HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-08-25 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7
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Victim's Throat Sla:s.hed
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Miss Tate
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Strang"led
Near Death
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -/4 Sharon
Tate was ~of stab woundJ, 1he was
~ed by a rope fastened oround her
n~k, looped aver a ceiling beam in her
livinf room.
c.ounty Coroner 'l)oma11 T. Noguchi
teltHied today that the rope burna on the
pregnant actress• throat indicated her
body was 1W1pended above the floor for a
short period while she was dying.
"My apinion that she wu suspended
for a ah<ri time Is based an the lack <>f
severe canstrlcture by lbe rope but the
rope burn was placed in such an es.tent
around the curvature af the Jen cheek
bone to make me believe It was cau.sed
by pulling upward," he said.
N<>guc:hi said Manday that Miss Tate
bad not been drinking and had taken na
druga the night al Aug. 8, 1969, when she
and faur other persons were 1tabbed and
that to death at her Benedh;t Canyon
Estate.
Noguchi told the jury In the murder
trial <>f the "Mansan family" that blood
t!sta ()D the bodies (lf the v I c t I m I
Indicated neither Miu 'T'ate Mr hair
atylill Jay Sebring, to wham 1he once
was en1aa:ed, were under the influence af
ttBihol or narmua.
He uld teats showed Palish wriler
Voltyck Frykowski and coHee heiress
Abigail Felger each had taken amall
amounts cif the drug MDA, known as
"tuper speed", and both apparently had
been drinking. ·
Noguchi said none of the victim• had
been sexually m<>lt.ated.
Defendanll Charlea Mansan, Leslie Van
Houten , Susan ·Atkins and Patricia
Krenwlnkel aat .quietly at the COWllel
table during the caroner's I • r y
lealimony.
Speaking clinically and unemotionally.
Noguchi d""'lbed wounds and pointed out on a diagram o( Frykowakfa body the ,
loaatlon of $1 stab wounds, 13 laceraUoni
and two aunshot wounds. He said the five
vlcti~ sulfered a total of 102 stab
waondl, most of them apparently In·
meted by a bayonet-like weapon.
Woundl on Mill 'Fol&er and Frykowald,
· htr lover, Indicated they put up a terrific
atru(&le lo fend ofl tbtlr Hllllanll, he
Aki.
Noguchi aald woonds on Mia Folior'a
bandl and 8'711' showed Ille had tried lo
grab tho blade of the ilnll• Wljlt her bate
hand!. •
The «.rr0ner said a .22-callber revolver
mlihl have been the 11111r\1mlOIL used lo
beat Frykowaki over Ute head.
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Girl Takes A~id . Driving Car
Of Victim
5-year-old in Serious Condition
. A, 5-year~Jd girl ls in serloos condition
today becau.se she accident.ally swallowed
an LSD tablet Monday night, Sant.a Ana
police reported.
The vlcUm, Deanna Bryan of 1817 S.
Evergreen St., is In St. JOfieph's Hospital.
The physician attending the little girl
said lhls D1C1rning that there ts na way at
this time to detumlne the extent ar
damage tel the chlld'• physical ar mental
well being.
The child'1 mother, Dattle Ann Bryan,
called police at about 9:30 last night when
her daughter started acting "strange."
She told investigators the little girl
became hysterical upon seeing a kitten
with which ahe had been very friendly
prevlOU!ly.
Mrs. Bryan toJd police that she and her
daughter had been visiting friends in
Anaheim Monday and It Is believed that
she found the LSD tablet. oo a dresser in
the Anaheim bm1e.
Pallce have withheld the name.s of the
perSOf'll the girl and her m<>the.r visited,
Thief Rakes
Out the Loot
A thief visited a Costi . Mtsa
waiU'ess' apartment Monday night
but he didn't rake in the loot.
He raked It out.
Officer Phil Donahue arrived at
Sheri Howerton's home, 187 E. 21st
St., and found the thief apparently
reached Into her bedroom with a
bambao ra~e. liftJng her handbag
from a dresser.
The less was $20, including purse
and c:antents.
lnvestigatars who were called to the
Bryan home said DeRnna. "appeared to
be disoriented. She wculd not talk except
to cry 'Ma.ma.' "
Court Injunction
Stops Police
Arrests at 'Cave'
A permanent Superior C.ourt injunction
slopping police from enforcing an old
dance hall Jaw at "The Cave" night apot
has been obtained by HunUngton Beach
attorney Gecrge Shibata.
The crder, algned by Judge Leiter Van
Tatenhove, declares the Jaw, aa It applies
t<> the Beach" Boulevard and Adams
Avenue bar, unconsUtutionaJ.
Shibata 1aid the awner of "The Cave,"
Michael Nuben, and several patroRJ had
been cited about 25 limes under the
ordinance which prohibit& mlnora from
entering a dance hall where alcoholic
beverages are being served.
The attorney argued that the ordinance
Is vague and that it does not 1J11ke clear
what iJ a dance hall and-wjlat ia not.
"The Cave," which ca~ mostly to a
yaong cllentele with a tute far madern
rock. has been under police scrutiny far
some time.
Australians Strike
SYDNEY CUPJ) -Abaut thre•
quarters of a million Australians walked
aff their jabl today in a three-hour atrike
to protest federal government ecoaomlc
policies.
A pair 11( suapectll In the slaying of a
Huntington Beach man foond nude on his
bed Monday, hia throat cut and four sf.ab
wounds ln his chest and back, are in jail
today.
One captured was driving the dead
man's car, just as police were heading
for his home ta question him about possi·
ble invalvement,
Miles· C. Cox, 18, a laborer, <>f 15700
Irene Way, Westminster, and Frederick
J. Yanke, 20, af Gardena, are in Han-
linglon Beach CI t y Jal! for que>lionlng.
Each Ls charged wiih murder in the
weekend death <>f Walter Christie, 51, of
8131 San Angel<> Drlve, partner in an
aircraft hardw-.re firm,
Yanke 15 charged additionally with
receiving atolen property and ar·
raigrunent an all counts Is expected
Wednesday in West Orange County
Judicial District Court.
"Yanke may not have been present
when it hapPMed, but he might be an ae·
complice." said Detective CapL Grover
L. Payne.
'Ibe detective chief, who hait been
crllicizOO by aome newa med.fa, said
reluctance to release fact.. early in the
Olriltie homicide case was essential.
An all-points bulletin was broadcast
Monday for <ltrlstle'a ml1Slng light blue
· Mustang.
1be car was spotted at 8 p.m. by Of.
flcefl\ay Haltabauaft, parked b .,·1 de
Boin <lllca Slate Belch, bringing ad·
dltlonal police officers end hellcopLer In
to comb the IWTOUnding area.
"Prior to that, we believed Cox was In-
valved," aaid Capt. Payne, adding that
patrolmen were en route to his
(See llOMICIDE,.Pa1e I)
Ch~racters Signing Up
Saturday Boat Parade's Deadline Draws .Near
1\tursday Is the rea:latr1Uon deadline
for the lf10 f>a.racter Bolt Parade which
11 ocbedUled lo run ~tur<lay In Newport
l!arbor.
SpoMOrod 111 the Commodore• Club of
tho Nolll)Ol'I Hiul>or Chamber of Com-
mtrct, the toth nmnl.nl af the para~
wUI future tht lhtme "OUr Americal
Heritaee."
Jack Barnett, executive secretary nl
the Chamber, Hid today there are a& en-
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tranll set for the race. "IL will be• little
bit shorter th ta year, by maybe 15
mlnutaa," he said.
variety, or the more common type
decorated to t.be theme of Uie parade.
The par1de wlll bealn at l ;!IO p.m. al "'ll1e Pavilion Quotn wlll le"1 the
parade, earryma lho camn-.. and the Bal~ Bay Club end la ocheduled 1o
their wives the Ghamber dlrectora •nd end ln1tbe same tpOt •t about 4:30 p.m. ' --their wlvu and the El Toro Marine CGrpa A pre-parade bnmch •nd briellna will
A~ Station Band," Barnett iald. be held for parade ontranll 1t tho BBC at
Any boat, IQUfpped with standard llfo· 11130 1.m.
ty equipment and re.gl1t.ered J n Barnett old the $10 reglsltaUon fee
Calltomla, 11 tllalble for entry. Bamett will be taken at Ole Chamber offices, 21&a
aaki the bolts can either be ol an unW1ual E. Coast Hilhw•Y. Corona del Mar.
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY. AFTERNOON, AUGUST, 25, [L970
• VOL.. ... NO.-. s 1HTJOMS. • ,.... .
Stinking Shame ..
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Bonni-. Ille pet Basset hound Of the GO!'tloll ~ famllre( Mil-
waukee, Wis;, ~s learned Iha! equality demanda et wameQ p -
heeded by Clyde, 1111' family'• pet akllllk, when .be dilt:idel le W.
over. ' '
Sniog Alert ·Irks.
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Football Coaches
By JACK BROBACK Of 1111 DlffY "Utt Iliff The first school smog alert Issued for
inland Orange County today 'has thrown
high school fodtball coaches Into a state
ol shock 11 they tried lo ocbedule pre-
season drill.!J, ·
Sm<>g alert condiUons were Wued by
Orange County's Air P<>lluUon Cantrol
District (APCD) Mooday, warning· that
today's amOg ·conditions were likely to be
such that school-aged children shauld
avoid heavy u:e~Uon.,
Convicts Riot
At San Quentin;
Guards Use ·Ga~
SAN QUENTIN (AP) -San Qu<nUn
prison guards drove B<Xt dema~tr,aUng
prisoner• lnto their ,cells w~ tear ~u to-
day after nine offices were .damaged by .
araor;i-caused fires, pri50n orncta~ .,id.
The priaonera staged .a 1ltdown'1str.lke ,
In the prison recre,ation yan:f to pt'l!SS a
dozen demaqds issued by black priaoner•
during an experlmental Superior Coun
hearing Monday within the prison walls.
White and Mexican-American p'rlloners -
also t0ok part in the dem<>nstr1tkln~
prJ!l()tl <>fflcials aaid.
A call for mare black and MeJ..ican-
Amerlc.jn . COWIO<IOl'I were alt\Qlli Ill•
dernand&.
Mtnocity race prisoners tOtal Wpereant'
of the 3,!00 p<ilOl)el'I at tho state prilon
on the 1~ of San l'rMciad>fJliy nd.r
San Ra(ael, 15 miles ·JIOl'th-a( San Fru..
clsca. · · r •
Ouardl' found. nine CfJUnlelora" ollice1 ·
damaged In. <>ne ceJlbl6ck after drlvln1 '
the. demanstraUng prisoner• back1to their
cells. '
Furniture, .wooden window framea and •
other woodwork was charred In the
prelQnlnary steel and concrete cel11.
There wtrino report.I of injuries.
Flrlt •lln or \rouble came when
prt10nera rttueed to repart to their prlaon
jobs aftu breakfa1t and conarea•tod ln
the recreatlan area.
.!J'hty repealed the demand11 dellvered
(See PIWO~, Pop I}
" . The alert, bowev.,., wu luuod far
Orange 'County'1 "Inland sane."
Foot.ball candidates at. most ·omtat
!dioola loday w.ere In full action In lie
coodillcming drills bein( be1d wider cleill' . . .
skies in ~ weather. .
Elsewhere, hawever,' the JolaQd smof
alert w&J causing problems.
~Is repoJ'Ledly affected by today's
1mof alert include· Lcwell, W •Ha1$ra,
Brea-Olinida Unifl«I," Votba L 1 n tl·a·
Placentia Unified, Jl\tllerton, Anabltlm,
Magnolia, Centralia. Buen, Pirk, Savan-
na, Cypress, Garden Grave, Santa An1,
and Orange Unllled DillflcLs: Tlistln end '
Trabuao, · ' v •
,Among the oullpoken ·athloLlc' ofliclels ·
rnanllng the 1mog WllnllnC II Jolln
Wallin, Katella Jf!ah athletlc~lrector, He
said the county'• football jwocram eoW4
be "amotged QUt'• this fall ll the .•~ •r.st<m If 'nol modified lo Uitl'ildldoli ~hei1 the Crlsl!: Is over. • 1
Wllllam Fltthen,.county dire1tdr llf'lbt
APCD, said loday.l~Ja,'up to'tliii vlttoua
achool <ifficiala lo 1d~1 wben It~
~fe f« studenta tt ...,..., In ~ '
iildoor and''GUtdool"' activiUea Which IN
(Seo.SMOG, Pip I)
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• Park Fail,s
Council in Furor To"Get Vow -
Over City Agency . From VP
lly TERRY COl'lLl.E
..... Dlb 1"1111 """ •
I 'Illa Sul Btach Cil> Couocll wu llile I U. ~ ol • hurricane 'Mooday ollbt -
J callil. P"celul and all<nt. Th<D the
l mMthii opened. •
! . 1t.ere wasn't a calm. peaceful or &ilenl
tnCllMnt for the oext four hours as w1r-rinl ,_ oo the eounetl and Ir. the au-
dience hat•naued and insulttd each
olhtr.
. It beg.an with the routine . second
nadUot GI u -dlMciOI Ille · orgM•U-of &he c:JQi'1 t:Ol'ltro¥trllal
----~.11 ~ Its fil'll lal • -t 110 oo a H .-.;ti ....
'1 tNM there ls a serious que1llon or
11\f at to whlthtr a new 11tncy cu be fnrmed. 11111 it a charter clty," 11ld ,
Albert Dal Guerdo, ..... --Ille ... .--..... Illa -111. 'T1le. -ehanp Jn the Jll•e rfronl _......,..,,_ __ lo
th< dlJ c:aunc:ll u Ille,...,.,., ,....,.inc
· boM'd and Nplac:e It wllb five _, ap-
pointed by lbt mayor and appt'>ved by
th! council.
The agency is cl\arJed with redevelop-
ing blighted city areas. Jt. has t.axin1
_.. _, ... Imm munic:lpol aoftm-
ment. ·
Detractors of the change claim ·it would
make the a~ responsible anly to a
tbrte-man·council mtjllrily. Opponent.I of tht chanae blive lnaiJted they 1'•nt
elected of[jclals, rather than appointed
ones, to control the aaency 's taxing
powers.
"'Ibis c:lwtu doea not llv• the mayor
the powtt lo appoinl u.y boanl. U be
Man ·-File8 Suit;
Names Missouri
Sex Researchers
ST, LOUIS, Mo. (AP) -A me.ooo
damqt "..Ut ·1ui1 t.n filed 111.inst IU
resNl'chen Dr. Willi.am -ff. Ml.1ttr1 and
Viflblia Jahmoa by a mao wbo aid the
pair employed his wife u a ltXUal
partoer for two men undu trulmtnt by
Masten and Mn. Johmon.
does he ta U5Urpina power. Wt htve a·
tou~ll·muaaer. not mayor form of
Pvvnmtnl." co11tiooed Del Guerico,
who has been active in the reca.11 mo~
nltnt lhapin1 up aaaU'l!t O'yor Mort.on ·
Baum and Councilmen Thomu Hogan:!
and Conway Fuhrman.
Councilmen Harold Holden and Lloyd
Gwnmen lllPPOrttd Del Gl>tldo's con--
contention.
Other resld~ts yelled Insults from the
audience at Mayor Baum and CoUncilmtn
Hoaard and Fuhrman who have been
under ft1'9 themlelvn sine. their firtna o(
Cliy ... _ Lee Rl....... ud Clcy
AJlonleY Jim Carnes.
"I don 't think a debit. bttw..., the div
council artd the audience Is neces.sarJ,1'
Interrupted .Acting City Mana1er Dlnlil
Couriemattlle. ,
COunc:llmeo finally pahed the --readiJIC S-1. 'lbe c:llanfe In ,..,.,t 10< the -vei9Pment •C'OCY bec:oma--elloc:llve
in 30 •11. •
Buch el"Ollon wu ou:t U1J •nil eauted
a amall amount' ol dlbate, ~ """' different lines. "" ' ·
Aft;er ~ver,11 nsiljtnta demanded im-
mediate adion to .combat beach erosion,
the c:ouncU voted unanimously to go
beyond ftatever .11nU-erosion efforts
were being made by the U.S. Anny Corps
of Engineers. The council ordered a
U,700 private study ol beach erasion pro-
bltl\U in Sul Beach and promised that
municipal action to halt the flow o( sand
ln)o~the sea would follow.
Councilmen then set the city lax rate at
$1 .35 per $100 assessed valuation.
At lb.is point Del Guercio roae again to
request clarificatiofl of the mayor's
authority.
"'Ibis b not submitted to harass or em-
barrass the mayor," he uid, then
lalJDChed into a readina: ol the city's
charter, declaring the charter gave
Baum no authority to 11Jenc. or threat.en
to throw out any speaker at a counciJ
meeting.
Baum replied lhat the mayor "as
p ... lding office< bu the right to "cut otr
dtbat. Ind upedite the businea of the _,, __ "
··~~· ' "Yoo're only ceremonial, Let the coun-
cil vote me down H I abou.ld 1top ta lk·
ing," challenged Del Guercio. "I dart you
to remove me by force."
He ut down when the council voted -
S.2 -to a.it off debate.
Another clUz.en 1ot up to talk but WU
ruled out ol order by Baum.
Is Detroit Losing?
Has the ubiquitous bug taken over the world? Pbo,to-
grapher tho.ugbt so, for a moment at lea$l, when
he happened on th is scene Sunday ln the 800 block
of Balboa BOulevard ln Newport Beach. There they
were. seven of them (count 'em). au in a row. And,
a.s our man raised his camera, another one chugged
by. It's enough to drive a man buggy.
' . ' The ·Ma8sage
' I~ Message
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In Newport
The massage parlor.syndrome weal on
trial in the Newport Beach City Council
cRambers Monday night.
City Attorney Tully Seymour turned the
council chamber! Into a veritable
C1'.lw'tr0om u the oounoil heard a plee by
a Newport couple ud a newly fotrMd
syndicate asking for a buslnesa lict.nse
fot whal would be the city'a liltb such
health club.
Two of the five massage parlors in the
city have been raided ia recent weeks -
with charges of prostitution resultin1
each lime.
Despite a plea by I.he o~ners for an im·
mediate decision, the council votei.I to
cmtinu' the hearing pendiag the cath,r·
ing of additional lllformation.
Santa Ana lawyer Edward Ulman
attor.ey ror the owner, Vad• Van Chue,
and himself a prind_pal in the syndk'ate
behiod the eaterprise, claimed a delay
would cause undue bard&hi p on all the
principa Is.
Hu11tington Death Report
Delay Blasted by. Coroner
By ALAN DIRK.IN
Of IM Dtl" P'lllt lt•ll
Huntington Beach police were smarting
today from crltlclam leveled by coroner's
deputies over what they termed the delay
in rtpOrtinc a homicide to the C1'.lunty of·
flee.
Deputies, citing a st.ate law that deaths
are "immedl1tely reportable" to their of·
flee, comptalned that they were not
notified of the slaying until 11 a.m.
altl'ough the body was discovered at 8:22
a.m.
Det. Captain Grover Payne commented
this morning," 1 don't believe in publicly
airing problems bet"een us and another
agency."
Depu ty Coroner John Gill, wbo was
aasiped the case, did not arrive at lhe
5CeJ'le unUI 11 : 10 a.m. But he found the
Huntington Beach detectives coopentive.
"They knew we had them with their
ln:MJJl!ra down," Gill said. "There was too
much at stake for them not to be helpful.
WhetJJe:r thel!. ~peration was a true
reflection of their feelings or not ,, don't
know."
Gill did not hesitate lo criticize the
delay in the report of the death.
specialisls In the cause and lime o(
death.
"When 1 was a policeman l might have
aeen five or sill bodie.5 in a year -now I
aee that many ill a day."
FN .. Page 1
HOMICIDE ..•
Westmin!lter home when it was found.
''"re thought the suspect might st i 11
have Christie's car," he C1'.lnlinued. "We
didn 't want him to read loo much in the
papers and dump ' il.i"
A pair of teenaged" girls and a boy were
taken into custody in Col's compuy M'oo.
d1y night
The girls were releued to parental
custody and the boy is in Orange County
Juvenile Hall today, for additional in-
vestigadon to determine if be will be
charged at all. ·
lf so, said Capt. Payne, It won't be in
connection with Christie"s murder.
SEOUL (AP ) -SoUth Kanan Prt3'-
dent Chung Hit Part preaent6d VI~
Pre&ldtt:lt Spiro T, AJ:new with an *
penslve ahopplnc Ust cl military netdl
Tue9day but failed to win a deliilH
pledge on a promised increase in U.S.
arms aid. ·
A scheduled two-hour meeting betweM
Iba ... -'"'"""" lo tis •• before .breaking up at mldalte""°°"
They resumed discussions over dinner
Tuesday night and then qreed t:o meet
a1ain at breakfast Wednesday.
An official Korean spokesman describ-
ed the atmosphere as serioos, while other
Kol'!an toUrces said It was somewhat
tense.
Agnew himseU said the talks went
"very well." Asked a6out tfle length cl
the discu ssions, a spokesman said: "This
doeS'll 'l necessarily mean they aren't eel·
ting along."
Park it undentood to be ..utn; a
plldl• of ''""" $3 bWlon ove' !hf nut five yeari a.!I Ole priCt (or droppinc Ms
objtction to the U.S. plan to withdtJw
20.000 or the 63,000 Amtrlcan troops Ila·
Uoned hen.
Althou&h Agnew announoed in a speech
here Monday th1t lhe United Stales WOMld
provide new add to help modern.i•. tbt
600,000.man Korean armed forces, he said
before his arrival he did not e1pect his
\'isit to produce a specific new aid pro-
gram. Other American officiall! said M
decision would be made unlil a study ii
made of Korea's detailed needs.
There were indications that Park and
hl.s advisers presented juat such a de~
eel list durirl1 private iesslMS ~
Apew, U.S. Ambusador Wllllim J,
Porter. Gen. John N. Mlchalis and other
U.S. officials.
Agnow ca me here at President Nl1M'1
request to pied.le continuing U.S. 1upp611:
for Korea and listen to Park"s views but
without authority to commit the ad-
ministration to any specific arms pro-
gram.
U.S. military aid to Koru i.!I currently
$140 million a year, and any Mw ~
grim would require approval from a U.S.
C.Ongress lncreasin1ly wu ry of Ameri.CU
spending In Asja.
The lengthy meeti ngs contra.sled with
Agnew's !irst Asian tri p 11.!lt January.
None of those sesaiona delved detply into
policy questions. .
The.J(orean paUef'l\..may be repealed'
later this week in Thailand where A~w
will have to explain congre.!lsional reluc·
taoce to finance proposed Th1i assistance
to Cambodia,
1bl .Wl also ~rged that the Rll
rtlUl'Ch team lfeatly benerlted from the
u&& vi tbt map's wife f.b:l'Xllllh "monetary gam by the putlllcation ol books1" while
the.husband "lost the conjugal society ol
hi.I wife'' and suffered "great htlmiliation
and dilgra~ in bis toelal aJldldorhettic
relationships."
·Beach Kidnaping
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He also argued that no other massaf!:e
parlor had to undergo council scrutiny. He
said his parlor, to be called "Alhena s of
Hollywood," should-not· be judaed on the
alleged sins ol si.mlJM bulines.sea Ui the .,. ..
.Business License Supervisor S!an
Hirschberg had brough t the application lo
the council atteation because. he said, ol
problem• encountered with the ap-
plication Ilse.If and lhe result of police in-
vestigations.
"As soon as they know they have a
dead _body they should call us," he ex·
plained. "Whether they are police or not,
they art not tranScendental to the law."·
''We have no indications of anyone else
involved in this at this time ," said the
captain.
Theft was apparently not a direct
motive in the brutal murder, bul police
alleged that personal effects or Christie'•
Wert found in Yanke.ls apartment.
Agnew also is expected to receivf!
another request for increased arma aid
when he meets Wednesday with "Na·
tionalist Chinese President Chiang Kil·
shek at his mou ntain tetreat 1t Sun Mo&n
Lake.
The .Wt was filed in U.S. Dislric( Coort
by attorney'1 of George Edwin CalVert,
whose addrns wa!I listed only 35 New
Hampshire. The attorney1 declined to
give Calvert'• home adW-e,ss. His wife's
name was listed as Barbara.
Ma!!ten caned the dlarae "ridk:ulous''
and said "we wou_kt be .&lad to..tbp~ove
such a situation when lhe opportunity
arises."
The cha rge was in connection wilh
resean:h done for · the best s e 11 in g
"Human Sesual lnadequacy," written by
Masten and Mrs. Johnson and published
in April.
The suit also names &s codefendaTlls a
"Jobn Doe I," of the State of New York
and a "John Doe 11/' or Virginia.
The suit 'aUeges that the sexual rela-
tionship cl Mn. Calvert wa1 used as a
.. form of treatment'' for the Does and
that Mrs. Calvert was paid $500 for the
first soch treatment on or about July 21,
1967. and $250 for the second trtatment
on or about Jan.'&;' JIM: The suit said
Calvert learned of the ·atleae<f treatments· ·
on ·April· 11 ol· this year. ·
A total ol $158,000-actual damages is
a&d., from ·\he four · d~atits and a
toj.11 of $I001000 in pl._initJvt dan}lgea: l•
aa~ fro;m Maatera ~i:id ~rs. J~.
~s..t_ul 1aid the char1~1 • • f .•
"flw!'ped up" and It ill·the fll!it'IUll •rl•·
Ing from tht I~ years ot resem::b _b)' him
aitd Mra. Johnson. .
•
OAllY PILOT
' ....,... .... " ............ ~
LeeltH ... cit ........ ,,...,. c.. .,,_ ,,_CJ ......
oll.vt&I CO.UT t>Ual.llHl"fG COM~AN't ..... , . ..,, ""'•" Pf'l.1.--W~\lllll.....,.
J.,~ a. c .. rt • .,
"ltt'l",_.liHoll •NI ~II MMl91'( n ••• , 1e •• ~a ......
n.e""'' A. M ... ,~r ••
M°"""il'Otl lift!"
li1~1:.. It. Ntll
S..,t~ °' ..... c ...... ,. ldl!W
Offi• ..
)
Suspect . Given
Stiff Sentence
One of two men accused of using a
young couple and their baby aon u
holt.qe during a wild shootout w l t h
Huntington Beach police has drawn stiff
prison terms following hi.!1 plea of guilty
to charges of kidnaping and armed rob-
bery,
Superior Court Judge Samuel Dreizen
gave David Zltu..alo, JC, a transient, five
years to life on the robbery count. He
sentenced the defendant tn one to 25
years on the kidnaping charge, both
sentences to run concurrently.
Running with those terms will be a
spell ol one lO 15 years in stale prison for
Zateulo'a guilty plea to charaes cf
assault with 1 deadly weapon relating to
an earlier prosecution, Deputy Dl~ict
AU.omey W. J. Moseley eKp,Ained.
Zat.ualo and Douglas McGregqr Cum·
nUn&s. 27, of Garden Grove ~ere ar-
rested last April 1S after an eight-mile,
bullet riddled chase that began in Hun·
tington Beach, wound its way throuch
three communities and ended· with the
couple's capture in Fountain Valley.
Police said botk men seized a. La Puente
couple-and-their si:s:-month~ld inf&nt,
commandeered their car ilnd used them
as hosta11es in a chase th&t began with
their shooting of • man oul.!llde • CO.ta
Mesa tavern. ·
George A. BerWw, 35, o( 207
JJaltimore Ave., Huntington Bell:h, -was
shot in the forearm after being accused
by· the two men o1 stealing money .they
Wd they had left on the counter tn PIY·
nteat for drinka. ' ·
The chase ended in Fountain Valley
when a volley from a police shotiun shat-
tered the wind.oicreen of lht stolen car. No
ciit w11 hurt ln (he melee.
'Cummlrigs is scheduled · to face a jury
tiial on identical charge1 Oct. 11.
Sworn in at lhe start of the hearing,
Seymour .!let the stage. He requested that
all persons 1.esUfyiag be sworn In.
Ulman. president or the "Sunset-New.
port Enterprises," the syndicate formt>d
to provid' the proprietor with advance
capital, criticized the entire procedUN!.
He was fu rther infuriated when \h1
council, midway th rough the testimony,
adjourned temporarily for an "e:s:ecutive
5ession."
He charged this was a violalion of the
Brown Act, the 1tate'1 right-to-know law
that prohlbils 1scret sessions except 01
personnel maUers.
From Page 1
SMOG ...
banned during the alert.
Fitchen , obviously disturbed by the at-
tack& from athletic officials. charged, "it
is up t~he coaches or 1ehool officials to
call oul' answering service lo determine
when th'e owne count has dropped bek>w
the warning level.
"lt is our responsibility, according to
law, to nolify lhe schools when cur
forecast Indicates that the ozone count
will be .35 parts per mill!on or hlJher
during the coming day," Filchtn coo-
tinued.
The .air pollution control officer said,
"We have three smo1 monltorln& field
sLaUons in U}e coonty -at Anaheim, La
Habrl'I and 01'1nge Caunty 11irport. They
are checked hourly and the dl!gl'tt ol
ozone in the atmosphere recordt!d.
"All any M:hool official has tn do is call
our air pollution answering service, 535-
5$35, to determine \tlf: level of oiont
count at any one ol the three staUoos."
Mes ans Up, Up •••.
And a Win in Balloon Charnpionships
·A Costa Mesa couple soared up, up and
a••Y from. 'the. towa State Fair to arab
titles Jn tht National Hot Air Balloon
OhampionshiPft, a final point talll' In·
dic•ted M<1nday. ,
They ,are Mr. and Mrs. William L.
F..ckn'ltler, of 384 Princeton Drive, who
were even unUJ Jut evenl, wJlen the man
or tht ~ truahed 1 rooftop and lost
points.
Mrs. Wllm• , Eckmelcr -the only
woman entrant -tciok first place in th~
11Pot taraet compeUt.ion and c•m-e ou1
third overaU amona au conltstanta.
Her hush.Ind Blll, who was tltd wJth his
!i'pouse until that trlckY flMI ~ t1r1et
«vtnt. placed aevanlh among t J\ e
ballooniltl who camt lrom all over th•
nallon to daull! fa irgrounds visitors.
The over&ll winntr was Frank Prit·
chard. o( Flint, Mtdl., who came from
behind Jn the final tally to ed1e out Or.
William Grabb, of Ann Arbor, Mich ., who
held a perfect 4,000 points at one time.
Fourth place was won by Peter Kr1tg,
who \I from Indianapolis, lndlana and not
10 be c:onf\lsed wilh the Peter Krlta. who
Is a DAlL Y PlLOT reporter.
The five-day long national cham·
plonsh.lps were p&rt of the Iowa State
Jo~alr and dauled the awestruck Iowans
wllh their m1gnlflctnt grace:.
BIUoonisU asct:nd up to 20.000 fett In
lbelr briahtly colortd hot itlr b11g,;, danal·
ln,q beneath Lhe 40 to SO.foot diameter
ctlestial vrssrls In baskets or allnas.
Gill expl1tned the need for In·
vestigating teams to work together, "The
police and coorla enlirely depend on us
for determlnaUon of P,eath, for example,
which in this instance establishes a prima
facie case of homicide."
GUI, a former police ofCicer himse.lr,
said that coroner's deputies a r e
t 'rom Page 1
PRISON ...
in a five-page letter Monday lo prison of.
ficials. They included :
-Freeing of all "political prisoners."
-Fretin& of th ree Soleclad State Prison
inmate.!! who face trial In the !laying oC a
guard last Jan. 13 .
~losing of two disciplinary cellblocka,
where 200 prisoners are now confined.
-Appointment of a black warden.
-Appointment ol black and Mexican·
American assistant wardens.
-More black and Me1k:an-American
priMn officers and counselors "equal to
white officers ."
Capt. Payne said Christie was known to
pick up male hitch-hikers and speculated
Cox may have been given a lift shortly
before the victim was slain.
"It looks as if he was killed sometime
Friday night,·~ he added.
Christie was found Monday morning by
his business partner, Terrance Smith.
who woodered why ke failed to show up
for work at their W&T Hardware Co.1 ti900 Knott Ave., Buena Park.
He found out why and the scene will
always haun_t him.
Mayor Takes Control
PORTLAND, Ore . iUPll -Under an
t'Xecutive order signed by Mayor Terry
Schunk, all unils of city government will
be u11der his direct cootrol durin1 the
American Legion Convention starting
here Friday. Schunk said Monday he
took the action in the face of "strong
polariz.alion in this community" and an
"ex~ted lnflu1 o( unknown numbers of
young people who are seeking 1 plaUorm
lo e1pound lheir differing views."
Too Little?
Too Much?
Agnew is scheduled to fl y to Formon
after a visit Wednesday.to U.S. and Seuth
Korean troop! oeir the demilltarilid
zone between South Korea al'ld Com-
munist North Korea.
Comedian Cosby
Now a Student
AMHERST. Ma ... (U PI) -Comldian
Bill Cosby has been accepted at tbe
·University of Massachusetl.!I' &raduite
school of education.
Officials said Monday Cmiby hid ap.
piled and been accepted, but a
spokesman dld not know his plans for
registering and. taking clusa. "Ht
doesn't want people staring," h~ said.
Before Cosby became 1 star in the
televlslM series "l Spy" and "The Bill
Co.!lby Sbow.'' he told 1 .reporter, "I jult
want lo mike a blg pHe of money and
then do whit I really like -teachln1.''
DON'T BE MI SLED BY DISCOUNTS, DEALS, SALES ANO
GIVE-AW A YS.
THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST-IT IS
UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUCH, BUT IT IS WORSE TO PAY
TOO LITTLE.
IF YOU PAY TOO MUCH, YOU LOSE A LITTLE MONEY
AND THAT IS ALL.
WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE, YOU SOMETIMES LOSE
EVERYTHING BECAU SE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGH T WAS
INCA PABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TO DO.
YOU CAN'T PAY A LITTLE AN D GET A LOT.
ALDEN'S
I AHTA ANA, OU,N•I
TUITIN c.11 , • ,
AL DIN'S
110 HILL CAIPm
a DIAPllll'S
11174 lrft .... Tnti11, Cettf.
111·1144
c;ARPETS • DRAPES
• 1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4131
. I
I
I 1 I
I
I
. . . ... .... ... --. '':!".~"'"~""=....,--.,,,, ~-~~--~----··~ ·;-.,--_-·-• -• • !/
Your Bometewn Buntingto.n .Bea~h
EDITI O N
' ' Dally Paper.
VOL 63, NO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNn', CALIFOR~IA' TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 'i970 TENC~
' ' '
Seal Bea({~ Factions Clash Over New Agellcy
By TERRY COVILLE
Of tM 0111Y P'llet SttH
The Seal Beach City Council wai like
lhe eye of a hurricane Monday night -
calm, peaceful and silent. . Then the
meeting optned.
There wasn't a calm, peaceful or silent
moment for the next four hours as war-
ring factions on the cOOncil and if1 the au-
dience harangued and insulted each
other.
It began with lhe routine second
'
r.ading el an onlinanco chanain& the
organization of the city's controversial
RiverfrCnt Redevelopment Agency. It
passed its first test a week ago on a 3-2
cotmcil vote.
"I think ~ere is a serious question ol
law &JI to whether a new agency can be
formed. This is a charter city," said
Albert Del Guercio, 'who rose from the
audience during the meeting.
The change in the Riverfront
Redevelopment Agency would eliminate
the city council u the aiency'1 governing
board and replace it with five men ap-
pointed by the mayor and approved by
the council.
The agency is charged with redevelop-
ing blighted city areas. It has taxing
powers separate from municipal gove'"tl-
ment.
Detractors of the change claim it would
make the agency responsible only to a
three-man council majority. Opponents of
the change have insisted they want
elected officials, rather than appolnt.ed
ones, to control the agency's taxing
powers.
"This charter does not give tbe mayor
the power to appoint any board. If he
does he ls usurping power. We have a
council·manager, not mayor form of
government," coiltinued Del Guerlco,
who has been active in the rec.all move-
ment shaping up against Qayor Mort.on
Baum and Councilmen Thomas Hogard
and Conway Fuhrman.
2 Teens Held ••
Ill Murder
Pair Suspected in Beach Merchant's Death
A pair of suspects in the slaying of a
Huntington, JSe;ach man found nude on his
bed MondaY, hi! throat cut and (our slab
wounds in his chest and back, are in jail
today.
One captured was driving the dead
mAn's car, just as police were beading
for hiJ home to question him about possi·
ble involvement.
Miles C. Cox, 18, a laborer1 of 1S700
Irene Way, Westminster. and Frederick
J. Yanke, 20, of Gardena, are in Han·
Fires Started
tington Beach City Jail for questioning.
Each is charged with murder in the
weekend death of Walter Christie, 51, of
8131 San Angelo Drive, partner in an
aircraft hardware firm.
Yanke i.s charged additionally w '1th
receiving stolen property and at·
raigrunent on all counb is expected
Wednesday in West Orange County
Judicial District Court.
"Yanke may not have been present
when it happened. but be might be it.n ac-
San Quentin Cons Riot;
Guards Use Tear Gas
SAN QUENTIN (Al') -San Quentin on the llhores ol Son l'ranciaco Bay nur
prison cuanls drove '!llO demonstralillc San llaf .. l, 15 milts llOl1h •of San Fran·
pri!oners into their cells with tur gas to-clsco.
day after nine offices were damaged by Guards found nine counselors' offices araon~aused fires, prison officials said. •damaged in one .. cellblock after driving
The prisoners staged a sltdown strike the demon&trating prisoners back to their
fn the prison recreation yard to press a cells.
dozen demands issued by black ptisoners Furniture, wooden window frames and
during an experimental Superior Court other woodwork was charred in the hearing Monday within the prison walls. 11 White and Mexican-American pri90ners preliminary steel and concrete ce s.
also took part in the demonstration, There were no reports of injuries.
prison officials said. First sign of trouble came when
A call for more black and Mexican· prisoners refused to report to their prison
American coun.selor1 were among the jobs after breakfast aDd congregated in
demands. the recreation area.
Minority race priJODers total 61 percent They repeated the demands ~livered
<if the 3,&00 pri3oMn at the at.aN prison in a five-page letter Monday to prisoo of.
ficials . '11ley included :
Nixon Prepares
Clemente F ete
For Candidates
By Rla!ARD P. NALL
Of IN Dellf' l'llM 11.tf
President Nixon turned to the
California political 1Cene today as he and
the First Lady prepared to welcome ISO
Republican candidates and wives to their
San Clemente home at a 5 p.m. reception.
'J'be guests were to include GOP can·
didates fur Congress. state senate and
assembly and the Board o( Equalization.
The Nixons gave a dinner last month at
the Spanish-style home honoring Gov. and
Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Sen. George
Murphy (fl.Calif.) The President has
been promoting the election o f
Republicans in California and elsewhere
ill various ways from social events to the
etandard picture posing technique.
Earlier in' the day, the President met
with top foreign policy aides to ponder
cbancea for peace in the Middle East as
(See NIXON, Pap I )
-Freeing of all "political prisoners."
-Freeing of tbr~ Soledad state Prison
inmates who face trial in the slaying of a
guard last Jan. 13.
-Closing of two disciplinary cellblocks,
where 200 prisoners are now confined.
-AppoinUnent of a black warden.
-Appointment of black and Mexican·
American assistant wardens ..
-More black and Mexican-American
prison officers and C0W1selor1 "equal to
white outcers."
High Rise Talk
Slated at Meet
Huntington Beach residenb will be
given the chance Wednesday night to
learn more dtails on the 17-etory, 287·
unit retirement apartments being plan-
ned by the First Chritlian Church. ·
A representative of the architectural
firm of Blurock .apd Donald will describe
the plans at a meetin1 of the HOME
Council in the council annex at 8 p.m.
the church's application for a variance
to build the. tower at Main Street and
Adiins "-venue baa been co~ued by the
plannlng.colllll!laalonen lo Sept. IS.
Valle y Teen Help Booster
Group to Study Clinics
A si-lng commlltee, formed to get
Fountain Velley'1 Teen Help organization
back on lt.o feet, plans to 1tudy drug
clWe& throughout the county before .of·
fertni advJce on the needs of the city's
)'OU th.
Committee members met for the first
time Monday night. decided they lacked
11ufflclent information on teen programs,
then scheduled 1 trip to the Anaheim
Free Clinic Cept. a to study their pro--
cedures.
Jim Hollywood, administrative auts-
tant to the city manager, aakl moat com·
mlttec members wanted to read more
about drug and lten Pro&rllrul before
telling Teen Help bow to run Jt& opera-
tion.
The comml.ttee was eatabllshed alter
Teen Help cl0&ed its youth center three
weeks ago in the fa~ or Joc:al business
complaint&.
"We <lo have a pouible Ille for t h e
youth center, temporarily, but we won't
know unUI Wednesday." Hollywood said .
He has bttn work.Ing as Jlalaon between
the steering committee and the city staff.
The cornmlttte JI coml)OM\d of a doien
resldenta from.various professions in tht
city.
I
complice," said Detective Capt. Grover
L. Payne.
The detective chief, who has been
criticized by some news media, said
reluctance to release facts early i.i the
Christie homicide case was essential.
An all-points buUetin was broadcast
Monday for Christie's missing light blue
Mustang.
The car was sPotted at S p.m. by Of.
Heer Ray Hattabaugh, parked b es 1 de
Bolsa Chica State Beach, bringing ad-
'
'K~Y IS ACCOUNTABILITY'
Fovnt•in V•lllv"1 Brick
Detafled Pla ns
Movi ng Valley
Sc hool Syste ms
By TERRY COVIl.LE
Of !fie E»llY Piie! Iliff
A child is not a motor car and the
Fountain Valley School District doesn't
coru;ider itself a factory.
But that doesn't stop school ad-
ministrators from tapping industrial in·
genuity to get the wheels of education
moving in high gear.
Planning -down to the most minute
detail -is the basis of the best iridustrial
systems, and now of the Fountain Vall.iy
School District.
District officials have outlined ·the
district's philosophy of edtication and
have' required principals of each of the 13
schools to implement lhat philosophy in
writing with a detailed "education plan"
for each .school.
"Accountability is the basis of it." ex.
plains Mike Brick, lhe d i s·t r i c t
superintendent, "l<~rom the governor on
down, state legislators are telling the
schools to show them what is happening.''
"We have long had our theories o(
edticatlon -how to teach children. Now
they are asking us to prove it works."
The education plan for individual
school& is the sort of proof school people
are looking (or, Brick hopes.
'n\e plan, in each of 13 cases, is a
Jen~thy document which outlines in detail
what the school will teach, bow to teac.:h
It and to whom.
It explains the district goals in coocrete
terms.
One example is district goal 12: "To
provide a systematic plan for logistical
support lo wist stolf and atljdenll in the
achievement of defined di!trlct learning
goals ai'ld objectives." '"
Tiie individual IChool rtwrltes lhat goal
In sltgbtly more 1peclfic terms. 'then the
"school 1oal" Is malcbed with In. ol>
jecUvt. tn this instance "SelecUng Items
from dlatrict catalog as well as ~proved
buy-out items, the principal wULestabllsh
!See EDUCATION, P11e ll
• ....
ditional police officers and helicopter in
to comb the surrounding area.
"Prior to that, we belleved Cox was in·
volved," said Capt. Payne, adding that
patrolmen were en route to his
Westminster home when It was fqund .
"We thought the suspect miglit st 111
have Christie's car," he continued. "We
didn't want him to read too much in the
papers and dump it."
A pair of leenaged girls and a boy were
(See HOMICIDE, P11e Zl
* * * Coroner Hits
Beach Police
Report Delay
j ' .. +1,j , __ .... -91.l .~-lly .MAN o......,.
Of .. Wfr Piie! _. . . ' . ,1
ijunlingjon Beach police we!\ in;nartinr
today from criUcism leveled by coroner's
deputies over what they. termed the delay
in reporting a homicide to the county of·
lice.
Deputies, citing a state Jaw that death!
are "immediately reportable" to their of.
fice, complained that they were not
notified of the slaying until 11 a.m.
although the body w~discovered at 8:22
a.m.
Det. Captain G(Over Payne commented
this morning," I don't belleve in publicly
airing problems between us and another
agency."
Deputy Coroner John Gill, who was
assigned the case, did not arrive at the
scene until 11 :10 a.m. But he found the
Huntington Beach detectives cooperative.
"They knew we bad them with their
trousers down,'' Gill said. "There was too
much at stake for them not to be helpful .
Whether their cooperation was a true
reflection of their feelings or not, 1 don't
know."
Gill did not hesitate to criticize the
delay in the report of the death.
"As soon as they know they have a
dead body they should call us,., he ex·
plained. "Whether they are police or not,
they are not transcendental to the law."
Gill explained the need for in·
vestigating teqms to work together. '1The
police an!f cdfirts entirely depend on us
for detennination of death, for example,
which In this instance establishes a prima
facle case of homicide."
Gill, a former police officer himself,
said that coroner's deputies a re
specialists in the cause and time of
death.
"When l was a policeman I might have
seen five or six bodies in a year -now I
see that many in a day."
Mag azine Lauds
Gisler Scliool
National honors have been .awarded to
Gisler School in the FoUJ11taln Valley
School District by the publishers of
Instructor magazine.
Gisler School ...has been named to the
mq:~'s list oC "newsworthy schools"
and w.Jll appear Jn the
August/September lssue ol Jnotructor
along with othet< schools so Rained. The scbool wa's hoiiored for ll! in~
novation s in the field of lndividuali.zed in·
1trucU01. •
GJsler feature1 a variety of special pro-
grams including a learning centtr with
learning: coordinators. teacher aidea, a
modified teaching lchedule 'lo allow time
fol" plaanlng programs, hlgh use of com·
munlty . resources, and othe.r actlvttles
deslined to emphuize t.M.indivldual.
COuncllmen Harold Hol~en 1nd Uoyd
Gummere supported Del Guercio'& con.
contention.
Other residents yeUed insults from tht
audience at Mayor Baum and Couacllmen
Hogard and Fuhrman who have been
under fire themselves since their firing of
City Manager Lee Jli!ner , and Ctty
Attorney Jim Carnes.
"I doo'l think a debate ~tween the city
council and 'the audience is necessary.''
interrupted Aeling City Manager Ileru!il
Courtemarche.
Councilmen finally parsed the -m
reading 3-2. The change In format for the
redeveklpment agency becomes eUeCtift
in 30 days. ,
Beach erosion wu -next up 'and caaect
a small amount of debate, UKlt!lh U.C
different lines. ' ·
After several residents demanded Im-
mediate action to combat btach ttOaioa,
the' council voted unanlmoU1Jy to· &O
(See SEAL, Pip I) ' . .
YOUTH CORPS -·Mrs: Virginia Stirling work~ with high.school s!u·
dents )?atricia Benton,. 15, and' DOn Jones, 14, both of Santa Ana, In
li~r~ at H"!'t!ngto\\. J;!eac!>'& Goltten· West · Coll~e. Students. are ~g~ ·~•f ~!eifnFthli summer under !ftij!lllOllo
bpiid YbUth c~,.··~raae , , . .
"" " ' -I • '
C.ollege ~elpers
Youth Corps Working at ·GWC
Twenty~ne students ar.e wori..ing their
way through college wblle still 1n high
school.
The college ls Golden West College in
Huntington Beach and· the student.a are
youngsters enlisted by the Neighborhood
Youth Corps.
They are Working. side by side. with the
staff at Golden West this summer, help-
ing the college prepare for opening day
Sept. •. -
Most of the youths come from families
with at leas.l seven children. Many of the
families are on wellare and the
youngsters work to help out.
The money they . ear,n comes , fr:om
federal funds. The money. is critical to
their families but tt>e youngsters also
value jhe experience.
"It's noi like any other job' where you
just wor~. ·l'm.leaming.somethini," said .
Cecilia Carrillo, 16, Sant8i Ana, who has
been assiltiM:·in'the graphic arts lab.
Tiie Ne;giiborhood Youth Corpa,tries to
place studerts in jo!>s that relate to what
the stqdents w.ant·to do in the future, &aid
Ingrid Scott, NYC director. .
Not only are ·tfiey ·receiving jdb· el·
perience, they have an opportunity for a
recommendation; and thi.S ia a ·big plus in
the program, said ~iss Scott. ·:n.at
really makes a difference when they aJ>o
ply for a job elsewhere.·•
Miss Judy Borg, an~er NYC director,
said the program also ii helping the
potential dropt>ut student. "They're mak·
ing money now so they can afford to go
to school. They also koow that someone,
other than school i.uthorltier, wwts thbi
to stay in school."
••1 have to finish high school at least,"
said Arlette Gartman, ts .. "You can't get
anywhere without a diploma."
Arlette would like to go on to colle1e
and major in secretarial science. At
Golden. We.st this summer she is typing
and fillng in the admissions office. · .
Mrs. Virginia ,Stlrllng, 1"ho superviw&
three·NYC students in tb&college library ..
commented on another dlmen1kld to tht
program. .
"I've learned.a Jot·thts summer, about
'Secret of Suct:ess'
neve~loo to Realtors
Rtal estate agents will learn l<fhe
Secret of Succ:;ess" Wedleaday morning.
Thal'• the theme of a l.olktlo be Jllven
by June bunl!an of .the Human outreach
' Council at the 1 a.m.1 breakfast meeting
ol the Hunlinalo•Fountain Valley ·Board or R..:ltor1 it Mlle Square Goll Club.
t
he necessity foi programs llke thlJ, -Ind
the necessity it ·Ls that these YoUDOters
find ot.it ea,rly.wtiere they want to io. &nd
what Ibey want to do," she said.
Working under her guidanct, three
students are binding periodicals.
"You can tell what they are inlerelted
1n by looking at which magazinea tbey
1lop to leaf throgh;" she 18ld.
0oe o.f the Students WU fascinated with
horticulture. Another became absorbed in
myUtology-.o s11e ·a11owec1 him· the._
section oq myUl>1ogy, and: he apent many
of his break periods reading., ·
'.'It was'bard·to'l'l him back.to work,"
she said. ·
Court Dafe Set
Ill E~l>ezzleh;ieiit
AIT8.1Pmenfhai ~n-: c6utthii~ 1to
Sept. 2 in the Harbor Judicial Dialr1ct
Municipal Court for an Or~ \\'Olnan
arrested Aug •. 17 on charps1 of em·
beullng about 14;000 from •a Jlewpl1
Beach civil ongineerlng'flnn,. ·
· Terrie D. Mlle•. 34, wai •rreited at lief
flome al 349 N, Olive St 1~1 I brjef
investigation. •
The woman .hu: bein emPlond ·U a
aeeretary-blokk-r ,by ,Ronald W.
Martin and A-latol. DelectiVN '11ep
company offictals fil:Jt , tpOtted IOJD•
dt..repaneles in · handlin& ol limds.four
months ago.. • .
Oruge
"'eat•w
Low cloud• in th< mornin& anil
hlgh temperatures in the afternoon
conUnue Wedneadey, with rtildlnp
ranging from 75 locally to a furth-
er inland. •
INSWE TODAY
Britafn ii wing the ""11'oc1c:
trea.irtrnt" m tf\!ing' to prntnt
it.f uoung (>foplt from btcomi!IQ'
hooked on drug1. Poo• 6.
' C.llfltnlle • ....... , .. ,,
Cloecttll!t ""' p ,..... .... +I Cl .. tlllM 1W1 OI' ..... ~ t C•flllCt 11 IYIVll ...,... 11
Cmt•ff 11 , lfolrtl 1fo1P
O...fll Mtlltff ' lledl Mlil1lett lf.11 a1Lleflll ,_ & T ... ¥111111 11
lfttefl•lfllMll l•lt W....._, I ,..... , .. ,, .............. ,.,. H.,•-If _.,....... .. ...,.........,. 14
I
' .
•
I DAil y PILOT " u. 1970
Ee.1011 Pitch
Huntington Vies
---""-i-~
U.S. Honors -A billion dollar program for develop.
-~~ buullli<:atlon and ,.....,,at1on ol the e<ology In HunUn~n
Beach is beir\I cited in the city's bid for
national honors.
Monlo Nillkoftkl, cbaimWI ol the
Citl,_' Stetrlni Commitlt<. llllde the
pitch for tho dty -nigbt ...,.,. the
All-America City jury in Portland, Ore.
Huntinaton Beach is one of 22 eities to
rtach the finals ol the competition for the
citiRn participation award of th e N•·
tionll Municipal League.
Tbe winner ii upected to be named
Wediiesday mornini-
Nitikowskl described five c i t i z e n
recognition projects in ha presentation.
He told of the creallon of the citiiens
organizatiOn be heads to bring divergent
interests ' into a sin&le force for com-
munity oction ; the CXlftStruetion ol the
:!.30k&r beach parking Jot: the landscap.
1ng ol tbe Paciftc C:OUt Highway: adop-
tion of the_ Top ci -the Pier p I a n tor
Beach Kidnaping
Suspect Given
Stiff Sentence
One of two men 11ccused of UJing a
young couple. and their baby IOn II
hostap c1uri111 a wild shootout w I l h
Hummgton Boach poJ,i« has drown olilf
pri5on ttnns following his. plea of ~ty
to cfiaiiu of lddnatilnl and anned rob-
bery, •
Superior Court · Judie Samuel Im:ir.en
gavt Dl.vid Zataalo, 26,' a ttamient, five
yean In· tile on the robbel1 COWll. He
sentenced the def"""'11 In one In ~
years oo the lddbaplng 'charge, both
&ente:noes to run ~.
Rwmlng With tltoOe terms will be a
spell of one to 15 years in atate prisonJor
Zai..alo'• guilty plea to chugea of
assault -with a dudfy weapon relalinl to
an earlitr prosecution. Deputy O!strict
Attorney W. J. M.,.ley explained.
Zataalo 'alld Douglaa McGregor Cum-
rninp. 11,, of Guden Grove were ar~
res!.ed list April ·25 art.er an eight-mlle •.
bullet rictdled chase that began in ·Hun-
Ungtoo Beach, wound il5 way through
three communities and ended with lhe
coupJe'1·capture in Fountain Valley.
Police llJd both men seized a La Puente
couple and their six-month-<lld infant,
co..-Nt11lhair <Ill' all( used.iliem • as hostages io1 a chase that began with
tlieir shooting Of a man outside a Costa
Mesi J.ave n. · ·'
G<Olp A. Bersbaw, I>, of 207
BaltimOrt Ave., Huntington Beach, wu
&hot in the forurm after being aCCUlld
by the two men of stealing money they
said they had left on the counter in pay·
ment for drfnks.
The cha.se ended In Fountain Valley
when a volley from a police shotgun shat·
tered the windacreen of the atolen car. No
oat wu'hurt ln the melee.
Cummings is tcheduled to face a jury
trial on identical charges OCt. 19.
Unruh to Attend
Democrats' Luau
Jeaa Unruh. Democratic .cudldate Lor
governor, will appear in Huntington
Beach Friday.
He will attend the opening of tht Hun-
tington Be a ch ·Fo u nJa in Valley
Democratic Club's new headquarters at
17931 Beach Blvd . at 5:30 p.m. and then
will be a guest at a luau at Carpenters
Hall, 8.llZ Atlanta St.
The luau ii beh1g sponsored by lhe 5g..70
Democratic CJub and the Unruh for
Governor Commlttee. Luau festivities
will begin at 6 p.m. ReserYSlions may be.
made through the ,,_70 Democratic Club.
DAILY PILOT
QRAHGi COAlr ,UllliHING CQ¥,Afol't
••i••f N. WeM
Prto1lc:lent •NI l"11eu1h ..
J 1ci k. C111lty
redevelopment ol lhe central clty, and a
park 1yllam that lnclll<IM u
neighborhood. parks and a 41!>-1cre cen-
tral park.
They all add up to a bUUon doll11
package which wu begun five years &So
'l\'hen HunfutCt,oo Beach citi1ens -went to
work on the project~ Nitzkowski uid.
Accompanying Nitzkowsk! on the three-
day trip are William Reed. the city's
public information officer, arid Dr. Henry
Kaufman, fonner city COWK:llman and
former plannln& t"Ommissloner.
Ji're• P .. e 1
SEAL •••
beyond wb1t.ev.u tnU-eroslon dtorts
were belq made1>y the U.S. Anny Corps ot Enilniel!:ts. 11'e council ordend a
$2,700 privato lludy ol bead> erosion pro-
blems in Seal Beach 1nd iprom.ised that
municipal 1ctloa. to halt I.be now of sand
into the aea would follow.
Counc:iJJQen tbe:n set the city tu rate at
$1.SS"per fltt aae11ed vi1~Uoo.
Al thil point Del Guarcto roH again In
request clariftcatioa of the mayor11
authority.
"This .b not submitted to harw or em~
barrass the mayor," he 11ld, then
launched into a rudJn& of the dty'1
charter, declaring the charter &ave
Baum no-authority to aile.oce or threaten
to throw out any speaker at a council
meeting.
Baum replied that the mayor as
presiding offJctr hu the right to "cut off
debate and upedlte the liua1-of the
~···" m--...
"You're on1y ceremonial. Let lhe coun.
cil vote me down if I should atop talk-
ing," challenged Dtl Guercio. "I dan you
to remove me by forct."
He sat down when the counc:ll voted -
1-2 -to cul oU debate. ·
Another citiun got up to talk but wu
ruled out of order by Baum.
"Don't feel bad," quipped Holden, "I
can't talk either."
De.I Guercio stood up again, thlJ time to
speak' on another agenda item ~ncernlng
a request by Courtemarche r o r
permission to ~ant a leave of absence to
a female employe.
.. You see bow" little the Interim city
manager knows. He doesn't have to ask
pennissian of the council to gr111t a leave
of absence, only to spend money," Del
Guercio said,
.. No I •don't,•• "ttpl~ Courtemarche,
referring to a recent resolution requiring
such personnel actions to be brought
before the COUQCil.
Wheo' th'e city ~lerk asked for
permission to hire a part·time employe,
Del Guercio was up again.
''She doesn't need authority to hire
help, only to pay," he challenged. Gum-
mere agreed, but because of the city's
frozen budget tM. majority bloc on the
council denied pernµssion .
The council session, heJd at McGaugh
School alter a car caravan arrived from
the crowded city hall, went on 1n almilar
fashion, with part of lhe large audience
booing and insulting Baum, while another
segment of the crowd 1pplauded him.
Heat Kills Fish
In Beach Pond
A combin,tion of heat and lack of frelb
water has killed 200 lo 300 fiah in a Ho-
tington Beach pond near Talbert Lake.
City otficlals were afraid fish In
Talbert Lake, a key part of the proposed
central park, might also be threatened,
but now say there is no danier of those
fish dying.
''The temperature ol the pond on Joe
Ferm'1 property hid risen, and it wasn't
getting a.y fresh water from Talbert
Lake, '° a high 111umber o( 1ti.d and a
few other fish did die," Tom Severns,
development coordinator for the city, ex·
plained.
He said Ji'erm's pond wa~ nonnall y
connected to the lake, but bec•uae or low
water a natural barrier had aeparated
the two, creating a 1peclal 1itu1tiOl'l.
OAILY PILOT PM• ... Ut •rr11
Is Detroit Losi1ag?
Has the ubiquitous bug taken over the world? Photo-
grapher thought so, tor a moment at least, when
he happened on this scene Sunday in the 800 block
of Balboa Boulevard.in Newport Beach. There they
were, seven of them (count 'em), all in a row . And,
as our man raised his camera, another one chugged
by. It's enough to drive a man buggy.
Massage is the Message
Before Newport Council
Frot11 Page 1
HOMICIDE •..
takea into custody ln Cox'& company Mon-
day night. ·
'lbe girls were rl!:leased to parental
custody and the boy Is in Orange _County
Juvenile Hall today, for additional in-
vestigation to determine if he will be
charged at all.
The massage parlor syndrome we11t on
trial in the Newport Beach City Council
chambers Monday nighl
City Attorney Tully Seymour turned the
council cha,nbers into a veri~ble
courtroom as the council heard a plea by
a ·Newport couple ud a newly farmed
syndicat~ askina: for a business )i~ose
for whal would be the city's sixth such
health club.
Two of the five massage parlors ln the
city have been raided i1 recent week! -
with charges of f ro&titution rtsultina:
each lime. "
Despile a plea by the owners for an im-
mediate decision, the council vote!.1 to
continue the hearing pendi11g the gather-
ing of additional information.
Santa Ana lawyer F...dward Ulman
attoraey for the owner, Vada Van Cha.&e,
and himself a principal in the syndicate
behind the e11terprise, claimed a delay
would cause undue hardship on .all the
principals.
He also argued that no other massage
parlor had to Wldtrgo COU4lCil scrutin>;. He
said his parlor, to be called "Athena's of.
Hollywood," should not be judge4 on the
alleted 1iill of 1imilar bu1lae11e1 in the
area.
Business License Supervisor Stan
Hirschberg had brought the appUc1tion to
the council atte11tion because, he said, of
problems eneountered with th~ ap-
plication Itself and the result of police in·
vestigations. .
Sworn in at the start of the hearing,
Seymour set the stage. He requested that
all persons testifyi111g be swam in.
Ulman, president of the ','Sunset-New-
port Enterprises," the syndicate formed
to provide the proprietor with advance
capital, criticiied the entire procedure.
Re was further infuriated when the
council, midway through the testimony,
Bandit in $70
Heist Sentenced
A man who took S70 at gunpoint from •
Fountain Valley market has been ordered
to spend the next five years to life in
state prison. .
Superior Court Judge Samuel Dre1zen
set that term for Dorman D. Buttram, 22,
of Anaheim alter the defendant ple1ded
guilty in Westminster munlclpal court to
armed robbery charges. Buttram'• a'!>'
plication for treatment _as a JX)!Sible
narcotics addict was reJected by the
California Rehabilitation Center a t
Norco.
Buttram adm\lled that he held up the
Stop 'N Go market. 16040 Newhope St., on
July 22. 19811, and made off with the
night'• lokinfla of $70.
adjourned temporarllY for an "executive
session."
-He charged this was 1 violation Of the
Brown Act, the state's right-t~know law
that prohibits sscret sessions except oa
personnel matters.
Prior to its nezt meeting, the council
will ask the police department to look In-
to the background of Sunset-Newport,
whose principals, according to tnman,
are David Cadley, the convicted felon, a
"Mr. Mascalco" and himself.
The eow1cil alaa asked to see a copy of
the franchise agreement between SWllet.·
Newport and the owner.
The applicants had pleaded for ap-
proval, and Van Chase said he has been
wor&g long bpurs the put Iii weeka to
prepare the 62nd Street establishment for
opening day, ·
Ulman aald any delay would cause a
major hards)lip on all parties involved.
It was about tlliJ point that Seymour
read a classified advertisement that has
been run in this week's DAILY PILOT.
The paid ad atates:
"Athena) ol the SunHl Strip with the
greatest girls · from Hollywood to
Maauge·You. Now 1n a new loctdon ln
Newport Beach.''
Seymour queried If the parlor Wu ln
fact open, In violation of the law.
Van Chase aald It wu not, the ad had
been an error.
Seymour and Vice Squad Detective
John Simon aald there have been a
"number of i'oung glrla" seen inside the
bu!iineu.
Van Chase 1aid one of the woml!:n was
his wile, the other was his only employe,
hired to answer telephones, and the other
girl. or cifla, were juat friends of the
family. ,
Ulman 1tressed that there had been no
buslneu conducted.
He explained the tenor of the ad as "•
gimmick" to attract new business.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Van Chase, who,
police said, had a clear record, WC!:re ada.
mant. however, about their intentions for
their first busine.si venture.
In his arguments, Ulman contended
that the city had forced the firm to spend
the money preparing their business, so it
had no grounds to deny the license.
lflman pointed out that in order to get
health and fire department approvals, a
requisite for a businesa license, some
$4.000 In construction work had to be
performed inside the building.
If so, said Capt. Payne, it won't be in
connection with Chris:tie':s murder.
"We have no indications of anyone tlse
involved in this at this time," said the
captain.
Theft was apparently not a direct
motive in the brutal murder, but poliee
alleged that personal effecb of Chriltie's
were found In Yanke's apartment.
C1pt. P~yne said Christie was know-n to
pick up male hltch·hiken and specu11ted
Cot may have been given a lift shortly
before the victim was slain.
"It looks as if he was killed sometime
Friday night," he added.
Christie was found Monday rooming by
his: business partner, Terrfulce Smith,
who wondered why he failed lo show up
for work at their W&:T Hardware Co.,
6900 Knott Ave., Buena Park.
He found out why and the scene will
always haunt him.
Widow Receives
$6,500 in Suit
A widow who 1ued the city of' Hun-
tington Beach for $140,000 after her hus-
band died in an auto accident has se.ltlf'd
In Superior Court for $6,500.
Mrs. Mildred Todlfunter of 5902 Liege
Drive, Huntington Beach accepted !hat
sum Monday as her lawsuit was about to
go on trial. She ~ad charged the city with
negligence leading to her busbud's death
on July 4, 1968.
James Wilson Todhunter, S2, w11s
thrown from his motorcycle at Golden
West Avenue near M1nsion Street when,
his widow 1llea:ed in her court action, hls
machine was overturned by broken pave-
me"t and rubble.
The $6,500 aw1rd Is to be shared by
Mrs. TOOhu1ter, her sons Mark a:ld
James and her daughter Vivien, Judge
Raymobd Vincent ruled.
East and West Meet
BERLIN (UPI) -We!:st German Presi·
dent Gustav Heinemann Dew to West
Berlin today for a five-day visit despite
Communist East Gttman protesta that
his presence would be a provocation.
Too Little?
Too Much?
Ji'rom Page 1
NIXON .•.•.
talk• between Ar•b and I1t1ell repreMD-
taUves begln In New York.
OCflclala meeting with the Preakll!:nt In
S.n Clemente lncludtd Secrelaly of St.Ito
WUllam P. Ro1era; ~ooepli c. Sileo,
aS1istant tecretary Of 1tate for Middle
Ea.Item Alf1irs; 1nct Henry Kissinger,
n1tlonal security affairt advlstr.
Roger• puahed U.S.-peaee iniHatiVH
that led to agreement by t1rael, Jordan
and Egypt for a three-month cease fire
and the start or negotiations.
Press Secretary Ron Ziegler 1 a t d
Mr •. Nixon would cover a wide spectrum
ot foretin Policy de•elopments lo the
discussions.
The President recei ved an "en-
couraging" report on the economy Mon-
day from four key 1dvisers.
Dr. Paul W. McCracken, chalnnan of
the Council of Economic Advisers, said
administ ration policies to cool the
overheated domestic economy are work-
ing.
He called evidence In the ecooomlC.plc·
ture encouragina:. He added, ''One ·mast,
of course. be cautious about trylng to
read too much into very· current data, but
in a great many ways the evidence aa I
say, we felt, was quite encouragini:."
He said he did not want.\«> su1ge1t, that
the stl'\lggle agalnst tnnation is over.
McCracken cited as hopeful indices the
less rapid rate of increase in the con-
sumer price index and increases in in·
dustrial produclion, personal income,
retail sales and housing.
Jn a 1Jdeligbt of the current Presiden-
tial San Clemente s1ga, Press Secretary
Ziegler said yie President has told him
"planted" questions are oul at Ni.t.00'1
new& conferences.
Ziegler said the President told him he
has not tolerated planted questions in the
23 years since he first tried for public of·
lice and he isn't starting now.
The Presidential posture on quesUoD
planUng was inspired by a column that
suggested one had popped up toward lhe
close of his July 30 news conference.
Ziegler said he told the President be
ntver planted an actual question with the
press but had offered ideas to reporters
seeking fertile ground to probe.
Nixon, Ziegler said, told him there
were to be no more of these fertile.
ground suggestions.
Ji'rotta Page 1
EDUCATION •••
a sy1tem for supply distribution based on
dollar amounts.
The objective tells what the school will
do. After it is written a series ·of ac·
ti ti vies are listed 'explaining how lhe
district will accompiWi its objective.
The activity list outlines rtep-by-step
the means to accomplish whatever the
school wanb to do.
In other words any individual can read
through a school's educational plan and
learn just what will be happening In that
school throughout the year. The plan also
sets up a method for measuring the auo-
cess or activities.
Teachers learn what and how to teach
to children and can also evaluate how I.be
plan is workihg as they go along. .
On the whole the plans for each achool
are quite similar. But fle1ibitlty is given
to each plan so a school can allow for dif-
ferences among it.a students versus those
of another school.
Tamura School for instance has a
number of students of Mexican descent,
therefore the school officials have decld·
ed to accentuate the studies of American
and Mexican culture. Another school
might delve more Into Japanese culture.
"It's a lot of work ," Brick admits. "But
It puts it all down In writing. Everything
we are trying to accomplish. We can
show you in black and white what we are
trying to do in each 1ehool."
"vice Pmlfeftl ...,. ~-• "'°'"''" T110111•1 1(,, .. 11
lallw
· Tho11111 A.. M .. ,,.;,.,
, MWl"'9 left!'
Al111 Dir~i11
Sex Suit Filed DON'T BE MISLED BY DISCOUlilTS, DEA.CS, SALES AND
GM-AWAYS.
Wat 0.•llO' C-•y Ed•IOt
• Alitrt W. 11111
An«llM Eaotor
.. • ......... , .. '"'' Off{ ..
17175 l11d1 lei.rl1~1ril ~M1ili11g Ailil1eJi:l.O. leir 7,0, 92641
ONr Offk•
1..llUM..a..dlt 1l1 ""'"' ,,.,_. [ <.Giii ~: -WEI ·•IY $1t'ttl H......-r •tldl~ Jt1l W"I ••lllln l loil!""trd &111 °'"'*"11: aia Netlfl El C1111111f 111: .. 1
" ..
•
Research Team Hit for 'Damages'
ST. WUIS Mo. tAPl -A 17!11,000
damage suit bas been filed against sex
researchers Dr. Wllll1m H. Mailers and
\lirginia Johnson by a man who said lhe
pair employed his wife •s a 1exual
partner for two men undl!:r trealment by
Masters and Mn. Johnson .
The suit alJO charged th•t the!: M.1.
reSW"Ch team greatly benefited from the
use of the man's wife through "mont:tary
gain by the publication of books," while
the hu sband "loat the conjugal society nf
his wife" and suffe red "great humiliation
and dlsgrice irt his aoclaJ and domfltlc
rl!:talionship!I."
The suit was filed In U.S. DlsU'ict Court
by attorney's of George Edwin Calvert,
~·hose address w11s listed only 111 New
Jl1mpshirt. The attorney! dttllned to
alve C.lve.rl's homt address. His wife's
n3me w11 listed 11 Barbar•.
Ma1ter1 c1lled lhe charge "r1dlculou1''
and said "we would be 1t1d to disprove
such a 1itu.Uon when <tbt opportunity
arises.''
The charge was In connection with
research done for the btst s e 111 n g
"Human Sexual Inadequacy," writlen by
Masters and Mrs. Johnson and published
in Aprll.
1'he suit also names as codefendants a
"John Doe I," of the State of New York
and a "John Doe ti." of Virginia.
The suit alleges that the 1e1u1J rtla·
tionsl)ip of Mrs. Calvert was used as a
"form of lrtatme!:nl" for the Doe9 ind
that Mr~. C1lvt:rt was paid $500 fot the
first tuch treaiment on or abotlt July 21,
Jt67, 1nd $250 for the second treatment
on or about Jan. I . 1968. ,,,e suit aald
Calvert le!:amed ol the alleged treatments
on Aprll 11 or this year.
A total of $150,000 11ctu11I damager Is
asked from the four defendants 'Ind a
total of $600.000 -WI punitive damages Is
asked from Masters and Mrs. Johnson.
Muter:s tald the tharges we r •
"trumped up" and It ls the first suit iris·
Ing from the 15 years of research by him
and Mrs. Johnson.
I . •
THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST-4T IS
UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUCH, BUT IT I~ WOR SE TO· PAY
190 LITTLE.
IF YOU PAY TOO MUCH, YOU LOSE A UTILE MONEY
AND THAT IS ALL
WHEN YOU PAY TOO UTILE. YOU SOMETIMES LOSE
EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT-WAS
INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TO DO.
YOU CAN'T PAY A LITTLE AND GET A LOT.
ALDEN'S
U.NTA ANA. OlANU
TUSTIN Ctilll , ••
ALDIN'S
lft HILL CAanft
•tU.nllD
1 U7C ,......_ , ..... c..llf.
llW144
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4831
'
Tate Hupg Defore Death_
Dying Actress Suspended By Rope, Coroner Says 1
Gliosts Leaving Ship;
()ueen Mary Abandoned
. ' \
I By ARTHUR R. VINSEL •
Of .... Dtillr Piiot tr.ff
Ghosts are leaving the Queen Mary, almost like r&t.a !rom a sinking ship.
Thll is tbe word from workers aboard her.
History hu alw111 enfolded the monarch or the AUanUc in magic, pre-
dating the toil, tears, sweat ani:I blood ol the 800,000.plus troops she carried in
Workl War 11; the gaitty of portwar passages from New York to Uverpool.
The Queen, some swear, carried a gbost crew and
passenger manifest.
They say the ghosts are leaving now.
* * * Tbouands lined the Orange Coast on Dec. 9, 19671
for a fmal glimpse before her majesty's engines shut down
forever and she became Disneyland in Long Beach Harbor.
Some cheered the fact that God-and big business-
would save the Queen. Some didn·L
One was Mrs. Jeannie Lorimer, or Newport Beach,
who watched proud Mary slide down the ways Into the
Clyde River in Glasgow, Scotland, 33 years before. Her-husband Archie was
the giant luxury liner's lirst engineer.
''She: should have stayed in England,'' said Mra. Lorimer through tear~
clouded eyes that misty morning. ·
"Or towed out into the AUantic and blown up." * * * " Controversy soon began to swirl around the rusting royal hulk, whlch
was sentimentalized, ridiculed, visited-and atlacked by thousands of worlcmen.
We called her Mayor Wade's Folly and laughed.
But the Long Beach establishment d'oesn 't like for anyo~ to rock the
boat-if you can pardon the pun-and the Queen Mary is the Sacred Cow of
City Hall.
My interview with San Francisco designer Alexis Tellis. who himself
renovated an old bay ferTyboat, was written for a Long Beach newspaper,
aent Upstairs and vanished in the lofty heights of editorial policies.
He only predicted beforehand all the structural, electrical, logistical and
labor problems &.he would ezl>erience and they happened right on schedule.
* * * Costs have naturally skyrocketed beyond original estimates as a corollary.
Enthusiastic at first, for instance, the Diner's Club abruptly jumped
ship recenUy. A second giant corporation e:rpected to sign on in its place got
cold feet.
'11tree inlettttiq news items crossed the DAILY PILOT desk Monday.
One: A glowing news release about the $525,IXX> paint job about t.o be
applied to the Queen. and paint only covers the outside.
"A portion of the ship's public tour_ areas is planned to open In mid-
December ,"said the announcement from the city manager's office.
Two : A UPI story saying the same operation wilb the Queen Elizabeth
Jn Florida is bankrupt and Mary's little sister is destined for scrap.
Three : A column by Long Beach newspaperman George Robeson telling
about the ghosts allegedly encountered on the Queen Mary since workmen
began their job.
* * * Her spirits include that of a crewman crushed to death in a watertight
d()(X' whose mounted bell bas tinkled at odd limes with no visible cause. other
phenomena have been reported too. ,
But the bell no longer tinkles. The unexplainable happen~s h3ve strange.' '1 stopped in recent days. Only human sounds are heard now.
Those WhG make them are uneasy, more than when the eerie ones walked
her deckJ and passages.
"What do the ghosts know that we don't?" asks Robeson.
New University High
Kids to Attend Viejo
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of .. Dlltr .. llft 11tft
Misslon Viejo High School will face
double sesaions when its doors open ne1t
month.
Trustees of the Tustin U n lo n High
School District voted Monday to house
the students, faculty and administration
or the new University High School at the
Mission Viejo camplll until their school is
completed.
Robert Bosanko, principal or Mission
Viejo High School, said he had no
previous indication from the board that
bis sclJool was being considered.
He said reports had Indicated that the
I,000 students would probably be bou5ed
at Tustin lliglt School.
1'Running two schools on one campus
always provides problems," s a i d
Bosanko. "We haven't yet bad a chance
to work out the details of our schedul.
ing."
8osanko said he understands that the
students would probably be housed a
minimum or 30 days and a maximum or
68 days at the Mission Viejo campus.
University High School located in the
Universh.y Park community was scbedul·
ed to open next month but delays were
caused by the sheet metal wor'kers strike.
A tentaUve date of Nov. 15 has been set
for the school's opening, barring any
more unforeseen strikes or inclement
weather.
At one point school administrators had
believed that the school would be housed
at Tustin High School and plans were
made so that the Tustin students would
altend morning classes and the Univt:tsi-
ty students, arternoon classes. Class
lengths were to be shortened to 40
minutes wijh five minutes between each
class and the University students were to
have their own faculty.
A similar schedule may be worked out
for ·MiWon Viejo Hlgh School, although
definite plans bave not yet been made.
Mayor Takes Contr,ol
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI ) -Under an
executive order 1igned by Mayor Terry
Schunk, all units or city gO\lemment will
be nder his direct control during 'the
Ametican Legion Con•entioo starting .
here Friday.
LOS ANOELES (UPI) -AA, Sharon
Tate was dying of ltab wounds, 1he was
hanged by a rope !uttntd around her
neck, looped over a ctlllng beam in her
living roGm.
County Con>n<r Tholll3' T. Noguchi
te>tliled today that the rope bums on the
pregnant actress' throat Indicated her
body was suspended above the noor for a
short period wbile she was dying.
'"My opinion that ahe was suspended
for a abort time is based on the lack or
severe coostricture by the rope but the
rope: bW11 was placed in such an ext.eat
around the curvature or lbe left cheek
County Smog
Alert Upsefs
Team Coaches
By JACK BROBACK
Of "" DellY l'li.t '""
The first school smog alert issued for
inland Orange County today bas thrown
high school football coaches into a state
of shock as they tried to schedule pre.
season drills.
Smog alert conclitklns were issUed by
Orange County's Air Pollution Control
District (APCD) Monday, warning that
today's smog conditions were likely to be
such that scbool-aged children should
avoid heavy exertion.
The alert, however, was issued for
Ora nge County's .. inland zoo~"
Football candidates at most coast.al
schools today we.re in full action in the
conditioning drills being held Wlder clear
skies in sunny weather.
Elsewhere, however, the Inland smog
alert was causing problems.
Schools reportedly affected by today's
smog alert include Lowell. La Habra,
Brea-Olinda Unified, Yorba LI n d a ..
Placentia Unified, Fullerton, Anaheim,
Magnolia, Centralia, Buena Park, Savan·
na, Cypress, Garden Grove, San~ Ana.
and Orange Unified Districts, T".:stin and
Trabuco.
Among the outspoken athle.Uc officials
regarding the smog warning is John
Wallin, Katella High athletic director. He
said the county's football program could
be "smogged out'' this fall II the alert:
system is not modlfied to alert schools
when the crisis la over.
Sensitive Noses
Spark Challenge
Of Town's Law
SIMI VALLEY (UPI) -Charles Holly
Green, a 42-year-old transient who was
arrested last week when the patrons of a
coffee sbop said they could smell him 10
feet away, was released Mond1y.
Ventura County public d efender
Richard Erwill asked for a superior court
hearing when be heard ()( the c8se, and
chane. .. ged the consittutiOiiility of the
ordinance under which Green wa! ar-
rested.
Green, a Korean war veteran, who has
been in and out or Vet e ran s
Administration Hospital tuberculosis
wards for years, bad spe11.t several hours
in the shop over a cup of coffee. After be
was arrested, he was taken to jail and
given a bath. Municipal Court Julge Burt
HeJ1S0n sentenced Green to a llklay jail
term last Thursday.
Simi Valley City Attorney E. E.
Cabaugh did not press the case before
Superior Court Judge Robert Wllllrd
Monday, and the Constitution issu.e was
never brought up.
The county ordiaance adopted by this
one.year-old town 11 tat es that "any
person who appears or remains Jn a
public place in a conditiot by reason of
filth on his clothe! or body that would
reasonably of£eod the ordinary sensibili·
ties of others is guilty of a misde.-
meanor."
Park Has 'Shopping List'~
J
Fails to Win Detailed Arms Pledge From Agnew
SEOUL (AP) -South Korean Presi-
dent Chung Hee Park presented Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew with an ex-
pe.Mive ahopping list ol military needs
Tuesday but failed to win a detailed
pledge on a proml!ed increase in U.S.
arms a.id.
A scheduled two-hour meeting between
the two }eaders •lretched. to six hours
befGre .breakJng up at mldaltemooo
'Ibey resumed discussions over dinner
Tuesday night ind then agreed to meet
again at brtakfa.st Wednesday.
An ofliclal Korean spokesman descr\1>-
ed the atmosphere as serious, while other
Kortan sources nid lt was somewhat
tense.
Agne\f him!tlf said the talks went
1•very well." A!kfd about the lenath or
the dJscuS!lons, a spokesman said: "This
dOtml't oeces.urtly mean they aren't get~
ting along."
Pa.rt ls undfrstood t(I be aeeklng A
plodp of ..,,,. II billion over Iha next n.., ,.... u the Pfke I« dropplnc blo
objection to the U.S. plan l.o withdraw
20,IXM> of the 63,000 Amer ican troops sta-
tioned her~
Although Agnew annc>unced in a speech
here Monday lh1t the United States would
provide new add to help modernit.e lhe
600,000.man Korean armed forces, he said
be!ore his arrival be did not expect his
visit to produce a specific new aid pro-
gram. Other American officltlls said no
decision woold be made unUI a study la
made of Korea's detailed needs.
'Mlere were indications thtit Park and
his advisers presented just such a detail·
ed list during private sessions with
Agnew, U.S. Ambassador Wiiiiam J.
Porter. Gen. JGhn N. "Iichali! and olher
U.S. o!llclab.
Agnew came here al President Nlxon·s
requnt to pledge continuing U.S. support
fGr Korea and listen to Park's views but
wlthoul authority to commit the •d·
mimstraUoo lo any specl(ic arms pro-
sram. )
U.S. mlUtary aid to KGrea is currently
$140 mllJJon a year, and any new pro-
gram would require approval from a U.S.
Congress lncreaslngly weary o( American
spending In Asia.
The lengthy meeting• contrasted with
Agnew's first Asian trip Jast January.
None of those sessions delved deeply into
policy questions.
1be Korean pattern may be repeated
Jater this week in 'nlailand where A,r>ew
wUI have to explain congreulooal reluc-
tance to rlnance. proposed Thal a~istanct
to Cambodia.
Agnew also ts exped.td to receive
another request for lncttased arms aid
when he meets Wednesday wtth Na·
Uonalbt Chine'Je Pmldent Chiang Kat-
~hek 1l hia moontaln retrtat at SUn Moon
Lake.
Agnew ls sch~uled to fly to f"MmOH
afler 11 vi.!Jll Wedne!iday to U .s. and SGUth
Korean troops near the demllitiriied
ione between Sooth KORI 1.nd Com-
mlll1lal North Korea. ,\
bone to make me believe tt was cauaed
by pullin1 upward,'' be 11ld,
Noguchi said Mooday that Mm Tole
had not been drlntln1 and had taken no
drop the nipt of Aug. I , lieB, when she
and four other perlOl\I were atabbed and
shot to ckath ot her Benedict Canyon
Ellate.
Noguchi told lhe jury in the murder
trlal of the .. MaDSOO family" that blood
tests on the bodies of the v i c t i m a
indicated neither MW Tate nor hair
stylist Jay Sebring, to whom she once
was e11gaged, were under the influence pf
alcohol or narcotlcll.
He said tests ahoW1!d Polish writer
It's a Dog's Lile
Voltyck P'rylcowskl Ind col!.. h<!ml
Abigail Folger each had !Um IDlall
amounta ol the drug MDA, known u
"super speed", and both appuently bad
been drinkin&.
Noguchi uid none ol the vlctiml had
been sexoally moleatld.
Defendants Cbarlea Manson, L.ealle Van
Houten, Susan Atkins and Patricia
Krenwinkel sat quJeUy at the COUJ'lle1
table during lhe coroner's I o t 1
testimony.
Speaking clinkaliy Ind ~.
Noguchl described wounds Ind poinkd
out on a diagram ol FrykowUi'1 body the
location of 51 Wb woundlo, 13 W:eratlons
Ul'IT._.
Bonnie, the pet Basset bound of the Gordon Schroeder family of Mil-
waukee, Wis., has learned that equality demands of women go un-
heeded by Clyde, the falnily'a pet skunk, when he decides.to take
over.
Market RaJ.ly Slows Down;
Error Blacks Out West
NEW YORK -Traders and investors
today began cashing in thl!ir gains, br:lng~
ing a fi ve .. da y 1toct market rally
blacked out on the coast Monday by com·
puter failure to a grinding halt
Thousands of stock market watchers
were disappointed jn California when a
transmission malfunction in the highly
technical system cut off results of
lrading.
A thorough investigation by the
American Telephone & Telegraph Com·
pany. put the blame on a problem in
Oakland, which is a critical relay point
for many West Coast point.s. '
The DAILY PILOT waa IDIODI ..,...
papers Ir.ft without its cuatomary dai1y
clOl!ling financial tables, but ATiit autho
orities said they had every hope no reput
problem woold crop up today. (See Pages
J().ll).
Prices COtllinued to allde lower In
moderate trading today as profit taking
smothered the rally of the past five days.
The Dow Jones average of 30 ind~
trials was off 8.07 to 751.51 at noon.
Declines held a small but widening lead
over advances on the New Yort Stock
EJ:cbange.
Gretel Wins Again
I ntrepidSquelche_s Plans
Of Heritage Cup Racer
By ALMON LOCKABEY
DAILY PILOT ... ttfl9 ldffW
NEWPORT, R.I. -Bill Ficke r of
Newport Beach and Intrepid Monday
dcep.sixed Charlie Morgan's dream o(
becoming an America's Cup defender by
de.reaUng Heritage by a whopping .even
minutes 28 seconds over the 24.3-mile
course.
The blue-blazered Amerka's Cup selec~
tion committee pulle~ alongside lieritage
almost before she was made fast to the
dock with the erpeet.ed "we regret to in·
form you" message.
Morgan had seen the bandwriling on
the bulkhead before he crossed the finish
line. He jovially Invited all the wives and
girlfriends of the crew to board the
Heritage from her tender and broke out
the beer on the way bact to the dock.
Fkker and his crew followed the com-
mittee to thelterifage docflO offer their
condolences and congratulations for a
good series.
Heritage was ahead of Ficker by about
200 yardJ at one poinL The race was sail·
ed in light southwesterly wlmb under
clear skies.
The race between Australia's Gretel JI
and the French yacht France was
another seesaw batUe.
Gretel had a three-second advantage at
the start and increased the lead to 1:14 at
the weather mark. But France out-
distanced her rival on the second leg and
led at the reachlng mark by eight
seconds, increasing the lead to 17 ieconds
at the eDd of the triangle.
However, Gretel's Jim Hardy out·
maneuvered France's Pierre De!Four on
the fourth leg and held an advantage of
1:04 at the second weather mark.
At the filth mark Grttel led by 13
secoods on the downwind run after losine
the lead to France four Umes. 11te time
difference at the finish was Gretel by
1:32.
This nee saw Baron Marcet Blch's 41
million dream poised precarlouslJ over
Davey's locker.
'nlis will be a best four out of aeven
series to d~ne which yacht will be
the official challenger and Gretel JI
already has two wins.
Newport Faces
Traffic Woes
Over Freeway
Newport Beach ti studytn( what It •
thould study obou1 !be ...., 11 mJclit be
In wllboot !be Pacific Coast Jll&inr•Y·
The City Council Monday cliroc:W •
Mayor F.d Hirth to follow up bis .... -
gestioo that the dty pr<pare a -1
al the COll!iderallons !acing the cily and
its looming monumental traffic problem. ~ _
Tbe m>yor will actually be making a .
list ol tbo thinp 1hat should be in-· •
corporated btto a study of future ltRft 1
:
and highway plans.
The list, councU memben pointed ont, -
would include a Dover Drive-Padfic: ,
Coast l!J&lnray interct>ange md widenll>C : '.
of !be Back Bay Bridge. . • _
It mlg!Jt oJao tnclude • --; Bay Bridge -connecting Sin Jooquio ·• _
Hills Road witb, say, 32nd SReet Jn Costa
M~. .
It mlght oJao include • lilt of -• : equally thoull)>firovOOng proposals of -•
what mllbl be necesary wlthoul, or ...., •
with the controversial treewar.
Public oplnloo In Newport currentlJ OJ>
pears to be nmnbig ogalnlt the plumed : •
Ptclfic Cout Freeway through tbo city,. .
at leaat olong !be adopted route, and ·,.
many residents believe that the road can ..
be ellminakd entlreiy.
The council hu reluctantly, for the .
most port, "'4orsed tllminallon, but, as .
Councilman Richard Qoul put II. "When ••
the poopte -the --... time In the fulure, they will IOddenlJ 11,Y, ••
'What dld we do this for?' " •
Hirth said !be people llb>uid tnmt the . ;
problem before 1 vote is taken to tab •
away the council's power to determlnt . •
freeway routes.
1bere is CWTenUy a citizens' cont· .
miitee peliUon being circulakd that ·•
would force a refemtdum on just IUCb a _
charter amendmenL
A aeCorid peUUon clrcuiakd by th& •
same group would force lbe oouncll to ...
either rescind the current route qree. ~ ,
ment , or put the questions io the wtera .
as to whether it llhouJd be rescinded..
Councilman Milan M. Dostal com-
mented that construction ~ a second ;,
Back Bay Brldgt would d e s t r o y ·:
Eutblu!I. •
That Is euctl,y tbo point Hirth .... '
~lomili. <;
The olternoUm to !be c.ut P'ntny •
may be more homnclous then tbo
auperhlghway, It.ell.
Hirth .. Id he would ccnlet with both '
slate and county llialnnY _.i, U '
necessary, in drawing up the "llat of e&:Do
aiderations. ''
'!be widening of !be Histing Bacl: Bly •
span along the Coast Highway, several ·
c:oUncll members noted, 1' gobig ID be-"
mandatory with or without the freeway. •
And !be Dover interchange ollowinr
continual -of tralfic Imm llover": Drive to east!Jottnd c.ut lliglnray ts o1ao~:.
bnperatlve, kCOrding to Coundlmu -
Undlley Parsom.
Comedian Cosby
Nowa Student
AMHERST, Mess, (UPI! --· BUI Colby hu been. accepted u the
University ol Maaacbuaettl' pduate
&ehool of educallon.
O!!lciaia said Monday Cosby had Ill' •
piled and been accepted, but a
•Pok<llnon did not know bis plana !or ,
reglstertng ud taking c:laaa. "He .
~·t want people otarlng," be said.
Before ~ became a stir in the
televialon series ••1 Spy'' IDd •"!be BUI
Cosby Show," he told 1 re~ ... I just
want to mate 1 blfl'. pUe of moneJi;.d
then do what I rull)> like -tH " -
Thus ended an $800,IXX> dream of the
young Florida designer and builder who
footed the bill for the project himself. He
designed and built the boat, built moat of
the sails, and perSonally skippered the
boat during lhe July and August trials.
Intrepid got the start over Heritage and
Jncreased the lead at every mart except
one. She led by 1: 12 at the windward
mart, 23 seconds at the reachlng m1rk,
one minute 47 seconds at the end or the
trlangle, three minutes a .-ids at tho
-nd weather maric, tllree minute> 57
Girl Takes A~id
-. •t the mth mark Ind 7:28 ot tho
finish.
But the time 1PllU at the marb do not
lcll the whole story. On the oeoond leg
Storm Nears Hawaii
HONOLULU (UPI) -Tropic.al •tonn
Maggie with gale winds and flooding
rains wts due to hit the Island of Haw1JJ
at noon Wednesday. •nd then sweep
northward throulll lbe r...i of !be i.lland
cbalD.
5-y.ear-old in Serious Condition
A S.year-dd girl Is In seriOUJ cond!Uen
today becaUH she accidentally BWallowed
on LSD tlbiet Monda;' nllbt, Santo An•
police reported.
The victim, Deanna Bryan of 1117 S.
Evergreen SI., b In SI. JOl<Ph't Hospital.
Th< pilysictan oUending Iha lllU. 1kl
said lhia mornlns that there is no way at
this time to determine the extmt of
damoge to the child's pi\yslcal or mentsl
well being.
The child's mother, Dollie Ann Bryan,
colied police at oboot t :IO last night whta
htr daullll« ~ lldllll "ltnqe..
Sbo told hwulllltan !be lltU. cti1 became bystertc.tf upon aeetng a kltlen .
with which she had been very MendlJ.
invioualy.
!oln. Bryan told pollce that slit ..,4 Iler
daughter had been vbltinJ !rtends .,
Anaheim Mooday Ind It ti bellmd thol
•he found !be LSD teblel on • dreaer In
!be Anaheim home.
Police have wlthbeld !be names ol the
persons !be girl Ind her molber vislted.-
lnftstlgatora who wtn called to the
Bryan home Nld Dulnot, "oppemd le
be dlJorltnkd. She ""'1ld not ta1it ucepl '° t:l"/ ~' • I
'·
r·
•
• •
'
'
DAILY I'll.OT ' . T-. A""'l 25, 1970
'
Mid east , T alks Begin
U.N. Medi at.or Mee ts lsrae!., Arab Envoys
,~ .... ..-.... ....,
' . , When Cltrl1tlno Will,,,... of New·
'rk, England left for • vacation
th her family, she put • dummy
@fessed M Ii woman on-her bedl.o
~wart Qurglars.. Th.e ruse worked
tcin well.' Detectives forced their
way into the Wllmores' home after
befug alerted by a neighbor. JaMes
\.eMlbetter. who thought he saw a
body. Leadbett.r said later he had
.been nostna around the house to
make sure nothing was amiss. The
police said anybody planning to
leave a dummy ,In a home should
advise ·authorities befor~and.
•• • ~~ Friends telephoning J ean Nash
lien an answered by growls and
arks. Sometimea the line iJ dis-
lconnected. Mrs. Naab, of old Wind-
~r. En"land, says the unwanted worin~ 1ervlce ls provided by
dO( Cleopatra, who sits by the
bone for hours waiting for a call.
Mrs. Nash cannot grab a ringing
le!ephone first. Cleopatra removes
th• handset' lo her basket and
l\'Orries it
•
A ,... ldlto brolc< into lhc
Dtitch .,.bal1y in Stockholm
climbtng through a bathroom
window Sunda11 got no farther
than the bathtvb, according ·to
tht police, who found him
cufeep there. He \OOI awkmed
and ch4F11Cd ~~ pMbli< lnto:l-
catio!I.
•
Gardner St•n Mlcok of NotUn&·
ham, England saw Michael Hug·
ginl, 1, crying because be bad ""
pet i..enter in a childr1n'1 WMLlu-1 .
pet contut at •a local fair., Ha
used bis spade to uproot a aix·1nch
worm for Micbaei who won first
pr!zt ... • A man who bet~48 cents on seven
horses over the weekend ln ·LOn·
don, England, won $27,715, a
&pokesman for the William Hill
Bookmaking Organization said.
The lucky bettor. ·Identified only
as ''Mr. Albert,'' was remembered
by a teller who watched him bor· ·
row eight cenll from a friend in
order to complete hl1 wagers . • Schoo Im l • t re•·• 0001'11•
Roy started her 40Q.mil• holiday
trip through England ln a hors ..
drawn Gypsy caravan, taking wtth
her a hen that likes to drink beer.
"Those alcoholic •U• certainly
pack a punch," she said. • rThere are 20,000 litter baskets
1'11i1slnR from New York City
dreets. Envlronmehtal Protection
E\ni1trator Jerome Kretchmar,
gave the estimate Sunday,
most of them probably were
fiolen as curiosities, because they
•e "enormously camp." The city
19 t4Jnklng of lnstalllng brigbUy-
itlored ftberglus trash boxes that
~uld be bolled to sidewalks to
p'event theft, Kretcluner .said.
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Gunnor
v. Jarrlna. !he -1•1 U.N. mediator. to-
d17 !onnaUy opened hi• e!lort l<Ml>y to
negoti1to peace In the Middle E1st.
Jarring met first in hls 38th floor offiw
al U.N. headquarters wllh Yo!ef Ttkoah,
Israel's ambassador to the U.N .• and then
conferred wtlll Abdul Hamid Shara!,
Jordan's envoy lo Washington. It w1s not
known whether Egypt's U.N. et-
b&ssador, Mohammed Hauan El Zayyat,
would see Janing today.
Israel. Egypt and Jordan h.!lvt agreed
to d'le talb under Jarring'• auspices
which followed a ce~ftre aloag the Suez
c~al beginning Aug. 7. 11le: United States
proposed I.he lruce and the talk!, and
JarTing announced Monday afternoon
that they would becin today .
"U the Arab 1ovemmenl1 genu1nel1
wlsb to dJICuu pea<e wltll UI, the CJb.
'jtct.lve wUJ be 1chleved,111'ek0ih'11ld to-·
dly. He told newsmen he informed J1r·
rlnr ol the "basic prlnclplo1" ol the
lsr1ell position and added:
"It W<>Uld not be uJtfW to enter Into
details of our diScuSSl.ons. 1be objective
ii establishment of a jlllt and lasting
peace between Israel and Egypt ind
Israel ind Jordan. All of us rtalite that
after 22 years of 1ggrastons, solutions to
the 11UUIY diffk:ulti., will be dU!lcult."
Tekoah scheduled another meeting with
Jarrint this afternoon before leaving
tonight for consultatiom: In Jerusalem.
His departure will presumably leave
Israel without a representa.ttve here for
more talks with Jarring but Tekoah was
not expected to remain long I n
Jeru.ulem.
Tekoah conferr.d wllll Janina from
t :JO a.m. untll lO:Xl a.m. In Jarring'• ol·
* * * * * * Lebanon Claims Israelis
Attacked Border Village
B¥1:..P='1aey ~"Z.or::t;
Israeli troopa ""1lled lnID ooulhem
Lebanon today for the aecond atralght
day and blew up houses near the border
villqe of Chebaa. Arab iuen1llu
,.portod lnfliclln& heavy cuualtla and
damages on the t.aelil In attacU on the
Lebaneae and .Jordanian fronts.
The military spokesman in Beirut said
the lsaeli ground attack was preceded by
an arUUery barrage bl wblcb four hornet
were destroyed and fou r damiged. He
said the Israeli troops blew up ah: more
housts on the ou\sklrts of Chtba1, J.5
miles in.side Lebanese territory, before
withdrawing. There were no casualties
r'PQrted in the attack, the spokesman
said.
On Monday, Lebanon said Israeli
ground b'oops blew up a building near the
villige of Yaroon and kldnaped one
person. Arab guerrillas, who have vowed
to frustrate efforts toward a poUtk:al set-
tlement, have continued attacU a1atnat
Israel.
In Amman, the newspaper Falah,
publication for 11 major 1uerrlll1
organlutlon1, 11.ld commandos 1Ulcked
Israeli posltiom at EJ Rouu on the sM>pes
or &oft. Hermon in Lebanon Monday eve-
ninJ with heavy mortan. It said "heavy"
casulllles and damages wen Jnfiicted on
Ille Isra.U.. by d~ecl hits.
Fatah said Al Assila guerrillas liter
clashed for 2~~ bours with Israeli forces
in the ctntral Jordan Valley. Heavy
artillery and howltzt't's were used In
which two Israeli troop carriers were
dutroyed ind 1ll their occupants killed
or wounded , the newspaper said. It said
one guerrilla was wounded In t.he blttle
near Um El-Wattad.
All was reported quiet along the Suez
canal front but charges and coun-
tercharges continued. Both Egypt and Israel accused each
flther of violating the 90-day cease-fire
that began Aug. 7. And in Cairo,
diplomatic sources said Egy pt an~
Jordan will insist on complete Israeli
wlthdraw1l from Arab territory seized in
the 1987 wu and safeguards for Palesti-
nian rights in the New York negotiations.
f
~gela's Sister on Boat
From Canada to Cuba
SAINT JOHN, N.B. (UPI) -Canadian
authorities, 1cting on a request from the
FBI. checked out a groop ol. Americans
headed for Cuba today, but failed to find
any trace of Angela Davis. wanted in the
United States on murder charges.
However, a young woman aboard the
-OJ.ban vessel "Conrado Benitn" was
identified by others l.J1lOl1I the $00
Amtricans bound for Havan1. u Mrs.
Fania Davis Jordan, Miss Davis's sister.
After an initial "no comment" the
woman refused to speak lo the press.
One reporter who tried lo &el addltionaJ
information was shooed away by the
woman's male companion.
Royal Canadian Mounted Po lice of·
ficials confirmed that they were actively
seeking Miss Davis.
!'We had a-request from the FBI to be
on the lookout for Miu Davia," said
RCMP SU pt. P. H. Bourassa. "In this
case, we ire llkin& special precautiorui."
He would not say what special
measures were being taken. The RCMP
here said 11at Wftk a nationwide alert
wa1 on in Canada for Miss Davia.
Asked lf _ FBI agents were In Salnt
John, Bourassa aald "Not lo my knowl-eda'· But when the FBI uk.i u1 !or help
in find.int a wanted person, ~e, try to
give them a hand."
RCMP officers on the setne said it was
doubtful that Mils Davis woold try lo
mingle with the "Venceremos" ("We Will
Win") group headed for Cuba to harvest
citrus fruits, because of the publicity and
offldaJ 1ttentlon surrounding their ar-
rivals and departures.
IT'S NO T ONLY
WAY TO FLY
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A superior
court judge has issued a preliminary in·
junction prohibiting dlstrlbUtion of a
ma1ailne with photographs of women In
erotic pases and carrylna: Overseas Na-
tional Airways fli1ht baaa.
The injunction was is!IUed Monday
against Jaybird Enterprises and Parlla-
rTient News, publisher and distrtbutor of
the magai.ine "Roommate Wanted."
.Judge Richard Schauer took the action on
a suit Oled by 0Vtrse11 National
Airways.
;Tornadoes Teasing Texas
.. Sh-O we rs Scattered, But Mo st of Nation Sunn y
nlYllWGf USA'IUTllU MIMl .. IWT IO l:llA.M.IST a ...... 1 1 _.. .. Tlltft~llN• ..... "" ,l'fC. .... ....
Oce overlooklna the Et1t River. ~
Alked .whether he would deS<:ribe the
openlni session .aa procedural or substan-
tive, Tekoah aald : '-'One should not
categorize the discussions. It wu an open
meet.in&.'' ~
Janina set no deadlines in lht
dlscusslon1 and made no estimates about
when progre11 mljht be evident. But. in
announcing Monday the t.tlb would begin
within Z4 hours, he took 1 posiUve view:
"t fttl sure that the parties wlll enter
the dtscw.sioos with the firm Intention ol
finding a solution. I hope that with good
will and understandi'ng they will in time
reach agreement on a just and lasting
peace."
There were no plans at this time for
joint meetings of lhe three represeo-
tatives. Jarrin& said he would see them
"one by one."
Senate Ethics
Committee Bans
Car Lease Deals
WASHINGTON (AP} -The Senate
Ethics Committee hu forb idden futurt
cut-rate automobile leasing deals that put
50me senators behind the wheels of Lin-
coln ContlnentalJ for $750 1 year.
In Issuing. the ruling u 1n advisory
recommendation, the panel did not say
which aenalora had accepted the low-cost
leases from automobU• manufacturers
seeking to promote their cars by having
celebrities drive them .
IL said only that "certain senators and
a Senate officer per&0oally have leased
an automobile from an automobile
manufacturing company under apecial
and favorable terma."
Sen. Jolu\ C. Stennis (0-Miss.),
chairman of the Ethica Committee,
reported its findings to the Senate Mon-
day, declaring the pr let ice should end
with the current 5tl of leases, if not
before.
At leasl a dozen senators repor'\tdly
had leased automobiles in what SteMis
called "a promotional program of many
yean' standing."
Stennla sald the commUtee lound DO
tvldenc:e of wrong-doing or improper in-
fluence in connection wllh the leases.
But It made this recommendation :
"'Existing private leases or automobilts
to senators at favorable rates should be:
terminated at or before the end of the
current model year. The!t leases should
not be renewed .
"In making private agreements in the
ruturt for the leasing or automobiles,
senators should nbt acctpt any favorable
tenns and conditions that are available to
them only as senatora."
Ford r.1olor Co., Cho'sler Corp. and
General Motors Corp. 'All had acknow·
ledged providing cut0rate cars to gov-
ernment officials and some members or
the. House and Se:n1te as a promotional
device.
The Continental leuea, at $'150 a year,
were less than one-third the normal price
for rtntll of the luxury c1r1.
Ul"t T .......
REC EIVED $1 0,000
Oh io's S.n. Young
Water Se!alptress
A hot day a nd a cool lake ... and a pretty girl wi th a tos11 of her hud
creates a water sculpture in Spokane, \Vasb. This young lady's crea-
tivity was aided by a camera with the shutter speed set at 1/1,000t.h
of a second .
Government Health Aides
}""'ea.r Diphthe1aia Outbreak
WASHINGTON (AP) .:... Government
disease detecUves say limited outbreak.s
of ~iphtheria, U1e ancient child killer,
could spread across the United States,
wHh ghettos especially vulnerable.
T'hey implied' that any city in which
half the children are hot immunized could
fact an epidemic such as the one sweep-
ing San Antonjo. Tex.
A recent Sllrvey showed San Antonio
had inununiied only about half Its
children, corvpared with 70 percent for
comparable cities of 700.000 population.
The city has listed 56 Clsts of the vicious
disease this year -~ of them this
month.
'USED IN PREC AMPAIGN'
ConM<tlcut't Son. Dodd
Experts of the U.S. Public Health
Service·s Communicable Disease Center
in Atlanta say 75-35 percent or the na·
tion's children are immunized against
diphtheria, but they rate th.is 11 only
fa irly good.
The exPerts said in an interview that ?3
states do not require pre-school shotl
with the tripl e DPT vaccine agalnl:l
diphtheria. whooping cough and tetanus
or lockjaw.
Those stales are Alabama, Alaska,
Ariz.ona. C.Olorado, Delaware, Florida,
Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Montana. Nebraska,
Nevada, North and South Dakota,
Oklahoma, Ortgon, Texas, Utah, Ver.
mont, Washingto:i, Wbconsin and Wyom·
ing.
They said that for maximum 11fety
acainst all three maladies, chlldrtn
should git thret shots of the trtpte vat>
cine a month apart. beginning at about J
month! of age -Followed by a booster
shot at age 1: another booster upon
entering school : and a booster every 10
years thereafter.
Diphtheria Is named for the Greek
word "diphthera ." meaninc hlde or
leather.
That's because the ancient malldy ls
chara cterized by formation of a thick,
somewhat leather·llke falH membrane
vn the lining or the throat and other arw
of the respiratory tract.
The poison of I.he bacteria that came It
a.lso can spread throughout lht. 1y1tem.
affecting even the htart. Death can ocair
in an agony of 'chokln&.
Hij ac ked Je t's
Pilo t Believes
Bornb Was Hoax
AlbuM,_
AllC~··· Allt11I• ••M.,•ll•" •11"'•'dr; loOw
t : .. " ....
.~ ... Democratic Coff er s Lo se
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -The pilol of
a Tram World Airlines jewner hijacked
to Cult-by a passenger in a U.S. Army
uniform said today he was "99 percent
sure", tile young man was bluffln1 about
a bomb on the plane but could not take u.. -risk.
c ... , ..
'•Ir tQ'lt. Lltllt 'lltrltblt W!Ni
lllttit •1111 l'Nf'flllll "'°""' "'-Int -fffl'lt • flt It ILM!t Ill t~I
.... ,. llMI WHl!fMe•. 141111 tMtY' n. C...111 1-111,, .. ,,_ ,,_ ..
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s...., "'""· 7'14e• TUllM'f
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....,. lltt. •in'·"'• l4h r:• '""· ,,..... ..... 1'80 '""' .... 1:41 ,,.,,.,
.....
Clllc•tt c111c1-" Cl-tll'lf ......
O.trelt
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l"wtWd ·-Mil-_, ...
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Mltml a..cft 0Mllw1ua1t
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°'"'"' ..... Jl:otllt• l'N!•ftlf>lllt
,lllltli.·911 .....,,1.
"'"""" 11..i 11vtt "M SK,.."'tftlt
SI. LOU!I
SIU Ll~I Cit~
Stfl 0'"6
It" Pr11\Clt(t
lflnl• h'Mtt ...... , ....... ,~,,,,., 4.
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W ASHJNGTON (IJl'l) -The Senato
DemocraUc Campeifrl Committee 11ve a
!Dial of $11),0llll to two &onalnn !ct use In
primary elecUON they later decided not
to enter. The commillee doesn't expect to
gtt any of the money back.
Stn. Thomu .Dodd of Connecticut
received $10,000 for UM In aeeklna: the
Democratic nomlnatk>n for re~lecUon,
but later decided to abahd<>n tht party
and run 11 an independent.
Sen. Stephen M. Young of Ohio also 11c-
ctpled •10,0001 but lattr decided to retire.
A spokesman for the committee, set up
to give fl nari.ctal aid to wiators st-eking
re-elect.Ion, «tld the fUndJ bad not bttn
returl'led and It was auumed the money
had Deen SptnL
'·The committtt dots not 1ntlcipale
lhal it wUI be 1etUng the money baek,"
the spokesman said. "At leut. there
hasn't been any eJtort to recover iL "
He added, "A good mnay of th~e ~
pie tlncumbent Stnate DtmocrataJ sptnl
money In preparation for their campa.lgn.
We feel it .,.TIU\d be: Improper to s"'tek
relmbur11ement since It wa.1 taken in &OOd
faitn at the time \flty Intended to be the
Democratic candldetl!I."
Dodd was not Jn W81hlf\lton, but hll
administrative aubt.Anl, James Garlllnd.
,....aid. tilt (the money ) was uaed durlna
U>e ptwcampalp ume. '' ,
The 713 jet, diverted to Havana Mon-
day night a!ler lhe hijacker said he had
an accomplice aboard who would "blow
up the plane" on signal. returnecl to tta
scheduled _dC>liO"i9n.Jtero at !JP .a.m.
today with 71 of the GrilifW. •
pasienietl aboard.
The hljaclltr, tenllUvely ldeoUllod
!run .the -er manllut u lloblri
L. Lobadle, wu liken Into cUltod)' in
Havana by Cl&ban autborltlel.
The pilot, Capt. Warttn G11011e.
Bridgeville, Conn., said he decided not to
risk calling the hljacker'1 bluff. Hi uld
no one attempted to gr1b lht young ma"
because "we don't take ch1nct.1 like
that."
George •id ''I only cauUoned I.ht l*>"
pie to rtmaln c1lm" and they did. He
said the hijacker. ducrlbed as •icalm 1nd
collected,'' gave no re.uon for \\'ttnUnc te ao to C\lba and remained 1ilent duriOI
Ille ealende<! trip.
1 I
1 I
T •
Fo1111iain Valley
VOL 63, NO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, '1970 JEN CENTS .. '
Seal Bea.c4 factions Cla·sh Over ·New Agency
By TERl!V COVILLE
Of ,... Dellf ,..,.. ltMf
The Seal Beach City Council wa1 like
the eye of a hurricane Monday night -
calm, peaceful and silent. Then the
meeting opened.
The.re wasn't a calm, peaceful or silent
moment for the nei:l four hours as war-
ring facUons on the council and it1 lhe au-
dience harangued and insulted each
other. ·
lt began with the routine Jecood
reading of 1n orclln1nce dlang!ng the
organizaUon Of the clty'1 e<1ntrover1Ial
Riverfront Redevelopment Agency. It
paseed its first test a week ago on a 3-2
cotmcil vote.
"I lhink thert ls a serious question of
law as to whether a new agency can be
formed. This is a charter city," said
Albert Del Guercio, who rose from the
audience during the meeting.
The change In the Riverfront
Redevelopment Aaency would eliminate
Ult city council as the qe:ney'1.govemln1
board and replace It wilh five men 1p-
pointed by the mayor and approved by
the council.
The agency ls charged with redevelop-
lng blighted city areas. It has t.ulng
powers separate from munlclpal govern-
meol
Detractors or the change claim it would
make the agency responsJble only to a
three-man council majority. Opponents or
the change have l.ps.lsted they wut
e1ected olflcials, rather than appointed
ones, to control the agency's taxing
powers.
"'Ibis chart.er .does not .give the mayor
the power to appoint any board. U he
does he Js usurping power. We have a
council-manager, not mayor form oC
government," contiooed Del Guerlco,
who has been acUve in the recall move-
ment sh.aping up against Oayor Morton
Baum and Councilmen Thomas Hogard
and Conway Fuhrman.
2 Teens Held • Ill Murder
Pair Suspected in Beach Merchant's Death
A pair of suspects in the slaying of a
Huntington Beach man found nude on his
bed Monday, his throat cut and four stab
wrund.s in bis chest and back, are in jail
today.
One captured was driving the dead
man's car, just as police we.re heading
for his home le question him about possi-
ble involvement.
Miles C. Cox. 18, a laborer, of 15700
Irene Way, Wesbninster, and Fre.dericil'
J. Yanke, 20, of Gardena, are in Han·
Fires Started
tington Beach Ci l y Jail for questioning.
Each is charged with murder in the
weekend death of Walter Christie, 51, of
8131 San Angelo Drive, partner in an
aircraft hardware firm.
Yanke is charged additionally with
receiving stolen property and ar-
raignment on all counts ii expected
Wednesday in West Orange County
Judicial District Court.
"Yanke may not have been present
when it ha~. hut he might be an ac-
San Quentin Cons Riot;
Guards Vse Tear Gas·
SAN QUENTIN (AP) -San Quentin
prison guarda drov• IQO d<monstr•linl
priloner1 into their cells with tear gas to-
aay af~ nine offices were damaged by
araon-caused fires. prison officials said.
The prisoners staged a sitdown strike
ln the prison recreation yard to press a
do:r.en demands issued by black prisoners
during an experimenlal Superior Court
hearing Monday within the prison walls.
White and Mexican-American prisoners
alao loo)!: part in the demonstration,
prison officials said.
A call for more black and Mex.ican-
Americaa counselors we.re amon1 the
demands.
Minority race priiOnen total SI percent
or the 3,600 prisoners at the state prison
Nixon Prepares
Clemente F ete
For Candidates
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of Ille D•llr Pl .. I St•ff
President Nixon turned to t h e
California political scene today as he and
the First Lady prepared to welcome 150
Ripublican candidates and wives to their
Sao Clemente home at a 5 p.m. reception.
The guests were to include GOP can-
didates for Congress. state senate and
anemb\y and the Board of Equalization.
'['he Nixons gave a dinner last month at
the 'Spanish-style home honoring Gov. and
Mts. Ronald Reagan and Sen. George
Mdrphy <R-Calil.) The President has
been promoting the election o f
Republicans in California and elsewhere
in various ways rrom socia l events to the
llandard picture posing technique.
Earlier in the day. the President met
with top foreign policy aides tn ponder
chances for peaet in I.he Middle East as
(See NIXON, Page !J
on the shores of San Francl!oo Bay near
San Rafael, 15 miles north ol San Fran-
cisco.
Guards found nine counselors' offices
damaged ln one cellblock after driving
the demon&trating prisoners back to their
cells.
Furniture, wooden window frames and
other woodwork was charred in the
preliminary 1teel and concrete cells.
There were oo reports of injuries.
First sign of trouble came when
prisoners refused to report to their prison
jobs after breakfast and congregated in
the rl!Cttalion area.
They repeated the demands delivered
in a five-page letter Monday to prison of·
ficlals. They included :
-Freeing of all "political prisoners.''
-Freeing of tbree Soledad State Prison
inmates who face trial in the slaying of a
guard last Jan, 13.
~losing of two discipllnary cellbloc ks,
where. 200 prisoners are now confined.
-AppoinUnent of a black warden.
-Appointment of black and Mexican-
American assistant wardens.
-More black and Mexican-American
prison officers and counselors "equal to
white officers."
High Rise Talk
Slated at Meet
ijuntington Beach residents will be
given the chance Wednesday night to
learn more di.ails on the 17-etory, 287-
unil retiremeot apartments being plan-
ned by the F'lrst Christian Church ,
A representative of the architectural
firm of Blurock and Donald will describe
the plans at a meeting of the HOME
Council in the council annex at 8 p.m.
The church's application for a variance
to build the tower at Main Street and
Adams Avenue has been continued by the
planning commlssloncn to Sept. 15.
Valley Teen Help. Booster
Group to Study Clinics
A steering comm.itt.ee, formed to get
Pountaln Valley's Teen Help organization
back on itl feet, plan1 to study drug
cllnica throughout the county before of.
faing advice on the needs of the city'•
youth.
Committee membenl met for the fint
Ume Monday night, declded they l1cked
sufficient Information on tetn program11,
then scheduled a trip to the Anaheim
P'ree Clinic cept. I le study their pr&-
cedures.
Jim Hollywt)Od, admlnlstraUve assiJ..
t..tnt to the city manager, aid moat com-
mtttet l membera wanted to read mor1
'·
about drug and t~ programs before
telling Teen Help how to run it.! opera·
tion .
The committee: was established after
Teen Help closed Ill youth cent.er three
weeks ago In the fact of local business
complaints. .......,
"We do hive a poissible site for t h e
youth center. temporarily, but we .,1;on't
know unUI Wednetday," Hollywood ,.Id.
He has been working as liaison between
the steering committee and the city sU.ff.
The tommitlee ts compooed of 1 dozen
resident.I from various professions in the
t ity.
I
complice," said Detective Capt. Grover
L. Payne.
The detective chief, who hu been
criticized by some news media, said
reluctance to release facts early in the
Christie homicide case was euentiaJ.
An all-points bulletin was broadcast
Monday for Christie's mis.sing light blue
Mustang.
The car was spotted at 6 p.m. by Of.
ricer Ray Hattabaugh, parked bes l d e
Bolsa Chica State Beach. bringing ad-
'KE Y IS ACCOUNTABILITY'
Fountain Valley's Brick
•
Detailed Plans
Moving Valley
School Systems
By TERRY COVILLE
Of Ille D .. l'f 1'1111 11•11
A child is not a motor car and the
Fountain Valley School District doesn't
consider itself a factory .
Bul that doesn't stop school ad-
mlnistrators from tapping industrial in·
genuily to get the wheels o{ education
moving in high gear.
Planning -down to the most minute
detail -is the basis of the best industrial
systems, and now of the Fountain Valley
School District.
District officials have outlined the
district's philosophy of education and
have required principals of each of the 13
schools to in1plemenl that philMOphy in
writing with a detailed "education plan"
for each school.
"Accountability is the basis of it," ex-
plains Mike Brick, the d Is tr I ct
superintendent, "From the governor on
down, sl.l.te legislators are telling the
schools to show them what Is happening."
"We have long had our theories ot
·educatiOh -how to teach children. Now
they are asking us to prove It works."
ditional police officers and helicopter in
to comb the surrounding are.a.
"Prior to that, we believed Cox was in-
volved," said CapL Payne, adding that
patrolmen were en route to his
Westminster home when it was found.
"We thought the suspect might st l 11
have Owistie's car," he continued. "We
didn't want him to read too much in the
papers and dump it."
A pair of teenaged girls and a boy were
(See HOMICIDE, P1ge Z)
* * * Coroner Hits
Beach Police
JlepPr~t Delay
l!y µ.AN DDUtlN'
ot ,.. Dmtt' """ .....
Htmtingtno Beach police wete'Snwtin,
today from criticillm leveled by coroner'•
deputies over whit they termed the delay
in reportJng a bomJcide to the county of·
lice.
Deputies, citing a state law that deaths
are "immediately reportable" to their of.
fice. complained that they were not
notified of the slaying until 1 l a.m.
although the body was discovered al 8:%2
a.m.
Det. Captain Grover Payne commented
tills morning," I don't beUeve in publicly
airing problems between us and another
agency."
Deputy Coroner John Gill, who was
assigned the case, did not arrive at the
scene until 11 :10 a.m. But he found the
Huntington Beach detectives cooperative.
"They knew we had them with their
trousers down," GUI said. "There was too
much at stake for them not to be helpful.
Whether their cooperation was a true
reflection of their feelings or not, I don't
know."
Gill did not hesitate to criticize the
delay in the report of the death.
"As aoon as they know they have a
dead body they should call us," he U·
plained. "Whether they are police or not.
they are not transcendental to the law."
Gill explained the need for In-
vestigating teams to work together. "The
police ahd courts entirely depend on us
for determination of death, for example,
which in this Instance establishes a prima
facie case of homicide."
Gill, a former police offictr himself,
said that coroner's deputies a r e
specialists in the cause and time of
death.
"When t was 1 policeman t might have
seen five or six bodies in a year -now [
see that mai:iy In a day.''
Magazi1ie Lauds
Gisler School The education plan for individual
schools is the sort of proof school people
are Jooldng for. Brkk hopes. Natimal hooors have been awarded to
Tht plan, in each of 13 cases, is a Gisler School in the FOU11tain Valley
lengthy document which outline!! in detail School District by lhe publishers of
what the school will teach, how to £each lllltructor maga:z.lnt. •
It and to whom. Gisler School has been named to the
It explains the district goals in concrete magi!IQhe's ll.st of "oe"'!Swort.hy,IChools" ,
terms. an.it < w~ll .aPiqegt Jn· l'be
One example is district goal 12: ••To A~st~l)u. 'J.Uue ·O' Instructor
provide a systemaUc plan for !Pa:1'Ucal aloit,wlth;O~ schqol1,~ 1amed. ·
support to .,.Isl staff and rt~ In the 1'!ie ochi>ol w!J hoi><ll'od 'for Its In·
achlevemellt of delioe<f dlslricl learning novallon.s ln'the field orlncllvidualtsed ln·
goals and objectives." 1tntcUo1.
The individual. achool rawrlte1 thal goal Gisler features·• variety of special pro-
.in 1JighUy more ~Ille tuml. Then the grama including a learning center with
"&ehool goal" ls matched with 1n o~ Jearnlng coordidator1, teacheralaldes, a
jec:tive. In this !Mtance 0 St!ectlng Items modlfled teaching IChedule to low time
Crom dlslr~ catalog as wt.ll 11 approved for plaanina proarama, high 11Se oC com-·
buy-out Items, the principal will establllh ' m\U;li.ty resQU.rces, ,ad otbu a,ctivttie•
(Set EDUCAnON, Pip Z) , ~•signed to •mphulze lhe llldl~ull.
' ),
' .
Councilmen H~ld Holden and Lloyd
Gummere supported Del Guercio'• con·
contention. ·
Other res.idents yelled insults from the
audience at Mayor Baum and Councilmen
Hogard and Fuhrman wbo have been
under fire themselves since their firing of
City Manager Lee Risner and City
Attorney Jim Carnes. •
"t don't think a debate ~tween !Jle city
council and tbe audience is necessary,"
interrupted Actinc Cit1 Manaier Oe.nn1s
Court<marche.
Counctlmen finllly pused the -4
re~ing 3-2. fhe ch11r11e ln format for ~
redevelopment agency becomes effective
in 30 days.
Beach erotion was nut up and c-_Qled
a small 1mount ol debate, thouCh aio.
different li.nt!s.
After several resident& demanded lzn.
mediate action to combat beach erOIJon,
the c.ou:ncll voted unanlmoully to ao
<Set SEAL, P1 .. ZI
. • -! 1 • ., • '
YOUTH .CORPS -Mrs.; Virginia Stirling works wilb high achoal.,atu,_
.dl!IM .P.~b:icia ~'~~rll!>n Jone•,,'14, bOlb of Sonia Mai la
llhrary at-Huntlng(o1rilliHh'• O'Glden Weot College. Studonta ""'
Al!long 21 ernpl6ye<l'lt GWC.'~ this summer under Noiglibor-
bood Youth Corps P1W™ri--· ' .
College Helper~ •
Youth, Corps W orkirig at GWC
I
Twenty-one students are working their
way ·tt;rough college wtille 1WJ in hlib
school.
The college is Golden West College in
Huntington Beach and the students are
yoongSters enlisted by the Neighborhood
Youth Corps.
They are worklng side by aide with the
staff at Golden West this summer, help-
ing the college prepare for opening day
Sept 9.
Most-of the youths come from families
with at least seven childrl!tl:. Many of the
families art · on welfare and the
youngsters work to help out.
Tbe money th.ey e~ comes ft:oln
federal funds. The money Is criUcal to
their families but the. youngsters also
value the experience.
"It's not like any other joti where you
just work. I'm learning something,'' said
Cecilla Carrillo, 16, Santa Ana, who baa
been a.WsUng in µ>e graphic arts lab.
The Neighborhood Youth Corp& tries to
place students in jobs ,that relate to what
the students want to do In the future, said
Ingrid' Scott, NYC director.
Not only are they receiving 'job e.:r-
perience, they have an opportunity for a
recommendation, and this is a blf plus In
the program, said Miss Scott. '"111.at
reaUy makes a difference when they ap-
ply"-r a job elsewhere ."
MiM Jooy Borg, .IDOther NYC director,
said the program also ia helping the
potential dropout student. .. They're mak·
Ing mooey now so they can afford to go
to school. They also know that someone,
<1ther than school 'authoril.ies, wunta them
to stay in school:"
"I have to finish ' high school at 1east,"
:said Arlette, Gartrnon, 15. "You can't &et
anywhere without a dlpl"oma." ·
Arlette would. like to go on to college
and major in aecre.tarlal science. At
Golden West this summer &he ts typing
and filing in the-admbsions o(flce.
Mrs. Virginia , Stirling. who wpenrtsea
three NYC students in the college 11brary,
commented on another dimension to the
program. ,
"I've. learned. a Jot this 1wnmer ·1boull>.
i • ' •
'Secret-of Suc¢.ess1
' Revealed to · Realtor& .
Real tslalt 1gents will l<!arn "The
Secret pf Success" Wedaelday morning.
Th1t'1 the Oieme of 1 tallc to be Jllvon
by Jwie Dunc:en or the Human-Outreach
Council at the 8 1.m. brHkl1st -Ung
of the ~unUngto .. Founlaln V1ljey Baird
of llealtors 11 Mlle Squore Goll-Club.
be neCess.ity for programs like thlJ. mt
the ne~ssity it is that tbeie youagsten
find out early where they want to IO and
what they want to dO, '' she aaid.
Working under bet guidance_ tbra:
students are binding periodicals.
"You can tell what 1tbey ~ InterelUd ln by looking at which magazines they
stop to leaf throgh," ahe said.
00e O[ the stpdents WU fa~ with
horticulture. Another became abeorb&I in
mythology so &he showed him theo -section on mythology, and be '1><nt nioni
of hi> break perlocfs reacfin(. '
"It was hard to ret him back to wort,"
she uid.
Court Date Set
In Embezzlement
Arraignment has been continued to
Sepl 2 in the Harbor Jlldicial Districl
Municipal Court for an Orange woman
arrested Aug. 17 on. cbarlU of em•
bezzling about $4,000 frnm 1 Newport
Beach civil en1lneerlng firm.
Terrle D. Mlles. 34, was 1ltre8ted at her
home at 349 N. Olive ·Si.1following a brief
investigation. 1
The woman baa been employed. as a
secretary-bookkeeper by Ronald W.
Mmln and Assoetates. Det.clivet Ill<!(•
company officials first, spotted IOme
di1Cttp811Cies in handiinr of funds four
months 1go.
Oruge
Wea titer
I.ow clouds to the morning and
high temperatures In the altemoori
conllnue Wednelday, with ~
r1nglng from is locally to • furth. er Inland.
INSIDE TODA T
f Britar• ii· 1ilinlf . th• •P•1"!cli
l iTtnfm~t>r in; -tf111ngl •to 'JWe•t
iii ¥•Ung l><oJilc from becoml,..
llooked an drugt. Pao< S-
I
'
• f ' ' l
'
'
--·--... --~ ...
DAILY l'ILOT " Tu
E1'!'!fl P ·ltcJa .. ..
,~· Huntington • 1e.
or U.S. Honor
.A' bllllo" doltat program for develop-
-•, -lopol1t1L he.tullliqotleo and
prHerV1tlon of the ecology ln Huntll'.\llOn
Beoch b being cited In the city's bid for
national honors.
Mon\I Nll!IJow•kj, <h•l'I"•~ o( ll!•
Clttzw Sleerltll Commltl#, m•4• lh•
pJtch for the-etly Monolay night )lolore the
All-Am.-tcA City jury in Portllnd, Or~
. Huntington Beach is one or 22 cities to
reach the finals of the competition for-the
citiftn ParlJoiPJlioO IWll'!I of I h' If•·
tioqaj llunielpal t,.ag~.
Tho wl!lner . .ii ''pecltd Io bt namlll
Wednesday morning.
Njllf>wskl dt!<rll>ed Ii•• c i l l • • D
re<H11IU011 proiecl.l In h~ pm•ntallOfl. He told or the creation of tJle eltiitn.J
org1111'Jtilm "' h••#• to l>ri!l• di•!fl!nl
lnlertfll Into ' •ll1•1• lore, for com·
munlly 1ctiofl; the conatru!'llo• ol the
2,m-car beach PIA:irli lot; O,.t J1ndscap-
lng cl the Pacine Coailt HighwJy; adop-
tion of the Top of the Pier P.l an for
Beach Kidnaping
Suspect Given
Stiff Sentence
Ont qf two men a~cuitd of u1Jn1 f
YOWIJ COllple 1114 lhtlr b1by IOn II
hoitalt dur!PJ • wl~ shoolout w ll h HWll!ql.on lltt<)J pqllct hu drl1'JI 1Ulf pruon 'ltrmo follo•l'!J hiJ pl•• of JUijly
to ""4f PJ pf 1114!iaflnJ an<I anntd rob-
be~P.n.ir CquJ'I Judge Simuel PrelJ•n
gavt D1vld Z.,ta"lo, :11, ~.lr1111ient, flv1
yea n. to Ult p11 l!I< robb<ry count. He oen~ tht def1ndrnt Io o,,. lo II
years Oii tho ~napln• <nlf P . bQll> oenlt-lo lun concurrently. R!llmlni witIJ' thot! term• will be a
opeU of w lo Ii 'yrm In t11lt prilOn ror
ZlltOJo'• JUillY pita Io c;hlTIH of
assaulf. wllh·a deadlj' w11pon n:tfilin& lo
an 11rlltr pro11<uU00, lltputy Dlltrlcl
AUOl')lty-W. J, )jo11ley 11pl1ig•d. .
Zataalo an<I Doualu M<dregor J;iim·
mm,t, ·"· pf Qlll'dtn Q~vt wert ara ""~ )Ji! AprU II aflH an till!lin!I1,
bullfl itddlad tjlUI lhal l>e1•n In Hun-
tinJIOlt ltacfl. wouild Ill Wlf lhroulh
three commiJ.nities and ended wilh the
coupl1'1 clpturt in Fountaln. Valley.
Polite uU both mt11·1t~ • La ~ulJ)lt
couple .and their six-mont~ld jpf•nt,
ex>mmfindftrtd ll)eir cir and UJefl t)M;rn
u ho!tages in a chase that be&an with
their 1hooting of a man out.side a Costa
Mesa tavern.
George A. Bershaw, ~. of 207
Baltimore Ave., Huntiqpin Beach, w1s
shot in Ull fo1'1rm arta r be~g accuMd
by the two men of sleahn1 money they
said they had .left on the counter in pay-
ment for drin1'J.
The clwe tndtd in Fountain Valley
when a volley from a police shotgun shat-
tered the windscreen of the stolen car. No
one Wai hurt in tn, melet.
C\µnmin11 11 1c~edµled to face a jury
trial OD ld .. Uell chariH Oct. 11.
Unruh to Attend
De)lloorats' Luau
,,.. u~. Oemocratlc cudldale for
govfi'nor, will •pPtat in HunUncton
B'°'ch Friday. . Ht will 'attend the opening of the Hun·
tington Be a ch ~Fo u n ta in V•lley
Democratic Club's new headquarters at
17931 Beach Blvd. at 5:30 p.m. and thel)
will be i fUISt at I lua u at Ctrpenters
Hall, 830! A.tlant1. St.
Tbe luau ls bei1g sponsored by lhe 69-70
~atic Club and the Uiiruh for
Governor Committee.. Luau festlvitles
wlJI bqin •l f p.m. Reservations m1y be
m~t throu&IJ tbt 6i-7Q Democratic Club.
DAILY l>ILOT
OU~·· ~·r,.u•~l·HIJl5 c.oM,.,.., ••lt•rt H. w,,4
PrMlcltftl t/MI ~llO"tlltl'
JttJt l. Curley
redevelopment of the culral city , 111d a
park 1yMern ll\at lncluciel S I
neighborhood parks and 1 415-ac.rt cen-
tral park.
They all add up to ~ ~illion doller
package wp;oh was ~l!JI" rive ye·ar1 •• 0
v.•hen HUJ!tl~ B11a'h citliens went fo
work. on lhl project., Ni tzkowski said.
Aceompanying Nitikowski on the three-
. day trip are William Reed, the city'a
public I~lonnaUD11 ql~oer, and Dr. Henry Kaufm~n. former cllY councilm111 and
former plarinln& commfMioner.
l'rollf ,. ... l
SEAL ••.
bey.ond 1fP•Jever 111JJ<t.ro1iPfl tffortl
were tiei~l !lllde by ll!o U.S. Army CorJll
of Engineers. The council ordered a
n ,700 private etudy M beach erosion pro-
blems In Seal Beach and promised that
municlp•J 1cllon lo h1ll lhe flow ol nnd ~ ll)t 1e1 wpuld follow.
CnUJ1CiJman then •et the cijy tt1 rate 1t
II.If per 11111 • .,....., v1Iu1!1Dn.
·,\l !h~ point ~I Qµtl!'lo ,.,. 111ln to
"'1!11!1 c!1ifllc,llolJ ol !h• mayor'• a~thorj!y.
'"11111 II not pibt)liµed lo hlr•i• or •m·
bur.., lj1t mayor,'' M pld, lhon l1~nC/lo4 tnlo a rndinl qi II>• ei!fl e~rltr, dlDllrtnl llt1 cilart.r ra••
B1um "II 1uthorJly lo •li•nct or tjlr11!1n
to ll!ro~ DUI lllf Jpt1ier •I a council
m11Uni·
11.wm r•plltd ll>at !IJ• ~r.or 11 pr01idlilg officer h11 !ha r,Illll lo 'cu! ofl
doba!t and uptdt!t !he bllJI-of the
meeti~."
"Ypu re QOly coremonJaJ. J:..et. tha' cowr
cit vnlt !flt down ii J thDUJd ttop talk·
ln&," ch11Jen1ed Del Quereto. ••1 dare you
tQ remnve 1111 ~y fnrct. ''
Ill n! down w~•n lh• <OW)cU vqltd -
l·I -l'l cut olf deb111.
Another clUzan 11>1 up Io tal~ bul wu
rultd oui of order by Blum.
HP,:,ri'l feel i;,.d," ~ufpptd Hgldtlh "I
can't ,alk tither.'·'
Pol .Cluarcji) !lood ~P 11110. thi• Um• I'!
1pe1Jc Ofl •nother 11end1 lttm coriccmlna a requeit ~Y Couf1:1m1re)Je I o r
J"rmiuJoo' to &rant t Je1v1 of ablenca to
4 female empfoye.
1'You 1ee how little the int.rim city
manager !<nows. fie doesn't have to ask
permli1JD11 ol lhe council to grant a lea ve
ol !l~~en<:.f? only to 1pend zponey,'' Dtl
Guere10 111d.
t1No l don't;•· replied Courtemarche ,
referrina: tn a recent re tolutlon req4irin&
such personnel actions lo be brought
before the council.
When the city clerk asked lor
permisaion to hire a part·t.imt ml)loye,
Del (iuercio was up agalll.
"She doesn 't need authority to hire
help, only to pay.'' he chaUenged. Gum-
mera aa:reed, but because of the city's
froitn budget the majority bloc on the
council denied permission.
The council session, held at McGauih
School after a car caravan arrived from
the crowded city hall, went on in similar
fashion, with part or the l11rge aud ience
booing and lnaulting Baum . while another
se1m~t ol the crowd applauded him.
Heat Kills Fish
In Beach Pond
A combinJlion of heat 100 lack of fr•h
water hu killed 200 to 300 fith in t HUI·
tinaton Beach pond near Talbert Lake.
Ci ty otticials wtre afraid fish In
Talbert Ll;e, a key part of the proposed
central p11rk, might aliO be threatener!,
but now say there i• no danaer of those
fish dyln a.
"The temper•ture pf the pond on Jot
1-~erm's property had risen, and it w1sn't
getlin& a1y fresh wit.er from Talbert
Lake, ao a hich •umber of ahad and 1
few other fi1h did die," Tom Sevtrr11,
development coordinator for lhe olty, ex-
plained.
He 11ld Jo'erm'1 pond wa1 normally
connected to lhe lake, but because of low
wattr 1 natural b1rrlu had tepttated
tha two, creati.n& a 1pecial altut tiOI\.
'
I• Detroit l.o•fn9? .
Has tQ,e ubiquitous buf taken over the world! PhQto-graph~r lhougjll sn, for f moment af leul, when
be happene4 on tbis ·~·•• S~lldiy in the 8jlO blOI* of Balboa Boq]ev1rd ln N•wpor\ Beach. Then th•Y
were, seven of I.ham (count 'em), au in a row. And,
as our man 11j11ed hia eamer1, another one chij&Jed
by. II'• enou1b to drlva a man bu(I)'.
Massage is the Message
Before Newport Council
The massage parJor syndrome we111t on
trial in the Newport Stich City Council
chambers Mondly ni,tit.
City Attorney Tully Seymour turned the
council chambers into a verif,Jble
courtroom as the cnunc» heard 1 pie• by
a Newport c:ot!Plt aid a niwly formed
syndicate 11kinJ for • bu1ln11a lictNt
ror what would be the city'• si1th tuch
health club.
Two of the five IJUIPlll parlor• in thl!
city have been rai~ed ia rectnt weeks -
with charieS of prostitution rnuitin1
each time.
Despite a plea by the owners for an Im·
mediate decision, the council voted to
continue the hearing pendi.Jlg the gather-
ing of addlU011al lnformatkiri.
Santa Ana lawyer Edward Ulman
altoraey for the owner, Vada Van Cha~,
and himself a prindpal in the syndicatt
behind the eaterprise, claimed a delay
would cause undue hardship on all the
principals.
He al!KI argued that no other massa1e
parlor had to underao ~iJ 1erutiny. He
said his parlor, to bt calltd "Athena's of
Hollywood," slloold Ml be jud1td on !ht
alle1ed 1in1 « 1imilar bu1inu:1e1 in tha
area.
Business Llcense Supervisor Slan
Hirschberg had brought the applica~on to
the council atte11tion because, he sa id, Df
problem• · encountered with the ap.
plic,ation itJelf and the re1ull of police in-
ve1ti1ations. .
Swnrn in at the start ol the hear1n1,
Seymour set the stage. He requ.ested that
all per~na test\fylag be sworn 1n.
Ulman, president of the '.'Sunset.New-
port E"terpriHt," th~ 1ynd1~1ta formed
to PrOvide the proprietor w1Ul 1Pvance
capital, criUcized the entire procedure .
He was further infurl1ted when Ul•
council, midway through the testimony,
Bandit in $70
Heist Sentenced
A man who J,ook rro at JUnpoint from •
Fountain Va lley market h111 been ordered
to spend th• next five y1ar1 to llfe In
state )Srison.
adjourned temporarily for an "e.iecutive
aeNi.on."
He clt•rced this wa1 • violition of tht
Brown Act, the state's right-to-know law
that prohibits sscret sessions e1cept oa
personnel milters.
Prior to it.a nut meelin1. the: councjl
wiU aak ~ polica departmen t to loo)!: i~
to the blck1round of Sun1et-N1wport,
whose principals, t ccording to Ulm1n,
are David Cadley, the convicted felon, 1
"Mr. Ma.scalco" and himself.
Tht council •lao asked to SH a copy of
the franChl1t 11rHment bttw11n Sun1et-
Ne wport ind the owner.
The 1pplicants had pleaded lor 1p-
proval, and Van Chase said he has been
workln4 lonr how'! !ho pa!! 1i1 wteie to
prep11e lht l2nd ltrM1 ntabJl1bment for
openin& d1y.
Ulman Aid any del1y would cfUH a
major hardahip on all partiea inv~vtd.
It waa 1bqul this point that leymour
read a c:J,,ulfltd 1dverti11m1nt that h11
been "'I' In thll w11k'1 DAILY P!Wl'.
The paid 1d fialtl:
"Athtna'a of thl iµnut Strip with th1
gre1tut 1irl1 from HGJlywDOd t o
Maa111• You. NoVr ii) a new locat.ion in
Newport Stach."
Seymour queried If tht parlor wa1 in
fact open, In vioJation ol tha l1w.
Vin Chait Aid Jt WU not, the Id had
been an errnr.
SeymDUr and Vjce Squad Detec~lve
John &Iman nid 'hart hava bttn a
·'number oI )1)Unl 1irl1" 1ean inald1 Ult
busineu.
Va" ai,.. 11id qn1 of the WOIT!tn w11
his wif1 , the other w11 hit only •"1ploy1,
hired to 1n1w1r tel1phcne1, and U,1 ethtr
girl, Of tirJa , Wtrl jUJt fritftdl Of tht
family. ·
Ulman 1tre1Md th1t thtr1 had httn no
b"'illtJI """4utled. He e.s:plained the tenor of the ad a1 "a
gi mmick" to at~act "'"' ~aintas. Both Mr. a11d Mr1. Van Chase, whn,
police said, had a clear record. were ada.
mant. however, about the ir intentions for
their first businus venture.
In his arrumenll, tnm1n contended
that the city -had forced the firm to spend
lhe money pr1p1rin1 their business, so it
had no 1roond1 to deny the lictn1e.
Ulman Pointed out that Jn order to get
health and fire department approvalii. I
requisite for 1 butinm 1iaq111 aomt
$4,000 in construction work had le be
performed lntide the buildin a:.
From Pagel
HOMICIDE ...
lakrn into CUJtody in Cox 's compaP,y ~olt
day ni&ht.
The girls were released to parental
custody and the boy is in Orange County
Ju venjle Hall today1 for addilional in-
VeJtiptipn ta determine if he will be
chargtd 11t all .
lf so, said Capt Payne, il won 't be in
connection with Christie's murder.
"We have no lndi c1tioria of •nyone el&e
involved in lhll at this time," 1aitl th e
captain.
'nieft was appareptJy nq~ f direct
motive In tM bruta\ murder , but po)lct
alleaed that persona effects of Chrle:tie'1
were found in Yanke's <1partment.
Capt. Pa yne said Chrislle w1s known ~o
pick up male hitch·hikers and $pecula ted
C.OJ may have been aiven a lift e:hortly
before the victJm was slain.
•·1t lookJ as if he was killed sometime
Friday night," he added.
Christie was found Monday morning by
his bus iness partner. Terrance Smith,
who wondered why he failed to show up
for work al their ~r&T Hardware Co.,
6900 Knott Ava., Buena Park.
He found qut why and the acene will
always baWli b.lm.
Widow Re-ceives
$6,500 in Suit
A widow who 1ued the city of Hun·
tington Beach for $140,000 after her hu1-
band died in an auto accirlent hu iellled
in Superior Court for M.500.
Mra. Mjl~red Todhunter of MQ2 Lieae
Drive. Hunlington Beach accepted lh1t
sum Monday Ja: her Ja w11uit was aboµt lo
go on tri11. She had charged lhe cjty with
neglige1ce leadin( la her husbaad 's death
on July •, 1968.
Ja mes Wilson Todhunter, ~. was
thrnwn frnm his motorcycle 'l Golden
Wesi AvenUe neir M~Mlon Str°te~ when,
his widow alleged in her court 1ction, his
machine w•s ove rturned by broken pa ve-
me1t and rubble.
The $8.SOO award is lo be shared by
Mrs. Todhuater, h~r sons Mark and
James and her dau&hler Vivien, Judae
Rlymond Vincent ruled.
East and We11l Meet
BERj.,IN (UPI ) -Weit Girman Pre1 i·
dent Gustav Hein-.mann naw ltJ W!Ul
Berlin tod1y fnr a fivM•Y vitlt dt1plte
Cnmmunltl E11t Germ•1' prote11f tb1t
his presence would be a provocatit>n .
Superior Court Judi• Samuel Dreiun
set that term for Dorman D. Butµ-m, %2,
of Anaheim af~r the deftndant pleadei1
guilty In WeW\jnster municipal court to
armed robbery ch1r1n. Buttram'• .aP-
plicit.io11 for lrtalmtnt at a poa:abl•
narcolic1 addict w11 rejected by th•
Californ ia Rehabilitation Center a t
Norco.
Too Little?
Buttram admitted Ul•l he held up the
Stop 'N Go marke~. ll<MO Newbope 81.., on
July 22, Ul68, ind midi off with tha
nirht'• takln11 of f70. Too Much?
FroM Pqe J
N,JXON •••
Wu bel\1'8111 A<ab ~ ,.,,,11 ropr-
tatives btgln In New York.
Ol!U:l.lb mtttiOJ witb tbt.Ere&ktonlle -
~~~~ol~· 'lf#llflll P: ll!!tan;,· ~~ f;. lllj:a, ·
a~lstant llf!Cretary of ~ate for Middle
E4ttem Affalrl ; and ~ry Kissinger,
national stet1rltx,.tffairs adviser.
~ .f"l'lltd u.~. pe•ce !nili1.av.,
that led to .1sree.menl by Israit, Jordan
Mind Egypt fQr ·a three-month cease fire
and the ~rt of negotiations.
Press Beere.Lary ~n Ziegler 1 a t d
1'f.r. ffiJRn '\'Quid CG V''r 1 wide spectrum
of fprei1n policy deveii>pmsnt.s IJt !h,
discussions.
The President rlkeived an "en-
couraging" rtpo(t qn ~ economy Mon-
day from four k•Y 1dvi1tra.
Dr. Paul W. McCracken , chairman at
the Council ol EcClnomle A4vlse'r1, uld
administration policies to C®I the
overheattd dome1tic tcopl)rpy 4r1 work-
ing.
Ht calltd evidence in the ect>nomic•plc-
ture encour1gln1. He 1dded, "One ·mw:t,
of coyr~. be cautious about tryinj: to
read too much into very cu'rrenl da ta, but
in a great many ways the evidence as I
say, we felt , was ~uit.1 ancouragjng."
He said he did not want to su ggtlt thft
th~ 1truggl1 a1ainst inflation is over.
McCracken cited at J'topeful indices the
less r1pid rate of iricrease in the con.
sumer price index and Increases in in-
dustrial production, personal income,
retail 11Jes and hou}iil)g.
Jn a 114eUght of tbt C1J(rcnt Presiden-
tial San Clemente saga , Press Secretary
Ziegler said the President ha s told him
"planted" q,uestions 1rt out 1t Nilon't
new1 coplerencet.
Ziegler 11ld the PrJ!lidenl told him h1
ha1 not tolerated pl1nted questioN in t4f'
23 years since he first tried for public of~
rice and he isn't 11trtin1 now.
The Presidenti•I posture on quesUon
plaulln( was inapired by a column Jjl1t
suggested one had popped up toward tha
elate of hi1 July 30 news conference.
Ziea:Je r 1111id he "814 the President bt
never planted an actual question with the ,
press but had offered ideas to reporters
seeking rertile ground to probe.
Nixon, Ziegler said, tokl h.im there
were to be no mor• of thet• ftrtilt-·
ground sug1ution1.
f 'rona Poge 1
EDUCATION • • •
I 1r,1tem ror SUppJy distribution b'a5ed Oft
dol ar amounts. •
The objective tells what the school will
do. After it is written a series of ac-
titiviea are listed e1plaining how th•
district will IOCDmpllsh its objective.
The Jctivlty list outline:a iitep-by-1tep
the f!1ea na lo accomplish whatever J.ht
school want.a to do.
In other words any individual can read
through a school's educatlon'al plan and
learn juiit what will be heppening in that
school throughout the ye1r. The pl tn also
sets up a method for me1surin1 the suc-
CeM of activities.
Teachers learn what and how Ui teach
to children and can also evaluate how tha
plan ill working as they go 1lonil;.
On the whole the plans fnr each tchool
are quite similar. But flexibility i1 Jivtn
to each plan llO 1 school ca11 allow for dJf.
ferencea among its students ver1u1 thou
of another school.
Tamura School for instance has a
numbe r of 1tudent.s of Mexican descent,
therefore the echool officials have d~id
ed to accentuate the studies of American
and Mex ican culture. Another school
might delve more Into Japane11 culture.
"It's a lot of work," Brick admils. "But
It puts it all down in writina. Everythinc
v.:e are trying to acct1mpliih. We can
shnv.· you in bla ck and white what we are
trying lo do Jn eac h ichool.''
vie, ,."""4"ft .,...~.-1 ~•llft•r
Tlt'IJ!'' )(,,.,11
l!tf .... Th,,..,, A. M111,~i11t
#•~•"" l t lftlr
Al111 Dtrki11
Sex Suit Filed DON'T BE MISlED IY DISCOUlilTS, DEA(S, SALES AND
IOJVE.AW A YS.
W-1 O• tfll'I' teYol'Y t:tlllr
. -Alb1rt W. 11+11
Anoe,.!• ilfl!w
M-.. , .. lffch Offi••
17175 ····~ ''"''"''" M•llint Aidr1,11 ,.0. It• 7t O, t2641
ontr eff!tft
L..,..;;. lttdlr ft' ,:-.,•! •-,
"'" Mtiit l • ""' •• ., ..... , ,,......,. ltJdll !tlf'WMI l lillleJ l:iou~vt,,.
ltll (:'JfllP'l1'l M ltftl~ I.I '~'""" ltMI
Research Team Hit for 'Da1nages'
ST. LOUIS, Mo. iAPl -A llllll,000
d1m11e suit .hu been f1ltd ag1M1 t If.I
re.,ardlera Or. Willlam H. M11ter1 and
Vir.inia John1on by a m11n who aald lht
pair employed hla wife I J a seiu1l
partner (or two men under treatment by
M11tfr1 and Mr1. Johnson.
The 1ult 1lJi0 charaed that the 1e•
re1earch te1m 1reatly bent_fitlld from the
use or the m1n·1 wire throuah "monetary
gain by the public11Uon ol boMs." while
the husband "lo.~t the conjugal Hciety o(
his wife" •nd suffered ··~eat humiliation
and disaract In hi1 toe11I Jnd dom11Uc
relAtlonshlps. ''
~ sull W~J filed in U.S. District Courl
by altorney'1 of GeorJe Edwin Calv1rt,
whose address was liirted only A5 Nrw
HamP.shire. Thf 11UOr~y1 declirted to
give Calv~n.·1 hetme 1lidre11. His wife's
name WI U1ttd II B1~1r1.
Ml1ttr1 calle~ the charge "ridicuJou1''
and llld "Wt would bt Jl•d lo ~l1prov1
such 1 •ttuatlO'll. whtn th• opportunity
ariw. ''
•
Tha charae was In connecliftlJ with
research done for the bei1t 1 e 11 1 n I
.. Human Sewal Inadtqu1cy:• written by
Mast ers and Mrs. Joh1'110n and publllbtd
in April.
T~• suil aJ:io names a~ codf!fend&Jll~ a
"John poe !," ot the Sl alt ol l'lew York
and a ''John Doe 11." of Vlralnia.
The suit alleges th11t the :seiu•l rel•·
tlorahip ol Mrs. C•1vtrJ was used 11 a
"fQrql of tr,atment" for the Does and
that 1':1rs. Cal vert was pa id V>00 for tht
flrJt 11uc~ treatment on or abo!Jt J11ly SI,
1967, 1nd •250 for the •c:conct trt~t111e"t
on or abollt Jin. 4, 1941. The suit 11id
C•lvert learned of the 1lle1ed treatment•
on Apn\ II of th is year.
A tot~I ol $J50,000 11ctu11l damJigel Is
1sked from the four defendants 1nd •
total of '600.000 In puniti ve d.111T111e1 It
a~kt4 frol'Jl Masters and Mr1. Johnson.
M11len 111d the charge• wt rt
.. trumped up" ind ll It lh« first ault iris·
ln1 lrmn lhe 11 year• of r11earch by him
and Mr1. JohnlOft.
THE COMll,ION LAW OF IUSINESS SAYS IT B~T-IT IS
UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUCH, IUT IT .IS W 0 RS E TO PAY
TOO LITTLE.
IF YOU PAY TOO MUGH, YOU Losi A LITTLE MONEY
AND THAT IS ALL
WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE, you SOMETIMES LOSE
EViRYTHIN(i; BECAUSE THE PRODUCT you IOUCi;HT w AS
INCA,AILE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TO DO.
YOU' CAN'T PA Y A LITTLE AND GET A LOT.
rn. I . . r I s~ ALDEN~s
t . .. iJ ~ .. , 11111:_
I j ~ • --
6 -·-~ ' ·. -· .. ---
CARPITS • DUPES
1663 "•Ctfttl• Ave.
C05TA MUA ,,., .... ,.
Newport Bea~h
iD.l'IIO..N_~
Your Hometelfll
Dally Paper
VOL. 63, NO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNlA TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, '1'970 TEN .CENTS •
Collins Annex Debate Expected at Pane:l Meet
Proposed anneiation ol the ColliM
Radio Company property to the city of
Newport Beach promJses to develop into
a hot debite Wednesday before the Local
Agency FonnaUon Commission (LAFC).
Lliied up on opposite sides o(. the battle
are the city and Collins Radio versus the
Irvine Company and residents of the new
Irvine communities of University Park
and TurUe Rock.
No firm decision on whether the city
may legally anneI the 177 acres northeast
• cl MacArthur Boulevard withoqt Irvine's
coos~t 1, expected to ~ out of Wed-
nesday's debate.
William J . McCourt, assistant county
counsel, says the LAFC is not going' to
rule Wednesday on the $64 question: Can
a leaseholder (Colllns) annex.property to
a city regardless of the wishes of the
landowner (Irvine ).
McCourt said the LAFC Is concerned
only with "general policy" and not with
the answer to that knotty questioo. He
• ""1• Iha{ b up to the dly ol Newport
Beach and the Jrvine Company to settle.
Collim does not O"o\'ll the contested, tri-
angular-shaped IT/ acres bounded by
MacArthur, Campus Drive, and Jamboree
Boulevard. Ttie Irvine Company does.
A survey of aUot.ieys for the city and
the other interested parties shows no
agreement on the vital questiOll.
Denni1 O'Neil, assistant city attorney
of Newport Beach, says recent court de-
ciaions on such anneutions have ruled
In favor of. long term lessees, Collins in
this case.
McCoort cbecke9 his law booi<o and
said he coold find no IUCb lnterpffi&Uon
of the aMa laws.
When the Newport Beach councilmen
approved the annezation July 20, Ray.
mond Wation. Irvine Company viee prea..
ident said, "The company is still fee
holder of the property."
Considering the atUtude of the oppon-
ents and propooents of lbe proposed mer.
BBC Tower Appeal Nixed
Newport . Council Rejects High-rise Proposal
By I. PETER KRIEG
01 lfl• EHll'f ,1191 Ili ff
Upholding a unanimous planning com.
misaion recommendation, the Newport
Bea.ch City Council Monday rejected an
appeal by the Balboa Bay Club for-a 16.
story apartment building. The 182-foot
height ol the proposed building is more
than three times as tall as present city
high rise regulations allow.
However, the council left the door open
for alternate proposals. It likely will get
Nixons Slate
'
San Clemente
, 1J GOP, Reception
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of .... O.lt't ...........
President Nixon turned to th e
Call!ornia political ~ene tOday as he and
the First Lady prepared to welcome 150
Rep.iblican candidates and wives to their
San Clemente borne at a 5 p.m. reception.
'l11e guests were to include GOP can-
i!idates for Congress, state senate and
assembly and the Board of Equalization.
The Ni1ons i ave a dinner last month at
the Spanish-style home honoring Gov. and
Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Sen. George
Murphy (RrCallI.) The President bas
been promolirlg the election 0 r
Republiuns in California and elsewhere
bi various ways from social events to the
atandard picture posing technique.
Eaflier in the day. the President met
with top foreign policy aides to ponder
chances for peace in the Midd.le East as
talks between Arab and Israeb represen-
tatives begin in New York.
Officials meeting with the President in
San Clemente included Secretary of State
William P. RDgers; Joseph C. Sisco,
assistant secretary of state for Middle
Eastern Affairs; and Henry Kissinger,
national seeuri\y affairs adviser.
Rogers pushed U.S. peace initiatives
tha t Jed to agreement by Israel, Jordan
and Egypt for a three-month cease tire
and the start of negotiations_. .
Press Secretary Ron Ziegler g a 1 d
Mr. NilDn would cover a wide spectrum
of foreign policy developments in the
diM:Ussklns.
The President received M "en-
c°'1raging" report on the economy Mo.n-
day from fouf key advisers.
Dr. Paul W. McCracken, chainnan of
(See NIXON, p .. , I)
Services Sl~ted
I ,
! ~or Harbor Gra<l
IGlled on Cycle
\
A 19\69 Newport Harbor High School
gradua~ has been killed In a motorcycle
accident during a European tour and
funeral \services will be Thursday at
Pacific V.iew Memorial Park.
Graveside rites for Richard Winston
Jones, \19, of 15%5 Highland Drive,
Newpo!1. Beach, win be. at 4 p.m .. ac-
cording] to Pacific View Mortuary.
Detltlls of the Au,;. JO accident near
Dubrdvnik. Yugoslavia, are sketchy, but
J<"-ll reportedly lost l'OOtrol of his cycJe
olkl it hurtled oll the road .
He Is survived by his mother, Miriam:
his father, Winston. of Lot Angeles, and a
si1ter, Anastasia, of the Newport ~ach
family home.
Jones playr!d football 11 Newport
Harbor High School and attended Oranae
COlst College for OM V"tlr prior to hiJ
summer trtp that ended ~ tngedy.
His family suggesta I memorlaJ con-
tributions to the Olympic Pool Fund, for
the eompelltlon l11<illly to be built at
Newport Harbor HJglt School.
·,
soon a new plan for dual towers ~feet
high on the same western end of the club
property, 122 West Coast Highway.
Following a public hearing and unani-
mous denial of the request, the cooncil
ordered the project back to the planning
commission for consideration of alternate
proposals.
The council action came despite a
warning from a BBC official that the
club was ready to go ahead and build a
second "Chinese Wall," ldenUcal to an-
Hearings
other apartment complex en the other
end of its property that has bl'1)UJht
howls from Newport ruidents.
The current "Chinese Wall" is a 142·
unit' project built in conformance with
e1isting regulation,,. lt is five stories; or
50 feet high.
The club "threat" drew a respanse
from the leader of opPo6ing homeowners'
groups that did not believe the Bay Club
would build anytbing, if it couldn't have
its tower.
Massage is the Message
Before Newport .Council .
The massage parlor syndrome we11t on
trial in the Newport Beach City Council
chambers Mcmday night
City Attorney Tully Seymour turned the
council chambers into a veritable
courtroom as the council heard a plea by
a Newport couple 8Jld a newly formed
syndicate asking for a business license
for what would be the city'• 11ilth such
health club,
Two of the five massage parlon in the
city have been raided i~ recent weeks -
with charges of prosUtution resulUng
each time.
Despite a plea by the owners for an im·
medi'ite decision, the cooncil voted to
continue the bearing pendi.ng.tbe..aa1her·
ing of additional information.
Santa Ana lawyer Edward Ulman
attoraey for the. owner. Vada Van Cha:.e,
and himsell a principal in the syndiC'ale
behind the uterprise, claimed a delay
would cause undue hardship. on all the
principals.
He also argued that no other massage
parlor had to undergo council scrutiny. He
said his parlor, to be. called "Athena s of
Hollywood," should not be judged on the
alleged sins of similar businesses in the
area.
Business Ut:ense Supervisor Stan
Hirschberg had brought the application to
the council atte11lion because, he said, of
problems encountered with the ap.
plication itself and the reault of police in-
vestigations.
Sworn in at the start of-the hearing,
Seymour set the stage. He •requested that
all persons testifyi•g be sworn in.
Ulman. president of the "Sunset-New-
port Enterprises," the syndicate formed
to provide the proprietor with advance
capital. criUcized the entire procedure.
He was further infuriated when the
councll, midway through the testimony,
adjourned temporarily for an "e1ecutive
aession."
lie charged this was a violation of the
Brown Act, the 1tale'1 right-to-know law
that prohibits sscret se.,slons e1cept 01
personnel matters. .
Prior to lb nut meeting, lhe council
will ask the Police deJ>artment to look In-
to the bickground of Sunae~Newport,
whose principals, acoording to Ulman,
are David Cadley, the convicted felon, a
"Mr. Masca.lco" and blmself.
The council also asked to aee a .copy or
the franchise au.eement betw~n Sunset-
Newport and the owner.
The appli<anta hid pleaded le< •P.
proval, and Van Cbale1aa.id he hu been
working Ion& houri the past six weeD to
prepare the UDd street eltablishment for
opening day,
Ulman said any deby would cause a
majoc bard!ibip en all parUei involved.
II W8'1 about this point that Seymour
read a classified advertisement that hu
~~in~ w~ICs DAILY Pllm.
The paid ad states:
"Athena's of the Sunset Strip with the
greatest girls from Hollywood t o
Massage You. NoVw in a new locaUon in
Newport Beach."
Seymour queried if the parlor was in
fact open, in violation of the law.
Van Chase said U was not, the ad bad
been an error.
5eymour and Vice Squad Detect.Ive
John Simon 11aid tbere have been a
"number of young girls" seen lnside the
business.
Van Chase said one of the women was
hit wife:the other was his only employe,
hired to answer tele phones, and the othtr
glrl ~ or &irls, were jw;t frl•ds of the
ramUy.
Ulman stressed that thert had been no
business conducted.
He explained the tenor of the ad aa "a
gimmick" to atttact new business.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Van Chase, who,
police said, bad a clear record, were ada-
mant. however, about their intentions for
their first business venture.
In his arguments. Ulman contended
. that the city bad forced the firm to spend
the money preparing their buainess, so It
had no irounds to f'leny the license.
Ulman pointed. out lhat in order to get
health and fire department approvals, a
requisite ' for a , business license, some
'4,000 in construction work bad to be
'(ier!ormed Inside the building.
Wiiiiam I. O'Bryoo, pruident ol the
Bayahores Community AJsoclatiO!I, the
ezcluslve residential area adjacent ta
the club, contended that the BBC could
only afford to build apartments that of-
fered water views.
He said a lower structure would have to be built perpendicular to the water
and said, "The Balboa Bay Club will not
build any new apartments that ••• look
(See BAY CLUB, Pa1e I )
* * * Construction
Halt Nearing
In Newp0rti .1
Newport BeaCh m•Y he reedy Ii> orchr
a . moratoih:ant' in au 'bay front con-
structtori pending development of -.pew
master plan for the city's waterfront
City councibnen Monday be&rd i VirJe..
ty ol pleas for IUC'h' a move , 80me' from
councilmen' ·and some fri>m private citizens.a~ndlng a p.'iblic he~·on tfie
BalbOa Bay C ub tower apartment ~ ject. , . ,
lt acted formally on one proposal, by
Councilman earl Kymla, that cli!ocU Ille
city atal! and the planning commiaalo!l to
consider the formation or a •'Lower
Newport Bay Civic Distrlet."
oliring a study seuion ?.tondiy al·
t.emoon, prior to ils rejection of the Bay
Club appeal Monday n)&ht council
memben asked about µie 'possibility of
an immediate "freeze .. en the tssu.anet of
building permits for at least a certain
section of the bayfront properties - a
section that would include the Balboa
Bay Club.
Under current zoning laws governing
Bay Club property, the BBC could build a
five-story, 50-foot apartment structure
stmuar to the s<>-ealled Chinese Wall at
the western end of Its property on the
West COast Highway.
Only approval of a building permit
would be necessary.
Kyml11's civic district proposal would
1nvolve all property adjoining tldelandJ In
the lower Newport. Bay. .
In presenting the Jdu, he told tht eoun·
ell that civic dlatrlcts may be outed
under. state law .. for the purpoee of ~
flee MASTER PLAN, Pate II
CdM Teacher Johnson
Suffers Heart Attack
Corona del Mar biology Wtructor
John Johnlon i5·listed in serious coridition
toc;lay at Hoag Memorial Hospital after
suffering, a heart attack Monday 1lJght.
He .was stricken in his Coron4 del Mar
home.
JohMOn, 56, has ~n a teacher at the
school since U opened In September ol
1962. He is a well-i:nOwn spcciallst in the ecolOl)I tl Newport's Upper Bay.
Characters Signing Up
Saturday Boat Parade's Deadline Draws Near
Thursday Is the rcgislralion deadline
for the Urn> Character Boat Parade which
ls acheduled to run Saturday In Newport
Harbor.
Sponged by file COmmodon!s Club ol
the Newport Ha'rf>Or Chambtr of Com·
merce, the 10th running of the parade
will feature .UJe theme •1()Jr American
Heritage."
Jack Barnett, executive secretary of
lhe OWnber, Mid today there ue IS"'"
•
tra'nts set for the race. "lt will be a llttJe
bit shorter this year, by maybe 1$
minut.ea," ht said.
"The P11viUon Queen will lead the
parade, carryina the c.ommodorell .and
t~lr wives, the Q>amber directort •nd
'their wive. and the El Toro Marine Corps
A~ Stallon lllnd," Banletl llkl.
MY bolt, equipped with otandard aar ..
ty equipment and registered I n
Calllomla, Is eligible IOI' entry. Blmelt
aald the bolta can tither he of•• unuau.i
variety. or lbe mort common type
dem-ated to the theme of the parade.
The parade wlll be&in at 1:30 p.m. at
the Balboa Bay Club and b scheduled In
end In the same spot at about 4:30 p.m.
A prt111rade brunCh and brleling will
be held for parade entnnta at the BBC It
11:30 a.m.
Barnett Hid the $10 •eglatratlon fee
wUI be taken at the Chamber oflkea, llef
E. Cotll lllahwoy,CofUll dd;Msr.
ger the cue 1ee1ru1 desllned for · the
court;.
Irvine has protested the .anneutio'n
because the Collina P'operty ia In the
heart ot the Industrial aector ot the pro-
~ city cX Irvlne.
this fact but they are also aware ot the
this 'fact but htey are also aware of the
financial advantages of ann'eling the Col-
Una acreage to the city.
. At the July 20 hearing, Newport Plan.
rung Director Larry Wilaon told · council-
men that the Pil'<el W"'lld brinr I -tial anrnial taJ: revtnue to tbe clt;y ol
•110,000 which ·could reach a toti.J of
$228,000 with !urtber develc>pmai!.
At the same July 20 bearing, Newport
councilm~ also announced the tjty'1. in-
ten.Uoo or event~ly annexing the 'oraD1_e
County Airport and all Irvine industrill
property west ol Jambor<e Road. Such
a nwve woold subtract about 200. more
acres from the future city of tmne'1
(flee COLLINS, P.,. I )
• • DAILY PfLOT S,.,. M
J,RtlST. HARRIS "ril~S,.lfER. BACK ON C:iTY HALL 1 • D<!o• Art -.n..au.11)111 'Whtn•lht Prlu Ttt 0-Ont ,
I
Ci.ly Hall Loses·
Mesan Wins Fight Over Art 10.Xu
Improbable as it sounds, a 50-.year-<ild • other · artist. who have exhibited Uieiz'
Costa Mesa grandmother actually bu paintings a.ad other art work and· b&ve
beaten City HaJI. never been conlronted with a tu bill
It wam•t her clty'hall, tt was Newport because of it.
Beach's, Nevertheless, sbe ctushed it. Last .Monday. she was told there wu
1,!n. Kirby Harr.ls, 28716tb r1ace, la an • nothing ahe coold do. Newport BuclJ IJ.
""' Un"I ahe •• _,,.artl ts ... ceqse Supervisor Stan HJ~& de. ar""'I'.. u g .... anil)'., -.u. s . wno · clared that the artist's fee was JtaDdard eJ:hlbited their worts in Newport Beach 1-1 .. ...
h • · "' 1 1' 1\.,-1----, opera .... 16 proce:dure .. •··to pay • -· ee or a ..-~ Wbereujloo Mrs. Harrtl call..i the dty ~~~tall artist. whOse exhlbils were • =~',?~~~~
noUctd . by the city's Bllsineu License die sun hUo't received one. De~ent at various baob, bol!lpit.ils, .
Ubraties, 'city halls, etc., had to pay the. She has, however' received a lot of
tu. Ii U . k Mr H · , . .u;ke ~:;,.... from the olllce of Clly A t e over a wee ago, I. arr1s Mllllger Harvey L. Hurlburt, to wbapl
palnUngs on display at a savings and Joan . she pleaded her case W,ednesday. Slit office got. not.iced. lilould "forget the . ')'ljoie thing," aha And she got a notice -from the City ot doesn't need a license, she was told.
Newport telling her to PIY the tax.
"I won't do It," Mrs. Hanis told just Alld like a letter the same·day from U..
She ll d city Bus1ness License Dep&rlment. ac-o about anyone who would llste1. ea e . companied by a fl5tful or forms_ needed.
City Hall. to apply for a business lice11se.
She told them that she knows cfoiens of The controve~. it ~ed. hln&ed on
Sister Saves· Tot'
From Drowning
In Familyi Pool
An ll-mooth-old Newport &ach girl ts
alive today thanks In the d!orts ol her 10-
year-old slater who pulled the lot from
the bottom or the family swimming pool.
Jonnie Peckham wu re.cued from. tbe
pool at the family home, 110& Dover
Drtve1 at about 6~30 Moodat nJgbt by her
1bter Tort. The chlld reportedly was blue ·
and hot brt1thln1 when the was IJtouiht
out 0£ the water. ' . ·
l'lie,glrl:1 mother. Mn. R. A. Pecld)am.'
administered the back.:pre11Ure fonn of
artificial respiration· to her w~l\e
awaltln& fU'e department resc:oe. teama-
TbC tot was breathing on her own by
the Ume firemen arrived and &be was
taken to Hoar Mimorl1l ij01pltal where
ahfl Wat held' ovenU&ht for observation.
Site WU r<Jwod thJa mornln&-
IS.. ARTISTS, Pl(t Z)
1feat•er
Low· clood6 In tho mornhif> llftd
high lemperaluras In the ~
continue Wednesday, with readings
ranging from 75 locally to 18 !urtl;
er Inland.
INSIDE TOD-''11'
Br;tail\ r. u.slna th• .. ,,..,.,.
1red~mtnl" ha irvlno ~ prlutM
tt{ vouna M•Ptc ffotn """'l!llog hooktd on druos. Paoc $_
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Guards-Subdue
'
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SAN QtraNT!N (AP! -San Quentin
]X'llon auards drove 800 demonatratln11
.prisoners Into their cells with lear gas to-
day after ni!'le offices were damaged by
ar&&t-caUJed fires, prison offit:la\s said.
The prisoner! staged a sitdown strike
tn the prison r~ealiori yard to press a
dozen demands issued by l;llack prisoners
durin& a nperimentat Superior coon ~ Moni!a1 within the prlton walb.
'Yblt' tbd Muican-Ametican priaooer1
also took part in the demonstration,
~ officials said.
A, call ror mo~· ~lack. and M~xican
'.Amerlcil'l ~tort 'Were ifnon1 the
dem1nd1. ·-
~tf !act jltl9011ert tolJI II percent
of the 3,100 priJOn<rs at tM 11Jte pri1611
on Uie'ihores ol San Francl..CcrBly net1r
San Rafael, t& iniles noftli of San Fran-
ciscG.
Guardf found nine counselors' Offices
dam.11ed tii One ctllblock a/fer driVtng
the de.m6nltriting pri90nl!f'I back to their
ttlls.
Furniture wooden window frames and
other woodwork was charred In the
preliminary steel and concrete cells.
There were no reports of in juries.
Firlt 1ip\ or trouble came when
prisonJa refustd to report to their prl10n
jobs after breakfast and «1ngregtited in
the recttlilon 1arta.
TbeJ' rope11<c1 the -and• deliver•d
In 1 fi•°'P"I• Jett« Mood11 to prilOll of.
ficiall. 'nlty tnclUded: -Jl"reekla of. ail ••poUflcal pri10nen ... -~I of three l!oledad.lliafo Prilon
!nm-di faeo ttlal ·to the alaflnt o1 a
llU•rd Wl·Jan. 11. ~ of twb dllclRlln•I')' .. Jlblocka,
where Ill jlrilontn art liotr CoiiJJned,
-Appolllmflll ol i black ••Iden. -A~ ol black and Mfllcan-
.
""'"Pllfe l
NllON •••
rote st
.
'An!4fltei tillliiool ...... -Morf lifl~tild Mktt~leift
prison officers and counselor1 "equal to
white officers."
Macco Unit .. .
Sale S t·udied
By, N.Y. Finn
The Pol'ible uie of Leadership Houa-
lng S11teml, a divillon ol the 'Newport..
based Macco Corp., is under di&cl18!11on
todaf between M.1eco's parent company,
Great 'Southwest Corp., and a New York
metal firm, Cerro Corp. •
Willia~ ·c .. Baker, t~airman of the
board of Great Southweat, aaid no
definite agreement had been reached "at
th IS 'Uilil. Sli6UIH tllm he a fillal agree·
ment proposed, it will be subject to the
approval of the boards of directors of
Maocb1 Great SOUthwfft and Cerro," he
1aid.
C.rro ii an lnternailon1i producer of "°" ferrout 1Dt:t•ll and a manUfacturer
of Wire, cable. •nd brau mill producll
with 1111nu11 u(.; ol about ll4IO mill!on.
B•ker nld the a""ll currently under
ntptlaUm include houllng tracts, apart.
mfilt llNI mobile home park jlnljecta, the
m1jotlty of which ii• Jodl<cl In
Ctlfft.rrda, wllh tome awta tn Tuai and
Florldl.
The ntent of the lr1ti81cUon w a 1 not
menttOlled, nor wa1 a propoied pr 1 e e
t1Ve.led.
1 Jn orange Cmnly M11cco O'!'DI or con-
trols the j01000.tcre Starr Rlncli, the
5;000.lcre Coto de Cul private recre•·
Uon cllib. the 700.acre 1S1nd Pointe
developmtnt In Sanla Ana and the (16.
lcre Otenbrook development in Brei.
A Macco tUblidlary also cont.roll the
the · doUticll of~ Adviltti, aaJd Movteland ·Wu Muaeum and the
odmlnbtratl6n po\Jdn,. 14 cool the Japjnfse 0.... Park In BU. .. Park. •-.:.. Macco . h11 been . lffllinl .bu1er1 for ove<bilted oomadc _, ire work· . aome of llJ !ilbtldill')' dlvblonl Jot ~boort Int. citied evidence In the ecoOOmlc ...,,_ a iiiontli. Macco AM Greal South•eet .,... hl•e been faced with ea 1 h problerm lure _.lillf· lie idded, "One il\Ult, iin<e the ban.knipicy 61 lhe Pn Cintra!
ol cOin<, be cautlolll about ll')'ihl to Railroad •arll<r thil IUIM!t!'·
1'1!ad loo li>Ucb Into verj current dala, but Oreat lioutlnr<tt ta IO per..,,1-.l bJ
in a lirut fD&n)' way1 the eVidenci u 1 Ptnntylvanla Qmip1ny, ill ot whole
&ay, we felt, wu quite incouriiJn1." stoek boionp to the P'11i! Central
Re n!d ~ did not •in! io 1ug<tt 11111 Tralilportaliop ComOany -a ""°UY
th• •tnlAI• aplnlt lnfi1tloii Is over. owned sublldlll')' a! Ille Penn Cealral. McCracken clflld'u hopef1il lni!lct1 !he
less !Opld rite of·lncret,. ,In tM ""°' . oumet orlce tndn and lhci'UHI 'Jri fhi
dustrW' )!iodllctlon, penonal Income,
retaU u~'llld hooit'1I-" . " In • •ldeltPI ~' u.e Ollrl•lnl Prllt-
tial Ill ~lap, p..,. 9ecrltol')'
Zieglot "1d•t!ie ~-i. .. toid hll!I ••pJ~"' lfUfltJonl trt out at Nl10011
news eonferences. Zi~er ~ the Pr~ldent told him bi
hat ~t Mferated planted ,questions In the
23 yeiri'stnce he firtt tried for public of·
lice and he Isn't startlna: now.
SJa~t Dril~ing
Charge Leveled
~y Newport
The PreaJd~al 9.05ture on question
plan\illg wll Inspired by a rolumn that
suggested one bad popped up toward the
close of his July 30 news cooference.
A suit against G. E. Kadane and Sons,
West Newport oil producers, has been fil-
ed by the city of Newport Beach in
oran1e C.OU111ty Superior C.Ourt charging
· the rirm with slant drUIU.g, City Attorney
Tully Seymour disclosed today .
Ziegler ·said he told the Preat&!nt he
never planted an' _actual qtieation With the
press bUt had 9flertd Ideal to reporter•
seeking fertile ground to probe.
Nlion, Ziegler said, told him t b e r e
were to be no more of these fertile-
ground 1u111e1,t1ons.
Newport Panel Sets
ln11urance Studies
A three-member panel lo st.Udy all
aspec1A of. city_ employe lnsµrance was lo"°" by l/>f Newport Beach City Coun-
cll Monday night.
'tba iptmberlhip of the panel, lo In-
clude OM 6Cl.mcllman, one m@rl1ber of the
citt Nff ~~-fl!lplo1• repr...,,. wf•<. wm · be sele<ted at the councll's
s.pi. 1t meeling.
DAILY PILOT
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:LMtlll1t1.~~'"'' PA In 1171, t266J
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He said the local firm and the General
Crude Oll Company o[ Delaware, which
have joint lnferests ln the leaee of Betco
Compawy property north of the city
limits, were both named as defendants in
the suit.
The action, Seymour uid, alleges t~at
KAdlhf thd General Crude hllVI! drilled
well11 by sla11t drilling from. thei'. lease-
hold property in county territory mlo the
city limit!. The city maintain11 this is in violation o(
Section 1401 of the Newport Be1Lh
charter and askl the court to ellter a
judgmen( f o r • a ~rmanent ln)~lon
restraining conti•ualitm or the dt1lli.ng.
No damaaes are asked, Seymour said,
beCause tt would be Impossible to
determine what damagesi there were.
The lawsutt came es new1·to official•
of the oil company.
James Giistrap, dlv1'1on mana~ for
G. !:. Kidane, nld thl1 monling, "I did
not know 1 suit, had bMr'I filed. .
"U It has, t cannot comment." ht aaif!.
referring all questions to the. complUly t
Jaw firm, Rutan and Tucker of Santa
Ana.
3 Face Charges
In Yard Thefts
Three suspects in the Aug. 18 burglary
of a Newport Beach boat yard are
schedtiled for arraignment Wed,nesday ln
the Ha-Judlctal District Municipal
Court .
Harlay Dean or to n , 43, R:aymond G.
Cleland. 44 , and Mary T. i-1ogan, 37, •tre
arrested Thursday artemoon on a boat
docked at 2'11 West Coast Hiahway.•
The trio are suspect.I in the fbeft of
$500 worth of bronu propeller 1h1fl.1
lrom Blaclde'• Boot Yord, 1414 Nolfp0!1
llliuleYlrd, poiJOI n!d.
Black Writer Refused
By African Taxicab
JOHANNESBUllO, Soulll Africa (AP)
-'VisJUna Amerk:11n cotumnllt earl
Rowen 11y1 a ttxt hert rtfuted to ~ck
tUm Op bectute he la nonwhJte. A M!t'Ond ab from the ume-oraanlu·
lion arrltltd mlnui.H later, 1pologiud ror
the' flrat driver•1 ad.lan ind drove the
bit« coluninitt lb hl1 destto1Uon. Row1n
II toutln Soulll Africa -1llylnf •t
hotel.I normaJly rt rvtd for whitea -ti
port ol a •rltlnl tour ol Africa.
. -•
J'l\OM P.,e J
ARTISTS •••.
the fact 111,1, In • l'Ol'lltr ol her )>llathtit,
Mr!. Harrll had P,.ice tags.
_llutinµU iht..lutot, lil<-nld,-tht-~
N~p;ort Buslneu l.Jcense Department !old' bet Ulll, U .......... t,11t ~ ,
i;;a1 the -llOl.hft i. ,.,. tllt tel. •
~ removed the price laj!I . 'MilJ was also a big brtak for the a.av. ~
litgs and Joan, which 1lmltarly was told
that it'!<> longer would have to pay for an
; e'xhlllftor'e. llcen1e -which it ~ad Dever
known It had to pay In the first place, ac·
cording to bank offlclala.
Then came Wednesday's confusin1
answer from the city manaser's oUq.
In the meant.if»e, Mr11 H1trJi hid stir·
red some iierious lhlnlinl alhon1 tbe
powers thlt be.
Thursday, the city Busiaess LlcenSe
Department made the following declara·
tion :
· I• Detroit· Lod.ng?
"Artists whose paintings are an dla play
for 30 d&y!I or longer are primarily tta1~
Jng 1n exhibit, not a sale. The cJty, tftet
much disclwtmi. d~s not want to
eliminate the type or cu lture brought
about by this kind ot a11 exhibit." H8' the ubiquitous-bu( ll1kiti over !He world? Photo-
grapher thought so, lor a moment at Jeast, When
he happened on !hi• ocene Sunday in the 800 block ·
of Balboa Boulevard tn Newport Beach. There they
w6re, aeven of U!elh (eotml '~).all in a row. And,
ai out man ralofd hi• c&lhoro; alioth~r oJlo chugi&d
by. 11'1 ebOUfti lb drive a man buggy. In other words, said License So~rvisor
Hir schberg, the city will Jay low 'on ep·
forcing the ordinance until it can bl
changed to provide thi sexem ptlon.
From Pag., J Justice Clarke
Resigns Positions
Nixo1i Accepts
Mrs. Harris, and all others like her,
can go on and exhibil the ir painU11gs -
replete with price tags in the cor11ers -
as Jong as they are parti~lpating in full
lledged exhibits, not brit! week-long or
weekend sales.
BAY CLUB NIXED ....
Into a tenet ••• or onto the Co8st High-
way."
RJchard Stevens, executlve!J vlce presJ.:
dent of the Wrather Corp., owners of the
BBC, although vowing to construct
another low·prof~e building, did streu to
the council that-the club would consider
lhe kiwer twin-tower cotetpt.
"This would fly," hi;: said, pointing out
that the club could get the 96 apartment
unit& It needt into two towers reachJ11
only 15 f.eet above ground, 35 feet above
present llmitalions.
They would be staggered, offering bay
views from both ,buildings, he said.
Earlier thlt: year, Newport vote rt tum.
eel down a proposal to extend the club's
current leate for the city-owned piece of
property. There art 28 years left 01 the
lease.
Stevens admllted that time ls of ut mott
importance, dl!tlosing that he has $10
million to i•vest. and mate a profit frc.m
in the time remaining .
However, he did say he believes the
city, somethne In the /uture, wou1d fin-
ally agree to an extension or the contract
on the land.
He said the club had no other choice
e1cept to get JOtnethin& built.
"We are Rot the villains," he said,
"The villain is the tax assessor."
He pointed out that the club'! &5!ies&-
ment jumped from lt!t,000 to h&Q,000
this year. without a1ty additional Im·
proVtmMta.
Stevens iesponded io each pl1Mln1 ·
commlMion. o~jedion to the tower prD-
posal.
He said "It i1 preaumptuou1 to ll.lrn lt
dow n on the basil Of the 1e1ae vote (one
reason cited by the pl1nJer1). Thai i1
completely irrelevant."
The commis!ion had .ilao cited a
survey in "Newport Tomorrow," R
citizens' committee projectio• for the Ci·
ty, that had ahown the vast majority or
residents opposed higb-ri!le dructurea.
'"I'he wording of tht question w1s very
leading," he said.'
Another commission objection, that the
apartment would infringe on .eighborlni
single-famil y residential tones, Steven!
countered by saying, "The proposed
tower would be no more intimidating to
From PftfJ4! J
MASTER PLAN.
tcction of the public laterKt In cert.tin
major public development.I ind p..iblic
assets, and to protect private interest.a In
the peripheral area thereof by creatin1
an environment com~tible with the
purpo~ of the public aSM:t."
Kyml1 u1d suggeeted lt.lndards should
be established .
They ""'Id include, but not be ilrniled
to. re1trictk>11s and requtrementa 1uch as
space, exter}or •ppearance!l, l1ndic1pln1
spact, exterior apptar1nce1, landecapl.ng
exterior lighting and other physical
characteristics, he said.
In ectin1 on the proposal, the council
directed a Study that would explqre "the
desirability, legality and feasibility" of
creating the chtic district.
Kymla stressed that hs proposal "is
nat 1\m!d at the ~ey Club."
He pointed out lhlt other communitiet
"rt c1rrylng out 8imil&:r ttudle1 and
thtfe 11 a netd to explore the p\lln.
City Atty. 'nJll)' Seymour pnlnted out
that the cooncil, in taking any formal ae-
tidh in tbat 11re11. would h&~e to be
careful to Include 11 wld11: 11rea. to
demoniitrate th11t one §Ingle area, such as
the Bay Club. •as not being
discriminated against .
He also said that the cily ~bould do
whatever it wants to do, in a hurry,
before the Bay Club files for 1 bulldlnt
pe_rmil uAder exlatina 7.onir11 reiul1tton1.
Seymour told council member1 that
preparation of an or d In an c e Im·
plemenUng the free:r:e could not be done
that very night, and would either have to
wait until the Cooncll's nelt rl"tular
meeting. Sept 14, or be taken up at a
specia l meetJna In \he interim .
There wu no formal propot1I made for
a aped•! ltSllOl'I.
East and We8t Meet
BtRLIN (UPI) -WNt German Prttil-
dent Gustav Heinemann new to Wett
Berlin today for a five-day vlllt dtlptte
Cornmu.nllt la1t Otrman proteatf thlt
hlt presence would be 1 provocttton.
adjactnt re1Jdtnt.I lhlt the w 111
separatina the properttH is M\t."
Joining O'Bryon In a chorus Of op-
position to the projecl were repreten-
tatives of three other community assocla·
tions who addressed the council.
Roland Landrigan, 5lS , El Modena,
president Of the Newport lfel1hts Com·
munity AsSOclaUon, potnled out that the
traffic problem is already serious in ttiat
area, and that the additional apartments
wooJd only make Jt worse.
He alao cited the lack ol supporting
services, such 11 ne1rby 1roctry atotea,
the criteria for .1perment development.
Among the other spe1ker1 Were
represenl.ltivt!I of Lido l1le and CIUf
Haven associati ons.
In addition, O'Bryon 1ubmitted to the
council letters from 10 other community
associ•tlont opposing the tower.
"This ia indic1tlve of the •ntire com-
munity feeling" about the plan, he told
the cooncil.
O'Bryon, in his arguments against the
appeal, had pointed out that Newport
Beach "is still a relatively small com·
munity of small commtmities.
"I do not wish to see that imaae change
dramatically," he said, "c:xceS!ive high·
rise will chan1e lt dramatJcally."
Agreeing that 11change ls upon alt of
us," O'Bryon said the city must concern
itself with controlling and shaping that
change.. .
He s1ld the waJ to do that ,,-as not lo
allow "a st.rlicture more than twid! as
tall a!'"ari'y other stfuctures in the Bay
area to be erected practically in the
center ol. the harbor for all to .tee.''
In recommtndlng that the plannin1
commission bt directed to ,e:t lnvolvtd
with t.he future of the club't property,
Councilman Parsons 1u1,e1ted "the
posslbiJHy ol. a compromise. •
The move drew objtttlonii from Qoun..i
cilmen Milan M. Dostal and 'C1rl Xyml1
who pointed oot that the nHt 11tep lhould
be up to the Bay Club.
"Thi• ohoUld be a declllon of the Bay
Club," Kymla said, it should reYiew JU
plans 1nd decide what is economic1lly
feasible." He Yoted 11alnst the motion to
refe r It back lo the planners.
In makin1 his preHntaUoil and dl11elos-
ing there were alternatl ve1, 8teven1 had
pointed out that they had not been con-
sidered formally by tht planning com-
mission.
Pl1nnin1 Director Lawrence Wilsori
concurred, s11ylng the pla nning 11ency
had discussed only the specific plan for
the single tower.
As propo!ed. the tower 1partment
would ha ve been built on 11.1111 made
from steel girders that would have allow·
ed 1 view undeme1th the 1ctua1 structure
throu11h to tKe harbbr.
Prt!sident Ni1on flas officially ac«!pted
the resi11nation of U.S. District Chief
Judge Thurmond Clarke -a c Io s e
per!llin1l friend whost Corona del Mar
home has lodged the prernlent on teveral
occasions.
Judje Clarke, who will 1tep down from
his senior po1IUon coverln1 the entire
central district of C&lifomla Sept. I, will
reta..ln aenior judge slttus and serve on
the bench when called to aervt.
Judie Ciarke m:epted 1ppolntment to
the bench covering federal cases in ffven
Callfornla counties Jn 1955 after 11erving
for more than i5 years t!I a Suptrlor
Court jurist in Los Angeles.
For years the judge has commuted lo
U.S. District Court in Los Angeles from
his Cameo Shores home.
The residence has been visited often by
the President before and after his elec·
Uon.
One of the molt recent Allys by the
First Family in Cameo Shores was a few
weeks before tht Nixons purchased their
San Clemente: vtlla.
Newport Orde'i:s
Right·o(~Way
Action Started
The Newport Jl«ch Clt1 Cotlnoil Mon-
day nlgllt moved to Insure Itself It will
own all the right.or-way necessary for the
planned wklenlng ol 32nd Street this
winter.
The cotIDCil unanimously approved
resolutions ordering the 11tart of con·
demnaUon proceedings agaln!t ownert of
eight p1rcels of properly alon1 the route
who hive not yet •grt'ed to a takin&:
price.
The actk>o, aceording to Public Work_.
Director Jos~ De\rlln, will probllbly not
have to be followed throug'tl in 111 in-
stancts, as mO!t of the landowners will
prob!bly come to terms in advance of
court action.
The city i!I planning to wtdf!n the road
from two to four J1ne11 between Newport
and Balboa :Boulevards, an 800 foot
stretch, at a eost ol ne!Jarly $'7&0,oOo.
Too Little?
Too Much?
Hlr9Chberg didn't comt rigbt out . and
say the stink made by Mrs. H'an18 bad
anylhtng to do with the cfty'1 change of
heart, in favor of art.
But thell City Hall never has been 1
good loser.
From Pllfe J
COLLINS ...
potential industrial tax base.
To date the city h.u not formally noti-
fied LAFC or its intentlona In regant to
the airport and the additional 200 1cre1.
The controver1Jal Collins annexation
developed as an olf!hoOt of the now-dead
proposed merger of 5o acre1 on the norf.b.
east corner of M.11cArthur and Campus.
That property l! owned by Ml!Donnell
Douglas Corpof"1tlon and Wis to be 10ld
to Azimuth F.quitle1 Inc. of Newport
Beach. for development into a high-ri!e
commercial hotel complex.
The lrvine .Company vigorously pr().
tested the Azimuth 1nne'llatioo and t•o
wttks ago A:r:imuth attorney Alu Bowie
announced that his firm had dropped all
plans for ;innexation to the city.
Bowie then took the county Planning
Commission route for a ione change nee.
essary for the $40 million development.
On Aug. 12, the planning commi1Aioner1
post pdned. action on the rezone for 1"o '
weeks. '
While the •debatt between Azimuth and
the Irvine Company w1s at 1 lt1 peak. I
Collins Radio 1nnaunted lt1 Intention to
seek annexation to the city.
The Azimuth 1nne1ation was attacked
by Irvine on the 1rounds that It was not
conll~s to Newport Beach. The Col.
!ins prt>perty, on the ot~r hand, bordert
the clty boundarlee for alm01t a mile
alon& MacArthur.
Kent Student's
Mom Files Suit
CLEVELAND !U PI ! -A 14 million
damage suit wu filed Mnndiy Jn U.S.
District Court by the ml'llhtr of one of
four atudenl$ !!hot 11nd klll!d by natloti&l
guardsmen an the campus of Kent State
Univeriilly May 4.
Mrs. Elaine Miller of Plainview, N.Y.,
charged in the suit her son, Jeffery Glenn
Miller, wa1 deprived of hi1 civH right!I.
Accused in the !Ult of ntgllgence were
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodel, Kent Slat.e
Univer1ity Pre1ident Robert white and
Ohio National OU1td Officer•, lncJudin1
Gen. Sylvester bet Corso, the conr
mander of the Ohio gu'ard.
DON'T BE MISLED IY DISCOIJ1'1'$, DEACS, SALES AND
GIVE-AWAYS.
THE COMMON LAW Of BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST-ff IS
UNWlSE TO PAY JOO MUcH, iut if iS WORSE TO PAY
.TOO i.nTLE.
IF YOU PAY TOO MUCH, YOU LOSE A umE MONEY
AND THAT IS All.
WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE. YOU SOMETIMES LOSE
MRYTHIN~ BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT WAS
INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TO DO.
YOU CAN 'T PAY A LITTLE AND GET A LOT.
\
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ALDEN'S
MMTA ANA, OU...C
nrtTIJll c• ... ALMN·I
Ill Mft.L C.A.nl I; ... ,..,.
1014 ,,...., '"" c•. UIJ)'4
CARPiTS e DRAPES
1663 P'IRellfle Ave.
COITA MllA ,_ ....... ,.
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Costa Mesa
EDITION -
VOL. 63, NO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TVESDAY,-AUGUST 25,·"1970 TEN~.
Group Hears Steps to Improve Harbor Cultll:re
1
1
By WIWAM SCHREIBER
Of IH Dloltr .. 1191 illff
The stale of the cultural arts In the
Harbor Area amounls to a good deal of
1
11
talent with too little space to utilize It
properly, according to a group of experts
who have catalogued the local cultural
opportunities. ·
DAILY PILOT entertainment editor
Tom Titus, Newport Hari>or Art Museum
Director Thomas Garver and George
Kuyper, former manager Of the Los
Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, also
suggested steps which could be taken to
improve these offerings in the Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach of the 1980's.
Garver told the gathering that the ac-
ceptance o( .the visual arts In Orange
County could best be illustrated by an in.
cident whh;h occurred in Fullerton
several years ago.
He said millionaire industrialist Norton
Simon offered the city bis $120 million art
collection and $500,000 to build a museum
for it The city did not act immediately
because the land he wanted lo use was
Board of Education property, said
Garver. '
"Fullerton fiddled while Simon burn-
ed." Garver added.
Eventually. he said, the offer was
withdrawn and the ·collecUon Is now hous-
ed in the Los Angeles County Art
Museum.
Garver said that the Harbor area art
museum, which is located in part of the
Convicts Stage
Balboa Pavilion, b not adequate. He says
people tend to overlook the museum and
Ignore ils existence.
"Our exhibit! are beUer known in auch
cities as New York,.chica10 and Phoenix
than they are in th!a community," be
$aid. ·
Garver also meriUoned facilities at Uct
and Orange Coast College but said they
were also not adequate as cultural sp:1ts.
He concluded by suggesting some of the
things needed for a a:ood cult~al base in
Guards Drive San Quentin Inmates Into Cells
SAN QUENTIN (AP) -San Quentin
prison guards drove 800 demonstrating
prisoners into. their celb with tear gas to-
day after nine offices were damaged by
trson-caused fires, prison officials said, ne prisoner• staged a aitdlwn sLrlke
In the priBOll. recreaUon yard to preu a
dozen demands issued by black prisoners
during an experimental Superior Court
bearing Monday within the prison walls.
White and Mezican-American prisoners
also took part in the demonstration,
1
i Nixons Slate
'
San Clemente
prison officials said .
A call for me~ black and Mei:ican-
American counselC>fS were among the
demands.
Minority race prisoners tota1 51 percent
of the 3,600 prisoners at the state prison
on the shores of San Francisco Bay near
San Rafael, 15 miles north of San Fran·
cisco.
Guards found nine counselors' offices
damaged Jn one celJblock after driving
the demonstratlna: prisoners back to their
cells.
Furnltur:e, wooden window frames and
other woodwvrk was charred ' .Jn the
preliminary steel and concrete cells.
There were no repOrt.s or injuries.
First slgn of trouble came when
prisoners refused to report lo their prison
jobs after breakfast and congregated in
the recreation area.,
They n!i>;ated the demands delivered
in a five-page letter Monday to pri.son of·
ficials. They included:
Mesans Up., Up •••.
Anda Winin8alloonChampionships
-Freeing of all "politlca1 prboners."
-P'Teelng of three.Soledad State Prison
inmates who face trial in· the slaybtg of a
guard last Jan. 13.
-Closing or two disciplinary cellb1oct1,
where 200 prisoners are now confined.
-Appointment Of a black warden.
-Appoinbnent of black and Mexican-
American ass~nt wardens.
-More black and Mexican-American
prison officers and counselors "equal to
white officers."
c.oata Mesa and the Harbor Area.
He said more money is needed and that
the large industrial concerns should be
tapped for support.
A larger, more visible museum facillty
provided for by municipal funds and !ind
gifts is also necessary, he 11aid. But he
warned against too large a facilltY whicti
could become a burden on the com-
munity, '
Titus concerned hlrnsell primar\Jy with
the difficulties confronted by the emefg-
•
r. I
' ' ..
l
Ing theat.r groups and also -of the more established eompanies. J ·
He said Costa '!lfesa and Harbor Area
theatergoers have many fine ~
to choose from ~use .Of a nw:Dber ol.
talented rompinJes. He adOed thiC m&ny
ne~ groups have been formJng aM are
getting highly ,favorable respolll!te from
the community.
The primary prOblem in local. Com..
munity theater, according to ntus .. 11 noi
(See CHART, P•t< II· . ·I '
' ..
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' I 7
GOP Reception
By RICHARD P. NAJJ.
ot t1M O.llr "''-' St.tf
A Costa Mesa couple soared up, up and
away from the Iowa State Fair to grab
titles in the Natloo.al Hot Air Balloon
Champion.ships, a final point tally in-
dicated Monday.
nation to daizle fairgrouocb visit.or•.
The overa11 winner wu 'Frank Prit·
chard, ot Flint, Mfcb., who came 1"m.
behind in lho linal ta!b: ""afao oot.Dt.
William Gratib, of Annirbor, Mich., who
held t perfect 4,CO> pOlnt.s at one time.
Pair Suspected
In Huntington
Beach Murder ,,,.
A pair of~ in tho~of a
H.,..iinlll>o ll$ICli men ,...,..,.. oo his
bed·MOoday, hl1 throat cut aqd four atab
wounds In his ch"t and back, are In J1". . 1 today.
President Nixon turned to t h e
Callf<>rilia polilica1 actn~ today as be and
the First Lady prepared to welcome 150
Republican candidates and wives to their
San Clemente· home at a 5 p.m. reception.
'I1le guests were to' include GOP can~
didates for Congress, state senate and
usemblf and the Board of Equalization.
The Nixans gave a dinner last month at
the Spa!llsh.style home honoring Gov. and
Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Sen. George
Murphy (R.Calif.) The Presi~nt has
been promoting the election o f
Republicans in California and elsewhere
tn various ways from social events to the
ttandard picture posing technique.
Earlier in the day, the President met
with top foreign policy aides to ponder
chances for peace in the Middle East as
talks between Arab and Israeli represen-
tatives.begin in New York.
Officials meeting with t.'le President in
San Clemente included Secretary of State
William P. Rogers; Joseph C. Sisco.
assistant secretary of state for Middle
Eastern Affairs; and Henry Kissinger,
national security affairs adviser,
.Rogers pushed U.S. peace initiatives
that led to agreement by Israel, Jordan
and Egypt for a three-month cease fire
and lhe start of negotiations.
Press Secretary Ron Ziegler a 1 l d
Mr. Nix.on would cover a wide spectrum
of foreign policy developments in lhe
discussions.
The President received an "en-
couraging" report on the economy Mon·
clay from four key advise.rs.
Dr. Paul W. McCracken, chairman or
the Council of Economic Advisers, said
administraUon po\lcies to cool the
overheated domesUc economy are work-
ing.
He called evidence in the economic pie·
ture encouraging. He added, "One must,
of course, be cautious about trying to
read too much into very current data, but
In a great many ways lhe evidence a1 I
aay. we felt, was quite encouraging."
He said he did not want to suggest that
the struggle against In nation is over.
McCracken cited as tiopeful indices the
less rapid rate of increase in the con-
sumer price index and increases in in-
dustrial production, J>:USOnal income,
(See NIXON, Page I)
Thief Rakes
Out the Loot
A thief visited a Cosll Mm
waitress· apartment Monday night
but he didn't rake In the loot.
He raked It out
Officer Phil Donohue arrived al
Sheri Howerton's home, 187 E, 2trt
St.. ind found the thief apparenUy
reached Into htr bedroom with ..
bambOO rake, llflin& her handbq:
from a dresser,
The loss was $20, including purse
and content.I.
'
They are Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Eckmeier, of 364. Princeton Drive, who
were even witil last event, when the man
of the house brushed a rooftop and lost
po in ls.
Mrs. Wilma Eckmeier -the only
woman entrant -took first place in the
spot tar£et competition and came out
third overall among all contestanU.
Her husband Bill, who was tied with his
spouse until that tricky final spot target
event, placed seventh among t h e
balloonists who came from all over the
Fourth place was won by Peter Krieg,
who is from Indianapollr, Indiana and not
to be confused )Vith the Peter Krieg, who
l.s a DAILY PIIm reporter.
The fivMay ·1ong national cham·
pionships were part of the Iowa State
Fair and dazzled the awestruck Iowans
with their mainiflcent grace.
Balloonists ascend up to 20,000 feet in
their brightly colored hot aJr bags, dangl·
ing beneath the 40 to 50-foot diameter
celestial vesael.s in basketa or slings.
Mesa Planners Deny Bid
To Expand Nabers Car Lot
Costa Mesa planning conunissioners
Monday rejected pl.ans by DI.ck Nabers
to expand his Harbor Boulevard Cadillac
agency into adjacent College Park resi-
dential property,
Commissioners rect1mrnended denial of
a rer.one petition filed by three College
Park homeowners seeking a change from
residential to commercial in the de.t1igna·
tion of their property on Princeton Drive
just off of Harbor Boulevard.
It WB! made clear during the cmunis-
sion session that sale of the three lots
to Nabers for eventual expansion of the
auto agency hinged on approval, of the
remne request.
Si.nee the planning t'OlllDliaaion act.. as
a recommending body in such matters,
the final decision rests with Calta Mesa
city councilmen.
Applicant.. for the zone cha!lle are Lt.
Cmdr. Cllarles V. <on, Jr., 464 Prince-
ton Drive, Ramiro Morales, 454 Prince·
ton Drive and a property owner identifi·
ed only as Abbott at 468 Princeton Drive.
Members of the College Park Home-
owners Association opposed the z on e
change, charging that commercial lntru-·
sion into their !~year-old neighborhood
would make exisUng noise and traffic
problems worse.
Tom Shoemaker, an architect for Na-
bers, produced a plan for the prop:>aed
expaMion which showed an entrance to
the service area on Princeton Drive.
"Nabers wants those three lots for In·
gress-t:gress ·mto h1s service area," said'
Joe Groskl, who identliied hlm9elf u •
real estate appraiser living In College
Park.
"Giving those three lots to p:>mmerc:ial
(See PLANNERS, Pap !)
Heated Debate Expected
'
ln Collins Annexation
Proposed IMelltlOl't of the Collini
Radio <:ompany property lo the dty of
NeWport Beach promises to develop into
a hot debate Wednesday before the Local
Al!;ency FormaUon Commission (LAFC).
Lined up on oppo!lte sitte1 <it the blltUe
are the city and Collins Radio versus the
Irvine Company and resident& of the new
Irvine commun.itles of University Park
and Turtle Rock.
No firm decision on whether the city
may legally annex the 177 acres northeast
of MacArthur Boulevard without Irvine's
consent is expected to come out ·of Wed-
nesday's debate.
William J . Mc:Court. assi!tant county
counsel, says the LAFC Is not 1olng to
rule Wednesday on the~ quesUon: CAn
a leasehotaer (Collins) annu: prQpertJ to
a city regardless of the w11he1 of the
landowner (Irvine).
MCCOurt said lhe LAFC Is concerned
only with "gener;t policy" and not with
the answer to that knotty question. He
says that is up to the city of Newport
Beach and •.he Irvine Company to settle.
Cojijm: does not own the contested, tri·
angular.shaped 177 acres bounded by
MacArttiur, Campus Drive, and Jamboree
Boulevard. The Irvine Company does.
A survey of attorne)'! for the clty and
tht other interested parties shows no
agreement on the vital question.
Dennis O'Neil. assist.ant city 1Horney
of Newport Beach, DYi recent court de-
ciiions on 1ucb 1nnex1Uons have ruled
in favor of Iona term ltuet1, Collins in w. <NL •
McCoort checltd his law booka and
said he <OUld find uo 111Ch lnlerpretlllon
of the 'annu llwa. • . 1
• Wfl.. the newport Beacli . coundlmen
opproved th< anntuUon • JU(y 20, 'Rly-
(9'e COWNS, l'>I• I)
I
One captured wu driving the dead ·
man's car, just u police were head.inc
for his home to queltion him about possi-
ble involvement.
Miles C. Cox,. 18, a laborer, of 15700
Irene Way, Westmluter, and Frederick
J. Yanke, 20, ol Gardena, are Jn, Han-
tington Beach CI t y Jail for questioning.
Each ii charged with murder in the
weekend death of Walter Christie, 51, of
8131 San Angelo Drive, p&rtner in an
aircraft hardware firm.
Yanke is charged additionally with
r~lving stolen property · and ar·
ratgnment on all counts la expected
Wednesday in West Orange County
Judicial District Court.
"Yanke may not have been present
when it happened, but he mJght be an ac·
complice," said Detective Capt. Grover
L . Payne.
The detective cb.ie!, who has been
criticized by some news media.. said
reluctance to release facts early in the
Chrl!tie homicide case was essential.
An all-pointa bulletin was broadcast
Monday for Christie's missing lieht blUe
Mustang.
The car was spctted at g p.m. by Of-
ficer Ray Hattabaugh, parked b e s i d e
Bolaa 01.ica State Beach, bringing ad-
ditional police officers and helicopter in
to comb the surrounding area.
"Prior to that, we believed Cox wa1 in·
volved," said Capt. Payne, adding that
patrolmen we~ en route to bis
Westminster home when it was found .
"We thought the IUSpect might s t i 11
have Christie's car,'' he continued. "We
didn't want hiin to read too much in the
papers •"4 dump tt."
A pair of teenaied ,girl!: and s ~ were
taken Into custody in Cox's company Mon-
day night.
The girfll were released to parental
custody and the boy ls ln Orange O:iunty
Juvenile Hall today, for additional fn..
vestigation to detennine U be will be
charged at all. tr so, said Capt. Payne, it won't be in
connection with ChrlsUe's murder. .
"We have no indicatlons: of anyone else
Involved in this at this time," said the
captain. ·-
1'1left was apparently not a 1 direct
motive in the brutal murder, but police
alleged that peraonal effecta of Qirlstie"s
were fouod 1n YAnke'a apartment. . '
Mesa Tennis Meet
Deadline Announced
Wednqday ts the final day ror signups
to compete In the Seventh Annual Cotta
Mesa Optimist C1ub Tennis Tournament
for youngste"r1 I Lbrough ll. Matches ire
llated Thursday and Frid~. ·
Contest.aw who have mpleted tM Oosta Me.sa .Recreation partment'a
sunimet trainipc program'" wjll take 1 to tjie «IW"ls at CO,ta. M~ HI~ SchOol,
I ... uni flnl, 1ei:ond and third place ........... ' . ........
, '~' ) ,' , '• ,. '' ) r , ' DAIL!Y .. 1LciT1'9ff• ......
ARllST ~~RRI$. ;J'tJ'RiJS H ~R :11Ac!~ 1.dN1 CflfY ~LL ·. · .
, Dou Art .lkcomo .llutl"'!I~ W~on tho Price T .. -On?· ·
~.itt H;~ll Loses
' ' . ' . .
Mesan Wilis Eight Over Art Taxes
• ' ' • • ' I• I '
In'lproba~le as It.~!. a 50-year.-Old . "I won't da it,"·~· ~a tota full:
Costa M:esa IJ;a~other ac~ly has ·about anypne w~ Wo.uld listea:Sbe eaDed
bealen City Han. · City HaU. ·
It wasn't her city hall, it was Newport She told" them tha t she knows dozena of
Beach's. NeV'ertheless, she ciushed Jt. other artists who have 'exhibited their
Mrs. Klrby.~is, 28116th Place, ls an paintings ud other art "'.orlt and have
artist. Until ahe gGt angry, all artl.!ts who never been confronted w1tb a tu· bill
exhibited their works in Newport Beach because of It.
had to pay a $15 fee for a busilless La,st ,M<>n<lPY she was tol4 there w~ licet\se nothing she could do. ·Newpart Beach Li·
• . . .ce* SUpervlM>r Stan Hirschberg de-~t least all artists ,whose.exhib1~ were clar-ed that the artist's fee was standard
noticed by the city s Business Lti:ense operating procedure. ·
Department at various banks, hospitals, Whereufm1 Mrs. Harris·called the city
libraries, city halls, etc., bad to pay the -at.torney'1 o!fice ukilg tor a definltioa of
tax. the word ''busineu." Sbe aaid Thunctay A litUe over a week ago, Mrs. Harris' she still hasn't received one
paintings on dlspliy at I livings and loan Sbe bas, however, recel;ed a lot of
office got noticed. . · · ·otbfr things.
And she got. a notice -from the Cty of Llke a response from the office of City
Newport 1elllliJ her to pay the 1aL ·M~or. 11.arvey L. .ffiar)~t, 1o wbqm
Pair · Arrested
In Mesa Robbery
At Gas Station
A transient fisti salesman with a Ten·
neasee prison record waJ arrestc'd along
with his younger pal early today, when
police rolled up during the alleged
burglary of a Costa Mesa· service station.
Investigators said the owner, James R.
Hopkins, the two arrestees and the off.
·~y attendant , who Qrst rep>rt.ed
wsplclous actlvltle1 at the staUoo are 111
related or acquainted.
P8.lrolman Harry Ehrlich and partners
ln two other: squid cars rolled Into the
Enco Service Statlon at 2025' Newport
Blv4., about 2 1.m., 1ccordi.ng to their
repom.
They sakl a window had been smashed
and that coins, cigarettes and trading
stampa: were conflsc::ated from Ule
suspect palr they confronted at the scene.
Jamel R. Jones, 44. ind a 24-year-old
Gardt.na min who ktentUied himself as
William ..D. Stockton were booked on
bllr(lary charg!t.
l'ollce pid Ibey later received ln-
forri18tion that the younger man was us-
, tn1· a relat.lvt's name: artd wcre~trylng to
"det.rmln<'hls this mornhl&. ·
• ·~ 4
•
·she· pleaded her c~ Wednesday. She
,shou1d "forget the. whale thing," 1be
doesn't need a Uc~ sh& was told.
Alld like a letter the Same day from the
city Business Wcense Department, ac--
COIJlpaoled by a fi.tlul of form. -tt"f"ed
to apply for a business UceMe.
The eontroveny, It seemed, hinged on
(See ARTISTS, Pore I)
C.•wt .
Weadu!r
Low clouds in the morn.inc and
high temperatures in -the 'afternoon
continue Wednesday, with readinp
ranging from 75 locally to l!a f\lril>
er Jnland. , · ·
· INS..,E TODAY
Britain b u.slng tM ~ .. ,hock
trta.tmtnt" in. &~ing. to pt111vcnc
it& young ptoplc from becoming
hooked on dr1o1g1. Poat S.
.. •
t
'
' : '
I
I
I
• • ~ •
•
I
I DAILY PILOT • c
=
Newport Hears
The muuge parlor l)'ll(lrome we11l on
fiat in the Newport Beach City Council
llwnberr Monday night
Clly AUOl'lley Tully Seymoor turned the
wncU chamberi into a veritable
10urtroem a1 the council heard .. plea1by
t Newport eou,ple aJld a newly formed
iyndlcate a.sklng for a business license
'or what would be the clty 'a sixth such
ieallh cluH. •
Two of the nve mauage parlon ln the
~ty haw been ra1ded hi recent weeks -
Yith cbar8e1 of prostitution resulting
tach time.
F"°'"Pqel
ARTISTS •.••
he fad that, ln a comer of htr paintinp,
Ws. Harris had price ta1s.
Durinl all the furor, abe· aaid, the
~ewport Business LlctnJI Department
old bu that, if &be removed the price
lags, she wQuld not haYe to pay the tax.
She removed the price tagi.
Thia wa1 abo a big break for the sav-
ngs and loan, which 1tmllarly wu told
~at it no tonger would have to pay for an
t1hibi1or'1 llceue -which it hid never
mown It.bad to piy In the flnt plaei!, ae-
:onling to·banlc o!Hcia11.
Then Ca.me Wednesday'• confpsing
snswer lroin the ctly. manager's ollice.
In tbe ~'me, Mn. llatrl.a had 1tir-
red ane lel'ioul thinkinc amo111 the
pawen that be.
Th~. the city B.W-Lie""" Deparlmoirt mldt th! following ·declara·
tion: · · "ArtUiti wbo.e paintinj:s are on display
!or 30 dt:• !I' .Janser are primarily stag.
Ing an uhlbl~ oat a oalt. Th< cl!J', afle<
much d.ilculalOI, doe• not want to
elirninlte the type of culture brought
1bout by th.ls kind of•• ethlbit."
In other words, 11aid Li<:eme Supervilor
Hirscbbt/1. the city .will Jay low on en4
forci?Ja the ordinance....J:lntil it can be
chl!llod to P'ovlde lhJ sexemptloo.
Mra. Hafril, and all others like ber.
can go on and exhibit thelt palnilqs ·-
replete with price ta11 in the cor.ers -
as Ion.a: 11· they are parUdpati.ng 1n full
fledged exhibits, not brief wetk·lonl or
weekend aaJes.
HirachberJ didn't come riJhl oot and
11ay the at.plk made by Mn. BaniJ hac;i
anyt!Ulg to do wtlh the ctly's c)wige of
bw't, In favor of art.
But Iha Qly Hall never hu been a '°°" 1'-· •
Fret1t P .. e J
NIXON ••. '
retail salet and bollllng.
In a aidelJ"1t of the current Praiden-
lial San Cleipente 111~. Press Secretary
Ziegle·r said the Preaident bu told bin, .
"planted" queatlom are out at NlJ:on'1
news conferences.
Ziea:ler said the Presidenl told him he
bas not tolerated planted questions in the
23 years since he first tried for public Of·
fice and be isn't starting now.
The Presidential Posture on question
planting was inspired by a column that
11uggested one had popped up toward the
close of his July 30 news conference.
Zieber &a.id he told the President be
never planted an actual question with the
prm but had offered ideas to reporters
Relf.i.ng fertile ground to probe.
Nixon, Ziegler said, told him t b e r e
were to be no more of these fertile--
ground 111&&ea:tiorl!.
Tydings Tells Source
BALTIMORE IAP) -Sen. Joseph 0.
Tydings (0-Md.), ~ayg the author ()f a
Lile magazine article accusing him of
lmproprtety in orfice told him a White
Hou&e official was the tource ol his in-
formation, the Baltimore Sun reported to-
day.
' DAILY PILOT
• O•ANGI COAJ1' ~SLt~INO COMPANY -·••rt N. w,,, I
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Jtc~ l. CYrf•Y
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1M1 C~ltl . Htrll II c-IN llNI
CAILY ttlLOT, •UI> .Meli II ~""" IM I.I~-~ II ..-i1111e11 •1lfY eo!Cl9t 1\11'1•
Ila'( !lo ....... ..u-. -~ """' ,.....,.,.. .. Id!. CM.. M .. , ....,.,lfll!.., '""' .... 1"-'4.""' """"· •*" wM floO ... -...t """"'· °'""" C.Jtt l'llltlltfl""'9 t_.., ,.. ... ,..,,. •"'• .,,. ., nu wtst It,.._. ....... N-" MICA. .... la W•I
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tal'ft ...... f, .. ,., ~ CMt! "lltlltflhoot (-"Y· "'-,.._. 1terfllit. MIVllr1I.-. •ltitrttl .... lltf' ., ,._,_., llt!'lill ,.,..~ 1M ,..,llC'llif wHPltVI .,.i.1 ,.,._
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I
essage
Dupllo I plol by Ibo..._.. for Ml ID-m.-... loo, Ibo --lll Macco ~" been attklng buyers for
some or Its subsidiary dlvlsi9!'1 for about
a month. Maecb and Grf:at Southwest
have been "'heed "Ith c a 1 h prnblerM
since the bankruptcy of the Penn Central
Railroad pr lier this summer.
Great Southwest is 90 perecnt owned by
Pennsylvania COrnpany, all of whole
stock belongs to the PeM Central
Transportation Company -a wholly
owned subsidiary" ot the Penn Central.
continue the hearing pendi11g the gather-
ing of additional inrormatlon.
Santa Ana lawyer Edward Ulman
attoraey for the owner, Vada Van Cha&e,
'and himself a \)l'incipal in the l)'ndi<'ate
behind the eate:rprise, claimed a delay
would cause undue hardship on all the
principal ..
He also argued I.hat no other maaqe
parlor }i~d to und~go council scrutin,y. Ha
said hi& parlor, t.o be called ''Alhena's of
Hollywood," &hould not lie judged OD .the
alleged &ins ol similar bu.sinuses in the
area.
Business· Ucense Supervisor Stan
Hirschberg had brought the applicaUon to
the COun~ atteJ1Uon because, be 1ald, of.
problems encountered with the ap-
plication itseU and the ?fault ()f police tn-
vestlgations.
Sworn in at the alart of the hearing ,
Seymour set the stage. He requested that
' all per.90llS testifyi11g be n-om in.
Ulman, president of the "Sunset.New-
port Entuprises," tht 1yndic1te formed
to provide ~ proprietor with advance
capita1, criticiud the entire procedure.
He was further Jnfurtated when the
councll, midway through the testimony,
adjourned temporarily for an "aecutive
11euion."
He charaed this was a violaUon ol the
Brown Act, the state'• Ti&ht-~know law
that prohlbita sscret Rlaiona e1cept oa
persoMel matters.
Prior to its ne1t meeting, the council
will ask the police depaltment to look Jn. · to lhe background of Sunae~Newport,
whose princlpab, according to• Ulman,
are David Cadley, the convicted relon, a
''Mr. Mascalco" and himself.
The council also asked to see a copy of.
the franchise agreement between SUnR:t-
Newport and the owner.
The applicants had pleaded for ap-
proval, and Van Chase said he haa been
working long boon: the put 1ii: weeks to
prepare the 62nd Street establlahment for
opening day.
• Ulman aaid any deiaY. ...Wd W. I
11U1jor lw<ilhlp on all partlel tn..ivad.
It WU about thil point that Seymour
read a cla,aified advertlaement that Ital
beeit run In tlltiak't DAILY-PILOT.
Th< pald_ad ttatts: .
"Atljeoa't of the SUlllel Strip wllh the
Bl"' lat girla · lrom Hollywood to
Musaae You. Now in a new location in
Newport Beach."
Seym()ur queried if the parlor wu ID
fact open, in violation of lhe law.
Van Chase 1ald It was not, the ad had
beef\ an error.
5tymOur and Vlce Squad Detective
John Simon said there have been a
"number of young girla" seen inside the
business.
Van Chase said one of the women was
his wife, the other was his only employe,
hired to answer telephone.s. and the other
girl. or girls, were just friends of the
family.
tnman stressed that there had been no
business conducted.
He explained the tenor of the ad u "a
gimmick" to attract new bwilnw.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Van Chase, who,
police said, had a clear record, were ada-
mant. however, about their intentiona for
their first busi.nes! venture. '
In his arguments. Ulman contended
that the city had forced the firm to spend
the money preparing their business, ao It
had no grounds to deny the lit!:nse.
Ulman pointed out that In order to get
health and fire department approvals, a
requisite for a business license, aome
$4.000 in construction work had to be
performed inside the buildin&.
From Pqe J
PLANNERS ••
use wou ld be like pulling a cathedral in
the area as far as parkJng is concern-
ed," he said. "All the customers l'l'Ould
park on Princeton Drive."
In moving to deny recommendation or
the petition, Commiaioner N1lhan L .
Reade said a "mistake was made In 1956
v.·hen College Park was built up to Har·
bor Boulevard ." ·
And Commissioner H, J. Wood predic-
ted that someday all of Harbor Boulevard
will be zoned commercially "but not for
three lots..'.' '
. In other action, the plannina: commis.
s1on:
1 Recomrnended appi:oval f)f a zone u.
ception permit for Rlchard A. Sewell to
build ~ 27-unit apartment complei: at
2311 Elden Ave.
-Recommended approval o( a zone u .
c:eption permit for Film Club ol Ai:ntrtca
to inslall a drlve-thru Photo Develop-
ment Carousel at 2750 H11rbor Blvd.
Rec:ommended deni•I ol a rezone peU-Uo-n by Dlvld E. ·Or ant to rezone 11 com.
merclal a rtsidential lot at 441 Hamilton
Sl. adjacent to • commercial are11.
The peUtJon was denied on the 1rounds
that Jt "would likely rnult In a 1tp1ra1e
business being klc1t«I on Hamilton Street
which would Jet a precedent."
-ConUnued until Sept. Iii an appeal
from Dwight W. Grabill to divide hls '\ot
at 2SMS Maui Place into ~ loll. Thi&
division w11 denied by Plan!Un& Director
Wil~am Dunn who ,.Id Ille olze of the
propOsed two parcela would be btlow the
1.000 aqaure feet IJllnlmum cstabll&bed
In tbr ttaet.
DAILY ru.oT ......... LM '"""
Macco Unit
• Sale Studied
By. N.Y. Fir1n
'11'" posslble •le of LeaMtaillp Jlauo.
inC' Systems, a d.i vislon ol the Newport.
based ~1acco Corp., is under &uuloo
today between Macco's parent company,
Greitt 59uthweat Carp., and a New Yort
metal firm, terro Corp.
William C. Baker, chairman of th 1
board ()f Great Southwest, said no
definite agreement had been reached ,"at
this time. Should theft be a final agree--
ment pr~d. It will be subject to Ute
approval or the boards of directors or
Macro, Great Southwest and Cerro," he
said.
Cerro is an international producer of
non ferrous metals and a manpfacturer
Is Detroit Losing?
()f wire, cable, and brass mUI producta ,
with aMual sales of about '600 million.
Baker 1ald the ass.eta: currenUy under
negotiation include housing tracts, apart.
ment and mobile home park projecbJ, the
maj()l'ity of which are located ln
Galifornia, with some assets in Tezu and
Florida.
Has the ubiquitoua bug taken over the wOrld? Photo-
grapher thought so, for a moment at least, when
he happened on this acene SUnday in the 800 block
of Balboa Boulevard in Newport Beach. There they
were, aeveo of them (count 'em). all in a row. And,
as our man raised his camera, another one chugged
by. It's OllOlllb to drive a man bugsy.
Characters Signi~g Up
The extent of the transaction w a 1 not
mentioned, nor was a propoaed p r I c t
revealed.
In Orange C.Ounty Macco owm M Con-
trols the J0,00()..acre Starr Rancl'I, the
5JJOO·acre Coto de Caza private recrea·
tion club. the 700..acre 'Sand PolnfAI
development in Santa Ana and the SO.
acrt Glenbrook development in Brea. Satu·rday Boat Parade's Deadline Draws Near
Frot11 Page I
Thursday is the registraHon deadline
for the 1970 Olaracter Boat Parade which
is scheduled to nm Saturday In Newport
Harbor.
Sponsored by the Commodores Club of
the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce, the • loth nmnln& ()f the parade
will feature the tbtme "OUr Amer\can
Heritage."
Jack Barnett, e1eeuUve eecretary of
the Clwnber, aaid today there art 2$ ~
From Pqe J
CHART ...
In the realm of aUendance but rather in
the lack of .support in the area for
fa cilities.
He said some of the established oom·
panies have permanent facilities but the
newer groups must give performances ln
whate ver auditoriom is available.
Severa] of. the new groups, n1us sald,
have staged e:a:cellent performancq ln
maJ.eshift facilitie_s.
He added that many e1cellent croups
are also desperately 1e~rehin1 for a
place to begin prc>duct.ioa seu,oo1 1nd
that the Harbor Area ()( 1980 would do
well to lake-some o( them .
Kuyper had a few barbs for nt()St
locally produced symphonies and believes
that the best means .of giving the loc1l
area its worth ih. music would be to .eek
quality rather than quanUty .
Kuyper, who has been manager for
several major symphonies, said com-
munities should pool resources and brin&
in some of the very beat musical groups
an ensembles.
He 1lso seemed to have llUle re1ard for
the facilities available here for such pro-
ductions.
"You never reaUy hear a good
orcheslra if it performs in the UCI or
OCC auditoriwna and gymnas:lums, '' he
said.
He said the idea o( a large symphony In
the Harbor Area is impractical because
of the huge upkeep e:l'1)Cnst.
The Harbor community ()f the future,
he said, should concern itself with better
concert facilities and with bringing in the
finest ensembles to perform.
All three agreed that these 11c-
ti vities are essential elemen\3 in the pr«·
ess of brin,R:ing out the best in the com-
munity. They stressed that a conce rted
effort is needed to make the arts better
known and more favorably received.
The three aired their vi.e.ws at a recent
Citizens Harbor Area Research Team
(CHART) meeting. A tape recordirog of
their discussion and findings will bt
presented to city officials and the Orange
County Board of SupervilOrt.
Parsons Report
To Be Weighed
By CofC Group
A discusaion ()f the Parton• ReporL
v.•hlrh advocates expan1ion of Oran1e
County Airport, is planned Friday by the
Costa Mesa Cha mber of Ccmmerce Avla·
lion Committee.
Deadline for reservations Is noon
Thursday, with luncheon to be in Mokl '1
Volcano House Restaurant at the new
Rodeway lM, 1400 Palisades ·Road.
An open disc\Wion will follow com-
menta by a five-rnember panel comprised
of Orange County Aviation Director
Robe.rt J. Bresnahan and presidents of
four aviation firms.
The others are Kennell\ S. Clark, Avia-
tion Committet chairman and chief of
Mission Betchcrart: Frank Tallman, o(
Tal!mlnts Aviation; Richard Brown, «
Marlin Avlatton and Gail Smith, of
N owport Skyways.
East and West Mee t
BERLtN (UPI) -West German Preal·
dtnt Gustav Heinemann Oew to West
Berlin today for a five-day vilit despite
Communist E11st German proteaf.. that
hl1 pre1ence would be a provocation.
tranta set for the race. "It will be a little
bit shorter this year, by maybe 15
minute1," he said.
"'The Pavilion Queen will lead the
parade, carrying the Commodores and
their wives, the Chamber directors and
their wives and the El Toro Marine Corps
Air Stltion Band," Barnett said.
Any boat, equipped wJth standard iaf~
ty equi~ent and registered i n
California, ii eligible for entry. Barnett
Hid the boata CAD either be of an unusual
variety, or the more common type
decorated to Uie.theme of the parade.
The parade will begin at 2:30 p.m. at
the Balboa Bay Club and is scheduled to
end in the same spot at about 4:30 p.m.
A pre-parade brunch and briefing will
be held for parade entr1nt.s at the BBC at
11 :30 a.m.
Bamett uid the $10 registration fee
will be taken at the Chamber offices, 1166
E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar.
Sex Snit Filed
Research Team Hit for 'Damages'
ST, LOUIS, Mo. (AP) -A $750,000
damage suit has been filed against ses:
researchers Dr. William H. Mastel'$ and
Virginia Johnson by I man who rid the
pair employed his wife u a suual
partner for two men under treatment by
Masters and Mn. Johnson.
Tht aiit also ch...gtd that the se1
resutch tum greatly benefited from the
use ol Uie man'• wife through "monetary
gatn by the publication of books," while
the husband ''lollt the ·conjugtl society o[
his wife" and 1Uffered "creat humiliation
and disgrace in his IOCial and domeatic
relationshlpt."
The suit was filed in U.S. Di.sltict Court
by attorney'a ol George Edwin Calvert,
whose address was listed only as New
Hampshire. The attorneys d~Uned to
give Calvert's home address. HlJ wife 's
name was listed 11 Barbara.
M11ters called the charge 0 ridiculous"
and said "we would be gladtto disprove
such a situation when the opportunity
arises."
The charge was in connection with
research done for the beat s e 11 t n g
''Human Sewal Inadequacy," written by
Masters and Mrs. Johnson and published
In April.
The suit alM names as cc>defendants a
"John Doe I," or the State of New York
and a "John Doe II," of Virginia.
The suit alleges that the se1ual rtl ...
tionship of Mrs. Calvert was used as a
"form of treatment" for the Does and
that Mn. Calvert wu paid $500 for the
• fir!!l such treatment on or about July 21,
1967, and 1250 for the tecond treatment
on or 1bout Jan. 6, IHI. The suit said
Calvert leamed of the 11leged treabnents
on April 11 ol this year.
A total ol l!S0,000 actual dlmages is
asked from the four defendants and a
total ol $600,000 in punitive damages ii
asked from Masters and Mrs. Johnson.
Masters said the charges we re
"trum~ up" and it is the first suit aris·
in& from the 15 years of rtsearcb by him
and Mrs. Jobnaon.
Nixon Proclaims
Hispanic Week
President Nixon Monday proclaimed
the week of Sept. J3 National Hispanic
Heritage Week in recognition of the 1lfta
of people of Spanish origin to our national
life.
"I hope this week will eJtCOurage n1aoy
Americans to extend a cordial welcome
to the rece11.lly arrived immigranl.s rmd
visitors among us who represent the. rich
heritage of Hispanic lands," the P:esi·
dent aaJd from the: Western While: House
in San Clemente.
His proclamation noted that for more
than two centuries Americans have titk.?1
pride ln the .contrib\ltion1 ol men aAJ
women of Hispanic origin from the earl)'
Spanish explorers to those of recent
generations who ha ve ''helped lo give
new dimensions and fresh vitality to our
music, our llterature aid our food and
have brought a particular warmth and
openees to our spiritual values ud our
11tyle of living ."
Too Little?
Too Much?
COLLINS ...
mond Watson, Trvine Company •ice pres.
ident said, "The company Hi still fee
holder of the property."
Considering the attitude ol the oppon-
ents and proponents of the propoled mer.
ger the case aeems destined for the courts. ~
1rvine has protested the anne1ation
because the · Collim property Is In the
heart of the Industrial aector of the pro.
posed city of lrvine.
Newport Beach officials are aware of
this fact but they are also aware ot the
financial advantages of annexing the Col·
lins acreage to the city.
At !he July 20 hearing Newport Plan-
ning Director Larry Wilron told counCIJ.
men that the parcel would bring a poten-
tial annual ta:r revenue lo the city of
$110,000 which could reach a total ol
1228,000 with further development.
At the same July 20 hearing, Newport
councilmen also announced the city'• in-
tention of eventually annexing the Orange
County Airport and all Irvine industrial
property west of Jamboree Road. Such j
a move would subtract about 209 mora t
acres from the future city of Irvine'•
potential induatrial ta1 bast.
To date the city has not fonnally notJ..
fled LAFC· al its intentions in regard to
the airport and the additi()nal 200 acre1.
The controversial Collins an6ei:aticn
developed as an offshoot of the now-dead
proposed merger of SO acres on the north-
east corner of MacArthur and Campus.
That property is ()wned by McDonntO
Douglas Corporation and was to be sold
to Azimuth Equities Inc. of Newport
Beach for de velopment into a high-rise
commercial hOlel complex.
The Irvine Company vigorously pro..
tested the Azimuth .annexation and two
weeks ago Azimuth attorney Alex Bowie
announced that his firm had dropped all
plans for annexation to t.he city.
Bowie then took the county Plann ing
Commission route for a 'l.Olle change nee.
essary for the '40 mi llion development.
On Aua. 12, the planning commissioners
postponed action on the rezone for two
weeks.
While the debate between Azimuth and
the . Irvi ne .Company was at Its peak,
Collins Radio announced its Intention to
seek annexation to the city.
The Azimuth annexation was attacked
by Irvine on the grounds lhal it was not
contiguous to Newport Beach. The Q>I.
!ins property, on the other hand, bordera
the city boundaries for almost a mile
along Mac.Arthur.
DON'T BE MIS\.ED BY DISCOUlilTS, DEA[S, SALES AND
GIVE.A WAYS.
'
THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINES~ SAYS IT BEST-IT IS
UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUCH, BUT IT IS W 0 RS E TO PAY
TOO Lime.
IF YOU PAY TOO MUCH, YOU LOSE A UTILE MONEY
AND THAT IS ALL '
WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE, YOU SOMETIMES LOSE
EVEltYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT WAS
INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TO DO.
' .
YOU CAN'T. PAY A LnrLE AND GET A LOT.
SANTA A•A, OIANM
TUSTIN c.I .,,
ALDIN'I
HD Hill CA'""
& HA.'91111 ,.,, .......... , ...... c.ttf •
111·1144
I
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
16'3 l'lac•ntla A-n.
COSTA MISA
646°4131
' 7
i .
' l '
...
Saddlehaek
VOl. 63, l'IO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
Nixon
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of tllt OllllY ,., .. , ltt tf
PreSident Nixon turned to t h e
California political scene today as he ind
the First Lady prepared to welcome 150
Republican candidates and wives to their
San Clemente home at a~ p.m. reception.
The guests were to include GOP can-
d\date9 for Congress, state senate and
assembly and the Board of Equalization.
The NI.Jons gave a dinner last monlh at
It's a Dog's Lite
Plays
the Spanish.style home honoring Gov. and
Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Sen. Geora:e
Murphy (R-Calif.) The President has
been promoting the eleeUon o f
Republicans ln California and elsewhere
in various ways from social events to the
standard picture posing technique.
Earlier ln the day, the Pre&ident mel
with top foreign policy aides to ponder
chances ror peace in the Middle East as
talks between Arab and Lsraeli rtpresen-
Bonnie, the pet Basset hound of the G?rdon Schroeder famil y of Mil·
wauk.ee , Wis., has learned that equality demands of w~men go un-
heeded by Clyde, the !amily's pet skunk, wben he dec1des to take
over.
Clemente'sHosp~tal Gr,oup
Endorses Orange Project
By JOHN VALTERl:A
Of flM O.llY ,II., Miff
San Clemente's Community Hospital
oommittee has joined the city's physi·
cians' group to endorse a new hospital
proposal by an Orange group over the oft·
delS)'ed. plans of the San Clemente
Medical Center. The IS-member community group,
formed in recent months to ~ild a public
community hospllaJ, ?las joined fori:es,
Instead, with Chapman General Hosp1~l
or Orange to attempt to ~est ~1c1al
permission to buik! a hospital 1n San
Clemente from the finn of C. T ·
DeCinces of Van Nuys.
nie San Fernando Valley devel~~ has
beaded six-year-Old plans for a private
hospital near the civic center but no con-
itruction has begun as yet. . The endorsement by the community
group _ predicted earlif!' this month -
it 1;oupled with the unanimous vOte last
wtek by the members of the San
Clemente Medical, Society to endorse the
Chapman plan. Mayor Walter F. Evans, a leader in the
drive for 8 hospital other than the
DeCtnces facility, said that he, Coun·
cilman Wade Lower and other com-
munity leaders toured Ch~pman General
Hospital in Orange last Friday.
He termed the hospital there "very Im·
pressive." The 99-bed facility near the Newport
Market W ateliers
Disappointed
In Malfunction
Freeway along Chapman Avenue would
be similar to that planned for flat land
east of the Sa n Diego Freeway in San
Clemente.
"Looking at their plans.'' the Mayor
said ... the one planned for San Clemente
would be a little bigger."
To implement its plans for a general
hospital here, the Chapman group must
win the sanction given to DeCinces by the
Orange County Comprehensive Hea lth
Planning Association.
A showdown has been predicted
between Chapman and lt.s supporters and
DeCinces at an October meeting of the
association.
The meeting marks the end or a 90-day
period given DeCinces time to draft com-
plete details or his firm 's finances, struc-
ture and plans.
Spokesmen for the devel.oper have pro-
mised construction will start within the
90-day period which began last July.
The makeup of the San Clemente Com·
munity Hospital group includes pro-
minent civic leaders in the city.
The group's members, who formed a
few months ago as a nonprofit cor·
poration, include:
Publisher Harold R. Burges, Municipal
Court Judge Frank Domenichini, Mayor
Evans, Chamber of Commerce President
Bud Fowler, Jaycee leader Robert
Frauenzimmer, Planning Commissioner
Art Holmes, Interim Oiambet Manager
Walt Hunter, Methodist Minister Dr.
Donald Inlay, Councilman Dr. Wade
Lower, former Mayor ff9ward .Massie,
former ctunnbe.r President V e r n
Overbaugh, San Clemente innkeeper and
civic leader Paul Presley, insurance. e1-
ecutive Wflliam Ryan, surgeon Dr.
Herman Sobol and Bank of America
Manager Lee Winterton. ·
•
Today's .Flaa1
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, '1970 TEN CENTS
to 150 GOP Candidates
tatives begin in New York.
OUlclals meeting with the President In
San Clemente included Secretary of State
William P. Rogers: Joseph C •• Sbco.
assistant secretary Of state for •Middle
Easlml Affairs: and Henry l\Winger,
national security atfairs adviser.
;Rogers ptl.$hed U.S. peace btltiaUvea
that. led to agreement by Israel. Jordan
and Egypt for a threNnontb ceue. fire
and the .tart ol negotlaUoru.
' Preu Secretary Ron Ziealer s a 1 d
Mr. Nixon would cover a wide spectrum
of foreign policy developments in the
discussklns.
The President ~iv~ an "en-
couraging" report on the.economy MOO.
day from four key adyisers.
Dr. Paul W. McCracken, cha.inn.an of
the Council of Economic Advisers, said
administration policies to cool the
overheated domesUc economy are work-
ing.
He. called evidence in the economlc pic-
ture encouraging. He added, "One must,
of course, be cautious about trying to
read too much into very curren' data, but
in a great many ways the evidence as I
say, we felt, was quite encouraging."
He said he did oot want to suggest that
the struggle against inflation 1s·ove.r.
McCracken ciled as hope!ul lndlca the
less rapid rate of increase 1n the con.
sumer price index and Increases in' m.
d\L!lrial production, penonaI income,
retail sales and hou.slng.
In • sideilght of the current Prellcien.
tlal San Clemente saga, Presa Secretary
Ziegler said the Prealdent has told him
"planted" questions are out at Nixoo'1
news conferenca. ·
Ziegler said the President told him bt
(See NIXON, Pep Z>
800 Convicts Strike
At San uentin Prison
Viejo High
Faces Jam
This Year
By PAMELAUALLAN
~ °' .... hllr'"" ..... Mission Viejo High School will race
double aessiods wbt.o lt!, dQCn open oe.rt
month. ·
Trustees of the Tustin U n I o n High
School District YOled Mooday to house
the students, faculty and adminLstraUon
of the new University Wgh School at the
Mission Viejo campus untll lheir school ls
completed. ·
Robert Bosanko, principal of Mlsslon
Viejo High School, said he had no
previous indication from the board that
his school was being considered.
He said report, had indicated that the
1.000 students would probably be housed
at Tustin High School.
"Running two schools on one campus
aJways provides problelllll," 1 a i d
Bosanko. "We haven't yet had a chance.
to work out the details of our schedul-
ing."
· Bosanko said he understand! that the
students would probably be housed a
minimum of 30 days and a maximum of
68 days at the Mission Viejo campw1.
University High School b:ated in the
University Park community was schedul-
ed to open next month but delays were
caused by the sheet metal workers strike.
A tentative: date of Nov. 15 bas been set
for the school'!! opening, barring any
more unforeseen strikes or inclement
weather.
At one point school administrators had
believed that the school wouJd be housed
at Tustin High School and plans were
made so that the Tustin students would
attend morning cl&MeS and the Universi·
ty students, afternoon classes. Class
lengths were to be shortened to 40
minutes with five Jl4,rute.s between each
class and the University students we.re to
have their own faculty.
A similar schedule may be worked out
for Mission Viejo High School, although
definite plans have not yet been made.
Storm Nears Hawaii
HONOLULU (UPO -Tropical storm
Maggie with gale winds and flooding
rains was due lo hit the island of Hawaii
at noon Wednesday, and then sweep
northward through the rest of the island
chain.
Girl Takes A~id
5-year-ol.d in Serious Co1idition
A S-year-old girl is In &erious condition
today because she accidentally swallowed
an LSD $8blet Monday nlght, Santa Ana
police reported.
The ·v~ Deanna Bryan of 1817 s.
Evergrein St., ls lft St. Joseph's Hospital.
The phJliician attending ~ UWe l~l
sa_ld·this momlna that there,'la no. w~y at
thia time to determine the extent of
dam•ge"li> the chllU'1 physical or nieow
well lielng. \
'Jbe cliild'1 mothet, •lloitlo Ann Bryan,
called pollce at about l :!O last llilbt when
her daulbter narted acUrig "'lttange."
She told lnvesUgators the little girl
became hysterical upon seeing a kitten
with which she had been very friendly
previously.
Mrs. Bryan told police that she and her
daughter had been visiting friends in
Anaheim Monday and it 11 believed that
she IOU11<1,lhe ~D la~.let "",a 4rprer In
the Anahe'1m tlafue. \ " , ~
· PofI<e have wflhhel~ the llameJ ol the
pe'1QIU lhe tiJ{l and hit molliet.'1il!Od.
lnvellipkp who were ' called •to I.be
Bryan hOme &aid Delnna. ~'appearid to
be dlsorlel!IAd:She would not tal.k e,.,.pl
to try •Mama.' "
2 Laguna Police Officers ·
Get Promotion to Captain
Two Laguna Beach police officers will
be promoted to lbe rank of captain, ef·
fective Sept. 1, Chief Kenneth HUck an-
nounced today,
Sgt. David Brown and Lt Frank
Schopen, who ranked first and second in
evaJuation tests, will receive their Cap-
tain's badges Friday morning at I a.m.
from Chief Huck, Mayor Richard
Goldberg and acting city manager Joseph
Sweeny.
Tile protnotlons are part of an ex-
pansion and reorganization of the Laguna
Beach police department.·
Oral examinatio"s of Aeven eligible of-
ficers w~ conducted Friday by the po.
lice chief!s of three Southern California
cities, Huck said.
The candidates, who already had sub-
mitted written resumes of their qualifica-
tions, were interviewed for about cne
hour tach by Chief Richard Baugh of
Brea. Chief Aubrey Duke of LaPalma
Khrushehev at Home
BELGRADE (AP) -Former Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev is now
resting in his 1ummer home. near
Moscow after three riiOOth,, of medical
treatment in a hospital, the Yugoslav
news agency Tanfug reported today from
the Soviet apltal.
and Chief Arthur LeBianc of Coronado.
Chief Huck was ndt a member of the ap-
praisal board.
Salary acale for the new police position.
has not yet been set, Huck said. Besides
the new captains, the force will Include
LieutenaRts Robert McMurray and John
Zelko.
Remaining to be filled in the
reorganit.alion program will be one police
sergeaJtt position and two positions as in-
vestigators.
The positions will be filled from within
the force, Huck said and those Interested
have submitted their qualifications Which
are being examined.
Forest Blaze
Threat Quelled
A potentially dangerous brush fire was
quelled by forestry crews in Cleveland"
National Forest Monday afternoon after
it charred five acres near Ortega
Highway ea.st or San, Juan Capistrano.
The blue, the first of any consequence
durlng the summer season. wu brou&ht
under conlrol in less than an hour after
erupting two miles trom San J UaJ\.
Two air tankers, bulldm.en and . 40
flreflglltus worbd the r~. to leep ii
from 'l(lreading lo the dry bnlsh in huge
fore5t area.
Guards Put
P1aisoners
Into Cells
SAN QQEN'\'IN (AP) -San Quonttn
prison guards drove· 800 de:JpODl&rlt.IP&
prlsonJ'• hJto their cells wttlittor ......
day 1alter nine afilces !JVO.daniaial "1
arson-caused fire!, prison olficl&ll llid.
· Tb&-prlaonero &lafOil a ~
In the prlsOn' ricrutloo yard 114 ,... a
do'"l' denilJ)ds ISsueol bY bla<:• ~
durjng an experhn..,lal SUpetli>r Coor!
bearing Monday wftbln the pr-walfo.
White a.nd'Mexlcan-American prisoners
also took part in the demQnstration,
prison officials said.
A call for tnore black and Metlcan-
Amerkan counselors were. · aniong the
demands.
Minority race prisoners total St percent
of the 3,800 prisoners at the state prison
on the shores of Sa n Francisco Bay near
San Rafael, 15 miles narth of San Fran-
cisco.
Guards found nine counselors' olflce.s
damaged Jn one cellbtock after driving
the demonstraUng prisoners back to their
cells.
Furniture, wooden window frames and
other woodwork was charred in the
preliminary steel and concrete cells.
There were no reports of injuries.
First sign of trouble ca.me when
prisoners refused to report to their prison
jobs after breakfast and congregated in
the recreation area.
'Ibey repeated the demands delivered
In a five-page Letter Monday to prison of·
ficiau. They Included:
-Freeing of all "politicaJ prisoners."
-Freeing of three Soledad State PrisQn
Inmates who face tri8.J io the slaying ri a
guard laSt Jan. 13.
-Closing of two dlsclpllnary cellblocks,
where 200 prisoners are now confined.
-Appol.ntment of a black warden.
-Appointment of black and Medc.an-
American assistant wardens.
-More. black and Melican-Amerlcan
prison officers and counselors "equal to
white offlcera."
Australians Strike
SYDNEY (UPI> -About three.
quarters ol a rniillon All!trallam walked
Off their jobe today in a -hour atrlk•
to proteat federal government eco80m.ic
policies.
NEW YORK -Traders and lnv~rs
today began cashing in their gains, bnng-
ing 8 f Ive-da y stock mark et rally
blacked out on the coast Monday by com·
pute.r failure to a grinding halt.
.4.lternatives Discussed
Thousands of stbck market watchers
were disappointed in ~alifomia w~n a
transmission malfunellon ln the highly
technical system cut oU resulls of
trading.
Laguna Weighs Parking Problems
A thorough invesliga~ion by the
Am-·ican TelPnhone &r: Telegraph Com· By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL "" vr Of "'-DtllY '"'4 ,ltlff piny put the blame on a problem . ln Oakland; which is a critical relay polnt Laguna Beach· plannint commissltrnen ·
Co .... 1 ts probed the central downtown basin's for many West ast V...n • parking shortage Monday night and ex-
'Ibe OAlLY PILO'l' was among news-plored various financial meln! available
1>9pers left without its customary dally to the city to develop parldng facilitiea . cloolng llnancial tables, bul ATiit 1ulh-..... lties saJd they had every hope no rept:at Highlights of the parking discussions
w p Wert: problem would crop up today. {See agts
10.11). -Commisslooer Robert Hastlnp' su1·
Pr1ce1 continued to slide lower In &est.ton that aoy parking strodure bfl
moderate tradina today a1 profit taking built on a leaseback agreement, In such a
1mothered the rally of the past nve day1. plan a deve1oper would bu.lid the lot,
The. Dow Jones average of 30 Indus-lease It to the city for 20 years and then
trials was off 8.07 to 7$1.SI at noon. the title would go to ihe city,
Detllnts htld a smaJI but widening ltad ~hainnan Wlllfam Lambourne's sug·
over advances on the New York Stock gesUon that a parking alrucl.Ure be built
Et"l11nge. , by a non.profit corporation .. t up Iv, I.be
• ' f •
city. The corporation would 1llue bonda
to pay for lht structure and parking
meter revenue would p&y orr the bonds, 1
When lhe bonds we"' paid, the c:or-
poraUon would go out of bu$iness and the
title to the parltlll( focillly would ffO to
the city.
-A look al the Pirklnl district Idea,
wh;ch la beinf Uled In the Southern
buslnta ltdor Of the, ctty for the
deve.lopment of a park.Ing structure.
ln such a plan, property ownen within
a parking dl!trlct are assessed for the
cost of the slruci.UN, but recelv• 11early
rttum of 75 percent of the parking meter
revtnue to help offset th• Increased
asst.ssmtnts.
-A 11Ucgestion lro m Fo!'fl Avaiue ..
• ~William Axil,. for a park·
lnc-aulhoril)I. "11lcll -Id O(llrate almi· /tr to the Plfklil& dJalrict complex.
Park!Jlg In lbe downtOwrf Ill• wos not
oobedulelf 01 lhe agenda. for t!>e ltuify
session. Slnco • number ot Interested
pe1soos lhoM<I up far the . '"'"Unf, however, many of them community
boulnessqien, Lambourne decided to
dl>:ussthe Iasue.
Hastinp oaid his leaseback proposal
would allow parldll( development without
"a !arge ouUay of money by the city~"
He said that the Ieuebock program
Would work 'belt ·on llnd that the city
already own's. Sud! an area ts the e•·
!stlng Glenneyn lot, which Is now being
ltllditd ·by Ibo ct\)' ~. JDultktor)'
' parklng stncture. 1 • •
CltY 1'1armtr AA'ln O. ·A~ lltild the
•tud)ron f.be1Ia1, alone wllb .a llult)o tor•
paikillt lot on !ilenllald Street wobld< be
released to the eommlalioo;S.pt. lt: '
Talk' drifted to apeclOCI Of Ule Glen-
neyn lot proposals; bo'"'* Lambounie
saJd that It YU not wtM for lba ClOJ:D•
mls!loo to be spelctlc and go into
number1.
Lambourne, in dbcusalnC h~ non.profll
corporation ldta, said lh-1 he fol! certain
lbal people "'"' avalloble to buy bonds
for such a parlilng structure.
1he chairman noted, however, th11t if
the revenue from the metert In U'le 1truc-
ture did not metl the bond payment.. the
.(See P~G, Pqe I)
Weatller
Low clouds in the morning 1nd
high temperatures in the afternoon
conUnue Wednesday, with readlngs ~an:Ji~ro! ?5, l~ly t~ a;a {urPt. :
1 i:NsmJJ "...On.t 'l' · :
Britain ii u.aina the •shock
treatment" in t1')'ittg to prfl>fnt
ill Vo•ng r><OJll< from l>lcomlng
hooked on drNgs. Pao« S.
C1Hfwlril I
C'*lllflt 1#• 1 Cl!t&llie. ..._,. c-ks u
(l'MIWfrf 11 °"'"' Htlkf• ' •• , .. lill ,.,. I
•ftTttTllflllltlll , .. , ·~.. , .. 11 ...,..... 14
Ml·~ 14
I
I
I
I
t
.
l
I '
•
I DAILY 'llOT SC
Arms · Talk·s .. Miss Tate -~:1 Serious
• ----'·--...-
I
South Korea Pr~nt.s De~iled _Pledge
SEOUL (AP) -South Korean Presi-
dent atuni Het Park pre&ented Vice
Prtlident Spiro T. Aan.ew with an ex-
!'<Mi•• ohoppi., U..t of military needs
'J\leaPy ~ hilled lo win a detailed
pledfl. °"' & pnllDiled lncreue ia U.S.
arms aid.
e<r111e .... ,,. .. ,.,~.......,11 • -~· · .,;."!!-. •e;:,'J:Ul.~."t:.: Kona~ -... ~.If-. . Near Death
tense. provide new add to help modernlzt: the
Agnew hirf1¥U . ,Jald, ~ taJU . went . tQ0,000.man Korean 81'1J'ed forces, he said .
''very well." Mted about~ lenCf.h-« before his arrival he did not expect his
tbe.-diliCijili,onl, a 1poke&man.Wd: ';'I'J:UJ VJ.lit to pr.od.Uce a seecUic QeW a1d pro--
Ul5 ANGELES (U~ll r M Sharon
Tate wp dying of stab wqundl. she wu
hanged by a rope fastened around her
neck. looped over a celling beam in her
living room. ,
does"n't necessarily mean they aren't get-gram. Other American orficiala said no
ting along." . . decisi~ would be made until a stud,y is A scheduled tw~hour meeling between
the twO leaders IU'etched to six hours
bdore .brMldn( up at mld&llen\000
Thty• ...... dilcutllooa •• ., -
Tvddu ~-....... to meol again at breilcfast Wednesday.
Park is understood to be aeeltiq& 1 mtde ~d Korea's detailed needl. •
~ledce ol ~e t.1 ~on over tie mxt .There WEl'e indications tUt Park ud
five )'Uf'I K. the pnce for droppln& hit h11 1dri.1er1 presented just aidl a delail· County CMloer 'l\omar T. Noguchi
t~tified today, that the rope buz:iw on the
pregnant actress' throat indicated · her
body was suspended above the. floor for a
short period while she was dying.
objection to the U.S. plan to withdraw ed list during private M$Jioal rib
20,000 of the 63,000 American tl'1:>0p5 sta· Aanew, U.S. Ambassador William J,
An official Korean spokesman describ-tiooed here. Porter, Gen. Jobn N. Michalia and other
' FfOod'• Rep-ement
·~oardTaps S~artzbaugh
New Saddlehack Dean
In an executive session Monday night,
the B9ard of Trustees of Saddleback
College named Jack A. SwartzbalJlh 9f
Lagut\4 Beach to the post of dean of
5tudent.s for the 197G.71 school year.
Swartzbaugh, who has been coordinator
of counseling and student affairs,
replaces John J, Flood, Saddlebacll: Ian
of students since ¥ruc:tlon at lbe col·
f<g• began In t!Je 1111 ol 1111.
Justice Clarke
R~signs Position
In California
President Nisoo hu officially aocepted
the reslcnatlon of U.S. Dlstrict Chief
Judge Thunnond Clarke -a c I a s e
personal friend -whose Corona del Mar
home ~ 1od&«I the presi~t on tevtral
occasions.
Judge Clarke, who will step down from
his aenlor poaition coverjng the entire
central -al C&lilornla Sept. I, wUI
retilJl ...., Jude• a.tu and 1trvt on
the--c&lled to ......
Judp Clarke *"'.Pied ~inlro<Jlt ,to
the 'beadi,COVfrinc lidtral c.uel Jn RVM
c.fjflon>l&c Clo-In 1155; a(tq su,yi., forJ"R ,.... J:i ~~"-· J. ~~ c. juiitl')n Los ,.....,.... . •
For y-the jutl&e ·bu commlll!d to u .s. Dlal{lfl Court In I.or A,,..'les (ram
bis ClmeQ Shores home.
'Ibe fftldenot hi• been vt1ited often by
the Presl.dtnt. before and after his elec-
tion.
One or Die mon· -nl 11&y1 bt Ibo
Fint F.amily in Cameo Sboro was 1 few
weeks before the NI.Ions purchased tht.ir
Saa Clemente ·vlll&.
Kent Student's
Mom Files Suit
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A 14 million
damq'• IUlt WU Hied Moodly In U.8.
Distriet Court by the mother of one of
lour ltudenll ~ Ind killed by lllliooal
guardsmen on the campus of Kent St.ala
Unive:nity MJy 4.
Mn..J!'J..aiae MJ.ller ol Plainview, N. Y.,
charged in the suit her son, Jeffery Glenn
Miller. was deprived of hi.dvil rights.
Flood, who also aerved .u assistant
dean of the swnnar "8llo1t at Sad-
dleblck, ,,., a freq!Slt tartit of student·
crWdsm cturina:·the""i battle·over stu-
dent hair lellgth, beclu.se al llil Insistence
in enforcing the college dress code.
A-Saddleback spokesman said Flood
will mnain as a counselor but has been
oblifed to curtail hia duties: because of i}.
Iness. -
Cou.osdor William L. Kelly will a1111mt
the posttton·of coordinator of couneeling
and studen~ .affairs. ·
The Monday night board ~lion makes
official a red.i.stributioo of duUu that bad
been in effect informally since Flood
became ill earlier this year.
Trusieea al.act approved a new format
for SaddJebllck's dtii.en advisory com-
mittee which will reduce membenhip
from an unwieldy 110 to 50, and reduce
the number of .lubcoml!Jitteel from 11 to
six.
Fifty new committee members from
the college's five 'trustee districts wtµ be
appointed for one-year terms. Thi com-
mittee'• function i.s to malntlin com-
munication with the troltetl in •~u
corurning the various districts terVed
by tbe co!lege. Becau8e of its 11ize ind the prolileratton
of subcommittees the J!'OUP'• acUvitia
h•d -~iril>t/1" P"! ~-· • pi>f· lege '1Jik'esman slid.
The m rem1infilg wboommllteu wtn
iqclude bqUdlJC, commWllitJ ~.
fiiiUot( Ubmy, tch<Unblp ooil• ,_
tional.technica1.
The boat11 · aloo 1ppf0Ved 1 bid OI
$24,000 for an addition to Building 8, a
classroom building that will be enlarged ,
to house duplicating services and a com-
puter cenW.
The enlarged building will continue u 1
reloCatabli structure, to serve. for several
more. years. First permanent buildings
for the Saddleback campus will be a
library and a math-science building,
acheduled !or conJtructton by 1 m
Plyment of a $1 ,000 fee for an ac-
creditation .visit in November also was
authorized by the trustees. The v.is.il by
an accrediLation team Nov. 4, ~;ind I 1'ill
constitute. the final phase of a three.year
atucy that will lead to Saddlebaclc'• full
acaeditlition with the Westtm Aaoela-
Uon. of Schools and Colles;ea:.
Man Files Suit;
• 0
Name s Missouri
AocuMd in the wit of neJlia;ence were
Ohio Gov. J amet A. Rhodet, Kent SI.Ile S R he s University President Robttt White and . ex ese&rC r
Ohio .N.tional Gu.rd Offloer11 includina . G<n. 6)'lwlter Dd Coreo, the com,. ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) -A 1750,000
maodlr .afibe.Ohlo guard.· ·damage suit has been fil~ against ~x
The 1ult ·asked $2 million tn oom-researchers Dr. WilliArn H. Maltus and
~toey-· 'dlmtl• and f2 million in · Virginia Johnson by a man who uld the
punltiv.e.dJIMI•· pair employed his wife as a sexual
HandJJDI the 1u.it· for Mr1. MiUtr wu: . partner for two men under treatment by
Attonl!W JOfepb .JQlne:r. Masters and Mrs. JohMOn.
The suit 1ilso charged that the sex
DAILY PILOT
N...,.,. le•lri Htatl"ffM ... . Lei•M "'""' ......... ...., C....... S.CJ: t it -
OAANGE C.OAST li'UlLllHIHG COMl'ANY
'' I Mert N. Wtff ~ ........ ,. .. ...., .I••• a. c.rt,., . \ll(t ,...._. t1111 ._I Mllllftl'
D'"'"' A.. Mur,.hiaa MiMllnt lolll.,.
l ichtt4 P. N•11
...,. Ort!'IH c-1r '''*" -
•
· TQBtarch team greatly benefited lrom the
use of the man's wife through "monel.ary
gain by the publication of bo9U:' .while
the hul!lband "loist the conju1al society of
his wife" 1ind aifri!red·"great hurmtiJUon
and di!grace tn hil aocial and .domestic
relationships."
The tuit'wu ftled tn U.S. District Court
by att.omeY'• at George F.dwtn Cl.lvtrt, ' wbOte address wu listed only 11 New
' Hamp.hire. The attclrney1 declined to
givt Calvert's home 1ddres1. Hil wU1'1
. name was listed as Barbara.
Masters called the charge "ridiculous"
and &aid "ft would be glad to disprove
such a situalian when the opportunity
arises."
The charge was In conneclion with
re.search done for the. best 1 e 11 1 n g
"H1.unan Sexual Inadequacy,'' wrillen by
Masten and l\lro . Johnson and puLillh<d
Jn 'Apnl.
The suit <1lso names as codefendants "
"John Doe l," ol the Slate of New Y0rk
and a .. John Doe 11, '1 of Vlf1ini•.
'-..?1111 illl~ allelff ,Ill>! Ibo -..i relic
tlom6lP " Ma:.1 Cal'(Ht "''' Ultd u • "!om « tr•bDOltl'' lot the ~ and
that Mtr. c.Jxect wu fllld '500 foe the
Ont -lr<calmfPI oo or 1boot July II,
11167, and UIO ·f« the ltOOlld tr.,lmtnt
on or ·-·Jan. I, 1111. Tiie oult 11ld
Calvert learned of the alle&ed treatmtnt&
on April 11 ol thla year.
A total of ft5G1000 ,ctoal dama1er is
asktd Crom t.ht four del.endanll .and 1
total of M ,000 In puniUv1 dlm1a:e1 lJ
1sked from Ma1ttr1 and Mn. Johnaon .
Mast.era 11td the char1M w • r •
"trumped up" and It ii lbt lint •ult 11111°
ina from tht 11 Y•at• ol l'UW'dl by blm
ed Mn. Joholoo,
U.S. officials.
· Aanew Can)f here 1t PrHident Nixon's
r-to i>ledl• onnWluln& U.S. llUppor\
' for Kcru and liJten to Park'• •WI but
without authority to commit the ad-
minllitr1tloo to any specific armt pro-
1ram.
U.S. military aid to i>orea ,k ~urrently
$140 million a yur, 9nd any new pro-
gram would require 1pproval tr.ma U.S.
ContNWJ. inlna.W,ly weary· CJ( Americln
a:pe~ing io Asi,a. ,. .
• ' • t •• -The lengthy meetings cOntrasted with
Agnew's first Asian trip last Jaouarj'.
None of. those. sessions delved dee pl)' into
policy, question(.
The .Korean pattern ·IN¥ J>o. ..,,.,led
liter lhil·week la Thailud ""°'* A ... w
wiµ have to ~xptain Oon'gression.al re1uc-
tarx:elto finance proposed Thal assllt.ance
to Cambodia.
Agnew also is ex~ted to receive.
another request for increased arma aid
when he meets Wednesday with Na·
UonaUst Chine.se President Chiang Kai-
tbe.i at hii mountain retreat at Sun Moon
Lok.e.
Agnew 11 lt'beduled to fly to FormOA
after a visit Wednesday to U.S. and South
Korean troops near the demilitariud
zone between South Korea and Com.-
munlst North Korea .
f',..m P .. e l
PARKING .•.
additional money needed would have to
come from the city's gener1I fund sup-
plied by Lues and other &etVioes.
Laguaa ltlateh
Mike Wardlow, 11, Huntington Beach, keep• his eye on the ball during
a ping pong match al the Laguna Beach Boys Club. Although hil home
is up the coast, Mike is spending the summer in Laiuna and taking
advantage of the Boys Cl ub facilities in Laguna Canyon.
hMy opinion that lhe wai 1U11pended
for a abort lime is based on the lack. of ' . . lieveire CODJtrictw'e by the rope but the
rope burn was placed in auch an utem
aroWld the curvature ()f the left cheek
bone to make me believe it wu caUJed
by pulling upward," he said.
Noguchi aaid Monday that Miss Tate
had not been drinkIDg and had taken no
drugs the nfght of Aug. 8, 1969, when 1be
and four other persons were stabbed and
shot to death at her Benedict Cinyon
Estate.
Noguchi told the jury ia the llUlrdtt
trial ol the "Manion family" th&t -leltl on ~ bodies of the v I c [ 1 m 1
indicated neither Mlu T1te not bait
llylial Jay Sebrinc, to whom she nnoe
was qaged, were under Lbe. iofh11.ace al
&lcol!ol or: nar'91Jts.
He Ilic! 1<>11 lbow,,cl, Polldl write<
Voityclc FrykAJWlkl and coljee -
Abigail Folger each bad !&ken -U
amount.I al Ibo dn!g MDA, known , u
"super speed", and both appare.nUy bid
been drinkiag.
Noguchi said none of the victiJU bad
been suually molested.
!Jdendanll <l>lrtel MAmoo, Lea!Ie Vu
Houten. Susan Alklna and P1trtd&
KrMwinkef Al qulttly at the coumel
table durin& the coroner'• Co r 1
teatimoo)'.
C.Spo Council
Votes for Board
James Okazaki Appointed
New Capistra110 Attorney Axline outlined Ibo parking &Ulho<ily
plan now used in 8an1a Monie.II . AJWk· The San Juan Capistrano City Council
ing authority was created which adessed James OkazUJ of Mission Viejo has in lnternaUonal rel.aUoos from U'f voted unanimousl y Monday night to
property owners. been named the new city attorney for San U . . f "·I d h' I cre1ite a park! and recreation com-The city increased bosineu licena fees n1v ers1ty o ..,... ora o and is aw mission.
600 piercent to raise additional nvawe. Juan Capistrano. degree from the University of Denver. The sevtn-man board will be selected
His appoinl.ment w a' announced by He was admitted to the Colorado Bar by the council at their Sept. 14 meeting .
LEASED TO Q TY Mayor Tony Foratt.r Monday •ft.er he Association in 1956 and the. Callforllia bar According to the ordinance creating Lhe
The authority had .the Jot built; and was uaanimously tie<:ted to aerve by the in JllU. com.mission, which will IO into eUect in
leaaed to lht city, Tbe City Council pledg. Cily Couocll. . He and his ·wife and three ·children 30 days; one~rnember will be a--·~-.l' ed the p-.-t ts il'll',__. Okazaki, a native Of Colorado, replaces WU"r\CU · "'n""'•Y asKSSmeJJ • 7"~-· John Dawson of Anaheim, who ha,, serv-moved to Orange County in 1964, tttldtng from each of the four 4>arks and recrea-businw llc.JDle fwldt:, and Fkini meter iri Garden Grove while he served u tion zones described in the city 's master fundJ to pay tor the boild.s on the Jot. ed the city since i.ncor:poration in 1181. . t t "S Alto . ' .. An I plan. M rt. G b" '---•de i .. ..-Dawson resigned ip June becaU5e of ass1s an u . • rney in ........, gees. a um mer,• ..........i ve..,,._, ask-fUcUn rune 1-and "'-Okaukl has also served In the Orariae Two members wW be &elected from lha ed if the city had explored the po1u•lbllity con · g comm Jl'"" a on;avy "-& city at large and one m•m•·r wtll ~ • r fed I d 1 1 f -r workklad in Anaheim, where be is lbe County Counsel'• office before opening a &l'C'. uii: • o era an s a e unds for city park- . ta 1 d 11 private practice in Santa Ana. representative of the Capis trano Unified ing and redevelopment. as sis n ty a orney • School Distr;c1. La bou He will remain as a special retainer He is active in community arfairs, m me taid thaJ. several years ago for litigation which~ not yet been com-se rving as a member or ilie board of Councilman Jim Thorpe, who ha.ti been
"talk of fundJ for federal redevelopment pleted. directors of the Mission Viejo Litt I e instrumental in getting the commission
'vas a one way ticket out ol town." Okizaki, who in Mardi was appointed Lea~ and the Orange Empire Boy orf the ground, said one of the com-
"Today the community might l~k at attorney for the Orange C 0 u n t y Scouts. mission's concerns might be attempting
federal funds for the. downtown aria." waterworks District No. 4 which the city He also is a niember of the Sanla Ana to get a community swimming 'pool con-
Autry said that the city has received governs, received his bachelor's degree Kiwanis Club, the Catif. Bar Assn . and !1 struded at Marco Forster Junior Hifh in
federal funds: for traffic studies, and for a trustee o( the Methodilt Olurcb in cooperation with the .school district.
the general plan study. Mission Viejo. He said the junior high would be a
"Right now, I'm invesligatina three Th:nf Rake·S He will a.wume•llil duties Sept. I. logical place for a pool since it i1 tbt federal programs. B~ the competition .,.;:;. center of the school district.
exceeds the availability," Autry ¥id. The commission 's official duties will be
Lambourne said. that before the city ~· 0 h Lo Fro• r.,e l advising the city council and staff in all
could talk about funds for redeve)Opment ut t e ot matters relating to parks and recreation,
and parking a decision would have to l)e NIXON ~ particular ly developing sites, facilities.
made on wbat to do in La.aunt. A thief visited a Costa Meu • • • programs and recreational service,.
GOOD POINT waitreu' apartment Monday nis;ht The city has at the presenl time three
but he didn't rake in the loot has not tolerated planled questions i.a the park sites which will soon be developed. Gumbiner uid that was a "iood 2.1 years since he first tried for public of· One, between the Casitas CapiatraYtO and
point,'' and the answer be Wanted to He raked it out. fice and he isn't starting now. Casas Capistrano developments. is to be.
hur. Officer Phil Donohue arrived at The PresidenlW posture on question developed by the Westport Corp. and
Axline, lteerina the diacu11ion to more Sheri Howerton's home, 187 E. Jlst p\anUng was ,Inspired by a column that maintained by them for two year,.
Immediate parking needs, said "let'a do St., and found the thief appartntly led h d ped •· d the Two other par•, are not yet p''nned
'om.'"'•• now ,.. ·•e do •--" reached into her bedroom with a sugges one a pop up wwar ._, .. ....... "1 wn...,...11 area. close of his July 30 news conference for development. One ,., m· ,., Terrace • 'mbou---•·•~ h' "-t 12 bamboo rake, lifting her handba·1 · uc ..... • ·-• a1.111nn:u un ~ years Ziegler said he told the President he tract and the other ia: in Troy Homes.
ago the Chamber of Commerce wanted to from a dresser. never planted an actual que.sUon with the Councilman Thorpe uid he would like
establish a total downtown parking The loss w11 S20. includlnJ purse press but had offered Ideas to reporter' lo see neighborhoods consulted about
district. and contents. seeking fertile (round to probe. what kind of parks these two should be.
"But then. there weren't enough people I~============::=====::===~=============::::::::::;:; lo get behind IL Now all we have Is tht: I
small lot on Mermaid Street in a small
parking diltricl." ·
Alline wanted to know ii the whole city
coo.Id Ooat bonds for parking facilltiei.
Lambourne. told him the city would then
Have to put such a proposal to the voters
for a general obligation bond which re-
quires a two-thirds majority tOr passa1e.
"We would all benefit for parking
throughout the city," Axline uid. "U
nothing is done about parkinc we won't
have a busineel community in. Lacun1
Beaeb."
Lomboumo said, 'If the cilium foot
the cost! of parklne for tbe bus.iness com-
munity, part of the community fpses ."
Lambourne later asked what the city
would do about the merchants on
Broadway if parking stru ctures are built
near Glenneyre and Mermaid Streets.
Hasting11 said that possibly a tcm·
porary parking lot could be built on Main
Beach property, north of Broadway. He
as.id such a lot could be ued, until a
parting structure was built on Broadway.
Commissioner James Sdlmib:: 1"1d
another alternative would be to wor.k with
Laguna Federal SAvings to 1dd another
story on lop of the existing parking for
!he -·Uon. Suell paning could bl utld bClth by the cllf &nd Lquu Fed:
era! CUICOmen.
Commls&loners 1bo beard a report
from the ell¥ attorney office llJttlnf
parilin& loll on tu utmpt ~
namely churches -c1n bt rented fot
city park.in& JS lq ii revtm11 IOU to-
ward the church !undl.
East and WC!it Meet
BERIJN fUP() -Wet! Gtrltllln Pr .. 1.
dent GUltlv · He.inemaM flew to Wiit
Borlin today for 1 Uve-day visit d.,plte
Commwillt E&51 GcrltllJI proteoll tblt
bil preaeoce wou11111 a Pf:O•ocalloo.
Too Little?
Too Much?
I
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DON'T BE MISLED BY OISCOUlilTS, DEAC:S, SALES ANO
GIVE-AWAYS.
THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST-IT IS
UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUCH, BUT IT IS WOR SE TO PAY
TOO LITTLE.
IF YOU PAY TOO MUCH, YOU LOSE A LITTLE MONEY
AND THAT IS ALL.
WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTI,E, YOU SOMETI MES LOSE
EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YO U BOUGHT WAS
INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TO DO.
YOU CAN1 PAY A UlJLE AND GET A LOT,
UNTA ANA, OU.MM
JYmN C:.-.,,
ALDQl'I
llD HIU. CAlll'ITI
I Ou.rlllD 1 UJ4 1"4 .. , ,_. .. ~. ,, .. , ....
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
16'3 Placelltla Ave.
COSTA MHA
646·4138
(
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La una Beaeh Today's Pinal.
VO(. 63, NO. 203, 2 SECTION S, 28 PAGES i. ORANGE COUNTY, CA(IFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, "1970 .TEN CENTS
Nixon Plays Ho·st to · 150 GOP Candidates
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of IM Dllllr 1'191 ll•lt
President Ni.Ion turned to t h e
California political sceie today as he and
thl First Lady prepared to welcome 150
Rtp.iblican candidates and wives to their
San Clemente home at a 5 p.m. reception.
The guesl3 were to include GOP can-
didates for Congr!:ss, state senate and
assembly lind the Board ol Equalization.
The Nlzons'gave a dinner last month at
It's a Dog's Life
-the Spanish.otyle home booorlng Gov. and
Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Sen. George
Murphy (R-Calif.) The President h ..
been promoting the eJection o f
Republicans in California and elsewhere
in various ways from social evenb to the
standard picture posing teChnique.
Earlier in the day, the President met
with top foreign policy aides to ponder
chances for peace In the Middle East as
talks between Arab and Israeli repreun-
Bonnie, the pet Basset hound of the Gordon Schroeder family of Mil·
waukee Wis., has learned that equality demands of women go un·
heeded 1by Clyde, the family's pet skunk, when he decides to take
over.
~l~m~nte's~ospiUJI Group
Endors·es Orange Project
. ..
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ttle O.llr f'l .. t ll•ff
San Clemente's Community Hospital
committee has joined the ci'y'~ msi-
cians' group to endorse a new Mpital
proposal by an Orange group over the oft.-
delayed · plans of the San Clemente
Medical Center.
11\e t>membc.r cooununity group,
formed in recent months to build a public
community hospllal, has joined ~or~es,
in!tead with Chapman General Hospital
of Ora~ge to attempt to w:est ~fici!l
p«misslon to build a hospital 1n San
Clemente from the finn of C. T.
DeCinces of Van Nuys.
The San Fernando Valley developer has
headed 11J·year-Old plans for a private
hospital near the civic center but no con-
struction has begun a.s yet. .
The endorsement by the community
group -predicted earlier this month -
is coupled with the, unanimous vote laM
week by the members of the San
Clemente Medical Society to e~orse the
Chapman plan. .
Mayor: Walter F. Evans, a leader in the
drive for a hospital other than tbe
DeCinces facility. said that he, Coun-
cilman Wade Lower and other com-
munity leaders toured Chapman General
Hospi~l In Orange last Friday. .
He tertned the hospital there "very im-
pres!ive." Tbe 99-bed facility near the Newport
Marke t Watc hers
Disappointed
Jn Malfun ction
Freeway along Chapmbn Avenue wouJd
be similar to tQat Planned for flat land
east of the San Diego Freeway In San
Clemente.
"LOOking at their plans." the Mayor
said, "the one planned for San Clemente
would be a little bigger."
To implement iLs plans for a general
hospital · here, the Chapman group must
win the sanction given to DeCinces by the
Orange County Comprehensive Health
Planning Association.
A showdown has been predicted
between Chapman and i4 supporters and
Deeinces at an October meeting of the
assiociation.
The meeting marks the end of a 90-day
period given DeCincea time. to drafl com-
plete details of hls finn's finances, slruc-
ture .and plans.
Spokesmen for the developer have pro-
mised construction will slart within the
90-day period which began last July .
The makeup of the San Clemente Com·
munity Hospital group includes pro..
minent civic leaders in the city.
The group's members, who formed a
few months ago as a nonprofit cor-
poration, include:
Publisher Harold R. Burges, Municipal
Court Judge Frank Domenichini, Mayor
Evans, Cham!ier of Commerce Presidenl
Bud Fowler. Jaycee leader Robert
Frauenti.mmer, Planning Commissioner
Art Holmes. Interim Olamber Manager
Walt Hunter, Methodist Minister Dr.
Donald Inlay, Councilman Dr. Wade
Lower, former Mayor Howard Massie,
• fonner Chamber President Vern
Overbaugh, San Clemente innkeeper and
ciVic leader Paul Presley, insurance ei:-.
ecutive William Ryan, surgeon Dr.
Herman Sobol and Bank of America
Manager Lee Winterton.
taUves begin In New York.
Olflclals meeting with the President In
San Clemel!te Included Secretary of State
William P. Rogen;-Joseph C. Slaco,
assistant secretary of state for Middle
Eastern Affalrl; and Henry Kissinger,
naUonal secllrity affairs: advi.su.
Rogers pushed U.S.· peace lnitlaUvm
that led to agreement by IsraeJ, Jordan
and Egypt for a three-month cease fire
and the start ol negotlaUons.
Press SecreWy Ron Z"1egler 1 a I d
Mr. Ni%Ol'I would cover a wide spectrum
of foreign policy developments in the
discussk>ns.
11le President received an "en·
couraging" repnrt on the economy Mon·
day from four key advl.5ers.
Dr. Paul W. McCracken, cbainnau of
the Council of Economic Advisers, said
administration policies to cool tbe
overheated domestic ecxmomy are work·
ing.
He called evk!.eoce In the economic pic-
ture encouraging. He added, "One must,
of course, be cautious about trying to
read too much Into very current data, but"
in a great many ways the evklenee as I
say, we felt, was quite encouragini."
He said he did not want to suageat that
the struggle a,gainst inflation l! over.
McCracken cited as hopeful lndices the
less rapid rate of lncrease in the con.
sumer price index and 1ncreases In in-
dll!lrial production, penonal ll>come,
retail sales and housing.
In a sidelight o( the C\ll'Tent Preeldtn-
tial San Clemente saga, Prus ~
Ziegler said the President hu·told blm
"planted'' questions are out at Nixon'•
news conferences.
Ziegler said the President told lllm be
(See NIXON, Pap I)
800 Convicts Strike
' At San uentin Prison
Viejo High
Faces Jam
This Yea1·
By PAMELA RAILAN
Of .... D6lfr "*' stiff
Mission Viejo Hiib SCbool will face double awions wtien _,,doors open nut
month. ' Trustees or the nr.Un u-n i o n High
Scho91 District vottd ~Y to house
the students, faculty fDd admlnlstration
of the new University A:igh School at the
Mission Viejo campus until their school ls
completed .
Robert Bosanko, principal of Mission
. Viejo High School, said he bad no
previous indication from the board .that
his school w~ being considered.
He said reports had indicated that the
1,<m students would probably be bouaed
at Tustin High School.
"Running two schools on one campus
always provides problems," a a i d
Bosanko. "We haven't yet bad a chance
to work out the details of our schedul-
ing."
Bosa.nko said be understands that the
students would probably be housed •
minimum of 30 days and a maximum of
68 days at the Mission Viejo ·campus.
University High School located in the
University Park community was schedul-
ed to open next month but delays were
caused by the sheet metal workers strike.
A tentative date of Nov. 15 has been sel
for the school's opening, barring any
more unforeseen strike:i: or inclement
weather.
At one point school administrators had
believed that the school would be housed
at Tustin High School and plans were
made so that the Tustin 11tudenl! wouJd
attend morning classes and the Universi-
ty students, afternoon classes. Class
lengths: were to be shortened to 40
rrtinutes with five minutes between each
class and the University students were to
have their own faculty.
A similar schedule may be worked out
for Mission Viejo Higb School, slthough
definite plans have not yet been made.
Storm Nears Hawaii
HONOLULU (UPI) -Tropical llprm
Maggie with gale winds and flooding
rains was due to hit the island of Hawaii
at noon Wednesday, and then sweep
northward through the rest of the island
chain.
Girl Takes A~id
5-year-ol.d in Serious Condition
A I-year-old &irl is in serious C<lnditlon
today because she accident.ally swallowed
an LSD tablet Monday night, Santa Ana
police reported. nie victim, Deanna Bryan of 1817 S.
Evergreen St., is in St. Joseph's Hospital.
The physician attending the little girl
said thi.s morning that there is no way at
this Ume to -detmoioe the -• ol d.,..,. to the cbf!d'• pllytical or me.aJ
well belllf.
1be child's mother, DotUe )t,M· Bryan,
called police at about t :!O laJ( ntgbt when
her dalJ&hter atarted '"1lng "strange."
She told invesu1ators the litt1e girl
became hysterical upon seeing a kitten
with which 1he bad been very friendly
previously.
Mrs. Bryan told police that she and her
daughter had been visiting friends in
Anaheim Monday and it ii believed that
she found the lSO tablet on a dresser in
the ~ home. , L
Pollc61ta•ewithhe14 u.i -J pie•
· pmoMthe ~land blr mothe< 'jloilt<l ,
r11vefld1alw• W"'1 9tre, c.iteil-1ii, t6e
Bryan bQme. uld Deanna, ''appeared to
be disoriented. She would Dqt talk elcept
to ay·•Mama:' ,.
2 Laguna Police Officers
Get Promotion to Captain
Two Laguna Beach police·officers wilt
be' promoted. to the rank of captain, e!-
fe<:Uve Sept. l, Chief Kenneth Hlick an-
nounced today.
Sgt. David Brown and Lt. Frank
Schopen, who ranked flr!t a.nd second in
evaluation tests, will receive their Cap-
tain's badges Friday morning at 9 a.m.
from Chief Huck, Mayor Richard
Goldberg and acting city manager Joseph
SWee11y.
The promotions art part of an ex-
pansion and reorganization of the Laguna
Beach police department.
Oral examinations of seven eligible of-
ficers were conductM Friday by the po-
lice chiefs of three Southern California
cities, Huck said.
The candld;ates, who already had sub-
mitted written resumes of their qualific.a.
tions, were interviewed for about cne
hdur each by Chief Richard Baugh of
Brea, Chief Aubrey Duie of La.Palma
Khrushehev at Hom e
BELGRADE (AP) -Former Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrusbcl)ev Is now
resting in his twnmer home near
Moscow alter three months of medical
' treatment In a hospital, the Yugoslav
news ageocy Tanjug reported today from
the Soviet capital.
and Chief Arthur LeBl.anc of Coronado.
Chief Huck was not a member of the ap-
praisa.1 board. ·
Salary !Cale for the new police position
has not yet been set, Hock said. Besides
the new captains, the force will include
Lieutenuts Robert McMurray and John
Zelko.
Remaining to be fiUed in the
reorganization program will be one police
sergeaet posiUon and two posiUons as in-
vestigators.
The position! will be filled from within
lbe force, Huck said and i.ho.se interested
have submitted their quallfica.Lions which
are being eocamlned.
Forest Blaze
Threat Quelled
A potentially dangerous bruah fire wu
quelled by forestry crews in Cleveland
National Forest Monday afternoon after
it charred five acres near Ortega
Highway east of San Juan Capistrano.
The blaze, the first of any comequence
during the summer aaaoo, waa brougbL
under control in lw than an hour after
erupting two mUes from San Juan.
Two elr tankels, bulldorus and 411
firflighters worked the fire to keep It
from spr<adlng-In the dry brush In huge
forut area.
Guards Put
P1·isoners
Into Cells
SAN QUENTIN (AP) -San Quentio
prison guards ctrdve tllO demooatralln&
prisoners into their cells with tear gu to-
day a!ter nine offiFt• llt'ere dinnq:ed bJ
111111-ca-flrti, 11rlsop ellkl>b Uk!. '.l:bi~=a.i......;... In the :priao1nec yanl to' )X'il a
doun det1wlcfs Issued• bybtact prtiooers
during an UJ)el'lmental S~rior Court
hearing Monday within the prison will&.
Wblte and Mei.ican-American prbonert
also · took part in the demonstration,
prison o(ficlals said. •
A call for more black: and Mexlcao...
American counselors were among th&
demands.
Minority race prisoners total 51 percm•
of the 3,600 prisoners at. the state pri!OD
on the shores of San Francisco Bay ne11r
San Rafael, 15 miles north of San Fran·
cisco.
Guards found nine counselor):' offices
damaged in one cellblock after driving
the demonstraUog pg.onen back to their
cells.
Furniture, wooden window frames and
other woodwork was charred in the
preliminary steel and concrete cells.
There were no reports of injuries.
First sign of trouble came when
prisoners refused to report to their prtsoo
jobs after breakful and congregated lo
the recreation area. ·
They repeated the demands delivered
in a five.page letter Monday to prlloo of.
ficials. They included :
-Freeing of all "political prisoners.••
-Freeing of three Soleda1:1 State Prison
lnmates who face trial' in the alaying of a
guard last Jan. 13.
-Clooing of two disciplinary cellbloc.U,
where 200 prisoners are now confined.
-Appointment of a black warden.
-Appointtnent of black and Mel.lean·
American assistant .wardens.
-More black and Mei:lcan-Amerk::an
prison officers and counselora "eqllll to
white officers."
Australians Strike
SYDNEY (UPI) -About -
quarters of a million Amtrall11t1 walked
off their jobs today In 1 thr...iiour ltriko
to protut federal government e<:o10mle
policies.
NEW YORK -Traders and investort
today began cashing in their gains, bring-
in5' a f ive-day stack market rally
blacked out on the coast Monday by com·
puler failure to a grinding hall
Alternatives Diseusse_.
Thousands of stock market watchers
were disappOinted in California when a
transmission malfunction in the highly
technical system cut off results of
trading. A lborough investigation by lhe
American Telephone & Telearaph C6m·
p1n1 pui the blame on a problem In
Oa.kland, whlcb i11 a crl~lcal relay point
tor many We.sl Coast pcnnts.
1'Mt DAILY PILOT wu among news-
popen loll without Its customarY dady
tkllinl financial tablet, b\JL AT&T auth-
orities said lhey had every hope no repeat
problem would crop up today. (Set Pages
10-tt).
Prices conUnued to 1lldc lower in
modtr1te tr1dlng today ea profit taking
1rnolhered the rally of the past five days.
The Dow Jones average of 30 lndus-
trlal1 was orr a.07 to 75t.51 at noon.
Decllne•held a small but wldenlna lead
over advancts on the New York Stock
E1chana•·
Laguna-lVeighs Parking Problems
By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL
Of "" °'"' ,.,.., ttlff
Laguna Beach plaonin& corr.rnlslioners
probed fhe central downtown basl.n'•
parking shortage Monday night and u-
p&ored various financial means avalllble
to the ci\y to develop parking f1etllties.
Highlights of the parking dlsctWions
wtre:
......C.Ommissioner Robert Hulings' sug·
gesUon that any parking structure be
buDt on a leasebaclc agreement. In JIUCh a
plan a developer. would build the lot,
lease it to the city for 20 years and then
the title would go to the city.
-Chairman William Lambourne.'1 1Ug-
gestton that a parking structure be built
by a non-profit corporation It! up by the
city. Tbe corporation would Issue bond.I
to pay ror tht structure aod parking
meter revenue would pay olf ~ bondL
Wiien the bonds wm paid, the oor-
poratlon wou.Jd 10 out of busint&S and the ·
title "' the parting f1eility WOllld .. fol
the city. "
-A look at the parklnf district Ide.,
which is beill( u.sed jo,,.Jllt SOll!bem
bualne11 seotor of !hi", If! IM'. the
deqeJopment of .• parlri,. llliilctUre.
In 1uch a plan, property owners within
a parltlng district ar:e utessed for the om of the structure, but recetye a: yearly
return of 75 percent of the parking meter
n:venl.{e ~ help offset the lpcreased
aaessmenls.
-A sugg ... Uon f r om FOrtit Av.,ue
...
-Wllllam Alline for a pork.
Ina: aulhority, which would operate siml·
lar to the parking. district complex.
?~ lo the downtown area wu not
~-·on the apnda lot the etucly
SMidtift. stDoi • a· n\D'fiber or 1 tntemttd
~ -"P' fw the meeting, hOwever. many of them amununlty
bsulnessmee. Llmboume decided to
dbcusa the lm.ie. ·
Hastlnp Aid his leaseback propooal
would allow pY!dng clevelopmenl without
"'•large outlay of money by the city."
He Pid that the lwebaclt program
,would work bell on lend lhat the city
already owns. Such an I.tu la the n-
l•Ullf Glenneyre lot, which fs -now being
11iidfed b7 Ille c117 1t1111oi • mu1tHtorY
parking llnl:ture.
City Planner Alvin 0. Aulry 11ld .the
studi' 1Jlf the lot, llc>nc' with "'s!O!b' (or a
perking lot oo Memald Stieot would be
~loaed to the ,commtakm Sept. ;J.t
Tilk drifted tto ·IJ)edfJCS •ot 1be G!e>
nqn,·lot p!.opouJs. -iAmboun>e
said that It WU not wfJe for Che COtn-.
mlollon ta ··bf 1pelcllc end I" Into.
numbers.
Lamboume, In dlscuatng his n<M>-proHt
corporation Idea, laid that he CeU ctrtain
that people weni available to bu,y bondl
for IUch a park!~ structure.
1be chalrman 'ooted, however., thit if
lhf reve11ue•from the meters in. the •true·
turo did. no1.meet the bond Pll'mtoll, tbe
(S.1 PARKING, P110 I)
? ¥
Wea tiler
!Aw clouda In .the morning and
high temperetwu In the alttnlOOll
continue Wednesday, with re1dlnp
renOng from 75 loceUy to 18 fw1JI.
or Inland.
.JNSmE. T0,0AY , ..
Brit.aha 1 it' . ..,ing Q, "•hoc~
treatment" ha truino to prf"VC1LC
itl ~oung ptoplc from becoming
hooked on dniot. Paoe S.
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-''-.. ""!'_ .• ; ••• ~ .......... -.. • ~ ••• ..t ••• ~ . :
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DAILY PILOT SC
Arnt alk· Mi.ss T me -::!
'
----St mtt-gled
Near Death
o;ea; p,.•n,, oemL"'1 Pll!tls@
Sl'DUL (AP) -South Korean Presl• J lbt I~,_ Mt~I. ' ·~ 1tni9 a-...M Ill I llil.loii
<jent <~.. Park pr.,.nted Vice Kb~iill ·MiltW Ill~ It ril Hilf11jgNfllill llifUiiililllJllAlllll P~\ ro_ TJ, Agnew wlth an l!.X· ten6e. provide new add to help modernize the
pens&l " ~ u.st fll ~llltary needs Agnew himst1r. )a\4 ;otf:, ~11:!1 · ~ent,1 P 1000-man Korean armed forces , he tald Tu~ t failed _10 r1n • d~talled "very well." Asked iho(it thi 1englii di tl~tbr~ llls arrival he did not expect hi8
pledii. on ·, promr.ecl Incre:a'SfTri 11.S:-ffif:QiicudlOiif, i K'f)6kMtf\lfl'ttld: "1'119 Yl!lt ta prOduct 1 speelUC new 1ld pro-
'
LOS ANG!iLEK <U~!) -A. 81!0~
T1te wa1 dyin& or 1tab woundl, aha w11
hanged by a rope fastened around her
neck, looped over a celling beam lh h•
living room.
arms'•\d. doeS'n't nece!lSlrily mean they aren't .11et-gram. Other American officials said no
A ~led two-.hour mef)lng boLwetn· ting along." decision would be made· until 1 study it
the i.o~leadt1t alcelched tb a11 bouts .PJrk ~ und~rst.oOG to be Ae:tkidl 4 mlde of Korea's detailed fitedt bef~· .ortaiiltg up II midllteHoooli p!Odtt of "'r' $3 bUUon over the next There wote in<l;catibtls !Hat balk llid County Colon!t Thom.II T, N-1
testilied !Maf thll tbl tOjoe butfll or[ !hi
pregnant actress' throat indicalt:d her
body was suspended aOOve the floor tor 1
short period while ahe was dyln1.
'llley
1
ttium.ii· dltcilll1ol'll bvit ~!Mir \\Yi t•arl i 1.f!>• prJ<!e for droppint h~ hll ad1Jserl presented Ju.rt ltlch 1 a.tin. Tue~8y nigh( and then egrm th mM\ oojectlbn th u\i U.S. plan lo witb'!t!w ed list during privat~ session~ with
again a~ break.fart Wednesdly. . 20,000 of the. 63,000 American troops 1ta· Agnew, U.S. Ambassador William J.
An officlal Korean spokesman de&cr1b-Uoned be~. Porter, Gen . John N, Mlchalia and other
Fio.4~LBi.p .. ~fftent,
Board Tap~ Sw·art~haugh
New Saddlehack Dean
ln an executive ses1ion Monday ntahl,
the Board of Trusteu of Saddleb&ck
College named Jack A. Swartibaujh bf,
Laguna s .. ch to the post ol d<!an ~1
student.I for the 1970.71 school year.
Swartzbaugh, who has been coordinalor
of counseling •n4 &bJdent affairs,
replaces John J. Fklod, Sadd1eback ~an
of studenl> o!nct IMU'UcUOll tt Ille Cl>I·
lege began ta the ,j'1J iJI 1'lt
Justice . Clarke
R·e~ip Pd~ttlbtt
In California
President Ni1on has ofllclilly ltcefpted
the resla:oatiop of U.S. District Chief
Judge Thurmond Clarie -a c 1 o 1 e
per10nal friend Whaie Cdrona ae:t Mlt
home has JodgM the prt!ident on tev!rll
occuions.
JUdge Clarke, who will step down from
hls ae·ftiln' p0Altkln COverlhg t~ entire
centttl<!Utrlct rJf Cllila~nll S<pt. 1, •Ill
retltft -'*1Uar judtf: 't•tuA and ~"' on
tM ·bench ~hfn called to 1erve. Ju~ Clirke otcepled appolntm!ht to
the btnch CCIVtri,i:tg Jfderal C&f1~_ ln sevtn
Ca!Jlorblo ~lier ,ftd!!S ·~ Ur;vl/JJ ~ufnjirrt1·~E11,1~ • ~u"'~
For. yi11.' IM Judi!" II commuted lb u.s. Oijfrl<I Cbtill iff 1 Aftfel!I ltotrt
his ~~ th6rll from!. · Tb! ulid!nc< hal Ii'•• visited oliett by
the President before and tftet hli tlet·
lion. ~ oJ Ii.. mb1t rco•nt 1tay1 by the
First Family In cameo Shores was t Jew
wMlla tierott U1t Nlaoru frurehued tl\elr ssn cletrti~ vUla.
Kent Student's •
Mottt Fil~ Suit
CLt\ltLAND (UP!) -A 14 mUli<ll
da!lltte &ult wH fjiod Mondly ill U.S.
Di!trict Cl!urt by th! lliblh!t ol On! ol
four otud!ri!. 11iot and kill.ii bY nit1ot111
guard!llieri on ih• c1m1>u1 M 11eni Stile
Unlv"llty May I.
Mn. tlil!e Mill" bf Pl11nvle"1 N.Y ..
charged In the suit her son, Jetf@t)' Glenn
MIU!r, 11il debrlved oJ h~ c!tvll rlfh1'.
Accund In !hi 1Ull ot n11111eoce ""'
Ohio Gov. James A. lt?!MeS, Ktnt Slall!
Unive<1Jl7 · Pf•~denl m~tt White •M
Ohio N1t;ana1 <1111ra· Olflcen, lhclu61ng
Gen. s;Ntti1r be! Corio, th! c<Jft\·
mander of the Ohio guard. Tlli 1\llt 11k!d 11 million In com·
peru1alllry dimlJM and fl mlltlfJn lh
puntUvt d.tm1g@1.
KIMllJll IHI lull lot Mrl. Mlller w ..
Attorney Joseph Knner.
DAILY PILOI
~-....! . ~
Flbod1-who also served All assista nt
. -deait'. of lhe 1umn1er HA1loft at S&d·
dteblck1 Illa! i .lteQulnt tngoi of student C!ti~thrlt tlurint the i•ni: battlA over stU-
de~t hlir l~ngth, because ot his iruil.stence
in enforcing the college dress code.
A Saddleb11ck spokesman said Flood
witl temtih as a counselor bltt •haJ been
l>bliltd.t<> curWI his ~uti!t ~•use of Ii·
lness. ,
·Coun.ot(ir·William L. Klby .;,lil'aUilme
the position of coordinator of counseling
and student affairs.
Tbe Nond@y night board acii91) rna~es
official a redi1tribution ol duties that had
been in effect informally since Flood
became Ill eal'ller lhis tttr. Trust~~J AIMJ 1pprof~d a new ,formal
for SaddlebAck's tilll.ln 1dvlsolj todl·
mittee which will reduce membership
from an unwieldy 110 to 50, and reduce
the num~r of 1ut1Cdmimlttles from 11 to
six.
Fifty new committee members from
the coueft'• ffvt tttJltet dllttlct.4 will tie
aprst:ilbt@d frft one-y@ir U!rrrt•. Tht c<rm-mil~'I futtctUJn It to mlfntatll com-
munication with the trustees in tr!ll
corl:trnlti« the virlota dltltir:tl ttrted
by ihe dltl!,e. S!fitust o Ill #lu and thl !""lilerltlnn
o( 1ubtOrtl.t11iUel!I ltlf lfb!JP'I fldtlYltleA
had lagged during the JI.Ill yelt, t col·
Jett sp<ike!lli•h Hid.
Tho iJs feltllll!lllt tubcommltt!t< •Ill Jn~ bulldrti,,. t<J111!11tJnlly M"lcl!,
Ii , it~tlry, ·Wi~allJ, afld VOCI·
tionat.tet:hMlcat.
The board also approved t bltl uf
$24,000 fo"r an addition to Building !I, a
cla"room building that will be enlarged
to house duplicating drvJces Ind a com·
puter cetltl!r. The ettlalged building will continue ., i
relocatable structure, to serve for several
more years. First permanent buildings
for the Saddleback catnpUs will be a Ubr~ty 11!11 I itial~·scid~ce buildinl,
ach!aul!d "' c<m!!hlclion by 11'11.
Payment of a $1.000 fee for an ac·
c;tditation visit in Novembe r also was
autho,JUd by ih! trustees. Tho •~It by
·an tCctMilltlOf'I tl!am Nov.'· t ind .6 ~Ill co~titute the. final/hase nf a tHree-;e•t .iiidy tllit wnl tea to ~•d,di!Uck'I IUll
acetel!JtAlio n wilh the 't\'eltirn Aubel•·
uoo ol 9chflol! and C<lll•111,
Man Files Sult;
Names Mi8@0 111'1
Sex Resea1·chete
·ST, LOUIS, Mo. tAPI -A $750_1100
damage suit has been flled aaaj'ft&l tel
researchers Dr. *Jlllam H. Mt!!ter1 1tid
Virginia Johnson.by a man who said the
pair employed hia •lte tA a se1~1l
pa rtner lot tlto m~n under tre1ttnftlt hy
Masters and Mrs. Johnson.
Thi suit 11,. chor1ed that th• '"
res!trch team greatly Wnfflted ltbm the
usf a! Ult man'!! wilt thi'~Mh "moMOity
g•ln by the r.1:biic>lil>n ol bookJ," lriille
the hu!lband 'lost th• conJu1al !Ocl•tf /If
his •Ut" lind slllfertd "lfelt hllttllllltlttn
and dt!trace In hi! 90<111 ln<I Mtneotlc
reldtlon!hl{J!."
)')ie•uil •IS Ol!d In U.8. District Court
by ·attol~eft M O!Orll Edwin Calvert,
· wttbse tddress wat listed only 1s tc•w
HlmP•Hlre. Tile ituirft!Y• dotunta ..
give Calvert's h1>me address. J-111. Wltt'I
name was !isled a5 Barbara.
Masters called the charge '4ridiculou~"
and said "we would be glad to dl9prove
such a aituatioo when the opportunlly
arises."
The chArRe was in ton~tion w\lh
rtse:trch l'lont (or Vl• bt!lt I. 1111\ II
"HU!llln !<~It lftl!f'<jUa!j<i' ";;1~ bt
MHlett fflij llln. Jiti""'" lilt! piJblish!il
In April.
The suit a!SCI names as codefendanls a
"John Doe J," nf the Stalt of N!• YtJtk
an<! I "J"'n DOe 11.'' ol Vlrttni..
'11'1 SUit 111!11'-! that the 1e1u11 r!ll·
t!Oftlhlp Of Mr!. Clfvert Wei uied t I
"rorm Of tte:ltment" tot the Docs and
!lull Mrs, Cal•ert wu !>818 ielll lor !ht
firlt ttJch tteatmtnt •• nr about July 111 1987, tnd $UO fdf' the~ trc•tmen
on tJr aboUt Jan. I, 1198. The suit 11ld
Calvert learned of the 1llt'ged trr.atmenta
on Aprll lJ of {hl1 ye1r ..
A lbt1l ot 1160,000 1ctu11l d11m111t11 Is
11skf!tr frl)tn the foot derentt11n11 and 1
total of $600,000 In pUnJUve d1m&ftl 11
aslltd JrOm M.••tet1 tf'ld frtrt. Johl'ltan.
M11ter1 1tltf the ~h1r1e1 "11 'f •
"tnlmpld up" ••0 It I• th• first 111111rlt·
tna from tlit 11 ytarl of rtt!!trch &y him
and Mrs. Johnson. .(
U.S. officials.
A.new came here 1t Pre1ldtnl Nixon's
requ.,( I. ~ledf'f, conlin~lnf U.S. iu;ril>rt
for kor~i !tid st.en. lo Part1t ~il•t.btJt
without authority to commit th! 1d-
mi1ll1tralidh to 1ny 1peclflc irrlUi prlJ.
gram.
U.S. military aid to Korea la cyrrtntly
$140 milliOrJ a yfar, Ind an.Y. ntw pro-
gram wolild le<iull! IMolbvll itOJfi a U.S. Cont~'" lncr!lllnfly •eaty al Amellcln
spettalng lti Asll.
The lengthy meetings contrasted with
Agnew's first Asian trip last January.
None of those sessions delved deeply into
poltey questions.
. rlie Korean Plttein Inly be lej>etled
lai.I thll week In Th1Jilnd wbtr~ Ali!ew will h8'e U> •iJl1ain ~gre!ilo~tl r'lluc-
tance to tfnanct proposed Thal assistance
to Cambodif.
''My opinion that ahe ttu lllspended
for • Short time IS based Oft the lack of
severe cot11lrlctur! by th•. ropi btJt Ute
rope burn Wl!I p1ietd in tuch an fltfrlt
around tht eur.•ture or Ute. left chtti
bonf 1'l l!t8ke lilt b<ltovl tt wal cauud
by 1'tJl!Jnj tlp~lld '1 hf did. l<lolilchl 1tl1t :M'onday tilit Ml!O Tait
had Rb! b<ln drlrililn# illd hid liken fill
drugs the nljht ol· Atir. I, i!!I, >ih!n the
and four other persons were stabbed and
shot to death at her Benedict Canyon
Est.ate.
NOfUChl U>ld th• JUrY lh tht ltlurdlt
ltltl bl the "M!llJon llttillf1 thot biQl!d
lelt• on Iii! bfldlea ol the ' IC t I 1111
IMldt!d ftelthof,. Miu r11. Ml btll
ttylil! a1j. aebr nl; W wltom lilt oflff
wil !nllf!d, were untlet the tnhul!ttf ril tlcoi!OI ot n1tcol1e1. Agnew also is expected to receive
another request for inertl&ed arm.1 aid
when . he metU Wttlnesdiy with Na-
lldnaUst Citlnese l't!lident Chiang Kai·
jhet It his dtoufrtaill letreal It Sun Moon
Laite.
Lagut1a Mateh ·
He 111d It& oho•ed l"o111h "fll!I
voityck trrk,.1k1 ind cotlM h!~llll AblMltt ror1er .. ,h had liken ltfltll
1mt1ttftli ol ll1e drUJ MIJA, .ilflWft. ti
''littier •Pled", iM both 1pp11antJ; &1a
!fe!n dlilli:lnf. Agnew is scheduled lb /ly to Formosa
after a visit Wednesday l.O U.S. and South
Korean Lroops near the demllitt:rized
zone betw!!o SO<Jtll K<>ru lftd Cbtll·
munlst North Korea .
Mlki Wardloli<, 11, HuntlJigll!n Bbch, nepa ltJI eye M lht batJ durlnf
a ping pong match at the Laguna Beach lloyi Club. AJthlliJI~ hit hamt
is up the coast, Mike is spending the tlJmttiet lft LillUftl and tOinJ
advantage nl the Boys Club facilities ill IA'UM ClftjlDft,
Hoguch1 o;Jd """' bl Ute .iltJnli !ljd l!len 1etu•llr molHt'!',
,.,.,, ... ftl#j_fl 1
PARKING ...
additional money needed would have to
come from the city's aener1l fund sup-
plied bjl Luu •toil otMI !!rYlc!I.
!Jelend•nli Ci!tatlei MUtM!fil LHtle van ltllUlon, 8Ullft Alitbtl ari~ l'ttrlCla
l!t•n•lnkll 11! ~uletJy 1t !lit OoWllll
!able d11tilll the ootllflll't 1 et t
!faUl!i{Jfty,
Capo Coun~ll
Votee for Board
James Okazaki Appointed
New Capistrano Attorney .Ulllie oiJUln<d tM ~lrilnr autilorl\Y plan tlo• u!ld ill Santi MonlCI. A flilk· Th!, 8an Juan , Caplofraro City COUilclJ
ing authority was created which •w!IM James Oklilkl of Mission Yie)·o h•8 voted unanltnoueJy Mbhdiiy fllftit lo prfr.rt1 owners. , bee ed h in ll'ltetnaUnrial r1H.1uons t tom the create a parks arid recr"At1·0• ·-
• Cltv I ed ~. · li n nam t e new city attorney for San Univer1ity of Colorado and hi·s law "
11
cuur , ncreas uu111ness cenae ftt1 J C · tr mission. 600 .u L ! ,_ i ' 'd''U al uan ap1s ano. degree from the Univers1'ty ol Denver. ...,.rcen w r I.Se 10 1 on .. revinut. His appolntmeltl VI i 1 •nriounced by The seven-man. !!oard will be selected
LEA.Sim 10 dtt Mayor Tony tarst!r Mnndliy aft« he He wall admitted to the Colnrado Bar by the council at their Sept. 14 meeting.
the ttJl.horJly hlO ttlf! Jot butjt •r:td wflS unabfmau!ly tle~d ta tetve bj tht ~s~~tion in 1956 Ind U1e Califorftia bar Acctirdint lo tht ordinance creati nl tf'I•
lell.IM to th! tlty, 'Hit Ctty CiJun<!f ,pl!df-Cily Cot/nett cainmisoldn, which "Ill lo into eflia tn
ed the pro~y assessments, lnctei!M Okazaki, a nati ve of Colorado, replace! He and his wife and lhtee childteh M days, one m~l'tlbef Wiii be apPO!nted
buitrt@lb l/c!ttie ftmlis , •M fltrki,Hf triffl!r John. D•¥flO'n of Anaheim, whO tlll IM!rY· moved lo Orange County in 1964, residing from each or the four parks and recrf:i· runtf~ to P.ay fbr we 'b(,ndjbn tHt u,t, ed Ott CU)' StftBI fhCotJ6fttlbft flt jtfl. In Garden Grove while ht served as lion zones described in the city's master
Mark Oumbinlr,' loca develo~r. Ilk-Dilwl<lft tl<ll8"!a td JUffl be<.IU.t al assis tant U.S, Altorne7 I~ f<os Anaelu. pl~.'!;
ed 1r the city had ei:plored the possibility contlJdtlnf l!G'tn.rftllthl!f'llJJ •M a ~•Yr Okatikl hal -I!lo tetYed In Ult btJblt '"'"members W'llt be seltt!t~d frOin t.11t
of fed~ra l and state funds for city park-wof'IOtUllJ lfj Anlheitn, Wrt@l'e he~ ii tl'le-County Counsel;• nffice before opening a City a£ large and ofll: m~mMr ~IU ~ I
lnJ ahd redevelopn:ient. assistant city attorney. private practice in Santa Ana . representative of the Capistrano Unified Ulm~rn& Said fHlt aev~il veltt$ atlJ H~ Will i'errtl lti •11 l lp!!tllll r~l!Jhtt H~ la active iTl •community affair« Sc~I DistrictJ.
11talk of funds for federal tt<Jtv"e!opment for 11yj1tJon Whl~h has n'ot j'ft lJ@@ft cant: setvi~I aj t mem.ptr of t~e board of ncilmAll . Im 111or~, ;Jho hAs bee n
wa s l!I one way ticket out
0
/ town.'' pl•ti · dir~ctOrs of the MISslOn Viejo 1. it t I e instrumental in g~tttng th~ cbmmlssion
'"Today the community might look al Okazaki , Who Ill Mar~ •all appMM!d Le~Mue and the ot1nge tmplt! Aoy oft tfte 1round, 81ld <>nt or th! com'·
federll fund• for the do\th~n atea." altntnfy /(Jr tNi OtAitje o du tit y Scoots. mi11~lat1's corK:ern.iJ m11~t be auemptlnt
Auity did tµlt the cit>: as. tebfl\lld w•tetW&t'k8 Dlfttl~t Nt'I. 4 lthlc!! Utii cit; He 111<> 111 i member or th~ satttl An• to a~t a community swimming pool c1Jn·
federal funds for traffic stu ies and for gove rns, received hit b8Cifiel0t't deft~ KiW1tni1 Club, the c.1flf, Bar A••n . lftd 1~ structed at Marco For•ter JUrl(Jt Hith Ir!
the general plan study. ' a trustee nt the M'efhodlit Church in cooperation wit.h the. sthool tll~tfl~L "l\i ht
1
, MWion Viejn. He said the junior hlih wbUld be t
i now, m inveot11alin1 thret Tht' "f RttJtn• Hi •111 aasume n11 flulieo &ept. t logic•! place for a pool sine! Jt 11 ille federal . programs. aut the comptut;nn t::.: c;a center ()f the schobl district
exceeds the ava:Uclbllity,i' Autry t.!lkl. the commiMlon's otttclAI dutl~s till! .....
L.lmbourne did !hit hMdr! the cily h "' p· 1 d · ' "! ( ti ~ could talk about lunds for red!V!'••m-t Out t e Loot rrom .. e • 0111n1 '" cl y ClJtlnc 1n¢ stiff lh 1U ruy l\'11 m.tlttf'i r~lllin& tb ~Irk~ Mrtd tecre•tUm
and partinf i decl!iion wotlld ht•e to M NIXO N parl!cularly Oeveloplnt tHf!s, riicilltl@t;
made on wh1l lo do in LllfUn1. A thlet vl•ltM t COsl.t MMi • • • prOtrarlls ind rttteatioh.ll s~tvict!
GOOO POJtrf1 waltre~!' •~arttnent M<iM•r nt1M The city has at the present time ·three
Oumblntr olld thot WIS 1 "!OO<I btil he didn "ke Jo Jiit ill> , hd not tote~!l!d planlod qul!tlbnl In di! park sile1 which will iolin be d!V!laptd
point," and the enswer he wanted to H, rlk@O it oot. 23 years since ht first tried for tnJblJ~ tJI. One, bt(,Oeen the taslt!! Clllfl!lttf'lb aad
heir. Clt'ttcet Phil Odti()ffue trfived It uce tnti ~f: l~n·t ittrtlnt now. Casiil Ctplitrlho aevtll:IJ!tnl!nt.8 Is kl bt
Axline. s!ledng th• discussion to more S~!ll frnwertM '• nolil! 117 t . ll!t 1'1ie ~•!lld!nll!I pb!lUrl bfi fllJl!tlon d .. elopM by Ill> Wts!pbt( COi p •rid
Immediate pa.rkin1 needs, said "let's do St., tnd found tM Ude/ !~PtrlnUY pl&ntln.t •as Inspired by I ctiltlmfi th.Ill maintaini;d by UU!rn ttJr tfrri year~. ·
snmflthin1 now Jn pie downtown •rta." rtao~f!d inlo her bedrt'K>tn -with • suggesled one had popped lljl klw.trd tlte two Othl!t pirks Are not yet t:iltnn~
Lartl'bournt rem1ndecf hfm Ou
11
i 12 years b11mboo rake, Jiflifll her handtilf elate bf his Jtlly 3CI nf!iN!I caf'lferM~@. for dtv@f1:1prnent. One is In the Terrt~•
11go tne Chamber
0
1 cbmn'lerce want~ lti lrow a dr!s1er. ilegltt ~lid he tottl the 1'te8ldeht tie trA~l. and the oth@r Iii: In troy Hnm@~.
es!tbll1ft I total downlown plrkln1 The lo" wa1 ll0, lnciudinl puf!e n"er pl1Hted Ah oelUll ifU!ltlbn 1lllh lh! Councllmal1 Thbrp; "Id hi would llki di1lr1ct. and contents. pr!I! but hid offer!<! ld!I! lo ri~l!IJ to lee n>ljhbO•hMdl con!tilt!d lbllUI
1·nut then there weren 't enou&h peoplt l~=~::;:::;:::;::;;;;;::;:;:::;;;;:;:::;:;::"~e=il~ng~ie~tt:ft~•~1~r~OU~h:d~t:o~p~lllb~e.;;;:::;;;:~w~ha;t=k~in:d;ol:p~a~•k~s~t~he~se~tw~n~<h~OIJ~ld~b!~.
ln I'll behind it. Now all we hive ill th! [ 1
sm•IJ lot.,.on Uer.mt.id Street In 1 •miJJ
parkln1 alatricl.''
A1ll11• wanted lo know It the whole cit)'
could ht>ai bonds fbr parking facllitlta.
Lambourne told him the city would then
Have to put such a proposal to the voters
for a &entrAI obligation bond . which re-.
quire! • twO.thiNli rttajotlty fbt J>l"ll!,
"We wouhf 111 benefit for parkinl
thlbUlhoul the cllf," Aili!!> .. 1d. "fi
nothing Jj di#\! iibOUt parKlnf wd won't
h1v11 • bu1ine.ss communll)' Jn Latun•
Beith."
Lambourne said, 'If !he c1Uztrt$ foot
the ~lHf fllklltg lor tlte bu!llHi!.! -· mUnlly, pal Ill <HI iotttrhuJtlty lo!!I.''
L.amOOume later asked WhtU lhfl City
\Vould do about the rnercbanlll on
Broadway iC parking structures are built
near Clenneyre and Mermaid StreeL~.
Hastings said that possi bly a tem·
porary parking lot could be built on Main
Bellch property, north of Broadway. He
1ild 1uch • lo( coo.Id be tl&M until t
pUk;ng slruaure •al bu ill iJ/i l!lc;dwlr.
CommlMk#lf!r J1me! Schmttz stld
another alternative would be lfl wnrk with
Laguna Federal Savings to add another
story on tap of the eilstlhl p1rkln1 for
lht! CQt'p()l'IUOn. SUCl'I pttKlnl COUid ~
used bOth . IJy th• city Ind Lltuna fed·
crtl curtl')'ffltrs.
C()rnm!Ulontts 11bo htarct • report
from the clt1 11torney oftlcf: st1U111 ~r)dn1s iols_IO]l ta• "'mPJJlroperilet-
n•ine 1 t:hurdiq -can be renttl (or
cit; ~rklnl as lont 41 r!Venu1 ~· le>
w!rd ihe: cfiurch tunds.
B!lRLlN IUPI) -Weit Ottman Prtlll·
dent OUillV Helne)'l'Jtn~ new to Wett ~ltn lodiy fot I flve-d87 v~i! d!opltl
Crrinmun~t £olt Oermon plnteo~ that
bil preitllc:e would be a provncitlcn .
(
Too Little?
Too Much?
,
OON't BE MI Sl.~D I Y OISCOlmTS, OIAl~. SALES AND
8 1\'!·AWAYS.
TH E COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT I EST-IT IS
UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUCH, BUT IT IS WOR S! TO ~AY
TOO Lttflt •
I~ YOU PAY TOO MUCH, YOU LOU A LITTLE MONlY
ANO 11-IA t IS ALL
WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE, YOU SOMETIMIS ~OSl
EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGiHT WAS
INCAPAILE OF DOINS WHAT tt WAS ~U~CHASID TO DO.
YOU CAN'T ~AY A LITTLE AND SET A LOT.
ALDEN'S
CARPITS e DllAPIS
, •• J Pi4lc111tl1 AYI.
tl:l•t A MllA
64&•41 31
Niguel_ Trainees. to ·Fight
By BAIUIAM KllEIBICH
A 70-year-o!d man who 1t last can en-
joy reading the daily newspaper, a
mother who can understand h er
children's report cards and even go to
school to discuu them with the teachers,
the foreign-born bride or an American
who can go to the market or join her
neighbors over coffee, a bracero who
wants to qualify for a better job -these
are typical of the studtnts who will be
taught English by volunteer teachers now
completing a special course 1n Laguna
Niguel.
Teaching the teachers is a rewcomer lo
the area, Mrs. Robert SCanJand, who
launched her first training course just
two months after moving into a new
home at 29652 Preston Drive.
Teaching English to adults, either ii·
literates or fortlgn·born, requires some
very special skills, and Mrs. Scanland,
who has been doing it for seven years1 is
an expert.
A volunteer teacher trainer ror
Laubach Uteracy. she has helped to start
teaching centers in three Southern
California counties. has taught English to
many braceros and Other Spanish, speak-
Ghosts Leavit1g Ship;
'
Queen Mary Abandoned
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot ~ DallY Piiot 11tff
Ghosts are leaving the Queen Mary, almost like rats from a sinking ship.
This is the word from workers aboard her.
History bas always enfolded the monarch of the Atlantic in magic, 1>re<
dating the toil, tears, sweat and blood of the 800,00().plus troops she carried in
World War U; the gaiety of postwar passages from New York to J..i.verpool.
The Queen. some swear, carried a ghost crew and
passenger manifest.
They say the ghosts are leaving now.
* * * Thousands lined the Orange Coast on Dec. 9, 1967,
for a final glimpse before her majesty's engines shut down
forever and she became Disneyland in Long Beach Harbor.
Some cheered the fact that God-and big business-
would save the Queen. Some didn't.
One was Mrs. Jeannie Lorimer, of Newport Beach,
who watched proud Mary slide down the ways into the
Clyde River in Glasgow, Scotland, 33 yean: before. Her husband Archie was
the giant luxury liner's first engineer.
"Sbe should have stayed in England, .. said Mrs. Lorimer through tear·
clouded eyes that misty moming.
''Or towed out into the Atlantic and blown up."
* * * Controversy soon began to swirl around the rusting royal hulk, which
was sentimentalized, ridiculed, visited-and attacked by thousands of workmen.
We called her Mayor Wade's Folly and laughed.
But the Long Beach establillhment doesn't like for anyone to rock the
boat-if you can pardon the pun---and the Queen Mary is the Sacred Cow of
City Hall.
l\1y interview with San Francisco designer Alexis Tellis, who himself
renovated an old bay ferryboat, was written fOI' a Long Beach newspaper,
lent upstairs and vanished in the lolly heights of editorial policies. ...
He only predicted beforehand all the structural, electrical, logistical and
labor problems she would experience and they happened right on schedule.
* * * Costs have naturally skyrocketed' beyond original estimates as a corollary.
Enthusiastic at first, for instance, the Diner's Club abruptly jumped
11hip recenUy. A second giant corporation expected to sign on Jn its place got
cold feel.
Three Interesting news items crossed the DAILY PILOT desk Monday.
One: A glowing news release about the $525,000 paint job about to be
applied to the Queen. and paint only covers the outside.
"A portion of the ship's public tour areas is planned to open in mid·
December," said the announcement from the city manager's office.
Two: A UPI story saying the same operation with the Queen El.iZabelh
Jn Florida· is bankrupt and Mary's little sister is destined for scrap.
Three: A column by Long Beach newspaperman George Robeson telling
about the ghosts allegedly encountered on the Queen Mary since workmen
began their job.
* * * Her spirits Include that or a crewman crushed to death in a watertight
door whose mounted bell has tinkled at odd times with no visible cause. Other
phenomena have been reported too.
But the bell no longer tinkles. The unexplainable happenings have strange-
ly stopped in recimt days. Only human :sounds are heard now,
Those who make them are uneasy, more than when the eerie ones walked
her decks and passages.
"What do the ghosts know that we don't?" a:sks Robeson.
Gretel Wins Agal11
lntrepidSquelchesPlans
Of Heritage Cup Racer
By ALMON LOOKABEY
DAILY ,\LOT ... 11 .. lllllw
NEWPORT. R:r. -Bill Ficker of
Newport Beach aod Intrepid Monday
ffeei>-sixed Charlie Morgan's dream oC
becoming an America's Cup defender by
defeating Heritage by a whopping seven
mlnutes 1.8 seconds over lhe 24.3-mile
course.
The blue-blazered America's Cup selec·
lion committee pulled alongside Heritage
almost before she wa., made fast t.o the
dock with the expected "we regret lo in·
fonn you" message.
Morgan had seen the handwriting on
the bulkhoed before be cross<d tbe finish
llne. He jovially invited all the wlv<11 and
gir!Criends of the crew to board the
lterft.ase from her tender and broke ouL
the beer on the way back to the dock.
Ficker and his crew followed the com·
mlttee to the Heritage dock to orrer their
condohmces and congralulaU011s fOC' 11
good oertts.
niu1 ended an $MXl,OOO dream of the
)'00111 Florida designer and bulldeT who
root.cl the bill for the proj<ct him,.lf. He
deslped and built the boa4 built ll10I( ol
the ,.ii!, and penonally •kippered the
boat during the July and August trial~
Intrepid got the stan over Heritage ar)(f
Increased the lead at every mark' e:x~pt
one. She Jed by l : 12 at tile windward
marl!:, 28 aeconds at the retching mark,
nne n\lnutt 47 ltCOnds at the end of the
lrJ,..ie, three mintJ!tS 0 sec:oods It !ht
second weather mark, three mlnutea: 57
second1 at the fifth mark and 7:2.8 at the
fin~.
But the lime Spllta at the marts do not
!ell the whole 1tory. On the secood leg
Heritage was ahead of Ficker by about
200 yards at one point. The race wall sail·
cd in light southwesterly winds under
clear skies.
The race between Australia's Gretel 11
and the French yacht Frantt was
another seesaw battle.
Grett! had a three-second advantage at
the start and Increased the Jeff to 1:14 at.
the weather mark. But France out·
·diStaneed her rival on the second leg and
led at the reaching mark by eigh~
scconds, increasing \he lead to 17 seconds
at the end of the triangle.
Jlowever, Gr~cl's Jim }lardy out·
mancu'lered France's Pierre Dc!Four on
the fourth leg and held an advantage of
J :04 at the second weather mark.
At the fifth mark Gret@l Jed by 53
seconds on the downwind nm alter lo&lng
the Jud to France four times. 'Mle. time
difference al the finish wu Gretel by
l :32.
This race saw Baron Marcel Blcb's $2
million dream poised precariously over
Davey's locker.
This will be a be11l four out or seven
series to <letennlne which yacht will be
the oHicial challenitr and Gretel II
alrudy bu two wins.
Ing adults and trained otber volunteer• to
do likewise.
Mrs. Scanland uses the .. Each One
Teach One" method of word-plcture
assoclalion made famous by Dr. Frank C.
l.aubacttwho, befOl·e bis death this year,
spent more than 40 years developing
literacy programs tn more than 100 coun-
tries and writing primers in more than
300 languages and dialects.
T1le first lessons in English using the
Laubach method were given in 1945. It
has . been used to help oot only the
foreign.born, but also the eight million
"flmctional illiterates" in the Unlttd
Laguna Plans
Special City
Budget Meet
The Laguna Beach Clty Council will
hold an adjourned meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday for final acUon on two items
held over from last week's reg u I a r
ses.slon: adoption of a 1970-71 budget and
the problem of repair to the city's sewer
treatment plant.
Since repa~ of a broken clariller in the
ancient plant could cost the city $60,000,
adding 10 cents to the tax rates, both
agenda items '.Vere deferred for action
pending further examinaUon.
Total cost of the sewer plant repair
WQuld be $90,000, of which Federal funds
would cover one third.
Apart from the possible increase for
the sewer repair, councilmen will be con.
siderlng a $3.8 million budget with a tax
rate increase of only about hal! a cent
over last year's $1.93.
Since the city does not have to report
its final tax rate to the county until Sepl
7, it is p:>SSible this Jtem may be further
delayed.
Also scheduled fo r the Wednesday
session is a joint study with members of
the Planning Commission regarding ten.
nis courts.
Councilman Charlton Boyd's committee
system proposal will be up fOI' discussion
and Boyd and acting city manager
Joseph Sweany are expected to report on
results of their search for office space for
the county health survey learn now work·
ing in Laguna.
64 Applicants
Bidding for City
Manager's Post
To dale, 64 inquiries have reached
Laguna's city hall regarding the city
manager posiUon just vacated by James
Wheaton.
Of these. about half are from persons
now in California, according to Coun-
cilman Roy Holm, the remainder from
other states.
Holm and Councilman Charlton Boyd
have been charged with the tast of &r•
ranging to find a replacement for
Wheaton, who left last week to assume
the post of city manager at Corona.
Responses to advertisements in the Ci·
ty Managers' Newsletter, a nationwide
publication, and in Western Cities
Magazine have been arriving dally, Holm
said.
He has requested feUow councilmen to
look over all the responses and indicate
those they would like to have followed up
with an application fonn .
No deadline has bee:'I set for receipt of
applications but it is expected a declsk>n
will be made wi~ six to eisht weeks.
Woman Recovers
After Accident
A woman pedestrian who suffered head
injuries when lltruclt by a car in Laguna
Beach Saturday night is now recovering
and in saUsfactory condition, it wu an·
nounced today.
Josephine Fell, 57, of 1488 Catalina St.,
ts in the intensive care unlt at South
Coast Community Hospital as a rt!ult of
the mishap on Glenneyre Street near
Catalina Street.
She underwent SW'lery lmmedJately
after the accident which occurred while
1he was crossing near the Jnteraecllon.
Motorist William R. Redline, «. of El
Centro. told police he bad just gone
through a crooked ofrset tn the street and
his vision was obstrocted by roadside
shrubbery.
Boys Ooh Sets
Summer Sleep·fu
The sandman commeth to the Boya•
Club of Laguna Beach Friday.
The club bas planned Ila second sum-
mer sleep-in for boys under 12.
The event begins at 8 p.m. and will end
at JO a.m. Saturday. Youngsters m1y be
picked up any time between 10 a.m.
S.turday and 1 p.m.
AcUvltlel wW loc!ude games, movles
•nd 1urprise P"'tlJ'lllll. Club memhln
partlcJpaU01 need a permwlon 1llp from
the club ~gned by parent or leg1l /llW'
dian and returned by Tbunday.
The charge will be IL Partlclpanll
need a aleeping bag or sufficient
blanketa.
The •leepln Is limlled to 2.1 boys
because 1urf teams from this club and
Hermosa Beach will al110 11leep at the club
before their mee1 SalW'dQ 1DorniJ11.
States -perJOnS over 25 Yfl1"1 ol 1ge
with leas than a fifth erade education.
CalJfornia aloflfl is esUmated to have
in,g ZOth in literacy among the 50 stat.ts.
The highest rate of literacy Js in Ut.h
and the lowest ln Lou1sana, accordln& to
government figurtt.
But the batUe against llllter1ey I! bein&
carried on by tbe souu..m C.Ulonila
j.llenlcy Cooncil which has 11 centers
where 149 volunteer teachers tnstruct
1,135 stndenl!, ol whom oozy 10 percent
are Englis!Hpealdng.
Some 50 naUonalities are represented
among the students, but most are
Spanish-speaking, especially in I h •
SOuthem California center&
There are 17 teaching centers in
Orange County, Including two In the
South County artL Classes in English,
conducted by volunteer teachers, are held
en Tuesday evenings at 7:30 in the Adult
Community Center on Spring Street in
San Juan Capistrano and in St. Edward'•
Catholic Olurch in Capbtrano Beach.
Active In the South County teacher
training program ls Mrs. Francis Line of
San Clemente.
Jn addition to working In the teaching
centers, the voluateen also assist paid
aduJt education teachers in standard
English for Foreigners classes, coaching
students wbMe educaUon does not meet
the expected night IChool minimum of
fifth grade work. ·
Some of the Laubach Literacy teacheri
are in Mexico, teaching English to adult&
\\'ho need the language for their work.
A graduate of Ohio Wesleyan Universl·
ty, Mrs. Scanland, mother of five, mar-
ried "after a one-year career" and has
devoted bersell to volunteer wort, for the
past seven years conceritrating on the
Laubach Ltteraey program.
Tn 1965, u president of Churchwomen
United, she started a clasa for 2:0 women
in Santa Ana, Since then she bas con..
ducted 3Q.hour teacher training counu
twice a year.
At the request of a group of local
residents, Mrs. Scanland agreed to con-
duct a 15-hour summer COUC'8e in her new
Laguna Niguel home. N1nt students wU1
wind up five three--hour sessions thl9
w .. t.
The one man In the group is a former
high 9Chool and junior college tuc:her,
some of the women are at.lll In college
studying to be teachers, others are
housewives who find tbemselv~ with free
time when their children are In achoo!.
One joined the class because she wanted
to help her new neighbor, a girl from
Iran, learn EngUsh.
Several already &re volunteering their
time helping Spanish-spelling pel'l<N
multt the languye.
"Most!y,'' uys Mrs. Scanland, .. they
say they feel there Is a need for this work
and they want to make a contribution to
better understanding."
The student teachers work through a
manual that shows them how to teach
from large picture and word charts.
sometimes using models of familiar ob-
jects for those who speak no English at
all.
To hold students' lntettst, sentmces
and little stories using the new words are
introduced almost immediately. The
pupils progress: through five workbooks,
learning 131 words in the very first, and
an increasing number In subsequent
books until they reach about seventh
grade level in their command of English.
A valuable teaching aid ls a weekly
newspaper published by La u b a c h
Literacy in two editions, one for third
grade level students, the other, with the
same news written in language that can
be undentood by 1tudents at the fifth
grade level.
Of practical value to students or
English Jiving in California Is a simplified ·
verzion of the state's official driver's
handbook, with vehicle code regulationa
translated Into language that can be
studied and l.Jnderatood by license ap-
plicants.
To Mrs. Scanland, there is "no great.er
reward'' than the expression of joy and
amazement on the face of a student as he
finds himself speaking and understanding
the language that has loomed as a real
barrier ln hi! llfe.
"l often think the teachen get as much
out cf the lessona as the ltudent,'' she
say a.
For the dedicated volunteers who train
as teachers, there Is special meaning In
the words of 1'1omas Carlyle: "That
there should be one man ignorant. wtw>
had the c1paclty fot knowledge, this I
call I tragedy, , , "
F estiva~ Berets
Sales Exrended
To Who'le Year
Laguna lleach berets -devised lour
years ago •• a trademarll! for the WJnter
Futtval -have becoml such a popular
aouvenit for vlslton to the Art Colony
they will be kept on aaJe all year at the
Laguna Chamber of Commerce.
The colorful bett1ts, each with a paint
brush stuck through it like 1 feather,
have been tr:1ld on the FesUval of Arts
grounds this summer as a Winter
Festiv1l fund.railer and apparently
tourl$!1 can't 1et •llOUih of them.
lle1't chairman Mrs. Zachary Mllaby
and her voluntee< beret Dllbrs can turn
out the headploce.s to oell for 11 and mal:o
a handy profit to help fllWICe Winier
Festival events.
The 1971 Wln~r F..u .. 1 will be ..,.
panded to three weekend!, luting 17 day1
from Feb. II through March 7 and
prtllmlnary 1nnOuncements alrtad,y are
bringing many lnqulrlel, 11CCOnlin& to the
Chamber ol en~
L -DAJL Y I'll.OT l
Battle
,·
OA.IL.YPILOT .... ,,_.
TEACHING ·TEACHERS TO TEACH
Mro. Robert Scanfand Trains E"91llh lnitructors
Freeway Alternatives
Newport Beach Council
' . Studies Street Problems
Newport !lead> IJ JtudyinJ what tt
shoold study about the meu It mJght be
In without the Paci.fie Coast HJghway.
The City Councll Monday directed
Mayor Ed Hlrth to follow up hl5 own sug·
gestlon that the city prepare a propo15al
of the consideraliona facing the cJty and
its looming monwnental traffic problem.
'Ibe mayor wW actuaUJ be maldrJi a
list of the things that should be in-
corporated into a ltudy of future street
and hlghwoy plans.
The Hst, council memben pointed out,
would include a Dover Drlve-.faclflc
Cout !Dghway Interchange Md widening
of the Back Bay Brldce.
It mJght also include a RCOnd Back
Bay Bridge -oonnecting San Joaquin
Hills Road with, say, 32nd Slreel in Costa
Mesa.
It might also include a liat cf other
equally thougl>jlro.,.king proposals ol
what mlgbt be: necessary without, or even
with the controversial freeway.
Public opinion in Newport currently aJ>-
pears to be running against the planned
Pacific Coast Freeway through the clty.
at least along the adopted route, and
many residents believe that the road can
be eliminated entirely.
The council has reluctantly, for the
most part, endorsed elimination, but, •s
Coonclbnan Richard Croul put It, "When
the people see the conseqllfl)CeS eome
lime in lbe future, they will IUddenly Ky,
'What did we do this for?' "
!firth aald !be people lhould -1lla problem before a vote Is taken to toe
away the couneil'1 power to detennim
freeway routes.
There is currently a citizens' ccm--
mlttee petition being clrculated lj>lt
would"fon:e a'referendum on ju.st u:b a -
charter amen<knenL
A second petition clrc:ulali!d by tho :
same group would force tbe oouncn to
either rescind the c:urttnt route agree.
men~ or put the quesllona to fhe'wton ·
a.s to wbether.U lhould bO mcioded. .
Councilman Mll•n M. Doltal earn..
mented that COllllrucl!al ot a oecohd
Back Bay Bridge would de 1 trO'y
Easlbluff.
That la <UOtly the point. Jllrlb ....
trying to make.
'Ille alternlllvea to the Cnast "->1 ·
may be JDOre hommdnu. then tho .
super!ilgbway, lllelf.
' !firth aald he would eaifer with bollt
st.ale •nd county Highway peraonnel, ti
necessary, in drawing up !he "Hal of cm-.
sideratloos."
'Ille wldet>lng ol the m.tlng Back Bay ·
opan along tbe Coast Highway, aeveral
council members noted, is 113ing to be
mandalory with or wjlbout the !reewlJ.
And the Dover lnlerchlnge allowing •
continual now of traffic from Dover
Drtve to e..-Coast lllgbway II also
impenUve, accml!ni to Councilman
Lindsley Plll'IOlla.
ly Phil lnterlandl
"I Don't SN Whit Good 11\at'll Do, E-II y.., Do Spot
Hla H•lleopt1r.''
'I
I
I
I
I
' • ' '
[
I
l
_... ............... • WhlD Chrloltno WllhMre ot New•
...,.rt, Eo1land left for a vacalloll
th her family. ,.., put a dllmll!Y
,JrUIOd u a woman OC1 her bed to
·:thwart bur&lan. 'lb• ~· worked too well. !>electlve1 forced their
way Into tb• WUmores' !tome alter
~~by a nelgh~r. Ja,....
L , who thou1bt he ,.w a
body. Leadbetter said later be bad
been nosing around lb• house to
make sure nothing wa1 aml11. 'nl•
police Hid lllrbodY planning to
leave a dummy In a home sbould
advllt 1uthorltl11 beforehand.
• 1 Frllllcls telephoning Joan Nalh
oflan aro IJllWerad by growls IJld
barb. Sometbne• the line 11 411-~-ectal. Mn. Nub, of old Wind· '°"' En1llJld, ·Hyl the unwonted ,pnsw•rlnK service ls provided by
'her dog Cleopatra, who 1111 by the
phoM for houn waiting for a call.
II Mrs. Naab <:lllDOl 1rab a ringing
telephone lint. Claopatra removu
the handHI to her buktt &!Id
•JVOrrlU It.
•
A "'°" who btokt fnto the
Dutch t"f'bal•tl in Stockholm
climbi'ng through a bathroom
window SundaJI got no farther
than tile batht1tb. o.ccon:lfno to
the police, who found him.
n.rleep thtrt'. Ht to(U owaktne~
and chargtd with public intozi-
cction.
•
Gardner Stan Micek of Notting.
ham, England 1aw Michael Hug·
gin• t, cryi•I because .he bad no
pet .le, int.er in· a children'.s unusual
pet contest at a local fair . He
used hl1 spade to uproot a six-inch
worm !or lillcbael, who won first
prize. • A man who bet 48 cents on seven
horses over the ·weekend In Un·
don, England, won $27,715, a
spokuman for the William Hill
Bookmaking Organization said.
Tb• lucky bettor, identified only
as ''Mr. Albert,'' wa1 remembered
by a teller who watched him bor·
row et&bt oent1 from •· lrlend In
order to complete bla wagers. • Scboolml s tre1s Ooo"le
Roy started her 400-mile holiday
trip through En1land in a horse-
drawn Gyp1y carav1n, taking with
her a hen that liktl to drink beer.
"Tho11 alcoholic eggs certainly
pack a punch/' she aald . • 'Ibero are 20,000 Utter baskets
ml1sin1 · from New York City
atreell. Environmental Protection
administrator Jtr""1• Kr1tchm1r,
who gave the estimate Sunday,
aald most ol them probably were
stolen u curiosities, because they
are 11enormously camp." The city
I& thinking of installing brightly·
col_pred fiberglaiss trash boxes that
would be bolted to sidewalks to
prevoot theft, Kretcjlmer said.
... . . . . . ,.._,____ -. . . .
ideas-t-~ alks -Begill-
U.N. Mediator M-eets lsrp,el, Arab Envoys
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Gum
V. Janine, tbe 1poolll U.N. medl1lor, tc>
dar formally opened hl1 e11ort today 1o
oqot11te peace in tbe Mlddle Ea1t.
Jarring met fin! in hb 11th floor olllce
at U.N. h<adqll1rtero with VOit! Tekolll,
Llnel'11mballldor to the U.N., and tbeo
coolemd with AbdUl Hamid SbareJ;
Jordan'• en~oy to Wublnltoa. It WU Dot
known whether Eapt'• 11.N. ""' bllaidor, llohamin<d Hallan El Z.yy1~
-... Jarrln1 lodly. I•rael, £cypt and Jordan have 1.,....t
to (he !alb Wider Jorrlng'1 1111plco
which followed a ceue-flre •Ione the Suet
canal be"'1!inl Au1. 7. 'lbt United State•
propoeed the truce and tha talkl, and
Jll'rlnl IJllll)Ul)COd M!>!ld•Y ·a1te,,_ !hat !My would be&ln todoy.
0 tf tht Arab a:overnmenl.I pnulnely
wilb to d1lculll peace wilh us, the ob-
jecUve wUI be achleve4,"1'ekoah aid to-
d.ay. ije t()ld \lewsmen he informed Jar·
ring of the 1.1baaic principles'' of the
Jartell position and added :
"It would not be useful to enter Into
deltllJ of our dilcuS!lont. The ob!"ectlve
11 esttbll6b.ment d.' a just ~nd astlng
peace between Israel and tgypt and
tarael and Jordan. All of UJ reallit that
aft.er %1 years ol 1ggreaslons, aolutlort1 lo
the many difficulties will be dlfUcult."
Tekoah scheduled anolher meetlna:. with
Jarrin& thia afternoon before leaving
tonight for comultatioris in Jerusalem.
Hi.I departure will presumably leave
Israel wllhout a representative here for
more talks with Jarring bot Tekoah was
not ei:pected to remain tona I n
J"eruaalem.
Tekoah conferred wi1h Jarring from
9:30 a.m. unUI 10 :30 a.m. in Jatrin8'1 of·
* * * * * * Le'banon Claims Israelis
4ttacked Border Village
BJ UNITED PllEll IHl'ERNATIONAL
A Lebllle,. military opokum1n llld
!Jr1ell lroopo c:roPed into ooolhem
Lebanon today for the HCOod straight
day and blew up houat1 near thl border
vlllaae of Cbebaa. Artb cuerrtUu
reported lnfllctlnl heavy caaualU.. and
dam11e1 on lhe Israelll in atfAckl on the,
Le:baneae and Jordanian front.I.
The mllltarY 1poke1man tn Bel.rut said
IM lsaell around 1\llck WU preceded by
tn 4rUllery barra1e ln whlch four home•
were destro)'ed and four damaged. He
said the Israeli troops blew up six more
boules on lhe outa:klrts of C.'hebaa, 1.5
ri:lllel in1idt Ltbane1e t.errltory, before
withdrawing. 'lbtrt were no casualties
reported in the attack, the spokesman
uld.
On M~y, Leblnon aak:I laraeU
around troops blew up a bulklina near the
village of Yaroun and kldnaped one
penon. Arab iuerrlllu, who bave vowed
to frustrate efforts toward a political set-
UeTnent, have continued attacks against
lsratl.
In Amman, the newspaper Fatah,
pubUcatlon for 11 major guerrilla
organlutlons, uld commandoe aUlcked
Israeli positions 1t El RouSI on the 1lopea
of Mt. Hennon in LeblnOn Monday eve-
nln& with heavy mortart. It 1a\d "heavy''
ca1ualtle1 and damages were inflicted on
Uie Israelis by direct hits.
•Falah 1aid Al A.Pila guerrillu later
clashed for 21,-', hours with Israeli forces
in the central Jordan Valley. Heavy
artillery and howitzers were, used in
which two Israeli troop carriers were
destroyed and all their occupants killed
or wounded, the newspaper aald . It 1ald
one a:uerrilla wu wounded in the battle
near Um El-Wat.tad.
All was reported quiet along the Sue1
Canal front but charaes and coun·
ten:tiarges continued.
Both Egypt and Iarael accused each
other of vlol1ting ttia to-day cease-fir•
tlla t be&an Aug. 7. And in Cairo,
diplomatic sources sak:I Egypt · and
Jordan will lnJi.&t on complete flraeli
withdrawal from Arab territory seized in
the 19&'1 was and safeguards for Palesli·
nlan right! in the New Yori nea;oUationa.
Angela's Sister on Boat
}.,rom Canada to Cuba
SAINT JOl!N, N.B. (U PI ) -C1l11dl1n
authoritle1, 1ctina on 1 request from lhe
FBI, checked out a group ol Americana
he•dti for OJba today, but failed to find
any trace oI An1ela Divis, wanted In lhe
Unit.Id St.at.u on murder charaes.
However, a youn1 woman aboard the
Cuban ves1el "Conrado Ben1te1" w11
Identified by otheta 1mon1 the 500
American• bound for Hav1na, as Mn.
Fania Davis Jordan, Miss Davis's sister.
After an ln!Ual 0 no comment" the
woman refused to speak lo the pres1.
One reporter who tried to pt additional
information w11 shooed away by the
woman'a male companion.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police of-
ficials c;ontirmed that the)' were acUvely
seeking MLll t>avia.
··we had a request from. lhe FBI to be
on the lookout for Miu Davis," aald
RCMP Supt, P. H. Bouraua. "In thia
case, we are t1tlng apeclal precautions.••
He would nol 11y what apeclal
measures were bein1 taken. 'nle RCMP
here said latt week a nationwide alert
was on in Canada for Miss Davis.
Asked If FBI agents were in Saint
John, Bourassa 1aid, "Not lo my know!·
edge. But when the FBI aaka UI for help
In finding a wanted person , we try to
&tve them a hand." RCMP officers on the scene said It was
doubtful that Mb1 Davis would try to
mingle with lhe "Venceremos" ("We Will
Win") group headed for Cuba to harvest
citrus fru.lll, because of the publicity and
official attention !UfTOUndlni lhelr ar·
rivals and departures.
IT'S NOT ONLY
WAY TO FLY
LOS ANGE~ES (UPI) -A 1uperior
court Juda:• h11 issued a preliminary In-
junction prohibiting distribution of a
n)agazlne wllh photographs of women in
erotic poses and carrylna Overseas Na·
tlon1l Alrway1 flight bags.
The injunction was Issued Monday
aaabut Jaybird Eriterprlses and Par11•·
Ment Newt , publisbtr and distributor of
the magazine "Room.mite Wanted."
Judp Richard Schauer took lht acUon on
a ault rued by overseas National
Airwl)'I.
flee ovorlookln1 tl)e ~aa\ River.
Alked wliether be would deseribe the
opelllne R'8ioJl aJ ptooedural or subata,...
tJve, Te:koah uld : "One ahou.ld not
categorlr.e the dlscu&llon1. It wu an <>pen
meettnc."
Jarrtna aet no; deadlines In th•
d!Jcus1lon.1 and madt no estimates about
when proareu ml1ht be evident. Bui, in
announclne Monday thee talkl would begio
within U houra, he took a poslUve vtew:
•·1 feel sure that the partJes will enter
the dlacuulons with lhe firm lntenUon of
tindlna; a toluUon. I hope that with good
will and underst.andtng they w:lll in time
reach agreement on 1 just and la.!lting
peace."
There were no pl1n.1 at this time for
joint meetings of the three represen-
t1Uve1. Jarrina said h~ would see them
"one by one."
Senate Ethics
Committee Bans
Car Lease Deals
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Senate
Ethics Committee hu forbidden future
cul·rate automobile leulna: deal! lhat put
some aenah:lrs behind the wheela of Lin-
coln ContlnentalJ for '150 a year.
In Issuing the ruling as an advitory
recommendation, the panel did not 11y
which senators ha:d accepted the low-cost
leases from automobile manufacturers
seeklna: to promote their cars by having
celebrltle.!1 drive them.
It said only that ''certain .senaton and
a Senate officer persona~y have leased
an automobile from an automobile_
manufacturing company under special
and favorable: tenn1."
Sen. John C. SteM~ ([).Miu.),
chllnnan of the Elhlca c.otnmlttee,
reported UJ findings lo the Senate Mon-
day, declaring the practice shouJd end ,.,
with the current set of leases, if not
before.
Al lea.!lt a dozen senators rtportf'dly
had leased automobiles in what Stenni11
called "a promotional program of many
years' standing."
Stennis said the committee found no
evidence of Wft)ng·doing or improper In-
fluence in connectJoh wllh the Jeue1.
But it made this recommendation: ,
"Ex.lslina: private leues of automobiles
ll'ater Sculptress
A hot day and a cool lake ... and a pretty girl with a toss of her head
creates a water sculptur:e in Spokane, Wash. This young lady's crea·
tivity was aided by a camera with the shutter speed set at 1/1,000th
of a second .
Government Health Aides
}.,ear Diphthe1·ia Outb1·eak td senator• at favorable rates 1hould be
tennlnated at or before the end of the
current model year. These leases should
not be renewed.
"In making private agreements in the
fulure for the leasing of automobiles,
senators should not accept any favorable
term1 and conditions that are available to
them only 11 aenators."
WASHINGTON (AP) -Government
dlseate detectlvea 1ay limited outbreaU
of diphtheria, the ancient child killer,
oould spread acrou lhe United Stales,
with ghettos especially vulnerable.
ExperU of the U.S. Public Health
Service's Communicable Dlaease Center
in Atlanta $BY 7HS percent of the na·
tion·s children are immunized •1ain11t
diphtheria, but they rate thla as onlf
fairly good.
Ford Motor Co., Chrysler Corp. and
Gene ral Motors Corp. All had actnow-
ledj:ed providing cut.rate cars to gOY-
emment officials and some member1 of
the House and Senate u a promotional
device.
The Conlioental leaae1, at f150 • year,
were leu than one·thlrd the normal price
for rental or the luxury cars.
They Implied thlt any city In which
half the children ire not lmmun1zed could
face an ep idemic 1uch u the one 1weep-
ing San Antonio, Tex.
A recent survey ahowed San Antonio
had Immunized only 1bout half Ill
children, compwed with 70 percent for
comparable cltle1 of 100,000 popul1tlon.
The city has lllted·66 c11ea of the vletoua
dh1eaae thla year -30 ol them th!&
month.
The experts said In an Interview that 2S
statea do not require pre-school sholl
wttfi fhe trlpJe DPT vaoclne aaalnlt
diphtheria, whooplna coua;b and tetanus
or lockjaw. ·
Thole ital.ti are Alabama, Alask111 Arizona, Colorado, Oelawar1, Florida,
Idaho, Iowa, Maine, Montana. Nebraaka,
Nevada, North and South Dakota,
Oklahoma, Oregon, Texa1, Utah, Ver·
mont, Waahingto;i;, Wl.sconlln and Wyom-
ing.
Tiley said that for maximum safety
aaatnst all three maladle1, children
should get three shota of the triple vae--
cine a month apart, b!ginntne 1t about s
months of age -followed by a boollter
•Oat at age I; another booster upon
entering school; and a boollter every 10
years thereafter.
Diphtheria is nr:uned for the Greek
word '"diphthera,'' meanlnc hid• or
leathtr.
Thot's becawe the ancient malady is
ctt.artrcterlzed by rormation of a thick ,
aomewhat Jeathtr·llke falae meml:rane
on the lining of the throat and other areas
of the respiratory tract.
The poison of the bacteria lh•t cause It
also can spread throu(hout the 1)'1tem,
affectlng even the heart. Death can occur
in an 11ony of choklnl.
I Tornadoes Teasing Texas
Showers 'Scattered, But Most of Nation Sunny
Hijacked Jet's
Pilot Believes
Bo1nb Was Hoax u,,, ........
RECEIVED $10,000 Te111perac .. rea Ohio'• S.n. Young PHll.ADELPHIA \UPI) -The pilot of
MlfltJ •W Miit (tlltlnued evtr "'"' Ltw ,(ff. a Trana World Alrllnea jetliner hijacked
'USED IN PlllCAMPAION'
Connectlcvt11 Sen. Dodd
..,.,._ <•ll"""'l• ltH' w1111 -,., lo CUba by a. passenger in a U.S. Army
llltlt ..,.. ~ IM *'''' .. 1111111 .1111 .h D • c ff Lo uniform nid today he w11 "ti percent '°-"""' -tlo _ .. ,M emocrat1c 0 ers Qe IUl'e" lhO young man Wll blUfllOI lboul _. ..,.., •• ~111M "' .c.".," C a bQJnb on the plaae bUt could not tab ~. TM ......,, -· jt. •
,,..,.,"' 111 -., .. , wtt"' •'"'"' -" "It'll r!lk • ....,... '"""'•"''*' ...-11i.1111, The 72'7 Jet, diverted to Havana Mon. ~ :..,::.•.~':::':a. ""'*" JD $ 20 000 T s day nJlht after the hijacker 11ld he had
..., -""" ...... ,...,. 11111 -to WO enators an adeompUct abolrd who would "blow ::::"'..::".:..'::",,::.."':i. :::..,~ ' up th• plane" on •\inol, returnld lo Ito
Jriltfl ,.., .. '--""""'.,. 1ohtduled deatlnaUon here at t:U a.m . .;: .,,: -::=.::. ;.~"'::.:: ·'' tod•Y with 79 of lhe ortatn1I IO 111111. °""" ..,. ...,...,. " WASHINGTON (UPT) -'1'ht Senate returned and It wu auwned tht money paaaengen aboard. i :."::..to-~= t..:r:'w~ "".:: II Democratic Campa la~ Committee a ave I h•d bttn •pent. The hijacker. tent1tlvely I tnllfted
,. .u •• ttw aett. .,011 lotll ol '20,000 h:I two Senator• for uae In "Tht commlUM dou not. anticipate from the l)laenaer mantra• Robert ~ ~._...,. ~.:.-:":. 111• Coar-• (} S S 1" primary ejecUonJ they liter decided not th•t It will be aetuna the money Hck," L. Labadie, waa tlken Into c:ustody In
l M wt"' ••• ... ... • • .,,. ... ,.. Ult 1pokeam1n 11id. "At lea at, thwt H1v1na by CUban authorities .
Tiie "*"lf•l"I ................. ,.. ·~ •• """'• commlll .. ~--·1 ct lo ·' Th II r. w ll~ , ... wllll ....., ... WWW• "•Ir ....... Lltfll ••rl•lll• ... II ..... _, •IMI , ..... ~ 1'11•1 .... tnu:r. tll"I uvuu ltlpt hasn't betn any nrort to r«»vtr It." a p ot, wipt.. 1rren Geor11 •
.,_.,,..-.WM•"',,...., 1111 .. 1 111•111 •IMI ""'""" '*" 111e.,.,1r1. " '"' "1'1oi1 !Od•'· "' 'MT' aet any ot tht mOMy back. He added , "A 1ood mnay of these -Br',."evUJe, Conn .. 11ld h1 aectded no1 to .,_,.,., with 1lr.M ..,..., WIM• 11 •ft~IY I ft JS ~Milt Ill l tltrl!Mlll ~wt~f,"t;:t GJ~ ~+... 1':J ~ .,, r'v-NI ''-· H*'-111 111e mw~1•1.,. r•MH ... , • .,. w~··· H1111 '"'' n. w-;·1.u,....11 tt.,. '"~11-n11c. Stn. Thon'\at Dodd of CMnecth:ut pie (lncumbtnt Senate Democrlll ) aptnt r\1k catllna lhe hijacker'• bluff. Ht Nld
1,_ 11 ,. 11 .. r...rt i.vt••· o..ert '-1•1 '-'•lllf" r•• "'-.,. · 1ta1..t.11 ""''~' =f 1111R ~ lllCll rtctlvtd tl0,000 for UM In 1eeklri• the money In ·~paratlon for thelr caml\9l1n. no one attempted to m-1b lht yNO•• man '"nilfluml -r• ff'MI n i. 111. 11 1'. 1"1•1111 llf'IMfll~tft r....,. frWll !ft 1 ai • ..,..,,. IM ""~ teftt •• r• -•• ., ... ,. N•11t ,..,, ,.. 11tt•'• "*' .. , u i. ,., w1• ... '"""''"',. a w11 ,..,Md , 1litlli. l•·• Democratic nomln1tlion for rwlectlon, We feel It would be Improper to tttk becaUH "Wt don't tak1 chlncet llkt ~, wi111 • 111 retft111. Su• Moon Title• '"''1"1M· a,c:. •IMI 1r.11.t.m, "11• but taler decided to abandon the perty relmburument tlnct It wu: taken In pod that.'' ~tHE:r cAk!!_ottN•.tr -~ ' ,., •• .,.: ir£i=:!E!',:~· ~ =•~ ind rt1n 11 1n lnde~ndent. f11IUI 1t tht, time they Intended to be lhe Geora:e 11ld "t only c1utloned the pen. ~f:~'tl!:~f'!+.:-. hrW 111111wtt•a•NJ :»•·'"· •.:a ~r·£:!'~~~~:i:V.: Sen, Stephen M. Young of Ohto alao 1c-Dtmocr1tJe c1ndldate," pit to remain calm" and thay did. Ht
Mii ("""" mtunlfl"• ,;;;i l~lf!~ l'lr.t ~Ith 1:J•, "'· 'I lnlui~ ,.,,, r-w, ·A ~MA ctipted ,10,000, but later deelded to ntlrt. Dodd Wal not In W1shln1ton, but h\1 11\d the hijacker, de1crlbed l !I "c1lrn Ind 1Utt•• ttiu~~· '1'f" -.. ,. ... 1.u 1 II\. '·' ... 111:T-i!OPt11 (IVllW~ 1" •ri*I A ....,,,ke1man for th1 committee. 1et up dmlnl1tr1Uv11 assltt1n1 J1mes 01rh1nd collerted," 11ve no rt110n tor w11nlln~··
"'~-" ..
"~''" .. .. ""•" . .. • ••ktu ll•lll .. ..
llt!MrU: .. .. .... .. .. ....... • ..
CJrik-n ..
CIMI-" " ..
CltYtl11'1111 " " -.. ..
ootn' .. " ·-· " p
'""""" • • ·-" .. ... _ " ..
-~ " " lli_.1Cltt .. ..
l HV"I' ~· " Mltffll kKfl .. ..
.MllW1"'411t .. " M.lftfttt•ll'I " " """°"* .. .. " N-\lilt It •• ...... .. ..
P1 .. llt611t ..
P~U ... 1"11t " .. ·--• ..
Pllltftl• OU " '"-"'"' .. " 1tt11•1Vfl .. .. ... " " IMrtolMl!tt .. " St. Ltult It " ltll Llitt City .. ..
St11 l:llt1• • " SM ,,tfttllte .. ..
''"" ··"'' " " . SH tt!t " " ..... "' .. :: _ .. ••
7
'
'~§' .,..sn•ltfW ~ hllll . , , . , . 110 '" J.J "'' IM ,,., "',....,,... -i--' a \ ., ' "' o1 ,, "1Jrr1o''vic.[= '"'"111w J1iM 11111. •·' •• lrM,~11111 u ·~~·r.x~·~ f',] to glvt flnancial 11~ to sen1tor1 seeking u ld, 'It Hhe moneyl w1s wtd during ~ to CUba 11nd remalntd allent dur ha
f11r .-~ V w S....-•IMI •:12 •·"'• Ith l1M•.f'I, ~1-;::l'I t~ = ff r111'1 J;11 ~ tHJecilon, llid 111' fUndl hid lM)t beUI lhe prtc&m1\lii&n tJ!N ," the tlClCRded trjp, ~ -·-•• -"'1""' MIM l!M11 l 1IP..,._ }ltt 1.U f·"'·-UJ!!••l!Ut8-!1.Jl""-"'-'J!'""'O!!J_,.""'------"""."':::'""_ ___ "___:_ ___ "_ _ _:_:_ ___________ _;, __ ;_~..:;, ______________ .;. ________ ...... W1t111Mllrl .. ..
7 r
.................... ·-.
San (;Jemenie
(;a pis tr ant;
VOL 63, NO. 203, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
Nixon
Br RICllAllD P. NALL
Of .. Dllll~ ,, .. , •till
President Nixon turned to th•
California political scene today 1s he and
the First !Ady prepared to welcome lSO
Republican candidates and wives to their
San Clemente home at a 5 p.m. reception.
11le guests were to inclu<je GOP can·
didates for Congress, state senate and
a&"fmbly and the Board ol Equalization.
The Nixons 11ve a dinner last month at
..
lt's a Dog's Ute
Plays
the Spanlsh-atyle home h-lni Gov. and
Mn. Ronald Reagan and Sen. Georae
Murphy (R-Callt.) The President has
been promollng tl)e election o f
Republicans in C.llfornia and elsewhere
in various ways from social events to the
standard picture posing technique.
Earlier 1n the day, the President met
with top foreign policy aides to ponder
chances for peace in the Middle East as
talks between Arab and Israeli represen-
Bonnie, the pet Basset hound of the Gordon Schroeder family of Mil·
waukee, Wis., has learned that equality demands of women go un·
heeded by Clyde, the family's pet skunk, when he decides lo take
over.
Clemente's Hospital Group
Endorses Orange froject
' " By JOHN VALTERZA
, ot ........ ~ Plltl 111tf
San Clemente'• Community Hospital
commiUee has joined the city's phys!·
cians' group to endorse a new hospital
proposal by an Orange group over the oft.
delayed plans o! the San Clemente
Medical Center.
1'le IS-member comnrunity group,
ronned in recent months to build a public
a:ipununity hosplt.aT, has joined forces,
instead, with Chapman General Hospital
ot" Orange to attempt to wrest official
permission to buiki a hospiLal in San
Clemente from the firm cf C. T.
DeCinces of Van Nuys.
The San Fernando Valley developer has
headed siJ:-year-Old plana for a private
hospital near the civic center but no con·
1truction has begun as yet.
The endorsement by the community
group -predicted earlier this month -
ls coupled with the unanimous vote last
week by the members of the San
Clemente Medical Society to endorse the
Chapman plan.
Mayor Walter F. Evans, a leader in the
drive for a hospital other than the
Ueeinces facility, said that he, Coun·
cilman Wade Lower and other com·
munlty leaders toured Cha.prnan General
Hospital in Orange last Fr1day.
He termed the hospital there "very im·
pressive." The 99-bed facility near the Newporl
Mark et Watchers
Disapp ointed
In Malfunctiori
Freeway aloog Ch11pman Avtnue would
be similar to that planned ror Oat land
east of the San Diego Freeway in San
Clemente.
"Looking at their plans," the Mayor
said, "the one plaMed for San Clemente
would be a little bigger."
To implement its plans for a general
lxw;pital here, the Chapman group must
win the sanction given to DeClnces by the
Orange County Comprehensive Health
Planning Association.
A showdown has been predicted
between Chapman and its supporters and
DeCince9 at an October meeting of the
as&"OCiation.
The meeting marks the end of a 90-day
period given DeClnces time to draft com-
plete details of h15 finn's finances, struc·
ture and plans.
Spokesmen for the developer ha ve pro-
mised coostruction will start within the
90-<tay period which began last July.
The makeup of the San Clemente Com-
munity Hospital group includes pro-
minent civic leaders in the city.
The group's members, who formed a
few months ,ago as a nonprofit cor-
poration, Include :
Publisher Harold R. Burges, Municipal
Court Judge Frank Domenichlni, Mayor
Evans. Chamber of Commerce President
Bud Fowler, Jaycee leader Robert
Frauenzlmmer, Planning Commissioner
Art Holmes, Interim Ch;unber Manager
Walt Hunter, Methodist Minister Dr.
Donald Inlay, Councilman Or. Wade
Lower, former Mayor Howard Mass1e,
former CJiamber Preaident V e r n
Overbaugh, San Clemente: innkeeper and
civic leader Paul Presley, insurance ex·
ecutive William .Ryan, surgeon Dr.
Herman Soho! and .Bank of America
Manager I.Ale Winterton. .
EDITION
I " OAANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AJJEil:IST 25, 1970 ' TEN CENTS
to
l&Uv" bet)n ln New York.
Ollldab meeting with the Pntldtnl ln
Sin Clemente iT)cluded Secreiary of State
Wllllam P, Rogers; Joseph C. Sbco.
assistant .ecretary of state for Mkldle
Eastern Affairs; and Henry Kia.singer,
naUonal security affaJri rdvlar.
Rotr•n pushed U.S. peace lnlUaUves
that Jed to agreement by Israel, Jordati
and Egypt for a thr•month ceue fire
and the start of. negoUaUons.
150 GOP Candidates
Pr<m Secretary Ron Zl<C)er I I I d
Mr. Nixon would cover a wide lpeetr\lm
of lortign policy development,, in the
di!CUsaionS.
The President received an "e~
cooraglng" report on the economy Mon-
day from four key advlaerL
lli. Paul W, McCracken, ch&lnnan ol
the Council of F.coaomlc Adytsus, 1ald
admlnbtraUon policies to cool the
overbe.tted domesUc economy are wotk·
ing.
He called evidence in the economic pic-
ture encouraging. He added. o;One must,
of course, be cautious about trying to
read too much lnto very current <blta, but
ln a great many ways the evMtence as I
say, we felt, was quite encouraging."
He said be did ~t want to suggest that
· the struggle against inflation is over.
MCCracken cited as hopeful indices the
Jess rapkl rate of increue in tbe coo-
aumer price lndex and incrus<8 In In-
dustrial production, pet10Dal Income,
retail sales and booalng.
In a sideljght of the current PntJden.
tial San Clemente sap, !'ms Secretory
Ziegler said the President has told b1m
"planted" questk>ns are out at N'u:on'a
news confem>ees.
Ziegler said Ute President told bbn ho
(S.. NllON>l'lp·IJ. .
800 Convicts Strike
At San uentin Prison
Viejo High
Faces Jam
This Year
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of "-tt.KY '1111 lltft
ML!sion Viejo High School will face
double sessions when its doors open next
month.
Trustees of the 1\lstin U n l o n High
School District voted Monday to hou!ie
the studen.ta, faculty and admlniltration
of the new Unlveraity iu.-~ at U:-
Mialon Viejo campua·tmlil their IC!tool b
coinpleted.
Robert BosanJ<o, !ltlncl!>al of Mlulon
Viejo Hlgh Schoof said he hod l10
previous ind.icaUon from the board that
his schooJ was being considered.
He said repory bad Indicated that the
t,000 studenb wOOJd probably be hooaed
at Tustin High School.
"Running two schools on one campus
always provides problenu,'' 1 a Id
Bosanko. "We haven't yet had a chance
to work out the details of our .chedul·
ing."
Bosanko said be understands that the
studenta would probably be housed a
minimum of 30 days and a maximum of
68 days at the Mission Viejo campus.
University High School located in the
University Park community was schedul·
ed to open ne1t month but delays were
caused by the sheet metal workers strike.
A tentative date of Nov. 15 hu been aet
for the school's opening, barring any
more unforeseen strikes or inclement
weather.
At one point school administrators had
believed that the school would be housed
at Tustin High School and plans were
made so thal the Tustin students would
attend morning clrsses and the Universi-
ty students, afternoon cla5Sel!I. Class
lengths were to be shortened to 40
minutes with five minutes between each
clas,, and the University 1tudent.a were. to '
have their own faculty.
A similar schedule may be worked out
for Mission Viejo High School, although
definite plans have not yet been made.
Sto1·m· Nears Hawaii
HONOLULU (UPI) -Tropical storm
Maggie with gale wincts and flooding
rains wa& due to hit the island of Hawaii
at noon Wednesday, and then swetp
northward through the real of the island
chain .
Girl Takes A~id Guards ·Put
P1·isoners 5-year-ol.d in Serious Condition
A S.year-old girl is In aerloua condition
today btcauae she accidentally 1wallowed
an LSD tablet Monday nlght, Santa Ana
police reported.
The victim, Deanna Bryan of 1117 S.
Evergreen St., is in St. Joeepb's Ho.spital.
The physician attending tbe Utile girl
said th!J mOrning that there Is no way 1t
this time to detennlne the eitent or
damage to the child's physical or mental
well beln1.
The ~h.ild's mother, Dollie Ann Bryan,
called police at about 9,301¥1 nilfll wllen
her d1'llbter &tarted 1CtiQ1 "'11tana:1. ''
" ' ' • I -> ·~
She told lnvesUgator1 the. little girl
became hysterical upon aeeing a kitten
with which she had been very friendly
previously.
Into Cells ·
Mrs. Bryan toJq police that abe and her SAN .QUENTIN (AP) -8an Queat1a
daughter had been vitttlng . hitnda in .,..1500 guards drove IOI deinonltratiDC Anaheim Monday and it Is believed that ,..
she found the LSD tablet on a dres,,er ln prisoners into their cells with tear 1u 1o-
lhe Anaheim home. day after nine olUce1 wtre dama&ed bJ'
Police have withheld the names of the arson-caused fires, p-iso(I olficlala uid.
persons the girl and her mother visited. The pri.,oer1 staged a altdown strtQ
Investigators who were ,called to the in the prison reereaUon yar-d to' preaa a
Brya~ hpme '!lid Dellllll8, "appeared to --luued by block pr_..
be diJOrlenled. She ...Wd DOI tall: uoept during_ '" e~ental ~riot CqtJrt
lo Cl"/ ~.' '' bearin& ~ wJ!.llltl .._,..,... _...,
'.!. tr»·'\ ·-rPJ(t--n ' .r~and~~~ ... -= ~ 2 Laguna. Police Offic~rs pr~::~·blact and x-..
American oowaekn were amoai tbt
Get Promotion to Captain
Two Laguna Beach Police clficen will
be promoted to the rank of captain, ef.
fectlve Sept. 1, Qtlef Kenneth Huck au.
nounoed today.
Sgt. David Brown and Lt. Frank
Schopen, who ranked first and second Jn
evaluation tests, will receive ttielr Ca~
tain's badges Friday morning at 9 a.m.
from Chief Huck, Mayor Richard
Goldberg and acting clty manager J01eph
Sweeay.
The promotiona are part of an e;t-
pansion and reorganization ol. the l..aguna
Beach police department.
Oral eiaminatlo1s of seven eligible of·
ficen were conducted Friday by the po.-
lice chief's of three Southern California
c!Uea, Huck said.
The candidates, who already had sub-
mitted written resumes of their quaWica.
tions, were interviewed for about c.ne
hour each by Chief Richard Baugh of
Brea, Chief Aubrey Duke of LaPalma
Khrushehev at Home
BELGRADE (AP) -Former Soviet
Premler Nikita Khnishti>e:v Is now
reating in his aummer home near
Moscow after three months of medical
treatment in a ho1pital, the Yugoslav
news agency Tanjug reported today from
the Soviet capital.
and Chief Arthur LeBlane of Coronado.
Chief Huck waa not a member ol the ap-
pralaal board.
Solary scale for the new police pcollion
has not yet been aet, Huck said. Be1idcs
the new captains, lhe force will include
Ueutenuts Robert McMurray and John
Zelko.
Remalnlng in be filled In the
reorganization program will be one police
sergeaat position and two positions as in-
vestigators.
The positions will be filled from within
the force, Huck said and \hose trlterested
have submitted their quallficatloos which
are being examined.
Forest Blaze
Threat Quelled
A potentially dangerous brush fire was
quelled by forestry crew1 in Cleveland
National Forest Monday afternoon after
it charred five acres near Ortega
Highway east of San Juan Capistrano.
The blaze, the firat of any cowiequence
during the summer aeuon, 'waa brought
under control Jn less than an hour after
erupting two milei from San Juan.
Two air tankers, bulldoiers and 40
fire<igbtera worked the fire to keep it
from spreading in the dzy brush In hu&•
fare.at area.
ctemand.o.
Minority -priaonen total 11 per<enl
of the S,SOO prisoners at the state prllon
on the shores of San Franclaco Bay ~r
Son Rafael, U mlleo north of Son ""'" cisco.
Guards found nine oounsekn' offices
damaged in one cellb.lock after drivJnc
the demonstrating prbonen blct to tbeir
cells.
Furniture, wooden wl:odow frames and
other woodwofi: wa1 charred ln the
preUminary ate.el and concrete cell&
There .were no reports of injuriet.
First sign ol trouble came wt'tcln.
prisonen refused to rep..1rt to their priJ(Q
jobs after brealdut and cooire11led In
the recreation area.
They repeated. the demand, delivered
In a five-page letter Monday to prilon of ..
ficials. They included :
-Freeing of all "po11Uca1 prilonen.•t
-Freeing of three Soledad State PrboD
lnmales who f'ICI trial ln the alaylng <I a
iuard last Jan. 13.
-Closing ef two dbclpllnary cellblocb,
where 200 prisoners are now confined.
-Api)oinlment ot' a black warden.
-Appointment ot black and MeKtcaoo
American assistant wa-rdens.
-More black and Muic:an-Amerle1n
prllon officers and C()l1nMk1r1 'I.equal to
white officers."
Australians Strike
SYDNEY (UPI) -About fhrM.
quarters of a milUon Austl'aliana walked
off lhelr jobs today ln a three-hour •trike
to protest federal pvernment eco90mia
policies.
NEW YORK -Traders and Investors
today began cashing in their gains, bring-
ing a f i v e . day stock m a r k el rally
blacked out on lhe coast ~tonday by com·
puter failure to a grinding halt.
Alternatives Discussed
Thousands of stock market watchers
were disappointed in California when a
transmission malfunction In the highly
technical system cut off results of
trading. A thorough Investigation by the
American Telephone &: Telegraph Com·
pany put I.he blame on a problem In
Oakland, which l5 a critical relay point
for many Wesl Coast points ..
The DAILY PILOT was among newa.-~pera lefl wilhout II.a cuslOmary daily
closing financial table.a, but AT&T au!Jl.
orlUts said they had every hope "° repeat
problem would crop up today. (See Paaea
10.ll).
Prices continued to 11ide low!r In
moderate tradina today as profit taking
•mothered the rally of the past five day11.
The Dow .Jonell average of 30 Indus·
trlals was off 1.07 to 761.Sl at noon.
'Decllne1 held a small but wlden[flg leact
ovtr advances oo the New Vor' Stock
Eich .. 10.
)
Laguna Weighs Parking Problems
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of Ille 0.llJ '"" Jllff
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
probed the central downtown basin's
parking lihortage Monday nlghl and ex·
plored various financial means available
to the city to develop parking facilities .
Highlight.a of the parking discuuions
were :
-Commissioner Robert Hastings' sug-
gestion that any parking structure be
built on a leaseback agreement. In such a
plan a developer would build the lot,
!else il lo the city for 20 years and fhen
the litle would go to the city.
-chairman William LamboUrne's SUI·
gesllon lhat a park.in& structure be built
by-a non-profit corporation aet up by tbt
I
city. The corporation would laaue bonda
to pay for the structure and parking
meter revenue would pay off the bonds.
When the bonds were paid, the COl'-
poratlon would go out of business and the
liUe to the parking facility would go to
the city.
-A look al the pa,_lnl dlllrict Idea.
which b beJna Uled Jn lhe Southern
busiMu aector of the city for the
development of a parting 1tructure.
In such a plan, property .owner• within!
a parkln_g district are a&IOlsed for the
cost of µie atruc1ure, but recefve a yearJy r~urn or 7lperc,nt of the PJrklha melel'i
reVf!nue to help offtel the increased
useurntnta.
-A auQealiDa from )'onll,Av""'°
buslnelan'lan William Alline (or a park·
inl authority, which would oPfrate almJ·
lar to the parking dlatrict complex.
Parking 1n the downtown area waa not
achtduled on th& agenda for the study
HUion. Since a number of lntere1ted
penona abowed up for the meeting,
however, many of them oommunity
baulneumen, Lambourne decided to
-the ilaUe. Hall! .... oald his lea8'baok propo11l
Would MIOw parking developrnint without "•fare• outlay ol mon•Y by tl\l·cltyJ'
1 ffe aatd tha\ the lea.eback program
would wort hell on land that the ell)'
alread,y owna. SUC:h 1n area la the ex-
!Jlln& Glenneyre Jot, Wl\leh Is now btl11j1
· 1tudled by the cti, 1lafl.for,a mul!l-•1'>Q'
parking llnElurt. .
City Planner Alvln 0. Autry 1aid lhe
study on the Jot, .iona with a 1tudy for a
park1111 lot on Mennald Street would be
releued Jo the commJulon Sept. ti.
Talk clrln.d to speclfico of the Olen·
neyre lot propG88lt, however Lambo\lme
aald that~ it w11 not wise fOr the com-
mlulon to be apelc6c •n4 go lnlo
numben, ·
Lambourne, )n dl!<l"'llll hla "'l>P'°lll
c:qrponlion Idea, oald t~ft he lell cullln
tho! people were available to buy bondl
fur.,uch a J)arkina: structure. nle cl\airm~n noted, hqwever, that If .
the revenue from the meters in the atruc:-
ture dld not meel lhe bond ""'1!l••ll. lhe
(llee PAJ\IWilO, Pqa I)
Weather
Low clouds In the mornln1 and
high temperaturet ln the afternoon
conUnue Wedneaday, with readln1a
rangina from 71 locally to Ill fur!)).
er Inland.
INSmE TODAY
Britoha b 'lollll10 tht "$hOC16
trea tment" fn trying to prtwnt
fl.t 11oung peopl.e tfom becoming
hooktd on dnig,, Page 5.
I
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f.
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---.. -,._, ~ .. ' . Arms Serious ' Miss Tate
outh Korea _ P~~n 'f_ J?~~iled PleJ.se
-~~A';J,.-:;..th ;.:.,P~ :.~·=-.:~ -::=.=. '-'U.,-C.CibiM:r=
Strangled
~ath Near P-t Spii:o T .. A"1<W with In u-t._. • ,.,,... -.... to ...., m I .. Ill
ptftlive .ehopplna lilt of mlllt.ary needs Apew hlm.wlf said the talks we11t 600,000.m_an Korean armed fprcu he 111d 't\.lelUJ bl.if f.:btd lo win 1 detailed "vtry well,H ~ed about· the' le~ ot · before hla arrival he did not ei:Pect hla
Pledje .°' 1 pnm'Jt<! increase in _ U.S. the dlseusstons, a 1poke1m1n aald: 'Thll vl1il to produce 1 specific new aid pro: L-0S ANGELES (VPJI -A1 Sharon
Tat.I •••·ctylna of aiab wotWt.. ah• wu
b1n11d by-a lope l•llontd """"" bit
.. neck, looped over a cellin1 beam in ber
anu 1id. doesrf'l Jlecta.qrfly mean they aren't rt~ JMIM. othtt Amerie1n offiet1hi nJd ·no
A ICheduled two-hour meeUn1 belween Ung along." decision would be made unlll a •tudy .lJ
the two lt.a~r1 Jtrekhed ~ si• houri Park la understood to bt aetkinl:· 1 made-of Korea's detai)td 11~ • .
befor.1 ,bruk,ifte up at m1daftemoon Pled~.of.JO""-$3 bl.Jlion over tht nert 'nlere wn indications U.at Pirk ~nd , ,.
~ nwM ·dl1CU11i9"J GVV dinner flv1 )'tlfl' u the price for dr<)ppin&: ·hll bis~ 1dvilert pre.ented just 1liai 1 'def&!I---
1'Ulldly Nitit and thin •srted lo mMI ob)tctlon to the U.&. plan to withdraw ed J11t durlnr private 1e11ton1 with
Uvlng room.
County Coroner Thomar T. Noauchl
~••!Hied today !hot tho ropo bum on tho
pre11nani actreu' throat lndlcated her
body was 1uspended above the noor lot a
short period while she was dying.
a(ain a~ brukf11l Wednesday. Z0,000 ot the U,OllO American troop1 sta· Agnew, U.S. Ambassador Wiiiiam J
An oUicial Korean spokesman descrlb-Uoned here. Porter, Gen. John N. Mlchalla and othe;
U.S. ollicials.
.
Board Taps Swartzbaugh
New Saddlehack Dean
lo an uecutlve session Monday nieht,
the Board of Trusl.tt! of Saddleback
Colle1e named Jack A. SwartWaup of
Latunl Beach to the post of de1n of
studenU for the 1970-71 school year.
Swartzbaugh, who has been coordinator
of counseling and student affairs,
replaces John J . Flood, Saddleback dean
of students since instruction at the col·
lege be1an hi the ~II of ltM.
J usti.ce Cln.rke
Resigns Poaition
lri California
Prui~e11t Nll"on hu officiaUy accepted
the resianalion of U.S. Diatrict Otief
Jud&t1 Thurmond Clarke -a c Io 1 e
persona.I friend who5e Corona del Mir
home has 100,td Ute pn1idtnt on a vert!
occasions.
Ju~ge Clarke, who will step down frdm
his senior position covering the entire
central district of California Sept. l, will
ref.Ila ltftior Jude• tlllua and 11rv1 on
the btnch when called to aerve.
Judie Clarke Ecepled appointment to
the be11~ coverini federal cua in "ven ca.Jiforni• Countiea in 19$5 after servtn1
for more thin U years 11 a Suparior
Court Jurllt in Loll >.nrele1.
ror yun the judf,• haa mmmut.d to
U.S. DllUjct Court n Loo A.,.i11 lrom
hil .C-Sllom borne. •
'TM -Nilittneo lw been v\1lt.d o!Wt by
the PNlidtnt before and after hit elec-
tion. ' •·. I
0.. ol the most rocent 1tay1 by tho
Fint. Fiarnlly in cameo Shoru WU a few
weeb hefort the Nilona purch.ued their
SU Clunlate vW..
Kent Student's
Mom Files Suit
CLEVEL.AND (UPI) ->. 14 milliM
dl.INll• suit waa flied Mond1y ln U.S.
Dittrk?t' Court by th• mother of nn1 of
lour 1tudanta: ahot and killed by national
1uardlmen on the campua of Kent Slate
Urif\lerfity May 4.
Mr1. Elaina Miller of Plainviaw, N.V.,
chu1ed 1n tht auH her son, Jeffery Glenn
Miller, was deprived of hil civil riah.t.I.
Aeallld in the suit of 11qllaenc11 wn
Ohio Gov. J~m.-A. 1'hod11, Kent Slate
Univeraity l>re1ldenl Robert Whit.I and
Ohio'N1"9nil Guard Officel"I, inciudln&
Gtn. lylv•t.• Doi CorlO, tho com·.
mudtl: "'.lh• QI\~ 1111nl. The 1ult asked U ~ffljon in t'Om•
-tnry tlamqu Ind U million in
punitiY.\_ (llftllM1
Handliu the •Wt for Mn.. MWer wu Attonioy J911ph Kilner. .
DAILY PILOT
N..,_. le•• HRri•N ..... ....... '"" ,.~ .. .,.., c .... .,.. s. en ·· 10
Oli4Nel COAIT .. ll.LllHIN9 COM"AN'I'
••lt•d N. Wtt4 "'"""'t ..... '11111--
J •• ~ I. C¥'''! . Vitt ..... !Hitt .... ._,. M.,..._.
"•••• .: •• v11 EotfW
T~•""'' A, M11rpkl111 Aol ..... li'll lfffw
•tth•r4 P. Ntll ...... o .. ,., c.M1r ,.,.., -CM" M .. : • Wut It!' '""" Htwll#t •aJdli nn Witt ., .. , 111111w,..
L_.... -..du .. '-t •-M,,...lfltllll "'""' 11'11 ....... U-t11 ~_. C1-'9i .. Nttt11 I I c.illi.t. ... , .
Flood, who also served as assistant
dein of the sumra~ ieasleq at Sad-
dleback, w.a1 1 frequi:nt lar11i of student
criticism durinc the lon1 battle over stu.
dent haiJ. JenJf.h, because of hi1 insistence
in enforcing the college dress code.
A Sadd1eback spokesman 11id Jt'lood
will remain. a! a counselor but has been
obll&ed to curtail his dutiea because of u.
lne11.
Counsalor William L. Kelly will aaurnt
the po11Uon of coordinator of counalin&
and 1tudent affair•.
The Monday night board action makes
official a redistribution of duUes that had
b@en in e.flect informally &Ince l"1DOd
became ill earlier this year.
Trust.eel al• approved a new formal
for Saddleback'• citian advisory com~
mittee which will redu~ mernber1hlp
from an unwieldy 110 to 50, and reduce
the number O(Jiu~mmitt.ee1 from 11 lo
six.
Fifty new committee memben from
the colle1e 's five trusltt dis tricts will be
appoin~ for one-yu.r terma. Tht com-
mittee'a functton ls to maintain com·
munlcatlon with the tru1tee1 in areu
co~ernlng the various diatrlcta aerved
by th< <;0ll•••·-
Bec1u1t.of ill 1!11 and the proliferation
of aubcommltltu t~ amup'1 1divitlu
had J•11ed during I.he paat year, I col·
lege 1poke1man said.
Thi 1ix: Hm•lnin& 1ubcommitt.ee1 will
Include buildiq, community 11rvieu,
finance, library, . ICholanhlp and voca·
tioool-teehnical.
Tht board also 1pproved 1 bid of
$24,000 for an addition to Buildin1 t, a
cla.woom build.inc that will bt enl1r1!d
lo house duplicaUn1 aervic:es and a com-
puter cen~r.
The ;n1ar1ed buUdin& w1U conlln.ut u 1
relocatlble 1tructur1, to atrve for aev1r1I
more years. Firsl permanent bulld ings
for the Saddleback campus wlU be a
library and a math-aclence building,
ac~uled for construction by lt72.
Payment of a t t.OOO fee for an ac-
creditation visit in November also was
autl\orized by the trustees. The visit by
an accreditation team Nov. C, I and I will
CGnatitutt th• final phase of a lhree·ytlr
1tudy that will lead to Saddlliback's full
aceAdllltlon with the Wtst.ern Auocia·
lion of Scboola and Collt1u.
Man . File.s Suit;
Names MissolU'i
Sex Researchers
ST. LOUIS, Mo. fAP I -A 1700,000
damage suit has been filed against stl'
researchers Dr. Wiiliam H. Masi.ers aed
Virginia JohJ\IOll by a mtn who 11ld tht
pair employed his wilt as • .sezual
partner for two men under treatment by
Master1 and Mrs. Johnson.
The suit also charged that the sex
re1earch team 1really benefited frora the
uaa of the man'a wit• throu1h "menellry
gain by the P.';'bJlc1Uon nl book•," while
the huaband 'lo&t. th• ~onju1al 1oclety of
his Jt"ife " and JUfftr~ "Jr11t humillatlon
•Ml dis1ract in his 10C1al and dome1tic
relationattiPl-11
Tht suit Wiii filed jn U.S. District Courl
by 1tlorney't ol Geor1e Edwin Caivert,
whose addreu was listed on.ly as New
H11mp&hlrt. Tht attorneys detlined to
1ive C4lv,rt'1 home a~dress. Hla w\f1'1
name was listed a! Barbara.
Masters called the charge "ridiculous"
and .said 1'we wauld be glad to disprove
auch a situation when lhe opportunity
arises."
The char1e was in connection with
research done for the best s e 11 I n g
"H~man SeJUlll lnadequary," written by
Mailers alld Mrs. Johnson and publlthtd
Jn ~prll.
The suit also names 1111 codefend1T1ts a
"John Doe I," of the Slate of New York
and a "John Doe 11 ." of Vlr1tnla.
The sull alleaes lh.at the se1u1l rel•·
tionshlp ol Mrs. Calvert Was used at 1
"form of treatmt.nt" for the Dot• 1nd
I.hat Mrs. Calvert was pa id aSo!I for the
llrSL IUCh treatment on or 1bout July ti,
Itri, •nd •250 for the second treatment
on or •00\.ll Ja", I, lH&. TM. autt ••Id
CiJvert ltamed nf tht 1lle1ed trt•lmtttll
on April 11 of this year.
A total ol •1~.000 1ctual daniaaes b
asked from th• four defendant• and 1
lolll of M001000 Jn punitive d11m11es 11
asked from M11sttrs and Mr1. Jnhnaon.
Mailers ialrt Lht ~harfeJ we r'
"frumped up" •od..ltl1 Ole fir1t tu ll aria·
ln1 frnm the 11 ytar1 of rt1aarch by him
aod Mn. Jo'"'-
A1new came here 1t Pre1icfent Nixon'•
raquut to pltdae conUnulna U.S. 1upport
for Korea and Ti.ten to Park's views but
without authority to Cf'lr'l'lmit tht •d-
mlrtlstration to any •peclfic ar.nu pro-
1ram.
U.S. mllillry aid to Korea 11 curr•nl1y
'140 million a yur, and any new pro-
1ram would rtqulre fpproval from 1 u.:s:.
ConJress lncreasln1Jy l'eary of'..\mertcan
spendln1 Jn Asia.
The lensthy meetings aontta.!lted with
Agnew's first Allan trip last January.
None of those sessiorui delved deeply into
policy question&.
11'e Korean }>lttern may be repealed
"'later thia week in Thailand where Aanew
will have to e1plain1con1reHllH\ll reluc-
~ to flna~e propo1ed Thai a11istanc1 to C&mbodla.
Agnew also Is expected to receive
another request for increued arms aid ~hen . he meets Wednesday with Na-
honallst Chinese P,...iden~ Chiang Kai·
ahek at hla mountain reLreai at Sun Moon Lake.
A1new is IChtduled to fly to Fnrmota
after a vi!lt Wednesday to U.S. and South
Korean troops near the demilitariz.ed
zone between South Korea and Com·
munlat North Korea .
From r .. e l
PARKING ..•
additional money needed would h1v1 to
co.me from the clty 'a 1eneral fund au~
phfd by tues and other services.
'
1,aguna Match NIL.V PILOT ll•ff ,....,.
Miko Wardlow, 11, Huntington Beach , kHp1 hl1 eye on tho ball during
a pint pong match at !he Laguna Beach Boy1 Club. Althou1h hl1 home
is up the coast, Mike is spendinR the summer in La1una and takina:
advant.aa:e of the Boy1 Club facilities in Laruna Canyon.
"My opinion that ahe WN autpended
for 1 short time ls hued on the lack of
severe con1trldure by the rope but tht
rope burn w11 placed in such an 11t1111t
around th• curvature ol the left cheek
bone to make ,me beli_evt Jt w11 CllJ.led
by pullln& upward," ht 1ald.
NOfuchl llld Monday Ui.tt Miu Tit.
had not been drinlctn1 and had taken no
dru11 the ni1ht of AIJ.I. I, 1M9, when abt
and four other pel'IOf\I were atabbed and
ahol to death at her Benedict Canyon
Estate.
Noguch i told the jury In the murder
trial of tht "Mal)IOtl family " that blood
te1ts on the bodlu of the v I c t I m 1
Indicated neither Mial Tate nor hair
1tyll1t Jay Sebrlnr. to whom 1he once
was e111aaed~ were under: lht lnlluence of
alcohol or narcoqca. 1 Ht nld testi ahowed Polish writer
Voltyck Frykow1kl and coffee helr111
AbJ11ll P'olaer each had taken amall
amounts of the drua MDA, known a1
"1uper 1peed''. and both apparenUy had
been dtlnktn1.
Noauchl old none of lhe victim• had
been aerually molested.
Detendanta Charin MaMOn, Leslie Van
Houten, Suun Atkin• and P1trlci1
Krenwinkel 11t cwuleUy at tha CIOWlHJ
table durinl tho coroner'• 1 er Y
te1Umony.
Capo Council
Votes for Board Axline outlined tht p.1rkln1 authority
pl1n now used in Santa Monica. A prark-Th in1 authority was created which llaeP8d e San Juan Ca pistrano City CounclJ
James Okazaki Appointed
New Capistra110 Atto1·ney
~opert J.ames Okataki or Mission VitJo hil In lntarno"onol relallona 1r 0 m ..... voted 1.manJmously Monday nliht to ,.. Y owners. been d th cl'" "' \.I• create a pa rks and recreation com· 1be city .increased busineu Ucen,. 1,., name e new v attl>l'ney lot San University of Color1dt1 and his Jaw ml5'lon.
600 , Juan Capi.strano. d f th u · percent to rllse iddltional revenue. His appointment was announced by e1ree rom e n1versity of Denver. . The &even·man baarrt will be selttted
He was admitted In the Colorado Bar b th ·1 h LEASED TO CITY t.1ayor Tony For1ler Mooda" after he Y e rnunc1 al t eir Se.pt. 14 meeting.
J Association in 1956 and the California bar A d" h The authority had the Jot built and was unanimously elected to serve by I.he in 1963. ccor ing tot e ordinance creating the
le1ted lo the city, The City Council j,Jedt-City Council. . com mission, which will go into effect In
ed the property a11easment.11 increased Okaz.aki , a native of Colorado, replaces He and his wife and three children 30 day s, one member will be appohlled
lxlsineas license funds, and p,a;kint meter John Dawson of Anaheim, who h.as serv-~oved lo Orange County Jn 1184, residing from each of the four parka •nd recrea-
funda to pay for the bonds on the lot. ed the city sin~ Incorporation in 19fi1. In Garden Grove wh ile he served as lion zone! described Jn the city's master
Mtrk Gumbl.oer, a local developer, Ilk· Dawson retllJltd in June because of assistant U.S. Attorney in Los Angeles. plan .
ed Ir lhe city ~ad eiplored the poulblllty confllctin& commltmenta and 1 heavy Okaz.aki has also served in the Oranie Two members will be selected from tht ?f federal and state funds for city park· workload in Anaheim, where he is Uie County Coonsel'a office before openln1 1 city at large and one member will be 1
1ng and redevelopment. asaistant city aUorney. priv.ate practice in Santa Ana . repre~entative of the Caplatrano Unified
Lambourne said that several years 110 He will remain as J special r•tainu He_ is aciive in community affairs, Scijool Di1lricl.
"talk of fund• tor federal redevelopment for lili1ation which hu nol yet been com-.serving as a member of the board of . Cooncilm1n Jim Thorpe, who has be•n
was a one way ticket out ol town... pleted. ' direcLors of the Miesion Viejo Litt J 1 1nslrummtal In aelllng the commission
"'t:OOay the community mlght look at Ok11.1ki, who in Mar(.tl was appointed League and the Orange Empire Boy off the ground, aald one nt the com· ~
federal funds for the downtown area." attorney fnr . t~e Oranae ~ o u n t y Scnuts. mis1ion'1 concerns mi1ht be attemptlni
Aulry ~id lh~t the city has received waterwork1 D1str1ct No. C which tht city He also is a member of the Santa An• to 1et a community swimmlna pool con-
federal funds for traffic itudies and fo r 1overn1, received hl1 bat!helor's d11ree Kiwani1 Club, the Calif. Bar Assn. ind ii structed .at Marco Forster Junior Hirh ln
the general plan study. ' a trustee af the Methodist Church In cooperation with the school district.
"Right now, I 'm investigating three Missi on Viejo. ~e said lhe junior high would be 1
federal proirams. But the comNltition Thi'ef Rakes He will assume hia duties Sept. 1. logical place for a pool since It ii the eed th r.. ce.1ter of the school district. exc 1 e availability," Autry said. The commis!lon'1 official duties will be Lamboum• aai'tl that belort: the city f' p d could tolk about fundi lM redeveiopmont Out tJte Loot rom age l • vi1ln1 the city council and stiff in •IL
and parkin& a rteeision would ha\11. to bt 1natter! relatin1 to parka and recreation,
made on what to do 1-, -.,.,.1. NIXON partlcularly developln1 •Iles , facilitles, in """'•-· A thief vi•iled • Co1la Mt1a • • • prnarams and recreatlonal servlce1.
GOOD POINT wai\rt1s' apartment Monday ni1ht The city has at the preaent time three
Gumblntr 11id thlt wai a "l ood but he didn 't rake i" the loot. has not tolerated planted question1 in the park sites which will aoon be developed.
point," and lM answer ht wanted to He raked it out. 2.1 year1 since he first tried for public of· One, between the Casit•s CaplstranlO and
hear. Officer Phil Oonnhue •rrived it !ice and he isn 't starting now. Casas Capistrano developments, Is to be
A•line, 1teerin1 the dl11Cuislon to more Sheri HGWeftOn'1 home, 1111-i-. 11st The Pre1idenlial posture on question de~eloped by the Westport Corp. and
immedlalt parking needs iald "let's do SI .. al'ld found the thief apparently plantin& wa1 inspired by a column that maintained by them ror two ye1r1.
60methin1 now in the dow'ntown area ." rea ched into her bedr~m with 1 su1gtsted one had popped up tnward th• Two other parks are not yet planned
Lambourne reminded him that 12 years bamboo rake. lillini her handbaa close of his .Jul y 30 news conference. ror development. One ia In the Terrace
110 the Chamber of Q)mmerce wanted 10 from a dresser. Zie1ler said he told the Pretident he tract and tht other is In Troy Hnmei. eata~lish a tot•I downtown parkina The 101.11 w1a uo, includinr pur11 never planted •n actual queation with the COlMcilman Th1>rpt 11ld ht. wnuld like
dJsµ-1ct. and contents. press but had offered ideas to reporten In aee n1i1hborhoods con1ulted abou t
"But !hen there weren't •nouah people 1~===============·~ff~ki~·n~1~le~r=tl:l•=1ro~u~nd~to~p~ro~b~•;;· ;;;;;;;;;:::':·h=1~t~k~ln:d~n~f~p~or;k;•~th;•~H~tw~o~1~h~nu~l~d~be~. lo set behind it. Now all wt have II the
small Jot on Mermaid Street in a 1mall
Plrkilll dialrict."
Axline wanted to know If tht whole city
could fiO&t bonds for parkinj: fadiitie.!I.
Lambourne told hlm the city would !hen
Have to put 1uch 1 proposal to lht voters
for a genera l obligation bond which re·
quires a two.thirds majority (Qr p1.!sa1e.
"We would all benefit tor park.int
throughout the city," Axline said. "ff
nothin1 i1 done about parklnr wi wan't
have a bu1l n1u community in i.1un.a Beach."
Lllmboume s.aid, 'If lht citizen~ foot
the coat.I of p1rlcin1 for the buslnesa «1m-
mun1ty, part of lht communlt,y loses."
IAmbourne later asktd whaL the city
would do about the merchanls on
Broadway if parking structures are built
near Glenneyre and Mermaid Stree.ls.
Hastings said that possibly a lcm·
pora ry parking lot could be built on Main
Beach property, north of Broadway. He
nld such a Jot could he used un til a
parking structure w11 built on B~oadway.
Commissioner James Schmltg said
another altemativ• would be to work with
Laguna F~eral Savings to 11dd another
5lory on lop of the existing parking for
the corJ>?raUon. Such parkin& could be
used bOth by the clt.y and Laruna l"ed·
era! cu1tomer1.
Commlsaloners alsn he1rd 1 rep()rt
from the city attnrney nlflce 111Uni
PJJrkln& l11ts 11n ta• exempt propertles-
n1mtly churehf'a -can be rentld for
city parkl n1 as lnn1 aa r1vtnut '°'' ID-ward the church tund1.
East and We~t Meet
BERLIN {UPll -West German Presl·
dent Gu1tav Helnen1ann flew tti Wut
Berlin toda,y for a five-day vi1lt de1plle
Communlat &11t German prote1ta that
h~ pr.,..co w.Wd bl • provocoUon.
Too Little?
Too ·Much?
'
DON'T BE MISLED BY DISCOUlilTS, DEALS, SALES AND
GIVE-AW A YS.
THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST-IT IS
UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUCH, BUT IT IS WORSE TO PAY
TOO LITTlE.
IF YOU PAY TOO MUCH, YOU LOSE A LITTLE MONEY
AND THAT IS ALL.
WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE, .YOU SOMETIMES LOSE
EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PROpUCT YOU BOUGHT WAS
INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TO DO.
YOU CAN'T PAY A LITTLE AND GET A LOT.
ALDEN'S
U.MTA ANA, OU.N•• TVITIN Ctl ,,,
ALllN't
Ill MILL CAlf'm
A llANllU
1 IJ74 l...t-. ,...., c.IH. ., .. , ...
CARPETS • DRAPES
\
1663 l'lacentla Avt.
COSTA MISA
646-4jll
•
-----------~=:~="--~-::---.-----r!\"-.,...---.,--. ... -~..,.-·•·-••·••a-_f,=""'"""..-'""""-""'-:"'-·'p"''""'·'"'·~·"":-:--;-;-r:-:-"1--r.-,,,.,-;o.r., -;,"';'c.r,--:-:·rc. ~~ ..Allllll•' ~. ,.,,u
BaseKeeps600Acres
Los Ah,imitos . Plam '.to Expand H.ortsing
ALAMITOS
Navy la "°' lettlnc ao 1of the
enUre 1,8!4 acrt1 at Loi
Alamlloa Navil Air Slall<M.
Tentative plan1 for lboul tDO
acru ol modl!lar hoo•ln& lo be
llulll ar the bate a!le{ ll la
clo.sed 11 an alr facility ne1t
fl&mpltt have bee,n rtltaaed
by tho Navy Departm"1l
Rep. Richard T . H•nna (D"
~nehelm) told Loa AlomllOI
city coqpcUmtn about the
plam this week. H a It n a
hlmMtf had betn brleffd 0i1
lhe Getalla by A11l1ta nl
Tt'ied Cente1·
Ward Due
ORANGE -Oronge County
Medical Center offlclal1 ex·
pect to reopen a 15-bed portion
o[ lhe hospllal'• II · bed
P1Yehl1tnc ward by mid·
September. A 1horta&• • o1 r.ststertd
nunes due to the death of two
nur111 and the illness of three
mor• "colncldtd with 1 re-
paJnUn& and rer\\odeUnt:" pro-
aram, a 8'0ktunan llld,
'cau11n& lhe patttal ohuldown.
Patients needlli&
hospttaUutlon ln r e e e n l
weeU, hive betn referred to
Meln>j>olllan SlAI• Hoapl\ll,
Norwalk. The county contra1;1.1
for more than 200 M:ds 1t that
f1clllty .
Vae1tion periods usually
mike it difficult lll recruit
re11.aitertd n u r 1 e 1 , the
apo••man said, noting the
warcl la expected tn be ·staffed
fully "In the next few-wuk1."
Secretary of tl1e Navy F~111k
san<iert In Wultloflon.
Hll1Jll said Ulll lhe 1d·
dlllonll houalna on the base
w04illd •rve peraonrtel N-U""'4 al the Lon& Beach
Naval Staitlan.
A<tdltlonal facllltles such as
ochoola end a PX woold be In-
cluded In the IOO 1cre1, Hanna
tald.j
The news end• 1ontt of the
llpteulatlon on what the Navy
plans to do wtth the acrea1e at
lAI AJamltos when &Jr opera·
Uofl.11 stop at the f1cillty June
!O _;i\' year.
Hal\11 Wd that he has no
lnlormatJon on whether tht
Navy has any plans for Ult re-
main.Ing '100 acres at the bue.
Other Deftnae Department
•&encle• IDd U\er. federal
1gencte1 would have the op.-
porU\llllY lo Ule lhe land If lhe
Navy makeino mo~ bida for
the land. lf they show no tn-
lertat, the city of L o 1
Alamltoe expects to develop a
rtlkln&l park on the Janc:I. It
would include • 1hoppln1
ttnten a lake, and iretnbelt•
Oil tht property.
VC Irvine Accepti11g
Environment Pu11ils
Jlt\'INI -UC lrvlne la IC•
cepUilJ applications It both
the ir1dU1t.e a n d un.
dergreduete levd for wllat Is
billed as the 1tatt'1 firil
educational p r o g r a m In
"!nvlranmental man a 8 e.
ment"
Chancellor D • n I e I G.
Aldrich , Jr .. 1114 lod•Y lhe
plln 11 1'1lmed al educat1n1
profKa1on11"'who will be 1ble
to respond lo the public dt·
mand fdr a cleaner en-
vlronml!!nt.
The program will combh1e
courses In ena:i neer inc.
'blolo1lcal 1clem:es aQd soci•l
1cience1.
Studenls compleUnr the
course wlll be el,glble for dual
de1rets in two of the three
1rt11 of 1tudy.
The program . b: in part due
·-~~~~~~~~~~-
Death Notice• Notice•
tUOldal. Aotull 211170
....
DAllY rllOT 1
•
•
JI tAILY fll.DT SC Tll"Ny, -25, 1910
!'f O!!!Jf'• w .ortla
Bad Environment
fujures Bnsines~
l y SYLVIA PORTER
So polluted Is the Potomac
Slat one observer calll our
tapital'1 river • "pestilentill
•ink" -and u 1 result of tbe
tac t tbat for ye.a r s
rneltopolltan Washln.gton ,has
poured untold &otalt ol 1ew1ge
lnto lhe river, its plight it ir.-
doed hideous.
Now numerous com-
par1t.ivtly inrloctnl bystander•
are suUering. For lnstance,
Prtntfce-HaU SJYI that hous--
lng developers in ~arby
Maryland and Virginia. 1'1re
losing &heir sbirU beca11&e of
curtailed conll:ructioa." Even
federal financing of home
b<lilding Is being wtthbeld until
sewer systems are ~oved
by the Federal Water Quality
AdministraUon. 1be ''domino''
I.HI'S Of OIL PAINTfN•I
WHOUSALI'. WAUHOUll
ONN TO THI PUIUC
$5 and up
1'1t L •DINOIR, IANTA AMA
PHONI UJ'46M
Dl.U.l•I WANTID •••••••••••• • • : WANTED:
• Will purch •s• •
• im•ll Electronic• •
• M1nuf1cturin9 Firm • • , .... ,,... °""' •
-.
'Little Goy' Courted
Savers' Picture Looks Up
l'aul J. Nicoletti, Jr.
is now alllKlciat.ed wit.h us Ill!
an
Acn•mt Eua•ti11e
DEAN WlrtEll Ill: CG.
550
UU:O..P'9*2'lm a , -wst tr r
Newport tentel' Drive
Newport ... ch, Ca.
•
NEW YQRK (AP) -The
developing competition for the
ordinary American'• savings
dollar is not likely to abate for
some time to come, but ju.,,t
how much the ordinar y
American will benefit isn't
clear.
True. in banU all 011er the
nation he Ls being enticed into
opening new aceounll with •II
1orU o( merchandise, •nd
someone With the desire and
time to keep, Jet us aay, a
dozen small accounts revolv-
ing can pick up a bousd'ul Of
goods.
But all these gifll serve to
t'lbscure lhe fact that the
return on savings account!,
the inttrest rates, are froien
----SD·IYI 8111116
••
,.
-·
Compl~te-New York ... St~k List
Market
S91nbob
If ,,
J: J: " ll
'l 11 ~ ,,
I: J< '
-.... ·' .Tue~day's Closing Price~Complete New York Stock Exchange List
I I
--.. .
•
·-
•
Q
., -. .
ts count
-.P-riees
EVE .RYDAY!
PIUCISlfRCTIYE WfD'lllSDAT THROUGH TUISPAY
AUIUST 26, 27, 21, 29, 30, 31, SIPTEMIH 1 ,
-1-A.M. TO t:OO P .M. MOii. THIU FIL.
1-A.M. TO 7:00P.M.SAT. THIUSUI.
USDA CHOtCE • BONEAN
UIDA
GIDICI
ROUND ......... y PRn•s ·
FAD SEW ONLY
USDA CHOICE lfff
FARMER JOHN e FA.MIL V PACK e SLK:ED
Pork Loin
CHOPS
ptCNIC STYLE
EXTRA THICK e 2-lB. PICG. e SLK:fD
2911. . 8911.. STIAK NO BACKS, NECKS OR GIBlET4 9 USDA CHOICE e TAtlS REMOVED BISTO• c PORK
ROAST
FAD 138
BACON 491Cb SllCEOO 1-lB.PAC[(AGE . ••r•er.10••79c T·BONE ~ 1~b~ ••YI• lb.
STEAK EXCRlfNT fOR BAA. B.Q,. • WHOlE BODY ••••••z• 3911.. USM CMOICE e BONE IN ••YIRS CLUB 1·29 FRESH FROZEN
STIAK lb. ROASTING 5911.. CHICKIN
USC. OtOICE e EXTRA LEAN
FRESH FROZEN
EXCELLENT FOR BAR. l!I Q.
Country
Spareribs
FRESH e BUTT OR SHANK HAlF
Pork Leg
ROAST
FRESHfROZEN
8911..
BACON
BYTHf ptECE
SLAB
BACON
IQ.OZ.JAR Formerly Greenland Ha1ib\Jf · ••• 9811.. 'TURKIY 35c ' Hl ... 11uarters lb. STIAK --·
PORK
Tenderloin 135
lb .
WllTIRN
OYITIRI 89 TURBOT, 69
C FILLITI . fb.
., •• -• ~·---1
1•1US11UllT •6'1'ACl BOX o VANIU:A, PEN & QUILL • 8-0Z. SIZE
CHOCOlATE', CMOCOLATE MALT 47c ptMENTO OR JALAPENO 45c ; Instant Breakfast CHEESE SPREADS I UMON •LARGE PACKAGE 13c REGULAR OR SWEETMILK e 8-0Z. 9c jELLO PUDDING Pillsbury Biscuits
ICRAfl e 16-0Z. BOTTLE 45c TIP TOP e 6-0Z. CANS 1oc French Dressing FROZEN DRINKS .
200 CT. e ASSORTED OR CALYPSO 23c BIRDSEYE • 9-0Z. C.AN e FROZEN 31c Scotties Facial Tissue AWAKE
; FAMILY SCOTT e 4-ROLL PACK 32c 31c I WtttTE AND ASSORTED COLORS 8" FROZEN e Al~ VARIETIES
TOILET TISSUE Swiss Miss Fruit Pies
U OZ. o P<ANUT BUTT~R WITH GRAPE 63 33c OR RED RASBERRY FLAVOR ( FAD •6-PACK
SMUCKERS :& GO~R CINNAMON ROLLS
iiuiCitAMAL,ES ", 39c PUSS 'N BOOTS e fl SH 16c CAT FOOD
· 5LiciDL~cirAii4?"';""~ KINGS FORD • IO·LB. BAG 39c Charcoal Briquets . .
'
•iiilllliS-·
•IPltE•
•PiiiiEMIX
WHAT ARE
4-STAI Sl'EOALS
4 STAR SPECIALS ARE
ARE EXTRA SAVINGS
MADE POSSIBLE BY SPECIAL
PURCHASES FROM THE ~ANUFACTURER
AND PASSED ON TO YOU!
FAD Fantastic Savings
Oii DECORATOR SHELVING
Gef a fllf O.Carotar Sh•hoing G.iid•.
foUow thll Sk.Mng guld• for d.co~ting
any roon1 Ki your hom•.
ITEM · r.,4. r"'" r • ..-IO"'d6• -.... ---= $3.45 $5.25 $6.39 $6.55
"' $1 .89 $2.84 $3.79 $3.32 """'"" ...
look for our in-star• shelf displcys.
Stondard1 al\d bf'ocke1t al1a avoilobl• .
WATCH FOR THE OPENING OF THE
EXCITINGLY NEW DISTINCTLY
DIFFERENT FAD MARKET.
Comer of Walker and La Palma
LA PALMA
•
VARSITY r-.rn.~ AH-in-one
~ .. ,BINDER
fl 1s1
500COUNTeWfl)fORCOUEGERULE
FILLER
PAPER
RED, BLACK OR BLUE
.. BLAZE
.=sTICK PENS
MARK YOUR BELONGINGS
dDi.11.DYMO Label-ette 77c
..,-LABEL GUN
PACKOF2 •DOGorCAT
• Sargeants Super 169
Flea Collar.
SUNIOST
YALINCIA
ORANGES
BEAUTJFUl FRESH
RAINBOW
ASTERS
"
6.':.$1 00
'
IUNCN 78(
1
1
...
s DAil V l'ILOT 3
Linl{s . Shutdown. • Vowed . • Ill
. r
Dispute
Ghosts Leavi11g Ship;
Queen Mary Abandoned
By ARTIWR R. VINSEL
Of ti!• Oall1 PHtl stiff
Ghosts are leaving the Queen Mary, almost like rats from a sinking &hip.
Tltis ·is the word from. workers aboard her.
History bas always enfolded the monarch of the Atlantic in magic: pr~
dating the toil, tears, sweat and blood ot the 800,000-plus troops she carried in
World War II; the gaiety of postwar passages from New York lo Liverpool.
~ The Queen, some swear, carried a ghost crew and
, pa$Cnger manifest
They say the ghosts are leaving now. ' * * * Thousands lined the Orange Coast oo Dec. 9, 1967,
for a final glimpse before her majesty's engines shut down
forever and she became Disneyland in Long Beach Harbor.
Some cheered the fact lhat God-and big business-
would save the Queen. Some didn't.
One was Mrs. Jeannle Lorimer, of Newport Beach,
who watched proud Mary slide down the ways into the
Clyde River in Glasgow, ScoUand, 33 years before, Her husband Archie was
the giant luxury liner's first engineer.
"She should have stayed in England," said Mrs. Lorimer througlt tear-
clouded eyes that misty morning.
"Or towed oot into the Atlantic and blo"•n up." . * * * Controversy soon began to swirl around the rusting royal hulk, which
was sentimentalized, ridiculed, visited-and attacked by thousands of workmen.
We ca"Ued her Mayor Wade's Folly and laughed.
But the Long Beach establishment doesn't like for anyone to rock the
boat-if you can pardon the pun-and the Queen Mary is the Sacred Cow of
City Hall.
Afy Interview with San Francisco designer Alexis Tellis, ~·ho himself
renovated an old bay ferryboat, was written for a Long Beach newspaper,
sent upstairs and vanished in the lofty heights of editorial policies.
He only predicted beforehand all lite structural, electrical, logistical and
labor problems she would experience and they happened right on schedule.
* * * Costs have naturally skyrocketed beyond original estimates as a corollary.
Enthusiastic at first,· for instance, the Diner's Club abruptly jumped
ship recently. A second giant corporation expected to sign on in its place got
cold feet.
Three .interesting news items crossed the DAILY PILOT desk Monday.
One: A glowing news release about the $525,000 paint job about to be
applied to the Queen , and paint only covers tlte outside.
"A portion of the ship's public tour areas is planned lo open in mid-
December,'' said the announcement from the city manager's office.
Two : A UPI story saying the same operation 1vith the Queen Elizabeth
in Florida is bankrupt and Mary's little sist.er is destine<l for scrap.
Three: A column by Long Beach newspaperman George Robeson telling
about the ghosts allegedly encount.ered on the Queen Mary since workmen
began their job. '
* * * Her spirits include that of a cre"'man crushed to death in a watertight
door whose mounted bell has tinkled at odd times with no visible cause. Other
phenomena have been reported too.
But the bell no longer tinkles. The unexplainable happenings have strange-
ly stopped in reynt days. Only human sounds ar~ heard now.
Those who make them are uneasy, more than when the eerie ones walked
her decks and passages.
"What do the ghosts know that we ·don't?" asks Robeson.
No Parldng B1·ings Gripes
Residents along San C I e me n t e ' s.
Trafalgar Lane and several other streets
leading to city beaches will have to put
up with a summer no-parking experiment
for a few weeks more.
Police Chief Clifford Murray, who also
serves as city traffic engineer, received
city permission to set up experimental
110-parking zones along parts of Trafalgar
and Avenida Marquita.
Tbat was several weeks ago.
But this week, residents of Trafalgar
complained that the zones a re
troublesome and asked that the signS be
removed.
Chief Murray requested -and receiv·
ed -two more weeks for the experiment
to alloow for a final determination 01111 the
efrtcUveness of the plan during peak
liummer use.
Niguel-trained Teaclaers Ready
OAllY •1lOT ,,.. .. er.,.. ktlMNW
'Tu1·11 On the 11' ater'
There's a whole ocean not too !ar from this fi sh
cleaning trough on the San Clemente Pier, but this
thirsty pigeon prefers getting his liquid .refresh-
ment fresh from the tap. Lots of luck, fellow.
Trailer Park Delay Seen
Clemente Planners Also Face Action on Radio T oiver
Delays are expected We<lnesday night
in planning commission hearings en new
propasals for an ill-fated mobile heme
park and a permit for the tower or the
city's first radio station.
The mobile heme park matter -a new
attempt le win permission for a project
denie<l eeveral week1 ago -will come
from Lincoln Savings and Loan, which
has aske<l {or the delay to finish revised
plans. ··
The firm has planned to build the park
between the 13lh and !4th fairways of the
Shorecliffs Country Club.
Planning commissioners hail approved
the firm 's permit, but a later review
from city councilmen resulted in that
group denying the propos,al.
The savings firm is cne of two
developers whose mobile home park
plans' recently have tallen to defeat in
cooncil chambers.
The other, Contemporary Mobilhomes
of Newport Beach, lost ils permit last
"'eek to replace a goU cour.e with
ctiaches.
The Lincoln plans, whiclt will probably
be delayed until the Sept. 9 planning com·
mission meeting, are expected to be
substantially different from the first
ones.
Councilmen hit at the layout ol the
park will\ side-by-side coach spaces.
Several councilmen a1so vehemen'tly o!).
jected to befug shown. &lides of beautiful
modular homes (built in sections) then
told that only a few of the new styles
would be included in Lincoln's park.
Mayor Walter Evans later told coun-
cilmen in study session the Lincoln Sav-
ings aides would return \Vith drastic
revisions to the defeat.ed proposals.
The ratio transmission tower, proposed
for a hllltap inland of San Clemente's
residential areas, is the first public action
by the developers or the station since
federal approval came earlier this year.
The El Camino Broadcasting Corpora·
Planners to Name
City llaU Street
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Trustees
of the San Joaquin Elementary School
District are considering the placement cf
decomposed granite en s c h a o I
playgrounds.
Members of the board and staff
recently toured San Diego schools where
a fine granite is used instead of turf.
The cost was explained by Ralph
Flewelling, · architect, to be Bi>'"
proximately $24.000 for installation as
compared to $26,000 for the sprinklers
and installation of turf.
After weighing skinned knees against
muddy clothes, the board decided to
postpone their decision until more in-
formation is available on cost of upkeep.
lion asks the city for a use permit to
allow a 202-foot transmitting tower and
small butldlng for a site near the
telephone relay tower on the Visbeek Jto.
perty.
The tower would occupy the site on
land without zoning classilication behind
th~ Hillcrest tract area.
,Saft GJemenli resident Kfrt Munroe fJ
the local spokesman for the broadcasUng
firm.
City Planning Director Dick Ahlman
said tbe delay will be sought by the clty
to allow Police Chief CliffOf'd Murray
<acting as the city's communication's of·
ficer) to conduct an in-depth study on the
technical facturs Involved wlth the sta-
tion's frequency.
San Clemente's airways are clogged
with other frequencies, already.
Items which are expected to remain
alive for business Wednesday include :
-ResumplloifOf a hearing delayed at
the last meeting to consider a permit to
operate a used car Jot for Jorelgn autos,
service and repair at 924 N. EI Camino
Real. Francisco Sanchez is the applicant
-A req'uest for variancl"to build a six·
foot wall tn the 11ide yard setback of a lot
owned by Ednnmd Fittertr at 2717 Via
Vlstosa.
-Park Issue
Not En~
hi Clemente
Hai:bor Hills Goll ·eo.,,,. will cloae
dow1i in coming weekl, Jta: operators vow:
ed, In 'lhe wake .Pf denial b)\ the Clly of San Clemente of plam 1o "'Plaoi the
links _.With a ffi<lblle b1llne0 pork. ,
. Anc1,Re1 w!od,'aSanta-Ana rear~te
counselor for the developerl of the fil.. . ' ~. ~ faled pork anl! the' Forster Tnllt, also
vow'ed tod;iy Uiat lhe U.ue avtt the city
denial la far .from, over. ~k
Wood, who arped In vain lalt ~ !tr
city council rev.uaal of the pJ~g-?>m.
mission denial . ~ ; a permit for , the
development ¥id that lbe montbly'IOIRI
for the I~ :._of the course were 1oo
much to bear. , '
Har5c>1" llills will begin growing .,..is
within weeks, he ~. •
Wood. said lfgaL co11111e1 for the
developers will examJQe ffeords at ,qie
public bearing last We11nesday nlgb!l 1o
determine if court· aCtlon would he !War-
ran led In another lty al gelllnt< 211
mobile home 1paces ii the canyon bellw·
Harbor Estates.
Wood<was one of eeveral spoketmen for
Contempnrary, the Forster Trust whtch
owns 'the land, and the ellsUng IJ'OUP
which holds a lease with option 1o boiy tbo
golf co~se.
Th~· realty consultant said today ~
his leel)ng still holds-thal lhe COWJdl·and
prevloUs commission dinials are invalid.
"We feel that the matter waa ~
judged and Councilmu Tom o'KOele
who made the motion to deny the appeal
had already said that mobile homeporp
in his area would be iMtant shliaa,''
Wood Blid.
"The declllions made by the ·com·
mission and council were not predicai,d
on the facta al the case and we sWl main-
tain that there were lrregu.lariUe1, bi the
transmisSion of information betwrizl ·lhe
planning commlsalon and council," be-ado
ded.
Wood a.,.rted that the loud protesy by
Harbor Estate• residents and the ctr.m·
ell's de<:islo.n1 have "defiated the vahle of
· the goU coarse property ~ • J>Oin! lha~ll
can't · even .be JDll'Ut.td, W .-
developed."
He •aaJd previous city acUou bave
quashed 'attempta to bulld apartment. on
the stte.
He added that lhe land ii unsuiltd lot
slngl .. lamlly resldenUal development
under the It.I Zonh1i clusUlcatlon.
'"We had offer• in elCl'Ow of '20.1000 an
acre for that property ond. that nm1 the
selling price up to three.quarten .Of a
mllllon dollan, but alter this lateat denial
the land seems to be wOrthless."
Wood said the dly councll WU "in-
Umldated ond coerc.d" by the applause
from the audience. :
He said that among lhe recourte• cf
lhe firm trying 1o establish lhe mlll!Ji<
home park would be study on deannelln&
~ .iflecled land frdm the cJly.
The fond became part of San ~
·in·IJl9 .. t the wiabes of the Fantu<.l,Uil·
I ' ' y. ' ' r •
r ·
Fighting Illiteracy Complex Task
By BARBARA KREIBICI!
01 Jiit 01Hr •lief Stiff
A 70-year-old man who at last can en·
joy reading tbe daily newspaper, a
mother who can understand h er
children's report cards and even go to
school to discuss them with the teachers,
the foreign-born bride of an American
who can go to the market or join her
neighbors over coffee, a bracero who
wants to qualify for a better job -these
are typical of the students who will be
taught English by volunteer teachers now
COThpleting a special course in LagWla
Niguel .
Teaclting the teachers is a newcomer to
the area, Mrs. Robert Scanland, who
launched her first training course just
-two months after moving into a new
home at 29652 Preston Drive.
Teaching English to adults, either iJ.
)iterates or foreign-born, requires some
very special akills. and Mrs. Scanland,
who has been doing it for seven years, Is
an expert.
A volunteer teache r trainer for
Laubach Literacy, she has helped to start
teaching centers in three Southern
.California counties, has taught English to
many bracero.s and other Spanish speak·
ing adults and trained other volunteers to
do llkewist".
Mrs. Scanland uses lite "Each One
Teach One" method of word-picture.
association made famou s by Dr. Frank C.
Laubach who , before hls death Uiis year.
spent more than 40 years developing
Ute.rac::y programs in more than 100 coun•
tries and writing primer1 ln more than
ioo Jingu>gos and dlalccls.
The first lessons Jn English using the
Laubach method were given in 1945. It
has been used to help not onli · the
foreign-born, but also the eight million
"fOnctional illiterates" in the Unite<l
Stl!_tes -persons over 25 ye{ll's""of age
with less than a "fifth grade educatjon.
Calitornia alone Is estimated to1bave
Ing 20th in literacy among the 50 slates.
The highest rate of literacy is .in Utah
and the lowest in Louisana, according lO
government figures.
But the battle against illiteracy Is being
carried on by the Southern California
Literacy Council which has 91 centers
where 849 volunteer te(\chers instruct
1.8.15 students, or whom only JO percent
are English-speaking.
Some 50 nationalities are represented
among tbe students, but most are
Spanlsh-speaking, especially in t h e
Southern California centers.
There are 17 teaching centers In
Orange County, including two In the
South County area. Classes in English,
conducted by volunteer teachtrs, are held
on Tuesday evenings at 7:30 in the Adult
Community Center en Spring Street in
San Juan Capistrano and in St. Edward 's
Catholic Church in Capistrano Beach.
Active in the South County teacher
training program is Mrs. Francis Line of
San Clemente.
Jn add!Uon to worli:lng tn the teaching
centers, the volunteers also assist paid
adult educatloo teacher• In standard
English ror Foreigners classer, coaching
students whose education doe!! not meet
1he expected night ICboo1 minimum of
fifth &rade work. ·
Some of the Laubach Literacy teachers
are in Mexico, teaching English to adults
who need the language for their work.
A graduate of Ohio Wesleyan Univerai·
ty, Mrs. Scanlan_d, mother of live:, mar-
ried "after a one-)'ear career" and has
devoted herself to volunteer work, for lhc
pasl seven years conct!itrating on the
Laubach Literacy program.
In 1965, 'as president of Churchwomen
United, $~e started a class for 20 women
in San{a Ana. Since then she has con-
ducted 30-hour teacher training courses
twice a year.
Al the request of a group of local
resldents, Mrs. Scar1land agreed to con-
duct a 15-hour summer course in her new
Laguna Niguel home. Nine students will
wind up five three·hour sessions Otis
w~k.
The one man in the group Is a former
high school and junior college teacher.
11orne of I.he women are still in college
studying to be teachers, others are
housewives who find themselves with free
time when their chlld."en are in school.
One joined the class because she wanted
to help her new neighbor, a g.irl from
Iran, learn English.
Several already are volunteering their
time helping Spanlsh·speaking persons
master the language.
"Mostly/' ~Y• Mrs. Scanland, "they
say they feel there ls a need for thl1 work
and they want to make a ~ntribullon to
better underatandlng. ''
The student teachers work through a
manual th.at •hows them how to teach
from large picture and word charts,
oomeUmes 111101 models of familiar ob-
~
..
jects far those who speak no English at
all.
To hold students' interest, sentences
and.litt.le:11Jorl..es_ using.the new words are
introduced almost immediately. The
pupils progress through five workbook!,
learning 131 words in the very first, and
an increasing number Jn subsequent
books until they reach about seventh
grade level in their command of English.
A valuable teaching aid is a weekly
newspaper published by Lau b a c h
Literacy in two editions, one for third
grade level students, the other, with the
same news\wrJtten In language that can
be understood by students at the filth
grade level. or practical value to students of
English living in California Is a simplified
version of the state's official driver's
handbook, with vehicle code regulations
translated int.o language that can be
studied and understood by license ap-
pllcants.
To Mrs. Scanland, there ls "no greater
reward" than the expression of joy aJl(f
amazement on the face of a student as he
finds hlmseU speaking and understanding
the language that has toomed as a re.al
barrier ln his Ute.
"I often think the teacher• get as much
out of the lessons as the student," she
says.
For tbe dedicated volunteers who train
as teachers, tltere Is special meaning in
the words or Tbomas Carlyle: :'That
there should be one mao ignorant, who
had lhe capoclly for knowledge, this !'
call a traaedy ••• "
Mlt.Y Pil.OT _,, .....
TEACHING TEACHERS TO TIACH
Mra. Robert SC<1nl1nd Traln1 Engll1h ln1tn1Ctors
" • • .. • ' . '
r
'
• DAll.V PllOT
Mideast Talks Begin
-------
U.N. Mediator Meets Israel, A rab Envoys
~ ................
, When Chri1tine Wiiimore of New·
"wark, Englaod left tor a vacation
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Gunnor
V. Jonin(, the special l).N. m•dlalot, .,_
day lllrmelly opened ~i1 dlort todly to
..,.Uata po-In the Middle Eul
Jarring mtt ltrst Ill his Sith floor omce
at U.N. btldquan.r> with Yootl T<koah,
l5rael'11mbassedor lo the U.N., and then
conftfl'ed with Abdul Hamid Sbaraf,
Jordan'• envoy to W"1Unaton. 11 wu not
l<nowo whelhet' Egypt'• u:H-. 1111-
blssador, MQhlmmed Huson El Zayya4
would ,.. Jarri!ll lodlf.
Israel, Egypt and Jordan have a.greed
lo the talb under Janing's amplcts
whlch lollowed a .,..,._fire ll<log the Suu
canal beciminc Aq. 7. 'Ibe United Statts
proposed the u,.,. and Ille talks. and
Jarring announced MMday .altemoon
that they would begin today.
"Ir the Arab governments genuinely
wish to diSCtW peace with us, the ob-
jectlvo w)ll be 1chi<vod," T<koah Pld .,_
day. He told·~1eWsmen he lnrotmtd Jar·
ring of the "basic principles'' of \flc
IJraetl poslUon and added :
"Jt would not be 1,11eru1 to enter Jnto
details of our dlscusaions. '11\e objective
ls establishment of • just and lut1111
ptlct between lsrael and Egypt and
lsrael and Jordan. All of UJ rtallze that
1fter 22 years ol aggresskJna, .!IO!ut.iona to
the many difficulllts wlO be difficult"
Tekoah scheduled another meeting with
Jarring thl.a: afternoon before leaving
tonight for consultations In Jerusalem.
His departure will prtsumably leave
ls;'ael without a reprtsentaUve here for
more ta.lb with Jarring but Ttkoah was
not expected to rtmain long in
Jerusalem.
Tekoah confe~ with Jarring from
l :JO a.m. until 10:30 a.m. 1n JarrlnJ's of~
"tll,her family, she put a dummy
~ressed as a woman on her bed to
:U.wart burglars. The ruse worked
'too well. Detectives forced their
way into tbe \Vilmores' home after
being alerted by a neighbor. Jamn
LMCibetter, who thought he saw a
body. Leadbetter said later he had
been nosing around Lhe house to
make sure nolhinJ was amiss. The
police said anybody planning to
leave a dummy in 1 home should
advise authorities beforehand. * * * * * * • Lebanon Clainis Israelis
Friends telephoning Jeen N•th
often are ans>A'ered by growls and
:barks. Sometimes the line is dis·
:connected. Mrs. Nash, of old Wind·
·sor, England, says the unwanted.
:answerinl'! service is provided by
!her dog Cleopatra, who sits by the
!J)bone for hours waiting for a call. iif Mrs. Nash cannot grab a ringing
:telephone first. Cleopatra removes
:the handset to her basket and
-worries it
Attacked Border Village
•
A nvut 10ho broke into tht:
Dutch embauy in Stockholm.
climbing throu"'~ a bathroom
tDindoto Sundav got no farther
than tilt: bathtub, accoTd ing &o
the pol~. who found him.
a.slt:t:p thttt:. He wa.t awakt:11td
and chargt:d with public 111toxi-
cat'ion.
•
-
87 UNITED PRESS INl'ERNATlONAL
A Lebanese military spokesman said
lffa~ll troops crossed into southern
Lebanon today for \he second straight
d1y and blew up houses near the border
vUJage of Cbebaa. Arab guerrillas
reported inflicting heavy casualties and
rlamages on the Israelis in attacks on the
Lebanese and Jordanian fronts.
The military spokesman in Beirut said
the lsaeli ground attack was preceded by
an artillery barrage ln which four homes
were destroyed and four dama·ged. He
!laid the Israeli troops blew up six more
houses on the outskirta of Chebaa, l.S
miles inside Lebanese territory, before
withdrawing. There were no casualties·
reported In the attack, the spokesman
said.
On 1tlonday, Lebanon said Israeli
ground troops blew up a building near the
village of Yaroun and kidnaped one
person. Arab guerrillas, who ha ve vowed
to frustrate efforts toward a paUtical sel·
llement, bave continued attacks againsl
lsrel.
In Amman, the newspaper Falah,
publication for 11 major guerrilla
organiiatlons, said commandoa attacked
Israeli positions at El Rouss on the slopes
of ML Hermon in Lebanon Monday eve-
ning with heavy mortars. It said ,;heavy"
casualties and damages were inflicted on
the Israelis by direct hits.
Fatah said Al Assifa guerrillas later
clashed for 21,J hours with Israeli farces
in the central Jordan Valley. Heavy
artillery and howitzers were used in
\\'hich two Israeli troop carrlers were
destroyed and all their occup11.nts killed
or wounded, the news paper said. It said
one guerrilh1 was wounded in the battle
near Um El·WaUad.
All was reported quiet alonp: the Suez
Canal rrant but charges and caun·
tercharges conti nued.
Both Egypt and Israel accused each
nther of violating the 90-day cease--fire
that began Aug. 7. And in Cairo.
diplomatic sources said Egypt and
.Jordan will insist on complete Jsraell
withdrawal from Arab territory ~ized in
the 1967 was and safeguard!! for PalestJ·
nian rights in the New Yori: negotiations. Gardner Stan MIC9k o! Notting·
ham, England saw Michael Hug·
gins, 8. crying because he bad no
pet to enter in a children's unusual
pet· contest al a local lair. He
used bfs spade to uproot a 1m.indt
wonn for Michael, who won first
prize. • A man who bet 48 cents on seven
horses over the weekend in Lon·
don , England, won $27,715, a
spokesman for the William Hill
Bookmaking Organization said.
The -lucky bettor, identified only
as ''Mr. Albert.'' was remembered
by a teller who watched him bor·
row eight cents from a friend in
order to complete his wagers.
Angela's Sister on Boat
From Canada to Cuba
• S ch a a 1 m t s t re s s Gtorgie
Roy started her 4CJO.mile holiday
trip through England in a horse.
drawn Gypsy caravan, taking with
her a hen that likes to drink beer.
"Those alcoholic eggs certainly
pack a punch." she said. • There are 20,000 litter baskets
missing from New York Clly
streets. Environmental Prolection
administrator J1rom• Kr1tchm1r,
who gave the estimate Sunday,
said most· of them probably were
stolep as curiosities, because they
ltre "enormously camp." The city
is thinking of installing brightly·
colored fi berglass trash boxes that
would be bolled to sidewalks to
prev.ent theft, Kretchmer said.
· SAINT JOHN, N.B. (UPI) -Cat1adian
authorities, acting on a request from the
FBI, checked out a group ol Americans
headed for Cuba today ' but railed to find
any trace of Angela Davis, wanted in the
United States on murder charges.
However, a young woman aboard the
Cuban vessel "Conrado Benitez" was
idenUlled by olbers among the 500
Americans bound for Havana , as '-1rs.
Fania Davis Jordan, Miss Davis's sister.
After an initial "na CGmmenr' the
woman refused to speak to the press.
One reporter \\'ho tried to get additiooal
informat~n was shooed away by the
woman's male companion.
Royal Canadian '-founled Police of.
fitiaJs confirmed that they were actl\'e\y
seeking Miss Davis.
"We had a request from the FBI to be
on the lookout for Mias Davis," 1ald
RCMP Supt, P. H. Bourassa. "ln this
cue, we are laking spec.la! precautions."
He would not say what special
mta!Urtt were being taken. The RCMP
here said last week a naUonwlde alert
wu an in Canada for Miu Davis.
AO.ed if FBI agents were in Saint
John, Bouraua said~ "Nol lo my knowi·
edp. Bui wtwi tile 181 W. UI lot belp
in finding a wanted person, we try to
give them a hand.", ..
RCMP officers on the scene said 1t was
doubtful that ~1lss Davis woold try to
mingle with the "Venceremos" ("We Will
Win") group headed for Cuba to harvest
citrus fruits, because of the publicity and
official attrntion surrounding their ar-
rivals and departures.
IT'S NOT ONLY
WAY TO FLY
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -A superior
court judge baa issued a preliminary in·
junction prohlbitin1 distribution of a
magazine with photographs of women in
erotic poses and carrying Overseas Na·
tional Airways night bags.
The injun ction was issued Monday
against Jaybird Enterprises and Parlia·
r·ent News, publisher and distributor of
the magazine "Roommate \Vanted."
Judge Richard Schauer took the action on
a 11uit filed by Over~as National
Airways.
Tornadoes Teasing Texas
Showers Scattered, But Mast of Nation Sunny
c ... , ...
"•Ir 19ctn. Lllht 111rl•bM •INh rt1e111 •IMI mwll!M '*"""-~lrlto -lf'lr I ti If -l'ltl• 111 1~ teNr 11111 w"""'1r. HIP! tWtv n.
(•1111 ""'""'""'" ··-""" "4 .. H. lni.M l~llVNl ''""" ""'" a tt eo. Weter '"""'"'lllf'I • S11n, ,,._,., Tide•
TUllDA'f'
.klc:f!ld 111911 S1• 1t.1'1 S.J WIDMESDA't
f'lral llltll , , ,. ·•·• 1:111,1'11. 1.1
,Inf low .... •••• h 'i 1,111, 8.1
lfOillCI Mtll • ••••• ... t:ct 1.111. a.t kt:ollf low ll:M 1.111. ).I
11111' tl:IMt ';12 '''"' Sitt 7,)1 '·"'· ~ ..... 11••.m. 1t11 a~.u, '"·
'
Tet11pera111re•
Al!lu111uer-.o•
Anchol't•t
Alllntt
•~lr.er1!1i!ld
111m1rdt
loltt
80l.ll)ft
Cllk lllfl
Gloc1..,..11
Cltwltr!C .... _
t>.•tell .......
l'or!Wlll'fll
·~-He~ ...
HouJ'°"
1(1-1 City
l11 VH11
Ml1ml kid!
MttwM ..
Ml-•111 ._,,,_
Hew 'twtc
""'"' , ... ltoblfl
ltlll!ldtl.ril1
''"*'"' ""'°'"!' l"of>lllNI
lli'Hj 111111
.. M S.cr1,....nlo
SI, l oult s.n '-•~• cnr Sil! 0! .. o
Sin Ff1ow;IK.•
S1nt1 llrMr•
Malllt
SDD111n1
llti'rll'lll
Wlll'llf'll't
Mlllt \...,. '"' . ..
St 4S .or
.. ,. .12 " .. " " " .. " .. n " . " " " . " " " ., s,
• n Jr SI
" 4 ti 7J .17 . " 1•~ JJ H II& U . " . " n tJ 1.21 . " .. .
" ... . " ·~ " . " tJ 54 ,, ,,
" " . ~ ,, " " .. .j ~) . " .. "
'' 'J IM • . ..
ljse overlooklna the i;;aa River.
Alked whether he ·•V1lld del<ribe th•
opening ~ulon as proctdural or subatan-
Uve, Tekoah said: ••0ne should not
cate1orisl the dlM.'UAIOJ'll. It WU In open
meellnl:."
Jarring 1et no deadlines In tht "' -di.scusslons and IUde "' •Um1te1 about
when p<ogreu mlabt lie evident. Bu~ In
announcing Mooda7 U.. talk.! w<>uld begin
wllhln 24 bourr. ht tool!: a positive view:
1•1 feel sure: that U.. part.lea will enter
the discussions with the firm Intention of
finding a solution. I hope thal with good
wm and undel'standhlg they ·w1u In time
reach agreement on a just and luUng
pea~."
There were no plans at this Ume for
joint meetings of the three represen-
tatives. Jarrina said he would see them
"one by one."
Senate Ethics
Committee Bans
Car Lease Deals
WASHINGTON (AP) -The S<Rl!e
Ethics Committee hu forbidden future
cut-rate automobile leaaing deab that put
aome senators behlnd the wheels of Lin-
coln Continentals for $750 a year.
In issuing the rulin&' as an advi90ry
recommend ation, the panel did not say
which senators had accepted the low-cost
leases f1·om automobile manu!acturer:s
&eeklng to promote their cars by haVing
celebrities drive them.
It said only that "certain senators and
a Senale ofUcer personall,v have leased
an autonloblle from an autamobile
manufacturing company under special
and !avarable terms.··
Sen. John C. Stennis ( [).1\.1iss. ),
chairman of the Etttics Committee,
reported its findings to the Senate Mon-
day, declaring the pra:Uce should end
with the current set of leases, ·if not
befare.
At least a doien senators reportf'dly
had leased automobiles in what Stenni!
called ··a promotional program of many
years' ~anding."
Stennis said the committtt found l'KI
evidence of wrong--dolng or improper in·
fiuence in connection with the leases.
But it made this rtcommendation:
"Existing private lea~s of automobiles
lo senaton al favorable rates sh<>uld be
tennlnated at or before the end of the
current model year. These leases should
not be renewed.
"In ma.Ir.Ing private agreement.s in the
future for the lea1lng er automobiles,
senators should ~t acctpl any favorable
terms and cobdJtioo11 that art: available to
them only as senatOrs."
Ford Motor Co., Chrysler Corp. and
General ~1otors Corp. All had acknow·
ledged providing cut-rate cars to gov-
ernment orncial11 and some members of
the House and Senate as a promotional
device.
The Continental leases. at $750 a year,
were less than one.third the nonnal price
for rental of the luxury cars.
U'I T•IMM
RECEIVED SI0,009
Ohl1'1 S.n. Young
1i; ater Sculptress
A hot day and a cool lake ... and a pretty girl with a toss of her head
creates a water sculpture in Spokane, Wash. This yaung lady's crea·
tivity was aided by a camera with the shu tter speed set at 1/1,000lh
ol a second .
Governme11t Health Aides
•"ear Diphthe1·ia Outb1·eal{
WASHINGTON (AP) -Government
disease detectl\'es say limited oulbteab
of diphtheria, the a~ient child killer.
could spread across tht United States,
with ijhettos especially vulnerable.
they implied that any city in which
hnlf the children are not imm unized could
fa ce an epidemic such as the ohe swee~
ing San Antonio, Tex.
A recent survey sh<>wed San Antonio
had immunized only about half its
children, compared with 70 percent for
c:>mparible cities of 100,000 population.
The city tla1 listed &8 cases of the vicious
di!ease thls year -30 or them thLs
month.
u,.,,....
'USED IN PRECAMPAIGN ' c-ncut'• Sen. Dod1I
Experts of the U.S. Public Heatlh
Service·s Communicable Dlse'1se Center
in Atlanl.a say 75-85 percent of the na·
ti on's children are iminuhiztd against
diphtheria, but they rate this a1 on ly
fairly good .
The, ex per~ said in an interview that :?3
states da not require pre-school 1hoUI
with the triple DPT vacelne against
diphtheria. whooping cough and tetanu.s
or lockjaw.
Those states are Alabama, Alaska,
Ariwna, Colorado, Delaware. Florida,
ldaOO, Iowa. Maine. Montana. Nebraska,
Nevada. North and South Dakota,
Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Ver-
mont, Washingto;i , Wisconsin and Wyom·
ing.
They said that for maximum aafety
against all three maladiea, ch.ildrm
shc>uld get thrtt shots of the triple vac-
cine a mooth apart, begiMing at about J
monlhs of age -followed by a boOster
shot at age l; another boOster upon
entering school: and a booster every 10
years thereafter.
Diphtheria is named for the Greek
word ''diPhthera," meanlna hide or
leather.
That's because the ancient malady Is
characterlzed by forn1ation or a thick,
somewhat ltathet'·like falat membrane
on the lining of the throat and other areas
of the respiratory tract.
The poison of the bacteria that caute lt
also can spread throughout lhe system .
affecting even the hearl Death can GCCUr
in an agony of choking.
Hijacked Jet's
Pilot Believes
Bo1rib Was Hoax
De111ocratic Coffers Lose
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -The pilot ol
a Trans World Airlines jeUlner hijacked
to Cllba by A passenger in a U.S. Arnty
uniform said today he was "!It percent
sure" the young man was blufflna: about
a bomb on the plane but could not take
the risk.
$-20,000 to Two Senator·s
WASIIlNGTON (UPI ) -Tht Stnata
OemocraUc Campalln CommJttee gave 1
tat.al of $20,000 tq twc Stnator1 for U:te In
primary elccUom t.bty later decided Mt
to enter. The commlttce doesn't e.tped to
get any or the mone1 back.
Sen. Thomas t:>«kf of Connecticut
received St0,000 tor ust ln seeklni the
Dtmocratlc nomlno.Ubn for rt!-clect1011,
but later decided to abandon the party
and run as an Independent.
Sen. Stephen M. Voung of Ohia Risa ac.
cepted $10,000. but Inter decided to retire.
A spakcsman ror the committee, set up
I~ give flnt1ncl11 I Aid to senqtors seeking
re--elecUon , 11ild the fundt had not been
'
returned and It wu wumed the money
had been spent.
'"T!ie eommlltet does not anllctpalt
that ll will be gitt1n1 lhe montY back,·•
the 1pakesman said. "At leut, there
hasn 't been 111\y elfotl to recover II."
He added, "A good mn17 qi lheae peo-
pie llncumbenl Senile O.moc:t•ll) apenl
ll)OOtf In preparation fur thelt campttgri.
WI Ml ii '"uld be lmprOp<r II> s<1k
rel'mbutatther\t since it was t1k n In goo~
filth il the Umt they Intended t.o be tha
Dtmi::cratlc ttt)ditlate." 1 Dodd was not In Washlogton, bllt his
n:!mlnlstr1tlve aMls tant, Jam •~ Carland.
~aid. ··it (the money) ,was used durlni
Lhe pcecamµalln, thne."
The 171 jet, diverted to Havana Moo.
day night after the htjaci.er iaid be had
an accomplice aboard who would "blo1ir
up the: plane"' on signal, returned to it.I
scheduled destination here at' 4:S.S Lm.
today with 79 of the original 19
passengers aboard.
The hijacker, tent.aUvely idenUOed
from ~ passenger manifest as Robtrt
L. Labldi<. wa.s taken Into CUltod,y IA
Havana by CUban authortUea.
Thf pilot. Capt. warren r.eorte.
Brldge•DI•. Conn .. said ht decided not to
rlsk calling the hiJtcker's bluff. He 1114
no one Attempted to grab the )'OW'll man
beeaust "we don 't lake chancts like
that."
Ge:>ri:e sRld "I only cautioned tht peo-
ple to rem3\n calm" and lhcy did. He
said lhe hijacker. described·~ "calm and
c'llected." gave no reason rar '"'"nuns to
go to Cuba !'Ind remained silent durlna
Ule eitended trip. ,
• T'ltree Shot -' AJ!isterdamPolice~_ Bomb at 'U' Ti·aced
Hippies in Clash
AMSTERDAM (UPI) -A
Dutch motorcycle pollcem1n
opened flre on a crowd of
youthful protesters Monday
night ln this European hippie
center, wounding three
peraona.
Police said none of the
thrte, all Dutch, were serious-
ly wounded.
.... Irylng to dely the ban on
1leeplng were a •mall mlnod-ty.
City authoriUe1 decided la1t
week to Impose the ban alter
re1ldent1 and area
busineumen complained about
the large number of youn&
people lleeplng m the square.
The ban went Into effect at s
p.m. Monday. Dutch student
MADISON, Wil. (UPI) -nminl caU al J:• Lftl,
Tbe blatt that kWed • )'UWl& HAt J :~ .. -llld, • .,,..
Unlvenlly of W h coo 1 l • bulld1mc aJllodld. ,,,... -
researcher and injured four a flub fft."
per!lOl1I was detonaled from a Kll1ed -llol>ert I:.
ttolen truck parked in I P'Ulnlditt 0 , father ol three.
driveway near thf!I tchool'• ffll wlf• l&kl bl Wu catddns-
•-· MathemaUcs Jlewrdl up"' rward> t.•• the ~-., lunlly plamo4 to mo••
Ctnl<r, police said Monday Wedneldq and tliai 10 GD I
nlgbL vacauon.
Detective Stanley Dlvenport 1ftjm'td WWI Pad QWD. •·
But another 100 persons, ln-
cludinl 15 pollcemen, were J.n.
jured durhi.1 the incidents ln
which 1,IOO )'Olllhs fought
Police with cobbltlltonts they
tore from the graund. Six
ptrsons were arre1ted,
11'0QPS distributed I e a f I e t 1 u,1 T......_
during the day sugl!"stlng OFFICER CHASES STUDENTS-INCLUDING GIRL WITH BRICK CLEFT)
uld the truck, a 11187 white 1 nMUCh .-omtt; Norbert
Ford Falcon, was owned by SuU., rt, a UW llCUrlty
Lorry Travis, Ma'"-who l1Wd. and Da'rkl -· 21,
said the truck""' lllolen wbile a -fmn --be wu on vacaUoa l n South Afr1ca.
Calilomla. A lom1h --c:at by
alternate places to sleep, SIMplng Ban Leads to Violent Confrontation In Amsterdam Hundreds of penons were in -------'----'----------'----"_;__ ___ _:__;___;____:_ ___ _ The blast occurred Monday fi,U. 11.ua. --lnjuhd
mcnling, two minutet after an crttScally. meat wbldl u.tU>pes caDen'
'the clashes took place ln the
city's Dam Square, a favorlt~
gathtttng place for long.haired
youths from Europe and
America. They were pro-
testing a ban on sleeping ln
the area. Police using water
cannon finally cleared the
square.
Police Inspector E v e r t
Jagerman satd a motorcycle
policeman, feellns he was
threatened by the crawd
around him, flrtd his gun
three times to disperse them.
One ol. the men Jbot wa1 a
Thnes of Amsterdam
photographer, Daniel Konlng,
29, who was hit In the back.
A number of those in the
crowd sald they were merely
spectators and claimed those
the :square at 6 p.m. playing
gultar1 and talking. None
could be seen sleeping. Some
Of them carried signs, in
Engliah, saying "sleep on the
1treets tonight. 11
The crowds later began
overflowing into the roadway
and tome youths aat on tram
tracks and beat on wlndowa of
passing vehicles. Police moved
reinforcements into the area
and aaked them through
loudspeakers to dllper.ae.
Most of them ignored the
appeal and continued to mlll
about, bara.aslng traffic and at
one point rocking a police van.
The shooting incident occumd
at about 10 p.m. and thei water
cannon was used a short Ume
later.
Duin Trips
Ads Warn Drug Users
LONDON (AP) -"LSD can treatment for addiction to the
take you places you never
dret.med of," says the poster.
It shows a youth In a strait
jacket cowering in th6 comer
ol. a padded ceU. uodereolng
15 Charged
In Bombing
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -Fil·
i,en YO\llli blaaa, lncludlng
• leader• of Ille m!U"'11 Na·
Uonal Comnu"ttee to c.ombat
Fascl!m, have been charged
or arrested in the booby-trap
bombing that killed a white
Policeman a week ago.
Two, 15-year-<ild Duane C.
hallucinatory drug.
National Lifeline, a charity
con!<lrtium which cares for
addicts and alcholla, devtsed
the black and wblte placards
to strike out at early stages of
drug usage which can lead to
addiction.
One poster shows a wrlthine
on&-day old baby. "He's been
a Junkie al his life," saya the
caption.
"This baby needs heroin the
way most babies need milk,"
the: tne51iage reads. "He's a
ngi!tered dope addict. A vic-
fun of the drug scene. If be
lives it will be a miracle.
Rihicoff
Blasts Nixon
Segregation
NEW YORK (UP!) -Sen.
Abraham A. Rublcofl (!).
Com.), charged Monday
President Nixon and the
Congrea were helping to send
America "down the road to
aparthied" by perpetuating de-
facto segregation.
Riblcoff, who accused the
north of "monumental hypo..
crisy" in a Senate speech
in February, said in an article
in Look Magazine the need for
a national policy to end
segregation in North and
South alike "seems more
urgent now."
"If anything,'' he said, "re-
cent actiQns by the President
and Congress have strengthen-
ed my conviction t h a t
America is heading down the
road to Apartheid, a strict
separaUon of the races, based
on de facto segregation, and
that nobody who ha! the
power to alter this course ap-
pears willing to do so."
Rlblcoff cited a Senate-
House conference committee's
"watering down" of an
amendment which wouJd have
required a uniform national
policy on Integration, a
Co n g r e ssional distinction
between de Jure and de facto
segregation and NJ :r o n ' s
March 24 speech saying de
facto 11egregatlon was "un-
desir1b1e" but that the adml~
JstraUon planned no act.Ion
about It.
anon)'lllOUS telephone caUer Another pollc:o ipOlrolmaJI
told a police dispatcher: aa1d u tbert bid btm mort vokea l n lbe same wa1
"Hey pig, there'• a bomb In time bet,.... the call and the f1ngorprlnt recorda are kepi.
Ille Math Reoearch Building uplotloo m 1 a y ~ A ...,.. In the fire depari..
on the University campus. would 1'wxtoubtedl)o" been ment said a pluUc type bomb
Clear the building." among the cuualtlei. wu wspected. Ho w e v e 1 ,
Davenport said mlnut. but He aald the caD wu -.t. Spedal Ageot Edward Hay'"
identtfialbe pieces, were found ed on the pOl.lce tlepirt1Mnt11 ol tbe Mllwaukee FBI office
o1 the truck . 'regular 24-bour tel e p hon e aald lnvlltlgal<n had not yet
alongside the village. '11le Police Lt. Kenneth Buss aatd tape, but· the depm b6* does determined the met type ti
village was overrun Jest week,""lhe==d=lspa=tch=er=reoo=.=-Iv=ed=lhe==:'not"'=hri='::::•=''wke;=:pr=tnt:;,'.,' ~equlp.~;.,;dp~iollv~;•~UlfJd;;;~·====::;
Cambodians Repulse
Five Red Battalions
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
(AP) -An estimated five
Communist battalions launch-
ed an attack nine miles
northeast ol Phnon Penh Mo~
day night, but a military
spokesman said they w e r e
driven back.
Maj. Am Rong, the Cam-
bodian spokesman, said the
Viet Cong and North Viet--
name.se slammed Into the bat-
tered village of Prek Tameak
just before midnight and that
fighting continued until Tues-
day morning.
by three Viet Cong battallons1r
that pushed to within six miles
of Phom Penh, which h on the
other side of the river from
Prek fameak. The river it
now approachlng flood level
8lld Is more than a mile wide.
A.nothtr enemy assault was
launched against the town of
Saang, II miles south of
Phnom Penh, but Maj. Rong
said the attackers were held
off, largely by one AC47
gunship that circled most of
the night constantly spraying
the defense perimeter with it.I
rapid.firing guJlS. Saang also
has been a frequent target of
HAMS
" • • • So Good It Wiii
Hant Yft 'TII It's Gone"
llfAIL STOllS
-... --.-.. lloo-47J-ttlt 1m a. 1reekhunt, AMhei111 A54M1
~taj. Rong said the Cam-
bodian troops were given in·
tensive support by fighter-
bombers and by Cambodian
gunboats on the Mekong Rive r the Viet Cong and North Vlei· I===========================:::! namese.
* * * * * * Senate Opens Debate
On All-volunteer Army
WASHINGTON (AP)
Faced with N \ 1. o n ad-
ministration opposition, a
divided Senate debatea today
wt.ether to make a military
career so attractive volunteers
would eliminate the need for
the draft.
The White Hou.se contends
the proposal, backed by an
unusual coaliUon of liberals
and conservatives, would cost
billions and throw the budget
further out of balance.
A vote could come late to-
day.
Tbe fate of the meuure,
sponsored by Sena. Mark 0.
HaUleld (R-Ore.), and Barry
M. Goldwater (R·Aru.), could
depend on the munber of votes
attracted away by S en .
Edward M. Kennedy ([).
Mas,,), -opposes Ille present draft sy9'em.
Kennedy has saJd he fears
the undiluted volunteer anny
concept could lead to poor
mtn fighting rlcb men's wan:.
The amencbnent to the
military purchasing bill also ii
oppooed by Chalnnan John
Stennis (0.Mlss.), of the Arm-
ed Services Committee.
ln30 a
hydroplane can skim
overa mile of water.
In the same time~·
can dial a call
in the country. @Pac1nc1111epm,.
PMk, who ta charged with
first-degree murder, and
Davkt L. Rice, 23, charted
with conspiracy to commit
murder, remalned at large
Monday.
"Unless people stop playing
with drugs there'll be a lot
more babies born in this state.
Because U1U is what happens
when you start turning ol'I for
a laugh. Some laugh."
Another poster adv i 1 es ------------------------------!
Rice Ls minister of in-
form.aUon for the Nation.al
Ccmmlttee to C o m b a t
Fuclsm -NCCF -which
wu fcrmed .after the Black
Panther puty dl11banded lts
Omaha chapter.
The chairman of the NCCF,
Edward A, Poindexter, 25, and
severe! of Its members were
jaJled alter weekend raida by
police in the predominantly
Negro Near North Side.
parents to search t be I r
children's pockets for pep
pills.
"Some school klds pick
things up very quickly," says
the legend on a picture of a
boy with hooded eyes holding
pllla in hJs hands.
"It's not alwaya sweet can-
dies they pick for sixpence
(six cents) a bag," the
message reads.
The LSD poster warns :
"Lysergic acid dlethylamide is
a terrifyingly dang e ro u 1
hallucinogenic drug.
SaveSIOJIO trip
from LA.
'The only airline serving
Orange County fust Increased
Its fares. So, we suggest you
drive to LA and fly PSA instead.
Our fare to San Francisco is
still $16.20, Including lax.
Olw ••• .... ,... . , ...
PIA
si:-.r-
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see Mexico, the Pcmama Canal,
South America, the Caribbean,
and Florida in 15 days.
Prince$ Cruises to
the Caribbean
from$S75.
SUcy" in the same ocean view room every night
and explore five different worlds. Sail the
Pacific and the Atlantic. Cruise the Panama
Canal by daylight. See such exotic po!U as
Acapulco, Cartagena, Nassau, Balboa,
Cristobal, Montego Bay. Enjoy the most
luxuri0\1$ sca·going accommodations avail·
able-the lavish, lively Princess Cruise ships
where every dollar of your fare brings you more
in conveni~nce, space, and pleasurable pampering.
You'll bask in air«>nditioned luxury while your resort
does the traveling. No bags to pack and UDfack. No
reservations to come unreserved. An attentive crew
of several hundml fun-loving Itilians will spoil yo
sbamelwly and feed you fabulously. You'll swim,
mn, dance, enjoy a showboat's complement of live
entertainment, movi~ skeet shooting, deck games,
health spa, a ~ala social calendar, and the perfeo
relaxation which only ocean travel can provi
There'1 never been more to see, more to do,
more to enjoy since the invention of r------------------
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while choice cabins are still available. Los An plea, California 90003'
Or call Princess Cruises: I led 1 cruise comina on. Pleue prod me wilh
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Los Angetis to Fort Laoderdale
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...
•
'
. ------==-:-:-:c-;:o-== ---------~-'
• Beach for the Peo le
•
•
Among th~ multitude of down-to-th&-wlre struggles
tblt came to a climax -In the · llaal •esslon ol .lhe ad·
jouming c,Jilomia,Legislatur& waa one .that bad lril·
J>Ol'\8111 rarnlllca!Jons In Oranze COunty.
The bW came· so close to passage and securecl sol·
ticient support to servt notice warning that some type
of similar legi.sJaUon is in the offing-if not this year,
in a year not far off. '!be measure, entered by Assemblyman Pete WU-
..,. (R-5an Diego), would have bad far-reaching el·
fect.s along Orange County's coastline. It would have
given the state veto power of any development within
1,000 yards of the 'ocean al all point, along Calilornla's
1,100 mile coestline.
Any development in that coastal corridor would bave
been subject to review and approval by one of five state
regional boards. ln effect. this would have meant im·
l'OSition of state standards of all construction within
the strip.
lt was, perhaps, the obvious extent of the bill's
Power that caused legislators to reject the measure in mo.
But it came closf>-and the closeness contained in
it a warning: what is left and what can be .salvaged
from califomia's CoasUine assets are for the people ·and
must be preserved. for the people.
At one stage, the coastline bill was approved 42.-.30
by the Assembly, but that was before it ran into a block
of conservationists who said· the mea_sure didn't do
enough and conserVative's who believed. it an invasion of
property rigbts.
Both Orange County Assemblyman, Robert Bad· ham of Newport Beach and Robert Burke of Huntllig·
ton Beach voted against the bill. They said they were
concerned over property rights involved;
It could be the Wilson bill was too far-reaching.
Even if it were, it went far enough along the legislative
road to serve clear notice that powerfuJ foicris are go-
ing to be working to preserve this notion: the ocean is
not the private presenre of those who happen now to
own land near it or on it.
Assemblyman Badham may have been right when
he said increased beach access would bring more
Hoover Should
Clear the Air
Despite several yeara ol book and news
story criticism of J. Edgar Hoover , direc-
tor of the Federal Bureau o l
Investigation, the material did not seem
worthy of serious column interpr~tation.
Royce Brier ·
,.. •· ._.
'lllough the FBI agentry bas oc-
cuionaUy been arbitrary and even ar·
rogant in pursuit
of it.s business, it
bas in ~aJ BC•
knowledged the
limitations put on
the bureau by
law. In this it
has been several
marks ahead ol
the run of local
and state police
authorities, and
U thia be true, Mr. Hoover deserves what
credit accrues.
But now comes news antipalhelic to
Hoover which is in a new dimension.
Because it is news it is QOt perforce fac-
tual; it remains an allegation, but
Hoover'• personal and ethical relation to
it requires an answer from him.
Tt is based on a book written about the
late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and
Time magaiine's treatment of that book.
THE STORY GOES Iha! the FBI put
wiretaps on Dr. King in the mid-Sillies.
'lblt the bureau does wiretapping in
some investigations it considers vital, is
ccimmon knowledge, but the practice is
still in a twilight 7.0l'le, and requires a
court order it lt · to be legal
Wire tapping of ltlng kma~s 1 in
allegation, though it is known Hoover
~dered him subversive and wblicly
criticized his conduct in the racial con·
troversy. Yet this not the gravamen of
the whole story now alleged by Time.
That is, that the supposed wiretaps in
motel rooms revealed Dr. King engaged
in extramarital acUVity. The news story
says the surveillance "uncovered no
subversion," though UU.s was the only
legitimate concern of HOOVer and FBI
age~
TIME SAYS the book about King bas
the "COJTect outline of the FBI tape
story." But it does not contain, according
to Time, matter involving a reported
meeting between King and Hoover.
As quoted by Associated P r e s s •
"'Hoover, Time learned, explained to
King just' what damaging private detail
he had on the tapes, and lectured him
-----------'
"people who dirty the beaclt." But Assemblyman Bad·
ham did not seem to recognize that the prevailing cli-
mate of C.llfornla is,fllle of giving to all the people more
use of the thlags that belong to all the people -even II
they mess up some of them ID the process.
' HURRY·· Thke MONEY
Speaking of Assemblyman Robert E. Badbam, he's
made it Possible for you to retain one iota of y0ur in-
dividuality, even in Ibis age of computers and Iden ti·
fication by number. Bui you may, iJ you wish HURRY to the Depart-
ment of Motor Vehicles with MONEY and personalize
your PLATE.
That's what a new bill, authored by Badham and
Sen. Milton. Marks, wlll do for any California car own·
er~be be LOVER, LOSER, or LOUSE.
The bill is not entirely in the spirit of fun and iden-
tity.preservation. ·You'll pay $25 extra for the privilege
of having your personalized plates and rou must con-
form to a rather complicated pattern o up to six let-
ters and numbers. They can't follow the present three-
number, three-letter f.attem: ·they can't be obscene or
in bad taste; and can t con.taJn mp re than five consecu-
tive letters or five consecµtive numbers .
Income from the special plates goes into a fund to
fight SMOG< So wbetlier you COUGH up f., them be-
cause you are· V AlN or your ·memory for 'numbers is
VAGUE, to Assemblyman Badha!" goes our TANKS!
Sign of the Times
An insignificant, or possibly significant po11 on an
important American issue: an Orange Coast family re-
ports that during a vacation trip their two children
flashed the twcrfinger "peace" sign from the back seat
to each approaching automobile.
111.e reaction was mixed; some glowered, some
waved, some ignored the gesture.
Final resuJt-the ''peace" sign was returned by 81,
iRDored or rejected. by 77.
Dear
Gloomy
Gw:
Human Relations Cmnmissima
If God had meant women to be
equal to men, be would have made
them equal to men.
-C. C
llllf fol.tu,. NIJectf ........... .,._ ll9t
-l'T l'!lev .. .. --..... Senf '"' ,., ,...,,. .. •1'MIY .II .. 09'11r Pl ....
that his morals should be those befitting
a Nobel Prize winner. He also suggested
that King should tone down his criticism
of the FBI. King' toOk the advice,"
resulting in a "decline of ~t 'esteem".
(for King). •
U this meeting occurred, and if it
followed the course indicated:, then Mr.
Hoover shouJd fill us in. Neither he, nor
any citizen, can define the "morals" of a
Nobel Prize winner, which hardly fit into
the FBI code of community behavior, nor
justify pious elhottation in an y
circumstance.
BUT STllL MORE must Mr. Hoover
explain the charge that he used official
infonnation obtained in an FBI in-
vestigation to coerce Dr. King to
moderate his criUcF of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. No court in the
land would permit use of such irrelevant
fed eral offense.
This is one of the most dlSturbing newa
stories of our time. Neither Mr. Hoover
nor the people who employ him can af·
Cord to let it stand unresolved, as it now
jtandJ.
ABM as Bargaining Chip
To the Editor '
The Orange County Board of Super-
visors will consider the establishment of
a county human relations commission on
Aug. 26, As proposed, this cotntnmlon
will seek to promote better understanding
between the citiiens of the county, pro-
vide channels of communication, and to
Jessen discrimination. I believe that such
a commission is essential for the con·
tinued progress and well· being · of oUr
county. ~ ~d of understan(ftng and co~
munication between individual! and
groups in our nation has become quite
apparent during the last few years.
Orange County has been fortunate in not
being faced with major disturbances like
those that have erupted in so many cities
acrosa our land.
However, our population is increasing
rapidly, and with it we see congestion, in-
creased tensions and conflicts formerr
ting. If we are to continue to avoid
violent confrontatioM in the future we
must provide sofile relief mechanism for
building pressures. I believe that the
creation of a county human relations
commission is a good step toward ~
moting good will and better relations
among all the citizens of the county.
JOAN S. PE'ITY
Howl• Protested
To the Editor:
"'"\ THIS IS the dangerous power Allen and
Goldsmith refer to in their article. but
they don 't delve· into the electronic
media's far reaching effects. 1'ie pOint is
Lttter1 from rtotlers are welcome.
Nonnallfl writers 1hould convey their
messages in 900 word.I Of' less. The
right io conden.st letter• to fit tpact
or eliminate libel i.s reserved. All let.
ten: must include .rignature and mail-
ing addres1. but names may be with--
held on request ii .ufjicient Ttqson
. ii apparent. PoeCTy ,will. not be pu .
ii.sMd.. '
finding what was happening interesting
enough to listen to or watch.
After he arrived home, back in
Stockton, he heard on the news that even·
ing about student demonstrations on the
Berkeley campus involving perhaps a
thousand.
My friend was there m06t 0£ the day
and witnessed the students "demonstrat·
ing .. " Needless to say, he was rather sur.
prised to see the demonstration as filmed
by our news · media-the whole c.ampus
seemed , to have demonstrating students.
The TV had exaggerated the nwnber or
students and made it look as though the
whole campus was involved . or course,
their rationale is that . it is more
"newsworthy."
that there are over 20,000 students on the
Berkeley campus-most of whom prob-
ably never even sa wthe "~monslra·
lions" that day. But what about SOIIM>
one who only saw the newscast?
They don't know how many students
are enrolled at Berkeley, .they don't
understana that many students are just gtudenls~ 4nd the'y -don'~ undtr~ that
long hair is nOt synonymous with mililan·
cy. All they know about the situation is
what they see on the tube. Th~ "media" haS contributed a
dangerous amount of influence on the
public, not for what they have said
perhaps, but more of what they have fail·
ed to say. What is ironic is that they have
probably done it unintentionally.
BY ONLY reporting the bad things that
happen and leaving out the good, the poor
listener can only asswne llµlt only bad
things are happening, a~ in the case of
the Berkeley demonstraticins.
The most catastrophic thing the news
media has done, though, is made some
people feel that their worst enemy is
someone other than themselves.
RUSSEIL LUND
'Step Toward Goodwill' Each morning we are awakened at S
a.m and on by barking dogs, 1 have
counted five loose dogs at a time on this
street. I just now counted three loose
dogs and it is 11 :00 p.m. The neighbors'
dogs are turned loose early mornings and
some are loose all night. I bean:! a noise
at the back of our house and I looked out
the window and there was a big dog. Jt
was in the middle of the night.
Can Sin Be Simple
It's semantically interesting that tbe
average person stands in awe or suspi-
cion of "big words," and believes they
are used to bamboozle him. Actually, the
opposite is more often the case -prO.. It ls a cwious time. Senate liberals,
men who have opposed further escala·
tlOftS in ladocbina, who have sought to
taan our priorities lrom arms ex·
peod.itures and who have for their pains
beea singled out for defeat by men who
suuest they are disloyal -these same men. are cow being sweet-talked by the
Pmtagon to vote for an ABM because h
wU1 lead to disarmament
To a visitor returning after a year or
so, tbe acene would be unbelievable. Men
who have been talking nothing but
IU'ength for years, who defended the fll'IL
ABM appropriation last year on the
poads thlt the Chinese were threaten.
in& ut and that a Soviet S&-9 missile had
a far great.er capacity than it really had,
now -mar u the Apostles of Peace,
anxlOlll to a•ll'd a $20-$50 billion plum to
defeme contractors as some part or a
v..t ICbeme to cmvince the RussiMs
that we are leriOU5 about a reduction in
~arms raoe.
THE ABM, which comes up for a
decisive vote Olli week, & now being sold
u a "barPinllli chip.• '11le argument Is
bncthtakfitgly ~e. U we approve an
erpansloo <11 the All)!, II w1ll Ii"< us
something to abandon JI lhe Russlaria will
only abaodoo tomethint elae.
tlllpired adminlltradon Juts now sug-
,..1 µ.it the ABM vole will be "mean-
tnsJass;" that II will be toerappcd anyway
tn lhe course of the SALT lallis Ill
Helllnld.
Bui thil argument depends for Ill
vaUcUty on three propositions, for none of
which ii there any tv1deoce. •
F'ltst-lt assumes the Russi.ani dn not
read the C<qreotlooal Record. U ABM Is
a barplnlns chip, It II the most public
.... 10 ~-ll ls the ldnd or bargalning
chip u...I -10 lheJ!ory _&~ -' by the
late Herwood Broun dunog bli Driir r•••
dll)I) and dilutroua tenure es maapglng
edllor ol the old N•w York World.
i
......
Mankie\Yiez
and B~aden
BROUN WAS ii the process of hiring a
yourig reporter who wanted to know how
much money he would be paid.
"We will offer you $40 a week," tald
the hardheaded Broun, "but I am
aut!tortzecl"l• go as hlgh U "$IO:" So much
for the bargalning chip. ·
Seoold -The argument requires a
willing suspension of disbeli~ of a
magnitude not contemplated 1n
,---B11 George---.
Dear George :
People who don't have the
courage to sign their n1t11es to
letters are lower than snake&. For
inst.ancc. that nosy crone who
wrote that 1 kept spying on her
and counting the liquor bottles. b\
her trash cans is not <1nly paranoid
but so cowardly &he won't stand
up and sign her name:
YOU KNOW WHO
Dear You:
Actually, that letter was about
you. The letter about you was
lbe real shocking report on your
actions. (You know what.)
CONFIDENTIAL TO JACKIE
GLEASON: You wtrtn't supJJO$ed
to stay on that dleL, until you
disappwed.
(Write to George, the only advice
columnist 1n the-entire racket too
smart to pay any aUeoUon to h1s
own advice.}
Aristotelian theory. It requires one to
believe that the President ud the Pen·
tag on · and its allies in· the military-in.
dustrial complex, as well 'as their
spokesmen in the House and Senate, are
sincerely interested in a reduction oC the
arms race.
ThLl is crucial to the argument. Surely,
the administraUon had ample opportunity
to demonstrate this concen1 before. U w.e
were concerned about a reductioll of
arms Jevels, the time to show It was
when Sen. Edward Brooke'• resolut.ion
urging an en<l to tes6ng ol mu It Ip le
warhead missiles (MIRV) was passed
earlier 1n the year. It was ignored.
FOR mAT MA1TER, Pentagon con-
cealment of a virtual shutdow1'in Soviet
SS-9 missile production and emplacement
during the past year was hardly con-
si.stent with a "bargaining chip" posture.
The adminislration may indeed be
prepared to scutUe a weapons system
that will put jobs In 33$ congresslooal
districts and ring sluggish cash registera
through defense industry, but there is
precious litUe evidence to ahow guch
change of hearL
Third -: The "bargaining chip" ar~
ment assumes that Important steps in the
relaxation of tensions come wheR we
bargain from strength. But the two most
conspicuous advances in lhe '60s -the
limited le.'!l-ban treaty and the nuclear
nonproliferation treaty -were both
negotiated Ctom what this AdmlnistraUon
would call "weaknes.'!."
In the first case, President Kennedy
had already renounced atmosphtric
testing. In the eewnd, P r e s i d e " t
Johnson's hand was strengthened by the
Pastore resolution puUlng the Senate
•t.rongly Jn supPOrt -in advance.
What thls all suggests Is that peaceful
lntcnttons:~-not11ew-,.,·tapons -are the
best bar&a.inin& chips of aJJ.
Frink Muklewtn
and Tom Bradea ..,. '
It ls dog days. There is a noise abate-
ment Jaw and a leash law in Ulls'town,
One cannot sleep late in the mornings,
not even on Sundays, where I live. It was
six o'clock this last Sunday a.m. when the
dogs started barking. My husband works
late, as I am sure some other people do
at night. It is impossible to sleep late in
the mornings with these loud·mou(hed
dogs barking under our windows. It is not
the dogs' fauJt, but the dog owners. Poor
training, undisciplined dogs, or perhaps
DO training.
How can we "love thy neighbor" when
they let their dogs run wild and bark so
much of the lime 1
· 1 like dogs, but not barking under my
wlndow while I'm sleeping, Would you!
ffiENE HILTON
'TV Exa99erate•'
To the Editor:
I was very pleased to see on your
editorial page for the first Ume an article
dealing with a problem which has needed
more attention and understanding than
any of the many problems facing our
country. I'm referring to "Power o( TV
•.• " by Allen and Goldsmith.
I wanted to tell you about an e1-
perience which more than illustrates my
feeUng on the subject. It coocerns "Stu·
dent demonstrations" and how they are
reported .
I RAVE a friend , an over-30 type
Individual, who went to the Btrktley cl'!m·
pus on business. When he arrived, there
were several students handing out
Je:iflels, 01hert silting down and a eouple
of atudtnt.'1 making speeche!i. He said
there were possibly two hundred . Well, he
walked on 6't finished bi1 business, not
pagandists a n· d
demagoguos at.
ways use "little
words," because
they know that lit-
tle words seem to
be clear and def!.
nite but are really
quiet ambigu9t1s.
As a current
example, we get
daily reports
about Amer i c a.n forces killing so
many "Reds" in Vietnam. "Reds" ~ a
short ·word everybody can understan4 -
but it is wildly inaccurate. We are kitting
North Vietnamese boyS, most of whom
don't know Karl Marx Crom Groucho.
SIMPLE-MINDED theologians have
done the same for centuries, with the lit--
tle word "sin," which seems specifiC and
obvious to most people. Yet we know now
that many things once considered •!'_sins"
are now called merely "errors," anti that
dancing, playing cakis, or drinking ,me
have absolu~y nol.hlng to do with the
metaphysical klea of sin.
It iJ not the big words that are
dangerous -If we don't understand
them, we can look them up, or iust Ignore
them. It is ttie Uttle ones that we Imagine
we understand, and that we suppGSe have
the same meaning for other people,
which lead people to war, persecution and
tyranny.
Hardly anyone, for lnstance, graspa the
full meaning of a litUe word IUce
"peace," which operates on al least three
levels. First, there is inner "peace af
mind.'' then there Is ''civil peace"
between persons'of the same community;
thtn there is "international peace"
between sovertign nations, which Is an
enll~)'. dif~nt klnd of thing.
I MANY PEOPLE say t1you can't have
peace" because human beings are full of
~· instlncla -but thl.t 18 -
•
fusing' the level8. War on an international
scale iS a soclal mecbanlmt, and can be
avoided by the proper social controls, no
matter how "aggressive" people remain,
Both cannibalism, 8Dd taler slavery,
were abolished by social controls:,
although peOple generally-are no "better"
today than they were when they ate their
enemies or enslaved them. '
·Big words are sometimes an attempt-to
sound learned or impressive, but just as
often they represent an aUempt lo be
)>fecise -as in 'legal or medical
terminology. A "heart attack" soUDds
shnple to a layman, but it 'doesn't mean
much to a doctor, who is looking for a
differential diagnosis that will pinpaint
the ·exact causes of the breakdown.
We have a right to expect and demand
"plain language" when a subject can be
stated plainly. But beware of the man
who uses little words to explain, attack or
defend" a large, Cf:lmple:r; and con-
tralllctory problem, .
--·--Tuesday, August 25, 1970
Tl>< editorial pag1 of !ho Doar
Pilol ... ks t<rlflforot.mtd "'"'" • ulate ffildt1's bf/ pr<1'1lttng lhfl
new1paper'1 opinions cmd com-'
menta111 on topi.ci of fntef"es1
and significance, br pr®idino: a ·
forum fOT U.. t%pf'<uion of
our readtrs1 opinions, 'end bv.
1»'t!t-nd110 thl diClfTJ~ tiifto-
point.l of inform.eel oblnotn
and IP.Okt.smen on ~p.iu_o/ tM_ <1au.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
. ,-----' --~-
Salut~g Proves
Divor ce Grounds
lly L.M. BOYD
ASK THE AVERAGE man
H he hu .,... fainted and he'll
aay no. Ast hlm tf be bas ever
black~ out and he'll say yes ...
TIIIS MORNING In the mid-
dle. <i Seattle's Magnollit
VUlage I saw • pari:eel camper
containing a small black poo-
dle together with a large tan
COlll&r. What did you see
th.11 morning ? ... AN IN-
KEEPER OF lengthy ex-
perience says men leave hotel
rooms in a far neater ~
dltlon than do women. Think
Iha!'• right.
PERSONAL NOTE -"ls
wrl(lnC' dllficult? Do you like
to browse in old bookshops?"
So Inquires a friendly Flori-
dian. Used to. But no, not
anymore. MosUy, I like to
browse in hardware stores.
Parilcularly around t.h e
'M"eOCh racks. Next to that,
fish canneries are excellent
for browsing. So are farmers'
markets. Then come sporting
goods houses, garden shops
a n d automoUve accessory
ltorfe. Finally, lumber yards.
Actually, lumber yards are
almoot as good aa 11111 can-
neries. See, nothing to Ille
wriUng pme. F.ellow can go
on with this kind of drivel
almost lndeflnltely.
CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
"What'1 the world's best-sell-
ing Scotch?" A. Johnnie
Walker .•• Q. "How long has
Sammy Davi!, Jr., been blind
in ooe eye?" A. For 16 years ...
Q. "Which came first, the
typewriter or the fountain
pen?" A. Tbe typewriter.
A VER.AGE WEIGHT among
the girls in their thirties is 133
pounds ••. CIJST OF VENISON
to the .hunter runs ap.
proximately !4M a pound •..
111ERE'S NO WORD Jn the
Japanese language for "kiss"
•• .NATIONWIDE, 3,185 men
list themselves with t h e
census as chambermaids ••.
POU.S NOW SHOW ooly nne
wcman in 10 opposes dlrorce.
LOVE AND WAR -It was
llOt ttlat her' Mrny officer bus.
band fltrced her to address
him as Major, that's not what
bothered her. What shook her
was be insisted also &he salute
him everytlme he walked into
t:l,le room. Upon hearing about
that, a ~ilwaukee judge
promptly granted her a di·
vorce, thus setting a legal pre..
cedent. Mil,itary men might
gjve it some th9tJgbt. Too
mlich spit" and polish around
the house now can be regard-
ed as grounds for goodbye.
OPEN QUESTION -How
tall b a tree 15 feet shorter
than a pole three times as
high as said tree?
JUST ONE MORE PUN? All
right, a Texas mother, whose
three boys pooled t h e i r
resources to buy a beef ranch,
named the place "Focus" with
the excuse it was where "the
s un 's ra ys meet .''
Urforgivable, what? ••. FEEL
A COLD coming on? Better
drink a lot of water. That's the
advice of a U.S. Public Health
Service doctor. He says latest
studies show tha-t's the best
way to ward off respiratory
ailments.
Your question! and com.
menu art welcomed and
will be used in CHECKING
UP wh.t:rever possible. Ad·
dress letters to L. M. Boyd,
P.O. Box 1875, Nttopart
Beach, Calif., 92660,
WillNixonHaveOwn'
Teapot Dome Issue?
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Democratic senator says there
are haunting indications that
the Nixon admfnistraUon may
be bringing Ille ghost of
Te.ap6t. Dome back to life
under an old, but forgotten
alias: Elk Hills.
Sen. 'Ibomas J. Mcintyre
based his comments on plans
to tap the Elk Hills Na ¥&
Petroleum R e 1 e r v e in
California to c omp e q sate
private oil firms for their loss
of Santa Barbara Channel
drllllng leases.
of corruption was revealed at
the foundation or t h e s c
transfers.
"After the sorry revelations
of the Teapot Dome scandal
had burst into public light/'
Mclntytt recalled, "a number
of steps were taken to protect
the integrity or the naval
reserves and to avOld any
further repetition." ·~
I T'lf"l!f., .... 2$. 1970 DAILY PILOT l
When It Really Counts!!
TO
• Pants all fabrics • . .
Values to $22.00 _____ ______ Now $5.00
• Tops, Shirts, Blouses
Many styles & fabrics,
Values to $32.00 .. . Now 1/2 Price
• Dresses, Summer &
Early Fall ··········-······-··-·········-·························· Now 1/2 Price
• Lots of Skirts .
Values to $18.00 ...... . . ... :__...... Now $5~00
• Many of our Groovie Bikinis
Values to $20~00 _~·· ··-··-· _ Now $5.00
• 2-Piece Skirt & Pant Suits: Values to $30 .. 00 . Now .1/2 Price
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
He said the move bean a
coune eomewhat parallel to
that a hall century ago wblcb
resulted in one of the nation's
most famous scandals -
centered on lhe Harding ad-
ministration'• J e a s e of
reserves at Teapot Dome,
Wyo., and at Elk Hills.
Mcintyre, who has been
critical of what he tenns too
much oil industry influence in
g o v ernmenl policymaking,
asked the Senate Armed
Services Committee to in-
vesUgate'naUonal security im-
plieatlons and the metbods by
which the recommendaUons
were bandied in tbe Calilomia
case.
• • • -5 -GRAB BAG : 5 • •
Along with decades of na..
tlonal reliance on n a v a I
petroleum reserves, "there
hu been a hl!tory ol aU=pta
by private companies to rape
those nserves fot their own
gain," Mcintyre. of New
Hampshire, said in a speech
for delivery today in tbe
Senate.
He noted that llie Teapol
Dome case had culminated in
a Senate tnvesllgatlon Jn
which "an extensive network
••per,.I••• lhe -····Mined ia the Qaick.m Dt.
ner RHt.IU'aat.
C • • e ud f'mlf
.. , how Pod •
ftlll Chkkm bi•
•ff UR M,
• Lots of Jewelry and Things • • • • : Values to $4.00 Now Twenty ~Ye Cents : . . -. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . . .
Sale Starts Wed., Aug. 26th·· 10 a.m.
, , 4
Fashion Island Shop Onlyt
\
•
l
l
l
l
•• • • --1-.
I DAllY l'llOT
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl
'lJllnner, anyone?"
$4.2 Million Suit
Filed in Gun Death
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A
wunan wbOse husband was
accidentally ki':'td by police
during a narcotics raid has fil-
ed a $4.2 million suit against
Los Angeles County, the State
of California, the cities of
Vernon and Whittier and five
police officers involved.
The suit, filed Monday by
Ptirs. Linda L. Dyer, sougtit
damages for Mrs. Dyer and
her two childrell, plus $250,000
each in ampensation ror Mn.
Oyer and every person in the
room wben her husband, ·
Henry H. Dyer, 22, was shot In
the head last Oct. 2 while
holding his son Francis, now 3,
in his anns.
The suit suit charged that
Vernon policeman Frank E.
Sweeney accidentally pulled
the trigger while h I s
automatic rifle was pointed at
the floor of the apartment
above the Dyers' wtiere the
narcotics raid took place.
It also accused the officers
of "wanton misconduct" for
allegedly drinking alcoholic
beverages on the job, entering
private property without a
search warrant, carele• me
of fireanns and Ullng the rUle
contrary to regulations.
A1so in the apartment. at the
time of the thooting Wert Mn.
Florence Mehan, Mrs. Dyer's
mother; Mrs. Dyer; Francia
Dyer; and Mrs. Dyer's sister,
Susan Mehan. The Dyen'
other 90l'I, Jonathan, was not
born at the time.
·-----· .... ......... -,,...... . ..........................
., ........... Cl ......... ,, ...... ,. .a.. .. ..,. ....... -. .................. ~
ENROLL NOWI
O•aes Start~ 14
Write or Cell
-···~----
•
Coltw M ........ N..,.rt .._. H ......... 9"dl-..........
1175 Herber 11.C. fl Pelm SHppi .. c..t.r)
• 641 .. ,40 11151 Mctl• St.
147-ltt7
I • I ........... ,,,. ........... lbolll lhe 1111 H&R lloct lrlcollle I
, TU C:OUIM. Tiiis .... a ""lllllt llr lftlo!Mloll Oft'1 .-rtd pltCIM llM
.... IMI obllQttlon lo •flnlll OP 1-24 1
I """ I
I CITY I .... """ •
CLIP AND MAIL TODAY . ·~
. . . . ~ . . ~ . . .. -. ..
Walkouts
Hurt Farm
Production
SALINAS (UPI) -Cew
Qiavez' farm Wllon m'lftber11
shouting "la buelc:a" and car-
rylng their red and black
ea gt e banner, effectlvely
crimped productloll Monda)l ln
"America '1 Salad Bowl"
Because of their strike for
union recognlUoa, only :is I>"" cent of the lettuce a-eW1
worked in the SiUhu Valley,
aald Les Hubbard for the
California COUncll of Growen.
Go'lenunebt wuri.s noted
that only IO railroad cars of
vegetables left Sallnu, in
comparison wtth the usual 250.
The AFL·CIO Fann
W o r k e r s Organizing Com-
mittee walkout is aimed at
l•ttini growers to l'e«J8l1ho
Cbavu' organilaUon. rather
than the Teamsters Union , as
bargaining agent for 10,000
field workers.
Although there were five
trespassing arrests, p o 11 c e
'
tf
.,
-\
Callf ornla Flnt . ,.\ .. l
MarinCourtroom
Opens in Prison
SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -
For th~ first time in California
history , a court convened in·
side a , prison Monday -in
Marin County , where
previoualy a judge had been
killed as three convicts tried
to escape his courtroom.
Judge J..,ph G. Wilson took
his Superior Court se11lon lo a
San Quentin Prison employes'
auditorium, which is Inside the
gates but outside the state
penitentiary's walls.
Outside the gates,
persons demon.strated
heard protest talks.
1 0 0
and
"People outside the prison
walls have no rights and peo-
ple inside lhe walls have less
than no rtgbts," said Tom
Hayden of the ''Chicag o
Seven."
Attorney Marven Stender, of
the National Lawyers Guild ,
asserted "we will allow trials
behind these prison walls onJy
when the defendants are given
a trial by their peers -fellow
prisoners."
Stender, w b o represents
thrf:e Negroes cbar1ed with
killing a wblte guard at
Soledad State Prlaon, also con-
tended that "• public trial
means the unfettered access
to the courtroom by an the
people.''
Inside the auditorium, .Judie
Wiison oet hearing and trial
dates for five convict& and
remarked that "once I was on
the bench, everything teemed
nonnal and it went smoothly."
agencies noted no violence the 01'1 T•'-l'Mtt
opening d11Y. PROTISTORS GATHER OUTSIDE SAN QUENTIN PRISON WALLS
California
Jobless Rate
District Atlorney B r u c e
Bales said he would hoJd an
actual trial within a month at
San Quentin to t.st the pro-
gram's legality. Be l n g st.ruck are SS Inside, Judge Convene• Court in Soledad Prison Death C•s• growers here and in the Santa ------..:....==--'-----'-:_:___:_:___:.:_:_:=_:__:.:..:.::....::..:.:=-==-----Rises Again Judge Harold Haley, ts, was
Maria area 135 miles to the SACRAMENTO (AP) shot and killed at lbe Marin
IOUth. Jet Returns
After Bomb
The Salinas Valley, site of
noveL!I by John Steinbeck, pro-
duces 70 percent of the na-
tion's iceberg lettuce -about
$81 million worth yearly. It
also turns out carrots, celery,
brocc o li, cauliflower, ar· Th tM d _
8-year-old Tells Tale
Of Killing, Drug Use
Unemployment in California County Community Center
reached upward again in July, when an accomplice rmugled
la.test figures show, at the 6.Z guns to three CODvicts ln his
percent mark with "8 ooo courtroom. 'I'11rff of blJ kid--
per90ru! out of work. ' napars also were killed 1.nd
The State Department of · the olher Is charged Wlth
Finance said Monday that Ju-murder.
Ucl>okes and strawberries. rea a C LIVINGSTON (UPI) - A
Chavez, whose strike and bizarre tale of an S.year-old
boycotts Corced vineyards to SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A boy forced to take drugs and
recognize hls union, was not Pan American 707 jetliner
present when the vegetable bound for Hawaii was turned a father who admitted killing
walkout started. He ls in a his wile in Louisiana has been
retrtat recuperalinl from a back over the Pacific for a related to au'thoritles here.
fut he started in a d.iJpute search here after airline or-The boy, William FeliJ Vail
with the teamtters. ~ flclals .11ald they received a <t\.-Jr., walked into police head-.1-r:amstel's, who now say telephone call that the plane Chavez ~d represen~ field would blow up if 8 $lOO 000 quarters and told officers he
hands while they bargain ror . ' was "tired of using drugs ."
canners and packers, had .... ransom was not paid. He said his father had forced
algne:d vegetable growers here A Pan Am spokesman said him to take LSD and !lmoke
"bile the Mellc~Amtrican Watern Airlints' payment of marijuana "more times than I
leader stul wu busy with the $25,COJ ransom two weeb ago can count." gra~ pickers. "obvioualy set a new paUern The boy also said his father
U.S. Panel
Sets Hearing
On Welfare
in bomb threats." admitted he pushed the boy's
The Hawaii flight with 138 mother out of a boat into a
passengers and IO c r ew lake near La ke Charles La.,
mtmbers resumed Monday even though he knew she could
after officials said they found not swim.
no bomb. The anODymolll caller said The boy led authorities to a
the plane, which bad taken off camp on the Merced ruver about two miles from Liv· an hour earlier, would blow up ingstoll, where officers ar-
SAN FRANCJSOO (AP) _ within an hour if the ransom .... -..a his f ther went unpaid, officials said. r~l.C\I a • William F. The U.S. Department of "We felt that in this in-Vall, 31, and a woman friend, Health, Education and Wellare Sharon Hensley, 21, of San opens a bearing today to stance the whole thing was a Franctsco
determine whether CaJUomia hou:, that we d1d not intend, to Offtcers" found a bag con-
has failed to comply wilh ctr-pay ransom," the Pan Am tainlng four capsules of what
lain welfare rei\J]ations and spokesman said. was believed to be LSD and
therefore ~slbfy could Jose Officials said they followed charged th e couple with suspi-
nearly $1 billion .in federal aid all instructions given by the cion of possessing dangerous
granta. m.ale caller except for paying drugs and contributing to the
J. Andrew Brooks, an HEW the SI00,000. Neither the delinquency of a minor.
hearing examiner f r 0 m airline nor the FBI disclosed The boy was described as
Portland Ore., will conduct the the instructions. "ti1&hlY intelligent" by ln-
htaring on the government's The Western ransom was vestigator1, who said he ap-
claim. the statt has failed to paid by a bank messenger on peared to be in good cond1Uon
follow regulaUons in program• an Anchorage, Alaska, street although be said he had lived
Involving 1,731,500 we Ir art after a telephone caller said a on a d1et of grapes and water
recipients and $977 ,12.8,000 in bomb would explode aboard an for about two weeks.
funds. airliner at a certain altitude. A bag of grape11 was the on·
riverside camp.
Mer<:i!d County D e p u t y
District Attorney R o be r t
Qualls said authorities from
Calcasieu Parish, La., were
due to arrive in Merced today
to investigate the situation.
* * * Parents Get
Exam Order
ly figures showed an increase1~_,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;a;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;
of 61,000 jobs over a year
earlier, but the labor forcel
outstripped that growth with
an increase of 132,000.
Unemployment was u p
sharply, the report said, ll)
five major metropolitllll area11,
Orange County, San Jose,
Bakenfleld, Fresno and Ox-
nard-Ventura.
San Diego held steady and
the Santa Barbara and Vallejo
areas both registered slight
improvements, the r e p o r t
said. Elsewhere, unemploy-
DIAMONDS
AND
ESTATE JEWELRY
PURCHASED
South ~••t ~•••
l rltlol •t tho S111 Oi990 Fwy.
Coit• M••• U0-9061 SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -ment increartea were termed
d -~ • .,_,.~~r~a~tt~.'~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mental an physical ex-
aminations were ordered Mon-
day for a state hospital
psychiatrist and his wife
whose three c hildren ,
authorities said, were caught
selling marijuana at school.
Police said the children,
ranglng In age from seven to
nine years, told them their
parent.1 -Dr. Wiley H. Bill·
ingsley, 46, and his wife,
Diane, l2 -had give n
them the marijuana at home •
dGot;-~
2'40 E.CoaslHeoy., CoR1no del Mat'
Do;I~ 9 :30 +o S:J> ,_1: 67J·171/0 ~•iidow• n. +oS &olA -M..t.rCharv&
ANNUAL AUGUST
STORE-WIDE SALE
(SALE ENDS AUGUST 31st)
H E w • s s 0 c i a I a n d No bomb was found. ly food officers found al the
Rehabilitation Service says\-----------'..::::::_..:::..:::.:..:=.=..:::...:::::: II~~
California has updated stan-~.
GAS LOGS
24" Twiste d Pin• with multl•let laurnar dards for aid to families v.·ith
dependent children, but the
u.pffard adjustment was not
.lllllflclent to meet required
AFOC maximums.
Pepperdine School Of Law
wit h
PROVISIONAL ACCREDITATION'
by the State Bar of Cali fo rnia
Committee of Bar Examiners
••a· .. ,.so Sale $)950
Many styles and sizes r. chooM from.
Come In and see them bumlng.
150/o and MORE
ON
FIREPLACE SCREENS
AND
of the fin est banks
in Orange County IS NOW REGISTERING STUDENTS FOR ITS
ACCESSORIES
flrelet .........
.... 442042 Sale $25so
""""'"' Ftd...Z lkpo.TU
ln.suranc.
~''°''
are named ..... .
A FULL
SERVICE
BANK
l
NEW THREE·YEAR DAYTIME COURSE OF STUDY
in addition to its ori 9inel
FOUR· YEAR EVENING COURSE OF STUDY
with both courses leading lo a
JURIS DOCTOR DEGREE.
CLASSES BEGIN SEPTEMBER 8
CONT ACT: Mrs. Loulae Nelson, Director of Adm I~
slon~ Pepperdine School of Law, 12345 Wa1tmin·
1ter Avenue, Sant• Ana, Ctlifornia, 92703 (714)
531 -8581
•Provisional accredititation became errcctive
July I , 1970
I
100/o OFF
ON BAR-B-Q's
20°/o AND MORE ON WALL DECOR
IANKAMHICARD ~
MASTER CHARGE
'illMjd J. J:u
PASADENA
12tl E. WALNUT -SY. 2·21361 MU. 1·1067
...... ....,., ............. ftOI .. Ji.H
ORANGE
102 TOWN l COUNTIY-(71415;2.017• .,.,. ..................... , ...... ,,,.__,..., '" "" .
------=<'·---....,...~-~-".~=~~~·--~---- -- -------
T11tt4ay, .l.llf\ltt 25, 1t70 D~Y •llOI '
LEGAL NOTICB LIOOAL NO'l1C!! Base Keeps600 Acre~ Ll!OAL NO'l1CS
'
••
'
l,,;;::;-1 •••• -.-,.-,-,-.--1 -----~ .. ~------.... ,,
.-
~ ClllTIPICATI O' 1us11•1u c11 rlPICA1'I ., I UMfll11'-,tCTITMMn MMI ,t(nTl.US MA/Ill ,IC1'1'TIO\tt NA.Ml
Clln'l,IC.t,TI Of' ll.ISINltt. Ti. .............. • urtlfY tMf ere '" _ .......... ~ Ct1111\' "' It o;ion. '"' ........... -· c.,IWY -i. 'ICTITlitVI MAMI ~ • ....,..... t t Ort-CllYllt\i', --I M"-t IXlt 0 ' Tiit .... MMlll ... Cftfif'r k II Ullo Ct l!frwlllll, "'*' IN flc'lltleM fir"' -~"'9 I e.1"'"6 Ii 4' 1iWI. l'ltw.ort (~... 1 I I t IXP
LEGAL Nanes
=::, ·~.~~ ~ ,:i;: : .. ~!u~ci:, ~ :"...,.'= ~~:"·,..~11io;;111~1;:'0' ,g:~::m ,t~~::J,"'': :~"r::n~
Ill._ , ..... -.. •L.us.old -IN-....... ell;&:;_,.. f!illl ·-'*" ltllOCIAlll .......... , ..._..,.._.. :--H~ "0,'Cft~::i~ ... .: Tlltl'll Ill .,_. tMI ~ ... """ It -.. ~ ,,. .. ftli..n~ _.., 9f ,.. *'01'-1111 .-, """" ' ,.... llf ... tol...V.. ..._ ,.._ Jt T 0,...,. .,..,.,._, ..... 1111_.. Mme ... NII ft ,._ fll 1-.ldWd It :':"'~1111 hill.,_,._~ et ••IRflte
::::::..~ Nit 9111 1111<1 If ,...... II ti ":.n..v ~ ~il*C. lt\6 N. I I = Wt'"'1tlat .._..,.. JJI "" °""'*"' lJ'M 0.5-~I'
Los Alaniitos Plans--w-Ex pand Ho rising
L06 ALAMITOS The
Navy .ia not -letUng 10 of the
enUre l,SZ4 acres at Loe
Alomilos Nani Air Stal1011.
Tentative plans for about 600
acres of (Mdular housing t6 be
bullt 1t the b1u:e aft~r it ls
closed as an air facllity next
.sum mtr have been r~leased
by the Navy Department
Rep. Rlch•rd T. Hanna (0-
Anahelm) !Old Los Alamitos
cJty cou.ncUrntn •bout the
pl1M this week. H a n n 1
hln\3f:lf had l:ittn briefed on
the detalll by A 11l1t11t
Secretary or the Navy 1'rank
Sanders in Washington.
Hanna said thlt the ad·
dltional housing on the bast:
would serve personnel &ta·
tione~ at the Loog Stach
Naval Stati011.
AddlUonal racllities such as
schools •nd a PX would be in..
cludtd in the 600 acres. Hanoa
:said.
The news ends some of the
sptcuJaUOn on what the N1vy
plans to dO wilh the acreage at
Loi Alamitos whtn tlr-opera-
Uona stop at the laclllty June
30 nexl year.
Hal'bll said that he has no
lnform1Uon on wbeUler the
Navy has any plan• ror the te-
malnl!)g 700 acre1 a t the base.
• Other Defense Departm eDt
agencies :tnd ther. llderal
a1encie1 would have the op-
portunity W use the land If Ole Na1 makes no more bldl f6r
the and. If they show 1no in-
terest. the city of L o s
Alamitos ex~ to develop a
regtonel park on the land. It
would Include. a shopping
center, • lakt, •nd rreenbelts
on the property.
MlcflMI Ml.ltllf, mt Cllft Ol'IW .. ,lowtr, S.!lt• AM l!IMllll, H-' ·~ C.llf. ~i ... ~~ C.uf. N..-t I Mdl. (ti. ' I~ ,.,.,,_ l lbtt, W S.11 Jot-D.lt• ,\llflnl 1' l'1t ~II ·...._ (N!Mtlt• 0.ltd .WW.I a 1'11 owl!\ 11 Ut\111* I Mdl (llftlft. W. -.rw ., ,.~......., Mlellfft M11lltt" ~ ott-. ~I a4, Int ITATI! OI' .CAll"'OflNIA. S"ltl ti (4111#,., Orff* .._.,.~i
Stt lil f/f C:t tlftMI•, :...""':' CW!lf'tj! h • ~ , OllANO• (OUNTY1 Ott ~ JI, lfJt. .... _ ,,.., 1 Nol•rl' °" AM.111t 2li 1'1tr .,..., ..,.,. HtlVY ""'lll!ldu on Au9Ull 11, lfJf. ..,..., ,,,., • Net•rv ""'* fl! .,,. t-Mill I I••• W&Ollflll' ~II( 11'1 I M tot Mliil ...... ---~ llklltrtl l lMr ;lllllk Ill •>Ill IV .. lcl lltl• ,.,_UY tHWftif" Oorftlly M, 0\15'""11• k-11
.,...,_. MlcNet Moliltf lMWft .. fl'lf lt tll" tf C1lttorn1e, ..... ,_ Cllfillitiii 'Wt llltlMr H-••f :: ::.c~~~ :-tt..-:;rllJr,~=
lie ttll *-wllolll ~ I• l~r!M4 Ofell" C•t't' ~II f9 -t. lit tJ\11 ..... ~ Nf ~ .... thf tcllitoll 1f1t .. Ille Iii tM Wllftln IMl""'*" W •¢11MWl4-Oil 41Hvtj t,i JfN, btftft l'l'lt. 1 Not1rr nt"1f II 111toKflMll t. 'flt Wllll\fl !.-.. rtl!'Al) llfW a .
'"' 119 "'°" .. IM ...,,.. ~le Ill •M tot 11111 11111, --llY •"""""* W It~.-....... flt ~.. Mll.011.10 O '°"OS
IOl'•ICIAI. SI.Al) I ........ ,,, or ...... kll......,, HIN'+' .... -· NOl•f'I' ~ie . C•llfll'l'I• LOii A. )flUON ~ ,~ •114 tllclltttt .,.,.._ COftkt.1 IMll l"rll\C.IMI Office In ~ Miit • C:l llfWlllf ....... ~ "' "" f9 114 """ --'"""' •• °'"" 0.-11191 ~ ,,lllc .. I 6lfkt Ill ...... M""'9 1rt t1,1~tl""" 19 1M wlllllti Ntll rt Mlle, Clllltflll•, MV c-··ltft IJ.tltn
Ca Ft 0.-1"9' C_.., ir.trv!l'llnt t llf ~~ TIMI' b • ,tlMIMI Ofl'it. 11'1 J-f1 tm nyon ll'e M"f Clfll'll'llwltfl l .olrts ltlllH lllt ~,.... Or•-COUftlY ... :;::J"'" o: .... CO.'( OtllY ... 11 •. AWWI u. 1•n COFFl<;:IAL ll.All ,,,., (IJ!Wlllultn lil•lt9 "'11 ... II lf1' 1GJ.7'1 l"Vtllltlltd Of-<•.t Otll'r Piiot, ~ I , Devil J-ti, 1'14 ' ' "'"""'' u ""' .._~ 1, e. IJ. Nottf'f' 'VOik. ca11tw111a ,,_lllMll OrMM C•ll Dtlll' l'ltof, l-----LE-G-AL--NOT--IC-E __ _
Stab.on No'v ''10 1rn.,. "11Mlttl ()Hitt ·~ "'"""'' IL n .. a....-I, .. °"'""" ~l'f 1m IPi-11 --------'------Ml' ~btlM f.Jfltft • ~ LEGAL NO'l'ICI 111tt1 i1,~1•11 U:GAL NartCE e1a T11'1c..t.T11 .,, 1 usor1•••
f!vtllsfltd Ot1• _CNI! Dtll'Y l'llol, ,ICITtOtll NAMI I 0 ti• ------------· JA.wW :ti IJ'lf ,_,,....,.., \, I, IJ, •Aa *I TIM ,...., .......... etttttv ltltl I'll II n pe1•a on tltlf 1f1' 1"1-1fl ..OTKI 'rO callMTffS ~IN 1 IMll!olu ti lll Crer lwd, NOTte• ... UtTl llTtON IU,.l lJOa couaT Ofl 1111 °""*· (lllNn\5-. """'" "" lkltti-
Med Center
Ward Due
OllANGE -Orange County
UC Irvine Accepti1ig·
Environment Pu11ils
TO c••.t.T• ••c111uTT LEGAL NCYI'IC!: •T:i• 0, c,.._1,0 •• 1 ... nta nron -., •11.L Jo N t: ,. ~fODJESKA A AeW, 11.._ 1:i!.~~:/1.c.c.1 T~iin ' co~':.Tl.:.. OR.AH• =•1 ~u':: •:ii:-~ M!,~ ".=:;
•113 000 fire station is now serv. t+OTICE ii "''*' '"'"" .. ...., ·~~·••01 couaT OP' TMI 1!1t1tt"' , ... ., HAWICIMS 0.U•IH .. ~ ...... Ill IVtl 11111 "*'., ~· " ti ~ • Crfdltwf, ol I!. LllC'OY KrotSCh 11'1111 l lU t ' . flOI ..... ; ing Modjeska Canvon. M. KtMKh. Dftlttr"I. wNM """""" 141• s A.Tl 01' CA,.,IPOaNIA .... NOTICI! tS.,Ht.ltEIY Otvlll ... !tit Lt•• J. u..--Melvftll Coll• --f lUt ' l ··~1 E -~ ii m Mtthll Alff!Mll. .,lllol TMI COUNTY Ofl O•AN•• cttdll•n " ,,.. 1DOW MtMllll 41«fclenl 11\tM Ctllf
, •re new ac y a -. , •• -,1.., • , ,, .. ni. ""' ""· "-"'"' 111t• ·~ --111v1nt ci.1"" HllMI • · ' WlltY.., ""'"'" 1 ' NOTICI: OP M1All tN• OP' l"ITITION 1 .... 111t1 d«Mlnt ,,.. ,_Ir .. flt Ille D1tld Aw\111 IJ, lt1'
?i1odjeska Canyon Road hoUse1 :., -;::: :.w::.ni:.. ":"' J'o "::c':.'. •o• l"llOMT• ., ....... AND l"O• """'' wtlll IM ~nMrr """"" .. 11'1 STATE OF 'c'Att~O~~
a rescue squad and a new hcvred l"..-h', """'" .,, ..... NOt•n It l•TT•lll TIST.MIMTA•Y "" lffk• ., Ille ("" ., IM .. ~ OllANGIE COUNTY•
pe -rdlng to y,· ........ IEatlf StrMI, ao ........ Cti.Ni" "' lH•I• ., lE llOY MAHIW SMITll, t11t1lltd cwrt, II "' '"'"'"' ""'!-.. "'11'1 °" ""'-! ,, 1tti. btltl'I .,,._ • H011ty
rv'.m r, a......... • ... L.M ... Its, 51 •• ., c Hf9nl... C.ff"'· 1'111 llltCIUt"' vt11t"'"-,. ..... ~, .... ,It I 11o11'i. "SI I ...-.-.It
Medical Center officials tt.· tRVlNE -UC Irvine is ac-
pect to reopen a 15-bed portion cepting appllcalions al both
of the hoopllll's Ii · b t d
ps')'chlatrit ward by m id -the graduate a n d un-
SepUmber. derira duate level for what is
A abortage of N giste:ffil billed as the state's first
nunh due to the dtath of two educatiorial p r o g r a m in
nuntt Ind the lllneeS ot three "EnvirOnmental man 1 g e ..
mart "coincided with I re-ment."
PJlnUn& ldd ttmodtlln1" pro-Chancellor D a n i e 1 G.
tJ'llTI, • tp0ke1man saJd, Aldrich, Jr .. said today the
causing the partial ahu tdown. plan is "aimed at educating
P a t i e n t s n e e d i n g professionals who will be able
hospltaliiatlon I~ r e c e n t to respond to the public de--
weeks, have bee.fl referred to mand for a cleaner en-
~11lropolilan State Hospital. vironment.
Norwalk. The county contract.&· 'Ibe propam ..,.ill combine
for more than 200 heds at that courses in e n I i n e er i n I .
facility. biologicB.l sciences and social
VaCaUon periods usually scieras.
make it d.tfHcull to recruit Students completing the
regi1tertd n u r 1 e 1 , the course will be eUglble for dual
s pokesmin said, noUng the degrees in two of lbe three
~ward is e xpected to be staffed areas of study.
' fully "In Ute next few weeks." 'The program is in part due •'-----------·--------------:: D~•tft Notices fll•tft 1\'otlre•
d El-A ...... • -I • -· NOTICE ts HE•E•Y GIVIN Tllll dll'l'9MCI" '"' offlc•., lier IOOl'titn· ..... n • .. ......... --~ lo e1paruion O( (aciJitieS at 8f en uucr u iJwrm&n. Tiit H....t"f lll wllkll IM S.Cllrl~ lllll A.. SMITH tit 111111 11«'5 ,._ MllC:Mlll., HAIT &. l•ISCO tU Cll'IC tHMrld U..-. J. Ur-kllfWll ~"" 1"
UCl's School of Engineering. The original Ure sta Uon w as ::_..~;~~. '-1~1~ ~;,_,~~1, 11110ti ftH' 11r,. .. .,, !111 a1111 ,.,. 1':.!.ne. c1t11er °'"'', w"'·i '"'" .,..; c.11111mi.. !: :: w~'i,~''\.:=.:r:-M ~~1!:
built in 1947 after retklents 1utt1ltur1 tllf fur11r1t11"'' of HV•r-Of l111tr1 T•t11r•tnta"' •• H Hiit...,.,, wllkll ll 111e •'-< Of OU.IMU Of 1nV" td nt titellfed """""· Th j I bu.Id! . ,.,. l'f'itlllrt'r MW 1«11 ... 11 a MtrlM rrlettftel ftl wtikll Is rt11111 i.r furl'* UM«JllMO I!! •It "''""'' Hrtl "' (Offfclll SMll
e \1ew eng neer ng 1 ng r a11ed enough money t o f""'"'· 11111M. COo.itill' or Or•I\ ... s1111 11•t1Cu11,... arid 11111 lh• 11rri1 •!Id •l•c• " tM 1'"" Of Mi:. 'f'°'"1~1;!\':! JOMlll E. o.i. ... 11 will house the environment h 1~ d -" t ruct a ctuttr111• 111C1 w.1• -.-11 •• Ill Marlt1e tht 11me Ill• """ Mt '°' tou• "'°""11 •""' 1 "' 1111 • ,.6111., l"Ubllc c:.mtrn1• pure ase a ..,.. an ....... s illlM Vin-" l"tlirrritc.,. l4t1tt11w 11, 1r10. 11 •1• '·'"·• It! 111t "' 11111 N1tk1. ,,1nc.1,.1 0ttk• 1n
studies program. fire hall The oltl sl1Uon was TM 1ftrna1t1 .,curllY lr•MtI'"" "'m courtroom of ~·tn11t11 N1. s,,!' Mii ott..i ,._,, 1,,u10. Or•• COU!llv • ' , "'" bl COl"llltl'flll'lll .. ~ It tritr iM MIT 4llW W11rl, 11 100 Ct;llt Ctllltr Drl~t ..-ut, I" Nill HAWICINS M~ C-IJlltfl Eit!ru
pr act Icing professional dedicated 1n lrt0. o1 s..ttlnbtr. u10. 11 1o:eo A.M. 11 ""cu., of s.m1 AN, c1111 ... 1111. .t.drril"'"''''111 ., "" 1.1111 J\lf\f "· "1'
Prior to 1941 thert was no lk11tr11 E. Mrltl • .o:so w111t1w1 l lvd.. D.lt.d Aw1»t :u...,"~,. • ""•'"'"• N11""'1,,,-.oen1 'utttl...,.. o.--. c-• Dtll• l"\1o1. engineers at the graduate f' ~-t· . • '""A nyo lvllil 'It. L• AA .. lft. c111fan111 ~ 111 w. t . s,'•'• MltCtllLL. ""' • .,• W• Autu•T u. 's 1nc1 """"'111r 1, 1. ",. ire ~Jon 1n 1.uc ca n. w1111rntr1t1. C-IY t •IJ c11t1c C•"' , 1n..1a
level "who want to intensify n-1~;on w•• supplied bv the $0 f1r •s kMwn ,. "" Stc:lll'M l"•rt.,, c u,nOH •· TMOMAI 1 111111 """' CIHlffflll ,-, V =w · ..,. " · 111 bull-nttnet i ncl ,__ lltod bf llba Yllllhltl IM., hlte ll Tth us-hll
their training in the en-Silverado and Orang-! firt sta· tM °'"'ior ..,. 111e lflri4 ,..,. 1111 HSt, ati.mua o.ru. c•~ 11411 ..,...,....,, 1w AMIWltt"1tri. •••· """ Toi: 0111 ns.-•11111 •rt.Jan l'llbll~ Or•"" c..,1 D.111'1' ~11e11. vironmental problem areas,•• tions. Residents wert notified oe,..,, ;,""'"'' 21. ,.,. ..,..,_ tw 'tttllltltr ..,_,.. 11, 11, u •1'111 S..lltrlM 1, NllJC
Aldrl.ch said, also ma• "•'roll of an emergency bu the aoun· s..:ur..i Hrt., l"WU111tc1 °'.,... c .. 11 o.u~ '11o1. 1t1t1 1..-1.111 caaT11"1c•TI °" 1us111111ss
J "'" J LAD Drut Cf """""' 25. » a/Ill ~' I, 111' -JtcTITtOUS ft-II
in ''"'a Dew progaam. ding of a larae railroad bell •r 11.lr>I•• E.' Mirr• 1M2·7f L!GAL Nm1CE ""' .,..,•ltll'Mlll oo c...iltY r11w .,. "~ h · · ''"A A_, of of 111 .\tlitl\lhl COt111ue1111t a bus"'-" ti ft'1 Ccimw.11 anging UI we: YIU,,. . one •1t~ 1. Mfl'W LEGAL NOTICE ,-atM o. .. M1i1r111ftllotl a..c11. <•lltoffl•. "°'" CooperaUng in lhe new pro-the canyf:ID residents. .._ w11i1111tt ltwc. ""'" ""' fk1111ow firm -If iu1L~•s gram are the environment.al Sttltt "* .....,., c111T1P1u r1 °" au s111v1ce ca.. t11111 ""'' 111c1 """ .. LM ..._.., Calif. ttMS Clitll'ICATI ell IUSllllll l"tCTlf lOUS NA.Ml Clfl'I_.,.. Ill' l'lle ....__ _._ ....... resource engi',1eering group • rve111,... a.-.,... ,.... o.11., '"°'· P:icTiTIOUS MAM• T111 VN1t<•ttn1t • «ii1rru ~j'' Nmn "' l'urr •1'111 ,,ec.. ., r11ld9rlc.•
under Dr. Jan Scherf i g, '"'''"' t1, 1'1' 1J11.1' Tiii ,_..,.11tn1C1 do clfllf'I' r11w ... ~1"' • Dull-• 11 ~ ,., '"Is 1o1-...: M Le d colllluctlnt • lli!Jl,lnftl ., )11 N. H••M( Ch.lb tit .. CDllt ,,,.. •• Ct "E ~~'It I-T ........... n cor..-u ..... 8SSOCi8le professor of CiVIJ ac 0 t ......, l ' llYll $tlllt NIL CtHIOl'!llt lll'ldtr Ille Int flClllllM tit"' ntll'll tf LAI( I HUtlllllllOll .. Kl\, (lllMrnll
cngineerln1: the deparlment ld,.UAL NOTICE ttct11iW. tll'm r111n1., GEMl
0
N1 •M 11111 I Ol!CK co .. tN1""1111t1 "''" 11 _. CMrlDlt* o. ,.,.,..,,., "" c.,:mr111 ttM tlrrt1 11 cornpOIM ot llM tolhN-1 ... PllMd GI Jiit fltllowlnt "-• ¥tftOH Or., H""'llntl"' l .. d\. C•Hlol't1l1.
of papulation a n d en-N p """""' _ ,..,"""'.I~ ...,. 1.,. •lt(h n•"* 1" 1u11 ,.., 111c11 11 rnio.nct o.i.11111 A.UtUtt l. 117f.
lru tal bl I d. D ew Ost , .. In t M rn~ ., ••• lillll'#l" ... 11 ~lo,U: CMrtflfl• 0. Ttvlll' v nmen O ogy un r r. . frJOTICt TO c1101T9•s lflllt ._ ,,,_.1 1 .. i"°'" 0,1.,.., FrMtrldl J. FalM'•· 3:14S CtlGtldt 1._ T, MH• .,
Peter Dlxon, professor of IUl'•lllOI COUit OP TMI CHI• ,,.,..., c;.u~tilt. ln .. C••I• ,,,... 5111• of CtHl(lt"141· °''"" C-11':
b I I ··•"T"•'•'•'••'T',"•'•°'"•I····· JI-T M-'. 1m lllloMI OrlVI, tNl"ll L. 0111t1. SI» Cwnlrv Ch;• Otl ""'""' J, 1'10. Dlftre -· • lologica SC ences, and the ORANGE -Ch 1 Jim 1 n ..., ·it • C•ta Mnt'. c.11,,;.111... D• .• CD1t1 Mesa Not•"' Plltllk Fn ~ tot -.1c1 SI•••· school of social sciences under II I Joh M Leod '"· A"'6Jt1 t1111c1 •1111111 21. 1•11 o.,.. 11 .t.w .. 1nt __ 11., _,.. "-T. Mui •1111
Co ege truS ee n IC l!:llllf of O,v.llEL •VOY, tki CAN 8tttle L. ,,,._, frtOtrk• J, F1Drt Ch•r10tt1 0. TtYIO• kl'IOWn lo "11 lo
Dr. Gordon J. Fie Id in g • of Newport Beach has been Auov, Ooc:111H. Jim11 T. Mlil<• 1rv1"' L. 01111n "'.,,. ~ w._. ,..,,,.. ••• 1WK•1b-. J r f S f . . NOTICE II HEllEIY GIVEN te lllt lltlt ti Ctlilattill . Sl•tt DI Ctll,,,,nl1, Or4not COlml'I : eel IG !IM Wlll!lti ln•lr-' t rloll
LEGAL Nal'JCI!:
assoc1a e P O e s o r o appo1nled cha irman of the crec111Gr1 of tnt • ._. """" cltcldoeflt CW!llY "' I.•• •-1" u 0n .t.1,;1ull 10, i.n, bttoi• me. • N• tck,_1ec1..s '""" b1eu1ec1 '"' ........_
------,11Dia 1, O•kclllt Memorial Part.. c;1,ndo••· geography and administraUon. Campus Renewal P roject of :::,: ~~~::"",':ufr~"'1~ •ri:,IM~ ' °"' A111ut1 11. 1tto. ""-l'fll, • Nal•rv 11"' 11Pub1'!..~ec1·~,.,:i-:;,i::1~ ~!~ ':".:d <OFP'lc~e:.L~11 ~''"' ••vmolld IHder, IMO NewDGrl WtslcHtt c1111>11 Mortin,.,, Ol•eclD"'. Students in the program will th" College's 1970-71 capital with 1~1 Me1111r., voucM••· In ti.. off!CI :ublk; :~1 ~ 'ti!.,.!1'~~ ';;:;:1~ ~"'"~Olien llnown 1o in:. to bl "" MOiano Pu&lk. C•IUornl1
••vd .. CD•'• Mn.. 0.11 01 c1••th, A110. ono complete the core curriculum f -d . M 1111 cl•rt ot '"' 111ovt t111111te1 _,..,, or :.• k e ~o int ,, ._ thl "'"""~ ..,. ...... :.i,., "'"'" 1,1 iu11$Ulbeil to •r111Cltt1 O!lk• 111 ft. S11rwlvN ff Mii.. H1rry &H<:ltr, Jr,, ' E O , • Un Campaign. fO •rlHlll !him. Wllft Ille ~ -•·'' tlOWft ' , ...... -.. wlthlti Ill! w\llllR ln•tt1imefll ltlCI iKk-1t<lt+d Ot't""' (ao,mlr ., .. Ill '""' , ' I •A I l•••nc• . ""· "'" 7t. ell! ot c1111h, In II lhr II Th al f h If d n\lelltn. "lfMI llfllllflllil\lll II lhl llffki """"·" """"' ••• ""ic:r ~ .... ,,.. MJ CommlHioti li-1•• • Mii• •· ......... '"'' t""c~ ...... ..," n . 11n1e11111 o1 L•...,.... aeldl '°' a ee areas, as we as ego o t e renewa un 61 ,.1s •"-.,..· llOll!lllT ._TOMS •r'ICll 11111r-i 11111 Kt-*'IMI """' •· '""" •i<Kulld 1111 11'"" • Ju11& 11, 1114 Wnlcllff ChtHI, WldtilfOl,'f, 1 AM. J7 ~ ..... Survl\'fcl "" two 1IS1tt1. ,,,,. required c 0 u rs e 5 I n dr1've .,, M~ 000 to be ... ~ for NIC~LAS.. KOUINEll, .. y E II I, Klfllll ,,,. lltr\t. COFFIC1At. lEALI ~ubllsl'wd °'-C-t Dtll't Ptio1. ""ll•m•'ll, F1lr,.1w111 M-111 '••-·A k H. Om · _..,, llOCU '"' <O••IC•A' •e ••1 Marlon I llMloOll W ltllff ClllHI '~"·"·•rY Dlrldon 111 M. Mc tlll of 1111. Nebttilo.1; ,~ U h · d , . D'ANGELO t. GIVENS, HDO W!111llrf ... • "'" · ~st 4. II, IL D. 1470 14'--7' " l l NNlt • · ,.,. ,,,,... DDnilll• RMH, .s11em, 111111111; mai.i11:ma cs, p ys1cs an remodeling-and exterior pain .. ~ao,1twirc1, La1 "'""111, canfWnla fDllSI, e"er!ew Gant.. Not•,., Plltllk • c111flr"lio
' MflMW, •. Ii, McKtnrll, Omlhl. 110 .. ,,., chemistry. I of . ht . t' b lkl' '#hid! II '"' pt1c1 "' b\lllMU "" "'' Nolfrv Puclk<•lllornlt Prlnclotl otl1ct In LEGAL N011CE A~m '· Dont1!1. )OU c ... 11~111. cnta tonlthl Tui snr J·JO PM 1te11u1tm l ng e1g UIS 1ng U tn~ undlriltlnecl "' ,11 "'111.,.1 Nrlllfll"' 19 LD• Mttll• Cwl!I., °''"" °""'"' 1'·95•. D•1• "' °"'"'· A~o. "· SU<"Vlvtcl Ma•s. 'WHnuct1~, f AM, ti&111 11 st. Through elective courses, and tot.al landscaping of the "'' 11a11 of ..... e11<;1tHn1 wtttilft 1-.ir Mr Camrrilulon li••1•11 M• CIWMllnlt!I E~..irtt ••• Mlt .,, wllt, &t .... rl¥; llll'tf tonl. 111""1 H., <••<•I-<•••·•I< C•·•" '•-·"· -~··· ,,_ -· II••• --•'•••-• -, Aut111t 1, 1t1J "°'II 10, Im NOTIC< TO CO• .. TOOO ., P11G111hi; M1rt1" -E. 1"4 Mart I'. ee.., .... Mccor,,;kk L~•~;:. "'.:,1,~ ;;: s tudents will learn how lun-campus. ---l~k~' -.... ~ P'O~ _, "'1 ~\lblllhtd 0r1,,..$kC115! D1lll' .~'~t •ubtltlled 0<111111 Co•st 0•11¥ •ilD•. SUl"IEllOI COU•T OP TH• °"""'" COlt• M.,,., 1111•r. Mt1. """ ""''· otre<1..-,, dament.al principles ca,, bear A -ant from lhc James 1>.11~ •utu11 21. 1tN AUlllll u '""' tlmllll' 1' · '° Aut1111 11• 11• u •nt *1ft'l'lbe• " sT•TR o" cAL11•o•N1• 11,..111ou1. 1..oft• ll•adl; bra•I><'<. JOHi>ll . e• , • llD'N"AllD w. DlllENIA lt111 1.,,_ lt1'0 tolll•N JOtl Tl4l COUNTY 0 1'
O<"r-"i., Ll"IC"'t~ Pnt11:. Mlclll•n~. llf•trv. •0 •A1tE on environmental problems Irvine Foundation of $75,000 E.>KulOr Dt -w111 oa..t.11101 ""~"'· t l"M; """'i.m ~~· T11u,.. w11111m "'· 1t•rt. 6!41 w.,_.. s ... t , ~uch as air and water nnUulion h l ad be ectlved o1 "" at>Ow .,.!Mii -.c..w.1 LEG AL NOTtCE LEGAL N<rl'tCE Ht. """"' ...... AM. boll! 11 ~I. Jo"Clll .... (HllOllC ?Ot. '1un•lnv!O<'I Bltcll. D1te er ""~. yv as a r~ y en r • lOlllT '-TOMS Esl1lt ., DOL.LY HALL $COTT, •ho
ttiu>'d>. lnt'!frrenl. t"'('Od St--~~··~ Ce..,. Auous! n . S..Nived rw wife, l'"rancis; and tnYJronmenta} degrada· MacLeod said. NICHOi.Al. 111.0LLllflll , MYlaS, NOTICi OP CONllltVATOl'S ,llVATI I All :t6H lu-11 11 OOLl.Y H. SCOTT, Docn1H.
I I...,,. l tllt Ctll1 MtAI Mortu1 ry, D .. two deuthtt ... Silll' Sitallt, ~nit AM; f '-==============;JO•AMO.LO A e1Vt NS SALi OP lllAL ,.O,••TY NOTICl TO c.alDITOllS NOTICE' IS Hl!REll"f GIVEN i. •11\9 ft(-~.. JDl'CI Oo11Nrl1ldt, N.w Jersev; t i•• Jon. lr ~ Wlhllln ...,iw... .. ........ 111 lll~llllOI COll•T o" TM• uWl'lor• or """ ••• ,..,..... oMc:Mlftl
"OWl'iLL iu•vlved br nvt •rtnckll!klrtn. SWllcO•. Students completing l h e T .. .... -:i-Lii ........... " ............ , Ill THI ... ,. •• ,. •• COUll!T ... THI STAT• OP' CALl,.O•fflA POii ..... 111 --l'llvltlt c .. rm .... r,,.,"" H!I ... l111\)m Howtll. ~J1t e11r.~ A ....... WHt1e4dt~. I l"M, l'edllc View (lllPll. d d '• · .., Cl • lie T•t 11111 -..111 STAT• OP" CAl.lflO•NIA •Oii f N• COUNTT OP' OIL\NOl Mltl dlcedttll ••t r-ll'td Ill ltlt lhllT\o
• I• -un ergra ua"C program r.1 en-... -. •lw '"' ._.. ., A.,.;...,1 ._ •••vtw THI '"""'' 0, •••••• "'-.......,. w1"' 1rw1 M';t1MrY v.11Ct1er1 ... 111t offk1 ~\II M~. O.I• °""· •••· ""Ol•.::c:t lw l"iKlfk ,Vlew Mortu11Y. ···-·~ i surtlwd ~ !'Ml 111uti111tr1. Yvt:tltllt l!a&-SflAW vironmental management will AllMl.riM 1 ,. ..... , "-· l"u 111.1Mo1 0ra111t , .. ,. oauv '"''°'· lft 1111 Matt ... If ttw c-••IOnll'-111 IE•••t• .t MAllVANN Hl!IMI ECHEll • ., '"' c11r11 of"" ttiov. .,,1111tc1 tturt.,,.. ~e~. Fulltt'lllfll Vll'llnla l•dt•, C.0.1' A•IM a. Slllw, Jr. 1'°'1 S!aftllY LIM. be bl d d k TELEPHONE .Au..,at ll •1111 S.7-i.t I, I. IJ,, lt10 LEVE•ETT CH.Allll5 M O N II 0 t • 0tc11MCI. • flt Pf'ftlnl '"""'-wl!ll Ille M(naart MIN' brDtft•r. Wllblll' f". H-•n. c11a. H11ntlnvlot1 a1tc11. s... .... 1vR bv will. a e to 0 gra uate wor 1571·10 C"'5trve1M NOT/Cl IS HEAEIV GtVl!N "' 1111 voucn.... ID Ill• w-1111111111 II Cit -•~.· sl• ••indct1Ut1r.., •1111 11• •re•t· ,,,1,, ••• ••-·-·· •• ,,,, '"" T••~ relalad to environmental p-'NSWERING IUR• 'U NOTICE 1s HEt:ll Y GIVlH t1111 crec111on ., •hi •11taV• 111mtc1 ~ vouNG. PllENNEll ' Hl!WS, JU Wn1 ... --~ """ ., ,.,. "' .... '-·-c· THIE~ GI.ACE MON•OE. •• ""' all --111vltll <11111\J •••ln1! Tlllr41 St•""· Stnlt Alll, C..llforftlt. ft7t1. fr1"11d!'ldre~. """'" ,.,n,••I •e•vlce,, McKllrt11n: brolher, J1dt. Sll•vk11, bJems in socl;ll sciences, I 3 5. 7 7 7 7 LEGAL ,,v,, c. CbnMnlitor "" Tilt ..,.'°" ar\G "'''' et IM u J11 ~t "'' ,_Int t. fl141 Wllkll It "" •Itel ol bu1tn111 of tlll W•'i~yt~y. ll /ttfo, P,v.Ulc Vl•••J Cllt~. Wte111etd1y, l PM. Pteli: P1ml1Y COIOfllll bJ J . . L~V&llfTT CHA.Ill.El MO N rte l, lhlfn, wnit 1fM """"....., ~I !fl llf'dt'11tnM tri Ill ....tltr• -1tfftl"' 1,
lnl!•m•M. Mlrrl• C~m•l~n ln O~lo..vle, 'F~·~-i:ii•~l;;""'";,i;;,;:·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiii;;;;;Oii;;..;i.,:ii.Oi:i:O~IY;i;;O~r;;iieiin~giiiniieiieiir~miigiii;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;I ~.-.. Contll"V•lol •!loll I """rrltd mtll.. wltl'I hll "'' Dfllc1 " tlll cter-• the t lll0¥t Illa Mttl1 of 111d e1rcooen1. wllllln fOo,lf ~ -~I•. l'Klllc Vie·,, MDr1uirv,1' --C•aTll"ICATI 0" lll&INfSi wlfi Joflllflf 111-ln, will Mlt 11 lli'IYtlt 111lllttd c-.irt, II'" I• "-' l!Mrn. wl!h ~!Ill 111.,. tllt llnl tulllklllon of tl'llt OlriK!Ots. P'ICTITIOV. N~J "le. te ltll 11'911111 a1111 Mil blddtr, ~-Tltt lllC:llli•rY 'IOt.IClltt't. to tllt IHI-netJqi. ~0111•1 Thi WM11r1!1M11 llOH rii"llf\< Ill' It cw.. fht WmJ •114 condltlont lltr•lnttt.r m-O.rtlfl\ld 1! Ille l1w ollllltl "· MeO'#tll O.lld A1111111 U, Jf111 lllc"ird Wlnsla~ Jo.'".t,. '°'"" lt, of IJ'll 1111C1lnt 1 "'11"'°" II lt11 ..... ll'ls .i.Y,., tiiM'\fcl, i ncl llUl:tlfCf t• (Of'lfltmt llon IJ'I' Ille & GrH!I llY: llOl 'l l T W. att/GGSI, C1_pll01• Hilt l •dll-t lld H'~~l•rnl 0•., Ntw..ort 'llf•cll. 0111 DI Hunll"'""' 8•tll. Ctollflll:nlt, """" thl 'uHrlor Cwrt. °" AUI Ull 11. 'l"· .. lht ,uo E. (1'11•111111 AYtnue. Dr••· 11111..-H•tl tlttlll. A11,u1t IS. Silfvlv&Cf In> ,...,,.,,, Tldlll-.i• firm Mrnt tf dl!SIONEa 11ot;r tf •:DO o'cloc:li: P.M. or 1111'.-~fllf, Ctllfornl• "'6t. wllkll 1• lftt 111.U Cci-l!•KUl.,.1 GI "'9 Will
f'"I·..., J~y\, ol Nt•vPO(! •••cll1 l1!1'1er, ,. ... 8.ICS t M 11111 M111 llrm It CtrntOllll wlthlll llM HIM •tlawecl In> llw, at ~.,_ of b\11lnt1• Of IM "'"""'llf llfd fft I ll IJf"" lba'tl ntlMll """"'1t Wll'tlt1n J1nt1. l61 Ant1•l111 1ll11•, A1•· If !hi lollowlt11 ""'°"' wllHt 114flll In flCI ol Wll!f!\111 I Sc:Mlidl. •llWNVf !tr minor• Hrttlt1ft11 lo 1111 "'l'I ol l'Mllt1 ,,,.... I N..,...
,1:r.t1 Jon••. NtWPClrt 9•1cll. r.:rtVt•ld• Now p LAY I NG lull tl)ll tllef ti rftldlfw.• fl t 1 ltll61tt• HMI C•nwvitor," '''" Wt1h:I!" Orlut, ltld dl(.ldtftl, wlllllti "'" ""°"'h alter IU wolf T~ ''""' fff'lc~·. r~ur•11Y. 1 I M. P1cll"t Vltw . Jltll H111111. 10211 J1t1 Ctr or .• Hu~ '4111• ~. N.-1 B1adi. Ct llforril•, 111 1111 11rtl ou~nc111on OI tftlt nt11tt. _ l t11!1 A11t, '-Jllonl• H7'n Mr..,..•ltl l"irit. 1'1mlly 1111~'lt1!1 ~I ltnt1IO!I It.ch, CtUI. f2Mt. !hi (ijlll, 11111 t1111 lnt1rnt In fM nltll 0.led AUtU11 1, 1tl'O, Tt...,__: (71') '41-4»1
wltlllnt ,. l'l't~e mc,..orl~I c·n1•J'!'1ll1111s. I Dll• ........ U, 1f19. Of 1114 C~•I• 11111 Ill• wt11, In 11111 """•• M. H•rt A~ Jtt C•l•«llltn
""'' conltlblll• i. l!'te ~,,. .. , ... .,,,"' l"DGI Jtck Mualll .. """ retl ,.......,., lltl(l'llMd •• to11ow" Adrrilnlstf'tfl"IR "' 1'111 ftlt t• f>uetlll!lll Of-CotH DlllY """'· FUl'lcl, N<!W"IDrt H1rbor H!~ .. ~rh()OI. Peel-lt11t .. C•llMI •• Or1111t (CMtty: Loi 1• •IJlll 1111 t10tlhllS16rlY ,. IHI ol " 1r 1llov1 "',,.,.. Clletclitnl AUtuH IL ll •1111 $tolttn..... ,, ..
fie V1-Morlu •-. l'lr..-ton. Oii ........ • • lfll, liottwt 11'11, l Hotl rt 1.111 16 1t1 tlodl UI of lM ll.t1utldlvl1lan MdlWIN Ollll fll lt10 IDl·10 MAlllUJO l"llblk In Ind fOr M141 s,,, .. --llY "' CorON Del Mar, In lhl tl11' "' • .,, IOll •T w. 111001 •lllllf•rticl J1ck Nlltlll ktlOWft lo 1111 It tit N-rt INCll. counll' of o ....... 11111 s• •. Cll19""'ft Av-"t\'fl M1rrvlo. Ate ts. of u •., 111,.not11 ""' "'""fl wf1oMt "'""I It t11•kr~ to Of Citltornit, 1s ..,. ,...P recordtd lti On1111, C.hfwoll tl"6 ~~. HUll!li'l!llOll 111ch, Otll DI d-11111, IN W""lll !Mir-' •11111 IK~lld... botk '-•• " ,, et Ml<Ctl5-nMUI ,,,,.,., T1h ~"" P•JUll
•AU9Ull n . SUrvlw41 .... Ut!l, Flt1t•I~. "' tJ!fe!illtll IM NIM. In "" ottk• ., "" c~ll' rtclN'dtr ol' ""'""'' .... """'l•ltlr•lt".. '''"'''''' '' , ...... TIO• ... 1"crtvll, ••v. LIO •ll'll Jot Mau.ifDI 0 I c bl \SlALJ Mid c_.., ~ublli~ld Ortnte co.11 01llv t lltt,
fl'lrM dtUft~lt"', Allltl\I Ltll'll""' Julll . n y on a evi"si"on J .. n L Jobi! Tiit ttrms ·,1111 condl!lclrl1 tf Ille 1111 AlilUlt 11. 11, H tnll Stottmbfr I, TIANSAC~:g;-IT~:u~U~l==S UNOlll S•""'"1 1 ... H1ptilnlt Lorino; 21 1r•f111. NDl1no P•blk -C1!1ftf11141 1r1' C1sh In lfwflll MDt'll1' Of 1'111 UllllM 1'79 1.U-10 THE ONOEISIGNEO COAPOllATIO"' cJ'lllclrtn' '11 lritl-il•lnecP!llclrtf't. llOllfY, l"rlllCIHI Offlc1 In Slates ol' Am<lrkt In llM tmoufll tf •T dote ........... certlf'I' !!WI! II Is _..,_1_ 1 Wtdllfld•Y· I:• PM, Smlth1 Cllt"'· II• °''"'' Countr 11111 It perclfll Of !I'll ~M lltke M , DQAL NOTICE -• •-"• ........ ~.,, Thu•9'c!IY. I AM. SS 51!Tlefl Mr (llmmllllol! £ ... lrn bl paid 11 1111 time ol' IM Ult. •lld !hi ~ buslno ... IO<':ti.d II HO Nau.u. Colla
•nii Jude C..ltltlk Ct..irdl. ltilt•"""'' AH M9rdl 2, 1111 blllrv:t of tllo calll, If •til" It Ill ttlll """'' Cttlfortilt unOtr Ille lk1lllot,i& tWm
•-· .. c-11-, L-8e1dl. Smlllll '"'111111>111 Ortr•M C•ll OallJ l"llO! ~ Int 1T1t11lllf o1 11111 trt Mid rMI a.At: »'1 nt,,,. Of ltlCAL .U!OCIATl!S, IHC. tnll -.,.. ~· • ' ..... OTICI TO COIOITOo• llllt 11ld """' It COl'l'l-.d of lllt lollowl"9 Mottu1ry, Olttc!Or•. Aue, 11, ti. 11111 '-"· I, II, lt1t ISU·N pr-1v. Tiii bll1nct tf ,,... ~M M ~. _11,_ Wl>OH r "'' .... _ i ,,.,..Xlllf ---.,-,,-c-,--~-,~--lll'kl lhtll bl MCVfed "" • --··....., ll,ll"ta10• couaT OP TMI -~ _., Pl' nc ....... -
... "'" LEGAL Nan-"°'' •I'd 11••1 dolcl of ltVft Wltll """'"' st ATI ., CAl.ll"OllNIA PO ii "-'•fl'llll Is II lollowl: l!dwtrd H. Mlntett. All VJilo of II lust I -~t Hr annum. llld .... TM• COUffTT OP OIANO• NAMll OF COlllPOllATION: llrkrt' H•"'cltrl LAM, Hv~ll"9lool tffdl. Dtilt ll'lilwY N;t!I to be t ll cllll IM H "l'tlllt ~ A...,.,P Ellc11'11'ffl. lllC.
.,i clt1!11. AllPUtl tt. SurvlvW tw wilt, NOTICt 01" IM'TllfTIOI TO wllfl!n lO °'"'' trom lhl fttt f1f UW lllt. lrlt .. If IOOAll •• WIT~lll, Ofu•~ .,~·INC IP.Al l"LACI OF aUSINESS: •11111; son. Edw1rd H .. Jr.1 1l1U9tllt~, IXICUTI llC::U•ITT AO• I MINT All bl1ls Ind llfflfl OT>Ull llt In writ, NI, ,_ N1•M1u, Ca1!1 M11t. CtllPDft1\1 Wllztbelh M1c0orllllf. Gr1vesldt lt..,ICf\ .CStu. •111 -111, U.C.C.I ll>d rKlll'ld at IM lflltt of Wllllfllll ~OTICI! IS Nllll!IV Gl'(l!N to "'41 Wl'JNllSS Iii ... l'lf !1111 I'll! _., II wtr1 held lod1v, TutldlJ, 2 PM. G&Od j Nollt• Is lltrtbr •IVett lo 1~ cr~llon 5d>m1cll, tllll'M'll tw. likl c~1,.,., c,....lhlr• "' 1111 •"""• n111'1H dacldltll Ju111, 1'1t llllPlltf"cl C11m1l1r1. Srri!tll1 MGtl111ry, •I E.M.O. INC., • C•lllorni. CtrNr•Tilll. 11 UOI Wfllcllfl Ori .... , SVfti no, NfWIOl'I 11111 i ll ill.,.fotlll llt vl ... tlllll'lll a .. 11'111 IAltJOY ELICTllOlll,.S. INC.
Clrl(:t.,... Dlbtlll', WhOH busfntJI t ddrlM 1. ~ll Bntll, C1tllorn1t. jll l ll'f 11 .... '""' 1111 llM .. 111 dtcfOll'lt 1r1 •MUlrecl "' 11141 !Corffftlt kll) MOll lN Ollvt ......... Suite 7!1:1, HunlltitlGn •••ch. llfll PllbHCt !leri '"' It'll• nolk:O •1111 1111111'1 then>. will! lilt MC•M"' vou«wrs. In AU1n Dl ...
ll<1i.t1d ,i,n11r1w M<orln. ~117 Eldotl SI., (O\lf'll'I Ill' Or1n11. Sl1tt of C11!fornl1, th1t ll\I rritklt11 of lllf M1'· 11141 c.n.trv• lllt elfl« If Ille Cllrlt. Df lhl 11/1'¥9 Slcr•l•rt · Tr14111r.,.
COSll M1w. Dllt of lff•tll, Allfllll n. • JIC"urlll' In"'"' II •bout,. ti.i tranlff tor ......... "" rltfll Ml rtlttt • ..., •Ml 111111i.ci COUrl • .,. lo ,,_, ""'"· Wllb lllclllrcl o. "°""le~. $11rvlvt11 b¥ melhtr, Mr•. Len• Morini lt llU'JH !:. LOUGHllf:Y •1111 AOOllEY II •1t11 1111 offl 1-l'lto ntctl .. rY ..-11.u, II lttl """' ''~ 1 111..e dlU~h!•••· .ht "'"n. Plmtl• •1111 D. o•ow. "" SkUrH ... ,..,, ""'"' • otN· ..!11111 1t''int. llor1l111111' ...... tfllct: DI lltr 11t9mtvs: ITATI 01' CAl.111'0IUU .... tarblrt t ~.Alttn1 iw. 1ltttr1, H111n • bullnt11 IOclr111 1t1 221 Ml ln llr..t. Hun-' TNILIM GllACt MONllOI OUlt'l'l!!!A. C"ll,EHTEll t. I AaHES COUNTY Of" OllANGI, 111 Goldmill 1n41 J111111tt Or1t•1n1 t~rttl llntlOl'l IMcll, C.U"l'I Of Or1ntt. S!flt of C_.,.t lor ti rllll ,,.,_ lt:Ol llT S •• A.NIU, .CSU MICA.1111111' Of! 11111 ilfh .. V Ill' J"\lf\f, A.D. lfi'O, Wetllen, 11.1.;, l et tllll LUCllll Mtrlti. Ctllfort1l1, 111 orClll....,, loctled 11 tt2 Mtlti •NI nll ll ... -llvO., '· O. ltl lllt No/:j< l uc,._ lioltjll'I 11'11 ~rY IC. Oulllol t NDltrJ lff'lktl wltl M ~1141 Wil!IMlftl', 11 AM, llr .. t, Hu11ll1111t111 ... ell, Cwnt1 tf llVl!lllTT t H ,t, ll l l I C1ltt. ~ Wflkll IS Ille I~ tf lullllt ltl •1111 IW 11111 COUttl't 11'111 Siii•, Or1r>1t, Sltlo of C1lllOt'!l5-. MDNll:OE tll•IMH of 1111 wndlfl"""' Ir> t i fl'tll!ln rtllcll ... 1-.1n. dul'f c.ornrril1tlofttC en41
lllcl P•DPl'll' II 11ncrlbM '"' tMtrtl ' ""!"'I"' " "" .. 1111 of 11111 ftcldlllt. Swotll, HnONCIY ._,.. ltkNrO 0. ••: All MlliPlfttlll1 ..... wl•, lllll •tltO Ill WITTMAllll i~.tl::T wllll • tow t'Mnttll 1fttl' lllt fl•st MllQ. llOlltrkt t f111 .Alttn Diet ~-11 mt It ARBUCUF; ' SON ira•., 11111 TltAVIL 1111Vlce 1:M11lnt11 1 wHM11t v kllllli.tt flClll flf llllt ""1a. " thl l"ro11c11111 11111 '-r•tttT •
W""llff Moriulry k-ti HUNTINGTON 11.t.c;H TIAVIEl ... :..,,...,. W "ctMfl"l'•fw Dtt .. JulY II, Jt19. ftffturtf', r-ilvtl'Y, of IM ,<tl'INtlU ... IEltVICl ll>t IK.iled ti DJ Mtl" S!tMI, IHI WlllCMf l rlft Ht1Tle111 "· WlllMI' I'll.II llloUlltd 1M wll!llti lt11l.-nl Ill
U7 E. t'tJ' st.. Costa l\feu Nun11nt11111 1aac11. Ctuftl1' " 0111111. '""' nt l!xk.Vltts., ""',. win 1 ...,..,, of lfMI '*"'°'""" """"" 11ernH. -f,Jllt ti Ctllf~ ti......., t..a. Ctllftnlla nut tf Hit 1tiov1 """' .....,. 11111 .n-ltclHd to "" NI well eot• Ml-4,.. A.11 ktcwttd ttcut"ll'/' .. ,,.11'11111 of 1111 '" cn fl •nn ovaYt.t.. c.\al"IWTlll a 11111'111111 uecuted "" """· 111 w11,,..,
• Mfl)t Wiil Ill ... ...,,. .. aM ltle ._ 'l!Olll/lld °''-CNJI ClllY l"lltt, •.t.aNll Wflill'sol, I !WI .... IMl'-141 Mt 11'1'1' 1111111 11111r1t1on ,...,"°' ff141 111 ., •fw ""Mini lO. :t1, u. 1,,. lstl·1J ''' 11oa11tt •.,•4•N•• .,. .tH11111 '""' tflklft -1 "" u., MwJ ••L-MQR'"''RI-•'ll Nr of Sttllmtlll'. 1t7L ,, t:• 1t. M.. u u IMtAtttutt '"' ,.., "'lt'lk ~l11t11t tlrll ,....,.. wrntlrl.
Utl ... ·•'I:" .r.o ,, '-ill'llrll C.111. Finl /'11t1ent1 l fllk. '· 0 ••• 11116 fOff,ICIAL SEAi.) Conn lllel M• OR ..... 17122 •tlefl • ..,11 Hllfll_lftrin Mkll. LEGAL NOTICE N..-1 •fMll. Ct llt ...., MAllV K.. OUllll!T ClilrltY Ii' Dl'MM Slait iW C..jlttt11i._ Teh OUI UI...... Not'" Mllt-<~llftlrllllo Catle MIN MJ 1otd4 Sf !Ir ''~ 14 It'll setVl'tl!I' ,.,..,, WOTIC• 01' SNlfll'~ SAi.i A~::-i:.:-::~Cetll DIHY ftllet Or .... (-'"I'
• IH lllll!Mll "''"'1 •1'1111 llNrll ... WW lW HOUSTON CAlll'OllNIA INVlSTMEHT "-t 4 11 II, U. 1f1' 1•1' Ml' COmtrilNll!I l..,.lrn
11>1 ~ ttr IN "'"" .,..,. "'' ""' It IV •••o ' "-t, U, tt1' BELL BROADWAY 1111fltl'tnl frDlt'I •Iii ....... 1ri1 COll l". 'l•lt1Uff ..... JI.JI. s '· ,,,._., a." WITTMA•. SCMMIOT
N01i11 •1.0tt-r;::.111 olw~" 51.:W,ll<\ ltll*I "' 11 LEGAL NOTICE J:.!':'tcllff Drtw, MORTUARY h ltcl All•Utl 11• 1'11 ~; 1t11 II</' 1111 MunlclHI Cwrt, c-'-G. Celll. 11• BreM "wa;CtRI MHI Ill/Ill E. LWtlltew trll Orlflll (""'"' Jlldlclal Oltlrltl I U,1110• CdUIT Ofl THI A....,..
UW -' .!. A.Ucl~b O. o-(ao,mtv ol Ortr•••• Slttl M C•U1tml1, ITATI 0, CAl.l,OllflllA ,Oa ,Wl\lflNI Ort~ Cot~! D111'Y Plllf,
<..l"_llll_lllMlll °""'" C .. 11 0.111 111111, UPlll't 1 ludtrMnl tnllr .. 1f1 ft ... 11' of TN• COUNTY O' ··~ti Auwll IL ll 11'11 Sff"mbt<' I, L
• -· U. UJt U•l•N HOUS'JON CALl,.OltNJA INYl!ITMEN"f CAtl NUMll lt lftlU lt10 lut.1I
COlll"OltAtlOH: 11 """"""' u'tld~•:= SUMMONS •1~RM1-LAGUNA , voAL N-cE ••••rut Jui.~us ,, GOMrs •• 1 L. 111. sr auc:11:. M. w, tMMELl. LEGAL NOTJCE n "'""" \,oA -VII cllbh,. '"°""'"'II 1111 11111111:1 "'a. II.Of •• .,.,,..., .. ., IM MAllllVH Hl!$Tl!A, •£AMI MORTVAJlY 11·--::=:=:-co,,-,.,,-,,-,-,..,=-•• Jtc11111iv c1ue Oft ,.1c1 111111m1r11 Oft tr11 c1111 JANET HllSTIA 11111 CHA.ALENE HOT1c1 1111v1f1N• 1101 ~ ,..~. HOTICI .. lllUC TIANI'•' ot !ho itlUIMI ot .. Id oeclltloll. I ilt .... H•STll!!ll Trwt1, ''•fntllb 'I' ' • NOllet ii """'°" olvt!I !hit .... ll041nl of 17tl Las'Ulll CUY• Rd. (I ... 1111 .. iW V.C.C.I '"led.,,.... lll'ttlo •Jtlll, lltlt ,,,. J~ll CLAlllNCE I . ft A.1111$, WILM.A I. FAil• Tru5t-Of Ill.I CNlf C01nm1tn111' Coll•• N11 Ntllct It Mt,,,., f!Yt~ "rM CrNllllltl ot ur11 kHltmOllt ~Ill ltle ..,.,.,.,., In •1s. DOIS I lllrllltfl DOI Y, h•clu1r...,, Diltrlct o1 Orinoa c-.in11, C•ll10rlll1, will
•
Of ltUTH l!. l.OUGMllllY 11'1111 AUOlllY 1M Co\Htl'I' Ill' Or•""• lfl'lt flt CeMWt1141, ==llH. 0, TH• ITATI O p rec11 .... Mlllld bkb uo IG 11 t.m. ,_.. 0 . GlllOW. ,,.,.,,,..,.., ""!Iott Mlflftl 411K•!btd ., fll!lll'fl'l; ,. j ........,. ~ lt10. II lilt Pllrcllt1lnt a.I. or P ,~ ... c VI-11141rnl II t21 Mt lr> llrtlt, Hl#!'lflftflOll lob IL ilf ""' tt lti t lKk • ti C0A1Ll ... llll A r. lilt ..... "'""" Mld lCIMOI <llllrk:I IOCtllld ti 1)1' Mimi "'"'" 1 ~" IMCll. Cflllt'll~ at Or•l'lfO. Slllt of Wnlt'I P1rt1;1 ltcllon; M""'1lllllf011 f • 1 A-, CMll Mitt, Cttltor11Jt, '' wllkll
MBuoRIAL •ARI ''Sally Of The Sawdust'' sterrr .. , C•N"""''· "'"'bl.Ilk""'""" •MUI" ,_,., c•tv If H11nl1t1•lort •MCI!.~ .,.rir' .. ~-· 'l:!".·".~!.-.!11• _! '""' 1111111141t will" ltl*lkl• _. •1'1111 I~ · llt mi .. 19 l.M.O, INC.. • Cttlleflllt tv of 0ta1111. 111!1 of (tljtor11/1, 1t1 .,,. ._..._ '" ,,,. rMll l.,.1 C1111ltlry • M....., W. C. fitW• Ctrtaratloft, Tr_.., .... WllM Mlntu ,., MIP rt<Ct•<IN In lG(lll, ). ''" 9' !."!~":., u.=,"~.!. "ci:: ;.~ ":= Olttrlct T_.1 llt!'llll i.r Allllollc UM ~....... t<lllrnt II '· 0. tbs. UL HVllllllFlll If Ml$Cetl1.-i1 Mftlil, ate1trtll , of ltlollltcl <-I Ill lllt ·~ ~IUlttl Ill" "'71 khool VMr. ~ ~~· r • t-EWPQRT lffC.ft. CMl!Y tf °"'""' s111• Ill' °''""" CWl'llV. ICllOl'I M"IUllll tltlMI nu !ti ... c-I All blti •r• II le Ill 1cicordlnct """" -NC'lrlc Vin Drive Mon. Fri. ... 9 °'-A -'--c ..... C...-.& 6 PM Cl lllorfllt, TDttthlr wflll .~ ..... llllWllt''-1111 •ltflfn TIN ....... '""" -lll'Vkl .:. "" l'lllt\KlloM ·~ ClltlclllloM •1111
N--·· ~11111_1_ ; * ., T IYIJ mJ0 ..Hny .,JUr\.. , TM..,.....," II lr11'11,.,.. II llcll1141 tltll!Mflls. horllllll "*"'t tfllll .,_ 'ffJ/IJ DI thll ~ 11-i;..... .. wltfll" kotttOcalloN \lljllcll trt -ll't Ille ltld .... ....,.. • • _.,..._ MISSION \/LO Min.,~ it m ""!!." SttMt, H\H!llt'1'111ft "'111, wtlfWll'IClt = 1111-'114 .,. lft IM '"""' ntn>lll ~ v wllftlll mtl' ~ llCVrH 1~ "" "'~' of "" 114~ Fri, _. 9 PM CWtirr o1 ..... ,.... s1•11 w c.ui.mi.. MIWIM •-'"' THlaTv ,.. 11 ........ ....w..., ""c11t1111t ~., 11t11.c:110o1 f11t1-1e1. : • 9\ 11111 ..--iv It ill'JQ'1liNI In • .,... HoTtCI! 15 ,,..... O!YIN .... tit. 21 nu .,. VI~ llOtlfltil ""'~ """*-ltCll i.l<lrtll" fl'tllll tllMlll wllfl his ....
• '" A~ tlldl .. ""9, tlllllnt,. ............. SWlln'IW I"" 11 IO;• rdlCll .AJti. .tt .,.. • nll 1 """"'"' ,_...,. ... , "•lcllft9 UtNtr't cll«t.. <.-tiflltll dMC,, "" •111·
....... ---L _(_ --\Y/_ -• r ---• TV .L originl(, I.--·~ .............. .Wt tr1 .... Wvtee Mlln L-.. c-""*1tl• "'Clvk (tflltr .... """''"'' .., .. , t41U ~ ..: ...... llDrMll ..,... ....... ,, "" .,..... II P EEKrAMJLY ,.....,gagf'Con~~ :ow -· LnCUtcunsic. ~,,.. • .,,..i1rn•1P4urn1NotGN 11AcP4 °'"''wtttc:lt'l'flf..,.,•Ms,<lliflt1;-_,.., "'"""' tl!Nlldliil tft"" c•••t c''"'"~n11r co1 .... COl.oN IAL FUNERAL T~ve.L 1111.vtca w ,.,..,. a1 122 °""'"' ,,.,. ., c11tftirlM, 1 wtH ..., """ ..,11..., """'°i.w .. .,.,.,,. _ ._,. ., ,,..,.,_ ·~ .n •ll'IOINll .., 111, Mtill StTttt, N1111!lt11lll'I looc.ll. 0Wntt tuelk _,... l'I IM fll9lits! ......,, <Mtf'a(f, w Wiii 1"1'1' .. 1M COWft l'llltl ti.,. 11rc .... Intl of 1111 ""'" Mo1 ti
ROME " Ot111M. tll t• " C.lllWlll•. ''"' tn i.wM ""'*'~" 1111 u""" '"''"' ,. e!U' """" ,....., ~ 111 IM • ...,.lflttt IMt "" bldoHr wlH .... ., ltli. -1 Roi A Thi WM\ ''""'" ""N • '*"llll'l'llMll.i •II "'41 rletll, llttt W.. Worttl ilt MN ~ ctrn11tlftl. IM _,.,.,.. contrect If "" """ ti 1" JI vt. Ill II' tfllf !llt l!fl NI' If s.ttmlloll', ]\IOI"""' ftlltot In l1'lot ~ ~ T• _., ...... tf¥1Ce If llt "'ftrdod It .. Im. lti !1M Wll'll et ftllurt 10 Wtstmlultr ....... STARTING MONDAY, AUG. Jlst. L••af 1,,., 11 lovt~ Ctllfor'rlt. Pim Ht11"'11 .,._,,,, II' " llludl illl1Mf " mli• lie •lllnMT • .., """" ......,. •IMI .nltr lnl'I """ contrtct. 1111 ..-.cll4flt tf • ~ """° l t llk. 111tt •kcll so.ittv1r41, fllolPI'""°" __ ,., ~-•"""" ..., •ICW!ltft. wlni fN _..kilt w ""' .-...., 111111 lfMI tlltt• wllt Ill fotlll!H. w In tlM ~ ''AMERICA'' ,.. .. 11 ... ,II, c"""" "' llYll'lfO. lltlt "1«r• ltilll'ftl w '*'\· •lttNn """" .. _....,. wltftlll '".i • "°""'' .... lllH '""" ,...,..., will •
SHEF •• R UOJIT\IARY ... hann ~ Ctltf•mlt, • 0.1# ., SM!• Ant, c lltlorlllt, .A"'Ull """ H11tll tltfti Ill ""' -llir i.rttli.t to .-111 tc"60t flttTlc.1. r 1:1 "' It tar '' l,.....11 tt 1111 Tr•,,...,_, all 1', lf111 IWllo a ......_ ...,... 111 ..,. """*•· Ne bllMlat """ w1111c1r1w flh Mt 111r 1 ..... ,,.., fted ••• Cablewi•lan M Fn.11 """" •flf _., ..... llMll 1111 J.AM11 .... Mus1c:tt. o., .. """., ,,.., • 11r1H of ,.,;.,.n..,. ,.,, d•n '"" 11'11 ~· ST'lllN~ LIONll ••a"YMOll t11ft•ltrW• .., ""' tt1t\4 .....,, 111.t .,,1. llMrltl 111Ml • 11t111 wt iw 1111 C1H11lt11 1....,..... SU C1emte lt -..1• ~ • -" CaH 642•3260 11111ll'Wtlll tr"" 1111 •bf<IL ,,.., c011t11r ., 0r111t1. w. 1. ,, JOt1,., c1w11 thf '",. ,, truei,tt •IMn'• ""
• NONI!; C.11:1111111 l~1; "*' (~ •rlll! ...... •11kllllt 11W 1"111 11t -tr D.11111 Autvtl Jt, lt1fl. J, Q\11"' . ti !t W411vt l til' Wrtt11llrlll,. ..-1rt-$:\1JTm• Ml•R'l'UARV I' M.o. tNC .. • Clttt. ctrW111en Dll(lll:y WAl.IW~T ... *' Dl l t, CtlAIL tert'Ntllltt ~ 1nr 11111 or In tile b!Od!Ni. ·m .,...... "Th•r•'• Mor'• T• ,,. On "able TV!'' ., ltte!!• M. o•t rllfl J"I•• A l~t\tr uu Wtl"'"' ., ..... 11... °""' '"'°"'"" 2, ltl'tl • 11 •. fl\, 1>., vto V lrtti•I.... lfllllill'1 A,..,_ tl!'Wl"f lH~ C:fllft. fllff NO"MAM I , WATSON
H uoll• .... u---· • ., '"''"' .... P•1tr ., (ll'll c ... 11r Or, Wnl T .. 1 11141 ...... S.Ct.itr'r ol tho
._.... IN S T 'LLATION s1•95 lr•tilflPM ...... "'"'' Ctllt. '"'' AlfWllWI '" ''-llllllft IN.,. .. ,,,,.,_ U"'5ll " "· MONTHL y SERVICE $6.50 ~Ublbllllll 0r.,... CcM" 0111¥ l"ltal, 'llbllt,,,.,, Hutllllltlltl't IMtll Otlff ftllwl, 11'11&1~ °""" Ctlilf Dtll'f ,,i.t, PU!llltllfd Or .... °'" Olll't 'iltt. -------------" ·-----------------------------------------.11"'"'\tll 'J. It" Ul&-l'tl Autu•I n •1141 il!lt"11~•r l. L 1t70 111:1a AlltUll .. 1\, lL !3. "" 1.u..19 Alie\I" ... ts. 1t7111 ,ll»-10
LEGAL NOTICE
"
J8 DAJl.Y PILOT s
Money's Worth
Bad Environment
In:ju1·es Business
By SYLVIA PORTER eltect has rarely been so
clearly demonstrated.
11IE LEAST you must do al
this late stage ls learn what
laws already are on oor books,
what federal legislation is pen-
ding, what pollution agencies
wUI be consolidated into the
new Envirorun<nl>I Prote<1ion Ply11iouth' Runner
Agency (EPA) when it comes
So polluted Is the Potomac
th•t One observer calls our
capi~l's river 1 "pestilential
sink'' -and as 1 result ol the
tact that ror years
metropolllan Washington haJ
poured untold totals of sew111e
Into the river, its plight Is in-
dttd hideous.
Now riumerous com·
parativeJy innocent bystanders
are suffering. For instance,
Prentice-Hall says that hous-
ing developers in nearby
~faryland and Virginia "are
losing their shirts because of
curtailed construction." Even
federal financing of home
buildtug is being withheld until
sewer systems are approved
by the Federal \Vat.er Quality
Administration. The "domino"
into exJstenct in m Id· Here's the sleek and racy 1971 Plymouth Road Runner, the intermediate size Novemtiier. So here goes. The Air Quality Act of 1967. hig~ performance car. Standard Road Runner engine is the 383 cubic inch four·
Title 1 covers Air Pollution barrel V-8. wJtb 440 six-barrel and 426 hemi optional. and Control, provides for the ------------'-'-.:.:...=:....:::.:...::.:::.:.:...:c.::=::.:. _________ _
l ,OOO'S Of OIL fAINTIN&S
WHOLESALE WAllHOUSI
OPIH TO THI PUILIC
$5 and up
161t tE. IDINGlli•, U.NTA ANA
l'HONI~
DIEALE•l W.1.NTIO
•••••••••••• • • • WANTED • • • • Will {iurc h•1• • • sm•ll l1ctronic1 • • M•nuf•cfurin9 Firm • • Principals Ooly • • • Write l .C.S. Corp ..
• Svlte JD at •
• 2165 IE. Cout HlthW•J • • Corona , .. tMr, CalH. • ••••••••••••
designation ol control regions
where two or more com-
munities share a common air
pollution problem.
BY THE END of this sum-
mer, 90 regions are expected;
these are supposed to set air
quality standards and to
prescribe limits on the amount
of pollutants from s t a c k
emissions. To find out how this
affects you, write to the Na.
tional Air Pollution Control
Administration. Dept. HEW,
Rockville, A-1aryJand 20852.
Title 2: covers air poJlution
from automobiles (National
Emission Standards Act). 'Illis
authorizes HEW to test pr~
totype cars of manufacturer.1
to see if they meet federal
emission standards (California
is ei:empt, has its own more
restrictive standards).
CLEAN AIR ACI' Amend·
ment of 1970, has passed the
House, sbouJd become law this
year. 'Illis will_ authorize
testing of any new car,
establishment or-standards for
fuel arxl fuel additives. state
Inspections of cars in use,
etc.
Water Qual ity Act or 196.5.
This gives states and ter·
ritories that option to set
water quality standards or
have the federal government
do it for them . Although all
states have standards, the
standards· of only 17 and the
District of Columbia have
been approved by Interior.
Clean Water Restoratio11 Act
of 1966. This greaily increases
money grants to states, cities.
etc., for (1) development of
improved methods of waste
treatment, water purification,
sewer design and (%) con·
struction of waste treatment
plants. lt has done some good.
but need for Jmproved
facilitiea is far, far ahead of
fund! now available.
WAT ER Q U AL I TY
'lmJ>l'.:ovement Act of 1970. This
toughens water pollution Jaws.
particularly pollution by oil
and hazardous materials and
requires installation or marine
sanitalion dev ices to control
sewage from vessels. The law
al.so imposes stiff penalties for
noncompliance.
'IHE SOLID WAS TE
Disposal Act of 19&5. This
authorizes a development pro-
gram for improved methods of
economical disposal of such
solid waste as trash, garbage,
paper. scrap metal a n d
technical assistance to state
and local governments in·
valved in solid waste disposal
programs. C o n g r e s s is
scheduled lo tighten thia vital
law this year.
On top of these major
federal Jaws are important
state laws. llvlder separate
legislation, California's Air
Resources Board on Aug. I
revised its test procedures for
new automobiles and
established new em i s s ion
standards. The likelihood is
that all stales will be forced In
the future to adopt California's
procedumi, and Prentice-Hall
urges businessmen lo check
now on California 's ex·
periences.
This past June, Illinois pass-
ed a Pollution cootrol act
which its governor claims is
the most comprehensive in the
nation; again, businessmen
should check. Also Michigan a
cou ple of weekg ago put oo the
books an unprecedented law
which allows p r i v a t e in-
dividuals to bring court ac·
tions against any public agen-
cy or private industry they
think is damagini; our en-
vironment; this law WILL
spread.
FUZZY AS it may seem, the
batUe between the polluters
and the protectors is being .
joined in this summer or '70.
So, if you asked, "What might
THAT cost?" I would answer,
"Choose your own figure ."
For all the estimates are wild
guesses and any one who
knows what he is talking about
freely admits he doesn't know
what he is talking about.
'Little Guy' Courted
•
We are pleased
to announce that Savers' Picture Looks Up
Paul J. Nicoletti, Jr.
is now associated with us as
an
Accoont Executive
DEAN W1T1°ER. ac Co.
JNCDIU'OaA.TZD ....... .,.$ .. ~
SSO Newport Center Drive • 644-2·292
Newport 8Hch, C•. 92660
'
NEW YORK (AP) -The
developing competition for the
ordinary American's savings
dollar is not likely to abate for
some time to come, but just
how much the ordinar y
American will benefit isn't
clear. -
True., in banks all over the
nation be is being enticed into
opening new accounts with all
sorts or merchandise, and
someone with the desire and
time to keep, let us say, a
dozen small account.s revolv-
ing can pick up a houseful of
goods.
But all these gifts serve to
obscure the fact that the
return on savings accounts.
the interest rates, are froien
"""'"··''~~~ llOlftlllllrftlDDrnl•e
SR·IYI BANKIN6
Pti¥KY "d ..,. 111 "'"' ••• -'°" do JOflf bJilijftl at Newport 1'ltional 8llt. TOI CIO relu io
I OlfllfOftlb~ 119 dllir-1 lriood!J,
dMerfal ttl~f tnip:ts ,,... -.,;clJy aod
eff<itnt11. II'•• -of fG!'"" ,.....i-
that,.. 011 lool IGntml to it,,... busy dar.
Coffet ind •ticioos ci*ies t<e
...;~ble 1o 11t1p"" "'" -.. Pf"id• '°' wiU1 Olfbtlndit( ......._ Eniol fNI
CJtniriufJ lliqw --
·-
• (OHYI NllNT omcu SRVINO OllANOI COUNTY
.vr,.rt_ ... Mlc:tw!IOll It MIQ\1hltf IJ3.lJJI • ..... Offiot "7tUt 1tJtllllMWN 547-1141 t1i1ct PM.,._~ It ComMflwtlH:lt 11J·Z900 •S-,HilllOtlkt HttWlt h 111·1290
s.,ttlw otfct ~"'tor« PllAltlil '42·1511 • • ...., Offtcit £nt C11111m111 ft SW. Colltlt 171.41411
Wltktfff Mee Wtstdlff 11 O.Ww 147-3111
Sul ludl ..... ltdllfl WW!f,Stll l1Kh 5K·Z7J1 • ~ HIHtOffkt ltisutt WO(ld, U111n• HilblJO-l200
at levels that barely keep pace
with inflation. That's the real
reason for the premiums.
Nevertheless, some recent
development.! do indicate that
perhaps the future is im·
proving for America's small
savers and investors, who
have suffered from
discriminatory practices dur-
ing recent years.
-Brokers who scorned small
accounts during the great
volume days of the late 1960s
may very well be reconsider-
ing, now that volume has
dropped off to a level irJ..
consistent with prorlts.
At least some investors who
had been ignored by brokers
have lately been receiving
those little "From the desk of
•.. " reminders with the timid
suggestion, "Time to invest
now?" Maybe they need the
little guy after all.
One of the more unexpected
inducement.s to :imall in·
vestors came with
Congressional passage o( a bill
designed to raise to S'h. per·
cent from S percent the in·
le.rest rate on government
savings bonds held to maturi·
ly.
This is the second one-hair
point increase in a year, and
finally brings the rate to a
level at which the small in·
vest.or can at least stay
abreast of innation. As it was,
he was losing.
So also was the federal
government. For 20 straight
months. redemptions exceeded
purchases of savings bonds.
Some bonds acquired under
payroll deduction plaM we.re
redeemed a I m o s t im·
mediately, depriving the
government of funds and fore·
ing it to run up big book·
keeping expenses.
Another development meant
to entice the small investor
and his funds is a change in
the nature of .savings and loan
institutions, which to date ha~e offered investors little
more than a repository for
their funds.
Beginning In mid-Sep-
tember, these institutions may
offer bill-paying plans that
some observers suggest ma y
be the forerunner of checking
aCC<JWlt services such as of-
fered by commercial banks.
The change, annoWlced last
week, will permit the S&L
institutions to pay t h i r d
parties designated by the
depositor. Presumably. a
depositor may have all his in·
stallmenl payments m a d e
from his savings account.
At first this seems like a
r a t h e r >nslgniflcant but
\\•elcome change, a mere con-
venience, but pennywise in-
vestors will be quick to
observe that money in a sav.
ings and loan acrount earns
interest \l.'hile that in a bank
checking account does nol.
\Vhile these developments
are small indeed. they do in-
dicate that some power is
being returned to the littlf
saver and investor, who large-
ly found himself shut off rrom
the action during the great
boom that burst.
As the downturn continues.
power is being returned to
ordinary investors and, in
fact. some industries do not
try to disguise their depen·
dence on those small amounts
of money.
He does count after all.
Today's Stocks 'foday
Peddlers
Protested
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP)
-.The biggest consumer com·
plaJnt about Nevada does not
involve gambling, but fast·
talking from land dealers
peddling "paradise" that turns
out to be a chunk cl. unusable
desert.
"We get more complaints
about fraudulent land sales
here than anything else," aaid
State Atty. Gen. Ha r v e y
Dickerson. "I never hear
gripes about the casinos."
Dickerson spread on his
desk an array of attractive
real estate brochures he says
are mailed to all parts of the
country, mostly to elderly
couples.
"How would you like SO
acres of paradise?" asks one
with a photo of a ran<..'h house
with trees. Another sho\VS a
silverhaired couple smiling
down on a paper that says
"deed." Just mail a $50 down
payment, then $25 a month
and pay about $3.000 for "your
own beautiful JO acre estate."
Many looking for a place to
retire send in the down pay·
ment and a few monthly
payments before they come to
see the property, Dickerson
said. \Vhen they find it is ugly,
has no water, no electricity,
no telephones and no nearby
placts to shop, they stop
payments.
Salesmen refuse to return
their money and resell the
property.
Most oomplaints are dif·
ficult to prosecute, Dickerson
said, because the mailers
"m-erely skirt the truth." They
show men fishing, ·snow-cap·
ped mountains and horseback
riding. They never say it's on
your property, it'.s "nearby"
-within 100 miles or more.
The Attorney General plans
to ask the state legislature to
adopt a law similar to one
New 1'.1exico has pre\•enting
these practices . It would bring
the dealers under the state's
control by requiring licensing
and would outlaw all fonns of
misleading adv~rtising.
Dickerson did not know how
many were operating !hi! way
and he refused to speculate.
However, he said throughout
the sagebrush-<:overed state,
land was being sold that would
have been used Jong ago if
water could reach it at
reasonable costs.
Pollutants
Paying Off
For Ash Co.
NEW YORK (UPI) -One
of the first compal).ies to
di scover paydirt in pollutants
is a Dayton, Ohio, finn that
collects fly ash from big
smoke stacks and converts it
inlo a building material.
Dayton Fly Ash Co. started
in business back in HIGO, when
env.ironment was a household
word only to sociologists and
ecology was known only to
ecologists. n1e firm was
founded by a father·son team,
John and Bart Thomas, who
had hired out the year before
to remove fly ash, a
troublesome byproduct ol fine-
ly pulverized coal burned by
power compm1ies, from the
tall stacks of Dayton Power &
Light Co's. 1'ait station.
The Thomases had some ex·
perience in the sand and
gravel business and decided to
see if the fly ash they were
removing and dumping had
any value. Aft er some
research and much leg work,
they determined that the fly
ash was money going up J,,
smoke because it made a good
cement extender 1n ready-mix
concrete and concrete blocks.
The fly ash, which the power
companies were paying A per
ton to get rid or. reacts with
lime in the concrete m\"x and
forms calcium silicate o im·
prove the final qualities of the
mix. Thus fly ash could be
delivered to concrete mix
makers at $6 to $1 per ton.
Power companies have been
paying as much as $17.$
million a year just to trap the
fly ash before it gets out into
the atmosphere and to get rid
of it. The Edison Electric
Institute estimates that only
about 5.2 milllon tons out of
lhe 30 mllllon tons of ny ash
produced in ulllities· stacks
each year is rttevered for
byproduct use.
Dayton Fly Ash Isn't the Otl·
ly company in the buslness
now. There's enough com-
petition lo Cilmprlse • ny ash
couf'leil. \\,Ith so much raw
material still available arnJ the
utll!llt-s \\ llling su ppliers, the
drlvc is on to de velop further . ., ..
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-THE NEEDLE
IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN
A.nd th1 mo" tcho
knows ;use hmo to turn
the phrt111 to get tM
mrut out oJ the barb U:
DAILY PILOT column..
ist Siµ.lne11 Harris. Ht
has bt"tn caUed the
modem· da11 H e n r v
Afencken. lf umi'rt
1'odl/' for his II.ft of the
acid adjective and
t h o u g h ' • pnwokinr1
prost to give 11ou th1
needle ... if "°"' want to find something to
think oP>out in wMt you
read ... if 1'0U have o
&enst of humor, you
b e lo n g with recu:lns
who delight in telling
others wh4t .. Sud mid"
in one of the Mtion'•
mo.st • quoted cohmuu.
Some Sample Barbs
Recently Thrown
By S ytlney Harris:
"On• of the highest pild joba In Ame ri c•
con1i1t1 of 1t•nding up in front of• mi~
f'ophone, Hp.1 rating the pod record•
from tht bad ones -•ncl playing tha
bMI ones."
u1t•1 sad but true that· while alcoholics
are the best argument for abstinence, so
many ab.1tainers are equally effective ar-
iument for a little drink now and than.,.
"Mott of the so-c1lled 'incompatibility' In
m1 rri1,. 1prin91 from the fact th•t to
most men, sex i1 •n act; while to 111
women, It 11 an emotion. And this differ-
ence in attitude can be bridged only by
love ...
"The sole difference between 1 'dedica-
ted crusader' and a 'nosy re!ormer' r 'l.·
a:ists in our agreement or disagreemen~ ,
with his objectives."
"The most nploalwe combination In tM
world consi1t1 of tlncerlty •ddad to
lgnor•nce.''
uwhenever I am the recipient of an ex-
cessively hearty handshake, 1 1us}ect
ltr. Muscles is tryllig to sell something,
hide 1omething, or prove somethin&.,.
Ck'eck The E•itorial Page
For This Signature
•"'"~,,..,. ~ ,,i;~~ ~ '4: :.t.~~
It'll Help You Find Th·e
latest Quotables Created By
'The Needler' For His Col-
umn, A Regular Feature of
the
DAILY PILOT
Your Hometown Dally New1paper
All l,ODO of Us Had
. I .
u B~sy Day .Today_
' We creaUjl, aMae ...... iv_e_r_e -..---a-n-o~t r-e-r-fres emtwn of TneIJAIIXPII:O
'~ ~-each d~y'1 all-~ew DAILY, PILOT. Often 1taffer11 MM~ n..u ~ (lef)J, 'Jtew~t 'Be1cb city ed.itor1, work wilh a
-~·llkt Pjlrlcli 0 Donnell to &•t Ule story bolh In words _. ....,.. -II'bl! ltaff·. ht 70,000 Pictures last year ·10 Illustrate: the -·li!cY·of Of .... Coul ~le:Nol>ody knows how many local stori.,
M~N~t us; /
CREATIVITY helps advt!rtisers tell " their storlc.'i and sell their goods in
the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. Maury Gardner of dis-
play advertising deparlm~nl look.!! over layoot with DAILY PILOT staff
artists Anne Hamblin (left) and Charlolte Andresen. The ad they"re dis-
cussing will be reedy lo appear in the newspaper only hours after arUsLI
put finaJ touches on the layout and it Is approved by the advertiser, a I~
cal ·retail merchant.
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QutcK · HA.Niii pliC! ·~ of type, ads and c~l5 (the melal plates used
to ~~ ple!Um);iftto 1>11e forms as the day's prOduct begins to
tan thapl!: COmpositpr ~Atden Malsbury is only one of a platoon ol
printers who "bdihJ'! ·tai41ews page!! under pressure of deadlines, work-
ing q,a.inst the clock t0· btin1 readers the latest avaHable lnformaUon In
eech · ecl!Uon durJna lhe.111)'. ·
DEUVERY of the newspaper la a speed event, too. Conveyor belt.I carry
the papera through the ma.lkoom where they are automatically tied in
bundles of ·so and tossed to waiting circulation district manrgert (liki
Blaine Roberta, shown here, (right J who speed them via a 40-vehicl~
fleet to carriers for delivery. fl.1ailroom foreman Geor1e Araui (left)
and his crew can move 20,W> newspi:ipers an bour.
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1 VOLUME Is lhe word st th< Copl D<sk. DAILY PILOT Copy Delk Clliel
Norman Ahde~ (rl1hl) aid~ by Tom Titus (background) and other
copyreader1 every · d1y iffts, chec_ka and tdlta mort wire reports from,
'':orldwtde neW1 urvicu Uwt the aver.,• weekly news macuine pul>
lishel. Edltort.'.tean eMU,b tfll•J)hotol to wallpaper a llvln1 room every
14 hours. Spffd, bOm ol -rlence, h<lpt lhtm keep It tll !rah, too.
•
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THE WORDS are ready. Marjorie Jack90n feeds them Into a $25,000
computer, a DAJLY PILOT investment In speed and accuracy, which uses
a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters al the rate of
1,000 a second and punches a new tape which will activate another machine
for automatically setting type at high 1peed. The machines can set type
at lhe rate of 6,000 lines per hour.
PRESSURE here ls both physical and mental. Charles Haubrick, ster~
lype foreman, checks impression made by page full or type on a mat
squeezed by 1,800 pounds of pressure per square inch in the mat roller.
P.1at can be curved and used as a mold to form lhe curved plates which
flt onto cylinders of high-speed printing presses which print the DAILY
PILOT. It's pnrt of the quick-paced daily process of reproducing 100,000
words for DAILY PILOT subscribers to read .
. ,.,.
l\.fODERN equipment helps ~e •ecounUn1 department keep up with the
"loday" pace at the DAILY PILOT. Even as 'the day'a new1pape!' i1
bel!li sped to 11.s readers, Sunnle Chauvin begins feeding fla:ur.es Into 1
de1k model com puter's accountini console. It ~elps keep track of blllin1s •
for ids and subscriptiona. The machine, one of several lied Jn to tht main
computer. helps handle 5,000 account. a month.
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, ~ -RAPID communclation IS the name ol the game. Supervisor "Nita'\Follort
and her crew of "'ad-vitorl" handle l ,000 transactions a week by phon;e.
reaulUn1 ln publica tion of $1000 clwlfled ads -words which help peopll
buy, sell, rent of I ea 1·e ... even nrlct lost dogs. Many oi the-DAILY
PILOT'S l&O phone Unes ate plu1ged in here', the class'itlt.cl advert11ln1 d•
pertmm~ bome of "Want Ads" 11\d Dlme'A·Llnes. ·
PICTURE.!, too, get the benefit of skilled, efficient handling by master
craftsmen who re-photograph them and then transfer the images to a
sensitized metal plates which are used to reproduce the phOl.05 as read-
~ will see them in the newspaper. Here, Chuck Ryan t.akes a really
close look at a negative which will be used to etch the image on Ule
metal plate.
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FINISHED pftooucr 11 ·checked by Elwood Andefson, press crew ch1ef,
even JS high-speed presses continue to roar at 60,000 impressions per hour
completing the day's run on press units which represent an investment of
i,1.5 million. Elevel)-man press crew wUI feed lnto these ·llllchlnes the
equivalent of a roll of paper one page wide and ll0,000 ntlle:s Jong in
printina: the DAILY PILOT this year.
AIMOST before the lni: Is dry, tbe product or our busy day is tossed
deRly on your lawn or Porch by one ot our 700 newspaperboys who are lm~nt llnki' In' the-chatn, of. people it takt11 .to bring you today'• news
and IUturea today In lhe DAILY PILOT. And' as our young Independent JhefC., like John Me.It.on here; make their dtliverlea, we're aearina:
llP for ln04her buJy di)' -all 1,llOO <I ua. . ' ~
The ~~ow!). Ne~spaper for All The Communities
Of ·Ti,~· Gro~ing Orange Co~st ·
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JI DAILY PILOT Tuesd&Y, Augu1t 25, 1970
iseount
Priees .
EVERYDA¥'! ·
PllCn lfflCTIVI WEDNESDAY THIOUIH TUESDAY
&USUSTti,27, 21, 29,30,Jl, SEPT~ll 1
-1-AJI. YO 9:00 PA-. 'flll FIL
IOllO A.M. TO 7:00 P.M.UT. Tllll SUIL
UIDA fjJ SEW ONLY UIDA
aiaa: USDA CHOICE IEEf aw ..
--I
FARMER JOHN e FAMILY PACK e SLICED
USDA c'HOJCE e BONE.IN 291b . ROUND 891b. ... 1.aot1y
PRY IRS STEAK
::=.~ol• 891b.
PICNIC STYLE
EXTRA THICK e 2-LI. 'PICG. e Sl.ICED
FAD
BACON
SLICED• 1-l&. PAC~E NO BACKS, N"'KS Oii GIBlE~ 9 ' USOACHOtCE • 'JM.SlfMCJWO BISTO.P · c
T·BONE
-l~b~ PRYIR lb.•
PORK
ROAST .
EXCELLENT FOR BAR. B Q.
491b.
Cou•try 89
••r••rl•••79c BACON .
·•TEAK EXCELLENT fOR BAR. 8.Q., • WHOtE BODY
Klll.SIZI 391b. USDA CHOICE e BONE IN .PRYIRS CLUB 1~ FRESH FROZEN
STEAK ROASTllll• 591b. CHICKlll
~ CtiQICE • EXTRA LEAN
RIB f .. SH FROZEN 3 . 981i.. TURKIY c • Hl•dt1uartors 51b. SOAK
I f'llLSBURY•&PAC[ BOJ: •YANIUA P!:N 'QU1ll • e-0z. ~IZE
CHOC::OlATE. otOCOLATE MAlT
47c
PIMENTO OR JALAPENO
. Instant Breakfast CHEESE SPREADS I l EMON e LARGE PACKAGE 13c
REGU\.AR·OR SWEET MILK e 8-0Z.
JELLO PUDDING , Pillsbury Biscuits
KRAFT e 16-0Z. BOTILE 45c TIP TOP e 6-0Z. CANS
French Dressing FROZEN DRINKS
'
200 CT.• ASSORTED OR CALYPSO 2 3c ·BIRDSEYE • 9-0Z. CAN e FROZEN Scotties Facial Tissue . AWAKE
FAMILY scon . 4.ROLL PACK 3 2c 8" FROZEN •Al~ VARIETIES WHITE AND ASSORTED COLORS
TOILET TISSUE · Swiss Miss Fruit Pies
l8 OZ.• PEANUT BUTIE• WITH G•APE
63
OR RED RASBERRY FtAVOR ( FAD e b-PACK
SMUCIERS & GOOBER · CINNAMON ROLLS
, GEBHARDT • 28-0Z. stZE 39c PUSS"'N BOOTS e FISH
'.JUMBO TAMALES CAT FOOD
suCii'1u"Nc;MEAr-35c
KINGS FORD • 10-l.B. BAG
Charcoal Briquets .
•fliiill.fiSSUI
•iPPtESAUCI
•PlililMIX
1
45c
9c
1oc
31c
31c
33c
16c'
s9c
Spareribs . lb. BY THE PIECE
SLAB
FRfSH • eun OR SHANK HALF BACON Pork Leg· · 69 c
ROAST . lb. I FRESH FISH
FRESH FROZEN l~OZ.JAli! Formerly GrHnlond Holibut
PORK
TellClerlol• 1 3~
lb.
WEITERll
OYSTERS 89 TURBOT
C .FILLETS
••
WHATAIE
4-STAR SPECIALS
~STAR SPECIALS ARE
ARE EXTRA SAVINGS
MADE POSSIBLE BY SPECIAL
PURCHASES FROM THE MANUFACTURER
AND PASSED ON TO YOUI
FAD Fantastic Savings
on DfCOUTOI SHELVING
G.-. a Fiii C>ecorotar Sti.lvil'\9 GI.lid•.
Follow lti• Sh.Mng guid• fOI" de<:orolil'lg
G(ly room il'I yGUr h-.
llEM •.. , .. -r ... • l "Mr 10"xl6" ... .... .... .... -""" $3.45 $5.25 $6.39 $6.SS '""" ... $1.89 $2.84 $3.79 $3.32 """"' '""
look for our in-1tore 1helf di1plcy1,
Standards ond brocket1 0110 ovoilobte.
WATCH FOR THE OPENING OF THE
EXCITINGLY NEW DISTINCTLY
DIFFERENT FAD MARKET.
Comer of Walker and La Palma
LA PALMA
rr.;~ VA•~!JY •
r-..._. AH-in-one
BINDER
• 111
500 COUNT e Wlbl OR COLLEGE RULE
FILLER
PAPER
RED, BLACK OR BLUE
~BLAZE
.=:STICK PENS
MARK YOUR BELONGINGS
J6c
22 .~ .
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. DYMO Label-ette 77c
LABEL GUN
PACK Of 2 •DOG or CAT
• Sargeants Sup er 169
Flea Collar.
'""'<" -
SUNICIST
YAL!ENCIA
ORANGES
BEAUTIFUL FRESH
RAINBOW
ASTERS
WHITE MEATED •
MELONS
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Pa rt of t he complete beauty
t re atment is a manic ure .
Miss Rhonda Kni ght,
Golden W est Colle ge
stude nt , increases her
expertise.
HAIR CARE TH ·EIR ·EARE
Beauty Given
Student! jnterested In beautifying
America will have a head start l>ecinnlng'.
next September, thank$ to 1 pilot pro-
gram being Initiated by Golden West
College.
The beautification, the kind done in the
hairdresaer'a sah>o, will be learned by
high school junion and seniors in a head-
start program leading to a regular· coa-
metologist's license.
The 1tudents will remain In their high
school classes during the morning and
report to the college at 11:45 for a rour-
hour ses.!Jlon Mondays through Fridays.
Following high school graduation, they
will transfer to Golden West and com-
plete requirements for the Slate Board of
Cosmetology examination after the sum-
mer session and fall semester, cuUlng a
sununer session and semester from their
post-high school study time.
They will study theories in the care of
hair, skin and nails, learn t be
Cosmetology Act and its rules and
regulations and get practical experience
In manicures, facials, scalp treatments,
hair coloring, hair cuts, shampoos and
hair styling.
The program was started because
"there seemed to~be a need for voca-
tional education, said Mn. Mary
Callahan, supervisor of the G W C
Cosmetology Department. Also, she saJd
"It seemed ideaJ for the students to work
into the college atmosphere."
The cosmetology · program already has
an enrollment of approximately 60
students and staff members have no idea
what to ~xpect in the way of the new high
achoo! enrollment.
Cosmetology is an open field, Mrs.
Callahan said. There will be increased
needs for coloring technicians, pennanent
wave technicians, manicurists and other
specialists.
Head Start
.. The day of do-it-yourself is over," she L;l0olw;i.;.. ... o1....,.-,~.,._,
stressed. "A woman will come to her cos-The art of shampooing is
melologist for many reasons -to , ti: I" eel b " R b t beautiful and for psychological uplifting. prac 1c Y m rs. o e r
A woman's whole attitude changes C astro on fellow student,
when she enters a beauty salon, Mrs. M. S d p ( b ...l Callahan believes. Students are taught iss an Y earson a ov'ID'J.
that it is a place of relaxation . Women Rel axing d urinq a facial
will depend on their salon for many " given by Miss Cindy Sutttr
things and cosmetologists !'ill become
more like "beauty doctors." • is Mrs. Tim ·Readma n.
Cosmetology has become a technical
field, Mrs. Callahan emphaslze(i.
"Coloring ls in, for example .. Viry few
people haven't bad their hair colored."
Will !he di.tall _,.tology atudents at
Golden West join nuraes l1ICf otbeh who
wear uniforms in going to trim white
pantsuits?
"We haven't gotten around to that,••
Mn. Callihan smiled.
• ' Wardrobe Reflects Personality
Pacesetters Not Her Style .
By MARIAN CHRISTY
WASHINGTON -Dynamic
Robert Finch, special assi.!tant to
the President, often is mistaken for
look-alike lawyer F. Lee Bailey.
Finch, like Bailey, is a master at
handling crucial situations and his
supercool altitude is part of his
name·fame.
Mrs. Finch, who is her husband"s
alter-ego, is exactly the opposite,
peronality-wise.
She's docile , retiring, tightly con-
trolled . Some peQple say she's dull:
The only fashion show she'll attend
Is the one with a do-good motive.
Everyone on the Washington social
scene. particularly her good friend
Per~ Mesta, knows Mrs. Finch
happily basks in tlle shadow of her
husband.
''You've got to commit
yoUrHlf to an ob jective
-whatever It 11. '' ....,,_.,....,.....__......_.......,.
On married love: "It's the main
reason for being alive. t have no
otlier ambitions."
ln public Mrs. Finch Isn't nearly
as outs~er husband or her
pal, Mrs. Martha Mitchell, wife of
the Attorney General.
If there's something important to
be said, It's done privately, usually
at the dinner table, where famUy
members a~ present and the frank
conversation is apt to go no further.
Rec:ently two contemporary-con-
troversial subject.a came up -
prtmarilal sex and p u b I i c
dissension by campus dwellers.
The conversation aot of( to 1
BASKS IN SHADOW
Mrs, Robert Finch ,
heated start when Maureen Finch,
19 -a student al her parents' alma
mater, Occidental College in Los
Angeles mentioned l h a t
classmates orten lived with lovers,
and questioned the
"Establishment" concept <>I mar·
riage.
Mrs. Finch, a
Episcopalian Sunday
teacher, had her sv:
forme r
school
"My dear, it might look like
superexcitement ~ the surface but
it rarely · results lri a lasting rela-
tionship. Doing soinething NatanUy
immoral creates a temporary aura
of mystery. But It 's a
dimenskln1es1 alliance."
Then her only aan, age IS, talked
about the campus revohrtlon, disen.-
chantmtnt with Vietnam, racl&l lo-
.
justice and whether or not the
''system" waa based on true or
false principles.
Mrs. Finch had a second say: "If
you want to change something, get-
ting uptight won't help. You've got
to commit yourseU to an objective
~ whatever it ls -and go out and
accomplish it the best way you can.
Yelling and screaming: never did a
job.
"But a mother can.._'lOt 1lways 1c-
count for her children," she says tn
a kind of searing honesty.
BEST-DRESSED NOMINATION
The only Washington woman to
make the_ best-dressed list Is Mrs.
William McCormick Blair Jr.,
whose husband i.! general directot
of the Kennedy Cultural Center.
Mrs. Finch was nominated to the
list but didn't get voted "in"
because her designer clothes, ln-
cludin1 an I. Magnin mink coa'9
are quiet rather than pacesetuns.
The most daring fashiOn she
owns Is a n accordion·ple~ted
pantsuit by Richard Tam d.. San
Francisco. She wears Kimberly
Knits, Jerry Silverman dresses and
Mollie Parnis cOStumes.
Rarely doe.s she splurce on
clothes -although her husband has
suggested she invest in a Valentino
midi. She prefers to have a little..
known seamstress from Palo Alto
-Flora Murata -copy couture
from top designers for lea money
Uum Ille original.
Robert met Carol Ol'J a blind date.
She w1s president of a IOl'Orlty,
Gamm• Kappa Theta, ind her
alsten: said it was her "duty" to at-
tend an upcoming sorority dance.
In f1ct, ooe stater actually dilled
Robert'• number and handtd bet
the phone wben he said hello.
They talked and dated -for two
years. •
·' _,, ·•··
MRS. ROSCOE JOHNSON EXPERIMENTS ON MISS ANITA BARCELLONA
A SATISF IED PATRON, MRS, HARRY WARD, ADMIRllS ~OIPl!!JRI
r'
I
r
I
•
I
I
O•ILY PILOT
' La;t-minufe ·Stuffing ,
Stuffing a few more things into their flight bap: before boarding their id rplane
lo Madrld ·•re (left) Miss Diana Gray, 17; daughter of Mrs. Dorothy Gray of
Newpc)rt Beach and Miss Linda Tomerlin, 19, daup:hter of James Tomerlin,
bOth of Newport Beach. Among 1&3 students members of the Forei.ii:n Study
League; the. girls will via:it Italy, Austria, France and England before relurn-
l•K Sunday, Aui. 30.
Horoscope ,
Leo:· ·Romance Awaits
WEDNE$DAY
AUGUST 26
By SYDNEY OMARR
·-ARIES (March ll·April tt):
You may ha ve to wade
through some material bttore-
,oclilevin1 IO!ld' r""'ll. Pt•
Urie Is gr.at ally. A ..id ten·
dtnc:y tDwal'lf ~.
See ---.. tbty really eal!L
TAIJlll:l I ... -ly II):
UCM _. """ tM}or point. v.. Ml liMwlclal back!i\g fltoi ........ '°"""'.' Older
,
"Circus
individual deserves res peel . garbled While b e i n g In·
Accent on short trip for need· tcrpreted. Realize this and
ed tools. take necessary precaulions.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): 1'1ake your meanings crystal
Pleasure Indicated through clear.
children, creaUve ende.avor1. SAGGITARIUS lNOv. 22·
Best to-finis~ rather than Jn. :;-Dec. :21 ): Helping a friend ~ho
itlate prOJecb.0 Spread Jn. ls financially embarrassed is
fluence ; ~broaden horizons. fine-if common sense Is a
Dynamic ~ividual ·co u Id guide. Be fair but firm. Refuse
enter your hie. to fall victim to sob atory.
CANCER {June %1.July %2): Fulfill basic oblla:ations.
What appear~ to be ~ dor· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 • Jan
mant iasue is reacl!vat~. ~19): Persons in authority ap-
Make new contacll. Bring pear insecure. Be sclf·rellant.
forth creative r esource s. Don't antagonize one who has
Streu Ind e p e fl den c e , . alded you in past. Individual
orlglnaJlty. Change at home ·who is usually steady openly
baae, is accented. displays doubll. Take thi! in
LEO (July 23-.Aug. 22): stride.
Unorthodo.1 persorus, met.hods, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb .
clairru: appear to dominate. 18 ): Associate confides about
You will have to say gooclby to neighbor or relative problem.
status quo. Element of ex· Do what you can, but don't
cltement ls present. Romance, become involved in family
adventure are fea tured. ~dispute. You •re due for a
VrRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): financial windfall.
•
Surgery ·Severs the Preble~
EAR ANN LANDERS : Aftu two
chlldren and live mlscarriages ffiY h~ -
band and I decided 1 should be sterllti!d.
'M)e doctor explained It was a simple
aur1ical procedure of tying the tube! and
be gffered_ to ilo_lt. l!I Ute COW'll oI IM
coosultatlon Bill asked about sterillzaUnn
(or the male. The doctor described the
v~tomy _io~taJI. lt.Jiouodlt.so_much
ajmpler (and cheaper) lhan my operition
that Bill said he wanted to have It done.
He went to the hospital the following'
Friday. The sur1ery took les1 than 25
minutes. Bill speot Ille night in the
hospital and was back at his job Monday
mOrning. I can't tell you what that opera.
tlon has done for our marriage. To those
men who believe a vasectomy destroys
their manliness I would like lo say lhis :
It takes a real man to have thJs operation
so his wife won't have to go through
surgery. Who cares that ·he can no longer
produce a child? It 'requires no brains. no
courage and no character to get a woman
pregnant. Males prove it every day.
lr Paul Ehrlich who wrote '"l'he
Population Bomb" is ·so concerned why
doesn't he have a vasectomy! And thil
goes ror •II the other he.men who talk
about the' threat of ov.erpopulation. -ST.
LOUIS
DEAR S.L.: Professot Ehrlich has had
a va~~tomy aid M have tffasands of
ethers. It 11 becomln.~ • popular
operation. Tba.nkl for wrllln1 te e.zpre51
how one wife feel1 about IL
1 DEAR ANN l:ANDERS: My hua:baud
bou'ght a horse a few ~eeks ago. Kirk has'
-been wanting· his own horse for a }on&
Orne. We decided not to wait unUI we
could keep the horile on our own place, 110
the horse is being ~ed about a mile
from where we live.
A coupe we know board honei at the
same -place. The man does not ride, but
his wire does. I have heard her mention
to Kirk at least three times that since I
don't ride and her husband doesn't ride,
. the two of them ought to go on rides
together in the park.
I say she should filld some females to
ride with and leave my husband alone.
This woman has a flirty way about her
which could spell trouble. I've conslde'red
several alternatives and am· asking you
€o help me decide. Should I play Jt cool •
and suggest that while she and Kirk ride,
her husband and I will go to the movies
or just strolling In the park? Should I get
relnterested in horses (I rode ""hen I wu
younger) and make It a threesome? Or
should I put my foot down and say,
New Members Welcome
•• ·!fl
"Nothiiic doln1." 'l'hankll, Ann. -THE
N~Y.SAYER DEAR SA VE'R7 'Be eattfil when yoa
,., 1our root dow1, ltoney. e1pecl1Uy
.,..nd llorfn, Yo11 ~t bit lt te set
rtletetttted la rkll9• ud make It a
tllreaome.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My 26-year~ld
brother has been In one llind of trouble or
another all his Ufe. I cOuld write a book
&bout his 1henanlgans. The last ihlng he
did was sell • rented car and leave the
1tate. He is back now, stone broke, with
this car thing hanging over his head.
Mom wanta u.s girls to pitch In $500 each
and save our brother's skin. My husband
aaya, "Not 1U10ther dime.'' My sisters'
.husbands s~ the same th ing. We are
good savers. and have a litUe money set
aside for "emergencies." Shall we do u
Mom as~! -TE.ETER·TO'ITER
DEAR T. T.: No. Lei yoar brother take
hit 'umps. I'll bet people have been res-
culn1 him all Ills Jiit whk:ll It why he bas
been 111 10 much treable. Enou1h ls
enou.1h.
Tau Tau Dines
Wedding
-Setting--
Se ect
sept 11 1s tile' dal• selected
y DOdl <aa:M!lli •iii
Sidn~y Berk for their wedding
whictl will take place in the
First United MeTho d l 11
Church, Santa Ana.
Miu Meirs is the dallghter
of .John Melrt of HunUngton
Beach and Mrs. H e n r y
Angel~n of Costa Mesa . She
is a graduate -ot Costa Me1a
High School and Whittier
College and aUended Oringe
Coa!l College.
Her flance, 10n of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Berkowitz ol
Lincolnwood, Ill. stu\Ued in
Chicago and IS a graduate of
West Coast University, Los
Antele1.
Garage filled
For DAR Sale
A three-day garage aale.
featuring household Items,
clothing , jewelry and bric-•·
brae Is being planrled by I.ht
Patience Wrlgbt Ch apter,
Daughters of the American Families
To Picnic
Tau Tiu. C h 1 p t e r of Revolution, La-una Beach. The sale will take plact 11t Be.ta Sigma Phi of' Laguna the home or tht regent, Mrs.
~ach will kick of( the new ·Lowry Gallinger Friday~un· Voters Brew Coffee
Looking for a· sense of
belonging in 'the communlty!
l( so, and you are an area
woman ta or over, .you are in·
vited to attend the first
membership coffee. sponsored
by U¥.!: ~ague of Women
Voters IQ Huntington Beach.
Ho11Ung the' coffee in her
Hunlinaton Harbour home will
be Mrs. Franklin Gilchrist,
and anyone wishlng transpor·
talion or 'informaiton about
the 10 a.m. eve nt Thursday,
Aug. 27, may call Mrs. Clare
Gagnon, 892-1088.
League members m e et
Kroahs
Tell Ne¥1s
Of Troth
Hosting an engagement par-
ty for their daughter, Jud y
Kroah, were the Jlev. and
Mrs. William Kroah of Colta
Mesa.
Her fiance Is Roger Barber,
the 90n of Mr. and Mr1. Paul
Barber. The Barbers also
opened their El Cajon home to
famil y. and friends . to
celebrate t h e forthcoming
marriage.
Miss Kroalt Is a graduate of
Die Bear Lake High School
and Is curiently a eenior at
Southern California College ,
Costa Mesa.
Her flance Is a graduate of
San Diego State Colleg,,
A Jan. 22 wedding is planned
in tbe First Assembly ol God
Church, Costa Mesa.
twice a month for day or
evening meetings to . listen to
experts discuss timely sul>-
jects regarding important ac~
Uvitles in the city, state and
nation.
They obtain facts from
research committees a n d
discuss all sides of each issue
before reaching a decision.
~1embers also inform the
voting public or pros and cons
or ballot measures at election
time and arrange for all
candidates running for office
to meet the vot~rs so that
voters may make informt!d
decisions before casting their
ballot!!.
Everyone but the ants will year with a potluck dinner day, Aug. 28-30.
be invited when members ot tonight at I:~. Mrs. John Proceeds will be used for
Bela Gamma chapter. Epailon1_e_1um __ w_1_·11_hos_t _the __ ,_,._n_1._~t_he_c_h•_P_"_'_'s_v_a_r_ious~_pro_J!<U_.
Sigma Alpha say goodbye to ••vwti .. ..-t
summer with • beach party Revolutionizes
Sunday. Aug. 30 in Huntington
State Park. D t w •
Families wm gathe• for the en ure earing
social outing at Z p.m.
The chapler, inactive during
the summer except for socia l
activities, will resume its
business mecllngs Thursday,
Sept. 3, in the Fountain Valley
home ol Mrs. G e o r g e
Friewald.
The 11tarflt thin1 to h.a1•in1 yoor
OWi\ tttlh ti possi'hlt now •ith c
pla11ic tttlm di!ICOvtty thct actu-
ally hold1 bo1h "upptr1" and
"lo•erl'' •• ne1·tt before pmsihlt . I L'•• re¥olution1ry di•coi•try ulltd F1xo11r.r.'T•, for daily home
Ut1t. (U.S. Pat. 13,003,9118) With
F1lt00f.7''T m.ny dtnture we~rt111
m•y tit, llpl'ak, laulllh, 'll'ith Htllt
"lll'TY of dentures comm1 lno..
l'IXOOE..,.,. fcrm1 an elasllc mem· brine that ht!p1 ihtorb tht diock
of bitinr and che•m1-hclp1 P«I"
--
teci rum• from bruiWia. You '¥7 bitt harder, chtll' belt.tr. tit lllGr'9 naturally.
fllUlOF.Nl may hdp YOll IPUk
IDOl'e clearL1, be more 1t ieue.
Tht 1pec11I pencil-point dilJl'llW
ltU you 1pot flXOOf.NT ll'ith·.,..
c11ion ... tl'htre needed !
One apptkation may l••t for hoor1. Dentures th•t fit are eia9':11•
til l to health. 5';e your de11111t
rtr;ularly. Gtl taJy·t.o-uw.F1XOOK"'1'
Denture Adhtti•e Cr••ni. ct 111
dru1 counttr1.
Sale EnUs Sat.Au .29
Hert •rt liMtd 111«tl1 • lew er lhe •reel•I 1·1lut• )'OU
.,;11 find thro111ho111 our 1pa1:iou1 Ht1111!! >urnlabitir: Ctnlcr,
~11ing1 in rt1o0111 1h~r roo"' ..t fcforile Amcrk.n fridi.
1ifln1I fun1iturt. And nar "'•utiful tellin1t 111: planned
ltl lhat you Cll'I 1tlei·1 1u1h~nlie ful"l'l ilure with lh!! authentie
1rr1'~M1ri", ind ~njoy Hr u1ucl profe.ioncl cempli!tienlcry
Reg ular
Pric1
Sole
Price
·-~;,;f 1f'J01
rJJ> Regular Sale 7-Pr1e1 'rice
Helrloom Cuttom loom Plan--
Wead Top
30" J Or. Ci:hest 119 . .50 99,95
30" 2 Door <;:ab. . 119 . .50 99,95
AO" P.r. Dresser 1.52.50 129,95 I
48" Obi. Or1s1er l 9A . .50 161.95
Cla11k Mano,.Dl"lng loom
.56" 8uffet 339 . .50 274.50
.56" Chino 297 . .50 239.50
Oct. P1d. ToDle 307 . .50 244.50
Con1 "Back Chair 87 . .50 72.50
Cab. Serwer 317 . .50 254.50 Wagon"
, _p.,ppet Show
Study Leo me.wge. Much PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb ?Jl):
uncertainty exi.!lts. But )'OU Emotions will have much to
a.re due to receive aid from do with your phyelcal reaction. r==========-,1
fr iend . Money 1;ituation is not condition. Seu-control is essen-FAIR
Corn•r Study Desk
30" Upper BookUise
11 ... .50 92.95 Cane Sack Arm Cheir 107 . .50 16.U 79.50 64.95
,;. ... free °" the l'flClll
',,,.,.pn.Sof,._Au9. 27·21·2f
stable. Be ready for sudden tial. Being reckless, throwing
Changes of policy. ·away rule book could prove
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22) destructive. Rang on to prin·
F11!, f•ir, f•cl111I. 111011
lhr11 word1 111"' llJIO f•ct1r1 i11
1p1r•t i111 011 the DAILY rlLOl
1di!ari1l p•t• •••ry lll1v. Bring the klddiH to see
the Mitchell ?t1arlonrttl!:S-
S &how's dAlly at 11 •m·1·:1·4-
7:30 pm and S11turday
11 tm-1 pm-2 pm-3 pm-4 pm
ttl&x and enjoy ou r air.
ccndl11onf>d rn1111l at Huntin11;ton Crntrr, 1111 Beach
and Edinger at the San Olrrn
F/u'tl).,
You art aubject of attention, ciples.
publicity. Be aure you do not1F~~========~==========il
START YOUR
CHILD'S
MUSICAL
PROGRAM
THIS FALL
B~11 The
-P.tano
NOWl
become victim of notoriety .
Check quotes. Be factual.
Overcome temptation to write
Jetter In anger.
SCORPIO I Oct. 23-Nov . 21):
Valuables could be lost Jn
transil. fl.1essage might bt
FOR ONLY $595
YOU CAN OWN A PIANO BUILT
IY WURLlmR JHAT
REGULARLY SELLS AT $795
n.-,,..,,;, l~w It'!<• lnli141' l11i11c.h, Jtli'f•'V •"' •Ill ftl• \II•
lo•111• h111h•t j11lu1 • 10 ytlt '"'•1t111ty t 0 ¥1t • 111il1ie" 'W•rlit11r
~11111 ~·""•tr. c.111'1 ff Wrflllt 1 C11111 h1 fHIWI $11 111111 ~II• tht~I
jlli11111! •:.,. "'"' c.hllil ..... fi111 1., •• ,1
WallichsMusic Ci\Y
SOUTH C:OAST l'LA".A
COST A /!ll!A PHON! 540.316.5
HOUl$1 MON . tfir. IAT.-11·11
OPIN IU NDAY-.. OOM MI p.m.
,,
SERVE IT WITH FLAIR •
Fine sllverplate, Rococo bowt
with beautiful chasing. $65.
I ooted sQuare tray with rococo border, $56~
§LAVICl~'S
Jtwiltn S111c1 t •l7
!~FASHION l$V.NO-
NEWPOP.T BEAC.Y -b44-1 l!O
Op111 M11i•Y ntl ftld., •tttH t :Jt
\
AO" Upp1r Bookcase 99 . .50 82.95
31" Cons. E11t. Tobie 13A.50 107.95
30" Upp1r Cabinet 16A.50 134.95
::a pt, fnJndle 239.50 199.95
itlo1tic 11ightty higher
Decaro•ed Custom Room l'lan
Daffedll, white, willow green and blue
JO" 3 Dr. Ch1st 1oi3 . .50 11•.95
30" 2 Dr. Cobine! 113.50 114.95
AO" 3 Dr. Ore1ter 182.50 1 5•.95
30" Upp1r lookcase 89.50 74.95
AO;, Upper lookcatl 11 ... .50 94.95
Spndl. Hd. &d . 3/3·A/6 59 . .50 49.95
Mirror .57 . .50 47.95
Vonity 127.50 104.95
Night T ob11 64 .50 94.95
Corner Disk 152.50 127.95
H•lrleom Dining laem
5A " 8uff1t 311.50 262.50
5A" Chinn
O...ol Tobie
Du11bury Choir
Oval Tobie
Du11bury Arm Chair
T 10 Car11
H•lrloom Dining Reom
22 ... .50
184.50
AA . .50
17 A.50
.5 ... .50
179 . .50
34" 1 Or, Sitrwlr 179 . .50
33'' Hutch Top 62 • .50
A2"1'a. !:11t. Tabl1 117.50
Matti Chair
Hory•ll Tabl1
Squire Choir
Ory Sink
lat)' Suson
SAU HOUll:
Monday lhni
Friday • , ,
10 om t09 pm
Saturdoy•
to 5130 pnt
37 . .50
13A . .50
32.50
l 8A . .50
29.50
192.50
1 SC.SO
37.SO
144.SO
44.95
149.SO
t 52,50
· 49.50
99.50
.J 1.50
114.50
27.00
149.50
24.95
-------,r
Sheffield Cherry ledroom
.58" Dbl. Dr1s11r 327 . .50 259.SO
Queen Anne Mirror 107 .50 It.SO
Panel Hd. 8d. A/6-510 131 . .50 114.SO
5 Dr. Ch11t/Che1t 3.59 . .50 299.50
Night Tabl1
Panel Hd. !d.
134 . .50 109.50
16 ... .50 129,50
Sheffield Cherry Dining loom
.56" Buffet 3.59 .50 219.SO
56" Chino 267 . .50 224.50
O...al Tobl1 319.50
Queen Anne Chair 106 . .50
Qv11n Anni Arm Cholr 127.50
''"' Cu1tem loem Plan
32" 3 Or. Chest 139.50
32" 2 Or. Cabinet 139 . .50
AO" J Dr. Dres11r 16<.50
32" Upp1r !oakccue l OA.50
AO" Upper lookcas1 124 . .50
Corner Desk 117 . .50
Upper Corner Bookcase 207.50
Hi.Fi Cabin1t 217..50
T.V. Upp1r Unit 207.50
Cl•tslc Maner ledroom
66"1 Triple Dreiser 339.50
Mirror 102 . .50
'ran Hd. 8d . 510 112.50
Chell/Chttl 339 . .50
Night Tobit
Toll Hd. Id. 6/6
Lln99rle Chttt
107 . .50
139,50
214 . .50
272.50
14.50
109.50
114.95
114:•5
134.95
14,95
104.95
'4.95
169.95
229.95
169.U
274.50
14.50
'4.50
279.50
17.50
109.50
174.50
•
Closed 2101 N. T USTIN AVE. Nonh or 1;1h S1 . •SANTA ANA• 71~, 835-.144~ •
Sunday • ~ . . .
t
I I.
...... -------------------------------------~----·-----... -·--·----·----~--------~-
DICK TRACY
\ TUMILEWEEDS
MUn AND JEFF
MUTT, HERES A LETTER
FROI'!\ MRS. G. J. BOwYER
OF HOUSTON-
8 -iS
<;HETl-llNKS
WE'RE NOT
"FllNNY!
-,. j ...
i. .... _ ... ,_ .........
ly .~hester Gould.
ly Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
............ _ .................. ..
·-~~ ... ~~-~---"-' -··----"~"-·'-'_··-~·
JUDGE PARKER
PLAIN JANE
By_!fl'.'!o)c!_Le Dou~
· ! T\.IOU6MT WE OUGMT
TO Mi\VE I>. T.\LK ...
A.&OIJT VOlll!: l=A.TM E~'.
By Frank laginski
r:;~-----------.:r··
iOOA.Y:S BEST ...,_AICM Fc:Q
you IS A L•SR-..!'
OF COURSE<.!f. "Tl-I.A\ OOE.St-f'T WORI< OUT, 1 MER.E'S ALSO LEO,
GEMl~t, P l&E'S, Vl~,AR\E'S .....
DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ' • POWER
ACROSS
l The meuy ·-
5 Ending used
with ear
and ratio
10 Roule
14 Man's
nitknan1e
15 Comedia n
Benny -··-· 16 Busy
as···-: 2 words
17 PieterM~I
collection
l'l Operate
a glider
20 lnr1er
courtyard s
21 A
scratch1n9
'"' 23 Unfolds
2& Reverenc~
27 Wild i!Ad
excited
30 Slave
34 The "R" of
"RPI.I ":
Abbr.
)5 Stories
37 Chemical
sulfix
38 June 21
through
Sept. 20,
in Paris
J'l •••• game ht n
41 Asiatic
shrub
42 Bosio~
Bruins st •r
43 Niblicks
and wedges
~4 Greek letters
. I ' "
"
17
"
1 l . " "" ,. "
3•
~ .;·
" " -, • ' " " .,
4S Even:
2.words
47 Locale of
"H<1mlel"
50 Education
gro1111:
Abbr.
51 Lariat
52 Kind of
jDurney:
2. words
5!. Pait of 11
defensive
milit ary
pos1l!on
&J Opposed
Id Freshe1:
3wo1ds
t.4 Plant pa rt
&5 Avoid
adroitly
&Ii Greek
goddeso;
& 1 El las or c.o. ···-···· &8 Loved to
l!~ti!S S &9 Otp!'tssion
'l lmprr ~sr s
deep!y
10 Footba ll
pla ys
11 Father
Arab.
12 C !r~v•
13 Roltcall
reply
18 Orink to
excess
DOWN
Z2 Covered w 1\h
water
24 A nitrated
1 Door product
la sterier 25 Televis ion z ...... Rubens : dev ic e
Old-time 27 Ga s
movie 28 Backward s:
a c t1es~ Comb. rorm
J Rai se 1n 29 Turn outwMd
temptratu1e JI Brief
4 Deeds vigoro us
S Adjusted contest
beforehand 32 lend ··-···.
& "Ben·-··'' 2. words 7 Japane se J) Real esta te
sash 19reement
8 Oodge1 s or Jb Kind of
Expos, e.9. thrtJd
4 • 7 ' , ..
, " ·-lo ••
" ' 19
.-, f " " ,. " '" "
}. -
-" " '
" -'
3'l App le drink
40 Invested
with
ministerial
functions
~4 M<1de in1o
a law
4& Not tard y:
2 words
•S T<1llred tt1
impude11tly:
Slarig
49 Follower~:
Suffix
52 Strike
violently
53 Prtrosition 54 Soi slowly
55 Sport
57 \'etch
58 ··-·Oown~~.
M11slc trlt1c
5'l Pausr
&2 Egyptian
•nler :
lnf0tm1I
63 "Thf'
Colle!!"' Widow"
111l11or
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PERKINS
MISS PEACH
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STEVE ROPER
PEANUTS
,_
. Ll'L AINER
SALLY BANANAS .. '
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
By John MRe1
By Mell
r; ~~ . ',. . . .
By Charles M. Schub
EGO>. FIFTl'·NINo .. TEA-~E\'tNT~·NINE. MILK .•
T--35.1970
VotJ1/.L
~INO
CATS••••
_!Vt.MUM
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DAILY l'ILOT JIS
ly Al
ly Gus Arriol•
ly Ferd Joh-
IHA,.,s-rf!f WAY I ~E>Ji<D IT·· IT WAS/. 'i!~D CON l>Joc:::n~o~N;,1· (.~ ~
By Roger lallen
DENNIS THE MENACE
•
'If I EVER GET .IW!RIEO,MoM.lMOONNAm\QJ~
IT EASY l\'Hll£ MY /(//FE ooes 1HI: l'Dll( ,. •• •
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DllLY l'ILDT T11t!diJ, Alltldt 25, 1'70
:Diamond in Rough Tag
i
f Attached to Chargers
~AN DIEGO (.\P) -Charlie Waller
called bl1 San D1e10 Otlrgers "a di•·
mand in I.ht routh." and Jim Dooley
merely said his Chic110 Bears need more
work.
While neither head coach ~·as O\'tr-
joyed, Waller laid claim to h1onday
night's N1Uon1I Football Le a g u e
preM.a10n victory, a 14-9 decision for the
Char1es who 1puUered iCOl'eless for
three pcna1ty.pl11ued quarters btfort
puahing across two touchdowns.
"\\'e don 't look gOQd but we win," said
\\.'aller. "That last drive was a thin1 or
beauty but that '1 the way I.he game
should be played."
He ~fernd to a 'lt•yard drive
engineered by leCOnd·year quarterback
Marty Oomres, wbo enter.cl the: came
after veteran John H.ldl Sol the CW1ers
on the ICOl'eboard With a 15-yard iwing
MICKEY MANTLE TO REJOIN YANKEES AS COACH SUNDAY.
NY: Ma11tle's City
Mickey Not Seekin.g Houk's Jo,b
NEW YORK (AP I -Mick ey ~lanllr
makes it plain he""l _not lifter Halph
Houk'• job.
"I didn't come here for that purpose.''
the New York Yankeo' newest coaeh
said Monday, but he admilled he does
have managerial asplraUons.
Mantle, in asi interview, pointed out
that ht lirat asked Hook's permission
before joining the Yanka.
"I asked Ralph If it was okay "'ltn
him," said Mantle. "I'd never push him
out Of a job -he '1 the besl manager I
ever played for ."
The former Yankee star starts in his
new capacity Sunday, when the team
takes on the Minnesota Twins at Yunkee
Slatllum.
"Although I like living in the So11lh1\C!'t
be1t ," he said he considered it almos. 1111·
perative lO come back lo Nc1~· York.
·'This is my city -the people hilve
been so good 10 me here."
Atantle, v.·ho hit 536 homers cluru1s, a
record·wrecking career. v.·as n.oeentl;
chosen as the fifth Yankee coach.
, lUa addition will have no immediale ef-
~ct on lhe po&ilion1 and responsibilities
al the other four coaches -the team
plw lo use five the remainder of this
ytar and again In 1971.
He will serve aa .a special br11!1ng
<.'Oach, assisting especially the yr.uns
players, occasionally working oo 11Y:
coaching lines and aiding Houk in a
variely of ways.
"f}i)Ld.id be coolf! back'.'
··I was getUnt tired ol Jwit sillinc
around in Dallas," the ~tkk said. "anti I
\\'anted to do something in baseball -il"1
my first Jove."
Mantle said he wanted lo 5ct in o
n1anaging in the future, but not
nec.eaaarily with New York.
"\Ve 'll just have to wait and :we !,n•111
things work oul lhi1 season.'' he s1ud. "I
won 't be able lo make a dechdon until
after the season."
f.1antle made his com111enlA durini( a
bash for one of his business venture~. a
temporary help service. Football star Joe
Namath , hlan1Je'a partner, was also on
the scene.
The new Yankee ctiach appeared ill :it
ease in lhe surroundings, chocked v.1ilh
hundreds of people .
··1 don't like so many people so cklse
together," the Oklahoma country boy a1!-
mi1ted.
Perhaps he'd feel more at home in lhe
"'Ide open spa ces of a baseball field ,
someone suggest~
f.1antle didn 't answer. just cracked th11t
ramous handsome 1rin a~ if to say, "G!arl
lo be back."
Bad Bo y Pepitone ls Good
-Good for Cubs, That ls
LOS ANGELU fAP) -Joe Pep1tonr,
a bad boy ln Hou£ton but son1ething of an
.jdol in Chic.ago, LS not only loved by the
(ans but by manager Leo Durocher, 100.
"He's some kind of gu)•," Leo bubbled
after Pepitone's two-run home run spark-
. eel Chicago 10 a •·Z victory t.1ooday night
'over Los Angeles and extended the
Dodgers' losing itreak to lhree
"He keeps everyone loose. i'itan, he's 1
8erl9e r Slale .... """ .. "'' ""' "Wf. U Dlclltr1 ¥1 QICA .. ~ .w.. M o.ltef• "' C~k ... .wt. • 0.-tn n .II, L,tou11 Allf. ,. Dolittt's "' ii. l OOl•t
""'· lt °'°""'" \>I SI lo..11 ~· I Olofttn f! Alltnll ~· t Dtaten 41 Allt11l1 SWI. I Pod!tell 11 Ati.11i. hit. t CIM9ar1 •• Hw111111
I Si P "' l.!J ••n.
'"""'· ~JO ."'· 11 ~ ., ....
s •·"' S • m, 'p.m. s.n 1m.
\\'illiams aboard in lhe rourth , itakcd
Jenkins lo a Z-0 lead.
CMtU.00 LOI loNGElEI l•<•r~ •••-r•I
lltull\e"• u • t t t Wiiii, u 5 1 J t
tte-lt1, t• • t I I Awn t ll. rl J I j t WUl~l'llf,, ~ • 1 1 I W.Pe••I, ff ' I
11kl<"""• Ill t I I I W,Pl<~lt, Ill t 1
t1n-1, lit I I I I Helllr. t 4 I
Pe•I,_, ct • 7 1 I Slnmou, 711 1 I
511111.» llllSuatkla.:lti II
Ctth~. rl 0 I I l9tt!W<t, lb I I H~ley, t e 0 I Cr1wtor•, II • I
J-1111, p o I f \'1nct . 1 t I
111111 l• j I I
(~ltl ..
l•u ""'"lltl
II Limit, 1 I I
(;1 ... !1111 ... ~ 1 •
Mill.kt lttll, 11 I I c;, .... ._• .. 111,pl't I I
l ltllt ll t •
191 M! IOt -• "°° 111 000 -1
E -S11111. Svdt~\t. lOl -Olk ffO I, l l\ 4nge•~s t 211 -w Pt I'll If. ltu11111. Hit -P1.i-,.,,. 0 1) 5 -Vtl>IOI, Kn11nt9r, F -,,.,.,.,
I' M A al. '-• 10 Jri'"' jW.1._1') t I I I t j
Vlfl(.I {l,.i-•J l 111 I ' l I t
I L1""' !l lllll
p111 lo l•llbock Brad H•bbert.
Dom~• completed three of five passes
for •~ yards, including a clutch 21-yard
shot to Gary CarrlaOn on a ttUrd-and·ZO
situation, before Dick Post ran 14 yards
for Lhe winnln& liCore with only 3:20 Je ll
.. pt.y.
"Penalties killed us in the flrst half,"
said Waller, -.·host team wu assessed
132 yards: compared lo 116 •&ainsl
Chicago.
"When the boUlenecka 1et out of the or-
renlt we will be able lo move the ball
well 11aln1t m01t clubs.''
"Marty Domres did a fine job for San
Diego," 11ld booley.
''tft pickld them up. 1 was Yery lm-
pre1Nd with the way 1he Chargers moved
the baU ln long pass situations. .
'"\Ve have ho excuses,'' tbe Bears l.'oach
11ddcd. ''We just have to ktep working on
our offen.te and defense."
Domres, who quarterbacked Lhe Char(-
tr1 lo a come-from-behind victory over
the New ·York Giants on Aug. 15, didn 't
&Ive the Beara' dofen1i! all the credil ror
blanking the Chargers for three stanzas.
"ll we can eliminate penallles we "'·on'!
have to win in the last quarttr: y,•e'll be
ahead by 40," Domres said. "Penalties
are What hurt us : they stop our drives."
The Charger defense held Gale Sayers
to 2$ yards in nine carries aod Bear
qu•rterback Bobby Douglass completd:I
only 13 of 33 for 117 yards, but he
!ICampered 32 yerds in four trips to lead
Chicago on lhe around.
Chicago's offense was vi rt u a 11 y
restricted to placeklcker Mac Percl\•al
1.1•ho booted field goal1 of IT, 20 and 30
yards and mlssed from 43 yards out in
the third quarter.
A 29-yard punt re.tum by rookie Linzy
Cole stt up Percival 's first lhree--poinls
and Bill st1ley'1 block of 1 San Diego
fie.Id 1oel attempt paved the way for the
Bears' second scQre.
Dick Butkus' recovery of a Cha rger
fumble was converted into Percival 's
final success.
"The defense jelled wilh the exception
of conlainment," said Waller, referring lo
Dooa;las1' 1erambling runs. "Our piss
coveraie 'A'U very improved."
U1i<1tlu. It lfle (Jllr. ... tun .$.JI\ Di1911 CIWrQ· 10 NFL ,.-_..., klllMU ttmt;
Finl ......
llW1"9 'r••'Ht '•u.;n '''da« ll•li.tr~ .........
''"" '""h Jwnala 11;1;1 ""* ,... . .itr..:i
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IJ.l )l !IU1
4·~ •d ' ' II IJJ
U'I Tts..MN
BEARS ' BOBBY DOUGLASS llDI GETS MOBIED BY A TRIO OF CHARGERS.
Football Is Beating the Hell
Out of Somehody--Texan
AUSTIN, Tex. IAP) -"!l's going oul
there and bealing the hell out of
somebody."
TI1at'1 lhe way ofrensive tackle Bobby
Wuensch , an All-American candidate and
one of defending national collegiale
champion Te1u <.'0-Captainl. feels about
rootqall.
And you might say ,it's the 1ener1l at-
titude of the whole gung-ho Texu team.
ll returns ltl largest senior class ever
-32 -lhis autumn. The Longhorns are
loaded a! they try for U\Clr second con. ·
secutive nalional champlonalllp.
Uftl T ...... 19
Of courie, the c:ompetitlon wil l be stiff.
Take Qh}o Stale for e)\:ample. They are
senlor-htavy with the same folks who
won the national title as sophomores in
1968.
There's a lot or talk the national ch1m-
pion1hip will fall lhla Jeason to one or the
other.
Te•as players ~·ould dearly love to play
Ohio Slate.
"Both senior cl~ have talked a lot
about it," says linebacker Bill Zapalac,
one of four Longhorn captains.
"I'm 1ure it would be an outstanding
contest," says fullback Steve Worster, 6-o. 210, the oulltandlng offensive player,
"'ilh I~ yards rushing, in the 21·17 Cotton
Bowl victory over Notre Dame on Ne1'
Year's Day.
Linebacker Scott llendersgn also says
he \\'Ould like to play Ohio State, ··But I'd
rather play Penn Slatt because of the
<.'tlntroversy last year." The Nittany
Lion.'i 1von 11 stralghl and con1plained of
be.in£" ranked second to Texas.
\Vorster rhymes with rooster and
llenderso n expected Texas to atart off
No. I this year.
''Ohio State clai1ns it has the best
athlele.s ... but Wltil lhey 10 through a
season undefeated they 're not entitled to
be No. I," ssy1 !lender.son.
Hender&an, U, 215, and Zapalac, M ,
220, the 1wo llnebacklng captains, are
above average In brains. Both made the
All-An1erlcan academic team latl year.
Worster and Capalac say California
(Sept. 19 ) and UCLA {Oct. 31 will be
among the tougher team Texas plays this
year. Zapalac also · UN Oklahoma -
''automatically."
"Some tean1s v.•ould give lheir eye
teeth to beat us because of what they
<.i>nsider unnecessary scoring by ll.! lut
year," says H.ende~n.
"The Hrst four games (CaUfomia, Tex·
as Tech, UCLA , Oklahoma) \VII I be real
ell:et.llent proving ground for Eddie
Phillips isuccessor to quarterback James
Street )."
"I'm scared of every tean1 we play,
says \Vuensch, a 6-3, 23S.pound charcer
\vho threw wipe.out bloc~s on critical
do"·ns against Notre Dame and in "the
big shootout," Texas' 15-14 victory over
Arkansas.
•·Not scared n1entally or physically but
scared of what 1ve n1 ight do 1o1·rong ,
iiCared of the1n in a good way,'' 1ald
\Vuensch.
Use Forked Tongue
White Man's Act Stolen
By (Stanford) Indians
\Vhite men were once accused of speak-
ing with lor~ed tongues by Indians who
re\t they were being dou ble-talked or just
plain cheated by \•arious aareements.
Now, howevtr. it is the Indians who are
guilty of such shenanigans.
Pardon me.
I must clarify !hat 1t1t ement to 1den-
--------WHITE
\l'ASH -=-----
lif,Y the lndi11U as bcina the tribe from
Stanford Univenlty.
. .\ most contradlcting nev.·s release has
come from the office of publicist Bob
Murphy.
Bob Mtirphy will kln1 be remen1bcrcd
a.s lbe (UY who 1pells strictly with a k in
place of the second t.
are campaigning for various Heisman
Trophy candidate1. ·
The Indian sales chief and propa11nda
minister hes announced tha t he Is a
.sports inlorn1ation director tcapitallz.ed,
no lessl and not a can1paign manager.
He e1nphasi1es lhis fa ct with an ei-
clamalion point.
Then hr goes on to sRy that Stanlord'll
llcisman hopeful -one Jan1es Pl\mkett
-1.1·ill do his ca1npaigning oo the field of
battle.
At this juncture one 111ust aceuse
P.lurphy ol speaking with a forked tongue.
After dedicating one entire paragraph
to lashlna: feUow publicists for trytng to
promote their favorite sons. 1'111rphy pro-
vides three paaes of docun1enled In·
formation on Stanford football .
Only in thi6 ca1e it jullt 110 happens thal
Plunkett ls the only Stanford football
player 1nenlioned.
Further, Murphy 's St11nford 1pring
football review brochure has a picture of
Plunkelt on its cover with the lettering:
"Quarterback Jl111 Plunkett -All-
An1erican and Heis111an 'frophy can-
didate."
funny guy, 1h1t'1 1o1 ha! he Is. lie pl,y1 his
hurt oul , too, and ne\•er 11y1 anylhlng
about. himself. Hr'1 alwaya throwing the
needlt -and aetting it back . Loo -but.
Jn&n. everyone'• loose and ht'1 ooc bli ,....., ..
Mlli~tlnn 1 l t I I I
WF> -Vtn<I 1111 -Htlllr, Hltllllllt1 f~ -
f It Alt ...... ..-.1 -11 Ji)
CUIS' RANDY HUNTLEY TAGS OUT WILLIE CRAWFORD. t.turphy has ad.milted great shock 01•er
the fact fellow coileii1te 1ub thurnpus
11'1 gelling ~ a 1•hite men j111t can't
believe anything an Indian says these
days.
Ptpltone'1 home run was his Ullh ol 11\e
yur and his nrlh su'lCe comln( lo lhe
C,Obl from the Alln>•
Aod four of his homers have bttn
aaain&t the Oodam. including 1 arand
i.1Jlllll11f.
"You 1ott1 be lOOllt: -and a htlle
craiy, too -to pl•r, th\! g1une," sakt
Pt:Ditone. arrectna w th hlA 1111na1er.
Prpitont'• homer P'''ed 1he "'ay ror
Fer&USM Jenkins to ea rn h1i. 18th 1o1 in
a11init,4 lams, the top-winntr on the
Cubs' at.arr
"He pitched a good 111111. ' 1>ral&l'tl
Durocher, "and he pllched darn good
wlltn ~' h<d ID " The homer by rrpltone, I \\1th Dtlly
Vengeance Is Sweet for Casper
Stm'ON, 1'-iass fAPl -Billy Cagper
Is 30ft-spoken and mild mannered , but
he 's a tiger on the coif courst 11 Ille top
mofK'y·w111oer on !he PGA lour Olis year.
ca,per galtled sweet vengeanct on one
of hl!! 1nost fruslraling layoo ts ti,onday.
Urlng a U1rH ·uoder par 69 11nd '"lnnlnc
the 'll0.000 Avco Cla!!ilc by thrt'l' st~nkes
at Plcamtnl Valley COUnlry Club.
·•Afttr tMI 1ir111 round Ill , lllt hl~nc~1
of my carttr. and lailina to 1nakc lhl' l ut
for the hrs! Lhne since J9&~. I ;11e~' I \\ a:i
t
more determined this )'tar." Cas(X!r '"o'd
•fler wlnninc his fourth tourn~menl 11'115
Jeason.
Referrin1 10 his niahtm1ri1h plav 1n lh->
19'1 A\•CO on lht same 7.%12-yard course
the 39-year--0ld ~1:astera cha1nplon gau•efl
~1ne extra satisfaction ln his i71h
wurna1nent \'lctory.
Jusl oot year ego, Cll:!JX!r V0\1 ed. '"I ll
~ buck. This cour5C ol\·es me a bun<ltc
lie kept hia 1\•ord and returned.
· 1 \\llntrd lo 1n11kr amends,'' Billy ~aid
•lll'r flnlshin• vtith a 72-holc total of 21"7 ,
I I undt?r par. ln the 'l'l·holl' toumin1rn1
dctayl'll by torrenlial rain Sunday.
··1 came hert just hoping to do wtll 11nd
"'&!I more determined, upeclall y In the
firs t round&," he aald. "You can't figure
on winning ~uMl a lot of things hare lo
go your way lo win ii tournament such As
this I lhought 280 l\OUld 1.1·in ii, so l':ri
,·er)' hoppy Jo be lhrec _strokes lo\\.•)f _"
* * * A fh·e-.pound "'tl{tiye pike "'' H1t.ed
out ttf E1 Capllan retervtlr by 1 CM.la
\'Isla ~1111 rtctnlly. A bomber htrt wat
uttd t1 catch the flsb and It'• &ae tlrtL
tllflt in l'A't )'tars m:1t a pl'e bas bet.1
1ake1 from San Dle10 area waters.
f'ormer Santa Ana College football
whb rucl\al"(] Deckert i1 s.hootlnc ftJr a
earner back berth on the University of
1'ti1Tni 1rJorida) football team.
Deckert, S.11 . llO pounds, may havt1 1
geod shot at the po9ition dqpite th8 h1n-
di<'ap or missing sprln& practice.
FanJ 111ttntlinc the Sept 7 Dod~rs·
A1lu1a-Aoableltudc.r at Ood1tr stadto.m
will 1ei a S31 1 rtcord\ng of V I 1 c e
Srully's destripUon of the flnal tnnlnS• tf
Dill Sln1cr'1 n•hllttr 11al11at lbe Pbllllc1.
First game ef the twin blll 11 1t l 10S
.p.m.
lo
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Sports it• Brief
Dana Point Ma11
Seco11<.l in Eli1ns
Clyde Lacher or Dana Point
Is among a group of four
flnalilt1 who will compete for
the loth annual West Coast
E I lmlnatlons championship
~tonday at Kona Lanes in
Colla Mesa .
Lacher, ln second place. has
• total pintail or 11,186. 86
behind the leader, Farriel
Hinkle or Los Angeles. In third
ill Gary Madison of San
Bernardino (11,062) while Walt
Block: (Carson) is lhe fourth
finalist (ll,Ot6J .
Larry Schoenfelder of Costa
Mesa finished 10th ~'bile a
former Mesan, Fred Bernal of
Tustin, placed 11th.
•
Defensive tackle Rick Cash,
24, injured in lhe exhibition
game against the Oakland
Raiders last Saturday, sus-
tained a broken right arm and
will be out of action a
minimum of eight weeks, the
Im Angeles Rams announced
Monday.
There was beUer news for
the two other Rams players
injured during the preseason
game.
Safety Richie Petitbon, 31.
who bruised his left shoulder
and defensive tackle Dlron
Talbert, 25, who had a slight
concussion. both should be
ready CO go this weekend
against the San D i e g o
Chargers in another ex·
hibitlon, the Rams said.
•
LOS ANGELES -Coach
.John t-.1cKay of the University
of Southern California had 68
players, including last year's
starting back.field, running
through conditioning d r i 11 s
Monday as the Trojans opened
twice-a-day football practice.
l111proved
Angling
Expected
Fishing in Orange Coast
area waters ha.'! sloy.·ed up the
past few days but landing
operatocs are optimistic things
will pick up again soon.
Robbie Robinson of Davey's
Locker reports that albacore
specials out or the Newport
·Landing are traveling 85 miles
to hook into the albacore with
rea90llable success.
"\Ve are getting a Jot of
bonito, barracuda and bass on
the local boats although we
have }osl a lot or fish the last
few days."
Bob \llarren of Sa n
Clemente Sportfishing reports
a achoo! of white sea bass
moved into rang~ of the half
flay boats on Friday wllh quite
a few fish in the 2G-30 pound
category brought to gaff.
"\Ve ran into a big school of
larger bonilo Sunday on the
outside but only a few of them
were landed. With heavier
tackle, we would have had a
lot more fish on board," he
says .
The area boats continue lo
l'!pot large schools of ye\low1ail
but they aren't bi ling yet.
"The old tuners are com-
paring this year to 1957 and
1959 when we had Lhe real
good runs of yellows ," Warren
says.
"ln those years we brought
In a large number of fish and
last year the yellows didn 't
appear until mid-September
through October.''
Art's Landing reports
simllar success with the area
fishing grounds . Bonito, bass
11nd barracuda are hitting
v.·ell.
The Trojans' 16 lettermen
Include quarterback J immy
Jones, tailback CI arc n c e
Davis, tullback (,'barlie Evans
and flanker Bob Chandler.
1t1c.Kay. y.•ho worked the
iiquad 90 minutes at each
practice, p\aimed conditioning
drills through Wednesdey.
•
LOS ANGELES The
UCLA Bruins put !hf! football
Jn the Mir t.1onday du r Ing
their first day of two prac-
tices, quarterback D c n n i :;
Dummil completing 30 of G3
passes .
The Bruins, who open lhe
sea.son Sept. 12 at Oregon
State, worked out in S\\•e.al
shirts and shorts, an NCAA
requirement for the first three
days of practice.
During passing drills Oum-
mit completed four I o n g
passes which would have been
touchdowns and w a s in-
lercepted h'·ice. • PALO ALTO Darrell
Waters . a sop h 01n ore
11.lCbacker, suffered a slight
knee injury Monday as the
Stanfo rd Indians held their
first football practice of 1he
year.
Waters '"'isled a knee
maneuvering on a p a s s
coverage drill and probably
will miss a few days of prac-
tice.
Coach John Ralston and his
staff worked with 75 players
on the first practice day . Two
sessions a day are scheduled
this week but pads won't be
put on until Thursday.
•
BERKELEY -Coach Ray
Willsey put a squad of Bl
players through conditioning
exercises Monday as the
California Golden Bears began
pre.season football practicr.
The team will begin prac·
ticing today both morning and
afternoon. Monday morning
all players under\\·ent physical
examinations.
• DEL hfAR -Jockey Bill
Shoemeker piloted two win-
ners Monday, ooe in a dead
heat and the other aboard
Billrick Stable's classy Klar
Tov in the six-furling $16,275
De Anza Stakes.
The vic tories b o o s t e d
Shoemaker's lifetime mark to
6,017, only 15 shy of Johrniy
Longden 's career riding re·
cord.
•
SAN DIEGO -The San
Die'o Chargers have acquired
from the New York Jets Bill
Pierson, a center who was an
All-Pacific Athletic Conference
player for San Diego State.
Jn !he deal announced fito.1-
day the Chargers will get the
6-feet-3, 255-pound Pierson in
return for an undisclosed
future draft choice.
Deep Sea
Fish Report
Angels Face Tigers
1n Twin Bill Today
DETROIT (AP) -The MJo.
ne10la Twins have been ~
operating and the California
Angels have frilltred away an
excellent opportunity to catch
the American League 's
\Vestcm Division leaders by
playing .500 baseball. ·
Of the last 16 games, lhc
Angelii have won eight. Uul
MlnneJOta, five games in lront
of sec:ond-place California. has
won only rour.
11\e Angels l\ope for more
(.'Of\11B\ency rrom lhelr pll·
ching it.aft and the bat of third
baseman Ken Mct..tulltn All
they meet the Tigers \n A twl·
nlfthl doubleheader Wnight 'in
Detroit. Tom Bradley, who wa1 1·2
before he was sent down to
~ionolulu, hA1 been recalled
and Ulti younc right _ hander
will join Tom Murphy, IW, to
pitch agslnst the Tigors1 JM
Nlekro, tl-10, <and Les Cain,
12.-4.
Both games will be broad·
cut over KMPC (710). The
fir1t aame 101 under way at
3,30,
Wedne9day night'• (.'Onlesl
will be ttlevised over chaMe.I
S, beginning at g p.m.
McMullen, who usu111ly hitJ
better ln the 5CCOfld half of tht
stoson, hu batted a puny .180
in tht last 20 game.1 with only
lhree...runs baUeQ In. Ht ha1n't
hit a home run 1lnce recorclin&
No. 12 on Aue. J.
DURING IACKSWINQ THINK "lEfT·HANDED"
The top.of·th•swln1 position
shown in lll ustr1tion I 1 is •II
too' common. The eoller his
Uftld tht club to tht top in·
sltMi of havinc 1wt1111 it Tht
result is • minim•I 1hould1r
turn ind an obYious:ly bent ltft
arm.
••
Tht problem occurred In tht
grip and the subs9Qutnt take· away. In both cases, he t ither
htld the club too tiahtty with
his right haod, or too loos•IY
with his left. The result WIS that
his riaht hand •nd 1rm picked
up the club.
It is very important that your
left hand. arm and side -domi·
natt your backswing, 1s has
mine in illustration #2. If some~
thing on your ltft stde controls
your backswinc. you will make
a full shoulder turn and make
1 nice wtde swing arc with you r
left arm extended.
•
I sugest that you pr1ctice
the swing with only your left
~
0
hand on the club (illustration
13). Be sure to keep your left
arm extended at all times. Then,
when you m!fike your normal
two·handed swine, be sure to
feel that your-19ft hand, arm
.and side art . still domin1nt.
And naturally, be certain that
yo ur right hand, arm and side
are "out of the pictu re."
& 0 lf7t NAM. -..... ti11i9
Lona Irons from Th• Roqh, Pitcttina from Woods, Uphill and
Downhill l ies-lh•H and oth•r ahot5 ar• ~~iltd lor you lft
Arnold Palm•r's bookltt, "Troubl• Shots." FOi' your CORJ°i stttd
.20( and a stampt>d, HH·tddressM envelope to Arnold Palmer, In
car• of this"~'*'·
Los· Alantltos
Racing Entries
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VI" Gl~liimllnl 111 l!obbY Lllll't JPt.,MI•) IH
Na!Nn lroll /H1rO 117 Oebb•'• lle<ll(tl C81n~tl 111
Tomb1r Tonio 1Cro$bYI l!I AIM ILl1l~t•
Mldl.'t Moon IWll~I Tom LvdOll (Ptr~rJ
Lorttt1> l1>111 1$"'11~) 'I' " "'
Los Alamitos Results
LO$ ALAMITOS •ESULTI
#MndtY, Au.. 24. ltN
C1"r & l'atl
P.l•$T •ACe:. o100 •t1d1. MtlUen 1 yNr 0!01. Cltlmlne. P~r&t lll'OO.
l•ll•rl'• Oon (1'1011 lJ.2fl 1,..e S.10
Dlc~ev ..... e.r fPlfM•I 10.00 •• IO
FIM! Win IW!IM1nl '·'° Tln'MI: .20-JflD.
AIM raft -SoN Ni., Httr hlr.
wyeo~. OlnMr Stm. Hltll 1111 H•"'·
Hulllr Ct11rN. ell Of [Mck.
k•llt"4/d -T1111>l11t 91r1. S.00.'1
i.lln!, AMthtr CllPld, Sll1r.,.•1 R""'sl.
SICONO RACI. lJO ••rll. 1 YN•
el~ and 1111, Cl•""'"'· PvrM 11'00
laldl' Rode! tWlllKlfll :M.:111 11.JO S.10
Pll•rlon ''" ILIJMloll 11.211 •• 111 Wiiiow Oolll (Ad91rl J.M
Tltnll .1 ... 1/10. Alu! r1~ -True Vtrt#I. LUC:kV llfl
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pt •teo•, P1mtion f11 r, U111!11c~H.
$Cr1lcllld -Pt1l1r 11111, H1'1 '.
RH\lffl, Su11•lown, Vin GllH.
II Ill.NT\. T 0001\.1, 1 • l1tt1rt'I O'IM & I·'"'" •ed!.t, tllll UM.II,
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1•111\, P.1 ra l111, W•tc~ Curl 0... W1t(~
S~lrleo.
k•tl~htd -Bur"! Tri.tr, TIMy
lntn, 1ro1ono11, Tiii City Girl. Pll•lll
C1111lrvl, l'1>1~!oll Cl"
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lloy11 Sl>Ur !Mltdlt!ll J.40
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cumci. J\IOlt. Rllol•lno Rocto.", 0..1t1•
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1MI \I~. Cl1>1"'I"'. P~Pil UJCIO.
Slrtorht& (Ptrner) 11 .... 7 ... I.Ill
PrltlO ~ .. 1'ks) ,,llO I.to
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Tlrnt: .'5-9111.
Al .. 1111 -Glrlle't ltlc~11, 1-.n
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kr1k1Wlf -Trle "'· C11tlernle Sindt, Ctrtalrl Somplft', Tftt .. Far All.
51.VllN'fH •ACI, G v1rd1, l 1nr
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Allr'l\lral lltd (ICallilJ It.JD 7.M S.ot
Ct>erM RIYl l ("""'°"! lf,M $,410 •le•'& Gold !Crt1bYI IAO
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·~
DAILY ,ILOT
Mesa Grid Coacli Exploding
....
With Enthusiasm-as Usual
B• ROGER CARI.SON
Of .. o.itr •1191 Stitt Coacll Miil< MJUer ol Calta
Meaa High School wu ID th<
mldst of Ont day rod tape ot
\he Mustenp' prf!COnd.iti0ol11g
drUl.s when ask&d (or • con\·
ment or two pertaln.lng to hli
team'• 1970 football (orlunt'S
An bout later , the tnhnltablt
P.lille.r paused for a breath 1n
bttween e1poundinl on lhe
abll!Ues and c1pablllties of
bacts Kim "'olf 1nd Kent
Paul.
The rest of his suniey look
!ongtr.
MWer, a ~th. IM-pounder
beginning hi!: sa'Ond year at
the Mustang helm. makes lit-
tle bones otbout hls beliefs 1n
Mesa's (ol't'spect.s.
Included in the stable ar ! JU
returning varsity lettennen
led by . .\!I-Orange Coast Area
selection Pat Sweetland, (&.2.
210), the ~nm's captain -a
certain starling lighl and
defensive end.
S\\•eetland was a first lc:ln\
:1ele<:tioI\ 3t defensive end •ll
the l.r\•ine League d n d
p;arnered ~erond ltam all-<1re;;.
honors at l1is derenslve !)O'>l.
A r e C" e n t mononuclcot'is
!'care 1urned out to be a m1no:
lnfe<:tion for Sweetland.
Mesa v.•lU begin its 11th year
1n varsity f('()tball in the ftill
but the rast decade hasn't
provided the Green and \\'bile
with anything resen1bJing su1.:-
cess on the gridiron.
Among other advers1lle11.
Costa M~sa has never e11jo~1-d
a winning season -am!
"·bars rr.orr. ha! never w >11
1nore Uun two games in ,
row.
In 10 year.> Costa Pi1t.-sa has
put football victories back-I.~
back only three times.
ri.·liller, however, says his
team is capable o( playing
winning football con·
sistenUy.
His first year as crid men-
tor turned into disaster when
MAX MlllER
multiple injuries severed " all
chances after what looked like
1be t-.1esans' most promisiAG
season in history.
Miller's plus signs for this
year's oulfit is nearly endless.
but n10St importanl. the llsl
includes veterans at nearly
every position. 1 The key to a successful
season appnrenlly lies at the
a 11 • Important quarterback
vacancy.
Miller says he's got the right
candidate for the job in Robin
Senik, a >9. 160 -pouad
righthander. who's shown ex-
cellent leader~ip qualities
along with the abllity to
re lease the ball quickly. has
good projection on aerials and
is accurate.
"Robin is eJCtremely in·
telligent. He called 90 percent
of the plays in the spring
game and we expect him to
call most of the plays this
year,'' says Miller.
Backing him up is junior
Flip Darnell, a &-0, 17()
pounder up from lalil year's
sophomore team ,
Miller elaborated on his
group individually, but ad-
mitted the problem was to gel
the individuals wo1·klng as a
unit.
Anotbtr key lo Mes.a ·11 poui·
ble sutcess ls lhe kicklna
11me's improvement.
LefUooted Qaig L e e p c r
and/or ~ Ricardo will
mare kicking chores. WhUe
the latter Is an experienced
and profkient field go a I
kicker. Leeper has displayed
consistent 3a-40 yard efforts.
The ace-in-the-hole r o r
Miller ls Pal Kalama, • can-
didate who sat oul last year.
fltiller ratts Kalama as bis
qulckest player, says he 's a
definite starter defensively
and will push Wolf for the
starting tailback position.
Another bright spot for
?\1iller a.re six assistants.
Besides regulars Doug Brown
toffensive line), Don Bums
(backfield) and John Carney
(defensive bacb). he tw stu-
dent teachers ?\1lke Frye,
Dave \Voodside and Rich
Croson.
The latter trl<.i hall (rom Cal
State (U>ng Be11ch). Frye
earned a\1<011ference honors
while at Orange Coast College.
Leading the tine candidates.
along with Sweetland, are
tackle Jim Miller (6-Z, 225)
and a palr of guards .
Chauncey Bayes (6-0. la5 ) and
Brad Gilbert (s.a, 170).
And, with center D a I e
Williams. ?\tiller claims the
Mustangs \\'Ill be stronger at
that position despite t h e
graduation of Dick Ferryn1an.
Williams checks in al ~10,
175, and is an e.1cellent of-
fensive blocker.
Split end candidates include
Dale Kube.ska (&-2, 19$) Frank
Kelly ($..9, 150) and Dan Baker
~~10, 160 ).
Wolf (S-9, 165) and Paul !>
10, 180) appear to have the
starting running back posi·
lions nailed down.
Defensive alignments in-
clude Jim Hohl ($-9 , 185
linebacker), Gary Schoettler
t6-l , 190 end) and safetyman
Jon htarchiorlatti (6-2, 185).
Gnagi
Outduels
Arnold
Rlck Gnaii or the Casta
1\tesa Comets won • tight pit·
cher's duel from Westmin-
ster's Rod Arnold Sunday at.
ternooo at TeWln.kle P,ark as
John Saint's club won, 5-S.
Gnagi and Arnold hooked up
ln a pileher'$ duel for six in-
nings with Arnold nursing a
one-run lead from the first.
Gnagi struck out 15 batters
while walking two and ftllt
the di.stanct ror 1he Comets .
Aroold had 10 strfieouls and
no walks in seven lM1ngl for
\Vcsbninster.
Leading by 3-2 in the bottom
of , the eighth, Costa Mesa
S<..'Ored a pair or runs on two
walks and a clutch pinch hit
by Deve Onken to thwart a
ninth inning uprising that fell
short ror lhe vWlors from
Westminster.
1\1ilcheU Haddad hid a pair
ol base hit& to lead the Comet
hil panldc.
COSTA MIU. COMa!t l:) 'rll>I
Schun1acher Barracuda
Due Saturday at OCIR
_. o I ' • ' l • 0 0 • 0 1 ••
l I I I I I 1 1
I I t I l D I 0
I 0 0 0 , , I • I ' ' • • •
Others wllo figure to play
prominent roles in Mustang
fortunes include Joe Arthur ,
Mason Hungerford, Gary King , I ' ' . ' Randy FoJC and M i k e 1,?l
Schepens. .., , • r.i
Offensively Pitesa w i 11 Ekl••· " ,, ', •, •, .... ~ .... (!
Don Schumacher or Chicago
will make an all~mpt to gTab
a $1 ,000 bonus payment with
h.is new revolutionary Bar-
racuda Funny car al Orange
County IntemaUonal Raceway
Saturday night.
c1nploy the Pro-I with variable camJ>bt11, 111 ! : ~ ~
Bclween trips to OC IH. sets while the defensive align-Arno:d." 4 • 1 •
Schumacher will r11ce the ment figure to be keyed ~,o~ ! f f :
AHRA Nationals In New York. around the Arkansas-5. which ~~·f ! : : :
Dave Beebe of Anaheim, employs a roverbad: 1or T•'•" :u J ' 1
Gene Conway and Mike Snive· monster) with a pair of k-" .....,_, • tt •
I -" \ •'--f we11nil11tl• MIO aDt 011-> • t ly are a so entercu n "~ un-linebackers. comets a 111111 lb-J • •
Schumaher made a
surprise mid-summer ap-
pearance at OCIR Wednesday
to test his '70 Barracuda.
which was constructed by
John Butera of Cerritos.
ny car contest. I=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::~~~:::::::;;;:;;:;:~~;;:;:;;:;::=:=::::::::::::= Top fuel entries include Jim
On its maiden voyage down
the quartermile drag strip at
OCIR. the car recorded an
astonishing 7.18 seconds -
206.42 mph with Schumacher
al the v.·heel.
On the second trip', it equal·
ed. the track speed record for
funny cars with a 210.28 mph
clocking ancl just missed !he
e.L record of 7.11 with a 7.12
llecond elapsed time.
Schumacher had not an-
l.icipated racing on the \Vest
Coast until fall but the
performance Of the new car
ha!! warranted a return trip
Saturday night.
At that lime he will attempl
to collect the $1,000 record
bonus posted by the track
along with the $1 ,100 posled
for funny car top t ll.mlnator.
OuMr Gary Cochran oC Foun·
lain Valley and Gerry Glenn.
Qualifying begins at 2 p.m.,
followed by eli1ninations from
8 to 10:30 p.m. Spectator• will
also get a break at the gale.
Adf\lission for the double
feature (fuMy cars and fuel
dragsters) is $3.
Don Enriquez of Dana Point
was a victim of circumstance1
Saturday night in a combo
eliminator contest.
The low qualifier al 7.44
seconds, Enriquez was nearly
a half second quicker than bis
first round opponent Gene
Brasel of Ontario. Then It hap.
pene<I.
As 1he pair were staging.
Enriquez' parachute suddenly
and inexplicably popped out
and fell lo the ground.
Brase.I went on lo win the
event, defeating Larry Van
Unen of Buena Park in the
final, 7.93 seconds -189.87
mph to 8.05 -176.47 mph.
Major League Standings
AtltERJCAN LEAOU£
Baltimore
New York
Detroit
Boslon
Cleveland
Washington
P.1innesota
An&el1
Oakland
Kansas Clty
Milwaukee
Chicago
East Dlvl1lon
W L
80 45
69 57
68 57
63 6(l
fll 64
80 65
Wtst Dlvl1~
73 l()
" 56 61 M
49 77
~ 80
46 83
Pel.
.1140
.54'1
.544
.512
.488 ....
.593
.552
.54-0
.389
.3%
.357
GB
11113
12
16
19
20
5
61,~
25 1/i
281\
3Q
NATtONAL t.EAGUE
Eas& Dlvlalon w L
Pittsburgh 70 57
New York 68 59
Chicago 00 62
St. Louis 80 00
Philadelrhia 57 69
fl1ontrca 65 71
"'~lit Divlsk>n
Cincinnati 84 45
Dod1en 70 65
San Francl.ico 63 62
Atlanca 63 63
Houston 56 70
San Diego 48 79
MlftlltW'I ltWlh
(:~l~to 4, DHllft t
Alllllll 6. MOnlrtll I
Pct.
.551
.528
.516
.476
.452
.137
.651
.560
.504
.l\IO
.444
.378
GB
3
4V, ...
1211
""
12
19
iii\
26~li
35
,. ....... 0-1
All1n11 !Jt,.,,•I , .. 10) 11 NIW Vgrt; lillYtn ..
I), 11ltM ClllClnNll (Clillnlnt&r .. j) It l'ftllMltll>llla ILtrKh
>11, "Ith• (.)11c.9te /HIM& U•lll 11 °"'"" IMOillltr Ml.
ni9hl Plt!llM;ftll lW•lk•• It.I) II $an oi... I~
t.u,, """' ''· ..... ~. ICtrllOll .. 1)) .,. s .. ~ l"r-LHI (Jllt-IKk Ml, n111M HovtlOn (llllr,..._llTI IHI ti Monltff! l"""r'°"'
l)·fl nlthl
WtMttll•.-'l ··-~!Oii 11 Mllnlr ... 1, 11lfllt
All.,la al Mt'<ll Vort, ftllhl (ln~l"'ltll 11 PM!l<iflPlll•, nltlll °''. lO .. , °"'''"' ""hi 1'111, ~rrv11 tt Stn DI-. nlfh! 11, ltlrll II .... ,,.ni;IM.o
DEAN LEWIS
1966 HARBOR ILVD .. COSTA MESA 646-9303
Service, Perts, & Body Shop
Now Open Until I p.m. Mondty Nighh I I
Or1nge county"• Largm1t >11d·MostModorn Toyota and Volvo Dealer
Altl~tl ..............
1'"'4 W. Llflcl.111 '""·
C1Pi1tr1M S-11-fff..llll ""' a.. .. y Ptl'I: •11..
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11u N1w1M1N atv0. ..,. R•taer1111
•1 LllllWllll Pullt•tw~1'-"» 01111.,. 01'11.,._....Ht
Ill Soulh Ruclll '141 ••••M 0f1Yt &IV~.
DEAN LEWIS
AU•UST 5'1CIAU
SPECIAL
1970 TOYOTA YIAGON
::!:$1117
VOLVO
DIMO
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$466
•SU8782
1 1
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ltlll~ R..011. Htli.t, Aulwnllil. .,_
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$1095
~~
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•
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I
,1 AILY PILOT
'
..
TV DAILY LOG
TUESDAY
AUG.UST 21
•:ZI QI 00 Wetltitt (C) M1rp Shits.
•:JO 8 Y•li•il ''*"' Slltw (C) (!iOJ Abbt Lane, Wts H•rtlSOll, V'ic: P1rry,
Giff r.toAr 11111 Iii• wile, 8arb111,
'""" "Ca1Wi4 c. .... (30)
GI 9CI>111y r....nu Mlttit1 1301
@(l) ... """"' -(C) (30)1
9 Us fer tic '10a (Cl (lO) I
G 'ltl.w• I• l.lrill1 (30)
8) Jlltidlrt J4 (t) (60)
fn TM lwl'l l.,.,t (C) (lO) Kiili
Mllfintl.
C!) SHU Rtt.1 ._ U1t1 (30)
0) A W.W AJlrt (C) (JO)
·-n. (C) (IOI ..... , ............ (M)
7;55 G> c...-.. .. s.,: .. .
1:00 ......... c.t (C) (30)
ti Te T• .. fflli (C) (31))
lilt Ill II! -..,..... (Cl (i>)~ble Gftl JIM fkW.~
7:00 6CIS EVllMt: Nm (C) (30) t ;JO.lil (j)TM C...• aN t.J.
Wajllf CloMitt. (C) fiJ) (R) M1Uit (IMYI P1tt11·
0 a;, NIC flllrMfr Ntn (C) (30) &Oft), Gool. Drln•111tttr'1 ltllCNllry,
D1Yid 8rinkle1. fr1nk Md011, Jah1 blci111 lD act likt 1 llll!lfll 11 kn• Cb1n~l101. and IJ.'1 iltuitiol tell1 kr lhlt O Will's Mr Uni1 (C) (30) Mr lathM ii t11t tlljtct ti his $k·
• I LM LMq (3<1) rt11ry'1 llfldioli.
m"" "' ""' <Cl<llll G tB -ttl 1301
liJW "'""' (CJ !llll. .I Ill M,JU;/P-1 !!!!HCI llOl
fl!} f•c• f• Ht1lUI (30) fracram Ill lilllllic:I J lMlll tel (IO)
OI IC*ilJ breatblfll lot intrusldllt:• IJ IUflf..,.... (q (l>J (I) '1ht
entray. TrouDW Cll!plll." A ltlk 11 f~t llil.· OJ ClJ Trvtti IN C.t ... 'tt'kt' (C) torr 111i1 hllwt ti Mtt•a Crltk.
E) CMist tk liti111 W1r4 (C) (JO) 0 II ..... (() (60)
a!l ~nll Mlri1 ($5) D afl(J)EDMltats ...,, M.D.
Q) TM Gill (C) (JO) (Cj (60) (I) "TU Sitt Pti1111 of
l :JO .. 5 CL CIS llHl-"11 IHN:
"lilt ,., ... CM.net" (!) (to111·1
1d1) 'S&-0.nnr •1r-. Cirrt Jur.
1u11. llK:Olt M1ur11. JICOboll'J.ky.
1 m~4-m1nnt11d fefUJll, Jlllp1 "'j
111011nt PollJll colonel (Ju11na)
Ind llil S\fjlltlltlrl Htlpt fro.. the
H1tls.
Ptact." Dr. Wtlbf' lfNb I colltll
studlnt itj41r'41 bf I ~M ~111·
in& • ~atioll.
a"' " ea. ... ~ (JO)
IDlwU'I LN (60)
ID~· (C) (IO) (I) "A
Coll'letS1!i111 Wlli Hlllltl1WtM Hll'f-
lo1d "
<llHIJ <IS -(C) illll e ,,. V"9I ...... (30) ll!l ..... _ , .. .
II "IN THE COMPANY OF * STRANGERS"-KNBC
Special on the Alienated
Amertcan. Narrated by
E. G. MARSHALL
10:)0 B CIS ,.._ t,.a.i (Cl (10)
'1Th1 Arms Otblt1." Sltl1ton B•fry
Goldwtl11 (R·Aril.) 1M 'fllli1m Cl CHrnID '" tie c,.,.., " f1ou11ir1 (D·Wls.) ,,. fNhifM.
str1..,111 IC) (60)"'Tll1 Alitn1!14 OTwlli&M z.. (30) Atnt11t1n." Dotum11111ry hoa!H .ci.
Ind flirlllld by [. Ci. MarWll, IOI (I) Fi• , .... (CJ (30)
who l1ldl 1111 KHBC DocumentllJ E Ml ....._ (lO)
111111 to lsil Yill.1 aM T""lll' 11:0011 D a.·-(C) I
ClllJIOll, East lM An1tlt1 Nld Mk· B ...... -· Mttl.11" P11\ ill Ctnlral Las An11lls, •""' '"IJllM wtthi• CNMI"• a....,. t: CCI ...., ..-
1
11n11 11 11Md whit tllty tkiM a (7r1N) '60 -~ Clift.
Wfon( •ith IOCietJ'. lll Rulict .It VH Awl.
8 TN Mlfil li1•1 (C) (lO) II lllNr: ..... _. llfl• (M· vtntvt•I '4l--G.r11 S.1411• o llll w m "" ..... !Cll""> m r ("Ji "fill Lule ~ lllhl 11111 in 10\'t l'rA m": ... •Mii 1n udl1n1e 11114111'11 fro111 lfM 'UI
Mi641t [1st, • •/IO.;n, tie 11 tlM u (I) a C1J -. m
CJOW/I princt ol bis OIMIAllJ Nico 18 IAf'I IWi I W ">
Mllw11dcl1 111ts1L ll:liD B QIWlllsw l riffill C)
O llliltil11 $ M"lt: (C) "lt1n1r-D @(JJ cD ... ., ~-(C)
4i••" (mlllKll) -~, -Pit 8Clllnt Phyllis • II ..... Gtnr Htr·
Ttrry Moon, 1'inct G1~nor. D1•n1 Mt! iuuta.
J111er Sluden\ is perw1d1d bf hi1 D , .. · •
budd' to allow hil oldtf b1olhtf on M"lt. ••IKMtl , • hril
ll1v1 110111 th• Ari roru to 11u (•lh•nllllf) ~5 -Clwt llooM,
c1r1 of his 1111 •hrle hi 1tudlti Cliulfe Dt11plli1.
lor 1111111. I fJ ~ Cil m M en.tt tCI
m T-~ c. C) JO) Ill lrlwil: ~ ta hfMrJ" ''""' " nw11utncti I I I (comt4y) '56 -Sllill.,. Wi11t111,
• ""1 M1• (60) Johll Gtl(IOll.
aJ CJ) ID I Dr11r.1 et l11nn11 (C) l :QO II Mollie: "I.ct ltltl~ Trlil"
(30) (R) "[t11n1tly Youra, .ll111111t.''I {•nl11n} '4t-f11Ttsl TllCUr.
TM Yilit of 0111 ol IOll'(I old 1irt. Q Q ,.._ (C)
flilnds 1111M1 Rtnnit je11ol!L m M . . .... ·-· I ""· ... lll)'t· fD TIM TIJ TUI li1N Up 160) 1117) '45-Jimes Lpd11, Sa!lr Ultr,.
"Youn& Aprll." In thn 19~ pro-11.15 0 ""--,.. (C) ~11Cl)o11, 8cstlt LM pl1rs 1 dllCh· • • 1
111 .tlo rtlwm1 I• htf" ho1111 l1n4 2:00 II All·N11M. U.: "l.al .... if
ftl 111 1111n1td 1111rn111 irillt 1 ...,.,. "T1ll S,, lial" 1N "TM ct•• princa, pltyt4 b, Jowpti l ................
Sdlildk,.111. .t:JO II ._/lift U• hit .., ICI
•
Conway's
New Show
'Unusual'
17 YCllNQN ICO'IT
HOU. YWOOD (UPll
Comedian Tim Conway aat in
1 boi.~Ukt off1ce at CBS
Televloloa City IJld atl<mpted
-totally wlllioot lMICC:ea -to
eiplalo ill new fall ,;i,.,.,
The puqy. balillnf COiiar of
j'Mctta1c'I Navy" wu unsure
d wbat bi& new Yfr!Xure would
be.
Ke was CQl)fklent, however,
whot tt wouldq \ be.
"ll'• not a variety or
muaicaJ lbow," he pid, "At
thla time we have Art Metrano
who bums lor UJ. We also
have one dlncer, Sally
Struthen, who dots 111 the
June Taylor dance rouUnea on
the mow.
"Another thin&, we 4ren't
going to haVt jokes on the
sen-...s, They've hlred three
writers who have written for
te levision beCore and seven
writer• who have n e v e r
written for t.e.JevLsM>n."
Conway sat back in hi.5
chair, confident of the future.
Conway h.u IlttJe cause for
confkienct. Mil western series,
"ftango," lasted only a aeUQn.
~ first "Tim Conway Show"
died before 1 full season. As
the star of ''Tum--0n," .he waa
shot down after a single show.
"We held 1 pttmiere and
canctllatioo parl for 'Turn-on'
the same ntlht," he said
chttrfuUy.
"In the new show there will
be no blackouts, no one-liners,
no singers, no skttdles arx:I all
our acripts are in code. From
that you may 11thet we have
no comedy.
"Au contrairt," he said,
tripping off the French phrase
breeilly. "We don't bave a Jot
of lhln11.
"What more could you ask
for thin aii inn<it.lnce·r, a hlifi"i·
mer and a girl dancer? I'll be
oo screen, too, liilening to the
hummer and watching the 1irl
dancer.
"Now you may say to
yourself that this ii an unusual
show . And I may say lo you it
is an unusual show.
"We are not going to make
fun ol Spiro. But we are mai·
ing fun ol the Japanese. I
think it's about time we ~new
that . We ao 15 mlnutes without
a word of Enellsh -j u s t
Japanese. The bad feature of
Lhis is that it limits our
audience .
"You have to see the show
to appreciate ii. It's hard to
explain when you have guys
not writing ll exttpt in code so
other 9hows won 't steal the
material."
DAILY P'ILOT ll•tt l'llel•
'Ironside' Series
(;hang~s But-Little
&1 CYNTHIA LOWRY one show In which Sgt. Brown
"' -that 's me -ha1 1 con-}IOLLYWOOD (AP ) -IC I JrontaUon with Ironside.
televlalon aerie• can 11urv1ve There's another in which
It• third season, It Is a going there'• a fight belwetn ~rown
concern. an e!labllshed hit. a~d . Mark Sa~'er, that a Don
And ndbodv 11 going to do Mit.Chell her•. " 'Another pause, unUI Mil· much tlnkerln11 with the chell cautiously plc~ed up
mae.hlnery of su1..'t't5ll. another thread.
"lronside," lh1: NBC cops· "Wilen you're in rour fourth
and-robbers serie., Is In that ye.11r, you have to keep I C·
sltu1lion. Raymond Burr , in ting," he observed.
the jitle role, will continu e to Very lone paliae thl1 Ume.
1rowl lovably from h I • followed by convera:atlon
wheelchair. unrelated to lrotllide'1 cases:
A word has Je11 ked out lhat children. home repair,, a
Barbara Anderaon will have Sammy Davia ptrty.
new wardrobe of more colorful Just as the orf.camera Burr
clothes this sea10n -but bears no resemblahef: to
that's okay because althoui."th Ironside ~or Perry Muon J,
she plays 11 low aalarled the buttoned-down Set. Brown
policewoman aide, she is also and the dark-skinned Sanger
supposed to be 11 rich soclalite. are completely unlike the ac-
The two Dons -GAiloway tors who play them .
. MESA FAVORITES -Winners ol the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse's 1969-70
awards are, seated (from left), Barbara Van I-loll , best actress; Anita Gross~
man, Linda Baum Memorial Award , and Julie Haas. best supporting actress.
Standing are Joe Del Rosso, best supporting actor: Lois Wilson, accepting
for Bob Wentz, best actor ; Ed Little, Thespian Award , and Ray Scott, star of
favorite play, "The Girl in the Freudian Slip."
and Mitchell -who play Calloway Is a c11u1l, llaht-
lronslde 'i devoted ma 1 e heartlld feUow who amble!
helpers. wlll hit the same around In well-worn 1hlrt.9 and
familiar notes : one earnest faded jeans. He 'lfll riuralng
and dogged, the other short· an ugly gcuge on the hand suf.
fu sed and stiff.necked. fered putting up a MIOden
It is pleasant aitd profitable bookcase on his wall and kept
to be involved wllh such a glancing at his watch so he
series. The headache comes in wouldn't be late for a circus
sitting for pres ea s 0 n in-matinee with hla daughters, S
terviews to talk about a show and 3 years old. Wentz Scores ;\gyln thst by de&icn will be un-f\1itchel1. Who come.s o(f 1
Top Mesa Players Feted
changed from pre v i 0 us bit bosUle on screen is
seasons. agreeable and - u n t 11
Burr was polled away from n1idafternoon -1leepy. He's
a scheduled interview for an one of the night people, In love
emergency pr 0 d u ct i 0 n with stage acting and most in-
meeting about his contribution terested in producln1.
By TOM TITUS
Of .. 01llJ .... , 11•11
Three productions split the
glory at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse's annual awards
banquet Saturday night, while
Bob Wentz picked up his third
trophy to beoome the county's
most honored act.or of 1970.
Wentz, who rece.nlly won a
Victor award at the Lagu na
Moulton Playhouse and the
DAILY PJLOT's Distinguished
Performance award -both
(or his perfOr'mance in "l
Never S11ng for My Father,"
was honored anew Saturday
with the best act.or award for
his role in Costa Mesa ·s "A
Delicale Balance."
The top acclair.t went Ill the
Civic Playhouse comedy "The
Girl in the Freudian Slip,"
which captured the ratroiu
Association plaque aa the
(avorite play of the season.
That show also produced the
playhouse'• TheSJl\lln Award
-• trophy aiven tor the best
performmree in a role or any
size -for Ed Little. Little
pl11yed a psychiatist's super.
neurotic patient in "Freudian
Slip."
The two stars or the sta1>on
opener -Barbara Van Holt
and Joe Del Rosso -each
took home a trophy from
Saturday's fe stivities. Miss
Van Hott was named best ac-
lress for her role of I swing-
ing bachelor reincarnated as
a girl , while Del Rosso's
perfor1nance as his/her best
frie nd ea rned him the best
supporting actor laurels.
Julie Haas, who played the
petulant daughter in ' · A
Delicat.e Balance'' was named
best supporting actress of the
Casta Mesa season. to a Red Skelton show, Burr. who learned through
The highlight of the evening postponed because Skelton had nine years of "Perry Mason"
came with the presentation of wrenched his back 8 few days lo really lead lwo distinct
the Linda Baum Memorial earlier. Galloway and Mit· lives, has far-flung Interest
Award, for dedicated service chell, both on short vaca tions that range from a copra ptan-
lo the playhouse, to Anita and busy v.dth private con· talion in the Fijls to modern
Grossman, musical director cerns, jumped loyally it not art.
for a number of childre11's enthusiastically into th eliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;
showg over the past fi ve breach.
years. The award is given in "I think you will find this
memory of the young act ress season that the relationships
who died two years ago. are more solid," began
sh<lrtly after starring in Galloway, almost diffidently.
"Dream Girl " al the "What does that mean ?"
playhouse. asked the reporter. Entertainment for the even· 'lliere was a longish pause HO~l or •?C~JM& CHAii lHU
lng was provided by "1iss and Oelloway said : "There's / 1ot £A5T tAtlOA I L¥D. Gr~man. resident director --·~===::==:'==1ll l~l/.{£_11~Al~B0~•~1t~!l~'5~U~LI~· i~!l~<~"!!'~
Pali Tambellinl 11nd actress-r;G: I G I director Mart.hella R1ndall. oomy us s
who ca.1ducted 11 satirical Your Kinda Guy
revlew of the 1969-70 sea&on .
The awards banquet was ~ -
held in the Costa Mesa Coun-
try Club.
Er11ie Pyle Film Re-1·eleasetl SflYI Mti;tUllN
''THI lllYllS ..
DALLAS (UPI) -A pro-
ducer is re-releasing a movie
about newsman Emie Pyle,
who died 25 years ago
reporting World War II on the
Pacific front, and publishing a
I
book of his columns.
Lester Cowan said the
movie. "The Story of GI Joe "
will be shown this fall.
He said the proceeds will go
to the 36th Infantry Division to
be donated to a charity of
their choice.
The movie is about Pyle and
Capt. Henry Waskow of
Beltatl, Tex., a member or the
3&lh Inranlry. Wiskow, who
also was killed In the P1ciflc,
was the subject or one ol
Pyle's best remembered col·
umns.
"This picture is b e i n g
brought back now because
there is 1 whole new 1enera·
lion that has neve r seen or
heard of Ernie Py I e's
writings." Cowan said. "He
wrote little stories about
ordinary people. He loved peo-
ple avid hated war .
"The film is more pertinent
to young people today than it
was \~1hen first relea sed al the
end of the war because there
is a war oo now. When It wal
first released people were gel·
ting tired or war."
The movie, sta rring Burgess
Meredith as Pyle and Robert
P.fltchum In his first movie
role as Waskow, was first
rele11sed in IMS, ftve weels
before the war ended .
The book will consist of 100
columns written by Py\e, SO of
ones picked are the ones lhat
are the most pertinent to
world problems today, that
appea l to feelings and young !
people.''
"Pyle 's works arc perhaps !
the best piects of )Var
literature in our history."
LOOK TO
EDWARDS
LUXURIOUS
CINEMAS
FOR THE BEST
SHOWS TONIGHT
lH M.....i1 • Cli1t hstwood
"Paint Your ~•gon':·GP
• Liliiiif".'saii'am ·----ril !!I.I!!!!!.!! -Al.10 l•PI
"Th• Downhill Racar"
C•.r. chill, fr•• J:
e St1rt1 Wttln1ad1y
.llJ\S srel!'AR1'
H
A11ttlo1y 91IH
l•ttid ........
"WA~K IN THE
SPRING RAIN"
PREMIERE ENG BEMENT! SHOWl"ll llDWI
"THE MIND
BLOWER OF All TIME!"
At l 1ll·C•111p. Sli1w l1t111
10131 l•a OffltN O,.. 1:15
P.M. S1p1r Pl•,trl••4
• s.,.rSHc• hr.
~
-Ti•t flllllNi•
Roted
(R) MON. tti._ 'II.
•1• 11111 t 1U SAT". ,, .. f, II:•,.,..,
IUN. l :IHtaM•U
l(AltATE STUDIO of C11f• M••• •••P•"• •* t4J w. 19th St., •• them written before the war
EXCLUllYE A•EA
5HOWING
flac1"ti• I t9th. Wi h••• 111"110-1111'1 •n-1 cl .. u11 111 11 u1w1I and 50 during it. Cowan said he
for 1111111, wo""•" I i•'1· 17-141. for l111for,..•tio-O•v1 1545·109•. hoped to ha ve lht book out by
•ft1r •:JO p--441· 117 ,, 154J·li150. Chi ef hulructo1 , f,.111!• Oct . 1 but a publisher has not
NO ONI UMDll 17
UNLfSS WITH PAllNT
W t DP<E ~DAI
D1111wr•, Jtp•• N1tion•I K1r1t1 Ch11'11pi111~. be ho m "li•I "'1,; 1.,,,,,1 'll _ en c sen. '" J.._ IC•'• '-4tr•tl•1 t ... IMM•tNN IC•r«• Dtll, •t I I d h I I 811K1 C.bot 11 Wr•r. ,.. • ~ 1 ·• se ecte I e co utnns or .. ., ...... 11 ........ , ...
1:00 u HA ~-· .. "••ltM" (Mcu· lit~:::;:~~~~=:::::::::~~~,"'~~boo~k~ ... ~c·~·~·~·~·~·~id~,~·~·T~he man\lry) 'SS-Sir llurtftot Ofji,.ier
IMrft!ll.
O~YTIME MOVIES m "Oft• et Ollf Airu1tt 11 •• i#(' {41•1111) '42:-Erie PvtrM11,
Go4f1t1 Tt1rlt. I :•. fCI ...,.. If .. ...,. Cliv••· . llllt) ~ -Victor M1111r1, Mill 2:00 p "T• Wittllllt fttr" ('rllfll) llMCM~ Jim•• Alnm. I 'fi-K!rt: Doucl4'. l '· M1r1t11M, ' Robert B11kt, Cllri1tlnt llllllM•
I:• 8 '"11Q: hlllJ Wi4t1 A(tl-" GJ ..... If Mri.. I,....
fc.mtdf) '40-Jd Bt11111. ltodln l*•tt•lll) '$1-JiM D1wis, Arllt•
ter, Elltll 0.-. W1111111.
t:JO D ., .. .,. lw 1 Didi SUM" 4:30 . "TIM Kim fllll" (OllM~) (lilrsl~ 'U-1tidl1rd ((1i., Vlw· 'II~ll•••tt 80)111, MtfW Wilt,
a LllMHon, M Hirt. lM .IOllfd1~
FOR ADVERTISING IN THE
WEEKENDER
PHONE 642-4321
FINAL WEEK! ENDS SUN. AUG. 30! GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE
01
STAG[ • " •• • flis•tlJ tlUJllffi-'t •• ".....:·fe.tgist•r ".,;,, • f4111J, "'4l"ifirrnt •. "-Dai~ Pilot
•• •• 1 Ji111llt«tIf11'11 lhf f•11'i1J •• ''-l, A. Times
LAGUNA MOULTON PLAYHOUSE
, 606 l.ot"!'• Canyon Roi~, i..,..,. lt1•h
tulj4'111I Jo 1b1 FtJlifltd of Ar11
Al 1t1f1, any nl9ftt at Y2 ptiGt for childr1n 1nd L
studi11t1 II an4 1u1d1r-fnd 11f"Vic1 ptraonntl.
.Twesday1 lll'"th
s .... ..,. "' 1:40
TICKETS ' CALL 494-0743
L_ __ ..,.;_ _ _J ll:1=.
tN-n4•ws • cm1
=--==--=-:~-.-,..;:
Joh W.yH 11
"Chi1um" (0)
"Wait u'ntil D•rk"
....... cm2
=~un'n:'\tlri~
.... l.c..4 w ...
G-IOIGI c. $Con •
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DAILV PILOT )9
. Vince Back in Gown Garroway Returns,
This-Time on Air
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
IJurbonlc 1team plant ta a
dlrector'1 dream spot for a
dlaae acene -five or six
lltories of huge metal -pipes
and tanks with 1talra wrapped
around the outside lllr:e a 1tant
strangling vine.
The thermometer had push·
ed past 90 degree:s as the ptop
men ol 11Matt Lincoln" plied
at Its base bite ol light balsa
wood and simulated brlckl
made of foam rubber to loolr:
like a junk heap.
Vince Edwards, the former
Ben Casey, M.D., and the
future Matt lJncoln, M.D.,
was standing behind t h e
cameras, dressed Jn faded
blue jeans, sport shlrt and
sneakers, leafing through the
day's edition of the Hollywood
R>porter.
''Tbll episode u about a boy
who wants ·lo blow up the
1st AREA SHOWING
PAMVlitoH9 TECHNICQ..QR8
r ~~•= 11!1-· 2nd GREAT FEATURE
AUDREY HEPBURN
ALAN ARKIN
RICHARD
CR EN NA
lteam plant," e 1p1a1 n fl d
Edwards. "We're aeWna up
now 10 the stunt man can
throw the bomb."
First, the young a e to r
playlns Ille boy wllh the bomb
had t.o be filmed as he raced
from the plant toward the pile
of debris and hurled what
looked Uke a wrapped ahoe
box into the middle. n took a
lot of action -once the boy
overshot the mark; another
time hla foot slipped, throwing
off hla Urning. Then the aunt
man dressed like the actor
took over.
He dashed and hurled the
box beyond the junk pile as
flames and debris belched m
cue from Its center,
Everybody groaned.
1'11iat guy," said Edwards
with a grin, "will never pitch
for the Dodgers."
Minutea went by as the prop
men rewtrt.d the small bomb
and tucked the fake bricks and
litter back into the pile.
In Edwards' mobile, air-<::Ono
dlUoned dressing room, he
talked about his second doctcr
15eries for ABC.
"This time I play a
psychiatrist without a couch
- a 1JOCial psychiatrist,"
Edwanls said. "This guy is
more learned and m or e
tolerant than Ben Casey -l
was not against p 1 a y I n g
another d\K1ar, I just didn't
want to be stuck in 1Urgery
and ln a white coat!"
When the series was con·
celved, It was wrapped up in a
tw<Hlour pilot called "Dial Hot
Line," and Vince played a
psychiatric social w o r Ir er
supervising a telephone
answering service for youth in
diatress. For a variety of
reallOnS this fonnat proved
difflcuJt to expand into a
POPULAR
PRICES!
WWZJM#IL ...... !l'I . lit"IDllTI,... 2 -·liiiii
cc. -r:L:•:IC7 ' s a
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
Rated "GP" All A ... A4.ttt.4
• .,.... DfNNtl" S11c1ntri.
14-• C"'-9 W_, •I
New
teriel. Edwmll w11 glvm a
MW name, promoted t o
psychlatrllt and the bot llne
was rtduoed to the 1upportlng
cast.
Jlhl!o_lwmula •erles about
psychlatrl.st.s hal(e never done
well in network television -
0 Breaklng Polnl" 8nd "11th
Hour" made few wave! -
Eidwarda believes that the
coocepl ol a psychiatrist
working tn the field can lick
~ 1taUc quality athers bad.
"We are handling all sorb
of contefnporary problems -
the tmwed mo(her who wants
to give awa;y her baby; the
priest who leaves the church
By BOB THOMAS '"!llere'U be ,.... tllment.s
ol educatloD, -elements ol HOLLYWOOD (AP) entertalmneot. And, I hope, Startin& Aug. SJ, local r..-ay there wtll be at l<all one el&o
travelera wW be able to IOOthe ment fl. suz:priae." ~
thelr frmled nerves by listen-Garroway supplied an eJe.
illg to the familiar, friendly ment or surprise for the
voice fl. Dave Garroway. btoadcasllng trade wbeo bl
The same Dave Carroway announced hi.s affiliation wlt.b
who took tarly television KFI. Recently be hid been
v1ewen on a tour of the "Wide presiding over a televial<11 talk
Wide Wor.ld," who pmlded sbow wh.lch had been syn.
over •'Today" for 10 years, dlcated from Boston.
who was I.he communlcator of "Monitor" on NBC radio. ''It died at\et a Yftl', and I'm still not certain why,'' he
and wants to marry; student L---.i1...:. .... ..:.-------"""-"_..""" confrontations, m o b Ii : a
'111e owlish emcee ls shifting remarked. ''The rtviews and
hls base af operaUoo to Los the public response had been
Angeles and will preside over excellent. But tt was an RKO
the U p.m. spot on radio sta-General package, and the
tioD. KFI. Does thls seem ll.ke company underwent a change
a comedown for one of of personnel. AU live pro. sniper; and as the season goes
on we'll get around to a lot of Tla1•ee's a Crowd
relevant things." Danny Kaye (rear) as a refugee fleeing the advancing Gennans and Curt Edwards stresses t b a t viewera will not find that Matt Jergens (left) as a stuffy Polish colonel take o!f for England with orderly Akim
televi&lon 's most noted grmnmi.Dg wa,, caoceled.'"
personalities! Not at all. GamJway moved to Bolton
Li.ncoln is ju.st Ben Case with Tamiroff in "~1e and the Colonel" tonight at 7:30 on Channel 2's ''The CBS
a dilferent name and ac-__:Tu:.:c:•.::.•d.::.•:::Y_-N""igc.h.::.t.::.M.::.o:..v_ie_s_.'_' --------------------
cupatlon. Gone are the tense,
Local radio can be blg after 17 years tn New York.
business in Lot Angelesli, as which, be sadly concluded, bad
well as other metropo 'tan become unlivable.
short-fused and humorless at.
titudes, and ln their place will
be an easy-mannered , out~
going and concerned
Samarilan.
Vince SIYI he has pretty
much pattttned his character
on the series' consultant, Dr.
Don Muhick, a specialist in
thi.s novel area ol psychiatry.
Tryouts Set
For 2 Plays
'nle Nifty Theater of Hun·
tington Beach will hold audl·
tiODS Sunday, Aug. 30, for its
upcoming one-act plays, ''The
Popcorn Machine" and 1''11le
Dentist."
A cast of sis: men and two
women is needed for the pro-
duct.ions, which will b e
directed by George Betar.
Tryouts will be held al 7
p.m. in the theater, 307 ?.iain
St., Huntington B e a c h •
Further information may be
obtained by calling 536-9158.
--.n ,.... •11114' cs Prcdda
areas. especially in the late-"New Yort is lite a sleff,
a f ternoon. home-from-work beautiful, charming wcman
OO<lrs. who has turned into an ugl)'.
What klnd or a show will bitch," be obeerved.
GamYWay present! ''l came to tbe coaclusloD Nurse Martha Visits Viet
"Mostly talk, With some that I didn't want to live there
By GENE HANDSAKER Twice she has been wounded sim ple." muaic w~n it's relevant to any more after my son bad
by irhrapnel -but she makes For 4~ years, while making what 's happening on the abow. been rooued three times. We HOLLYWOOD (AP) light of that. •·The wounds 1'11 do some telephoning, have lived in Greenwidl VilJtce and
M th I I movies on this same lot, Para-· I ts and d nI ar a Raye caves n weren't serious. On<:e in the occasiona gues o be was o y 11 at the time~
October for her sixth annual foot, once in the ribs. l've had mount, she worked two days a monologues. It will be a show Three times be \lU acconed~
five-month duly tour io Viet· worse hangovers." week as a nurse at nearby about things that concern peoo "I decided to leavt New.
nie· 54-year~ld entertalner,_c_ec1_an_o_f _Le_ba_non_H_os..:p:..ita_1._:.P_le_1_od_ay=--. _______ Y_;o.::.rt..:·_"_be.::..:dec:__lared.:.:::_ __ _ nam. 1-
As an entertainer? Not speaks hesitantly of the lesser known nursi ng side of her twin primarily. "If there's a soldier career _ as if she fears it will
sitting around with a guitar in sound like publicity talk.
the evening, I might 'sing a She showed a snap.shot or
!ewsongs,"shesays. herself in Green Beret
The wide-mouthed, raucous, uniform, flallked by two smll-
comedienne goes as a nurse -ing Green Beret soldiers, The
a .surgical nurse. ''There are image contrasted sharply with
no jokes in surgery," she her appearance now as a
notes. "1nod witch" with 1 on g,
A registered nurse since pointed, false nose i n
INSPECTED USED TIRES
Big
Selection
Most
Sizes
$ Big savings
on slightly
used new car
takeoffs, tool
1936, she's Lt. Col. Martha "Bugaloos," a Saturday NBC
Raye of the Army Nurses show filming for the fall
Corps Reserve and serves television season.
with the Special Forces, the 1'.1artha began nu r I e's C M 75 l 17th St r.tr2 Green Berets. training on the side while Biiii osta esa Firestone Store -4 -ll'tO' 444
Y.'here does she serve~ in vaudeville with her parents. HOURS M F I I t 7 S t 8 t 5
Wh , "I 1., · 1 , h : on. " r ., a.m. o p.m. -a ., a.m. o p.m.
•·1 can't tell you. Tha t's all 1 ~~Y~·~~~· ~e~•t~. ~t s~t~a~t~;;;;;;;;:;;iiiii;;;~;;;;~;;;;~~;iiiii~ classified." h
Talk About GROWTH
-OON.11.D SU11£RLIHD·Ellllll OOUlD-lOlt SKlRRITT
Sure, the Orang• Coast ha1 been growing. But 1 look at c1rculatlon figures be Io w will prove th1t the
DAILY PILOT is growing even faster. All the figures repr ... nt first qu1rter readings for NCh of thei
calendar years indicated ~nd the 1tati1tlct are filed with the Audit Bu,...u of Circulations (ABC), acc.P,.
ed by the nation's l1rgest advertising space buytrs as the mo&t 1uthorit1tiv1 tource for newspaper clflo
culatlon figures. And, as Al Jolson ustd to 1ay1 ''You a.ln't sMn nothin' yet,''
(io~ .. --·---·--· .. -fii1 ,,_...., ....... ~" ~
IGllWmD IOlllTM.1*11 1111'.:UillllO.t.' ----------Cob' b)oDE WXE9 ~ ,
Exclusive Southern
Orange County
Engagement
Cali 847·9608
Year
AIC ltl lllHlrler tlllllf
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
Dally Average
i fMlllhl Mllllol Mtt'U a1
14,J4J
18,055
23, 184
26,609
29,106
32,983
34,257
136,155
One Day •rw11 AiC AM¥111 .........
11,711
18,734
23,854
27,404
38,695
35,408
35,716
38,,329
1969 39,183 41,252
1970 40,552 44,236*
•o.+Ny UUlll Wl•JI,, HIM wllll AIC
The DAILY PILOT Has Plenty To Talk A~out ·----
Gains in past 10 years:
•
Average Dally Clrc:ulatlon One·chly Dlstrlbutlo:f
282°fCL 263_o/o
I
l
1.
• -1\ f:;::Pf N Yr:"f ..... .,..JiK <E:A •411\ .. 5'4C:o, il 'WO\ 1aowq..-"'f •1ee; t; •; M<•""w ____ " .... ---· ....-.... --·--•• ·• • ., •
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE 1~::::::~:..:.::..=~:....1=-=~'""-'-'-'-....._~~~~~~--~-1c::---:-• ·~~
-rol • 1000 GoMrol • 1000 Generol IDDO -•I I• -ol IM 0-rol 1000 Cooto Moto llDO Gontrol IODO GOMrol • 1000 · l,;~=;;;;;;;;,.1:::;:*::::-*~-:;;;;;&;;:;-'"'~;;&;;:;'=::;;~~"'::::i::* New Trl·Plexes 1.=;~===~;;;;;;===~I
1'{ 1'{ 1'{ fJ. I n /) BAYCREST el.ind.a J~le loot'"""' e.aut11u1 .• b<d· 1u...., ..!5~~ .... ,.,> -n.v o;>ile5 TAYLOR """"• fam1ly"""" bomr; Larp, beautiful "homuwllh 1\11\ l\"'1 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT H.OME Wye pool; on ...... well .. Income" located In... ~Ml&
' . l nd I le landscaped "''· ~. u.e °""1 Eutaide.,.. °'Costa IRVINE TERRACE 101 I • 1 Ori.. 11nec1 ,,_, Priced to ..u ....._ Featurlng (1) 3 BR,
It's almost school time! See this well located. 5 BR, 4 baths; fam. rm. Mex.lean tile fl.rs., at $11.000. Excellent ftnMo. 2 BA "owners umt>• + (2) Mr'\f:la~f"\
4 bdrm. bqme ready !or occupancy. Family exposed beam cell .. cpts, d.rp1 incl. W/Pier U.,. W'Ul leue/option. Per. 2 BR rental units. See at UllT1 ' rm , dining rm & lovely pool. $'75,000 & sJjp. Excellent Terms •••.•....•. $135,000 feet lot llU'le family or eD-2135 Turt:in Ave., cor Wood-''rm~ m
Pf.'l.LTOP
646-8811
MONEY
MAKERS!
2 Units
Front 3 Bedroom horn"
with fireplace If a nice
apartment in the rear.
Present income $300 a ..........
$25,995
3 UniJs
3 Bedl'OOm bomf', a 2
bedroom garage apart-
ment and a secluded l
bedroom apartment
with a steady inoome of
$395 a rnontb.
$37,500
Duplex
2 Bedrooms in ee,ch 11de
with &IU'ages separat-
ing the apart.llltnll. Lo·
cated near U1e golf
cow-se and Incl udel a
big, private yard. Try
10% down and let some·
one eJU: help )'OU "·i th
the monthly peymenu.
call to Set'!
$31,500
Tri-plex
AUention veterans! NO
DOWN PAYJ.'IENT FOR
YOU. Three separ11.te
units and a 2 Wroom
unit and a reaJ way to
start a nest egg for
your retirement Live in
one and rent out "the
other two. Call now to ..,.,
$41,500
Four-Plex
Modern 2 story v.·ith
(41 largt>, "2 bfodroom
uniU. Present income S600 a mQJJ:th. Excellent Wms available.
$46,000
Home &
Business
3 Bedroom homt" on
large 84' x 233·, C l lot.
ldelll tor any Jlome 1.)lpe
buatnesa. Owner will
carry the financing,
submit your terms.
$39,500
,_ tertaWnr. Bullf>.jn stereo. la, nd Pl. or call Mr. Faurla DOVER SHORES ...:.. $10l,000 For information on all Jots & homes TV, wet bar, ttntraJ va<> at 642-4905.
DeligbUully Different• Brand new 4 bdnn, CALL: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR uum, poo1 ,,...., •l«trlc (Abo new Income uniu tor
den & garden room with wet bar. Dramatlc 133 Dover Dr., Sult. 3, H.I. 642""620 garage door opener "-auto-aa.te in Dana Point).
2-story living room with balcony. For-maJ din-1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I matic sprinldtts. Call for I;;,_..,..,,_,_;;;;;..,.., ing room. King-size master bdrm suite with I; app't cozy COTTAGE-·fl50 total
cathedral ceiling. OPEN DAILY ~•I 1000 Genorol 1M cub to all -no 00wn to
410 Morning Star Lane ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 -Full price $20,..,
"Our 25th Yur" ,~IJtii·· ' ONCE IN A WHILE Re.ity Company i163/": ~& fl•'!,,...;
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., -Realtors ' '75-32lO 64'1-U!S ,,,... ""''· '"""'...i..,... A truly outstanding buy ap. & tarp lot. Cail S6-8424 2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro•d OUCHI pein, and we have It!! South Coast Realtors.
NEWPORT CENTER *644-491*0 Ownt'r cornmu!iog to invefit. Here's an BtMACULATE 4 $31 950 * * * * ment firm i.i Beverly Hilb! bedroom, family room home ' And hates it! Anxious to with pool she back yard, POOL WANTED IJ=========,-:======== J sell his bia beautiluJ 4 bed-lal'f;e covered patio, Ir; FUJ...
G&r>er•I 1000 General 1000 nn, 2 sin .... ho ... A in excel-LY CARPETED wJ(b plush S •. harm. 3 ~,
Fixer upper house wanted
by young, bard 'A"oridn&:
couple with casb. 11;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 ----'-' -~ """' I Located cl t p&CIOUl a C 1ng ....,.... I I' HUNTINGTON BEACH Jent Mesa Verde location. carpe s. · oee 0 room home on qWet. tree-
LOCATED NEAR SHOPPING Great family floor . pl.an, acboola: Ir; shopp111g Ir; cit)' lined cul-de.cac. Large Wn-
AND SCHOOLS. Freshly large game room with fire-park ~ playground. Avail· lly rm, 2 massive raised
CALL G> 646·14t4 BEACH BEAUTY
with &* % loan ~.
Sharp, sharp 2 )'ear old home
v.ith 3 bedrooms, fireplace,
bltlns. great kitchen & a
large screened & crptd ·p&·
tio. Terrific VA Joan on th.is
property can hr assumed by
you. $1B9 Per mo. pays all.
QJl for de.tails.
JOa.. COATS ~WA~LACE
REALTORS
9552 Hamilton Ave.
Huntington Beech
962-4454
place Ir bar dandy bii~k ·able with FHA or VA term• hearth fireplaces all bltm,
pe.inle<l irWde and out. Four yard for sunning. Top quaiL .MESAdon'IDEwatL.IMARS'camen .!:: luxurioua &h"'"' c&rpetmg' & bdnns, 1% bath home with DJ:A>l ·-lireplaee. FIA heat & BIN ty throou t, Easy to set?! BUY nl $29950 · beautiluUy land~ped. Pos-Easy to buy? $47,950. at 0 Y ' · session by 1chool time. Call
Kit. New carpeta thru-OUt -, ~ CO:TS 568424 completely draped. Waahing
facilitie1 in oversi?.ed Dbl.
gara,.e. 15'x3l' patio • pro-WALLACE
res&X>nally landscaped rn. REAL TORS
eluding ,priniden • com-l;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;-. -546-4141-
pletely fenced. NO DOWN H l ("--E I ) VETERANS. LOW FHA orse overs v,...n Vin "91
TERMS, Vacant -.Quick pog. will alllo love thi• 3 bedroom ii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:ii:I
session. Full pnc.e o n I y ranch home on a FULL e !!L
$29.!!50. ACRE bu outdoor frplc I! ONLY ..,.... M. M. Lo Borde, Rltr. BBQ. 'many . ..., .. trtts. MOVING
646-0!iXi Eves: 545-pwl Room. for 12 units. Owner $21 500
will finance a t 8~%. H"~. ' EAST BAYSHORES CUTIE won't lut! -·.J MllSt sell sharp, ~pacious 3
Neat little ranch atyle "'"f 500 Very few left at this price. bedroo(Jl•, 2 baths, complete
91~
Ne1r Newporl P•ft Offlct
e OPEN DAILY l·S e
'Til sold! Wume 6% % VA
Joan. $148 Per mo. Redecor,
3 Br. W /W cpts, drps_ l~
med. pogseggion! Only $22.-
950. 1!184 Federal Ave.
Call: Patrick Wood, 545-2300 e Bill Haven, R••ltor
21ll E. Coast, CdM 673-3211
ASSUME FHA 6%
4 Bednn, 1% bath &. den,
W6talde, 10CiO sq. ft. A-~
condltk>n. $2500 Down.
Cost• Mesa Investment
541-7711
home with -r ' Located on treelined street, bltins, oversized gai:age, WESTCLIFF area, 3 BR on
4 BEDROOMS • 2 bedrooms, 1 bath this mce home ia close. to park like yards, covered pa. cul-de.cac. Alley, Lge boat
lovely yard and •hopping & schooU. Instead tio & separate play area. )'8.l'd. Assume 5~% IBA $32, 950 excellent M>c.atlon °1 ren~. why not buy this Walk to school & park. Full Joan, $21,850. Own I bkr.
FHA and VA Terms. Hea.Y)' $49,300 1:>~ & !".,.,..,.two -~ars i....~~ price $24,fil. Low, kiw ntA 540-2266
..,.,.,,.,,. to .-.,,.,. c ....... to U\q a down payment OR AsmJ. ME "T=ru=P~L=EX=-. ~o=N=L~Y~$35=.=ooo shake roof, beautitu.I en!J'y '"-r ~ •• Hom••·-;,,.
..... & .. '""" ' ..... 5%% Joan, J ust .listed -2 °~nn1, patioo<, enc way and Cl"nttt halls. 2 creuing in value laster <><=\.I
gorgeous: baths. Hu GE than ever before. hurry! Call Sf0.1151. garages. Drive by 424
"'" .. "· bum-;., ,,,. OPEN HousE DAILY Nie' hols Real Estate E3 . :,\"~"B.;"'· Thon •"· Dishwasher. • . ram i I y F'ROM I PM Heritage
Room". Lots ol carpeu and Realtors 3065 Country Club Dr •••L1ot11 A11ume $22,000 5y4•/. GI
drapes. Drive by 3108 "Our 25th Ye•r Outstanding CWllom home S46-t521 loan on 4 BR, den, 1"-ba.
Roanoke Lane Saturday 2--6 In the H•rbor Are•u along 15th fairway of Mesa Cpt/drp. 270 Roblnhood Ln.
PM"' call 673-4400 v ..... Coontcy Club, 4 b;g SPRING $31,000 FP 645-1291. Walker & l ee ~~~~~~~~J bedrooms+ r.m;ly, dining HAS SPRUNG e EASTSIDE-3bt,3 garag"
-fi: game rooms, approx. 3000 ~~~~~~~~~J at this pretty two bedroom $24,000. Easy terms. By
Dirty College P•rk IQ. ft, private putting i:reen -: TWO MASTER home. Jt la Identified with 1-='ow="'=r,;;616-::::::::""'::::·=== Re .....
2700 Harbor Blvd. at Ada.ms
545--0465 Open 'til 9 PM
A HOME
WITH EVERYTHING
Near new custom decorated
-4 bdrm .. 21'1: btl .: lge. fam.
rm. w/frpl. l'"ormal din.
rm. Lovely yard -garden
entry. You own land. $49,500
"Please call for our picture
brochure o( c:urnnt listings"
For The T•lented
Young Couple:
Excellent floor plan with . 2
bedroon1s, separate den and
1 ~1 baths in top Newport
nf'ightbor hood , Tu'O
fireplaces. space for boat oc
camper p&rldng oU alley.
Needs "HER" kleas and
"HIS" hand)'WOl'k. PRICED
AT APPRAlSAL $31 ,900
C. F. Colasworthy
&. CO. REAL'JUR
Bayside Drive.
675-4930
Ea,tside Ch•rmar
$21,DOD
Hurry on I.his one. It's a 3
bedroom, 2 bath home, new-
1)' painted and ready to be
lived in. We sold it once '4
days after "·e got it. if•
available again, so can now
before it'• gone! Located in
Eastside Costa M e 1 a •
~ RL1'R.
Fixer-Upper-51/J91. • see it! towering trees, shruba, %
This house is a mesa. but it (Open :E:veni.rol SUITES Acre of land + rueat room, bu '4 large bedrooms, 2 ~~-J · b 'I I ~ ••g "10 2 HUGE master bedroorrui, besides, makes this an ex· .,..,,..,,, e ectrie u 1 t -n (---·~ -· -pi'--" v.i .... llorses OK, kitchen separate fa mt 1 y EACH with WALK-lN dos. ..... "'"""
room, double garage, forced OLLEGE REALlJ: et~ and PRIVATE bath. '4 llO bang it goes Lor i;u,950.
air heat, large cul-de-li&c •1* ..... ll:Harior.-be<lrooms in all with 3%
Jot with fruit trees galore,: I~~~~~~~~~ baths, FORMAL DINING
co " " d P • Ii o • n d LEASE OPTION NOW room. """''" F • m II Y playhouse. Take over 5~~ Room, built • ins, marble
PAUL•'l'JltlE
CARNAHAN
•S<Y CO. k>rl.n -$178.00 per month l''fREPLACE, You've never
toRLtaJTRpaym. •Dt. 516:8640 4 BDRM OR & FAM ""'n a beautiful mod•m 1093 SW', C.M. '46-5440
home like this fut. $36,SOO! 1-:;;;;;;;
IMMEDIATE POSSESSTON! SEE IT TODAY! 1;;
LitUe money needed. Stun-WALKER & LEE, Realtors EXTRA SPECIAL
ning 4 huge bednns. Double 2043 Westcliff Drive
-Farr,_,, W-.
Mis• Verde 1110
ON THE FAIRWAY
Custom built, 4 bednn. fam.
Uy room, 2 big fireplaces,
This beautiM home over.
looks the 17th I.airway ol
Meu Verde Gou Course.
6%. assumable loan. By own..
er. 3036 Java Rd. Sf0..4095.
$63,501.
Newport le•ch 1200
COlY FOR TWO PLUS
ONLY $17,900
646-7TII Open ti! 9:00 PM Newport Heights; owners
fireplace, l'"'ORMAL DlN· 1----'"'=~---bought Jsrger home, \11an1 --------
ING . Family room. Gourmet VETS fut action on their 3 BR, 2 Newport Beach Home kitchen. Move in with option BA ~ 1-~ ti I + If seller pay1 closing eo&ts • e.uuu s £<:\.) v ng rm to buy money and reason-1 •--" nn w/ •-lo You can mow into this 3 arge ....,,..,y ~l' ' just a short block able rent. Call &ts.6303 bedroom, 2 bath home lor dining area. hardwood Drs,
Own yoor home for le1111 than
rent. Nice bedrooms 16' !iv.
FOREST l OLSON $15.00 total ouh out ol yout" doubl• P' w/lront dri,..;n from Cliff Or.
pocket. H's located in Colla aho alley access. PriCt!d be. Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath -
Ing room. Washer.' dryer,l---'~"'~·~Re~•'~'·~"--Mesa. Jt hu a double low market!!! master bedroom adjolnin,
garage, beaatifu1 landscap-Lachenmyer Rlty tile bath with built lns, plus
ing, covered patio, tree Un-Cal: &46-39'l8 EvH: 64UJ185 tu.I: bath with built IN; ltv-
~ street. Owner a.001111~~~~~~~~~ in;g room with fireplace, dln-
frldge, stove included. Sep. $22,500
$23,500. ltWT)'! 546-8340.1~ BAYSHORES ing area and larie picture
RL TR. windows overlooking lovely
;:.le ~~i. A R..,".' ~ 2 HOMES. 1 LOT
fi45.0303 Start building )'OUr ES-f OREST l OLSON TATE with .. ~ lotTiliC Val·
ue in excellent rent.al area. Cape Cod collage; knotty
2 bedroon1 + 1 bedroom + pine inter., 2 patlm. OWner Inc. Realtors double garage. Seller will may trade for mobil home. OUTSTANDING pay po;n" ,., """FHA "'l •;;;i;i~~~~;;;-·1 Submit. o,,.,n Thun. 1.S. CUL-DE·SAC VA loan! No Down Poymont 2511 ere.1.new o,. Callo
Ankle deep~ carpets, t~1J Walker & Lee 1c:e~~ .~ ~:n~~~I~ 673-3663: 673-*JB& Eves.
covered patios, formal din· gOOd North Costa Mesa loca-associated lna: room. two romantic 2043 Wettcliff Dr. tion, walking distance to all
fireplaces, huge rn aster &16-77ll schoolt, incl Parochial If bedroom. This 4 bedroom Open 'til 9:00 P?af
t'ol'O big marketa. Near • new
BROKERS-REAL TORS
202~ W Balboa 671·166}
gem ' oll•red '"' • low FOREST ~ ~ ru crpts. Listed at -·""""· Colle p ... $36,!iOO ... ..-. u. IN THE CITY c0pen "'""t""'' IJ• 0 "' Owner moving north, must
Cheaper than rent. 3 ~ Ml·SllO 1;ell uni"''" 3 bednn, 2 bolh
Tremendous bedrooms. 2 <--..tt.tiW College "Park honk", com·
LIDO-WATE-R-FRONT full baths huge tre e ~:1~11REALTY pletely cn>td • drpd, Spac-
covered Jot', covered patio. ~~~~~~~-~~ J \owl family rm overlooking
secluded lanai; wool carpeL
ing and drapes, electric
kitchen with bullt·IM.!. Gar.
age off alley with electric
eyf! opener, room for boat or
ClJTlper . Beautilul Jarxl.scap.
ed mmer lot.
Drive by 378 Aliso then call
owner for appointment to
see. $37,500. 646-4032.
RARE VIEW
View of Bay l Ocean, 1park.
ling lites a1 nite. 3 BR., 2
Ba., &: large guest rm. Court
)'8J"d ,patio, Prestige Joca.
tion, 2936 Cliff Dr . .Aaklng
$59,500 but arudout for of.
~r. Drive by or call.
Business L .....
APTS.·320 LIDO NORD Fu11 price $23,500. NO -= lush landscaping & covered
NOW REDUCED TO oowr; VETS. 5'46 -8560. Co1ta Mes• North Side patio. See this dellgbUuJ
$150,000-Xlnt Term1 RLTR. ~s 2 story Northrate home _ Onl>' $28,750, with
6 Beauutul unit.I. S car with finished Bonus Room. 3 excellent terms. Calf Ray
WANTED
OCEANFRONT amall bou&e
fir duplex wanted by aun
wonhiper with mone)'.
CALL (!) '46•1•1• Opport.nl'ty 3 & FamUy '"'·Col ... , Ptuic area & Newport West Hom-
e.11 $%JO to $275. 4 & Family
Volbwl.geI? repair 11ho1> rm, Mest Verde SJOO. Op.
on Hubor .BJvd. SlJ.000 Uo111 OK.
Buya: you a job ol • 1011cn Eveningsi
$1000 a month + •
HEAL'l'1fr PROm ON ~-s:=o~
THE BU$11l!ESS rr. OUEGEREA''TY
SELJI, COiJ for deutls--•~µ£
..... know vw ......... ,I !!~~~~~~~~
N•wport •t F•lrview
UMlll lonyllmo I
Superl•tlve Living
''The Bluffs"
1800 IQ. It. O( the rrwitesl
JivinQ:. M a 1 t e r siled
l)fodroom, 3 baths. 49 x 19 ft.
gU t'ndO&ed sundeck wllh
a brHUI 1..1.kifl& upper bl)'
view . Priced below
replacement. 842-5581 QI'
MG--tnJ. Tart>ell.
JUST COMP'7L=E=TE""D'""
Ivan W('.11• MW '4 l:k<troom. 3
bath + powder room View
Jw)me In Dovtr Shore&.
Rk'hly pllnclled family rm.
wtfltjl -eJl'llr. SWTm·
mlna pool In wallt"d~in
patio, Roy J, \\lard, Reauor
6-16--J!OO, open dally.
I
pn,ges & utility room 1111ith or <t bedrooms to dD>l!M! Gault, ~fill Heritage
80 fl. trontuw on excellent from. CUl-de-ec street. Realton.
1wimrnltw bMch. Uinta are Deep pile carpel w 11 h:J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.
newly tumished. l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.1 matchlne drapes. "GI" No SEA & SAILS
BUI G~y. RHltor Near Esta.,.;• Hin ~~ Tra~~8i° IBA terms. Viewed from this beauuru1 833 DoVH DR., N.B. Gt~ 1""9 1511 .
3 Bedroom, 1'6 ha.tbs, 00~1
J-BEDROOM ...,.."""· endo8'd patio. Re.I"" W I k & l custom hon1e overlooking a er ee N•wpor1 H~. !Bedroom.
den A dining room. Under
priced at $62,!iOO. EASTSIDE Many trtts. P4,500. 2700 Hart>or BJvd at AdanU1
W..U to wall e..,.-petlng, large Wells-Mccardle, Rltr1. MS-9491 Open 'til 9:00 PM
fctv:td yard, encloaed gar-1811.1 Newport Blvd. C.M. Pm BARRETT RlTY
.... $1s.~. ~1729 E\.'e•: 644-0684 Superl•tive Llvine
•N ~~~~~~~~~I ''Th• Bluff1'' 642-5 200 OWNER-BROKER "TREES & SPACE-1000 "I· •I. o< the .,..atestJ~~~~~~~~
11t.~ .. 7a&ALT\' N1•r N••••rt Peil Otflc1
TRI-PL EX
On the Boordw•lk
~~ .. !!·~-~~-~~lme~~~JWooded .lOO'xl.25' lot, Coty 3 Jiving, Master sized !Jed. S•nt• An• c.nyon -A STUNNING bdrm. 2 both, dU>ing rm. """"'· 3 belhot, '9 x 19 IL % Ac"' view, hone• OK.
buili·in kitchen with bruk· 1laas e.nclosed sundeck wt th Elegant CtJ.tlom 3 BR, 21it I' MODERN fast are-.. Covtred patio and a breath taking uwer t>.y bl, unusual 24' l.Jl, formal
Tl"I the n"· ..i~ ....... Eve."" double p.n.ge. Priced 10 .,eU "lew, Priced below t'l!plact-dinfng nn, chef'• kU, study f'1-44ll ( :=J 146-tllJ
1 Bk>ck eutof pier, very nkli!i
l units Heh bavirw 2 bed-
nn1, a.nd Apt ''C" i& IOld
tumfdw!d. Excellent lnve•t-
ment, $$7,500 ttlll price, new
Joan can be atTall(led at
$65,000, &"%, 25 yean. Call
to ... !
..... '""fl'''" ·1 N Fi w .. 1 111c11t. 842-5581 or 54()..1720. +ram rm. Sile!
room wi.U l11nd itself to a • o n11.nce pro ems.. Tart>cu MAIN REAL TY BACK BAY 3 or 4 BR. faml·
wry Interesting furniture M. ~· L•Borde, Rltr. • .. r -n l)r + Pool! CUstOIU buUt on
arT1.ngemen1, 4 majetitlc 646-0500 Evei: MZ-7'38 $251950 Realtors ~~., cul-de .... c. SeU or trade 10
bedrooml, """hln1 eBEACH BARGAIN• 4 Bdrm.+ F•mlly Rm ·BAYFRONT APTS. Unit•. $48.950. Eq. $18,950.
mocttm kitchen, cnchanllna J.tust sell now!! Xlnt oond., Bc11u1Uul home In prime VISTA DEL LIDO 646-6528 Bkt.
lilnd~plng. Oflffl!d •I • 3 Br. 2 bll., al krw, lo.t pnce t.n!•. 4 kina bedrooms, huae Pier & Slip Av•ll•bla DUPLEX • 4 bt up. 2 br
f6w..fHi«\O, ~ta l600 RUR. ol-524.500 -walk f& oet!ftn: rvnn..-....,~. ltoi1tln ., ;fi-ANl)-l:J -7.wn-l ~~---r ''" oo , ..... a••"6"• ,.,. CAYWOOD REAL TY 2 hlllt\I. 30 ft. covered µ· George Wllll1mson crpt, nlCll!ly furnished. 200'
6306 W, Coo111 Hwy., NB 11o. ~17lW>, REAL TOR to bt'ar.h. Sa.ctilict. Owner
• 541-1290 • TARBELL 295S Horbor '73-4!50 '4S.15'4 ..... :...;.m_•;..'"'-"'";.;..;"="'---
interest . RA'fES·
~p~
CONFUSED?
Wh•l'I .you'r• not fit.!!'l iliar with •II tht com•
plexltl•1 of buying a homa, it'1 tim• to con·
1ult with 1om•on• who works with real •steta
day in •nd day out. M•y W• help you solve
y0&1r home-buying problems7
CONSULT THE PlOFISSIONALS •••
"THE RfAL ESTATERS"
4 Conw1t11t11t locatlon1 N ... You
WAKE UP
with a amile, in this luxurious 3 bedroom,
2 bath, double fireplace home in Newport
Beach. 2000 square feet of Jiving space. AU
electric, built-in kitchen. Newl y painted.
Easy maintenance yard. Brighten up your
future for $37 ,950. Owner will lease option.
540-2313.
If YOU HAYE EYER
WANTED LIDO ISLE
This is a chance of a lifetime. Owner has
reduced his price ,5,000-4 Bedrooms, sep-
arate dlnln~ on a 45' street to street lot.
$59,950. Don t miss this. Call loday 546-7171.
JUST LISTED -EASTSIDE
2 Bedrooms + Den + Family Room . Huge
Brick Fireplace. Rustic with lots of wood
paneJin~. Big corner lot. Room for boat. It's
newly listed. "Come See" or Call 54&-2313.
LIVE
in spectacular Cbina Cove. Waterfront •••
Corona del Mar. Beautiful Birch Paneling S
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Deck Patio, 2 Fire-
places, Boat Davit & Winch. Offered at
$128,000. -673-8550.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS • $19,950
Hold this small, one bedroom liveable cot·
lage on a 50 x 27 foot lot untU you're ready
to build your dream home. This is the best
location in the Heights. Call for Showing!
546-2313.
COUNTRY CLUB VIEW
A permanent view from this 1500 square foot
rustic home of beautiful Santa Ana Country
Club. Large Family area & Dining Room.
Double Car Garage with drive-thru· boat
door. It's a Buy at $24,500. Call Nowl
546-2313
"fANTASTIC"
A large 3 bedroom, 2 bath, double car gar·
age home, near beautilul College Park. Alt
built·in fire alarm & intercom system. Block
walled yard. Large aluminum covered pa·
tio. All this, under FHA-VA tenns of only
125,950. 540-2313.
HAPPY LIVING
hi~h on a hill in beautiful MESA VERDE .
Tri-level, 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath. Separate Fam·
ily Room, Formal Dining Room + Break·
fast area. Really a floe home that you
should see without delay. Priced at $46..1950.
Phone now for an appointment to inspect.
540-2313.
MESA VERDE fHA ·YA
$28,500
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, an electric built-in kit·
cben, large flfnlily room home on a corner
lot wilh room for Boat storage .. Assume low
interest loan. See Today! 546-2313.
UDO BEAUTY
You read about new fashion In clothes, look
at this lovely four bedroom home, with lhe
latest fashion in decoratin~. A home with
style for any type of furniture. Patio for
entertaining. Three doors from private
beach & space for boat. $75,900. 673-&50.
LOOK! EASTBLUffl
One of the finest homes In the Easlblu!f
area. Built by LUSK. Beautlful master bed·
room, + 3 other large bedrooms. 2~ baths.
Living room , family room. E:s:cellent land-
scaping. Only $51,000. Compare and buy.
NEWPORT BEACH
1700 Newpert Blvd .
6-U-7171
CORONA DEL MAR
332 Margue;ita
67J .t650
COSTA MESA
2790 Harbor Blvd. 646-2113
INVESTMENTS
2714 Hatbor llvd.,
Suitt 20 I, Cost• Mes•
146-2116 =='-"----11-,
Experience Eliminates Experiment
'
l..;.H;..;O..o.U_SE_S_F_O_R_SA,...t._E_._H;..;O,;:;U.;;.SE;;:_S;_.;_FO.;;.R;;..;S:.;A;:;.LE:;_I~~ FOR SALE
l;,_;:"~:;:;;_:;:.;:::~;;-:;"~:'.'._;::;;_;;_:;l~:;-;~:;:;;_~po-;rt;;_;~:;_:;•:;;:_;;_:;_~I !;:~I L•gun:-~~~~$ 1705
RE.NTALS I RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS R EllTA•~
Hou .. 1. fumllhed _ H"'!_ .. • Unfurnlslled -IWuml~ ~ Fumllhed Apto. Fumllhed. __ _
OPEN HOUSE DAil Y
What We Paid 5 Yrs, Ago!
$49,DOO
$ 1,DOO Down
Subjtcl To 6% L .. n
2400 Sq. Fl. Custom Built Home. 4 Bedrooms,
3 Baths, Family Room, Mexican Tile, Sprin-
klers, Water Softener.· ~ Acre. Room for
Pool + Boat. N r. Boys Club & Y.M.C.A.
Prlnclpolo Only
Newport Beoch Bock Boy
21114 Donnie RN<!
642-37'3
Newport Beodt 2200 G-r•I -Newport BNch :12111 Hunllnvton -__ ......, Boodt -.... ----2 Homes: 1-&droom 6: 2
bedroom. den. R-3 Lot, over
S100 aq, ft, Walkint dlatance
to town I beach. Sfl',SOO.
• BAYSHORES • '* LANDLORDS DRAVATIC lll>I• ........
Wlnttr 1tnl&I. Newl,y decor.. Fret servb to Sa try, UftU9Ull. artirt1c 2 br, 2
new ww carp. " draPH: )'OU. ve ba, prndrt .,.._ IM ,,.... turn ___ _. ~ CGSt:a. w. haw mah-adults -·-• ..; aew rt:u._.; '~"~""· tenants waldnlc La Unt!il----···--------C'hatmlna 3 Br. 2 Ba. Grttt CALL . 3 BK. lam. rm. bltlm. N AO/a~,, ·'"~·=:;i"' Hom .. Flnden '45-295I ... 1c.u.._.,,.,._
._, 22ol w. Cst ffwv, NB ~0 "... BRAND NEW A VACANT ri~ ~ S2'7S ,a/mp, REAL ESTATE .. , ~· --
1190 GltNJCfft St. * BAYSHORES *
4ctrpe~tto ~ ;~~:i 2 BR. ~ ba townbse. 1&e <1r
4!14.9f13 5f9.-03lG WINTER RENTALS landtcaplna. AV&ll' Sept 1st. IA option.,SZSO or S17S mo.
3 A:' BR .• Furnished ~ ptr mo. Aaent, ·Cwner. m.axi, ~ e ONE OF A KIND • Priced from $275 54MJ:41. BAL. Island. Baytrest. Lido
Tiny houee with spectacular JJao, one Baytronl & Unda I3le yrty rental$
ooeao view, $27,500 "C" 'f!>OnlU. Realtor * DIVE IN * BUl G""""', Rltr. 642-463)
THE HllRAllDER
"Scottilh Treat"
161'1 P•rkolde Ln. Mtr. IQ.1"9
San DI"° ""'1 to
88.ch Blvd, 4 bllu
So. to Nolt. W. on
Holt l b1k.
Bethke Really * 499-285.! 224 W. C1l Hwy, NB 548-$27 Tots ok. Clean lar&e 2 Bdnn, LEASE/Opt l <1r 4 BR. Con-
* BEACH HOME * --2 bath. F•OC<d, patio, builC do or Home. CdM High 11 QUINTA HERMOSA J,14,950. OnJ.y ~ ft. to beach Balboii ltlancl 2355 in stove, Gardener A: POOL! --a .... -. Lii
D.111.Y PllOT "I Kt;NiAL~
Apto. Fumllhed ---Hunting~ Boodt 44DC
J BR Pml Adult•.
BMut/Quietl tJttl I n c I
O):llmo. 17678 C&mtrCla, -1 SR •t beach.! $145. BM:b.
nttJ.tum. QU1E'n I
202-A !4th 536-.1.319, fU.1784
I-BACH. SSS util lad, Lrs 1
BR. txtn ckllllts. $140.
Pool,-patln, AduJb. "3H71T.
flJR.N. 1 Bdrm. Ocean VMw.
EmPlOYed adult w/ rert. No
dilldn!on or pets. 4M-1019
CLEAN modem l BK on ...... ~-HModern Spanlsb" 1~-~-~-~-~~-~-!'=-~-~~-~-~-;:;-~~-~-~-;:;-~~-~-~-;;;-~~-~-~-;;;-~-:;:~·:-1:.~ ":'.::.., ':'"': *EAST BAYFRONT • .:;f.::l'e~65. 645-2951 e 3BR,1 ~ BA.$115 16211 P•rkslde Ln.
Newp0rt lle•ch 1200 ll•lboo Penlnoul• 1300 "°""..., h<aoh. $29,500. '.8::;p~A':tr·~1f"· ~!;:: *SEE FOR SELF *"-==Rel=""='d=*=:l4Ml56=oi:=-I Mg r. MJ-54tl
..... --··•...U. Aua. 29. 1>18 wk ..... 7839
1 BR apt on OCMn ll'oot.
Avail. Sep 15 • JtD .15. $115
mo. 49C-.Tl30
--'----·---~" n-•t • 494 -· -•· ~ ,. FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN FOUR BEDROOMS -5 giru111.e .._.... y .._ 2 R. turn. apt. • view. Avail f\T.AT 2 Bdrm hcunt. Built. Newport HeJghh 3210 baths. Only 3 iou from W. S.y Waterfront /SECLUDED, screened sun-Oct ht sm , ,.._ Pe ok Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court·
ocesnfront & wry dose 10 Bl!:autil\1.1. newly redec, 4 BR room, ptderui, t BR. Sl8.· Ba,y & &acli Re.lt;y Inc m stove " rt .. ,,... t · VERY N~ 2 BR, cpts. drpl. fa.~.· sunken swlm'e: pooh, BBQ,s & foua-
Ehoppg, Over 2700 1q. ft, of + bonus room. Patio-deck-500. 494-7329 days, im E. est. CdM m...YO> H=Fl=YI :~2tsl ~~ mo lnel's appl's.
real charm. Lee pme rm, 2 beech-pier'-slip, $115,ooo. I;======== 1010 so. Baytront; 4 Br. 3% ''THE UL TIM.ATE IN APT$''
b<aul frplc'L R-2 lot. One Biii Grundy, Rultor D•n• Point 1740 ba. wat•rbont homo• 2 Br. * HEY KIDS * U 1 BR's-From $150 % BR's-From $175 Genor•I -room useti u rental apt. 83." Dover Dr., N.B. M2-4620 1 Ba. pr. apt. Dock tor 2 LOOK AT TH1S 3 Bdnn, 2 Ba nfwntty Park 3237 AJI utU. incl. Furn & Unfvm.
with bltn kit. Roof deck too, ~~~~~""'""'""'~I NJ·-----boa.tJ. Bill Grundy, Rltr. w I bullt·ln stove. Fenced 3 BR 'I'nhousc>!. Eutblutf $400 I ===::i::=::==:=::::-.;:=::,::=;;:::==-YEN DOME & view ol while watt'r. Im· CHOICE Ba.yfront Duplex E\V l!OMES -W ,!M 6'U-4620. yard, READY TO MOVE 2 Bdrma. l.tJath $280 General 4000 ~port ~ 42tO
n1ac! Call Mr. llarria:, 301 Ed&ewater Open week-3 Bednn, 2 bath, l520 sq. lt. IN! $1915. 3 Br. 2 Ba'lhs tt'11:. .:..:==----= IMMACULATE APl'St
ADULT and MS.8424 to~ this dl'F"htf'Ul e .... -. aome ocean view, nr new H ntl~ •-ch 2--RENT FURNITURE .... ,,... u .,..on u.• ._. Home-Finders 64$..2951 3 BR. 2% Baths $325 horn< -169.500. Soulh Cout P~r/rloat-1.0 BR. 7 Bath< Yaoht Harbor. Small lot. * 4 BR. 211 baU.. iJ50 A New Wey To live
lnNewport a..ch FAMILYSedloo
Realtors. DAVJS REALTY 642-7000 See at :WOOi Aurelio Dr. VIE\V House, 2 br. den, wori: Gard-er Incl * -~-----~-'-========::1BUlLDER· &t2-t!I05 shop. Adults pref'd, no pet, •n 5 BR, 21,i ba. $M0 *DIRECT TO TENANT OAKWOOO GARDEN
APARTMENTS
Cl ... to "'-I"" P•rk * Spacious 3 BR'1, 2 b& 2 BR. 2 bll townhouse · Good .. al trl 1 •= 500 tlall SHARP 2 Bdrm home w/ e RED HILL REALTY 24-Hr, Delive"' fioo< plan. $26,000 Good lkfo l1le 13SI so new p ex """' Jl8I' Y tum. Avail. for ht. I ___ , nl Kidd' -··• ., On 16th Street btwn
Irvine and Dover Dr.
* SW!m pool, puVifftn
E 5 Call 5.')S..2615. euo..-,:u ya . lea ... .,... Univ. Park Center, Irvine 100% Pun::tw.se OpUoo tennll, Owner 675-8200, ----R NTAL MOVE 1N TODAY
644-6488 LARGE HOME Houses Furnished • 1 BR Duplex • Frple, ;·GOOD TO LAST ll~ Cail Anytime 833-083> Complete 1 BR Apt u
~ F'rpJ, Dxllv/l.ndry b.c'll
BLUFFS Condo • 4 Br, 3
Ba. Best ate11. Below n1rkt.
By owner. Aft 5 & wknds.
644-4869
5 Bednn, family rm., xlnt -.:c..;.__;_..;_;__ garage, am. back yard & ! TURTLE ROCK 1 yr old 4 Low a1 $2'J/mo.
&treet to altt!el 4S ft. JoL General 2000 patio. SlfiO mo. Call 536-n46 Hom•Flnder1 64$.2951 BR, lam rm. ATRIUM. din 30-Day Minlmwn B:: app't only. nn, patio, sprinklers, 2/3 * WlDE VARIETY
197 000 ---Lagun• BHch 2705 Cost• MoM 31DD AIR'"'"' drpo, bookca..a, CUSTOM FURNITURE •LOW WEEKLY RATES* * E.Z ON *
1145 An•hllm Aw.
COSTA hlESA 6CJ824
(7141 642 .. 170
MESA MOTEL
Owner '""Y .,;.,, dowo for 3 *SURF & SAND* -=-...0.._,;;.;..., _ _;;;;;,1 nr . .,hb, ..,..,, ooum, pk. RENTAL Kltd,.n, TV's m~ ""'""'· The ........ Siw1> 2 bdnn In ,
Newport Heights 1210 Bdnr.. :,Orne in Terraces, A Hop &. A Skip to the RENTALS/LEASES ~~T or~· w/opt 3 BR, Avail by Oct bt $.Bl. mo. 517 \V. 19th St., CM, 548-3481 Heated good location. Conv. to
CdM, w1th ocean view, BEACH! Neat 2 Bdnn. tum. UNFURNISHED isp, crp ' carport. rear Yrly l8e Cn4J 833--169'1 J t f S'-1 Ad It i46-968l everythibf. KiddJet ~I· , _ 3 bdrm yrl, fncd. w. 1911'. Shops soo . . us or .. .., • u • 1 1; 2 BR furn & unfurn.
COLONIAL MANOR LIDO REALTY INC. !shed, l~ Baths. Elec blt· ..... • & fam. nn. ft. Prefer adl.ts. Re.ts. Avail roPar:,· ~n~_ 1!_~ruveau'"'.t;y SOUTH BAY CLUB 'come. WON'T LAST, SU>. 337 Via Lido 67~1300 ins. Bring the tots & pets. home Custom decorated .-. .. .., Tu,-..,........_.,. MENTS Crpts, drpe:, pa.do, pool. bit. Hom•Flnder1 '4So2t51
EXPANDABLE CO'"' --m-HURRY! l{URRY! $165 new ~arpets. fittplace, bitt: !!_.10>l'll1 BaAby OK. $175. lS04 BOB PETTIT R~al~r APART D-h ns. !'140 to $11). Sead1ff ==-=~=-_,,,~,;,.... ~ ._ H Fi d 64S.2951 tna, exc, ocean Ww. 1 .,,.., i-ruo< ve. " CE .:.._.,, .. -Newport ~•c Manor Apts 1525 Placentia.. NEW l-u....a.·i. All bltbl, A home to be proud of at a pact. 3 Br, on lg. sunny Jot. om• n ers .,. ~ R!ty 583 W. 19th 5™ ....,.... 880 Irv~ Ave 548-2682 uk about our m. cpVdrt>i pr. Nr. S. O:ut
bargain price! 2-Sty, C.Olon-$5.2,500. Ownr. 675-2643. $12S-STEPS BCH! 1 Br ut1 1~ftN~·~~ MS-9493 24 hr phone Days 8J.l..Ql.01 Ni&M.s (Irvine and 16th) count Plut.. ~1973. MS-2321
la!, nearly new. Beaut. de-pd. Child/peta olc. Sngb. NB 2 bdrm. apt. at WoodA Cove. $151)-NEWLY Dec 2 Bt dplx, Ee;t Bl-M 3242 (714) 6t~
cor.; lge. rountry kitchen Huntington Beech 1400 *BEACON* &U-0111 l5" yda, to tieach _ L&e. itv/ref, ch. klc, tot olc:, C1'f _ HOLIDAY PLAZ.K 2~~.~IFMAPT, .:::;:,. C01te Meta 51•
w/all elec. blt.nll.; chande· GUARANTEED/LICENSED tree shaded patio, Lease for *BEACON* 64S-Cl111 BAY VIEW. New 4 BR, 2% DELUXE Spaciou!I 1 Bdrm. Be t iew $300 ---------1
lien;, frpl, of Hallan marble. $26 900 * EVERYTHING * $165 1.to. GUARANTEED/LICENSED Bath TowMouse. r.mlly Furn apt. $135. Ptu.s util. er. au . v ' mo. BAY MEADOW APTS Lge. llv. rm. & din. rm. ov-4 •-,-m 2 ba' th I 1~ ~ t' ,_ I -""' 5.nl Seashore Dr. NB. 645-N-.. ud"-t BR, ~.,, Dl;:UlVU • arge ......, 2 bdrm. at Victoria Beach. 2 Br. u.nfum, crptJ, carb. room. "' • .,.c, crp g ....... peg. Heated pool, Amp e _..... 1756 "'" ..... ....
e1iook1ng 20x40 H & F pool •Q'. ft. featurloi: Carpets, Furnished down to the NUB. Exe, view, lireplc. A few disposal, gar. Adults pref. Lease. $39a. 644-5268. ing, No children -no pell. --'·-------2 BR, $165. Beam celllQp. w/lots of decking Ocean drapes, fencing, landscap. B.IN! 2 Bdrm. Close to shop. 1965 Po c M 2 BR. Winter. Stepe: to Wood pe.n'Jc. Iha& crpt&.
view from ballroom size Ing, fireplace, dinlng area, ping, 1 min., to beach! $150, atepa to to aand5 , Leue Ref'L $150 mo + depos. (;-rona del Mar 3250 mona. . . beach! On 44th St. $3)0. ht priv. patio, some •-'ca
baJ • Lg BR 2 B CALL Now 177 Mo. ....,.,7. . --* Casual Uvlnn * "--1 mo' + ••--•---•-'"~ cony. e. ·· a. paUo bltin dble oven &: · Charm tud' deck I ---., .., .... •· ........, ........,"'-'6 Pool, l&Dd volley ball crt. A home of dist.lnctlon for .... n~, d'-hw.,•-·, ro-• Hom•Finder1 645-2951 5 10• w ocean •135 3 Br l1L ba stv cpb Co I ... ,., ,,,_; ....... I Bd dep. ~. .._,....., I ·-•1 -• ·-... -"' '""' .... -.:u view, ocean side o( hwy, at .,_. • ,. • • · *A II bl N * mpe ... .., '"'"-~ · rec ....... 5., OOo ~e•, -·· only $55,000 & well worth Ill 'air heat vacant, move in ---Wooda Cove. Lease drpa, tam or sngls. CM. va a e2 ow rm. Hones~ patio: louRKe •NEW 3 br, :J ba. On water, ting ireen. Adults, no ,eta.
CALL '9\ '"'·2414 tqia,y. four tenns. Rentals to Share 2005 ll35 Mo. * BEACON * 64S..01 I I Neat & clean BR. Apt. chaini, etc. $125 •. MOVE lN Avail Sept. 12 or IC!Onet . 387 W. Bay. Open HOUICI
9 \:I' GUARANTEED/LICENSED O'slud agJ, garage, $l8S NOW $300 .__....i., winter lse 12-T ,:i .. n .. 64L'""""' ~. ... I' Artisllc studio cottage, tire-B & •-h Rlty I ! • ~To ... .., or · pm.~. """"'~·
I,_ 2 "-/I 1 ,.__, •Y · ueac • nc. Hom•Flnder• ""2951 675-7408. ll £AL TY \VANT ED • refined lady to place, high glass windows, ......, w ·P ex, ctptl, ... ...,. 2401 E coast Hwy CdM __. 1..:0"-',::0'=~==~-like Liv Int In ' Your
Niir Ntwpori p011 Offlrt , •• ••Jl ( -J $4' 010.., shr lovely NB . BluJfs hm. path leads to beach, Lease 1tv. Sngls ok, CM .67S..3000 ' • WINTER RENTALS e OWN HOME •• I I
University Perk 12J7
TRULY A BARGAIN
Owner'• drasUcally reduced
the price • wanta an offer
immed on his 4 BR. 2"ii ba.
townhouse; iclnt greenbelt
Joe. Will sell with &mall
down pay!, Full price S30,000 e Rad Hiii RHlty
Univ. Park Centtt, Irvine
Call Anytime 833-0820
1st Western Bank Bldg.
Unlvenlty Park
O•ys 83~101 Nights
Corona del Mir 1250
BROAOMOOR
BEAUTY
l\flci·\Vest owr.u Instructed
us to aell as aoon u possi-
ble~ 4 BR. 3 Ba. view home;
comp, cptd., drpd., all bll-
iR!I, Profess. lndscpd, 6% %
Alisumable loan. Reduced to
-~ ~· ~ • •M ••-Mo. * BEACON *"""Ill Reot NOW for Sept.! . Pvt ha-all pr1vl. ......,-mo. .,_.o;.1 ~ I~""'!!""""'""'""'""''""""' Costa Mesa 4100 ABBEY REALTY 642-38SO Why pay $ITS for an aptf • 6 UNITS 644--0369 MISSION REALTY 494-0731 GUARANTEED/LICENSED 2 er, 2 ba, near qcean. Cou---------when we can rent )'OU
2 Bedrooms each, bltlns, SH ARE my e I e g ant SPACIOUS 2 BR 2 BA on ocn 2 BR. l child welcome. No pie only, $300. G. H. LOVELY 1-BR., 'ii .Blk. to tor Sl«>. 2 BR, nawb' ,
crpta, drps, newly decoral· waterfront home wl dock. fmt. $350 mo. Avail Sep, 15-pets. $140 mo. 1980 Wallace. RobertJM>n, Realtor 675-2440. * SUNNY * oeean. W01nter ~8· Yokarly crpt/drp, encl padol, apac
ed. Enclosed garages, cl06e Man, 30-60 yrs. $150 mo. Jan 15. 494-7830 QUI 548-2!m. * ACRES * :~64'2 w n er I ro er smds. 2 Pooh! Adulta only.
to everythln&', s Yel\l'I new. 615-4331 3 BR. 2 ba, Nr au 11ehools, Lido Isle 3351 · :.;;,.;:.;c::,·---~~~ 2'l83 Fountain W~ E. <Har·
847-8501 Eves: 642-0427 t'ONGENIAL Working girl, Sen Clemente 2710 ep~ • drpi, fenced yard, 4~;-3 Bath. across from * Motel•Apts. * 1~~ :.~·i: bor, tum W. on -Wilaon).
m :»--25 to share Newport $265. SS-25M. 1 nnil crt l d Studkl I. l Bedroom• 646--4664 TilE VICTORIAN ;Qj•f(Lil Shores houR, $225 mo-&plit ON Golf Coli!w. 2 BR. du. 3 br, trptc, fen~ yard, dbl Jubhou&e,p :ygbreoau:h; LO# RATES ;;•1;:",;N;;B;·.:::~:,;.,.-..,,=..,-INEW 2 Br, 1~ Ba w/ pr. • •If 1's..J •., ... ~ Util pd. 548-6403. plex. Heated J>OOI. Wllc ID gar, See 416 E. 19th St. Call $650/per mo. 673-7489 or Dey, Week or Month WINTER n!Rtal·2 br $200 + $155. Adults. Crpts, drpl,
\ '• ";; 1U1.n Jl.1ALE in 30·1 will share 2 br bch. $17S. mo. 244 Del Gado m.8811. $175 rno. Refers. 642-6500. • Color TV Air Colld. 11t11 See 1019 W, Bay Ave., bltl'llil, filed )'I'd w/ patio.
TRANSFERREDI home w/same. Roofdeck, San Clemente, 4!J6..6.'117. 3 BR. hDUie. 1~ -Ba., cpts.,1-==". :c.-=====-==~a~ ind ;·~~= ;tt: :::. ii;; :..Ji: Victoria ( E).
Must Rll In a hurry -big 2 ~~. :~ ~.~~~· Summer Rental, 2910 ;:s~=r r;~ mo. Huntington Beach 3400 1 Signal So. ot O.C. front, pvt patio. winter 'V"l'""L'""LA.,.--"'M"E"S"A,--,A"P~T"'S..-I
atory, 3 Bedrm • family MATURE W k' AVAILABLE Sept. 1, Pacific Falrp'ounds only.673-305.1 2 BR Priv patio ff•• ~
room' Imma-·'ate ,.. & oul . or mg Y."Oman --------'-lg --=~=::;;:.,.,....,...,--' . ""' _... '-'W WES'tO.JFF area, 3 Br, c Sands Tract • 4 Bdrm., l'.4 2376 Newport Blvd. ::--2 cl'd Cblldren FHA or GI term Only will share bch home w/ LAGUNA BEACH 1 Br tum, "' block to ocean. car en car.
•••950 Call 847-853:· liame or couple. 11.11'5,, Fen-CONDOMINIUM = .:~s:i::, cul-de-Ac, ~u7.'wooil=.·bea~~ 548-9755 Pool.. Sinele, $135 lo $145. welcome, no pell pleue!
.....,, · · ton, 67l-2ll0 Lovet Bl Lagoo ill 2 47ic10 FURN Mobile Home. 833-3535: 1W4-06J7 evt1, $165 mo, 719 W. Wlllon.
Y Ile n V a, AVAIL 911: 2 BR In court, 2 fenced baCI( yd., ff'.Ult trees. N'icfj park to.. adults. Elder--DELUXE 2 Br, w.,•-"" loc. ....1251. WANTED 2 Roommaleli: for BR, 2 BA compl.etely tum-ehldrn ok. NO PETS. Refs water fall, lg. fish pond ""'""" ~==~~~=~
lg. nice apt. $75/mo ea. uU lshed, linens, d1sheJ1, etc. req, $l40. 54&-I076 w/llah, $200 per mo., plus ly people or bachelor. No Pool&; bltna, Adulta $210 DO QUIETI ALL NEWI
pd. Home any n!tc aft 6 PM Washer/dryer. Avail Aug. cleaning and dam a 1 e pet.. No drlnken. Sp. for 1 Jae. 642-6274. · Cpts, drps, blt-i.ns. 2 BR. -=A-;=-...==~-i . ..:""=' =Ba::k::or:.;•::Pc:l.C.=_, °'='·'--2!).Sept. 5. Also avaU for r!t ~~t!n8;:S. deposit. 536-9438 ~~:3-!1~ J:· $130-mo. DELUXE 2 br. oceanfrnt, Adults, no petz. Nr Harbor
JOG TO BEACH I e \llORKING girl wls.hes to wlnfer rental. 49P·215l AM 536-4027 $115 w/pool·LRG 2 Br sep a avail. 9/12-711 $225/mo. &: Adams. Garage avalJ&ble
REAL ESTATE
MART
3 to 7 Bedrms. 2 to 4. baths, share Bal Isle home or 837-0791 anytime, hse, gar, patio, child ok. Ae&pulco Apta, attracHw, 548-4928. * 54(>..3997 *
up to 3000 "'· ft., •hake w/ .. m•, 67>-238.1 aeytime •BALBOA 1 k 2 Br, MeH Verde 311D +BEACON* 645-0111 Pool11.' UtAildulpatkl, Gmlo1•1 c::Br:.;,::fum:::_.--Blk-to_be_aob._ HARBOR GREENS
roofs, all bltns & carpeting, 19'2& 3 slO"" beach home 4 $81>-$125 wkly for Sept Also GlJARANTEED/UCENSED vu~. &, no pe s. Adulll. No pell! &Z r i fro •<le 900 ' 'J ' 1 BR-.$150, 2 BR-$175 o:•a ..,,.,. GARDEN '-STUDIO APTS inane ng m _., . Bdrm. 4 bath, 3 trplc. Call $150 mo. winter rate, 3 BR. 2 ba, tam nn, dbl 3 BR form din rm 3 ba 2000 lllll Wallace Ave, C.M. Aft 4:00 p.m., .....,....,'"" Bach., • 3 BR'•. tram IUO.
Rancho Le Cuesta ,,.,.., """" , .. ,,, 673"'6880 -1c ""'iJ &: d"""' encl · ' ' _ _c.:;c.._=-'-'-'-"--"-'-"-'--"·-ft"""' ..., ., "'"""°"" ~ · .. ., ' ~... .,..., 1q fl Nr bch, lse $325 •PARTLY ~ ... ,__,, ye-v or 2700 Pelerlon W13, CM.
968-
Broo2929kh*u"u' AM& Atoilan8taP'I r.'E-',-'1A-'L'=E-'>J.,..C,"1_t_o~,1uu-,~bou-,..-I RENTALS yard, $225. 673-5809. w/lf'dnr. Bkr 847..s531 eves DELUXE Townhoule, 3 Br, 2 wlnter. W. Bay Ave. 546-03'70
" til H U fu 1-1.-... ....., .,..,,., Ba, drapes, w/w c.rpb, •MS--0217 '°To"'""""* -~=~~--MALTMI In NB, $1l5 mo. + u . ~~· n m-Newport Beach 3200 ~· dshwhr, patk>. $235/mo ......... MONTICELLO COJD-COft M By Owner • SAVE 645-1018 eveti. or wknd1. General 3000 turn. Nr all IChla I elem thtu 2 Br. ~to bcb. $250 plex-de!uxe 2 br, 2'1Sa, auto.
165,500
lllN• MrnNij Beaut 5 BR, 3 Ba, Colonial --;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Fountain Va:;l::;l•,_Y_.c,3410 QCC}. 3 Pool•. 833-3694. incl utU. Yrly avail 911. garqe opener, clubhouse '-1~::=:::==•~71~·~~·~·:::=~= 1 TelT'd garaie, wlk to bch. Costa Mesa 2100 1---------BAYCREST $.1(IO. Townhouse., 3 er, den I NASSAU PALMS. l &: 2 114: 61~704.5.. 213: 447--9443. pool. Adulta, No pet&. $225.
SOUTH OF HIWAY Prestige area. S3500 dn, $333 -* 8u41get Saver * 3 Bedroom, pool, newly dee-or nunpu1 room, 2% baths. BR Apts. F\lrn ta Vnf. Pool, OCEANFRONT lower du----=-~=~---
Storylx>ok cottage. Beaut. mo. Quick asswnp, 536-0467 2 BR, dell-On cul~e·sac, 1 Bdrm home with fenced orated. CICfie to schooh, bltns. Crpt'd &; drp'd. Avail plnr,-pot11, BBQ, 1hady plex, 2 BR, 1% ba. trplc. $170
lndscpd, 2 BR. & din . rm. 11000. Below FHA, 4 br. cond, freshly painted. Sl~mo. yard, tot ok. READY TO !hopping I transporta.Uon, Sept 7 962.-5965. :a""ns. 117 E. 7.lnd St. AvaU 1/10 to 6/1o 646-2830 3 Br., 1% Ba, patio, blt-tna,
home. Frplc., brkfst, nook Pool ell!Ct bltna ref owe 1578 San Bern a rd I no, JI.JOVE IN NOW! $1.10. $550 Per month. 3 BR, den l tam rm, trplc, Sl2-364.5 FURN. 1 I 2 BR. Apts. crpts, dl'pL Aak about OW'
w/bltn. lx>oth. $44,750. 2nc1.,' us~. si.4% 'FHA. 646-1715 Hom•Flnders '4S.2951 bltnt1. $250 mo. yr lse. Call * Pool! -Quiet! Aalr: for .. Anita discount Plan. 88o Center
OPEN EVENINGS 493-3418 BEAUT. 2 br, 2 ba, frplc, $80 l BR private cottap before 6, 2'13t9JS..1929 or aft Adult Living. Lrg 1 Bdnn. JONES REALTY 61H210 St., 64U.340, mu I\ ,\ 111: 11'11
Ill: \I.I'\ l\f.
f~ I 1 ' l 1 >0 '1 I
MAKE Offer: 2200 sq •, 4 fncd patio, clubhse, pvt heh, Cl\>, $ll0 with everything Realty Compatty 6, :Jl3/0I.£.-Oll48. Carport. $135/mo. HEIDI, ~Q"°u=IET=~A~DU=LT~L~MN=~G
BR, den, cp/dp, corner loL hid pool, IPJanl patrol!ed. 2 Bedrms, tnced fOT totJ $120 67S.3210 '42.t235 --560 W. Hamilton. 545-ll'M). ~!."ona ~I Mar~ 1 I 2 Br. Shag crpta, bltns,
Imm. By Owner. 962-1636. Adults, no pels. $250 l&e CM 2 bedrms .......... $160 Senta Ana 3610 Furn. 1 BR & 1 BR. Apt w/ aaraie. pool. beaut. lndscpd. Sl50
PRESTIGE MODEL 1800 Sept.July. 673-5419 3 BR everything tots/pets $325-SPAC 5 br, 2~ ba, DR,~ 4 Br 2 ba patio fool BACHELOR * $175/mo. * &: J170 mo. l.ncl all utU.
Dy Owner: 4 BR, 2~~ Ba. OCEANFRONT· Spac. 2 br, .................. $170 frpl, huee yd, Fam welc. 10,. kidi i,, pets.' SA ' 2110 Newport Blvd, CM Call 6'15-SS53 241 Avocado St. 646-0919
*VACANT* Att.Spm846-2156. lha,fam.&breakfastrm. Old2atry4BRkfdaOK$17S. NB. *BEACON*f45.0lll N~'"W Nicely turn 2 br ======:::::::==NEW LRG 1 BR. bUn
Quick possess. of this 3 BR. -=:==;;:;:==== $300 mo. Sept.June. 675-8922 STAR*lET * BEACON* 6,otS...0111 GUARANTEED/UCENSED apt-lotll of bltnt1. dlahwahr & Balboa 4300 atv/dahwbr, fro st-fr1 e
home, So. of Hwy. Extra Huntington (I) 776-7330 GUARANTEED/LICENS'fl) ·-··-. encl gar. Adults only 1195 :;_----= refrlg, doled Pl'I'.· ln room oU dbl. garage, Carp., Harbour 1405 Newport Beech 2200 ol 2 Ba 1 546-6399 LEASE ._10 to &-10 modern 2 4-plex 11(. S. Cout Plua.
stove & rebig.; take a look * MR. CLEAN * • 1 YdRI d • 3 8.':· ,._, admbl Laguna Beach 3705 mo. . bdr. firepl. bar, bUilt in $160. 545--2321 aft $. rm, n rm, crp .. , ........ , -I BR. Fum Jl25. Bachelor kl hen lOO' .. • you'll like It! REDEC Ii: Lnd&cpd WATERFRONT NEATJBdrmhouseinideal k&pool · u kk1 3 BR+ family room $285 le , m ooe~ MODERN2Br.Crpts,dl1*,
MORGAN REAL TY Waterfront 3 BR&: dock for PIER & FLOAT location, CAU QUICK ON ~i 1;. ok. ~n~jyrty~ mo.+ utilities. . ~ll~.Ad=, ;'de~~-~ front. for mature 'Mlil'king GE ldtcll. patio, encl pr.
673.6642 67J.6459 sale, lse, or lse option. 3 Bedrm., 2 bath, formal din. TillS! $175. lae. AYllil Sept. 644-5856 Bethke Realty * .f99.28.j8 CM 17 11rt .. no children or pell Nr. bus. $145. Adults. llD E.
644-42'11 Ing rni, fireplace , w/w Hotn9-Flnder1 645-2951 PENJN Pt-Owner's upper 2 * ~~;::ly ~pt Bach $160. Write P.O. Box 724 20th St.
UNEXCELLED VIEW crpts, and furnished com. VERY CLEAN & VACANT BR. din rm, frpl, w/w, lg Capistrano Beech 3730 .... ......i. Furn. KJ•-• "'wk Balboa 92681· ·2· A~!~B"'R-. un-..,.tum,---""'Adul,,-,,-b,-pvt-,I
r H bo All Fountain Valley 1410 b • -......... "" .. .,. ....... ...., ·--' ---• Immad. o ar r & ocean. r. plete. D le gar. u::ase '""V· Custom 11.pt with bltlna. back )'d. UW Inc. $2SO lae. 4 BLOCKS from Ocean New & up, 5f&.-Ot5l 1.u ... , Cfa.:a ear. oc-
spllt level home on R-3, 5100 PRICED RlGHTI $500 per mo. Realtor crptJ, dqls, 3 bi& bedroom&, Avail 9/1. 1500 Miramar. • BR ram nn di~ rm ~~..;;::,:..:=..-_~-Bafboa Island 4355 cupancy. E. 18th It ,
sq. fl. lot. Ideal for 4 Apt. 64~4353. $190 mo. Agent M6-4141 By appt only 1213) 69J...5388 ~ • ' ' • B•c"!!~r Apt. $120 • 1---------~176, 54G-Kl1 Owner Transferred 1.;~======:.!-=:==;,:::=;;=:..:..=::::;=::·::;=·=;::=::=1 crpts, drps, bltna. $275 lse. ..,..1519 ~~=~=~~~ units, $Dl,IOI. 2501 Ocean Pool-healed .l flltered I' Ref 7n-5GTI 174-7465. I 3 BR sep bol&le VUl 1.ncL 1 BR. $150, 2 BR $165. l\iol. ~n:··GC:U!t;: :::~.:~ly. 1::!'~n'tere~· IUfl yard. Genera!_·---~2DOO~~G~e~ne!!!;r•~l~---~2~00D!!,!G~e~n~e~ro~l~---12~DOO~l :D;;u=;=·e=x~e;,;o;:U;:n~~=urin=.=3~9§'.75 1 M!~o. N1~uit~%:v. ~ ~ =':°" :· ~~ ::: AM= ~.:i.11. :;_
833 Dover Dr., NB 642-46J> HAFFDAL REAL TY Elden. M&-B278 eve1. Pasadena (213) 79&-4003 WD100 Aw, CM. SU-Tm
Ml-4405 FOR Rent: 1 Br/apt. Very 1 OR 2 BR. Lri ciolC!tt, pool, YEARLY RENTAL -let 1 $170, 2 BR, bath A ',l iNdlo,
:1419 QUIET COVE
OPEN WED. l·S
1 BR., 3'Ai bit.. Family &: rum.
pus nu. Latf:est view lot in
llarbor View H.111&!
2 e/111'0~\A-/&'tJ~Q.• clean I; yard. ID FloweT, adultt, no peta. Utll pd.1884 br. open beam, dutcb door, drp1, cpta, patio. Avail 911. 4 BR .l tam. rm, ba, new ~ I." 1.J p Of. 642-~ Monrovia 548-0336. dlhwshr, bltns. Cbarmi.rw, n4: M&-0>1 or 21 1:
crpli, Xlnt cond. $3riOO down NTALS )'OU'll love ill 61>2916. 59:J..5221 lo auume FHA k>an. Full r·~ p I 'fir f' •• ,, ' Cl LI RE $70, &ch, retll" of carport, --:;==,..,.-=-=--=I
prl ·~ ·~ B nv urr e WI ne PUI • n nUCIU8 Apt•. Furnl•hed Qu~t. matutt P't'm only. NEARIY NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba, * DELUXE 1 • ' BR ce ~.,....... y owner. u " lrpl 17821 Aah St. 968-6038, 0 Rtomin119 t.tt*B of the Yard. no pet•, 5f&.-0059. • elec/Kll, c, patio, Garden Apta, Bit-Ina, prtv. DON V. FRANKLIN
Realtor Laguna Beach 1705 • 67:S.22ll • :·,,.-,,coo~o=--i-..... .,..-~.~.~ru~ta-on=-•21l •iii-iiii"-iil'!Z-jiijiiiiii1ijiiiiiil
adjoin. valuable IQ t1. MBNIRcH m
Always rented. Own1r Save $4,100
615-5181 I haVe reduced fbe price of
BalbN Peninsula
my hOme $4,100 ao that II
1JOO ·•'OU.Id ldl In Ute next 3 wb
bC!IOre tchool atal'U .• hr, 3
ba living: rm A dining rm
OWNER w/open beam oeUtna. Den,
TRANSFERRED I .. tlol, :ltlli ,q tt lamtty * Penlnau!a Point * bPach home. 1 yr old. pvt
l BR. home, 50Xl00 lot. Let-beach A tennis court.I. OWn.
patio. Nel'r ptlv. tennis club~ er, Prloclplea onlY pl.e&Sll,
boat nmp, bl,y 1 ocean. .;""~'800!!!!Ph>'-'ne!!!'l!4!19-~!'l!!l2_.~I I ll~ll50. ~. OPEN HOUSE *
4 BR., large den -15$,950
Ntar N.11.Y.C.; 4 DR., cXtn
R·2 lol. Only ffJ,500 .
MARSHALL R~AL TY
675-4600 ANYTIME
Sfflrc I• btllevlna:. Aaaume
builder'• low int. loon. Lt1w
down. 3 OR. 3 Ba. Lowb'
vltw. $49,500. JQ.6 Dally,
Porlaf11"' Laguna; up Nyu
Pl, .->If Coul llW)',
four 1m1rnbl.d Wltdl ti. General 4000 l BR, FURN, $90 BBQ .Alto 4 Br. 3 Ba. Lie patio, heated pool, frp1.c.
low to form four llfl'Jplt words. lllO "C" Onna:e Ave. Sept..June 638-8f10, ~ Adults. Jl45 mo. 546-516.l
NI l IR 111610 1 • I .:.~1=iy STUDIO APT. Hunting!.; .. ~--116!>-QUl>:ri W.. "''""" 2 333 E. 21al St. BR. 1% BA. GE kitchen. 1 EXTRAORO}NARILY car gv. Adults, oo pet.. :NO
BEAUTIFUL E. 16th Pl. 548-&m. :==K!:::Y::T~l =T=!I !I f V•I D'IMre G•rd•n Apll N-rt Booch 4200 ON BEACH! 2 BEDl\M lli ha, crpb, drpo
I I 1 Putt:lna green, ntertall ' __ -----bll1n1. Acrou from pU'k. . I ( 1 ortream, flmnn 1verywbere, 1 BR. •pt. CkllM 10 bay 6 • SU.ie q.ta trom Sli5 S1S5 mo. 56IOI uk fCC' Mr. ~ po!)!, rec. room. bWlard" beach. i\trn/W\f\Jm. AIM>, • 2 BR F\lm, J'rom $28.5 Wlnten.
F l R A Y I ~;·ers.':i ~~ baob. opt. 111& w. &lboo • 2 BR unturn l260 lJlG 2 er, lll a.. r.mui..
14 I I I ! The giraffe Is on odd-look· $135. h tl! no Panol'll mvd., N.e. Eva. 67S--m6or ~\ed~~= only, 2 child. ok. No petL ::==·=~·=!:·:::!·=!.·_,Ing ueoture. He ccn moke a Rd., .uh. Betwlen Hft..J--'-~-"-·-----rte room«ean views $150. 726 JotM St, CM.
LAC u 0 L l littlefoodgo •--s-~s borAN•wpnrl-2BtkN.19tll OCEANFRONT. Deluxe 3 ........ pie..,.....,, 'BR. unlUm. Crpb, drpo,
t--r--r-r"r--r-.-.:--i· 0 Como"'-""° ct.uclle ....... BR, 2 BA Fll>lo. A""U Seourt bltnl $Ul. l6ll W, WU.00 St. I I 1 1 I 'I' ,..~:t':,~~= "'Prom$38.50Wk. ~1<ffl mo. YEARLY! i'UllN.~ ,"!'~::-°7o~, °'"'
';" AJ!Wpll. ~m1:i':" m~~ 2 BR. 2 DA, °"''" d<pa, HUNTINGTON !rally/Jon. $90/mo 511.-f9 PllNT NUMalRED LEnERS IN THESE SQUARES
UNSCIAMAI.( LETlllS
FOR ANSWER
SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000
"'"" furn lnc:I 23" <.'0!0< TV PACIFIC ""511-23ll
:;::1::: =~· linens, It s: ' (ll)n'\pontnt l)'•lem, ' LR.Cl 2 I. a BR.. ' Blthl.
VILLAGE INN Reb. ro mo. 64M3tl7 ru ~:,N~~ 11.B. P'rplo, bll-liu, ""'"' .....
l..aallna Beach 49(.9'436 3 BM~ Ba Condo; Furn or Oh.. open 10 am-8 pm Daily encl gar, palJo. Sf&..1034
BALBOA INN unturn, S.WI unf. PYl/pi1tln, &itAMPd b1 2 BR Dui>lcex. Newly. die.,
Ballx>a tm.fj40 ('.!Oftl. .f07 naphlr Rd., ~u. WIWAM WALTERS co. l!;ltn1. Child ok. $1~
Pt.ACE REALTY <iM.tlM '-------------~---------21!1""'1JOO OPl!:N l!UNl 961 ltl. 16th Pl -·
t
t
I
I
, OAJLV PlLOT T_.,. Mtult 21, 1910 . I . , .... •TALS 1•--.. --~-11111!--fl!ll--~, ANNOUNCIMINTS ANNOUNCIMINTS
AplL Unfumlthtd __ A ...... ':'.n~•~l ... e4 -A!lfL Unfvmlohtd _ " * .. erld NOTICES and NOTICES Cerpontarlng 6.SfCI Heullng '730
c..te MllM 51C~ Corona d.:I Mer Sl.SO S.nt• AN 5'20 ~~-----··--'4ji1jj0ii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiii'4iil·0 CARPENTR-~--y~, c-,-.-, ,-, I 1, TRASIJ 6 -C-.,.-.. -.-...... -. P1 T
'7' --~, --·--Room Addltlon1, Pttlot. d&)'I, 110 a lot.d, Free est
I BR U..,,.,.. SL11>/mo. ll> _,. "' w •• * CAJl1 BE BEAT Any 1"8 job. Mike, 846-2!11 1.::Anytl=m::,:•:..;· ,,.._=.:'°"=·~~
fant o.k:, na petl. Joann St. •"" WANTED QUALITY Woodcnft, 1rrtl MOVING, G&rt&e ciffn.up It
CY, $«&-343'T~~-..,....,-I ~ " S1ncle Stoey gcn'I COMtr. • ~tery. lite haullna. Reasooablt.
I WXURY 2 BR apl, pool, b-l~!"'!, 1'"'ret oollllultatlon le: quote. FtH estimate•. 645-1802. ~'.ftc MU,Jm CharJeSt, lltJDNBR.~~nt\&ra SouthS.A~re OVERWEl'GHT LADIES ~:=~=~ pd~~;l~~Ts::I
'f!!!!~~~~_.!5~200~ r .......... I prlw ... tlol ' I Bedroom I Baths * CABINETS. Any ,;,. job '-,,,=="'14"'0.=3691==="-I 1!M"'1""'f 8Nc:ft ...,., ~. O>ntorl B""'-For weight ~tteJng program to establish 25 Yt'l "'I>U· ~ , -
PARK NEWPORT .,.,. "" s... 1 ...... 0111 "'411J. Can>ets • °"'"" atatlsUcs for rapid permanent wel~ht loss, cEN. Repalr, add. cab. Houaeclunlnt 6735
tnie ll"I OYrlkg the ,,,.ter. 7 IMKAtthur nr O.llt HW)'I Atr Conditioned condu~ by qualified physical culturiats. Formica. panetinl' mar111e .
...... 7 1e.w.,,,,'"·,~""., W7,fa&2 _7;?0ARC!IC!>HID Whtddys Wsnjt Wliad!i•t Golt Must be a minimum of 20 pounds over-Anytht""! Dick, 613-M.19 HOMEOWNERS
Spa. From 0 ~ • -'"" I' tlol SPl!CIAL CLAsSlfJICAT{ON FOR weight, have transportation and not cur-Floonstrlppod&waxod,Cpl• Bach 1 Oft 2 Br. Also I ffY 2 Bdnna., 2 boths, with •un-Privat.e a ren~ under doctor's care. All inquires com· Cement, Concrtt• '600 cleaned Windows washed 1:
,......_,, "'"'· kit. prt dock. SZ>O. ALSO', Bdnm., NATURAL BOr.N SWAPPE.RS pie v confidential ra1' •-··-cl •·· b ~ ~ dra_.. Heated Pool C--f I R I ' ' CONCRETE. All ~. ~ rene •JUW>C • ean .. 06 pt.t. or baJ SU tni P•-.. uv• 3 bltbl. Carpeted, ~· ..,..... a • ~.,...~ ''""' Uabl b n ......... out mAkl ae:r, epts, drpg. Juat bit-ins. Cov. garage, $325 S Lfntt -5 tinMt -5 buckl est. Sawi.Ju:, breaking, haul. llO\'I ava ~ Ya . _t-' ....
N. of Fuhion UI at Jam· Mo.: min. 1 year tease. Plenty <d lawn ._.,... ""' ._~~AO 111vn-=.o.,.. .,.. .. ...,.., ASK POR MIS' POWELL -537!5412 lnr 1e sldploadin&:. Servlct ~ro;u::i ~~
bone " San Josquln HW. . 0 a-Youa ,..... .,,,,, • ..,_, ..,. .._ .. flh•1f•..., A quality. 548-8668 Bob • or
Rd. 644-1900 fot leutng In-t' '7S.US0 Cuiiott I: Strnae ._.OTHl,... NI: w.t: -TUbl• Otl\"' BUSI NISS end MORE C.Oncrete pe.Uo tor 1 w"!!rv!!!l!1co,..call0!!!!642-!!!l!:l55!!1!1!! . ..,!!!'! lo. -1,. •r a.a To Place Your Tr .. r't P•rH M Ad Ptr...,als ,..5 •--· Artiltlc ,.~ •• 1, ----__. --•· HIDDEN VILLAGE PHONI! 642.$671 _FINANCIAL --money . ·-~· WINDOWS • walll wuhod . .............--..---~""""' • Lie., call Max a, 644-0687. Fin, •lrl~, sealed Ii * OPEN OAll Y 1-5 * -· apt. bl'-GARDEN IU" i.:> o Dlx. units, Anaheim: 2 Granada Hm.s 2 •b' w hme Bual""' 1r FUU.Y UCENSED * ~ 2 Br l ba •-u• Sal -.... Re-··-·.. ,_.. CEMENT Work of all kinda. waxed. Free nt, 891-TSSf 791 AMIGOS WAY ran(e., crp~. drps. $1BO mo. 2500 South ta Br., ,1% ba. Eq, $25,CM'.Wl. -111 ft, like oew, $57,150 ~rfP.11nltlet Q00 •uw•...u Hmou Spirltua.llat Free est. day or n!ghl.. 6T3-3090.
J BR, J ba., unit!. untum. 546-1740 or $t&-13:ll. Santa ALO * !>46-1525 Wa.nt local home or am&1l val 4 Br, I k, Um nn. For ....::..UZ • • , ----Advice on all matters. 636-0314 Oullkte living areaa and . · u.nita. Call: Nancy, P)Ta. mWr hme. Hrbt-Vu Hilla. CANDY SUPPL y Love, Mar.iage, Bualneu * HOUSECLEANING • 2
double garages. szr.; to Pll.12 Br. 2 Be. So. of Hiway L-.une Be.ch 5705 mid Excbl.Jwon ~. Ownr. ~. 64Mm. ROUTE Readinp given 1 days a DEa>RATIVE CONCRETE woman. Jllilt Ii ettlclent. * 644-1617 * (Ma.rguerke). Gv. No pets. ...• . -2i Acmi, Hemet: poaible Have everal lule boma, (NO SELLING INVOLVED) week, 9 AM. 9 PM DRIVE~WALKS-PATIO Call MS--122? ____ --11"l mo. 213, 431-1195. OCEAN VIEW Lr1 ~--ID N. El Camillo "'al. CAIL DON, 642-851' JOE'S CLEAN SERV ~~~ SPACIOUS 2 br, 1% ba, w/w Bachelor, 1 & 2 BR apts. mobile home •lt.e. Want will exchange equity 1Dr ,......,, one •••••••• $915.00 San Clemente, CEMENT WORK, no job too • HOAG HO@ita! area: Delxe crpt, rtove, retrlg. Adults, Furn or unfu.ro, Crpts, drps, multiple unit. lot, Orange tinaller homes or f Pl&n two •••••••• $1625.00 492 9136 94 Free We do Everything· Re• &
3 BR, 2 BA. lrplc, bltns, no pets. $225 mo. 675-3580 bltne:, patios, w a Ill In g County area. Mr. Beatty, Realtor P1an three •••••• '3250.00 · • 2~6 ::;. H~=~~ Comm. Free Est, 642-7551.
dshwUu', crpts., drps. adul~. di.stance to town. 100 Cl.W Pyramid Exch&J1ton 83M341 Cub Required, Excellent in. IM.PORT. Notice-You naw HOUSEWORK \INlted ~ 8 to
$221 mo. ALSO 2 BR. 2 BA. Lido Isl• sss 1 Dr., Lag. Sch. 494-M98 67s.8800 Commerdal-1-~prop. come 1tJr a tew hours week.. can be protect. for any * CONCRETE work: patlos, 3, $1.8 per day. Experienced.
crplll, drps, (hhwshr, bltns. ** WOOD'S COVE ** 3 Units 011 2 lot., Via Lldo downtown Le.auna. older. ly ~· (0.ys I: EwninpJ. present or prev, med. oond. drvways, etc. L Ice n sed . l3G-83-f4 ~« 2 BR. ~,.111~~ __ _.. -" .-.... .__ by 1 of the Jgest in.. C.O'•· Phillips Cement MS-6380 adults. .,.....,. mo. LRG BAY VIEW-• Bea~ -14 block, new 1 & 2 area. Ei}ulty $25.000. Trade Trade for San Francilco or ........ '6 ., .. ...uuec..,. .uvui · Meu Cleaning Service
6424387 Anytime 6'2-lm Study, crptl, drpe, 1% ba., BR Gold Medallion a.pl!!. fa: T.O.'s or !?? N, Calli. counlr)' acreq:e. coin operated dispensers in :spage:m~ ~ .. ~j C t t 6620 Carpels, windows, noor., etc.
• Br. --"·. r-1, -•, irplc, wab--dty, Avau Sept. Each have 1%: BA. Pool. Geo...,. ... WllilamlOll Realtor Owner 4gc...1652 \ Newport Beach and 11ur-on rec ors Rl?I &: Commc'I. 548-4W " _,., s•v .,.,. •-i.e 673--7502. ._. , rounding w tab-seMI., call for detail11-It 1---------
'!'edec le new cpts & drps. 5· $350 · $200 up. Lease 2175 S. Coast Gn-4350 673-156C Eve11. Have 18 units, Torrance. llah route ~~s ~me could snve thousands! Im-* THE REMODELERS * Gen'! cleaning, Home1
Retrig, alv. Ava.ii mw. l H fir.sf a. ch 5AOO Hwy. 49'1'-l630 or 499-3929. $3,980 lat Trust Deed & a Annual spendable $]J,570. btaDd ~ and lll9cke.) med. claim seM1, Med. Free esta • 100%> tinancmg It apt&, Nlte or 04)'
child ok. un ' on 11 __ ** NORTH END ** '67 Mu.ta.ng, w/everytbj.qi:, Want beach area house, For peraonal lnerview in Undenvrlting Ser v 1 c es, Kitchens, garage•· c:mrporta •546-57-43•
309 36th St 646-462i WALK 3 blks to beach. 1 BR ocean vu ;w blk shop-inc/air, (less then wbsle) Call: Rich Irwin, 675-60EiO Newport Beach area .end 675-5l2T or &f2-.U63. C.Omplete Remodeling.
UPPER Duplex, 3 BR, 2 ba. Almost new lg 3 BR apt. ping, be~s. Lila.;;; n d r y Also 10 ac. nr Salt &: Sea .Pyramid Exch&ngot1 Mme addttas and 'phone <5<:; .. =1ei::-."'w""'td"owe<1=;-. "0°'1vo=tt<d= Quality Contra.cton 6U-3fi60
yr round, * b1k ll'om bcb, Dbl gar, ~. w/w crpbs:, fadl, ad .... ts. mo. S25oo Do you have a bow;e 67S-8800 numhtt to MULTI-STATE M & w htY WAY, quality borne
gar , Avail now . drpa:, datnbr, 2 ba. $22:i 49'-4488&: 830-4237. to TD? 673-4621. Trade $9500 eq 1n Nwpt DISTRIBUTING INC 1681 en omen repair. Walls, ceillfii, lloors
2131332-21-42. mo·,,~!l~ .... ~/pets, childn e ADULTS ONL~•--t WANT SAIL <>I' POWER area twnhae for equal eq 1n Broadway, Anaheim, ·Cal.if. etc. No job too small.
2 BR a"' w/Uplc. Mature ok:. ~ •u Quiet pleasant oce ...... v.. YACHT to ... "",<m. Have Big Bear cabin ... .., .. balance 92802 (114) '/78..5060. Everyone's looking for the 543-14M
Y'" o T vie t ttage available .-. "'V I-:========:::::: right one. We have a way. 1-~~tlo~-~,--00.,.-,11ng,,,.--adulta. 6l5~ Clubhouae Ave. OCEANFR N , w ap . or ooincl til West:L.A.Jncome,O.C.ren. has pymnts leSI than renti· 547-87 24 hr. :record. Addi n1 *Rem e
$185 mo. Lease. Ca I I aundeclc, bch. Newer, apac $140.00 n; w~ taJ. bou&eA & $90,!Xrl T.D.i. Jou Petenon, Box 958, Bia Money to LOiln '320 Fred H. Cerwick, Uc.
Anaheim. 1·11'-%M5 dlx 2 Br, bltna, cpts, ~ Ph: coll. Dwyer : Owner 673-4621. Bear I..&R. Call collect ----------Sc caJJ Us & begin to live! 6n.aMI * 549-2170 * BAYFRONT * ::"ii:'.r.iui'.: ~ ... REAL ESTATE lBOO. Top Quolily 8xlt)' All. 116W12<. 1st TD Loan PALM REAotNGs ADDITIONs. L.T. eo .. 1ruc-r. · ' Y GttMr•I Purpose Shadow·&x Style STREET BUGGY. Beaut. Cards & Sa.nd Readings tion, single or 2 1tory, pl8.115, LUXURY APTS. Sterf· SJrr.2131. -·~ -. 65 8,., n......,.....,.....,. Help 1n All Matten e1t & Iayoutt. 847-1511. int at $375. * 642-2202 NEAR Huntington l'..arbour Rentals W11nted 5990 Frames W/GllUI. Mfr. new l-Ol·kind..duign, ' .,., ••~ia:.JW:AI• 1D AM-10 PM, 1 day1
-•• ~""suLA 3 lc: 4 BR New Triplexes. Quiet area. ' -----·· -Colt. (Trade val.) ff20 tor Corvair eng. w/auto lraJUI, 2nd TD Loan 213 . 697-9272 La Habra Car..at Cle•nlng 6625 .c.i~ .... ~ Lrg 1 BR. Dillhwasber. $150. * LANDLORDS * auto or f 496-2500. $1500 val. up or down for FUU.Y LICENSED ..--
2 :::· :. ~~='. lnfanUpet ok. ( 213) FREE RENTAL SERVICE COMMERCIAL Income pro. boat, auto or ? fi6.2500. Term. baaed on equity, INCURABLE Diseases Ii: ~ 592-2623 at (714) 846-3559 Bil.le Beacon 660183 CM pe.rty, iree 6 clear, next to Trade $40,!Xkl eq iD modern 642-2171 545-0611 terminal case• are my ~ ~
e NEWLY Redec. Upper 3 * ATI'RAC. 2 BR, $139 & 3 CPLE to care kr Pvt. borne Sean. Val. $65.000. For Santa Anita estate, 5 br, 5 SeJ'Yin& Harbor area 21 yn, apeciaJty. Nothing to lose .; .-~
BR. 2 BA. Walk to beach! BR $1'9. All extras. Pool. or apt. Write Daily Pilot units, house or beach prop. ba, Olympic pool, 3 blks S•ttler Mortgag• Co. yoor lite to ga1.n. CTit) CARPET ~mo Yearly. 6f2.6836. Kids/pell ok. 17 43 l ·C Box P'JJO'l OWNER 675-6259 to trwy. Take lat.e boat of 3313 E. 17th Street 673-1166. STEAM CLEANED
Keelson Ln. 847-0325 1968 Mustang Hdtop, 19,000 equal value. 673-6566. LOANS $50,000 & up. ArJySW •=IN"G"E"'R"'s'"i -N"•'"w-"o,"a.,.-nge REASONABLE RATES
5238 I 2 BR, l~ BA., patio. Rooms for Rent 5995 miles, $1700 val./20' tibgl.s 8 Units, good rental arta. Real Estate or Business. Co. Guide. For free Info, Allio carpel lnstailalioo
p:IOI. $165 mo. MORA KAJ HUNT. Bch. Bacbelor, mm· Wizard C.Onteua, SIS, trlr $38,000 equity: Income Mr. DoUum (303) 9'22-2305 Wrttr S.C.S.G. P.O. B<>x l-,,,,.--,64,.6,,5=9cc71,-.,="';:-:-
apt.s. Ea.at of Beacb Blvd, munity bath &: ldtch. $65 Sl500 val. FOR: clear Late $13,500. For house, C<lm· no collect calla. Zill, Anaheim, 92804 Diamond Carpel Cleaning
IRVINE --·--
NOW LEASING! % b1k off Garfteld, mo. l Blk to Pitt.~. Cad or LTD or T &C-2514. mttclal or bone ranch, AN .. OUNCEMENTS Pcnnyrlch Bra1 -Swimwear Aug, Spec. 400' $2'1
New. family and adult1 units CONDO. Lra. l bl', 2 car gar, w-•· I COSTA ME.SA Cl COR OWNER~ and NOTICES Personal fittings by appt RepairiJli Ii lnlc.JlaUon
with total recreation dub · oo· •~ br ..-1:1 * $1.S PER ,.,.,.-up w """ I •·"boa ~·-54n ""'"' ""' """" Free est. ~1317 pnv. pa • w:aiWI • -.. • $35 k 90 x 117-2 bldg& 168,......, 1&,ii Snipe o'.>aU t, ... ,.,.., --·------......,...M;.I or............,_
and ptt«booL l, 2, " 3 ~~1411.cbHd OK, aft 6 PM, ~.~~CYI'EL ::;_,: -up equity $42,000 for h I g b Xlnt cond, $800 value, Trade Found (Fret Ads) 6400 AL COHOLICS Anonymous REMARC Service•. 3 rooms
bdrm.I from $l.50. Nr. ahop-JiJO"'U de&ert, 1Dr TD1, stock, real e1tate, Phone 542-7217 or write to $21.50. Fully tuaranteed.
Piiw, goH, ~· Ju.1 I ··=-L~O~V7.E~L'"Y~N=E~W~A"P"'T"'S SLEEPING room, Co• ta Owner 646-8558 ()l' anything of eqUa1 value. % ~t-AHUA, rec en t P.O. Box 1233 Costa Mesa. Credit cards OK. 847~
eouth or San ''""'A" Fwy, on Near Oa!mn &: RUk. 1 Ir 2 Mesa: prtv. home. ~er. 675-1070 eve1 mo r, no J.D., Frie.ncUy SERVICE DIRECTORY STEAM jet carpet cleaning. Culver Dr., Irvine. 833-3733. BR' ·~ "th St.. 841 -1 6'2aDJ 548-0390 Evn. Will -c·-g aood --an . · w-kids. Vic: B 1 u e bird B ~-u--00 __ ,._ •· ~ ~ ~ excna.11 e ......., Have 6 umt. • trade. up . .,. __ ,,., '-·. "-h. 4••1747 y ......_.r._..,., na ..,..........., PARK WEST 1 °~-full bath No view M-1 Newport Beadl , __ .. •-mobil -ni....,.. -. uo.. ~ Accou ting 6500 .. -"-. Free est. 642-4055 MENTS SPAC 3 BR, 2 BA, 1z'I yard, kit".::'-::'.°. tiO ! blk. ,_ Want •a.nu ..u e or 494-230S n ••~ APART endomed pna:e. $190 . ...,..n. r•\ pa: . , w property tor 2 amall bomel park, multiple, commerc.1,,,===-,,~-~..,. Owned and Managed by Adults only. Call 8'2--4549. bch. 673-1023 til 11:00. 1n CM/NB area. Jea:i office. Rlch Irwin, Pyramid BEAUTIF1JL W bite Pck· BOOKKEEPING Service for
,,,,..""..,,.rrvm...,· ~O>!'m~pany~!!!!!!'j l BR.. ~ew. Frplc. Near Priv. ig:I rm../ in ~-c·;· Smith, Realtor 64&-3255. Exdwlgol'I m«l&O, = ~·P~Avewek ~:. ~~sse~:~·::;: 1~-•·· · · -- -ocean. Patio. Adulfl. pool home w youna: ..,,., 1 16• fleetllner-50 hp, wood. (6) 2 Be:dnn unltl. Hunting. Bem ' i.aiuna n e ~ c b wkly, monthly. Will pick up
East Bluff 5242 IJNDBORG CX>. 536-2579 lady pref. 6f2..3755. Will trade tor RanchtrO or ton Beach, $26,000 equity. 497_1M,9. & deliv. Call 675-Ul.2 morn-1"'=-'------2 BR u-•·-"-"'• '""·-•-· ... _,,,,.,, ·'ue Tradeforvacantland,latae'I"'==-_,,.-,..--,,...._,,, In ... · ''""'u. .... .,..... Motels, Triller E' 11...11.lUUIU lJI. ""'-.. v.. • boat <>t 1 Bla. FOUND: Female part Ter-
NEWPORT BEACH nrp., stow, refria:. Court• 59'7 $7004800. ~ or 8'6-:W~ vu· 6U-Of27 rier pup, white wttan spots. Appll•nc• Repiirs Vlll11 Granad1 Apts. Adults. mo. S3&-S581 3111, ' e . • * Flea collar, Mayfair Mkt on Parts 6510
$350. Fow-bedrooms witb MOVE IN NOW I WEEKLY Ratea. SEA .... .... * * * 17th St., 8/23-evening. Call
h,lmnlem above I ~· brarxl new 2 BR aptl LARK MOTEL. 2501 548-1948 e Wuher & Dryer RepaJrse
Gracious Uvtng & qUlet sur-*horn S135 * Newport Blvd, C.0.ta Meu RCAL ESTAT£ RE.AL ESTATE r ~O"'UN=D"""'sm=-. =ma1=•"'b"la.,.ckc-=:kit-Free Eslimates. Work
roundin&I 1or f.amlly with NEAR Huntingtoo Harbour G I Gentral ten about 3 moc old. Ha.a Guaranteed. Call 53&-3159 cbildreo. Near Corona Del Crpll, drpl, bltm, family Misc. R•nt1l1 ,5999 •n•r• nee. collat. Vicinity of ==~======
Carpet Loylng &
Rep•lr 6626
I STilL have t.he Best deal
In town in C&rpet·Llooleum-
Tile. C.A. Page. 642-2070
Floors ---·----CARPET VINYL TILE
UC CONTR. FREE EST. * 5C0-7262 *
Furnftur• R•1toring
Ironing, my home. $1
ht. You Deliver. _,
IRONING
In my Home 548-257.1
I ronlng In my hom•
C.M. Reasonable 548-2572
J1nltorl1I 6790
SPARKLE Jm1i.Orial&-win .
dow cleanine Serv. Win-
dows, restd., oomcl, oonst.
cleanup. Free est. 96Z...o6T2
L•ndscaplng 6110
NifWLAWNS.-~Inc,
rof.O..tilllna, re nova t Ing,
clean-up. 897-2417 or -· MAID SERVICE 6125
C AND S Maid Service
Rc1ldentlal & apartments.
Ph. 642-9873 or 642-9874
Painting,
Paperhanging 6850
PROFESSIONAL Painli111'..
Exter. 1 1tory, lo 11111 $200
w/good paint. AVJ. rm. $11.
Accous. celllng1 gprayed
2-roabl $15, Roy 847-1358.
HOUSES, docb boa!J flag.
poles, anythinj-1
• everYwfll"
reasonably pa.Jnted. For tree
estimate 646-9152,
PAINTING, int &:
Hlghe1t quality for
prices. FTtt est.
847-4128.
e ic t .
'°""'' John,
Mar H\gb School, Fireplace. ~a. 5152 Heil, Hwillpgton 12xM GARAGE for Rent Offlc• Rent11 6070 Lott . 6100 =t, C.M. • alt S p.m. Babysitting 6550
we• bar " bullt.J.n kitchen Bcb.. 846-4696, 833-02"'2 $20/mo. Full privacy. 7176 3 ARCH Bay, above medlca.11===...,..~~~~-BABYSIT, my home, fenced
appllanoes. e 3 BR. 2 ba. crpti, drpl, Placentla Ave. (rear) CM. SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY bldg, unobatrucb!d viewlot, BRO~ le White Springer yard, lunch, all play equip,
835 AMIGOS WAY 6"-2!19l bltnl, sundeck. 1 blk kl bcb. ~ 1·2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq. $16,950. 837-7013. Spaniel about l yr old found From Victoria to Meu. Dr.
·" Reflnl1hln' 6675 PHONE the rest • then phone
the be11: Jordan &: Son
&: Painting. Licensed, bonded, tlJRNITURE Stripping
relinillhin&:.
e NEW DELUXE e
3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lc.ue.
Ind sp&C. master suite, din
rm I dbl p.rqe, auto door
opener avail P<>Oi A Rec. ..... e FROM $265 e
865 Amigos Way, NB
Maoa,ged by
WILLIAM WALTERS CO.
PRIVATE VIEW
2 Bdrm&., 2 baths; carpeted,
draped, blt-l.na, dllhwshr.
UpstaiN, $250 Month. Mm.
) )'t8.r }eSI ,.<>
• ( 175-6050 0
w··a: 1ta.&
$175. MJ...a5 I 2% car prage $50 mo. ft. oHlce suites. Immed. oc--in the Bay. ~ • 8 to 5 Price re:as. T:ic hr or $18 wll.
l BR at beach! $1Z. Bach, I Sl.ngte garage $2> mo. cupancy. Orange C n t Y • Acre1p 6200 £op~.m~·,,...,,,,......,.....,...,.=-,.,~ 646--0160.
$110, (fum). QOIET! Near o .c. a.ltport. M8-5044 Airport Irvine c.ommerc. -~~ KEYS Found on beacb vie. BABYSIT'G, wkly, m Y
aJ2..A 14th 536-1319 m.178-t Complex, adj. AJtporter ESTATE SALE Island A Balboa. Jnquitt _.. ba k "=====:=;=':i::=;j Guqe fer Rent Ho•-• • "-tauran• """"· Rlverstde Woodcrest Area at front counter, D9H.. home, fnui yd, by o ' " CdM * US mo 1e& n.c-. " Im 28 unlm -.Y vie: Sch Blvd I. P.C. Hwy S•nta Ana 5620 · San Dieau It N'pt. h)'I. 1.09 ac. p: ac. · Pilot, :l2ll Ba'boa, N.B. Exper 536-707a .. ,;·;,;-;.:-:;;·;;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;~~·lh;;;;;;;;~*p615-0ll;;;;;;7 * UNCROWDED PARKING ::;r Va.a Buren ~:V~u~· Grey kitten w/pink fl ea col-UNEMPLOYED teacher \l.·Ul
• Income Property 6000 l.OWESf RATES Dr Eakl~~~) ~73i 606 So: Jar. Vic Balboa Peninsula care Jor kindergarten or
VILLA MARSllLLES 1 :;;;;;;;;;;_;,;;;;;~~;;;;;;; Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont .. Oil N 1800 LA' Point. 675-3503 or Dr. Stock-alter school dilldren in C.Ox BRAND NEW I• Rm. 8, Newport Beach, ve, 0· ' . . ton,673-1050.
SPACIOUS Retire at Catalina 833.3223 Cow·toiy "'Brokers Govornmoot land-15 aore GRAY bb I al kit'-• ...oo1 dl•t. !J6M;l8. ·,:,,====~~=-==L;-1 Write.Land Packqe 1185 ta Y em e u:n. " WILL babysit my home, 1 I 2 Bdrm. Apta. MEDICAL • OENTA Arrowhead San Bnd~ smo months ol.d. Ii.ea. cotlar. behind Pmnona Sehl, CM. Adult Llvlnt for • fascinating new lite! St•ltes avail. Best location. --' · Vic. Warwick Lane, CM Any age. 6:_30 to? ~
Furn. I Unfurn. Rambling :.J room e&tallna Xlnt parldfii. Modern facil. R. E . W1ntM 6240 64i..ttl6 n ...... H H t l ,,_,.i.,1 .... ., I vallabl 1-::======== Oil1J) care. my home. day1, ot.bwuhtr color coo:dlntt· ....,a ... , OUSe 0 e • ·~-· ltiea. Jmm.,... te Ya e. ---1· vie Pla.centia. & Victoria,
ed appll&nola . pluab iha& izlna" in family groupm, 10% BAYSHORE CENTER WIU. YOU take acreqc or Lost 4401 646--0952.
cai.-pet • choice at 2 ~or Down, eking $65.000. 601 Dover Dr .. N'pt Beach lat Trust Deed in on your ::;-: : !..= .. :::. Jean Smith, Realtor • • 11s-Hllo Q 8 .... us"'iN"'E's<THs .nc1671 1
R ·-E-D-nE_•_D_E_o_w_""'_"'_'k" W.':+ ~:,.R'ili,MTi
u-'-.. .. Nr. Undlne on Lido. Jn. WKDYS 546-66ll robe doon • tndJnct "'6"" -.····am ca..a FINANCIAL ,·ur:. ·:EWARD! ===·=~-·-~-Ina la k:itcbtD · bruktut 646-H55 NEWPORT Hgts area, large
bar . bu&• prM.to ,._11-----..---•I HILLOREN SQUARE ;------i,,,.,..,;.*..!Cal~l".'673-~2468~•;..,_,~ yanl w/..,,.,box. Lunch +
Coron• del Mar 5250 patio . pluab 1~PirW Business Rental 6060 1900 sq ft DelllXt! OU1cu Bu1fne11 f ".A.CK w/whlte Peke, snacks. Xlnt care. 645-2™
brick &NI-Q's. tarp beat· -· --• ·--. Avail. for lmmed. lea&e ln Opportunftltl 6JOO male, "Ipo," Vic. Ogle I. CHILD care. to ~ yrs, my o:;~. _,D,ailyl BR1-6., 3.?! Id p!l()1s 6 la!al. SATOR""62<W _,_, _ _:v•atminster ont or citles busiest shop. Santa Ana, CM. RE "'.D. hm .. lncd yd. Nr. Atlan-
.. _.6.,eri e · " °""' 3101 So. Bristol St. ve, e ........ "'ter actON pine centert. WW divide. Affiliate 646-1735 ta-Bch Blvd, H.B. 536-4084. D!ahwshr, cpll, drps, ftpl, (li Ml N _,So "-->t '11. ) from Fletdler Jone 1 II WANT GOOD GRAMMAR ,7.;"7"'-;;:;~=-;-;;=;-;; Walk to <> c ea o. Act. 7r • S. wt ·z; ua Chevrolet 800 aq . Jt. 1137.~ Air-cond., music, pane,, 1 LOSf in CdM VALUABLE WOMAN w/2 young children
675-5723. PHoN'E~ 557~ mo, Call 8'6--3101. crpta, drt>s. Max. park i GOOD o:ONEY? KEYS in leather holder, wishes to care for child, * COROLU>O APTS. 2 Br, 1 FnCE Space It boa l :~:u~-~~·~~~j Secured •nd Ouannteed Reward, 673.-3082 :2'1r5. 546-S2n.
& 1 ~ BA., frplc, dbl c..,_. displa¥ art a. Ex c e 11 . FLUFFY Fem Tabby kitten, e LOVING Cate ln my
port&. large Pool. $185 a up. rrs Btt.ch houa.e ttnu. Bia· marine exposu~. 260 2 UP to 3600 sq ft.-Deluxt, air Rncb for that phone now. flea collar, 8/5, v t c: home-hot lunches, fenced
673-3378 .... t sel«=tion eV'tf! SM the Newport Blvd., N. 8. cond, crpts. drpi. In. co~ ThJI could be )'OW' op-Br.ntwood St, CM 54MTI9. yard. Call 646-5151. . .;:;;::::::...~=~~_,....,.."jl 673-fJ606 puter center bldg, 6'6-742:1 ----LGE new 2 BR. 2 ba, frpl.c, Cl Jfled ' S46-6080 portunlty lo earn extra. high WHn'E le Ian short-hair
all bltm, cpta, drp1, beamed DAILY PD.maeL 600-12X> SQ. FT. office allO 1..:0:c'::..::,o=:o,,--~--1 Yo-eekly cash money wifh oo Yorky Face fem. dog. Vic. Boat Ma lntenanc• 6555
oe:U'g, pvt Pill. So. of HW)'. atctloa aawl 600 aq. ft. 1ton. $90 & $150. LARGE offices • 2 roo.m selllfli. Just restock kx:aJ, 19th & Tustin. 543--0318 •.;:"'°"""':==:=:,,...:;;:;,""=·===--=========;j . .:Ci.M;;;.;;64&-71i;T;;;;30~<;;<.;;;;-aulte $160, 4 room &Wll! $233, company establiah@d lrafllc LADIES gold Bulova watch I' South Laaune C5t Hwy air con:! .. carpets, drapes, store• In a fl'w hours a Yo-eek lost by student nune, N.B.
Fount1in V11llty 5411 Fountain V1lf1y 5410 • Ind. 700 Sq, Ft. 1160 mo. paneled, S43-252S of your llp&re: time. Uaht. Re vd 838-2067
DOCK Ir boat cleaning &. mainl wlth good ye a r
around service. 832--0682
ml)J1llJlil I;~~---~············ OFFICE Re ta1
1
.. -..... pleasant work . =,,'==· ~=-..-,~= ?tlr:Cue Bkr * &U-7799 n 1' .._ ... _ 1r .,..,., are n.>liable and can FEMALE Golden Retriever, • · Bch. $100 Mo. Cout Hwy. -1--M V ~ "·" "·al E O K 41u -lmntedlatcly I n v •I t a esa e1ue area. ,,....; 6070 n.c 5tate ' • ,,......;r•••· mOOerate a.moon! of "'8h 546--2517 or 546-3665 Brick, M11onry,
ate
:Joun lain~
Modlur""'-Styls Lu""'l
DelllU l·Rm. oUlct 6085
Nr. °"""'• Count> AJrport.1---------1
It lrVlne l n dust r I a I 19% Return I: Spendable.
Com·•·· ~-, dra eo.ta Mu& centtt. 138,<o> ~. -~ ..... Do muslc. aiJ'.condllk>niftl It "n.
J•nUmial MtVt~. $125 Me>.
BOB PETIIT. ReaJU e 833-0lDI e
DESK SPACE
105 No. El Cimino R••I
Son Clttn•nf•
2 Unlta -El Camino RtaJ,
San C en1eote, $10,[Q) "Down
Realonomics Corp.
6.560 {guaranteed and secured), • PENDANT . Aqua Marine
and can begin now col-oo 1Rver chain. Sentimental ---------
Jecttng prolitii, ctll col.Itel val. Vic CM/1-l.B. 546-flOSl BLOCKWA.LLS Plastcr-
for permnal inlcrviev.', MT. I-,=======--Patios Drivtway1
Baxl11r, (2131 787-.8912 Qt' Ptrsonils 6405 S!dewalks Gc.9852 mom. or
write box No. M-~1. Ottlly eve.
Pilot, 22U W. B&Jix-. B.t·1d., --------========
Nowport Beach. ATHENA'S Carponltrlng 6590
HEAL 111 Forces sale of of the Sunset St Mp with
J11.nttorlaJ se:rvict route. the greate1t g:lr11 rrom CARPENTRY
1963 Ford Econovan, all HOU..YWOOD to MINOR REPAIRS. N<> Job
equ.lpmllllf to Mrvtc. au-u•S$AG£ YOU TOC' Small. Cabinet in pr-
('OUnC&. C • o s 1 e • •i>-llft q:e1 A o l b • r can!Mtl .
•64.2-9575•
Gardanlng 6610
~------~-WORKERS Ava.ilablt: Any
kind of work, anytime.
Cleaning, lawn work, paint-
i!"lf etc. Efficient, reliable .
$2.50 hr. Ask for Jobn or
Nicholas 646-0Y/5.
AL'S ..;AROENING
tor Gardening le small land.
scaping service1 call 540-5198
Servin& Newport, CdM. Cos.
ta P.fesa, Dover Shores,
WestciW:.
AL'S Landscaping. Tree
removal . Yard remodeling.
Trash hauling, lot cleanup.
Repair 1prnkler1. 673-ll66
LAWN & Garden Care,
beautification, weeding &.
cleanup by oollerie 1tudents.
Reas. 50-7363. Calina Bros.
EXP. J apanese Gardener .
Gen. cleanup. Haulln& trees.
Mainf. yard &16--0619
JAPANESE Garden i n g
Service. Neat work. Clea::aup
yd. malnl. 963-1103.
CLEAN UP SPECIAIJST
New fence le repair. Odd
Job•. Reas. 548-6955
Complete Y•rd C1rel
Jlr.: 5'0-4837
Gardening: Land cleanups,
sprnklr sys, rota-cement
work. C.D. Yancey, &tS-5860
Cut « Edp Lawn
?tfalnlenancc, Llc'd, Inll.ltt!d
5'18-48G8 aft -4.
General Servlc•s 66tt
APT CLEANING -Painting
-Rug Sb&mpoolna: • Ute
Rcp11ra. REP.fARC
SERVICES, 847-6688.
Ed's Oean1n1 SeMct
Carpets · UPbolstery • Wln-
dow1 • Floor Can. -
Hauling 1a1w.-.o-1llalbl
.Ullll IJvlq
""1dlbed a Vahmlllhod -DESK SPACE
Commercial Bkr. 67&-6700
e 5 Sl'ORES, 1110.<m. 616-
698 w. lttb st. Bethel
'I'O"tlo'ttl corntt. 5d!t'7CI lit.
fndustrlal Rent11f
proximahlb S1.00:J per Ytf.f. ~75, U m anawtr k•w
Can be built I.IP to dolnll" Now wttb a new location mq-at ~ IL O. T .N.T. I.Awn Ser v 1 c e.
much larger volume. ru.U In Ahdf:rton Carqe cle•n.ups, haul.Ing
--------., ... ·-...... c..,.... . ,,..,,,... , ..... • a..-C.W.,• ....... '"" ....
222 Fore•! Avenu•
Le9una Beech -AJR.CONOmoNED ornces.
$50 Ground ~. Ccut
Jlwy, Corona. dcl Mar.
6,..2llOO
/NEWPORT BEACH
$80 mo. Atr-cond.
Ervin "*m.1601
t"'OR lse • 5300 1q. ft. prime
w 1 r e b 1 t 1pace..ail/part .
lrv1ne Ind. Mr. Bullard
546-*'51
NEW blda, 1381 tn 2300 rt,
Nr. 8a)rer Ir ra.lrvlew, 1
yr lt'a.. SUIUvan 548-2176 _
RENT M-1. Im gq rt $133
mo. 1355 Lonn. C.M.
m.5118
prit:e $3000.00. "6-fo63. N•wport Beach Quo.I eo=n-=,1:-,,-.. ·~-,.,,.-,.,.,ry,..,-....,.-k Light tno\·lr1g. Ml-5863, * * WlC SHOP, Call W~. 642--95l2 lin&, all home imprvmn111. I ;;S3-;1-;...l;-T29n;.,,---=--
thru Sun, 9-5, Bill tale, 2U 62nd St, 6~ld ' W. No jnb too sm. Free est. Y AR D I Gar . C I eanup.
67J-.72f>2, Coast H"'Y in !ht 53fr1058. Ren-iow trtts, Ivy, lfUh.
REST AURA NT: Prime llwy N~ Slwtl'f!lt Center CARPENT!:R: R c m 0 d c 1 , Gracie, backhoe, 962.8745
k>catlon. $10,llOO. +MASSAGE &-SAUNA patio "''Orie, «'ment \\'ork HAULrNG 110 A LOAD
• .f96..8042 * tow:ly tlrls.J F.:Xl'EnT ~IA "' p11lntlng. No job tM Cl11an Up Ttte Snrv. Ot'n.
Pl.ANNINO to mowT You'll SAGE. Ask abou t our 1.,.~ 11n1all . li"n!l' e1L, 5:J&.1944 Prunlnr 6-46-2528, Ml--IM3
find aft lrMZI~ number oi Vepa V•t'•tlons. 10 AJ..f 10 JlEPAtn., Rcmodf!"llnt &· H\UT.ING Ir cle•nup, lrttl
home. hi tocl.t.>''a Cla11Wed 2 AM. 1 DAYS. zi:-o W. PalkrNo job 100 amaU! b 1'1.rvbl removed. RC!u.
Adi. Owck thtm now. Cout Hwy, NB. f»S..34B. • 67:h\417 * rn.-. ea:tim. M8-1092 ~-~----·--------
Insured. 543-5325
McAdams Painting Serv.
Inter. & Exler. Special rates
on apts. 646-3645
METICULOUS PAINT.
BLUE CHIP STAMPS. INS.
crew cool. students. Int-at
houses. Exp. Docla:. 675-S812 * PAPERHANGER * Recognized Authority, Prior
Instructor, 646-2449
PROFESSIONAL, 30 yr t
exp. papethanaing I: pain-
ting, from Ena:land. 968-7'61.
COl..J..EGE Students., 3 yrs
exper. No drinking. Blll or
Steve, 548-4549. * PAPERHANGING
& PAINTING. 1r 968-2425
Plesterlng, Patch,
Repair 6llO
* PATCH PLASTERING
All types. Free estimates
Call 540-6825
Plumbing 6ltO
PLUMBING REPAIR
No Job too small
• 642--1128 •
HOM' REPAIRS
Plumbtng.electrical. $7.SO Hr.
6-U-2755 or 642-0506
U. l!R PWMBING
& REMODEWNG
"57-9644
Remodellng &
Rep1lr "40
ROOM Additions, gan.iiea,
remodel. LoWflt Price lq
town. Lie. contrac tor Mi-29118 '
GEN'L rem<>delina & maint.
No job loo s maJI .
Llc'd/lnsured. 67&-8183.
Sewing ,,..
Ci> rln.os.smaktnc-Altcrttionl
Df'lll$ne<i h) suit )'OU.
Call .lo • 6t\6-6.f-f6
~Sewln & All1r11tlon1
lii3Q.3682
-~~----.,.~·~--·~----------... ---------·-···-----··---... ··---·· .. ·---·----·------··--.. ~-__...--------
• T.....,, Aupt 2S, 1970 DAILY PU.OT SE~C~ _DIRICTOllY JOIS lo EMPLOY,MENT JOU lo EMPLOYMENT JOllS & IMPLOYMl!NT JOllS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & l""lOYMENT JOIS lo EMPLOYM J ll~" •M~LO M•N 1 MERCHA I E FOR ---·-_i'_n ..... ~c_._,_._,,,_1 • .._ __ m.;.;.;4 Job Wontotl, Jo"° Motl, Wom. 7100 Jobt Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo Mon. Wom. 7100 School .. 1n1tructlon 7600 ~!>~~TRADE
e Dllicount ·rue Centet" e
202.1 So. Main, S.A. S46-U11T
All type• ol tile • wall, floor,
pa.Uo, cnttY •·m. bath I: .-r. Expert U.,tau.llon
or tree tnatrucUOna fot do
it )'CIW"llelhn. Compllt• lint
of acceuoriel It UiGij for
ln•t.allatlon.
• \f•rne, The Till'! Mau *
CuJt. work. hwtall & ttpain,
No job too &ml. Pla~tel'
patio. Lc&kllli 10 b o we r
repalr.
147-19S7/8'&o0206
CERAA1JC tUe cw;tom ~'Ork.
Free estimate.
• 494-2144 or 494-6372 *
Wom1n 7020 ,:;;:;;.:.;;;.-;:......_ O.b• '"'" Full ... :---. own * DRIVERS * Marine Mechanic s.= .. -,.ry· Dlocovor • Gre•I New ~-!'umltu.. I010
I An1 nol ordinary! And If ~ -C WI~ Th R n 'd ••· you ll'I! II()( an ordlnacy transporlation, 25-45, llt• No lxperienc• Ex;perit:ncM. only, Pttman. SH, Id •klllt. 'rcmporacy. •rHr '" • t n ..... ,60 wood dtllc&
bou, l v.·1111 you! Am ~1teeplnc. N I en' Job, rm.:e btndill. To AMERICAN GIRL $53.M • Relln'd wood arm
youni, &ttrtctlv. Southl!rn !"8..7401' &l!cr ' pm. ec.uary. v.wk •t modem mariM. 1172 Dupont Dr, NB AIRLINES rotary chain, S29.50 • Wt
llllJ• ..... writ"", PR, Check Here BAKtJl -'"'""'"""" b&lld Ml .. t .. ,. ..... Ca!llGntlti Coll or .,.;,, IUll delalls. !.'l>-"32 ................ •leclioo
• •ct ' '1 • re c e p t. PB>C. at,op San Otrne t ~ drivlna ft<.'atd. Apptv Laite Arrc'IWht'ad Marina, A n1.tun.l lor YOUltl people 01 uaed ottic:'e furn in th.ii
RtlPorw!blllt)' a tnust! Am ...-or -~e YILLOW CAB CO, P.O. Box 910. n41337·2!'l0l. * SECRETARY * ...tio qnt e11cltemtnt plus! area. "-rd wor1dna .. kno\\•n tor BARlliA1n . TOPLESS 186 E. 16th St. Ne&t •PP'~. briaht. Tl:cket qerl~ Air hlchl! Mc Mab&n Desk
h1endllnt11, klyalty It ln-t h h ••ant.•u ThP1trw, 320 So. • Costa t.lesa MDtCHANDISINC • Op-f'ne~lic ~f\i l&dy tor I Station & a:• n t '!' Rew.rva. 1800 N= Blvd.
lellliCnot. Call El. In e Wit I . e Ma;-81., S.A. • EXPf;RJi E:NC:ED FOOD A portunlty In retail level, Put &:irl oJ<:, Shrthnd, tYpinr. tlon.s! Ramp or travel
6'11H149 S COCKTA I.+ WAITl\ESS. It f\lll time. Call bttor'e 10 lite bkkP&. Real Estate or 118'!nt! We'll train you ~ Offi~;-Equl pmMt IOJI 1
SENIOR t 'f Pl 1 t w/dtc-••ub' operator, male er 1• • PERSON TO OPERATE am A: after 5 pm, 61~ construction e:<p, helptul. thtse and more. day or nlte. -1
ta&>honc ex pe r i9 n ce In-111•1•· )II~ llalr l"ul'tionf, SNACK ~R M/F. Steady. ~IEN-Dper~nced s:elcoater. Salary open, ~7.5fi61 w,. Induct. placement aa-rB.\il Selitfcric twewrittt,
le.rested In ~·tlme even-Jo~ Kings•. ~~I Bt.Y Pllu, R&nciJo 51.n Joaquin Apply, lolacGttgor Yacht SEMl-Retir~ man, pa r I •iltance. Ul(l. -47•1 E. 17th St., SUite
ln1 work . perle~ tn ' Golf ~ Corp 1631 Placentia c M tlrne, for lite mainlenance 103, C.M. &12-3192.
lyplnc mo6t form11 of le&a1 e BEAU'I'Y OPERATORS UI021 Culver Road . ' ' . work, 4 hours a day, 5 di.ya Eiit, 21 yrs, Approved torJ.:i========
doeu1nenta. 548--1573 EVJ:S .l SUNDAYS. Newport Beaeh NEAT Appe:arlnr lernale for a wk. 54S-1608 alt 5 pin. Veterartt. Eliltble lnstitutioo Cafe, R•tt•urant IOl4
SPAN. iipeak giri to live in • ~57 Irvine Branch part dme I :nllict ~·ork. uodrr the ftdfralb' lnsuredl--'-------
fot lite hou5ekteplno I: child e BR o ILER COOK. Near UCJ &33--0112 Pe.rm. pot t . Plca.san.t SERVICE reN i•lliknt la&D pcwram. . 10 i 't. ·deli cue. 3 ahelw. r .... s.rv•--6980 .... *°"'r 2 Office& Cover* x p E lrl~ne manner. t'OI~ ~ TER and "Aerobot" elect. steam I-'-"-"'"--'-'""-""--Catt. Rd., ~ DISHWASHER. 0 Inner E RI ENCE req'd stroetlon exper. pref• d , Employment Atoncy tatM. Sn at Swtu a.Jet All Of Orang• County hou!e. 6-13-66.19 Mana1er. RK"eptioftiat, 00&-Quick thlnktr. .__ina & Alrllno SdMOIJ Paclflc
BOB'S TR.EE SURGERY
la back offering the ..ame
Fine Qaullly ~f, Service. * ~793 ...
TREES, ltt?dges, trim, cut,
atumpi; ren.oved, hauled. 30
)'l'I. esp. FUiiy ins. 642-4030
DON'S TREE SERVICE All
types, Lise & 11\15. Fl'ee EltL
matea. 642-MIW
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Job W•ntod, Men 7000 ----·-CAPTAIN
LICENSED
Radit • Lo n, 30 years ex.
perlenee sail or po~'et. Pro.
feuional sport fishing auide
lolexlcan I: C·ntral Amerl.
can waters. Administrative
experience.
AV Al LAB LE IDr weekends,
extended charters or deliv.
niea. Beat of reference•.
Write Box M 1060 Daily
Pilot. 22U W. Batboi Blvd.,
Newpor t Beach, Ca.
llBST
lllYSI
c
L
A
I
I
I
F
I
I
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
·7
8
•
Jolt~n, Wom. 7100
abilities
unlimfte()
agenc.y
TRISH HOPKINS
488 E, 17th, Suile 224 C.M.
'4J.1470
"" A llott1r Pooltlon
• ACCOUNTS PAYABLE * * CLERK *
wa.nled for reiOl'l. $500. per
mo, l!Qtel ex pe rience
desirable. Wrlti!: Box M·
W27 Dally Pilot, N.B.
*" L l -A ROUND*
*C 00 K* Good pay, steady empJay.
n1ent. Apply: HOTEL LA-
GUNA, to the Chef, 425 S.
Coait Hwy., Laguna Beach.
494-1151
A·l TELEPHONE Soliciting
. Full time, no exper. nee.
I m me diate employment.
1869 NeWpOrt Blvd, Suite F
C.lii. 548-.5501
*ACCOMPANIST*
Full Time. Needs to
know choral and vo-
cal, for high school.
!\lust be xlnt. reader.
Call l.lrz. Reynold•
for appointment t 7141
5,\S.1121 .
ACCEPTING Applications
!or * 1''R Y COOKS * 1111
shills. Only exp"d and quali·
ly men need apply. Wages
comn1en:surate with exp.
Apply in penon, 1"°3 W.
Coa.st lfwy. Ne"-pt. &h.
•ASS I STANT BOOK·
K EE PER· Experienced,
alerl. amiable bookkeeper
to \\-'Ork with npidly grow·
Ing finn. 30 hr work week,
wages 01ien depending on
qualilietilions & experience.
Apply ln person only. 2221
fairvlew Rd, C.~I.
* ASs'T HELPER *
FULL OR P~.T TIA1E
Aae 19-al, 6 month& resdcy.
req'd. k.25 per bout.
Ph: Jim TMmpson 956-2873
APT managers, husband "
wife, cxper, indulilrious.
repair ability. 5'1;)..fi7:il
ARI YQU
BEAUTIFUL 77
It'• all in the eye ol tbe be-
holder. Check the TV com.
ml. you v.'8tch and if you
!Ml yoo're as pretty u
wm• ol thoH peoJle, call u1,
CALIF. CASTING CO.
la ~ntinulng Its search for
.veryday people who ha\'•
a desire to work on TV or
modeling jobs. $75 to .$125
per day. No lee t~ you ever. * 1'-0R ON CAMERA
AUDITION *
CALL (7\41 83&8082
10 AM to 6 Plot
Asst. Bookk•epef
Rtt.-Pay. 'r y p in g, tern·
pantry.
AMERICAN GIRL
2rt:i Dupont Or, NB
SSl--3232
AffENbANT At Chcvrnn
S1a. & lle11z Rent-A-Car,
La.gune Beach. P~rrn .. par1
!i1ne. for college student.
NO long t\air. Sal. A: Comm.
with n1.iaes. 494-9003.
BABYSITIER. FuU time, 5
days. CNr home onl;. Mugt
havt own tra:ne. Ca l I
hr.tween 1:38 Ir 8 :30 .
546-TIHS.
BABYSI 1'1 ER Fir tr~ri
chlld~n. 2 In ac:hl, 1 100·
cller. Mon-Fri 7 :45-•.
~106.
e BABYSITTER . Ugh!
bQuleke.eping, live in. $30
"Ak. 1 day oft. 646--093!1
BABYSJ"ITER -S.A. Hai.s.
area. 2 child~n. days. Call
atl 4 pm. 567-69-tl
BABVSITIER WANTED
M Ek\c>n A~ Cl\l. * 642-6471 *
BABYSmER, l J.. P M,
Mon-rri. Shirt lMMEI>.
SA{j,RY OPEN. StM'/12
TIME llOR
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
FEMALE
Secretary
$1.25 Hr
Fut acmtr. typiJl, lite SH.
Recept. A gen'I ore d!uttea.
Work for ch&rmtnc, even
t'mpe:red ban in Buena
Pk.
Keypunch Opr
$IO Wk
f<tlin. 1 Xf, exper, Lecal re•·
Iden!.
In•· Upderwrlter
$ff5 Wk
li1'1111 be eKper. UndeNTittr
examiner. Local ~•!dent.
ltluat bave O\\-'n transp,
Acct. Clerk
$15 Wk
Tfpe 35, JO key adder &: cal-
culator, Joe. resident.
Biiiing CJ1rk
$90 Wk
Accur. typist, hand postin1
to Jedgen. ~1onthly bWin1.
G•n'I Ofc. Cl•rk
$400 Mo
A.CC"Ur. figure typing. Cos1
Acct., 10 key adder & calt'U·
lalot.
PBX Cord Opr
$12 Wk
Accur, typist, rd w/ma th, &d
memory.
Frbgla11 Rollers
$1.50 Hr
Wiiling to wm·k on days, then
cha"ge 10 r.wlng. Must be
exper. ...
Delivery Driver
.$1.25 Hr
Know 0 . County. gd driving
record. Able to bandle a
van.
Factory Tr•inee1 .
Frorn $1 .,5 hr
All area5 of Orange Co.
MALE
Plant Mgr
$600 Mo
!l.1ust be bondable, \\'Ork long
hr!!. Comp\elc charge of
pla111 It office.
Re1tauro1nt Mgr.
$400 Mo
Trainee. 2 Yrs. colle1e, t'f!&1·
aurant bckgrnd helptul. \VUI.
in& to work Jong hra.
Tr uck Driver
To $2 hr
Gd drl\•lng record. Know 0 .
County, 1bli to handle pick .
up.
Production Worker•
$2 Hr
Wood "'-'Orklng bck&l'•ld nr
mrcha.nlcal applitude. WUI
lr&in.
W•r.,,outtmtn
From $1 hr
Clean-cul, &hart hair,
room vi:per,
stock
Silk Scrffner
to $1 hr
MU.!lt be itx()l'r, on printed
clrcull boards.
APEX
Employment
ACJ•ncy
•'J1TE EASY WAY
(U)I; UI wtcy)
187J HARBOR
ILyP.
t lit block So. of lllb>
COSTA MESA
541·l4Z6
mellclan. mat1eute. hair ...,..,_,. *Sec'y otcc"! 61t I . 17th, S.nta AM 414 Newport Blvd. NB. BOOKKE&PER/ &tyllst, (male or female) *>me lie. bkkpg. Call 8;30 .,_,, c.1411 _..u.t ---SECRETARY an\ to 10 am 5-tG-745-1. Top skills, SH &: t)'p. R.£. -79 G S I022 lla.lr llunten Salon, 'atb '"-k~ •·iplul, ~~· 01 .. ,._ ,=,, lo•.•. ar.190 •I• tor owner of Real Estate Isl. 644-2151 NlGllT COOK&. CO\JN'l'ER ""•''"' '"" ~u<>n • ... ,_ •" 1---------
development&. c.'Onstruction llELP full tun' " •-p&rt *Gen'I Ofc/Bkpor •.c-tnj; now I Newport URGENT-M .. •t , ... this
company. Bookkeeplna: FAT & iJGLY77? ;!me. 'Apply: CHQ,y""gEJ.'.L AIR.AIP,litetyp. ~ Ullderwater ln&tltute. Wttk. Late .... mcx1el30" gu
taaks in~~h1de JNcynlll 111.X If you are, we prohlbb' can't Z76 Nev.·port, C.~I. *S•c'y $51~ 56-1816 alD\le, crou-lop re r r lg.,
pi·cparahon, clos(flg of com· use you, ~~ Sil 80, ty~ 60/v.'Ork for top sttfto, ~ressrr, desk A
poler '"""' '°' •""'"' CALIF . CASTING CO. NURSES AIDES m•...,m<'nt. Thfftrlul 790I ,,..;,, Euiy Amer. "'"'· 2 ledger, trial_ balance & Is contlnulnc Its search tn *Retail M,r S4SO+ wins-backed chain. ;i ;~r~-h ~1~ ~: Oratlie Co. tor a vartety oJ : ~~r:!:!nt Carttr oppor, tor fashion or-ACTING lo~at. 2 lge murals. .f •-bl
would be belpful but not typo, for worlc in .mag. mo. • iented, sharp cal w/retail trir. pickup truck. 646-5647.
oeoe1&1ry. SAiary open. d:8llna:, TV comm! a. Ir ind. Full time bck&rnd. Salary + comm. Do~ want to be_a full time NEIGHBORHOOD: Furn
So!nd ooniplete nsume and films. Gre.at pay~ pt. time. for our new f•cllltltt *R•cept $35r. wwking prqfes&>O~ Do tbunk, canopy bed, studio
u.Jary req'mll. lo Box M· \Ve are client pairl, no fee. Oppor, for be1lnner. Req 's you have Ult eell dlllcipline rouche-:s, dre:ssers, ete}
Jll9 Dai1,, Pilot , Not a .chool. Apply in person Ute type/90me record keep. to "ubject Yll.U'Sell llO a rig. Household goodies !Hi·Fl, v FREE init. ld BrlUah training course&: round pool table, han:lwan, 890KKE~PER. Part tin1e. TV SCREEN TEST *S•c'y $Sl!o tn.. artl&tlc humility to ac-e-tcl 1'!1 f"ri . t.l21 w. Ba,y
Ex Perie n c e ci, mature PH: (Tl.f) m.gm HU~TINGTON BEACH Audit dept I gd w I figures / <.'tPt minor roles until the Ave., N.B. Calley!.
•'Om. an. R e 1 1 au ra n t ex· lO, , .. ~ 6 PM CONVALESCE NT 1 traininJ period ii romplete? MOVING' W ·•-dry reJ rTed. but t ~ ..., HOSPITAL •~P respo•111· If !IO TIIE LONDON LA· · a ... ocr, er, psr1e~ P e no Fema1e PBX for llllSY:ering GUNA A CT " r. S WORK-stov~, Klrb)' vaeuwn •. gro.
euential. Call aher 10 im. Kn'lce Two h.ilt ·1 500 Newpo'"' centtt Dr., NB scctiom.l m-n/gld quiltod &M--4031 · • II avaJ · 18811 1-'klrWta SI. '' SHOP might be able to help .' •··· ' 7: 3G-tPM • 3-11 P M , Suite 200. By Appt, &W.4981 N . _._ sofa, du~lte set, 11.tlSC. CAKE DECORATOR, ex· '46-llm (S1ang Lane) you. o prt!\'lOUS expcnc~ 642-45.18 SM W. 19th.. CM.
perlenced. Apoly in permn lfuntinrton ~ach neeeasary, no age barrier.1'°'==~=-'-~==
FRENCH'S PASTRY ll70 f /C lkkpor fo $65(: ~ SERVICE Station Attendi.llt, Members rf thia excluaiw LEAVING State: color/TV-
W Bai.er C rtt • Oi'l'ERING: Xlnt Ac-awing ahifl. Lorin's Afro, GfOUP will only be accepted king·sz bed, bunk: beds.
-· --'-' · · C P.A. Exper, Thru financial comn\Odatiom to college 3201 Hadim· Blvd, Harbor upon a satisfactory personal dre5.9er, relrig, crib O'IllEJl CARRllR •lml•. Newport a!udenl. r·or lite household &: San Diego }'rwy, c.r.t. illtervle1v with tbe director. hsehld items. 642-~2961--'.~~1
.oys Pertonnel ... tnc' dulies. 6Th--0310, 548-7197. Interview1 Mon. 3-7Pl\I Call 4MM04 for appt. Rummage It Bako Sale
1.1• D D N PART time . weekends • SERVICE Station Attndnt, Sat. Aug. 15, 8 am·5 pm, C>
WANT • over r ., . • ans\\·erin" """'""' 1i; -ntin.. MERCHANDISE FOR 10th St., (Womens Oubl ED 641 3170 .... "' .... "' '" ... Exp'd lor full time. J)tnn. • apartments, (woman). Hrly waie plua comm. 900 SALE AND TRADE H.B.
PleaAnt H.B. office. E. Coast Hwy .. N.B. Shell. for the
DAILY PILOT
Dana Point, San Juan
Capi&tt°8.M and
Capistrano Beach.
Contact Mr. Seay at
DAILY PILOT
San Clemente office
305 N. El Camino Real
49ZM20
e fi'RY COOK-days
e FRY COOK-ttliel
Thr Cottage Coffee SOOp 562
W. l!kh St. C.M.
G•I Fridey
Good typing_ lite bookkeep.
ing, call Loraine, Weatcllfl
Personnel Agency, 2043
Westclirf Dr., N.B. 64$-2TJO
. . O&NERAL HELP:-:-
$4.25 •n hour CASHIER-tun tim e , af-ternoon hrs some wk endl Le. expand chain, fl or pl
Personnel ' Dept. H 0 a t time help fur sales aat. Age
Hoepltal, N.B. 18.35, 6 mo'• rtsdcy req'd.
•CASl-l.IER• Some exper. Call fltr. NelBOfl 956-2873
pr r l 'd . Kerm-·Rtma •GIRLS• Do YoU e_njoy
Hardware, 2666 Harbo r working with the pub'.ic?
Blvd .. C.?o.1. HOLIDAY HEALnJ SPA,
CAPTA IN WRIGHT needs no1v has openines. full or p&rt time. Piea:se call help Now hiring Waitress, 842...-1451_ ·
Busboys, Cooks and foun. -',-~~~~~~
lain 1111d. Apply \Ved -Sat * HAIR STYLIST *
lG-5 p.m. Wil \Vrigbt's MIJST BE TOP CALIBER,
America-Golden \Vesl Ii: FOR BEST ClJENTELE
f;dinger. H.B. Zody's is next OUTSTANDING COP.11'11S.
to us. SJONS. BEAUTlFUL SALON.
CL ERK typist-Some die· "HIGGI" 3335 VIA LIDO,
laliun required, prefer ex· NE\VPORT BEACI-1.
pcriencc in real estate • 673-6890 *
development or rel a led HOMEWORKERS \VANTED
field. Salary open. Call Mr. (Envelope Addressers).
Cre"'s 546-1161. Rush stamped, a e I f . a d·
COASTAL AGENCY dreased envelope .
A member of LANGQON WORLD
Snelling & SMUlng Inc. TRADERS. P.O. 8CJf U27·
Th• World11 Lar91Jt A2l, Redondo Beach. CaJU.
Profe1slon•I ,_"';::71;::'~===~--!mploym•nt Sorvlc• ti 0 USE KEEPER-mature
2791" Harbnr Bl, CM 546-6055 responsible. Live in, 2
Jlarbor Blvd. at Adams 1tehool age children. Pvt =~-~--~-'-I room l ha, cokir 1V. COILS I: Iran s f or m' r Weekends off. References.
winrler-Solderi11g skill re-897-08&1..
11ul~d-Women only. Apply H_O_U_S_E_KE_E_P_ER--A-U-.rn-·-,nd
Gr I n1_e I/Shepard, itl gal Friday, deJ)tndable, 50
Paular1no Ave, C.M. yn _.,, l.1ake our home your
COLLEGE girl wanted, ~'Ork home. Own r m l 'JV. daya
momlng11 only. typing It of· oU. SIOO mo. ~.
538-2579 Serv Statlo11 Mechanic-Sales.
PART time help wanted, man. top pay, 1495 Superior,
P.latlhcws Unk>n SeNk'e. a• Placentia, N.B.
3928 E. Coast Hwy, CdM SERVTCE Sia. Salesman,
Payroll Su"rvlsor ' full & pu-t time. Loren's
to SIOO Rlcbt~ld, Harbor & San
:\1nt company. Compiuterexp. Diego FN·y., Costa J\.1esa.
Lr& payroU exp. Top bene. SrTrER needed 't.V. !1Chl
nt1. Call Miss Eliiabeth, dlat. tor 7 yr. old girl .
557.fil22. Abi11t.U Abbot Pt':r-Please, call collect wkday
IKlnncl A1>;cncy. 230 \V. \Var. eve&, (2lll 838-1024, loin.
ner, Suite Zll, Santa Ana. Jofllll. ='-~=-~-~ PBX Ans-.rll\g service exp. SLl~t G\'11.1 aale1 • easiest
prel'd. Full lime or part way to exercise. Lose in-
time. Ph: ~1 chc1. ll v.·Ol"ks, II feels iood
PHYSICAL O i r r c t 0 r, & :seU1 like bananas in
quallflefl Jn organizing & hunc:hea. C&U B. Snyder coachi~ basketball. _54_'-~1"'~------
M0-9387. STOCK CLERK
I REAL ESTATE OPEN· Shippi1111 receiving delivery.
JNG FOR Q U A L 01 r I £ D No experience necasary.
SALESMAN. Ex c e 11 en t $550 per 11\QQth to at&rt.
comn1isi;ion i;chedule plus Chanc., to advanoe. Perma.
ml\1l.)' bonWI benelils -A~ nen1 job in Costa Mesa. 5
for J\.1r. Snyder or ~trs. Joy day v.·«>k. \Vrile qua.llflca·
ASSOCIATED BROKERS tlons, v.·cight ii: height to
SERVICE. :ms w. Balboa r.u. Box 145. Costa ~1esa
Blvd .. N.FI. or call 673-3663: 97627
=·~"'~'7"'-""-~'253-'7---~~~ ST_U_D_E_N_T-S.-ll-yr-,-.-,-,-,o
Relief Cook, LVN & i;eJI candy. Make good
llou&ekeeprr. Bayvie1v Con· money In .11pare time and
valescent Hosp, 2055 Thurin, help needy school. No cash
=C=·=M"-. ="-'~""'~-_-_. =~~~-I required. Call 642--0803, SAM
RE'TAIL Salu Clerk, 6-<iay i ,;'°;cc'P:..M~l:..S..=t.:..'.::til:..noo=n::_·~
\\'k. Sat, Sup, eome eve•. SPA: Wanted lmmedl&te.1Y
64l-USll, 11k for Phll. female technician tor new
Re.staurant
Reuben E. Lee
Now Interviewing
NICJht lusboys
& Dishwashers
l•dles' SPA. over Zl. Box M
100.1 Daily Pilot. 2211 W.
Balboa, Newport ~ach..
Telephone Solicitors
Charity appeal. Paid v.·cekly
Apply: ua N. Broadway
Rn1. 410, Santa Ana.
THE FISHERMAN
ls now interviewing
• HoJtesJ
flee wnrk. 968-76&3 HSKPRS Ernplyr pay• fee r APPLY •
C 0 0 KI houseWper-makl,· Georie Al len Byland Apn· 131 E. COAST H\VY.,
e Coclct•il W•itreJI
Attractive . pel'M>Jl8ble . over
21 . Apply: 2 wnmPn or couple cy 10&-B E. 16th, .s.A. NEWPORT BEACH 317 Pacific Cout H~. N.8. "' I butler/hoosen\an exper 547-{)385. RESTAURANT. Now taking
foe' family w/lge new H,;,SKPll-~=''-.,.-,.,.-,-,.-,.-. ~B~>ll~.-I applications for •COOKS•
beyfront home. Exper le Isl . 1 sch age child/1 doa. 5 Apply, Colony Kitchen, 3211
e TYPIST•
l'fl!'• r.ssential: Sal~ry open. eta wk. Ref fl!Q . 673-001.1 J<larbor Blvd., C.l'of.
""-""''or 64~104'" * HOUIEKE1iP5 R * 00
liO \VOROS or better, ex-
perience in 11hipping & in-
voicing helpful. Growing
company. good opportun·
ilies. caJI lor appointment,
546-1158.
'° Rellel fry cook Sta1t $1
• COOKS. Waitresses & Fo1 recorded Information week. The Cott11ge Coffee
d iRhwasher&-Odle11 pleue dial M~70. ' Shop, 562 W. 19th St., CAf
Re1taw·an1, tl.2 E. 17th St., SU1UN
C.M. IN CE Ofc. H ttp. See Betty Bruce al
COOK (Dinner) TypinK & clerical, to $2.50
$30 Shift ta &IA"l hr, p/tlme. Santa Ana area.
BLUE BEi:T 673-9'004 Call ~l-t369 10AM-2PM.
Cook lo I-• 1 JOURNE:Y~tAN mcatculttr conipan n. wan ~ or wanted-full time. capable
elderly lady. Uve In lovely ol manqln& small meat
cottage near the bay. Drive, dept. 33-47 E. Coast Hwy,
Small 11alary, 549"-1241.. CdM
DENTAL Ass'I. chair-side,KE __ Y_PU_N_O_l_O_ifc_r_a_to-1"-P-•rt
~1\n. l yr ortho exp. t\111 or Hmc. wk-end n i g ht a .
pt-time, lovely o I f Ice 1 Pe1'110nnel Dept. H o a i
Tuslin. Salary OP en · HOlipltal, N.B.
5-tf..1211'1 .;;..:~=====---IAtACHINE operator, ex·
••DISHWASHER perienced ·lathe, mill, drlll
EXPERJENq;D prns. Apply In person, 151
full time, :ARply SU1l1' -Prod\K:lion Pl, NrB-
SIRLOIN, S830 W. Cout MAID: for NtwpOrl-Balboa
Hwy, N.8, No calls, Nninaula ~•. £¥p'4 or
cc1Cb•1-RIUBEN'S m11c.u 675->163
COMPLEX MAILING room &upervl1111r:-.
.f&l1 MacArthur Blvd. .Uper\efl(.-e In o per a 1 I n f
INTERVIEWING lotON.-FRl Phllllpaburr lnM!rter '
2: 30 to 5 pm Chuhlre liibelina: machine
DAY HllP dHirld. """°'"lbili\te• In·
Over JT )'tin cludt qanlz.in1 &. supervl.-
• HOSTESSES Ing Ip bulk malllns. Man e BUSBOYS. or woman acceptablt .
G xec
Agency for Career Girl•
410 \V. Coast Hwy, N.B.
By appoint. 646-3939
SALESMEN. pt·llme, 5 men
w/cars lo do sall?I &. publtc
relations v.·ork for local Co.
l.1ust be avail S-9 pm .l all
day Sal. Look neat .l be
able lo talk to public:. APPIY
iJ1 penon, l-4 pm, No pbone
calls. Newport 9 ea c h
Cablev'-lon, '624 W. Cout
HW)I.
*WAITRESS*
APPLY lN PERSON
COCO'S
•7& f1Jhlon l1l•nd
Newport Beach
**WAITRESSES
URGE.."NTLY NEEDED
FULL TIME
Pltue Apply e SURF A SJRL.OJN •
r.«lll w. °'""' ,,.,,.
Newport Beach
sALESl..ADY. experk!nced, • WAJTRES.S. EXPER .•
22 It over, xlnt opportunities f'uU or Part Time
with vrowlng chain. Soulh Benton'• CoUee Shop
co ,.at Plaza, Chris 133S.Coasl.LaillnaBch
Fuhlon1. Canta.cl Mrs . \YAITRESS. over 21. Lillle
Crlatell, 54~ Htkllebera. 109 ~tcradden
SALES w/Sllm . Gym, )'OU Pl, N.B. '73-11989
can tarn what yo I.I ' re WANTED: Mal\u-e Woman
"orth! Call Mary Lou Good, ixp. w/small chldrn. To --• DISHWASHERS * DlihwaJher-Dey * MALE Help Wanted, part or 96&-2.116 or 5.IJ..8329 provkte frkndship • io\-e \o
Over 18. Expcr, pttf'd. full lime. Apply bet. l-t SALESGffiL w&nled'. pt two pre«:boolera~ While
• Apply In person • PJ\1. Kenturky f r I t d tlme-t'ull time. ApPlf Klrk mother v.wki. My hOme M·
Vari dtKamp Ootfll!t Sl'iop Chk:ktn, 893 S. Col~I Hwy, Jeriten. 2»J lf1t rbo r Fri. Salary Optn. IMf-4.109
3099 Brlatol, C.J\f. 1..:;;'-"";:;::.' _::e.::'::"':;:,.• .:484::_:'94_:.1;:8·;_.1 Blvd., C,ftt. W AH'l'ED exp/dl&hwUhtrl. ~·~• -0~1iP=.~TClitJR='""'-.--M~N 'lb &11ltt rncr of local SA"""L~.E"°:s"'b'l,.-,._--:111:-od<=. "'A"',....."" Pe.rm po1\Uon avail. Pleue
CLERK MATRON •PPllt.not 1kd. Nial a~ aha.rP· FUl1 ti.mt. Apply conta.c:-' Manaatr. Beach
pearuce. &t3t3 I.ft. M-F, JCM, 27 Tov.·n 6 PKln-ttouM Jnn, 49T·Jlll
CITY O>" LAGUNA 'BEAOI Wriaht ~lO ~only. tey, C>ranle-1e =~WELD==E=RS~ltt~>-por"',-... .,..,..,,,18-
Salary $493. to ~1. mo. MAINTENANCE i SECRETARY * ~. Pert time. etA:1 W. lTth
Type !> v.opm, t~ >""· f'J· PAINTER !kautlf\tl New Officet. St,, Bldf 3l C.M.
per. rntttlnil: JI u b 11 c . One )'tar exptriera a.a .)nut. GOOD opportunity tor altrt WpMEN, Ute dclt~ry wortc.
Rota ling 1hllte. f'"lnal JUlng nl"yman painter, Apply r.l.la. .ccreW')' to "''Ol'k In faat l\tial h.,va own car. ApQW:
Sept. 7!h, 1970. LaiUM ~lfltd pcnonntl ore. NEW .. paced N.B. •tl-vertlsU. agen. 3Z N, Broadv.·ay. Rm. fllll',
Beach Pol\Cfl Dept., 50l p ORT-MESA UNt~1EO cy, All skill• Incl, st10r1hand I ~==,;_S.c:-nt;;;a_Ac;.ne,.;.:.. ~~
F'on:11 Ave., l •. B. SCltOOl. DIST, 1601 l61h . ttq'd, Xi11t Mlat')' I bel'lt· \VO~tAN To work in Donut
nlE QUlctU:R YOU &iI: SLJ -~!wporl Bheh. (1141 fit&/Undtr JO, Pb: ihop. NO p.hont ca I I a
THE QUIQ<EI\ YOU &£LL 64~. * 133-1670 * plef.lit. 2947 Harbor, C.M. ~~-,~"-~-~--'""--"'-"--,-'-'
4
F ELEC lawn mower. new ~~n!~ 8000 cond; Dinette set, drop leaf
20 PC. ''MADM:ID" table w/Z chain. 1 ~.
3 ROOM GROUP ~take otter. 968-2975
FROM MODEL HOMES LG Hard Edie 1trttcbed
l ncludea: Quilted ao1a cl painting Akal tape deck
chair, 2 end tables & roUee other hsehld Items. 548-2162
table, 2 lamps, dresser, mir-ror, headboard, quilted box Appll•nc!!._ 8100
sprlnp & mattreu, 5 pc GE \VASHER & DRYER.
dinlna: room: table A: 4 hl· Best models, slightly used,
back chain. coppertone, both for $200.
COMPARE AT $749.95 ~S.'\25
No down ~~ON $16 1'•~ ... =YT=A"v-· -.. ~""~.,-."""M" .. -.
WELK'S wAR&~ouSE ha~ wuhers, dryera I: mat-
OXI w 4th SI ·--1a ... Ching sets. 8sl Guarantee.
, ., .w.i• ,.na S."il-8637.
MUST SELL N'°"E"°W~/~U"'1.:..-,_a_pp~li~.anoe-,-~,i
OVER STOCKED· TVs All guaranteed . TWlnl $49.95, FulL .$59.95, Dunlap·s, 1815 Newport, CM
Queens $89.95 Kings $119.~ 54S-7188 'I\vin Size Heilctboards S7.91i.' 1'K7.E"N°"M"'O'°RE=-.-,.,,..--wcc""°''.'7=:-, I
Trundle &ta $89.95 Rolla· late. model $65; Ward '11 pg
Y:ay beds. $29.~. ' Studio dryer. 6 cycle, $65, both
Couches $89.95. Xlnt cond. 847-8115, 5-16-8612
SIESTA SLEEP SHOP DELUX re(rig/tn!erer com--
1927 Harbor Blvd., CM bo. Colmpot, Xlnt A-1 cond.
66-2760 $195. Pvt pl,,y 8J3.-0647.
3'1155 Cst. Jlwy, Dana Pt. G. E. relrigerator -top unlt,
496-4552 ideal for converting to beer ~:l"'!~~!'!'!!"!!'!~~I k,. roolor. 135. 67f>.4296.
17 PC. KING SIZE e REFRIGERATOR. Fri&I•
BEDROOM dalre 14', yellow. As it $75.
I.Ar(• 9 drawer dresser, m1J'. 644-illl.
ror, i bedllde: •lands, KltlJ:I,.;.""'~~--~~ 1!¥41 hqdboard, frame, quilt. A1AYTAG auto wuhcr & ru
ed mattre., sheets blallk-drytr. Perlect cond.
•ta •k • • 540-3)30 ...
' ax;lce of Spanisb NORGE auto washer, Xlot
or Pt1odern Style cond $.15, guaranteed &
All FOR $149 delivered . 841--8115. ~
No down pmts. only S9 mo. O'KEEFE &. Merritt gu
WELK'S WAREHOUSE rangl'-grill & hooded
600 W. 4tb St., Sanla Ana lop, $40. 646-5-109.
Dail,y 9-9 Sat 9-6 Sun U.S LG. COLDSPOT REFRIG e
\V /Cl'OSll-Top freeier.
S50 * * 64&-70)
Antlquu 1110
Mu1lcal
ln1trumtnt1 1125
e LUDWIG DRUM SET •
lofR ll Mn. cha.In • 1d cond, Almofit rew. perfect cond
m.alce oh"; (;old.le.I •tack Ptlake olll'.!r• m..7C85
'""' SlS; Youth bed llDd f'ENDER SUper revert> a.mp. matlr••• $25; Wht Goodcond.Callafl &PM.
klycbllf/btnch $10. Mile ~trn
lttma. S.16-2380 ~.-N~,-w-ll~o-lnor--12-•trtng~.--t
2 OAK Bookcase,, 4lx60x14" guitar & cue. $225
$3.1 ea. !i anllq. phone * 675-87~ alt 6 •
opera.tor .stool•, kleaJ barau, 1----....::..;:.;.:...-'--
S40 ea. I -4-dnwer Oak cardl---------·1
file, $20. 474 E . 17th St., Pi•no• & Organs 1130
Suite lln, C.M. 6(2...8192.
HEAVY rattan 3 piece ICC> FALL MDSE
tionot, ophol$1cr"" """"' SOON ARRIVING
cusblo,._ table. chair A ot· AD d!M:ontlnued modtJa of
loman $50, Sf&..2791 ca.rt.v planOI A orpn1 now betna:
AM clO$C( oot at dlac:ount priCa
SOJ'A, I Fl, nearly oow, )'O:& can't ~lleve.
qWI~ avocado atttn and Shop us .l let!
blue. Rttvt-nilble, T cUJhlons WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO
$-.i. 5t&--:m.f all 5:30 PM 1319 Newport, C.M. 60-844
u cifil9· eora $45 or trade l""'""""'""'·"'"-""'"'"""I 1or 9m11lu tofa. Good eon· I WI.LL &IVfl tendu 1Q.vtnc
ciltion. 64'-5308 care In a piano. Cirand ==='==='====! 001m1> '"' ,.., """
Office furniture IOlO •kftd. No childr-..n in homa. .:..;:;.:;:.:.:;;.;;._;::;;.;~I 540-2279 Iller 5 p.m.
~ Autom/Copler $611 NEVER UMd Sfflder 51.iper
!cost $1300). Exe. detk S.50 Rtverb. Make ollet.
Lealher chr $10, new typwr * &1$-1324 *
$40. lBM c A e. 1ttreo,l-----'-----
r11111c11b, sec'y desk, clc. NO m.1tw-what It 11, 1'11
CLOSING Oil'JC&!I Ownu c.an Mil H with a 1)41!.Y
61:J...46n PILOT WANT AD! IQ.467S
~=-="'l""!""'l'~""""""',,.,......,"""""""' ........... ......--......,..,.,~.............c.,.y-~• it f f 1'i f#if , 2 I I t ('t"ftii"f t f I i --r-t-~r-r-r-..-"'°"~,....t"r""'I'""""•"'' ft t ; i -0·~...,....••~o !•-• ·• •o ·~ •1 " ' ~''"~-~"I vv
-
'
so .. YOUR LITTLE RED WAGON
IS .REALLY ·oRAGGIN'
'
l\LL
llLL
' .
,
. . .
ADD HORSEPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET
You can handle those bills. All you need are the dol-
lars you'll 9et for all the still-9ood, but· nobody· uses·
them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list
of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar-
ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you . . . it'll pay
you. And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell ·
iust about anythin9 with a DAILY PILOT classified ad.
Try it today. Every day is a CJOOd day to use
•
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS
(And You Can Charge Them) .
E 642-5678
l
Tlltl4q, -.... ~fiO DAILY "LOT I
Joas a ·~~LOY MINT \ Joas .a &MP LOY MINT I Joas a tMPLOYMINT I Joas & IMPLOY/llt,..,-I Joas & IMPLOYMENT I .1eas & tMPLOYMINT/ Joas & rMPLOYM•l'4 ' I 'Clls i' IMJILSVM'NT 1"i1tcHAN01s1. #OR
5chool .. l~•lr~llon 7600 li'!ol•·l~ttructi'o~ School;.;,;;.;;llon 7600 Scllool .. lnt1ructlon 7600 SchMl,.ln1trucii';..1'0ii ~;.;;.1 .. in;I;-.,;;;, ·;;; Schoot .. lnatructl6n 7il00 5-;.;;:,.ln1tructj;, 1'8o SALi AND TRADI
, · · ''• MIM1llonoou1 -
5
· · s h 1. d TWs variety of fine schools 10 rr c;;,:., c...,.
C. 00 s an could introduce ;::;·,'e; .. ~.s:;:. , 'Pd. I cyt. U.1:5. Set at n. · ., you to a new tomorrow. Al~rt r1. eo.1a M ...
'· 1 s
NEWPORT -MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
140 L 22nd ST., COSTA MESA
645-2323
Klnder,arlen Readine s!l
Arla & Crafts
Mu1lc & Rhythn1
Physical Fitnei s
Phonics
Colors & Numbers
Educational Field Trips
Hot Lunches
Basic Bible Stories
TOTAL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
MEN,.,,,, •• _._,."",, ... WOMEN
0 INHALATION THERAPY
0 MEDICAL ASSISTANTS
0 DENT AL ASSISTANTS
0 MEDICAL SECRET ARY
0 EKG TECHNICIAN
• REHABILITATION TECHNICIAN
0 ORTHODONTIC ASSIST ANT
e STUDENT PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE e DAY I EVENING CLAS5lS
• OW NED I OPERATED BY MEMBERS Of THE PROFESSIO,., e GRADUATE PLACiMENT SERVICE
,<t>.• 0~.. CALIFORNIA ~\ PROFESSIONAL ~ .. ,OH•L>THE WOALD SCHOOL
0, MIDltAL & DENTAL PERSONNEL
1895 Newport Blvd., Cost• Mas• '45·2922
Schools
and
Instructions
'l'his variety of f1oe ~c hoo ls
could introduce
you to a uew to11101·row.
'
F-•r further inform•lion reg1rdin9 the Da ily Pilot
School' •nd ln,truction Directory
CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325
SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE
Instructions F.r further Information re9arclll\9 the Deily Pilot
Schoel• 1111cf ln1tructltn Directory
CALL 642·5671, EXT. 325
PORTABLE ORGAN
.....,,.. fttW, bbfd, \Ptd
MC't. lndudff bench. l'llusic
;;;;:;· 135
Gtt tht 1tory • , , kno"" th• , ...
cltlnt opporlv11ll!t1 t v1ll1bl1 it
YOU 111 tkt U.S. l!'lottl l11cl111t1y. Git
i11 lhh 9r11t 111w '''''' fltld wh1r1 •t• ;, no ••rrf1r 111'1 l•v·•fh •••
11nh11rd of,
1 MAIL COUPON TOD,t.Y·-1 • • I N1hi1 ............ , ........... , ...... , • • • • : Address ....• , •...•............•...•• ; l City ....... , ........ Phone .......... l
-···-···········-···············-······--
AN.THONY SCHOOLS
I lnnketper• ln1titut1 lntern1tlon1I
PHONE 776·5800
1717 IOUTM l•OOkHUllT
ANA.HllM, CALlf. 92104
tAHIOYID fOI YITIRANll
GLAD TIME
PRE-SCHOOL
15th & Mon rovl1 Strttt1
Newport 8ttch
lHo•g Hospital Arte)
GlAD TIDINGS
PRE·SCHOOL -ELEMENTARY
A,pllc1tlons No w Being T1k•n For Fill
Cl111t1, Full Oay Klnd•r91rttn & lit Or1d1.
Smell Cl1111s lndlvldu1I Help
Phonics
LI'"''' Pr .. School
With 911allflff THChrs & DlrNt•r
SPECIAL RATES FOR FIRST 25
PRE-SCHOOLERS WHO REGISTER!!
846-6620 or 546-7866
--------------
'
AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS
For Men and Women
I Travel Agent e R111rvatien1
e Ticket 5•111 ~ Air fr1i9ht C1rgo
t C1mmunicatltn1 e Operation• A91nt
01y •nd night cl•s11s
AIRLINE SCHOO~S PACIFIC
Accredited :
S1nt1 Ana 543--6596
610 Eut 17th Stroot
National Association Trade & Technical
Schools
Approved tor Veterans
Eligible institution '.lnder the Federally ip·
sured StJ.1dent Loan Program
--------------------...... ..------------------------1 ~ POLAR610 land cimt~ 32>
Jumping Jack .
Pre-Schoel
Locoted on th• Back l•y
OvtrlMklng
Newport· Costa Mesa
2549 Tuatin Ava. -
Co1ta Me11
6'46-0677
SEW-KNITS
SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS
•od LINGERIE
WE HAVE THI P'IPllST llLICTION
Of KNIT P'Al.ICI ON THI O•ANGI COAIT.
2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD
COSTA MESA 540·3Z61
S-T-R-E-T-C·H
& SEW (T.M.)
CLASSES
a 2 hr. $1500 L"'"'
Morning -Afternoen
•nd Evening
LINGERIE CLASSES
3 2 hr. $600
LetlOftl
SAUCERMAN SCHOOL
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
811 f'AJR DRIVE • COSTA MESA
Grades 1 through 9
Small group and lndividuali1ed teac~ipg to
meet the realistic needs of youngsters.
Abilities \vill be challenged by good teich·
ing and a variety of educational materials
ao that more effective learning will result.
MOTIVATION
Op1rates only from within a person -not
from the oulside. Good teaching can stim·
ulate motlvation within a youngater by
building on successful learning experiences.
Nothing succeeds like success!
WHERE THE PROGRAM
FITS THE CHILDI
Wiiiard H. SaucerQlan , Ed . D.
Tolophono 540-4060 School
541-1751 (ovo.1
lNROLL NOW FOR FALL
lnjoy Success Iii life
throu1h Modem CasmetololY
COLLEGE of BEAUTY
o!!ors only the moot advanced, updated
Courses and Techniques. Your skills
will be only as good as tbe trainlnc you
have been given.
New Cl••t•s Stein lach Tllnclay
Register NOW
646·2919
o,_ Te hWlt - T ....... ,..... .... ,,...,
N• A11,.l ..... t N......,,-W ........ ty a.4-tl
18'5 Nowport Blvd,. CQlo MolO
2117 S. lrlot.I, Santa Ant ~7
Ste .. LlcHH411 l ..... "~
""'a tllt• t•
e C1nc.rtlt l trtu play
-----__ ......._._.__
Cll!TIPllD KINDll!GAl!TIN
IN COITA MISA-
2 LOCATIONS
1'37 Church St.
l1 blk. ••"of Nawport oltovo 19thl Pho~o' 646-3636
7'1 P1ul1rln•
(2 ~lks. W. of lrl•t•I noor $o. tout Plt1ol
""""" 540-1919
ee~@)~e~~
Anna's
Pre • School-1 at Grade
ANNOUNCES
f1cllltle1 for Enl1re..i Enrollment
Register Your Little Ones Now For:
Kindergarten & 1st Grade
• A Pull {fun) Le1rnlng Pro9r1m
• Mu1ic
•Art
• D•nc lng
• Crt1tlvt Actlvltl••
• Hot Luncllo• & Sn10k1
• AtH 2 thro"llh hi grado
2110 Thurln Ao .. Cttt• Mo,. P~1 6'16-14«
.
•lectrlc ·~· fOcua, de~ l1mcr flub. CMI, etc.
Eiccelknt eond. S30
Set at CH Jtth St., Rt.I-, CN
(n1xt to B .. q,Jp Store)
i SfROIJ-<>CHAD\ SET
Coavt.rtt• pito the 10 nee
iltmt Of eqv.lp. lot btby
$400 value Youn fQr Oftly
fl'O· See .... I?"<· MMl!3
12 VISTA •akt ' cheit +
Stont Martin 1tole. SUI ,...._ or ... "' ,., '.:hlno
cabinet. 8f.i..451'J
11\!k• .Vonlod 111 •
WANT to buy: Rocklrlc
cb&fr, chest of draMn.
dull, mt.ta! f i le/cab .
~1 wAifi'ED,
U1ed dark room ecJ•.11p. and
41<• •15-00:I
SILVER COINS WANTED e Highest prtcu pad
• M4-1245 •
Wanttd: Wl'letl chair
with 1'fnOV&bJe foot
teils 11»421 aft 4 ------FREE TO YOU
l'l\J'Z.Cute, lovinr tore hair
klttfl\8, I wn aid. 2 ~
whit~. 1 Oul(y &NY, 11lutty
IN)' W/Wht boob. Call
~.tt&pm. am
Save U1 from the q
pound. lffut1. !'lled.
sized b~. 4 wlu okt 5'11--M30
"" . COWE 1heph!rd -85 lbs
1ood "-'lchdot, house train.
td, IPfLY't'd ma.le. Good me
yard nt.eded. M?~9Kt aft, 5. am
• LOV .\BLE Grey A: whH
lona bairN mitten-toed ldt
ten, 3 mot, needs aood
home. 633•8551 o
836-4493 8/25
flEKlNOESE. tema1e, 5 yn
1m, k>.,..1 people eapecillly
chUdren nffdl go home A:
.
r
•
Inc4 yard &M-TO:l2 alt 4 pm
"" •
•
SOF't' Lone ha.ittd kittena
box trained, VU)' blaJtfl¥
\I/ill dclivtr to a:ood home
8JB..MIO or 637-tlSO 1115
KI'ITEN!, to &ood bemel
Uriusual, blk, ca Ii co
. Of""i'· ~960 8/27
3
r
6 LOVABLE klttf:ns T wki,
i.lk and wht. 3 ll'SY tip
atripe pretty and lava..,
Need fd horqe. 8S7-369T 8/2ti
2 WNd ...... • ·-• .....,... ......
I
• •
•
I
ha.Ir, black tipr and tw6
calkoa, t Jci.nr; and
medium ~. 5'8-8712 1/21
ADORABLE Bla.ck &: • wtJ'tt
friendly . kitten, 6 \\·b
medium lona: ha.Ir, Med
good home. 13&-4~93 4/25
~ PER$lAN blu-cr~m
mother netdl aood home tor
kittena, 2 creme male1,
calico. 546-006:.) 1125
\YfDE Angle lens to pttty
\\'ho purchased movie
camera from me Dec. '68.
86~tm 8/23
PURE \Yl\lte odd ey e •
iJtered male 2 )Tl. A1to
varil!ty of kittent ~1538.
836-4493 8/21
PART Siameme kltlen1. black
w/white whllker1 A mlt•
tens: ~µJi._ . ~/3l
EXCEPflONALLf cute kit·
tena, pt,Siame.e, weaned I:
tralnt.d. 5tl-tll5 8/l5
C:l'lEYHOUN()..2 yr 'old
female, epeyed, friendly.
83.\.ltJOB 8121
DARJ,JNG miniature apricot
poodle . Mal•, 6 m 01 . ......... am
lKC 8-lett hound male
needs tenet.el yVd, ~
e e1 am
6lYU::iNG kltiens w-penofl..
allb' • Calleo l ~ A wht.
~ 1/15
ktTTENS • 3 Iona haired blk
I: wht, brown A wflt.
146-:1$14 1111'!
M!RtHA F BEAUT. Lone ha~ kltte"'
SALE AND TRADI calico A ortlll" User I wkl. MERCH OISE FOR I MERCHANDISE FOR
---. -----~ 8115
'l•no• A Org•ns 1130 Pianos & Ori4n1 1130 Pit1rte1 & Orgen1 8130 Hl·F1 I Stereo Ml1cell1rieeu1 Ml1cell1ntOUJ MOO ~~~~'!-""' 1600 ~•c!_!!•.!'ff"• Met ilLVDIWhlte Per.ian Kit· ----'-o.~. --srER.EO, walnul conten11>. NEARLY new 1tove. Dining 356 A Po1•scha bulf!per, Pur· Ht-CHAIR .l net playpen DESJ<~td a.k 80 x :W, ttna, f wk1. Want wann
SAVE NOW "ONE ONLY" 8ALE HAMl\10NO, Steinway, Yam-~tromb!-rr Carl110n, xi~! pme table l 4 uph018lcred ii• Oeli1hU Never been dlna:. ·both $25: Papa l Mirna typewriter e~elt, J drw.wer, home. 963-ililt 8/19
DURING SUMMER N@w l Uaed aha New &: ul9d g\l.nos ol cond 1151l. ~7-9~. chain. e•cellent condlllon. ed 11'. Kenmore t IP. wuh-boudoir chain both $37.50: nMU(al ~lnlah ~· ~ptr fiART Pootlle P\lPPIH to
CLEARANCE SALi PIANOS mos't 1Mkc1 But buy, In Lawn mD\lll!!t. 694 I>urell er Sl5 a1 ii ~alt door tracUon 11.~: bed 5htll, 8 Y.'OOdline CIJ'IO 1ood homes . Call
We ha~ trad•lnii reilml Decorator ~pine. .. .. · · S39t s.: Calir. at · Schmk1t ¥ullc T •P! A,_!Cord•r1 l!J! M&-3101 afl 8 P~t only 8 Pt.t. ' · tractien $10; BI n o c 11 I a r a door, 1' over cab htilf!t, bed &t6-<)6t2 1rn
rent returns " Doo~ mnd!!.I~ Nf!w Kl f.IBALL Con&ole 169!1 Co. 1901 N. MAJ.A, Sapi. Ina AKAJ llKX> 50 rminltr. 16' Retrir. <.'Oppertont W/bol. St2,60: •mall boyg lihoe •I'd boat rack $i00. 20 I•· 5 Kltteri.c.llCo I Tabby 'l of every model llanimond KIMBALL Grand ••.•.. SiB5 1 free 1 1 I I I * MAPLf! HUT(H * 1kat11 $2.lin. SU.3626. 5098 dbi baml 1ho11"un Savace wk.I old 3029 Coun*-o'uh
Organ Buy now l recelvt ORGANS ~corda " pla)'S reel lapM, l~ ~~· ~:m:ha cycl: GOOll CONDITJON Harcum Ln. Turtle Rock . Mod 3U, 3" or 'fl/ ,_ 1~111, Dr C fi.i M045l8 '~J l/25
utra di11COOnt 1'110f.IAS Orran ...•.. 1119 also I trac~ ca.rtrldaei . New 309 · ~6 Th11rln St., cr.1 . ex. coOO 16.\.. 10061 C\jtty•1,...-·,_, ~·.,....· ..,..--~-"-=I
lt•litt.t'oN D HA~llotONO Chord "A·l" 1299 !!_!!Y.!!!l!R 1205 $450/Sao 1~646-5432 &IT-1 . • 1151" * fdl.73tli AAti' Grand Prilf Sl1te Sark Dr, HB. 96)..X1&4 3 mo old maJ• pupplel part
" HAJ,ff.IOND B3 11995 1·9 ZINI i WOu..ENSAK t fl k 10" be fiEh 1aw w/11and $1~ rt!,cu.l11ion pool tablfl with cocke.r &nd pt lab. ---''"
in CORONA DEL Pi!Afl · • ''" ~LOR TV~SH NEW 175 or 8~brr~ 4 18'' -jrtlnter $35 5 hp 1910 EL!iC lnallnRter, 11atrway, all 1cce:uorl11, flawteu * AUCnON * ' IOOC\ home 541.TW ·;:; 2854.-o!~ ';:~1 i'~i !!!"!930 Includes bench, cleliV'-ry 1 \Vho.lisale plus '2i * 646-aooi. . Zebra mini trail S!.J, Ph~ chair' ~ k>r ~d . !';:,1 =*"~10~si~ c.! 1 ~ Fine Furniture MALE Boqle to aood Mme,
.. -"'amnty .. , Many olhtt Pricei llllU'I at $2-t! ~173 after t new S ow, f, "1 _.. · Tl ' h .,,ip: ' • Appll1nC!llll Love1 chUdren AU •tw>tl
Barp hu . . . • BAY TV • SjMrtlno 0•1 ueo AN'l'iQuf dt•k. SU~. Ke.n-~. ST3-T 11 • =:n&.~ior J..~p c~~~ Auel~ lt'rlday 1110 pm ~1' lfl • Pt.t only 11ri IJA PifMOND Or&:a n
""/Jlre~e11 I: perr.. \Var-
ni /lty, Jeuon• k del1v. $511.
NE\Y 88 IM'll• \\'al, !)~!net
piano w/key cover It 3 pedtll, 15 yr w1rr1nty,
made In USA.
GOUW MUS IC CO.
Slnol! 1!1 l lOIS No. Pi1ain1 S./\.
•s.17..Q6St*
e Ut;f, NEW e
•CO.\f PLE'l'E DRUM srr•
All 6pm, 6tul21
lOes TODAY! Clau '1QO
titUST BE SEEN! t!l3 Newpon, c.~f. 6-16-2111 PooL TAILI more elee. dl')'t.r S40. maple A:;S: :::,t\(l ~k ::!:~ ar afftt 9:00 PA-I. ~TOM Wl~cly s 'Auction l1rri t BAbY t>Utch nbbJIL Grey
e Al .. '° e 2-1" a &JiOr 'f'V ' RC X .f ll . RelUlatkin. ~ee :~1:10. tent trailer $50. Ej~/d~r Cf'rlaldtlrt) ~TS~ NeWpert. CM "6.l6Be 6 white 113-3'15 1111
YAAtAJIA • l\IMBAU w/temole. Ex"-tl (ond., Complele wtth all ' , S.tij All Xlnl t!ortd 642-0421 SPl"f}!,:J'ChOrpnl •!dbl ke)'ttrd, Bthl"41 ~ I .icta. Mal'I. "iN60J'Y" Black I. whit• • THO~lAS 1918 mod1il bria ..,,., $.JOO USEP iill' Pool 18' x J2' JI: • , -WI!"• a n, an1p1, end p.• •-... &acle 1 ,.... n14 ffft.19518125
l\OllliER le CAMPBEµ. Movl-o~1. ~Make ot'. aoceuotltl. Xlnt cond. 4' with lwtl deQkll, filler, N.B. Tu11nl1 Club chart-r table, pjctut11•, anliq~• I . ._ uuto~. l•b e, chrs, ~ ' ' ' COAST MUSIC ... $.Vil. &4e-3l2!) \'lt:'ijUm, laddfr, Qthnn1er, me m b. r I h Ip. uas + mllC. All Barp\N. ii.ii Ilk• NW. Llt'IC ' dr Tttri1. rran Ollrm•n puppl9'1 '
NEWf'Ol"'r l HA:ft»OR ~~I~~ Galway, CM, -Im liner. $lt9. ~ h"IU'lllfer fee. 142-2413, LAI Ond11, f.tlM»n ytejt, Maple I pc dble bed •t. wkl: tild. MMSl7, W8 Tri;
Costa 1-ltsa • 6'12-Xll Ml1cell1ntau• qocl COOt:. ti! 2 ilr cond. one 10 ~. Avery 1\irnon • Frwy. :~~~ ~~;:~ ;;cnl.:.'>~C..,..1'1~·~~-~-
/\tlJ, lfrs lftily lO.f At&t G.UV.CE SAL£..al1 ~~I( vOll., 430ft 81'\J, Sein, S~; NEWPORT Beach Tennlt REM0DELli'lc;: Gu OVf.11 Wrlnaer w 1 1 he r StS. Lo~lr lll4Ck kitten. t.w.
1'110:\lAS SrlN,~T OltOAN° Hl·~I -~ _Stt~ ~.. 8111 Plltr.o-1100, 10111 of mite! 9~ 61'll Admiral SUD. 1t1b h1muy_ n1en\hel'lhlp, c001t top, lollet1, Cfllll'IJ, Ml4t1btd. ult llS. 181i \Y. ab . ., I box tralned .. w.21*
W1lnu1. Cost $89.\. 1 Yn old. MORSlt /Im/Fm altft<! "'°"' 2200 Puente. C~l. 60-4360. $573. 6.W-ll:te. Jlh't ~nd. 144-1567. 221\d lL s. Ana 5 Sptl"k)' k11.:,., S -.i·JCl·ol(i~
• ~\IARRANTI'l LjH new. llOlt, 130. GE pol't. rv $3.i. PLAYOR6UND s11.irc7'. ~ Cant d\1mond ladlte NE\VPORT Ttnnb Cl ub I Pllliti[$1 ·q MiR&J~y'"'tna.'Cft•n. l&Mt78 11•
SJ&;, 641~ m.-&541 da.ya, 4M-~ e\"a heavy du ty. pi, Ph : r In a:-11 c 1· It Ice. I Stcrl· Chlrtf'r ram. memben h\p. Kids. llmll 2 undu 12, ftllf Make otrtr or tni•? 2121 U5VEL-Y YI klltrtd cat fret
SATUrdl)' a QIM&-A~Lq'lF'~! • wkntl~. IJk tor .PAL 141Hi311. I tns/1ntlq1w. allwr. m-m. f.tovtnrt 1lll~ oh'. ~1. Rout Bftf. 21!16 firtior, 0.1 ~llep. ct-f. &46-54"9 , to ad home M--'JO!ll. am
•
•
• . • . . . . .
'
' ' .
•
.
•
TRANSPORTAT ION TRANSPORTAT ION
OAJLY OU.Of T_,, ._ 2S, 1970 FFiR=aEE'TiTo~vYiouoo~~~~~~t::~~1!sPO~lt!!T•~T!:!ION~-I TUNSl'OltTATION TltANIPOltTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOltTJTION ---·
..... A Yoc:hts -... , Slitl _,.,. -Mol..cyclff noo -. -~--Truc~----"''500"" rmoortod A-9'0G Imported AV!ot' • 9600 Imported Ciro -Imported A-HOO
PO•SCHI OPEL '11 KAWASAKI U1
51rett and dirt bike. Ukt
DIW! Lt111 than !,DIX! on
enchw:. 9,000 mJ. ldl on "'"'"
rant)'.
~.!""',.= ':n;..!:,1 __ _::.D~A.::.TS.::.U.::.N;.:_ __ 1 KARM~~N GHIA
mouoted 'Nitti rack. Binks -----1·--------
A!rl"' conv.ntlonal •tll'Y $ '63 GHIA . ., KADE'ITE •ta •tn
'60 PORSCHE Cabriolet, 1600
1u:per, with hard top. Ntw
engine, new d utch, new
tlrr1, new PAint, A~f/J'M,
just like new. ca.n be IM:n
at 2089 Harbor Blvd ., or
phone 643-1982, 9im to 6pm
equipment, ladOcn. drnn .... ~!SUI •• a.ulo., 102 hp. r/h, lo mi's.
I ·-,, -Mu'I tell. Be.t offer! c otN. Lee.vi,.: •late, rnuat Radio, lltater, Rwt1 Great: &37-4199 ·
ORN /WlfT pup, bouae-tral~
l!d. \'t'I')' pM.yf\11. likea kids,
SACRIFICE SALE !300
• ~ '»14 •
1961 IT t\J,.OJET, 50cc C sp.
Sl. roadf'M:'fr. First n:c.
6(10 u new. 750 orWinal
mllH • paned chp ill'
1pttOon w/atlcktt • U)O,
Call 6:30 -8100 p.nt. 546--USO
•250 Kawaakl. Trail tquip-
ped. $4~. l\totorcycle
trailer, 3 place wl 10 gal
storage, atNpa a nmp,
$275. ~ Munster Dr. HB..
atU, f!H..'1314. 153 M:onia.nlta Full Price · $799 dlr •
Ll.EUna Beach. ' "Lcaotr Ill The Otarh CHiet'' tXF.V %77). Will tike CJll" In
'63 FORD Van-Xlnt f.11•pt, ZIMMERMAN Tratkr or Financt. Piivntt
outntb!d tor nvtnc. 1 x 10 2US HARBOR l~VO. P111·lY a1s4().)2 or "91-68ll
awnlnc w /polt• l''ulJy 54CM41I " e '6!) KARMANN Gl1JA1'
crptd. Must 11ell tmmed. · Xlnt cond. Pvt o'vrier, Ma~
Make o.u ... 61$:6111 Biii. EN GUSH FOR oUor. 523-11152
'69 JNTER°NATI ONAL1';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·D;;, e 'GS KAJU.tANN Chi•
Tro.V!'lall, l2>ll. n e I u x "'I ' Convt, rblt ena, clutch. nu
trailer, ready, a,bo ALL N!:W ENCLLSlf 1 l::i""::;k;;•;&l;J20:-T3i::.'Wi'====:I Atntrearn. 4$:)-150.3 t"'OIU>S NQW IN St'OCK
FORD '3 P.\J. y.g Canlpcr, DRASMCAU..Y LANCIA
RENAULT
'5' Rtntult 01uphlno
Engine and lrllme in pl(!
condition. Jolaa bad clutch.
Perfect loz· ruaklnc dwie
buggy, $50 c~. 956-3044
PORSCHE
PORSCHE '70 '"
Jmmac cond., cxb"a.s Include
rM 1tereo, S !Tack ftge,
cover. Bu,yina new houle.
!'lfu.st saCrUlce:. $3995,
~71
'69 Honda CB300 air, a.t. • p.1. ?itany extrM! ~~~
BEAtmf'UL .. tandkll..,., EXECUTIVE Madia "'"''!lent '°""ltlon. !650, "'9-0152. ·~~ '61 l.ANC!A, >'ulvla . '61 PORSCHE ::::nm!:'~~ _s._u .... __ ,. _____ ,._11 =·~~rUet~ &t~~= e~is c.m;;; 9520 ~~0: ='or~Vtt' other CABRIOLET
need• cood home.
&j&..JMl am
POr~ '116 91~. 4 1pd.
Btaupnk:t radio, chrm rlma.
radial$, • arilltm. $ 3 7 O 0 •
962--07U. Or llft 5. 147-<1161
SAAB
REALTiiY male pup 1J wki SEALED mo.s '69 HONDA 350 ·-----'= Thooclore :=::=;::;:====llfrrdtop, 'tleaming metallic
old. """" cd home. ""'"' mo 31' Cbl .... b;. """ sio,p. Mobil• -mo SCRAMBLER Xlttt. '°""· APOLLO ROBINS FORD METRO '"'"'· •ith """"" '""' m. 4M--9868 alt ~ pm
1116
v.·bf're-ls, .. 11. t cyt. dicltl Best oJl~ 106o llarlxr Blvd. te:rior, cN'ome wbeell, ni.·
Authorized DN.ler
ena. fbrrb C0111truel, teak ·········~ ~=~*="""'=:,,'~'-*~--~1aroR llO~tES Costa P.1e:sa 642.00lO --------dial tires AM/fM radio BEAtrr. Cb&mm>ps -Humilns lntuk>l', no Nil• or mut, ;;;: METRO VAN Uc. \VY\V 215. '
Palm T hlih F'rtt you vesael'1 hull damaged on • Don't le Late '66 TRMIPH T-100 C. 500 19~ "4 T bulll.ln can1pr:r. $2199
R.emow ill 67J.M29 1125 land .. .a.II-... ---IL v ' I ' cc. Semi/chop. Runs id-· • All Steel Con11trucOon FERRA s·-"'"" . ~-.. ~ "' .. -~ .,.. Pick Yout Choice Now M"" Sell! .,kinl< SGOO. • All Flt'""'"'''""~' RI ~vc. ·~. "'• -· <arpet-CHICK IVERSON PETS •ncf LIVISTOCK mQ be i«n at COLUMBIA I th oo.oni MIL'·IG'N i.m::, J>&~ing, bed, new
YACHT -CORP.. 2'1'5 · n • ='"'°'==,,,...=~~ ..: "" S paint. Xlnt condition. YW
e HUltRYI e
Only l female: tiny toy-"1iite
AKC poodle P'JPPY kit! Abo
mllle PERSIAN POODLE,
2% )'1"11, 11now White. He'•
~•! See at 3l1 E. 170\
§b.-~l4J, . --·-
MALE Lah Retrlewl-JI) }Tl
AKC. all fhotl. X I n t
t e m perament., Obedie~
b'Jinirc. 673--JUM.
l'lft'Cormack Ave, C.?,f. on MEADOWS "%ti RA\VASAKJ ·&de \Vinder Trailer Sa.lea FERRARI .-• 54$-72.1:i * ~~ MAur. 22A, 9-1?.noon, • ~!>'· . , ,• tolnt f•atl ~~· N~ 6~'ft_ C&rd~~6~~bor* Bl~ m2 Newport Jmporta Lt$ Of.. • 1958 '?ltfWpolitan • ~19-~i,.~~1~r 67 SaJe1 :m~r;:ci:nParu
&rJll on. 11'""'• '""' .... y. Luxurious New -ana:e Cowrtt• cml,)> 1~ 1 Good coM.'New tl~. Seall!:d bid• •may b! 11u~ "-~,,,1or~J;;:tm;;·c..--~--I CLEARANCE SALE lzed dealer. , $1.2.i &12-:11301l--'l-;,9'1i;o.-H"ARB"""O,;;R.:B::;L;,:V,:D.:... -the
,.;tted •• SO. COAST 'Adult Park '6& Btn.TAOO Mark Ill. Gd All '10 mOd•I <amP'<> re. SALES·S!:RVJCE-PARTS '63 SUPER 90 SONETT
MAR IN E SURVEYORS, Sftl•lf pets •llowtd , ~~ ·~~198or dirt. Extru. dua!'d, 4-S!ar, \\'estway1, 3J~,~~~b1· MERCEDES BENZ Inimedlate Delivery
Cal
5133U E
8
.. d2nd St., Loni Bch, S.A. Fwy at Je•-y Rd. -. ...,.,....., Funtlme, H1ghwa.ym11.n, Va· ,,,,,2_a•l\ll ".,,,1764 Oran1:e County'11 Newest IJlr.
to
,__ ..... ., -..... ......,.. .... ~ A11 Oean As Brand N~w. COAST IMPORTS
• 1 • . .,.. opened at 2 1'°'!,Jc'~y Rd, t!m> •IONb• •uo ,.,,.. catJonce1. Special prices Aol~ re~..J "-.:1;_ -~< ~ ~ ~ = ,,_, =-' AM/FM. (JZY 5251 dl<. Wiii
pm, Aug. 27. 1910. Jf\111 ..... ...,.,.. *""" call coll-I Excellmt. condUJon $.1.:iO subject t<' pttsent lnven1ory_• ::;;:!:;;:::;i;:;="'=:=;=:: of o Co 1 • <Lw o,;i~ .... I• lake car in Trade or Finance range un Y
purebue JW1oJ •. dtte &. • --. ... '"'. ~-..,..,., • 642-0589 •· Sc.ott'a, 914 N. Jlarbor Santa FIAT 1200 W p ·1•-c t H
bl
.-..-_,.... """""iJ.lll • Private Party, 546-4052 or . ac1 ... oas wy.
paya e Aug. 31;.1970. sale , _ e ,89 Ka .. ·--~1.1 ~ Ana, ___ __:,;;,,;..:.___ A • .. ..._.... ........ 49-1-0811 . cross •1'0m
:Jee.Ji ~~d15!.,~~ '::'. 1 ~•_,•"-"•c.•~•;:,,:;•;;•=•=•"'t ~1, ~ ..i, .int a1nd. New '70 Datsun ~THIN" 1000 Po""h' '" .':,'!/: :·~ mttted w/a 10~ or bkt. SPACES · 1000 OHC. Piclnlp wlth camp. 8 " Bahama )'l!:llow, cle&n & I=========::'\
Cub or edbWI. chedc A,Vf1Jabie-. in Huntinr\iJn atOl?PED C:~ro, 250ct; ht er. Sile price ;m dlr. ''f~f' Ktrong. Hu B taupu nk t SUNBEAM GREAT DANE. fawn •
brindle for 1how I:. .com-
pattjoG. Hot1t1-Hollo" line
bred. 1136-7J.!i6.
made payable to ROYAL Bf•cli 1:., Cc.ta Meu.'i nlo-~ ~ it. Metal ftakt, C# 677981 \Ynl take car tn Al\1/FM. chron1e \V h I s,
GLOBE INSURANCE CO. est pa'j-Q rilid hme. 646-4663 b'8de. \Viii fillll nce private Sem perit radia.18, factory
GERMAN ~r<l. j -mo ..
vllw $1.00, v.ill mll che1pt:r
(movl"ll Call _aft fi pm,
54B-3'189.
HAillE CATS MOlll LE HOMES Auto •-rvlco pan,. Call 546-4C52 .,. "FRIEDLANDER'' pb :~";'~h.ai-". "',·, .. ,'.".~-wr '63 SUNBEAM Alpine, '"°" \#It, ' A~'•' l1:ne1t, avail .. k 1e -494-6811 , I "~ u u"" mtch. Tonneau 4: lop. A-1. ~ A P1rt'1 ,..-Pll · tx•••. SJ~~. SI'~~. ALL COLORS· . in~~ •lae •price ""i'· _ -t--._ METRO VAN 1J711 IUCH IHwr. Jf) iw:. , PO~ ..... ...,..., $400/oU. Priv pt)'. 644-5838
HAVE to se:U. due to mov-
ing! Our pun: h r e d
Samoyed. I mo. No pape:rs.
A1ki"' $3.5. 8394117
. ftRl~~~~S '=~~ :~· l\10PAR 4:56 posl. cosnplete l~~ s1~k.bu1~n ~':"1~~: NES:,ci E·~~. ====-===="'I ~Ue:r over sfooo~u·, best '65 SUNBEAM Alp, near new CAP'n 1;DS Huntington Beach s:iu.-s11 ~~~1:.t fu:1 ~f:i; petirll, panelling, bed, new &n.rl.l'l.l'l.I MG MS-4960 :id~::S~ ;!_ ;:t'.;,m ndio
2200 W, CllL Hwy. NB ~2244 ON UDO ISLE: Furn/Jt1e-manifold 'for 3& Mopar $100 paint X1nt condition. '68 9ll TargL Sepia Brown, 5 '67 ALPINE Coovt, llOft A
STEVE W'
.,_R ~-,.._,, trailer ~·/coffrd patio. DuColl Ignition sysle:m for • S-IS..f)..45 * --..,.1----------l 1pc1, mag whttls. Rear h·~ 1 kl 11m • ...,...., ''"""'c ......., ~ ... .,..mrw .. -'68 MGC • GT glau window. Call .,....., n793 .. :~.''! .. ,,-,op, as nr ....,-,
•SCHNAUZER. PUPS: ..
Male at 1tvd l groom.Ing.
Xlnt conc1
1
new lee bnt. rud-Perle:ct Beyftont location. Mopar 333 complete with i:· CArtfPER sheu--tor· 1;-ton v1-.. .,.~
der l sail, aturn mast l le.lea\ for a couplr.. All for nklon wil"e11 UJ, 633-5576 truck, 51iding \\'In do w s , gamfl Wire whcrh1, radial tires, '61 PORSCHE CABRIOLET =========
boom, oars $15.i ~84708. $2.100. Thru Sat. c all 4 TIRES I:. whls from 1969 door. Sacr. $200. Eve5 A~l/F~1 r11dllo, 6 cyl., auto-?.lust sell for beat oHer TOYOTA ·-· ~tALE Be:qle '2). 2 yn.
Loves' children. All 1hota.
COWAmIA 26, ''ro, many 61~292:;, All Sat call col· VW aiu 560xl5 Mu11t Ril .~•~94-<:..::7::00:.-______ 1 ma tic trnnsm!i;sion, low • 67~1323 •
xlru w/ali p. $2500 down. lecll !)J6 624-3363 · now. S80 516-0TaS, 540--7858. '67 Pilgrim Overcab Ca 1npe:r, U miles, Lie. XSS 79J. • 1962 PORSCHE *
Assume Joe.n. 832-0061 LEAVING 11tate, mwit tell V.W. trame-trana., 4 gd. good t'Onditio11, $800. • Call GUfO Sport d $2499 FRESH PAINT & CllROME '67 TOYOTA --BLACK Labrador pups: 8'QOd
Ufiu:, 'exc!tllent famlJy • &
f'tetd . S25. 968-793.S
-COL=7.u~M~B~!A""22.~l3300'=--I 1968 Mobl" Home"""° -2 tire.._ misc. '"•· paru.1°',.._.=::;;ll'i:::===== ""'" Open Sunday C"-'ICK IVERSON 11105, '""""' Yacbb. Royale Inc 64ft-Ol80 br. 2 ba. Many xtru. 963--0130 or 536-7072. -537.7777 Call Collect 'F,I DON'T aive it away, eet
2!'1.J w. Cout Hwy, NB 894-1410 or 897-21µ3 .. C•~r Rent•ls 9522 Olllf1D,...,M*'"1 YW quick ca.sh ror JI with a
Corona. Good condition (ZLK.
9271. Will take car in tn.de
or tlMnce private party. dlr.
Call 5'16-4052 or tM-6811. 2 BR Parklant-, ~ Ml Jt, Auto Tools --DAILY PILOT Cla.!1.itied
27' P'E.AniER Soop, fl'bils com. lot on roll oourae, _& E.q.,,:u;ci'!;•:._ ___ '4~:!:0 '10 V\V Pop lo_p l'amper. '69 Fiat 124 Cpe 54!>-30.11 Exl. 66 or 67 Call 642-5673 & ch11.'""e il. o/Wd. Gd cond, mu.st 5C.U. irt wood ·-Sltt,w; ·1-5. Avail. \\'k!nds. . . Untl HARBOR BLVD. . .. GR.EAT Dane JlUPP~•. bla.ck,
AKC. 3 wits. S150. <U ........, nea. 61>1393 or 531-5363 D t Br..h Club, HS. 67!'N016 or 64~1 ExOIJC ttd With black VUlYI co Sac $6950. 968-7472, 536-6928 ONE .et of wide~al belted "=====-=====! burkr1 1!(!<1ls. Lci\v miles, hllll l----ST_A_•_tt:S_'_A __ Used Cars 9900 Used C•rs --
14' HOBIE Cat .1r; trlr, $1!Xl0. Ur.t11 S60. S/32's of tread -h d 11 ljF;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i";;;-~1 9' ·-11 _ .. coll lb Dune Bu119 ies 9525 8 r.'(t'f' '"' l':lft, Sacri-• --------------* AKC YORKY MAt.a.•
5'9 Moa.
•• 646-0142 ...
~0-....... ap& It, $50. Motor Homes 9215 left. One st~. $35 whh 2 •-~----f lee! <XLY2::JJ Take older ~
speal·-:1-g, 637--1156 BEAUTlf'UL custoni buggy car in trade. \\'ill finance • THINK I C:~28: F'ullhoe. 0/8. NE\V '71 mod e: I Vaca· • -._ -· 1ilt for street. \Vire "-'hhi, private . 11 ly, Cai l Pat rllr. ''~1~"
1..1ttle u&e. $9200. tioncaer-the fl~st ln mini Tr•Her, Tr•vtl 9425 tube frame 1: A :'I: 1 f'. alt 10 : .1 <l!H-r~. 5'1().3100. AKC toy poodles, 1itver, 2
males &: female. 8 ~·ks,
w/shotl;, $60 ea. ll'f-1910
German Short..Halr Pointer,
S mo'11 old.. ahota.pape:n.
Xln't huntlna ~: 567-1540.
DACHSHUND Pup, male, 9
mo'1, all lhols. Gd w/ldda. =· 147-5010.
l·T*Dlti home6, 19' tully M""lf-con-AIRSrREA~f 21', old bul }~ratured bua:. Dunc Eu!®' NEW FIAT ~,!.,' ~~wood ke:et boat, !~,~~~ 9~~1rr:::~;, good, sell-cont .. a,l!'oO Mw "1agailne. m;. 61 . 5.¥--0 '~, 1970 aso SPYOER ·''FRIEDLANDER"
Sl3SO Santa Ane.. Tnt. Travelall. 493-1503 OF.LUXE '70 Dune Buggy. All color• to choolie from.
837·7038 U>~:.· TRAVEL Trlr. clean in Xlnt ccnd. Low mlleq!. Smi + Tax & Lie. NEW MIDGET $1995
•BpUTlfUL 52' S.mete:r --·· $2200. Call 837--9542. All modeLo; lo chOOSl'. 1l,,. •l!ACH IHWT. 111 S100~•11,soo Term.a. 'T te Motorcyclet 9300 good cond. ~-c i.11 C Ill . S C 893-7566 • 5.1'1-682·1 ....,. -S-1~2316 a orn1a por t ara NEW·USED-SERV. I
COW.ES. 4,KC. 2--males
~e/1 male & 1 fem. ,lri
~-$50 t!I. 846-&Sn.
Octoan1kje. 714-~5. Import.cf Autos 9600 901 E . lat, S.A, MZ.8801
• HOBIE CAT-Sall no. 562. Trucks 95" AUSTIN HEALEY ~
READY 'JU RACEI llOllO. ' HONDA MG
&\&SETI' pupa AKC 9 weeks '!'~· · 1"1 and tan.whit. "' color. 6.'J3..3337
Call &14-2406. ----1970 GMC BOAT for Sale. KITE sail
boat Good c o nd ft l on .
675-3212
AUSTiN AMERICA
Sllle!I, Service, Part•
lmme:dlate Dcllverj
All Mode1'
e 1!167 HOt'iOA SPORTS CAR
Call after 6: 00 pm * 5-18-8183 •
JAGUAR
Sales, Servi<.,:, Parts
lmmedlate Delivery,
All Model•
'Al!GHAN MALl·AKC
I mo.,.O\amp ped. ~10-'m&'
&LA CK Lab-Welmaraner iiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii
1500 PICKUP
WITH CAMPER J1rtuµor1
Jl111po1·1~;
1 1 -~--·-----
J1flUPOl'I
JIJ11p Lll 15
pupi, 5wb. f!O. 2JI CHRJS C rai t
JAGUAR
HEAD9UARTERS _546--&183 Lapstrake-Olllus, Rare:
Afllh•n Pups .. AKC R'I l:R.iy, f,w in existence. 210
nnn.n.n
THINK
m engine, heater, delu."e
cab, tlberilut. t.irc11 wllh
3 foot cab o\IC!r King of
Road Ce.,mper, stove, refrla:-
erator, 20 gal. Willer tank,
natural wood with Iota or
SJOO W Cbtit Hwy N B Thl> only authorized JAGUAR
f>l2·M<I • ··~1764 dellll"r in the entire Harbor
3100 \V. Cout Hwy • N.I~.
642-9405 Mo.l7SC
Au!horltl!:d MG Dealer
-~.AIJTY. • 962-9989 hp. 4.S mph. 2 bunks, hl!:ad,
radio, out:nuen. bait tank.
conv. top, fishing t!Xlru. ______ .;..._. I X1nt for water 1klina:. ~
HONDA Aulhorittd ti-1G Dealer Area. Complel.i.
SALES
'63 J\.1GB
4 speed, \VIrr \\•bcf!ls, radio.
Horses IU
URGENT: 01.EAVIJ'fC A~a! crulall"fi, Top condition ,
Mutt 11eU·Qtr. hone. Great near new cowr. S4600 or l•• llACM tMWT. '" cow pony N • make: oUer. Call Mr. Smith, 537·6824 • 893-7566 · ee 1 C'.'1:· NEW·USEO-SERV. per/ridtr. Bit olr. 64~184 673-91!11.
''FRIEDLANDER" room .
$3295
Serial 58744
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
mG Harbor Blvd.
'53 CHMYAH
Bristol Inboard
l8.1 Corvette enalne. ,OR SALE • LEASE l \' Ton encl'l&ed tniiaht bo:< <~JJ dlr. WW take can OR CHARTER $1125 1.11.~ new! t ,000 n1H11 l!ft on in tradt or rlntlnct privatt
,DOO Down; ~ yn blllamr. '\'arranty. ~10..,ln:, murt party •• MMOSa or 494-681 1.
... PiybridJ:e ~ler eruu. i>e.11. er. Steep• 1. Con,plell!b' 6J8·7ss:t $000 or &st '6$ FORD PU, a· bed, c.c. V·
••f<m<tltlon<d -..hout, 1• ••••• ••• 7T<·2l5.5 I au lo '-• M•l11' '""· .. utm". MINT c 0 N o.r R&.H. :dnt cond thruout. ¥'• Ski .__ 'TO \'AMARA 250 D1'1·~f:':. to ••2'1•l2 n. XTR..45 PL'n:I Make offtt! --.t·lf:' GJaupar G-3, ., • ., •. p,m. -, Ol hp M -,,.. .... mi's, mint rond ~ firm.; f>r!' 53N978 Evfs Ir w)c-e.re Uuuerboll, '70 VA,,tAHA !JO H!r I ':'.17 CH.EVY truck. Good
.mda S9J.MOS. · Xtru Mecl\lnical steer-Enduro 4;2S ml 'i , ltkl! Mw, run'a cond. $250. S-1M97Q,
il\lj", t.Chomete:r. SP!'f!'do. S3llO firm SH al 2539 We:stmiMter SI,
Jr TroJl.n SS. H;T. Exp. 65 n~r. 12 gal. cruise t11 nk, ' Ptv pty 9Gi-lt51. C.M.
Vf ndio. lath.I, btlt lank, llf 'II '68 UUl..TACO Me.t11dor 250 ~~ 1.~-t e ruerve:r1, fire !Xtina:· 19j9 1•,\ roM GMC w/ ,,_..,, .......,r. •em roon1, t he .. __ 1 Good cond * ;47~ ' •~ ntw crpt&. 111:w hWJ ' bot-A l'I. uw. cowr, c:lc. •8"7---0054• enckNled btd. $915 or bl!st
Wn patnt.. gPI 4. Very ii ~ • Y Y dul)t Conllntnlal -~--"""'"----otter. 9Bl-3f2t (tem'I! Anxklual By owt11r tUt tnlltt. \Vint.h. AU like e 1961 SUZUKI 120 1 0N.;=~;::...::....,.::..:c:,,::....,,5_7_C_h_•_v.
SHARP 1'60
One hundred.six seril!:s
l'llechanically Perfect
Sacrlf~ $00). 540-6539
'68 SPRITE w/b·lr. Purchas-
ed new mkt '69. 12,IXXI actual
ml. New c.'011d. $ 1 4 1 5 .
513-3297
Salt's e ~vi~ e P<1rl!
ALL l'llODELS TO
CHOOSE FR0:\-1
• 2800 ('pr In 1tock
• In1mediate ~liVl!:l'l/
Or•n1• County'• Newe1t Oe•l•r
COAST IMPORTS
Of On1ni~ Co1u1ty
l~ W. Plclllc COflsl lhvy
(Acrrui!I fron\ Balboe.
Bay Clubl
&42-0-lOO • MG-4!"129
CORTINA
./ '68 CORTINA GT.
Rf'lllll. r.ond1tlon
673-im or 492.23$7
~ new JUQl. 6'1"6o4 $200. Cau 5f0.72JS pickup, new t.ttery,. pa.int,
.. ---1967 • '" SK! BOAT W/l3l hp 'ff BAC 250 -IS90. 53&-97''9 DATSUN llpDrtllahier eem1letel1 £vli;rnt!M ' trl.lltt $945, 140) ml'1, $435. 837.Zlt '68GMCHand.IVan.Jomra. __ _;;.;,..:_;;.:..::.;:__
-· .,.... oell thl•1-",..,_-==' ==== llONDA iiiiCC Super Ho*ij, CLEAN. SI~ DOT DATSUN
---171119. --Exlra ch"1m•. !mmoal!atel, ~--'-*_;541-:::.:..:12il::;:.'.c:*__ OPEN DAILY -....-,,..It "' lloltMllnt1n1nu '°33 MOO. S31!411ll ,. ' •Mo --· ,:--'-..,;;,;.~'-=-.....; . .., (Jhevy Pan. Truck 733 C\I. ,._., tNdt wmaai el:!r•a1c. MARINE '86 ·I-ION°" 180 wl•~ VI ~lean. cllrotM rims. SUNDAYS
m-ua .. ~tm. !NGINI REPAIR d!•bap, 11,0llO m\. xlnt ,..,..,, -... Ill 615-U~. IWO De..,h Blw. HYDRO ..... LT', ()ftp v Authorti ed Mrrcruiaer IC'r· eo1wJ, s~ ~uh. -4!n-33"8 ·~ JE!.'P truck • whl tlr. Jlunttnaton Bearti
0 .8 . b1r, "° ..... '7915. lbic, vi0t, Jrtbotlrdl, Sttrn Orh:""· '70' BSA 6HCC re-bit 6 r)1 en;. ~ Ion. lf2.M or ~O JI'-·.-. 541-fnl "-"~ I -tic, ~ Complete lint f\. ...,..min_ flll2.,&) 3 Clfrtn. 646-3161. '66 1600 ROADSTER
'tf Uli' Lone Ster C!u>s !O l>'rr!U. malerla' • '"P· e '6& Yom•I~ 2'0 '~ OT•! 'SI GMC !!IQN PANEL
... aD ~kc.. I m "1 'I c;.. plirf Enduro $lock • cll.'@n XLNT roND.
•-titr. Jl<m 6'14.119 . CR YSTA~fNElt SlOO. ,,.,., .. n.;o • • s.s-m< if,..,...... wii .. molor • COf{P. • 16i .\'1mah11 VJ-1988 Ford Elconoline. Prlttd
A Pl W*. ~ Mtfw. 16ai Pl1ccnU1 .. eo.11 l'l.1eu StMl-cuino1n, 11:lnt eolllt. for qutck aaftt. Xlnl cond. --=·=·=----. Call MU'lt2 sm. "16-1269 ~'91. -··-------.;..::..:,;;::c._ ___ _
S\t\'tt flnllh 1v1 bl• k vliu•I
lnlf'.tklr C t1Pffil. Dir .. IRU1'
&ill wUJ take ·tnlde or fJn.
em• rnvlllf' l*rtJ call
516-40:''2 Of l(\.1 -8811,
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
IN
COSTA MESA
S98ll.
!!ARBOR A1\fERICA.N
19W l-(arbor Blvd.
&16-0261
• '66 ~1G J\.Udgel -New
radial~. "irf' 1vhecls $10511
8-16-96."'.8
MGB
'65 MGB ROADSTER
Exrellent 1•011<J11Jo11, 1\v1rp
whef'l~. (VNE O!l!ll. Owned
hy liltle old i;chool 1encbu.
Take ti·adr. or ~•nail down.
\\'ill fin . pvt. ply_ Dir. Call
Pat Rfl 10 an1 5-10-3100 or
·1!>4·10'1.I.
'S.1 r.tGB. wire, ~11CllELIN
X. Xlnt cont!. $950 673-17:>3
eves.
Imported C•r1 9600 Imported Autos
11~11· COSTA MESA
HONDA s::N
OLDSMOllU
2150 HAH OR ILVD.
1969 FIREBIRD 350 CONVERT.
F•ctory .;, candit. •nd cu.to'" fri'" 011
thi1 1p1r.li119 red cir, flLH02l I
$2895
1970 MUSTANG MACH I
Full power 111d j1,11f 11,000 '"i111 011 thl1
•~c1ptia111I ll.alh .lr1cl1-i11. (07!.4.CNl
$3395
1961 CHEVROLET MALIBU
.4. h111cham1 d1tk •ii"'•'-117 V-1, r1dj•
111d lle1trr. l uck1l 11eh. fYEROf 21
$2195
1969 FIREBIRD 350
T11rba hyclr•!ll1tic, r1dio, he•fer, paw1r
1lt1ri119/br1k11. J ui! recluceti la th=1
Ji.ic1. IX ll.S,9 4)
$2795
1961 FIREBIRD 400
F.a11r speed tre~miu!en, power 1le1ri114 ,
••nvl lop, r1i10, h••*•r, cu1lom trim,
IYQF121 I
$2495
1970 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
O~tl~el ,_,.,, 1-'ttl 111701 Onty 4,000
m1. Air co11d .. Stereo r1clio, Tinyl tv, •t~
19171£0) '
$4695
1961 CAMARO
A 2·dr. h11dlop with ftclary ,;, •it con•
cl ili?ni119, •~lo. lre1t1., pow11 ,,,·,,;119, VI
•n~•ne. !XEZ44J)
$2595
1969 MERCURY COUGAR
G l111r1i119 white •"'bl.ck ... 111yl top. Ilic.•
i11+1•ior. flXEIJ9l '
$2695
1961 DOOGE CHARGER
Automtllc lt111tmi1Jio11, r1dle, h••ltr •n'
•ir cen•. Der• ''''n •i11'1'I top 0"1' t r1111
lower hody. f 46 '1AKS)
$2695
1965 CHEVROLET BEL AIR
A11 orit in1I l·owne• 4.4,, 114. with J4 003
,.,;, f:ca11a'"lc.tl 6°1yl, 1n4 •uto. t;1111.
IRIW66])
$1295
1964 Pl YMOUTH fURY Wtg.
s.~ p111t ntt•, lu99190 •• , .. ,,,,,, paw·
'' 1t11rln9. IOYS'IS'll $995
1967 MUSTANG
Ault. lt•n1lfti1tion. f1clery 1ir, powt~
1+•11!114, A cl•r~ blwe t llcl wh!le •i11yl lo1t
with lllu1 l11!1rler. IYXYO]'l
$2095
2925 HARBOR 80ULEVARO, COSTA MESA
,,.,, '" 1.f
. ~ ·--~ -·-~ --·------·-· -, ___ ---~--·· ---·-. ---. ----.-·-.---·-"'"""""==--· --·--· ----·---·------------.-·--.--.---·-----
• ,_ ._ u. 1'170 DAILY PILOT f j'
TRANSPORTAl ION TlllANSPOlllTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'O~TATION T~ANSPORTATION TliANSl'OltTATIOH TRAHSi'OttflTICIN ---. .. --1~1m;;;;.,po_rt_..i_,A_utoo _____ !~ported Auto• MOO U•od C•rs 9IOO UMd C•rs "" Used Con '900 u...i<•n --!!!'P"...".!!d_Au~ ~ ~lm;.;po,;:;,r;.;tecl-.:...;A;.;ut=":......;;"~00 UMd Cora =·-~ -·TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAtilN VOi.VO TRANSPORTATION IUICK
'66 BUICK, Eltctn Xlnt
---CADILLAC 163 CHEVY Impala convt.
Nffd.I •rel,. Work. SeU or C:HIVIOUT
trade. Al.k_ tot Ch II c Ir• ----·----'67 TOYOTA --
Pick •P wllh ...... , 31,"'1 Harbour V W, NEW VW IUti ill'll"llrU'U CA1S tofld, .t'uU pwr. 0 w n r I ·as CADJ~-. 2 ctr. H.T,
"""''•-· SHOO, Ph : ...-, bl~ vlft>I top,
-'61 CHIV llLAlllll
'It EL CAMINO 341 "'""" 6 .,i. lltlcO. 0... -
MW e,_.ne and ttent... MW ~,.: _.,rizalb' pir'ltcl. Mt--Cll "'hlte body. >Ont tond. Pr\e. actual Mlle&. Local l owner • •
'"'-· OrtrV>a1,.. no. CAMl'ER $55.89 pr. Wi~ ~ TMINl Our Speclalty tll'l"I, Jllnl mnd. 9C-12'JD -... .... .. Arie)' ..
1'h. new "'"· ""'"'· ..... .,, SALE ~ lor &nl'thlrc1 cUPM. • Fully E ui-...t
$141.11 ...... ,....... VOlYO'
tu & L le. °""' Ind •. AS LOW AS S99 •15 SKYLARX. Meitft ••t•. ec1 1ow tor lwlmld ale.. •r
tilt will, S1W'p... $900, ortr OWNER 54l-a05 ·n a... &ood """· Ruot Ibo Doll1 ...... --Trl-
&ood-< ,_ !Im. All! -",,.,_,;:.,~1"~P~M"'. =-==~ owner. MJ-m
$'1399 • • q ~
CHICK IVERSON IOO Vo ·
vw L:~s'"'0 "FRIEDLANDER" w, CUT)' our own contracts
Crtdlt II no 11r®lt m
CHICK IVERSON vw
2 dr.Jlo'!'"• lluo Chip Auto s.1.,.
'61 ELECTRA 2Z'i, 4 dr ht. '62 Coupe d9 VWe PIS P/8,
Alr, pwr, new lirff:, lo ml'a. •Ir i 1terfr0. SH. to •P. moo. 813-0275. • prectatr! 548-3690.
•n '''°' -· '15 'MALllU 'IS Mallbtl ~ 4-opd, ml
VW Guarontffd * $21'5o * 2145 Harhi'.lr Blvd., C.M.
1VM l•AC:M (MWY, :tO :-12'-9700 * J40.43t2 '67 RIVIERA: rull pwr .. alr, '53 COUPE DE VIU..E
very clean: low m I I• • l\.eblt ena;/tttnl, $500
blue. blk lilt. New t\rff, Gd
--11100. eT:l-'l'I04
tt:ioor~-w!JI
trade • lmall don ~
'56 CHEV, Xlnt mnd. Goo4 tinl.nct. -Alll priet. Dtr. AM/FM. (2L1) 592-1660. Pvt ply; 540-2492 ,.,,_ Ex1. 66 or <T YOUR CHOICE .
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
l flfO HARBOR. BLVO.
COS!'A. MESA 893-751)6 • 537-6824
NEW·USEP.SERV. ~ trans. Mutt 1tll -n\lke of-Cd 4M-i14t
1--·COST __ A M_l1:SA __ l 196!·_<UOL-8731 '65 Y'!I S~N ~ CADILLAC CA MARO
DEMO
1967 IUOL-6311
1967 IUQH·69ZI
$2295
Sunroof
Cr.1J R-988J
$899
-VOLVO-,e1~'!!!.
6'><l4!1 '10 l'lt-11'0. 1!8782
SAVE
$466
+ • ------·-
1---------'IJT CAMARO Conv. PIS.
'e9 CAOtu.A.C Co u pt Auto. New tlru. Xlnt COCJCI,
Of/Ville 12,000 mi's, like Make offer 546-1231
I>r. m-0121 I ,,=63-0ii.'VilOLET=="=="e"r-.,.,.-,-.,..-.od'.I
1969 Kinpwoad 1t1.. wrn. air, new uaw ML .,__ Frlil
iu Call !W0-3210 ex 312 or r an1.11111 ........... warir,, -·-&00dbotl1·--19&8 Camam S.S. 3!16 4 spd, '&6 Qievy f11.uMt SUP* Sport
blk ln1. po&l/t:ract»n. $1700. -..... lftn1. RJH. ~1318 ' · $1300 or bt1t OU., wtl '70 Vt' AGON (2660)
$1817 HARBOUR V.W.
NEED HELPT Look for lt
in Pilot OassUifd. p-W-"1f
hf'\\', k>lckd, $4750, 644-1635
... EL DORA DO -Ilk• ... w . CltEVELLE flnlnct. 56-77U.
H b V W 1sn 1 &:ach Blvd. 842..f.W a r our • • , __ ""-"''~""-''"-"'-"-" _ Che<;k our dtaU:
1lll'l0 .,~ Cpe for dt.llvery.
Ovcnr1u1 dcl Rprciallst.
LOADED! Full pwr/alr/ -. ------
1terM $4~ 642-M62 '66 CHEVELLE SS396..4-spd, =========-===·~=·====I fnap, need.c. clutch, Sl.350.
theck our deals
8 OTHER DEMOS
AT BIG SAVJNGS
!8711 BEACH BL. '424435 '63 VW Bu9 Imported Autos 9600 .., Actos 9600 61'.>-1628
HUNTINGTON BEAQI ~tECHANIC SD&:IAL DEAN LEWIS
DEAN LEWIS 1966 H1.rbor, C.fl.I. 646-93113
'60 Volvo M~
N1:v.• ri1"1211. Clean,
$225/olfcr. • sr..-~
Antiques, Cl111lc1 9615
"6 7 VW u,$~"'"' "' """°'· c.M. ..._,,., , CAMPER CHICK IVERSON BILL MAXEY l'ully ,quipped indudh•: I"•· VW ""'""""'""=r=:r.,...I gage rack. Run11: &: looks ITIOfVIQITI~ br~;:n':7heL~~~ ~-~~l:cin66srv~
• r.omfurt with ~nnmy COSTA MESA 11111 ll!!ACH .BLVD. CHICK IVERSON --w-A~N=TE--D--1 WANTED' c1 ... k ., ..,. Hunt. Btich 147-8555 . tlque c11r enthu~ill&IJ! to
I ml N t ~~ H Bclo VW I'll ""Y top •·ua· •, •• -·r Rhlll'f! nice shop & !iltor11g1: . O ~· "WY. on ,.... "" ..... J~M f11clli11es. N.B. 67[>..1498, VOLKSWAGEN todll,Y, Call '68 CORONA coupe -vinyl
\Ofl 1t.ndrrl lraM. Xl nt cond .
Pvt pty. $11.95. Ul-1469
TRIUMPH
'67 Triumph TR6
4 11peflt w/overdriVt', \Vin>
wlieels, AM/FM dlr. low
:t49-3031 Ext 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'69 YW SEDAN
100% Guarantee
(YNZ-2601
$1750
mill'll. Run! like a fine HARBOUR V. W.
w11tc.h. <UOVM6 J. Wil.1 tak_e 18711 Reach Blvd. 1142-4435
car in trllde or finance pr1. l-l untlngton Bf'ach v11.1r party. 546-4052 or1 _______ _
49<:"11. Lar9e Selection
... TR~. AM/FM, IA mi'•, Of vw Campers
X1nt cond. $2'150. Pl.YI: 1
!l.1.1-51 JJ. Evr.s: 968-0321. Vans, Kombis,
• ·o; TRIUMPH spillic. Buses New & Used
1-on\•trt. 4-spd. or11. 01-1•ner-. 1 -~· 0 1. $1000. 963-22&3 mmeg1at• e 1very
CHICK IVERSON vw WIWS --------1!100 WlLl..IS PAnf'I. IW'I up
for 283-327 Chr v.-no eni:t:LIW!
54!1-30:n EXt. 66 or 61
1970 !!ARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
llnd 11slr for Ron Pl11C'OOI. ~.~=-.:.,!hi"· ~=-11:,,: -===== 54!J.3001 Ext. 66--67. 673-0900,
'64 Volk!wagen Camper. Lie.
O~fR 199, Jee Box. Sleeps 4.
$1.295.00
Jim $lemons Imports
120 W. WARNER.
SANTA ANA
0JK!n Eves. l SI.In. 456-4125
'6! V\V
Lo1-1 mllr.1 on rebuilt enitilW!,
flt'W clutch, flt'W brak~.
radio, perfect condition. Can
he sttn at Zl89 Harlior
Blvd. or phone 64.>1982, Sam
10 6pm
'64 YW BUG
Autos W1nted t700
WE PAY TOP CASH
tor used car1 l trucks just
CA1I 11& for me estimate.
GROTH CHEVROITT
Ask for Sa1u MADq:er
lJl1l Beach Blvd.
Huntil1if0n Beach
847-6087 Kl 9-3111
WE PAY CASH
R•dlo. 1"'"0'' fTAZ ""' FOR YOUR CAR . Sm11.ll Dowri will finance .
Private PartY. Call 546-4052
•• 491:"u CON .. ELL
'66 NEWLY p Alntrrl , CHEVROLET o v e r h a u l e d • Xlnt
'69 vw s1395 R1dio, h11l1r, l1>ol 1 1ricl clri .. 11
lili. • f1cf•f"'W lr11~ tit tXUV-flll
'07 vw $1095 f11tb1c~ IIWL-1911
---'61 vw $1195 R1d i•, h11l1r, cu1 lo"' 1!1 1rinq
wh11I, 1•c1ll1nl "'''"· coridition. IWTf-1115 )
'68 OPEL $1295 K1cl•tt1, R1ll1v 1qui 11p•d. r1die1
h11!1r. A-1 1h1p•. !WYNf Ol l. --'6-4 vw $649 Rillio, h11!11, 9ood lir11, ri1w 111int,
1xc1ll1ril ,.,,ch1nic•I conclltio11. --· '67 FIAT $949 Cp• .. r1clie, h11I••· Goell
tir11. ITRY·Ol ll L --'68 TOYOTA s1349 Cerone H.T. Cp1.-R1clie, h11t1r,
whil1 with bl•c• i11+•rl••· IM"'1cul 1I•
conclilion. !O~l-llL),
'68 FIAT $1350 150 Spicl1r 2 dr. rtcl in, h11t1r,
ul tr1 1h1rpl IWTI-6161
'69 VW BUS $AVE A·I Sh1rpl R•d with wh ite roof.
S11 I d(iw1 thit b11uty I•
1pp11ci1+1, l •f26fl .
or trani;.. bucket ~ats --=~=~ ~=~-
1 .. 00. Call 5,30-9,00 p.m. '66 YW SEDAN
546-UOO
throughout. $100.'i, Must sell! 2828 Harbor Blvd.
642-7374, 675--0144 Colta Mesa w .. tD>
'63 S550/'¥ $1450, low 1ni, WE PAY TOP 00LJ...AR PLUS A lARGE SELECTION OF
VW BUSES, ALL COLORS
VOLKSWAGEN lOOo/, Guarante•
jTBX-:i.191
like NEW. '62 Chev/ $150, FOR TOP USED CARS
need1 oil scal/'63 Con-air U )'001' car J.i -extra clean.
.-=: K'tl UI first. pcrf run'g end .µ1J. 67J...1784 BA.UJo:R BUICK
Joe Berlotll'•
$1079 ,65 VW e '67 BUG--GOOD ~COND. _. 234 -.c, •l?th St.
NEW RRA KES. Slboo or bat Coita.Mes1 . 543-'l?M T&M MOTORS
IOll G1rcten Grove Blvd. HARBOUR V.W. BUG ofr. 5-tf>..7R91 IMPOR'fS WANTED
Amrrlcan magll v.irle tire~. 18711 Rr11~·h Blvd. 812....f.f.35 e '69 VW Bug-Xl ra lo rill, .()ranse Crll.l1'tlel SALIS OPIN SUNDAY
PAln. SllYICI TUH,. CUlllOm meta.!HC P'int iv h Hunt1ngloo Bf:ach $1750 cuh or $.150 l takr TOP S BuyER
over pyn4.n~, ~8-. 2731 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA THU•S. TILL 1:00
ll4·2214 I V1 ltl1, I. •f ..... ,
lf2·1151 he11utUul lat:1 work, YPU. '6!1 V"' C1n1per. polMJp, trot. 901. orig. oWllf'r .. 24.00'.l mi.~ ''6 VW BUS .$1525 18811 Beach Blvd.
Sevrn\l o~ cuStnrnl1.ed L•:;;';;'f;i:;;"=· <;97;;·:106;1~===-~R;;/l!~,O:N;;";,:';;";';;*;,;;""1235;;;~:-!,H;·:,:·ll<;;;•;;<h;·=,,::P:,;"-:=l<;_;T;.a55!>:::::_J.. ______ l!!!..,l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"°'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t!
VW to choose from I~
CHICK IVERSON !--'-"-----------_.;.::.:..:::::.:.:.--==='---.;.;:;::.=~;;._-_;.;;::;;; vw
54!J.3031 Ext., 66 nr ~7
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
'68 VW Bu&, ·lo ml, xlnt
mech cond. Asking $14001
'69 Duiw, buggy crunpl w/
top, 10~ bar Ii many v:tral!,
rehll rnJ: w/ only 600 mi.
A~kln11: $1600. Ph 962-8584
he-fnrc 11 am.
'70 VW SQUAREBACK, ex-
cellen1 cond. $2200. 494-2459
l\ltt'r 3:30
e '70 VW CAMPER e
Pop top • tt:nl t-like new
• 5'i8-1240 •
1970 VW Sedan • 1 year
iuaranl~. mdio, dark blur.
$1690. Must sell. Ownt'r
emignolna;. &t4.2188.
• 1!169 VW-Xlnt cond. r/h.
1500 CC'. $1695.
• 67f>..2051 •
'10 VW, yellow. blk lnl.
Hr11 dcr ~xh11ust, coco milts,
$11%. 675-0615
'58 vw
· Ori1tiN1l black lini~h v.·lth
contrA11ttng red Interior. Llc
GBV710.
$38 Down
S38 riown. "'-$29.711 lor 24
monrhs, APR' ii 21.5<;(:. total
lntrre11t. $148. Tot11 l c11.1h
prier $738.
CHICK IVERSON vw
~11'-30.11 ExL 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COS'TA. MESA
'64 VW, $625. Xlnl cond, Tlf!W
patn1 jnh. Must aeU, Please
call f'n:!d, 642--1323, NR
e ·so vw-Ne11t· tlttt, brAke•
I.• uphnl. Xlnt cood. Make
ort,.r. 5-19-101.7
e '69 VW-11u1nmaUc stick
11illt. BluP. $Ui00
CAii 546--6050
'68 vw
CAMPER
n 11 top \\!Ith Jtlr!!!mlnJ: while
tinlsh, Ah1/l"M ral'llo + 1trr-
eo tapt, ttl't'rsc chmmc
rlm11 wtth wlrlr oval pnl)' 1111.11~ Ures, 1pecilll c:th1u1~I
1y1tl!m. Lie, ZXV6fi.\. Won I
IAl l 11.t
$3199
CHICK IVERSON vw
Hl70 HAr.BOR ALVO.
co.5TA Mt;s.A
'&'I VW, Rllnt rrr&I, r\ttl'lt l ~ v.'Ol'k. U)J f irm.
~208,1 .... .,,...-~,--,;;<. i:fVW. Run~ JOOd, f'ORI SALE Oft T RA DE .
Wbolualt priC<!. Mf.2'91.
U}AUER s. . , ,;: . ' . . .
BUICK1NCOSTA MESA
1,..1111z11111r tauTT .. _,!l!Jil;i:l~JA;jGc;U~A;;R~---~~--0::.!pe;;:;I S:::Y
234 E. 17tft ST.
PRESTIGE CARS
AT
SENSIBLE PRICES
GOOD VALUE
USED CARS
'67 CONTINENTAL $2895
2 Door hardtop. You'll ju11l hRve to 1ee th\.s onr tn really hr#
Jieve It. Full power, 1tlr condltlonln1. t.lectrlc head rl"st ·arid rt'·
clnln~ JlllUenJ:rr 1eal. Automatic transmlulo n, elc .. etc. Ju1l
34,102 miles. (YWS613!
'67 CADILLAC $3595
El Oort1.dn. Thi~ im1n11culall' aulomobilr h1111 vinyl top, leath~r
intrrior, full pn\.\•l"r, f11ctory llir eondilionlng, AM·ff-.f r11dlo,
pov,.f'r door locks. tlll·lrlc-scoplc 1tttrln1 wherl plu1 the luxury
of Didll\11.c it~f!I( 4 \V AK4.10J
'65 OPEL
2 d•e1 cou pe. 4 1pt•d, rtdi•
'"' ~••'•'· ! ltGUOll l l
'64 LE SABRE
H.T. 2 lo che•1• ho~. VI. 111le.,
Rl H. P.S., ~.I., f1cforv
IKA•••71 !Ill'VO l ~I
STATION WAGON CORNER
1969 MERCURY MARQUIS WAGON
4 aeater 1tation wagon. VS, automatic, full power and lac·
tory air conditioning, atereo, AM.FM radio, lugg•ge rack,
wood grain paneling, etc. Gorgeoua. Slut Book Price $4350.
IYWT793 l
$3895
'68 CHRYSLER
Town I Cou11try w1••"· VI\ 1uJ•1111 tlc.
r.11w1r 1l1tri119 • llreli•'• ftct1ry 1lt,
ut••t • r1c•, l•w 11111111•• l h11 l ook
,,;,, 11170 l llOIQD I --'69 vw
Squ •r•ltt ck, f~ll 1ut11 ... 1lic tr•111,..l1°
1ion, fttl•ry 1ir C•nd!t!o11!111, rtdl•.
h•1l1r. l1w 111111191. l lu1 l 1eli '"''
l 2ll5 1611 1001
'70 OPEL
•
'65 MERCURY
C•l•11y '••• w•••"· Aule1111tic , t1die,
h11)1r, 11•w1r 1!1•rln • I ltr1li11, fee•
t•ry 1i1. l lu• l 1•li 't1c1 S l4tl IO••· ,ASG I ,
'66 CHRYSLER·
W19•11. f11ll pow•r, f1 cl•ry •Ir copcll.
lle11i119, lu.9191 '''"· low 111!1•••••
l lu1 l ••k ''''' $11•t IXSR4 14l --·-----'66 PL YM.OUTH
fury f p111•11••• w1.e11. VI , 1ut• .. ''"
dl•, ~,,,,,, p1w11 tl11rl11• I br1k11,
f1ct•ry 1!1, I SQD401 I
••
ONLY .AT
CONNELL CHEVROLET
• '70 MONTE CARLO 53299 3000 mJl r-g, Auto .. P.S .. air, rtm11.ln in&
fActory 1t11arRnlN'. Showroom frHh.
Vinyl roof. I 14m7>
'70 CAPRICE 53599 Cpe. R&l-1, auto.. r.s .. alr,.vlnyl root,
rl":mAlnlrn: factory 1U•rant~.
(t60ADYI
'69 IMPALA 52'99 Custom cpc. P,S.1 1n110., radio, vinyl roof,
fa.ct. air. rcmaininR factory
auarantrr . fYYN~I
'68 IMPALA
· 51899 Cuatom Jr.· R"'malninl factory 1uaran~re.
P.S .. R& ., auto., fact. air, low milea.
CWZZ474) .J
'67 CHIV. WA•ON '. '1·799. &I Ar. Auio .. P.S .. radio. fectory Alt, •
1tron1t heautltul car. Specla1.
fl'ZH933) . ....J..... --
'66 CHIVROLn ' SS99 6 cyl., auto., RAH, Spkla.I.
IRRY5381
6 eyl. Chf!velle 2 Or. (:pt. I 65 CHIVROl.ET
1 owner, automatic, RAH.
~ INfVllllU ,
• s999
-
I 68 F91D MUSTAN• • -''2299 ~ C!'M!· RAH. 111110 .. P,S .. facL air.
• Su~ a. nice· t:ar A chH.p. (VH~l .
'
'PORD WA.ON ~'1899 9 !)JN. S~lal thb wtek. R•H, auto., P. , atr cond. tVOG38t)
'65 MUS TAN~ 5999 Aulo., R&H. V8, 1tronfi car.
\VIII paint to 1ult bUY r.
IJKR867)
'68 V.W. 2 DR. IU• 51·399 13,440 miles. Radio, heater, Hurry.
IZSF845l
'66 IUICK SYLAU 51199 2 Or. Cpe. RAH, auto., P.S., factory ah'.
Look a t thll. (RUJ365) '
'67 RAMILll 4 DOOR 51399. Sfodan. 990 Amhau ador. P ,.S., auto., RlH,
factory alr, nice car. Thia wefk 1peclal
PICKUP-VAN-SALE
'61 l'ORO VAN
\11-I•"· Aul• .. R I H~ 11ic1. 1112611
'67 llAtrtCHllO Llkl ... w. Aut .. I , H. l lr, 11,S, 11mAI s1m
$1811
$1191 szan
$2399
'61 l'OlllD CHAT!A_U
Ch1b w11e11, Aul•., R&H. 102011 1
$2499
''7 FO~D li.D. VAN
Ne ..,;11dowt. ""'' t l•111,will ,.int to 1wll.
10746f6)
$1699
''4 ICONOLINE VAN
Auto,. 11r ••nd., AI H, r11I 11lct lrv1k.
IHKV4i l l
'67 11. CAMINO Avl.1 It\ H, f'.I .. 11!.!try. !YI..,, . '67 11. CAMINO i"o~; H, 11.i ., 11r. 169 llOllD ~ TO,.
l".U. lt&Hj VI. iilll 1111•.a. jfO 1JI!') '68' ,... • ... ez4"" 111ct1111. c.,,.., .... 11;, • .. ~~"'~{ 11'. L~1 '
'68 CHIV •• TON . s1• ' , llldo• i llcll, 1 c~t. 111t1. cnu1c1 '87 ..... • ... a1--llld11 ••• i1ldl, & IY1~ -'87 i:;~: ~ .. ~,~ S ... Dll $1199 ' , ... w. .. ..... •.•. ~
'61 CHEV. ~ TON 'IJ g.W, ~~cu1111t1 . ~1-
H.O. Ven. Auto,. VI, n•w celtr, hlth rU ll· :-=~N~'11~i1~11 •
b•r. 1151JOA I 188 ~~!!;, ~"'~ itltlr, • •1• s209t . ,88 :.: •. '-:.~. 1•1..a
'67 CHEV. ;--. TON r~t:ii ~"'"'· W. 111c11. ~
s,,,+••11; Wo11't l11t. 111 01001 168 Ct!IV. 4l TM s1-
$2099 • ,i&,,.., l!ICIG • C'/I> Hit.. __
ITJl~1') •
'68 ., ••••• ,.. , $1199 '6t VOL KS. CAMlllR 'f:l.,.· t uN• """· •• LI ~. M•11d RIW. RIH. tt1r••· 111 •A&ll ru-.::r .. , .... llr, •
$3299 ... ~·:.~ .~., _ $1889
----••I ~kl. IU31NH -----
CONNELL
CHEVROLET, 2m Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
546-1203
--I
l"r---...---.-~-~·--.,·~ -~-------·------.------~ --~----...--.----~-~-:~-------~-------..,..-----------------
.. •
• •
•
TRANSPORTATION
•:a.: '70 CORONET 2 DOOR '70 CORONET R/T '70 DODGE CHARGER DoDG~ 'CHALLENGER
$JS NO. WL21C0!10l679
OVER FACTORY INVOICE
COST $JS No. 11021 1 • OYER FACTORY INVOICE COST . $JS NO. XH29COGl2JZ49
OYER FACTORY INVOICE
COST $JS No. IOl4JO
OYER FACTORY INVOICE
COST
5,000 BLUE CHIP
"J1;11t '" 1110 fint oM yoU'll r.cei... s s
S 000 911tt1 Chip Ste111p1 if yoti buy TAMP b..1111 •• ... ••Y othor deelor.'"
"JUST SEE ME FllST'
•
'69 DODGE DART
2 Dr. H.T. Automatic, radio, heeter,
WSW. IYIE9161
'66 CHEV. BEL AIR
4, Or. Autom•tic, radio, h11t1r, WSW.
IPSl96DI
'&I PLYM. BELVEDERE
4 Dr. Automatic, R&H, power steering, , ... ,..., .;,, 16781101
II W you are not completely satisfied wi1h the service you
are getting from your present dealer please drop in to
our AA Rated Award WiMing Service Department & give
us a chance to service your cor properly. I have been a
new car dealer in So. Col i!. for over 20 years & would
very much like lo be your dealer,
•• We have the best financing In
Sincerely,
Cal Worlhington
P.S. We give Blue Chip Stamps in our Service Department
Southern Colif!lrnla. If you are
short of moMy cind need low
monthly payments, Sff our ex·
perienced counselors.
'67 OLDS WAGON
Automatic, redio, heater, power 1t11rin91 WSW. ITXESMI
'68 DODGE 448
2 Dr. H.T. Autom1tic, redio, heater, P.S.,
vinyl top, fectory 1ir. fWEW935 I
'69 CHEV. IMPALA
Cpe. Radio , heeter, 1utom1tic, P.S., eir
cond., WSW, tint. 9l11s. IXYVl971
$995
$1295
$1495
OPP.II llPllD WID., AU•UST Jkll
'68 DODGE Police Spec. 5795 Aistometic , heeter, tinted gless. (2S421'41
'69 FORD Galaiie 500 $1995 2 Dr. H.T. Autom•tic, r•dio, h••t•r, power
steerin91 fectory 1ir. IYCW457)
'68 DODGE Coronet 500 $1395 2 Or. H.T. F•ctory eir, •uto., r1dio, heet•
er, P.S., vinyl top. IVRA419)
'&& CHEV'. Y2 TON
I
Pickup. VI, 1009 i..d. I Y246691 $1295 '68 DODGE CHARGER
R•dio, h••ter, white side w•ll1, tinted
gl•n. IXRZl241
$1395 '70 PONTIAC LE MANS $2295 · • 2 Dr. H.T. Autometic, r1dio, h11t1r, vinyl
roof, WSW, tint. 9l1ss. 1075595)
C .. YSLER
1B6f NEWPORT -New tifts,
i'C)D(I body A: motor. Trans
needs work. Make otter.
~
COMET
*'64 COMET*
e New braRs 4 Tftse •Att 5:30, 96l--003l•
CORVAIR CORVETIE
CORVAIR PARTS '65 CORVEITE FASTBACK
1960 engine complete $25. Pri~ for qukk: sale. May
Powerglide transmission and -""-.dc-e-cdown~"'· =--~2698~·~axl@s $25. Gas tank S2. Or e '68 427 Vette e
take ALL for $40. m.1427 Must sell $300). 534-8859
after 5 pm. * '61 CORVAIR * e '64 VE'ITE • New titte:,
BEST OFFER mags, top, lo ml Xlnt'cond. 5(8..3227 after 5. ' 1947 Pomona, ''B," CM aft 6 '65 Corvette C.Onvt, new . nIE Qt.JICKER YOU CALL, eng &. paint, X1nl oond,
ntE QUICKER YOU SELL $l950• * 962--9S77
New Cars 9100New C1r1 9800 New C1r1 9900
l'
·-------•.J. -· ., ---
DODGE FORD MUSTANG PONTIAC PONTIAC RAMBLER
1967 DODGE MONACO
40,00C. ml., pis, p/b, 383 q .
Best otter 493-3813.
'66 Squire WGCJOn • 'li6 l\lustan~ 2+2 Fstbk • 1969 GTO C.Onvertlble. Auto TRANSPORTATION car.
Fa.irlane with wood p-ain ex. 239 cu. m. 4-spd p/disc brks p/1, many ex-Orte. owner 1958 Pontiac
'63 CLASSIC wegon -Rlll'l8
good, look> good. AU cond.
1425. 968-5650 * '66 OODGE Van, R/H, -
8, stick, xl nt cond., $1650.
Aft 6 pm, 540-1593
terior 'dlr 390 V8 J:ll)'Ner New tire & Brake1 tras! $20Ci0. 'ean 548-fil23 Deluxe Xlnt cond, $125.
alee.ti;,, ~Ir cond.' Stereo CLEAN!! , 540-8362. T·BIRD
tai>e, atito. trans. (TAY279) See at 1825 W. Balboa Blvd, You ll find great bargains .~1965=~T~E~MP=ES:'~.~ .... -,-n4 '62 T-Bird, Ai<-Cond, All
Will take trade or finance Newport Beach 540-8308 ~n .YOU shop u:e Dally dr. $lOOO
• '62 Dodge L•nctr
Nttda work, S75. 673-7506
private parcy. Call 546-4052 '67 MUSTANG CONVT, full Pilot classified adi. e 546--2574 e ~~~te party. Call
or_494-6811. pwr It air, outstanding car.I-========.;.;:=======::..!.=;=:=:=====
Be-ing transferred. MUST New C1r1 9800 New C1r1 9800 New C1r1 9800 FORD JAVELIN SELL! Best offer over1----~-------------------
whlsle $1475 549-4317.
--------11996 Javelin 343 VPrPerfect 1965 FAST BACK 1 + 2 , TOP DOLLAR cond. Loaded. Air, power, hydramatic, r/h, low mi.
"' CLEAN USED CARS
See: Andy Brown
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
Xl60 Harbor Blvd.
Costa M~ .....,,.
-.66 Fairlane
etc. BJue book $2800, 1st Xlnt cond. $950. 646-&00 or
$2200 takes. 646-445.5 days; 673-7211 ~7040 aft 5. l-~.65~eo~,-.. -.... ~M~"'-...,.,.--. -
Great Condition
LINCOLN $1100 833-1213 eves.
OLDSMOBILE '68 4-DR Lincoln, Xlnt rond,
Med ml'a, new robber,
Loaded! $3295. ~1.f92 1--------· I
MERCURY
'64 OLDS Jet:star I ,
Wholesale price for quick
sale! 1 owner, x.lnt cond, --------1 64&-:1698. .~-------' 62 Comet '69 cuu ... su.,.me, Vioyl Hrdtp air auto xlnt cond.
C.Onvertlble. Automatic, VB,
radio, heater, dlr. Excellent
cond. (ZZV 074), Will take
trade or finance private par.
ty. Call 546-f052 or 49"Sll.
Automatic. Radkl, heater, Best Ouer'. &73-8ns
bucket seats, oonsole. (JWI' .62 • 2 dr. 98 743) dlr, Excdlent trans-NEW TIRES'' a..EAN'' '66 Ford Fairlane 500 st.a. portaUon car. Will take $500 · · 54s-Oj7t1
waa:. trade or finance private par.I=~·====='=='="' I ESTATE SALE ty Can 546-4092"' 494-6811. -
See eay,1me Rlchlield, :100 •68 """-vs •tick R/H PLYMOUTH
W, Coaat Hwy, N-!3. Atake chrm whl~. wiglw, Si400 o; --------1
written otr. Secunty Paci· beat cUer will fjnance e '65 GTO 4 SPEED
tic Nat'l Bank. Trust Dept., 545-7743. ' ' 335 MA
550 N -~ "--~ NB H.P. GS, e-t"'"•'··cuterui·., · '60 M I STERO LOADE. Dll Call 644--0lU ext. 21D for de-ere convt., x nt cond. , .
tall. lnsidt & out, Power, $350 $1300 OR BEST OF·
=~=~===~I orbesto.Uer.646-9022 FERll 892.3414, '65 FORD RANCHERO ==M=U=ST=.=N=G==l :i.,.,.p:i:'::1ymou~th"-ru:::C..,:.;:,,-:;:,, .. :=,7~1
A. gd clean <.'Olld. $550. 835-3548
f cyJ Automatic, (2 dr 268), ~. 494-7655 eves -E
Wlll take car tn trade or .67 MUSTANG VS-auto, new wknd., uk fbr Pat.
finance pr Iv ate part)t. tires, ndio, xlnt cond. ~t '63 Ply. wqon, XI.NT oond.
546-4052 or 49C.QU. scll. S1400 or ofr. 546-5619 Nu ttreg, etc. ~ MUST
FOR Sale or trade for VW 1989 MUST ANG MACH I 351 SELL! 643-1628.
Bui -1969 Ford Country cu. in. Goodyear ttrn. U.s. '59 PLYMOUTH stat ion
Sedan. ,:Int oond, ps/pb, map. ~t cond, $2500. "ft&OO, good trans car.
air, .tettO Make otter, 673-.1000 Make ofler. 968-8269 after 5 ~ 646-7875, eve•· I O"O=-o~,.---,---1========= Mi.-5603. l96?i Muatana: -I cyl. con.
'65 LTD brd""' • na/pb, """' vertible, ps/pb, good cond. PONTIAC
"'Y ,,.... f'-• Good tiftl, 545-4867
windoWI, atr, new tires, I=...,,._~-,'------1--------1
,.dlo, ll:IOO. 644-55io atl '65 Auto, Im mac cond, only · '68 CA JALfNA
5:30 56,000 ml, Lv country, must
sell. 8J.1....6010 or 893--1626 • '62 GALAXIE 500 Fuli power. vinyl tnp, \11,
Convrt .... uto. Best offer '67 MUSTANG automatic, dlr, redio, heat.
takes. 133-3124 Convert. Clean. 613--2002 er. Fu 11 price fl~ (60-i * * '68 FORD Cntni Sq Wgn, MUST Sell '67 Mtata.ng·Lan· AFlJJ Will take Trade er fi-
tape deck, air, pwr, lo dllu $1150. P/$.RJH-s/S n.anoa Private J>&l'b'. «Mi· miles. $3645. 545-07'4 Good cond. M&-3529 aft • no«. '.--------;--· .,
• '
Bos LONOPR£
PONTIAC
1967 We expertly perform an Pontiac
warranty wor~ . . . regardless of
w h e r e you' originally purch1sed
your Ponti1c • • •
1968
1969
'70 1
Nobody mows your Pontioc better ti.in· Pontioc people
• • • Wt have been senin9, setvicing •ncl satisfying
Pontiac poople for over 25 yetrs • • •
SERVICE
FIRST
'
• ' f