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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-08-20 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa..
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NeWport Yacht Wins Big
In A1nerica ~s Cup Trial·
THURSDAYAFTE RNOQN,;AllGUS't 20, '1970
VOL 6l. 1110. ,,,, I JllCTIONS. .. , ......
• • ans·on a1 om :a1n •, . 0 ,
•
Kop echnes
Critic ize
NEW YORK (AP) -The motller o!
'Mary Jo Kopechne. bas questiooed the
behavior ol two trt.,.is ol Sen. Edward
M. Kemedy -l1i4 -thol took ll<t ~'f lifo i.t -'· wrltmg in the curmit lliue• ol'Mce.rt•s
"81mrie, Mrs. "'8dme alllo said she
believed X.nnolf's-!IAS)' jhal be was
driving Mary Jo to ~ ferry on Oiap-
paquiddick 1slancl '""" be took a wronc
turn and his car plunaed off a wooden
brjdge. MiSI KQpeClme drowned. Kennedy
escaped serious injury 'bUt did-not report
the accident to aut.harif;ies for several
hours.
Mrs. Kopechne wi.I highly critical of
the Inquest into the accident Referring lo
Judge James A. Boyle's statement that
be believed Kennedy ~ad lied about his
destination, lhe wrote :,
"This cooclusion, 1bY a man who didn't
know Mary Jo, leaves•a bad taste in our
mouths, and we lb!JOlutely reject it and
any implications that :now from it."
1be behavior ~·s two frierids,
Joseph Gargan aul Markham, ls in-
erplicable and waa explained at the
Inquest, Mrs. KoJ)e:cboe said. She asked
why they did not call authorities when
Kennedy, having escaped from the
submerged car ,,aurnmoned them to help
him try to rescue Miry Jo.
"This is the bi& hurt." Mn. Kopechne
wrote, "the nigh.tmare we have to live
with for the rest.of our lives: that Mary
Jo was left in the waier for nine hours.
She didn't belong thete."
Markham, reached for C01JlIDent in
Boston, said: "I gave \fhat I thought was
all the facts t am •'flare of under oath
at the inquest, which 1s now a matter of
public in formation. I don't want to com·
ment further on it."
Mrs. Kopechne said she believed the
senator was in shock after the accident,
thus explaining hls.11failure to notify
authorities. But she ~d that his friends,
"both cool-headed Ia.ryers," did not even
call Edgartown to .see if Kennedy was
sale on Martha's Vineyard alter be swam
from Chappaquiddick.
Abortion Case
Nixed by.Court
The Calilomia Supreme Court has
refused to hear a challel1ge or the state
abortion law sought by a Santa Ana doc-
tor under lndktment for al!ege(f]y ·
perfonning aborUons Illegally.
Dr. John Gwynne and two female
assistants. one of them his mather, are
facing the charges in Santa Ana
Municipal Court. ~~ In the Supreme Court appeal, 18.wytfs
for Gwynne had contended the COi').
lroversial Therapeutic AboMn Act is
unconstiluUonal 1od hod previ<>.Wy
Pointed to the current New Yogrlt abor·
tion law claiming the californla statute
can no long r apply to any woman who
sceb to end her pregnancy in a doCtor's
clinic.
Gwynne petitioned for d~missal of tho
Grand Jury indtctments, saying statutory
prohtbitions of abortions violate both the
state and (ederal consUtuUons.
The court's refUMl ca.me withoul com·
mcnt. Similar petitions bad previously
be<n deoled by the Muoicipal court aod
the Slate CO\lrl of Aj>pUls.
Death Trap for Six Freeway Blo~k
Measure Killed •
U~I Ttl#IMM
By L PETER ltl\IEG
Of ""' DlllY ,lllt Satl
SACRAMENTO -The Badbam bill
died a quick and bitter death ln the
Se.nate Tramportallon Comm It tee
Wednesday. .
' Joa I rooul~ tho ......... ~ l:..t I f'rOe .. _ay mile aJoow ~ Budlls
....!lloe moved 1l leul"1 llltle cloetr lo
• reaUty.
'Ille coriimiu.e ldloo, which foUo1re4
only 10 minulel o! -ny. bad ID Im-
mediate devastating e ff e c t on
As!emblyman Robert E. Bodbam (R.
Newp<>rt Beach) and auppo;ters ·of tho
bill.
His backers, mostly 1Newpgrt 'Beach.in-
terests, were crushed when ~ t to 5
committee roU call vote was announced.
Seven affirmative votes were needed to
move th&. bill out onto the Senate floor,
The final act of announcing the vote
came only after Badharn issued an
a1most unprecedented J.a.st..minute plea,
after the vote had been ta.ken, to allow
Fifemen hose down smo1dering wreckage of con-
vertei:I school bus-in which six persons on a camp..
ing trip burned to. death Wednesday near Palm
Springs. Four other· persons suffered
third degree burns. See story, page 8.
second and
amendments to be offered -thereby
keeping the bill alive.
He wanted to add a proviskm requiring.
the State Division of Hi.ghways to study
alternate routes. • ,. ,•
Intrepid Scores
Big Victery
In Cup T~als ~
"By AIMON ~BEY
Of lfM DtllY-P$llt SMfl'
NEWPORT, R. I. -Skipper Bill Ficker
of Newport Beach rapimed Intrepid over
the 24.3-mlle Ameriea1s eup course
WedneSday to beat,~George 11inman's
Wea\herly by a wboppill( ~ven minutes
and 31 seconds.
' It was anoq>er bri&ht sunahiny day on
Rhode Island Sound with the southeaster·
ly 11ihd !ibljig inl eor!Y .al abou~ lfknols.
-# Chfrlle Morgan1s Herita(e, was beaten·
by Bob McCullougb'a Valiut to the tune
of CU'ee minUtt.e antf '41 seconda after
trailing the New York. yacht by only 57
seconds at the first weather mark.
Heritage was flying a protes:t flag at
the finish, claiming Valiant violated the
wlndward.Jeeward rule 30' seconds before
the slart. · ft , •
It appeared ,that Valiant,. weather
bGat altered cOurse to faU down on
Heritage.
Heritage's biggest loss came at the
start ~t the firs~ spiMaker leg w~n she
hoistt!f .the chute In a light wrap and look
nearly three minutes to pt it set again.
VaUant ,ripped a chute on the same leg
but had a.new one set ud drawing in a minute and a haU.
1n today'irace Intrepid metts Heritage
and Valialt goe» agains' her trial horse
Weatherly. Dockllde experts are guessing
that if Intrepid and Valiant wtn their
~atcbes today the &election oornmi~ 1
may elimh\ate Heritagetand Weathtrly.
Thlii would leave a loog draWll oul day
lo day ballle between' V,allanl and
Intrepkl until the committee makes its
!Ina! selectlcn IOmeUme by Sepl. 13.
After todaylt race11 the selectio11 co~
mittee 'fill ma,ke up pairin11 for tbe next
(See CUP TRIAl.8, 1'11e I)
f I
Charlie Te lls of Jail
Shakedo wn Humil iation
The move drew immediate objectlons
from committee members Senatora
James E. Whetmore (ft...Garden Grove)
and Alfred E. Alquist (l).San Jose), two
chief opponents of the measure.
They suggested Badbam instead ln-
tnXluce a resolution calling for·a study of
alternate possibilities.
Badham wanted no part of this,
pleading for the special consideration aod
again asking C.Ommittee Chairman Ran-
. LOS ANGELES (uPI) -Charles nection wilb the slayings. Aller com-dolph COilier ([).Yreka) oot lo formelly ~fanson took the witness stand at the pleting her testimony she held a news con. announce the vote.
TatP.-LaBlanca murder trial today to ference to discuss her future and made Senator Collier, despite his support for
complain bitterly about.the "humiliation" these points: the biU, found himself hemmed in by the
to which he said he was subjected in the -She plans.to live in "the wildemeM '' insistent objectiomh loblthell reqlif uebst and county .jail. "lh h 1 h ldr formally ended t e 's e 'I an-Wl er wo young c l en and conUnue nouncing the vote.
Dressed in priaon denims, his beard · the life or a hippie. Badham and other supporters, bitterly
and hair stringy and unoombed., the 35---She wbhes Otarles Manson and his disappointed , had Utile to say in the
year-1>ld ex-convict testified outside the three female ~ codefendants would •·get capitol halls afterwards.
presence of the jury on his motion to down on their knees and beg for . ft·all happened 50 fast, they seemed too
order the county sheriff to cease and for;glveness" but she does not believe ~......l lo nt desist the ·"harassme.ilt•PI Of the delen· they ale capible"ofdoln'g·.sO. · .... _.-• stu,~JYU comme ·
dant . -She will oot "rejo~ her husband, The hearing, scheduJed for 2 p.m .• M~nsOn described "'a "shakedown" Robert. He Is going his way -to Mexico finally began aboul i 2:45 p.m. and 10
which h~ said he undergoes a number or -and she is going hers.~ . _,. minutes later ~nator . Collier called on
t. d · hlch h la" u II -She does nol Intend lo lak Badham to present his case. He gave unes every ay m w e •es o a drugs again· or join hi elver e both sides five minutu and by 3:10 p.m. his clothes, opens ms mouth, wiggles his . a pp e commune. the committee was rushing out.·a aide
tongue\,tums his head to show reach ear, But she feels hippies will not resent her doo to turn to lhe Senate chambers ra~ Is anns to show there is nothing accµslna Manson and his group. r re . ·nl
in J.tis .arm~ shakes his hair, lilts one -She hopes to "find' God" and in so Besides Assemblyman Badbam, 0 Y toot aM Oien UliitHer. ......-..doing-tcr-work-witlrchlldren. -----four..peraons...wem.allowed!lo_addrea the
"lt is symbolic or humiliation," he said. -She Js "not going to worry'' about
''Jt's like k.jcking a dead.man." Manson seeking, veilgeance.
MaMOn also testified that when he -She hopes the ~ young people of
spoke "With his attorney in jail an officer America will learn from her experience
alway.s wa.s present and wheil he at-arKI" "take another path.'"
tempted to pass any written com-FolloWing Mrs. Kaublan on the stand
munication to the lawyer the officer read was Ttmot~ Ireland, an ln!tructor afthe
Woman Killed
By Bolting Horse
it first. Westlake SChool for Girls about hall a
He satd a guard al.so was present when mile from the Tate estate. The wife, of,,a•Hunt~ Belch~docio.r
he talked to protpe<:Uve-witnesses aod Ireland said oo tho night of the slaying wgaas110tJ.ldlM ~'!~;,itr" 01Y1J~ ..... • . .here'~.~. 1e within ~t of their. conversation. a number or girl.s were having a campout t"-ltdJ.,""" ....,. ••u~ u.ocl:fo'-
The. .t'a(e11 star witness, Linda Kasa--on the acbool ground.a and he was fence ~ · 1 _ ~ "' ' • '
bian, concluded her tdtl-y Wednesday supervWng them. At aboul 12:4$ a.m. Mrs: Dixle .1J9ir 1!oll'l'an, U«ili
after 18 days on the witness stand and Aug, t, 1969 be heard a man's voice Aladdin Qrlve, JfurlUngton 'ffllbb;tlf, died
said she would continue her life as a hiPo screaming: · of hea,d: in)uries at .f:4$ p.rW.' at SOu~
pie. . ''Oh God, no, please don 't. Oh, please • Coast ~Hospital; ·Sou.th I Laguna, •bol.iL •
Bul 1he says she will never take drugs don't. don't. don't, dbn't. Please don't." seven hours 1after·tbe •cddenL ·
again. The ·prosecuUon wlt.neu said be check~ Cotoher's ' investigators aald the ac--
Mrs. ,f{asablan was followed by three • ed to make sure "the IOUDds had oot come cident occurred at the COto·Dtt-Cu.a Hunt
eye w1toesses who substantiated In every from any. of the young women and then Ctub In Trabuco CUyon •hen btr rteed
delall covered In the~ leaUmony tho drove lll"OW1d bul could find nothing bolted and she ellbeo Jumped or was
story she told dW"ing her, long ordeal on wrong 90 he returned to the IChool. thrown off.
the stand. The next witness, Rudolph Weber, Her husband, Dr. Frank V, Hoffman,
Mrs. Kasablan was granted immunity · wh<R home Is .not fat from th6 Ta~ practices ad\llt and chUd paychiatry .in
from J>toaecullon for her parl In co11-(See TATE, Pop I) Huntio&lon Beacb •
• '
~--durlnC the briel"bwhlc that
seemed almest anUcllinM'tlc aft.er the
w~ of pJanning and poatpmmwnta.
Qnly Mrs. -pb Beek,,..-.of tho
formoe ~ of the -. .,. ~ -<;111 OowlP-"8-' JlollrllPll!l•'81!111"'1•.:
· Spe1tJ01. ID ~ were ~--(IWl-linliool _, mt Al s. .i:ocli; orolip
CoantJ roAd commiaionrr,
Barke'• appe.-.nce • drew a1tkJlll
from ladbam, who aid)! •'8 "'IPS•W
at ID assembly coDeque a.p ,e.arJ01
befbn! the Senate lo cljpoee a.l1lll, •
liilrb bad Lola the ainmfflee.11111.ll K
. killed the ""-rlr<im·Beach,Jl"ojllo!UJI
Jn llunllngton1Beach lo the ...--.
dary .• t Newport Beach, it would -
tho planning efforts o! • mapber of dUea.
He said Huntlnglon Beach, c.ota M...,
Fountain Valley and Laguna Beech ....
looking forward to the freeway."
He sald, ""nley ,have invested.Ume an4
mooey" plannlng arouncMbe -rj>u!t
and said it would cause hanilbi11 If this
leCtion was deleted. ~
Koch Introduced a deleiatioo ol. OnoP
Coast olficlals in the pller1 wloo -11,
there oppoolng the bill, includlnC Coilllly
Supervisor Alton E. Allen, La1UM Beidi
Mayor Richard Goldberg, Coltar-
Mayor Robert Wlllon and FountalD
Valley City Manager Jame. Neal, ' ·
K_och lold the panel that they wwld ·bl:
leaving five· dead-end freeways pObstliig
lowanl the coast In Orange County bY.
killing the Newport Be1cb segment.
He Pointed out that of the 10-inile
stretch afl.ected in the Badham bill. a
formal route had already been accpted
and' adopted for au but three miles -u.
sectfon between the West Newport bell>'.
dary and Bayside drive. ~
Badbam, ccuntering thlr, pointed o--u i
that a citizens committee is already mov ..
ln1 to force Newport Beach to r!:ldnd the
agreement on the four-mile .atretcb from ,
the Back Bay lo the Corona de! -cl11. limits. . -
Kocb pointed oul lbat the slllO ~
-fl$ ml\Jlon worth ol ~· along the adOpted. rouie 1ad -"!bot
(See FREEWAY, Pi.llil)
Orure
•it I ; t.·•
J OAIU PILOT s TIM!rldaf, Auttnt 20, 1970
• ,.....,.. Mt•ter !
Badham Pledges
He,-11 Try Again
' .
'lllere II --!bu ... Wl)' lo klll • ,,,,._ ......
And'~ ROOert E. Badbam
'(R,Newport Beach), -move lo have
the L.egl•.._ c:ommlt the slayfn& of •
Pacl!lc Coat Fn!two)' soctloo failed
IV~, bu vowed lo !ind IMlber.
But be11 have lo hurry. State Ilivbloo of
Jli&)iwl)' officials said loday the start of
constNctloo of the Newport._..,, the
ColUI -........... for the !mil
lllcll ,.r.
-.; ...... ,..41. Hlf 11111 promllo Illa' the Senato
Tra.OiportoUoo Committae rtjecta4 his
* * * P.-P .. el
• FREEWAY ••.
StSO million baa boin opent plannlill for
the route.
He also noted that ll\e two freeway
segments already deleted, one through
Venice and the other through Beverly
Hills, did not tnvolve adopted rilutes.
In his closing testimony, Badham
\!olunteered to take t b e political COO·
eequeQeea of the blU. ·
PoiDUng out that his district covered
lerritory other than just Newport, t.r-
nlo!} -local ofllclals wanted the lreew17. he told the committee, .. I have
lo Ide the pollUcal rilk In the lace ol my
constituents."
He staked his position on the view,
''Where a freeway does not belong, a
freeway does not belong."
As it enters Newport Beach from the
oorthwest, the propooed conlrpvenlal
route cul.a almost directly towards the
shore and conUnut.1 through the city oloog some real estat. bordering ezistlng
Coast Highway.
In pleading to. be allowed to offer the
amendment, Badham first had tried to
lnlerrupt the actual voting when he saw
bow it wu· going.
Committee members d e ma n de d
Sena~ Collier not permit him to speak
until the vote wu completed and .
Badham had to wait until the 4 to 5 coont
wu completed.
He enttred his . futile last-dilch plea
before the vote wu announced, momen-
tarily givin& rbe lo aupporters' hopes.
Voting tn favor of the motion to aJ>-
prove the bill. a motion made by Sen.
Efowml Way (fl...Ereter), were Senator•
Jotepb 1\1, ~k.(D.l.ong Booch) and
lames R. Mills ([).San llleio), ln a<Jdi.
Mon lo C.llltr ond Way.
~ were Sens. Fred W. Marler,
Ir., (J\.Roddln1l. Lewis F. Sherman (R·
Ian Dieio) and Ralph C. Dills (D-Oar·
dtna), Jn addlUon. to' Wbetmm-e and AJ.
quilt. • . •
Abaent !rom , !he eommlttee hearin1
were Sen1 •• Thomas Camll (0-San
Fernando). Milton M'arb (R-San Fran-
i:i!eo) al)!! .11¥ Short (()Stockton). ·
B1dham had aald earlier that Carrell
Ind Maro 1upp0rted !he bill, allhough he
wou:Jd. ti.Ye needed aff11tt11Uve votes
from all three to gain passa1e.
Sen. Wbebnore allo spoke against the
bill befoi'J the vote was taken.
Alt.r praising Ammblyman Badham's
ellorta In wortJnr lor his leghlalion,
Wbebnore observed that Vr'hi.le Newport
Beach raidenta do not want it, "the
sreat maJority of the people of Orange
County want thil freeway."
Probably ·the most dramatic testimony
tame bun Mrs. Beek, whose late hua.
band bad been known well by those whom
&be ldd.rraed.
bill to eliminate the Pacllk: COut
Freeway through Newport Beach. wu to
take the city 's pU&bt to Govemo!'
Reagan.
Badham taid he would ask the
.covemor to remove funds from the
budget for that 16Ction of the frMW_ay
when it OO!D'3 up for con.UrucUon.
That, according to Wallace Knutsen,
district design engineer for the Highway
division, b only tbnoe yean ofl.
.Kmrtaen said tllla morning that !her•
.,. llO IUods In the c:ornnt 11'1\).71 budget
for actual constructbl of the freeway.
anywhere In Orange County and said
nooe will likely be Included In the -budiel to be a!!gpted by the lllghwl)'
division ln October.
Knutsen dloclooed that the Newport
8'<lion may be the first on th• stat.'•
priority Jn the i:ounty, howev,.., and that
the road -w be ~ lrom the plan-
ned Newport F'Meway (Rout. $!) Jn.
ter<hange and built aouth through
Capistrano.
. Ma aaid by .the, time.it re.aches that far
down, coostruction would also have begun
northerly int.o Huntington Beach.
AU this, Knutsen stressed, b according
to present prioriUes which could be
changed at any lime.
He said that construction of the
Newport Freeway through Costa Mesa to
die coast would likely oot be started
berore the mid ot' late 1970s.
Badlwn, boweoer, insbts that !he cur·
rent Pacific C.out freeway Foute, along
the Coast Blgbway in Newport, ii against
recommendations of a special task f~e
appointed by Governor Reagan to study
effects of freeways on environment.
He abo said that the federal govern·
ment, throultt the e ff or ts of
Transportation Secretary John Volpe, L~
moving to cut out funds f o r
superhighways that ''would run down
people's beaches."
Badbam also wu quick to cite the er~
forts of the newly-formed Citizens
Coordinating Committee in Newport
Beach that has begun to circulate peti·
lions that will force the Newport City
Council to rescind Its agreement wilt! !he
State Division of Highways.
The city has signed an agreement
adopting the actual route of the coasta l
freeway east from Bayside drive to the
city limit! at Corona del Mar.
Under the initiative petition, the council
would either have to rescind the agree-
ment on ita own or put the question to a
vote of the citizenry.
The CCC is also circulating a relat~
petition that would require a clty-wide
vote on a charter amendment lo require
the council to conduct a referendum
before it signs another agreement.
Signatures ol 15 J1eree91 ol the elec·
t.orate are needed to force the council to
act on both matters.
Other reactions to Wednesday's com·
mlttee action were as expected.
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth hur·
ried from the capitol to catch a taxi to
the airport. He would say only, "I am
8011')' it went the way it did."
Mayor Robert Wilson of Costa Mesa,.an
opposition leader, was obviously pleased.
He applauded Assemblyman .Robert H.
Bur.kt (&-Huntington Breach), for his
wort in defeaUna: the measure, although
not bestitating to comment thal the bill's
sponsor. Assemblyman Badham, had
!ought hard fo r legislation he believed in.
Mayor Wilson said the committee,
however. had little cllolct but to do what
it did, pointing to widespread opposition
ID the bill.
SEEKS WIL DERNESS HOME
Witne11 Linda Kas•bian
F ron• Page 1
TATE ...
residence, said be was awakened about 1
a.m. Aug. 9, 1969, by the sound of run.
ning water and thought there was
something wrong with his plumbing.
He said he discovered the garden hose
was running_ He said he saw four young
persons, one man and three girls. He
testified he asked the young man. "Just
what the hell do you . think you are
doing?" and the man replied. "Hi, we 're
jUJt getting a drink of water:•
He said they gol into their car and that
he .reached in the window as if to grab
the key! but actually he was hoping tq
scare them oft He said the mM drove
-41way at a high rate of speed.
The third prosecution witness wu Jim
• Alin. 16, a neighbor, who said be saw
MW! Tate's maid. Winifred Chapman,
running out of the estate fOT help lat.er in
the dey of the slayings.
It W&! the maid who dlscovert.d the
bodies.
Bod y Identified
As Fullerton Man
The nude body of a young man found
Satw'day in the San Bernardino Moun-
tain.! bu been identified as that of Gary
Stepben Laci<, %1. ol Fullerton.
Lack's body wu found by a hiker in
Deer a-eek Canyon in a remote area 40
miles east of Victorville.
Sberilf'1 deputies, wbo brought the
body out by helleopter. said the youth ap-
parenUy bad been livin& in a e1ve In the
area. '
The cause of death ls under ln-
veatfll"'8. ldentificatiqn .wu mlde, lhioulb flngerprlnli and deinal <harts.
East Europe Leaders
Hold Kremlin Parley
MOSCOW (UPI) -A conference of
seven Eut European leaders 'ended this
afternoon aft.er five hours of dlscwslon
and unanimoull endorsement of the
recenUy concluded Soviet·West German
treaty, communillt sources said.
The meeting of the Warsaw Pact
powers was opened by Leonid J.
Brezhnev, general secretary of the Soviet
Communist party, in the Kremlin at 10
a.m. It met continuously with one break
for lunch and adjourned at S p.m.
Her talk WU abort, and lo the point.
"I have lived In Newport Beach for 50
rears," she Uk.I, "and this freeway
would ruin our city.
From P .. e J
"l can't stand by and see that happen."
Councilman Ro1er1 likewise was brief,
1aytng, .. You can talk about the integrity
1f the freeway 1y1tem, but al what cost!,
tnd to whom?"
He asked the committee to "Unwind
wbll has been done, then seek alternate
tolutions."
DAILY PILOT
OU.NGI Co.t.ST l'Ull.ISIUMG COMl'ANV
A•'I•'' 1'1. Wt.4 ,. ........ , .... ,...JM,tr
J•clr l . Cvrltv
Yk• ,.,..:.a.., Mid Ge""•' lllf .......
'"'"''' ic, •• 11 ......
f\o"''' A. M11,,t.i11•
M ..... lrlt 161W
Aith•f4 P. N•ll
SWiii °'""" c:-tl' ,,,.., ........ c .. 1. M..-~ J» Wt1I S•Y llNI! H..,....• 9Hdl1 nu WMt .... , """"""' 1."""' t.K111 m .._. •-fMtllnf!M allldlr U'UI .. Kfl 1~1'111
.... '""-""; -Nwtfl ll ~ ... 1
CUP TRIALS ...
three races. There will be no raclng on
Sunday.
Ficker lost ground to Hinman oft unly
one leg of the course. After building up a
lead ol 4:53 at the end of the triangle he
lost over a minute on the next windward
leg but more than made It up on the run
to the fifth mark where he held a 5: 14 ad-
vantage.
But the new that had the water front
buZJing here Wednesday was the protest
lodged by Sir Frank Packer, head ol lht
Au,stralian syndicate, agalnft the meag...
unng of hJs own and the French yacht.
on the part of the Aussies to gain more
time before the start of their be.st four out
of seven elimination series with the
Frerich, scheduled (o start Friday. A pre..
vklus request for a four-<lay delay lo al •
low the Aussies more practice time was:
coldly turntd down by the French and the
New York Yaclrt Club America's Cup
cohunittee.
But If the protest Is allowed by the
International Yacht Racing Union com-
mittee. under which tile Aussies and
French will race thelr--elifnination, It
rould possibly gahl them the time they
want
Here are the facts and conjectures th11l
rocked thls yachting e11pital Wednesday:
Sir Frank Packer dropped the protest.
written in longhand. al a skippers•
meeting Wednesday morning. lc.ss than 12
hours after he a:rrlved tn town.
Baron Marcel Bl.ch..head of the French
.syndicate. was fur1ous. claiming that Sir
Frank had not comulted him or his syn-
die1tt about the matter. Blch s1ld his
yacht had been mea1ured and accepted
by Bob Blumenstock, measurer for the
America 's Cup committee.
For that matter, so had the Australian
yacht. But Al1n Payne (prollOUllced Pine)
took lssue with what he c a 11 e d
Blumenstock's Interpretation of the ln·
ternational measurtmenl rule for 11
meters.
SpeciilcaUy Payne charged th a t
Blumenstock did not Inspect the deck and
i'lllerior arrangements of Gretel II wh.ich
calls for enclosed heads (water closets)
as opposed to a toilet that ls merely
enclosed with a draw curtain.
Payne claims the Aussies have gone to
great lengths to comply with every
aspect of thill and other 12-meter
measurement rules.
As lo France, Payne complained that
the fairing plates (roro the bull to the
rudder actually increased the water line
"length. Gretel does not have these so-call·
ed "fairing flaps". No mention was made
of the American yachts, but al least two
of them have the fairing flaps on their
rudders.
What does il all mean? It means that lf
the IYRU committee beaded by Dr. Dep-
pe Croce allows the protest and requires
the yachts to be remeasured it could
result in a delay ol several days before
the start of the challenger eliminations.
It might also result in a precedent
which would require Valiant and Heritage
to be remeasured. Both have the ques·
Uonable fairing strips.
An odd twist Is t~at the U.S. selection
trials are bP.ing c!onducted under the
American selection rommittee which has
no say in the protest. As far as this com·
mitlee is concerned all the American
yachts are legal 12 meters and so are the
French and Aussie boats.
Packer's and Payne's big shot ap..
peared to be at Blumenstock who has the
responsibility of measuring all yachts
which are candidates ot America's Cup
competition.
Payne claims Blumenstock b too
cU\lal about the whole thing and tn·
terprt!:ts the rule to his own thinking.
Regardless of how the donnybrook Is
resolved, you can bet that Slr Frank
Packet and Alan Payne are not very
papular around the Newport watufront
from ~1aJ's Cl11m Shack to Chry1lle'1
Restaurant to the Black Pearl.
Aeeept lJ.S. Word One Killed;
Israelis Ready Thr ee ·Hurt ·, .
' .
To Start Talks In Accident
By U1Hecl Pre11 laternaUoaal
Israel indicated today its appraent
l!ltalalacUon wJUt the U.S. reply to its
charce1 of E&YpUan wse-lire violatioo1
by lllnallng It ls rea4y to start peace
talka with the Arab states.
Diplomatic llOllrct.S in Jerusalem said
Jsrael formally asked U.N. Mediator
Gwmar V. Jarri.ni to beiin talka at the
foreign minister level and at a site other
than New York.
The lsra.eli ambassador to the U.N.,
Joseph Te.koah, aubmitt.ed the requests
from Foreign Minister Abba Eban to Jar~
ring at a meeUng In New York Wed-
nesday night.
Israeli sources said the government
was pleased by what it considered
Washington'! "partial corroboration" o[
its charges that Egypt had violated the
cease-fire by moving mlsslles closer to
the Suez Canal.
The cease-fire, now in Ila 13th day, held
along the Suez Canal.
But an Iaraeli 1poke1man aaid two
Israeli soldiers were killed and four
wounded in a battle with Arab guerrillas
in the Mt. Hernton area or the Upper
Galilee Wednesday nigbl He said the
guerrillas attacked an Israeli posiUon
under cover of a mortar barrage laid
down from the slopes of the mountain.
The spokesman also reported two
separate mortar attacks on Israeli border
setUements !rom JordM durinf: the
night.
The start of the negotiations toward a
political settlement in the Middle Ea.st
had been held up by tbe coctroversy over.
alleged cease-fire violations by Egypt.
The sources said Israel would appoint
Its representative to the talks as soon as
JarrinJ: replies Loi~ views.
Egypt and Jordan, the other parties tG
the negotiations, favOT beginning the
talks in New York at the ambaaadorial
level.
The diplomatic sources said Israel llUg·
gested the talks begin in a.Mediterranean
or European capital where both sides
would have shorter -fines of com·
munication to thelr governments. They
sald Israel suggested that a more quiet
atmmphere would be available if the
talks were not in New York.
7 PC.
Telloeli lold Jarring that Israel !ell the
talb ahould be held at forelsn minllter
level lo 'lbow wloua 11\tent Ind lend
vealer 1'tJi)tt lo !he dellberlUOM, the
sources said.
They said Jarring bad asked Eban AUi.
12 for hls vfen on where and at wbat
level the t.alka should be held, but Israel
waited to get U.S. comment on the alle1·
tit cea..flre vkllaUona.
lsr.&el was pleased with what it coo-
sidered Wuhhlngton's "partial cor·
roboration" o fthe charges and is now
ready to proceed, diplomatic IOUl'cta in
Tel Aviv said lodlj'.
Three AlTested
By Mesa Police
On Pot Charges
Costa Mesa police Wednesday arrested
three ssupects on nllJ'COtlcs chara:es and
seized a refrigttated bagful or what they
believe to be bricks or marijuana .
F.dward A. Galvan, 23, of 2032 Santa
Ana Avenue, was taken int.o custody on
charges of possession of marijuan1 for
sale. Two women, aged 19 and 20, "who
wen in the residence at the time, were
taken to Orange County Jail on charges
of being present in a place where mari-
juana was being used.
Offlcen: were Jed to the residence by a
bicyclist they had stopped for a minor'
violation. He told officers the bicycle wu
owned by a woman living at Galvan's ad-
dress.
Arrivlng at the home to obtain proof ot
the bicycle's owenership, police detected
the strong odor of what they believed to
be burning marijuana.
Police say Galvan invited the offlctr to
search but that there wu no marijuana
in the houae.
Police dl5covered four brick.! and
several ama1l bap of the suspected weed
in a bedroom refrigerator and also con-
fiscated a pipe which contained auspected
marijuana residue.
• • • A housewife was i:illed and bet~ret • • children injured Wednesday afternoon
when she apparently tried to execute a U·
turn on Pacific Coast Highway in Hun-
tington Beach and wu struck broadside
by a beer truck driven by • Laiuna
Beach Man.
Mrs. Carole Ann Conner, 31, ol Los
Angeles was pronounceU dead on arrival
at HLmlington Intercommunlty llospltal
shorOy after the 2:21 p.m. accident.
Her three children, Debra . 11, Kenneth,
5, and Stephanie 9, were listed In
satisfactory condition today.
Traffic Investigators said the beer
truck, driven by William A. Mansfleld of
180$ Arroyo Drive, Laguna ·Beach, col·
lided with the Conner vehicle at a s:peed or 40 to ~ miles per hour and imbedded
Itself in the side of the car.
Manslleld, who was unh urt, was cited
on charges of. having brakes oqi of ad-
justment. Officers cl.iam he had only one
inch of usable pedal.
Mrs. Conner apparently tried to cross a
raised center divider after leaving a
beach parking lot in lbe Bluft. area of
Huntington Beach when the accident OC·
cured.
Funeral Service
For Verner Beck
Dela yed a Week
Funeral services for Verner Beck, 77,
Festival of Arts director who died Satur-
da y. probably will not be held until early
next week, a Sheffer Laguna Beach
Mortuary spokesman said this morning.
The spokesman said he had talked by,
teJephone with Mr. Beck's brother, Carl.
from Laramie, Wy .. late Wednesi:Jay. The
brother said that the fam ily Is coming to
Laguna and will then arrange for funeral
services. he said.
Mr. Beek died at South Coast Com-
munity Hospital after suffering a stroke.
He was a former newspaper editor and
was active with the Festival of Arts. He
also served as a director of Laguna
Federal Savings & Loan Associaion.
SEMI s~~ I-V ANNUAL ~D,
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An orrongement that will bo come 1n import1nt 1l1m1nl in the total af.
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• SAYINGS on
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PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
-TIY OUl U VOLVIN• CHAlM-o,_ M.._, ,,..,.. • Fri. t-
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA. CALIF.
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H u ntington Beae
EDJlJ O N
Today's Fhud
N.Y• Steelm
* * -.
VOL. 63, NO. 199, 5 SECTIONS, 60 !'AGES ORANGE COU NTY1 CAUFORNI.( THURSDAY, AUGUST. 20, 'J.971j
Senate Committee Kills Badham Freeway Bill
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of a. 0.llY Piie! St•H
SACRAMENTO -The Badham bill
died a quick and bitter death in the
Senate Transportation Co m m i t l e e
Wednesday.
As a result, the planned Pacific Coast
Freeway route along Newport Beach's
coastline move<t at lei.st ·a little closer tO
reality.
The committee action, which followed
only 10 minutes of testimony, had an im·
mediate devastating e f f e ct on
Assemblyman Robe'ri E. Badham (R-
Newpod. Beach) and supporters of the
bill.·
His backers, mostly Newport Beach in·
te:rests, were ctuabed when the 4 to 5
committee roll call vote was announced.
Seven-iffirril.ative votes were needed. t.o
-move·the bill out onto the Senate floor.
The .final act of announcing the vote
came only after Badham issued an
almost unprecedented last.minute plea.
after the vote had been taken, to allow
amendments to be of~ered -thereby
keeping the bill allvt.
He wanted to add a provisioc ttquiring
the State Division of Highways to study
alternate routes.
The move drew immediate objections
from committee , ~ Senators
James E. Whetmore (&.Garden Grove)
and Alfred E. Alquist (0-Sau Jose), two
Desalt Plant Ol('d
chief opponents of the measure.
Tiley •uuWtd Badham Instead In-
troduce a resolution calling for a. 1tudy of
alternate pouibWties.
Badham wanted no part of this,
pleading for the special consideration and
again' asking Committee Chairman Ran-
dolph Collier (0.Yreka) not to formally
announce the vote.
Sen!!tor Collier, d"!>ite his 111pport for
the bill, -himself hemmed in by the
insistent objections to the ~t and
formally ended the bill's life by an-
nouncing the vote.
Badham and other supporterl, bitterly
disappointed, had little to aay ·Jnl ·the
capitol halls afterwards. :
It all happened so fas~ Ibey aeemed too
stunned to comment. .
The hearing, ocheduled for ·2 .p.m.,
finally began about 2,45, p.m. and 18
minutes later senator Colli.er :called: on
•
Badham to present bis case. He gave
both sides. five minute.sand by 3:10 P.m.
the committee was rushing 'Out a side
door to return to the Senate chambers.
Besides Assemblyman Badham, only
four persons were allowed to address the
ocmmiltee during Ille brief bearing l)ult
seemed aim~ anticlimactic after tbe
weeks o! planning and postponements.
Only Mrs. Joseph Beek, widow of the
(See FREEWAY, Pase Z)
One Killed,
Three Hurt
Site Set in Huntington or Valley · 1n Accident
By JACK BROBACK
Of tllt DllfY f'lltl $tiff
Plans to build a $6.t million sea water
desalting plant in FCMltain Valley or
Huntington Beach moved closer to reality
Wednesday night.
Manual Lopez Jr., representing the
federal Office o( Saline Water of the
Department of the Interior, met with
directors of the Orange County Water
District and delivered signed agreements
for the project from the federal govern-
ment.
The timetable is part of the agreement
signed byi.the two agencies and calls for
site·selection by next Nov. 15 and start of
construction by June of 1971.
Construction firms bidding on the pro-
ject ·were to meet with OCWD officials
today and inspect two proposed. sites, ac-
cording to Neil Kline, district assistant
manager. ,
Biing stuqied at.the prtSenUlme is 20 ads owned ti)' 11\J diJli)cl near Ille In·
died
For Harbour
' ' Marine Project
Management representatives of the
Undersea Gardens, Sf.nta Barbara,
visited Huntington Beach today to inspect
three possible sites in Huntington
Harbour for a Similar attraction.
They were taken on the tour by Ralph
Kiser, manager of ·the Chamber of Com-
merce, and Don Burns, vice president
and general manager of the Huntington
Harbour Corporation.
The three sites under consideration are
the Gulf Oil property near Admiralty
Drive and Pacific Coast ijighway, a loca-
tion next to the county boat marina, and
the sunset beach sanitary district's
treabnent facility on th e corner Of
:Warner Avenue and Coast Highway.
• Next Wednesday Kiser, Lou Evans,
head of the chamber's k>urism com·
mittfe: Doyle Miller, city administrator:
Vince Moorhouse, director of harbors and
beaches and William Reed, the city's
public i~ormation officer, plan to visit
the Undersea Gardens in Santa Barbara.
The Undersea Gardens Is a marine life
attraction located in a sheltered harbor.
Visitors to the Santa Barbara facility can
look at sea life nine feet below the
surface.
Nixons Arriving
On Coast Friday
F or 10-day Visit
President and Mrs. Richard Nixoo will
arrive with a flouriSh on the Orange
Coast· Friday afteriloon with the public
invited to the landing strip at· the EJ. Toro
Marine Corps Air Station.
The chief ex.ecutive and his wife, who
will be returnlng from a second hon_ey·
moon In Puerto Vallarta, MexiC1:11 will
touch down at -4:30 p.m. in Air Force
One.
The general public.will be a~tted to
the landing area to greet the F1ri;t Faml·
ly with gates opening ai I p.m., base
~keamen said.
The arrival will mark the sLart or the
second visit this monlh of the Presideat
to his Western White House home in Stn
Clemente. • ,
Tbe arrival will be On the same. day 11
the visit by Vice Presidf!nt Spiro
Agnew, who will remain ·along the Or·
ange eoa,t unUl Saturday. when ht plans
to start his tour ol. Southeast. Asia.
Agnew, White ltOUM 1poktsmen sald,
would meet with the !'resident Saturday
In San Clemenle, and ml&ht meet again
(Seo NIXON, Pace l)
•
tersection of Ward Street and Ellis
Avenue in Fountain Valley, and a similar
parcel adjotnil).g · the Orange County
Sanitation District.Plant 2 at the mouth
of the Santa Ana River in Huntington
Beach.
Firms bidding on the project Include
Baldwin Lima Hamilton of Ohio, Aqua·
Chem of Los Angeles, Westinghouse
Electric Corporation and Aerojet General
Corporation.
The plant, an experimental project will
produce only 12 million gallons of
desalted water a day, a mere one percent
of Orange County's daily consumption.
The water produced will be. used1 in the
district's waste water reclamation pro-
gram for irrigation pwiposes.
Kline said the water would not be for
domis.tic; use although the end producl
would be suil.!ble lot that purpose.
. "~'plant is, be:ing built as a pilot to ~ve ~~ for prOduciot: :USfbJe
d . alu from ult I~• " l<liM' d. t , ,. ~ i. J.'"7l ~ :-·~ •. .,_n;:,;z.
Ul'I TtltPIM11
SEEKS WILD ERNESS HOME
Wltn111 I.Inda Ka1abian
Mans on Tells
Mist reatment
In Coun ty Jail
LOS ANG~ (UPI) -Charles
Manson took the w:itneis stand at \he
Tate-LaBianca murder trial today 'to
complain bitf«J:lY about the "humiliation"
to which he said be was subjected in the
c:ounty jail.
Dressed in prison denims , his beard
and hair stringy and uncombed, the 3a.
year-old ex-convict testified outside the
presence of the jury on his mQtion to
order the county sheriff to cease and
desist the ':.harassment" of the defen·
da.nt. ' "'
Man.son described a "sh8kedown"
whlc;h be said he undergoes a number of
times every•day in which be takes off.all
his clothes, opens his rnouth, wiggles bls tongue~ ~rns his head tO show each ear.
raisef nis arms to show there is nothing
in hfs armpits,, shakes his bair1 lifts one
foot and then me otlier. '
"It ls symbolic of bwnillation," he said.
Hit'• like kicking a dead man."
Manson also testified that when he
spoke with his attorney In jail an o!llctr
always 1'81 pretelll and when 'lfe ·~ te~ ~ pa,. any wrilten com.,
muntt!-tion the lawyer the 10frtcer read
jt first.
He said a guard also was present when
he talked to prospective witnesses and
wlthin ·ursbot of their conversaUon.
The state~• $1.ar witness, Linda Kasa-
bian, conduded It« testimony Wecii\esday
after ll dayi on the -•land and
(let TATE, P11e I)
•
The plant will be powered by natural
gas, Kline said, and the project bu
already been submiUed to the Orange
County Air Pollution Control District and
has received the approval of that agency.
Kline said the Pollution Control District
reported that the gas-fired steam boilers
in the plant would produce only 10 per·
cent of the 811owable emissions.
The project is the second desalinization
plant proposed for Orange·County.
Plans for the ill·fated Bolsa Island, 150
million gallon a day plant off Bolsa Chica
State Beach ran into severe financial dif·
ficulties two yeld•ago and were dropped
by the federal government and three
power companies who bad Joined for
developmeQt of the '444 million project.
Howeve r. Metropolitan W8*' District
of Southern California, the fifth partner
in the Boisa bland project, bu reported
that it is still considering cooatruction of
l deaalt Mt•at IM,,m!>l 'are 1IOI Mr.••ia ott111a €.u 111·16l!Jb. ·,,.,.. ·
.{·r· t': · \ • '•'' . 6AIL.YP1toT,.-..:,...
' ' ' t. YMcA~S WURTIBACl;IER, CALLS EX£,RCISE CADENC~
. In Huntlnvton· Buch,:Pu1hup1 In· tho' Porte·
By TERRY COVllLE
., ........... $tiff ·Fun •• ID Su1nmer Mrs. Cbarloma Scttwankov!tky, the
princlpal figure in ·I ali>rmy conttovers)I
in the HIJ!ltlnglm Beach Cilj School
District, has resigned ·flom the odistricL
District officials aMounced thia morn-
ing that the ponner principal of LeBard
elementar)< lchool submitted her resigna·
tlon to .the board of trustees Wednesday
night and it was a~pt.ed.
Ki.ds En joy Beacli Day Camp -
Mrs. SchwankovakY.t who recently won
a superior court. ~ton. forcing the
district to keep bet u , a princlpal for the
coming year. c:ould not be reachtd for
comment today.
"The board 'and Mrs. Schwankovsky
feel this is in the best interests of the
district,'' S. A. Moffett, d i s tr i c t
superintendent, said today,
District officials agreed to pay $14,750
to Mrs. Schwankovaky to complete ber
contract as a principal for the coming
school Yt!ar.
"The resignation and salary payipent
was worked out as a mmpromlse .by at·
torneys representing both sides," MoffeU
said.
"An appeal on the Superior Court
decision, filed by the school district, will
probably be dropped," Moffett added.
Mrs. Schwankovaky's resignati on
brings to an end nearly four months of
battling over district actions. concerning
her position as principal at LeBard.
It began May 12 when district officials
asked her to either resign, accept a prin-
cipal post at another school or become a
classroom teacher.
"All ri~ht, everybody in line! Down on
your stomaches -flat! Now, up ·one!
Down two!"
As ,Sam· Wurtzbacller barked out the
orders boys and girls scrambled to their
pw:ihpup Positions, except for one ·tiny girl
whO curled up on the grass and slept.
In a more.quiet mood Sam took a book
and a few youngsters . under· a tree in.
Lake Patk and read 'them stories.
Other children were·busy with different
er alts or· art projects in the morning' and
in the afternoon they all went to the
beach.
This is how the Huntington Beach YM·
Gas Ship Sigh\ing Se t'
WASHING TON (Ul'l) -The Navy
may not have to wait Ufltil October to
determine the eiact'location of ·the scut~
tied nerve gas ship as previously thought,
it was learned today.·· Although a
triangulation process for locating the ship
failed, the Navy may have determined
the ship's position withiA a mile by using
satellites.
• CA's summer day camp WOrk.!i. Fqur
young counselors and 45 eager children
combining for a full day of acllvities.
"This is our third and f'maJ, week of the
program," Richard Collato, executive
director of the Huntington Beach YMCA,
'explained. "We have 45 kids registered
this week and 150' took part in the whole
program."
The local YMCA launched t h e dily~
camp program thJs summer for the tint
time. "It's been quite successful," Collato
said.
Boys and girls ages S.12 meet every
day at 9 a.m. at Lake Park and are pick~
ed up by their parents at 3 p.m. •
Their morning routine includes arts
and crafts -such as making pupPets and
pie tin picture frames; physical' fitness;
sports; read, by one of the counselors;
films and other activities.
In the morning everybodY goes to the
beach, or on a special trip Wtthln.the .city,
such as the_ polke or fire ~~ts.
Cost o! the program Is l17 'a'clilld, for
one week.
"I was an·expertment this summer and
we think it has worked beautifuDY;"
Collato C1:1ncludlti.
Intrepid Takes Cup Lead
New port . Yac ht Whip s R ival by Seven 'Minute s .
By ALMON LOCKABEY windWard·leeward rule 30 seconds before
tNllllll ••• • the st,8rt; '
NEWPORT, I\· L .-Skipper .Bill Ficker It api>eared that V81ianl, the wealber
of Newport Beach ranuned 1ntrepkt over boat altered' course to fall down on
the 21J·mlle America's "'~= . u. ·· • ·' · , , , ~-)-";'"!~ M""';"' V I!<' ~I fO. ~ •
Wedneoday to be1t """"'~· • • • , · ··' ' e.t loss came at the
Weatherly by ·a wboJ>Pine it••· -or WJMiker Jerwhcn she
ud 31 secend.a.it-~i:~.:11.', • ' • · ~ -~~ ' b\,a.Ught wrap and took •lt'W~s1aoollier ~ialn.hiny da)"IO ~~lr·~ .. niluul .. to ·l•I It set again.
Rliode faland SoOod wltll the ~aster-·ViiJiii'¥ liPP<ll•• chute on the ,,.mt !•I
Jy wlnd flltblg in early at •bout.14 kllOts. but hid 1 gew one set and drawing in a
Charlie Morgan's Heritage was beaten mt• and -ti haJf.
by Bob McCullough'• V1ll11t to the twie In lod11'i ~lnllepid'meela llerilaae
of t:iree minutes and . 4.1 teCODds lfttr an4, VllMl goeg again&~ he{ tria1 horae
trailing the New Y*focht· by only 57 weall>td;. Dockalde experts are guessing
seconds at the first weather mark. tb~'Jf lblttpsd,1 and Viliant win their
Heritage wu ftytng a ~ flag at matcht:a tQday the 1aelectioo <:C1:1nunittee
the !ini.sb, claimin& Vallaitl vJoillod-tlte m111 elimioale Herila&e and Weatbercy.
• " I
This would leave A long draww.·out day
10 day bJl\lle belween Valiant and
lntrepi~ llntll tlfe committee mu.. Its
, final sele!!Ucn sometime by sept. 13.
. After· today'• ,i-acest<lhe .. ~ectioa~
• mlttee Will make· up pairings fot.theliext ,~tbr~ races.. 7bere will r be1 Dofl'aeflJl,on·
S\,ln~a,J• 1 . • l ..,. • ~icl!Or 'lost ground Ip• Hintn>n!!°" vnly
ono ~g oJ lb~ <;9111'SC,.Afler bullmnt Up a lea~ ol 4:53 at the end of tbO tr\Mcle, he
loot ovet' a minute 6n' lhe 11<Xt-wlailw1rd
lc&J buLmore •lilan nilde ~ tlJI' on the run
to the fl!tb mark where he held a l:H ad-
vantage.
But the.rew that bid tbe.wttlef' front
buzzing here Wedl'ltsday was the protut
. (See CUP 'l'IUALs; 1>.,e.1)
A bousewHe ,'"" killed and her thnt
children injured Wednesday afternoon
when she apparenUy tried to ei:ecute a U•
tum on l'aciflc Coast ffigbway ·In lluJ>o
\ington Beach and was struck broadside
by a beer truck driven by a Laguna
Beach Man.
Mrs. Corole Ann Cooner, 31, of Loi
Angeles was pronounced dead on arrival
at Huntington lnter~mmunity Hospital
shortly after the 2:21 p.m. accident.
Her three children, Debra, 11, Kenneth,
5, and S~ t, were lilted in·
aatlsfactory coaditim today •••
Traffic investigators aid thl!i beet'
.truck, driven by William A. Mansfield of
1~, Arroyo Drive, Laguna Beach, c.ot~
lided Wlth the Conner vehicle at a &~d
of 411 to IC miles p_er hour and lm~dded
IU.lf ih the side of the car. Manafteld.'told police Mrs. Conner'1 'car
WU blocking both lanes, an(t thaf he could
110t....W..hfflinc Ille car. ' 14n-Coauor'l.cto!lll>ter. s~. who
--,,_ tlle ear by the lrllpact,
told oiflcers her mother '"' on her way home from the beach. Sbe bad jusl pulled
out of the parking lot when they were
alrUCt.
Woman Killed
'By Bolting Horse
'nae wile of a Huntio~n Beach doctor
was killed Wednesday ~n her hone
galloped oot ·of control and she fell onto a
fence post.
Mrs. Dixie Lou Hoffman, 45, of 4025
Aladdin Drive, Huntington Harbour, died
of head injuries at 4::45 p.m. at South
Coast Hospital, South Laguna, S:bout
seven hours after the accident.
Coroner's investigators sakl the ac-
cident occurred at the Coto De Caza Hlmt
Club in Trabuco Canyon when her steed
bolted and she either jumped or was
thrown off.
Her husband, Dr. Frank V. Hoffman.
practices adult and child psychiatry In
HunUngton Beach.
Volunteer Gls Costly
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. John C.
Stennis said today an amendment to
replace the draft with an all-volunteer
army would add at least $4.3 billion a
year to the defense budget. The
Mississippi Democrat, chairman of the
Armed Services Committee, said the
issue should be taken up when the C1:1m.
rnittee launches its long·plaMed hearings
into the overall Selective Service System
-hopefully later this year.
·Ol'aalfe
Wendler
Hope .you enjoyed today's weath-
er, . beCause we're having an in-
stant replay Friday with low clouds
In the morning and hazy sunshine
thereafter. Temperatures w i 11
,range from ~ to as degreea.
INSIDE TODAY
Gov. Reagan's Commisriofi cm.
Educational Reform ha.t rec°""'
mended abollah'"<nt of the ,..,
UT< ·~·-· 'Gfl<I ,ql'!~tj<m ~j 0' m•fit pag 111Up for ;Ccili/Qrnill'•
ttach1r1. Page 8.
Ii
I
I
,
I
a
l'reete•H Fighter
Badham Pledg_es
•
'He'll-Try ~~gain .
ThereU·rrwrt.lhan one way to kill a
freeway route.
And ~ssemblyman Robert E. Badham
(ft..Newport Beach), ~ move to have
the Legislaiure commit the slaying of a
Pacific Coast Freeway .sect.iOn failed
\\'ednesday, h.,s vowed to find another.
But he 'll have to hurry. State Division ot
H1ghway officials said today the start of
construction of the Newport segment the
Coastal route is scheduled for the 1973-74
Ii.seal year.
Badham seems ready.
His first promise after the Senate
Transportation Committee rejected his
bl!! to eliminate• the Pacific Coast
Freeway through Newport Beach, was to
* Frem Pqe 1
FREEWAY ...
fonner secretary of the. Senate, and
Newport Beach City Councilman How11d
Rogers spoke on behalf of the bill.
Speaking In i>ppostion were
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R-Hun-
tington Beachl and AJ S. Koch, Orange
County road commlssioner.
Burke's appearance drew criticism
from Badham, who said he was "appalled
at an assembly colleague a p p e a r I n g
before the Senate to oppose a bill."
Burke had told the committee that if it
killed the freeway from Beach Boulevard
Jn Huntington Beach to the eastern boun-
dary of Newport Beach, it would wreck
the planning efforts of a nwnber of cities.
He said HunUngton Beach, Co.sta Mesa,
Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach "are
looking' forward to the freeway ."
He said, "They have invested time and
money" planniJli around the new rout.e
and said it would cause hardships if this
&eetion was deleted.
Koch introduced a delegation of Orange
Coast official! in the gallery who were
there opposing the bill. including County
Supervisor Alton E. Allen, Laguna Beach
Mayor Richard Goldberg, Costa Mesa
J.fayor Itobert Wilson and Fountatn
Valle.y City Manager James Neal.
Koch told the pariel that they would be
teavlQg five dealknd freeways poinUng
toward the· roast 1n Orange County by
killing the Newport Beach segment.
He pointed oot that of the llknlle
stretch atrected \n the Badham bill. a
formal ~~. P~ already been accpted
and ado!ill!d'rill: oll bUt lhru ;nilts -the
"cUon be(..e;. iliO Vl6t Newport boUn'
dary and Bayside drive.
Badham; ·countering tbla, pointed o u<t
rhat a citizens commiUee Is already mov·
in1 to fofce Newport Buch to rescind the
•Jreemtnt on tbe four·milt st.retch from
the Back Bay tO the Coroo.o de! Mar eity
limit.s.
Koch pointed out that the state already
owns $15 mHlion worth of right-0f·way
along the adopted route and noted that
$150 million bas been spent planning for
the route.
He also noted that 'the two freeway
1egments already deleted. one through
Venice and the other through Beverly
Hills, did not blvolve adopted routes.
In his closillg. testimony_, Badham
"olunteered to take t h e Political con·
sequences of the blll.
PolnUng out that his district. eovettd
territory other than just Newport, ter·
Titory whose local officials wanted the
freeway , he told the eomm1ttee. "I have
to take the political risk In the face of my
constituents."
He staked his position on the view,
"Where a freeway does not belong, a
freeway does not belong."
As it enters Newport Beach from the
northwest, the proposed controversial
route cuts alniost directly towards the
shore and continues through the city
along some real estate bordering existing
Coast Highway.
Jn pleading to be allowed to offer the
amendment, Badham first had tried to
interrupt the actual voting when be saw
how it was going.
DAILY PILOT
ORANG~ COAIT ,.Ullb~IMG COM'AMV
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take the city's plight to Governor
Rea1an.
Badham said he would ask the
governor to remove funds from the
budget for lhat section of the freeway
when it comes up for construeUon.
That, according to Wa1lace Knutsen,
district d~ign engineer for the Highway
division, is only three years off.
Knutsen said this morning that there
are no funds in the current 197~71 budget
for actual construction of the freeway ,
anywhere in Orange County and said
none will like1y be included in the next
budget to be adopted by the Highway
division in ~r.
Knutsen dl.sclo,,e.d that the Newport r-7::::..,.;,.,£,.
priority in the county, however, and that section may ~ the first on the state's (
the. road Would be started from the plan-
ned Newport Ftte:way (Route 55) in-
terchange and bu.Ht south through
Capistrano.
He said by the time it reaches that far
down, cort!tructioo would also have begun
· norther!Y lnto Huntington Beach.
All this, Knutsen stmsed, la according
to present priorities which could be
changed at any time.
He said that construction of the
Newport FreeW1y through C.OSta Mesa to
the coast would likely not be 1larted
before the mid or l.;!e 1970s.
Badham, however, !nsiBIS"U..t the cur-
rent Pacific Coast freeway route, along
the COast lflghwoy in Newport. la aga,inst
recommendatiom of a specla}>taU force
appatnted by Governor Rea.gait to study
effects of freewafs on environment.
'Who Me 40?'
Yep. England's Princess Mar·
1.m, Queen Elizabeth's young-
er sister and fourth in line for
the British throne, celebrates
her IOth birthday Friday.
From Pqe 1
TATE •..
He also said that the federal govern· uid ahe would continue her life u a bl~
1ment, throu&h the e ff 0 r t !I of pJe. '
,'fransportaUon Secretary John Volpe, b B~t abe aays 1he will never take drugs
moving to cut out funds for again.
superhighways that "would tun down Mra. Kaaabian was followed i.... three ~ie·s beaclles." i "' r--1"' eye w tne.ss.es who substantiated tn every Badham also was quick to cite the ef. detail covered in their testimony the
forts of the !ij!Wly·formed Citizens story she told during ber long ordeal on
Coordinating Committee in Newport the stand.
Beach that has begun to circulate peti· Mrs. Kasabian waa granted immunity
lions that will force the Newport City from prosecuUon for her part in oon.
Council to rescind its agreement with the nection with the slayings, Mlt:r com.
State Division of Highways. pleti.ng her testimony she held a news con.
The city has 1lgned an agreement ference to discuss her future and ntade
adopting the actual route of the coastal these points:
.freeway east from Bayside drive to the -She plans to live in "the wilderness"
city limits at Corona del Mar. with her two )'QWlg children and continue
Under the inlU&Uve petition, the council the life of. 1 hippie.
would either have to rescind the agr~ -She wishes Quarles Manson and his
ment oo its own or put the quesUon to a three female. Cllde:fendanta would "get
vote of the d~. th The 030 i.s aho aiciilitlng a relaled down on ,, ell' knees and beg for
petition 4bat would require a city.wlde forgiveness but ahe does not believe
vote on a charter amendment to require they are capable of doing so.
the council to ·conduct a referendwn-· . -She will ~t r~joiq her hUlband,
befort It sl&M another a~ement. -Robert.~ls going his way -to Mako
Signatures of 15 gercerit of the elf!JC'o -8e~c is 1olng hers.
torate are needed to lorce,.the Council to -Sbi not intend ever to t.aice
act on both matters. drup· q11n or join a hippie oommune.
Other reactions to Wednesday's com-But lhe t~ hippies ~ not resent her
mittee action were as expected. aCQ111na.Manson and bis group.
Newport Beach M~yor Ed Hirth hur--She "hopes to l•find God" and in &0
ried from the capitol to catch a taxi to do!?'& to. W!>f:k with children.
. the airporL He would say only, "I am -She Js "not going to worry" about
30rry it went the way it did." Manson Seeking vengeance.
Ma~~r Robert Wilson of _Costa ~1csa, an -S~e hopes the young people of
oppos1uon leader, was obviously pleased . America will learn from her experience
He appliuded Assemblyman RObe.rt H. and "lake another path."
Burke. (R-Huntington Beach), for his Following Mrs. Kasablan on the stand
work 1n _def~atlng the measure, altho~g~ was Timothy Ireland, an instructor at the
. not hestitatmg to comment that the b1tl s Westlake School for Girls about half a
sponsor, Assemblyman Badham, had mile from the Tate estate
fought hard for legislation he bellev~ in, Ireland laid on the rug· hi of the la · g Mayor Wilson sald the committee, . . s ym
however, had little choice but to do what a number of gu'Ls were havtng a cam pout
· d"d · · Id d ·r on the school grounds and he was it 1 • ~mting to w espre.a opposi 1°" 6Upervising them. At about 12 :45 a.m.
to the bill. Aug. 9, 1969 he heard a man's voice
screaming:
From Pqe 1
NIXON ...
\Vilh Mr. Nixon upon the Vice President"s
relum to the. states. ·
Among the greeters of the Nixons Fri·
day alternoon will be their youngest
daughter, Julie, and her husband David
Eisenhower -both guesls at the
Presidential estate since last Saturday.
Eldei' daughter Tricia also is expected
to arrive with her parenl.s.
From the air station, the Nixons will
board the President's helicopter for the
short bop downcoast.
The visit In San Clemente should last
through the end of the month, aides said,
but other than the Agnew visits and Ua\ks
on 1mpresslons of Southeast Asia, other
plans by the President are not yet an·
nounced.
The arrival Friday afternoon will he
much different than the last touchdown
at El Toro for lhe chief executive.
On a late Friday night several weeks
ago the weary first fam ily landed without
much fanfart after a wearisome, cam.
paign·style series of stops across the na·
tion.
The trip Included stops in North Dakota.
and Utah before the final destination in
Orange County.
This arrival promises to be different.
with thousands of greeters expected to
give 1 wann welcome.
Huntington Realtoi;
Sla tes Open H ouse
A new ~al estate: office Is opening at
9M2 Hamilton Ave., liunlineton Beach. A
grand opening will be held at the ofrtee of
Coats & Wallace Rtaltors from 5 to 8
p.m. today.
The a11ency already has an office at
Harbor Boulevard and Baker Street In
C.OSta Mesa. Frank H. White. 1 partntr,
will be the manager of the new offlce
which will specialize in residential
resalea.
''Oh Goel, no, please don'L Oh, please
don't. don't, don't, don'L Please don't."
The prosecution witness said he. check·
ed to make sure the sounds bad not come
from any or lhe young women and then
drove around but could find nothing
wrong so he returned to the school .
The next witness, Rudolph Weber.
whose home Is not far from the Tate
residence, said he was awalrened about 1
a.m. Aug. 9, 1969, by the sound of run.
ning waler and thought there was
something wrong with his plumbing.
Dr. Max Forney
Leaves for ·Guam
•
Education Post
Dr. Max Forney, superintendent of the
Huntington Beach Union High School
Dislricl for eight years, left the city to.
day with a brilliant<0lored ftawaiian
shirt and a floppy beachoomber's bat in
his bags.
They were given him in a raucous sen-
doff at a chamber of commerce luncheon
We.<lneiday.
Dr. Forney, who al.so re.signed as a
chamber di~tor. is to take a ))Ost as
associate profeuor of educaiUon at the
Univenlty of Gaum.
Praise, laced witboo jokes! wu lavished
on the educator. Darre1 Ward, who
operates a mortuary, was the master of
ceremonies, while WilUe Otto. president
of the Rotary Club. Dr. John Venables,
curriculutyt director for the high IC~
dlstrict, and Matthew Weyuker. pr~ldent
of the trustees, took turns spealdne.
The festi vities were topped by a IS.-
minute Hawaiian dance display by Ja.yme
Boyd,,Miu Huntington Beach.
In other business, Warti was elected a
chamber director to replace bank'
mana&er Ricbard Waidaunaa: who has
bten trans/erred, and Ed Sullivan,
manager of the SOuthem Ctllfomla
Automobile Clu.b in Huntington Bt.a.cb.
was elected to replace Dr. Forney.
'
•
Morgan P~ot_est Denied
•
Valiant Victory Upheld by Committee .
NEWPOJIT, R.L -ClarUe Morpn'1
protest qainst Valiant at the •tart of
Wedntldv'• MCOnd race of t h e
Amerlt;a's Cup selecUon bials wu
disallowed today by the New York Yacht
Club race committee.
Sir Fr11nk Packer, head of the
Australiu syndicate, received the same
rebuU from the International Yacht Rae·
ing Union committee on his protest that"
both the Australian yacht G.retel If ud
the French yacht France have been . im·
properly measured.
Morgan claimed that Valiant skippered
by Bob McCullough of New York bOre
down on Heritage at the start so close
that Valiant's boom passed across
Heritage's foredeck.
Valiant was the windward boat with the
burden of keeping clear Wider the
windward-leeward rule. The two boats
were overlapped at the time of the Ur
cident.
Jn denying the protest. lhe committee
gave Morgan a mild lecture on filing
what the committee called minor or
lrivial protest&.
McCullough's defense was that he did
not bear away on Heritage far enough to
cause the Florida yacht'to alter course.
It was the fifth time McCullough bas
l;IUL ~ETll'f
Bill Picket on hitttpid and Charl~
Morgon on Heritage were fighting
virtually a bow-to-bow battle afcer
three Legs of tht third race of the
America'• Cup selecion trials here to-
day.
At the weatlltT mark, Intrepid held
a scant 16 second lead ovtr the Flor·
ida boot and was unable to change
the time wlit on the fir•t reaching
leg.
At the end of the third leg, com·
pletil1g the triangle, Ficker had in·
creased hi.s lead to 20 seccmi:U.
An almost equally close battle was
going on between Bob McCullough's
Valiant and George Hinman's Weath·
erly. Valiant led Weatherlv by 19
seconds at the first mark. 61 second.a:
at the second mark and 48 seconds at
the third mark.
The 11atchs were sailing in a 10·
knot southwesterly brfete with ab9ut
oPte foot of chop. Occa.sion.al showers
fell on the course.
bee11 protested since. (he trials began in
June. In all but one other he lost lhe pro·
test.
From Pqe 1
pr!lk lhowm wetted tho Newport '!"'
tohy as the yachts 'f'eN Ielvlng the
docks under tow for the starting line.
Tbtrt was conjeclure earlier ln the day
that fog on Rhode Island sound· might
cancel the day's races,
Today's schedule called for Intrepid to
meet Heritage and Valiant to sail against
her trial horse Wealherly.
Weather pennitting the pairi11gs Friday
would rematch Valiant against Intrepid.
Bill Ficker on Intrepid lost the first round
to VaJiant on Tuesday.
Sir Frank Packer-let it be known today
thal he does oot intend to drop his protest
regarding the contro versial fairing strips
on the French boat as well as two of the
American boats.
Packer said he would renew the protest
-next time against the American
defender if Gretel 11 wins the challenger
trials.
The use ol these "rudder flaps", which
In effect increase the water line length of
the yachts. could lead to a very large in-
fraction, Packer said.
He told reporters he was cabling the
London headquai-teni of IYRU in an ef·
fort to get a further ruling, despite 1he ,
rebuff by Beppe Croce, chairman of the
international body.
INTREPID TAKES BIG LEAD IN CUP TRIALS • ••
lodged by Sir Frank Packer, head of the
Auslralian syndicate, against the meas-
uring of his own and the French yacht.
on the part of the Aussies lo gain more
time before the start of their best four out
of seven elimination series with the
French, scheduled to start Friday. A pre.
vious request for a four-day delay to al.
low the Aussies more practice time was
coldly turned down by the French and the
New York Yacht Club America's Cup
commillee.
But if the protest is allowed by the
International Yacht Racing Union com·
mittee, under which the Aussies and
French will race their elimination, it
could possibly gain them the time they
want.
Here are the facts and conjectures that
rocked this yachting capital Wednesday:
Sir Frank Packer dropped the protest,
written in longhand, at a skippers'
'
meeting Wednesday morning, less than 1%
hours after he arrived in town.
Baron Marcel Bich head of the French
syndicate, was furious, claiming that Sir
Frank had not consulted him or his syn-
dicate about the matter. Bich said -his
yacht bad been measured and acceJ)ted
by Bob Blumenstock, measurer for the
America's Cup committee.
For that matter, so had the Australian
yacht. But Alan Payne (pronOl.Dlced Pihe)
took i.s.5ue with wbat he c a 11 • d
Blumenstock's interpretation of the in-
ternational measurement rule for 12
meters.
Specifically Payne charged t h a t
Blumenstock did not inspect the deck and
Interior arrangements of Gretel II which
calls for enclosed heads (water closeU!i)
as opposed to a toilet that is merely
enclosed with a draw curtain.
Payne claims the Aussies have gone to
great lengths to comply with every
aspect of this and other 12-meter
measurement rules.
As to France, Payne complained that
the fairing plates from lhe hull to tlie
rudder actually increased the waler line
length. Gret~l does not have these so-call·
ed "fairing flaps ". No mention was made
of the American yachts. but at leas t two
of them have the fairing flaps on their
rudders.
What does it all m It means that lf
thP. IYRU commit e hea d by Dr. Bep-
pe Croce allows e prote d requires
the yachts to be remeasured it could
result in a delay of several days before
the start of the challenger eliminations.
it might also result in a precedent
wh ich would require Valiant and Heritage
to be remeasured. Both have the ques-
tionable fairing strips.
.JJ. J. 9.~rrell~· A~~~~L SALE ·
7 PC.
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•
·'
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'·
11
'No .c~i tor Helf' • :· •'
' KOpechne~ Rap
Kennedy's Aides
NEW YORK (AP) -The IMIJ1er of
Mary Jo Kopechne has questioned the
behavior of two friends of sen. Edward
M. Kennedy after lhe accident that took
her daughter's life last summer •.
WriUng in the current Wue ol McCall's
1t1agatine, Mi'!. Kopechne also 1aid the
believed Kennedy's story that be wu
driving Mary Jo to the ferry on Chap-
paquiddick Island when he took 1 wrong
turn and his car plunged off a wooden
bridge. Miss Kopeclme drowned. Kennedy
escaped serious injury but did not report
the accident to authorities for sevez:_al
hours.
M:s··. Kopechne was highly critical of
the mquest Into the accident Referring to
Judge Jamea A. Boyle's atatement that
. .
be believed Kennedy had lied about his
destination, she wrot.e:
"This cooclusion, by a man who d.idn''
know Mary Jo, leaves a bad taste In our
mouths, and we absolutely reject it and
any impUcations that flow from iL"
'I.be behaviOr of Kennedy's two friends,
Joseph Gargan and Paul Markham, is in-
exp~ble and was not ezplalned at the
inquest, Mrs. Kopechne said. She asked
why they did not call authorities when
Kennedy h a v t n g escaped from th e
submerl'd car, summoned them to help
him try to rescue Mary Jo.
''This ts the big hurt," Mrs. Kopechne
wrote, "the nightmare we have to live
with for the re!t of our Jives: that Mary
Jo was left in the water for nine hours.
She didn't belon1 lbere."
HEADS FDR LAGUNA HILLS
Scienct AdvlMr DuBrldgt
New Computer Keeps Tab
On Juveniles in County
DuBridge Quits
As Nixon Aide,
Returning Home
By GEORGE LEIDAL -fonna~n ls relayed to the officer in two Dr. Lee A. 9uBridge, decrying cuts in
federal spending for scientific research,
resigned his post as President Nixon's
chief science adviser Wednt!day.
Of ,,.. DMhl' "lltt tt.n minutes.
The computer age has caught up with Besides f.ield inquiries, the sberifr's
juveniles in Orange Cotmty who've had department receives more than 30,000
brushes with the law. &imilar juvenile requests from other government ;,agmties, each year. The A televi.slon system now retrieves in-same process is followed, only Xerox
The former Caltech president who will
be 70, Sepl 21, will retire with his wife to
a new three bedroom home in Leisure
World, a spokesman for the Laguna Hills
retirement community said today.
formation ow 150,000 county youths copies of the me card were made, and
who've been in cont.ad with till law, for t lo •-non~irninal or serious criminal offenses. sen tn., agency. The televllion screen image of the
The .,video-data terminal'' -television juvenile's backgrou.d cu automatically
screen -reproduces the case history of be transferred to a permanent printed The White House ·said DuBridge would
be suceeeded by Dr. :Edward E. David,
Jr., 45, an executive of Bell Labora-
tories, Summit, N.J.
any juv~Ue in just seconds, a county copy for the requesting agency, saving
spokesman said. even more time, Capt. R. W. Lux-
Fonnerly, requests for iRformaUon embourger, sheriff's records division,
from the Central Juvenile Inda (CJI} by said. President Nixon accepted DuBridge's
resignation "with deep regret" and asked
the white-haired, bespectacled scientist to
stay on as a member of science advisory,
an appointment the President will make
when a \lacancy occurs in December.
County law enforcement agencies, or The tot.al of J00,000 juvenile inquiries
other departments, took as long as 15 each year, can be handled by the new
minutes. Last yet...·, police, sheriff's system at an aniual operating costs of
deputies, highway patrolmen, the pro· $27,000 - a savings of $%2,000. The old
bation department, flood cootro~ fire system is estimated to have cost the
departmeiits, school welfare and 1t-county $49,000 each year.
tendance officials, aad forestry services Video-data terminal.! a1so are located "Your participation in my '·
made 70,000 CJI inquiries. in the a.sse!Sor's office, municipal court, ministration during this cn.;cially im-
port.ant initial period will always be a
source of satisfaction to me," Nixon said.
Each request required someone In the administrative office, and in the data
sheriff's office to manually check through services department.
thousands of iode1 clll'd! on file. "The computerization of the CJI is DuBridge bas served in the White
House since the start of the Nixon
Administration, leaving an ocean view
home in Three Arch Bay pt South Laguna
for the Washington .....Jignmenl
Once located, the juvenile's case directed toward achieving a more ef·
hmory was rtad by the-radio dispacther ficient and effective tool for the law er>-
to the awaiting officer and the card refil· f~~t officer ii bis hudling 1of
ed. · juve~ probierh!," g,Giff James Music
Under the new syttem., C.Jl rtiquests aaid. In leaving, he praised Dr •. David, a
Republican ~d said it had been fortunate
"that •the 1Eiarcl Jcr JQ,J successor bad
been so easy."
will be made to the COJDputer which will "'Ibil project will lay a.firm foundation
Duh the case histqry:Gn the televbion • ·tor tutur. data ~ of other filts
aaee11 withil five Mwds, and Ull·.tn. Within our law tllforcezDel:d. community."
School Tenure End Urged
R~~!a:!ets M~=~:.~ei~?~~ew~: ,!~:hc:~::=~~=tthy ...
Of tlMI 0.11, """ Jtatt performance above and r~yoqd the stan-cording to the best research in bebavicr'al
Governor Ronald Reagan's C>mmiasion
on EducaUonal Reform has reached the
halfway stage of ita statewide m.
vestigation with the issue of an interim
report which calls for X:tlpping of the
,fenure system and the creation of a merit
pay system for California'• teachers.
Both suggestions are among seven
recommendation,, offered to the governor
by the ~member commission under the
chairmanship of Santa Ana accounting
executive Robert E. Hanson. The lo-
tmnediate r~ briois to 10 the
number of recommendations offered
since the connnission began its probe of
lhe state's educational system last year.
Hinson regards his group's comments
on tenure as perhaps its inost Important
cootribution thus far in its response to
Governor Reagan's appeal fOr a common
sense ~alj:sls of what he has called an
unwieldy and complex educational struc-
ture. .
"He wanted what we had to say in
crisp layman's language," Hanson uid.
"We think he's got It in the reports we've
preperN thus far."
The Hanson commission's suggestions
on tenurt (a form of ' job security for
teachers) are dtastic and will, he
cheerfully admits, "cause a hell of a lot
of controversy."
The rqx>rt says "tenure serves to pro-
tect incompetent teachers beca111e It
creates an lltu9()fJ blanket <If protection
wbidl often deten appropriate action."
"Tenure waa first established as a pro-
tection fot teachers against bias and
discrimination in dismissal proceedings,"
Hanson nplalned. "It'• no longer
neces.\111')' for this purpose -Article Five
of the callfoml1 r.ducatlon C o d e
gumnlm all certified pmonnel due
process and protects them r r om
di!Criminatory or malicious flrlnl prac-
tices." •
"What we sug:ge.at will like nothlo1
from the competent teacher," Hanson Id·
ded. "ln fact, II """1d help lo restore
conf'Klence in the teachll>i prof"'hm by
removing the public's image of 'life pro-
tection. regardless ot competency'."
The COOlmisalon also recommendl t!ial
all C.lllomla'1 ocbool dlslrlcll, w!Ut lhe
backing of 1 "clear policy statement by
the Callfomla Slate Board ol EduaUont''
-Id de'relop merit Po)' pl1111 DJOll
auttable to eacb llldlYldual dfJlrk:l.
.. Thla would, of CO!Jl'le, be wUhln fma1'-
cial llmlll « Utt dlstrlcl," H•-uld.
··What we Wd'e 1"1mar11J concerned with
wu lhl development « pl1111 w!Ut lhl
dards of the past and prtsenL" . sciences," the comml.ssion added.
Hanson's commisSioa felt that the It points out in its report to the
absence of. merit pay' for California's governor the "need for the design and
teachers "creates an undesirable, if not field testing of alternate types o{ school
intolerable, refuge fer mecltocrtty for organization which would be assessed and
some teachers." It alsG, the ~port points validated systematically according to
out, creates "a sen~ of frustration for predefined, specified objectives of stu-
others who are willlOg and quill.lied to dent accomplishment and specified ob-
assume ,greater re'.sponJlblllty in a jectives for change in the way ad·
sincere effort to codtribute to a higher ministraton, teachers and students work
level of ucellence i8 education." together."
The commission noted what it describ-five factors should be present in the
eel as "four main obJec'Jons" to merit final consideration, the rt"porl states. It
pay none of which , it commented, '11!1 in-defines them as "staff involvement in the
surmountable. They are: decision making process; f I ex i b I e
-Concern by _t:eachers over possible organization; professklnal evaluation:
favoritism finder t.merlt pay system. careers in teaching and perfonnance pro-
motions." -Fear ol losing :teC'Urity which "ac-companies a fixed tncrease in salary -Discontinuance of the state Board of
schedule with Utile or no eelf im· F.ducation'a issuing of textbooks for first
provemenL" through eighth grades and acknowledge.
-· ''Retl!fanct to any rating system ment of the responsibil ity of the school
due to 1 lack of confidence either in the district for printing and purchasing-of
subjectiylty of rating systems or tn the such books from approved lists.
objectJvity of those who d<! the rating." -Tnitiation of a tw~part statewide testing program . -Predicted high cost of merit The reeommendation calls for an an-
systems. nual assessment of students' achievement
'"!be weight of our analysis Is strongly in grades one through 12 and comparison
In support of the premiee thlt merit pay of results with state and naUonal nonns
ls one of the lrriportant nece6Sltles to the wherever postllible.
achievement of the highest attainable The commission also urges the adop-
quallty of education," Hanson added. Uon of "adequate diagnol'llfc tests so that
Five other recomendations have been teachtrs may assist individual learners
submitted to Governor Reagan since the with specific learning tasks. Diagnostic
commission began Its investigation which tests should be provided,'' the report
is oow Jn its second year. .slates, "in the areas of reading,
Hanson and his 19 colleagues on lhe mathematics, language arts and study
fact finding teatn have met at least once skills.
a month 1inct their appointment -A new look by lhe Legislature at
His commlssloo's o t h e r recom-what the commission believes to be
meodatklns include: seriouS inadequacies in the field of voca·
-''There should be created 1 single tional education.
state Educatlmal Research and Devel~ The commission states tn Its report to
ment Agency, responsible to the !tate Governor Reagan that ''the State
Board of Education (when constituted as Legislature should enact a statute which
previously recomme.rided by WI com· would provide opportunity for every stu-
minlonl. dent graduating from the public secon-
"T1lls agency," said Hanson, "should dary schools to have acquired , , • a
be authorized and funded to .umulate the: saleable skill."
dmgn, evaluation nd diwmlnaUon of 1be commission ca.lls for the develo~
new elementary and ltl'()ndary in-mmt of "a Muter Plan for California
atrucUona1 and organl11Uon1I programs. Vocational Education" on a regional
-Sweepb)c changes In lhe or&anlza· basis. ·
tional ~t ol. tchoola. Twtlvt educational areas remain to be
"Rllld adherence lo trld!Uonal ad-conslderfd by tile Hamon Comml,.lon.
mbtlatraUve pr1ttem1 aggraYata and, Jn They tncludt the group's study or conflkt
aome CUM, erulel the undertytna bluet In the ICbools and campus unrest,
to -unreJI," lh! commissloo 1lmpllllcallon o! lhe fduaUon code •
rtpert ttatt1. urban, auburban and rUraJ needs, public
"'!be oo !r:equenUy •lll1Jni aolocl'llic lcbool finance and relallon1hlp of the
alructare of tchool admlnlstratlon ls <>P" fedtral and state 1ovemmenta · 1n
ptualve, outmoded In dealln1 w!Ut both C.ll!ornlo fdu<atlon. -
. ( >
1llllncSlt, All11usl 20, 1970 H DAIL V Pit.QT .I
' .
Static Mars Smog Parley
Orange COO.ly Air P<>llutloo Control
Dlstrld DlreclQI' William Fllch<n return-
ed from a six<Otinty .smog conference,
Wednesday, angry over verbal attack$ by
San Bernardino and Riverside CoWlty
representaUves.
proachfld ••crt111 levela" in neighboring
San Dem~.~ R~verslde counttes.
San Bemardlno County Supervisor
Nancy Smith charged Fitchen with taking
a "negaUve attitude" toward rtaching
agreement on the unified alerting plan.
voiced lhelr dlaplealUl'e over m>OI
generated In Los Anaelta and 0r..,.
counties drifting into the.fr counUu..
Robert M. Bar1ky, Los Angeles Coun1J
deputy APCD officer, oald he did DOI
think a unified alert program would be
appropriate because Rfvenkle County
generates its own smog.
'lbe rtpreSentaUves mel at the request
of ruveraide County Supervisor Paul
Anderson In an eff~ to reach accord In
a mutual smog alert s)'llem.
Under the system, Anderson said, an
emergency smog alert would
automatically be called in the two coastal
counties whenever air p:>llutants ap-
Fltchen, however, countered by saylna:
the smog levtls In San atmardlno and
Riverside count"' art in no way related
lo those In Orange C<><Jnly.
The conference at Umes developed Into
11 shouting match as several San
Bernardino and Riverside COU11ty otficlals
"To call some kind of region•! or baaln· .
wide alert to relieve a situation in
Riverside or San Bernardino county '
would be kind of poinlless," hi uld, "like •
blowing 1 whisUe or. banging pi.DI to ·
make the smog go away."
ChooM from Tam
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Cypress evergreens
for attractive
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gallon size.
3ss
Artillery Fern,
Kittensear and
Spider plants In
7 inch hanging
baskels. Already
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111
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in green, bronze
or aluminum.
9.99
Sun dial stand
Jn white, graen,
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4.50
garden cente~
Specials!
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Stunlyplantaalreldygrowing ln4 ready to plantln 1 Q111on
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Beautiful bedding
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every vari8ty of
camaHons. Eaay.
care flowers
already growing
In trays.
Ageralum, Coleus
In 4' pots. l..Dvely
flowers to make
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Kelloggs gromulch."ucellent
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keeping roots cool. 1 cu.ft. big.
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Decorative Sequolabarltln
3 cu. It. bags. Medium, COlrM
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Available at these PanneyGatden Centers: CARLSBAD DOWNEY
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•
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f
--j DAILY PllQT
Reds Take Town
Near Phnom Penh
tc...i• ..... 0111\' ,. ....... ff)
k Stoke-on-Trent, England, bus
company has refunded the six cent
fa.rt charged by a new bus conduc·
tor for the life-size doll Mr1. Mar·
garet Ru1hton was taking to her
hos~italized husband. "This was
the case of an over zealous new·
comer who charged for excess bag·
gage," a bus company spokesman
said. • The International c I a m s h e 11
Pitching Tournament, scheduled to
begin in Cape May N.J., .Aug. 29,
has attracted an entrant (r<?m
England. He Is Horold S..rlt, 70,
of Chiswick, who 101t one arm
years ago in a' tiger hunting ac·
cident in Burma and ·now is an ac·
count.ant. •
TM DtPriest Girls, two of tht na-
tion11 jir1t airlint hostt.tses. helped
celtbratt National Aviation Day in
Washington.. Theti are Anne DePrits:'
Morttan. Powhatan, Va. (~ft) and
Carrit DtPriest Salmon. Wa1hingtan,
D.C. • Firemen answered an emergen·
cy call to remove a horse from a
bedroom. Auth·orities said ShalKe,
a 2--year..old cbeatnut. wandered in·
to an empty house from a field, in
Cubllngton, England, trotted up the
front stairs and became trapped.
Firemen, aid"4 bY a veterinarian
who gave the animal a tran·
quilizer, set him free. • Police in St. Louis, Mo. said a
· man, about 22, placed a paubook
Monday Into the teller's drawer at
the Lindell Trllst Co. auto bank.
The teller, Raymond Peten, told
the man to Wait his turn because be
was busy with another customer.
The other customer was Georg•
WMM, 45, an ernploye of a check·
cashing finn, who was cashing a
check. The impatient customer
angrily ·withdrew the passbook , ana aS Peters passed a canvas bag
containing $5, 700 through t h e
drawer to Weese, the wrong man
snatehed the bag and ran off. • The Brlllsh Broadcastihg Corp.
(BBC) department teaching Eng-
lish by radio and television has
put new interest in its course.
Christopher Dllke. director of the
course, .says a striptease model '
tears off her clothes. As each piece
is removed, the teacher spells the
name of the garment on the black·
board. Dilke said, "Students soon
pick up the language when they
are faced with such interesting
and compelling lessons."
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A '°"" of J,000 North Vietnamese captured the
villag,.e of Preak Tameak nJne miles ilorth
of Phnom Penh today ln the heaviest
BM1u!t of the war on the capital'• oufer
defenses. Field reporll aald Cambodian
troops were batt11D1 t b e C.mmunlsll .. face to face."
An offk:lal Cambodian apokeaman aald
casuaJUes were heavy on both aides but
gave no figures.
Prell Tameak b on the east bank or
the Mekong River. The out.skirts of
Phnom Penh lie on the other side of the
400-yard-wide river wilbln range of Com.
DlW1ist mortars and rocket...
~U.S. il'O'IDd force:J were involved in
the Preak Tameat campaign but Saigon
commuNqtaes today reported that six
Americans were tilled in the crash ol a
bellcopter Jn South Vietnam as well as
cootinued comblt between U.S. and
North Vletnamete t::-ces near artillery
bue Barnett near the LaoUan border.
Spokeainan reported 25 North Viet·
namese and Viet Cong slain In a fijiht
jUJI .,eat of Barnett In South Vlelnam'•
northwest comer.
Phnom Penh communiques said the
North Vietnamese troops stormed Into
PrtU Tameat bdore dawn today and
were iD control ol the village by af.
ttrpoon.
This gave the communilts control of
the Mekong river in that area. and trafiic
lbere •topped. ·
'!be 52zJd battalion of Ille Cambodian aim.f look up a blocking position to foll
any further Communist •tlvance but the
C.mbodians were backed u, against the
river by Nor1h Vietnamese units pushing
la from three aides.
Cambodian .air forct pllob began at.
tacltblg Coaonunlsl positions In tbe Preall:
TameU .,.. tbb momlnl bat all lire
stopped about noon.
'lbe Cambodians were being supplied
by South Vietnam ... gunbo::ta movlni up
Ille flooded Mekollg.
'Oosest School'
Plan for South
Integration Told
WASIUNGTON (UPf) -The Nixon ad·
ministration says its basic plan for
desegregaUng Southern schools this fall i1
Co make it p)Slible for any child, black or
white, to atteJ)d the school near ~st his
born•.
And it hopes the .Supreme Court will
not complicate the: plan right now by rul-
ing that children should be bused to
achieve racial balan~.
This e.iplanation came Wedne9day
from Attorney General John N. Mitchell
during a luncheon with newsmen prior to
his departure today with President Nixon
for the West Coast.
Mitchell sald about 300 Southern school
districts ire desegregating voluntarily
thls fall while another 100 district.a have
been, or will be, sued by the covernment
to abolish all.black or all·whlte acboolJ
set up by local laws. He conceded thli:
will staiil result in some all-white and
some all-black schools in the South
b!cause of housing patterns.
"What you will have. I believe, ii
clostt to U'I! open society eoncept of
being able to go to the iehool neamt
you ," he said. And Mitchell suggested
that the overall result would be a
Southern school system generally com·
parable to the rest of the county, except
for some big city black belta.
But .Mitchell said one of tf'!!l "crave
problem!" facing the adminlstraUon b
the possiblllty the Supreme Court will
broad!n Its standards of equallty.
Army Drops Charges
FT. McPHERSON, Ga. (AP) -The
Army says it has dropped charge1
against S. Sgt. Kenneth L. Hodges ln con-
nectlon with the alleged massacre at My
Lai because "available evidence was in•
sufficient" to bring him to trial.
' Althoulh the f!ihting WU only nine
miles from Phnom Penh, here it wu u
lf nothing were bap;>enlng. H,.vy
monsoon r1.ln ..00 wind lhut out the
sound of battle fro.m Ille capltai and there
was no chana:e in the relued w1y of life
here. •
The light~ broke a IG-day lull In Cam·
bodlan around action, a lpOktlllWI aatd.
* * * Bruce Stays
Away From
Peace Talks
PARIS (UP!) -U.S. Ambassador
David K. E. Bruce today stayed away
from the aoth session of the deadlocked
talka on the Vietnam war. A brief state-
ment avoided the word boycott but said
the United Stites was awaiting a change
in the Communist attitude .
North VJetnam•s chief negotiator, Xuan
Thuy, has boycotted the talks for the past
10 montru:.
Philip C. Habib, Bruce's deputy,
delivered the shortest U.S. statement to
4ate ln the negotiations, saying that the
talks "should be conducted in a genuinely
conciliatory atmosphere and without
demands for obviously unacceptable
preconditions."'
Habib announced that Brnc! would not
attend shortly befOn! the session started.
"Ambuudor Bruce will be working in
hil Office ill day," RI.bib told newsmen.
A U.S. apokesman aald the American
delepilon wu "not going to Interpret"
Bruce'• at.epce llut Habib made It clear
~ wu not 1taytn1 away because of
lllnen. ,
Habib declined to say whether Bruce's
action was connected with the continuing
boycott by Ille chief negotlaton for North
Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
"I really don't want to comment about
ft," Habib replied when asked if there
was i connection.
Xuan 11luy Jeft the talks last November
when Ambauador Henry Cabot Lodge
resigned aod President Nixon did not im·
mediately name a successor.
Bruce wu appolnt.ed Lodge's successor
earlier th1I ~and has made two
appearanctt u tbe chief U.S. negotiator.
At the end of last week's aell!lion, the
North Vietnamese delegation announced
that Xuan 'niuy was returning: to PariJ,
but "" date WIS menUoned.
Hablb"I oUk:ial statement, submitttd at
the 1eulot1 today, covered only half of 1
typewritten page and wu Ille short..t
since the talks be1an 19 montha ago.
Reagan OKs Bill
To Clll'h Bombers
In California ·
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) -Gov.
Rooald Reagan bas •iined a bill setting
the death penalty as possible punishment
tor conviction for a bombing Jn Qcb a
person suffers "great bodily harm."
"As you know a wave of bombings hell
hit the country in recent months, and
California has not been spared," Re11an
said at Wednesday'• signinc.
"I know I share the hopes of all law·
11biding citizens in the state that the new
llw will !'IOmehow help to curb this most
trag:tc and senseless fonn of violence."
'Ille bill by Assmblyman W. Craig Bid-
.die, (R·Riveri;ide). set the penalty of
death or life imprisonment without parole
-al the discretion of the jury -when a
person is convicted of wilfully and
maliciously exploding a "destructive
device" causing great hann or injury to
another.
The musure included • ' Mo I o to v
cocktails" in the defmition of "destruc·
1.ive devices.·•
Strong Winds Hit NY
Heavy Thundershowers Dot Easterrt Third of Nation
Coastal
Mtll1Y _., lee••· Llttll ••tit~
Wlfldl tlitl\I IM "'°"Ill,,. ..,,. --
l ... wttllr!Y ... ll '""'' Ill •"'"""" IOdl• •llf ,,kl ..... """' .... w ,...
oC11!1I ~!Mfl!Vr .. ••!'Wt ....., 6.1 to 1 •. IM111d '-•111!1"111 ,,_ fl"W!I
II IO u. W1trr 1-•lv1"11 n.
Sun, Moo•, l'ldea
1'MURSD.\Y
~""""' """ ........ , ll1d•.'"· •.• ~ftcnd -l l.i:t I IOI. 11.f
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""' ltllft' 111.1!'1. ""' ''"' '·""· Moo!! ill;IMt 91 .. '·""• Ith 11"1~ 1.m,
•
Temperatures
Mltll LIW ,rte,
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.1.u,1111
llk ... tfltlt
8!11Ml'dt.
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Cillc:l11111"
Clwtltllf -...... ........ ·-... _ .......
LM """'" Mllml ltetll
MllWMtt
Ml"""°'ll' NewOrt..l\f Ntw YWll
01k ..... .......
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'"1l11M!itlll1 """""' ·-· l'Ol'll•~ ·---· II, Louis
Sll!Lfl(1Cl1Y '-fl O!tto '-II ,,lll(lt@
Sen11 atrblr•
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"'IT ........ F at Alf>ert
Four·year-old elephant seal,
Fat Albert, is new .student at
the Sea·Arama Martneworld in
Galveston, Tex. He now weighs
a mere 1,000 pounds, but he'll
eventually tip the .scale at 4,000
pounds. He'll be really Fat Al·
bert then.
Guerrillas Muin
On Kidnaped
Pair in Urugua y
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) -The
Tupamaro guerrillas remaiaed silent to.
day on their plans for two Jddnaped
foreigners. Police, facing the poaaiblllty
the atrategy is being directed from inside
jail, tried to isolate captured guerrilla
Jeaders from the outside world.
No authenticated messages have been
received from the guerrillas since Aug.
JI, when they reported in a communlque
that American agronomist Claude L. Fly,
65, and Brazilian consul Aloysio Mares
Dias Gomlde, 41 , were i11 good health.
Police reported on Wednesday the
ditcovery of a I e t t e r from a jailed
Tupamaro leader to another guerrilla
chief urging the terrorista to remain
silent because they had more to gain the
longer the two hostages were held.
The letter, writte1 on nine cigarette
paper1, was sent to Raul Smdk. a
founder of the organization, and was
fouJd in the suburban house where he
and eight other TupamllW were e1p.
lured Aug. 7. -
Florida Riot ers •
Fire on Sheriff
. FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (UP/) -
Snlpora flrld on jlroward County Sheriff
Ed Stack ~-Y nlibt and be es/led
1n "the monster" -a giant riot CXll;itrol
vehicle -to help quell tl1e silUt nilht of
racial violence in the county.
"When Ibey start flrtn& al me. things
an getting out of bond.• IAid Stack, who
alllO ll running for Congreu. '10ur men
will be armed with loaded rtnes tc:ini&ht
and Ibey will reapood to fOi<e with ap-
propriate force."
11.ngela D~vfis'
Car Now Seen
As Big Ruse
L06 ANGELES (UPI) -Aqela Davis'
1959 staUon wagon may have bee11 placed
1n front of a Black Panther's home here
in an elaborate ruse to throw authofities
off her trail, a poUce'Olficlal said today.
The dlse-0very of ·the dusty Rambler
Tuesday night culminated in an intensive
but unsuccesaful search by 50 officers
and FBI agents in the immediate area
for the black militut.
The car, ideatified in 1 nationwide .U
points bulletin when Mias Davis was first
sought in connection with a San Rafael
courtroom ahootwt th.at left four 4tad,
was f~ in front of the home of
Franklin D. Alexander, 29. Alexander, a
Black P1nther-. is president of the Com·
mnnlst Cbe-Lumumba club of which Miu
Davia la a member.
The dbcovery of the car touch!d off
speculatio1 that Mils Davis might have
returned to Los Angelei. She wu
report!d In her home tow n of Binn·
ingham, Ala., laat weekend.
The car was initially considered a
prime link to Miss Davis because
Alabam1 authorities cited unconfirmed
report& ~at she waa see• driving: a "blue
Rambler station wagon." But offietts: in
Alabama were unable to aubslanUate the
tip from an informant.
The ·finding or the car and reports from
witnesses the same day they hid seen
Miss Davis at Los Angeles Interutional
Airport lnteruifJed police JnvestigatiOns
befe,into her whereabouts.
~w:ever, the police official nkl fn.
·mt!pton di!cooui.d the reported
sightincs of the woman because all ol the
wt~ Aid the lVOmlD in que1Uon' WIS
we1!9D1 cUlfennt dotbfnl.
Stack said the sniper bullet! mlsstd
him by six feet.
"If they continue shooting, we're going
in thert tonight," Stack said. ''We won't
staod bY patiently and Jet police be fired
on without reacting. It's no longer fun
and games. We've got to break the back
of this thing."
Two black men suffered gwishot
wounds and were listed in fair condition
in a hospital here today. Neither was shot
by p::ilice. One of tbe shooting inclde.n~
stemmed from an argument in a grocery
stou and another involved a man who
was shot by a customer as he tried to
hold up a tavern, police said.
Stack met briefly with Gov. Claude
Kirk shortly after midnight at the Fort
Lauderdale Airport and refused the help
of nalional guardlimen. Kirk said he was
pleased with what Stack WllS doing and
said be was leaving him in control of lhe
situation.
There was little property damage
Vtednesday night despite sporadic
firebombing, but three patrol can were
hit by sniper fire and two others had
smashed windshields from rocks thrown
by angry yOWlg blacks.
'The huge riot wagon was brought in
from Orlando and when It moved into the
troubled area, It drew gunfire and was
bombarded with firebombs and rocks.
Forty deputies armed >Yith shotguns
walked behind the vehicle to disperse lht:
crowd, but officials said there were no
shells in the magazines.
Pompano Beach, Hollywood and Dania,
neighboring towns troubled with violence
since Saturday, were relatively quiet
Wednesday. The violence spread to Fort
Lauderdale - a city of 140,IQI -Tues-
day night. Police repcrted tl1oy shot and
killed a Negro looter early Wednesda~
and arresi.d 10 peno111.
Ex-Bunnies Sue
NY Playbo y. Oub
NEW YORK (UPI) -Four former
''bunnies" charged "sexual discrimlna•
tion" against the ·New York Playboy Club
Wednesday in a petition to the Equal
Employment Opportunity Conunluioo
asking for reinstatement and back pay.
Part of the complaint wa1 based on the
claim the club bad penalized bunnies bub
not bartendera for havinc "stretch
mvks" Ro~ J. Mozer, attorney for the girls,
sakl the suit was the first "to challen1e
the phony semrn" of Hugh Hefner'1
onlerpriser.
GIF.T$1 AND :~ASUAL . .
HOME ~U~Nl$Hl~GS
ANNUAL AUOQSt CLEARANCE
* Brown Jordan Patio Furniture °"':::,~ ~ ~=
* Name Brand Barbecues .................. ~-... •'•
*Gift Items ...................................... "'u .... _
* Garden Umbrellasct~.•,o,::~~~~" 100/o-300/o off
.... 116.tJ
.................................. ,,.,,
* Chaise Lounge
*Terry Cloth Pads
* Chaise Pads • , •.• ,,, ••••• , .••.•.• ,. , •••• , ,, ,, ••••• .... SJ.t i
.... SI.t i
.... &11 .•1
*Terry Piiiows ...................................... """'·"
• ... 12.11
"
NEAR cost
200/o OFF
200/o OFf=
$16.95 & UP
NOW $13.95
NOW $.4.88 .,
·NOW $6.20 -Now S7.2o
NOW $9.60
NOW $2.49
NOW $1.99
r · Many l te ma on Our Annual Augru t
Clearance Sak Are at Coat or Below.
A ll Salea Fi11aU
-
)
•
7
•
. .
Fo1111ia.in v·~Jley Today's l'l•el
N.Y. Stocki
VOL. 63, NO. 199, S SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. THURSDAY, AUGUST; 21>, 'ino :TEN CENTS -
'
Senate Committee. ·l(ills Badham Freeway Bill
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of .... ~IY Plltt It..,
SACRAMENTO -The Badham bill
died a quick and bitter death in the
Senate Transportation C o m m I t t e e
Wednesday.
As a result, the planned Pacific Coast
Freeway route along Newport Beach's
coutline moved at least a little closer to
reality. '
The commitlee action, which !ollowed
only 10 minutes of testimony, had an im-
mediate devastating e ff e c t on
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R.
Newport Beach) and supp:>rters of the
bill.
His backers, mostly Newport Beach in-
terests, were crushed when lhe 4 to 5
committee roll call vote was announced.
Seven affinnaUve votes were needed to
move the bill out onto the Senate floor.
The final act of announcing the vote
came only after · Badham bsued an
almosl unpreced•nte<I last.mlnulo plea,
after the vote bad l>een taken. to allow
amendments to be offered -thereby
keeping the bill alive.
He wanted to add a provision requiring
the Slate Division of ' Higbw~s to study
alternate route!.
The move drew immediate objectjons
from commit.tee members Senators
James E. Wbetmore (R-Garden Grove)
and Allred E. Alquisl ([).San Joae), two
Desalt Plant Ol('d
Site Set in Huntington or Valley
By JACK BROBACK
Of IM 0.llY '"'' Stiff
Plana to build a '6.1 million sea water
desaltin1 plant ln Fountain Valley or
Huntington Beach moved closer to reality
Wednesday night.
Manual Lopez Jr., representing the
federal Office of Saline Water ol the
Department of the Interior, met with
directors of the Orange County Water
District and delivered signed agreements
for the project from the federal govern-
ment.
The timetable is part of the agreement
signed by the two agencies and calls for
site selection by next Nov . 15 and start of
construction by June of 1971.
Construction firms bidding on .the pro-
ject were to meet with OCWD officials
today and inspect two proposed sites. ac-
cording to Neil Kline, district assistant
maniger.
Being studied at the present time is 20
acres owned by the dia~ct near I.be W..
Sites Studied
For Harbour
Marine Project
Management representatives of the
Undersea Gardens, Santa Barbara,
visited Huntington Beach today to Inspect
three possible 'sites in Huntington
Harbour for a similar attraction.
They were taken on the tour by Ralph
Kiser, manager of the Qiamber of Com·
merce, and Don Burns, vice president
and general manager of the Huntington
Harbour Corporation.
The three sites under consideration are
the Gulf Oil property near Admiralty
Drive and Pacifjc Coast llighway, a loca-
tion next to the COUDty boat marina, and
the sunset beach sanitary district's
treatment facility on t h e corner of
Warner Avenue and Coast Highway.
·Next Wednesday Kiser, Lou Evans,
head of the chamber's tourism com-
mittee ; Doyle Miller, city administrator:
Vince Moorhouse, director of barbors'and
beaches, and William Reed, the city's
public information officer, plan to visit
the Undersea Gardens in Santa Barbara.
The Undersea Gardens is a marine life
attraction located in a sheltered harbor .
Visitors to the Santa Barbara facility can
look at sea life nine feet below the
1urface.
Nixons Arriving
On Coast Friday
For 10-day Visit
tersection of Ward Street and Ellis
Avenue in Foun1ain Valley, and a similar
parcel adjoMlng the Orange County
Sanitation District Plant 2 at the mouth
of the Santa Ana River in Huntington
Beach.
Firms bidding on the project include
Baldwin Lima Hamilton of Ohio, Aqua·
Chem ol Los Angeles, Westinghouse
Electric Corporation and Aerojet General
Corporation.
The plant, an experimental project will
produce only 12 million gallons or
desalted waler a day, a mere one percent
of Orange County's daily consumption.
The water produced will be used in the
district's waste water reclamation pro.
gram for irrigation purposes.
Kline said the water would not be for
domestic use although the eod product
would be suitable for that purpose.
"The plant i1 being built as a pilot to
develop tecluµques for producing usable
domestic 'filer-irom salt· wa~,'' Kline
said. ·
• •
SEEKS WILDERNESS HOME
Wltne•• Linda Ka1ebian
Manson Tells
Mistreatment
In County Jail
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Cllarles
Manson took the witness st.and at the
Ta~LaBianca murder trial today to
complain bitterly about the "humiliation"
to v.·hich be said be was subjected in the
county jail.
The plant will be powered by naturil
gas, Kline said, and the project bas
already been submitted to the Orange
County Air Pollution Control District and
has received the approval of that agency,
Kline said the Pollution Control District
reporh!d that the gu-fired steam 'boilers
in the plant would P:roduce only ·to per.
cent o£'the allowable emissions.
The project is the second desallnlz.aUon
plant proposed for Orange County. ·
Plans for the ill-fated Bolsa Island, 150
millloo gallon a day plant of.f Bolsa Ollca
State Beach ran into severe fin{ncial dif·
ficulties two years ago and were dropped
by the federal government and three
power companies who had joined for
development of the $444: million projecl
However. Metropolitan Water District
of Southern California, the fifth partner
M the Balsa tsland project, has reported
that it is-sun considering construction of
a -desalt plant -but pJanl•are not definite
at this time as to IoCitlce. •
J r ,,.. .,
• • ... JI.
. ~ ' Controversial
•
Teacher Quits
In Huntington
By TERRY COVD..LE
or "" Dlltr '"" "'"
•
Mrs. Charloma Schwankovsky, the
principal figure in. a stormy controversy
in the Huntington Beach City School
Distric~ has resigned from the dlstricl.
District officials announced this morn-
ing that the ponner principal of ~ani
elementary sdlool suhmitlod her ,..,1gna.
lion to the board of trustees Wednesday
night and it was accepted.
Mrs. Schwankovsky, who recenUy won
a superior court decision forcing the
district to keep her as a principal for the
coming rear, could not be reached for
commen today.
"The board and Mrs. Schwankovsky
feel this is ln the be.st Jnterests of the
district," S. A. Moffett, d i s tr I c t
superintendent, said today.
District officials agreed io pay t14,750
to Mrs. Schwankowky to complete her
contract as a principal for the coming
school year.
"The resignation and salary paiyment
was worked out as a comprOmise bj at-
torneys representing both sides," Moffett
said.
"An appeal on the Superior Court
dec~loo, filed by the school district, will
probably be dropped." Moffe~ added.
Mrs. Schwankovsky's r e s I g n a t Io n
brinJ! to an end nearly four months of
baWmg over district actions concerning
her posilion as principal at I..eBard.
It began May 12 when district off)clals
asked her to either resign, accept a prin-
cipal post at another school or become a
classroom teacher.
cllld opponenla of the musure.
They IUgl'lte<I Badhain instead IJ!.
troduoe a ruolution calliu( for a study of
alternate possibilities.
Bldlwn •onlod no part of uu...
pleading for the special consideration and
again asking Committee Chairman Ran-
dol(!h Collier (0. Yr<l<a) not to formally
arinouice the vote. .
Stnatqr Collitr. despite his support-for
the blll;fllw>d hlmaell l)tmmed in by tbe
Insistent nbjectiona to the _.i 'and
formally ended the bill's life by an-
nouncing the vote.
Badham and othu supporters, •biUerly
disappointed, had little to say· in tbe
capitol balls afterwards. ·
It all happened so fast, they seemelf·too
&tunned to comment. · '
The hearing, scheduled for 2 ; p.m.,
finally began about 2:45 p.m. •nd 10
minutes later Senator Col.lier• called on
' ' YMCA'S WURTIBACHER CALLS EXERCISE CADJNCIO
In Huntington Beach,. Pu1hup1 i'n th• P.•rk
Fun • ID
Kids Enjoy Beach Day Camp
"All right, everybody in line! Down on
your stomaches -flat! Now, up one!
Down two!"
As Sam WID'tzbacher barked out the
orders boys and girls scrambled to their
pu.shpup positions, except for one tiny girl
who curled up on the grass and slept.
In a more quiet.mood SIJ,Tl took a book
and a (ew youngsters under a tree · in
Lake Park and read them stories.
Other children were busy with different
crafts or art projects.in the morning and
in the afternoon they all went 'to tile
be-ch. ·
11Ils IJ how ·tbe Huntington Bea<;h YM·
Gas Ship .Sighting Se t
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Navy·
may not have to wait uittil Ck:tober to
determine the exact location of the scut·
tied nervfl! gas ship as preyiously thought,
it was learned today. Although a
triangulitlon process for locating the ship
failed , . the Navy .may have determined
the ship's posit.Ion withi1 a mile by using
1atellltes. · ·
CA's summer day camp worQ. Four
young counselors and 45 eager children
combining for a run diy'of 'activit1es.
"This is our third and final week of the
program," Richard Col!J!:to, execu.Uve
director of the Huntington Beach YMCA,
explained. "We have 45 kids registered
this week and 150 took part .jn the whole
,program .''
The local YMC.A launched t he day.
camp program this summer for the first
time. "It's been quite succeasful," Collllto
said.
Boys and girls ages f>..12 meet everr
day at 9 a.m .. at' Lake Park and •att: pick-
ed up'by their parents at 3'p.m. ·
their morning routine~ includes arf.s
and cfafts -suCh as making p~Pflet& and
pie· tin picture frames: physical fitness;
sports; read, by one of the coUMelors;
films and other activities.
In the morning everybody goes to the
beach, or on a sped.al trlp within.the city,
such as the poli:e or fire departments.
Cost of the program Is 117 a child, for
one w(!tk.
"I wu an eiperiment this summer and
we think it' has worted beautifully,"
~Ila.to concluded.
President and Mrs. Richard Nixon will
3rrlve with a flourish on the Orange
Coast Friday afternoon with the public
jnvited to the land ing strip at the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station.
Dressed in prison denims, his beard
and hair stringy and unoombed, the 3s..
year-old ex-convict testified outside the
presence of the jury on his motion to
order the county sheriff to cease and
des.isl the .. harassment" of the defen-
dant.
Intrepid Takes C~p Lea.,.,
The chief executive and his wife, who
will be returning trom a second honey.
moon In Puerto Vallarta , Mexico, will
touch down al 4:30 p.m. in Air Force
One.
The general public will be admitted to
the landing area to greet the First Faml·
ly with gates opening at 2 p.m., base
spokesmen said.
'Ibe arrival will mark the start of the
second visit this month of the President
to his Western White House home in San
Clemente.
The arrival will be on the same day as
the vi.sit by Vice President Spiro
Agnew, who will remain along the Qr.
ange Coast unUJ Saturday, when he plans
to start his tour of Southeast Asia.
Agnew, White House spokesmen said.
would meet with the President Saturday
tn San Clemente, 11nd might mett again
(See NIXON, Pa1e I)
' •
Manson described a "shakedown"
which he said he undergoes a number of
times every day in which he takes off all
hi s clothes, opens his mouth, Wiggles his
tongue, turns his bead to show each ear,
raises his arms to show there 19 nothing
in his armpits, shakes his hair, lifts one
foot µnd then the other. "n ts Sf.l!.lbolic of humlliation,'1 he said.
"It's like kicking a dead man."
Manson also tesUfied that when be
spoke with hia atton}ey 1n jail an offlcer
always wu present and when be at-
tempted to pasa: any wrluen com-munication to the llW)'tr lhe offlcer1read
it rirst. ' ·• ·
He sa(d a guard abo was preaeril when
he talked to proaPective wltneasn and
wlthln earshot of their c:onveraation.
The state's star wliness, Unda Kasa-
bian, concluded htt testimony Wednesday
after 18 daya Oii the wltnw llalld and
(See TATE, Pa1e II '
Neivport Yacht Wliips Rival by Se'i.ien Minutes .
By ALMON LOCKABEY -·-NEWPORT, R 1. -Skipper Bill Ficker
of Newport Beach ramrtlfld Intrepid over
the-14.3-mile America'• Cup .course
Wedne_sday to beat George HJJ1man's
Weatherly by a whoppina 1even minute.
and 31 seconds. .
It was another bright IUOlbiny day on
Rhode Island Sound with ti. 10utheaaltr·
ly wind ftlllnc·in· early at ahout·lf·klola.
Charlie Morgan'11 Hertta&e wu beaten
by Bob McCullou&h'• 'Valiut to the tune
of C.ree minutes Ind "41 eecondl 1 after
trailing the New Yotk'yacbt .by mly 17
seconds at I.he first. weather mark.
Herltap WU Oylnc I protbt na1 at
the flnbh, clalmlnl Valiant •!olated Iha
•
wlndward-leewlrd rule.30 seconds before· Thia would leave a long draWll ou't.day
the at.art. ' to day battle between Valt.ant an4
Jt appeared that Valiant, the weather ' Intrepid unUI the commi~ makes Ha
boat aU.ered course to fall down on final selection sometime by $ti>l. ll.
HtH tagf:. ' Arter today's races the• aalec~· corft.
H1rit.a11e'1 bigge.lt lO&S came at the mltiee fill make up palrinp for the nu.t start of the first splnaaker leg when she , three races. There will , be no •nctng.oo
~ hoiJted.the ·chut.e in a.t.lght wrap and1ook -Sunday; ~, ne~ly ~r!!:!,'rlnuteS to get It set again. Ficker lost groltnd to ·~oo ,n1y
Valiant rtp~·a chute oa the ·~me. leg . o~i., 0# the~· After g'llp a
but.had..a •qe.w one set aJld drawmg ma lead ot 4:53 at the end of tM · acie. he
minute and·• hair. lost over a minute on the nwpt wiadward
In today's race•lntrepid meets Her1taae feg but more·than made· It .ap on tbe-nm
and VaJJut gDeil aa:ainst her trisl borae to the fifth mark where he ttltd 15:14 td·
Wea'therly. Dockside e1pert1 are aues~linc vantage. ~
th~t If Intrepid and Valiant win their But .the new that had ~ wale!' fronl
mstches' today. the select.ion committee buulng here Wednesday 1'fl the protest
may dlmlnalo Heritaae and Weatherly. (Seo CUP TIUAl.'l, Pa1• ll
•
Badham to present his case. He 1ave
both sides five minutes and by 3:10 p.m.
the committee was rushing out a side
door to·return to the Swale chambers.
Besides A!semblyman Badham, only
four penom were allowed to address the
ocmmittee during the brief hearing that
seemed almost anticlimactic after the
weeks of planning and.postponements.
Only. Mn. J""'ph Beek, widow ot the
(See FREEWAY, Page I)
One Killed,
Three Hurt
In Accident
A housewife wu tilled and her three
children injured Wednesday afternoon
when she apparenUy tried to execute a U...
turn on Pacific Coast Highway' ln Hun-
tington B;each and was suuck broadside
by a beer truck driven by a Laguna
Beach Man.
Mrs. Carole Ann Conner, 31, of Loe
Angeles was pronounced ·dead on arrlvtl
at 'HunUngton Intercommunily Hospital
shortly after the 2:21 p.m. accident.
Her three children, Debra. U, Kenneth.
./. and Stephanie 9, were listed in
gatlsfactory condlUon today.
Traffic investigators said the beer
truck, driven by Wiiliam A. Mansfield of
1605 Arroyo Driv.e, Laguna Beach, col-
lided with the Conner vehicle at a speed
of,40,to 50.mlles.per )louL.and lmhedded
lmil to the aide of the w .
Mam!ield !old plllct Mn. Comllr'• at ,,u ~J both lane> and tlial ht -
llOI' awid bllllllfl the ....:' • •
Mll;"<l>nMT'• da.,-; flle°l&nle, who
wu pirown from the car by the Impact,
told officers btr mother wu on bet way
home from the beach. She had juat pulled
. out: of tbe parting. lot when they were
struck.
Woman Killed
By Bolting ,Horse
The wile of a HunUngtoii Beach doctor
was killed Wednesday ~en.'~r· bone
galloped out of ,oontrol aDd she fell onto•
feta post.
Mn. Pixie Lou HsJiman . 45, of 4025
Aladdin Drive, Huntilgton Harbour, died
of head injuries aL -4:45 p.m. at South
Coast Hospilal, South Laguna, about
seven hours after the accident.
Coroner's investigators said the ac--
cident oceurred at the Coto De Cua Hunf
Club in Trabucq Canyon ~n her steed
bp)ted and she either jumped or was
thrown off.
Her husband, Dr. Frank V. Hoffman,
practices adult and child psychiatry in
Huntington Beach.
Volunteer Gls Costly
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Sen. John C.
Stennis said today an amendment to t
replace the draft with an all-volunteer
army would add at least $4.3 billion a
year to the defense budget. The
Miaalasippl Democrat, chairman of Uie Armtd Services Committee, said the
issue should be taken up when the com-"" miltee launches Ila long-pllllllled hearlnp intO the overall Selective Service System
...... hopefully later this year.
C:Out
Weatlaer
Hope you enjoyed today's weath-
er, because we're having an in-
stant replay Friday wtth low clouds
in the morning and hazy sunshine
ther~fter. TemperatW'es w 111
rans;e from 75 to 85 degrees.
INSIDE TODAY
Gov. Rtagan'i CommLssion on
Ediu:ottonoi Reform hos r1com-·
"""'1t<f.fbOU.h ... nt Of th< l<n-'14Tt~ttm and creation oJ a
ment l!U setup /or California'•
ttacMn. Page !~
r .,,t
t • lilfLV l'ILOI H rhurM.11, ~ io. 1978 ...,
' Freewa11 ftghter
B~dham ~·Pledges
·He'll Try Again
thtri 11 ~re than one way lo kill a
freeway route.
And Assemblyman Robert E. Badham
(ft.Newport Beach), whose move to have
the Legislature commit the slaying of a
Padfic Coast Freeway sectJon failed
Wednesday, has vowed to find another.
But }'te'_ll h•Y.e to hurr)'. Sf:ale Division of
Highway officials said today the 6tart of
construction cf the Newport segment the
Coastal route ls scheduled for the 1973-74
fiscal year.
Badham seems ready.
His f~l promise after the Senate
Tramportation Committee rejected h.is
bill ti> fiiminate the Pacific Coast
freeway through Newport Beach, was to
From Pagel
FREEWAY ...
former secretary of the Se,nate, and
Newport Beach City Councilman Howard
Rogen spoke on behalf of the bill.
Speaking m •">PPostion were
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R.Hun-
lington Beach) and Al S. Koch, Orange
County road commissi~r.
Burke's appearance drew criticism
from Badham, who said be wu "appalled
at an assembly colleague a p p e a r I n g
before the senate to oppose a bill."
Burke bad told the committee that if it
killed the freeway from Buch Boulevard
in Huatington Beach to the eastern boun-
dary of Newport Beach, it would wreck
the planning effort& of a number of cities,
He said Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa,
FoWrtain Valley and Laguna Blach "are
looking forward to the freeway ."
He said, "11ley have invested time and
mooey" planning around the new route
and said it would cause hardship!' if this
aection was ·deleted.·
Koch introduced a delegation of Orange
Coast ofHclals in the gallery who were
there opposing lhe bill, including County
Supervisor Alton E. Allen, Laguna Beach
Mayor Richard Goldberg. Coit& Mesa
Mayor Robert. Wilson and Fountain
Valley City Manager James Neal.
Koch tald the panel that they would be
Jeavi.Qg five dead-end freeways pointing
toward the cout in Orange County by
killing the Newport Beach segment.
He pointed out that · of the 10-mlle
1tntch affected in the Badham bill, a
formal route .had already been accpted
and adopte.d far all but three miles -the
section between the WW. Newport boun·
dary a!ji·B•Y~lilo drlY•· • . Badhlm, countering thia, pointed o u t
that a ciUzens committee iJ already mov·
ing to force Newport Beach to rescind the
•greemtnt on ~ fQur-mUe stretch from
tll• Bacl: Bay'.lli th• Corona .de! Mar dty limlu. ·. ·
Koch pointed out that.the state already
owns $15 million worth of: right-of-way
along the adopted route and noted thal
$150 million has been spent planning for
the route.
He also noted that the two freeway
segmen_ts already deleted, one tiµ'oogh
Venice ant1 tha olher through Beverly
Hills, did not inv~ve adopted routes.
ln his closing testimony. Bad.ham
\'olunt.eered to take th e polilicaJ con·
&equences of the bill.
Pointing out that h.is district covered
territory other than just Newport. ter·
ritory who&e local officials wanted the
freeway, ht told the committee, "I have
to take the political risk In the face of my
constituents."
He staked his position nn the view.
1'Where a freeway does not belong, a
freeway. dOcs not belong. 'l
As it enters , Newport. Beach from the
northwest, the proposed controvel'lial
route cuts almost. directly towards the
shore and continues through the city
along some real.estate bordering existing
Coast Highwa y.
In pleading to be allowed to offer the
amendment, Badham first had tried to
interrupt the actual voting when he saw
how It was going.
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take t.he city'a plight to Governor
Reagan.
Badbam said he would ask lhe
governor to remove funds from lhe
budget for lfiat section of the freeway
when it comes up for constructi9n.
That, according to Wallace Knuben,
district design engineer for the Highway
division, is only three years off.
Knutsen said this morning that there
are no funds in the current 197B-7l budget
for actual construction of the freeway ,
anywhere in Orange County and said
none will likely be included in the next
budget 'tb be adopted by the Highway
diviJjorJ in ~.
Knutsen disclosed that the Newport
section ·may be the finrt on the slate's
priority in the county. however, and that
the road would be started from the plan·
ned Newport Freeway (Roule 55) in·
terchange , and built south through
Capistrano.
He said by the time It reaches \hat far
down, constructiQn would also have begun
northerly into Huntington Beach.
All this, Knutsen stressed, is according
to present priorities which could be
changed at any time.
He said that construction of the
Newport Freeway through Costa Mesa to
the coast. would likely not be started
before the mid or l;:;.~c 1970s.
Badhamt however, insista that lbe cur-
renl Pacific c.oast. freeway route, along
the Coast Highway in Newport, is againat
recommendations of a special task force
appointed by Governor Reagan to study
effects of freeways on environment.
He also said that the federal govern·
1 ment, Qtrough the e f f o r t s of
Transportation Secretary John Volpe. b
moving to cut out funds f o r
superhighways that "would run down
people's beacbe!."
Badham also was quick to cite the ef.
forts of the newly-formed Cltiu:ns
Coordinating Committee In Newport
Beach that" has begun to circulate peti·
tions that will force the Newport City
Council to rescind its agreement with the
state Division of Highways.
The city has Signed an agreement
adopting the actual route of the coasta l
freeway ea,t from Bayside drive to the
city limits at Corona del Mar.
Under the initiative petition, the council
wouJd either have to rescind the agree-
ment an its own ar put the q_uestion to a
vote of the cltizenr)'.
The CCC is also circulating a related
petition that would requite a city-wide
vote on a charter amendment to require
the council \0 ronduct a rtfeTtridWn"
before It signs another agreement.
Signatures of 15 )>ercent o! the elec-
torate are needed to forqe the council to
act on both matters.
Other reactions to Wednesday'a com·
mittee aciion 'Were as expected.
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth hur-
ried from the capitol to catch a taxi to
. the airport. He would say only, "I am
sorry it went the way it did ."
Maior Robert Wilson of Costa Mesa. an
opposition leader, was obviously pleased.
He applauded Assemblyman Robert H.
Burke (R-Huntington Beach), for his
work in defeating the measure, although
not hestitating to comment that the bill's
sponsor, Assemblyman Badham, had
fought hard for legislation he believed in.
Mayor Wilson said the · committee,
however, had little choice but to do what
it did , pointing to widespread opposition
to the bill.
From Pagel
NIXON ...
with Mr. Nixon upon lhe Vice President's
return tQ the states.
Among the greeters of the Nixons Fri-
day afternoon will be lhelr youngest
daughter, JuJlc, and her husband David
Eisenhower -both guests at the
Presidential estate since last Saturday.
Elder daughter Tricia also is expected
to arrive with her parent.Ii .
From the air station, the Nixuns will
board the President's helicopter for the
i;hort hop downcoast.
The visit in San Clemente shou ld last
through the eod ol the month, aides said,
but ot.htr than the Agnew visits and talks
on impressions of Southeast Asia, other
plans by the Pre!ident are not yet an-
nounced. ·
The arrival Friday afternoon will be
rnl>Ch different than lhe last touchdown
at El Toro for the chief executive.
On a late Friday night several weeks
ago the weary first famil y landed without
much fanfaN! after a wearisomr. cam-
paign.gtyJe series of stops across the na-
tion.
The trip included stops in North Dakota
And Utah before the final destination in
Or~nge County.
Thli arrival promises to be different,
with thousand• of greeters expected to
give a warm welcome.
Huntington Realtor
Slates Open House
A new real eatate office Is opening al
9M2 Hamilton Ave .. llunUngton Beech. A
grand ope.nlng will be held at the office of
Coat> & wanaoe Realtors llom I to 8
p.m. today. The agency already haa an offip(! at
Harbor BouleVN'd Ind Bak'r Streel In
Costa Mesa. Frank K. White. • partner.
will be lhe. man1t11cr of the ntw o!flct
which will spttlallzo In residential
resalel.
UP'ITtllMttt
'Who Me 40:>'
Yep. England's Princess Mal·
garet, Queen Eli2aboth's young-
er sister and fourth in line for
the British throne, celebrates
her IOth birthday Friday.
From Pagel
TATE ...
uid she would continue her life as a hlp-
pie.
But she uys abe will never take drugs
again. \
Mrs. KasabJan WM followed by three
eye witnesses who substantiated in every
detail covered in their testimony the
story .she told during her long ordeal on
the stand.
Mrs. Kasablan was granted immunity
from prosecution for her part in con-
nection with the slayings. .After com-
pleting her tesUmony lhe held a new! con-
ference to discuss her future and made
these points :
-She plans to live in "the wilderneu"
with her two young children and continue
the life or a hippie.
-She wi.!hes Charles: Manson and hi!
three female codefendant.1 would "get
down on their knees and beg for
forgiveness" but she does not believe
they are capable of doing 80.
···" .LS!it will ·not 'rejoin ·htt l!U!blnd,
Robert. He ls going his way -to Mexico
-a.pd she ii going hers.
-She .does not intend ever to take druP -alni or join a hippie ·commuhe.
But she feels hippies will net resent her
accusing Manson and his grQUp.
-She hopes to "find God" and in so
doing to work with children.
-She is "nol going to worry" about
Manson seeking vengeanc.e.
-She hopes the young people of
America will learn from her experience
and "take another path."
Following Mrs. Kasabian on the stand
was Timothy Ire.land, an instructor at the
Westlake School for Girls about half a
mile from the Tate estate.
Ireland said on the night of the slaying
a number of girls were having a campout
on the school grounds and he was
supervising them. At about 12:45 a.m.
Aug. 9. 1969 he heard a man's voice
&Creaming :
"Ob God, no, please don't. Oh, please
don't, don't, don 't, don't Please don't."
The prosecution witness said he check-
ed to make sure the sounds had not come
from any of the young women and then
drove around but could find · nothing
wrong so he returned to the school.
The next witness, Rudolph Weber,
whose home is not far from the Tate
residence, said he was awakened about 1
a.m. Aug. 9, 1969, by the sound of run.
ning water and thought there was
something wrong with his plumbing.
Dr. Max Forney
Leaves for Guam
Education Post
Dr. Max Forney, superintendent of the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District for "Cight years. left lhe city lt>-
day with a brilliant-colored Hawaiian
shirt arld a fl o"ppy beachcomber's hat in
hi! bags.
They were given him in a raucous sen-
doff at a chamber of commerce luncheon
Wednesday.
pr . Forney, who also resigned RS a
chamber director. is to take a post as
a~iate professor <lf education at the.
University of Gaum.
Praise, lace.d with jokes, wa1 laviahed
on the educator. Darrell Ward, who
operates a mortuary was the master of
· ceremonies. while Willie Otto. president
or !he Rotary Club, Or. John Venables.
curriculum director for the high school
district. and Matthew Weyuker, president
' Of the trustees. took turns speaking.
-The festivities were topped by ll I~
minute Hawaiian dance display by Jayme
Boyd. Miss Huntington Beach.
In other bu!tness, W8n.i was elected a
chamber director to replace bank
manaicr R1cllard Waldzunas who has
betn transf&Ttd, and Ed Sullivan,
manaaer of tbe Southern Gallfornla
Automobile Club in Huntington Beach,
was elected to replace Or. Forney.
-~~-~-·~---·
Mo~gan -Protest Denied
Valiant Victory Upheld by Committee
• NEWPORT, R.t. -Charlie Mor1on'1
prot.,t aplnot Vlllut It th• start ol
Wedalld.ay11 second race of th e
America's CUp aetecUon trial.a was
disail0wed today by the New York Yaeht
Club race committee. .
Sir Frank Packer, head of the
AuJJt.rallu ayndie1te, received the same
rebuff from the International Yacht Ric·
Ing Unloo comrn..ittee on his protest that
both the .Auatralian yacht qrete:l 11 ud
the French y1cht France have been im-
properly measured.
Morgan claimed that Valiant skippered
by Bob McCullough or New York bore
down an Heritage at the st.art so close
that Valiant'! boom passed across
Herltage'a foredeck .
Valiant was the wildward boat with the
burden of keeping clear under the
windward-leeward rule. The two boat.a
were overlapped at the time of the in-
cident.
In de,.ylng the protest, the committee
gave Morgan a mild lecture on filing
what the committee called minor or
trivial protest.a.
McCullough's defense was that he did
not bear away on Heritage far enough to
cause the Florkla yacht to alter course.
It was the filth time McCullough bas
· BUL~ETIN
Bill flcker on 111tnpid and Charlie
Morgan OH Heritoge were fighting
virtually a bow-to-bow ba~tll aft/sf'
thrte legs of the third race of the
Amerlca'1 Cup 1~lecion trials here to-
day.
At the weather nwrk, Intrepid hetd
a scant 16 second Lead ovtr the Flor-
ida boat and WG$ unable to change
the time split on the firtt reaching
lea.
At the end of tile third leg, com·
pitting the triangle. l 'icktr had in·
creased his lmd to 20 1eca1'd.!. An a,lmost equatlv cl.ose bottle wai
going on between Bob McCUltough'1
Valiant and George Hinman's Weath·
erly. Valiant led Weatherly bv 19
seconds at the ftr1t mark, 61 .recond.f
at the second mark and 48 seconds at
the third mark.
The ~tchl were 1aiting in a 10-
knot 1outhwesttrty breet.t! with about
one /pot of chop. Occc.rlonal 1howtr1
fell on the cour1e.
beell protested since the trials began in
June. In all but one other he loat lhe pro-
test.
. .
From Pagel
' Bdak lbow!rs wetted the Newport area
todliy 1s the yachtll .were leaving the
docks under tow for the starting line.
There wa.s conjecture earlier in the day
that fog on 'Rhode ls land· sound mlght
cancel the day's race!.
Today'J schedule called for Jntrepid to
meet Heritage and Valiant to sail aa;alrat
her trial horse Weatherly.
Weather permittin& the palril11s Frld•y
would rematch Valiant against intrepid.
Bill FiCker on lntTepld lost the first rouJWi
to Valiant on Tuesday.
Sir Frank Packer let it be known today
that he does not intend to drop his protest
rejarding the controversial fairing strips
cu1 the French boat as wtU aJ two of the
American boats. '
Packer !I.id be would renew the protest
-next time against the American
defender ii Gretel [I wins the ch.allen;e.r
trials.
The use of these "rudder flaps'', which
In effect increase the water line length of
the yachts, could lead to a very large in-
fraction. Packer said.
He told reporters he was cabling the
London headquarters af IYRU in aA. er·
fort to get a further ruling, despite lhe
rtbuff by Beppe Croce, chairman af the
international body.
INTREPID TAKES BIG LEAD IN CUP TRIALS • ••
lodged by Sir Frank Packer, head o[ the
A'.ustralian 'syndicate, against the meas.
uring of his own and the French yacht.
nn the part of the Aussies to gain more
time before the start of !heir best four out
o( seven elimination series with the
French, scheduled to start Friday. A pre-
vious request for a four-day delay to al-
low the Aussies more practice time was
coldly turned down by the French and the
New York Yacht Club America's Cup
committee.
But if the protest is allowed by the
International Yacht Racing Union com-
mittee, under which the Aussies and
French will race their elimlnaUon, J it
could possibly gain them the time they
want.
Here are the facts and conjectures that
rocked thl! yachting capi~I Wednesday:
'6ir Frank Packer dropped the protest,
written in longhand , at a skippers'
meeting Wednesday morning, lesa than 11
hours after he arrlved in town.
Baron Marcel Bich head of the French
syndicate, was furious, claiming that Sir
Frank bad not consulted him or his syn-
dicate abou~ the matter. Bich said hi!
yacht bad been measured and accepted
by Bob Blumenstock, measurer (or the
America's Cup committee.
For that matter, so bad the Australian
yacht. But Alan Payoe (pronounced Pine)
took issue with what he c a 11 e d
Blumenstock's Interpretation of the in·
ternational measurement rule for 11
meters.
Specilically Payne c;:harged L ha t
Blumenstock did not inJpect the. deck and
interior arrange ments of Gretel II which
call! for enclosed heads (waler closet.Ii)
as opposed to a toilet that is merely
enclosed with a draw curtain.
Payne claltnJ the Aussies have gone to
great length! to com ply with every
aspect of lhiJ a.nd other 12-meter
measurement rules.
As to France, Payne complained I.hat
the fairing plates from the hull to the
rudder actually increased lhe water lint
length. Gretel does not have these so-<:all·
ed "fairing flaps". No mention was made
of the American yachts, but at least two
Of them bave tbe fairing naps On their
rudders.
What does it all mean? It means that U
the IYRU committee headed by Dr. Bep-
pe Croce allows the protest and requires
the yachts to be remeasured It could
result in a delay of several days before
the start of the challenger eliminations.
It might also result in a precedenl
which would require Valiant and Heritagl!I
to be remeasured. Both have the ques-
tionable fairing strips.
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' ----T..tay's Fhuil
N.Y. Steeks
-.
.VOL 63, NO. 199, 5 SECTIONS, sa e.-(~ES ORANG& COUNTY, CAUPORNIA ! THURSDAY,· AUGUST, 20, J970 TEN 'CENTS
Bill Ficker
Challenged
By Morgan
BULLETIN
Bill Ficker on I·ntrepid and Charlte
Morgan on Heritage were fighting
tn:rtually a bow-to-bow batUe after
three lt!lS of the third race of the
Amtrica's Cup selecion trials here to-
day.
At the weather mark, Intrepid held
a scent 16 second lead over the Flor·
ida boat and tDa& unable to change
the time split on the first reaching
leg.
At the end of the third leg, eom-
pUting the triangile, Ficker had in-
creased hil lead to 20 seconds.
An almost equally close battle was
going on between Bob McCullough's
Valiant and George Hinman's Weath.-
erly. Valiant led Weatherly by 19
second! at tht first mark. 61 seconds
at the second mark and 48 seconds at
the third 'ltlark.
The yatchs were sailing in a J Q.
knot &outhwesterly .bree:.e with about
one foot of chop. Occa&ional showers
felt on the course.
* * * lptrepid Beats
Weatherly Yactit •
In Trial Race
By ALMON l.OCKABEY ........ '""'
NEWPORT, R. I. -Sklpper Bill Ficker
Of Newport Beach rammed Intrepid over
the 24.3·mlle America's CUp course
Wednesday to beat George Hiftman's
Weatherly by a whopping seven minutes
and 31 seconds.
It was another bright sunshiny day on
Rhode Island Sound with the southeuter·
ly wind filling in early at about 14 knots.
Charlie Morgan's Heritage was beaten
bj Bob McCullough's Valiant to the tuoe
of t:.ree minutes and 41 seconds after
trailing the New York yacht by only 57
seconds at the first weather mark .
Heritage was fiying a protest flag at
the finish, claiming Valiant violated the
windward-leeward rule 30 seconds before
the start.
It appeared that Valiant, the weather
boat altered course to fall down on
Heritage.
Heritage's biggest Joss ca me at the
start of the first spinnaker leg when she
hoisted the chute in a tight wrap and took
nearly three minutes to get it set again.
Valiant ripped a chute on the same leg
but had a new one set and drawing in a
minute and a half~
In today's race Intrepid meets Heritage
and Valiant goeii against her trial horse
Weatherly. Dockside experts are guessing
t~at if Intrepid and Valiant win their
matches today the. selection committee
(S.. CUP TRIAUl, Page ZI
•
' . '
r ,eewa ..
Ul'IT......,_
SEEKS WILDERNESS HOME
Witnesi Linda Kasablan
Manson Tells
Mistreatment
In County Jail
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles
Manaon took the witness stand at the
Ta16-Lalllanca _. trlll todliy to
<9111~ ~itterly abouyi.. "huqlill~tion"
to which he sakf be was subjected in the
&unty jail. •
Dressed in fjriar;>n. denhm, his beard
and balr stringy aM uncombed, the 35-
year-old ex-convict testified outside the
presence o{ the jury on his motion to
order the county sherif£ to cease and
desist the "hara&!lment" of the de£en-
dant.
Man!On described a "shakedown"
which he said he undergoes a number o(
times every day in which he takes off all
his clothes: Opens his mouth. wiggles his
tongue, turns his head to show each ear,
raises his arms to show there is nothing
in his armpits, shake! his hair, lifts one
foot and then the other.
"It ~ symbolic of humiliation, '"he said.
"It's like kicking a dead man."
Manson also testified that when be
spoke with his attorney in jail an officer
always was present and when he at-
tempted to pass any written com-
munication to tbe lawyer-the officer read
it first.
He said a guard 11!0 was present when
he talked to prospective witnesses end
within earshot of their conversation.
The state's star witness, Linda Kasa-
bian, concluded her testimony Wednesday
after 18 days on the witne!ls stand and
sald she would cohtinue her life as a hitr
pie.
But she says she will never lake drugs
again.
Mrs. kasabian was followed by three
eye wilneSses who substanUated In every
deta il covered )n tbeir tesUmony th·e
story she told during her loog ordeal on
the •\and. ·•
President
Due Friday
At El Toro
· Presiden! and Mrs .. Richard Nixon will
arrive with a flourish on lhe Orange
Coast Friday afternoon with the public
invited to the landing strip at the El Toro
Marine Corps Air StaUon.
The chief executive and his wife, who
will be returning from a second honey~
moon in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, will
touch down at 4:30 p.m. in Air Force
One.
The general public will be admtlt<d to
the landing area to greet the First Fami·
ly with gates opening a1 2 p.m., base
spokesmen said.
The arrival will mark the start of the
!econd visit this month of the Presitlent
to his Western White House home in San
Clemente.
The arrival will be on the same day u
the visit by Vice President Spiro
Agnew, who will remain along the Or·
ange Coast until Saturday, when be plans
to st.art his tour of Soutbeaat Aaia.
Agnew, White House spokesmen said.
would meet with lhe President Saturday
in San Cle~te. ind might meet a1ain
with Mr. Nixon upon the Vice President'•
' •. . .
f<luBltlhe-f
Among th~ l!'fel<!i the N~ 'fit. J<,
day afternoon , wµJ tie their ~ . ..
q11ughter, 'Julie, and her husband David
Eilenhower -both guests at -tM
P<Olidential estate stnce 1lsl Saturday.
Eld<r daughter Tricia also la ezpeeted
to arrive with ber parenta.
From the air station, the Nixons will
board tbe President's helicopter for the
short hop dawncout.
The visit in San Clemente should last
through the end of the month, aides said,,
but other than the Ainew visits and talks
on impresslaos of Southeast Aaia, other
plans by the President are not yet an-
nounced .
'111e anival Friday afternoon will be
much different thafl the last touchdown
at El Toro for the clUef e1ecutive.
On a late Friday night several weeks
ago the weary first family landed without
much fanfare after a wearisome, cam-
paign-!tyle series of stops across the na·
lion. .
The trip inc1uded stops In North Dakota
and "Utah before the flnal destination ln
orange County. '
This arrival promises to be diUerent.
with thousands of greeters expected to
give a warm welcome.
Voluntee1· Gls Costly
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. John C.
Stennis said today an amendment ·to
replace the draft with an aJl.volunteer
anny would add at lea.!t $4..3 billion a
year to the defense budget ~
Mississippi Democrat. chajrman of the
Anned Services Committee, said the
issue !ihould be taken up when the com-
mlUee launches lta long-planned hearinga
into the' >verall SeleetJve Service System
-hlipefully later this year.
E''-9 ~rotofl»I
For what is believed to be the
first time in history, the Ameri-
can Flag' rues over the White
House St night. It is proper to
fly the Flag at night iJ it· is il-
luminated. This pholo of South
Portico was taken Wednesday.
Newport Council
To Set Tax Rate
For 1970·71
Tbe-.Nowporl Beach City ·Council wlll
meet Monday nlght to set a tax rate for
the 1970-71 fiscal year. The rate could be
1.,; than the 'current IL225 figure.
Final assessment figures released this
morhing by Finance Director George
Pappas give' the council a net :assessed
valuation of $289,251,425 to use in
estahlisbin.g ~e tax rate.
Desalt Pla~t Approved
11 counctlme!t cleCtd8 to simply· balance
the bUdget, Pappas said, Newport Beach
taxpaY,ers would see about a two-cent
drop ,ift the 'ra\e. ll Ule cUrr"ent rate is
malnteined, he said, a surplus of about
fff1QOQ would be creat~. .
ACCOl)ling to Pappaa' figures , the ~
uaes'.sed Valuation af properties ln
N<wpol'I Beach ts 1311,197,711. .
$6.9 Million, Coast Project o;,, Drawing Board
By JACK BROBACK
01 tM D1t1Y Plltl Slfill
Plans to build a $6.9 mii\lon se11 water
desalti ng plant In roir.11.ain Valley or
Huntington Beach n1oved closer to reality
Wednesday night.
Manual Lopez Jr., representing th~
federal Office of Saline Water or the
Deeartment of the Interior, met with
directqrs o( tlle Orange COUnty Water
Di.strict and delivered signed agreements
for the project from the federat govern-
ment.
The tlmetalSle is part of the a·greement
signed by the two agencies and c~Us, ror
11te selection by next Nov. lit and start of
construction by June of li71.
Construction Onns bidding on the pro-
ject were to meet with OCWO officials
today r.id inspect two proposed ,site.!, ac-
cording. to Nell Kline, district as,tstan t
manager.
Being studied at the present ·ume is 20
acru owned by the district near the Jn-
tersectlon or Wafd Street apd Ellis
Avenue in Fountain Valley, and a similar
parcel adjoh1ing the OrangP. CoUnty
Sanitation District Plant 2 at the mouth
of the Santa Ana River in Huptington
Beapi. . ' • .. ~ ' . . Firms bk:lding on the project include
Ba·JdwiD Llma .Ha01ilt® Of G~IO, Agua-
Chept ~ of Los Angeles. 'Wealingh<M!se
Electric Corporation•and'.Aer:o~t General
Corpora,Uon. -' • 1 ~ ~ •
The plant, 1n e~time~ projed...wili
produce only U million gallona of
<&!salted water a day, a mere one percent
or orange Ooont)''1 dally consumption.
The water produced will be. used' in t.hc
di!trlct.'1 waste -,.•ater t:eclam1Uon pro-
gr:im for lrl'lgation,pu~ses.
Kline 1ald the waler would hot be for
domestic use although the end product
would be suitable for that purpose.
"The plant ls being built as a pik>t to
develop techniques for producllig usable
domesUc water from tali water," Kline
aald.
•
The plant will be• powered by natural
gas, Kline said, and the project has
already been submitted to the Orange
County Air Pollution Control District and
has received the approv.il or that agency.
Kline said the PoUuUon Control District
reported that the gas-tired steam boilers
in the plant would pf(lduce only 10 per·
cent of the allowable emissions.
The project Is the ,...ad dellaliruzaUqn
plant proposed for Orange County.
. Plan.s rot the il~fated Boin ISlalld, 150
mllUon 1allon a day plant oU Bolsa Cblca
State Beach ran lnto aevere flnanclatdlf·
ficulUes two years ago and ,were dropped
by the rederal government and thrie
power companies who bad joined for
development of the $444 million project
However, Metropollt.an Water District
of Southern Calilomla, the fifth partner
hi the Bolsa Island projec~ has rtporl<d
that II ~ sUllconstd<rlng con.strucllon of
a desalt plant ,but plans are not definite
11 Ulla ttmo u to locaUoc.
He ,said fi-om uha, nearly $16 million
m-.1 be·subtraoted becauae of the l(eer.e
on , Upper Bay assessment! cit lanil '"in-
vQJ.ved ·in Q1e landswap suit, and another
$6.6 mllUon, equalling•2.25 percent qi the
total,.whichJll !~ted as uncollectabte.
Pippas declined to prtdict. what the
council would do, and said be would make
no recomroendaUon. • .
'mlia ls their prerogative,•; he said.
'llfe final esaeasment 6gures Wf1' com· plied W,edoes4a,Y after PfppaS received-a
totil "'1!bllc U\illtles U1esl!llent figure
!lorn . ~y T&l< Ala""°r Andrew
Hinshaw.
Thia aueasment, compiled by the state
Bolrd el Equalisation, Increased :U per-
cenl to 17 ,129,640, Pappaa said.
.
Baat~l flol Cur~
BEmUT, Lebanon (AP) -Syria's
Baath SOC:lallst goVtnirnent baa pnalbed
a plot &y the rlvat·B~thist fadlon In
lraq to overthrow It. 1 Beirut t'lt\\'lplptr
which lpeaks for the Syrian Buthlsti
reported today.
Badha·m Measure . . .
Kille.d; 5 ~to 4
By L. PETEii Xllll!XI
OI, .. Detlr....,. lwt
SACRAMENTO -The Badbam bill
died a quick and bitter death in lhe
Senate Tranaportation Co m m I t t e •
Wedneoday. • •
• As a result, the planned P~ ~at
Freeway route along Newport Bel'Ch~s
coastline· mOYed at> leut a. li~ closer to
reality.
The commiue. action, which IOllowed
only 10 minutes of testimony, bad an im-
m~te devutaUng e·f f e c t oo
Aalembl.Yman Robert E. Badbam (Jl..
Newport Beach) and .lllJ!POtlen ol the
bill.
lib backers, mostly Newport Belcl\)lk
1erests, were crushed when tbe 4 to 5
eommittee roll call vote WU announced.
Seven affirmaUve votes were needed .to
move the bill out onto the Sen3te nOor. 1
'I1le final act .of announcin& the vote
came only after Badbam issued an
almost unprecedented last·mlnute plea,
after the vote had been taken. to allow
amendments to be offered -thereby
keeping lhe bill alive.
He wanted to add a provision •rtquiring
the state Division of Htghwl)'J to study
alternate routes.
The inove drew immedlate obj-
from commfttee members Senators
James E. Wbetmort CR-Garden Grove)
aocl Alfred E. Alqulsl (J>.San Jose), two
cb.ll!f opponenta of the measure.
They 1uggested Badham Instead Ill::
troduce a n:JOlution calling for • study of
alternate pci.stbillties.
Badbam wanted no part of thil,
pleading for the special co111lderatlon and ag'41 uktng CommiU.. Chairman Ran-
dolph Collier (Jl.,Yreka) not to lormallf
anno!p>Ce the vote.
'Senator Colller, despite his 1Upporl for
tbe bill, found· himself hemmed tn by the
insistent objections to the · request and
lormalJy ended lhe bill's life by ..,.
oounclng the vote.
Badham and other supporters, bitterly
disappotnl<d, had little to II)' in the
capitol halls aftefwards. •
It au happened so fasl, they ....,ed too
stunned to comment.
The bearing, scheduled for t p.m.,
fmalty beian about z,45 p.m. and II
mlnutea later Senator Colliei' called on
Badbam to present his case. He ga1' both 1ldel five minutes and by 3:10 p.m..
the Committee was rushing out a aide
(See FREEWAY, Pap Z)
* * * ill. Failure ·.
,
'lbe:re ls more than orie Wlf to kill a
freeway route.
And As!elnblyman Robert E: · 8'dham
(Jl.Newport Beach), whole move tq have
the Legislature commit the •llflnit of a
Pacific Coast Freeway ~ failed
Wednesday, has vowed to flnd another.
But he'll have to hurry. State Division of
Highway officials said today tbe start of
construcUon of the Newport se1ment the
Coastal route b ICbeduled for the I973-7t
fiscal year.
Badham ,..... ready.
lib first promise after tbe ~
Transportation CommlU.. rejected hia
bill to eliminate the Paclllc Coast
Freeway through NewpOrt Beach, wu to
take the city's pllaht to · Governor
Reagan.
Bad.ham aald be would ut the
governor to remove funds from the
budget for that sectJon of the freeway
when it comes up for construction.
That, accordlng to Wallace Knutaen,
district design engineer for the Highway
d.Jv1sion, is only three years off.
Knutsen sald this morning that there
are no funds tn the current 19'10:71 bud&et
for actual. construct1on of the freeway,
anywhere tn <>range County and said
nooe will lll<ely be Included. tn the next
budget to be adopted by the Highway
Three Arrested
By Mesa Police
On Pot Chuges-,
Colla Mesa police W~y amst.d
three' SUI~ an narcbl!ca· charaes and
lelzed a teliigerated·basfu! of whit lhej
jl<U..ve to be brlckl of martjUIDI.
Edward A. Galvan, 23, 1of a32 Santa
Ana Ave., was takeii into . cuatody on
charges of possession of marijuana for
sale. .Two women, aged lt ind 3), "Y(bo
were in the residence at the .time, were
taken to 'Oringe County Jail oo charges
of being preaent In a plaai whete mori-
jUana wu being uaed.
Offtcen were le( to lhe ralden.. by a
blcyclls\ they had ~ tor 1. minor
vlQtttton. He 1o1a ofltce<l 'lhl bicycle ivu
o)Vned by 1. woman living at,Galv1n'a ld-
dml.
Arming at the homo to oblaln lX'Oof of
the bicycle'• o~nerahlo, p0tlce detected
the strong odor of whlHliey beU..ed to
be burning marijuana.
Police II)' Galvan lnvtled the officer to
oearch 'but \hat there wil· no Ularijlwla
In '1he bouae.
Pollet clllco.....r four brlclal and
several mi;tl ba*1 tbe IUlp<Cled. 'liffd
in a bedroom ,rt eratcir 'and ·•Ito con-
fiacated • pipe Wb conlt!Mol·flWlpected
marijuana resldlle.
•
division tn October.
Knutsen dJ1elooed that the NOWJ>Qrt
IOC!lon may be the first oo the •laU'f
priority in the county. however, and that
the road would be started from the plat>-
ned Newport Froeway (Route 55) In-
terchange and buill aouth throu&h
Capistrano. •
He said by the time it reachel lbal far
down, construction would llBo have t>egim.
northerly into Huntington Beach. •
Alt Ulla, Knutsen streaed, ts ac:conllnl
to preoent prloriUes which could H changed at any lillle. _ ·'
He 1ald that construction of th!!
Newport Freeway through Coeta Mesa ~
the coast would likely not be. •t.arteiJ
before the mid or J::.!~ 1970s.
Badham, however, l.nsii!la that the CW..
rent Paclfic Coast freeway route, a1ooC
the Coast Highway in Newport, ls against
recommendations of a special tut force
appointed by Governor Reagan to atUc1J
effects of freeways on environment :
He also. said that the federal 1ovem..
mtnt,. through the e ff or ts bf·
TransportaUoo Secrela?}' John Volpe, It
moVirig to cut out funda for
superhighways that "would nm dowJl
people '• beaches."
Badham ilso was quic~ to cite the ef ..
fort! of the newly-formed Cltl.zeDI
Coordinating Commlltee ' In Newporl
Beach that has begUn to circulate peU.
tlOns that will force the Newport 1 Clf.J cOuncil to reiclnd Its ag11ement with tbt
State Division of Highway!.
'Ibe city has Signed an qreemerit
(S.. !IEAcrION, Pap ZI
Weatlaer
•
I r
Hope you enjoyed today's weaf.h. •
er, because we're having an fn.
stan( replay Friday with low cloudt 1
ln·tbe morning Jnd hazy sunshine
ttlereafter. Temperatures w I t J
,range from 75 ·to 8S degrees.
INSWE TODi\ \'
G08. Reagon'• Comm.ilaion on ,.
Educational Reform. h4I recom.-
mcn<i.d abolish"""' of tht -sire IJll&em and crearum of a '
merit pow setup for Califomia'•
ttacbtr1. Pa.Qt I. t
•
OAllY PILOT fl
Schools Stu,dy
' ·Parent H.otline
• By JPANNE REYNOLDS
Of .. "-"' '"'"' lllff
Adm.lniJtrators of the Newport-Meaa
Unified School District may institute a
botllDt for parents and a Wies of par.
ent·fJCUlty seminars to facilitate: com-
n"Vdtlcationa between parents of Colt.a
Mesa High School 1tudent1 and· ichool
luue. jt became apparent the wum
problem facln1 the scbooJ 11 a monumen-.. ti! commualcatJon.s bre.akdown.
admlnlsli'&t6rs: -
The propoaals were made d11rl111 a
four-hour meeting Wednesday njgbt at
the school. It was attended by 300 par.
ents, students, teachers and administra.
tors.
The meeting was called by the achool
board lo hear corpplaints and answer
(!Uestiom re1arttln1 Com Mea HJCh'• controversial modul,Jr ICheduUng l}'lfem.
School board President Bud · Franklln
ind Di1tricl Superintendent William Cun.
ningham Wednesd1y told audience mem.
bers the system had· bttn iMtiluted at
the school in an tff~ to provide a better
education for the students.
"We're here to listin objectively," Cun-
rtigham said. "We're not locked into this
program or any other program in the
district."
& piltnt& spoke on both aides of the
Franklin, after three houri of debate,
noted ''It Is obviou1 the eonetrnt e.r:-
prtNed here relate to problems other
than the scheduling."
Jl'0Uow1111 the meeting Dr. Norman
Loats. dl&trtct superintendent for in.!truc.
t1on1 llid "we really have to take a 1ood
loot at cammunicationa and we're going
to have to work on it much harder. The
Idea of a hotline for parents and the
seminars are a mean.s or improving that
communications problem.''
The majority of parenlll who spoke
against modular scheduling were among
432 who hid signed a petlt1on presented
lo the board Jn July.
The petition asked board members to
return the 1chool to tradltlonal sched-
uling: to use state approved te.r:t books,
regular homework assignmenll and rea:-
uJarly issued grades: to ,order a closed
campus, conventional dreu code, and
to aboli.!lh pa11-fall courses.
At Wednesday's meeting administrators
attempted to point out the areas in which
the demands had been met and why th~
had not been met in other an:as.
From Page I
FREEWAY BILL KILLED. ••
door to return to the Senate chambers.
Besldel Auemblyman Badham, only
four ptrlODll were allowed to address the
a::mmll,.. during the brief hearing lhlt
.eemed almoit anticlimactJc after the
WeeU of pflllllfn& and pollponemenll.
Only Mrs. J01epb Beek, widow of the
fonner secretary or the Senate, and
Newport Beach City Councilman Howard
Rocer1 spoke on behalf of the bill.
Speaklol in oi>ppoll.ion were
Aaaemblym1n l!obert lj. Burke (ft..HUJ>o
tlngton Buch) Ind Al S. Koch, Or11111e
County road C0J11mia1ioner.
Burke'• appearance drew crlUcltrn
lrom Badham, who Rid he wu "appalled
at an auembly colleague a p p e a r 1 n I
before lhe Slnlte to opPost a bill.''
Burke hod told the commit,.. that If It
killed the frteway from Beach Boulevard
in RuntingtOn BUch to the eutern boun·
dary of Newport Beach, it would wreck
tbe plaMing effort.a of a nmnber of cities.
He said ffunUngton Beach, C.OSta Mesa,
Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach "are
lookin& fbrward to the frl!eway."
He Saidi at.'bey bava.Lftf'll:llWl•llme •net
money" planning around the new route:
and said It would call8e hardship& ii this
aection wu deleted.
Koch introduced a dele1atlon of Orana:e
Colst Offlclala In the Siilery who Wirt
there oppostni the bill, lncluillng County
Supervisor Alton E. Allen, Laruna Beach
Mayor Richard Goldberg, Costa Mesa
Mayor Robert Wilson and Fountain
Valley CitY. Manaa:er Jame& Neal.
Koch told the panel that they would be
leaving five · dead-end frteways poinUn.C
toward the cout ln Oranae C.OUntJ by killlnl the Newport Beach aegment.
He pointed out that of the IO-mile
1tretch affected in the Badham bill, a
formal route had already been accpted
rnd ado'pted for all but thret miles -the
aectiol'l between the West Newport boun·
dary and Bl)'llde drive.
Badham, countering this, pointed o u t
that a cttlzens committee l1 already mOY.. in& to force Newport Beach to rescind the
agreement on the four·mlle stretch from
tbe Back Bay to the Corona de) Mar city
lim!ll.
Koch pointed out that t.be state already
own& fl~ million worth of rl&ht·of·way
alon1 the adopted route and noted thaL
f160 mUllon has been spent planning for
the rout ..
He also noted that the two freeway
segments already delete1 , one through
Venice and the other through Beverly
Hills, did not Involve adopted routes.
In his closlng testimony, Badham
volunteered to takt t h e pol!Ucal con·
aequenct1 of the bill.
Pointing out that his dl1lrlct covered
DAILY PILOT
Ol:AllOI COAST l'Uat.ISHIHG tOM.l'AN'I'
l•~•'• N. Wee4
1>ruM1~r t !WI P<,i.ill~r
J.,i. l . Curl1v
n ...... x .... n
Tk•,..•t A. M ur,hi~t
MIMI~ .. EtllW
M..,.n IMU OfKM
1111 Weit ltl~•• l•ul••t•d
M1 lli11t .Yd1•tn ,,0. It• 111$, •J•6l
oa.r O:ffl• ..
CMl1 ,._; Ml W ... II'!' Slnll 1.1.-tt1cti1 m '9nlt .. _
Hual .... lloll -..U.: 11"$ .. tdl ,......,._,
... (~rt· .. ,..,,11 •• C:11111M .....
ttrrltory other than jui;t Newport, ter·
rltory whose local officials wanted the
freeway. he told the cammlttee. "I have
to tlkt the pollUoel risk ln the face of my
constUuentl."
He ltaked his position on the view,
''Where • freeway does not belong, a
freeway doe• iiot belong."
A1 It en~n Newport Beach from the
northwe1t, the prop<>sed controversial
route cutl almost directly tow1rd1 the
abore and continues throotfl the. city
along some real estate borderlnJ e1lstlng
Cos.st Highway.
In pleadlnt to be allowed to offer the
amendment, Badham first had tried to
interrupt the actual voting when he uw
how It waa ,olnf.
Committee members d e m a n de d
Senator Collier not permit him to speak
until the vote was completed and
Badham had to wait untU the ' to 5 count
was campleted.
He entered his fu tile last-ditch plea
before the vote was announced , mon1en·
tarily givln1 rise to supporters' hopes.
VoUng in favor of the motion to ·~
prove the bill, a motion made by Sen.
Howard Way (J\.E.r:eter), wece Senators
Joseph M. Kennlck (0-Loni Beach) and
James R. Mills CQ;San!lego), in addi-
Uon to Collier and Way.
Opposed were Sena. ed W. Marler,
Jr .. (R-ReddlnJ), Lewis F. Sherman (R·
S111 Diego) and Ralph C. Dllla Co.Gar·
dena), in addition to Whetmore and Al-
quist.
Absent from th!! committee hearing
were Sen.ll. Thomas Carrell (D·San
femando), Milton Marks (R-San Fran-
cl1to) and Alan Short (0-Stocktoa).
Badh~m had said earlier that Carrell
and Marks supported the bill, allhoush he
would have needed affirmative votes
from all three to galn passage.
Sen. Whetmore also spoke a1alnlt the
bill before the vote was taken.
After praising Assemblyman Badham's
PHorts in working for hia legialatlon,
Whetmore observed that while Newport
Beach residents do not want It, "the
great majority of the people of Oran1e
County want thi1 freeway ."
Probably the most dramatic testimony
came from Mrs. Beek. who!le late hua.
b11nd had been known well by those whom
ahe addressed.
Her lali was short, and to the point.
"I have lived in Newport Beach for llO
years," ahe said, ··and this freeway
would ruin our city.
"I can'l ataod by and see that happen."
Councllman Rogers likewise was brief,
1ayln1. "You can talk about the lntearlty
of the freeway system, but at what coat.a,
and to whom ?"
He asked the committee to "Unwind
what has been done, then seek alternate
aolutlons. ·•
F rom Page J
REACTIO N .•.
adopting the actual route of the coast1I
freeway e11t rrom Bayside drive to the
citv limit& at Corona del Mar.
Under the JnlUatlve petition, the council
would either have to resc ind the agree-
ment on It.a own M put the quesUon to a
vote of the clU1tnry.
The CCC ls also circulating a related
peti tio n that woold require a city-wide
vote on a charter amendment to require
the council to conduct a referendum
be.fore It slgn1 another agreement.
Signature• of • t5 percent of the ell!C·
torate are nef!ded to force: the council to
act on both matter$.
Other ~actions to Wednelday'1 com·
tnlttee action were a1 expected.
Newfiort Beach Mayor Ed Hirth hur·
rled from the capitol to catch a t.uJ to
the airport. He would aay only, "1 un
t0rry II went the way It did."
Mayor Robert Wilson of Coata Mesa, an
oppoa!Uon leader. was obvious ly pleased.
He 1pplauded Aasemblyman Robert H.
Burke fR·HunUncton BHcll), for h~
work in defeating tht me1aure, although
not l\tsUtatlng to comment tl'l1t the bll l'a
sponl!Or, Asu mblyman Badham. had
fought hard for JeglslaUon he believed In.
Mayor WillOll u.Jd the committee,
however, had llttlt choice but to de wh11t
ll did, point1n1 10 wldesprtad opposition
lo the bill.
I
Ul'IT .....
'Who Me 4 0 ?'
Yep. England's Princes& Mar·
garet, Queen Eliz1beth'1 young-
er siater and fourth in line for
th e British throne, cele brates
ber 40th birthday Friday.
Disney Yippies
Found Innocent
In Park Fracas
Three JlOl'ION meoted Jn the Yfpple
lnvaslon of Disneyland were found fn.
nocent Wednesday of mlademeanor
charges 1temmlng from lhe disturbances.
Police arr.,ted 23 long·hlfr<d youths
on a aeries of misdemeanor cbar1es et
the Magic Kln1Jdom Aue. • and cloa:ed the
park 1lx houra ahead of schedule.
So far, rive perlODI have pleaded
(llilty. three hive been judged not guilty
and char1es have been diamJaaed against
two.
Munfclpaf Court Juda• Kenneth La•
Wednesday fround Geor1e Wayne
Cl•ylon, II, Anaheim, Innocent of being
In a place where marljU&lll wa1 betna w-
ed.
found guilty of beln1 under the ln-
Slev=A. Jones. 20, Anaheim, was
fiutp!!f dru1a.
Gitt ~tt, 18, Anaheim, was round not
aullty GI tmpus!Jlg.
Kenneth Slnl1loe, 20, Anabe.lm , pleaded
,WUy to disturbing the peace and receJv.
ed 1 flS fine.
Barbara Martin, 19, 6212 Pickel St.,
Garden Grove, pleaded a:Wlty to dlsturb-
lna the peace and was fl.ned $25.
Alan Morse, 20, Anaheim, pleaded
guilty to dbturbing the peace. and was
given a five-day jail term. The judge
noted, however, that Morse had already
served the term.
Steve Walden, 19. San Diego, WU SUC·
ct1slul in getting his lrial on an as11ult
and baUery· charge continued until next
month.
A trespaulng charge againfit Keith
Robert Tucker. 18, Van Nuy1, was
dismissed by the court when witnesses
for the prosecution failed lv appear.
Also dismiased. by the court was a
marijuana possession charge against
Robert Heagy, 18, Anahel .
On Monday, Lae disposed of two other
Disneyland cases. Mortimer H. Hess Ill ,
23, New York, pleaded guilty on a
possession of marijuana charge and
received a 30-day suspended jail sentenct
and e $65 fine.
Gerald SlslO, 2~. New Mexico, pleaded
guilty to one of two caunta ot dJaturblng
the peace. He was given a Ilkiay Jail
senlenct, the time he alrtady ha1 served.
The second char1e waa dlsmiaad.
Trial dates have not yet been set for
the remaining 12 defendants.
Israelis Ready
For Peace Talks
With Egy ptians
By United Presa Jnteraallona1
Israel lndlcated today Ill appraent
utlsfactlon with the U.S. reply to Its
charges of El)'pUan cease.fire violations
by signaling It ts rtady to start peace
talka with the Arab states.
Diplomatlc sources ln Jerusalem said
Israel formally 11ked U.N. Mediator
Gunnar V. Jarrlna to bq:ln talks at the
foreign minister level and at a alte other
than Nciw York.
The Israeli ambass1dor to the U.N ..
Joaeph Telcoth, 1ubmltted the requeall
from Forelin Minister Abba Eban to Jar-
ring at a meeting In New York Wed-
nesday night.
Israeli 10urcea 11ld the 1ovemment
w11 pleased by what It considered
. wa,hington'a "pa rtial corroboration" of
llJ charges that Egypt h:id vloh1ted the
cea~fire by moving mW!le1 close:r to
the Suet Can1l,
The cease· fire , nQw in its lllh day, held
along the Suet Canal.
But an J5raeli 1poktJ1man 11ld two
Jsraell aaldlers were killed and four
wounded In a battle with Ar1tl1 aucrrtlla!
In Ole Mt. Jfermon aru of the Upper
Collloc Wednesday ni&hl
•
' Morgan Pr9tes:t .Denie~ ·
,valiant Victory Upheld by ~on:imittee
• were overlapped 1t the time of the in·
cJdent.
Weather p!J'nllttlng th~ pairings .Fri ay
wou1d rematch· Va1i'itlt-i#atnst Intrepid.
Blll Ficker on Int repid 1011 the first round
LO Valiant on Tuesday. .
N!\YP()RT, R.1. -CharUe Morgan's
protest acafnlt Valiant at the •tart of
Wednesday's ltOOOd race Of t h e '
Amerlca's CUp iaelecUon trillJ was
disallowed today by the New York Yacht
Club race committee.
Sir frank Packer, head of the
Australian syndicate, received the same
rebuff from the lntemaUonal Yacht Rac-
ing Union committee on his protesl that
both the Australian yacht Gretel JI and
the French yacht France have been im·
properly measured.
In denying the protest, the committee
gave Morgan a mild lecture on filing
what the committee called minor or
trivial protests.
McCullough'• defense waa that he did
not bear away on Heritage far enough to
cause the Florida yacbt to alter courae.
Sir Frank Packer let it be known today
that 'be does not intend to dtap his protest .~
rtgardlng the controversial fairing strips ~!
on lbe French boat as well 11 two of the • ·
American boat!. _,
Packer said he would renew the prolest
-next time against the American
defender If Gretel II Wln5 the challenger
trials.
Morgan claimed tlfat Valiant skippered
by Bob McCullough of New 't'ork bore
down on Heritage at the start ao close
that Valianl's boom passed across
Heritage's foredeck.
Valiant was the windward boat with the
burden of keeping clear under the
windward·leeward rule, The two boats
It wu tilt fifth time MCCullou1h haa
been protested since the trials be1an in
June. l.D au but one other he lost the pro-
test. .
Brisk showers wetted lhe Newport area
today as the yachts were leaving the
docks under tow ror the starting line .
There was conjecture earlier In the day
that fog on Rhode Island sound might
cancel the day's races.
Today's schedule called for Intrepid lo
meet Heritage and Valiant to sail against
her trial horse Weatherly ..
From P .. e J
The use of these "rudder flaps", which
Jn effect increue the water line length of
the yachts, could lead to A very large in-
fraction, PaCker said.
He told reporters he was cabling the
London headquarters of IYRU In an ef·
fort to gel a further ruling. despite the
rebuff by Deppe Croce, chairman of the
international body.
INTREPID TAKES BIG LEAD IN CUP TRIALS . ._ ..
may eliminate Heritage and Weatherly.
Thi.!l would leave a long drawn out day
to day battle between Valiant and
Intrepid until the committee makes its
final seleclicn sometime by Sept. 13.
After today's races the selection com-
mittee will make up pairings for the ne.r:t
three races. There will be no rac ing on
Sunday.
Ficker Jost ground to Hinman on ~nly
one leg of lhe course. Alter building up a
lead of 4:53 at the end of lhe triangle he
lost over a minute on the next windward
leg but-more than made it up on the run
to the fifth mark where he held a 5:14 ad·
vantage.
But the new that had the water front
buzzing here Wednesday wu the protest
lodged by Sir Frank Packer, head of the
AuslraUan syndicate, a1ain1t the meaa.
urtn1 of hi& own and the French yacht.
on the part of the Aussies to 1ain more
Ume before the start of their best four out
of seven elimination seriea with the
French, scheduled to start Friday. A pre-
vious request for a four.<fay delay to al.
low the Aussies more practice time was
caldly turned down by the French and the
New York Yacht Club America's Cup
committee.
But if the protest la allowed by the
lnternallonal Yacht Racing Union cam·
mittee, under which the Aussies and
French will race their elimination, it
could possibly 1ah1 them lhe time they
want.
Here are the facts and conjectures that
rocked this yachting capital Wednesday :
Sir Frank Packer dropped the protest,
written In longhand, at a skipper•'
meeting Wednesday morntna. less than 12
hours after he arrived in town.
Baron Marcel Blch head of the French
sy ndi cate, was furious, claiming that Slr
Frank had not consulted him or his syn-
dic.ate about the matter. Blch 11id his
yacht had been measured and accepted
by Bob Blumenstock, measurer for I.be
America's Cup committee.
For that matter; so bad the Australian
yacht. But Alan Payne (pronouriced Pine)
took Issue with what he c a 11 e d
Blumenstock's iiiterpretatlon of the in-
ternationaJ measurement rule for 12
meters.
Specifically Payne ch11rged th a t
Blumenstock did not inspect the deck and
b1lerior arrangement! of Gretel II which
ca lls for enclosed heads (water closets)
as opposed to a toilet that is merely
enclosed with a draw curtain.
Payne claim1 the Aussies have gone to
great lengths to comply with every
aspect of thls and other 12-meter
.JJ .. J. yarreff j
7 PC.
WALL UNIT
INSTALLED IN YOUR HOM~
measurement rules.
Al> to France, Payne complained that
the fairing plates from the hull to t.he
rudder actually increased the water line
length. Gretel does not have these so-call-
<'d "fairing flaps ". No rq.entlon was made
of the American yachts, but at least tv.·o
of them have the fairing flaps on their
rudders.
What does it all mean? it means that if
the IYRU committee headed by Dr. Bep-
pe Croce allows the protest and require!
the yachts to be remeasured it could
resu lt in a delay of several days before
the start of the challenger eliminations.
It might also result in 1. precedent
which would require Valiant and Heritage.
to be remeasured. Bolh have the ques-
lionabl!! fairlng strips.
Navy Sinks Am mo
LEONARDO, N.J. (UP I) - Five
lhousa.nd ions of obsolete explosive s v.·ere
bein.g sunk off the Delaware Bay today ,
far from a proposed earlier scuttling site
that was only a mile from where dead
mustard gas was dumped three years
ago.
r An 1rran9 ament that will b•c:omt an fmport.ant element in the total ef-
fect of your room.
• SAVINGS on
HERITAGE MADRAGA L
1-4,._, 41M .. ,.. ............. fvalhl,.
• 15°/o SAVINGS on
HER ITAG E UPHO LS TERED
FURNITURE
OYll 1,MI PAlllCI TO SILICT lllOM.
• 20 to 30°/o SAVINGS ON MANY FLOOR SAMPLIS THROU<iHOUT TH(
STORE DURINCi THE SALE
You favoril~ fnt1rfor de1i11ner tDUl be hawu to 4lli1t ~ou •• ,
H.J .GARRETT fURNITURE
PnOF ESS IONAL
INTERIOR OESIGNEns
( • •
ll 11 HARBOR Bl VO.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
..
1
.,
7
I'
7
Costa Mesa
EDITION
TOilay's l'hud
. . .
'
VOL 63, NO. 199, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA TH URSDAY, AUGIJST l O, 1970· TEN C£NTS
• ll I· reewa
Plane Crash
Kill s Four;
Pilot Mesan
A Costa Mw pUot and three other peo-
ple wert kliled · ln the crash of a light
plane · Wednesaty afternoon at Rancho
California Airpert in Southern Riverside
County. A boy working on the ground was
critically injured.
The dead include :
-Chester W. Wilson, 51, of 2?£10 Arnold
Ave., Costa Men.
WilUam ·r. BoMle, 35, Glandale.
-John D. Kloppenburg, 18, La Canada
-Margaret Ellen Lamb, 26, Granada
Hills.
Critically burned and cul on the ground
was Robert Kevin Torbet, 11. His father,
Robert Sr., is the former manager of
Torbet Aviation, now Newport Skyways,
at Orange County Airport.
The ekler Torbet currently Is general
manager of the airport at whic:h the
crash occurred.
The crash took place when Wilson
attempted to land bi.! single.engine
Beechcraft, based at Orange County
Airport, in a strong crosswind.
The plane's left wheel touched the
runway and a gust of wind pu.shed it out
of control. Wilpesses said Wilson gave
the plane aome power and •ttempted· to
., pasa between ' )!anpr and the !Mf.•r.
But, they said: be ~ the top 91 a
car, slid Into the hangar and crashed into
a parked aircraft. Botll ~es burned.
The T<>rbet boy wai lnild• the hangar
at the time, working on the parked plane.
which was owned by his father. Aflame,
he ran outside where bystanden put out
the fire and rushed him te> Loma Linda
\lalverslty llDspital.
U-turn · Brings
Woman's Death
A he>usewlfe was killed and her three
chUdre'il Injured Wednesday afternoon
when she apparently tried to execute a U·
turn on Pacific C.oast Highway in Hun·
llngton Beach and was struck broadside
by a beer truck driven by a Laguna
Beach Man.
Mrs. Carole Ann Conner, 31, ol Los
AYlgeles was pronounce<: dead on arrival
at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital
shortly after the 2:21 p.m. accident.
Her three children, Debra, 11, Kenneth,
5, and Stephanie 9, were listed In
satisfactory condition today.
Traffic Investigators said the beer
truck, driven by Wllllam A. Mansfield o(
1605 Arroyo Drive, Laguna Beach, col·
llded with ~ Conner vehicle at a speed
oC 40 to 50 miles per hour and lmbed.ded
ltaelf In the side of the car.
Mansfield, who wai 1i1nhurt, was cited
on char1es of having brakes out of ad.
justment. Officers cliam he had only one
inch of usable pedal.
Mrs. Conner appartnUy tried to cross 11
raised center diVlder after leaving a
beech parking Jot in the Bluffs area of
Huntington Beach when the accident Of·
cured.
Mansfield told pollce Mrs. C.onner's car
wa1 bll>cking both lanes and that be could
not avOld hitting, the car.
SE &KS WILDERNESS HOME
Wit_. Lindo K111blon
Ma nson Tells
Mis treatment
I n County Jail
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charles
M•nson took the-\Yitneaa: stand at the
T•Je-taBl:..U mur4er trial tod+i'. to
COlllP!41ii ~IU«J;'lltl6ul 1111 ··~
to Which he said..he wu subjected in the
county jail
Dreued Jn prlaoo d4aims, hb beard
and halr stringy a~ W'ICOmbed, the !>
year-old ex-convict teatlfied out.side the
presence of the jury Of'! his motion to
ordtr the county sheriff to ceaae and
desJ,at the "haraument" of the def~
dant.
Manson described a "shakedowfi"
which he said he ~rgoes a number of
times every day In which he takes off all
his clothes, opens his mouth, wiggles his:
tongue, turns hla l}ead to show each ear,
raises his arma to ll)qw there is nothing
in his armpits, shake1 his hair, lifts one
foot and then lhe other.
"It Is symbolic of humiliation," he aald.
"It's like kicking a dead man."
Manson also lesWled that when he
spoke with his attorliey In jail an officer
always was pruent and when he at~
tempted to pass any written com-
munication te> the lawyer the officer read
it first.
He aaid a guard al.lo was present when
be talked to pr°'pecUve witnesses and
within earshot of thetr conversation.
Mes a M.an Killed
In Indiana W reek
Thomas J. Neja of C.Osta Mesa was
killed In a highway actldent ~ear Green·•
field, la., early this mornMg when the
camper truck In whlch he W'llS riding left
the road. ,
Naja , 25. Of 328 ~ St., waa sleeping
in the c1mper 1• the ~ent',~
curred, 11ccordiJ'll 1totTowa authorities. A
hlgttly rated' rtcin& driver, ·he Was
rewrning to cautornia from a ract In
New Jersey.
Funeral services are pendtn1.
Mesa High
Feud Sparks
Hotline Idea
By JOANNE REYNOLD8
Of * Dllfr PH• l•ff Admlnlstratora of the Newport.Mesa
Unilied School Diltr;ct may lnsUWte a
hotline for parents and a series Of par ..
ent-faculty seminars to facilitate com-
munications between parents of Costa
Mesa High School studenta and school
administrators. .
The proposali were made during a
four-hour meeUng Wedneaday night at
the ilChool. It wn attended by 300 par ..
ents, students, teaOers and admlniltra-
tors.
The meeting ,... called by the ,llcllool
board to hear complaints and 1Nwer
questions rtgarclina: Costa Mesa Hi&h'a
controverllali:nodular ICbedullng system.
School board President Bud Franklin
and District Superintendent Wi!Uam Cun-
ningham Wedne!dl!J' told audience mem.
hers the 111ystem had been Instituted at
the school In an effort to provide 1 better
education for the students.
"We're here to listen obJecUvely," Qm.
nigham said. "We're not locked into this
pl"ogram or any othtt prop'am ln. the
dlstrict."
As· parenta lpoU -both aldu ol the lsst1e, it ~am• apparent the hfant ~~~~·l1 aiponumen-
·JPiUk11n, ;:.., .;;:t"~ -'<. noted· ;11 la ~ lhe"cliooerna U•
pressed l>.ero ~le lo proble1111 oU,et
than the achedulililJt
Followtas U. Bill'!'l"Mli!llQ(,. Ill'. Nonnan
Loats, dll!ritl -IJ\tendent !or lnstruc-
Uon, llM "we really hlVe to take 1 good
look at commwijcationa and we'rt goinc
to have to !ork on It much harder. Th•
Idea of a hotline fat' parents and the
seminars are a ~RI of improvl.ni that
commWllcaUona• problem."
The majority of parenta who spoka
against modular 10heduling were among
432 who bad aiin'd • petition preatnted
to the boll'<I Jn J!!ly'
The pe:tJUon nked board members to
return the achool to traditional sched-
uling; to ua Ute approved te1:t books,
regular homework uaiirunenll: and reg.
ularly issued gfadea: th order a closecf
campus, conv~I dress code, and
to aboli1b pau~fail courses.
At Wednesday'• meeting administrators
attempted to point out the areaa in which
the demaodl had been met and why th~
had not.been met in other areas.
Cunningham noted that Costa Mua
High wUl have a closed campua this fall,
that students in tl>e three pasHafl cours-
es -beginn!ng art, driver education and
studeht government -would be Jssued
Jetter Fades on request and that report
cards will be issued every -six weeks. At
the district's three other high schools,
grades are issued every nine Wee.n.
CUnningham explained that the state
does not approve lert.boob at the high
school level.
''As !ar as the use of lesson packages
is concerned, it allows you, the pattnll.
as well as the students, to kDow what 1s
required for each COW'st. 'Mley also al-
low the teacher to uUlis.e more than one
book, and l would hope no teacher limits
his teaching to1 a aingle booi with no
other materiala.,' he· said.
On returnh11 to a conventional dress
code, Cunninlham lndlcated IUC.h a move
would be up to the p1rents, faculty and
(See 8CBOOL8, Pqe I)
Nixon to Arrive Friday
El Toro Opens Gates for Pres idential Welcome
President and Mrs. Richard Nixon will
1rrlve with a nouriah on lhe Orange
Co.Isl Friday afternoon with the public
Invited to the lafl4in1 1trip at the El Toro
M1rine Corpa Ait Station .
The cllfll ex~llv. aod bta wU~. who
will be rtturnln& from a second honey-
moon In Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, wlll
touch down at 4:30 p.m. ln Air Force
One.
The general public will be od!Jllttad to
the landlna area to greet the Flm Faml-
Jy with 1atea opening at 2 p.m., base
spokesmen aaid. 'l'ht arrlvAl will mark the start of tho
1~ vi.sit thla month of the Pre!ildtnt
to bll Western White •lOUM bomCI in San
Clemente. .
The arrival wJll be. on the aame da)' ••
. '
. ,
the vi.sit by Vice Pre1kl'11t Spiro
Agnew, who wUI relJ\lin al~ll)g tfle Qr.
anae Coast until §pturdJy, when iheplan1
to start hl1 tour or SoulhtJJl, A'.11•· r •
Aariew, White lk>u!t spokesmen 1~d,
would meet with lhe Presklent Saturday
Jn San Clemente, and mlahl·nieot oaotn
wltli Mr. Nixon upon the Vice Prelld<!ll'I
return to the 1tate1:
Amot11 the greetm o! the NlllO!ll Fri·
day alt.moon will be the~ youncest
daughter. ~ullo, aod her husband O.vld
Elaenhower -bolh glieata al the
Pmldentlal ·estate alnce last Saturday.
Elder daughter Tricia alao IJ expected
to Arrive. with beer parent11.
From the alr ltalion, the Nixol\I wUI
board the Pretldent'1 helicopter !or !be
ahort hop downcoaat.
The vlllt in San Clemente lhou1d lut
through the end of the month , aides said,
but other than aie Arnew visit.I and talks
on tmpresslon1 of -Soulheast Asia. olber
plans by the President are not yet an·
nounced.
The. •rrlval Friday afttrnoon will be
much. dlf!e.mt thin the 'J111t toUchdown
1t El TOro for the chief execuUve.
On a late Frid1y night 1ever1I weekl
ago t~ weary flrl! l1mUy landed without
• mtich fanf1re aftu t wearllome, cam-
pal1111•1tyle -·or otope '"""' !be na·
tlon .
'M'le trlp tncluded ata.,. tn North Dlkota
ind Utah before Ula ftDll deaUn1Uon In
Orange County.
Thia arrival prom)IH to be dl!f.,..t,
wit!> lhout•nd• ol aneton upecled to
~ a wann welcome,
.... r-f'lag Preti-ti
For what' js believed to be the
first time in hatory, the "merl·
can Flag flies over the White
House at tni'g ht. It is proper to
fly the Flag ·.at night if it is ll·
IuminQt~. This photo of South
l'ortico was taken Wedne$y._
BillSt. Clair
Levels Blast
Against Manus
Costa Mesa City Councilman William
L. St. Clair fired a parting 1hot today in
his five-month feud with former council
candidate Tom Manus. over political
posters.
St. Clair, wu ei:onerated In court
Wednesday of charges that he had Il-
legally posted campalan ~materials.
Manus, who·made the orjalnal comylaint
during ~ cl)Y council CllJllpaign lut
April, maHe it clear ht belleves·St. Clair
waa cle,r.ed ~aU!i& he ia: a, city coUn·
cilm~n. .
'Balderdash," St. Clair said tod.ay.
"1bls really •tripes me," St. Clair con-
tinued ... The oilly reaeon I was arrestr4
Jn the first pl~ce .was because I was. a cl·
ty counclJrnaf\.'' . ·
He charged , lbat Manua ' acijons were
undertaken to aarner some "cheap
publlclty" to boosi a !altering elecUan
cam paten.
Manua aHe1edly staked qut St. Clalr'a
Newport Boulevard barber shop, ind
sl,ned •· complain,!. that poaters, 1d-
vocatln1 the re.election of CouncUman
Georae 1\tcker, were obstructing the
public rlgllt-<>l..,ay ,
St. Clalr ·1aid, "He should have dropped
the mat'°'r after the elecUon.
"AJ It wu, thli was a waste. of money
!ornothlng,-11 .,.,.led my m..,.y-Jnd tho-
tupayen' money and a lot. of tlmet"
Vol~~~~ ~Is Costly
W~N (AP) -Sen. Jolin 'C."
1ltemf1 aa\d !Oday an am•ndmt"I lo
repJace the: draft with 1n all·VQlunteer
army would •<1d at leaat 14\3' bliUbn ,a
year lo the de!eose budgel. The
Mlalsalppl Democrat, chalnnan of ule
Anned Sefvlce1 Committee, said the
1~ 11'1oakt be hlken up when the com·
mltlee launcb" Ila long·pl•nne<I heartnp
lflto the weran Selective Service System.
-hope!UUy later tlila year. ,
. . . .
. '
Badham Measure ..
Killed, :5 to 4· ,
By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. Del., ...........
SACRAMENTO -The Badham bill
died a quick aod bitter cte.tb Jn . the
Senate Transportation C o m m I t't e e
Wednesday.
lo> a reoult the plann<d Pacl!lc Col!t
Freeway rou!. along Newport, lleacji's
coastline mo~ al lelst a little clOoet to
reality.
The committee action, which followed
only 10 minutu of testimony, had ·an lin-
medlate devlltallng e f f e c t on
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham. IJI.
Newport Beach) ind auppi>rten of the
bill.
Illa backers, mosttY Newport s..a. JJ>.
teresu, were crushed when the 4 to 5
comnUUee roll call vote. wu anDOUDCfd.
Seven affirmative votes were needed to
move the bill out onto the Senate fkxll'.
The final •ct of announcina the vote
came only after Badlwn l81ued an
almoat unpncedented tut.minute plea.
after the vote bad been taken, to ·111ow
amendments to·' be offered -thenby
keejllng tho bill alive.
lie ftDted to adil a provision roquiring
the State Dlvllloo of 11Jibway1 to study
alternate routea.
Tho move drew Immediate objeclloils
from committee memben Seooton
James E. Whetmore CR-Garden Grove)
and Allred E. Alqulat (0.SU Jooe), two
chle! opponom.. of the meaaure.
They suggoated Badhant lnltead Jn.
troduce a moluUon calling tor a aludy of
alternate poulbllitles.
Badham W"1ted no port o! thla,
pleading !or the special conalderalion aod
again asking Committee Chainnan Raq..,
dolpb Collier (0.Yreka) not to !onna14'
announce the vote.
Senator Collier, despite hia .support for
the bUJ, !Olllld hl-ll hemmed In by the
inslitent objections to the request and
!onna14' ended the bill'• Ille by ..,.
nounclng the vote.
Badham aod other l;llpporlon, bitterly
disappointed, had liltle to uy In tho
capitol halls afterwards.
It all happened ao !asl, Ibey ,..mid ton
stunned to comment.
The bearing, ICheduled !or 2 p.m..
rmally began about 1:45 p.m. aod 10
mlnuie. later Senator C.Olller called on
Badbam to present hia cue. He p~
both aides five minutes and by 3:10 p.m.
the oommlllee. WU ruahJ!l8 out a lido
(See FllEllWAY, Pqe 1)
*-* * .
FteeU,ay IJf,ll Failure
Doesn't Stpp Badha,n
There la more than one wty to kill a
freeway route. ~
And Asaemblyman Robert E. Badham
(Jl.NftllOrl Beach)" w"""°1move to_,bove
the Lellalalur• cominlt the ola)'inl or.a
Paelllc Cout Fr~wa,y secllon (ailed
Wednelday, h8' Vl>Wed lo·flod anoll)er.
But he'U have to hurry. State DivtaP,•or
HLchway ofticlata aald ·today the start ol
coolllructlon •o! tlie NeWjiort· IMfll1l'l1I tlie
Coastal niute Is IChedUlod !or Ille tm.H
fiscal year. ·
Badham seema ready.
Illa Jltst priimlse alt.i the Senate
TranJportalloo Commlllee r<)ecled h)a
bill to eliminate the Paclrlc Coast
Freeway through N~rt ~cb, wu to
take the city's plliht to Governor
Reagan.
Badham JaJd he would aak. the
governor to remov~ funds from the
budget for that secUon .Qf the freeway
when it comes up for const.ruoUon. .
Thal, according to Wallace Knutsen,
di.strict dealgn engineer for the fflilhway
dlvlaion, ta only three years off.
Knulsen uld this morning that there
are no fund.a in the current 1970-71 budget
for actual conatrucUOn of ~ freeway,
anywhere in Or1J14e County and aaid
none will likely be Included In !be next
budget to be adQpted by the lllghw13
Three Arrested
By Mesa Police
On Pot Charges
Colla Meaa po11co w~ arrelllad
three. iuspecta ,on nareot.Jca: chara:ea and
aelzed a relrlgerated haglul of what they
bellew: to be bricks of marijuana.
Edward A. Galvan, 23; of 20n 'santa
Ana Ave., was taken hrto eu1tody' Ori
cl)arges of -Ion. ~ marljulna for ·
aale. TWo women, aced 19 and 20, Who
w9N1 tn Ole realdence 1t the tlnie, were
taken to Oraoge County Jail. on charges
o! belnc pr.,.nt Jn a placo where marl·
Juana w1,1 beinl Uled.
Ofllcen Wllre led lo the ~by-a blcyi:l~t they had' ltopped !or a minor
vlolaUoo. lie tqld o!ficen tbt ~lcycle wu
owned by a woman IMnc al q~·a ad.
!lreta. Nrlvtng at the hoal• lo olilaln lll:oGf qi
the bleycle'• owene~, ,.,uco dellClt\!
the lllrOnC ... ol 11"'1 -to be hln'nhll ""'")ulna. . ' . t'ohco aay G"1nn ln+lted tho ollicor to
"ird! but that there wu no m.n)uane
Jn the-.
Police dLooovered !our brloill ,and
HVeral small bap of the SUlplcted -
In a bedroom refrllerator Ind 1llo con-
n1eated a pipe whldt contained IRllpeCled
D)llrlJoaoa mid-.
divlalon Jn Oc:tober.
Knulaen dlsclo.!ed that the Newport
section may be the first on the 1tate'1
priority In the county, bo-, and that
the road would be •tarted rmn the piano
nod Newport Freeway (Routt 15) ~·
terchange and built llOUlh tJiiouab
Capistrano.
He aald by the time II reachel that for
down, conslruction would also have bea;ua
northerly into HwiUngton Beach.
AU thil, Knutaen atreued, ii accnrdlnc
to p......,t priorities which coold bl
chaJJ1ed at any \[me. . .
He said that COD.111truction ot ~
Newport Freeway t!>roulh Costa M,eaa lo
the coast would JikeJY not be atarted
before the mld or I.:~~ 1970s.
Badham, however, in.tllltl that the CUI""
rent Pacific Coast freeway route, alOlll
the· Coat Highway in Newport, is a1aimt
recommendatiOQI of a special task torce
appointed by Governor Reagan to lludy
effects of freeways on envlronment.
He also said that the federal aovern ..
ment, .through the e f f o r t 1 a(..
TransportaUon Secretary John Volpe, Ji
movin& to cut ouL funds f o r
superhighways that "would run down
people's beaches."
Badham alao WU quick to cite the el·
forts of the newly.formed Citizens
Cool'<llnatlng Comniltlee In Newpor\
Beach that hu 'belUJl to circulate peti•
lions th1t wUJ force the Newport City
Council to rescind its a~ment With tM
state Division o( Highways. . 1
The city has signed an agreement
(See REAcrtON. Pip l)
Weadler
Rope you enjoyed today'• w .. U,.
er; be.cause we're havlna an in-
stant repl!Q' Friday with k>w cloudl
ln the morntn1 and haJy ....i.tne
thCreafter. Temperaturea w 111
range from 75 to 85 dearees.
INSIDE TODAY
,Gov. R•oaOn•1 CommW!on on
Educ:otlorio:l Reform hal rtcom-
me,Wtd abolilJu"mt of the kn.
ure 1111cem and creation of o
merit JXlll setup for Qalifomio11
ttoehtr1. Po.ot .t.
Cttlfllf1lle I Otcfllllt cu. , Ci.ttlMI ..,. =::."' ;: DMtill ........ U --. . . ....,~ , .. ,, I'.._ , .. ,J -" .......... 1J -"
-.. " --~ =...!!!!' " IYlvll ;i;;/ tt -..., llMll ...... 1 .. 1. l.......... ti ,......" , .. ,, -. .,,_.... .... , .. ,, --..
•
. ..
DA!l.Y PILDT c
-Amp v.s. Word -
.Israelis Ready
.
To Start Talks
ly Ulllto4 Preis 1oterD1tloul
"'1tl lndlc1ted ljld1y ii> 1ppr:ient
aaUsfactJ.oa with the U.S. reply to It&
~ '!! Eopt.iln ceue-fire violations
~~.~ It is rudy to start peace
WU.. Wllb the Arab states.
Dlpiomatlc ...,,,,.. ;n Jtn11.1lem aald
hrool 1..-Jly .--U.N. Mediator
CWWllr V. JorriJli lo bqin taiu at the foceJcn mlftltter levd Ind It I site other
than ?Xcw York.
Tbt lsta~ ambassador to the U.N.,
Joseph Tekoah, submitted the requests
from Foreign Minister Abba Eban to Jar·
rlnc 1t a mettinc in New York Wed.
l>eldl¥ llllhL
llrMll .......... llid lhe covemm<nt
'"' pleued by what ~ considered Washington's "partial corroboration" of
1ta charges that Egypt had violated the
oe«se-flrt by movinc missiles closer to
the SUez Canal.
The cease-fire, now in ite 13th day, htld
along the Suez Canal.
But an Israeli spoke..sma.n 11id two
Israeli aoldien were killed and four
wounded lo a battle ,with Arab 1utrrill.u:
in tbe ML Hennon aru of the Upper
G&lilee Wednesday nlg!IL
The spokaman al.:> reported two
separate mortar attacb on Iaraell borde:r
..iuemeni. lrom Jordan durin& the
night.
The start of the nqoUaUons toward a
poUUCAJ settlement in the M1ddle East
had been held up by the controveray over
llllfied ...... r~e vlolattom by !1ypt.
'Ibe aources said Ierael would 1ppoint
Ill representative to the tal.b as soon 11
JarrinJ repliet to It.I views. EcYPt Ind Jordan, the other partle! lo
l're• P .. e l
SCHOOLS •••
otudenta of Heh hl&h achool. '
"Al hair bas aotten lonatr and 1klrtl
have 1otte:u shorter, we hive liken the
attitude tblt whit a student looks Uke
b tbe llorne'1 reapoM!bllity, not th•
achool'a. Admio1strator1 were spendint:
a heck Gf a lot of time musurina; halr
and lkl.rU," he stat.td.
A queadon u · to th4 quality ci educa-
tion avajJable .under 1 modular IChedul-
ing 1y1tem waa also answertd by Cun-
lllnJl)lam :· • "l>er~, I think thls system has
the: lnlfidttnts or a tar lliJ)frtor educa-
tion pr1_>1,ram ror more student.I."
FoltoWiril: CUiuUhcham'1 rmiarka, one
critic ri tht 1y1tem, Mra. James Moult-
nJp, angrily said administrators were not givjn1 ~ 1Q1Wer1 on the petition elem•*· f'Yov'\'.~ beel wotldn( ot1 It tor two yeira. Well, Pm tired of horil\I
that y~'re workin1 on it -I w1nt aome
action."
-
the negotlaUona:, fa vor beginning the
talks ln New York at the ambauadorlal
level.
Tbe diplomatic '°"'""' llfd llrael oug.
1estec1 the talks begin in 1 Medlt«ranean
or European capital where both aides
would have shorter linel' of com·
mwllcaUon to their pemments. They
Aid Israel suggested that a more quiet
atmosphere would be available if the
talks were not in New York.
Tekoah told Jarring that Israel felt the
talks should be held at foreign minister
Jevel to &Jw>w serious intent and Jeod
g~ter weight to tbe deliberationa, lbe
SOUl'Cet Aid.
'Ibey said Jarring had asked Eban Aug.
12 for his views on where and at what
level the talks should be held, but Israel
waJted to get U.S. comment on the aliq:·
ed ctase.fire vlolaUon1.
Israel was pleased with what it con·
sidered Waahhington'a "partial cor·
roboration" o ft.be charges and is now
ready to proceed, diplomatic sources in
Tel Aviv aaid today.
l'ro• P .. e l
REACTION ...
adopiln& the actual routt. of the coast.II
frteway east from Bayside drive to the
city limits at Corona de! Mar.
Under the initiative petition, the council
would either bave to rescind the agree.
ment on iUI own or put the question to a
vote of the citizenry.
The cx;c la abo circulating a related
petition that would require a city-wide
vote on a charter amendment to require
the council to conduct 1 referendum
before It signs another agreement.
Signaturea of 15 percent of the elec-
torate are needed to force the council to
act on both mattera.
other reactions to Wednesday'& com·
mittee action were as expected.
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth hur-
ried from the capitol to catcti a taxi to
the airport. He: would aay only, ''l am
sorry it went the way it did."
Mayor Robert Wilson of Costa Mesa, an
opposition leader , was obviously pleased .
He applauded Assemblyman Robert H.
Burke (R"Huntington Beach), for his
work in defeaUng the: measure, although
not-hesUtalin& to comment that the-.tMll'•·
sponsor, Assemblyman Bad ham, had
fought hard for legislation he believed in.
Mayor Wilson ifid ~ committ.ee,
however, had little eholc4 bl.It to do what
It did, pointin& to widespread opposlllon
lo the bill.
I
I/PIT .......
'Who ltfe 40'!'
Yep. England'• !"rincess Mar-
aaret, Qpeen Elizabeth'• young-
er 1l1ter and fourth in line for
the British throne, celebrates
her fOtb birthday Friday.
Disney Yippies
Found Innocent
In Park Fracas
'I1lree penona UTested 1n the Ylpple
invuloq of Dflneyland were found in-
nocent Wednuday ol misdemeanor
chareea: stemmln& from the dllturbancea.
Police arreated 73 Jona·halred youths
on a serfN of mildemeaoor charges at
lhe Magic Kin1dom Aq. I and closed the
park si:r houri abead of achedule.
So far, five penohl have pleaded
guUty, three have been juda:ed not IUllty
and charges have been dJsm.1.sled agalnat
two.
Municipal Court Judge Kenneth Lie
Wednelday fround George W a y n e
Clayton, 18, Anaheim, innocent of being
in a place wbere marijuana wu being ua-td. _.., & • .. ' •
Steven A. Jones, 20, Anaheim , was
found not ,Wlty or being under the in-
fluinct <J( drup.
Gf'Y Plett, 18, Anaheim, wu found not
guilty ol trapuaing.
KeMe:th Sinlaloe, 20, Anlhtim, pleaded
gullty to dlaturblng the peace and receiv-.
ed a f25 rine. Another pireo~ su.nuned up the meeting
uyinf, "I~ waa a real aood meeUn&. A
Jot of people got a lot off their chefta,
ind I think everybody bas a bettu idu
ol the [!~tml, even if they don't airu
Oll the ~INODI."
l'rom P .. e l
Camp Law Hailed
By Congressman
MlAMl.(AP) -A law which authorizes
cre1Uon of federal concentralion camps
wlder crisis conditions was praised today
by tbe chairman Of a committee con-
sidering its repeal.
Rep. Richard H. lchord (0.Mo.), sald
the 11tatute might have prevented -
rather than allowed -the detention of
112,000 Japanese American11 durin11 World
War It, an episode viewed by many
blltorian11 11 unwarranted .
Ichord's Committee on Internal Securl·
ly began hearings fi ve months a110 on a
Senate-.pa11sed repealer (or the law, the
Emergney Deltntion Act. which pro-
vides for rounding up subversives In lime
or war or insurrec:Uon.
DAILY PILOT
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M1 Ui11t A44rtHI P.O. lti 1160, 't616
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tMtA 1111 ,_ .. 111 V•lllff, '""' wr111 '""" reeleftel KlliWit. °'""' (lltl P~llll"'9 • ,........,, .,..,,.. 111t111i "'' •• nn wn1
lt19t I I ... ~ ... -' IHcfl. -Ut WHI
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~· ~1m. °"'• c .. 11 '""'it1>1oot ~··· ......... ,.,,ft. Hlllllltl_, .. , • ., --., ·•-Tl•-'• """" ........ .. '""""""' ""' ..... ' --"' ..... ··-... ,,.,, ·-1.oJllW f.iftt ,_1 ... ptlf II "1--1 ltU,,
tM C..M llltM, ClllMrll". ~l,ll)o("itlltll W
U M'W "" Mll'lltllr1 oy lft•ll ". -IM\i'l llllllltrr ........ , • ., l:JM -1111v.
FREEWAY BILL KILLED. • •
door to return to the. Senatt chambera.
&aldea Assemblyman Badham, only
four per.sons were allowed to addreaa the
ocmmlttee durinl the. brief hearing thal
seemed aln)ost anticlimactic after the
weeks of planning and postponement!.
Only Mrs. Joseph Beek, widow or the
former secretary of the Senate:, and
Newport Beach City Councilman Howard
Rogen spoke on behalf of the bill.
Speaking rn t>ppostion were
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R·Hun-
tington Beach) and Al S. Koch, Oraflie
County road con1missioner.
Burke's appearance drew criticism
from Badham, who said he was ··appalled
at an assembly colleague 1 p p e a r I n i
before the Senate to oppose a bill.''
Burke: had told the commiltee that if it
killed the freeway from Beach Boulevard
in Huntington Beach to the eastern boun·
dary of Newport Beach, it would wreck
the planning efforts of a number of cities.
He said Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa.
Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach "are
looking forward lo the: freeway."
He said, "They have invested time and
money" planning around the new route
and said il would cause hardships if this
section was deleled.
Koch Introduced a delegation of Orange
Coast officials in the gallery who were
there opposing the bill, including County
Superviso r Alton E. Allen, Laguna Beach
Mayor Richard Goldberg, Cosla Mesa
Mayor Robert Wtlson and Fountain
Valley City Manager J1mes Neal.
Koch told the: panel that they would be
leavJn& fi ve dead-end freeways Pointing:
toward the coa.st in Orange County by
killlnj the Newport Beach se1ment .
He poll'Jted out that of the 10..mile
stretch affected in the Dedham bill , a
formal route had already been accpted
a'iid adopted for all but three miles -the
Atctlon between the Weal Newport boun-
dary and Bayside drive.
B1dham, countering this, pointed o u t
that a citizens commit tee Is 1lre1dy mov·
ina to force Newport Beach to rescind the
aareement on lhe rourtmile stretch from
the Back Bay Lo the corona del Mar city
limit&.
Koch pointed out that the state already
owns $15 millioo worth of right-of·w1y
alona the adopted route and noted that
•150 million h11 been spent planning for
the route.
He also noted that the two fretway
segment.a already deleted, one through
Venice and the other throu1h Beverly
Hill•, did not involve adopted roults.
Jn his cl01in1 te1tlmonyi Badham
volunteered to take I h e po IUcal con-
sequences of the bill.
PoinUn& out thal his dlslrlcl covered
lerritory other than Ju1t Newport, ter·
ritory whose local ofllcial1 wanted the
t
freeway, he told the committee, ''I have:
to take the political risk in the: face of my
consUtuents.''
He staked his position on the view.
.. Where a freeway does not belong, a
freeway does not belong.''
As il enters Newport Beach ,fr om the:
northwest, the proposed controversial
routt cut.s almost directly towards the
shore and continues through the city
aloog some real estate bordering existing
Coast Highway.
In pleading lo be allowed lo offer the
amendment, Badham first had tried to
inte rrupt the actual voting when he saw
how il was gOifli.
Committee members de ma n de d
Senator Collier not permit him to speak
until the vote was completed and
Badham had to wait until the 4 to S cou nt
was completed.
He entered his futile last-ditch plea
before the vote was announced, momen·
tarily giving rise to supporters' hopes.
Vot1n11 i'n favor of lhe: motion ·to •!>-
prove the bill. 1 motion made by Sen.
Howard Wa y (ft-Exeter ), were Senators
.Joseph M. Kennick (0-Long Beach) and
.lames R. Mills (0-San Oiegol, In addl·
lion to Collier and war.
Opposed were Sens. Fred W. Marler,
.Jr,, rR-Rtdding), Le wis F. Sherman (R·
San Diegol and Ralph C. 01111 ID-Gar-
dena), in addition to Whetmore and At-
qu isl.
Absent from the committee hearing
were Sens. Thomas Carrell CD.San
Fernando), Miiton Marks (ft.San Fran-
cisco) and Alan Short CD-Stockton).
Badham had 1aid earlier that Clrrell
and Marks supported the bill, although he
would have needed afflrmatlve votes
from all three to gain passage .
Sen. Whetmore also spoke against the
bill before the vote wa1 taken.
After praising Assemblyman B1dh1m'1
efforts Jn working for his legl1l1Uon.
Whe:tmore observed that while Newport
Beach resid ents do not want It , "the
greal matorlty of the people of Orange
County want this freeway ."
Probably the mMt dramatic test imony
came from Mrs. Beek, whose late hus-
band had been known well by those whom
she addressed.
Her talk ~II short. and to the point.
"I have lived in Newport Beach for 50
years," ahe &aid, •·and this freeway
wou ld ruin our city.
.. t ca n't 1tand by and see that happen."
Councilman Rogers likewise w11 brief,
saying. "You can talk about the lnleG'J'ltY
of !he freeway 1~$lem, but el what coils,
and to whom1"
He asked the commlttoe to "Unwind
what h11:s been dont, then seek: alttrnate
solutlon1. 11
Morgan Protest Denied
V ~liant Vicwry Up held by Committee ·
were overlapped ·at the Ume of the in-
cJdtnl.
Wetther permJUln1 lbe patrincs Friday
would rematch Valiant 11ainsl Intrepid.
BUI rick.er on Intrepid 108\ the first round
to VaU111t on Tuesday .
NEWPORT, JJ.t. -QlarUe Morgan's
protest acaJnat Valltnt at the start of
Wedneaday 's second race of th e
America's Cup eelecUon trials was
disallowed Coday by the New York Yacbt
Club race committee.
Sir Frank Packer. head of the
Australian syndicaLe, received the same
rebuff from the lntemaUooal Yacht Rae·
Ing Unioo committee on his protest that
both the AustraJJan yacht Gretel II and
!he French yacht Prance have been im-
properly measured.
In denying the protest. the committee
gave Morgan a mild lecture on filing
what the committee called minor or
trivial protesta.
McCullough's delense w•s that he did
not bear away on Herltl:ge far erJOUlh to
cause the Florida yacht to alter COW'M.
Sir· Frank Packer let it be known loday , •
that be does not intend to drop his proteit
rea1rdin1 the controversial fairing 1tri~
on the French boat as well as two of the
American boats.
Morgan claimed that Valiant 1kippered
by Bob McCullough of New York bore
dow:l on Heritage at the start so close
that Vallant's boom passed across
Heritage's foredeck.
Valiant was the windward boat with the
burden of keeplna:: clear under the
windward·lteward rule. The lwo boata
It was the filth time McCullou&h ha.1
been protested slnce the trials bqta In
June. In all but one other he !oat the pro-
test.
Brisk showers wetted the Newport area
toda v aa the yachts were leaving the
docks under tow for the starting line.
There was conjecture earller in the day
lhat fog on Rhode Island sound might
cancel I.he day's races,
Today's schedule called for Intrepid to
meet Heritage and Valiant to sail aa:ainst
he:r trial horse Weatherly.
PICktr HJd he woold renew I.be protest
-next Ume aaalnst the American
defender it Crettl II wln1 the challenger
triall.
The use Qf these .. rudder flaps", which
In effect increase the water line length of
the: yachts. could lead to a very large in-
fraction, Packer said.
He to ld reporters he was cabling the
London headquarters or JVRU in an ef·
fort to get a fur ther ruling , despite the
rebuff by Beppe Croce, chairman of the
International body.
Intrepid Takes Cup Lead
Newport Yacht Whips Rival by Seven Minutes '
By ALMON LOCKABEY ........ ••1• but had a new one set ud drawing in a
minute and a half.
on the part of the Aussies to gain" more
time before the start or their best four out
J
:· .·
NEWPORT, R. I. -Skipper Bill Ficker
Of Newport Beach rammed Intrepid over
the 24.3·mile America's Cup course
Wednesday to beat George Hil1man'1
Weatherly by a whoppin1 seven minutes
and 31 seconds.
It was another bright sunshiny day on
Rhode Island Sound with the southeaster-
ly wind filling in early at about 14 knot!.
Jn today 's race Intrepid meeb Heritage
and Valiant goe:;: against her trial horae
Weatherly. Dockside eipe:rta are gueuln1
that tr Intrepid and Valiant )l'in their
m11:tches today the selec tion committee
may eliminate Heritage and Weatherly.
Thi• would leave: a Jong drawn out day
lo day battle between Valiant and
Intrepid until the committee mikes Its
final selecticn sometime by Sept. 13.
of seven elimlnaUon series with the
French. scheduled to start Friday. A pre-
vious request for a four-day delay to al-
low the Aussies more pracl.ice time: was .•
coldly turned down by the French ind the
New York Yacht Club America's Cup
committee.
Charlie Morgan's Heritage wa1 beaten
by Bob McO.lllough 'a Vali111t to the: tune
of t:!l°ee minutes and 41 seconds after
trailing the New York yacht by only 57
seconds at the first weather mark.
Heritage: waa flying a prote.st flag at
the finish, claiming Valiant violated the
windward-leeward rule 30 seconds before
the atart.
It appeared that Valiant. the weather
boat altered course to fall down on
Heritage.
Heritage's biggest loss came at the
start of the first spinnaker leg when she
hoisted the chute in a tight wrap and took
nearly three minutes to get it !et again.
Valiant ripped a chute on the same: leg
After today 's races the 1elecU011 com-
mittee will make up pairings for the ne:rt
three races. There will be no ricing on
Sunday.
Ficker IO&l ground to Hinman 011 .. nly
one leg of the course. Alttr building up a
lead of 4:flJ at the end of the triangle he
lost over a minute on the next windward
leg but more than made il up on the run
to the fifth mark where be held a 5: 14 ad·
vantage.
But the new that had the water front
buzzing here Wednesday wa1 the prate.st
lodged by Sir Frank Packer, head of the
Australian syndicate, against the me1a.
uring of his own and the French y1cht.
But if the protest la allowed by the
International Yacl:lt Racing Union com-
millee, under which the Aussies and
French will race their elimination, it
could possibly gain them the time the y
want.
Here are the facts and conjectures that
rocked this yachting capital Wednesday :
Sir Frank Packer dropped the protest,
written in longhand, at a skippers'
mteting Wednesday mortiing, less than 12
hours after he arrived in town .
Baron ?i-1arcel Bich head of the French
sy ndicate, was furious , claiming that Sir
Frank had not consulled him or his syn-
dicate about the matter. Bich said hls
yacht had been measured and accepted
by Bob Blumenstock. measurer for the
America's Cup committee.
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bH·Oll'
I
I
I
I'
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Saddlebaelt T ... y's Fl••I
El>ITION •
VOL 63, , OAAN6E COQNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
f '
' . ,
Senate Committee l(ills Badham Free·way Bill
• ' I '.
By L. PETER ltlllEG
Of .. Dlllr , ... , , ....
~CRAMENTO -The Badbam bill
died a quick and bitter death ln the
Senate Tra(\!portation C o m m i t t e e
Wednesday.
kJ a result, the planned Pacific Coast
Freeway route along Newport Beach's
coastline moved at 1east a lltUe closer to
reality.
The committee action, which followed
only 10 mlniqe.s of testimony, had an im-
mediate devutaUna: e f I e ct on
Assemblyman RDbert E. Badham (Jt.
Newport Beach} and 1upporten of the
bill.
His backers, mosUy Newport Beach in-
terests, were cruahed when the 4 to a
committee roll call vote wU announced.
Seven affirmative votes were needed to
move the .bill out onto the Senate floor .
The fmal act of announcing the vote
tame onJ1 alter Badbam issued an
•lnjOlt wiprecedenled lut.mlaule plea,
after the vole had been laken, to allow
amendlpents to be ottered -lher<by
keepin& Ille• bill alive,
He_wlnted to add·• provill,oq ntqlliring
1be Slale Dtvi&loo of llilJhways to study
alternate rou~.
'1be move drew lmmediate objectionl
from committee members Senaton
James E. Wbetmore CR-Garden Grove)
and!Alfred E. Alquist (0-San Joae), two
chief oppooenla of Ille meosure.
They ' sugeeted , BacJham instead in-
troduce a retolutioo calliog for a study or
allemale ~bllilie1.
Badham wonled no parl of lhis,
pleading for the special consideration and
again asking Committee Chairman Ran-
dolph CoUler ID-Yreka) not to formally
announce the vote.
Senator Collier, despite bis support for
the bill, fowxl ~ hemmed in by the
lns~lenl objections to the roqueSI . and
formally ended the bill's ll!e by an-
nouncing t.he vote.
Badham and other supporters, btttet\y
disappolnled, had lillle to Ill' Jn. Ille
capitol halls afterwardl.
It all happened • last, they seemed *°'>
stunned to comment. t
The hearing, scheduled for t p~ ..
finally began about 3:45 p.m. and 10
minutes later Senator Collier callelr on
Badham to present his case. He gave
both sides five minutes and by S: 10 p.m.
the committee was rushing out a llde
door to return to the Senate chambera.
Besides Assemblyman Badham, Oll(y
four persons were allowed tc addrtsl the
ocmmittee during the brief beariog OW
seemed almost aniiclimlctic after the
weeks of p1anning and postponemenb.
Only Mrs. J.,.ph Beek, widow of lbe
(See FREEWAY, Pap I)
0 on 0
Second Hone11moon
Nixons Arriving
On Coast Frid~y.
Presjdent aod Mn. Richard Nl:a:on will
arrive wltfl a flourllh on the Orange
Coast Friday aftf:{OOOll with the public
invited to the landing strip at the El Toro
Marine Corps Air station.
The chier executive and his wile, who
will be returnina: from a second honey-
moon in Puerto Vallarta, Mei:ico, "will
touch down at 4:30 p.m, in Air Force
One.
Tho ,..,. .. , puWlC will be admillad to
Ille lmdJlltl _.. • .... the l'irfll Fami-
ly with plea ........ -el I p.m., bue
&pokesmen 1aid.
The arrival will mark the start of the
second visit this month pf the President
to hil Western White House home in San
Clemente.
The arrival will be on the same day as
the visit by Vice President Spiro
Agnew, who will remain along the Or-
ange Coast until Saturd~y. w.hen he plans
to start his tour of Sootheast Asia.
Agnew, White Howie 1pokesmen said,
would meet with the President Saturday
tn San Clemente, and might meet again
with Mr. Nixon upon the Vice President's
return tll the states.
Among the greeter• of the Ni:a:ons Fri-
day iftemoon will be their youqe1t
daughter, Julie, and her husband David
Eisenhawer -both iuesti· at 'the
Presidential estate sln'ct last Saturday.
Elder daughter Tricli al.lo is e:a:pected ·
to arrive with her parents.
From the air st.atioR, the .Nimns will bOard the 'President's hel~( for' the
short hop de-st. '!lie viliil in San Cltj!lenle ~Jul +
throl,gh !lie flld <JI' u,e ..... '""" ~ '. bul olher Uaq Ille Agnew Vtslts arid
"' iQ:lpreasiorui of ~ Alia, other plans by the Presideot are not yet an-
munced.
'!1le arrival Friday aftfitnoon will be
much different than the last touchdown
at El Toro for the chief ei:ecutive.
On a late Friday nlghl several weeks
a'o the wear.y first family landed wllbout
much fanfare after a wearisome, cam-
paign-style seri~s of stops across the na-
tion.
The trip included st.QP.J in North Dakota
and Utai) before the flftll destination in
Orange County.
This arrival promlsea to be different,
with lhou.aands of greeter• e.1pected to
give a warm welcome.
Tape Record~r Foulup
Loses P1·obe TestimonJ_
-·
All or part of the testimony of five
persons who testified before the com-
mittee of inquiry into the July 4
Woodland Drive riot wa:i lost when a tape
recorder broke down, it was disclosed
Wednesday night at the Laguna Beach
City Council meeUng.
Writer Arnold ~no, one of a dozen
persons who testified during two days of
inquiry before a committee consisting of
Mayoc Richard Goldberg, City Manager
Jamel! 0. Wheaton and Councilman
Charlton Boyd, asked If the report or the
broken tape recorder was correct.
It was, Goldberg told him, adding, "But
three of us sat there listening and t8k.in1
careful notes. It would be nice if we had
the information on tape, but u~
fortunately we do not. You'll just have to
trust our lntegritf."
Hano said It was not a question of In-
tegrity, but rather "Another in.stance of a
growing series of inefficiencies In city ad·
ministration. Maybe we should just call
tQe whole thing on again and get an ac-
curate record."
Wheaton said It wa11 a mechanical,
rather than a human failure. A personal
tape recorder had been used, although
iL was nol required, he said, and it was
not discovered unUI midway in the hear·
ing that the batteriea were tn bad con-
dition. ,
He said the committee members had
very copious notes. Hlno ashed II it was
correct that the repaired Jllloorder had
got the tesUmony of police officera but
not of W~land Drift resident Gary
Lewis, the only resideqt who tea:tlfied.
Wheaton said this w11 correcl
Goldberg said it wa1 unfortunate. Hano
saiQ it ~·as a funny colnfldence.
Laguna Seelcs New Home
For County Health Clinic
Councilman Charlton Boyd and acting
city manager Joseph Sweany were in-
structed by Ule Laauna Beach City Coun·
ell W~esday night to .seek out new
quarters for lhe ctunty~ed heaJth
services team now conductlna: a survey of
Laguna '1 needs -if possible free quarters.
'Ille team, headed by peyehiatrlit. Dr.
BiU Routt, ha1 been headquartered Jn the
Nab sclM>ol cafeterla, but must move out
6epl. I.
''Thil is one of five aegment.s of a study
of aervlces -tnvolvlnj: mental heallh,
phy1ical health, a medical center,
welfa~ and probation. The county has
1ent an outatandln& technk:al team to
study oor needs. We hope to find them
another space in a public area at no cost,
or that the city would underwrite the __ ..
-"If you can find a space, well and
good," satit CWnciln1an Edward Lorr.
"But I ,would .object .to the r;tly W>-
derwritinl any COii al thil Hme."
Boyd qld hilf I dolon locaUOfll Wm
paufble and no request for money had
~ made earlier because It wa1 felt
free &pac4!_ could be found.
To a auggeatlon that city hall apace
mlghl be found, Lorr .. 1c1 he l1llad to,,.
how thil wvuld be 1t no -to the lu·
poytr.
Flag Protqeol
For what. is believed to be 'the
first time in his.tory , the Ameri-
can FJag flies over the W~ite
House a,t night. It is proper' to
fly the Flag at night ii it is' iJ.
hJminaled. This pbolo of ljoulh
P.orticQ was. taken W~nesda_y.
Fµneral . Service
For ·Verner Beck
Delayed a lJ' eek
Funeral services for Verner Beek, 77,
feat.ival 'of Arts director who died Satur-
day, probably will not be held until early
nei:t week, a Sheffer Laguna Beach
Mortuary spokesman said tbls morning.
Tbe spqkesman said he had talked by
telepJlone with Mr, Beck's brother, Carl,
from Laramie, Wy., late Wednellday. The
brother said that the famtly 1s mming to
t.gu.oa and will then arrange for funeral
services, he said.
Mr. 8eclc died at SOUlll Coasl Com·
munity Hospital after suffering a stroke.
He wu a [oaner. newspaper edit.Or and
was acUve with tbe Festival of Arta. He
alJo fM!l'Ved u a d~ecl<>r of Laguna
Federal' Savings ' Loan "-lal<io.
Baathisl P1ot Curbed
BEIRUT, Lebfnon (A~) -Syria'•
Baalh Socialist government has smashed
a pl04. by the rival Baalhlat faction in
lraq to overthrow it, a Jltlrut newspaper
which speaks for tM Syftan Baathlsll
reported today.
Issue Sparks
Bitter Fight
In Clemente
By JOHN VALTEllZA
Of .. "' '11•1 ,..., ~fobile homes will not rej:>l1c~ the.Jinks
· of the loonderJog Harbor tlliUs Golf
Course, San Clementr's ·cl y 'council
· decided Wednesday, . 'fhe decision t.o tum down .an a~I of
an ,earlier denial for · a 216-a~ mobile
lt@me part came'<lt.the end of JJIOte than
lwo;iloura ol ~ -and aimetim,.
ll!~lr09'1W~ V 'I\ r ' ' 1!1111 ~
came from bOtll side1 o the t.;; .. , aloltt
with conflicting statements on the
relative revenue benefit to the city by a
terraced mobilt borne part overlooking
th~ se~
A capacity audience of Harbor EstaJes
residents along both sides of the nearly
defunct course crowded council chambers
to complain that plans by the Con-
temporary M o b i I e h o m e Corporation
would destroy the neigliborhdod's at ..
tributesrand elimlriate badly needed open
space recreation in the region.
The hearing -called to COlliider an ap-
peal of ·earUer denial by planning com-
missioners -had its bitter moments.
Santa ~ ~t consultant Reg Wood
offered s.ignatllres of local businessmen
wbo support the park as evidence to
offset letters and petitions . of protest
from Harbor Estates. He also Offered a
&election of photos taken ol homes in the
area which be in\plied were run-Oown.
Wood also detailed what he said would
be more than f120,000 in city revenue in
the· first year of. the park's life -facts
which drew attack from the opposition
later In the evening.
Wood also asserted that the views of
only four homes would be altered by the
park.
After 1everal protests from the op.
position, aHrbcr Estates Homeowner's
Association member Ken Saunders rose
(See TRAILERS, Page I)
Council Rejects
Motor Scooters
For Meter Maids
MotortCOOtera for San Clf;mente's
meter maids got lhe boot Wednesday.
City councilmen acting on a qui4Jy
pre~ J.lle.(00 frofti city staff, agreed
to comnut '5,7.00 to buy two new four-
wheel vehicles to be used for par~ng en-
forcement, instead of replacing a bat-
tered city molorscooter which collided
with a large sedan Jut week. The crash
injured parktr!g officer COruile Atkinson.
City Clerk P!{ax Berg, acting as city
manager pro-tem ln the vacation absence
of City Manager ~:en Carr, made the~
poeal that bids go out for better vehicles.
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe agreed
with the Idea and suggested the cily in·
vestlga~ modlfied Volkwagens for the
parklnt job.
The city of Santa A:na uses special
rlghl·hand drive VW autos for meter of-ficers,
r,layor Waller Ev,na cited lbe city's
l'Buy American" policy, ••wen, It Santa Ana can pull it oft,
maybe we can, too," O'Keef~ quipped.
several ftrma will be conaulted on
IJJ)eClflcaUons and prlces of the new
machines, which promJ.w to be more
atable, aafer and warmer for t.he meter
maids.
The city's I a 1 t remaining parking
scooter -which coat more than '2,tx:M>
when bollihl new -will be sold aa.b.
~UP,4 J~
HEADS FOR LAGUNA HIL'LS ,
Sci1nc1 AdvlMr DuBriclge
Dog Law
Approved
In Lagunl\
By ~ARBARA KREIBICll
Of .. .....,w..., ..
~-J>!'Ck!'f pleas from a huio
crowd at Lapa1a City Hall Wedllelda.y
· nipt.feU on deaf ears u !Pe City eoun.
cil, by a S to 2 vote, adopted cou.cllman
Edward Lorr's O(dinance banning do&s
from city parks and beaches.
For one startling moment toward the
end Q( Ille i...o1•v dilfualioft, 11 fl"4
• Ille ~i;i -der..ted.""'
CaancilmaD Peter Osb'~ba bad
IUPPJ)l1ed tb8 m1 , 11e ~ ted .. ., ... wllea ~ .Rlqwcf GeJdberg an.
ed for a roll caU on tQe mot¥m-
'I'he crowd roared its approval, but Jt
turned oul Ostrander had though lhe vole
was (ID en amendment to the ordinance,
Cit'}' Attorney Jack J. Rlmel said a re--
C<J\Ull of the vote would be in order if
there had beea•confuSioR and Ostrander'•
vote was cha11ged to a "yes." . D B . · Councilme.n ·Roy Holm and CharltoQ u ridge Qiiits ' no.f:. C:~ll,:,:"':1\in:,::· 11,. 1n 30
As Nixon Aide, . d•1:i··.ddi1ion to cooljnuing the pr .... 1
leash law regulations, lhe ordlnamce baa
R 11 dogs at all times, on or off the lea.ah. eturning ome· from Bluebird Canyon Park, Top ol the
We.rid Part and Riddle Field and also
By GEORGE LEIDAL" from all beaches from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
Of 1M ~llY , ..... Stiff daily throughoot the year. Ji-alio pro.
Dr. Lee A. DuBi'idge, decryin' cuts in vides that the council may,"by resolution,
federal spending ror scientific researeh extend the ban to cettain times and areas
reil(ned his post as President -NiXon;~ in Heisler Park. •
chief sciMCe adviser Wednesday. · A woman who said she lived on Cliff
The former cal tech president ' whO will Drive wanted to kROw what this meant.
be 70, Sept. 21, will retire with his'wife to City Manager James D. Wheaton aald it
a new three bedroom home in LeisU.re meant there would be no immediate
World, a spokuman for the Laguna· Hills i'estricticn on walking dQgs In Heisler
retirement community said today. Park, but these could be put into effect
The White House aaid DuBr!die would by resolution of the council.
be succeeded by Dr. Edward E. Davi~, "Would we be told about this?" asked
Jr., 45, an exec u t Ive of Bell Labora-the woman.
tories; Summit, N.J. Wheaton said it would be done at a
President Nixon accepted -DuBridge's public. meeting but would not aeceuarily
resignation "with deep regret" and asked have to be alUlounced in advance.
tbe white.haired, bespectacled scientist to "I'd just like to be sure what the law
stay on as a member of science advisory, Is" said the woman. "We're never sure
an appointment the President will make or' anything around he.re any more."
when a vacancy occurs in December. Writer _ Arnold Hano described the
"Your participation Jn my · 1-ordinance, presented to the COWlcil in a
ministration during this crucially im-surprise move by Lorr two weeks ago, u
portant Initial period will always be a "vague, inconsistent, inaccurate and con-
source or satisfaction to me," ~ilon said. fusln("
DuBridge has served ln tb.-Wh1~· --~··it 1S a midnight ordinance, written ln
House lllnce the start of tbe NP:on (See DOGS, Page J) '
Administration, leaving an ocean view
home In Three Arch Bay in South Laguna
for the Washington i...3ign rnenL
In leaving, he praised Dr. David, a
Republican and said it had been fortunate
"tliat tile search for my succeasor bad
been so easy."
Praisln~ Nhcon's keen ' lntereat 'In
science and tc hnology, Ougridge adderJ,
"these past 19·rnontha have, of couhJe,
been djfflc~lt tlmcJ In many ways."
"One result of fiseal problems has been
the slowdown of the nation's acienUfic .
and tectmologlc enterprise has not tieen
reversed," DuBrldge said.
'·Much of this lag in the pa.sl year Jw
been lhe failure of the Congress" to ap-
propriate· the amount of funds requested
in fi!JC41 I~ for research.'!
He told reporters Congress had sluhOO
fl&O million from the Preaiden\'1 request
for college reaearctr In the ' CUA'eflt
budge!. •· '
Lellura WQrld spoil...-deacribod•lho
scientist'& retirement. Home. as on• ol t.JMi
''98rden villa" models that ra'!le ue to
149,000. The home lhe'DuBrldgeo .,.Jeclld
Is In a completed unit a~ ls ready for
immediate occupancy, the 1po;keun1n
said. The Lhree-story home w11'.:Purchas-
ed two to three wee~ ago.
Or. OUBridge told reporters I n
(!Jet DU .BRIDGE, Pap I)
Oruge
We•'t•er
Hope,you enjoyed tt>qa,y's weat~
er,' because we're having an ln·
&tant replay Friday with ·low cloud•
in I.lie morning and hazy BUnshine
theieafter. Temperatures " l I I
range from 75 to 85 degrees.
INSWE TOPA. Y
-Gov. Rtapan'• Commiuion on
Educational Reform haJ recom-
mended aboli1hment of the t••
1'Tt 1u1tem and creation of a
mtrli. po111efMp for CoU/on\ia11
teoch1r1. Paae &.
le..,._' • \,.,.......:. 1•1r
Cllld!Mt ~ T Mlttwll ,.... 11
C....itltll •M N•llitMI ,._. W
"'"kl 11 Ol•M C.UlllJ 11 c............. 11 ''"lot ...,... 11 DMltt Httl«t II IWh . »-U
•111,.,Jll '"" f IMll MttUtt U·ll •~ttrtelMltlll 1•1t TllM•ltltlt II
..--. 1>11 TllMltn 1•11 "°'"""-If WMIW Allll L"'"'1 1J w,....•, "'"' 1 .. 11 MMtllllt 11 Wertll MM • t4
l
I
I
SC r...t.v, ._ ZO, 1970 •
f'reell*tf Fighter
Badham Pledges
.
He'll Try Again
Thert is more than one way to kill 1
freeway route.
And As&•mblyman Robert E. Badham
<R·Newporl Beach), whose move to have
I.he Legislature commit the slayffia: of a
Pacific Coast Freeway section !a.iled
Wednesday . has vowed to find another.
But he'll h~Vt' to hurry. St.ate Divl8ion or
Highway officials said today the N.rt ol
COD&truction of the Newpori "iJll"lll 0,.
c.oa.stal route is 5Cheduled for the 1173-74
fiscal year.
Bad.barn seems teady.
His first promile alt« the Stnate
Transportation c.ommittee uject<d his
bill to eliminate the Pacilfc c.oa.st
Freeway lb.rough Newport Beach, wu to
take the city's plight. to Governor
Reagan.
Badham said he would a.sk the
governor to remove funds from the
budget for that section of the freeway
when It comes up for construction. . .
That, according to Wall~ Knutsen,
district design engineer for the HJg.hway
dlvl.sion, is only three year1 off.
Knutsen uicl this morning that there
are no funds in the current 1970-71 budget
for actual construction of the freeway,
anywhere in Orange C.ounty and said ~ will likely be included in the next
bbdget to be addpta! by the !liibway
diviskln in October.
* Mayor Praises
Senate's Action
On Freeway Bill
Returllir\I from Sacramento in lime for
a Wednesday nlcht City Cou11cil meeting,
Laguna Beach M•yor Rlcbf.rd Goldberg
announced defeat of the Badham freeway
bill in the Senate TransportaUon Com·
mittee. and commented, "I think the com-
mittee acted wisely and in the interest of
the majority or the people."
He said he did aot anUcipate revival of
the bill "at least ii Its present form ."
"If it comet up again," uid Goldberg,
•·1 should think it would be for a re-study
of the )lewpgrt Beach Segment of the
f.re<w1Yl"'l1.1'1¥1th a view to Pnding '°
alternative to that porUon of the freeway.
there must be an alternative in that area
that woold nOt block oonstruct.lon of the
rest of Jhe freeway ."
Goldbera: and City Maaager James D.
Wheaton joµr11eyed to Sacramento for the
commitlee 'heartn1 on the controver~ial
bill, to lend their weigh,t to those opposing
It.
Kllut..11 disclosed lh•t the Newport
section may be the first on the Btate'1
priority ln the county, however, and that
the road would be started from the plan-
ned Newport Free"'ay (Route !15) ln-
terchan«e and built south through
Capistrano.
He said by the. time it reaches th1t. far
down, construct.ion would also have begun
northerly inw Huntington S..cb.
All this, Knutsen streMed, lg according
to present priorities which could be
changed al any ti.me.
He u.id that coMlruction of the
Newport Freeway through Costa Meu to
the coast Would Ukely not be ttarted
before the mid or late 1970&.
Badham, however, insist.I that the cur·
rtSJt Pacific Coast freew1y route, along
the Coast Highway in Newport, is agsins~
recommendations of. a special task force
appointed by Governor Reagan to gtudy
effects of freeways oo environment.
He alao said that the federal govern-
ment, through the e f for t s ~
Transportation Secretary John Volpe, 1S
moving to cut out funds f o r
• supethigbways that "would run down
people's beaches."
Badham also was qu.ick to cite the ef.
forts of the newly-formed Citizens
Coordinating Committee in Newport.
Beach that has begun to circulate peti·
tioos that will force the Newport City
Colmcll to rtsclnd Its agreement with the
State Division of Highways.
The city has signed an agreement
adopting the actual route of the coastal
freeway eut !run Bayside drive to the
city Um.ils at C«ona del Mar.
UDder the Initiative petitio11 , the council
would either have to rescind the agree.
ment on its own or put the question to a
vote of the citiunry.
The CCC is also circulatin& a related
petition that would require a city-wide
vote on a charter amendment to require
the council lo conduct a referendum
befofe it llgns another agreement.
Signatures of 15 percent of the elec·
torate are needed to force the council to
act on both matterg.
other reactions to Wednesday'• com·
mlttee action were u expected.
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth hur-
ried from the capitol to catch • taxi to
the airport. He would say only, "I am
sorry it went the way it did."
Mayor Robert Wilson of Costa Me.sa, an
opposition leader, was obviously pleased .
He applauded Asltmblyman Robert H.
BUrke CR-Huntington Beach), for his
work in defeating the measure, although
n'ot helititatlng to comment th1t the bill's
sponsor, A!semblyman Badham , had
fought hard for Iegi1lat.ioo. he believed ln.
Mayor Wllson ~id the committee,
hpwever, had little choice but to do what
lt did , pointing to widespread opposition
to the bill.
PrNI~ .... ~
FREEWAY •.•
former -.WY ol the l!enate, 11111
Newport 8eacb Qty ConncfJman Ho•ard
lloprl opoto Oii beball ol the bUL
Speakta1 111 oppaet'oa wtre
~ -H. -(R.-8111>
llnatoo llooch) 11111 Al &. Kocll. °""'"
·O>UnlY road-· _.,
Burke's appearance drew crlUci.aM
from Badham, who said he was "appalled
at an assembly colleague a p p e a r I n g
before the Senate to oppose a bill."
Burke had told the committee that if it
killed the freeway from Beach Boulevard
In Huntington Beach w the eamm boun·
dary of Newport Beach. It would wreck
the planning efforts of a number or cltieg.
He said Huntington Beach, Costa Mt.Sa.
Fountain V1lley and La.guna Beach "are
looting forward to the freeway ."
He sald, "They have invested time and
money" planning around the new route
and said lt would cause hard!lbip5 if thi1
aectioo was deleted.
Koch introduced a delegation or Orange
Coast officials in the gallery who were
there opposing the bill, includ.i.ng County
Supervisor Alton E. Allen, Laguna Beach
Mayor Richard Goldberg, Costa Me1a
Mayor Robert Wilson and F0t.mtain
Valley City Manager James Neal.
Koch told the panel that they would. be
leaving five deali-end freewa ys pointing
toward the coast in Orange County by
killing the Newport Beach segme nt.
He pointed out that of the 10-mile
slrttch affected in the Badham bill, •
rormal route had already been accpt.ed
and adopted for all but three miles -the
section between the West Newport boun·
dar)t and Bayside drive. .
Badham, countering this, po1nt.ed out
that a citizens committee is already mov·
ing to force Newport Beach to rescind the
agreement on the four.mile stretch from
the Back Bay to the Corona del Mar city
limits.
Koch pointed out that the state already
owns $15 millian worth of right-of-way
along the adopted route and noted that
$150 million haa been spent planning for
the route. ,
He also noted that the two freeway
segments already deleted, one through
Venice and the other throqgh Beverly
Hills, did not involve adopted routes.
In his clMing testimony, Badham
volunteered to take t h e poliUcal con·
'sequences or the bill.
Pointing out that his district covered
territory other than just Newport, ter-
ritory whose local officials wanted the
freeway . he told the committee. "t have
to take tHe political fisk in the face of my
constituents."
He staked his position on the view.
"Where a freeway does not belong, a
freeway does not belong."
As it enters Ne"J)Ort Beach from the
northwest, the proposed coolrovers\al
route cuts almost directly towards the shs and continues throu1h the city
a !Qme real e.state bordering existing
Coa!!way. Jb ' ln1 to be allowed to offer lhe
ame ment, Badham first had tried to
lnter.rqJ>4 the actu-1 voUng when he taw
how it wu going.
The two officials did not speak, but
were introduced along wit.ta represen·
tatives of other communiUes.
From Page J
"I think the commit~ wJS impreued
t.hat there seemed to be twice as many of
us up there to oppose the bill as there
were to support It,'' said Wheaton.
Council Delays
Bike Ordinance
The "urgency" label was removed
from San Clemente's proposed tough new
law on minibikes, but city councilmen
Wednesday still agreed to introduce the
meal!iure for passage at ils next meeting.
The shift In action on the law was call·
ed. councilmen agreed , to allDW some
time for community feedback on pr<r
v1siBnS which would outlaw riding of
recreational motor vehicles on private
property without written consent of the
landowner.
The code also would ban riding of the
noisy machines within 300 feet of any lot
used for residential purposes.
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DOGS BANNED IN LAGUNA • • •
solitude," ssid Hano. ''When yo 11
subscribe to the theory that the people
are fools this sort of slipshod w<rk Is
what you get."
IL was Hano'& connnent that Riddle
Field is not an official city park, but only
part of Boat Canyon Park that produced
the subsequent voting c o n f u s i o n .
Go ldberg suggested amending t h e
ordinance lo change this wording, bul the
motion died aft.er City Attorney Rimel
pointed out lhat adoption Of any amend-
ment on second reading would send the
ordinance back to a first reading status.
A last-minute attempt by Councilman
Holm to lffiend the ordinance so that lhe
beach ban would be effective only from
June 15 lo Sept. 15 went to a vote, but
was defeated 3 to 2.
Hano also noted lhat no menlion had
been made of Irvine Bowl Park. "the
city's largest park'' and attacked a pro-
vision that dogs enrolled in city-s ponsored
obedience classes would be exempt from
lhe beach ban.
"You're saying lhat U1ey can attend the
classes on the beach, but they're not
allowed there after they graduate," said
Hano.
Though speakers supporting and op-
posing the ordinance were fervent in
their appeals, the atmosphere became
tense at one point when a young man
turned his back on the council and ad-
dressed himself to the audience. Asked
by the mavor to follow the rules 11nd ad·
dress the council he snapped, "There's no
point in talking to you any more !"
Goldberg repealed 1hi s request and
several persons in the ~udlence urged the
man to follow the rUles. There were
murmur& of "Throw him out" and a
police offiqer appeared at the door of the
coilncil chamber.
"You elected a 1late of pl'Ople who're
going to sell this town out to the real
estate lnt.ete8ll. You should ~all these
people," the man shouted , and strode out.
several speakers 'uppC>rtln-11 t h e
ordinance referred to littering problems
~used by dogs on the beach and on
private property.
A number said they would find the
ordinance accept.able 11 It wt.re amended
to permit d0&·walking on the beach dur-
ing winter months. Lorr insisted thlt
would be too compUcated. A man noted
lhlit It had been poalble to regulate
times and placM for 1urflng ln summer,
allowing more freedom in winter.
Sport.I writer Terry Neptune drew ap-
plause when he charsed, "I'm 1tck of
llslening to these peopl'J who rtand up
here and tell you how terrible It is at the
beach. They never go l.o the beac.h. I'm at
the beach all tho lime so I think I'm
qualllitd to speak. l Jo& up and down the
beach every day and I never see any of
these terrible dol problems they talk
about."
The 27·year Laguna resident said the
city u!ed to have an efficient dog-catcher
who enforced the lea.sh law. He urged
further study.
Lorr cited a lifeguard report ljsling
1,353 leash law violations at the beach in
less than a month. "That's an average of
59 a day," he said.
"We could enforce the leash law iI we
had a good man,'' said Neptune.
"Reponsible dog owners should not have
to suffer because of a few nut.! who let
their dogs run loose."
The "good feeling" that many came to
Laguna to enjoy i.s being destroyed , said
Evely1t Munro, who was near tears as ahe
described taking her1 grandchildren to
Bluebird Canyo11 Park and "watching the
happines!I of parents with their children
and their dogs who come there for
recreation' and watching her teenage
daughter romp on the beach wilh her
dog.
··1 do not believe !here is any Jleed for
furth er restrlctlon1 of our liberties ," she
said. "Let Laguna Beach ooce more be
our responsibility. Do not destroy it by
repressive aJtd unnecenary measures."
A man stepped forward to suggest that
though most of the people in the audience
seemed to oppoBe the ordinantt, he
believed 75 percent of the people in the
city would support it.
Mrs. Bonnie Hano proposed a public
referendum .
Former Planning Comm Is Ii lo n
chairman and defeated City Council can-
didate Joseph Tomehak, whp was among
Uie crowd listening to the proceedings vis
1:1 loudspeaker on the porch after the
council chamber was filled, drew ap-
plause when he came in to speak.
"The ordinance is a repeat of
something on the books at the present
lime," he said. ''Let's get 1wsy from thl1
trivia and 1et down to real city buaines.s."
Councilman Boyd said ht felt "1hort
<·hanged" when the efforts of the Citizens
Advisory Committee and the Planning
Commission to pla11 the city were met
with council action oo dogs.
·•we have 1 sewer crisis, a traffic
cri1is, a police personnel crisis ..• and we
have a dog problem," commr:11ted Boyd
sarcastically. "It Is my conildered jud1-
menl lhel piling another ordinance on a
proliferation of ordlnantts will Rot tolve
anylhlna.''
Goldberg siid he: did not ~lleve the
ordinance would 110lve the problem corn·
plelely, but noted it was backed "100
percent" by experts from the SPCA and
lhercforr bad his supporl
Ul'I Tel411M111t
'Wh" Ille 40?'
Yep. England's Princess Mar·
garet, Queen Elizabeth's young·
er 1ister and third in line for
the British throne, celebrates
her 40t.h birthday Friday.
Body Identified
As Fullerton Man
The nude body of a young man found
Saturday In the San Bernardino Moun·
tains has been identified as that of Gary
Stephen Lack, 21, OI Fullerton.
Lack'• body wu found by a hiker in
Deer Cretk Canyon In a -remote area '°
mile.s east of V!Ctorville.
Sheriff'• deputies, who brought the
body out by he.llcopter, said the youth ap-
parenUy had been living In a cave In the
area.
The cause of death is under in·
vestlgaUon. Jdentlfici.tlon was made
through fingerprlnta ind dental charts.
7 PC.
Fro"' P .. eJ
TRAILEI_tS ~EJE(:TED •..
&o deliver a acathlng attack on the
deve.!Opera a.nd their plans.
"They treat us like ckld1, ninnies snd
amall·WWD )lkU. ••be Aid, "tnd they art
hJtU., ua all ... Ith baR, illlantlle ID-
nuendo."
·He &a.Id the ~ts of t h e
neighborhoods "~ 1lf 1tener people, not
clods" and wwcd that his anocllUon
would receive copies of the petition by
the bu.slnessmen ror study.
"J swear to you that we aland ready to
check w1th every name on that petition to
dftermlne If they're real," he addecl1
Saunder•, who tokt councUmen his pro-
fession was a flnancl1l specialist with
several large firms, termed the asser·
tiona of ioeome frnm the park were-er·
roneous because they wer1 fliures of
Rross income comlni from -In part -
building fees.
But the spokesmen for Contemporary
didn't relent.
Regional Manager Howard Miller eJ·
plored his !inn'• 1take ~ ttie 2&fk ln·
dustry and said that a huge park under
way in the Leisure World area would
have ita ahare ol mllUonaires In res.I·
de nee.
"We expect the ume thing here in
Harbor Hills," he added.
Miller explained the stringent park
rules he proposed and promised that
because aome coachea would look down
on others, roof• woukl be kept attractive,
uncluttered and glare·free .
nie apf>eal ended with oratory from
Rodger Howell , 1 lawyer for Con·
U·turn B1ings
Woman's Death
A housewife was killed and her three
children injured Wednesday afternoo n
when she apparently tried to execute a U·
turn on Pacific Coast Highway In Hu~
tington Beach and wa.s struck broadside
by a beer truck driven by a Laguna
Beach Mao.
Mrs. Carole Ann Conner, 31, of Los
A'!1geles was pronounced dead on arrival
at HuntiQ1ton Intercommunity Hospital
shortly after the 2:21 p.m. accident.
Her three children, Debra, 11, Kenneth,
5, and Stephanie 9, were llst.ed in
salisfactory condition today.
Traffic investigators said the bee r
truck. driven by William A. Mansfield of
1605 Arroyo Drive, Laguna Beach, col·
lided with the Conner vehicle at a speed
of 40 to 50 miles per hour and imbedded
itself in the side of the car.
i.mporary.
Howell W<fl<d lh>t the council -In
...,."" -bad no I.gal rtght w deny tho
,appeal !or a conditional use permit
becalll6 Of .eliltiJli l1aio llWI and , !Wdcl4i 1nierpfellot1om. 'llJe proposal me1 •
all leial standMds, he added.
Bui the council wu· unswayed.
Councl1man Thom11 O'Ke•fe, I
Shorecllffs resident who has• <;rltlclied
two existing parks in the area, led the
drive against the Contemporary propose,)
and reiterated his beliel that the mobile
home industry is in a great state of
· tran.1IUon toward modular home con-
struction.
He urged fellow COWlcilmen not to
allow "this proposal to become and ex-
periment."
O'Keefe also stressed that the city
should study existing undeveloped area11
of the city which could be compatible
with a special mning category to allow
for mobile home parks.
''This one is proposed in u:actly the
wrong place," he asserted.
Councilman Cliff Myers lent a seeond
to O'Keefe's motion to uphold the plan·
nlng commlssion denial.
A unanimous aye vote followed with lit·
tie more disCUS:Sion.
Fron• Page l
DU BRIDGE. ••
Washington "he hid a horror of re-
maining in a job beyond retirement age,"
noting he'll be 70 in September.
The DuBridges bought a home in Three.
Arch Bay more than eight years ago and
prior to that they owned a home in the
Capistrano Beach area.
David, who ha.s a quiet manner and
long sideburns, described the ap-
pointmmt as a "chance to make con-
tributions."
He said he did nol. know Nixon before
his appointment to the $42.500 post, which
must be confirmed by the Senate .
David was philQSOPhical about the cut·
backs in science rese.arch spending. "One
never likes to have his budget cut," he
sa id.
David said he had found thal Nixorn
believed "that science is for people" and
"there must tie a balance" in the federal
outlay.
He cited major needs In the fields of
health, health services, transportation,
and defense .
David, native of Wilmington , N.C .. lit·
tended the Georgia lnstitutfl o f
Techoology and received his Ph. D.
degree in electronic engineering from M.
I. T. in 1950. He is an expert in com·
municalions and computers.
SEMI s~,. I -v ANNUAL O.U.D
1
WALL UNIT
-
INSTALLED IN YOUR HOME
An ~rr1n9ement that will become an im portant element in. the total tf•
feet of your r90m.
• SAVINGS on
HERITAGE MADRAGAL
lt4f9•111, 41111111 ,.. •• , K&euJ....i fllrtltitr•
• 15°/o SAVINGS on
HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED
FURNITURE
OYll 1, ... •AlllCS TO SILICT JIOM.
• 20 to 30°/o SAVINGS ON MANY FLOOR SAMP~S THROUGHOUT THE
STORE DUii.iNG THE SA(E
H :IGA"RRETf 'f U RNi~ RE
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646-027'
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
,
-TU oua atVOLVIN• CHA••'-
0 11en Mon ... Thurs. ' Fri. I• ...
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I
Laguna Hea~h
EDITION _N.Y. Ste••
* * VOL 6l, NO. ·1n, 5 .SECTIONS) 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY; AUGUST 2a, ·1970 TEN CENTS
Senate Committee Kills Badham Freeway Bill
By L PETER KRIEG
Of .. Dtllr """ ,,....
SACRAMENTO -The Badham bill
died a quick and bitter death in the
Senate Transportrtion C o m m l t t e e
Wednesday.
As a re.suit, the planned Paclnc Coast Freeway route along Newport Beach's
coastlioe moved at least a little closer to
rtality.
'The committee action, whlch followed
only 10 minutes of teatimoey, bad an im·
medlite dev.utatlnJ 1 ff e c.I on
Asaemblyman Robert E. Bldham--(R-
Newport Beach) and suppor\en of the
bill.
His backers, moatJ,y, Newport Beach in·
terests, were crushed w~ the 4 'to 5
comm.Jttee roll caU vote wu announced.
SeVen affirmative votes were needed to
move the bill out onto the Senate floor.
1be rmat act of announcing the vote
came oalY aft.r Bldlwu lslued an
Second Honeymoon
Nixons Arriving
On Coast Friday
President and Mrs. Richard Nil'OO will
a1Tive with a flourish on the Orange
Coast Friday afternoon with the public
invited to the landing strip at the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station.
'1'11e chief executive and his wife, who
will be retumin1 from a second .honey-
moon in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, will
1 touch down at 4:30 p.m. in A1r Force
One.
The general public will be lldmltled lo
lhe lading area to· 1reet the J'int J'uni-
ly with gates openJne at 2 p.m., base
1pokumen aaid.
TM arrival wUI mark the start or the
second visit this month Of the PTesident
lo his Western White House home in San
Clemente.
The arrival will be on the same day aa
lhe visit by Vice President Spiro
Agnew, who wlll remain alorig the Or-
ange Coast unUI Saturday, when tfe plans
to start his tour of Southeast Asia.
Agnew, While House spokesmen said,
would meet with the President Saturday
In San Clemente, and might meet again
with Mr. Nixon upon the Vice President's
return to the states,
A.moll& the lfeeten of the Nixons Fri·
day afternoon will be their youngest
daughter, Julie, and her husband ~vld
Eisenhower -both guests at the
Presidential estate since last Saturday.
Elder daughter Tricia also is expected
to arrive with ~er parents.
From the airi staUon, the Nixans will
board the Pr<lideot's helicopter for the
ihorl hop downcoast.
'!be ~iall In San Clemente ~ I.Ill
through the elld ol tqe ~th. &ides 11kl,
but other than the Agnew vistts and talks
f)n lmpressiona of Soutbeeat Asia, other
plans by the P~deat are not yet an-
nounced.
The arrival Friday afternoon will be
much different than the last touchdown
at El Toro for the cbJef executive.
On a late FrktaJ night several weeks
a10 the weary first family landed without
much fanfare after a wearisome, cam-
paign·style series of stops ecross the na·
lion.
The trip included atopa in North Dakota
and Utah before the final destination in
Orange County.
This arrival promises lo be different,
with thousands of ~ upected to
atve a warm welcome.
Tape Recorder Foulup
Loses Probe Testimony
All or part of the testimony ot five
persons who testified before the com·
mittee or inquiry into the July 4
Woodland Drive riot wa:i lost when a tape
recorder broke down, it was disclosed
Wednesday night at the Laiuna Beach
City Council meeting.
Writer Arnold Hano, one of a doun
persons who testified during two days of
inquiry before a committee conslstln~ of
Mayor Richard Goldberg, City Mart4ger
James D. Whealon and Councilme n
Charlton Boyd, asked if the report of the
broken tape recorder was correct.
It was, Goldberg told him, adding, "But
three ol us sat there listening and taking
careful notes. It would be nice if we had
the information on tape, but un-
fortunately we do not. You'll juat have to
trust our integrity."
Hano &aid it was not a question ol J.n..
tegrity, but rather "Another Instance of a
growing series of inefficiencies in city ad-
ministration. Maybe we should just call
the whole thing on again and get an ac-
curate record."
Wheaton said it wu a mecbanlcal,
rather than a human failure. A personal
tape recorder had been used, although
it was not required, he said, and it was
not discovered until midwa y In the hear·
ing that the batteries were In bad con-
dition.
lie said lhe committee members had
very copiol.ia notes. Hano as~ if It was
correct that the repaired JeCOrder had
got the testimony of pollce officers but
not of Woodland Drive resident Gary
Lewi.I, the only resident who Wtlfied.
Wheaton said thil waa correct.
Goldber1 said Jt was unfortunate. Ha.no
Hid It WU a funn)' coi.ncldence.
Laguna Seeks New Home
For County Health Oinic
Councilman Charlton Boyd and acUng
city manager J~pb Sweany were ln-
al.nlcted by the Laguna Beach City Coun.
ell Wednesday night to seek out new
quarters !0< lhe county..ponsored health
services team now conducUng a IUf\'ef of
Laguna's needs -ii possible free
quarters.
The team, headed by paychtatrlst· Dr ....
8111 Routt, ha1 been headquartered In the
high achoo! cafeteria, but must move out
Sepl. I.
l''J'his 11 one of five aqmenta: of a 1ludy
of aervices -lnvolvinS mental health,
phytical health, a medical center,
welfare and probaUon. 'l'ht! county has
1ent an outalandina technical teara to
, 1w~y our needl. We hope lo find lbe!ll
another •pace in a public area at no cost,
or that the cify would underwrlla lhe
"If you can ftnd a space, well and
good," 11ld Councilman Edwml Lorr.
"~t I would oh)ect to the city \ln-dtrwtttfn8 any b_\ at Olli Jlmer" • BoYd aald hall a dozen tocatlon1 were
poufble and no request for money had
been made earUu becaUJe It was felt
free apace muld be found.
To a IUQestion tllat city hall apace
mlcht be foond, Lorr iald ~· failed lo aee
how t1t11 'l®ld be 11 \lo cool lo the tu'
payer. • .\
almost unp.-nled llat-mlnute plea,
alter the vote had been tann, lo aflOw
amendments lo )>e o!teied -thereby
keeping the bill alive.
He wanled to add a prvYt.atOn requiring
the Slate Division ol lllgbwaya lo study
alternate routes.
The move drew immediate objectloM
from committee members Senators
James E. Whetmore (R-Garden Grove)
and Alfred E. AJqulst (D-San Jose), two
. .
Flog Protocol
For what is believed to be the
first.time in history, the Ameri-
can Flag• flies over the White ..
I-louse at night. It is · proJ>:ei to
fly the Flag at night iJ il·is il-
luminated. This ph9to~ot South
Portice was taken Wednesday.
Funeral Service
F ~r Verner Be(:k
Delayed a Week
Funeral services for Verner BeCk, 77,
Festival of Arts director who died Satur-
day, proba'bly will not be held until early
next week. a Sheffer Laguna Beach
Mortuary spokesman said this morning.
The spokesman said he had talked by
tel.,.i-with Mr. Beck's brothf:r, Carl,
from Laramie, Wy., late Wednesday. The
bro\hf1 said that the family ta coming to
Laguria and will then arrange for funeral
services, he said.
Mr. Beck. died al South Coast Com·
munity Hospital after suffering a stroke.
He' was a former ne~ editnr and
waa active with the. Festlvalof .A(ta. He
afao """'"' .. • ctJreCt.r-of 'Lagw!• Federal Savlnp Ir ).oan Aaeociaton.
I
tnaathist Plot Curbed '
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Syria's
Baath Soclallst government haa amuhed
a plot by the rival B11thlat facUon In
lrJq to overthrow It, • Beirut newspaper
wftlch 1peab !or ·Ille Sl'flan Baau.pla
reported lod•Y·
'
chltf opponents of the meuure.
They •uuesled Badham Instead In-
troduce a resolution calling for a study of
alternate possibilities.
Badham wanted ro part of this,
pleading for the special consideration and
again asking Committee Olairman Ran.
dolph Collier (J>. Yreka) not lo formally
aooounce the vole.
Senator Collier, despite bis support for
tho bill, -blmsdl hemmed in by the
Insistent objections lo \he requeol and
fonnally ended the bill's.· life by an.
nouncing the vote.
Badham and other .. _.,., bl!lorll'
di!.appolnted, had little lo ..,. Ill ""'
capitol halls afterwards. ~. , •
lt all happened 10 fut, tbey ...eititeo
stunned to oomment. · .
The hearing, scheduled ~ I p.m.,
fina11y began about l:ts p.Da..~-18
minutes later Senator ColUer calkid. oa
easure
No Trailers
.On Links
1ln Clemente
By JORN VALTERZA
Of ,... O.lfr ,t.., lleff
""fobUe homwwill not replace the links
<lf the foundering Harbor Hills · Golf
Course, San Clemente's city C<>uncll
decided Wedne&day,
, The decUion to tum down an appeal of
•D' ut'U<r denial !0< a ~~ mobile
home park ciune at the [t~ lwjl hours ol dela11ed '
bitter -1el(tm.on1 rrori. d ~~foes ,.ii):e. _ · ~with_., ~
came flOril both ~des ol~~. ~
with... J;911fllcUng stat~. on the
relaUve revenue benefit to tie city. by a
tenaced mobile borne park ... tookloi:
the sea.
A capacity audience of Harbor Estates
residents along both skies cf the nearly
defunct course crow~ed C<>uncil chambers
to complain that plans by the Con-
temporary Mob I I e b om e Corporation
would destroy the neighborhood's at-
tributes and eliminate badly needed open
space recreation in the region.
The hearing -called to consider an aJ>
peal of earlier denial by planning e<>m-
mlssioners -had Its bitter moments.
Santa Ana park consultant Reg Wood
<lffered lignaturea of local businessmen
wh<l support the park at evidence to
offset letters and petitions of protest
from Harbor Estates. He abo offered a
selectJon of photoa taken of homes in the
area which he Implied were run-down.
Wood also detailed what he said would
be more than $120,000 in clty revenue In
the first year of the park's life -facts
which drew attack from the opposition
later In the evening.
Wood also asserted that the vjewt of
only four homes would be altered by the
park.
After several protests from the op-
position, aHrbor Estates Homeowner'•
Association member Ken Saunders roae
(See TRAILERS, Pip !)
Council Rejects
Motor Scooters
For Meter Maids
Motoncootera for San Clemente's
meter malda got the boot Wedneaday.
City councilmen acting on a quickly
prepared memo from city staff, agreed
Lo oommit $5,200 to buy two new four·
wheel vehicles to be used for parking en-
forcement, instead of replacing a bat·
tered city motorscooter which collided
wlf.h a large sedan laat week. The crash
injured park.Ula: officer Connie Atkinson.
City Clerk Max Berg. acting as city
manager pro-tern in the vacation absence
of City Manager -:en r.arr, made the pro-
posaJ lhat bids go out fQr better vehicles.
Councilman Thomas O'Keere agreed
wfth tbe klea and IUQ~ the city In·
vestigate modlfled Volkwagens for the
parklnsiob. -
The city or Santa Ana uses special
right·hand drive VW aut111 for meter or. flcera .
· Mayor Walter &::Villi cited the citj1f
''Buy I American"\ p&llcy:
"Well; ~ Santa A~• can pull II of!,
maybe fie can, too, 11 01Keele quipped.•
Several firms will be cilnsulted on
11peclficaUons and prlcea of the new
machinel, which prt>IJllM to be more
1table, ~er and · warmer for the meter
Wida.
· The• elly'1 I u l rtmalnlng parking ~t,r -whlob ooat' more than i2,00ll l'han bottibldlOw-; Wl!i be IOld ... 11.
' (
HEADS FOR LAGUNA HILLS
-Sclonco Advl11r Dulrldfo
DuBridge Quiiis
. .
As Nixon Aiik, . .
Returning Home
l!Y GEOR9R LEIDAL
Ot tflt Dllfr 1'19' "'"
Dr. Lee A. DuBridge, decrying cull In
federal spending for scientific r~.
resigned his po.st as President Nixon's
chief science adviser Wednesday.
The former C8llech prefildent who wlll
be 70, sept. 21, will retire with his wife to
a new three bedroom home in 4:1sµre
W9J'M. ~ ~pokeaman fo_r the Laiuna Hilla
retirement community aald today.
The ·White House said DuBridge would
be succeeded by Dr. Edward E. Da,vld,
Jr., 45, an exec~ t l ve of Bell Labo~a
toriea, Summ\t, N.J,
President Nixon accepted DuBridce'•
resignation "wlfh d~ regret" and Uktd
the white-haired, bespectacl~ scientist to
stay on as a member of science adviaory,
an appointment the PreaidP/lt will make
when a vacancy occurs in Decen\ber.
"Your partictpalioh in my I·
ministration during this cnocially Im-
portant Initial period will alw4ys be a
source of satisfaction to me ," Niz:on said.
lluBridge has aerved in lhe White
House since the start of the Nll:on
AdminialraUon, leaving an OCe&fl view
home in Three Arch Bay 11\.Soulh La&"JA
fo~ the Washin&ton .... algnment.
In leaving, 'he praised Dr. David, a
Republican and 111id It bad befn fortll)aie
"that· the aearcb for my au~ hid
been 80 fll.IY." ,
Praising Ni~oo·s keen tnierest in
sr.lence and t: hnoloay, OUBrldge added,
''these p~st 19 months h~ve, of,~·
been diff1cult tlmcJ in ma~y ways." ,
"One result of {iscal problenu has tieen
the slowdown of the nallon'1 lclenUOc
and lechnologlc enterprise' bu not been
reversed," DuBrtdge said. ' ·
"Much of lhl• >•g In the paal. year hp
been the failure of the ~ to i.p-
propriate the amount of tundl;nqueated
1n a.Cal 1970 for .research·."
He told reporters Consreu Jlail ~l,.iied
$160 million from tbe Prealdent'a request
fot -collqa r-rch. In ll>e· current
bud~t. I , • I I ~ur~ World 1110kJl111en,~lbed Ula oclenll~l'a rt!l~'"""1.lio111•"11"11J1 qi Y>t11 "iarden villa" m~la .Dia\,,.,.. up lo'.,
$48,000.The homo the ~ielocted
ii ln .~ comple~·unlt er\d,ri•ready for
immediate oc:eupency, the apokelman
&ai~. The three-tloty homer, .. rputcha,..
ed two to three wttoks ago,
Or; 0..Brldi! , told r~1 l n
• , 1.(~ DU~~. e¥".ll.
.
<
•
Badham to presen_t his case. He pve
both sides five minutea: and by 3:10 p.m.
the committee was rushing out a a1dia
door to return to the Senate chambers.
BWdes Assemblyman Badham, ooly
four persona were allowed to address the
°"'"m111se c1ur1og the bn.r beartnc thal
seemed, almost 11\ticlimactic after t.he
weeks of planning and postponements.
Only Mrs. Joseph ~ wldOw of the
(See Fll&EWAY, l'llo I)
'
Emotional
Pleas
Ignored
By BARBARA KREIBICB
Of .. MllY ''* '*'" !!:motion-packed plw lrom a h!llO
crowd at LaJ!W1a'• City Ball Wed"'3d1Y.
night fell on deaf ears 11 the City Coun-
cil, by a 3 to J vote, adopted cou1tCilman
Edwml Lorr'• O(<iinance bannin& dop
from city parq 'an.I beacheS.
F0< one startJ1ni moment lowll!d l2'o
11111 I( the I~~ !I a~
tho onllunce had been defeated.
Councilm1n Pew Ostrander, who hid
IUP!""led tho measure throulbou~ voled
.. ., •• when Ml)'OI' RJchard GoJdbetf calk
eel for a roU call on tbe motion.
The crowd roarecl Ill approval, but H
f!lrned out Ottrlnder had though the ....
WU <11 an amendment to the ordinance.
City Allomey Joel; J. 1!lmei aaid a re-
count or the vote 1'0uJd. be In oNer if
there had bee11 confus!Qn and Ostrander'•
v.ote was changed to a •<yes."
Councilmen ·Roy Holm and CharUon
Boyd cul the dbsenling votes.
The ordinance will become Jaw in 30
days.
In addition to ca:itinuint the present
leash Jaw regulations, the ordinance bans
dogs at all Umu, on or off the leash_,
from Bluebird Canyon Park, Top ol the
World Park and Riddle Field and also
from all beaches from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
daily throughout the year. It allO-pro.
vides that the council may, by resoluUoDt
extend the ban to certain Umes and areu
in Heisler Park. • ,
A woman who said she lived on Cliff
Drive wanted to know wbat thil meant,.
City Manager James D. Wheaton said It
meant there would be no immedtai,
restriction on walking dogs In Hels1er
Park, but these oould be fllll, lnlo etroc\
by re10luiion of the council.
"Would we be t0Jd about thla?" aske4i
the woman. •
Wheaton said It would be dqne at a
public m~tlng but Would not Jteeesaarlly
have to be allnOUnced in advance .
"I'd just like to be sure what lhe law
la," said the woman. 1'We're never sure
of anything aroun4 here @nY more."
Writer Arnold Hano described the
ordlnance, presented to the council In a
SurPf'.lse move by Lorr two weeka ago, u
''va.qe, inconsiateot, inaccurate and con·
lusini."
"It is a mldni1ht ordinance, written in
(See·DOGS, Paae 11
Oru1e
l\'eatlier
Hope you enjoyed today's weath-
er, because we're having an iJI.
atant replay Friday with low cloudi
in the morning and hazy sunshine
thereafter. Temperatures w J 11
range from 75 to 85 degrees.
INSIDE TODAY
__..... Goo. ltltJQOri't CommililOn Qn -
E4ucotlotaal Rtform htu reeom-
mendtd abolilhmef't of the ttn-.
1'rt 1111ktn and creation of a
riitrft po11 1etup /or California'•
kocher1, Pogc 3.
c~~. , • •:= • ,.,,, ·1=~-,.:,: t :c:.t'C. ~ Cfffl~ ,.11 • Or-.. Ct\lfll't 11 Cl'fU~ ti I~,.,._ ,.,,_ 11 OH111 JM~ II Sflt>l1s .,_., • ....,..., ,... ' , .... ~ 11>11 1"1"f.-.. 1•1t T*"""-11 ,._ l•U TIMltln llolt
"""'.,. 11 WMtlltr I A1111 WMm It w~• ...... IJ.IJ
Mettl... " wtf1ll ,._ ..
'
~ DAil. Y P1l.OT SC
Treew,e1 Fiflater
• 14 ..,
Badham
~ .. ·~ledges
1·
rr.•Pllf8 J
FREEW AY· ..•
former ~ of the Stnate. and
Newport -cft;y Couod!!nan Howard
RotOrs ipo11e Oii bellalf ol the bW:
He'll ·Try ·Again
6 p • a kl n 1 In op()Olllon " er • ~ -IL -(11..lllm-ttnston ~) and Al s. Jtq 0r..,.
County road oomnilaton<ri
BW'ke'A ,ppe3rance dnw criticism
from Badham. who said be wu "appalled
at an assembly colleague a p P e a r I n II
before the Senate to oppose • bill."
1bfrt ls more than one way to klD a
freeway route.
And Alltmb\yman Robert E. Badham
CR-Newport lkach), whost move to have
the Legiatature commit the slaylna of a
Padflc r..oa1t Freeway section failed
Wednt.lday. has vowtd to !lnd another,
But he'll have to hurry. State Division of
Hl&bWIY Officials said today the start of
construction ot the Newport sqment the
C.oastal route is acheduled for the 1'13-74
fiscal year.
Badham &eems ready.
His first promise after the Senate
Transportation c.mmlttee rejecled hll
bill to eliminate the Pacilic c.oa.st
Freeway throulh Newport Beach. wls to
t.ak.e the cltY's pllght to Goverhor
Reagan.
Badham said he would ask the
governor to remove funds from the
budget for that section of the freeway
when Jt comes up for~·
That. according to Wallace Knutsen,
district 'design engineer for ilie Hiibway
divisioli, J.s only three years off,
Knutaen uid this morning that there
are no ful'l<h In the current. trm.71 budget
for actual construction of the freeway,
anywhere In Orange County and said
none will likely be included in the next
budget to be adopted by the Highway
division in October.
* * Mayor Praises
Senate's Action
On Freeway Bill
Returning rrom Sacramento in time for
a Wednesday night City Council meeting,
Laguna Beacll Mayor Richard Goldberg
announced defeat of the Badham freeway
bill in the Senate Transportation Com-
mittee and commented, "I think the com-
mittee acted w)sely and in the interes~ of
the majortty,o! the peopl~."
He aakl he dld aot anUcipate revival of
the bill "at least la !ta present form ."
"lf lt cornea up again," said Goldberg,
••t should~ 1t would be tor a re-study
of lhe N'ri,cl'I eacn ....... t of !he
freeway thl)r· with a ,\liew to finding an
alternaUve to.that portion of the [reeway.
There must be an alternative In that area
that would not block construction of the
rest of ~-freeway." , Goldbe I ind City Manager JameJ D.
.Wheaton ouraeytd to sacran:iento for the
committee bearing on ttse controvenl•I
bill, to lej>d their ... 1g~t to tl/<>S< oppooing
ft.
The two Offlcla11 did not 15peak, but
were introduced along with represen·
tallves of other communities.
''I think the committee wu lmpre$5td
th1t there seemed to be twice as Jlllf!Y of.
u1 up there to oppose the bill as there ·
were to support it." alld Wheaton.
Council Delays
Bike Ordinance
The "urgency" label was removed
from San Clemente 's proposed tough new
law on miniblkes, but city councilmen
Wednesday still 1greed lo Introduce the
measure for passage at Its next meeting.
The slllft in action on the Jaw was call-
ed, councilmen agreed, to allow s o m e
time for community feedback. on pro-
visions which -would outlaw riding of
recreational motor vehicles on pr\vate
property without written consent of th'
landowner.
The code also would ban rldin1 o( the
noisy machines within' 300 fttt of any Jot
used for resldenUal purpose!.
DAILY PILOT
N..,..t lealrl
l..pN IHtlrl c-.1i1 ..
OllAMGI CO.UT l"UllLISNtNO (OiltPAJtY
••'l•rl N. We•4
,..Pillllll .... l"llMloll#
Jee\ It. Cw•lty
Vie:• l'r11'.""I .... ~rll M•"'ftr
lllo1111t K1t•il
f_d!ltr
T11011111 A. M•r,111~•
M .... 11111 lldltw
l i1ll•N '· Nill _
S...1h Or•ri,• c.ut'lly liflllor
(e1I• Mtw! U0 W(JI ••'I' 11••1
N1w"rl •11,~; ft11 Wtll·&.-.01 •ou~1rd
L.ltU~t BIHll! m l'-1 ... _ ....
~..,,11,..1.., ••tdl: 1r11, ••acll •11i11...,.1•d It~ Cl-i. . .1115 Nllrflil Ill CemN ftNI
OA1\0Y l'IU)T, Wiii! '"!di It ~ 11'.1 :c.-..... ~ ....... ~ ~ .. • ......... ulll-lllr ~ •t.:&1>. ~ C..11 ~ NWtllftti... -..0 I/If/I ,_ .... Yt-.Y. 1--...mt IWI
.,.... dll .... ()r ...... C.MI ~1111 .... ~ ............ -•• 7111 ""' ............ -.-.~ ...... ,
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, ..... 1114) 14l-'J11 a-w.i ........... 641 l&fl
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"'"""""· ... ......, .......... il!Ollllr•l-fdflWi.I -• ..........._,, .........
_, ... ·~ ~··-.-i.1 ,.,. --.. ~-....., dtM ............ " ".......,, ... .. ... C-•• .... ~ """"""' ... "' UFf'llr tltl ........,,, IJI -•I t1 •-llltrl
Mlm..., "'"i...'-· u• _..,.,,.
I
Knutsen disclosed that the Newport
section may be the tlf'lt Oil the state's
prk>rlty in the county, however, and that
the road would be started from the plan-
ned Newport Freeway (Route SS) ln·
tetthange and built south through
Capistrano.
He said by the llme It reaches I.hat far
down, construction would also have begun
northerly into HunUnjton Beac:b.
All .this, Knutsen stressed, is according
lo present prlorltlea which could be
changed at any time.
He said that construction of the
Newport fr.teway through Costa Mesa to
the coast would likely not be started
before the-mid or late 1970s. ·
Badham, hoWever, insists that the cur·
rut Pf;Cllie Coast· freeway route, along
the Coalt. Hlgbway in Newport, is against
recommendationS ci a special I.ask force
appointed by Governor Reagan to study
effect.s of freewa.vs on environment.
He also said that the federal govem-
meot1 through the e f f o r t s ?f
Transportation Secretary John Volpe , is
moving to cut out funda I o r
sµperhighways that "would run down
people'.s beache.s."
Badham also was quick to cite the ef.
forts of the newly.formed Citizens
Coordinating Committee in Newport
Beach that has begun to circulate pell·
tiom that will force the Newport City
Qni:ncll 'W ·rescidd Its agreement w1dt the
state Division of}lighways.
~ city bas signed an 1greement
adopUnc the acb.ial route or the coaJtal
freeJray Ult from Bayside drive to the
citt limits at Corona del Mar.
UDder the 1nl.Uative peUtlon. the council
woWd either have to rescind the agree-
ment on Sta own or put the quest.ion to a
vote of the cili:,eDJ')'.
The OX ia also circuJating a related
petition that woo1d require • clty·wlde
vote on a charter amendment to require
the' councu· to conduct 8 referendum
before It signs another agreement.
Signatures of 15 percent of the elec·
torate are needed to force the council to
act on both matters.
Other reactions to Wednesday's ·com·
mittee action were as expected.
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth hur·
ried !rom the capital to catch a ta.xi to
the airport. He would say only, "I am
sorry it went the way it did."
Mayor Rebert Wilson ol Costa Mesa, an
cippoalUon leader, wu obviously pleased.
He lfl'llUded AssembJiman Robert H.
Burle (R,.Huntington Beach), for his
work ln defeating the measure, although
not hesUtatlng to comment that the bill'• iqionsor, Assemblyman Badham, had
fought hard for legislpµon he believed in.
Mayor Wilson &a~ the committee,
however, hid little choice but to do what
it did, pointing to widespread opposition
tO the bill I
Burke had told lhe committee that if It
tilled the freeway from Beach Boulevard
ln Huntington Beach to the uattm boun-
dary of Newport Beach, It would wreck
the planning efforts of a number of cittes.
He said Huntington Beach, Costa Me.sa ,
Fountain Valley and Laguna Belich "are
looking forward to the freeway .''
He said, "They have invested lime and
money" planning around the new route
and said It would cause hardmlp1 U thl•
section was deleted.
Koch introduced a delegation of Orange
coast officials in the gallery who were
there opposing the bill, including County
Supervisor Alton E. Allen, Laguna Beach
Mayor Richard Goldberg, Costa Me~a
Mayor Robert Wilson and Fountatn
Valley City Manager James Neal.
Koch told lhe panel that they would be
leaving five dead-end freeways polnUng
toward the coast in Orange County by
killing the Newport Beach segment.
He pointed ®t that of the 10-mi.Je
stretch affected in lhe Badham bill, a
form•! route had already been accpted
and adopted for all but three miles -the
section between the West Newport boun-
dary and Bayside drive.
Badham, CQuntering this, pointed out
that a citizens committee is already mov·
ing to force Newport Beach to rescind the
agreement on the four-mile stretch from
the Back Bay to the Corona del Mar city
limits.
Koch pointed out that the state already
owns $15 million worth of right-0f-way
along the adopted route and not~ that
$150 million has been spe.nt planrung for
the route. ' •
He also noted that the two freeway
l'iegment.s aJr,ady deleted, one through
Venice and the other thf9ugh Beverly
Hills, did not involve adopted ,routes.
In his closing .testimony, Badham
volunteered to take t h e pcUtlcal con-
sequences of the bill.
Pointing out that h.is district covered
territory other than just ~ewport. ter-
ritory whose local ofrlcials wanted the
freeway. he told the cotnmittee, "I have
to take the political risk in the fact of my
constituents.''
He &laked· bia position on the view,
"Where •J.)1~a1 does .. not belong, a
freeway dOU"bOt belong.
As it enters ~ Beach from the
northwest, the proposed controversial
route cuts almost directly towards the
.shore and .continues through the city
ai«IJ IPP'le real estate bmfering exiJt1ng
Coa1.ay. In g to be allowed to offer ~e
a.me ea~ Badham first had tried 'to
Interrupt~ Uie actual voting when be uw
how -it was eoing.
Fro1n Page 1 ,
DOGS BANNED IN LAGUNA . ' . • • •
solitude ,"' &a.id ifano. ''\Vhen yo u
subscribe to the theory that the ~pie
are fools this sort of slipshod work Ji ·
what ycu geL" .
It was Hano's C<Jmment thal Riddle
Field is not an official city park, but only
part of Boat Canyon Park that produced
tile subsequent voling confusion .
Goldberg sugges1.ed amending t h e
ordinance to change this wording, but the
motion died after City Attorney Rimel
pointed out that adopUon of any am,nd·
menl on second reading would send tile
ordinance back to a first reading status.
A last-minute attempt by Councilman
HOlm to amerld the ordinance so that the
be8ch ban would be efltttive only from
June IS to Sept. t~ went to a vole, but
was defeated.3 to 2. •
Hano aJso noted that no mention had
been made Of Irvine Bowl Park, "the
city's largest park" and attacked a pro-
vision that dogs enrolled in city.sponsored
obedience classes would be exempt from
the beach ban.
"You're saying that they can attend the
classes oo the beach. but they're not
1llowed there after they graduate," said
Hano.
Though !5peakers supporting and OJr
posjng the ordinance were fervent in
th~r •w.eals •. the atmosphere became
tense at one point wtrcn a young man
turned his back on the council and ad·
dr.esscd hlmshlf io the aud\,nce. Asktd
by the mavor to foJlow the rules and ad.
dress the council he snapped, "There's no
pofn~ ln talking to you any more!"
Goldberg repeated his request and
several persons in the audience urgtd the
man to follow the rules. There were
murm~ of "Throw him our' and a
poUce officer appeared at the door of the
council ·Chamber.
"You elected a slate of people who 're
goblg to selJ this town out to the real
estate interests. You should recall these
people," the man shouted, and strode out.
Several spe3kerS supporting t h e ordinance referred to Uttering problems
callSed by dogs on thr beach and on
private property.
A number said they would find the
ordinance acceptable U It were •mended
to permit dog-walking on the ~ach dur·
ing wtntu months. ~rr lnsl!ted thl~
would bt too complicated. A man noted
that IL h•d been possible to regulate
limes and places tor surfing ln summer,
allowing more freedom In winter.
Sports writer Terry Neptune drew •P-
pl aU!le when he chllrged, "f'm sick of
Llalening to these J*l>IO wbo stand up
htre and tell you how terrible It Is at the
beach. They never eo tot.he beach. I'm at
lht beach all the Ume IO I think I'm
qualifjed to spe1k. J Joa up 1nd down the
beac~.ev.ert day and I never see any o{
thCse terrible dog problenu they talk ii bout!'
The"27·year Laguna resident 1aid the
cltY osOO ~ have an efficient dog-catcher
who enforced the leash law. He urged
further lludy.
Lorr cited a lifeguard report li.5ting
1,353 leash law violations at tbe beach ln
less than a month . "That's an average of
59 a day," he said.
"We could enforce the leash law if we
had a good man," said Neptune.
··Reponsible dog owners should oot have
to suffer because of a few nuts who let
their dogs run loose."
The "good feeling" thal many came to
Laguna to enjoy is being destroyed, said
Evely11 Munro, who was near tears as she
described taking her grandchildren to
Bluebird Canyo11 Park. and "watching the
happines., or parents with their children
And their clogs who come ther' for
recreation' and watching her teenage
daughter romp on the beach with her
dog.
"1 do not believe there is any Reed for
further restrictions of our liberties," she
said. "Let Laguna Beach once more be
our responsibility. Do not de6troy it by
repressive aJKI unnecessary measures."
A man stepped fcirward to suggest that
though most or the people in the audience
seemed to oppose the ordinance, he
believed 75 percent of the people in the
cily would support It.
Mrs. Bonnie Hano proposed a public
referendum.
Former Planning Comm ls 11 Ion
chairman and defeated City Council can·
dldate Joi;cph Tomehak, who was among
lhe-erowd listening to the proceedings via
a loudspeaker on the porch after the
council chamber was filled. drew ap-
plause when he came in to speak.
•·The ordinance is a repeat of
somethlng on the books at the present
time," he Mid. ''Let'1 get away from this
trivia and get ~n to real city buslneu."
Councilman BOyd said he felt "short
changed'' whtn the eCforta of the Cltiz.ens
AffvillOl':Y Committee and the Planning
Commission to plu the clty were mel
with council action on dogs.
··we have a sewer crisis, a traffic
crisis:, a police perlOMfll crisis ... and we
have a dog probltm," comme11ttd &yd
sarc3stic1lly. "IL is my considered judg-
ment that piling another ordinanct on •
proliferat.lon of ordinances will .at solve
anything.''
Goldberg said he did not believe the
ordinance would solve the problem c:om-
pletely, but noted It was backed "JOO
percent" by experts from the SPCA 11d
therefore had his supporl.
I
l
F N 111-.... e l
TRAILERS REJECTED • • •
ll1'1Td1~
'Who Me 40?'
Yep. England's Princess Mar·
garet, Queen Elizabeth's young·
er &ister and third in line for
the British throne, celebrates
her 40th birthday Friday.
Body Identified
As Fullerton Man
Tht nude body of a young man found
Saturday tn the San Bemanllno Moun·
talnl hu been fdenWJed as that of Gll)I
Stephen Lack, 2f, of FullerfDn.
Lick'• body was found by 1 hiker in
Deer Creek Canyon In 1 remote area 40
miles east of Victorville.
Sherllf'a deputies, who brought the
body out by helicopter, said the youth ap-
parenUy had been living in a cave ln Lhe
area.
The cause of death is under in-
vesllgation. Identification Wu made
through fingerprints and d'ntal charts.
7 PC.
to deliver a scathln& 1l1Mk Cll the
developen and their pjans.
"'nley treat us like clodt, ntnnles and
lll\lll-town hlcb, • ht lllld, -the7 are
hlttJnlt 111 ill wtth -· lnlaoW. tn-
rtUendo. ••
He sa1d tbe residents of t h e
neigh borhoods "art all steller people, not
clods" and vowed lhat his auoclaUOn
would receive copies of the petition by
the businessmen for stucfy.
"I swear to you that we stand ready to
check with every name on that petlUon to
determine 1f they're real," he added.
Saunders,.who told councilmen hls pro-
fession was a financial specialist with
several large !inns, tenned the asser-
tiorui of income 'rom the park .we.r~ U ·
roneous because they were ficures of
~ross income corning from -In part -
building f ....
But the spokesmen for Contemporary
didn't rtlent.
ReJional Manager Howard Miller ex·
plored his firm's stake In the park in·
dustry and said that • huge pule under
way in tbe Leisure World 1rea would
have its shart ol milliooalres in real·
dence. · 1 "We expect the same thing here ln
Harbor Hills," he added.
Miller explained the stringent park
rule• he proposed and promised that
because some coaches would look down
on olhers, roofs would be kept attracllve,
unc luttered and glare-free.
The appeaJ ended wtth oratory from
Rodger Howell , • lawyer for Con·
U-tm·n Brings
Woman's Death
A housewife was killed and her three
children injured Wednesday afternoon
when she apparenUy tried to execute a U-
tum on Pacific Coast Highway in Hun-
tington Beacll and was struck broadside
by a beer truck driven by a Laguna
Beach Man.
Mrs. Carole Ann Conner, 31, of Los
Angeles was pronounced dead on arrival
at Huntington lntercommunlty Hospital
shortly after the 2:21 p.m. accident.
Her three children, Debra, 11, Kenneth,
5. and Stephanie 9, were listed In
satisfactory condition today.
Traffic investigators said tile beer
truck. driven by William A. Ml'Oslield of
1605 Arroyo Drive, Laguna Beach, col·
lided with the Conner vehicle at a speed
of 40 to 50 miles per hour IJKI imbedded
itself In the side of the car.
WALL UNIT
temporary. ,
Howell a&$C!rted that the council -ta
essence -bad no legal right to <leoy the
appeal lot a condlllonal use per!Jlll
becauat cl ..mtta( trtate lawa and
juldclaJ tntorprotatlonl. Tht ptOPOlll mel
all lqal standar<b, be added.
But the council was WISWay~.
Cooncihnan, Tl)or11as ' 1 .Q'K~lc. .a
Sborecliffl resident who has , crltidted
two exlsttng parks in the areit, led the
drive against the Contcmpcrary proposal
and reiterated his beUel that the mobile
home industry is in a great stato of ' ,
trarurition toward modular -home poll•
1lruction.
He urged kllow C9Uhcbll'en hot to
allow "this prcposal to become .,nd ex·
periment.''
O'Keefe also strcs.wd that lhe city
should study elisting undeveloped areas
of the city which cou1d be corhpatible
with .a special mning category to ..Uow
for mobile home paricl.
''This ooe is ptop()Rd in exactly tha
wrong place," he asserted.
Councilm&n Cliff Myers lent a seCC1nd
to O'Keele'a motion to uphold ~e plan·
ning commission .denial . '
A unanimous aye vote followed with lit·
tie more discussion.
F_rom. Page l
DU BRIDGE. • •
Washington "he had a horror of re-
maining in a job beyond retirement age,"
noting he'll be ro in September.
The DuBridges boUght a home in Three
Arch Bay more than eight years ago and
prior to that Uiey owned a home in the
Capistrano Beach area. ·
David. who has a quiet manner and
tong sideburns. described the ap-
pointment as a "chance to make con·
tribulions.''
He said he did not know Nixon before
his appointment to Ille $42.500 post, whicll
must be confirmed by the Senate.
David was philosophical about the cut-
backs in science research spending. "One
never likes to have his budget cut," he
said.
David said he had found that Nixon
believed "that science is for people" and
"there must be a balance" in the federal
outlay.
He cited major needs in the fields of
health, hea!lh se rvices, transportation,
and defense.
DaVld, native of Wilmington, N.C., al·
tended the Georgia lnslitu te o [
Techi10logy and received his Ph. D.
degree in electronic engineering from M.
I. T. in 1950. He is an expert In com·
munications and computers.
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ltwrsd1y, August 20, 1970 L
Computer l(eeps Tabs on Kids
Data on 150,000 Juveniles at Authorities' Fingertips
By GEORGE LEIDAL """"" with!• flve second&, and the In-be transfemd lo 1 permanent printed in 1he ...,....,., office, muolclf)ll -t.
04 """ o.llY "'"" 11.,., lonnation la rel1yed to the officer in two copy for the requesting agency, saving admlnlstrative Office, and in the data
The computer age haa caught up with minutes. even more time, Capt. R. W. Lux-ser\lices department. ·
juveniles in Orange County who've had Besides field Joquiries, the sheriff's embourger, sheriff's records division, "The computeriiaUon of the CJt la
brushes with the law. department receives more than 30,000 said. directed tpwan:I JChle:vinJ a more ef·
A television system now retrieves In-similar juvenile requests from other The total ol 100,000 juvenile Inquiries ficient and effective tool for the la• ..,.. ,. ;
formation 011 150,000 county youths government agencies , each year. The each year, can be handled by the new forcement officer ln his handUn1 of
who've been in conlact with the l.!lw, ror same proceu ii followed, only Xerox system· at an annual operating co1t.s of juvenile problems," Sheriff Jamet Mlllk?
non~tmJnat or serious crlmlnal offenses. copies of the file card were made, and $27,000 -a savings of $22,000. The old said.
The "video-data terminal" -television sent to the agency. system is estimated to have cost the '"nus project wiD Jay a firm found&Ulm ' ~
screen -reproduces the case hi!.~~ of The television screen image of the county $49,000 each year. for future data proceu.lng of other fUtl
any juveRile in just seconds, a county ,.:l":.•..:•..:nile:..:...'•_hl_ckgrou_:c__od_c_u_a_u_1o_m_a_u_ca_U..:y __ v_1_deo-d __ ,_i._tennln'-'-als--also--are--loca--ted--w-i_ll>in:.:' :.oo:.::r_:l•:.w.:..:ent::.::=:.::ement::.::::.::""::.::m::munl::.::::ll':·:." spokesman said.
Observitag Pair
Art fans study offerings at the Art Yard. yet another summertime
festival of creativity currently under way in Laguna Beach. Tlte show
is holding forth in a former lumber yard in La~una Canyon. just a
brush stroke away from the famed Festival of Arts and the less
formal Sawdust Festival. The fourth display of local art work is at
the Art-A-Fair on N. Coast Highway in Laguna.
Carpente1~ Accuses Unruh
Of Angela Davis Support
Newly-elected state Senator Dennis
Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) Wed-
nesday accused Democratic gubernator·
la1 candidate Jesse Unruh of supporting
Angela Davis during her tenure battle
at UCLA.
Carpenter said Unruh declared In May
that if he were governor, he would have
supported UCLA Chancellor Charles J .
Young's recommendation to rehire Miss
Davis. The UC Regents voted not to
rehire the self-avowed Communist.
Unruh said last May, "I wou1d not have
hired Angela Davis in the first pJace and
neither would I rehire her" '6elcauSe1 a
Comm uni.st cannot be "objectlve." But he
6aid for the regents to overrule the '
chancellor was ''political interference."
Miss Davis has r>een charged with
murder and kidnapi ng in connection with
the Aug. 7 escape altempt in San Rafael
by three San Quenlin inmates. The at·
tempt ended with the dealh of a Superior
Court judge and three others.
Carpenter said Unruh's statement that
he would have backed the recom-
1 me.ndation of the chancellor was "dam·
ning evidence " of his "extremely poor
judgment on issues that affect the quality
of education in califomia."
Jn a prepared statement issued to
newsmen as ClfPfDter arrived at the
Senate chambe-1 Ure Newport Beach 'at·
tomey charged "Unruh sought maximum
political mileage, . making b o l h
statements of support for Miu Davi.s and
opposition to her." " .
Formerly, requests for trdormaUoo
rrom the Central Juvenile Index (CJl) by
County law enforcement agencies, or
other departments, took as long aa 15
minutes. Last ye~, police, sheriff's
deputies, highway patrolmen, the pro-
bation department, C!ood control. flre
departme11ts, school weUare and at-
tendance o!ficta1s, a11d forestry services
made 70,000 CJI inquiries.
Each request required someone in the
sheriff's office to manually check through
thousands of index cards on file.
Once located, the juvenile's case
history was read by the radi o dispacther
to the awaiting officer and the card refil·
ed.
Under the new system, CJI requests
will be made to the co mputer which will
flash the case history on the television
Hospital Gives
Employee Awards
Five-year and lG-year service awards
were presented to rl employe.s of South
Coast Community Hospital ln South
Laguna at the 11th Annual Employe
A w a r d s Banquet sponsored by t h e
hospital board of dirtetors Wednesday.
Hospital administrator Daniel M.
Brown was master of ceremonies at the
banquet for 140 employes and guests at
El Adobe Restaurant ia San Juan
Capistrano.
Dr. Hennan Sobolf president of the
medical staff, thanked the employ es for a
job well done and Victor C. Andrews,
president of the board or directors,
presented the service awards.
Receiving live-year a w a r d s were :
Doreen Bater, Kennard Critchfield,
Laura Doo2, LaVerne Kelley, Blanche
Meier, Louise Norton, Byrde Parker,
Nancy Patrick, Susan Rice and Irene
Snyder.
Awards for 10 years of service were
t><'SOnted I!/' ~Ima Barnes, Ellie Billy,
Joseph Cblsin. Ronald Farley, Virgil
FarleJ, Sally Favour, Opal Hayes, Jean
Hinkson, Miriam Kolber, Pauline Lan·
dret.b, Miff Jane McMurray, Earl Price,
Lota Sloftel Ind Dorolby Tomey.
School Tenure End Urged
I .
Reagan Gets Mi.dway Rep ort on Education Probe
By TOM BARLEY common goal of iMurlng reward for teachers and students and unhealthy ac..
01 ™' o.11Y '11tt s11H performance above •nd beyond the stan· cording to the best research in behavioral
dards or the past and present." science!," the commission added. Governor Ronald Reagan's Commission
10 Educational Reform has reached the
halfwa y stage of its statewide in-
~estiga:lion wilh lhc Issue of an interim
report which calls for scrapping of the
k nure syslem and the creatkln of a merit
pay system for California's teachers.
Hanson's C!lmmission felt that the It points out in iii report to the
absence of merit pay for California 's goverpor the "need for the design and
teachers "crtates an undesirable, if not field lesting of alternate types of school
intolerable, refuge for mediocrity for oqi:anizalion which would be assesud and
some teachers ." It also, the report points \lalidated systematically accordlng to
out. creates "a sense of frustration for predefined, specified objectives of stu-
Both suggestions are among seven
recommendations offered to the governor
by the 20-member commission under the
chairmanship of Santa Ana accounting
executive Robert E. Haruon. The in-
termediate ·report brings to 10 the
number of recommendations offered
since the commission began ils probe of
the state's educational .!ystem lest year.
others who are willing and qualified to dent accomplishment aod specified ob-
assume greater responsibility in a jectives for change in the way ad-
sincere effort to contribute to a higher ministrators, teachers and students work
level of excellence in educatibn." together."
The commission noted what tt describ-Five factors should be present In the
ed as "four mai n objections" to merit final consideration, the report state,. ll
pay none of which, it commented, "is in-defines them as "staff involvement in the
surmountable. Th ey are: <lee is ion making process: I l e x i b I e
-Concern by teachers over possible organization: ~rofeuional evaluation:
Hanson regards his aroup's comments
on tenure as perhaps its most important
contribution thus far in its response to
Governor Reagan's appear for a common
favoritism under a merit pay system. car~rs ~~ leachmg and performance pro-
-Fear of losing security whlcli ''ac-motions .
companies a fixed inCP-ase in salary -Discontinuance of tbe slate Board of
schedule with little or no sett im· Education's issuing of textbooks for first
sense analysis of what he has called an pro\lemen\. ·•
unwieldy and complex educational struc· -"Resislance to any rating system
ture. due to a Jack of confidence either in the
"He wanted what we had lo say in subjectivity of rating systems or in the
crisp layman 's language.'' Hanson said. objectivity or those who do the rating."
•·we thin!( he's got It in the reports we've -Predicted high ro&t of merit
prepared thus far." systems.
The Ha nson comm ission's' suggestions "1lle weight of our·analysis Is strongly
on tenure (a fonn of job security for In support of the premise that merit pay
teachers) are drastic and will, he Is one of the important nece!Sltles to the
cheerfully admits, "cause a hell of a lot achievement of the highest attainable
of controversy.'' quality or education." Hanson added.
The report says "tenure serves to pro-Five other recomendaUons have l>Qen
tcct incompetent teachers because it submitted to Governor Reagan since the
creates an Illusory blanket of protection commission began its investigalion which
which orten deters appropr iate action.'' is now in its second yea r.
"Tenur e was first established as a pro-Hanson and his 19 colleagues on the
trction for teachers against bias and ract finding team have met al least once
discrimination in dismissal proceedings." a month since their appointment.
ltanson explained. "It's no longer His commission 's other recom-
necessary for this purpose-Article Fi ve mendallons include :
of the Callfomia Education C o d e -"There should be created a single
guarantees aU certified pertannel due state Educational Research and Develop-
proccss and protects them f r om ment Agency, responsible to the state
discriminatory or malk:iow firing prac-Board of Education (when constttuted as
lices." .. previously rtCMUnended by lhls com-
"What we suggest w\11 take nolhing mission). i '
from the competent teacher,'' Hanson ad· "Thia agency,1• satd HanAOn, ~'should
cled. u1n fact. It would http to restore bt·authoriz!d and funded 10 stimulate the
confldenct In the leaching profession by design, evaluation and dlssemlnatlon of
removing !he public's image of 'life pro-new e1ementary and secondary In·
tceUon, regardteu of competency'." stroctional and organizational programs.
The cornmiMion ai..,o recommends that -Sweeplng changes in the organiza-
11.ll Ca llfornla'1 school dlstrict.1. with the ' tional manal«fient of tchoolJ..
backin1 of a "clear policy statement by "Rlgid adhettnce to traditional ad-
the C&llfomla Slate Board or EducaUoo ," mlniltraUve patterm a,ggravatu and, in
:r1houkl develop merit P.,y plan1 most •me cate1, create1 the undrrlytna Lssue1
suitable to each lndlv1dual district. 1to atudent unre1t." lhe commtulon
"This woukt, of COUTIC, be wllhln flna~. I' ttpan states.
rial limits of i,he dl1trtct," Hanson sakt. 11in.e 10 f~uently e1l1tln1 autocraUc
"What we were prlmarlly concerned w1\h atructure of ichool administration ii op--
,.., the ~cvelopm<nt al plans with the prwlve, outmoded In dealln( with both
(
lhrough eighth grades and acknowledge-
ment of the responsibility of the school
district for printing and purchasing of
such books from approved lists.
-Initiation of a two-part statewide
testing program.
11le recommendation calls for an an·
nual assessment of students' achievem ent
in grades one through 12 and comparison
ol resultJI with state and national norms
wherever possible.
The connnission also urges the adop-
tion of "adequate diagnostic tests so that
teachers may assist individual learners
with specific learning ta sks. Diagnostic
tests should be provided," the report
states, "in the areas or reading,
mathematics, language arts and study
skills.
-A new look by the Legislature at
what the commission believes to be
serious inadequacies in the field of voca-
tional education.
The commission states In Its report to
Governor Reagan that ''the State
Legislature should enact a statute wh ich
would provide opportunity for every 1tu-
drot graduaUng from the public secon-
dary schools to bave acquired • • • a
saleable skill."
The commission calla for the develop-
ment of "a Master Plan for Callfomla
Vocational Educatlon" on a rtflonal
basl1.
Twelve educational areas mnain to be
coosidered by the Hanson Commission.
They Include the srouP'• aludy of conflJcl
in the achools and campus unrest,
1lmpWlcaUon of the educalJon code,
urban, suburban and rural needs, public
school finance and rtlallon1hlp of the
federal and state fOYtmment.a 1n.
Cali!omla education.
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Reds Take Town
'Near Phnom Penh
--··· I llr .. °""' .._ .... A Slolto-oo-Trent, Enaland, bus
company bu refunded the 1iz cent
fare cbargod by a new bu.s conduc-
tor for the life-size doU Mrs. M.r-
.. ,.. Ruohton was taking to her
hospitalized . husband. "This was
the case of an over zea1ous new-
comer wbo charged for excess bag-
gage,'' a bus company spokesman
said. • , The lotematioaal C 1 8 m I b e 11
Piicl>ing Tou.rnament, scbedaled to
begin in ~ May N.J., Aug. 29, bu -attracted an entrant from
Elfglaod. He is l!orold S.arl~ 70,
of Cb.is~ck, who lost one arm
years ago In a tiger bunting ac·
cident in Bunna and now is an ac-countant. •
Tht DtPrklt Girl.I, two of tht M·
tion 's Jir(t airliM hosteasts, helped
ct~bra£4 Nattonal Avictio'll Day in
Wa.thingiolt. TMt1 art Annt DtPritat
MOT<ton, l'owllaran, Vo. (left) and
ConU DtPriui Salmon, \Va.thingtqn.
D.C. . • Firemen answered an emergen.
cy call to remove a bor1e from a
bedroom. Authorities said Sh•l•c•,
a 2-year-old chestnut, wandered in-
to an empty house lrom a field, in
CUblington, England, trotted up the
front 1tairs and became trapped.
Firemen, aided by a veterinarian
who gave the animal a tran-
quilizer, set him free. • Police In St. Louis, Mo. said a
man, about 22, placed a passbook
Monday into the teller's drawer at
the Lindell Trust Co. auto bank.
The teller, Raymond Peters, told
the man to wait bis turn because he
was busy with another customer.
The other customer was George
WHH, 45, an employe of a check-
cashing firm, who was cashing a
check. The impatient customer
angriJy withdrew the passbook,
and as Peters passed a canvas bag
containing $5, 700 through t h e
drawer to Weese, the wrong man
snatched the bag and ran off. • The British Broadcasting Corp.
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A force ol
1,000 North Vietnamese captured the
village of Preak Tamuk nine miles north
of Phnom Pfflh today ln the beav;est
assaulJ. ot the war on the capital'• outer
def ...... Field ,..,..is llld Cambodian
~ wera battltng the Communls&s ··race to f.:e."
An ofricial Cambodian spokesman uld
c~ltiet •-ere heavy oa both aldes but
gave no figures.
Preak Tameak is oo the ust bank of
the Mekong River. The outskirts of
Phnom Penh lie on lht other side of the
too-yard-wide river within range of C:Om-
munist mortan and rockets.
No U.S. ground forceJ were involved in
the Pre.at Tameak campaign but Saigon
communiques toda.J' reported that six
Americans were kllJed in the crash of a
helicopter in South Vietnam as well as
continued comblt between U.S. and
North Vietnamflst t:.""CeS near artillery
hue Barnett near the Laotian border.
Spol<esman reportel 2:i North Viel·
nameae and Viet Cong slain in a fight
just west ot Barnett 1D South Vietnam'•
northwest comer.
P-. Penh <01111DU11iques said !be
Nor1h Vlelnanwe troops stormed into
Pren Tameat Wore dawn today and
were In coatrol of the village by af. temooo.
This gave the communistl control ot
tbe Mekong river in that art.a and traffic
there stopped.
The 5liid battalion of lhe Cambodian .,,., IOl1k up • blocking position lo foil
any lartber Oommunilt atlvance but !be
Qit"bodl•N were backed up against the
river•bJ' -Vletnam.se units pushing Jn fmn three lides.
Camhoctla• air force pilots began at· tacldN.()wnawnb< polit.ioos in lbe Prut
Tameak srea this morning but all fire stopped about noon.
The Camhoclians were being tupplied
by ~ Vietname.e eunbo:ta moving up
lbe flooded l\ldm!I.
'Closest School'
Plan for South
Integration Told
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
miniatralion says it.a basic plan far
desegregating Southern IChools this fall is
to make It pos&ble for any child, black or
white, to attend the school nearest his
home.
And it hopes the Supreme Court will
not complicate the plan right now by rul.
ing that children should be bused to
achieve r&eial balance.
This explanation came Wednesday
from Attorney General John N. Mitchell
during a luncheon with newsmen prior to
his departure today with President Nixon
for the West Coast.
Mitchell uJd about 300 Southern school
districts are desegregatlng voluntarily
this fill wtine another 100 di!tricts have
been, or will be, sued by the government
to abolish all-black or all·white acboolJ
set up by local Jaws. He conceded thil
will stall! ruult in some all-white and
some all-black schools in the Soutb
because of housing patterns.
"What you will have, I be:Ueve, i!I
closer to the open society ct1ncept of
being able to go to the school nearest
you." he said. And Mitchell suggested
that the overall result would be a
SOOthern 1ebool system 1enerally com·
parable to the rut of the cotmty, except
for some big city black belts.
But Mitchell Aid one of the "irave
probtmui" facing tbe administration 11
the paa:lblllty the Supreme Court wW
broldt11 Its llandanls of equality.
(BBC) department teaching Eng-
lish by radio and television has
put new interest in its course.
Chris topher Dllke, director of the
course, says a 1triptease model
tears ofi her clothes. As each piece
is removed, the teacher spells the
name of the garment on the black-
board. Dilke said, "Students soon
pick up the language when they
are faced with such interesting
and compelling lessons."
. Army Drops Charges
FT. McPHERSON, Ga. (AP) -Tbt
Army 1ay1 it baa dropped char1es
against S. Sgt. Kenneth L. Hodges in con-
nectkm with the alleged massacre at My
Lai because "available evidence was in-
sufficient" to bring him to trial.
Allhough !be fightlna "" onty niM miles from Pbnom. Penh. hfrt tt WU ..
ir nothinc ,.... happening. Heavy
mcnsoon rain and wind abut out the
IOWld ol batUe horn lhe e1pltai and there
Wal no cbanae in tbe re1ued WfY of We
here.
Tbt fighlin& broke a lo.dtJ lull lo es,,,.
bod.ian ground actlon, a apokuman Aid.
* * * Bruce Stays
Away From
Peace Talks
PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambaasador
David K. E. Bruce today stayed away
from the lllth se:ssioo of tbe deadlocked
talks on the Vietnam war. A brief state-
ment avoided the word boycott but said
the United statea was awaiUng a cha.nae
in the Communist attitude.
North Vietnam'• chief negotiator. Xuan
Thuy, has boycotted the talks for the pasl
10 months.
Philip C. Habib, Bruce's deputy,
dcllvend the shortest \J.S. statement to
date in the. negotiations, saying that the
talks "should be cooducted in a genuinely
conciliatory atmosphere and without
demands for obviously unacceptable
preconditions."
Habib announced that Bruce would not
attend shortly befort the session started.
"Ambauador· Bruce wW be working in
h1s office all day," Habib told newsmen.
A U.S. spokesman u.id the American
delegation WU ''not going lo lnterprtL"
Bruce's ablence but Habib made it clear
Bruce wu not lta)'in& away beca111e of
Ulness.
Habib declined to ay whether Bruce 's
action was connected with the continuing
boyoott by the chief ne1otlators for North
Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
"I really don't want to comment about
It." Habib replied wben asked if there
v.·as a connection.
Xuan Thuy left tbe talb last November
when Ambassador Henry Calx>t Lodge
resigned and Preakie:d. Nixon did not im·
mediately nune a successor.
Bruce wu •PPolnted Lodge's succes.wr
earlier thiJ IUIDIDU and has made two
appearancn u the dlle:l U.S. negotiator.
At the end of last week'• session, the
North Vietnamese delegation announced
that Xuan 'Thuy was returninc to Paris.
but no date was mentioned.
Habib'• Clffki11.l 1t.atement, submitted at
the lel!lon today, covered only ball d a
typewritten page and WU the shortest
since the talk• be1an 11 gaonUll aco.
Reagan OKs Bill
To Curb Bombers
In Calif oJ;'llia
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) -Gov.
Ronald Reagan has 1igned a biU Betting
tilt death penalty u possible punishment
for ct1nvietkm for a bombing in which a
person surfers "great bodily hann."
"As you know a wave of bombings bas
hit the country in r«:ent months, and
California bas not been 1pared," Reaaan
said at Wednesday'• s:igning.
"l know t share tbe hopes of all law-
abidlng cltittns in the state that the new
law will somehow help to curb this most
traatc and senseless form of vJolence."
The bill by A=blyman W. Craig Bid-
dle, (R-Riverside), set the penalty of
death or life imprisonment without parole
-at the dl!crelion of the jury -when a
penon is convicted or wilfully and
maliciously exploding a "destructive
device" causing great harm or injury lo
another.
The mea!UJ'e Included • ' M o I o t o v
cocktails" in the definition of "dutruc-
tive devices.''
Strong Winds Hit NY
Heavy Thundershowers Dot Eastern Third of Nation
Coatal
Ma.II• •un~• IOd•'· lltllt Ylt ll ble
Wlftd6 """' • ..., "*""" ,.,,.. '*-..... _,.,,. I to U knoll Ill ~ '*' Miii F•ld9• HIW! ION' 1f, oCaltl i.m ... ,."'", ·-fl'Onl u
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Florida Rioters ,
Fire on Sheriff ..
Fat Alltert
Four-year-old elephant seal,
Fat Albert, is new student at
the Sea-Arama Marlneworld in
Galveston, Tex. He now weighs
a mere 1,000 pounds, but he'll
eventually tip the scale at 4,000
pounds. He 'll be really Fat Al·
bert then.
. FORT LAUDEllDALl!l, Fla. (UPI) -
Snipen find ao Browll'd County Sherill
Ed Slack W........, aiJbt and ht called
in '"the monster" -a 11ant rtot coo.trot
vehicle -lo help quell U.. sixth night of
racial vkllence in tbe county.
"When they atarl llrln( at mt, lblnp
art: 1etUnc out of band," l81d S1ack, who
alJO ii ronnlna for cooe-. "Our men
will be armed wllh loaded rill• tonight
and they will respood to force wtlh ap.
propriate force."
~ ngela Davis'
Car Now Seen
As Big Ruse
LOS ANGELF3 (UPI) -Angela Davis'
1~9 stat.ion wagon may have bee1 placed
in front of a Black Panther"• home here
in an elaborate ruse to throw authoriUe1
off her trail, a police official said today.
The discovery of the dusty Rambler
Tuesday night culminated in an intensive Guerrillas Mum but unsuccessful search by so .m"''
and FBI agents in the immediate ana
0 Kid d for the black militant. n nape The car, ldeutified in a nationwide all
points bulleUn wben Miu Davis was first
P • • U sought in connection with a San Rafael 3ll' Ill ruguay courtroom shooLoul Lhat !ell four dead,
Was found in front of the home of
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP)_ The Franktln D. Alexander, 29. Alexander, a
Tupamaro guerrillas remaiaed silent ~ Black Panther, is president of the Com-
munist Cbe-Lwnumba club of which Ml.ss day on their plans for two tldnaped Davi! la a member.
foreigners. Police, facing the possibility The discovery of the car touched off
the strategy is being directed from inside I lh '"· ha jail, tried to isolate captured guerrilla specu atio1 at ~• Davi! might ve
leaders, from the outside world. returned to Los Allgeles. She was reported In her home town of Binn·
No authenticated messages have been ingham, Ala., last weekend.
received from the guerrillas since Aua. The car was initially considered a
Stack uld lbe tnlper bulleta ml»ed •
him by Ila feet.
11Jf they conUnue abooting, we're aotnc
In there tonight," Stack al.id. "We won't
•land by paUenUy and let police be fired .
on wllhout reacUng. 1t'1 no lonaer fun
and ramea. We've &ot to break tbe back
ol ll!IJ lhlng."
Two black men 11Uffehd aun•hot
wounds and were lilte4 In fair condition
In a hospital here loday, Neither .. ._ 1bot
by police. One of !be ahoolin& Incidents
stemmed from an argunlellt in a grocery
store and another hivolved a ,men who
wu shot by • customer as be tried to
bold up a 11.vtrn, police said.
SW:k met briefly wtlh Gov. Claude
Kirk aborUy after midnight at lbe Fort
Lauderdale Airport 1nd refused lhe help
of natiooal guar&men. Kirk Aid be wu
pleased with what Stack was doln& and
said he waa leaving him in control « the
sllustlon.
There wu litUe property damage
Wednesday night despite • p 0 r Id I c
fu.boml>lng, but three pairol can were
hit by aniper fire and two otbtra had
smashed windshields from rocks thrown
by angry young blacks.
1be: huge riot wagon was brought in
from Orlando and when It moved fnlo the
troubled area, It drew gunfire and wu
bombarded with firelx>mbs and rock!.
Forty deputies armed with shotguns
walked behind the vehicle to disperse the
crowd, but officials said there were no
shells in the fJl8,gazines .
Pompano Beach, Hollywood and Dania,
neighlx>ring towns troubled with violence
since Saturday, were relatively quiet
Wednesday. 'l'be violence spread to Fort
Lauderdale -a city of. 140,000 -Tues.-
day night. Police reported lhey shot and
killed a Negro looter urly Wednesda y,
and arrested 10 persons.
Ex-Bunnies Sue
NY Playboy Club
II, when they reported in a communique prime link to Miss Davis because
that American agronomist Claude L. Fly, Alabama authorities cited unconfirmed NEW YORK (UPI) -Four former
65, and Brazilian consul Aloysio Mare1 reports: :~al she was see11 driving a "blue ''bunnies" charged "sental di.scrimina·
Dias Gomide, 41, were in good health. Rambler station wagon." But officers in N y k pJ ho Cl b ti on" against the ew or ay y u Police reported on Wednesday the Alabsma were unable to substanUate the Wednesday in a petition to the F.qual
discovery of a I e t t e r from a jailed tip from an informant.
Tupamaro leader to another guerrilla The findlng of the car and reports from Employment Oppor,tunity Commission
chief urging the terrorists to remain witnesses the same day they had aeen asking for reinstatement and back pay.
silent hcause they had more to gain the Miss Davis at lAls Angelea lntenatlonal Part of the complaint was based on the
longer the two hostages were held. Airport intensified police investigations claim the club bad penalized bunnies but
The Etter, writte.a on nine cigarette hete into her whereabouts. not bartenders for having "stretch
papers, was: sent to Raul sencpe, a However, the police official said In-marks."
founder of the organization, and wu vesUgaton diacouJlted the reported Robert J. Mozer, attorney fur the girls,
lou.W Jn the suburban h>~ where he sightings of the woman because a,11 of the said the suit wu the first "to challen1e
and eight other Tupamaro& were cap. witnesae1 said the woman in quesUon was the phony auism" of Hugb Hefner'•
tured Au&. f· wearm1 different clothing. entei:priset. "-~~~~~~~~~....:.~~~~..:...~~~~~~:..
GIFTS ~ND CASUAL
HOME FURNISHINGS
ANNUAL AUGUST CLEARANCE
. I
* Brown Jordan Patio Furniture-==~
* Name Bfrnd Barbecues .................. ,, ... -....
*Gift ltei91~ ........................................ u .. .......
* Garden ymbrellas~. •,-.:r.:.:..T 100/o-300/o off ·
*Chaise ~unge .,,,., .. ,,,_,c.-c.-,.,_,,..,,
* Terry Cl~ Pads .................................... ..
*Chaise Pa~s ...................................... '"'"·"
a.,. SI.ti
• ... Sil.ti
* Terry Pillows .......................................... '"''
..... SJ.It
NEAR COST
2()0/o OH=
200/o OFF
$16.95 & UP
NOW $13.95
NOW $4.88
NOW $6.20
NOW $7.20
NOW $9.60
NOW $2.49
NOW $1.99
Many Item.& on Our Annual Auguat
Clearance Sale Are at Cost or Below.
All Salu Final!
I !
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)
0 ·-· • •
San f;)e111ente
• C~pistra•o EDIT ION N.Y. Ster••
•
VOL. 61, NO. '19', 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, '1970 TEN CENTS
Senate Committee Kills Badham Fre~way Bill
. By L. PETER KRIEG
Of .. Dell)' Plltl S ....
SACRAMENTO -The Badham blU
died a quick and bitter death in tM
Senate Transportltion C o m m i t t e e
Wedne!day.
As a result1 lhe planned Pacific Coast
Freeway route along Newport Beach'•
coastline moved at least 4 little closer to
reality.
The committee action, which followed
only 10 minutea of testimony, had an im-
mediate devastating e f f e c t on
Asoemblyman Rober\ E. Ba.dham (JI..
Ne,wport Beach) and aupporten of the
blU.
Hls bactei;s,.mosUy Newport Bu.ch in·
, te~ts. were crushed when the 4 to $
committee roll call vote wa announced~
SeVen a'.fnnnative vOtes were needed lo
move the bm out onto. the Senate Ooor.
The final acl of aMounciag the vote
ume onlf after Jladham laoued ao
almoet uoprecedenlod IUl.mi.ut. plea,
afler the vote had betn laketl, to allow
· amendmentl to be o,ffend -the«by
keeping the bill ·allye.
He waoled to add a pmilion !'l'llllring
the Stale Dlvllloo of llil!hways to lludy
aJ1onlate ........
Tht move drew .Immediate_ ob~ons
from committee memben Senetors
JaJtlell E. Wbetmore1 (R-Garden Grvve)
aod Alfred E. Alquist" ([).San J..,), two
~ . '
chief opponenb of the measure .
They ' 11111estod Badham instead ;.,.
troduce a remtuuon calling for a study of
allernate P."'itiilltles.
Badham wanted no ·part of this,
pleading for the~ consideration and
again aU.ing Committee Chairman Ran-
dolph Collier CJ>.Yreks) not to fonnally
announce the vote.
Senator Collier, despite hia support for
the blU, found himself hemmed in by the
ins~tent objections to the r<q-1 and
fonnally ended the bill's life by an-
nouncing the vote. ,
8adham and other aupp>rterr. bttta1Y
disappoinled, had little to say .... the
capitol ha.lb afterwards. • .
It all happened .. lsll, they·oeemed too
atunned lo comment. '
The hearing, scheduled for 2 'lp:m .•
finally began about 2:45 p.m. aM' JO
mJnutes later Senator Collier called on I .
0 ra1 ers_· .. on 0
Second Honeymoon
~ix.ons Arr~ving
On Coast Friday
Pttsident and Mn. Richard Ni>un will
·arrive with a flourish on the Orange
Coast Friday afternoon with the public
inVited to the landing strip at the EI Toro
Mat'ine Corps Air Station.
1be chief executive and his wife, who
will be returning from a second honey-
moon in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, will
touch down at 4:30 p.m. in Alr Force
One.
1be general public will be admitted to
the landing area to greet tbeFlnt Fami-
ly with gates QJIOliinf at i p.m., base
IQXlkenen 18ld. ~ arrival wtll mmt }!le atart ol the oecood vis~ this month of t1ie President
to bis Western White Hause home in Sao
Clemente.
The an-ival will be on the same day as
the visit by Viet President Spiro
Agnew, who will remfiln along the Or-
ange Coast until Saturday, when he plans to start his tour of Southeast Asia.
Agnew, White Houle spokesmen said,
would meet with the President Saturday
in San Clemente, a~ might.meet again •
with Mr. Nixon upon the Vice Premdent's
return to the states.
Among the greeters of the Nilons Fri-
day afternoon will be their youngest
daughter, Julle • ..a her husbsnd DsVld
Eisenhower -IX>th guests at the
Presidential estate since Jast Saturday.
Elder daughter Tricia alao iS ezpected
to arrive with her parents.
From the air station, the NilOl'l5 will
board the Preoident's belicopter for tl]e.
short hop downcout.
The vlsll In Son Clemente should last
through.the•"" of the 1"""th, aides ,.id,.
iMlt -than1tllo,~ .visits and talks ·m. imp/eaiolis •f' SoU1bt.at MP, otbet •Pans by the' Pr~f are nOl yet .,.
noonced. .
'!be arrival F'rlday. jdlernoon will be
much different than $e 1all touchdown
at El Toro for di< ·dlioll ell<utlvi.
On a late Fridaf nfcbt aevtra1 ;week!
•@1he weary flnt lari!llJ'-Witho\JI
much fanfare after a WOrisome, cam.
paign-sty1e series of lkljJI across the na·
tion. ,
The trip included -In North Dakota
and Utah before the fiiaJ. destination in
Orange-County. --
This arrival pn>ml.sel to be different,
with thousands of grdten up«:led to
give .• warm welcome.
Tape Recorder Foulup
Loses Probe Testimony
All or part or the testimony ol five
persons who testified before the com·
mittee of inquiry into the July 4
Woodland Drive riot was Jost when a tape
recorder broke down, it was disclosed
Wednesday night at the Laguna Beach
City Council meeting.
Writer Arnold HaDO, one of a dozen
persons who testified during two days of
Inquiry before a coounittee consisting or
Mayor Richard Goldberg, City Manager
James D. Whelton and Councilman
Oiarlton Boyd, asked if the report of the
broken tape recorder was correct.
It was, Goldberg told him, adding, "But
three of us sat there listening and taking
careful notes. It would be nice U we bad
the infonnaUon on tape, but un-
fortunately we do not. You'll just have to
lrwlt our Integrity.''
Hano said it wu DOt a question of m.
tegrity, but rather "ADolher WW'lct of a
growing series of ~Uiciencies In city ad·
ministration. Maybe we ahould just call
the whole Uling on again and get an ac-
curate record."
Wheaton aaid it was a mecbarucat,
rather than a human fal]p.rt. A peraonal
tape recorder had betn used, although
it was not ~uired, be said, and it was
not discovered until niilwa)\ in the hear·
ii\& that the batteries were In bad con-
dition. .
He said the comnpttee lnembera had
very copl,Us ~s. IJ'ano a4'!d if it "as
co!Ted, that the ropalred ..-,ier bad
got the testimony of pone,, officers but
nOt. of Wooc:Uaod Drive resident Gary
Lewis, the only Tesi~ who t'esU!ied.
·Wheaton laid thlf ·wu correct.
Goldberg said ti WU lln!orlunate. Haoo
sald ti WU a flllllly colocldence.
Lagtina ~eeks Ne~ ~o~e .
For County He?Ith Clinic
Councihnan Cborltoo Boyd aod aclli)g
eity manager Joseph Sweany were tft.
itruct.ed by the Lapa Beach City Coan.
cil Wednaday nJcht to seek out new
qurters for the county-sponsored health
services team now conducting a survey ot
Lquna'a needs -if possible fret
quarten.
Tbe team, headed by psychlatrtsl Dr.
Bill Routt, hu been hesdquartered to the
blgh school cafeteria, but mu!t mov.e out
Sept. I.
''ThiJ ii one of five segments of a study
ti services -tovolvin& mental health,
ph1sk:&J health. a medical center,
wtlfm and ~tlon. The county haJ
1111t u outstandlna tedmkJJ team to
.s\IJdy our ~ We .hope to flild them
another apace In a public ma at' no co!&, or that the city would underwTHe the
coot." . .
1'lf you can find a apact., well and
good," said COuncl1man Ed1¥ard Lo!T.
"But I would • obj<CI to the '<Ky 111>
derwrtLlna: any cost aithil Ume.''
Boyd said llllf a dolen loca!loN wm
poalble and no «quell for money bad
boen1 mtde earUtr beca\111, it wu felt
free space could be found. ·
To a sugge>tlon that city ball space rnJcht be found, Lorr said.be failed to aee
bow th1' ....Wd be at no cGll to the tu·
P"Y•r.
Flag Protocol
For what is believed to be ihe
first time in•history, tbe,'Ameri-
qn Flag flies over the White
Hoose at night. It is proper to
fly the Flag al night U •i~ i~ il·
luminateCI. This photo of Sliutit
Portic.o was taken1 Wednesday.
Fiu1teral Servia ,
F.or Y erner Bec,k I I' '
' ' Dela y-ed aJ Wee k
• I ' I ( ' '\
Funeral services {ori Verner Beck, Tl,
Feot!Val•Of Arla director who 'dled SatUT·
day, probably will not be beld until early
!'!'II -!<-a Sheffer Laguna , Beach
Motiuar:Y s)>Okesman aaid thla mot'Jll!tg. 'l'liO iPokesmao ·said he bad talked by
taJeph!Jne;with Mr. Beck's brotbei', earl,
ftom.Larl\mie. Wy.f late Wedrieaday. The
bnlther said that t1>e·family ii coming to
Lqufta and wlll 1¥".arr111111e for luoeral ~. he said. --Mr. Beok died at South Coast Com·
muntty· Hospital after suffering a,ttroke.
He~lfu a .former «Wlp"!:per edU.or· and
was aetlve with'the FeitfVal of Arts. He
alfo, .,rvid U I ~ of '.Lal!UJ>a Federal SaYlnp I< , -Ion. ' . .
Baathiet ·Plot Curbed
BEIJIUT, Lebaoon (~P) ~ Syrja'1
Buth Socllllit goV'emmtnt has smUhecl
a plot by the rival Baathlat factlo• ,Jn
Iraq to owrthrow it,.a ~lrut newapaper
which 1peaka for th! .Syrian BaalhltU
r~poned today. 1 1 • •
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Issue Sparks
Bitter Fig~t
In Clemente
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ... DMI' ...... Sllfl' Mobile homes will not replace the links
of the foundering Harbor Hills Golf
Courie, San Clemente's city counc.ll
-decided Wednesday.
1be decision to tum down an appeal of
an earller denial for a 216-space .mobile
home part came at ttie end of more than
two hours of· detailed -and so~times
bitter -teatimopy from the, developer
and foes a.lite. . · ~-'!iL:~~· relaUve --6oillftt !q,Jl>e c;llyi)lt;" terra<ed njobtie fiome part oj'Ol'looklill
the sea.
A capaclly audteoce of Harbor Estates
residents aJooc both aides of the nearly
defunct COW'le crowded council chambers
to complain that plans by the ~
temporary M ob i 1 e b om e Corpe.ration
would des~mi1:,e nelahborhbod's at.,, tributes-te badly neoded open
11pace ·recreation ln the region.
The bearing-called to consider an ap-
peal of earlier denial by planning com-
missioners -bad its bitter moments.
Saota Ana park conaultant Reg Wood
offered aignaturefl of local buainessmen
who support tbe park: u evidence to
offM letters and petitions. of protest
from Har'bor ·Eatates. Re al.so offered a
selectioo of· photos taken of homes in the
area which be hnpUed were run-down.
Wood also detailed what he said would
be more than f120,000 Jn city revenue in
the first year of the park's life -facts
which drew attack from the opposKion
later in the evening.
Wood also asserted that lbe views of
only four homt!B would be a1tered by the
park.
After .several protest! from the op-
position, aHrbor Estates Homeowner's
As6ociatlon member Ken Saunders rose
(See TRAILERS, Pace Z)
Council Rejects
Motor Scooter s
For Meter Maids
Motoncooten for San Clemente's
meter malda got the boot Wednesday.
City councilmen acting on a quickly
prepared , memo from city at.aff, agreed
to comniit '5,JJO to buy two new four·
wheel vehicles to be Uled for parking en-
fotttmmt. instead of repJacing a bat· ~' city iriotohcoofer which collided
I with a large aedan 1111 week. Tbe craah
in)Ured parldiig officer Connie Atkinson.
: City" Clerk Mu Berg .. aCting sa c1ly
manager pfo.tem in the vacaUon absence
of City Manager Iten Carr, made the PfO:-
PQUl that.bids go out for better vebiclea.
Councilman Thomas O:Keefe agreed
wJth the Jdea and suggested the city in·
vestigate modifled Volkwagens for the
par~infl-job. • . .
. The City of, Sarita Ana usea 1peclal
right-band drive VW autos for meter of4
ricers.
,Mayor Walter Evw cited the city's
"Buy Amencan" policy.
''Well,· tt· Saota Ana can puiJ It off,
maybe,.. can, too1" O'Keef~ quipped.
S,Veral flrml wlll be con.ulied on spec1q<,u. and pr1c<s ol the new
1 machtnel,' Whlcb promlle to l>e more
·stable, llfa: and warmer for the meter
uUildl.
The clly's I a 1 t ,.molnlnr ptrldng
IC'OOttr -which COit more than $21000
wh«l J>ouPt--wlll be sold U.11.
I • '
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""'"'~ HEADS FOR LAGUNA HiLLS
~lonco Aclvlior DulrW..
DuB·ridge QuitS?
As Nixon Aide,·
Returning Home
By GEORGE LEIDAL
0t Ille rt.llY Pl• 1'9ft
Dr. Lee A. DuBridge. decrying-cull in
federal spending for .scientiftc research.
resigned his post a.! 'President 'Nlion-11
chief science adviser Wednesday.
The former Caltech president who wnl
be 70, Sept. 21, will retire with his wife.to
a new three bedroom home in Le.islae
World, a spokesman for the Laguna 'Rliis
retirement communJty said today.
The White Houae said OuBrtdge would
be succeeded by Dr. Edward E. David,
Jr., 45, an•e x e c·u ti v e Of Bell Labora·
tarles', Summit, N.J.
President Nixon accepted DuBrtdge's
resignation "with deep regret" and Uk.eel
the whit~hai.red, bespectacled scientist to
stay on as a member of science advbory,
an appointment the President wDl mate
when a vacancy occurs in December.
"Your participation in my· ad-
ministration during this crucially Im~
portant initlal period will always be a
source of satisfaction to me," Nll:on aaid.
Ou.Bridge has served in the wNte
House since the start of the Nii:on
Admidisttatton, leaving an ocean view
home in Three Arch Bay in South La8ll!I"
for the Wasfttngton &33ignment. ·
In Jeaving,, he praised ' Dr. Davi.lit. ia
RepubliCan and said It had been fortunate
"lhat the search for my succeuor tiltd
been 80 easy.'' '' Pralsin~ Nilon'a keen 'interest rm
science ahd technOlogy, DuBrtdge addfil,
"these pa.st lti months have, o1 2e0urtie,
been difficult times in many wajs.1'' ! ·
"Orie'reSult of.fbcal "problems li:IS bte.n
t»e slowdown of the nation~• adenliffc ·
and tecimologlc enterprise haJ not been
reversed,'' DuBrldge said. '
"M'u~ of thil lag in the pa.st year has
been the failure of the-Congresl to· ap-'
proprlate the amount of funda reque;ted
in flecal 1970 for research." 'H~ loldlripotters c.ngm..bad!llUl\t'd
$180 milllOri from the Prtsldeot's .. ntqlUt
for college research In the curTeilt b\I..... . ~e W~·spol<esmen~ i1le
ICleriUat's fetlrement home as cine of the
ugardtn •fil.11" Jn!>dflb~~tl rahfe "' to
1(9,000. The home the lluBt1Cl!l"l>llili.cted •
la In .a. compleled unit Ilic! 11. rtaijy !Dr
lmm<di•JO oc!cupancy,1 u.. <spo1reom1n •
said. The threffloTy -WU "purCbaso•
ed two to three WHka IJO. ' • · '
Dr. DuBridge told "1191Wa . t I n
(Bee DU BRIDGE, Pap I) ' '
' " ..
• • l
Badham to P""'Ot hia cue. lie -
both sides five minutes and by a: 10 p.m.
the committee was rushing out a side
door to return to the Senate chambers.
Besides Asoemblyman Badham, on)J
four peraons were allowed to addrea the
ocmmlttee during the brief beari9I that
Memed almost anticlimactic after the
weeks ol plannina aod poslpOllements.
Ollly Mn. Joseph Beek, widow of the
(See FREEWAY, Pap 21
• Ill s
Dog Law
Approved
In Laguna
By BARBARA KREIBICB
Of .. oeq., ..........
,
Emotion-packed pleaa from a bop
crowd at Laguna's City Hall Wedoeoday
night (ell on deaf ears u the City Como
cU,1 by a 3 to 2 vote, acfoPted couacilmn
Edward Lorr's ordinance banning dop
from city parks·and beaches.
For one atartling moment toward the
end of tlle leogthy d!.....-;Jt appeared
the ordlunce haCl been defeated.
Coandlmao Peter-Ostrander,' who bid
•"l'llOi:ted tho -• fhroulheul, .. 1111 ..... when Mityor Jll:liard Goldberl ca$
ed for a roll call oa the · ---• Tht· crowd roared lti appmal, bot It
lumed out Ostrander had though the vote
wu on an arriendment to the ordinance.
City Attorney .Jack J. Rimel sald a ... toun! of the YOte '"'"1d be In on!..-II
there bad beell coofusion and 0.trander'a
vote was cha1ged to a "yes."
Councilmen Roy Holm am Owlton
Jloyd cast the dluentlng -..
The ordinance wlU become law in :JO
days.
In addiUoo to-continuing the present
leash law regulations, the ordinance bans
dogs at all limes, on or oU the leuh,
from Bluebird Canyon Park, Top of the
World Park and Riddle Field and alsli
from all beaches from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
dajly throughout the year. It al»..pro-
vides that the council may, by reaolution,
estend the ban to certain times aod ueu
in Heisler Park.
A woman who said she Ilved on Clift
Drive wanted to know what this meant.
City Manager James D. Whea~ _said lt
meant there woukl be no .izilnlediate
restriction ,on walking dogs in Heliler
Park, but these could be put into effecl
by resolution of the council.
"Would we be told about this?" asked
the woman.
Wheaton said It would be done at a
public meeting but would, not neCessarily
have to be announced in advance.
"I'd' just like to be sure what the law
Is," said the woman. "We're never .ure
ol anythlng aroond here any more."
Writs-Arnold Hano described the
ordinanct, presented to the council In a
surprise move by Lorr two weeb ago, u
"vague, inconslltent, inaccurate and cqo..
fwiing." .
"It ia a midnight ordinance, written 1n
(See DOGS, Page Z)
Oruge
Weatlter • Hope. you enjoyed today's weath-
er; because we're having an in-
stant replay Friday with low cloudt
In the · morning and buy sunshine
thereafter. TemperatW'"ea w 111
range from 75 to BS degrees. •
lNSIDE TODAY
Ge:v. Rtago:11'1 Commiario?t ma
EduCational Rf/OMR 'ho$ recom-
mended aboli!h~t of the u.
ure _1111ttm and creation of •
merit pa11 ~~tup /Or Calf/ortdc'1 ttachcr1. Paoi 3. •
• II
'
t IWl.V I'll.OT SC
Badham .Pledges
. -.
·He'll. Try Again
'ftaete U: more thin one WlY lo kill a
freeway route. .
And "-mbl)'llWI Robert E. Badham
(R-Newpo<t B<acb), wi-mov• to ha~
111< i..pbllltt commit the lloyiag of •
Padllc Coast Freeway -!ailed
Wednesday, has vowed to find another.
lWt ht'll have to hurry. State Diviskln of
High-olllciab ,.Jd today lhe start of
-cl the N<Wp0!1 oqment lhe
Coastal rollfAo Is scbtdul<d foe lhe 1117).71
fi!<&l y<ar.
Badbam RClnl ready. ·
B.il firgl prontio< al.... °"' S<nal<
'l'ransponallon Commillee rejec:l<d his
bill lo <iiiilbuolA! llMi Pacific Coast
Freeway lhnJ<lill N•wport Beach, was lo
take the city'• pli&ht to Governor
Reagan.
Badham said he Y.'OUld ask the
governor to rernoft funds from tbt:
budget for that sedion of the freeway
when iL comes up for mutrUCtion.
Thal.. acoordlng to w ati.c:. Knutsen,
diSlricl design ~ fer lhe H!ghwJy
dirision. is only ,three years off.
Knut.s<o laid this "'°"""' that O-are no funds in the culftl'lt t!rro-71 budget
for actual mnstruction of the freeway.
anywhere in Orange County and sald
nooe will likely be included in the nut
budget to be adoplA!d by lhe Highw1y
division in October.
* * Mayor Praises
Senat.e' s Action
On Freeway Bill
Ret:untipe from Sacramento in time ror
a Wednesday night City Cou11Cil meeting,
Laguna Beach Mayor ruchard Goldberg
announced defeat of the Badbam freeway
bill in ·the Senate Tr111sportation Com·
tnittee and commented, "l think the com-
mittee acted wisely and in the inter¢ of
the majocity, of the people."
He &aid be did ROt anUcipat.e revival of
lht bill "at least ia its present form."
"U it comes up again," gajd Gokl~rg.
•·1 5imu1d trunk it would be for a re-study
of the Newport Beach S<gm<nl of lhe
freeway only with I view to finding an
alternative to t.ba1 portion of the freeway.
There must be an alternative in that area
lhat wculd mt block eonstruclion of the
rest of the freeway."
Goldberg and City Muager James D.
Wheatoo jounoeied, IO Sacram<DIO for the commitk.e • bbibil cio tbe Controversial
bill, to koid their w<ipt IO lbose oppooing
It.
Knutsen disclosed th•t the Newport
section may be the first nn the state's
priority in the county, however, tuxt that
the road would be started from the pl•~
ned Newport Fretw•y (Route SS) in-
·ler'change and built &0utb through
c..pi.Wano.
He said by the time ii ruchcs that far
down, construction would also have begun
northerly into Huntington Beach.
All this. Knutwl ~. is at'COrding
to present prklrities which cou1d be
changed at any time.
He said that construction nf I.he
Newport Freew•Y through Cosll Mesa to
the coast would likely not be started
before the mid or late 197fls.
Badham. however, iosists that the cur-
rent Pacilic Coast freeway route, along
tM Coast Highway in Newport. is against
recommendations of a special task fOf'Cf:
appointed by Governor Reagan tc study
effects of freewavs on environment.
He also said that the federal govern-
ment, through the e f f o r t s ~
Transportation Secretary Jchn Volpe, LS
moving to cut. out funds f c r
superhichways that "would run down
people's be.aches.·•
Badham .also was quick to cite the ef.
forts of the ne\\ily-fcrmed Citizens
Coordinating Committee in Newport
Beach that has begun to circulate peti·
lions that will force the Newport City
Council to rescind its agreement with the
State Division of Highways.
1be city bas signed an agreement
adopting the actual route or the coastal
freeway east !ram Bayside drive to I.he
city limits at Corona del Mar.
Under-the initiati\'e petition, the cooncil
would either have to rescind the agree-
ment on its own or put the question to a
vote of the 'citi:.enry.
'Jbe CXX: is also c~ating a related
petition that would requin! a city-wide
vote on a charter amendment to require
the council to conduct a refen!ndwn
before it signs another agreement ·
Signatures of 15 percent of the elec-
torate are needed to force the council to
act on both matters.
other ~actions to Wednesday's com-
mittee action were as expected.
Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth hur~
ried from the capitol to catch a taxi to
the airport. He would say only, ':I am
sorry it went the way it did ."
~tayor Robert Wilson of Costa Mesa. an
opposition leader. was obviously pleased.
He applauded Assemblyman Robert ~·
Burke CR-Huntington Beach), for his
work in defeating the measure, a1though
not hestitating to comment that the bill'1
sponsor, As!emblyman Badham. had
fought hard for legislation be believed in.
Mayor Wtl90n said the committee,
however, had little choice but to do what
it did, pointing to widespread opposition
lo lhe bill.
............ 1
FREEW AY ..•
lonner oecrdlr'1 of the Senile, aod
~rt Belch Cf11 Couod1man How1nl
lloflOn spob on b<hall ol lhe bill.
Sp••tl~c in ~ •era "-iltlmM ~ H. 8uJb (11.-HUI>
tlnl!Oo Boaclll aod Al S. Kac!l, Onli80
Coonly 1'IOd COl1U1llslloM<.
Burke's appeararice drew criticism
from Badham, who said he wu "appalled
at an a~bly colleague a pp e • r I n R
before the Senate to oppose a blll."
Burke had told the committee that ll it.
killed the treew1.1 from Beach Boulevard
In Huntington Beich to the euttm boun-
da111 of Newport Beach. it wou1d wreck
the planning efforts of a number of cities.
He said Huntington Beach , Costa Mesa .
Fountain Valley and Lar.ma Btach "att
looking forward to the freeway."
He said, '"They have invtsted time and
money" planning around the new route
and said it would cause hardships if this
section was deleted.
Koch introduced a delegation of Orange
Coast officials in the gallery who were
there 'opposing the bill, including C:OUoty
Supervisor Alton E. Allen. Laguna Beach
Mayor Richard Goldberg. Colla Me~
1'1ayor Robert \Vilson and Fountain
Valley City Manager James Neal.
Koch told the panel that they w~ld . be
leaving five dead-end freeways po1nt1ng
toward the coast in Orange County by
killing the Newport Beach segment.
He pointed out that of the 10-mite
stretch affected in the Badham bill, a
formal route had already been accp~
and adopted for all but three miles -the
section between the West Newport boun·
dary and Bayside dri ve. .
Bad.ham, countering trus, pointed out
that a citizens committee i! already mov-
ing to force Newport Beach to rescind the
agreement on the four-mile stretdl from
the Back Bay to the Corona del Mat city
IJmits.
Koch pointed oUt that the state already
owns $13 million worth of right-of-way
along the adopted route and noti:<1 th.al
$150 million has been spent pJaruung for
the route.
He also noted that the two freeway
segments already deleted, one through
Venice and the other through Beverly
Hills, did not involve adopted routes.
In his closing testimony, Bad.ham
volunteered to take t h e poUtical con·
sequences of the bill.
Pointing out that his district covered
terrilory othel' than just Newport, ter-
ritory whose local olficiab wanted the
freeway. he told the committee. "I have
to take the political risk in the face of my
constituents.''
He staked his position on the view.
"Where a freeway does not belong. a
freeway does not belong."
~ it enters Newport Beach from the
northwest, the proposed controversial
route cuts almost directly towards the
shore and continues through the city
along ~e real estate bordering e:ris:ling
Coast Highway.
tn pleading lo be allowed to ofler the
amendment. Bad.ham first had tried to
inte.rn1pt..Jhe actual voting when he aaw
how tt was going.
The two officiali did not speak. but
"·ere introduced aloog with represen-
tatives of other communities.
From Pa11e J
"J thm the committee WU impruaed
that there seemed to be twiCe as many of
us up there to o~ the bill as there
were to support it." u.id Wheaten.
Council Delays
Bike Ordinance
The "urgency" label v.•as removed
from San Clement.e's proposed tough new
law on minibikes, but. city councilmen
V.'ednesday still agreed to Introduce the
measure for passage at lts next meeting.
Tbe shift in action on lhe Jaw was call-
ed. councilmen agreed. to allow some
time for community feedback on pro-
visions which would outlaw riding of
recreational motor vehicles on private
property ""'ilhout wrltten consent of the
landowner.
The code also would ban riding of the
noisy machines within 300 feet of 1ny lot
used for residential purposes.
DAILY PILOT
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DOGS BAN NED IN LAGUNA • • •
solitude," said Hano. ''When Yo u
subscribe to the theory that. the people
are fools this sort of slipshod work ls
\\'hat you get·•
It was Hano·s connnent that Riddle
Field is not an official city park. but only
part of Boat Canyon Park that produced
the subsequent voting c o n f u s i o n .
Goldberg suggested amending t h e
ordinance to change this wording. but the
motion died after City Attorney Rimel
poinled out that adoption of any amend·
ment on second reading would mxt the
ordinance back to a first reading status.
A last-minute attempt by Councilman
Holm'to amend the ordinance so that the
beach ban would be effective only from
June 13 to SE!1)t. 13 \\'enl Lo a vole. but
v.•as defeated 3 to 2.
Hano also noted that no mcnllon had
been 'made of Irvine Bowl Park. "the
city's largest park" and attacked a pro-
vision that dogs enrolled in city-sponsOred
obedience classes would be exempt from
Che beach ban.
''You·re saying-that they can allend the
classes on the beach. but they're not
allowed there after they graduate," said
Hano.
Though speakers supporting and OJ>-
pqsing the ordinance were fervent in
their appeals, the atmcsphere became
tense at one point when a young man
turned bis back on the council and ad·
dressed himself to the audience. Asked
by the mavor to follow the rules and ad-
dress the council he snapped. "There's no
point in talking to you any more~"
Goldberg repealed his request and
!eVeral persons in the audience urged the
man to follow the rules. There were
murmurs of "Throw him oat'' and a
police officer appeared at the door of the....
council 'Chamtw.
''You elected a slate cf people who're
going to sell this town out to the re11 I
estate interests. You should recall these
people," the man shouted, and ~trode out.
several speakers supporting t h e
nrdinance referred to Uttering prohlemJJ
caused by dogs on the beach and on
private property.
A number said they would find thr
ordinance acceptable U it were amended
to permit dog-v.•a\king on the beach dur-
ing winter montm. Lorr inslstl!d thi11·
would bt too complicated. A man noted
that Jt had been possible to regulate
times aod places ror IUJ'fing ln summer,
allowing more frtedom In winter.
Sports writer Terry Neptuoe drew RJ>-
plawe when be charged, "rm alck of
Jistening to these people who stand up
hert and tell you how terrible it is at the
beach. Thty never go to the beach. rm at
the beach all the time ao I think I'm
qualified to speak.:.4jfS,.QP e~_ down the
beach every day and I never 1ee any of
these terrible dog problems they talk
about."
The 27-year Laguna resident said Uie
city used to have an efficient dog-catcher
v•ho enforced the leash law. He urged
(urther study.
Lorr cited a lifeguard report listing
l.M.1 leash law violations at the beach In
less than a month. "That's an average of
59 a day." he said.
"We could enforce the leash Jaw lf we
had a good man,'' said Neptune.
··Reponsible dog owners should not have
to suffer because of a few nuts who let
their dogs run loose."
The "good feeling" that many ca me lo
Laguna to enjoy is being destroyed. said
Evefyft Munro . who was near tears as she
described taking her grandchildren to
Bluebird Canyoft Park and "watching the
happiness or parents with their children
and their dogs who come there for
recreation ' and watching her teenage
daughter romp on the beach ~:ith her
dog.
"I do not believe there is any 'lf!ed for
further restrictions of our liberties," she
said. "Let Laguna Beach once more be
our responsibility. Do not destroy it by
repressive ud unnecessary measures.''
A man stepped forward to suggest that
though most of the people in the audience
i;eemed to oppose the ordinance. he
believed 75 percent of the people in the
city would support it.
Mrs. Bonnie Hano proposed a public
referendum.
Former Planning Commission
chairman and defeated City Council can·
t1idate Joseph. Tomehak, who was among
the crowd listening to the proceedings via
a loudspeaker on the porch after the
t'ouncil chamber was filled . drew ap-
plause when he came in tc speak .
"The ordinance is a repeat of
~mething on the booY at the present
lime," he said. "Let's get away from this
trivia and get down to real city business.''
Councilman Boyd said he felt "short
changed" when the efforts of the Citizens
Advisory Committee and the Planning
Commission to pla11 the city were met
v.·ith council action on dogs.
"\\'e have a se"''er crisis. a traffic
criliiS, a pollct personnel crisis .•. and we
ha ve a dog problem," commeqted Boyd
sarc-asticaUy. "It i~ my coraidered judg-
ment that piling another ordinance on a
proliferation of ordinances will Mt aolve
anything."
Goldberg said he did not b!:ll!vc the
ordinanct would solve the problem com-
pletely, bul noted it was backet1 "100
percent" by e1perU from the SPCA a11d
therefor!! bad his support.
UPI Tt ..,_n
'Who ~l e 4 0 ?'
Yep. England's Princess Mar·
garet. Queen Elizabeth's young-
er sister and third in line for
the Brilish throne. celebrates
her 40th birthday F'riday.
Body Identified
As Fullerton Man
'!be mid< body ol a young man found
Saturday in lh• San Bmlanllno ~
lainl he b<en ldentili<d u that of Gll!Y
Stephen Lack, 21, of Fullerton.
Lack's body was found by a hiker in
Deer Creek Canyon in a remote area 40
miles east of Victorville.
Sheriff11 deputies. who brought the
body out by helicopter, said the youth ap-
parently bad been living in a cave in the
area.
The cause or death is under in-
vestigation. Identification was ~de
through fmgerprinll and dent.al chart!.
....... ~ ... J .'
/ .. , , TRAILERS ·REJECTED .. • •
to deliver 1 1eathJn& 1t11ci on the
d<vtloper1 and lhelr plans.
"They 11e1t us like tlods, nlMles and
mall-town bicb."" be uld, "and'tbey are
hlt11o1 "' '° wlll -· lnlaoW. In-nuendo."
lte .said the reaklents of t h e
neighbOrhoods "•re all steller people, not
clods" and vowed that hls aaoclatJon
would receive copies of lhe peUUon by
the businessmen for study.
•·t r#ear to you that we stand ready to
check wkb every name: on that peUt1oo to
determine lf they'ft real." he added.
Saunders, who told ctJtJmlhnen bil ~
ression was a financial specialiat with
several large firms, termed the asser·
tlons or income from the pa.rk were er·
roneous became they were figures or
gross lneome coming from -ln part -
building fees.
Bul the spokesma1 for Ccntemporary
didn't releTt.
Regional Mana1er Howard Miller el·
pklred hi.s Hrm'1 stake In the park ln·
dustry and said that a hu1e park under
way in the Leisure World area would
have its ahare ol millionaires in resi-
dence.
"We expect 'the same thing here ln
Harbor Hills," be added.
Miller explained the stringent park
rules he proposed and promised that
because-tome coaches would look down
on others, roof• would be kept 1tlractive,
uncluttered and 1lare-free.
'Ibe appeal ended with oratory from
Rodger Howtll, a lawyer for Con·
U-turn Brings
Woman's Death
A housewife was killed and her three
children injured Wednesday afternoon
when she apparently tried to execute a U-
turn on Pacific: C<last Hi1hway in Hun-
tington Beach and wu struck broadside
by a beer truck drlven by a Laguna
Beach Man.
Mrs. Carole Ann Conner, 31, of Los
Angeles was pronouncecl dead on arrival
at Huntington lntercommunity HospilJI
shortly after the 1:21 p.m. accident.
Her three children, Debra. 11, Kenneth.
5. and Stephanie 9, were listed in
satisfactory condition loday.
Traffic Investigators said the beer
truck. driven by William A. Mansfield of
1605 Arroyo Drive, Laguna Beach, col·
lided with lhe Conner vehicle at a speed
of 40 to 50 miles per hour •nd imbedded
itself in the side of the car.
IA!mptraey. :;
Ho...U auert<d that !he .,,.,,,& -"I ·• .....,« -had no legal rtght-.0 ~y tht ·.~
appul !or a coodlllooal use pmnll ••
-"' ullUnl llUIA! l•'[R and ~.· fuldclal lnterpr<lailonl. '!be """"'"'1 mtl •
all legal alandanls. ha added. .
But the council was nwa,yed.
Councilman Thomas O'Kttfe, a
Shoreclilfs resident· who has a'iUclted •,
two existing parks in the area, led the
drive against the Contempor•ry proposal
and reiterated his belief that lhe mobile
home Industry, ls in a gree.t ~tale of
transition toward modular .home con-
atructJOn.
He urged fellow councilmen not to
allow "this pr()f)Olal to become and el·
periment."
O'Keefe also stressed lhat the city
should study e1i.8Ung undeveloped areas
or the city which could be compatible
wlUi a apeciaJ zoning category to allow •
tor mobile home parks.
"This one is proposed in encUy the
wrong place," he asserted.
Councilman Clilf Myers lent a second
to O'Keefe's motion to uphold the pla11·
ning commission denial .
A unanimous aye vote followed with Ill·
tle more discussion.
From Pa11e 1
DU BRIDGE. ••
Washington "he had a hqrror of re-
mainh1g in a jcb beyond retirement age,"
noting he'll be 70 in September.
The DuBridges bought a home in Thrett
Arch Bay more than eight years ago and
prior to that they owned a home in the
Capistrano Beach area.
David. who has a quiet manner and
long sideburns, described the ap-
pointment as a "chance to make con·
tribuUons."
He said he did not know Nixon before
his appointment to tht $42,500 poSt. which
must be confirmed by the Senate.
David was philosophical about lhe cul·
backs in science research spending. ''One
never likes to have his budget cut." he
said.
David said he had found thal Nixon
believed "that science.is for people., and
"there must be a balalice" in the federa l
outlay.
He cited major needs in the fields ol
health , health services. transportation,
and defense.
David, native of Wilmington. N.C., at-
tended the Georgia Institute of
Techl.lOlogy and received his Ph. D.
degree in electronic engineering from M.
I. T. in 1950. He is an expert in com·
munications and computers.
A~~~~L SALE
7PC. $149 WALL UNIT
INSTALLED IN YOUR HOME
An 1rran9ement that wiU become an import1nt element in the total ef ..
feet of your room.
• SAVINGS on
HERITAGE MADRAGAL
MrMM. 41al .. ,..., ec•ml...t ,..,..,.,.
• 15°/o SAVINGS on
HER.IT AGE UPHOLSTERED
FURNITURE
Otll 1 ,tit 'AlllCS TO SILICT FIOM.
• 20 to 30°/o SAVINGS ON MANY FLOOR SAMPLES THROUGHOUT THE
STORE DURING THE SALE
H:I'GARkEf(f URN~RE
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
CO.STA MESA, CALIF •
646·027r
PROFESS IONAl
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
-nY oua llVOLVINIJ CH,t.lfH-o,.. Moo., ,,,_ l Fri. 1, ...
-ThurM111, Au111s\ 20, 1970
S~11 Diego's . Atiloo1n Coug'ar Improved ANIMALo;c .,._
••• ~ I Barkeep Enlists Help ilt 'Flower Power' I New Mercury Comet in S1nall Car Class -SAN DIEGO, C.ltt, (AP ) -
A cou::rle years ago the city
start cutting holes In con-
crete sidewalks and Installing
trees to spruce up downtown
streets.
the trees !or everyone lo en·
Joy.
"J113I drop them In the
1round around the tree1 ," he
ICU! patrons. ''111ey'll 11prout."
By CARL CAR&"TENSEN COO'lpacts, yel l he Interior h1cl thal despite I.he attention
A~'-!1w1 .,.,.,. dimensions are comparable to given smaU cars thrOt.tghout
That 1ave "Little Joe" an
idea : he sllrted planting
flowers in , the ground around
A bartender, he I 1 l e r
enlilted customen in the pro-
jecL Stop in his bar now, a
simple place just orf the
waterfront. and with the bar
napkin you get a little packet
of seedli.
And sprout they do. as
witnessed by a variety of
marigolds and petunias thriv·
ing in the mUd San Dleao
climate around 600 or so treea.
LAS VEGAS -Unc<Hn those of lnt.ermediate siic the Industry , Lincoln Mercury
Mercury today ls prepatin& lO ' cars, Bldwell said. will conlirrue to place its ma.
jump into the battle for a "We're a lead pipe cinch to jor empha sis on its "tram.
share of the ever-increa.1ing set an all time division model lional marketi'ng rtspollllbllity
small car market by launctltng sales record in 197! if industry -the medium price field."
a full line ol 1971 Mercury volume runs at a respectable Lincoln ~1ercury, like other
Comet models, Including a level, as anticipated. We mecUum price divisions, was
choice of engines plus two and should top that by a minimum adversely affected in 1970 by
four-door body sty les. of 10.000 unllS. Sales of 430,000 the sharp trend for small Cir
YOUR . WATCH •~-
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Gettin&' ready for \Vin.
I.er? Skil at Bi it Bear
and n-nl a cabin for lt
people,
e Here's a fuf way to KO·
1969 Mach I txcellent
condition, 357 engif111',
automatic, air PS/PB
stereo taPt'. \\'arranty.
e Going to Jo'raoce or
Ciennany'!' Take a few
f'asy lessons aod learn
1o speak bolh langua-
"'·
LADIES'
OR
MEN'S
coMPLETELv OVEJtHAULED • e Completely cleaMI. oUf'd
Ud J'f'~t.ed.
AT 'IHE LOWEST PRICE T.VER
' ~llh1. .. .. 1 ... DmOl'.a. aunm.Uno •ll•htly Ilk~ -ru.tad w1mi-. 1111m -""""""-~
w1rn nus AD
KIRK CHARGE e MASTER CHARGE e IANKAMERICARD
"The Store Thel Confidenoe Builf'
• MAit.OR • HUHTIMGTOH
2* Hi.-.. llYL l .. dl & •<fl11t1r
C1al1 MUI --_ l.L I H1111tift1 .... 1.-ctl IU.f~ s±.2 tlD£ltA,4 "2·Ul1
Open Mon., Thurs., Frl. 10 1.m. 1 til 9 p.m.
KIRKPATRICK'S
PRESENTS
"Any place there ls sunlight
I'll plant a flower," says "Lit.
tie Joe," who was born Joeeph
B. Parker 49 years ago in
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Parker, who Is aboul five
feet tall. says he has Oowers
"growing as far away 11 32nd
and Main," or about !IO blocks
from bis place of work.
There's even a pumpkin,
which came as a surprise to a
supervisor in the city's tree
planting division . The
supervisor said pretty plants
Newlyweds
To Enlist
In .~urines
The addition of I.he new woukf be a solid 16 percent sales. Bldwell emphaaiied that
Comet should propel a division gain over what Li n co Jn thty had "bought in1urance in
lo an all time model record or Mercury dealers expected to the form of Comet and Capri"
430,000 sales, 8. E. Bidwell, do in 1970," Bidwell said and wa s ready for 1971 "no
P.fercury Division gene r a I The very confldent Ben matt.er which way the market
manager predlct.ed today. Bidwell was appointed general runs.·•
In adWUon to Ole Comet, manager of the d i v i s i o n Capri Is the d I v i s I o n_' s
LlllCQln Mercury will a1so ·1n-eailier thi s year ancl' quite popular import introducled in
troduce a new Mer c ur Y candidly says that the "dealer the U.S. last April. For the
Cougar with changes referred body is the key.'' He referred 1971 model here L i n c o I n
to as "the most notable since to 1970 as "rather disap-Mercury wlll offer 39 models
Cougar's introduction r 0 u r pointing" but added that "we with most or the new product
years ago." are going to get the job done Investment conce-ntrated In
The 1971 Conlet Is smaller this coming year." the lower series Monterey
around the trees are "usually BLOOP.IFIELD, N.J. (A P)
okay as long as they don 't _ When David Mont leaves bother the view or the ~
on the outside than its original Emphasized today was the models.
as well as many of today's =========-==--=:_ ___ __:__==
pie." · home to join the Marines his
''LltUe Joe" has tun inlo a wife is going with him.
few problems protecting his · Mont and Miss Diane Orr of
Uowers. Insects and dogs were Sidney, Iowa, who met as
Coast Coeds
Finish Class dealt with by using chemclal sprays but Parker hasn't been sophomores at Tarkio College. Two Newport Harbor High
able to spray anything to keep Mo., will be married next School .students have com-
some people away from the Thursday. Two days later lhey pleted a workshop f o r
flowers. will be sworn in as officer can-yearbook editors at USC's "F II · k ... lo · School of Journalism. e ows P'C 1.1,.,m give didates. He decided to enlist lo · •-· t d f I aving They are Nikki Appleman, gir~ tns ea 0 e ra••-r than .. _ drafled and she d M L them for everyone to .stt." he uie LllC dau ghter of Mr. an rs. .
Jamented Thursday. "That's went with him lO see the H. Appleman, 1621 Highland
sel!isb." recruiting sergeant Drive and Cori'nne Domecq,
There is more to growing "I had no intention of sign-daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
flowers than planting, of ing her up," said Sgl. Charlie Richard Domecq, 328 Prospect
course, and watering is p~ Brown. St.
bably lbc most important "We wanted to explain to NikkJ will be editor of the
chore -something t bat her the life of 1 military wife. yearbook, "Galleon," at
Parker has taken care by 1 threw a great sales pitch, Newport Harbor High School
again calling on his patrons. but then she w~ extremely nut year and Corinne will be
Sun1mer CJear11nce S11le
•Ow In prosrie.1 •I Bob'1
llll'n'1 Shop. S11vi1111 up
10 .>o r.,. Shop ind 11wr.
"We organized a bucket _''~""~=e~pti~·b,,,le~.':_' ______ l'_"he~as~s::;':".""'"2'..' ed~d~or'.:.. ·----'-=-==---===-===-==-:-:....:-::-.:._-=--======= brigade and al night we waterl -
lhe flowers ." he s a i d ,
';Sometimes the boyll stagger
a little, but the nowers get
water."
NewCoCd
Officers
For ROTC
NOR.'dAN, Okla. (AP)
The Air Force may be getting
some female sec ond
lieutenants from the Universi·
ty of Oklahoma.
The new commander of the
Air Force Raerve Officeta
Training Corps at t b e
university said Monday he will
encourage coeds lo enro.11 in
th e two-year Professional Of.
ficers Course -PCC -which
leads to a second lieutenant's
commission in the Air Force.
Col. Frank L. Rose Jr. said
the coed enrollments will
beg.in next summer. The: PCC
starts in the summer befort
the student's junior year with
a special training camp and
an intensified short course in
tht subjects covered during
the freshman and sophomore
years of the regular four·year
program.
Color console
with fiddle-frH
line tuning!
P.CA"1 ad1111nc1d
Autom1tic "Lcdld-in"
f 1n1 lurung (A.f .T.)
pinpoints the con.el
11gn1l e*tronically.
T1lt·OUI control ~ner
for eny ICCISS. COfllt
in Ind HI ii,
' I
I
acific avings
• • • • e e e e e • AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
FREE
SAFE DEPOSIT BOX
for maintaining a $50022 balance in any of
our high rate accounts-take your choice.
ANNUAL VELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS
179% 150\ $100,000!!!! ONE
6.18% 6.00% 5,000!!!! TWO
5.92\ 5.75\ 1,000!!!! ONE
5.39\ 5.25\ 500!!!! %th
5.13\ 5.00\ 1!!!! ONE DAY
ANIMPORTANTEXTRA
Your money earns interest from the day you deposit.
till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day.
ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE
•
FREE . .~ II ~ ~ 1. Traveler's Checks 3. Tickets to Sports and · ~ . ·
'Iii' :t 2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Ticketron) 11 4. Many other FREE Services
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
1S33 BRISTOL STllEET • COSTA MESA. CALlf'ORNIA • PHONE 54~0tl I
I s499 95
TUMS
KIRKPATRICK'S
,---.,...--.,.--24 YfAU IN THf HARIOR AHA-,.,-,-,---l•nk"""1"'• RCA SALES & SERVICE __ M_u_ •• _ .. _ •• _,.:.••_
2760 Coast Hlthwoy Coro"" del Mor Phono '1l·2650 ----
DAILY PILOT }
IN
HARBOR CENTIR
2300 HARBOR •
COSTA MESA
SEMI-
ANNUAL
SALE!
SALE!
SLACKS s100
With Purchi11se Of
One At Reg. Price
SALE!
SUITS
'1000
With Purchase Of
One At Reg. Price
SALE!
SPORTCOATS
s1000
With Purchi11se Of
On• At Reg. Pric•
SALE!
2 PANTS
SUITS segso
THIS
STOREWIDE
SALE ENDS
AUG. 28TH
•• KINGS' CHARGE
646·4242
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SC
'l'e11r Mo11e11's Worila OVER THE COUNTER
Midi Mea11s Bu}TS Due
8y SVLVU PORTER
1be fall clothlng season i~
now openiq -aod H. •, suttly
no 9tCl'et tQ any female lhal
1t's the m1d1 aod nQthing but
dtt! midi
Does this nu:an that you -
tht office worker young or
mkkUe aged tn Ulc steno p<l\l
nr executive su11e -u1ust
face U\e. awful prospect of In·
\'e5t1r1g 1n a wbo1r new
wardrobe' • Of c-ourse not And 1n fact
t.bls giYes me the opporlun1ty
to submit to )OU oor of the
most basic rules on dre.~s1ng
far "ork II Is A VOi D
packaging yourse.tr tn the
latest lash.ions or t\en bcu1g
tD tbc advance guard or any
ntlol clothing trt.nd ~iort rules
bck>w but hrst Mrt' are
S"pte1tlc po1nu on {b<' min1
mi<h er1s1s
AtTNI SKIRTS will ren1a111
very much In e\'1de:nct during
thlc; perk>d i\ios! young uff1ce
work!rs sim ply cannot <1fford
In Junk their enllrt wardroMs
nvem1ghl -and they won t
and colon sunplc Sunphc1t\
means C<.'0001\1)' as well as
iood taste, lor s:imple color~
and tty~s ne'er go ou1 or
fastuoo
Waif unul )Oii re 1n thr p10
per mood to go shopping Ir
you think th1~ results 1n a
VI nr<lrobe about as unplannt'tl
as a hiccup Unnk _;lga1n " sa) s
!.1rs Burge Shopping when
you hovf' noth1nG 1n mind can
) 1eld lour most 1mporlant
purchases and prevent thosl'l
desperate impulses "hen )OU
shop because you have lo
Test the v.carab1h1 y of iin\
garment you thoose for
daylong ofr~ce "ear by r.rtnk l
1ng p.art of it In your hand to
~ct' 1f rl rctun1s to 1Ls or1g1nal
sh:ipe If 11 doesn I pass 11 up
FOR THE OFFICE !he
most practicill fabrics arc
alp.ac;i c ~ n1 e I s h~1r,
ca:.hmcrt crepr r I a n n e I •
foulard p 1 q u e :sharkskin
tweed wool I 100 percent),
wool Jersey and }lny nl the
manmade st.av press fabrics
cspec:1ally good 1o1: hen blended
\.\1lh wool
\\hen trying on clolhes s11
down raise your arms bend
over 1n frool of a mITTor Be
sure the garment 1s com
fortable
* .. ·r. "'J. •" And of (.'OUfSt lht obv1ou.s ..,_ PfW 11.t.mJ.'i:ve ~
rules shop tbt major cloUung •1e ._ .. •i. ••• "-•""' ~,,..._l ~
salts (summer clotbts aod ~•w Yo•uc: IAJ>J ,.,.,, " Jth ,.,~,111 0 ~ "' 1~ l\ Ad"Mr.11, .20
b I h B -Tn. l'OllOwlrit Illa nclltv 100.. 11 ~rr HK :; lm .. ..,., F )ft t!~ =· l • fa r11cs rndg t now) uyn:,. ,...,R:.01i.roi~F•':°9:~, ~r~~·..,, ,.~°t'.! 11.1 uoo ttd 3 w.""~~\ 1_. ~tap es-u erwear scarves, '"" N•t "'*'" •fG 11.,. tu l'rud Mln 11? ~ -· ul 1s• Att,...L., fll' t belts stockings spo~· shi ... o ' ... '"'•-' ,_ \11'111•'",, •,11 WF!n N -. ~ NM 1!\.t '• :.-5:' \j\.l 1r.'! "Ir."",.. le• '"' ,.,. ,. ,,, lldl,.. •,.· •,• '' ,"!!'>' ~rw. '"' r,., w -\lo ~ ~lr'rroo 1'\. •tr •tc 1n d1•-•nt stores ' ·~•1 ir•m•c-ood "" ... ~c; ..-. 1~ t11 ,, , & • ,., • "' -...... ,,... ·~ ' ."' ... '"'' 011 "'' II i 111Jlllllt ' ~ .,, Com 'It ~ rli-i and other inexpensive outlets ::i~·· ... tftl ~",":. t:"l? .... 11'4 A14 .llljt:,,,., 1i ,,n :;:;• "t't ii~ 10."1''1 r: Al~ays check the thrtrt shops 11>1>f6011M1~ J o.1om H' li. P~,... ~· 1, " T•a•· 1s 'I• 1fl.' "'•"• nttr•
nd I ti t 0 ~ ,,•'...,, 11"~ ·~·, <o ff" .~) oo.' ,,,c."' '\4 4'l Therm ~ 1 Rt ~~~ 11. a resa e ou es 1n your area *'" ·~ c11U1o1 ''"' n E ,·,· 1,., '''s'M "" "~1;111v o ii.. ' Akel"" , ~
for extraordinary bargains .~•H 10i;1•w1 .. 1e~ :=: U ~, ,~ ll11<1 ·xi11 1"" l~ l:C"' G• "' n A nlll"l I: ... V<I bren -""''w ltT i '~ f \A ln'I' 11 "• t 1141 A lltl'llt ..H
A FtNAL NOTE \Vbtn you'~:~ ~ :J11i;"0 1m" 1:~: =:"~r ~' 1!a 1:~ Tmcfli);S i'n 1 ~ :i::t'i!i ,,
flnd l\.1:0 dr...,ses """uaJ!y .1111 11>1 "'" Pi'1W '' l'K 11~ n•I "tvt'! c,. lt 7+ Tt w S S lte "4 r
"" ~'I Jo nol l..clude ""Ire•• 1 11~ ll•vm ~· I'"" '' J• h ?tJ! '-', ;1,'1'~: 1 R bt-com1ng one cosllng say ~·.1:00_, ;-: ~~'l:~~ !'! !'° ::~'"; !f'~\.l !i r~1!:'. 3~·i: ll\i Ai= )'f:
$100 and lhe other »o buy the '1\!11on 1u E11 ·~ '"' R1c10. Pi. r,.., Tv""' po1 10,, 11\1.1 "l\r:J " u V.A En1 I .... l\, M!t! 1'4 Hi lt!lfY $to 21 On!ttoe: ~i~~ l\O A tClll'• o'3 quality dress for economy 'A' corp ,', ~ 1ren sv. sn 1tooc1 E" ''" :io un 1u1/11'1 ,..,,. n 1 ol,FAPr S 17 ll!lttl Ml~ l' ltobln M .. It Un McG!I A H)lr '1 f'Very time Hert'• Mrs 'tTS •"" ll. ,_ 1e111n w 20~ 1 ll:O$tton 1 i..., us e.11;no1 !l• i~ ~l1l\:'~jlt1s.
8 b .. 1.G I"° !>.:. )ill :iltD .... 1 J ll:OI' C1st 11~ ~n. US EnwJ lM If Al 11 Cllilm Ufgt' S pro ability ' chart ~v~ ~<I ~"-il .... ~ ff r J~ ~~~II$!~: ~;:;: ~"1 Uf \~t" tt~~ ft AIP111PC X.. showing which 1s the better 'Df•lt tn • ,..., 'koclW'!' c 1 ~. '' soe111e. lli ~1.:o vi> P!nP ?O!.?,. ~~'l..t "so
b N I •·t I 'I""" E• t" ! \ ••IJll Cn '"'-1u. Sc1n11i E '"' ' u11~ L• p., , , Al'l'lllr Ei 1~70 uy o e i.,.. eac 1 wearing in '1 s.1. '~ '-c;r8Jll'I $c 10~ 1114 sc11o.11 '" Jt. Jti utu 1nc1 2J 1,1'1 •-H••• ,,,
h 'I' tndUJ 1 2V. )IA MN 32 lt Sci C1>tr 1¥t ,v; Vol co ''' ,. .., -eac case COS!! you $1 ' rorn ~ ll< t'4 tirttn Mt is., u•o Sci 111e1 H:. 4~ Vll\C• !• lit AmeH 1>IJ jQ
AitbM H j JW ~rn!l llE 16'-'> 11 ~ I'°' S.0...1 15\0 1614 V!ttrOfl '!tt 1!1;. Ml•J"'(, "
) f'ar
I
' 3
i
;
) e~r
I
2
3
4
s
SllO GA.R~fENT """' '<. •'' .. ~_... Pr ''• m cr1.,.., H 11 !t WICf> ~II u~ lllA! Am lrfn 10 "ICOlt C • • 011 ~r ... 111 111 ~ 6~ icrlPIO A • -'\lo W1cl1w P I) 14 .... ~: .. ~~; lO \Vcartng~ Appcar&.l'lct Aiko Ln4 1~ ,..,. ;..,.,d c~ • •'lo ''"' Pl I•~· 11'4 w1111 !d , 10 Am!Clci 1 20 .. , b .. liq a.~ , .. , •• 3Ull ln1 5\, '"" Stb c~ J,. .n.:. RHClt '"" 3 ~-.... ,_ "" !IUper .. HiM EG •h S • !iyrOCln 1111 I SPIUlrn 11;, ·~• 1r$11w J :MO "''" '-" ••
2 1 Ailon Goo 3 • l l• ~1novr S 1t '1 SY<: Grp ' 14 WI., NG l:?lo'; 1..._ Am Cirrn •Jp ~ SP endld 'm&11c 1 '1 )\, 1ven In I It H'1 $.e,,en Uo '~"° •l'~ Wt:J'I 'IE 14 f'" A R/lfln 160
20 hold Aim $"1n '. 10 ~ ... reo F 27 23111 Shendoll ~"' J'• W•I Tr I.lo •:t. :IJlc,,v•fl !JS, mg up ' El Ub l • :H.. ~ •• n CD ,._ l\lt Sm!ln M ,~. 1\• Wtbb R• I I\< DI ITd -10 st•ll feels OK ""' E~or 19 " '° ~ldoc In! 21. 3u. So11d s1 s lh t \• w11cur" p,:, '" Am °"'"''" 'm fllf'n S ~ 6 lllhn •\o 1\\ SCI! W11 lJlo 114: Well'.if M Jl.,.. llU ~e1i;:1 ';':
10 sad fare" ell :mG'l::i :i\11 tr• :\~" 30k• ~io ~,0~;~ i~· ;~~ff"~~~·"': f11 !U ~~.!r,: 'lf ssa GARMENT •"-""~,n,, ,1! •. 1,•,• ~ •.. ~GI 31 ll\'> w tCP ··~ u .... ~'" ,.,,., •• s•~ lllGnl". r" M '" ' ....... _,,. '"' 1\(, Sw ISvt "\1 151• w"" "¥b I • n. Amtt.il1 10
Wearings Appearance ::.":::' 1~ 'f~ ·:~ vr-'7 J.~ 1;~ 1!~ ir:~ 1r: ,;~ 'X\~L:" 1~ ,:i,t ~ :t:: ~1'°1 30 fine ''Cl Ind '. ·~ Old pp 21 ~I', Slcl Re111 ii 11~ W•IC Pl. Ill!. ll>Ji Am Hoop ,,
20 atd1n« fast ~~=~~ ~ .;, ~.. ~I G;• 1: I~ ~::~i. Hft~ 2i . ~; ~~r.~. 1' '~: 1~..? Amll'IYUI so e ,,. MoP l?'li lJI.. y1U CP 1,,\ 11 S!r1w Cl n ~ Yrdn~ F. 1 •'"AMA tlClx 1.4 100 seedy for ""o"' 1-i 24'• 11 ~ v•n in• ~. ·~ • -m "'loto"
b ''vldt 1 1~• Hydf All> 11, ,',', ~~t~Gi:1o 2 \' JO 4'CC &ol 15 '1 16~1 m1i1t Sy .., AR O )e
dona1ed to ~~~dSt~, ~~ ~~ 1~ 2~1 ~;zff~ ~~ti~:~..!i~
char1tv l:~~P.1~1 1~l~ 1 ~.: 1~:1'.~ 0 ~;: ~' ~m~}~ '!:
forsottcn ~:~kp ; .. ~ • 1~:,..;°'i'.. J>o • • MUTUAL Aim s10 '
l•"mr1 ?S 1t Int ew.11 :._ ~~ ~~5~f,,r,u ll
l •vl• .. 1l 1 13 ... 111!M<1!TI 111o 11 -, AS..0tar160
\•&ehm 1:1 1' ~ Int Sv1 11 11 > .. Sut pfAI 65
Pants wt!I berome far more
acceptable attire for !be office
as women make the transilion
rrom m1n1 to mid.1 by buv1ng
panLc; shortening their m1d1s
to make them tunics and lurn
1n1: the enhre outfit into a
suit ' IThat s what 1 11111
doing :ind planning -and I 1 P
never worn pants to lhe office
before )
~II our "ardrobc~ "'II
becomr multiple-length 4 nl
lections from which we 11
choose whatever lit~ an oc
Newport National
Corp. Merger Told
'ell~ l~I• 16~ 11 1n1 Sv ol H H ' FUNDS Am~ut pf u iolm l"(I I I 1M~-t '"' 1 ~ .. t&T WI ... 1 llerk H~ JI Ill lonlr• l? > l~ Aim T6T 260 'r11 LeD ) 5 ~ ll 18 SoU! I 2'I 2~~. ""mWWk1 56 """'°' W 1 .... 1'o J~(Obs F 1'o l • ANVtlSpl 1 U lllrcl Son l1 Jl J•t l11" C 1 1l:o Ameron 60 II tt~ll• Jlo l-. l•m W>T S•o 6 ~ Ametek IO• IJlock ~1 21 ~ ?IV. JAm., F , .... 11"• """"f Ill<'. .. •,,~,,~ .. ·, •"• ',,,' ',•,m,,'°'o, l•o ·~-NEW YO~IC (""II') !NTGN vn•vtU ""mftc ID ~""In~ C 1,1 9 1 )'"'"'<PO l~' 'i 1: ~ -T~ lollow n1 QUO-n• Co.I. 1~ 61 11 61! AMP IJ'I< SI ·• .-o ·• Ttllons wPPlleCI br. Inv Guo 1 oll 7 " AmHx Coro 'lOCll ""H l? ll (ti!•' St ••" •~\\r 1he Ntl on81 I''°' Inv nJlc ! ol $ 01 Am sled 1 • !lo• C1<1 ''"' I • sSt Ctl 17 11 ellon Pl S~urnle• 10$ flCll l )1 Amt.I 3.2 llr!nk1 In ,,.,., 11 K~lv1r lJ 1' Ot•ltt' In< •re lnvntoro Gro.;p ""n.concl I tt
cas1on
NO DR ESS length will ap
pear truly out of place. at anv
soc1aJ occasion for at least the
neKI year or so
Now here are vour fun
rlamental rules oo clothes for
!he otr1ce and on gelling the
most for your clothes dollar
Nt>vcr buy a new wardrobe
till al once a point
particularly pertinent al th1~
m1n1 m1d1 trans1hon period
Instead says Ethel Burge
11ulhor or ' This Bus1ne~s of
Dressing for Bu s1nes~
1 Dartm.11 $2 95 I Buy 11 pit< e
bv piece as good stores put
quahly merchandise on sale
from time to time
ALWkYS WAIT unUI a l'ICl'i
t lothmg trend has 1 aught on
and always keep your SI} lcs
=====--.1
SUB -QUALITY
DRUGS
ARE RECALLED
ltr 1Elll1' 6U.NT, ll Pti
t;\ cry v.-eek. tht gove111
menl issues a Utt o( prod 11Cl~ thal they \\Ould J1kr
tak('n off thl' markl'T c1thr r
tempora11ly or pPro\an~n1
Jy \Vf' have fou nd \hat the
maJ011ty of the drugs on
itus ~all hsl Br<' made bv
]etiS{'I kno" 11 nu1.nufac1tu rrs \\ hu!W pl oduct11 ae r not
usually 11tock('d hy pha1 ma
c;l5fJI Whrn cine or thf' largl"r
well known i:un1p;an!l'ti I~
!lated 11 ls usuallv 31 thetr own re:qUC!!it and beeau.se
the:• have found stJnlf'thtni;
In lhl'tr cxlf"n~1ve lf'stln~ 1abo1 ato1 iM Thf' tiubltc 1~
toeing p• ot.!'ctcd by !(II ICl S\I Jl('rVJ~1on of thP 1nrd1r1n,..s
1hat can be d1spl'ns('(! i<O
\Oil can hovP con!1dcnc" io
\1 hBl vour doctor prc~tribt-ll
a.nd your pharmaeii<I d1J·
JX'TI~<'" YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CA.:'1 PHONE US "hen you
n4'!<'d " dcllv~ \Ve will de
hvc1 pran1pUy "1thout "x Ira rhari:e A great many
people rrly 011 u11 folr lhru
healU1 nN!di 1\Vt-""'C'.Offif' rcquc.-l<c !or delivery st 1 v11 e
and charge-account•
The d1reclors of t h t.
Newport National Corp , the
holding compan) for the
Ne" port NatJonal Bank ha vl"
reached l:ln agree1nent tn
pr1nc1plc ' to merge w11h the
Southern Cahforn1a Firs! Na
lional Corp, holding t'Ompany
1st National
Deposits Up
Soulheril C.:al1forn1a 1' 1rsl
National Bank ~Ith nine of
flees throughout Orange Coun
I~ sho\\cd a yearend depostl
increase of twice the national
average and 1s ranked 103 1n
tolal dcpos1ls among the ntt
llon s more than 14 000 coin
n1ere1al banks according lo
figures released by I he
American Banker a national
daily financial publication
The figures arc based on an
annual survey of the nalion s
top 300 banks as of June 30
conducled by the American
aanker
Stale
Chi c l
\Vorkcrs •
Picked
ftobin 'v Allen <unenllv
e1nplO\C'd by lhe Cahfornia
Slate Ernptoyes Association
has been named general
manager of !he nl'\.\1y rormed
Ca hforn1a Public Emp!oycs
federation according to
federahon president C (,
Quist
CALPEF was known a~ lhr
League of County Emplol e
Association~ prior to i r s
reorgan1zalior last Apru It
now represents 8 ~ 0 0 0
cmplo) es 1n ;,o n1depcndent I countv employe organ1zat1oru;
I
~n __:_ahforn1a Qui.st sa~
I ••• a •••••• ti • • •WANTED• • • • • • • •
w.11 purtn•s•
i m•ll Electronics
M enuf ec;tur1n9 Firm
Prlnc.lpal1 Only
•I • • • • Wr ite l .C.S Corp
Suite JD •t P.All LIDO ,HARMACY • • J51 Hosplhll lt•ll ~..,,,.,. ..... 641 1110 1 •
,._ h h"" 1•
ll6J L (Nit Hl1hway •
Coron• dtl M•r. Celll •
.
\
(
-'. • • • •.• • • • • I
c:,.;
•.t1y '''' •c;f1vt wee r
for
m111 •ncl boys
ouferw1111r
by
f'l\•gh•y·f'l'tC.
, for l~t •••
@)~a@@)§@
l \111\111'!1111-•'' • "''''·'
\. ' ••• ~,.~ 1.1.~11 "'""'*'' ...... ti .
for the Soulhern Cahfom1a lllrk• Scft 1j"' 1't• 11• "'" 1 • 3"' "'' 1>1lc•1 •I 1oilllcri nves aos tu o Anc11 Hoc:k 1 i:w,,"., ~~ ,r· 11~ ,•,•,•m.. l,,, ,H• lhtlf' >Kurll!e• Miii I " A~pNS~ 1
'
' N l I 8 k ' ..-, (0Uld n1v1 °""n P•OCI l I>' J 17 ""nd Clav 1 1G lf~I 3 JOna an lluc~•" ''' ''' ellt' 1 I 1'• !oOkl' COkll o< Oo~th! S1oco U 41 15 t• A1>1cneCp 2S
A I d.I llfe'"L~•~ ~>. 2g~ ict,,111"°1 F lj "o"t \l•-ecll .Vl!dfl<.dY Select •10 '" Apc..011 \lit Joint announcemcn 1:s:su""' ,, • a1o1 Ask "'' Pv s l.I , 01 APL Cl>'P r;:11 W S" '"' t: ' ev• ~I> I• • 110• AOerdn Io• I IO nv R es~ 'Ql ~JI AtlA Svc ! 06 lod G L \" df d tmcco 11 1 l(ev• C ' n.lo I• Aclmlr• ly F~ndi sl i 15 1' l• >O A N ay eorge 100 or •non M 67 10 <,..,,,PC ' ''• Grwih ••• ,,,,.~ ''' ''' ,'''110 •~ •nnM & •S 61' Ina •~ 1 ?' •• rch •n 1 Jr NNC president and c c ~nr•d 1 ' lt\ 1"11• El :p.: '; :~~ l :1 l u :i:nc<ICll; ••"•' 6 83 ArotPSvc JOI :10 Mtoo 1S l~V, ,1 .... Co J\lo 3~~ ,,,,1,, nsJn Ii.la At!tn• OS 20
Bl k SCFNC d I S 1 1''-'~ • :!O '5' evs'-Fund• ArmcOSI l IO a emore pres1 en '"111 ow ,.. t110 vot ''~· 2"" Allll 1to '•1 6 ,, APOilo 1.ss 1 ,. ,,_, ,,, ,0 :•D lnl,t, I·'' 1Crelslr 1 ~ J, Aftr Sl'f 5l'f C 111 II '"~
d " 113 II g met 111Tch "• 7•LMC 08! '"' 1 ,..,1rA,;, F il 51 cu• 87 ,~11,u,, Armour 160 Sal I.lie ml JOn a ree n 1rr O..v I 11. L•n<• In 1' ~ ?l ~ A!l~rate SI °" l J 1 Armr l>f •IS
Ir "" N IN Carle &I 1~ l L•nd P•• )~] All>l'la FO :11 :H ~~ :1 l:: J~ Arm•ICk 10 1~1 merge Inc ewpor a 1r1r r.ft ,. 1• L•"• Wd • 61~ Amcic , • s 18 cus it' 1" , 36 ArmCk 1111"
18 k •• I S a•c "1G t '• •t<on ,,',,,,'~Am llua ''• 30l !ut SI l!lil6 S• Armllvb 160 tlona an 1nlo u1e arger an ·~su c~o l'o 11 Ltrwn M Am ov1" • ,, , 4 ,,. s' 161 t ._ ""'o Cor~ 90 Ctno ?l 11 '> lr•dV Ld 11 1~ A"'tr e~Pf<IS~ ... Sl !M 641) Ar~ln Ind' D1ego-l>ased bank ·~n VPS h !6" L~ll c.,,,1 ' 1 CIPll ~ 71 6 H UI St J 21 l n A1hlO 011 , 10 'Boh d ,.. C11:;110 ~ l't l.•11 r r: l•':l•'4 lncm• 1)6 14 Po!tt 119 )I) AlhOI 1112~ t men sa1 u•CY expect !"hm ··~ 1 ~ 11~ Lewis"" 1' 13 1""~' 1.a IO<niCkb s'' 's' ~!~0,0 ~ ~ '-M M!1 1"i ~ • ~PKI 111 nlctc: Gt 415 19' ..,._,. Pll 1G ;,tiu Ind 1 • l"-Lobt1w ) • 1\lo Stoc~ I lQ 7 76 ex Grlh 6 SS 116 Alllloe r !ncl the merger to take place 1n Ll\el u 11 , • .,, 11<> on r-.,y ,~ Am .-,,., 1 H • 14 L•~ R•ch 1111 n 11 AtlC1YE1 l• -h1 II I.I 57 S• LOii E!rt! 10 11 Am (or n •~A $ ._ .lotr1Y 4 i. .! ll AUCEI PIS II early 1971 ronow1.11g~oval c,,','•"•' •,1 1~: '~ L'Vnc11 ~ i • "·,.... 1r, •1• ''' 11, s1~ ,31 .,1 Au Rlctoud 1 M•d GE! ~'I U Am I.' t 1 )1 105 !It Inv S5' 661 AllRCh Pl•H
l)r •har"hOld"rS Of h <Om '<'<~o"M 0 ,,, 1', 0 Iv I S "Amt.I G ~ ~n •VIII Inc "1al I Q1 I 11 Aili Rich pl J ~ <: " IA~ll<r! 11 ;6•<'1 Am r"Gc ~·v•ll.lng '1)2t1 A11RthPl2J(I
-I U & 1 • 11~. M!lmt ""' • I Anello• C.•O\ ~ loom , S•Vlf• ""Uas Chom I pan1es as well as regulatory c11v1n Ml ,. lll'i' M•n n M J,. J • cap, I'' ~., c1n~o J' 75 l! 1s .t.t1a5 Ct1rp fl&k Ml 11P.1ru,....norr ~ ••• !lwlh •1 •l• ca~! !'llllATDIM Olli agencies approval c•~"'°" 1~ 1t-M•• Mtv • ' "t"'~ t1t '" Mui 11n 11n Au•o•• P•od <',',",',.!''o' ~~ ~' M1r"' Qr • • I • FO v 1 S I " lu!h e 0 !0 I),\ 11 00 A~lomln Ind
T r th l l ,,,. M Br""'' 2• 21 en J,<41'J•ttMa11na In ltl 1 61 A•co(p 6(;r erms o e agrremen .. ,,ow cn '"~ 1~\• • 1 .P "' 1n • ,~01 0 ~" ii 1•6 anMn t ill •40 Ao;co PtlJC ;oeur 0 Vi '1~ M1ver :3 11'.I,/, 191• "~ oc 1 1 09 1 19 1~,. Fd 9 07 tu """e"' Pd ~ ptOVldC for the ISSUSnCe or } 3 COCI•' Co 41 ''> 'AtOVV ,, 1I A•!rot1 l I~ ; O.il'-110 Tr 1? 15 ll ?t Av""! I...: 'II tol .. m E l " M~lc H "•All• !-lnu<i~ln"I 'Ail~• 'Mi 'Mi AvMP<I 1 !O SCFNC shares plu< paymentcomn1 F ' '" \1--d M•• • 11nc1 ~ ~•1 <81IM8"e•• too too A1te<01 111 t:o!on Sir ?3 l• V.Pd!•n ?~ F n<1 O 'I 0 -M O •< > >> r t I 110 h r h r •o-•t l 7 •••IO lt1 l? l ' > " e• Ill 41
•0 e··t ""Sore"' 0 '" • • ~I~~ ~.JSnMlclAMu •5G•t1 a "'"' ._.. """ Com Cir ll 1 Mdlcl C• i, ·.~ c Co 1&11 •44M0¢<1>Co1Q10111J
0 N omC:•t lft..:Oll lt Ml<tl~• 1• •Bobson 150150Mooch1 111112u 1e approximate 400000 N Ccom TeT 21 1114 M1ow -:;T 1s:w;1~~11e1con 106slC'5MIF rFo 110 111 C°"' MUI\ S 6 Mo!' ~"' "" lll'I llert Knl 116 I U '-\IF Gii\ • 1G • S• shares expected to be outstan om ,.,., 1~ ~ ...,1., via. 1~;~ 1~v. 'le•~ c:t~ •-59 S02Muus ~~ 1c1~1P10
d I r ... r~-;0 c~ ~i s~ ~ ps~f' .. ' ::;.~,r:" S{f j ~i ~~ 6';;..rn i U ; 3 1ng at ll(' lime O u 1e r:mo 1.,..1 ''•~·'fr!>•~ q ,,,~1•~114;1on s1 ,~, 1U\<\u1 s11n 111s111s
mercer ~mp "lee J ' • Mon• C1>I I • ,•,,•'\Mt Fon ~"" • 11 Mut Tr!I 11~ 1 7• om••' '1 >Monml'1<1! "llo•ton 1111nN(AMutllll006 N N I I B k '"on R"<:~ 7< ?• ' MOO~ P i 9 O 0 SO H lo •>>•" -• ' > ev.pot1 <1( OIL<! <In r:onorld 1, ,..., "OO•t s 0 1 o• ,.~1 1... 91 ts
operates nine banking offices ~:::;,8n L ,~l~ ,:1• ~;:y,1~ 11 ' 11 i eu ... ~~~~ C~\~1~ 11 •• ~:: '~~:!, 's!! '36
0, g C t Bl k C0t1> S J ~ J>. Mo!{)) I. :., ~\'> .... .,,,n 1119 1111 81111' t 11 JO 02 Jn an e Oun Y a emore C0<.., 'fr I'• '1 MPt Club 11, lJ> Pi.~~~ :~~ i;; m ;~ ~f: said present n1anag"ment and ~•wid H 1; Mu•11er ;,•I~ i.v v .. 1 1 r11111 Grw1h 732 161
staff are lo conl1nut. un r..:;. 'Z'~ ~ . ih =~~~I c; ' : 1'"'-C'G'~.,F(j ~ :~ ~ ~~ f~c..5..!." ~ 1i. ~ H Cro.,C~1~•11 ~•CC!nd •'•r-6~07 AIS "> changed The merger will rvtt/o R •· '• N•""v c 11 l ~•r-::~"'.,, l ' 71hNe11oc:r!,~ !9' 1~ r.YP•e• C 6 1 ft! "'"" 1 • ._.1111 •hr ot 5 sa N•vw Ce• J" J to bring to 66 the number of l'l•n• L'" 1 • 7 • N~tC•• R • 1~, c•1r ,.,, ~ l 110 1 N•uw Fd 11951!i 95
Southern Cahfornta r~1r~i Na g:~·o~ :, ,:, N~tmf:,£: ,: ,,.,, '"~:;:~· ",r7"f:'1n7!IN~':to"::'"' \~~\\~i~ n.1. G•1' II I NI! G,0 I •• om ,,, l S?"llcl> Sig 1 '9 '" l1onal Bank 0H1ce~ 1n Sanoat•tn " ' 7• N1t ~1b 11 ',', ,.,,~ .1 ·~1Nore1,.1 11,,11 ,, l'Javb Fd •4 "~ N•TI 'I/It'd I t ~" 7190 > oO '' Diego Orange and Los l'Mv Ml• u n ,..11 "•' i ~ • ncom ... cnqo • • ,,..tnrln •1~''4 • <rP 1 •?c,;',::c 1Gr 611~1 ... 1C:~:~ 1f~1~~ Angeles counhe~ n.,~1b .t.a 2~ 1•~ N~1 s~ow 1 cap11 • 91 1J7101 Fd 1 12 111 nrh 1~1 10 1 •N~!Slv• "'Fun<! 66J17JOn•Wm$1169H49 ;?<',",,'.~ •,, , •,,,", :.!El o •• •,,'o 11'1 16 '°•n1 ~' 1• SO?~ Nt!I 11 Jf 11 .19 ·-• , " " '•1t'~ hrhtl 8 1~ ••S DPt"nh 'J2 191 ~Tiii• 111,l Nk .. tnF' ~3 1~o ~<lfCI &<11110<10AIM 1609(() ::;;~.:E t,; ~~· ~i!I! i J ~ n 'I r-~•m< 1• 01 IS ll OTC Sec t 01 t 13
0 •m C• l~V. IJ\li NA P."« ,, 1 Co on all Pace Fncl 6 u I I)( n ,c 1~r l"• • •U'.:•r -; ,..; 1o E<iu•v 301 ~ii\Paut R•v l tl 616
!"llvt CM ''' l ~ "" r '>II 7 ?'• t~h : : 5 Of ~="~u~o ; rf ~ ~f Oocu1~1 ~ ~~ NPA ".;•• II II tn<om un1v8lt lll!e 113•1143
O<lw Jo• 7S'~ ... "IW 'lla1G ,•,,, ,•,,, Vtnt J '6 3 71 Dl!qflm 'G< , " !"lov~ n9 1•• 11 NW P Sv ro Grtll 961 •~PIM 51 9H 911 l'J•w N '' 1• ,.~cl R•c ' ComS !Id J tt •tlPon Ent 5U !1.1 "u~~n 0 "'' "~ Cttio A.i ,','•,•,,•cw111> A'\ I 1 11'1Plon ~nd fS?l04 t'JtOll ,., .... O~oW• ,.co1;Jl"D .. ,, ~z Pin! • l"'·O~! S~an 1, ,., Wlh .. !an Inv 1.., J &<1 c w1 ) i " nrmon1 , 1 OITIP "'• • t• • 31 P• ct Fur>01 "••I Sn l 1tt Otter TP 1~, 16'• (°"'pet ! «I St2 Grw!~ II U 11 t(
''.'
' A ,,~r-omoP.cl''71~"1E•ll1131 con L•~ Over 'I 10 ; 11 ·~Comp fd 111 I 59 N ko• 11 St II Sf
°'<Iv< S \ l1'l' 1 ' O~v(1! 1~ l l (Ol'1~1~ 60 3 9J Pro Fund 11111 1 tt
Water Fir1n
Purchas es
Soft Wu y
P8•E 11l0 H'• PEC l<r1 UI•: Al ~ Con<ori;I • 10 t )(I <>rovtlnl J 13 ~ti
The assets of the Mft Way I~;! 5i!'' ~ • :~' ~:~'1.1.J;~ ~; ; J~ :, ~:~s~ 1~ ; T: ~ ~ P~r~~.;: Fu~~· 9 21
Refining Comp~ny ha\e been ~I t,:t ~ •• ~ ~:~,:~~ ~.: f,,l~l GM~ !;{!:I ~:~.~ ,sU1~ll ~lclCPV 1•• 1 Pol'ICol • ., Coto Ld Ulif'll)ffl G !" I i 190 I d b ti A Ft"m !1• 1 ""t.ltr f:! 1 i'Cnl~ CAO •'110l'f lnccm All )'6 pure 1ase y le n1er.,1can 1 c ~"' '~ Perliw ., , .. , ,-," .,.,0 v , "' s ll rnv••I s 51 6 10 "I 0•1~ •l -' ~0111~v P -1 \later P•od""IS Corporation ~1MC!d1 1 , , P•v•I• , a' Crn v..0~1 1 61» Vl•ll tS1 1u "' >> >>' I 4 o ~•VAi> II '117Slll VOY~O 5:-6 SU FmcS 01 .. "••rl I I 11 .' \'> Ot!IW~•· c; Oll> Reo T•C~ lH J-53
IL v.as announced today by~;:~vR't 1~.1~~~~~·1'·~01! ,1 ,,,, De<•• •eo101111.o.ere 1 J•t.11
6 ,,,., p G v 11~: 1'1~ Delwr 10" 11 OR ntrel 11 olJ !~SO L A Reda~ President and i~~.,: _. ,,., , .... : .. " P•c 1 ~ lh Dell• s •1 • 11 RcJent~ •" ! tJ
con Coro 1 1 't Pt~Jl W• p, ''"' !?'"''' 111' 11 11 >•lem Fd • '6 •I General Manager of the "cu1 0 11 •• ,o o··~TI• '•' ~,, i:;~~:r:1~?:1 °~~ .. ·~,,'~FJ~:12n
Corporallon FB C:•co P T 0~11 $ ~ 1' 1•;1 '1c~ Mow~•d 1nt '"~ l1 59 I? '
I
f• e l'< ~· 6 • PhRO~ ~1 e ' o
FAb Tok '. l Photon I ,., ll~l•n a IT '19 Sl>CI ,. )Q 16 10
I P'odu'ls '-"''no 1 ''~ P!c 1 ~ 1 !.\t Gl'Wll> o ll 10 •• 8~1 11 61 11 ., American \at Cr sln~f" l n j ~ s.~~"'ivs',-J.J: 1 • •·o~ratJnn 1\ hotlv 01vns ''"'I Stock 1 u 11 11 Eciutv l •2 ' •• \..> ~Y" "" fber~t 10 ~t II '° lf'IV~SI 6 60 I lf
0 r I 0 Fo~T 10 fSJ103 U!I•~ !U '' operates .,,erv1so t 0 range B l r l "mr1 \' 'IS • 5' S•le< ""' I" 1.61 Ql'J)t._lll (' llS En•rev l~li5 1Cli!,el Sc..cS 170113.70 Coast a \.\Bler concllt1on1ng ~ .. ~,,. •ro tnu G~ '" 111
sales and ser\1ce franchise E:~l"'1;1h ~~J ~?ts~:::;.~~~~.~~ F' • J h Et ttx 17 111111 ,11 Otlftn n n 1713 r ro1n Long Beach a n d I l' 111 ;a, 6l\ ll 11 (_' F "O''c.~" 10, r. I!~ ;~~~ Fu...l!" I ti
F&rtd /<&'< (tD!I 6HatoC•bc!t;p IO
l akcii ood lo S11n L:leincnte Relired Astronaut ~rank ~:d"'r.."~ i~'}1 1 U ~';.~' ~~~ ;~i l!lia~~n•,:;:n~
'Is hc'dq rlcr l' 'l '"" 31<! ~Id &o OH!G••imllll II 7Jl 1$2 Cami>RL t i• ua s '1\/U " Il-Ortnnn r<;ccnlly parll(;lpatcd F t1 Fur>d ng11in1 "'''Inv 7l1 7ff camo5P 110 s N t B h F!d Trnd 111• 2(' S• wlnv G• • n • " CdBrrw "°' • treet in cwpor eac u1 a reguhllion countdown and Frc;~~~11 P:,, l 11 ~:r,.•nv '1U ,1~ g~,iit'd' ff:
where 11 ma1nla1n!< a I b r th l St l"°S' '<JSl\tFrmGI ~lt42'C111Ce.ou1
1cgencr<111011
gent'ral ofl1ce11
aunc o an au en u a urn ...:om 1 ?6 s •3 •t••e s1 l6 15 u u c1rb"'" i !O
Planl II n d v~n1 l •3 l 9~ ,teaom~n Fvndt Ctrl "" 60 V model tn Santa An 1 The " F v. 1 n •-.. Am Ind s ao • 36 c1ro c1.0ti s
ended June 30 1970 1nd1tated
afi 1mprove1ncnt 111 protlts
<.:ompa1cd to last year :-ialts
for the sr-con</ quarter 'II ere
SJ >132 249 up 32 pt' rccnl fro1n
.~ 595 087 fur !I . second
l"•tln r • ~ 11 f 1' F\dvc S 11 S6J (oroPLI I•
l:lunch Wil s conducted on L i\I ~:: \~~~~ ~ ~~ '~ ,,!fnlf~ltM 1F~~ 2" l:.~~~~',:
Cox Manu facturing Company's ~:: 'i'~:11 : ~ t~ ~:~ OP 1! !~ 'l Z C• rGn , f!le ~~I $ ~• 30 •7 J' l5 Sloe-10 A9 10 d C.r~•W "°"' nr\ng range: USc<I fO ICSt f1re ""' C11t1 '15 $ U iuc lnGt I :11 ! 13 C•!!~k > •• F~1 f'nd •56 voln51 16.1 131 Ca,~··• 7D
th<' comp,1ny s fain LI)' of ~;:, GG'i.r ~ ~1 : ;: rM~' ..,~1 ~ '~ ~ J: ~iio ~:,: to
d I fl I I "oundrt ~ 'fl I o? t•''"'s 7 •~ I 1t !!1.11\flwCp 1 r Cll 'j 0 Y Ill()( C S FevrJ.O J ~t t 1-l!~"ncl J 'I J S4 •l•n Df.o• 511
C Bo I·• IJ ,., ~"• n ""' r~chno1 J 1~ • lt ~"CO I"~ l O oloncl rman pus l Lv lC DN re. • '' '••1r-D Gt 1J •1 761• G~n In" lO! f=. •lh '91 S • Towr MR 111 '57 Gtr1!11'ltr Ol l bu lion on the Cox Launch Con 011 ' 1 i 11 1.~n C•o 'u 'u Gtn Mins -. qu,1rter Iris! yr.iir p1 c tax lri Ir 01" 1 '~ 1 '' T••v Eo 1 Sl f 2J ~nMot t.Ur h ol System and wah.:hed lhe F~'',~~ , 16i!1l11 ~~l ~~ 1 ~ U ', ll ~=~1H:.,dV 1 .. , come rose 16 peicc'!ll to F•"" •fl(.i.., 1wnc int JS3 ll etn1t1L1 1u
1$19 86:'i fro111 $4-17 U93 in the Saturn V modrl streak 1o an t"'rt i '" t1n11 Mij1 7" I'' ~ 111L1 Pl~ sa l!l'IDM'. SH 6 ~JM I~·-1 •I 11 ce"lllP$ 1.1(1 co1nparablt pcl!od a vcar agu _ altitude.. or l 200 feeL The J;(01~'o 11~ ~; 1~ "tt&'.?F~ f::r~' ';.'.., '"{ .~
Net in come 1ncrc,1~~d 10 od 1 I Is 1 11 1 Ill ~ ~11 Am 1 1 •~ Aict"' 1 ~1 • 01 sw 1 to rn t aunc c, <' c ,.., I C•~t•....,. 6Cl 6 11 1;10 , 110t 111s t Soy• •D
M•1 79'' or 19 ccn'• , sl1 ''' •i• •-, -, " '' ,. , '' '" ~nTt1u uo ~ ' L'> detailed co1nn1al)d und service or111;~ 1; n v.,,;; ,., 111 "f""' from $208 943 or 17 <en!~ a ,,... ~ S-<: UFd c•n ,,, 1~, "'e:r ~ shar<' !11 lhc 11kr Plnvd la st inodules 1s a in1n1~t11r• ot the ~:t·F: i[1~ t.i~~fi L~:;'',F!f1 1 21 !fi1~tu th
Ye.r "alurn V gystel't\ "hlCh lOOk COIT! ~I 1 11 11~ lncom • 1 4 '9 "~clbr" l"c .(i•ili.-d • J~r 1 s~e ~11 J:'l •l' "•mPS 1 lo
' Moat or the heavy expenses Borman Ill limes arouod the ~i11~1111 UD 11' ~~b:°' !~ j :f ~~=~~J ~
Involved lllth 1nt.roduc1ng our moon and batk lo earth In :~":'n"on "'15 !~ndP 'u' •is c~rf ,J'
new C'lllr:SCs tn ~lotcJ Hotl'I 1968 MF'1 1•• j~"•lnir I' I' Cflemtlrl)rl i c;11 '" 111$1 !n I 1 M •mNY ).0 '1nnagemeni "nd A-ru·nlh•g -===-----'="'"'"'"'= HofOO• t lo , N•'" """ le' 11.21 w~ ,,.~ '' a .. .._.,._, "' --·-••r' y ! I '\O I W•lll~1•t1 Grwo~ el V• I 60 Jlre now behind us 1\lurcuvcr ON THE TUBE 11•C l •v ~oe flM e~111r lf.n11 .. t• Ol'llu • ~MO .. or ~I~ tJ1 I 111 1l "111:" _.,,, ' Internal cosl controls m 4t'd•e I" t Moro 1"' n 111,eost 111 ,.,1111 \' j'" t~t~v 1-11 1 ti ""11 JrP i lhUled hi lhC. f1rSl qunMcr Of For +tit b11I 9" 411 to wl!tt t M•flfO '' ' I :'i ''""t 01 !~I ( Pl :~·s~~' ~;~r1 ,a1s~~~;~~1bu1'i~n ~ftK"'~ .~~ .. b!~,.,~';:.~ .~! ~~n' J~ !Q w?,f;a;:.;" 11f~:~~;: ~~f,u1~:1~Y,
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Syuabols
•
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-·--,-...-..... -------·r----------~---------------~-------------------------,--..,.-.,.-------~
Tlwrsd.IY, Auouit 20, 1970 SC
'J.1hursday's Closing-PriceS-Complete New YorK Stock Exchange List
••i.t .... \-------------' *"'9.1 M.1911 \Aw .C•M Qg,
DAILY "LDT J :J
Finance
Briefs
NEW voaK (UPI)
Teleprompter Corp. n a s Ir
formed the redtral Com
munlcatlons Commission It In
tends to apply for perml!s.io··
lo establish a domestl1
s a t e 111 t e communication·
system , po.~ibly In asaociaUoi
with Hugh'! Alrcraft C.O. m ·
others. Hughes (iltd a similr
ooUf 1calion-
BURLINGTON.Ma ..
<UPI ) Mlcrowavf
As!Jociat.es. tnc., has obtAinec'
contracu tol311ing $ S . a 2 r
mllllon from Raytheon Co o
Lexington , Mass., to produa
components (or the Atmy't
safelJl.lard mlsslle 1ysle111..
MILWAUKEE (UPI) -Ra
lntemaUonaI. Inc., 11 spendinf
about $6 million on factory
enlarge111enU in E u r o p._e ,
Braall aDd Japan, President J,
R Stru.b\Ui:er u.Jd Wed.
nesday. The company mates
hydraullc devicts.
' I
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P.11 ................................................................ _.. ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--·~~~~~--
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\
Ji, DAILY PILOT
Pope OKs
Liberal
Rules
VATICAN CITY !AP )
Pope Paul VI has decreed new
liberal rules for p r i e 11 t 11 ,
brothm and nuns including
one pennitting most nuns to
leave their a:inveots freely
~thout permission.
The 2lh-page document was
prepared by the Vatican 's
Congregation for the
Religious, and the pontiff sign.
ed jt in June.
A Vatican source said heads or religious orders in Rome
have been informed of the
decree, and it will be publish-
ed in the next edition of the
Act! of the Apostolic See.
The source said th e
document's six points revise
article! of canon Jaw con-
sidered to be "superseded or
anachronistic."
One major point reduces the
required age for superior
generals of religious orders
from .O lo !5. It also reduces
the required age for masters
of novices from 35 to 30.
"This is the age of 'hail to
youth!'" one official ex-
plained.
"Young people think any
persoo over 35 is a
Methuselah. It's just an adap-
tation to modem times."
Other points in the docu-
ment art:
-Uncloistered nuns may
come and go freely from their
convents without. c b e c k i n g
with superiors and without
opecilying their destinations.
Convent& are w a rned .
however. to exercise vigilance
to prevent sisters fr o m
becoming involved in "in-
convenienlu .episodes.
-No longer will a
testimonial letter from a
bishop be required ta certify
"'the goocf behavior" of can-
didates for the priesthood.
Religious superiors are asked
only to seek whatever in-
fonnation they c o n s i d e r
necessary to m a k e a
character judgment.
-Religious superiors are
given authority to modify the
boundaries of their orders'
provinces, or in some cases to
create new provinces, without
consulting with authorities in
Rome.
-The eight-day spiritual
retreat prescribed for can-
didates for both temporary
and perpetual religious vows
of poverty, chastity and obe-
dience may-now be reduced to
five days. Temporary vows
are usually in effect for three.
year periods.
-The canon law stipu]aUon
that cariClidates for temporary
vows must make a last will
and testament is amended to
apply only to candidates for
perpetual vows. Fonnerly,
seminarians and postulanl! for
sisterhood often made wills
prior to their 21st birthday,
and ·the wills were therefori!
not legally binding. Perpetual
profession always takes place
after the age of 21.
ReportJ circulated In
Vatican circles that the decree
will be followed by an in-
struction to shore up the
discipline In many religious
orders. Tbese report.'! say the
instruction wlll provide ways
of clamping down on such
dissident groups as the Im-
maculate Hean Sisters of Lls
Angeles. who defied Francis
Cardinal Mactntyre's rules on
dress two years ago.
Church sources confirmed
that an instruCtion was in
preparation hilt denl<d thJt II
would tU•.a 1et-touglt tone.
, For
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
6424321
'
Navy Trying to Shir.k Old 'Lily-whit·e' Image_
, I
W ASHINGTbN (AP)
Despi\e efforts begun lllr<e
years ago to recruit more
blacks, the Navy oUicer corps
remains a .. virtual illy-while
organiution with Negroes ac-
cciunUng tc:r1ess'than one per-
ctnt of the , Navy's 80,000 of-
ficers.
'lbf'..,re are only . 200 blacks
.above the rank of ensign
wearing Navy blue and gold,
aboot dolibl~ the number three
years ago.
' ' Accelerated tokenism,"
says Lt. Commander Robert
L. Toney, a-b~ack·officer givtn
Ille job of selling the Novy to
the Ne1roea and olher ml.Dori-
ty group members.
AlillOl.lgh Toney and another
Negro recruitln& officer, U
Commander Melvin Patridge,
are critical of what they say
has been ~ Navy 's less than
full-hearted effort, they lay
1he biggest blame oo the
Navy's imagt and competition
with 'Private industry.
"The Navy has .an image
problem that It hasn't been
able to overcome," says
Toney, erp}aining that blacb:
.still think of the Navy as a
place for cooks and mts!I
stewards.·
niat was the Navy 's image
before World War 11 when the
only opportunity for black&
was to be cooks, mess
stewards or ,.stevedores. Since
then, the Navy. jntegrate~ its
ranks and considered Negroes
lot equal promotion. 'nM!:
Anny, Air Force and Marines
did the same.
'l'hr<>Qgll the years; however,
the Navy 'has traditionally
trailed its sister services with
the lowest per~nlatqe oC
Negroes in iU ranks.
•
.... ltt&29cm.9pl1Dgi
......... cft:&UJ buow tor ti.dgeil: "'* Ma;.lt's:Q1bo'a .,..._pdced llMol'Ortho·cowtl .... .,..., n. ......... , ........ . ---
Defense Department figures
released }!!st wetk sbQ" ~.379
(3.2 perC<llt) blacks In the
Anny's offictr corps, 2,267
(1.7 percent) in the Air Force
aad 308 (l.Z percent) in the
Marlne;s. ,In U;Je Navy It's less
than hall of one percent.
Three years ago, the Navy,
aware of its traditional low
standing, a-eated the olfice of
Minority Officer Recruiting
Effort with the acrOnyrp of
MORE. Toney was put in
charje. The Navy a I s o
eslabli!lhed an office o f
Minority Affairs u n d e r
Pat.ridge's direction. Both are
lrylllf to readl Int. the na-
tion rs ghett0es to sell the Navy
.as a career.
But, say! Patridge, "You
can't change an image with
news releases. It took: us 300
years to get ln the mess we're
in. And now, suddenly, we
have to reverse the thinking of
22 mlllion black AmericanS."
The lack of black faces in
the Navy is one of the biggest
drawbacks to recruiting. ~ly
two black navy officers are
asaicned lo the Pentagon.
Patridge s a y s prospective
DOUBLE BONUS lfrng"' au-: headboartl {not as
ilklstrated) ptus quilted ~ead. Twtn or Fvn : piasUc
heedboafd (not asWualraled) and metal frarDa on
.. sy-rofliag ...-. Sol•-ilenuino Slleplwwd"
casMrs and fined mm caps..
FREE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
MAIL ~ PtiONE OROERS ACCEPfEO
LAKEWOOD SANTA ANA and
FOUNTAIN VALLEY 4433<:andlewood Avenue
Candlewood Shops (across from Lakewood ·Center)
Phone : 634-4134
16131 Harbor Blvd.
(corner of Edinger)
Next t o Zody'a • Phone: 839-4570
Negro r<cNib &1k wby tlrt,.
aren't mora bLack .f 1 c es
around.
Addlni ta !be •llihillty pro-
blem is !be fact <there has
never been a ~gro •dmiral.
Another factor tiampering
recruiUng or black officer can-
didates is the battery of ex· ams.
"It's the same exam (or
every.one," aays Toney, "Bid
he 's competing with 99.t per-
cent middle class whites. And
let's face it -their pace is
just faster tharl ours."
' . Pallidfe, Topey llDd other
lolack ""'!"i1m are """1inl
college campuses for black ol·
fleer candld;\tes. But big COi'
porations, which only a few
years aJO were criUch.ed for
discriminating ag4irl.!t blacb,
have the. same idea.
Big compa.Jlies are ofie.rinc
fatter pay ~ about twice
what the Navy offers. At the
same time, sa.Ys T o n e y •
"blacks are asking thermelves
v..-hy should I volunteer tor
the military when the rnl
problem is here at home?''"
)
Earf)' Ametle.., accent9d
con>"<lil>I• w"'1 wl.,.._ ... 9995 l'l\fptll wood,fumed errn
and 11ftt box plested
flourtet. It '88lufn Ortho's
deluxe button-fret lnner11prir1g mattress,
etf atzn.. tncw. Ortho'a Spedftl Doable.._
ANAHEIM
1811 West Lincoln Avenue
Between Euclid •.nd Brookhurst Avenues
Just East of Fed Mart • Phone: n&-2590
•
•
Th~, August 20, 1970 S DAILY PILDT ~
Computer :Keeps Tabs on l(ids
Data on 150,000 ]u'f?eniles at Autlwrities' Fingertips
OAIL'I' "ILOT , ..... II' GAS kllMNtf°'
Observing Pair
lly GEORGE LEIDAL
ot .. °"" ..... l l•ff
The computer age tuu caught up with
juvealles in Oranp Cowlty who've had
brushes with the Jaw.
A televlslon system now retrieves In-
formation o• 156,000 county youthJ
who've been ln contact with the la' ror non-criminal or seriOUJ criminal offenses.
The ''vldeo-dabt tennl.nll" -teJtvlalon
screen -reproduces the case history of
any juvealle in just seconds, a county
spokes~ said. _
Formerly, requests for WormaUon
lrom the Cenlral Juvenlle lndu (CJ!) by
County law enforcement agenclea, or
other departments, toot as Jong u 15
minutes. Last year, police, sheriff's
deputies, highway patrolmen, the pn>-
batlon department, flood ctintrol, !ire
departme11ts, school weUare and at-
tendance-officiab;-aftd-forestry services
made 70,000 CJl inquiries.
Each request required BOmeOOt In the
sheriff's office to manually cheek through
thousands ol. index cards on file.
· Once located, the juvenlle's case
history was read by the radio dispacther
to the awaiting officer and the card refil-
ed.
Art fans study offerings at the Art Yard, yet another summertime
festival of creativity currently under way in Laguna Beach. The show
is holding forth in a f<>nner lumber yard in Laguna Canyon, just a
brush stroke away from the famed Festival of Arts and the less
formal Sawdust Festival. The fourth display of local art work is at
the Art·A·Fair on N. Coast Highway in Laguna.
Under the new system, CJI requests
will be made to the computer which will
flash the case history on the television
scree• wlthla five seconds, and the in·
formation is relayed to the officer in two
minutes.
Capo School
Registration
Set Tuesdav
Chapman Hospital Plan
Wins Clemente Support .,
Registration of students new to the
Capislrano Unified SCbool District begins
next Tuesday.
By JOHN VALTERZA Mayor Walter Evans today said that Returning students need not prf>regis-
ter before the opening of sdlool Sept. 14. °' ""' 0.1" P11et '"" strong disenchantme1d with years of
San Clemente's medical society and the delays in that plan was one of the reasons
city's mayor today both officially pledged for the support for the 0 r a n g e
New students attending San Cleme1te
High may register dally from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the school, begirming Tuesday. full support to plans by Chapman General developers.
Hospital to build a major hea1lh facility Evans, a t e a d e r in the d r i v e to Returning '1th to 12th grade student&
will be mailed instructions telling them
where to report on opening day.
in San Clemente. usurp the DeCJnces hospital plans, has
1'1le support means that the year-old kept abreast of the new proposals by
plans to ,build a private hospital on a Chapman to build a major hospital near Palisades school filth graders and 1lzth
graders from Daaa, Palisades aad San
J uan elementary achoob will be atr
tending Capistrano School, San Juan
ca~ Students new to the di!trict,
may register daily from I a.m. to noon
and from 1 p.m. to f p.m. begian.iDC Wect.
nuday, at Capiltr-School
graded site near San Cleme11te civic the Edison yards on a terrace of the Los
center will be challenged e v e n more Mares tract east of the Sarr ·otegG
strongly by the Chapman group head-Freeway.
quartered in Orange. LiM»ln Savings-and Loan has com-
Pennission to blli~ a licensed hospital milted itseU to 1ehd Sl.1 million for the
re1b with a group led by the C. T. property, which fs reported already in
DeClnces Q)mpany of ,Van Nuys, but ~~~· Js
•
School Tenure End Urged
.
Reagan Gets Midway. Report on Education P!obe
• I ' By TOM BARLEY common goal of insur:ing riward for teachers and ~ta and unbealtl}y BC·
or ltM Drill»' •1111 s11ff performan~.above and beyood the ltan· cording to the best researct' in bebav}oral
Governor Ronald Reagan's Commission
on Educational Reform has reached the
halfway stage or its statev•ide in-
vestigation with the issue of an interim
report which calls for scrapping of the
tenure system and the creation of a merit
pay system for California's teachers.
Both suggestions are among seven
recommendations offered to the governor
by the 20.member commission under the
chairmanship of Santa Ana accounting
executive Robert E. Hanson. The in-
termediate report brings to 10 the
number of recommendations offered
since the commission began its probe of
the state's educational system last year.
Hanson regards his group's comments
on tenure as perhaps Its most import.ant
contribution thus far in its response to
Governor Reagan's appeal for a common
sense analysis of what he has called an
unwieldy aDd c<>mplex educational struc·
tu re.
"He wanted what we had to say in
t:risp layman's language." Hanson said.
"We think he's got it in the reports we've
prepared thus far."
The Hanson commission's suggestions
on tenure (a fonn of job security for
teachel'l';) are drastic and will, he
cheerfully admits, ••cause a bell or a kM.
of controversy."
TOO report says "tenure serves to prc>-
lect incompetent teachers because it
creates an illusory blanket of protection
which often deters apprq>riate action."
"Tenure was first establi.shed as a pro-
tection for teadlers ag"ainst bias and
discrimination m dismissal proceedings,"
Hanson explained. "It's no longer
necessary for this purpose -Article Five
of the California Education Code:
guarantees all eerti!led personnel dUe
process and protects them r r o m
discriminatory or malicious firing prac--
Uces."
"What we suggest will take nothmg
from the competent teacher," Hanson ad-
ded. "In fact, it woukl help to restore
confidence in the teaching professkln by
removing the publk's image o( 'Ille pro-
tection. regardless of competency'."
The commbslon alao recommends that au Callfomia's s:hool dlllricts, with the
bocking of a "clear policy statement by
the CaUf'Omia State Board of EducaUon, '1
ahou)d develop merit pay plans most
suitable to each individual dlstrkt.
"ni:b: would, of course, be wtthin flnan-
cltl Umlts ol the dlstrlct, '' Hanson Mid.
"What we were prtmarlly conctmed with
~·as the develotfmenl ol plans with tlJo
dards of the past and present." · sciences," the comrnisajoo addea: ' . Hanson's convnission felt that the lt points out in its report to the
absence of merit pay for California's governor the "need for the design and
teachers ••creates an undesirable, if not field testing of altern ate types of school
intolerable, refuge !or mediocrity for organlzaUon whicb wouJd be assessed and some teachers." It also, the ref>orl points validated systemaUcally according to
out, creates "a sense of frustration for predefmed, wec=Irled objectives of atu-
others who are willing and qualified to dent accomplishment and specified ob-
assume · greater responsibility in a jecUves for change in the way ad-
sincere effort to contribute to a higher rrUnlstrators, teachers and students work
'level of excellence in education." together."
The commission noted what it descrlb-Five factors should be present in the
ed as "four main objectionst' to merit Cina! consideratJon, the report states. lt
pey none of which, it cti!;'l'lmented, "ii in-defines them as "staff involvement in the
surmountable. They are: decision making process: f I e x i b I e
-C.Oncem by teachers over' possible organization: ~ofes.slonal evaluation;
favoritism under a merit pay system. car~rs ~~teaching and perfonnance ~
-Fear of losing security which "ac-fn<>Uon_s· .
companies a fixed increase in.. "la:ry -D~tinu~ of Ute state Som! of
sctiedu!e with litUe or no self Im-Educations ls$\)mg,cf teitbooks for first
provement." through eighth grades and acknowledge-
-"Resistance to any rating system ment of the respcmsiblllty of the school
due to a lack of confidence either in the district for prinUng and purchasing or
subjecUvity of rating systems or in the such books from approved lists.
objectivity of those who do .1he rating." -Initiation .of a two-part rtatewide testing program. -Predicted high cost of merit The recommendaUon calla for an an-
s_ystems. nual as:;essmeni of student&' achievement
"The weight of OUr ·analysis is strongly in grades one through 12 and com pari80n
in Support of the premise that merit pay of. results with state and national norms
is· one or the important necess.itiet to the wherever po!sible.
achievement of the highest attainable 1be comm!~ alllO urges the ad~
quality or education," Hanson added. tion of •·a~e dialflOSUc teft!I ao that
Five other recomendalions have been teachers may aJSist individual leamera
submitted to Governor Reagan since the with apeclfic learning tasks. Diagnostk:
rommission began its investigation which tests should be provided," the report
is now in Its second year. slates, "in the areas of reading,
Hanson and his 19 ctilleagues on the mathematics, language arts and study
fact finding team have met at 'least once skills.
a month since their appointment. -A new look by the Legislature at
His commJssion's other recom-what the commisskm believes to be
mendations include: serious inadequacies in the field of voca~
-"There shou1d be created a single tional education.
state Educational Re.search and Develop. The commission states in its report to
ment Agency, responsible to the state Governor Reagan that "the State
Board of Education (when constiUlted as Legislature should enact a slatute whk:b
previously recommended by this com-would provide opportunity for every stu-
mission). dent graduating from the public socon-
"This agency," sakt Hanson, "should dary schools to have acqulttd ••• a
be authorized and funded to .stbnulate the saleable skill."
design, evaluation and diMemlnaUon of The commiaion Calls for the develop.
new tlementary and secondary in· mtnt or "a Masttt.Plan for Cali!ornia
s:lructional and orpniuUonal programs. Vocational EducaUon'' on a regional
-Sweeping c11ang., In the organU.a' beslt. ,
tlonal management ol IChoots. Twelve edllCatlonol ar<U nmaln to be
"Rtild --· to Jradltional ad· CO!Ulidtrtd by the Hll!IOlt Commlsllon.
Jlllnlstrallve patterns aggravotes and, In They Include the '""'P'• study ol coofll<t
90!Decaau"creat.Ji the: underlYin& Issues in the IChools and campus wirtst.
to student unrest," the conptt&llon aimpl'.l:flc1Uon of the educ1tlon tode,
report st.ates. urban, suburban 1od rural needs, pubUc
"The oo frequently oxllting autocnUc llCbool llnance and ttlatloolbip ol the
stnictuno ol tthool admlnlstroUon ~ op-federal and stale 1overnmenla In
prusive, wlmoded In dealing with both Caltlornla education.
Be!ldes fieJd inquiries, the sheriff's
de~ent. receiY,Js more than 30,000
similar · Juyenllt requests from other
government 1gencle.s, each year. The
.same proctss is followed, •only Xerox
copies of the file card were made, and
sent to 'the agency.
The .televilloo tcrte:n' image of the
juvenile's baci:groWKI cu au.tomaUcally
be transferrtd to a permanmt printed
copy for the requesting agency, saving
even more Ume, Capt. lt W. LUX·
embourger, sherlff'1 records dlvisk>n,
said.
'Ibe tctal of 100,000 juven.Ue inquiries
each year, can be handJed by the new
system at an annual operating costs of
$27,00ll -a savings of $2Z,OOO. The old
system ts e:sUmated to have cost the
county $49,t:m each year.
Video-data termtnal.9 abo are located
in the auessor's office, municipal court,
adm.ln!stralJve offlce, and In the dl&a
.services depa.rtmenL
"The compulerizatlon ol the CJI b
directed tcward achievln1 a more ef-
ficient and effective tool ror the law en-'
forcement officer i1 his haJldllng of.•
juvenile problems,'' Sheriff James Music::,
said. -· "ThiJ pro)ect will lay a firm foundaUon . ~
for future data proces.sing of other files .
within our Jaw enfortement community." . .'
garden cent~r
•
0-frOmTam
Juniper or llalJln
eyprea 8Wlrgreena
lor-
landlClping. 5
gallon size.
3ss
Artillery Fem.
Klttenaeerand
Spider plants In
7 inch hanging
baskets. Already
growing.
111
Zodiac sun dial
in grHn, bronze
or aluminum.
9.99
sun dial stand
in whHe, green.
ortan.
4.50
Specials!
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• Gold Dust • Burfordii Holly • Parrywlnkles • llntana
Stunly pllurts already growing and ready to plant Jn 1 gallon
contalnera. BeaullfyyaurY9111 lodlyl
•
Beautiful bedding
plants In tray, ...
every Vlrlety of
carnations. Eal)'"
care flowers
already growing
In trays.
tray
Ageratum, Coleus
In 4' pots. Lovely
flowers to make
your garden
really bloom. Buy
several of each.
... 379
Kelloggs gromulch ... exeenent
for retaining moliture and
keeping roots cool. 1 cu. 11. bla.
1.29
1.98 Zcu.11.
Decorative Sequoia bark In
3 cu. ft. bags. Medium. COll'M
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Avallableatn-i:.rtneyGlldtn Oenterl: CARLSBAD DOWNEY
MONTa.AIR NEWPORT BEACH Shop 12 lo 5, Sunday tool
.. '
,.
·.--. • • • . . .
l . . .
. .
'
•
I
DAILV PILOT Thursday, Augusl 20, 1970 •
Reds Take Town
Near Phnom Penh
•
~ <~• iw .,. o.11J Pl• 111m
: • A Stoke-on-Trent, England, ·bus
C»mpany has refunded the six cent
lare charged by a new bus conduc--
!or !or the life-size doll Mrs. Mer-
fer•t Rushton was taking to her
Jiospitalized husband. "This was
jhe case of an ove r zealous new-
dnner who charged for excess bag-
Jta.ge," a bus company spokesman
said.
• • <The International c 1 ams be I l
filching Tournament, scheduled to
~gin in Cape May N.J., Aug. 29,
bas attracted an entrant from
EQgiand. He is Herold S•erle, 701 9£ Chiswick, who lost one arm
years ago in a tiger hunting ac-
(:ident in Burma and now is an ac-
$<>UDlant.
l · •
· Tht InPriest Girls, two of tM na.
1ion'a first airline hostesses, helped
ctlebrcte Notional Aviati<Tn Day 'in
Washington. ThelJ are A.nne DePriesi
Moreton, Pmohatan, Va. (le/&) and
Carrie DtPriest Salmou, Washington,
f).C. • . Firemen answered an emergen-
~Y call to remove a horse from a
l)edroom. Authorities said Sh•l•ce,
Ii Z.year--01.d chestnut. wandered in·
to an empty house from a field, in
Cublington, England, trolled up the
tront stairs and became trapped.
Firemen, aided by a veterinarian
who gave the animal a tran·
quilizer, set him tree. • Police in St. Louis, Mo. said a
D)an, about 22, placed a passbook
Monday into the teller's drawer at
·tile Lindell Trust Co. auto bank.
The teller, R11ymond Peters, told
tile man to wait his turn because he
:was busy with another customer.
The other customer was George w ..... 45, an employe of a check-
cashing firm, who wag cashing a
check. The impatient customer
apgnly withdrew the passbook,
a]id as Peters passed a canvas bag
·containing $5, 700 through th e
:drawer to Weese, the wrong man
:anatcbed the bag and ran off.
~-.
. The British Broadcasting Corp.
:(BBC) department teaching Eng-
Jish by radio and television has
tput new interest in its course.
:,hristopl\er Dllke, director of the
-course, says a striptease model
'tears off her clothes. As each piece
Its removed, the teacher spell s the
~brune of the garment on the black·
rboanl. Dilke said, "Students soon ~ck up the language when they
~•re faced with such interesting
:aod compelling lessons."
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A for« ol
J ,000 North Vietnam~ captured the
village of Prell Tameak nine miles north
of Phnom Penh today in the heavieat
assault of the war on the capital'• outer
deferises. Field reports said C,mbodian
troops were batlllng t b e CoinmWJbl! "face to face."
An official Cambodian 1pokesman said
casualtiu were beavy on both sides but
gave no figures.
Preak Tameak i! on the east babk of
the Mekong River. The outakirt.s of
Phnom Penh lie on the other side of the
400-yard-wide river within range of Com-
munist mortars and rockets.
No U.S. ground force3 were involved in
the Preat Tamm campaign but Saigon
communiques today reported that six
American.t were killed in the cra!h of a
belkopter in South Vietnam as well u
continued o:>mbat between U.S. and
North Vietnamese t.::ces near artillery
base Barnett near the Laotian border.
Spokesman reported 25 North Viet-
namese aod Viet Cong slain in a fight
just west of Barnett In South Vietnam's
northwest corner.
Phnom Penh communiques said the
North Vietnamese tioopa stormed into
Pre.at Tameat before dawn today and
were in control of the village by af.
temoon.
This gave the communista control of
the Mekong river In that aru and tnflic
there stopped.
The 52nd battalion of the Cambodian
army look up a blocking ~lion to foil
any further Communist al.Iva.nee but the
Cambodians were backed up against the
river by North Vielnamese unit! pushing
in from three skies. ·
Cambodian air force pilots began at.
tacking Communist positiona in the Preat
Tameat aru this morning but all fire
&topped about noon.
The Cambodians were being supplied
by South Vietnamese gunbo:its moving up
the flooded Mekong.
'Closes t School'
Plan fo r SQuth
Integration Told
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
ministration says its basic plan for
desegregating Southern schools thi! fall j5
to make it ~ble for any child, black or
white, to attend the school nearest his
bome.
And it hopes the Supreme Court will
not complicate the plan right now by rul·
ing that children should be bused to
achieve racial balance.
This explanation came Wednesda y
from Attorney General John N. Mitchell
during a luncheon with newsmen prior to
his departure today with President Nixon
for the West Coast.
Mitchell said about 300 Southern school
districts are desegregating voluntarily
this faU. while another 100 districts have
been, or ~ill be , sued by the government
to abolish all-black or all-white scbooll
set up by local laws. He conceded this
will st.alll result in some all-whlte and
some all-black schools In. the South
because of housing patterns.
"What you will ha ve. I believe, is
closer to the open society concept of
being able to go to the school nearesl
you," he said. And ~titchell suggested
that the ·overall result would be a
Southern achool system generally com·
parable to the rest of the comi.ty, except
for some big city black belts.
But Mitchell said one of the "grave
problema" facing the administraUon ii
the possibility the Supreme Court will
broaden Ill lllandards of equality.
Army Drops Charges
Pr. McPllERSON. Ga. (AP) -The
Army says it has dropped charges
against S. Sgt. Kenneth L. Hodges in con·
nection with the alleged massacre at My
Lai because "available evidence was in-
suffic1ent" to bring him to trial.
Althouah the flahtinc WU only nine
mues from PhnOm Penh, here tt wu as
ii nolliJn& WON luoppeoin&, Heovy
monsoon rain and wind shut out the
sound ot batUe from the capltai and there
was no chance ln the rdued way ol We
here.
1 The fighting broke a llklay full In Cam·
bocltan ~ action, a spokesman Aid.
* * * Bruce Stays
Away From
Peace Talks
PARIS !UPI) -U.S. Ambassador
David K. E. Bruct today stayed away
from the 80th session of the deadJocked
talta on the Vietnam war. A brief state-
ment avoided the word boycott but said
the United States was awaiting a change
in the Communist attitude.
North Vietnam's chief negotiator, Xuan
'Ihuy, has boycotted the talks for the pasL
10 months.
Philip C. Habib, Bruce's deputy,
delivered the shortest U.S. statement to
date in the negotiaUons, saying that the
talks 0 ahould be conducted in a genuinely
conciliatory atmosphere and without
demands for obviollily unacceptable
preconditions."
Habib announced that Bruce would not
attend slJorlly before tM session started.
"Ambassador Bruce will be working in
bis office all day," Habib told newsmen.
A U.S. spokesman Hid the American
deh!gation was "not going to interpret"
Bruct'I ablence but Habib made It clear
Bruce was not staying away because of
illness.
Habib declined to AY wllether Bruce'•
action was connected with the continuing
boycotl by the dllef negol11ton for North
Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
"I really don't want to connnent aboul
Jt," Habib replied wben asked if there
WIS I eonneetlon.
Xuan Thuy left the talb last November
when Am.basgador Henry Cabot Lodge
re.signtd IDd Preaident Nixon did not im·
mediately name a successor.
Bruce was appointed Lodge's successor
earlier ttrls aumner and has made two
appearances u the ch1ef U.S. negotiator •
At the end ol last week's session, the
North Vietnamese delegation annouoced
that Xuan Thuy was returning to Paris.
but no date was mi;ntioned.
Habib's official statement, 1ubmitted at
the seeaton today, covered only hall of a
type:written page and WIS the! ahorte!lf.
sine< tbe !alb begin Ii monthl qo.
Reagan OKs Bill
To Curb Bombers
In California
SACRAMENTO. Cal~. (UPI) -Gov.
Ronald Rea1an has signed a bill setting
the death penalty as possible punishment
for conviction for a bombing in which a
person sul(ers ''great bodily harm."
"As you know a wave of bombings has
hit the country in recent months, and.
Calirornia has not been spared," Reagan
said at Wednesday's sign.in&.
"I know I share the hopes of all law·
abiding citizens in the state that the new
law will somehow help to curb this most
tragic and senseless form of violence."
The bill by Assemblyman W. Craig Bid·
die, CR-Riverside), set the penalty of
death or life Imprisonment without parole
-at the discretion of the jury -when a
person is convicted of wilfuDy and
maliciously exploding a "dutructive
device" causing great harm or injury to
another.
The measure included ' 1 M o l o to v
cocktalls" in the definition of "destruc-
tive devices."
.. Strong Winds Hit NY
Heavy Tliundershowers Dot Eas te rn Third of Nation
<:allfonel•
Coutal
MotllY -fl¥ tocll1. l ltl!I ¥t•11ble
wlftdl nl1hl 111(1 ll>Ol'ftl/lt hllVn """"" IM .... t..-h• I to ll knoll I~ ,,,.,_ "°'"" I nd f r!OtY, 141'!> hldt'1 'It, OCt llt t 1-rl tll!W r1-.,._ U
to 11, lnltl\d lmrM••lfl•n l'tllN fftllft
U to IJ. Wl19!' IMl-IT\I .. fl.
Sun, /llooM, Tide•
TMUltlOAY
5«0nd Iii.It .••• '... "'., '·"'· ... k'co,,. llrw •·q •·'"· f.I
r~~· h~• t·f16, m. J 1
'I"/ lo" .. ,,MI "'· 1.1
S.C-lo# • 1.M t.m, O,t
kfl •1-l .lf1m. k it 1 :M1..m.
MllOll lt!MS ··~ 1.m. ~ lt:t• '·"'·
T f!ll!Jtel"lltura
"''" Lew '""'· ·--" " •• Anc!\erfff ., ~
Atl1n!1 " " l11k1<1f1t1• ·~ n
lll1m1!'0 " • 86111 " ..
·~ .. " " CM(-.. " Clnci-11 " n c1-11'"' .. " .. _ .. " ...... II " 1"111 'Mlrllt " " "'""" .. " MllMfl .. " Hout'°" " ,.
Lot '"'"'" " .. Mlt mf 111ell " n Ml!•t llkff .. " M ln,,.1..:111• .. " ,,. ... °''""' .. " NtwYOt'k .. ..
01kl11\d " " ....... .. ..
1'11111 lloblt• .. " Pllll._l..,,lt .. ..
Pllt\tlur9ll M .. ·-· "' ,.
hrlianct -.. ·-.. ..
lac:•-le .. .. St. loul1 .. • Sitt'-"' c.u,, .. .. s ... OitM ,. " kl! "'"'flt<o .. • SHI" ••rHr• .. " s,1n1t .. n
-·~ .. M
'""""' "' "
f'llt Albert Ul'IT ...... lt
'
Four·year..old elephant seal,
Fat Albert, is new student at
the Sea·Arama Marineworld in
Galveston, Tex. He now weighs
a mere 11000 pounds, but he'll
eventually tip the scale at 4,000
pounds. He'll be really Fat Al·
bert then.
Guerrillas Mum
On Kidnaped
Pair in Uruguay
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) -The
Tupamaro guerrillas nmaiftd allent to-
day on their plans for two kldnaped
foreigners. Police, facing lbe possibility
the strategy is being directed from in.side
jail, tried to Isolate captured guerrtlla
leaders from the outside world.
No authelUcated messages have been
received from the guerrillu ·elnce Aug.
11, when they reported in a communique
that American ag:rooomist Claude L. Fly,
65, and Bruilian con!Ul Aloysio Mares
Dias Gomide, 41, were ii lood health.
Police reparted on. Wedoesday the
discovery of a I e t t e r .fn:m a jailed
Tupamaro leader to another guerrilla
chief urging the terrorlsta to remain
silent because they had more to ga.io. tbe
longer the two host.ages were held.
The letter, writte1 on nine cigarette
papers, was sent to Raul Sendlc, a
founder of the oraanizat.ion, and WU
foutd in the suburban house where ht
and eight other Tupamarog were ca~
luted Aug. 7.
Florida Rioters
;
.Fire on ·Sheriff
'. '
roRT t.AUDERDAL!il, Fla. <UPI) -
Snlpen fJnd on Broward Cowlty Sberllf u SIOcl: w_., nlChl and be callod
In 4tbe --a Clan! rlol cantzol vehlde -to bolp quell !lit 11Jth nl&bl ot
radii -lo the-">'· . "'"*" Ibey 11art llrlnl at me, tblnp ire pttlnc out of band," said 5tact, wlio
allo II l'UDllinC for °""CJWI. "'OUr' men
will be armed with lolded rlf!OI tonlsbl
and they wru mpooc1 to forte with ap.
propr1ate force.'"
'.Angela Davis"
Car Now Seen
As Big Ruse
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Aqela Dav!J'
1951 dltkm wagon may have beu placed
in front Of a Blaek Panther's home htre
in Ill elaborate ruse to throw authorllies
off her trail, a police officlaJ said today.
The discovery of the duaty Rambler
Tuesday night culminated in an intensive
but unsuccessful search by SO officers
and FBI ageutl in the immediate area
for the black milltaat.
The car, ideaWled in a nationwide all
polnta. bulletin when Miss Davia WU fint
sought in connecUon with a San Raf~l
courtroom shootout that left four dead,
was found fn front of the home of
Franklin D. Alexander, !9. Alexander, a
Black Panther, is prealdent of the Com-
munist Cbe-Lumumba club of which Miss
Davil la a member.
The discovery of the car touched off
speculatlo11 that Miss Davis might have
returned to Los Angeles. She was
reported in ber home town of Binn·
ingham. Ala., last weekend.
The car was initially considered a
prime lint to Miss Davis because
Alabama authorities cited unconfirmed
reparts "'."!I.at she was seea drivin1 a "blue
Rambler staUon wap." But officers in
Alabama were unable to IUbstutiate the
tip from an informant.
The finding of the car and reportl Crom
witnellaes the S;l.JDt day they had ltefL
MW l>avil at Loi Angelei lnteraational
Airport inteoollied police lnveotiiallono
here into bet whereabouts.
How~er. the poUce official &aid in·
vt.sUgators disc<>wlted the rtported
alabtinca of the woman bec1u1e all of the
wftnealet aid the womu in question wa1 weartor diff.,...t clothing.
Stack said the sniper bulleta mllNd
him by •ta feet. . '
"U they continue lhootinr, we're 1oln&
ln there tonight." Stack Ald. "We won't
lland by paUently and let police be llr<d
on without rtacting. Jt'1 oo ioneer fun
and games. We've got to brett the back:
Of this thing ."
Two black men suffered gunshot
wounds and were !lated in fair condition
in a hospital here today. Neither wu shot
by police. Ooe of the shootlnc incidents
stemmed from an argument 1n a grocery
store and another Involved a man who
was lhot by a customer as be tried to
bold up a tavern, police said.
Stack met briefly with Gov. Claude
Kirk 1bortly after midrught at the Fort
!Auderdale Airport and refused the help
of national guardsmen. Klrk said he wa1
pleased with what Staci: was doing and
saJd he wu leaving him in control of the
lituaUon.
There wu Utile property damage
Wednesday night despite a p o r a d I c
firebombing, but three patrol cars were
htt by sniper Ure and two othen luod
amuhed wiodsbields from rocks thrown
by mgry young blacks.
1be huge riot wagon was brought in
from Orlando and when it moved into the
troubled area, it drew gunfire and was
bombarded with firebombs and rocks.
Forty deputies armed with sbotgum
walked behind the vehicle to dtsperse the
crowd, but officials said there were no
shells in the magazines.
Pompano Beach, Hollywood and Dania,
neighboring towns troubled with violence
alnce Saturday, were relatively quiet
Wednesday. The violence spread to Fort
Lauderdale -a city of 140,000 -Tues.
day night. Police reported they shot and
killed a Negro looter early Wednesday.
and arrested 10 persons. ·
Ex-Bunnies Sue
NY Playbo y Club
NEW YORK .(UPI) -Four former
"bunnies" cttarged "sexual dlscrimina·
lion" against the New York Playboy Club
Wednesday in a petition to the F.qual
Employment Opportunity Commhlslon
asking for re.instatement and back pay.
Part of the cmnplaint was based on the
claim the club had penalized bunnies bot
not bartenders for having "stretch
marks."
Robert J. Mozer, attorney fur the (iris,
said the suit was the first "to challenge
the pbony seii.!m" of Hugh Hefner's
enlerj>rllu
GIFTS AND CASUAL
HOME FURNISHINGS
ANNUAL AUGUST CLEARANCE
* Brown Jordan Patio Furniture D*:::;:: g;.'"1 ::.::
* Name Brand Barbecues ,,, ............... "-'-•'-
*Gift llems •., , •• , •••••• , , •••.• , , , •.•••••• , lalire 6Ht LI• lHMetl
* Garden Umbrellasc~a ".'::~:~:v 100/o-300/o off
* Chaise ~ounge .... $16.tS
* Terry Cloth PCl!ds .................................. $6.tl
* Chaise Pads
* Terry Piiiows
.......................................... $1.tJ
.... SI.ti
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•••.••• ·• • • • ••• ...•.•••• , ................. SJ.ti
• ... SJ.II
NEAR COST
200/o OFF
200/o Off
$16.95 & UP
NOW $13.95
NOW $4.88
NOW $6.20
NOW $7.20
NOW $9.60
NOW $2.49
NOW $1.99
Many l te1n1 on Our Annual August
Clearance Sale Are at Coat or Below.
All Salea Final!
T-•. -20, 1970 DAILY PILOT ~
Mothers
React
Mitchell Predict,s Student Backlash
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Al-
lomty Geaera1 John N •
M-ll 110Y1 musiv• -I SUPPorl could hurl liberal
--withdrawal Gl lhe
American commKment t n
Vletnam., the 0 general Mtltude
ol the public.'' and "feelings
the pneraI public bu lor
clemootlniWrl " ... .,,. .. amber.'' .
Mltchell ll"'dlc:led UllJ lall'u
elections would be uniqua,
"There Is going lo be a lot
more crossover voting than
ever be.fore." To Verdict polltlcal candk!ate1 UllJ fan,-----------------------------
becalllO the publlc would
-Ille )'OUllll ampalp workers wttll pro-IDCI
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)
-~trs. Loretta Collins heard a
jury convict her son of first~
degree murder, carrying an
automatic life sentence.
"I know my son didn't do It.
I know he's innocent, 1 know
he's innocent," she sobbed.
In Grand Rapids, 1%5 miles
away, the mother of the coed
John Norman Ccllins was con-
victed of murdering, heard the
Verdict also.
"God was on the jury," said
Mrs. Roland Beineman. "l'm a
convinced he was the main
member or the jury." ff _ .... _ L ff i
As lightlipped jury members a .... .,.,, ufl' a r
Uf"IT ..........
left !he courtroom Wednesday, San Francisco Pl>llce tectlcal squad officer uses a protestor's long hair ID hold
defeme attorney Neil Fink the dissident with one band while clubbing with the other. Police broke up a
quietly praised the six men group of 300 demonstrators on Market street after a ralJy in Civic Center sup.
and six women for considering porting the "Soledad Brothers" and the "Los Siete."
the.ir verdict for more than....:.--=-------------------------
dl-b. Mild>ell aid Ibo • publlc
dl111tl1factlon wt.di
~ and plcl<.U.C will be r<flecled In lllI.s !all'•
electiolll. •• u an tbe8& tkll came oa
Ille campulel and -•p
for candldolo X, it mlglJt urge
people ln vote for lhe Gth«
~te,11 MJtchell said
lng a luncheon for reporters tn
bis office w~.
Mltdtell said Ille bock! ....
agalnS student --would come Into play even II Ibey did
not use protest toctlco. He
said "jmt an ktentltk:ltkn"
with students wbo h ad
~led tn IUCll activities
would be enouglt.
The all<rlley general, Prost·
denl Nlmi's campaign
four days. He said he will ap-
peal because the 23-year~ld
former college a t u d e n t
"wasn't on trial for just one
murder. He was on trial for
seven."
Karen Sue Belneman, 18, an
Eastern Michigan University
freshman , was the last of
seven young women slain in
the Ann Arbor· Ypsilanti area
during a two-year period.
Collins' attorneys tried five
times for a change of venue,
saying community fear made
a fair trial impossible.
Co1inecticut
Clergy1nan
Wins Vote
Martinique Bracing
For Storm Dorothy
m-In 1911, awlded questtom--be
woold run the 1m campatp.
"I've done thflt bit.'' he Aid.
' MJld>ell Wll asked If Vice
President Spiro T. Apew
would renew bJs attactl on
d.....,.,.._. before t b I 1
year's elections.
"I doni tblnlc ~ baa
to talk cm lbe .abject matter.''
He oald. "I -pqle got
"I'm not sure there were
any impartial sites in this
state," Fink said.
No one has been charged in
the other six killings. But in
Salinas, Calif., Wednesday,
Monterey CoWlty District At-
torney Ed Barnes said he will
begin enradlllon proceedings
within 10 days to brlng Collins
lo trial on charges of murder-
ing a 17-year~ld girl a month
before Miss Beineman was
killed in July, 1969.
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI) -
Advance squalls of tropical
HARTFORD, Coon. (AP)-storm Dorolby began whipping
The Rev. Joseph Dulley, soft· the beaches of lhe French
spoken 38-year~ld naUonal Island o( Martinique today and
chairman of Americans for residents r u s h e d final
Democratic Action and son of preparations to receive the
a West Virginia coal miner, full force or the storm.
has won a three-way primary Hurricane force winds of '1S
to become the Deomcratic miles an hour, or a little
candidate ror U.S. senator higher, were expected to rake
from Connecticul tbe island by early afternoon.
Duffey forged a volunteer Dorothy, the season1s fourth
grass roots c a m p a i g n tropical twister, still has not
organization from t be rem-been classified as a full hur-
nants of the old Eugene J. ricane, however.
McCarthy apparatus o fl968, "Right now It is a strong,
which he headed as state cam-Wi!ll-formed tropical stonn,"
palgn chairman. 1be United said forecaster Neil Frank at
Church of Christ clergyman the NaUonal HUITicane Center
will take !he place on the In Miami.
ballot that was occupied in At 9 a.m., the storm wu
of the island of St Lucia, near
latitude 14.1 north lon,gltude
59.8 west. It was moving on a
ptilh between west and west-
nortbwest at about 17 m.p.b.
llAllD SHAP'INO
the me111ge."
He aaid Ille Jsaueo lllls lail
woold be Ille ..,...,.,,,, the
MAMICUlllH
9'he Hair Styling for Men
ffiing'g Chaifl
2 llocb Welt .t lretlkhunt
9568 HAMILTON
HUNTINGTON IEACH
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 9'2-IMO Extradition will a w a i t
sentencing, set by Judge John
Conlin for Aug. 1.8. Gov.
William G. Milliken's legal ad-
viser said, pending unusual
developments, "I suspect the
extradition request will be
honored."
1958 and 1964 by Thomaa J. ~cen~ter~ed~a~bou~t~7~5~mll~es~e8'1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; oood. I• Dodd, censured by the
Senate in 1966, for using cam-
paign contributions to pay
personal expenses, is running
as an independenl
Ccllins did oot testify during
the trial and bad made no
public comment since bis ar-
rest Aug. 1, 1969.
Duffey faces an uphill battle
against both Dodd a n d
Republican candidate Lowell
P. Welcker Jr., a freshman
U.S. representative.
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\
\
I
•
-
• DA.JI·! PILOT EDITORLU PAf;E •
Equality or Chaos?
A few yean ago a woman applied for a Joi> as sta-
tion agent at one ol Southern Pacific'• desert depola.
Sbe was nfused because the job involved handling
heavy bundles and boxes -and hea.,Y lifting ii for.-
bidden by state law.
Under the federal Civil Rights Act o1 1964, .the wo-
man· sued. DJscriminaliOfl, she claimed, because of
1u. SP, caught between conflicts in state and federal
law, asked !or a ruling.
'nle law la not lnlended u a mlachlel·maker. Wo-
.men too olten are victims ot arbitrary dlacrtmlnllUon
parely becaUH Ibey are women. They are elduded trom some colleges for this reuoo, they draw stlff8
pr!Jon sentences 'In some states and they are forbidden
certaln legal propel'ty rtghta In other ..
While they hold YI per'cent of the nation's jobs.
their salaries · are '2 pe\ient lesa than those peld men. _ sun, we mus\ wond~r if Orange County'• freshman
Congres•ll\811 Rep. John G. Schmit%, wasn't right In
warning of •1egal chaos" as he voted against the bill.
Certainly he wu In 'the minority, for the bill cleared
the House of Representative~ '350-15. (It la auured pa ..
sage in the Senate, but.must be raUfied by three-fourths
of the states).
The ruling: SP must break down lta baggage and
lrelghi Into sizes Ughl enough to meet state regulations,
and SP must hire an otherwise qualified woman station
master at Thermal, Calli. SP, at last roport, still was
appealing.
That legal complexity is only a s.,nple of what
may come out of a Constitutional amendment passed by
Congress last week providing "~ual rights for men
and women" in all matters -not m jobs alone as con-
tained in the 1964 legislation.
Why did· Congre~smen vote so overwhelmingly for
the bill, despite the threat cit legal chaos?
Very likely .they-were looking at the fact that 2 mll-
Jion more wom~n .tban men vOted in 1968.and.3 ~on ' .
more women than ·men will vote.In 1970. ' · 1
• ' "It will open a Pandora) box of legal complica-
tions," says Paul Freund, professor of law at Harvard
Law School. ''The amend.meat expresses. noble senti-
ments, but I'm afraid it will still work'lll,uch mJ.!chief
in actual application ."
The Reiurn of the Saloon
There is, for example, serious discussion at the
highest federal level about how women w)ll be drifted
in the anned forces ; what duties they would perform
and what physical standards would apply.
In such legal areas as divorce ' and child custody,
women appear lo be losing an advantage under the
new law. Aliqlony would be a tw<>-WQ' 1ti'eet: women
could pay ex~husbe.Qds just as men now pay u·wives.
No maltel'. the cllerrtele no matter the -.wdust ou
the floor, California llqUor drifl}ters have J>erit their el-
bows for 36 years ill. establishments that~ have -by
law -carried·the,quainf name "cocktail lounges.''
The Innocuous term.came into being when.prohibi-
tion ended and the·'1drys'.' held onto OM vestige ol pride
by lobbying for leg!JlaUon to keep ol(t more .sleazy
terminology !pr the 'comer watering hole,
Two Call!ornia Jaws would be affected ovemigbL
Present marital age-of-<:OllSeDt is 18 for females, 21
for males; presumably the male age would be lowered
to 18. And bartending -IO!Jg a male-stronghold occu-
pation (except in beer bars) -would find itself seIUBl-
ly Integrated.
No IJM)re.-Gov. 'Reagan bas signed a bill changing
all that.
From now-on, you can get intoxicated, tipsy, tight,
boozy, 11111, hali-...... ver, jagged, jiggered, muddled,
pie-eyed sw<nz!ed, boiled, bigh. In your' cups, lit, loed·
ed, crocked, potted,-sotted, soused, stewed, full, tipsy,
crapulous, fuddled or, .yes, plain old drunk -in a
''saloon.'' '
' Envoy Ripped
For Same-sex
Marriage OK
Blpartiaan member• o! the House
Foreign Affairs Commllttt a r e
delib<ratlng a demaod for lhe o<111'r ol
MrL Rita E. Hauser as U.S. Represen-
tatlve to the United Nathm Human
Rlghtl CommissiM,
Ullder bacbtage cooslderaUoo 11 the
Econonaics No lake . .. • ...
Agnew's Unfunny Humor
Vice.President Spiro A&now -i<!11D11
ready !or lhe fall PoilUcal circuit-ii busy
'lfQnlng up a new acl. Lll<e all perform-
ers, the Vice President COllllalltly noeds
new material. 1be old jokes about the
media are wearing thin, 1et Mr. Agnew
has turned to economics.
Econom1cs lln't called the '1diJmal
scieoce" for nothing, but in the Vice
President's bands it comes alive. 'I'hlre ii
humcr for everyone in hit initial effort -
tncreuingly dangerbu.!..''
Whfn he lurnl to uaemp!Oym<nt,
:Agnew's humor become• a bit cruel. He
taib :o1 jobs and caree.rs terminated in
defense plants and laboratorits-reduc-
Uons which, as he says, "tend to hlt sel-
ected proles&loos and skil!J" far harder
than general red-
1 appeari.Jg in, of all places, t b •
Now ~ couroe neltber ol thele
statements b tn' any way true;. the rich·
humor derives from the lac! that presut
spending levela actually incuue the
amount ol defense and war spending.
TllEN HE SAYS lb ... problems could
have been made easier U Congress bad
enacted some of Mr. Niion'a pf'11gtams,
tnclitding the ••revoluUoriary new ap-
proach to family aasi.stance." A~w·s
reference to the Ni%on weUare ref'onn
plan, benefiting families on welfare earn..
tng less than $2,200 per year, may come
a a. bit ol lboct to out.of•ort fffO.
nautical eogJneen Md. Q!OCe ldeotl.sts.
who doo'I cintlnuilJ lldnk -food stamps.
Allett-Gold81Dith
\~
making o! !UCh a reQuesl In a lelll< to
Prelideol Nixon.
Mrs. HaUS<r aroused lhe outraged Ir•
of tbe 1egislaton by her speecb before
the American Bar AMociation in St.
Louis a few days ago, advocating' repeal
of laws prohibiting marriage between
penoo1 ol the same sa. She contended
lllCb statutes ar:e uncoostitutionaL
ASSERTING th e s e laws are
pr<dictod on the lho<lry tN1 reinciuc-
tioo is the primary purpo3e of marriage.
Mn e.user argued that limiting repioduction bas become a worldwide
toclal aim and .. I know .o better way of
accomplishing that than m a r r l a g e
between the same sexes."
Rep. Clement Zablocki, Wis., ~nd
ranklng Democrat, excoriated Mrs.
Hauser for expounding what he
characterized as "an example o( the
moral rot which is ln!ectinr our nation."
These seatiments were heartily secotMl-
ed by R<p. IL R. G,.,. ol Iowa, a rank·
Ing Replbllcan committeeman. The
veteran legillator not ooly agreed with
what Zablocki said about Mrs. Hauser
but also deoouoced the United Nations as
"decadent and malodorous".
"What else would you e'lped from the
tordid United Nations?" he Asked.
ZABLOCKI,.& subcomnUtlet chairman,
placed respomibility for cracking don
on htr on the Nixon administration.
"Surely we must loot to someone in the
White House or near it to confinn or
deny approval of her astoundlng recom-
mendations," declared Zablocki. ••1 say
that because it is disturbing, indeed, to
have such non.sense coming, not from
academlcianl or wild • blue • 'yonder
radicals but from a person in a high and
nspoasible position in the administration.
"I wonder if Mrs. Hauser and others in
htgh places have given careful con-
lideration to the social implicaUoM of
ssncUotU.ng unnatural Ualsons. 'lbe effect
on public morals in tbl.s country of
authorizing bomoseJual1ty would, in my
opbUon, be catastrophic, not to say
revolting and disptirtj.''
By Robert S. Alle1 and
Jotui A. Gold•mltll
-----Thursday, August 20, 1970
7'llf edllorlol page ot 1114 Dailw
Pilot 11t1u to inform and Jtim-
ulaU: rtadt'rt b11 J)f't11nting thtt
11<w.IJ'Ol)tr'1 opllllo1u and co"" ""'"°.., on topCa of fnt~tat
.,.<! ligfllflolnu, btl providing o
fonm /M IM UJ>!'fui<m of
'"" r.od<rr' opilllo1u, and b• prunting Olt diotrtt d e'°'
pcltoll o/ lnform<d ob1m>m
.,.<! ipok<1mn Oft topics of Uu
dq.
Robe1t JI, Weed, P!ablllber
(
Walblngtoa Post. Agnew's one.llnera ap-
pear uoder lhe witty headline "The Myth
. 'lb&t We Are In a Receuion."
'Ibo Jot• In Jful!IDg!Dn Is tllat lld-
mimltraliml econom\sta are the Gliel who
bat11 aahl ft. are. ln • recession, ud 90
hu'l'rusol:;r Secretary David Kennedy.
Theo, while the reader is still chuctl-
big-perhaps a bit nervously if be is one
of the million aDd a hall people who have
become unemployed since ·Mr. Agnew
was inaugurated -be moves to IOIDe
really solid material.
In the course oJ'. what be calls "some
observations that J don't believe hav~
been getlilg through to the public in moot
recent newspaper commentary," the Vice
President says the economy is mw mat·
iag two major readjustments. We are
going through, he writes with 1 straight
face, a "major decllne In defense spen-
ding'~ while we are cooling off "a loog m.
OaU111ary overheating that bad become
FUllTHERMOBE, lnllaUoo II ri&llg at
a more rapid rate than It wu in i•.
The llgures for July &bow-that the
wholesale price indeJ 1'09e at an annual
rate o( 7.2 peroeot as cotnpiared with a
1989 rate of 6 perceal
Mr. Agnew develops his joke about "a
major decline in defense spending" at
great length, ~g it for more laughs
thaa probably are in it. He callJ It a
••massive reordering of prJoriUes," and
even says that by "mid·lr71 tbe reduc~
tlons will approaCh $20 brruon.• Here the-
Vice President's hyperbole may bave
gone too far. Sen. William Promtlrt has
demolSlrated that there bu been as yet
no reduction in defense spending-that
defeue hudiet rely almoot tolely on Im-
aginative boobeping.
In ~ Of dollars spent on defeo111
thi.s year we ·are atill ahead of last.
A few months ago, theft wu a good
laugh in Washillgton when President Nix·
on denounced Coagreu for not acting on
an emergency housing bill Mr • .NiJon said
he had :rubmllted in February. It iutned
out that be ·had not aubmitted a housing
hill in Februllf}', or lllf other time. Mr.
Apew, trying for the same laugh, now
.aaylfbe tilU was sent-to O:li~ "early
this year.'' ·
0. the whole, Mr. Agnew was funnier
when he wu talklng about the prm. He
didn't know anything about that subject,
either, but be didn't have to work so hard. '
By Tom nr.len and
Frmk Mllllki.ewics
Breakfast of Chumpions
•
h ootblng l&Cred? A Washington outrl·
tionist claims that virtually all of our Na-
tion's most cherished breakfast certals
"have about as
much nutriUonal
value as a shot of
wltlskey."
out ol 60 lead-
ing cereal•
tested, Robert a...i. glwnly
told a Senate fr).
vestlgaUog com-
mit~. only niM
. were worth tht
hotbe• ol chewing up and swallowing.
1b1nk wbat this revelation means to
our American culture: "Jack Daniels'•
-The Breakrast of Champions!'' And
across the land nutrlUon-miM!ed mothers
will be snipping at their Utile ones, ••Shut
up and drlak your breakfut!"
BUT UIT'S NOT he hasty. Let"1 not
lose faith ln our great breakfast cereal
manufacturing iodustty. We can be con.
fideot Ill leaden wtll -t this thall"'I•
Jn ttue America fashion.
Already Ult makers of KaZowee1!
(lops in uJes., 8J st in nutrltJonaJ vallJC!)
have radically altered their product to
meet the new altuallo1.
Ka-1.owees! as any television viewer
knows. are "ta1ty, chocolate-covered
Styrofoam Cakes dropped from airplanet
-the cereal thlt buoys you up all day!"
The dis<lolurt, In Sonat. testimony,
lhal Ibey "'b<ted the nutritional value ol
a case of cheap vodka" caused a near·
paaio at The Ka·?.owet Breakfast Cerreat
and Llfuart Mfg. Corp.
BOARD CJIAIRMAN S. J. Lovthearl
laid It on the Uno: "Genllemen, either,..
' '
~~
'I don't r»ant proUU...
I r.oant the moon tnu:lot
iii the Kni1rk PDPS ho;d'.
rethlat our product or we sink with IL"
"I think I'vt got It, S. J.," aald Snodley,
the )'OWll market analy1L "First, we
double our Jumbo-size box to make: a
Super.Jumbo siu box. Nut, we raise the
price 20 cents. Laslly, we emblaz:on the
front wtth thus grabber : "SPECIAL -11
centa OFF!'"
"Great," said merchandise director
Frana ... And we ca11doubleourCrte11ve-
away olfer. Instead of one Hanay-Dandy
Flame Thrower for one box top and
$49.98, we offer two for two box tops alld
$99.915. ..
"And with the bigger boJ," uld
rtse.arch director Billings1ate t1cltedly,
••'J'bere'll be room ror 27 plastic Surprise
Priz.e.s insttad of the present 13."
"WHAT ABOUT the C»Sl of all thls!"
the treasurer, Sourwlne, aa1d JOW"ly.
''Styrofoam doesn1. grow op trees, you
know. Why, with what you'd spet1d 01 e:t4
tra prizes and premiums, we couldn 't af-
ford to make Ka-1A:Jwees 11utritious!J
And we all lnow we can't afford that."
Tbert was full minute ol thickeniag
gloom. It was broken by that creative
)'oUDg getlus, Jack Armstrong. He. saved
the giant corporation with foui litUe
words.
''Leave out," be llkt, ''the K•
7.owees! !"
So look on yoor grocen' lhelves next
Week for the ALL-NEW Kl·Zowees! I in
the Super.Jumbo boz (lt cents OFF-!)
W:ith two free offers on the back. Each
boJ containi 27 Surprise PriRa and a full
cubic foot of fresh air.
Moreover, you can believe the clabn on
~ la!>tl: "Th.ls boJ of K•~tes !!,, by
,ICleJtific test, contaim as much nutri~
tklnal value 11 five out of six leading
breakfast cereals."
Meanwhile, &lay tuned to yoor fadio for
that thriWng Rew adventure serial,
brought to you by Schenley Distillers Co.,
"Dean Martm -All-American Boy!"
Quote1'
Mn. Donia Karla, Brtlbut -"To be
a homemaker tn the trutat sense is to
stlmulale your mind with worthwhile
books, keep lnfonned on cumnl evtntl
on the world scene_ to be a helpmate to
your husband and the tincl of 'godly'
mother who can mold and influence
)'OUZ'll Uves."
It.In. Geori'i C.CatDll, OIM., Stak's
Adfl.so<y Comniluloo • lhe SlaCQ of
Wome• -"lt'• the quality, not the
quantity, of child care that counts and
you an a more valuable mother if
you are out lo UM! mainltre.am."
Market Drop "
Proves Boon
In One Wa)'·
:sydney). Harris
In all the moaning and groaning and
gnashing of teeth about the stock market
plunge tllla spring the only sensible words
I heard in the
cl"orus of lament
came from Milton
Friedman, t h e
arch • consefva·
tive ecoflOmist Bt
the University o£
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Angela, you read U1e bumper strip
wrqng. It said -''Register Com-
munists Not .Firearms." You did it
backwards and look where it got
you! -C.K.
Tiiis ,.,tur. ••U"flt ttffen' ""~ llff
JIKH!oal"f llre~ II IM """-"'" S.... ,_ "' "'w' Ho OIMmr oua, Dlllr l'lllt,
An immensely perspicuous economist
-whose opinions must be respected,
even when his ainclusions are rejected -
Prof. · Friedman, as a doctor of the
economy, pulled oul the thermometer and
found that the patient was sll;{fering from
a g~Jloping fever known as "paper pro-
fits."
Olicago. I NONE OF THE speculaton deserved
Pro!, Frledmm\ Ulese prollCs. Tiley bad done nothing to
opined as bow the earn them; nor were the prolits an ac-
drop in market curate renection of economic conditions.
. prices wasn't a The fever was simply a fonn of greed.
bad Jbing at all, and was probab!y health-nl_)t productivity or acumen or any com-
ful for the e~omy. Evf!l though J lost ~; binaUon or resources and skill
my p_lttance 1n the sharp decline, and felt , But if capitalism is to work as jt was
emotionally .as well as fiscally 'b!Wsed, Intended to, and not become an inflated
later reflection compelled me to agree. perversion of itself the individual invest•
Most ordinary ~le ~ "invest" in or must be prepa'.red to take the Jong
the marke~ are not invest.in~ at all;, they view, to support a company because he
are gambhng. They have htUe notion ol. thinks it is a sound one and to stick with
what ~ey are doing, and no particular in· his judgment even in ~everses. Only in
terest m the , welfare of any company -this way can he contribute stabilltf and
ercept to gam as much as fast as they confidence to the economy, and encour~
can. age companies to plan ahead on a ration-
THEY CONTRIBUTE nothing toward al basis.
our national productivity, and will buy nlE STOCK MARKET should not be
any stock that sounds attracUve, an expensive toy or a roulette ""'heel: it
deserting il as soon as they lose interest should not operate for the benefit of rich
(or principal) They are too fickle for a insiders, but neither should it become a
company to rely on, and too impatient to shutUecock for miUions of outsiders who
wail for long-term benefits. They are, in ml!f'ely want to gamble, grab, and get
short. parasites, predators, plungers and • .out.
poor saps. Myself included. This, basica lly, is demeaning to the
There just was no sense to the market , .whole economic process, and cheapena
in the couple of years precedin& the rather than enhances the market
plunge-stock prices bore no relation to • mechanism, to the final disillusionment
reality al all. of all.
Laboratory in Court
Suing a soap company for damages, a
botmewtfe charged that a ce~n sham-
poo had caused her hair to fall out. Dur·
ing the trial, the company offered to have
a model use the shampoo in front of the
jury -to demonstrate, '1>efore your
very eyes," that her bait would not fall
out.
But the court rejected thls experiment.
The judge pointed out that. since the
housewife's hair allegedly fell out ove~ a
period of monlM, it wouldn't help to see
whether the model's hair would fall o•t in
a period ol minutes.
EXPFJUMENTS In the courtroom can
be mighty persuasive. But, precisely (or
that realon, the law is COJlCf:med to keep
them within fair limits. An experiment
won't be allowed if it is not similar to
the origin.al situationf justify compari·
"'"· On the other hand, the experiment need
not be identical in every detail. For ti•
ample:
A woman shopper, who had slipped on
the floor of a mafket, wanted to
demonstrate for the jury the sllpperine.~
of a cleanser that bad been used on the
floor. The market protested that her test
214mplc came from a dllferent balch of
cleanser.
But the court decided the experiment
should be allowed. The judge Nld that.
11incc It was the same prodyct, from lhe
same manufacturer. there wu m:iugh
&lmllarlty to Justify mating th< tesl
OF COURSE there ls always the rlsk
that an experiment, even though permit·
ted, may boomerana llld prove. lhe wroog
thin&·
Law iu Action
--.
.Jn one case a woman sued a railroad
for losing ber trunk. She sought payment
not onty for the trunk ilselr but also for a
great many articles of clothing which.
sbe claimed, bad been in it.
On the day or the trial, the railroad'•
lawyer brought into court a trunk or ei-
actly the same sl:r.e -and a duplicate of
• each and every item the woman bad
listed,
"Now, madam,'' he said with a bow,
"kindly show the jury how you were able
to get all these things into your trunk."
·with perfect aplomb the woman pro-
ceeded to fold, tuck and fit the items 10
neatly that she not only got everything in
but bad plenty of room left over. Result:
she collected in full.
An An1ericu" Bnr Association
i:n•blic service Jeot1're b11 WUl Bt no rd.
....----B11 G~org~ --.,,,
Dear Geort:e:
Do you think advice columolst1
deserve. such a high place in the
general pictu~ or contemporary
America? SKEPTIC Dear Sk~ptl~:
No, anrl the minute 1 get these
~eel-together •heels through the
bttrs I'm getting down out of htrt.
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lJ1urM111, M!gust 20, 1970 DAILY 11LOT '1
~ -Seienee -Protein Sear~h--Lf»o·ks E-verywhere CHECPKING WASHINGT<>N (AP) -JJnjJ<d Nations esUma1'S ..,. b, Alla I grams. peanuts, which have Jona been or used for ferU!iur. h1 this decaM and to htllllllll e u e Scientlst.s-a r e rumm11ing cur dilly from hu..;iger or Jt Ja in tbe. anlrrta)..poor known as rich SOW"<U of pro-Ellewhere, the pro d u c t s by the next.
through trash cans, siltlng the malnutrition. With the popu.Ja. countries ~e sclentisU are Win. They are also atractlo1 • being lapped for protein de.-Researcher• clte th1I co.
seu and barvesthia: f~ and tion of the w or 1 d upecttd preu1.ag hardest to extract the proteins from m a t e r I a 1 s pend on what's available : com parl!on: A 1,000-pound ttetr
1erms in Uie quest for 'cbeap, tQ more than double to 7 billion proteins directly from grasses, forme.rly thrown away or It· tasst.1.s at Kansas S t a t e m a k e 1 about 4 poundl o(
pteotit,ll sourtt5 oi prolein, by the ~d of the century, the iralos l:nd other substances. nored. '. University, sugat cane waste useful protein In a day, whlll
the 'bod)''• Ht important problem 1S likely to grow more South Africans, Colombians P. R. Krifdmaswamy of In COiombia,. cocoouts In The 1,000 PoUnds of yeast can
lWue bulldl!!r. acute. and G'\latemalans are already India's Protein Foods A!Jocla~ 1 make 4,000 pounds ot prottlo
Their searclt, reported at In the United Slates. ac-drinking beverages endowed Uoo noted that his country for p h J 1 PP 1 a e 1 ' weeds ln in the same period.
SlantiI1g Rain
'
Restful Thougl1t
By L. &f. ~YD
M 0 ST RELAXING mental
Image )'OU can dream up, it's
said, 11 alanUng rain. Sleep
specialists suggest lpsomniacs
envision· same when trying to
doze off. ••• OOMa.10NFSr •
psychosomatic ailment among
professiooal s I n g e r s is
lllryngitts. Among professional
wrestlers it's skin rash.
the 'lblrd I n t e r n a t Io n a l cording to an Agriculture with the e1Qt1c-~_g elample, is one ol the ~ld'a Portugal, "junk fish" in Seat· 'Iliffe are problems. Swills
Congress on Food Science and Department survey, most peo-names of "Pro-Nutro" and largest producers of peanuts tie, fun g I and bacteria in researchers repOrted their
TechnolOf!y now under WBJY pie get more th~n eDOUgh pro-"Incaparlna" 1nd f0rtif'8d by and co~tui, yet eats only 5 to I England, seaweed, algae and noodles made from algae had
here, ls fUeled by the realm. tein. Nortb Amerk:ans on the protein exlracted from soy· percent of its peanuts and · microbe• in Japan. a sickly green cok>t. Present
tion that in u>e standlng-room-average eat 66 grams of beans, Indians enrleh bi8culb feeds cattle on 70 percent of C.R. Gatellier of the French alialfa protein contah too
only world of the· future-and antmaJ protein a pertOn per and candies with peanut flour. the seeds culled from its cot· Petroleum Inatitute reported much undigestlble materilL
kind.' And suddenly I believed in already crowded countries day, supPlemented by milk, And even In the United States, ton bolls. on. plans tn France, Japan and The Israelis uid their aoybesn
him completely. 'lbat was the -space is at a premium for eggs and cereals. firms are test.marteUng ~ Now researchers are trying, Ruula to produce protein flour produced stomach gas.
moment I stopped being a the animals wb1ch provide But the-individua,l con--teiMnrlched f Io u r and to tap the 1.6 million tons of 50 from a yeast culture grown in R~chers are beln1 careful
single girl and became a men with protein. sumption of -nlmal intein in noodles. percent protein pulp from a pejroleum medium. He to scan their tubstances for
spinster, her oullook .• Since Protein deficleocy is· a vital the Near E a 1 t averages 14 But sclentirts aren't ~ pressing peanuts lnto oil. 1be estimated the protein will be any toxic er c a n c er o u 1
factor in the 10,000 deaths tbe grams, ·m Africa 11 grams an ping with soybeam • a n d cake is usually led to animals ready for (eating to animals elements. tbatday,l've&~aysknownl\~~~~~:._~~-~=---'~~~~'--~~....:.....:...~~--'~~.:....~~~~~-'-~~~~~...,--=--'-'----=~~~~~~~~~~~~-
CONSIDER TIU8 -Among
those believers Jn rein-
carnation is a feminine
:subscriber who would like to
return to this earth as a baby
robin. Writes she: ''To .learn
to Oy la the wind! To learn to
sing on a branch! How won-
drous !"Might be all right, at
that. Still, it's not for me. The
average baby rObin eats 14
feet of earthworms every day.
That's out.
OPEN QUESTION -Why is
it mental patients rarely get
headaches?
VALUE NOW OF the
average shoplifted item is $29.
THAT AGE AT which an in·
ventor is most apt to file bis
first patent is ~ . . . A
NEWBORN BABY blue whale
gains about 10 pounds per
hour.
LOVE AND WAR-"When I
was young," writes a lone lady
now in retirement, "I always
asswned I'd marry. lt never
occurred to me that I
wouldn't. Then one day when I
was 29 -and keeping com-
pany with a milk truck driver
in Boise -I asked the young
man why bl!! didn't propose to
me. He laughed and said,
'Come on, for the same reason
nobody else ever proposed to
you. You're not the marrying
wouldn't ,marry. It bas ~~
occurred to me, not even once
"-that I woyl~ '.' .
CUSTOMER SERVICE~ Q.
"Do. the Japanese take thrtir
vacaticns in the summer like
We cjo'?" A. That they do. Most-
ly in Au.gust .•• Q.' "Will ze.
bras. breed in captivity?" A.
Almost never, and who can
blame tbem? • • Q. "What's
A. Gordon's.
HOW MANY FIRST names
come to mind 1hat spell the
same way backwards as
forwards? Start with Nan, Ot·
to, Bob and Lil. Have I·teft out
any? . • , NOTHING ODD
ABOUT the fact that Sious: Ci-
ty is in Iowa. What's odd ls
South Sioux City is i n
Nebcaska and North Sioui: Ci·
ty is in South Dakota . . . AM
ASKED THE origin of t h a t
word "hick." Originally, it
was Manhattan nomeoclature
for any resident of Hicksville,
N.Y.
HOUSEHOW HINT
What, you say whenever you
paint anything outdoors, every
gnat in the neighborhood lands
on your damp handJwork?
That's easy to fix. Mix an oun-
ce of camphor with each
gallon of paint.
Your questions and com-
ments are welcomed and
will be used in Checking
Up whenever possible.
Please address your letter&
to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box
1875, Newpqrt Beach 92663
Lie Detector Export
Says lnnocent,s Saved
LOS ANGELES (AP} -The Ht said polygraph evidence
lie detector, feared by many Is Dow acceptable in all courts
as yet another technological in three states and .in lower
device at the disposal of law courts in 2S others, including
enforcement, actually has sav· Calliomia .
ed. thousands of innocent More than half of all lie
persons from prison, a detectors are u s e d com·
polygraph expert says. mercially, Reid said. He said
''The polygraph is the finest they help detect office crimes
instrument in the world for and assist in interviews for
the poor unfortunate person "positions of trust."
who can't defend himseU,".----------1
John Reid told a news con-
ference Monday. Reid, 60, is
attending the flftb annual
Tiieeting of the American
Polygraph Association.
"'Ihe imtrumenl seeks no
distinction between the rich
and the poor, the educated and
the uneducated," Reid said.
"Sometimes we have made
mistakes -we have passed
guilty persons as innocent.
"But no case , has been
brought to our attention where
we had passed an innocent
person as guilty.
Reid, who has worked with
1ie detectors for 30 years -
longer, he said, than anyone
else in the country -said of
111 persons in the U.S. who
have submitted *° polyi)aph
tests, 70 percent were ptoved
innocent
He said he has examined
more than 30,000 persons who ~
volunteered to be tested.
In a polygraph t e st ,
:iiem!Uve devlcl!!S measure the
person's blood pressure, pulse,
respiration and skin response
while he is asked 10 qul!!SUons,
Reid said. Four are pertinent
to . the crime, four atl!! lr·
relevant, and two are CQl'ltrol
questions .
Even chronic liars show tell-
tale changes on the graphs
because of their fear or being
caught, Reid said. "You just
need an issue aboUt which the
person is concerned," he said .
Optn--Thurs. 9a.m.~ p.m.;frl 9a .... -6p.m.
•U•NA PARK ·~· HUNTINGTON ••ACH
Mercury Savlnp Bldg. ~ Mercury Savlnp Bid&.
Valley View 1t Llncol11 ' . Ed1n1er 1t Betch
********* *******
.,
I
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546·7080 COSTA MESA
WEEIDiYS 9 to 9
SATU.DAY & SUNDAY
9 TO 5
GLIDDEN SPRED
ENAMEL
0 Th• high 91011 1tuff yo~
migJ.t W•nt to 1i11• in #it
••td.11 or •11ywh.r•
1p1rkl• m••111 pl•11ty.
D s • ., whit , .. ,, h•pp1111d
to Sp1rkl• Pl•nty,
111yhow7
197 9r.
PAINT BRUSHES
0 Ti•• your choic1, 011• or
thr•o inch bruth••·
0 luck•cl out •1•i11, I n••cl
• tw• i11ch llr111h. ·
0 o••Y follt1, n•kf ti1110, fllkf
tim•.
TRU·TEST TOOL BOX
""'-" 0 R1199•cl m•t•I witt. t+i• lift out tf1y,
O P1i11t-' fw,n I 1hould
hop• ••I •11•m•l•d ttii•I ,,.,,
0 Got• http t.'01k It
with, but W• 1111 l1ck1
too.
5aa
BLACK & DlCKER
ROUTER
_,. D P•w•t without• h••"Y thi119
to hold '" to.
D C•mptcf f•r t•tti,., into th•
COtll•rt •"' ciloif'lf th. ieil> ........
6995
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SCO'l'.f'S TURF
BUILDER
0 Thit will frffft•lp yo1r l•wn ert4 '"t
ilur11 it, or you up.
0 .Slow c•ntl"Uo11t prolo1t1M feH'lllf,
but tilo11't count •n it to 90 illf• 11•:11t
Y••r, Co¥1t1 S.000 sq. ft,
IECi.
'·" 895 1.00
OFF
scon'S PLUS 2
l"'~'l'~liiii!i;:J!:'I 0 Co''" 2,500 •q. ff. •""' 1110 knocks off mot• w••d•
th111 1p•c• p•rmih li1tin9 ... , ..
0 Gr••• for 9r11t, r•i1•1 eld
11.d wi#i tilichortclr•.
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7.H. 695
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scon's
CLOUT
Like th. n•m• ••Yt, It ro1Uy
clout• tft• bu91 •ncl ltw11 , .....
D Why pl•nt •good l1w11 Jutt • '° fttd tho11 911y1, cwt off
th•lr rttfon1 now. c..,,,.
1,000 1q .. ft.
'
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ACID
D u .. io ,,.11., ''''" th•
•P•h off c1m•11t or
concr•t• (or i1 1• th•
•th.r w•y •rou114111
0 DUut• It for 1111111'1' •fh1r
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77c 9r.
SPRING DOOR STOP
Q f11•t• lll•Y ta"• th•
•lltir• w•ll if '•It t•lll•I
hom• 111 • tl••r 1wl111l111
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D 1,.,, fllli,h ... ,,.,
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BAR-B-Q
0 Th• big on• with the
1'111f1ttic 111otor, 1pit, 1""
th, work1.
0 Got th• ho.Ill 10 you C•ll
work i11 pri,•cv without
111yo11• t• w1tc:h you llur11
th. , •••••
0 Adju1t.lll• 9rlll 10 you c111
do thi1 thl119 lik• 111 •••ct
1c1•111.t (Wft,11. I cook it'1
111or• llk•'•tt i11•x1ct fictio11.l
88
Ad.,•rtitecl 1p•ci1lt good thn1 A119111t 26, 1970
•••••••••••••••••••••• : FREE CLASS •
• "Scott's Lawn Clinic:" :
• Tun., AuCJ. 25th 7 to 8. p.m. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
DOUBLE HIBACHI
.... -.... T'~~'!""~ Cl For twic• " 111..c:ll
..
co•klit9, oftd twic• th•
full,
0 An4 twin tit. ctferffff
10 1tick +. l••ll
h1mbur1•r, c1.,.i ••
499
REDWOOD
TUB
0 Nie• .wir• l.0111141 tult f•r
illfloor or ovtti!Ofl
pl•nti11"'
0 k.11 .... rt roclwoM,
look1 ktftr wltfl •1i119,
lUk• fi11• wi11,,I 1••
DECORATOR ROLL
CORK
0 Roll out 111 •nlir• w•ll, ff jutt
do • littl• .. 11l11t111 bo1rd. .
0 It'• 11ict incl #iick t• ti••
tho•• cuh liitl• plttt you
lto.l9ht i11 Oilt Hu1•W•r•
til•p•rtm•11t.
UNFlRISHED
GU.N CABINO
0 All 1tl11• with tl•t• cilfff, •• tf•l• •r peillf t. ult,
0 Q•I I IJttll cilrtW•r t. tt•r• your t•l•ffi'11t 9!1Ui,...
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I DAIU PILOT
SACRAMEN'OO (UPI) -
Thirteen unbeodin& Senalors
vowed loday to kill Gov.
Ronald Reagan'• •1 billion tax
revlsloo program, but the
governor rem a In e d "op.
timistic" as the legislature
beaded toward adjournment
A final Senate showdown on
the embattled property tax
relief plan was schedu.Jed to
begin tJlil afternoon and COO·
Unue well into the evening.
The legislature was working
qainst the clock to complete
its buslne$S and wind up the
1970 ltSl.io.o by F.Jiday even-
ing. •.
Reagan bu dacrlbed his
tu procram u "'Ibe most
tm.portant issue to come
ThundlJ, A"""' 20, 1970
before the legislature in a
generation." But to win its
passage, at least one o( Jl
previoW: opponents would have
to vote for the measure.
All 13 told UPI they would
continue to vote no.
1be governor's p a c k a g e
would reduce homeowners'
property taxes and finance the
cut by raising other taxes, in-
cluding sales. Withholding of
the state income tax also
would be adopted.
Reagan was descrjbed as
"optimistic" and ••confident"
by a spokesman, wbo added
"'Ibe governor and all o! us
are working very bard to get
this bill pasoed." T b e
Republican chief executive
Californians · to Vote
On Mills Antismog Bill
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
hardest fought a n t i s m o g
measure of the year is through
the legislature -giving voters
In November a choice on
whether they want to take
101De or the money now spent
Rafferty
Raps Profs
011 Angela
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
State schools chiel Max Raf-
ferty said Wednesday the two
University of California pro-
fessors most responsible for
hiring AngeJa Davis last year
are g u I I t y of "gross ethical
and profe1111onal misconduct"
and should resign.
Miss Davis, Rafferty said, is
nothing but ''a fugitive gun
~II" be wouldn't even hire as
• Cllllodlan.
The former UCLA
pbllooophy instruclor, wbcoe
teaching contract was can-
celed by \IC R<gents this
spring, Tuesday made the
FBJ's "10 most wanted" list
fer supplying the j1lllS used in
the San Rara.i coUrtbowe kid-
mptng and abootout two weeb ....
Ex-JBS
Solon Dies
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Former_ RepuJ>lican
Congressman Edgar Heistand,
who declared himself on Ule
floor of the HOWie as a
member of the John Birch
Society and a figtier of com·
munisn, is dead after a short
Jlloess. He WM 81.
Death came Wednesday of
complicaUona attendant to a
kklney infection, authorities at
Huntington Memorial Hospital
ln Pasadena said.
Heistand b e f o r e rea~
~o rtionment s erved
Ca11fornla'1 old 21st district,
which included parts of Los
Angeles, Pasadena and the
Antelope Valley. His first term
atarted in 1952 and he aerved
for 10 years, serving on the
F.ducation and Labor and
Banking and Currency com·
mittees.
on highways and spend Jt on
mass transit and smog con-
trol.
Eight roll calls were needed
before the measure could
muster the needed 54 "aye"
votes to put the proposition on
tbe November general election
ballot. Tbe vote: 54-18.
"The people have a right lo
detennine if they're going to
survive," said Assemblyman
Frank D. Lantuman (R-La
Canada).
"Let them have a chance to
decide i! they want to continue
choking to death in smog."
The vote was the biggest
victory of the 1970 session for
backers o f environmental
legislation and it sets the
stage for what the measure's
author says may be the most
expensive campaign in tbt
state's history.
The proposaJ by Sen. Jame!
R. Mills CD-San Diego), wouJd
strike a provision in the state
ooruititution since 1938 limiting
lhe use of state gaaoline tu:
revenue to highway building
and maintenance.
The seven-cenl&-a·gallon tax
i! now dlvlded about equally
between the state and local
government and glv• the
state nearJy $70 mllllon a year
for freeway and blgbway pro.-
jedi.
The Mills amendment woold
allow voters of any county to
authorize use of ap ~ 25 per-
cent of the gasoline taxes col-
lected in their area for other
transportation systems such
as buses or rapid transit.
"I think W.. is the 1TI011t
historic accomplishment of the
session," Mills said after the
final As.mnbly vote. The
measure had already passed
the Senate by the ~eeded two-
thirds margin.
State Senate
"Approves Bill
SACRAMENTO (\IP!) -A
bill making it murder to kill
an unborn baby cleared tbe
Senate on a unantmous 35--0
vote Wednesday w it ho u t
discussion or debate.
Under the measure by
Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle
(R-Riverside) it would be
murder to kill 1'A human
being, or a fetus, with malice
a!oretllought."
Mobile Bus Explodes;
Kills Six in Desert
PALM SPRINGS IAP) -
An old school bw cooverted
into a travel home proved a
death trap when a propane gas
tank exploded and burned the
vehicle to the ground, taking
sl:x lives, the highway patrol
said.
Four other persons were
seriously burned Wednesday In
what patrolman John Dorn
called "a real holocaust."
David Paul Bruce, 22, of San
Bernardino, said he was
traveling east toward Indio on
Interstate 10 when "this old
bus came over the hlll with
fire pouring out all ill win-
dows."
The emergency elit was
useless, he .uld, because a
rnotorcy('.le was 1 t r a pp e d
iecurely acrou the rear of the
vehicle.
"Ont woman new out a win-
dew and landed on the
highway with ber clothes
afire," said Bruce. "Five
other people sot (M.lt ol the
other side of the bus, 1Crtam-
lng and yelling. Other pe<ple
who arrlvOO at the scene start-
ed ripping o(f the clothe• of
the lady In the roadway."
Dta~ Jt the acene wtre F.dna l>1vl11 11; her atattr,
Dnlsci1la, 13, both of El Paso.
Tex .; Jimmy Cottrill, 15, and
his ste~brother, Jon-Jomo
Scott, 19 months, both of
Toledo, Ohio.
Two others succumbed later
at Desert Hospital here. They
were CIUford Tandy, 61 1 of
Toledo, grandfather of the
Cottrill and Scott youngsters;
and Dorothy Davis, 49, mother or the Davis girls.
Under treatment at the
hospital for serious burns, but
reported in fa ir condition,
were Myron Davis, 50, father
of the Tex as children and
driver of the bus: two other
Da~is children, Patricia, 14 ,
and Mike tS ; and Barbara
Scott, 38, Toledo, mother of
Joo.Jomo Scott and step-
mother lo the Cottrill boy.
Investigators said tht 10
persons were en route from El
Paso to Los Angeles when I ht
propane tank, mounted under
the bus noor. •lJlloded.
Bruce slJd the bus stopped
In the westbound lane, ltltn
cros!Cd the median strip Into
the eastbound !ants." he
reported. "After about 50 feel
tt rolled part way down an
embaalonent.."
conferred with S e n a to r s
Wedntlday a n d scbodulod
more priYate meetings today
in an attempt to pry loose the
measure.
Edwin J. Cray, Assistant'
Press Secretary, said the
goyernor bas not ruled out the
possibility or calling a special
legislative session to consider
tax reform if the legislature
rejects his program.
Reagan's plan awists of
three bills, two of which have
cleared the Senate. '!be third
requires 27 votes, and the
governor only b a d com-
mitments for 26. Even two of
those were not schedull'd to be
available until this alternoon.
Gani"' Grove
14D40 llOOKHUIST
4, ADD HAKIFLUID AS NllDID
5, AIC·GRIND UNING
6 ILllD sm1M & <LIAN IAClllNG
' PLAT! Al NllDID
-
7, GRIASI & PACK WMllL llAllNGS 8 ALL CYLINDIRI INSPICTID INCLUDING
' MASTll CYLINDER
9, IOUTI WHllll & ADJUST HAKES
10, I.DAD TIST VIHICLITO SUNDAIDI
HURRY I
WHILI
THEY
LAST •••
Wffllt·
SPICfA1
-1 " 1
( · TIRES
Your Poclcetlloolc • • •
BRAND NEW
••o::,~'" The Guardian Premium or
rinlll!a
9.~ 1495 1595 .~::;·~ ~
6 7.JSa14(171fl41 -,.1:n1:i ;:~::::::~~:)
17i95 ......
' lli71/14l
1.oor11a.2s.1s
((71/1 J}IG71115) 21 95 .......
0171/14}
l..SJ115
(N71(1S)
U11f141 t .ODI 24 95 ....... 2695
1.llhlS ,.1Sa1S
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t.ss1e14
IH711J4J
l.SSll:JS
(H7fJlS)
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FREE
COFFEE
HOW
RACING-TYPE
TIRES
RAISED LETTER
60 SERIES & OTH
COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH ARIA
1c-r If trwlrllllll'tt a Weshnlfottlfl
3005 HARBOR BLVD. SJO.J200
.t. .. blm • .. _ Parlr
6962 LINCOLN ILVD.
ICWMr ef LIM.ii. .... lt""11
126-5550 CORNIR OF BAKER & HARBOR 557·1000
•
--
Th11rsd1.Y, AuQUst 20, 1970 OA!LY PILOT 9
Transplant
'Haste'
Blasted
.... ar ...... u111..._11_-----~--yPhl-..,•-11119_"-"_ •. Railroad fhogging Through Afri~a -
STANFORD, Calif. CAP) -
Dr. Norman E. Shmuway,
bead of Stanford Universliy's
heart transplant team, aay1 ·
aome surgeons displayed
.. almost irresponsible" haste
to get in on the acclaim drawn
by the dramaUc oPeration.
"It was almost a political
thing," Shumway slid in a
reporl published in I h I s
month's California Medicine.
When South Africa's Dr.
Chrisliaan Barnard electrified
the world with the first heart
transplant on a human being
Dec. 3, 1967, "everyone had to
try it," Shumway said.
Shumway leads the ·only
surgical team still performing &•W " · tra:st!i1f~ :ny~~gular basis ~~~ Ot:liosF-~-.tt~Y..W ... --'
Shumway's team performed "a .. .a _,......_ _,._.._ .w~ "11";111
Slanfonl'• f~st and I h e """.' llolr, :B;';' ~'do"'it".'77"""' ~ •
world's fourth human heart ·------·----r,-------:-1 transplant in January 1968. Of 4
the 25 Stanford transplant
redpienta, eight survive, the
longest for 22 months. 4•natlon Trip
Of the 161 worldwlt'e
transplants, 29 survive.
Shumway said Stanford's
rate of auccess -35 percent
survival after one year,
against less than 10 percent in
the rest of the world -Is due to experience ama,ssed at
Stanford before the
Agnew's~ Asia Visit ·
To Reassure Nations
lransplant.s.
For nine years preceding the
operation that gave a new
heart to Mike Kasperak, the
first Stanford transplant reci-
r.ient, Shumway and his col-
eagues studied s u r g i c a 1
transplant techniques, human
tissues and irgmune reactions.
With few exceptions.
Shumway said, surgeons wbo
performed transplants did not
have the background com-
manded by the Stanford
group.
"Some of these surgeons
were almost irresponsible in
the way they jumped in" after
Barnard gave Lou 1 s
Washkansky a new heart, he
said.
Shumway said transplants
were later halted "not so
much because of p u b I i c
cognizance of the problem, but
by physicians who stopped
referring patients to -doctors
doing the transplants."
Various approaches are
being investigated to counter
the major obstacle t o
transplants -the body's
tendency to reject a
transplanted heart as foreign
tissue.
One is tissue-typing, which
seeka donors with body tissue
closely resembling that of
recipients. Another is the use
of antilympbocyte globulin, a
serum derived from horses'
blood that has been injected
with human white blood cells.
W ASIDNGTON (AP) -Vice
Pmldent Spiro T. Asnew, In a
new fight with senators Who
favor faster U.S. withdrawal
from Vietnam, returns to Asia
this weekend to reassure
AmeriC4JJ allies the NiIOD ad-
mlni.!ltration will honor its
cornmltmenta.
The vice president's four-na-
tion trip, covering some of the
growid he vi.sited eight months
ago, iB described J>y associates
as a steadying operation to
reassure South Korea, Na-
tionalist China, Thailand and
SQuth Vietnam of U.S. in-
tentions to maintain a hand in
Alia.
Reauurances are planned.
one source said, because of
the reduced U.S. role in Asia
under the year-old Nixon Doc-
trine and the continuing
assault by senators who favor
even sharper limitations on
the American commitment.
Agnew assailed t h e S e
senators Monday in words he
described as "among the
strongest since I took office."
He charged the McGovem-
Hatfield amendment to cut off
funds for U.S: acUviUes in
Indochina is "a blueprint for
the first defeat in the history
of the United States -and for
chaos and communi!m for the
future of South Vietnam."
In part, Agnew's new trip
will give. the vice president an
opportunity to tell p r-o -
American Asian leaders, as he
did last January, thal Senile
critics represent a minority
viewpoint in the United States.
In South Korea, the only
CQuntry on the itinerary which
the vice president did not visit
on hi! first trip, Agnew i:1 ex·
pected to give assurances the
United States wW aul!t with
the moderization of that na-
tion's military force . There are
plans to pull out aome 20,000 of
the 63,000 U.S. troops there.
Jn addition, the S o u t h
Koreans are understood to be
concerned about t h e in-
c r e a s i n g protectionist sen-
timent in !be United . Stata,
especially the drive to put
curbs on imports of teitiles.
This could have even more
imgact in Korea than Japan,
some aources aald.
ln Thailand, a major subject
is expected to be negotiations
over prospects for U.S. finan-
cial support for Thai aid to
Cambodia.
Jn Formosa, import quotas '
and u~. plans for rtlations
with Commuflist Olioa are on
the agenda for what is ex·
pected to be the eas1est stop of
the trip.
Various subjects are to be
discussed in South Vietnam,
but aides say the trip ha1
nothing to do with the South
Vietnamese Senate elections
scheduled. Aug. 30.
llilaa r,an 118 rellXlna~ ..
THE COfFEE POT IS ALWAYS ON
How about a cup of 1ich, hot coffee, freshly brnwed?
Or would you pref tr hot te11 Hne somt dtlleious
fr'1h.Oaked cookin! li's a 111ul11 dtl~ ll!Yitt
of your Newport Naliontl Bin~ Sit-I Rtlul Tau
limo t;umrindl ro11otyorrr probl1rr1t>torl Ill
hol rolroshmonb and coo~H f'lt yoo a irlw-'"'
for tht day. Newport Nltlontl Bini ii al•IYI
thin~nr of you I W1'n blt1I d~n1 ~ fllryttrL
Enjoy this, aloil1 with other 11nlQu1s:eMcu11
"Thi MOii Un~ut Bon• I• The Wol1d.~
Bl UilQll
9 CONYINllNt . OfflCll IDVIN• OllANOI COUNTY
Alfptrt Olflal Mldltll0111t M1Wthur 8"·3111 • llYtilt om. ~de 1tJ11t1bolt1 M2·1141
C.11 ... P1rk Oftla Nutwoof •I Comm.,,,.11th 111-2t00 •...., Hiii Office Ht~ It Bret 171·7!90 S11ptrilt Ofllct Sul)fr!Of 1t Placentl• 642·9511 • UalttnllJ Dffk:t Cnt d!1pmi111t St1te Coll111111·4140
Wntdltr Otflu Wlltellll tt l>o¥tr '42·3111
St11 hKlll Otflct ltisurt World, S.11 IMCll 51 .. 2.711 • ltpft1 Mlhl Mlai lllsurt World, La1u1111 HlrttU0-3200
S1'0FDOjlP, SO•th Africo
(AP) -Giant earthmoving
mach.lnel are carving a 127 ..
Jll)Je railroad out of the virgin
wlldemess where Zulu warrior
chieftain Chaka once reigned
supreme.
A· self-contained village with
ill mt alrslrip has sprung up
Z11 four months amid the heat
and dust of the remote
Zult:!aod countryside 40 miles
lnllnd lrom Empangeni, the
nearest: town of any 1iie.
JWJon,born -boos Pierro MatUoda rules u ae.lf·
styled mayor over the hamlet
he created and named stof-
dorp -Afrikaans for ''dust
vlllace.''
Stofdorp exisls because Mat-
tJoda won a '2.1 mllion govern-
ment contract fer a flv•mile
sllce ol the longeet railrold to
be bull In Soulh Africa lllls
cenlury. II will link coulal
Rlchatd's Bay with Vrybekl. in
the northern Nalal Province
interior at an estimated cost
of $112 million, opening up
•Zululand to indUSlrial and
c o m m ercial development.
.Government planners believe
tiny Richard'• Bay eventually
will outgrow the Indian OCean
harbor of Durbin, 100 miles
south, a!1d become· South
Alrida's biggesl port.
HUGE BAG
$169
CLEAN
DUST llREE
'
Mattioda's share ol the pro-
ject ls relatively small but tt
is a tough job. lits 10 white
and 200 African workers must
blruit more than a milliOfl
cubic yards of rock and dirt
out of the rugged countryside
and build thrte viaducts, a
huge culvert. and a itaUon at a
spot called Ulundl. They
started four months ago and
have 14 months more to finish
the j-Ob.
Mattioda is confident they
will make it. He is a llkeabJe
extrovert with a big booin.lng
voice and an infectious laugh.
He never stops prail!ling hi!
men and machines.
"They get nolhlng but the
best," he say1. "The btlt food
and every modern convenience
such as fridges and stoves."
When they need a haircut be
has them flown to Empangeni
in his personal plane, a craft
he bouiht to speed delivery of
essential spares and supplies
for the job. The plane also
enables tbe men to take a
break in Dui'ban now and then
when bush boredom sets in.
Mattloda doesn't fly himself,
though he's taking lessons. It
takes an exptrienced pilot to
land at Sttlfdorp's airstrip,
which was bulldozed out of the
bush in two days. The strip is
smooth bol by no metN II•~ '° uninlllate<I pilots landliig
down the sloPe are apt to find
them a e Ive 1 acceleratb'll
alarmingly instead of 1lowing
to a hall A mlOky fire lhows
approaching planes wbicb way
the wind is blowing and takes
the place of the u s u a I
windsock.
MatUoda laid out Stofdorp
for maximum self·sufflele:ncy
and comfort 'The village 1up-
plies its own water and eleo-
tricity and bas abund.anS
stocks of everything Jt need.t
for survival, besides piles of
machinery a n d equipment
spares. /
N·SAI!!
~ THE WOR·LD IN MINIATURE
LIVE DEMONSTRATION ON
* CULTURE
* CARE
* PRUNING
* POnlNG
* WATERING
... See and hear it all Sat. & Sun., August 22
& 23 at 11 :00 a.m . -5:00 p.m. Yau will be amazed
at this ancient oriental art.
FROM
I
THE
FlORl$T!
. IEAUTlllUL
By LARRY RAGLE , , , Hobbyist
Rrsttime on sale ... sale!
For • m • r • l«iou1
1 • r d • " -controls
•WMCI• -k•p• root
zone cool111ood mulch
·RED ROSES $1.oooFF
ARTIFICIAL INDOOR
DECORATIVE
PLANTS
llOR
*HOME
*OFFICE * ENTRY
*STORES
LARGE
SELECTION
Of;lE ARE IN-
FULL BLOOM
'"'.U.&.l.i"-1 POICID Pl OM $§95'
c
REDWOOD
STEP PING STONES
DESIGN YOUR OWN
GARDEN PATH
FRESHLY CUT-All SIZES
12' ...
DIAMnll
, INCH
JUST CUTI LONG STEMS
$198 DOZ.
CALL
us ...
FOR COMPLETE
LANDSCAPE
CONSTRUCTION
LICENSED
.CONTRACTORS
Feeds blade
lownswith
nature's rich
balance of
fertilizers
and minerals.
Makes dichandra
50 POUNDS a healthy,
COVERS lush carpet
5000 SQ. FT. of green.
$4 9 5 Destroys
• soil pests, too. REG. $5.95
BANDIN! IS THE WORD FOR FERTILIZER.
PLANTS SEE, HEAR, SMELL,
AND TASTE LOVE
COOL
ROOTS
DIG IN
. SILVER
SPADE
TO GUARD
AGAINST
MIDSUMMER HEAT
$J49 LAR•I
4 CU. PT. IA•S
101 MORI ,,,,,,;,,,,,,. $3.15
KAMA DO
COOKERY
DEMONSTRATIONS All DAY SAT. &
SUN., AUGUST 22 & 23. WATCH THE
EXPERT SHOW ,THE VERSATILITY OF
THE KAMADO ••• CLEAN, SNUFFS
OUT BRIQUETS POR Re.use, GOOD
LOOKING P AT I 0 FURNITURE AC·
CESSORY.
!tED· GREEN· GOLD
SMALL MIDIUM l.Alll
$39.95 $69.95 $99.95
HOUlS i MON, thr11 Fll.' t• 6-SUN. 10 •.m. t• I p.m. -SATURDAY t •.m. t• l rlO ,.m.
2640 Harbor·· 91vd.
COSTA MESA
CALL 546-5525
CHAlel IY
PHONI WITH
YOUI ClllDrr
CAlD
OAILY PILOT
GOODWILL
Industries
GOOD WILLY SEZ:
"H•ve you ever mad• •
Goodwill tour? Thouwnds
do each year, and ara as.-
ton I shed at the scope of
Goodwill Industrias op-
eration. Come 1ny wHk·
dey for a guided tour of
Goodwill's tr1ining Can--
tar. Call 547-6301 ."
590 W. 19tlt St.
Costa Mesa
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9-9
Sot. ' till 5:3~46-2479
Your Dollar
Buys More
At The
GOODWILL
STORE
SPECIALS
THIS WEEK!
BOX SPRINGS
& MATIRESS
$3390
BOX SPRINGS
& MATIRESS $3990
New Extra Firm
IOX SPRINGS
& MATIRESS
$69'5
WOMEN'S
DQSSES
77'UP
BABY
MATIRESS $975
MEN'S
PANTS
55c.77c
AND UP
MEN'S
SHOES
$1.55 UP
BOYS
SHIRTS
33c.55c up
GIRLS
DRESSES
77c UP
Please Use
1
lbese
Bootlls In Your
Neipmhood
Call 646-247'
for Pickup Service
For The
Record
Marriage
Licenses
l..S "EGAS1 New., -M1rrl-llctn111 I»""° Mrt 1Pld<ld1:
ROllERTSON·WAlllS -A1111. 1, thorn11 W., ll, 11'1111 ........ IW /VIII!, 1',
llOlh o1 w .. rm1ns1er.
NELSON·JOHNSON---All9, '· Mitt, 5'.
of lnql~. 11'111 Erm1 L., JJ, ol Hl.W'llt111ron aeKh.
NAZARIAH-OORNOff -"""'· 2, Tony, 21, o11111 a1rt1er1, n. bolfl " Hlll'-Unoton le~cl•. PEltEl-RENHAKER -An. l, Mtl·
"'-""· J2, ot Hunllnqton IHth, and Mirian, 31 ol G•rden Grev•. SHARER·MORRISON -AUQ. 1 Jol!<1 H•ttztU. 72, •nd GIMIVI E., 111, botll ol Leaur.11 ll••cll. SKEEN-PHILLIPS -AUlf. ~'Jun• W. ,.., ol Ntwcorl llrtch, 1nd llrlQltH·
K . U . ol S•nl~ An•. 1-!IGHSMITH-MORROW -Aw. ~.
ll-rt ClllitlM, ti, of Hunl!llO!on lle•d'I. •nd Mllrr Jo, It, Ill' Fauntlln k~r~·~~ll-HAGINS -..... $, Edward
J., f7, 1rod Slllirw k1tlllwn, lff, botll
o1 HuntinPton llttcl'I. HOLkESTS\llAAOE -,t.,119. J. Cllf· ford Ro . ,., ol N--1 leach, 1nd Cttol .. 2t, ol AM"-ln'I. FlAHERTY-VAFIADlil -AUQ. ,, Gtor.111 T ., 31', 1nd it.thlflftt, lf, boll! ol CllrOIMI de! Mir.
STEWAllT·llALLil.RD -A\l'I. 1. 0oua111 c .. Jr., 3', •rod Rull! A., ». bath-fll Foun11ln V•llrv.
Death J\'otie~•
•
Very •Jnt.eresD.ng~
Saddle'back, Ar1ny Air Base Designated
SANTA ANA -Two Illes
not qualified for • t • t e
''landmark'' 11tatua
nevertheless have been ac·
conkd the dignily of being
designated •·state-registered
Pointl of HistoricaJ Interest."
Old Sadd1eback Mountain
and the former Santa Ana
Army Base became Orange
County's first "points of
historical interest," a county
spokesman said.
"Historical I and mark •'
status accrues to building or
other permanent Jandmarks.
Orange County has many duly
noted places including the old
County Cou.rthou.se in Santa
Ana, the harbor at Newport
Beach, the Mission at San
.(uan Capistrano, Dana Point
and the Modjeska home in the
canyon or the same name.
Tbe action recognizing the
air base and Ute mountain
pass as being of hi!ltorlcat" in·
terest was taken by the
Ca.Ii for n 1 .. Hist ork:al
Three Women Named
To Chapman Board
ORANGE -Three women that women have held posi-
have been elecled to the Chap-tions on the school's policy
man College Board o f making board.
Thustees, marking the first They are Mn. Thurmond
time in the college's hi.story Clarke, Miss Harriet Sue
Salmon and Mn. John H.
H eadquarters
For Riles Open
Scudder. A fourth newly
elected member of the board
is a man, C. P. Von Herzen.
Mrs. Clarke, a resident of
Corona del Mar, is the wife of
Judge Thurmond Clarke, chief
WESTMINSTER -Orange justice ol the U.S. District
CourXy Headquarters to elect Court in Lo& Angeles. She
Wilson Riles as S t a t e serves on the Board of.
Superintendent or P u b I i c Regents of Marymount-Loyola
Instructioo will be opened here College and the Advisory
Saturday, Entertainment and Board of Cal State Lo,,
refreshments will be provided Angeles. ·
at 8100 Westminster Ave. from Mrs. Scudder, a resident of
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Newport Beach, is an alumna
Riles is currently on leive of Chapman College and was
as Deputy Superintendent of on the policy committee of the
Public Instruction. Comedian founding board of Town and
Pat Paulsen and Rep. Richard Gown at the college in 1967.
IAndmarU Advbory COJno
mlltee, appointed by the aW.
deparlm<ot of Park> and
Recreation. .
The Santa Ana Army Bue
wu ooe of the largest •ir
force Installations in the na·
tion. Extending over 1,300
acres of what b: now the
Orange C.ounty Fairgrounds th
Costa Mesa, the b&Se had a
population of 25,000 soldlen
and civilians, at Its peak dur-
ing World War ll.
Activated in February 1942,
the base was considered the
nerve center of the Anny Air
Force training program. In
November, 1944, the base
served aa • redistribution
center, convalescent hospital
and separation center. .
Old Saddleback, I o c a t e d
along the Santa Ana mountain
range within Ute f;leveland
National Forest, is actually
two mountain peaks -San-
tiago and Modjeska, a county
spokesman noted.
Whea the first while men
passed through Orange County
in 1769 wu:ler Gov. Guper de
Portola, headed north to
Monterey, they eamped in the
shadows of Old Saddleback.
When viewed at a distance
Santiago P e a k ' a 5,691-foot
crest and Modjeska Peak's
$,171).foot beighlh, appear to
form a saddle, even though
the two are almost a mile
apart.
Besides the U.S. Fores~
Service's resident fire look-out
on Santiago, there are several
buildings housing iwtallations
ol electronic equipment. While
Santiago Peak is u s e d
primarily for fire prote.ction,
both mountains h a v e in-
stallations operated by utility
companies. Civil Defense, the
Air Force and California
Highway Patrol.
toioa T. Hanna (D-Anaheim) will be Von Herz.en and Miss
T111reu 11o11M. 11. o1 tue Ftrrwer SlrHt. special guests at the opening Salmon both reside in Lo!
More than 50 businesses In
the county have drawn their
name from Old Saddleback, an
irwJication the twin peaks are a
"landmark" to Orange County
residents. Bellflower. Survived bv ~•rn>h. Mr. •r.d Of the headquarters. -''"'eies. Mn. Jahn aoio.. Gnvn!H Nrvlct1, nur. 10:• ANt Slllwrda,, A~t 72. et ~1-;;;;; __________ ;;;;;i_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;; ________ ...
Sl\eflll«d Cerntitn', Hl.lflllMIDll llqch,i. '•!Nf Mee-alfkl•llnt. Wnklltt Mllrtw•"• dlrK!an..
llUOL•Y
H111I H11l11m lltld!ev, IHI Wttlclltt
0!'1v1, J,.pt, J, N_.-f ltfel!. Dlft' ti
dull!, Alltlllll lt. Sllf'YIVlid bV hulbl!ld,
DaMld; .on, Don. NewPOrl e .. c111 1ls-
1..-, Eunk;1 SllWM. Venhor1; $ ttlncl-
dllhlr.,., Gr1veslcle Sttvlct1 Frldtv, 12
,_, ,, ,.ec:1t1c' vi.-. """11Wl11 "'"'·
ltl\<"lf"lllll Jclllf> "· Ar.hw oHlcllllnt . .. ec:ll.. \llefr ~,.,. dlr.cton.
SMUl:ll
lldr L• Slwlfer, SU W•,,,,.,...r AllllWI, N.,..._. a.di. Datt If ....... A.11911&1 It.
"""'lvld bV wife, Mloriolt F .. 6 IOlll:
llllllbmrl L~ $118ft, CW-; JOtwl R .... hll·
111 W., 111'11 t'.llNIW T., 111 Ill C.lt #Moll lfd'W1rd J ., '-,.1111;, ltldllrtl J.,
Molan Htl, Ut.tll l tlawtrt.n: Mrs.
M1rv Sllr11rtnanl. C0tlt Meu1 Mr1.
P1trlc:lt ltl•IDW, Anlhllml Mra. Ct..,.,..
hw 511411dins, Orfinttl 1 brother, Mtlvln
H. sr.atlf', ca1t1 Mtu: s allten: Mn. Miidred Cor1thlll, El Centt111 Mn. Nell
Geilon. Ntwtt1t. C1Uf; Mr1. A'tlrll a,
Wefll, 0rt._.i1t1, CIHl.1 Mr1. ltlllr/'
OoodnftJ, P:lorldt1 Mra. l.oreM Si.ti,
ltllNo.!< Ctllf.1 27 1r.nddllldrtft. lloter1'.
I J'M 5iHicltv, AllVlllt 23. Ind llMlllem
MIU. I AM Mandt1, Aw•u5' 2'-11 $1. J09dlllft01 C1lholk Churd'I. Inlet"""',
Good SM!:Mttl Cemettn'. ltllJ C.11
,,,.. Mett11.1r'1', dlrtctor1. FtmllY r~
....... ,. llO f\owen be ""'·
ARBUCILI'! • BON Wntctiff Mortuary
U7 E. 17tll SI., COlta Me11 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
C..OU dd Mar OR Mlil
Colla M,.. Ml .:UC • BEIL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
lit Broadw•y, Co1ta Med u J.34,13 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1715 i..paa CUyoa Rd. -• PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAlllt
C<meleey e M-...Y
CUpd
SMI Padfte View Drive Newport Budl, Califorula
MU'lll • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERlL BOMB
?Ml Bolq Ave.
Wutmluter m-.m5 • SHEFFER MORTUARY Laiu•• Be•cll 4ff..1QS
SU Clemente 41W1N • SMITHS' MORTUARY m Mala 81.
llullagloo --
urs BE FRINllY
Jr you have new 11efKhbon-
or know or anyone moving
to our el"N, tllease toll ut
so thal "'e' m17 exll.'fld •
friendly 'M:ICOIJ\e and help
them to become aCQutilnltd
In their ncW surroundlnp.
So. Coast YISitlr
Now thru
SUNDAY
·AUGUST 23
LATEST L.P. HITS!
McCartney
Includes: The Lovely Unda. That Would
Be Something, Valentine Day, Every Night,
Hot As Sun, Glasses, Junk, Man He Wu Lonely, Do You, l.1omma Miss America.
Teddy Boy. Singalong Junk, Maybe rm
Amazt!d, Kreen-Akrore
Beatles
Let It Be
lncludes: Two Of U1, 1 Dig A Pony, Acl'061'l
The Universe, I i 1e Mine, Dig It, Let It
Be, Maggie !\fae~ l've Got A Feeling, One
After 900. Tht LOng And Wmd.ln& Road,
For You Blue, Gel Back.
$
SALE
88
Each
u .. $5.91
SPECIALLY PRICED
WOODSTOCK
BO.I DYLAN
Self Portrelt
Lill $1J .tl
LIST St.ti
$8.88
$6.88
CROSBY, STILLS, NASH & YOUNG
ll$T $1.tl $3.88
hf• ... * COMPLETE SELECTION OF · TOP 45's at 68c ea. *
GRANT CITY
ANAHEIM
UK•l11 ot $hlte Collet .. l•t A•••~11 Cff.
• Hown 11 A.M. te t P.M. Deir,
511•llfoy 11 A.M. te I P.M.
GRANT PLAZA
HUNTINGTON.BEACH
lrtelll1nt et A.._
H•111r1 t =JD A.M. te t:JI P.11. -.ny
l11td., 11 A.M ... 6 P.M.
SALE! DURING OU~
STORE WIDE
AT A GREAT
VALUE PRICE:
95 sold formerly
Twin at $7995 •••
:.~'~ you save $20!
60180"' i.. Sim, 2.,.. .. $1 &9.95
lil IQ"' ling Sill, ;i.,.."' $249.95 '
•
Selly Firm Guard
Now on sale with exclusive Bracer Gards that give reinforced
center support. Plus high-fashion damask cover richly quilted to
Dura-Lux cusbioning-Sealy's unique blend of cotton and Sealy-
toa:ma•-for llUrlace comfort. Don't miss out on th e finn, com-
fortable way to a good Jrigbt's sleeJ>-i'educed for the first tim e eve r! ----
and for a great night's sleep,
Sealy's finest-Pcisturepedic:
Tile ... pamperer." (.;hoose Jo:rlra
Firm or Gently Finn-both de-
signed in wopcrnfjon wilh orlh°"'
pedie ::iurgcon., fo r i:nmforUr.bl y
firm l!ifpport. No morniz1R" haL-k·
.ache from 11lccping on " loo-ooft
mattress. Lie down. The real
O'.lmes ea.s1t
. Costa Mesa's Oldest llo1ne-ow11ed f'ur11ll11re .Stor e
1865 Harbor Blvd. Downtown Costa Mesa
Phone 548-5131
lnursday, Augus~ 20, 1970 DAILY PILOT lJ
San Diego~s Ahloo111 Cougar Improved
Barkeep .Enlists Help in 'Fwwer Power' New Mercury Comet i1t Srnall Car Class
SAN DIEGO, Calll. (AP) -
A couple years agu the city
:;tarted cuttinJ holes in con·
crete aidewalkJ and installing
trees to spruce up downtown
streeb.
That gave '1Litlle Joe" an
idea: he started planting.
flowers In the around around
the trees for everyone to en.-
joy.
A, baftender, he I a t e r
enJ isled customers in the pro-
ject. Stop in bis bar now, a
simple place jud off the
waterfront, ar¥1 wit.h the bar
napkin you get a lltlle packet
of seeds.
I See by Todays
Want Ads
a Cettin&" ready for win..
ter? Skii at Bia Bear
: and rent a <;abin for 11
people,
a llere's a fast w•y to ao,
1969 MaCh l excellent
condition. 357 en&ine.
RUtomatic, air PS/PB
stereo tape, warranty,
a Going IO }'ranee or
Germany? Take a few
"Ill)' lessons and learn
10 &peak both lalliU&·
i,:CIS.
LADIES'
OR '
MEN'S
Wini THIS AD
k lRK CHARGE a MASTER CHARGE e IANKAMERICARD
"The Store That Confidence Built"
Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10 a.m. ~til 9 p.m.
KIRKPATRICK'S .
PRESENTS
By CARL CARSTENSEN compacts, ye t the Interior fa ct lhal despite the alteDLlon IN .. Just drop them in the
.,&rOWKI around the trees,'• be
teUs patron,,. '1bey'll sprout."
And sprout they do, as
witnessed by • variety of
marigolds and petunias thriv-
ing 1n the mild San IMU•
climate around 800 (ll' !O trees.
""'..._"¥• •d"*' dimensions are <.'OfJlparable lu given llJllaJl cars throughout
LAS VEGAS -Lincoln lbose of intermediate sire the industry, Lincoln Mercury HARBOR CENllR
Mercury today ls preparing-l.o cars, Bidwell said. will continue to place iLs ma·
jump into the battle for a "We're a lead pipe cinch t.o jor emphasis on it.s "tradi·
share of the ever-increasl,ng sel an all time division model t.ionahnarketing resP!_)nsibility
small car market by launching sales record in 1971 if indwtry -the medium price field."
2300 HARBOR
"Any place there is =1igbt
I'll plant• &ft?," s.ays "Lit-
tle Joe," who was born Joseph
B. Parker 4.9 yws aa;o in
a full line ol 1971 MerCl,II'y volume runs al a respectable Lincoln Mercury, like other Come~ models, including a level. as anticipated. We medium price divisions, was
choice ol engines plus two and should top that by a minimum adversely afiected in 1970 by ''
four-door body styles. oI 10,000 units. Sales of 430,000 Lile sharp trend for small car
COSTA MESA
Chat<anooiia, Tenn. ---------
The addition ol the new would be a 60lid 16 percenl sales. Bidwell emphasized that
Comet should pr<lpel a division gain over what L i n c o I n they had "bought insurance in
to an all time model record of Mercury dealers expected to the form of Comet and Capri"
430,000 sales, B. E. Bidwell, do in 1970." Bidwell said and was ready for 1971 "no
Mercury Division g e n e r a l The very eonlident Ben 1natter which way the market Parker, who ts about five
feet tall, 1ays he has Oo~ers
"growing as far away as 32nd
and Main," or about 30 blocka
from bis place of work.
There's even a pwnptin,
which came as a surprise to a
supervisot ln the city's tree
planting division. '!be
supervisor said pretty plant&
Ne ,wly,weds
To Enlist
In Marines
manager predicted today. Bidwell was appointed general runs.''
In addition to tj;le Comel, manager or the d i v i s i o n Ca pri is the d i v l s i o n • s
Lincoln Mercury will also in-earlier Uris year and quite popular Im port in cted in
troduce a new Mer c ur Y candidly says that the "dealer the U.S. last . For lhe
Cougar with changes referred body is lhe key.·• He referred t97l e Lin c o In
to as •'lhe most notable since to 1970 as ··raLher disap-Mercury will offer 39 models
Cougar's introduction four pointing" but added that .. we with most of the new product
years ago." are goffig to get the job done inves tment concentrated in
The 1971 ComeL is smaller this coming year." the lower series l\1onterey
around the trees are "usually BLOOMFIELD, N.J. (AP)
okay as long as they don't ...... When David Mont leaves bother the view or the peo-
on the outside than its original Empha.sl.zed today was th{' models.
as well as many of today's =====-=-=-=--==----~-==--=----==
ple." home to join the Marines bis
"LitUe Joe" bas run into a wife is going with him.
few problems protecting his Mont and Miss Diane Orr of
flowers. lll.'leCts and~ Sidney, Jowa, who met as
dealt with by using ial 50pbomores at Tarkio College, Two N-~ Harbor High sprays but Parker hasn't been ..... ....., •
Coast Coeds
Fi1tisli Class
able to spr~ anything to keep 1'.1o., will be married next School students have com-
some people away from the Thursday. Two days later they pleted a workshop for
flowers. will be sworn in as officer can-yearbook editors at USC's
"Fellows pick them to give didates. He decided to enlist School of Journaji.sm. to girls instead of leaving They are Nikki Appleman, them for everyone to see." he rather than be drafted and she daughter of Mr. and Mrs . L.
]amenlt d Thursday. ''That's went with him to see lhe H. Appleman. 1621 Highland
selfish." recruit;ng sergeant. Drive and Corinne Domecq,
There ls more to growing "I had no intention of sign-daughter of 1.tr. and Mrs.
flowers than planting, of ing her up," said Sgt Charlie Richard Domecq, 328 Prospect
course, and watering i.! pro-Brown. St.
bably the most important "We wanted t6 explain to Nikki will be editor of the
chore -something t b a t her the life of a military wife. yearbook, "Galleon," a t
Parker bas taken care by l threw a great salea pitch, Newport Harbor High School
again calling on his patrons. but then she was eitremely ne:1t year and Corinne will be
Sunun cr Clearano:e S.Je
now In pro.-rct1 a' Hob'•
~ten'• Shop. Savin11 up
lo 50 7(i. Shop and N.-c.
"We organized a bucket _:1~uscc~p~tii1'.bl1:e.:'.:" _____ _!t~he:_:as~sistan~'.'_t!'_od~ito~r'.:_· ___ !==-.:___..=:======---==--=-===== brigade and at night we waterl~
the flowers," he s a i d .
"Sometimes the boys stagger
a litlle, but the Dowen get
water."
New Coed
Officers
For ROTC
NORMAN, Okla. (AP)
'nle Air Force may be &ettina;
1ome female second
lieutenants from U1e Universi~
ty of Oklahoma.
The new commander of tbe
Air Forte Reserve Officers
Training CoJ'1)S at th e
university said Monday he will
encourage coeds to enroll in
ttle two-year Professiooal Of-
ficers Course -PCC -which
leads to a second lieutenant's
comrnis,,ion in the Air Force.
Col. Frank L. R06e Jr. said
the coed errolbnents will
begin next summer. 'lbe PCC
st.arts in tile St.11!.!met before
lhe student's junior year witb
a special traiAina: camp ~
an intensified 6hort course m
the subjects covered during
the freshman and sophomore
years of the regular four-year
program.
acific avings
• • • • • • • AND LDAK ASSOCIATION
FREE
SAFE ~fl!QSrnBOX
for maintaining a $ 500.22 balance in any of
our high rate accounts-take your choice.
ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN.YEARS
7.79\ 150\ $100,000!!!! ONE
6.18\ 6.00\ 5,000!!!! TWO
5.92\ 5.75\ 1000!!9 ' . ONE
5.39\ 5.25\ 500!!9 Y.th
5.13\ 5.00\ lg_q ONE DAY
ANIMPORTANTEXIRA
Your money earns interest from the day you deposit.
bll the day you withdraw even if it's just one day.
ASK llOWWU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE
•
FREE ..
.. 1. Trauulee'11 Checil:s 3.. Trckels to Spotts and
2. Ccl1ction of NOies Theabe Attractions (Tlcbtron)
4. Many other FREE Services
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M .
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
sm BRISTOL SllEEI • COSTA llESA, CALIFORNIA • PHOIE Jl40.4016
SEMI-
ANNUAL
SALE!
SALE!
SLACKS
s100
With PMrch1se Of
One At Reg . Pric•
SALE!
SUITS
s1000
With Purchaae Of
One At Reg. Price
SALE!
SPORTCOATS
s1000
With Purch1se Of
One At Reg. Pric•
SALE!
2 PANTS
SUITS
'sa950
THIS
STOREWIDE
SALE ENDS
AUG. 28TH
•• KINGS" CHARGE
646-4242
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OAILY PILOT s
Vetw Mone1's Wortla OVER THE -COUNTER -Gomplete-New York Stock List
Midi Means Buys Due 11,,,,, __________________ l!ll_l _MIW '\'Ol:I( f~l~·~--hllllf Htt ltlM N.t Ntw Ylll'k 1J9Cll_ ll!Clll"'9 .nciif-·· lllift.J loiltll LN Clu,.t C.. t.,..,) Nilll Le~ OM Ctl1t ··-.. ~ NASO Ll1tl."91 for Wednetd•y, Autu.st 1f, 1t70 tW.,J Kial! "'"" c-. 144 ~ '~ I:+:.~ 8~1"s~\~P1.J J 'l '1''! 'r 4 14
-& ¢. !1li "C f:'"J!•'il JU ~ •• ~ !\\!-+ l ...._...l'l'tl ......................... lfl\I... ... ..... ...... _ I . . 1100 14~ .
By SYLVIA POJITER
1'be r.a.11 clothing acasol'l l!
now optn1rlc -and it's surel)I
w secttl lo any lemale that
k's ~ midi aod notblng but
th. mldi.
. Does th.la mean that you -
the off1ce_ worker, young or
middle-aged, in the steno pool « eitecutive suite -must
ftct the awful prospect of In·
vesllng in a whole new
wardrobe?
Of count nol . Aud, in fact,
thls glveii me the opporlunll)"'
to submit to you olle of the
most basic rulet on dressing
for work. Jt is : AVOID
.,.ckaging yourself In the
latest fashions or even being
in the advanct J!:IUltd of any
new clothing trend. More rules
below but, firit, htu'e arc
gpecifk points on tht mini·
midi "r.rLq,is":
MINr SKIRTS will remain
very much in evidence during
this period. Most young office
workers simply cannot afford
t.o junk their entire wardrobes
overnight -and they woo 't.
and t'Olors si111plt. SimpJicity
means ccooomy as well a:>
gOOd taste, for simple t'Olors:
and styles ne ver go out of
f;;i,Shion.
Wa.it until you're in the pro-
per nlOOd to go shopping. "II
you think Ulis results in a
:.Vardrobe about us unplanned
<is a hiccup. think again." .s~ys
Mrs. Burge. Shopping wbtn
you have nothing in mind can
yield . your most importanl
purchases and prevent those
desperate impuJ:.:es when you
sbop because you have to.
Test the wearability of any
garmerit you choose I o r
d;iylong office wear by crinkl-
ing part of it in your hand to
see if it return11 lo its original
shape. lf il doesn 't, pass it up.
FOR THE OFFICE, the
1nosl pract.ielil fabrics are'
alpaca. came I 's hair,
<:ashmere. t:repe. {la n n e I,
foulard, pi q u e, sharkskin,
tweed. wool (100 percent).
wool jersey and any of tht.
manmadc. slay-Piress fabrics.
especially good when blended
wjth woo!.
When trying on clot.hes. sit
down. raise your arms, bend
over jn front of 11: minor. Be
sure !he garment is com -
fortable.
~ ................................ ., -··1••• --w't.:""1. I l!Yt llV. Im + ' • -\i3I ,, " ,, l :JO UV. 1•1 " --··-·· lot tz 601', iO -'!f i\lt !~ 3 14 ilrt " S JMI M M f.41 ~· ~ <.'Our11e, U'le obvious •MAUt..,: ....... """"_!•~~'$;,fl ~ nv. ~~tt i ! b!~ ·'° H n t~ » ~ :=i .~ 'ii 1lt? 2l~ ~~1~
rues: 6 P the m•Jar clothing --1111 1 34., ,'i• '•I~ "tt4,,.l '1~ + Hi Atfo ~ Jl1\~ 11111 ~ ~~:C: '1.cl •i ll. ~ .. ~~ ~
s.Ues (~wruner ciothes and N£w v~RK ~AP! HN Mt • ,.... •1111tr1tt ... ,1 r ,~ ..... AtJ M u• "" 10 +· · ~ G•• ~• ii •14 -~ 1Pte PI·"' •• .. ... f b I 1...i.. -fllf lol "'''J 11111 Inell•~ 10\6 II PGtlr WK lt lo(' ., ~ 4 R NMJls I~ ·n 't. 'I 2.1* + ' • Pll1\t J •I~ il!f' +• •'kjf .«I ... \~ ~ • a r CS r15>rt nOW), BU)' anc1 ,,._ "°"· 11\fl'fll t\\ 1 Pro a.ti' j\'1 1~ 9Cltt F~ a t:ri '• ,·.. ••• 7 ••. ,, oc.aao• '1~.~ l?f 6114 f!~ + .. ' :{/':O,o ·.:. 1.1 I lll:·~ ,2 + .. ~. Slaples~erWear, $C8tVes, :::Siro111t!'..,~llf' •• JT, FUc;80I~ 'l:Z 3:"" at~'°' tr-NMI'. dll Ill 1-IS) ut'" ~rm. Q,... t ~ 'm ~ !_ tJ ol9 ftilrt, ji n j;14 J~ ,.'.\II f!l.': l.'lt 1 tt + • .,.
belts. ~-••-s, , ............ ...i.i ... ~, """-,•.''""".=." ,•,;•, ,1,~wFln 1,~ ,,.•~ , "" ,• fll: !.,-"''w !.'•~ l!"'fil A •""r.:'"'.• a > v '' • o~P , ff"' 41M 4 V. +I..., •n!!'t ·'°" s ~ ., """' .... .,. f""' -.:><w·wt Of II .,. V. -_ • '' K A~ ..v. -! "4o llt Iii: Yi 21 27\ji _ "" ll•l'•lf Fl11 ltr l~U I 15 t I'
CtC•, elC. _ in .1~-~"-t stores /001 Kllllll trlNIC• ood P »:, ~ Pull $ NC '•I>* 1 '·~I 4 it:' 11l~~.:..'°"., I I ·.m U, ii ·~~l 14 OUI llt 20o 1~ II f.~ fddl..lw .20ll It ff'.1 111. I ii 1 ~VWl t\oN. llvl 1r1 ~IP. or.i OH 17\lt. It,, l'ublWU-t fflo V c;_,, ru m " •"'•'-, •' '' ' ._., 1" ot.tntlt ·1,.~ 3,7 .... n,.~ "•• f i= 81,:11>, 4{~ lJ~ ~'+ r,l'I :'. ~
and other inexpensive outle.b. ~~1=J ~~.· ~°":~rllf N ~ ... ~ure::.,., .t 1J« t:! :P.Z I' ,,~-r 1t11.!r• IU flt 'is l~ +u II l~pl4lJ • !J :att4 n"• + ll'IOI I~ 24 ,..
41 !Vi 29~.:. ·-~ Alwavs chetk the '"·fft ~ ..,...._ ·h ,.. '\.k ~ •ur,1.-St 14 nil•••• AS 1 ,..... j '•'•·',..' I_,+ y. CIS~•f, ...... ~ 11"!7 !!~ ._ ~··· '1,, 4 , '!_\;a ~ ..... _., J -· ~ o.m .. i;:...mkll ™" I Cp 5 JV. POuo Cll ~" 1lltt" » ,.,,.. ...... ... l ... .... Pfl'fl ... ... and resale outlets bl your area ~uru ~~ rtlkln E ,'" i ~ • !"' 1 ri11n':' lo ~~ r' ~~ .l!! .. 1." 2'6t '»Ii • ,. .:..:-.,. CBS 1 4111 •>A .; It lob• ,,,.""~ J15 ''~ 1oq,!' 'i1l! + '• . . i..... ""' u•v-1" CM ll) m Tiffi»' In ~ I''' ........ .!.4. 110 1~\/0 1• HV. . ' olu IM• 1611 Ult J1'6 31111 31 -+ ~ ,. ll tn !!~ 1 t! ' t! -... tor extrJOrdUlary bargains. i~"" to!:ft.ol",:, ="u! U ;14 1 1!:90 "O'' !l!v. r11an G• 1~ ro Ai C ,;-,11 .. 1~ ~ 1111 ~ ~~ .& ~s '~ 1-. • . vr,•• '•s iG "" t •
A FINAL NOTE; When """ ~.· .. 1:. "", •• ,,.-~ .• !'-1_f,•• ,•,• ,,• ,a·.~~l1 Y21 ff ·-t,~~"'ll 1~ 1 I,\ ~·,!!"",,. i,.. ll·~ -~l, J~ + li ~" 1i!::. I~ ~: nu ~; +~,~ ~tr"' :14
' ,,. I na \~ JVW trw " klll ~rl,.. " ·-£ "" rne.nt jl& ~"'.., 1!:S ff m ml ~ -FNIE"~l,10 I 37 17 JI r ee,llC. l·# \~O i:~ ~\I ll1, + ~; find two dresses t'quaUy t' ~no:i•y. 1:::1J:i ~~-,~~ 1p-I :::: ~.. " !'$;; ' ~:,~eoE: .Jt l l. ti' i jN + JSo,v .40 ~J ll'A 11'4 l n~ . r:~,01 . .0 » tth 2t u -l't
becomi ''
-·n R ' ~u r Pd 2t\t fill~' '* 0 +'ll omw 2.XI 1)1 ~ ~ .... ,, + •~ rtr.dU" .kl I> 11'A 24~• Ult~ ng. •11e ~sung, ..... r• • ,... llO. :i:11c i~ i• ::-t,~ ' ' .. I m• . ml ff" + -·•• -E , •-• "" " • . . v .. v -" __ ..... ., " ,, ,-_, , It' ... 11 7 ,, " ... , .... -1 · 1.,.i,o . ... '"'\'.C s11 n 11 .... Jl>Vi 1ou -.J• ,,_,,. "' ...,,,. "'ur .,.. • roo • 31111 1 • I • -'!: rn• llfl . 11 ~l 21 ,l . ''" tevf1t 1 2 '~"° u" uv. _ \•
$1()0 and the Olf)er $50, buy tbe r.l5.l~"t ll\IJ lli !1111.lltlEll t~ ~ 11.1l'fv' Ii~ I ~f'IJ tv~,""·-Fii IOVi22., 31~.: dt~dl~ ,: mt n~ 12tf+ c1omwOll , 11 14'4 IS~ l;t. ·+tt Gr1n1W I.SO 41 31\lo 35 311~ +ti.
qu·'1'ty dres f "A' Corp ..... t SI'> ow R06d E u . illK ..... A ~ l~ • '"" ~ + Of'llllUI kl 230 1 •lolo dt"• -\.\ Gr•1D•11 1,XI ' It ll".'1 u ....... ~ S or f!COflOmf A.FAPr !> 1 11 l•lf;ll ~01'1 n""1 Robin ,: l \lo f: ~ lll11m 'l<ll'l 27 A 1 1im .,.. AV. '9 .,... OfftNI .U 371'1 ~ UV. -1 GI A&P l.m1q lf 2~"'i U" 2ilf• every time. liere's Mr 8 i.1Ts 'II( 11o ~ !i!"·•n w 2ll!N !1 ROMIGl'I ~ 35 ~· ~~l :~ ~"' Alco.w,;• 1: ~ ~m '!Cui, +·r· ~~ll'llt• 1 1 u~ u1to 1s•,. + \\ Gtto1or1r 1.:1SG i n 1n·. in. -"
• • ASG 11111 j• 1~ ,._.,. J 1 R01 C~! 2V. 1 u! ''" ,,.,, , ... , AM .50 .ii t~ m ~ Con ·~ 64 21 10"'-21'~ + 1.~ n 40 d • -""
Burge s "probability" chart ~~ ~Q ,,. 1014 to ~le "I"'· ·f~ H~~~;,1 s . .:;; ~~ li us s11111r :l61': • ~ • .J·!: 2: ll"' y~ I + ~ c:'~. 1~ ,;J 1lf't1 1h'1, '~i'U + '1 F~fc: 2~ B~ 1tl.1 l!~ = ~ showing wllicb is the better A.1>er1r 1n • ,~,, WI/ c 1~ 2'to &di,, ·~(l AV. H! i~~ ~~ ri ~!""' .iir .«is ~ m. f"r· C1:onEdr1 p14 1 1s11o 1sr4 1s11o ,.. i.u l 1tvt 1,..., ,,.,,, +tit
b N th Acmf El .,, 911< t•llli Cn 4\!i T\6 •11tn E j'lr A iJl•ill SUI ~ •llo ,.,..,.,. pt'.jg ltl 110Vi 711,ii onE,d1$ pl 5 S S9 !>&V. St , .lll 10 7~.. 11~ l•:t uy. ote al each w-···ng ;,. f,fl 51~ 6lot 111 r1ph S< u"" UTIV. C"OI ti '" l~ ,. "'I 1·· " ·m· ~1r'IF,1,'1'r., ·"... JI I~ -l.lO 11 3J :>'J~ :o3 + ,.. ·" ' lH• ••Vi: 1~:1;, -"' 'Ir Inell/\ , 2 1• "~ c 1 ,.. .,. ,......, '' fl" '' ,onfrelQl'I• 1 ss Jl~ 12'11r. n•I _.._,, I.XI I "'~ ""• n·~ .:...~L each Case CO~ .. •ou $1. • , •. , ' •• -· •":i•m ' , •• •->cl '" •,• '•"~ vv" LP,. ,s.-. ...,..,~-M , • I '' ~ '" ' "'"'>J -,.,. ,.,,., ,,.,. no ~ lll!C• mls .. J7 .. ' "• ~1 .... ,c,onH:-!":'1i, '" ,•, ,,·~..!~.-+~·~,.--·JO,, -· ,',',":' ,',' !,'~-·.·. A.I-H !._, •'Ill ~ RE 14,,•, 1~ S<ol'I ""' I"' I' Vl•tron ~-'" 1·10 :V t.. " ... , -. """' " .. $100 GARMENT i.lberll ~ 14 rove P• ...,, k l>IU H • ' Wadi Rll II 1' 7'.:. C 2.20 U tt"' 41 -Powr 1 d 31Mi1o »,. 30\'t -._ G 11...!Hlcl .4'0t 11 1H Jllft ?l._
Y W
Alcoltc 4\4 .... rwll! '" '"" ''lo er PIO " 4 ~ W.tdsw p 13 1 ,._ ..... ;""' .20 u ~ Q .n: -ConPw pf•.SO llllO 31\lt 5814 5'\IJ + y, G •r:Oh 1.~ • d '-•v. "" -· '• t.ar earlogs Appearance Anco Ll"ICJ I• l•l.i utrd c~ • •Vt ur11 p1 16'to 161.ii Wiltt l!ld 9 1~,., -"~1'-.~ 1.1s 2• 1• :• a•Vi -14 ccontAlr .J5J! « '* •~ ' -14 Gu' 011 1.lll 1111 21 211-. 2n. +o.. Allq l!lt\I ~ m i;Ulf Int ~ '"' tlJ c""' 114 ~ R di 2 _,, """ n '" 11/• -"Pi.lo -",ont C•n 2.40 1116 •1111 ,, t,V. -~Gu f OU 1.50 1111 11 11\lo 11'1. + ~.
I 35 superb Alll~ Eo '" 514 (;'r'rocln 71'> • letll!rn 1¥. ti); Win!! J'fl 3 A 1111" l.40 1 .Uli "" ,, oot C•n wf 1 •2 •1 "' • Gull Rtl•U• 14 ~ t ' + "'
'
,5 lendi A.Ion Gto jVi »I .. l'IO~t s lt '1 Y< Grp • 4=IJ; w .. ;'Ne w. &.iw '. ,_1. 11 11111 1 .+'ih eon, .. ",OP .u. $ 1!4 7tl 7't .-GUlfStaUI .ff ll nv; n"' """ • Sp d t,m1dc Vt 3\\ 1'11!n In 1\lo tlli Sev«ll VP ..,,,_ OV. ~:.ii "l:E ?!1! 'I" A ' '•" 115 n m Jotv. + •4 I> 2 Ill 301.'! :IJ'-t 311"' t-~ ~11$U p!~AO z20 55 ll 55 .. ... h Id" Am eusn 914 10 •n•ed F :n 23\lf Slitrldoh sv. sr. , T • jg ~ .~ Slf > 'm _, c' Cp pfA'l:J' '2 l11r1 ~ 31'Ao + 11Wlnd ,50 121 12i. u 1214 + '•
oJ ..., 0 Ing up ... El Lib 2~-. )'41 W:" \' ,. ·~ Srntlh M .. ~ • , I ' Am •IV•$1 >A @ f •L ontMtv '' ,, ' ••w ., • .. -4 10 stillfeelsOK"m E•IN" Sft~60 oc: "' ~ Sto:i~ldSIS r~ ~ ~~:l!'r"R' ·~ =~·Df ..... L'<'• 11'·R· 11~ ,11 iZ C~M·1 ··•111 ·1.511 l1t1 ?)fa,;~ ~l ... :t 1UG~1twPts:il l ~~ ~ ~~ .. 1
:: t,m Furn 5\lo t I lhv" ~ 7.. I W•I I~ 13 W ]llf M 12 l Am "'"' 1,M ~:... •" >< i! on I Pf J l 3.1 3• lol +1 Gu111111 Ind 22 4\11 6~ t l'J -h s 10 si:id farewell ' Grtet ti •S:O.:. ' Olm EP 30 ll E Tet ::&\.ii n\lo Wa Cd "' ,, II? ....., tiiNCI ll ... a lt on Tel .• ll 19~ It Jtlto -\'I H I ... m lrud ll\l:o .. loCm "-1\'i Sot.111 ~ ~Iii\ 21'111 Wit" NA s ™ "'8~f,.'1' '11~ ff t I '"' -on •ol Dtll HI) l:I l2:i. 321. + " -.. -™ GARMENT :m ~::=: 1~ IF' ' =~GI l!.,, 'm'v; i: ff{:.~ ,uv. 14\lo w11n Ml• 3~ ~ A eriins •.$0 lb ~1}1 S\ n\4 :ti ~~4.50 11;)9 d V. ............. -l.'l li1dlW11r 2,20 1 :!Qt• 3i»lo JL'!'• I ·~
Y W . • .,.. "·= -I ~ 1$14 W1 n "'ub ~ nlo,.. "'II r"" .: l!···llli "'," '.~ -i .... u,11 '·."· ,' ·.·.~~ Ut? ,•,1'1\ +\Ii ."',',','1.'.',,1.,"'.•• ,,,1 24,,, ,", .... •• ~ •• car eann111g Ann.1r1ace Anl\ellf .. ~ """" In l~ I , P1cuv ,"• ,"' w'illll Wit 6\0 t\li. AmHoola •70 ,. "4i ., ...... \lo .... :u.-. .. T "-r> rr-"lllten In '4 ~ uck Mf l'h 41,1, llndVn W. tVi nbtt lH.O"VJA HQIJlllM lU uu u~-t· ,-1111 1."0 43 21"4 27\li 1no+"I 1mWil .251 U 5:W, 5W ~+'• I 30 line "'Cl In<! 4'1· ~ ~ud PP 11 Wh Id llee11 11 lHli WI~ PL ll\ll. "~' Am Hoso '"'' -R ' , 1Sh 15~• lfu ~amrn p,p I ' li'.I n v, It~ + '"'" 'rd&n M ' "* uo G~, u Jj\~ tin HPd 12 t• Wrdlw E 1\• , .... Amlnvtst .so "1 ,, \~ COPtlli.W 1.10 $ •o ~o ,qr ·.:.:.\io 1mrJmd .70 16 ..... ,.. ll~ ' 2 20 afcling fasl •rcien pf 2' 311\.\i urst P 1 1"' Sterkl Str t•.w 10 WrlOhl w 111\ 1•1;,. AM•IClt l.f> 1f J1, •• ~• .. ! ... = C~PR5•1•, .,50b 3' JOt; 2'\oio "--1\.lo indllTln ... n 1•~ 2l\lo 11~. -to
3 f '"' MOP 1$ 13'.4 V•lt Cp 12\li ll ilrlW Cl lJ lS 'r'rd"'r' e t\(o 4411 AMelCIJI Df• 1 • ... ...... c-w1 711 l u:ia 1 ~ 1$\0 tilnd Har 72 J II 11-li 17~ ;\o loo seedy or t,rrow H :za;r; 211,1o vau 1~1 fl! f¢. Am Motor• 7111 •:,,., ':\4 •z +1 Corin~• .rie 11 1••.1, 1l'll! 141.1, +,... Han.s Cp :jij 1• rn. 11 1;,,!: ;, job ~~·101 :Jv. 2~~ ~!.·~; S'.!o Sb AN1tt;as 2 11 131 ~ l6 )6\lo:;:-" ~~WIJJ.jijn ~Ill , Ult~ !SJ• ... +114 HllnntM l.)11 J ~I'll •1 1· •!\• ' ""'o Sci •ltl. 5;; r.o •a,, w 2 """'Photo .12 35 fftt "' JI~ -v. cow°r ~om 1.t ~\· lt:t:. 711'4 + 'I< Hllr(ourl l 6 32"'-J~·~ 1Ha ~-donated t(I 1•lrd A.I Jlk JXO "' ,,,1 ..,,1' 101,, A.Rt!Ov .lk "! . n ci .. , O .,.. ~ l+O 3''i +''o ~•rrb Int 1 .. 43'tli 4J 43\~ +~•
''
•. oL ..,... ... Aln "II~' 1 l I 'b ,,.L ·.:.:.-.·· J BdCJ ..... 11 U\a 1~ 1•"' + "-lltl~O Co 1 t2 u1·, 1•·· ,,,, -L charily 11f'' . ~• hl''" ln11xcc 0 1:! j'i,l A Srnt 'i.to tll 2W. 2t•'l 2~Y: -o,t, ~i'ii!"V Ji.111 ~ ~V. 26~ 11~ + i:; •rtSMrx .&Ct ~ 19\'o t\' lt"t + ;';'
forgotten l:r~:·nt :"" :',; \~~r•t:..i 3h "'" MUTUAL ~r 1.111 J: ~ ~J,t 31~ ++.14 c,redlllf FJn.,! ' ul~ n .... l!:t = ~ ~:C11 ti I:~ l ~·,·· ~t'· !:~.:.. ·~ t••ln P 1'l 1 lntrm I~ •'4 A NnSfd pl4.15 151 ''V. t~'ll ~\4 + t """"~" ._.., 1 IJ 17'14 lJ , .. HtYes Alb I ll• l o, 11 11 1~ -~. ~:~~~ tt,,,,l~\1~_a~:r, 1~1::; A.mSttrtl .4 n 14i~ l6tt i4v..+•.11 c'°"'c!irncr0 1 is 21 xii~ 20\o:r -Vt M1u1nne 1 • J1, 1 +1,
•
5
Pants will become far more
acceptable attire for tbe ofJice
ill! women make the traosition
from mini to midi by buying
pants. shortening lbcir midis
to make them tunk:ti and turn-
ing the entire outfit into a
"suit!' (That's what J ain
doing and planning -and I've
never worn pants to the office
before.)
ieechm 12 221'1 "' ~v• 11 1.,.., "~·· l.MI Sl 27'-" 21 21~ +tt c:C0 li lJ 46 10\\ n-. 10 -\t EecltMn .II• ..,, 11 16 n 1, -~. ,,1,, ,~ 16'14 11,,_ "' , ,, ,, ,,,.._ ASl41 pfA.2.'5 1 40 '40 "° c c" · 1 1114 lt\4 l9v.111• elnz MJ .n u•o J•''' :u•.~ i '• N N • I " " FUNDS A.mS1 N • • ... ' I .. ,L row• ork 10 ll>;, I)'-' U~ ,, •!enc cvn 1 10o 1:n 1\.\ • ewpol·t at1ona ~:~ir ~I Jv. J 1~~f;t it~ 1! <j ATt.¥',;j,.j S7J ..... .,t~ ,t; ++iZ ~nJel~J# 3t 21V, ll HU. ~ tier 111! ·'° 1• 11'• 11:t'a 111• l: ~eir Lib 1 SV> )7 '' •-U••• 2, ~., Am l& T tllO 161 4514 •4\lo W• +% E'l c · Jl!ll S41o'J S~ S4 tttU1r D/4.01 l 1$ 13\11 15 i~
11 w " ,,. ~ ... A.mWWk $t JO 1~ 110 o·' .. '' 0 0•P .d 15 11v. 1'~, tl•~ +, H1!mtPds 1 1:; ltl.o lj•• ·~~ j 1,
q lups • • ·~ F 111 '" AWWt""',.·,, ,,_ ,, .. ,, •• ••" -+r, ''"" ·n"'' n 11 10•0 11)1,. 'H•lmrhP .20 ,•, u 1·a 1 ..., Hlo 1\9
All our wardrobe~ wiJl
become multiple-length col·
lecUon.o; from which we'll
choose whatever fits an oc·
casion.
8lrd son 31 33 JIO•U" ( 7 1'1< .... "' -""' ,.. ,,.. y p .?5 ' u-. 1'•.o 11' ., Html~l>ll C~ll ~ J'll JV. -., lllrtcnr ~ 3\lo Jim WJ! S~J 4 I' ........... a ......... ,.1"1ner011 ·"° 3 1:51'1 UV, IS~ -Cullftlll .tt lJ 11 1,1, 1J I \?' -Hemll11t .~ ID S\.1 $.,_ 5~1 1-'•
C M T Id ~1J1d< HI 21'11 21\lo Jpmes F 1'!? 21'i':i ,t,meltk .~ lt au I '• to.I + v. Cumm111 .lllb 1 :itlio lt~ 21~( +· "•• itrc Inc IS. 3~ l4~ J4 .'.14 lloout El ,,,,. 1'-1msbv 11, ••to H~W YOR< ,.,,I TG AMF Int: ·'° 150 ,,.,., n~ 2:1V. +v. c,ullriOr119 ... 17 •ii .... ,... • .. tnhFd i.1~ J!O 2!JI.,. "" ·u~ + ~· Ol·p erge1· 0 ~oll ler 10,. t\lo Jllfy Fd1 J._,., 4 _ "' " H H ~llPY•ll Aml1c 10 l l4"" 34~~ :U\; t urtl.il.Wrl 1 •• •• "' -.,... 1 bloO •• '' ••; '· LI
• '"''.
C •" •h ,.,,, •o ,, .. ''" ~0-tollow111g "I:: Inv CeA 10.•111.• "'P o'-,. ,,., ,.,.._ .,,.,,. . C ~ ..., IJllo 13'4 1J\4 ,.. u n ·'"" -Na '" ,. • ... " .-..... •• WPPIO.. ' G ·~ ..,., ·-,,. " _...,. ..... ""!h tj II Wr ... 1 l ?•to> ?4•L T4"· -.. '"' P•ck '~ 5• lOti 204' 2\lh . ::i c~~ lltt 1~ 1e,'."!'i !! 44'h 4511> e NlfOonif A•'.~Y 1~~ 1,!;k, l:Jf ~Jf ~~ ... • c2orP u 1411 14'"' 1"" 1 "'cuter H 1.1 t 1 11111 11\J, 11" ···v. lab Vohi01 lt 1 60.:. "• S '• 8rlnk• In -U.Vi 21 •• , ... ,... 11 u lllon °' ~~ IOS ndl 3.J, Ainil'I -''° • "'A ,. '911< • v. ~VCIO!l\ l.'l(J 11 u n·~ 22'i. -t"' HonttoteJ I 3l Jill, ff"" 301/t. ••
' ''
., '" • 1! l t ~lers Inc Ire nv-... 1 G•-·o • ..,, 11 1149 61'1 "" -!,\ 'r'Dru'M 1.60 J ~'• u i4 U'"" ~· oOllrt I 2D 6 lJl'i >;; JJ\,.i '•
NO DRESS length will ap-
pear truly out of place al auy
social occasion lor al. least Uie
next year or so.
Now, bere are your fun-
damental rules on clothes for
tbt office and oo getting the
most for your clothes dollar.
Never buy a new wardrol>t
all al once. a po.int
parlil .. -ularly pertinent at this
mini·midi transition period.
Instead, says Ethel Burge,
author of "1'his Business or
Dressing [or Business,''
roartnell, $2.!¥.1), "Buy ii piece
by piece as good st.ores put
quality merchandise on salt>:
from time to ti,mt.. ''
ALWAYS W.&IT until a new
clot.blnJ!: trend bas caught ou
and always keep your styles
SUB • QUALITY
DRUGS
ARE RECALLED
The directors of t h t
Newport National Corp., tile
holding company for the
Newporl National Bank h<1ve
reached an agreement ··iu
principle" to merge with the
Southern California First Na-
tional Corp., holding c:<lllpony
1st National
Deposits Up
Southern California First
National Bank, "1'il:h nine of-
fices lhroughout Orange Coun-
ty. showed a yearend deposi t
increase of twice the national
average and is ranked 103 111
1.otal deposiLs among the no-
tion 's more than 14,000 com-
mercial banJi;s, according to
figures released by th e
American Banker. a national
daily financial pub.licalion .
The figures are based on an
.annual survey of Uie nalion'.s
top 300 banks as of Junl' 30
conducted by lhe Anterican
Banker.
State Workers'
Chief Picked ~., TlllY GIANT, 1.P•
E\·c1·y week tht 11:overn-
ml:'n! issues a list of prod· Robin W. Allen. currenlly
1,1cts that they would like employed by the California
lakrn off the market either State E1nployes' Association. temporarily or permanent· Jy. \VI:' have found that /he has been named general
majority uf tb(' drugs on manager of the newly formed
tJ1is recall Ust are made by California Public Employcs
lesser knO\\'Tl manu[actllT· F' d I d' ers "'·ho:-c prl)(lucl~ are not e erat on. accor 1ng 10
usually stock1'<1 by 1>har1na· federation president C. G.
cisL~. Quist. When one o( lhr larger CA LPEF was known as the
\\'Cll-kno .. \'n companies is League of Countv Employe listed it is usually at their 1 own retiucst and because Associations prior tu i r s lhe~· ha .. ·e found somC"thini::: reorganizatior. lasl Aprjl. I!
in 'their extensive lestin~ now represcnls 8 S. O O O
laboratories. The public is emp!oyes in 50 intlependenl bcini:: protected by i;trii:l. su-
pervision of the mcd1ctnl'S <:ounty employt organ1iallon~
that t:llil be dispensed, so in Ca1Uornia, QuJst said,
you can have confldcncl' in ---
\Vhat your doctor prescribl'S I • • • • • • • • • • I and your pharmacis t dis-• •
pcl1$CS. • WANTED • YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN P1iONE US when you
need a deJivery. We \~·ill de--liver promptly \\'itliout ex-
1.ra chari;:e. A great many
f)('(lple rely on m for thclr
health IX'eds. We ,veJcomc
r<.'QUCf;ts for dclivcry service
• • • • • a.nd charge <1ccount.s. •
•
Will {iurch1s• • lm•U l•clron ics • Manuf•clurin9 Firm • Principals Only • • ...... LIDO PHllMACT Write 1.c.s. Corp. • S1.1lt• l ·D at a
351 H-.lr• .... • "2165 I. Co.•t Hi9hw11 •
HiJWp•rt a-ca. 642·1HD • Coron& tl•I Mar, Calif, • fttt o.tiftl'y _I. a •••• a W a a I
1•sy-,1ra 1cfi.,. wa•r
fo•
mal\ ind hoy4
ootMWaar
by
mi9hly·m•c
0,111 Sw~~•Y•, •. '"'!ht :.u"'"'''
11 lo '
for the Southern California a~n ~~ 1~ 11\i: :~,;r~ ~ ~~ l~""· •f'wntcti 11vti""ao. ;a: o. ~~cono~·'°\ 1U 11* ~~ il\t +i-· -o,...;.. '" .,.~1~~;: 2l 1~t? 1s~ 11~ t'••
6.,,,,., 8e 't HM ,1, T 7\'> 1 tould 111,:<ur.::;:~ '#~ 'i.tM 1~ •ncorJNSv , Jfi'i 14!'1 "~' _, ... g111llivr .:i.s.. 1 no nlo '" a ~nf .tt 1s1 2•..., ~\\ ~•\Ir + ,.,
f'lrst National Bank. i~t~ .s 20~ ~~ ~I~ 1!'"' 11~ ~ 111!01.,.or bo:n19'1t l 'OCk 1'.•1 U.t• ~~~·ll> 1·if i n:z n ~ +fl D:~·,~ ~ : ~\io mt "' •• ~~ .:.:_.~ :1: G ·'/1o 11 rl~ 1$ ffl'l .. I~ A iolnt announcement issued :1c Le•\ •"" Y4 tu!f E ,,,., 1:.ri I eOJ ,nscJv. tlKt •.10 t.» •~n i iJr 11 ,,!,(,, u 1' +l'A 01rt rt>11 pf 2 55 li\.\ :M~ ~~.-\.'t on1a kt .•Q 29 2 ta 21~ j'~ _ 1, Ct! W 5v ?:Jh 2'lllo eye Flt 111-io 11'4 ,t,IJe,rdll l.~4 t'J "~''At';: !·lf ~.D7 APL c.orP I 1m IJVo 1>11 t ~ g111 Proass 32 1" 1 ;,.. -~ ~Of1'V1"\ j•lll 111 I 1:0 ll I -P•
today George l,. Woodford , E:;:.0 "" !l ~ U:1 ).~ :"" ~ Adgi1r111y Funds: ,1.1 15)9 u.11 !~i /:, 9f#. JJ .~ 11~ ,w.1 ' ~2 >q D0:rc:C~.~· ,1003 ritI• s:·~ J'"-°7-.~ Ti 1~11 .C: 1t7! i!\; 13t~ ~. ~ -j 'i;
:•nnM II 6l bl ll'KI In! 211. 1>Jo I ....,II •.et 5.1• vy 5.15 $.11 Ar'lllN l°or tl 1611 '\jj 1 V. -\I l'r'lni-lucf ._!O l 2 ... ?~ 2._, ·.-" OUd Mel .llO 1 f~ ~VI •l'I ., Jr., NNC president and c. c. Ctnrad 1'1> "" lnot El J\4 '"" ·~~ ...... ',·!~ H~O(J( 6.:IJ 6.13 Art• •Np, t I ~ 32'" Jtl' -~~ .••,YlnPt 1.1111 11 21~ ll n•i +. tt-MIJI ·"° t I' Ill-; 14\i '• C•P Mklt ls 15V, .lrlt Co l\lo ~ Mo . .~ Jahnsln 14.54 14.$1 Arcto 0111 r • 2114 21 11 -1'1· L •'Dr _4f 130 fO '<I '<I" HOU•C.hl' l.lQ ,., 3.1 :M :u -l. Blakemore, SCFNC president ~I' $0W ' 1V. MO Vat JIV. nv. Affl r;rd :·~ ::r. '.l:o"t: F~:.~ ArlzPSV<: 1.0I 15 """' 11\11 UV.+!j g-tre Co 7 2• 7ttlo 11h '~ ·;...; Hou1F Of4 . .0 1101 IDl 101 -11, :•o lntA 7•.li 311. KreBlr 2Vt Jl..li Al1Jlr~ 5 1t 5·-c '' ' · Al11ns DS .lO 1,~ •'"•• ,°",.. , ..... t ~~ g'•n~'.1!,', ',·.',,' 2'07 •"•"• .11~ 1,',.~, -t ... aH~t,FF ,, ...... ~,, '•l"~ lm ',jt_! _ .. ~ 'd th $13 'I" t C10Tch l"H 7'A l.MC Ott ''"' llo Alj A " · ... \IS 1.0l 11.'5 ArmcOSl l 60 ... .• ... ...,, .. T• -$1 ,. sa1 e m1uonagreemen :1rr o.v • 1v. L•11<f 111 :nv.231~Alsr:i' " .sa CU$ a1 i1.111t.u "'""'° Pfi10 .:i ,," ,."-2w. •1 Air .SD ,,,, 2711, 1 .. ill' oustL 1.20 2 • .in +• c1r!e e1 2V. J tind Ru 1\l:i ! ., ..... , e t .st t .23 Cus B4 1.n t .50 Armour 1611 ' lt 31~ :Jl.\lo _, D1 tc Int 131 a. 1t;• ++~ au~rNGs 14 11 .u{• "" 4<1~ + '• will merge the Newport Na-c1nr Go •ev. It Llllt Wd • •'Vi '"'''" Fd ,1.12 '""' C""5 Kt '·" >.•I Atm•!Ck ·'° ll 2~ 2J l'I ,,Vt!·~ Denn Mtv '° 7t l41e 1 ... _ '''' 141 HouGt 1>rl.50 i u "" •• "It " C1.c toG t V. t'oi Litaon 1•~ 71'1 AmctP 1.11 5.U C:.Us K2 J ... I~ AnnCk pli JS ?200 41\io AS d V, Oe"nv111t 'o• '6 Jt• """ -\.\Howmet .10 JO ll'l l:MS 13lt •. tional Bank into the larger San ::111t c.o 1"' 1~• Lirwn M '·~• lJ ~ 3u1• t.M ~.GI CllS jl 15.l' 1•.s.I ArmR11b 1"60 s 21~ 11•1& 11''I v, Oe11tsprv1ni 1 2J 22\lo 1{ 1{1' + '" Hubbrll 1.0H 11 211 1~• im -•a Cefll!!J 1' 2:J'h Lead~ Ld 15 " ·-·r v" 1·'' , .. CU$ ' ' 1.65 '·"" Aro Cor11 9o 12 1'"'i l~\. 1' 30 Otl!RGr LIO 1 u 15 '' -1" Hlldl!I•• l.lO 11 2C>lo 20 20'4 .,. '· ff based b k :~n VP$ '\4 I~ Ltll Co.I 1 71' ..,,,...Ill E1ore-ss: Cus SJ J.U 6.AO Arvin Ind· J 6 11~ ll'n 11\/t -\'• Otn-co ~a J 3l 33 · · r:u111Chm .11 1 15 U lS , leJ!:O-an . Cll1rn11 1~~ :n4 "-t"ur G llV. 1'H f• t ~, u,, 6,11 Cw $4 J.H 3.Sf Alhld 011 1 H U 11~ 11 211.4 +I DeSolol"c .-IO \D U\'i 11'° ff\ ~· + ~• d1lloPw 1.60 52 21'1> 21 21'4 + '1 Ch1rl 0 J~ 41/o 'L"1l• 8F n 13 MIN . •.• Poll Ir 1.n 3.11 ASMI Brew" 2 n. JU Ai DtlE'dl• ! • fl 111~ 17"i + Yi .:1111 a ••. 60 H IQ!1 IOl-1 10~.+ •• Both men said they expect Chm Lta 114 11,1, Lll'IC Mh '~ '"" ~nYetf ).0 1.11 "dell S.ti 6.5 Alsd OG l lO 65 1J :u·~ nt< +·;" Oet Ed Pl:S.50 ' 11-... '"'' ,',~ -+-v. Ult•IB 1>•11.75 ' s• YI 5t -1'• t:tla '"" 2~~ 1'l LobllW 7~ 7~ S~I 6.71 ·•·· llidr GI •-35 '·H kidTrp" ilSp 12 ·~ •'1& 'Iii +~ Del Slttj ! l'U 1'~ I +14 Ill Ct"I 1.1• .0 N 20 ..0 , the merger •· t.akt place 1·n chtl uu• ""' ll'h Lcrfl Cd• 1 .,,., --~ l .10 1.1• e:r Grt~ •.s..s 1.1, ,t,1111one ind 15 15~7 1s 151'1 -'4 D!x'~r '' 1, 17 , .. • 111 ce" 1113 .. SO '° .il"• '°'~ .ou. :i-', w Chi 8r&I s' S-1 LOOI Etrn 10 11 Am 'i'll~ 3.11 •.:U b: lhch U.11 U.31 A!ICtv[I 1 ll 21 201.~ 20Vt 2111'. +'I\ 0D 1IFhuin .~ 11 ... t~ 14fl:l4 1--~ t1o1o1 ',owtr 1 ll :U'r. 3'\11 :U~\.,--'9
Carl" l97l follow'·g approval Christ s 10• 1a1 t v"th r 15'" u v. Am p•th • tt s • .u IWI, •.7~ $.1 AU Rlchl!O. 2 2•7 5~ 58\to J~• !~ em/Ml 1 '° 51 15,, 35, 3 -"' w 1112.lM :10 1e 21 2• . J .. , Christ pl f l ti M.O GEi 13th 11 Am n·i •.21 •.'H 'e rk 1.:15 •.1J Al!RCh pl) 15 z100 ~•'A 41 •t•4 \:. g11m Sliam" r ,. !"~ 1~~'& 15,._ t V. Imp Co Am 281 9>,. ~• tl l ! "
ho "!rdtl 1 • M1I Riiy s sv;"m M•"' JJ1 I .OS e llV S.S6 4.01 ,t,ttRkh pf0 J '"~~" ftJ.:. P.1 !1S11 pf(? 1 ,,, u •' "'t'!iolHA. (p ],.II) l•I 21 2611 2611 '• of share lders of both com·'\ z Ml~ 10\io 1114 MPlll<rt '·/'It ,,,,., ~N n uruoY•ll nc N•t 1.02 1.n A.tlRc11 pn,ao •5 '5'4 ~~· -4$'< 1\4 Dl•S pl 01.7t 16 1~.;t i•i~ 1sr· t or. lntame C1p11 '' ,.. •t~ 11'1 -1. Cl U e 11v.11,. Memi As '" 1~• •R•R!'•'c un1v1!1 l'KI 1.1i 2.tt Att••Ch(or1; 1 11 7314 2l''a 21" o.r. Dlct•l>hon . .a 25 1ic 1,~ ~,,•1 "l"ccum .1't a t\1 t %11 n 11 ••• ="•'es as well as r•m•la"~ gl'I''" M• ,, 14y, ,., 1 /1o 3,.. 1~· ·~-• roup Loamis S•v1u: At111 Cori> n 119 111 1v. -'"' 01abold llb 1' 51,' ,1 . "' lld!IJI Md .ao 21 i••, 11111 ll''l' r-• ~ ....,. J lP. Mt l f!4 1.-Ml~ C 6'111 6~ CaOll '·:la •.H C1n1d 32.75 32.75 ATO lru; .Ch JO 6'~ ' ''Ao + i't g1 lore la· .60 1 J01; IO\~ ii;"' t2 !l>dolsPl l.lll 5t 2l~., 2J 23\'o + ~.
agenc'.CS' app I 11v1cn l~ ,llil M•r Mlt ~ f'• Grwtl\ I $1 t .31 C10U t.31 , .• AllO"Qrl Prod IS ' S~t 6 + U It tnghm .o 121 9,, , ,:• 4• 11\Clsll N11 90 I 17~ 11'11 171~ -l 0 fOV.ll • tlltlr M~ -'" t Merm Gr I la IH '"cmP i .7f 1.~ Mui 11.711 .n Avtom!n ll"ICJ 11 J'o Jlo 341 -~ DIJl119 Pl i 7 1 1' 4 l l 25 ' ''o lnge•Rand 2 ll5 .U>~ ll .ll~') -t 11
c,tl'!!on,,o ,"', ,1111 ~ •. !row,' 2, 15 Fd hov 1.1s 1.a.i L111ro e ro 10.06 ll.lla ,t,vo;o co tctt ,, fta ,,, '* + •'o O!llc<! co "4 i lit 1 < l111;1ll:d en.ls 5 11>,a 31.,, Jl~~. Terms of the agreement tv-·~ !114 ...... ,,., l.f ,,~ lOl• \lpnf :M . .O J9 .tt 11gna In 7.U •.• , Avca llf.i20 1421~• ,, '11 ~" Obn1i .lOti '" f6 ': ,t; ~::! ~··inland ~II ) JG 2W. lJ'lto ~-...: •.• tceurD .mo 6V.Mi~r0 111'lt•n !POll~Fd ~.111.4'.Mll'lht" 4,0J(.«JAvtl"l'P'd .20 N 2J\'a 1s n +•·,Dlllk!' 1}0 xJ ••, ·-••• nmcm1 -19P "41• 6''> •·•+'•
pro,1·dclorthei'«uan ce·'J.3 COG•rCD4<1 • .. , , ,. 11 ssoc1 l.091.1•1uFd t.01 t.HAvr.et111e."t11 11 •v. ,,~ 6o.r, .Olvtrs nd ':u ",, ,l '•'• +~1nsllco.10n •t1J~1l'ltou~.:.+1. • ..., "" co~m £ 3 jV. Mfd c H , ~ ••\ A$1ron J,10 ~-°' S\ T• 11.15 U.JI mA.vntl pti 50 1 l.Wi ~\Ir uoh· +J givMto 1 ll ll 1 ;' ' 11 + V. t"SPlr Cop 1" 6' 11 361• :Ui.,_ I• 'CFNC shar•• plus payment i:OlllM F t',<, '4 Mee! Ml'lt qav, 19'h A.le!. H,ou~roion: Mires 1.t6 2.N AYGl'IPd 11il l7t AJ 6l'~ + 'A rPu_per ~ ., 11,' /:11 19l~ -1'o tnttr'a 1.10 1 'H~. 21'> ll'.\ • 11
.;i " ..... Co.loll Sir " 21 MKl!rn nv. ?t •U" ~ 4.0S •.15 lhltl •.00 f.00 AUK 011 "nt !I lHO I \lo n:;o, + .,., Own•Ml" ·1a l ~·· 17•'< + '4 t"trlktnc 1.IO I 1l ll 23 . ,.
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camc11r 6 1 Mf!l"!d •~ l'illi 13o;., Fur.o B 4.15 '·" Merld Fd u.3111." · B-· OwnFno ;.i ' s.•, s.•111 +ti IBM 4."" 3•t 2•m nu~ 1Jt>A. of at least $10 ca.sh for each o com cir l7 31 Mi41d ci ''-" ""' ~·oa 5 n s.n ktA Mu •.SO •.tt -0onr.e1111.,.· ,~ ~ 1 . 1 • + '.\ '"1 Ch Nuclr 11 l9'111 ll'n •• -'.'•, c !f•t lo;\lo 1111} Mt -·1~ .1ft -·cl Cp :i.11 • . .u Moody CD 10.70 11.15 B•lx.t< W ~ u 1~~. 1• t•t. i 1:. Oorlc ca ::12 1f M:,; H~ J''a -\\ 'ntFlaFr .>Ob 1•2 SJV. Sl 33\\ l t 1 tbe approximaLe 400,000 NNe ~ H~1t '1~ 21.._ tJ!rurf._~ 11:¥ ~ != 1l:lt li:H 000fF Y~~ 1;:Y 1JJt :~~i ii ~~ k~ !,~ }h't '~ ~~r~1~ver711 Bl Jl~ • f,? = ::t l~tHHQ1~v 1.1Jf. ~ 1~ fft-> lJ , '•
shares .I-•··'•· be OUislan C~ "'' ~ n; MJu VIG ~~ l!'A ert l(.nt 7,26 lJj , Glh •.XI 4..5' 11111~1\1 15p !f j/,'a 4' ... tU V. DOWChm 260 u ~lt NJ", 3W. -'Ito Int tnousl ll7 1~19 t\1 10 +'t, ,............_-u w -eomo A ..-~ Rull l/ lert< Gb ~.$t .oi MuUf Gv 10.U 10.lll -p 1111 1 , 11 w ~ grtulntl l 'II .,, liv. ~'" + '1 fnl Iner Cfl.10 l2 If II~ lo\~ -•,
d. o. , i:mp Cm • Viii Sci •V. , 1!Jlr flt 4.6f j ·l, mG t.Ol "·i! 8•1111~ ell.JS 1 1~ 1'!'14 l2V. -\lo tu"' Pl2 IO 1 331 ~) -'• n1 Miner 26 1~ 10 JD -~~
CmD TK 3 '"" M«i' Col i~ '~ 11os1oro,,s1 4.6• 7.26 l.lut $hr, 11. J 11.7 81nk of Nj' 1 1 '3'4 .ni. '•314 *"" Drevtu1 Cp 11 si.o. s -~ nl N!c~ 1.10 JU Jt:t'o l'>Vt l'l~a + .,. Ing at u1e tune of the Cmc Inst -3l't wk R J§°V.1"1,li Bonds! 5.01 A Mii Omln l.jt t. l!lk fll C1I 1.3• 11 2H~ 21¥1 21~~ + \lo Orts.st pi B2 s :it a 2'9 -') \nl Mna .20e 14 11" 1~0 11\to + l ..
merger. comrf$ 2 21"1 MonmPk 1 n :i,1...,Botl n l.H9.13 111Trs1 l.741.1jill•MTr.,. a«Vt 11.W.«-1•1 \•0ul(ePw1.J •120i ~~JSf•+!, ntP1p1.50 191,J.11~33\~.U\'i
N rt N . I k COl"I Rock ,5 2tVt Moll~ p '"' 9 '°" 1.11 7.77 EA Mui l .IOOCI Blrb Oii 1 "ut ~ 11\'i 27llo ~ 1'.4 DulieP Pl6 7S 1 IS I IJ D. ..••. l'lll Recru 25 ··~ ~.,. ' + i,. ewpo , aUOna 8 ii 0 CO'lfrfd 1V. 1\lr MOOre s 10Y, 11 BrO<IO $l 11.1612.JI Hll Ind 1.9J 7,f &trd CR 0.:Js u lPI 35 l5';lo VO Dlll111rad 1 20 •2 tl\>, l' '' · nt Sat! 1..0 • 3"~ 36 .361> ~ 1
a( . ( C 1 in 1~ 1k TA 11 l1'1i Bul1oek Ctl~ln: al ln~~t 5.12 '·3' B11k fru; ICI 19 f.11,1, 10'• 111Jo '! DuD!en .601 111 M" !,1'' ,',2, 4· ·~ L1nt T&T 1.QS <01 JP,& Jl'!t 31?0 t '• Oper f"Sllllle bankinaoftcesc:' L 131.~lii,\!Mltt r , 4,,_ ~11Ck 11.3'12.'~Nal SKU( Ser: !alesMft . l I'~ t'« 1'4 '•duPPnlJ?Se 1511 ., ... ,. "-"I n!T&T pfO' tl"112~ ll.W.114 l' . 0 --o c:r'"s 31~ ~ ~J ;:: ·~~ l" .C.und" 11.:1' 11.11 1111111 •.1110.02 &1ln Mt pf I 11~ 12•1 11\'i -1'• du Pon! pU !otl ~ t1 42'11i :n,,· J~·-+n~ !"IT& T pfE • t20D !!4\fo IU\t.. 114\; I • in range County. Blakemore~--Yr 1~ • .,.. ... , c•·• ,,~,ti r~ld 3.15 1-1.5 !Gl'ld •.61 s.°' B1111 1ncr i • 11~1 11' 11~ +l'MI duPon1 Dli• , • ,, • •" IMT&T PIH• 11 11 11 11 , .... ,,., >S I> -' • •lo•W S ,., •.-0 1"" >.• l .-0•"1' "',. " +! ~-. "'''' •J' > '''' >I ' . • 'd nJ n<f •• " o • ,,.. -' " • .., '" "' ""' !O \\ ll~i 3'1 -< .,,,.,. LI I." '' '''• >O !0' ~··,, '''/;' P \'J 1 ,,. -1 s.a1 prese man<uuoment a ,T>ue '' '" Ill-• NY vnt 11.ct 12.11 Grwth 1.12 •·t l'"KhL• ·• 0q .... .. ~ uc• u 11 ' " _... rN Mot '·· 1 MutRI E\ , ••• ,, •.•••.• '' ·-s.-•. ,,,,.,, .,, 1t 3l"-lWI 33\lr ... Oo •.20o'2,10 lZID 2o6 ,. u "1"1 ""'•• '' 6 \) ,. ~1
Staff e •· t' C'''' Mh 1.,.. ,.._. LE ,,. ' '" ·~ " ,_ llS 21 20~ 11 + V. •.Uaf2 07 ,,. >• >• >• -,, o " -~ 1 •Ao •1'4 •1•~ ' ,., · ar w con1nue un-crau c .. 26v,1r i; N'lt'in<1 3,~ •Vo G,,!d 1.1• 1.1~ •mom '·tt '·"' 81vV11:c11 :so 1 ,,, t.il ,,~ ... OUQLt 4g1 ·, i«IO ,.,. 16 1 ~, _,Inf u1111 .«1 10 l6~• 261,t. ,,,:,;_.~, changed. Tbe merger wilt :nm::h R '''• ~'9 H1rr110 C l)V, 1!'11 Cepft"'' t .lO 7.•S SIOCt 4.72 7.34 Bearln" I IJ l&'> lHO 16•• + * 0q l.1Sol1.17 i20 ui; 11•~ 21,; + ~ rn: U!il ,._ 11 21>r. 1&•1;, 211.\ + 'J Cvpr1, C ' 7 l'l•I Drnd ,'" ,,2:~ C••/I i'!v 25.61 1.1, Nel Gr!h 4.H 1.'° 8111 FdJ I 2' :)N 21 2A'o + \r. Dvmo Ind 1 lh ''" 1j -,~ n •8rpece I 9 :11\'t 21 l o ll1,~ t
brl.ng t tt lh •• f Dan• L!)s 71~ 7.._ N tC rt ., ... r .ot 5.tlNeuw Cet J.17 J,90 8..c.krn•n so 57 m, n •<o ~ ..•. D)'n• Am ;a ll 5\'• s•, ,,~ -'"Inf r11\C1 .90 165 l~la lJV-. u~~ -1 0 .,,, e numm:r 0 D1nl'r' M • ' f,V. l'l~m:r CP l \lo 11.~ Cen Shr 9.ll 17'0.1 Ntuw Fd 15.t5 U.tS h<:IOlt• 0 30 SS JO ,.~. "'• .f-Vo E F • ' !nt~r•Pw 11• ' 16''1 ''"'" l&'a ~ Ii Soulhern CaJifornia First Na-°"" ~ 5.\0 .... ~'fit E"u' 1• u c~111n1no F11Ms: •• Wkl 10.65 11.u 11tithA.r i.5b il tt• ''• tla. +vi -• -/MtrstS!r .60 is 1.;, llV. 1,,.., +t oar. Grn 11 17:14 Nil GA.O l!'• l~h '}1tan 1.7' 10.70 twlO~ 11.•312.'3 &eic'o Pet · so lll 1511> 1•11o 15\'o +io,;, Eaql~Pc~ .1a l' lt•. 1• n ~ ''* ow• !~t ..ia !81' 17h 11 fiO"naJ Bank offices in Sun oah•tn P 1 ?'°'" N•I Lib ,. n •corn St 1."it 1.n lch Strt 1.'9 1." B•ld•" 1 .O r 2J"~ 1f''• 2sv. . E11co Cp .ta , n •-. 111, 1,...., _ ,,, Jow11E1L 1.ao 1• 16~; "~' 1~• f '• Olvh Fd •'-" l\lo N•jl Mtd 1~·~ 17•(. t,rw1h 4.n ~.tl Of"llS! 13.91l:l.'2 ltldll9H . '°" ll 13' .. 1Jlo l)'.\ -., E11t A.!r Lill ~ 1' ,~, 1$41 -u lowOlllG !.JI II 7'0't. t9 .. 20•, -"• Diego, Oranee and (,I) s Dav M•• 1• 11 Ni Pet b<o •~• ~:~ t~ l:!: n'i'l' 't·.t !:V aeu Hew"·"° " 211~ 211'1 2111t _ 11r l"1 GF .tlf n 1'''> 26 2!\1 t ~ lcw1PLt l .H 10 2211. ll~• 11~~ 1,
A I Decor 1n •1..0 Sl• '.l~t ~Kii ~':! •,• C•••• Gr B·•·. _ O ' .>• ..... IWll lnl,rcon ; 4'l. .\.lj •'-" -Vt Ill U111 l . ..cl I Uit 1410 16 • 1owaPSv 1.3i 1 19~ lt\'o 19\'o -'t ngecs counties. De~tb A.o 23 :11'1 Nel s11ow ... " -... .... -a.m•• co, , u:u. ,.~, 1~4 + ••''l"""nk 11 tll '°i' st1,; 60, . ·~ pqi,Hasp .:u 11 71"' 21 11~ -1•, ')elhl '"' '"" 1 ... N•I Silvr • •'I: CIPll •• ,1 S.31101 FO 1.12 ... , •••••• '. E1 o"'r'• I •o 1' 16! 2 •• ITE Imp 60 10 lll 1tl' ?ll'i ~luJ c~ ..,,,., ~,,., NEn GI: U\a u F11nd •·"' 7.25-°"' wms n.•9 11.'9 1,;;1 p, 3 1 ~ ~t; ~a ~~ + ~ Ecltl" Mt :n 21 2'l! ,f~~ M~i .:.:. ;,; 11"! Core· lJJ 2s~ '''~ ,,.;, =-•,;
Ot! C•nT iv·, 1··~ NJ NolG IA'" 16~ fr"'• s,.74 Jf.26 'Hell 11.3' 11.J9 • 01'c ' •• '' ~. ,,.. ,,1,_ -ll, E( erd J .ll1 3t 13\\ 13 131.1, + 1, T s~ pU lll J '' "'~ t1 + ,,,
"'' '' 11•1 II'> ~ , F ,. .. , ''"• •• ~rh '·'' t.t$ nh 1.n '·" ene P .... ~· "' " • Ell aonBr• ' ' "'' '''' J K r);v A,i., l\1o 11.l I~\~'".., " SPKI 6.51 7.11 OPo ~IM 1.60 t.40 &ll!ltll PH.5'1 t50 51 SO\~ 50\/t ..... EG&G · '' -'It -• -o~we, E l~\ 3l< !eli 8 ~j;~y~Ch!mtl t•.071S.3llO'rC Sec t .0' t.n eener 5012.SO 1100 211.~ 211\~ 21\'.-•(.11M~1c·1i,. ;f 1~, 1J~: 1J~•-'I JltksnA!I 11 IS 6"a '" 4'• .i i~
C ... ,,,, ·,,, ' (OOf\111: Pict Fnd •.« 7.CM een111e! 15t 5 410 •i'I -" .,. ····-,, ,· ,. ·' ' J1ckAll pf'° I Rt P . ''· +·· 2l:i' In; V: ,,~ ~~.r~J& ,,,_ 10 EQut'r 3.0! 3.31 iul Rtv 5.'1 4.'6 e-vfl tn l ''" "' •~ . . . N\em" M;", it , 6,.,. 1"'' +-,' J1.-;iPr ll1 1 ·1 1 1 t •• Olver CM ?lo 3\"; NEur Oil 7 l~o F~ f.Dd f .90 tnn SQ •.10 4.IO lerkeY Pho •l 5io S>o SH -\io EIMM10 pf I ll>t 11>: 11' + ,1' Jfnlitn 60b 11 11'o 11 11\0 '• Ooc1o1tol ! S''°l NJ",t, GI• U 11 GI~ '·" !.O'l1 Pa Miii J.17 l.11 &ermec C0tP SO l'"t l\lo ~ .-.. E' 11lnNll Ind ,. 5~ ~\· s•.! + ,~ J11>11,nFd .06t 19 !O~ 1,•,',<, •,•0,,1 'o DOW Jon lJ'4 j•I~ lo!W w.iG I '" ·~om un1v1 I Pr:!I• 11.l• 12.Q l!leth Sii 1.IO 150 '1~. 11• .. 21 l\I . '. Er~~IONG l ., lltl U" U•!t Jep d ln06f ' 10'°1 O<rllt 08 h\'o 5 NW PuSw 11'• 1110 Vtnt 3.M j·1t P l11rlm 7.~ 1.ff Bit T!lrff .&o !2 tll-•1"° •2'"• + I~ Ellr1 Cp I 10 12 IN. 10:>, 20VI · · ·;: JtlfnPllol .IO •1 15'0 1•1 • ,,,,, :...., •
Drtw NL t''r 7'o NuCI II.IC ~·~ • Col Grlh t .6.\ .llPnt Sl •.n •·ff B!1ck D~ .II 11 •Pi. (1 t!V, ... Emer EIK '1 (1 SI'~ ~...., SO\'t +ii Jt~en•A .SO JO 16ll, 15'_, ll'O -I•
Dunkin o •'~ '"" Ollla Art ,,5io ,,'!I! cc.~,,~ ~d' l'.ff •.ll 1ol'I En! S.2, 5. e11rrJohn d 30 11'• n~:, lllit -\'< ErneryAlr .90 1} 501, '''" .SO\'I +l~ JJ" '1,1'c "i •1 1.lo tJ SJ " + ·~ Durl~n 11 j•l.t Ol\lo Wei ., " " 1.11 1.2e Pron Fm t.Sl lo.CO 811ss L,,..,,· 1 10 11'-fl 11 -Iii Emh~rt 1.10 14 li•) ,.,,., 21~~ t llii fwe O · 1• ~•l< «lo '"• --f•
"'l P•ln! ··~ ,,.~ Op! Sc•n ll Hl!i Cw Ith co 1.33 j·43 Pltn •n~ l.15 1.13 Bladt HR ' 211 ""• 19 4t~ + " Em.~ISI 1.16 I 26\t '6\.\ 1 '1 -* J,1•mw .. ,., ~iO 11J 1,1\'j 26>..; 27 •. !!~qi( wf S l~) Ormont t', 7 Como As l .G' .31 rlct FUJII!$; Bl~ l!le!! J°?O t 31 JI;;. 31loi + 14 E POftC .90 J 2.6~ ~ 2'* t-o •"" 1l 1 31 32 "ast s~ 7 1"' Otttr TP 1i·.,11~ .. com!>fl S..«J j·t1 Grw!I\ 11.4•11,'4 !obtoit ani, 1t ,,, t t _,,.E"'I!! !n .40 N 'lll" 11 11•11 JmWell Pl I ilOo 13 1J lJ ! , '°con LID 11111 1' lnve• NA J'o )\IJ CO!T'll !d 7.61 ,i. N l:rf l.ll .31 &OllllnaCo • IU lt'ia 12""° 12'1' + \" E1111M ll'l4.25 111 '' 112"" 112~> .:...4l Jal\nMt n 1,10 l1J :13'0 lJ1; lJ>\-'•
0.:1 PasEI 1 1'11111~ PEC l~rl 17""13\'1Com'!~ '·"° 3.nl'ro F11nd 7.to 7.ffl Bolld Ind. 17 4 1>• I\~ t -•>,E'1\rfG11 i.10 I 'lt'A I l'M·+!Ji. John1 S~c Ill 13 10• ''°' 1'h-j. •
Wllter Firrn
Purcliases
Soft Wuy Ed\I'!.-5.,, 2>h Vii 1o~vc11 lC'-'11111> Como Fd 1 .•• I .St M Hor 11.'9 UJt &ol•CIS 2.Sb JIS ~\) .&2\'o ·ra+1 rin~dl a.., 31 3 l ,,. !\~ • John Johll ,Jl 130 -I!!'· •S•·• •S'•
ElDI s .. st ~ ~ PebJI br AO~~ tl~ Conc...-u t .20 t.ll1 rovdnl l.73 t,111 Bordm i.20 '' 21;, 11\11 21 -?'t ESt Inc: 1.20 is 17V. 16~• 17 -; JonL0tftn .a:i • u" ••·~ •1 ~ • .-'• 'rhe 811.\;Cll Of the Sofl Wau Eldu llt 5'1; 6 Pac ,._V~ m jV. COMO! Ill •.OO f,SO P\l!'llln f.'9 J.11 BOf"11Wir l lS 3' 10'·" 20 20 •• , .• muJrt .30 J.I 11~, 10•..:i 11~ +I Min JW .50 l 16'" 1S't 15'• -''o J J'j Wllr 1 3'.,. Pt~ ... "~ 3 v; COl\JU '" 2.3 3.0, lllnt('l'I fund•: 150l"m1Ttt ·'° ~· Ill ... 1'1/o 12V. -.. ~ 1se.1n1 1.20 11! 12'' 21* 21 '11 -JontLlu .l•P 7 10S.. 101• ·10>~ -...
Rcfinl ... Comp n• have been El Nuc ~ J>.4 P1~ce o ''~ 3 Conti Mt ,_, t .t7 Eoult S.9' '·" aca Edi• 114 41 31\o 3,,. "" -iterllne .ne 16 tl• .-..., ~ i 1., Jorr,..,sn 1,30 l 11111 111• 11•., + ·~ •<e a ~ Etcttov ''• ~ p1""'o1 ,,._ 1141 cont G10• '·!' •.N Geor1 l!.U n .n eounu •nc' , t (t ,...., 11~ -tna Ci> ... 20l 20•. 1ts"o 10\lo '14 Joa e"s 10 , 1~~ 1~" 1t11• _
h d Enrom 6.,. 7 l'irl<r or •U S\) Corp t 1'. 013.90 Grtl\ 1.u l.'llJ llr•nll~lr 50 31 11~ t•• t'• ·~ Jlf240 6 l1 ll jl2 !IQ Jc• Ml• 1 40 10 3'V. J9 l~l -" • pure ase by tht. American El c ~vs 1 ?'1> "'"'"' " 71· 1u. Cnt'r car. •.st 10.tt '"com ,,13 7.j( BrlggS1 1 .4Q~ n 061~ 45~• " =~I"' Old .25. • 1rt" 17'" 1•~ :_ •• tc•ise "* 1 ~1 a t,. 1n, ,._; .~ :: El°"'' •l 45 .~11.>l'Y p s' ~CrnWOv ~flt !.33 lnvt>I S.SI •. It llrltTMv i'lll st Jl(• 51\'t ltvt-114 Yl!UP .~ Jt 30'1 33"\4 lj'lt -''>1(111 511tf~.IS 1 6} 1l 6] \l,';Her Proclucl! Corporation El Moe1u1 ' •~• Pavel1f t 1:i.:. Crn wo11 !.55 1.ot v1111 ,_s1 1.13 ar111M• pf1 1 U~'• u·~ Jt\i -.,., xceno 1.~ ' '•'.6 17'' 1 ~ -t-•• l(ats st~•1 11 l 'J'~ 6tl'; 611, +• 'E .... 11s OH /l !l>~ Pe~rl Ml ,._ ·~ oeVg~ M !11151.11 Vova11 s.u 5.ff Brlt Per 11~ C$1 10-1;, r-• IOI~+ •i lbtf'ft ·"° 21 l•l~ IC'a ''""' + '• K1h,t,f pt•t1 ' !.!•, S4:it i<li ,.
ll wag announced todQ" bv Ener<1Y ( 1 !IV. Dte:rltl 1 11 'j\'i 0.1rw1re Group; RID Tecfl l.11 l.,f Br Pel ln.Jle 117 'ii tt' 'l'' ..... lclA .60lt )I "" l"llo J1\'o K11 4.15pn l l t1'0 u " lC~o l•l) -•
I A Red P 'd t ncfE~n!1 II ' ~"Pl G~.W 11',,"f',• o"',,1•0 r 10.A6 l,43Rlnlnt 12.,31!,50 rl<WYGI 60 l 24\.o 24" 24-l' 'hi•• Ill .la ll J'>~ 1 1 -'1 1C11sC p!1 5Q 1 l~'• ll'< ... -I J Efll!fQ lie I'~ HO P1 E"tln "'• "' OfCal '·IOjO.J\ Rtvtre 1.3, f .l ldwYH~li I I ~· ~ ~ t '" F•\r c .50 1:li 1t'li 1f\t 11'>1 -., K1l1C1m 1(1 ' 11'. H 11 ,,
•· . ay, rtsl en d Entwi!I ''0 1•;, Ptnll P~c I '<I • 5.61 t.13 Rr:,tnl~ •·'' .a klv11UG 1°11 10 24\l 2''4 2•"'1 VI 1lrmont 1 3t U •\ 1410 lito •lo 1\ K1hC p11 -:11 2 11 1I r1" + Eo~ Coro 1 \Ir Pepsi wa 5't 61' Drexel 11.U 11.U • m Fd 1·" •·11 row~ Ca· 1 •b 4•\ 4.t. •.•.. •11\Jlf .!Op JO M~ 6\'i 4V. ·~ Kt..C Pwl·r 7 ,0 30• 01 ~ " General Manager nf I he Eou11 011 ''" 10 Petrollt 31~;, :n OreYI f-11 '·"' 10.n """'r 11·'1 12.n wni·"'rJO .10 ' !~ w. t>,1, -·~ F1m iv fl" I ' llh 11~. n:iio":: ''KC PL ... ,.. ,,, ,,.'1 ,,,•, •,, .. Erlt Tee ~" •·~ Plllld! "' 5~ I' O'!"' Lv l0.7t 11.12 cudd9r Funds: wn hoe 1:.S. 10 l 11 221~ 'l2l' -'IA F1ns1ee: hK II t UO 3r. + \\, ~· ·"" '
C I. FB C:e(o n, ,I• Ph!! :Ill 11 It:. E~ 011&Hcward: !"' rnv U.st 11.14 lrunMk 10 ~ m 12~1 11~-,_. F•rWttt Fl" • !1 1Di~ l v, _ "' ,c, •5culnd ' •••' '''• 11\i 1P!r ~ ·~ orpora ion. F1D Tt-21, JV. Pho!on I'' 1~ ll•lrn •.• , t.ft P<:I 11.10 26.'9 l>Cet!I l"dl. 2 ,~. 1,. 1% -\I< FlrlhMt ,tob JI "O~J ,4~ -I!!" -~ K •"• ~ •' 111. 11'• 131~ +-'I
A • Wt rod (SF1trlr.q ,,,. 2~1Plt l"d II\ G0rwth tS5lO.U 8•1 12.6212.ll t uc;•E:r 1D f I~ 111,!o lnto +\'o FA$ lntr J61 Ill ttt \Ir • ...,_,, an ' 11 '1 70'> ;>!ii\~'• mencan a er r uc ,f.'2"'1 ,•.·,", 1.·,•,.,.c-,,,,,",,',..·", .. " le!! ,eo,.:•:ll 110 4>1 '"" ,i. + ""fieoct'" .•o 6ll 2• 16~ ,,,.. ~1 K~nPwL 1.1' 1 'Pl 11•, ,,,, _ ,, ....-~ """' 2 P• m Jfl -" edet1I 1.111 JO ~lift 10 10 -•• Ka!v lrtd 11 ~" •'• i'~
Corporation wholly owns and ,.,""',,, ',',·.1.! 1,',·l? ~:Jlo'!!)'1 ',·.•,, J-HI •,.~11,.1:,"•'io ,. 4\1 f\W '~+ l'o tdMcli 1.111 " n" 22 221, ! "'K•ut Brd _,a 10~ l''· .,.,, :;,~, ..., .-~· unF 3 lO 2ft,O :JO -V. FtdPK flee t2 l h lh t~ ~ KlwKB .'Oii I !I 11 ls operates Servisofl of Orange E'lret lll.15 11.0l lrl l"' ,. l ulOVI Jo 'l' 1m 15''9 '~"' -"'F Pit ri.• . 1:1\• 11\'o ll"t \1 Ketblr• 1,:IO ' •O' ~t.·1 ·~· 1) jJ ] Emr1 Sc •.11 '·S4 !11K Am ·'' · l unk 11.afT'I! ) 1 41/o At •.. ,. Fed5ltn .llO I 1!1\4 1.,.., Tl~I . "•lie• lr'K! ~ I II', t,.1'• i,.'"• •\
C d.. . .>Ot•ttlt..lll -Leps Ener1v lD.6Sl0.&5 ti s'is 11.011 unkR ·ll.50 , j' ,, 1.1 •.... F::g•11 Inc t J"• " s·~-•10:ello<1g 110 ~ •··.
-.v "' ., •v 61 71~ 31\.o Sll~-. 1~ ,~ ell•~! t( -1 '" ~·ll +IV. cl!oag wl J '°" 70•., '°'• 'l Oasl ' • water -n 1t1on1ng · 111•Dr1e s.-••I• oh '·'"' J·1! ,.1.,•·,·-.. ,.. "' • -• • •· • '
nd h 9\1!1'1' 7.6' •• 3t lllm d 1.H ' \lrlNor 1 «it 10';1 2•~ 14 1-l\4"" .. ~Dev II ll 1h 1 ., •. t<•I•~" I.JD 14 ll'' 11•, ,
'ale' a ·-v1'ce franc ise: F-L } 11Ut Gtt1 1.u '"'' llHr "P ••·""·Ji l''1''' ,.· " -,.. , , _ .. 'iifl c11 .10 •t !''' 14'-'o 141~ . ,, •• ,,1 .•• ,, ,,., ,, ' ' -·1'1·111's· aunc l Eutx l>.••···~ ~ ... , ''·2112· ' ...:~ LU • "'"II ~ • .... "" ii ' ' ;;:i ,u 10 l'V. l~;. I'\'+ \t. "'u • ~ ·~ jjl• 'U'"' +I t<ennmet Ml l~ :.l 1)1-, '11-•
fr''m ' ·ng Beacl• , n d !·'il"ct '" ta.u 11. 1· ,, 1.u 1. ''''ll' ·., ,,, .,,, ,, .. ,,.. • , ... , ., ,, , , , _ .. ,,.,,,,, ,·., ,, ... ,. I.Al ... ,.,-,. ~..... .. " "'""•ltl ......
1lrfd IP ~.1' ~.JO tm1 FurlOs: •u~ro llV ' '" • " 11 ll +llo. l'"ci! l • ..O , '°~ 20• .• 2<1•4 . .• KFCh Del 10 1~1 " 1 1·~ iii; -•\ Lakewood lo San Clemente. R t' .~ A I F k Firm l!u ,.tt 1·1,s 1n1~1 :·i1 ::n . -C-~uYr:'t'i'l; '!1 !t~ ~l1' n··~ + ~ l(y U!!I 1.jt ,. ?ltO ~4•• , .. ,
C Jrt'u ~ ronaut ran · ~f.1 Gr!h 10 3111.1 Trvit 1 . .is J·'' C•bol C:P 10 ,1 l6~• :Ui• ,.~ _ 1~ F't Ch rt 2.tn 6, it "..; »l: = Kur""' 1,$0 l1 ~1\lo t111,o ·~~ .; ,,,
Its headquarters is al 506 31Sl Borman recently participated F,•,i .~~~ 1;·,~liU ~\111:v ~·i~ 1:i~ f:l1.~~n•:u"' 1~ ,~~ 1f.1 11~ ! "~1~lN't'r11' J:11 "°~' I~~ ~~ ll~ l' ~:'"~rco~i~'; ,~ ~·~ ~~'k ~·~ "'·eel 1'n Newport 9 .. ,,, I rnd 117~20S4 wl"v GI 4t2 4," 11mpRL •S• 11 23'Ao 12~ ,, + "Ji•I tr,, l ml "t n~ ~ ~ -• In • reg11lat1'on c-un"·wn and 'o"!~1,1 p,..,.,. Saver Inv 11.1• ll,O':I ••••• ''' I' "' • ' >• > ,, I . I . ·" """' ... m !(:it 3n iOKff• $. t S,to !dlrew .O• " 16\1 2,ttl 2'~ -lhf,d 'i 4 'l wtlere I m a I n a l n ~ a launch of an authentic Saturn ~llliuJI 1 u 3 S7 SIFrm GI t.:11 ··n d" Pit· 1 2C n 5~'" i ~, + -~ F i"\lt6tl '.n ~ ;r. It: .fi ~
d · ncom '"!·"!'"St :U1Sl~. 1n1tRd 110 1 13\tt 11\lt V. ••••• Fjn o~ 1 J 14/ ~ 2.+to -'11
regeneration plant, an v model in Santa Ana. 'fhe FstF"'v. i'",:U l~"l~~u:' •. )& :~brtn'Fl 1: IT.ti~ ~:':.~~11n£'1t~': ~ fl1o1 r1l: t11'"±.1,,,
genr.rat offices. ~'111 ~1$ f 11 '·~ t~llt S.11 l·" 1r1l1~ .60 ,,•, ll ll.>;; Hv. t 1a F~ ~~ ·~ .• 22~ 1~ ~ a~'.·:---launch was con<lncled on L.M. F;I ~sW t Jl 1·66 sief.. enRoe 2F~~-.,.. :~:P~tOf.J "tt y: ~ r. ij•P Lt , ,, 141 ended June 30. J9?0, iudicaled "Ax Manufacturing Compan''S "!! M1,u111 1 :11 1 • .so 1111 15 '°• 1~.11 C•rDT 160 ~· l'J 221: ij = t'o • trff, • 1 flll fm ~'!' t i!
' VJ ~ "·· II •• 6.61 COP Oo 1.4 D'.i C1rrff 60 f, I~ 10~~ ' + ~\ klorCp l.ltl m 19 "" '1?~ -1 S?/Htbols a11 1mproxtrncnt in profits nring range, used to test fire~~' t':: lf·fi SJ:Jj u5.i~G1 1j jt 1iu c:~ 1:.= f1a Wt 20li :: tt ~S~1'!J.2jll' ~: jpi jf~ Jr1 -.+ ~:
compared to lasl yc.:ir. Sales the <.'Ompen)l'!I family of ~ .. ~'!~ .~N • ._. ~~~51c;1 1·tt ',t.I ~·!t.~~k 1:.t:' ut n,,. ml 11~1 _.,. FtodF•ir ,to n uio '/I" "* ! • ror the secoO<I q1111rtrr were F Giii 3 12 l" MR Ao ·" .H i J C(H"~ 'i !!,'~• ,,n: 1t. + 1o ~001• ca ·'° 11 "'• "' m 1~ lfot. 111uow11\f i, • trv ,~ •mb()b
$3,432.249. up 31 percent fron1 rcCadly-to·,flyBomodcls. nl.ed U ~~~f1: c.rl~ .• ::1 r155\ \~ii ~2:°~., n ~ ~!il If.if! !:::~~~?rllJ~~~* 15; ffi~ fii: !12
" ~ 1" s!~ '1
1
1ock "'''~et •tPo<ll. ~'"
. 0 one rman pu,,.. 1e §NTC '24 '.. tmo r,1 2l.t7 "'·'! ;10<~ Pl'MJO l Sl l't ForMtKI &Ct .. 1Xi Uh I -y. • OV•!S •• , \lllO'lllc11I.
$2.595,087 for lhc second """"' •,n ,.,. /ow' Mft • 1' /·s 11tn uct 1.111 21111o v. '• \\ FMcK ~11.ICI l 30Vo kl'~ Jl)1~ •-"'Ito t•tr• or extr•s. ~,-1 ,,, button on the Cot Launch Con-111 3.,, j·n ''" C•o •is "' 1'" ILt 1.u i, 221, \9i 27\'i Fos.t WM 111 1 1.t1 , .. ,, '~* .,._ •
qu.r•·r la st )'Car Pre ••• In· tntorn 1.11 .U ••~ Ea 1..si l·u 1n1 tPS \" n 1~4 •~ lJ~ .:..:·ij_ l'o~bor11 .lOo 11 1f ' t • It -;: ~~ elws sled: dlwtclend, (.-1.kiullutr~ ctl..+ "' · · ...... trol System .. nd wat~·" the',,'et.'..1'11 "' ,.,,•,•1rucl0!" F•'• "•.~',·l'i ~.,•i s""w ·.!.~ ,, 1' is -1t1oFrHptS1 111 tt '~ 1• 1 °"""do, COme rOSf 16 perCC'1\l fO ., l;lft;\I ,rM.. n U ,,,. )'7 "' i. ~ I illfl ·~·+ " l"ruehCau 1 }ii ~-21t> '11• + :: . .-e< •1t0 or PfiG In 1911 11lu1
S t V od I I k t Fund Inc G(Pt WO\ jl'>( 1.n .. t11\klYI ID , 11~• \la '1"-+ .. Fg<N1 In .IOI 10 I'd 1 ' -,, llec:k. (l!vldrrld. f-P•id * • ' I ••.• '· •
$519.'" fron• 1'47,093 1·n the a urn m c s rca -o an Cmri: •. ~1 •·•• "II M111 1.4' 1·n 11tn 11u .t'tt1 fO ,.... 1 • 1Rt '"" P .,.. ... ow ~ . tmHc $.ti 1.u \J" d 1"' ,11 .,..., 1 . .ob 21 11·!. 11\ot ll'l .:..;:,, .-.6--•Ylbl'lt In •lock <1ur1~0 1'1Q. rulm1tllf <..'Omparable period ti year ago. albtudc or t,200 feet. The ~~ Tnl 10.1' 11.ID u" C1a~1 t,41 .la trt•leed :.'2. •; lt1' ft1' l~ t 't a"~ (p 1.SO 224 11\t !Ul 161• -·~ Cl~ Viii/I Oii 'X.fl!vldtnd OI" ,,'liB"1blt-
Net income increased In• model launch vehicle, with~"~"° Am i:~ t:ll "i~m u'1~U ':ft Ji;:l ~~ " u~ Ji~ jiU+ u ~"r: ':i~~'IOA qi ,Ill l'l~ it:'';.!:.~ 11°" d1""" •-Otci..rcd • ••Id .. ,,,
$24l,792. or 19 ccnt.s a share 1 ~K 1'·1: :·:~ lcl:: 1~·;; "1·,., ...!J,.11
11 ·Fro: 1 1lv. 1~ ·~ ..... ""'5110 '•~ 7 ~ .._ • +\Ii '~ls vei•. 1\-0ttl••ec ar H id .11,.. dct3i cd command and service br•ttr :" ~'.21 vi~ ':" . ..,·11 h•mPs 1.20 ~ 2n. '\• H"' t"""v, f"~111"~f·" I ir, ~ .. 22!t +\I •toct 1'1Ylftlld °' W•• up. 1:-o.c~r.• fro1n $208.943. or 17 cents a t'OllP Ste~ uf: tin 1.11 • MrMNY , u -b ~ U '' , .,, -, , di! '' "'" ,,., od I · · ' '" I lb ' 11 Fd i1M ,,. ~hi ;.. ·-• · "' ' Yt••· '" ~ctum"!~I+"" • share. in the like period 1asL m U es. IS a mtnta ... rc 0 e ~:f1r11d .1,~~ f ~ lf•v~t l~"nt •·•1: s,t1 r.::er" ,J,: n ~·~ ''"' J4 .:..:· 11 ~twr.1"° 11 wllll dfvlcl~ndi in .,..,,.,,, "-Ntw 1uu:
•car. Saturn v sy,;tem which took •• ' .. ,1 j! 1,• u" u"j" •'"""'• '" I' ~·.. l!!!!"y ,,._ ! 7'i fl• r!:l + !" In ~~ J 1,1 11\11 l ~ t " -P•ld !hi• ,.,r, dlvta .... 1 omni~ ol• ~ 1111<· " '"' i;;o,;.:H -.;. ff}l Sf itllo .. ~ Olrtlln " 11• 4 O~ a ~:z -~ 1trrt11 ar no l~lto" ll•t" •· 11,1 drvtdtnl
•'A1oet of the heav)I txpon!ftl Borman JO limes around the L~~~M li» 1 ; ==~ a~:~ l~" ih~rnw6i~1f ~i ,;,, ti~ '~=it rf:'S't'r ~-· 'i 'u'~ ~· ~ It+~ ll'IHllnt: r~1··~ Cr pa10 "' 1'7' llkl1 lnvolved with introducing' our moon and back to earth in H~·~i'UO.ti v~, '"°P 4, ':.1"1 1 ti 1.1~ f°' ml +\ ~ ''~ .. '-•c 1 '.. 5-\i 1 totr d•~ldfo~. 1-'"•·0 '" •totll'. ctut1111
I Mt Ill I I I~• I j " Ii'''' S SI ' ••~ OI ~ ' ! I -... '•"•-· ~ '" --~ f70.~!~'1"'Cl tl:.h Y•lut cno••••I.,,.
new COUtsC!i n 0 e • 0 e -.. ,, •.• ·~~ ': ·~·'"n .. 1: ;:·." i•· ·1· I ''• ' .. I"' I ~ " N ... "•... ~ IJ'1 M .. .l r • '" .. "C-tll! ·~ I t 1 + -u<llll!•lbvUon O!lt, x-s.11:, •~ f IL Managcmcnl and Accounting ~-J,pri i..)O I 'Ntltlflllfll "'\ .. "'u ) • *1., ~la ~"" t ;i ,, J· .. ~ 12'~ n,:r ~ :t,:,: lt-..C.llld. (~-·. aov~~a. •-E•..t~vt
are now behind us. MorL"Ovcr, ON THE TUBE ,ll::J.,::.\,,~ •,·.ft~ I'. f.:&l 11,,n_.tlt:li ~""l/~c,f•'".u; : :~ !Jt? :i;r l: ffl "-·r: J1 .~ l!!• ~1w citltd -Nta rn 1~1L a-111t-ta-<il1tr~ lnlbrnal cost controls in-Moro ill tli lit, .1,,. it 411 11~ 1f \' ,,",,"" .~ J f ;.: Ja .!: ~ ~tiefl. ~r-E,. right, 11"f-w!1nou1 "'''·
sUtuted In the first l'tUllrtcr of F • • • ' 'r».n \'' 1· .JKhV ' ' .,.. Irr'' ~ ·* n'" 1i~ 1n1 1''1' 1~· '•'• 11:1~ ,1·" 'l :r "i +-~ ~"1' ... W-WUI! ..,.rr,nt1, "'d-Whtl'I
"'1 er flt.• tlf t11iet .. "' •• • .L . .:.:·!""'1 "i". :t!'.~1 '1, •1'·.s •1"·" rorr111:~1 11o· ' H' I " ''" j"' ., •. • .. , h ' 'b cd ' ' -.• TY '!."""": rt! .. -~ ' w· -'I '" 1'111 .JOI "' I ,, I ' ' •• -···~ WK. nO-N••• U! I year ave. a so con1r1 UI "'ff'""' •" '.. r•n llM F '11 i !ndt . ·1 M ' ' ~ \1 '• • t • "· e" Mlli.. ... Jt 17 w;J· 11 -, lk11Yf'tr v•-·~ b•r"ltnoalq Ot rtal
to 1,1. pr"'I< n•argl1• ,........ w " -,;,,,;., .... ;th .... I I •1~ 1·· n1 .. r1"' ···1·",,'.·' 1"°· 'r."·~i's, ••• y . " ~· »• H" • n· <0< .... • • "1 .,,-"' '"'" ~rtlnl G 1 tll Ii'\ • !4'1-l • !-" r "' • • •1n1 ll'Otlllf'llM urlder l~t
Pr. V Cment'" McNau••too S.1lw'''' Hllien el the DAIL'f' ';1m~•, ~'lfj 5 .. ""•~" 1·· j'·" !11!.n • 11.~• 1 !lli I' l'i -·-'1\1 "" . It I• >~•' j I' t f \ a...iiru.ot? ,.,,1. • .-,.,,,,, • , ... ••lOT Tl'" ... I a \~ i " "1,ibUI I 211 ,q; 1 ,, I ·~ .. , _.._" "' we llid. • 1· . tt. • . . /"MIVC '" 11• • \, 4 \i 11-t ..., flllr ' 1 10 1 "I' 1>11nlu. t~-Fo•t•~n ln ut •ubl•ct 1, t°"ll fl\ .t · • l'r' "V 41 1'1 I \t 12'• 0" \o C" Sl1 .20 ' f7'1 II Ill j \> Wlltf'UI tflu•!llPl•on "'·
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.... ---~--------------~--------------------
1970 DAILY l'llOI
W00nesday's Closing Prices-COmplete 'New 'York Stock Exchange List
ComtJlete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
"
Finance
Briefs
NEW YORK !UPI) -Stan-
dard Oil Co. (New Jersey) and
Roy11 Dutch Shell an-
nounced whal appe:ars to be a
nawral gas discovery cl com·
merclal iroporlanct tn the
North Sta SI miles off Den
Hekier, HOlland .. lf so. it would
be the le((lnd commercl&l
petroleum field In waters off
Holland. 'Ille llnl -r I e I d
di9e0vered by Tenneco, Jnc., t1
not yet in production.
SAN PRANCISCO (UPI ) -
Natomas Co .• Sun Oil Co. and
lhe government of Pakl!tan
ha ve obtained a contract to
e x p 1 o r e 25,000 squar•
kilomcten In western Saudi
Arabia f o r oil. Dillingham
Corp. of Honolulu also has an
interest In the concession,
which Includes land and sea
-
"
I
I
4 DAii. V PllGT ThursdlJ', AVtust 20, 1970
N~vy Trying to Shirk Old ·'Lily-white' lniage·
Pope Ol(s
Liberal
RulRs
VATICAN CITY (AP ) -
Pope Paul VI has decreed new
liberal rules for p r i e s t s ,
brothers and nuns including
one permitting most nuns to
leave their convents !reeJy
without permission.
The 2Yl:-page document was
prepared by the Vatican's
Congregatio.n for the
Religious, and the pontiff sign-
ed it in J wie.
A Vatican source said heads
of religious orders in Rome
have been informed or the
decree, and it will be publish-
ed in the next edition of the
Acts of the Apostolic See.
The source said t h e
document's &ix points revise
articles of canon law con-
sidered to be "superseded or
anachronistic."
One major point reduei!s the
required age for superior
generals of religious orders
from 40 to 35. lt also reduces
the required age for masters
of novic.es !rom 35 to 30.
'"Ibis -is the age of 'hail to
youth!' " one official ex-
plained.
"Younk: people think any
person over 35 Is a
Methuselah. lt's just an adap-
lalioo to modern limes."
Other points in the docu-
ment are:
-Uncloisiered nwis may
come and go freely from their
convents without c h e c k i n g
with superiors and without
specifying their destinations.
Convents are w a r n e d ,
however, to exercise vigilance
to prevent sisters f r o m
becoming involved in "in·
convenient" episodes.
-. No lopger will a
testimonial letter from a
bishop be required w certify
"'the good behavior" of can-
cfidates for the priesthoOO.
Religious superiors are asked
onJy to seek what.ever in-
formation they c o n s i d e r
necessary t.o m a k e a
character judgment.
-Religious superiors are
given authority to modify the
boundaries of their orders'
provinces, or in some cases to
create new provinces. withoul
oonsulting with authorities in
Rome.
-The ~ eight-day spiritual
retreat prescribed for can-
didate! for both temJM)rary
and perpetual religious vows
of poverty, chastity and obe-
dlence may now be reduced lo
five days. Temporary vows
are usually in effect for three-
ye.ar periods.
WASHINGTON !AP)
Despite efforts begun three
years ago to recruit more
bl~. the Navy of[icer corp.s
remai~ a virtual lily-v.ilit.e
organiialion wUb Negr~ lle-
cou.ntlng for less than one per-
cent of the Navy's 80 ,000 of-
ficers.
There are only 200 blacks
above the rank of ensign
wearing Navy blue and gold,
about double the number three
years ago.
''Accelerated tokenism,"
says Lt. Commander Rs>bert
L. Toney, a black officer given
-The canon law stipulation
that candidates for temporary
vows must make a last will
and test.8.meot is amended to
apply only to candidates for
perpetual vows. Formerly,
seminarians and postulants for
sisterhood often made wills
prior ... to their 21st birthday,
and the wills were therefore 1
not legally binding. Perpetual
profession always takes place
after the age of 21.
Reports circulated in
Vatican circles that the decree
will be followed by an in-
struction te -&hore up I he
discipline in many religious
orders. These reports sa y the
instruction will provide wa ys
of damping down on such
dissident groups as lhe lm-
maculale Heart Sisters of Los
Angeles, who defied F'rancis
cardinal Maclntyre's ru les on
dress tW{) years ago.
ctwrch sources conrirmed
that an jnstruclion was in
preparation but denied that ii
would take a get-tough tone.
the job (I( sellina the Navy to
the Nearoes and other mlnori·
ty group memben:
AJthough Toney and another
Negro recruitlnc officer, Lt.
Commander Melvin Patridge,
are critical of v..itat they say
has been the ,Navy's less than
fuJJ-bearted effort, they lay
the ~est blame on the
Navy 's im~e and competlUOO
with priVate industry.
"The Navy has an image
problem that it hasn't been
able to overcome," says
TQney, explaining lhat blacM
still thipk of tbe Navy as a
place for cookJ and mess
&tewards.
'Ibat wu the N1vy11 image
before World Wu ll when the
only opp<Jl'lunity lot blacks
was to be COQks, mess
__ .stewards or stevedores. Since
ihen, the Navy integrated lls
ranks and considered Negroes
for · equal promotion. The
Anny, Air Force and Marines
did tbe same.
Through the yean:, however,
the Navy has tradiUonally
traUed its sister services with
the lov.:est percentatage of
Negr.oes_in its ranks.
Defense De))Jrtment fi1ures
released last week show 5,379
(3.Z percent) blacks in the
Army's officer corps, 2,267
(1.7 percent) in the Air Force
and 30I ( 1.2 percent) tn the
Marines. ln the N1vy it's less
than half of one percent.
Three years ago, the Navy,
aware of ils traditional low
standing, created the office or
Minority Officer Recruiting
Effort with the acronym of
MORE. Tooey was put in
charge. The Navy a Is o
established an office of
Minority Affairs u n de r
Patridge'• direction. Both are
trying to reach into the na·
1100'1 &J>etl<>es w .. u tho Navy
as a career.
But, says Patridge, "You
can't change an image with
news releases. It toot us 300
years to get ln the mess we're
in. And now, suddenly, we
have to reverse the thinking o(
22 mlllion black AmericaM."
The lack of black faces in
t})e Navy 1s ooe of the biggest
drawbacks to recruili,ng. Only
two black rni.vy officers are
assigned to the Pentagon.
Patridge s 1 y s prospective
11aur ... 1
Box Spring
Negro recruits ask· why there
aren't more black f a c e s
around.
Addine to the viJtbUity pro-
blem ls the fact there hu
never been a Nt!gro admiral.
Another factor hampering
recruiting of black ofl.icer can-
didates ls the battery of e1·
ams.
0 Jt's the same exam for
everyone," says Toney, '1But
he's compeling with 99,9 per-
cent middle class whites. And
let's face it -their pace Is
juat faster than ours."
,
Patridge, Toney and other
black recruiters are 1COUrin1
college campule3 for black of-
ficer candidates. But big cor·
poralions, which only a few
years ago were criticized fOC'
discrlmlnating against blacki,
have the same Idea.
Big companies are offering
fatter pay checks, about twice
what the Navy offers. At the
same time, says Toney,
"blacks are asking themselves
why should J volunteer for
Lhe 1nilitary when the real
problem is here afhome?' 11
·~~. . . .. .J·(.,'t
Now Ortho'a conwrtlble
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A m!OOmuni aupport sleep wnlt
wlti all the fil'NI quaMty oonstnlction
88 features that •re •IW•VS
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Ortho'• apeclel
potytt1'9thana cushion
suP9(>rt meana you get $88 a proper, maximum and full-lhne support.
all sizes. lnctudea Ortho'a Specl•I Double 8onus.
MMll'Mll
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' _.,.;p Aega:I COftl6ort priCtd IOWef
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time crawn flu c.artttir support, po/yuratheAe
oushiooed •nd be•ullfuf CO'fe(.
O.ltlc: Paik I DouWe ._,. scrofl qultUM.
And all thJ& dul'lble quellty
con1truclion '9 covered In a beauliM
110fal print ind~ The DCMtbM' Bo.I
ere'8·Wh8t YOU get:• Fieldcrest no-,
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nr:Mron King or Queen size fitted bottom -
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pillows • 2 pillow cases • King Of
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The Stratford
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deluxe quilt-top, button·lree innerspl1ng rn.ctress.
lndud• Orttto'a Special Double Bon•
For
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
6424321
LAKEWOOD SANTA ANA and
FOUNTAIN VALLEY ANAHEIM
4433 Candlewood Avenue
Candlewood Shops (across from Lakawood Center)
Phone: 634-4134
16131 Harbor Blvd.
(corner of Edinger) '
to Zody's • Phone: 839 -4570
1811 West Lincoln Avenue
Between Euclid &f'd Brookhurst Avenues
Just East of Fed Mart • Phone : 776-2590
Jeam w ork Makes a Winning Formula
EXCLUSIVE TO THE DAILY PILOT
The tJtlrd annual l"orum Interna tional l!orse Show Oct. 7-11, which
offers <1 variety of classes and thousands of dollars in prize money, is
crealing inter.e~t i1~ equestrian circles in Orange County.
. . Co1npet1t1on is keen between riders and daily workouts to perfect
sk11is and timing are the order of the day.'
.On~ such rider, Cocil ta l1arper Presley skimmed easily over a few
practice .1umps on her white hunter, Charwood in the practice ririg at Win-
rock Farn1, Fountain Valley.
Con11n~nicatio11 ~et\"een tJ1e attractive red-haired rider and her big
horse was visually evidenced by pals and low-toned instructions given to
the horse to settle hin1 do\vn for the higher jumps.
. Charwood is being worked for two hours four times a week to ready
h11n for lhe schooling shows at Peacock Hill Diamond Bar and Portuguese
Bend and for the national sho\\•s at Del Mar.'Santa Barbara and the Forom.
. Schooling jumping horses is a rilual with procedures as stylized as a
minuet or b~let routine. The big white horse seems to sense, when~he is
taken from his stall and groomed, that Cecilia will be arriving soon.
She swings quickJy into the stable parking area in her yellow XKE
Jaguar and strides quickly to the tacK room to change into riding clothes.
BOTH PR OS
}he big horse gives Cecilia an ~flectionate nuzzle before sh~ mounts
and rides into the practice ring. Both rider and horse are ''pros." The
ho~se mu st be on the right lead and takeoff at the proper distance to take
a Jump perfectly.
Timing is important so the horse is slowed or urged on by ijle tap
of a heel if his approach is too slow . Mistakes are made and Cecilia circles
the ring to try the jump again and again. They work as a colorful team
under the warm Cali fornia sunshine, and Charwood is rewarded after a
good workout with a cooling bath, juicy carrots and friendly pats.
For Cecilia Harper Presley, riding is a way of life. It would be
strange indeed if the daughter of Cecilia OcMille l:larper and granddaugh·
ter of Cecil B. De~1ille didn't love horses.
One of her earliest recollections is riding in front of her mother as
she worked one of her fine gaited horses which she showed successfully
for years. Her mother is a former president of the California Breeders'
Association.
"I was 5 years old \\'hen ·I was given my first horse. He was a huge
\V estern horse, at least 17 hands high. named Omar." Cecil ia said . After
Omar she gradu ated to better horses and began jumping.
Charwood was bought off the auction block at one ,of her mother's
Del Mar sales and has developed into a splendid hunter. On the days
Cecilia cannot work lhe horse, he is ridden by Miss Leslie Oert!l.ey, an
owner·t.rainer at \Vinrock.
LIVELY HOUSEH OLD
Charwood moved to Orange County from Los Angeles a lew years
ago . Cecilia and her husband. Randall Presley, an Orange Co unty builder.
head a lively ho~sehold on Lido lsle con1prised of Cecilia's son, Peter, 13,
and Randall's children. Randy Jr., 22 and Terry. 16.
A member of the Los Angeles Junior League, Cecilia has become
active in Prange Coast philanthropic groups. She is president of the AdoJ>-
tion Guil4 of Southern Orange County and a member of the Newport
lf'arbor Service League. She also has joined the 1970 Diamond Horse Shoe
and is t~reby entitled to privi1eges and social activities during the Forum
Internati al 1-:lorse Show. ..
F ily activities include sailing in the family's catamaran and
water skiin g. '
lllw.U,, A\19usl », ltlt P•t• U
COOL PE RFORMANCE RECEIVES A FITTING REWARD CHARWOOD THRIVES ON ENCOURAGEMENT
Lincoln 's Wisdom Called to Bear on
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Since you
favor sharp amendment of all abortion
laws which are "archaic, inhuman and
discriminatory againsl the poor," I'd
like lo offer a brief rebuttal. based
on testimony heard 1n Middlesex Superior
Court in Cambridge, 111ass.
• Or. William A. Lynch of Boston had
lhls 10 say, "Legal abortions would be
JlO safer than illegal abortions. Back-
11.reet abortionists who work in the
1hadows use Che same antiseptics
~vailable to physk:i8'ns." He also con-
\ended that "human life begins at the
moment of conception."
-,.Since you claim to be fair T 1n1s1
)lqtt will publish this. -O'l'HER SIDE
DEAR SiDE1 If you will fnrglvc. 11)e.
JIU Llk• tbt Iona way 1round the barn
Ml rtply. When Abraham Lincoln was
11ked b)' a proseculi.n1 attorney, "Jlow
•
ANN LANDERS ~
many leas does a 1bttp have?" ltt
replied, .. Foor." Tbe att.rney lbe1111ked,
"ff you called a sbffp'1 lall a leg,
how many le11 would lte bavt?" LincolA
replied, "Four. ~terely betause you call
a &heep'• tail 1 tea dou noC make
ii one.''
And lhls Is my reply to Or. Wllllam
Lynch 's 1tattmenl.
SLat.cments are made all day tons.
but lbls doe1 not mean Ibey are valld
(Ir cotret:t. GeneratJ001 of lhe<iklglan1
wlll be thrilled to know ii.at 1t Ian
tlte q11ttti01, ''Wlla ftl Ufe beCfn?"
lla1 -1<Uled bf Dr. LJllc& Dey
bave hffa aearddac fer u uswer to
tlth qUettloa for ctataries.
A1 for tis N&emett that back-tlrttl
abortlonllta ate. the: same anll1tptlc1
avall•bW&o pb:)"llclan1, Dr. Ly.net. 1iMluld
be lnformetl U.at for tbe past 71 ye1r1
ueptris tlNI JIOt aotiteptic1 1:111 been
the medtod ti sterile t • c b D I q 11 e •
Moreover, every 1ur1eon witb whom I
cheeked 1ald It 11 lmpo1sible to maintain
a compltte.ly tale aaepsil 4111tlldt u
operatfn1 roon1 . In rac~ palienl& hav•
beta known to pick up in(ectloos in
&be operaling rooms of aome lllgbly
mpeded bospitab.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The leUer
from the office bulldozer with lbe Big
Mouth made my blood boil. She was
highly criUcal of the "country hick"
who was so hipped on a freq uent change
of outfits that she wore her cocktail
clothes to work ralhe.r than repeat.
l say bully for Country Hick and
fie on the dull , dreary, I a z y,
unimaginative dames who arc too bored
or Jndltferent (or just plain dumb) to
try to look like somethlng when they
arrive at their jobs.
[ work in an office that emptnys
3fi women and 11 men (including lhe
DAILY ,ILOT , ...... W akNnl ICMllMr
UP AND AWAY-Preparing for keen competition during \he Forum
International 1-lorse Show Lo take place Oct. 7-11 is a time<'OnsumiDg
job for Cecilia 1-larper Presley and her horse, Chart>lood. Mrs. Presl&y,
a Lido Isle resident, follows a family equestrian tradition.
CECIL IA READIES CHARWOOD FOR ACTION
Modern Problem
executives) Yoo wouldn't believe the way
aome of the women c0me lo work -
no makeup, hair tn bobby pins and
clips like they were ready ror bed:
wrinkled, faded, ill-fitting blouses and
shirts; unglrtlled, jiggling, shaking: no
hose; sandals; dirty toenails -it's an
insult to the people they work with.
At least Country Hkk In her aequined
rocktail dress, lonnal 'hairdo and blue
eye-shadow ls making an effort to look
like something . -A CITY GlRL
DEAR GIRL: Thanks for lbe kind
words 111 bf:halr of tbe aal who tries.
There 's something In what yo11 1ay.
and wb11t'1 more I Uke the WI)' you
1ay ltl
CONFIOENTlAL TO CROSS MV
liEART1 You sound dettrmined, but t'rh
unoonvioced. Overconfidence can tit
dangerous, Tack thls one in your bat.-
bond:
I tell you this-and I tell you plain,
WhaL you have done, you will
do again;
You Will bite your tongue -
careful or not ,
Upon the already bitten 1pot.
How far should a teeaa1• COllpla p?
Can tee.king be aafe? When does I
become too bo& to bandle? Send tw
Ann Landers' booklet, 11Neckln1 and Pet-
ting -What Are the Umlts?0 )1alt
your nqueil to Ann L11dtl'l1 encloslnl II
cents ta colo and a long, 1tam,ped, tetf..._
dressed envelope la care of tbe DAILY
PILOT.
Jll!ll ............................ _.. __________________________ ~~~~~~~~---···
Rummaging for Fantastic Barga ins
• • . ,
I
A little bit of everylhing with !r~b merchandise
added daily is the promise o! Temple. Sharon Sister·
hood members who are preparing !or a !oor-<lay
rummage sale Aug. 23-27. Hours will be 9:30 a.m. to
Poncho's To ps
-All-wool blanket poncho in red Seaton tartan en-
hances the Pendleton Woolen Mills line for fall.
•.
. ' .
La Cresta
CLEANERS I
Gll.(UUNTEED DRY C~ANING • I
....................................... I
Drapes 50~
lX"fitU SAT., AUG. JJ, 1t10
1687 ORANGE AVE., COSTA MESA
Nat ..... ,...t Offlle.-646at4•t ....... ~ ..... --
4:30 p.m. in Temple Sharon, Costa Mesa, Sorting
merchandise for the summer event are (left to
r ight) the At.mes. David Brenner, Lawrence Green.
wald and Stanley Vitt.
25th Anniversary Date
Chosen for Nuptials
OJri!t IAAheran Owrcb of
Costa Mesa will be the selling
for the nuptial rit<s linking
Jan.is Audrey Miner and
Robert Gqy Berg.
Ha irstyl e
Long-s hort
Sept. 2S is the date selected,
the same day the bridwlect'1
P'""'"• Mr. and Mn. Hany
Aubrey Miner of Costa Mesa
will celebrate their silver an.
'"Ibink ftmky for fall," says
hairstylist Kemelb, who calls
for his new contemporary
hairstyle sbcrt-Jooc hair.
II looU long bot is actually
5bart laytrt all over, even
dewn lo the sboulders.
He cuts it to.the shape of the
head -detennina the line of the "Yle.
CUSTOM-MADE
DR·APERIES
USE OUI CONYINllNT SHOP At NOMI lll YICI ._ ...
547""41
A W1rd• tl~Ot'1for will c1tl 1t .-w 11-1
witli • 1tri•IJtt 11l.c:tio11 of l.i9h ~111lity
lew cost f1bric:1 fH you to dtoe11 f,."'·
N1 ol>li91 tio11I C-p/1t1 cl1c:9t'1tor lff'Y•
ice -11~lat1,., -1li ,c:1..-.n..
-.... c...
(mRIJ -=--= ' --....... ,,... --
Choose One of the Many
Coast & Southern Federal
Offices to· Serve You:
llAIN OfFICE:tth & HlU. l.olAngtl11 • 823-1'51
WILSHIRE at GRAMERCY PLACE: 3933 Wilthlre
81'4. LA • 318-1265
L.A. CMC CENm: 2nd I. BrmdHJ' • 121-1102
HUNTtNGTON IEACH: t1 Hun~ Center•
(714) 897·1047
8ANTAANA LOAN IEMCEAGEHCY:
1805 N. Main&• (71•) 647 .. 257
UHTA llOtlCA:: 711WIW!lrwBM1•383-0748
IAN PEDRO: 10f\ &. PaclftO • 131~1
WUTCOYUIA: Eaa\land Shopping Clt. • 331·2201
PAHORAM.AaTY: 8111 Van NU)'t BIYd. • ln-1111
TARZAHA: 1m1 Ventura Boulew.rd •345-1814
LONG BEACH: Snfl Locuot 0>137.7q1
RESOURCES OVER $800 MI WON
Your Horoscope To morrow
Aries: Cycle Continues High
FIUOAY
AU6UST 21
., llDNltY ()lal ••• ........ ,,,I ..... oc:tlk'll •----__ , __ _
11p.n.,-..... --...... ·~·----.in11 ,8illwll •
Ww87 ... _,.., -• ..,.. Wt'' r' .......
... .. ,. ,, tllln ..
• &n*r' +t tdtt:. UR
wt ~1ll4aa. Git ... llan _ _,_, ..
-.1 ...... -.11 .. --IMllOIJ_.,..
......Uw w4 Ii llp.
Allll!I (llardl II-April It):
lo ,..... lie -... wlll-hll lo .... Ii ,_. ...
lolbles. -"of -IOdal -,.;
GDIJNl !M>:1 21.June •I:
,,,,,.. -be _., where ptpm. Rgnehrres .e
.-. a.eel: -Ille -,,,.. could be cleCr"" « milltpr•••..,,,,· lf Ila.. yoa balld tow...i
IQOC!ell,
CANCER' (Jlme 21.JulJ Ill:
-~m11be• lap.Gh•~•c:hlore
at cnatlYe Ulftllion.. lt is
more d!fllotlt: to be a good
guest !Un. pd llOIL llelu.
Lei .... u .. juices Daw •
Ll!lO (JulJ . :IS.AUi. Ill:
8'istnew ml mnaoce moy
not mate best ~ Your
ambjtlcm;, desires may c.
!lid. -yoa will ..... lo
tmllt Ga lolnl too far olldd, individual may fl~ pro.
price -be door. Rulize mloenUy. tbls 11111 Mt """"""811· AQVARIUS (Jan. Z.Feb,
LlllBA (Sept, ts-Oct. II): 111: Being will\ loyal lrlends,
'lllore ii no -lo bow 11111 famlly meml>e!!I IJ of special
mape. Aclaere to Mlk: coo-importance. Delay· bu!intss
'1ictians. Some dec:isionl ~ decision. There are numerous
quift addJtiooal t b o u g b t . factors. Changes are .due. Be
Rellu<i to bo rushed, cojoled ready to go with the Ude .
or lhrealmed. · PISCCi (Feb. Iii-Mardi 201:
800JIPIO (Oct. :IS.Nov. 21): Check instructions, dire<tions,
Do a bit of catering to wishes especiaUy where travel, a~
ol mate or 'businets partner. polntrnents are concerned.
Dan't make dflinite move un-Relative could be easit, of·
U1 pooiUve of lerTain. B<st fended. Tread lightly. Obtain
to nimb rather than to begin. hint from Aquarius message.
PllJ' . for thne. · Gain in· IF TODAY IS Y 0 U R
formatkm, BIRTHDAY y have ftne
Gila II Ry-.!. YCOl coUeel,
~ 11111 ._i... aodll !or
el/arts. Cycle _ ... hl&li:
don't wllte opportunities. You
getc:lmic:elollale--
1111111'* ........
~ """1 ...... fnt,
whit must watt. Not easy,
but -II ...,..,.ry.
IAGm'AJUUS (Nov. 22--sense of humor. You are
Dec. Jl)· Be aware d. work discriminating, capable, bld:
metbods 'and bow they can often ftnd it dUricult to con.
be improw!d. N for t h centratt your forces. You try oriciml ideu. Associates will too much at one time. Settle
be recepti_•e. Cbect safety on one goal -then odds for
b a 1 a r d 1 • Be independent success are enhanced. During
without belng anogant. September, you will make
CAPJUCOllN (Dec. n.Jan. vital, new cont<fts. ,
lJ): You may be in too much ro 11nc1 °"' ~ •bolt! -~'
TAUBIJS (A!Wil ll-lllJ •):
Obtlla hint !nm -• -......... Stml loll p-
m..,.ctan dnnn oppoll.~ 911.
WIGO (Alig. zs&pt. II):
Grma ii not nee e11 arll y cr-ner' across tbt way. Wort
-mof<rlol ol hand. u yoa
.. .. _ '--~ M Ind lllt'lllOI'¥· fl:"_., °"",,.. of a ....... 1 """ ~~· em· A1rrD1oev. se..:1 111r1 •• 1nc1 » -.ta her d apposjle RX m8J be to Omerr Badlltt, DAILY PILOT• ·~--gi • time Be. )2«1, Gr•lld l••I $1•111in. N• I.....,,. you ~ -V '((rt, N,Y. 10017. •
u well• emoUon. Taurus1,-='---c:=:::----:c-=-
Counselor's Tip
Frustrations Remedied
War •• , riob • , • avqe people &o switcb their tboughU: delmnmatkln. m o u n t a l n s
murden •• , e""""'J' slump lo mare coaotrudhe c:llanneb. CAN be moved.
••• unemployment. , , JOU1b When UllDtfVin& news reporta You may not see results
rebeltlon ••• CMlpOI wnot "get the best of 100", try ovmi;ghl, but keep on plug-bt0: :...,~ of.,:U:: ~!.~~! loventory of ~~,;.;':" :.:.:~-:: ean al people e+a:Jwbbe what you u an individual can ........ blVe alftady phmpd mUUorw or wuWcf lite lo do about nentually IOlves a weighty
into • pit of deopolr 11111 .. y si .. Uan 100 find upoot· problem. frastratJan. ting. But concentrate on one Once you've done all you
''MaQJ reel totally belplell or two items at a time. u feel you cu do about a situa·
In evt11 lmwiDc 'llllere lo tum 100 rile younel! Into wrath tlClll 11111 you STILL feel
for relief,'' MrL L7n11 'over the entire world's aro-turbulert lnlide, better ex-
W..-Or, prof e 11 ion1 I bkml, chaD('f'll are you'll ac-amine your own life. An el· cessive conoem about world counselor at Family Service compllsh nothlng but stirring problems mq be a warning
Association of Orange County, your awn frustratiom. .;gn of -. ... inability to solve
Harbor
Center
VICTORIA'S
lljl & UIGI
SIDS
2300 H1rbor
Cost1 Mesa
claims. Tum into a "doer" imtead -J-
'lbough it may appear to d onJy a "critic." H ycdb.,....yocr __ ... __ J>b_*"_w_probl __ ems_. -='--=--"=-=--=
...,. that "all ....., ti-pniblenw bug you, vol.-
days is bad news." tbl.s limply your aervices to a k>cal
is not true, she poin&s out. mittee or organl1.ation that
U.wly the underlying ,..... deals with oudl problems. H
sum idulppy .ecounts may goven:.MDtal s I tu a t i o n 1
hoYe .. overly upsetting ... ditlurb )'OU, start writing Jet..
feet oo people II that within ten lo COll(n!SSmCtl and
t4tlr own iDdlvidual lives tbey apcantati~ er other local
are Jtrua1ia1 with turmoil dfiNM ,
and problems they are INble And dan't f.& delnrt'Pd or
to bandit. ~ .... )'Cit red
Ba9ed on the steady strum "one kUa' wan't help." You
of dally ""'°'""'II -""" ........... ,_. lrlends with lnlllbled Om8e Coon!· 11111 net ....... lo jotn In your
-Mrs. w--cruoade ...i with enoact>
Georgetowri·Manor
2101 N. TUSTlN AVE. r:;,:: SAHTA ANA
PHONEGS-3ttt
TO "SAlllA AllA1 S. .... Pwy ... Ne•p•t ....... 17'\ 1ttM
....... , ............ Wt ..... 1,. ..... , ............ _ ... ...., ...... _ ........... , ...... ...
Art Unkletter Shows You
a New Way to Beat Inflation
... Just Join
JoL..
Oilb
Two rings
fo r two
lovers . . .
both rings
$88.00
•
Easy a9dit terms • student accounts
GYat1oble. • up to 12 months to pay
~rd • Moster Charge
"THE STORES CONFIDENCE BUILT"
Established 43 Ye1rsl
MU"'1filffOW CIM'Tlt -·-......... llMdl -· "Aaaoa SMOPPIN• CIHTlt 1* HI ....... ._
Cllhl Mne ......
OflN MON .. THUU. & fll. 'TIL t P.M.
Coast & Southern Federal
Offers You These
'
Highest Prevailing Rates: '
COMPOUNDED DALY AND PAID QUAATIRLY.•
5,QOO/o.5,13 "lo
,._book; No Minimum.
5.250/o-5.39 "/o
ThlH Monlh Cenm .. te; No Minimum.
5.750/o-5,92°/o '
One-Y'!""Certlft .. 11; $1,000 Minimum.
6,QOO/o-6,18°/o
TWo-Y.,Ctrtlftcatei $5,000 Minimum. ·--Eomlngo
• INSURANCE TO $20,000
•
\
;.,
I 1
I
(, -,,. .... Wi
~ -
Luau ~ime Arriving
By hi ghv.iay and waterway, me1nbers and guests \Vill arrive for the annual Bal·
boa Bay Cl~b Luau tomorrow evening. Mr. and Mrs. Gibson Emory, a host cou·
pie are ready to join other hosts, the Bruse Dub rows, Ed Thrashers, Will Bur·
linghams an6 Sain Hurwitzes.
Status
Defined
Me.nbcrs 1f the Orange
County Chapter or t h e
American Society of Women
Accounta11Ls f ill hear of the
Status of \VOBICO Accounta11Ls
Overseas wt}en they gather
tonight in fie Jolly Roger
restaurant ~naheim.
Speaking will be M i s ~
Eunice Stockman, secretary of
the Americ.an Society c (
Certified Public Accountants.
chairman pf the National
Education :Foomdation a 11 d
past presidenl of the Los
Angeles Chapler of ASWA,
Mrs. fo.1abet Beltz of Hun·
tington Beoch is president o{
the Orange County Chapter.
HAIR BEAT
"SHEAR
c u
T
T
I
ti
G"
HAIR STYUST
QUISTION: 11 it tr111 thet 1he1r
'uttin9 i1 th1 b1•I wey to cul
heir 1
ANSWEI: With lh1 coming of
Summer, 1om1 of the h1i1 will
be coming olf, 11 will 1om1 of
tli1 cloth11 '"'ong our b11<:h·
t oil'lg women, ll1for1 c:11ttiP19
your heir, m1k 1 111r1 th1t vo>1
ind 'f'Our Slyli1t 111li11 w h 1 I
you're 91tlin9 into !h1irpi1c1,
wig, 1!c. I 11 I'm 11111 \'Oii will
c.on1i.,1r, b1fo•1 t 1 king your
clolh11 off (bi.ini 1r;11'1d1I 111il,
topl111, 1lc. I
H1i1cutlin9 IS h1iratylin9, re·
91rdl1u of whet it'1 done wHh,
M1ny wo1r11n h1 .. 1 b11n br1in-
w11h1d into b1li1 .. in9 th1t il
1ho11ld b1 done with I r110r,
1h1111, thinnin9·1h1111, 1tc., Thi1
i1 riot lrw•l You c•11 bltt it off.
!tor ii off, cwt ii off or bu r11 It off I •1 • m•111tyli1t i11 S.A. I
my1olf •9rttl1 ju1I io YOU t•li;t
it off i11 lht ri9hl pi•co1.
In • 1•lon whtrt thtv know
Wht1• lf'1 At, lhty will 1tll vow
1 look , 1101 t h•i•cul with • IP••
ci 1I wt11d tool, Thi1 Summer lht
he ir 1hould bo cut 11110 • 1tvlt
1h•I will bo f••• -flowin9 •11d
complimt11!1ry. A l 1 l1119th1
1hould bt tither: blw11t 01 loud·
H or l1ptrtd ind b1ok111 11p,
1v1n whtll 11ot ••I,
For9tl th1 1p1d1I wtird tool
bi!, ••"'tmber th1 b11t w1y to
,ut h1ir 11 OFF,
f'ltli'M lftlJI ., l lll "~I' ttttllttlit ..
\
11 FASHION Ill.AND
NIWPOlT CINTll
644°1111
'
The Tee
{Edllor'i No!e A column of wom-
fl\'S I°" IOI! itOl'll "'IU ·-•r IK,.,
Wtei< In the OAll V PILOT. To ret>Orl
K°"'5 for Ille Wffk, 1>1 .... m•!I them
lo fl. O. Bo• 15'0. Cot!o Mfl•-Tr>ev
mufl bm rece1 .. ec1 bv Mondtv.)
lllYINE (OAlT
TIN WHISTL.1l-CIA11 A, IM Mmes.
Rgmrt GllrdNr, l~; O. B. Merlin,
l3i Robert W. Smll!I, N""'" Barne>. H l Edtw9rd Miium, )II Cl•H II, tne
Mrntl, llDMkl Wl11!1rlll<r11, Gto.-le
Garo , 3'; Jene ~rrl1, JS; Closs C.,
lllt Mnws. 00'1 L-. l6; Peul Dun-
llP. UI J, H, Pet-. I•; I . II,
Haborites
Preparing
A Picnic
Black Star Canyon has been
selected for the annual family
picnic of the Newport Harbor
Exchange Club on Thursday,
Aug. Tl.
Assisting with the prepara·
lions are the newly installed
officers of the Exchangettes.
the auxiliary to the men's
organization.
Mrs. Jack Dalbey assumed
presidential duties. Other of-
fi cers inc1ude the Mmes.
William Boyer, vice president;
Dave Roberti and F'red Cole,
secretaries ; Coy W at ts ,
treasurer; William Randol.
activities; Theodore Robins
Jr., hospitality, and Norman
Von Herzen. publicity.
The Excbangettes meet the
second Wednesday of each
month.
Tattler
HAMMOND
ORGANS
NEW MODELS ARE HERE
NOW!
READY FOR DEMONSTRATION
AND DWVERY!
Disco•« for yourself tit• "M91 .. tlc 119 S..41"
of ••-bHVllt.I H.,.,.0114 °'99.t.
COME HEAR -COME SEE -TOOAY I
REGISTRATION
OIGAN CJ.ASSIS NOW HING
FOIMID FOi •l•INNIU.
CJ.ASSIS STAIT
WEEK OF SIPT. 21.
COME lN FOR COMPLETE DETAILS
Wcllll~~
SOUTH COAST PLAZA'.
COSTA MESA l'HONI ~16S
HOURll MOH. thN IAT.-11-11
Ol'IH IUNDAY-tfOON ,. I,...._
Best Exercise
Strides Taken
Toward Health
Finahyl
Tho ..
flattering
1....,1opped
pontMt1
ln-
horcl·to-find
large ond
half-tit••·
Talr:e your
pick at
Ella Nor's.
~~'sHALF-SIZE
1805 NEWPORT BLVD.
COllA MllA I V1Ilk.M,11tll St,,
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTIN•TON llACH
'""' " hftltr ""' ....... ,.,
A1tt1 bl OllAN•ll'Alll MALL ,ULL•llTON
SIZIS
14!'1·22!'1
38-46
SHOP
Fragrance
'Foiled'
Gloomy Gus 11
Your Kinda Guy
Tbiitfdq, Alltusl 20, lf/0 DAILY rllOT Jl
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
'
•
.......................................................... -------------~~~~~--~~~~---· ..
JI DAILY PILOI ~, August 20, 1970
, TV DAILY LOG
THURSDAY
AUGUST 20
f ~ t ', I N f,
':GO 8 1tc lllfft (C) (60) .\it1J Du/IPll1.
0 DIC M...mtt (C) (60) Tom
'"""· 8 C.. YH Tlfl nil! (C) (30) Seu
Slla ROii M1ril 1ricl QIOll'
a:JO e ¥1rttn1e '" .... .., <Cl (60)
Rrw. ll'Of PetrJ. Foulldlf of Illa
~11&1 Qlurdl !ft Hollywood,
June l eckMrt, All M11!1rci. Taini
ArOM, ,.et« Sttln 1nd Dr. Lotni
CM~ ~llt, 11111t. oc...w c. ... (30)
m lllJ f...tlt thftilR (30)
@(I)""' ..... (60)
Q) (I) NIC flllitt!J NIWI (C) (30)
m t.n ,. ni. '7'0I 1t> 130)
QI CJ) nit Munlin (30'l
El htln flf LM111 (30)
o-..c..tR t1IJI
rt '<IJ L~:.t1.: •nttr m I llMll ......... ,i.111.
h '° unl\IMld tMt ft ... tctnet lfOlll Mr put. P..t I of I •patt . .,.
m T1 , .. • lrlll ft)(»!
m w-•-!Cl <!II)
!l!l --(C) "'' ro--iCl <'..,..,.. cit Ano'.~ ,... ,.,........,
Herschel Ber11m·ru
Returns as 'Arnie'
By CYNnllA l.OWRY
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
llmchd llM!udl Is returning
to television In mid-September
in thi' tlOe rote of" ••Antle,'•
CBS's new ball-hour series
·-!he day~ •d;
LOOK TO
EDWARDS
LUXURIOUS
CINEMAS
FOR THE BEST
SHOWS TONIGHT
.. ~ ••• :::: ..... lliflC.i • ....-
l.-M...t•·CllM ........
"Paint Your Wagon"-GP
~ •DWARDa ~· ~@!§'~
=~-===~::.-== NOW DC1USIYILY GP
"PAnON"
Georwt C. l c•tt
• • •Ltre" . AT •LLI• • •
lem". -T """"· & MN IN--· M7-* HUNflNOTDN •iu.c::H an• .-.. • 0...111 1111twrm.e M*A*S*H
•• , .. 1111
vtnlarea or a f amDy man "Who
J.< suddenly pulled from th•
security of. a toad.Ing platform
and to.ued into tbs execuUve
suite.
Bernardi left te 1 ev l1 lon
a1moU a decade ago with a
flnn public Identity as Lt.
Jacoby, a rumpled, weary and
cynical police olllcer outwitted
each week by private eye
"Peter Gunn."
Since be ha. added lo hi.<
Broadway credits in musicals
such as "Fiddler on the Roof."
"~it" will have a wife and
a couple of children and wilt
rdh.-ct the television trend for
sltuation comedies that shoot
for tile bear!, not the fUMY
bone, and often have a
message built in.
But in a TV world whlch is
largely dedicated to depleting
i d e alistically midd1&dasa,
middle-income and especially
suburban life, •·Amie" will be
a standout. It will be the firat
of the ne.osltuation comedies
dedicated to the glorification
o( the blue-collar worker and
his life style. There were some
lunch.pail carrying heroes in
the past, but Jackie Gleason's
Ralph. t*.e bus driver, William
Bendil'1 Riley and the kooky
carpenters or "I'm Dicken! ..
• He's Femter'' v.·ere figures or run.
-·---.,.....,.
Cast Listed
For 'Shot'
At Irvine
lilt JrvlneCommunlly
Theater has announced lbt
cast for its first production of
the new sea.son, the French
comedy "A Shot In the Dark."
Sally Brown will play the
leading role of Josefa, a maid
1uspccled of murder, with Phil
Davis ca.st as the magistrate
attempting to detennine her
guilt or innocence.
Others In the Irvine C<l3t are
Gary AJdrlch, Nancy Leland,
Jerry Leland and B e a
Teaford.
Dirccing the Marcel Achard
comedy will be G o r d o n
Yeaton, a newcomer to the
Orange Coast Are.a, who has
staged several productions In
Palos Verdes, Downey and
Stockton and has acted in the
San Francisco Bay area.
"A Shot in the Dark'' will
open ThW'Sday, Sept. 17, for
three weekends, r u n n i n g
Thursdays through Saturdays,
at the ll!tle theater of Corona
de1 Mar High School. Advance
reservations are being taken
at 8J3..0793. m N1t1c11n S4 (C') <60'l
mno--1CJIJOl~•
Jrill•rrillet.
Bernardi, a skilled actor,
will play a contented working
man 1'bo unezpectedly
becomes a blgb salaried ex-
ecutive. b u t determinedly
stlcl<s by bis eonvldlons. He
has just coocluded an <pirod•
in which Amie ii assigned to
notify an old friend lhat, after
27 years of loyal service to
the company, be i5 to be sum-
marily retired with pension
and gold watch just because
he bas reached his esth birth-
day. t.JO 0 ID (i) m Dr.-: (C) (30) {R) In one scene Bernardi was "Buri!uy·--~ Son." frldlJ 1nd (Il) Slit& ... M lllu (JOI
a) A ~or1d Aptrt IC> {30)
G111no11 lfMllfl(ltt , bllf'lliry tllat sputting in outrage against a
lwd• to ttle M>fld of tm1ll·limt lllt· system ni.led by the calendar Buena Park
Tryouts Set
tatica opmtor&. in5tead of a man's individual
J:OO 1~ :~~':'1111 fll1n CC> (30) Wil· 0 m ,.._. (C) (!O) .l•htt w., .. 111 capacity. It should make a hit
Om QC Rlltrt!Y N..s (C} CJO) EID( , lhlk:llt/Plltlr't °'* (C) "Chisum" CG) with the mature audience.
DIY!dBrinkl•. fr11nk McG-. .klha (3!1) "I think we make some ., "Wilt Until D•rk" I n-d' ob d A d't• f th ed Ch111t111or. lO:CIO D!D(J)ltlTlll S'l,..,,(C) points,' D!.:mar 1 serve u 11ons or e com y
BWlllt'• N' lifte1 (C) (st!) Ali (60) MU'it and COITltdy 1hrrin1 during a break ip shooting. "Ready When You Are, C. B."
A1ii1, Gtil Sheldon 1nd Anthon Cft111tsNellCllRtlltr,tt1tGokldluws .. \Ve have another show in will be held Monday tvening
Roblrts. 1nd Mtn1 Ftlclmen. ~·hich Arnie's son has been by the recently reorganized m 1 lMI; L., (3!1) IJ m ,._ (C) (617) ordered at school to cut his Buena Park Players. m ._1 tlll Cllcl (C) (30) O (I! f])G n. ~ (C) hair. J argue and order; he A cast of three women and
,... m n. Amwb• Wiii CC> (lO) tOO) C~ DvllCM flndl 1111 ft111etll • .... .;: balks. Then suddenly the com-one man is required, ac·
-~ dud tlld .wt blfiMs Ill..,. bM pany orders Arnie to shave off cording to Jef'T)' Weiss, who ls
fil""""lllltlllftlr (30} llflltllll Blylor. ..-....:-.:=.="-...-,;;: his mustache. J think the directing the play.
fa(() Trvtll " teMiqlltlltes (Cl 0 Clll If IM Wtill (C) (30) • ~tti l••r4 W..t episode may help bring a little The tryouts will be held in
..,,, Chri.t .. I Wm. "-' IC) (JO) m ••.• """ (60) 610KI c . SCOTI • understanding Oil both sides in room B of the Community ~ ...... IA.IL. MALDIN
(E)ll•.,._...Mlril(S5J ~mp:-... (Q ('60) (R) "PAnON"·GP a pretty common situation Recreation Center, 8150 Knott
m n.t lilt (C) (30) ID,,. Na *'* <'O> i;;;;;iithii.,,.iiiiiidiiayi;;sii.'ii' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiAiiveii.ii. BiiiiueniiiiaiiPiiariiiik.iiiiiiiiiiii9jll
7:311 0 ft (J) famly Mlir (C) 130) '-"'HI! 1 • t111 ti PM """""' (I) Mr. Tf'lllcl\. Bufly and .1Dc1J 11 ~
mlJQOl\fd i11 1 1111zu1d 11111111 driv!11110:JO D lwlltM i... (Ml)
to Ylll'lllOlll to meet Uncle Biil Ell NI ..... (JO)
~J"'~~\'t°:i":' .. '.":hor~l m • r,.. ,.... caoi
athll'lllnl Fmldl 11~ Jolt! 11:00 IJ QI CIJ f!tl ..... (C)
alld 8oofl4I if'I 1 11ot'"fntul 1 ••lu· 0 -rn -"-(C) abla pilct of jewtlfJ, M1rj D1tu . -w 'WI
1u~s. 00-. -..,_.
0 Tiii MWll llMI ((:) {30) T•m 0 ... (C)
momberl 1r1 llO)'d H&)'llll. Celest J 0 n..tJt I: (C) '"1111 EMI c.~
Holm, Dirr• McGM, WUllun Win· tel' ..,.-(1nUlielll '54-1.etf• ~Dlubdll Alhley ancl .let!. Br1llllle, M•rttrft Enfriiw. w m_..,.........,w..-o !HJ (l)(f) AMllll lril rt) (lll"fllery) ·~ Atttnbor°"lll
(la) "ttit Crowded Elrtll. ~ Hoat 8111 Cathy O'Ootlflllt, 1111 HIJl!t•. 8!.lmld ""°""' llcM ltl• 1nkntl .tel hit Nltllld Ill Olfl pop.dltion m ,.,,.,
probleru lot ctnluria. @CD s. Hint
=J~~!:n, ~ ED "nllillftll 11 .... It) CRl
n1fer J1ynt.. Smt11nd Y1rcl L118S 1 min Cl) ur. MIU I Dllf fC}
who n111mbln t111 Mid of• troubl.• ll:Jll BCll Cl.l...,.. ~ (C)
som1 11n1 ti .If"" thierm hi 1 wild
.......... ~... 0900111:1--(C) m Trwtll wtonllq..._ (C) (30) .loin Rlwrl lSflolt-.
8 .. "*"SNDlilllHlllW,...-(!)I ws;!Ai,I loltbowl ti th (musit1!) '33--ClfJ Gtlllt, MM Sujllrbowf (C) (60) Doil Mc:Mllur WISl
shO'lll llllhl!&fit1 of 1111. )"Mr's Rost·
boW1 111111 1nd l11U •1111 to1ch1S O @(l)C!) Diel c..tH (C)
Georp Allert, .lolln McKly i nd TOl!I·
my Prothro.
m Mqtie ind till .. llliftll M .. clilna (C) (30) IR) Exllthea lot t
"Hipe Ind Bottom.~
!l!l -" "" (C) (30) em [lllla de AMI" (30) ,,,.a;ic-'" -
a:oO 0 6 (J) Kippy Dl)'I (C) (60)
B1ndle1Ni t41fry ~IMI Ind Ml s!1
&inr-trom Hit ~ll·btncl .,, Hill r orr•. 1L111t.
, ~R IOA Y
DAYTIME MOVIES
m Mwll: ..,,,._, Hiii ... (my>
tery) 'S4-ld1 Lupino, StM Cotb-
11, Howltcl Duff.
1:00 II lllolril: •JltH If hrit~ (drama}
·U-Mldlel1 Mor11n, P111I H1in11id.
00-(C) ec.. • ..., ............ (C) m---1..,-.,,,· ...
z:oo m ""'""' -""" '"'"" " IGOt•: "fomomM la MJ Tum" 1M
"'A Oan11rous Ctme."
FOR ADVERTISING IN THE
WEEKENDER
PHO~E 642-4321
j
NOW PLAYING
1
Only on Cablevision
"THE BLUE A'NGEl" Storring MARL!NE DIETRICH
' NEWPORT: Mon. -Fri. at 9 PM; also Sat., Sun. at 6 PM.
MISSION VIOO: Mon, Wed, fri. tt 9 PM
Newt before on Wat C.oast TV: the origin.I, lllCllt d.ssic.
STARTING MONDAY, AUG. 24th
"SALLY OF THE SAWDUST"
St1rrln9 W. C. Fltlds
local
Channel 3
CabJe)'l,lon
Coll 642'3260
INSTALLATl!>N S14.9S MONTHLY SERVICE $6.SO
"THERE'S MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TVI"
Warren J. Deacon
New SCR Manager Na d
Warrtn J. Deacon, 29, of
N..,,.,t Btldl has been op-
-pointed manqing director of
South Coast Repertory, it was
allflOUnCfd today by EzecuUve
Director David M. Emmes,
y,>bo said U>e appointment
woukl be effective Sept. l.
Deacon, wbo lives with hl1
wife Saundra at 7.816 Lafayette
\Vay, will head up Ule resident
repertory company's opera-
t.iOM with specific emphasis
relations area. ln addition,
Deacon will join the group's
artistic policy stafr and will
direct several company pro-
ductlon!J . Formerly managing director
d Newport Beldl's Open End
Theater, Deacon also is an in·
structor in conununicalions at
Cal State Fullerton and is a
partner tn Cinemedia, lnc., a
Newport Beach com-
municatloM corporation which
produces commercials, educa-
Uonal and bus~ films and
grapblc arts.
Formerly a writer-director
for North American
Rockwell's Autonetics Dlvl!lon
in Anaheim, Deacon served
for ooe year as program
director for an eastern al--------
Edwards Cinema Wnt •1
P.t.N~VISION~ l [ CHNICOl.OR '!
~=·=_r!!lo
2nd GREAT FEATURE
AUDREY HEPBURN
ALAN ARKIN
RICHARD
CR EN NA
I .
llllate of NET. the public
television network.
As 1 writer, he is the reci-
pient of an international award
for his docu e1'1t1ry
i;creenplay on m a r I n e
ardleology, "The reasuree of
Scorpion Reef.'' _, ___ _
"'M-A:S·H'IS 'JHE8 ST
AMERICAN WAR
COMEDY SIN.CE
SOUND CAME
*'14 . , --,,,..,.....Pr*IO '
liiimto SlJTllUILIND·EU~TT GOULD· lOM SKERRITT '"""'"'-l•~·---, .............. ~ -· .... -· -:-1 ll(XI r1E1RD JQOT • TMI JllllG UilillO. L ~ -.. -'-·-·---__ ..,_..., ::=:::.
COio!" 1W DC LUlUI '.t.NA'ilSIOH'" .__
Exclusive Sou •rn
Cringe Cou ty
2bill CiiEt?'& ......
a.mc.ll»Tf/UBllAUP
i."'lii'iiw---::. ..... _ ~-ii ·--------~--·--·--·--Sift EXCLUSIVE WEEK !
Rated "GP" All A.9n Admitted
Por .. tol DiM;r•tlon S.99n1.-d
Edworfl Clnerno Wat #2
M.UIOI-' -a;lftA .... -~• .. 1"'2 '1¥ .. lfl'IHllT•r -Gl!d•R W•ll
•--·---·---91,_..n G•nl•n Or.ve & S11 01.,. Ftwy1.
CALL 892+493
DIRECT FROM ITS
EXCLUSIVE RESERVED-SEAT
ENGAGEMENT. •• CONTINUOUS
PDIFORMANCES AT POPULAR PRICES!
"A Big Musical Hit-
In The Winner 's Comer!tt
-ARCHfB WIH$TOH. H.., Yorfl P1>1.t
"Hilarious And Entertaining. In
The Stream Of 'Sound Of Music'!"
-JOYCC mS(R. Loe An1•le1 1..;..,, Sr>dtcete
"A Big Bawdy Rip·Roaring
Musical! Howlingly Funny! See It!"
· --W-""'0.11 HALL N Y 0-ilJ N-.
RA TED "GP"
A" Ata A•111lnff-
P'•,.... .. Di5'1'91IH S11ttettff
Pl"fl4lnted hi Ster•oph•11k S.1M
5th Super Week!
l
Ve .,
pl
lh
"
" al
•I
lh
Cl
,)
m
g• ••
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-----~~___,,..~ .......... ----· ·~·-------------··---· -. ·-----------------·----
Ve1rice Film Fest
Banks on TV Help
VENIC E IAPl -The
Venice Film Festival, grand·
d11ddy of then1 all, Is trying to
pump new blood Into lls veins
this year with the help or
1elrvision.
i· he 31-year.old lestlval,
which began We dne s da y,
abolished prizes lasl ycHr
a!ter lcft-winger!I c h <1 r .g c d
1hey were manifeSla ll ons of
crass commercialism. But the
absence ol con1petition dim-
rned much or the glamor
i::cnerated by the Golden Lion
awards. and few stars showed
up on lhe sands of the Lido.
11lC idea was to put lhc ---------·
BALBOA
673-4048
Open
6:45
71t t . l1lltol .. , .... hftlnnt•
e ALSO IN COLO R e
STEVE McQUl!EN
"THE REIVERS"
NATIONAL OENEll:AL'S
OPEN DAILT 1:00 P.M. ........
spotlight on lhc yoong mo11\e
Industries in Africa. Asia and
Lalin Americu and on in·
depcndt't'll talent in Europe
nnd An1e rica . But of last year'11
flln1s. ooly the vet c r an
Federico F'ellini's "Satyrlcon"
attained box office or critical
success.
F'cw 1f uny critics expect
tnore t/11~ year. Bu t Emesto "
G. Laura, in his second year
as head of the Io-day fe stival,
hopes television will come to
the rescue. He has invited two
of Italy's top dirrcto~. Fellini
and Roberto Rossellini, to
show films they made for
tcle11ision.
Italian directors and actors
are increasingly switching tn
television. Both Anna f\1agnani
I
. ,.f
Tona Goes 'Mod'
and r-..1arcel10 f\1astrioianni are f\Iod Squad star Peggy Lipton visits Tum Jones on
unde r contract to RA!, the the singer's shO\I•', displaying her singing talent, tcr
state TV company. Fellini night at 9 on ABC. Channel 7. spent fi11e months roaming ....:.:::::..:..=----'--------------1
through Europe f i l m i n g
circuses for ··1"lle Clowns."
\vhile Rossellini lta11elled to
Spain for his two-hour TV
version of "Socrales."
Bolh filrns v;ill open tht>
fesllval .. outside of the corn-
petition'' -although the corr.-
petition no longer exists.
Laura lold a oews con·
ferencc last month that "I.he
prizes at the Venice F'estl11al
are that the films are selected
to be shown here .'" Eighteen
films, two from U.S. com-
panies, share that honor.
Barbara Lodan's "Wanda''
and "Deep End." a n
American-German coproduc-
tion by Jerzy Skolimowski, are
the U.S. representati11es.
There will be three from
Latin America: GI au be r
Rocha"s "The Lion Has Se11en
Heads'' and Miguel F'ai:ia's
"l\1ort.a1 Sin," both Brazilian.
and "Mr. Presiden t'' by
Marcos f\.fadanes of Argentina.
Jonathan Tees Off
On Golf and Golf crs
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD !UPI)
Jonathan Winters possibly is
the funniest man -comedian
or not -in capli11ity, but not
just with one-liners or bon
mots.
Beneath his wit runs a deep
s t r ea m of philosophical
obse rv at ion which can be
touched off like a powder keg.
But he always kt>efll!! it
fu nny.
Sitting i'n bis house the other
day. a long No. 2 wood from
Bob Hope's house, the subject
of golf su rforced .
It's outdoor claustrophobia.
"I rap golf every chance J
get''
Wir.~ers had "''orked himself
in lo a state. His expression
was petulant, bul unlike the
golfer who shanks an easy
seven iron lo the green.
"My major objection lo 11>1!
courses is that they take up
more space than cemeteries.
tf any01.1e wants to picket golf
courses, 1 ·u carry a placard.
''It's not a cheap litUe hob-
by. 1t costs a fortune to join a
private club, rent a golf cart,
buy the bag, clubs. balls and
drinks after a game.
'
TI1unday, Augus t 20, 1'70 DAILY l'ILOT
Mesa Players ~ Awards Set
The favorllt' perf0tmera o[
the 11169-70 .H:uon al the Cost.a
~tesa Clvlc Playbome will be
honored Satw-day night when
the community theater group
holds IU llhnual awards ban·
<1uct.
The event Is S<;heduled for 1
p,m. at the Costa, Mesa Coun-
try Club.
Nominated for best actor of
the Sf!llSOfl are Rob Weoti for
"A Dtllcate Balance" and Bob
McCaa for "Boe.Ing, Boeing.''
Best actres5 nominees are
Barbara Van Holt for "Ciood-
bye Charlie," Jayne llamJI for
"SI.op the World -I Want lO
(;ct Oft'' and Carol Faulstick
for "The Glrt In the Freudian
SUp."
Compeling for lhe best sup-.
, WIDNUDAY I THUISDAY
"SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY"
fRIDAT·SATUIDA T·SUNDAT
"ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTE RN
ARE DEAD"
Ir To• St.pp• ..
110• RlllERV'ATIONS: CAU '*I~
lW N~ .,,,._, Cetl' Mn.11
wit1;f
-~ 61J-4260
2905 Eqst Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
Tiil 111•1Wt COll'1>AAI~ ,,_ ... ,,
•,BLAKE EDWARDS
Pflb.ICltDN 1
«> Cl.M~w, .. PW'ftSIDr
EXCLUSIVE AREA
SHOWING
NO ON E UNDER 17
UNLESS WITH l"AkENT
portJni •ctor trophy will be
Joe Del Roe.so for "Goodbye
Charlie," JOOn Hoyt for "A
Delk:at.e Balance" and Ron
fo'llian for "'Tht Girl in the
fo'reudian Slip.··
Vying for the lille JI best
supp0rtlng actrw lill be
Helene Ash and Kathy Ladd.
both for "Boeing, Boeing,"
Pamela Hall for "'the Clrl in
the F'reudian Sli p" and Julie
•laas for "A D e li c ate
Balance.''
The Thespian A" at d ,
emblemallc of ouUWldJnc
performance lit 1 "'" of any size. has three aa:plranta. They
are Ray Scotl and F.d LltUt,
both ror "The Girl in tht
Freudian SUp," and Olive
R~es for "Boeing, Boeln1."
Other boootl "' be p ...... tod
Slturday wUI be tbe favorite
play plaque from the Civic
Playhouse Patroos Aaloct.tlon
and the Linda Baum Memorlll
Award for dedicated tenlce lo
the playhouse.
PREMIERE ENGABEMEllT! SHDWIKG 1111111
"THE MIND
BLOWER Of Alt TIME!"
At l :ls.< .. p. S•e• l•t• ••
101>0 l•.1 Offlc11 0,.. 7:1S
P.M. S•p•r Pl•11r••••
...:limtlCU•
Roted
• S.,.S..Ck .. ,_ (R)
M'i(Uol 'OA)-
lEE CUNI
W\RVIN EASTWOOD JWlSEBfRG .
IWHrVOUR WAGON
a.,d(llb-Ui..-..:1 t-k.o.,. .... ,,.,. -
MOM ..... llRt. •=• ... ,, • $4T. P:M & It:•""'"
SUM, l:IH1 .. :•
RAYWA!SfON HAIM ~Ell ==-
-.. i..~ALA'llW'lil\B -•Mlto..itt -K:9UIOC.o\N ~ _,,f!IWEIKXl.Cl\\I ..... -.... AUMV1N ., __ I
...IJ,\'lll\YumEJI --"'4'1'n' l'IONWJI' •N'.\Q.\1f0l•-.... ._,
5th EXCLUSIVE WEEK !
R t d "GP" All AtH ·-a e ,.,..._. DiKreriM Su1111r.il
Comn1unisl East Europe is
to be represented by fi11e
fi1ms. 2nd Soviet Cu lture
Minister Ekaterina Furtscva
is expected to head the Soviet
delegation.
Janot ha n 's face and
111 o 11 em e n ts immediately
became those of the rich.
lackadais ical golf nut babbling
away on the tirst tee, going
through lhe rilu~I.
"I can see then1 oow."J he.
said, swinging an imaginary
drl11cr . ··wearing pink hats.
funny little flps on their shoes
and alpaca sweaters. They
wear a uniform, but they don 't
have any fun .
"And that's another thing.
c;olfers replay e11ery hole all
day Jong and into the night.
·•1 love to fish, but I ne11eri:=:::::::::=======:::==:=::::::~~=====~11 talk about fishing except to
another fisherman. But golfers
will make you sit there and
listen to how they got a birdie
on that long far five three
PAN A.VISION& TEClitllCOLORI• ~
~\~~*1"'~-~~
SHOW TIMlS:
1 :l O, 5;45, 10:00
ALSO IXCITING CO·HIT
•
yea rs ago."
Nearly Every one
Listens to Landers
Laura. a iormcr mov"ie
critic from the Va l i can
n e w s p a p e r 4'.0sservatore
Romano. said he ~ hard to
geL Communist China to show
for the first time at this year·s
festival. _ "They're getting ready fo r Jonathan has played 11 half·!'=====================::!...".'~~~~~~ dozen rounds of golf and never
broken 100. He still has his
clubs but doesn 'l know what to
ll~liii~j;iij~~ijj~fJll;ia~n~a~f~tenioon of temperament.
~
o, •• 7:o0
•
WALT ()ISHff;",
••
\ I
do with them .
"I'm ~k!flg of melting
down the clubs and making
them into a cigarette box," he
said, musing.
-Co11ti1111oiu Dolly 1 '·"'·
"A IOY NAMED
CHARLIE IROWN" ,, ..
'"HOW THI W EST
WAS WON"
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PREMll"RE l"N CIAGEMl"NTI
""PUFNSTUF" • CG) Colel r
"THI" COCKeYEO COWIOT$ 0"
CALICO COUNTY" e (0 ) CelOr
e:n1m11nmtft! 1<or Tht E~fl,. 1<1m11v ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~4,H4 •NA
HARBOR BLVO
DRIVE-IN
J41111A A"I•
BROADWAY
WALK IN
--..... ~ ... ··-51~JUl
-,_ ·-Mt-JJ\J
--··-.... m
PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT!
JOHN W4YNE h • "CHt$U~"
• (GI C1lor
411<1r1v "''*""' "WAIT UNTIL OAll:K" e C..ltr
PREMIEll:E ENGAGEMENT!
JOHN WAYNE Is e "CHISUM"
• !GI Ctltr ,
Alld...., Htphn1
"W4lT UNTIL DARK" • (lier
ALL COLOlt !HOW IOPI
Clltl a1Jtweef , &... M<INlfl "PAINT YOU WAOON"
Re'"'1 lttohAI "OOWMNILL RA.CIR"
AllC.ltf ~
Te!!J Cllf"lii e Ht11ry J....i1 "THE IOJTON STRANOLfrt"
• a .. r , Vlllc1t11I "'1c•
"THa O•LONO •OX" e IOPI Ctler
PRIMlllR• E:NGAOl!MINTI
"l>UllNITUll'" e (G) C.itf'
Ofll '""''' ••• ,.., c..
"TNa COCJtl:T•O COWIOYI OP
CALICO COUNTY" • IGl (eltr
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
NO. 21
298 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA
CALIFORNIA 92627
PHONE 17141 642-7492
Y'ALt COME ON OUT!
. z 1 ..
7 PM
BI G DOI N'S Sc.111arc Dancing e
Tiincs e Country Western Music
Folk • Singing e
Great Eats!!
PICNIC SUPPER & REGULAR MENU
-PICNIC SUPPER -
STEAK ON SKEWER STICKS CORN ON ·A· COi
POTAlO SALAD GARLIC BREAD
89'
EYES RIGHT ..
k \OUtS .L HASl\R\J
01'1 iii ...
l't.ytltel fltH1t h Hit "''"' te·
4'•y, lio11t hew"''"' l'ffP~ •ppl, ,ti"'"' ....... .. .... ;, • .,., 1
.... ... "''""· it ._ .. n. • ., ..,. •ft•i' •' ...... t-1111.,. .. ,,
"eliunlllf" ........ l11t yo11 c:e11't
, ..... .,. .. , ••• , i. .... + 1;1l119
th•"'· E••" TV
erwl t110¥ie1, If "'t ,.,,,1fo11e
•'"' .. 1 ....... ill
.... ritlo+ .... .,,
•r. 9ootl ••·
e1c.1le fM 'f'Ollt ••••· n.. belt
w•y t. l!eep
yollt' •••• •• he•lffiy ,twl 11om1•I
., ,.,,;bl., ......... ;, 1i111plf ••
••• .i.,,,.., ,; .. , ... _ ........
he•lth, wor~o11t, b11t •'••YI 1111·
cl•• c irc:1"'"t''"'' which pem1il .;.~ ...... to ....... VOii ... u.
II i1 9oocl to ln1ow the+ we r••I•
ly c:e1111GI •"••·U•• 0111 '''' •••
but, .. , c111 •b .. 1• th.,.. wiffi
pOOI' li9hti.., 1twl th• 1tr•i11 of
lo,$i•11J o"' '''' lo ••• 1111d•r
wrOIHJ colMli+i•111. Tli• •cl ol 1••-
;119 with '''' which 11•..l b .. 1 •t•
denietl prop•r correctio", +•~•1
•• e1tor"'o111 11110 .. 111 of •"•'1Y•
Yo.i c•11 beco"'• phv-ic1lly ••·
h•111tecl by tryi11t to de do1•,
de111•11di119 work whe11 vour •V•I
••• 11ot eq11ipp...i to do 1Mth
work.
Lei us ch•ck your ey11 lo ••• ii
y1111'r• 9ivi119 th•m th• ch•11C•
to ••••• you ,,.,11, Pho11e
l<f?-1 171 for •n e ppoi11hlle11f •*
our offic.• i11 the F••• Poi11h
Shoppint C•11t••·
Pho11e 147-1271
---------.-.. ' -~--...
Thursd~y. Augu~l 20, 1970
238 Saddlehack Students Earn Dean's Honors -~: .~
Saddleback CoUe&e h 1 s Jon Gariepy and Wendy Jlewetl, ScoU A. Longnecker, Paulaon, Patricia Plumb, John Davis, Robert A. DeBach, Saa Juun Capl5truo &ulh LBguna ·~
named !SI students to the Jenkins. o( San Ju1n Bill MacMut.er, John S .. 1'~. Zold. Mike • De:ffley, Rbohda Laura Delcolle, Jon Gar-Sharon Addi!:. Go r d~i
Dean's li.!lt for academic Cap Is t tan o : Gabriella Peckham, R1dlard Reeves. MJniM VMjt Donalelly Dana Fales Melody lepy, Coy Greenlee. Joel Id· Brown. "Jane E. Dorris. Nan($ .~,·-ement.dur••• ·~ Sprina Merctreau, of Sooth L&gwla. DI·-Allanlello, ... •--•-F lk M~ Ann 1•1.. dings, \Vt ndy Jenkins, Perry <:ilbertson. \Vendee John
...,.., .... ...., u.1t: • -... Caplltrua Beacla t..gua Baldi ....... 1••11w:uu 8 ' ry ... rmon, Patrick, Diane E, St.ephenson, Nancy McDonald, Gabrid)j
1970 quarter. Students must John Brittain, ID. Mark Marjorie Austin, John Paulo AJsia de Moraes, Anit.a Sheryl Hone, Mark Honllckel, John Thompson. 1t1ercereau, Lee 1lresselc. ·'~;
attain a 3.t (B ) averase or Gibson, David W. Gregg, John Bowman. Canon c r 0 u t ch, Becker, Kathy T. Btrce, Bernice Kim b a 11, Pat '
better for • class load of ll Janton, Katherine KC6ler, Bill Deborah Date, Glenn Daniela:, Richard W. B:iansett, Dorothy McOleaney. Cid McKinley, s11,p1e-•t5-••• ClleeM -Giff I'•••
quarter units. Langley, MarUyn Maddox, Brandt Davis, Ocl.Ue OeWitte. T. Bums. COiieen Calvl4 Nan· John McNamara. Philip C.
Of the .......... students. 7l:I Pauline Murakami, Mary .c. cy Ca•"•iano, Mib Derbyshire, Mathts, Edward J, Mul1eady, • .._.. Pedur.i, Linda Sancher., Jim Pauline Favour, Raymond K ... Dodson Richard G Robert M'urpby Mlchael K
Sq u I 11 ace , Jame:s A. Fontana, GaU Goodwin, Janet n:::an. John S. Estey, Crail Nelson. Mlcbeie Noon a ; students h'om the Orange
Coast. area received straight
A's in their courses. They are:
Stephenson. . Guinther. Jerrold Hagstrom. Fleck, Avis French, Tom Thomas Oller, Valerie Phillps,
Coron• del Mar Ronald HoUowbush, Cynthia Gardner, Elaine G 0 rn e z, Patrick J . Reilly, Howard RI~ ....... Mortllo, D. L • Holter, Hilary Huston, ThomJS William Cross; Gary Hultman, Ridenour, U>ulse Robb In a, ~-;.::-ta M Jones, S t e 1' e McClelland. lleleo -....Johnson, S le v e: n George Sausman, M l c b a e I
"9& en Martha Newkirk, J. Nicholas Se U ~--• Sink ~-E Ski nmn · ham c d t Ooisl< p Tim Johnson, Paula Lee KeUy, Y er, ~Y , ~· . p . . ~ • o r o, Erin ort, olhy Lana Klussil, Leslie Kosla, 8omerville, Catherine Stanko,
John Brittain., III, o r
VITAMINS -MINERALS
feot11tl119
IMPACT FOOD SUPPLEMENT
lh• J'l"•"'lc ll•lu••I org1nlc di•*••Y 1uppl1,.,•nl whit~ •n'lbrtttl
ov•r 10 h1•lth huildnit 1iJ1,
WELSH'S NATURAL FOODS .
C.pis1rano Beocb: Rlclw-d
Neuland, ol Costa Mesa;
Michael Dwigjlt, of Dana
Point; John S. Peckham. of
Irvine; Marjorie A u s t i n •
Martha Newkirt and Mark
hylor, of Laguna Beac:h.
Kuem.h, Richard Neuland. Port, Richard Rice, Douglas Gren 1..... Jaki Le 0 g u,. Marie Va1ore Jeannette
DUI Point Schilngheyde, Katie Shaffer. I) ·~ ' John B 01 h we II, Tom Patricia Straigb~ Mark Dorothy Rooeberry., Robert Walker, Jay Watts, t.arry 263 FOREST AVE. LAGUNA BEACH 494-3582
Brabeck, Derryl L. Cook, Taylor, Erie Van D' use n , Sackett., Marc D. Shaw, Bob ;;;Wheaii;ii;iiii;itoniii.i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
F~th Masucci. of Laguna
Hills ; Mark Paul.son, of
Laguna Niguel; Ilonitlly T.
Bums. Karen Dodson. Steven
Jotuuon, Lana Kiussis and
Dorothy Raseberry, ol Mission
Viejo.
lloberl A. DeBach. Mory
Ann Harmon and Don E.
Somerville, of San Clemente;
Michael Dwight, Everreti C. Deborah Webet. K 8 t b r 'I n Stevens, Scott Storm. II
Eva.N, Allen Fulmer, Shirley Witdlell, Bob Yount. Su Clemente
!Cent. Nancy Knise, Kim Lagun, Wlb Cindy Abts. Patricia Alex-
Waugb. Sb a r on Johnson, Sharon El Tort Kipp, Faith Main.tcci~ Barbara ander, Geofirey Anderson,
Bryan Bailey, Kerry Brown. Paahao, Joan L. Rex. Roger ·· Ba1drld,ge, Barry ~f.
Linda Pamer, Patricia Berg, Michael A. Blanda, Jr.,
Thomas. Lag1IDa N'ltuel Michael A. Blanda, Sr .. John
Irvine 1'taurits Berkboudt, Lucille R. Clark. William S. Coffey,
Reiko D. Hall, Charles Hicks, Dean Honnette, Mark Patricia Creighton, Carroll G.
GamingLa,v To Get Test
civil suit "in order to secure
our property and privacy."
Bolh said they keep cards.
''Artistry in Moving'' for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
Call:
494-1025
580 Broadway
Cholera in Russia
No Epidemic Threat
~~~~~~~~~~! NEW YORK (AP) -lo 1893. just IO days after his
great work, the Pathetique
Symphony, w" performed for
MONARCH n •" the first time. Peter moh
After • person is infected.
the virulent bacterium in·
cubates for periods ranging
from 1 few hours to five days,
but mually from two to three
days, Then it explodes.
HONOLULU (AP) -Two
men are suing the city in
a constitutional test of a state
law which makes It illegal
to be behind • locked dOOt
in a room with gambling
equipment.
Henry Halm and Albert
Yamagudli. said they filed the
dice and dominoes in theirl jpii::ii;ii;,iii;,iii~=-····••l!!iiii.iiiii:iiiiiiiii:iiwiiiiii~i!~~~;,iii~~· homes. I
They further complained
thaL ttie fear of arrest has
kept friends and relatives
from visiting them. paper
on T Tchaikovsky was dead at the
age of S3. He died (I{ cholera.
ARRIVE
BEAUTIFUL
WITH
2n.J·
::be bul
C.o5melic5
CMdies
Gi~-ls
If w< Ao.it
\we ji .••
"'~ ol•ll ocA..Y .1..1
CO"'l'le!:t-
Pao.eri.pbo .. SerVice
~"" O(' a;UL.;
~ }.'OW.llC\l &,'(
PLAZA
l}(;,jJ/IA 499-3511
50V!1-I uie<JI..\"<
Open Nightly 1,45 p.m.
Sunday 1:45 p.m.
The Russian composer died
at the tieight ol. his artistic
powen to a disease that ba.s
taken uncounted lives in
repeated waves around the
W<rkl in the 19th and 20th ctn·
turies.
Now Cllolera has returned to
the Soviet Union, striking re-
sort areas on the Black and
Caspian seas. A 11umber or
cities there, and in the Volga
River basin, have been closed.
Cholera seems to have
originated in India, in the
Ganges River delta and in
lower Bengal, and probabJy
was prestnt tbett in the dttp
past.
But the first great epidemic.
called a pandemic. w a s
recorded in 1817. when the
dlolera bacteria burst out or
India and followed land and
sea routes to China, ~
Philippines, Russia • n d
elsewhere.
In 1826. another pandemic
began, killowing the same
course. but spreading farther.
to Europe, Britain, and North
America.
That pandemic reached Can·
ada in 1832, moved south to the
C.hicago area and down the
Mississippi valley. Jt spread to
Boston and New York and by
1836 throughout most of the
nation, before disappearing in
1838. 'n1ert haven't been any
cases of naturally acquired
cholera in tfle United States
since 1911.
Tchaikovsky died in the pan·
demic ol 1891, also from lndia,
one of seven global pandemics
rttorded before this latest
began apparert.ly in 1935 in the
Celebes Islands of Indonesia.
The wiggling. c o m m a •
shaped bacteriwn, c a I I e d
vibrio comma, spreads in
primitive conditions of poor
sanitation, in contaminated
water and food.
The infectioo 'produces a
vioelnt diantlea, then watery
stools. vomiting and rapid
dehydrations. Death may oc-
cur within a few hours.
If cholera Is untreated,
deaths may exceed more than
50 percent of those stricken.
But with modern treatment,
restoring fluids and salts and
giving drugs, d~tls can be
reduced lo less than one per·
cent.
There·s llttle chance of the
current pandemic affecting
Europe or the United Star.es.
Ollorination of water, proper
disposal ol feces and sanitary
food handling prevent the
spread of cholera.
BIA with modern travel,
other ausceptible areas,· such
as the poor areas of Central
and Soudl America, coold be
reached by a cholera pan.
demic.
Pet Lovers
Lose in Reno
RENO, Nev. (AP) -The
children of Mineral Manor ,
'!''ho picketed the Reno Hous-
ing Authority last week in a
protest to keep household pets,
have lost out.
The Board o l Com-
missioners Tuesday stood by
its policy ol no pets in its
public k>W-cost family housing
projects, of which Mineral
P.ianor belongs.
•·we had to employ a man
fulltime to do nothing other
than handle complaints rrom
tenanU about stray dogs,
viciOU! dog.c;, and loose dogs,"
said Ernest Cuno, chairman of
the commission.
A Gentleman's Tradition
-is
"Chisum"
Forest U:ker l!P . .
Lynda Day
1ECHNICOlOK "'
Opefl Nlthtty -6:45 '·"'·
MATINEE
SATURDAY
•nd
SUNDAY
2 P.M.
'lhe~anatt'Caoc
ID their !FlnC
cM""'!
Whit Ii if 01•f the
H. G.l•of1+•11• c111to"'•"
C•llllOt fi11d 11 •lh•r
tr1diti111•I ,..,,.·,
clethi119 sh,, P
011il• ,; .. ,1.,.
it ;, ••r•ic•l
At H. Glt41t.11• St..,.
f•t Me11, we t.•ce111•
l11¥elv•d i11 ~.lpi119 '"'
c111t•111••• t•l•ct wlo1t
will 111e1t •11li111c1 theil'
w1Nlrebe "••d1.
M•v w1 i11•ito ye11 to
vi1it e11r ,11111111 1hop
i11 l•91111• Ni91111'1
M.,.,,,11 l1y P'le1e
•"cl clioe1• frofll 111
e1dM1i•el1 111,.f ...
1111cti.,. •• ,
Sod•k:k ·--L, ·~f c...o. ·-........... & .. .,,.., -
CAPISTltANO BEACH
JJttO DOMINY PAii IOAO--HUI YON!i
496-1211
Ol'IN MONDAY N"I TIL
9 P.M.
Early Bird Specials
MON. -TUES. -WED.
FOR THE MONTH OF AUGUST
T H E
SH AG
An intriguing cut designed to accent your
femininity. Equally romantic and casual.
it'; deceptive 1n its ease of care. Created
by exacting stylists who understand the
nature of the flattering shag.
• Shag Cut with shampoo. reg. 8.ro-Now $ 6.SO • e U you haven't any curl tendency. \Ve suggest a
gentle body wave .. , ...... with cut $17.SO
• For added glamour, sunstreak, with set $20.00
Armon~ Coi//ure
S•n Cl•m•nt•
:1t:1 I, OU. VISTA
Located Jn 3 Areas
L•aun•
111 •lt?IAOWAY .. " ... c-ttt 4~139
L•guna
11• M. (. M'#Y,
414-9511
ARMONDS BEAUTY COLLEGE
NOW FORMING NEW FALL CLASSES
For lnform•tion C11l 496-9436
3'0$2 L• Pl•r•. D•na Point
4-pak play doh
==69~
lOCkt."""" ,.,..,;· ••• 5 8 I
webster's
diction,..y
129
,.. ... ,,,. ..... CM' toltck
pant collection
~-4a7
A.__. ef '-hi..,. .,..... ,_.., _.,nc •. ....... ..-ic..-y.
-. W.rwh. ,..,., '"""
try&.. Fk-r•I
lambskin
blouse
J86 ...,..._ -·--... ~--·-•kin:_........,. • .+ HCkM.,.,
, ........ iu. .ll '6.1&,
welt-seam skirt
578
~..,.__. __ ......_with~•
.... .-. twtlMt .... IMctl 1ip ..... , .... .-~·-•-1•. _ .. ·--bee~
glasses , ..... _
, ......... ir-. ·--·--12-. ..... 166
bicycle lacks
flashli~ht J 7~
batteries
T"4i ..... _., foll ....... ...
........... ~ ........... )' 1 ... ,.,. .. n--.a..•-..-•._
two
size-
ponty
hose
77~ ...... )'_ .. ....... .
worthy",
~IN11cle y.,.• ........... ,_
beg, 4 tOIOl'I-
j •
77~ .. ............ ,
..,,,..y;wW.
... <oll ... ''"'·
. , l
porcektin
enamel
corn pot 199
w..,.,..., .... w.,...,_"
'o IW-orp •ft-.,. cmM fer
•P'-d. 1'2 ... _,....My; ...... -................ _.. ....
·.·· ployt~
living
gloves
11s
=s9~ ........ ___ _. ....... ...-.
......... uedMs:.
chillon leflan II frying pans
,, .. ,....... ..... ..._...._ .... .,._, -
iCe ~ fi ·-~!~?!
, .... -........ ..,. ... -· ........
147 196 J33
trlaminic syrup 4 ••• ,...__. . ...., '"""'"-99( •• ,, w ...........
2 0%o p8"10X
~ .... ""-""' .... 169 .. _ ... ...., •• ( ......... J.
fleet enema
• ...,...._ .. p ...... ..... " ............ ,.. .. 36~ .......................
b..f.c. Ice cap ::r:.., .... " .... ,... 139 ..................
•
I IP~1,,(, ._• r~.;: vl•L! L''IC I t .. \~
:.<•f1~·,·11L1 ... ,.~>'~I l(~li> l\1i. ol l't \\lfllN ~A ~l PIOllO
'171 No ~VA tON . WllM!HOION
Al1A J!t1( "' Aft~Oll IYtjWOOO
I ~[11\l N! OI \l,,lf l[)lllH ,,~1{
•J0'1 \r~'"•·f· .. u "'I '" 'l'·'lf'
']•'•. ' I 1": '[' '' ;, ;,: ::1 ~ • '' . i ~[', ;,r,.'\'.'. ·'L'""~' ·~•1;,~
~
tawel
ensemble
Thick 111td th!"ty t-el1 In ell
..•tont 1rroll tl•1ltnff wTth
lmttk• """.,""a. ....... -·· ..... ..... doth , .... -.1 :
57~ 117 197
WIHlt!lll cl ~OlliN\IN . Wiii] T ·f
S4NIAflat lAM lllAOt. WHll .i~·
&J?O ( fllH~lONl. OOWNI 1 1 T07t AIONOllA 8tVD .. NOllWAIH ta r,1111ao~ s110 ~,1Nr, cl ~ffR
-------------------------------------
-----------··-· ·--------· -------------·-. ----·--------~-
0At l Y PILOT Thuffi111r. A119u1t 20, 1~70 •
Coyote Complaints ·Prompt Return to Bounty
. SACRAMENTO (AP\ -
Bounty hunters are riding
NEW
PODIATRY
PRACTICE
again -oot after the hlde or
the wily coyote lit $$ each in
the northern Sacra m e.n lo
Va lley.
Tehama County re10rtcd to
the controversial bounty July I
in response to pressure from
cattlemen, sheepmen a n d
sportsmen's groups to "do
something" about the t."OyOle
problem. · , ·
The bounty approach Is op.
posed by both the California
Fish aod Game Department
and lhe U.S. Fish aiid Wildlife
Service.
The program has brought In
40 to 50 coyotes since Ju ly 1.
C o u n t y Agricultural Corn.
missioner Don lllll reported In
n telephone Interview from his
orfk:e in lted Bluff, t2$ miles
north o£ Sacramento. Some
were Mlot from airplanes and
helicopters.
Pressure Is mounting to
raise the bounty to SIO lo get
more coyotes, Hill said.
He said nlost of the hea t
comes from hunters. claiming
that the prolific coyotes have
cut deer herds. This tends to
force the coyotes into the
va lley a~as to prey. on cattle
and sheep, he eddcd.
HIU prtdlcted that State'
Fish and Game offldal.I wou ld
dispute this, and they did.
Hill 1dded that virtually
every coyote Inspected hi d
deer h1lr In tu stomach.
"That'• the reuon we have
the bounl)I and not the Joss to
livestock." he said.
Zoologist Maynard Cum·
mJngs of the Universlty of
California at Divis said that
some areaa In Tehama County
are overgrazed because of too
many deer -defplte I heavy
coyote population.
"A amall 1 rou p of
'11J)Ortamcn•1• organizations in
Tehama County have made
<his 11feg1Uon." he s.ald ... This
Is not borne out by the rin-
dl np or the Slate Fish and
Ga me Department."
Cummings makes It clear,
however, he beUe11es there Is a
place for klc:al programs to
<.'Orltrol the coyote where be
po1es a danger to cattle, sheep
or poultry.
There 11 no worry about the
coyote becomlng eztinct, he
added.
western plalns anhnal and haa
sp~ad to 111 41 conUguow:
states and Alaska and hu ·In-
creased his numbers In spite
or intense trapplng alld bounty
programs.
Although .he moy be the
ptrpttua l lole.r oo the Satur ..
day morning television car·
toon.s, the coyote is UMJUally
well adapted to survive!, he
sakl.
"He 1J very clever,·• Cum-
mings added. •·The pro-
fessiona l hu nter soon learns
that be may be the most dif4
ficult animal we have to trap.
The fox Is not. In the ..,,,.
league with the coyote.." '
Cumminp is from Colora&t :
where coyoll!I is pronounced •
"ltie-oat'' rhyming with "sky· '
oat." California preftrtoc•
run!I t o"a rd ··~tee''.
emphasis oo the m I d d le ·'
aylfa ble becauae of tht atate'• ~
Sponish herital•· '
Howard Leach. Fish and
Game Depa rtment speciali8t, ,
denies that coyotts have bad a '
major rffect on lbe dee r
population In Tehama Couruy,
a popular hunting resion.
"'It is a predator, "° qut5-'
Uon," Leach said. "But It has
never been demonstr.ated to be
a major contribt.nor to popull-
tion decline of game eni mals:'
UCKY KEEPS PRI ES DOW '
I •
Leach said his departrntnt
prepared a btll in 1969 lO
classify the coyate as a fur
bearing mammal in California
-the same protectloo af •
forded the mountain lion. 'l'be
department couldn't fjnd a
legislator willing to sponsor it. !
~ GROUND
. BEEF
SS ~.
lEAN GROUND BUF
CHUCK· QUAllTY
l ll(l(l lOP 111.&Ull IOllllB IUI •• ,.,,,, •• , 77~
IXTRA lEAN GROUND 8 7 ~:.~~!~~~~.!~~!!~~........ ~
FRESH FRYERS
U.S.D.A. GIAOl A
WHOlE BOOY CHICKIN$
~
ROUND
STEAK
LUCKY TOP QUAUTY
IONOfD lflf
CfNTfl
CUT 87~ ..
,. > CHUCK
ROAST
lUCJl'.1' TOP QUAUTY
IONDID Bl~f
IU.Dl
CUT
--T .\~~THOSE FAMOUS ~ NAME BRANDS
YOU KNOW and TRUST•
Nationally odverli..d item, you •
mean quofiry J prefer• • • brands thot
TOP QUALITY "BONDED" MEATS
E'very cut of LUCKY meat i1 ''BONDED" .
bock guarantee of complete r f . -your mone y.
knovts tllot al/ beef isn't th '° 11 ~hon. The homemaker
ore so porticulor th ke soine, t because our buyerJ.
8EEF is consislentl; su:rio~oi: i'h~t l UCKY ''BONDED" :~~~~ ogecl, carefully trimm:~ .e:~~~;n~l~~~NT
THE SEASON'S FINEST IN fRUITS & VEGETABLES
The beJf in f•tiifs and \'e e bl
Aavot ptak. , • ANO OISCgO~N;s PRK::~I pid:ed at their
HOUSEWARES, HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS
UT-UP FRYING CHICKENS r:~,~~ .......... 33~. .•• AT LUCKY LOW EVERYDAY
TRUE DISCOUNT PRICES!
CROSS RIB ROAST BON!lfSl ••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••• 88~
• ,LADY LEE BUTTE• ::':r.'.::'. ......... .79'
o-+ CHEEZ WHIZ m7.f::~.~~~~~79'
ICE CREAM fOllMOlfllll•SCOTOl 69' ~ h GALC11t-••••···••·"'"""•·
PARKAY SOf'TNl'°"llllll 39' '0'°'1" l•OLH5.. ................. .
.,... CHIFFON MARGARINE::2.~41 '
HARVEST GAY
32·0UNCl BOTT1E
PEI FOODS
PURR CAT FOOD !~~~~! ............. 16'
t<AL KAN DOG FOOD :!~r~~~::~ ... 27'
l>OG FOOD =~~'.~~SG ... ~ .................... 59'
ONNY CAT LITTER :~:~ .......... 57'
~PACKAGED 1$00DS ·
ZONKERS !~~~~~.·.~.~~ .......... 33'
flG BARS ~:~~~~~~~~ ......................... 44'
CRACKERS f:·~~.'.0o~~~1.~.~~.~~.~~ ......... 39'
j o--11 SAUCE MIXES ~~:~~~~~:.~~?.~~~~.17'
RENCH BREAD ~!~~~ ... , .............. 41 '
.READ MAJYIST DA1'DR•ll •33< IOUNO !0' 24 OL lOAr ., •• ,. .......... ..
l;>ISCOUNT PRICES ON Diii ITEMS
LUNCH MEATS l~'~". 36' 1
l lKEl IOLK~~. DUil PIP. IHC I tllHSE .. , ,.,... l
· Our LOW Evcl)day Price! .,
LUCKY FRANKS 1
ALL 'MEAT 58( 1 LB. PICG. '
(12 OZ. PKG. 4St)
~~!~.~£~~£~~~.~.~ ... 3 ~:,.$247
CHEE SE FOOD 69c
111"$. SUCH. 111111pM ••. , , • , , .11 fl ,!'.$,
HORMEL FRANKS 65c 1
L lllll , , , , , , , . , • , • , • , , • , ........ I \I PU '
5 LB. CANNED HAM r.\~:.~. $479 1
4 0Ufl Iii I , llDllRt,,.,WDUE '"~ ttUHI
eo~~~,~~~~~J~ .. ~,~·.asc
1
•••OB'S DRESSING :w:~.·K 43c
S tlllliflH! lllUUll: I II Ill We),, .••.
JOO'S AVOCADO DIPS 49c
~U.• II !IOI ................... ,. I It flll.
tlENNA PURE BEEF iii.'· 96c
ll!Kl'ill'llST. •an• SMWI ' ••••••• "
JWlL f (OOll(9
fAIMll »1111
HAM
''" llMOWIO
ATLU(~T . ~ , /''~~~.53c ' MU ll,
()• ..... ~&,;/
FRUIT COCKTAIL 35c OOLE
3G-0UNCE CAN
'1""-PIZZA PIE MIX :;::~~~:: ....... 33'
BOUILLON CUBES :~'t:~ .............. 19'
~ FOOD STICKS :~:_-;i:.~~~~ ..... 41 c
GINGERBREAD MIX ~:::.·:::'. ...... 31'
GRAVY QUTK ~~~~ .................. 16<
·: ,, FROZBI F-~· . ~
Fl SH STICKS ~!'o't'::~~ .................. -.~ 1°2
FISH CAKES ~·::.1:::~.~ ••••••••••••••••••••• 31 '
SIRLOIN TIPS !':!.:~: .................... 45<
BEEF STROGANOFF :::;:•: ..... .-.. 51 '
CREAM PIES ~!1.~~~:~.~~.~'.~~~~ ......... 27'
()s~ot~~~r2'-,-;
VIVA 126COUNl ROLL
MEXICAN FOODS if:!~~~~G ........... 52'
!Ull T•t O,, GUiii & 110 (11111 IUlll!Oil
APPLE PIE :!:i~::~.'.~~~.~~ ................ 89' . . CE "'""'"'" . . 25 ORANGE JUI .. u.................... '
GRAPEFRUIT~:~~!~1~.'.".~~ ........... 26'
VEGETABLES :1:r.::~.: ............. : ..... 33' ·
!Pl.Ai w/(llAMJA~a. ""'POT If OH •l<•f""1 !llKl1,US
l ,lll~OlllOllS •ISlllCl.CAllOTlw/llOWll l!,l,At Gilli)
EGGO WAFFLES:::.~ ................... 44'
HONEY BUNS m'::'-. ........ :-.: ...... 31 (
POTATOES ~::~v•u ......................... 35'
(I TUn(Ow/ClllUL w)OH\IUt
MIXES TSl.AlltllMll!OAIOllMlff • 28 < MAIGAltlA!t Of.CAii •••• _ • .,., •• ,, •• ,.
P.EPPERS =~~~~~~:~~.~~t~.'.~··········· 78~
MORTON MACARONI ~':~:: •... :42'
TOTINOS PIZZAS l!:~:~::~:~i.~79'.
I Our LOW E.el)<l:Jy Price!
S APRICOT HALVES 29c HAaVlST DAY
29·0UNCI CAN
·It. S. D. I. FOOD ·STAMP
COUPONS
Gfadly Accepted
~ KLEENEX~OWEL ~·:~::~•31•
DUPONT SPONGES«uu ........... 35'
f1"" SCOTT TOWELS~%:c·,~::t:.~39'
GAIN DETERGENT :::~ ................ 82'
~FEMS NAPKINS ~:i;,~~~~.-..... 67'
(),• ..... ~&,;!
LOG CABIN SYRUP 65 C .. Alt ,.U•POSE
24-0UNCl IOTTlf
JOY LIQUID ~~~1:.~·,~ ...................... 57(
~ HEFTY BAGS ::;:~:.i:.1:,~ •••••. 89'
SAL VO PELLETS !!W~': ............... 74'
~ HEITT REFILLS ~'l!~:~.~~.~.45<.
IVORY FLAKES ~:~uo• ................. 82'
COLD WATER ALL:::~'.'f.' ...... -.. 82'
COMET CLEANSER ""'L "'-······ 26'
_..NU SOFT RINSE ~'..n. ....... 'I"
WHITE KING "D';om1G1•1 58, 4t01.10l .......... ..
WHITE KING SOAP !!!~11!!~~~ ....... 69<
WATER SOFTENER :'.":~::~ ......... S7'
DOW CLEANSER ;:~=-~~.~~~~ ... 83'
DISCOUNT PRICED rRODUCE
· 1 00% CHIQUITA BRAND ' f ~A~!t!i!!
:it.\ you CJI -•Y ••• fDl~ea
ripa b1ncbes!
10,~
OTATOES ·
U.L NO. 1 oaADI • RUSSET
1 O,:r~48c
'
luclry h•1 ju1! 0\-.1 tht b.'lf p1odwc1 .i..,1,
lft '9Wft111!d o1&o•••.,..rdi~P'~ •
,I
I
···~&;!·-~
SNACK PACKS sac HUNT'S PUDDINGS rout S.OUNCE CANS
PEACHES ;::i~.:.1•1.~~~.~~ .................. 38'
~ REALEMON :::~~.':~.~~~~ ...... 51'
ASPARAGUS :~~:.~l.~.~.~~~~ ........... 471
RIPE OLIVESUIOSAlllTYIOtrtCT 28' t:J"" llllM, S,. 01. U.I •• ,,
BEETS r.-::: .. ~~~~.~~~~.~ ..... ~ ........... 31 1
.,... TOMATO JUICE:::r" ......... 27'
()P~A!~·~~::,/,-,-~~.,
GC>lDllf NUGGIT
J6.0UNCEJAI
BABY ,OOD !~!~~::~'.~··········-·" 9•
_.. TENDERLEAF TEA~;:.',':' •.. , .• 73'
JUNIOR FOOD ~:~::.~ ............... 121
_.. PURITAS WATER :':.'.':i\'. ..... .35'
BABY JUICE c;111r1n1•000 , 9,
.. l/SOLU.I .,,,,,., ...... ,,..,
• ' •.WllAll ouvt on ... L "'········-~·············85'
' LUCKY
SLICED
BACON
'u1, 69C , PKG,
THIN SLICED BACON 39c
O«'" MAtll, 11 ot. ,., ................. _,,.,,,,
·--RWE-.. ''Ba .. r-• r,.. ..... ~. _... ' . -...... _,; ...... . ... .}_ji
:.:!~,~~~~~~n1~."·-87t
~~~~!!~.!EE·~··········--···--· $1 ~s
GOLD SEAL RUM $419
If II-. •T. ITI.. .................. ,,,. • .,,.,,.,
t••-llffl• ,, .... , l ... , ,_)
""; i-i,.rM19 ~· -< ~ •• !U ...... 10"'
o-< SPRING WATER :~'::~.~ ...... 35'
GERBER CEREAL !!~:":. .............. 26'
o-< CRAB MEAT 98'
'Olfllll'J OUll5f11Pi. 6\, 01. CA•
BUTTERNUT ~~::~ cu.-87'
o-< MIXED NUTS 79'
PUlfllllfS, ll Ol.C.&1 ••.•.•• -•• -....... -•.•
.,."!".,;..HORMEL SPAM 56'
IUIKlllOll MIAT. 11 01. t.&11 .• ,,_,.., ...
KOSHER DILLS ::::. ................ _ss·
GREEN BEANS ~!~~1~.1.~~~~ •••• _ ... 28<
tr1l OLIVES :~~::.1,~::~~~::~~~ ............... 491
If You Are in a Rush ...
1nl 1111~inr 1 pu1th111 ti 1i~ i11111s
er leu, 111~ ,., c•tc~.stJnl witlt
tltt llnhi"f rtl lipt. T•t "Giit'
C~tck" is Jft 1ddtl tlRltftit~ct Wt
&ft 111111 hippy 11 ofh r.
; <>1 /;.,, LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HEALTH ANO BEAUTY AIDS
0
~ -.-
TAME RINSE
1111111 l't •111111 k1!r ••• ltnas it ••••rrl•111
1111. 1111r11s, n• •••at:••"•· 111 It '''''· R111J1r, '"' •ii' _,.,., a..i. slu .
REGULAR,.,, .... ,
WITH BODY, •• ,,.,
GLEEM II
TOOTHPASTE
lttttf l._1 ""! ''""' II HW 1111 ... c1Y1tJJ11lttl11 wa11 ..
1n1 lltt ,.. s•llt. 1 .. rllts,
flt ,,, II hi' llJ'ftHI c11itl1L
FAMILY SIZE • 77c
SECRET
SPRAY DEODORANT .
lttfS )'ti Cltl, Cl/a Hf Ctllflrtl-ly •IJ, fffl
•••• Yt•·11 11111 •If 11m11. Safi, n•· lnittli'I'., wtl't stall cltUl1t1.
HEAD & SHOULDERS
DANDRUFF SHAMPOO -
lU Jtllr •aa•r•lf •r•-l1111s tht Sift .111• rffte•
tl•t WIJ , •• wit• ff11• I Sktlll,tn:, th s•111,.1
that Imes •1fr •1atif1I.
FAMILY SIZE TUBE
""' . ot121 llfClUDIS 4f
10c0ff,,, •• ,
f AMll T SIZE LOTION
""' $11·9 IN<lUDIS
''Off •••••••
FAMILYSIZIJAR
PatCl llfClUOIS llc OJF
4.ou~aSIZE 63c $138
PllCI INClUDU 20c OFF
Shop Any Day ••• Save Every Doy • • • With 'Lucky ·low DiscoontPricing Policy! , .
Cl •&•. "'" , .. , ,. -• ti ,. ·-1.-•1111.lft•lll,.
"'nlere's a strong movement
afoot, and rightly JO, to gain ·
protection for the coyote and
bobcat," Leach said. ·•we feel
~~~·' should be managed ;
Another attempt at s uch
legislation will be made next·
year. he sai d. '
The measure would allow1
Lhe Fish and Game Com-1
miss.ioo to set regulations ~
tccting the coyote in u~:
natural habitat and prov1de~
ror its control in areas wber1.
it poses a danger to cattle,
shetp. turkeys and the like.
In going its own on the
C1>yote program, T e h a m 1
County became ineligible to
renew its contract with the
U.S. Fish and Wildfi re Serviu
in a vi rtually statewide contro l:'.
program.
The <.'Ounty's rost is going,
from $17.405 last year to a .
budgeted $38.134 this year, tni
eluding $4,000 set aside to pay
bounties -including $2,000 ~
up by the cattlemen's ~
lion and woolgrowers, !
Malcolm Allison or the-"'
federal service said his agency.
11•on't cooperate with a C'OUnty1
offeriag bounties.
"It's an indiscriminate waY:,
of killing." he said. !
l
Tries Guniho
WASHI NGTON (UPI~ -;
Sen. Allen J. Ellender, (DI
La .. l who loves lo lavish his'
chicken gumbo on f o I k s
lavished it Wednesday on th!
First Lady and quite a le'(
other ladies. ~
He cooked it up on Capi~ Hill and had in, among others .
111rs. Richard Nixon, M
Spiro T. Agnew, Mrs. Cliffor ·
M. Hardin, habitual fl~
Perle Mesta and s o m
senators' wives.
,,
STIYI. DAN &-IYlON flNllY
II .....,.. ll'Mll llM ltffrt ~ "* Ill•
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ti IHIMI WMMll. Oii. ..ii. tlll ltlart
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•
'Ripper'
Still Big
Mystery
LONDON (AP) -London's
bottelt mystery tour I s
throolh an ordinary worldn(
dass quarter in the east end.
lt11 called "!ind Jack the Rip-
per."
Tbo English and tourists
from abroad are queuing Ul)
tor guided visits lo
Whit.echapel, ~·here th t
notorioos ripper lurked in 1881
and stabbed lo death 1t least
five and ~ps 10 ladies or
dllbioos """'"" A lot of the scene of tht
crime io Britain's loogest-run-
ning 1'ho-done-il WM rated by
the blitz of 'Vorld War IL
To hear th< guides tel1
the uncaptured ripper's story
of murder aod mayhem today
still evokes memories or those
few months when he prowled
under tht gaslamps and carv-
ed his way -literally -in10
London Jore.
The pilgrims come to have
their hair raised and their
blood curdled.
. The idea behind the 60-cent
stroll round the ripper's slam-
: ping ground is to pin a name
· on him.
As the guides tell it, there's
no Jack or suspects: a brilliant
15urgeon wbo caught a noxious
· disease from a prostitute and
killed for vengeance, a Polish
immigrant, an East End
character called ' ' I e a t h r. r
11proo" and a dozen others.
According to the legend, the
trippers are following tn the
bloody footsteps of a tall top-
hatte.d figure Who carried I
. -... ••
First Men to the Moon
. ... -.. . . . . -~-.. --,----,------.. ·~---... -·-: -; .i .. ~ •. • • • .
Thursd1y, A11911st 20, 1970 DAILY PILOT 20C
Utility Rate Hikes Loom Across U.S.
WASHINGTON (AP) he held out little boPC that Lincoln said. attributed to• number of fie.
World-wkie sbort.ages a n d much could be done to lat year 1 he 1 a l d , tors, lncluding tbe Mldeast •
skyroclo!Ung pie<& fO< file! oU alleviate the crisis any lime America"' US<d I .I million poUUc.ol altuation and pow ..
have hit American utility oom-.soon. barTe1a of tuel 0 11 8 day and demand worklwide.
panlta ao bud that the result He was Interviewed Tuelday the projected average ror 197'0 One major cause fer tM tn-
could be a~ uWl-following a press briefing et is 2_3 mlllion barrels 8 day. creased demand, Uncoln sakl.:
ty rate b.lkea for the nation'• which be discussed the ad-As a result, the dllily cost of was that resk111aJ fUe1 oll can . conawners. a high Nixon ad-mlnlstratlon's decision earlier tod . be r..n-...1 to 1 low 1ut...nur ministration official says. this wetk b la'ap 8 proJ>O.'Cd fuel oil in this coi.mtry ay ts ~u!CU "'"" ~· nt
'Ibe a.is.is lnvcilves residual revisioo in the natkm's oll lm-more than twice wbat ll was cootent, a ma"" requ e . _ _._1 at the end ot last year. in many air pallutlon control , luel oil, UHd principally by port ~N~ .program.
J\eavy lndustry and utlllty The revision would have 1 _ _:Tbe:.::::..::""'.::rtages:.::::::::...in::,:fuel::::,0::::"=.,..===progr==ams=-====::;;;
companies. Since the flrst of &Ubstituted a system of tariffs
the year, the price of foreign-on roreign petroleum products
produced residual fuel oil has for the 11-year-old quota
doubled and American fuel system. In abandoning the
prices have increased by tariff proposaJ , the ad·
about 40 percent. ministration decided to con·
Nearly two-thirds of the cent.rate on improving the
residtl&l oil used in this coun-quota system.
try ls imported. Residual fuel oil, however, Is
"Utility companies are not affected by the import
being btit hard," Geo~e A. controls. Because the nation's
Llnooln, director of the Office needs could never be met
of Emergency Preparedness, from domestic supplies, all
said In an interview. limitations on t mp or t Ing
Asked if this meant a possi· fOM!ign residual fuel oils were
ble rise in electricity rates, lifted in 1966. !t~~l1n said, "It certainly CRISIS GROWS
RATES GO UP But the crisis in fuel oil SUJ>
"In most places, lhert's a ply has continued to grow.
rate adjustment tied to the Since the first of the year,
cost or fuel so that when a the cost of foreign residual oil
utility company's fuel C06ts go has risen from about $2 a bar-
up, electricity rates go up , rel to $4 a barrel and
too," Lincoln said. "It's the American residual oil has
old story. When a company 's gone rrom $2.50 a barrel to
operating costs go up , those $3.60.
costs are borne by lhe con-Coupled with tlle dramatic
suiner. price rise there has been a
"'Some states have p~ drastic increase in demand,
#,#GRAND'\ I OPENING •
THURSDAY. AUGUST 27ftl .. , ....
SIPTIMIEl JlD
STOP IN FOR
FREE Gin
KRAZY-KIT
CARD and GIFT SHOP
N•• o,_ 10 to 5 t ... • S.t.
34179 ITltllllT 0 .. TN( GOLOliN LANTl!llN
DANA POINT
496. 9790
visions that limit such rate in-1;:::===========================j creases to industry users of
power, but this is the ex·
ception, In most places in-
creases are provided for right
aero&.! the board."
Lincoln would not predict
when and by how much utility
rates might be affected, but WESTBROOK'S
black bag and a netdle sharp This oil painting entitled "Crew of Apollo lt,11 a montage showing portraits of
knife under his cloak. a stronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edward Aldrin. their blastofi.
IN LAGUNA
~l.\E YARDAGE What the guides don't koow explorations of the moon's surface and .splashdown, will be presented to the
about the ripper's identity Smithsonian Jnstitution's national portrait gallery by a group of Texas and
they fill in with the gruesome Florida donors. Artist ls Rona1d Anderson of Dallas. J7J So11tti c .. t Hlthwoy
details of his deeds. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ t:» 19 t:JI 1 O•Y$ r-. Neartlw Tbey tell horrified visiklrs or
the girl round with "her head
nearly cut off and 35 stab
wounds!' They add: "It was
the ripper's habit after the
frenzy of stabbing to e<trve out
his victim's intestines." Some
Jist<ners blanch.
The ripper kept up a
macabre r u n n i n g cor·
respondence -in red ink -
with pol~ between murders.
the guides relate as they lead
the group on to the spot where
the next victim had her throat
<Ut.
Some of the missives were
sem.iliterate, with e r r • t i c
Jpelling end lopsided syntax.
Others obviously were the
wurk of an educated man.
•f U.WllENCll 11$TllAOA
ti'• not M dltfk utl 19 mall• -
.,._ loDIC Ul'11•rt S11r1 wllll blli;;k
.,..ilr!W 1M lllt!M'llll fll4I e,..llM I
fl'Kfloll Clf Ill\ Inch • , , Ill I •ltllgtll
llM • • • beyll!ld fl>e NlllO'll ocl'JI' DI r-lllJIP'f' ..,..lid. ~wild\ !ID'# to
cMrco1l-9r•"I' ,...,.i1net. SI.rt tllrtlf
IMl69 the outaf> COfMf' DI """ ~
lid and '°""' 1 ll!leo °"""''rd vnlll It
,....,.. ttll blKll I ..... tll faml I ftl-
1111'9. Tht ldv1n1.oe of Vl"'41 ~lllr
tMl1f'lf for me lower 11.,. ti• In
If'* IO!Mrl ..... feet 11 ,,..ovllleo.
fMn •r• ••h•1t11llOIS tlM In trvs•·
'"' yvur hlk' tll'9 10 -lklllld "" .,. .. """'° fllrll 11111 lontlsi.ntl"/ •~·
~ltnl _. ,,
Howe of Estrada
17 ... Mell ... 1ew.n1
tlllllllllt*' letc.11 •~1-9164
MANO'f' MllfT1 "Te prfvfnl rur.I Inf
t1rnbh "" polllt*I b••11. •l)lllf
...,lltt 11Mi1H will! • c1mel" !Ylr
"""'·
~ Hor.I l41tuJH1
Nixon Popular President
·with -Writers of Letters
:pfCIAllIE 11-1 WE~\JTS
candies seed~
·ed fru1t5 fancy pr1
<O!. 497-1350
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
When President Nixon took of-
fice, he urged the nation to
lower its voM!e. But if his mail
is any indication, people are
speaking louder than ever.
May over the U.S. operation!! derision that the costume wasl ~L:;,::;.;..:::::=:::::;11
;, cambodia t11at special toned down aoo t11e headgear , GIFT PACKAGES
teams o{ volunteer! had io abandoned. ,•· WE IM. EYDTWHEIE ,,,
man batteries of telephonesllfi~--jiiijjiiii-iiiiiiii~~~~~jii~~--111 around the clock.
According to a recent com·
pilalion, Nixon received during
!he first J8 months or hit ad·
rninistratioo a total o f
4.567 ,483 letters and cards and
429,308 telegrams commenting
one way OI' another on his
policies and performances.
A staff working In the f'll:·
ecuU'e office building ad· WANTED'. jacent lo the White House
reads and sorts the mail and .p.
senior White House imistant
l>Cri<>dically presents t h e
Presidertt. with a cross-section
This total or 4,9 96 ,791
~get pourin~ into the
White House mail room Is at
least a millioa more than
President Dwight D.
Eisenhower received during
his entire eight years in the
presidency.
And the voiume Is in-
creasing. In the first 1l weeks
of 1970 alone., Nixon received
J,458,557 letters, 304,0'26 cards
and 228,753 telegrams-a total
of 1,991,336 messages-more
than any previous president
l!ver received in an entire year
;:i.nd ebout 60 percent or what
he received last year.
This count does not include
telephone messages w h i c h
reached sueh large numbers
during the controversy last
of it.
Whal ha11 caused this deluge
of' mail? White House aides
say it Is because the President
has been more candid in ex·
plaining the complex situa-
tions the nation faces and has
gone frequently on television
to outline his policies in more
detail than his predecesso,,,
Another reason may be that
his policies are more con·
tro..-ersial. 'l11e Vietnam war,
particularly the. Cambodian in·
rursions, have sparked by far
the most comment.
When somebody in the White
llouse-nobody is sure
who-decided several months
ago to deck the White llouse
police out in special white
unifonns with custard-pie hats
for ceremonial occasions, it
caused such thunderou s . ,,
o\J \,ONCE
~ A ~ YEAR
SALE
THURSDAY· FRIDAY · SATURDAY
ALL KNOWN BRANDS
REGULAR & HALF SIZES
LIGHT WEIGHT WINTER
' AND ALL WEATHER
DRESSES
COATS
BAGS
JEWELRY
ALL COLORS & KINDS
REOUCED PRICES
UNUSUAL AND
EXOTIC
ONE SMILE-A-WHILE
DAY CAMPER
FOR HAVING TOO MUCH FUN
Whe~: 14582 BcachBoulevard
\Vhy1 Swim School e Sports e Crafts
Cookout s e Trips • Overnight s
\Vho: Boys & Girls -4-14 Rf'gardless
o( school plncement
When: Your ChoiC'f': By Day, Wt"f'k, Month or Whole Summer. No Minimum Sign·up Required
FOR REWARO & INFORMATION
894-2312 -CALL -5311-3333
We Have A New Name
i h ~~1.~~~~~'m""''
888 GLENNEYRE
LAGUNA BEACH
494-0582
WASHING -TV--REfRIGERA TORS
MACHINES e General
e General Electric
•General Electric e We stinghouse
Electric • z.,uh eLanh
• Mayllg 4A,.1'1-I Sitt) e Westingho •RCA e Gibson
(M()NA MllSIC tOMPltlt ti
NOTlO FOi. in <J>MPl.eni ' ALL ITEMS REDUCED u..-orQ<JALJ'Y CIA~,,Cl'I.
==~~ i .._U_P_T_0_1_Y2_0_FF_!___.
WE WK,..,. 81.Sf TITLE
WORIC3 1.i s1llCJC. 1119'0fll; '
•1Ml)NI. IN'IC ~IS
Y1J1111. ~IOC. ~O Fl"'"'-"C 111~et!UMv.
IA~t-1~ MU~IC Co.
.,. ,_, ,,.,., utwM ·--
445 SO. COAST HWY.
494-2394
AT THE LAGUNA HOTEL
BUY DISHWASHERS ''WE $ERV1Cf:
LOCALLY • Gtneral MOST MAJOll:
& Electric APPLIANCES"
SAYE • KltchonAid M 'l'ttn llqletfMc•
• Moyl1g
See Us Before You Buy!
IS HAVING
A GIANT
STOREWIDE
REMODELING
LAGUNA BEACH ONLY!
every piece of fa bric
in our store at . . . 251~
We' re reducing our entire stock to make room for the painters.
Redecorating our store means a prettier place for you to shop and
select your favorite fabrics and sewing accessories. New fall mer-
chandise will be arr iving soon and we want to make room for all the
great "new looks" in fashion fabrics. Be early to our storewide sale
for best selections.
YOU'LL FIND1 WASH 'N WEAR PRINTS, LINEN WEAVES,
HOMESPUNS, PIQUES, KETTLECLOTH, VOILES, DOTTED SWISS,
CREPES, BROCADES, VELVETEENS, WOOLENS, BONDED ACRYLICS,
POL VESTER DOUBLE KNITS, MUSLINS AND OSNABURG$, ALL
LININGS, UPHOLSTERY VINYLS, PLUS MANY MOREi
278 FOREST AVENUE. LAGUNA BEACH
PHONI 494-Utl -USI TOUI U.NIA.MlllCA.lD 01 MASTllt CHAltGt
. • . .
----------------~----------·-------~-----------
DICK TRACY
,
:iuMILEWEEDS .·. I GOT'fA COME UP Wrru A NAME FOR "THi KIPl-•• OR!1f.f\S FROM OI!
ly Tom IC. It~
~SEEN UP HEPE ~~VAY, WEEl'S ...
m!AlCHA OOIN'? .,
: JUDGE PARKIR
INKY-Fl~!
-ANP Tl4iN
TMIAl'S NllNCY.
SHllf l'Oolt 16
YES •• FJlL IT UP! HAV~
YOU Gar A Ol"ATf
w.11 INSI PE l
PERKINS
ACROS S 50 Goes Ytsttrday's P1.12zre Sol•td:
1 YtllowJacket 5 Debris from
Jogging
: operation
·10 Kind of race
'14 llllattOUS
pl1nt
, 15 Flower · 16 ''What's
' the blj
-1·
down
SZ Fl11sh 54 Transaction
55 Agitatts: Z words
59 Ercusts
63 Mata-
64 Not
applicable
6!i Ftmlnint name " J.(l');.!M "'
J'UST INSIPE
T><I OOOl TO
'Tl(I! R16MT!
Ill
;17 Colleg~. lo
' the grads:
Ei7 Love, 111
Milan
68 Actress Sommtr
61J Kind of
.... ~t=..-M•"' •\II
2 words
)19 Delineate
21J Romiln VIP
21Putlnl
part icul1t
place
·23 Ttrml\t1'
' relatlv1s
:~~ ~;·~f1~\1°"
; in P.y,11~·
• 31l Stagger• ,
:34 Rich cake
•35-lilounl· ~ ains of the
; USSR
• 37 Food store:
, lnfor111al
• 38 --11oment's t. notice :
'· 2 words !3' E:icltemt :cz Son of Jacob
J 4l RtllglotJs
: ftasl · • 45 Liv tr DI' ! lt:idnty, e.g.
c46 Tooth;
1 Comb. for111
•41 Kind of
: foods
"
" ..
'
yarn
70 Fruit
drink
71 Ceast fl~
111ollon
DOIN
11 kind of 36 Ftigl'lt'd
entrance 40 One who lZ Flower can't
strewn: remembtr
Heraldry .tl Setting
lJ Pen111anship 44 Book of
11 Box fro111 the Blblt
\ wh lch 47 Slll'Tender
1 FtJltle enhnals tat 49 T•illght soldler: 2Z P11t Into 51 lachlnt for
lnlot••I serYlcl closing c1n1
2 -· btt'f'e: 24 Sole o 53 Pa1vo -:
Musical a plow Finnish
direction 26 Personnel athlete
l Various 17 Parllelpa11t 55 Noted ~
4 Small •'"','tlon playwrlghl farmer :It 56 One of a
5 C1plt1I of 21 lu1e Tanotn • •
Laconia 29 P0tm re people )-"
6 Parcel of the siege 57 Riv« of lltfy
land of Troy 58 Rernlndtr
7 Tarzan's Jl lnd11ced to &O Group ol
friends bad cot1rse turtles
I MtSt on of aetloa: 61 W(l~
.sailing 2 words fl1WI
vessel 32 Afri can "2 ''lr.tt rt t Psychor'f"" antelop_e , stmr"
rotlc disorder 33 Drives fn '6S elfore:' 10 Expanded wllh ,forcr· Poe1i
' 7 • 9 II tl 1J
• MISS PEACH
•
KAMP
, KfLLI
A~ll~L
CAl!"IV~L
• J ' I
I ••
....
\U "'
" • Ill "'
' ..
\ •
U'l 41NIR
Ll'L ABNER has
'
GORDO
. tifOON MUWNS
'.ANIMAL CllACKIRS
Ill
'" 111 '" ,,, "' "'
. .
------~---·-
DAILY "LOT %.i
ly Al Capp .,
ed by mail. been delay ,
I
J
MR.MUM
•
'ly,... 'Jtt
I
~
-·PEfS
fLC{lf.fE
Ill
DENNIS 1HE MENACE .
J)
•
• .. , •• I , ''(U ~" I r1'• oz-
' •
,
' l • • • • . ,
' ' I
• '
i"E!tACRYLIC -1
nucco .. .&TRY PAINT
• t
• 1-HOUff TO Dttv • WOWT CHIP,
• SCRU88ABLE cllACK GR PEEL~= • CLEAN-UP wrr H •. 8AIGH1' WHJTE " WA~ AND COLORS -____ ._ ~·
. '~y .l!NA .. L.
· ·· 12:oil~WOL'CAN
i I i
........... ~-... •
• _!XTREMELY T®QH AHO DURAQLE F11118H
• HIGH GLOSS • ,AST DRYING
I .
• ~ON FURNITURE, ll~CHJllERY ..
I TOYS, ETC.
'
' l-----· NCOllATOR Dll.9ff!N9D
FLOCK P.APl!RS
t • ,RE·TfUMMED 1 • IUNofAIT ·-
' 21 POPULAR COLORI A~ PA.fTIRNS•
C<JllP. RETAIL OU11 3•S· 695 -""'OU. ~ • · MIO."·
IOl.D IN 2 aoLL IOI.Tl ONLY
,'.l J 1, SO r.1A1N
SANT.A ANA
1 !l ' ~ ..... '
I' \',' '1• I o ),
" .
• • ., .
. , OUR""" ·-' 1•• ce...: '•
·UL. . RITAIL 3.1$ 1
-r --· ~ ••
OPEN 5 NIGHTS OPE~ \UND A'f ' ·100 ro '.> 30
"0 "f't.•THI• 10.!'lA•~A"' "'"P "' !111.TUR[lt\T\ J(I,, • 6)0
•
•
•
ST.ANDA'RD BRANDS
PAINT CO.
'4u11 IRa &c3l
Eveoy It•• Ill Ollr Store• Cettflltd tlY our Ektylng labort1ory
· tl\=:::"":9~~::~ IN.
. 41o-. 1.oe ... 'I.ff••·
,.;. '.abQ Ill. IX24 IN, 9X24 IN.
-. 1.2a.•~ .... , ... .. ......
.. :-tall~ tOX29 IN. 10X311N.
( ....... 2 ....... a.••···
•. :t#H;nt. 15~4~ IN. 15X54 IN.
I ·t.79 ~ S.:ff ... Mt ...
• '... .-11fZIS l,.,TOCK . I
•
f'OllONA·ONTAlltO
CORN(lt HOlT .. MILLS
I kti l:•tll DI IM .. Hi115 "'f.. •
•IVlllllDE
COft"tlt MAGN04.IA & ~
. .
": .•. '
.•:
..
•
.... !""""'----...-~~~. ~~ -. -v-~~~~· ·-·-·-------·---·-.·--..----~----.-.. ...... --·--·--~-------·-·-..,.--.-··----·----~~---·---......,...._...
" ~ ..
• •
•
• . : r:
; .... . ' ~{" ' \ . ~;:.
, I
'° '
..
'•Ihlen l1l•nd Suppl1ment to DAILY PILOT, Thura., A"9ull 20, l~I
'
. . '
. -
. .. .
I I l ' ... ' , '
' ' ' . '
'
. ' . ' ·~·· ... ~. ~ ••• .i • r ' . . ... • ·'.: ."•· "" .. r , "
\ J '
BRING THOSE LITTLE APPLE POLISHERS WITH YOU WHEN YOU
SHOP FASHION · ISLAND FOR YOUR BACK-TO-SCHOOL REQUIRE-
MENTS.* .
''
•
THEY'LL SEE GERRI -THE WORLD FAMOUS IJANCING GIRAfn; ,
PERF-ORM TODAY AT 11:30, 2:30 AND 7:00 P.M. FRIDAY, AND AT
1:30 AND 3:00 P.M. ON SATURDAY.
FREE INFLATED BALLOONS FOR THE KIDl)IES.
*(SCHOOL OPENS MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 14l
. . . ' ...
58 Fine Stores and Services • Open Friday and Monday nights
I
. . ' ..
.l ' · _ . NEWPORT CE'NTDB. •
Pacific Coast Highway-Between Jamboree and MacArthur
I ,
,__ -
' •
FRIE SD OF ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA. SEE NEWS OF FREE,, DRAWING ON PAGE 2
-
'-"""*' ltl""" Supplem111t l•DAILY PILOT,_Tliurt., Aufutl 2t, lt11
'.Nationally _ Known Comedy Giraffe Appears at Fashion Island
Comical Gerri the Giraffe Set
For Appearance at Stage Gourt
l • • . .
Gmi the Girt.He, a ll-foot
.. people-Cuffed" animal wbo
has captum:I the hearts of
i young and old alike throoghoul
' the United States, w i 11
perform al Fashioo lsland
today, Friday and Saturday •
Gerri was born (fifteen)
years ago in the Jrnagination
of comedian George Colston
StrideRitestMI greet blear• ~·re buitt
to fit And our pt0"1llional fitters a:re
trained to mike doubty 1Ut9tb9ydo
SlndoRlte. Thomoott.-
name in chlldrin'l lhoM.
13.50 to 015.00
W. ••rry
.. iclth1 to EEE ' ' ' • • • • • • • •
.
' I .
l l 54 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT .CENTER
l Opp. Broadway • 6+4-'1223 • •
• • ' I
. . . . . . . .
• ' j
I
l • • . • • • . . . • • . • . •
poncho
piquant ...
pant
suited
in
acrylic
& wool
blend
with
tyro lean
braided
bonier
trim ••
pepper
.-1~
sizes S-13
$1-0Cbe
poncho
S25 die
pent
ALSO AlHAMlltA
NEWPO.RT BEACH, 15 Fllhlotl Island
Coallnutd oa Pap I)
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Pilot, Fashion Island Merchants Group to
Team Up to Give Encyclopedia Set Away
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FASHION·ISLAND
NEWPORT CINTER
CLIP ;THIS COUPON NOW AND IRIN6 1t TO FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT
CENTlR. DEPOSIT IN LARGE DROP IOX IN STAGE COURT ON THE MALL
BEFORE AUGUST 29th. WINNER WILL IE ANNOUNCED AUGUST 31 •I .. YOU
MAY WIN A COMPLETE SET OF 24 VOLUMES OF ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRI-
TANNICA$. COURTESY OF THE DAILY PILOT !-ND THE FASHION ISLAND
MERCHANTS' ASSOCIATION.• WINNER WILL BE NOTIFIED.
NAME .................. ..:....-··---·····---------.......................................................... ..
ADDRESS ............................... ".-......................................................................... ..
CITY -·-·-·-········-------"--····-···-·-------------TELEPHONE .............................. ..
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•MEMBERS OF FASHION ISLAND itERCHANT'S ASSOCIATION
OR D!PLOYEES OJ' THIS PUBLICATION NOT ELIGIBLE..
.fun clothes
7 fashion island, newport beach 644-5070
•p•1t 1u"dey1 cfuri"t fhe summer 12 to 5
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Fuhlon Island Supplammt lo DAILY PILDT, Thurs., Augull 20, 1~
Popular Concerts Continue
Free Family ·Films Featured
By Fashion Island for Summer
Fashion Island a ho pp Ing
oenta', in conjunction with the
audio vilual department of the
Newport Beach Library,
Mariner's Branch, and the
SanUago Library System. is
featuring a summer series of
free one.hour movies every
Get Balloons
From Smiley ..
Smiley, the Clown, wiU
bt on the center mall at
Fashion Island for three
dat1s1 Thurtdat1 through
Saturday, from 11 a.m.
until 5 p.m. daily offer·
ing inflated balloons to
children of shoppers at
Fashion Island.
Friday evenlaa: al 8;30 p.m. in
Stage Court on the center
mall.
This free community at-
traction consist& ot. films for
family type viewing.
Special oeatlng la provided
in Stage Court on the center mall for evening shoppers and
their famllies.
Tbt lllma to bl lhown Fri-
day are "Turned cm.·• and
''Why Man cnates." on. Fri·
day Aug. JI, the program will
be "Voyage of Brteantlhe
Yankee", and ''The Kite
SfAPV" _,,.
GERRI GIRAFFE ...
Contin0td Frtm Pa1e t) cemed lftrt allowed to IO oa
way on a one-way street in St. their way &o make an •Po
Louis, held at the Customs Of. pearance at a big prize fight.
fice in Canada, and kidnapped Excitement bu been the
in Cuba. keynote of Gen-i's career.
While appearing in the Na· Usually be is creating the ex~
clonal Hotel tn Havana, Gerri citement. He entertained for
and his ••stuffings'" were kid-the late President Kennedy'•
naped by some Castro bandits, family at the fashionable In-
then on the verge of ousting dian Creek Country Club 1n
Miami Beach. He •'"""•bled Ballilta's government. ~
Through 1n interpreter, it was the Bob Hope show at the Can-
Jeamed that the kidnapers dian NaUooal Exposition tn ..
at
Gerri the Gira/ft wiU
!toge his show twice
daily in th.I same area. thought Gerri might have guns TperfOMlormato. ~ diford • ..... ~mmPrtoceand ~·:'·ll~L.W.-~'&ll .. '.iii!ir hidden inside his body. After a ,_., _, .. 1':.i ~
Fashion Island
--::::===::::::::::::th=orougb::::::=inspecti:::=·='"=·=all:::con-::::::•=nd=Princ<S::::::'="'=M:::ona=co.::;::--FRONT ROWS AT FASHION ISLAND CONCERTS FILL WITH KIDS COncluctor Henry Brandon Smiles At Youngsters, But Plays For All Ages
Hauk
ht ., ....
f~SHION ISC"AND :CENTER
fRr &hoot &Jiu!!
~ @[j) ~ e [j) I ~
Nights Filled with Music
A summer series of nine big
band and "pops'• concerts,
under the directiO!I or leading
Chicago bandmaster Henry
Brando~ is presented each
Monday at t p.m., free to the
public, in Stage Court of
Fashion Island of Newport
Center.
Sponsored by The Irvine
Company and Fashion Island
Merchants' Association, in
cooperation wilh the
Recording !Ddustrles Trust
Fund, the band series has
been programmed to please
young and old.
folding stools or cushions in
the event of capacity crowds.
Programs 9Cheduled for the
final two concerts include:
(For Monday, Aug. 24)
Fashion Island 0 v e r t u r e ,
Dance ol the Spanish Onion,
La Mentira, March of The
Toys, 11ll'ee-Quarters Mancini, ,
Dixie Doodle, Nature Boy, The
Second Time Around , Vienna
Lile, Mimi and Sound or Music
Overture.
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NEYER BEFORE SUCH SPECIAL
PRICES ON COUECTION COLOR,
OUR FINEST COLOR INAMONDS.
We c•ll our di1monds of fines+ color,
"Coll•ction Color." And now th••• r1re
tJ i1mond1 c•n b• yours 1t v•ry •p•c:iel
prices. If you've wented the b•st v1lue
for her, th••• ere the d iemonds-
end now is the tirne.
1 /4 crnt oolitaira, $195.
1 (J carat solitaire, $250. '
3/8 carat solitaire, $350. t
1 /2 carat IOlitaire, $450.
Oth«s from $100. _.
U• our n1110lvin9 charge
to dhide your payments. ___ .. __
Clltlll• Acmuntl ln•ltlof
Am9rk.ln Expreu
,.....,""rbnl • MlllV Cllt1'99, TOii
~L\,YICK'S
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH ·-6-1-4-1380
o,.., MeMey •nil P'rl4ey vntU t :30
. THURS;· FRI;· SAT.
'nllrty-five talented musi-
cians heed the baton oI Henry
Brandon in a delightful selec-
tion of all-time favorites dur·
lng one hour programs.
The public is invited to bring
(For Monday, Aug. 31 -
final concert), Fashion lsland
overture, Pan the Piper,
Strike Up The B a n d 1
Broadway Melodies, Bugle
Call Rag. Mame Hi.Lita,
lnvercargill, Midnight in
Moscow, Col. Bogey, Ritual
Fire Dance, Musicians' Strik~.
CONCERTMASTER
Henry Brandon
Dime-A-Lines Mean $$$'·. l
FALL DRESS BUYS
reg. 10.99112.!19
sale '9 & '10
Saw on fash im's lleMsl h>ob. )
I, 2 & 3 pc. styles in misses',
juniors', petites' and haH sil!S.
BELL-BOTTOM JEANS lJ
• ' reg.5.99
sale 4.79
Poriolar nny cotton denins witll I the flm.leg look you Joie! In
siles 6 tD IS. Buy..,. and sne!
SMART SHIRT BOYS
reg.3.99
Sale 3.19
~ looks, body shirts, tab
aad button-fronts. Many fabrics.
In sizes 92 to 38 am! 10 to 16.
GIRLS' BACK-TO·
SCHOOL DRESSES
111111 sttct 20% OFF
HI ticket pricn
~:-1.= sale 5.59
Back-t~ fashions la
knits, acrylics, blends & cot·
ton corduroys. Sizes 3 to 14.
~1 1 .\\L Sl\l\IEH fLE\H \\I'~:
l./H/11-.1> {JI l'Tl"/ll-."·111 UUl I':
EXCITING DRESS SALE!
'1.00 and ·up
orig. 8.99 to 17.99
Super savings on great styles. Find
misses', juniors', petites', & half sizes.
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save 50% & more!
BL~~3.~9~ TOPS~
sale '2
Blouses, shirts and knit tops
incJuding tanks, Tilirts llld
shells. Sizes 34 to 40. S4L
CHARGE IT! Use Our 2·Way Chal'llt: Plan ...
Enjoy Convenient Monthly Billing ·
r
SCHOOL DA Y:S ••• ARE YOU READY?
BUSTER
BROWN.
~
WE SURE ARE!
••• featuring the Harbor area's finest selection of
Back -To -School Shoes.
The latest of fashion • right s~oes fitted by
ex pertly trained staff of both stores, Also, shop
large selection of leotards, l ites and
childrens purses.
FREE.--
With Every Poir Of Children's
School Shoes, Your Very Own
COMPLm PENCIL BOX.
HURRY AND GET YOURS---
'H(_estelilfSlIOEB '°' Tiil IWTill"f J,!ll,
FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH e 6#1464 WESTCLIFF PLAZA e NEWPORT BE CH e 541-1684
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.....,........, ·lalw 'Supplemom "'OAILY·PILOT, Thurs .. ·AU\IUll-20, ·1970 .
·Sehool Too r
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Succeed in Music
'I'tle singers rehearsing the
, numbers ranged in age from 8 4 to 14. They come primarily
~from the black ghetto areas or
re• .J c.ersey. They-left camp
for two weeks of vaca-
before retumng Or-ft
to a school that eam..
music and 'basic educa--
4Q..voice New Jersey
<llOlr has lppear<d with
musicians .. ~
· Casals and pionle!.'V•o
• On !II aclledu!e~
Is a February mite with
er Marian Anderson in
York and a spring tour·bf
Western states.
1be choir was conceived by
lbe New Jersey Sympbooy and
developed by R I c b a r d
McCarthy.
The Symphony a s k e d
McCartby in 1967 to develop a
choral group to accompany
·the orchestra.
McCar1by had dreamed of
directing a boys choir since
his days as a college music
major in Celifomia. .He ' got a_
budget of $200,000 .in , Sep-r
tember 1969 and expanded his
(.'flolr into the New Jersey
Boys Oiorus School.
The idea of !he sdloo~ lbe
S3-year-old McCarthy says, is
to combine "the best of tbs
Viema Boys·Cbo\r abroad and
the Columbus ofloy> Oioir at
hoolt and cootempon.ry priJl.o
ciples in education and hwnan
relations."
The boys go lo school from
8:30 to 4:30 each day. There.
are strictly di.9cipllned 1 tf.i:
hour dloral reheanals -morning and afternoon.
Mathematics, English, history,
and other third to ninth grade·
subjects are also taught.
The . scOOol!s a cad em l.e
direct«, Cortland Bell, says
the variety cf stu deni
backgrowxls requires a lier·
ib!e approacil and, lie says,
the boys are taughL In "a pro-
gr<SSive, fTeewheeling, hlgh!y
individualized manner." 1
To be accepted, a pro-
spectiye student must haYe a
good musical ear'· g o o d
behavtor. and pass an ln-
tdv!<w "1tll sdlool ·official!.
Winter classes are held ih· I
Georgian mansion In Newark.
In summer tbe boys go to Tbree·lion cubs frolic•et the Anima1port at New York's Kennedy Airport-during
school on the grounds of a brief stopover on their Florida to Africa "air safari." The cubs are enroute
Waterloo Village near here. to Kenya where they will have a starring role in "Living Free," Columbia
All year long, tbey rehearse. Picture's aequel to the motion picture. "Born Free." make concert appearances,------'--------'-------------------
and go to dasses.
CTA Growth
Mtmber1hlp· in the
California Teachers As.!locia-,
tion (c,I'A). tootinues to grow.
CT~ rei>;erts -.that' its mem·
ber'shlp now ezceeds 173,000,
up more than 3,000 from last
year. NoW ·m its l07th year,
CfA ·is .·the largest 1>tate
teachers.. a·ssoc i a lio·n in
America.
~.Cs Hit· by. Enrollment Jump
SACRAM·ENTO ..... )1Yel. mimated at· l :S prrcent over
CaJi.fomja '• . two-yJ!:ar c:um~ · Alt.bro(h the state as • ~ previous year ..
munity·:oollege.s ~ill be. hit the er~ .in public e~emen~. The 'expected inctease in
hardest Lhis fall by increases and secondary school enroll-grades nine through twelve ·of
in enrollment, while t he ment, the rate will be slower 2·2 percent for· an enrollment of about 1,290,000 is 'also less
number oI students .wilt .drop than in the put several years. ·than·l~l year's estimated' 3.%
off '8gai~' at the _kiddertl:&"t:en These are among a number percent1increasei · . ·
whole Will ezpenence .an m-of cmclus.ion! that can hi 'c4lifomia's 93 two-y e a r Doing Better
------~-----------------------. drawn from . reports on public commWJity collegu report an
'·BAYLOR
THE VAWI' SWISS .WATCH!
~l, ~Jege and .university expected 9 percent 'increa!e in In spite of criticism' to the
enroUinent ailticipated for ·the enrollment. Tliis ' adds up to contrary, U.S. public. schools
fall.· Reporting were Lhe atkJut ·ao;ooo ·mort full and are doing better than ever,
PopulaUon Di vision of the part-time ·student.!, for a according to the National
State Department of Finance, statewide total of about 800,000 Education Associaton (NEA).
the Coordinating' Council for -the Wo'rld's Iargist system It points out both whites and
Higher Education, the state o( higher ed~tioo. Negroes have i n c r ea 1 e d
offices ol the C,alifornia Com-The · CaWomia S ta t e educational attainment, and
munity · C o J .J e g e · 1 , the Colleges report a,n erpected the achievement by t h e
California Slate COiieges and fu)l ·and part-time enrollment Negroes 15 to 29 years old
the University of C"lifornia. of 244..,ooci. an increase of aboUt was 7 years; in 1969, the me-
. Kindcrgart~n enrollment is 18.00!>. Included in the report, dian for the same' age group
expected to be about 340,000 in , but not counted 1n the total, was 12.1 years.
the fall. This is a decline of 4.6 are abO'ut 65,000 , students in;;=========;:::
percent, the biq~ ·d,rop in ~·non-~te funi:I~" extensiari'
'the past. three .y~ars. programs. an increase of LOCAL
I
a ·tlaze ••• ·
••• Just ·WhJ.t
Is A Yard?
• • • • • "111'1 THI AN•
SWI• •••• o.,.Hi9f ..
... wlM •• ,. eyeHI c• M
1296 Ml ... laclle& re 2161.
MD1t '9fferlll cit IMlt tnttit
41"' wiM ef 1620 .....
llldn. ......... , Se, ... ,
.. t..a.d .,., ,,.. .. ..,,.
,.. wJtMI felwks ,., .,... _,,
•
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t 11Je ·lfix..-~.·2,125,,,ooo .. about 10,000. rr.Orp last year.. No ether n•w•p•per t.11. "1111 ,...._ ~. U o( Call! ll'IOt•, e ¥•ry dey, •bout wh•t'1 eproUment in gedes one . '"" niver~]tY . , om1a qoint 0,., 111 the Gr.•t•r Or•nt• 20 FASHION ISLAND e NIWPOIT CIHTIR
tttrough eight ls a fligl)t. in-rePorts that·1t e.~ about C11••• th•" the DAILY Ph.OT., '44·2525
tOJ W • .CTH ST•1n
S.M• A11•
:crease ·Or one.:teii!-~ o( ~per· .106,364 students av,er~ed oot. f::========::::~===========~=======~ cenL. This is a k!s.!ler-increase on ·ii three-quarter basis, 'l'heJ-
1
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.6.A. 17 ,ASHION ISL.AND
Newpert hoc.II
than 1ast year wbicb -was total enrollment for t h e
· 1 September quarter -. always
· H01·8e :Sense
·Used by Vet
AYLESBURY •. Eng I and
(AP) -.. You got to help us
out,'' Ule tetephOne caller told
the fire chiCr Sunday. "There's
a horse in a bedroom . out
here." . . ' The chief' and tus men ra<:ed
out to Ok! Manor Fann 'Where
LL Cmdr. Roger Lockhart-
Smlth trains ho~s. One of
them, Shalaco, had gotten into
the empty 275-year-old manor
house, climbed the stain and
gol stuck in.a bedroom •
A veterinarian gave the
animal a tranquilizing shot
and blindfolded him. Then the ·
vet and the fire department
backed him down ail im·
provised straw-covered ramp.
the highest -is ez;pected to
· have three to four thousand
students more than the highest
of the other quarters.
Enrollment of s p e c I a I
sfudents is expected to reach
close to the 590,000 mark·.
These are students in 1uch
categories as mentally retard-
ed, physically handicapped
and so forth, plus adults tak-
ing high school night counteS.
Strikes Jump
Teacher strikes jumped 30
percent in the 1969-7() !Choo!
year, according to a report
by the National Educatkm
Associatloo (NEA). During~
year there: were 171 confirmed
strikes. In 1968-69, there wett
131 strikes. There were half
as mruiy strikes this past year
as during the previous nine
years.
WHAT? A TALKIN,G· DIGflONAllY???
: I
'Yet,-! 3M years of
1ilel\C9. • dictionary speaks. 't'• !webslefs New World
.Dfetlon1ry.wlth tha little LP
,that4:ellt how to pronounce
phonetic 1ymbols. So when
·')'OU'find a new word, you knO't11
~exactly how to aay it. And
you'll know precisely what It
me1ns because 56 authorities ·
haye spent 15 years preparing
this new dictionary. It has
more entries and the largest,
clearest type of any colhtte
dictionary. lt.also.Jdentifiea
American words such as
bedrock and 1wlndle. And
costs no more than a
silent dictionary, 7.95.
Thumb-Indexed, 1.95
B. DAL TON, Bookseller
Uso J01IT Master Charre or BankAmtrlcll'il.
Add 5% Tax and 2~ for postofo/handRnc.
5 Fashion Island, Newport Beach 92660
(714) 644-00410({714)833-2200
74 Fashion Square, l.a Habnl 90631
. (714) 871-896'1 0( (213) 697-6709 .
·BOOTS
BY
CREATIVE
frOfl'I • pro¥0Clfiv. collktion of
1t1thtfs, st»des, crinkled p1t1n11
Mid •fl tht MWtSf colon.
Don't
Shoes
' Will
Make
It
'. 1 All l Work!
..
lroe dw1y Anlheim Cenler
HlWM>IT HACH
WHITTlll
Whitlwood Contw
IWDSIDI
Rivmldt Pim
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New System Puts Teachers
In Best Suited Positions
A creaUve English. teacM? w1.th. thanitni condltion1 In mlnlstraton, -will be able to
who hJ! a way with kids, ~ the Kh>ol and tociety." .tt°'1f a career In clulroom
Jone., has hi> eighth &rade F AVOIUTISM FEARED teadllnf.
pupils eager to try' their hand OS opP9Qtnts fear it will -There will be a pi ace for
at everythlnJ from compooln( !tad to wnouf!ased merit -· -.-. for w-no Japanese Haiku poetry to re-It ould the _..._._ amount Of money can mate up pay. w , y say,·~~.. . creating Shakespeare's uJul· teachers to the old dog-eat.dog for the lick ot job q,Uaraction.
ius Caesar" in modern dreS!!I. system under which each -Longevity, with all its
He's happiest in t b e te'acber did h1I own bare~ etft.!caUonally crippling effects,
classroom, u n h a p p 1 e t t in.g wtth superintendent· and would cease to be a criterion
presiding over dep6rtmenta.J. school board and rWes were for promotion.
meeUnga, and inept collecting often granted on the bhis of -Student! could benefit
milt money or maJntalnina: favoritimt, ftiendship and pol-from teachers trained to han-
admlnlstraUve recorda on bis itics. die specjfic . responsibilities
student.a. · DS advocates argue just as and specific teaching skills.
Mr. Smith. on the other vehemently that it need not be Even the warmest ad·
hand, ii known by his col· merit pay if properly im-vocates of Os admit that it
leagues as an administraUve plemented, Bince salary dif-has its piUalls. Muit pay
genius. 'I'bougb competent ln feiu.Uals wo"U1d be based on aside, there is the feat that OS
the classroom, he 13 more differences 1n degree o I would be used for · ecohomiz-
highly regarded for his responsiblllty as well as on Inc. They note, however, that
energy, organ I z at Ion I quality of performance . real differentiated staffing i•
wizardry, willingnes& to take Teachtrs would be doing dif· liable to cost more., not less,
on extra advisory tasks, and ferent jo~ fOf' the different for two reasons : teachers high
aensitive handling of both pay they re::eive. in the hiuarchy are paid more
students and colleagues. Ideally, DS would enable and there are mo re
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remain in the classroom -;;;:========:;::;
Who's the better teacher! where they are happiest and ff A •· d A d Lik• carrots and oranges -but qualified -rather than Only Ono e s ... e II y
both of which contain e!Sen-It the f···• or go Into Final sto<ks In all home editions. tial vilamlns -neither is qu pro ~on Joe McClure. 9. holds aJobe he won from DAILY PILOT "Ask Andy'' column administration in a rd er to That's a bha deal? It ls In 0rall9fl I'. nd M "better." They have d.if· ma•· , salary b--w•-ou~. Co r•· DAILY PILOT 1 1,, so that his brother. Andy, 6. can admire it. Joe, who is the son of Mr. a . rs. -... &Auu 5" unt)'. '""' s th Job f ferenl skllls, lnterests: and am-At the same time, tt would only dally newspaptr that dtli'I-Robert McClure of 17643 San 1'1arino Circle. Fountain Valley. won e K e or
bitions. They should be dotn1 reward "teachers" Ute Smith en the package. \vritin~ a question published in the national ;'Ask Andy" column. The column
different tasks -for difierent who are willing and qu.allfied"==========:__a~p~pe=•::."'...'.:e'.'.:ac::h:_::Sa'.'.:t::'.u:'.:rd:'.:a'.:'y~in:_l:::h:::•_:D:::A_::l:.:L:.:Y_:_P_::IL::O::T:.:·:__ ___________ _
l.l"IT .......
Seretae But Stucli
Mary Wade, 14 , of Sacramento, looks quite blase
leaning against the second floor rotunda railing in
the California State Capitol building. However.
she's actually waiting to have her.knee freed from
the railing posts . It took local police just five min-
utes to free the teena:::er.
Laser Opening Door
I
To 'Real' Movies
pay. to undertake educational tasks1~
So argue advocates of a new that require greater decision·
method of u s i n g teachers making responsibilities and
called "differentiated staff-longer hours.
ing." Behind the eancePt is a School systems across the
recognition that lo d a')' s coonlr)' are experimenting.
teacher ·no longer should be Temple City, for e.i:ample, a
considered a ja.clr:.of..aU-trades matter teacher couJa. earn
-information dispenser, drill-more than the superinkndent.
master, disciplinarian, mon· With a salary of $15,000 to
eychanger, record keeper, $20,000, the mast.er is the
counselor, specialist and man-district cunicultun and re.
ager of a computer-based search specialist in his subject
learning system. area and mu.st have a doc-
In an age of individualized torate or equivalent. He works
learning, there must be in· a 12--mont.h year, gives up
dividuallzed teaching. A n d tenure, and sUU rpends aome
this, say DS supporters, re-time in the classroom.
quires some reChinking about
deairablllty of the all1J11rpose OTHER SALARY LE~
teacbtt. The time ha! come, The teacher helrarchy In
they say, lo differentiate the school dl!trlct includes
among 'the various roles and s~ni<lr t e a c h e r s , staff
rtspoosibililies of t eachers teachers, teacher associate! NE\V YORK (APJ -The over cinema. It is a much bet· and to pay some more than and several levels 0 f
future of movie-making? tcr story-telling medium." others depending on how com. paraJlrOfmionals in addition
Laser holograph.!, according A holograph, or hologram, plex and demaDding: their job to the muter teacher-all
to producer-director Joseph records the spatial pattern i.5. doinf dlfferen\ Jobs for dif·
Th N t. J E d t I lerent salaries. Strick, who has been granted a produced by the interference e a 1ona u·c a on
license to develop motion pie· of a reference beam with light Association, the w o r l d ' s Dwight W. Allen, I pliine
'enected (mm an Obl.ect The Jar-~ professional org.aniza-mover of differentiated llaf-
tures in this process, by which holograph method, invented in lio~~ays that ·tbe concept of fi ng, believes it can produce
a three-dimensional effect is 1948, became applicable to differentiated staffing "must many benefi1' for education.
achieved without view ti: proiection in the 1961'.ls with the be carefully scrutinized and Amon: them:
glasses, ava labiiity of the inte'n.!Mi .any plan ••. be viable , fluible, -Good teachers, who
Strick. who has made such ,_la;:se::r=bt::am=o::f::li::gh::t::. ====and=::ada=::pla=bl::e::to=k::'::'P=P::'::"=::d""=::v::•::u::m=uch=mon=::ey=u::a,-d_-1 fihrui as "Ulysses" 11 n d I
"Tropic of Cancer," was
granted the license by the
Holotron Corp., a subsidiary of
the E.I. Du Pont De Nemours
& Co. and the Battelle
1nstitute, \\1hich OYr1lS the basic
patent for the Holograph p~
cess.
The unique intensity of the
laser beam of light has been
used previously to provide a
thr~imensional still image.
but never for moving pictures.
Strick, who has a rare if not
W1ique background of science
and fil m, sa id he hopes to pro-
duce the first feature-length
movie in the process in about
18 months.
The purpose of the laser
film would be to provide an
image that is closer lo reality,
Strick said, stressing that, at
first, lens difficulties would
necessitate making it a small
audience film, for viewing by
up to 100 people. He said the
laser provides the technical
neressities to produce a 361).
degree film.
"It is only a 'gimmick,'"
Strick noted, "if the films
made are not good ones. U
they are good, this might take
Reform OK
Of Tax
Appraising
SACRAMENTO (APJ -The
first major reform of in-
lleritance tax appraisers -
the last vestige of political
patronage hu w o n
Assembly approval.
The compromise reform bill
by Sen. Gordon Cologne (R-
Indio}, retains the rontroller's
patronage -but it requires
that the appraisers pass a
qualifying examination and
limits their appointment to
four-year terms.
The bill also prohiblr! ap-
praisers !rom participating in
partisan pollUcaJ activities
and bars them from con·
tributing to political cam-
paigns.
For years Lhe Assembly has
been trying to do away with
the appointment of •ppralsers
and baa tooght to "lab!ish a
corps of trained professionals ..
For years. lta efforts have
bten blocked by the Senate .
•
silverwoods
Tailgate Tartan, a new
kind ollltlrtbJlnnoYllivo
Kilhaw1y-dressier than
1 sport shirt, livelier than
a dress shirt. If riding the
fe nce on what to wear un-
der sport coat O( blaztr-
this Is It Hardy cotton twill
tailored with finesse, with
2-button cuffs and up-
dated Highgate #2 collar,
a bit fuller and longer, for
thewldoties. Blue/red,
gold/blue.1!.00
IHOll' tUNDAYI, MOON TO I PAI. AT IL'YUWOODI
. • TOPANGA PLAZA. Cl"""" C1TY
lith Ji 8roadw8y • S1nt1 Barbar• • Pmden.11 • Tope1111 Pim • CMbrrJ titr • ~ lllCh . .. ..
•
......
Floors by Armstrong •••
Three of them,
Price tags ~hY Penneys
. '
VINYL CORLoN·oR CUSHIONED
VINYL BY @mstrong.
' . • •
Sant• Cru1• Thousands ef ;
vi·nyl ch ips creo1e ~andom po.,_
'errts «t.f sttbtle color. You'll be
emoted tho! a floot like tfoi•
could be priced so•Jow, a colo,.. ' ;'
299
&".YD.
. ~ ' 4-
Do a 9X12 room including installation and moving 2 applt~s for •13
CASTILLIAN9 Rich, bold co l-
or -in 'he cfauic beauty ef o
Spanish tile design.. Tough,.
long-wearing vinyl in ·4'9 decor-
ator colors.
399
SQ. YD.
Do a 9Xl 2 room including Installation and moving 2 appliances for 185
COllll MAlaLI~ Ric hly
colored, 'ronslucent \'inyl.
weirted ond textured like real
marble. Ava ilable iA 8 colors.
399
91i!,YD.
Do a 9X12 raom including installation and .mewing 2 appliances for •as
c..,. i• °"phone,,,,...-nean11t store: DOWNEY (869-'S41) FutlERTON (871-4343) HllHTINGTON
BEACH (892-mI) lAKEWOOO (63 4-7000) MONTCLAIR (621-3811) NEWPORT BEACH (64' 2313)
OlANGE "THE CITY" (639-5091) u .. r•-r• li!H payment pla•I
I
•
._. ...... ltl .... S..,,lomont fo DAILY PILOT, Thurs., AUi••• 20, Im
Teens Aid Mexico
~ Ohio Y outlr.s Rebui"lding 2 Churches
.-APIZACO, Mexico (AP) -
~Obio-en .-Jpelldinf part of lheir
tumlDll' vacations and most
of their uvln(a to patch up
:(wo rural Mexlcu cllllrclles.
; They raloed enough money
:to P'1 for their fares to Apj·
!kleo1 uvme eipenses and
:even f100 fur coostructioo ma.
:tertala. Now that they're near·
·Ing the end ol their ttu.e-:_t proJecl, many _,jd
)like to •lo!' IDlli"·
r The )'OWll!ten are from !'Ille North Broadwsy Unilod
jlturcb of ~lumbus. Accorn-
yanled by the Rev. IAltl~
;eub]ew and two other adults,
':they flew from Columbus \o
.l\l'edco Ctt.J and then r.ame
:by bus to Ulla: '"18ll commu.
Jdty 80 miles !OUtbt&st or the
:C.pftal.
: They bought wood ud .,,.
)nent and started to wort at
:!he Meilcan Epbcoel Meth-
'Odist Church and a small mis-~ion church at Santa Anita
.three miles away.
: ''\\'e worked on the parson·
=age here and helped put up i>oats for the new roof at the
Other church,'' Melissa Moo.
bey, 15, said. "And we painl·
.ed and buill tables and bench·
es fr6 the Mexican children
here u well as new shelves
for the pastor." She admitted
to a loueh of bomeslckneu but added. t•J 'd like to do 1t
again."
Mike Donally, 17, 1 aid,
"People were nice tow, -here.
especially as Individuals.
"Apizaco hits a different
climate from what we're used
to-it rained most every day
and it's cold at night, but we
adjusted to it. ..
All slept In sleepina bap--
the ll1rls in two sinall moms
behind the church aod the
boys in 1 meeting room.
'Ibey toolt turns cooking,
wuhing aod drying dishes
aod doing the -chores. Boys and 'llrls alike mi<ed
and poured comen~ CUI Jum.
ber, painled, and did general
cleanup.
Debbie Sickles bruised h«
leg when she was culling a re-
tnforcement rod. "But I'm
i-eady to come bact again,"
she said.
Georgiana May, a 17-year-
old. agreed. ''I'd do It again
and for the same reason ."
N o n e of the youngsten;
spoke Spanish and few of the
townspeople knew English.
"No comprendo" (I don't
understand) was tnvaluable,
Our
Sale!
c .,.,. )0 Ehclric. ~-.........
......, ,_ ........... ..,_ .. «k«chi ..,. ..... ~ ..... -... "" dat,T_. _____ _
blao .....
-$129,-
Mike Wri&llt ,.Id •
Jim How.II, wbo lei\ 1111
wile and dlild at homo to •-Y tho .,...p, ttrVed as tramlator. He bad spent
al.moat four )'ell'l in the area
and wu a peraonal friend Of
the ctiurch's Jlutor, the Rev.
Role!ido Sanchez. It WU How.
ell's suQ<!llon that led to tbe
Mexico project.
A Columb111 bouawife, Mn.
David -. IUpen1sed the
kitdlen duties and tbe sbop.
plng.
''Going to the market was
a new uperience," !he II.id.
'Ibtn: was no oven or ref:rtg.
eration. "We bad 1ota of stews
and soups and we went wild
over the bread here. We miss-
ed ice cream because there
wasn't much available, and
we had to get used to warm
sort drinks,'' Mrs. Hect aa!d,
adding:
"At least I know what lo do
with tortilla now, 1'
Barbara Kiger, 15, sald her
rrlends in Columbua will "nev.
er hear the end" or the trip.
Mary Dennis, a lfr.year-<1ld
beauty, summed up the adven-
ture :
"It's been a lot of hard
work but It 's been fun."
Cir ,.1211cttk. ... $149 ••••••••••• HOW$12t
ear-. 10 -F.it aa--..
L1booanl, 1 odd+trPe h,r. as' wwwlfic;
.,c:e M,. pa~~ ta.tll •ltctor,
.... .,,,. ........ blrllt, •• ..,,.. .......... _,,_,NOW .
L .... t'M•••••••••··-MOW*"
... .. , W. .. cisa1 ct• •.,boord.
~ .......... ~•••:•If'. pov-e
...... MW coMrol.. Pfcmhc: ~ Ptco
-• ...... bl--. er ... -i. i.t. •. a· .... u ." .. NOW
a Slr. at""' of"-.... , tl••eso CANOGA PARJt: CAlllSBAD DOWNEY
'UUEA'IOH HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTC!AIR NEWPORT
au.at OIANGE "THE CITY" VOITURA Shop S.,"<ioy, loo, 12 lo 5 P.M.I
I
If there · is a better value
than the Penncrest· freezer,
it's the Penricrest· freezer
on sale. Save
PM~ 14 cu. ft. refri9ert1tor
II -plotely frost f,.., feolv"'s
101 pound freezer capacity,
4 storage 1hatves. T'#in
porte1ain enamel flniih crispers
are easy to clean, •• kttpt
•egetable1 fre,h. Wbite only •
Sale $178
a.,. 205.tS. Pet1rcrest® 15.S e11. h • .&ik frw ster•,
up ··~ 64 r pound• of food I F-•tural • sh•lv•t '.ll •'iu•+-
•blel: •nd 1lid1-out bulk 1tor~• Htk•t• Defl'elt tlNill
k11p1 w•ter from spilling durin«J defrostin«J• Juic• dw•t111
r•ck holds lar91 i nd 1mall cans , , • 4 door 1helva1~ Whit•
only.
Penncrat® 18.1 cu. ~-uprl9ht frHJ.,
R19. 24'.tS NOW $211
........ a~ 15.1 <•·ft.•I• ~
side refrigerator feames
226 pound capacity freu:er.
Heo¥)f duty. sine coated steel
n!frlgerotor shelwes resist
con'09ion. Porcelain eno••I fi.QJU.
crfsper and tneat pon. Prost f,..
thruughoul, White only.
'
A"'iloble ot theM ""'"•r ''°"'" BURllANIC CANOGA PAl!C CARlSBAD OMA VISTA COUIOI OIOft DOWIMI
fULtfltTON GRANADA HILLS HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON PARIC LAKEWOOD lONG lfACK lOI Al'IOS
MONTaAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD ORANGE •TH~ CITY"
vENTURA W£STC!ifSTU. Buy U on Penno11 time poY"lffl pie""
SAN FEINANDO TOMAN<;E VAH N\M
L
. . -.. .-------.-~ --------....-_,,,_,,
Fnhlon •l1i.nd SupPle--~ DAlkY-PILOT, Thur1.,.A .. u1t ·:!f,-l'7C4
B'anks:. Accused. of Checking Politics in . Strident L.oans ·
\YASHINGTON' (~Pl -The
Amet'iean Bankers AslOciaU9n
hu -uraell to Investigate banks accuSed Of political
diserimtnauon· against student
loU-seekers.
can cbange'i.,erson's poUUcal
leanings ' through aucb . prac-
Uces. . ' -. . .
He suggested ~e · ABA
~reale a cnmp~t bureau and
ad"."ise c'olJe ceit and
untversiUes it will look into
sue~ charges.
Si!'n. . Jacob K. JaviU (Rr
N. Y. ), aald Tuesday It is
pos~ible there . are "bankers
stupid enougb ·to believe" they
Javtts made the reco~
~ndation after Sen. Ralph
Price& :J.a//
IN ANNQAL ANTRDN~ NYLON TRICDT
PANTIE SALE!
NOW 'THROUGH AUGUST 29 y;;;;ti
1\
BIKINI
Jhe briefest of briefs Clesignea
for wear beneath girdle or pan ..
fie girdle. C r o t c h lined in
brushed 100% Antron® Nylon
t ricot for comfort af')d ebsor ..
bency. Legs and set-on bond of'
·daintyc gentle elastic. White,
.... 6/1.10 sr-44
BRIEF
6/6.60
''Free-Stride '' action crotch of
double fabric with lining of
brushed I 00 % Antron® Nylon
tricot for comfort and absorb ..
ency. Perfecte·d encased elas·
tic waistband .. White only!
..... ,,,... 6/7.50 SI.-4°7
.... 6/10.IO 6/9 00 Sil• I •
fashions for ...
Fashion Island, Newport Beech
Stonewood Center, Downey
•P• 4aUy 11 e.111. 'ttl 6 p.11t,: Millffy a.t Md., 'tR f :JI p.M.
CHAIOI YOUI PUICtf.11!1 i.T l'AI HIOHS 1'01 LA PIEMM8
WI ACC•l'T MOST MA.JOit CRIDIT CAIDI
Yarhorough, (0.Tes.), · 11ld
there hid been "wtdesproad
polltk:al• C0111iderattons•• by
aome bank! In decldlbg ~
merits of a loan appllcatlQn.
Yori: Clly. mlUee, accused the ABA ·of
!'l"'lklnl at· ii fl'Qlll tl)e eqpd-
po!nt of.bow ll)ijeh the .bapkl
borrower." · terlsUc." , c-.ea -publiatdqg the~
: "Thffe ahould bo no , Javlta said any comp/linta of bank& that dlacrlmlnate.
dlacrlmJQation," said O'Leary, «>\lid • bo -. lnvestlgatOd ...,. • 0 '1eary said he eould nol
bead of the AljA'a ,la!k force lldentWly and the edUcatlonal make '1\Y proml!et for the
00 guarani-' loans Jo college JnsUtutlon could be advised of ABA1 bul he perionally felt /I
will get Q¥t of It . ., . 1
4'l've seen Joana called 1h
my •tate ·because •' penOn
voted a certain w a y , 1 ;
Yarborough remarbd wblle
queo\iolllng ABA apok"~
Jamea J, O'Leary . ot New
Yarllorough also WU crlUcal
of the .&eot!l'al toi>e . o I
O'Leu'Y'1· tesUm'ony to a
Senate" •u-bCommlttee
reg&rding proposed reVislona
lib the gu&rant...i allldent loan
program. Tbe T e 1 a n ,
cbalnMn of the education
.1ubcommltt.'1 P'lttJ'.ll Labor
and •Public WeUare Com.·
Javlts suggested the ABA
aet ·up 1 a bureau ·to' b8ndle
complaints-under th1a "dii-
crlmination ' buslnes!'.' • • •
any fact<r I<>. Inhibit making
of a · loan • other ttiaD the
<lese£ving • character '91 the
""" the· flndlrigs : AnOtWer ' 10an "aee.p11 · the idea bu great
atudenta. He added he did nol ·aouico could be· d.,lgnated 'H merit ,.. I'm willing to recom-'know the extent of aucb 'discrlmin, atory praCtiNI• by tbe cbatges are confitmed, he mend· such · a, step." But he
banks but sa.id he vfu a said. The ·ABA, be added, said' be bad ~aUons about
"'11uncb It is not cbarac,·l~m;l;gh;t;co~nsl;d;er~~iniiiiidr;astic~~p;ressur~, ;'~ln_J~lndl;nd~_vlvl~d,uii;albanka.~~
BlstOey •otnts to -~llty
Moscow, ·u.s. News Hint.ing Peace? . . . . '
By PIUL Nl!WSQM . re'!lit, . notwi~ng tile the i """1!lin& · of W:e 1 .1 fllcl with R'l'i O\ina In the
UPI •-'• Mn• A111tru credit the Soviet Union is get· Germany aOO to oust the east.
As the United States and the· ting for ita "cooperation" with United States from E~.. EcononUc necessities may
Soviet Union move wilb.an ac.. the United Statesi in UW: cur. The new Moscow~M·tr~· dictate the need for agreement
cord rare in their history · reot "'arch . for a Mi-ty could Indeed be ,the begin-' 'th the United' s t I st1IJ toward a relaxation of world peace. ning of a new and peaceful era Wt ta es. t
tensions the headlines reflect In 1955, the Soviets !Uddenly for Europe. wants the United States out of
'the~ 8nd ·rean ~ir ·,f .. agreed to sign' a peace ~ty it 11so cod.Id' be a means to Europe but for ttiat lt may
torts' a:rou8e. with Austlia1 after blocking it woo · West Gennany away coupt on. \\'.ar.weartneu of the
"Moscow-BoM Treaty _ for years. It was mly'J)art of a from tts. close Western ties American people.
Key to New Europe?" that peace offensive· which bad With proffilses of h u g,e ;:;;========
was one.. . several otJjectives. -eConomic gains through trade ,
''French Heil Bom·M"""" First, tile Soviets ""'!lht to w1111 Eastern Euroiie aod to 11--u-'1-1-BREN
. "lllAT T'INIS
TO 10 NATIVI IN" .
. : l/Udtili . ~--·.
' , . .
'
HAWAIIAN SHOPS
' t:istabllsb' a nne Of neuttal weaken . the west Em\>pean ...... .,, ' ~~·:i~;.;/:i:;" ~; lllateo proteclln& their western econilmlc community before• it L...,..., WALTAH SAY: 'GREAT THINGS Tb ·GO NATIVE IN'
"Israel Urges Cease-fire flank from 'Sweden to can be joined by 'Britain. . I.D~ 26 FASHION ISLAND. .. VlOlation . ., And, "Syria gees Yugoslavia.· ·By -v a r I o us A guaranty of present Eur0:-NEWPORT llACH _ 6of4.00U
p<!riJ to Paleslinlans." Of the means, blcludlng hl>lding out pean bowldariei< alao helps •to UNCLE LEN HOURS' Daily 10 to 9,30 SAL~ 1 the plum (I( German reunillea~ shore .up Western ""rden as it Sat.: 10 to 6•Sun.:,1 to, 5
.• sessons... ~tioo~~~~-~~-h~'.!.!~~_!~~~~~.,.,.~~~!:]:=::=::=::=:=::=::=:i:::::::!~:===:=:=:=:=:=~~~~~==~~~==~ osALT: Some Ground Hasl. •. 1.ucy swg t to prevent guards against .a PosQble cop.
Been ·Broken," declared tile
New Yori: Times. Said the
Christian Science Monitor :
"Arma Talks Fan Sh:lrt of
Hopes." .
BIA as one perused these
headlinea rumlng the gamu~
• Moscow-*Bonn, Moscow.to..
Peking, Washington-to..
Jerusalem, Washington-to-
Paris-to-Saigon, it s e e med
permissible to ent..-taln for at
least a moment a tmall hope
that pertape the world .woold
become a better pl.ace in
which to live. At least people
were talking. _
Yet, as American forces
continue their p b 1 • e d
withdrawal from Vietnam and
as hopes mount for a new era
o£ peace in Europe, It la well
to take a look at· bi!lory lest
Euphoria overcome reality.
The Western allies believed
they had blocked Soviet es:-
paMion into the Me<liter~
ranean, the Mideast and
Africa wllh their NATO and
CENTO alliances.
But in 1955, the Soviets lea~
!togged WeS!ern defeoaes with
lhipmenll of anna and other
ald first I<> Egypt and then to
other Mideastern states.
Today's Mideast crisis !s a
Penn!!YS priCes 1(!"!9r
the high cost of l1V1ng :~
Sale 15% off
"
*sold
only
by .. iesta k;t:,.~
Corner gtoups. lounge on them l:iy cloy and use os on
extra bed by night. Choose from a variety of modern
styles. Or pick from our Spanish and Mediteoanean.
Boys' storage or girls' French Provincial styles.
FASHION ISLAND
"custom creations at the
price of the ordinary''
once again ••• HERE'S PROOF/
•ROSILLINI pre11ents a Juxur!ousJy, Jloft
Brown suede walker ••• fully lined with
KID LEATiiER on a buoyant 'crepe 'sole
construction at the unbelievable price of
15.99
SCINTILLATING. llMULATID ftJ)UJe in
bone, black, navy. A handsome •.RO!telllni
design , , , AU. LEATHER ln and out • • •
surprisingly, only
"·"
~mean!, MJ..r Olar .. , Dlnm, cOrt. lllancllf. :&mm-Elcprolw
OPEN MO~All and Flt!DAY EVENINGS
Penneyt prices ililduc:I• delivery
wMllin toc:ol deu..r, area. u........,11_,.,...._
Sale! $95
Save $1-41 lleg,$109
a.diftiag choir. H.,.'t a
real lllCHMiZecl chair for
--forl.largo
tufleJ back. Ban -
i• froat for eosy .mng.
Gr9at doslgn that will
et1hanco .,_ liVing
room. C-..,c( with
d .... ble~
fabric..
Sale! $95
S-$14 hg. $109
Early AIMri<an style aw!Yel
rocker. Kiln dried hardwood
frame 11 d0wolled, ~
and glued. Exclusiw 'ToniOft
Rest' construction with
heavy den1lty polyurethane
foam eushlons for firftl
support. C-red with
durable Hercvlo.,e fabric.
Aoalloblo at Olt'f of those Pe-y 1tore11 CANOGA PARIC CARLS9AO
&AUWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPOIT IEACH ORANGE "lHE Ort"
Sale pr1cee effective tlvu Saturday.
' .
Sale! $95
S..:,. $1'1 Rog. $109. T....tltiol!al
style loonge chair. &d111MI 'T-
~ sion·Rtsl' constrvcflo9-for pel'-
foctfy balanced uatiog condort.
Heavy density polyvreth-foam
cu1hion1 over kiln dried ~al~
frame thaf1 dowelled, 1C1ow1d
and glued. Ccrlered·with clanobl•
H .... Jo .. labric.
\
fUIUl!TON HUNTINGToH t!J.CM
$bop Sundoy, too, 12 lo 5 r. MJ
.I
,
•
•
'-"llhlM 111 .... Junl!-' to DAILY PILOT, ThurL, A-t 20, 1'70
' Student Achievement to Pay Off for Education Firms?
11J 111LL UVINGSTON ----eootracU and llcr.cullabillt)' may I 0 U n d
JNll1 far oul fw grade
-· but thoy're big wont. in educalioo lhese days.
. 'llley'rt both beiQg balled u
tho hope of the '70I and
decried u a l•tal step
backward.
Reganll... or their final
auccesa: or failure. these terms
will be tossed around 1"'"1y In
the next few ye.an, and
parents would do welJ to know
what they mean.
THE EEGINNING
Pe rformanct contracting
and accountability got their
first major pubUcity through
•• aptrim.ental program in
Taarkana, Ark. 'Ibere, a
taddng 1lllChiDe firm woo a
The~
season bqins
with our-
contract to leach remedial
readlnj; and mathematics to
200 oecondary -Ill>
dtrachlevers.
1be CXIOlP4'IY ra:eives. a
""'1dlrd rata of po)'lllfftt for
•tudelta reaching ao agreed
achievement level However, a
bonus Is pald il students reach
the agreed level ahead or
time. The firm gets lea for
the slow students and nothing
for the faUures. 'The profit
motive underlies the whole
program. Students who make
fast progress can win Green
Stamps or time off to listen to
folk-rock. SucceMfuJ teachers
are winning stock bonuaes, in
IOm.C iMtanees.
Prellminary evaluations of
the project have been hazy.
More time is probably needed,
and some observers think
. AUGUST SALE OF
'NAnJRAL MINK COATS
' Even though lt'1 Augw;t, we're launching the hinting
6e&M)n on 1loriow natural mink. Jt'1 nol too soon to
•bee;in your <:ampe.lgn , • , especially when our niink
;,coat.s are so dazzling tiriced. Find llllY f'XCUst' 10 hurry
'lilm into the store. Thi~ Is en event you can'\ afford
' ;to miu ••• and 11 ireat opportunity lo anUclpate next
:Chrlsi.mas in luxury.
DlllONlltl AHD MANUfACTUR lflS
OP THI WOILD'I 'INllT 'URI .
f4........... Mewpett CMlfet' N•wpMt .._.
(714} '44-4661
Now ...
tb<re should be better tasting
devices. While overall 1atns
were chalked up In rudlng
aod ma~ a 1urprl1lng
Dwnber of P'lPill lbowtd DO
Jmprovemmt or had slipped
backward. 0. the other h111d,
dropouts were a1moot nil and
vaodallsm In the cooperating
ochoolJ lw been cut In hair.
The Teurkana project has
spfrked nationwide activity.
San D l e g o has applied for
federal fWlds W finance a
multi-million dollar program
for more than 17 ,000 children.
Math and reading will be In-
volved. 1be read.Ing program
is scheduled for 9,500 kin·
dergarten IUld prbnary grade
pupils under a guaranteed
achievement contnct with two
prtvlle flnlll and • third plaQ
to be developed by the dlslrlct.
FEDERAL FUNDS?
5chool olficlsls ... a1'Jitlng
ftderal approval before they
proceed with detalled plans.
Da.llu, Detroit, Portland apd
Phllsdelpbta are among other
large cities rurting with ao-
counlabillty and performance
contract operations. °"" partlcularly atrong sup-
porter ii Dr. Leon Lessinger.
formerly a CalUornia school
superintendent and U.S. com-
missioner for elementary and
secondary education.
Performance coolraeting Is
a "vehic.le for determining
what the people and the
aovernmenl are gettlna foi
theil' inooOy In eduCalloo," be
aaid. "'Too frequeatl1
educatora have attemptad lo
explain tbelr actlv!tl .. and ...
pendltureo In terms o I resources ind pl'Oeellel used,
rather than learnlni ""'11ta
acbleved. 'lbe!e eaplanatlons
are no longer adequate,!!
Another advocata Is Don
Davies, ~ U.S. Office of
EducaUoa11 UIOdate com-
mlsalooer f o r educatlonal
penonnt1 development, who
said: · ·
"[ see it u an 'in' coocept
thal comes to grips with a no-tion too many school men
have too long r1!jected -the
ilollon that acboolJ aod col·
leg,. ohould lhoulder the
rapolllibWty for learning suc-
ceaea of falluru of tbeil' puplll."
ST Al'll STIJDIES
The Calilomla L<gW.t""'
hu moved toward tho cone.pl
of accountahlllty In povlng the
way fw atudiea limed al Plan·
nln1, Programming,
Eudgellng Systems IPPBS)
lor local school districts by
1975.
Opponents of performance
contractl.ng have been inclined
to take a walt-anckee at-
lltude, but ara now beginning
to upreu IOrDfl remvaUoos:
1. The 1lamor of the new
programs may blind the public
to the fact that the added
Bumper Stickers ~Battle' on Road
IUndl pluo;ed Into ubtiog
achool lytleml could ~ just
.. beoeliclaJ. "If l had 10
1tudents and JO a11chlnes, I
could do Uda," 1ald one en-
violls Tenrbna t<acher DOI
involved in the program.
2.. The reward system may
being only a temporary gain ill
a specif1c area and not tho
broad learning goal of educa-
3. Involvement of private in-
dustry ls counter to American
tr1dlUon of public education.
It could bring agonizing IDOl'll
judgments. For eumple, sup-
pose a firm contracted to im·
prove children'• patriotism.
What would the goals be!
Would questioning governmen-
tal policy and active dissent be
consldered achievements or
failures! Would pannta IHI
that being able to reclia Iba
Declaratioo of lndepend"""
and know voting law1 and pro-
cedures are adequate 1oall!
The ddwmanlzalloo of the
industrial approach is also
feared. When students are
dlsculsed as •'producta" who
.should have "zero reject
capability" after sraduation.
lbe Orwellian overt.on.et are
strong.
4. Most of the programs re-
quire massive federal funding
and are far beyond the local
dlstrlcls' ability. Will lb< 1""'
of easy dollan launch many of
these projects, only to see
them abandoned and forgotten
when the money llopeT
Cents s~ented
th fr"I, ",·"'M:~~_!1~g'·. r~;Heowis your local treeu to "Keep your fri~ lti~ert "like :·Kiu GRANGER, Utah (AP) -The dollar• and &eent.s got mixed
Th. f-~ •···'ng baltle 1-UC11:'.ll\_,w;1o..1... city c~an -eat a pl1eon," or me, 1 m • liberal or 'Pot: up when a akunk went Into hiding .,., the 111t' condl•:-.... at the
By the A11oclatad Pm1
-~ .... ._... i.a many Vietnamese fought in f r om "Fight smog; buy a ..,,......, fought through the cities and OUR dvil war?" A earful of hone" to "Keep America hobby not habit." Granger-Hunter Branch of Valley Baok and Tru5t Co.
highways of America. The hippies aometJmes bean on its beauliful _ IWallow your betr The crusaders go for "Fight The small skunk was being chased by children when it dia-
ammunilion ls cheap; just a battered bumper: "No babies, cans." Crime" .,Stamp out old age· covered a hole leading to the basement of the bank. Once safe.
few cents. 'There are no no manpower, no war." The 1 •1 d~illusl d ke• ·ga .... , .... "G' ly inside, it continued giving· vent to iU indignation and the air
It. t h ran .. Y "' oned a • smo _ Cl re.... or u .. _ 0 conditioner carried its wrath throughout the building. casua tes, excep P er • P 1 The doves doo' have tt all · "Fl~t I 11 t I to ••-~ .. -~ f chol nded And · t • vice: gw n a on ; i.uc 1..:1Jiuu.i o your ce nn Manager H'"'""" Cameron called several counly and private wou egos. • as in mos their way. The haw•· are bibe •· " ""-.... rlan ---' nobod -II '-· ~ ma...-, 11"' vegi;wi Sunday." agencies for help, but none was Interested in skunk rem.ova!, wars, Y • .,a Y w........ st1'ck--·•o'oua too. •· "Wh not tak c etick sales bl .... """"'"' iugges14: Y e a For the aexy there's: other Ulan from an academic standpoint. .
L •• alnr A_.er --a.•bl areettlng "America -Jove it or leave cannibal to lunch?" For the "Hormooes art 8 big bust .. The bank lived with their problem, with the help or per-
UWI ess •uu r•.,._ Y I g it" they admolUb, or just man who wants. to keep his . · fume and deodorant sprays, until closing. On the advice of old--
bigger. The bu.stnessman, once "Stand by your Pra~t." flreanna tbere 'a: ··~aw the And, fmally, for the blankly tlmen in the sku nk-infested area, Cameron left a bowl of milk
content with a framed ''Think With pollution now a top gun, and only outlaws will peulmirt:ic there'• a !ways: and raw eggs outside the hole overnight.
Big" above his desk, now often Issue, eco' ..... , stickers do well. have guns." ''Tomorrow t.s cancelled due w Tuesday the skunk wa.s gone, but the memory lingered on.
carries his slogans wberever1 ~-~-y~r~.,,.,g~~~r~o~~··:r;>Jl•-~~-_12~_!'."~~~~_'~!!.....!~~~~~:_ ___ _!!~~~~~~~~~'!!'!!"'!!~~~~~~~~ he goes. I~ 111e Mt',,.. The young sPort 1n o r e lack d Interest." ~!Mti'W'.-a 1
There are thousands of
ohops acron the coontry mak-
ing a 11POCialty out of aelllng
5Uckers.
'Ibeir ideas come from 1U
over.
''I carry a tape recorder and
1 notebook with me aJI the'
lime and whenever something
hits me I write It down," says
Al Minsky who left the retail
music buliness a year ago to
open a one-man bumper
~ticker company based in
Dallas. "Sometlme1,11 1ay1
Minsky, "people give me thelr l
ideaa just to 1ee if they'll
sell ."
Stickers can ex:presa a
person's views lo the car
behind on almost any liven
situation. War, peatt, sex,
patriot.ism, l he generation
gap, pollution, op l i m i 1 m ,
pessimism -you want It, they
sell it.
Rigtlt now the Vletnam war
Is the most popular slicker
subject.
"Visit beautiful Vietnam by
Soulheasl Asia Airlines" is
Even at 100 yards
our prices
look great!
r
Md la l::,.eau-.
hAbac*.of .........
....,....,.... .. f l
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for the first time ever
an unsurpassed value!
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morel Never before hu Penney'• Ano Jewelry 6 °"*!'*'!ever offered ouch a wldo and varied 88 aeMcllorl of qualllY watcilet at thl1 cU!ltandlng
PlfCe.
~!!,etfl
Charge these valuea at lhese Penney stores: CANOGA PARK
DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH
MO~TCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY"
•
CARLSBAD
LAKEWOOD
VENTURA
A
... ............ _
.... p ...... ..
............. $ .... .........
AIM:adl at,..,._.,._,,
_ ..... body.
Aloili ........ 0 warMlref
colon .. .,.,.. ---3" wiA 'leftf rib. 11
goug•witk..d.•
fulltholi .. 2091*"'9• 79" •i• ..,d. choliia..
L,_..._,....,.
1kM1111 ...... l2
er 20 OO"Ofti. hft .......
c. WllKIMttff 1200
1hot9va.12or20
goug8-. Modlfied ,w..
36"
114's ........ W.Ck
_. ... klL Fea•• a tcrGtdi Old
d-.st ..... ttclftt twfoc..
MMI\ an A..nca•
lowfJAQ t.o.gr•
tpedRcat~._
Ava i1obl•. "' 12 ..
14' lb ... igb&.. A 13''
tenne111 the now piece
•
·---........ oMllo. 12-#I oloot
2~-...........
199 .... n_,...,....,.....,:LD ... ....... _____ _
.... lb.U_#a __
..i..1
2?!.
12-·---~-
.•. ,,, ..
lJ a .....
-~-......... ~ .... _ .. "'"·--... ~-, .. ........ , I: I
lowhoC1 +*
..-• n1a111a -" ............ 1499
Charge It at_, of th-""'"*'° -CAHOOA PARK CAJLSBAD DOWNEY FUUERTON H\INllNGTOH Bu.CK
WCEWOOD MONTCIAll MtWl'Olf WCH OIANOE -ulE arr' V&aUIA Sloop ~s .... i1cri,.,, .• loo. u lo ., , JtU
'
Why Read Failures?
Scliools, Teacliers Feel Blame
If Johnny can't read, who's
at fault: The teacher? The
school 1ystem? 'Ille parents?
Producers of teaching
• materials? Or-the student
himself!
Until now, it has generally
been the practice for teachers
to hold students accountable
chrough tests and recitations
for what they have learned -
or haven't teamed. But now
the tables are being turned.
Under the concept of ac-
countability -today's "in"
word in education -schools
and/or teachers are he Id
responsible for s t u d e n t
~ormance.
It is "absurdly naive" to
h9ld teacher• accountable when they have so little power
to co~ the professional
aspects of teactUna, says Mr1.
H~len Pate Bain, president of
the National Educatio n
Association.
JT'S UNFAIR?
J. Lloyd Trump, associate
secretary of NEA 's National
Association or Secondary
School Principals, likes the
idea or accountability up to a
polnt. It i.s unfair, though, he
says, to hold teachers ae--
countable under existing con-
ditions -conditions that re-
quire teachers to spend so
much time on nonteaching
duties, including clerical work
and "babysitting."
Area Men
In Service
Marine First Lieutenant J.
Richard Phil.Ups, or Costa
Mesa, was designated a Naval
Aviator during ceremonies at
the Naval Air Station in "'•'
Corpus Christi", TeJ..
He received his "Wings or
Gold" about 18 months after
arriving at Training Squadron-
22 at Corpus Christi for his ad-
vanced phase or training.
Marine Sergeant Ttd L
Moatt, husband of the former
Miss Donna Whelan of 17ea2
Van Buren, Huntington Beach,
is now serving ,,tth Marine
Force Logistic COmmand in
Danang, Vietnam.
George D. Paul, son of
George F, Paul of 495 E. 11th
SL, Costa Me I a, ii
participating In a U.S. Air
Force Reserve 0IIlcer1
Training Corps (AFROTC)
field training encampm(f1t at
Fairchlld AFB , Wash. e.:::;;,_u.;.;;:_..;.,.:~..-..:;;,.:1t..;t;.;l~'.?~:.:i.i:
During the encampment,
cadets become familiar with
the llle and activitlea on Air
Force bases and can examine
caretr opportunitlet In which
they might wllh to serve as
olflcers.
U.S. Air Force Doctor (Ca1>-
tain) Chris K. Uolme1, son of
Mr. and Mrs. A. IJ· Holmes,
Ill 4lst St., NewpOrt Beach,
has arrived for duty at Hill
AFB, Ulah.
Doctor Holmes Is chief of
the pediatric services for the
2791st USAF Hosptl'al, 'He
previously served at the Air
Force Reserve P e r s on n e I
Center, C.Olo.
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OPP. BROADWAY • OPEN 7 DAYS • 644-0980
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Bird Bait?·
Car1iaby Sh.op Finds Daws
• !ttmdy aUractlu Allttlka
blonde lryl!W lo rt! &er ,.
help us launch 11111 -
service ~Y llllln& Ol\l llle .lonn
in the ltcin," Bui aid.
"All ot a IAldden I !tit a
rol)ed.up newtPIPtt hit me °" the bead, It WU her hmllud
He took her away."
Lung Spots
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TUES., WED., THURS. & SAT. 10 A.M.-6 :30 P.M.
SUN. NOON 5:00 P .M.
56 FA5HION ISLAND·
(OPPOSITE, BROADWAY)
NEWPORT CENTER 644-6"'
I
fi:
•
...._,......, ltlwl 5'1ppl1mont to DAILY PJLOT, Thuro., AUfuot 21, 1'70
Mexican-Americans
Rap School System
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
s e D a t • 1Ubc::omm1~ in-
...tlglllng -mJnorlty
-"" r«elving equal educatioa heard c b a r g e 1
WednoodaJ ocboo1 olficials
and Tens Rangen1 barr8'Hd
and intimidated M e x i c • n -America _ .. during •
IChool boycott in Uvalde, Tes:.
'J'be charges Wtn brought
by Joee V. UriegJS, a member
GI the Teus State Advisory
Oommlttee on Civil Rights,
and J""' J. Rublo, -dirodor of the Muican-
American Development
Orporation. Both are from
Austin, Tu.
1be boycott was called last
April, they said, following
musal al the Uvalde School
Boan! to consider • list ol cnevaoces.
fte grievances included:
-Failure of the all-Anglo
sc:bool boa.rd to re-hire a Mu.-
i can· American teacher
because be wa.s running for
county judge.
-Assigning studetlll I o
cl88RS for the mentally
rdanled because Ibey couldn't
ttndeMIWld questions put to
them Ill Eoglisb.
---Operatio( a track l}'stem
whk:b operated as a dead-eod
f<r llfuican.Ameriam child-
.... ralher dwi dealing with
.,..,i.i.m. al language.
After the boycott began,
they aald, then was a "total
~ , ... the needs of tbe
Maican-American in the field
al educatioo and in the ad-
mllltltratioo al juatice.
'"'lbe cblld:ren were in--
timidated by I c b 0 0 I ad-
-who told them
they woold all !all u they jolll-
ed-lllelr lriendl in the boycotl
An entire company of Texu
Rangers ••• arrived on Cbe
first day. Flying overhead was
• bellcopter belonglng to the
Te= Department or Publlc
Safety. Rangers would COD-
front individual aw.dents and
bal'as! them.
"Teenage boycotters lost
their olter«bool jobo, and all
male boycott.en: over the age
of 18 Wert re-classified by the
draft board. in its zeal the
board also classified one 17·
year-old youth.
"Parents of the boycott.era
also lost jobs or were sub-
jected to daily pressure !rom
their Anglo employers to
return their children t 0
ICbool," the paid said.
Rubio said the Mexican-
American people or Uva1de
were peace!ul.
.. 'Ibey do not want violence,
but they are capable of it,'' be
warned.
Both Rubio and Uriegas
predicted wider use of the
ICbool boycott during the com-
ing school year in com-
munities WlteSpOOSive to Mex-
ican-American needs.
'lbe two recommended Tei:-
as state legal barriers to
teaching b i-1 ing u a l l y be
removed, that more Mexican·
American teachers be hired;
that textbooks r e f I e c t
Mexican-American hlstory as
well as Anglo-American, and
that tbe federal government
recognize t b a t integration
guidelinea are being evaded by
merging the M e .1 I c a n -
American with the b I a c t
minority.
Works, Legend Part
Of Sculptor's Legacy
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -but the coin's designer of
Benny Bufaoo, considered by record ins!sted Bufano merely
many the great.est sculptor pt out his udi aince Rodin, ii dead at the age awe . st 0·
of 72. He was born in the southern
The body of the pint.sized Italian village of San Felee
ltaliaD born artist famed (Or and came to the United States
hil works of heroic pro-in 1900. He was married in
portions was found in bis 1925 and .divorced here si:a:
stud» Tuesday by friends who years later. ms wife said he i:: ao1-=:l i!:,8":., ~ was "not designed I or
caroeer's office tentatively domestic life."
blmped J. beert attack and He wa.s involved in frequent
aid Ito bid been dead for 36 legal battles "'~ both hb
boon. pmonaJ Ille and ""'"' and •
An objective view of Bu!ano wu perpetuaDy broke until a
the artist wu often douded by group of friends finally took
the complei picture of &llano over his finances. They have
tbeHe m:!. 1 confidant of the also gathered more than 500 of
dty'1 leaden and cJa!med ;;;;;h;;;b;;;WO<;;;;;;ks;;;;;;in;;;stor;;;;;;a;;igi;;e.;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;jJ
frieltdahipo with major figuta
lbrooghout the world. SIDries
oboot him """ legendary although it wa.s often difficult
to separate ract from Bufano's
!erWe fancy.
A We-long pacifist, he said
he bad chopped olf the first
joint of his trigger finger and
sent it lo Presideot Woodrow
Wilson to protest World War I.
Allo, bl said, be de!ligned the
buHalo oa ooe side of the old
nlcUI ood"pooed for the lndiu
bead profile on the other side,
The retemblance was the.re,.
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DAll.Y rflar %1
North-Favored by 7 .in ~C Q ~iJ.ty Clas ~ic Tonight
Toughest
Road ,Trip
I
Faces Halos
1be second.place CalHomla Angels, 5\1
1ame1 off Mlnne!Otl.'1 pace in the
Amerk:an League West, art starting whit \m1nager Lefly Phllllps c11ls "our
tou~road trip of the season.''
The A!Wrt beaten Wednesd~.nlght by
tile er... )n,tianl, J.O, take today off
but treyOJ, Mjtlmote wbeft they play
tile <kli!*'leodm .In tlle Eut, Friday nlg~t. l -.
Tom Mu/Phy, IS-7, wUI ):itch apinst
Baltimore's 11-pme winner, D a Ye
McNally, u the Angels launch a 10-game
tour with other stops at Detroit and
A ... el Sf•te
... ..-.. KMl'C ('11)
AUii. 'I ...,...1, ·1 ••lllrr!W• -· u A-'1 I Oitlroit (1) A... Al'Olll at Detroit A111. NMb 1t Cle\ltlaN
Cleveland. 1bere will be two twi-night
doubleheaders within a four~y perkld .
"It's not going to be easy," Phillipi
aakl, "but we've got to keep our heads
up."
Ridl Hand, a 21-year~ld rookie In only
his second year of profeSl!lonal baseball,
fired shutout ball for 7·1/S Jnninp and ttien got yeoman relief help from Denni•
Higgins as the Indians 1alva1ed the finale
of a three-game series.
Hand's victory over the Angels wu his
third straight agatnrt the Californians
without a loss. Against the rest of the
American Le.ague be carries a 2-9 record
.and a 4.6 ERA. Against California he is S·
0 with a 2.16 ERA.
"l have confidence when I pitch against
the Angels because I've had success in
the past," the rookie right-hander aakl ••
Na right ann soaked in. an ice pack.
"Once you beat a team yoo 1et the Idea
you can do it again."
Hand, a native of Bellevue, Wash.,
1pent only two months with Portland of
the Pacific Coast League last season
before winning a berth with the Indians
tn spring training.
"I went do"wn there with the idea t
eould make it," he aaid ... 'ftlere ls only
one way to learn how to pitch in the m ...
jora that's be in the majors. l think I"(e
leamed a lot in the abort lime I've been
here and now Mr. Dark (Cleveland
Manier Alvin Dark) ia giving me a
chance to show what I've learned."
Pind>llitter Chuck HIJWoo'a .,..._Ing
double, which 1Dlpped a ICOr'eleu tie. in
the aeventh, and Hand's perfect 1queeze
bunt sacrifice gave the Indians enough to
defeat letthander Rudy May, 6-11.
CLIVILANO CALl,OlNIA •lllrlllrttt •lllrlllrw L-, 2b l 0 I 0 Alomer, llt ( 1 ~llllOll, rf ( I I I • .,..,, cl J I
Foti•, If ( I I 0 FA9G1I, u 4 l
Ullle ..... , If 0 I I 0 A.Joi!-, If ( I F_, c l 0 I I. SpMc.,, lb J I
T .HOrlOn, lb ( I t I Mc.Mui~ • 2 I Fllller, Jll g I t I Von, rl · l 1
lr~d,d •OllE~c I I Hfict_,.,,, 11 4 1 I I Jolvli!01'141, pit I I Nellles, .. I 0 I I Jl11ll, c I I
HlnlOll, pit 1 I 1 1 ll.M9y, p I I
llrna,lb 1010~,p I I H•nd, p l I 1 I C.V,1n, pfl '1 I ttltoiM, 11 1 I I I K.T1tum, fl I I 10:1111 *4 J 1 2 TOllll :it J
Clrnlend ODI 000 '°° -t
C.llf0rrll9 QIO ---• E -Fr911G'I. DP -Cl .... •l•nd l. LOI -er.., .. hnd 1, Clllfornll •. 21 -T. HOl'ton. l. .......... '° Hind (W,s.t) 7-1/l 4 t I t J
Hlftlns 1·111 1 I I I 4
•.M9y IL.6-111 .. Ill J 2 2 t 1 0.-. l·l/I 1 I I t l
IC.T1tvm 1 1 I I I 0 llw -HllllN. Tllm -I: .. Attendlinc.I -""·
SLIDING UNDER TAG -BUI Ru'5ell, fleet footed outfielder with tile
Los Ani•les Dodgers, alldes safely under the glove _of St. Louis Card·
!nals' third baseman Joo Torre with a stolen· base. Pildler Joe Moeller
Piteking Sou~
Big Blue Machine Top s
National Loop in Hitting
LOS ANGELES (AP) -'!lie Loo
Angeles Dodiera, alias U. Big Blue
Machine, came home today leading the
league in hitting but mourning their
pitching aft~r gaining· two games m the
Cincinnati Reda in as many,daya,
Idle toc!ay, the Dodger• open.. a nine-
game homoaland ,Friday algh~ ·against
DWer s i.te ............ , .. ( .. ,
AUii. 19 Dodt«a 11 ii. Louil 5:15 111.m.
Allfl, ti Ded9en n. Pl~ 1:15 1.m.
A119. n o.Qw1 va. Pllllblx•lil ''" 11.rn. Aue. n A•ll 1t .. I".,_• 4:15 11.m. Aug. 2J ......... •I .. tlmin 2:21 •. m,
t h e Pitt.bur~ Plrai.., 'Clailde Ost.en
12-11, will pitdi for Loa Angele• agalrui!
Bob Veale, 1-13.
'The Cincinnati. Reds, who have called
themselves the i;til Red Machine all
seaaoo, saw their West.era 1Divlsion lead
over tlle aeoond-place DedlOn djrn!n1'h
to•U ganteO'WednN!fay w1im tbeyJool to
•
Montreal, M, wiiile fllo Dodpn wbl(ll'Od
51. Louis, '-2.
The Dodger1 gave lbepllelvea the allu
after ~arting a hitting binge, a .31J clip
aince the All.Star game that ~ted the
team average t,o :J,'rl.
"I've never seen. anything like It," aakl
abort.atop Maury Wills, a veteran ol
Dodge.r teams that lived off pitching.
After Willie Davia broke a tie with 1
tw<H'Ull single in the ninth inning against
the Carda1 Dodger manager Walt Alston
lamented over his pitchln1 and rejok:ed
over his batsmen.
"We were spoiled . by our pitchinl
before, but those da)'f seem to be over ,"
Al1to11 said. 0 Basically, oor pitch.Ing was
not good."
C:hlsox Set R e eord I
The Dodgers lack the fence.b\llting
power of ClnclpnaU, bu! Alston laid
speed aM percentage tn·1ke up for l&crof
home runs.
While the club's 70 homers la l last-
place stallslic, it~ four .300 hlt.tera and
eiaht batten above .280. It leads the
league in triples and stolen ba1U. Aparicio Can't Explain
Reason for .300 Average
BOOTON (AP) -At the age of JI,
1fter 15 )'ears in the major Jeques, Lllil
Aparickl is suddenly a .300 httter for the
first time in his career.
"I'll tell you the truth, t wi1h I knew
the reason," Little Looie said Wednelday
after coming off the bench to get two hits
and drive in three runs u the Oticago
White Soi: scored 11 runs In the ninth in-
ning to defeat the Bolt.on Red Soi:, 13-5.
Thoae two hits raiaed Aparicio'• batting
ave1'111e to .SIS -not bad for a &UY who
averaged .JllO for the first 14 years of bis
big league career and never before hit
above .280.
Loni known as one of the premier
tensive shortstops in baleb1U history,
alao an outstanding bale stealer In
i1 younger days, Aparicio was juat an
verq:e bitter moat of the lime.
alngllng to c:ui.r Ulla time to drive In the
ll'th run In the innln1 tytnc the
American LNgue record for most rum in
a ninth inning by one club, tet by the
New York Yankees aa:alnst the old St.
Louis Browns in 1951.
"I've got a little 1tiffneu .bl my neck,
and I wanted to 1lt out these three
1amea, but I aaid I'd be raady if they
-.led a pinch hitlor and tlley did,"
Aparicio Aid. "Now I hope to get back in
the lineup Ftiday after our day off Thur•
day. It all depends llow I feel."
"He's amazing," Gutteridge 1ay1 of his
star performer. "He'1 physically a young
man, with no ei:tra weight. He stay& ac-
tive, and I think that'• the aecret of hia
IUCCesl. He 1hould be able to play
another two or three years."
Alat.oo said be couldn't ei:plain why the
Jloclgerw have enjoyeo:I IUCh '""''"' -41-23 -on the road while loolng ll of S7
games in Dodger staditull.
The answer could be that his f'51 team
thrives on artifJcial turf at ballpark•
where the Dodgers have w o n I~ of 20
games.
LOS AN9•LIS IT, LOUIS
•r•rw 9'rllrM Wlll1, u I I 1 t lllldl, II l 1 2 I Mot1, II ( 1 1 1 J111ier, 211 4 O I O
W .. 0.1111, cf s I 1 I Kt9111, 1-4 1 1 1 W.P1rk«, 1-J I 1 0 TPrrt. JI> l I O I
tilJ-1, 211 J I 1 I C•rd .... I, d ' I 0 I S1411tll.c ••1os1mm1111,c 4101 ltu.a.il,r1 4111L .. ,rt ~Ill ~r•i.rtt•w1n.a 1 I I I M•lr'lllH, u J I • I •r....,..., p I O I t Dl11•Wlle, pit 1 e I I lt~,111! lllOC..rllir\.• Jiii J..ii ... ,,, ••••
Miii • ..,.., 11 I I I I
MMll•,P 2100 L91.rtYn, a 1 1 e O Tot.II 3'4f~ T011ll :Ul?I
~......... .. 111 112 -• St. l.Pl,ll$ 100 , • ..,. -'
I! -SlmmO!lf, Twro t, ~ -LDI A..-lt5 I,
II, LIIV!• I. l08 -LDI A,..._ II, SI, Lovll '· Hl -8!'lldl (111, H ...... !Ml, MOI• Ul. II -•••uell1 Grt1llllrll"'11J, .rock. I -L.elebllr•. l~HllltlllO Moel...,. S-1/J J 2 I 0 J lr~W ... J) W/J 2 0 0 2 3 M• 1 I I I I I
C1rlton (l ... 1'1 f t • 4 .l ' 'NP -C..rlllll. .,_. ,. -II'"'"°"', Tlnw -1:•. ~~ -,,,,..,
took seCond on the second haU of the double steal with umpire Andrew
Olsen watching t:he play closely. The Dodgers won over·the host C·ards,
l-2.
Ready for Title De fense
Joe Frazier, heavyweight boxing champion, will defend his crown
against light heavyweight king Bob Fbster Oct. 22 in Detroit. Frazier
skips rope in a light workout at SouUt Lake Tahoe using a rubber
liner to aweat off any excess poundage at his Sahara-Tahoe train~
irtg camp.
"It'• got to be the pl of my life,''
ia said. "I'd say right now tbeR are
" peopie pulling for me lban ever
fore. I got a call from Venesuela at Kids Today Want 1\nswers••Paterno
lght last nigh! alkipc me why I'm
playing."
The answer to that question wu that
11 was 1iven a rest durtne the three-
•me aeries here w h I c b wound up
edne9day. He sat out the tint two
es and wu on the bench a1lin In the
ale when manager Doo Gutteridge
lied on him aa a pinch hlttei: in the
ntli Inning with the baaea loaded and
lcq:o trailing 5-4. r
Lu~ bounded a high ahot to lefl driving
whaj prJ>ved to be tile winning runs.
White Sox continued IC."Orlne, and
~' Aperlclo came up 1111 n,
NEW YORK (UPI) -Richard Nixon
loveo to talk football.
Okay, I've a:ot 1 wgge1tion for tum. He
ought to talk to tile aame feUow I did.
1'1le 1enUemen'1 name ls Joe Paterno
and he makes hla living eoaehinl football
at Penn State.
Joe Paterno talked maybe five minutes
the other day and made more good sense
than moet anybody I've heard in the past
five years.
1t won't be that Jon1 now before Joe
Paterno calla hlJ Penn Sbte squad
together for the 1tart of practice Ind
there lrt IOme thJ11111 he bow• he 'I
going to have to do dlffere~lly tlian ha
haa In tile put.
'"MU.i business of a football coach get-
tlna: up before a group Ind saying 'You
do thll because I tell you I0,1 that's
over," Joe Paterno 11ys.
"I think kids today want to know why.
They want lo know why they have to give
up thlnp they feel art important lo them
and you're going to have to explain it.
You're 1olng to have to ,;ve reaaona.
·You're not going1ll be able to arbltrartly
dismla tome o1 the reque1la theJ. ~ke,
whelher lth&1 to do ,.!Iii thOm getting in-
volved poUUc11ly, 1oclally or whatever It
may be."
"I have.only a couple of basic rules,''
he say!I. "NG". I l teU our kids I feel the
four years they 're golna to be in colleee
are the greatest yean of their lives and t
don't want them to gel tied down just to
the football program. That's one of the
rtasoru I don't believe Jn an athletic
dormliory. The1e are the only four years
they're completely free..
'"l:'l'len I tell them I don 't think they
allould ever do onythina thal'a 1oln& to
embarl'l&I thelr teammalft, becauae If
that happen• It wtll cause Ill feelings and
we're not 1olng to have the kind of
teamwork we ahould have. I aak them tq
take thole tW11 things into con1kterat1on,
the freedom available to Uiem and the
many other things available to them, but
I make it clear l'tn not going to let
anybody embarrasses hla teammates."
Joe Paterno, like Vince Lombardi, Is a
great believer In discipline and like Lom-
bardi also, he believe1 1lhletlc1 la one of
the few areas wbert there ti any
dl1elpllna left rlgM now.
Rebels Match
Defense Vs.
North Offense
By HOWAJID I. RANDY
Of .. °""'" ...........
It Isn't surprising that tile North la
favored tonlfllt In tho 1111 1Mual Nonb-
Sootli Orange Cowlty All-Siar foothail
game at Oranee Coast College.
In 10 prtvlous aamea, the NOl'th bas
woo eight including the last two by
lop.sided margln..s.
The odds favor the Yankees by aeven .
points In tonight's acUon with kk*off at I
o'clock.
It is a charity benefi& for the Qilldren's
Hospital or Orange County and iJ
sponsored by the Brea lJona club. A total
of IU,000 has been presented to tile
hospital in prevklus years.
Ed Bain (FoothlU), c:oodi ol the Wl-
derdog South squad, sees the came ..
one with 1 good offense (North) acalnst a
1tout det.nae (Sooth).
''We have to atop their of(el'lle in order
to win. I hope 11 turns out to be 1 matter
ol their offense against our defense."
Bain says he will .sbutUe three split
end! into the a:arne, carrying plays to the
• quarterback.
"We don't have the quick bacb like
they have," be says.
In the same breath, he add.s: "(Mark)
Dunn (Mater Del) is quick but ('Ken) Ep-
pelheimer {IA Quinta) ind (Bob),
Speicher (Foothill) are slower."
John Cailard (Rancho Alamltoo), bead
coach of the North, says :
"Thia should be a great spectator
game. It will be 1 wide open affair rather
than a two.thue yards at a crack of-
fense.
"There are a lol ol good, aolid football
players on both teams tnd 1 don't thinlll
there are any real super stars."
Closest to this category is the North
quarterback, George Fraser (Anaheim)
wbo rece.ntly played in the Shrine All-Star
game at the c.oliseum.
In high school, Fraser didn't call hi.I
own plays. It wUI be dilf9rent at the
ooi.et tonlpt.
.. I think calling your own plays has I
lot to do with the kids enjoyment of the
game," Cailard relates.
''1 may end up calling the plays but we
will start with the quarterbacks callln&:
them."
The North c:oodi Isn't buying tbe of.
fense.defeiue theory of Bain.
"'Ille South team is strong In the power
Mes.and their offeme Is wide open," he
says.
"I peraonally 11w four Foot.hill games
last year and our kids ha~bed to pidl
up what to read on a full home offenee...
We have 1(1<111 a lol of lime drlJllnc ea
where to 10 and bow to -· -moves.
"Jt should be a cue oI two solid foot·
ball teams plttlna: their skills againal
each other."
Four Orange Coast area playen will be
Jn the offensive lineup f« the South and
aeven for the defense.
In lddition to DuM at tullback. Bill
(See NOR111, Pale 14)
National AAU
Swim Meet
Begins in LA
LOS.ANGELES (AP) -Debbie Meyer,
Susan Atwood, Mark Spitz and Hans
Fassnacht, all of them with solid chance•
of lowering their world recorda, COOtpete
today Jn the opeainc aessiona of the Na·
Uonal AAU Swimming Championships.
Scheduled for thlt lint of four daya of
cornpet1tion are 1be 100.meter butterfly,
the 400 froestyle, the 100 breaststroke,
and the 20G bacbtroke, with races r 0 r.
men and women.
Miss Meyer, who won three indivtdual
rold medals at tile 11111 Olympic! and
holds three world records, goes in the
women'• 400 where the baa the global
mark ot 4:24.5.
The ta.year~kl from Sacramento
doeml't predk:t recorda but she's done it
at Ulla Loa Anplea Swim Stadlurn beforo
and admits th• pool to be one of the
W1ll"ld'a fa.stat.
Mw Atwood, of Loos Beach, holds tho
record in then backstroke at 2:21.$.
Spitz, a Californian wbJ attends ln·
diana UniversJty, tiold1 the record in the
100 butterfly at 55.I while Fassnacht ot
West German)', a .tudent at Cal Stat•
(Ulng Beach), 11 the 400-meters reec:rd
holder at 4:04.
The latter nee could provide the
toughest competlUon 11 Fassnacht goes
against such stars as Mike Burton, OJym.
pie gold medalltt in the 1,500, Gunnar
Larason of Sweden, Canada'• Ralph Hut·
ton ind Tom McBeen, 1 fut lmprovina
teenager of the United States._. .
Meet officials ,.. the posslllillty of the
ftnt 400 under four minutes and al.ao aay
that 19 world records could pouibly be
broken during the rour days of com·
peUtion.
Prelimlnarlel are held at II a.m. daily
with the finals at 7 p.m.
The bulky field Includes a hilll of
forelgnen Including II Imm Mexleo
heeded ~ Felipe Munoa, Olympic 1olj
medalbt in tlle ltlO backatrol<e, and '" ye,ar-fd Marla Tef'91a Ramlrti who won
a bronze med1l ln the .xi freettyle.
Mlu Meyer II erpec:ted to make an at·
tempt to lower all three ol her worl~
marks . In lddltlon to the 400, she la tht ~ldel of freestyle marka ol l :llU In tho
ltlO and 17:111.1 In tile 1,11111.
I •
I
I
• .
" 4 OA!l V "Lff Thurtdly, August 20, 1~70
11 1 Area Stars
TOM GRZECKA
O.ffnsiv• End
PAUL MORO
Linebacker
BILL CHAMPION
Center
MIKE SHAUGHNESSY
Defensive Halfba ck
• ·' t
• ID County ·Grid Tilt
J IM NORTH
Tackle
GREG NEWHOUSE
Safety
LEE WALTERS
o.fen1lv• T ackl1
GARY VALBUENA
Spilt End
MARK OUNN
Fullb1ck
OAN SHAW
D•f•n1iv1 Hiilfb.ck
.. ,._,,.,r~-.... -' .
North-South
'
Starting
Lineups
S,•lb
Offenws
LE-Craig Grimm, Foothill 222
LT-Bruce Nenadal, Foothlll 210
LG-Doug Rothrock, Foothill 190
C-Bill Champion, Fountain Valley 205
RG-Dave Kuchera, Santa Ana 190
RT-Jim North, Corona dei Mar 190
RE-Gary Valbuena, Fountain Valley 130
QB-Vic Pereboom, Los Alamitos 175 i ·;.
LH-Bob Speicher, Foothill 190
RH -Ken Eppethcimer, La Quinta 188
FB-Mark Dunn, Mater Dei \BS
Defense
E--Tom Grzecka, Mater Dei
E-Gary Porter, Orange
T-)::.ee Walters, Huntington Beach
T-'oennls Kennedy, Marina .
MG-Steve Bixler, El Modena
LB-Paul Moro, Huntington B6ach
LB-Dan Popichak, Santiago
HB-Mlke Shaughnessy, Estancia
HB-Dan Shaw, Fountain Valley
S-Greg Newhouse, Westminster
S-Jim Votaw, Foothill
North
Offense
SE-John Dunn , Servile
LT-Paul Barrett, Servlte
LG-Brad Lambert, Garden Grove
C-Bob Wendt, Loara
RG-Kevln Healy, Fullerton
RT-Bill Balliet, Rancho Alamitos
TE-Mark Doak, Lowell
QB-George Fraser, Anaheim
RB--Tim Thorn, Anaheim '
RB-Gary James. Rancho Alamitos
WR-Pete Farquhar. Fullerton
Defense
E-Zack Tatum, Sunny Hills
E-John Henkel, Garden Grove
T-Randy Bright, Anaheim
180
175
195
205
185
187
210 , ..
175 .• 140 .
180
17!
190
185 .
180 '
2115
200
218
182
182
"" 180
Quarry, Foster
Fined for Bout
S ports Clipped Short
·r -Greg Robarge, Katella
J\1G-Dave Marshall, Katella
LB--Ed Young, Savanna
LB--r-.1ark Bill, Sunny Hills
CB-Glen Garson, Troy
CB-Pal Butler, Loera
200
lfi-0
115
200
200
205
t<S
178
175
198
185
llllt Laver in First Round Action
S-Je(f Morton, Kennedy
S-Gary Jame!, Rancho Alamitos:
K-Fred Kay, Sunny Hills
In N-ew Yorli
LOS ANGELES (APl -Heavyweight
borers Jerry Quarry and Mac Fosler no
IOfl&er Jre under suspension in their
home state of Cali.lomia even though the
l!tale's athletic commission wasn't happy
they fought in New York.
Quarry, who won lhe June 17 ~Ith~ by
a knockout, was fined $1 ,000 and Foster
received a $250 assessment from the
commission Wednesday.
Both had been suspended last spring
w h e n the Olympic Auditorium pro-
motional groUJl in Los Angeles claimed
they had first agreed to meet in that city.
The fines resulted from lhe ract they
tiad gone through with their Madison
Square Garden malch despite being
under suspension in California.
Nevertheless, the commission held !hat
the suspensions should be hlted Pven
though they could be imposed again if the
fines 11ren't paid by Sept 30.
The · penaltie! appeared light since
Qua rry received about $50,000 for his ap-
pearance in New York and Fosler in the
neighborhood of '20,000. There was no in·
clication they did not plan to pay the
fines .
Quar ry, of Bellflower, handed !he
Fresno battler his first professional set·
back and put himself in position for fllhPr
big money boul.S in the heavyweight
division where he twice has 1 o s \ tillc
light..
The commission found Quarry guilty of
meeting a suspended fighter and also of
conduct discrediting boxing In lhe cnn·
tract dispute. Foster wa s found innocent
of the latter charge, but \\'as fired for
fi(hting Quarry when the Bellflower
fighter was Under suspension
FORT WORTH -Wimbledon cham·
pion John Newcombe and top-seeded Rod
Laver Lake on first round opponent1
toni&hl in the $12.,flOO Colonial National
Invitallon tennis tournament.
Newcombe (aces South African Ra y
~foore and Laver goes against Roger
Taylor of EnglaOO .
Fiery PaJ¥:ho Gonta\ez and Spain's
Andres Gimeoo took matches Wednesday
night.
Gonzalea. disputing rulings and cursing
the lights , whipped Australian F'red Stolle
2..fi, 5-4, 11·9 in the feature nrt&tch.
f.imeno lobbed former U.S. Davis Cup
player Marty Riessen intc submissiOJ'! 12·
JO, 8-3. ·
In doubles Wednesay night, Laver and
Emerson thrashed Gimeno and Taylor 6--
3. 6~.
Gonzalez and Riessen play Newcombe
and P.ioore tonight .
• 1
DEL fi1AR -Jockey Bill Shoemaker
celebrated hi! 39th birthday hy riding
heavily wagered Beja to victory in the
split 111'-mile Del P.1ar Oaks anri piloting
1~n other winners Wednesda y to boost his
career tolal to 6,114--Just 18 short of rac·
ing'&.record, set by Johnny Longden.
•
A trim Eddie Meador reported tn the
l.os Angeles Rams' Cal State 1Fullerton)
training can1p Wednesday Joining team-
rna1es who helped persuade the all-pro
safelyman out of relirement.
f\leador prepared to workout with the
club during the arternonn but !here was
no Indication how soon the 33-year-old, II·
Major Leag ue Standing s
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ea.st Division w I. Pct. GB
Pitt.burgh "' :;6 .548
New York '4 57 .529 21:i
Chicago " fi-0 .51fi • St. Louis 57 66 .46., 101 ~
Philadelphia 54 !7 .44fi 12 1;
~font real '3 70 .431 14 1 ~
West Oh•l&lo n
Cincinnati 82 43 .65'
Doc11en " i2 .570 II
Atlanta 61 61 .500 1913
San Franciaco 61 61 .500 1911
Houston 5.1 67 .451 25 1 i
&an Diego 43 76 .387 33•,
WM"'""•Y'I ••1>11111
Motlt..i.1 1, Cln(l".,.n • Alll!llO ~. Ppllodf!lplol• J
~Ion f . M .... Yortc J
LM A-le• ._ 51. L.eul1 I Ctllc-It, 1M1 Oietoo t
.. n PrlNKIKo J, Pln.ou-.11 •
TotilOY'I ·-· Pl'ln ... 1,n1, tLtrllCll •01 •I All•"•• r•-•JI,
"''"' CWr •-fottllldlllelll.
.. rM.,.1 ·-· Alloonl• It MorllrNI, 'lltl\1
Clnclnntll ti Mrw Yor•. 111.ri1
Houti.tl .i ~lltdt._IA, I IWl•llllM
Pfl1ltlvr•h ti Lfl Allttlft, "'tlll .. LOUii ti S.11 O!He. nloh!
c11iu.e 01 kl! "''"'-.._· "1911'
AAtERJCAN LEAGUE
Ralt1more
New York
l)elrolt
Roston
\\'ash1ngton
Cle,·etand
.~l1nnesn1a
Angels
Oakland
K<insas Ci\)
i\!ilwaukee
Chicago
Ea1t Dhisl(ln
\\' L " .. "' " i\5 51
" 5'
5' " 53 64
\\tsl Dhi\ion
72 '7
"' " "' " " 76 .. 77
H 81
w..iMMI•' • Jl11wln
8••tlll">Ort l . M•l.,.1u••• l no•!•IWI I, o,iro11 o
Cl••eltl"ld l AllHll I
''""""..,lt l ll•w Yo<• ft
Cll•t•..,, 1l 8 011on I
"""W' CllY l W•t~·"flOll l
T..i1,•1 G1""1
Pct. GB
.639
.55(1 1 l
.511 13
.51 7 15
.475 20
.475 20
.611.I
5.17 511
.5'3 6
.Jn 271-it
.37~ 211
35Z 31
N..., Yt'1i: (SIOlll•"l,rt ll•IOf It Mlllnt.Ml!t (ltPI
'·11 f!«tM
l)ntv QMAt sm.ot~l...t
P'rl41y•1 G•m••
llP11.., 11 "'"~"' c .rv. 1111111 W11lll"'llorl ti Mkl ... IOlll, nl9fl1
N1w 'l'or~ •t CllN:t!IO. ~,.nr
MolW• ... t• t i O~l•flll. n<qh!
0•'-l•M 61 (11v.i•..d. '"~~' Clflffnll"t .i lltltlmote, nlf!'ll
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARIOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA 640-9303
Str'llce, P1rt1, & Body Shop
Now Open Until I p.m. Monday Nights I I
Orange county'1 1.argest ind Alosl 1ilodern 1'oyola and Volvo Dealer
year veteran will be able to aee came ac.
lion. He aald he ~&bed. about 195, only
two or three poUnds over till playing
weighl.
Meadnr, who retired in April, said it
was tough to leave an insurance bulineis
in Dallas but Coach George Allen and
several ballplayers kept callin1 hiin.
•
MINNEAPOLIS.ST. PAUL -Rod
Carew, wearing tennis shoes, look brief
balling practice Wednesday and awung
his first bat sin~ undergoing knee-
surgery June 24.
Minnesota Twins' Manager Bill RllneY
said Carew, batting .376 when he collided
wilh Milwaukee's tifike Heg an June Z2
Steelers, Colts
Trade Receivers
PIITSBURGH -The Pitlsburgh
Steelers traded All·Pro wide receiver Roy
Jefferson to the Baltimore Colts Thura-
day for flanke r Willie Richardson and 1
high 1970 draft choice.
In five seasons with the Steelers, the 26-
year-old Jefferson caught 199 passes for
3,671 yards and 29 touchdowna. His 67
receptions in 1969 set a club record.
Jefferson was chose n in the second
round of the 1965 draft from the Unlversi·
ty of Utah.
A native of Texas, the l-fool·2, 195-
pounrl Jefferson was also a punt returner
and the Steelers' player representative.
DEAN LEWIS
AU•UST SrlCIALS
S~ICl.\L
1970 TOYOTA WAGON
~:~: $1817
All Ott.et MIMWf 11 lteQ:
1119'\ U-Hll•• Plc.k.,_
Leitd Cr11l..-CeN11
VOLVO
DEMO
SAYE
$466
•SU87St2
1967
TOY OTA CORONA
i"ll•~ lll<'O;o, HM!tt, A~le!'Mtlc tr-.
(VIV Jl1l
51095
trying to pivot at second base, wou!d lake
batting practice dally.
Rigney !aid a deeision h a s not been
made whether Carew will be activated
be(ore Sept. r' when lhe playoff and
World Series roster deadline goes in ef-
(ect.
•
Ul5 ANGELES -John D. Loyd ap-
parently fo rgot about hJs plans staled
five yea rs ago to set up a cut-rate beer
and hamburger sta.nd on land he claimed
in the middle of the parking lot at Dodger
Stadium.
But lawyers for the Loa Angeles
Dodgers remembered, and their plea for
dismissal of Loyd'a suit was approved
Wedneaday In Superior Court. IAlyd wa1
neither presen t nor represented when the
judge acted on grounds Loyd did not pr~
secute his suit, filed against the Dodgers
June 30, 1965, within the five.year period
set by Jaw.
Loyd, a SJ.year-old one·time cabinet
maker, contended ownership or a 48(}.
squ'are-foot area which he said he
purchased from Mr. and Mrs. Murray J.
Black.
The Black! said lhey had retained
ownership because the CityHousing
Authority aornehow (ailed to include their
property when it acquired Chavez Ravine
for a low-rent housing project.
--DENNIS KENNEDY
Defensive Tackle
NORTH HOLDS 8-2
EDGE JN SERIES
PREVIOUS SCORF.S
1959-North 14, South 2
1960-North 40, South 28
1961-North 30, South 24
1962--No game
1963--South 9, North 7
1964--North 28, South 14
1965--North 14, South 12
1966-North 15, South 8
1967--South 11, North 6
1968-North 49, South 8
1969--North 45, South .11
(North leads series, 8·2)
NORTH ...
CONTINUED FROM PAGE U
,Champion (center) and Gary Valbuena
i split end) will start from Fountain
Valley along with C-Orona del Mar's Jim
North at a tackle post.
Bain is basing his opinion on a host of
Orange Coas t area players dotting the
defensive lineup.
Anchored by linebacker Paul Moro of
Huntington Beach Ian All-CIF third
team selection), area defensive playen
in the starting lineup also include:
Tom Grzeeka· (Mater Dei) at an end
position: Lee Walters (HB) and Dennis
Kenned y (Marina) at the tackles ; Mike
Shaughnessy IEstancla) and Dan Shaw
<FV) at the halfbacks ;-and Greg
Newhouse tWestminster) at a safety
position.
If the offense bogs down In eith~
direction, both coaches feel they have
place kickers who can rill the gap.
Doug Rothrock of Foothill kicked 23
straight conversions du ring the season
and had a pair of field goals. He will be
kicking for lhe South contingent.
Fred Kayo( Sunny Hills also had a pair
o( field goals during the regular 1969
season, the longest from 23 yards out. .
Vic Pereboom (Los Alamitos ). the
South's starting quarterback. will do the
punting for his team while Tim Thorn
/Anaheim ) will punt for the North.
II
SALE -LAGUNA SWIM
TRUNKS -Reg. 6.95
Sale Price 4.00
TENNIS DRESSES
13.95 to 26.95
LADIES TENNIS SHOES 7.50 & 7.95
TENNIS SOX 95c to 1.75
TENNIS HATS 2.95 & 4.95 LAGUNA STRIPED T·SHIRTS
Reg. 6.95 Sale 4.00
HIMILAYAN BACK PACKS
Reduced 25%
MESS KITS Reg. 1. 79
Sale Price 1.19
FOLDING CAMf SHOVELS Reg. 1.79
Sale Price 1.19
CRESSI RONDINE FINS
Full Foot-Sale Price 5.88
BILLIARD CUES Reduced to
1-1 Price
538 Center St. 646·1919
MENS TENNIS SHOES 7.95 & 8.95
TENNIS SHORTS 4.95 to 12.00
TENNIS SHIRTS 4.95·6.00·8.00
TENNIS SOX 79c to 2.25
WILSON-DUNLOP-DAVIS
BANCROFT TENNIS RACKETS
CHILDREN'S RACKETS 4.95 to 14.95
ADULT RACKETS 7.95 to 46.00
WILSON T2000 STEEL RACKETS
Strung Nylon 39.95
PENNSYLVANIA XTRA DUTY TENNIS BALLS
Doz. 7.50
. YELLOW TENNIS BALLS-7.95 Doz.
RACKET STRINGING
Open 9·6 Cloae JI Sundays
•
·Trend of All-Star Conwsts
Expects w Continue Intact
U would oppeat that the trend ol high
echool elktar utravq:anzu will continue
latact next yrar. despite a couple of st.ate
venture• that experient'ed shaky finucial
aituaUou recently.
The all·state basketba11 game, which was
silayed for the first lim• last month in
Oakland before a paid crowd of 4,770,' will
have a ICCOPd time a.round next year pro-
viding a final bill (practice unlfonns) doesn't
put the eipe.ues over the 80 percent mart or
the gross gate.
What's more, managemeat of the event ls
considering playing a pair or games aext ----
ROGER
CARLSON ·-----
year .•• one In Oakland and another in
Southern California two or three days later.
mer afler the flrsi year's lotal or S,000.
Reports .are that the SUnair event will
change aite.s -possibly lo UCLA.
Another change in site will be for the LA
City.CU' bosltetball game should the ll«lee be
resumed. The game lost NCAA approval and
was not held this year becaWJe of the failure
lo keep the ex:penses uoder the 60 percent
llmlt in '&t.
II they resume the gsme it wilt probably be
held at the Sports Arena where lbe tab is coo-
siderably lesis than Jack Keat Cooke's Fonun.
• • •
Orange County all-star busiaess appears lo
be Oil solid fooUng wlth the football (at
Orange Coast College tonight), basketball
fatso at OCC) and baseball (at Anahe8n's La
Palma Park) all drawinl well.
• • •
Two new faces are in llrl.e ii the CIF
southern Section orfice. Tom Morgan (UC
Santa Barbara) replaces Lou Joseph as
Admillistrative Assistant and Mike Peck
tAntelope Valley and Hanford sporUwriter)
will be the director of public information.
Josepb moves on to Villa Park High aa prin-
cipal after a o•e--year stint under CIF SS
t.'Offimi!!ioner Ken Fagans.
• • •
Cavazos
In Retur.n
Physicals Set
PhysR:ab !or all football
asplranl$ al P.larinl High
• School are tcbestuled foe
Saturday mornlnc.
OAIL Y I'll.OT ;!$
TAI AMwen ,,,_ n.. .._ T•
( ........... ., ....... ..,. ........
T•1A111 AMalfllt .,_
135 ·7777 Football tand.idllte! a t To Bullrl'ng ~M~ar~in~a~w~ll~l m~ee~t a~t~tb~e~bo~y~s·~~~~~~~~~ .: locker room from a until noon.
Diminutive Eloy Cavazos, 19
years old and standing 5-Z in
his: stocking feet, return.<i to
the scene of a recent triumph
ln the bullring by the sea in
Tijuana Sunday afternoon.
One or the most sensational
and electrify Ing M a t a d o r s
ever developed in Mexieo,
Cava~ wlll v\e with Curro
Rivera and Jesus SGloriano
for top honors on tbe card that
gets under way at 4 p.m.
A valiapt bullfighter wilh an
irresistable personality. this
will be the mini-Matador's Sf'.
cood corrida at P I a z a
Monument.al where he w~
awarded 4 ears and a tail fot
his erfor-ts.
So great was Cavazo's
perfonnance that excited an.
cionados carried him on their
shouldt:rs from the arena to
the cheers o( impassioned
spectators.
Curro Rivera has moved the
local Public witb. his dramaiic
and dashing s t y I e of
bullfighting. In his Aug. 9 Ti·
YOU CAN TRUST YOUR TRANSMISSION
TO ANY OF AAMCO'S 550 CENTERS.
WO.lllO'S ~EST 1IWISAllSSIOH Sf'ECML.ml ......... ~ ·-,,rti.-.llM»t 1'·M W. L ..... l lff. 6Mt , ..... A-...
(•,..,.._ 1----.1111 12"1...., hn. ...
Cfllll M.......,...1"' ~11J) Pl· .. llU H ........ 11.... MM ._,_ . .._ .. ,.. ....... --Kil .. .... ·-''"'
Baseball and lrack and field evenll are ltOl
under NCAA pressure to produce capital. thus
the Cal·Pal All·state baseball came, which
was displayed before 450 sools at Aaaheim
Stadium last month, is ezpected to be staged
agaia next year -again at Anaheim Stadium.
Poor and late prunotion of the event burned
the Police Athletic League but the Anaheim
Police Department seems undaunted.
A H A •-juana appearance youthful
The ead tesult. of the constant pro. GPJJ§ ttfJ le'r Ri,_ra displayed s u P er b
crastinatio• that seems to envtlope achool Dr. Arturo §erf:a of Huntington Harbour smiJes after classicism with the magenta·
boards is all too evident where the fledlln&' catching a 90-pound b1uefin tuna on the Jolly Roger and-yellow cape as well as
Unlvuntyl{ighisconcemed. 1 ......'.I~l~o~u~t~o~f~S~a~n~Di~·~e~go~.~~~~~~~~~~~~__:w~ith~tb~e~small~~red~mul'.".'.'.~~··~J.:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:== • • • The Trojans, who'll opea the 1970 season u111~
A•other display ol recenUy graduated preps
that's due for a return engagement .iJ the
Suaair lrack and field invitalional
der coach Jerry Redman, will attend Tustin
lligh on double sessions throughout the fa11 .
Ullivenlty's maiden campa.Jp includes
eight games with a bye la the fifth week ot
the free lance Khedule.
The spoosoriJg body broke even on a
reported crowd of 3,500 at Cerritos this &W!·
USRC Midgets Ontario Prize
, '1 Fund Grows
To Race Saturday Cash aa:essory prizes may
lop the $85,000 mark: for
participants in the inaugural '
California 500-mile race on
The first racing program Furst were aboard a boat Sept 6 at Ontario Motor
featurlngi United States racing which pulled in 26 l'OOllerfisb, Speedway.
Club (USRCl mkl:gets will four dolphin. a pompano, a The $35,000 figure will be in
take place at El Toro's Orange cabrilla and a bonito. addition lo the guaranteed
County Speedway Saturday prize of $500.000 posted by the
nigh t (7). • raceway . and the record
Veteran Lowell Sachs of San $51,!IOO lap prize fund . Total Bill Young and Jim Draine Diego will try to get back on monies o(fered now surpass
the winning track at tht El scored a 61 lo win a partner's . the fl00,000 figure.
Toro oval against his younger best ball tournament at El A total of $1S0.650 In ac-
chaliengers. Niguel Country Club. cessory prize money has been
Westminster's Duane Sears Howard Salquist and Draine poated to date on a coo-
ls the chief Orange Coast area tied with John and Joe Co~e tingency basis. but due to
hopeful in Saturday's lineup. for second place with 64. duplicate awards offered by
Sears, 1969 USRC champion, r:tr. and Mrs. Eug e ne competitive co mp an its
won a big race earlier this Parker teamed w1th Mr-• and manufacturing products of a
month In Yuma, Ariz. driving Mrs. Paul Riate for first place similar nature, it is impossible
In Jim Devitt'' Offy and he in a mixed besl ball tourna· for race participants to collect
appears ready to make a run ment with a 63. · tile total amount.
at second place in the pointl---_.::_------------------1
standings. He currently trails
Sacbs and Glenclora's Danny
P.fcKnight in the points race.
•
Members of the Pacific
Sands Club twim team will
hold their annual awards ban.
quet Sunday, Sept. 6 (I) at the
clubhouse on Atlanta Ave. in
Huntington Beach.
Among the trophies lo be
presented will be m o a t
valuable, tn061 improved and
the perpetual coaches' award,
"'hich goes to the most in-
spirational 1wimmer.
All individuals will also gel
participatioo trophies along
with 50-mile Red C r o s s
patches for everyone who
swam that distance during the
summer.
The league initiated its
regular schedule in May and
will conclude it Aug. 2Z with
•the Southern Counties Swim
Conference individual 1wim
finals at UC Irvine . . ~
Huntington Beach w a s
represented by a trio of
anglers on a recent fishing
haul off the coast near La
Paz, Mexico.
Oil City resident.! Robert
Herron, Don Berliner and Phil
Baseball's
Top Ten
AM••tcAll t.•ASUI
'""., Cllllt e ,11a • M 'ct. Y•llr:i'""M.1, IWI llll 47' tJ llt .321
Dllvl . Miii II• •15 7J 151 ..n1
11, $m!ll!. 111' Ill 61 M UJ .lll
I<. Jotin111n, C1I llJ 4ff II US ..lH
A111rlclD, Chi 111 •5' 75 1•t ,J1J
io1n1t111. ICC '°' 3ff n no ·* F. Rolll11ton. 111 tt 3'1 6' 111 .XII
1t1,._, Mii lU '51 11 lCI .JOI
F-. Cle 111 <II Sf IU .JD6
W. Hot'fOll, 1>91 f6 J1t D 111 ,»! -·-l(IUebr .... , Ml-10!1, J1: F. Hewer•.
W1M1,,.1on, J); Tll'"9'fltll, l llllen,
.U1 J, ~I, ll"lmer .. 2'1 It. OllYet,
IClllMI CllY, U, a 11 ... l•tlM 111
'· How•r'd. W•1hln11on. f61 J. ,_n,
!11ltlinor1. fl! KlllliH'tw, M l-t1le,
111 011 .... Ml_..,., "' ll. Olh•r.
K1nt11 Cflf, ts. MATIONAL LIAeUI
'llYet <• • Al I M ,cl. C1111t, AH Ill lSt 71 11' .Uf
C""'91111. ''"' tJ • l4 1n ,,... '~(ill lH 44t ti IQ ,J.IJ
W, ,,,..,, U. 121 ,fff '7 IQ .J;ll
W. Oevls. V., IU ~ • IJI .~
G11ton. $0 111 l1' 11 Ut .Ul 111-. '"' 1n ,,, tt •• .m
MllM111. All 10t 61 a "' .In I . Wllll.mi, Chi U' di !Of 111 .Jtl
Hk:krn•"' Chi 111 a1 11 u' .ut -·-·-"'· CIMlllMI~ 'I: Petez. Ctr1tilll• ""'"' •1 I . Wllllflftl, (lliCllO. lli1 H
Al"°"" Afit11t1, "'' Rkll Allfll. Jt,
l.Olill" ». It-l1ltH Ill
l111tll, Clllclo'l11&tl, 1th Pertt. Cl11•
c!l\Mtl, 1111 I . WIHl1rn1, Chiu ... !Oii
H, ..,.,., Alltulll• lti1 flidl Alftll. II.
Lwlt. lot.
Dozens of Great Selections!
Ray Bloch Singers; Hello Dolly/101 S~s
Play Henry Mancini f_.;te;/ Joe Soulh Slo!J I
Scheherazade/Beel-Piano Co11cerlo #5/
Nas/wl\le Ccootry Slngorsc Hils llf Glen
Campbell & Eddit-/lluper Blac*-
tleaturtng T-Bone Walloer, Joe Turner,
otis Spahn)/ 101 S!rings Play Million
Sellet Hits ~ lhe·Beatles/Franl<
Chackslield: Movie Themes.
Dozens more!
Two 8-traclc Ampex Stereo
Tape cartridgestogo ...
1 just *4 811
l\'1'!f.V1
You c.ao •ho, 12 t• 5 St.tndayt, too, ot ,.._. '•".., A1i1to
C•"t.m IUfHA PA•K* CANOGA ,A•K CA•LS.IAO CHUl.4
VISlA DOWNEY fUlLERTOH HUHT1NGfOH IEACtt
MONTClAIR ~l!WPOlt'T IEACH O•ANGE .,.Hf CITY"
VENTURA. Ckh.. j,. • , • ithcl,g• flt
• OrAngelhotpa .. V•Nty Vi-. (Qoeed Mdoyt)
Our prices go down
on polyester cord tires.
Your ;$3vings go up.
•
N11oft fllt colt.. terry alipioott auto
1o•t CIO'fen• Utne honclsom. CO¥ef..UP~
pootecl you< origiool upbol.llery. S,,_.,j
color-4••
tocirtl ttyl• air c••hieR ltw:cket 1eot
cover. Co,.fortable wire A1e$h HOt cove<
keeps yo11 cool Mt su"'"'8t', wana io wi•*·
S..erol colon.
2''
FOREMOST GP4-78WITH
4 Pl ES OF TOOOH P0JYESTER CDl>I
Sale ·$18
plfl fe'd, la.t ortd old tit•
Blockwoll i.b6'-
Size 7()(). 13 Reg, 21.4S fed. Im LM
Size .56(). ij Re!J-21.4S . f.d. -1.75
NOW$21
pl .. led. .... ortd old tu.
s;,. f78-14 Rog. 25."5 Fed. ••• 2.u
NOW$24
"'"' led. ""' -i old "" S<ze GJ8, I 4 Reg. 77.4S Fed.tmUO
sn. GJ&..1' Reg. VAS feel. ""' lAG
NOW$27
pies led. tua .-1 old""
Si"' ~15 Reg. 29.45 fed, Im 2.IO
ww-.as $3 _,,,
..-effect;.e tin Salwdoy
, .. ,.,,.. -ca•• •I..,. .. ._ W
c....u.i-r.aeeior<Ml-.._....n
3kw9"-~ ...........
21'..d ... loue•s.sa... ... ,-. , 1
•e411st · 1 I I r 1 clll\fr
enne111 auto center
Yet you c.on 1hof) I 2.Jo S Sunday•,'°°• ot ony of these Penr.ey Auto Centers: BUENA l'ARK 11 CANOGA l'ARK CARLSIA_D CHULA
VISTA DOWNEY FUllERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" VENTURA. Dfivo io.,. C-. It
"Oz s , _.... .. -~...._.
•
-2_f DAILY PILOT
Alamitos
Racing
Entries
"' "' ...
"'
1 ': ...
LOWER LEFT HEl:L FIRST. f
Start your downswin& by low·
erinc your ltft hHI. Nothing
else must take plate .prior to
this kty mave.
Lowering your left hee I
smoothly at the outset of your
downswing automatjctllY pro-
ducts good results durhJC your
retu rn to the ball. for example,
the clubhead is kept on its
proper path.
But the big advantaae ta low-
ering the left heel first Is that
your downswing is properly
timed. It est1blishes an orderly
sequence of movement thatcul·
minates in m1ximum clubhead·
sp~d at impact. The result:
...... . . ~• • I
1•coti10 u c•. -"*''*'-l 1•... maximum distance. old~ 111111 ~ ci.1mJ119. ~IHM s toll. ~~1:9,,,.,.. ~>:.:;,., 117 ~~ ... ~·~"";;;"~,..~-;;~ .... ;;;-;;;;~====::~;:;~~===l hll!tio. e• r:Ciif.1 no llr 9111Jltr1" CWlllonl 111 Mooifl C!fbMr CPtrllf<l IU ~
l"Odcfl llect.1':.,.!IC•"ld 1\' LOW SCOflESI HIGH POWUrl Gtt pftnlfof roffin& h1lp In Atnold ~ ~oJ 1,!1';&.._111 i1~ PalrMr's booklet, ''T" Sbotl ind F1irway ""Woods." written ...
TJrw TOUCfl \P••v•• 1 ,., cl111i¥1ty tor r.aders of lflfs cotumn. A c:opr fs YoUrs for 20s ~nd :t:.~~~.J1 Ir': • sllmpld, Hlf·afdraucl envllOptl s1nl to ArMIM P1lm1r, c/o
AIM 11111... ttus lllWI PIP",
S[r 81r M BOii ~ii •,•n, tf.;~11111·1 ~ Mlolalt c'Jr.11MI
, ..
"' ...
"'
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SIXTH llAC:~. olOO vard•. 2 v••r "l11h. l(llldtf'91r1en Tr11l1 -2,.,, Div, PurM \~todV !Per"'rl uo lllMI ot A-!• iMl.trl 11'
0.-... l .. 'tl 'M Uf!Cle ClllOt C•r 11 110 A·HO llttt1r1ln1 !LIPh1"'I 111
A-Mid MIU\t. ir:'*1) 117 "'' l•llY 11 ) 1'111 l,.V_! 1rt H I -Vesse11 s11mon Firm E11trv.
"' "' "' "' "' '" "'
1 Y••r ~l~nl•.
"' "' "' '" '" "' '" •M
I .. ..
'" "' "' '"
Los Alamitos
Racing: Results
LOS AU.MITOI ••SUL TS ..... .-.,, ....... lt, ,,,.
CIMt I ••tt
•laST ltACI. :IJll y1r<11, M•lcMn J
V••r Oldl bred kt C•lll. Cl•lm1"'1. p.,,,, lll'OO.
Drew P!1v tSmlTlll
C1nl1I Holl (Drtvtrl
$1111rlft'I RIOll"il (Slr1111•)
TinWI: .IWllO.
1.20 l.00 J.611 '·"° J.olCI ...
AIM rt11 -Sodl'I kltll, Hu .. J
Ch_, lumt Trlnr. Fotblclcletl, Bon·
•lklt TO!IV, H•ll QulclC, AOtnlt•I W•kll.
Scr11cNd -P•r• Lu .. Cit! F« Aeho
Wv-. Fll•lll Pllfl.
\l!CONO a&CI. l!lO \llroh, 3 vur
t11dt •lld ""· Cl11mf111, ,..,.. .. t\IOll • Ju111~ 11o¥ (ll..,.._) S . .0 l...O J.IO
FIHI (hlrtor CLCW110rll) U.20 1.00
The kolttlMn ll"11tl 7.20
Tim.: .1 .. :lllll .
..Ito ''" -11•-111'" Our.n. Gettlt U•
Joe, Potktl llOC:ktl. C• &ob, fllthV
Holl951, lltoPI• a.<1.
Scr•tcllecl -fr•nkl• FrM. c;,..,,.111,
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tJ MIOtfTL Y OOUaL•. l · DrlW
rr.r & J • J11111111 a1r, M141 114.ff.
THlaO IACI. W v1rd1. l vt1r 11d1
1M 11P. Cl1l'"ln1. Purte $1IOO.
Nitti Dll '-''' ILl!ll>lmJ •.20 J.40 J 6<I
Oja \11tt (Hlfl,lnt l JM ),00
eotltllf 11vou 1c1rdu1I 1.l'O
Tllftl: .1 .. 1/lt.
Alllo r111 -TMllll1 Doc. An Of ""'· 5~1 ln\IN, S._., W'1(11, Mr,
Ml11•, lrllh SN, ll•ld NlbbL
lcr11t....i -Gllll'V &e, 81rlombl,
Dl!k.111 MIU, Ml-On.
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o!Ot -!,IO , Al1ow1ncn. Purll noo:t. Whtow IMIJttl IAlll ltl 7.611 J.JG J.IO
ll:Ofl Slcl<l1 (Perntrl 2.40 1 . .0
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T'"'°1: .17-1/ID.
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Didi, llnct. Pifer, Lorrtt• Lerlt. Lii· --Ho Ktlk ... s.
Ptl'TM llACt'. U) Ytrd1. 2 ~11r oldt.
Cl1!mlP111. Purte U!OO .
1141fffr1'1 °""" fl'•••l 11 '° '·'° ) 1(1 Trut Grit lf't•ntrl ll.00 ;.IO
Mr. SNOr tAd1lrl 160
Time: .It 1111.
4 110 r1n -Sllned Tln1, 1'ru1 kt!it ,
Sn11~1' TNkv, Roc~tl B•r flov, Mfl••·
Or. Maon, l(lpty•t Moo11, AO\IOpOUll. kr1tc:~lnln1 aid. OH T1clle,
G• hit Go.
Tl'"•' .4S·f l111 •
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lu1, Morw1'1 •111 ~v.
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SIY•NfM aAC:I'.. lloO Vlrdl. 3 VHr
.,..,, •nd u,. Alllwtl\Ctl. Purll n.ot.
ll1rl90 llotktl 11111111/ lte 4.llO S.llO
llHd'I Tot>le (Aidllr) 4.«I l .611
l(•-11 lllr TOP ( ..... 111rj '·"°
TlrM: .II 1'111.
AIM r111 -Kl,.. aoe1111, •••4 LM.
J11u•<'• Go Go, 01MY 91r Diii,
PllllNr. Donl1 a1 Good.
,.''"" .11 111r. Sctl!Clled -L~hfftl!M lltbtl. Coed.
$hf'"r0d.1t, Ont Of Tl'lr11, Okllll''I .....
NllllTM llAC•. JS y1t111. 1vwr11d1
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C:hlll air (IC•nltl 3.211
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llol11c1Clftt ltod, W ... t Lllrt. S9"ildl
Plllll'', L.tt•t Go Sim, DovbMI Don.
kr1khed -C1llllmL. ..,._, Unt!·
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U IXA(TA, t·Ml'I A ... ., .. , I
J . Yt11 •••n• H141 SMl.M.
Physicals Set
For Jaycees
Dates and times for physical
examinations for prospective
football players al the three
area Junior colleges havt been
announced.
Saddleback Collqe will give
physicals Thursday, Aug. 27
from H p.m. Golden West
physicals are scheduled f o r
llX"TM 1tACL t1D •••d• 3 ye,, 01d, Aug. za..27 at 7 p.m. while
•11111 "'· Cl1lmln1, PU<M UDClll. aound1,.. 01 M•• Orange Coast. has :slated two
F011~":,~':'11L l1th•ml 7.c ~~ ~:: datesA-Aug. 28 (8 :30-9 p.m.)
r..ntr ltlYtrWln (H1rtl l.20 and Uf. 29 (9-Jl a.m.), iiii..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiilii• I
Comprehensive
evening programs toward
Bachelor of Science
and Master of Science
degrees
Systematic, dynamic Instruction Is given by an outstanding faculty
of practicing scientists and engineers holding advanced degrees
from top universities throughout the nation.
More than 12,000 technicians, engineers, and administrators -both
men and women-have continued full·time employment while
working toward their degrees at West Coast University.
S.S. degr••• In engineering, computer aclence, applled m1them1t1ca,
•nd •pplled phy11 ...
M.S. degre•a In system• engineering 1nd m1n1gement acl1noe with
eight optlon1 for opecl•llutton.
New term 1t1rtfng: Undergraduate courses begin Oct. 26 at Los
Angeles Center and Nov. 23 at Orange county e.nter. Graduate
courses begin Oct. 26 at Los Angeles Center. Send coupon ~low or
phone for information.
550 So. M1in St.. Or1nge, C.llf. 92688
Lot Anaettl phone: Orang• County phone:
(213) 382-1372, Ext20 (714) 6'7·~712, Ext.20
Pt1111 Mnd information on: 0 Undergraduate program 0 Gr1du1te program
NAME~-~--------------------AOORESS--------------------~
CITY STATE ZIP·-----
.. . • .. ~ .• ~.;'J' ..... i j '7r""QiWS PW ......... I ";;J + ; i ••..• , ... ., .. ~ ..... r
Rustler Outlook P1·omising
Golden West COiiege's cross
c.'OOnlry team already i s
measuring the ·d I 1 t a n c e
between September a n d
November and prospects or a
Southern Ca 11 for n i a Corr
fertnce championship.
1be outlook is promi.sing for
the 1970 Rustler harriers. Last
fall coach Tom Noon's squad
camecktse, posting a s.1 mark
in con!erence dual meets and
finlshing second In the con-
ference meet behind East Los
Angeles.
This year Noon has five
returning veterans and nine
freshmen candidates around
BUY
IN
PAIRS
which to bulld, and iI they
perform to expttt.at.IOC1s
Golden West could !inJsh In
rront.
lieading the list ot returnees
will be ltam captain Terry
McKeon, runnerup in the 1969
conference meet. M c K e o n
finlshed three seconds behind
Art. Martinez, (East LA) Jn a
time of 21 : 15. He also Is the
conference's defending two-
mile champion with an im·
pressive 9:26.7.
Noon described McKeon as
"a runner that really comes
thl'Ollgh when the pressure ls
applied. He runs under the
n1ost adver8C conditions nnd
never runs a poor race. lie Is
one outstanding com petilor."
Also back from 1969 are Vic-
tor tt1artinei, "·ho finished
third in the conference, Bob
Chamberlain, tttel liobbs and
Steve Seyler.
Frosh will fil l out the seven-
man varsity and seven-man
juaior varsity rosters. Among
the hopefuls will be Jack
McQuown, Huntington Beach ;
Tim Funk, Fountain Valley;
Ken 1-lurst. Steve Lassegard ,
Steve Varga, Don Diston,
Westminster; Steve Chris·
tiano, Fountain Valley; and
Richa rd Priest. Costa Mesa.
EACH $16 95 IACH $19.95
Pl111 f1d. (JC, T11c
$2.17 to 2.23 ptr tirt
depending on si1•
" For thrills and besut)I ... •
watch the
Thoroughbreds!
Rese(ved seats from,$1.25. .
(Saturd,ys & holidays, $1 .50.)
Phone (714) 755-1141 . For •pec/1/
blises, call Greyhound.
Racing Mon. thru Sat.
Poat time 2 p.m. ., .. ,~
Thorough6t1d Club
••
IL
UNlltOTAL
COAJf TO COAS1'
LlfnlMI! J 11-":~~-~· •••t0< <or fit•, •IW ,~ ...... l>I•••~ ''"'"" J •• ""10 J.DJ". i.;11 Mr If ... , ·-·· ........... .. • , ..... i .. ~i. ,. ... o .. ...
....... 11 ..... 1t 11.,._ ...
IACH $22.95
.... 11.-.. , ... _. '"" .. ., ..... ,;,. .... plttl•oat• i. IN l'•tl•
... I l!Ood 10....:oiot -· ..... td •• ·~• u,,..,, u.1-•• ,...1 .... , .. 1 .... , ......
,rite I...,. AOti..wiM ..i. 1~u-.1 ...,....,1 ....... .... ;_,__, .. -..
,.,. fl,11 .,.;i,, ....... ,..., 1-w .. -11;. . ... ,
Pl111 fed. l ie. T.1ic
$2.47 to 2.80 p1r tire
dtptndin1 on si11
Pl111 Te •. Ix. Tat
Sl.84 lo 2.04 per tire
•e111n"ln1
n size NO TRADE·lN NEEDED
205-15 ltjt!K .. 121·11 w 170.11
2 '" $69
earh '37 SO
••ffK•l· 155·1 C ... 1110-11
21S.15 lt,iK°' IUJ·IJ .. 1171-IJ 2 ,., $75
235-15 1.,r..11 tiS.IS
2 '" t79
••u h "'1 ~o
UNIROYAL~
~ WHILE THEY l.AST SPECIAL PURCHASE-
/SLIGHT BLEMISHES FASTRAK Gl.AS·BEL T
E71-14 '1u1 F'ld. E.r..T•i: $2.lJ por tl ... + GI.ASS llLT
2 for $56 ·
each $30.95
F71-14/7.75-l4 G7~14/8.25-14
'78-15/7.75-15
G7&.15/8.25-l5
rr~1 Feil. E•. Toe
'"' tir• $1 . .S.S te
$1.17 "'"'"'1 .. ,
Cl/I •i••
eJr h $37 9'>
M11.1418ss.1.t
H78-1s11.ss.1s
J7a-15tl .a5·15
Pr.,, F1d. It. T ...
,., ,;,. $2.9] ..
$J.OS 41pffliiin1
WHITEWALL ONLY $2.95 MORE
Most alzes In 1todr.
'20,000 Miii GUAIWITIE
TUBELESS WHITEWALLS OR BLACK
BRAKE
RELINE 2 for $25 VW's 560.15
650.113
700113 135111 4.
735115 ltd W1tliou! r.h•.,. ' ~u~~~~.~::-2195·
lff ,..,,. '°" i.bor Miu" Ito ... ""~" ~for$28 775114
a25114
15~114 115114
775115
·wt1r.oul or l•ll -... MMt II ""'-rlfl 01 -•k• ... _
fllMlllllp dutlt>g lh• • • 20,0CIO mlftt .. n..i. Cort
,T•I• fllltMOlti 11 Ml lrflllflf•blt. Dhc lrttlr" r.,,..
TRAILER Tlhhi.:::.---__ ::-;:,.:;o,:; •FOREIGN CAR TIRES· WIDE TIRES• WIDE UYAIS •STEEL REINFORCED. 78 SERIES. 70 SERIES. e
Semiitp
Tire Stores
CW here tJiere_ is more than meets_ the e~
ANAHEIM I CORONA I GARDEN GROVE I HAWAIIAN GARDENS I HUNTINGTON BEACH ft61 1100KHURS1' 136 W 6th ST 11601 wtSTMINSTlll: 11972 CAISON ST 19411 llACM atVD. !AT lOKOLN) " • '6 ILOC~S lASI Of ltACrl) fl[lWl(N PION([-& aWAi.Q M Mill NOITll Of .\CIMUI
635·1170 735·6010 193.3595 165-0227 5:16-7571 --·
SANTA ANA I
HAllOlt AT 10l5A
llt-3700
r~J
UNIROYAL
SANTA ANA
1211 W. WARNEii AV[.
4WAlltf -AT 1-l~IOl.I
SCO.IH6 I TUSTIN
131 l. 111 5TllfT
(1st A"D "D" SI./ 544-9431 I WESTMINST':ER::----;,-':'.CO:"'.S'.:"TA:-'."'.M:"'.ES"'."A·-~1:---S-AN:..;;.,;Cl.:,:EM,;.E_NTE_,
WUTMINSTHI AT CIDAI NEWPORT BEACH p llOCIS r. Ctl COlotlt Win) 927 N. [L CAMINO UAL
19J·3S21 322 IASl' 17t" ST. 492.5543 642-4131
USI YOUR MAJOR CREDIT CAllD I OPEN 8·8:30 DAIL y I 8-5 SAT.
•
WHAT'S IN-
OUTDOORS?
bJ .IGdr """'°"'
Deep Sea
Fish Report
-·
-----·---------------. ------
TMldl1, .l1191ut 20, 1970
LEGAL NOTICE
•
... -.. --
DAil V rlLOT %7
LEGAL NOO'ICE
I
I
•
I
l
• HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSl!S Fott SALE HOUSES l'OR SALi! HOUSES l'Ollt SALi HOUSl!S l'Olt SALi HOUSl!S l'Ollt SALi HOUSl!S 'OR SALi
f'°""~~,.~·•~.liiijiiijiiijjji;il~OOO~Clenor~~·~1 !!iiiiiii!!iii~l~OIOi;i;l;G;°';,.;r;•;I ;;;:;;;:~;;;:1;"'~°"";;;:-;~•~l;:~;;;:;;;;';"';;;i:G;•;.,.;;•;•;I ;;;;;;;:;;;;;;il;OIO;: o.n.rol HOO c:..t• -. 1100 Newport BHm 1200 Boltio. Ponfn1ulo UICI fl e OPEN DAILY l·S e • DUPLEX 2 l 4 br. "'"'. OWNER
-S.. Collop Rutty lw fl / {) A 11!!!!1-..... $19 500 '111 ..id! -ti(~ VA ..,.... l boy. By ownu TRANSFERRED
-.. MESA VERDE GOLF ol..inda J~le r;;;;;:J ...... ,_ ,,.. Pv .... -· 152.500. ......... • Penlnoula 1'>tnt. GE '-COURSE CUSTOM ' •. I l B<. W/W cpb, ...... I"!-FABULOUS e.,vlew; 1 l BR. hoil>e. SOXIOO lol. 14<.
HOMES from $6',SOO lo PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SCARCE 3 """"""· 2 both, dble cu med • ...,.,. ... , Oni, 1%1.-homes, by onr. '°" Caluy patio. Neu priv: tenni. club. REALTY $92,500 Newly listed -Lot •60; perfoc:t for tho fam-You b<I! • Bed!ooml. lamlly. _.with bui• IWll •n-""'· Dr."" 204 KJnp PL 64&-1994 boat nmo. boy & ,...,,_
1816 Jameic• Rd lly who wants a spacious waterfront home. 4 wp dlnlrw . .t: qytniJed ltv-cloaed ywd. Neat A de•n Call; Patrick Wood. M5-2DI . $45,950, 3065 Country Club Dr. .a: hand 1 Extra lge BR.,_. Ba., pwdr. rm. Lge. liv. rm. inc nn. AU on one Jevd. adult occupied ~ Call e BUI H•ven, Realtor Ntweort Hefthts 1210 ---
l.ml•, rambhng. spacious ~ in~~ ~' bl•ck~ & den: 3 car garage. BeauL paUo/garden; ~tl.tul abq ctrptts • now to att "THE BAJiCAIN 2lll E. Cout, t.dM 673-3211 4 BR., lar&e den -J!6,9M
c.alif. JTIOdtorn "'i thall•booi '4-alnut-pandled a1r condi-deck & dock. Lot •60. dn.pu. Sq~aky dean in-OF THE YEAR". EASTSIDE Ne~ He'-hts
3(Q) ~-ft. of qu ·tY t.toned pme room with l2' side i: out. rtad,y to mow llAMILY HOME ""r-·• .., Near N.H.Y.C: 4 BR .. ~
<:harm. Lots 01 bednns + wt"t bar overlooking the For inform1tton on into! Top COit.a Meu loca· Newport 3 •-•--·. 2 •-t•-. d·-.. B•rg1ln lot R..2 lol Only $11,500. famil.). fnrmal dining 4 courv. 4 Bi1: bedrooms u All lots & homa II tion neu scbools. park I: P\."""'11wt -... .,IU~ !iOx127 Level, ma~ otter, Frank Marshall Rl!'alty ~nr ~n! t.Ven a Uny wrU u: family,dinini • 81 LL GRUNDY, REAL T:OR ahopp'r. J\dl price $38,500 at de.Incl"-d"!~h~'-with btJPilt t·inl may aece:pt much lns than 510 W. Balboa Blvd. 616-4600
.. -bre9kfast rooms too. Mar\)' with temia, Call 5tQ..USl • "' .. _...r -U& • li.sted price ot. $16,500. CASH beauurul extru:. 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8 . 6'ti..4620 Falrv5-w big 2 car sance and sepa. TALKS! MODERN DUPLEX
.»tO C•pri Li"n• 3090 Bali Circle
Desji:mf'd tor ju!t thfo ri£ht About 175' a!ong Ult 15th Gener•I t• G..,.r•I
family a truly lari::" 12522: faiN.11y, and a.n oa:uiona11--;;,;.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::; 1000
SQ. n .1 l"USlom ··1"''0 btd-''if'w of ocean A Catalina.I• room~ -1€'at"h aboul 15" Big 5 brdroom + conver-
x 25·1. Grf'Clan tub. radl-tible 5ludy il both dining
Ml kt-at. phlmbtocl for pool. A: family rooms., 4 baths.
Truly difff'N'n1 I: inlt'T'f'll-1 Sparkling, fuJJ,y f'Qu.iJ>S)f!d •
ifW floor plan it t'~-p&nd-pool -most inviting. Spe-4 VA
ablf>. I ciaJ brochure availablt>.
1500 Adams •t H•rbor, Costa Mes•
(ne•r Cinem• the•ter) 546-.SUO
BR /No Dn
Mesa Verde
BecliUR Of IJl'gmcy, OWMf
1000 will pay the points for you
4 BIG BEDROOMS
MESA VERDE
COUNTRY
to use yoor VA loan. This
nict" home iJ loca~ l block
from 5Chool Md libnry ~
shopping closie by. No down
payment financing is very
--
4 BED
BEAUTIFUL
ONLY $26,900
HUl"e trtts. New carpets Cred
ab8g in elm). Tbe owner bu
crea?M a truly llve&ble
home. 11000 down FHA or
try No Down VA.
IT'S A DILLY,
DON'T DALLY
Remember the ~ .,mg,
the 8riy bird ptl the
worm. Jt'a ~ with va1Ue. tor the buyer -just
lilied in nice C.0.ta Mesa )o..
cation. 3 BR, 2 bathl, $25,950
-AND )'OU'll tiuy it be&n
)'O;U pt throurb the front c!OOr. .
64Ulll pn .... te ":'!!"n""'n. l25,500 -Jean Smith, Realtor ' Bl\. 2 Ba. up; ' BR. 1 .... -... down. Frplc., blt·ins; eood
(1nyt1me} rental area. Owner a.nxiolls!
Priced at isi,950.
COSTA MESA 1 ~~!!!'!!~!!!!!!!!!!!~1 Call nJ.JHJ
NORTH SIDE BY OWNER: LOVELY l 8' Unlverslly Pork 1237 1ssoc1'1ted· Gorgtou,s 2 stcl")' Ncrthpte •
with tbtlahe:l Bonus Room. crpWdrpa. 2% car/~.
3 or t ~to chooee LARGE covered patio "KICK THE HABIT'' 81tOkllt&-AIALTOltS
from. CUl-dMac •treel w/brick BBQ. Nicely , •. of~ rent! Why do 2025 W.lalltoa, N.I.
Dttppilecarpet:wtthmak.b-landr.aptd. yard. Walk to 11. when for a amaD down (EYes. c:all: 642-0507) U. drapn:. "GI'' No Down drnl/Jr/A: HiP IChl.1. ~ paymt. You can BUY an I .......... .,,.. ... ;;;;;;;;;;01 _ alao FHA terms. Let's Assumable GI Lo an . , ___ .. 2 bd I' 6U-ll3'1 OPEN SAT-SUN a .. -~...... nn. town-
10-4 boulffo, with )'OUt own pr. ~===~=~~-I den, for only u:i.950! ·
WEST BAY AVE. Trade!
Walker & lee
~al tors
2790 Harbor Blvd., at Adami
569491. Open 'ti! 9:(1) PM
ASSUME FHA 6% e Red Hill RHlly
Uqiv. Park C.nt". lrvino
CalJ anytime 83.l-ODJ
DRAMATIC
3 Bdnn. 2 bath in lmmac.
Charming new 3 bdrm. 2 ba.
Mediterrane:an style; Blcr.k
from Oct&ll &-bay. Builder's
borne, top quality.
Bill Grundy, R1altor
833 l)(w£r Dr., NB &U.-4QI
O!Jtstand1ng home Jocatl"d on 1 a qu.W-1 cu..l.ot-u.C" street
,.,'ith btoaul landscaping and
large cowl'N J>ltio. Thi"
spac..ow; intttl<lr 15 tuletul.
Jy M«Jn1ttd & appointed
•ith a massi\'e dble f~
plaa-. Ifs Ont' of P.~sa
Verde-'1 GR.EATVAUJES a1
LIVING rare in Meu Verde-, to
pleue call rigbt away!:
Nichols Real Estate Nichols Real Estate
P.AIL>YIUIS CilJl.&JWI aa•HT• DOYER SHORES
1093 naker C M 546-s+tll Spacioos. beautifully con--
4 Bednn, 1 ~ bath &: den,
Westside, 1950 aq. ft. A·~
condition. $2500 Down.
Coste Mis• Investment
541-n11
cood BeautlfulJy landaca~ -------
ed. ;,On@ of a kind" and Lido Isle 1351
only SJli,500.
On A Full A~re 546-9521
.. , J k N!<HOL~ ,.,'Ii;! nncti lfPe 3 bedroom
home, compl >reP11inted, llPW
mh.,,'lhr' It disposal, lgr de.
1ached cov. patio, outdoor
brick frplc ,I, BBQ. Many~~~~~~~~~~
shadr tn!t's. Horws allow-* ed. Owner -.,;u fine. 11 8!-2%
-huny !hit. won't last!! TAYLOR
I~~~~·~-~-~~~~I structed family bome. 4 IMMACULA.TE 2 yr. ol.d 4
546-9521 L ? Bedroomt 6 batha formal Br. 2 ba, ft.Jn. nn. Nr. So. 1 :;~~;;;::;;;::;;;:;;:1BEACH ORIENTED? diniug room, brea.kfut Coast Plua. 15X38 patio WALK TO THE SURF &:-room. Kitchen designed tor w I co v • 6" " Io an
TAKE Outb SAlID trom Ibis alJDOlt new entertaining Extensive new uawnable. $28,950. $2500
price ju5t ~uced to 129.950!
BOB PETTIT, RHltor
"SINCE 1946"
days 83U101 nights
Turtle Rock 1239 'U\ Spa.niah custorn·built home walled terrice dn., owner w/c:uey 2nd.
with four spacious bedrooms. • 546-1363 Aft. 6 PM, all day 1----------6~% VA LOAN fonnal dining room. ~-Wttkends: owner. Macnab-Irvine
Realty Company
642-1235 675-3210
Z-ST.Y. t Br. l Ba. Fam. rm.
Assumf' 6% ~ loan. 10%
On. 188)5 Tabor. 833-2929
LARGE HOME
5 Bedrm, famUy r m., xlnt
1trttt to street 45 ft. lot.
B:; app't only.
197,000
Owner may trade down for 3
Bdrm. home in Terraces,
CdM, with ocean view.
LIDO REAL TY INC.
3.11 Via Lido 67J.7300 co: Ts
WALLACE
REALTORS
°"" : .....
$49,500 DOVER SHORES
O....lightfully dillerent! Brand
~ 4 bdrm, den & garden
rm w/wet bat. Dramatic 2-
1ty living nn wlba.lcony.
Extra sharp 2 year old home
with 3 bedrootnJi, lireplaee,
hltns and a great ki1dwn.
Owners have increased the
living area by adding a love.
ly covered & screened pa.
tio. $189 pa.ya all. $29.900.
rale lamily room, pool-table.
size GAME ROOM, Use of
association pools, teMis
coorta &: recreation area for
nominal monthly fee. $64,950
INCLUDES TIIE LAND.
MESA VERDE'
$:11.950 COZY cottage -larte
ya.rd -needa 8011\e tender
loving catt. Priced for im-
m@diate sale -all terms 1240 EXPANDABLE cozy com-
pact. 3 Br, on Jg. sunny k>t. available. Call S 4 5 · 8 4 2 41----·=.,-.---PRICE 'iiiDUCED ~500· aw.... '1>-:1643. EXCLUSIVE 'VTn1: FHA -VA-$21,500 South Coast Realtors. -546-4141-
(0pon E•..,int•l •. -C. F. Colesworthy
"-00 REALTOR
1028 Bayside Oriw
675-4930
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, all elee·
tric built·in kitchen, Jarp
family room. hOD1e' on a
corner lot with room for
boat storage. Assume low in.
tere1t Joan. See Toda,y! 546-
2313.
·~
3 BR, 2 BA + 3 room de-. B lboa I I nd tached 1tudio. $45,950, A&f. e I 8 1355
PEl=ll=lON
* TAYLOR I 642-tm ·~'-OPEN DAILY m .cm
•
COATS
&
WALLACE
REALTORS
9552 Homllton Ave.
Huntington Beach
3 BR I den. 1% Ba, 54S-I014. ----
-.~ .... -.-.--T"t~--410 1'-1orning ';tar Lane
-···-.. -WATERFRONT ~;;;;;;;;;;~\s1· on channel ,.,,/pier &. dock.
IRVINE TERRACE ,. 3 Bdrm. 2 sty. Beam ceiling. "" .. _ • ,. ...... ,., ""' YACATlllll PllOPEllY o ..... ,. will ,,.,,.,, l.n T.D.
this 'llld Jocated 4 bdrm HWTY! Won't last. $85.1'.m
honlf' ready Jar-occupancy 1. Oa~ .tlllY5 meU • 2.%> 962-4454 •
"FANTASTIC"
A large 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
double C'aJ' garage home,
near beautiful COUege Park.
A[ built-in fire alarm & in-
ercom syslem. Block walled
0 THE REAL '> ESTATERS
Fam/hOme. Plea11anl
neighborhood, nr sch. Well EH I bluff 1242
kept. Many Xtras. 1 4 1 0 ---------Wauion Ave., $25,500 ..
E-SIDE Tri·plex, xJn't loca.-
tion, 2 br ea. Garages, fenc-
ed Y?s· lncome $405 mo.
Principals only. By owner,
UNOBSTRUCTED
VIEW
Family rm.. dminc rm. ,. acres 5UfTOWded b>'
)ol.-ely poal, ST;i.OCll. hwJUng. fidw:ic_. Near
"Our 25th Year"
WESLEY N.
;:~;;;;;;:;1 yard, La.rgr aluminum COV·
; ettd patio. All thi1. under
JUST LISTED! rnA-VA temu of only $22,·
950. 546-2313.
BA Y$HORES S38.500. 642-55lt.
Assume $22,000 51/•% GI
Dazzling clean and 1unshine
bri&ht ~ the be11t word1 to
detttibe thia outstanding, l
bedroom 2~ bath cautree
condominium. Priced right
at only $49,500. Call 613-3550 "Our 25th YMr'' Klamath Yalls, Oregon.
WESLEY N. l. Ind.me Villagf'. 1~ R·2 TAYLOR CO Jot. c""' to ,JO lift. boot. RHll<>rs Opon For ln1pectlon
TAYLOR CO.
O TIIEREAL
'"\.. ESTAT!:RS
BEST BUY! 4 Br. 2 Ba.,
forced air heat; cov. patio, loan on 4 BR. den, 1%. ba.
bit-in BBQ w/frpl, Furniab-Cpt/drp. 710 Robinhood Ln.
$31.000 FP 64&1294. O THERI:AL
''"\.. ESTATLRS ed. ONLY $39,500. • 111& On goU courR NEWPORT CENTER Sundey 2 to 5
RPlton ~ location · 2lll San Joaquin Hilll Road 2057 Commodore Rd. ~'E'l''PORT CENTER 3. 1Ake M1~. :? lots,llijiijjjjji6j!4jij4i4ij9i10iijiii!j~ Elegant Spaniah atyle 4 bdrm,
"C" THOMAS e EASTSIDE-lbr.lg.,....
$2.4,000. Easy tf'!mll. By
nu San Joaquin Hills Road VW!w o1 Jake. no smoe ·I l bath plus ! home in ex.14·-B~E~D-R~OOM==s~~,32=,9"50~ Realtor ownu. 64&-2!1115. e EAST BLUFF
2'l4 \V. Cout Hwy. 5'8-55271-:i:;;;;:ii;;:=::===== LUSK PLAN-D: 4 br, 3 ba.
Newport Beach eve1 545.5643 Mesa Verde 1110 PLUS den w/vtew-lr. heat-644-4910 citnui area. ,Ult'f, ;BJ·· • ' cl111i~ Baycrest. Courtyard fllA and VA Tenna:. Heavy Jean Smith, Realtor • • entry. Largo polio Mlh ''"" roof. b<autilul ootry Eastsi~, C.M. Spanish tile Ir Adobe brick. way and center hall.I. 2 gor. THREE UNITS
G 0 Absolutely Unm.acWate! This geous batha. HUGE kitchen, OYetnrnent 646-3255 UCHI beautiful home is decorated built·ins also Diahwu.ber. $3.500 PRICE REDUCTION.
Loan $165. P.J.T.I. per mo. 2 ~~~~~~~~~~IOwner commuting to in\leS't-to perttttion, Call for a~ "family Room". Lots of On 2 Bdrm unit • 1 bdrm. •·-e bedrms w/,.,·--'robe ment firm In Beverly Hllls! · · unit • bachelor cot"" .... Dou. ..... ..., u pomtmenl. carpet1 and drapet. Oriw -.~
closets. Living nn w/fire. And hates it~ Arucious to J S Ith R It Sa ble garage • Large laundry
• "'"'· dini"" room + rat-7 Rll his big beautiful 4 bed· ean m. ea or by 3lD8 Roanoke Lane t· rm. Ne&r gchooll a.nd aho~ ·~ ' urda.y U PM or call inP" area Jn kil('hen. Scrvlt:f: rm. 2 slory hofll(' in excel-ping. A bargain 1t only
-·-Now «pl< & -• Jent Mc.. v...... IOC>tion. ::646-325:::::;:5===1W a I k .. e.,r .. &n lee $33.txll. New FA healer. Oversized Great ramily floor plan, M. M. LeBorde, Rltr.
dble-i:a.r. ''Move-in condi· Out of town OWIK'r pricing largt> game room with fire-646-0553 Eves: 673-fillS
tion".
Only $:U,!lj()
Lachenmy1r Realtor
C.a.11 646-3928 or 545-3483
for immedlate sail'. spark-plaor & bar. dandy ba,:k Leases-Options 2790 Harbor mYd. at Adams
ling 3 bedrm hOme with near yard for sunning. Top quali. we have sevttal 3 I-4 54S-046S Open •tii g:oo PM DOVER SHORES
new carpets, gunken iiving ry lhruout. Easy to see! bedrooms (one with pool + 1430 Galaxy Drive
room with rozy lireplace. Easy 10 buy! $47,950. separa!P 20' x 20' game $22,300 A.SSUMABLE 4 Bedrms, 3 baths, 3 cat
all bltins, heavy 11hake roof nX>m ) and ooe rompletely Yes, assume this 8o/'o nu gar. Travutlne marble at.
& manicured yard. Won't furnished. Joan on a 'BeautifUI 4 Bed· rium. 14' high skylight,
THE ULTIMATE last long at $29,950!: CaU S22S to $33lt' room, 2 Bath home. All new panoramic view. Expertly
FAMILY HOME M>U24 Some with option lo buy carpets & drapes. Excellent crpld, drpd, A: decorated.
--------· I ed pool crpl.l/drpg.
ON THE F Al RWA y 835-C811 * * Mra. Norton
Ctlatom· built, t bedrm. ~ BWFFS; Condo 2 Br. 2-14
Uy room, 2 bi& fireplacea. ba, den. Split level, ·choicest
'Ibi& beautiful home over-greenbelt. $38,500. B y
looks the 17th la1rway o1 Owner 644-4906
Mea. Verde GoU Course. LUSK S BR, 3 Ba,. fa.m rm,
6%. assumable Joan. By own. din nn. Avail Sept. 10,
er. 3036 Java Rd. 540-40$.. Sf14.500. Owner, 644-0866.
$63.500. I===='====
a=v"'"'o"'WNER==-_-,-, 7b:-<."'J"bo,.,-. "3 I Coron• del Mir
car pr. Lrt-F /R. formal
din nn, intercom, Vacant
$45,500. 645-1148, 2873 Boa
Vista.
Newport BHch 1200
BROADMOOR
1250
I BeautilUI ""'"'°""· "' $21.500 to $33,.... cabinetry '" kitehen with $100.00J. Roy J . Ward ...... Newport Beach Home Juxw-y baths. 12'x12' Break. (Open Evenlnp} built-ins. See Toda,)'! Call tor. 646-1550. Open daily.
wt room. 16·""1• famil y HARBOR VIEW HILLS &541.,.10 546-2313"' """'1. SALE"'A•EN
BEAUTY
Mid-West owner Instructed
us to sell u. aoon u. poasi-
ble! 4 BR. 3 Ba. ~w home:
comp. cptd., drpd,, all bJl •
iM. Profess. lndscpd. 6% %
Assumable Joan. Reduced to
l<S.500 room -Sparkling healed ·Near 11f.'\\', view home ~ just I short block
pool -a complete Jana1 and with 3 bedrooms, 2~ balhs --c:::E~ 21. year old Newport Beach from Cliff Or. MM.'ftHt
bomb shelter -and rr:uit I ~~~~~~~~~~I SpacJOUS, enclosed yard ~ lllkt 1 JM firm hb opminga for 2 ex-C:O...IN·MAlrnNj]
tree1 pJore -all for only I PARTY PALACE family room with lireplace 1 Cz:=::::::z:=z=:zz=z=~li&i!'""!~~~~iii;i; perieaced real estate Wea-Spacioua 3 btodroom 2 bath -1 171·•1' $68,500 -Phonr. 646-nTI to Sunny, view kilchen I; ----men. Call: muter bedroom adjoining Q
Wpect. Luxury. entertainment home 3 car garage SPIC & r•AN FIXER-UPPER . Watt.r Haese 675-3000 tile bath with built tns, p1u1 UICK POSSESSION
O THE REAL
'"\.. ESTATERS
in UpJ>t'r Newport Bay near $57,500 . ..-5 Bedroom, big $19,200, ~1ic.~ DOUBLE LOT full bath with built 1111; llv. Spac. 3 Br. home, cameo
Country Club and U.C.I. 4 Shows on thia one! Gret.t GI lOaD at $155 tncluding 3 lng room with fireplace, din. H1ghlands. Beau. lge. entry;
bedrooms 12 are over king-locationnearahopplna:.Jdeal everY.tbtn 1 may be Wooded.1.00'xl.25' It. Cozy l.ng area and larle picture liv. rm. overlooking n!Cely
PERFECTLY
LOVELY!
2-Sty. family home. 3 Bdnns.
+ fam. rm., 2 batlui +
guest nn. " bath. Bit-ins,
carp., drape11. Obie. gar.,
shake roof, large patio. Call
to 1ee!
Salisbury
k..-..i11~
ns MARINE AVE. 67U900
BALBOA ISLAND
Hunllftffon llHch 1400
MOVE IN BEFORE
SCHOOL STARTS
by assuming subject to 6-%
annual percentage rate loan
this spacious 4 bedroom. 2
bath party home with cov.
ERED PATIO 8-B-Q PIT .
work-saver kitchen for
MOM, fireplace, everything
upgn.ded and a steal for Jess
than $5,000 DOWN, Cali be-
fore it'a gone!!
Walker & lee
Realtors
7682 Edinger
54().5140 842M55
PRICE REDUCED
$26. 750, 4 bedrm 3 hath, bltn
range, o...en, dishwasher,
l&l'l'e ovenized dbie garag•,
covered patio, All custom
tile kitchen, with deluxe ca.
binets. cement driveway,
block wall, landscaped. cpll,
drps, b'plc, large family rm.
l'"'M;l••11 '62-4471 ( :::: l ~1 J sized bedroom·sttting rooms) for retired couple or ycung ...umec1: 1. .. 1,.4.._ -,950, bdrm, 2 bath, dining rm.. windowa owrtooking lovely lndscpd. yard. Glassed la.
l;;;iii;i;i;i;i;;;;;; I f Uy "'4""' ~. .-•··"!.; .. kilchen with break-.. ,. '"' ni-··n·o. Qu·-• with HUGE walk·iiJ close11. am . ..., • · but mike otter!I Needs UWI ... aecluded lanai; wool carpet. e "''""1 •..... i..,. -1"' ......... fut attL Cove.red patio and pouess.; priced to sell! FORMAL DINING ROOM . clnnup, _.....,yard WV!'.""· Pri-• t --" ing a.nd drapes, electric
PRICE REDUCED!
DIVORCE NORTH COSTA MESA
Neu Public and C&tholK:
llChoolJI, 4 bedrm. ramLly
rm, 2 be. 2 patios. dblf! pr ..
Jiecluded & J)riv1te. Aasume
existing GJ Joan at s~ ~.
$136 per mo covers all,
$25,950
Coy Hester Realtor
644-J902
Eoot11do Special
Now will gO VA/FltA al only
$25.500. Neat 2 1-dining +
bia detached sJHping room
on can&~ &: 32' work ahop,
rev of-Jot. Most unusual.
10pcn Ew:ninasl
doubl• ,.,..._ c= 0 ~ MORGAN REAL TY apaciou.o: entry and manicur-&.. .... bl , , , kitchen with bullt·ins. Gar-Reallo" ---No Finance pro ems.·· 67• ,,.2 47• u59 ed , fenced yard. Our plea· l!'.-t..a. .. -a D=J-----I age oU alley w:lth electric ,..... .r¥"t sho J $36 500, 1'ln the Harbor Ar•• ...uwuw .. 9J04um...-M. M. LeBorde, R tr. for boa
iatik;r'&t lee °"6i3'.Moo" ~430 ,.,. ... ~'!""·~9·"!~!"~!" ... :rv"'J:M~1 -Eve"..._ ::=::,:. ,-:::. :fR~:..ou~v1 :,~ ...
~ Westclltt Dr.
646-ml
Open 'til 9;00 PM
GROWN PAINS?
5 BEDROOMS,
2 BATHS-$26,950
NO money down to Vet1. and
this hou11e is 11 11\C'al. Loc9t·
cod in best COl!!ta Melli.
v.oalking distance to Catho-
lic. SC'hools Md shopplng.
Buill·in kitche!i, double-gar-•irt. family room. Or lake
nY1'1' 5"4 ~;, VA loan at Sl!».00
mo., tnclucting t•~•. -
SPANISH GASTLE
+POOL
Just lls!ed. 1'hi$ lovely near
new boll\(', 4 1~. bdrms +
fam. rm. + formal dining.
kar aarace. YIJ'd St"P*·
rate frorh pool Atta -Ideal
for 11m11U fry -Park &
schools close b)'. Jwit SG9,.
950 -To insP"(:t phOne 646-nn.
O THE REAL
1'"\.. ESTATERS
1c $25 950 Coil• Mffo 1100 Drive by "8 AJ;,o !hen eall •hak• rool l-tly. l 8'. 4 ba.
' owner far appointment to waterfront home, xlnt swim.
LIDO WATERFRONT 4 Bdrm.+ Family Rm 1----·-p-.. ---.... 137.500. 64G-4032. m;,, bcaeh. N•;v:n,rodocor.
APTS.-320 LIDO NORD Beaooiut home '" prim• New Tri-xes -.B'"E"A"C'"H"sP=Ec=iA"'L-S175.000 SHOWN B APPT.
NOW REDUCED TO area. 4 ldng bedrooms, huge $57,500 lO% Down. Sharp 2 BR.&: Bill Grundy, Realtor
$150,000--Xlnt Termt family rm .. ftlll dining nn., (uncler constr-avail Aug, 30) 1-BR. duplex. 1-Blk. to 83.1 Dover Dr., N.B, 642-4620
6 Beautiful units. 6 car P · 2 baths. 30 fl. covered PB· Large, beautifUl "homes "'·ith OC!tn. Xlnt C.ond. Priced to
, tllity -1h tlo. S40-lnl. an lnoome" knted tn the 11 Artist's Hjdeaway ~ge; ;,~ 0~:eu-:,1 TARBELL 2955 H1rbor finestEutaideareaofCOllta. ~RGAN REALTY Rustic charm; bek>w Hwy,
.wlmming beach. Units are e BEACH BARGAIN e Mesa. Featuring (1) 3 BR. 673-6642 675-64$9 1-BR. + studio + fam. rm.
newly tumilhed. 3 BR. home al yeslerday's 2 BA "ownel"I unit'" + (2) Tropical Patio. $35.IXXI
Bill Grundy, Realtor price! Only $25,500 • terms. 2 ek. rental units. See at BACK BAY-3 or 4 BR hou&e Hal P lnchln & Assoc.
.., Do -N 8 64" -St "' I b • t ~ Tustin AYe., cor W~ + family + Poot Cu$fOm .1IOt E. <but Hwy., Cd.\I ....., ver .....-., · · v-1<1.<u @ps ~in, cu en-built on cul-de-aac. SeU or 67' •-"'!!"""'!~!!!!!!~'!'"!!!!"I nls. land Pl. or call Mr. F11.uria Tripi dupl __,,.,
Suporlallvo Living CAYWOOD REAL TY at 642-4905. "1.~'!..10-s(/W: ~ * OPEN DAILY 1..S *
''The Bluffs" m W. Coast Hwy., NB (Alto new income units for Bk;~ ~ .. -' · 60t Poln .. ttle
... ...._.._.. 4 Bedroo•n \Vell•built hOrnt &Ml-5111 Convenient 8eycrest
' GER~TY with family room & dining 1~~~~~-~~·~~~;Cll~l --'lf2'7Jiiiii)--·i nn. 1..ar'i• pool size yard.
1800 11q. fl, of the if'(!alesl e S41-1290 e Mlle in t>ana Point). BLUFFS Condo • 4 Br, 3 3 Bdmf. 2 Bath born~ wUh 2
Jiving, Muter sized bed·l-;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii;;;;;iiiiii ...... -. GOUNTRY CLUB VIEW Ba, Best area; Be>o\v mrkt BR., den, 2 ha. apt. Cpta .•
rooms, 3 baths, 49 x 19 n. FHA 5V..% LOAN A permMl'nl view from this By owner. Mt S a: wkndl. drps, I-blt·lna in both unita.
&)us enclosed aundeck with Immed. pog&eMiOn. 3 C"hetty natlc home. facing beauti-544-4869 Good klc. -l'CJOd income.
a brea!h taking upper hay bdrms, 1% bath.a, bltiftll, fill Santa Ana Country Club. &enlc Properties 615-5726
view. Priced below replace. hdwd floon, FA heat fl Large-76itl2>, R-2 lot tor DUPLEX • 4 br up. 2 br •CHARMING re mod 'Id
ment. 842-5S81 or M0-17al. pl&<'f', covd patkl 6 onl.y later eJtp&Jllk>n. 1500 IQUIJ't down, 3 ear 1~· new boule CdM. M Jot. 3 blka 1; $27,000 Mutor bedroom .. ..,.t..i COlY FOi TWO PLUS """' "'"'" 1or """'· sss.ooo Tt.rbtll -900 ... __ "°"'0 "! loot ...... with doubl• car crpt, nicely f\lmisbed . ZIO" .. _ _,, ~ '"""'1 """' to bead\. Sacriftce-. Owner kl ut;h, 2 BR I den, 1'4 BA,
MAIN REALTY a;arage. 1t'11 abu,y11t $24,500. lTI4l 53&-1400 crptd, dl'lld, blt·l1111 Urtpl.
REAL TORS 54S-ttn CeU Now! 546-2313 Owner carries papen, T\9% • F9t Sa>e By Owner • 1nt., no princlo-11. 675-1632.
s .. c~.:i~~--1; ~:.::.. ••. PETE BARRffi RL 1Y ONLY $17,900 '"' hall. h.,.. 1Jv1nr nn.,
UlZ)' den, bullt·ln.1. AhrK!KI
WANTED
642-5200
Own )'OUf' own hOme ror 1,.,,
thfa ftDt. 'NICe berdrooma.
16' Llvlnr room. Wqhf'r,
<!,,..-Irie. ..... lncludod.
A rN1 t.J:nin and ila R.-2.
OU! 64S-tl303
FOREST E. OLSON
f
nodownCJotfllA.54Q..tnl1 'l!z=-:::i=C:::===I Fixer upptt ama1l home IRVINE TERRACE
TARBELL 2955 H•rttorli DUPLEX wlllnt~ by • )'Olin&, h&rd Owner anxious! 5 Bdma. 3 . workine c.'Ollple: With cash, baths. Hnae-tam=-·· rootn.
O THE REAL
'"\.. LSTATERS
BAYFRONT APTS. -~ VISTA DEL LIDO On 1111'1'• comer lot wltb CALL ,.... •••·1'1' $44,750 CLEAN 3 Br. I fam. xtra
room to build.. Excelle:nl 9 ~, h::1 kit. ldffl lor 1torl11t
Pior & Slip Avollable E ~ ·• J-•iion s~ ~ .'.M _._ """'""' l boot. •·-polio. S.12.500 ANO UP ~,.,JD ,. """" ' R~l ,...w., l lAL~ COu.EGE PAilli5" arta,
G Wiiii Wells-McCerdl1, trs. .Nt•r Nt•P•rt f'••t ortltt aorg• •mson uno Newport Blvd C.M. close In ahopplna, collegt! A:
REAL TOR _,,, Eve;. 644--06ll DAILY PILOT WANT AD. -.. !20.250. 54>26!<
673-4350 64S.1564 ev11. OW 6C2-o5611 • ctwae tt. ~1 N111S111u R.d. ()ptn 12~ I --~---...-~-•-~~~~--,•~~~~~
Short walk to beach, 3 br,
2 ba. crptl, drpti & bltm. 4 GOOD ll'll'Gn'le unltJ on 2
Princlplea only. 64~1845 adjoin. Yl.luable Io I•.
2 BR, 2 ba townhouse • Good Alwa.y1 rented. 0 w n e r
floor plln. $26,000 Good 1 .,,,'7S-5==1BT=:-::::-===-:. rmn1.· Owner 67S-8 200, •-·---64-1-6483 Bolboa Ponlmulo UGO
BWfTS DOLORES MODEL
3 Br, 2l~ ha • .SU.500.
114: 6f4.&TI5. Zl3: •m.,
-·--BE:n Loe. V•cant. lie. 3-4
Br. home1. Bl& iotJ. J.'rank
Mllnlhall ~a!ty IT5-4fllO
2 Stocy, 4 bedrm, sep family
nn., elee kflchtn approx
~ sq ft. 00&e tO 1c.hoola,
11hopp'g. FlLVVA terms.
847-8507 TI4: 431·3769
fnjt§"!:'I
TRANSFER RE DI
1o1ust 1ell in a hUZT)' -bit 2
&IOI')', 3 Bedrm I\ tamUy.
room. hnnuu::ulate lr1 a, out.
F'HA or GI knnt:. Only
$33.950. Call IW7-8S3l.
REAl E~IAH
MART
-UND'E'R$2't'~
10% Down on 2 SHARP 3
bednn homeii with hllini ·
trplc"s, one with pool and
in top kx:aUon near all ...
p'f ,
Pacific Shores Realty
5.16-81194 """' SJO.""' ---------~ JOG TO BEACHI
3 to 7 Bednn1. 2 to • hltlla,
up to 3000 9q. fl., ahake
roofa, all bltflll &: ~
&.Z tlnanclnc from S26,990.
Rancho Le Cuesta
Brookhunt &: Allanta
968-2929 * U AM tu I PM
Jltol. Below rnA, 4 br. c:ond_
Pool, ti~ bllns, rel owe
2nd.. usm. 51' ~ 1FltA.
493-341'
'
"
3
I,
0
I-
s
·-1-
'· -· ~
I
•
IO
" '" 2 ·-7,
°' "" ... ·-
e
lln
"" ...
•m
~a. .,,
u,
Ill.
I
Uy
ox
"'·
fG9
I
..
• 3
ni,
"" ... ,
!86
~ ... ••• .... ••
• Mt
WC
IA.
•
------lllllli Tl'KI,.,, Ait;ust 20, 1970 DAILY P!lOT HOUSES FOR SALB HOUSl!S fOR SALi -RINTALS "RIHTALS RENTALS--RENTAL) -fRii1iiNffiAri:Lr=---nil'f.rn=~:,_,
Huntl~ Boochi400 Loguno Booch . 1705 ~~· Fumlshod Housn Furnished Hou-Unlumlshod ~ Unfurnlshod _ Af/11. fumlshod ~ '""""'"" IBST
lllYSI
c
L
A
5
s
I
F
I
E _
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
•
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
SIYB
~ISHI
PRESTIGE MODEL mi • SECLUDED u .... -Out • Corono del Ma• 2250 su ....... Rantols 2910 ~rol -Bo I boo "" N-~ ....,, 420I N...,.., --
8Y~6 ·;.!~!!-.!'!"" do or-Indoor ltvt nc. LARGElll&m.SBLvlew •llALBOA PENINSULA: *DIVE IN!! OCEANFRONr:S,..~d<n
.... -·-SWnom, lm'l<:ed avd<os. -. plua pool !or """'""' 45' ~.~ ~-·-s br '-1·~ -·d. 1 BR. $18,500 . 10 ...,, !ale. $llO Mo, -·~" ..... -L -, .. $300 lncld u!L Avail 4~7S29 4 bt. t.ovt:tyr SHARP! 1 BJL mrn..in. Sept. 15. ~mr Hunllnt!on
Horbour
· W11loy N. T1ylor Co. AYall Seo< 1't Al» avall ... Flftpl&ce ...... 11 n ce d !-='===;.;,:;:;'===
l40.S Son Clom.,lo 17!0 REALTORS lfM9lD ·--,mt. 1'00LI CALL NOW! Hunllnvton Booch -
Quick Sal~ By OW'ncrl Lux· . f13..2039 $150 ur loua cu stom •P-JILUFFR.et6denoe.21tnry,4 Balboa Im RENTALS H.,,;..Ffnde,... '4S-2tSl 3BR.tonndinnn,3ba.2000
p<tlntmtnta:. Besut aplit br, 2 full · A 2 baJ.t baths. 411 8£1.VUE · *I ft. Nr bch. lit $325
le"'1 2 -3 ba. Nr Ntw. -.<e ..,... " bnch, Lano, PtnlJI. Houaoo Unfvmlshod * Move 111 Today wl.,.,nr. -8"7-8!.ll ...,
Sae $49.500. Tenna/trade mqnlfictnt view. $69,500. Point. 2 BR. turn ar WlfW'i. ,_96)."635;;;:';i;C,' ,-,,.---,..,,-~
846-5289 OwnM 114/171,>SJJO or 492-Lg nna. AVl11 now to ~ Gti~ral 3000 2 BR with f:enced )'Vil. •nEAtrr. 2 sty, 4 Br, 2 Ba.
2ll1 by appointment. 11. Nr Bay • 4 bch. 2 le WON'T LAS?'! $125. fonna1 din 4 liv rm. Jr fam RE DEC & L n d s cpd pa.Uol. $240 mo. Pb: (Zll) rm Grdrr tnct Waterfront 3 BR &: dock tor C1pf1tr•no Beech 1730 8'f9..9800 or eve A wt midi Hom•Ffnder• 645-2'51 ' S3SO mo.
-.le ,A_ lae .-.i.... 1714) --. c....-Sh k 96>-'700 , ....,, or ~· v•-•• _...,.r GC BRAND NEW 6 VACANT IA'"'v""AU..;:-~Sop~L~l-~2-br--2-ba
644-"21 ",;"', .. ~ Duunlplnoa ~~ Lido lslo •••J Swett Treat 2 Bd $85 Bkr 4 8edrm. hOme w/a,>tl, VWa Padtlc _., ,..:_.,,,. _._ ' .. l'"c · ...... -.: ... ~ .,.... CALL EVELYN' 95~2200 0rps. patio A com pl n.....• t•-~--.. ~ .... ,fWO __ ,,::-
Fountaln Valley 1410 Ocean view. Ste new Dall& lAndtrapblc. Avail c-.i ht. ~.;_·..,.., --. -..-.
Point Harbor trom .tD1 wr * 4 BR. 2 BA * ""'"' ~•'1 • Custom Built Homel crowded area. Both rented. WINTER RENTAL $400 mo. Hacntecl House sm per mo. A&• n t .1,,';;B;;;R,;,_:::,._,:-_--,.---1 ••• 500 ...._ __ ....., -Clll -,...,. 546-tl.41. ....... ....,, C111l, drpl, new· Fantutlc POOL I Yard! "" , . vwui:.-'""~ "'"'"'"u. ~Hird 4 8d SJ.55 Bia' ack ly dee. Patio, pool avail, dbl
Load• 01 """"' 4 l«e bod· Don• Point 1740 n .IL--lslond •••• CALL EVELYN 956-2200 * P Your Bags "'" %1'0 mo. "3&-1346
rms -must see to appre; --..._..
elate! PRICED RIGll'l'! NUDISTS & * AVAIL. SEPl'. l5'h * Nifty Nugget .., • peto. Ntol •BR with founloln Volloy 3410
HAFFD84A2L_..!5EAL TY RECLUSES 4 BR. & conv. den. ..,.__ An"'' pod 11> 8d ~Bier blt-IM.F$llndo40 HURRY! ;;;w;p-' btdnn l l nn•~
........,. will love private center\. lnc. pier/dip $450 •'" Hom• rt 645-2'51 P ~
4 BR " fam. nn, 2 ba, new patio! 3 bd, 3 ba + party 2 BR. furn. apt., same Joe. u CALL EVELYN 956·2200 edwon~t •--:"°"'Haffd. $l65" mo. &bow Vl Cotto Meu 21DO •MO ~ ..... -·-Rlt;y ~. Xlnl oond. $3'Dl down rm. Boat ...,.. Fl'ee "" $1'0 Ml I -
to usume FHA kJe.n. Full beach. $37,500 10% ctwn. 8-.Y' le Beach Realty Inc. ft atll'e
price $11,650. By ownor. 49!h1377. 2407 E. c.t, CdM 6"'3000 CUtle 2 sty mov;o.llkt Slni DESIRABLE Sonto An• Hoitht 36311 ~17=821=Ml==St=. -==38=· = NEWHOMES-$30,900 TEACHERS CALL EVELYN 956-2200 HOME
1
-
1640
3 Bednn, J bath. Js:i> 111• tt, Nearly new, 4 br 2 ba all 2 Br., 2 ha, cptd, drpl, forced • 1 BR uni. on ~ acrt: S.A.
Tustin .... _. 1 ,,_. br 'd'-· p•---air heat, Garb-dlap, bit-ins. Hgta, ffinet ok. yrS i.e,
--'------90rne ocean "'"""• nr new e ec, \l.ISDWS , .. y, pr, ~ !rpl tlo, •i•• Yacht Hutu. Small Iota. frplc, IU1ldeclc. Winter, c, pa prage, wattt •...,mo. 54S-5218.
BY OWNER: 3 BR, !am rm See at 34001. A\lreUo Or. Avail. 9/&. ~ Ap.te, f13-Rent me'! La.ughtrv ttdt film. Adult. only" no pets. J====-=====-1 w/frplc. Huge trees. bl TD ., ......, ...,., 3 Bd, $140 RATE REASONABLE La--a Beach 3705
$135, owner will '°"" bal BUlLDER 64~~ 8918• <~> 728-1111i5 CALL EVELYN 956-2200 _...... !rom Country Cob """ -
w/ reas dn, 64fr.5593, no al90 new tripln $66.500 1010 SO. Baytront; • Br. 3~ 275 Mesa Dr, * Ph. 548-6106 2 BR. trplc, sunroom Ii:
agents. REHNo!~SFumllhed ~i:~~~~~:r2 Ships Ahoy MONTICELLO 2 BR. 2 BA 2 ~~~~~-~of:!
Laguna Beach 1705 boo.ts. Bill Grundy, Rltr. View Jlllty air $150 3 Bd car pr, crttta. d r P 1 • bmU Lii. 494-SZZ8. Sl?S/mo
------General 2000 ~-CALL EVELYN 956-2200 mai n tenance & pool. uni $190/mo tum. I_::::,,.::::.:------~mo. Call 83.l-0288 art 6 i,,= ~ .·::: =' =~-"°'"---Lower 3 Arch Bay
2 Bedroom 2 Bath home.
Large waUed entry court.
yard. Spacious living room
ha1 brick fireplace with
carved wood mantle, built-in
bookca!leS Ir open beamed
celling, 3rd Bedroom &:
family room expansion
pl.am available. $59.750.
$125-STEPS Bt'ff! 1 Br utl 3 BR, 21iii be., dil:V nn. Yrly pm. ~ S.150 mo. MqnWcmt
pd Child/pet> ok Sncls Nn ,..Jal, 10/1; $400 Incl ulil. Fish Hook %155 MO 2 br blMncd yd 2 BR. 2 BA, den, lndey, kQ
*.BEACON* 64.5-0111 No pets 673-1894 atL 7 Bite tt Quick 2 Bd $95 Bkr cpt/drp,' tmmac. No pets: of wood. Privacy. 49f...8306.
GUARANTEEDllJCENSED YRLY Or wlnter-.l hr, 2 CALL EVELYN 956·2200 2430 Santa Ana Ave, 2 R, den, $250 leue,
patioe, newly painted. You'll 548-i578 n OK, Nmy redec.
Rental1toShare 2005 kiveit!5f6...5Sil.675-4372 S80 J BR private cottaae •2 BDR M HOUSE· 6fChlqulta..499-lOS?a.m.
CM $110 with verything '
WANTED -3td party to Huntington 8ei1ch 2400 2 Bedrm1, fnced ~toll $12'1 pt!';'drps· 1 Cblld! NO Laguna Nlgu.I
she.re l bf' b9e, ll unt. CM 2 bedrms •••••.•••• Sl$f m Wallace, C,M. SOUTI-1 1 ,._,Rft Prl Harbour area. All hat priv ONE Yeu lease, eoty 2 BR, 3 BR everything toWpets ~ ... -. v. atta
ind.. $75 mo, will negotiate. bltns, re trig., f ree :re r , SlTO $13>2 BR unturn hie, m leue 2 br, 2 ba, den, din
0
'a.'" Nffd pty lmmed. Home washer, dryer, dble pr, 3 Okl 2s;;;·49jtkid;Qi{Jl.'15 gar. Older couple pert. :ru nn, fam nn, w/oettn view, ~· 1~ 846-0573, work 74~7989. ask blcb to ocean. $:D1 mo. incl STAR*LET · E . lr.th. St., 646-9154. U'iO mo. 495-47&1 evn.
REAL ESTATE !:;= Fttncb. Anyone ~=· Tradewlnds Rl1Y UI n6-7330 ~~E..;,1'."~~~ =-y~ ba~~
IT
Oakwood ...
a new way to live in
Newport Beach ·
lt'• fun, fine ne!Pbort an<!~ liTinf.
aJl jn oDJ~liJ,xmiaur pacbae.. 1\at'• Oak~ •
lvood Ga ri38n Apa?tmentr Jn Newpo:ii
lleach, just mlmlle1Jr6iti Balboa'i Biy liid
beathea.:
Theri'• a •/, million dollar Clubhouse with
,party ruollt;billiards room, indoO? golf driv·
ing range,·men's i nd Women's health clubs -. saunas, tenni1 courts. reifdent te.Dnis. pro
and ·p~ '1hop, and Olympic .size .pooL .All
this, and· much more, just :1teps from. yoUr
profeasion~y .decorat!!d apartment. each.
,,·ith .private ·balcany/patios. Air condiliOll·
ing/flreplaces opllonaL
Oolcwood Gortli11 Aportmltit•
On 16lh Straet bttw"1l Irvine udDcwet Dr.
Plfl M2-at10
spat!M11~1'•1 Wtoom n lr ... r11nl..,N""
•t.raiMN..·tJllta.fnL..tus.&t•~•ffl
MMlk.,_ .. ,., 11-tet,.
Go-"'"'='°;;;1 ____ •;;;•;;.:;00 Cono Mon 11"1 GI..,,,.,.. St. LADY To "'8tt 2 Br, 2 Ba • 1 BR Dupl<X • Ftplc, * SPREAD OUT 646-2!39 Sept, ~ .,.,5245,
494-9473 549-0316 Tustin apt w/9AI'l'te: by garage, s:m. M.ck )'1l1"d & E-Sidt! 3 BR hie, no -· -J F * SUNNY * OPEN HOUSE * Sept, 1. 543-2305 eves/Fri/ patio. Sl60 mo, call 536-n46 CLEAN 3 BR Ir& ......., clU1dren. no pett Older Don• Point 3740 ust Of *
Seeing a boli'Vln&. Auwne, ::;Su:c•::..· --~---!enoed yard. Cill.,... A P"""" ... ~ .....,.;.. * ACRES *
b""d ~ I In I Lo r -Lanuna Btoch 2705 pets ok. HURRY! S1&5. 'BR -s· I Ad Its "" ,, • OW I. "'"" w CONGENIAL Working girl, --·--------Homo-Findors 645-2951 ' BR. 1 child ..... """'. No e, ..... view. sm 1ng e u * M ........... _ * down, 3 BR. 3 Ba. Lovely 2)-25 to 11hett Newport pet&. $145 mo. 1980 Walle.ct. mo. on ~ lse, ht &:: lut v•• -r•-
view, $49,500. 1o.i; Daily, ShoreS bouoe, 1225 Jn<HPlit RENTALS/LEASES 1135 3 Br, 11> ba, stv, cpts, c.u MS-2ll02 req'd. Bltno, !enoed yard. South ea, c ob lo 0 whole Studio & 1 Bod-*
portafina Laguna; up Nyes Util pd. 543-G403. UNFURNISHED dl'PI, fa.J.n or gngis, CM. --Avail tmmed. 5 t 6-i 7 5 9 , new way ar life dealined Lf1'1# RATES
Pl. oU (:out Hwy. MALE in 30., will share 2 br Lge, 3 bdnn. &: fam. nn. ii*~B~E~A~C~O~N~*~Ms.G~~l'J:ll~l:N;•;;•;opot;;;;rl;:Bo;o;ch;;::;;;S200;;,1~340!lli~~El~Coo=....,;:'==~~
1
;tun tor s1ng1e peop&e, It's Day, Week or MoaUl PL.ACE REAL TY 6'--9704 home w/same. Roofdttk, home. Custom deoorated, ~UARANTEED/UCENSED fun Ii vine with warm, d)'· • Color TV Air CDbd.
* BEACH HOME * patio, ' blk> to beach. Se· now"""''" !lreplaoe, b!U-* No Yord Work BAYCREST Condominium 3950 nomlc neighbors. It'• • •Pool• Phooe s.r. !Dd
$35.fiOO. Only 850 fl to beach. Laguna. $125 mo. 499-4307 Ins, ex~rocean ';!,';:·M1 yr. 3 Bedroom, pool newly dee> ,S750.oc.::i Oubbouae w I t b • Maki Service avail
PL.ACE REALTY 494-9704 MATURE Worldng woman 1~.sffE~'R°ENTA~ Gardener included 2 BR. orated. Close 'to schools, 3 BR. 1% BA, end. pe.tlo, in health club, saunas, plm. l Signal So. ar O.C.
Th
will share bcb home w/ Orlktttn ok. VA(: A N T ! JhOpplitc a: transportation. Newport . Bluffs. $ 3 O O. ming pooi party room b1L F&lrgrou:nds
e same or couple. Mra, Fen-2 bdrm. apt, at Wood.a Cove, CAl.J.. NOW! $130. $560 Per month. month. ph. 6#.~. llanh, indoor roU: mMna; %m Newport Blvd.
ton •~:ruo 1.50 "'" to beach -L«e. RENTALS --. ., .... '°"""· --:>==,.,-===-..,---• ,,,... tree shaded patio. Leue for Ho,,,.finder1 645-2951 Apts. Pumllhed ~~and ~t tmniJ;.; </ NASSAU PALMS • t a: 2
DA I LYi
~bri ~~ $165 Mo. $175 w/pool-LRG 2 Br sep I--'--...;,,.,;,;,.....;.;,.;;.;:. __ I Slll&!e, 1 A 2 Bedroom lux· BR ApU. Fu1'n & Unt. Pool,
I
e ............ ~~ 2 bdrm. at Victoria Beach. h.w, gar, patio, child ok. Realty Company General 4000 ury apartments with all ~ plnl:-pana. BBQ. s bad y
646-6245 Exe. view, fireplc. A few CM 67~10 642-1235 modern convenieneet avall. lawnt. 171 E. 22nd St.
Atan to llhatt 3 BR on steps to to sand. Leaae *BEACON * 64S-01111~;;.;;;;.;;.~~~~.;;.;1--i;;;~;;;;;;;;--&bit!, Furnia.bed ml ~ 642-3645
% ac:re f7S mo. $275 Mo. GUAR.ANTEED/IJCENSED e 1 YR old -l Br. 2 Be. tam ~y •·.bed. -~F~u-m-. ~l~B~R~ .. --p I LOT -eve<. Charm '""""· deck w/..,... * B l Lu-L nn, din rm,..,,..,-· dbl EXT MAN Or woman 1bare beaut. view, oce&n side ot hwy. at 9CJ nners ~ pr, park 1: pool prtvil, D11 RAORDINARIL Y MODELS OPEN DAILY BACHELOR
Coro1* det Mar home. No Woods Cove. Lee.ae &· 1 pet ck. $400 mo/yrly. V I D'IBEA~ .&-... 10 A.M.. t P.~ 2110 Newport ltvd, CM
ORANGE
""'°'"'· $1.25/mo. 6'13-4169. '135 Mo. NEAT! 1-BR bxne. Fenced .... Aval ..... .,._ 1 soro 1 ..,.,. NEW N-.... % Ir
FEMALE-In C.M., 2 br, 2 Artistic~'~~~~ yard. READY TO MOVE BALOO'A Penln. Ft. ml Sq. ~ ~waterfall"" 1 RENTS FROM apt-lots of bltm, diebwlht Ir
ba, pool, % equals $75 mo., place, •ugu -· wu....,... .. , IN! $130 ft. 3 BR. 2 Ba. home; i:mt-:~--= ........... ~-. ~hl~M~· $150 to $350 Mel pr. AduU1 cnty .,...,
Call Uttle Sandy 645-1685. path leads to beach, Leue Hom•Finden 64.S.2951 furn . .Pre.ter 9 mos. Jeue . ..., ftC. room. --, -$185 Mo. Available Sept. lJlt 675-4691 BBQ's. Sauna. ftun.-unfum, mo. st&-Q99.
COASTIS 19-28, 3 story beach home, 4 MISSION REAY.TY 49C-073l $325-SPAC 5 br, 2\-ii ba, DR, · 1 4 2 er. a1ao Slnales trom NEWPORT BEACH $150 _very llice 2 BR mobile
Bdr, 4 bath, 4 frplc Call I===.,.:_;_==-"--''-' trpl, hi.lie yd. Fam we.le. 3 BR. Wn. rm. b.ttinl. 21Ai $1.35. See tt! 2)00 Panonl 880 Irvine Ave. home, '100 - 1 BR. trll'.
675-8689 aft 9 pm. 2 BR. trplc, IUlll'OOm &. NB. ba. Le. llv'tll nn. & fenced Rd. M2..8670 BetwMn Har-Adults -.v DO pets. 132
BALBOA. M ar F. 2t-30 to pa.Uo. On quiet St. No pm. *BEACON* 645-0111 yd. Nice area. $2'75 per/mo. bor'1r N~-JBlkN. :ltth Irvine & '16th w. Wibon, CM 548-957T leading ::;a~ .. ~~~lm-9,"~7~:-:i,;: Gu~;~~ •':."~B~K.;,,!!·:.:~~ .. ~$2!ill~-~.,.-1-.11-,.:"-mo-..,.1 .. p"A"LM ...... M .. E"SA-"""ll' .... T"s.""' <714) --:,. ~~.&.t-$3SS.:.
N ft -~ 2200 3 BR O<eM vu, 1 II lili to Owne• • .,.._ 644--6488 SOUTH BA y CLUB & O!>. 54&-0451
M k I ewport IHI•'"" beach. $250 mo. 1 BR $145 H~ fenced k>t. pe.tlo &:: · ' 1 BR FURN. f149.SO ar etp ace 1-.-B-A_Y_S_H_O_R_E_S___ mo. •~TIOJ or 2!31m<J86_ ~i:,·"-..... & -r ~~ z~~ ..... .= ~ APARTMENTS • • • :y~d~ ~·
Winter rental. Newly decor., San (lament• 2710 Hom•Flnders 645-2951 ,..,....,., · mo.Imo. OK J,=========.I new w/w carp, &: drapes; ::.:;.::_=:;.;:=c....-;;c..:..:1$2'15 4 Br 2 be. patio fncd OVERLOOKING Upper Back e POOL Live whare the fun 111 LG 1 BR, 1J81'1#, wata'
new refrig.; turn. recover-ON Golf Counie. 2 BR. du-for kids & peta_' SA ' Bay, 3 BR CoOOo. Crptll, e SAUNA pt.id, $130, quiet n.tJdde
ed. Charmlnr 3 Br. 2 Ba. plex. Heared pool, Wik to *BEACON* Ms.Giil drpa, !rplc. "911, 644-"47 •JACUZZI RENT FURNITURE area. 548-1517.
Great patio, Only $250 bch. f17S. mo, 244 Del Gado GUARANTEED/LJCENSED 1561 Mesa Dr. Costa Mesa SMALL Studio apt. quiet,
Month. San Oemente, 496-6.ll7, ' University P1rk 3237 Phone 546-98'0 * DIRECT TO TENANT stable penon only. $1DO hid , ... ~ ... =.· ~~ Vocollon Ront1l1 290ll Countty Club LiYing ] BR TnhouR, Eutbhd! $400 , .. Hr. o.Il""Y alil. "46-IB09 alt .. -, 2 Bdm,., 1-bath $2111 >'fro $38 50 Wk. ll10% Purchue O!!<Jm 1 Br. New braul tum.
WATERFRONT BAL BOA Penlnsula-dt!lux 3 BR. Family room, 3 Batbl:, 3 Br 2 Baths $325 m • Complete t BR Apt u M~Mo. Adults only. mJ
PIER &. FLOAT duplex, 2 br ea. $150 wk all bl~, newly decorated. 3 eR.. 2% Baths ~From $165/mo. Luxury Sin. Low a1 $2'l/mo. Elden. 6'6-9278 eves.
3 Bedrm., 2 bath, formal din. summer, $175 mo winter, pOQL + ALL rec' 3 BR 2 be. fam. rm ;:rrs &le Apbl. Oxnplete maJd 31J.Day Minimum ADULT 1 BR: New crpta,
Ing rm, fireplace, w/w 2ll ~ or 2l3/69S-6012 facilities! $300. 5 BR 2 1iS 'ba. S3tO service, bousf!wares, ltnenl, * WIDE VARIETY bl:tlnll. $135/mo Call evH
crplll, 8.Dd furnished com. Hom•Findtr1 64S-2951 e itEo Hn.L REALTY aU uVlill,Lbe1AtedGEpoolLNN CUSTOM FURNITURE 548-2897.
plete, Obie gar. Lease only. Summer Rentals 2910 SIDNEWLY Dec 2 Br dplx, Univ. Park Center Irvine L RENTAL 3 ROOM Furn. Apt. Ufili ...
S500 per mo. Realtor 1tv/n!f, ch. Joe, tot ok. CM Can Anytime 333-os2o Laguna Beach 494-9436 517 W 19th St CM 548-348J Paid. ~ adlta. $U5 mo. &1~4353. LAGUNA BEACH * BEACON *Ms.Gill TlJRn.E ROCK 1 yr old 4 BALBOA INN . ' , aft s, 518-4157
*
BAYSHORES * CONDOMINIUM GUARANl'EED/LJCENSED BR. tam nn. ATRIUM, din Bolbna ""8740 ~---213 Costa Me1a W1N1'ER REN'l'Al-'l Lov.Iy Bloe Lagoon Villa, 2 * Brinn The Kleis rm, pallo, 'P<•~en * In H 3 &: 4 BR.-F"uml1hed BR, 2 BA completely tum-':I AlR U"P(I, drps, bookCuet;, Stant Ome --------
Priced from $250 i.!lhed, linens, dlsfle1, etc. 2 BR. _1. ....,_19 drapes nr. IChls. pool.I, courts, pk. Bachdor a.partmentl. --------Alao, one Bayfront Wuher/dryel". Avail Aug_ 22 .-.. io, ~-.. ~ • Avail by Oct ll!lt $360. mo. Completely fUmilbed l BR One or two people ovet 30. LUXURIOUS Be~ frnt. 2
"C" Thonw, Realtor • Sept. 5. A18o avail for win. l POOL! CAJ..l. TODAY! Yrly hie <n4J 833-1692 pa.Ho, lawn c h airs, etc: ~7036. 8AM-t:30 PM Br, Avail. 9112170
224 W. Cllt. Hwy. NB 548-5527 ter rental. 499-2152 AM or $140, DLX. l BR twnhse, J.ce. enc. CALL NOW! $125. l OR 2 BR. Lq: closetl, pool, 6/21>/n. $225 mo. '*"'9760
BEAUT. 2 br, 2 m,, trplc, lm-0791. anytime. Hom•Finders 645--2951 yd. UN of l pools, tumll, Hom•Finders 645-2951 adUlll, no ~ts~~tll pd. l8M FURN. 1 A 2 BR. Apt.I.
fncd patio, dubh.9e, pvt bch, w tiALBOA 1 It 2 · Br J125 2 br/4-plex, crpts, drpg, parks, lot tom, goll etc HOLIDAY PLAZA Monrovia ~. AJk for ·Anita
4100
4200 Nowport Bloch
htd pool. guard patrolled. $~$125 wkly for Sept.~ stv. sngts ok. CM Av&ll. Sept 15, $325 . DELUXE Specious 1 Bdrm. 2 BR. 2 BA. crpts, stove, Janet Rftlty 6T3ClD
Adults, nc> pets. $250 lie $150 mo. wlntl:r r a tt. +BEACON * 645.(1111 833--03n. Furn apt. $135. Plus utll. refrig, carport, ,.. Slop'& 1 BR. Ftim. Apts. Pool. No ~~~:?:-·/~"'"'1 1'1 ~s.p~,_,~"'~•;:,· ~6'13-0419~~==:oJ~'~,,.....,~~· =====d~GU~ARANl'EED~~~~/Ll~CEN~~SE~D~IFOR Rentalt In Unfvenity Heatt'd pool. Ample park· center. 82> Center st. dtltdttn or pell. ~16th ~ Parle I. Turtle Rocle. Call: ing. No childftn -no pets. PLANNING ID mow? You'll SL, NB. ~
General 20000eneral 2000General 2000 BOB PETTIT, Realtor 1985 Pomona. C.M. ftnd u amazing number of 1 BR, in. blk to beach. Awll.
$@\\4l~-~~trs·
Tire Puzzle with tire Built-In Chuckle
'
,-
"SINCE llMG" THE QUICKER YOU CALL homes in todl.y's Oagln.t for IOIHet 9/1-6/15. $1415
Days 83l..Q101 Nla'htl THE QUICKER YOU SELL Ads. Cbtck them now. mo. f75...8293
Irvine
* TURTLE ROCK U"l!a, vl<w . ...__ 4 BR.
lam rm. 3 BA, 3 car sar.
$355. SJ3.,1772.
Eoll Bluff 3242
3 BR 2 ~ lndry la: ramUy
nn w /Parquet Dr, b"pl, ~
_pr. Jni..-d yd, cblldttn · peta
ok. l.eaoe w/ ef 337!1.
AvsiSep"~ --Corono dol Mor 3250
•
• . •
OAll.tt'll.OT·-_,, --:ra, 191~ • -_
TAU REN1AL> RENTALS l\ENTALS . -RIAL ESTATE BUSINESS •nd ANNOUNCIMINTS ~ ._..._, Aj>fo. F""'I-,,...._ llllfumh hod ~ Unfllmi...... " * -* 1t; jf 1t Otnet•.' -~!~~IAL ind NOTICES
'""'~ ..... llMch --""'"" ....,. -Nowpo'1 llMch S2lt ~ clol Mor 52511 Olflce Ront1I 6070 RHI Ed•ll loons 6340 Por-el1 6405
1 PA!UI NEWPORT • -105 ORCHID MEDICAL . DENTAL WlLL ·nWoe 2nd T.D.'a by lNCl/RABLE a..-. I
ht Uva oYlika: the ;water. T s Bdrnu .• J bllthl. Car:peted, SU.Itta avail Beat iocation. txladnc bl A 2nd'a. pvt turnl"'1 cue. ..,,. m1
, l
. -
THE HIGHlAllDER
"Scottish Treat"
16161 PorbW. Ln. Mfr. 14!-19"
Stn Di'ltO ~'1 lo
•tcb mvd. • bDo
St\. t.o Holt. W. o:o
llolt l blk.
LA QlllTA HERMOSA t
"Modern Spanish''
1'211 Porblde ln.
Mjir. 147-5441
• "'-» -.• •v
FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN
Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court·
yards, sunken swim'g pool•, BBQ's le' loim-
tains.
poolJ., t tcotd• cts. mo.ooo dN.Pt'd. bit-Ina. Qw. eangt. XJnt Pf.l"ldni. Modem f.acll· pty. 546-m&. tpeiela.Uy. NoUUns to 1ole
Spa. From 111' to "50. $S25 Mo.: mltl. 1 )"ff.I' ltuf ltb:. Immedialf'ly aV&ilablt. --· youri life to eain. (TU)
Boch, l 0t I Br. Alto I aty &?MOSI 0 BAYSHORE CENTER Money W•ntod 6150l,:67l-:;llft6.:====;==I ~~ Dec. ldt. pi M 601 Dover Dr .• N'pt Beach ----
Pit. ot btJ. Subtm prq. opt -=r a.a ri.u,. Co. needi $15 M Announcem..,t1 '411
m.a)j .er, cpts. drpa. Juat > c 17s..&OS0 0 tor e:<pullkln. Secuml.
N. of .Faitdon tll at Jam. * COR6LlDO APTS. 2 Bt, l • -• . 968-7935 alter 5:00 p.m. WlNNER of Mclrote School
-' s .. '°'"""" HW. ' " BA ~-dbl • -•sp I a.& ANNOUNC!MENTS drawU. for TV' B. E. Rd. '"'"1900 1or ie...mr ~ 171 •• u.--, ('.&l'lo -Covey mo Pomorll. eon. to. "°" ....... Pool. Sl«l A up. ...., -"· • HILLGREN SQUARE end NOTICES Mea.' ""'*~N.__.,l_L-Yr.-'* OP~78 n.n" 1 • 32 , Whoddv• W•ntf WMddV• a.If 1900 '" It Deluxe Oflke• Found (Frff Adil 6400 ~·==·=====I OPl:t DAFI •~ ~· ~ ~ SPECIAi. CLASS.,ICATION FOR Av.n. tor lmmed. '-In -Ctmetory Loh Mii 1'fl AMIGOS WAY M~ 2 BR. 2 Ba. . ... .aTUa•L BORN sw•PPIRS ont ot cltlH: bus!nt lbop.Bl.ACK Cat, younr 2 BR. 2 b9.. unib;. u.alwn. Dtab•'lhr, cpt-. drpl, frpl. ~ "°"" "" p1ne cecten. Will divide. rnale-vtry personable, (.3) lDI'S In Harbol' Rat.
Outside livlne areas , and Walle tu oceu.,Art. 17~726 5 Llnos ~5•t11•1~a~ 5 •~·-k• Air-cond.., musJc, PMellllc, talkative. B&Jbolll. Penh11ula. Vettft.at ~t~ ,
dou"--~ -,,_ -"l'la, -· Mu . ..n·r A Appoared at °'"!Ming oJ • -1·~ • -prage&. ,...,~ "'-· Lido I .. •ULU -AD lllUIT IMCLUOI ~ LRC ~Y VIEW-2 =~ t=.7~:£.~--IAL•-;JI-$ .. i~•:,,'= :,~fu~·~~~:!tD~~~~~~ves~ Tutor1n9 6490
3 BR~ a. Qlndo: furn or Stuct1. crpta. drpl, l'4 J>.,, To Place YM TrHer's Par adfH Ad Deluxe 1-Rm. omc;e tiier cat, ailv!r :lev."eled col. GERMAN a FR~NCH untu.m. Pvt/patio, pool. 401 trplc, wsh-dry. Avail Sept. PHONE '42-5'71 Nr. Orange County Airport lat & flea coll':"-Vk:: F.a.!y Pleasant Method
FJacsblp Rd . NB. 5. $3501-t.67S..7502. 8 Units, good ~ntal atta. f()Ja)"acn, Whiakeytown. le lrvine lndu1trlat Tu.litin Ave&. lrvi.ne Ave, ForAdults&Chlldren.
ml682.--3DI OP~ SUN? $38.fm 'Equity; income Shaata l.&ke area. Fabulous Complu,, ~ drapes, C.M. 5U-00.3 * 83.1-ffi54 * * IA YFllONT * Huntlr.shn llffch 5400 su.soo. For i....., ...,.. hunilog. lishing, boailog. mW.. .-..Utloning 6 KEYS Found on bea<h vi<. SERVICE DIRECTORY "THE ULTIMATE IN A!'TS" --mercl>l or hono rucb. Equlty ""'11 -•· mtn janllorlal oerv!ce. $125 Mo. hland 6 Balboo. 1oquln'l--------
l BR's-From $lSO 2 BR's-From $1'15 LUXURY APTS, St•"" OCEANFRONT, view OWNER 675.6259 cabin etc. Meyer 54S.l366. BOB PETTIT, Realtor at front OOW!ter, DaiJ¥ Accounting 6500
All util. incl. Fum & Unfwn. Ing •t $37$. * '42-2212 IUDdeck. heh. Ne1Wr, spac I..ovely home 1n tu.desm Gfl&llada Hills 2 sly vu hme • 833-0101 • Pilot, 2211 Balboa. N.B.
--RENTALS * PENINSULA 3 & t BR db: J Br, bltns, crpU. drpl, for 9i'ttkeod or permanent 2800 ,q ft, like new, '57.'rr!O GRAYISH Brown miniature BOO~PING Service lor
Newport 8ea.c:!' 4200 •-Unlumllhed 2 BA. frplc, blt.tns, crpta, ="s1~1:: ~ :._ LtvlrJ&. Val~ $30,Cnl, Trade val. 4 Br, 3 Ba, tam rm. For Commerir•I 'MS poodle found vie Bristol .tr smaU busmesscs. Laa. B<:h·· ...,..,.. ~ .. ~A S325 mo/yrb'. 536-.2131 for YoW' local property. nnaltMw HrbrVuH.ilh.. San DH!&-o Frteway. Cd.\1, N.B., C.~1 .. Daily,
1 /< :i BR turn & "WlfU111. ,,.. _ _.• ~--5100 ··~ ijfi::if:r;;u;;;-;;;-i;;ac;~ I;~~ .~,~··~!"'"!:!1~~1'---...._ __ ,..._ ·.,AA •m Newport eenttt. 15% Return. 540-6859 wkly, monthly. Will pick up ~· -· 1 ~~=,..,,~~-~-~I WALK 3 bib to beach. _...... ""• · vw..,., vu;, U'n""ll • Tu shelter Ir: spendable. SM b · & deliv. Cail 67>-tll2 room-~~}~~ ~~. ~!:~1 .:========0:.1 •NEWLY Rtdec. \Jppe:r S Almost new Jc ! BR apt. 2 BR House; High deaef1. WANT SAD.. or POWER -""-lk Ir: brown long haired ings. * * * * BR, 2 BA. Walk to beach! Dbl pr, '=Pl. w/w apts. smog fr't't' U'ff _Desire-YAOIT to $100,CO>. Have Ne~BeacbC-lcor.aer . ....,..PartPomeranlanJ="'======== ~ ~ ~ ~"!: El Puerto · Mew Apti. S:UO mo. Yeart,y. &U-6836 dl'l'S. dstwsbr, 2 bl.. $225 able for tttftd. cost ot uv. West L.A. inco~. O.C. re~ $12,IXXI Total -30..X85 1t. Vk:~ty of Mendoza and El Ap_pli•nce Rep•irs '* * * * e Y'U.RLY·l BR, nea.r bay mo. No ICWPets. chl.ldn bW teu. in area TRADE 2 ta.l houaes &: $90.000 T.O.s. Rnlonomicl Corp. Camino. ~ P•rts 6510 ""'"' 1·2 B.iroom Apti. • I: ocean. Partl,y furn, $150 ok. 536-lm • or 3 Br/C.M. or So, S.A. Owner 673-4621. Commercial Bia, 6751700 FOUND Boy's small bicycle.I--'-';;.:;'-------'--'
e OCEAN VI.EW . Wi~ SU> up ind. utilities mo. 673-2950. NEAR Huntington Harbour Owntt646-5t61 Commerclalincomeproper. COMMERCIAL plus VicinityolFalrviewandSan •Washer&.DryerRepa.irse ~~ f~.b~~~~!n~ Also tum. Pool, & Recreation STEPS to bch. Now tbru 71L New Triplexes. QWet uu. 19 U apt B&dg, N. Holly. t;y, free 1: dear, next to 1\1)11J1ments, La,euna Beech. Diego Fwy. SfS-2777 Free Estimates. Work
ly v.'/sm children 0 k . atta. Quiet Envil'OMlent Hurt 3 Br, 2 ba. Semi furn. l.zg 1, 2 Ir 3 BR. Diahwuhtt wood; pool/a'ir-cond. FOR: Sean: Val. $65,000. For view. Seil, trade or lease. GIRL'S bicycle found Sat. 15 Guaranteed. can 536-3lS9 64~ Off street parldng,, No pet&. PX> mo. St&-2575. $150 up. Chlld/petOK. (213) 40-50 U bklg, Ieu than 10 units, house or beacb prop. 4~1652 In M!!Sa Verde area. B b ftt• 6550 I BR. apt. Cll)ll(' to bl.y I-]959..1961 Maple Ave. Lge I BR. patio, on ha¥. Cpts. 592-2611 or tTI4) 846--3559. yn old, L.A. or Su Diego OWNER m.6259 e 5 STORES, $110,(Q). 68&-540-4733 a YI ing
beach. F'um /unfum. Also. Costa Mesa drps, ride tie avail.. Power. MOVE IN NOW Cnty. (213) 763-7715 aft 5. HAVE hardware store, Cos-698T W. 19th ,,~·1.,..~thel Bluepoint Siamese, female. OPENINGS Now w/reiiable
bach .. apt. U1.6 \V. Balbol. j ~~~~~~~~~~ $185. ()73..6141. brand new 2 BR apta 3T An&'.lema.a Schooner 11 Meta. "lock, stock A owe:rs comer . .,_.. '"° a.gt. Vic. ?oinsettia, CdM babyaltte:r, xlnt c a r e .
Bh>d .. N.B. E\>es. 6T>7876 or BAY MEADOW API'S . * from $135 * d.sl..aux, Rea<ty w 0 r1 d battel val. $12,500", for 67S-3271 full/part time. !if e 1 a
4.!»-2250. New ~citing l BR, $140, Newport Heights 5210 Crpu, drpl, bltns. family cruise! Val S2Sm. Want sngl home equity, vacant lot or lndustri•I Rental 6090 Polnter Pup North IP aularino area,
2 BR. $165; Beam ceilings. 2 BR duplu. Mature adlts :: ~e~tuistoo or twin IF'R A/C, w/low !! Owner 646-1675 APPROX 1700 sq-ft of whse Vic. Santa Ana St, CM r.-546--094~~'·-~---~ SPAClOUS 2 Br. Jurn.
Adullll. No pets. Full ocean
-n·. Yrly renlaL Ind's
v."&ter & eltt:. $300 mo.
646-670~
e \\!Th"J'E:R RENTALS e
Rent NOW far Sept.!
ABBEY REALTY &nJS50
OCEANFRONT lower
duplex, 2 BR. 1% ba. frp)c
$1-G mo. Avail 9/10 to 6/10
6""830
2 BR UJ'PER..walk lo bch,
$250 incl utll. Yrly avail
911 714-6l5--'ltH.5. 2 13 •
447-9"3
W~ pan I&. shl& crptg. Ollly, no peta. $121. &0-.sDi · • time engs. 5t6-325l eves l1'f 1968 Buick Riviera Grand space in new So S.A. incl 541Hi516 1.IC sitter hu 2 vacancies,
pnv. patio, tome w/frplcs eve~. • BLK to bch! Qu let, I pm. Sport.ch!stnut. Mag wlW, tract. Air cond office, Bl..K And white Collie, male. my home. Vic OOC &:
Pool. sand volley ball crt. and-1ll'O'f! Nw l Br $135. Prv FWi 'n Chips, completely full pwr. Trade $33)0 equity overhd door fixtures In. $200 Vi c Or a n a: e Co u n t y College: Pk schools. Xlnt
rec bldg., pool tables, put. IRVINE 5231 patio, &•r. Sbgi adlts, cpl. equip'd, free&. clear. Nets lor VW. 546-5445 or 54Q..ID18, mo_ Ph: 549-2231, S..S daily Fairgrounds. ~ loving care. 549--0706
ting green. Adult&, no pets, -D-A lfth. 53 6 • l l l 9' $2000, $5M value. FOR boat uk for John. FOR lAe-5300 sq ft prime SIAMESE Cat vie K.illybrook WANTED OUl' home, 7:45-4, 38':' W. Bay. Open House 673-1784 2 school age boys, light ll-7 pm daily, 6t6-0073. NOW LEASING! $150 MO. 2 BR. untum. Apt. I anything of value. 541-6639 Have seven.I large homes, wattbse space-ell or part. Ln It Wablon St, Halecrest. hou k. Ult ha Ove-•--u• -~" d;ys, 962-4981 evn/wknds. will exchange equity for Irvine Ind. Mr. Bullard P11oM 545-6583. ~~ _'!1 536--~ °: Like Liv ing in Your New, family and adlllt units --. .._ 6......... ---" ho ' ~1 FOUN • ·~ OWN HOME •• I I with total !"e'a'eation club patio A heated pool, 1035 8 Dix. units, Anaheim; 2 ..., ...... er mes or · D muepoint Siamese 8 appt.
Wby Jll'Y 1175 for an apt!. and ptt'-SCbool_ 1. .3 I: 3 l2tb St. fllCl'OY from I...ake Bt., l % ba. F.q, U&,000. Mt. Beatty, Realtor NEW bldg, 1368 'to 2300 ft, mo old w/collar. Veryl'e"AB""v"'s=rr,.....-.,.hom--...,f,..,-..,..,
Park.) 53&-400> want local home or small 838-6341 Nr. Baker &. Fairview, l gentle. Identify 675-8754. ard 1 • ~Y all le, e .
:e"u: ;a:R~r!:i;: ~ =r s;::::· ~ * A'ITRA.C. 2 BR. $139 ~' units. Call: Nancy. Pyra.. Commerci&.I &: income prop, yr leue. SUllivan 5'8-2176 FEMALE wire hair terrier, ho~ ;~toi;a : :r::~
crpt/drp, end pa.tlos, spac south ot San Diego Fwy. on BR $149. All ex:tru. Pool. mid E:xcbangon: 6Th-8800. dOwntown Laguna, older. RENT M·l, 1125 sq tt. $125 lame left rear leg, S.13, Vk:: Price reu rx br M $18 wk.
grnds • 2 Pools! Adults only, CuJve:r Dr., In'ine. '833-373.\. Kids/petl ok. 1 7 4 3 1-C 545-36.52 Eve1. Trade for San Fra.ncllco or mo. 1355 ~t..i6C.M. Nat'l Ave. 548-398.l aft 5. _'46-0='-1"60". =·,--"'"--
Z238 Fountain Way E. (Har. PARK WEST Keel9on l..n. 847--0325 Havt 18 units, Ton-ante. N. Cali!. countl')' acreqe. SMAIL while maJe dog, cur· BABYSIT'G wkly, my
bar, tum W. on Wilaon), APARTMENTS (2) .3 BR. Apts. 1 w/yard, Annual spendable Sll.570. Owner 494--ls.52 1250 SQ FT. M·l lndustr:ia.I ly . hair', vie V~ & home, med yd. baby ok,
B•lboa l1lend 055 THE VICI'ORIAN Owned :tnd Manapi by 1 child OK. Without yard Want beach area house. F.q in beaut nu 3 BR water. space w/office, J..p ~nt, Umon St, C.M. 646-4574 vie; Bch Blvd &: P.C. Hwy
1---------· INEW 2 Br, 1% Ba "''/ gar. The Irvine C'1mpany has pa.tkl, adult.s only. $140 Call: Rich Irwin, 675-6060 front b::lme w/dock in Hunt. r Creer~ 1240 Logan RABBIT . found in Mesa Exper 536-7073 .
I 3 BR 5el> houSf' Util incl. $155. Adults. Crpts, drps, ea.. 842-4549 Pyramid Exchaniorz Harbour of $22,000, Immed ' .M. Verde -5t&-3431 CHILO Care at my home.
Lease $22Slrno. Nr. South bltns, fnod yrd w/ patio. ~ 2 BR, l~ BA., patio, 67S-8800 poss. FOR any income prop Lots 6100 Lost Harbor & Baker vicinity.
Ba,y. Ne•iy dee. Ca I I 6fi1 E. Victoria ( El , East Bluff 5242 pool. $165 mo. MORA KA1 20 Acres. Hemet: possible or land in OC onr 548-2381. 6401 C.M. 5~
Pasadena (213) 798-4003 636-4120. apts. East of Beach Blvd, mobile home site. Want OCEAN View re9klential Jot !""'========
VILLA MESA APTS. ~ blk oil Garfield. multiple units lot, Orange What do you baw to trade? for sale, Costa Mesa. $14,500 ·LAVENDER Blue Parakeet BOilt Milnt.nanca '555
H t·-1.., Beech 4100 NEWPORT BEACH "-··-•· ''-lt ..,. ID~-•---·-------"" 1 •• ., 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. l BR. New. Frplc. Near .... uuu..,. area. -~ -.,...-~ tenM. ~ at 4V<lV Valley lost from Shadow L n -1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I 2 ,car encl'd gar, Children Viii• ~ran.da Apt1. ocean. Patio. Adult&. Pyramid Exchangon Count;y'1 .LarRtst read trad-Rd. or trade equi()' for N. Lagun.a Bch Sat. .Answers t~ DCK?< & .boat cleaning &
ON BEACH! ~come. no pets pleut! $350. Four bedrooms with I.JNDBORG CO. 5.16-2S7' 675-8800 lnc polt-aMmakea deal.. Calif. property. 415: "WaUy" Reward. 494-3922. nwnt with .good year
SJ°' m W W"-balconies above & ~w. ..L + *. * * * ~ or P.O. Bal'. MJ6 LOST _ brown ...........__,_,,, aro~ &eMCe, m-0682 "" mo. · ._,n, Gracious IJvina: & quiet SW'-*LOVELY NEW APTS • Be lrel ea 94709 :uL'l"Ml'.U1'U mornings G16-l25L N ...... Ocean I< ~~. 1 a 2 r ey, · · dC!cla.wed male cat Pacitic·'-===''======cl
ttc room-ocean 'fiews
patios-ample paJ'kin&.
Security pards.
FURN, a1lo Avail
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AVE,, HB.
<n4> 536-1487
Ofc. open 10 am.6 pm Daily
Managed by
WILLIAM WALTERS ro.
e BLK to bch! Qu it!,
snd-:-prf! new 1 Br $150. Prv
patio, gar. Sngl adlts, cpl.
:m.A 14th 536-1319,
613-1784..
FURN Bachelor, ma t u r e
single S75 iool util. H.B.
RllY. 53&6565, eYe'll 53&-2377
roundings for family with ._,, ......... LAST....._____ 2 0up 1· HARBOR GREENS <hi-n. N.,.. Corona Del Br. "5 13U. Sl 847-3957 ••.• oAC~ REAL ESTATE --~~0 lox lot., area. Child'• J>Ol Reward. Brick Mesonry
GARDEN &: sruoio APTS Mar Hi&h School. Fireplace, 2 BR. uptta.trs. large front A¢s. Unfumllhed ~rat $5250. nr Beach 81 &: 96U57l etc ' ' 6$60
wet bar &: built·in kitcbl!n yard. $160 util p a Id, Warner Ave. 536-'lOil MALE Cdlie "Steppe" one.I-='------'=
Bacb. l. 2. 3 BR's. from SllD. appliances. OUldttn. pets ok. 53&-2821. L·~~-&.•ch 5705 Mohls, Tr•ller 3 ARCH Bay, above medical whlte fDr'e, leg. P1ease BRICK * BLOCK * STONE
2700 Pet.erlOD Wiur, c.M. S3S AMIGOS WAY 644-2991 OCEAN VIEW • Lr& Courts 5997 bldg, unobstruc~ viewlot, return. God Bless You. By the .hour. after 5:30 ~Q IETI AL I . l~e~im:,~~U~': Ba.chekl', l I: 2 BR apts. # WEEKLY Rate!, SEA $16,950. 837-7013. 54&-9208. 642-1948 * 66-0758
U L NEW TradtW!nda: Realty M7-85ll Fum ot untum. Czl>ts,. drpl, LARX MOTEL. 23O1 Ranches ,150 BL.ACK wJwhfte P eke ,
Cpts. drps, bll·ins. 2 BR. •NEW DELUXE• bltns, patioe, walk ina: Newport Blvd, Coda ~1esa male, "lpc»', Vic. Ogle & Carpentering 6590
Adults, no pets:Nr Harbor 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lei.Ml. l BR. Unlurn. O'pts, di.stance to town. 100 Cliff l 113 Acre hone property Santa Ana, CM. REWARD. CARPENT·RY
& Adams, Garage available, Incl apac. muter .Wte, din ~. ;;~· ~ Dr .. Lag. Bch. 494-5(98 Mite. R•nt•I• 5999 -all level&: usable. Spacious ~1735 MINOR REPAIRS. No J'ob
&-»-39!17. rm Ir dbl garage, auto door e 3 BR, 2 ba, crpts, drps, * * WOOD'S t'OVE ** New Big S.•r C•bin 3 br, 2 ba, l car glll9ge Hse LOsr: Female chocolate Too Small. CabiMt m Pl"
QUIET adult couple only. 2 oS>fher avail. Pooi &: Rec. bltr1!1, wnd@ck. 1 blk to heh. Beech ~ block, new 1 &: 2 Sleeps 11 6'&l070 rompletely re nova t e d Siamese cal Jt>weled tlea ages I: 0 th• r cablnetl.
:,,,.:, ~~ted~-~ area.• FROM~ • $.175. 842-4085 -:ch ~ve ~e:11B~ ;:: Bu1ine11 Rent•I 6060 =~w a=ncec.;ver:.oof ~7-Vic Back Bay. :;17:', tf .:=-a*~
mo. 2295 Pacific Ave., CM. 865 Amigos Way, NB $200 up. Lease 2175 S. Coast --owner will finance. 10782 FLUFFY Fem Tabby kitten. Andel'80D
548--6871 or 642-4429. J\.f·-·__. by S.nta Ana 5620 Hwy. 497-16.ll or 49'-3929. OFFICE .Space &: boat Mead1 Ave, Ori Pk acres flea C!Ollar 8/5 ., .•. ~CARP====~--~ ~--d" I 633--9700 hoo... ' • .... • ENTER: Remo de J , SPAC. 3 BR w/ lrg covered W1l.lJ.AM WALTERS CO. --** NORTII END ** l5P ay area. E ::ii: Ct" I l · · ")! Brentwood St, CM 548-4719. patio work, cement work patio, l'lC!w w/w crpt, new 1 BR " blk ,iv-._ marine exposure, :l 6 0 2
d 1 bllns 21L ... _...__ PRIVATE VIEW VILLA MARSEILLES ocean w '71 ,._... Ne.........,rl Blvd N B Ac 6200 FLUFFY fem Tabby kitten, & painting. No job too rps, e ec · /7 DG"'"'· 2 2 ba -• BRAND NEW ping, beaches. Laundry -...., " · · re•ge flea collar, 815, vi c: smaU. Free est., 536-l944 Nr fl'ee1o1."&yS. No J>CU. Bdrms., tbs; carpelo:u, II dul $175 673-6606. B
56-4893. dUra~, ~in.I~! d.~wshrM_ . SPACIOUS !~air~.~ mo. BAY, 6SO sq. ft. & ooe 55(1 sq. HORSES? POOL! BOA;; 2 ... ~~~blaSt.kCfM 548-4719 CLEAN-UP jobs, hauling,
2 BR. drps, cri>ts. swim'g t>Slall'S . .J ~ •• onu1. Ut. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. NEW n-..-side apt.s. with fl. w/pit. plua 3900 sq ft, 5 min to Dana Pnt Harbor ,....,......, ... u c em poodles, concrete work. Free est
pool ' gar. Also 1 BR. 1 year lea.sr. Adult Living pool. F= $2.ClO month. storage yard or pe.rlting. plenty of area on 1.79 acres: ~c4~~ Niguel. 499--Zlll Small or big. 548-ml
cpts, drps, pool gar. No ,_, . '75-6050 o Furn. & Unfurn. PL.ACE REALTY 4!M-9704 Large overhead doors. 1980 zoned sn\all estate in · REPAIR, Remodeling &
L•nun• S.ach 4705 children, no pets. Quiet -• Dllhwasher . cob' coordlnat-Harbor Blvd. 645-1440 Capistrano city limits, all Patio-No job too small!
-""'--------neighborhood. 6t2-80tl -··p 1 a.a ed appliances. plush shag REAL ES"fATE STORE OR OFFICE util, 4 bldg, sites possible. Person•la 6405 * 67~17 *
SINGLE. CIO!le in, modern,
dean. Resp. mature penon.
Perm. $90. Refs. 494-:6715
2 BR furn or untum, fan-
tutk view, 11' bl:k beach.
88che1ors pref. 4!M-l652
QUIET ADULT LIVING carpet • choice of 2 color Generel fiOO Or UlO Sq, Ft. Parking Owner 494-426'1 CARPENTRY: Cabinets,
I & 2 Br. Shag crpU. bltns, Corona d•I M•r 5250 IC!bemee • 2 baths • ataD Rent a Ii Wanttd 5990 Reuonable. 646-2414 Government land-$5 acre A THE NA •5 Room Addltiom:, Patios.
pool. beaut. lndscpd. $150 ahoWers -m1mnd ward-2630 Avon St., Newport Wrlte-Land Package, ll85 of the Sunset Strip with Any size job. Mike, 646-2576
& $170 mo. inr::I all util. robe doon -tndirect lJPt. Arrowhefld. San Bndo 92410 Ul A\.-ocado St. 646--0979 1ng 1n kl.tcbe::a _ breaJdut WORKING couple, no STORE-OFFICE the greate~t girls from REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS ~.... bar .. huae prtvate fenced ctilldren, no pets, want 2 or Newport Bch. 825 sq ft 11 ACRES-WEST C.M. HOLLYWOOD to * CABINE'TS. Any size job
MODERN 2 Br. 1% Ba. ~ patio -plush Joinuacaplnc • 3 br hie, condo or mobile * Ervin ~1601 * Owner 646-7994 MASSAGE YOU 25 yrs exper, 548-6713
Crpts, d11>s. GE kltch., Q,. brf• b ck Bar-B-Q' ho CM H t. Bch 000.1200 SQ FT QUALITY it'~io, ~':uclts g~. Nr:ii.t b~. : pools • la..~ 1arKe beat· ar:~· Pb ., SU-:1 or 000 sq tt. ~tore: :1~ $8/; R. E. Wanted '240 Now with a new location gen'I const~~=nt:;;i
20th, . gr. . ON TEN A~ 3101 So. Brl~tol St. 539-2253. C.M. 64G.2l3o . . in Free oonsuJla.tion & quote:
NR New 2 Br. l1n Ba, 1 A2 BR.. Furn • Unfurl OiMl.N.olSo.·CoutPl.ua) NEEDED Approx St>p1. 1;!AS!'':~~e~~R.~ Newport Beach CailKen~,548-4235.
1
S._n_c_1_e_m_on_11 ___ ,_11_0 cpt/drp, stv--Oshwhr. gar. ~~~ ... ~ pOonrl•. ~~J Senta An• 15-~~ .. 3 br home, pool Office Rental 6070 area. 644-426.5. 642-9532 GEN. Repair, add, cab.
Av! 8121_ 766 W. Wilson c-......., Jo.,..._. tn -.. PHONE: 557...nGO pre er~. Co. executive: Fonnlca, paneling marllte.
l BR. live rm, kit A bath, 642-7$8 900 Sea LI.De, CdN 644-2'U w/tamily. References avail. SUPER-DELUXE QUAlJTY Business 2ll 62nd St., 62nd AW. Anything! Dick, 673-4459
ocean, view, wlk to heh, (MacArthur nr. O..t ffwJ) $150. LRG 2 BR. Studio Apt. Under $300. Clll collect l-2-3 room, up to 3,000 .... O I • 6300 Coast Hwy in the
ahop;.ing, &how, reuona.ble :i &. 3 BR. unfum. Adults, pvt ('I'liplex). Family 1 1 st 7141822--6241 ft. ottice auites. Immed. ;;;;. pportun ties Newport Shores Center Cement, Concr tte '600
rate. 4'2-9996, -492-5189 yard, encl gar. lmmed. oo-LGE new 2 BR. 2 ba. .trplc, kltcb.. w/bltns, crpts, drps, FAMILY wishes to rent or c:upancy, Orange Cnty. HEALnf Forces sale ot *FULLY LICENSED*
--.....,.-cupency, E. 18th S 1 · 811 bltns, cpts, drpg. beamed trplc., encl gar, 1 or 2 lease w/op'tion 5 br home Airport Irvine Commerc. Janitorial service route. Renowned. Hindu Spiritualist CONCRETE. All types. Free
Dan. Point • <4740 546-3776. 5'0-4431 ceil'g, pvt pat, So. of Hwy. children ok. {Nr 1chl1) No w/poot Up to $350. Loving Complex, adj. AJrporter 1963 Ford Eronovan, all Advice on all matters, ~t. Sawing, breakln&', haul·
NEW S~ '2 bedroom l~ 1 BR. $11(), 2 BR $165. Pool. $25G-$27S. 548-7'983. pets. 2230,S. Ce:nter St'., S.A. care. El Toro/ La ru na Hot~I & Reitaurant, be.nks, equipment to 1ertnce au-Love, Marriage, Buslneu ing & . sklpioadln&". Servke
baUl. Available Sept.]., $225 Elec. &: wtr pd. AdJts, no SPAOOUS 2 br. 1% ba, w/w Nr Warner, 557-6502 Beach area, J39..8ll7 S&n DleKO Ir N'pt. Fwys. counu. G 1·0 11e s ap-Readings rtwn 7 days a &: quahty. MB-8668 Bob
mcinO:lty. 496-62«3. ' ;~ ~:. O~;:-f405 241 crpt, stove, retrlg. Adults, $115-Lrg cheerful 1 Br. apl * LEASE wJ option 4 BR. . UNCROWDED PARKING proxhpately $7,00J per yenr. week, 9 AM - 9 PM * CONCRETE work: patios,
RENTALS na pets. $22:j mo. 675-3580 Crpts, drps, bltna:, encl gar. unde.r $25,000. (per(. CM LOWEsr RATES Can be built up to doing 312 N. D C&mino Real, drvways, etc. L I ce n s ed •
• L.mlsh-..a NEW cus10m tri-plex. 1.JBR, SO. ot h'W)' 2 Br, NICE! No 1 cbild ok. CNr. achls). 2230 area.) Im.med. occup. Call Owner/mgr, 2172 l>uPGnt Dr., much larger volume. Full San Oerne11te, Phillips Cement 548-63$1
_,.,,.. Unn.io -2BA. frpk $.360. 1-:IBR, 28.A, children, no pm. Square S. Center St. S.A. nr 6£S28!I Rm. I, Newport Beach. price $3(XXl.00. 646-406.1. 49'2·9136, 942-0076 CEMENT Work of aU ldnds.
fTplc $21.0. 164. W. 18th. only, $185. 642.-7898. W~. 557~. FURN. Apt in COM. For ml22J Courtesy to Brokers $1,000 DOWN -PUTS you in-Single. Wklo9i"ed _Divorced Free est. • Goner•I 5000
VENDOME
IMMACUI..A.TE API'Sl
ADULT and
Jr,A.MILY SectiOD
C .... to .-Ing, Pork * SPldoul 3 BR· •• 2 ba * Swim pooJ, putfpttn * FrpJ, lndiv/lndry fac'ls
1145 An•holm Ave.
COSTA MESA 6'2-282& * B-.c• Lovers
64frl055, 6TJ..-9565 !=========-========= responsible single woman. DESK SPACE to a it)i~ launderette in M & w ~<
SllO, 2 BR. bath A Ii •tudio. Fovntoin Velloy 5410 Fount•ln Vell1y 5410 6~2381 or 675-J468 BeauL L. Sch Roy J . en omen MORE eo"""1' patio tor
driis. cpts. patio. Avail 9n. ,, •••••••••••••• ~.~·· * LANDLORDS * JOS No. El Camino Reel Amtaon Rllr. 4M-7J)O less money Artistic ttinr 714: 548--8301 or 21 3 ; FREE RENTAL SERVICE Sen Clemente 2 Operator sh 0 p or Everyone's 1ooldnr for the Uc., call Max at ~ ' .,,_,,,., :JJ Blue Beacon 645-0183 CM f92..MZ equipment. Can 646-3621. tight one. We have • way. DECORATIVE CON * DELUXl: 1 & 2 BR ~ • DESK SPACE e.l(cept Mon. &: Wed. before Sc call us I begin to live! DRIVES-WALKS--p~
GfJ"den APts. Bll·lns, prlv. e Rooms for Rent &"5 4PM. 547.fiG67 24 hr. record. CAU. DON, 642-8Sli
patio. heol<d pool. ~. 222 Forest Avenue * • WIG SHOP, Cail W<d. •MASSAGE & SAUNA CEMENT WORK. .., job too
Adult.s. Sl-G mo. S4&.Sl63 Lagune .Beech thru Sun., 9-5, Bai Isle, !.Owly girl.ii EXPERT MAS. small, reasonable Frft
../ LRG 2 &: 3 BR, 2 83ths. ~ AVAJ.L Aug. :14: Room w/ CSf.M66 673-7262. SAGE, Ask about our Ll1 Eatim. H. Stu.Dick 5ts-8st5
Fti>lc, blt·lns, crptl, drps, t • I ~1:;ru1~'. CM. Bree.kl.ut: RESfAURANT: Prime H'W)' Vf!gas vacations. 10 AM to j:======:;:=:;;;;:;,J encl gar, Pfltio. 546-1034 oun at.,. A: rl 11 • R itchen &. pool Need inunedialeb': Small of. Joce.tlon. $lO.OOO. 2 .Uf, 7 DAYS. 2930 W. Contr•ctors .1..1.-
,.,.., p v . eas! Yna }f.dy nee apace tor aC"COUnlin& ==~·;~-~ -~··~*;,==l~c~.,..~-~t:i;H~wyi.;-"NB~. ;!1<8-"i36!Mi;i;.;;; -SPAC 3 Br, q>ta. drps. pool, , pref'd. 64z...n-a5 --.1~ 1 • ..,,..,. n-a•• ·-•. ~ ,,;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I tam. • .3 tida ok. 2214 hlediUrronMUt. S,,.U l.uzury ~ ...... --ix .......... ~ SWINGERS! New Onuige
College Ave. No. 2. 646--0627 ·l Bedroom, lull hllth. No North end. 49$.5510. Business Wanted 6305 Co. Guide. For tree info.
kilcben. Pvt pe.tlo. 3 blk to UP to 3600 sq ft-Deluxe, air Write S.C.S.G. P.O. Box e REMODELING
SHARP! 2 BR, bll·in rlow, 3 BR, .3 Be, treshJy pain~. l & % Bedrooms -! Baths bch. 6~l023 tll 11:00. cond, crpta, drps. In com-1ANITORIAL Service or Ac-2'll1. Ana.helm. 921>4 e ADDITIONS
dilhwubtr. Oilldren wd-=· r:f.~~ltna. t A.dolt lhtn& ROOM for rent-~ block to pujtr ctnter bld.r. 646-7425 countl or Jtug Cleaning PelU'l,)Tich Bras • Swim:wear e ALTERATIONS
come. HUR.RY? $180. 2 BEDRM 1" ba crpU drpl l"Urnlshed & Vatanaished oceen. Beaut view. $18 and or 546--600> route, comm'l only 492-0SZJ Pel'IOl\al fttti?lP by appt • PAno &: DECKs
Hom•Fincfer1 645-2'51 bltina. $160 mo. 54!>-3424 uk Up. 2500 See V!f:'w, CdM. LAR,-.,."°G"°E,,--olli""'.,.-,-.-.~,-... -m-1 549--0026 or 5t6-0029
NEW 1·2-3 BR'a. All blrns. for Mr. Wlnten. : ~.,,.., "'-.. I $60 Lovely nn. pvt home, t1Ulte $Im, 4 room swie-$235, Money to Lo.n 6320 A LCOHOl.lCS AnoJJymOUi Allen Con1tl'\lctio" Co. ~~m:;;,..s-mieout 2,~~~.;;tj/)c..=. : ~~c.;:;, ~~ ·~ ~~.o~e1;';.,~1oyed ~~~-·u~~is. drapes. 1st TD Loan ~:~h:.~!.to i::-"k:~~· eon~~~i.
-548-4691 e CZ.-Gt:,.,.. i i; ~"'-Prtv. qi nn, in large C.M. i NEWPORT BEAC! I"' .,.~~ PERSONAL M~ for * nIE ""M
(9sta MeJI 5100 .;;:=:;:=======:; e ~-c.til•p J . '"' pool home w/YGUn& fam. YJ $90 mo. Alr-cond, -,.. .u•'r..l'ILA>' muslc:laruf single duo trio n.i:. ODELERs *
..... --·-----Newport a .. ch szoo tM11 s1ai.r "'••••• --''"' ""''· 6'"1155. -· •61>-1601 2nd TD Loan 67'.o-31()(1 >i.e ..• n.10.M ~.i.:-: ;.= .•oondna
2 BR Dtu»ex. Ne"*7 dee. I * $15 PER Wet:k-up •I OFFICE Rentals Laguna Complete Rernock~
Bllna. Child ok. WJJ/trr0. NEWER yur1)i •PIA . on ~·t~••i,,.J! -· kitchen. $.15 per Y.'etlt•llP Bch. $125 Mo. Coast llwy. Tenna blJtd on equity. Fero' RESULTS )'OU CIUI ~ Q\lality C.On~ton &D.-
:Mg E. l &th Pl 5f9..3886. Peninsu11. 3 BR. $300 mo. =~ff~:·;:~':! Apts. MOTEL M&..97$5 Real F.atate O.K .4M-9727 '42·2171 545-061 1 pend on, Cl.1l the SUper-_, •
I BR. J Adult Qnly, Cao-.;675-0532.;.,;;;~-=-=-~ NEED llELP1 lAlok flit it NEWPORT ett.Ch deluxe of. $e.rvtna RArbot atta 2J )TL Stltaman. .Dtll,y Pilot MY WAY, quality home
a.lll/loc. SZ!mo &fl-4881 ... 0 N E y I N y 0 u R Da1b' Piiot Clauifted ncu. AINond. tttd. Prlv. Settler Mortfag1 Co. ~~~e:: ::1u -place ~r.11' N:•1;!b c:r.::,.,tnc. := • nr 547.2331 ___ POCKE ___ '-'T_1 ____________________ Phone 60-t.S'rl ba. 2400 W. Cout Hwy. 391 !!, l7th Strtet -~G--1494 •
I •
' -
•
, Tlo•Ndq, ,\ugurt 20, 1970 DAILY PlLOf 31 • ..
SI RVIC:I OIRlc:TOltY ~CE DIRECTORY :!£!.S_!.!_Ml'LOYM~ :!£!! ~.~_!:?_!~~~ JOIS & IMPLOYfill!:!! j JOIS & IMl'LOYMINT JOll & IMP.LOY 11 IS a f lllPLOYM,!!! ,,.._, A _ ii\':
Controc:tor. 6620 lronl"I 6755 Job Wonted, Mon 70IO Jobo Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo Motl, w .... '7100 Jobo MoJ>, W-7100 Jobi M.n, Wom. 7100 Jolio Mon, w-7100 Jobo Mon, w-7100
~~. ~~::"~:~ '=i!:.~:u:':.!.,:-· CAPTAIN AUTOMOBILE u.e """'' COCO'S.RE UllN;s HOTEL •.• Mm. ___ ..,, SE11Vtasc.1,,...-·~~~·
613--6041 * 549-2170 up. $1 ptr hr. Exctllcnt LICENSED ci1n' npu, fbr fut arowirc COMPLEX Very plellant worklrw ~ncn. Apply, MacCrtror Yaeht tnll A put tfme. E:qiftienc.. Benloq's CQlkt 9x1f
ADDITIONS, L.T. Con1truo-work. Ntwp0rt. Costa Mua rt.dar _ Lo n, 30 )'ears ex. Oldl dlr. fn °'1:· Ct;y. $1 ~lb' Blvd, dona In ant dl.fi' bottl, In Corp·, 1m PlM!tnd-.. C.M. td Drily. Neat, Apply 290 13$ $.Out, Lquu Jfch
lion, 1lnale or 2 •tory, pl&na, am.. 64WS81 perience .u Ot f)OWfl'. ~ Apreuive man. will.ltw to INTERVIEWING NON..ntl. .. bocalt~ ~ MO'l'llER NMda tnd ol sum-Newport'B!vd., C..M. wAJ'riti:Si °""' ti. Uta.
cit 4 layoutt. 847·1511. lroniJ:w, mY home. $1 frukJ¥J iport fl.ahJJv cuJde work, x.lnt pay, vac W, fr.. 2:J:I to 5 pm men(. E:QittStftee., mcomt ma he.Ip. Cbldn\ILt Ukpr. SERVICE 8 T ATI 0 N If.. HtkUebtrl. 1'I llchddm
hr. You Dtllm-. 111mcan &; C·ntrel Amerio =ta. bco.~ so!';u.~ DAY HILP ot wlll tn1n. Call cnt) Udo We 8qfroAt. m..uoc.. tendant. hll or Part !Jme Pf. H.B. m..iiilf ..
Corpot Cl11nlng
~Q
CARPET
STEAM CLEANED
Rl!ASONABLE RA TES
Ahlo carpet bwtallation
646-.5971
6*-6&0 Un wattl'I. Adml.niatraUve l.,.Unlv, ~. C, M. e ~T~Rii ~TOO-~~ ~ _.... NURSl!S Needed b private =~ ~ted. l1Z Hmof WANTED: ~ Jhtt.
e IRONING In "'" home, .,...ri.ni.,, '40-9'61. IUSIOYS ~~-d"" -...,,. type. RN'o · m ........... Rn> l -
Coota M .... Re""""ble. AVAILABLE fOf' """""''· ** llUS D • HOU'"""EEPER LVll'o -Prae. -Aldn. AD !lllARP Pl ap """' .., saluy 0-U 2 mil citli! MS-WO ,....,.... ,..,_ or·delJ•. RIVERS e OISHWAIHl!RS .~. lh!tll. Call any hoar. '°""""· -t ...,· .. ,, f15.06il • Ten months JllOlltlont. $3.10 "" TITTTW Lfticou1:1e N D-'-'--ules. Beat of ...ia.ocu. per hr, Apply Mon, lhlu DENTAL Ml't.; cba!Nldo, * • .!!'::·.--' "The Place.7_':""'~9W , $9100 W ... 6790 Write Box M 1060, o.Dy Fri., 1 am to f pm, at BUI Min. 1 )'f ortho ap. NI. or Perm.1nent Position .._;nu;J Bail.lm, ''Tbt ..._...;• ..., s. •
gpARKLEJ&iifiCrii:ri"wm. Pilot, 2211 W. Balboa Blvd., Cange, 800 Jrv1~ Avenue, pt·tlme, kMJy office, for eur new fecHltles e OFFER.INC; Xlnt Ao-Bltlt0l.~11orl3S-m2-PART TIME EVE:S..
dow cleaninc Serv. Win-NeWJ>Ort Beach, Cai Newpor t Stach. (1l() 'l'\1rtln. Salary open. c:ommodalioN: to collep smm aetdfd T.V. tchl MI N & WOMEN oow.. relid., com.cl, corwL 6Q.?007. 5"-U15 Apply in nanan lttldent. For Ute bou1tbok1 di.t. W 1 yr. cld pl. 6 to to;3" J.Yft, Nop..
J•nltorl1I
cleanup. F?M ut. ~ Job Wanted, ••DISHWASHER r-··-·· duUH. ~. MS-1191. PINIR. tail c:r.illied w1cday peie.1'Jce ~.
Diamond Carpet, Cleaniq: Womtn 7020 s:!y~ ~ ~ • • WAJTR ESS -E:ic· HUNTINGTON BEACtf Ofc. TrelnM Jns ews. (2U) l3Mal4. Mn. Mutt be llfat A' de-
A.._ Spe<. 400' l>I Lonclocoplng 6110 --. sallry open. peritnc:od, lull -· Apply, CONVALESCENT ,._nt H.S, l"d OK. Beaut l'-'-pendable. -. ........ ~-e•L le ln.s~~;x>nlll7 NEW LAWNS, n1erdlor, --------MS-13115attl. SURF A SIRLOIN, ~ ... w. HOSPITAL N.8 . ottlcn, 1'09 bmd!ts. ~, ... Wanted: Mybome. vtee.WE'11WN'.FOC. r•-= ~ SENIOR t ypl at w/<Hc-Ooul Hwy, N.B. No~. Call Mila Be"", 557-8122 2 Yr CJ10 ~. 2 A S Atwr-lnkrYtew caU 54'7· ro~l:llllnr.renovatl11.r, BABYSITl'ER ~.~....... •v .,.,,~ REMARCSe:rvices.lroom• clean-up. 19T-2tlT or taptioneexperience~ ·•~per DESKOerkpartthnerellef. J.IS1111ori4aSV Ablp.U Abbot PnloMtl llOGnlPttwt.F.VJy~ 7712. $21.SO. Fully auaranteed. 846--0932. tere.ted In put.time even-Jor teacher'• 4 8Chl chUdftn, Mlllt know all phuet of lStuc lAnt) -A&mey, n:i w. Wama, 988-1"5. 1-.-"'.,=0MEl<:....._W_AJ<l'ED==-.-
Credlt ca.rds OK. 841-66811 ======== inr Wort.· Exptt'I~ in ll:~. 4:30 Mon/Fl'f, Ml.tit front desk, nlaht audit, Hwrt!l'lglClft Beach Sult. m , Santa Ana. SUM GYM DI.er btlp Trotta'• 8a1ICry
STEAM jet carpet cleaniJ:la. MAID SERVICE 6125 typtng moet forn'll ot lepl have car. 89'7·'7949. PBX, I: NCR G'IO. Ben ~PART thne Sa I ea lady den1001trMe: wodd'1 NO. 1 %U Farat AM.,
By ClirKatt, nation...wlde documentl. 548.-1573 BABYSITI"ER wanted, dyl, Brown'1 Motor Hotel, SllOll HOUSEKEEPER O>mpetnion ~. Vtrpnlia'i $nip ~ Ir lntrodut'e 0 ° Lquna Bffch
service. Free est &U-4055 CANDSMa.ldService llOUSEworkwantedbyd&y. own tran1, Harbor S. Cout Hwy, So uth b-dletl.Ywpnwn.lJ~in. 'n Stllctl, ~ E. Cout cltkle,newSI.JMGYMJET See Mrt. Raupp
· • Reeklentlal Is apartment&. Ref. own tnMport.atlon Blvd/Weit Kent St, S.A. Lquna. Rd. excblnpd. Send Hwy, CdM BAnt. No exptl". Nee. WOMEN, Ute delmry'flllOric.
C•rpet Laying & Ph. 6U-9873 or 642--9874 531-UMT aft. S PM. 531-8167 DRUG CLERK, rnwne Ir h!1. • to Box M PART time hel wanted ShiMy Grabun 881-1916 or Mlllt have o;rn car. Apply:
Repair 6626 p • ti J-oL Won~•, -BABYSITTER • my home, MATURE l029, Da81~ ~ %Zll W. Matthews uruc! Service' M&-4311. 325 N. Bl'OlldnY. Rm. 410, ••n ng, Iii' ,_ mutt have r;efttencn, own Full time. Call a.DIS Balboa YU., • 39'J8 E. Cout Hwy, CdM ' SUM GYM Nltt -~ Suta AllL
I STILL have the Seit du.I P•perh1nglng 6150 "--& W-7"_ traMportaUon. M1Hi706 HOUSEKEEPER All around PBX ·-~--•-exp ~ to aercite. L.o1e ~1-;:========I In town in Carpet-Linoleum--n..n .... , ... , V<N * DRIVERS * ---~-_. ..... ,,, · chts. I wortr;t.. k fttb rood Tile. C..A. Poge, 64>-"'70 PROFESSIONAL PslnU,.. ~-~~ y ~TT"': R: 1~ pl FrldayM ... • de~, SO ... rd. Full -· « port • ..J. like ho--In ScMoQ.1-7fll • _ Neat work. Fine patnbl. Coo .__...eep .. ,., .,..., m. ..,.. N &..-..I )'I'S +. our ......,.. :YCM' time Ph· B-1881
Electric•I 6640 Roller, bru&h. air-less n!:;:: wk,Jdayoff.64&--09.19 O -.,,......ence home.Owntm4'IV ~PRA~~N Pt bunch«. Call B. ~1---------
-· accmu. eefllnp. • 548-<009 • BABYSITTER wanted, Nec:-ry! cU. 1100 mo. -: -elderly ;::;-In J.:: "'3-1<9' ITS YOUR MOYE
ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs, Local rers. Low prices. Roy Collep Parle achool dlst, 3 Muat have clean CUilorll1I HOUSEKEEPER 9-5: 311 •mi-Invalid. Lt hlebokl S'IUDEN't'S, 10 1" Ir up to lllllJSTRY 1'111!!1$·
maintenance & r ep a I r s • 1 _84_7_-1_358~·~~---Jobs-Me~ Wom. 7100 da.)IB a wk. 55T-n41 drlv~ reoont. Apply 1blft. Parkhunt !Wiftment duty. $2.25 hr. 6'13-3541 ldl Clllldy. ~ r:: lllftliU.-
548-5203 No Was"-BABYSITI'ER -live. in or YELLOW CAB CO Residence, 9925 La , -TE m<M'll!Y In "*""' me -~ • Al "' F v Ph· 962-SMl REAL ~·A • OPEN· ........... -. No -AIRL"'E & rum , * WALLPAPER * A·l TELEPHONE Solicitlne out. Lt. Mekeeping. Good 186 E. 16th St am a. ' · ' ING FOR QU A L IFIE D reqtziftd. CaB 60-'*3, UM lft
Floori 6665 When )'CM.I call "Mac" E\ill time pay· Bo)' 1 'Ai. 644--5249 l!WI. Coat& Meu. HSfa>RS Emplyr JIAYI fee SALESMAN. E x c e 11 e n t to 5PM I Sat. •tn nooo. ,
5'&8-1444 646-lnl immedlakno~. BABYSJ'ITER-full time, 1tEXPERIENCEDFOODA: GeorleAllen Byland~ a:immtaskm tchedule plut Tdtphooe SalktfDn e OPmAnONSAGENT
HOUSES, docb, boil.ts, fia&:-1869 Newport mvd SUite F own tram. 25-45. . Lt COCKTAIL WAITRESS cy 11Ji-B E. 16th. :,.A. many bonu1 benetitl -Alli: Cbartt)I appeal Paid wee1d1 e TICKET SALES CARPET VINYL TILE
UC CONTI\. FREE EST. * 56().7262 * pole., anything . everything C.M. 548-.5501 ' ~kttpq:. 968-7407 aft 6 *PERSON TO OPER.i.TE 54.7..(1395. ':-"~.8":rderTED arB~~ Am: 325 N. ~ • R~VA110NS
rtnJOnabl . ted F ~ .;;oiii.iiii.iiiii.;;iiiiiiiiiiii• I • • "YSITl'ER, I ~"• 2 SNAO< BAR M HOUSEWJVES.Studmtl $ S ~ ~ e AIR. ntEIGHT-CARGO
Furniture Re1torin9 e1tlmate.~ · or u..,., • AAMES ':;home, M M~iFn. !!!; Rancho San ~· 1o $111 per hr pc:lllllillie. SERVICE. Zl25 W. 8aJboa Rm.
410
• Santa Ana. •COMMUNICATIONS
& Refinishi"I '675 trans. 64~1809 aft 4 Golt Coune tfffphorie from )'OU.!' home. !llvd., N.B. or call m..3963: To ,17,• . e TRAVEL AGl:NT
FURNITURE Stripping
rellnisblng.
•642-9515•
PHONE the rest. thtn phone FREE . BARMAID Wanted. no ex· 1!021 CulWT Road m.al60 eva: &U-225.1 Sellar P1lc1inlna Ena. mast Afrlfnl Schools Pacific
&: the best: Jordan I Son JOBS per. neceae. Apply lOAM Ne"ft1)0rt Beach INSURANCE Ofc. Help . Relief Cook, LVN i: ~~ ~.bo!t '!::·i::: 610 E. 17th, S.nt1 Ana ~~·54~· bonded, Sat. mom. to Vikki's Irvine Branch Typl,.-& dttical. to $2.50 House~. Bayvtew Qm.. u planl\hll'. Fee Pel (alto 54M59' ~. 1791% Newport Near UCI 8l.J...atl2 hr, p/time. S.Ota Ana area. v'1escentfl01P. 2SThurln, leey '-""" _,: _.._ .. ,:_.._,..,SCUBA. ...... .1-d&l9C!'I for:m.. IF You want anything but a ACCT. ASST. $700 Call 5C1-4369 111AM 2PM CM. &e.3505 -._. """ "auaw ... ~•MIA
Fie Blvd, CM. EXPERIENCE .....,•d • • • · n-Rnet' ,_..:..,, -... In& now! Ne"!°port G1rden1nst '6IO lat rate job, don't call w . , P A L, fin. atmlll., au,. .~.. Ru c T o R ,.-q...,., ·>er-MIW -1---~-----Otherwise, for free eit, pervise (3), Hvy reipons. BARMAID-TOPLESS Manqer ~ptionlst CO&-e INST S for REl'AIL Sales Oerk, 6--dl.J WntclW Drt N.B. 64$.2'Tl0 Underwattt ln1t1tute:
AL'S GARDENING Paintina' Ltd. 5'8-4549 Public contact. Top firm Fantuy 'I'hestrt, 3Z So. meticlan.' ~.'hair Modellna SchooL ST.50 per wk, Sat. SUn, aome evn. "66-:,.::1!1=6-~----l
for Gardening &: rmall land-• Ma.In St., S.A. stylllt, (mal~ or femeie) hr. 1 year t1qlfr1dw::e. Call SC.lll3, uk tor Pbll. e P/tlme pl Jor ~ I PVT art w.or. ,o.a hme, "''""'..,.,.,,.call 540-5198 YOU sum The Paint 3 ACCT. PAY. $475 BEAUTICIAN ... bu"' Holr Hunt"' Salon, ,... ..... .... 113!·'1'9. REUBEN E. LEE -·"' .... Gen1 " by ........ """"''LA art Serving Newport, CdM Co&. Br, Liv Rm &: Kitchen A A ~-3 -...1... C.M. ibop. No Isl. 6#-2151 J.. W. ROBINSON 'S __._ e -··-~it___: cent. dilld or adll QS.1111 ,• ' Painted $50 Call 557-8638 . · ..,......,.., or yn exp. ~ ,..... ,~ .... ~ ..... , ~es:W~ Dover Shores, M~ ~aintln&' Serv. xtn't growth potential, ~z!:ie w~~0 ~d. ";h: ~ER~~~ e NEWPORT BF.AOI e NOW INTERVlEWJNG Mach. Shop e Jtecept. e MERCHANDISE FOil
WORKERS Available: ""' !~~~.:.~Special...... AAMES ......... 54&-71B6 64'"""1 .. 516--32115 ""openinp... Night Busboys ~n~ ~ ... F: SALE AND TltAl>I ~~:n1:. la~~ork,~r:: METICULOUS PAINT. EM:~~~~:NT i::;!: ;~1:;.1!~ ~~~~ ;:. Full or Part Time & Dlshwcnhen I ~~ Personnel
Ing etc. Efficient, reliable. BLUE CHIP SI'AMPS. INS, a 19 Monarch Bay Plaza, aery, N.B. Ph: 6f4.2573 e SALES e Atency Fumlture 8000
$2.50 hr. Ask for John or crew col. students. lllt-ut 77'-1120 Laguna Nleuel. EXPm. "-'O!neJ1 HqtlOI' store * APPLY * ln& <>ra.rwe, SUlte: C, CM -I
Nid>ol8' ...,.,,,, -P·A·PExpER' DocbHA G. """8121NG !00 N•·.~:"'""236, .,Anaheim BANK """".!;'.~dally, ..... App~!::'°0e':;° pm ~~~--... ~ ~ PRCOOM. "MADGROUMID'p' !
AL'S IAnclscapiJli, Tree * N .-ER f!Vel. ~ •2 Fuhion Jal, N.B. •
romoval. Ylrd remodeling, & PAINTING. < ,...2425 !1114 No. Main, $.A. TELL S FACTORY tnlntto, Hllh Equal ........,.,. ..,...,,.. e TYPIST e FROM MODEL SOMES
Truh hauling, lot doanup. * PAPERHANGER * * EXPERIENCED* """"' graduai., military • 118taan.nt 60 WORDS at ...,., .,. Includes: Quilted dlo l
Repair 11prnklen. 613-1166 Recognized Authority. Prior obllpb completed. Good J AN1TORS: Full I: Part perlerce ill lhippQ 1 ~ chair, 2 encl tab£el Ir co&e
GARDEN I NG: Land instructor. 6f6..l449 "A Better Position Top salary Ir: benefit& math, ~· 10" or over, time eves/wrk, Men/wo-Full TlrM votcina: helpful. Special con-table, 21.am,pa,dresler,m!JI. j
cleanups. Spntkr sys, rota-p T For men .l women mechankal M>ility betpful. men or cooplu. Apply at e BUSBOYS' akleratlon fer ~ bi-ror, headboard, quilted box
cement work. Yancey INT,.r·· •li~d .~~Locales! ,1QC J Interested ln joining a wt ~ 2JO -~· ..... ~:r Ave., S.A. e DISHWASHERS lqual. G~ COfnPtlftY, ~ 4 ma~:.. s, ~ ·1
6'6-5860 ~ -' .... ·~ ' --bank. FAT • UGLv777 or -~.. ..... -"""""· call ... -""'"'' ~ --\.all Chuck, MS-0809, L _,. -'I KJ1'0lEN Helper', f:roeen * APPLY m PERSON' * Interview afttt 4 pm, 54&-ll58 be.ck chaln. 1!a~tion?~~ PROFESSIONAL. 30 yr. Lt! •t lNDU.I • ,~ ...... Centinela Bank If ]'Ol.I are, M probably can't tood proceu plant, 5-dQ <XlMP~._!T $749.!15
cl-by <.'Olleg """""" exp ... -... paJn. ... "-"' .... ·--· "" ,,.... ""-~ .. Fancy """" Snack Shop '#l * WAmESs * ' ,...,. ~ e · ting. trom England. 968-7461 ,_. -•-:;;._,<;g-CALIF. CASTING CO. F-. 21144 Laguna ea,,,.,. · No down Pmts. Only 118 ""'
Reas. 543-1363. Catina Brog. '"-II Call Can:Me: Vanderkooi Ia conttnutne Its 91!UCb ID Rd.., Lquna Beach. ,..JD> 2305 E. Coast Hwy. WELK'S WAREHOUSE
c.JU", Japanese-Gardener. Plastering, Pitch, Ora9 Co. b-a variet)' o1 KIIUIEN man, aome clean CoroM de! Mar APPLY IN PERSON &XI W. 4th SI., San!& Ana
Gen. cleanup. Hauling trees. Repair MIO __ <::n;•c.l .:;'"":;..:.nn:::..::N::.B::·--1 t;ypes. 1or wodl:: In mac. mo.. up. Student prtf<OVft' 21. Re1ltaurant
MllnL "'"64&-0619 abilities Bookkoopor dellng. TV comm1·~ •Ind. WIU!or ., """' 2$.4() .,. TAro BELL COCO'S MUST SELL
APANESE Garde nlng * PATCH PLASl'ERING anlimitei') Tbru T·B, loal, Call Lonme, mm.. Gre&t ""'· pt. -· wit. 12 hr. No.,.. nee. Call Prot ldAla -.t w/""" •7I Foohlon lsloncl OVER STOCKED Service. Neat work. Qeanup, All types. Free estim.aln Westcl!H Personnel Ageney, We are c:llent pakl, no fet. Golden Bear, 536-9102 dMln. Good 1 tar tin r ch Tw1DI $f9.!IS, Fl1lb $59.95,
)'<!, malnt. 968-2303. Call S4-0-Q25 ageOCV 2043 WHJcllll Dr,. NB . Not a l<hool oaluy. No exp. "''" IW Nowporl loo Quee"' $89.95, Klnp 1119.95,
C!.EA11 UP SPECIALlST · '· 17 64.>mG FREE LICENSED 0coan Ave. Ht&. lldL ---"-·----!Twin Size Heodboanl" 17.95,
.New lonc:e &repalr.Odd 1_P_lu_m_b_ln-"g'-----"'°-e BRO I LER COOK, TV SCREEN TEST REAL ESTATE_ .,._7100 W T>und!eSei.$89.95.RoUa-
jobs. Reas. M$.6955 PLUMBING-AIL TYPES E.D.P. Clerk to $600 DISHWASHER. Dinner PH: Cn4) 835-8282 WOMAN RESTAURANT. Now taking ,f,t OWn way beds, $29.95, Studio
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Compl*1• Yord C•r•I 24 Hr. Service Mkt. CllonCsltrkS.c. ~~ ·"°""'==·,-=64c:2M19~:::,-,=~-ID AM In 6 PM BUSY OFFICE applpplla.~-~'Kl*COOKSw • s°""""'IESTA l89SL.!15E,EP S OP m.; 54().41)3! FREE E5l'I>!ATES Payro or to ~ -Female PBX tor """"""" SALARY A y, -tcbeo, 3211 a plec:e' H • ; i Cut" Edge Lawn Water heaton IO() '""'11. A/P Clerk $W CARRI.ER """"'· Two """" avail. CALL Ms.2'51 Harbor Blvd., C.M, 1927 Horbor Blvd., CM 'i
M""''""""· Lk'd, lnsuttd · ~~~N': Inv. Clork $41T BOYS := • l-n PM. LIVE-t N .. .,.,..,, HB s.. ee"' 11Nce 11 of California. ""'eat ~n;;;-Pt. ·
I ........,. ""t Call Jim Gloon, 715 °"'"' TRISH HOl'KINS WANTED FEMALE -machine .... ' -u .... _. m fl -
Gonor•I S.rvic11 66.J StP .. L~~".:,~G REPAIR ... E. 17th, ""'"' 224 C.M. attendant at local High Reim.~..... i6:J C..Xec We' re fussy 17 PC. KING SIZE
VIJl.DU, 642·1470 for the· School. 35 hr wk. 63.l-&>62 * MAIDS (2), penn. 25 or BEDROOM
Ed'• Cleaning Servi« No job too mnall DAIL y PILOT FIBERGLASS MOLDERS ...,., * MAINTENANCE Aleney "" Caroer 0 "" a bout who • ·-. ~-~. -·--
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I e ~ e CCEPI'ING Appl' tto Nat'!, mfg of tiberglua tu.. man, penn, Ph: 494-'lllll '10 W. O>ut Hwy., N.S. -•• • ~• ~~ ~· '~~:fl~~=~s:~ HOW REPAIRS ~or * FRY COOKsW::.: ~~:oo~~uan "Ahowen: need11 hand Jam. MAIDS EXP! TOP WAGES By appoint, 64S-393I b . :;~.=:=
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6730
Plumblng.o!ecirlcal. $7.SO Hr. shlf'3. Only exp'd and qoall· Capi.trano Beaoh. lnaton In tool dept. Top Apply In peno"'RoodW&JO SALESLADY ,,.,.,._ gets tO UY It. ed """""· sbeetJ, blalt>-
H1uJlng 642-275S1Jl' 642..QS06 ty men need apply. Wages Contact Mr. Seay at wages .l benefits for e:x;per Im 1400 Pallladel, C.M. 22 A over xint ~ni~ eta, etc.
'--------"HR PLUMBING ~':..... ""':'.,,, "w: DAILJ PILOT wel.Jayout men, American MAID: ... Newport-Balboa with .,..ring chain. South And fussier Cltoi<:e ol -
T.N.T. Lavm Service. ...._ REMODEUJNG '"---·H-, Newp' t "-h. San Cl 1 ttl Superior, 1913 E, ~ Pentneula are&. Exp'd or Coa1t Pla1a, Chrl1 or Modem Style
• ._._ . ~.1 DO.; • emen e o « ta!, S.A, r.:>t /Call 6'75-3463 F-. ~-··~ Mr 1 • bou h . ALL FOR ....
I G&ra&e clean-ups, hauling 551-9644 305 N, El Camino Real · ......,.,""'~ a t W 0 •-•
• light """"'"" 548-iiB63, I========= ALL THIS <!l'J..tQ) Gil Fridoy MAID: fOf' Nowport-Balboa cnmu, 54S-3li88 No down pm~. on1y 19 mo.
531...J729 • Remodeling & ••CASIOER. Natfonal 1 girl ow~. Ute S/11. call P~nhwula uea. Exp'd ot SALESWOMAN WANTED II WELK'SWAREHOUSE
y ARD I Gar. CI eanup. _Rip•lr 6M0 and __ .. LDralDe', Westclitf ~ noUCall 675-3463 over 25. Apply, 261 gets tO $9 . it. 600 W. 4th Sl, Santa Am
I Remove trees, ivy, truh. '.::!::::C'-----= Frff Al• Mode, Tool I Lumber, Huntington Be ..... -.. nel A~ncy, 2043 We1tcllff MAILING room aupel"Viaor • E. 17th St. C.M. Dally 9-S Sat 9--6 Sbn U4
Grade, backhoe, 962-8145 ROOM Additions, gan.rei, ORIGINAL can 962-5561 10-4 pm. Dr. N.B. 645-7170 e.,nence In operatt nr SALESLADIES. full &: part It's not that we conskltt FURNITURE returned &Om
HAULING 110 A LOAD remodol. Lowo•t Pr!"' In HOUSE OF PIES CEMENT FINISHER " GENERAL HELP " Plrlll~be!Jlneerter • time. Apply In ponon, THE Calll<rnla "cred or dJaplay •tudle•, model hom.
Clee.n up. Tree Serv. Gen. town. Lie. con tra ct or . F.xper. * * 546--2535 $4.25 In hour Chethlre .. ng maehtne SHOW-OFF, 22 Fash Isl, acythlng like that. e1, deoaraton canceqation.
Pruning 646-2S28 543-8>43 _ll4o:;c"',::2988=-.,.-,,-.,.-~..,. If you'd enjoy being a -CHILD care and Mothers Le· expand chain, a ot pt del'lred. Rnponsibllitletl In· N.B. SOani&h &: Medlterranean
HAVE P-U &-'trlr. Haul GEN'L .remodelin& Ir: maint W•ltre11 Utility man helper. Must liWim, drive, time help for, sales &11t.,A&e ~~~~~~-~i~. ••--1--.-5-ECRET---AR-Y-.-It's JU8t that n worked wry R D FURNITURE
· No job tDO small. C•ahfer Busboy row, live in alXI be in-19-35 6 sdcy d "• ll"' ....... llSQ ........ , hard to become u,,.-weat'• 1144 Newport Bl., C.M.
I anythl111: Anytirrie: Mov-LW:'d/lnM'ed 675-8183. Ho1te11 B•k• hel..,..r telllgent. Lovely home, nk-e ' mo• re req . or womui a e c e pt ab I e , Beauti.fW: New Qfficn:. foremo1t klld (.'(Jrpll'atlon, -nlte 'HI 9
I lng/cletln-up/trub. Free ' .--Call Mr. Nal.ton 956-2STl 540-3095 GOOD opportunity tor alert and '?el not bau ....... .,-Est. SST-6904 if you Uke people. , .a.nd do-family. 52 Ltnda We, N.B., tary to k in f.ul: we a t ID blow Wed Sat. A SUn 'tb 6
Sewing 69'0 q: your own thing ••. o~ now thru Labor Day. 6'15-GIRL-~?.;_gd. tl'Pilw MANAGER TRAINEE ~NB ... ~R.. our statUll «I •l ick • --· • l{AULING &: cleanup, trees
&: shrubs removed. Rn.II.
Free estim. 548-1092
TRASH &: garage clean-up.
Mon-Sun. SID a load.
Free Estimate. 548-5031
MOVING, Gerage clean-up &
lite hauling. RtaDlable. I Free e!ltimates. 645-1602.
QUALITY You've ~
wanted. Dreasmakinl -
altttations. Key Say, 1763
~.A~ .• C.M. 645-1292.
Sewing & Alt1r1tions
Calll!J0.368> --Tll1, Cer1mle '974
portunity fur advaneement. 3169/673-8446. I lte. """'ni• rele-phone. FOR TOY QJAIN -~ , ... w ....... ~ qen. quick-buck Aleamen • .=::::.:,~~===~ Good position I« right ""'· cy, All skills Incl, -then thi• will be llkt no CLERICAL RECEPT. For ippt. Ph: Ml-226.1 Xhrt oppor, 18-25, married, req'd. Xlnt sa1&t)i ai bene. ln tour short yean,,.... tum-
other Job you've~ before. Major Ufe Insurance Co, 2 GOOD NURSING dRfbe <11 e:'~!~ .. ~~ Co. fitl, Under J>, Ph: ed. an idea into a multi.
We'l'!! opening llOOn • • • at: flrl off, N.B. Ideal eond. 5 ne tJ:. -.u roon, 011t Mr. * 13.lJ.670 * million dollar pubUc car-.
3ll0 Newport Bl, NB d -k .. pm s·--•-g CARE Brubaker:, 5'S6383 tto N ~k ay .. " ...., . ·' !Alw• requlre1 good nunes. If in. SEC;y".LEGAL pora n. ow our.,._., er la
Don't walk., .Run?! 11&lary $375. 646-0521 for fm!lited in Jolnin&: such a MANAGEMENT Trainee/ TRAINEE $SOO looking for -.lei repteten. Th~XM ~6 ~ 1970 appt. statt, call 646-1624. Saleaman. A~tlont be-Lovely new Newport Beach tatl-.u who can tblnk the •
There • CLERK-TYPISf in public IJW accepted, The Slnpr Ole's. Xln't oppor. w/fine way we do. Bwtk,_~bed~,-~-,,,--eaae_r_w_/mlr· See You • . . a~· ... '"nt's · ofti.ce. Book· HAIRSTYLlST for buy &: Co DXJ Harbor c M ""~~~~~~~ """"''"' ~ talon Expe'flence 'I • ' ' ftnn. Top benet.lt.. can Mb. Are you one ot the m@l\ be'• ror: Wn &ttee tablt w/
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'' HouMCJe•ning 6735 • Discount Tilt c.enttt e * ASS'T HELPER * ~:~." .;;.,:r w ~: ~~ la neceaary, ~ta followirc MAN 'ft> ..mt mer of local Bel1)' 5S7-W2, Ablp.11 Ah. lookirc forT Some prevloua plate &:!au top, eod tabla
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2>'.13 So. Main. S..A. s+G-1611 Call 54&-'1040 for interview. Iii not. eau 8&-0611. 1or an appliance store. Neat ap.. bot Penonne1. Agency 230 9alee elq)el'ience wW bl!! Mediterrat'lean dresaer w/ ·),
• All types of tile· wall. floor, nn.L OR PART TIME appointment. , pearance. G8o2383 Mr. ff. Warner, &die ZU. Santa belpfu.I. m.trror, DUX din rm eet,
!otOMEOWNERS pallo, entry ways, both l Ale a-11, 6 mcnlha ,...icy. COASTAL AGENCY l<AIRDRESSER ..,·~ Wr!aht&-10emonly. Anl. .....,..,,-.499-IB88 •' noon stripped. waxed, Cpts lihower. Expert lnlitall&Uon 'd $3.85 br A member ol Marl .. _. I Are )'OU ued to tt.rnlrw lood cleaned, Windows wuhed il or tree imtructiona tor do req · per • Sl'lf"lling A: Snelllng Inc. Uceneed, to a.!18.iAt atyl.llt, fte ~haft C. Sec'y (2) money? With • liute effort VERY InterestDlg Sale -
general house • cleaning It yOUl'Sdfera. Complete line Ph: Jim Thompson., S.2873 The World's L•rgest ~~Beach. ~ or Experienced only, Perman. $500-$575 our · reprnentattYet c • n ~;~ . ._'n from ~ to~·
now avaDable by an expand. or accessories a: tools for E R Profestlonal ent )lb, fringe benefits. To Coftltruc:Oon, mktn,-&/or make $25,000 a year A up. J. Interior ~~~irch
I f Iona! janlt-~-· ASS'T H LPE Employ-nt •-rvfco HEAD CUSTODIAN work a t --'om marina ., _____ bc'-d , ng pro eS& urqu lnlltailaUon. Full time or part.Ume. Af;t """"Horbo·:-BI, CM-.,~,.,,_,. oCean View School Dllt .. ...,. ' ....... ...., ..,..., • Are )'OU more inlerelted In st., N.B. 'IC~. For fast guaranteed .:::;.===:-::==,-,,.-I ,... • ~ .. A .. ,.,.. • ~ ~ or write full detalll. Nowrirt od·~--.. ·--·-DIN. "L dbl bed,.,,__,. _), . -n _._ ""'""' * Verne, The Tilt Man * .._........, mo. re""""ncy re-.~.-L.-Blvd. at Adamo Salary $583. • $690. Mo. Lake .Anowhead Marina p _.__ w.... .,,,..... w """""'" • service ClLLI U'W"""""'· Cwt. work. 1nstall A: repaln. qUired, $3.75 hr atart. nU"1J[ll" Cuslodlal duties at an ele. p 0 ·Box 910 7141337.250i erlOftM ,...... .. cy real~ than In hard.ltlJ. dfftll?I'/ nlte 1tand, budret • •
No job too 1ml. P1a~ter Can Mr. Winston !21.(140 * COOK * mentary tchool, 2 )'fl. cu. ' . · E ED U2 Dover Dr., N.8 . 1,. an acn ~llld there? chair, $?l. ~ BA~ ol Beach Januorlal patio. LeakiDI: shower APT ma.nagen, husband I: Exper!enced. Full time todial uper., H.S, ifad. or MECJfANIC N ED '41..Jl70 Clinyou.tababfc.newc;ar BDRM/SET maple din'&
'Carpebl, wiDdowBComm.. ,'L .~1~1· repalr. wile, e-. 1-.....~.. PARK LIOO CONVALES. -..iv, .1. .. plic&Uo-ml.lat be • Part 'lime plan and todleu 1l1np ,._ .,1 ma~ '~---
elc. Re•• ' -w 847-1951/-....,, obUltY . ...,:;-CENT, 642-2410, N.B, ru:.i, ~ c;,,"""'°" e Contact Mu. * SECRE'l'ARY * be"'11'" In otrlde! ;;;,,. A , .... :~~
I f'OR XLNT HOUSE -coo QI•--·· II Of 7912 w ff 14-' Mll'CUt Motora l6GtEIS Neat ·~nee. brtabt, • -~·~a -ARE vou K, = -~· .. '" '"'''" un.... ··~·~CAL .~-tic -·-·-~· lor r Well ...... on. Tdl -~ OOUBLE, BED * O>mplele ~·u• · Tree Service · I WCJC1c in ucban&e f~ board ton Beach, by foUC· 28th. ~·· ·~·~ ..-·-• ,."" ..-·-$30 N condtlion. * Call 836-0648 * BEA'"'FUL77 & apl. ..,, No exp req'd, HOMEWORKERS w·-' •ENGINEER rtrt Ole, Sbrtbnd typ... _,..,.,,,. .. !alt• • coffee ' ~
• Hou~,..1"'•1'.fnl'G 2 80B'STREESUJlGERY llilll M -~ otbe j b "'-"'~ u.~ ........ Yadlt r-, lite bkt..-Real :E.tate 0:, br'ftkandthencaDUlwblle * * "''Or.au. Fa~· ... ;ruc~nt.. Is beck offe~ the 11.mf: It's ·all tn the f78 of the be-an ww.. r 0 • ·(Envelope Ad~ra). 'iQi"Pi;-centia. cM... eonttru'cii~n exp. MJpM.' lht'a out. CA'NoPY Bed f t am• ,
F•--Q ul lty ~-Serv"" •-u-. ~-•the TV ---548-3152· Ru.ab 1tampcd, ltlf·ad· ...... 1 , •-··-" -·-·~·-Call 548-1227 ""' 11 ··~ • ,_,,..,__. ~ ..._,.. MEROlANDISING • Op-salary open. stT'*7 • Oh, OM Mini of caution. UWl :! ':!.'::"' 'AU".,.,."", * 540-3198 * ml )'OU watch and If )'OU * * COOK TRAINEE d re I I e d a n v e 1 op I • portUhlt)' in retaU lewl. Patt SECJU:'I' ARY• exper. for· Sl:'ck operatofti. nitd not AP" $40. .,_....,;n;;o,
J OE'S CLEAN SERV. TREES, Hedgea, trim, cut. tee:i you'N aa pretty u Xlnt fringe benctltll LANGDON WORLD ..._ .__., ... -... ~-"be~ ID --••-• di~~ 1,., l ..iu. You'U .t. • .:t bt -*"-'-:cl'~D=-.-.,.-0-po-rt..,.-,°"C"'h-ol~r-I I We 6o E\terythlng.Re1 Ir: ~ 30 torneofthoeepeople callua. BAYVIEW CONVALESCENT TRADERS. P.O. Box 112T· • WU u..... ...... ...,.--., meu,11..... ".......... ....,. ,.. .. _ ....
Comm. F1'f!e Est. 642-'1551. •tumpl ren.oved, hauled. CALIF. CASTING CO. HOSPITAL, m Thwin St., An. bdondo Beach. C.a1U. am l after 5 pm, 646-0223 coUeetlon In 1rz &rOUP ~ )'OUI' time. · Make offtr. 5U-QS2.
e HOUSECLEANJNG I yn, exp, Fully im:. 642-4030 ia :!'Ofltiiiul.nc its 1tarch tar CM. 6d-3505. som Medical Front'Ofc, tice. 646-0565. Mn.Austin. FOR APPOINTMENT OIN'G Rm Fum. Will.
etn1 do.y worl<. Rellable. DON'S TREE SERVI<:>; All eveeyday -""' hlvt COOK (DIMerl * HOSTESS * Lu.., pl ... medial ...... SERVICE Statton AttmlanL CAIL: • SELL P,,_ ,.,..,.tt1y. e StS-5657 e types, Llsc • Jns. FT'M Elt1. 1 dutr. to work on TV or $30 Shift to lit&rl • An 25-40, attractive, pthl)n. needl )'Ol.L Eicper. Book· •'ll'UW shift, Lorin's Arco, .TACK STANL&Y * 6CS--2W *
'°tea Clnnlng Suvlct mates. 642-5584 mod~or jobs, S'15 to SUS 81.UE BEET ~ able, to meet public. Marine kee~ to work w/sr-t d1l Harbor Blvd. Harbot Cn4) 135-3233 BURNT o~ couch 6
Cari>tt1, wlndOWll:i noon, etc. '"° per day, No lee t.. you ever. DeUcateuen, tul.I time man Relt&urant, btI Webb'• ~t. $450. Call Clotla '-~ D4tao ~ c.M. •WAITJU:SS• Ezptrltot'f!d dw.lr, aood oond $65: bed A-
h.ea A C.Ommc'. S48-4lll ~pholat•ry:,_____ * FOR ON CAMERA Mu.st be rtllable. See Jerry Newporter IM, ll07 Jam-Kay, 540-6«6, In ews Mon. M only, Xlnt tlp9. Apply ln burNU 155 4ft 5: 54()..tl21,
WILLl"'S .,.,,_ .. "-ts AUDmON * Stock A OellvtrJ man. ....... bortt Rd. N~ St.ch. COMTAL ACEN'ct Strv Statton Meche.nte-Sa.let-penon, The Cottage Cofke FOR tale, renn.bkt. Mlle Gen'I cltan1nr, J-lome1 """ r ,,.,, • ..... ., ...... ~ I •--a-~ Bl ~1 •-1--Recovtr e ftPl]t e ~an. CALL (n4.) 83$.m ~me, days. SH Harold. App Y Ul ptnOn Oll1y 11 am. ••w .. llU'f" •• "l' man; -v JJl.1 • ._., , ~ .582 W, Utb S.., 0wta tumltuni. m.28!11, 126 DJa. • "".'-!·!~7•,"'s•Day -~ "~"' .. ,,~ lO AM to 6 PM 405 £.17th, ~t. 2 pm. other fet/.CIM·~ avan. a• PW::tn~ N.B, • M.a. mond Aw, Halim r..nd ~ Beaut WVIA· .,.,....,~V"I·
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ll W.Y --· ._ lfl. 1910 M IH """ HANOI .. POil MIRCHANDISI POR TRANSPORTATION TRA~N.:::S::.PO=RT;,;A;,;T:.;IO;.:.N:..__1 .:.;rRA=N;::S;P.O:::.;R,;,;T,;,;A:,:.T;.;10,;,;Nc... TRANS PORTATION .-~ /IMO TRADE SALi AHO TRADI SALi AND TRADll SA ANO TRADI FREE TO YOU ---LI Boats & Yachts 9000 Sallboat1 9010 Mobllo Hom11 9200 Motorcyc l.. 9300
......... 1C100 Applloncea llOI Pia-&, 0rtaM II• ·M-11•--Vfrf lovable belp w/blt -!968 ITALOJET -4 ---d ...... curlJr.....,. Oodt-CAPTAIN COLUMBIA del<Oder ,.. •••••••••• • ' ...
FuotilOI O Factory KENMORE Wuhu, 2 BEA~"!· "'*" .U r<llll. * AUCTION * apoo, II-""'~· needs LIC ENSED SI-6. lnboanl. f'>ll rac-St. ,..-.r. '"'
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"i· a,.'° -'"""'.SU• -· ......._ ~ 5'0-840! ~ ~....!'""" $100 • --,-., lni: eee• l extras • .,._7735 D , B Lat 6/70 u now. 7M ortgloal n.k w.tk Onl:t' Bet W. w-=r ._ .... ..--11 $IG. P RIDAY, 7:30 P.M. IJDDd boine, ftt'ICC!d )'&!'d.. Radar -Lcn.n. SJ~ tx· or 646-«MT on t e e rnllc11 -pasited cbp ~ * * * SAVE ')i; • * * WANTED: Good Ulld ~ No tu. l1'S-0023 AVQUST 21t t l.a..ml « 836-4tt3 l/20 pMenee aaU or powrr, Pro. LAPWORTH U lnbtd Pick Your c;:hoice Now ~tlon w/ltleker • $200.
JllJ ~ Ol Mnd ~ "'tt'tlft'ltor. KNABE CRAlfl> PUKO Furn from Repos N«!d IOOd baqw:, !meed yard kl&loMI lllOtt fiahinc sWde Ya.cbtl Roye.le Inc ~ In the Call 6:30 -9:00 p.m. 546--ll9D ~-........... -Hamn>ond/ottldl. lllOO ... " Model Homes "" ................ ,..._ Mexlcu ... °"""' Ameri-2912 w. °"''a.;.,,. NB MEADOWS '69 Hood• SL 00 in good · pnllied $1300 DAYS ONLY t c.oca&cnd. IJV'• 1: .ttf'tOI, black 1n.lle ~WT. cu watttl, Adml.IUltn.Uve cond. UIM!d onty 1 time aince * Jllr'I'IUC Ransc ~ · · MardAYillt • Drwcel Came mll:. t.m:~tban a yimo old. uperiehCe. KITE.Ractrwequlpped. lm ••• going fast! 11 has had a complete top
(Frlcidalft m...nl. $35. PRIVATE PAR'IY ~e a-dWn. buffets, Lc:wM cbildn:n $G.38t6 or AVAILABLE tGr ~. mac. cond. $850. 673--1090. Luxurious New end c:~M ovetbaul It new
Call &l&-5838 w&ntl tD bQ1 »lano Qdna., QeClemQ, cedar &231'9 8/21:1 ex~ndl!d charten Ill' dellv-646-199l, M&-.a634 Ad ult Park chaM. $250 or best oUer.
LG. COLOSP01' REFR.IG e fDr CUb 21S: f6l..tCS dJrD. bunk bedJ. Duka. FRE£ Low. ~ a. t~s. Beat of rcfel't'ncu. ~ 25, \lied $6300 Call 673-4274. • W/o..-Top maer. dlvana, occa!donll cht.ln. betuty trom ~ bax Write BolC M 1060, D6lly Yachts Royale Inc 645-0810 Small pets allowed .69 DUCATI 450 cc rn:~ qu~ s:;o * • 646-MO Televlslen ao,s maiile rocil<@r, capt al n traWd caUoo Jdtten tD kw-·Pilot, ml W. Balboa Blvd., 2912 W. Coeat Hwy, NB. S.A. f'wy at JeUrey Rd. Scrambler _ 1300 mL Xlnt
'Mat-bfteal $
7 5
'. e F,..._,.Uprfoht e -ctiain. Dtnettes. mattrtlRI. 1,.-aenile people. 6t5-3C92 Newport Beach, Ca. * NEW orange a yellow 14851 Jeffrey Rd, t'Ond. Fully @Quipped, nevel'
SJ)..mf. U cu tt. $90. &e-2251 1'71 ZENITH 14' tlbera\Ua bo$t • GIP or m-4506 1124 FOR SALE .. LEASE Orbltal ~tnnaker kr '4'-26' 7lt/530-5331 call collect ridden in dlrt. $750. 846--9446
-CX>U>lt 'IT.$ ~ 'l1wJusand )'di ot 11' PenWt B lue-Cl'ea m OR CHARTER bolt. uwm.. ~-8105. W-2930 or 20 -~ ~ F----•I 0 AntlqUH 1111 Wbolnale ;lla S25 new carpetins. Home d• __ .... _ ---'-.-..ii -· ,A_ ~.ooo Down, syn bai&J'Hz. -·10 KAWA"•~ Sid• w_, -~~ Pric:os mrt a1 Siii louotain. -~. -.,, jd...,";_· ~males,"';, <C' Flybrid(e -~ Powor CNIHra 9020 •••••••••• 250, ssso°"."" See at 602
...... d ---BEAtmrol. .....,.. °""" *BAY 1V * --Oltd much calico. 516-$965 8121 tt, Sleepo L Comp\•tely SKIPJACK 20 INVENTORY SALE Clubhoui•: N.B. 673-<57'. = ~~.-: ~~~~ :. ::~ c._ ... ':!!! ~s AUCTION MALE st. aern.rd dos. ~tkl.nedMINT ~ 9 me&. old.160HP M..ercnds· 1 of a Kind .1.::"::•:.,•;oor~Jun~·-,.,==--·I ~ the W1:Ht .W.Ction chain, niee/be11t, 11 ew _ .... VOE • ftlftUI trained. Needs ~ with XTJtAS PLUS• Make ott ; er. Marine bead, cuttom Untvenal 2.tx53. •15313 '70 BSA 650CC
of tl9ed ottk:e tum bl thil cond. $100 ee.. Matchln& ot· but. '69 mocW. Ul!ltd I I.up )'Vd. M&-1656 after 5 Da.YI 5.l9#11 . Eva 6 ~ trailer, new ro='watt radio, $9900; General 24:61 •6277i;CU=ot=om=·===="'=.6SJ=3J
&n11.. toman, $25. 548-$1'50 mo'a. $350. aft' 60-DIS. o:»a: BROWSE AROUND pm. 8121 enda ~. top & wide curtains, moor-$9500: General 24x60 #67171 ~
Mc Mahu: Desk VJCJ'OJUAN table A ~ C . & -~ Nnpcrt Blvd. Very pretty gold le whlte tl-, lng covers, jump seal!, $10.200. -Auto Sarvlce
mi9C ch1na A t &iUI. •rMra1 &hlnd 'l'on)r'• Bid& M•t'll: aer ml.le kHttn 4 mo med Z Pacemaker -aJgtu 19li7 chrome rod holden 50 gal-CHAPMAN & Parts 9400
1IXI N= Blvd. i-lntilWS. matry cum 0 re Equipment .. Colta Meta * 6t8-8686 10111 halr. N~ good home. SporUhlbeT cornple te ly lon rue1, built.to ice box. MOBIL E HOMES ---·'------1
..
items. 842--2427, 17451 Santa SXlO, SX7 le 4 X 5 Vlnis. OPEN DAil.Y 9 to 4 Lovable le friendly. 336-4493 equipped. Must sell thla: Meticulouily maintained U06 N, llarbor Blvd., S.A. '60 P.U. VS Ford, R/H, 8'
Amool/o:ipk!r, $4SO! IaabeU FY btwn W Ima. --A BEAUTIFULll FREE kittenl 5 wks old -weekend, Strrl». 2)% dovm f1000 lnveated aeU for $585() 1r 531-81.(fj * bed, w/camper shell. 5'x.12 <c:mt fllXIJ. Ett. desk S50 ~: • U'Del' ............. lltoaes. tpot with apprwed credit ot firm ' SPACES 4-whl trtr, must 8cll tW ~mrcn_:. ::•:. ~GH ~. J<lhD QWocy :~!:u:.~~nmm .:l.rRE~: ~~:iwhi~l~ ~l385":'16M-~~ea1e. • 9624130 Available in Huntington week! 646-5647. ~/cab. ttt'Y desk, etc. Adllm.11 07611 "Biei&b Bed'.' S5mm Y'ublb.. 'frith J.S5 m. Ot.k·lron strqs.S' taD-3' dla Verde. CM SACRIFICE • 24 tt cabin FANTASY 24' Custom Sport Beach & Costa Me.sa's nic. V.W. ~ .. 4 gd.
CU>SING OFFICE! Owner ii ln the Empire 61.d ud .alumimun cUe $50, at top and bottom. g• cit-ClrrE. 5 wb. grey kltt.enl., cruiser 185 b.p. big Chtysler O'uiRr, fly bridge. twin 120 est parks. tires, mac. eng. parts.
m-46Z1 mm of the Whit:e Route * 9G-.36S4 * cum1emicr. For deoonton. aiao S1ame9e fem a I e Marine. Just pat n t ed Mere. ouldrl.vee, top cond., MOBILE HOMES ~130
or SJ&-
7on.
EXEC De<.
3
ateel muter $'15. m-Gl.74 or m-un ext la.ndsCapen, commerdal ( t emperm e·n t a .I ). thl'Uou.t. Perfect l!lbape an duel conCrok. 84w Bendix America's fllle&t. available • VW pans, trans axlet
desks. swivel chain, Adler 359 Sporting Goods 1500 areuose fOr pkntlng tren, lflf>.0118 8/20 arowxt. In wa.ttt now. radk>, outrlaen. Fast. lof\i ir. every al7.e & price range & bodypart11.
E1ec 21 typewriter, top DISllWASHER. 1970 Gatten •hrU,ba. tables, etc., etc. Ex.. HEALTHY Male pup, 18 Reduced price fl200, Call rarli"'. Comp! w/4 whl trlr, JOMICRA, INC. e 642-0443 e
quality t: priced' ri&htl ... Sattler under muntft' POOL TABLE tremeJ,y sturdy. wkL Wants good home. art 7:30 p.tn. 493-3996 Asldng $6750. Owner , 19261 Beach Blvd.
536-11194. eves 536-9866. model Avocado. Nettr u. .f X I Reaulatioo. $35 EACH Shots. $9li8 &fttt 6 P.M. (l' anus DCFB ,59 2.5 646-3167. Huntinaton Beach 536-6511 Trail•r, Trav•I
VERY lDtere&tilll .sa&e ed, in WI'· cnte. $119. Call Complete with all Call 61$.3463 8/20 KW ONAN auto P11ot. ilow 1966 TOU..Y· Craft 26' 2\0 2 BR Park.lane 950 6(( It -
9425
Sa
' ,.,. 2' ~ g ~<.Of-~. ~. Xlnt cond. Fri. Sat or SUnda,y LOVELY •-__ ,_ kit -~ RD'F .,._...__,,__ HP. S.S. 125 bn. Like new. _ lot 00 'gou _.,.....,,,' 17' ''TRAVEI,EZE" aell' "~· ....... u .., • $!S0. 646-3629 -F ELEC' • GE _.~ ,,_..._ ... w.aic • .-..-.., • .rawuu••="••=•• S70IXI Accept .... ..-def ....,.,,, .....,......._, cont trlr &: lhT Intern'!
!!itt turmture I ~ e ENGLJ.SR BNEE-HOLE uu... UV\.I..,,. ten. Box trained. Wt 1 l lrhoY.oer, 2 beads, dee galley, Bal~ WbIJJ';;' ~is:-Dlrftwood Bch Club, HB. truck. Both late model fully
W. J . Interior Inc" 3841 DESK-$115 er best a&r. Mltoll...... MOO dryer, $(9: Evaporator deliw!'. 83M3M. 8/20 $21.tm. 644-4221 MM684 • ' Sac $6950. 968-7472, 5,16..69211 equipp'd, w/finest iowin1
Bitdl.Sl.,NB. 6H-.s9B6 C!ICde!' made flr mobile ADORABLE k:itb=nl 1 wht, 26' PACEMAKER delu:x: 2'l'Centul')'Lab6treak.32'1cu 12x 44 General $4195 ai<U. A steal at $450). ~. 6 -~. ~ "'-.. ,,;~ Sewing MechlMI 1120 *__...~ ... <.:'!8-,.MA,•Tl'RESS,cblld'o ~~ ~ ~:.~ BOme caliro, ~ tigers. b~~:IA~ 1&7ft5""'0.0 in Gray eng. New cover, 1206 N. Harbor Blvd., SA 613-1776
_..... ~ "'111' ~ .,...,...~ '""" .. 546-6242 8/20 ,,~7""'li_" • -• perfect cond. A!!IO '59 Streamline 28', met&I
o:aod. f1S. 646-4150. l9'lD Sbwe' tooch-o-matk:. maple rocb:r, potty chair, ply $7 ea. 546-245'1 BEAUTIFUL mixed Cdlie, ""' 7203 542-1974 or 543-1445. Sabot. Motor Homes 9215 awnlng/&ldrting. Located at
ft-•-i. I022 z:lr-lq, beaut. walnut eon.-ln.fant bath t u b/safety * MAGOOPJ-E00~Ji'b~ * female, wonderful, f ine 12' FIBERGLAS di nghy· NEW •n mod el Vaca· No. 2 TerTace, Lido Park.
-r-ee -De, malcltl button h:>lee:, ptes/ bottJe warmer/ boU8e dog, 613-1017 8/22 oars, anchors. Homemade. Spetd-Ski Boats 9030 ttoneer-the tint.'S'l ' in mini (Adults only}. Extras, Lo
GJGANTIC PARKING LC7f OYetCUta le8l!d, blind dlapttS/diaper pd le bq. 2076 Thurin St, CM FREE wood-model glaa ~for bay fishing. homes, 19' fully self-con-down, owner wi~ finance,
SAIZ -Fri. Aug. 21 ttuu hems. -& etc. Goar. BlankeU A infant's -· l1SO * SU.7395 Co 1514 SUperl<r CM 1••······· '8med. Yoor i,,._tioo in. 645-2571 °' 67>-1056 $M cub. « amaU pymta. 54().-6'm BOY'S Schwinll. St in rr a Y ~ • 8n2 30' OWENS '641WIN $225, lo vited Scott's, 914 N. Harbor, 21' NO~!AD. Sell contained,
Fri. Aug, '8,.!D a.m, to (. """238. , AMF <And Prix Slat< "AJ>!tle<=to" b.... X1nt m lmmac, xtru lxltop 16 ft Ski Boat
-
P. ~: 5 .c~.~--i eo!• *REPAIRS* reeuJa&a p:iol table wttb Com. SSS. 6'7'3-&31. FEMALE German~. wui fin. Must &ell. 567-TTIS· • Santa Ana. :;:r, ~1£ :ec =
-~-~ • ___ _ all -~ •-~--5 """'· old. Gd w/cblldron. . , items; ailboM budware -..--.. uu --...-• ,....... _ _, .ua•-=-VACUUM 0eaner $12, Chest !J6tr.297B 8124 23' PEMBROKE '62 SeaSkitf Bristol Inboe.rd Mini Bi kes 9275 wheels. Very dean! Must
tarntture -'JV& -ham rw!k1 mactrlne in ~ heme, condition. Original c 0 • t of 5 dnwus S12. TV $25. TAKE Ule pl nan Cabin, 135 HP gray martne 283 c.orvttte engine ·--•• -!!ll!'ll! A&king $24:95. 968-7281
e q
0
lpme n t ~ vam. Special SS.95, all 'WCrl: par. $1500. M'o v l n g , must * ~1525 *· BITS. S:.9390 eue~ Fish now. $3250, 646-3441 MINI bike -Taco 99, 5 hp, 16. to 19, TRAVEL Trail
vacumn tubes .. electronlc anteed. 56.a238 sacri6ce for $950 e&11b. Aak 15' Upright freezer, like new PM 813> Wll.L You take my $90,()J(I $1125 good ~~A~...;.., 9;~~ coat N5 Ciean and in good co::
test eqUipment Rear perlr· e for Clwck Tl'app 541)..9l()O, fr.i. Dinette set, Fonnk:a T.D. or West LA. tnoome : ~· ~-t Will pay $500-$700. 962-7689
1ng a1ft,, 884 w. J81h St., 1~ ~RE~= or after 9:00 PM. 54>7004 table, 6 chain $25. 644--4493. J beautilUI black female kltJ· for your sail or motor 638'7689 l'c""~-'-c""'""'-'--"· I
C.M. =...""'145 . .......,, 2=A type~"':: *TV TRAYS & Lorge truok :. ';;'~eyes, \0 Slam-yacbt! awn.. 613-<621. , ••••••••• ':'-BIKE 100. Unicyclo •= & ~ •• ::::~~
Sl'7 Golden rod, CdM. 3.btl8x21. Tdepbone bench go $595 548-3136 WOIJWll A girl& clothe&:, Musical nist $350 Niue. $100 a. I too! 5'0-603.l DESPERATELY need borne BOAT 13%' ~r wood Call 546-2076 _..:__.: '
lltudio beds. ridin& boots, Jnstrvmenft 1125 rnd add leaf lamp table $20. __ tnr 2 lone: baimf male kit'-S.llbolts to10 nino.bout windshtelds, pad· 9300 Truc ks 9500
saMJe, drps. prthl/di.sh-!.. ~~ vin:r1 dlaln. S15 M isc. W•nted 1610 tens, 15 wkl. 6'75-8299. 8/20 dect 11eat:s, Mark 55 Mere Motorcycles
...-. fwn. dishes I PETS d LIVESTOCK SEALED BIDS O/B, trailer. Great for1---------
MLSC! FENDER BASS AMPLD'IER. 10 FT Cabove:r Camper, 16' to 19' TRAVEL Trailer an 1970 34' Columbia Aux Sloop, ~'8.tet siding. SS.'iO. 673-0174 1970 GMC
DELUXE RICKENBACHER •tow, ?"etrig., etc. $600. 1957 OMn and in good a>nd. Dogs 1115 where-ls, u.19. 4 eyl. diesel or 833-llll eirt 359
BASS GUITAR Ford 2 door station wagon, 3 Will pay $5004700. 962-7689 ~. tbrgl.s construct, teak 18 FT. Oris Craft run&bout.
r'U'U'U'U'I
THINK 1500 PICKUP
WITH CAMPER
GAR Sile ii: mile. itema
~. dryer, rf!:trlg, leW• me machine, tools. lumber,
gankn tools, etc. 2349 Notre:
* 61S-&t04 * ~ ;t =::at %W WANTED: e HURRY I .-Interior, ro u.ilJ: or mast, Inboard. Fast ski boat. Full
• ACOUSTICAL &Wtar -&a Uted dark room equtp. and Only 1 female tiny toy white vessel's hull damaged on co~. Xlnt cood. $995 Finn.
Glb9on J.SO w/r:ue X1nt e STROLL-OCHAIR SET 4x5 675-0425 J.KC poodle puppy Jett! Al8o land while in transit. VH9ti 548-9707 uk for Tom SU
HONDA
Dame Rd., CJIL 5t6-Sl.'5
day « nit:e.
srERE0 ·' DtlheS -Silver •
Bedlpreld . furnlture-
H........, items -Old
cxnt. $135. 60-900 • c.oavm. iOOI the 10 nee. WANTED: Old Cylinder male PERSIAN POODLE, mey be seen •t COLUMBIA 'G5 16' Glas8par, 90 HP Mere "'Ci61EDLAIJl\Eft'1
GIBSOi'i'B45 12 string Guitar ~~!1' .~! eqwy'p. farf ba~: Remrd1 Edison « Colum-2% yrs, anow white. He '1 y A C HT CORP., 275 eng, full equip, very clean, fn nU' 2!12 engine, heater, deluxe
grover beads. elec. pickup ~ S:~ .:::!. ~ bia. Atta 5 PM. S48..ml3 gol'leOUI! See at 333 E. 170\ McCormack Ave, C.M. on $1400. 645--0629. 111• llAat (MW'I'. •1 cab, flberglast; tires with hardcue SMO 6'73-0717 ......... ..., -r.---· S 646-01 Sat, Aug. 22, 9-12 noon mly, 19' Cril Craft 537-6824 • 893-7566 8 foot cab over King of
e 5-PJ.EX;E ~ ~ FENDdel ERR~ .... ~~~ FREE TO YOU G~ 42~HEPHERD ~~onb~ug~!4,·~cr::: Beaut.1945Clas!~= NEW-USEO..SERV. RoadCamper.Stove,refrlg.
set • Good l'Ond. $75 or best guJ.:;~ -ctm: Adorable available PUPS mlttl'd to oo. COAST ~· erw. $14£6. 6'l3-31BS """""' ~ ~·;:er Iota~ -· 1DJl12 CUtty Sari< Dr. HB '
GARAGE SALE! MovilC
H9ebld ~ dress~r
drawers, i: MJee. 2827 Alta
Villa. Eat Bluff N.B. SAT
-SUN.
offer. Call ~T.J61 * S'B--64M * f\my b1acll: or b/w kitteN Qmnp Slred. PleaM' call, MAR IN E SURVEYORS. ,69 y~
• llll
~----~~ nriy u .. .....,ed .,-•-5-2nd Boal Maintenance 9033 .,50, Suzuki room. -~w/c:JM PIOOC tabl benchH t: 2 call d ay or night Ul.JQ , .... E. St, Long Bch, X1n:t c:onditlon. patio cbaine,$11; umbn!lla 6'J3...(Ql5 8/21 quel~. GU-4860. Calil. Bids to be opened at 2 MA.RINE Hustler -6 speed, Very $3295
642-964'1 tmt !10: Exer-Oenle 125; "FREDDIE FARKLE" lo a AKC SILKY pm, Aug. 27, 1970. NI ENGINE REPAIR ,Fut 1•847tl'lll 1575
e NEW Fender D e l uxe TV lrportstereo.846-61T1. tiger kitty that needs a TERRIERS purehase price due &. Authorized Mcrmi.iset SeT-69 Montessa 360 Serlal58744
Revel1> Amplifier. M u 1 t NEW Roberti •ttteo tape home. 7 wka o!d box * "'°° 537-0136 * * payable AU&. 31, l970. Sale vice. lnboanh, Stern Drives, CAPPRA, 71·• front-wheel, UNIVERSITY GARAGE Sale -FRl-?!!
31M Yellowtltone Dr, CM
~7587. Washer, d b I
d re s 1 e I' Matchq/tbl&.
LOTS MORE!
MAPLE dining Rt, 6 cha.ln,
g I a • s e d lnJlch, bed,
dn!Men, JW.1e..Hed. retrig.
Lorge metal office .....
518-8611
GARAGE SALE! Moving!
Jewelry clo<hing, book<.
chtna i: Mile Items. 594
Femleaf, CdM SAT It SlJN
ONLY!
IRON, l!tf'P 5tool, t.mptT',
bdrm wet, bu!fet. sofa-bed,
chair. 577 F Vidorla., C.M.
MS-0438. Fri " Sat.
Rumruge & Bake Sale
Sat Aug. 15, 8 am-5 pm. a>
10th St, (Womens Cub)
H.B.
LEAVING State: color/TV.
k:lng-e.z bed, bunk bed!!,
dreuer, ?"etrig, crib 01HER
hsehld ltema. 00.2961.
El.EC la'Ntl mower, new
cond; Dinette set, drop leaf
table wl2 chain. l chaise,
Make offer. 96S-2915
HOIJSEHOID -., --Aanlturo.-Mmpl. 3M4 Grant Ave.,
C.M.
MOVING ... Furniture It
-.... 8/'l2 • 23. 5t8-4409 S. ~. Ht&.
GOODSO!a-bed $15: woman·1
clot.hes G 7.&; lo)'s, nrt.c, le
"IQOdlet. .. 846-2721.
GARAGE Woe: )""'ri-SUD--10-6
St.ereo. rcuter. tabie, etc.
10691 Vlo -· !Mno.
J.G Bani Edie '''"""" pt.lntinl .Aka.I tape deck
other b9ehld Items. ~2162
sell! Call 00-1142. tecorder, 8 track: 4-«pd, 2 trained. 536-2029 8/ZI GREYHOUND Female , =~~ ~~d15~Cali.! ~ etc. Also Complete linen. Mlkunl Carb. Loaded OLDSMOBILE
walnut apeakrn. Coat $480. FREE To gd home spayed, faun color. mitted w/a JO% ol bid. berglass material & $Up. <•46M0161) $845 2850 Harbor Blvd.
Pianos & °'9MI 1131 Sacriftce $2Z. 963-1071. beautifully marked mixed Purebred, friendly, 2 yn. Cash « caabien: check plle1C.RYSTALINER JAMES LTD Co!'Ota Mesa 54().9640
ANTIQUE desk $100, Ke~ I.ab i: German Shepherd 7 $25. 833-l.fal. made payable to ROY AL "ONE ONLY'' SALE men elec. dryer $40, maple mos. old S48-4196 8/21 e p u RE BR E o GLOBE INSURANCE co. CORP. lS84 O
1
58 FORD
1
12 TON
Ni!W i: U~ coHee table $10, tent trailer DARLING lik kitten male, 3 DACHSHUNDS 1626 Placentia, Costa Mesa Id Newport Blvd. PICK-UP PIANOS I")<;/! """ ..,
74
--'a•• Columbia 40 diesel $28,950 Call 548-0292 Caste Mesa 642-0040 Brand new eng, Le" ••·-• ...... ~ moe:, • .,......, to go: Cmpl.t 2 Mos old, l male $3) Whl . u~•
Decorator Spine~ •••••• $399 ELEC lncllDa.tor, stairway, w/bed food Ir kitty-litter 962-6007 1teenng, A-pllot, 4,00J mi'. new brake., new
New KIMBAlL Coll9ole $699 chair '"'-, 1 ..,.. old. Cost 962-4894 8/21 GREAT DANE, lawn • 12~~· D.FC., Fatho, Speedo Marine Equip. 9035 6 ply tires, new battery,
KIMB
... G-.... ~ ..,.,... 3 • ........ s, H/ pressure water ,__ • -·"~ ~ •.u1U •••••• ,.,.... new $18511, Xlnt buy $500. 5 KITrENS. 8 wks, 2 all wbt brlndl.~ for lhow i: com· genera,u1 "' ........ tor. New
ORGANS 646-6300, 61'3-7211 males, l blck/wht females, panion. Honey-HcUow line Olympic Te~st $369'5 ll'_J>~~ ~~R~ paint. In fine condition Aft.
ntOMAS Organ •••••• $179 ,..,'U'OT>J' hi'-'-----"" ""~9649 ·~ oo•nS& ""''IY er 3 p.m. 642-4330, Ask fur HAMMOND Chard .. A·l" $299 ~ ... ,G Equip-tent, al. .... .... ., -..~....,,,.. in»" 8/J) ... ~. OJ<r • also (2) 20' Slips available tury Model. Long fihalt. Bob Larson, composing.
HAMMOND B3 .,_ hap. kntm'ls, stove, otheT e BOXER PUPPIES-AKC, PACIFIC YACHT SALES Pe:mct condition $125 .
''''' • .....,.... a• s t d 1 t em 1 • Very 3 Mo. old black puppy part 2 brindle males, 5 wkl. Ch. 3446 Via Oporto, N.B, 673-1570 963-3251. 10AM-5PM. ' '65 Ford long bed % ton
lndudH bench deliwt7 & reuonable. 549-0700. • mckn' and put Jebrador, blood!Ws. $100. ~1391· HOBIE CATS e l967 EVINRUDE 6 hp • . .. peint truck, compreSl'JOI'
wan-anty • Many other NATURAL Cerulean m\nk n e e d s & d home . COlLIES AKC pedigreed motor w/N gallon tank. , , , mounted with rack Bink&
Bargain&. , • • atole, silver, 14 &kinl. hill. 548-7486 8/21 Sables & tri-colared. 6 wks ALL COLORS Good cond Airless cooventionai spray
MUSI". BE SEEN! Let out Orig -S2000 Sac nnms Aug>) ..... all color old w/•boU, .... ""'871 FREE DEMOS .1175. 838-'748 '70 Kawasaki 250 oqulpmeo• ladden, drop
• ALSO • $475. 536-2731. kittena, adult. only 10 am • GREAT D .................. i., bla<k, CAP'N EDS Boat Sllp Mooring 9036 clolhl. Leaving state, must 7 496 E J9tb St .... ""' ., .. .,,. • sell, 494-7314. 753 Monmnita,
YAMAHA • KIMBAIL SMAU.ER Brunnrick pool pm • ·• AKC, 3 wka, $150. (1) • SLIPS 32,_38, Also n.., Uke new! 9,000 miles left on Laguna Beach.
e TiiOMAS table Cues, cue-rack. ba111 C.M . 8/20 525-6053 2200 W. Cat. Hwy. NB 645-2244 • .... ~:1 warranty. Movmg, musttl-.c~..::::::7-"=-.,-,-~-
KOHLER 4 CAMPBELL $40.673-0174 or83l-13llext (6) GREY&: wht long hair GERMAN sbor t ba ired Coronado 27 Cancelled·lm· itorage &ho!tlauncbing, sclt '69 Chevy 1/2-Ton
COAST MUSIC ~ k!ttena I-bright but plain pointer pups. AKC. Shots med deltvery, Also 2 more. * 673-6606 * $fJOO or Best With camper, low mileage.
NEWPOr.T & HARBOR 9Xl2 NYLON rug, never tiger. Need homes. 546-3566 wormed. Reu. 968-U90 SAVINGS! Boat Services 9037 774-2155 Automatic, power steering,
Coata Mesa • 642-2851 uaed $50; Diahwuh, exc befan. 4 pm 8/21 Yachts Royale 1nc 64.S-08JO _ nir cond. Dlr. Will take
AuK. Hra Only to.6 M&t cond $JOO; Air com, aood FREE rabbit A guinea p1g' ln * AKC y~~ MALES * 2912 W. c.oe.st. Hwy, NB Fiberglass &: Gelooe.t • · car in trade or finance prl-
cond P7!::. &f>.2383 1 n..A. blk. _...., 57S Mos. SAVE NOW •'" cqe . .....,.... att ao... 1r * 646-0142 * * VACATION Over. Owner **Repairs** , · vate party. Call S4M052 or
DURING SUMMER 2 VISl'A """' " cbffi + wht. Vory '°"'"""""· Noed ,.turning to Ohio. $366 Froe Elttmale1 548-1752 <94-Q!U. CLEARANCE SALE Stone Martin stole. Sell ad home. 673-lSlO 8f21 AKC toy poodJH, sll'V'!T, 2 Sabot purchased 6 wlm ago ·-• --., ;;;-';;;=:;;-==--
We have trade-Im. repom, Reu. er trade tor OW. BEAUTIFUL A smart! JO males le female. 8 wb, will be IOld for $275. Pb. Bo.t Ch•rter 9039 , 53 CHEVY YAN
rent retU?ftll .. floor models cGtnet. 644-0575 mo blk Lab female to good, w/rhb. $00 a 837-8910 l-'673-4.,;;,,,,;::""'"'=· =----• H·~ ~-DI SHERRY'S n.....o.1 __ .._, BEAUTIFUL3S'diesel..i-11'Tooo-1-~•-igbt~ ol eveey model Hammond GARAGE Sele: diMreleed ve>.Y uuu"". an e: .rvuu"" ....... ..,. * COLUMBUS.JS: F/eqUp. -...... ,.. '""" ~ u-.;: ""-' Orran. Buy DOW A receive maple diniJ:V aet encl tbl, 549-2515. 8/21 iilver c1rl $75, tiny whiU' Incl: aail1. tr a I le r. to qualified skipper. $65 <G963691) dlr. Will take care
extra. dl.IOOtmt cof!ee tbl., ttfrtg, m.i9C. FREE kitm. and mother girl $'15. ARC. 546-2848. boat/cvr, etc. READY TO day, $315 wk, $700 2 wk!. '6 9 H 0 ND A 3 5 O In trade or finance private
HAMMOND h9ehld iteml. 5'8--566'1. cat would llke gd. homes. W·EJMARANER PtJPS SAIL AWAY! $1395. 213: * 673--0339 * ~MBLER XlnL cond. party. 5464052 or 494-6811.
In CORONA DEL MAR 33 CANDY A a.ck machinel About 8 to 10 wka old. Champion Lines ~'~""°"='-':::,.~---~-I'll' TROJAN fly bridge oUer FOR SALE: '55 International
2854 E, Coast Hwy. 673-8930 plus tnJler $1500 totaJ or $50 545-2343 8/7.2 646-4318 i STAN Miller ntc~ Sabot ~r:a~~s 6 $85 day * 6754314 * % Ton, 4 spd, Pick-Up, 8'
Open Mon A Fri eve1, ea. M/llcll 968-3406 2 FEMALE Germ an • D AC HS HU ND pups. -man,y trophy wtnner. Xlnt ., · w • HARLEY Davidson Xl.CH in Bed, new radiator. Gd. ~ 5 ._ ........ -AKC M-~-· cond Sail -3185. <r:'Wln EXECUT I VE M•rlln a. basket Fork. frame, cond. Best OUer. 642-3433
HAMMOND O r ran TRIMMER Frollt Th r ow "'~""" pUpfl, mo., •u rru ....... u.a..,, · "'""'"".,,. · '"'' ,......,. t u. w/plftl!'U ti: perc., w~ lawn mower. Gd. cond. rood homes. 968-3255 11121. red. FemA.le. 538-&m Cail 673--4739 Flahina· 6 pass. Taale in· irn, eo1.c. '"" eng. 646-t75.1. '57 OiEVY tnick, Good
rarity, ietl!ICft I: deliv. $588. * 968·3044 * GREAT Dane a ~ e AKC POODLE PUPS 8 SACRIFICE cluded. $135 +fuel. 646-9000 '66 llONDA 305 dirt bike, run'g cond, $250. 548-6970.
NEW 88 note wal, spinet * WAIST 1encth light blonde m1xture 9 mo. old male Wks. Fem. Blk. 22' FRBGLS SLOOP fl>gls tank, xlnt cond. $300 See at 2539 \\'estminster St
piano w/key rowr & 3 tn.Jman Mir wig w/cue, 96U4l3 8121 $75. * 56-8563 548-U&f. OR 675-47'95 Flshln1_ Boats 9040 or best oUer. ~7139 c.~f. '
pedda, 15 )T ~. $60. 6'2-8i96. TWO CtrI'E KI'ITENS BLACK Lab-Weimaraner Fiberglaa 6 Gc!lcoe.t e 30• JEFFRIES -::i~ * '70 Kawasaki Centurian '67 CHEVY Van, xlnt. cond.
madeGOULDib USA~USIC CO. a AMF 4xa POOL TABLE 'nger 1: C&llco, 8/21 pups, 5 wks, $10. '* * Repairs* * R.B. Oirysler eng. 84\V Showroom cond, ridden 4 Sell or trn.de. New tires &
S
i..::...... $200 e * 567-TI41 • 546-0483 Free E&tlmatn 543.1152 Bendix. $3300. M&-SrlO. tlmC'll $395. 84~ p11.lnt. 646-2698
-u~ * "'' •151 A'-h A '&.I KAWASAKI 250 cc '68 FORD E 1· ~ No. Main, S.A. -1r "l OLD YElLA DOG" pu~ •w an Pups• KC Reg COLUMBIA 26, 170. many Al rcrift e $2!J5 rono tne, wll or •Sff481• 2 LGE metal ctelke ~each. py I wb old to id people. QUAUTY. * 962-9989 xtn.s w/lllp. ~ dw'D. 9100 673-2440 aft 5 lrnde. Priced to seil quick. --------"""'""'"""'""'0.. ... iii \ 2 ""'"'or mwen, w" 6452617 "" --"""""toan.83Ml561 --------i-,=""'"""""c.,:;:..,:,,--1;°'..,_;;--
2698
;;;---;;:;=--,;,=--1 O'K!ZFE i: Merritt 40" FALL MD$E new $25 a. 541-1092 AKC Brittany Spaniel. Fem. Hones "30 COLUMBIA 22, $3300 AIRPLANE wanted from '70 KAWASAKI 175 cc 1959 11,J TON GMC w/
l'10ft • dean. with dock. SOON ARR IVING REG/SLATE pO()L TABLE S mo. To heme .,/fenced Yachts Royale Inc 64541J'J prlv. party. 4 Plact • lor * *' 4~ * * ~~osed. ~ ~27· $975 at best
1100
Good $55. U a.5021 AD ~ modtta of e Ir ACCESSORIES $375 yd. 846--1'7U2 8/21 MOVING to Flo r Ida , m3 W. O>ut Hwy, NB Labor Day w'eken d · ~
planOI • orp!'ll l'IOW belna 5&3TlT aft 5:00 pm. FREE to ri&:ht bol'M-Pl.a daughter'& 5 yr Bay~ 27' FEAmER Sklop, f:rbr\• :s..~ er Bttch pref'd. • '68 HONDA 00 '&.I FORD Ranchen), Jjl V-8,
• MAYTAG Sf!rvkt Man. ~out at dbcovrrt pice1 SHOPSMJTH 'll'fjf&: •W: tailed macque monkey • -hnmejl. sale. UXI or bHt o/wd. Gd cond, must ttlL --Xlnl cond. Sl50 4 spc\, new tire!, xlnt. cond.
)\a.I W'tabtta. d1')'ttS" mat. )'O'J can't belleve. Alrteu spray; compreucr'. M9--263& oUer. 646-2139 $1695. fi7S..1393 « 5.11..sl& Mobll1 Homt1 92 847-S883, 64Ui601 $2050. ~17
chlng Rtl. B8t. Cuaranttt. Shop ua & IC't! All xlnt cond. ~. AKC bft.9ett, 2 yn, ~ to % AR.AB, 1 papered Bay * Vktory 2l $1295 * 00 '68 DUL TACO M&rk Ill. Gd ONE owner, '57 C he-;-;631;;,::-;;,::..,,..--.:----:-I WAR.D'S BALDWIN SI'UDTO DREXEL 8-pc mahogllll.)' rood hOme-. IC2-C345. 8122 gelding. 5 yean old. Gentle. 3 SA.Us, motor, slip. far street or dirt. Extraa. pickup, new battl'ry & paint'
NEW/Ud ~a.nee• a 1119 Newport, C.M. 6UM8C d1n'1 aet w/buttel, Duncan FEM. Slamtte cat very ~lilb/We1tem.. Broke to (213) 592-2135, en'> 846-36.17 + REPO * $595. ~198 A'king $ma. 536-9759 . TVs All I U& ran teed , -·"e ·-• •-II <r:Aron drive Phone 546-6255. 10-7 '47 Onlve r1al 24 X 60 e '6.'i Honda C UO e '6.11 GMC }'-..... ,· V•• _to ml'
DunlJ"'I, 1815 N•-CM ... ..,. •• vaalM! .......... IC! _.... rentle, gd. '*· 5'6-4508 8121 • ' 14' HOBIE Cat ~ trtr, $1000. 2 BD 2 UUlU .... 8 "' .. _..,. u .1an1~.~-.Y·--•• 531..J956 ** •1<1--J--'-,lfem .__ REG.Quartl!l'borie-top 9• Mil raft, collapsible, $5(), •--. Ba In Adidt Park. Xlnf dirt bikl'. 0..EAN. $l5", 548-7111 .,._.....,,""" "'"~ .. .., ....... •u:.-, ""'""" ""'"' brft!dl-best ofltt Alao L"w. • l..Ani:IACaPtd A: many ~,thrr $100 962""'133 * 548-12.15 * '
ai.a New ._ ued ..,.._ ot •LGE OOUGHBOY POOL• to -.1 m ....... -.. .,...... •121 ........... ~~·,,..,,, •~ ~·4. .,,-...143 •--""" ...., • ,. ... -5"""" .. .., "'""'''"'"' .... ..,.,.,11.1 .....,...,,. exu·..,., "'" 1nO n!nt. S.IJ,{\) 1!168 HONDA CL-450
MONTGOMERY Ward auto
-· 3 ,,.. old. Lil« ..... 1'15deUve'ed•-
""" mam. Bell bo>1 In .,,,,..... • outo Iii"" 14' HOBY.cAT $1050 1 -< h •· •-Ca11L a1 •-•-ldt M··...... * MS-G57 lit 4 • Bundled ntW5Plllf'l'1, 2191tA TRANSPORTATION • --·· * ~ 1
-nk terms. ScrambJier. Good cond, low Campers 9$20 -...,.._. .......,. ~Aw a.ta ... .,. 1u.,..,;i'"" 714/5J0.2930 -531-8105 Dlr. ml'•. ~" 64" -1 ----:---...:.::::::I
"'"'"" -Co. 1S07 N. MaJn, Santa Ju. S SPD btkf: s:» Dtdrk: " "' ' ....., ~ ME -mowtt Q> Etrty Ammcan ~Ir black klttto. t,ov. •--11 & Yachts 9000 m' GAFT ~ Schooner, HAPPINESS IS IN A 1970 HONDA 350 CC 1953 a.• TRO VAN
couch ~ 117 E. 11th, Ot ab!ti &: box trained. 893-2986 uv. al: fiberglAss, rtal salty. Chapm a n E:xceilent condition $.550 SI.NC'""' '.:_" bulltln camper.
t<ENllORE """' -· Xlnt cond, !fl (Ode, 140 TIIONAS SPINET ORG"1<
deltwred It g 11 a rant e c . Walnut. OolC $1!95. S Yrs old.
lfj'-CI.5,•S4&-86?2. • WAM.ANT'YI JJlm: new.
SEARS OU<ic SQ" pa _;$31!1:;:·.,;-~~-=,--=
...,.., 2 tge ....... -e ORGAN, llammOOd. spin-
-'"'"5!eonble. t.uc. ·~ !Nlowood. mo. ... $1XI. ~ntB. ... 5e"23ll6 •
$1350. s.16-'ilKl Mobile Hames • 642-0589 * · r;i..,., lee box, car.
• GL.ASS DINGHY FREE Beautirul ldnem to e 34• Monttteye 22' TRI wltrlr. mod. Plwr pttlng, P&nelling hed new """ e Sovtnr homes. ~ 8121 * 53l-8105 * TRAU.f:n..2 Blkt> & 'gj Sttsukl 1wn1. Xlnt co..._..i'tion. ' -Dl)'a 644-6300· evet wlmds Sl~/trade for dune bui. at D ·~ * 173-1615 * 2 Chihuahua ptqtpiN, I wkl. fll..4119 ' ' Jloble CAt 847--8984 fVORCE Forces 1 a IP! Ill CC Tr11il Bike--$220 take' * 545.7245 * &46-1622 Mobile home w/Cl\hana, 1% both. MG--0649
e }{ft.AND nllW El1eytlopeo ~ OOR.Y, beaut. irtyl~. inbd. e Zl' Sloop-wood keel boo• be 3 b• fo-• ti '68 DUL C dla Blitamk:a., " vol .Murt 1 Yr. oftl l.Alllradol' Jema1e. eJV., with trai+cr .l e:xtru. sleeps 2. ., , , .... '\."-' na o, TA o lotstaOOr 251? ,rb 6C2-91W7 548-D'.M 8'22 #50. 847_5505 porch. ~. Prime !Jeach Good cond * $4'/'S $1~ ~.7Q.1S location $-C.595. 5.~75. •8'17.-0'l54 1r
f
CA:O.tPER shell f<T!' ,~ ton
truck, -11dln& w I n d 0 .., •·
door. Stier. $200. E~~ <94-6700
' I
• 0
I
,.
th or
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ol
an •w ..,, ,.,
ff-.,.
on .,
•• .,,
op
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n ...
"" ,,
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or
~· "" •••
>al •• id.
I
""' 70.
St.
ld.
' ..
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"' '8t
....
ld.
v .
nt.
1'11.
95.
20 -... .,_
•w
~· ••• ,.,
--pi~--~----------------~~--~------------
_ Tllwsd11, A""!I 2C, 11711
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANiliOlT"ATIOH TRANSl'OllTATloti TillNSl'ORW ION ---~----1 lmpomd Cut ffOO lmpomd Autot 9600 lmPorttcl A-9600 !!;lm~poo~rl:od=A~utot~~9600~~1 !l~m!!poo~~;lod=:A::-;;7-.!H00~1'.1:m~p~":'od~Autol~~_:-~ !!!!!:!!~ -HOI '67 VW DATSUN KARMANN GHIA OPEL PORSCHE TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN
C *'1!7 Karmann GM•* '119 KAOETTE "• "I" • 'U l'OR.'lCKE CABRIOLET '6B COIONA VOLKSWAGEN -;,,-Vw BUG am per $ Xlnt cond, $1550 aulo .. l02 hp, r/h. lo n1i'1. Must 1tll for best oftf'l' ... tomat'-dio beater _. MllUI -•6ts.5510• Mu~ 11e:ll. Be1t otferl •615-Jm• "'" ...:, ... • · • 'MVWBuc.Oet.n. Olr,4Qllfed<XXA9891,S1'85 l'ully Equlppod. -----'----1831-5399 -----=:o:;;..;;..__ (VHH !JI). MOO. Plv "'1· 1U11 -wldl ...au _,,
SUnd••• "''""'· mQ11 &921 ''Lnd .. 1n'l1>et•.,•oo..... METRO I======= SAAB BILL$1YmATES * 536-425.1 * wm """"'"· a.n"-$2339 ZIMMERMAN ------1 PORSCHE '70 vw SQUAREBACK. n-'63 VW·Bluo, AM·nl ........ METRO VA/4 Authodzed DKltt VOLKSW & GEN ..U..t -· $2200. •w.e new -· 1.,.. rad!. Xlnt
2145 HAIUIOR ilLVD. 19:;.i ~ T bulllin tampu. '61 p'ORSCHE " atttt ''II> -· $l3SO. 67:M621 U• u10 Slove, 1lftk. Ice box, carpet,. SUB 32152 Valle Road H b V W ~ •---"'-~ CABRIOLET •-'6& VW. auto, dk blue, ndlo, '13 SUS .,.._...., ,.bit ar Our ---.,==~==-·~. po-,., --. new S.n Juan CapAtnno _..1 ~~ Pmect -. ---Mllol _,, • • DOT DATSUN point Xlnt eondltlon. llrrdtop, -•·amt-metallic l.Tl~/-/499-n;! -·--~ -· ..... OP N A * 545-1245 * ..,. ... '"--·--• L __ 4'.c de oond, 6f2..Sll5. SlCMotofr. 54&-6119 llTll BEACH BL., 842-<435 E D ILY "'""· wHh bntnd new;,,_ ""'_..,...~ BllL MAXEY e ·70vwCAMPEfi'e e 'OOVW-NEWUPROI..
HUNTINGTON BEACH AND e 1958 Metropolitan e ttrior, chrome wheels, ra-Pop top * 1~1 * llkie new XLNT OOND. * '50D.
APOLLO SUNDAYS Cood eood. Now Htta. dial Urea, AM/FM .adio,
18Sl5 Bea.;h Blvd. $175 M2-5190 tJe. WYW 215. Sale1 e Se1·vloe e Parts ITIOIYIQITIAJ * ~1240 * * * 561011 * * ·nun-Beach · $1899 From sw""'• • __ _ '66 VW • 1966 VW Sedan. Cl<t.n.
MOTOR HOMES llU-1781 or """"2 MERCEDES BENZ . the 1..i BEACH BLVD. Gd. Qmd. "95. """"' pd mO<hani<ally. 501 CHICK IVERSON SONETT Hum. ...... 147-GS.I ... vw Bug Gd. eond. ~ .. °"""" A ... Cd>f . ..,._,.. * All Steel Col'llltruction * A1J Flbera:laaa Exterior
MILLIGANS
Trailer SalM
ENGLISH FORD
13951 Harbor Blvd, ALL NEW ENGLISH
1 Garden Grove * 537·2852 FORDS NOW IN STOCK
CLEARANCE SALE DRASnCALLY
All '70 .rnodl!'I campers re-REDUCED
Or ,1!1'J" (.ounly ~
l.JPcic·st ),·I•'''""
N, . .,... ~ U~r·d
M,-., cedl·~ 8e11z
J im Si emon ~ Imps.
\'1/Jr '1(·1 8. M.lH\ St
S11nt,1 An,1 5-1 6.4114 duced, 4-Star, Westway1, TO CLEAR
Funtbne, HJa:hwayman Va. LARGE SELECTION '68 281 SU.ike new. 15,000
cadoneer. Special p'ricu TO CHOOSE FROM orig, mi., auto, jls/pb,
subject to prftf!nt inventory. Theodol'9 AM/FM, s.w. Must aac.
VW lmmediale Dell wry I mi H d. Out HWy ao Bdi eng, $50 over wholHllle '62 GHIA COUPE
Orange Coun~'• Newest Dlr. '68 coftoNA ·-vbol book at $650. Call 549-flli Good Cond. $'2'00 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'66 PORSCHE
912 4 SPEEL
(NPD 6)7)
COAST IMPORTS .,. -..=~ .. oond. ""'XI KARMANN Ghia"'""'-• ~""vw "'~•tick
ot 0 """ ty Pvt ty fl•M -· ·iilft nt cond, Dk ~ body ..,. ·&U•u•u .. range """"" P • .,.........,, .....,.. .,.,.. w/blk top & Int. 34U026. lhl.lt. Blue. $1600 1200 W. Pacific Coa&l Hwy. Call ~
Acros5 from 11l1UMPH '60 VOLKS bug, xlnt «Ind.
Balboa Bay Clob $495. Pri"'te Puty. ** '59 VW ** ~2-0406 • 54f>.4529 -548--05.14 '61 eng. $400, MJ.5172
SUNBEAM '67 SPORTS 1200
D.llL Y I'll.OT p.f
JIWIDOtfAtlOli
'"?P'~ .Autee MOO
VOLXSWA5EN
'64 vw
59UAUBACK
Lie ..
$195
CHICK v:easo~
S&o30Sl !:a. 66 er II
lllll .U..-BLVD,
COS'IA MESA
'GVW
Law milef 'ii' retluilt eniame,
dlW dutcb, new brabl.
ndlo, -· OXldl-Can be .CD at D!9 ffarbar ......... _ .... __
to 6pm
Cool Bluo Super si...,
'6.1 VW eonverttble.
Mecha.nkallY perfMt. Sao-
ritice $800 firm, 5«).(1539
e '61 VW BUG e
$1350/make otr. 9!lU222
""
Scott'•. 914 N. !Wbor, Santa ROBINS FORD -846-~'"'~1===~,-I
Ana. ~ Harbor Blvd. . '69 MERCEDES 250
Beige $4 250 or consider New '70 Datsun en.ta M... ""'°'° TRADE. 6.&-1.,;
$2999 '63 SUNBEAM • Alpine, pxl
mecb. Tonneau .l top, A·l.
BILL JONES l400iou. Pri• pry. -$199
'61 ALPINE """"· oolt & BILL JONES 8.J. Sports Car Center hard top, askifll $1450. B.J. SPMtl car Centtr
l fm OHC, Pickup with camp. MG 283.1 Harbor, C.M. 540-4491 M~l5l5, 28.ll Harbor, c .M. 541M491
er. Sale prtee S2.09'l dlr. '63 PORSCHE ---·-----1 ONLY AT
,. "'''" Will -""' Jn FERRARI TOYOTA '68 GT 6 trade. Will finance private --------'68 MGC. GT 'S' coupe, Agean Blue tinish.1 _______ _
puty. Call 546-4052 or FERRARI WU. hem <li I tin AMl>'M . (JGE 9781 70 TOYOTA'S Italian Radna Rad furhaok 494-6811. N~ Im-· Ltd. ~ AM~,..;,;,~ .;I., aot~ Bl LL y ATES fully equipped, --··
9522
'70 VW Pop top camper.
Sleept1 4-5. Avail, Wkends.
6Th-5016 or 644--0501
'69 VW Mini· T Body
Sacrifice 536-1956
Dune Buggies 9525
DUNE BUGGY
CHASSIES
'61 Corvair 4 speed $199
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
J28.j2 Valle Road
San Jll&.h Capistrano
1.17-4800/493-4.511/499-2261
'59 RENAULT
DAUPHINE
El'!g. l frame in gd. oond.
.... _. ........ vr lnstc:dc.lmmedialedelive"". bony bl k 1n1~--!YEM CountT onb' alJtbor. made transmission, low •cs e ac "~_. ~· d«l..-. 1
miles, Lio. xss 7$. VOLKSWA~EN ~ 11•-'• 414l Saa11lee, tak• lradt ~C:-~~~:!;.15 $2499 Sa~!a~~:.i=no '••._ ~~Y~ ~un, ~1.6~0 ::
N..._ -CHICK IVERSON 831~1493-45lll499-226l tnllm •m 549-3100.,,. "'-'"'· 642.9405 54.~1764
Aulhori"" F=ut 0eai.. VW · '63 SUPER 90 Laguna Beach '67 GT6 Coupe
S4S.:mt. Ext. 66 or 67 ,':.750soi Cat. Highway Extra Sha!li! Radio. heater,
1970 HARBOR BLVD. As Oean Al Brand New, * 540-3100 4 speed, w i rt whttls.
cosrA MESA AM/FM. <JZY 525• dfr. ww '67 TOYOTA 1WCR im>.
._ ---------tak.e car in Trade or Finance Pick up with cam.per 31,COO $1"5
• - - - -• ~ Private Part)'. 546-4~ or actual miles. Local l ownt!r BILL JONES
--- -TH -INIC -• THINK 4.94-6811. automobilf", Original n:d tin. 8.J. ~Car Cfnter "flAj ''MG'' '60 PORSCHE C.brlolet, 1600 ish, new titts, radio, heater, 2833 Harbor, C.M. 5*+t91
HI super, with hard top. New ready for anything! lUPM. '67 Triumph TR6
sa ena:ine, new clutch, new 117), 4 speed w/O'o"el'drtve wire "fRll:lll 'HOER'' 1'fRIEDLAHDER'' """ new painl, AM/FM. $1399 whtt•, AM/FM on;_ low
LllUI ju.rt llk• new, oan he "'" CHICK IYERSON mile~ Rons llke a line 13750 IEACH fHwy. JtJ NEW MIDGET $1995 at 2089 Harbor Blvd., or watch (UOV846) Will take
893-7566 • 537~ 1893.~~c~ ";J7~ phone 645-1982, 9am to 6pm YW car ~trade or finance pri-~ ~ '66 PORSCHE 912 ii~~~R"e~.:; ~,"""'· -°'
'69 124 SPORT CPE. Co?"'· AM/FM, 4 -'"" COSTA MESA '65 SPITFIRE RDSTR '67 MIDGET A" """""'°"'"' !SUN 512)
FIAT
Has blown clutch. Ideal for RAdlo, heater, .~pecial
mlling dune buggy. SSO
cash. Afler 3 pm. Ask for hau.sl. (XEP llil J
ex· MK Ill ~: ~~~~~94~ ITlglYIQITIAJ
Radio. h('a!l'r, chrome wheels PORSCHE '70 914 DEMO
{P693A) $499
BILL JONES
$1895 Bob I.anon, composing. BILL JONES
'64 VW Pfln w/front end B.J. Sports car Center
brakes, steering, pedals & '''""3 H bo C M """ "91 cables. Xlnt start for Dune ~ ar r , · · .,..._.
Buw' -an. • ' '69 Fiat 124 Cpe
weeeknds. Exotic red with black vinyl
1970 HONDA Trail 70, 400 bucket seats. Low miles, haa
mi. $250 or belt oiler. Call had excelll'nt care. Sacri·
1..,:646-:=2139:====== I ficel (XLY235) Take older
I · car in trade. Will finance 9600
I,,,_, 710> '70 WAGON {6372) nr v · Tmmac cond., extras Include
$1195 FM "'~. 8 tncl< tape, $1817 BILL JONES cover. reuying new house.
B.J. Sports Car c.enter Must s1u:rilice. $3995.
2833 Harbor, C.M. 54().4491 525-8577
MG PORSCHE 1969 912 Targa
Sallil, Servk..t, Parta 90CXl mi°s, ~feet cond,
Immediate Delivery, AM-FM, chrm whls, $6400
All Model.a *4.~*
PORSCHE '66 912, 4 spd.
Check our d.eals
8 ontER DEMOS
AT BIG SAVINGS
DEAN LEWIS
1966 Harbor, C.M. 546-9:m
B.J. Sports Car Center
m.1 Harbor, C.M. 5404491
e '66 TRIUMPH Spitfire
convert. Wpd, oria. owner.
SlOCC. 9fi8..2'l8.1
'60 TRIUMPH TRS·Xlnt
cond, 4. 1pd, New top, Good
tires. $450. ~100 a.ft 6 pm
WILLIS Imported Autos private l my. can Pat dlr.
aft 10 L.J 494·7503, 546-3100.
J?rtuport
Jl1upo rts
Blaupnkt radio, ch.rm rims, '67 TOYOTA nullab, am/Im. $3700 . 1950 WILLIS P""" • ..t up
1-ALF_A_Ro_M_E_o_1'69 850 SPORT CPE. 962--0743. Or aft S, 847--0168 corona. Good oondiUon (ZLK. tot" 2113-327 Oif'v.·no engine
'55 PORSCHE Spdstr, best 927). \Vill take car in trade or trans .• bucket &eats ·
e '67 • 1600 Spyder, org.
OWMr. Xlnt. $2595, 547-5832
day, 846-~39 eve.
4 1peed, yellow. lzXw 395)
$1595
llOO W. c.out HWJ' N.E. offer over $1000. or finance private J>lll11. dlr. $200.00. Call G:J0.9:00 p.m.. 642-!!~ MG De~~~764 548-4960 Call 546-4002 or 49f.6811. 546-ll90
BILL JONES
AUSTIN HEALEY B.J. Sports Car-Center
2833 Harbol', C.M. Sfn.4491
'63 MGB l~l;m;po;:rt:;;ad;;;C;•;";;;;;;;;;"°°;;;;lm;;;po~';'ad;;C;•:;;rs;;;;;=;;;"°°;;;;;;;;lm;po;rl;;;od;;;;A;;;ut;;;of';;;:;;;;;9600;;;;;=; 4 speed. wire wheel1, radio.1,
$988,
HARBOR AJdERICAN
1969 1-larbnr Blvd.
&l6-0261 AUSTIN AM ERICA
Sales, Service, Pana
Imm«la te DelivtrJ
AD Mod<ll
J}rtuport
jl111port s
3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B.
6C-94<lii 54Q.J 7&4
Auth::>rtD!d MG Dealer
e 'Gt Auslin Healey 3(XX) 4
aea~r. O'Yf'r/drive, new
paint & uphl. * 61;:>-4510 *
'61 AUSTIN Healey, "'hite,
new tnlns & over drive,
pxl oond. Eves 4.94-4.997
BMW
Authorized Dir.
Salt! e Servi~ • ParlJ
AU. MODELS TO
CHOOSE FROM
• 2800 Cpe in stock e Im.mediate Delivery
Orange County'•
N1w11t 01al1r
COAST IMPORTS
Of Orange County
12>0 \V. Pacific Coast Hwy
lAcross from Balboa
Bay Club)
642-0406 .........
CORTINA
NEW FIAT
1970 ISO SPYDER
All colors to choose from. ~.-.,.~~M~G~M~ld-g•-t--~N~,-w 11
$2335 + Tax .l Llc. radials, wire whee.ls $1050
All models to choose. 346-9638
California Sport Cars e MUST s e 11 -, 6 6 MG
!:Kll E. 1st, S.A. S4Z.880l sedan-Good mechanic a I
'10 FlAT 850 SPYDER cond. $495. fi'73-0357.
$1995., 3700 mi. Owner trans. ---II
i."" <96-4683. MGB
'68 124 WAGON
Air cond., 4 wheel disc brak·
es, 4 1peed. IVWW 641)
$1295
BILL J ONES
8.J. Sport!> Car Center
2833 Harbor. C.M. 540-4491
JAGUAR
JAGUAR
HEAD9UARTERS
The only authot1ted JAGUAR
dealer ia the entin Harbor ,.,.._
Completai
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS BAUER
BUICK
JN
COSTA MESA
%Wi E . l'lth street 543-m> .
'67 XKE
'65 MGB
ROADSTER
Wire whrels, 4 speed, Radio,
beatl'r. while lop. !NFY906J . $1395
BIL L JONES
8.J. Spor!J; Car Centt'I"
28'.U Harbor, C.M. ~
'65 MGB ROADSTER
Excellent oond!Uon, wire
wheels. (VNE 099). Owned
by little old school teacher.
Take trade or small down.
Will fin. pvt. pty. Dir. Call
Pat a.ft 10 am 540'3lo0 or
494-1029.
'64 MGB
W1te wheels, radio. tHC019)
$1195
BILL JONES
B.J . Sporll Car Center
2833 l-larbor, C.M. 540-44!11
1969 MGIJ.GT Black. Custom
equip, comb. FM radio-
1;1ereo tape deck. XlnL cond,
Make offer. 642--6.~
e '67 MGB-GT lo mi, good
Conwrtlble1• wire wheels, I cond. MUST SELL, make
1peed, (VAL 9071 oHtt 675-3348.
$2595 ==-===="'II
BILL JONES OPEL
B.J'. Sparta Car Center ----11
2833 Hubor, C.M. 541).4491 '67 OPEL
e '67 CORTINA Deluxf':, 4-JAG XKE 1967 2+2. air. new
dr auto Good urei RWl5' Pirellis, very !harp, ~ ~II . ~2574 ' ti.rm. Call S3fr!l866.
R•lly Coupe, 4 s p •• d,
Af11/FM, air cond.
,,
068 CORTINA GT.
Beaul. condition
673-7333 or 492-2387
• '68 Cortina ~· $1325
or ~offer.
5.16-34.91 or 213/431-4.893 --
---fXXf' 987) $1299 KARMANN GHIA
BILL JONE S
B,J. Sporu: Car Centf!I'
2't\1 lllU"bor, C.M. $40-4491 '63 GHIA
n.dto, """'· Rons G"'"' '68 Kadette Railey
DATSUN F\111 Price $799 dlr.
fXEV 777). Wiil tAke Cllr in 81g F.n1lnt. 4 Spetd. Reed)i
-· -----Tr•de or F'lnance. Pr!V11te to Roll fZXW 3361
'66 1600 ROADSTER :·: K::::..,; :;:','. BIL~1~~NES
Sliver finish w/black vinyl Xlnt cond, Pvt owner, Mak"! 2$3.~·~tr,' c.C:. ~~
tntmor 4 rpeed. Dlr., (RUC: ofler. 52J.87S2
8Sl) will tJka' trade or fu1. e '63 KARMANN Ghia 1966 OPEL KADETI
How does Fiat do
it for the price?
SAVE aasa
UP TO
$400*
FIAT
850SPIDER
c;.. ........ el IPOl'f-........ ...._, ......
.,_ ._.... ,..,. Plot ~ IMll Cl~
a... body ..,...,. idy ,.cdlfo•s.t ad ti
Jilh, de.fl liadtCMI ..... '""" ............ ..
rodJ.arl 11,.,,,--.:1 Cl fonlOltkoly ........ ~
for • ,,,.., sqvlpped .,.. tpCll't ..... s.s " tocloyt
$2287'0
Howd ....
Flat do~ for
th. price ?
•077f.9i
F ; I A I T
· * ON OUR DEMO & EXECUTIVE SALE *
1970 124 SEDAN
AM /FM , #717 140. Window Sticker Price $2376
5~ PRICE $1195
Visit Our Huge New Service Dept 16 Stans . .
Servicing All Sports & Fore~n cars
ES ance rrtvate p&l1)' call Com.1, tblt eng, dutch. mi * ~~ * !<6-4052.,,. 49'-6311. "'""· 61'-'"'15 ----------._ _______ , _______________ """.
CONNELL CHEVROLET
'70 CAPRICE COUPE 12,000 ml. Showroom fr~sh, vinyl root, air,
auto., P.S., P.B., Rt'mainin1 fact.
"· warTanty, (ADY460) '70 IMPALA CUSTOM CPL . 7 fiOO ml. Auto., P.S .. air, vinyl roof. remaminK -fAct. i'1UM.lee. Dead sharp. (711CKBJ • I '69 IMPALA CUSTOM CPL Auto., R&l-f, vinyl roor. ract. air, remainlfll
fact. warranty. Low miles, (YYN008)
(SIX OTHERS TO CHOOSE J'ROt.t) '67 ~;,~·~~~~a~. P.S~ P.8., 1ure is a nice car. (TZH933)
2 Dr. H.T. Auto., P.S., radio, h@ater, '66 IMPALA coun
nice car. (UI..A965) '66 CAPRICE WAGON 6 pass. VS, radio, P.S .. aulo., air. Low
.miles, atrong car. (RUZ152J •
2 Door hardtop. Strong ear. Automatic, '66 CHEVROLET
'· . radio, heater. lRRY538) '65 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 pr, H.T. Ra.dio!.heater, aut.omatlc, P.S.
Real nice car. (NAZ487) . '65 CHMWZ DR • 1 owner new car trade In. Automatic,
radio, heater. (NFV{llS) '65 MUSTANG 2 DOCiR HARDTOP Auto. trans .. will paint to 1uit
buyer. Strong car. (12791) '67 FORD GALAXIE XL 500 2 Door hardtop. Radio, automatic,
power steering. (TRU367l '66 FORD CONYIRTllL! VS, P.S., automatic, radio.
Sharp car. (SRH593) '68 Y.W. IUG Ra.dlo, heater, stick.
Oean 1tron1 car. tZSF84S) '69 OLDS VISTA CRUISER 6 pass. 'Wllgon. R&:H, P.S., auto., aJr. Real nice car. Won't la.st (670AGHJ '68 PLYMOUTH SPORT PURY Convert. RlH. auto., P.S., air cond.
Strong low mileage car. (2ZD786)
$3499
1699
'1399
'1499
_ TRANSPORTATION TRUCKS. TRUCKS. TRUCKS
'83 COft'IAllt t Or. llkk. flkl. '""'.,, 113 Ill. Allt S Dr. M.T. tv"'tM.ft.iS.. U H.
'62 \'ALlAMT t Or, M,T, ........... ff.1 ........ (LOlaMI
'83 CK.OS t 0.-. M,T, ............. ll"l aNO
'83 DOIMll 4 Or. Otrt ..... , lllM, llHDl11
'62 COltVAla c ... Slldl. llHl1M)
'88 ~ TOM CH•V. ' -
-fT"'911
'66 'h·TON CHIV. w/c..,,_,. fPJl411J
'67 Va·TON CHIY, ~ ltkt. fYt 4t1J)
-''" n CAMINO. UH, P.s ....... fll7· ,,.,'
$489 ''I 'l1·TON CHIY. VI, l&H. fS212671
'67 IANCHllO. A. llH. Pl, .it (IU.
1JA)
'67 IL CAMINO. A. UH, Pl. f¥1 61H)
~'JM 'U ~·TON CHIY, 6, .... IT1141&J
""9Gli '67 ¥.·TON CHIY. YI, tlkl. IUJ.2S9J
'6t POID Vt-TON, llH. did. fl021Sl1'
$399 '61 llOID V1•TOH. A. Yl, All. (IJIJ4J
'U CHIY. Vt·TOH. l. H, YI, 1rkt. IUJO.. ,,, . '
0&7 CHIY, Vt•TON lpt. ¥-. YI, A, t .
$-1117IOJ &H ''4 llOID k .... V1•TON ¥-. A. .Sr, I.
H, fHQ4U:I.
CONNELL
CHEVROLET.
2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
546-1203 .
'
I • j
U -0.Ul Y PILOT
TRANSPORTATI ON
.. ... ...... .. • -·
TltLH"SdtY, August 20, 1'70
TRANSliORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION
-""'lfji •• "t'• • "' ?. • ,"" •• •
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORT#TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
' 9800 ,.._ NewCors 9100Ntw C1rs HOGNewC1n 9IOONew C1rs 9100New C1rs 9800New C1r1 9100 -
SPECIAL 1970 BUICK
NEW 1970
SKYLARK
C111toi!i 1port co11pe. l'ow·
•r plw1 .;, ce>l!ditio11il'l9,
11i11rl roof, •It. Cu1lom
trlM. s11:. sos• I 1059121
NEW 1970
RIVIERA
'ow., •quipll'lelll pl1.11 .;,
conclitio11i119, ¥i11VI roof,
el<. SI .. 1061 1901721 1'
NEW 1970
RIVIERA
'""''' .q11iptr1011t pl11t oir
conditio11i119, "i11yl roof,
olc. St•. 5077 1901t•J)
NEW 1970
RMERA
Power oq11ipmo11t plus t ir
c.orMlitio11int• •i-vt roof,
etc. Stir. 11 21 19200531
LIST n1c1
S44JJ.J5
IEOUCID TO
$3937
LIST PRICE
S62J2.11
~EDUCID TO
$5284
LIST PRICE
S6J67.5l
llDUCID TO
LIST HICE
$6411 .12
RIDUCID TO
.
NEW 1970 LIST PRICI
S6J1J.JJ
RIVIERA: llDUCED TO
Powtt t quipmtnl plu1 t if $5268 cortditioni119, ¥1~yl roof,
t tc. Stk. 5130 f7J569 11
NEW 1970 LIST PllCE
55725.47 ELECTRA 225 llDUClD TO
2 Doo1 cp1., pow1r tquip· $4782 mi ni, t i• conditioni119,
tic, Stlt. 5117 12150261
NEW 1970 LIST PllCI
ELECTRA S67U.7t
Cu1lom • Dr. H.T. limit· llDUCED TO
.d. Powtr 1quipmtnl, t ir $5658 condltio1ti119, 1tc. Stk.
SIM 1247•7•1
NEW 1970 LIST PllCI
WILDCAT SUM.45
llDUCID TO
Cu1tom cp1. Powtr itquip-$4599 mini, .;, condilioni119,
•''· St•. 5171 I 11251 11
LOOR SA
CL AR
NEW 1970 LIST PllCI NEW 1970 LIST PllCI
WILDCAT 5541•.71
llDUCl!D TO
S61JS.57 RIVIERA:
llDUCED TO
Custom <P•· 'ow1r equip· $4564 m•nt, t ir conditioni11g
•le. Stt 5179 !1117191
Powtr 1quip111t11!, ••• $5099 co11ditio11i119. 1lc. St~.
5116 {92953)1
NEW 1970 LIST PllCl NEW 1970 LIST PllCl
LE SABRE 54110.96 .
ll!DUCl!D TO
55951.71 ELECTRA llDUClD TO
4 Dr. H.T. 'ow1r 1qu ip-$4158 mini, 1ir e:onditiolti119,
t fc.St .. 5110 11126721
C.11!0111 4 Dr. H.T. Po w-$4899 t r tquip111t11!, 1ir condi-
lioni119, 1tc. Stl . 5111
126lllrl
NEW 1970 LIST 'llCI NEW 1970 LIST PllCI
WILDCAT ss•z9.t7 LE SABRE $4195.90
llDUCID TO l(DUCED TO
Cu1lom c,.. Pow1r 1quip· $4588 mtnl, t ir conditio11in'J.
1tc. Stk. 511? 1112 697!
C111lom cp1. Powt r lliqujp. $4169 mi nt, 1ir conditio11i119,
1h;. Sit 5191 (1 1?1991
NEW 1970 LIST ,llCI NEW 1970 LIST PllCf
55104.51 55519.55 LE SABRE 455 WILDCAT llDUCID TO 1tEDUClD TO
C111tom 4 Dr. H.T. Pow-$4333 1r •q11ip111111I, t ir cond i-
tio11i119, 1lc. Stk. SJI J
( 112691 J
C111tom 4 Dr. H.T. Pow1r $4672 equiprntnt, ;1 ir condition·
i119, vinyl roof, t ic. St~.
52 26 11157101
Specializing in QUALITY JAGUAR
..... -
234 E. 17th St. .,
COSTA
MESA 548-7765
Imported Autos 9600 Imported Cars 9600
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN
'67 vw
CAMPER
Fully equipped Including lug.
gage rack. Runs & looks
brand new. Lie. VT'I' 907.
Spend the weekend 111
comfort with economy
CHICK IVERSON vw
549-3031 Ext. fi6 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'68 Square Back
Bwp.ndy Red with All Vinyl
Interior, Radio &. New
Whitewall Tires (\VTE 1711
NEW VW BUG
$55.89 pr. month
$147.78 down includ es
tax & Lie. Open End
VW LEASING
AT
CHICK IVERSON
vw
1970 HARBOR 'BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'66 Fastback
Radio. ISVU 2161 .$1135
9810 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Auto leesing ~----Imported Autos 9600 Imported Auto. --'--·----VOLKSWAGEN
VW BOSSES
&
CAMPERS
'6Ts. 'GS's &. '69's. 8 10 choose
fror11 .
BIU YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
~Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
837-48001493-4511/ 499-2'l61
'69 VW Sedan
VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO "'LEASE "' ---------1---------1'69 Cad El DQrado, Loaded~
'65 vw
BUG
American mags widl! til'l!S,
custom metalliC paint w''h
beauliful Jar" work. YPU.
001.
Several other cuatombed
V\V to choose [rom
CHICK IVERSON vw
1 ...... ._ -• Like new, $179 per mo, and
1111111111 ......... others. '
THINI ~v~o·
"FRIEDLANDER"
2 dr. Demo. * $2750 * 1J1st IEA(H (HWY, >ti
893-7566 • 5.17-6824
SOUTH COAST
CAR LEASING
300 W. Cst Hwy, NB. 645-2182
Used Cars
TRANSPORTATION
CARS
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 NEW-USED-SE RV.
1970 HARBOR BLVD. our Specialty
COSfA ME.5A ~ AS LOW AS $99 '66 vw sedan Antiques, Classics 9615 We carry our cwn contracts
Radio. ITBX 539) 1939 PACKARD Oipper 4 Dr. Credit is no problem
Remarkable cond. 675-7800 Blue Chip Auto Salas
\Viii seU to lst $1000 ·HUR-2145 Harbor Blvd., C.l\f,
RY! 642-9700 * 540-4392
CHEVELLE
'66 CHEVELLE SS396, 4-5pd,
mags, needs clutch, $1350.
67;....1628
CHEVROLET
'65 IMPALA
396 VS, • speed, power Slet'r-
ing, radio. heater. (NKF947)
$899
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
837-4800/ 493-4511/499-2261
'66 CAPRICE
PLE
C·E
NEW 1970 LIST PRICE
WILDCAT 55115.IJ
REDUCE D TO
C111tom co11v1ttibl1. Pow·
t r tquipm1nl, 1ir 'o"di-$4999 tioni119, .,,, Stk. 5287
{1696•1 1
NEW 1970 LIST PRICE
SKYLARK 54440.0J
IEDUClD TO
Cuilom Sp!, Cpe. Pow11 $3945 1quipmtnl, 1ir co11dilio11.
ing;, ¥inyl roof, 11,. St~.
521J 11256.11
NEW 1970 LIST PllCI
GS 455 54171.42
IEDUCED TO
Sport Cp1. Pow1r tquip-$4292 m111t, ,;, conditio11in9,
¥i11yl roof, '''· Stk. 52 69
1124242 1
'
NEW 1970 LIST PllCE
ELECTRA $5105.0l
REDUCED TO
4 Or. H.T. Powtt equip-$4834 mint, ,;, conditiottin9,
vinyl roof. 11,, St~. !;274
lll454J I
Used Cars 9900
CHEVROLET ---'67 CHEVY SS
396 VS. Power Steering, Bue.
ket Seats, Chrome IA'heels,
Radio. Heater. {WJB 586).
$1599
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
837-4800/ 493--4511 /499-22fil
'63 CHEVY Impala convt.
Needs engine work. Sell OT
tracie. Ask for C h u c k , .. ,.,,.,.
Used Cars 9900
CHEVROLET ---
'64 Impala
2 door hardtop, loaded '-+
air cond. dlr. (TFB 593).
Will take trade or finance.
Call 494-7744.
1964 JMPALA convt. 56,000
mi. J owner, Air. Xlnl concl .
\\'orlh more than $700. Ph;
57a-;,.:i33
CHRYSLER
1%4 NEWPORT· New tfres,
good body & motor. Trans
needs work. ti.lake offer.
00 .......
'67 EL CAMINO. Runs perf. I '"========:-I
Below book at 11425: c., CONTINENTAL
help fine. ~1691. See at
1700 Superior Ave. 0.1. 1966-Xlnl cond. l.ooded! Jm-
Cobell Blue "'·ith whit!! vinyl
ln!erior. Radio, \Vhitwall
Tires IYNZ260J $1810 Harbour V.W.
Harbour v. w. 1 ,1,.."ii=i,,,,.."~=·N~oc:-~~~..,.· e_.-f~t5:_'_"' $18 29
$1199
H b V W Autos Wanted 9700 ar our • • WE PAY TOP
2 Door Hardtop. Full Power t'IlDT WAN'l' ADS! 642-567t maculat<.' throout. Owner
& Air Cond, dlr. Vinyl Top. ========'-'=""'=';="'=·=Sa=c=.=1=2500=. =llM-4=9=10 Great Condition ISYU 400) -
e '68 V\V :sedan, chrome 187ll BEACH BL. 842-4435 Small DoY,,, will Finance, Imported Cars 9600 lmporled Autos 9600
l&ru BEACH BL. 842-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'64 VW BUG
Radio, lfl!eter. (TAZ ll.J)
Small Down wW finance
Private Part)'. CaU 546-4m2
or~lJ
rtms·, :r.11ctielin 11r i!s, Harbour V.W. --•.,.1UNT11'1=-=:o=-ro:-:-N-::s"EA=cn:--i aulll'OOf, exhaust l'i)'Slem.
chafns. Take over 1871l BEACH BL. 842-4435 '63 VW BUG
payments. S46-8308 alter 5 llUNTINCTON BEACH Red beauty. Excellent concfi,. fbr Used can It. truclca just
CASH Cali Manager .......
BUICK
Call 49-1-7744.
1965 Chevy JJ V-8, • speed,
ll,000 mi. Many extras. Ex·
cellent condition. Sa.le or
trade. 548-2008 Pfl.f or wkends. J--;-=-=:=c-=:---1 tion. New vaJW: job, IWQD can 115 fOl' free estimate.
''6 NEWLY p,;,,,d, '63 VW Bu9 510), 'mall down will fi". GROTH CHEVROLET '64WJLDCATHT2d,,loml. ''67 CHEVY
o v e r h 1 u I c d , Xlnt :P.IEOIANIC SPECIAL Pvt. Pty. Call dlr, :P.faury El wnd t t · ec wt!, sea· an enna: 4 door sed A t R I' throughout. $1095, Mu:oi:I sell~ Lie. OKC-612 art 10 AM 540-3100 or Ask for Sales Manaiet tUI whl, AM/FM, air, all an. u o., · ,,,
642-7374. 6T:>-0144 $299 494-1029. l82ll Beach Blvd. pv.T. Top cond. S7SO. Pwr. steering. Air cond.
'6B vw Black. o,g;...,..... -------CHICK IVERSON -------H -Bea• '~ "" czsc4371· il .. , VW SQUAREBACK Hght 1970 VW Sod8" • I year un c -= !:; = !.'"~~ ~ . bllll!, 25,000 mi, new' l1N'i; VW guaranttt, radio, dark blue. 847-6081 KI 9-333111'1"!16&~B=u~1"°c"K-R=w~l<~ra-G"rnnd-$995
""' dired. w/m. dwn "bl'al<"" Pttl<Cl """';'~· 1uro. Mu.t ... n. Own<r WE PAY CASH Spon.a.e.too' M,. .~1" BILL ·y ATES
... ..-..... 1 C&ll Mr. Thomas $1400 497-LW. ~14$-3031 Ext. 66 or fi7 !!migrating. &14-2188. fu ll pwr. $3200 Trade equity
................. l.970 HARBOR BLVD. I vw 546-544" VOLKSWAGEN
54tMll97 Days, 645-.1359 hVes. la"'e Selection cosrA MESA • '68 Bug""""· 1st ow,..,., FOR YOUR CAR ,;._IOI,, ,;.k '"' ,..,:. "' j ''4 Yw .,, Xlnt cond. r/h, $1280 Mu.st 32852 Valle Road Of . VW Campers, '1>4 Volkswa~n Campl!r, Lie. sell. ~70. '66 BUICK Electra Xlnt !-ln.ri Juan Capistrano S9UAR~ BACK V.cw, Kambis, ?,~;:,;:.;'· 1"" Box. SJ,.,. 1.1 ·.~,,.."""°'vw~-XI"'°,,.-"°"'-,~· -,,.,,., CONNELL "°""· Full •""· Owo' .,,_....,1<,...,s11 /49!J.:i:.;1
._,._ healot Xrelic whl'-J' SI I !"'°cc. $1695. CHEVROLET tran•le""". 11400. Ph ' '63 CHEV BELAIRE "=~ •• ...:p11---• _:::·. Bu*, New & Used •m •mons mports • 675-2051 • ·~64Hl=~"=---~ .,......,... "'" "'.., ...... ._ l20W WARNER 1:='°""°"',,_,-,,,.-,,.-=--•• _.....__ r . 6 cyl. Stick. Good transpor. Th1I ~:eek-end 'onty (T£X. lmnt.dlat1 0 1livery SANTA ANA ' '61 VW-New l!itbai..ud: 1ygtnn, -~ Blvd. '67 RIVIERA: full pwr .• air, latton. fl.!echanicaJJy perft!Ct,
680, CHICK IVERSON sunrool, new brakl!I & Costa b:Iesa 546-\XIO ':ery cli'an: Jow mi I e. ~ ()pen Eves. &. Sun. G-4125 WE p y TO DO AM/F'f t~•) 5'"l""" Asking S3ZS. Sec Arley 11t $999 tune--up, $IOO. 673-6357 aN 5. A P LI.AR. " · •w r ......,, lhl! Da '] YW WANTED FOR TOP USED CARS '61 BUICK £9ecial, needs day -d_{ :~~~·· :P.fonday.~ ~ dn. ~ $31.78 monlh ~Ext. a; or 61 I'll PRY top dolfa-for yaur VOLVO ll your c.a.r 11 extra clean, work. Bei;! offer. <:.--w=;-;-=-;,;;--,-,-CHfCK .fVE,RSON 1'IO IURBOR BLVD:C VOLKSWAGEN today. Call 1--------,.. u• !lnt 6';>,.1156. '64 IMPALA SS. <09 cu In,
VOLVO BAUER BUI,..._. ~. 411 Posi. Xlnt ---', YW ~A MESA I a"<) "k I"' Ron p;-hot. '" e ~• S ·a1 W A •~• ......-~£ JS.i9..3l31 .... 234 E. 17th St. 1...r. peo 1.g, uto. Maki! olfCo:r. 646-4914 alt 5&3bl.._ •OrfiT JULY '69 VW, Auto. Eict66-67.6'13-0!IOO, '70Dtmo.•3182 OoctaMl!A. 541-7765 P/S. R/H. Xlnt cond! firm. -=-, ·r"' vw 5 ~ · d'-Ressonable! 646-3431. mo HARBOR ~LVD. tutti.ck'. 13,300 flfl. Im--• """"" lires, n "'· SAVE IMPORTS \VANTED '£6 OiEVEU.E SS396
<»STA M&9' • ID9C.I $1,9.lO. rt1Mrood.morbut0He1. ~ Counl:il!I CA. DILLAC Rr11J 11harp, best oiler over
'61 VW CtJnptt, Jmrmculate 833-.:1636 Alter 4 PM 497-1674 aft . 7, $466 TOP S BUYER Sl250. 4954289.
Comp&ettly "qu 11' p e d, e '6J VW CAMPER '62 VW BILL r.tAXEY TOYOTA '63 COUPE DE VILL£ '65 i\!alibu SS, 4-epd, Ille
I abeolutely llJoe nt.w, wry R.tBLT ENG, U7S Run.' IOOd. Ocan! Check our d<'a.ls 18W Beach B.!vd. Rct>tt e111/trans. SSOO blue. blk Int. New tire5, Gd
rtUOntble. S.W-1313 or *'*64+-2627•• 64$-0236 J!IXI r CPI! for de!IY1!ry. It. Be.ch. Ph. 147-35.'» J>\1 pty: 540-2492 eond, S1JOO. 61":>-1704
1 -·-Overseu del Specin llAt, c":::,.":::m;::,.•_~~=~-I '65 VW 1qlW'ebmck, new eng, 'fi9 V\V Sunmot, BelJit', \Var. DEAN LEWIS Ousifled'• acUon Jl(t'MI'. '68 EL DORADO• Iii«-new· '&I Chevy Sl~r Spnr1
'" VW BUS $1W ttm.1 •mlfm. xlnl cond. nnty J,"d. 16,000 ml. $169l. Jo"<r an ed lo l'll!ll around LOADED! f'l.lll pwr/air/ needs work, ~lte oUl:T,
R/H, fr(u tfrn • &H..(123.'i Bcq offtt. 494414 5'15.-..'\4.'i6 Mullt Sell 1~ Harbor, C.fl.I. 646-¥!03 tb.: dGck, dial 64~. wtereo. $4550. fi.1U062 54M928
t
·~w COSTA MESA
HONDA s::.
e l\lfl COOC.fD PflOMT
•NGINE e flltOtlT WH•liL OlllVf e "OWl!lt ASSISTED lliLll-
ADJUSTING PltOHT DISC s 1 3 9 5 lltAKEI e MA)UMUM St•ll!D 11'Mt"H e UI" TO 4f MILlS t"llt . :;~~'.':' ......... ' .. .
SEDAN
t"h11 II• NIW C41' flrtHtllillt t..(11 T••ltl. T•t I Llclllt•
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOalLI
2850 HAllott llYD. COSTA MISA 140.9640
•
• , TlHlnd,Y, AU911$1 20, 1970 DAILY "LOT
TRANSPORTATION_ TRANSl>ORTATIOJ'j TRANSPORTATION -T_R_A_N_s_PO_R_T_A_T_1_o_N_ TRANSPORTATION RANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO!!N=f!..~-~-~· ~~~-~~-~~-~~~~ • •
UIOd Car. 9900 Ul[ld Cars • 990iJ U .... Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used' Caro • 99111 Used Cars 9'00 UMd C•ro -UIOd Cars 9'00 .... Cars -
CORVAll ~NCOLN_. ~ MUSTANG MUSTANG MUSTANG O~DSMOllLE . i--P-0-'-N-TI_A_C....;.;. '1 .llAMBLiR ~ ~-~-IJ-1-1 ,-, ~
CORVAIR PARTS Its ~DR Uncoln, Xl..t cond. _ '65 MUST.AN~ , ' ,18'3 •-m~ Am•rl-· 2 ' oe V~erlo , '6 j ':..:t';"~t,:; ~~~":.,l~bb.,, '69 MUSTANG '6'1 MUSfANO 6 eyl., xlnt. eo_.ubl•.o"tomallc. pow. ~~~~~ ~"." '61 PONTIAC Dr, oO:'t.o Ml.--Coa ' L M ~
axles $25, Gaa taric. $2. Or 6 cyl., stick, ndio, he!ter. ~ice•:; ~.• a1:-:•i e.r steering, VB, <OMK409) *~* WAGON ~ma. c.M. -:
!Ake ALL '°' l«I. 839-ll2' MERCURY tKWL 561. p.m. 96>-!66L $899 ' I.I (IEB-281) SURF'STUEll''DE .. BllahAKt·EWDl&Oft MOTORS § aflt• 5 pm. r • $1699 1965 FASTBAO< i +" BILL y ATES • PLYMQUT--1 $49J "\ ; ... ;!1~~.R.~~ coodl--;,i-Comet BILL YATES ~k:~h~ ~; VOLKSWAGEN_ ' • ''5 GTO. SPE•D BILL YATES W/tlldll!C rool,'63.'Sllldt t. 11111 ------~
t1o1c """'"'run. aooc1.1 VOLKSWA'GEN or-nu • 3285t ·v.u. Rbad 335 H.P. MAGS, VOLKSW' A,,._E., 1$.195. ,,.._ •·'"· -~ tor making dune bugy. Automatlc. Radio, hea)!r, 32852 Valle Road '67 MUSI'ANC G;-T f spd, San Juan Capistrano STE9'10. LOADED I I ¥' ~,. • ==::::!=::;:::== ~
$100, 54~352'1. ~lke~.~a'!:_.cortllOle. (lWT ,S..n Juan Capiatrano dlae brks. 300 en,. Xlnt 837-'1lkl0/f93-t511/499-2261 $1W· OR BE·ST OF~ 3285 Valle ~d T•lllD ;. * '61 CORVAJR * ...,., .i:.4Ct!llent tran. &11"'800/493-t5U/$Zl61 cond. Best over i1800. --FERll 192-)(14. Sln Juan Capll.P'ano '
BEST OFITR portation car. Will take 4:9M782 • '61 Mw;ta.ng Convt w/air, 8.37-4800/493-4Slll499·Dn ,64 'nROUaHAM, Beautlul '
l!MT·Pomone., "B," CM aff 8 lrade or finance private par. • '66 M~ 2+3 F1tbk • R/H, Xlnt cond, 33,000 '6.1 Ply. wagon, XLNT cond. ====-c=--,o=-' .,
• ly Call 546-4092 or 49Ullll 289 eu. In, '4pd '65. Coovert. Muatq. mi's, 613-J.895. , Nu tirefl, etc. isoo MUST '68 PONTIAC Le Mans Oelux condition, air + full po~r
'63 CORVAIR $200 · New tire le Bnkei Great Condition • ,69 M t Mach I SEU.! 645-1628. 2-dr Hrdtp, Michelin radial Lite blue,~. 643-m?
Gond 1tua~. ~7916 '68 COLONY Pk 10.pasa wgn. CLEAN! I SUOO 83.1-1213 eveJ:. S2S50 Au~ ~'oS. Pufec~ , tires, vinyl top, air. Beaut * '62 Hard Top, "8,000 ·ml. ·--"!~~~ -4 new premium tires. full See at 1825 w. BaJboa Blvd. '69 ~at 1. XInt oand, m · 11 " -P · 64 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury cond. throughour. U nd e r xtnl cond. 1 Owner. Pvt
CORVETIE pwr &: fae air. Xlnt 'coOc!. Newport Beach 540-8308 e~ auto air ps/pb stereo oond. Pvt. pty. 64+-«S3. 3&3.bel Xlnt .~·.,~~~ .11 warrantly, $2400. Call alter Pty $600 549-{1554 * ...... .._ --------l;;;Pvt.,,,.~pty\'i.,i1:o;""°;:::...· ;:~;:::;:..._ 1966 MUSTANG P/S P/B ta~.~.~. --leviflll -· ~· .t ·30 557-.8825 · · ~ • ..._ • ._...
' • • ' ~ ~ '65 CORVETTE FASTBACK •'"' MERC' Gd . Shapo A/7, M•• Whttl•: Xln; '61 MUSTANG GT/Al>. Lan-OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC . .; •PONTIAC' Ak, now VAUANT Prl~ for quick sale. May TransportaUon car • cond. Musi aee to ap. dau H.T. Sl900 Trade?' ,67 OLDS Delta Custom 2 dr braket I.: tir:'· CLEA~! 811 ----~--
trade down. 646-2698. ~lOO • 64:>-2326 Precia!e. S1200, 968-3f93. Owner 6~1. hrdtp, Fact. refrig, p/s, . · otr/over $67a. 6T5-5154 · '63 Valiant, ~· work e '68 427 Vett• e 60 .Mere convt., xlnt cond. '67 MUSTANG VS-auto, new '67 Mustaiv. blk, 289, 3-spd P/8, P/wind., P/seaUI, Jo 1969 GTO Convertible. Auto J• 1965 TEMPES':' wagon-4. S7S/belt oUer; 69 C>aaa
Must sell $3000 534-8MS , ln1kle & .out, Power, $350 tires, radio, xJnt cond. ~tusl •tick, New wide ova11; Perl mi's. Still under warr. Best p/disc brks, p/1, many ex-dr. $1000 StUleno motorcycle S650.
e 'M VE'ITE ~ New titts, • Ol' best offer. 64&-9022 sell. SlfOO or otr. 546-5619 cond, $1600. '67>7532. cash olr or trd. 64~2698 tru! $2050. Call 548-6123 e 54&2574. e 673-3721. ·
~·· fi>p, 10 ml. Xlnt cond. New C•rt 9100New C•rs 91CG ... 1-w ca-9100New Can 9800New Can HOO 54S:.3227: alltt .5. ._ ••
DODGE --'66 CORONET 440 '
'
2 Door Hard!OJ!. Full Pnwer
(ZNV 273! Must Sell! Small
Down will niiance. Call
<M-7744
'70 M'ONACO wgn • '40 eng,
ps/pb, fact. air, stereo
tape, rigged for towifl& T.T.
Must sell. 546-3372
1967 DODGE MONACO
40,000 mi., p/1, p/b, 383 ena:.
Best otter, 493-3873.
FALCON
'61 FALCON, 6 cyl 1tlck, 1tn
wa:ri. $175. Alt 6 p.r.i.: 832:1.
Malloy Dr., H.B. -----FIREBIRD
'68 Pont Firebird, US map,
wide: oval tires, stereo, Must
eeil $1995. 6%-9161 Aft 7 pm.
FORD
'69 MACH I
V8, Automatic, power steer.
in& & brakes, chrome
wheels. Wide oval tires, ra-
dio. <YYJ 495)
$2295
BIU '(ATES
VO,U<SWAGEN
328.52 Valle RoAtl.
San· Juan Capbtrano
837-4800/493-4511/ 499-2261
TOP DOLlAR
'" CLEAN USED CARS
See Andy Browr1
THEODOPIE •
ROBINS FORD -
m> Harbor _mvc1.
Costa Mesa
642-0010
'65 FORD LTD
f dr. HT_ Auto. & VS, power
1tttrlfik CDKV..e&:i')~ -
$695
BILL YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
328.53 Valle Road
San Juan Capistrano
837-4800/493-4511/ 499-2261
'66 Fairlane
Convertible. Automatic, VI,
radio, heater, dlr. Excellent
cond. !ZZV 074), Will take
trade or finance private par-
ty. Call 5464052 or 494-68ll.
'66 Squire Wagon
Fairlane, with wood grain ex-
terior, dlr. 390 VS, power
steering air cond. Stereo ~~· ,:t·::·o:T:=
private party. Call 546-4052
or 494-6811.
'65 FORD RANCHERO
6 cyl Automatic. t:I dr 268).
Will take car In trade or
finance pr Iv a te party.
546-4052 or 49U811.
SECOND car -'64 Ford
Convt. Garaxy 500. Good
condition. $600 or make ()f·
fer. Call alter 4 p.m.,
64&-83311.
'65 LTD hrdtop -p1/pb, pwr
windows. air, new ~s.
radio. $1200. 644-Sfil.O &ft
5:30 * '66 COUN'fRY SF;DAN
6 P ... let ml, P/~P/B
Gd. cond. Reas price.
•• 962-9811 .
'61 GALA.XIE 500 2-dr sedan
r/h, tac. air, pe/pb, 4 new
tires. Xlnt. cond. 1 owner.
Pvt pty, S1995. ~
'6.' FAIRLANE Sport Cou~
Good cond. l250 or bHt. 'of·
fer 644-1441 dt. 5;30.
e '63 FORD °""'"' ~ Clean! P/S.R/H. '$395 '* * 54S-3635 * * •196.5 Galaxie r:mXL
WhllJe book price, muat. sell.
67J..1071
JAVEUN
'69 JAVEUtl 343 V-8.
Perfect cand.: lot.ded; air,
powtr, etc. Bl~ Book S210Q,
Flrwt tm Takes! Mr. Sood
~MDa)'I
LINCOLN -D '63 Linc. Coht'L
~r. S650 + 535-2731
-
DUE TO POPULAR REQUEST, WE ARE REPEATING
THE MOST DRAMA TIC CLEA·N UP SALE IN OUR 18 YEAR HISTORY
' ' * ••
THAT'S RIGHT. $70* OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL NEW 1970 COUGARS,
MERCURYS, MONTEGOS, CYCLONE GTs, MARQUIS, & MARQUIS COLONY PARKS
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
OF OVER 100
TO CHOOSE FROM
NEW
1970 LINCOLN
CONTINENTALS. 2 DOOR HARDTOl'S
AND 4 DOOR SEDANS INCLUDED IN THIS SALE
AND
LINCOLN CONTINENTALS
NOTHING HELD BACK
ALL. 1970 CO_UGARS
XR7'1,
HARDTOPS, ETC .
Drive Them Away
For Only
MERCURY MARQUIS
011~ OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL
OVER 100 NEW
LINCOLN· MERCURYS
TO CHOOSE FROM
STATION WAGONS, SEDANS, CARS,OF T~~ '70'• NOW
HARDTOPS $70
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OVER FACTORY INVOICE*
CHOOSE FROM OVER
*Please add 20/o for handling
100 LINCOLNS, MERCURYS, COUGARS & MONTEGOS I' 69 CONTINENTAL $ 4666 . Coupe. V-8, fact()ry air condl-
f.i()ning, f~wer, radio, heater,
Landau R . All Continental
' '70 MARK Ill
Ele8nce persoolfled! This fabulous car driven only
I 68 CONTINENTAL $3888 4 Dr, Sedan. V-8, factory air
conditioning, full power, rad.lo,
heater, Landau Roof, full of
luxury features. (XS~2}
I
6,4 mUea. F.quifiped with every poulble luxury !ea-
ture Including fu I power, of course, automatic 1~
control, power door locks, tilt 1teeting. A~t/FM 1tereo,
' Individually adjustable 6-way power seats, Landau
luxury extras. (XEU89ll
. . I
I 61 FORD LTD 51555 2 Dr. Hardt()p Coupe. 390 en·
r.ne, auto. trans: .. rad.I(), heater,
c. air, landau roof. lUES685)
roof. C613ASJ)
57333 I 68 CONTINENTAL $3666 C,upe. Factory &Ir condition-
Jng, full ~~utlful condition. (8 )
I I '65 MERCURT s1111 Parklane. Auto. trans ... radio Ir: heaUr, P.S .• P.B .. etc.
(llCA.l:lOl
I 68 COUOAR 521,11 Auto. tran1., pcrwer 1teerin1.
radio, heater, 23,000 mllea.
(XEU663J
I 66 MERCURY . 5999 Caliente Coupe. Auto. tr&n1,,
power steering, radio,
heater. SRM721
• Now I• The 'J1est Titne In Ten Years To Buy A Lincoln·Mercury Product
,.. '"
-,..
>
~·ohnson-son
n. o ~ © ® n. ~ © ® ~'ii' a ~ ffi ~ 'ii'£ n. • ~ £ oo ~ IllilI • ~ rn oo © M OO w • © ® M@& oo
540·5630 •
COSTA MESA
2626 Harbor llvd. \ 642-0981
THREE GENERATIONS IN THE AVTOMOBILE BVSI NESS
NCOLN-MUCURY DEALER IN OllANOI COUNTY
• '" ,
)
WE -~ HAVE THE · ~ ~BEST ~
SELECTION ~
OF ~
BMW's ~
IN "
ORANGE ~
I s COUNTY g
D All Colon
D All Models
lmmedlahl Dollni;Y
'65 PORSCHE
'68 vw
lt•dio, h••ftr; c11~torn 1ffff'o
!111 )"httl, ••collo..t rnML
condition. IWTF-161)
$1295
ltdio, h••t•r~ 1eo4 ttm,
11ow ll'•int, oxcollont f!loch•itl·
c.ol cendltion.
$695
'65 vw
AM /FM r•dlo, li•ot.r. (lDY-
9701,
$795
'67 FIAJ
Cpo., r•tllo. hoofor. &oeiil
flrt1. llltT.014)
$949
'68 DATSUN
1600
Shorp, 1lt•rll' cor. l l•ck with
whit• lritorior. A·I 1h1,..
ITWW-7161.
$1495
'68 TOYOTA
Coron• H.T. Cpo. -l•dio,
·ho•t•r, whit• with ~l•ck lrt•
torior. lmmoculoto condition.
I041·11ll.
$1349
'69 vw
lt•dlo, hootor. ltool 1loon
cir. 1 •10011
$1375
~
' l
-!
·1
• i . ~
,;ot .. i
' .
'68 OPEL '
2 dr. 5-4. Lew Low Mll•1. ..~
(WfT.11,) .,
$1049 '· '!
• ' .
'6t VW BUS
A·I $1torpl 11:9411 wlffl whit. ..
roo'f. Soo l clrlvo thl• ft1 1uty .r •
to •pprocloto, f •92691. ~
SAVE :
,~
AUTHOlflD \
IALIS' • tlllYICI
•
;
Joe /Je,./otfi ~ ., ••
MOTORS
Q,PEN SUNDAYS ' . . IOI! Gardon o ....
Boul1v1rd • Yo Ilk. E. of hMll
loulevard
192-SSSI
••
'
)
•
ANCHOR
MOTORS
2150 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA • 546°3050
OPEN 7 DAYS • 9A.M. e 9 P.M.
'63 Corvair
4 Sp•ecl, redio efld 11.eter.
lf'XR760l
'62 ·Rambler
'63 Buick Skylark
A114'om1tic, 1ir conclitio11i119.
IHD0671 1
· '62 Falcon Futura
C..W.rtibl ....... ff1111 .. llKlff
111h, r1dio l h1af1r. ·
'63 T-Bird
A11tom1fic, rMi1, li.1t.r.
fRYY&J9 1
'62 Lincoln
Co11ti11111t-.I. Full •,...,. 1ni' 1jr.
IJ RHSS9l
'63 Rambler
2-Door. l .dio ..i M.+et.
(f6l15071
'63 Chevfcilet
v-1. fli1ly .._u;,,.,.
IQAZ 9lSI
'61 Chevrolet
lroolwoolf$t.+i0tt W1fo11, Allieo.,
fully equipp.cf. IRTU)l I)
-Phn Tex di UcMM-
'62 Pont. Tempest
Co11'<'1rtibl11 A11to., radio ind Miter.
!No, 111151
'63 Ford
v.1, 1uto tr1111., eir conclitiofl.
37619
'56 Do.dge 1/:z. Ton
PICKUP. V-1. 4 speed.
,IH45440!'
~9
?9
'61 Volkswagen
.(AufM"tic 61m1111 c1111p1r.:l1 $AVE
'64 Chevrolet .Van $AVE
btr1 Cl1011o
CZST614 1
'6& M111tarMJ
. . ' .11 50 H~Rlqa ill.VD.
~A MESA •. 546-30 0
•' :orM'7 DA Y'S k •. tA.M. e f P
I·
'
~-'---' 3.speed.a.o,;,,fk',
50cc--..,i,,.
engine. 45 mph.
Pooi-Fon:e.12 manlb/
12,000 mile ~
warranty.~
-1-Z,.1-
"Leader ln The Beach Citt~·
ZIMMERMAN
2845 HARBOR BLVD.
J.40.6410
BIG
SELECTION
OF
.
·~ 'DATSUN
Pick Up .
Trucks
Blilt to like
• the matry,
Sii ON I TODAY AT
•. ~~!~!~ !.~ s C•t• Meu 642-0040
ALL
COlORS
READY
FOR
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY s
z
Suzuki
TS -90 Honcho
Tho "ting" al Ibo
llgbtwieigllt •·•P'Qllll
65mpli:.91bt~ ''Leader in The Jleaoh
-engb$ S .,d.. Oti•s"
tubo&ame.Pool-r-. ZIMMERMAN
12·-1>/12.000 ~ . 2845 HARBOR ,BL VD.
-~ . I
mllo-j· 1:1 J.40.6410
B.IG
SELECTION
OF .
DATSUN
Station
·Wagons
ALL
COLORS
READY
... -.... •
z
Ill
A -"' = •
111.q.il TODAY AT
JAMES LTD
1514 ow·Newport 11Y4.
COlhi Mell ,M~
Bailttotab
:; Oil tlae eouby. -
=I iiiis0Lfo
1114 014 tffwport llvd.
Cotta M•M 642-GCMO • -z
FOR
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
uwj Do\:MJ -
"Leade\. tn The ~ch
Citi""
ZIMMERMAN
2845 HARBOR BL VD.
5-10
FINEST
MOST
RELIABLE
SEftVICE
DEPT.
ANYWHERE
FOR AU
SPORT
&
IMPORTS -·-'Home of
The Best
~2000 ·
Car
-t Do\!1111 ,_
"Leader 1n The Beach
• Citle1"
ZIMMERMAN
2145 HARBOR BLVD.
540-4410 ..
, '
• •ir •••
Ho.w ·doe$· Fiat do it
for 'the price? m11
Huntington ·'I ieach
Chtysler·-·1~1Y~!uB~~. I
·. HuntingtOn Beach I
$4G4164 • 142.o631
• (213) 592-2801
Anmiiat:
GRAND
OPENING
OF YOUR NEW
• Chrysler.:-
• Plymouth
SERVICE
CENTER
• Modern Electroni
Equipment
• Air Conditioned
Waiting Room
• Factory Trained
Tech nicians
• Quick Service
While-You-Wait
l£J'S GET
ACQUAlllTEll
During AUGUST
YOU Choose Your
Senica iilll Wi'U .
AntHp 111e rrst
THREE Dollars!!
• SERVICE HOURS
Monday . , •
7:30 am to 9 pm
Tues to Friday •••
7:30 am to 5 pm
• CREDIT: e American Express
Card
e St•ndord 011 C•rd e U.C.B. C11rd
e 8'1nkAmerlcord
' . H11ntington
Beach
Chrysler-· .
Pl.ymouth ·
16661' 8'l•ch Blvd.
Hunt~ton Beach
$40.5164 • 142-G631
• (21Sl m .uo1
'
0 that attracts
the ~irds :
THE MGB '70.
•• • I
.JJe,.f, :J.rieJlander .
13750 BEACH ILVD. cltwy. 39)
2 ·~tockl So. of Gordon .Grove F"'f.
6 blockl Ne. ilf Son D.-f"'f.
537-6824 *' 893-,~
la<iNI>A;
~ -fROM . ~ MINI TRAIU ·
. ~ TO I
~ 75~'s P:
JI: J.lerb 5neJ/an Jer I
~ 13750 BEACH BLVD. !Hwy. 39)
":ri 2 block1 S.. of Gordon Gnlve Frwy.
" 6 blocks No. of S.n Di.,. Frwy.
537-6824 1c: 893-7566
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