ~1onday. A s s istant Transportation Secretary James M. Beggs said the giant carrier feared its other creditors would "panic" if its plight were made public and used the Swiss money plus other loans lo repay part of $200 million il owed on U.S. commercial markets. Beggs revealed the June 11 transaction while testifying wllh Assistant D e f e n s e Secretary Barry J. Shillito before a House Appropriations Subcommittee in support of proposed government backing for another $2(11) million in bank loans to aid Ule Penn Central. The proposed loan guarantee, under the Defense Production Act, was criticized severely in Congress and was dropped just prior lo June 21, when the railroad filed for bankrupt cy and reorganization. Beggs testified that the Penn Central turned to the Swiss banks after e ig ht months of successfully rebor· Coast Florist Joins Florafax Ernest Camp, owner of Flowers By Debra, 2 6 1 6 Newport Boulevard, Ne\\·port Beach.California , was fonnally accepted today as a subscriber of Florala~ Delivery, Inc., one of the world 's largest flowers·by- wire organizations. ro"'ing against the $200 million it owed U.S. commercial in· vestors. " ..• about 2 and 1/:t months ago, the investing companies that handle tllis paper began lo ask questions as to the state of the road,'' Beggs said. "Rather than answer those qliestions p u b 11 c I y and precipitate or at least run the risk of perhaps having a panic situation develop with their other investors, the Penn Central chose to pay this money oU." He said "Part of that wa,_ dooe by going lo Europe and boi7owipg a JiUle less than $60 mjllion rrom Swiss banks on a very short-tenn basis," at JO.I percent interest. Beggs said be did not know if the theirproposed $200 m i 11 i o n loan to be guaranteed by the government was to be used to pay off the Swiss debt. In any event, the railroad was only able to ra ise $90 million or the $200 million It owed and the declaration or bankruptcy followed, t h e transportation department o!- ricial said. Last week Rep. \Vright Pat.. man, O.Tex., chainnan of the House Banking Committee and a leading critic of the Penn Central's financial policies, made public a fede ral reserve bank credit report that was available when the $ 2 0 0 m I Ilion government-backed loan was being considered. The report concluded that Ole proposed loan would provide "inadequate assistance'' to the line and only would stave off bankruptcy temporarily. Patman's committee cur· rently is Mvesligating the rol es played by various banks in lhe downfall of the Penn Cen.- lral and the interstate com· merce commission is making a separate inquiry. Both the senate and House Commerce Commiuee have YIS YOU CAN been holdlng hearings on an su THI 1971 administration proposal for MllClDISollHI $750 million in fed er a 11 y 1.1 guaranteed loans for all aili ng JIM SUMOHS IMPOAT railroads. The Penn Central 111 w. Wffrlff -s...t• "~• would receive an esUmated °""' •-. 11. .._ MMH• $500 mlllion of this amount. ~~:;:;;;;;;;~~. • I See by Tod ay's Want Ads • Can you 11n,? llo~'-lll·fx'lul plft.Y a mu.\1caJ note or (~"O. MW!.ici3ns •rt rleftied lor IOCl'l elu~ and l'f:!l!au. ""'"· e Need e."':11'3 gtoraat 11paCt>! Rcnl a i:aragf!, 5tt. our tla~ified 11CCllon d•lly. e \\1e ha\·I" 11111 kind~ Of CAL' Anti k11Ue11 far )'OU! All cO!ors and kinds Ire~ for lh,. A.~kt n;" Srr: F'~ To '\"till, At1 Exhibit Scheduled Siegler, Inc. Sales Told Lear Siegler. Inc. or Suntt1 t.lonicrt reported tocll•y t.h:tl earnings and earnings per sha re for tilt nscal year en· ding June 30 l!tt all·Umc records for the seventh con· secuUv@ year. Net earn i ng s were $23,689.000 or $1.SJ it share arttr provlslon for prt:fer~ dlvider:ds. up from $22.109,000 or Sl.41 a sha re the prcvloui ye3 r. Commercial ;1n(I Industrial ia1es were up , but total sn.lcs or '566.405.000 were down sll,::htly from $5fl7 ,863,000. due primArlly to lower aerospace and defense buslne$s . OVER THE COUNTER • ..-. ·-·- Complete-New Y~rk Stock List ,,.,it -~ J61j, •••• ,. ... Mi + •to 11'~-'4 IS'" +2 ,~'; !." ·~ lf'' + t,j ,,,,, ... "Jtlnrket .. ' / friday, .,..rt 7, 1'10 SC DAILY '!LOT JJ WASIDNGTON (UPI) The SecUrlties a.id Exchange Commis.1ion has sued Liberty Equities Corp. and Peat, Marwick, Mitchell Ir Co., a large accounting firm , charg- ing violation of the securities laws in proxy material. The specific charge is that $325,000 in certificates of deposit that had been bought from Nalional Savings & Trust Co. of Washington out of the proceeds of a loan from the bank. on the same day were rtfiecled as a current asset to d~ up Llberty Equities' financial statement by inflating assets. c . Wyatt Dickerson, Jr .• an o(ficer of Uberly Equities, al· IO was named a defendant In the suit, which seeks to enjoin the parUes frOm further viola- ti Ohl!!I. Otht.r1 named in the suit are White & Co., of St. Louis, Kennedy Invtstme:nts, Leasing Agent For Union Bank Ioc., of Tuls&, Mason & Co .. of Newport News, Va., aM AUen & Co., of New York. PHILADELPHIA (UPI) SC'ientirtc Resources Corp. ha• decided 110t to go ahead wiUl the proposed offer to e1cllangt common stock and stock i.r! its Land . Resources Corp. subsidiary for its $1.15 annuaJ dividend preferred, The com· pany said thal, instead, It wiU sell off !ta own unprofitable computer technology opera4 lions and wm rulize 8 book loss for tax purposes of aboot $9 million, •bile reducing cash - oulfiow. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The California Public Utilities Commission has exempted Pacific Telephone & Telegraph ding rule for the issuance of Co. from its competitive bicS-. tt75 million In 36-year deben- tures. The negotiated sale is planned for Oct. It WASHINGTON (UPI) Continental Ttlephone Co.. 1 leading phone company, has regl.atertd ~ m.lWoo in flvt year notes for aale in Wall Street lhroug!> a IJOllP led by E. F. Hut""' & Co. I I I I l ' ' • I 1' 11 DAil Y PllOT !/I~~·. Auou'!-71 !9~0 -' ..!!~~ ~ndge Clark .step·s pown • • -R~eals Swry of Tiiur".,n on d .Deal !o'r His Appointment ' . , By PATRICK BOYLE Of ......... f'llet Jtltt Federal District J u d g e Tbunnood Clarke ls retiring from his pool as <;hie! judge lot the Loo Angelea dlslllct Sept. l t but the 68-year-old jurist saya It la riot be<:<luae of age. "'nle freeway drivt: to Los Angeles," aay11 Clarke, a Corona del Mar resident, 1'1s ju.!t too much of a nerve strain.'' "The other day when that bridge fell across t h e freeway," he adds, "I got trapped for four hours. It ju.st isn't worthwhile to fight lhe freeways every day." Wben Judge Clarke first bought a home in Corona del Mar, he flad planned to take the train lo Union Station and walk to the Federal Courthouse. But right after he moved to the area, the train stopped running and he has been driving ever since. Judge Clarke was nominated for the position on the federal bench by the late President Eisenhower in 1955. But the nomination ran into problems in the Senate. On the eve of his retirement, Judge Clarke recalled the previously unpublished ac- count of the circumstances surrounding his appointment. "I was called back to Washington to appear before the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee on Jul y 29, 1955," Clarke recalls. Bul t h e Democrats were in control then, and they had said they weren 't going lo approve any of Eisenbowerts appointments. The President had just had a stroke, ·and they thought he might not be running for another term. They were hop- ing to win the presidfncy in 1956 and nominate their own judges. "Another appointment that was before the committee at the tlme was that of Warrtn Burger .. who was then assis-tant U.S. attorney general. Berger was also a RepubJican and be appealed just bef0tt me. ,;The committee was lo vote on Saturday, July 30, Since ' jt was the last day of the Senate sessloo,. our nominl- tlons would not go to the floor or the Senate, so full approval of the committee was re-- ql1ited. "Burger appeared ju s t before I did, and when his nomination was disapproved, I really started to WWI')', '"lbe onlf reason I was ap- proved wu t¥cause of rny cousin, Senator 'S'\o rm Thunnond . .Before <the com- mittee meetllig, tfte late Senator .Everett ,.pirksen told me that I had the Tull approval or the committee wilh the exception of' Senator Olin Johnston, Tburmond's col- league from South Carolina. "Johnston was voting a ·gainst me because 1burmond, who was then chairman of the Post Offit'e Committee, was a g a l n s t Johnston's nominee -f-o r Postmaster of Charleston, S.C. "I went to the nOor of the Senate and ·hlkl Strom what the problem •as, ind ~ went to Johnston and traded my apPQintment ior that of the postmaster." .,,_ Cl'Jl'ke reCalla that he wa. the only Republican judge ap- proved that year, e.xcept for a Texas Republican nominated by Senator Lyndon Johnson, who was then the powerful majority-floor leader of the Sen.ate. Judge Clarke's appointment to the federal bench was a high paint in his career which began at tbe municipal e<1urt level in Los Angeles in 1932. One of his first cases brought him into the limelight. TIRED OF FRl'EWAYS CdM's Judge Cla rke There was a demonstration in Los Angeles at the 1932 Olympic Gam~ by a group wanting labor leader Tom Mooney freed from j a i I . Mooney had been arrested on a bombing charge. Members of the group were arrested · for disturbing the peace, and lhe case came before.Judge Clarke's court. "Somi of the defendants came tO court Jn bloomers," be said, "and they were con- stanUy disrupting the court, D)Ueh as w8s done at the recent conspiracy trial in Chicago. "It was one of my first cases, and I had a tough lime controlling my temper. I really learned what patience was. When they were con· t~"icted, at the end of the three month trial l g"ave them the maximum sentence. r o r disturbing the peace ... Clarke was elevated to the Superior Court bench ln 193$ and remained-there for 20 years. Some landmark cases came before him. One of the most notable ended Dec. 7, 1945, when he ruled that racial covenants were unconstitutional. The case had been filed by Hattie McDaniel, the actre~ who played an Academy Award- winning role in "Gone With the Wind." Under the judge's ruling, it ,..was illegal ·for b o using developments to exclude peo- ple on account of race. The ruling was affirmed by the California Supreme Court, but only after the U.S. Supreme Court's more famous school desegregation decision in 1954. In another I and mark decision, the Japanese alien land law s were un- constituUonaJ. Under the laws, Clarke ruled in 1953 that citizens of Ja'panese origin could not own land. When he retires Sept. 1, Judge Clarke will as!ume the title of Senior Judge. He will still have his staff and offices in Los Angeles, but he will not have to spend as much time in court, or on the freewaf!. UCLA Prof Gets Honor 'Lilre livimr Books' L06 ANGEL&<; (UPI) - A U.CLA professor received the Society ol Nuclear Medicine's Distinguished Scientist Award today for his work iii. diagnosng disorders in internal organs. Teen Bridges Infamous Gap Dr. Benedict Cassen, a member of the researdl staff o( UCLA's laboratory of Nuclear Medicine and Radia- tion Biology, received the award (or developing the prin· cipal or scintillation scanning, whidl is used throughout the world to probe disorders of the thyroid, heart. liver, lungs, brain and kidneys. The system translates radia· lion injected tracers into light flashes which are recorded as pictures of c.rgans within the body. SANTX' CRUZ, Calif. (AP) -Patty Nelson is the prime mover of the "Spring and Autumn Alliance ," a program that has put 50 e<1Uege students into personal contact with elderly persons. "It's like going into a library full of amazing, living books," the pert blonde coed says of the students ' visits to retire- ment and rest homes. "It brings wi~om for us, and enthusiasm for them," When the !9-year-0ld junior came to the University of Cali!ornia's Santa Cruz cam- pus, from Banning, Calif., two years ago, she was haunled by the faces or lonely ol<t people in markets and on the streets. She asked the college pr~ vost, Dr. Page Smith, if she could. study the problems of old age. Dr. Smith sponsored her, and she spent weeks reading up on gerontology. Patty, a literature major, tackled a local retirement hotel first. ''Everyone stared at me." she recalled. "They thought I was just another hippie, I guess." But she got conversations started by talking a b o u t gardening or grandchildren. "It's incredible to hear them say they were married in 1910 ....: and lived through history." ''Naturally the reception was mixed . People ask.ed me often: 'Why do you throw bombs?' I always answer: 'I don't throw bombs. We oppose the throwing of firebombs - here iind in Vietnam.' " One old inan, she said, refused to talk to her for .some time. He finally gave her a list of the things he didn't like about young people. "I g~ to him by going to church wilh him," she said. "We're good friends now." Some of the students carried guitars on their visits and "we dug up some old songs. The response was electrifying. They 'll just be sitting there, staring into spact!, but the eyes light up when you go into 'Shine On, Harvest Moon,' or 'My Wik! Irish Rose,' " When the school term ended ln June, Patty stayed on in Santa Cruz. St111 struggling for ice rmbes? . mERES A BBTER IAYI WITH THIS FRIGIDAIRE SIDE-BY -SIDE with AUTOMATIC ICE-MAKER Deslper Door. C..1 .... It= ""' Iron! decor to N )'DUI' •ltchet Of ,.... lllODd. Aatomatlc te Mak1t , lijls, flft.teS, relttWS cubts iato doof server. Al aitomat· lcollJ. "' till "' spflt. 21:9 CL fl witll 211..fti. dzt •trlictl ....... lm 11111 ,.... wide. Frost-Proof! b1 neter deflosl ..... Fully Adjustal*. Shelves '"°"' llP .... to Iii roods of any htight. SWildl a piUHize sheH to I I.ti!'!' 1ize silt!! ill set:'llllds. COMPLETELY INSTALLED s5991s Available in Colom.oo! 411 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA -646-1684 D•lly 9 to 6, Mon.-Fri. 9 to 9 ' Almos t Eve1·yone • I r Reads The N ewspapers Newspapers deliver massive coverage of ALL occupation groups each wee~day OCCUPATION OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD Professionals Managers Cleric al, Sales Craftsmen Other Manual Farmers 88% 91 - 85 80 71 70 Sour«: Opinion Research Corporation News papers reach, in-depth, into all occupation groups every day, as this graph indi- cates. But what should be even more interesting to advertisers is the high precentage of management, professional and other hi9h-ial1ry-e1rnin9 types who Nada newspa· per every day. They make more money, travel more, buy more, set the s~a(ldards for others to foUow. If you want to play 1'Fonow The Leader," advertise in some other medium; if yoo want to lead the leader, put your message where he'M cead it .•• with us, the newspeper. • DAILY PILOT ~ • .... , - • ' I ' I l ' ' I Tt1rning Back the Cl.ock F'rld1y, l11911St 7, 1970 5 DAil V PllOO :J Pavillg _ Way to Suit Tardiness eenalty to H-Urt£lemente? .B~ JOUN VALTERZA ef "'-0.lff" Plltt ll•ft A ()(¥ible court battle over the city's withholding of $5;900 for tardiness in c;wnpleting a pavJng contract is brewing to S41in Clemente. In plain terms, comments by an employe of the Griffith Company to city councilmen Wednesday came across as a threat of higher charges If the contactor accepted any further city con· tracts. The battle is simmering over the city keeping the money ·for aSlerted .. late days" in comple~ of widening project en and paving project la.$1 .year along Camino Capistrano. The total cost of the projtt:t . was about $64,000 for the job completed last J uly. critlctsm from city aide.a Md rtskients ollke .. Durlng one cooncll metting City Enginter, Pill! Peter indicated be would probably declare Sully Miller an "unfit" bidder if the firm oUered !Ls services on aubsequent jobs. De!endlng he city's stand on the Grif· Ulh matter 1 City Man1ger Ken Carr &temly maintained that the city "i& com· pletely within its rights'' to withhold $100 a day for S9 days worth of del.fys. Carr quickly added tMl.t he had in· tended to make a full report on the matter lo the council. Clemente R-eady for Bids On Restoring Bluff Area race, City Engineer Phil Peter said. A turn-of-the-century village like the one in this artist's conception would be a center o( activity on the Starr Ranch under plans to transform the 10,144- acre cattle ranch near Mission Viejo and San Juan Capistrano into a privately developed public park. Plans presented by Recreation Environments Inc. of Newport Beach await action by the coun ty Board of Supervisors. But Stan Kelly of 720 W. Calle Juntpero, told councilmen durring the oral communications from the audience that the withholding was causing the ''a1ienalion of the seeond paving con· tractor doing business with the city." Qids will be advertised soon for a city project to restore the badly crumpl· Ing bluI{s below San Clemente's Colony Cove -lw~thirds of which will be paid for with state disaster funds. City Councilmen have authorized the advertisement for bids on the project to build Lincoln·log crib walls at tbe base of the unstable bluffs and lo recom· pact the soil. The prob lem has become aggravated by seeping ground water which has ap- peared since the development was put in . Many or the earth slippages have resulted in the closing of some lanes of El Camino Real wlllle crews cleaned up lhe tons of dirt and stone. ~oaqui.t1 Board Settles V alenc.ia Attendance Feud An argument over who should allend Valencia School has been settled by, trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. The board voled un.anlmously Wed· nesday to retain present attendance boundaries which encompass part or the Capistrano Highlands and Aegean Hills areas. Parents of the Cap:strano Highlands students strenuously objected to the decision. Richard E. Smith, president of the Capistrano Wghlands Homeowners Association, asked the board lo allow all Capistrano Highlands students to aUend Valencia, which is in their com- munity. He suggested that the Aegean Hills students, who are bused Into Valencia, be bused to Olivewood School in El Toro. J School Superintendent Ralph Gates said it was more economical to retain present boundaries. He recalled that when Valen· cia school became overcrowded last March all new students from both the Capo Highlands and · Aegean Hi lls conr munities were bused to Olivewood. New students this fall Crom the two areas again wi ll be bused to Olivewood. There-will be about 115 from Capo Highlands and 90 from Aegean Hills, school officials said. Smith argued that it is psychologica!Jy better for children to attend their neighborhood school and aesthetically Dentist Joins Parking Unit San Clemente dentist Dr. Wallace Kvilvang will be installed soon as the newest member of the parking com· mission. Dr. Kvilvang, 1211 Via La Jolla, is a longtime resident of San Clemente. He was appointed to fill a vacancy on the commission created by the recent resignation of Thomas Broadbent. Councilman Wade Lower made the appointment of the dentist because the retiring cmmissioner also was the coun· cilman's appointee. The advisory commission Jends advice to councilmen on matters relating to parking. NOT SO FUNN !' PORTLAND, Ore. (Uf>'l) - A funny lhing happened on the way to the Portland Zoo Thursday morning. Four-year old Royce Lowe of Eugene was pulling his wagon throogh the zoo's turnsUles when both he and the wagon got stuck. His father, Gayle, was close behind and came to the rescue. The fathe r fixed things so well It took four :.oo maintenance inen 30 minutes to dissemble the Wagon and release the lather-son teall). Nix 1'9n ' ' better for the district since parents are more wi lijng' to donate trees and shrubs for landscaping. "Unfortunately schools are built for the total community, not particular areas," said trustee Ed Berry. "I agree it is good to have rapport with one school, but I don't think we have the luxury of having one school per develo~ ment. 1 can't see it in the immediate future either." Bart Spendlove, president of the Aegean Hills Homeowners pleaded wilh the board not to remove t h a l development's cruldren from Valencia. "Some ol our children have attended three different schools in three years before they went to Valencia. I think it is better to move a new student rather than an established one," he said. Dana Harbor Means WUiening For Del Obispo The dangerous kinks will be taken out of Capistrano Beach's winding Del Obispo Road by next year. The revamped highway, which al.so will be widened, will accommodate the ZS,000 cars ex- pected to travel to the new Dana Harbor each day. That was the promise this week made by Orange County Road Engineer Hal Krizan. He told a committee of the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Ccm- merce that Del Obispo has top priority because of traffic projections. The data show the road will have a 400 percent increase In vehicle trafiic with the opening of the first portions of the harbor next spring. 'Ille Pacific <:oast Freeway also will affect the load on tile busy roadway, he added. In a talk before the chamber roads and signs committee, the engineer said the existing traffic Toad of 6.100 cars per day will soar to 25,000 vehicles within a year or so. The winding, two-lane road, is a major north-south artery of the west Capistrano Valley. It will be widened to four lanes south of Stonehill. The Capistrano Beach southbound off· ramp of the Coast Freeway will send harbor and beach traffic over this seg· ment of roadway. Extension of Alipaz. a combined pro- ject o[ Orange County and the City oJ San Juan Capistrano, 'will provide • direct access to the harbor and beaches from the central Capistrano Valley over the new widened Del Obispo. Wben lhe Victoria extension bridging the San Juan channel and Sante Fe tracks is completed in 1972, the south ~gment or Del Obispo also may become the major artery for shoppers from the Coast Highway sections of Dana Point· and Laguna Niguel who trave l lo t¥ Capistrano Beach Plaza shopping center. Nixon 'Sewe rs Not Good Enough, for City I ' • The sewers of the Western Wblte Jtoue- and of neighboring Cyrus Shores have been offered free to the City of $an Clemente. But the city doesn't 'l\'ant them-just tel. The network-which cost lhe original rleveloper of the posh residential area 1lmost $100,000 and the residents about ta.000-have some problem!! which rfiust ~ repaired before the city ~II ake tht!m over. ~ City Engineer Phil Peter told COWl· cihnen this week that impellers- (booster machanisms which Improve the flow) arc falllng apart and need rep.airs. Until the job is done . he added, lfe recommends that tht sewers stay In private 0~11ership. The dedication of the sys tem, • com· ., mon practice, is be.Ing oUertd by the Cyprus Shore OOmmunity Association, whJch has borne the cost of maintenance eince the system11·constructlon. Tying into that network are mains from the White House Compound. In offering the dedication thi.1 week, Association, President Roy Dickson Aid the homeowners have personally paid for maintenance of lhe syatem for JO years, incllJding recent expenses to clean mains and seal the Jolnl&. If and when San Clemente aOC'tpt9 the network, the malnWlanct duties will revert to the city with the. Shores residents paying the rees through exisUng property tu. Dickson stressed that 1ht sewer 11atem · was bunt to serve an area four tlmes as «1Ut as the Cypnu Shore colony Itself. Celebrity Saves Boy He added that the situation has come to the point of "possible litigation." "I am rather concerned, and It could cause an increase in the cost of asphalt contracts. I just want to make you aware of what is going on," he added. Kelly's alluding to "alienation" CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. (UPI) -Ent.r· tainer Bobby Darin dived from a motor boat Into Lake Tahoe Wednesday and pulled out a boy who was in danger of drowning. Darin and some friends were in the vicin1ty because they had to bring thejr boal back to the Kings Beach Marina to get more gasoiine. presumably meant a recent dispute between the city and the Sully Miller paving finn whose work on a Mariposa· Marquita road project . drew strong • I 1. Seats big enough for five bi& people. ! 2. Over 12 cubic reet of luggage spact. 3. Steel cargo guard m trunk. 4. Rust fighting Oush-and-dry rocker panels. 5. Inner fendm , front and rear, to protect the outer fenders. 6. Low profile tires on 14'' wbccls. 7. Springs computer matched to weight of the car. 8, 140-bp Six or 200-hp VS. • • 9, Magic-M irror acrylic lacquer finish. 10. Automatic ignition key alann. 11. Rear windows that roU up and down. 12. Foot-operated parking brake. 13. Glove compartment that locks. 14, Body by F~bc1. You r Chevy dealer may still have som e left. But you bette r hurry, ~ause he's offering summer clear· aoce deals on all new Novas in stock. Putting you tint, keeps us first. .clearance savings now. The estimated costs or the project is under $30,000. Th municipal projeet wass called to protect flood control pipes which have been exposed by repeated sJides. The bowl-shaped area has given way enough to also jeopardize some front yards of expensive homes atop the ter· • rs If bids from contractors are submitted, councilman will dec ide whether the cos~ would warrant completing the job. Thus far 00 percent of the payment wil l come through the state's flood disaster relief funds. Federal sources_ might pick up much of the remainder of the total bill, City Manager Ken Carr said. • Nova Coup1 •Tl11• ma11ufactu,t1'1 n111ts11d r11ar1 prlc11, lnclud/111 fedtral ,.~c!Jt ""'and JUfftllfd "ea/u ntw 1·1/ik lt prepa1a1i,o11, tliar1u, w .. rt: rtd1u:rd SJJ9 1tvtral nionllu 410. You're on ·np_nme. ' • " r· ,• t ' ------------------------------------------------------------------~ OAILV PILOT ' . ' • U.S. Awaits Troopers to Halt ' • Hanoi Move ..-"' T011r$ IEWS] .. • ! l London strongman Walter Corn• llu1 is lookinj! for an attractive fingle iirl with enouJ!h sinew to crack concrete over his bead and help luR hi s dumbbells. The 4f>- year-old Cornelius. who heaves on the sta~e. said she will '"need to wield a sledl!ehammer to crack slabs of concrete across my head." "Above all. she must be sin£le.'' he said. "I've had enou~h trouble with jealous husbands. I just "'ant someone who is nice to look at and able to help me carry m.v dumb- bells." • Police ore 011 the lookouL for o naked Briton who take3 day· time strolls ,iear o Toke. A police spokesman said the man was &ten by two passing motorists. "lt must be thr. hot weather," the spokesman said. • Somethint is crooked at Louis- ville City Hall -its three-story c entury-old to\\•er is leaning four inches, officials say, Larry Mat· t ingly, superintendent of public . properties, said he wasn't worried about it, however. 1'f{ the tower has onJy leaned four inches in 100 years. I can't see how there could be much dane:er," he said. • Two trained monkeys. Labar, and Liselotte, set off a burglar alarm in their cae:e in a Maimoe. Sweden pet shop \Vednesday night. Police found l\\'O youne:sters trying to steal fish from an aquarium. • The wreckage of 7.680 cars was scottered 011 the Son Diego rreeway \Vednesday bttt 011/11 two Highway Pat.rolme11 toere needed lo c/enr it nway. The wrecked-vehicles u•ert. lay rnc· ittg models whiclt fell off a de- livery 1ruck. • Rob•rt Gr•gory, 32, of Bradwell, England was injured when thrown from a speedine: baby carriae:e. oolice said. Gre~ory was taking· part in a village race. • Sam Morris, head of a north London shoplifting firin. advertis· ed in lhe Times for retired, con· victed shoplifters. He said he wants to learn from the pros the secrets of their trade so he can better design security measures for his clients at the s hoplifting stage. • The. script for a movie being ~ shot in downtown Antwerp. Bel· l_ gium last u;e.ek called for po· t• I.ice tn break up n dernonst.rn-,.- tion . Tire 1'ea/ police didn't P'l i· the word. The11 broke 14p !hf de· · mon.strntion rrnd. were n/Jout tn t' takr moviemaker Rnbbe De Hert. I to jail uilien they d iscovered n their tnistake. ~ b:lllEi~_..~ • Otto Klemper•r, noted German- Je,vish conductor, took out Israeli citizenship Tuesday. the Ministry of Interior announced. Klemperer, 85. also hold.~ Swiss citizenship. He has been tivin~ in Zurich since HiUer's rise to po"•er in Germany. He plans to take up residence here. Rock Festivities • By \Jnlltd Pl'f:1t hltematlonal Gov. Dewey Bartlett had sent 1tate troopers to slop a rock festival planned for th is weekend near Sulphur, Okla., and Max E. Sulcer, sponsor of the festival, was mad. "All those gestapo at the gate." SulCilr said Thursday after troopers cleared out the site of the rock festi11al. "You would think it was heil Hitler day." Firebombing Continuing. In Ohio City LIMA, Ohio (UPI) -Sniper fire and firebombing hit this northwestern Ohio city of 55.000 again Thursday for the second night in a row. Nobody was reported injured. A Molotov cocktail destroyed a linoleum and furniture store and 20 ar· reslS for curfew violations were made . Police said the gunfire, from rifles and small arms, was aimed at store windows. National guardsmen called into Lima arter a Negro woman's killing touched off racial disorders-Wednesday will stay for the weekend to patrol the southside. The 500 guardsmen, all 80 city policemen and sheriff's deputies from 12 other counties kept all persons off the streets as an 8 p.m. lo 6 a.m. curfew was extended indefinitely. Col. J, E. P. McCann, administrative assistant to the Ohio National Guard adjutant general, said !he Lroops would sLay to ensure against a flareup of trouble. "\'le expect to be here at least until Sunday night." McCann said . Police said the sniper fire, which they first encountered Wednesday night after dispersing a gun-carrying mob tha t started downtown, came mostly from darkened windows or rooftops. The violence followed the killing <lf Mrs. Chrisbne Ricks, 40. who tried to stop two while palrolmen from arresting a black youth blocking a street with bis bicycle. Police said the woman grabbed patrolman Glen Pierce's revol ver and began firing al him. She was shot dead by his partner, Ted Boop. During that first night or violence. five peri;ons were wounded, Including three policemen. Seven others were ar~ rested. Eight fires were set and six police cars hit by snipers. Several suburbs jOined in ordering a curfew for Thursday night and Mayor Christian Morr is cont.inued the ban on the sale of gasoline and carrying of guns. ABM Showdown Set Wednesday \VASHINGTON 1UPI) -A SenatP. sho"'down on the Safeguard antiballi!lic rnlssile system (ABM ) has been 1et for next Wednesday, with opponen ts believed to be one or two votes shy of victory in thei r effort to block expansion of Lhe system. The opposing sides agreed Thursday, !he llrst anniversary of last year's dramatic !)() to 50 tie vote on the ABM, to end lhis year's debate at 3:30 p.m . ( EOTJ nexl Wednesday. The key vote v.•i!l be on an Amendment by Sens. Philip A. Hart !0-~l ich .J. and .John Sherman Coo per 'R·Ky. \, !o confh1e the ·ABM to the existing two sites in Montana and North Dakota and bar construction of further installations. ' Headcounters on both sides believe another cliffhanger is m tbe makin1. It didn't look Uke Sulcer would get his festival, but another featival was in full swing before it began near Jackson , Mich .. and a federal court ap- proved a ID-hour festival in Philadelphia on Sunday. Officials in a Pennsylvania township were trying to halt a rock festival there planned for Aug. 28-30. Promoters of the festival near Jackson had expected 60,000 young people - each paying $15 for three days of music by 21 bands -but Michigan state police said up to 70,000 persons had come to the 39-acre Goose Lake Park Thursday nigh~ -12 hours before lhe first band was to begin today, Police said 15 or 20 of the new arrivals were arrested on narcotics charges, but there were no serious incidents. A 4(1(1.. man privale police force kept the peace, and watched a 12-fool·high electrified barbed wire ferl« to keep out easy riders. The Strawberry Fields Festival begin.'I loday in Morport , Ont., some 90 miles northeast or Toronto and 750 miles from its original location in Moncton, New Brunswick. Canadian i mm i gr a ti o n authorities are turning back thousands of Americans at the border. After a U.S. distril't. court judge ap- proved a llJ.hour rock festival in Philadelphia Sunday state and local governments asked an appeals court to reverse the decision. Gov. Raymond P. Shafer said he feared "serious harm" from the festival and said the promoten;: could be jailed for violating a stale law which prohibits commercial concerts on Sunday. The promoter or the festival is Peact, Jnc ., an organization which raises cam· paign money for peace candidates. 'fhe chairman of tht fund distribu- tion committee is former U.S. AUorney General Ram~ Clark. In Oklahoma, 10istrict Court Judge Bob Howell ordered the site of the proposed Turner Falls Rock Festival near Sulphur padlocked Thursday after Bartlett told him the festival would be held Saturday and Sunday despite an injunction against it. Bartlett mobilized 300 Natio n a I Guardsman and sent too Highway Patrolmen to the 5ite of the festival in southern Oklahoma's Arbuckle Moun· tain and closed highways leading to Turner falls. Panther Gives Vivid Account Of 'Last Ride' NEW HAVEN, Conn. (.UPI ) -Black Panther George Sams Jr., who has plead· ed gullty to murder charges in the death of one party member. said Thurs· day he ha d been ordered to shoot Chicago Panther Fred Hampton. Sams. a key prosecution witness in the murder conspiracy 11nd kidnaping trial of Lonnie McLuca~. was In be cross-examined today in Superior Court. McLucas is accused in connection wi tll the May 21, 1969, death of Alex Rackley, an alleged police informe r who'e tortured body was found in a Middlefield swamp. Sams and another Panther, Warren Kim~ bro, have both pleaded guilty to second· degree murder in the slayint. Sams said he \\'llS present when Rackley was tortured with boiling water. takl!n for a ride and shot twice with a .45-calibcr pistol. "We went on a road ," Sams teslified . ''The next thlng I knew. we were pulling over. I ga ve Warren the gun and said 'These orders from n;itional -ice him.' "Tht' gun went off and I seen Ra ckley :;pin arou nd and hit the ground ," Sam!i . ieon tinued. He said he sent McLucas 'back ttt make ~Ure Rackley was dead, and tht' Panther fired a second shot into Rackley's head. ' Sunshine Scatters Showers • Few Rainstorms As Nation Bwks • Plea.sant W eat1ier in , . • " " ~ ,. ~ ,., " M "' " " •l ~ ·" " ·" ~ • ~ " • ~ • \ Queeti of Sniog The air was rare in a park in Philadelphia Thursday a s Debra Wolf. 17, was chosen as Miss Sr.iog America 1970 during a non ceremony. Vrugu,ay Band J(idnaps ' U.S. Agriculture Expert MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI) - Tupamaros terrorists kidnaped an American agriculture expert from his laboraWry today only hours before the ransom deadline for anothe r American adviser and a Brazilian diplomat ab- ducted a week ago. The U.S. embassy reported tha t Claude L. Fly, 65, of Fort Collins, Colo., was taken from the lab shortly bcfnre 6 a.m. PDT, as he talked with a group of Uruguayan agriculture specialists. An anonymous telephone call to a local radio station sald Fly was taken by the Tupamaros and ipiritecl lo the game hiding place where American ad~ Viser Dan Mitrione, SO, Richmond, Jnd., and Brazilian consul Aloyslo Dias Gomide, 41, were being held. The telephone call said that "justice" would be dealt to all three men H the government did not agree by mid· night ton ight to release an estimated 150 political prisoners in Uruguayan jails. Uruguayan President Jorge Pacheco Areco has stood firm in his refusal lo deal with Tupamaros, a left-wing band named for a Peruvian 1nca, Tupac Amaru, who Jed an unsuccessful re volt against the Spanish in the 18th century, Fly moved to Uruguay last January under a private contract with the Uruguayan government after leaving the tea chi ng staff of Colorado State UniverSlw ty. 'l'he embassy said he is a native of Fulbright, Tex., and is employed by International Development Services, Inc. In Paris PAl\IS (UPI) -Amba!Sador DaVid K. E. Bruce brought a whole new series <lf peace prop:>sals to Paris but none wUI i;urface in either public or .secret negotiaUons until Ha_npi gl11es something jn 1·eturn for Pre!ident Nixon'1 ip. poinlment of a ranking negotiator, an authoritative diplomatic source said to. day. The diplomat avoided using the term "coalition government" in discussing the new and as yet unexplored possibil!Ues for peace, but he mentioned a "sharing of power" that could be discussed by Hanoi and U.S. negotiators without the parlicipalion of Saigon negotiators. The diplomat said the United States would make no attempt to resume secrel negotiations with Hanoi until Washington is satisfied it is dealing wilh a qualified negotiator. American negotiators are confident Hanoi will soon send one of their ranking negotiators ba ck to Paris. possibly within a few week!, the diplomat said. , The diplomat noted that the inost senior member of Hanoi's negotiating tearn in Paris is Nguyen Minh Vy, "v.·ho is No. J or 4, depending on how you count." The United States is not ruling out contacts with Vy "on the technicality of his rank" the diplomat said. but he noted that in the eyes of American negotiators "he has never shown tha t he is anything more than a repeat-the- o!d-position guy." The diplomat said Amer ice n negotiators would happily hold sec ret ta!ks with Vy, but first they would have to have "some indication that Vy is more than someone who simply gives statements when someone pushes but- ton." Only I Sextuplet Remains Alive ROME (UP I) -The survivor or sex- tuplets born Tuesday to the wife of a $40"a-week factor y worker drank her first milk today through a tube running into her incubator. Doctors at Umberto Hospital said the girl, whG weighs 28 ounces. was fed several grams of breast milk and tha t her condition remained stationary. They said her chances for survival were slim. Anna J\.faria PeLrone, so tiny she fit in a doctor's hand , was the last re· maining child of Anlonio and Loredana Petrone, who became the parents of sextuplets Tuesday night after 11 childless years . II II ~ ~ 1 .Early apartment dwellers had to live with flames. You don't in an all-electric apartment Step insi de any all-electric Medallion the clan, fre sh look 0£ the df..perics Apartment. You 'll sec why they 're set~ and the upholstery. That'i because ting the trend. Notice how the • electric heat is clean heat , kitchen slcams. \Vhy 1 Because •• . Now the bathroo m. Torn there are no by-products of . on the water tap. Note how c o mb ~stio n to dirty wa~ls . the electric ,watcr.hc1tcr givci ~nd w1ndO\o.'S. No oppressive -you hot watcr-rfght now. kitchen heat, either. Electricity heat~ Enter the bedroom. Sec the separate the food-not the kitchen. heat di111 You can only have room· ' Walk in to lhe living room. Notice by-room tcmpc.ra.ture ~ootrol If it 's electr ic. Many Medallion Apartments also provide clt:"ctric air conditioning. The rent'? Like Medallion Hom«, ~1eda llion Aparunents art: ilso avail .. able in all price ranges. You c11n set \\•hy more people arc cho6sing to live 1hc. good clean Hfc-tlcctrically. sCJS Southern C.tifornie Edl1on -- '• ' l ) ' ·, • I I I Paet Creates Furor • • \ '· / Frldiy, August 7, 1970 ly Phll lnterlandl DAILY PILC'3' 5 Refugees 'Warned: ..---f ulbriglit Ir-ate Over-Spain· Treaty Stay Out UPI T ....... VICTORY KISSES FOR TENNESSEE 'S GORE D1ughttr Nancy, Wife Paull,,. Share Triumph Gore Facing Battle From Nixon Forces NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)'-. Sen. Albert Gore, an anU·Viet.- nam war Democrat, faces the toughesl fight of his Jong political life against Rep. Wil· liam Brock, a I pro-Nixon Republican, in ttie Nov. 3 general election. Gore, who calls himself the No. I White House target of the off.year elections, won renomination handily o v e r four cpponents in Thursday 's Democralic primary. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew already has promised to campaign for Brock who defealJXI cowboy singer Tex Ritter and J. O. Boles, peren- nial candidate, for the GOP nomination. Dr. Cecil Pittard of Knox· ville was uoopposed for the American party nomination. Winfitld Dunn, a Memphis dentist who drew heavily on hometown support, won the Republi'8n nomJnation for govemo! in a minor upset that wil ptt him against Democrat John J. Hooker Jr. 1n the general election. Dunn's closest opponent, Nashville in- dustrialist Maxey Jarman, refused to concede, cum· plaining ot "voting inequities" in Memphis. The Senate race will be watched nationally as an in· dicator of Southern support for President Nixon's Vietnam and OOmeslic policies, both op- posed by Gore and supported by Brock. Gore, seeking his fourth six year Senate term after 14 years in the House, called for the "support of all Ten. nesseans, De moc rats, in· dependents, Republicans·• in the general election. Brock said of Gore's primary victory : "l don't see how an incumbent who has served in the Senate as long as Gore can consider himself a winner when be barely received 50 percent of the vote." The total was 51 per- cent. ' U.S. SALT Proposal Registers With Russia VIENNA I (UPI) -The Soviet Uni!h has shown "a positive inlerest" in an American plch for curbing the two nations~' issile arsenals, diplomatic ces said today. Russian an American diplomats me today at the U.S. Emba for the 30th formal session 4} the Strategic Arms Limilal'fn T a 1 k s (SALT). The .t?SSion lasted 40 minutes wittt an hour of inform a I con1ersation af· terwards. The American plan - po15sibly the most important single event since SALT began here April 16 -was presented July 24 by the chief U.S. delegate, Gerard C. Smith. Although less than a draft treaty, it suggested that the talks focus on a numerical limitation on s trategic missiles and bombers, a strict limit on giant missiles of the Soviet S.S9 type, and a low- level curb on antiballistic Rail Di missiles (ABM). . . spute The three meetlngs since then have been taken up mostly wilh Soviet probing "Of PJa11 EasP~~ details of the plan. This pr~ T bing has hen .so extensive that, ror the first time, experts Ou t Firern,:._0 from the two sides have met .....,.., in smaller meetings, outside \V ASHING TON (AP)t~ A the n o r m a I lwice-week.ly formal sessions, to swap presidential emergency rd questions and answers. has recommended r road The Soviets have not yet firemen 's jobs gradual be given a defin.ilive response to abolished as a means set· the American outline or tling a long-standing bor presented a counteroutline of dispute. their own, the source said. The White Hou!e di d .;:::========::;:;I Thursday the board call for phasing out the jo of most railway firemen. recommendation on immediate approval of w~: =r~·said the N~tl Railway Labor °"11 , whidl represents more 130 railroads wtth 95 of the nation's track. 111 on vtrge of a settlement with United Tran,,portation Unio which bargains for t b e firemen. The .settlement would com-1 bine the dulles o( firemen and brakemen under a new job classificatlmi acceptable to the railroads and union. No new workers would be classified as firemen but no firemen \\'OUld be fired . The clwiOca· lion would be eliminated gradually through retirement and death. GEIST FOR FALL THINK t WISTCLIFP PL.\JA MIWPOlm INN Christianity isforfodaY Truth doesn'I c!tanae with Ume, The trulhs Iha! Christ Jasus tabghi more than nineteen cen1uries 110 can llave the same effect todly they had then. They can thlnae the course of the world. ll'f up to us. 1 We have to understand wha! he bugh~ to put l/ttSe nte'sely practicll tachinas int se in our daily lives. If '" Of us does !hit, ~will Ila a .. rf<ed eftect upon th ortd. H"r Howard H. I , c.s., a member ol T Chrotian Sc:ienct Boord of tureship, speak°" " mtianity Is for Today.~ ou ind your friends 1r1 t cordially illYited to this fr public lecture. ~tian Scieoce lecture s.4-o • .,, A•tUtl I, 10 A.M. ,..=a..-. .. ", ....... WASHINGTON (UPI) - 'Ibe rUt1 between the State Deputment and the Senate Fortl!I• RelaUons COmmlttee ha,s been dee~ by the lleW· ly •lilied nillltary a n d eoooomlc. qreemeot between the Uolted Slfles and Spain. 'Jbe necuttfe agreement, fiMllf«I Tbanday d e 1 p I t e sftnuoul objec:tiaDI fro m Russiall8, Ge I'm.ans Sign Treaty MOSCOW (UPI) -Foreign ministers Andrei A. Gromyko of the Soviet Union and Wa1ter Scbeel of West Germany in- itialed loday a nonaggreslon treaty praised as a foundation for relaxing tensions and building a lasting peaoe in Europe. It was the climax to the most signillcant diplomacy between the old World War II foes In 15 years. DiplomaUc sources said the So v I et s agreed to accept a West German disclaimer that the document constituted a sur· render of the right to evenlual Gennan ttunificatlon. Scheel and Gromyko in· itialed lbe four-page document beneath the crystal chan- deuicrs of a marble hall in Spirldonov Palace, a room built by czarsand used by World War II allies in plan- ning strategy against Adolf HiUer. "The goal we set before ourselves has a great political importance,'' Scheel said. "'The treaty will help relax tensions and provide the pre- requisities for building a last- ing peaee in Europe." Gromyko praised the truly and said bargaining over a JO-dey period had been tough. He said the Soviets were as glad as the Germans it was over. In a statement released as he prepared to board a plane for Bonn at Moscow airport, Scheel added '"With this treaty a new page will be turned in relations between the Soviet Union and the Federa I Republic of (West) Germany." Foreign RelaUoN QWrman J, Willfam Fulbright, sranls Spain eormornic and military assistance worth about $200 million over flv• years. Jt in- cludes a loan to Spain of 16 U.S. warships and g Ives America continued use of four military lnstallatiooa in Spain. The Foreign Re.laUoos Com- mittee, piqued by the State Italy's Neiv Gove rnment Like Old ROME (UPI) -Italy has sworn in a new government so similar to the one that fell one month ago that Italians wondered how loog it would last. TDe only readily apparent change In the 32nd post. Fascist government from the 31st was lhe premier. Former Treasury Minister Emilio Colombo, SO, a scholar. ly looking bachelor, moved up to the premiership held for three governments by Mariano Rumor. Otherwise, the same four parties made up the center- left coalition that has ruled much of the past seven-years. They are Colombo's Christian Democrats, who kept 16 of 27 ministerial pos~. t h e Socialists, sii: ministries, the Unitarian Socialists, four, and the Republicans, one. Department's refusal lo agree lo pubUc discussioM of tbe agreement before it was sign.. ed, voted to· go ahead and hold public hearings anyway In tbe coming -"'· Fulbright had no immediate cnmmenl on the signing but an ~ said tbe senator con- tillued lo at.and by bis lengtby statement of Wednesday. Jn that statement Fulbright contended the agreement ac- tually was a disguised com- mitment for the defense of Spain; that it had been worked out without due respect ror the right of the Jegb:lative branch to examine the alleged commitment; and that the Slate Department had been "With !,bat one, i! h• otarts a rlmllillg cllalogue, · start running!" CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. (UPI) -Mayor J a c k lllackmoo II uklng r<Sldentt wbo fled the dt1 in the face ol )lw:rlacne Cella to etay away from their homes for another couple ol days. Manr ttlkttntl who aought refu,e from the atorm tn cltlet and towns away from the coast DOW are planning to return home because they have heard the cleanup opera- tloos are almost complete and the town la back to normal. Blackmon sald this Isn't tbe case . "'Every other wann body b a problem and we don't need them oow," Blackmon aald Thursday. deceitful in informing him -------------------- when the agreement would be Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough (0.Tex.), toured tbe city and surrounding communities by helicopter Thunday and said the damage would r u n between $500 million and $1 bWion. Blackmon said it would be $300 million in Corpus Christl alone. llnellud. St.ate Department a I d e s acknowledged today that at the end of la.It week ~ sideration was being given to the pooslbllity ol agreeing witb the Fortign Relations Com- mittee to bold public hearings oo the agreement. But on Monday FulbrJgbt made a speedl in which he disclosed some informaUoo about the agreement which the State Department sub,se.. ~Uy charged consUtuled a violationofco n f Iden tia 1 tesUmony given the Senate by administration officials I n July. Crash Binds Family Trio STANFORD (UPI) -Mr. and Mrs. Fred Saas are shar- ing a room in the mal.emity section at Stanford University Hospital with their baby - and not just because or strong fee Ii n gs about family togetherness. Saas and his wile both were injured in an automobile ac- cidenl June 16 and the baby wa s born 17 days later. "'We are sorry stte had to find us in sueb adverse con- ditions," Mrs. Saas said cf the child, Shawnee Ellzabeth. Tot Dis~arded Mother 'Did It . for Vs' A spokesman for the city'• utilily company aaid only 10 percent of the company's customers have had their power restored. Lim l t e d STANTON, Mich. (UPI) -Probate Judge Guy Wagner power service was expected A 17·year-old girl, married for scheduled a hearing today on to be restored lo aU the towns a year and a mother for a peUtion to take custody of hit by Hurricane Celia today a month, offered only thb: U· the baby ,filed by Montcalm except for Port Aransas. planation, "Gerry didn't Uke The city is sUll under a being tied down." County Sheriff T h o m a s 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew and MT'. Linda · Foor had told Bamwall.' police man roadblocka to pre- autliorilies Tuesday her baby Acrording to authorities, vent JooUng and unoecesaary daughter, Amy, had been t1d-Mn. Foor led authorities off traffic. Police have arrested naped. She was charged with a ru ral road to where little 14 persons for Jootlng 1fnce assault wlttt Intent to commit Amy was found lying in seven-Monday's hurricane and 20 murder after ttie baby was foot-high corn. others for violating curfew. found, in good condition, za;.----='--------------=---- boors later in a cornfield where police say she left it. Mrs. Foor told FBI, state police and local authorities, she and her 19-year-old hus- band, Gerald, bad been havln& marital troubles ,since the. child was born'. The husband wu working lD Ohio when tbe baby was reported mJa&. Ing. Authorities quoted .M r • . Foor as saying e:he abandoned the baby "to save my mar· riage ." "I did it for us," she said. "Gerry didn't like being tied down." 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IWIO 6ROWTlf S111fatt of Ammonia- Jdnl fot rapid ,c:rowtb1 ricb greeo folj•ae & improYed quality for all planu. I.awn• a: .,..., • Sluf!-Unail .. • . . .. 9f '·'fi !!:,1 Y,,)i:•. '&~ ---.. -·-Snail & S1ua PdJftl -•priokl• around I•7 lc thmbbe.ry to ltUJ snai.11 & dup- OTerni1hc 1csult1 llcg. 98t: ~~~~~~~~~~~~I I I I • . ·-lllCll 1111111 CIUll Sulto1te ot Ammonia ~ .............. . I .. :;:, . ll'. •bl .... • .. '"lft 'Jff ' ' "'¢'' '··~ ~'·~; w_, ·,:.r*k! ~"I ~~.w"' . ..,,, '''""" ....... 59c , ,. 11801 Harbor Blvd., Garden Grove&: Anaheim 543-6774 rs .. t(o;~ 2U3 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 646-3925 ,_ •• ._ I CHlllTRIMS AVArlAlll-.. oUMtrlcord-I '""" Hewtn11 On Crt41t Pltft. . ............................ ~ , I • ' • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • Time for --~.eit and Festival of Arts officials did yeoman aervice recently when they Jury-Tlued a tr8llspo~·on system to Uke the.place of the Stdejined tram!. The six trams that bad fm years carried the mul - Wdes to the FHtivaJ and Pageant of. the Master• were put out of action because they did not meet safety r& qulreznents of the state vehicle code for operation on . public streets. • ~ The gap was pretty wen bridged this yeat by chan~; lni the schedule of the larger "Cannonball Express and by using the recently acquired city bus line. 'This seems·to be handling the passenger load pretty well and might help cure the $12,000 deficit the Festival laced each year by providing tram transportation. The cannonball charge is 25 «nts and the tram charge was 10 cents. , This is a good opportunitY for city and festival of- ficialJ to begin some innovative thinkint about t.fans. PortaUon next summer. It might be along the Jines ol some type of Joint venture for mini·buses or some other interestinJ( trans- pc>rtation form that could serve year round. There is al· i;:o an opportunity for creative thinking 'in the realm of joint action on parking. Meeting Needs of Youth San Clemente long bas been the type of community which adults love for its quietness and beauty. But for years the youth of the ·city have needed tangible and effective recreational opportunitiefi besides a stretch of sand and sea. And aft.er years of mild laments. it seezm the city Is at last recognizing the growing need for ora;anized recreation for the thousands of youngsters .in the -city. And although the idea is still in the infant staie, city fathers are seriously considering the bUilding of a Real Hippie Mo vement Soon Will Die • In one ol G. K. Olesterton .. delighlful Father Brown storiel, a crime is suc- cessfully commlt.1«1 by a waiter in an aclulive private club -becaUSt the ~ and the wailers are both ~ in tuxedoo, and eannot be told apm excopl by lhrir adlOlll and attitudes. Cbeata1.on is mak-1"' the point that people who dres& the same are looked upon the .same, tin. til the1 begin to function. J thought of th.is story jn re- laUon to the hippie costume that is so poJXJlBr amQll& the YOWll loday. Tho biwie c:<llltume has been a bleuing to a Miole generation ol mlsfill, )oserg and rotten eggs. For the first time, they are now able to disguise themselves as hippies, permltting the hippie move- ~ to take the blame (in the public eye) for au their oeurotJc misconduct UNTIL mE ADOPTION of this regula- tion uniform a few years ago, tile l06ers had nothin& to identify with and no place to lUde. They were forced to take individual responsibility for t h e i r behavior, and were oot condemned as part ol a youth bloc. Now, by the simple subterluge of adorning themselves with a few beadl or belts, they can be their old noxious 3oelves and pass tbt onus along lo the movenSent they pretend to belong to. THE RANKS OF the true nower· children have become ao Infiltrated by these "plastic hipples" that I doubt · if more than 50 percent of the youth wear- Dear Gloomy Gus: Whal"• thJt tnvfftig;,uo. ol La- ..... •• liberal IJ:OUPI by 'the Un· american A.es Su~t- 1'<! The b!;h'.ri,., rlghl-wmg clique is 1 1n control here.. AJ)d judging f<'"'1 the way thlngr .,. colog. they ohouJd be lnvutiglteCI. -A Non-poUUclan n" ,..,.,,. r'lflldll ..__. ....._ • __,,., ............. , ..... .._ ................... -....P-. inc these eoetumes hive even the r<:rnotesl ~ ol the original pril>- ciples that animated the movement Or care at-all. SlmP!Y by ma.quenidinc u hippies. tt)e7 feel they can iet away with ~ molt outraceo~ conduct, in violaf,Jon " au ,enulne hippie beliefs -knoiflng that tl!t llraJ&fll public c a n-0 o t dilcriminalt between them and the real UMc and 1IWll)'I niliUkes mere fonn 'for~. ntlS IS WHY THE movement has to die before very Jone. Jn a year or two, only sub teen-qers will still be affecting the cootume, just .. they pick up the discarded Jareon of the adolescenta a couple of years later. The okler youths remaining in ~e will be the ragtag and bobtail of hoodlwns, sadisl.5, oddballi, paranolds and pervert&. But, cultural lag being what it Is, the public will continue to condemn 90melhine it call! the ' ' h I p p i e movement" long arter its core has di&iriegral.ed. For it offei:J; an easy and obvious target, a safe me81la of dlscharg. ina: aggression and fruatratkln and anx- iety and hate. In different· ways, the movement has not only been a boon to lb& misfits, it has been a bles&ng to the perplexed public, who otherwise might have been forced lo look inward for the caule:S of our troubles. For the Back Bay Trade InnoYation • • beginning PlOfrtm of Ol'pllized rec:reetloG for S... aemente youth .. The function h11 been satisfied In kind thl'Olllh •om• private ~roups, but more opportunities lb6Wd •be provided. The city a!Ieady has a paria dlrector,.pan land and a citizen commission on recreation. What it needs next Is a solid comm!tml!!lt In philo- sophy -and dollars as well -from city fathers. Our youngsters are worth such a COIDJ1lilmenl _Ultunately, we all would reap a reward for the otrorts. Laguna's Library Poverty Decisioo of Laguna Beach school ln1ateet to ~lo-' cale $31,000 from district reserves for purpbue ol -s for the high school libi:ary i.,., laudable one. . The book shortage in the school llbrary !w been a long-•tanding problem. It hat been mede even· mote difficult for students because the town's pul>lic ilbra.ri, the Other likely source ol boob for reference.-and apec_. la! projects, is small, overcrowded and less tb8ll ld"'1 ·. for study. , When the .tale accreditation committee inspected the high school, members had Jaudatory•commmta ·fo r almost everything they e.ramlned -ex.c_wt the book· ~ shelves in the library. The facility, Ibey noted, was ex- cellent. but where were the books? .School administrators in recent year1 h&ve devoted much time 'to preparin( formal presentation 1eeklnJt: federal funds to help stock the library, but three such proposals have been poilitety rl!fused, presumably be- cawe the district is considered too well off to rate as a priority area. 'I .,,,...,.~~ 'Aley will have to keep tryin~. The money the trustees have had to dip into reserves to come up with. will buy about one-flftb of the boob needed. s "THIS IS THE PROSE CUToR .... I MEAN Tl-IE PRE5 1~£NT.: Nixon Misspoke Himself at Press Contereiice Bruce Wi,II ·Have 'Something New~ . . SAJI. CLl!lMENTE -COnlt..-y to the express huiguace of President Nb:on last week on . tbe questloo of a. caallUon government ln Saigon. language gloomily noted in this column and elseWhere, ·. it can now be authoritatively rta.ted Iii•! Ambassador David Bruce will Indeed have "jOmetJUnc new" to offer the other aide In .Paris. With respect to the ene.my'a offer of a coalition which could include •me element& of the present Saieon govern· ment, but not President Thieu or Vice President ""Ky, the President mmpoke at biJ Los Angeles press conference. IN ANSWER TO a rather complicated queKtioa, be &aid "We are opp>Std tb a coalition, whether negotiated or im· pooed." He did not meu, 1o say Iha! •t all. . Returning to San Clemente later, an ·aide Pointed out the mistake W the President, aOO Mr. Nixon agreed. What he had meant to say was that the Admlnillratian Is opposed to a coalUlon will<:h does not., includt: any elementJ of the· present Saigon gov'"l"11ent. The distinction is large and makes the impartant point that Mr. Nixon· did nOt mesn in any way to hnply • U..l the United Stales WU filhting for the · propoaiUon thlt a South Vietnamese govemmmt Dllllt be personified by Gener Ill Thieu and Ky. FRoM m TIME the Pari.s lalkl began, die U.S. posltli!n bu been to deny Norlb Vietnam any of ils"l>•illical objectives. The President baa deterin!ned -as ofi now at least -that we shall not go on and on repeatln& Ured fomwtu whicb deceive the American pubUc more than they do U»e enemy~ Nor, for that mttttr, would Bruce ' hive taken the job merely to rHnact. the old charade~ Whit tht new neeoUator wlll be able to offer may not IO IO far ~ lbe ceue-fire and atancl-down advocattd but not olfered by his prod......,,. But he wtU at the Ol:lt.let etve notice that the Unltod Staie. -nnl inllal that Thieu and Ill' stay on. But there la more in the wind than the e1planatlon oI errors which a Presi- dent may make during a press con- ference. And there are JOUnd reasons why new initiatives a.re now essential, according to sources here who should know. SUCCDS IN THE '-1iddle East gives the President a chance to go into the November congressional electlpns with a aolld foreign policy adlievemefnt behJnd him, provided nothing untoward occurs in Vietnam. On the other hand, something untoward seems likely ~ OCJCf1::; flll& bef(>f't the elections -unless fhe'.rt is progress ln Paris. The rainy season will be over In late September, and an enemy offensive is al hand·. That offensive coo.Id take place in Cambodia, in Laos, In Vietna1n or in all three at once. The Cambodian ex- pedition, still hotly defended at the White House, is also seen in the naked logic of Ila aftermatti as presenting the enemy with 1 new front where defeat for "our side" could be 'inflicted with great ease. THE DANGER DOES not lie in "defeat for our .lllde." With 1reat ease, Norlb Vietnam could always have taken over Cambodia. The danger Is in. American reaction W "Defeat for our side," and most important In the White ~ouse fear ol this re.action. The danpr 11 that having made the war in v1eviam a war in Indochina, the President .will regard a defeat anywhere I.here ~ a defeat for him. Mr. Nixon has made him-?'U perf~ly -even painfully -clear ct ttie sub1ect of "defeat." He will not, r:.e has said, be the first President W preside over "defeat." He has talked o~·embanass· ment'~ and "humiliation/ ~ ~ Oounc;fng wordi which th iUon'I poli· tical rlgbt could throw bac into his teeth. THE DANGER, there{' e, Is that of an enemy succeas to whl the Pre&ldent will feel he must res d by frhutting off troop withdrawa.Ls r carrying the war to Hano~ or both. That is why tbe a tment of David Bruce and the declsi to permit him to offer bargaining, po ions rather than only to make dema may at last -in the lamented ph -offer "11.ght at the end or the tu I." By/Frank r.tanklewlct aad Tom Braden l!!pan Afte ~~the 1945 Atom Bombs The · f0Ilowh1g ii one of t100 columm w.rittrn fO'f" the Chicago De- fender in 1945, a ftW months after mail com.municattona· betwevi Japan and the U.S. had betn re·e1tabli1hed follo wing the Japanese IUf"f"eWr. M11 Jath1r and mothtr, 1ww 86 veaf"s "old, live in Yamanaahi Cit11, Japa.n. Fathef"'I 1945 lettef" was from Osaka. where he t.oa.s then fn the e2:p0rt and import b~ne1s.: m· tkil 135lh. mn•i· versary month after V-1 day, it U inttf"esti11g to f"ead hil commtnta and to rtflect a,.. holD far;w h«t1e come in this 1hort quarllr: ~enturv. so complete that 90 percent of in cltiu of Japan wilh populatiOns over 30,000 were burned and destroyed. You can ima1lne the con(lltlons : 10 .million people without homes, clolhlng, or food.'' Dtsperition, consternation, and anger fi>llnwfd, "PEOPLE WERE NO longer obedient, law•bktlng Jambs. Distrust of soldiers and government oUiclals and wrath against war lear(iers ,burst out all over the country. SOC\al order was broken. Everyone ran to attend to his own needs for food and clothing. Control of prices, distribution routes, etc., were In a mess. Black markets opened, Inflation started, and prices of commodities went up by le1ps and bounds. .' "~fANY W ARE cornered by starvation are oing into the new oc- cupations .o( n11te.rlsm and hold-ups. l am trying to ' cture the true conditions, but can ne ver. show you a glimpse of lt with limit pages and my poor knowl~dge of ords. In short, the ma- jorlly of the ity population is ne.e r starvation, al order is broken , law is disregard virtue and refinement.a a.rt non-eli11 t. and all are hungry beasts on th very point of breaking out into riof g, City life ls extremely dang,rous at esenL "Under s circumstances I btlleve To !be Editor: I'm going W go for another year bQt I would sure feel better about it U your paper would wake up ~ iet behind the Back Bay trade so we can iet a few mud hens out of there ~~ open up the area to boating like the lower bey b-. ' ,Mailbox " 1be foUowing are excerptt from a letter from my father in Japan. A few weekl ago, I had the pleuure of nporting that he and my mothe.r and ,. my two sisters, who are all in Japan, are alive and well. .. ' . nte Japanese public, Father· p.y1, had no way of knowlU how ' the war was 1olnl. "The .hoal!Uilea ended on August 15, and we pt ·rid of the danger o( death by bomb attickl. But living con- d\Uons could oot improve In • short time. The truth was concealed' l:)y oui military government; and even when concUUona were at thelr wont,,tbe nation was tokl that •• were willnlnc the - war. We weni told to st.and and bear all banlshlps In order to Win . "During the war one could not buy anything u cep& 1overnment rations, which gave 300 iiram• of rice 1 day and very ''llltle salt and 50y r sauce. a lltUe vegetables once or twice a week, and no meat or fish for months. ,••But· atr1nge to py, now we can buy Jlmolt anYthJng at the black mu:ket. U you pay tho prlcii. Suell P<~• .are beyond the reach of ordinary cltitw. ' Only wealthy people and those who became rlch1n war Industries can aUonl· lo enjoy auch food. J am neither, and most ·salaried 1mtn are in the· Ame poaltion. General Ma rthur la facing real dif· ficulty In to educate lhe country for democra . Japan never enjoyed true democracy nd Creedom for the people. Feudalism · in the naUon'1 blood, flesh, and bones They do not know what is the. real aste of democr1cy although they are •lhouUng the •!Ogans of demoora . Most w.ould rather get JOO grams m or rice a da.y. The desire and Qpir tion for democracy must begin after Vl belly is ru~." You give big splashes to any misguided birdwatcher who comes by, making It eeem lib 1 small handful of dialdent.a are fiehtlfli some couraieoos battlt l(ainlt 1 terrible dragon. WM. P. BOLANtl Jll. B•J l'r•cle A rlth-tle To the Edllor: f -thal lbe AUi\lsl 3 edlllon of the DAILY PILOT qain refers to 'tht propooed Or&lli< County • Irvine Com- pony land trade of Upper Newport Boy tldeJudl U ua trade Of J57 ltQ"U ol county-owned fldeluda 10< 4!0 acres of 1"1no upllndl." Thll llal<tnent bu been reputed In your ptper every time you pubilJb an artJcle "" the subjed. I IUllMIT 111.lT ,..,r •rltbmellc la In trror, and tbat It ml•lead• the publl<. It II 1 well-known facl that the trod< 1sreement c:all• for dredglnR out lbe °""8 !~ands 11 lhe bay and dcposlll._ ~ dirt on lhe bay 1horea, lo becom' lriilne proporty, The• i>l&!da are In- cluded lo tile ..ailed 411) ..,..,, Recent , Lf:tters ff"Ofn f"tad«rr "'' wclc~. Normalll/ wriUrs 1ho\Lld conoev t>a<tr mes1ages In 300 words or lt11. 7'1\a right to condms1 lttttra to tit •J>O.C• Of" eLim.inata libtl fs reaervcd.. AU let. Uri mU8t tnclud1 1ignatur1 and mailo ;ng address, but nama1 mDfl be urltk- 11.ttd on f"eq11e1e if 1uff(cUnt r«ruon ii apparent. Poctrv wiU ftOt bl puf>. 1Uh1d. .IUl'Ve)'I, accordin& to lnform•Uon i aup- pUed to tho Board of Supervloors, cliJclo9e1 the fact. that the illllldl ar-e mnctderably 1maller than orl&lnally dtlCl'lbed. 1'1:lil further reduce• the 450 acres. IT HAS Al.SO been e1tabll1hed in court lha& the cowtty owRJ much more than !17 ....... qnally d....-lbed, In· cludlnl Norlb Star Beacb, lho 22nd St. beach and Bock Bay Drive. All lbl1 -lnfonnallon bu bet11 publlsbod In yOur paper, llld It can be verified elJlewhere, yet the mllltadln& 1t1te1nent it repealed every lime. Sharpen your pencU and add qalnl ELSIE C. KROESCHll Towards the end of March, lMS, my father says, Mother aQCI the younger of my two slst.UI moved in to the coun\ry to get away from the. bombin1s. Father remained in the c:Jty -his home ii near Osaka. After that date, he says, "conditions be<:lltle worse 'ar,d w or a e daf by day, and our life for ltJe next five moritha wu DOt.blnc bi.it fear snd dUperallon, trytni lo es- <ape from perpetual heU flre, ~lh and destruction.. ' I .. AMERICAN At!UAt. attacb wm ~--B" Geor1• ---, Dear George: You always take the male aide on court.stllp problem1. Are )'OU aorr>e kind of a 1io~! P......all)'. l lblnk you could learn a lol i- either Ann Landera or Ablp;Jl \V•a Buren! ~ 5Ulll Dear Sue : , • Thank& ror trylnc to help mt, Sue. But artn't Utey married? < "We did not pvmble ii our bomh burned, ratlont became ku and kll to the point of 1tarv1tiln. But when Japan aurTtndered and tbj real situation became clear before us for the f I r s t time, the whole natk>n wa1 stunned. Flag Desecrators'.H~ven Dt.monalr1tor1 and all lhe rig-tag eie. ment of the new revolution set have a bit of p~nt for dtfillng the American flag, at least just JO Ion& u It'• done at a political demollltr1tion, That w1s the lnterprtt1tkm banded down by tbe !'<nnsylvanlt sup ..... Court In • cue involving the atate'• law M na1 desecrallon. An American na1 bea~ 11111 the insortptlons "Mau Love, Nnl War" and ''Thil New American Revolu-. llooarl"" had been dlapl"l'ed tl a July • Ant.I-Vietnam demtnWltlon at Ptnncl'l•anl> &alt U~ity and the ftll battar OOIWlctod of doaecrtllon. The hllh -ruled, bowe•, thtl the otale 1n 11dot1 nol 1pplf " any patrlotil or pol!Ucal dtm0nstr1Uon or decor•· 'lions" and the defend1nt "was obvtouaty parUclpattna In 1 demonatratiOn con- cernln& • polillclll Issue." · ~ Edito.i:ial •• TBIC COlJ1t'M WOJlOS '*!1'1: I far try from Charla Sumner's "He mtm bt cold, Indeed. who ca a look upon Ila folds rlpplln1 In. the breeze without pride of country"; or Ollver Wendell kolmel' ••0ne Ila&, one land, one heart, one hand -one: nation evennore"; or Woodrow W:UIOll'• "The tblnp that the n11 atands for were cre.atod by tho e~rtencu of a areat people. EYtQ' that It 1tand1 for Wll written by lho r uv ... " So, orf to Ptnnsylvinl1, flaa bumen. Say It's potitlc1I, and you1re OK. Cllllol'IJa Feature Seniict I .sba quote more of my falher'1 lefter n week. ' Ir By S. I. llay1kaw1 ea" Saa FraadJCO State CaUee, Friday, August 7, IV711 • cdftorlal J>OQ• o/ u.. Dailu IOC 1111u tD lt1/t)rtn and 1tim- tc rf'Odtrs bl/ J)rtsmtlng this 1Drpaptr's oplnlon.t and com- taf'l/ on topiu of fntere11 a *nf/fcanct, by providing a f Uta f01' thll' l:t'J)f"ll1'°1e. Of o reodef"s' opfnforu, and bw p ~entfng ihe dfocrse vf110- h1t.1 ot informed ob1n-ver1 G d 1pok1.rmcn on Coptc, ot the y. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • .J '" :an <lid ?ar iat •ar "d eat Uy ?Ct lid, 1er ••• .... 11i .. th. or '1ll ng :he ;id im an >SI :ht lei •• ' ' by C• •• '· of nr ·-" w 1.1 -y 1g ly ,. r- -Y •• •• 1, ii :h ,r IO •• n ., • l ,I I .. .. . " .. •• DAIL V PILOT 1 Author ot Biii .Ma y Try A.gain £ ' .. __, ... ---·--- -·.Senate .Nixe~ Vote on 18-year-ofds ' - . -. . . ·~ ~w-et(}lb"-1 C~ECf~ ~form . · J . • • _ .. ''. . 11ai-'Plug Gf.ee~s 1?1·om· ·r o ... (:~ SA~E~ (AP) -An " ,. .I. Ietl '<Aaoenlb\y ........ bit .,. "' ~ ...... Pn>Vtd a .-lDWioo cvt la Baths .01' .. SalW:dav .. ~~:J.;.$,;;; • ., I .J' (:I~ by';ia. .:· S n a.ie .J.!~'J.~" .~ woman~t..C.Oherag~ ~-4~~::'•f ~JS'. • ~ !.18 'mari.Y .are. not" iOst;" noted ~ l1WUI , • • r-•· wtmen• as"l:q~ -11!~_1t.;m pt .. Countess ·de P.l)tUers, "they're ~ ~'" .. worth Sui~ 1'>fee li>!IOJ I,! inany ,merely added to ,lb<! qes of. of'~ ~l'\ld!tfl Afl- m·en as women S~eed .! • ~ther women."" '"~y ft.~, 19'10 . .Tl!ll ll1IAZl1JANS ~ke , CUSTOMER ~RVICE -Q. jpes due -DAI ' 15 - avoca&s· full b r & k fa :s l. '"Did you evt!r ride one o( , · .. ....._,,9'_· ~ TwyToisf?ie In Hot Auto; ~ \ • i •. ,., .. . .. .. Sitter (!one Sottd-1 all rigbt .. ~llw!:·s those old lfl g h ~ w be e.J e were included 1n me I plan A Mt;!>~!, FJi\LOW'. !"ho bicycles, L<lllie?'0 A. No, }'OUl)g lo•aYOld~~ ~ed CANoG~: PAJu(:tAPI cla.i0l4 hay levee. ts an '1'mO-fellow , they came along..bef.onit the , .. doub1~Uoq~-which SACRAMENTo CUPO ~ - The Senate -by four vt>tes -~-~ to approve a proposed co nstituUooal amendment to allow CaUtor- Rilnl to decide this November wheUier fbe vollng age should atart at 18. By a 2U vote Thursday, Senators di:{eattd the measure by Assemblyman John. V. Briggs (R-Fullerton), alter an bour o( noor debate sprinkled with llumor. But Sen. Lewis F. Sherman (R-Berkeley), noor manager for lbe A•mbly-pas.sed pro. po&al. won· permission · from colleagues to try again to gain approval. · . Shermao said Califomian.s Showld decide for themselves No Ne'v Polio Cases in LA ---• wtitther youngsters at the age SenatOrs anc1 18-year-old As. of 11 should be 1iven the semblymen and an l&-year-0ld vote and all ~ adull Governor,·• Bradley said. "lt reM>QR11biUUes ucept l h e conjures up the vi!iCM of a right to drink In a bar. coupk! o( 11-year-okt Senators "This means that on their In Otis Hou'Se without the 11th birthday, Oallfornians privilege of drinking." would be ldult.s,u 'he aaid. "lt's intriguing to think 'IlW: would Include the right about it, but I can't quite te sit on a jury.. be tried picture it," be added. for a crime as an adult or Bradley also said t b a t even hold public olfiee. unwalited youngsters Would be Sen. Clark L. Brtdley (R-''cast adrift by parents who San Jose), led the usault on no longer care" about them. lhe proposal and baed his He said tbey coul<t sweU opJ>O$,ition primarily on the we1{are rolls. have a degree ttf judgment and maturhy, which they ac- quire with the pasnge of timf," he sakl: But Sherman ar1ued that the amendmenl. if adopted, would "maite otlf young people accountable for their actions." Similar legislation in past sesslons has aha failed . The Reagan Administntlo n has already served notice it doe• not intend to camply with lhe federal law. giVUlg the vote to 18-yeilr-ol.ds~ new ad u 1 t respoiuibilltie.s "Eighteen-year-olds do not given 1o youngsters. \iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiti "We could have il-year~ld Police For ce I 11 M 011te rey On W alkout TAKATA NURSERY and Landscape Co. tioo4l ailment, "'\elY " • . my Ume,,Undersland it t90k.'>-'\layrvl! willl!IO!dlllfl ,,..u Id Two Ult!~ l\fOUlets apparenllY IT. TAKES nin&t-lioij.Jes. or · "" exper~ haodle those coil-citate .u lJQposed ·~ ~'i.n. died oI !Mi@t prostrati~ after white wine to make on'e bottl£ traptloill locid~. 'No l under the ~nn ~an. ' being "tet:t·by lhelr babysl:tter of cogt\IC, sir ..• AM AStsn · ciW.nary 1el~' could !lay 'The As.sembly Rewpue, &nd · for an houP. lnside a Car Whfte WHERE a bus~· and '!)re tiprtgbt "". one ol aaroe. Aod . Taxation Commitlee, cui jhal lemperatv..., ro0e IQ m wet! most apt lo have. fri:st Y.9U ought not can.me. Louie, "forgiveness" ,fund ~ to ~ degnes, police said today. met one .another. No doubt boy. TbaV• bad. million Thundiy 1to o&el , Hugh Ftynn Ill, and .. his about that ln school. ~ PHILOSOPHY I -Once ~ lo&t from __ ..iilltiftto to brother, ·John Jr., 6 months. L9VE AND WAR ~1 ~0 again ~·s that n,i ft y add. ~Oler ~1 ~.t ~he ; sons of .lrfr. and 'Mrs. John LoS ANGEL~ (UPI) -MONTEREY !AP) -Poll~ a m..m figures bis 1na~~ onlooker; "Dr.· Joseph Peck: .staba sales ~ beg., .Ai.lg. Flynn of Canoga .Park. were Los Angtles County health of. in I.his city of 30,000 we.nt is on tile rocks, he j11.St Wants "By the Utne you're 55. you 1, as propo&ect in tt111.:1Jfaaan dead on arrival al Northridge flcers had some good news 01 strike Thursday· night for -On 5 GAL TWISTED JUNIPER 5 GAL. ITAUAN CYPRESS 5 GAL YUCCA out. Witb DO more ill ' ,wtn Olln loot!; '":for,rcqd to many tax bill. ' f~ ' Receivini Hosp ilal·Thursd•Y· lO_.e:e:port Mooday. · higher pay. than necessary. put a Wom.Jll, ?'(lore fruitful and «ijoyable: Assemblyman W .. T. The sitter, Virginia: O'Don-For lhe first .t.lme In history, The walkout. v.1tich began who decides betfa,arriage. bas years of M.Ving, if you follow Bagley, leglslalive 1uthol' of nell, 62, of Northridge, was the county got through ap en-w.hen seveu men faUed to AND ALL H:RNS. gone bad, want. to fix blame. the advice of Aristotle, who the ta1 shill blh, ··~bad booked .fur Investigation, of · tire year· without one new c~ rePort on the 11 pm shift m d k h • Id bo . . f d ed'~-__. t f llobel ..... b . . ' . 0 An ma et e ~ y ~y. said, 'lt ls~ to rise rom not iscuss LJ.111C "*"'.cu manslaug.hte1 . She ·told o~ o po, ng ·repo.~. c1u1 t the city by surprise, ...._ 1-11 ~ ! Forever, if possible. Our LOve life as from a banquet, neither with Reagan, "hilt to -my ficer9 she had forgotten he Health officer Gerald.. A. ,although negoliatioq& tta11e S.le Good ; ~ and War man UOOs this un· thirsty N'lr drunken.'" File knowledge there is no op-: childrefl because she was talk· Heidbreder rsaid the news was been going on for tw6 months Th rough i '"'7• ~~ -• • . U--~.y BE·· ..: .. fortunate. lt fs his beue.1 1111 that, too. ~iUon." ing to her daughte~: contained in ,receot tabulations · The Mon~ey PoH~ Re.lief. ~ ru£ti school boyg shou1d be NEVER Mn' a man that flagley said MO mi~on was Mrs. O'Donnell sa~d she ffG!ll the U.S. Ji:ealtb Service. ~aUon at a meelilll .:._ Aprll 10th . required to pass a laymi;n's makes a habit of steepling the amount the state would , ~ the boys to the hospital 1he service also mealed that Thursday afternoon v o t e d i " course in alimony and child his frngertips who wasn't a lose b_l delaying the sales tax when she returned to the car _there W_!~ po deattw_ J!Q11!.. _un,afilmquslL.fP.r U>e_ str _ __ "lllJIT"TG '""'I" STATM>M AT "'*Tot JIUppOrt Jaw bef0re--6e1ng lOt poet1C(anc:t· a lltUe pompO\Js-lilci-iase until-Sip[l. -• lrld-foond1hem· iiot' Dreathing, polio a~ywhere in the United the association ~resident; Sp. 710 IAKIR ST .. COSTA MESA PHONE 546-0724 allowed to graduate. Why not? ••• IF THERE'S NO such The tax reform p 1 an, _!flO~lic~e~sa~ld:_. ______ .,'.s'.':ta~les~.~m~l~96~9·:._ ____ ~Do~n~La~a-'ii~n~g:_, m~cL:._:.-:.__=!llllll!llllll!llllll!!!!!llllll!!!!'!!!llllll!!!!llllll!lli!!llllll!!!!!!!!!!!!!llllll!llllll!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Can you think of any situation thing as ~fr ,,why Is it Iden.:. ,dapted 66-11 ~.itt ~y by, th•I" besides matrimony wherein an ··"t1cai twins so ·often sar Ute· '-ssembly, baJ ~been ttalled - 18-year~ld boy can be held same thing. at the same time three weeks on the Senate by the courts to a lifetime even wben talkiflg in separate floor, ·one vote thort of the contract? groups? ••• THE SURVEY· 27-vote twO:thirds ~ 1 r 4 I n ~;.,Jsm T 1t E CAP[L. trAKEBS, wbo are wllllug to .. needett for passage. - LA in y o u r body ask an)ibOdy an)'thing, report. · The tax plan -Realan's - were placed end to end, young only three women out of IO major legblative proposal of lady, they'd encircle the earth are satisfied with the.ir bust 31,', years In office -cuts four ~times. However, this measurements. I aifee.. locaJ property tuft 40 percent · would ruin yo,.ir appearance Your ques~iom and com-by S:hilllng ·a major porUon • • • NO GREEJS,: SHOULD menu are welcomed and of sdloo1 and welfare ~ forget ii wu ,bis ·early an-toiU be iued h1 Checkin_g from locaJ., taxes to ·hictier cestors ·who fir'lt taught the Up whtreOff pa.ssibl.t. Ad-st.ale $ales, tQcome and bank : western ,world to take a baUl dress Zetterl to I,.. ,, B®d, ancf ~rporatian tues. "THE 1 YEARS THAT .a Cali/. 92660. also pul neW limils on local , every .Silturday nighl .• • • Bo:c 1815, Ntwpor't Beach, The Onurlb~ mtaaure would. ) taX ·.rates, impose "'pay r o 11 ' wltbhokiln& .of state income Smogless Engine Bill Killed By Committee tu.es and make hundreds ol . I leseer changea in stile tu ta.ws. , SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ao Assembly committee has kill- ed a bill to force the auto industry to-develop a com· plctely smogfree engli.e by Jan. I, 1975. Opponents <>f the bill that would have banned from California highways smog-pro- ducing engines manufactured after that dalei said Thursday there was no such thing as a completely smog-free engine. But Sen. Nichotas Petris, ID-Oakland ), the bill's author. aaid he had ~th t b a t Cable Ca r Ferris Wheel American industry could pro- duce such " engw by that R. ecord ~ei dale -and he said it was · '~" : needed to avoid a health ' · D • m•nace 01 majdr proportions. In San tego Petris told the Trans-· portalion Comm i l lee the SAN" DIEGO (APi, -; Norman Creamer '5 IJ\lrded auto industry had been •·drag· and more tanned than ~n ging its feet for year£" though he stepped into ~ ferris Americans were jwt begin-~heel ae1t but that'• because ntng ta realhe they were he's been there 1qer ·1han ''bamboozled.,, anyone else . The 29-year-<1ld bachelor, The d r e a m of the jobless, decided to bre:1k the automobile "has turned into world record of tlbuecutive a nlgbtmli~ and J!Ve now days on a ferris .wheel. ~ ~ · ber Gujnal"Book ol lleconfs iAl regard ft as .u1e 'nlQll one the mark ftl -,1-days, 'tt enemy," Petri said. "We're hours by David Trumaine of continuing to produce more Kent, England. and mofe ·pc>ison·ptoduclilg By Jt:OL 'l:m. Thursday, ,,. a u t 0 m 0 b J I e s. The good, Creamer had ecllpted that "-·ash Awa rd mar• by oo• minut•. \..d. Internal Combustion Engine, m. plan to set off the ferrii should be toppled and replacec1 wheel today ltema from 1 T D ? by something that's Clefll." Hmark made laat week, UAJJ 0 1"0p •· I want to do ii-break the rec- otd by one fv.11 day. •nd then SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -CHDJ). REN £<l • Job." S k not I He llartl on a tem~r1ry Gloria y es may . ge 1' ob aoon u • birker at UW:. much of the $50,000 she was LfK E awarded for a cab le tar ac· amusement par.Ir. where the, . cident which she said gave ferrl1 wheel •PHw but he hopes •-;.,atlable oenul d111ires. lJNCLE LEN to be obi• to ·follow up-on • 1"'"' an offer to become • dilC Cily Attomey 'Ibomas M. Jocko-at a Joc-1 ra!Mo ltl)Uon. O'Connor, wl1o represented the /=========='-_.!.=::::'....::..::..:::::;.:=::..:=:::::1 · city in Us unsuccessful • case, filed a superior court action Thursday asklng judge:; to split up lhe money . He said aitorney Harold ~"s somellq~· .. , · comlortins about the~ .. .. .,. . Elliott, who filed the or-lglnal suit, has a llen or 40 perocnt on any 1mounl cO!let:ted . 1'-farvin Lewis, the attorney Its scats . ... '' who tried the case, also his "' a claim, O'Connor added. Lewis claimed during the trial last April that the 1964 accident foroed Mrs. SykeS into the arms of more lhah · JOO men . WANTE .D 100 C:IGARmt SMOKERS - If yo11 '"'o••· yo• .,.. w•nl•J !t p1rtic ip1t• i11 lht ll•W •11Jjg. wi111•I p•o9r1m ll11it119' te .n ... i111t1 your 1111o•i11t h11.lt. Y.w d11i11 to 110,. 1moH111 1111 Ii.. (.011'11 I 1•1lity wlfh iht 1fd If tht 1m11i119 111dio ¥11111! vot- 11•. For d1t11l1 wl1lt •r c.111 lh11 111tl•111f 111ll•IPllO•i11t tOUrttlJ of. frc1 1111r1t1I y.1111, ( COSTA ME~A 1110 o, • ..,. ""'· S11i.I• D • 142·41•J HUHTIN .. TON IEACH 1 ISIJ 111,h llwd, 5111!1 201 ••2-1121 I ' were designed '"' •n ortlh)pedk surgeon •. ' ., . Teat drive It tod•Y• It's more of a oar than you .thi nk CHICK IVEllOI .PORSCHI!! I AUDI ""° ..... -. _,,....._ 616·9391 OllllU cqGm'$ Mlnt6fl11'11 lllAIO . ' "' , I • • 3 DAYS ·· OlttY · r - "IGHT•NOW ~·t·~Nl!c ·---~· ~ fOR MlNI ' ·$300 2 for . • . ·,/J., ~REOijElf FOAM I BEi) 11i1ow~ ... . . " 7 6Cu.~~ .. • • A Hrr91t of krtoia11'A"4 Sni•11I A•d Mon hr."' t•i••I S•por 1hopp~rs· 1pociols price· •lashed to "' moiio ynr ••lier 10 f•rthor. Wt show l••I • sample ' ' '. of ••11•1 of torrific ~•Y• all over tho store. Como ,.••lttt·for JO•••· SIZES 4-7 HI dtt:n-tip .~lylc: .... co11on/polyeJ1er -,b.r 1umhle dri• wr~ free. P'Oc:k•tt. ·SALE IA 'S A H' ILICTllC ALARM '$244 Prlco ml ••1111•1 ........ I• ,. .. 1 .. colors Sale 84~1'.:; • ••· 1keln --· J GAD-ABOUT PlAIDPANTS $ALE $3 96 Perma•••t Pross SHIRTS Pol,c:t1er/f o11oa 1hirr~. ~n•ppy .,... MJ/iJ~ or f ,-\ '~ P<pp<J·'P I,, . .....,, pruus 1n ' •M 11roup. '/· •' _:.· ;7." • I , •• TIEN'S COMFORT ·PACKED -CASUALS $ ·96 SPICIAI PUACllAH t !oiM•tl 1tl,YBrt« • f':ri·•I lt'i1ur1• li•frr ••• • ("fll;1r.. '81""" b •1 GRANT PWA • B-~T £ 1ADAMS. e. HUNTINGTON BEACH ' , . ., . HQUU: 9:30 •.m. to ~:30 p.m.,.Delly; Sunojoy, 10 •·"'·to 6 p.m. . -• ' I /' ' I DAB. Y Ion.or Friday, AllglDt 7, 1970 Paperboy Tries Clowning • • Pilot Twosome Mane Coco Honorary News Carr1er Tbe trutb la -. was Qull• • bit ol -· lnlWMI when two ~Y PD...O'T carrier boy1 met Mlchael Pollkovs ol Alhlllld, Ky., and the Ken- t'uct, hoc farmer's $-year-old .On, Davy. But it wa okay. In lact, 1t WU ln tbe line of duty -for everyone involved. Polakovs' .. real" name is Coco the Clown. And little Devy is really Coconut . a rninilture c I o w n . Aod clowinlnc around WU the purpose of their iileeUng with the two DAILY PILOT carrius who were selecled to creet tbt emissarh~11 from the Ringling Bro!. • Barnum and Balley Circus. The carriera-Bob Maurer. 11, of 1102 Valley Circle, Costa Mesa. and Ron McDaniels, also 11, or 2110 Federal. Costa Mesa-were delegated t o receive from Coco a n d C.OCOnut aom.e very special ticketa !0< the Aug. 13 through 19 visit of the circus to the Anaheim Conv,...ntioo Center. First, C o con u t delivered tickets which will be used aa incentive awards for DAILY Pnm canien, tbe.n he han<f.. ed over a set of 50 rtsttved atat ticket! which will be given away t.o 25 locty readers of the DAILY PILOT classifled advertising section. (The first ol those tickelS will be given away today and five pairs dally will be given away to readers who find their names in special ''ads'' in the classified section from now tbrou~ next Wednesday.) After Coconut made the ticket presentation, the clown· ing really started. Coco, whose grandfather originated tht 'face and the wardrobe that have gone wilh tbe Coco name in tbe clown business for the last 100 years, loaned some of t.he mack of hl1 ll'&SePaint and tbe skill ol his hands in applylnc I]. Carrier McDaniels w • 1 transfonned from prol'essk>na1 newspaperboy to honorary clown In a matter of minutes . Then McDaniel& and Maurer tumed the tables and, throw .. ing a DArL Y Pll.Dr bq over Coco's shoulden, made him an honorary newspaper car- rier. Tiie CUtTefll Coco Wll born in Russia and reared in EngJand. He speaks with a British accent lha.t b coun- terpoint lo the mild southern accent of his Kentucky-born wife, Hazel, and son Davy (CocooulJ. Davy Jlas been drilled in the drolleries of clowning. He will tell interrogators be is 5 years old, then answer the q....iion -bow long he has been clowiq with the quick quip: "Sb: yean ... Aclually. c-iui bas been In clown makeup oil and on lloce be WU 11 montbl old. Hta father tak.. him .. lite road wherever be goes in hi• role of. Coco as advance man lot "the Greatest Show on Ji:artb." Only in tbe big cities where he slays long eoouch Im: lhe show to catdl: up with him does Coco actually wort in the circus. But be makes up for It with his personal appearances al sbopping cenlen, hospitals, on television shows, etc. Jlli record is 14 performing ap- pearaoces in ooe day. And he· once -were the ifeaepaint or his profession for 14 coo- iteeutive hours. As the DAILY PILOT'a newest carrier, be need not WOrT)' abotrt having to tote bis -bag quite lhat long on IDY given day. DAILY PILOT CARRIER RON McDANIELS SKiPTICALLY EYES STICK OF MAKEUP Coco Geh Set to Uae Mesic of His Paints, Skill of His Handa to Tr..,aform Boy to Clown Tarnover DecUning Teacher. Supply Growing "Go fnlo !<aching. You 'll always be able to 1et 1 job." For years, college student. have been cfven that adv~ by parenta ud placement ol- ficiala !IDllliar wilh the .....,_ fngly """' endio( complalnta of a teamer ahort.q:e. That advice may oo longer be valid, ho wever. An Auociated Press a u r v e y abows m a n y metropolitan areas report they have more •pplicaliool '"' leaching jobs than poeitiona open and their turnover rate •• dee.lining. PerlCIO&I officiala attribute the change to several factors: (an iDcrea.lt in the number of colle1e graduates &oin& into teac.hing. higher 1 t a r t i n g aataries and an economic ~ueere that bas cut industry'• need Im: ld<ntlata. The Mlcblgan Stale Boa'd ol Education warned recenUy that because d the oversupply GI t.eacbera H is ''eotlrely pos!lble that several hundred spring and summer graduates will not find fncblng positions for the ~71 scmol year." In Detroit, a Board of Education spokesman report. ed the city bad 11,000 l<adlers and a backlog or 1,000 appli- canta. '"Ibe simple truth," said the spokesman, "is that 19ching jobs are hard to come by right now and so teadiers under contract stick with the jobs they have. I know some of them have looked as far as Colorado or Montana for jobs, but the demand is pretty small." Marvin C. Davis, Education Department personnel direc- tor for Baltimore, said the city has "an abundant teacher supply." He said the only abort.ages are in areas like spedal education, and in some subject.II -including foreign languages and social studies -there are three or four Skirt,s Not Too S1wrt, Hair Not Too Long • MONTEREY (UPJJ ''trimmed at the neck and &bbulder-lenglh hair, beanb eara." and micro minll are fine for other queries touched on times as many applJcat.iOnl "' jobs av.,;Jable. The city has 8.500 dulroom tucllerL Chicago bad ., few teacben: lut year that the Bolrd ol Education hired 1.000 penons with provWonal t e a c b J D c certJ.llcates. 'lb.is year, said Edna c . llid<ey, director ol teacher peraonnt.I, uwe have Ph.DI coming to our door fcw teaching positions that abudy have been filled." Mrs. Hickey said t b e turnover rate in teachen: II 6 percent, which sht said was one of the lowest ln the nation and compared to a 15 percent national average. Elsie Stone of the Boston Unlversity placement bureau said she wa1 having difficulty finding jobs for teaching graduates because a lot of acienlist. laid off by industry are aeeklng classroom wan. David Fitzpatrick, assistant director of the Massachusetts Burea u of Teacher Certification aod Placement, said there waa a general oversupply o[ .English and social lludles t eac h e r s, although there were tome shortages in the fieldl of in. dustrlal arts, w o m e n ' a physical education, math and science. He uid the Bolton are• was attractive lo l<achecs who hoped to do graduate worlc at colleges and unlveralUea in tbe areu. how close mustaches and ltudenta or the a l r ea d Y beards should be trimmed, if ;=========:;: employed, but they att a at all. definite drag for new job On the female side, the skirt teekeri. lenath choice ran from miao Th.II'• what the Mool<rey lo mini lo -length lo midi ollloe of the Stale Department and mul. of Human Resources Develop-Acc<Wding to James Ham- meot found out when' it mood, manager of the mrveyed IOO employers on the department's Monterey office. Monterey Peninlula. the lhort cut to a job for While ddvfni Jnlo lite long shaw youlhO b l h • For Weekender Advertising Phone 642-4321 and ohor1 ol whal employen ~ •od for leuy consider """' interviewing you,;, llril "'' • lilU. hem- young per>On11 I~ job<, lhe. ~letl~ing~.:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;:::::;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~ deportment !oood thal 1kirUlr had better be within .short hang!nf diltanoo ol the lm<e.t and hair on males well above the oolilr and nol inlerf ... lnc with one'• heartnc. Groominl Jland.ardl were a Uy pert ol the survey. Employera wtre uUd to circle the longest blfr llyle Le ~1rn to help your family through prayer. • FIRST SWIPE OF CLOWN WHITE COES ON C•rrie .... t.clown Transformation 89gins COCO'S DEl'T HANDS PAINT A FUNNY FACE Ron lan't Sure About Th•t Masc•r• Brush STILL LOOKING SKEPTICAL , 'RON THE CLOWN' CHECKS UP ON NEW IMAGE Coco Holds Mirror and Welcomes Newest Memb.r to Society of Buffoons WIND HIM UP AND WATCH HIM BRIGHTEN THE FUTURE Ho ha111't had much experience ao you 'll have to be a little patient and give him a little extra help at first. He's not used to having someone else's trust and confidence so, for a day or two, you may find him a bit watchlul and timid. No one has ever given him a chance to prove hlmaelf before, so yeu may have to boot him out at night. He'a liable to offend some ol you r other employees with his enthusiasm, his many questions and his eagerness to take on any task. He's not accustomed to drawing a decent salary-no one In hl11 family is -so you may find him a bit too grateful for his first pay- check. Ha'1white He's black He's Mexlclan-Arnertcan Ho'a Oriental He's poor. A normal, !Un-loving and hope- ful American kid llvlng right here In Orange County, but poor. "Disadvantaged," they can· It. His prospects for the future a re the dim-• meat, unleas maybe you can give him a hand. The aummer fob you could make !or him .could brighten his prospects considerably - and make him really normal. Someday. Call us and we'll help you hire him. Dial 632.JOBS. And hurry. He's waiting to grow. National Alliance of Businessmen ,10111 Orange County Metro 1193 North Millet StrHt, Anal'ltlm, Calltorn\192803 lltey """Id accept for 1 new l Come lo this Cllrtltltln Science Lecture employe -"""'1ider lenCth. SATURDAY, AUGUST I, 10 A.M. - ...,. !he'"''· over the oolllr,l_~E~D:W:A~R:D:S~N~l~W~P~O~R~TiC~l~N~l~MA~:T:H:E~A~TR~E~-'I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~ trt,,.,med 11 the nt<k ud WI l'ASHION ISLAND or oo r .. lricllon. MOit circled I I ' I 1 • • UCI Frosh Self Reliant Student Survey Sho·ws 'Cut Apro1i Strings' Tendencies lRVINE -Students who will ent.er UC lrvine--for--the llrst Ume thi!I !all are stfongly determined to "cut the apron strings" trom their parents and tend to disagree sharply with their elder! on issues ranging from sex to politics. For their own part, the studenl.s' parents want their · sons and daughters to develop independence and self reliance at college, but seem 'reluctant to lose their influence over lheir orrspring. Sludenl.s and their parents revealed their differences - as welJ as some basic agreements -in a ques- tionnaire ' distributed in ad· vance to some 1,500 parents and students who are at,. tending weekend s u m m e r ~ientation programs at UCI during August in preparation for enrolln1ent this fall. 'Ibe surveys are being used as the ba.si..s for discussion 5e!l.siOllS belwttn the parents, the new students and more than l-00 continuing U C I students who are volunteering CSF Library Gets Record Of Festival FULLERTON -The first eighty years of Laguna Beach'!! Pageanl of I.he Masters have now become part Qf the library at Cal State Fullerton. The early years are record· f'd in a scrapbook prepared hy Roy M. Ropp, who pro- duced lhe Pageant from 934 • . , Ropp presented the book to the college library lasl week, where it is to become part or the collect!on of the Com· munity History Program. R-Opp details the hardship ln putting on I.he Pageant in those early days. He developed the practlce er in- cluding several people in the living pictures, painting the backgrounds, li ve narratlon, and accompanying music, all of whlch today are integral lo !he prociuclinn. Denll1 Nolke• tlAKll Y"el 8 . Hile>. 2J.t 1111 M•ntone, N•w- .,.,..1 1Je1cn. 01!1 01 11<11111. AU9U<! §, Survlvtfl bv dlufhll••. LU<lnd1 lu•lt . [Mii Mtt1, 1"41 M.1.,lvn Ailltll, ,,,,,. mtn•o; •111••· M1 ... 111 W1I01r. UPllMI "'"'"'''' '''"x G'""'' O•l•hOt"•: Ot· cir Gr,.ent. llrl!lll> Columb11; 5 trond· rhltd•1n_ Gr•111 1ldt Sorvltt• ? PM St!· urll••· Autu•l I, II P1C1fiC View M .. no•- 111 Ptr~. P1clHt \lltw MorTutrv, dlr.c- •~ MATCl'IA n11n1 M. Mii<"'· «11 SW•llt Av..,uP. N--t II••<" 0•1• el (l"tn, A1.11u•I 5 su ... J.,tfl 1111 1>1•1n11. Mr. '"" Mrt, MOHlt M1tch1 or tne nom• 1ddre~U 1l1Ter, LftU•ot. hl>t"'I IOd••n• gr1..amo•n1r, M1- l•ldl Mlltl>t. LO.. Antol••· Sorvkt> Wlrl net• 11 7 PM tod•v •t l't<lllc vi.w r:i.iPtl. lnl1•m•nl. P1clllC Vltw Momo<· lftl l'trl, Dlr1<Clld bv P•cille Vlow M0<- l~lf1t ARBUCKLl: I: SON We1tcllff ft1ortu1ry '27 E. 17th St., Cost.Ii Me11 r 841-4881 • BALTZ P.10Rn!ARIES Oorona del rt1ar OR 3-9450 Cotta P.1e1a ft.fl 5-%U~ • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Coi l• Me•• LI 1-Jl:U I • I McCOIUDCK LAGUNA BEACH ft.fORTUARY l 1715 La1una Canyon Rd. 494-8415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemettry e Mortuary Cb1pel 3500 PacUlc Vie• ()rive Ne.trport Beach, CaUlornla .... -• PEEK FAMILY COl.ONIAL FUNERAL ROME 7MI Ui)l11 Ave. We1tntl.n1tt..r 1"4W • IREFFER MORTUARY Ll(Una lkarh 414·11.11 Saa Clemente •n.GtOI • SMITRS' MORTUARY , I en Mila SL Ban1J11(t1t11 lkacll ""'"' to asslsl with tlle orient.atlon J>l'OINtn'Ul;- Responses to the lilt ct nearly 40 quest.Ions were received from about 560 new students and 680 of their partnls. 'I'tlls accounts for nearly one rourlh of the 2,100 new students who are ex- pected t.o enroll as freshmen or In advanced standing as transfers from other colleges this fall. Tolal enrollment of the five- year-old campw will jump from last year's 5,000 un- dergraduates, graduates and medical students to more than 6,000 this fall. Students and lheir parents tended lo agree on most of the basic objectives of a col- lege education. such as learn- ing to be a leader, attaining job skills, improving lhe ablli· ty to think and broadening intellectual interests. And, while some parents· feared their children might be templed to use drugs at college, 74 percent had no qualms. For the most part, lbey y,·ere backed up by their youngsten. Slrty-nine percent of the !ltudents agreed or 1trongly agroed thal they woold never try drugs. However, 19 percent of th@ students were undecided and U percent already had decid· ed before entering t h e university they might try drugs, three percent of them empbaUcally so. Students and their parents parted ways over whether it is important ''to learn bow to deal wiU1 political a.nd social injustice" in college. Sixty-two percent of the students felt deaUng with In- justice is either '"essential" or "import.ant," compared to 47 percent of their parents. Disagreement became pro- nounced over whether "the uni versity should consider that it acts in ·place of the parent when it formulates student rules and regulations." Seven- ty-0ne percent of the students either disagrttd or strongly disagreed, while 58 percent of the parents agreed or Mesa Pair Face Suit Cliurging F oodFraud 1'ot Picked As Princess For Benefit SANTA ANA -Samantha Grahant, 3V1 has been chosen ((1 reign as princes.., of the Cops and Cowboys Benefit Breakfast and llorseshow, ac- corrting to Orange County Sheriff Jim 1'.1usick. The anRual event , to be held at the Orange County }t"airgrounds on Srpl. 13, Is for the benefit of the loccil March of Dimes birth defeet program . It ls sponsored by the Reserve Units of the Orange Cou11ty Sh er I ff' s Deparln1enl. SamRnlha , dRughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Graham, 20~7 N. Highland, Ornnge, Ill a "rubella baby." She was bor11o with a hearing defect because her mother con • tr11cted rubella -Germ11n measles -·during h e r pregnancy. "One important re c e "'t scientific disCilvcry I!! the rubella vacclnc ," Sheriff Music 11aid. "By choosing Samanlha as our Princess, we hope to emphasize the urgency or immunizing ;dl children undel' 12 against this common chlldhood disease." UN ITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH HOW OHN SATURDAYS •t.lP.M. MON.0TNUll. 10·1 P.M. •llDATS 10.• P.M . f714J M0.1111. L.ec .... l•1 h, c .... Pl-. CMttl M .. ....... .,.. ....... -M .... .., E. H. LEVAN • I ) • Ft1da7, A11g11st 7, lt70 DAILY "LGT Q Irvine Cityhood Studies Under Way in Committees ''Later, we'll establish com· Burton heads, la compolfd or mittees )o study _tualion presklenu of ntlihborbood quesliorui a.nd forms o f 1aociaUo~ which art louted aovunment~" he said. within~ 53,000..acre propoaM 'lllt Council of the Com4 city area where about 111,<nl now live. muniUe!I of lrvint, which'i----------- Derby Victor Gets Honor Free Drawint! fer Solid Silver Bar (v•ll $369.00 Sal, Aug. 8 · 1 PM the ultimate ownership by·the seashore . . . . . .. a lot in I(jUEL .. &J-IORf~ Our prouclest achl~vement at L•guna Niguel lliest: lerrac«, these few homesltes (79) In Niguel Shores, offer 1 rarely found ownership opportunity. Thlt prlvale, 1.1.te-guarded community ftonh one of the most beautiful beaches on either Orut. Evtry homeslte has views to the ocun horizon. Ni1utl Shot es Is the newest p•rt of Laguna Niguel by The SN.shore, C.llfomJ1's most rem.1.rktble new town. Mike It your bu1intJ• to 1ee Nl111el Shores' •t your e111lest opportunity. 111e l1nd endures-tht11mn .1.nd prlw cha.nae. Ni1~ Shom homul.tes from '30,000. , "· ' N • Sf~ lM• C10111r11• 511M Olficll Tel1phon1:: m4l J47·n61 For• colorful bllKhure 1bov1 NIJVll 5korea· ind 1h1 new town llf U1un• Nl1111I, wrltt: l•111n1 Ni•u•I GorporaUon -Otpl.OCOI' •J Mor"rdt flay Pl111 Uaun• N1&111I, Cihlomla 9lW1 I I I • DAD. Y Pb.Ol Fr)daf, Augu1t 7, 1970 Complet~New Yprk Stock List •• Credit Card Dropouts Move OVER THE COUNTER HEW VOllK I"~}. Tl'lu,loO•V't ~ t•ltt Ht' In on American Debt Scene l .............................. 1N-TO<\ Sloe-l~<llt-"'lut.: 1•.) Hltll 1.n Clnt Cllt I' Stlft Ne! .. l Hl1 1"6 .Clift.I NI ... ~ <i.t ca.. !::~~· ;~ 1f r.~ r.~ l'r ;. Yi ti ~: ti~ --:::iu" 1:1i ~ ~i! lin tt . • r, 1\,. NASD LIJ!l1191 for Thurtd•y, Augvst 6, 1'70 M!W YORK (AP) -A 10.i111on In lhe spedes Debtor Ame0caNJS m11y be making t l 1 lppe1!''1>l"e. Statistical e.-idtbee ol ill emuaeocy has llOt yet '-t compiled, but an unurual nwnber of people appear lo have it.s charac- ~· Am<ricans ,,. big deblors and biive been slrlce World War IL More thJn $120 billion ls now owed by ~. .,. billion of it for automobiles ud AO billioo more for pcr.tana.l loaos. That'& why the mutation iJ intemtlng; it's quite a. contrast to tbt familiar species. What ii it caUed! The credit card dropout What are its characteristics! A weariness with financiaJ problems that justly or unjustly are al- ltibuled la lhe credit card. One mutatioo. a well paid hxUvidual who enjoys living clOll!: lo his limil. deKTibed his situation I.be other day. "I was planning a trip to Europe this October with my wife and four kids. I think it's wise to let youngsters see and observe the places they read about in their books. J thougbt I could affonl ii. "My wife told me that she and the children n e e d e d clothes for ttie trip and J didn't object. 1 told her to go out and buy them, that she had the cards. J didn't question her anymore: I make a good salary and ba ve outs.ide locome. too. "In fact I fell so good t went out and bought $UO worth of. lies. I know that 90UDds absurd, but I boy lla every t\PO years and neve r in between. It's not that I'm extravagant; I dOfl't ketp that kind ol money on me, but I do have credit cards." Then the bills came in. "I knew thty looked awfully big and I began to get worried about them. But can you im· agine, when I added them up I found I owed $3,IOO. Now the trip is off and so arc the credit purchases. I'm paying cash from now on." Check with your friends and you'll probably find a similar experience. aJtbough ~uUy Penn Central Loan s At Swiss Banks Told WASHINGTON (UPI) The Penn Central Railroad quietly borrowed almas*. $60 million lhis year lrom Swiss banks to pay off some U.S. creditors and to conceal its shaky financial condition, con- gressional testimony sbowed Monday. Assistant Transportation Secre1ary James M. Beggs said the giant carrier feared Its other crf'ditors would "panic" if its plight were made public and used the Swill moocy plus other loans to repay part of $200 million it owed oo U.S. commercial markets. Beggs revealed the June 11 lran.saction while testifying with Assistant D e f e n s e Secretary Barry J. Shillito before a House Appropriations Subcommittee in support of proposed government backing for another $200 million in bank loans to aid the Penn Central. The propo s ed Joan QUarantee., under the Defense Production Act. was criUcized severcJy in Con&ress and was dropped just prior to June 21, when the railroad filed for b ankruptcy and reorganization. Beggs testified that tilt Penn Central tumed to the Swiss banks after e I g h l months ol successfully rebor· Coa8l Joins Florist Flo1·afax Ernest Camp, owner of FIOVr"ers By Debra, 2 6 I 6 Newport Boulevard. Ne.,..·port Beach , Ca I if or n i a , 11.·a.,. formally accepted today as a subscriber ·01 1-"'loralax Delivery , Inc., one of the wockl 's largest flowers·by- wire organi.iations. rowing against the $200 million jt owed U.S. commercial in- vestors. '' .•. about 2 and If! months ago. the invest.i!lg companies that handle this paper began to ask questions as to the state or Ute road,,, Beggii said. ''Rather than answer U>OSe questions p u b I i c I y and precipitate or at least run the risk of perhaps having a panic situation develop wilh their other investors, the PeM Central chose to pay this money of!." lie· said "Part ol ttta.t was dQnc by going to Europe and bomwing a little less than $60 milUoo from Swiss banks on a very short-term basis," at 10.1 percent interest. Beggs said he did not know if the then-proposed $200 m i 11 1 o n Joan to be guaranteed by the government was to be used to pay off the Swiss debt. In any event, the railroad was only able to raise $tlO million of the $200 million it owed and the declaration ol bankruptcy followed. t he transportation department of- ficial said. Last week Rep. Wright Pat- man. D-Tex., chainnan of the Hoose Banking Committee and a leading critic of the Penn Ce.ntral's financial policies, made public a federal reserve bank credit report that was available when the $ 2 0 0 m I Ilion government-backed loan was being considered. The report coocluded that the proposed loan would provld e "inadequate assistance" to Ute line and only would stave of[ bankruptcy temporarily. Patman's committee cur- rently is h1vestiga ting the roles played by various banb in the downfa\1 ol the Penn Cen- tral and the interstate com- 1nerce commission is making a separate inquiry . Both the senate and House Commerce Committee have YES YOU CAM been holding hearings OD an SEE JHE 1t11 administration proposal for MllCIDIWIHZ: $750 million in f e d e r a 11 y aT guaranteed loans for all alling J IM SLlMONS IMPOl'f railroads. The Pem Ce ntral 131 w. w~ -s-t• M• would receive an esUmated o.-111a a ~~~,....~·~,.~~~l50tl~~m:il~U:on;;o;f~tlti!~·~a~m;oo~n~t.=,, ' • I I See by Today's Want Ads • Can )'OU slT'IJ:? Jtow ... hout play• musical nme or IM.1. Mulcla.n11; al'f' nt'tdetl for loetll clubt and ~1tau­ rsnt.a, e NC't!d ex.tre 11lorugl' gpaier! H.cnt • gtu'tl~. tee our clllalfltd ~lion dally. e \Ve have_ alt ldndl al a.ls 1t.nd klltk.3 for you! All rdota •nd klN1a tr-.re tor tkr a1kln1. Sec FrH To Yo.. ... _ ..... ._ ... w ......... 11 ........ , .......... v.sci. .u.c...... II II ... II I' • = JJe ~ rmi: u -... ':i\, 1itt 11 .. Mc.•-........... __, __ .............. ~~·~~·l , 1~~ 11~ 1~=·~ "tr·r-: "1,5 \~,a ii~1··~ r't:r.'r11 ••'' ~ !!,'~" on a $ID&ller sc.t.le. Families 911 a. .. "': 11'1111' ~= l 4 '.!\" 'l, ~ ~ + \t 111 .,1:ft nt ,.1 Ui' :; ~ : , f, ',','' If'., have been cutUn.g back .sim.'e ... ,_... ... ~II 1~1!: .! f iJ lM ·-. 1 lf °"' '°"" \'I :; llfl'. 1. ••. -y •·g·· d""'•• _••w ,.vo1Ut.J"",."iai·· lf.i 1 l"I~ ~ .... Tw r: l' AJ~ullt ·" ii ~ II 10 -Vr o1'11~' 11\ ... Ii. ~ ,. .• + ·14 Kef;O 1.'fii t ts lp,~ ~M; ................ ~ ... • .. _.. Tl• 'Ollowi•.. ·a,...,,, HI( 11 ·~ ~ ,. I! Adel,..~ IA ti "' '\.. ,_ -tt ,.. ·110 " ti. "' )4.\o + Vo Urtnb\I l..O I ~'· .~ I -~" And s-.:·-..,..._, It! U .... Golf t'I .... •• =":~It 1 • ,:, >t!~ 3' ltllo = ar. P•I ::io M ~ ''°' X\1 -'•" ~=~ ~' : 1ht oto ~on.. now roany 1 _.., w • • ,.,.. ~ " Yt wnP11 ...,. 1, .w,. ~ 2 ll.. ..., ·w + ~ "' .t.111 1 I n111 21•4 fNt -..,.1 ... 1 .. 1 11 1'"' 1•1.t ,,_, =~I 'r! ,. • Miil 't\lt ~ t \~A ~ I 17 2• '5\io 2,ffi -\(o 1r,111t .lDD I "" Hit ,.,_ -·" Gf•~IW 1.50 ff )61) lt ramilieS feel they do not have •, $-"!;; '-i!;w•" •• ~ '" l.~ ··~Utl1•. lf! '°1"· 7rtAJ~'tOIO ' 40\lt • ..OYI +"" ! llbl T,fO ••• 32 31~ H "" •Yl>r4 1.'XI 1 II~ lilt ••• In ?!:t , NM "' ~" '1 , ~ta "/' 'I' •11a-1 019 sw .. ' •1 •1 1 ...... GI A&P 1_. 21 1~ ,.,, ••-ua•• -•·ol ov-u ,,., -._ io:,. ·-He 10~ t 1 ~ v. Jr 5J •~~ "--. -" olf 11111 1 " 14'4 IN. ~ "+ ~· "tNor!r 1... , 1l'< 111, ~ ~ "'""'"' "' -'*'-....,, ., ,_ 90ll Ffi l~ ~~ ~..:=-JV. . V ... 61\ ••o ~ 1tr 2t )\lo JU. oll I" 11U.1) J )f lllAI n \; !~HP I 6ct 1 .io )f~ll pe.nscs when several cards are :":'ri, ,:~ ~:::.t11° 1 ",. &trwwf ""I!" ::f:! ~Zt l~ ~·tn~ l l u1\ 15\.o 11 ;..::,.. 9f ~;'?" t 1l{. 1Jt!" 1Jt:' -1J11111 p1a1 :"' 1 1i.• 21iho •-Im• 'I IF'c.rQ111I 3 Pvrlt'I' St 11 I''' fl.I I 2 tOC .2I ij ll~ ~?"' lf"':!:l? 11G-.1... :io .. .101.'i lOh.;,:·"io.GIN~ plA,«I 4 1111 11~ .... ~--·m· g 11.m f!_wll• IMH F~ g _ ...... ,c. ~'r'I'' ,.. A l ............. ·,,. ''' -· .... ··-oluP kt .<&Sc 10 •i-. f f\-\to r .... ,lt Flnt 130 lllt ti ..... ~.... . NCW1t~ COUICll frt;I, cf ..c; .... ·~ ~ (4 .... .... AkOSt..W M 1 1ir.' 15\t 1~ -~ olSoOll I 76 Ii ''""' '' 21 • ti 9WJ'IJ"'~. ·:: :: 1:1. :m 1bere art Other ttASooe: also a.a:'w °""'I":,' j;111...::. 1 1 1~ ""1l'r'I' T ""' 111 1\lo ,_, .J...,~ .itt l! Jiq,r; 1~ nt.1, -+ • "",,.t ',..·» :: m! fte ?lu ~ "tW•~ln °.lf 1 ,..., It, .IJi. F " I"" .... r;;ft iv, Tl.., 0 • l t'i' llet1C• .IO. 11 n'~ lt~ :io~: .1• IScr;· ... to I 131.'t 131, 11111+•-tclnGnl'M , 11\o II\~ lo explain the actions of tbe t ·,..,;:,ts,.: .. "> 1t.n.11 c ~ ~J~:;"f1 1it:1P:.J:::t:l ~., 4 ,..., 31 :..:.,. wEd 2.70 02 JO'-'J0•1 ~-to ..... s11 1.JO •• n n·. ·~"---':$ Ill (lftll l"" ' ...... ?. 'n ... 15\\ 1-..... ~ 0 '• "'• .... ,,.. l.ll u ' l 'r'I' lt14 + \:; E _pll.0 11 21\lt t1i.. "" r:ul'>ol/1'111 I .s 14\t IJ,. dropouts. n.WC rnaey credit .. w• "" ... 11•'1· ,!'.! ,""*, !_ I"' 12 lll:1)'Cll • ,, 1., f''~-2' 'lJ: ,•,~• i~ • ... :ID al ll\la ,,~ Ul< _ \l omw Otl J" ti 14\£ 1111> If"'+ t~ Gt•.,. .llO 11 2t 2l l'J ·-II S~ Ii: 14\li Rt\'m ~ "" ,.., ....._.... 46 M\il U f + = -..t k IOU I'~ ~ ·\~ + I': Gn.lmmft(p I •J 14\o ll'oO --~ operau·ons ·--~~-1, ret•ll-~....!:!'. A'tn;tt J\.i 111-" u.. •lo'I •1441r ' , •1,..,,, ,.,. 1 ll!: n• "' Comw1 o •1• l1l• 3~ -~ Gt1uH111 1':11 1• 11•1 22•1 <Al~ ..,..., CUI~ fMrlt --·r hwtlc ._ lt\o R.i Creel 31\o'I r: TrOPQ "'° 30\lo :\Ute! Pd Ai II U '"=~Cone Mlllt 1 1 Ullio Ul.io lJ ... , GHMOll J.lla l Sol\.'> UI' a uood many are suffering T!~,. ,.. , ,,"""•' ,•.. "'rn •1,~ •'" ,•,•• •,• u"-'1! Fd t1o1 10,~ ~1,~, .•,.,.111 1• · ""-'"' -~onnM" .JOe 1>t 11 '°"" ~ -~ GuH 0 11 1 se loll 1A 2.si;, 111 .......... "' ... e:ai .. ..-r •• nltw: J ., ... 11 2f .s ,t,_ '"• -an•a<C• ,to 4 11~ 1~ 12.._ +~ utf flt11cn n "' •'~ from indigestion ol the book· ~,,l.£«! ,13:-:t ,!.... 1 11' '° °"" E• 21 "" u11 • lr.lfl'r 31\lt 21 •1111 1111n<1 ' 1~ 1511 1~ l't an E611 1.to n n~ 2111 ""' ~ c;u11s1.u1 ,,. ,. 11 n .. Tl .. , "' ,... • ... J1'.; Rob/11 M 11 lt IJ11 McGW •\lo S\lt Alcol .to lJJ "''• "' "' -"-Ed11 pf• 1 14V. 14 1• -1.4 lfWlricl -~ JI 11!.., IJ\.(I keeping system. They are :~~ ~.... l~ ,m ~ 21t? ::-'&st iE"' ~~~I ~9~::1 '~~ .:~ =Af, ·\OJ! tt l~ H1';t ,ft:~~ an~ ~:105 Sits :JI~ ,t114 2~~~+-!"' ~~ ~~:~ ~ ~·~ ilt. belching out all sorts ol er-.-· ,r., • l\O , }\Ii RuJ Shw MVI u1 " ~ 311'1 M! Et 012. J lf."' VI )]\lo_, Cor.Fd pll.jO 11 n\4 II~ H1~ +.,. Gul1W PIS.I~ I S..~4 $<!~ 'or'. ·n'• ,• ..... 11ri d c,.t I 'll WI lll!fE .. , .. ,,. uu " ~ Jl Am 1>4n• .IS. u ' !"" Jl~ -""COllF~M 1 14 ,, 72\1 72~ . ' c;ul!on Ind 5 6!• 6\11 .. -U 1\li I llrt -.. 4 P ~p 21111. AmeH oll.)11 l•I Olo ~ 13\lo -1 Con l fflllljl " S ~; S + " H I ~r !ldu• 1o,i I" C J jl't •nln E 3"ll '" tJt~ SLct ! ~ AAlrFIU(, .IO 11 •21'1 ''Iii 'j -l'I ConNtlG I.?• 15 ''~ ?•-. 'I + "" - - -Jn some d-. .. ..+...ent start.~"' F ~, .. '•"• •1•.,,1>11 Cft "" 11 111 ,.,,. >!'ttJIH 1M 2 2•V.AmA1r1n ·.-111~ 1t 1 l4-'Ac0!!$ Po..,..! 41 311•~ lOI' :10•to -h 1"1d:w1t 1.:io ,' •,•,•,_ •,•,•,, ,,~1:-2_ .. ,. ......... WU .. -H ... !k ll" Y"' iC"'• 1\i 2\4 Vtl LO 5Mi Mli""' 94krt 10'1 101"r JIWI + \'o CanPw 11!0.J 110 Jtl'r 5'V. JtV. -t I H•llPr! 1..0. • .. .. revoling· credit program 1, ~.! "', .• • .. • ~•-Mtt~ ~,,• ,, J ·~--'"'! ,'"' V•nu 5• i•>• Hv. ABr~ i .10 103 sn. ,. .. l'" -t ·~ c°"P"' pu so zto ~v, s-11 S-'I'> -:1: H1lllbol•I l.lll 60 31..., 34,,, J1 . -., ~" M .... ...,.... l\'r Vltlron S'' SW AmB 1.20 11' '' 131.:o .U CCHll ... lr .l5P fl llo I\;, I .. + .. H1mW•I .251 ,• .,,_ t \', 6\" -lo misbUlings art nearly Im· ,1 •• ~':'. '!.. 1•,'11 Gr~ •,, 16"" l7'4 •loPI H I I WM;h RU .. ~. INll """ ." l·2G U5 «11\ r." '°" " COtll C.n 2 . .a 31> """' .. ,, .,.., -~ H1mm PIP 1 I~ 11• 1Mi ~ lied E .,. GfW"• JW m ptg Jo ol\4 ~ W~rw ~ ,, .... 11 AC.11 pt .iS • 2J •'• 25 ., Con!C.,. .1)1 5 116 P,. n; .. 1.iammnd 70 •'>' M. ~: IV.+:~: possible to correct thiJ aide AJ,.,.' G.! ,'.. '•"• .,,!!l ~ •1,. •• "--"! 1t 14V. W• 11 &ct n"l 1111i Ml ctm ... n 111o ,•• •'°" -~' c..n1 C• ' 11 ll''r 33 31 -'' H-lmn ·,.. ni.; 21\o 121.r + 1.. ) -., '" -.n '• • .._.,,.. 4 6Vi ill... 3\lo l" A OM!r1 I 60 1 24 4 ' -"'Cf Co pfAl.50 II lf'o '6>o 37 ·· liericl H••. n 1 '"° 11'• 11'0 + ·~ of I ega} confrontation. Let,. ~I••• >,•~ ?.'? Gvlf-1nl ''\ 114 5eftsfrft f'lt lOVr W...-3 ~ ACrYSucl 1.4 l 1.,.,, l»lo lnlo + \lo Cl (p pfl1.SCI 11 111'1 Vt.. ll'' +1 Ha C 'so I ] l ll \ ...,., ~-· ....,. GY nlr 1'4 S"i: G111 4\4 j'-Wtlli HG 'j" 'I AtnCYM. 1.li 211 >0''1 1tl0 lO\• -"° CantMto .II 1.0 l4•o u 1\ 11t, +. "H,C'!' ... ',·.... 14 0 ~· ,,J 1l,• ,, ten to the stores arc 1....,......,r A El Lib 3\i. WI tUfloofr S lt 11 5....., U• _.. 4 W11f1 RE ·~ l'I "'"' Olillll I 1 llt1 11!\ \Po + c,..1 OU 1.54 SI? n\.:r ,_. ""' -1. Ho"-""-,·"" .., .. ' r ' '&'"" ...... Am ....., U V. 'l HI,,.,, '" lVI I~ SIWolddl P'o 4 ti Tr '"' ,,.. AOlltTel .20e • 25\~ 75\~ 2Sh ... ~Con• Oii pl 2 • ).& 31·~ )<I + \!. H "]' i \~ ~. !',:1. ~\? -+1;:. tbc C 0 mp Utt f re1entl""ly Am "iirn W. 14 Hervtel F 21 23Yi ~ll!I M 6"" 1\io Wttlb Ille '"' t Am °"41\/HI \I 1:i. I\~ 1t;, -\. ,--Tfi .IO Ii':! jfl'J 19''• tn. .. trr S nt I "' ~••1 • A Gr~! ~l.\ 4'"' Htrlt Co ''-3" ld5t S 1~ 21' W•kltr" ,,.., ''°' A""IJ •. l&t 1 11111 111\ U 1A ... Control o.t~ 11! U\lo :ti'o 3.l''o -~ H,•,·,.~,,,c,o ~A 1, >,•,,_ ',• •,•,,. '+ .. A.v..clkll 11M:.11'4 Hllll'Wft •• :16 ... 3'-.W1tal p ru t l< ...... Erofit le I 3 2T'l 211'o --.CMWOod 1.90 2 3'~ '7'> 3''1<+~Hlwll E! 1·n 5 1~ 16\to 141't , puoehe5 OUt the SlmC errors Ml IMll \""' 15\lt Hidoc: Int ,r-' l1~~ ~", W~o.,1 12h lV.~ WeH114 M h>~ U ,,.;;,"EtPw 1.6-t 1t• ,, 1-0o 75 + \Ir CnOll pf4.SO ~Jn ~ ..... , "°"' .;. '-~ Hlr\O"'°AI 1 ·;o ., ,., "' month after month. and the:nA SI Go0 Jiit] Holm EP JI U" '"»¥12'"4.W1ln WA ·~ Jli>Am Eao Ind 161 "' tl f'h-~t':-rl" 1.4'0 'l7" 11'~ 11V, '·'HIY!I Alb.1 3 ~ 7' 1t -\'I lh I al d -~en1 -A51 G r1I l\'J W. Holollrn 11 I"" • G.CP l•VO ,,.... Wiln M!t :R. s~ AEatl'ld pt.U act 52\'I '11'1 JJ\lt ... , c-Tiil I 3'I ~Yi 1~·~ ll\\ + ·~ ' 11"1 1114 121'1 + '' e eg ep .... ~UI l!SUes l\rrl Ttlv 171'. IS Hoovt1' JIV. l0~ "' EISv" 14~ ljllo Wtln Pull IYj • AGetllm. SO U UV. UV. 12Yo , , , (;-IA..., 1,10 U ..rllr 391~ "'1\11 + ""'H1rt•llnt J 101•,, Ill~ 10014 :_. ,, lht l ~8 """"' HowrdGl ~ ,.. _.,. tY, Wlr-Wf\ 6 '""""'"°·1 '70 17 10.r,;, 10\4 1t11o-\<oC-lt"..50b 41 ~ 3110 J' _a;.folec!tMn .11• IV ~ -I ea ~ Anl<tn II) TV• ,•• HH~ ,!", 151'» 1' ltrld'f1i lt It~ WI ~ 16~ 1'~ A ~ J 60 702 $<!~ Sl~ Sl'lft _ \4 COPWl311 I.XI • l5l'o 15.. 1510 •. , , . Htlnt HJ .91 :)t l<l.O J4''. )41,\ + 1 • Ara llld ~ ....., ,.. •l'I l 14 11lt91• If.¥; Miit WI l"L 11'11 lt • ll> tt~ 29~~ 2911< -<ti COf"lnlhl!l ,tte H '~v, n•o U 'lt .... Helt!ne Cud lt 1:.00 llo m -Vt One individual With 5eVUal Anloeft M 6\1 1 Muct l"P 27Vo 2 Ill S!•n HJoO t3 U Wrlllw I!' 11 2~ Am Hosp .l• 7 l'.4 II\ IV. + Yo r.orGW 7.W. 1115'\V, 15-l•'• 15-l\~ --J Heller Int .60 11 11\lo U 11 I . Ardell llf 1t JI H1>1 Gt• 12:r,i, l:W. 51tf'14 SI~ t\lr 10 Wrlttil W 11'4 lt Amlnvc$1 .SO ot JS ~ l'"'° _ \'» Cowlti Com l 1'~ l~'o 34 , , Ht!ll'Fll' POI I I 1(:W. U'"' 1(1'.I -'·'-Cards and mu tip le errors ob-Al'll McP 12\lo 2" l>411r11 p ,,• •• ·~·"'! S•••w Cl 3:1 ll Yrdnv E l'!i Olo m.rCIJI 1..0 I 97 t1 '1 -"'C<>Jr 8dc!I ,]II !l~ 11~·. 1.1''. + 1, He!mrf\P .10 ., 11 15\·· n~ -·~ I •-~ naJ Joan Arrr/#1 H 11 2N HVtll CCI '"' ., A.Mt!~~ pl' 1W JI\ 6 1 _~(;PC Intl 1./9 n let 7'''> ~-o.> liemltPfl C10 I 4 lh Jro -1 .. 81111:>.1 I pel'80 , paJd ""°'IOI 1V. 1l'I M"11tt Int .,. AmN >G •,•,0 II l5I" l6 + ~. t:rlM I.~ ' lJ J'l>t l?~ -·~ Hotmllnc .10t S J"l SI;, Slit -lo all J his bi!'• and sru'pped "",.~(': c8:1f lf~ ,.~ 1~-Ar, 2l' A t ti ' II 1\11 10.: l>,lc + 1, C.-ec!ltf! Flft 1 I 4V, 1'l~ 1'1'> .•. tterc Irie .151> 10 J~ 3$"o 35'4 -''o Ul Iii ""' ;;i:I . ,..... ,.., ,.. 5 S\\ Ame!'.oho!0 1-i,.1 UI 41 ll'·lr •?\l _ Crompl(n .IO 1 l"lo '""" 1~ -\'. HerVIFd 1.10 12:1 1S>O 15''t "h -t , ••• --··-m' '• liWe pl-·. • ••• '~. .. , ... ~ , .. , .. , .... ·.~!, llll. tn~ Alt v • .. ''" ,,,, + ·~ C•<>11111Hlnd I ' 1" 11'-o " -'• HNP>t•I" .IO 1' lib »Vt 36\lo -'• ""'"'-'<UU:. .... ... .... ~ k -.. -2W. J)\\ Am Settino , I li~ II 11 ., '"•-Col l.GH .. 10'1r •1· 10\lo + .. Htw P.U ·'° Ill :Uh n me -\r I •· .., of . 1111 P11nt _..,.. "' tne•co O 5'41• •,•,, MUTUAL ,~,.!!,,",.·!! •• 1...._ 21111 11,._ + ·,,_ cr-11 cor• n u•. 1ru 11>, _a.. HJo~ Vofteg.e 11 1:.e 7\1r n. _ " " ~d enoo&"' Jt. J waa 81rwc1t iv. !w. lnfr••d ,1, ... •m~tr ,.,; 3 ,;\,; .i ,, _ "-C'rwn!•U I.Mi •1 m. m. 7''\ -~ 11n1ant1o1.i 1 1 J01l 30'11 10 .... -1, e.a11ri I" lVI ¥11 /"' Cont .. .... ,.. , ••• • 1 • JI~~ ~ C•11 z pf6.:iG 110 !1 s•v. 5tVt +H't 11-11 1.'6 1 n 10 31¥i :n:i. + ..., writing letters to a fictitious e,. ..... ,,. 7.1Vt 1M nt .... lft ~~o Sl.. A"''i" r· JI,• 1s ,.,,. 14\0 :.:_·t~CTS Cor• .... 10 11''t IN 11 ~•\Holl Eleclrll I 5'-\11 l"--Vt The 4'11'91 llV. l:N In! IWPr ,\\! ,•,:°t: Am 0•. >I l l'~ tl fl'~ + 1_. l.ldll~Y .6'1 l t'llo f 'l t\1+ '-\ liotkl'l'lnn .21 11 ?510 25 2511 -~ name. Y never w c re l:r:'Ts,_ 7;'1.:; P.v. /:l ~11' 11 .. "~ AfllS~ 11 '·4 u 111,0 H'lir 11"" _ v, cullle•n .7il ' 11>1 11\~ 11v. -\!. HotldA 1.1011 , ll'.• 31., nt~ -H~ answered a00 probably never ~"" ,,.., ~ , lftl 5., ,., ,. 1Jh FUNDS A7ug':i 1.to 2t 2::: 2r,; 21J~ -,,, ~~ro~·~ ~ n~1 t: t: = ~ =~~ 1·~ 6~ ~~ ~i .... ~~ t ~: ere ••• 1 Berti Ht 31 • 111\etel .·.~ '' ..... r.::: t' 11 2 II• I '·• :t-'"' CurlluWrl , 11 111't lttl 111~ ... l'IOl'le'IWI ,·10 115 111'1 1111 "''llr -1 1 w r~. was ac-li't. LIO 1' 411 Ion~ ,,·· "'' !:nT&T ~'° 317 'I'\ "'"" 44'\-I• r.uner H 1.~ " 1!11 11"' 11\\ -ti "'"°" Bl 1'70 ll 1Ht ?1•~ 21~ +"Ir complishing absolutely nothing 11:.r"S.: :nm JV. J~ob1 '~ 1 ,,., Amwwtu .5' 1 'o "" •~i. ..... ~t~M 1·f0..., '1, 1:,.\l 1ll'4 1~·ti, ++~ i.011 1nu .'u u 1& 2.s~ 25'\lt -·~ 1!11'1(:11• 3U i Jt<111ln c '"" J~ AW 4,101 l.'"1 zJO 11\io 11•4 17h -\olo D M-Ind .10 10 tl~ 9h 9~ + '"' but to use up my thne 3nd Black HI , ... ~ 2911, Jem W•I ~·.:. S\lo Am ZlllC I lh l lt lh -·.~ - -H-OUO Miii .40 •16 Ul't UI'> UV. -\• ~~age ~--ps and •et a bad ._, ••" •,•,,, j• ',~a'1F 'I"' 27" Ame•,~ .... ~. ,.• ", .... 1!~ 1',,.. +"' D•"lth.., .UD n 74i r; 1,, ... H,~"", >;.,>.,.10 s1, ,,.u• ,~ ,~i .:.;_ :t ~ G"4111 • 9ofl I '"""" 14 7•1 AlllUll • Inv COA 10.,111.'6 Ame ell -,.. ._ " •·•·· Dant Cp l,U 10 )(l~'t ll(I ... l'O"' + '" ous ... · v> v> "' credit rating." 8ocllf•A.f 1~~ 1!! ~~~ i~ l''t •V. NEW voRK IA"> •~v "..'!Jt! 1.n 1.n AMF •nc.o .to 11: h>t: TI~ ~:~ t 11': g:;:: :~ pl/1 't 31 ~i... li~ + ;: I!:!~ :fl:~ 1i t! ;.:·i. ~ ... ~ cu ,._.. i!l 1(.1.., 5, !:~ ~ -1il• touowi;r. •-\11" 1·~ 5·ft 5·21 z:;c,ric .s.1 31 O'i ,,,,. I.! -I'> Dir• p~"' 11 '::: 1v, + .,, HouillP 1.10 J? "°"' 3'"" ..:i -ti. Such p r o b I e m s are i'iTnb 1~ 29.fo ""' K•I•" ., 11 11 1•1""'-· SI.IHI ti! llY 1~::!1or1 G '·' ~o.a:i Amoe• torD ••5 1~. 1•>1o ,,,.., -~ o.vcoc. 1 1~ 10 ,,\l ,:~ 1011 = "" HcousrNG• .to 11 O"-o ~' + ·~ ~. :rt:• b 1'U, 17\lr tC.lv1r l4VI 'l"' ::°"HI~~~~ 105 1'1111 ~~·).61 Afl'tl.I,. .!·"'° ' 19'• ,,., 1t't + \.< Oavco 016,1$ JSO SI 51 51 + ~ 1-0ooiGI pfl,$0 10 ~ 4S ~ -V• numet"OUS, uut apparently not rwn ,.., w. I K•le Gr11 JVo "" DNIMi, Irie . 1,.., Mui l.jl t .H Amh! """ n I~ "'• l1A ----'lir o.ivtnHud .so ,•, '"' 24,.. 11,~ _ v. How Jolln .1• 11 l»t lj 110.:0 + "" 8<vttl e. 15\lt ll l<t v*"' 11'1 '"' ,... otlCel 11· whit!'> Pro. 1.10 l .l7 An~..1 ", 1• 14 n 1'1 11 + l! o..,.,,.PL '·"' 11 .. 11v, 71 ,., ~r .1(1 " 13\< JV. l'Plo -~ -H~ Some -edit card ...... w '~ 714 KH r T 7 1lo'. ,_,,,,., 51oc:k ••. -....... """" ..,....... lJ 23'1. n 'J -Dl>t olO 7 .... rlO) "'" ta•~ _,,_ ••.• H\lllllrd 1.0.. 21 10\(o If\,; in. ·-~-,,' ""' evr.W I lt'to ltlla Ktllett ~· :ru. Id ij,'it• bNn SI-ltd 1.;) t.if Ancorpf.15v 1 ' 1•14 ''"' I~ -;, o..re Co ' 111 "'• ,.~ ;;;; •• l\ klld8.., I JO 1 :iov. 10\a ~ -""' dl-nsen are amazintoJy ef. 'f u.11 41'r J l<•llw0 1~~ ,,Vi -• ,.,, --· v., ,.,. s.1• '·''AM c11Y I.le to 3g;, l 1.,. l1..., -" Del,...,,. 1.11 'n' 11•~ 1.-. "" = ,., H119h ..-., ·.io l "'• •1• •v. _ 19 ~ ·~ ,, ,, .• , ... f. , .• , ... -"' .... ' •..• ,-. '' -··~ ,,,, ·-· + • -· ... ''' , " -· ' I W S'I n n ... , ..... , twMI nY RtSll •OJ •io-•..... "' .-,,..,..n n 7lh 711.0.-1\ l>ft~.,m .7 I ISV. 15\• I!\• ficicnt in their bi I I i n g, -. lll'r U l'l K.,.• 1~ 1n 1 11-. • ' "· 111.i n ·16 1425 APCoOll 1.l1f ,. ts• 25'4 2"T -· °"'' A!• .so ,, 2,•,•, u•, J•~ ~ ld1f\oPw 1 60 1 ""° n... ltl'i _ '• I all MOii M '6 6' l(tys Cut I ltlt a" All! IW J." flt APL (Mp 14 ll''> 111' IJ~ + Vr 0.tlec Inf 11 (''> l'h = 1• llle•l !1~1 :.a 41 IP\ IO!o 11 _ 1 0 a though not of tbem were '"'""" e ,, u 1<1.,11 l"C 1Vt 714 .... ;! 1 61 1.., J Hr>UO •.n ,:,, "'PL p1 c1.111 J 1•1• 11 1• _, °""'Mio ·! o 1 11 U'< 15~ -v. I" Ctn• 1.u ,, '° 19•~ it'll t '• SO rom mrung. IP Ml9t 1,sl'I 1~~ ,1~1 ,EI 4 ,., Adm ••ll'I vftdij· l(ey1f-Fu;..,i.' ARA Svc ·.9' 11 Mlk II N'~ -'lo Oenls.olvln1' I 11 ll t2'0 7\l:lk .:.:: o, 111 PowP• i 11 J.1'~ J.1 J.1 f tile beg. · The nttll f\r. 1'111 ii"" 1111 ,.,. 31~ ..... n '· Johm.111 11 n 16 11 APL p1 8 50 1 10>.io lfi'4 10'1 -'" °""'vtht • o 1·~ llo 1 11 Ctn pfJ 50 5J Jno 31"1 JIO. T " ~ ... , .. v: J ' Grwlfl 4.N ·"Apollo 1»'1 ?1A•<•l•N IOI 1 Jiii,, ll '~ 7114 +'.i.OenRGr 1.10 1 1•1• :;:t ll\~-1.io ltlPwol?,J1 J?O i1h 21Vo 17'/t transition from cash to credit :: ntA ' f"' K~i' o1 1:~ it"' /~:," l:~ J:H ~~: g; lfi! 11.1! ~~fi'Ps~~n 1.:.. l: r, .. 11 f~: f: ... ,t ~ ~~:f1~"'i.4n-o ~ jµJ: 111., ]J!: = ~t iN"t ~= ~~ i:i 2~lti 2:~: ~~~ ~ ·~ imsulstoa<lbeedworwikthedgrooelmlauborins ~~ =~:~v ;~ ;U ~~ol.~ '~~ 2!~ :11 ••. ~1r:,'ci i:! l#" ~: :: 1)2 'J:P~1 ~~~~~s?s1 : 1U ~{; 1~ ... l~I\:. ~ flt: \1t!15.~ I n'lo r; n :::·' :~~'Ci:~ c,;::1 ; ;~: ;:: :i: = :~ .,._.. Kit Go ''"" 191!. Lind R•J '" 3~1 v••e ' ·,. · us k? 4 0ll 4 Am1cc 1'12.10 .let 1~'• UV, 26.lo -Vo 0.Xlft .1.1 4j l~''o 15\\ lSVo -"II l""lan MO 60 I lfl'o 11l4 IS'<-14 b NG t'4 t 'lo llN Wd t•· m All Am .,.. ' UI !' !fM IO.IOArmout 160 l 391'• lt'4 )II'"',,,, OltlFIMn .411 4 fl~ 9 9 -\li r""pl1PL 1$1l 111 ]\? ] Jy. But many ave worked :tc •• 1'1111\llL••llOll ..,:,v.AUll•lt l .Ut.31 UI, •.• ,,.,.,.,rm•tck '.MI •11111~21 1"" .... Qltmlnl!l.IO 1'1.!'\J'.l'~ll"'-'il f!>dPlpfi1~ 1 1 n·~ .... ··-l I ~ ,, t:rwri M l t.. 15 Alllfl• FO .... .... I 5l ,,·" ........ Jllub 1.40 ll '6 2.'.I'-" u ... Ol•m Sf\fm I llA 1•'4 1.t'h U>.li + ..... lrH1e•R1'1tl '7 5J ~ ... ll, ... J v..:.:: ~io "'1e111 OU =~,.s; 11'4 1N. 11<1v Lit lt\'o 17"• _ 1.P.~ :·[} l·U 111 1-1 3;3' ~·~Arvl•"o',"', ,J... 6 1t ;o It .. lt'~. Ol•i• f1C1 s JS'll 15\' 15\~ ••.•. ill!!Jlld pf'?JS • :n•; :t:t" 3''4 + ,0 1r I 1 2\; Liff\ c:.&.I 2 211. ... !Iv• ' ' oltr 1 N flt AJ.h IV •I :ttV. 21~ 11'• + :\I Ole 0 0! IO 1,1, l•!o 1470 111:i .. 11111..., 511 ' 7 101 J4\4 }:I>~ 21\i -\i Despite_ the seeming in-htrf' ':, Pi '\lo Ltlsur G ll" l!V. t: DllJ!,,!:! f.Sl l(nkl<ll j" 1'4f AVIOll p12:.o 1 .I.$ 45 l J · Dier~ .<Ill t~ t\lo N -\.\ '""'°"' 1"' 51 1 l~O I + ,,0 Crease m• lhe fiwnber Of ~ \'_,' P,,,, .. ,. t'""•'•'• n 'l ,!'oil ,a( •n !Cnlrt Gt .:52 1'.U AuO Ir-I I'~ I\~ l"t + V. 01..oolcl .4.lb 1i 541'1 54 11~ -ln1lko Job !1 IJ'\ 13\oi ll\(o _ ''< •• 1nc 1 Vt ... ii! fss[a irtl't ''° 732 A1'40G 1.20 "31·, nv. n~.-~~DlGlorqlo .60 13 11~ 11 1 ··-.,lmli< ,.;Al '.ll 2 11., 11 11 _,,. d lh . ::r "''' IO" >"" -•• •" •• lllCmt · •• ·->>"· ,, .• ,.~,,, "' 21 '\l, ' I -·~ Olllll!Clhm . .a alO!I 9fo f \i t\; -.., , __ ,, c-"· '' •>• ,1,., •>>> _ ,, ,-•ts, er1seincredit ,,,, .... ~~·:--,.ii:: .. · 111V1M, 1n122 ....... -· 1•l<l1•••1'"'+'-D111noD'A' .,.5,. 11,. +1~,,·-,-~-,,0-• ¥--... ~· ,_ 1 2V, ·~· '°Ml . Llbtrtv 1.n 1·11 Alltk:lnl; Incl l .,.. DI -!': ,.. .• ,.. ' u " "" """ 7'1..i + ... Card d bt -tin•~ an<f lid~ 5 10.S 10I LD19 lrft 11 12 ~ 11• '(!'> t"' l lk I U ,(1.5 AllCl'l'El 1.l-1 1 l'llV. 20>1. 10'~ ··· 1"'V • ""' 100'• -lnlrlk 11c 1111 7t W• 1)°' ~ -l• e ......... ~... now •l•t pf '", "• "~""'·', 1~ 111'1...J."1""" 3Jt i J lte ,,., s:,, 6.'111 AUCE! PU.II 10 11 11 " Dg:i>re"t ,)I ll ... ••; ...... -\~IBM 41(1 . '°' 11t"I ,11\o'i 1'8'11 -l•,o1 the · 1~·J -' Jb llldel E l!il U •m ,._111 J.O! J.!1 Linc Ntt I.Of 1.1o1 AU lllkll p1 l l tt•I tt "'' -'• vMio .1111 71 '°'-20'~ XIV. . Int Ch . Nuc!r ll "'" 3lllo >Ill~ +I re IS a \AO 111 more an "'", •-11·~ n Mil Riil' ffi • --, "-, ,, , • ''''ct<t 1>11.ao s1 ., .. ., 11~1 + v, P-.JO '' 11 11~ 17'i + " 1111F1•Fr ..... ,, ··• '".• ·~ _ ,,_ '" Am tftV '·" l,ol '"' · ll'I ,,., 1•0 Oonll!M1n IO It l llo 511,, S1\o -•; '"' '''' ·,~. ,,. _. """' -• $1.) billioo outstanding, or 111r u A '61/t l' M• lkrt • Vo ' """ Mut 1 32 1.00 .._,It S1'1!n: AllA~ Chf!'m I 11 ' ~' t' . t)omFftd .tie It I I'• 1"• -\:o • 1'1 '"' n·~ 71\lt -1 0 tlr tJ I 201') , ""9ml Al IV. Jl.mN Grtl iu 2.. C1nld ll.ts :n,Jj AllA1 CorD 'l2 11, 1 'I ,,. .... Donnell~ u I' 11·· 15'• I!~ !ntHolll l.J.11 II 11•,; 11 u •..r. " several billions more than dur· 111'1" Mt 1p;, u \\ M1n111 M '~' 3~t""' Pac ·11navi11 C1011 1.•J 1.4l ATO In( .oa. J1 •>-< "' 1•+ Vt Dorri: P ·11 1 1 1~. "'l · ;,~ tM tftdu11 10 11 10' 11 :':' • 111'11 Ml 20 2fl~MllllOI C •11 7\ ._.._ Oroup: Mui l 1.ll ll.J~A11rort Prod J 61• 4''< 6'~ Oor• 0111'i • 11• I'• ll'-='lolol~ll..., PO .Ill U ?IP., 'O'., ~-49 Ing last year. ltrlon 1~ H Ml• Ml• • • ._ f \lo '"C.l';;it ,,Jt 1.00Lt1rh l•O t.ff10.ltAu!~•n I.., J] • 1'• • f "'0ovuCD 10 11 ~· :u "' )l"t 1~lnl Ml""'' SJ !I 101', lim !!11! ,...,er I I'll Me>m Gr ,'i'' 1•,,~ (lrwTf\ 1.61 t ,'6 Mtt111 In 7.ff 1.6? Avco (P .'°8 11 l~k 10'~ 10'~ . OowCh-m i 60 :M •l'llo 61 ~I•~ "" l~I Mn9 .'XII' 10 11~ 11'~ 11111 -·~ Banks alone have between 11111on,,o ,~. ,!~ ,,•,~-, 'l vi 1r.c:mt 1.1' 1 uM•nMn •.10 '"' 11vu. o1i .20 • 29 21'• ,.. ..... o.n51nc1 ,·..:i 1o '! 2,1~ 25,. + 1, 1n1 Nl~k 1 '° ua •01• ,,,.., •'~ .q ·~ ._ .... ~ L •'•" ,'",1'1. Fd IQ" l.2G 1:8' 1.1 .... FO t .10 '·'' AVe<-'I PO .20 ~ ur. 11 26 -lV. Orn ... pfi10 10 ~ JP• Jl + "'Inf Ppp 1.50 ti .w·~ u l4 -"I 50 million and 60 million cards I,', 0,, ,l ,tYJo •,J.!.r, 0 " vtl'll 16.36 3'.I! '" Gff\ •.:u 10.1l Avnei l!K ·"° 11 6'"' ah a-.. . . O•tnr o1 tu , 21~ ,1 11,4 1"11 1t11C1n 1 6h , •. , ,.,., _ ·~ "" 1~ 1• ADOl1o Fd 6.1, l,"9 MliH Tr ll,W l].4 AvMIPd 1,10 Ill 4''' '' '"' -'l'o DrevlU\(p I ' 151-o 1''~ 1™r '.i. ·~ !nl \•II 1.olll ..J ~','.' :u,, .. M,,• •. 1 ! ~ circulating, but a good many -;:_ ~ i" 1~1'> tdlcM~• 10 ,~ An«l• Lot 1.1• ~·:~ ~·~ i.ao A.uecou .111 •• 11\'i " 11'4 -DvkePw 1.«1 11 211, 11"' 11'"' -,, l~lr&tT i'c, 116 u~ ~ ... ft"-·-d r •-·So GIOOISI n .. 11-\11 eOlrft 2t1..l)lll'IA1lrQfl_,.~~ l.Gl~rklt}d 11.'J1t!i -8--OukePlll675 l 19 11''• •114 ..• l"IT&T !iH , ls1JI '1i.,.1Jl111+1'°' 0 llC:K: arc up ICii.ca. me omcll , II I' Mlt'lct 1n 12·~ ll ' ..... , ..... H • 4.$<1 4.t l Ml<IA M~ •.SI "-" Bobek w .59 ll jl'• '6\'o 16'1o OU118rect J.H I) ,,,~ a •1\.\ • ITT PIF 4 '° I !' " 11 -It a , __ ·-ot ~· g ,, __ , One ~·· ~ 311 ldkl Ct ,~ ll ¥ ,. .. ~ c 'I.,, • ··-, .. -• Ou~l•n .IOI IN ''" 14''1 ,. f \lo l11lT&T olJ 4 ' , 3 n ,_ J.IKI ... ,., n uo;:Ul ~. " >>'" >>" ,,,__ • •' Fund 9 4.tt 6.1• .._~ 11 · bbi)ll T .'5 t 1-• "• >>';':' '"":,. dl/PQl'lt 2.$0t 11 120'0 11tl'i !lt'oQ -"-low,' • o>•• -" i.~ •H •• ~ ~ )II $1oc:k J7j ,.74MOnr:tr'i 1 .1711. &I.It GE 111 14 11\o 11 .,.. .,....,d,P-••-I I>'• 11•-> • ' 1 41\lo 4 61 ·-· estimate is luai. less than ooe-T.i """ 72"' \o\\llW GT 14VI 1W, Sci C• J: .. 1.21 MIF "" I.II '·" lt!IG pfC• no,, 52 1l 5) Yi ..... ,,., "' • 1• ... '" olN J JS 1i1 .... '"" •7~i. -I~ Hl111 ''~ J pit Gti JO :JCIV. I bsoll 1•59 If: Mlfl Gtll 1,n l ~ h1>gPnt lJj> l\lo l1' '" -d~Pant l'll.50 2 49" llfl't 49'~ + ~ !nl IJlll 1.'-o ti 11\i 1t'. !"' third represent a Ct j Ve ~ l"IY 7111 N IU VIG 1,"1 IJI' e!.°"' 10)t 10: MU\J~ Gw 10.lol 10::111 Bk ol Ctl ·1.)1 11 71 11 ... '1 + y; Out LI 1.U ~ "" '11\ "'" -""lnl Ulll A U ""-!4\'t 111 -\• b.Jo•-s, 'cm' ,'-,' lllldl ,.., &«I l(M 1.'l'I 1. J Mu OmG 4.1• I,~ !tin• GI NY 1 J 11>, U '\ U \\ t.1 [)Q l.1511'1.01 Jl20 26'1t 1111 71''> +I ln~"'tto 1 11 n 1• I 22'<1; ,.._,,~ GJA.>= Sci }~ oll'I rk Gtll 4 14 J. I Mu On'rln I.IS t.fl 8.,,k Tr l !I JS l l'l •1 41'1/, -.... o.ic.lt old 1 11Jll '4'0 7~"• ,~,~ lnteroc~ p! S 1 1j'~ 11'' llli +11.!o 1~1 J'' 3\0 wk Ill 14,. 1"4' l•I• fd S.w ,.51 Mui sn,. 11.1111.n llirl>On i.i.!i 11 '1th ,,.~ W\I ~ ·~ Ovmofricl .111 I ''' •·~ t•'• l11•8tand .t'lt I 1 •• 13''t U\Oi ,, , Evidence of (urlher "TK J~ ,'., ci:i1, ,.. itk s 04 !"Mui Tr111.11 111s.ro CR'' 14 J• 31~ 31~-"°0YntAm .IO " "" 5''t S''•-l~l11te•1tS1r .ao '! u·~ 14•4 Jt\fo ,,, • ,.,.. .,. Pl l """ "'°" st 6 '° .711 HEA Mui I IJ • Jf" 9111c Inc .ta 1 11 11 11 •• -E·F-:~;'~':,/·a• lJ ~:' It!: ~:Z:.:.:. \\ reSiS!ance IS that many in--lloc.k ?J. 1~\lo =: r lgu l~u. ll Fdn 1tl t.14 N~O/ ,'"", '>'°t 1 00 llt$IC pf ,7.Jll · JIO 31'/t l7"t 37'~ + '~ E•tlt!P<~ .tG 7S ~-, '10'4 '1GlJo t •t !owtfll l.:IO 34 ~ \'\'• l6'-"i _ ~'t di 'd . .> b d -·rid ., 0>lon I Of 7 If • nv1 ' 6.4' &tlh •~II II 17 TH\ !IV. -\\ '' 0 c 00 0 '' • ' '' G , j · mi• --~ '' VI UaJS now a g. r ~Ofttrtll ' , ... ~ltf TrA 17\lr " ,.,.., $1 1\ "n J II lt<;u• SH; .... hln DfO ~ 1 34 34 Joi •< p ' '~ 11·~ II'•• -\.;, D'll't I .~ ...... --t l 1.PI 15% '>lt!T' ""' O\'t •" B •llodl'. c.1.,111• s,11n t 11 , ,, iiincriLo BC 2J "'~ 3,.,, ,..,~ · '\\ E111 Air Lin no 13'• 1314 •l'• + t4 1"""1Plr 1.60 jh 12~ + 1~ sloreowners for cash di> o•P s 3~~ 4\to 'o\oCh M ,j~ ,J,~ "l:ui1e1i; 11 llf 115, §~, ,11 1.« 501 B•~trL•b 10 791 13,,, ,,,~ 11v. -Vi Ea,1 GF .111 5J J1\, 16'~ H''< -» 1ow1PSv 1.:w s '~ •11 o ... -\• . ~ I otm Yr 10\'>ll'h l'.ol Clutl ,.. " fl•nd" u ,"'11'2 va J iff lll Bl'<f•f"9• 1 1 ll 311 311 -E••ttJ!ll 1.•0 1 u1~ 111, H!j -\.l l0<0H1»0 ,34 7 U'• 21'1• 72"4 -lt counts, arguing w1a l s nee they !""~ 'I"' l•Vt M ... ller ,•,., .. ,. lvld I u '°'•' •• ·~.·.. •"'•'• l·l? !tee! fd' 1 15 11'14 '1'~ ,. .... Ee11(Qd~k 11 •11 11·~ 10'!.i ~ -'~ !~ ~mo .61l 1i! 11:; ~,'i,• ""•• =··· · ••· II .,_and rttM!ff •,~ l \4 Mu111l1E..) ,,,,_,~ •fWj ,1'10 ..,.,lecl<m~n .SO Jt ,1 11,., :>?ll+'~E1rD11Y•l ,«1 II H• J5 ll +l'o OrP 2J~ are savmg "'"" se er wue ·~•• ,,.,,. 11' 1\0 M~H LE j'-•;::r NY v"' 11.41 n11 !"'om • l.4 1 11 BKt oic1i » l4' 11 »:r.. lct'llo _ •• Ecf\1111 Mt ,,1 !t ,"',., ,,,~ n•~ -"• -J.K-e ,.__ ew~-'· _ .. kl rou c o 26"'t H wee Ind • ... ,111,..., Fd ,,,, 6J5 rock /·7t 1.:n !l-.chAr .75o 1, ,,, ,,, •~'"+"-~'f•rd ·J .20 lt :»\. 12"-''JtckinAu 14 11 6,~ , 4 -i,. Xpense, W'I:' r ...,,__. auOU rv!Ch Ill of'.\lo !'\ =•nH C l • l~,, G Fd J It 7.17 H1I Gr!I! I\ l·'~ !teko Ptl .50 100 u U'~ 15V. 0 1<lnBros I I 7J 1l 1l J-20 10 7 WI ? + \'lo be Shared ~"'" C 1'~ I \; II 1•1111' ll "' •pemr '14 1.41 NfUW Ct! l ! 19 l•klerl J.llO • '6'~ 1~'• ,,_., ::. ·,, E<l .. G .• 10 Al 17''• 111~ 11~~ + " JfnU•n '.60b r 1''' 11, U'!t . 8'"' llMI ,.. )\'lo Nerc.r It !1 •Pll 11\W 1.63 , It N-Fd "13 11 2] Bell How '° .. "'. ,.,,, 711.,_ .... EIM<lltC .09. 11 •• ' 4'111 4'~ --J1oe11Fd 06t 1• 10"' 10~ ''™' + '" ""IY M •'~ 1\1 NCll'lo (p ll ~ 1J-toll 5f\r S.'H 5.1' H-Wld IG.67 11.W Bt!I lnl..-(MI U l'i ~ &'-,.. EJl!CI A!!OC lt A~• l 'l 4'~ -1\ JtoFd !n.~t t IOlf 10 I gllt0.1 "" ·~N"'at:t C~I Sf\• t.M1~41N~rQfl 11111l2511em1sco1 16 IS u ·· 1! +'4 E1Moll'IM•• lOO N ••• l\o -1 J~tnPl!OI Ill) 1t 16\lr '~' ,1..:t ... •It Gfll 1''11 HI" Ntl 15'°' ~; t':hi1"11°" Fuftd1 . NICI\ Sire 1.10 I 211 !1"'61• !Ml l l J~•;, n•~ ~ -'lo EW.Me1 pf 1 I 11 ..... 11\lt 11 1, -'~ Jll'oentA so 1 11'~ 11 1I A.it Exhibit Scheduled :fl~~ 15'11 N:: l"d P/1 l'\lo ~~l!!SI 1:~ :11 00 :-l~ f.11l:::IJ<=:1.1: 'J %}~~lo :!1.1+1 111 ~lir~1t~G1.~ ·~ 1t•'t ~ ~!t'~~1~wW~!ll1..:i 'l n~~ ll~ !~~~.\\ ~1111 p ~· r~ N", ~ ~··l ~ 9•l•n t.I! 10 n No.•111 ll to IJ.l'O B...cll• "' , IS «I'~ 4'00.:. "°"' -. ., E!11lnNtl Inc( Sl !~ S'4 , .. -'• Jtwtl C:o i.5'1 10 .,., •1 ,, + ;.; or 111 11" S Ntl SKll '" ,~ lncorn 1.14 7.21 100 fd 11,ff 11.67 !t....-! Sp12,50 110 H'~ 71'-'I 28V. -1.0 Emer Elec I I.!( 5J 51t• SJ + 1' JlmW1U pf 1 1t~ 1''• 11'1 lj\1 -... "' Al 21~ U'h •1 Show \lo SP9CI 1 • .0 I.SJ IOI f'O I 10 •.11 &en-t &c S\t 3•'t SVi + V. El'Fll'r~•lr tO 11 51'1 Sl 51 , JallnMtn 1.XI 11 Jl•o Jl•o l \-l -•-. lf\l lftl 6\lo W. ! 511vr ' 1 (htoe Gr Bn: Ont WmS 11 85 11 U Btnt1ur! 111 1 5 4 S ... Emh..,.! 1.IO o '6'~ 74\'i 71•1o ->\ Jol\n Johll .:t:t 'i 4 •IY, •7'0 + •A 8•lullCll •t SO NnO~ l~l~ C•oh SOS5.!1'Ntll 11,l5113Seerk.,.Pho •1 6'" a•. l'~-\\1 Emoo11t1.11 4 111'.21 ll'•t•~Jol\n\Svc .llO 11'i''"~J>;. §·: ~;~T :rt t;~ d\~n·r;. ,~~ " "urw:I 6.1! 1., """ • :n 4 '1 Berm~ Co•P ,7. J •• 2V:i J<I + v. EmPCtC .ta • 16'. 2'"" l6~J '\ Jalln Vt DI J JOJ..:i SO'.lr 50\/0 -1-l~i v Am 1• !t n v. M 511rl'ld t.•t t .56 Tt « t,14 t .14 111 Thr~ 60 1ns ..i 11•'> 15 + ,,_ Eq.utG~l .1.'IG 12 tt~ 21~• 1f _ •.~ JM1•l•11 ,l4o IQ'• 10\o 10'9 -'4 '" iil I II A 3~;7, l'Vi Frnl 5111 fO II Piie •,1M ••5 f.t! e,1h 511 1 tlG 1J1 ,., ... 11"1 '1"' -\\ E"11lhMI" ,IQ JJ It 11'• II 14 JMlOlll" .llO •' ,51. •S •S -' g :::,¥ c~ ,1~ IJ :1'R•K l'Ar l~ SPKI 6 61 129 l"•cr Fncl I u J,H Bletk Ok Ill ., ll~i ''"' 43 --lo> ESB l~c 1.111 9 "" ,,... Ill? t \~ Jl)l!H&L pl 5 "~· c NG 10 10\IJ C:htt'r>c:I 1•.>11J,)2P•u llllY 40.. '"°s 1a1rJ<>lo11 ... 1 U1i n !1 -'llE1qulr~ .let • 10 ''" 10 i1 usso d oil 4] ••.• A M , \~r 'rM ;ii\ 3~ e~~ 011 '"° ,..,co1011111: Penn Sq •to 'to e 111L•u•1 1 19'" 1•·~ "'~-'"' E• .. •I"' 1.io , 11,~ tit'' ,,\~+'AJorr'"*").>0 11 10 it•• 191'J->i t arlllel'S ·---\'-,j:1 .J "'"'•G•~ 1,,..,,11~ Equiv 11111 3).1:~,,Mui 1.11 5J1llockHR .u 10 !W>14o 1•1; 4~\tl-1ill.E11er11ne .ne 41 •'o 1., 9 -t 101 ~"' .• o 1 'l!t·~ ?ON• l'ltl•-\"1 .......v• -· ,,. ,. w ,,,. 71, 1 F und 1.0! t ... " 1 11,l71' 4' rue Bell 1 '6 1l Jl''I ll J1''> + t. Elhvl Cp 1-1 JJ n1. n •• l91o + '• Jov Mio 1.«t t .oi. "'.! 411'~ 1 \' 15 W p ' 11 ' 111 G..,.111 • lfJ $ 1' Pll9r!m I 01 I 11 &obble en., lj fl!! t'~ f'~ -V. El.,vl p12 .a I\ l Jl o ll'" l1'I + \Ir Kal1pr "'1 ' '" 11\o ?I>\ 21~.:.:. d ~:~~ ;,,: 3 "'°I~.: 1~ 51"' lncom tll.f t HPllD! SU 101\oel!l<IC.O ... 11 ll ,",~' 1'1olo -"•Eurofnll )Se 1 11 11 li K•l5AI 014,11 I .ti'• ll'·• 52'~-V. fl"''" 0 lG 10~ ID Art :,i. l~ Ven1 l ICt 3 •:I P,',"' 51 '16 ' I• 9ol1Ct> 250 127t •1 • "•" --l~~ EY•niP :IOb 11 1s1, lS l''• +-·,, ,",,",',•.•,, N, "', la>. 16.. l'lli + '' K'rby l'arr 5 w·1 1 •· • 1ot Gr111 •" t 11 an El'lt i Js s.11 &o..11 1nc1 ,,, 1 ' , , ,,0 , ,,.~ .. lD"o )O•• lOtl t ,, I IL I ~el-r!•Oll U\'>U~ 10W1l ?Hf Cll"1~8d 4 0l •JIPlon Fncl•1110,,..11QOkMlftl1ll 1i.11r11~1··~ ;,~. n 1•111.i -.111•1 -'\1C•11GEl«I 1 20•.20•0'61•-li .. . ,.tint 1014 1~ 1 5c•n 11'>\lS'/t wlltl AB l.U \.21Pl•ll In¥ •6t t.60Dorll.,, l,'1G to 1111 1! l~=~l"tber~~ .ID II U'o ll • IS'o -~'IC•"Pwl 1;,. , 1p , 211, 2l h-~i hib1ting artwork begimnng ",,",~, •,• ,, !, ,,'.. ,',',', 1..,11 .. CD 1 56 1."' P,,., 1<~1111" l\eroW•r 1.21 11 11'11 !' 11 -Fae;'"'"' ·'°" ?• ,, 1•'• Js + r. K11., '"" , ,,,, •'1 6,... _ ., ' "' As 111 ! Sl Otwlf\ 1114117• O ,,,..,. to 4 IJ' J'~ JI• -~ Ftlr(~~ .SO 10' 20 It .... 19'1\ -1lo K~u! Brd 01 19• U\o •• >• -1'• Au•usttO'>nMar'mersSa••1n•s[."O','i'• "•"",'• ~.->,,"' l._. 4'1 ornP, 1'1 "NE•• 11.·,, 1·14 .. !~"''';,, s "'~ 31\ lW.~,,F•lrHot!.He 11 '"I'• 111 -"l(a· .... c11 .-'' ''' -,, U'lo +'• fr • " ......_ n. l )J J':" :::;:-Id '' .::n N Hcir 1' 011t:M ;;:,,,,. Inc I 1n1. '°' 0 10 --c, Fe1rmonl I ) U>o 1 s·~ u •. -ICIVIP•Jll• '""60 "' lt~ 11•1 nu. +l'• and Lo As · · S t l"tl I 1?'~ n ,,. EC ,.,, ,n11.1o .~.! 0 fd 1.11 I 50 "re Fu..., 1 '1 1 •1 8renlfAl• ,loll so l ''o I'' l'.lo -.,., l'1l•ltlf 10~ I 1'1 lh 6',1 + 'Ill l<'-1•• 1 'O 1 Ill •,o •D _ '• an SOCJation, ll5 E1b1S,.•I 1 nlotblllr -·•oms .. 3llJ.t5P,.,..dlll 571 l °'l\'lgo~1 2.«lt ISJ $1\l5J ... F•mllyF\n1 1Jl1~l11 12 -'•K•fltrlncl.$0 !11 1 11 , .•. Elcll=r k 5'11. I'" tc AuTo ~ S\I d t al t.61 l"url1•n 1.'11 e.U lrl'I M'I I '1G 10 131~ j1':. ll .... -"'F1n•l•el Int 14 llo l\to I\\ -\'> l(fl!oa<I 1 JO :JI) 11 471~ •l -1 Westeliff Dri ve in Newport L"•lt• J lV.. ec F1E 1~ ~~Z M1sol In t ,, t.62 Pu•n1m F11'1<1•: 11.1,rMv 011 ! J~~ ,., ·~ + v. "~' we11 Fin • 11•~ 11•,, 1n .. -1~ Kt!IDOll wl 1 n n•:. 11 + ,~ 8 ~ She . _, uc '11 6 •kcc C• 00!!.ll tn 11s Jll ?,""" 6n11s11•l!P~t 1'e 5 ,,, ti• 1•o+v.F1t•hMl .llllb , "''• 4 \'. .tt1<o +1.1.kel1~v1>0 1 11·~ H•• 111\-I ea ... .,.. recc1vvu art ICP'I 11\i '"' •N:ol I"\\ l~ on•I Ml 61• •.It ft\1'9 11.7' 12" , Pit In i2t 1 t'4 9"• ''lo . . FAS Intl ,16t J7• !~· I 111o -1\'o Ktndlll '60 1• 21''t )6\l, ,,v, . I 'nJ t lh c ltf . urorn ,11,1o •,.',"'•' o.. , •. on1 Glh '" 6.tt rtl'I t,'M tOllldwvH•I• 1 10 :JI)~ lQV, ll)h --l<IFKIClers ID )II 2T'll '6''> l''l>-1 K"11nCO!I l.MI 1P II'•,,,~.,.,.._.,.. rai ng a e a orma 1 !': sv, :to •r w ... ore Ld 1\.40 n .to O'l(om •J' 1.'*' a11t....,. GI 60 ls ,, ',,6 11o .... F.,iMog \.aa 11 '''\ '1'• 1\\ + 1• ICFCh 0.1 10 1n 121. 11 .. n .; '• School OJ F';..,. Arts, San Fran-I R::iti '~~ 5':,,, ;:~~t P 1~'/o ,pi nlv Ceo ~ 10 >I !nV11JI ~ t In BktvntJG 1 n • 1Jlt 13•4 -1-~• Ftt1P1c Elec 10 '" 110 "' _ \, Kv 1101 1.5' 35 11 1 0 _..,. 21~ _ v, u.,.,. 111· 1 p I Ml t /10 ~owg1v •'2 511 Vls!t 641 7231!trown Co II ''~ 4'\ :'' , F "•c pfl.7& J l::l'o !Po IJ11 ,, K~rrMt L>ll U 1J ,, IJ . cio"" Juni-College, from Bob ::".~L 0,11 1,1,,,; 211,, P,::', '•"-,'• ,,,,, 2• •n w 11 St2 4.1• \fov~• s"" J t1 l\wn5h•tP .20 6 • •'• 1 t ~ F1d"•oll11 1 4 11~, 11'< 11o,r., -\\ Kt,,M o11.11.• ! 111\ &1 61\lo + v, "'-U .,, •• ,., ·~ ,, • VIII! M '!? 00 5100 Rep Ttch ] lt 3"' llwn!hoe ' 5(1 • ,.... ,.... ··~ :~ f!(ISlonS 60 l !J 1J u -... Ktv•ICMlll 1 ?l i''l n>·, -Uecker, Pasadena, Joan Irv-;:r: :• • 4V.P• GIW 11'l 1i~o11aw••• G•ouP .,.,,,,, 1 . .u •71~•un•wll ~ 71 14'~ U'l /l1•-,:F-•t1 tric I s•. "" !'•, .,KIOcleCo 1,'l!l• 11 .,,, ••1 11"'-'• """'" J\\, ""'" P•c !• ' Oectl t7S\06'1111ntrtt '''OU.1'8UO'E• 1 I 'I•" 0, "",.FtdOtPISlr 1 lJ l l'• 31 311•-\ll l(ldfk of 1 id •7 ., '"I Brandt, Rex Brandt, Bob E"" c~· 1·~ ,,._"~"'I W• '~ •lt Oltwr 10" 11.~,•, •,11.!!."',, ,1.•,, ''•"•~ ',', !,', x~•' ... :'l' J;1 _,,-"' FeG Dev co • 1•1 1 J _ "',",'' · pf,t.J.,1 , 41 •1 o . 1 G P l!'l'tlll O!I "4 I''• l"fl,.,UI 31\', Jt 0@11t S ii ' '"'" " """ R ' ., .. ••' •:; Ft,,o Cp 111 lQ U't h ll \4('o -.. mbCI~ LIO •I ll '~ JI'~ ]II.I,~'·• \Vood and eorne O,!t I!:~ T 5" 4\lo .. llR"° ttf $3 l' O.n11I ll.•1 11 •I k"'-"1• 11t1130! &u"9 Fl ot.trO 1 6'l ''• Ol 1, "llirebrd Jo f 111 , 21 •• 71 •~ _ ._ Klrrc!'OSI 40 J \''o 11\o 15\t -•1 " ' f'~(':l!C 1\0 1\,Df\!ISub lt t••r..-.v!'Fd t1t 107lSCIKklerFwnd'' 8duvetn•• l I a'o 'l'l,0 -,'F!eldclMl.>IO 'U'-''J l-l -ll,Kl.,,..vNS .1i .at',! ?l' .. 71'li -O\ M' H isis loc i cs· FbTec: 3'~l'P)>otel! 111o1 ... tt1Lv 10N11'.n ll'lllnvl17t11 01Nl1Fqr1 1 10 •l" ru·1.,·-··F1nFtdtrt111 10 1111 11 11 Klnne-roU.Jj I 11" 16 -H· "' arr . a a '. •-,•,1,110'r '" ,.:,.1, ,., '" •~ 1ton&Mi:iw1r11. ~Pit• M"J'"lluiov•'N &O 1) "," ,,,'. ,,! Flr••lne 1,60 11 ,1 n•; •Jl"-"'·',',nn~ot,1.u 11• 50'• ~ +'~ de dh d I ~ ( l!ttl•ll lllfM 1111 1'1Jl1?1Mnlo.Jlltmo I .. • _.,~t(I It ~t 1'> nt an as 1sp ay"" pain Grwtll tto 1o·n com s1 1.11 1:11Bunk1t otl.50 1 11\, ,,.1 Hi;, Fi!Ch•• 1.m 1a '' 111. J1 • ''K1r1ch co· 11 3,,~ 1,,~ 1, • .,;,i, ' ·ngs •I the Lam'"' Beach 1ricorn s''ll:14Wur11~ Fu'ld•: !tun1"" 1 . .a 11:MI 39•, Jt'1 Jtl. F11111.11f:'·~ it n11 11~ 1u.-1"•u.M A 1.ll~ 11 ,1 ,.,, 11 .._,, "~ $peo;I 1,1 ,U r,outw 1.0 J 1$ BurlNer I"°' 111 '5'~ 2411 2•'• -1•~ F'IHC ly 14'0 Jt 1.5 j.ll~ IS KiilaM N 17• " l2''> ll', 3?'~ _ ..... Acl • -R·-'·tion. Sou them Cal-Sl<lf~ 11.10 n.11 ~v••• • r.111 ·" !u'!.':!.0• pt.55 ,•1• , '" ~·.. ,•,~ • F,•,!~,·~.' ",~, ,' tt,,:• ",,:" ',',:• -:• Koehrl"'I \ 10 1 11'\ 11•, 11h .. ~ 'C c d' Ebl~I 10.ll l~U Ultrt I· 4 !.11 ~•nuY .Iii & "' " -·~ -.... • '' • • -t -I(_,. 160 7 11•~ 7~11 1\'o _lo ilornia Exposition. San Diego e1·t a1· "••el 10.lt 1 •. 0I .... [" Am °' '6t 8urrt111 .60 1J1 ti ... t Ji.. + ,, Fl1fl• Fd ,lie " 10·~ 10 10 -·~ t'or•<O•ft ira J !,, !'. 5~ +Ii Fmr11 Sc •.15 ..... Sil S~S 11.tl TJ,l1 C Fl1herScl .14 71 Ill l V. 1~1 -''o K•llto 110 10 J' JI'\ 1n· 1' Water Color Society S a n ~M••v 10 11110.Xt Mntl Gii! AJ.7 1.1• -,-F!ln11<01e 1 n, 10 2J•• 1l"" -'" "'!'" sS .u 111 , •\ :it"" :iti: = 1f ' r;"1nr1• S.n htm Fd l.ltl 1.11:1 C•bot C P.111 11 ~~'' ll''o 36"• -•o 1'11 E Co&tl 11 11 I~ 11 + t~ "'°"' 1 30 11 30>> l0"1 lO'l'I f ' '• D1e1111ito Art Guild and the ~<11111v 1,6,,,,,~h ... •AP1••4•1 .. !1JFll'l•~1 10 11• 1 1 -'•"l&G••.so 10 u•··" n 11 +1' · L o· D VA IG\l!Olf\ 7.!t ·jJ2!1110.111 lj.~11 36 all1hnMnv Ii 11>t 11 II -•t FIJ POwl,60 11 •11•••'••1t•+>lo - -Carlsbad-Oceanside Art Lea-ue to HI~ 11.111 . I !Id• ... a.n "11\PRl •I• It , •• , 1•\'o ,,,, -'• Fl•Powll 1 l• 'I'• a2·~ 61'1 + ·~ lac C.A• ! ~o ' 20 .. ?O "1101 In 10.!5 1 ,7! ,.,... F~r•h: amPSP j lC 1] ll.. l'o 21'~ -'o Fl• St"! I ! I \~ II\< 11\4 -'~ U1ms~ 5~u 1 1 M''t 16'·• b'Ue. ·O (&P •-I •. , C'«!U 4,•, 7.o• CdB•tw ."611 ' 1·~ I 1 -'• Fl!X>rCP I JI! 10, XI'• »'I< '° 1'•+ .. l J ... ''" O! u 11"' II l"•lrld I.II I Q 1n ..... 1 'n •.t1 Cdn Ptc l.20 • 55 511, Sl" -'• F uo• of II J d <2 ., + \'I Lin• Riii "' I ..... "'~ Some of tht' paintings, which Flfm l!lu 1.n 1.n T...,,, '·'' 1.1• CdP•< tnJ:io 1 S<111 l•\1 .s..11 1<1v~• .111 •1 10• !•'• """ .... '·"•ot>Si .u~ 1 1•\ 114 11\e Veterans Admlnl.straUon ,.,, Grffl 10.n 11.to s....1111, • •"u" ,1 ... can11 Rd 1.10 ,, 13 n u -'•FMC '-~ ,1s 1' ' ,,,, ~ •• Le1• s1e11 .JO ,. "'' " will be on display Monday f'ld\•• t.1t10.M~W11 nw • .l•C1DC e11cs1 JI 2ll't 1211 n·~t1 ,FMC l!f1.:u 1 32.'• l1 '•. l.ft•$11tt111J 11 ~·~ nv. rsd had SOme familiar adivce 1 ... "kl und u.N u.oe Swtftv Gt •.n J_., c1•nrvn 1 so "' "° ,,..., 40 1~ FaodF•ir .to JO 1.i, I• •'-+ •• Lf•'"' D~•A 111. '" 1'4 lhru Thu 3Y 9 ~.m. to 4 W-FJcl •rid 11tS2D.M '°'"" ln•1•."l'ft?c1rttlle 111 JI 1 11i. 1310 ·~Foo11 Cl!l .1Ct 1 ! "' ! ~'ILN10"'J_111 7• 11~ H''o 0 id ·' ti.·•in ,.,ftlr>Cltl l"rW: ,,. S.41 s" C11•0 ca.Of\!. JIO SS Jl S! I.lo Foott Mift ,.. ' •• ,, I '\ i .. l~$N(lt !O ' \'h ,,,, p.m. and r r ays 9 a.m. lo uay for verterans a '"" g f:"""' l .to j·n "'"" Gt ,_,, 1.l't C••o"L' 1 46 n ,, 2111 n•· -\• Foo!t eo.7<1 I 2111 2• ,,,., "' Lenon• ·"° u 1·~ 11•0 'I Se be ndull 3.21 .ff /"' 5t :lll.50l'.5a c rpTch 1'60 It 11V. 11 JI~+'\ ForilMo! 2,oll) 11 4SIJ 45\lo ol~ 'i\ tlOllPCtm oCI • lb\• 10'\ 6 p.m. unll ptcm t 10, college this summer under the ncom •.ff s.c ~•dm•11 Ft1r.t1: c:rri.rco '.e ss 3,,_ ll~ ,1.. Fo.Mi;k1 AO >i 11' 111, 17YI -\• .., v11 1nc1 • • 1~ ·11 be r I v1."'' J.lt •.04 Am Ind l t3 4.§1! 1•rt•rW 4GIO '1 15\1 I! U \ . "' FM.el( ofl.IO J J11 o ll'l 11~ + It t.otom11 1.611' 64 IJ''o 1S~ WI or sa e. , .. I 9·111 •-·'t forget lo ...... Ft! V• • u • H itklvc '' l '' .. ~ · ,, 1 -•'• -,,· ~ .. , W111 .10 \ •~tt h\t. l\CI ... ,,, L...,1•dlll '° i 1a.i , 1~ ..... . --uou ....... Fil " 0 11 .:n ii! kltll f•J :11 111 ..... k ,llltb 1 '°'" •v -FhlttH'G ·*' ~. tit 10 -L-"" C•D ,,, II\ tho • of "/ t"Glh 11"'°va11 SIM11 llloe I'd'· C1ttrJ' 1.70 '° ll"r ll'l 1,J!•,· •~ F•HPl_5ul ~ •7 5•1 U•• 1J1"1o t • Siegler, Inc. Sales Tol<l Lear SiegJt'!r. Inc. of Santa ~lonlca rtpOrtl!d lodRy that rarnings and earnings per ~hare ror the ri$eal year en· ding June 30 !'let all-time reCflrdS for the seventh con· secutlve year. Net ear ni ngs \vere $23,689,000 or $1.53 a share a.fltr provision frtr preferred dl\•klends. up from $22,109.000 or St.ti • share the previous ytar . Commertlal and Industria l salts were up, bul total sales of SM&.40!J,000 were down JJli(j:htly from SSS?.863,000, due prlmRrily to lowtr oc.rmpace aud dtfemr business. turn st Certification at• fl fnSlk ""'"'jl 9tl 1$,,7'15.&j CC I (.,,P to 1J 1 l'• -,. Frutrte:D l.111 11 Joi'• 2tl• Uh · .. Fii Munl 7,AI ' j t'to 0• •.• , d.I Cotc:o .,,~ ' ' lS\1 U\.'I ll~! = ~ FllCIUf In .201 '2 ''"' ' t -,,. tendllnce cards to the VA. Ftt N11 1.w '·' St«-10.t.111.MI c,1,eM~.o,,l ~, •,,':', ~!,L ."•.·· .. -G-"'' Sl•r• let.SI J1, J ~up lnGI ~.•n ~ 9' Ce•" ,..,.. ,.., ~.. ,.. 'The "cert card" I• needed "~' C•• 5,31 . . . 111a1ns1 1.111 1 u Ce"'' 1111 .let l1 u• • ts•, 1s•1, -1~ GAl c. 1.so 119 11°" 11'\ ,,,._ -"' l'i.t Fr.t ,,ht ~l'Y' GI ,,\• 11$1•n HUCI l 11 I 'I'' 11v., 11~ .. ,., GA Cori .4'0 ~' l" ,:·-11.r. + 111 ber """k •· Id "'J.'h •» •k TMll AO t.11110 1• •n lllLT 1.lt 17 1 '• nt.t 'l t .. GoA pfl,:t.. I 1 '• 'I .. ore (',~ s can •ro pa. , Ftld 111 i j• 1·,. re1rhr. '"'1 '!~ tnll!PS 1,20 10 ''" 11•i1r 1111 -~• G•m s~_a 1 JO 12 214• t 1;, .... f'Oll rs 4 l .. Ted'iricl !' j •~•nil• El 1 l2 ?lllo Jiiii j'" + \\ GlmS pl1..0 4 )4'~ j' 71 +-"' according to Martin J . May, i::"""l i: .. 1'.n T•cflno1 .ti! a t!IM, •,.• •,·il 10 1s1oo 111\ P. -1 1\ G•,,,..h 11 '' ?Jloo .} 11 -•t . ,.,.nk I" Group: em• GI ,, r. U.tol) ." ...... 51 'l" (!\\ •Ilk -~ GlrdDen 1.lO 5 ,. ,. ,.., Market Syuabols Acting Director of VA' s ~HTC '·'' ,,u r-Miii 1 1 4,\t •"',",'" •"• 4 1 " 'I G••*oc-.. I 1•·~ i. ,,..., + v. rw111 •.tt ! d 1••n r.11 •.14 1.11 on t tJ I 1 'l~ 1 '• + \1 G11~v 'ind !"" 1·~ "~ -'• Southtm California RegJonal ~ ~ n :lI T~ E,,, 1f~ ,; ~ ::r~~~ ,, l!':' , '· lf.1 t'1' ~111f't~11 'l I .. lit: /~ + }l Office. ~~~t ·,.~ .~ ~ fric 1" ! :; ;,!~,:1, Ill.: 'l it!! 1/f:! lJ~ T ;! ~,tXl~!n1:Jt. ~ w'":; f. wit':=:: Tiit fl>tklw!rw II t hY IO 1t•!l'1bob u ... FUl!d Am ,)I • 11 111111 Mui •'I ,, l"I I ·r~ J'• r. '!'' -I '. !':i.1T1011 ""° " \o ,,.. -10 lft 1111 llldi 11'11,k.t _ .... College student J I h 0 u Id :!."'S'.c t~t ::~, H~1~.pl!t ru : ~ ~~~ Pl"' lt. r.i t~ ~ -:.:: ~, ..... "' ··~ M ,.~ ..... --~ ~s!111;;~ ~· .:~ .. ~':2,.rrt\111 ""' return Ille ccrlltleatlon of at-!':i~''sK: 5.i. 5•1 u~~~ "11nc1'~ ... v~i1 ~~:.\iv'~ ,r >1t~ 14:_ a1Z• T-:~ G~·~\~ f 20 ~4 r,' ~ tm ~t :.::11, 111111 1toct 111v10tno. o--Lllwldt11n, di"}. d d hlch ·•·y An• F !.II •.• 1 lrocom 11n•••JI he1-0Mn ! IO .. "" " "" -"' G"Dt~tl .11! ri , •• 1·1·~···. ·1~ _, Mtlll, 6--0e'l:!ll•H or Plkf In 1,10 '""' ten ance cAr • w Ul't: 811 Fd ,.,. I" S<ltll u""'v•ll hKkt• MfA' It ,,.. 'I 'I" + • ~·"l"!Y""'" ' " i.•\ J ·~ -\~ •IM:t! dlVlcltM. t-1"•111 j I. I ., .. ,. ,_ . f:d Wilh their Chflck9 Com 51 ll0-11)01 Vt"• uota•111 htl•t• ·'1 l /'' '~ It · • enElfl( ?~ I .. 1i'j $>\-" '°rt•bll '" lloclt dllflno lt'O. n!f..,.1,.. rcce.1v •:i:Fo A f•t !:~ Utd er" "~••• 1 "91T1tTrft 1~ ll'• 2 '' U"" . " .., Fa• '·'° ~ "'' '1~\ -ti <•~ vt1111 on e•·lllwldmM or ••-<lll1•lbli· early In the last fuU month ~""~ ... 1,:n 1 ·= \l~ L'l~"· .~q1 ,,, si:;~~ l: 1; st )I:: J~.: ~ G:~ t~\' ,Jl)I .~ u',. !~~. 11' + \~ llDll ... , ... •-DH.11 .. 11 ,,, H iii "° ,,, of every enrollment period, •rein 'JCl,J! wi.u !""om i." ~" C~-~lo •, ij :w.· flli ..i + >t "" M1111 iP. !' to " 1•t 11111 v•••, "'-O.C111<tt1 or .. 111 trtff 1m1h11i: "' 511 j l! •.tti ..., ......... ~ '' ~ ~ +-·~ "M0' ,.1 s ' 11 '~ ..., + ~ ~ dlwkltnl • IOlll 11 .. 11-0tctetH Including gummer SCSI.Ions. ~~t t•,j •1.~ ~~or' J: 111 ~::11 ~~",.. l ., 1f~ l :t -\i ~~ ~' 11 \ ~~ ~~ ~\'Wo :··· ::-::,,~·~· ,•;:...~~~ = Veterans \\'ho have still not :~, :~t 1 ~=~1111,. J~ ,e :iri;,, i,. ~ lJ~ lf.\ 3~=~~~b'i"'1 : ~ t1~ 1l1~ r.~-h-l"•kl "''-'"'' llf'lkflM ...,11,.., .,,. returned their CArdJ for the H;.L•" •.n ti~• 1·• I" ~tP ,','",•, • Ill-. IF., 1•1 -" ll.•''"1 l 1u ''' 1111 -1, """'°Of 1111 •ct~,.-..," lltt.• ~ end Of the 5prin0' or •n ear )I l·ff f· Qft Mu !0.2t II U llrl1Cn _1~1 !J f' '' t"' -I~ Sf j.j t II ! I ,.. II """ ·~~ ; ...... Ml on tioodl l\>l1nt t H Got 6 Qt '-111S1 11'1 .a t 71 ,...,l<u ' 11 f. t ll '/' 1111 ...ii.. :jl' '!"" -'• "'9t!l111. r-0«111rt11 It P•lt .. ltl'L 111it summer smestcr shou do iO H MllWI l!.1 'I· l!.•"'1' 'i" II n llrlt ''" •' ' • •• nt· + \t Of tll.Oll1•1butlt11 .. tt •-$t1t1 In flll~ • Id H" toe • w~11'""'ft f.•ou•· "''' c""' IOI' ·1, '., '-~ 1 ~ -'' ~'"•'~,,,\, ~' i'i'•'• lJ)': It. -1, ltl'I. fttlfrilot; ,.1'1 wtlw"' ••41\'ldllftoil ,,, lhey Ill •· "r*"'" ).41 . 4 r#\I 1\1 II ""'"''Ii :t.. I~'• I U\4 fl , h + lt clol..(•llH ••·E~lfl'lldtrot, •-f...,,...i. ... once. tn " UIO 'i ... 1·)0 •. MOr4 ., l.U h•om• ... I l ,, n F pfl ' .. I'! 1, -Ill ........... ' '' -· - paid . for thtlr ast month 0 l .... ~'r,. l i I ,.~"'1\;11 1&il ,: ~ I"'" g111 l.: 11 a~ lfi~ :: :: ;; ~,:~,Id! • ~ .,~~ "':'''' ~:~ .:;:~~111"*:.,.:;;;_w11~~ m. 1 f ! !'1111 ~ I I 'Ted!v tJol ~il9' 1111 111 ~ It!\ ft"' _,, f l,. •I i'\ lt\1 1~ -\;. "' U ' I lt.,.,,tr,. trairung. and atarl rece.lvlng.,,14 C•• '·U •.• Wild, •·°' l" !)n~\1.0 '!4'~ t \, .,,_, 1111>1~ u to 7' t ''ldl11rlbu9t4, wl-Wflefl "-"'4 ........ Hal · he II JI lmP G1h I 6,)$ "' IM '·'' .II& ''ln M 111 '"• tt"" }j'1 -At • K IClb 'ri > R\.I "'1141 otllwtrr vi-I" bl~ttw Of •11:11•,,. their e ckll a11toma ca 'I /r<t ll'dll I" Wl!l•et111 1ot1 "J! ,.,,,,w r20 111 """ ''• 161.t t -. ec -':;1 . ..0 ' l~ t :-? t!t1M• or 11111n1 """'•"1ltd un!l'fr tllf h th ~ m (O -~-1 l'ICIHMI (.II ·" Wlnrn Fd • ii1 j i!v g! j IO I l'tt t\ '' l~ -1~ ~ J: \,, -. "• ,.,, ...... i<w Ad. or v r:urll!n bT tl.ltfll \\' en ey rr •U 111.:IMI I"" Trl\CI ·1·"1 ·II w1111i..:t, J ,. '·. {Vpf7,tl 1111 t:~: r~~ if'!..'; '~c··-II lt •1 ~ I\' -'1 (ell!Nnltlo. i-ttor•lfri .._ Wilted .. •n September, M1y •dvl!Cd. 1;wb'N -;; J..,:~ " it: i:t. ,:1~:·,..11 , '•" 11i..i "'' _ lb'''''"' 1 1s U'4 + 11 "'",..." ""'11._.,..,. """ I " • ' I I N.Y. Winner• and Lo•et-• Nl!W YOIUC !AP) -Tht _.....,. rht .,_. ""9 _.., "'9t ,...,. - "'-"""'1 Miii lllowfl IM _.. ...... Ill , ""*" fll d'lltltli • '*'t N• Ytnl I l.odl• .............. of \JOllllM. Nft ... .wc:.n,... Cl\llllllt ....... ~ ...,._ ....... ,.. .,. .,-kj W lodtr'• IMI Wlail. "' J ...... Lall "' ... _, I'.:. -1'' t\.'I -.. ·~ =I .. -. ,f'' = ,::2 ti.lo -i n·.= t '" --"' -_. '~\ ~;~ . -. -~ -. -~ :L11. ::. ~ .ti -" '"'· WASHINGTON !UPI) The SecurlUes and Exchanae Commiaslon announced It w\ll hofd hearings on charaes that Financial Programs, Inc .. of Denver and Ua lormer presi- dent. Thomas J . Ht.rbert, made ml~adlnJi! !Jtltements and vlolal'ed 1he a n t l • manipulative tectkml ol the !teCUChlts l•Wl from ttll through IMI. Tbe Denver Hnn. J.s principal underwriter and advi"r tor Financial Industrial Income Fund , Financl1J lndutb1al Fund and Financial Dynamics Fund. NEW YORJI (UPI) - A devi~ usln1 a private coded key to prevent unaul.borized persons from rpyln& on ftl.. formation belnc processed by I computer WU announced Monday by Commerdphtr1ls, Inc. Only 1 penon with tht proper key can ntake the com- puter yield the stored Jn. form1tioo to Lhe prlntout machJne. DENVER I UPI) -Kina ~.lnc .. lll!IOWlCedJt has arreied a new $0.4. million rtflnanclng pack~• with a 1roup of banks and other creditors. The comP1111 said tht plan would prov1de King with $8 mllllon ln frelh working capital and convert $3S.4 million In short-term debt Iota lona·term obll11Uons HCUTtd by producing p.,,_ pertJea and other aseets. TOKYO (UPll -An et.,._ tron1c color photosraphy pro- ot•s that can turn out postcard alze prints from 3S mm 11ide1 at one-fourth the conventional cost and a frao- Uon o( lht time h•! beeo developed by Toky Shlbaura Eltctrlc co. and S a k a t 1 Trading Co. The Uttlt machine mikes the ffrat print from • allde In two and a half minutes and lddltJonJI prlntt In 40 5ee0nd1 each. Donna Sims ' ' In PR Post Mr1. Donna Sims D f Newport Buch 11 the ne" tll rector of p.ibllc rt.laUons at Southern r.1uton111 College of Medical ind Dental Aalbtanta in An11helm. Mr,. Sime, 4302 Dana Road: Is a Jormer 114l~ll.M to the ..... ~ ........ ol •d.Yertlllna o1 the Pepsi.COia Company In New IQ, 1:. Lagunan Given Insurance Poat Jnhn L. Smltl\ ol Lquoa Be1ch hu been 1ppolllltd •cent for the Garden Ol'O'+'I offlc. of the Prudtnll• Jnsura~ Co. j •. • I I . . • --,.. ........ _ ............... --..--" . ' )J DAJlY l'IUIT fridU, A-7, 1970 Ju~ge Qark Ste....._s Down Reveals Story of Tliurmond Deal for His Appointment • By PA'nUCK BOYLE °' .. o.llJ .... Alilf F'tder91 District J u d g t! n.rmond Oarb is ret.iring from his poot .. dUel iucll< ""' the Los Angeles dislilcl S<!1t. I. bu\ the 6'-)'W'-old jurist ~ it is not because ol 1&e. "'The freeway drtvt 1.o Los Mgeles." says Oart.:.t, .• Corool del Mar resident. "ts just too much of a nerve strain. .. "Tht olber day when that bridge fell across t he freeway... be adds., "I got trapped fer fcu hours. ll ju.rt isn' '*1bwhU. "' figh! the freeways every day.·· \\.'hen Judge Oarkr first bought a home in Corona del Mar. he had planned to take the train to Union Station and ~·ali: to the ·Federal Courthouse. But right afler he moved lo the area, the train stopped running and he has been driving ever sinre. Judge Clarke we.s nominaled for the positiOn on I.he federal bench by the late President Eisenhower in 195S. But the nomination ran into problems in the Senate. On the eve of his retirement, Judge Clarke recalled the previously unpublimed ac-- counl of the c:fcumstances SUlT'OUDding his appointment ··1 was called back to \Yashington to appear before the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee on July 29, 195S." Clarke reealls. But t h e Democrats ~·ere in control then. and they had said they "'·eren't going to approve any or Eisenhower's appointments. The Pres.ident had jlisl. had· a stroke, and they thought he might not be running for anothe r term. They were hop- ing to win the presidency in 1956 and nominate their own judges. • "Another appointment that was before the committee at tht Umt WIS that of Warren Burger. "·ho was then a~is­ tanl U.S. attorney general1 Berger was also a Republican and he appeared just before me. "The tommittee was to vote 00 Saturday, Ju!JI 30. Since it was the last day of the Seo'"' .......; our nomina- tions woold no( go to the !loo< of the Senate. '° full approval of the commitltt was re- quired. "Burger appeared ju s l befcrt 1 did, aM when his nominatioo "-'as disapproved, l really sla!'b!d ID WWTY· "The only reason I was ap- proved "-'as because of my cousin, Senator S t o r m Thurmond. Before the com- mittee meeting. the late Senai.or l:vereU Dirksen told me that J bad the full approval or the committee with the exception of Senator Olin Johnston, Thurmond's col· league from Sool~ Carolina. "Johnsl.on was \' o ting against me because Thurmond, who was then chairman cl the Post Office Co::nmittee, was a g a i n s t Johnston 's nominee for Postmaster of Charlestoo, S.C. "I l!."eDt to the floor of the Senate and told Strom ~'hat the problem was, and ·he went lo Johnston and traded my appointment for that of the postmaster." Clarke recalls that he was the mly IWpublican judge ap- proved that year. except for a Texas Republican nominated by Senator Lyndon Johnson. ..,,.ho "A-'as then the poweriul majority floor leader of the Senate. Judge Clarke's appointment lo the federal bench was la high point in his career ~ began at the municipal c&1rt level in Los Angeles in 1932. One of his first cases brought him into the limelight TIRED OF FREEWAYS CdM's Judge Cl•ri<• There was a demonstration in Los Angeles at the 1932 Olympic Games by a group wanting labor leader Tom l\1ooney freed from j a i I • Mooney had been arrested on a bombing charge. Memben of the group wert arrested for disturbing lhe peace, and tht case camt before Jladge Oarkej1 OJW't. "Some ol Ifie delendlllls .came to court in bloomen," be said i.and they were con· stanUy dim>pting the court, much as was done at the recent conspiracy trial in Chicago. "'lt was one of my first cases, and I had a tou,gb time controlling my te-mper. I really learned what patience WU. When they Weft COl\- Yicted, at the end of the three mooth trial I gave them the marimum sentence f o r disturbing the peace. .. Oarke was ~evated to the Superior Court bench in 1935 and remained there ror 20 years. Some landmark cases came before him. One of the, most notable ended Dec. '1, 194S, when be ruled that racial t'O\'eflanb were unconstitutional. The case had been f Ped by Hattie McDaniel, the actress who played an Academy Award- winning role in "Gone Wilh the' Wind." Under the judge's ruling, it was illegal for h o u s i n g developments to e:xdude ~ pie on account of race. The ruling was affirmed by the California Supreme: Court, but only after the U.S. Supreme Court's more famous school desegregation decision in 1954. In another landmark decision. lhe Japanese alien land laws were un- constitutional. Under the laws, Clarke ruled in 1953 that citit.ens of Japanese origin could not own land. Wben he retires Sept. l, Judge Clarke will assume the title of Senior Judge. He will still have bis staff and offi<:"eS in Los Angeles, but he will not have to spend as much time in court, or on the freeways. UCLA Prof Gets Honor 'Like Living Books' LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A UCLA professor received the Society of Nuclear Me: di cine's Distinguished Scientist Award today for his W"Ork in diagnosng disorders in internal orgam. Teen Bridges Infamous Gap Dr. Benedict Cassen, a member of the research staff of UCLA's laboratory of Nuclear Medicine and Radia- tion Biology, received the award for developing the prin- cipal of scintillation scanning. wll.ich is used throughout the world to probe diaorders of lhe thyroid, heart, liver, lungs, brain and kidneys. 1be system translates radia- tion injected tracers into light flashes which are recorded as pictures of organs within I.he body. SAN'I'A CRUZ, Calif. (AP) -Patty Nelson is the prime mover o1 the "Spring and Autumn Alliance," a program that has put 50 c<1llege students into personal CQnlact with elderly persons. "It's like going into a library full of amazing, living books." the pert blonde coed says or the students' visils to retire- ment and rest homes. ..It brings wisdom for us, and enthusiasm for them." When the l9-year-0ld junior came to the University or California's Santa Cruz cam- pus. from Banning. Calif.. two years ago. she was haunt ed by the faces of lonely old people in markets and on the streets. She asked the college pro- vost. Dr. Page Smith, if she could study the problerrui of old age, Dr. Smith sponsored her. and she spent weeks reading up on gerontology.~· Patty, a literature major, tackled a local retirement hotel first. "Everyone stared at me." she recalled. "They thought 1 was just another hippie, J guess." But she got conversations started by talking a b out gardening or grandchildren. "It's incredible to hear them say they were married in 1910 -and lived th.rough history." "Naturally the reception was mixed. People asked me often : 'Why do you throw bombs?' I always answer: 'I don't throw bombs. We oppose the throwt.;g of firebombs - here and in Vietnam.' " One old man , she said, refused to talk to her for some time. He finally gave her a list of the things he didn 't like about young people. "I got to him by going to church with him," she said. "We're good friends now." Some of the students carried guitars on their visits and "we dug up some old songs. The response was electrifying. They'U just be sitting there, staring into space, but the eyes light up when you go into 'Shine On, Harvest Moon,' or 'My Wild Irish Rose,' " When the school term ended in June, Patty stayed on in Santa Cruz. Stilll -struggling for ice cubes? ' ' THERES A BITTER WAY! WITH THIS FRIGIDAIRE SIDE-BY -SIDE with AUTOMATIC ICE-MAKER Designer Door. Easy and 11111 to c.tianRt door lront de<:or to inalcl! ~0« litctle• Of JO'I' mood. Aa!Ollatlc Ice Makar fills. !Rem, releasn tubes \Ito door setYtr. -'1! 1Ulomal· k:lftJ. rto !ill No spill. . 21 .9 cu. fl with 211..ftl. site "rtlcal trttnr. lrst n-35• wide. Frost-Proof! Y<111 ne'l'er defrost 11ailll Fully Adjustable. Sbelvtos mme up or down to rlt foods of any height. Switch a piUHiie.Shetf to 1111'"7· sia shelf ia se<:orllh. COMPLnELY INSTALLED s5999s Avallable in Colors too! 411E.17th St. COSTA MESA -646-1684 Dolly 9 to 6, Mon.·Frl. 9 to 9 • • • Almost Everyone Reads The N ewspape1•s • Newspapers deliver massive coverage of ALL occupation groups eac~ weekday OCCUPATION OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD • ·Professionals Managers 91 Clerical, Sales 85 Craftsmen 80 Other Manual 71 Farmers 70 Source: Opifllon Research CorponUon Ne.wspapers reacJi, in.depth, into an occupation groups every day, as this graph ineli- cates. But what should be even more interesting to advertisers ts the high precentage of m1nagement, profession1l and' other hig h-salary-earnin-9 types who read a newspa- per evei'y day. They make more money, travel more, buy more, sett~ st1ndards for others to folJow. If you want to play ''Follow The Leader," advertise in some other medium; if you want to lead the leader, put your message w~ere he'll read it ... with us, the newspaper. DAILY PILOT ~ ' \ .. ' =· .. --------·---·--------------·-----------·---------·-----------... ~men BARBARA DUARTE', 494-9466 l'rilfl'• A• 1.1'11 a ,...,, l ooking High and Low T ale·nt Scouts the March Talent is needed both oo and off stage. The call has gone out from Mrs. Edmund Van Deusen, general chairman of the 1970 Fractured Follies, for assistance in the monu· mental task of presenting the annual production again this November. Jerome C. Oargill Productions o( New York will direct talent from the community and provide costumes and sets for the show SPo0$ored by Silver and Gold C::hapter of the South Coast Community Hospital Aul:iliary. Mrs. Macauley Ropp will assist Mrs. Van Deusen as coordinator with assistance from the Mmes. Violet Adams as finance chairman and Patrick Randall, Edward Glotfelty and Helen Johnson, talent scouts. under the direction of Jeffrey TO'Wnsend. · Miss Peggy Taylor and Mrs. Zachary Malaby will be-program chairmen with Warren Margan acting as consultant. More committee chairmen include the Mmes. E. W. Brookbank, makeup; George Wolf, tickets; Alfred Kress, posters; David Kawa~ saki. cast party; Neal Amsden and Evelyn Reynolds, wardrobe. and .. J:iowa.rd Wil son. walking ads, assisted by Patrick Cory and Theodore Taylor. Also in the production lineup are the Mmes. Millie Dooley, pub- lic relations; Charles Quilter, protocol; Sam Garst, courtesy; John Shea, sponsors; Ma1aby, coffee, and Jack Snipes, art consultant. Edmund Van Oeusen will act as stage manager with Zachary Maiaby, technical advisor, and Jack Lyons, props and sets. , According to Mrs. Jack Lyons,. auxiliary prt:sident, proceeds from the three-day production will go toward fulfilling t.he group's pledge to the hospital. . NO STONE UNTURNED -General chainnen of.the Fractured Follies {left to right), Mrs. Jeffrey Townsend and Mrs. Edmund Van Deusen plan to look everywhere in a search to find talent to put into their fourth annual show. Production workers are needed to back up more vocaJ volunteers appeafing ~ a variety of roles under the spoUigbt. ARTISTIC TRADEMARK -Poppies are a favorite subject for artist Virginia Woolley. She bas never painted a se'asca-pe feeling it's "a shame" to confine a moving ocean in a small frame. The water-calorist is a Jife-exhibitor in the Festival of Arts arid member of the National League of American Penwomen. . , First Fence Hanger Artist Bears Original Stamp By BARBARA DUARTE ' It was a tremendous conlrast from the ure she had been accustomed to -the serenity of the deep south and the accelerated, glamourous pace si'le found in Paris. She brushed the dust from her skirt. still somewhat rattled from the bumpy bus 'journey, the ·iast part of which took her down a winding Orange County canyon road. - And settled down in a chair on the porch of Hotel Laguna. After absorbing the bnposing sight of waves breaking on the shoreline, V"trginla Woolley heard an inner voice say, "you're home." So it was 47 years ago when Laguna Beach's first lady of the Festival of Arts arfived in l..aguua Beach. Then a young woman In her 30s, the artist soon was nwnbered amdng the locals, painting gear lucked under arm as she trekked across town to paint at artist Frank Cuprien's home. ART GETS BOOST As naturally as the smaU village became known as an artist's colony, so did the Festival of Arts emerge. "That year, we decided art could stand a litUe boost, and that's where the FesU~ val of Arts began. We hung palnUngs on fences along El Paseo, on clotheslines and even In a garage. Sort of a garage gallery, you might say. "We charged 10 cents admission. which also entitled viewers IG see four living pictures and other entertainment," J\.1iss Woolley related. "Since that day in 192.1, festival dates have been extended. to today's six-week show. ft's almost unbelievable how It's grown." Booth positions are no longer drawn out of a hat and the festival may be big business. But Virginia Woolley remembers them all, especially the year she had shingles and was wiable tu guide her beloved fest ival. HONORS ARTIST Honored as one of an eUte class of 21).year exhibitors by the festival board, Miss Wooley holds lhe added dist.incUon of being the only origtnal exhibitor on the grounds as wen as a Conner director, j'!lror and guiding light of the childrtn's free-for-all art workshop whiCh she and Russ Iredell started tn 1941. Her eyes shine when she thinks or children dressed in smocks working in ' chalk, detennlned to express themselves. "Girls usually draw horses, boys are ri1ore mecbanlcal and sometimes object to puU:lpg oo something they think they should eat in, not wear lo protect their clothes," she said. It also 'probably reml01f5 her or "'privlJeged" Saturdays she spent many yea rs ago teaching children 's art classe.!I while studying at Chicago Art Imtltutc. Laguna Beach is a long way from the gay life of Paris where she studied three years and was chosen lo exhibit in the Salon -but it's a place where the artist, always working from nature, can paint pomegranates in fall and pop- pies in summer. PRACTICED EYE Starting in watercolor, she moved lo oil and, while a . traditionalist, is respected by modern artists for her judgment in their field. The death of a dear friend last year stilled the brush of the octogenarian. But as painting has been so much of her life since she was an eight-year-old lri AU.e,nta, Ga., Jn love with art, so has lhe desire lo paint begun to slir again. For t~ past few years, a single paqel reminds fellow artists she is very much a part ol the Festival of Arts. And. this year, for the fi rst time unable lo watch over her little children, she sUIJ was at grounds manager Mogens Abel's side when artists signed up for OOoths. While missing in physical presence, Vir- ginia Wooley knows art is a matter of soul not body, and her soul will always be a part cl the festival. Gluttonous Guests Find Celebra.tion Far From 'Gorge-ous' ( OEAR ANN : Some folks we know who are: a Jot richer than we are trad a reception to celebrate the 401.h Wedding anniversary of their parents . They served only soft drinks and fruit punch. There were a few bowls of potato ~ips and nuts on the table. Also some ed-out sandwiches and cookies. IL asn't worth getting dressed up for. ANN LANDERS ~ :ind doesn't say too much unless 1 over- • spena, which l rarely do. TooU, and come •P wl..-101Mtbhl1 tbe two of you caa do -onrtlaied to hi• family. U yoa fDvtted uotlter c.1ple or two \o d11Der ll yov lltme, Herbert would ttay vp, wtold1't IMif • dale every time I pick up the paper. a variety of subject.a wbe1 J 1m uked to do so. Many of the IDJWen th1t appear in the column are &be end product of eonsultaltons with the best bnln1 In the country. I Im aware of lbe awe1ome re1poo1lblllty of 1IY1a& advice and I do my bt:1t lo be fair, dlrt<:t and corftC't. Wbe• l find l have erred, I 1dmll..ll Do you? • I I wrong to be -DIS~POINTEO DEAR DISA PPOINTED: Old you fl> offer your coogr1toltOon1 ind IM!1l l!iihes or to gel bombed •d nu your omacb'! ObvJously tbe lahcr. or yoq ..-ktn'l bave bctn ''OfHppobited." DEAR ANN LANDERS : llerbert con- der!li himself a IJOOd husband. I 'II ll!l JOU decide. He hands over his paycheck He worU hard and I know it. When he comes home It night he eats (with the newspa~ propped in front of him), then goes straight to bcd after supper. • This goes on all week. Sunday comes along and Herbert needs "a day to hlrnseU." • This means golng to his father's house 11n<i drinking beer until he gets so stirf he can't tee to drive home. I bave to go get him . When t complain he says he mum spend a.s much lime as he can with his father because the old man won't be around forever. (Tbe "old man" is Joli.) fl.1y questkld"' is this: How ca n I gel Herbert to let me in <ll his act.lvlties'! -MARRIED WIDOW DE.,.'R MARRIED: What 1cUvllle1 do you w11nl to be let In tn? Orlnlrtn1 bttr wllb hi s, fatbcr'! I 111ue1& you use your lmafiDallon, 11tere mo•l be fonte COllUIHml(y IC• llvlUe• yoa can en}oJ top6er. Ever bear of blD 11me•, COltettta, movie•, bo1'lltg. 1011, OAJn.11 pknlcktng:, blcycl- ln« .... Ute Hit I• eadlea. Gtt with ll, girl. Herbert'• ratller mlgbt be wttlll him a lot longer tUa you H 1ft don't. pump Mme Ufe ialo that dull. dull m&r· rtage. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have read your colmnn for years and Yotu' coocepts of morality and teXual behavior seem lo be &•tUng more antlquat.d and out«· Please state the quality of your creden- tials. What aives you the right to Impose your me;dieval code or morality on millions of people? Who gave you a license to inject your creaking views on everybody who happens to read? You show up ju1t about everywhere the English language is spoken. What in your background give• you ~ right lo push your viewa on peopMI? Who appolnted you guardian of the world'• monb! -MORRIS, MINN. DEAR MORRIS: I WUD't aware that HlltteklfOUd" aid ''ertdendal•" 1•v• aaymtt the rt1bt to pa1h his view• Gn P!"PI•· I bave been neither anointed l'IOf' appolnt.td. l elpre11 my tplDlons o• "The Brtde11 Gulde,'' Ann Landerr booklet, aMWers sbme of the most fre- queoUy asked questlons about weddings. To receive your copy of fhil com- prehensive guide, write to Ann J...aioiatts. In care of your newspeptr, encloslna a long, self-addreMod. etamped envelope e.nd 35 centa in coin in cart of. Ul9 DAILY Pl.WI'. • • • I ., { • • ,, s . ' ' ~ . . " ., . .. • • • ... $ :: • ~ ' ' ~ • ' ' < ' ' ' l ! • l . • • . ' • .. ' ' l ' . , ' ., ' \· ~·\ ". • • • • ' ' ' ' 1: ' • • • • • ' , • , • • ' 1 • • • • • . • ' ·- )f ~LY PILOT 11'-!s Uberation Is mak- tnc -in the busllless WO'ttd ld no proponents hive ._,.... ... 1"" Oranp Coast --Wegwird st.ands are con- 'i>icoausly void Of lemlrilnlty 'Until cme moves inlaod to £ht community pools. Sun-bleach- ""· -beauties kjss the decks of ·pools from Seal Bt.ach to San Clemente but trlclaJ. Auoust 1, li70 the beach -alns oil-limit> to the 008e<!Oat.ed ladies. "ll'S not a malt« o( tradi• tion but one of practicality, .. explained Mn Bohman. &JSis... unt ~ Ji the """' tingtoo !leach lWt>ors and Beach Department. "A girl is not pl\ysically capable or swimmi11g oat into ~ surf up to fJO times a day and handlina • possible ~- : .... ~-.. v~~ ... Beach lil'&IW'ds must be able to eeale 16-11 foot waves. overcome lip Udes, repeat lone distance swims and sub- due • hysterical victim in ~ water, be continued. ''Tbere is only one girl 1n 100 pb)'Skally o r emotiooal1Y capable or the job." Bollman noted that a iuard. mml be able to b.andlt a crises emo. TINA ECHTERNACH STRESSES SAFETY RULES Horoscope Pisces: Concentrate SATURDAY AUGUST 8 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 191' You are intrigued by mystery. Bot it is mostly of your own making. Means answers are available. However, you seem more conl.eot to let light shine in another direction. TAURUS (April 20-May 201: become loquacious. You gain most by adhering lo prin· ciples. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Work, basic issues dominate. You are able to complete im- portant mission. You feel bet· ter as a result. 1'-1ove ahead, not backward. Strive to im· prove relations with associates. co-workers. CANCER (June 21..July 22): lo be confident, versatile. Relatives, neighbors prove more attentive than usual. LIBRA (Sept. 23 -Oct. 22 )' If thorough, you ma k e discovery which can be transfonned to profit. Add to possessions. Pay and collecl debts. Be will ing to make changes that lead to progress. SCORPIO (Oct. 2J.Nov . 21 ): Wearing apparel takes on ad- ded importance. Take special care wiUl appearance. Impression you make could IJonalty. "We tomelimes htve sad tncidents OD the beach," he adiled. Bohman called exe<ption to pool g11arding. "In • pool or a cabn Ille, females Clll be effiderrt. Tbere a~ no great ptwsical demands." Allhoogb the b I k In i •d beauties may not meet the physical demands, they have the attributes and many girls are whiling away their sum· mers instructing and safeguarding children in area pools . Claudia Bryan. 17, guards at llWllingtoo Beach Hlgll School pool for the pe.rk::s and recreation department. Sb e believes rem a le lifeguards have a better rapport with the children and get more ac· oomplished. "Incidents never o c c u r because even a 'tough guy' would be too embarrassed to challenge a girl in any way." she explained. Claudia guards 40 hours a week and fillds it a great excuse to swim, stay in the sun and enjoy people. The F.dison Higb School senior pre! ers pool guarding to the beach responsibilily • '"Ibere is too much to watch . They (liieguards) have to be acutely aware of everything or u rm not strong enough ... Ala> stk~ to the concrete domain is Klm Stewarl, 11, a guaid al Laguna Hlgb Schoo!. "I enjoy It at ~ pool . I thought ol woikl,ng on ~ beach. It's excttltlg but \erribly strenuow. Not being particularly s t r on• enough. I p!<fer that the men maintain that area.'' A fre.Wnan history major in the fall at· California State College at Fullerton, Kim finds lifeguarding the "ideal job. Children respond so easlly and eagerly love the water." l~~~~~~ Tina Echternach, 17, guards and instructs almosl 40 hours a week at the Newport Harbor High School pool for the parks and recreation departme.at. A lifetime resident, Tina learned to swim in the bay at Ruby Street and now in· structs children ages 3--J2. "J really enjoy the 'Mommie and Me' classes. The children are so excited -learning to ·swim." With plam to major in biology at UCI in the fall, Tina hopes to renew her sum-. mer profession next year. "I've never encountered any problems from being a girl. Jt's all been great I'd never s~·itdl." KIM STEWART TRAINS EYE ON YOUNG DIVER ' ... ~ 1i . ' .. ,.,,.,.,..,-;~····~ Musicians Tune Up For Upcoming Year Aclivitles for the upcoming year have been planned by new officers of the Orange County Alumnae Chapter of Sig m a Alpha I o t. a, in- ter11ational profe ssio n a I fraternity for women in the field of music . Leading the group during the year will be the }.1mes . David G. 11eitzler, president; Michael J. Sabot. vice presi· dent; Kenneth M·c Kinney, secretary ; John Tu 1 I y , t reasurer : Charle s Sandmeyer, e d i l o r and historian: John F. Warner, chaplain. and James Schulke, parliamentarian. Mrs. ~teitzler ( Leon a Roberts) · was presented the $word of Honor during a luncheon meeting in t h e Mission Viejo home oI Mrs. Sandmeyer, wtJere Miss Nan· cy Slater, soprano from the University of Redlands. presented a program of art songs and arias. Founded in 1903. the organization has as its purpose to rurther the development or music in America and pr<r mote a st ro nger band of rnusical interest and un- derstanding between foreign countries and America. Through its ·international Music Fund, it has finai1ced projects such as presenting musical instruments and gifts to veterans hospitals, schools and hospita ls for the ha n- dicapped and the Louis Braille fl.1usic Institute. Anyone wishing i'nformation may call J\1rs. J\1eitzler at 539- 2674. 'Hair, Hair' I Coiffures !his fall will be sin1ple and flowing, giving a l softly defined ~elte. Hair t trends are taking on a new ,J appreciation for · the lady.like look that has been missing j too long. UNIFORMS AIN'T WHAT THEY USED TO BE! Emphasis c n agreements. assumption of_ s p e c i a I re s po n sibility. One you thought alool coold suddenly Your creative urges find coo- structive outlet. Give and you also will receive. Take in· itiative. Bold -s trikes ac- complliil what is required. Refuse to be a wailllower. mean difference between sue-CLAUDIA ~ and failure. Odds po1nl -----------ii;=====================~ll to success. Outgrown Clothes Fill Bill LEO (JuJyZ:J..Aug. 22 ): Your interests are prdected by friend. Know this and trust -in right direct.ion. Means pul fajtb in those who have demonstrated sincerity. SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): Work in quiel but efficient manner. Be discreet. Someone may confide in- formation which is difficult to keep to yourself. Family member a pp Ii es pressure. Respond tacUuUy, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Take into account some Nature's Beauty Exhibited VIRGO (Aug. 23.Sept. 22)' Accent on communication. Your ideas, plans are ex· amined with interest. Key is experiences friends may have Nature's won d c r s , coo- Cleaning out closets end recently undergone. Temper ccntrated inlo a small area drawers for the faU school Talk Reviews judgmenl with mature COOi-or land, will be shown when year may mean a windfall preberi6ion. Be pal.lent and you the Costa Mesa.Bay Cities f« Dana Point Cammunily D p bl will be rewarded. Wish is House. fUQ fO em fulfilled. Branch, California Fuchsia Good de.an clodles ol all AQUARIUS fJan. 20-Feb. Society meets on Monday, sir.es are needed to build stock r ~ M~~ ~ppaport, director 18 ): Review ambilions. You Aug. 10 . for an October thrift sale plan-0 e ou ChaUenge pro-can gel to top: but be aware "Nature·s Half Acre." a -~ by ·~ club. Mrs. ~lary gram in San Clemente, will ~ pr~e. Yoo get what y~, -"~ address s c I ut '"' "' color film, will be exhibiled P __ , ..i.-· '"-an em e n t e ask lor _ know what 1·1 1·6 ayne, gellClw .., .... 1nnan, al:lt,I Business and Professional by Lee Clifton of the ' Hydrex will collect a pp I i an c es. Women at a 7:30 p.m. dinner you really seek. Do some self· Pest Control Co. at 7:30 p.m. jewelry, toys and white meeting en Tuesday, Aug. JI , analysis. This pays off iii long in the American Legion Hall, e&ephan.ts. in Buffy's restaurant. run. Costa Mesa. Proceeds will go toward the The speaker will review the PISCES (Feb. IS.March 20\ · f\.1embers also are preparing building fund for la :i es. current drug situation and ez. Accent on how well you are for the All States' Festival on payments and maintenance. plain how his organization able to concentrate. What ap--Sunday, Aug. 16, from 11 :30 Bundles can be left at com-helps users kick the habit. pears far off may demand a.m. in Costa Mesa Park. mutaty house by arTanging Businesswomen in the aknosl immed iate attention. Those participating are asked with the caretaker, 49&-3187. Capistrano Valley are invited Visualize what ii Is you want to bring the nece9Sary food or Mrs. 1bomas Harrison, to attend. Reservations may '° accompUsh. Clear up emo-for their party. Visitors are 4K4506. Busy Bee Almvering be made with Mr. James tional cross-currents. welcome. Service, .f96.6717 may be call· Conn, club president.. at 49frl,...;,. ___________ .._..;,. ______ '":ll ed for pick.up eervice. 1766 after ~ p.m . Free Estimates RE· UPHOLSTER • <:-plettt Seleetio• or l"•hrlu lnel ... lng: Linens and Velvets Mum Craft.men Alwey• •• (SY.tCOS.«l!'Yl , Phone 64.2·14M ( I • HAYE YOU TRIED Swing 'N Hair C-ltl -11 ... "' 1 try ••• ""'" .. '''"' "" •111!1 1 26 RT North of 17th St.,. Costa Mu• 111 VAlUt .. JUST $5 .... '41·ll00 o,.. ,.,...,.., • ., Appoflt_,.t • I.' ----. --~ LADies AND GENTLEMEN, ''THE COUNTESS" "Countess" luxury silverplate from International Silver Company. • Wine cooler, S50. Liner, S3.50. Compate. $15. Shrimp dish wrth toothpick and sauce cups, $35. C!ltr')• Accounl1 l11viltd Amtr!c•n E1pro•• 6 •n~Am••'<•1d •nd M•1I•• Chtrqt. too. SLAVICK'S Jtwtl111 S111c1 1917 18 F•1h ion Island Nawport Beach -6-44 -1 380 o,.. Mo!Kte., od Frid•y 111tn t :lO An Original Collection of Designs For Profe~sions That Require An Identifying Costum• PANT SUITS-DRESSES-SEPARATES e F•nf11stic111ly Care.fre• Fabrics e All W•sh & Wear e Treditio·nal Wliit• or Choose From A Veritable Sunburst of Color1 • Sii•s a.i s C•llfornl• C•rMr CottumH ., Cfiarfej Stefan, Jiu:. 1621 Al•hmt St. Hvnllngton lt•th .S36.Jl66 • OPIN TUES. thru SAT. t :lO·S:lO " l j -· -~ -------- DICK 111.ACY TUMBLEWEEDS DON'T TRY 1t> Fl61fT IT, HON! 1T'S use~ess1 MUn AND JEFF YOU MADE ... ' '.. ,, ' -~.!"·~··-~ JUDGE PARKER • ,----------~-~ l-IOW WAS EYEi;:"VT'HI NG WAS GREAT, IW- "LEX: AT CLUDI M6 1-115 LANGI.LAGE~ ME THE !SALL CA LLED TME UMPIRE A. BUM, GA.ME ;;: SUGGESTEP TMA.T ME NEEDED ULASSES! 6V' 11-IE WAV, WHERE'S 1-1 15 MOTHER? ly Chester Gould ly Tom K. Ryan llON'TWU KNOW MEN ARE IRlll:SISTABLV PRAWN 10 US M'ISTl!RIOIJS WOMEN?! -y----___.;c..-- o>\,You'RE SO RIG>ll; JEFI='! By Al Smith By Harold Le Dou YOU II.NOW, I MA.D A. FAIRLY UNCOMPLICATED LIFE DNTIL I KAN INTO YOIJ, M1~ SPENCER! ONE OP TME5E PAYS. I MOPE ~Oilt.L STOP COLLECT1N6 ·~~~~ PEOPLE WITM PRO~EMS!l I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ' A. POWER I PE.RKINS ACROSS 1 Big ouant1ty 6 Bird 10 School SUbJtCl: lnf0tmat 14 Kty 15 Strp 10 ----Cal+en\e 17 Otadlocktd 111 Statt: Abbi . 20 Un1uflled 21 Ot ptessrd 2l Nickel, tor one 25 Recrnt: Pre Iii: 26 Attempt 27 Emulate Nancy Greene 29 Oisaorerablr responsi- bility 31 High hand1 c.ap golfer )3 0 i1"111 goddrss ~ Summat ion: Informal 36 Weapon 40 Canadian province: Abbr. •7 Oll1ce mac hin t ., Ti me ol ,., 50 P 1~i e 52 0111•\ S3 Part of lhe head 54 Arlie le 57 Statute 59 Prrform a second time Ill Reason for aspirin fl• Crowns 07 fad b8 Upper lim1! ol tree growth 70 Not sloping 71 Miscellaneous mi~ture 72 Inspire 7) "Janr --·-" 74 Depend 75 Vallrys DOWN l 01sawoving sound 2 No!rd Italian fim1lw } Worry "'arts 4 Wrsl Indi es volcano 5 One with 1 ROO etl\$ 8 Wa ter body 11 J<!nd of bi ISS 10 Mar me ol!icer 11 Ont actir.g for another 12 P~rl of a TV ~e t l J Read ily ava llab Ir 18 Morr humbl e Z2 Gloomy Z4 Sullu~ed with l19 hl 27 Fasten 28 Caffeine nut JD Menu item 38 Moh~11 ro(k 39 w.1tt r container 41 Gy111's mothrr 43 Rt mDv~ 4& Earthenwa't '" 48 Ytro1 i1 Attd aga111 51 Kind of lina11c 1er ~4 N11mhtr 55 Cha ratter 111 a dr ama 511 Anxious 58 Ourino "lhich Um r 110 ---li ly 112 British sand hill MISS PEACH 1: I ' . STEVE ROPER ---------·-·--·--· -------- U'L AINER • SAU Y BANANAS H..:.AQ.<a. HeY, I •l-·-·· -~7~1 GORDO FcOfrl MIGUEL/TO! I Iii! !<HEW fT WAS 3VJCIOEf MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS \.~ D I ' . By John M~ff By Mell OKAY, 8UT WH•N I GET MARRJIP, • Ii\4 NEVelt RUMMING HOMe TO YOU! By Saunders and Overgard ., MR.MUM DAILY PILOT JS By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson "THE NEIG~~ !'? /llJI! WHAT ~ ,ABOLJTMEr By Roqer Bollen .• a.EPHAt-lrs CAIJ ~ VEli'l',J ProFOJt-lD . 0 • l '· " . . ' - DENNIS THE MENACE 4Z Made displea srd 44 Hand some 4S Cowboy's acc essory a strong voice b Flnancial analyst: 32 Apron part 35 Run oul and disappear 37 Sales gi mmick : 2 words tr) Man's namt 'c~====~;::;;;iii~~~~~:::;rr~:::=,~~'r~j~ &5 Amooot p~1d IT'LL BE OUR In advance fill Understands S,,._Y! "'1CE PLACE Y'GOT MOME, ll'RLll-IG/ A1>b1. J • s " " • I J • • • • so " " " " " .. " " .. I , " ,, J l ... tr!f Child HERE, KID.1-r O![)J.(T -UMTIL WE FEEL • " FIGGER 'ltlU'D HAVE we NEED A SUCH A PLUSH'Y OIFFEREt.IT ONE/ !IPARTME.NT.' ~ 21 • JS " By Charles M. Schub ~~~~~~~~-~ 1AA1"S >'MD <:>' 1l<E M~IN6. - I~ ..pnt.r .. ~·7 ' . l ----------------------------------------------·-----------------·-------------· --.. --------- -.. ' Je DAILY PILOT frldaJ, AYMl 7, 1970 Austin--Lomhardi' s Kind of ~ s1...--heeded by Robort-ond-lhen hood.-ol PIUIMP.--wu--:Hlt orpn!Mtlon-1eo ..... not111ng-to J .. J. Cofle)-. a prow.or of surgery lllmOd lnlol1ln coach JUiy II. ch....,, u per Lornbardl'a leachtnp. ot !be hollpllal. Auat!n, who Will tum 41 In O<tobtr, "We''" "'!\ Ol'IUl!ed tn every phue One maolb llltr he W1denreol aoother wu Lombudl'a ldnd ol plljw, lie alto ol lhe game," be say~ "Evtcytbing operation, but .. detaila tia .. boon ii Lomberdi'a kind o1.-.. •e. clo ls dilculoed lllonlughly. Wo ttlcued as to Ila oature. F<r a ltw Ji'lnt, ho Olll t&ke onion, and -.id, ClOlches talk about wtw we want to ~ Ibo Redlklns llsuod TtP>N In-he ... nlay tblm Ol'·llft hit"""' ~ bow wa wanrto do It, lbd cll<ating Lombudl ''Wu resUng com-By .fnstb\CI. Austlft bu -a We-why wt Wenl lo do ti." • fortab11." ' cliarp \ype sl-be t«Oliod playlbg AUlllll'a ooollnUanol ol the Lombudl 'l'bal wu Ibo same report fs.oued by vanity -.U u a 11.,_.ict at 111*--·t -· llow<v•"· that he's a twD .,...__,, ~ ntgbl Thert 0....,. Stott and prote.-Dy for Ibo loot I'll' of hll dn lndMduallty. Ila,,. -persistolll, but a.-rmed, GlaDll II the op ol IO. "l'lll DO Vince Lomllardt," he 111d nnnon I.bat Lombardi's condition is Austin is an attentive student _tn the dmio8 a Weak ta. U. training scbedule. grave. Lombanll school, where the empbuis "I'm Bill Austin. But !'Ve been around Austin, an assistant to Lombardi at is oo aecution a.rd repetition wtil Lombardi for 11 yean, give or take Green Bay from U5t ~h lllM before everything is done virtualb' as lflC'Ond.. a few years. u a player and a coach. becoming an -t 11 Los Angeles aatur<. I know how he does things. But n's • Halos Face Chicago Tonight After Dropping ·Eight Back Angels Begin Four-game Series With White Sox MINNEAPOLIS-St. PAUL (AP) - California Angels' Manager Lefty Phillips bas heard enough talk about C rations. But Minnesota Twins' catcher George Mitttrwald doesn't mind them too mucn -it meam be doesn't have to cook for bis military reserve unit. Phillips wished that Mitt.erwaJd was away soldiering like three key Angels: -Clyde Wrigh~ Toni Egan and Alex Johnson -Tbw-1day night when the burly Minnesota catcher exploded a .f(lO. foot homer that powered the Twins to a 2-1, 14-inning victory over the Angels. Mltterwald hit the blast none too soon. He leaves Saturday for two weeks of military duty. "Too bad he wasn'L already gone,'' said Phillips, who used every available hitter but one. "When guys like Johnson an bitting .320 and like Jim Fregosi wttb a bad back," Phillips said, "aren't playing, we're in trouble. We mi.as their runs." Eight games behind the first-place Twins in a tie for second with Oakland, the Angels open a four-game series in Chicago tonigRL Player, got-to -•·out Bill AUIUn•-. --- "I don't feel I'm playing In a lbadow. I teeI l 'm weD quallfted, Ill do all the other ualst.antl." The feeling among the playtn Is tht ...... "We don't talk· about COICh LOmbardl but he's In the back ol au our mlndl, not lo he ldenUli<d. "But "' don't think or coach Aull.in as u interim coach. We all know he's the one In c114rge." Wide ....iver Bob Long playod for Lombardi and Austin at Green Bay before joining them Jn Washington. He waa aigned lo bis flnt professional c:oo- tract by Allllln . Tom Bradley, 1·1, pitches the first game for the Angels before leaving for two weeks of military duty. Bart Johnson, 0-2. hurls for the fifth-place White Sox, 29'h games behind Minne9ola. Mitterwald ended 3 hours, 47 minutes of suspense wilh his tOtb homer off Paul Doyle, 3-1, the !Ulh Angel pltcb<r. "He made me look bad the first time I faced him aod grounded out," said Mitterwald. "I was hoping to get a big one the next time." HE'S THE WINNE!t -It may be hard to believe but Mando Ramos, bis face covered with blood, was the winner of this fight. Action was ·stopped a1teT the above right connected but the doctor allowed it to continue and Mando was awarded a decision over Mexico's Sugar Ramos on a split vote in Loo Angeles. A LITTLE EXTRA TWIST -Tommy Jacobs, playing out of Amana, lowa, doubles up his fist to give a little body english to a putt on the 10th green during the first round o! the American Golf Classic at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio. Jacobs was six under par go.- ing Into the 16th where he triple bogied and finished two under par, 68. one stroke behind leader George Archer. Archer Leads Tourney Triple Bogey by Jacobs -One of Tlwse Things AKRON, Ohio (AP) -Tommy Jacobs was cool, calm and collected after a hmTendous triple bogey eight knocked him out of a shot at a course record and a commanding lead in lhe ftrst round of \he $150,000 American Goll classic. "Jt wu just one of those things," l1te 35-year-Old veteran said Thursday after he bad lost four shots on two holes and plummeted back into a tie for second place behind leader George Archer. Ja::obs, a slim, soft-spoken veteran tn a lengUay alump who last won tn lJ65. finished with a two-under par 68 on the tough 7,180-yard Flr<stoo< Cow> try Club eow>e. shots and ls.Id up just In front of the pond, "Just where I wanted to be." Then with a wedge shot to lhe green, be shunted dead right onto a gravel approach to a bridge. From the.re, he chipped over the green into deep rough, failed to get it out, finally reached the green in six and two-putted. Tonuny also bogeyed tbe next hole and felt hack Into Ibo pack. He was philosophical about it, however, ahrugged and commented : "ll I don't get 'em tod.Q', I'll get 'em tomomw." Archer, the tan..i player on the lour at tix-foot-t:lJ, hasn't won aince he took the Master's UUe in 1969. fi.ianager Bill Rigney of the Twins was elated about the victory which IDOV· ed his club eight games in front of secondiJlace C&lifomia and Oakland In the American League's West Division. "Sure, they all sound big," said Rigney, "but this one in 14 innings was our biggest victory or the sea.son. Our pit· ching was jU!t great." Bill 1.epp started for lhe Twins a~ had a no.hitter going with two out m the sixth until Bill Voss smgled. Voss · later swatted a homer in the eighth to give California a 1--0 lead. Andy Pt1essersmith, in his first start recovering from a rib injury July 25, held the Twins to five bits through seven innings but tired and was replaced by Mel Queen in the eighth. Queen loaded the bases and then hit Harmon Killebrew with a pitch to force in the tying run. CALl,ORHIA MINNESOTA ••, 1'!'DI •1Jr1'rtl "'°""'r, 2b ' o o o Tov•r, II • 0 2 O Vou, rf • I 2 l TllOmpMl<I, 2b S 0 l 0 Jollmlont. cl l O O o OH~1. r1 4 0 1 O J .TllVfl\. 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WP -l.9PO, Tfont -J:O, a.tt...stnco -'4.SU. ·Bloody Victory Rematch With Laguna Sought by Mando Ramos LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fonner world lightweight champion Mando Ramos to- day appeared lo be first in line for a rematch with Ismael Laguna of Panama, the man who dethroned him almost six months ago. The 21-year-old from Long Beach , rack- ed up a bloody, brutal JO-round split decision over UJtiminlo "Sugar'' Ramos of Mexico City Thursday night. "It was a good fight," said l\.!ando, no relation to Sugar the former world featherweight champion, "It's gotta be Laguna, who else?" said Mand.o's co-manager, Jackie McCoy, responding to newsmen asking who Man- do will fight next. Olympic Club matchmaker Do n Chargin, standing in Mando's sweaty dressing room, nodded in agreement. A tum-away crowd of 10,400 paid $91 ,056 to see a struggle that lived up to expectations. At times it was reminis- cent of another savage encounter - the March 1963 match in Dodger Stadium when Sugar Ramo• met Davey Moore for the 126-pound division title. Little Davey lost the championsRip and two days later, his Ille, from head injuries suffered in the bout. The 28-year-old Sugar in the third round did the anticipated. He opened a cut over the lefl eye of the Injury-prone Mando. 'The blood, despite heroic ef!om in the comer between rounds, literally gushed from then on. In the ninth Sugar's rapier chops open- ed the right eye and almost shut it. Mando's bloody nose frmn the earliest added lo the gore. But it was Mando, jabbing, leading wilh solid rights to the jaw, boxing at his best when the crowding Sugar didn't have him cornered, who landed the consistent damaging punches. Time and again it seemed the rugged Sugar Ramos would fall . But there was no knockdown. With Mando in bad ~pe. blinded by his own blood, Sugar came on to narrow the margin in the seventh, eighth and ninth rounds. It was Mando, however, who took charge and won the 10!.h round. Twice the ring physician, Dr. Bernard Schwartz, was called in to examine Man- do's wounds. Both times be let . the blood-bath continue. "He should have stopped it in the eighth round," said Cuco Conde, Sugar's co-manager. Angelo Dundee, tbe other manager, heartily agreed. Referee John Thomas scored 5-4 for Sugar. He was overruled by judges Rudy Jordan, 5-4, and Dick Young, e.s, for Mando. The Associated Press had ll 7-3 for Mando. Virtually all the ringside writers had it for Mando. He trailed Arther by one stroke and wu tied for second with 41-yur-old Paul Harney, now a club pro at Sutton, Mass., and ooly a parttime tourist. A big group headed by host pro Bobby Nichols followed at 69. otllera Included A&mtralian Bruce Crampton, Bob Goalby, John' Miller, Steve Reid, Phil Rodgen, Lou Graham and Tommy Aaron. Majors to Hire Black ·Manager Soon Defending champion Ray Floyd had a 711. Gary Player had a 71, Jack N1ddMD a V3 and U.S. Open chomp To01 Jactlin bad 7~ Arnold Palmer and Billy C&sper, the Mutm 011m!>10o. w ... not competing. When Jacobi -.. Ibo 16111 tee, he was six uoder par, bad not made a bogey, needecl ""'1 a par in lo milch Q)e record 64 on one of Ule most deman- ding c:ourset In the Unltod Slate. and led the field by four strokes. The !Ith ls a 825-yard par 5 w II h • pond guanllng !be green. According lo J-. he bit two lift&! . NASllVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Tl!e major leagues will have a black baseb&ll manager wJthin the next three years and the best bet is that he will be Willie Mays, Ernie Bank.! or Maury Wills, a naUonal organlr.allon on race .. 1auooa predlct.i Wedneodlll'· The forecast wu made by Ole Race Relationt Information Center, with bead. quarters here. a prlvai.. noo-proOt body that ga1hen" 1Dd dlstrlbtues infotmatlon on race problems. The RRIC said In 1 special ttport on "Blacks in Pro Sports" that it .had been informed by one encutive that all 14 big league teams had bttn ln- rtructed b7 Commiuioner Bowie Kuhn to recruit and c1e .. 1op minority pe1'l0nncl • for executive positions. The commissioner had no Immediate comment Jackie Robinson, the firat Negro to break Into major league buebalJ, has been the most critical of the game for ....,1ng over wortby black personnel for administrative job!. Pro football and pro basketball art similarly guilty, the report said. "Blacks in all three sports 111 that only on the super·slar level art the races equal.'' Bernard E. Carnett, who compiled the report. slated. "The average run-of-the-mlll player, they contend, Is likely to be paid les., than hLI white teammate wllh com- parable skill, coached less attentively, given leas opportunity lo play • • • and disciplined more sternly for an infraction than white teammates." The report added : ''Black baseball players insist that many in their ranks have contributed tremendously to--the game and, thus, are entJUed to advancement -Hank Aaron and Ji'rank Robtnaon among !be most outspoken now active. "Blacks in football say apprenticeships for head coaching posts are long overdue, •nd basketballers want more evidence of equal opportunity than the three head <.'Qflches (only one still active) and few u:ecuU ves promoted io recent yean." The report, speaking of potenUal managers, quoted a friend as saying, ·"There is something t'OOking with Willie Mays." Leo Durocher, manager of the Chicago Cubs. could be replaced by Banks, \he report added, and Maury Wills WW manage in Mexico for experience aimed at moving up in case Walter Alsion of the Los Angeles Dodgers taUs a front office position. The report listed as other potential managers among the black$ JJm Gllllam of Los Angeles. Larry Doby of Monlrt.al and Elston 11oward of the New York Yankees, all now coaches, u well as retired veterans Bill White and Geor1e Crowe. Coach ~'Coach t.omborcll ls ...., eut of ,..., mind," llld Lone. ;'The best w.., to a:preta it ii that we're coocerned for him. We blven1 loat bis l]>irll "U t were to dedicate this IN!IOn to anyone, I, penonally, would dodlcate lt to coach Lombardi. We mW him. "'But that doun't mean tbll eoaeh AusUn isn't No. l," be continued. 0 Jle knows the IAlnbardJ 'Ystem better thin anyone. He was in charge of the offenatve line in G.... Bay alllj In dultgo of our offensive line last year and )'OU ootlced the dltference. "He's No. 1, there's no doubt about that," aaid Loog. Dodgers Begin 4-game Series With Cincinnati LOS ANGELES (AP! -What's hap- pened to Claude Osteen, the ilodatrs' ace left.bander? Osteen, a »game winner Jn 190 and the winning pitcher in the All Star Game, now is ll-10 and has:n't won a game since July l . He went down to defeat for lhe seventh straight time Thursday night as Altanll bounced l.cs Angeles f.l to split a two- game series. The loss upped Osteen 's earned run averaa:e to a whopping 5.46. The big, affable burler is quiet about his drastic reverse. But manager Walt Alston says, "First it was that ankle injury he suffered in San Diego. The ankle ls all right now. I just feel he can't get back into his old groove and is really struggling with his delivery." The Dodgers will continue to ponder' Osteen's mystifying problems tonight as they begin a long awaited four game series with Cincinnati in Dodger Stadium. Joe Moeller, 5--4, will lead of! for tbe Dodgers again.st Gary Nolan, 14-4. In Thursday's game, the Braves cbued Osteen in the fourth inning, blut.lng him for 10 of their 14 hibi. Los Angeles blew numerous chancres against the Braves' starter, Jim Nash, by stranding six runners the !Int three innings and leaving an even dozen for the nJgbt. Ageless Hoyt Wilhelm relieved N11h in the sixth and at.re~ his scoreleu string to 14 innings while preserving Nash's: 11th victory. The save was Wilhelm 's 10th of the year and fifth in his last seven appearances. ATI..ANTA LOI ANelL•S 0.1,.wri, er Gol!ultl, d Miiiin, 20 ' Hhron, rf Ctl>ld9, 10 T_All'Oll, tr l.um, II c.eoy .. , lb T!llf'Nln, c: .. r11n1 Hr•• 2 I 2 1 Gr1blrt1.'wlb.u " I I t 2110Mo11,lf s ,. 5 0SJW.O.vls.d $ 41 <iOllW.P•l'll.r,111-S II 4 O t I Sudekll, RI " I I J 0 I 0 H•lltr, t; 4 O I 2o oo srwnoro,lb 4 20 4010R11ullll,r1 J It Gtrrldo, N Htth, 11 Wiihelm, 111 41100.1-.n,p I 00 4 221Llmb,p I ti 3010Llffebvrt,JlllO 00 J 0 0 0 Mlkkllfltl, p O O I Crlwford, Ph 1 t I 8r1wtr, p I O t Tote!$ JI 4 14 I T011r1 31 10 I All1n!1 UO lflO OOD -I Los AnOtles 000 010 GOO -I E -SUC141\ls. OP -~ ~ 1. LOB - •n11111 10. LOI ""'"'" 12. ttl -1'1, .r..ron. Mlllll'I 2. Slumort. JI -w. O.vi.. Sii -R11.._1~ C, eo.....-. SF -o. e ... wn. IP M R •It al SO HBll\ IW.11-4) S.113 I I 1 J 4 Wll~tfm 3-2/l 2 O O O J Oslllll 1L.11·10) J.1/l 10 4 2 I ;f l.tmb 2·1/) 0 1 0 J I 1 Mlkk1l11t1 2 l 0 0 t l artWer llOIJl Tl~ -l:ot. Att.nl!lllCI -20.111. Fillol Seeks Upset Victory Over Emerson BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) -Jaime Fillo!, 24, of <llile figures he's a lucky .. loser. He got into the $50,000 U.S. Pro Tennis Champlon&blps on the luck of a draw and now is assured his top pay day. Fillo! and Davia Cup teammate Pat Cornejo decided to try to quallfy for the rich tournament at Longwood just last Friday while they were playinC in Indianapolis. There were five spots open and the quallfytng was set for S a t u rd a y. However, the matches were pl)Stponed untH SuDday and Fillol a n d Cornejo decided to make Ute trip here. Cornejo won a qualifying spot, anurin1 hbnself or $350 as a first round singles loser. Fillo! was defeated, but be was lucky. The fifth aDd final berth in the field of 32 waa filled by a draw from the hat. Jaime was the winner. Cornejo bowed out in the opening roWMi, but Fillol defeated Tom Gorman of Seattle. Wash., in a bitter struggle. Thefl, the son of a Chile government attorney, aSSW'ed himseU of $1,200 iii singles by advancing to the quarter.finali with a stunning upset Thursday. "This Is my best win," Fillo! said after a U, 1.S, ~ victory over Clark Graebner, who ousted Wimbledon chanr pion and top.seeded John Newcombe bl the first round. "l thought I had a chance, but not a good one .agalnlt Graebner." Flllol see.ks another upset tonight ii a quarter-flnal meeting with sixth.seeded Roy Emmon of N ... port Beach. In other quarterfinal, favorite Roe! Laver ol COn1oa del Mar. blddln1 kr his slxt.h U.S. pro championJhlp In seven apptarancu at Longwood, m e e t s Australian countryman Ray Rulfels. South Afrk:a's=l OrylClale plays Jan Kodes of C&ecbo akta, and fourth. seeded Tony of A11 .. trA11.., .. 1~.,, elghlh·seeded Artllur A!he ol G10D Spring, Va. 'i -Youthful Partners -Design Own Racer II)' HOW~RD L. HANDY Of .. -~ 1'1111 '"" An old adap ol the dancing proleuklo 11)'1 It takes two lo llnl•· It wun't e1acUy a dance rouUne but lt w11 1 1ympbony in moUon that prompted young Jimmy Gurney and Chrlst4phu Drlvu to !nm in.a neighborhood venture, Jimmy, son of veteran race driver Dan Gurney. is a years old. 1111 partner Chrb Is 10. Ollb: sums up t h e 1 r partnership tn this manner: '1fe thought, usually, and I dJd the poundlng ... Cbril was referring to a sap box derby racing car lhe lwo youngsters built for the annual Harborvlew Broad- moor community soap box derby competition in Newport Bead!. Tho )'OUDg designer isn't new lo the prolesaloo deoplle h1I youth, •ccordin& to his mother, Arko Gurney. "He k-c1es1snu. qlnea on paper. It Is rully guile !ant&!llc the W9Y he doel iL It Is his tlltng. "The whole Idea bebind tt Is that he will oomeday dellgn race can. He bu a great deal ol enthualum and com· plete dedlcaUoo. I am keeping every one of his drawings and someday they wUl b e priceless. "He can't ipUl right now and when be prinla qlne, it comes out "tnjun." Cer11.in!y, lbl1 Is part ol the charm of \he youngster's enthusia!m, He may be too young to uock!rstand the ~mple thlnp like spelling words correctly but he isn't loo young lo dream or placing the p.l.stoos iD 1 dWuent place Sports in Brief or to put the wirtn& In a pecullor poattlon. O>ril undoubtedly had I hand In 11111\lng the ...., bo• racer. "We were aolng to call tt the buggy bul then lhe seat WU 10 90ft and the bed Of the car was ao '°fll we deckl· ed to Clll It the Bed-Buggy."" The youthlul, Mnd-¢nled name appears correctly spelled on the bed of the racer. .,11 WIS all tbe1r 0WD Idea," Chris' mother Joan saya. ""llley went pounding around the nel&hborhond pkidn& up a lot of old lumber and placing it in f.root of our garage before they started bull ding ... Many of the cars entered in Sunday's competjtioo were built by fatber-sOll combina- tions -but not the Drivas- Gurney racer. "'Ibe only thing we did to help waa to put food In their mouths so they would have enough ambition to complete the project/' Mrs. Drivas adds. DAILY l'tlOT J7_ Namath Asking The young racing duo has GREEN FLAG IS UP -Jimmy Gurney. 8, prepares for a down-Chris is ready to push Jimmy o!f to a flying start in a tire test visited the Gurney plant in hill drive in the Bed-Bu~gy, home made soap box derby racer he run. Jimmy is the youngest son of world-famed race driver Dan For More Mone y Santa Ana many times and build with the aid of neighborhood chum. Christopher Drivas, 10. Gurney of Costa Mesa. eachhaswatchedDanpkkup ~~~~~~~~~~""-~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­the victory flag at Riverside. NEW YORK -Joe Namath. a center of ~troveny on and oU the football field, was reported tod.,-to be demafloo ding more money to play again this season for the New York Jets. sprain ln the National Football League club's morning workout Thursday. But !bey Insist they did nol get any ideas from tM elder Gumey'a shop. 'Jbeir eyes sparkle at men- tion of the ricing plant and competition and J i m m y doesn't hesitate to say . he want. to follow In hia father's foot.steps as a race driver. Weston Sparkles In Meet Los Alamitos Race Entries That was the interpretation given to a statement by Phil · lselin, president or the club, following a Thursday night meeting with the s ta r quarterback who has been AWOL from the Jets' training camp after finishing a movie. "We have met with Joe Namath in an effort to resolve some requests Joe has made," l~lin said. "While there has been no resolution we are still discussing those requests with him." Before the meeting, the New Yorlr Times quoted Namath as saying, "I doo't want to play 1-.11." • Larry Smith, one ol the Los Anples Rams' starting run- ning backs as a rookie tart year, suffered a slight ankle Deep Sea Fish Report MlltMOIA-IS -ler11 1'1 bot!llo. 31 ...... IAfll Diieo CMVl!ldHI l>lw)-1.0:lt •rttlm1 , ... •IM<or•. OCIANllDl -Uf •11tlert1 1'5 blrr1- QIH, 4" llol'llto. :rM Nu. I v.i1ow1111. 1• llltllllul. lfSWl"OaT fArt't LIMlfllt)-1 .. "'" •ltrS1 $t 11Ncore, 17 Nrrtwd1. 41' betltttr., 51 bna, 1 l'ltlflwt. to....,.. L-...)-21t '"'""' n 1lbecor1, 71 btlnalCSli, "5 bonito. 111 bas&. I blu. fin lvN, llAL •IACK-1'1 1.,.tertl 1,11111 lieu, tS botll,.._ II Nrraeudl. 11,.._ 1'1 111t'-"1 :H.1 bonlto, 1a Nrrlaldl, 11J kf.I, 1M CLIMlfllTl-ltS 111111111 1• ~I• M beu, !U Nrr1wn, 2 1111~ ""'· 1 blvel'lll lullll, LOtUt S hCM lhol:Hk '"'1ftllllltl) -109 1111lerl1 411 1!b1cor1, I .,.11owt1n, ti blrr1CUC11, U1 Cl ll(O IN1&, IU bonito. CPl..,...11t LMNll111)-lff 111- •lors1 1• 1lblc:oA. n Mrr1cud1. '2J NH, 24f benllo, •7 rod!; (Od, l "-11001, 2 vlllowt1ll 1v111. lllllMillt Pllrl-$0 1ngllt'l l 11 blrrKuH. JGC N tl, JI bonito. J m1dcltf'll, I 'ff!lowt1ll •• , .. , -41 _,,,.., H Nu, I» bonl!o. 21 rl*k•ret. He missed the Rams' af- ternoon drill at their Cal State (Fullerton) training camp. Although coach G e o r g e Allen still listed Smith, from Florida University, as a starter for Saturday night 's exhibition opener with the Cleveland Browns at the Col- iseum in Los Angeles, there was a posslbillty he mJght not be able to play. In that case, Allen said Mike Dennis, a three-year veteran from Mississippi, would take Smith's plact. • ONT ARIO Fifty-eight cars -29 of them to be driven by speedsters who were in the 1970 Memorial Day classic at Irxiia.napolia -were ·-officially In the in· augural California 500 at the spanking.new Ontario Motor Spee<!Way Sept. e. Announcing the closure of entries Thursday, officials of the $25.4 million speedway disclosed that the ro.rter in- cludes four winners ol the Indy 500 -AL Unser, 1970; his brother Bobby, 1968; Mario Andretti, 1969, and a three-- time winner, A. J. Foyt, 1991- 64-67. • ClUCAGO -Congress bolds the important key to the pro- po.sed merger of the two ma- jor professional basketball circuit.. and apparenUy the door to that route won't be opened for at least another year. Walter Kennedy, com- miJiioner of the NaUonal Basketball AssociaUon, said Thursday there is UtUe chance this year for legislation which . would allow merger with the American Basketball AsSoeia- tion, without anU-trust com- plications. In Sunday's competition, each youngster finished third with the Bed-Buggy. An older youth ?.1ari: Karaglarlls, bor- J'owed the car and finished first. Arleo isn't against making it a family affair in the com- petition that was for young- sters 5 through 75. But 1he did disappoint the boys by using ardher racer to win the women's cham- pionship. Jimmy says It's alt In the family and he and Ollis are already busily engaged in planning next year's racer in .ro..-that they might be the wiMers and even offer mother a ride down the hill • Bast Heads Cycle Field Twenty-year-old sensation Steve Ba.st of Van Nuys at- tempts to fatten his already impress!~ win skein tonight on ~ speedway motorcycle racing card at Orange County Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa. Acllon get! under way at 3. As of late, Bast and his younger brother Mike have swept thrnugh some im· pressive main event victories with people like Richard Woods (Huntington Beach), scinny Nutter (Topanga) and BUI Cody (Garden Grove) all being in deep slump periods. All of the aforementioned will be on hand for Friday's main event with Mike Konle and Larry Helnselman slated to face each other In a match rac<. Ambitious John Wes lo n made a shambles ot the distance races in the Junior High School di vision Wed- nesday night in the summer season's final all-comers track and field m!el at Orange Coast College. The Edison High sopllomo<e captured the B80 (2:1&), mile. (4.:41.5) and the 3.3-mile cross country race (17:39) lo highlight the 1970 111-comers finale. Westm inster 's Walt Ankerman was a double win- ner in the high sdlool track events, winning the 100 (10.5) and 220 (23.4). Ray Harris of Fountain Valley pulled a doub~ in the prep category by placing first in the Jong jump (21·1) and high jump (6--0). Ff(l'Z H-k fLIPhlno) ... Mr, Ullld !Per""'/ ... MOore or Let.t iW 1-1 '" ll1rrl!I Tw CW•lel'IT) "' ~vbf Lit.• (Dttvt•I '" True C1n FIV (M1lrl '" ...... lllotitll Loot•-($~111'1) ' .. Mlwell11 fCltdOUI) "' U...;i. Edver (WtllO '" 5olllc ,_ (H1nll11t) "' Race Results Tllun4rf, ...... '· "" Clllr & '''' ,I.IT •AC•. U0 't•rds. M1ldln 2 VNt old1. c11lml119. l'11;u tl11lll. T,..... Grll (l'lf'lllf') J ,JI) JAO 2.:IO &1rron flld 1v .. ,.111 •.oo 1.6G Cut FQ/r A~ (H•r"d/119) J.40 Tlmt: .11 .... /10. Sc•1tctlld -ei. l'&lfll!I, Qveen·1 An11!, SOHd\' Seven, TIMI To Fire. secOND a ace. a v1"<!1. J ~''' old• 111d v. ttrl'd 111 C•lll. Cl1lml11g, Pu'" 11.00. Gold Lfnl11t IRl1111dll 11.'° I.to !.10 aocJi:v I!__,, !C1rooz11 l.llO !.l'O SulldllO (Wit-) IJ.70 Tll!'ll: .20 .. /10. 5Cr1lchld -Gold llltOI. MIH St11'1d Pll, Doubl1 H111Y, Mt. S"11 ll1r, Sl\olft Trle!ll, 00--,-1111"-d *"I. dlsou1!1flecl 111d •l•cM •111. NIONTLY DOUI LI, 7 •T!lll Ori! a I • e.tt Ll15". .... UI .... TKlltO ltACI'. C)G r1rd1, Maldlll 1 'l'Hr .tclt. l"l.lrll 1171111. Slrod !Llp.h111'1J 11: 1111'1' {Cl"ftbvl Ofl 0.d4V (A,,,.lr) Timi: .tt l!lr. Jo Kr1tc1'111, s.a1.101• l .llO l.l'O .... POUaTK ltACE . ..:JO y1,d:i. J yo•r old1. c111m1,.., PurM 11900. Scott MIC LIM! (P1Ulol '·'° S.00 t.60 LIO!l'I Diii IW1t111111J •.ID J.HI Diet P1110fl !l1111!:1l S.60 Tllfll : .l!MllG. Scr1tcl'lld -lllV 0.111, Miii D11· mond &u•, 1t1tlt'I Cll1r1r., P1uum lte- •unt. PlllTK ltACI' • ..,. v1rds. J yur old1 SIXTlf ltACI'. 110 Vlrdt. J Vtlt old1 111CJ up. C!elmlM. Plltff alll!O. Secntt Glllff• !Drl'l'lfl IJ.00 1.10 J.tO Ctll C&UKt !Smltlll •.te J,!16 H•11Y LH !Wl llll J.«I Tlmt: .47·Tfl0. Sc~"'*' -Yo Qlero, ltrlclrlu1, Hot P-r Pod, U"Cll P111r, S•VeNTl4 •ACI. J50 Vlnll. J VNr oldJ ~ u11. 01lml111. Purso lll'CIO. Cl'lf!Ftr (Wll""1l 7.a •.llO I.Cl l(lp1Y'1 Comll C\'11111) 11.llO II~ Gott1 lar Too CLll!fl•ml J.• Timi: .ll·t/10, kr11Cheod' -Coc11v Kid, Ten1r I••· SleePr 0.1r1a, J11t1r1. -.10KTH •ace. a .,.,,,,., J vt•• .. ds l 'ld Ult. Allow111ea. Pur11 12!0G. Foxv DDll !A,,,.tr l lJ.60 10...0 I :Ml Swl11g M111 (WUllOlll t .IO I.• l rlll Liii IP.,.,...) J.IO Time: .20-l/ll. Scr11c....,_,lr1t Olvl. Cupi. 111 11111. flllfllTH aACI. 406 v••d•. J v11r old• '"" UP brld In C.llf, Clllml .... PutN tr60lt. Rodl:tt t~IUll (Hlr!} Monlv Mm CPlllllll Hv RM\lltl CLl!lhlm) Time : .»7110. 11 .M S,• J.60 J.11) J.00 .... Scr1lcto.d -Tri. 1111 Min, Mlclll 0.1 Mir. 0....11 MCIO!I, l!leM Tw111tv . IS l!JIACTA, l·ltKICrl l•IVfl & t • M.norr Miii, ,,14 • tll'f .... Ex-USC Hoop Flashes Put Nutrilite on Top Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut Dl.t.loo Eut Dtri1loa w L Pel. GB w L P d. Baltimore et 40 .633 Pittsburgh 81 49 .559 New York 59 49 .546 9\1 New York 53 50 .537 GB 1·~ 411 II Ill> 14 DEAN LEWIS AUGUST srtCIAU 'Ibe-University of Soulbern Caiuomta can bt given an "8111 In propelling Nu!rlllte lempOnrlly back into the lead of the Costa Mesa open mnn- ....,. buk<>tball league. Nubilite moved a half game In 1n>nt ol Idle Wll!O<I Fon! Tuesday nlgllt In the first ball .of a cage doublflheader at Southern Callfornl1 College. The Nuttnlte five, with former TroJlrW Allen Young and Gordon Martin and e1-USC assbtait coach Darmy Rogers leadlng the way, pounced on Wbody's Wharf, 77-M. Newport. Stationers scored ..... 11 In In the .nlghtoap, dffeaUng Progressive prc>- duce. NutrlUte was given one of ttl stiffest tats of the summer ....... In recording ilJ 12th tr111mpl1 in l11ilemptl. 1be winners led by just !Ive potnll (41-35) al the midw ay Joncture and had to fight in tbie waning minutes to win by ,elghl. , '(oun1 CD), Martin (17) and Ropn (12) did the brunl oC the dp.maC the v.'lnners while the y'a Wharf du<J ol Pat Grant ind Bob Bedell canned 24 and II polnlJ. 1be Newp o rt Statlootrs qulntel put tt. r-th victory in the -. by downing Progressive Produce. 'Mle winners hid a 38-21 edge after I poorly-p!O)'ed first bait Newport's Mike Cbemy and Ptvgresslve's Tom Re 1 d !hared top scoring honors with JI apiece. l'ltOOa•lllVI PlliODUC:\ ('JI fl w•rn•m• 11 j ! f :~ ,, Clllllllrt1tl'lln\ 4 I I E::lr, l1' ? 1? Gt_mlfor 1 • 1 TO!tlt. _ _ 111 1J 11 !Z flll'#PeaT ITATIONlltl (':/ ....,_.,,. 'r ~ 1 ~ ::&.."" l l I 'l i.,,~ •1111 :!rm.. I I ' I w11:i'"'°"' l J f J CM,,.., 1 2 1 11 Tot_._lt 17 12 It U Hem~ 111ti.Ml's JI. Pr11~ "· WOOO'M WMAaP 4·~ pf I '':tr \Iii =-· 1'1" G~I ',ts l; Detroit 59 50 .Sil 10 Boston 53 53 .500 14 \~ Cleveland 53 57 .48% 1611 Wl!blngton 50 59 .459 19 Wett Dlri1lo1 MJnnesota $'/ 33 .633 An1el1 61 43 .560 g Oaklsnd Gt 43 .560 8 Kansas City 40 8' .367 29 Chicago 4( 71 .366 291.i Milwaukee 40 71 .360 :lO Chicago 57 53 St Louis 50 59 Philade~hia .. 59 lifontre 43 '13 Weit Divl1loa Cincinnati 75 37 DodJmi 61 47 San Francisco 53 55 Atlanta 53 57 l{ouslOf'I 49 SJ San Diego 4S ll3 Tl!url.d•V'• bWlh Cl'l!c-A, Mollt ... 11 t SI. LOUii l, M1¥1' YorJI I P!thbu .. 11 N , Pl'lflldll!lllll W All111t1t 4. °""""" l S.f! F,em;lsee f, ClllC.l!IMll l Hll!nllln I, S.,, °'"° f T11111"'1•- .518 .459 .4S4 .43Z .670 .515 12 .491 20 .432 21 .445 15 .337 371> 0ltefflll fJdlfll 1>-121 11 l'tlllHtlplli. IJMl-'°" ,.101, llltl\f N1¥1' Yll1t (McAl'lllr-Ml II fllttsbwftlt (MOOW ,.n. 111thl Mcl'ltf'lll f~l11n 1·7) 1t If. l.lllm IOllmoll IJ.5~~1:!'.t1 (Nollll 1,_.) II ~ (.-ntf J. .,, llltl'lt Atlfnle Hletd •• .... Nltll,. '"l'I •I Stll Olllo (llollwh ... IN K""' .. u1, I, 1WHt1t1!t HIUOOll IDIWll9'" ,.Ill et .. ,~ lln'lflt ...,,, """' DEAN LEWIS o l I o ";.0,.,.,,. ,~' ,l J 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 SPECIAL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON =$1817 Alf OtW M ..... hi 1f9't: M.itl'-Hla l'ld I "-" Cr1l11rt c.,... VOLVO 1'70 DEMO $2699 142 2 4, .. r1ill•. •••t..-, 4-t,.ff. cs.r: ••1401 !967 TOYOTA CORONA Stda11. llMIO. HMllt'o Avtornflk lrt!1$. ~'!.• r i 7 ~"' Service, Partt, & Body Shop v.;;;;; " i • Now Open Until a p.m. Mondoy Nights I -• ' $1 ~lll::..it ' l l • Orange County's La~gest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer M'rt 1i, : 1~ ,1 u IL_~:::.:::::::::::::~::.::::.:::::.:.:::.::~::..:.::::::.:.::::.. __ !.::::::::::::=;:t::::::::::::::::~.!I (VEV JlPI 5 ~""-! Ni.rtrllllt ft, Willld'l"I ,J,' Uttlt-Obie (CMH1l "' Tt~PY ~191 /Lal '" Wiiiow _, Acl~l '" litO('krl MUI f lrd .. 1 .. ' fl.,.•, G•ll' '\"11 I tvJrl ... •"-........ P1e1nc ''°'"' 10rrn..-1 "' :i::r~ I""' l':l;" ll' "' 1i. .,, \l ,.....nl "' J"'• Sufi (W;lt"I "' WhatS ru::at? We hereby dec:!1tt 1970 The Yur of the PuNycat. Our Mtional prize.winnin1 drink ha1 become I creait 1ucce.aa. No wonder. Thia 1Unny, oranae·•~cet .our make.a you want to purr. And mixe1 up qufdc 11 a cat. Ju1t combine a _packet of "Jn1t1nt Puuycat Mix," water and Eariy Time1. Aile. for lnttant Pu.Nycat Mix at your favorite food or ... ... •n '" ... "' ... ... '" ... ... ll~ "' i ' ' • •• u ~ • • • • " j g : • liquor 1tore. IOI.,"''¥.,,,,....,,, •1111 .. 1i.11111 ""'' ...,,._ • t I ' • r--.... ..............-...-------.-------------,............-·--------~-------------- • . , J. DAILY PILOT Frld31, ALl9Ust 7, 1970 Weleoae Aboard Thought,s By ALMON ~OCKABEY WELCOME ABOARD welcomes Bob Reed director of Newp<:n Beach's Marine safety Department, who has some pertinent thoughts on the fouled up sbip-to-sttlp and ship-to-shore r a d i o com- municaUons in lhe pleasure boat field. Reed has reason to be disturbed as bis department is a vital part of the emergen- cy marioe network. Here's Bob' "'J'he FCC·s requirement that all radio calls be initiated on 2182 KllZ has become pitiful . On v.-eekend days. monitoring this supposedly emergency frequency is somrwhat like listening to a mass exercise in total stupid.i· Ly. • ' O U TRJGHT emergency radio traffic has. for at leasl 13 years. been constantly in· terrupted by boat operators who are initiating calls to each other before going to a work- ing frequency. ··often lhese calls come on right in the middle o f emergency traffic w h I ch perforce must be repeated to offset the interruption. The Coast Guard is daing ils best to slop "radio checks·' as you undoubtedly know. "IT WOULD seem lo be somewhat objective to open one more frequency bet\\·een 2!NXl and 9000 KHZ. I or use as a call-initialing channel. I suggest this as an interim measure Qefore everyone is required lo gear up for VHF' and single-sideband in the future. ··Normal human patience V.'ill never permit 100 percenl participation in listening to the emergency frequency for a reasonable lime span before transmitting. AU my years of Hstening tn It has proven this to be a fact. "If it is said ttiat every urut of frequency between 2000 and :Kl(l(l KHZ is being utili1.- ed locaJJy. simply tune your o"'n radio across the span and see how much of it is being used. There seems to be some blank spaces in there which might be tapped for Southern California coasUine radio call-initiating purposes. "SOl'\.tEllOW. 2182 KHZ should be freed for emergen- cies per se until VHF takes over complelely. E i l her another frequency should be opened or the requirement for formal initiating procedures should be dropped." -Anyone who agrees with Bob could write a letter to the FCC t Federa l Com- munications Commission) and perhaps get some action. 'After Long Sea Trip, 3 Can't Park Bou.t. SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) - Aft.er sailing 14 months from Norway to Seattle, O I a f Johansen, his wire and a 11- year-old friend arrived back home Sunday only to be told their 55-foot boat was in a "no parking" area. The first person to greet the trio was a Port of Seattle official who told Johansen he would not be allowed to Lie up his boat at the fisherman's terminal dock for more than a couple of hours because it was not a fishing boat. After that encounter. the next 20 persom who greeted the sailors were friends and relatives. Johansen. 65, i;aid of the journey, ''It wasn't much. It was as easy as sailing in a S\\'immin g pool." However . the usually-silent native of Nornay permitted himse lf a smile when hi! described the long voyage in such terms. His wife. Marjorie. said 1he ·whole journey actually came aboul because they '>''ere unable to find on the trest coast a sailboat Iha\ they liked and could afford following Johansen's retirement. Johansen remembered 1ron1 his boyhood days in Norway the sturdy Norwegian Rescue Service boats that could be seen bringing survivors from stranded ships rn the North Sea. He wrote the service and asked if any of the old boats were for sale. ·The answer was •·yes." The price was right and the Johansens caught a plane for Norway where they purchased the Frithjof Wiese. Johansen steeped a new mast and made some mioor cabin moclirications and the trio set sail for Seattle. from Arendal, Norway. Mrs. Johansen said fr onl Arendal they sailed down to the Canary Islands off the coast of Spain. The Canaries were the last land they Sa\v until they sited Trinidad off the coast of Venezuela 43 da ys later. Johansen 1nodesl\y sa id there v.•as no spec ial skill to navigation. "You don't rea ll y h<1ve to br a navigator ." ht> sa id . "YotJ"re bound lo find land sooner or later.'' New Yacht Cl11b Rises I Freme work ol the Harbor Area's newest yacht club facility t.akC's fonn on Bayside Dri ve on the site of the old Ri chardson Yacht Landin&. The $600,· \ Mazatlan Rae e Gets Enthusiastic Replies By ALMON LOCKABEY ... tlft, eJH..- "Salll<lae Amigos." That's the salute to Southland yachtsmen of tbe Lo& Angeles \'acht Club as invitations were sent out ror the 6th aMU&l 1..os Angele-! 10 Mazatl;m race .scheduled tor Nov. 7. The $&lutation ~·as answered by more than 50 yacfttsmen who said in effect; "We're ready to go." But the respondents will be subject 10 a severe scrutiny by the LA YC race committee as the race is invitational. McLaughJin Coronado-15 MBYCVictor Tom McLaughlin of Mission Bay Yacht Club sailed a con- sistent second place series or races to win the national championship of the Coronado- 15 Class. McLaughlin's five second places netted him a low score of 15 points under the Olympic scoring system. Runner-up in the six-race ser.ies was Carl Eichenlaub of Mission Bay Yacht Club with 23. 7 points and Dan Clapp of Pomona Valley Sailing Association was third with 27. Jack Bateman of MisSlon Bay Yacht Club won the junior championship with a perfect score. STH RACE -(I) Harris -.b4-¥C Y-achtsmen -8-et ~f or-N ovembe1· trirn shall noL exceed g per. cenl of the length over:ill times the 1nax:Unum bea1n thnes the freeboflrd aft First oH, the entry list will be limited to' 50 boats as that number is all ·tbe harbor or MwUan can handle. Iu ad· dlHon, LAYC has set up tbt following criteria in determining who wiU be the final entrants: t. Membershlp In the Los Angeles Yacht Club. 2. Participation in previous MataUan races. 3. Participation by vessels of Mexican registry. 4. DedleaUon of the owner to ocean racing as measured by .activities in other ocean events. 5. Origin ol the entrant "''ith particular reference to geographic conditions. 6, Tbe number ol potential entries in each class wilh the objective of maintaining a reasonable balance between !he higher and lower raled vessels. 1. The dale upon which the formal applicaUon is received. Followins are the Mazatlan eligibility requirements: Yachts must be single-hull vessels of thoroughly seaworthy type, strongly buill and rigged, properly ballasted, with enclosed cabins and water-tight and self-bailing cockpits or flush decks. Yachts must m«t the rr.- q u i r em en t s regarding 1neasurements taken under the International 0 f f s h o re Rule (IOR) and confirmed by the rating certificate filed with Lbe race committee. The total cockpit volume in cubic feet which can be filled with water Lo the lowest point of the coaming over which \\'Ster can escape when the yacht is upright and in normal The cockpil floor nuist be at lensl .02 lin1es the length v.1atcrlh1e above the waterline. All din1e11sio11s arc to be taken rron1 tht> rat ing certi!icate fi!· ed "'ith the race committee. An y yachl now built or under construction w h i c h would be eligible under thr. Eligibility Requirements or the conditions of the 196.11 1iazatlan race shall be l11r1- sidered eligible for the l9i0 race. Miller Urges Opposition To Land Fees Cutter Morris Gets Comme11 iorative Ci1p i:he world·s bigge st prc- decommissioning party \Vas Boat owners and wa1.erfront highlighted in Long Beach by homeowners Wednesday were the presentation of the August urged to oppose the proposed A. Busch Jr. commemorative plaque lo the Coast Gua rd pier, tide and submerged land cutter Morris. use fees scheduled to come Carlota B us ch Flanigan. before the Bo a rd of daughter of tl"tc St. Louis Supervisors Oct. 7. brewing e x e c u t i v e and Larry l.1iller . chairman of spor-tsman in boating and baseball made the presen-the Newport Harbor Chamber talion at the Long Beach of Commerce Tidelands Com· Marine Museun1 on the ol'- miltee reviewed the history casion of the decom1nissionin;:: of the development of Newport ol the rvlorris. Busch commissioned the Harbor and the philosophy etched-in-silver memento regardiJtg the tidelands before which reaures a background tribute Lo the Morris over 11 net work of huge speaker~ \vhi\e searchlights played on the ·'dressed ship." The 43-year-old vessel. com· niissioned on the east coast 1n 1927. has been highly active on the West Coast, including serving as escort vessel on nun1erous offshore ya c h t races. The 125.foot ship is the only vessel of her class still <ifloat in U.S. waters. She '>''as named afler lhe original USCG ~!orris. a forelops'I schooner built in 1831 for Revenue Service and later dis!inguished herself in the Mexican War. 1846-1848. the weekly luncheon meeling of polished \Vood from a !\1or-The present Morris served of the Newport Harbor Yachi -ris bulkhead, Lt. Cmdr. Jaek in the Bering Sea in \Vorld Club Yachtsmen's Luncheon. Patterson of Ft. Lauderdale. \Var II and was a training Hartman. MBYC : i2) Tom 7"~,;.. McLaughlin, MBYC; (3) Carl Eichenlaub. MBYC : (4) Jim F!a., the current comrnanding shi p in the Korean conflict. f\.1iller pointed out that officer "Of the Morris, accepled N bo . . l n recent years she ha.~ ewport Har r IS unique In the plaque on behalf of the responded 10 over 2 . o 00 that the lands adjacent lo the Coast Guard. distress calls from pleasure Lins.key, WYC ; (5) Dan Clapp, PVSA. 6TH RACE -(I) Harris Hartman : (2) Tom PtfcLaughlin; jJ) Jerr Jones. SI BYC: (4) Carl Eichenlaub; (5 ) Dave Schibler, A-tBYC. OVERALL (I) Tom McLaughlin. MBYC, 2-2-2-2-2-, 15. j2l Carl Eichenlaub. MBYC, l -5-1-34 , 23.1. ~3) Dan Clapp, PVSA, 1-1 -2·5-8, 27 : (4l Ha rris 11artman, ?o.lBYC, 5-6-~J-I-, 31.7. !5) Dempsey Cope I and , MBYC, 4·3+4-4-8. 31.1. 161 J im Linskey, \VYC, 3-9-04- 6. 52.1. !7) Dave Schibler. MBYC. 7- 10-12-1(}5, 13 (81 Bob Martin. ~1 BYC. JJ.JJ.. :l-11).10, 13.7 19) Jeff Jones. SI BYC, 14-7 11-18-3. 79.7 ( 10 ) John Oliviera, Anacapa YC, 13-9-12-7-11. 82 Junior Championship (I) Jilek Bateman, MBYC; 0: 12 ) Tom Linskey, 9: (3) Eric Evans. MBYC, 17.1 Consolation Series ! I) \Veils Goodhue. l.1BYC, 13.7: (2) Dick Hauser. l.1BYC, 27 : f3J Glen Mc I n to sh . Westlake YC , 31 : 14 1 John Unger. Anacapa YC. 38.1; (5) Bob Evans, MBYC, 43.7. Troops ~toned LONOONOERJ{Y, Northern Ireland /UPI) -A group of 150 J?oman Catholic youths stoned a British army patrol today T.1 Northern Ireland's eighth consecutive day of violence. The soldiers charged the crowd with batons and fired nause;i g<1s but the youths refused to disperse. nn army spokesma n said. SEEKS NEW RECORD -Chuck Stearns of Bell- flower \VilJ be on the slats seeking to break the 130 mph barrier in the \.Vorld 's Water Ski Drag Ci1amp- ionships Saturday at Long Beach Marine Stadium. Stearns already bolds the world mark of 122.11 mph. watertrool and the tidelands Busch, who is president and craft requiring assistance. were developed with private ~~~;::~-Bou~h'.helnc~a~r 8~~ Blue water races in which mon. b · te · d" ·d I she has served as escort in-1es y pr1va in 1v1 ua s Louis. has bee.n a Jonglimc she has served as escort in-and private enterprise. devotee oiP' boating. Recently elude the Transpac. Mazatlan The harbor itself was dredg-his national bre1ving firm anrl Enscnada races. World Chan1ploushlps Blocker, Gabelich To Tow in Ski Rcices ed by the Army Corps of launched a camp;iign to pro-==~-~--"'--i mote boating safely . c -engineers, with federal funds ~lore than 200 ,000 persons Only One but the uplaods were de\·e-attended the cere111onies which Fina! stocks in all home editions. loped by private fund s. th \Vere a part of e Califomia That's a blg dea!? It is in 0fange The tidelands of Newport Internationa l Sea Festival. County. The OAILV PILOT ls the HarOOr were deeded in trust T I he spectators ranged a ong only daily newspaper thct deliv-to the city by the stale in lh h 1· f 1· J e s ore 1ne or a tis ancc ers the pJckage. 1919. of · four miles and heard the These same private_:_:_::_:_::::.__::_:_:_:_:_:==========-""========== individuals, i\1iller pointed oul , Drag boat racing's all-time fastest driver. Gary Gabclich of Long Beach, and television sla r Dan Blocker of Hollywood have agreed to serve as tow-boat drivers this wee kend in what is assured or being the greatest two-day \\'aler ski speed display in the history of the sport. Gabelich, who later lhis year will atte1npt to set a new world land speed record in the \iquified natural gas vehicle Blue Flame, will tow Long Beach's Norm Finn 1n the World Water Ski Drag cha1npionships Saturday al Long Beach Marine stadium . A highlight of this event ·will be all·lime speed record holder Chuck Stearns' at- len1pt lo hil the !JO mph mark. Blocker , the .. Hoss Carhvright" nf NBC' s Bonanza series. will tow Hollywood round engineer J im Corbett of ~.far Vista into the Grand National Catalina Ski Race SuAday, starting at 8 a.m. near Qucen"s \Vay Bridge in Long Beach Harbor . Both race sessions are part of the California international Sea Festival which continues through Aug. 16. Kickhaefer Cup Search U11der Way The annual search for can· dldates for the Kiekha efcr ~lercury National Gold Cup A'>''ards ror boating safety ls under way. The firm a n nu a 11 y recognizes t h o s e groups. organizations or companies thal have made major con· tributions lo boating safety during the year. The a\1-·ards are made in thrff: ca tegories -a group or con1111unily. a magazine . newspaper. radio or lelevision station. and a jlovernmental agency on any level. Selection of the whiners wilt be made by a panel of representatives from the U.S. Coast Guard and its Auxiliary : Americl.!n Pow e r Boal Association ; the U.S. Po"'er Squadrons. and the American Water Ski Association. Buck's Boat Show Slated In Anaheim continue to pay substantial amounts to the city and county in personal property and real property taxes -and con· tinue to maiJ1tain the waterfront facilities al their 0""'n expense. Miller cited figures sho\\'\ng that personal property taxes assessed against boat owners net the city SI 18,000, annua·11y, S 162000 to the county and $455,000 for public education. "And," said Miller, "many of these boat owners do not eve11 reside in this COWlly ." In addition, ?>.tiller said pro- perty-0wners with piers or other v.•aterfront facilities pay as much as $200 more per year in re al property taxes than adjacent owners who do not have access to the waler. Thus. Miller said, the pro-- posed $6 per year per lineal foot of usable slip and moo ring capacity -and $4.80 per foot for side ties -would be an excessive burden on the boat owner. In the beginning. ~1i11er sa id, the city encouraged private home ov.·ners to build piers on the submerged land . But in recent years both the city and county have begun to look Oil the use of these 1'.1i ss Vicki 11ollo\vay of T\1anhatta n Beach may not tidelands as a source of knO\V a sheet fro1n a halyard. or the blunt end froin rev<:nue. the point ~nd of er boat. ·but the Southern California "In the Ch a n1 be r Of fVlarine Association allows as ho w her own lines are Commerce.'' said ~1iller, "we suffi cient to call attention to the upcon1ing bont ha ve consistently taken a posi-sho\v season \Vhich starts in the fall u'ith the SCM/\. lion in op(>OSltion to the im· Sailboat Show in Long Beach. Incidentally, Vicki posing of an.v fees s1ructurcs \l'i\t be lhere, too. being assessed to the tidelands li~r:,.,.,.~i't~ro,.~i'~iipTii'i~i"'ip .. ii areas.·• Podiatry Group Na111 es Officer s The Orange Counl y Podiatry YOU CAN'T SPEND MORE H. Werner Buck "'ill present l\ssocia lion has elected a new his 3rd annual \Vestern Na· sla te of officers for !he coming tional Boat & Marine Show ye ar . THAN s25 Feb. 20-28 al Anaheim C-Onven· They arr Dr. l'\1arlin E. lion Cenler. Scrbin . president of Fullerton; The spectacle "'ill be one Dr. Allan Slark. vice president of th~ nalion's first major of Orange and Dr. Arthur 14Sr.11t1o1Sf .• COST~MUA. marine shows of 1971 and will \Va!ton, sccretary·lreasurer or PH. 64 2~5250 •··~ .. ,,..rt.-1..-""''•"'.., feature the latest in sailboats .. -~N~•~WJ>O'Jlll_r~l_B~ea~c~h~. ------J~~~~~l>~M~·-~·~"~' .. ~111111""11111111111111111111~~~~;;~~ powerboats and related ac-\ cessorie::J. Buck said the Ccnter·s ex- hibit hall. Y.•ith more than 100,000 square feet or space. would be completely devoted to power vessels. motors and marine hardware. The large arena with its ~foo1 high t"l.!iling w 111 showcase scores or sailboats under full salt. INSPECTED USED TIRES Big Selection Most Sizes Big sa vings on slightly used new ca r takeoffs, tool 000 structure \Viii be. the ne\v home of Bahia Corin- Lhian Yacht C'lub which once \vas a satelJJle of the • Balboa Bay Club. The \Vestern National Boat & Marine Stxiw all tgelhtr will occupy 111orr thnn 300,000 ~ullre feet of exhibit sp11ce in 01c plush new muJU.million <lollar Anaheim Convention Center. Costa Mesa Firestone Store -475 E. 17th St -646·2444 HOURS: Mon.· Fri.; t •.m. to 1 p.m. -Sat., I a .m. to S p.m. '\ --- Visits West-Coast l~er Majesty's Ship Fife, the fifth of thi? Royal Navy's gujded miss ile destroy- ers of the County Class will visit Long Beach for a three-day vi sit commen<:ing on August 9. Fife is currently on a ten-month world cruise and is no,v deploy-in~ from the Pacific to the Mediterranean. Here she is shown passing the Ar· gentine trainin~ ship Llbertad in the English Channel. Se _crecy Brings Fear Lontr-vlanned CBW Activities In Open \VASHINGTON (AP) -1'he United States has secrelly prepared for decades to fight a v.·ar using chemicals and germs th;it kill man. his animals and crops. The secrecy shrouding the nation's chemical. biological v.·arrare (CB\V) p r o gr a m fostered a horror-type reaction among many people which over\vhehned the logic of such wcotpons. Now, even decisions over ho"'' lo destroy some of these \'.'capons, provokes lhc same reaction. Controversy and p r o t e s t continued today as workmen at tv.·o Southern Army depots loaded 3.000 tons of old - but still deadly -GB nerve gas rockets aboard trains for their trip lo sea and a watery grave. Army officials said it cosl $1.6 million to 1nake these rockets. It will cost $705,000 to destroy them. tear gas -used in Vietna m -lo poisonous GA, GB and V nerve agents. Odorless. tasteless and invisible, these agents kill in seconds. Until last year, biological or germ v.·eapons v.·erc part or this hidden arsenal. Rut President Nix.on renounced use of these v.·eapons. ordered existing stocks destroyed and declared the United States wouJd confine its biological research to def ensiv e measures such a s im- munization. The chemical \1·eapons re- mained. Packed in virtually any Lype or military ord nance -bombs. rockets. artillery shells. grenades and land mines -they are stored and ready for use at military depots in the United Stales. \Vest Germany ;ind Okinawa . "As n1uch as we deplore this kind of weapon. we want to make sure that it is never used. There should be one lesson that we've learned from hislory and that is to ha ve the capability ourselves." said Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. '"This capability should be understood clearly -that we \viii never use it first. that \1'e v.·ill only use it as a deter- rent should some other nalion be foolish enough to (attack us )." The Soviet Union is believed to possess a stockpile of chemical weapons rive to eight times as large as lhe United States. The Soviet Army has chemical units even at batta\. ion level. Military .planners believe hair the members in the United Nations have the lechnological means of achiev- ing CBW capability. ln addition to the chemical agents in the U.S. arsenal. more than $100 million has been spent for herbicides and defoliants for use in Vietnam to kill enemy rice crops and slrip away concealing vegeta- tion . The standard U.S. nerve gas is said to be GB. the type now being disposed of. whlch kills by inhibiting the enzyme which relates muscular con· traction. Less than one drop will cause the victim to go into conclusion.'! and die of asphyxiation in minutes . The rockets. enclosed in steel and concrete coUins, arc only a small part of American CB W stockpile. Its size is a national secret. but it is bel ieved to contain millions or 1>0unds or chemical agenls ranging from relativel y milrl '; ~"'"==""'=====-., Until President N i z o n ordered an end to biological weapons, the Army w a s developing hardy strains -0f disease capable of resisting vaccines. These ranged from influenza and measles to such deadly germs as tularemia. smallpox, anthrax and plague. .· •. j VW BRAKE SPECIAL R•line 4 Wheels M•chlne 4 Drums Ov1rh1ul 4 Wh11I Cylind ers $39.95 YW SHOCKS ............. $7.95 Installed • 100.000 milr gu11ra.ntrrd lnPt 11ro-ru1 rd 1. \VE DO ALL f''Onf.IGN C1\ltS e DISC IU l E SPECIALIST e COSTA MESA STORE ONLY )111 H•rltor l l•d. 54,-4022 •r 549·2259 Open at 7:00 P.M . ,Show Starts at Dusk "Without a doub t the funniest se rvice comedy I have ever seen." -Ju<J•th C11st, NBC -rv "'M "A"S"H' is what the new freedom of1he screen is all about." -Rlc~rd Schicil:e/, life ,..,,. DONALD SUTHERLAND · ELLIOIT GOULD · Until a few years ago, little \vas known publicly about CBW. Congress paid little at· tention to what the Pentagon was doing and approved its requests for CBW f u n d s almost routinely. Americans began l a k I n g notice in 1968 when an airplane laying down a cloud of nerve gas at the Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. mi ss· ed its target and killed 5,000 sheep on a nearby ranch. E l VE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAG!MENT '" ··A''' '' H' begins where other anti-war films end!" '"M''A''S''H' is the best American' war comedy si nce sound came in!" -P'a111it?t Kael, ~"'Yorker SlCOHtl fCATVff . IOTH IN COlO• PETER SELLERS in I LOVE YOU ALICE B. TOKLAS F'rlday, A119ust. 7, 1970 DAILY PILllT 19 LEGAL NOO'ICE l.EOAL NOl'JCI!! 'Kidlash' I 1 .. --. ... -.. ---- ----· •.. -..... -·. ·-; --.-;--~ -----~---.. ~.-,------...,..-·--;""'";. _____ ·------·----·~--,,_,-=---·-----r~ ..... ~-. -,,-..-,,.-----.-,-,,-,.,....~: .....-1--r - OAILY PILOT ' Fund Drive Set ctwpman Cc!lege bas beeu.p or the campaign art 'J'!lc>mas ('9 1971-71 annuaJ hind eaf. A. Brennan. division manqer +.,Jtt-1~ -~-Pocifle-"l'elejlbGnef--1ifr-'t'f'' of'M. Keith Gaede oC f.acuDI Edward Crane. vl~ellt &~ . ' '111< goal ol tbe campal&n of Cal~k FoodJ'ill • , is J45Q,OOO, eight percent ol ta Ana; L. C. Moseley, owner 1ht total operating budget of of SanJtek Products o f the-achool The rem.aining Shertnan Oaks and William 1Unds come from student tui-L. Parker, director of cor-pon',and endowments. porate relations for l h e Heading the various divisions American Cement &rp. Dime-A-Lines Mean $$$ THOMAS A. BRENNAN W. EDWARD CRANE M. KEITH GRAEDE L. C. MOSLEY WILLIAM L. PARK ER. Cowbo y's KinHeatli Hostess? LONDON (AP) -Prime Minister Edward Heath, an unrepentant bachelor, may run neit door next month and borrow a cowboy 's daughter as hls official hostess. -Shf is "°trs. Anthon y Barber, wife of the new cha~llor of the Exchequer. The Barbers m~ved next door lo the pnme minister in September. Jt is unlikely 11 Downing St. has ever welcomed a mistress whose father had a Wild West youth. ''Father is 8S now," said Mrs. Barber during a chat in the family home on Montpelier Square, •·lituf. _he was a rebe1 in his teens hke many youngsters now. '"He ran away to America when he was IS. Let's see. that would be ••• oh. around the turn of the century. He went West and was a cowboy and he worked on the docks in San Francisco and al the mines. "He wanted to find gold. He never did. He spent about three years in America and then came borne lo Yorkshire." ll is widely as.5Umed that as next-door neighbor Mrs. llarl>er " i It automaUcaUy serve as oCflcia1 hostess at No. 10 DoWJUng S~ 'l1le lady --it. "Mr. Heath has women friends of his own who can serve as hostess.'' she said. .. Actually, you know. the custom of the wi>men leaving lbe dining room while the men drink port is dying oot and that's really the only time you need a hostess." Mrs. Barber is of medium height, blonde and generally too interested in the con- versation to maintain a stately silence. She likes cigarettes, garden- ing, walking and chatling up a serious storm. She likes good movies and thinks pop music is horrible, although her husband joins their two leen- aged daughters in listening to such groups as the Who and Led Zeppelin. She does her own cooking for infrequent family parties. "I can't imagine being out or politics," she said, "but if we did retire I think I would get active in birth con- trol. The world's getting too many people in It." She can talk to politicians on their own level -as a politician's wife a"nd as a former candidate for Parlia- ment. When she was still Jean Asquith, Conservative party leaders talked her into stan- ding for Parliament at Hemsworth. a Socialist stronghold in Yorkshire. She didn't win enough votes but she won a husband, a young politician n a m e d Anthony Barber who con- gratulated her oo a campaign speech. Who Cares7 N• •""•' 11•wsp•p•r /11 th• _,14 c•r" •bctwt ., • ..,, co"''""'' .. a., fik• vo11r c-ll'l1111ity 111.a, 11•w•P•P•' 4001. /t'1 lh• DAIL 'I' l'tLOl. i CEDAR GRAPESTIKES Lumber 11 our shlic:lr. htt•rfor l•u than wo .-JI l•t lan.'I. <Whoa la Domi.nguu. -Joe IJ.bd.acq-. Ju1t ..:ll hiDI MorkMJJlyou.allef h•U .ay. "Who?') BEAL-KILL BUG KILLER ~ The Mg l qiamt 10 oz. thlago With ~ ........ 9qU-spray.-to pu.t OW a log or gol tho ra9CGL1 wheN tMT bido. th• noalo is .peclal. (Which moan1. "'what?". Mt tolbJ 147REG. J.97 GRAVITY tATE LATCH Thl1 l1 a fine galvanl1.d pi.co al laardwar.. UMd to work well, until lhoy TcrtMd II•• d.lvil in c:olleg• and ropoal.d tt. Law of Grority. (I tboull'hl that wo1 a good lo:w too.) SULPHATE OF D)MONJA Don't u" ll •••rf moath lllD.d you11 bo pl«1..d with tlte '"11.lt1. On• shot ond you'r. vood lot tho wbol• 1umm.r, lfi~ II'-grou, yov.'ll llff II. 67C 20LB. BAG ''ff"!·.l"·(J / • ·<lf)-., --·-··· 1441;1 STEER. ' "4"1'1•"'·~ S•u.S c.-P tMllllP LOMG RANDLE ROUND DR SQUARE SHOVEL No. Alie•. we don't 1011 it Jor !Sc onymoro. Tllo•• two piece shov•I• ju1t dida"t got JI. !ho•• r•ally worC. 136 NATIONAL STEER Th• old lfondby. can'I becrt it. Doesn't do much lor your DOH, bi.it th.., lawn do.sn't ... m to miad.. Ju1l • slay upwind. 2 CU. FOOT BAGS 2~99c POOL CHLORINE , . sa·OR'EY. SEL·LS GAL. If yM·imftu'JIGl)I ftd.doi\1 Jl'ltt:•pOlli t"- you're )v.st chunlring a.war DlO_,. Got th• :JCJm• potancy a• lb llt'llH at d oubW and mom. BllfDER TWINE 'th•r.'1 a powerful duo. A cbolc:•. So IT yo hOY9 a ta.nc:r JOI" on• brand or Ibo othw. JOl.l.'11 be pl.o:Hd.11 It"• another. w• tnoy ha-thal 100. SHADE SWAG LIGHT A hl!J bcnMI lclhrk thing In yollo• aad hlacL (Somohow I don't think this copy 11 too .munv - -tho lamp I« yoa.rwllJ Complete •wag kll lnc:lud.d. 5 99 REG. 11.87 12xl2 CARPETmE fadoor outdoor loam boc:kod iD ploatlftQI "''°"· Thor.'• a lot ol. iac\or stulf oul now, bu.I tbl• \111'! It. So OO:lf to do too. J v , ' ' C:HEAP KDIG D' LI WI EDGER w-1 cm .c1_., that will t~'a11oy dOf'" ol .dv• 49a7 ·and Ml• po-r not to bog down. v .. thl•, you won't bf, IOny. 18 INCH REEL MOWER II thi1Ji1 ih• WCIJ' you Ilk• to inow. again a strong 6997 four eye lo •agl.no. Go\ moro lor-yii'" mowor buying dollar. !How om Idol~ Rlll~h1t ENGLISH RAID MOWER Adftrtltod •JMtClal• llN good lhN Auvull 13, lt70 !Did you Uo• half tbo llM 1 toll Gout th• m.rehaHIM Gl"9e't tru•.I I WEEKDAYS 9 lo 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 lo 6 REGISTER HOW FOR FREE CLASSES WEEKLY LA MIRADA STORE WEDNESDAY EVENlllG 7:80 to 8:3-0 P.M. Trot out lb• hon• cmd lbrow tho gang 111. Tbia 11 o Um• to pr.Hat ml1taa.. and paf J"OUTH lf tl:r.• la bot C1)11L AUGUST 12 '"lo1tollatlo11. ol Sholl l roc'\•I• and Woll Stoadard1" AUGUST 19 '"How ta Tab care af YCll!r Lawn and Gard111." bf Ortho Joo•a. • 3 PC. PATIO SET 'Rornombor when •• used lo n:1n two c:hai.n and a loungo. Now w•·,.. all a llttl• older and Mom would lik• to 1.:lino too.. Polypropylon• w•bbi11g, "<ripes clean wllb a dcunp cloth. Or ju.It bOH it oil. Includes: 2 Chaise Lounges, !Aluminum Cha ir NOW ll~lr WILSHIRE DELUXE BAR-B-Q WAGON A ..,.ry •l.g-ont mod•I with lh• co..r iron grat••· si:aoffr hood. motor. warming o••n. r.dwood ••rriav and carving: or901. oad l!ION. Coin• in. Irick th• tlr.1. l•t'1 talk about a lrado. !Your mon•r for our barb.c:ue.) 4887REG. NOW 57.77 S.T.P. OIL TREATMENT Dump It la lho old crankas• ond wcrtch It 90 to work. {hJJ't that o 1lllr •lat•m•n\7 C-fOll HO yownJI wtth fOUf Mad ID tho oil 1111 ... tub.7 lmpo11ibl•!) WHITE AND GOLD PULLMAN ' . / ALUMINUM JELLY W• fta•• 10 manf pull--. that I dNKrd ru11nlAg lh•m. Wlsh we could show tll•zn oil. This ba1 th• nice one pl-co mold.ct top. lnclud•s ••-rt louce,, all th1\tb.d. 3988 " ' ' ~-~ .. ~4~.'..f~.~:~' ~\~' " .... I Ilk• loy1onheny bott .... but thi• •orb bettor crt t.hln.Lng up fOW' aluminum 9CNOG. Sm-ar on. wipe oil. and ..• "Mona. wheN did the ICf'eoD doot 907"' 87C BOZ. I •• 13 13 ' ... ~ ·-·---------~---------~---------------------· ------------------- rrldo1. •-• 7, 1•10 I - A (ample te Guide ••• Where to go • •• What to do • •• • BOBBY KAY, CLOWN PRINCE OF FOOLISHNESS , PUTS ON HIS FUNNY MAKEUP 4 \;t ,.._ .,,... .,."'i -... ":~.,;; PERFORMING ELEPHANTS THRILL AND AMAZE WITH THEIR PRECISION ROUTINES Intermission lt's 'Repertory' Again f' or South Coast Group By TOl\1 TITUS tt lt!f D1JIJ Pilot 51111 They're pultlng lhe "repertory" back into South Coast Repertory for the first t1n1e since the company was organized five years ago. And, according lo Da vid l~mmcs, ex· ccutive director of the resident Costa Mesa theater group, this lime it's likely to stay there. During the past few months, SCR has augmented its featured attractions on weekends with two and somelimes three perfonnanccs of a previous show. Currently the theater is staging "Rosen- crant7. and Guildenstern are Dead" Fri- day through Sunday with performances of an earlier offe ring. "Spoon River Anthology.'' Wednesdays and Thursdays. This. Emmes points out, keeps the theater {and the box office) open all but two nights a week. More importantly. il keeps the company's actors working steadly. ''OUR PRmtARY reason for returning lo the repertory concept was artistic," Ernmes dccfares. "I t's more difficult to operate lhiS way, but we'll be able to keep our .company going. If we'.re ~oing to ask . our actors to work with Soulh Coast Repertory exclusively, we 're going lo ha ve to keep them busy." will run in repertory with the forthcorn- ing "Lysistrata." and so on. "We will derinitely continue the repe rtory formal in our new season." Emmes says, "possibly cpening the lheater yet another night. There will be six subscription productions and six open repertory slots ... THE TANDEl\f scheduling has con- Lributed to a noticeable upswing in South Coast Repertory 's st.oc k -and company directors are beginning to think seriously of the pot~ntial fourth step in the group's develop ment (the first was the embryo period as a traveling troupe : lhe second the early da ys in 'he Newport theater. and the third the present 200.seat houSt' in C.OSla Mesa.) This would mean a fully professional resident company in new and larger . quarters, a decided feather in Orangr Co unty1s cultural cap. That day may not be too many moons away. * BACKSTAGE -Followers of !he old Laguna Playhouse who were watching television last Saturday night probably recognized an old playhbuse favorite, Mike Farrell . . . Mike, who's alMi doing a daily soap opera. cropped up as the heavy in an episode of ''Mannix.'' Earlier Saturday night. Costa Mesa's Mitch Vogel, the 14-year-old boy who co-starred in "The Reivers." appeared in "Adam-12'' . , . Mitch recently was seen in a pilot film. "T\•lo Boys,'' which may land in a series slot soon. Clowns Still the Greatest 111 Ringlii1g Bros. Cii·cus "ClO\\'Os are pegs on which to hang a ci rcus." P. T. Barrium made that statement almost a hundred years ago. This year clowns are just as important -maybe even more so-as in Barnum 's day. Throughout its 100 years of life, Hingling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus has had a world-wide reputation for presenling the greatest clowns in lhc world. To make sure that lhis reputa- tion always remains intact, the circus has opened a unlque annual training program to ins truct young performers in the clowning arts' very special skills. Eadl fall , at its winter h<>me in Venice. Florida, the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Ba iley College of Clowns opens its session. Applications are r ecei ved throughout the year and the most pro- mising applic:mts are selected . Suc- cessful graduates of the College arc offered Cf.lntracts to. appear in one or the two mammoth touring editions of The Greatest Show on Earth. Irvin Feld, president-producer of I Ung ling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey, is pleased wilh the clowns the college produces. "Fortunately, there's a little of the clown in each of us, though it may be hidden under layers of con- vention, frustration or fear ," Feld says. "Under the experienced guidance of our staff -all present or form.er professiooal clowns -our yoong funnymen develop into a delightful and varied group of young entertainers. Being funny on de- mand requires a lot or work and prscticat training." astride tandem bicycles. They ascend to the air for the traditional baUet aloft and the show is on ~ The imagtnative journey through time recaptures great moments in the-history or the circus including personalities of circusdom such as Tom Thutnb. Buffalo Bill, Jumbo, Gargantua, the gtraffe-neck woman a collection of human oddities and finally Phineas Taylor Barnum himself. The world's largest group al perform· ing elephants go gypsy. The performing pachydenns are part of a tempestuous gypsy caravan which creeps from tile d&rk of night to explode in a fiery "Elephant Fandango'' Dancing gi rls with tambourines and handsome men with guitars serenade the audience while elephants cavort, gypsy style. Crowning the production is "The Greatest Birthday Party On Earlh''. a glamorous gathering of all tbe circus family. In the center ring, a huge birth- day cake rises high into the air. Lovel y ladi es fonn the frosting and, in resoun· ding birthday salute, tl1f world-famous Zacchini famil y fires two human missiles from the mammoth X-15 cannon. Jt's a highly dramatic and entirely fitting finale to a birthday anniversary celebra- tion. Century Circus Show Will Play Anaheim Center • ) . , • .- £ 1 ,. .. ... ' \ c n ' ' l • There was no particular probl em of artistic ennui when SCR made its debut at the tiny Second Step Theater in Newport Beach during the early months of 1965. At that lime there were two and sometimes three shows playing in repertory, orteo with many of the same actors -since the company's roster was much smaller than its present com· p\emenl of 45 members. Those rirst productions -''Tartuffe," "Waiting for Godot." "Volpone" and "The Trial o( Gabriel Kapuniak" - required only minimal se lling and c:ould be transported in a station wagon, as indeed they olten were. But with the start of the 1965-66 season , SCR opted for t~hnical improvement which, in its miniscule house, necessitated the moun- tln_~ or one show at a time. a policy which bas carried through int.o the cur- rent season. Cameron and P..1ary Harvey of Gorooa del Mar are members of the 1970 Utah Shakespearean Feslival Compariy . the troupe is presenting three or the Bard's works through Saturday nighl. The clo wns fall into two general cate«ories-the "whiteface" and the "August." Traditionally the "wh.iteface" is nimble, graceful, elegant with a touch or sadness in his gaiety. Typically, the "August" Is some version o( the wikl- haired. wild-eyed, grotesquely-dressed bumbler. whose feet always get stuck in a bu cket and whose pants are always falling down. He's on the wrong end of the stick, bu! he almost always turns the tables in the end. Ringling Bros and Barnum & Balley Cln.'\ls is bringtng its tooth anniversary show to the Anahiem Convention Center Arena. Aug. t:S:.19. TWO HUMAN CANNONBALLS ·ARE SHOT ACROSS THE ARENA "Now. after three years al the Cost.a Mesa theater, we 're really cemented into the operation of it,'' Emmes ex- plains. "We can afford our actors a continuing wet..kly identity rather than ha,·e them w-ait six or eight weeks bet\\·een showt. "Al.SO, THERE'S an obvious financial ad\•flntage in using the repertory system. We were able to play 'One Flew over the Cuckoo's Ne.st.' which was our greatest box office 111ccess, for two lnonlhs by putting il Into repertory v.·il.h 'Saved.'" Now, when ".Rosencrantz "n d f:•itldenstern" com pletes Its "prime time·• run next month, It wUI be: moved into the wr.!'.'kday ~lols And rvn con· currently with SCR's next production, "The Boys in the Band,'' which in turn • Two more Orange Coast community theaters will honor their l o p performances or the past season this month . _ _ the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse will stage Its awards program at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club on Aug. 22, while the Huntington Beach Playhouse follows up with Its yearly shindig Aug. 30 at the Whistling Oyster in Huntington Be.ach. Miss Raye Set For Viet Retm·n Martha Rlye, currenUy st.arrlng ln Ski and Marty 'Krofft's new Channel 4 St"ries, 'Tbe BUg1loos, '' being taped al Paramount Studio, plans lo return IQ Vietoam to enterlaln the G. l. '1 as "°°" as the fint 17 segment.I o( the new series are finished . The popular comedleone, whose 1nany vlsils lo the war .!One have earned her the gratitude of sol1der1 and civilians allke. expects to ba able to head out on ill'r next Vieh1r11n tour by mid-Sep.. tembcr. Accotdlng to legend, the "August'' came int.o being by a fluke 100 years ago. In the Zirkus Renz in Berlin. so the story goes. a stableboy, trying on clothes too big for him, got into the ring by mistake. ~ truth Is that some. one very like "August" was k n o w n to the Greeks and Romans. As long as there is a circus. there will be clowns to charm mlilts and laughter frOm children ot all ages. Over haH-a-mlllioo dollars has been spent in costuming and dresslng flve .spectaculars which are featured In the Centennial Circus. Opening the spangle- splashed production is the "Big Brass Band," a procession whLcb presents :he enure company with 1 Unltod Nations of performers Crom every country under the sun. It seu the sJ)lrlt tor the three. ring thrills to follow. The aerlal ballet, "Bicycles Bullt for Two," opens as 60 performers in turn-of- lhe-century clothes enter tlte arena While there may be some nostalgia aboul the "good old days" when the performances were held under canvas tents called the "Big Top" there is much lo be said for the comfort of the indoor spectaculars, ;md basically the character of lhe circus has remained the same. The weigPt of the canvas and the need for crews of 400 roustabouts simply became too monumental and expensive to handle and It was getting lo the point wh.ere putting up the canvas was the greatest show or all . In the tent days the ctrcu.ses traveled with 1.200 people in llO or 90 railroad cars. The trains moved from town to town In four sreCUona -the rirtt was the menagerie, cook ho'1ses and side- shows: the 9!COOd was lhe big t.op: the third the seata, and linal!Y the perronners. elephants and the ring stock. Today's circus, although atreamlined is still the Jarg~ .travellna ahow. 'nle Big 'fop was struck for the last time Jn Pittsburgh In 1956 and taken Indoors, playing tn coliseums and artnas which were springing up Utroughoul uie country. ln 1940 the first changes were noticed when John Murray Andersen, • Broadway showman, was hired to st<ige production numbers. That Is when lhe sawdus t became spangled with girls, glil• ter and razzle-<lazzle. Igor Slravlnsky was asked to write U1e score for an elephant ballet -and· proving no one ls immune from the lure or a ci rcus -he accepted and worlted with Merle Evans, musical direc- tor wilh lhe circus. to be~sure the notes written could be played by circus musi- cians. "Of coune then! always were pro-- ducUon numbers." says Irvin Feld, presi· dent and producer of the circus. "P,T. Bamum slaged them in the 187D's and ao·s. Wt these usually opened the perfonnances and were baRd on a theme from history -Hannlbal Cross- ing the Alps' or 'The Field 0£ lbe CJolh of Gold.• They used to have girls on a trapeze, but we ha ve ae ot them In an aerial ballet and where the circuses ln the 'oW day11 just ended,· we ha ve a grand nnak:." Rlna:ling Brothm circus COfnbhtcd with Barnum & Balley. The Greatest Show on Earth, In 1919 and guve Its first combined show In Modi.son Square Garden. WEEKENDER INSIDE FEATURES Friday. August '1, 1170 The Santiago Communication• Team, Inc.. comes to the riscue in efnergencies. Jack Kneass tella about this Uttle known group oC ciU:.en band radio enlhUJiasts in hls Wheels and camping column on Fage 22. Tr•vel Page a Gulde to Fun Page d Newport-Balboa ExhJblt Pa1e D t.J:ve Theattr Page !Z Lh1da flarri1on Zanuck P11e ti Out 'N' About Pages U • ZS "Kelly's Heroe1" P11e U FolkJorlco at Bowl Page U Sarfinl Fllm Page U Television Log P1ge U Gulde to Movie& Pa1e II l.n the G•IJerfes Page f7 Diane Dye and Twln P11e !7 Catalfn» Art Festival P1p 1'7 ' ! '• ... .. ' f • ) . . • ' I ~ l' I I U DAll.V 'llOT Ftfdlf, Auvast 7, l~O AUG. 7·-M fUHV.&L OP AJITl-'l'llo ·-o1Artswith180 aru.m, ICldpl«O ud ...a-~ lbeir work oo the festi· •II poandl, will bl -lllrougb Aug, 30. At 1•30 each neniQg tbe haolml cl Ibo -.,,, will be performed on tbe MIO ol tbe ln1m -with live models posed and C06tu,med in thirty pabrtlngt and eculptures as the creator of the original work showed thtm. Vic Schoen has C<lmpMed special music fot the period and mood of each worlt and the 2J..piece orchestra will be under his directioo. Other features of the festival include Rene's Puppet show, The Anna Mary Beet children's arl uhibit, and Sonday Oil tbe G.....,. Ad- mission to the grounds is SO centa for adults. lG cents for children under 1% years. Pageant of the Masten: tickets are $2-fS Mon.-Tbur.; SW& Fri., Sat. and Sun. Phone 4.9f..1147 fer debt rnervauom. AUG. 7·11 ALL CALIF. ART SHOW-The Laguna Beach Art A!sociaUon Gollery, '111 CIJH Drive, Laguna Beach, ii having U. All Clli!oioia Art E>blbit Jn conjunction with tbe F..Uvll ol Aris Wring tbe run of tbe Festival. Gallery Haun m 10 a.a to 6 p.rn. daily with docent tours on wetteoda at 2 p.m. "lbere are 74 works Wlibited out ol over 1,100 entered by California artists. A tram -es betweeo tbe F..Uval ml tbe Gallery during tbe complete nm ol tbe .OOW. Ticket. to Gallery are 50 cents. AUG. 7·11 ART·A·FAIR-Tbe Laguna J\eadt Fine Arts A!sociali<ln ii presenting Its fourlb l!lllllal Art-A·Falr I\ 346 N. Cout l!lgh. way, Laguna Beach, tbrougb Aag. 30. About 15 artilll, sculplors ml craftlmen will be li>owing tbelr work. Hoor1: 11:30 a.m.-10:» p.m. Admlaaion %5 cents, cbUdrea under 12 u... Tr11vel How to Go In Mexico By STAN DELAPLANE A.lUIC, Mexico -This ii a pleasant, IUllllY t .... + village. Cobbled 1treeta. An old colonial dmdl. A coo[, llowery little hotel -Posada AJ!Jic. O..adalajara'1 boulevards and bright ligbta are less than an bour away. 11 you want to go. Of the American retirement colonies around Lake Cbapala, Ajijic is the liveliest. The artists end writers settled here, taking over colonial houses with interior flowered patios and redoing them. * la oil woll In !hi• PorodlH? Not quite. Everybody says: "This is the worst fly year I've •eeii here. JUBt keep after your maid to close the screen doors." Not so easy. Maids go out a dqor and simply leave it open. The solution! Follow the maid around. Close tb'em yourself. There are 1ome mosquitoes now in the rainy season. Spray-on 110ff!" is the best I've found. Bring IL Can't find ii In the stores here. In mosquito country, roll your ateeves down In the morning and evening, Spray your hands, face and ankles. * ''Will you i1mw1r theH questions on Mutco: Can we get HCUrlty checks tent to vt?'' Yes. Poople here are getting them. ''What kind of shots do we rie.d?'' No vaccination certificate needed between Mex-ico and the U.S. anymore. But I get one every three years. U.S. Public Health advises typhoid and tetanus shots for all countries -You don't have to. But why not? You feel safer. * ''Whet kind of 9a1ollne credit card? (We have St111d•rd Oil.) No gas credit card• hero. Gas and oil 11 a Government monopoly. ''Any advice on drlvlnt?'' · Highways are good. Some ~ toll roads and super-good. Just don't drive at nighL Livestock wanders around. And you might find a burro coming through the windshield into your lap. * In cities, a man in khaki with a litUe badge on his cap directs you into a street parking 1pace. Tip him a peso when you leave. In smaller towns you find boys about 10 doing this. He says, 41Watch your car, Meestair?" Tip bim a peso when you leave. * Now these boys also wash cars -with a bucket and brush while you are parked. And "wash'' and ••watch'' sound much alike. You may come back and find you owe him a whole bunch of r;sos for washing. To avoid this, say "watch it.' Put your forefinger under your eye. Pull the lower lid down. * If you do want the car washed -(it's cheap and good) -make a deal on bow much in advance. * . The waiter holds up thumb and forefinger an inch apart. He means ••1•11 be with you in a minute." If he closes one.. fist and hits it with 1 the other elbow, it means: "That guy is .aiingy.'' 11-!ake a motion of .Pulling a goatee. The rasSlng girl knows you think she is the greates thing since frozen tortillas. * ''Wh•t •r• the best fr.. ports •round th• world?" Best I've found are Shannon Free Airport. The Virgin Islands. Hong Kong and Singapore. Free port means import.• are brou,bt In without duty or taxes. But -that doesn t mean they alwasy sen them with a modest markup. You have to know what you are buying -a comparative price at home. Example: Tokyo Free Airport is: t marked up so that you get JitUe saving. * .i "How many cigarettes c•n yfN llring into E•ropa?" ~ For just about all countries, the rule i1 two ~ cartons. You can order these al a cheap price ~ a t the airporl free port shop -in all tho lenninals l in New York. They deliv'; them on the plane. Now I take lhrte cartona-American cigarettes -coot from 50 cenll in France to '1 a package fn Greece. J tell the 'Cuttoma man: '"l'he1e are just for my own use. And I'm going onward in a few days." They'vp always passed U!em for ~me. I ---·-· -·--·---------·-· --~ ·--. -...-·~ .. ~ .---. ----. . . . . . AUG. 7 ·St SAWDUST FF.STIV AL -Over ISO artists and craitamen I will be displayin( tbelr work at the Sawdust. Festival in the 900 block ot Lagwta Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, from 10 a.m. to mldnicht dally. There ia no admiasion eharce. AUG. 7 NB UBRARY FILMS-The-Newport Beach Library audie>- visual department in cooperation with the Santiago Film Circuit is presenting Cree films each Fri. at 8:30 p.m. in the mall at Fashion Island, Newport Beach. This Fri. the program iJ .. Donuts from Homer Price" and "Tokyo Olym- paid." Jack Link letter will be there as ho:iit. AUG. 7 JUNIOR TEEN DANCE -The Junior Teen Club of West· minster will bold dBnc:eJ on most Fri. nights from 7:30 • 9:30 p.m. in the Community Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., West· minister. Admission, 50 ctnts. "Pollutions" will play for danc:lng on Aug. 7. AUG. 7 ·II JAPANP.SE VILLAGE -Rock groups and light shows will be the "heavy happenings" at Japanese Village oo Sat. even· ings th1r summer. from 7:30 p.m. to midnight with the "Samu· rats" and "Tbe Prophets" performing with the. aid of Fila· ment - a light ahow. All thia in addition to the other attrac- tions at the village including trained bears, a seal show. karate exbtbitions and tame deer. Food is available. 6122 Knott Ave., Buena Park. Phone 523-2381. AUG. 7-SEPT. 5 DIBNEYLAND SllMMEJt -Dl.meyland Is c e le bra t l n g its 15th birthday with over 500 entertainers all summer long in the "Super Summer'' celebration. There will be 21 special abow1 and talent groups with "Show Me America," mllllcal comedy on the Tom.orrowland stage at 8 and 10 p.m. Mon.-Fri. The Tomorrowland TerTace will bave ''Sound Castle Ltd." with new sets, new costumes and top rock favorites every evening from 9 except Sun. ~ ''M.in<rity of Sb." will take over the Terrace on Sun. and may also be heard on the Tomorrowland Stace on Sat. and the Plua Ganlens on FrL The "Entertalnmeut Com· mlttee" plays OJI tbe Terrace Mon.-Sat. afternoons. The Plaza Gardens will have: "Big Bud" sounds for ballroom dancing, nigbtly e::rcept Fri., with leaders such as Te:r Beneke, Sammy Kaye ml Harry Jam., playing. Sunday brings ,.Country Jubilee" on the Tomorrowland Stage with a dlHerent group each week. drawn from folk·music experts. Jau will be heard in New Orlerw Square and aboard the Mart Twaia. All this plus the 53 permanent fun.filled attractions all aumm.er Jong. Hours: a a.m. to 1 a.m. daily. AVG. 7 -SEP!'. 7 KNO'IT'S BERRY FARM - A Golden Cavalcade of Country and Western Music will be staged each weekend at Knott's, through Labor Day, Sept. 7, with showtlmes -Fri. -Sat. 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.; Sun. 5, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. "The Sound ~era lion," a group of 24 young men and women from John Brown University, will present shows Mon.-Thurs. at 7, 8:30 and to p.m. Hours: 9 a.m.·11 p.m. Mon.-Thurs .: t Lm..-midnigbt. Fri . .Sat.; Close 10 p.m. Sun. Admission $1 adults, 25 ce:nta for children 11 and under. No additional cbarp for shows. 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. AUG. 'i·t DISNEY ON PARADE -Anaheim Convention Center, 800 w. Katella Ave., Anaheim. Performances Tuesday • Sat., I p.m., maUnees at 2 p.m. Sal.; 2 and 6 p.m. Sun . Closed Mon. Ticket!, $2.50 • $5.; (Children under 12 $1 less.) avail· able at box office or ticket agencle.s. 100 Disney characters appeart.og for the rim time together b1,a live two-and-one-. half ~ -· It blmda live proclucUon, sound elle<:U, mo-UOn pictu!el, magic,. music alll\ lighting effects In a new fcrm ol onlerlalnmaJt. On stage through Aug .. 9. AUG. I TEEN CLUB DANCE -The We.stminster Recreation and Parts Department will bold a Teen Club Dance: in the com· munUy Center, 8200 We.sbninster Ave., (for Westminste.r teen 1) each Sat. from I p.m. to midnight. Admission, fl. for members. fl.50 for non-members. The "Shoppe" group will play for dancing Aug. 8. AUG. 1 ·3' BENEFIT FILM SERIFS - A series of films to benefit the Laguna Beach Free Clinic will be shown each Sunday .at 7 p.m. in the: Laguna Beach High School auditorium, 62S Park Ave., Laguna Beach. These are experimental films by student and professional filmmakers. Tickets, by do- nation, are '2 each or $9 for the series. AU funds raised "'. will go to the Laguna Free Clinic. Available at the door or ii! at Sound Spectrum. 1265 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach; ( The Groove Company, 2303 W. Balboa, Newport Beach and at the Free Clinic, 422 Glennerye Ave., Laguna Beach. AUG. I JAZZ SESSION -The Moose Hall, 7409 Lorge Circle, Hunt- Ingtoo Beach, will be the spot ror a Jazz Session put on by Jazz Incorporated, Aug. 9 at 1:30 p.m. AJI musicians invited to attend free. others: members, $1, guests, $2. AUG.11·31 POPS CONCERT -Henry Brandon will conduct concerts at 9 p.m. every Mon. in Stage Court on the pedestrian mall at FashJon Island. Newport Beach. A SS.member brass band will perform one week and a concert orchestra on the alter· nate Mon. No admission charge. AUG. ti· ti CIRCUS -Ringling Bros and Bamum and Bailey Circus opens in the Arena of Anahejm Convention Center, 800 W. ¥.atella, Anaheim, Aug. 13 to nm through Aug. 19. Reserved seats for adults are $2 ~ $5; children under 12, $1 off on all seats at most performances (some exceptions). Performances every night at 8 and matinees at.2:45 p.m. Fri.: 10:30 a.m. -.nd 2:30, Sat.; 2 and 6 p.m. Sun.; 2:45 p.m. Mon. -Wed .. tickets available at most acencies and the box office. Phone: · 635-5oo0. AUG. U ALL STAT~ FESl'IVAL -The sixth annual All States Festival (formerly Old-Tlmer-New·Timer Picnic) is sched- uled as a kick-Oft to Costa Mesa's Cultural Art.s Week, Aug. 16 Jn COeta Mesa Park 18th at Patk Ave. from JI a.m. to sundown. There will be an art show, entertainment, door prim, inf'oiinatlonal and food booths and a spaghetU dinner. The diMer i5 $1 for adu1~. 'lS cents for children. One may brina: hh own picnic or purchase food from the concessions whlcb will be open. free cotton candy for kiddies. AUG. -SEPT. HARBOR TOUR -The Pavilion Queen, Newport Harbor's newest fun attraction, is making sightseeing lripa at ll a.m,, 3 and 5 p.m. dally, departing from the Pavilion for the go. minute cruise of the bay. Cocklall cruises wllh an open bar sail at 7, 9 and 11 p.m. The boat 11 a replica of an old-tlme rlvtr boat, lavlshly deoorattd In rldi rtda ml golda. (Avail· able for char1a' parties, too.) Far{ for &fghtseelng Is 12 for adults, $1 for children under U, tots Wider s free with adults. Rffetvat.IOM -'73-5245. AUG. -SEPT. HARBOR CRUISES -Fully narrattd cruioes around New· Port Harbor leave each hour, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. and a moon- llabt cruise at 8 p.m., from the Fun Zooe Dock by the F'tn'1 L&Ddln& on &lgewattr Ave., in Balboa. Boat.a cruise In sheltered w1ter around the lslanda, vltwlng thfl home& .and yachts of I.he arta. TlcXet.s, $1.25 for adults ; ChUdren under 12 $0 cents: kiddies under i frtt. Rcsetvatlons-- phone 67U240. Actress' Roe an't -Be Beat HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -One thing beat. being the boss' son In the entertainment business, and that's being the k/,ilj~. boas' wife. ""'-"'" < Llnda HarTison Zanuck ls the bride of Richard Zanuck, production chief at 20th Cen-, tury·Fo:r Studios. She is one of the stars of ~ "Bracken's World," the week· Jy televi5ion drama· dealing with life on the sound stages f '., , and e:reculive Mt.es of a ma~ ~\~ jor studio. (;JJ Unda held the job before she married Zanuck. \ But lite did not worsen for , ~ her after the nuptials. Indeed, Linda findt fellow l cast members, the crew, 1 ~· guards on the gate and offJce p er s o n n e I extraordinarily friendly. The fact that she ls young. beautiful and shapely should be taken into account, too. "Dick and 1 went together for a couple of years before we were married,'' she ex- plalned the other day In her husband's commissary where the service was never better. Old Newport and Balboa "Of course, it's easier work· ing at a studio where my A g~ntieman visitor in the Newport Beach City Hall pauses to enjoy the col- hwiband is in charce. Dick lection of photographs which have been assembled by the Newport Historical is well liked on the lot so Society from 22 different sources. They show the Newport and Balboa area he· I'm treated accordingly. fore there was a jetty and before the islands were residential. This exhibit may "In the beginning, when we _b_e_e_n-"j-'oyo..ed __ an...cytimo_·_e_th_e_ci_·1-"y-ha_U_is_o.o_pe_n_tbro __ ug=-h_S_epto_. ________ _ were going together, people grimaced and though I was working only because of Dick. l really wasn't that am- bitious." Before being cast Jn her role as Paulette Douglas, a young coatract actress, Linda appeared in "Way ••• Way Out," "A Guide for the Mar- ried Man" and "Planet of the Apes." All, incidentally, were 20th Century·Fo:r movies. "I don't know why, but the more I work the more am- bitious I feel ," iiihe said, pushing her Jong, straight black hair away from her face. "My part in the series is sympathetic and I don•t have to go to work every day because the cut ts large and the stories are diversified. "An actress couldn't ask for more than to 'play an actress. So far I've done chorus girls. a navy nurse, a waitress and · an Indian." Mrs. Zanuck sajd there was no correlation between the machinations of. the characters Jn the NBC aeries and the troo-liJe activities on the Fo:r Jot. "It's made to appear on the show that the head of the studio isn't aware of half that is going on," she said. Live Theater "The Fantasticks" Musical fantasy on stage at San Clemente 'llteater, 20'l Avenida C abrillo, San Clemente, Wed. -Sat at 8:30 p.m. through Aug. 8. Reserva- tions --492-04&5. Lost Campers Aided Santiago Squad Helps Conventioners When over 700 units, owned County providing mobile units by members of the Family and a communications truck Motor Coach Association; where two-way radio recently rol!ed into Orange li,.Ji ·.ai!ltlG'" assistance ls requested or ap- County Fairgrounds for their ·~ , . . ·'--proved by the authorities. annual National Convention, By JACK KNEASS ·· ] Typical call-outs include miss- those who got. lost, either en ~---------ing children searches, disaster route or on the fairgrounds relief and community events. operations and monitors the or persons needed for an An This ............. r.11 0,gan'··o·on treacherous Santa a Canyon ,......,J.'l"'"'' .,... urgent message, were assisted Road every holiday weekend, has been re¢0inized by some by the Orange County head~ · · business o r g-a" n i • at i on. 1 rt ed s t · Co communicating and assisting .. qua er an 1 ago m· although not much has an.. municatiOQJ Team, Inc. all mobile units equipped with ,.-. pea red in print aboul it. Adohr 'lbe Santlagos-, 75 unHs and CB eqwpment. Fanns recently donated a 170 .members strong, has its 'I'he Santiago CTI i s milk truck, which the San- home office in partially made up of members tiagos will convert into a Santa Ana, but of Santiago REACT. a n mobile CB and radio unit. and counts its mem-the Orange County Painters, hers all over the organization of affiliated Decorators, Co n t r a c t o r s souWand with Art groops sporniored by General Association cootributed a CB Abalre and Pat-Motors Research, who s e (a Johnson 124), regarded as rick Culkins of members monitor chan nel 9 one of the very best. Costa Mesa, Ray Young of FoUrt-JACK KNl'.US arid offer assistance t-o :ill TF YOU OWN a CB and are tain Valley and Lloyd Crain other people wiih CB two-way towing up the coast or of Huntington Beach, among radio. 1'hey report fires, traf. anywhere nea r this ar.ea it the team members. fie accidents and the like to is nice to know someone, N E Go b the proper authorities. somewhere, almost always is I TH SANTIA mo ile monitoring channel 9. either units are some 20 or so camp-11IE BALANCE OF the ers aod trailers but it is not membership consists of mem-~~:e. a mobile unit or from necessary to own such a vehi-hers of IMPACT, a group cle to join the organization. composed of Amateur and If you are an active CBer From the start of the Faml-Citi1.en Band raido operators. and want to beloog to San- ly MCA affair to the end, IMPACT maintains working tiago, you can contact presi· the Santiagos were 00 24-hour agreements with various cities deat Bob Leef, SC'I'I, Box: duty, assisting coaches ert!'_•_n~djior~gaiii!UUliii. ~tioiiiosiiiiiiiiniiO>"iiiiaiiingiloiiiijjlilOil552il.ilS;jjaiiiniitaiiAniiiiaiii. iiiiiiiiiij~~ route to ta ke the right turnoff and relaying messages to ron- ventklneers. A hosp it a I emergency, a lost child, tbe death of a show visitor aM a stack of what appeared to be 2,000 or more message5 testi[ied to their activities. IRIDAL RIQ.ISTRY ACCESSORIES DANISH FURNITURE EXECUTIVE GIFTS 4JW\ 1'\ .......... Jii!L dan~.i.9 ~ Th.is little known ocganiia· ~-·· lion of Citizen Band radio Lil C d "Ollver" enthu~asts gives freely of its 2640 E.ColU•Mlll!h orona el Mot' tfusica1 Versioh ot "Oliver services on many occasions. Doif1;19=30+oS:lt Tel: 673-2.1110 Twist" on stage at the 1t aids in Search and Rescue °'"''*"• J1+oS &oFA-Mast•rCha.rge Moulton Playhouse, 6 o 6fjiiiiiliiiialiiiimiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiii~~ii;;;;iiiiii&Oii.iiiiiiii:::iiiC;a;;;&;.,.<:;;:;;:ii,"iiiiimiiiiZO~ Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Ii Beech, Tues. -Sun. at 8:30 p.m., through Aug. 30. Reservations -494-0743. ''Slots" and "Tbe American Dream" 1'wo one act plays are on stage at the Nifty Theater, , 307 Main St., Huntington Beach at 8:30 p.m. Fri. and Sat. tnrougb Aue. 22. Rtserva· lions -833-4571. "Spoon River Anthology" On stage at the South Coas t Repertory theater, 1 8 2 7 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Wed. and Thurs. through Aug. 27 at 8:30 p.m. Reservations -646·[363. ~ "Rosencrants-and Gu:Udenatem '' On stage at South Coast Repertory theater, I 8 2 7 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Fri. -Sun. through Aug. 30 al 8:30 p.m. Reserv•tions. - 646-1383. THI VIATl•tolO•s o, FRANK M. HAMILTON "ow •XCl.USIVl\.Y Ar CHALLIS GALLERIES IT'S SALAD TIME! H•r• at Newporf Produce we heve •II th• ''fi)(in's ." l•ttuce, endive, romaine, butter or Bibb lettuce, or ready tossed just waitin9 for the dressing! How about e frui.t siled, melons, cant•loupe, honeydew, Cranshaw, casaba and so· delicious with fresh strawberries, blueberries, 9rapes, cherries, etc. topped with a sprig of fresh mint. Come Seel Come Savel We have them all! And .,t the Lowest Pric•s anyw~ere. LOOK WHAT lOc Will BUY AT NEWPORT PRODUCE! ··················•\••••······· • SANTA ANA NOW • IY POPUL.AI DEMAND • FOR HEALTHT DIElS • LOCALLY GROWN LARGE • ICEIERG COACHELLA • : TOMA TOES : LETTUCE : GRAPEFRUIT : • • 1 CJ( LI. : 1 CJ(EA. : 1 CJ(u.. : •• w1t~~~.s 'c~~"'" • wrtH ~1:1~ C~uroN • w1tH ~1:.z C~uPoN • . . . .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE AUG. 12 ihese restaurants demand the finest for their customers. That's why they feat ure NEWPORT PRODUCEI Patronize them! "lerkshlrn On The lay," Newport; Olllmon's. Balbo•: VIiiot~ '""· B•lbo•; Chorlles Chili, Newport: The New Vlllo Vldo, Cost• M1sa. "ORANG& COUNTY'S FASTEST GROWING PROD UCE ORGANIZATION" ~ N~jJ~~CE ~:r_?_.:'_::~ "35 Y«ors of Produce '"'V hert Quality ls The Know H0t0" OrdtT of the House .. ···-· • t :r •n •• • !>- " a n- a •d s, ' B " •• " it " is n " l• i- -r. ' • ' -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Frldat, August 7, 1970 ~UT 'N' ABOUT NORM OAJL Y PILOT !!,') By STANLEY and ARLEY STEVENS ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Here's Johnny The new,est addition to Costa Mesa's thriving restaurant business is located at 725 'Bater St .. just south of Bristol. The "Johnny" comes from Johnny Carson. quick witted drawing cent of television's .,Tonight Show." Johnny is expected to inspect ijle latest member of his growing chain in person with~ in the next few weeks. CHEERFUL SPOT The interior of Here's Johnnys is the most modern we have seen. The booths themselves are molded fiberglass of bright blue with black cushions of red and blue p1a1d. The red and blue color scheme is carried throughout making a sunny, cheerful room. One wall carries pictures of Johnny Carson in various costumes. On each table is a red phone and orders are delivered to your table 1~ within six-t~ight minutes after you JOHNNY C•••oN place your caJJ. This applies to take out orders as well. " ~-­(~~ EAT IT HERE OR TAKE IT OUT We tried both the take out and dinner at John- ny's and found the food excellent, well packaged for take out and cheerful , fast service for both orders. Manager Dave Clard provided a tour of this amazingly efficient establishment. A loudspeaker calls your order to waiti ng personnel on an assem- bly line. A conveyer belt starts a tray at one end and as the order is assembled it is added to the tray. The equipment is modern as tomorro,v. One machine starts a milk shake in one swift operatio~ low-cal soft serve. syrup and whipping all are d one by foot controls at one time. Real Canlonese food eat her• or t•k• home • STAG CHINESE WINO 1 t 1 2 t st pl., Newport Be•ch ORiole 3.9560 01'" y._ 1Nu4 Dmtf 1Z·l2 -Fri. otl s.t. "ti J •·& THE WINE CELLAR "A RESTAURANT OF ENCHANTMENT" For Those Who Enjoy Ma9nificent Cuisine And Rne Wines Bob Moline-Vocal Guitar RESERVAT,IONS ONLY • OPEN WED., THURS., FRI ., AND SAT. NfWPOIT llAot CAlifaNIA 1107 Jo\MBOREE RD. PHONE 17141 644·1700 OPEN 7 Do\ YS LUNCH I. DINNER lnforll'l•1 Oce•n Front Bru11chi111J Dlnin9. l1111ckin9 •nd lmblbl119. 1601 W, Co•.t Hwy., Newport le•cli For R•1•r,.•tio11•, Ri119 Ut •f 541-1166 "THE ONLY o\UTHINTIC lo\LIOo\ IAY WILD LIFE PRESERVE" Now there's TIM MORGON al the Dod1 What more could any~ one ask? Except of course our usual viva- cious vittles and groovy grog (regarding the lat- ter, Jack, our alchemist i• back!) MENU The menu reflects lhe planning that has gone into the restaurant. Fourteen difie-reot hamburger versions, priced from $1 to $1.90, are featured. !:acti includes cole slaw or tossed salad and French fries. There are four dinners: steak, fish, shrimp or honey fried chicken. The chicken is marinated in honey before frying and comes out of lhe broaster moist and delicious. Dinners are priced from 95 cents to $3.25. A children's menu, truly for kids, priced fri:.'!:n 45 cents to 60 cents, includes hamburgers, hot dogs. chicken and the all American peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Each comes with French frie s. Sununer Luaus Those drilting up Pasadena way these sum~ mer Sundays can enjoy a diverting package deal being offered by the Huntington-Sheraton Hotel, 1401 S. Oak Knoll. A full-scale Hawaiian luau complete with Polynesian feast and a traditional island stage show. EVERY SUNDAY "'-A Juau will be staged every Sunday evening through Sept. 6. Starting time is 6 p.m. and the asking price of $8.50 per person includes din- ner, show, tax and tip. Tropical rum punch is served with the meal and there's a regular drawing for door prizes. On tap too is dancing before the show and island favors for all patrons. JEFF APAKA Heading the entertainment program Is Jeff a lot ol ~ thfn8S ~,I/ happen to you .•.• Whethec •L's hiMh, dnner or-<! ~ 'r"'V" be s~d you c hose I.lei p«itli HIM Offill,, ..... u:toN 541-6263 10..n11...:11t 1821 NOf\TM nrsTIN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~SN<TAANA W•lcome to the Wonderful World of OMELETS PRESENTED AT THE · EGG AND ALE CHOICE OF 30 OMELm . Dol}J hh'MI t..Kll er Dl•- s.n.11 wlftl bUdi T,., er Hon 'd111nes t ... ""'s.t.-l••ll lt,. J : m ..... 1-10 $11 .-L1..c:lrl f·2; DIHet" l•f-CLOllD MONDAYS 3101 NEWPORT BLVD., NEWPORT BEACH l11ter fre111 1'•rtll119 lot slQ • tM Sit• ef THI IG• AND .All, •tljKent to ,tying lutler. t7J.tt77 LUNCHEOl'r by the Seo .•• Served from 11:00 to .C:OO p.m. GOUR~fET DINNERS ... with a VIE\V sf'rved in 1 Grand ~lanpcr from 5:00 to 11 :00 p.nJ. Week- ends IS:OO til l 2!00 p.m. THE ELEGANT ~~~t ' RESTAURANT 1900 WT OCEAN 80Ul.EVARD; LONG BEACH, CWfOmt!A LOBSTER LOVERS Everyone is '•l~ing •bout our giant Au1trtlitn Lol:.1ter T•il 116-20 01.I ' ' .. JOIN THE IARSTOOL SURFERS AT OUR Coc~t•il Hour Evary FTiclty 5 to 7 11.educff R•i•t 011 Or111•1 E11terl•lnme11t St•rt. •I I • ~------------------------------ Apaka. widely known as the "Voice of Hawaii." Accompanied by an orchestra, other performers ~~sM!oried~ge~~l llawailan, Samoan, Tahitian Paci(ic Dining Car Newport Beach's Pacific Dining Car opened shortly after this year got under way. \Vhich makes it aU the more a pity we never got around to bitting the place until one night last week. Unquestionably it has to be one of the finest restaurants to open in Orange County in recent years. .. Our dinner excursion to the Dining Car was superb in all departments -food , service and atmosphere. A lingering afterglow · of contentment resulted in a long to be remembered evening. THE SAME -YET DIFFERENT In a sense this establishment represents a South Coast edition of Los Angeles' widely-ac- claimed Pacific Dining Car. lt shouldn't be con- si dered a precise duj>licate, however. since there are some quite basic differences in decor and menu offerings. Ownership and management is the same and that's in the capable hands of the Idol family, proprietors of the original Dining Car at 1310 VV . 6th St., together with well-known Cook's Steak Hou se on Olive St. both in downtown Los Angeles. The Los Angeles Dining Car enjoys a reputation as the oldest steak house in that city, havinJ? been in continuous operation since 19'll, MEET THE IDOLS Operations at Newport's Dining Car are under the personal direction of Wesley A. Idol II and FAMILY DINING COMPLETE DINNER UNDER $l "OCEAN FRESH SEAFOOD" 673-1103 COMPLITI llEAlfAST flOM 7 A.M. flATUllN• OUI FAMOUS COINID 111111 01 PAJTtAMI OMLITTIS • 11• llNIDICT HOUSE SPECIALTIES COINID lllF • PASTIAMI •SALAMI IAGILS • LOX e IAl·l·Q HAM 01 lllF ROAlT lllF e INOClWUUT 30S MARINE AVE ., BALBOA ISLAND 675-3375 Food To Go Open Fri. &: Sot. to Mldnltht DON JOSE' NOW APPEARING VIC GARCIA LTD With Vocals By GERMAINE e COCKTAILS e Enchil•d• tnd Taco , ............... $1 .35 Chill Rtlltno • Enchlladt ............ $1 .50 s.n..11 wltti aic.. IMM. To1t.dlm -4 s.11111 9093 E. Adams (at Magnolit1 Hunt. Beach 962-7911 ll~itt lfurst lftttt * What's Happenin9 At The White Horse Inn? * * New Luncheon Menu with table service * Group facilitie• for lunch * Monday night Sfacial Complete Prime Rib Dinner • , , $3.25 * Wednesday night Special -Champegno and Stroganoff ••• $3.25 * Dancing to Lee Ferrell's New Group * Exquisite Catering 3295 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach Re1etvttlon1 67~1374 hjs wife, Penee, third generation members of the 1.-0s ¥geles lamiJy of restaurateurs. The place occupies the premises of the former Karam's. In taking over this location, the Idols have made some nol!ceable physical changes and toned down the previous decor a bit. The remodeling and refurbishing have resulted in a more informal elegance, while such touches as briJbt red tablecloths and din1med crystal 'chandeliers add further notes of casual refinement. STEAKS THE LEAOERS Like its Los Angeles counterpart, mainstay or the local Dining Car's bill of fare is charcoal broiler s~eaks and meat dishes. Although diners are additionally offered a varied selection of house specialties and seafood plates. Among the house specialties are such Items ~s breast of chicken, Jerusalem, $4.50; fresh calf's hver saute, $4.75; grenadine ol prime filet mignon, $6.50. Seafood entrees include imported Dover sole, $5.75: &oft shell crabs, $5 .95: Australian baby rock lobster tails, $6.95. By way of steaks -all served with baked or French fried potatoes and toasted buttered rolls -there's everything from the Dining Car special steak, $5.35 to New York sirloin (for two), $15.50. Others are pepper steak (from top sirloin) $5.95; top sirloin, $6.95: T-bone (over l Y.a lbs), $7.95; N. Y. cut. $7.25; filet mignon, $7.50 j single special sirloin, $12.50. PRIME BEEF One has only to take the Cirst bite of a Dining Car steak to realize its quality and ten· deroess are exceptional. Beyond the restaurant's exclusive use ol prime Eastern corn-fed beef, there's another reason for this excellence. It's the Idol's unique aging process th at's carried out in Los Angeles at one of the restaurant world's most unusual facilities. Raving once bad an opportunity to view this marvel Cirst-hand, we still recall the extraordinary Care and attention given to large quantities of beef as it is gradually moved through a conveyor-like system ol aging and preparation. Continued on Ptg• 24 RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE Plcrno lor Ent...talnment Fffday mul Saturday HAPPY HOUR Mon. thru Fri. 5 io 6 LADIES NIGHT frl. •nd Sat. 10 p.m. t• l a.m. Temple Garde11s Chl11ese Resta11rani 1500 Aclam1 (At H•rffr) C•t• Mfffi s.1tJ1 ~tm ~• OPIN: 11 :30 ...... to 11 , .... s • .-, ""' n.....,. 11 :JO •·•· t. 2 •·•., Frfdey ...t S...rffr DELANEY'S SEA SHANTY Feoturln9 Oran9• County's Flnnt OYSTER BAR Eastern Bluopoint Oy1ttrs on Htlf Shall $1 .50 Ea stern Chorrysfone C /am1 $1.50 Large Shrimp Cocktail $1 .35 M•f o"'-"r Wo11ffrf11I Selocti"' ,... o,.. ,. z ..... Enterfoinment Nightly By KAPPY At the Pi1no l•r 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BU.CH '75.0100 BAL-PORT LOUNGE Prolldly ,,_... SUNDAY JAM SESSION 4 to 8 p.m. with the HONEY BEES HELEN •nd BASS Abo .,,..,1111 D• .. Frf .• ulll Set .. '''"'' to Z 0 .111. TRY OUR SUNDAY BRUNCH $ J 25 l9p wl .. loce11, s....,., H••· •r Pottlo. Hin• lrown & t .. t. 4507 WEST COAST HIGHWAY • NEWPORT BEACH 67~20D MR. Ml::K;:ES~~~ HOUSE OF PRIME RIB PRIME RIB ·-$2.95 ~!.!ii:;:~ DINNER Sl!RYED TO 1 A.M. THUR., FRI. l $AT. NITES LUNCH SHYED DAILT FROM 11 o\.M. TO 2 P.M. 209 Palm, Balboa , ......... ".,,,. ....... , .. ...,...,, .... 675-5774 I I I OAll. Y PILOT/ frtd_,, AUgUSt i, 1'70 . ond AM!RIUH CUISINE TROPICAL COCKTAILS l"OL YNESIAN SHOWS n11 ADAMI AVI. let ...... u.1 HUNTINGTON llACH 968-5050 r • Centinued from P•ge 23 CONTROLLED TEMPERATURE Under rigid temperature controls, the beef is moved from one station to the next as it a4es and' goes through variou1 stages of preparation prior to landing on the charcoal broiler. New York 0!1~1 for example, are "!led an additional two to mree weeks and top suioin ,goes through an additional aging period of three to five weeks. · .According to Wealey Idol, this process is important in brealdl)g ·down the fibers to assure greater tenderness aQd to ~nhance the flavor. Fac- tors readily borne out by the sampling of his wares. · The three members qf our dinner party were all quite familiar with the Dining Car's steaks from outings to the Los Angeles restaurants. Which Jed. one to order the top sirloin almost as a matter of babit. BABY LAMB In Uie spirit of trying something different for a change, two of us turned to the house specialties and ordered boned saddle of baby Jamb r !or two). $12.95. Roasted perfectly to our medium rare order with wine sauce Viloria , it also was accompanied by baked potatoes and toasted butter rolls. Skipping any of the Dining Car's a la carte soup and salad choices, we went on to select three excellent a la carte vegetables. Freshl y cooked, colossal asparagus, 75 cents; fresh zucchini, ' • crur ' In what is no dQUbt' one of the moct extensive lists offered .anywhere in the area the dlzier has a choice of approximately ill selections. • This includes some of the finest red, rose and white wines available from France, Italy, Portugal, Germany and California. And jhllre's also,a·oite selection ot sparkling win~ and cham- pagnes. WE 5PLl/RGED . Deciding to make the Dining Car outing a first-class evening all the way, we went all out in a choice of wine. Splurging as rarely, it was the line .old viotage Chateau Mar~a'ux, 1961, $23. Even so, the price seemed a barg8Ul because this wine is u~ually pegged at about $35 ip mosi restaurants. . 'Ibe night's flawle1s meal was wrapped up with the unanimous dessert choice of homemade cheese cake, 85 cents the slice. This is the same fine cheese cake served at· the Los Angeles establishment and which comes from an old Idol family recipe. RESERVATIONS HONORED It will be of particuJar note to many local diners that a much more casual dress factor prevails at the Dining Car than was the case with the former restaurant here. They also are holding to a strict policy of honoring reservations to the minute. 75 cents; creamed spinac:ii cents. Newport's Paci!i~! Car is open strictly WINE LIST as a dinner house, serving Tuesday through Sunday Turning to the Dining Car's extraordinarily from 5 p.m. to midnight. Located at 501 30th AJ3Q _UJ Tim /tlorgo1a's Back The Dry Dock in Newport Beach at 2001 W. Coast Highway, is presenting Tim Morgon, guitarist· vocalist, from 9 p.m. until closing, Tuesdays through Saturday and if you were one of the UD· fortunates who missed him in any of his previous appearances along the Oraoge Coast get wi th it this time. He really "gets to'' his audiences. Jarge wine hst can be a full adventure in itself. St., it's a place out 'n abouters can't afford to miss. ~~~~~---=~~~- RMttA ltE&fAUllANT Contlnent1I ·Cuisine Cockt1ll1 Smting L.uneMMJ and Dinmr Mcmdav through Sanirdav. Closed Sundays ---Mf.1141 Expand your homt to b1cNdt our dl•I .. room. OU.N•I COUNTY'S MOST llAUTIPUL IDTAUU.Hl THE DUKE MITCHELL SHOW W1"11ie N4ltwtll1 D1"tiR9 To Th• l i9 l1rtd So11nd 11106 COAST HWY., SO. U.GUHA-llS. 4ff.216l Pacific ~~ .. --•~iiiiiii\!11Jining-Car/f!liloo __ .... ,_ PRIME-EASTERN AGED BEEF 501 30th ST., NEWPORT BEACH RESERVATIONS 675.0300 Great Seafood! 400 M1in Salbo• P1ninwl1 In tht ftntst trdition of the true inniupn's 11rt. r@· ~~i~~-;~~-· ~:;~-~~ · ·,~~ · · ·~ • • • • • • THE BERLINER German Faniily Resta1ira11t ' .1801 J::Ast CaAST HJcnWAT' COIONA DEL l.(AI. Cl.tna:1114 PRONE: (71~) 675-1374 + 1-• • • • • • • • • • • • CARIBE ROOM PreMtnts -Entert1inment -D1ncin11 -Mon. thru Sat. BUFFET LUNCHEON MONDAY thru FRIDAY Song15tre11/Song Writer KATE PORTER 5:30---8:30 P.M. Mon. thru Fri. JACK COSTANZO and GERRIE woo 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BEACH-536-1421 • ~·············~··················, PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS L Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed del!:fous piping-hot piuas to your door in minutes. ''GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE'' EVERY FRIDAY s1,21 All THE FISH YOU CAN EAT Wlllt "'"""" '""' <:'""" Ctlt .... , ~ 11•11 • lllfter, ,.,, •• -· Your Family Restaurant EVERY TUESDAY AND . THURSDAY BUCK NIGHT YOUR CHOICE IMP TM T1rti_,. G .. '9flMMClrlhlr• .... ..., "' J,,. "--... ........ ..,,.,... .......... W U'H"'Y 4ltte Jllw, .. ....... lwtttf OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER 1:30 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., Mond1y thru S.turd1y-10 1.m. to 6 p.m., Sund1y GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH IROOKHURST & ADAMS Every Monday Is Family Day From· 2 P.M. to 9 P.M. TOP SIRLOIN SPECIAL ....... $1.39 ltte.l1Ms WM Perm er heMll ~"It S,.Clel Sider T•_, I FREE I THIS COUPON 15 llDllMAILI TOSSED DINNER SALAD CHOICE OF DRESSING T•Y ou• "OUll ll'EtlAL I h I ··••11••T11e B •u C ••s• Dre11 ng ••• ,,,... .. """'"' If """"'' Oflly OUR FOUNDER Ovr Motto : "Fine Food At F1mlly Prlc11." OUa fOOD: A ..... !llffef'Mt ~ ef ,,.,.., ... ..,.,,941 .... ........,.. ltMl. Phil. ,.., • "-Y·friM ·'!"-•5'9 wllklt e11r ,...., ll9tk W. "Jlr4 ef r...ihe. ou• INVITATION : c.-. ,. ... -' Miit ... t-llr. 11 :00 AM '11L MIDNIGHT 725 BAKER STREET COSTA MESA NHr Corner of Brl•hll SS7·f114 '• Famous Fer SAUERBRATEN w;th POTATO DUMPLINGS o,.. Dell, F., Dlt1Hr Ft.1111 I P.M • SATURDAY,AUGUST15 ANNIVERSARY PARTY ASTORIA TRIO FROM BAVARIA CHILDRIN 'S MENU •• 11t1s ag -~ Dn1.,,. a <FJ cotn.m ~rouo 8:00 & I 0:30 p.m.-Resirvotions Suggested for '4 or more people. 18582 Beoch Blvd., Town & Country Center Huntington Buch 968-5800 Closed Mon. •••••••••••••••••••• • SPICIAL ANNIYIRSAWY COUPON • • r.111lly Hltn -l•rcept A111. 151 TUlS. THlU SUNDAY -• • D11rtllt _...,. ef A-.nt tt1y -llll!MMf -• • ..... .. ,... ... "' ,., ... , "511•' • •••••••••••••••••••C OPENING SOON Wlllla111 Von Sultier'5 Village Inn • of La9una Oinlnt at It's finett to th• ercitin9 quit1r music of Charlie Spencer St•y • whil• and dance to th• ¥ersatile mutic of Mickey and Mike The cl1nc1 flew Is n1wly •l•rpll -Ht If yeu ,refer yet.I m•r •Imply ll1'9n. You ctn 9•+ it together on• pillow in l19una'1 1oft•1f mQ•t down·to-it lo11n9• . Village Inn Restaurant H6 S. c-t Hl1hwoy, ....,_ ._. 494.2700 • " T!1a nem G7iLL€')? «!~ OUR CHEF IS A REAL PRO. TRY HIS LOBSTER, IT'S THE FINEST OUTSIDE MARINELAND, STEAKS. TOO. ANO A FIX·IT- VOURSELF SALAD BAA. TRY OUl'I NEW COCKTAILS TOO, LIK6 A FOOT OF YOUR FAVORITE MARTINI. A GREAT DINING OUT VALUE ANOSOUTHEAN CALIFORNIA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW, ENTEl'ITAINMENT NITEL Y. TAKE SAN DIEGO FAWY. TO HAWTHORNE BLVO. ANO GO SOUTH TO MARINELAND DISCOVER THE ALL NEW ' ' • • ' • ' ; .. • -------------~--~-----------·---·-----·--~-------------------- . • Clint Eastwood Tickles Rickles- Accordlng lo tllat muter of comedy insult, Don Rickles, wbo _$!'.s wj tt. ~!!II I;;Jslwood• ln MGM'a ''Kell)'.'! Heroes " !:~ la a · 'l'f.ar who doesn't" work hard enouglf to fit the image, "He's just too nice a guy." Rlci<lel describing aome of Eastwood's behavior while they were in Yugoslavia film· ing the adventure story proves it. "A star doesn 't ride bis own motorcycle to the set,'' says Rickles, "he'a suppoeed to ar· rive in a chauffeur drfven liJJIOQllne, a Cadillac at least, but a Rolls Royce it beutr. "And one really shouldn't arrive an hour early, then ~t aroond ploying c...i.. with the crew.'' Chastising Eastwood further, R I c k l e s pointed oul lhot a s-T-A-R, should "walk off the set in a .huff at least twice a week, aod be late once in a while." Rickles went on with his "star.rules" for Clint. .. Not ''Say, do you have 1 room for me?" There.must be.81J..-a&f or at leut n.re persons, i..Q. eluding pel'9Ql)&l makeup man, wardrobe valet, aecretuy, pllotographer ..i ..,. J'erlOll lo pi.,y gin nmuny with and f1jD for -. Doa!I bring your wile,, eip«lllly ;f yoq'vo been bapplly married for 15 years. . On the sublec< ol dressing rooms, a mlnimum of four, with ldtcllen, bar, atereo i nicorcl .. player, Mlevision, Frtndi l!lljd., (DO ,older lbao· ZI) anil prjvlte w •1ilr. 01J1 CGl!lflelely: "la lJerO a 'J>laoe for ~ ta f:battl'" On ,_a for' bMrviews with Clie Jftll, Deftl" agree lmmedialely and f<r lbe ume day. Proper procedure, "'Pl~ oon.slilt my ap-- ~ oecretsry for nut And • remember; breaking appointm<llU and arriving la!< impreQts the press - then they know they're dealing with a ·star. • CLINT EASTWOOD MEETS NEW FAN 'Heroe1' Cost11r1 Don Rickles, Telly S11v•l11 practices ba!ketball shots in the nearest ashcan, asb other people about their work or bolds hands with his own wife. ln your shoe." And a word from OQn Rickles : "Clint's my friend aod tile big star ol the movie. But w:hat can you. do with a guy that doesn't even know wbat air conditioning Is. Give him an army cot and a nail to hang his hat on and he's hap. PY· Mexico Ballet Set At Bowl Two new product.ions of "'lbe Alteca" and ''Tb e Revolution" -workl which bave eonlrlbuled lo t he cele~ reputat!oo ol the "Billet; Folklorlco ot Muico" -wW headline a program d: old favorltH and dancu which have not been setn in the United States for &evtral yean, when S. Hurot pruents the Company al the Hollywood Bowl on Aug. 19, 21, ZI and 23, al l :lO p.m. ' ~waves of Change' C ho r e o 1r1pber-dirtctor Amalia Hernande& has c:rtated, e,,pedally for this tour. a new version of the rites of the· ancient Aztecs, with to8tume1 by Dasha, and dance patterns based on the msllng plastic relics of this great period of Mu:ica.n pre- Cooquest civilization. The ballet, wblcb de&!I with the worahip of the Sun God, fe atures the "Dance of the Tiger Warrion" who wear the A Greg MacGiD!vray • Jim li'reeman surfinjl film with world champion 11111- autllenUc skins and beads of ers Mark Martinson, David Nuuhi!'~ •• N~t Young, Billy Hamilton .and Corty the animals; the "Dect of Carroll. shot in France, PortunJ, l_;&Womia and Hawaii will be shown at the tile Vutal Virgina," aoc1 the Laguna Beach High School Audiloriwn, 625 Park Ave., Laguna Beach, Aug. Celebrity Protocol demands that location aceommodations be a four-room sWte Jn the best hotel. with a fireplace, even U one bas to be built. Between scenes, a star combs his hair, talks about his past and future movies, discusses plans for t h e theater, or telepbooes his agent He never studies people to absorb deta& d character, When working on a roogh location like "Kelly's Heroes," a Katzka-Loeb production, produced by Gabriel Katika and Sidney Beckerman, the star should complain to the producers at least four times a day and shout at an average of two waiters per meal, not say things like, "'Ibis is sure pretty country," or "Say, fellah, you're dripping gravy "How can I demand more caviar for breakfast when Clint's so happy? There 's something wrong with that guy." "Dance ol U>e Que 11 a I J.2.15. Tickets ~.50 at the door; · Priests," whose five-foot head-_ _c_:.;...:_:._.:.:..:.:....:;;:;;..:...:::....:::'if':::=========;;:========= I For on e egc;int evening Goach& GflorseS Superb Dining and Dancing SEVEN NIGHTS 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. '"' BoKr "a'ousE Aker yo• t•li:• tftto vi1l .. n fr. beck •••+ to DitMyl1M 1ri ilotti .. "' Fenri, t•p It e 1t th1 unMll1•1bl•. I .OAT HOUSE 111 s. .... s-t.A. Riii TMIU HOUH OP CONTINUOUS MOYIU Pizza Palace 161Jl H-Nr .t 14' ... fNatt. Wy'al 139-7290 WI MOllOll ALL PIUA COU1"0NI FAMILY FUN ,. ........ M.&S.. e ANNOUNC!ING e THE OPENING OF Young Artists' Work Shown at Coast Plaza The techniques of 28 young artists will be oo view at SO.th Coast Plaza Aug. to to 30 in an exhibit titled, "'A Se1ection ol Yo u n g Con- temporary CaUfornia Art1ats." It is currently on tour throughout the state under the sponsorship of the California Arts Commission. Works on display were selected by Bernard Hern , fonner director of the Lytton Centers for the Arts, from more ,than 400 graphics, pairr tings and sculptures, Hern describes the collection as "an expressioo. or the frontier spil'lt that still exist! io this state." All the artist! have in some way been influenced by the Calliornia environment. 'They are studying, or have studied at California colleges or have lived or are Uvlng i n calilomia. They are hlgbly in· dividualislic and do not con- form to any particular vogue or school of art. Their work! are darillg in fonn, media and style. Some of the pieces were apeclally prepared for this exhibition. This is the first of a series of exhlbitions which will pro- vide a continuing insight Into the vigorous arti.!Uc cllmate of Calif. South Coast Plaia is open every day (elcept Sunday) between the hours of 9:30 and 9:30. dresses r e q u ire prodlg1ous agility for the i ntricate maneuvers ol the dance. "The Revolution," Mme. Londoner Set for Hernandez's stirring tribute to the 'j Soldaderas'' (the women's army) of the upris- ing of mo 1 •• 1 .... bore .Frost's Show in 1965, returns in a new set desip by Antonio Lopez- Mancera. A hightlgbt ts the Frankie Howerd, the choice "Juana Gallo" Polka, inspired of millions as England's fun- by the great heroine of the 4 niest comedian, is coming to period whose feats in battle KTl'V, Channel 11. created a whole new Mexican He'll be on band at 10:30 Iolldort. p.m. Aug. 9 In "David Frost Other numbers by the com-Presents ... Frankie Howen!," pany or 75 dancers, singers an hour.Jong color tele!l)ecia1 and musician s from all parts that not only demonstrates his of Mulco will I n c I u d e many comedic talents, but "G1mes " a saUre-on the alsG spoUights other t o p Melican' attitude toward life British entertainment personal. and death, enacted bY. puppets itles. whose strings are manipulated Introduced by Em m Y by the Devil, and featuring Award-winning Frost, whole a cock flgbt. Costumes and 91}-minute conversaUoo-variety set design are allO new, by show airs weeknights at 8:SO Delfina Vargas. o'clock on Channel 11, the Among the works included muslcal·varlety offering will by popular demand will be see Howerd aided In comedy the now world fUDOQJ "Deer sketches and musical numbers n.-of ~"'-y-.a Indianl," by Judy Cornwell, London atar ~ ~""' ."'..... of "Oh What A Lovely War." with .Jorp Tyller .c:na~ tht BBC television personality role ol the balllad animal ; Ronnie Cori>ett and recording the apac:tl<ular "Wedding on artllt Deena Webster. the lrtbmlls of Tebuantepec'' And, as a special attraction, . wltll ill prbe-wlnnlni cos- For Advtrtltlne In The Weekender ' P\lone 642-4321 BUBBLES THE CLOWN CHILDREN'S PARTIES MAGIC SHOW -PUPPETS -FAVORS REASONABLE RATES ~ tumes; "Mocambo" and the there's Paul McCartney or the rh)'tbml of the Caribbean Beatles, presented in a reveal· -i•••••ill•mi••lllli .DRIVE YOURSELF CRAZV negroes u well u the u:cltlng lng interview. "La Bambi" and "Coco" Howerd Is a comedian tn ntl INCTACULM COMPANY THAT llZCTIUFllD TH'l'WOllLD FEATURING COCKTAILS • BUFFET LUNCHES DINNERS -ITALIAN & AMERICAN DANCING NIGHTLY "EDNA" AT THE PIANO BAR! Pl1•1• Come In •nd Meet Your Hosts: RICHARD & GEORGE RICHARD'S VILLA VIDA 719 W. l"h STREET COSTA Ml!SA fN•I "' tfltw ...... Mkt,J PHONE 642-5619 onH 101H A.M . nLL JM A.M. COUPON Grand Opening Special YANKEE FISH FRY BUY O"E ORDER IPllH & CHIPS Ol JflH &_CMln DINNft) SECOND ONE SO YOU WANNA llACll. .. PASTaACKS' Ol'IN H.w _,.., wfttt tM ,_, .. .,.. ._ .... • ...... 1 n.t ...... Ml .. ·•••" • rMI rMCI ...... MITUCll ,., NAS- CA.I *'"" ..... It 1rt .,..,.. ... fff wlll '"' N• ... U.,,_ N• lie ... ....-.ry. w.-., pm..,...,.,._ hf~....._ w-..., 6100 , ... ,. 11:11 , ... '"'""' 6:00, , ..... 11111 .... s.nn1., 12i00 ~ .. 1l1H ..., S.l!My ll:OO p ..... 1t10I p.-. ........... ,, ,., .... 1p9e.-.,. ,,.. °"" .,..,..., .,.., • PAITIACll · the most Irreverent music hall (1me111 the tutest h e e 1 tradition -l! stutteripg, stam· danee,I ever performed); the .... d I f t• c:omic daoce ot tile "Utt1e me ... ,. rop-ou rom ue Old Mm ol Juaracaro"; Royal Academy of DramaUc OPENS ''Sugar Harves t in Artswhosenamehasbecome Tarnaullpas" with lLs "Lariat a household word in England. n--•·," and tile •~loolve He appeared in tile color TONIGHT! ~,, -.. televilion -tacular, j'The • "Guldalajara," the fttlta dan-CantervlUe Ghost." starred in ce from Jallsco. the "Carry On Doctor" motion 'Statement' In County picture, joined Marg are t Rutherford in "Runaway Bus" i nd was in David Merrick'• Broadway hil, "ftockefellor and the Red Indians." SOUTH SW TROPICAL FWI Tropical Jllab & Largest Selecllon of Supplies in the area. .... ........... n:i..Wwt:IUOH, c:otTA MIU. ..,, , .... .....7N1• '"'°• ll;homlih Of-, -~ l•Hf'I ~n. .... omc.1 .... S» • DANCE COMPANY 100 DANCERS a SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA DIRECT FROM ITS SOLD·OUT NEW YORK ENGAGEMENT 11 PERFORMANCES (4 MATINEES) IVtNINOI AT l:IO (No Mon. "Jf.) Aug. 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14 & 18 llATINIU AT l:IG on Saturdays and SUnday1, Aug. a. •. 15 & 16 • 1 ••• d1nclng pertorm1ble only by 1 gifted few •••• di•· clpllnod •nd rhylhmlc •111• of 1uporbfy t1l1nt1d 1lhl1tn. " ... a great opoctacle ... comn brHlhleuly ~ to porfoctlon." Tlmo Magszlno, July 21, 1970 " •.. one of the wortd'e gre1tnt entertalnmtntll'' Weekly Variety, July 15, 1970 ' ' " ••• lho Moluyev COmpony la what II had afw1ft .,. • I .UnlqU11" New York Times, July B, 1970 .... ti,.. DININ6 FREE --Set.& .... " •• 11 t1i1116/ mtl!ttrpi1t1 •• "-'P.tgist•r ". , ;,, • worl, "''Pifkml •• b-Doily Pilot -------------------- " •• "fi111pl11t110 1U11'11 f.Ul1. ;"-L. A Timts A9Plf I It ... .-LAGUNA MOULTON PLAYHOUSE OPIM l'OI LUMCH AMf DIMNll ' 606 l.o9un• C...yon Roocl, l.o9un• INch IN9' Brookhunt • Hunt""'°" IHch .Jj1t1•1J• llt1 fi111;..J of A•ts . __ ,._ .. __ r-..,. "'"' .. Sndays llt 1:40 tlUftl&llt I.II* "fMlllM .. ~ .......... ~ .. .. ,.,.. //If ,.,1, ..... ... -PlllCl!S; U.ISIUlll.llS!f.11/7 M TICKETS NOWI :· --~~~~~;Ph~~"'~.,.~-~-~~~~~~~~I Al ...... any nl9lrt &I~,.; .. for children ••d tt:=""":;anls II encl uncl.,.__d -1co _..i. TICKETS1 CALL 4'/4.0743 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~··-·-­____ ...... ---.. -- Ill Mul!lt eem.r, Auto Club ore. c.;TI~kttron, all Mutuat Agtncrn; 8. 0. MutlO CO .. NT & Hiii: Wa1Mc11t & UbtrtY 1tott1. 1-...... 1»1'111t tflrtrll box otno. f'IOW opeo • •-·rprm·IT.111 · • . I '"' • -· • • • • • • . • • • . • • . • • • • . • . . • • • • . • . • • • . • .. ) ··. • • • • • . • . . • • • • • • . • • ; • • • • :· • :· .. i ' ' ( ·. :· .. • • . .. ··-.... ,.; • ... ... .. 1i ( IWl.Y l'ILOT f'rld.Q', A191$t 7, 1970 . For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT ' l Guide to Movies 'Too Late the Her-0'· W-0rld War II Film ~ Colnoba1 (R): A summer romance between a poor librarian and a noveau rlche college gtrl lapses due to their different views. A satitt on sex with Richard Benjamin and Ali MacGraw. The Gra1....,,... IRl: • Jacqueline Bisset plays a Canadian girl who seeks ex- cilement in the United Slates and finds narcoUcs and pro- stitution. Joseph Cotten and Jim Brown . Happy Endblg (GPl: Jean Simmons portrays a bored middle-class housewife who turns to drink. John Forsythe and Shirley Jones . I lme Yoa, Allee B. Tokla1 (GP): Nlee Jewish boy gives up his square fJanctt and his role in the establishment for the life of a hippie. Peter Sellars . The Losers ~R): Five man motorcycle gang tries to res· cue a VIP held prisoner by Viet Cong. William Smith and Bernie Hamilton. WIDNISDAY & fHUISDAY "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY " NIDAT0 UTUIDA Y0SUMDAY "ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD" ... ,_ Step,.nl ,-oa ••ll"RVATIOftS: CALL ..... ,MS 1G1 M..,..rf etn., <Ast• - ••1y0 c.•r• •cfiv1 wa1 r for men •nd boys cotton su•d• shirts by mt. witt brown.tan-gold M·A.s.B (R): lrr•verenl -y about tho Mobile Army Scqlcal Hospital during the Korean War. Elliott Gould, Dooald Sutherland and Tom SkerrltL Myra Breckhlrld&• (X): • Screen portrayal of Gore Vldal'1 novel starting Mae West, John Huston and Raquel Welch. Naked Undtr Leodler (R): ••'J'he Girl oo a Motorcycle" with a new name. Wood .... k (R): Thre< hour film oC a music !e&tJval. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS Aano of a.. 'l1lotlwld Doy• (GP): Genevive Bujold and Richard Burtoo a,, Anne Boleyn and King Henry VlJI. Bandoler•: Post~ivil War western in which two outlaw brothers, James Stewart and Dean Martin, join forces with Ule sheriU when the posse pursuing them is attacked by Mexk:an baocUdos. Ra q u e I Welch eo-stars. Downhill Racer (GP): Study of a young American's strug· g\e to become a champion skJer. Robert Redford. Tbe Jl1•allan1 IGP): Sequel lo ''Hawaii" starring aiartton Heston and Geraldine Chaplin. P•illt Your Wa«ion lGP): ?tfusical of the California gold rush days with Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood and Jean Seberg. Too Late the Hero (GP): British patrol, plus one Ameriean, attempt to destroy Japanese communications on a !i'mall Island in the southwest Pacific during World War IL L11ff Robertson and Michael Caine. Two Mules for Sister Sara (GP): Clint Eastwood portrays an American mercenary in Mexico. He rescues Shirley MacLalne. an alleged nun, who give3 him much valuable information. A Walk In the Sprln1 Rain (GP): Romantic drama star· rtnc Anthony Quinn and lngrid Disney film of the tale about after the litlt irtdi~tes tht Berernan. a famlly shJpwrecked oo a rating gil>t'n tht piclurt by deserted island. Stars John tlie lifotion Picture Code. TEENS AND ADULTS Mills a.bd Dorothy McCuire. The Motion Picture Cod e AirpN1 (G): Film ~enion And Rating Program n1a!J of I.be be.st-sellln1 novel. Burt * bt found on tlie motion Lancaster, Dean Mart In , picture page .. Helen Ha.yet and van HefUn.l;=;=T=h='=''="="'=l=m=m=e=d=to=te=l'-y==========-, Beneotli tile P .... I of Ult Apes (0): Sequt!l t.o "Planet of the Apea-" ata.ninC Charltcn H$on and James FranclBcus. The Ga.mes (G): Four young men in separate countries prepare for the Olympic track marathon in Rome. 111< OllWI·-(G): • Disutrous experiences of man ~ wile who go to New York from Ohio for a job lntttview. Jack Lemmon aDd Sandy Den- nis. Paltott: Sa1ute to a Rtbe1 (GP): Portrait of General George S. Patton portrayed by George C. Scott. Karl Malden plays General Omar Bradley. Sweet Cllarfty (G): Charity is a sweet dance-hall h08tes5 who searches for -love and undentandlng. Shlrley Mac· '-IATIONAL Gl!NEltAL'S FiiiSOUTHCOAST PLAZA THEATRE San Oit&o f rttWfY at Bristol • 546·2711 CONTINUOUS DAILY AT 1:JO P.M. .. . ... ,11' . .1.~··~ NO OHi UNDll 11 ADMml D SHOWN •I: 1:3' • 3:20 . 5:10. 7:00 • 8:50 • 10:40 Laine stars in the title role ofl'--------~-----------=' th.is musical. FAMILY The Boatnlkt (G): Disney eomedy, filmed in Newport Beach, about the Sunday sailor. Stars Robert Mo~. Stephanie Powers and Phil Silvers· la Searcb of the Castaway• <GJ: Disney's versioo of Jules Verne's classic about a lost sea captain and the search to find hlm . Hayley Mills, Maurice Chevalier, George Sand.en. Rascal (GI: Walt Disney comedy about a motherless and lonely boy and his pet raroon which he tries lo civilize. Steve Forrest and Bill Z..fumy . Sleeping Beauty (G): Disney version of Perraull'1 fairy tale. Music is Tchiakovsky's ';Sleeping Beauty" ballet with the voice or Mary Costa. Swl11 Fam.Uy RobiJJ1onr EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY (]!) ENGAGENENT .MOii, TutJtl.J.:~llP.M. Uf. h M-J14f.SrJe.1& llP.M.. Nl.141lN r•11»tM r.M. TATCH·22' IS.QUITE SIMPLY, ~· THE BEST AMERICAN FILM .,. ... l'VE SfEN THIS YEAR!" ~·;·;:;;;" Op•n S11ndty, ... for ,tha 5111nl'll•r 11 to S Youths' Prize Movies Unveiled in Anahei111 S...l a11101lu11I e Ill••* di•rt- 7 r • .w •• bl••· ~ .... u '44-I07• 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. 101h "INTOLERANCE" DIRECTED BY D. W. GRI FFITH CABLEVISION CHANNEL l CALL 642·3260 GET "HOOKED" ON THE CABLE! YOUR FAMILY WILL ENJOY EVERY MINUTE OF IT. INSTALLATION ON LY $1 4.95 MONTHLY SERVICE $6.SO "THERE'S MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TV!" ., school graduates, who are among the top prize winners announeed this week in the first Cinemedia Film Festival Competition for young film- makers . Co -spon s ored by The Broadway Stores and Maasan- to, and judged by leading film industry representatives, lhe Festival was the first of its kind in the nation lo be pri; jected e xclus.ively for high school and college student.s and attracted a large number of outstandi'ag entries from a three-state area. The films, for which tickets are available at alt Broadway stores, are scheduled locally at Anaheim Convention Center August %2 at I p.m. First prize of $1 ,000 was awarded to Dale E. Cole, re· cent graduate from Redlands High School, for a warmly bumorow three and a half minute color film enUtled "Experiments In Animation." Deftly maneuvering human and animal clay figures. Cole shot hundreds of individual frames without benefit of tripod, close up Jens or through the Jens viewing on his super-8 mm camera . Of three $500 second prizes . .. special hilfl school award goes to an eighteen year old al so a graduate of Redlands High, Gretel Gleit.sman, for a !+minute live action film "Dream With a Half-Shut Eye." BeauUfully costumed, the film contrasts the elegant! ol the Renaissance period with todays mod manners and minis achlevea a very tellin1 commentary on the loss o( chivalry in today 's society . Second prize winners in the College age group are Mike Jittlov, UCLA senior t n theatre arts, for "The Leap" and Larry Evan! of Seal Beach. an undergraduate at Cal State Long Beach, for "Lunch." According toJltUov, he was twice almost arrested while filming '"Ille Leap" from atop UCLA 's tallest building, and literally had to throw his camera from the building to achieve the effect of fallin1 . "Lunch'' Is Larry Evans' second fllm a it; describes a ''macabre metamorph~s or man into animal." Two third priu:1 go to T. Dale Alefon!, Jr. of Marini del Rey, 1 University of Arll:allias graduate I'll blolo0 for "The Wranaler," •tongue in cheek Western 1poof, and to Bruce A. Ward of H ol!Y'\'·ood. cinematography graduate from Ca II ror nl a Jnstltut.e ol lht Arta, for "Silent Majority" a comedic qulcll:-cut candid camera look al middle-class 1oclety. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 7:00 & 10:00 SAT. & SUN. 1:00 4:00 7:00 & 10:00 SPECIAL NEW POPULAR 'PRIC6!! Of/LDRENCWLY $1.00 all times 10RS ONLY $2.50 aft times llELL01 l / WINNf:lt "'. DOT T ACADEMY f .' AWAROSI • the ult imate trip ' ' i ' !I ' •' , • , I ./ ·1 . ·------~- In tJae Galleries 26 Artists On Exhibit 'rol11UNG EXIDBIT -TM w..-u ol » eont.mporary Calli. arilita, under the sponsorsblp ol the Calli. Arts C-Om- wlll be on exhibit al Sooth Coast Plau during nogular buJI. oes.1 boun, Aug. 10 • 30. COABI' AND SOlJl'llERN SAVINGS.-'1717 F.dint<r Av;., ' ' HJJntlllgloo Beach. On exhibit during regular ~ hour1 tJnulh Aug. 7, U. S. Navy Combat Art, ollldal aelec:tioo of acllon paintings and dra~ OoBONA DEL MAR LlBRARY--420 Marigold Aye:, COnlna dd Mar. On exhibit lhrou&h Augvst during reiular'Ubrary hours, ""llVinJ by Jarmila MacbOva. ' -. LAGUNA 'ART GAILERY-3n'I Cliff.Dr!~,,. Laguna .Beach. All Calif. Exhibit sponsorod by • Festiv4J of ~-lo run thfough Aug. :JO, noon to 6 p.m. Admission ls 50 cebls. ' . . .. . \ MARINER'S UBilARY-2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. During regu]ar library hours, the Jr. Ebell AtUsts of the Month exhibit featuring a collecUon of art from the last U-mooth 's eJ.hlhits and drawings of Malcom Cameron, lhrolJ8b Aug. BOWERS ~ )//, Maln SL, Slota Ana. Hours' 10 a.m. r 4:30 p.m. Tua.·Slt: J to$ p.rn. Sun.; Wed. and Thurs. eve to t p.m. No charge. Mpographlc 'photos by Dr. Norman Hodgtln on view tbroujh Aue. l6; ocillpture llwn Art West .WoclaUon, and old &ilver from llrivate collecUou. COSTA MEU LIBRARY_. CentB SL, Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular lllrary boan lhroolh Aug. 15, oil paintings by Loulle young. '. ~ ART LEA~13 Center SI., Costa Mesa. Hour: Sat. and SUn. 1 to 5 p.m. conUnuous e.xhl.bll!l of art wcrt in variot13 media by Art League members. No admlssion charge. . • UNITED CAlJF. BANK-.3039 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. On exhibit, during regular bwlness hours, through Aua. 15, •· pastel, oil and acrylic paJntings by Helen Patzer. • SECURITY·PACIFIC BANK-196 E. 17th st., Costa Mesa. , • . On eihlblt during regular business hours through AIJI. 15, oil paintings by Jane Huffman. MESA VERDE U11RARY-'l969 Mesa Venle Drive East, Costa Mesa . On eshlblt during regular library hours lbroogb Aug. IS, oil paintings by Araiy MetU Kirk!. CROCKER CITIZENS B.\NK-2300 Rarbcr Blvd., ·Costa Mesa. On exhibit duriog regular business houn ilrou&h Aug. 15, oil paintings by Marjorie Lud.I~ _ NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 ~e Drive, New- port Beach. On exhibit daring regular busmeU· boors tbrou&h Aug., woven wall hanglnga by Micti Llppe. MAlllNERS SAVINGS AND LOAN-1515 Westcmf Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil aod watercolor palntlllgs by Ruth C. Frymlr<, tlu'oo1h Aug. II. NB CIVIC CENTER GALLERY-3300 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business '9urs, through Sept., a colleclion of photos gathered by the New- port Beach Historical Society from 22 IOUJ'CtS, showing old Newport Beach and Balboa. JACK GLENN GALLERY -21131 E. Coast Highway, <llrona del Mar. Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Currently oo exhibit, a one-man show of Jerrold Burchman's palntlngr, lbroulh the month of Aug. CllAUJS -GAU.ERV -13!0 S. Coast llil)lway, Laguna Be.acb. Hour&: 11 a.m. lo 5 p.m. dally. Current ~bit. two- man show of Mark Coomer and Ron Roelch, lhroolh Aug. 28. ~ . . AND AT 1111 ONLY 1.-rf'lll:. '~1ifllft I .. . '"---·-~- . . . . lttJltJl '!.~E:d 2 DIUllY PK:TUIU tOl•aT MORI• • ITal'HANla l'OW'a1t1 ,. "BOATNIKS" l'LUI "THI RASCAL" C~-hftr 1 l .M. FOR ADVERTISING in tho "OUT 'N' BOUT" SECTION Phone NOR~ .STANLEY Mi-4321 • IDENTICAL TWIN BEAUTIES VISIT Becky Thiem, Diane Dye, right, on 'Bracken'•' S.t Which Twin Has Talent? Diane Hoping It's She ( Catalina Art Festival Vites l\JtExliIDifors Ao opm lnvltatloo to amateur aod professloOBI artists to show tbeir worts duriJll: lhe 12th A a n u 1 l Catalina F..tlval ol Art, at Avalon, Catalloa laland, Sept. 12-20, has been eztended by the Celallna Art AsiJoclaUon. Association pr ea Iden t Cbarlet Holt annomced that more than $2,000 in cash Ann-Margret Joins Cast Of 'Carnal' awardo would be dlslrlbuted during the week>loag Festival, which has become ... ol the moot colorflll art ga1l>eriD&s In So\llhern California. Holt announced that all en- tries must be reci!ived by t.he Auoc!Jllion no latB thao Sept. It. Entry blaak.O aod ad- dltlooaJ information may l)e obtained by wr!Ung lo' Catalina Festival d. Art, P.O. Bolt 235 Avalon, Calallna Island, California 90704, or phone Avalon 808. For sea or plane tramporta- Uoo to Avalon , call (2:13) '1'15- 3341. Tbe Big Whit. Steamer (S.S. Catalina) will cootinue it. daily crooslnga lo the lslaod uoW Sept. 'rl. Tbe laland Holiday sails dal· Jy from the BaJboa Pavilion. Ano-Margret bas joined the Reservations: 673-5245. cast of Mike Nichols' '"Carnal ;iliiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Knowledge," and will co-star with Jack Nicholson. Art GarfunkeJ and Candice Bergen in tbe Avco Embas.!y film. A Josei>h E. Levine pre5eO" talion, "Carnal Knowledge" wW be produced and directed by Nichols with a screenplay by Jules Fe.lffer. AM-Margret's last starring assignments were opposite Joe Namath in "C.C. and Com- LOOK TO EDWARDS LUXURIOUS CINEMAS FOR THE BEST SHOWS TONIGHT . pany," and in Columbia's By VERNON SC01T In the past year Diane soon-to-be-released "R.P.M." u.,1 NlifJWMll ~ helped support berseU with with Anthony Quinn . HOLLYWOOD -Diane Dye outside jobs inasmuch as she "Carnal Knowledge" will ol "Bracken's Workl" looks wwied ~five days 8 month start Lilining thls fall on loca- _...., ... like a beauUful 20-. In the serteS. · ol,..... .. • va-· e BC and ~-, ~ m ..... .,.,.v r, .• year-old D a 11 as • Tex., Fer a time she was 8 part New York, and marb Nichols, housewife named Becky. time Jexal secretary and later first production for Avco 'Ill.ls ls because Diane nd a 1"les.1 in a restaurant. Next E m b a s s y sloce "The :Bect:y are ldenlical twins. season Diane's role will be Graduate." Both are petite, blue-eyed expanded oo the show, COD-1~========~11 beauties wl(h dark brown hair, suming more of her timt. II flawless figures fiUed with Diane drives a small foreign Te.1as chann. car to work at 6 a.m .and The big. difference is that generally is free at 4 p.m. Diane decided to become an for the rest of the day. actress and Becky opted for "Living in the middle oI marriage. Texas, I never saw a beach," M Brandy Bennett on the Diane says, "so whenever NBC series, Diane plays an possible 1 head for lbe surf a.splrtng actress. She i s and ~ sand. I Jove lt.'' virtually portraying herself. She also enjoys horseback She moved to Hollywood from riding, driving to the San Texas when . she was 17 . to Fernando valley to canter complete high school 1 n a.tong endless bridle paths in California. Griffith Park. Her Texas accent regaled At . ht she be fooOO her clasamates on the flrst . ni.g . can d of school and Diane bas 1n a caIKl.le-l1t restaurant tn· ay . • . joyirlg dinner with a boy been working ever wice to . hich there Jose it. Becky, bCJweVf.:f', still b'iend, of w are ks 'th her leasanl many. Becall3& her own spea lhwest ~ wl p quarters are less than elegant, ""DI li a 1 · all one-she never entertains at borne. ane ves nasm , b . room apartment -a living Diane's w a rd r o e IS romi, dining rocm, bedroom basically the same as that combinaUoo she wears on the show: She has ~ refrigerator and miniskirts, boots, turtlooeck a hot plate oo whkh &he oc-sweate~ and blouses. ~ casionally files breakfast of Jftfen !eans .am a sweatshirt toast, eggs and coffee. The or a swim swt. rest ol her meals are eaten The youthful actress Js a in restaurants. movie buff and 11 k es to see Diane borrowed most of her movies with her date5. other furniture : tables, chair, Independent and articU!ate, a bed, a chest of drawers Diane is looking for a larger and a desk. apartment and a rommate Her livln.i quarters do not who is also an actress. "I'd quite measure up to those like to be able to fix dinner oC say Z&a 2& Gabor. But once in a while and have ~ young beauty uys the a litUe more spa<:e," she says. ifs enjoying her life and work· Diane _became accust~ Ing toward bigger and better to Spaa! m Tezas. She mwes acting roles. it. PREMIERE ENGABEMENT!'SHDWING NDWI k "lllE llll!D BLOWER OF ALL TIME!" At l1TS.Ct•J· I••• Lit• 11 Tia.II le• Offk" 0,.. 711S , ....... , •l111r•••• . ..., ....... . • -1'11111 ...... RCJ!ed (R) MON. TNitU l'llj, ':• Ud l :U S"T· J:U-711J..1t:M IUN, J1IH 1•t:U EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING All Ag11 Admitted Phon• 673-6260 '111E HAWlllllNf THE LUXURIOUS NEW IALl$A THEATRE NOMI o• l !XrltM CHAii lOtQ I 70t WT IALIOA llYD. \ \[.,IALIOA PUllN!Ul.A• l13-4G41.V NOW INDS 1UUDA Y DCLUSIYI KAllOI AllA SHOWIN• Michliel Celne Cliff Robertson Henry Fond• -Judith Cri•f MOM PIODUCll OP 'iHE Dll1Y DOZIN"I ALSO -IN COLOR. PEIER SllliRS1 Ill '1 LOVI YOU , ALICI L TOILU" ':::.:;' --MJ.toll •a.) , ... , ...... BROADWAY '"' J\l I\ lN NOW IXCLUSIYIL Y OP "PAnON" • • ••ACl1 , loT •u.1• • Cl ~. COA•T MWV ... MN DI•--· M 7••.0. o HUNflNOTON •~H JACI LIMM.ON e SANDY DINNIS • ''The Out Of Towneraff l'lUS -JlltltY LaWll IN ~ w., ,. n. ........ <•• S:XClUll\11 INOWINfl Cll1r1Mf1 He:11M "llNL\TH THI l'UN91" 01" THI Al'•I,. 10) C..... "lHI ct.AMII" !ti Cti... liXCLUll\11 lftOWINtl Mkllalol C11M • Cliff It~ ''TWO 1.ATI TH• HallO" "THI l0S811" (ll) Ctlw Ullffr 11 Mwt 11 Wllll P1r11t Cllnt I••'-' • lllll'lt-MKL.llflt ''TWO MUI.al POlt SllTllt IAllA" llPI Ct>lw J1ma 5!1w1rt e DtM Mtrllll ''IANOaltl.O" Cller PltlMllltl IN0AOIMINTI "'GnTINI tTllAlllfT" (It) C1lw "OOOOI VI COl.UMIUI" fll) C..... Ulllltr 1) Mlftt .. WJlll l'H91 IXClUll\ll tttOWINet C91trt• Ht&ltfl "llMUTN THli Pl.AMIT 01' TNI Al'lt" 101 Clltr ...,... e.t.M•l" lOJ c.ltl' .... Qltr ... "'SWIOIN HU\laN •ND MILL.'' Ufl "ttAlflll UMQla LaATHI•" lal U.... 11 Wiii Ml'I a. Mftl{"911 Wilt • ...,., Alf CM llltw ... lllPINt llAUTY" t•I N1l1tr MUI• "lltl laAat• O• TMI CA.IT,,WAVI" fl) •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • Fric111, Autlm 7, 1970 ···MATINEES DAl.Y··· RATED "GI'" DfNCt ,,_ hit S•.e11• •w .... S.. --- NOW AT BOTH EDWAR!>S CINEMAS, , .. ·---· ·------ 3rd EXCLUSIVE WED! RATED "GI'" .....::=.::- • 2 JllRY LIWIS IN "WHICH WAY • , TD THE FRONT" (G) ..... HELD OVER· 1'05mVEL Y ENDS TUES. . ---•tEF'llll --••-- . . ST:ARTS Y(ED., ~UG. 12 'M•A•s•H' is wJtat th e new freedom of th1 sreen is all 1bout.'' -Rfdla.r4 $(hlCP'T, Ute STARS : Elliott Gould Donold Suthtrlo ... A~ lT~ 0'1111AL THE GAMES MATINEES DAILY COLOR (0) -. :'M OAJLY flJLOT ,Fi:ldl1, Al,l9Ust 7, 1970 :.,. ______ -----'--=:::...="-'C:.:.-'- I '' ~XTllA ~SAV~ OH TOP QUALITY USID CARS ••• '69 PLYMOUTH '68 PLYMOUTH .JATWIU JEDAN. • AWNf SEDAN v-1 ...... 1&, ··~-""'· ' • J • ~ tfto.'fl!•-lk, lmin«U· ('f', -ltffr"!e< , C1DrY tlr. 4ZLN7a) • .-·.'1;395· $2295 '69 DODGE '65 PLYMOUTH SUPEI Ill IARlACUDA --w ... , """' .......... , ... . ...t.ul-•Me....,,,~li1lon. ••· POW~ •11...-1(11 f Wiii mo<e.; ~~95~;" p(WZ ,..S~ l1 \ 1 . '2395 ' '68 ~GE '63 DODGE DAIT I DOOR SIDAN DAllT 270 • RiOtf) ~Miff, 6 cYhnotr Sll<Nn. A11!~tk tr111m1Ll- 110!>, r.cl•o 1..0 ~e1!9f, CIEG· IOI' rt9t __.. •. lWTF J05) 69]) '1295 $595 ' ~. ----------------.-.---..--....----,,, ____ _ .. • OUT ST ANDI Net l,t, VINGS • ON A+ i: A$~..cH!tYs1..'iilr1 l'I. YMOUTlfS EN.Tl!ll. INVIN· T_ott)' ,Of' NIW l~.~~,YSLIRJ. ': • ~L YMC?U'fHS: A',lf ~f IM!".'l~IAts, ', ~S . ATLAS .Cl!tElltATES .THREl .YEARS Of' SERVICE TD ITS MANY fRIENDS IN ORANGE COUNTY • ._:1EE ATtAlt CHRYSLEltfP~ YMOUTH TODAY, ' AND CEL,EIRATI . . . . WITH SAVINGS! '66 vw '65 RAMBlER" ... '68 'OOdcie "< .. , . ' SID~N. AUIO!!Mll<: TrlnlmlHlon, r.-CHAllGER ' 4 Nl9" tt•nJfl'lllllCll". ••d• dlo, l\N1tr1 ~ 1IH rlna. A,ulDm~lit, ._ rldio. ht11..-, et·""'· r••lltt. •M bftk&'i 111<1 Ml1tr, 411RT 1571 c(llR 11lt> nfl I . {VUW41$J ' .. $895 " $695 $1995 '64 CHEVROLET '64 FORD '64 KARMANN HOYA. THUNDIRll"D tfAJl9H·WAG0N GHIA 6 ~plJnci.r 'llf!Rlllil, radio 11nd Aulom111c 1r1n1mlulon, ,,.. 4 SPHd lr1n1ml11I°"' •fella l'lt'llil<. • '!H kt ...,rl•l1. dlo, he•l•r. -•• 1IHrl1111, t'37.-,CDl POWtr brlklt. !PCZ 2611. llld U~ltr. !HUP 5171. •595 '795 '895 • ' '69 PLYMOUTH '61 PLYMOUTH '69 PLYMOUTH ' .. t.:J"" CUSTOM SUIUSllAN llOADllUNNER 1 Dr. H.T. 1uto,, •fdiO. bff!«, P , .J.«.lory eor, • Cir. w•e.., . .,. .. , l lllGm•!IC. • 1pftd tr.nsmlulcii>, rtdlo winyl top. ~iMJ dll. lldlpl r.c!lo. hffJort,. l!OWt',... ,,.,.. '""$1495 ' Int. IUC11AI 1nd ~tlt,r. (VQW fNiJ ' '$1995 ' '1895 ' \ • ;4·DOOR L~~ipAU •.. . ' ... · .. SA 'IE ·. . . BRAND NEW $ V.S ~in&, cruise-o-motic, power Sfeeritg~ P9~ diSC: brakes, factory o!r, tinted gloss, Vmyl-top, wheel covers, whitewalls, & full •tocttMy eqpt. Serial No. 0~56H102669 1-,6·()~AlAXIE 500 .., ,.., : .• ' t!~ffARoTOP V·8r-'"dte.1P6'tet "· . Stfering, Radio, heater,~MMr ~ f j LOWDOWN • LOW PMTS •. '66 ~.~~-~!~G Hordtop steeling, SUM-446 · . ' ·~67 ~8~~:!~.~:,~. Vir:iyl interior. VEL-271 ~ . .. BUY ONE OF OUR ADVERTIS(D USED CA~S.llllYE IT FOR 7 DAYS AND IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED TRADE IT FOil 0'-1O~200 USED CAIS AVAILABLE TELIPHONI APP ISAL USE THE EQUITY IN YOU II-OLD C'A R TOtN,tKB THE DO'l'N PAYMEN1' ON THE NEWONB-PAID FOR O~Nf>'f! CREDIT'COUNSILING Le1 .11s help yoq reurr,aN8.J you,.·h•J,~1·i,fy<n1/Hl'l>f!# lomkd with bills, bu' u•ould like-to f>uy a ne~ or usSd c11r rw lt'Mtlt CALL 842-M 11 OR 540-17,80 FOR'tHISFRllSI Y I I 1EW~i44~ ~ALKt DRJV•;A MAVUICK ., :~~~' ~!~!~!.~;~~;,~!~!.~!~!~! •11s•1 t wflitewoll ti'res, 24 month open-tl'ld lto$e. r :: CAU llENrAL DEPT.142:6611011540-7 """" IMMEDIAT,~ DEUYEIY · (OF·2SOSTYLESIOl f.U. wilt! long Bed. I it'f lii:n.: tr.\h·oir ~eo)«, plus U.lrol. ~ "" f25AlJSOa93. frid.11, Au!J;St 7, 1910 Serial No. OR01l160544 · snu 50,000 lllf. . .. WARIAfflY · AVAIUltE>. ·LQ¥(DOWN> ... & tOWPMTS. 66 ~~~wY ~~a.~:~:.~~~.~~~ $138 8 --::~-:::::::-::h:':::eo:':'Y:--id:-'ut':iy ·-:~;:-:S0~6 f:''-:::-:"::::"-"Jlr"I + •• '6·5· FORD 1 TON STAKE v.a, • '""'· . <kloi ""'"'s, ~1f26S . '6·a·oooGEVAN . . 3.i,4 !<>n loog ..... I bo<t V-8 £n9ine _ _ vwylowmileoge.73,218 •• I eftnJa J3l ftRESTIG~ WATERFRONT HOMES Ol'EN HOUSE SUNDAY 2• Lind• Isl• Drive Corp. owned. 5 Br. 5 bath home facing Harbor l1laDd. Jacuzzi I. sauna. Comp. ftlrn., for immed. occup. W/dock ............ '200,000 n Linda ltle Drive New 5 Br .. 5 bath home on Jaioon. MarbJe entry, w.et bar, AM/FM Intercom, Huge nutr Br. bas beam ceil. & own frplc, Large liv. & fam . rms. w/f.rplcs. w/deck ...... Sl&51000 Occupied-Lindo hie Dr. Cust. 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/J frplcs., circular stairway, decorator selected carp. ' & drapes. Shown by appt. ........ $210,000 Waterfront Lott No. 54 : On lagoon. With plana ..... $116,000 No. 41: W /76.2 Ft. of long water view facing Harbor Islond. With home. . . . . . . $295,000 No. 76: Wide lot on lagoon ........ $85,000 No. 88 : Corner Point lot with 118 ft. of front.- age. Long water view. Plans available." For complete inform1tion on •II other homes a Iott, c1ll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Man.,... of Lindo hie fr"" Jt1 inc:eptien to completion W Dover Dr. 5uihl 3, N.I. '42-4620 Open Houses THIS WEEKEND HOUSES FOR SALE (J Bod-) 2150 Vista Dorado, Nowport Beach <Open Sat & Sun) 228 Goldenrod. Corona del Mar · 1144-4910 CSal I. Sun 1·5:301 2039 Irvine Ave., Costa Mesa 644-1910 (Sal & Sun 1·5) · 1515 Bonnie Doone (Irvine Terrace) 644-1910 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) f22 Belvu_e Lane, Balboa Peninsula 675-1$JO !Sun 11·5) U Bod-• & F•mily or Don) 515 Tualin 1'v• .. (N•wport Heights) NB 64U9'/2 CSat & Sun 11).lj I *1707 Tradewind" (Bayer.,!) NB 642-8235 csat & Sun) *7006 Tahuna (Irvine Terrace! CdM 64U472: 67S.3468 <Sat & Sun 1·5) 433 16th Place, Newport Beach 675-3210 • ' (Sunday) 3057 Carob CEaslhluff) NB 644--0559 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 1000 Nottingham Rd .. IBaycrest) NB 642-0062 I Sal & Sun) 14 Bedroom ) ttll Linda Isle Dr.. (Unda Isle) NB 675-31!10 16at & Sun) 109 Via Ravenna (Lido Isle) NB 675-1662 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 1130 Santia11:0 Dr., (Dover Shores ) 642-823.5 (Sat & Sun) *** #S Collins Island, Newport Beach 835-5164 : 673-9043 <Sat & Sun 12-5) (4 Bedrooms & Femlly or Oen) 1330 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 !Sot & Sun) 17821 Ash St., Fountain VaUey ~38 <Sat & Sun 12-5) 2173 Boe Vista <Mesa Verde) CM 645-1848 rOpen Sat 12-5) *1915 Chubasco Dr .. (Irvine Terrace) CdM . 673-3211 : 545-2300 <Sun 1-51 1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 fOpen Daily) 1642 Irvine (Baycrest) NB 646-7755 <Sun l ·5 l 1606 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) *f627 Camd•n (C1meo Shorei;l CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 91J Darrell, Costa Mesa 645-2461 (Sal & Sun 10-ll) 2038 Calvert. (Meu Verde) CM 5f0-4556 (Sal & Sun after 12:00) 271& Windover Dr .. Corona de! Mar 644-1910 (Sun 1·5 :301 '10 Mornlna: Star Ln .. (Dover Shores) NB e44-1910 !Sal & Sun 1-5 :30) • 1112 Nottingham CWulcllff) NB 1144-4910 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 28111 Clubhouse Rd., CMtsa Verdel CM 6f2-1616 , I Sal & Sun H) 1718 Minorca (Mesi Verde) CM IWM'll6 !Sat & Sun l *1158 Sandcastle (Harbor View Hilla) CdM, 83J.-0700 ; ffl-~30 (Sun 1-5) 1'10 E&ltll• Ln. (Weokliff) NB 13U700: m24*> (Sun 2-tl *1'121 Galata lllvlnt Terncel NB 4NU200 ' (Sat & Sun 2-t) DOe i14dl1nd1 Drive (Newport.Beach) ~ <Sat & Sun 1-5) (I ...,,_ & '•mlly er Do") *1131 Galny Dr. (Dover Shorea) NB ta-ca (Sat & Sun) 16 llM,_,, & '•mlly or 0...1 1• Glluy Dr., (Dover ShorH) NB f41.1181 : 14M617 (Dal!y 1·5) HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES.FOR SALE ,. Gtner•I lOOOOenlral 1000 GeMr•f /Jek /Jarrell f<eaft'J · p~6,n'4 ' IRVINE TEIRACE-Ol'EN HOUSE Walk to goU -sallinc -tennis. Bayview home with pool. SpaCious, entertainment oriented. S Bedroom , dining room PLUS separate maids or guest room. f79 ,500. 1721 Gal•t.. Open S.t. & Sun. 2 to 6 SEE THIS VIEW ! From a high point in Corona Highlandt. Panelled family/dining room , builtin ldlcl!· en, 2 bedrooms & 2 baths. Large, carefree · yard with complete privacy. Fee land. 157,. 5-00. REAL UDO VALUE ! Extra charming family ho1Jle. Lowest priced 4 Bedroom & 3 baths on the Ialand. Asking $63 ,5-00. . Office Opon Satur<lay1 & Sunday• PETE BARRITT REAL TY 1605 Woatcllff Dr., N.I. 642-5200 Coldwell,8Mkar OFFERS: A.0"9MM•'f BAYFRONT-VIA LIDO SOUD TOP L9CATION .. Harmonious blendinJt of charm & utility are combined in this 2 bdrm. 2 bath home. Completely remodeled. Could be enlaraed. Pier with slip for large b<>at. f14:7,500 Kathryn Raul.st.on EMERALD IAY Superb view -beautiful, custom home. 38tlO Sq. It . -4 or 5 bedrooms. 4Y.. baths, rec. rm. Many e1tras. Jacuzzi, fire-alarm system. sel(-cl n. oven. Two years old. $145,000 Carol Tatum NMftORT HEIGHTS VIEW Can you Imagine formal dinin( with a full panoramic view of the bay, Lido &: Cala· lina for your enjoyment? See this 4 BR. now ! Ask.in.I!; $98,500 W. G. Comstock FABULOUS PATIO Also serves as entry courtyard thru double doors in Dover Shores 4 BR., 4 Ba .. room home. Great views. $97,000 Al Fink BEAT HIGH INTEREST Rates by assuminj!; the S'h ?'t> insur. loan on this immaculale exec. home. Larie !am. rm. + llv. nn., great !or entertain- ing. Fee land. $65.000 M. C. Bute WANT A GOOD BUY 777 Harbor View Hills/Broedmoor home offer- ed below market value -sharp 4 BR. - near pool -Mt. view -owner is movina: & must sell -good value at $64,500. Bud Austin CORONA DEL MAR-VIEW 4 BR. 21n Ba. Lusk home. Swim & dive all year i'n 18x38' pool, enclosed in a dramatic Courtyard. Home almost new. Let us show you this ! $61 ,500 ELEGANT SPANISH-5 BR. Ow ner says "SELL"! Distinctive split· level new ·home. Mexican tile' entry, hua:e family room 2/2nd fireplace. Formal din-- in.I!;. Prof. decor. Walled ttarden. Priced to sell at $56 ,900 Belle Part.ch SUNDAY 2 • 6 P.M. WESTCLIFF -OPBN HOUSE 1310 ESTELLE LANE. Terrific I BR., fem . rm. home In Harbor Hi·Mariners School District. Immediate occupancy. Owner moved. $49,950 Cathryn TeMille BAYSHORES PRIVACY Bay beaches & boat facilities avail. to lucky Bayshore home owners. Secluded 2 + den + dining nn. home -lovely decor -move-in condition. Large patio. Beaut. planted. $49,500 Mrs. Harvey ONE MORE CHANCE To ~et selUed near MARINERS School. Ideal !or young family, with 3 BR.; i Baths. Asking $44 ,950 Harry Frederick Ol'EN HOUSE SUN. 1 • 5 858 SANDCASTLE. !!arbor View Hilla. Come enjoy the beautiful view & pool in this 4 bedroom, 3 b.ath Lask llome. Sepa- rate family rm. La•. kitchen w/brkfsl. area. Mary Lou llarion IU.0700 644-2430 MACNAB : IRVINE FINER HOMES YACHTSMAN'S SPICIAL Prime BaYlront lot near Newport Harbor en-trance. Pler It 1llp privileges. 50 IL front· a,ge. Less than ~ pe~ front foot . Total . price Sll4,IOO., • LOW INTEREST LOANS-ON FEE LAND Bajcrest -..5\!i % -Doll house with pool. $57,500 Coropa del Mar -6~" -Sunny & sparkling. .$63,500. • •• Bayer.,t -6% '--Gorgeoua custom. $125 ,000 Owner's will carry secondary financi~ DOVER SHORES Magnificent view ol Bay & Ocean. Lovely f bedroom. 4 bath home. Shows the line&l a .. cor & care. Professionally & B,Ctiltically~land· scaped. Fully alr·condl\loned. A rtially •er•· clous hO!l)e offered by original owner. $120,000 BAYCRllT Reduced $4,000 for immediate sale . .l!eauutul S bedroom, 41h bath 2-story home. Formal dining room. Large breakfast area. Family room with wet bar: room for pool. View from 2nd story baleony. See this outstandin«i value. $89 ,800. Open Sun. 1-5. 1815 Santiago Drive. ' BAYFRONT Own the whole end of an island. 218 Ft. of waterfront with pier & float. ,3 Bedrooms, FamUy room, Remodeled fun beach house. Upper story has large view sundeck. Only ~4.500. BETTER YOUR LIVING Take a look at this extra-clean. almost new 3 bedroom, 21f.a bath &: family room Lu sk home. Clo1ed~ln court.yard. Owner movintt lo Hawaii -mu st seli. Visit Sat. & Sun. & lake a look. 2215 Aralia, Easlbluff. WEST COAST RIVIERA First time offered. 79 Beautiful seashore lots. Reported to be the last in this area. Streets, sidewalks & all utilities in. A \liew that J{oes on & on. Let us tell you about the financint & tax shelter. Call now . 675-3210 DRAMATIC VIEW LOT lma~inative buyers only, who want to build on harbor areas' most spectacular view Jot above China Cove. $65,000. Fee simple. Call Rick Macnab 642-8235 CORONA OEL MAR DUPLEX In beautiful South side. 3 Bedrooms. 2 baths each apt. Near excltlnR. sboppint. Great rental area. Price $62,500. 602 Avocado. Owner anxious. Cail for app''t. ASSUMABLE LOAN IN l~YCREST Beautiful & immaculate 4 bedroom, den, famlly room & pool. Hurry for this one. $58,500. . COOL, CLEAN AIR Best corner. 3 Bedrooms, 21h baths & situ- ated on the scrumptious "Greenbelt" area of "The Bluffs". $38,900. Call for app'l. PRIME DOVER SHORES VIEW Laree 4 bedrOQm borne with 4 spacious baths. All electric kitchen , dining room, marble fireplace & huge livlnJ{ room. Landscaped in a manner to maintain an open !eelinJt &. to allow max.".lmum view of Back Bay. Only $89,500. Open dally. 1130 Santiago Dr. LINDA ISLE Brand new ~story Bayfront home. 5 Bed- ~ooms . .ti,\ Ba~. Famijy room i formal din- tn.R: room. Your selection of C?arpellnt & de- cor included In the asklnJt price of $150,000. See our a~ent at # Jl Linda lale. v MACNAl·IRVINE Rt1fty Comp•nv 901 Dover Dr., Suitt 120 '42-1125 OOYER SHORES ' Medel Horne 1430 Galaxy Dr. rva.n weua model home now available tor lmmedi&te oc- ct.1pancy. 4 Bedrooms, 3 batJu, 3 cu prep. You may haw your &a.rd!:n in- doors in the 1p9cious Trav- .ertlne muble atrium with .oartrig 14' hfah skyUght er outdMra' thn.I th! slidtna glas1 walla ol a .9p8Cious llvinc rm wilh Panoramic View. El(Jlertl,y~ carpeted, draped and decorat.ett. Com- pll!tely landtclped. $100,<m.' Open d•lly 10 to 5 Ivan Wells & Sons ''BIO 5.'' I Beclroo!M. tt.t It! HUGE; master &uite with romantic, lflduded ba.lcooy. 2!' fam- ly ENTE'RTAINM»rr CEN- TER, maulve beaml!d CA· TiiEDRAL ceillnc. l deluxe be.th& and famOUI GARDEN KITCHEN. Private club, lllkes, 11.1'(1 riding trails, Hnd YOU own the land. Vartint and ready lo l!njoy at $42,· 500! Walker & Lee 20'3 We-1tcUU Dr. .... m, Open 'tiJ 9:00 PM DUPLEX $21,500 ~. bedrooms, oeer down· town, C.M. Park . women's / boys .l cfrls club, Owner need. ea1h. ~'II by 11-ppt. Lochenmyer "'' .tt. lSdo Newport Blvd .. C.M. CAU.. 646-39'28 or S4.>34S3 . Open Evening• Work1hop • E•1t1ide 16x33 acrou aUe)', plua lliUP slttplng room on baclt of dotacherl garage, fiOxtl!i' R-2 ]t'lt, and room for boa!, trail. er 2 Nice bedrm} & dlnina: rm • all for only $2S,'MO. Ca.II us? iOpen Evenings) 545·SllO (Mii cifllml lheatrt) lLLEGE REALTY iSllD.W..lt~.tM VIEW NEWPORT JETTY & OCEAN A ca~ above Bia: Corona beach, Cool 6 breezy. OJ.r.i- f'd fireplace. Fa'lnily room. Breaklalt nook. Nice bed- rooms. BeautUully land.sc11- * * * * * * TAYLOR * ·* * WATERFRON:T • $15,000 81' on channel with pier and dock. 3 bdrm., 2 stry. Beam ceiling. Owner will carry 1st T J). at low int. rate lo qualified buyer. Hurry for this one! Call to see. · DELIGHTFULLY Dl~FERENT Dover Shotes. Brand new 4 bdrm,, den ~ garden room with wet bar. Dramatic 2 s~ory living room ·willj balcony. Formal dlillnC· room. King-sil'e-'master bdnn suite with c• thedral ceiling. 3 car garage. SI08,ooc> flO Morning Star Lane Open Sal.Sun 1-5 :30 SMART ! ROOMY! DISTINCTIVE! And just reduced! New price on this 4 bdrm., 3 ba., WestcliU home makes it a must see! Pool sized rear yard. $49.950 1112 Nottingham Open Sat-Sun 1·5 :!19 A BIT OF HAWAII In Corona del Mar! Enchanting gardens and view of the bay &. ocean. A house to remem- ber. Enjoy this spacious 4 bdrm home w/ formal D.R. & family rm. All the incredlenll for a happy home lite. $79.~ 2716 Windover Open Sun. 1-5 :30 LINDA ISLE · $225,000 Mile Joni water view! Pbbulous cuslom bWJt 2 story Colonial with 3 lge bedrooms, re- creation rm & formal dlnin,R:. Pier &: slip. A real beauty. To see call 644-4910. · AN EXCITING HQMl With a dramatic flair! Tired of the usuaJf See this custom 3 bdrm borne near ocean 1n CORONA DEL MAR'. Architect deslJ!ned Ii bit 2 years ago. Teakwood, glass & sky! 179.500 228 Goldenrod Open Sat-Sun l·S :SO CHARM PERSONIFIED · $43,950 Spacious courtyard. 3 Yrs new. All modern extras in this Spanish motif. "Built-in" com· fort. Come see & be captivated. 2089 Irvine Ave. Open Sat-Sun 1-5:00 MINl·MANSION • $41 ,950 Maxi lot! Room for boat. trailer & camper. Thia S bdrm., fam roo'm Newport Heighta home really offers space ln and out. Call us lo see this comfortable home. IRVINE TERRACE · $40,000 A rare find in this exclusive area. Lar~e 3 bdrm. & 2 bath home w/near new carpetina:. Sliding doors open to lovely rear patio. 1515 Bonnie Doone Open Sat-Sun 1-S: 30 IRVINE TERRACE · $17,500 ·rremendous View! Watch the boating ac. tivity from most rooms of this beaufifUlly maintained 3 bdrm & fam rm home. An in· viting front patio with rare planting around lovely H&F pool. Call us today lo see. MOST DESIRABLE ARIA Popular Harbor View· home with 4 bdrms. k family rm. Pool size yard, fine decor & Corona del Mar Hi School. $53,509. WATERFRONT DUPLEX Let us show you this custom bit quality home with 3 bdrms plus 3 bdrm. inc. unit. Dramatic features tbruout. Wonderful view. NEWPORT BiACH DUPLEX On water at end of canal. 1 Blk to mlct & City Hall. 1 Bdrm & bath each unit. Good rental area. By appl. $44,000 LINDA ISLE LDT Build YOUR borne oo choice waterfront site. prime location. Leasehold. $75,000. "Our 25th Ye•r'' ,. •. v"""""' r;,,, ''"""" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO Realtors &: Oower1. Hurry & c11ll , •1 ~ 2111 Sin Jo•qu1n Hiiis Road FOREST E. OLSON NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 lOIO Bayolit. Drlvo 675-nlo tnc. Realt"'l Newport 8e1c:h HA.Rf~R N'. or ~ILSON *•* * * * * * ~ 3 ~~m.D~\.~A~"''' 1000 G..,.ril 1000· brick nreplace, Gas bull!- ·---lnB, Shlna:le roof, Dou blr cRI BEACH BEAUTY WITll ,6%% tOAN EJh lharp 2 year old home with 3 bedrooms, tlreplaca, bltlns and • rreat kitchen. Owners have inc:rt:ued !he livin1 area by adding a love. ly rove~ It llCl'ttflned Pl· Uo. $189 pl,)'I all. $29.900. J6a.. COATS ~WAtLACI RIALTOIU 9552 Hemllton Avt. Huntington le.1ch' '61-4454 $795.00 TOTAL DOWN 4 bedroom beauty wtth ior- pout fireplace IUn'OUnded by HUGE lamlly room with helmed ceUtn1 and knotty ptne. tfi,IGE modem kit· chtn, 2 luxurinu1 bl~, M.:ity e1rpet1 11nd drape1,' dbl. 1ar11e with IUICKl\lltk: door. G.I. Md FHA term1. CALL! Walker & Lee Realtors 2190 Harbclr .Blvd. at Adami 5'5·9491 Open 'tll 9:00 f>rl.t 7 BDRM. ESTATE Beautll\ll CU11tt1m hom11 on Jae. wooded Jot, Newport. Pyramid Exchan.rora 675-8800 ~ Eves. ' Wheel & Deal 4 Bedroom-. $25,500 Thia home Ml vacant and the owneF wanta It IOld. No monty down to Veta. It hu wall to w a 11 carpetJna th~hout, 2 r bathl, all built-In kitchen, double gar. a.ae. Call and barp.ln your way Into a new h0me1 Call p.raa:e. \V&lic lo 11.1\ schoo ls and 1up park, f11A or VA tenna, CaJi 5*-2313. $77,500, ·D TllC REAL '°' 1 · . .;'l'ATCRS . .. SHARP I Baya'fl•t 4 bedroom home wUb famUy rbom I separ- ate dinina room. Only lil.-sm. JERRY FREUD CHAS. ARNOLD 3M E. 17th St., C.M. '46.77B I $1,soe Rod11ellon THREE UNITS • Priped tc H:U, One 2 ¥'? U(IU • 1 bdnn. unlt • blehltlOr COi· ..... Doublo !ll"!'P . !.up laundr')I rntii;"'" Jte1r 1Choo11 and anoi>Plrw. A butaJn •t only W,<m. M. M. L18ord.1, Rltr. &l6-0555 Ev~1: m.6111 CUTE & NEAT -CORONA DEL MAR - THIS OL ' HOUSE has TWO very desirable R -1 Iota (with 3 large trees, a 11 e y access) jusl steps to main beach &. bay. Magnificent bay view obtainable from second stories when new homes are builL $85,000 . THE DECORATOR JUST LIWT After completing the carpets, custom drapes and shutters -and now th e own· ers have been transferred East. It's just like new, really r o o my and elegant. 4 Large bedrooms, 2 baths. huge family room and separate dining area and m11t· er suite. Newport Beach address and a pool-size yard. Sprinklers front and rear, gar,ge ~oor opener. VACANT and ready lo show. $56,950. e Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR Newport BNch Offlc• 102' Bayside Drl .. 675-4930 A wry attractive 2 bedrm &Side home. Hardwooct Ors, huee ldtchln, alley ac. Cftl, Room tor bol1 or trlt on IUIO R·2tot.Only121.900.J=~--'!"'-'"'!'!!''!'!!!'i?o!!'!!"'""!,..~~,jlJ ~~ .. '!:'R~:!. 540-USl. for QUICK CASH . rr·s Beach "'""'•m•. sia-Tlu·ough U 1e1t •ltctlon ftVtrt Sit the ~:;! ~~r a ... m.. D41LY PILOT AD HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE TRANSPORTATION HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi .:..:.;;.~c..::.;.:~.;,.:.:.;c.._~::.;:;::..'-.:;:;.:::::::::...._1 jt:·-G;;•9!.'o.l:; •• ·.,~-~1000:..,~G:••~11~ro~l---..;'iooo~1j~c;.,~.,.~r~aliiii~~~l~OOl~Q~ao~-~·~t~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ~OOO~~c;.,~:,.~·~•~I ;,iij";iij;i~l;OOO~G~o~na~r~•l;.ij";iij;i-:l~OOO~Coota -.0 llDD Newport llu<h l:ltll Col'GNI •I Mar 1lilll ,r --WHAT A BUYI DUPLEX PLUS COftlllG del Mar ' Dovra SHo•~ sic,.150! :. BR. HOME. AS-One. lot born OCEAN 2 BR ' ~ R. f &IJ ..... ...... THE ·to .. t•e15 ~ ''"' J'l!A LOAN, •••aw11h.raw.-·PLlis s1x.-PLEX . t ,. ... _., ,.._ .... I-' 'ft''li ~·-.. _ "-D 11 I to • e an ..... ............. IV ..... ' • _..,., • p)'tt. $97.13 mo. l BR .:c-& i\ICSt rm. XIII!. ...,...n • y ~ ea I! • Only 1 av~blt. Panoi:ari>Jc bay & Oc:ean pm, Huu OQIJ40 tt. lW oondltloa. Top.,... !Or uv. 3201.Jlll Boy11do Drive * EXCl'l'ING.-2-.io.y, fn>m t•VOt'Y"""-i--Vlew.&•el .. i-2 ~to;-Eie--lot, -<Mh>-lni-. Obi. lnr " ""tinr.151 . ._-Six. 2 bodrg>.9U!"11f.p!lb GI -PRIVATE BEACHES BeautifµI swimming pool Jn enclosed front ' patio. a Bedroom & den. Seller is anxious, so ,_. thls for sure this wi:ekend ..... $81,500 Open Saturday & SWtday, I · 5 4521 Orrington, Cameo Shores DELUXE UNITS 'fhree -2 bdrm .• 2 bath units & one -2 bdrm., 1 bath unit. All with individual patiO&. on a big level corner lot, 75' x 120'. Near beach & downtown . . . . . . . . . . . . $125,500 Open Saturday & Sunday, I. 5 324 ABier, Laguna Beach Corona del Mar i:o!"l'·aStonr, beamed celllDg llvill9 room, ".'If.or•.-.. Je.cum pool, 791> Financing det .... WATERFRONT HI ..... '""''""'' ""me 4 bednns,· :f oaths, parqu t"'floor family with 10% 4own. Very special buyl f"tS»To · Call: Patrtck WOOd 56.2300 Duplex 1 ,. 2 BR. "modeled financiox available. All tn rm., expensively carpeted, draped, land-$58,500. 0--.,en Dally I~ P.M. SW W. Coast • Biii H•-· Rltr. & cute . .,, condltlo•" sun. !Ip-top condl!...,. """"" scaped.. '89,500. Hwy., Newport Beach. 2111 E. Coa1t, CdM 673-J2ll dj!Clc palki. Dock your boll 1vlU excl\Jnge tor 1ln,la tam. 1018. S. Main. &A. SfJ..6613 in front S66 000 ily home up to $50,<m, or * UNUSUAL 5 bedroom View home. Unique MACNAB • IRYINE FHA er GI NO DOWN w· •N' TE. o "°"'1 ""•"" In eo...,. .. , n pl lth 2 bedr ..,, Mar. Drop by .l ~ ct' call oor an w ooms 4c bath ln one Rtefty cem,.ny WNt side Freedom HorM, 3 BR home in Newport mm. wing. Formal dining nn., crptd family M2-12U 67$.3210 Ju.at painted and paneUed. Heights under SJ5 000 want. room wi'Di 2nd fireplace. '86,000, . , Va.wit fllr quick ruove-ln. ed by readY bu~. Haslarp!eJIC!dya.td,O\vn. CALL I!\ '''·l•I~ * CHOICE Baycrest Lot-you owu itbt land er will Pll" points . Call now ~O / -OK for 2 story. $25,000. 1G ·;;;"';;;'";';';' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1111111;; -al 1111111 • N..., qulcl< ootion. _ _... ... I• $21,500 It.IA.LTV ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors VA cau '13-6568 evenln:s or N••r New1•rt P••t Ottlt• Dovor Shores Offlca . l!!:'.!!!l •••ia _,,...,_ OPEN SAT/SUN 1.5 1430 G•loxy Ori .. , N.8. 646-1550 s;;;;;;;;J. .. 4 BEDROOMS "" quiet, u... 415 22nd STREET lined, traftic free FIXER UPPER cul-de-sac. O>zy f'rplc., til· Country Estate, over 1-acrt'. ~------- -0 THE REAL '"'\. CSTATERS " 6 7 3· 3 77 0 J ,Go;;;:";:";;;'';;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';:DDO;; 0-rol 1oao 4 BR./ No On Mesa Verde ed • Bdrm. + lwae lamily rm. Lara:e 3 bedroom, 2 bath A entry, all built-in!, 2 w/600 aq. ft. ruest bouae. 3 dinini;, 2 1tory with tee mas. be.tbs ii: acceu to ~ar yard, Car garage. Fruit !rees. ter bednn &: 1undeck. Need4 Best ~ for the money at Room for tennis Cl . & swim. paint A clean up. Only 5 $26,950 -1'1WVA temus * OPEN SUN. 1·5 * 1915 Chub.11co Drive Irvine Temu:e. IUneu torce11 Mir-or tbls l>!aul. 4 BR., ~ ba. home w/lge. tam. rm., l1v rm &. pooJ Lge. i8J"llP w/clec door. Beaut Pecan paneling in fam. & Liv. mM. F'or fJlliCk sale, priced 11 S5'i.OOO! 2828 E. Coast Hiway 8 .... LIDO ISLE Beeauae of ~. OWllS' will pay the points for-YoU to Ule YoUr VA loan. This Jtice home .la located 1 block from -,,., library - shopping cloee by. No down p&ymeDt financ:iDg is very rare in Mesa Verde, ao pleue caU right aw~! ! years old xlnt C.M loca-or 5-!4 % asa:wnable loan ming pool. Complete pl'l- tion. FuU ·pri~ $21.450. CaU avail. Call $15.8424 South vacy. 540-1151. Cout Realton. Scenk: Properti~ 875-5726 Call; Patrick Wood ~2300 e Bill Haven, Rltr. 2111 E. COrtst,' Cd.M 67J..J21l Gtne,..I 1ooq Gener1I ~~----~~ 1000 HARBOR LIGHTS Plus the 3ttene new of sail boots Ailing 1n a nd 001 of colol'ful Newpoxt Bey. Cozy Liv~ Rm .• forn1uJ d ining rm. llU'ge Fan\ .• Blllhll'd rn1. y,•ith y,.•et bar. Beautiful BII Kit. overlooking prok.'l::ted brick patio wllh fish pood and loads of tnwical "°"''· ers. Ttu-ee Bdrm., :Bi bath • hUje, mwiter Bdrm suite complfite \11ith Romun tub. G&nlgo oL( alley + addi- tional bout or lraller storage spat'l', Top ncigt)tlorhood • lop qullli'ty -top value. Only $i2,500. • $700 Down Eastside 3 Bedrooms To Vets. This home ls in beautiful move-in condition. Located in the back bay area of Costa ~Jesa it's va- t.a nt and the owrw:T is anx- ious. Asking $23, 750. Low do1>. n to llflyone, Call M. M. LaBo•de, Rlt•. 2629 HARBOR BLVD. · M6-05.55 Res; 673-6116 S46 8640 '~IJOO.:Y OPEN EVES TILL a.Jo •' · •• OPEN HOUSES IRVINE TERRACE Corona del Mar VA-VA-VA SAT./SUN. 1-5 Nice 3 Bednn 1hat hali a n en-1003 BONNIE OOONE. 3 BR. Jarged "donn" room for a + dC'n & Cam. rm. A touch groy,•it~ lamily, NC'aJ' f::lt:ll\..· of Spanish. & Jr. Hi Schools. Cute pan-1300 S,\NTANELLA. 4 BR., e\ed living rm y,·ith shag family rn1. Corner prof)('rly, <'!l)lg. \Viii sell )01>.· down 1407 SANTANEU.A. 5 BR .. FllA or VA. Asking $27.750. fam. rn1. OPEN SUN. l..l ')llis<f\ rnl1':Rcaftt 546-5990 G.I. RESALE $148 P /M PAYS ALL only. t'jll.\\" ,\ llL\fll. llE.\U'\' 1\1'. ES~li\'1 675}0JOJ You C'an as~ume subject to 6',t GI Joa n thu; sharp 3 Newport Heights berlroorn l\ome w11h custom Sornelhing difierent, spacious avocado shag carpets, tirap. ~r Jot, 3 bedrm + fam., 6-modem ~op-Aver kJtch-tmroac, ._"UstotniRd ill f!'lecy rn on an oversize 68 i1: 105 rletail, garden atriu1n. CHU lot. $23,000 FULL PRICE. r S37 500 or &JJPI. , • 11urry, it may already tie One of a Kind gone.! W I k & L l'oluter bedroom + J bed· a er ee room.. Bllin ~..... 0 ....... Realtors 7682 Ed inger 8424455 540-5140 di&hwasher. Crptd & drpd. 1\!!ki.ng $28,500. REALTORS ATTENTION! If you haven't seen our fan- tastic new listing on Madi. son in Oxta Mesa, you have mlSSed a great home. 4 ~e bedrooms, family rm. for. maJ dining, kitchen e\ting area . walled entry and wrought iron gates. Submit on ternis, priced at $38,500, Houllt' Hunft'rs call )Ull' Realtor OR ~U51 tor all dt'ta.lls. CAN IT REALLY BE? That 1>.'e. have a home on a GOLF COURSE LOT for only $22.500? Yes, It really ' a sharp 3 Bedroom witb l.argt> fenced rear yard that opens onto Pine Tree Golt Course. Existing FHA may be taken al 1%.o/o with total payments ol only $154 incl taxes. Call now 546-4141. $19,000 ~ Bedroom home in Colla A1esa located on nice tree- ,jlned .otreet.' Home b&<,"""' }'11.rd 'for the dl1Jdftn. With no down payment, and a positive $200> profit in 12 months, thia: is the best in· vestment you'U ever make. Prove it to ]'OW'8el£ now! Call . " ......... . Nichols Real Estate PRICE SLASHED!!! 546-9521 Irvine Terraco Home '"""G~O~L"D~E"N"W""!!'E'!'ST~"" LEASE WITH Gf>TION Clean, romfortable 3 Be.Inn., ESTATE 4 BDRM OR & l"AM rami1y nn. & pool. All in PopUlar 4 bedroom, 2 ba!h 1Ml\1EOIATE POSSESSION! top t'Qmt.! S."IS.900. Call: Monterey Model "'Ith cus-Liltle money needed. S~ CURT DOSH Realtor ton' carpets and drapes, nlng 4 huge bedrooms. Dou- ' push bu11on kitchen, FOR-ble fireplace. Built-in deak. f.i,\!• d ining' roo1n, SEPAR-fOR~lAL DINING. Family ATE family room anrt SE-roo1n. Gourmet kitchen with CLU01'~D master suite. As. built-in!. l'oiove in wilh option sun1c subject to 6""% gov-to buy money &: reasonable ernn1f'nt loan, $37.900 FULL "'"I. Call 645-030.1 &lZ-6472 l:."\'C'S. 673-3468 1730 \\I, Coast i lighv.1ay ~ A TOUCH OF SPAIN A Spanish llavored vllla on beautiful Cliff Dr .. l Bed- rooms, family T'Oflm. l!tl'ge Ji\•ini,: roon1 with hreplace. A 11parkll ng nl'w I o o k rhroul!hout -$4rl,000 -Cal PIUCE. FOREST l OLSON Walker & Lee '"' n .. Jt,,, l{eattoni 7682 Edinger 842-4·155 :110.5140 HARBOR N. OF WILSON $22,950 , FULL PRICE &alto111 ''Our 25th YHr" In the Harbor Area'' 673-4400 Do1n Orgo 17092 Boy St. #B Huntl"tton Beach You are the winner of 2 tickets to the Rin91in9 Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at the Anaheim Convention Center August 13-19 Nichols Real Estate 54'-9521 . e Open HOl.ltie-W~itt OPEN Sat. l SUn. 12-!'l No. IEI H • I ' •-b 2 b · 5 CoUlnll Island. Spacious entaCJe . ~· '· ..... , living nn, u8ttl brick trplc, :Htory French Reg e n c y --IH"--• d overlooking tum"-ba.8in & HM.~s ..---... '6, new ...... .,..., I'Pfl, •• .., ~~;;======~I cover@d patio. S 31, 700. Ol1il &cy. 4 bdtn, 3% bathl Owner. 440 Cabrillo St. & a Uvlng room u large 64&-4TI3 as all outdoon. Small swlm- FIXE R UPPER $22,5001-'-~o=:;,~----ming pool, pier, &: slip Just listed in good location In WES'I'CLll'F AREA $237,500. By 01vner. 835-5164 Costa Meaa f Btdrm, tamUy 3 BR on quiet cu.1-de-•c, or by appintnient 673-!J(UJ room, 2 bath9, Owner says hrdwd Urs, lge tncd yard. sell "'AS IS". Financing A.ssume ~ int FHA loa.n. B•ycrest * Pool avail with $3700 down, Exist-Only $21.300. Owner/Bia. By owner. Grack>us J BR 2 ing lolln can be-usumed 540-2266 ba, spac kiV bHns, huge Jiv "th annual 1--,.,,-------nn w/f'rpl , din nn, master wi no peruntqe COVERED BOAT suite w/etegMt bath ove.r-raw adjustment. Present in. AREA te.rest 5%%. 3 Br-2 ba.attn.c corner. looks pool/patio. Beaut lnd-l!Cpd., choiee Joe. Bargain Below FHA appra.sl.aJ. at $55.000. 642-8062 PAIJLaW&ii Owner Eves, 545-8776 3 Extra nict: 2 bedroom pri-CAl1'ABAJI L\tMACULATE 2 yr old 4 • By Owner Eastbluff vate units on large lot 50'X as 1.T'f oe. Large. 2 story 3 Br, 3 Ba, TRll'LEX NO DOWN 170'. Veterans can buy with ~ b;iaza~ 1~ nt pa~ fain rm home, prof. land· no monry down & build an _1093!!!!!!!&W!!!!!!!·.,c,..,."-!!!!!!!!!!546-!!!!!5440!!PI w / c 0 v . 6 % '% 1 0 a n scaped; Overlooking &ck estate. Drive by 1948 Meyer ';: assumable. By owne r . Bay. Pl. & then call to le-e inaide. NEWPORT 546-1363 afttt 6 PM, all 2$7 catalpa • 644-0151 $41,500 dayweekends li\tMAC . 2 br/2ba , HEIGHTS 3 BR. 2 ba w/fam nn, new Tow nhouse. Pool/patio &: $19,950 cpts, drps &: bltns, Assume MANY XTRAS! We're ICRV· Holds l:hia nall one bed-GI Joan 5%. s~. $19,500 ba.1-~7~ area! OWNER: Newport •• room, llve&'b!e ~ge on a a~. \Valk lo OCC. 218 ==-""--~~~,.....~ F1irview 50 x 127 foot lot Wltil you're ~H~'="'=""',,::..::°'c.·'"""~--= BEST' Loe. Bal. Penln. Va- 646-8811 _,,,..., to build you:· drea.in ASSUME 5%.% Gl loan. 1900 cant, lge. ~ Br. homes, "-tt big lot,;. Frank Ma.MlhaU Please-call 642-567! ext. 329 borne. 1'his is lhe ~t lo-sq · 4 Br, i ba, crpts, Realty. 67>4fi00 between 9 and 1 PM to claim (1nytime) cation in the Heights. See <lrps.~ bltns, many xrras. 1-~~-""""~,--~ your tickel.9. (North County it Toda , S..15,950. TolAI pmnts $204. By ow~r-BluUs COfJdo toll-free nllll1ber is 541).1220). VACANT R-1 y . 546-Zll.3 Owner. 540-36.50 or ~7. 3 br, 2 story on beaut gtttn ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimolPanorama. Heights • Tustin, f MIN TO BCH-$29.000 bell Sat. Sun., 2150 Vi.sta approx. % acre: possible lot 3 BR, 2 ba, D.R., w/w cpt!t Dorado VACANT spilt. Free & clear. Would Drp~. [rplc, secluded area BLUFFS Con!lo • 4 Br, 3 consider exchange lor resi-Own/a. 1.liiO G I en e a a: I es Ba. Best area. Below n1rkl dential income. True market Terr. BY owner. Aft S I: wknds. IM>IEDIATE POSSESSION. ,a!U<, $14,000. $29,950 C.M. 642<6S! OPEN SUN U-5 "4-4869 ~ =·he~~sh~~ 3 ;R, ~EA~FRQNT with 6l/4°/o Loan ~:i~1! ~·:. 5J:~ 1~ B~~V1_11;'U;,~mi:.i~gN;: rool, Jam.Hy rm., all blt-ins Sharp. squeaky clean home. _Beautiful family bOmc, entry ha. Cpt/<lrp . 270 Robi"hoo<l rm w/big fJlllc 642-81172 & cozy frplc. Prit.'ed for 1% Baths. Nearly new car-hall, huge family r m., <'Oey Ln. $31,000 FP 64~12!14 Ei..EGANT HonK', 2650 Sf! imm~. sale at $28,950 -pets, drapes. Built _ ins. den, mauive n.atural. brick * 3 &. fully c r P 1 tL in pre11ige area. 3 br, Submit IBA/VA terms or Ch>lce beach area. Asking fireplace. luxurious kitchen. Assumablt> FHA, bltins. b)' owner. 377.CO>. W -5583 ~"-"' loan av&ll.. C a l l '85.000. ean to .-ee. ~ annual "/., rata lo&n. I •"'2~,.,,.~-~-~.....,"."'.:~"':0·~--.JI -:=:;;:;:::;:::;::::;:=:::::;:= """" CHIL T ROlllNETT ,,.,_,.,,._ r: . REALTOR 645-0128 TARBELL 2955 Harbor 4 ~EDROOM . family room N•wPort _Helght __ , __ 12_1_0 \outh (-odst ~ -JUST A PITCH AND Pun """'"'!"!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'""'""IF'rom lrvlDe iott dub. Tucked REDUCED away in .... .,..,. !Ni"' Temt.ce, Only a few short $1300 bJocloi to Faablon Wand aboppine center. Vacant two bedroom &: den doll house. In move in oooditioQ. Only $40,950. Call 873-8550. Owner aa,y1 "aell" his va- cant J bedroom 2 bath home in CX>LLEGE PARK. 1650 MtWU-C feet or living space. Gai Built-lns. New Carpets. Newly painted. Heavy shake root Double car garage. A~ -O THC REAL '"'\. t;STATERS sume a 5'ii%, $158 Pm VAi-'""""""""""""""'""" Loan. What more coold yoU ask for at a low price of Open till 9:00 PM i25.txX>~~~oo Sq. Fl. Superlative Lfvlng 3 Units, income $395 mo, "The Bluffs'' SlS,500. 0..'Tlt'r-Agerit llOO sq. ft. of the a:reatest ·• 545-2486 * living. M(l8ter aized bed-3 BR. den, bllnll, crpb , drps, rooms, 3 baths, 49 x 19 .tt. R-2 lot, nr busii>ess & Schls. glau encl~ sundeck with 1903 Oranre. 642--8064 a breath taking upper bay i:.h ...... Tri Pl FHA VA -view. ~ below replace-.... _.t" • ex - meot 1!42-5S81 or 5'16-1720. ~:& ,..,... CHILDREN WILL LOVE to Ma play in this parii:-llke yard, _ s• Del Mir 1105 3 BR., I~ ba.. home in de-LGE 4 br, 2 be., 1o1esa <lei sirable Elllltside Colla llfe&a. ~tar. Needs pa.Int I. crpt. Beaut. family nn. 'A'ith open ~Pri«d::' ==aoo>rdl==""=':· :"'"=""=· beam cell. Close to scboolll. _ BEAUTIFUL 4 ·lge BR, !gt liv rm. trplc, lam nn, tropical pa I Io, Sale/ex- cbarwe for sm home . --Dover Shores 1227 *OLD WORLD* bclU&i~ Dover Shores bay A mt. view home. Uniq11e A: di.Uerent atyle. Built for beauty a: conve.nience. f \4 b&, 4 car gar. hi ceil'p Ir. many extra featuret. S-169,000. 548-7249 University Park 1237 --------- UNEXCELLED VIEW of Harbor & ocean. Attr. split level home on IW, 5100 sq, ft. lot. Ideal for .f. Apt. unlta. $200,oo:>. 2501. Ocean Blvd., C<BI. By appt onl,y. Bill Grundy, Rael tor 833 Dover Or., NB ~ *DUPLEX* Two 1-bdnn. Good Joe. nev· er a vacancy! Could be a good deal: MA:!/ we abOw you this? MORGAN REAL TY 67U642 675-6459 BAYFRONT LDT 2119 Bayside Drive 88 Ft. bulkhead with pier area. szro.ooo (Fee simple). Bill Grundy, Rltr. 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6U-4S20 Sp•cious home + tricome Onr, 707 Polh!lettla: 873-9103 --•; Balboa p.,1noulo 131111 W. Bay Waterfront Beautiful, nowly redec. 4 BR + bonus room. Patio-dec:IC beach-pier • alip. $175,000 .. Bill Grundy, Re•ltor · 8r DoYer Dr., N~B. Lido lalo ft 75" Lot! • 3 Bedroo1ns • 3 Baths It Convertible den • Dining room with fireplace • Loll ot patio * Hurry! $82,500 bowcm1> lowson JR_. RcotCoA: 34l6 Via L160 I *OPEN HOUSE* : S••· & Sun. 1 .. s • 109 VIA RAVENNA l T A special~ , 1 Contractor's home • · • 4 Bodrooms I $G9,300 I 615-1662 $77,900. Call 546-2313 Good neighborRood. Low Mesa V rcM WESTCLIFF down paym't. Only S2S,SOO. ..!. .. -THE FOX CO. IY OWNER ~1N-M-nNfi DESIRABLE / .'.:::::::=11~1~-11~1:• ==~'J~I "t.ta.rquette" plan; 3 bdrms., LARGE HOME 1110 -0 THE REAL 1'"'\. CSTATERS 4 BEDROOM REAL TORS 673-9495 Cullom built, < bodrm. tam. Ab8alutely immaculate il,y room, 2 blg fireplace Large fam\Jy din. room_ $24,000 Thb b!autiful home ove~ Detached 20xl6 workshop 4 Bdrm. + 2 Hths look,, the 1Tlh fairway of FHA LOAN 1514 Highland Dr. Channing hOme. Prime area. Mesa Verde GoU Course. J Bednn tv:>me, 1% baths, OPEN THURS .• FRI. A SUN. Entry hall, larae fireplace, 8%. USllmllbJe loan. 3036 hr\'.lwd firs, qp111, d,rps, 1-4 all electric built-in kitchen, Java Rd. 540-«!95. $62:,900. frplc, forced air he"at dining p1 ·~ ~ '-·umable ,,....~· howcla:b loW&OD jsz. rm., ut extra eat-OWNER DESPERATE 2~ ba.. townhouse \\'ith lge. lam rm ,0--• d. 5 Bedrm., fwnily rm., xl.nt • ., ,.,,... 1n. rm., bit-in wet bar, (rpl. in mstr. street to street 45 ft, lot bdrm. Close to children's By a.Pp't only, ,play area, p o o I, school & $97 ,000 • shopping, Quick occupancy_ Owner may trade down to&" 3 S36.0CNJ. Bdnn.CdM i:-ome in file~ • Red Hill Realty ' with ocean v w, Univ. Park Center, Irvine LIDO REAL TY INC. , .. "16-TI 71. A BUNCH OF 3 Queei1-S l7.e 84!droorns, large garage, deep lot with lots of trees. "Morn", it has a HUGE kitchen. Carpets, drapes • NO WORK NEED. ED -JUST MOVE IN. G.l. and f'HA Term.a. Payme.nts less than rent. CALL! ;;;"'i.u;; ·~ Ae<>i.tCN:t tn~~a.Heavyahakt?root, MAKE OFFERllll · , (5% % int.) 3416 Vta Lido 675-4562 ~1~1tyled ext er Io r . n--... t & Sun 1 • payable $157. per mo. incll .. iiii;;;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,iiii• I ~ ,611 "",.... ~ Call Anytime 833-082tl 3Jr Via Liclo 673-'l30i I !!'~~~~~'!"'!~ LOT lll vi. z .... ~h 35xd; YOU OWN THE LAND Xlnc terms or consider Plus this beaut. 3 bdrm. & trade, $37,500. Owner. 21l;. family rm. home, backing 43J.-6319 I '• BEAC/'I BARGAIN. BR.' home al )'f!Stf'rday"s BEDROOMS FOR THE 11-1-G FAMILY I pr11:t""! Only $2'.500 . 1enns. .Str.pg 10 ocean, club & len- nis. 5 bC'dl"OOJU5, 3 bath~. !amlly room and a eho.rmtng St· eluded patio -ONE BLOCK TO OCEAN Only S4&.50(l. Cali quick 673-8550 Walker & Lee Realtors CAYWOOD REALTY 6306 \V. Qias1 llwy., Nil • 54'-1290 • \:(>'THE REAJ, ~ fi~'.f )\TERS ~ Harbor BJ,vd. at Adana . ~ Open 'ti! 9 PM General I 1000Gener1I . S~\\d1}~-~$lfS9 Tlie Puule witli tlie Buill•fn Chudfe O ~ec;irrange lethtts of th• four Krambled ""°'ds b.- low tr> fOl'm four iimp!e wo•ds I G!TSAM I I I I 1 I I' r~H_v..,.' D~A...--N ,........., jt I I' I I . r.:;.L -'"y .;.,.K..:.;A..0.8...-11 l I 1 • I I . look out f0< the man who ~------~ fets you do all tke - I c R Y K l T I e-i ' I I' I I' I 0 ;~= ~h:~~~g~~ . • .. -• --you d..,..1o9 ((Om '11'fJ No. 3 bt.low. 1000 • ~~IN~rs~~i~~E~ElTflS r r I' r I' 1· I' 1. C) ~ff~~i~Lmus IO I I I I I I I I SCRAM 'LETS' ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000 Pr..,, Int, taxeo, Ins. FIXER-UPPER TARBELL 2955 Harbor 2'91 Clubb°"" Rd. Wellt-McCardle, Rhrs. F1VE (~) BEDROOMS Open lill g;OO PM Extt home 4 BR 3 ba, lam, l.l1Q Newport mvd., C.M. Only $28,950 with big 5~" fonnaJ din. 2 trplcs, peUo. 54&-7729 Eves. 6"--0684 GJ Joan l:t take over. Need. Costa Mna 1100 June \Vant, Bkr. 642-4816 clean up. paint A yard work, * BY OWNER * LIDO WATERFRONT bot who ........ "your" deal New Trl-Plexes • BR, lam. nn, Land ..... APTS.~ Ltp() NORD migt ~ be the winner. $57 500 decora!ed proteuionally . NOW REDUCED TO COpe:n Evff\inlal (wlder conatr-~vail Aur. ~> Plusb crpt. Immac! Nr sch, $150,00Q-Xlnt Terms ~141 SUI Larie, beauUM "hOlllff with park; q(ll~t 11., cov'd petio. 6 Beautftul units. 6 car ga---~ ._. an illoome" located in the Needs no work. 546-0716, rage1 & utility room, with -GE.,AIALTY finestEutlideareaofc.otta 1=111-·~8M_l_no_,..._._141_.:.oo_. __ 80 ft. tronlin8 on excellent NMir,cM Mesa. Featu.rirc (1) 3 BR, '111E Sharpest, by owner, 5 majOr greenbelt. Stone's 4.5' lot-$52,500 ~ throw from clubhouSe te~ $7500 down. 3 br 114 b&., <nls courts, putting i rcen, 675-264.1 or 49'7-126S ! Olympic pool a.11 well as e t..ARGE LlDO LOI' e \ aduJt pool. 2 1-'rplcs. 2~1 5&:88" 206 Via i..orca., ~ baths. vtE\V, (714) 54.&.i913 or 346-325f • BOB PETTIT, Re•ltor EXCELLENT kit . Lido ts~ "SINCE 19-IB" 209 San Remo $42 OOIJ': Day1 133-0101 Night1 OWNER. 213: ~1 ' ' -------~====> ~"''°" .,...., 140i swtmm.ing beach. Units are l!!!!!!!!.,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!1-2 BA •·ownen unH" + (2) Bd, 2~i ba, bfful h1d!CP newly furnished. STARTER BARGAIN 2 BR rental units. See at w/toontain. Nu cpt & drpt:, 1:.E:."::':.b;:luff:;:.. ____ 1:;2;;.::42 Bill Grundy, Rooltor ONLY $17,950 2>35 Tuatin .,..,~Wood-""""' ,...,, S4I . 500 · EASTBLUFF 83.1 Dover Dr., N.8. 842-4620 Own your home Cot less tM.n land Pl. or call Mr. Faurla1~'40--05.lll"-'~·=-~~~-~~ 200• panonm~ view trom ..,.~~~!""!!!!!!~~-I rent. Nice be4room1 16' liv-at 642-4905. BY OWNER • 4 Br. 3 Ba, thl11; large J br, 3 ba borne. ASSUME 6% fHA Ing room. Wuher dryer, (AllO oew income u.nltB for S car a:ar. Ll't family nn, lncludes 26• x l5' fantUy rrn, WANT LOTSA ROOM?i . • refrigerator stove Incl. A 8llle in Dana Point). formal din rm, intercom. w/buiH-1.n bookshelves, cab. real barp{n and It'' R-2 "'""":~":'-;;~~iiiiiiii;J~2100~!'•~·c!"'!:·J"-'~·500~.~-~-~1~•"!.l8 inets A wel bar. ~9,500 He.~·1 a 4 bedroom ba1nt. with a 21' Uvlng rm, 2 batti( new w/w shaa Clllta ~ kit. of tall Calll sbade - privacy. A doll house witli a smllll down PA)'tUent • A lake over Sl"8 per mo ~ $2),500 tuiJ price. ' WESTSJDE 4 Bedroom + large rumpia room, 1 ~ baths, l car prage. $2500 ddwn. Zone Call M.7-0303. Newly Lltted 3057 Carob. &»-0.'>5.9 Open FOREST E. OLSON in the eou... Park ~·· Newport llooch 1200 S.1. • sun. Cotta Mesa Investment Inc. Realtors 54&-n11 HARBOR N. OF WILSON SANTA ANA CANYON Bl~~~l~Jo~~~E 5 ACRES I. HORSES, Beaut. 1423 Galaxy Dr· custom ranCh, pool, turn. Open oaay 1-3 ~ house. Im.med. poue~ New twwtory 6 Br. S ba. uon. \YUi constder eXchaftae Fam. nn. din. rm. 2 F'plca. MAIN REAL TY ~-tot. Pmote ....... Realtor• 54S-lt77 Prank Jime1 Realtor 646-8186 MM6lf e DOVER SHORES FHA or GI NO DOWN We.t aide Freedom Jlome, Choice lot • Corner Ju•t painted and pe.ntled. G•laxy & ~rln1r1 Vacant tit' quiclc move-In. 13.\000 . 1'erlN Mall. lw ~ 1"""4 Jtrd. Qwn. 644-4684 or M&-1'31 er will pay pOfni.t -Call Easttlde Tri.pie• NW' -need• qulclc acOon. Nrw carp&ta bllins gangn $21,$0I :clnt ron:t. incomt'' S4Z mo: C.U m..&561 eve.nb\p or AMume ne:w VA loan of ""'H:kehh, $35,000, 7~11%, Prl~ $42,500 ~DAIL_;,,c,Y=P~ILOT~-W-ANT--A-D. PrirM". only. 01'.<ntr IM&.7159 Call ~2-5611 • charge H. Oullltand.in& yt.J'd, covered LUSK 5 Br, 3 Ba View, CIO&e to •choola, ahopp1ng. l·--·----ijjj~ patio 3" lam"•· ~-····ion prote11:1. landteped, xlnt. ' 'Y• ~ ''THE "LUFFS" nd "'7 ~ B Ow by &-1 Ex ll n• 1 .. -FHA u co . .., •""" Y ner. )O&n t~ .~:· -.5"'. BEST BUY ~1-0866 {Open Evtnlqp) l\loat popular Eatre.lita. Va- cant • ln 1 valuab!e local.Ion S4S·SllO over~ •oldng ma.jot p-eenbel! _.._ ....._ 11: propolled marina_ Vte as tGE ,,itEALTY 2 ~ 3 """' ,,.,,,,., pluo 1am. ..~ ................ -...... J Uy nn. 2~1 Ba. D10 111. ft. Lovely patk>I. Mal'IY, many GOVERNMENT "'""· Unde• marktt at APPRAISED 148.000! OWNER s A y s SUBMIT ANY R&ASQN. $25,500 ABLE Or>'ER. Jutt reduced PXWJ tor rut .. ... , bedrooml, !11 .. , ... built • b, carpets, drape•, '--t t.arce lot, name yQUr terms, (.Jl-i5 Walker & Lee Rttlton (:nil - Pl.lot Wan! Adi. ~8 '414 Vi.ill.II Del Oro Newport &ach 6*1133 Corona del Mar 1250 ::;.,:.:;=.;.........;.::~ SPECIAL! RE:AL ESTATE HARBOR VIEW HILLS =:'f"'N BEA~~ l.uxuriowll 3 BR. 3 Ba .• h.I Open 7 df,,)'9 -8:30 to 8:30 cathedral ce.U., all e!ec. I '!!!''!"!~J!!!~~~~~..J klioh.: bealod, lillt ttd pool RARE OPPDRTUNlr( plus bar roon\, Ma.Y a.u1une cu:AN s Bldnn, 2 BA txlst. low Int rate on lot.n. Dulch Haven POOL. ~ App't only, take owr "' loan A ~ DUPLEX MO pA,y1 all. Oro~ will Oar of • kind; ).liity llv. nn., belp llnanc.i. cau 847-33Sl • $\vedis.b fi'illc .• 2 BR .. 2 08 Pl~U.3 1·S(¥_ 2 BR., 2 Ba., frpl. Bit-in. bolh units. App't, only, SEMPLE REAL ESTATE 2-\;~ E. C08..lll ll"'Y. 6';':\.21n1 Q!Al ~\TAH MAHI Natural~ born-swAPP&a?: rty '"l'n1dtr'11; hnwt14it'' in Pilot Cla.ultlild. , • r...,.,, ~ 1, 1910 ES F R SALE H US ES l'OR SAL• R•NrALS - H..,.., UnfvmlohM ll~~~~·~·~·~dl~l·~1 HUn1~·a .. c11 ,. S.n OilfD 1175 -.... ---"-------1=.;..;.....::__ 0...ret~ '' ....., • rut. tun. nn. honw, }ots "'OlILD YOU 8EUEVt:! I;;..::;;;=;;...----'= afxtru.. 1 mm. ~Gt.Un. o..ton> J tt. ,,_ deQ. adoM SPAl!IOUS ~, ~ « 4 -LOOK 8)• OW9tt, Dl,JIXI. ~ rf'd.mod Mme. NI'~ in Br. >'UL rm .. nnt. (lptl ~+ Ac. ol •YOl'adol. kc Ir. dJ'1)I, ""1)1 pairotied; all 1'C11Mhirt Vat Mlt Wri V&Jeacia era111••~ bU-i• sa• "-M-., Fam/fruit tref'S. HH"ltqt: fl.~ 5•G ·115l - PRICE REOUCTIOH I Cvr/pat'O, b&l'n. ('()ft'l], doc topea ~I •uc: .....,.L Gt ..,,..,..bor!d al S2t.llOD tor ~n. BNut Yww. xin1 ,.-,6'-~-,~ .. -.~,,.~. ~.._--..,-. ...... "f rYV lbia ~. h1lly lrnpr'OW'C! • ll'mtL l·TI4: 72&-909ii tned tor klek It pe.tL o.t • tMd ot ti.. .:~tru lM!dno hl'lmt •ith ut\1111 RENTALS · Blue Beacon. Bkr. ~111 "1tO hN.~ «flt~ pool room &-.:n mOOttn ~Uclw:n.. HouMS FurnltMc:I S15&--lncl uil. ol~r 2 l\r, a:· ~ room with ~~ Cul-dNIK •tfttt., ~ 10 s\o\·e. Nice C(ll'ld, qi_ll~ ok. '*· pool table_. aU ~ ldlol)lc I: •hopplnc;. Ct.U lot Gantrel • toDI Blue lkaoon, &er. 66-0111 lnf'nt. 4 mu1tt Iii~ beO-appt. ======:::z=~ ~ ~ • '(t.ll carpel-Rex L. Hocleta. Rlty. n s>-1 ..... ~rc. iAf.lx· 1car · Coit• Meta 3100 Ina 1~ plus am.om-147.1525 F.111.......... ons1...,r pe . _____ ...._ __ -' bed d:rlpes. firtlilaee .i, Blut ~•cion, Bkr. 64>-0111 CLEAN, Sharp, let. S bdrm. 1 ~t. All~ bUUt. POOL 1 & WCl8 tt family 1TIJ., Sbq f Jm pt111 ~rictrt.klf". sub-·a..:t ArHs R•nt•ls to Sh•re 2005 carpets, c!Apti It buttt .. m._. ' mtt1S:IOO '° 5'1i~ lJA klkn 2 cu~tandtll( 4' bf, ho111H EuWde C..ta M.a. Now I .-,.,.,. -_,. ... _,_..~ lh&t WO(l't l~ Xffll 1hnJ. PRrYATE Roon\, klf't'f'd alr v•ca.nt. S250 Monlb. Cati I --"• -~ ..,_,....._,.. 1 I'"· "-'I •· lw:a1.. rokM" TI'. prh'l.tf TV ... _ 51 \• • "h do nu, -e RN',...., ..-~ ,,_...11 Htrltap Re-al 1 _..-.... 00 mone-y. ,..n. HAFFOAi,. REAL TY lf deslrfd. ~ homf' Em.t• JlllE BRIDE •-•u.Jt. privileges ... ·ith a lamUy °'I .,,.=~·==-.,,-=--___, • 12 b&tblJ. Near OC'C. 1-"'0R LEASE -3 Bdrm. 2 4 BR. 2 BA hOnW w/ltf tam nn. VPry -d.-10 .hi~ 1-ck tram )-dl"r hmw)· · IJChoOil.. Ne"'' crpts 1: drps. motif!, lkTt-ii a 3 Bdrm . ..$4MIO dn " -.uume 71'.S dttam ""1fh a doll hnwe kiL ti-IA, FU.ll prit'f $21,al. A ~ 2 IMI, ..J,. family rm. l'!'al value OUt'red b)' Owntt, with' to)~ f!'ntnnor. G.( no Jil21.l.£h St,. J.'.V. 96MiQ3I mol'lf1 dn.. or take O\'tt this n..•"'"'ER ~t 2 n-i&W )"'""1 loan SlJ 500 vn·~ ..,..~, .. t', oo' RJlL PR.ICE. · • 2 Ba. Tiburorl Como. $1,900 USUTM }"1-tA kwt. 961-6760 ltO GIMMICKS Wntmlnster 1'12 Nff'!d ' bdrni. "'Ith Rparatr OPEN SAT/SUN l~S fa.nu.ly tuom + 2 ba..! \V.\\' 15212 X•vier Circl• , crpl:s, drpg. A l'tlle nncbtr {oU &at•h & Bolsa l ," 11quraky clran condition. Bta1,11. 4 BR.. den l la.m, ~$:1J. Gl. DD rl:lOIWy dn. nn. Lea t~ °"'.~old. 'or 1a~ O\'tt this n\ce V.A, ~in& 2 thick_. Dr. IOl.n 11o11' pmts of S1l8 mo. 100\'lng to bt>ach., "''ill U C· rlfi~ his charm.in&: hotM, ... 'Ith e:tlstlng V.A. loan, for lilt' a.skin&: pr~ of $49,995. 675-1662 REAL ESTATE ......._TOfll llVN'nl<GTON BEAcH OFC. C:0..1N~n =~1!.ys -l:~!!~~l ~-~:;;~1~15~·W:!~~~ $21.SOO 5•nl• A.. ·1~20 4.Btdroom bi&;, big 2 sJory, ,-.·.-, .B.A. 1. I '3 baths. eus1om t~ kjfi:htn • oov pa IO, orm \loilh blun l'allle A oikn, din rm., 11\• rm. fam rm. .dilih ..... r.:her '3000 DlO\'e in. usunw GI IOl.n. ~7-82~ pa).'n1"n!1 'teu than .rent. Foreed air lie•!, !trrpl.al't', Senta Ana Hgts. 16)0 f.am ily nn., larc, livlni: rm .. l BR Fam rm l'i BA, trple, Jt>pa.rale t"nlr')', dble gara.gt", BBQ. Tack rm. Corn.I. Lg, upe;rarled Carpt'1S, otmMI Joi, C.Omp. fenced. F..uy dn\'e1<·ay, hlc'c waUs, land.. lt"nns. By Owner 545-86~ ........ ~3634 Ba. S210 Mo. 4 Bdrm. 2 W1LL shl.re IL:,.;. h 0 m • Ba. $195 Mo. l Bdrm. 2 ba. + bonus rm. $:n'.I Mo. Ca.II : 5-4;,....&424 "''/!'l!flned, n111ure .,.·um.an. P\1. rm. ha l dl"f'tol 'l nu Vif11o•. &tauL t"f'l\trrnmtnl. Sou1h Co.Jt Rtal!Of'll 83G-10l4 VERY Cl.UN, 3 bedTnu "'ANTED: Rrfint"d llldy to \\/f1t'f'Pla('f', bltins. cul-dt'- lhr JQ\•dy NB 8Jullt hm. UI' Sln"t'I, hug: bednnt . & Pvt baJaJJ pn\•I, pa 810 big l'O\••red pallO. F•mll,iea 644--0369 only. $2!JO mo. A.it ~14.l Y.'ORKJNG girt 10 lhan! kive-'* * S.155 * * ly apt, ))\'I balh. Jl31 mo, 2 BR uni. Crpts, ~· stv, Laguna &ach ~lon.Jo~ri 9--t r•l'l.g!', yard. 1 ctnld ok. 543-4114. • 3:ii Rotbeslcr. 642-.9'l47 \\'JU. Shatt iny lo\•ely apl, 3 BR. 2 Balh. GAraKt!· N«"w IC.M:.) w/l"t'tint"d i 111 d ) . ~ls. drps. Rec. fa C', $240 Rf:U: plea.w. Nr. OCC. 5.S7-9499 "''knd1:ir a.ft 6. ~~. POOL, 3 BR, 2 ba, playMOm, \\"f'f bar 'I frpll'll s.:p \V'J.U. lharf' lf'i 4 Br Me, OUllidt' ~ bat~. ~:ig MalUA' )"OU~ man. Poot.1--~-7~c=-'--"'-="-~ 2 Br. 1135 mo. l!ll!i-C Clunie. l Child OK. Newport Beadt 2200 no pel.s. 642 -2259 3200 .=W;;:A:;;TERf:;;;;;;R:;;ON:;;T;;;;;.INewoort s..c:n Townhouses'· Adults Pier & Roat Spht·lf'Wf 2 BR .. -~·ei't. dton, 2 ha., trpl. bl1.i,.,. pa. 3 Bedrm, 2 ba1h, fonnal din-oo: fa~ poo1,' 3 ear 'gar. ing rm. ti!"t'place, w l"'' AYail. S.p! 1st $285 tTJ)ls, and furnl&Md mm. ..:__:_ plt>1e. Obie 1a.r. ,o~ year l BR ., 21,io batlu: 2 ca.r Clll'· lt'L"ll". S!JOO prr mo. Realtor porl. t"ac:a pao1'. $215 '42-43.'"il. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~-~12 BR ., 2 baths. Nt>w C8.TJ"ll, Bay1hore1 2llS 2 Car carport, S2'l5 1705 -~-------RF:ALTOR 548-6966 BAYSllORES: Winter Ren· 3 BR.'1.a:m . rm1 bltiN, %!~ ta.I. Jncl'I lllbot. $~. Call ba.: Lg, HV'ng nn. &; ftnct!d I' G46-8'761 yd. Nice •f't'a. $300 per/mo. l£iiM.o. 540-4421 .. '. R~AL EsrA'l'E . UNnN6TON BEACll OFC. 1'4-5>13 . 43G-751 I Opl!11 7 days -8:30 10 8:30 GI NO DOWN 2 Story, o4 BR. 2 ba, lg, fam. QTL. t>IPC kif. approx nKI titJ. ti . FHA tt"rms 11.v11.iy ~1·R."i)1 J::Vt"I: "431·31691 =========1=70=7 L1gune Niguel • • EXF.CUTJVE HOME * • 111 fashionable L a V f' ta • J.aguna Nigl.lei. Was n1odel 5 BEDROOM BEAUTY tion1e. Features Incl therapy &n IL 111>11.cious 5 min 10 pool , •djoining swim'g pool I hf.it be a c ti. '1111ndy lo wfcomplete privacy. Lee .. ' hool , 1 1 ..: ..... I'll.sh bean1 Ji v'g "" :c Un:les, IJ(' s « >.:ll ..,,,.. sl\l)ppg ar!'a. Popular 2 story "/lrplc. 16X30 c p I e d , Clen !>tar ni<Mkl. Only k1t1..tien-fam rm, ll i 11 Io p , v~w. Over ml 6Q IL Only i:~~ERSHIP Ul-4466 $.43,900 ttua week by 01<rwr. 29S41 Stordahl Cir cl f', t-·~E~V~E~S~'7'~"'~3~19~3~-14!b-5l00. ~~:oo4 ' SAUNA BATH OPEN Spece. trnh air. on This ttady 10 move lnlo the COIUI in rhf' beaut Calll. Na"''J)Ort ~·"11 3 bedrn1 bon1e Mts. 3 BR. 2 BA, bll-inl, alMI oflrrs an enJarg'M mas-c rpt1, drps,.lirf'pl. CarefrH ter brorm A famUy rm + ld&epg w / 1prlnkl«"r1 1.(U the !'l!(Ular modt"rn I.ea. thruoul, PeaCt'lul, quit'! It t.uru. J-llA valued at $31 ,950. re18xln&. S33.500. 4~;, reau 1or appt, ........... - 1110 ! Rtx J... Yoqe1, Rlty •. Sen Clemente w .2!11 ------1~~~-=~~~=~-1sAN C 1 em r n t' Blult · dOG TO BEACH I n."Sidenct 2 11ory, • br, le 7 Bedrms, :& lo • balh.1, 2 full I< 2 haJf balhli Privale i op to :100'.I liq. ft, •hake atttet to beat.ii n1ag· nifice111 ' . . rooh, all hl!/la " ClrpPlln1. view. $69,500. 0 w n f' r 1 E~tl ti wncln1 lron1 $26.990. 714/871·9300 or 492·2111 by 1 R.4ncho Le Cue1ta 11.ppolnlment. t Brookhun;t & AtJarita I========== j~2929 ft 11 AM lo I PM Dene Point 1740 ~,_. TRY $2.ThO DI'( -- i bflcirm, Atriunt nlOdel near NEW HOM ES • .$30,950 IJ~ wttt\ 1p&clou1 kilcht'n, S Bl'drm, 2 hath, 1~ ICJ. ft . tbtill~hlt leparsl• family Somf' oeta.n view, nr llf'W l'.rrt>oi, 2 baUI&. Nice yard '\'acht lla.rbor. Small Iota. Iii.I patiO. Guaae with bolt.I See at :WOllL AuNlkl t>r. f dooi BUil.OE.1\ 142 ... 905 • 00uaTESY REALTY alao new trlpkx $86,500 , ,.,_1""1 I ACRE · R-4 f ~ J BlbROOMS Ck'tan VWw, lf'vel, l tlockl tldfy u~ prnU&e homf' to lkacb. Great buy al St, lSon.iiYf'(llUre. M1ny S.15,ln), ~ fttlQr'ft'. $31,SOO Wl1h Mont~ RtaJ Ectate ~la. nl.A. Joan avail-1'tl44 Cout llW)'. •bit. 0.na Point. w .1Jlill ·Ro• 'I.. Ho1le.,, Rily. DEEDE D BEACH ACCESS ' if1-d25 * Cutt()ltl l bd, l blthl 'BLK to 3 Br 2 * rt«. rm wt2nd kltcllf'n eoneomOC:i~ ~-Wi.900 • 714 /495-3377 t!.,.,., •UJTOUodinl hl<tp. ifs wo~oE1t11lli 1 h • V,'; 1 $21,• ll)' o.mtr. many. bwl in applJ&llCfl f~ appt, •~ CW# Yoll tfnd ln the Oa11Ultd -.,krida. Ad1. mw.k tlwlm flOWf 3110 ;-;;riv. hrJme/101 OK s'iOO Huntinoton Ba•eh 3400 2 Br '"rnri for rot• .... s o -~ . 1 fir, VA~anl, tot OK .... $145 10\l'ELY '!'~!f~: 3 hr, 2 3 Br evtcylhlna 101; ba, r.r. £1».f cnum. Rl!lna . 'o,; O-R, dUihwe,h..r, s h 1 a P" r. ..... , .......... Sl!IO ~ l>rp. R t't1 rd. STAR LET 547-006J ~;;:-, Park. ~r "~·· ~ly:rn: $1.40-Ne ... ·ly 2 Br. Ou t.x . (t 1h11'1. A\'fll !Et111 J51h Bllllf, aar, chUd ok. LM. 111'~/m~. Grdnr ol Wlr Rlu• Bnmn, Bkr. Ms.-011.l {111. Call g41-$lf0 IMTAL~ •· ltlN'tAl.S • ' -RENTAi.i •• -Unfurn llhad :'fttJ. fu;nllhad Apts. fumlr,hod Huntlnf-lwh J4IO ... ..,.,, .. ..i.-4211-po<t ... cit - .WAT.IR,RolcT -Hor1oour uw..a.. ... -.i..-* . . lllSU I Ln. IU: =.:!. ~., 4 tJt. "1 at. doiW to bMch, all ~lftll -rth' .• patio, tnc:d )'aJ'd,i D'dnr & ... ·11tr pd. Ul5 mo. 3364221 AVAn. l s1 of Sept. 3 br. Towntde. W~t · drytr. CIM' 10 teh'f • at\p, Poot toe. !I0-4111 BEAtrr. l BR. Candt), Mm! tum. 2 cu a;ar. Pool. W111lk 'P bffcll. Adulla oaly. $150 ino. 8U--55tl .. Sll: k>-1141 LARGE 2 8.R., di.n'r room, caJl)f'ts A drapf'r., P!llllO, gardt'ner. Near beach, 5llD, "1-7Ul NEW J BR HOUSE Shq: crpt., d.rpl, blUm, Le. dln'r a.rta. $225/mo. ..,.....,. HUNTINGTON ltARBOUR Nrwer 4 BR. d1x. Lar SfOO Bkr 841--MSl or l!IJ..-4152 * 7 BR. HoolP. t'P.ncf'd NP Pf!l.I. 3 blks iron\ btach! Call 962-1966 $22:> -3 BR. 2 &Iha, hua!! yard. Cul-d&-&ac. Prffli&e att•. * 846-~ 3 BR, 2 BA, nr. beach It school.!. $230 pt'r in o . Ava.ill.ble Sept. 1. ~ L•tun• le•ch 3705 LEASE 3 BR, 71,J BA, sen.rice porch, 2 pa t.Im, Ol"E'llll Vlf'W, Jlf'&r 5Chool, l..eoai..-h, markP.I. So. 1A1Una • tJj() ruo. •9S-D1 eve.. .Laguna Nlgu•I 3707 Ll>ue $210. 3 BR, 2 BA. cpts, drps. Vlf~W. BEAOi &. POOL prlv. 11'»4111 rm ' Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach · Jt's fun, fine n~ighbort tnd pr!stige li,·ini;. all in one luxw::i oua package. 'l'bat) Oal· • \\'Ood Garden Ap1'rtraentt in. Nevtport Deach, ju;t mitlule1 !rom Balboa'• Bay and beaches.. 1'hP.re 's a•/, million dollar Clubhouse \\•ilh ,parly room;biJJiatdJ room, indoor 301! dri\• .. iog range, men's tnt1 ~·omen's hcallh club!, 1aun11, tennis c ourts, resident 1ennis pro and pr? ·shop, and Olympic i;i1.e .pool /\II this, and much more, just step!! Irom. yaur profe1s:ion•IIY decora lcd apa rtment. ""r.h . \\'ith private balcony/palios. Air l:ondit:n n- i,n;; firep lac:ca optional. Oakwood Garden. Apulmi nls U11 l6lh Strset bet we ea Irvine u d Dover lJr. ,(714) 84~-11170 5p1c.lou11t.di9, 1 • f lltdrtOM 1nil11. f ur".,iallH or llafvr-UUM. ·t l•I t. SJlL lam1dlal• Oc.c.p1acf S.100. 3 Bit. 2 Ba., "'1hr.,l=========:-;c========::. dl'}'t'r, i"t'lrlg, gardt"nrr rum. General 4000 Ag t. '49!).2'l38 496-2604 -------- CHA TEAU LAPOINTE Capistrano Beech 3730 l)eluxf' furn. 2 Br. apt. Pool. C10&e to .1hops Sl!JO + ulll. 4 8 1.0CKS from Ocean. Nrw Aduh1t, no pct~. 3 BR·,. tam rm, d in n n, l~l Pomona C.M, crpts. drpt. bltns. s:ns lsf'. --' Re-!1. Tn-~. 774-7465. 4100 3725 * N•wflO"!.. a._._•_h __ 4_2oo_ l BDRM. Modttr1. Belween OcH.n 1.nd s.,y, Y@arly S:lfJO. To adult only. 4401 C'llannel Pl. corner o1 •54h &. Balboa Blvd. BI<;ACll .FRN·r APT-YRLY 2 Brffu rn, TV/t,M, \l'llSh/dryer. Beaut. view, SWO mo. 5300 Seashore Dr, r\B. 64 j..1756 OC EANFRONT lowf'r dupll'X, 2 BR. l ~ ba, frplc $:!15 nio. Avail 9/10 lo 6/\0 fi46-2830 I l Bit. •·urn Ap\.I. Poot No r!ultll't'n or Pf'I•. 240ft'1 161h St., NB. 61&--4ti64 e YEAR LY $21~. 3 BMroom--2 S.lh. llll9 W. Balboa Blvd. 613-Z223 ellft. e WINT~R REff'tA11 e 'Rent NOW 1or sept, t ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 LUXURIOUS Beach trnL l Br. Ava!!. !t/12/70 6~171. S225 mo. 646-97&'.l SPACIOUS Oceanfront Apt. 2 Br. AdultH, 110 pt'lS. Yf'ar- ly S300fmo. 613-7609 NOW LEASING' Pork-like li,ir g for I.mi · lies with children ond odults . I, 2 ond 3 bed- rooms, furnished or unfurnished. Shoq:, cor- pets, drapes, oir conditioned, with ' self- c!eoning ovens. Complete $~00i000 recrea- tion clu b in three ticre pork. Pools, tennis, volleyboll. heolth club, teen fo cilities an d a pre. school! Ne xi to shopping ond golf course, ne ar U.C.I. ond Newport Beach. From $1 50 per mo. At Son Diego Fwy. •nd Culver Drive in Irvine. Phone 833.3733 . Owntd and m•n19ed by The Irvine Company Gener•I 5000 Cost• Mesa 5100 8111 Young 3'6 E. 21rt St. Cost• M•s• You are ttw> winner of 2 ti ckets to !he Ringling 8rot. "'" B•rnum & Ba il•y CirGus at th' Anaheim Conv•nlion Center Augu1t 13-19 PleaM> call 642·56'18, e>.:t. :t29 betweeon 9 •nd l PM to claim your tickf'lll, tNarth C.ounty loll·frl"f' number 111 5'4Q..l2201. COMP-lJ.LIBT APARTMENT FINDERS Hundred• ol Aparl:ments Ll1ted Now Coll 642-4656 MODERN 2 Br. l t,t &.. Crpt1, drps, GE ldtch .. patio, f'ncl pr. Nr. bua. $158. Adultt1. MIJ'. 124 E. 1 , 20•h NEWLY DECORATED 2 BR. crpla, drps, nlt-im.1 Htd pool. Adultll, no pela. St4:1. 149 Ea1t Bay L R G, clea n 1 Br . Rf'lrig/rai11«', bltl\ll, crpt11, <irp~. Workina adults ovtr li $100 mo. ~292 I BR. Dupleic. $110. Lrt nn1. Laundry. Pleuant 1ard•n IUITOund lng~. No pet& or childttn. 5-ig...fi9)) 2 BR, uni. newly dee. er,it, drp1. Elll'l Jlllliol, Spac. grnds. A.dulls only. $140 mo. 2283 Fountain Way E. {Harbor, turn W. on Wil10nl MESA Verde, 2 br ht fir. Sl.O. NP.wly decor., cla1e to shopping area. AduU&- No pr1 ... Avail ls! wk. Sept. 54:...-408.l -::=========:-INEW bP.autlful townMute, l :: -3 hr'1, 2 bll.'1 Villa1. 164 Cost• Me•• 5100 )I!_. !Rth SL, C.M . 645-1~. ---------1 613-9565 LRG a~.-,~h.-.. -,....,,~;~1 . ....,.b~lln-,·. FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. 2 & 3 BR'• Private patio, pool • lndiv. launary rac. Nf'ar Orange Co. Airport & UCI. Adult1 only. 20122 Santa Ana Ave. Mgr, Mrs. Joachim, Apt 3-A • • ft * El Puerto Mes• Apts. • .,,, ft * 1-2 Bedroom Apts. Sl:lO up incl. u1il lli'' Al.~n lurn. Pool '1 Recr,ation a!'ea. Quiet Envh"Onment 0 11 street parking. No pel1t. 1959·1961 Mapll' Ave. COlita Mesa ha . w/1hwr, cpl~. d.1p, no pet.1. ~A Mendoza 545-5121 WANTED: Middle apd cou- ple to u1la1 mgr: U apl1. No chUdrtn, .no :;i e 11 . 646-1186 NTCE 2 Br, crpt1, dr~. blir.1, nP.1 ... !y ITdecoraled. Adulr~ $1!1l ~4 (1-7!1 6 2 5"11-52'11 ~fO:\ TICElLO Towni1ouff l Br, 2 Ba, pools, S197.5(1. Alt S, 963-t i!13 $13!>-2 BR upper, bJtrui. 1·rpt1, drps, no pP.t.. ~ \\'. Wil10n s:. CM M>-0160 LARGE ? br. Iamily tm • l'arpels, drape.1 ... u!J t-hu. 646--0486 _c_or_on~•-d_•_l _M_o_r __ 42.IO_f ~~~~~~~~;;'. HARBOR GREENS * LRG l Br, crprs, drp .. , stove. 1·elri11:. Arlult.1, no J)ell. SlOO. '14S-10~9 1lt 4. RENT FUlllllTURE • DIRFCJ' TO TF:NANT 24-llr. [)('livery 100•:, Purch115e Option Complete 1 BR Apt "' Low 111 $22/mo. 30-Day Minimum * \VIOE Vl\RIETY CUSTOM FU~NITURE NEW furn, new w/w cpt.lrg I br apL, quiP.t, or shpg. Sll5. Si:J Berrlllnl. 6'16--0728 I BACHELOR apt, Fu r n. Orps, new w/w cpt&, pool, pvt. bal. 557-0082 e 1 BR, Cpt~, Drpx e e Sl:UI e 2110 "R" Orani::P. Avl', • • I on. APT, FURN. ADULTS. LRG. Bach. JlVI entr, So. or hwy. Beamf'd cf'llinc1. rcrr1g .. 1k'I k11.ctlM. Sl.l~ Incl uhl's. 613-696-1 2 BR. cpts k rlrps, pool, 1dull.1. IO. ol Hwy, Slia \II('. 61l-&21l 4300 SI~ MO·util pd. YEARLY Peninsula Pl. Nice. l frontl 1 RR apt. No pelt. 61~'!055 Bey Islands 4350 ----·----\'.'INTER RENTALS, 3 BR, 2 1>6, Jll No. Baylront 2 BR. I ba 401 N. Bayl.ront. 673-3245 .B•lbo• Island 4355 BALBOA I11l11nd ; Ye11rly 2 Br. apt. Avail Aug 1~. No 11tuden1. no pt>l1. fi1.l--086.'i Huntington Be•ch 4400 e BLK ro BEACH • Q\J~t. 11nd11roof! New I 9r S\;.cJ. Prv petio, 111r, S~l Adults, cpl. Jn.A 14th. Sl&-1319, 613-1784 FURN Bachelor. singlf' f l75 Incl R.lty, ~ "36-2377 m a l ur I! utll. H.B. * * R.EAR Dup~X· !urn. $95 010. l BR. + l&rllll«'· Ulll pd. 1 adull, no pret1, Reis, 968-65-49 L•guna. Beech 4705 LGI:: l BR, 2 blk1 1a bch. Nt"wly lur11 , SI~ Incl util. \Vknds : 494--0588" Sen Cl•mente 4710 GARDEN I< STUDIO AP'l'S Bach, l, 2, 3 BR'.1. from $110. 2700 Pelt".rson Way, C.M. 5"'1371) :t_ M lR RIMAC ,Aw o oos. New l ·2 BR., :Z BA., furn or unfurn, alr-cond, scU clt"an ovf'n, beam ceiling, d~hwr, prlv ear, elevatoN;, th~rapy + .1 ... •lm pools, BBQ'.1, 11unas, clubhousr. Adulll. From $140. Jui;t Ea.s t ot 2600 I-larbor nt:ar Nibert C11d lllac At 425 1'1t"rrimAc \V11y. 54:'5-6300 BAY MEAOOW APJ'S New exciting 1 BR, 140, 2 Brt, $16..'l. Bfoam <'eiling11, \Vood pan'lg, 1hag cr p1g, priv. patio, some w/frplc1 Pool, uncl volley hall er•, rec bldg., pool 1able1 put· ling green, Adulr1, no' pels, lit';' W. Bay, Opt>n I-louse 12·1 pm d•ilY. 646-0013. BEAUT. Duplex unit. Nie«' priv. patfo. Carp .. drapP.~. huilt·l n kftch.; choi~ area. 2 Bdrms , I balh; dining area 1,cf'. tivlna room. Adult• ooly. $115 OWNER 6-t:>.-0128 2 BR, drpa, crpts, 11wim'1t pool I. gar. Also l BR. cpts, drps, pool gar. No chilril'fn. no Pf'IS. Quif't nit"l&hborhood &42..JI042 $170 3 Br .. 11.i Ba, JMlio, bJt.\n11, crpt1, drp11. Ask ahoul our d\11C011nt 1'1an. 880 Center St. 6'12-8340. 2 BR. l ha. crpt.!1, drpg, refrl1., bu111.1n•. SI~. Jn.. anne St,, walk 10 Harbor 1hopptn.1:. 642-1467 RENTAL 511 W. J&th S!., CM, Stll·l4SI Call 5'\S..20llO .aft 5 pm l RR, LIV RM. kll Ir bath. "'"!"''""""'"'""'.,.'""'""•ICOi'rAGE SM, + util. Stnllf' Ol:'t>ttn view, wlk ~ heh, ·.-.. shop11lo1 I< 1hnw, ..,."om $38.50 Wk. ~~~ c1~ilr Prk. 311 \V. N-atoMble rafl 492-9996. From S16S/nK>. Luxury Sl11-1========== 492-5189. * DELUXE I & 2 BR G111nlen Ap!11. 811·\M, ptiv. patio, ntaled pool. lrplc. Adullll. $145 mo. :>46·~163 ale Ap11, Complete maid Newport Beech 4200 "'°·"""'==-· =====4~730" wrvl«, boul!ol'wattt, linen1, _ Capistrano Beech 2 Br. t"nel. g111r, 1un ltttk, E. 1Alh. Ari ul11 S I ~ 0 , 541)...4431, 54&-3176. all ptll, hc!1tf'd pool. BAO!., J A 2 BR furn & VILLAGE INN un1t1rn. Crpi~. dl'f", psrio, Laauna ~•ch 4!M·M36 pnol, \:>llM, $13"1.50 to f1GO. BALBOA INN St'acllft M•nor Apt1, !Stl Bal.boa 675-1140 r1a1'f"n1i•. 54~~am ask 1101.IOA Y Pl..AZA 01-:1.uxi:: Sc>Arlout I Bdrm . 1.bout our ditK"011nt.. BA YCLIFF MOTEL t'urn 1p1 , S13S. P lut 11til 1li' LO\\ WEEh.'LY RATES ft llt'alM ~· Ample park· Kuc~. TV'1, m•ld M!r'll\ct, Inc. N~ l'hilrl'rtn -no P"'•· llf'•reid Poot. l!IG:'i P11nml'\3!, C.M. 646.331.'i I& you NI In the cl1uln~ 2 RR UPPER·\l.•alk to heh, SF..cTION! Sointone I 1 S~ Incl utll . \'rl)' 1vatl wAlchl"I f"r It. DI a 1 911 T14-81~10.f~ J l J. 642-M71 lodayt 447-IM~l _.;...... ____ _ • OCt'.:AN t'RONT •pl rum., NR. MW 2 Rt, Iii. Ba. Ctflt•, TV, llllt'fll, Chtldr'l'n wt>I· drpa, atov•. dishwhr. 1ar. 78& W. Wllaon. 64.2-79:.')ll 1..'fln1r, d•y, wlc, mo. •92-001&, I ~-'"',-,,....,C.-~~~~- 49:i.5342. &SIDE older 1 8R. houH SM. Pttm11tlf'nl older tf'nant RENTALS ooly. ,,.._..,. Apts. UnfumlthM LARGE 2 Br. unf. Crp•1, Gen•ral 5000 drp1, pool. Child ok 1998 Maple Apt. 1. SU-2308 NE\V 1-2·3 BR'1. All blln1, 1 RR, dllhwa1ntr, hltt pool, f'pl/rlrp. pr. Nr. S. Cl>a1t •It! No pel•. I Miki ok, Plal.a. IW0-197l. M.,_2321 SIMI mo. utll \f'lC'J, M6-tfl6.1 You'll find l"'f'•I Mr&•lnt Unturn CO'ITAGJI: fnr "'hen )'OU "•~" naUy l 1''M'ltn + Xln! coM Pilnl clualhed ad •ttrtonl • fi~2·9!'1M • * LRG 2 Ir 3 BR, 2 Bath&. Frplc, hllns, cpt1, drp1, •ncl g11r., patio. 546-lO:H LARGE l BR. Crpts, drps, bl!N, patio, 1•ra1e. Adult.I. no pt't1. $135. 646-1162. 1 BR Apt, SL'IO. 2 BR. S1fi5. 241 Wil.son Avf', Adil&, no pet.I. Ph: ;,.m.7405, * * 1 BR. Nt"wly ca.met@d, draprs, elt"c. k I t ch e n , Children ok. Ph. 646-315.1 Newport lk•ch 5200 PARK NEWPORT Hlch nn a bluff overll)(lkinr th, wa!l'r. 7 poola, 7 lf'nnl• cr1.1, $750,000 Hrallh Club &.. Spa , Bach., l or l ARI. A18'1 2 ii!y Townhoull!1 w/2 nr 3 BRS. !'.:Ice kitt"h., prfv. balcony, nr p11tin. F'rom Sl'tS to $450, SubteJTanf'an parka, f'lev., opl. m • t d u r., c:onv. ahop'a. ModP.11 Opt"n 8 am • 10 pm Dally !lo 6 pm Sal•· Lot, 111! J111m. hnre" ' San Joaquin Hil!I ft.rt. In N""PI Bch, J~I N. ol .~ashion r11tand , 644-l!l«l tor leasln1 info. -----"'"" ~i:Yw;: m AMIGOS WAY 2 BR. 2 '11a, unita, unl\lrn. Outside living 11rt.a1 and double 111ragt:!I, S2:"JO 10 $.100. * 644-1617 * ~ • 2 an. 2 B1 !2 11oryJ. Bltn1, priv. ~tlo & balcony, JI011g JIOllp. arr11 . $1A5 mo. Appl. nnly. "424:i Hll&rt1 Way, N.R. !MQ-009.1 *** VACANT*** Thi! Blulf1, $..125, J BR, pool, ClevideRCI! Ret.11or 61~4 CHANNEl..t"RONT 1 Br apt • · SLlO )'rly. r tty furn. SQ! ma!Utt lady. No r • r , 61>UMJ2 *' 81\LBOA 81\Y CT.UR * Bacht'lor '"""'C'f' 111111 s~ mo. nn lr.ue. ~7-nTs or 548-2211 ""· ll-1 2 BR, 2 BA. Ul>flt"r Sl'O, No pet.1. I •m•ll t"h1ltt. Nr. Hoq ho&p, ~8-3461 or &t&--0147 LOVE.LY 2 BR. 2 ha $195. l.M. Ope.n Sal It Sun. Mtr~ 422A llllarit Way. Ph: 213: 9fll-10.l9 * IAYFRONT * LUXUllY APTS. st.,t· Ing •I $J7l. * 641·1201 I I -----~--~------------·-~------··:JI'""---·--~---------·--------~-~-~~-----~----~-------·-----:'- .. I RENTALS RENTALS REAi: ESTATE General '!ll-~--ll'!"--!1'11-lllllJ!l--1!!"!ANNOUNCIMINTS -* * * * * * ind NOTICIS Frida)', A1t9t1il 7, 1970 DAILY rllOT »' ANNOUNCEMENTS Siil iCi DllllC't&f7SlltYICI DiilC1'0ll'r. 1n4 NOTICIS ~:;:;;;.;~~-.~il~Cement~~·~C~oncnt~!!!_•~Ml~Ollj!H~ov~l!!.'f!!!..~~--~!J ~~ts. Unlurnllhtd At>ts. Unfumltt.td Huntl"l'on Booch 5400Hunt1n1ton Beoch 5400 Rooms for Rent 59'5 F°""" l'rM Ah) -Po..-011 6405 ---------DD'.lJRATlVE OlNCllETE T.H.T. t.wn l•l'W'le:e. ,_ '°""°"' YOU L.0¥1 T• n. •.. Her-... 1,.e, ...... ,. ..... u.Utt 41fllffliH I• • ....nc .. , ... Mttfttt s, •• 11~1 .. , «111 • s., 41111119 ., •• 1.11.,.. ,1., ... e M1~~1. l1••••rl11 Pri•1l1 p•li11 e C1rporh/1fo••t• Pool1 e 110'• ALL UTIL. INCLUDED t BR from $150 1 BR from $175 I F11r11. or U11fur11. I 16211 PAalJIDI LN .. H.I. 847-5441 San Diego Fwy lo Beach Blvd., 4 blks. S. lo Holl, W. on Holt l blk. lo .... Your Private World of Living ! ROO~t. bl.th, priv. enlrance GR.AY and brown1lb doc. Pt. * Al 7 DRIVF.s.WALKS-PATJO C&nae c:i.......,.. Nati:ac on beach. Avail t hru C.oWe and Pt. Gmnan one. CALL DOH, IG&lJ• Is; ll;bf mov\al. 5'f-WI. Alll\llt. Reftr. req. C&lJ all Sbtpht.rd • bUld In U. U:th y tt' la * CONCRETE wortc· pt.dos. ~ 1:30 PM. 4'+-6647 St. C.H. w~ Ou collar !:!:.. ... •)'Oar wr. .. .-..will,... _. __ ...... , .... .: .... u YARD J Cat. a.. • antf-ied c:ouar-.--~ _ .. , .. I~ _ .. ._,.._~......,---• tra:i; tiilli:" BEAUTlFUL Room for ttnt, ,1 Santa Ana Animal ~ )'Ollr Ute call. , PbJlllPI Otment. ~ Gndr blidlhoe ..,.:,,.. home prlvlltte• available. 5f1-&7 MORE Coacrete patio foe' • • Nta.t Ora,.e Cout Colle~. Shelter 24 lit Record.Int 1tta money A.rttltlc 1ettln&. TRASH 6 pnp • lee • ..,._,.,. FOUND In """'1<• p...,. WOM0 ENI I-Uc <all r.iu '1 -...._ lln -llO 1 -. Roo:.il ~1 '-·-""'· vtclnky Blade I: browa ., Free Ettlmak'. 511.-a , • ..-.-v. '"""t.. .. .. m med. a.-male ~ Slbn down, kwe lnches. w/ ,,-l"ld. 010k privlL ,_ be Cblld Ca .. , Avail 911. $M> mo. 673--0931; dot. 545-6430 .,.,,.1 tt.r wilh &Z Trim L1c....Md CdM. Wh1ddr• Wint? Whaddya Got? f'OUNO A toy poodle pey, "°::; =t~z =~· STUDENT or En1pl l><l• SPECIA C' •SSIFICATION FOR mate, ttcently clipped. Vlc: o . ' t DAY c&ft, '""'1.A.11.r Pal'k, }'OR XI.HT HOUSE. • • ~' -l"alrview i: Sano• f)'Wy tttm• •va.ll&blr. For rrer rtu. Fenit"lrd play yd. hcM prlv. rm. a: ba. tn prlv. NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS area. 546-1709 borne dr~t~tion can tunclws, n.pa. &10 Utb St., _. ~.::. * honl«!. ~ mtl. o.c.c. art!a _S-l•I lt.te ............... j:~~======:J~~:::'~~~~~~ 5*-1300 ....--KEYS 1'owMI (Ill kach vie. H.B. M'.aa Clft.ahlc Ss'riot J LIM.a -5 tlmet -S bucks Ialall4 6 Balboa. Inquire \\'OltAN, 30 lo 4.;, nice k>olt· • ROOM with bath, pVt f!n-... ,. .... -4D MUIT IMC:lUO• at ~ -~-. ~.... ~. Ilk• to ILi.it L hunt ~-----""--.u-Cupet1, W'indcrn. ftoan. .. -~ ... , --t.· J70 t-Wll•I YM .... M....... S.-WMI 1"11 Wfft Ill h'.... UV<n ........,_ ~ ,.,. • ~1'9111i-· --RfS 1: Oomrnc'L so..cn1 u ....... ,,,, ""o .,.,..,..,f\I · 1-You• ._ _,,.,; ... ,... 4-f ...._ w .tv.n.._, Pilot. 2211 Balboa. N.B.. It keep home on lamo&u1l-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j·-":~~~;fi;;~~:.. 67>0771 ~Otlltite '°" SALl -TltADll ONLYI v-~ R ' Writ / •--1' •--~·ial C..•'-To Pl•c• Your Tr•d1r'1 Paradiso Ad SM Dark brown abol1 haired • ._...... 1~r. fl c: 0 .,..,.. CONTRACTORS _,... ~ ._ YRLY-1 Bedroom full bath 0 cl . 431, Gold Beach, <m.ron ltl!s. It CGmmc1. taaM No kitchen pvt pat 3 b!k PH NE '42·5'71 malf: doc. found vi ni.ty °' 9'74" or ea.II S.U.-9!i00 &in GENER.AL CO. be ~ ·-u Pacific Coast H"''Y· Newporl ...... bet 7 • PM .l.ddltions-D-~•· 10 h .. u ....... WM> t ll:OO Granada Hills 2 11y ''iew ?7' TS Chri1, S4,000 valur. ,..ui, '"" ' Lvrc. Mon. """'".....,.."'tnr GUEST H !um Bh~. 545-442' *u•sSAGE • SAUNA hnidcntial·Commo"-cial -........ OUJe, , $100 home, 2800 sq 11, llke new, f'OR clean L\loblle flame, FOUND lol'ailf't, v 1 c """" • e 5.11-1699 e mo. Util Inc. Pool, 1c bk: $57,r;iO val_· 4 Br, 3 Ba, near beach, v.·ith tea.on. naJ ,,...__ GRAND OPF.NlNC. Lov~" McDo d'• Urh St .. ~ta I l..Jcmled Bonded HOMEOWN1·· yd. Employed lady. 642-Q076 fam nn. For amlr prop N.B. able ~t or new S<' camp. Pis. EXPERT 11.IASSAGE. · ~ i\1esa. Call to k!enlily, Fl -......a -BEAUT. home w/ pool hu or CdM. Ownr. Ofc 644-4.;n. er . .<(92-1966. 64~ Ask about our Lu Vqas ntE R.DtODELER.S oon ftrtwed • .. _ ._... extra BR f.or empt lady r• • "E ho ~· 500 al IN WHl~IER \'&cations. 10 Al.I 10 2 A!I, ~-flts • !OO'< .... ...,.!... elnned, Windows ...... .I: Newport Beach • 5200 Huntinnfon __ B1ach 5400 Privi.L $G mo. ~40 ' wl~pool,~· .::S.: ~,::::; !lave otiice ~11,din ... , \Vhlt. BLACKJSH l\filu po 0 d 1 e • TNDAYS. 2930 \V. 5'3-3<08C.out Hv.y, "Ki::brns, ....__.,.:: • .:::.:::= ie...,"'nlvallable...,..• ....... _ .... • ... male, vie: Sa. 1-...y. Wht .......... ., •-a-•-----~y a • ~IOVE IN NO\V LGE .. ~ --i room, pvthohomol , equity; For home, boat, tier Blvd, 165,IXX> equity. 1pot on chl!st. do( pitving. ........ °"' ... .., Complete RemodelJ.ttr. l.ng prof~ ,.,........ 2 BR. $:ll0 Yrty. Frplc, gar. b nd 2 BR .. 1.. kitcuc:u .,.,v., nr, K pp n&' house trailer, ete. Tf\,ADE for Trust Deeds. 713/656-.3199 Renowned Rlndu Spintu&ll.sl Quallay Contractors M2·3Sm IC!:rvioe. For •-~ ----...i Redec. &: nl"w crpls &: drpl. ra new a.,.., &: transportation. M~l061 Ownrr/BJ'oker 675-72Z5 * 67M215 * Advke on aJI matters _," •---.. Avail now . l child ok. 309 * lrom S135 * 3-4 mo kitten. b1k • wht. . : MY WAY, quality hcnw! sen.ice call 5C-2i67. 36!h St. 6-\6-4626 Crpt1, drps, bltns, family PPJVATE Room, '*th, en-Antdope Valley, 10-40 Acre 47' T\•:in Die&cl Houseboat, red oollar. Vic: St Anne'1 ~ .. ~e. SU!i lneu repair. \Valli". ctilina:, nooral!!!"'"~~"!'!!"!'!!'!!'!!'!!'!I ==-------t area. 5152 Heil, Huntington b'ance, patio S65 mo. level !ti S.36,500 eq, FOR bch clear, $36,000 valur. 1''0R Or-. ~ B:owncroft Rd, nr, R.radlllgk s riven 7 da~ • rte. No job too ama.11. e EX p ERIE NC.ED LIPPER. 3 llr, 2 ba. walk n .. h SA"' A69fi 833-0242 * 545-2486 * horn .t tiler Hi-lchool. 4M-S538 \'.'et' , 9 A..\I -t PM 5.fl.-1494 h k "'ft lobch.S:MO yrly. ~. ~ , --=~-----·!area e,wu $oro · houS(', units or"? :!oout ll:lN.EICaminoReal, 1,,===:-.,--=:--,,cl ou1e e_eper, o ~2-6836 NEAR Huntini'fon Harbour *Sl;; PER Week -up Also San Diero cty. lln El of state property. Call tn41 2 ~ rt haired dORS San C1etr1~le. ADDmONS._ L. 1'.· co~ tn.mpottalioo. $17 a de.Y· Ni::w Triplexes. Quiet area. w/kitchen. Ui per \Veek-up Camino, C.~f. 546-S!Ml 673-3114. r Wrvounds C. M. m.9136 "4:!..ooi& atructiotl, single or t 'tory·i..:541::..:...,.=-----~. ---------1 Lrg 1 & 3 BR. 's, Dishwasher I.pl~. MOTEL. 543--9755 1 ·G~U~,-.-•• -c-~-,,.,-tcy--,-,.,.-, \VlLl. TRADE Almoet ne 56-9918, 546-8193 -~==~· == Plus, estimates i: la you ti. BA y i:. Beach Jani..W E •• t Bluff 5242 •~ k 213) 59" -d f * 1"ULLY LICENSl."1> * 347-lfill r ........ •-, -· -J......., up. Peto . ( .... _ ,/ NICE roon1 In pleU&Jlt Great location. Tra e or ll' Cabover Camper ?llALE Siamese <.-at call to ....... t"'"' 171,l °'"°~= v $"=" P::~:!o, A ,ea, a, "b ,mem· Add•'"-•• • t>--"'-'inO" etc. D--1: Commc'L t6Hl1 • NEW DELUXE • or ......,...,.,., home, Jood location. Kitch. Wl. camper or ...,.,.., smaller camper in equ Identify, Fountain Valley uc,111, ,.., ,.. .n.o:u1UUC1-._ n.cB · I •i:c .. ~0 UW'W> ·1y nd .,7 1= _,,_ Pbl or · $ll e p'o '0o:on-Fred R. r ... -• .i~i. Lie. DAY w·--a.. ""'-·..i---.. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. OCEANJ:o'RONT, virw sun. pnvi ·.....,mo. ""<>-J:r.JO eqw • co !!Ion. After S:OO pm -....,.. ........ ra e savings x .......... ......., -· ~ ................. Inc:I !i'Jl<IC. n1aster !i'Uitc, din deck, bch. Newer, spac dlx ""==~======1 ~ _ _,_...__~=~·~-,.,.-* 847.1863 * F'°'D"u"N"o'°,°"wru=·1'"e°"k°"il"'"-"°"°"-,"'°'-lh'"l 17GJ, N.B. · · · 61'......Q}l.1 * 5'l9-2170 in&:. By day or bour. Owa rn1 & dbl .i;aragr, auto d00r 2 Br, bltnll, crpts, drps, Motels, Trailer 20 ac. S yr old Rivrrsidc, GLASSPAR Avalon boat 1:. St. .\ Balboa Blvd. NB. SAND'E'S CREATIVE \VIG Ca--t Cle•ning "15 tram~.' 5tl...t9'l2w•-.a.. "'="'"" opener avail. Pool &. Rec. lndry. Nr shops & pier, $175 Courts 5"1 Orange Gro\tc: manage. gear _ exrhauge for 11'· 6-12-'842 berott 6 pm. STYLING. Free pick-up &: •r--~ S ......,w ~~---II area. yr round. Adults, baby ok. ---------ment fret>. $5.650 a.c. S16,000 21' sell • <.'Onta1ned lr&VPI SMAU.. White male poodle, delivery. Licensed &: In. Servlee. For ftte eatiml-., e }o'ROM J2ti5 e 53&-2131 ./ WEEKLY Ratel. SEA eqUit,y, 1:-·or: home. inrome, I.railer or equity. Ca I J blue eolla:r. Vic Fairway Dr. sured. Call ~TZQ t,t"""M)'• ·~--~.·' 1..:';:ail::,.;;.......,;:..;;:;:;,,,_=~== S6:i .'\1nigos \Vay, NB BLK to BEACH . Quif't, snd· ~ B~:~ta ~!! l 1 _la_nd~·-•_Sf._2936 ___ ~~ 492-5029 e\les .or Sat. l llo!onte Vista. 6-IS--.5669 Pennyriclt Bns _ Swimi\·ear ~ ~ JOE'S CLEAN SlltV. ~1unaged by proof! Ne"'· 1 Br im. Prv. Outboard motor; .20 hp. TR.ADE: 12· Glen tLI speed WHITE Kitten. female. IOfli Pel"90ll&I fittinp by appt CARPET We do ~Rel 6 • \\ ILLJAM WALTEH.S CO. patio, gar. Sngl adult.'!', cpl. Misc. Rent•ls 5ttt Mere, long I.haft. Nttds bOat '" trailer, needs to bti hair, \•ic 44th • Balboa, :>tS--0026 or 546-9029 . STEAM CLEANED Comm. Free Ell. iG-1SrSl. l SPACIOUS 1 BR. Lrg patio. 20'1-A 14th. 536-131!, 6'1'3-lT84 tune·Up. Trade tor 7·10 hp. glassed. 1''0R: t..-a.r, station N.8 . 6'7>-3810 A LCOHOLlCS Anonymous REASONABLE RATES ---------·I : Entry ha.IL Crprs. drps, 2 BR unfurn. $165 mo. util GARAGE For ~nt-l25 mo.. outboard in pi. <.'Otld. Joe wa,gon or 1ruck or equaJ val. Phone 542-72.IT or write lo Also carpel installatioo l-l"I •-• 1 clshwhr. Pool. Nr. Fashion pd. No pets, no dlildren. C.OSta Meta, vie 19th l San-Quinn Dys 8i0-1170 Evrs, l500-$GOO. fl92-0.)2S Lost 6401 P.O. Bax 1233 Co!lta Mesa. M6-Sf71 -·-"--•_,,_ _____ • __ Isl & 1.lrkls, SISO mo. New crptg thru~t. bltns, la Alli. &lz..t289. \\'kend1t 49-1-6370. . IRON~•cs ~--~ &!4-5298 i Un11s, good rental Ll~a. "PATSY .. Diamond Carpet Clea.nina: .. ~ UUOl!C .. 111.Y I=========-I gW"" .. lndJ')' tm. ~2098 • GARAGE for rent • 3001 Commercilll income proprr. Mit,OOO Eq,,., •. , In . 0 m. La > al ET A g ·-· • ..., home You -1"'-up and · ,..__ """' ., ' .. ri:r 'em e IRISl-r s -Cemetery Lats 6411 u1. pee ........ _, · ..-BEACHBLUFF APTS ftTnheatb Ln, ....,,.ta ~1e811· ty, Crtt &.: elcar. ne>.1 to S13,500. For house, <..'Ommu. TER. :J yn old, ·wearing R.ep.airi11& l installation dViver. Newport. Col ta I Corona d11I Mar 5250 Nc\1 2 Br 2· Ba, Po o I. 557·9069. S40 mo. Sear.i:. Val. $65,00'.l. For ;:iaJ <lr horse l'anch. llt'a collar. Santa Ana 4 Lot!', Pacifir V I , w F~ ~r . 64.>-ll17 P.1esa a?N, U.00 ~ haul'. \iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Oshwhr, ~tios, 8231 Ellis, unllll, houst' or beach prop. OWNER 67~2.i.q Ht-il[hts .I.rt'&. RE\VARD. ~lemorial Park Cemert-ry. STEA.i.\I jet carpet d ean1n&. &11:edlent v.wt. 6G-&5b 847·8477 or 847-3957 Income Property £000 O\VNER 675-6259 aear R·l loi.oWrr rented Call the Daily P 11 o t S200 t-acb. &12-1323 o r By Cla.rKatt, natio~wide IRONL"IG Done tn my tiom., \..,. -• Adults·2 br studio DUPLEX -BY-'l'HE ·SEA '67 Mustang V.S, auto, Pl~. hse, nr 5 P•~. El 1'1onte. for. Di3Jli,tch Drpt, Ask for Pat 6-12-4084 !lerviCf'. Jo"'rtt est. 64Z-4055 a I 1 o llltenUora. &Coeta. 'A. , 1~• ba. patio, b a Icon Y, Few feet fron1 the water. $1600 value. Tradr tor 17.23' Eq, units or hm NB, Cd~f. Go r m a n Shepherd .. RE..'1AR.C Services. 3 rooms Meu. 548-6815 ;:arage. '2 blks from ocean. Large l BR. nev.·er apl.S, all gl..u boat, tnotor £: Lai B. 8480 Camino Sur, brown & black. •ns· Tutorint '490 $2.1.50. F'llll) J:Uar&ntffd. ./ IRONING ON 1'EN ACRES $150. 1401 Olive, H.B. kitchen built-Ir.s. Al"-'IYB trailer. CUcamon~a. Ca 91130. wer• to ''Be•r.'' Vic. Credit cards OK. 847-6688. My Home, Hunt. Bch. 1 1: 2 BR. l>~w·n Ir. Untum % BR, 1~ BA, patio, pool, lull on )'earlv l!!ase. Xlnt Call 548-9647 or 537.7902 Beach l<lt Guaymas i\lex. F•ihion Isl Ind; Wl•r· RE Ao I NG spec I a 11 1 t Cllrpc!t Shampoo-.3 A~ge '47·1138 1882 Newrnd Fireplace1 I prlv, pa.tics I $165 mo. MORA KAI Apt1:. income potential. Tax Cir, cha.lee Ac .• restrictt-d. }~&:C, val $2000 aDdior 26• ing flea collar. 644-0tlO ce~lied by !he 1tat~ of Rooms S21.50. Pb. 61<>-8160. *IRONING* ' Poalt. Tennis. Contnt'l Bldst, Eas1. of Beach mvd, in blk shelter. For lialc by owner. 20 min. RivlM:le, For: Eq. dsl launch val $2000, \\'&nl Caht: av&tl !or pr1\·ate Dale'.1 Maintenance Servlct: ?..l:y Home, $1 Hr. 1900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-:?till off Garfield Asking SM.900. Principals units or home. NB, Cdfit, van, sta. \\'ag. or l'f'C ve. RE."'\VARD, lleavy gold chain tutonni:. P iek Up ' Df:liv. St>"l&Q (MacArthur nr. Co111t Hwyl 1 BR. Ne\v. J•'rplc. Near only. Co.II 211. 388-7156 days. Lq Bch, elc. M80 Camino hiclt-. 548-2392, 494-2671 . ~:i~~t ~~{:t~:! ::::. * W-1-477 • Carpet Layin9 & I i\10DERN I br. hsc. stove, ocean. Pali().. AdulL<>. Business ~I 6060 Sur, Cucamonga, Ca 9l7YI. Have-4 Br. 2 Ba & d!!n lo!. Contact ~tr. Hosch, fEl\1. C.oUege •tudenl \\'i.::es Repair 6'26 Janitorl•t •JM LrNDBORG CO. 53&2::i79 d • JI62< c 11 · · to wrk \\'/brain damage or -._._,---rclrig, disposal. frpl, drps. What do )'OU bave to tta e · homr, \V.sidf" C.l'rf. Trade · orne • RLvt'r1ide handicapped chldrn. Please 1 STll.L have the Best deal Wf?RKERS Avail&blt:: .AQy 2 Blks to niarkrl, shps &. *LOVELY NEW APTS RETAIL Location, C.~f. 2544 List 1t be.re -ID Oral!&• for"i)rope11y in St. Petrrs. LOST: WELSH TERRIER rail Claudette S7~22'..q In to\\>n in carpet-Linoleum-kind . of v.'Ol't, &r'(Ytime. Cluna Co~·r. Preff'r n1id. or Near Ck:t'an" Park. l & 2 ~~ewpo30rt2 bl~· ,_~;1~:· CDunty'• IURHl read trad· burg. Largo •n"a, .,-,orida. bml chMcoal. F.dinger/Nev.·· GEn~•N Tile. C.A. Page. 642-2010 Oearuna, lawn "'Ork. etc. retired pcrs. Sl45/mo, 408~i Br. 425 13th St. 847.:1957 ..... xl ', "5'" re ........ uuut 1-...... _ _..make a deal. l~ at', -rt wrfrl 1. 646-1500 h...._, Hea--'·•• bo•s. 1UTII'\ ~nt, reliable S150 llr J:o'emleaf. Cd:\1. Sho1,1.n Sun & garage bldx. ()pe:n Sal u,..,......-.-. ,... "I" •un"" " Gd Constructive ~uons CARPET LAYER HS.AS Atk for John«~ aft JO ani. Santa Ana 5620 ~~~~: .. tor inspe c tion • ..1. * * * * * R-wd,S3.l&.14Z. * ll..t1-05.'.>4 .. CARPET! 1',antutie Y• 646-0075.. ' -;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ... .r.><JUO "" IX>G : Blk ~ wh, llmall inp Call 642-116-1 • e 2 BR, 2 Ba &. 2 BR.'• -:;;e'""P°"R"1'°"1E"'°'STO="RE°""'°"'LOC=.-temalt-\\'/lict>nse. Vic SERVICE DIRECTORY . SPARKLE Janitori&J • Wi&- 1 1 &. Attrac, clean. l blk VILLA MARSEILLES 15x41l. Xlnt, foot 1: auto tral· REAL ESTATE R_EA. 00 .,.L rfoS\TATE Capitol St, c.M. 642-6584 ---------·I E,•ctrlc1I "40 ~-cle~~na ~; ~ to bch. \Vasher & dryer BRAND N!W Gener•I aft ;, l1'-yslttl"1 6550 -----....-. r. ...... ..,....-., ..-.. I avail. S\90 mo. '.!13: 431-1195 lie. $!55/mo. 1871 Harbor, ---------17'=:,-;=-c=c::--:c-:o-. --·~----ELECTIUCIAN. Small jobs, cleamui. J'1'ff est..,,_.., or 675-7478 SPACIOUSA _c_-'_1..,· "'...__=,,·===:--Industrial R. E. Wanted 6240 LOST: Male blk Toy Poodle, BABYSITrING In my home. maintenance l:: re p a I rs . 1 & 2 Bdrm, pts. STORE-OF1''ICE 60&0 nr. Talbt-rt l: lifa.gnolla, l'rtesa Verde art:•. A~. 10 ~ Lanclscaplne 6111 I e COROWX> APTS. ~ BR. Adult L1°vln• N rt Bch, B"" n Prope._rty~-----\VA NTE'"' ....... ,..... ......,,.. F.V. Sml "·w.• Pl•••• oall 1h A 23 •1 h · 1 & 1'¥ BA, fq1lc, dbl • !!wpo ..., llCJ -..,....,u ..,.. "' ... °"" • ".'J ug, · "on. 1 ru CONTRA.CTOR·LIC'O NEW LAWNS. re-~ carport, & lnrgr pool. SIS5 Furn. & Unfurn. * Ervin 675-1001 * l.10 acre commercial or i~ lourplex, caah tn a 6-7~~ ... .,',..--0-:::i;,'.i:·-;-=c-~=-. f r1. 8~?1f..fi~~1. ~l per h1·., * 642•2192 * rot~tilti .... , re nova tins, J.. up. 673-:~78 Dl,bwasher. color coordinat. e RETAllo store 19' x SO'. dustrial. top Jocation, "as.Y loan. Phon'" 64~1070. Ai:L SM \Vht male poodle, vie ~h incl. .>t&-4Jl4 clean-u;~ 197 _1417 or ed appllanee11 -p]wih aha& 442 E. 170. St. Co•l• M•••, onioU 0 ·-o•-Fwy f\Jllv Balboa Isl nr. F"""" land'g. -·1• n ho I OLDF.R 1 bl'. 111 quietc.~I h 1 r 2 1 ...... .,....., -.. ~ • " BUS -·., "-" UlJ' care. my me, ,,., Floor• "'5 ,;........,,:==:,;:·======I ca.l'pet • c o ce o eoor 673-0lfO improved, $40,000 acre cub. INESS •nd Olvner anxious. Re ,v. lant to :l. Near Hamilfoll.•---------scct., Cd:\f., AcllClll &-3rd. scbeme11 • 2 balhs • stall ==~~=-~-~ 331.1400 or 499-4198. FINANCIAL 675-2393 •· I P1·ivacy. $115 I 1110. Avail shO\vera _ mlrmred ward· OCJG.1200 SQ •. FT. oflice also =========:: C~l. Iru!pf'Ction \\'f'lcomed. CARPET VINYL TD...E MAID SERVICE 6llS ' '.J/,"1/70. ;-~8-19.'i7 ro"· doo-• Ind'-~ "•h• 600 sq, ft. 11tore.. $90 It $150. Buslnlll BLACK w/1\•hife Peke. \\'il l do light lrooit\I'. 2043 UC CONTR. FR.EE ESl'. -'" """• .,... .. CM 646-2130 C • I 6015 mlJe. ''lpo", Vic. Orie &: \V&lla<.'f:, Apt D. * 54().7262 * C ANDS 1.l&id ServW IM ?l1AC. l llr. f1:C. rf'lr1g, in1: ln kitchen • breakf.a!I , __ ._. -------__ om_m_e_rc_•_•_____ Opportunitl11 6300 .._,_1 A -· RE\ ARD •-,, __ iaJ • -~-~ • ' 1-~~------'-' __.,a na., ....,.,. \I • EX.PER 1.fother •\•ill b&by1il °""11 ........ t -= a_. ........... ' ;~~8·67~:~i27JW.B Jo crnlent. bar • huge private hnoed Office R1nt1I 6070 cosrA Ml'flll C·l lot on 19th COIN LAUNDRIES 646-1735 Vic: On..rwe • 22nd, c.~I. Furnftu,. R1steriftt Ph. 60-9873 or MJ-9874 I BR. S!l'>V(', refrig. gar, Adults, no pels. $15(], lse. \ avail ilJl j, 673-2876 I LRG, <llrlf'r l br. Steps 10 Bay, crpl!I, drps, stove It rcfrtJ?. s11;, 1no. 673-69<M I SO of h"'Y • 2 br, NICE! No eh1ldl'f'n, no pf' ! s. Squares only. S18.i. 6'12-7898 1 r\E\Vi.lli,2 Ba, S o{ l{wy. r Bltns, lrplc, piilio, bean1 t·cil. cpls, dps. $275. 5'18--7983 patio .. plush JaDUJl(apillS' • -----Street. $1.M" per i'l· It. FRIGIDAIRE lRISH: SEITER Lunche1 a; med Yard. Day & Refinishing "75. brick Bar-8-Q's . larJ:e beat. StnJER..DELUXE QUALITY p I ti eel poo11 .l lanai. JET-ACTION remale, .f mo. old, tamily or "1'eekly. 5'8-9513 a n nf, 3101 So. Brl•tol St. ~~~r:m.:ii:. ~m= :: 1~~~~~.::i ~~:5.i°8~ CypreM cho~ Joe, 37 wa1h. heartbroken. 496-4307 VERY Reliable mother of ~ Strlpp~ &: Paperhaftllnt WI r..ii Mi N. ot So, O>airt Plaza) cupancy. Ora~e C n ty. bal. ers, 11 dryers, Min. $7500 I.RISK Selttt, 1 )T. Mesa 2 v.'Oll.ld like lo bab)'91t by re!lnlsh~9.il5 * PROFESSIONAL PalntlJw. S•nt• Ana Airport Irvine Cornmerc. R.raionomki Corp. 5dn P~~t. Xln1 t lnromc. Verde area. Leather collar ~..:.~day. Prefer inr.i.nl.l.J-=========>JNeat work. Fine p&ina. PHONE: 557-1200 Compleli, adj, Airpor1er Commerci.&1 Bkr. 67;).GlOO ant.a nu•, A pha Seta major w/Hc. tac. 557-9581. ........-.. G•rcloni-6'IO RoUrr, bruah, al r .Je 11 Hotel&: Rfitauarant, be.nks. shopping center. Bi&" volume S'"10"R"EW=A'°'R"D"!-o-,..,--°'o"°,,.-:=., W'°l"L7L-ba~b-y•~i'°t.-my-7ho-me-.-rn-t ··• 1prayinz, aceow: ...... 1.11-e 5 STORES, Sll0,000. 686-J , ....i~. $39 000 •· bl -• -• ---SUD • LRG 2 BR. Studio San Diego & N•pt. Jo'wyl. 69fl \V, l!tlh St. Bethel a ........ .,. • · •uouona e i: While altered mall! cat. vkinlty of Edwards '° AL'S GARDENING Local rel'L Lew prices. Ro)' Apt. (Triplex). Family size UNCROWDED PARKING T<lwrrs corner. 548-1168 agt. tenn9. Vic Ea.stbluff. 644--090:> Edlnrer, }f.8. l!J2..5209 fDr Gardening le amall 11.nd-147-1358. kllch. \V/blcns, crpl<>, drps, LOWEST RATES 3:J \Vashe.~/8 Dryi-ni, rood L.O=sr=--.~o~---',-,~"""""·-,..,.-, 1 NEWPORT Hits area, lara:e teapin&' Rl'\llCCI eall S«J.5198 H7.o~u7.s"ES~~"""~ .. -~ .... ~-.. ~1111--' lrph· .. encl gar. 1 or 2 Owner/mgr. 217'l OUPon! Dr., Industrial Rental 6090 location. $8,000 J.'I P. Small "'ith red collar, vie OCC yard w/undboi-:. Lunch + Sttvlnr Ne~'J)Ort. CdM, Coa. JIO)e• a:i.vthin&'' ~ ever).uw. <'hildren ok. (Nr sehls) No Rm. 8, Newport Beach. down payment . Reward &42-169!1 1nacla, Xlnt cane. 66-2754. ta Mesa. Dover Sbores, fft~bly painted. FOi' me pels. 2230 S. Center St., 8.3J.32'13 Courtesy to Brokers FOR l....'le-5300 1q. f1. prime COIN-0-~1ATIC Ba'-·alttl ..... , aiei Sa: \Ve1tcl.lft. fftim&te 646-975: S A N \V 557-6.'102 hie 11 t EQUIPMENT, JNC. ANNOUNCEMENTS "'¥ .. . · · r amer, HILLGREN SQUARE v.·are spact>-a or par . c<r.::......,.. ind NOTICES up. Nr Beach"-Adami, HB LAWN " Garden ca.tt, HOUSE Need paint! ~.~}1 ... Balboa 5300 Irvine Ind, Mr. Bullard ~ • ....., till ~-'' -------SIJa-Lrg cheerful l Br. apt, 1900 sq ft Deluxe Offlces 346-SOSl * 536-1105 * beau ·ca.tlon, weed.in& Ii: lnlf:rlor, exterior, free z. BR upJX>r 11 /sundrrk, Crpls, drps, blt.ns. encl ger. Avail. for imn1ed. lease in 1,.,-=.---c,,-"'7.=..,--;;;;;;;-~ FOR SALE: Excluaive Knit Person•lt '405 BABYSITTING In m:y home cleanup by eoUep •tudenta. estlm1te. Roi., reuona.ble crpts, f!l'p!', ref, shivf',. $1::.0, 1 child ok, (Nr. tiChli;l, 2230 one ot eitles busie~t shop. NEW bldg, 1368 to 2300 n. Fabrics Shop, f'9tllbllshed I~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;~ I for infants &: toddleH. Vlc: Rea•. 543-7363. Ca.Una Bros. 968-3236 S ·Center S! SA nr · Wiii di id Nr. Baker &: Fairvie\\', 1 bu11. in S.C. -t!)2-2MJ or I: ==-------! b•ase. 67?.-3'.189 · · · · · · ping ce.ntera. v e. 492-4702 T\VO Buiinc5~ executives liar-bar&. Victoria. 548--7123 JAPANESE Gardener Mo. PHONE the ~•t. then phone \Vamer. :ia7-6:i02. Air-cond., muaic, panelin&", yr lea!Nl;. Sull.ivan 548-2llG financial stablt-37 • 33. e CH.ILD CARE: Pref. non-Rate. Cen'1 Oe~Up. Ex-the best: Jordan I: Son : Huntington Beach 5400 crp111, drps, 1.iax. park'g I; 6100 V ER Y \V" I I k no\\' n OiV()rced. \Vilh I a r A: e repre!l&ed kklw to 4 )n. per. Rea.•. Fref: e • t. Paintina. Llcet111ed, bonded, Lagun• -~•1ch 5705 malnt. 270 r.. 17th St., C.M. Lots J'l'11tauran1 . 92 R11l1, beer unU11ually fuml~hed home * ~OR4 • 642-2239. insured, 54&-632:> ON BEACH! e I BR. FllOM S200 e 2 BR J ~~ BA J.'R0~1 S210 e 2 DR 2 BA J:o'ROfif $260 e 3 BR 2 BA FRO~f S.360 Carpcts-dra pri.dishwasher heated pool.sauna.tennis .-rec l"OOm-ocean views • patios-ample parkln&. Security guard~. },URN. abio .Avail. HUNTINGTON PACIRC 711 OCEAN AVF.., 11.8. (714) 536-148'7 Otc. open 10 a1n-6 pm Dall)' ~1anaged by Wll.LIAl\1 \VALTERS CO. * NORTH END * Qnp or tl>ose rare lovely 1 BR apts. l block shoppini:, beaches, private, e.nclo5ed patio. $17:1. R?.042.17 or 49t-4<!S8 ,_,lr Bram 21.1; 651-:nOO collect * $5,500 * Ir. wine. fi4G-S.:~:I for intimate dining and I =========:.JAL·s Laodscaping. Tree YOU Supply The Paint. s DOVER BUILDING; 8l3 Vic\V . Lt'vt'I lots . I::Z Terms Sl:?,j()Q catual bar BQ. lli ma 11 C•terlng 6575 rtmo\Pal. Yard remodeling. Br, Liv Rm I; Kitchen Dover Dr, Ne\\'port, 3 SuitPa PLACE REALTY 494-9704 HA~1BURGER StaM, year Part I e 1 . lnleNi!ltinr con-----Truh hlullng, lot cleanup. Painted, $50. CalJ s.;74&31 Ava.ii. 40c 1q. rt. J Ground 2969 So Coast Jli...,•ay around bwiinctS3, be a c b '-'t!rsalion ind mosic, ~feet \VlLL ~k Greek or 11&1\an Repair 1prnklera. 67~1166 R.eUred Painter: J6 ~ noor: tHO IKJ. rt. $2.16/mo. 1.l'f'a. 673-2910 new people. Wide range of dl~I' 111 your homt'. Call GA RD EN ING : Land exper. Neat I: honed. Hobo J 2nd Floor; 660 sq ft . DOVER SHORES, lgt-Bay PROSPERING • C0f'1"EE interests to <llfer includif\I 846-i273 cleanups, Sprnkr 1)'1, roto-drinker. Call 5.1&-6301 S.2&ltn10. t 2nd 1'1oor; 588 VKo\\' lot, tax useuon SHOP. 60 capacity E11abl. ocean crulter lot' trips to cement "WOrk. Y1.nc:ey . iQ. fl. $235/nio. Air cond valunllon -$24,800. Low 1 yr, Near Beach. 536-1459 Catalina and ~1exlco. Ski Carpenttrint 6590 64&-5860 TRADE, Palnlinl by ncen. La""una Beach 5705 A ut!I incl. .Pt!ana1er -lsehold · Owner &14-ro.39 boa! for rlw.r tun and --f!d contractor tor tnck. ""'-""=;:;...==:.....---. 673-2457. CANYON Lake Jot, unit !, skiitll'. Harbor c r u i 1 es. CAllll'INTlllY E XPERlENCED Japanese furn. or ! &U-4.\ll * .. \\'OOD'S COVE * 1t ~ach ~~ block, new 1 l 2 BR apts, Each have l ~ BA. Pool. SJJO up, Lease. 2175 S. COM! liwy, 497-1630, 49'}.39'29 NE'\V Ocean side apt1. 1vith pool. J•'rom S200 month PLACl: REALTY 4M-!171» REAL ~STATE General -~-;--'--,~-~~-3rd tier view, 60XU>, $97.'iO. Business Wanted 6305 ~lotorcycle11, for trail and MINOR REPAil\S. No Jolt G1rdener, Complete McAda.-• P1>'nH ... "-·. Deluxe l·Rm. office Service Free est ~ ""' .._ __,.., 962-8958 BUY or Lease s m 1. I l mount a I n exp I orin 1. Too Srna1L Qablmt in p11-• • Inter. I: Exttt. 8pecl.al re• Nr. Orange County Airport THREE ARCH BA y: bUAlneu. htotel. mo bl I e Colorado river cabin ci<>ee qel A Ith er a.bineU. GEN'L Clean Up, tree aerv, on a.pit. M&-3645 4 lrvtne Jnduitrlal Beautiful ~c\v lot, Private home park, retail franchise. 10 Vfifas (\\'e !Ike 10 Col. 56111$, Uno answer &eave weed kill, roto-tlll, sprlnklrs METICULOUS l'AINf. =~'.~~l~~ion1:;pe~ bea.ch. $17,;;cJU. Good trrms. Couple wi.11 lnve11t lo.60 JU. \Ve are looking tor fun Ftll Mii at ""3Sn. fl O. repa..lnid. 646-5848 BLUE OllP STAMPS INS. janltorlal service. Sl2.i ~fo. 0v.'l'IC.r n3:37i 3000 coll. Box No. PIOT1, Dally Pilot rnr companionship. Must be Andel'IOn JAPANESE Car-den Ing r.rew col. studentr. inf'41Xl attracllw with lood figures CARPENTER: Remo de l. Service. Neat work. Cra.nup houses R-<p Docks lf5.Sl12 BOB PETl'IT, Realtor Acreage 6200 Mon•Y to Loin 6320 •nd a nalr for good allirc palio '>\.'Ork, cen1ent work yd. maint. 968---2303. . • • e 833-0101 e ---"------------and poiNe. Betw!'fn aget 21-&: palnllnt;:. No job too CLEAN UP SPECIAlJSf No Wuttrla CORONA DEL MAR 5 AC. undevcloptid. Lake 1 TD L JO. Pll'9JIC send pholo and imall.1'...,..,. eit., ~19-U Ne'v lcncf! Ir. repa.lr. Odd * WALLPAl'lk 'f! Choice lo<'. Ample p1k'11:. U!IUn!I apprec. Hunt, flllh. st oan letter to Box 1061 QUALITY Woodcraft I job Re II 543-69l5 When )'OU call "Mac' Ground fir. Prlv. baths. Take over lo dn S20 mo . \Vf:1lml111tcr. Don 't M 1hy • Im '· a · SUJ4M 6"-4032 400 10 1100 "I 11 at !97-3418. a~C. TNTERF.ST or emb&rras~d. We're look. ~·1 C<lt11111'1ta· 1•1 c~rpentry,.. Complete Y ar4 C1rtl HOUSE p.,-~.. ~4 · · · lnr for-ne\v rtienda. Bara r J""l;:e COn1U on .. QUO • JIM 540-4837 ""' • .......,... lOc ft. AlllO 5 t11l SUlti', GOVERNJ\tENT land, $S an 2nd TD Loan and the •iune environment Ca.II J<en 6f5...00U, !W3-423S. ~·t rate •. Jnterior, exteriat \:::::::::-> Rentels Wanted 5990 1''URNIS11ED &· UNFURNISHED • 1.., hlcx·k lo. 3 shopping ccntc-T"111 ft ~ m1n 10 Beach: • S rnin 10 :;An Dlct1:0 tV.y, ,\l~L TlllS 111111 .• , 1.UXtJHTOlJS AnUtT 1\PT LIVJN<~ i''fiO;\l SJ:i) CALIFORNIAN Apto J!IS'l:J Brookh11.rs1 002-2!18! f URN. 2-3 Br howM: required 2 bathll. Owne:r '73-f757. acre. Write: Land Paclcagt!, UP . ...1 --Frff Eatimate.a, Ken Dall tor a period of S.t.2 mo's. 1185 AM'O\\'head Ave, San won't find them, C:.n )'OU CLE.AN· JOIMI, ha,.. ns. General S.rvlct1 6612 ~· commencing Oct ], Cd1t1, DESK SPACE Bndo 92410 Term1 bl.Nd on equity, think <lf a ba.tter way lo concn!te Mn"k. Free eat. ~~-,·:_ ____ _ Hntg Bch. Npt Bch. \Vrlte Fo '42·2171 545-0611 fllffl new people'!' We c.n'I. Small or bl.c. ~7801 \Vall Oeantnr By Machine REAL E.rtat. ReJ\lvtnaU. 222 . rest Avenu" 11 ACRES-WEST C.M. Sen''-"' Jlarbor I.I"!• 21..,... Thla ad la .1&. a "'"· t'att. l<lw CO!lt. driJUeu SerW:.'e, paint any bomt IDt u1vl ng full detail.8 or prox. 7994 .. .., -1·-r"'l .r-c. CARPENTRY: cab I net 1, ""--Elt. U» ._ 1 atcty '3!50. .. ,. tmlty ot •ch I•, rhop'JI Laguna -Beach Owne.r &46-Sattler Mert1a .. Co. '!'!!!!!!!!"~""''"'"'"'"""'!"I Room Add!Uom p ttoiJ -'\" ...... centeni. etc. 10 Daily Pilot ,,,. ,,.,.., 335 E. 17th $tf'e('Jt AITENI You can now be · b Ml'·: ... ! ""'76. s 6 8 QUIK KLE&.'l *EXPERT ,AIN11N0 --R111rt Proporty 6205 .... -., -M• 1 Any stte Jo · ...,, -.Ml .... ....,, "~"' * """'-.,. ... , Box ~f.200). 2211 W. Balboa I~==~~---~ _ P ""'""" '"ll-Al .... e11 o ... _....,.,.. rfte ..,,.umlllet. ......,. Blvd, Ne\\-porl Beach OJ.TICE for leue, 4 prlv 6150 preMnl or Pf.Ill mfid. hlatory REPAIRS " ALTERATIONS APT CLEANtNG • Palntlne oU~. recpt room, air ON Fairway . FaJlbrook C:nu ~MY W•ntec:I "'/major med. A ho&p. In. * CABlm."TS. Any 1\ze Jab . RIC Sh&mpoolrw '-Lite * PAPERHANGING STUDl:::NT despe.ni.lely tlttdl oond. Ample prlc's. Xlnl 1oc:. Club-new l BR. 3 BA. NEED ss.;,000 fnr 12 mot. C<lme lnauranc:t. No a.re ti yrs exper. 54UT13 Rep a Ir'• REM A RC It PA1N'J1NG. ,. t6t.JGS ~~ln~oc In ~~~~ 10;e1:~~'. Lachrnm)·er Realtor alr-cond. crpts, d r P 1 ' fl('pay ST 2, 500 , l..o&n limit, very lo coat, De GEN. Repair. 1dd, c1.b. SER.VICES. 847~ * PAPIRHANOiR * 642-82.JO 646-392& or )4~ lnd~~~J:._~·500· 11reurrd, New Ho 1 p It a I. eovtted lor your cond. You Formica, pa.ncllni m1rtlle. FENCINC. ttpl.ln. paintin,, f\eeocn1ltd Authorit,f. PrW DESK SPACE ...._,,,, could ,.., ,........,,, >'or A·~••··! Dick. IT.1-4459 .... ,.., malnt. INtruclar • ....:114! 1t RENTAi. SERvtCF. * ' --. Info •~·• Mod "•"-~ M I " D rt 621. .......... ' .._ . &IS-'"""" INT, ... -., ............... '-• Fr .. to L1ndlord1 305 No. El C1m; •• RHI ounto n ltl ANNOUNCIMINTS Scrv ~· ~UM --~-·~··· ~ Blue BeaCOll, 6'1Mll.83. CM S•n Cl1rnente incl NOTiCIS. ~1'3~.,., u•........u• or Cement, Concrete 6600 Ed'a OeuUnr Servk:e rers, He'd, Ina., fl'M .t, }'QR. Sale, tv.'O hl.lf.._cre1, Carpltl Upbol I WI "-Ill Cbuct. tcS.(11» BY AUG 1S, 1 Br. or 1t\ldlo 492-4G> view lot• A 1ky harbor. found (f,._ Adi) '400 l .. Wlll bOldabbe HtPONRlle CONCRETE.~ typlld I.~ dov.'I. f1oor C:,.,~ ' llpt, turn/unt l bt'lby ($8.1-NEWPORT Beach de.luxe ot-Yucca Vl.lley. Owl'lclr will r a.n;y ts oltlef th&.n est. Sawin& • .,...,a l'lc. ._ . Pl•shrlntr Patch \YALJ\ J hlki t<l "beach. $9ll CM, NB. Aft l. 64f;..-t219 (ice1. AiNlond. Htd. Prlv. aaeri, 6.841\ loan, lo down OEnuw Sheph<nl. 5AI my own. Sklney Sherrill tnr Ii: 11dpk)adlna. Sen'°9 Hiull"I 6-Ri~lr ' _ Aln1o~I IK'W I;: J Bn. AJ'll. b HOW Coe t ff 9S""35Q ~·· Curtlu / I II ~..Bob •-r:-.... Q.lcl i:;ii r, frpl, wJw crpht, PLANNING to moveT You'll 1• • a WJ. or fl"ldfi fOr car mo'1. Vic: 7:30 a.m. Sal ~~qu~·~.,,~-~~-~~~·..::l"--;;::;-;;';;;;--:;::;-;-::;;;:-·1·:-~::;:::;-::;:::=:::::;• ilf\'ii., rl1hwahr, 2 ba. $22.j find an amaxtnt: numb@r of I NEWPORT OEACll WHATEVER ;you need , mom, S\\'am from Udo OON·T ajv1 it &W1l7, l'!t CEMENT \\·6R.K, no jOb too llAUUNU 110 A LOAD • PA.mt ft.ABl'E1tlNG "''· ~11 i1glJlJpet1t, rhildn hnme.11 in today's Clas1ltled S!ll'l mo. Alr-contt. you'll find, It ycm read .. $h1pyal'd arra to 28th St. quick cuh for It With a Small, reuona.hle. Free Ctun up. 'J'l:te ~rv. ~n. All typn, F'rf!e .. thna ... 1*:1:1-16--1711 I /Ids'. Check !Mm no\v. f:rv1n •875-1601 Oail:y J>11ot Clan1Ued Adi ~fa.rin11. fi13-00'.l& Call 642-5678 Ii: char.we It. Eatlm. H. Stunlt:k "8-M15 Pnlnlns 64G-2S21. "3-30ti C..11 S40CJS ' . ~. ? •• ., I 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS .. • (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~l1 You1•seli A Pile 0[ Pen11ies (01· Evc11 Dolla1·s) Penny Pinchers Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 Pile Up Profits North County, 540-1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS ' -- ~· t r: / .'/ . f t ;~,, • •I,; • • .. • 1 • ·' ~~---.,..---~----~~·-~-~~-~--~-~--... , ... --·....--·-·--·--..................... --..... --,.......,.._._...,.._------~--- Ftld>t. A,...i 7, 1'70 DAILY l'!LOT S5 s•a11ic1 l'lRICTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY s111v1cE 01R1CT011v Joas a EMl'LOYMINT I Joas a IMl'LOYMENT JOU a IMPLOYMINT JOU a 1MPLOY~Mt~,.~·~~~,~~~~~~[•!:!!!!~~~Ht~I PB ~ ' ~ R ...... 11 ... & Tllo, Coromlo "74 JolN ~ •• w ..... 7100 ,..,, Moll, Wom. 7100 ~·":' Mon, w-. 7-.00 ,.... Mon, Wom. 71QO u.;;-~-;w-..;;:-nao Joh ~ w-7100 ~REPAIR _R .. fr ''! e D\lc!GuntTUeetntrr e BtAUTIClAH Jor •1111, DCNTAL Jec r tl•ry .ltSKPJtS ttaiPb'r' P111 IN MOTEL MAID R.EP!l£SEHTATTV£Sto,,_o No job too amaU ROOM Add\tlorw, pn&fft Skl2S So. Main. S.A. 546-1617 popular Colt& ft.ttlt shop. Pe~blt. rxptt\enctd, er. Gwfe Alkn B)'land A,.en. l.J.OWA REEF MO'rU. thio "or'Cln1I" ranwtJc • &U-.3121 • remodel. Lowut Price tn All ~ ot Ule • wall, floor, No clienfe'e nrc. Paid vaca· ncW01, Chl.llt.naln& Polillon. o 1og..a E. 11th. S.A. 30llOI So. Coa•t Hwy "SI.JM GYM" ~nc atMi!f. ---------'°""1l. Uo.-&•-fl I Ho le•, petio, fftl" M)'t, biil)t... Uo"'~~ Prolk~-~ t:rp!f.J. . .A'-fU. rt~. ~M'7-l.<JS9;,:;:;;-;· ====-~-,_,""C..,...""ir.ii;ll<:::;ch:_.,, ffl-c:;:.,;:."""::;..-,-jf-':ised on TV. "SI.JM (;YM'" * Pl..UM81HG~( 11 c en a e d) : ftJ.4989 ahower. Expert loitllladon Mamct•r-. MS-718f Sa""liiY •oendtnt upon abill.• * HOUSEKEEPER w 1 MUSICIAN'S Netded for loeal Uie ~'d'a iw.f bomt o.r. ttpeir, tt!mode.I, ~w COft. GEN'l. re.modelloi It ma.Int or tn...., lructructlona t.ir do DEAVTY Optrator • position t:y. f$5004800J . 111-llei Alt IV! ramlly. clubt 6 ttttaunnt•. Mail •· Loae lndwt • pin * * * SHOW81Z * llnlctla{i.Y?Hest.6'16-8MO No Job too •mall. lt)'OW'telfuLCompietellPe open tl)r eicpe r i enced DENTAL AM't w/chainldP Call 53fr245.3 rtwmt or call \\'nt CoAM EARNINGS ln your own 11ow-REPAIRS Uc'd/i.Nlured, 61'5-&W, ol acceMDrin: A toW fDr optl'Jtor, pttferably with esptt, x..n,y, etc. Call 1 NTl'JlEITING Telephone Ptr1onaJ Mrmf Co.. !100 home. can Loctilt 4!Jl.S1C3. OPPORTUNITTES Plumbi.Jw.dectrk:al. ff .50 Ht. inllt&UaUon. fo.llowtrc. New •• I 0 II• MS-a395 lit I pm. work from home. lfv,t MW '8q Lido Bklc.. Newpon. -~6G"""m1i~=JJ<~-'°"'~~-_s._w_lnt~-----'-"°-* Verne, The Tiie Man • Newport am. C.U M&--m DC>la$J'lC.1<lf mat u r• Jlriv9tei lllw ud at 1".tt. !:':M H.B. 61&-KlO. Alt. P\aa •ftd . M:t ~ Bol*7' D. Talat needs peopla: ol allt»U-"--""' 24 HR PLUMBING QUALITY you'Ve a I way a Cllat. work. Jndall A rtpaln. B~UTY Operator t~r pr-. '° •ltt ~ lovthourtd&ll1. Bee M·ll.08 I: REMODELLING wanted. Drf!um4ktrw _ No job too 1m.I. Pla~ter ~··hair atJUac lhop. Ho chlli:tttn. 'Mutt 1ovt1,°"-oi1>_,,._P11ot______ NMd htr• Men.y1 Gxec 551·9644 a!teratlone. Key Sa.y, 1763 patio. Lea.ldna s h 0 we r Pt.c:lme now, fuJl, ttZDI! 1ab9r. poodle. Abit to tlkf't ovv ll"Ollinc I'm lookllw ror manaaertaJ. l1ItDI' WANT ADI "2-5678 Ora A repdr Owner: 5'1-M65, whu owner • •way. No NEED knwww11 to do \rorJ· t)1l9 people to hetp mt-In a -rwe vt!., C.M. &e.1292. s41-m1mg..m drink, no ainob. Otfn BR. tnr, my -.. or )'OUn. ntW hume•. F\lll or ~ Become a QUEEN'! .WAY BA A 'IV. Salary open. C&IJ $1.50 pu dclMn. lft t..Me tlmt:, 6CJM!t -... ea-Girls (10 W. Cout Uwy. N.8. y ha ~--~ ------------=---------. . 'DON'T PINCH YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PINCH YOUR PENNIES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified · ~d 3 LINES 2 TIMES $2.00 Any Item Priced $50. or less (If mar• than one Item, tM combined tot1I c1nnot exeffCf $50.) 642-5678 YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD DIAL DIRECT • futiion CIOUIWor. E a r n Thurs ttn 8'.ln. &t&-.5161 FOC"ett .,_ ol U TOf'D. _T_.-~s.rv=-"i..;;;;... _ _.;•~• eaod ,,_,, 1n ,.... .,.,. tlmt. netU" bomt. FNe £LF.Cnt0NJC ~nJ _m_.-.,,,===--~­t•..._ 1ot bo"1r a-... Coll w-.. Expm.....i * ISADOllES * ----------~ BOB'S TREE SURGERY ... _._ ........ Fino Quall1y .,._ Sorvice. ·-· TREES, Hedgta. trim, Cl.It. stumps ttrr.oved. hauled. 30 )'R. eicp. Fully ins. 642-4IDJ DON'S TREE SERVlCE AU l.YPe•, I.Jae I: Ina. 1''ree F.at1. mates. 642-55M JOBS & IMPLOYMENT Joli Wo-, Mon 7000 -· LICENSED CAPTAIN · Radar -Loran 30 yun tx· perltnce aaU Or PJwel'. ~ resaional 1port fiahln.e eulde Mexican I:. CtntraJ Ameri· can waters, Admlni.ltrativt experitnee. AVAILABLE for v.-eekends, extended chartua; or del.lv. erits. Best of referencu. ~rile Box M 1060, Dail)' Pilot,. 2'll1 W. Balboa Blvd., NeWport &a.ch, Ca. Call Mr1. ~9 or wlU irUl, ma t u r e, * BOOKKEEP"~·~·••· de-.C&ll64...,..,. DAY COOK peritnced woman· llS' ,.rt apply s ' R ~rtne. EXPERJ.ENCED ti~ bookbep\rW tn retail 134 ProducUon Pl. N.B., store. Payroll A~~ 1:30 to 4 PM. counting. ""42S6 •• BUSBOYS Application. now belfW take'l lor Fall It Winter .Chedulet. Muat bt U or over. Apply afta> 3 p.m. TheFlvoCl'ftnl Reat•urant 38Ql E. Pacific Qut Hwy. Corona dt:l Mar. No pb., c.:a1ll CASHIER-Food cheek er. Full time, all year around poeltion. Xlnt 1 a I a r y. Hoattsa experience desired. Call Mam.pr at S.m'a Seafood S!n-1!21 * CLERK TYPISJ' * APPLY IN PERSON lll 8ayskle Drive Newp:ir1 Beach UQUOR dft'k WUJfled put time. Dpefienoe necflllll)'. ~ '42-3139 dlys; arw 5 pm, 673-85SS LADY owr 40 refin ed w/pernalit)', exp'd In Wet,_ .. _ .. ........... Knowf«lp or Booldqoc • ""'""'· No smok.itW". Stffdy poslllon .,, ont G( tbe finett .., _____ !!!!!!!Pl de«n ... otudloo b> Nwpt EXEC'S Sect'y-.Rect'pt Sm Bcb. Good ulary • bituft. e~neerin& otflcto, accurate Give refs.: wrtt. Dally typi91, tome SH I: bookffll'l l -PU_o<_cBmr;_c."°M°"·lllOI~-=---- ...... $500 mo, Retume to $3 95 """ PI009, Dally Pilot. 22U • CITY OF LAGUNA BEACH W. Balboa. Blvd, N.B. Larte,f"xpand'ingcMinnl!flds FIRE DEP_.,__,,"'""",... ft/pt help, temp &: penn. • nn1nu:..1'1 • EXPERIENCED Wire Ii. Are 20-30. I mo'1 ttsdey. '°"'er1ng cuu-"'" S1<Y -·d S4l0 to ~16 mo. RequiJ'n Parle Circle, Irvine. 540-52.f.9 B2rio Mr. van 45 wpm l yr, exper. H.S. --~=~=---grad. or equtv. appif by FEMALE factor)' pac1taatt1, LOT BOY llN'S Full & Part Time for eur MW f•clltty Apply in person HUNTINGTON BEACH CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL IarLl nortda St (St.,. Lant) lluntin(lon Beach NURSING SUPERVISOR. Fu.ll lhnt', nighll, 11-7:30 or LVN. PARK LtDO OON· VALESCENT C ENT E R ...___ NURSES AIDES. t I· T: l 0 lhl!t. Elq)erlenced, p art time. PARK LIDO CON- VALESCENT CENTER.. .. ._.... PART TIME (Ml!n 6 Womenl EVENING WORK Aug. 17, 5m F0ttat Ave 5'6" or OYtt. Sl .65 per tir F'ull time tmployment. New 1714J 4*-1124 lo •tart. ~ group in&. car · dealtnhip. Apply in Ntw factory branch openin& PCJOL Ropolnn&n. Qua1iliod in all pbuet ol trouble tbootinr:, plumbin,c, elec-- t:rical I:. mechanical. Al.:i experient'l!d u pool sultant. Contact Cleuon, 763 Hudson, 545--01:>4 con-CLERK TYPIST. Youl'lC, Mr. energdlc lady with some CM. bkkpg txper. ptel'd. WW train for local engfneerina: firm. Apply 136 Rochmcr, C.1't. • ml!Cit ra.16e!l. Ptl: 543-filZS iperson. in Orange County. No eicp. THEODORE nee. \Vork 6-11) pm. ROBINS FOR INTERVIE\V FA1 & UGLY??? 7020 U yuu are, We probably can't ... you. CALIF. CASTING CO. FORD CALL SA.T. &: MON. DO Harbor m vd. IO AM TO 5 PM Com. Mesa 774-nJl I.s continuing Its 1earch In --~~==-----===-==-o:== COCKTAIL waitttM, apply Orange Co, for a varlt~ ol e LOOKI * PART TIME SECR.E- 1..ADY desires pot!lition aa in peMIOn. Dana Villa, 34311 types, Ior work in ma&. mo. Would yoo like 10 have • TARY. Ty p In 1. ru. coo k . housekeeper can-So. CoM!t Hwy. Dana Point. deling, TV comnil'a. • ind. Mor Comfort bra or Trru Ing, &n9\\'f!:r phont. Mon., panion • recent Io ea I COCO'S-REUBEN'S fllms. Gt!at pay, pt. time. Mor wir • fl'fle tor bein& • \\'~ .. Fri .. I to 12 noon. reference, own car, Live COMPLEX We are cl.iil!!nt paid. no fee. boctt1111? C • 11 Anytime, Ply $3 per hr. Sta.rt lmmed. in. 673-8879 4647 MacArthur Blvd. Not a tchool. 96U219 or 968-1136. Nr. O.C. Airport 540-8061 ACCOUNTS r ec e iv ab J e, INTERVIEWING MON .• FRJ. -FREE LVN, rtlW.f Yittk ends, 7 PART TIME man or woman Payroll, Accountii payahle, 2:30 to 5 pm TV SCREEN TEST to 3:30 shift. PARK LIDO for ~tal wotk In animal Credit. Typing: IBM exec. DAY HELP PH: (n.f.) SJS.8282 OONVALESCENT CENTER ~ito'!:. WPri'~~: Box M-l082 No job too small! 536-2242 Over 17 year!I" 10 AM toe: PM 6f2...80.M. ''""" ... y ...,. DAY Work Wanted: SJ hr •• HBUOSSTBOEYSSSES FIBERGLASS I a Y· MAJOR Development Co. in v~~1!, ~"::' S~l plus $2 for Transp Costa Meaa. aru ttqulrts 87 .--.1... ~ OU on ~ -.v~. ,_ ............... uall • tuCCft8 IP YOU CAN QUALll"f' WE NEED Yor •ppobrtnwnt A lnle! v .. can ..,...n WE NEED CAW'ORNIA'S TEN BEST MEN TO HELi' * US SEU. PART OF * * * CAW'ORNIA. Wt're a land a:mopontion. Tbt !LRVlCE Rep....C.0 m ett.. ~test rrowt,. land c:orpor. mpermk! l'OQfe wttkltle auon in the Wut. tlwnpooetA tr poli.tm• Wt need brl&ht YOWll minds MedJa.nically I a cl l •• d to function u oo:r aaJe. rep. Sa.l&J')'-bonu.i. lM 1; m . rt&t"ntatlves. Natl co, L.w In Hant. adl With a llttleo dfotl, ).1)U can er Fountain van,,.. Writr JnaU conuru.IMI ot $25,0l)O Box Ml«J". r'laily Pilot. 2211 • year or mon. Sewport Bl:vd, N.B. tr )'OU ~ )Ql'n. ont ot the SERVICE Statioa Attedlnl: men wt re klak1oc for, ut wanted. Rn J..ll PM. yourwU ~· Salary plus comm Am 111 It jult • job )W want! Or I 3>CI amiol CM. a lifetime career. n pn91m., • For appolntmtnt ca.IJ: SERVICE Station Attendanl JACK STANLEY po~ Unw. ·-(TI.f.) 13.5-3233 Arttnon"• umon Sen. 1MS Adami, C...M. Pb: S4S-lf19 Salesmen Wanted SLL\I GYM """ ••I• Exper5ence41 • n I y -demoNtn.te 'Mllid'• No. J straight NII. A m•n nirrcbtt • introcNce eJC· th•t can st•rt •nd cltU.. new SLIM GYM~ complm • tM•I. Demo BATH. No upa-. nmc.. plan, inauranu, pod Shirley Gnha.m 197-19116 or hours. Excellent ~y 1-".......n"-'=-----,-- pl•n. C•ll R;ek Frith TELEPHONI! I to 5, ~ APPOINTMl!NT SALES MEN * SECllETAll'I' * Part -· ""' -°"""'" del Mar, U py· I want two mu with -.In NEEDED: Bua!oe. waman badcground. You mun be wtio tnjoyl: caWnc and cbat.- ~ IO lielnl: our method tine with ~ PH! A work hanl. ln return " l:ll.3656 or 175-llBI. will give You good co. hem. . . fil!. 1: an opportunity tor un-Telephone ~ • limited lncomt!. For appt. Charity appeal. Paid ~J' phone Mr. 8111 Harold, John. Apply: 325 N'. Brotdw'7 mn &: Son. 540-56.lJ. Rm. 4.10. Santa Ana * SALES * To ~~~l ?tlature woma.n, tor sates or Onr lo two years CCllp:nta f\nt jewelry. 40 bn. weekly i.. and-or Privale Prw>- 12 night&) Penn. $DJ. arno. U: ~ count)' to •tart. KIRK JEWELERS, ~~ Fee-Paid f.S.0 lluntington Centet"", Beach ltt jobs) Cal.I Ann. M.5-:Mt). &: Edlna:er. H.B. Wtatd\11 PertOMl!:l AJ:etrey. 2Gt3 Watcliff DriVfl, N.B. * 836-6748 * e DISHWASHERS up, sandillCJ ft ct.. f"\JLL CHARGE houn. will train. Good driv-• t BOOKKEEPER inc record required. SALES.~IAN w I n u r a e r y NURSE, Cook. cornpe.nkln. COLLEGE &irla &: hi«hl tall llCJ exnar. Ap· for all p"---. --· trial Polition open to male or fe. -r-.--:-.1 D•u or n""'-t ad full /tl A I"'-,....., ull"U garden cent.er aper. atnd WAM'RESS: Dt.y or ttlehta. '°"""Y"''"'' ... ~-"'I '"' gr s, ' p R'H!'. vg. ply in RefSOft, baJance. Cons I ru Cl Ion mall-appli~lll. APP I Y background resume to Ray ... ., ""-· • ... " ~. f.Z.25 hr. 646-1822 'S3 hr. No cexptr. necess. ...-ba i....-. • ...i hel..,.•• but rd 1S83:i 8rookhW'Sl. F. V. 1-N '"" .... ..., • a--· GIRL _ hoostwor1c 4 to 8 For appl. 546--5770, Vanda EDLER c_.vv.1... .,...... Amling, AmJ,...'.1 unery, 18 Ir over. Apply at n.. l C IO< nectaA.ry. For appolntmmt 962-3l12 J5(X) E. Coast H'N)", N.8 . ,.. _ _,_ Jr. 1~ •~-nLJ bNI wee.kly. S2 hr. 171h V"<"au Y ounse · INDUSTRIES INC. call 540-9110 tJCf 20. .....,. --·· .m.u ""'"' 6U-5!1ll COLLEGE"""'"' IJlleftst.d 2 Ol D S NI MAWS. Full ttme, 2S " RECEl'TIONIST SECRETARY C.M. M.,...,. MIU lWnlow ========:I 1n~wMbboyl;,ton 1 ov• t., .. over. Apply 164& Newport TYPIST to WANTED-Two ni1bt J b M-w ..... 7100 fiex!ble ... -paya VICE -PRESIDENT oISHWASHElis ..., 11. o ,_,,, $1.50 hr. Pickup applic.t:iona FILE CLERK-LEGAL Blvd., CJL Phone 60-88'7l PART-TIME approic 20 hrs. Apply 6'1S--54n, $ PK-4 PM. at the Boyi-Club ol to $400 MAINTENANCE MAN Open.Ui~c awilch· ~idy, houi.t1ex1b°ie. M VU..U..GE INN, &1. llL 0bilitieS lAjJuna ........ 1DIS J,qolN Bttutilul N.B. om..... V"l' Nowport Cntr olfice bJdr. 5% "°""'· A=n.te 1YJ>l•C toke '"""1hand 100 wpm. WANTED' M .. ur< ...... I• ft :\.. CM:yon Rd. pleasant working cond·1. day week; Muat have ~n1 min. at v>'prn electric like variety and figuru, woma.n to b&byEt 2 cir\& Clrl1.il m eu C 0 M p AN I 0 N /H 1 kppr Top benefits. Call Miu Bet. knowled&e of plumbing 1:-type11Titer. type fiO wpm or brtttt, Man)' &&" .f.IJ.. 6 1 in my borne agenc(Y W/C!lt' tor elderly widow. ty, 557-6122, Abigail Abbot el.ectrica.I, Pleuant work'g rompa.qy benefits such as wkdya. Reltr. c.Il ~ TRISH HOPKINS Dpndbl, n1'1, Uve in. C.M. Pel'90nnel A~ncY, 23o W. cond w/pa.id inmranee " CALL paid vacation&, lick Jeaw, WANTED matuft woman to 546-6599 Warner, Suite-211, Santa vacation. Ptnn. PI ea• t lndustri1I R•l•tlona pald medical and life inaur-care for tnfant, in my home. 48t E. 17th, SuJte 224 C.M. 1 00=N"'sm="u"CTI=o"N~So=,---,--, Ana. specify &Ke, exper, It rer. For Appointment a.net, credit union, etc. 8m'I s c1ys wk. Ref. 5'8-5725 ~"'!!"'"64"'"2!!·1!!4!!70 .... !!!!!!!!!! .. I recept. Gd typing It SH nee. FRY/cook wanted! Exp. All Wtlle box MJ.038. Daily {714) 4fr4.M01 ruwne c/o DAILY PILOT, WOMEN Lile deltvery wcrk. = ~f u s t have con.1truction !lhitm! Apply in pera. 1400 Pilot, 2211 W. Balboa Blvd, ~· 1073, Colt& Mesa, Must ba'.ve own car. Apply: ACCO~ANT • Ge,neral tor eitp/N.8 . 54G-683.'i W. Cout Hwy, N.B. N.B. TELONIC Calit. 9'J626. 3Z N. Broadv"•Y. Rm (10, S.A. c· erwg firm. Re-.....,-. - - --...-..., FULL or PART TIME MAINTENANCE • Gen'l el(· SECRETARY 1:-Girl Friday Santa Ana. quirt data processing Coo~_.._ EARN UP TO S5 per hr: per. for apL bldp, F/timt. IJlr &rowina:: home building ---------1 familiarity. $12.IMXI. Send FULLER BRUSH CO . Ca.11549--0(39 firm ttJocatina: in Orangtl---------1 """me 10 Box M 1°"· 2211 SECOND COOK 548-5"5 MAN To ...Ut mar of focal INDUSTRIES Counly. Mual be prolic~nl Sc:hoo1.-1n1truetlen 7• w. Balboa mvc1, N.B. • -..1 *GENERAL OFFICE an&nce ab:re. Neat ap-in ltCtttaria.l •ldlls + bave1;-========:1 Ambitious Hardworker Expenenc.u woman with General Office pean.nce. '91-2383 Mr. L-eun.11 Be•ch good telephone voice &: AIRLINE and ~tter willing to at.art Full Time exptrlence. 40 hn. wnkly Wrtpt ~10 am only, figutt aptitude. 2 firi omce, SCHOOLS at the bottom " work up p ant (2-nlghts). Ptnn. $300. a mo. * Mao a I fl r * tJCpeJ'· Equal opp:>rtunity employer Startin&'P 1 t ~ • ~ ~~~ PACIFIC with rapidly expanding land. ennan 10 11art. KIRK JEWELERS, lenced only for Ladlt!I •C'M ._ Day Ii: Ni&ht CU8e11 scape development corp. Sl. for our new faclllty Huntington Ctnttr, Beach I: Ready·Tt>Wear .shop. * RELIABLE sitter to comtl Starting salary ....,,v per mo. 54J..65i96 $.1 per hr to lit&rt, contingent Edinger 11.B. LANZ OF CALIFORNIA * in tor 2 chldm. EI Toro ZIJ/44!>-S610 '10 E. lTth Sl Santa Am on experience. Apply in per. f • Gf'RL FRIDAY F.sllhkln I1land, N.8. area. 5 day wit. &'17-4l339 SECRETARY • Exe-.'Ulivt ' n1 ZZ21 F · · Rd App y 1n person pl son ° y. alJ"Vlew " want a chal.le~e'!' Take over MANAGER, woman Jor tX· aft. S:30 position. M1.1rt have tuant Pleno Lessons C.f\f. bookll &. do lite .....i.-, cluaive men'• shop. Inquitt RELIABLE babysitter for personality. Com~tent In U.C.I. student hu room IGr ARE You HUNTINGTON BEACH Y~·· 1 ,,..mmor ~ •pelluig High CONVALESCENT Glftt boss. St&rt )'OU at 451 s. Col.II Hwy, (Hot~ toddler, 7:30-C. Mon/Fri, tflc;r -~ ... i..w~ N ll!Yerll btR. or fnwmed. S400. Cail Gloria Kay, _LaiU_,__,.=I ===:--,--Npt Shortil &n!L 646-8627 t ncy .............. 'J· o allldenta. Lt a r n Music' BEAUTIFUL?? HOSPITAL ..,__ * MASSEUSE * •• 5 •moldnr. 646-48n ,,_,,, aliht ,.,.Ina. .... It'1 all in the eye of the be-COASTAL AGENCY Immediate Excllllivt. SPA Real Estate Land Salesnuw SECT'Y \\lan:ed, no ~ltper Call Sn.ace 546-4478 hold ~--k ... _ TV 18811 f1orlda St. 2790 HartJo Bl 0 1 nee. She.Ml lookln1, modem • ' · er. """'""' uc com-lSlang Lane l r ' Opening Experienced Send l.L.S. CORP OPENS tli-eul?\i. typ~ug. Pt-tlml SKIN DIVING LESSONS ml. you watch and II you h Other Jte/tree jobs avail. re1umef0Boic1'1 H)93.Da.lly NEW OFFICE IN O.C. "°''''bl• .,111,_ •. s~~1ngHeattd Pool A Ocean 1 .. 1 ~u·ro '' pre••· as Huntington Beac ** GIRL •·ruoAY ** · -"-'bo N " "" ·-· L C ofY •J" PUot, .u•l W. Dill a, ew. 4 MajOr project. up to lS't.. s2 hr ca'I for aupt 548~2T2 checkout. .A. ntry IOIDe of thosce people, call us . ......_..__..~ Good typl.lt for • r.re1t job. port Buch. commlsalon. Call for appt. ' · ' ttrlifted Instructor. $ 15. CALIF CASTING CO Apply •t-"-.~=~~-,_-,--63S-7fiil SEAMSl'RESSES -VERY A&;et 7 up. AdWtl incl. • • ***COOK MacGregor Yacht Corp. MATURE Baby1ltter experienced on power 546-'.2M.l Is continuing 1111 search for * FULL TIME C ....nted, your home, pref * RELIEF COOK * ..i..1 r en 1 -=c=-,----,,::-==I everyday people who ha\'1! *EXPERIENCED 1631 Placentia •. M. area nr Sater btwn Ward Bayvitw Convaleactn t :=.,. 0 • 0 ':1eac1y sCuBA Lraonl: S4S. Warm • desire to worlc: on TV or Apply GOOD NURSING &: Sch Blvd. 'l-3:30. Call Hosp. 2055 Thurin, C.M. empk>ymtnt. Apply, 2IKXl So. pool I: OOfl'all checlcout. Cil:rt. modeline jobs, $'15 to SUS SURF' & SIRLOIN CARE 9fi8...5647 642-3505 Main St. Santa Ana L.A. Cnty Ins t ructor. per day. No flit! t.. you ever. 5930 W. Cout Hwy., N.8 . l't!qu.irtl food nuncet. tr ln.1'M'"E=o~r"c'"A77L_,,...,.,---• .,,,.,--,,,..,llt, R.ESI'AURANT: 18 or OYl!r, SERVICE Station Altn&'lt, _-_-__ .... __ . -----1 * FOR ON CAMERA ~No phone calls pleasel tertittd In joinlne •uch a knowledp of ln!. Exp only. female. ll.S pm and m&l e1, expe:r'd. Some mechanicaJ MERCHANDISE POil AUDmON * * COOK * Expmenced. tun stall, call 646-1624. f1 lime. On. Lonilty Ir evt1. Apply after 2 pm, exp, 2-10 P~t. FOUNTAIN SALE AND TRADE CALL (tt4> 8Ja.8282 timt. Parle Lido Con-11ANDY Jl,fan, relia. Cot Roeenberr. 644-2922 TASTEE29668ri1tol,C.r..f. VALLEY TEXAC0 .1---------- 10 AM to 6 PM valt1Cenl Hospital. 642.-M)4.t Nwpt Hgtha. 17 apll, lawn MOTEL Deak Oerk1 all RE S'TAURANT: Assistant Brooktiunit I: Gt.rUl!kl, F.V. Fumltur1 IOOO Aul Mgr. Tl'alnee f!'tc. Reply Box 1'1·1021, DaJ.. ahifts availaWe., with d'De M eves fail food Call · --•---- * PART TIME • COOK (Dinner} ly Pilot, 2211 Balboa Blvd. f"..--r. Apply: Box M·lO&T IJ'., ' • • SERVICE 1tatlon ~11J&D" SCRAM LETS $.1(1 Shift to start N 8 ~~ 54&-fi681 aft. '1PM. e~. Sa I a r y . comm. • Eve. * BLUE BEET 673--9904 · · 1be Daily ~. N.B. RN Director needed for un11om\1. Older man 11ne. , Need nine men for delivery COOK'S HELPER HEY GALS! THE QUICKER YOO CALI. •mall convalffcent holpltal. Chev~on, Adami 6:-ANSWERS Ex_,_ 642-S6l9 ~ .. nd;,..,. co, ....,, 1l _,.1_THE;,:;,;;QUl:;CKER;:;::=YOU:;;,;SEl=J:.:, ..:==*=64&-;,;1:::"4==:*<=:=;:.!..::""=:"""'8:,:::·:::":::·:::":' === •nd aales for 1te-ady employ. ,.... · ... ,..,. ._ 11..., 1""' ment. Must be ne•t In ap. DELIVERY MAN. oHice •&e lJ.,ll tt/£)t. Must ha\'I! Stipta -Handy-BaJk;v - pear.nee and will irw to tum 1r. mtt.ehines. SAl flex. 6 mo' .. reldcy, Sl.55 hr kl :tr Tricky -TALKING work, """"'on exp. k •hit Xh• "•rt. STAR G.AZE:R.:11" Look aut lor Ibo matt -$91 .00 w .. k bcn. J>n>f. qe 20-30. neat, ~tr. l.akl! ~2871 .um CIAYl.IO ~ letl Yott do all the TALJaNG. 547·7111 ·2 clean-cut In appearance. HOMEWORKERS WANTED A MM.. ){ 'f•l>filt,,,,..,C.U. )( sm.arl't OOUNTRY French oval din. -ASS'T HELPER UNIVERSITY OFFICE (Enve1ope Addrener1). ~Min T At...U .. ,.J'1•1Nn. -,-., ocf.n~ tablie ~11'' leave1, &-bl EQUIPMENT. 64&--8981 Rush all.roped, 1elt-ad· ·-To~--'-aiBM1forSotutdoy,1 ,.,., ~-bk chMn, --'--Fut. lime or pt.time. ~ 19-1 -· __...,., • ---..a.rs ...... • ........ 31. 6 mo l'l!!iidency ftq'd. Don Guthri• dre11td envf! o pe . ,.,~n~~· ..oclwdiO!li•4•WPnuto 1 uphlatrd attdl. s.c. ws. 11571 Tripp Circl• L ANGDON WOR.LD -GfyowZodiocbiilh""' ...,.. MatrlUng bolt chall'I S85. J:.u'B::. =ton gn_.740 Huntlntton Be•ch TRADERS. P.O. BoJC 1121• ;f;' ~=-ll~ J ;.» a pr. Evt• A wk em.. A2l, Redoodo Stich, Calif. JJW Jlt.. 6lT<-" NOf'.tf Ms-5911 * ASSISTANT-Pemale. over Y-· ''' , .. _ winner of 9077! ,.~ 3o1Wilta f4Mk I .a.a l;,::.10;;;vt=u,;:-~-,~=--,.,..= •. 1--18. Apply Kentucky Ji'ritd "" UIO< 5Dt a,.st-::"-I ,...., .,..tt•wv .. mi, Chicken 2929 E. Cout Hwy. 2 Uckets to thl! * HOSTESS* Sh•rp, 4~ »A •r,,_.. IWTTAllVI dining nu .\: b e d.rm Corona del Mar. attractive, full timt, 6 PM to 7-Ofror .e~ ~ IUmkuN, t JC 9' rur. lr&nd Ringilin9 Bros. Jl PM ahift. lnterviewt in ::--:er.. ffOW. · I ~·• piano, lamps, reb1£, mlilc. AS.S'T Mgr. tor fl'Ow1r>K fut and ,__...., T PM·ll PM Sun. 4i: 11,_. 4iOT"• 10ca..rllt • ~ tt hou:lehold lttme. U .a t 11 ......, ~·---11.-"-C'""" food chain. Exper, · Bernum l Bailey Circus Mon. only. ALLEY WEST, 12A 4.-.. _ n.... i-14 ~21>t P'ePPnllff La. Call &15-1500 •I tht 2108 w. Oceanfront, N.B. l:t:. :!t:: A. ~It.. 1 ~A;,p<~B=, ,:c,,.M.c·~---- BADYSITIER My bom(', An•htiim 67S-1TI.4 j5M-r dC.. ,,...... "PROFILE" Contemp dtn Vlctoria. nr. Brookhur1t, C t f ,,._ .. a.. 7'"• t i.... ........... __ , ~~" _ .. tbl Convention en er HOUSKPR. baby 1 t tr. ,,.,,,... A1 .., 11p., 1t .,, u~u..:a . .,., niu C.M. 2 chidlren In 1Chl, Aunu.1t 1~19 TeachU's 2 chlldren. A~ 11A .&I~ 71Vitlft elCte.00. to 80''. S chn + t toddlr!r MM106 ~. 6-8. f\t·r hn nu. Nr oc ·1't: ,:~. :~ f,:=Ji;;;i~ tbl plda. Xlnt buyt im. BABYSMTER. My home Plea» CA.II 642-$18, ext. 329 alrporl. 54S-1'162. 21,..., ,,6-1' ,· •I~ . OOed walnut contemp !Md- c.M. °"" tranop. Cons-be-n 9 and I PM to claim 1!0\JSEKEEPf$Eldnlr,.., ii~'"' llf "* :JJ::" /. let, $'1S. !11&-1139 llve--ln. 642-2420 YoUl' Uchta. (North Count)' mu, live tn. Own nn A 1V, ~ s.c A• ==-GAMES Table, tot& r 6¥'1 ~rm•ldl-M1v1rick tolJ.frec numbul154().~l. No chlldrtn. $100 mo . •., S£: :t=t rm th•lr , refrl1, 1'28 Newport Blvd., C.M. Saw your car .. tt's me 54a-695.f. If:!!-' MMf •~ WMhldl')'U, bedl. ~ Pt.ANNINO to mow! You1l fa.rt J ust read! fOr )'Ota' HOUSEKEF.PER J.'or Ip; "'' =~ l!iOIS.r1:nadeT't!T, NB. Hr.d an M'!Ulna number of phOne .. c11J Otlly Pilot blchtlOJ' M. w. &:. F' AM, °" tOY• Ill ETHAN ALLEN Molccue homt1 tn ttidlY'• Claultled Qaulfled 64)-5611 O\Up Newport Hom". Own b·a1111 G«)ll @Aitme {)N.....r. twin he.dboud, '50. Ads, Check them now. )'OUr •d -toda.y! & ttf. Kl 7-0997 541-1386 , ' I t I r .. ~~~;·¥·-·~--~·--,'* -t.--;;·.~-;:-~'""'::;:;ich;;-~-:c;~,;;"";::;'C';;-:;,,:;"".".:::::.;?;•,..,,,,.,;--;::->;>;>:c"*"'"m""''l<"·""'"o::::;:::twot..::;::"""".,.."---··•""''"'""=""''"",."·'.'!W"'"'"'"'·:0'~=•""-""'"' _____ , ___ .,,,,, ________ 4•-, f°""", ""9vll 7. 191• • • ER.E'S :YOUR CHANCE TO SEE THE CIRCUS FREi! • Fina -our ame A mong--Classi llllHCHANIDISI FOil MElicHANDISa POlt SALE AND nADE SALE »IC. TRADE F""'lture IOOO F""'I""'° IOOO .» PC. "MADRID" LTKE -· 'O ,,,...... "'''· 1 ROOM GROUP dbl< bod, "'"'· ..,,.,...m FROM MODU HO&IES &et. W&li i;beb.tet., ~. ski bdud-: Qu:Dted ..,,. 1 ht'.lof&. earn,,.-rear, Ml8c. dlaW, 2 Md tables• ooflet ~ ..-nmml w/ 8l\lnn!na tal:ie, 2 ~ dreaer, mil'-l'ICll YW, ~ l'Or, ''-dbMtlt, 4dlied bm: I ' S'.)FA. tiew!r med. quilted 1111o1:a11 A: mattrss, S pc Jlot:al. IOOfcbgual'ded SUS: atriu. l'DOm; tabk I f. ht. Matchire lovneat $ '1 S. b&clc chain. 500-8331 COMPARE AT $74..'l.95 H"'EIR=-,LOO=°'M'"""-'=· -,-,,--,,bdnn-,- "'9 ltf'l, bra5S hdbrd &. xtni. Nn dmfa Prni.. Onl,J-f15 mo hvy ~. Compil"te • .$17::.. WELK'S WAREHOUSE ,.....,;. tm W, 4th St., Santa Ana MERCHANDISE l"OR SALE AND TitADI G•r!'!'! S•I• 11122 MUST ~I heute.ful ii t be au 1 l t u I Mediternnean tum: 8' wM!t IOla a lovnell. 2 R~ be4nr1 .ta, ffi-bldt v fl I Y t: t d9corator dl&.in. pJm ... picturn, lamps I-dt. AD lea th&n 3. mo. oid. Pvt pty will sacrifice. Pleue call SG-0241. SEARS 18" ~ la"A'n mower, 1 )'I' old $45. Sbuta snow ski£ & po)es Sll. CraftRINln Accnl-ram, 10" rftd\8.1 IMW 1''/Cllbinet $75. 8' Ne-190n sailboat, Sl90. MllST SELL Offlce FumftuN 1110 Wrirhl litt'a: 8Pt $10. ~Ible:. 1586 C....-.y Dr, Apt A, OVER STOCKED T'w:ln.'i $49.!L\ Fulls ~.95, Qut-ens $89.!Ei. ~ $11!1.95, T'lt.'111 Si~ 1ie&dboank $1.95., Tnmdlc-Sei.; ~.!ii, steep. r!r Solas Sl£51.95 £ \lp. Srudio Coucbea $119.95. • SIESTA SLEEP SHOP 1921 Ha1'bor mw.. CM ,...,,,.. 34155 Csl. Hll'Y. Da1-pt .f9S-'552 Rdin 'd 34>.ill WOlld de8k.;, CM. 169.50 e Refut'd wnod &rm S"cA~T~&~Su~,-,~.-,-m--<~pm-.11 rotal)' cha.in, 129.50 • Wf' 3.111.t Dahliit Pi9ce, Cd.'4. bavt' lhe ~ ae1ecDon 6T>4'1M. Ampex 1 ape oI used ottiat fuf1I flt this l"«'Of"d. su:;, l'.I 1 • l area. Aquarium $t(I, Yamaha cy. Mc Mabu ~k de, p&rts, WH'l«TI uddit, 1800 Newport Blvd. mi9C. .Antiques. Polarokl 6e8(50 ca.mer. S25. EA'EC dHk I chair: 2 ~lde -=========c ~ tabl~ 2 armcba.irs. 1 strt-Appliances 1100 bell: chair; also photo COflY .~~-------11 17 PC. KING SIZE mnchiot, Xlnt Sey. 54S-S71.l · 5pN!d GE P 0 r t & b 1 e' I~~--=====---------------.::::::::. __ BEDROOM aft Spm or all da.y Sal diltiwuher,-l\i )Tl okt. 6 SI.In. Xnlt. Ql;Jl)d. $125. 546-2399 i..,...ttlno ... ....._,mb". ' an 6 PM ~ ANAHEIM ' mr. 2 bl"dside ~. Kl• D£,gcS, ••t..Jt 60", 1wio =e'"""'""""·-"'.=··"c,....,•,_.-.,,.-_.,M_•_• _ • - - ..... ....,.;..-el t' h. i r S, _,.,.I .L.ft .XSV~ _., • size tie.dboa.rd, hme. tufll. ..... ..__ __..__ --ll ~ .. -~·-,... , •• ;,,. ·-"--•. -, .. ·~""''· ~ E.~WI ed mattress, ~. blal\k. .. ..._ _;_ n-G TcQlla Wcufa~ w/la~. .... .... ,. ~ts . .:»"" ua.rantee. • .., ~ "' s"'""" .,.,...,., _.,~"~"""~-· ---~~ ~ilf;Tll'lri CONVENTION CENTER ar Moderb Sl';)rk. • 5-PrECE Raft¥. 6-p~ SOLID waJmrt-desir c ·· x ------'°'I ... MIRCHANDl5' POil SALi AND T1tADI Mloal'-1o - PATIO Sale, %" elec. drill, heavy duty aw, paint ~.~.·men's clofhine new • Oiied, el~ .-. ndla, TY. mi> tad- de.n, l>aNH(, ltlver eolna, ~ other' Kems. .Frtt ilft ''"'all.Y ~ 491--7183 or 381 Olk. Lq Bch. (rear) ...... DBL On.pea. bel~. lb714' traverae rods $25. ax!' .$15, <'hKil's redwd allde & ba.m!I ll't. S25. tlon:J dllJ& ' valanc:-e box &Yi" S211, dedl m. cotte-e tb1, aold hattglfll' lamp, Dlnki tten 11 a 111 n a: ct n&h.Y $150. :a'!9 Driltwo.Jd Rd, CdM '75-854&. round brealdut. sso for 21·· rontemp. design. 5 ThU I 13 W• I 19 No ..!';,!.~~~ mo. both. ~ .,.....,. SI!<. .....,., a1t rs. ua M ua. * AUCTION * WELK'S WAREHOUSE 4 PM. < F"°' Furnirutt """'· ... St.. -""' OH;c. Eqvlpmen1 8011 LUXURY "'""" .1ec """'· *ma OAILY ••• 111111 nlllS SA11111Af* •• ,,11a • .,.. Daily 5-! Sat 9-6 Sun ll.6: ne"" •cr:ifice. Ge.I ~. Auctions Friday 1:XI pm 1 KING s;,,, Or:lho • ...., eADDRESSOGRAPH good, S<O. Apt.....,., good, ALLSEATSRl!Sa!Vl!D:$S.00/ ... 00/$3.00/$2.50 Windy's Auction Sam df'luxf' m • 1tre11, box AIZ modds: ftttcondjtioned _S<O_·.,""=""""=~""'""""==-'"'"' aprinp, tnune 6 head. •·/guarant~. Service a, i\.lp-9 GREAT BUY! '56 Z'rn!ii Newport, CM 646-8686 Ad-•-1 relrig, Xlm rond. Behind Tony's BJdg. Mat'L board 185; 1 King 5itt plies, Platt embctssirlg aer. ....... •---------------------------'" bedspread, m l antique vier. S60 RECORD player A. reoords, malqialQ' ~ dHk. $85; + 7'1'-5200 * * &16--5226 * Pl & O IJ30 MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE .FOR =~·~ a!:!"~:?.1:,0: antique goidl"n-oa.k dlup Jeaf UNDElRWOOD forum elec USED a.pplJ.ances & 'IVs anos rgens SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE in fine bindl"""'", 1...._ .. 2, desk. 183; .,.,,,,_... mapl" All -··-.,...._. n.·-•·p'• -------------------! ·~· ~~ bodk --~-:2 b1ond Sl!'JO. 4 drw filn ~. Stt'l'y lM" N·=:--~·~CM . .,;;:;,: , ~·ONE ONLY" SALE Miscellaneous l600 Miscellaneous l600 Movifo camera, w-et suit, --~-::-'.-__ __.._ desk $50. Exe. swivel chair O.lol .. '1"'" ....,.., •-New &r Used aquarium, misc. 5(2 El ·-v -·-· ,,_ Siil. _,.,_, dWn S8 • LARGE. ~ h book ~ S20 eech. or ""-'~' 5"""'• o 1 Io m PIANOS Modena, N.B. t;.tJ....4452, S3S hotho ••• " W# ma• $15. 1882 wru-CM. ..... ..... COU>SPOT ""'"•; o.con.1or s .... , ...... 1399 * * NEW LOCATION * * MOVING TO HAWAII -.. ..___ ...----1 ~642-3408-----~--$50. MS-1542 ~w KIMBALL Consaie S699 e C ~ ' I d t •-Sola ~-'-~-ha'-u=><>, ....... -.. --u ..... , u •• om ..... ,.,e ry m. e 0 your orlll'9r. . g ....... , ... au..,r ~ u, I headboard. $35. 56-0906 0 LYN PI A Po r I ab If' (31 REFRIGERATORS k."JMBALL Gnind ••.... S'79.5 e Old Jewelry re,,.ired &. modernlud. double ~dboard, onenW 2 n. SIZE --~ ..... bdnn.. typrwriter. f'xcelient (.'()f). All v.11ite. S2>-~ ORGA.t'lS Cuttom Clttinn e Wix rutterns nJi. custom srereo .WortdaJe ,,_......,_,,, ditk>n. $40. 6Th-0120 momlna:11 646-782> THO~tAS o,..an S119 .. ,. ....-Speake J03J Ba·-'""' Cdi'\t 1Uit1":S, lndd. dresser & mir. • · · · · · ' Casting ~ppliff e Gotd/Silver precious ~· .,. ........ ror. n\gtlt std. 1 ·mahogany only. GE Retng, good cond. <..'ro8s •IAID.fOND Chord "A-l .. f299 and semi-precious cut &. rough ston ... twin .et dres:!lleJ'. mimx, lop freezer. 18 cu fl. 30" HAl.fMOND BJ ...... Sl995 Full II IR k•· d & L Id S 1· LADIES diamond dinner ne o oc '\oun •p 1ry upp its high boy, night std., cricke1 Gar-ee Safe 1022 _w_,,.._.o'S""~·-..,.__,,_11~~-I MON THRU SAT I M ·M ring. set with 114 brat chair, 1 lll8hopny dinq -----Retrigen.tor $65 inclu~s bench, delivery & • • •• 0 A. ..6 P. • center diamond, 2 diamonds room set., 6 chairs. table DESKS. Swivel th al rs , l!I04 COral PL N.B. ""'arra.nty • -• Many other RYE M GEMS .. % karat oil e:ach aide. .A: ieeYH, buttP't, Mina, cklthing, nJp, ~r. old sa3751 afte' & pm Bargain.a, • • Brilli&nt cut Sattificel Rep.. FREE TO YOU KIDS i!k»Hf.-..U 1 or~ ot our on.na.• or blonde male Jdttens or tem1la caJk:o tunny face short hall'M pt Siamf.e? Abo p -Ir hilrod. Btlor'i 10 or after 4. 3f5--~ an INTEUJGENT KittiH and cat., 4 wb to I yr, Males FREE TO YOU EXQUISJTEJ..Y adofable bax·traiDld k I I t • 11 1 , ln- dudl1'J calico. 8 w.U. t)!d to kind, atntlt, ~"' peo.. pl•. ~3f92 QI' ~ 8110 SIBERWI -· AKC , ~ female, 4 yn, dtildren'a pet. Frff· to f0011 borne w/1P9(:ll', &K-1111 Ill{) l'ITS ...i LIViSTYXit ' hmaltS. abort ·~ and ftu.e,c,, whltt blllf! qed. turquodt, ciallco and l Cat, '·· 1121 allwr wtth blk. 53&-Tm sn ~"'-------_,. :i PUR.EBR!.'l> 'Slaml't• Ra.rT, ~sapeke Bay Re-ldltena, $.15 each. trlever 9 )Tl okl, W'l1r:lendly -===*=~=2003==*== with cvhlldten, xlllt, watch '::: dot for farm ct buaineal, to Dee• -ans good Mme, 540-1!1511 Sii ::.:l!:.---,., __ _,;;.;;:o MALE Dobttm.l.n pinlcha', l'jlCE Spa.yed 1 )T old t mos. -wm make xhlt arandma cal Ii: ll e r watchdof, yet Jovea kids, uandchl1drtn l.tiaer kltten1 •don.hie ff:male a!IJl:y, 2 wb &11 need klVUll homr1. tiny toy poodle Pl(ppin. 548--5MS 817 MIHl142 !33 E.. 17th St. CM TV. 3' cuatom cooch tno Afghan Pups-AKc· Jt11 cushions), Jae trunk to fix Top bJoodllne, Bred with the up. You baW. 814 E. Ocean-ahow rinc·1n mind. 90-898!! front (corner ot "A" St .) • SKYE :rERRIER FEM lialboa 3n AKC PUP, Rare: blk tlpped L' 'V ABLE Black & wb.ite cream. Rns. 549--2547 le1na1e cat Ii sweet CHiliUAHUA Pups, AKC, a !~haired. Cahco spayed \\"la old. R e a• o nab l' . femalt. Had abo~. St6-81'45 5Q.-Ol1l 811 -===-_,,..,....,.,.._,._,I GERMAN abortb.alrfld pol.Dier -P'JP'· AKC. Shots. Wonned. R.eu. 968-l390 OLD Engillh sbttpdoa: pUpr, dwnp~n aired, ~1.ut., pet • &bow quaJ. ~nu _ POODLES • 2 M I F -Milia. ~. Solid black. 4 mo'a. $25. Part trained. 847.1593 OLD ENGLISH SHEEP WE'RE 3 littJe I wk. old ldtten1 wbo will ro to ttw: poUnd il we don't find homo. 22D7·A State Ave., C.M. M&-4950 818 DOG PUPS. Ah"C: "'3-J11)1 YNG B!ack Ii: wiLte male cat. Needs p.ntle hOine. Also (1) wWte I: (l) calico kitten Ir. {l) fem . puppy. Before 4pm ' 5t6-3566 8/7 AKC Ba1aet Hound. Trkolor, male, Needs te~ old "'th SILKY TERR.Um: AKC M., ed Yard. Loves er "' . Cham.. Sitt. 8.18-1149 u m 54o-M38 e\fl 811 answer 5"-68.10 1% yr. old, white Shepard, • IRISH SETJ'ER PUPS female. Nttd big: yard. AKC. W/SHO'l'S liwea Kldl I: adUlta. Bil 546-4789 lo9able SWffty. SJ0.3389 AKC Rea: Black b.bradors FREEZ.ER..Old lash.ion chest -weaned, wormed; -ldnt style w/compartmenls •P. bloodline. $15. 962--1~ Pt'ttX 18 cu ft nHda work MALE BLK. LAB. PUPS 54()..1652 8/7 • 6 wks. $35 AKC Bu.let Hound. Fem, --~~546-&156=o-.,,_~· =-- 4 yrs, tri-color. Lows kids. Ir COCK-A-POO • Nttd1 fenced yard. 540-8638 PUPPIES * S 'wk:a: old. eves 817 no. 56-5978 DALMATION fem.a.le spayed. SPRINGER SpanieJ Puppies, All 1hot1 h.sbrk, a people AKC. Top field breed or lover, alter S _p. m . oompe.n.iorw. 538-3373 ....... sn PEKE-A-1500 -PUPS G"" Stiot<nY bllOi, SlO. ..._ -occ. choln • ......, ....... """""""· ...,,,.,..1---,-Admln.l==-c=ae"'•"'":-,-0<...,,.=--MUsTBESEEN! :no E.17tb SL, #\5,Cost.Mesa ""'"""~"'""PllOt. '\ l.unpa, '1c. 'l!9M Santa mdts. "itldla, boob. ~blir Good oond. rrs, ' e ALSO e PHONE 645-1909 REFRIG $45. Freezer, xll'lt M.adrR. 962.-4161 bed o:JlllPlete, 15 pl crock, • ,.. _ * YAMAHA e JOMBALL ..., G , __ - odd mechinl!' nd · .,._.......,~ THou•• l !O'!'!!!!''!'!'!'!'!'!!!!''!'!!!!!~'!'!~!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ SI, .... as ... ,.~. xlnt $100. rlrilNffiJRE retume4 fl"Om • m1fiC • ,.,"-3 J --·-Hide.a-bed, good $60. Mov· Glline& pi1 cap. • .... ,,,. H••••• ! ,. ·-. ,,. ---.-:.....,...,;·,;..· ,.,;;-.. ~=;.:,: F:.RE=E~,-.-&ood_,.~,~,.-,,..,-,-,"'SJ PALOMINO Matt! p It kittem, 4 black &nd 1 calico. Quarter horse, Xlnt -ridtt1J1: I dWplay studies. model tan. items. Sal and Sun 9::11 NORGE WUbtr -just been KOHLER & CAMPBELL T•pe Recorders 8220 Miscellaneous MOO Ing oveneas. 1163 Dorset, es decOraton cancell•tion. to :-i. 280 E. WUon, CM ovet+iauled. In rood order. COAST MUSIC -~-----------------CM ~ln1 e:... .. bib & Mllditemtnean _ _,,'-'"~===~=~-m. 5-46-5712 NEWPORT & HARBOR AKA[· TAPE DECK C. F . Miiier . Ro FURNITURE SA1URDAY ONLY HOTPOINT C'l"056-lop freezer Costa Mesa * &42·2851 MODEL Xl00.12 605 M•r Vista Drlv• ~~air iurnacend, ~,OOO N . Bl Cu ESTATE SALE refrigerator. Good corr Open UMi Fri lG-9 Sun 12.5 As9orted lapes inc. Newport Be•c:h .,....... A ro • ,OOO ll+t itwpo'1 ., ''"' ll'I .,. ......... ,CE dition. •""". 644--0&96 •SllXJ* BTU,.. J..spd $¥. Water evUy 'nite ~ttl 9 ~~ -SAVE NOW *546-97.f.l • cooler on prtbl stand ~ ~Sat. • SUn. 'di g . ~~-:-~ v.=I Appliances 1100 DURING SUMMER SONY 'l"OXI ~ck ste~ You2 ~~~ ;;::: of 548-1478 • . FRENCH Provincll.I Jclnc' atEAP • MUsr DISPOSE CLEARANCE SALE tape ttoorder w/speaken ADMIRAL R.ebig. dbl dr. si:le white Bdnn set: Of' REnUGERATOR, Admiral We have trade-in...:, repos, &: mikes. $75. 6T'a-45S3 R I B $125, stud.lo couch !38, Ken- f'nritwood mninC . wl Irv; 225 Goldenrod, CdM Imperial dual ~mp w/cnm rent n>turns A floor models ing ing ro\. more deluxe gas dryet $100. Housebroken. 10 weelai old. "= trail horse. $JO!I or bsl 833-0932 _ 8/10 olr. 615-7049 aft 6 pm. Swing Set ;,t9-1TI1 1163 Dor8et 1..11, CM 8/10 BEAUTIFUL le: haittd klt- tena 1 wk1 old, calico, tigel'I, blk & w ht . JUMPER SHOW HORSE: I yrs, Bay a:eldin r , EngfWest. • 546-84:;6 * - Gorgeous Palo Reg. qtr. equitation ~ • D.J/9'l3-6081 * bJtch; t..in Bdrm lif:'t 6' 20 .. GAFFER 1 Sattler .., top ftffz.f:r, $125. 557-6232 of every model Hammond B tmd C' mini bike $100. breakfast drH9et. cbest; GE Mow; ,--•. -..-.. .__ __, tbl .· Organ, Buy now .I: receive Sportinn Goods 8500 •rnum & B•iley ircus 1r:t., $40. 644-0m. TRANSPORTATION ·~ ~·-e··· _,,..., ...... ..., t th FREE to good OOme -kit· K~ washer' t\ dryer. d'-··t .. r ... 1. bdrm "''· .._,., Antiques 1110 extra diacounl . a e UNIQUE "4 K. emerald cut '--. l -· •~--hal,, 1 842-6329 8/10 Encyclopedia Brillll'lnicf & """'' .. "" '""' HAMMOND 7'6" ?l,ou Surfboard. Gd. Anaheim ,,.,. ., • ...,.. '""5 Beats &. Y1chts tool al ~-"H rug &: pad, 23" MotOl"Ola beinnina board. Pertee! C 1• C t diamond J baguettes goJd blk long-hair. ) calico, 10 Orient ru.cs. ~ ..... ~ a. TV, ?ltisc. 12).B Clearbrook. WhMler Tradinn Post In CORONA DEL MAR . .., onvan ion en er ring, cost $1500 Sac. $400. wlu. ~129 8/10 673-00'26 ••. ., 2854 E Coallt Hwy 673-8930 cond. 545. 64fr1643 August lS.19 6'15-"..,," LICENSED CM._549-2110 Beads, vintage d.ottws col-· · • I===,_,~==~= gUQO FINE male Ma.lte1e k1tte1WS CAPfAl"N" LOVELY Victoria,n livina: FRI, Set, Sun: Le antique lectors items. Special Jiidian Open Mon "-Fri eves, SURFBOARD HOBIE 5·9". MINK jacket S500 'IV $35, will make beautiful&. lovlne · rm. Pifocn. wbitt-& gold !Civil Warl desk. $50. Hot-tapestriet, $4.95. All NEW Wurlitzer Pianos good condition, $40. Call Plea.se call &42-5678, ext. 329 bowling ba.11 bag a, shoes pell for those who adopt Radal' • Lor:tn, 30 ytan ex- tilllllh. 90ht., chain, tables point bHin oven, .$ l S : 0 E . Balboa Blvd., Balboa & Orgam d.iBCOOnted 1.0% a lter ~ pm 494--0l53 be twee.~ and ,1P! t~~ St5. Goll s~g exettiM!r them. 6'15-0137 811 perlence u.iJ or power. Pm. A 1wa.g lamp. French Prov. ..Easy" a:as dryer, $35; during thE' month of Aug, SURF'BOARD, Pel. Min. · your ti ets. ~ $8, Goll shoes $5. 548-759t feuionaJ sport tishlng guide white I gold chin. cabinet; clothes, dishes, tum, l * ANTIQUE Fire Anna Ii. GOULD MUSIC CO. 4 mo old. 6'8", 91-i lbs. :-'0.,.":-:':-"'-'-,",-"m-,-be_,_,_,_,...,.,_"'°-'-·i '1EW=;;;-;hoa=rcc1Nil=;:,::-,•sus,=•Kll>g;;.:::-. 2~E s:,:;:,ld ::J :v~'. l\fexlcan 1: C-entraJ Arnm. ~I: &pinel-pUUJD. ~!.«~"68 Abbir' Way, 01 Parts. Sat & Sun, 5-5, 214 .,, .. 5 ,~'."'.'' M•~~. S.A. l3xl9xl2. 673-2065 i\.1UST wll, 2 sets of reg. O·Lawn mower $75, Sean 645-0131 317 can watrn. ·Adrniniitrative vu-~· \\'. Wilson, C'.1>1. ..,,,, iu: box spring! & mattreues portable pool 15'x42' • $2a., experience. MEDIT. bf:drm sel, itufled LOVELY dre9stt " chHt, SPINET Organ, Blrd~l--,=•=54"7"-068"1"'•=o;---Miscellaneous 8600 haniJ,y used, like new, Cost !t camp cots SJ ea, baby GERMAN Shepherd-Husky AVAILABLE fbr wttkends, chair, buffet. 25" color TV air conditioner, pictures, maple, collector's it.Pm, $295. PRIVATE PARTY $190 per set, make offer; bassinet SS. Ph.: 54&8453 pupa, 5 wlu. need rd homes. extend~ charten ·or deUv. cons!, Singer &ew mach. Gd lamps, books, offino dHk, 334 Del Mal', CM "2-1.272 wantz to buy piano SU?ttMER s a I e · 1\1 a rd an Dos clippeni. 847·M P.10VING: Bric • a • brae, 64G-976l 8/7 eries. &st of references. cond. 548-0438 t-ve, all day Loveseat. clothes, t-tc. 1.Dts for Cub 213: 461·1421 Thrift Shop, lSlO Park. C.~I. WESTlNGHSE walnut hlk & china, giass\.\'are, blk/wh FRI ~E beahoutiful lklttensCalt~ PWllorite ,!!xWM ft:!!'.t Daily Sun. more. 1508 ComwaU, N.B. S.winn Mlchines 8120 LLO=w=R~Y-,::.::_..:..;,n:...-.,H~--~•---I Week of Aug. 10th. Boat TV tu It 40, ~,, oVJng me, p ease t,-..... • ~Blvd., VICl'ORIAN mirror SI S, 646-4331 -___ .,_ del ~I 111 "'~"'"' cover fits 24.25· whl TV console $50. 7' , llOIJ'lf: m ure. ;n-vs . 962-1359. 811 N""POrt Beach, C.. leather lop cottee lahle SJS, TR.ASH " Treuures, Patio 1970 Singtt touch-o-matic, wee,* ~2'594 * DREXEL 8-pc mahogany Naug. aofa $15· Strobe lite .::===::::::::::::=::::I F1JLLY Fledged ma I e 22' TROJAN' Magnawx console color TV, turn. · · 1 zig-iq:, beaut. walnut con-1,-,,,.-,,,-.,-,-.,=,----, din'g .et w!bufff't Duncan w!l'f:mote ::i s::io. Misc, Wanted 8610 poodle, 4 mos, color black. CABIN CRUISER. 1960 f '69 model, 23 .. lK'J'ftn, $350, ~ :u:::;· ~~~~ SOit', makes button holet. 1899 Upright Pi!':-~o,nd, Phyfe, Va1Ut! $2000. 91'11 $600. -.~""""H=AM='s"T"'"'T'"'IO'°N..-WANT to b\zy pedf'Stlll style 494-5383 811 NEW: upooi. bunks, ct1t1 includf:c color an 1 en n a , ..___._ OYe"rCUIJI: Rams, b I ind act.ion. Asking-•u..o . ..., ... 411 • * 5.11-3956•• ~ ~ 1 •---.,__ d ··•-• . ·"""""::c:=:__,.....----1 ~~u•"'•' Sud~ . .:~ ~~ .'.';,.· hems, designs I elc. Guar. .•~' ~833-<.10=~'~· ~-.,.--.,-PEDACAB. • ,.. I o o m , N 'I NC 109 . I WRL lab e, •n<.ui.800 !lba'Pf:. Aho 2 &autitul b.tack % ~uese. rps, _...t • varniab thru--,_ .. ..,...., , """" ..... =: ..., Ill receiver 2 chain, leather °" vinyl-JO wk old klt:"?nli to aood out, canvu (bluel elec. WALNUT Bedroom 1 e 1, C.O.ta Mesa. S44 cash or small pymt.a. ORGAN & Piano lessons by Hoover portable ''-asher, &:lobe scout ~A. xtraa. Botb covered. S.5:30 548-9Til home 548--0813 811 b~ pump, antenn4, blit headboard. loot b 0 •rd• PATIO SAL.E: Girl'• and 56-8238. profeMional teacher. Fut med. \I/el ault. $Ml-29-17 "to"•°'S8>=·="'"-.o;:!l'31=-::== WANTED to bu.y . Whllf: J Month old, Bladt .t Brown tell II. punip, pmp, lhatt dttsler, nitt-table, 00, worMn'• dothirw, portable * REPAIRS * method. S48-4Ml6 GrRLS Schl»im Stingray FENDER Bau a.mptllier crib, baby acalr. rock'g chr, Fem. cocker-mix. 543-7561 &: Ndder. springs 4. mattre. \Qc. $75. 8eWing tnad:rine. etc. ALIC Clean, oil I. adjust )'Our BALD\VIN Al!fO&Onlc Spinet S.30: Pair of while love'1C'ata delwce Rklcenbacher ba31 buggy, chest of drawen, or 548-5313 8/7 Rebl.t/tn.na. SUp avUI ~/ 8,1&--!;672 I &. !. '140 Jame1 St, 01. machine in )t)Ul' home, plano Ir. bench. Xlnt cond. $7!1: llobby homo SlO: High iu!tar * 6'15-&404 * baby fffdlng table. 1139-8ll7. FREE To ,&d. home. Lovable mo. ~,000 or otr. ml CONTEMP. oiled walnut din-645-{M39 Special $3.95, au work CWU'· 67"..>-4392 67~22 chair Sl:I. 644-2119 WANTED· Lab Puppies, 3 From Jitter 64.f>.2991, 60-72:22, ~1248! hw: table, per1 cond. ()pen:g 'G=REA~T~ .. ~ti-qu-.-.. -.,..~d>-.,~,. ··="='""'=·="==s.8238======1CONN Mln!Klf Organ, besut. • TENNIS M.EM.BERSHIP ANTIQUE msser, $5(1. Gu Used dark room ~11p. a.nd of 6 le.ft 8J3-.14U ' an FOR SALE. LEASi to aeal 12. Custom pads pews, Easily convert to wl11--cond. Bf:st otter o~ seo. -Newporl Tennis Club. $385 s love S35, New VW racln1 4x5 675-0425 F"REE to aood borne 1 blk OR (HARJER 1 incl. ona. $300. sell $125. dow seats, benci'IE'I around Musical 54S-882S. finn. 499-2313 c.m, $35. 2600 Willow Lane. ========== Ii: v.it!t• ktth'. 11 wb. Box· $4-$5,lm Down, sYra balan1-. 6Q.5001. • _,J ta.bl t Instruments 11251---------Ci\f --•.r ~ yoo.r """' e, ~ c • ANTIQUED credenza. linen ,,.. ""'R -~I ~l .. dio Machinery, Etc. 1700 trained. 8J9-3.to5 8/10 40' F1ybf'id&e Whef:ler DELUXE (8.lrtb hardwood I 644-4J!lt FENDER~ AMPLif1ER T 1-• I -ir Ir. aitver dra\.\o'el"S, Iota of "'.............. """"" i =vuu 2 MALE kittena, 10 Wttk:s, er. Sleeps 8. CompJet ~~_:. c'o t'"',,! TABLE aw, jointll!I', •n. DELUXE RlCKENBAOIERl-'-•-•••_o_n ____ •_~ -'"-°"""~,_.· _S4_5·-""'"~-7335-~-cabinet. Beaut wood irain. 110" TILTING Arbor table 1 craY. l black ii: white. ncondiUoned ~~"1'q .....,......_...., ~... " ttques, clock. dreaser, BASS GUITAR CLOSE OUT I .• Convrt to 11tteo or TV. aaw, l 12" band 1aw, like 4,., """l,,. 4,........., B/\O "1910", Mim' CON tabl~. ttcord t ab In e I , 100 LB. set bat bells, all $45 675-6707 new, various bl.adet., $295. I,;'-;~~"--';-;;-~'-;;':::;~::--;; XTR.AS PLUS! Makt 5.11-7961 =··~~~64=S * m.-M<M * l WHk Only =g1~1. 6pl.!1~!;.... $!5. Plastic FOR Rent -C&bib -?!tam· 962-TIJT ~~""". \! v-"""'lrir ... ,.,11~. 0•""' SJ9.897I Eves I LUDWIG Drum Set, 11.hnost \Ve 81'1:' reducing ~w refrig. .._.,.. .. .., ,,,_.....,,, """'t"""" .... ,, '"-'"!"" 90.J"' DOVER ·Stloftfl Custnm I' , "'A°"ug'=7=u•"til_· -""~'=--:-.-,, new, xlnt. cond. Make offer. erKtors, \\·asher _ dryel':'I, ~ • 0 moth Lakes. slpg. 7, tum., Woodworking M.ch. Loves children. 548-43G2 818 ends 893-MOS. -1 llben Oota.I IOfla. '8pa.nlill 1 0INETrE eet. aofa, J'Oclr.d, 6'J"5-.7083 TV's to rosi & nt-ar cost. "1· "1 USE watch, frplc. S Nites '$'75, s:n-3374 Seelma.1<e'offer.l6180hm1 SACRIFICE __ ;u 1t Ciiin v.•..U la.mpt1 46". Ca 11 ho kl prtbl/stereo. Casst'tre '""' 1::411 _.., ·-w c M .... "........ Jo~REE Puppies: Germen 646-6400 y's bib. Dy.-. t pre. T=R"'U'°'M"""P'°'E°"T"'""--"'O"'l""d-&I Also used color TV's low a1 recorder' & pla,yer. &42--6l07 or .,..,....,.,, e • ..,.. a,y, • • '""""""''-cruiser 185 h.p. bl& ~r amp, HaliicnftP:I' reotlVf't, Ambusador In cast' $&.'l. $50. Don'l mi~ lht-11e 111 % Carat diamond engage. METAL Lathe, all equipped, Shepherd aDd! 6 wkl old . Marine., Just paint~~ JO'· SWEDISH modern aofa <>Iller items. Sun, Alli 9tt\ 54&J585 llendefllOn's, 1877 Harbor, KASHAN Persian Carpel, ment ring A wedding band. Xlnt cond . S11JOO value sate MS-2lil 7 811 thnlout. Perfect atiape fl i'l50, Turquoise naupbyde 9-5, 3058 Murn.y l.n, C.M.. C.flf. ~15.'r, ;,xg· J>U1 ';~.!n.,!10ran. Sell Cost $500. &st offer. $600. &'11-9542 S Black kittens, lovable .\ around. In water ~· tofa bed. .$ISO, Bolb in t:d. GARAGE Sale: Sat I: Sun.. SELM.ER -Bundy trumpet 1969 ZENl'Mi bfa k al at cos,~· cn-.JU 64&--JOt6 1.:=========-1 Sweet, box·tralned, R.edUl'td price $DIG. ~ oond. &U11.86 Wl Elbe.. o-.:. 'Mna Vmle, ~= s'pm~· $95. "°'*>le TV. ~ ~ n 1: Un~ G~ &n1boflnf 7' ~CO~MM~~.Cl.~~El~..,.--,,.,,.-,-,,.dhl FREE TO YOU 893-29116 813 aft 7:30 p.m. f93...3996. sPANlSH -gold · l'l'U&b-near Clubboust Rd. uiare. S1 2a. Early Good Condition 8" ate-el t'OI ~· hiah. inside KITI'ENS6wksold, healthy BOSTON WHALER velvet 10ta I. io\'f:teal. l Mclo....,tbi:. sports equip It Pianos It A-ans ll30 Aml'riol.n ~ conaole TV, ==~~"-,,...,,=-"'-~~ llghled ?'hder panel ooo· 11, Mulkin pool l..l'ld tilter, playful and Ira In e d OR SIMD..AR Yr ntW. $f75. Call an. $ ;;;;;~~7¥~·-~f;;;;;,l.~ .. ~'1~ .... ~~<udtion.:::_.;s;•~O . TABLE Saw, Deka wlf 00!). 546-8177 no lintt, call att I S57-TI41 8/8 WANTED to &nt • no\!\ pm. 83'1~ HUGE ~ • ~ to M S ~ lllintd motor. 1", Complew TROPICAL ~: L)trelail. 892-1459 lt7 WlfT F1utty 7 mo old female La.bor Day, Resp. Pli1)1, f'OR Silt: ~ dl~ltt junk. l9t!01 l.athmua ~.. SOONFAL~RR~VEING e WE B~m .. ~• SELL with stand, $40, 642-2'141 Black Molltea, I~ Anael GERMAN Sbepbmf mala-. doc !WS-5971 813 Call Mr(·ru· ·1~"',,·~ ~t ,,· ltt, wHti 6 dl8in &: a extra (A.de.mt A ~) H.B. ,... !"''"""' MAHOGANY o!f!CE' ~k $35. Fish.· Jew~ C 1 ch I 1 d J. mult. T wks ITlalt beautiM g LoW:ly k>fig ha.ired t:ltll!n11, ..-~ Wit: table, in gd, rond. 968..a200 .. ~ diacontinued modcla of TV's, nt aoo6 pril'es, 2 Male mice w/luJe ~ M0-3629 ma.rldl"tP S4?.(l5Ql 313 6 wkir old. 64&-2324 8f8 NE\V 25' GW..par hull,i Only 2~ mo old. &t2-4603 • ANnQUES· GAL 0 RE: pianos; • o:rpm mw beil\8'. 3003 Fllm"re: \\.'y, No. !J;;, $1. 673-4609 9' t'AIRLINER ditighy w/4 3 Manx kittens, w/atubby beam cradle lricludt:d. i . ANTIQUE roeewood Victor-Et.nJ.. ~. turn • 6 misc. cloeed out at diloount IU'ictl C.'.'iil: R"'OCKWEIL===c-cimll"·="ar--.,-w, tJP Evlrrudt1 motor $195. FREE K\Ucna, JIUl'e white tall1. B40JS Ill P ~ o e e afttt 1 11.n 1' Mlfa, creen I hf'lii:e 17698 San Marino Cir, 1'. )oOll can't be:llew. * 549--0~fll * 1l!led hli~. $50. Ca 11 Schwinn tandml bike $8!. part~ 8 wkt old bo'.'I: week~, all dQ" Sat ' at:rtped DIC: om• S4i.6834 v1y. 96!-54li Shop us.• 11tt' ~ 846-J374 trained 646-5914 811' LOVELY Ye altered c.t rree Sun ~ . 1 ' . WARD'S BALDWIN Snm10,1----------~~~-----l=co-===="°= 5 PUPPIES ama1J breed to good home. ~7096 817 .. 7"-Hlde e berll; frame, mat· Hw lo. GMdtn Gftt.ts 1819 N--C.M. 642.MM Hl-FI & St.,eo 1210 Nea:hl Sewing machine INT'L slerling orcbkl 38 pcs, • : 17' Boet, llberifa' OYtf .n. aood. ft\IPbob~nnr 50c. ioo.-Siat rl Sm 1 ,...,.,.--...;,-...;,'...,..;,..,.!!!=I;~;;;-;;;;;:-:;;:;;;:;;-:;::;;:; I + altaduntnta.. $3S. appn.faal $495. Stll ~. 6 wkl:. old; ftlfle1 and SM. brttd puppies. 19341 ~. 50t'IP Evinzvdt~ 12 ftNdtd, S25. ~ 484.2 Royce. Rd, Untwr Pk. I' 6' WALNUT ltt-rta am/Im MJ...sr;ig Mt-2.SS2 lenWH. C..ll: 541)-.3629 818 Olana Ln. H.B. 818 GaLon Pl tank. c:ontm•, 3 Coucbel for ..ae. All in FRI, a SAT. 811 A 8 HAMMOND S 1.._ .. y COllllOle, xlnt rond. $175 or sro==VE=-l,-,Ovc~n-.'B"ua=T=-~m=s Kl:W cuatotn crpt I. pad!! FOUR llutty k It tens . ARIS'l'OCATS for arbtocaals trir, bait tank .i pump. Jdfr'I cood. TrQm $10)..Saxl. * AU. OAY * aha. New ir ~ .. ;!~ ~lc-""-o=a=o"!T=.,,!l&<-="'"""2"•"!_< 7G_ Gu, wblle. $50 ExceJlenL BoN Nova tb.15 t'Oll $180 536-ifi43 818 Call in ew. 615-3558 81? ;C.;;-U-;146-:;:,=1401::..-,,,;:::=:-,::I; ~11 530 W. WU...OON, C.M. meet ~ Beat bu)'I ht Ir WF.STINGHOUS'E etcroo, 6~ Stll $'75. 5$-2882 FLUFFY Beby ldttel'lfl 5 •k:t FREE bundlts of newtpt~r. 23· Sl&.rcn.f.1 inbet.rd t· EEO H£LP! J..G01t t:r Jr WI vu •atJ, ttrn. Retrla. So Ctllf. at Schmidt Muste oo"'°'' nll'ldtl, w . ---,r"o·-,'"s"·'s"u"'o"'1"'N"G,--s !\IM eame.ra. projector. <Md 540-2030 8110 IJ.3..2311 8110 board w/all Albacore "~" ilJ I.be ~ Dtroc_, !;kl! u.w. Lots of misc. Co.1901 N. Ma.in, ~nta >na &fG.1318 BAY WTNOO\\' $50 splk'er &: 90"!etn; child's car FREE bM.ut. kittens to kw-FREE Rats caJI Jimmy Alto fh1t ski boll 536-31;,. tionL Aoutehoold ije.m1. l;t&.1753 _________ , DlME-AMLINES. 642-0011 .. C.11 675-520'1 • ttat; playptn, 96MtJS Ina home. c.u 962-lWt tllO 54f=&10' 8110 _,._,_ .... _ •. ____ ....,..... I ) 1 ·----, F<id01, A.,.,.1 7, 1970 OAJl.Y I'll~ 11 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TltANSl'ORTATION filNll'OttfflfON TRAHSPOlif.U '----'------·I _....,. -· -.;..;.;;.;;=..;;.;.;.;;.;.;.""'"----------·I ~ E411lp.. ta5 ~cyclol tJOO Trvckl !lf40 Dune ~f!!.I!'" tsll l"!f"'rled Aut., '600 lmpDr!M A-HOO IOlflltel -MOCU ... ttlM ...._ f!li'"" Mlil!CEDES<eent d I• .. 1 *" ·suZ11K1 * BRANO N•w .• QISTPM ....... .,,,, RAT JAGUAR llz: 'ptd. eiclne ....W 6.l& .......... y 1970 "IC TON 1o1 ... °""" 8\IW. RMIW, ______ i------- 8. 819133 -.i1 '" ""'" -"°° a. • ~ """ wo.. dirt • _, J&"-u•a 3(1' OWENS "4 TWIN m. 847-3440 StMna the Harbor Ma ~a<ty.-Stl'Ht lep.l. Lott or • DEMO BALI! • .._.. "' PRE OWNED PORSCHB -· ..... Sal .. • """''"' PlllllrDJJQCK "'"' "'.,. tm ""''" ON '70 FIATS H•aD""UARTEIS LOMU 1-~•c X'J:RAS 11~ _..._ __ ~ .i.......... ldlllll'.IJI """""1'l.°' l50 SPIDER -T ':C~-:'~';"""':-;:--=:::;---==:;;;;;::::;::;I r .. ,. ~ 1;:~~~:=:;:;;:=--.IAM·nl-~-c ro mt 1"bearlf7wttu.l:adJAOUAltr - roR ' 11' Alwnlnoµn FOR"'"' -Boal Sllp1, Can JAMES LTD 1'!0 va ..................... '64 vw ... wtU..t ""' w ... ~. 1Jme0 6-..... -"'tlto ·--1966 Porsclio 912 ...... -. .,,. Jl19S:()() ' ( I . I l --·••1 ........ bnt.kea, llftrll!i. pedal~ ' Bl ' ct ·~ . Area. <»,_ w car fo:P earner, •cwmmodate 1S ft. lo 40 nc. CU8 om"........, ll&'J, •JC<O .. cablt1. XJnt •tare lot Dune ac ra ,. , .. ,.,..., jU.tt I 967 P he 912 $4250.00 SJ(IO. ~. • • tf. bot.ti. Bl.ya:ldt VUll&'t lM4 Old Newpcrt BIVd. er. 11.0 . lhocb. H.O. g,a)<! ~ afl 6 l 4,;D> milet, $229S. ~ or5C •••••.St.ck •Pl<fA I ·~·•-·"-Muina 173-ll31 "'""' ""'• 6W040 •prlnp, dool mlm>n, ,,.P .,.....,, 12'1 COUPE SALES 1965 Porsche 356 ...... 5fo<k •11A f349S.OO _,...... ' · 9010 3'Xl'E. Cl>f.l!l •Hwy., N.8. bum)>f:r. 700Xlf 1pllt rlm 5 Spel!d, ncfrw ttd AMorM SERVICE 1=;::=:=.;::... __ ....;:,::;: I ;;eo"'•"r,:..sWP7.<'-s'ii1&oi"'.i.1~~.-0u'i'p:::,., RAWASAJ<AI. u.s.A .. Kiil. '""' .,.. ..... ·•li4S1$, CORVo\IR ......., • ""• '''"°· AU .,.,.., iu.i ~900 PARTS 1968 Porsclio 912 ..... ·""k •no $#95.00 COlumtiU. 40 dlftltl 1. uttM 25'. ti.DO per ft. co · Saeht. Moto Gu.ua -Ou. $24H ~· ~t lq.al, re.I·· mlln. smi. BAUER eoruMbla 36 dlttel.Anxt6U11:! ' • 67J..&(50. Clltl, plate•, du'osn~ whl8, tau "AtrrO SPORT FIAT IUICK 1967 Porsche 912 <eacri wtth tb.tbor allpsl So.lei, &Crvlce, PIU'l.J. <~Uh Jl1l'Chlle ot 'l'Neic &: construction. $!l'JO. &46-lS)I. ~ Ganien Grove Blvd., CC " ' I ... ~., ·~ -··~ Bo•t s .... 1... 9037 ACTION C.YCLE i:;~:-""'""·Sen.I ... Dune 8oci:Y. Xlnt tond. Call °""''' S!'l-7777 Ov1urtC ·~L ..... ~ :"tttiYOrkk>own 1~ · • .,....._, ]'Op, "°'°· S950Jbnt oiler, Optn sunday Sollnp (new) ........ 1170i! J'lberrlu•A CeJcot,> ~ ·.~~ 1~1 UNIV1;11a111 *"'"""'* '69 850 Spy·_. __ aim <2> 10' SUPI aV.Uiblr. -**Rtpajn**" · _.,; · OLDSMOBILE -_,. PAClFIC YACHT SALES rr.. Etltm&ln '43-l!fi! ,71 ·-kit 250 . lmportod Cort -Radio, heatu, ,_ pttn. 3'46 Via.,,,....., N.B. 67:1-1.170 • -,,....1$1 28!0 ff..,... Blvd: lYPS 2<0l. _r.011·1r ·cA-.:s ~· Ch•mr ·'°" C1>o1& M ... , .*,... SalHmen wanted 515., n 5-11 \.I-SKIPPER Dtx. 3S f tJ""' new: t,OOO'mile1 ldt on 'SI Ford Pie~ Exper.ie~ only • Stralsf'lt BILL JONES IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 11th Scrwt 51!-Tll!; T arg.s •••••• St•cil: ••tM 1968 Porsc!to 912 ...... StKI ""4 1968 Porsc!to 912 ...... s ... 1 .,,.. ·59 Jaguar Mark IX. tuU 1968 p h 912 orsc e •••.•. Shld: •1'41.A JIOM!1', aut.o, 1n1p trays. Xlnt interior. tool.I, Looks 1970 Porsche 91 .. -4 •••... StM~ •111.f llke 't1 RoU1, Sl:200. 531-J855 $5695.00 $#95.00 $4795.00 $<1795.00 $<1195.00 ~~L .COLO!$" PEARSON IJ..BF.RG Au,~. warrant)'. Novins, must 112 Ton. Cornpletdy brand !M!ll, A man that can 1tatt B.J. Sporta car ~tm- ,FR&-E DEMOS Salllnc S l oop. "fVN· sell. ntw r~bt1llt eng. Nf'w andcor.ipleteadea1. Demo2833Harbor, C.M. 540-4491 KARMANN GHIA. CAP'N EDS N·SUN'' in real Yachting $000 or Be1t bra~•. New 6 ply lirn. plan. lnsuranc., JOod hol.ir1, • - - - -• ClllCX IYERSOll PORSCHE AUDI . st)' le .•. rediloovtr all the Tl'1·2t55 New paint, i.e.,, tba11 2.ln> uctlltnl pay plf.n, Call Rlck ~ TH'Tt:'K -e '69 KAR.\iANN Chia, Xlnt Autboriztd Soles • S.rvi<e • Parta 900 WE5T COAST HWY • W:. €at.:l:bty._NB~2244 c:cy1tal clett water harbon on eng. Must Sell, Mov\n&:. J'rius g to S, 540-4493. e "flAj eond. Pvt owner, Make of- • CAL..CAT·$150 of beaut. Catalina. etc, OtJ, n4-2~. --EO ltt. ~"12 TAHO£-lO $450 LY soo DAY! 1w1> Dty '69 Ch""" 'fl·Ton ALFA ROM , 111, l=======I NEWl'ORT IEACH • mb\• • ""'·' .... ,.., -·· Mmo =======~:=======::! . • COL. 38 Sloop w/dlnghy, wt1h campe~, low mileage. '67 -1600 Spydn', ors. owne-r. ~nu •~ WEST Weight-Potter, 14 sips 6 Nloe S70 day A~tomatic. power ateenng, Xlnt. , $2595. 5'4'1-5832 day, rRIOfUUWLn fiberg.lau, ,_., bu~. trlr, USO 8' week: Call 6~3-5252 aJl cond. Dlr. Will ~ M&-2-139 eve. S1711 llACH ltfwy. Jt) 5 HP ·motor, cushionl, el.c. or 67>89'}) eves ask tor car in trade or tinat>ce pn-1========"-893o7S66 • 531-6824. 548-4035 314' Be•< St, C.M. -C-A.,.ry ' ~" """'· Call 54641152 ... AUSTIN HEALEY NEW-USED-SERV. cE ~·~, 113'.-tntertst. 27' TROJAN fly brl~ll! 49-l-68U, G ™ 0 -tally""'""•"!'-..... ="'~load'<l ... Pll 6185 day • ., Chevy y.,., G.B., ""''· AUSTIN AMERICA """' 0""'· 8!3-1234 • "'" 1450: wk. 64&-9000 "'""'"' • '"""· v,,, '68 FIAT Sil WAG. 3n-Btw. 8 am.S pm. .. clean! $.)Zi. Sales, Serv1ce, Parts * 6'n-0717 + lmmedlate Dellvay 23' ,. Tempe!!;t -.Ip. fl'.· aux. Fishing Boats 9040 All Maddi 6 .}{P,, xlnt.-oond, .extra1, 1969 Ford Ranchero, k>w ~ to WJ,. S 30 00, 3D'~JEFFRIES mooring R.8. nuleage, 351 V~. 4 speed. ~5479 · Chryater eng. MW Bendix. New t!rH. Rm. Xlnt cond. $3300. 548-5l7C> Top end Just rebuilt. New $21::,0. 831)...641'1. 'Z'l' KC Sloop. B.P. L .L. Ex-clutch, K & H cam, excel· -=-=--~~ tN. Nee, -atomk-4.· S to S. lent condition. 6t2-l4.l4 Chevy Pickup 'jfj VS J1rt1.1µoi1 jhnµort ~, Ablol.ut!!' 1'0Ck. b6t1qm $4500. Moblle Hom_i• ___ ~_200_ 1_ tQOming,.,. Good shirpe. S220 • Fruer Bkr, 6~ + 5@-3005 * noo w. Cout Hwy., NB. H'.-~DmchY.·IW.Mw. ••••••••••• '69 • KAWASAKI 250 =======I,..,._ ~1 ~ ~"!. slc!ewinder lolJI of chrome, Campers 9520 A.tttbortzed MG Deala Air cond., 4 wheel dllc btak· es, 4 1pttd. (VWW 641) $12" BILL JONES B.J. Sports Car Center 2833 Harbor, C.M. 5t04491 '69 850 SPORT CPE '51 METRO CON· VERTIBL&-New top. N• braket. $15. * ~2635 MERCEDES IENZ MG ~ -~ "FRlfDUMDfR" NEW MIDGET $1"5 1111f t&Ac:M CMW'I'. •I $7566 • 537-6824 NEW·USED-SERV. lllilV'liftiP(I '67 Midfet llaadster MG 'ST MGB-Gr, o'dlift, wtN whJs; 30 trtOe. old. Lo M.l. MUlt seD. $1595. U)..Q.85 MGI '64 MGI w~ wtleels, radio. rucc:rm $11tt BILL JONES • ..,,~.~ wlcorript ncing Don't Be Late n~ellent C?nd1t>on. ' l •.•.t 4 ~ f'lUK t85l 1ear l hwy trlr. $1.100 Cn•l turned l,OOiJ miles $565, '69 A.H. SPRITE $1299 iU-006. .Pick Your Choice Now . ~ · '67 vw .-e;u;, ~l c~~· * BILL JONES wr: r:::;. t;:okdb.tty STURDY al' wooden · a.ux· in the >..'LOI mob:lrcyde front forks B..J. Spor1s Car Center B.J. Sporta Car C°Mlll!r 2833 Harbor. C.X. 5«MC9l 'ST MCB ~ • .A.-1 omd, 71,!IOO arts mi'a. dmme wire whll, M'mt RD. m&m attrr. 13'7..a215T '65 MGI ROADS1R lllary """•· lil .. P' "· MEADOWS & ""'· '""'""· oil '"""-Camper "" AUSTIN llealey ""'283;1 J!Mbor C•"· -$13tt ~alley, head, new~,il Mark Ill, XLN'f condltioo, ' BILL JONES . I t i misc. par~. Harl•y 4> eng il ·~ ·-'69 Fiat 124 Cpe .'811.!. As la Sl800. • •• going as • __ 1 k ~ . kl m eage. ~· .63 1llO SED~ ... , B.J. Sports Car Center L u~.... gu an . r ew FuJ!y Equipped -~ * SABOTS * uxurious New Triumph parts. 64s.1753 r.t hog lnteri cuQH287) • '6-1 SPRITE-Xlnt cord. Exotic red with black 'f'inyl PRICED TO SEU.. 2833 Karbor, C.M. · 54t)..4491 N~w .&:: a;iinplete • .645-0810 Adult Park a any Cll'. Ne.,.,·ly rebuLl1 eng. sr:ia or bucket seata. Low miles, has 646-3715 atttt 6 only ·o MGB · '67 HONDA 305 Scrambler $2488 otter. ~7498 had excellent care: S.cri-l -=========-Venture 21 wllt;lf & Small pets allowed • Xtra chrome. ~ good. fite! !XLY235J Take older 'I ipeed, ~ wbeds. radio. 3 HP motor, Genoa. S'.ail . S.A. Fwy at Jeffrey Rd, l\1ake offer. Call aft 3, DATSUN car In l:nlde. Will finance MG HARBOR.~RICAN :ll3/ 5,99.6381 All. 5:.30 14851 JeUrey Rd, 832-8585 54~1000 Ask for Bruce private .... .....,, Ca11 Pat dlr. CO 0 ff b V W ~" '68 MGC •GT 1"il ~!~Blvd. e R NADO 30 e 531-81Jl.\ 530-2930 a r 0 Ur 0 • an 10 a..> 494-7503, .-noo. ~-• W"tnt wheels. 4 fllMCI, wbltli .... CNFY!lllf). $Utt BILL JONES B.J. Spartl Car Centier 2833 H.ut:ior, CM. 564Gl --------1 SA VE $1500 ON DEMO Auto Service $ YACH:rS RoYALE """''O •••' •••••••• _& _P•rl• 9400 187lJ BEACH BL.. 6424'135 -DATSUN .,_ '69 124" Sedan WU. w ... b, "'dlal ""'" '68 MCB. ndlo, -whlo. TON EA,...... AM/FM _,_ nd .. ..,..... AM/FM rsdilo, 6 cyl., auto. XJnt cond. $1950. Pb: <TI•) '60 Morgan 4 Mater Fiberpau il Gclcoet RIVER SPECIALS 2 Aru;en 15'"xl0" mags, HUNTING B ....., • .u-o:i • " '~· matic transrnluion, low 96J,..<1066 Xlnt l'Ol"ld. ·bat off. OR 3-23'1& n.-~:.~,tn .* :a..1752 New 12' wide homes ilia:htJy wlnc1v Fireslone s Ii c k S; NeW '70 Datsun ''Leader in The t.e&r.b Cltle1" (ZOU 61&~1599 miles, Lk. XSS 795. I=========-"'==='==::;::=="'! .. ~ ~ dam""' Pmoct ,.;.. ""do. noo. ' u.s. Mag• 14'' 1100. JOJO o11c Plekup .lh ZI MERMAN $2499 UMd C•rs -.iMd C•rt -22; Flberilass· Family boat. jt.yourseiter. Original <Sell. .( 14" Pirelli Cent. Radials • . wt camp. M BILL JONES Slip -"100 . ing prieo $6000-17000. a.due. $4'l. "· Sale P"." ial99 dlr. 2145 ljARBOR ILVD B.J. Sport• Car Cont" CHICK IVERSON ---"LlJ.C.. or~'""""' f 644-2181 {# 67798) Will lake car in ,.,_,. '"'"lO · 283J 11arbor, C.M. S4Q.4491 VW ~ "{'" ,,, ....... ,"" e...: or cle~ S4IJ00.;5000. trade, Will flM~ private ~ LI' Snowbinl ..Uboat wtlrl<. BAY HARBOR 211,00l MILES""'"'· lli.'5 ,~!!!,Call 546-""2 .,i,,~68~J760~0~RO~A""O"'S"'JE'°'R"" HILL .. aN '49-Illl Ext. o; 0< 67 $150: 592.-6926~ -3271. Devon 1425 Baker St.. Costa Mesa plu's f .E.T. Lorin's Arco. J'+-<XI lftA 1970 HARBOR BLVD. eircie>, Hunt. :fa::v~"-Jtist So. of 1iarl:IQc Blvd. Ir; Harber & San Diego F'rwy, -----cosrA ·~•• CQL.l1MBIA ~ d2!1') San . Diego Fniry, tTI4J C.M. SS?-~ Op 24 hrs. . METIJO VAN Uiht blue. Excellent COfld . ·r.ii HJLL.:>itAN ~finx. Runs, in~ e •VW Nin•, trans axJea 1!153, ~-T . ~ camper. ·Radio, healer, dlr. 4 speed. need! v.-ork, ,100 or best MG Slpt 6, illbrd, full .racing. S:fil.9470 • · ...--StoVe, &ink. tee box, (XIll 7581 Will take car In ofler. ~ • Sales.~ Part. '1"'1r&:!?!i!."~·~9f-.Tn5 COlTA MESA ' : ~= carpeting, panelling, bed. trade or finance privalel'=""'""''=====''= Immediate Delivery. =F' ·!13,"m1n1 c~a~. ··MODEL' i;costr-'OUT xwr "'""· .. """'· eat1 ....-o< HONDA All-... fl. ~~~¥~Ille 9 tW'flL-~rnoqe1~mobtle bon\es Trailer, Tr~v91 M2S •~ * 54}.124.5 * ·-~:ll;·=....,===,.-1-------.--~ , (213 ~ ' are being. Offered at reduc.. '61 % CHEV. P .U. w/10' '66 1600 ROADSTrD I ~ LAl'WOltTJt74 ' \ <d prlcn, All""'"' up in 'la .. u. coni.tn.d lB' lravtl ..U -··••Ito'"'" cam,.... ILR r'U'LIV'l.r1 W/SLIP * ... 6.t~& -,, · Gtte.nleat Park. I IJir,' llke new, $1 8;:i0. )(ew:,.unt'& tires, 28,(Q) THN J1rtt1po11 Jl111pOrl c1 • ..:__ ,.bllle from ocean !46-:;m4 orig. 1nil&. 1':IOks & runs Silver tlnlsh wlblack vinyl ~~ST i.:11 ~ = ,~te-Takt·;Newport ,~ or Har-1l't'at, $1f?60.rJ73-16&l interior 4 speed. Dir., (RUf' HONDA 3100 W. 0.. RW7 • NZ. aii'gni~$:479..644-.fs19nt· :bof Blvd ao._~ .... :~lh.'theo Trailer, Travel 9425 "T F"oRD, cmpr spl, V&. 851) will take trade or tin-SU "2-9400 ~l?U ·· ·.' -'""'l\'Clt"to l'ffiO··wnrmer-Ave. -au!o, p.x., ~.b., rad, boot. anco private party call Aulhortzed MG Dealer · * KlTE No. ~9 with troil.,, C..ta M•aa · 642-1350, -11' Teardtop, S ~pr. refrlJ, 541HOSl or "4·681l. "FRIEDLANDER'' '67 MIDGET l Needs llORle work:. $500. Call w • ir E Ri':RO NJT mobil& t 537-4011 jack!. Perfect. cond, lo mi's. DOT DATSUN , •• •••at (HWY. •1 I 644-l\J08. . b ~-"'0 7281 ·~ ·~· ~,~ MK Ill I v "'°""' & ca •na, wt-• ~ ·~··-e ~ ~ -· SAcru::pcE!, .. , _ dtsr;lr;-~-~ or·unt: -e ·m Califorpian t.lo to r OPEN DAILY NEW·USEO.SERV. Radio,bea~r,chromewhetll New Ca.UL Catamaran 1 ·. ~ . '. . Stream Llne 70 l:lome.' Sipe, 6. ale, sic. SUNANDD'•ys (WFV 1701. W. * 673-8749 2· BR Parlda.ne, 95Q sq ft, Terry•Nomad•O•tia.. Ma.n;y xiraa! 2 b-io. old. ,.. l'U'U'l.ft.rl $1299 16' LUGER ·Jttward sloop, corn. kit on golf course, Explorer Motor Homes Sal;. JG'tOO. 18835 Beac.h Blvd. PLANNING to mow? You'll BILL JONES maey extras, xlnt corxl, wl Dll1fWood Bctl Club. HB. Fourwlnds•WHkender ' ~ ~~~;n ~~ · find an amazing nutnbu oJ 8 .J . Sparta Car O!:nter tn.Uer. Si.09>. 61l-8'H9 Sac $6950. !!63-7472, 53&-6928 TR.A TEL '62 VW Komb1-Comp reblt -homes in today's naWfied 21133 Harbor, C.M. S40-M!U 12' S~RFSAILOJ{ BAYSIDE Village, NB. Open TRAILER SALES e,.:. new dutch, shocks, 3 "69 D~tsun DX> sports ~· Ads. OK!ck them now. want Ad, Get Rnults! sailfish. ~2947 llse. Sell or lse. Owner will new tires. Convrtd into 4 cylinder. !"I speed, nuhol=========.:.======== I =====::::':=== fmc. 2 Br. 6r:Jrr-G77 1l1n Harbor Blvd. G.G. camper. Lug rack. &12-3070 and heattt 7D> miles (472-I _, •----lmpo~, A-~~ ,. • · ASH\ $2.195.00. Jim Slemo111 mportwu """""' n.u YVV\ol Power CrulNrt 9020 ACROSS FROM MARINA l~ BlocQ No. o1 '69 Dodge Van GYP s Y IJi~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • ' 2 hr ... ~-wt·" xtras. Carden Gro1·e Freeway Camper very lo mi's, $3100. lmpor!s, Main &: Warner, II ~" = 537 ••t J Sanla Ana, 540-2:>12 I CABIN eruiser t9' ffberg:u Kid!!, pets. boe.t ok. 49'-~134 _, 493-3785. • Donet; 7S hp. Johnson, 2 '68 NIMROD Deluxe, slps --,,VW,,,-C"°AI>=tP;;;E'°'R~-'fill DATSUN SEDAN bunka. head, n boa, Jtei;h * * 'ti6 SUZUKI X~. Xlnl 6 t . bo din tbl $600 With Sun-Dial interior rJ.dio, heater, 4 spd. New ! , .,_~ t&nk, baft ~tank." cond. Clean & depelldable. 5.J~~·~ ice x, · · $l500. 492-387!1 tires, excellent condition. C.8.lradio, outnga:er for $250. 53&-1267 $1700 or take o v tr marlin, 44 gaJ fuel eap. 'fa Ford pickup wlcamper,' 8' FUlJ.. cab-O'ler-camper, payment!. 25 mph, trailer. Xlnt oond. Motor Homes 9215 new brim, short blk. x,lnt fact, dlsconlinued moC l. * 827--039.1 * $1950 396 E 21st St CM cond. $81!). ett 4 5@.2171 Complete. $895. 869 West , D p U TRUCK ., . . . ,/ 1970 MOTOR Home, &leeps '68 14'· SLEEPS 6. X1nt col1d 18th St. Cost& Mesa. e 70 ati;un . . . 'U IT CABIN Cruiser, 185 6, ~· I'"• ....,,.,1, •one:. ,,,,,, VW 'Cam I a" Mirrors, ~~d~o11~& i hp , lrg. ChrysJet Marine, · 'Call 642-3;40 • .,. '"' .. · · "°""" DU per, vecy c: e..,, .iep-bumfM"r. """" m1, """"· I Just pa.ln!M • t hrU'o"ut. * Cali 54S:6!I06 * & tully eqp'd. Reasonable. * 9(;2.3.'"l&l • Perfect shlpe all ·around, Mini l 'iket 9275 ~l&4S • · * 1968 DATSUN ml * In water now. SACRIFICE . , ---Trailers, UtU i.ty 9450 LEAVJ;NG For Orlen1~ r.tust A.P. whl~, mil-bar. A·l rond I PRICE sn:>q. Call aft. 1;30 POWELL S hp Challenger. PL.'\T Bed trailer With Aell! :5315' Crown Camper. & lo. nti. S2'l00. 613-76'1!1 . p.m. 4*"3996. ~ect". $1'11 chorkl for Sabot 600x16 tires 2!i49' Oranae Ave, O.t. Dal!un camper tor sale I .. : '63 28' Chrl.ti Crall, twin !>46-3585 ronly $50. 67J.-01t:. '66 ECONO Super V ll n Incl 2 bcdR $100. 1. ICT'f!W~ approx 150 hr.o: on Taco 100, -s ·bp, hvy camper Air, automatic, $f?lf-all 6pm: ~1690 t new eni. $55bo.or be1t otter, du.l)', tire.1;, tiand btks, Trucks 9500 cont&lned. SI995. !"1.57-635.1 I "' trade " -· """'"'· "''" 646-7535 ENGLISH FOR:> ' TROJAN Cabin CruiScr, '58 Oievy Apache lleetJtdt, Dune Buggl1s 95251-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I s1 ...... nttr!y M I 9300 % ton. new motor. atainletl'I: I• I :~. $2995. ·~1361 -~. ~.eye es stcei beds. -~or best ot-WHOLESALE prices on '61, AU. NEW ENGLISH ='======= SL-3!il HONDA. 1.0 MILES. fer. 846-5963 '63 & '64 VW chassia. FORDS NOW IN STOCK I SpHCI. S.kl. ~tt 9030 XLlfI' .CONDITTON. XTRAS. c=HEVY=~~ ... ~,\l~l-Oll_<_nc_I,.._..., fomplele. rea~ for duue DRASTICALLY . * 545--tT:>S * stake produc:e· truck. Very llUgJO'. 54s-.&al.9, ooi.1782 REDUCED I • ' boet, '5J\P mere. . bit BSA 650 $550 lo ml'1. 100 W. MacArtlnu, e DUNE BUGGY; TO CLEAR wh, tii, qcnn fish~nt or -Call 545.6811 S.A. f>&.W10 Fibetglll!S LARGE SELECTION l . iki. Malt tell, tnovinr illf * 90 cc. RABBIT ,-64-FO-RD~-E<o<x>l~-i,,.-, -,.-bu~ilt VW-1600. X'I'R.A$ PLUS! TO CHOOSE FROM J' fJe.nd. $1400., ~ns-12 to $75 e~lflf!, oew til'l'S, $900. S72(M) •.•• 962-0692 Theodore l I PM Owntt, 644-0688 "6-223!!"' -• CORVAIR powered ..... ROBINS FORD • ·~ SPORTC.1tAFT C-Eqle Hond JOS.Good '68 Ford Econollne, Sacrillce raU. Needs to be compl. 2060 Harbor Blvd. '1 lB' "'1ty equt,:i. Incl skJs I: ' • cqncl. for honeymoOn. S l S 0 0. $000 or !I otttr. 646-0024 Colta Mesa 6f2.0010 • ...trlr. ONC 12ilH/P 110. Xlnt .$2SO. S44..f498 ~98. DUNE Bu.-v, UXI, silverl'!!!~~~~~~~!!' '1 cond. $2500. 5'.fl-8410, '68 YAMAHA' 100cc-====--...,--,.,,.--,, -1: • lQ2...13J9 · • ': Good .c:ond, Make offer BUSIE.V \marketplace ln wired paMling, pin strip. 557 " .1 Alli. pieck them now! Ing. Must sell. 61S-0062. ti ' FRBGl.S boel, '15 I-IP '* -:;, ! ~ FERRARI tor. tie<!. str. extra ga.1; '65 MODEL GILERA C 9520Campers 9520 FERRARI nks, Ute jackets, skis, tllt PXJ/bellt otter *. 54&343(1 lji~l~m~!!'!~"~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii NfWl)Cll't Impc:rts Ltd. °"" it. Ir, rm.. 1\llnl biU, $60. •69 i2s Yamaha Enduro 11 anc-CmntJ'a onl.)' autbor- , .. "6-UJB · Street"' Din · "A COMPLETE SELECTION lud ...,.,, * MtNt:si'6R.T' «> bp , * 54U287 * SALES-SERVlCE-PARTS ' -·· .. OF CAMPERS AT 3100 w. Cout HW)'. Evlnrud< ·wt.~"· · "'· 1965 HONDA 65. Min"' 4th ........... lttd> t'.k,µJ)O · All. 5 ' OD ...... ~ '43-9658 TOTAL DISCOlftlT PRICES" if.=.. Fm'Orl 5ti!.':4 I CENTURY 16' G~ Marine * '68 GREEVES 250 cc. i , ~ All~ ~ 's* -Very ·avod (ll)nd. $500 c..u *'--aic <pm, 64:1-7769 I' n· Ski boal 80 UP M 1969 Triumph BoMeviJJe 650 i. flilly crptd. Walstrum ~'. CC. New tte. 0Hn. $87S I .Jani ...... IUltJJ. -• • Call 675-"95 I · '111 AMEllJCAN -· .., Marine Equl111 9035 l:ilke. $500 ~ take OYtr ! ) r:• ~ 613-'l!i96 i( • • * RELMETS 1967 EVINRUOE Z.SO 0-•m, New 4 lndJ 33 ll.P. Mechi.nlcA.lly perfect. • halt priced. 6N784 Wanual, t.. HONDA SL 350 t: . $'100 PI RM * LOW MILEAGE * 573-6434 aft. j •pm 6-iS.-2003 att e ~m. e ANGELUS e HARVEST·VANS e TEAR DROP • CA.MP KING VANS e HARVEST e ANGELUS.VANS e KING 01' nlE ROAD e DLX. CAMPER e DJ'1 SKEU.S e DISCOVERER e CAMP KING e Cl:L\SSJS MOUNTS C.UfPERS fl\.ILL CAlo"V~ CA~Plk& $875 PIOM EMPIRE CAMPER SALES So. Ctl. Dl1count Center 101) N. Horbor, S.A •• t.!9-lm j I I FIAT FIAT 1970 l50 SPYDER SAVE $300 D!!mo •74182 All n10del.s lo choote, Californl• Sport Car• 901 E. lrt, S.A. ~SIJ.)1 '68 Fiat S50 Spider. lo, mi's, Tonne1u cover. chnn whla, amAfm. Pvt pry. Sl350. 8*-1950 au & (Jr bf.fore IAM. WE SELL •• , Cars That People Drive NOT ... Cars That Drive People We've got th• threa greetest Trium_phs of the century. The Spitfire MK Ill, the GT-6+, end the TR-6. Eec:h on• i11 its cwn wey, can giva you back the unebridged sport of motoring. Teka. the Spitfira MK Ill. With Its racing· type rack end pinion staerin9, its indap•n· a.nt springing, Its_ four fot.ward·speed ge•r· box, and its ultr1modast price. Or the Europeen Grend Touring Coupe - styl•d GT.6+. Leen ind tough, with its bi9 six-cylinder •n9in•, superior Redi1l-ply tires, and front disc br1•111 . Or the TR-6, Triumph's 6i99est 2.1eater, with its 21/2 litr• hi9h performance angine. T1ka any one for I short drive from our · showrooms, end right 1w1y you'll discover 1 lost ,art. Something c1l,led "Driving" ~ARGE$T SELECTION .. In tho State of Oallfomlo ·~• • •nd Point• ~East" FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 L ht St. 547.0764 1968 CAMARO 2 idr h•,..lop. f•cf"'Y •ir ceM., Yl ••· 9iM, 111ow111 1t.•ri1HJ, •ut.unotic tr•fl111'1 i1- 1io11. A k11•tiful k•llyo 6tfffl f•fl c•r, fXEZ..+4JJ. $2595 1969 MERCURY COUGAR Sp•rili., whit. wiMI 111 W11ck vhlyt to111 oM lt1tori•r, IZXE·lltJ, $2795 1969 OPEL RALL YE COUPE 011ly 14,000 Mil" 011 thi1 •c.,..Mical •..d ,,.,.., eUtomo~llo. R•41•, i...tor aflel 4• ,,.,,,. ff•11,.i1Moa. IXYU·Ol lJ, · s17'95 1967 GRAND PRIX l11outifvl 9•IJ with t•lltr11•tiitt ~1011 .. vi11yl t.JJ. F11clory 11i1, low 11til ... IP•HJJ7). $2095 1967 COUGAR XR7 011ly 19,SOO 111ilo1, ,., .. t•••fl with bl11c.~ lflhlrior. la1r.rfifully corM for. !YXTI0-4 1, $1795 1969 FIREBIRD Y1rd1,. ''''" with rodio, ho1.l1•, .-•w1r 1hl1rif19, power lir1.ltH, turiio livdr•11t•lic, IX•S99-4). $2995 1968 FIREBIRD J.4, h•rdtop. R1idio, h11•lor, Ylnyl top, cud11m trim, 111ow11 •f11orln9 111d p•pul1r 4·1po1d t1'111uni•1io11. fYQf.121 I, $2495 1968 CHEVROLET IMPALA - 4-4r h1rCte111 9411ulpped with f11c.t.ry 1ir0 "°"'"'' wilHiflW., vi11yl tep, 011ly I 6,000 111il1• •• thi1 i4ool f1111tito, Ctr. IWllC-6601. $2595 1970 GRAND PRIX F1ehlry 1ir, ,._, wilHllowi, 1t1r1• r1cU111 ,i11yl to p. l9171EOI. $4695 1967 MUSTANG 2 + 2 GT R1d1o, lia1ter •'"' ovtoin1tic tl'1111unl1Jf0111 •11 thi1 M1wtlful 9ray car. ITYl.t6JI, $1795 ')970 MUSTANG MACH I Full , • .,,., 011 thl1 6000·11tlle l•ll1-Royce tr1d11•l1t. Exe11plio111I 111.,i1191 1t thi1 prico, 1071-ACNl. $3495 1965 CHEVROLET IEL AIR fo;, d•er 1H. Eco11011ty 11M co1t1fort o..i 011ly J.f,000 Mll11t. A11fft111ti1 tf11111• 1t1itti.,., rffl ........ , llffi p•Wllf lfHri119. .1•1W.UJ), $1295 ri;RoY CARVER ~ROLLS -ROYCE . 2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MES" S•6-4•4' > ~ili ~'61!:r.~~:;:7_i' .._ .. -.,. •-.. --/iw. ~&;'!'" .-.--~ ~ -• • .::"' ~ ;r::-~· -,~---,,.---;;!'--::E:;"C~:-;:'')':·;"' ~< :'!¢~"7:::J°' ~C:=:;1"""-"7-~"'P' ..... "'"'!=';;:p:<:~r:"---n'!""""'':'\!!!':'t" .... ..,.."""' ...... """----------------l. !::: • r '· .. • -•.-." •• , • '• .. •, .... •• • .•:· •••• •• ~. 1-=£\d ' 00 ~.::::: 4f!CCli4§.{fSZ9;PG(4 st so a ct a DAILY PllOT • Frldly, AUtuit 7, 1970 ,..,":o..,::.::...,:;-:_=:._...,,_=mr ..... ==R"T;.;A,_T:;;ION~~'iTiiRANSPO"TATI ON -TRANSPORTATION -l'UNSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR1 ATION ----· --· TllANSPORTATION TitAMSl'OltTATION ,,,,..,..... Autos 9600 tMported Autos MOO lmoo-Autoo '600 lmpcwted Autos MOO lmpot1ed Aulao -lmf!!rtod C•ro , 9600 ~~~c..:.:A;;.ul:.::OI:..' _.:;9600::: 11ml'°rted C•rt 9600 Ol'EL l'ORSCHE PORSCHE TOYOTA TOYOTA TRIUMl'H VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN '&I Kadatte--'61 PORSCHE '6.6 l'om:.b.e 9J2 "BEST ~U:iTA"' '67 GT6 COUP! J TO rnoosE •'ROM BARGAINS" COROLLA 881 In town. Rad;o, ~•.J-VW-llf<J- tu.dy to Roi! CZ>."W 3331 $1l9t BILL JONES B..J. ~ car Comer 2111 Jtarbor, C.M. M0.4491 '67 OPEL f 5Pl'«i. AM/FM, alt" cond. (XAT "" $1395 BILL JONES B..J. Sports Car c.emc.r 2833, Harbor. C.M. 54M491 '66 ~ fo:ta. ~g. Lov. miliNge, xln'i a.ppearatllt'f'. ~u at ""'hi~ book. ~. 9Jl>.!l632. ROVER -- ROVER FABULOUS 3500 CAIRIOLET Priced from $3195 COME SEE OUR heatu, 4 ...... wtre wbeeb. MECHANIC SPECiAL J·IPrdlop, 1lc•mnig imrallK'I XYJ474 SELECTION OF RED WAGON (WCR 7'05), Lk. OK~ st1~" "''h .,...,. ~· '"· i CHICK IVERSON TOYOTAS e Ntw T1,., · 51999 CHICKUfvERSON "'""" '""""' • ...,1., no· VW JIM SLEMONS • Lunot• R•ck BILL JONES d,ial tin"S, AM/t~i\t ro(llQ, IMl'ORTS • Xtr•s B.J. Sportl Cat Center YW l.w. \\'Y\\' 215. I ~149-3ll3l Ext. 66 or 67 Musi S.11 2833 Harbor, C.M, 540-4491 $ 1910 HARBOR BL\'D, 549-30ll Ext, 66 or 67 1899 COSTA Mfo:.<;A 1·10 W. WARNER • $137$ '69 SPm'lRE MARK Ill 197() HARBOR BLVD. CHICK IVERSON I ·6' '""""'" "'" Chmm< OPEN~~~ 5!6-0'5 _ _E$:!!1~1t~ ~ -';.,;'·-~• cw-. rad;.. COSTA MESA vw nn,., • ...,,,,, .xhau•L R .. ll '70 TOYOT~S ------'67 vw Sedan l r1.... .&· nt'"' radilll tire.o;;, I IOIYIOI :.t9-Yl::!1 Ext. 66 or fi7 ... T TIAI VOLKSWAGEN 1<170 HARBOR BLVD. I Al\t/F'~. ~8-8!">22 ,. In stock. Immediate d W!l'7· •tiol•m~iiol-lioill·-------Air rond. (UVT 287) COSTA MESA ~ ••• • DEMO • --"'-'•·fl $1348 L"IO "'""'"'" T" .. -L l , .... ,$ WAGON 6372 -... -on '63 Cabnolrt. sLl\'C'r/blk int. "" )<llO• ..... ""'"' ... m.... Ulehrs $1817 Of vw ,._-rs. Ne.,.,· l'~Lnr. top. pa.inc, .4.M-sterco 1apt, lo mi. ~··-r-· r ims. t\\l/'f~1. Xln1 cOnd ~ho .... Tm conit. Pvl pty Vans, Kombis, H •IJ..434-5.353. 6T'.r4n< L•gun.1 Buch I OTHER DEMOS B N & U··-' arbour v.w. • '66 Porsche 912. Chrome 196ll 912 PQR._<;',CHE Targa. 900 So. Cst. Hl~y AT BIG SAVINGS uses, ew ._. ,,'his, air, lo mi. Xln1 rear glass \\'in.io\.v, rear 494-7503 * JOO DEAN LEWIS lmmldl•fe Delivery rond. Be~1 ofre-r. ~1ust rorn;o!P, itmllm. re ar CHICK IYERSON St>U! 494-9667 all :i. i;pt'!tkl·~. Ask 1 n g $4875. BllL MAXEY 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 VW '6: PORSCHI:: CABRlOLET 494-42'2 1969 TOYOTA Corona -2-dr , )fusl sell foir bP!;t offer '6:J Poniclw SC new rbll eng. ITIOIVIC>ITIAJ vinyl top, 4 spd. Good mnd. * 67>-1323 * Chrm \vhls. sun roof, 125 • _ _ ..,._ $1475. 846-4288 M9-JQll Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. .18111 BEACH BL.. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH V!:!lh~~Klll,= ·~ ~ "** .::23nl:;;;..Sc.L:..;N..;8 ____ _ ,...,,..._ mag ....... ~. $l!X.(J -TOYOTA Ual llEACH BLVD. Hunt: llelldl 147-ISSS I ml H. nC OJUt Rwy. cm Bdll OOSTA MESA '70 Voilatwqoen, Automatic Mk* lhift. tad I. htr, (580- AKV) $1 ,995 .00. Jbn Slemon1 Imports. Main & Warntt, Santa A-. 540-2512 __ TR_1u_M_l'_H __ 1 1&5 VW Sedan vw ••• ~E.!~vT .. doll" 2 EXECUTIVE DEMOS Xlnl. Cond. '4'-l><B _ N"" "'' """'"'"" lo• mil· • 1 963 """"h<-AM/FM. '67 TOYOTA '67 Triumph TR6 Sunmot. hd~. 'crnc 445) • Pa;d '"or not $ 9625 Garden Grove Blvd 4 speed w/overdrive, wire 988 Call colll!'Ct, 5.17-77'l7 open s~n '68 TOYOTA CORONA es, o~teN'd. chrome wtittls. S11!00 $1000 ~,,...,, Corona. Good c."Gndilion cZLK. Sedan. dlr, automatic low wheels, A.M/FM dlr. low * '68 Porsche 912. A.\1/Ff\.l. 9271, \\'ill take-car in trade miles, radio. heater, (WXT· niile3. Runs like a line '68 vw Sedan Discount FRITZ WARREN SPORT CAR CENTER chrome whls, radial tires or tlnance private parry_ dlr. 087) Take older car for down .... ·atch. IUOV846) Will take H b v w ::0.1nt cond. 841~ Call 546-4052 or 49+6811. will fin pvt PlY. Call Phil car in trade or finallC'e pri-ar our Sunroof. (\VJf-1908) "67 Ponche 9U. 5-gpd ·~ Toyota. gd oond. alt lO am 541)..J:tOO. ~1~-546-4052 ar 18111 BEACH BL.. ~-i~ $1388 no E. ht St., SA 547--0764 "''e~s3.1-~\ c:oo· ~1: ~1r5~4 ~~ =i~· JOBS TODAY! Cass 7100 J.IUNTINGTON BEACH ========-======== =~===";;==:...:==~==2~::::=.....:~~~~~~;:;;:~ ... vw . Lt blue, OW>roOl, JOHN COHNfU. "NO GIVEAWAYS NO GIMMICKS" •.. Jnt 22 Y11n of Ho,..tf D11li119, s.111111 ct....,..r.ts. YEAR-END AM/FM, Ye!)! ed rond. Must ae!l, $1495 or otr. 673-1698 '69 VW POP-TOP CAMPER • :J20() * 646-4131 * . '70 V\V Karmann Ghia ~­ Xlnt cood, lo mi. C06t $2&50 new. Eves: TI4: 49t-8988 • '68 VW Camper. fi ip-up top, Xlnt cond. 4.5,000 m.i'1, moo 968-4947 '60 VW-Good for Baja bug S'.WO or but otter. 962-178'2 UL' ~15-6519 '69 VW41495. Mu.st sell! AMfFM, sunroof. Good cond. ~3859 or 540-4545 1961 VW Bus Reblt. Eng. New dutd\ $600 or best offer. 675--7298 Harbour V.W. 18TI1 BEACH BL.. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '66 VW 2 dr, new yellow paint, mags & headers. Must sell or will trade !or older VW + cash. 545--6619 or 962-1782 e '63 VW SEDAN 14'5 ........ • '68 VW bug, immac cond, many extras, private party. OO:J.-0367 '61 VW convcrrib1e-riew eng, ncv.· lire11. $400. 496-1760 Harbor Estatf'S '57 VW Good transportation car, $300 firm. * 673-8669 * 9800New Cars ALL NEW 1970' s EXEC'S -DEMO'S --NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED BRAND NEW. 1970 .CAMARO C o u p e. Tinted 91ass, evap. emission control, AM-push but. ton rad io, citrus green with" green vinyl interior. Stock '.#~ I 054 1530202). '6:l VW, EXTRA Sl1ARP .... 1.-""'=="-'""--1111J • &$1Mi(l72 • '65 vw IU&---1 , An~r1can mags wide th"!s, 60 GllIA. Stll . Trade !or cuslo"' inetallk paint wUh motorcycle. S250. Needs bt>iutllil Ince-work. YPU- lrans work. ~ 90l. "63 Karmann Ghia conver. Several other cuatomlle4 tlble • R.ebU lll eng, n e \Y V\V 10 t:ll()OS(> rton1 ,,....., • clutch. Good "'"" CHICK IVERSON S700 ca.JI 00-737;, VW '!>7 VW-l'ebullt ern:I~ St.'111 646-3181 aftl'r 6:30 ~!J.JOll Ext. 66 or 67 1970 llARBOR BL.VO. COSTA r.U:SA '64 VW BUS CaJJ 645.W75 alt l'IOOn PILOT WANT AD! 64z..:i678 Imported Cars 9600 Imported ~·r• - NEW 1970 FI A·TS 68 to Choose From All Serviced & Reidy fo,. Immediate Delivery 850 Spiders & Racers Choice of Color & Equipment 32 to Choose From / ONLY $226260 l:jo007496) this weekend Also 124 Sports Coupe & Spiders Large Selection Choice of Colors Equipped As You Want ISER001171521 Low •• IOO's more for your trade in, foreign or d~ mestic. T1ke that short money saving drive to cool, smog free COSTA MESA. ·-ALL 1970 MODELS-· Brand New 1970 Nova 2 Door Coupe Tinted gleis, delulle belti, power steering, AM redio, evap. emission control, white wall tires, large wheel covers. I 360T l 17- lb24). FOR RENT 26 ft. Horizon Motor Home Al,. Conditioned And Fully Self Contained. At Popul•,. Prices. Phone Immediately For Reservations. Roger Miller, 546-1200 Brand New 1970 Full Sized Chevrolet Wagon Tinted glass, turbo hyd ra. rnatic, evap. emission , power steering, 250 VB engine, AM redio, vinyl in - terior. (9071 j 181716). CHEVY BLAZERS-1971 VANS CARRY ALLS-4 WHEEL DRIVES Now Fo,. Immediate Delivery At Connell Chevrolet. Ctll Ron Kr1nz, Truck Department. MERCURYS -COUGARS -LINCOLN CONTINENTALS Here's A Sample Of What You Can Save . . . HURRY! DISCOUNT '68 CONTINENTAL $3665 Coup•. f•ctory •ir co11Cii+ionin9. lull power, b.111liful concfitio"-I EI( 795. 1970 CYCLONE GT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY s77700 FROM FACTORY SUGGESTtD RETAll '67 COUGAR $1998 Auto. lr•n1., f,ctorv •ir cottd itionin9. power tleerin9, r1dio, l.1eter, Lie. TXU 190. '68 COUGAR $2332 '66 BUICK Skyhrk $1332 A11lo. tr1n• .• feclory eir conditionin9, 1 Door H1 rd!op. Aulo. lrl nt,, I I I 2828 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA NEW CARS 546-1200 USED CARS 546·1203 c•-Dr 1teeri119, po,,..er br1ko1, u1dio, RIH, pow1r 1lttrin9, telor, vinvl roof. XEU 041. '68 TOYOTA $1332 '66 MERCURY Ptrkl•ne $1554 Coro11• 1600. 4' 1pe.d, redio, l.01fer. 4' Door H•rdtop. F1ctorv •i• cond>ho.,. 1,,000 1T1il•1. "••• 11ow Getet II•••· ln9 full 'ower. redio. heele•. lik1 new! WXE 'tO. leeutiful condition. S8M 06,. '68 COUGAR $2110 '66 PLYMOUTH B•rracudt $1554 Auto. h•111., p•wot 1+11ri119, t•clio, v.1, eulo. tr1111 .. f•e:lorv •ir, keeler, 2J,OOO ..,;fe1. XEU 661. P.S., redio I "••le•. S8R 169. NOW IS THE BEST TIME IN TEN YEARS TO BUY A LINCOLN· MERCURY PRODUCT ~OhDSOD•SOD LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • MARK Ill • MERCURY • COUGAR, e>r.rt1e County's Oklnt 1ht1bl11hed Fectory Direct Llncoh\-Mercvry De•ltr 2626 HARBOR, COST A MESA 540-5630 540°5635 II Milt Sa. of Sin Dloto Frw)'.l ·----------.... --------··-·--------------- TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T~ANSPORTATION • ~'.V, /, 'L 7, 1970.====--,-,===~""..,,To""""''°" TRANSPO~TATION /TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATll)':'__ I ~SP~!A~"!_ :!:~P __ o _____ 1 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 lmporttd Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autot 9600 l.'•ed C•r• 99'JO U<11•lf Cars 9900 Us.cl C•r• 9'00 ~-V-O_L._V_O--· l--C-D_l_11_/!_! ___ -1-c::l:vnoLCT VOLKSWA GEN '00 \ \\. 111111; J.:!l •·11 ~d U1t•s, Jlf'\\ "4·,11,.., r"<hu I\•rru. 1i'"i1\•'I • run" -rrrr, liiQltS glToll. nand) lltll•· ('otr S·l7~. !';lit. l\ It IK'ICJ1'1• IOi\ 'I. ull 1,J •\I VOLKSWAGEN 'b3 1'11c1!0 nus: Rl'li & 11h• rn.'"' 1-11~ & l'lutch. flllill Sl:llXI w· 1na e o f.$M74 '68 V\\. "heels, pa.tnt job. Jbl'NJ CC's n1ust Stlt. nui.ke 111/t•1· Ht' !rude fur Viu1 VOLKSWAGEN ------- WANTED Tll pay iop d011&" for )'OOf VOU<S\VACEN 1oda.y, Call ae({ ask for Ron Pinchot. 549,.3031 Ext, 00-67, 673-0900. -VOLKSWAGEN '67 VVI Squareticrck Sunroof VOLKSWAGEN '67 vw CAMPER Fully equipped \nc;:lud111.ic luc K•l;t! rack. Runs It l•"·k~ brand new. Lie. VTf !Wi7, ---YOLY Demo. :t:-8781 SAVE $466 -c...i-·-- "-dJ' I ' • t 1! "/,-.:..tr.1.' -"" rn·, '" ' '!J· ! ., " · 1· ' J'IPALA 9-· • ,...._ L.-,;w IJ. l'l!: r 10.:k. X1r11 l~'i-~ .! ---- CHEVROLET '68 Chev. Nova II • tfnoi'", llke brllRJ' ~. X.l-Y !Cl. .-1;s-V\\' ~1·1i.1u~hr.v111· liiJ..•r:·.~ SHARP '65 llU pt, heutlera chron1t' rlm8, grl tltt1, hrk1 A-I L'Ond. $895 offer 67a-&866 Af,1 IFbl radio, tape deck, air cond. 10,00J mllrs ()n nt'W f111·tory engine, Uc, UEP1C.I $16!1:/. Sjlt'nd lhe "'Cekcnrl 111 mmrurt with t"COt10n1,y 1800 F. C!lt'. ror delivery. <Jvel'!IC&.!1 rh-l Specia.l~t. (' \~11;\'0, n·· \ rng rlh ·r1t1 .ir r;nd, t r. , , , ,, $1 099 C~llCI< IVERSON vw rlr11s, ~ll1·l11·!111 t 1 r C'', e ·;i:i vw-"~,-,-,-S<><I-.-,-,-,-.,-. t1u111u>f, t'>Ch,1 11~1 Jli)Sl4•i11, 1uol01', su11roof, chr. rev. CHICK IVERSON vw l!lll(i~~~~ <~~!1~1303 ~~E'/..,O~¥T --!!'U:·.-l-dr-1 11 fac1 5-19-:lml 1'::-<t. 66,.,,. Ii? 1•h.1111K. r.1he over "hh. frlCt. :H6-368 1 111111111·nt-< H!l .i1;;'l a11rr ~' -lll.Y.I V\V $100. 9 other squire backs to choose from. ' 'fi·• r, r •17 1970 111\RBOR BLVD. '63 P-1800S '~". "' ,., ' . ,.' IJ ·•. -i·n: fltnt' f'[Js.-A MESA -J •\f 11r 11 I" ·nd' 1 PILOT \\' /\N1' A OS! 642-5b78 642·5172 CHICK IVERSON vw ~1 1\l-JO:!l 1·;~1 00 fir" fi7 J970 llt\f1BUR BLVD. crn:TA l\TE~A " '!50/be'<t. !I ,!.t>.>1 nr " ·r 1r,11' 1 ~ ------1 118.!f" 11r rra!'fe: for llnnda -I !!peed, ovrr1lrll I', t1'11'-139Jl '1d-\!.i.Til1 I ~ ! • I If r ~ _!,111~V!I, rJl"I 'if ;;oo, '60 Ch(IYY lm[lala New Cars 9800 New C•rs 9800 New C•rs 9800 ~19-3031 }o.:Xf. f,(j or 67 1!110 \!ARBOR BLVD. $1399 1,/~. 1•/1, , 11, 111 , 1ir1;:. n•bl1 MS C"U In. w!dt• 11vaJs, HOW TO BEAT THE DEALER AT CLEAN-UP TIME. 1'1\U•Tfil."'CAI llll'OllE )'OU TALK l'RIO:. J( you·vc already picked out a particular car from the Ucalcr's Tor, he knmvs you're :scrioas ~bout buying, and he'll be n1ore inclined to gi' c ) uu his best deal first. Chrysler Plymouth Clean-up Sale ... OnNow 1 COST A i\lESA '69 VW Sedan Radio. Auro1nar11 .. !YCY 961) $1719 Harbour V.W. 18711 CEACI! BL., 812-4t::a Hl'NTINGTON RF.ACH '64 vw SQUAREBACK Lie 8115 $B95 CHICK IVERSON vw !'>19-3031 Ext. 66 or fi7 1970 11,\RBOR BLVD. COSTA !llESA '63 VW BUG Red beauty. t:xceUent condi. lion, Nrw \1al\'e job, smaU down v.111 fin. Pvt. Pty, <Ur. Cull t>h1I aft 10 Ai\1 ;,.i0.3100 or .f!) l-1029. NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month $147.78 down includes tax & Lie. VW LEASING AT CHICK IVERSON vw 1970 1-IARllOR RI.VD. cosrA l\1F..SA '6), V\V J~ll~ ('Ull- VCl'!Jb!c-yt'l!O'\' .t hl;11·).;. S1200. t~1~-~f~'I' Jtl67VOl.l\~8tat10nv..11r:on, BILLJONES Ol'h••,to. s~ 1.!"'l('f, $(flU"'f'~. now -1hru-out XtCXXI n11Je111. (;00(1 COn(llllOn. B.J. Spo11.q Car Cc nll"r 1:1-i11 f'!, \ r !If\' ••:r., \Va ,0 V·l 5-11)..U.«16 Cull 641---0100 or a.IR--Oll· """" fl "-C '' • l/J.11"1 c·1 I ..:.;.:__.c_::: ______ _ ..,..,. nr'"'''· - . :)' " f' .. n $1 ·f' -•xi.:··\!, rond1t1Un '17 (hf'vy. 6 cyl ~tick '66 V\V:--Sunroor ,\,\1/~·:-.t ltlG7 V0LVfl _ 122 S _ 2-Dr * f'.dl '•, • • ~ ! .111;..i~G aI1rr 6 pm Xlnr r"ln<l, S2'.);, nidio. :-i New lire5, Aini {;ootl (">nd~ Lnw nille! J~ {1,+ .~,, 1r:VF.l~LE-:i"""Jt"":~ta. t r.ilt-11.11 fr afl 6pm cond SI®. jJ6-'lfi72 Sll1.11. * 1!12-l:i:'.-I'~ nuu: 1-·• l 11 1'1· i,'.lJOhP,_1111"1.t>OS-l~"T\TIO'l \\.a~n. rum ~vW--1;u .. -Gol)d •r ' 1!J. t 11100 '"""'S7 ., . • •O .• ~...,..,.,. ' •.~I. f'\.I 1•IV S.11:». 1nns(.ll>rtatinn. ~;,i(I ()r lx-~t ··s c I f vfff"r !lti2-17K'l or ~Ht Soort Cars 9610 .J nevy "On $1.... •,\L\. puv.er str... .. '<lfl-?f.!I * ="----------I--_ --.,J\-7f7~ 11' .,~, •• 11, . l':h;f' radio. air Q.:-c1-!l·.\'tL-.U:~.~2~0r~ THE SI '· ~ '>ET~ . ~ ' . I! •1<ltnn Xlri1 cand. ~l.1ke ---------1 RACING "BOSS 429" •" In! ri1 l)·~-21l2.1 I VOLVO . . MUSTANG DArLY 1 il!n' ,,..,. ,,,,;• \\",\:-.T AD::I• ~'•::_·:LL~';;."'~,_~567~8,;·~·i:·:;, ,.··~'"-;.f).:=.'''===i~i -----------l ~l1•·k ~!nfr. l·tl,,.,11cr, Jes.'\ t11.1nl-=. -:::..:;;;:;..._----= _ ---=- VOLVO 1,00J 11111.·s. \'1·ry poWt•r!u! f Used C11rs 9900 Us .,d Cars 9900U!.ed Cars 9900 g1atk 11• hlarl-; 1ntenor. t'<.11 ------_; ---· ~---- BUYERS ~~:~~·.'.·~.~,'.'~;~;:/' J; I LET US CHECK Ant;ques, Class ks 9615 , YOUR DEAL 1910 FORD "'""'" ''" conol.1 ~~A;~;5~~E:;~~ ""''";~,~ff!.~* I $ $ Aulos Wanted 9700 ---I It's worth y()ur white •. FRITZ WARREN SPORTS CAR CENTER "DEDICATl:D 1'0 SERVlCl:" no f; Ts1. s ''· 5-17-071il ----U"Ll'LnZU THINK ~'YO!YO' "FRIED LANO ER" 2 dr. Demo. WE PAY TOP CASH I for used cars k trucks jusl call its for lree estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask f(1r Sales ?ilan .. i:;er 1.11'.?LI Bca1·h 81\.1\. lluntington Scat'h I 847-6087 KI ~~31 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR * $2750 * llllO IEACH lHWY. HI CONNELL ,,,.,,.,; • '''"""" CHEVROLET NEW-USED-SE RV. 752:8 Harbor Blvd. ~ ----=i Costa Mesa w .. 1;m • ._............_ -~w-E~P~A--y--- ("' " ' ~ f4Etl CH~\fROLET (~~ I '· '7 @ MONTE C4RLO ,. , . P·"t'" '••"k-, $3499 ~7:1n rnllt· 1:&11. n• -•• ~· ' .... 11 1r ('<'/lei., r '' 1111 'rP, l'ihO""l .. m !11•-,ll. 1~72 ' '69. CHEVROLET IMP> .,\ $2699 :21>1 lfT.J\.J!.•.1 r.f.irtcryair, l'~,l11\1,ll\1T'llo G;'JI ----- New Cars 9800New Cars 9800NewCen 9800 NewC•rs 9800 New Cars 9800 TOP DOLL AR '69 ~M ~ 11.~:1~~ CU~ .,. ,,,,c., ,,.. tmde·I". $2799 • INCOSTAMES ltrsAUER ~ . B UICK Spe<iolizioi ii .JQUAUTY Jl\GOAR Opel 234 E. 17th ST. SPECIAL OF THE WEEI{ '69 Porsche 911E fh,, full inj .. c!.on mod1I ~"' 011lv I• 700 "' 1,., ~11d '' ~<lo>ipo•d wi+k S •P••d tr~ni' m;"'"~• AM-FM t11d•o. dl1c br11~'" 1k, r!·. Fl•w!n11 l1n•1~ and imm•tulat1 in · ••de. M11•t •r•. !11920081 9 1. 1967 CONTINENTAL ' 1 door ~11•11•oc. You'll tu1! h~ve lo ,ee lh;s "' , > , y "',,.,e ol. r111! 1><>,.t• <!<111<11"'""' '''""'l~n , l•'"~ h•·'" rr 1 all<l 'e<l!ninp Pfl,,. ' " t, ,.,,,~,,.,.,i., "" con<11llonlnQ, 1t1rm ' 'o v't' m, rower <IOOr lmk1 11nd 'ltlbtll"''blt ~, ... m••~~~~. jUll J• •a~ mllff. l\"WS~IJ), $3195 1969 CONTINENTAL ? !ll)(lr !i~r(llnp (,o•d "•!•rlor with "~rk vlny! 1<10 nn<:I m>t'~"'Q <<l"Om 1n•••"" Ht.• lul l !>OW• •r '!<IUl1lmen1 l'!lu< t • .cJo•v ~ir tondUIC<llno. pnw· rr floor lo•k•. AM FM 1~<1io """ 1!41 only n.~11 vuy CMOIUllY C!r•Ytn mile•. (YWT1'6l, $5195 • COSTA MESA 548-7765 1970 OPEL GT Beautiful 1u~bu.,1 v1llow with bl1c:k b<1t~1t 11at., Aulom•tic d;,, br•kc1 •port d••r:nq wl.e1I, •It. 19•10.!0168 I MANUFACTURERS CAR !US£0) $ • ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST OPEL INVENTORY • SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY 1968 CHRYSLER JOO 1 000< h•rd!oe>. Comtil•lcly lo&ded \11'1111 eo11lpmen• Full 11<>wer, l•Uory •Ir cand!t!Qn. •"II· Ue•ro J\M.FM tlKJIQ, ~tlhl ~Ch s•11t, cu11om ch•<>fl'<ll Whttl•, re<:Un•ng .,.,.1, •It. l\fau11rul corll ••ledor with blet~ '""'' loll •nd ll11wlM~ lnl•roor. Mull lff CRYOll). $2795 1969 FORD TORINO GT FASTBACK 1 Door hordtop. Thia OUl1l•ndlng outumoblle 11 h111¥ equlppecl with VI tnplnt, au1om11ll(;. I• ~nl· ..,!,~lori, llctory ~Ir toMlllonlnQ, power 1t•1•!r· 1'19; \t""-o AM·l'M r..:tio, tll(llal .,1!111 $id• wnll lite.. You .. 111 be emlf>tCI •I Ille collCllrlon ii lhio cir. lll.WABIJll. $2995 1970 IUICK SKYLARK CUSTOM 4 DOOR HARDTOP This Y"'Y low mlle.'>QC "u!omo1Jl141 w11 ~l>l!<l"llt P.,tc;h•s~ lrom Bulc~ Motor Ol~·•lon 110\d 11 Ifill undl'f' l•ctory w1rr1n1y va H1glnc. "u«>- m•!lc. r11dlo, neallr, POwer SlttrlnQ, l>OWI• tl'akll!I, ''"'"' 11r conCll!lonl"<!. WhlTt "'"II UrH, cUJtl>m vinyl int .. IM, 1111~0N l. $3695 1968 BUICK SKYLARK C"'ltlm 2 door l!tnltoi>. V•I fflOlne, ~ulome!lc lransml11lon, rft!llo t<ld l\tellr, IOOWtt 1tt•r· Ing u1!1 po.,,, ortk111, t1ctory air condltlonlnQ, • lovely de."'°! l!fllge Mnd t•ll"lor wl!h buc-· 1~ln vl~YI roof, lhl1 Oflf ownl!" c•r w11 1old tnd , •• ~ ht•t. LOW mlluge !VlMIO\l, $2695 Low Cost-High Value 1969 V.W. SQUAREBACK $ Full Automatic Plu• Air Conditioning. A very hord.to.find Model. (369060237). I For clt'an usr.J •·ars JOHNSON & SON Ltt-;COLN :-.·ERClJRY 2626 Harbo~ Blvd., c:.:_~!:_ \VE P.\Y TOP DOLLAR J:"OR TOP USED CARS If your car i.> extra clean, ~ us fits!. Bt\CEP. IlUl('}i: 23-t E. 17th St. Costa l\tcsa ~18-17~ lMPOR'fS WANTED Oran!:(? Counties TOPS BUYER BILL r.tA.XEY TOYOT.•\ 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach. Ph. Si17-8SS5 \V:Hl!i•d cco11on1y 1·ar 111 Jll'l'tl or 1n1·ch:1nical work. * 96Z-SOOR t- Used Carl -------SALE City of Costa Mesa CONOE:\INED PROPEHTY illUST i'llfJVL THESE C1\r.S1 • 'j7 Chryi.ll'r Sl~~I '62 Buick Sin \\-.:n Sl r '6".l Falron 'f.() Chl"'1-y 'GO T-ll11U 'G-1 Pnntl<tt' "fi:; lntcrn;d1onal 1:1~ Lots niure lo 1·hooi;,. ,r,•111 up tu '1;~1 C,111 Cpe de Vtllr Sl">'l:i Blue Chip Auto Sales 2111 ll 1~rlu1r Olvd. (',\!. 642·9700 * 540-4 392 ---- WE BUY CARS! 'ij Buick Sp<•1·1AI Srd;in Good Corid * ;:,r.-.1 Or!C'r * 6-16-4597 h1·r :ijlm * '63 RIVIERA · $650 &16-7010 Art1'1' fi l'\1 CADILLAC * f()r Immediate Sale* 1959 CADILLAC PARTS Air oond111oner 'J'ransml:-;:;iun Brakt's Orum.~ Radiator F1·ont and !Wur Bumpers Radio Duhbonrd Equip1ncnl * MAKE OFFER * 1212 .SOutl1 Ross St. l':i.nt<1 Allll 542-3120 After 5 p,m. 'f,6 Cadlll11c Cou{lf' dr Villr, V-8 aulon1at1c, mdlo an l ~lllf'T'. 1iov.·rr !! I err in i.:, 1xn~rr hrakci, pnwrr \\in· do\\s, powrr S<"lltli, loclory air cond1tiorung, w h \I r v.·Rll!'i, tintrd glMS· 42,l)"Ml n1lh.~11 IPf''B 43-1) S:Z,.w,1.0). J im !'lrmon5 Import!!, ~lain & \\':irncr. Santa Ana , ~I0-2512 '68 Sf;DAN 0c Vlll~ .. ln1· nv1c11lnt('! Pv.r, llll.'N'<l, :1·r \-()W111'1' $26,000 1111. 6TJ...32fu '68 F.L DORADO. fnun111'. lo1Hk·rl-~lcreo, Lo m I ' 11 $4500. 6<12-8062 '58 CADILLAC $17S * c.u 64&-1503 * ,1111. 1d., \ '· ··Juo1r:r ""h"· ·'·like brand 1:.•11.1 r.•t·t· y 1\. 'n1n1.1 ---------------- ' I I,.~ \' C~J I.II'-.: TO '.'.. I.•'.,', bu~."'"" 'AVE' ijj 111·11'1• h11 \. 1/..Y.X1I!:11 tP --------------- '6 3 , /!,,A lj.JI '1 '" • ~ru·. r.id·<> 111 ,.,,.,- 1,r • ' •r l lil' i. V.W. CAMPtR " ' ' '\t I· \·1 , , .. ,i1 1: 1 , +n-.r. \ 1111 t11 " f f' t· I < ilf</• :,, 11 ( •. ! ( 1 l ! I 1 :•II ClC.'.; <42 I ,., ~ I' .S, C'lcc \1 uiduv.•s, wl•!. 1 i•.s, r 1..;; 111· .. ne\\'. 11· h 1n 1!rJr-1o..1!.llJ(r. Stout Lttr. ' \' f· I "I)' ! I $ 2499 s1599 I p_LJ~ ~"'" :::n,~.I~ F"~~.YPI~. r", """· '·'"'" s159 9 ~ dr·r pufl l"On<l111on. I '6 ti-:2 FG .,U r '~:Cf-lr::R O $99 9 . I' !'.-,) • •rl •. 1,.., Ir", r S., CJ , 1 \II 1.J:!J --=-----------,-.--- ' P.11 r,·. ·m~c r.~~o. ""'''' ""'· ron,o! s11 99 \JD '! I, 4\\ .. ,\:j,111 --'6, 7 ',.~ J I ACC,j ? PASS. s17 99 ' 1 •, ,, i. f' ' ii ,,, ·id., • " 1.I ' \' s399 s1499 TRJlliSFCR rn nn. l '53 ~~uH~ .:~:\0:1;;1 ~., ~ ! '66 1/J TON CHEVY v I Vt, 1110~, st-O'l!I truck, (U~ll •59 '"''· • ,, " ---• 99 ----------''"· ". ,.., """'" "'° '65 'h TON CHEVY vt, •to<k (S1!2'll '67-'"" , . ., ' ' 11'12"'" t~•. ,..,,. · "•" "\. ~ :::ai '66 y_.. TON CHE1-v fVOL1111 t ' ----I VI, r•r•u~. ~''· P S. •ft~lo. r.u•lorn t~o r•SJllAI '63 o•o~ 1 o• •• r ,,,._rnn. · • ... i.. """ p ~ "~· ~ ..... ~v . , '" r F1.•11;,~~ '68 1/J TON CHEVY TRUCKS· TRUCKS· TRUCKS •eJl-PONllAC C.10 $"'~~ V~. •!IC~. cem~r 51\ell, ntur ntw. (t~713A) ~ 1nr.Hl.llulo,l'U1. (0~~ 1ozc1~Q' '69 El CAMINO '63-(0!.IVAlll' ~'-'"""' ~····· .. ,.., """"'· v'1J~ (fol~IS6'"· ' '64 l!l'"L .0.11• l"Pr ____ "7'-71 '67 FORD RANCHERO _ ~ • ~ :·~ ·~· ~ tor_::_ Q .., 1--'-'-"-"-"-'-'"-·-'-"-·-·-""-"-'·-'-'-"-"-"--'''0 "" 1 "' '' "j!)~ '64 FALCON VAN 1J, •~te. Jr•n_ "' '" I ') ~ A•r, rad·O fHKV4UI E ll'tg kar~or Illvd., Costa Mesa ~11 ~·1203 • r I TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRAN SPORTATION 9100 Yes, We Have lteen -Geffing New Fords In By .. The Dozens ••• All Models .•. All Colors And With The Model Run Build .. O,ut They Have Been Piling Up ••• An·d ·Now At Any Cost They Bring Your Car, Your Wife, Your Title ••• We Mean Business • • • Yes, Drastic Price Cuts Plus Make This The Greatest Sale We Have Had In The Last Year ... Don't Take Our Word ... Come In And Make Your Own Offer ••• But Be Ready To Buy Because We are Ready To Make A Deal 5440 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. OPEN 'TIL 10 P.M. 636-4010 598-5588 ' ' TAKE THE VALLEY VIEW OFFRAM~. SAN DIEGO OR GARDEN: GROVE .fRIEW AY-. -· . ----· . ·------------ ·~· . .' r : ' ' New C11r1 9800New Cars 9800New Cars 9800 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900Used Cars 9'00 Used Ca'rs l, 9900 ·------~¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥.lf.¥¥¥-¥¥¥¥-¥¥¥-¥¥-¥-~,--CH __ E_V_RO_L_E_T _ CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL 'jij '.\lark II. A·L rond. illAKF. OF!<'EB. ''THE GREMLINS ARE HERE!" t 1968s!!~~eu -iC Cpc, 377 eng. radio, hea1('r, "10 Chev f"apricl'. 2 floor hard1op. V-il Auton1atic, radio and healer po~·cr * 67J...5882 * "l'M SO UGLY l'M CUTE" SEE ME AT HARBOR AMERICAN SPECIAL '67 DATSUN Tr-pott•tlo111 Specl•I '67 VOLVO S122 '65 RAMBLER Wt9011, "·•peed, r1dio, Convertibl •. VI, eulom•· 7 o:h .• "4·1pe.d, r1d io, heeter, ""hile ..... n tire1. tic tr1n1mi11ion, pow11 I SWR-b4 I J. ITllT-51101. lieerin9, power hr1\11, $999 r1d io, h1eler, wh ilewtll $1188 tir11, SLW 27 1. $395 SPICIAL SPF.CIAL T"'~S,.cl .. '65 FORD Tron,portotio111 S~ltd '63 MGB Mu1l•n9 6 cyl., tlick 1hllt, '65 AMERICAN IOADSTll •tdio, h11ter, ..,f,;11 will, .C cloor, 6 cyl.. otut omtlit ' •peed, ,., .. , wire INIC.1451, fr1n1miu ion, Ilic~ thif-. wheel1 OK' 104. $888 rtdio, ZXU440 et i1. $988 $299 '67 PONTIAC SP~CIAL '66 AMERICAN Tra.,ponetlffl SJteCl•I TIMPIST '59 MGA We9on, V.I, •wto. tren1., Auto. tre111 ., power 1teer· IOADSTll r•dio. he1!1t, while .,..,u lflt, breke1. redio, heeler, • cyl., • 1peed, rtdio, H•e1, lu1111•11e rick (TAN-whit• well ti rt I 1uvu. 21'1 1. lltl. wire 'Wh1eh, llCV 12'1, ti $1344 ;,, $1088 $499 "X MARKS THE SPOT" Harbor American Is THE Spot , . • * The Spot To Buy All American * -iC automatic, po11·cr :;leering, ii' bucket seats, low n1ilcs. -jc YCR-092 -le DEAN LEWIS -jc 1966 HARBOR BLVD. -le 646-9303 • 'li'.I Cl-!EVELLI': SI~ Bn11sh Hacini:; Gn.'t'n 1C PB, PS, AIR, Nt:\V TIRES i£: .f(H-JT:;9 aff<'r :;, ... EXCELLENT CONDITION _M ·191-:ii::9 arter 3 ~ 'j7 CHEVY -le 4 dr .. WRJ;Un. -iC SAC!llt'ICE steering-and brakes. factory 1-------- a1r conditioning, I 1 n I e d CORY AIR glass, \1hitc 11t1l!~. G V.1lY l-------- sr-al, I..oaik'jl 11.UI~! n11!cS. J!J6J CORV/\lR ?.l onza - ~lolor Nn. 117).IU. Sl.6!'.f.i.00. o I.' p enclablc. cronomieal, .Jun Slrn1un.~ Import~. :'\lain ~111 2nrl car. Good buy f.· \\'111111•r. .<:.;.111ta Ana. ;:ii $~!l.i. Pvt. p1y a fl 7 Pm: ~l()...251:.1 646-1367 --------1'62 Corvau·. Sacr1f1cc fnr ' CHRYSLER ho~y~~.. Quick &lie~ I --$18.1. 61&-... ~. 1967 CllR\'~LER Nr11porr. 1962 C'.or1·a1r, good for riarls 4 Dr. II T. Air, 1'11'1'. \1nd1\S 11r !o rebuild, &12-0lti3 al1er p\\r '-Ir!:;, r"r hrk~. Xlnt Ii rond Sl.6~•i ;iJ().i:~11 =""""--=====~II CORVETTE -le $115 or be'( oll" all ''"'· CONTINENTAL -le &19-<;;73 $1895 ~~~---·I ~ '6.1 NOVA sta \1·11A'. 6 cyl, ~ rcbH cng. f ender 1!cnt. ~ Snn1r v.·ork rcq"rl. .$:!'2~i. '63 All ('.•.H':i'' C'ustn1 rice 1967 Corvette Stingray st1nronf. ,\ \l/F\l. l••athcr Conv, Radio, heatrr i\:.17 en- cl(" Xlnl t~lnrl. pv1 pl~'. blue g1ne, •I speed, f'ncCd 10 srll. ic '"""" ho11k. 1'\li-66~7 .. ·i.16--1 72.~ VTD 1~ I -DEAN LEWIS ~ Used Cars 9900Used Cars 9900 1966 HARBOR BLVD. -le : : -le -le ] -le iC iC i t -le I -le -le t PRIDE • INTEGRITY • SKILL ,--.., lllUNO IEILCICl-Se"ice-Mo1109er W1'r• pro~d of Out •torvite mefltger ...... w1ffl goad r111on. W, leel Iha! Bruno •I lh• lrne1l BMW .,.,,h•<>•C in Southern Ctlifornie. r-l• •l1rtecl hi1 ct reor 11 V"· "Ila in Germtny ut1d1r9oin9 •~•en1iw1 tr .. it1 in9 ~I BMW't mo1! modern work 1hop. Drop '" •t1d 11y hello lo Bruna, Ht'1 • friendly fe llaw end 1 f•n• me,htni,, VW SPECIALS COMPLETE BRAKE JOB ENGINE OVERHAUL VALVE JOB VALVE ANO RINGS ll'LUS f'AltT$ 0"1 ALL f''l!Cfll $35 $95 $55 $70 646-9303 • "6·1 Vet. ~C''V n1_1g.~. !U"('S, top, lo rnL X!n1 1·111id. **" 5lS-~ *_. COUGAR 1967 Cougar CT. /\1r. pv.T :<II', cfisc brake.~. Sl79j. 644-24:.0 DODGE '69 Da11 Swirigrr. 6 rylinder au!omaUc. 2 cfoor hardtop, radio and hl•all'I". po11·rr slN'r inc. rnrtory air ron· tfition1ng. \vh1lr walls ISX!.1 f;621 $2.195.00 ,Jin1 Slemons I Imports. ;\1a1n R.· \\'arnrr. I S;:in!a Aim, :J.1~251:.! I ·10 ChRlltn1;t>r. full p\IT .t I 111r. 6.:JOO mi. $1100 of/ windshield stkkrr. Pr P!y. 6T;,..&1J4 '66 Dodg(' Polnra convt. p1>/jlb. Bckn\• '1'hlsl. Quick ' Mic S&.-.i. 5.'l7--0.1.i9 1963 Dorlge Sl11.t1on \Vagon Nr\l' lirrs. $12:>. 192.:;.~;g GH~T TRANSPOHT,\TION • 1!160 --1 cir s;:i • 612-4759 * ' i HARBOR AMERICAN !1 .:~:.~~~'::,~. r&M M'oro1Rs ~ PHONE 646·0261 ~I FORD ':).i Falcon: 2 rlr, Ii cyl-autn, gtl. tnins, $400 nr bsl ofr. !lfi:.L 17R2 or M5-6.• 1 !) 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. .u ford Coun1ry &-<!. sta 'fl.:U:. l<l mi's • 11,000, air ronrl ~ 16-6111 -19S6'"FO"""R°'"D0S"'loo"'- - All Must Go -Many To Choose From - 1967 COUGAR Radio, hrall'r. \\111tl'1va!I tires. "'herl rovrrll. air rond. Extr11 r ll'11.n. ln1v n.11Jcn;;r, an outs tanding buy~ Go1t1a SC"I' this rinr. fVZF~4f)I $2295 ·--1968 MGB ROADSTER I\ !lprrd. rnd10, henlf'r, 11 in> \\"hl'<'l~. Benulif11I rlark .i::rcen f1n- t~h 111t h black intcriur. Radia1111'f'S. G1·cat running cond1l1or1. 1 \'CH0531 $2095 • 1967 OLDS CUTLASS 2 Door Cn11pc. P.adio. h{"ater. HUlomatil'. \\hll,,v.all 111"1'! ,,.hf'f'I NlV('r~. air <"nnd. Cold finish 11·i1h n111lrhinc: it1t('J"1or. Exira rlrnn. IVCL13!l I $1895 ·--196 7 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE rhamra~e i::nld \\'1th hlnrk in t<"rior. full !"'11,.1-, Rh <'nnrt. A beautiful tnr, 1·c1·y 11·"11 rarrd for. !VEV9.'i!l1 $3300 • 1966 DODGE CORONET 500 2.0oor lJ11rdlop. J'oo.1·cr !ilecrin.i:;, power brakes. air cond~ ta· d10, heater. v.·h1ll'vt'all tires, bh1.ck "i'lYI tori. IRSZ5971 $1195 DON'T MISS THESE BUYS FROM THE GOOD GUY5 DURING THE OFFICIAL 1970 FORD CLEARANCE SOUTH COAST1-. FORD -MERCURY 494-1515 JOJ lltOADWAl, LAGUNA IEACH 549·3851 j* * ~~~~ ~::~:~ ~!~d;~~~*~e:: **~.,I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. :; .. ~,, .. • : .. f-.. .:~ ... ~ .. ~ .... ~ ... ! .. : .. :: .. ·:': ... : .. ::: .. nr nf!!'r. Call 1117-~G I ·--~~-~-~~~~~--~--· ' ' I ,, • k ! • • ' • . . ' -- l FNN>, Autust 7, 1970 DAILY "L~T t;«f T.:..RAH=-'-''""°"""""'-TA;..T_l...;;O.;,,;N_' "'"TllA;.;;..;;N.:.;l::.PO=RT:.:A:.;T::.IO:::N:;_-_::TllA=N.:.:S::.PO=RT;;A::.T::.IO:::N:;_-_::T;;;RA.:.:N.:.:S::.PC=R::.T>::..T:.;l::.O:.;N_::.T:.:llA;;;N.:.:S::.PO=R.:.;TA::.T.~l.,;;.ON;,;__..:,T:.;R:.;AN::.S::.P..:O::.R::.T:.;A.:..Tl::.O:.:;N:._.:..TR:;::ANSPORTATION T·~ii"'A"'N;.S"'P"'o"R .. TA.,T"1-'0N""-r"RA=N"'S"'PO"'R"'T"'A'"T°'IOH.D''-'-'-=.~ -" J 9IOO New C1rs 9&00 H.w Cari 9900 N•w Cara ~No;;;ow,;;_C.=";..;.....;,'---'tlOO.;.;.;..:.N.::•:..:w;..,;:C;:•::rs:_ __ _.:ffOO:;~No::.::"':...:;C::•":;:,_ ___ 9::800:;::,::N•W C•r1 9IOONew Ct1r1 •::: 0 '70 DODGE CHALLENGER '70 DODGE PICKUP '70 DODGE CHARGER '70 DODGE SWINGER No. 108430 OVER FACTORY INVOICE COST $ 7 5 OVER FA~ig::~NVOICE $ 7 5 OVER f:Cig:f INVOICE $ 7 5 ~-::::;;;--~-:::-~~'!--~~~~~~~.a.....~~~~~~~~= No. 150113 OVER FACTORY INVOICE COST 5,000 BLUE CHIP .:.~·~:.;:: ... :r ~;:: ~i::h:~:I· STA MPS ot the deol & I'll give you 5,000 Blue Chip 5tomp's Free.'' ' :!! ~~oElro"5, heater, 1;n11d glo-. Free $895 money bockguorontee & tO day triol exchange. 25421 4 '68FORDSOO 4 Or. Air conditioning, power steering, rodio, heoter. Free money bock gu orontee & 10 doy trial ex- it. PS684 4 !~~~s~n~~~s~ree~ney~kguo'· $1395 onfff & 10 day trial exchange. XR2124 If you are not complete ly satisfied with the service you are ge tting from your present dealer please drop in to our AA Ro1ed Award Winning Service Deportment & give us a chance to service your car prop erly. I hove been a new car doaler in So. Calif. for over 20 years & would very much like to be your dealer, .S i11cerely1 Cal 1Vorthi'1gto11 P.S. We give Blue Chip Stomps in our Service Deportment II .. , On approval of credit we con arrange financing to cov,er the entire cost of any car. .. No payment of an' ~ind until Sept. 21th. We try to al'l'tfttt down payments and· montMy payMtJlf~ to suit 11th indl· vid~•I cui t-ft ' , ' ''1 Y R WARUllT'I . PAllTS & LA•OR . F :~?h!t~~~~~"' f,ee money bock guo,ooteo $ 7 9 5 & 10 doy trio I exchonge. Z·XW822 '68 PLYMOUTH Fury 2 DR. H. T. Auto. Irons., foctory oir condilioning, power steering, rodio, heater. Fret money bock uorantn & 10 d trial t>cc e. VRM807 :~~r~~!lh~~~hitowoll tires F"' $1 money bock guorontee & 10 doy exc'hange. ZAX862 '69 DODGE Coronet 2 OR. H.T. Auto. Irons., power steering, rodio, heat- er, whitewa11 tire5. Free money bock gooronte1 & 10 day trio I exchange. 109255 295 '67 Dodge Polara 500 Auto. trons., oir conditioning, power steering, rodio, htoter. Fret money bock guorontee & t 0 da y trio I exchonge. TSG00 2 '69 CHEV Impala 2 OR . H.T. Auto, trans., air condi tioning. power steering, rodio, hla1tr# tires. Frit rfldney bock guor- onfee & 10 doy triat t xchongt, XYN197 '70 CHALLENGER Rodio, ktoter, whitewall tires, tintld gloss. Free money bock guorontee & l 0 day trio I exehongt 486ASZ $1995 '67 FORD Galx. 500 Auto. trons., oir conditioning, power steering, brakes rodio, heoter, tires, lin led glos1. Free money bock girorontee & 10 day triol exchonge. AKJ35t Auto. 1rcns .. oir tondi1ioning, poWer st1eting, rodio, ktottr, tires. Free money bock guorontM & 10 cloy triol exchonge. T8K209 $995 • 990G Utrl,_C_•_r_• ____ 9'00_ Ustd Cer1 PONTIAC T-BIRD 9900 Und Ca ri 9900 UMd C1rs 9900 Used Cari 9900 Ustd Cars UMd C•r• 9900 Used C.•rs 990Q Used Cars ·~~-"'"'-----'~ ____ _;..;..:,,;_ --PONTIAC MERCURY OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC FORD FORD -FORD .. .. • .. . .. • . .. .. -· " .. " :1 . j." ' '~ l I • ' . I • 1970 FORD Country Squire Waron. Xtru • No money dwn, take ovr/lease. Days :;41~. Wkerv:ls &. e\·es 9624981 TOP DOLLAR '66 Squire Wa9on -------'---l-------1--- • '61 Comet Ca!•ente, 2-dr. A.11 ls S.>95 -i94-f.83!i VB, 1957 OLDS 88, ; Dr. \\'oma 1 o"'·ner. New brks, mas:. cyl, new paint. new crpli . ~~· hall.. immac! S295 linn. 642-5912 Robert Joyce 2078 A Wall1ce St. '67 GTO, 4 1pri, PS/PB '66 CataJlna 4 Dr Hdrtp, CO , .ulo I lb ~-1• $1""" '63, NV. New pa I nt. 3 r1dkl speakers • P 1• P · "-•" · ..,....,. Gor(t!dtJs. $750. WW tUe l '69 LT[)..Beaut gold w/.,.,·ht vinyl top. $2750. In perf<'ct cond . M oving to Hawaii-must sell. 675-3190 1~7 FORD F'airlanc 500 2 dr HT, R&H. slick w/ o'drlve, eng tom down. make oUer. 968-1341 '°' CLEAN USED CARS Sec Andy BtO\\"n THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 642·0010 '6!) TORINO SQUIRE ~talion '69 LTD Squire Station .,.,.agon. Full power, 11.ir. W&r0n. Air, Jug rack. 18,000 A1'.1/fo'1'.I, 300 cng. Luggage ml. $3400. 91)2...2159. r11ck, 15.000 mi. S 3 2 0 0 MOVING Must sell: '69 Jo'ol'd 5S7-Sli9 Cortina, 4 dr, like nrw '6.~ LTD·Xlnt cond. Nrw radial rirc1. $1350. 642--4452. 40.000 ml tires. ps/pb. Air. '63 Galaxie, automatic. good 'auto !rans, vinyl top. 390 Fa.irlane. with wood grain P.X· terior, dlr. ::oo VS, po.,.,·er ste-ering. air cond. Stereo tape, auln. tr11 ns. ITAY2791 \Viii take trlldt> or finanCf' private party. Call 5464052 or 49'1-6811. '66 FORD RANCHERO 6 cyl Automa!ic. I?. dr 268). Will take car in trade or finance pr iv n !e perty. 546-4{)52 or 4fM..G811. e 1950 Ford VR e l\lust see to appreci.ale! • 673-81 31 • JAVELIN MUSTANG '66 Shelby GT350, 289 Cobr11.1 --------- Sigl'r~on r:am, 4-spd. Hurst l\nkaie, Ansen Ir a c ! ion PLYMOUTH bars. hP11d~rs. p is t n ~ s , ~RAcucA V-8 P/S Polygla.t hrcs, An1erican . . · ' mt1gs. !168-5206 art 6pin. Xl n! In! -R.Rr~lo V:brasontc . Mu~\ !'I'll! Only 29,000 orl.lf m iles· 1 CLEAN • $700 '67 GTA faA1bac.k Lo~ded 54g.9500 aft a wkdy5 au dey w/cuslm whls. nu polygl11s 1.1•kndt1: · t~s. Al'oflF.'.1 rad iol---·------ Ult-aw11y s!eer. 11·hl, l!Kl '66 Barracurln r ormula S, cng. Xlnl cond. Pvt pty, 4-flpd , Mlchellm. d I 'c afl .'i pm: :J46-3917 • brakes, fu! t1:lecrlng. posi, '69 MllSTANG Mach I, 428 original pvt o\.\·ner. Clcnn. Cln .t ~pd. posl-traclion. Sl200. 675-7flt8 Costa Me•• You ate the winrwr ol 2 !1cke!s to !hr Rinqling Bros. Md Barnum & Ba ilay Circus at !he Anaheim Convention Center August 13-1 9 1 o"·ncr. ~.CXXl nil . 613-3532 aft 5 pm. tradt'. Priv. pty. 644-2563 Xlnt C011d. Btst offer! '68 GTO-Must tee 10 ap. , * * 642-3213 * * Pf@Cia!e! A real buy at '57 T-BJRD, &: 'tiO Ford II-firm ,~~ ,........ Starllner S1800/bolh. Good · " Cond. 52&-2514 or 54fr-20U '67 Pontiac S\V/PB/PS i"t · D:;r.J • .......,....,, l air, au1o Iran~. pvt. pty. '&C LeMans convertible. 37.800 m1. Xlnt cond. SHl95. Good cond. S:J50 or best '67 T-BIRD LANDAU 962-7!Y.l2_______ offer. 646-2:559 F'ULLY EQUIPPI!:D i SI895. Call 846-2422 I 'G8 FIRF.BIRD. U. S. n1ags, 1vide ovAl !ires, stereo, mist STUDEBAKER '55 T-Blrd, lurq. color, id gl'C'i>n S2200 oroffer, 646-9161 --·· ----cond. Askini ;U95. Call t af1 7 P~·! '60 Studebaker convert!ble. 963--5844. Your local Super-r.!arkel.. Very good cond. Chrome e 'SST-BIRO e Dial 642-5678 & charre 1t. \\:heel6. $200 firm. 962-4186 Sell or. trade, alt 6: 548-8506 Please call 642·5678 ext. 329}-~~;:;~~~=;;;=-:.,;~~~~====~;...;:;=::::;=:=:;;,;~::=::::;: 1>e11.1·f'f'n !l nnd 1 PM to clalml:U~·~•~d~Cii;;;•';'iiii;a;;~99~0-0~~U~·~•d!;iC~·~·~·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9900;;ii~U~t~ad~~C~•~rsim;iiiiiiiiiiii9900iiiiii your rickC't~. •Norlh Countyll toll-fr .. oombe• ;, 54-0-l2'0). WE HAVE THE • 1600'1 • 2002 tirl!s, new paint, Jo ml. $399. ru In, 36,000 mi. $2200. 546--0136. :i.'16-8221 '6!1 .JAVELIN SST'. VII, 11u10 l.;:,~;======-=========I floor shif1 , p.s, RIH S2150. yrlln\\·/blk inter. 67l-2687 1965 Belved<'T"f' Llkt" new. lit· I e '64 C11tallna 4 dr auto, 11f1 7, Hf' over 14,000 mi. 2004 Pep· P/~. P/B. Very aood cond. '66 ~fUSTANG, Signal-fiatt pt'rlrtt l.n. Apl 8, CM. $450. 675-49(5 BEST SELECTION OF BMW's • 2500 ·~,.w COSTA MESA HONDA s::N •' 40 MllU t Pll GAUDM • Fronl Dl1c l r1•n • Full Ct'l"fl"I •. 7~ Mf'M 9 4 1,.M Tr111s. 'GREAT SELECTION FOR' IMMEDIATE _DEL IVERY .. I 1 UNIVERSITY t OLDIMOllU ·h50 HAAIOI ILVD. COSTA MISA 540-9640 ' I 67l-1 570 TT'd, auto tranl!, 28,300 mi. V~-2119 reg i!'.&.!i. $1S50 . Used C•r• 9900U1ed Cert 9900 LINCOLN 54 5- 7 6R:-. iii'iiiiiiii-'""iiiiiiiliiiiiiiii;iiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiil-iiiiil '6.' l\1USTANG Fas I back $895 1962 LINCOLN Contlnent11I SedRn. Radio, hl'ater, RU!omatle tr11nsmis- !lion, full powt'r, f11ctory 'air, Uk~ new, musr SCt' 10 ap- preclale. Llc. IGG 130 DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD. 64~9303 e 1968 CONTINENTAL, like new. '1 Dr., 11hr !nl<'rlor, full power & alr-cond., tiit s'trr \\•hi, p rlr. locka, elec wndws, w/1/w tires, r1dlo. Good gas. mileage. Pi.lark I II <'60 motor. Utmoat 1n comfort. A beauty to own & driw! Seti II, buy It! 53850. Dr. Robert Roper, ,,._.,.. MERCURY Stick, radio + mag whttl1. S69.5. AH. 5: 00 644-0236 '69 Mu1tang Mach I, {351' Alr. gfereo radio, p/11, p/b. Asklnjt S2795. 49.1--3291. ·s,1 Mustang Good cond Lo Mile.s 1000 * 548-91.66 * '69 Shelby convt. 12.000 mi's, Lo11df!CI. Make offer * 54R-J203 * ·r.s MUSTANG. vs. 3-spd, Styled .,.,,his.Me Ii cul out; ca~. $950, 54.~3646 '65 Mustana fll!tblck, 4-spd, p.b., p.1... f11c air, new tlm, lo mi's, S1295. 962-7440 '66 MUSTANG V8, auto, p.~ .• vinyl top, Xlnt. S 11 7 5. ..,__ ~ Co~nw-,rt-. "'M"',-, .. ~-.... - Great.condlllon $1100 833-1213 ew1. '68 11.!USTANG, ai r, $200 1966 ~1 ERCURY Park.Jane equity i,.. take over pmnts. 11.T. P/s, P/b, p/wndws Call S41-44l7 Ir i;eats. Alr'(ll]ncl. Landau I ==="'°"~~~-=~ top. $ll95. 53&-21:16 CLEAN '85 Musllllf. R/H. P.fERC Cyclor'W.' :tOO ·~n<lne. wire wi'\ffli,-S960. -• 96.WlJG . Len than l(XX) ml, iricludln1 Hurst trans .\ link. $350. 567-STO!I arter 5 pm '&I 11.fl'rc . .,.,,/11tr. new paint. Sh11:rp! $595. 5'8-2981 OLDSMOBILE ---'62 -M FUU.. pwr, ,,•.,., Mw um •. tmmA c. To ('1oge •n @llate, S56(1, 66--0376 1 ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST TRANSPORTATION CENTER ALL MAKES I. MODELS 1'57°1967. No reasonable offer refused on Over 100 Cars WI CARIY OUI: OWN CONTU.CTI Ev1ryot11• of At• I E111ploy od C•n '"'" A C•r At An,kor Molo" e EVEN IF YOU HAVE NO CREDIT e E·I IUOGET TERMS e WEEKLY, SEMI WEEICLY I MONTHLY PAYMENTS e DIVORCED -NO Jl:EO TAPE '60 THUNDIRllRD V-1, 111tor111tlc, ,.cl;a, h1tt1r, 1lr ,011ditio"l119 !KHX·7ltl. 'tt CA DILLAC v.1, •lo'tO"'tllc. r1dla, .... ,., IGfW.6971. "41 CADILLAC 'I.I, •11lom1li,, r•dlo, h1•!1r. ,;, 'orwl. '40 YW l:1dio, h••f•r ll''IW.177). $179 $99 $299 $299 "' """" ' $A'VE Co11w1rt. Alo'lo., r1dio, k1•l•r l •tlllll. 'U LINCOLN $399 Co"tin•"'•I, full pow1 r '"'•I• fJ RH0 llf), 51 Hibl• f:1p1"ol AU Ct" 't"'' T.f • Lictft•• .. Anchor Motors 0 ... 1 """' 546~3oso • IN ORANGE COUNTY • 2800 • 2800 cs e ALL COLORS We have a financin g pl1n to flt your budg1t . Com• In ind talk wi th on• of our experienced coun1elo r1. e ALL MODELS '61 PORSCHE MECHANICS ~~E_!;:!'-.!.,. ""'""· ~ $1795 11!1'19 owr. llul rlffd1 llOhl mt(f!1111UI -k. lll:Hlo, hWl- l r. 10~1. e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '57 vw $ """ "" -.... ,.,. 647 • 100~ n'r111tn an 111rta •M !lbOr for •.ooo mlla or 6 ll*lt'lll, M19 whltl1, .WI Wiii. P1rlecl nndUIOnl INHI "61. • ~"! .... V: .... "'"· ..... $1595 ''4 vw 11111 r1r. klolci tl'ld drl~ .. Ok• lltrdlll, hw11r. toOd tlrtt. MW 1 11ctory fr1,ii cir. rs111"s!. l!llnl, uc1!1"1.I ~•nJttl '°"' !,.;~~;;;~~==~"-''--..-I dll\ofl, (,.AM,,11. '65 PORSCHE $299 lrll'ICI -ll!llM not ~ mll1 .,, 111 llactlll, h"llr, I~ rnlC-lllt t'lll'Olll!hOUI , 'Nl\91 I llMlltYI C0021l. '65 vw COl'l'l'tf'11blt, AM.,.Nt. h"""' II*' o,.. (lt0Vf7'). '61 vw Jl:.cj19, Mlllr, UltlOl"I 11"~· lrlf .,...I, 111t1lltM mtth. CMl!lllolo. OCIZll•! '67 FIAT · .Joe Berlotti'1 T&M MOTORS IOI! GARD EN GROV E BLVD. SALIS OPlfrrf IU NDAY PARn , SIRYICI TUIS,. ll'fUH. flLL 1100 IJ .. 1214 (1/J Ilk. I. of .... , ln·Sl~l ' rn "' :c ,. :=!I' .,, I lft "' .... I .,, rn ' . z n -.... -·z .... :c m , E '" "' ... ·-·- VACA,,ION DISCOUNTS MUSTA NG SALE 20 to chooM from. '66 tftru 7 0 models. Coupn, Nirdtops, con- wnl!Q ond 2 + 2 f-cks. 5ot1)0 with 4 spood'1, obo air con· dltionlnt ...... ~ models. EXAMPLE: ' ' ; . · . 1967 MUSTANG HARDTOP . VI, euto"lt,.c, ,_..,, 1ftt ri119, radio, het tt r-ITSS.1691. au $ . PRltE .1399. . 65-~~~.!. ·.,.!~.~~.~~ .... s.s. . P.S., RlH, t ir cond. INGC910 L -------- '63 OLDS ST ARFIRE 2 door, HT. F1dl powtr, ftcfory t ir co1tclifio11in9. 1WX92921 RENT A CAMPER D•lvwt 111f co11fti•td u111pt n i ncl ~•tor """"' for l1milv fun o• 1 f1111ilJ h11cl91t. 111111"'1 cl1ltr totla'f. A.lit dtily ctr r111t1h II low I I $6 ,., "'" 1iwl " '" 111111. • • AMIRI CAN EXPRESS • • • . . Everybody 's Doing It! - Whenewr you b&,y a MW c•r during official facto'l ~leanup time, you're going to 11ve 11 bundle.. Th•r•'• "" donylng It. So oll wo ••Y is, look i round bUt, betofe you-actually make • the dt_al , consider ~re Robin•' • • • . 1. DISCOUf'!.TS - v._.111 .,, .. they'r• unbeatable wherever you shop. • 1 • . - 2. s~L·ec!ioN > r:--. ... ·· Why t•k• • model or .Olar y0u """'I .... Hy want when we have one of the Southli1ncf1 biggest 1970 model lnventorlM to choose frf!M? ' I 3. BACKUP • ! • Since 1921 Theodore Robins Ford hes op. erated under the ume ownership. Your investment is backed bv.,almost 50 Y••rs of know how and intesrfty. _ WHY NOT ADD SATISFACTION TO YPUR SAVINGS • · •. WHEN IT'S FREE? •• A THEODORE ROllNS EXCLUSIVE LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SIAL Oil THE VllNDSHIELD! 100%· PARTS AND LABOR WAR~NTY 4000 MILES OR 90 Dl-YS • ' ' . c .............. ~· I ••• ...... -. . .... ... .... -· Pi.VJ~ ......, ....... .,...... .... ..,.., --" ..... .. "' ... ...-••r' ,, L J 0 TRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT! '10 DODGE SPORTSMAN Window van. VS, auto., R&H, 1~" wheel base. (772ASKJ 4 spttd, l'adio, heit.lf!r, new '67 SHELIY 2 + 2 paint. excellent cond.. (UEN514l '67 PONTIAC GTO VS, auto., R&H, P.S., Factory air, vinyl roof. (UZT041) s179 5 GOODV ff:R TIRE CEN TER . ALL SIZES e SPEC IAL TAKE OFF PRICES e BLEMS e POL YGLASS WIDE OVALS e TRUCK AND CAMPER TIRES. !1JlEPARE NOW FOR A SAFI VACATION! ' I • • ., OVER 2 ACRES OF , Fl~E TRADE INS TO CHOOSE FROM ·WAGON SALE! 10 to choose from. '63 thr u '6r models. 6 & 10 ptnenget". Some fully equipped with full power and air condition ing. EXAMPLE : 1966 COUNTRY S(j)Ul~E 10 PA~SENGER Vii t llhmlttic. ,._, •ittrint, powt r wllldows, rtclio, htt .. r, low ll'liltl. (TEY· 521). . . P~I~~ 51195 • 1968 DODGE ~ TON w/1970 Al.A$KAN. CAMPER + l'lc•up 1q1,1ipptcl wifti ·\1-1, t11fo, R•H. C•mptr is f11Uy 9111111lpp~ tM r.t ,cly to f..- (65414Dl "67 "68 . -SAVE ~~-- ~~~.~~~~~! .. ~~~!.-~u~s1-6-9-5~·, ITYW9)4) SHELBY $2199 $2/95 '68 ~.~.?.!.~~.~~'''~AMPER-?95 (61CS406l. ---'70 ~,~!~.R.1.~~ $1 899 l ikt ntw. IYWT217J "67 /,~ \ master Cllarge ' Y.. ./ • CHEVRON ~v~~ .. l !D=-.,.-... -•.• -..• -.... ----s.-:1=-6~9~9~. ·-· Yinyl rool. CTAN901 I _ PERSONALIZED FINA NCING lei tllr fi111n'1 1•p1rh ht lp 'I''" clrivt th t cir you w11! 011 !ht 1111111 y111 Wt•I lo p1y. W1~ fl11111c1 throu9h 1111• of Am•ric1. F.r-4 M,tfof Crtdlt Co., N1wP*ff N1titn1I -1111 .. S1c11rify l'tciflc ltnk. Uri!tff Ctlifornit 11111!. PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON I PART$ DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 6 PM SATURDAYS 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI