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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-01 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesar ' • I• • ) .. . '- • > Newpo~t Rites for Salazar ' > • • I -·--e-0.iea-nos~-·Pieket-· ~at-·-IJCI I / • •Death P~ohe /-)De-JDanded· NEWPORT FUNERAL SET N1wsm•n Ruben S•luar i ~----.... ' .. TUESDAY AFTE1tNOON, SEPTEM9El lf, 1970 WOL. Q NO. •• I MCflOtill, a PMU • Protest to Nixon • ixe • I , Waitresses 'Liberated' . H k D . aw , ove From Ordaz Meal Duty Sh. · d . ow own CORONAOO -In the wake of Women's Liberation Day, 90 veteran "·aitresses learned they will u.ppartnUy be liberated from the chort of serving at the state dinner Thursday honoring Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Qrdez. They're not at all happy about. the switch replacing them with male wailers in gold uniforms. "We'Ve been getti~ ready for days,'' gaid IVY, Easley, 40, a waitress for 26 years. '''Many of us eVen bought expensive wigs. Aren't we good enough to gerve the President and his guests?" She said "Furthermore, most of us )lave chilcSr°cn at school whl are learning about f)emocracy and our way of doing things in America. How can we answer them when they ask, 'Is this deinocracy at·work?' " Tim Elbome, a·cteputy press secretary. 11aid "Slate dinners have always been served by waiters." He added that no final decision bas been made regarding waiters for the dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado. However a un1on spokesman said about SO waiters have been hired through the San Diego local or the Walters and Bartenders Union, AFL-CIO. <:out We•dter Coastal fog will cloak the beaches ln the morning, but sunny skies will ~eign through most of Wed- nesday , with temperatures running from 70 to as degrees. INSDJE TODA 'l' Moderate studentJ are 1trik- h1.g back on campuse.s acro.ss California. wtth ttre formation of "Frontlash ''10." See Paae 20. g::: VII ~ :.::.."= : ,....,.,.. t1-• or..,.. C.-tJ • ttll'lkt II h'l'+'lt l".n. If tl'ttawtnl U 1-" 1 .. 11 a,""1-ltt l'at• 1 Ii.di Mlll'tt... 1 .. 11 •11twt•l-RI U ,.......... It ,llltfl(9 1 .. 11 .,,....,.... " ... _ 14 '#-""" 4 """ M.,._ 14 ._..,, Htwa IJ.U rMI... • _,...... Ntwl w """'" '' • I The waitresses work six days a week and make $20 to $.1) in tips dwing their four-hour dinner ahilts. They stand to lO!e a day's wages. They said they have Wormed the Western White House, Gov. Reagan and several of the congressmen by telegram. If saUslaction is not forthcoming, they say, the next step ls a ·women's liberation group. 1 The guest list at the big ~plash inclµdes former President Lyndon It. Johnson and his wife, according to a hotel spokesman·. If they attend, it will be the second time in a year that the Nixons have entertained the Johnsons in California. The Johnsohs came to California for the fonner President's 6lst birthday la st year. Othef Presidential guesi.s at the hotel have included Harrj_son, Taft, McKinley, (See COBONAOO, Pap Z) Three Men ·Lost In Freak Mishap Ori Navy Craft Three Navy men apparenUy drowned late Monday in a freak accident aboard a landing craft engaged In underwater dem·oUUon work off San Clemtnt.e Island's Pyramid Head. Searches through the night by two Navy ships failed Iii turn up a trace ol lht thi;ee men ~ overboard .from the craft aft.r a winch broU, tbn>wlll& the sailors into the -. · Another crewman working in the test suffered a broken leg, but wu aved, Navy spoltesmen llld. All the names were still withheld thl1 morning as Navy per!OMd tried tq_ contact the victims' families. Tbt miWp, which occurred off the island about 60 miles from the mainland, sparked a searcb by the fleet tug U6S Chowanos-. The operations were soon joined by the aircraft carrier USS Ranger. , . -. The e1tensive surface tearch, aided by helicopt.n, continued until nightfall without lu{ninJ: up a trace " the mi n ing mea. •. · \ Ends Debate WASHINGTON (UPI) Jn a significant test of. sentiment, the ·Senala today refused to tie President Nllon's tiands by ordering him to end U.S. parUclpation in the· Vietnam war by a specific deadline. The vote against the Hatfield·McGovem amendment was 5S to 39. The hawk •s. dove lbowdown ended a protracted apd sometimes emot.iooal debate on the war issue and the pect1 • Nixon is setting in withdrawing American troops from Vietnam. AdvoCates or the: amend!nent held ll~e optimism of wiMing outright but bad hoped to make the score closer than It was. They bl key votes at the last hour. Two Republican "doves" -Sens. John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and Charles ' Perey of Illinois -announced opposition to the amendment on grounds It might undercut U.S. peace negotiation efforts. When the teo9ely waited roll call came. only seven Republicans joined 3 2 Democrats lo voUng for the proposal aimed at virtually compelling Nixon to get all American forcea: out or Indochina by Dec. 31, 1971. Voting to reject the proposai -as an amendment to a $19.2 billion military procurement bill -are 21 Democrats and ~ Republicans. The 1pectator galleries were about thfee.fourthl full as the vote _.,u taken. A num~ of young people were in attendance. There wu no audience reaction when the nsult was announced. The amendment had been expect.d to lose. ~ Final debat. be&an alter the Senat. convened at I a.m. EDT -the earliest meeting time in recent memory. In an emotional appeal, Sen. George McGovern j O.S.D.). CXHponoor ol tbe amendmenl, blamed the Stoat. for letllng the war go on and declared "in one Jehle, tbit chambu literally reeb of blood." In reply, Sen. John SieMls (0.Mlu.). a~ !hat tbe amendment wwld" "take away the .ll)'mbol ol our natloo - and tbat'a whit' the dUef enc.alive ii, the 1yrnbol or our nation.,. sen. Barry M. Goldwat.r (J\.ArlJ.) (Set WAI\ VOTE, Pqo ZJ I ., • 0 • ( I \ -ar ---CHICANO GROUP FORMS PICKET LINE AT UCI AFTER LOS ANGELES TRAGEDY Deeth Strikes in the City, 60 Prote1ter1 Merch on the Irvine Cempus Chicanos Picket Youth Meeting At UC Irvine By GEORGE 1.E!DAL ot 1111 Ptllr Plllt Sl•ff A group of 60 young Mexican·American youths picketed a Whi te !louse Youth C'A>nference at UC Irvine Monday. apparently tn reactlon ·to t,he,.death or newsman Ruben H. salazar during dlst.urbances Jn East Los Angeles over the weekend. A UCI spokesman said the group was ·rormed in Santa Ana Monday morning and bused to the Irvine campus where a preliminary White House conference on problems facing youth had been meeting slnce Saturda)r. .. J>lcketers carrying signs c a 11 i n g attenUon to th e· problems of Indian and Chicano youth gathered on Mesa Court about 1J:30 a.m. just ·prior to a (Set UCJ, P11e 2) Chicano Leaders Want Federal Probe Into Riot '" By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. D911J' ,lttt SllH ' Threatening more violence, Mexican· American leaders of Los Angeles County today dellj~ a i<!f!'al i>robe of a It million rk>t'the:t also cosl the life of one of their most widely-reap spokesmen. The ClticaJ\o chieftains were joined by otnclals at various levels of govei'runent. Los Angeles Time columnist and KMEX-TV news director Ruben Salazar, 42, or 3115 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana, was killed while covering the Saturday night demonslration ana rklling that followed . A 10-inch tear gas missile which can accuratlly pierce a ere-inch j>lne board at too yards tore through his head, after being fired from 15 feet away lnto the Sliver Dollar Cafe. • Spokesmeo for the Los Anceles Coonly Sheriff's Office refused to dlscuu tM fatal incident, which lncenled tile Chicano community that Saluar Wll dedicated. to help. · Otl\Oil'llf tlii!'Mr<>n \Vllltijer Boolo!nnl dil'fered in accounts of what transplrM compared to those Of depuUes at the ~ne. Authorities from other a I en e I es, includuding the International iUsoc:lation of Chiefs ·of Police and the manufacturer of the finned, combat·type m1sslle aaW Oley were appalled. The police r:hief's aMOClation manual on chemical agents expressly warns ag~inst using .t~em In crowd cootrel ar other than against barrtcade<l'crtmlnlls. Presidential Press "Secnitac:y Ron Ziegler announced at the Western While • (See PROBE, Pa1e Z) • I I • . 2 DAllY PILDT s Tueid•y, Stp\t/l'l.ber 1, 1970 • From Page 1 PROBE ... H~ in San Clemente ihat A&sl.Jtanl A~y General JerriJ Leonard Is In close .touch. Loi Angeles Count..y Sheri fr Peter J. Pitche~ said hi:i: department would wlthhold comment while the inve.sHpllon ls under ~·ay, but called for ev~ntual complete 'PUbJIC dlsCIOIUre O[ the facts. Congressman Edward Roybal ([).Los Angelesl and City Councilman Thomas Bradley demanded a prompl and thorough probe. • f:..os Ange les Counly Coroner Thomas Noguchi announced a public inquest will be held Sept. 10 into the slaying of the priz.e-winning newsma n. Inquests determine if death Is due tG accidental, negligent or crim inal means. Sidney Inna.!!, attorney for Salazar's wife Sally, announced she will file a $1 million suit charging wrongful death at 'the hands of law enforcement officers. Others in the barrios -which have been· fermenting wittl bitterness &0me authorities allegedly ignored -took up· the cry. Sala;ar ' himself predicted violence "1ould come if relief didn't. "We are deeply suspicious about the i::leath of Salazar," said an angry RosaliD Muoo.z, whci organized a rally tG protest the death rate o( Meiican-Americans In the Vietnam War. The Chicano Moratorium charges 20 percent of all combat casuallies is disproportionate to the number of that race.!Uvffig. ~ ~ - ,"The Of)e l)'lan whG could get our Ideas iicross through the mass media was .the one man killed by the 'sheriffs," said Munoz,. former UCLA student body president. Armando Rendon, who appeared with Munoz, charged the violence can be directly blamed an sberiff's deputies, an allegation promptly denied by Sheriff Pitchess. "Neither the march itself nor the assembly at its conclusion r:;,.re at any time peaceful," he said. · ·- But he did say the majority 7 ,000 to 20,000 persons · present a c t e d peacefully. Rendon, however, warned that tney rnay not stay that way. "We did not kill Ruben Salazar," he snapped. "We did not bust the heads of hundreds of youths. I would suggest if you want to talk about i:ioting, then you"d better start talking about police riots; •bout National Guard riots." 11fe National Me:icican-American Anti· Defamatio n League in Washington D.C. added support to Rendo!l 's 1llegations Monday. urging President Nixon to order tn FBI investigation . . Domingo N. Reyes, executive director, said H it is not forth.;oming he will ask (or a Congressional probe. . Authorities in Wash ington, meanwhile, gaid Jame$ Turner, aS!istant head of the Justitf: Department's Civil R l gll ts Division, has been sent lo Los Angeles to help. President Nixon's specialist on Mexican-American affairs, M a r t i n Castillo, arrived at the Newport.er IM by presidential helicopter Monday lo confer on unrelated matters. The East U>s Angeles rioting that left nearly 200 arrested 53, injured. and Salaiar dead. was presumably mentioned. however, said one aide. Tense 'Calm hung over the county are11 or East Los Angeles, Montebello, and Wilmington, on Monda y night, all~ough ·a few sporadic incidents of vandalism and looting occumd. The potential rioters are apparently waiting to see if t h e i r long-voiced demands and call for a pr:obe into the killing of Salazar are met. . Board Gets 'Breaks' • From Regular Meets Orange County supervisors wlll gel two days "off" this week and next \11eek, from formal sessions at least. Wednesday 's regular meeting has been cancelled because most board members will be at Mammoth Lakes attending a Uk:ounty conference on pollution and other subjects of the hou r. Next week A~mJsslon Day falls on the regular Wednesday date and so that session has been cancelled also. . .. DAILY PILOT , "...,.,. ..... 1 ..... lffclll CMM Mir•• H1111th1•••• IHcll F1111t1h1 Yelt.y S•• Cl_.,,. Rob1rt N. Weeol Pttt >Ornr Ind PuflHtlltf" J1t~ R. Curlev Vk l Pt"f• .,.M l~I ~ .... •11 Mlt110tt ,~ ..... , l<1t•il Eo1i.r Tl1t1"'"' A. M11rpki~11 l•hn1Ql"'9 Efllor 11:ch1rJ P. Nil! klYlll 0•1'1~' ("""'Y Edllll CMll Mtu: llD W11T 1 1¥ lltetl "'"""'"t 911c11: riu W111 l1lb01 l au_,. u911n1 e ..... , 111 l'ort1t A- Mu•l!lft9t"" 81tCll; lllU lt•rll l >u•t vlt<I l-11 (.Jemt'llt; JOI NOllll El Cl"'"'° lt1I OJ,lt.V PILOT. •II .. ....,k" h c.-."" 111.t N1 ..... -. 11 •ll•lleoll 1111¥ t•t ... I """ fl y M H1Mr11t' 1<11•-• ,., \.II'""'' l t..'<f\, Ni-; l11cll, CMll M .. 1. "11'11!•'f! ... 1ffCJO -"-""' V1lltJ, 110.,. wl\11 ,,... , .. ..,.... cfH_,,. 0--Coe" P~tl•tll• ... <-Y ""''llof pltfll• ••• ,, 1111 ....... , ........ •"""• lff-1 ltKI', 111 Ut WHI .. , •1r..i. c. .. ,.., .... 1 ......... 17141 642·-''21 Cl.alf*ll A4-tltlltt •42 ~671 5-f:l.-llM All ,,..,.,._h: T....., ... 492...4421 ~· ltlt, C'""'' (Ntl P119'1t111 ... ~'f• N1 ,......, tt .. t.1, llMt•I!•. ... ...,,,, ,...,,... ., ,, .... u-11 ,,...,.., f!ll't .. ,, ...... u. •""""'' •l'K .. 1 ..... '"'"-.. ., -""1 .......... ._...., clfH ,..,.,. M l• •I ='t l•Kll '"''""'" Mfw, (ll~lt. rl•I*' ly Ur,,., 12.M -llltf i W l'fllll U • -1111111 l'fllll1•"' ... 11ow11-•• , .• -lflly, -Largest Donation L~gu~a Hospital ., Gi~en $500, 10(\)0 By PAMELA HALLAN dollars to the new s 'a dJt"l e back -... ~01 ni. o.itr '"11•t-Sl•ll Community Hospital plaMed~for-haguna A well·wom raincoat, a few clothes In 11 Hilla. . . paper ha~ and a couple or collars were "We wanted to do somelh ing for our all B. R. Meriwether had when he left neighbors,'' s.aid Meriwether. who lives Georg ia as a boy nearly 50 years ago. wllh his wife in Leisure World, Laguna lttonday night he gave a half-million Hills. Rider Robbed Then Beaten Jn Laguna A hitchh iker hi Laguna S ea c h\ suspecled something wa s waing th is morning when·the camper he had entered began bumping along over a dirt road. He was sure of it when a rellow paMenger grabbed him around the neck in .a headlock. Police Lt. John Zelko said later that Durwood A. Phillips, 31, San Francisco, was kicked, beaten and robbed of $10 by five Jong-haired young men. The beating apparently occurred at Top of the World. Phillips was hitchhiking at the -~st corner. of Broadway. The camperO~id he would lake him to a·n all-night restabrant. Phillips entered the camper and found three young men In the rear. Alter the bumpy ride , Phillips asked where they were going. One of the men grabbed him . He broke loose and fled but was caught by"tbe five . "Try.to run agaJn and we'll kill you," one told him. Ph illips suffered cuts and bruises, ZelkG said. Sex Book Issued At NC College RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -A 31-page booklet with facts on sex is among the orientation materials available to students at North Carolina S t a t e University. The booklet. available upon request through dorm itory counselors . w a s prepared by the uni versity's division of student affairs. ' It contains detailed desc ription of !he biologi cal factors in\•olved in conception, methods of contraception, how to determi~ pregnancy, how to obtain a legal abortion. facts on venereal disease and other tnfonnation. Writer Dies Francois Mauriac, o n e of France's most eminent modern \vriters, died in· a Paris ho spi· tal Monday: A Nobel Prize win- ner. Maui-iac, 85 . \Vas called "The greatest French writer of our lime" by Charles De G·auUe. "The money can be used for anything the hospital wants. so long as It benefits geriatrics patients.'' Meriwether stressed the fact that the donation is not a legacy, bul is already in tne' bank waiting for the hospital which is scheduled to-open in 1973. To prove it, he brought his banker along . The donation, whi ch is believed tn be the largest'private donation ever made lo a medical faciijty in Orange County, is earmarked for a C e n t e r for GeronolQJogy, whicl'f M·i!J deal 'A-'ilh the afflictions of the aged. The proposed 256-bed hospltal will also have facilities for general, maternity, pediati:ic. emergency and out-patient Care and is ~Ing geared to meet tne health needs of a valley population or nearly 100.,000 by 1975. When completed, the· facility-will be manag~ by the Lutheran Hospital Soc- iety of Southern California. Frank Schaeffer. president of the hospital board , pointed out that a close liaison witll So u t h Coast Community Hospi tal is being maintained to avoid duplication of costly equipmenl and services. "We are extremely grateful to Mr. and 11-frs. Meriwetner for their generosity and their interest in Saddleback Commun ity Hospital." said Schaeffer, at Monday's dinner at Leisure World. "Their gift is deepl y appreciated not only for its medical significance but for the heartening impetus and support it gives our effort! to build a community hospital wh ich will render the highest .quality care to Saddleback Valley residenls of all ages." The Meriwethers settled in Leisure World 2.ft.er nea rly 30 years of world travel. Meriwelher, who began his~uccess in the sate prOmotion depar ' t of the !hen world famous John V nam11kcr Department Store in Ne ork ·City, joined the Arm y when orlsf-War I broke out. . I He was disablco and sen't to the Army General Hospilal in San Francisco where he met his wife. who was a nurse. "She was so popular, the paUents used to "'"·heel her around,'' chuck I e d ~1eriwether. After their marriage, the J\1criw_,{hers applied themselves to the business world for 10 years. then. in 1932 they decided they had made enough mone y and would take off around the world wherever their They ha ve been trav ever slnct., wh ims dlr"cted. ' cirCumnavigating the g three times in two years. From Page 1 UCI ... Earth is for Moving ) Bulldozer appears to be attackint parked earthmov-Nov. 15. Adjacent Lockheed Company property ls er at construction site near Jamboree Road and being used as "borrow site" for dirt fill material Palisades Road in Newport Beach. Project is an ex· for road extension. ... tension of-Jambcrree-Road-andrshould be compl-et"ed,i--- Family's Watson Loses; Court OKs Extradition NEW O~EANS (UPI) -A U.S. Stll Circuit Court or Appeals panel Monday turned down a req uest to stop the extradition of Charles "Tex'' Watson, a member of a desert hippie tribe accused or kill ing actress Sharon Tate and six others. (See Tate trial story, Page 4.1 Two female princi pals in the TatC- LaBianca murder trial going on in Los Angeles have tes tified Wa lson, 34, committed six of tlte seven murders. Bill s0ytl of McKinney, Tex., Watson's attorney, said since Monday's ruling was handed down by a three-judge panel he would petition for a rehearing before the rntire court. I-le said he had 14 days to file such a pctilion. If the circuit court turns down the appeal again, \\'alson "s last chance to avoid extradition to California would lie with the Supreme Court. \\latson has been in the Collin County J ail since his arrest lasl Nov. 30. He has fought extradition on the grounds he can not get a fair !rial in Califomia. Linda Kasabian, who turned slate's evidence in tile Los Angeles trial, testified during the trial that \\'atson committed the murders. Co-<lefendant Susan Atkins, 21. told a grand jury . that Watson killed five persons at lhe Tate home and she had been told he killed either Le.no LaB'ianca nr his wife the following night. She later recanted her story. The circuit court's ruling Monday upheld a lower court's ruling to deny \Yatson a writ of habeas corpus. Four MesaLatvmep,Pack For Bvnnie-Cl)·de Trial · Trial for Wee ml!h charged with the savage murder of a Colorado Springs pawnbroker began Mondfy and Costa Mesa pol ice who captured them last March are packing to leave and give testimony. Colorado author.ities have subpoenaed for detectives and given notice to another two to stand by to lravel in case their testimony is also needed. The trio -part of what was branded at the time a Bonnif and Clyde-style bandit gang -are flarged with first degree . murder and robbery. James E. Jackson, 25, of Independence. J\1o .. Jack C. Matney, 31. of Colorado Springs, and Howard T. Tschirhart, 32. of Costa .Mesa. were captured March 11 at 514 'h. Bernard SL. after I aw men surroijflded the sma ll home. They are on trial for 'their li ves. stemming from the bludgeon murder of Colorado Springs pawnbroker Erling Nielsen, 61. in l~bruary. Mrs. Patricia Pli1pps, 24, pregnant companion or Ja;.99n durlnj an alleged From Pagel WAR VOTE. •• cross-country crime spree, was charged "'"·ith a local burglary and is serving""Mme at Orange Count y Jail. Costa Mesa police received informaUon that the suspects might be in the arejl, since Tschirhart has relatives here. They were ordered out of the Bernard Street address -artcr leaving their guns in a car for the first time in two weeks - Rnd evidence connected to the Colorado Springs killing was found insid e. Detective Sgt. John Hegan, plus officers Ron Palmer, John Stoneback and Bob Arnold have been subpoenaed to appear and ~·i!l leave Wednesday. Detective Sgt . CliH McBride and Detective Roscoe Broad may also be required lo testify. · Broad is currently vacationing In Hav.·ail and \\"Ould be nown to Colorado and back along ~'ith the others at that slate"s expense. Fro1n J>age l CORONADO. •• Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Another guest is Omar Bradlr~·. retired five·star general of the army, Actor John Wayne is on the guest list as is jockey voted against the amendment but told his \Villie Shoemaker. Disc jockey Dick colleagues in final debate: "'This has \Vliittinghill o( Los Angele.'! is also invited. been a wrong war. We never meant kl win this war and ..,,.hen you don 't mean lo An estimated 100.000 prrsons are win a war, for God's sake don 't get into expected for a parade anrl Presidential H."" motorcade through this island city across Su pporters of the amendment had · from San Diego. modified the language in hope of gaining The White House has not conrirmed SO.YI.et Veis-sel support. that the PrcsidentS \\'ill tak" part in the conference luncheon. d b t th t d t The changes would have extended to para e. u ey are cxpec c o. . About 30 conferees including a Harvard withdrawal deadline fro m June 30 to Dec. The Coron arlo police force of 41 men law student and an unidentified New s u s Shi 31. 1971 , and would have given the ha~ been beefed up by about 2.50 other Orleans bishop mel with the pickets and 3Ve8 , o p Presflfe'ht an option of keeping troops in officer~. discussed representation of Chicano Vietnam for an arlditio nal' period of up tr\ They JI be on the lookout for a Yippie viewpoints at the final conference set for ~OSCOW fAP \ -The Soviet survry 60 days beyond Dec. 31 if he foun d lhem " I Youth '· n t ~r A at i on a 1 Party ) February in Washington. ship Sho kalsky rescued a storm -tossed: exposed to ··unanticipated clea r and rmonstration to protest federal Declining to join conferees for lun ch, American schooner that had been driftirlg prt.se nt danger." . / govemment anti·marijuana policies. lhe demon strators invited delegates to helplessly in the Indian Ocean for six In such a situatio n. he alSQ would have Diaz Ordaz. accompanil"d by his visit the barrios for a first hand look at days. the official ne"'-'S agency Tass been empowered to ask Congress to set a daughter. 1rill be given full military the •·problems ChiQ.nos face." a UCI rrported today. new withdrawal date. honors \\·hen he lands at the North Island spo kesman said. It said the del.ails were radioed to Supporters of the .proposal said it gave Naval Air Station just before noon. Nixon A few of the White. House Lask force VJ.arlivostok b~ Gcnnady Chubukov. Congress a chance to vote lo end the war \\'ill greet him. visited the Santa Ana barrios after lunch. skipper of the Shokalsky, arter he had as in effect they voted for White House The thrust of the ceremonial dlnner The peaceful demonstration broke up at aided three uniden lified American sea· authori ty to w11ge the Wjl" with approval anrl N1xnn's rccenL visit to Puerto va·J. 12 :45 p.m. r11 rcrs and towed their str icken yacht of the Gulf of Tonk in refolution in August, I.aria is strengthening relations between • The preliminary White House youth ~1arco Polo to Si nga po re harbor. 1964 . the two countries. conference drew 80 young people from Ir======'====================================, college campuses throughout the nation, 40 adull.S and 3U members of the conference staff for discussion of 10 "major Issues. such as narcotics, during the three-day C<1nference al UCI. The conference, held every 10 yearS since 1910, w<ls divided th.is ~·ear into two parts. A conference on children's problems will be held in Washington in December. and the final youth conference is scheduled for February, also in \Yashington. The UCI meel \\'as not sponsored by th e universi ty and was described as being preliminar)' to the final session. What's. • • ~y Line? · YOU WON'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDE_N 'S. • Unexpe~ted WE ARE MORE . INTERESTED IN DEVELOPlrQG LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WI LL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. J Man Overboard Tries for Madeira SOUTH,Ai\1P'l'ON. England IAP l - William Honcywill v.'Okc and found himself swimming in the Atlantic. He decided to mitke for J\tadeir11. He told his story on arr\vlnR today aboard the r30,000-ton Sou!h African llnt r S. A. Vaal. wh\cti rt.trieved him Friday 11 1, hours after he .fell off the shi p. Honrywil!, 2ft, a ceramics ('nginttr from Johannesburg. fell over the side shortly after the ship left the Canary Islands for Soulhampton . The impa t v.•l1h the Water knocked him unconsciou!'I. ··t recovered consciousne~s for 11bout five seconds and a v.· the tall end of thf' hoal dlsappe11rlng." he reported. "I thought to tnyself\ ·1 have f11lltn ever. M> I had bettor st11rt swimming.' Then I passtd ou t 11.1:1tin. '"I W(lkc up about & a.m. and found my5t.lf 1Ull doina .a aenU~ breast stroke. 1 \\•as !lurpriscd becau!'le I'm not a strong 5v.•imme.r. "I'm not a \'Cry good navigator. but I thought I n1lght be able to make !he J\lade ira coast. ''It was a beautiful morning . l thought if I v.·as going to dro\\•n I would go on a bright and beautiful morning. "But I thought there \ras !!-good chance of beink rescued ."' "'f~-11hip"s master, Capt. Alan Freer. ~ld the calm sea and fa ir sky were ideal for a search, bill .:"thi~ WB.$ not a matter of luck. II w11s due to the skill or our engineers 11nd our sk ill in calculat~ where he woulrl be. • "'I thou,1::ht v.·e would tlnd a bod.v." lhe captai n said. "I did not exprct lo find hin1 111ivl.':." A nPw sn1an asked H°®<'Y"'\fl If he fu1d • hf>~n drin king before ht r..-u ove~board'. "li-1ind your own business," he said. ' \'.'HEN WE DISC USS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD · HAVE TO " ' M 0 D E S T L Y ' ' ADMIT THAT WE HA VE THE LARG EST SELECTI ON S IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: Bl~ELOW, SERVEN . BEA TIIE, MAGEE, MONARCH , 8 AR WI c9K , MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG. .· SANTA ANA, OU.Nel TUSTIN C•ll • , • .6:LDIN'S llD HILL CAlPns • " DlAPlllU 11J74 1,,.111e, Titttl•, C911f, lll·JJ44 • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COST'A MESA 646°4838 I I I I I• s e c n ~ I< h p •1 H ., I • ~ a. It I< ti J • UI p: cl "' ~ ' • J '( c h• el F ., T· 0 It h ti F st p a cl I! " w OI .. c: b b • (I h II u • c p b • •u c k u s " " ·:nuniingion Beaeh E·DITION Today's Flnial N.Y. Stoelul 0 VOL 63, ~t09, 2 SE.CTIO~ ~8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS ' ------' Center Opens · Beach By TERRY COVILLE OI tM DlllY .. Utt SllH The communhy center opened today in ·Huntington Beach. There Was little fanfare as ·center leaders tried to avoid the controversial storm which knocked them out oI an empty grocery store on Main Street. But most of the reasons for the first controvmiy aren't present in thi.center's new location. · .Jt ls downtown, but at 309 Fifth Street ' • It ls not surrounded by shops. The center has also been separated from the proposed free ~11.n.ic and Help Line, primary targets of the opposition directed by downtown merchants. "Our main purpose is to serve the immediate community. This will not be a recreation center or a teenage hangout," John ,Holiday, -deputy director of the Community Action Council ( C A C ) , explained. The CAC sets up community cent.era throughout Orange County ind ll"ldes them through their activities. Holiday ts the man most involved with the Huntington Beach center. He said the new site ii smaller than the original, but would contain ,pnly the community center. 1be Help Une organization is still seeking facilities for a free clnnic. "We want the people and the merchants to know that we want the community center to be an asset, !IOt a War B-ill Defeated • Haivks Chalk Vietory Over Dove~ WASfllNGTON (UPI) -· In' a optimism of winning outright but had significant test of sentiment. the Senate hoped to ,make the score closer than it today .refused to tie President N1Jon's was. They lost key votes at the last hour. hands by ordering him to end U.S. Two Republican "doves" -Sens. John participation in the Vietnam war by a Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and Charles 1peciUc deadline. The ·vote against the Percy of Illinois -announced opposition Hatfield·McG<>vern amendment was 55 to to the amendment on grounds it might 39. undercut U.S. peace negotiation efforts. The hawk vs. dove showdown ended a When the tensely waited roll call came. protracted and sometimes emotional only seven Republicans joined 3 2 debate on the war issue and the pace Democrats in voUng for the proposal Nixon is setti~g in withdrawing American aimed at virtually compelling Nixon to troops from Vietnam. get all American forces out of Indochina Advocates of the alntndment held little; by Dec. 31, .191\ Life Term Ordered County Youth Admits ~illing in Market Heist I Jerry Let Johnson or Westminster forced their way into the Tic Toe Markel, today admitted that he.shot and killed the 9457 Heil Ave., last Feb. J3 and shot assistant manager of a Fountain Valley assistant manager James W. Oates, 57, or market and was immediately sentenced Garden Grove. · to a life term in state prison. Johnson was identified early in the Johnson, 18, or 14471 Titus St., offered investigation of the killing as the ma~ the plea as his Su_pe~ior Court trial before _ -who shot Oates through the hear~ Judge KeMelh W1lhams was abqut to get Immediately after the trio entered the . under way. store. The youthful.defendant also drew state One of Johnsan's companions in the prison terms for pleas of gullty to killing. Robert Woodrow Clements of charges of armed r?bbery and felony Westminster, was aentenced Monday by escape. Both terms will run concurren~ Judge Williams to a life term in state with the life sentence. prison. Johnson was one of three men who Clements, 22, of 14811 Alcester St., was Scientists Form Joh Protection 'Group in County Unemployed techoologjsts · in Orange County are forming an action group to halt what they call "the spiraling disaster effect" in the loss olgo:ver11.ment work. Twenty-eight men met Monday night .at Fountain Valley High School to write articles or incorporatio a for Technological Community Action Organization (TCAO). On Sept. 10 they have scheduled a meeting to take in new members. Interested individuals are invited to join tile group at a p.m., in the cafeteria of Fountain Valley High School. "We want to have a collective voice to stress the ills in the area whea all tbese people Jose their jobs," Frank G. Schott, a Fciuntain Valley resident and e1ecutive chairman of the group, said. . found guilly by a Superior Court jury last Aug. 12 of first degree murder and armed robbery. Prosecutors predicted today that a sim. llar guilty plea to reduce charges will be filed by the identified as the companion of Johnson and Clements in the Fountain Valley sbooting. It is expected that Herman W. Grant, 23, of Santa Ana, will be submitting his plea before Judge Williams later today or Wednesday. Board Gets 'Breaks' From Regular Meets Orange County supervisors v.;ill get two days "oU" this week and next week, from formal sessions at least. Wednesday's regular meeting has been can~lled because most board members will be at Mammoth Lakes attending a 10-county , conference on pollution and other subjects of the hour. Next week Admission Day falls on the regular Wednesday date and so that session has been cancelled 1190, Volin& to reject the proposal -as an amendment to a $19.2 billion military procurement bill -art 21 Democrats ind 34 Republicans. The spectator galleries were about tlu'ee-fourths full as the vote was taken. A number of young people were in attendance. There was no audience reaction when the result was announced. The amendment had been expected to lose. Final debate began after the Senate convened at a a.m. EDT -the earliest (See WAR VOTE, Paae 2) Beach Planners To Consider 2 Tall Towers Huntington · Beach planners w J 11 measure the city's future in tmu of. height tonight when they take a oeoond look. at two proposed ll·story towers in Huntington Harbour. The towers, plus four other high rise buildings which exceed the city"s . maximum 35-foot height limit, are part of a proposed Sunset Bay p'roject between Pacific Coast Highway and Huntiniton Harbour, north of Admiralty Drive. The plan'liJlg commission meets at 7 p.m. to consider this and other planning items. The Sunset Bay project is propMed by Real Property Management, Inc., a Beverly Hills rirm with large holdings in the Loni Beach Marina del Rey. Sunset hay plans call for ainstruction of an II-story apartment complex, an 11· story hotel, four three-story apartment un.ibl, a !our-story office building, and assorted shops and professional units. Real Property Management h a s designed a peninsula for part of the property, with apartments located on the peninsula and ~an 300 boat slip! in two newly dredged cbanpels. The two towers would be tht tallest build.inp in the city, unless commission- ers 8tso give approval for 1 16-story tower proposed by the First Chrisitian Chureh as a senior citizens comple:.:. The ch1D'ch tower, now being ltudied by city planners, is proposed for a 1ite at Adams Avenue and 17th Street and will come before the commissioners again Sept. IS. Controver·sy Avoided ' - liability, to the community.'' Holiday added. He outlined a few of the programs the center expects to provide: "We'll· need English classes, because there is a . large Me1lcan American populaUon in Huntington Beach. "We plan to have employment COUMeling and programs e1plaining job opportunities. , "Transportation systems, p e r ha p s volunteer drivers who can carry senior citizens or others to welfare ,department, health department, and other places, is a must. "We might establish a senior citizens program with outings to make them feel a part of the community. "The center will also provide classes in such areas as sewing, and filling out job applicaUo11.s. We wilnt to be in outpost to help peopJe find houSing or food, i! they need Jt." • 'Not So Peaeeful Scene • . "The whole pobit ol it Is to moblllle local resources to help people belp themselves," Holiday said. Holiday said the center would work from scratch for the first month until it is in run operation. "We need a c09rdinator to run the center, a bilingual coordinator f[Qm a poor_area," Holiday said, em~ that the center's work l5 directed toWard tSu CENTER, P'11e J) DAIL T PILOt ........... -A li&hl p11!>9 l!lxls •l!JI!( lhe runway.pt Meedowl!lrk .wport m an everyday iCme. But presently 8lllJOn is embroiled-in-controveny-w.ith~r.esidenU....alOnA; Heil Avenue, Huntington Beach, who charge that a.foot-addltlon to the runway ls causing planes-to land nearer homes. Special public bearing is set W .:30 o'clocLtonigbt at Commnnjf.Y. . Church. 6221 Heil Ave. I Orange County Tax Rate Set at $1.70-Up 3 Cents By JACK BROBACI\ Of ,._ D•lb' l"nM lhlff Orange County's 1970.71 property tax rate w1s set at $1. 70 this morning by the Board of Supervisors. The figure represents a three.apt increase over the 196S.70 rate or $1.67 per '100 assessed valuation. Faced with the need to absorb a deficit or almost $3 million because of a recent reduction in stale Medical aid to the county, the Supervisors decided to compromise and cut about $2 ·million out of the adopted county budget of $212 million. The $1.70 rate was suggested by Supervisor David Baker. He included in his motion, which . was I. o pt e d unanimously, that "the o u n t y administrative officer and e various departrrient heads find a way to cut the necessary $2 million out of the budget and report back to the board within a few weeks." The daciskln to peg the rate between last year's, ,1.67 and the $1 .75 figure which would haVe been reqtiired if no. budget cuts were made was vigorously opposed by the Orange County Chamber of Commerce. Clarence E. White and Robert Sigmund of the Chamber's governmental affairi committee urged the Supervisors to hold the line at the current rate, noting that assessed valuations of county property have gone up 17.6 percent. . "You can do like businesses have been forced lo do in the past year of tight fisca l conditions by i n c r ·e a s i n g productivity per man if you have to lay off some employes," White argued. Supervisor William Hirstein suggested that the $1 million beach acquisition fund in 'the adopted budget be elimffiated arliI that $600,000 be cut from other department budgets to meet the $1.70 rate figure. But Supervisor Robert Battin didn't agree. He urged that the entire $3 million be cut out of the medical center budget "because the center is the cause of all the trouble." Rookie Makes lJig Splash, Wins 3 Guard Awards Chip Rowe made a big. splash this summer as a rookie lifeguard for lhe city of HuntingtOn Beach. -80 MPH Clime End~ in Crash In Huntington An early morning chase· through central Huntington .Beach today ended abrupUy when the chased car smashed into a parked autorpobile. Officer Andrew Dickey said he began pursuit of the vehicle al 4:26 a.m. in the Five Points area when he received a call advising him that its driver was about to leave the scene or a minor accident. Racing through downtown streets at speeds up to 70 and 80 mph, Dickey was about to overtake the car when it collided with the parked auto at 6th and Main streets. The driver or the car, identified as Gary A. Flynn, 221 of 1985,....Berkshire Lane, was taken to fluntington lntercommunity Hospital for treatment or minor injuries. His passenger, 20.year old Vicky P. Durzenski, of 19775 Claremont Lane, was also treated at the hospital and released. Draft Bill Nixed WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tho , Senate rejected, 71 to 22, today Jegfslalion to e1empt draftees from duty in .Vietnam against their will. ' Schott said TCAO is concerned with technologists in aerospace, military an_d related induStries. "There are about 50,000 of us out of work ia California." Schott said. "Think or the effect that can have on the economy. Whet!. a man loses a job he can·t spend money heeded for other business." Sea Lion Deaths a Mystery Today he holds three top awards to prove it. They were given to him Friday night at the Huntington Beach Surf Lifesaving Association Awards Banquet. Sen. William Proxmire,, (J>.Wis.,) sponsor of the proposal, said draftees bore an unfair burden of deaths. aMI ca sualties in Vietnam -con\ributing 48 percent of combat deaths although comprlsing only 25 percent or the troops in Vietnam. Orange Schott said the purpose of TCAO would bt to "protect the professional status and economic welfare or its members." "We hope to gain a collective voice on this problem," Schott continued. "We hope to be Jn a position to be·critical of the effects of unemployment, to identify the problems and hopefully to offer solutlo"s." He said the names of 200 men in the county have already been submitted for possible membership. "Or111nge County is I.he headquarters, but we hope to spread to DClghbortng areas." One solution alrtady proposed b that "tht Small 8 u 1 i n.tts s Admlnistratlon COT\$ider· giving a priority_!!!_ busiMss loans to large aerospace areas hit by uMmployment. • "We plan to work on 0U1cr soluttcos,11 S<hott aaJd. Coast Herds Thinnirig But No Reason Disc~vered By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' .. .,..., .... ,,.., Sea lions have been dying in larger numbers than USUll th1a summer along the Orange Coast. according to Ille.guards in five coastal ciUes. No statistics are available as to the exact number ol animals that have died, but· lifeguards agree It's considerably higher than ln previous summers. The tint conclualon most people leap to is that the sea liOM are being killed by water pollution. 8111 Walktt. a marine biologist for t.1arineland. doesn 't agree. "Recent studies by Pt. Mugu Naval StaUon researchers aOO UC Santa Cruz and USC biologists indicate that neither DDT nor oil pollution have anything to do ~·Ith the deaths. ·M "In the past few yean the California 1ca lion populaUon has been lncreasing •l an alanning rate. Conditions a r e becoming very crowded as the herd becomes larger. "When thb hlppena, YOU get I higher rate of.... communlcible dlaeases, pu~ mortaiftJ and parasltivlty within the herds. "What we're seeing this summer on beaches from San Francisco to the Mexican border is normal mortlllty -a balancing of the natural ·size of the se1 lion populallofl." he explalned. The califomil sea lkm -the species In question ...., is one of the. more tntelllgtnt membo{I of the aeal family. Tbty ""' oftt.n .~n In toot and an regular altractlciM \n . most clttW<S. AlJhoUgh they are often called aeals, they are·not ..a lMle seal, but a sea Uon. Th! cat1:1e or death of the sea llon11 and the effect they hive on the popul1JI011 II difficult to determine Information on them In state Is somewhat sketchy. because their natural A study done by Bernie Buff of UC Santa Cruz and Bob Brownell of USC showed that oil pollutloh had no adverse affect on the 'animals, Walker stated. • "Tbey compared a group or sea lions that had greater than 40 percent oll covering their coats and a group lhat Md no oil. And the amazing thing was that the mortality. -rate was higher among the animals that had.no oil ." he noted. Wlllter said the aDimals. breed each summer on the Olannel Islands, with Qie cows each producing a single pup. • The mlgratorY. hlbllJ o! the sea lions are llOt compleltly undet'llood, he sa.ld. "It's • Mrd~thln11 to lludy ... w, would have to eoordin1t.e and collect d1ta from 8an Fra.nclaco to Mexico,'' W11Ur said. I• ... Rowe first collected a national award for winning ihe run..swim-run aintest at ' Santa Barbara in competition with 1r o the r lifeguard .associaUons. Then he took another national award for a fourth place fin1sh in the 1,000..meter swim at Venice Beach. But the big award came when fellow guards named him rookie of the year as the best or 26 lifeguards new to tbe ctty thit summer. Atotal of 97 lifeguards and their dates , pluii sever81 meinbers of the city council and tity start attended the banquet, held in Ufeguard headquarters. Two other national awards were • handed out for oompelitk>n events. Doug Kirk reodved reoognlllon for llnlshlng fifth ln the run-swtrn-run at Santa Barbara, while Raymond Bray won an award. lot. his third place !lnlsb In the Iron "1an event where he . paddled. a paddle boa~ 11'1111and..Wed1 dory. I • • We•ther Coastal fog will cloak the beaches In the morning, but sunny skies will reign through most of Wed· nesda y, with temperatures runnin& from 70 to 85 degrees. INSIDE !ODAY Mode ratt student,, ate strik· Ing back on camp 11.3e1 across CaUJornla 1otth th e formation of "Frontlasfl '70." St e Pagt 20. C11l"'°'"' ' M1tMI ,_. " """""'" ' "'"..., ,.....,. ., t1Mt111M )1·2' OfWIM (-fY • '""'" " ''""" ........ " ,,.. .. ..,.. .. """' , .. 1 • l•!Mtlll ..... • '*'' MtrUtl 1•11 lllltrt•I~ " T ... ¥kifli It ·--lf.11 ........ " .. _ ... " WNltlft • ..... l•tllle,. " WNMll'I fttWe l .. lt ..... ~ • --.. ..... " ------------- --------• ----,------------------------------ \ ' .. ' ·- .. ;\.. I •' ' ~ I : W rlte r Dies Francois Mauriac, on e of France's most eminent modern writers. died-in a Paris bospi· ~· Monday. A Nobel Prize win- ner, Mauriac. 85, ·was called -· .. The-greatest F rench writer of our time" by Charles De Gaulle. 3 :~Navy Men Drown Off Coast 'I11ree ·Navy men apparently drowned )ate Mon4ay in a freak accident aboard a Janding • craft engaged in underwater ~emolition · work off · San Clemente Island'• Pyramid Head. · Searches through the night by two Navy ships failed to turn up a trace of the ' three men swept overboard from the craft .after !I winch broke,· throwing the sailors into the sea. Another crewman working in the test suffered a broken leg, but was saved, Navy spokesmen said. All the names were still withheld thit momJng as Navy personnel tried to contacf the Vtctinis' families, The mishap, which occurred off the \sland.about 60 mileS from the mainland, •parked a search by the' fleet tug USS Chowanos. The operations were soon joined by the aircraft carrier _USS Jlanger. -'~ • ' The e1tensive surface search, aided by -,re11tOpters-. -conttnue-r-untU lgt\tra11-,wiutout turllfq: up I fri.ce of the misi:ing pleD,I"'-' ! ,. Marine Ordered tTo Face. Hearing ( ~n Baby's Death , ~ A young A:U.tlngton BeaCh Marine Who ~flegedly c~used the death of a one-year· lild baby by feeding him cocktails has )een ordered to face arraignment Sept. j8 i~ Superior Court. !. Judge Samuel Dreizen set that date for SJle plea lo be offered by Gary W. Rapp, ''· of 2222 Dtlaware. SL . Hutitington j3each. The present charges have been Jeduced from the murder count first filed fY HuntiP1gton Beach'pollce last July 24 . :; Rapp .and Mrs. Carmelita L. Reynolds tp( the Delaware Street address were ar· Ested shortly after her son, ·r-.1yron, died acute alcohor poisoning. Investigators id the evidence available indicated ~a't the baby had been fed a number of ~ktails in the hours preceding his lllleath. t Mrs. Rey.1olds \\'as later released. tt ~as stated in·munfcipaJCourt that she is ::S barmaid in a Beach Boulevard tavern ~nd she' left her infant son in Rapp's care ;a!_ur=.cin~g~h~e~<_w~o~r~km:;::.g~ho~u='~'~·~~~~ ~r • .. , • .. i: DAILY PILOT O!l.AljG~ co.t.1T PUILl~f-4\NG COMP .. NV' Robtrf ~-Wttd Pr .. klfl\I fl\CI Pufh•I"" Jtck 1t Cv•I•'( Vici Pr,.ldtn! or.d .:.1.,~••I Y.ontq1r Tholl'l•I K•1•il • Ea110r 1~1111'1•1 A. M ~r phi~t "'""0;1nt Eo<fO• Al~n Oirki~ W1-1! Q,on;t (0""'1 Ed••or ' ,t.lb1•I W, !0!11 t4 y11tl"tto11 flt~h Offitt 17175 B11 c~ B o~l ••••d M1il+11t Adlll1.1t1: P.O. lor 7•0, •11141 Otll1r Offi11n l•O~NI ll11c~· '2) ~O·••' ... ,..u• Ce)lt Mt11 Ull we~• ll~v s••to• · • • .,."'"', 111(.11: n 11 W~I II• oo• ll:>ul•••"' itn C1t,,...,.11: lW Not1~ El Ct"'••o lltt l • ~ppeal Rejeet.e4 • • • -. . . ,. Family's Watson . . Extradition Due NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - A U.S. ~Ill Circuit Court of Appeals pinel~Monday turned dowh a request to, stop the extradition of Charles "'fex" Watson, a member of a desert hippie tribe accu sed or killing actress Sharon Tate and sir-- others. (See Tate trial stor}\, Page 4.) ·'Two female principals in the Tale· LaBianca murder trial going on in Los Angeles have testified Watson, 32., committed six Q/ the seven murders. Bill Boyd 'of McKinney, Tex., Wat.son's attorney, said since Monday's ruling was handed down by a thr.ee-judge· panel be v.•ould petition for a rehearing before the . entire court He said he had 14 days to file such a petition. If the circuit court turns down the appeal_ agajn, Wa.Lson 's_la~t chance j-0 avoid extradition to California would lie with the Supreme Court. Wat.son has been in the Collin County Jail since his arrest last No11. 30. He has fought extradition on the grounds he can not get a fair trial in Cali!omia. Linda Kasabian, who turned state's evidence in the Los Angeles trial, testified during the trial that Watson committed the murders. Co-defendant Susan Atkins, 21, tokl 1 grand jury that Watson killed five persons at the Tate honfe and she had been told he killed either ~no LaBianca From Pqe 1 WAR VOTE. •• or hi! wift the following night. She liter recanted her story. The circuit court's ruling Monday upheld a lower court's ruling to deny Wat.wn a writ of habeas corpus. ··- \A gnew Joins President In 'Clemente By RICHARD P. NALL 01 111ti 0.llY Plltf $1.,1 Vice President Spiio Agnew cut short his Asian mi9sion to join Pretldent Ni1on in San Clerne~te today for a-National Security Council JneeUng on the Middle Ea!:t. The vice president shorte ned his stay in Honolulu by one day -cancelling a golf match -to deliver a personat- assessment of his 11-day Asian tour of Cambodia, Vietnam, Taiwan, SoutJt Korea and Thailand. The President reportedly w a 1 especially anxiou.s to learn more of Agnew's conversations with Cambodian Premier Lon Nol and his view of the chances of his coonlry'1 survival under communisL attack. The President, Agnew and t o p diplomatic and military adviJers also will assess the strained Middle East cease fire. .-v• Israel is in the midst of "a very bitter argument" with the U.S. over Istaeli charges of alleged cease flre violations by Egypt. according to Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir. It has been charged that Egypt' violated the agreement by moving SAM missile bases closer to the Suez Canal. meeting time ln recent memory. In an emoticinal appeal. Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D .. ), co-sponsor of the amendment, blamed the S'enate !or Jetting the war go on and declared . "in one sense,· this chamber literally reeks of bk>od." In reply, Sen. John Stennis (0-Miss. ), asserted that the amendment would "take away the symbol of our nation - and that's what the chief executive is, the symbol or our nation." The U.S. has maintained that it could not verify such charges conclusively before setting up elaborate electronic surveillance in the area. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R·Ariz.) voted against the amendment but told his colleagues in final debate: "This has been a wrong war . We never meant to wlil this \l'ar and---w~en you dorft mean to win a wai', for God's sake don't get into it." . Supporters of the amendment had . m,Odif~d the language in hppe of gaining 1upporL ' The changes would have extended to withdrawal dlillldline from June 30 to Dec. 31, 1971, and would have given the President an option of keeping troops in Vietnam for an additional period of up. to 60 days beyond Dec. 31 if he found them exposed to "unanticipated clear and present danger." In such a situation, he also would have been empowered to ask Congress to .aet a new withdrawal date, 1 Supporters of the proposal said it gave Congress a chance to vote to end the war as in effect they voted for White Houle. authority to wage the V.'IC with approval of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution in August, 1964. These attending today's San Clemente top-level session included Secretary of State William Rogers ; David Packard, deputy defense · secretary ; Richard C. Helms7' -director of the C e n t r a I Intelligence ,Aaency ;: }fenry ' Kininger, National Security Affairs Adviso~; Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; and Joseph P. Sisco, assistant secretary •of Statel'1or Middle East Affairs. Prisoners Flee South Vie t Camp; 11 Shot Down ~AIGON (AP) -Forty prisoners of war escaped from a prison detail on Phu Quoc Ishmd Monday after killing one of their South Vietnainese guards and wounding another, lSee War Story, Page 4) Nine of the prisoners were killed and two wounded in a gun battle, but 29 were still at lltrge today, Sout)l Vietnamese headquarters announced. A spokesman said he did not know whether the prisoners were North Vietnamese, Viet Cong or both. He sa id there are more than 20,000 in the Gulf of Murphy Meets Newport Backers During Luncheon -Siam just off the southwest coast of Vietnam. U.S. Sen. George f\-lurphy lR·Beverly Hills ), met v.·ith some ~ key Newport Beach suppOrters f\londay following his conference with President Nixon at the Western \Vh'ite House in San Clemente. The senato r ate lunch at the Irvine Coast ·Country club with some of the city's bigger cont ributors after 11 half· hour private briefing session with the President in the morning. After the briefing. the two strolled on the back lawn of Nixon's San Clemente retreat and discussed tbe senator's Israeli trip for newsmen. Murphy sPoke for about 15 minutes before the Newport group and expressed optimism that, "a permanent peace can be reached in the Middle East." • There had been no advance publicity or Murphy's appearance in Newport Beach, although it apparent!~ had be e n scheduled well in advance. . 7 Hospitalized In Ga s Leakage ATLANTA. Ga . (AP ) -Seven persons were taken to hospilals, thr~ of them in poor condition. Monday night when cholorine gas leaked from a tank truck on Interstate 20 and about 17 miles east of here, A spokesman at G[ady Hospital in Atlanta sald the three in JX,or cond!Uon • included a firerrlan, 11 truck driver and 11 passerby. All had inhaled the gas. the spokesm:\n said. Sevf'.rfll hourli after the lnctdent traffic had returned to normal. There was no evacuation of residents ln the area. although officers first r'J)Orted thtY ~emoved residents. GAS expcfts from Third Army... headqu,11rters ;t fnrl f\lcPherson tn Atla.nt,11 v.·ert sent to tht sCene to assist local law enforctment orflcer1. A communique said the prison break occurred late Monday afternoon while South Vietnamese navy men were bringing the -40 prisoners back to the prison camp in a truck from a work detail at -e~navy base. Some of the prisoners seized the sailors' weapons half a mile from the camp, killed one of the guards and wounded ar.ofher. Military police rushed from the camp to the scene, and the prisoners attacked them. the commQnique continued. "The military police returned fire and killed nine prisoners and wounded two others. Twenty-nine prisoners escaped and took along a small ann.'' \T olatile 'Liquid Triggered Blast I_n Anaheim Shop The explosion which did an estimated $100.000 damage to 11 neighborhood shoppln~ ccn,l,er: in An~hei!11 Sunday night was 1gnlled l:iy a volatile hquid which had the .t11tensity of 10 slicks of dy namite. Fire department investigators said today the nammable liquid. which they decllned to Identify, w11s poured t.hroughout the J & M Auto P111rts. 11278 s. Magnolia Ave. A witness told police he saw two men tnside. the parts store removing 10011 from display cases sh<irtly btfore the blast and 111 sl•tion wagcm parked at the rear of the establishment: A few seconds after the b11st tore tbe stort to bits, the station •a:on sped away, the witnes~ rtlated. Police described the area f\-!onday is resembling a scene after an 1ir raid. Eight store~ Jn the small cente.r wer' atverely d11m,11ged. • I What's Gnu? From POfl" l CENTER ...• Ute j>OOr, no matter ~hat race or creed. The center ls expected to be open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The hours may ctlangt when the program becomes more Involved. Specific activities qi the center are ' decided · by a local a:oVerning-board , currently headed by • Ro~rJ Rivas, president. . ---Other members of the exeeut.lve board -.;.,_,.. are Liborio Garcia, vice president; \. M~ruka Fujita , secretary, and . My~Ue .. ~-.. SUnson, treasurer, . , . " "The center has filed corporation . ; ;f papers in Sacramento. It's jll.9t a matter , ' now of waitlng for a tax exemption ,. -. • · before it is a full non-profit organiza· , .. • . I • •· t1on." Ho Jdax..J!id . The City of Hunting~ Beach has agreed to put up $100' a month for the rent whJ\e the CAC pays $90 a month for rent. $15 a month for the phone bill and pays the coordinator's salary. "We hope to put It on a selr-sustaining basis in time," Holiday added, "Through donations and projects.'' In case questions or complaints should arise, Holiday asked that he be called at 835--0505. "I'll answer any questions anyone has. ,We want people, all people, to become _ in vQlved with the comrnllJllty center." A 35-pound ba~y gnu, that's what's gnu. Shels receiv ing visitors at the San Francisco zoo where she was born last week. The infant's mother, Louise, shows her youngster how to put her best foot for- ward as they erucise d.a.ily C!t the zoo. Sen. C~rpenter's Father, 65, Dies Druing Vacation Coast Man Fou1id Dead At Hotel _in Huntington Newport Beach police today are investigating the strangulation death of a Newport man whose body was found Monday morning in a McFadden Place hotel room. Investigators estimate Bert Ernest Wido\f, 55, had been dead approximately a week when his body.was discove red by the hotel maid . The maid, Myrtle Hu!D phrey, told detectives she last saw Wido!f alive a week earlier, She discovered his body lying across his bed in the small rom when she went to ask why his trash cans hadn 't been moved. Detective Sam Amburgey said an autoesy revealed the man had died of Kris Dixon Quits Personnel Post At Ocean View Mrs. Kris Dizon has resigned as chair· man of the Ocean View School District Personnel Commission. She will be mov. ing to nort~ern California with her lam· ily. Mrs. Dixon. who has served as a commissioner since December, 1967 has chaired the three-man board for a year, The commission administers the merit system for school employes and serves as an advisory group to the school board in matle,rs concerning the non-teaching staff. Superintendent Clarence Hall said the appointment tc> fill Mrs. Dixon 's unexpired term is for tv.•o months. The successful candidate may be reappointed Dec. 1 for a three·year term. Application forms may be picked up hv registered voters at the schools office. Beach Boulevard at Warner, Huntington Beach. 847·2Ml. They must be returned by Friday, Sept. ll. Interviev.•s will be conducted Sept. 15. strangulation, but noted the cause of strangulation has not yet b i e n determined. "Right now "'·e're trying to gather some information on his background," Amburgey said. "We know he was childless and divorced, and he had lived in Newport for four or five years. He had been living in the hotel since April." the detective said, \Vidolf apparently did odd jobs on boats and had recently done cabinet work in some local residences. "\Ve dc>n't know wher'e he did the cabinet work, but ·we are trying to find out," Amburgey said. Sex Book Issu ed At NC Colle ge RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A 31-page booklet with facts on sex is among the orientation materials available to students at North Carolina S t a t e University. The booklet. available upon request through dormitory counselors. w a s prepared by the university's division of student affairs. .. It contains detailed description or the biological factors involved in conception. methods nf c6ntraception, how to determine pregnancy, how to obtain a legal abortion, facts on venereal disease and other information. Aussies Ba r Gregory CANBERRA. Australia {AP) ~ The gpvernment has barred black comedian Dick Gregory from coming to Australia to participate in an anti·Vietnam war moratorium in Sydney this month. Immigration Department officials said today. Authorities refu sed to say why his request for a visa had been refused. What's. • • • Frank Henry Carpenter, father ~f recen!ly elected State Senator Dennis Carpenter 1.R'-Newport Beach), died Saturday while on vacation in Hailey Idaho. lie was 65. · ' Funeral services v.·ere held this afternoon at the Pacific View Mortuary Chapel in Corona de! Mar with the Rev. Burton F. Giese officiating. Burial follov.·ed at Pacific View Menlorial Park. Mr. Carpenter is survived by his wife Helen, of the family home, 2260 B Via_ Puerta, Laguna Hills; two sons, Dennis, a~d Donald Carpenter of San Gabriel; a sister. ri.trs. Ruth Young of Sunland and six grandhcildren. ' A native of Grand Forks, Minn .. Mr.' Carpenter taught physical education at sever§l Minnesota schools, until coming to California with his family 22 years ago. After coming to California. he served as assistant recreation director for the city of Burbank, then later became recreation supervisor for the city of Torrance. From 1953 until his retirement in 1969. Mr. Carpenter served as Director o( Parks and Recreation for the city of San Gabriel. After retiring, he moved to Leisure World . Mr. Carpenter was active in the. Southern California f\1unicipal Athletic Federation, Kiwanis, and the Masons. He was a member of the Abiding Savior Lutheran Church of El Toro. The family suggests ,contribution! to the Frank B. Carpenter Memorial Fund al the Ct1urch of the Abiding Savior, El Toro. Teachers Gather For Beach Meet About·800 teachers, student leaders and guests are expected to attend the ninth annual' convocation of the Huntington Beach Union High School District Thursda y Sept 10. The convocation. set fbr 9 a.m. in the Huntington Beach High Sc hoo I au~ilorium, will feature Vick Knight, ass1s\anl superintendent of educational services for the Placentia Unified School District. as guest speaker. Faculty meetings will be held Sept. 8. 10 and 11 to complete plans for the opening of school Monday, Sept. 14. My Line? YOU WON'T BE FED ANY·. LiNES AT ALDEN'S, ' WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS THA_N MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT Will BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS . WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST LY" ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, BERVEN, BSATII E, MAGEE, MONARCH , BARWI C K, MOHAWK, ROXBUR Y MIL~IKAN , ARMSTRONG. ' SA PolTA AMA, OU.Mii TUSTIN Cell ,,. ALDIN'S 110 MILL CA.,m & DIA,lllD 11174 ll"lhM, Tnth1, Cellf. tJl.JJ44 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. .. COSTA MESA 646-4838 .' ' We be th• Mo SW in sa: ye -ex '" ha ab thi th• at sai '" I be. dir I 50 Sa Ba an fol lo,<; • . w. se• If sa: gn • IOI hi~ I tin '"' Th fol ye. ' ha Wi fiv w. Wi WI in• ex m• fr< Ill• p~ ha ofl " - -- CHl9'NO GROUP FORMS PICK ~ LINE AT UCI AFTER L.OS ANGELES .TRAGEDY Death Strikes in the City, 60 Protesters March on the Irvine Campus ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. ---.. -_ :_i __ _ Tuesday, Stpttmbtr 1, 1970 DAILY l'fLOT 3 Riot Probe Demanded LA Mexicans Xhreaten More Violence By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of IN Dttl\' "lltl SUH Threatening more violence, Me:dcan-' American leaders of Los Angeles County ~y-deman~ftderal-probe--Of...a..$1 million riot that alio cost the life of one ' . of their most widely-read spokesmen. The Chicano chieftains were joined by officials at various levels of government. Los Angeles Times columrlist and KMEX-TV news director Ruben Salazar, 42, of 3115 S. ruta Way, Santa Ana, was killed while covering the Saturday night demonstration and rioting that follow~. A 10-inch tear gas missile which can accurately pierce a one-inch pine board at 100 yards tore through his head, after being fired from 15 feet away into the Silver Dollar Cafe. the Vietnam War. The ChJcano Moratoriwn chargea 20 percent of all corribat · casua1ties Is disproportionate to the number of that race serving, •nie-one-nrarrwbcr tOUtd ·ger our1 deas· across• through the mau media was lhe one m11n killed by the s~riffs," said Munoz, former UCLA student body president. \ Armando Rendon, who appeared with Munoz, charged the violence can be directly blamed on sheriffs deputies, an allegation ·promptly denied by Sherif( Pit chess. "Neither the march itself nor the assembly at its conclusion were at any time peaceful," he said. But he did say the majo~ity of the 7 ,000 lo 20,000 persons present a c i....e d peacefully. Spokesmen for the Los Angeles County Rendon, however, warned that they Sheriffs Office refused to discuss the may not stay that way. fatal ipcidenL, which incensed the "We did not kill Ruben Salazar," he Chicano . communit)' that Salazar was snapped. "We did not bust the heads of dedicated to help. hundreds of youths: I would suggest if Deramatlon !.<ague In Wuhlngloft D.C. added support to Rendon'a .U.1ations Monday, urging PresldenfNbon 10 order . an FBI lnvesUa:a~n. . Domingo .N. Reyes, executive dlredor, said' If it IJ ... not-10~ 'bl--wtU-ut·- for a Congreuional ~· ·Autholitles tn Washington, meanwhile, said James Turner, aasistant held of the Justice Department's Civil Rish t ~ Division, has been sen\ to Loi Anaeles tci; help. President Nixon's 11peciallJt on Mexican-American affairs, M a. r t l D Castillo, arrived at the Neltporter IM.by presidential helicopter Monday to confer on unrelated matters. The East Los Angeles rioting that left nearly 200 arrested 53, injured, and Sala~r dead, was pre1um1bly mentioned,.however, said one aide. · Tense calm hung over the county am or East Los Angeles, Montebello, ~ Wilmington, on Monday night, lltbough a · few sporadic incidents of vandlliam llld looting occurred. Waitresses Won't Serve Chicanos Picket_ Irvine ' Others in the bar on Whittier Boulevard yoU want to talk about riotlJli, then you'd-· differed in accounts of wlia t. transprred-tietter srart-tllkinnli~Ut}iil)lree---nOti; compared to those or deputies at the about National Guard riots." The _J>Otentlal riot.en are ·apparenlly waiting to .,. ir I ti·elT'liilil·VO!Oi!!----l~ demands and call for a probe into, the State Din11er CORONADO -In ·the wake of Women's Liberation Day, 90 veteran waitresses learned they will apparently be liberated from the chore of serving at tbe· state diMer · Thursday honoring Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. They're not at all happy about the switch replacing them with male waiters jn gold uniforms. "We've been gettin~ ready for days ," said Ivy Easley, 40, a waitress fOr ' 26 years. ''Many of us even bought . expensive wigs. Aren't we good enough to serve the President and his guests?" She said. "Furthermore, most of us have children at school wh > are lea ming about democracy and our way of doing things in America. How can we answer them when they ask, 'ls this democracy at work?' " Tim Ellxirne, a deputy press secretary, said "State dinners have always been served by waiters." He added that no final decision has been made regarding waiters Jor the dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado. However a union spokesman said about 50 waiters have been hired Utrough Ute San Diego local of the Waiters and Bartenders Union, AFL-CIO. The waitresses work six days a v.•eek and make $20~to $30--in tips durin·g their four-hour (linner shifts. 'They stand to Jos~ a day's wages. They said they have informed the Western White House, Gov. Reagan and several of the congressmen by telegram. If satisfaction is not forthcoming, they say, the next step is a women's liberation group: The guest list at th'e big splash includes Former President Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife, according to a hotel spokesman. If they attend, it will be the second time in a year that the Nixons have entertained the J ohnsons in California. The Johnsons came 'to California for the former President's 6lst birthday last year. Other Presidential guests at the hotel have included Harrison, Taft, McKinley, Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Another guest is Omar Bradley, retired five-star general of the army. Actor John Wayne is on the guest list as is jockey Willie Shoemaker. Disc jockey Dick Whittinghill of ·Los Angeles is also invited. An estimated 100,000 persons are expected for a parade and Presidential motorcade through this island city across from San Diego. The White House has not confirmed that the Presidents will take part in the parade, but they are expected to. The Coronado police force of 41 men has been beefed up by about 250 other officers. White House Youth Meet By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 11!1 ~llY "iltt Ii.ff A group of 60 young Mexican-American youths picketed a White House Youth Conference at UC Irvine ·Monday, apparenUy in reaction to the death of newsman Ruben H. Sal.azar during disturbances in East Los Angeles over the weekend. A UCI spokesman said the group was formed in Santa· Ana ~fonday morning and bused to the Irvine campus where a preliminary \\'bite House conference on problems facing youth had been meeting since Saturday. Picketers carrying signs ca 11 in g attention to the problems of Indian and Chicano youth gathered on Mesa Court about" 11:30 a.m, just prior to a conference luncheon. About 30 conferees including a Harvard law student and an uniden tified New • * * * Hundreds Pay Salazar Tribute Orleans bishop met with the pickets and discussed representation of Chicano viewpoints at the fil'la l conference set for February in Washington. Declining to join conferees for lunch, the demonstrators invited delegates to visit the barrios for a firs t hand look at the "problems Chicanos face," a UCI spokesman said. A few of the \Vhite House task force visited the Santa Ana barrios after lunch. The peaceful demonstration broke up at 12 :45 p.m. "' The preliminary White House youth conference drew 80 young people from college campuses throughout the nation, 40 adults and 3(1 members of the conference staff for discussion of 10 major issues, such as narcotics, during the three-day conference al UCL The conference, held every 10 years since 1910, was divided thi s year into two parts. A conference on children's ..proble ms will be held in Washington in December, and the final youth conference is schedtdeti WI' February, also in Washington. · The UCI meet was .. not sponsored by the univ ersity ~nd was· described' as being preliminary to thertnal session. scene. The NaUonal Mexican-American AnU4 \ Authorities from other a g e n c i e s • killing of Salazar are met. i'11clududing the International Association of Chiefs of E:olice and the manufacturer of the finned, combat·type missile said they were appalled. The police chief's association manual on chemical ·agents expressly warns against using them in crowd control or other than against barricadetl criminals. Unexpe~ted Swi111 , Presidential Press Secrethry Ron Ziegler announced at the Western White Man Overboard Tries for. Madeira Jlouse In San Clemente that Assistant SOUTHAMPTON, England (AP) - AtlOl'RfY General Jerris Leonard is i"n William Honeywill woke and found ~lose touch. himself swimming in the Atlantic. He Los Angeles County Sheriff Peter J. decided to make for Madeira. Pitchess said his department wou ld withhold C<lmment while the investigation He told hi s story on arriving today is under way. 'but called for eventual aboard the 30,000-ton South African liner • complete public disclosure or the facts. S. A. Vaal, which retrieved him Friday Congressm~n Edward Roybal (D..Los 111n hours after he fell off the' ship. Angeles) and City Councilman Thomas HoneywiU, 2.8, a ceramics engineer Bradley demanded a prompt and from Johannesburg, fell over the aide thorough probe. shortly after the ship left UJe Canary Los Angeles C1Ct"hty Coroner Thomas lsl~ds for Southampton . The impact Noguchi announced a publ~ inquest will ·with the water knocked him unconscious. be held Sept. 10 into the slaying of the "I recovered consciousness for about prize.winning newsman. fi ve secon<t,.s and saw the tail end of the Inquests determine if death Is due to boat disap"pearing," be reported. "I accidental, negligent or criminal mea ns. thought to myself, 'l have fallen aver, so Sidney Irmas, attorney for Salazar's 1 had better start swimming.• TIM!n I wife Sally, announced she will file a $1. passed out again. J1).illion suit charging wrongful death at "I woke up about 6 a.m. and found the hands of law enforciment officers. myseU still doing a gentle breast stroke. Others in the barrios -which have I was surprised because I'm not a strong been fermenting with bitterness some swimmer. authoritfes allegedly igno~d -took up "I'm not a very good navigator·, but 1 11te ship's m1ster, Capt. Alan Freer, said the calm sea and fair sky were ideal for a search, but "this was not a 1natter of luck. It was due to the still of our engineers and our skill in e1lculatbW where he would be. "I thought we would find a body," the. captain said. "I did not expect to find him alive." ,... A newsman asked Honeywill lf be bad been drinking belore he fell overboanf "Mind your own business." he said. Soviet Vessel · Saves U.S. Ship . ' Hundreds of Oiicanos today began E l • R • the cry. • thought l might be able to make the -filing by the-casket-of-columnist Ruben --xp OS-r,Q-nS-~1;p---Sa1az·arh1m·se1t pre-d:l~ted--------Viohrn-ct-Madeil'"-a-cru. Salazar, .'!ho. btume. a martyr to i the would come jf relief didn't, "It was a beautiful morning. I thought cause he hatd covered Saturday night. Th B 'ld • "We are deeply suspicious about the if I was going to drown I would go· on a MOSCOW (AP ) -The Sovie! 11\lrVey ship ShokalsKy rescued a storm-tossed Amerfcan schooner that had been dtUting helplessly .. in the Indian Ocean fOf its days, the official news agency Tan - reported today. II iilil 'the detalla-.....-rl<l1'11cl'1<1•--t,, VladlvoStok by Gennady Cbu~kov, skipper of !he Shokalsky, arler be hail aided three unidentified American sea-Mr. Salazar, of 3118 · S. Rita Way, ree Uf, ings . death of Salazar," said an angry Rosalio bright and beautiful morning. Santa Ana, was to 1.ie in state from IO Munoz, who organized a rally to protest "But I thought there W)l! 1 good chance a.m. to 2 p.m. at Bagues ·Mortuary in J M• \. the death rate of Mexican-Americans in of being rescued." East Los Angeles. U lftUeS(}l;a farers ahd towed their stricllen yacht 1 Marco Polo to Singapore harbor. Funeral services for the award-winning corresponden t who had covered the Vietnam War, plus combat in MexicG City and the Dominican Republic, will be Wednesday in Corana del Mar. The 4 p.m. r ites will be in ·the Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel, with private interment to follow at the park. . He leaves his wife Sally, three children, Lisa, Stephanie ahd John, .pa1ents Mr. and Mrs. Salvador Salazar, of El Paso; and a sister, Mrs. Luz Cisneros. Legless Veteran Turns Swimmer SANDY POINT, Md. (AP) -A 24-year· old Vietnam war veteran who lost both legs in a mine explosion, has just completed a 12-mile swim across the Chesapeake B<W and back. Eugene RdDerts says he 's working up to a plunge across the English Channel. "I'm not ready for that yet maybe next year." the Mi tine veteran said. "But it Ytas a good swim in the bay." ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPI) -Three- explosions within 45 minutes damaged three di ssimilar buildings today_ First reports indicated at least two persons were injured. " There were unconfirmed reports that a bomb _had been defused at a fourth site - the office of )he Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. Police, h o w e v e r , discounted this. The explosions were rep<irted at the Gulf Oil building, the Burlington Northern Rail Lines building and at a warehouse near the St. Paul Dispatch and Pioneer Press building. A newsman asked a police" officer if there l\1as any chance the three explosions were related. "Three within 45 minutes?'' he answered, "negative!" Last month there were three explosions ht this area, one of ·which injured a woman. There have been many bomb threats in the twin cities recently. An explosion at the old federal building in fi.finneapolis, Aug. 17, caused $500,000 damage. fJolice recently found a 200- pound cache of dynamite hidden in the Burlingtol'I railroad yards in North Minneapolis. INA OF OUR SUMMER SALE • SALE ENDS WED.r -. ·-' SEPT. 2nd , Th.e . .lPok • SCATTERED DEBRIS FRAMES DOOR OF BURLINGTON NORTHERN RAIL LINES 'OFFICE St. P•ul Police Bornb Squ•d E .. rnlnes Spot Where One of Thrtt Bombs Explodtd , ... t'I ._ -4Jan J/aum ·SALE AT OUR FASHION ISLAND STORE - ' , I DAILY ,ILDT • " 'I Civilians Held t II .TOIAfS NEWS tc-• .-,., "'~ o.u., 1"1111 11t tt1 A guest at John Ada~· \vedding Sunday decided to play a joke on t}le briagegroo1n and s ipped the shackles of a ball and chain around l'lim. But the joke mi sfired when the guest discovered she had for- iotten the key "and firemen had .,!.O be -called to Cree Adams in-Stoke- on-Tren t England. • Reds Take Town9. Cut Power Lines PHNOt.1 PENH (UPI ) -Cambodian infantrymen supported by air strikes today fought their way to within a mile and a hall of ~ang, beld by Viet Cong Auto Firms Offer Raise, No 'Escalator'· DETROIT (AP) -The big Three automakers today offered the United Auto Workers a 7 .s percent wage increase in proposed new thret-year contracts but dtclined to remove a cap on a cost-of-living wage escalator. The union has insisted that an unllmited cost of living wage escalator ''is the pr ice of peace in this industry." The companies' insisten ce on ma intaining a maximum limit or eight cents hourly per· year iii cost or living boosts, made a strike against one of the automakers appear certain. · troops who bombarded the govunment I troops from a mountlln!.ide Buddhlst pagoda overlooking the town. \ The Viet Cong seized Srang, 26 mJle.s southwest or Phonm l;'(nh. Sunday after a three.day tiatUc. The E:ommunists were reported holding a nuriiber of civilians hO.!llagc in the town. \ The Cambodian command said other Viet COng units had cut high voltage power lines supplying Phnom Penh from lhe Kirirom Dam 40 miles southwest or the capital. POwer in Phnom Penh was not visibly affected bµt a Cambodian command spokeaman said "it is very clear the Viet Cong are trying to sabotage our economy." Western observers !aid villagers In Srang began leaving the town two days before the Communist offensive opened but that the Viet Cong were holding other civilians in the be.sieged community. Viet Cong in a mountiinsli!C "15BglS<li cverlooklng Srang fired mortars onto the approaching Cambodian troops. • .. j . - Welfare Bill Meets Senate Stall . I 1 J WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pr11ld1nt Nl1on'1 offtr to give· his proposed Welfare Reforms a year-long trial nm if Congress adopts the plan this year bu faUed to budge the top Republican on the . '~ Senate Finance Ccmmitte.e. · ;~ In fact, Sen. John J . Willlams of ~;f-i Delaware hu come up with a counttt .... ,., Proposal: Find out how well the pilct ·:,~ projects wor.k before approving the M.l ·~~ billion program. , • ;~ "In my opinion, it would make better ;~: sense to authorize the $50 mi.Won pilot ~ .. -. project and thfn a'lait the results of the t: experiment before deciding on what type of law we want tO enact," Williams said Monday. . In a move billed as a compromise., Nixon Friday said he would agree not to implement the Family A s s f s t a n c e Program until January. 1972. Pilot programs would begin in three states on Jan. I, 1971 The Ho se-passed measure. the Finance Committee si nce ·r,---.~ would assure a family of four a yearly .t income of $1,600. Finance Chairman Russell B. Long said he did not consider Nixon's statement a .· . compromise but...,only "A willingness to <.'Onsider any amendments Congress · · • might agree upon." Long said Nixon's suggestion of a delay . :• Current three· year pacts covering 730,000 workers at the Big Three expire SepL 14. General Motors said it was offtring the union a package which would cost the company $1.4 billion in wages alone and described its offer as "the largest economic proposal in its history." The first train to leave Phnom Penh in· more than two months pulled out of the capltal today for Badeng, 20 miles west of the city. R.ailroad officials said the llne beyond Badeng to the vital rice growing province cf Battambang was cut by the Viet Cong who blew up two bridges. Battambang Ls 180 miles northwest (l{ the capital. LITTLE MISS IN INDIAN GARB ENJOYS PARADE in in1p\ementing the welfare reform-" •'." until January, 1972, was an "interesting thought" but said he had not made a ( Communiques from Saigon s a i d Communist troops bombarded Da Nang Air Base early today with eight six·foot· long 122mm rockets. One airman was wounded by shrapnel and a parked Cl30 cargo plane .v,:as damaged. Htr U.S. Flag Waved Among Portl1nd Prott st'ors' Cong Flag decision on the suggestion. , Dan Taylor was probably popular tcith both the Ameri~an Legion and l ltt hippif dtmomtrators in Portland, Oregon thiJ week. At anu rate the 68· -year-old Downey, California man has been in the Legion for fifty years. Ile i;erved as a private in W\Vl in Europe. The companies' offers Included: -A 7 .S percent wage increase. l(ansas Goverrior Blasts The Louisiana Democrat said he agreed strongly with Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mans field that Congress shouJd get a chance to vote on we.Hare refo rm before the end of the session. 1: 1 -Retirement after 30 years service at • $500 a month at age 60 at General J\fotors and age !2 at Ford . Chrysler said its plan would allow a worker at age 65 after 35 years' service to retire at $551 a month. One rocket. i 1ploded. near the Oa Nang Air Bne passenger terminal and sprayed asphalt fragments on .a Pan .American \Vorld Airways 707 jetliner. It was the first rocket attack on the big base since June 21. Protestors i11 Portland Asked whether he was concerned a ' ' lame.duck Congress might act af~r ~ " elections, Long said "I don't think tt makes any difference.'' .';~· Ml•• T1eko S1hod1, 26, says· she bought an Eskimo doll in the Canadian souvenir shop at Expo '70 and discovered it was manu-.. factured in Japan-in her own. hometown. Miss Sahoda, a clerk in t he telegraph and telepbone office, said she bought the Eskimo doll for 83 cents under the impression it came from Canada. But when she returned home she discovered the doll was manufactured in TsuX:i· date, the small town where she was born. The doll represents Toongak. .described_ as a_ guardian deity of Canadian Eskimos. • A Miami man went to the Dade Retirement at 60 with 30 years service now Is possible at $«lO a..month. The union has insisted that retirement at a minimum of $500 monthly be: permitted after 30 Y.ears service, regardless of age. GM proposed a 7~ll percent general \vage increase, ranging from 26 to 48 cents a hour. However, employes making Jess than $3.54 hourly would get nothing in addition to 26 cents hourly which goes into effect automatically Sept. 15 under tenns of current three year pact!. Author Mauriac Dies in France One rocket hit 30 yard.! from a bachelor enlisted men's quarters and another PORn..AND. Ore. (AP ) The out!ide a barracks to have. been occupied American Legicn, which saw mild within a few hours. heckling at its national convention parade The U.S. Command said American troops last two killed and 12 wounded in Monday, heard Kansas Gav. Robert two clashes Monday 45 miles northeast of ·Docking say today he was disgusted with Saigon. There were no known Communi.9t the minority of youths who tear down casualties in the fighting . rather than build. Milltar,Y sources said Mon d a Y "ft is disgusting lo allo\v a few to American air raids in Laos had destroyed interfe re wilh the rights of the majority about 40 percent of the truck fl~t used or students," Docking said. by the communists to haul supplies down The quesion of curbing campus the Ho Chi Minh trail into the northe~n violence was expected to be one of lhc. part ?f South y1etnam : The sources said major resolutions coming before JPe 1nl!lhgenc~_ mformat1~. showed the _.llaUonal_C;QDvsntion..asJi.opened bus~ss Nortfi Vieffiam~se, de.s~1te a ready . sessions today. The 14,000 delegates were suppl¥ of new trucks arr1v1ng at the Port prepared to hear committee reports on of Ha1pbcng. have been unable to replace more than soo resolutions including those the losses inflicted by U.S. bombings. . . giving strong support to the President's handling of the 'var in Southeast Asia and for maintaining national security. Docking's rema rks were prepared for Williams, in a statement, said Nixon'J offer v.·as a recognition by t h e ' -· administration the bill has "serious deli\•ery to the opening session. Docking told the legion, "I am certain that you. as nre most -citizens -i!f cur nalton, are tired of hearing one percent of our college students. claim that 'doing flaw s." . WiUlams sfiid postponing the effective · ·· date "and then running a pilot project ~· 1during the interim does not alter ~he · ' situation, nor does it answeP the q~est1on ·~ of whethef this is or is not a bad bill." their own thing' means disregarding and N • T ' ts disrespec tinll: lav.•s of this nation; that tlte . erroris academic freedom means b ur n in g administration buildings and canceling c v R ROTC reviews -legitimate university et ruguay ap functions: that.civil righ~-means..calling __ _ public officials names. and that our /it Kidi·iap;itgS " colleges are a place for the students to " teach, not learn." i County Consumer Protection Oivi· &ion last week to complain about an airline's advertising practices. He was referred to the state at· torney. who referred him to the sheriff's office, which sent him to the Miami police, who referred back to the consumer protection people, who suggested he go again to the state attorney. That's when t he man gave up and returned to his auto in the civic center parking lot. where other authorities had t.icketed the car for overtime park· PARIS (UPI ) -Francois Mauriac, one of 'France'! most eminent modern writers, died in a Paris hospital early Tuesday. hospital sourees said. Mauriac, a Nobel Prize winner , was 85. · ·Mauriac fractured a shoulder in April. Despite intensive care he n e v e r recovered. Physicians at the Pasteur Institute Hos pital tried their best to save him, but Mauriac continued to weaken. ' Atkins Surgery May Delay Trial For T·wo Weeks Assassin James Ray. Says Lawyer Urged Guilty Plea ~10NTEV1DEO, Uruguay (UPI) .Nine alleged terrorist leaders were charged Monday v.'ilh complicity in the kidna plng of three foreign envoys, including a murdered American. 1'he six men and three women, arrested in a raid Aug. 7, were charged with harboring the kidnapers of U.S. police adviser Dani el A. Mitrione, U.S. farm consultant Claude L. Fly and Brazilian consul Aklysio Dias Gomide. , ..... --'- , •)4• ' ,., .. ,_ ·~ =~ '.' .. ; . ' I , ing. • The hospital so urces said Mauriac's condition worsened Monday night and death came soon after. LOS ANGELES (AP1 -Susan Akins, one of the defendants in the Sharon Tate murder trial. suffers from an ovarian cyst her attorney says, and it could delay court proceedings two y,·eeks. Daye Shinn, "'·ho is defend i11g Miss Atkins, !aid ~fonday the 21·year-old woman has had the cyst since 1968. Ong Fung Ch in celebrated his lOOth birthday Sunday. as the rest of Chinatown celebrated the August Moon Festival in Boston . On hand to congratulate Chin . who ran a laundry for 40 years. was Sen. Ed· \\"Brd 1'.1. Kennedy. D-~fass .. Joseph Kenned.v IT . ol dest son of the late Sen. Robert Kennedy. 1'.·tayor Kevi n H. \Vhite and--\Vong Che'"· who at 101 is China to,vn 's oldest resident. "[ neve~ get excited and I alwa,vs eat the best of food ."' Chin said in explaining his lon r!evity. P.1au ria c was once eulogized by Charles De Gaulle as ''the greatest French v.·riler'' in our time. When the then French president realized that one of his listeners was the equally prominent Andre Malraux, the usually unflappable De Gaulle became embarrassed and said "well. one of the greatest." Wave Still on Duty In Pregnancy Flap \\'ASlllNGTON (UPI) -Seaman Anna The trial was recessed Frida y "'hen she complained of pains in her side and abdomen. Doctors at County USC ~fedical Center declared her fit for lrial bu! Y.tien she com plained again Monday Judge Charles H. Older recessed the trial and ordered a second examination . • Older said Shin told him that Jf surgery Is required. Miss Atkins would be out of court two weeks. For 'vhat it's worth . l\1rs. Marv Flores. 23, a Dallas Wa ve who sued the Navy last nionth for tryi ng to oust her from the service because she became pregnant v.·hile unmarried. ' will be allowed lo remain on active duty. Olher defendants ln the trial are Charles f\.1anson, 35. Patricia Krenwinkel, 22. and Leslie Van Houten, 20. Keppler hair:: thf! key to the Soviet city of Vladivostok . They are charged in the de aths of liliss Tete and six others in August 1969. New Hampshire Dips to 30 Lightning Jg ,iites Forest Fires in Washington State C•llfol'td• N1t111 tftd 11<1r M«nl11t low c1wo1 t M IM t rtvtl!.cl 11...,, !ht sov111t•n Ctllltwrtlt <~Sllllle IO<ltv. burnlnt ol! Ill lllf t llt•-!Of' ...01111 IU""V t-IH 11111 tonllnu.cl wt rm t.mot r1•urt1. Loe. Artttlu btolt• out lrOl"I tnt "'°'"Int ov,..Ct ll wltl'I ttlr ...,,,, ~mt .i11t1nl 1"""''""'"· Tiit PrH !clH Iii.,. hdlY II IJ, UP Ofll -rtt ltllf'! MOflOn', Tonltht'I low '""110 tit U ''""' tl!J bHC .. I IO ,,,_ Ot$t r1\, rKrMI"" 1•••1 tniortO' clt t r ollllti. Wlll'I l'llellt rtrttlnt ''°"' 10 1""9 '"' CHI! '° t!lt 1ovtiwrn GtMrl '"'"'"'' Nlt'l of uo to 11J. 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" Ott<tll• .. " ,110 Rohl•• .. .. r 11111at '•"I• " • .. ..l!!tbu••~ " " "' ,....,,.,.1. '" " ,.,,!llftd " " lltd llutr ~· " lltllD " 51cr.,.,,,..1, " " SI LIU" .. " S•ll Ltkt CflJ " .. 1•n Dhl.,, " .. J.1n·,r1ncl•cn ., " l t lllt ....... " " l t•nlt " ~ Sl!'(lll:tN! ~ .. 111-11 "' " Wt11'1lr1t!Ofl .. " "' f • ~tEMPHIS, Tenn. !UPI ) -Convicted assassin James Earl Ray contended ifonday he had been denied "due process'' of law and th.at his guilty plea in the slaying of Dr. 1'.1artin Luther King Jr . v.·as in\•oluntary. In a long, !'ambling lypev.·ritten affidayit. Ray said Attorne y , Percy For~man had urged him lo plead guilty beciluse he said Ray already had been convicted by pre·Lrial publicity. lie said Foreman promised him a pardon "After t~·o or three years," through the office of John J. Hooker Sr .. a Nashville allorney mentioned as a possible member of the defense team. Ray said Foreman told him the prosecution ''had promised a witness considerable rc.v.·ard money" lo testify against him. Convinced he v.·ould get one lrial, and no atention from an appellate court. Ray said he decided "I didn'I wa!'lt lhe one tria l faked." Coal, Oil Controls '- Urged by Official WASHINGTON (UPI) -A spokesman for the nation's publicly O\\'fled po\li·e1- systems, claiming lillle can be done now lo avert shortages of fuel supplies this "''inter, his urged the Ni1on Administra. lion to set price. controls ·on coal and oil. '·Considering I had no other choice. at the time, I tentatively agreed to enter a guilty plea to a technical charge of homicide," he wrote. Ray was sentenced lo 99 years in pr ison on March 10. 1969 . after pleading guilty to the April 4, 1968. assassination of the civil rights leader. He ~gan immediate efforts to h-ave his guilty plea overturned and to gain a new trial. • The state filed a motion for dismissal of Ra y's petition for relief of his plea and sentence. Ray's seven-page affidavit, replete v.·it h misspelled words. v.•as in ansy,·cr to that motion. Ray told of trcubles he had with a series cf attorneys \Vho represented him. He said his origina l la\vyer. Arthur Hanes Sr .. had refused to let him ta ke the stand in his behalf, though he v.1anted lo. and that he .felt ,\utho r \\'illiam Bradford Huie. his biographer, relayed everything he learned about the case to the F'B I. Ray said Foreman. \vho came lo see him for the first time two days be.fare he was scheduled to go on trial. told him thai "Jf I stuck with them (Hanes and Huie). I would be bar-be-cued." "J fa vored taking the witness stand because I had testimony lo give which t dido ·1 want the prosecution to know of until as late as possible so there would be no time to alter. records, such as phone numbers." he •said. "Mr. Hanes turhed ' down this request. saying why give testimony a~ when we can sell it.'' .. " -~· • 1'.fitrione was found shat to death Aue. 10. Fly and Gomide still are believed held by their leftist captors. After five hours or ·questioning, Judge ri1anuel Diaz Romeu also charged the alleged terrorists with conspiring against ::;- the constitution and association for • ~· criminal purposes. .> One of the accused, Ra ul Bidegain Creissing. was charged with participating in the killing of two policemen. Bidegain could be stnlenced to 30 years in jail. The ethers face possible sentences ranging from six to IS years. Police continued to hunt fo r Fly, 65, ot Fort Collins. Colo., and Gomide, 41. The Brazilian v.•as kidnaped July 31. the same day as Mitrione , and Fly was captured a week later. The Uruguayan government, which has steadfastly refused to bargain......,.ilh the kid napers , Monday re st ored consti tutiona l guarantees thal were suspe nded Aug. 10 to facilitate the sea rch for the victims. Student Death Probe' Set; 20 to Testifv , LAWRENCE, Kan. <UPI ) -~ many as,20 witnesses coo\d be called to testify today al the coroner's inquest into the death of ff1rry Nichola!'I Ri ce, 18, shot July 20 ·du ring a confrontation be.tween police and college student!. ·: ~;-.. .. " '•, •• . ·:: .. • ~ j ' • I, " " He In-vests • Ill Youth t: ' Watts ]ijan Molds Youth Ev en When Titnes Are Bad :r. LOS ANGELES !AP) -E',ery Saturday morning at 10, about 80 boys and girls line up outside Stan Myles' Julo body shop In the Watts district to get their dimes. One by one they walk up to the COunter and Stan checks their name off a llst he keeps. Dimes In hand, each youngster then sctmpers to a store across I.he street for 11 soda or lee cream. Stan, a SO..yeJr-old widower with two a:rown chlldren. has been handing out the pocket money for O\lt ye~rs. To tam a dime a child must be a mtmber of the Neighborhood Cood Guys Club. Anyone can join. All of the kids are beh~:ttn the .11ges or 3 and 14. 1'.1ost o( their fam ilies are on \\'elfarc and Jn many of the homes there is no father. How do you become a good guy? "By keeping your hair combed and being nice," says 8-year-old Vanoy Bush. Good guys also have clean fa ces. R neat appearance and never break windows, fight or get Into trouble. ''They also de> anythin& lhe.ir mother wants them lo do witbout protest.'' s1ys Myle·s, a nali\'e. of Texas "''ho came Lo Los Angeles In 1936. A good report card during the school )'ear brlna:s an elrtra 15 to Ml cents. Stan, as the kids call him, started the club In 196$ when he cauihl two brothers breaklng-botlles behind his shop. 11'\Stead of bawling them oyt he asked them Inside the office. ga ve them a aoft drink and told thtm thty could earn a dime apiece by cleaning up the broken bottles. Soon the word spread that Stiin \vas a pretty good guy. _ Besides dimes, 1\1.yles lias handed out baseball equipment. swimiTting pool passes and !hoes .and even paid a beauUclan to fix up a little girl's hair JO she. could be in a parade. Each Christmas ~fyles throws 1 neighborhood party with 1 present for each ('Uut. Jn five years sinct he started handing out dimes, Myles has I05t only $20 worth of {Tlerchandise from his shop and has ne ver Nid a broken wlndow. • The weekly dimes alont cost him $400 1 year and he doesn't ketp track .or how muc~ more he spends on the kids ... Even though buslnen his been close to ~ ,, . ,. ' • ' won't (i\'C up the Saturd ay paf dayJ. • rock bottom recently. Myles says, he ,!·· .., WO\Jldn 't do thaJ for all the money in .{1 tbt wtirkl." he declarts. -· ·"' \ I ! • ] I \ - . 1 Hu 1 lea >Im .em . E ·"'' "" )1 1 ., Ill: tod hit pu :r: Ill. 1 pre ·~ Ir~ ~ l J toe ... 1111 to J 1h< J1' UIM . 1 pr! du es< wil • • s J (; . ·1 Co ha efl Fo ar1 Te Or ' "" lb: Fo ~ pt .: ch '" re ... of ec ca bu "' " lh ht th 111 .. « pl bl u . 1h "' lo UI • I ' Fo1111tai.n Valley Today's Flnal ~ N.Y. Steeb VOL. 63, NtD9, 2 Sf!;TI~ 28 ~AGES ' OiANGE COUNl"I', CALIFORNIA I • • TUESDAY, SEfTEMBER l, 1970 TEN CENTS . (:eJ)\ter Opens...-Beach By TERRY COVILLE Of *" DlllN l"lltt ll•lf The community center opened today in Huntington Beach. 'There was little fanfare as center leaders tried to avoid the controversial ~ l\1hich knocked them out of an .empty grocery store on ~lain Street. · But most of the reasons for the firsl controversy aren 't present in the center's new JocaUon. It i.s downtown, but at 309 Fifth Street .....,. lt ls not surrounded by shops. The center has also been separated from the proposed . fn!e ~linic and .Help Line, primary targets of the opposition directed by downtown merchants. "Our main purpose is to serve the immediate community. This will not be a recreation center or a teenage hangout," John Holiday, deputy director of the C.Ommunity Action Council ( C A C } , explained. r The CAC sets up e-0mmunity cent,er~ '\ I throughout Orange County and guides lhem through their activities. Holiday is the man most involved with the HunUngton Beach center. He said the oew site is smaller t}lan the original, but would contain only Jhe community center. The Help Line organization i.s still seeking facilities for a free clnnic. · "We want the people and the merchants to know that we want the community center to be an asset, not a War Bill Def e.ated Haivks Chalk -Victory Over Doves ·WASHINGTON !UPI) In a IJ&nificant test of sentiment. the Senate today refused to tie President Nixon's bands by ordering him to end U.S. pU-ilcipation in the Vietnam war by a specific dead.line. The vote against the llatfield·McGovern amendment was 5S to at. The hawk vs. dove showdown ended a pfotracted and sometimes emotional . debate on the war issue and the pace Nixon is setting in withdrawing American troops.from Vietnam. Advocates of the amendment held little <>ptimism of v.·inning outright bul had hoped to make the score closer than it was. They lost key votes at the last hour. 1'wo Republican "doves" -Sens. John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and Charles Percy of Illinois -announced opposition lo the amendment on grotmds it might Wldercut U.S. peace negotiation efforts. When the tensely waited roll call came, only seven Republicans joined -3 2 Democrats in voting for the proposal aimed at virtually compelling Nixon lo get all American forces out or Indochina by Dec. 31, 1971. Life Term Ordered County Youth Admits Voting to reject the proposal -as an amendment lo a $19.2 billion military pi"lcurement bill -are 21 Demociats and 34 Republlcans. " The spectator galleries were about three-fourths full as the vote was taken. A number of young people were in attendance. There was no audience reaction when the result was announced, The amendment had been expected to Jose. Final debate began after the Senate convened at 8 a.m. EDT -the earliest (Set WAR VOTE, P•ge Z) Beach Planners To Consider 2 Tall Towers _ControverS·y Avoided liability, to the community,'' Holiday added. He oulllned a few of the programs the center expecb lo provide : "We'll need English classes, because there Is a large Mexican American population In Huntington Beach. ~ ''We plan to have employment COUil!tling and programs explaining job opportWllUes. ''Transportation systems, i;-e r h a p s volunteer driven who can carry senior ' c!Uzens or others to welfare department, healih department, and other places, is a must. "\Ve miiht establish a senior citizen.! program with outings to make them feel a part of the commwllty. r 1'nle center will also provide classes in such areas as sewlnl;, and fllllng out Job applicat.io•s. We waqt to be an outpost to help penple find houslni or food, il !hey need it." Not So Peaceful Scene ''The whole poiJlt of it Is to ndMlile local retources to help people be.Ip themselves," Holi<tay said. Holiday said the center would work from scratch f0r °I first month unW it is in full operation. "We nee<t a coordinator to run the center. a bilingual coordinator from a poor area ," Hol iday said, em~iz:ing that the centfr's ·work is directed toward iSee CENTER, Pase Z) .. A light plane taxis along the runway at Meadowlark 300-foot addition to the run\vay is causing planes to Airport in an everyday scene. But presently airpon land nearer homes. Special public hearing is set is embi;oiled· in C!>D\rov111,sy wilb residents ailing. · at·~:30 e'cloc:I! tonight at Community Methodist T \ Killing in Market Heist · He!J. 'A-. 'Hun~'Beach. wbb' tllafge· that Clnlr.clr, IZ21'Rell Ave. ~adr-f,td1a~1s wi~I--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~--,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-11~ Jerry 1..ee ' Johnson fJf Westminster kM:tay adqlltted that he shot and killed the assistant 1rnanager or a Fountain Valley market and was immediately sentenced to a life term in slate prison. Johnson, 18, of 14471 Titus St., offered the plea as his Superior Court trial before JOOge Kenneth Williams was aOOut to get under way. · The youthrul defend1Mt also drew state prison terms for pleas of guilty to charge. of armed robbery and felony escape. Both terms will run concurrently with the life !entence. · JdiNoo was one of three men who Scientists Form Joh Protectio11 Group in County Unem.ployed technologists in Orange County are forming an action group to halt what they call "the spiraling disaster effect" in the loss of government work . Twenty-eight men _met. Monday night _at FOlDltain Valley High School to write articles of incorporati o ri for ~hnologicaf Community A c t i o n Organization (TCAO). On Sept. 10 they have scheduled a meeting to take in new members. Jnterested individuals are invited to join lbe graup at 8,p.m .. in the caleteria o{ FOuntain Valley High School. ·"We want to have a collettive voice to ~ the ills in the area whe11 all these ptople lose their jobs," Frank G. SchoU, a.FoWltain Valley resident and executive chairman of the group, said. Schott said TCAO is concerned with technologists in aerospace, military and related industries. ''There are about 50,000 or us out of work i• California," Schott said. "Think of the effect that can have on the econOmy. When a man loses a job he can't spend money needed for other business." Schott said the purpose or TCAO would be to "protect the ·professional slalus and economic welfare of its members." "We hope to gain a collective voice on this prob1$!m," Schott continu~.. "We hope lo be In a position to be crillcal of tne effects of unemployment , to Identify U)e problems and hopefully to offer .olutions." He saJd the names of 200 men in the county have already been submitted for pO&sible membership. "Orange County la the heidquarters. but we hope to 1pread to neighboring areas." One so1uUoh al ready proposed Is that the Small B u s I n e ~ s Administration consider giving • prlortty on bus}rttss 1o8nJ lo large aerospace area~ hi\ by uiiemployment. · '. · • "We plan to ¥:6rk on other·$Olulions,'' Schou uld: • forced their way into lhe Tic Toe Market, 9457 Heil Ave., Jast Feb. 13 and shot assistant manager James W. Oates, 57, or Garden Grove. · Johnson was identified early in the investigation of the killing as the man who shot Oates through the heart immediately after the trio entered the store. _ One of JohnSO'l1's companions in the killing , RObert Woodrow Clements of Westminster, was sentenced Monday by Judge Williams to a life term in state prison. Clements, 22, of 14311 Alcester St .. was found guilty by a Superior Court jury last Aug. 12 of first degree murder and armed robbery. Prosecutors predicted today that a sim- ilar guilty plea to reduce charges will be filed by the identified as the companion of Johnson ·and Clements in the Fountain Valley shooting. It is expected that Herman W. Grant, 23, of Santa Ana, will be submitting his plea before Judge Williams later today or Wednesday. Board Gets 'Breaks' Fro1n Regular l\leets Orange County supervisors will gel two days "off" this week and next week, from formal sessions at least. \Vednesday's regular meeting has ~ cancelled because most board members will be at Mammoth Lakes attending a llk:ounly conference· on pollution and other subjects o[ the hour. Next week Admission Day falls on the regular Wednesday date and so that session has been cancelled also. mell!tft the city'• futurt: in terms of height tonight ""'hen they take a second look at two proposed ll·story towers in Huntington Harbour. The towers, plus four other high rise buildings which exceeq the city·s maximum 35-foot height limit, are part ot a proposed Sunset Bay project between Pacllic Coast Highway and lluntington Harbour, north of Admiralty Drive. The planning commission meets at 7 p.m. to consider this and other planning items. The Sunset Bay project is propoaed by Real Property Management, lnc.. a Beverly Hills firm with large holdings in the Long Beach Marina del Rey. Sunset Bay plans call for conslruction of an ll·story apartment complex. an 11· story hotel, four three-story apartment units, a four·slory office building, and assorted shops and professional units. Real Property Management h a s designed a peninsula for part of the property, with apartments located on the peninsula and more than 300· boat slips in two newly dredged channels. The two towers would be the tallest buildings in the city, unless commission· -ers also give approval for a 16-story tower proposed by the First pirisitian Church as a senior citizens complex. The church tower, now being stlldied by city planners, is proposed for a site at Adams Avenue and 17ttt Street and will come before the commissioners again Sepl IS. • Orange Counfy Tax Rate Set · at $1.70-Up 3 Cents By' JACK DROBACK ot "" D•Hr l"lltl 111n Orange County'• 117~71 property tax rate was Set at $1.70 this morning by the Board of Supervisors. The figure represents a lhreecnt Increase over the 1969-70 rate of $1.67 per $100 auesaed valuation. Faced with lhe need to absorb a deficit of almost ·$3 million because of a recent _ reduction in st.ate Medical aid to the county, the Supervisors decided to compromise and cut about $2 million out of the adopted county budget of $212 million. The $1.70 rate was suggested by Supervisor David Baker. He included in his motion, which was a d o pt e d unanimously, that "the co unty administrative officer and the various department heads find a way to cut the ,, necessary $2 million out of the budget and report back to the board within a few weeks." The da:lsion to peg the rate between last Year's $1.67 ~nd the $1.75 figure which would have been required if no budget Cuts were made was vigorously opposed by the Orange ·County Chamber or Commerce. Clarenea E. White and Robert Sigmund of the Chvnber's goYe .. rrunental affairs committee urged the Supervisors to hold f.he line at the current rate, noting that asseaed valualions of county property have gone up 17.a percent. "You can do like businesses have been forced to do in the past year of tight fiscal conditions by i n c r e a s I n g productivity per man if you have lo ·lay off some employes," Whlte argued. Supervisor William Hirstein suggested that the $1-million-beach acquisition fund in the adopled budget be eliminated and lhat $600,IXKI be cut from othel' department ·budgets to meet the $1.70 rate figure. But ·super.visor Robert Battin didn't fl.gree . He urged that the entire '3 million be cut out' o( the medical cerite" budget "because the center Is the cause of all the frouble ." Rookie Makes Big Splash, Wins 3 Guard Awards ' Chip Rowe made a big splash this summer as a rookie lifeguard for the city of Huntington Bea.ch. • • Sea Lion Deaths. a Mystery Today he holds three lop awards to prove lt. They were given to him Friday night at the . HunUngton BeaC'h SUr( Lifesaving Association Awards Banquet. Co~t Herds Tliinning But No Reason Discovered By JOANNE REYNOLDS - Of fllle Ditty l"li.t Staff Sea lions have been dying in targe:r '1umbers. than usUal this summer along lhe Orange Coast, according to Jileguards ~ Jn five coastal cities. No statiStics are available u lo lhe exact number of animals that hlYe, died, but lifeguards agree it's COMiderably higher than in previous summers. The first conclusion most people Je1p to Is that the sea lions are being killed by \li·ater pollution. Bill Walker. a marine biolo;1sl ror ?.iarineland, doesn't agree. "Recent studies by Pt. Mugu Naval Station J'C'searchcrs 11.nd UC Santa Cruz And use biologists Indicate that neither DDT nor oil pollution h3Ye anything to do v.·J1h tht deaths. "In the past few yc~rs the California sea lion papulation has been lntrta5ing at I an alarming rate. Conditions a r t becoming very crowded _ as the herd becomes larger. ''\Vhen this happens, you get a hlgher rate of communicable diseates, pup mortality and parasitivity within the herds. "What we're seeing this summer on beaches from San Francispo to the "t.lexkan border is nonnal mortality -a balancing of the natural size of the sea lion population," he explained. The Caillomia sea Uon -the sptCies in question -is one of the more intelligent . members of the teal famll,Y. They are often seen Jn zoos and are regular •ltractlons in most circuses. Although they are often called seals, they .are not a trlle seal, but ti sea lion. The cause of death of the sea llOl'I! and lhe •fleet !hey have on the popul allon is I difficUlt to determine b e c a u s e lnformatk>n on them in their natural state is somewhat sketchf. A study done by Bernie Buf( of UC Santa Cruz: and Bob Brownell or USC shoWed that oil pollution had no adverse affect on the animals, Walker slated. •"Ibey compared a group of sea lions that had greater than 40 percent oil covering their coatl and a group that had no oil. And the amazing thing'"" 'flas that the mortality rate was hi9htr aniOng the animals that bad no oil," he noted. Walker S&id the animals brttd ·each summer on the ChaMel lalands,. wlth J,be cows each producing a single pup. The migratory habits of the sea lions are not completely understood, he said. "It's 1 hard thing to atudy. We would have to coordinate and ~lle:ct data from San Francisco to Mexico.'' Walker said. • .Rowe !int collected a national award for winning the run-swlm·run contest at Santa Barbara in competlUon with 14 o th e r lifeguard associaUons. Then he took another national award for a fourth place finish in th.e 1,000.meter swim at• Venice Beach. But the big award came when . fellow guards named him rookie of the year as the. beat of 21 lifeguards new to the city this suD'IJner. Atotal of t7 lifeguard.! and their dates, plus several members of ,the cUy council .and .;ity stafr attended the banquet, held In llf•guard he!ldqulrt<rL 1'1.'o othtr natkmal -awards were handed out for competition eYenll. Doug Kirk rec<lved rt<:OCJlltlon for llntahtng rifth In the run-swlm·nm at Santa Barbara, while Raymond Bray won an award f6r his third place finish in tbi iron man event where he -paddled .a. paddle boat, swam.and rowed a dory. -------~ ------- BO MPH Ohme EntL. in Crash .Jn Huntington An early Mmling chase through central Huntington Beach today ended abruptly when the chased car smashed into a parked automobile. Officer Andrew Dickey said he began pursuit of the vehicle at •:26 a.m. in the Five Points area when be received a call advising him that its driver was about to leave the scene of a minor accidenl Racing through downtown street.I at speeds up lo 70 and ao mph, Dickey was .8.boLit fu-overtake "the car when It collkfed with the parked auto at 6th and Main streets. The driver· of the car, identified as Gary A. Flynn, 2.2, of 198S ·Berkshire Lane, was taken to Huntin1gton Intercommunity Hospital for treat.men$ of minor injuries. His passenger. '»year old Vkky P. Burzenski, of l!Yr75 Claremont..Lane, was al~ treated at tile hospital and re.~ Draft Bill Nixed WASHINGTON (UPI) -The S...ale rejected, 71 to 22. today leglslaUon to exeffi"pt draftees from duty ia Vietnam against their will. Sen. William Proxmire,• (0.Wil.,j sponsor of trye proposal, said d,raftees bore an unfair burden of deaths ud casualUes in Vietnam -cootriOOUna • percent or combat deaths attboup comprising only 25 percent ol the troops in Vietnam. Oraage "'eatller Coastal fog will cloak the beaches in the morning, but sunny akies will reign through most of Wed- nesday, with te:mperaturea runniDC from 70 to SS degrees. INSWE TODAY Modtrate students art strlk· ing back 011 campmta acrou California 1oith t11t /orn1ation of "FronUash '70." See Paoe 20. c .......... Cllecftllll u, , __ ,_ .. , __ 1.nw .. 1 ..... llfltt•l-11t ~In-• --"" L......,1 •M1llM-'> ...... • ; =1'::. ~ Hdt Or'Mlll c..tlY I 1J ,,,.... ...... ,. 11 """' • 1 .. 11 ' llM* ,,U!Mtl l•U " ............ '' 1•11 ,....,.,,, It u wttflltr • 11 ._ ......... ,,.,. ' IWlrllli....... N " • I DAU,.Y PILOT ' " Writer Die• 1 Fr8ncois Mauri8c, o n e of · France'• most eminent modern writers, died in a Paris hosp i· taJ Monday. A Nobel Prize win· ner, Mauriac, 85, was called "The greatest French writer of our time" by Charles De Gaulle. · 3 Navy .Men Drown Off Coast Appeal Hejeete4 I --i From Pqe l Family's Watson Extradition Due CENTER .•• the poor , no matter what race or creed. The ctnler ls expected tn be open from 10 11..m. to S p.m. The hours may Chanst wnen. the proiram become• more. •JnvalvU. ~peclflc 11ctlv1tles of the centt.r art decided by a local 1overrung bo;ird, tt.1rrently he1ded by Robert Rivas, pret1dent. • NEW ORLl::ANS rVPI J -A U.S. Slh Circuit Court of 1ppeals panel Monday !urned <town a -request to s!op Uie ei:tradltlon of Charles "Tex" \\'a!.son, a member of a desert hipple ttlbe aet:u5fd or killin.'l actress Sharon Tate and six others. !See Tale trial story. Page • 1 T"·o female principal~ in the Tale· LaB ianca murder lrial going on in Lo.s Angeles ha ve testi ricd Watson, 32, rommitted six of the seven murder~. Bill BO)'d of MrKin"nr.y, TeX ., Wa tson ·~ attorney. said since Monday's ruling "'as handed do11.•n by a tOree-j ud ge panel he wou ld petition for a rehearing berore tht. entire rourt. He said he had 14 days to _ file ~uch a petition. Ir the circui t rourt turns riow~ the appeal aga in, \Vatson·s last chance to 11 void extratiition f('I Cal\fomia would lie "''ith the Supreme Court. Watson has been In tht. Col11n County Jail since hls arrest h1sl ·Nov. 30. He has fought extradition on the ground• he can not get a fair trial in Callrornia. Linda Kasablan, who turnto:d state's evidence in ~ the Los Angeles trial,, test.ified during the +rial that Watson committed the murders. or his 11.•lfe thf follo"''ing night. She later recanlecl her story. ThP. circuit court's ruling t.1onday upheld 11 lower court's ·ruling lo deny \\'atson a writ of habeas corpus . Agnew Joir1s President 111 Clemente · By RICHARD P. NALL 01 Ille OellY Pli.1 STiit Vice Pre1ldenl Spiro Agnew cut short his Asian mi~sion 10 join President Nlxon in San Clemente today for a National SPcurity Council meeting on the ~1iddle ' . ,. , ~ .. " . -.. ' ..... .. ( •' •, ... " I . . ! ' ~,. f ' • • • .. ... J' -.. ' -••• ~1. ' -~. . ;.-, _ .. ~,i ···· -··· ~~,;.)')'1 -... ~,•1 '"'"' ::, • • ••• ' "1' ti ., . . ... . . l ·.' . ,.,.,' ... •t ·~ . ..-• . .... ~'. "'•· . i... .. ..., .,.. .. "" ~; : ..... \ ._,. .... ... --- Ot her members or the execuUv~ boarti ii re Liborio Garcia, vice prr.sident: Maluka Fujita, secretiry, and Myrtle Stinson, treasurer. "The. c~ter has riled eorpnratlon papers in Sacramento. It's ju.st a matter now of waiting for 1 tax f:xamptltin before it is a full non·proCit or1aniu- tion ," Holiday said. The City or Huntington Baach has agreed 10 put up SUKI a month for the rent while the CAC p11ys 190 a month for rent, 115 a month for the phone blll and pays the coordinator's salary. _ "We hopt to put ii on a seU-susl.alning basfs in time." Holiday added. '"M1rou1h donations and projects." In cast. questions or ccmplaint1 ahould 11rise, Holida.y ask~ that he be called at 835--0~5. "I'll answer any questions anyone has. We want people, all people, to become involved with the comm unity center.'' East. A 35-pound ba~y gnu . that :s what's gnu . She 's rec eiving visitors at Th I ·d 1 •-rt d h' t · the San Francisco zoo "'here she u•as born last "'eek. The infant 's S C ' e V Ce pre.SJ en Suv ene IS Say ln . en, arpenter Q Hnnolulu by one da y_ cancelling 11 go lf mother. Loui se, ll how s her ·youngster how to put her best foot _for· 0 ward as they exercise daily at the zoo. match -to rlell ver a person a 1 assessment or his 11-<iay Asian tour of F atl1er' 65, Dies Cambodia, Vietnam, Taiwan, South K~:·n~r:1~1!~;d reportedly W8' Coast Man Fou1id Dead During Vacatio11 e!l~ially anxious to learn more or ?tank H~nry Carpenler. father of Co-defend.ant Susan Atkins . 21, told a lfltld jury that Watson killed five persons at the Tate home and ahe had been told he killed either Leno LaBianca Agnew's conversation11 with Cambodian A recently elected Stale Senator Dennis Premier Lon Nol and his view of the t Hotel • H t • t Carpenter iR-Newport Beach /. died Three Navy ~n appartnUy droned chances of his country's survival under in un ing o. n Saturday while on ·vacation in Hailey, late Monday in a frtU: accident aboard 1 communist athick. Idaho. He was 65. landlnl cratt. enaapd in underwater The Pre.sidenl. Agnew and top Funeral services were held this demollUon work off San Clemente From Pqe l diplomatic and military advisers also will Ntwport Beach police loday are strangulation, but noted lhe cause or afternoon at the Pacific View Mortuary liland'a' "'-amid Head. Assess the strained Middle East. cease in vestioati no the strangulation death oi , 1 · h Chapel in Corons del Mar with the Rev. •,. WAR VOTE fire . " " strangu auon as not, yet been Burton F. Giese officiating. Buris.I Sutcbu throu1h the nl1ht by Jwo , Newport man "-'ho!e body . WA~ fou nd determ ined f II ed 1 p ·1· v· , • Israel is in the midSl of •·a very blttl"r · o ow a ac1 1c 1ew Memorial Park, Navy atUpa failed to turn up a trace of lhe argument" with the U.S. over Israe li. Monday morning in A McFadden Place "Right now we're trying to gather Mr . Carpenter is survived by his wife, three men swept overboard from the meeting time in recent memory. ln an charges oJ il\leged cease fire violation~ hotel room. some informelion on his background." Helen, of the famil y home, 2260 B Via craft after a winch broke, throwlnf U)e. emotional appeal. Sen. George McGovern by Egypt. accordi ng to Israeli Prime h1vestigator~ eslima1e Berl i::rnest Amburgey said. Puerta, Laguna Hills : two 10ns, Dennla. liailon into the aea . ~O.S.0.), co-spoM()r of the amendment, Minister Golda Meir. Widolr. s~. h;:irl been dead ;:ipproximately "We know he wa~ <"hlldless and and Donald Carpenter or San Gabriel: a blamed the Senate for letting the war go It has been charged that Egypt violaterl sister, "Mrs. Ruth Young of "Sunla nd, and Another crewman working In '"-•·at d d cl ed , 1 a week when his horly was discove red b)1 divorced and he had 11·"ed In New~rt for ,,., grandhc1'ld uic 1.e on an e ar ' n one sense, this the agreement by moving SAM mis11\!e · • "" ren. suffered a broken leg, but wu aaved, chamber literally reek! or blood.'' baaes closer Lo the Suez Canal. the hotel m11id. four or five year~. He had been living In A nalive or Grsnd ft"orks, Minn .. Mr. Navy spokesmen said. In reply . Sen. John Stennis (0.Mtss.l, The U.S. has ma intained that It could The meiti , Myrtle Humphrry. told the hotel since April," the (!elective said. carpenter taught physical education 1t All the namea were 1tlll withheld this 1.saerted tha t the amendment would not verlry such charges conclusively detectives she l;:ist ~aw Widolf alil'e a WidoH apparently did otirf jobs on boll ts several Minnesota schools, until coming mo-1 .... u N1vy peraonnel trlld to "lake away the symbol or our nation -before setting up elaborate eiectroni·c k 1. Sh . , In Califor nia with his family 22 years ,.._ nd th , h -l. \\'('l' ear 1tr~ e discovered his borl y and h;:id recently done cabinet work In contact tht victims' families. a at s w at the l.T1lef executive is, the aurvelllaiice in the area. ago. The miahip, ·Which occurred off the symbol of our nation." These attending tod ay's San Clemenlt. lying ,11cross hi' bed In the small rom some local res1dt"11ces. "We rlon ·1 know After cominj;( lo California , he served Wand ibout IO miles from the mainland , Sen. ·BArry M. Goldwa ter 1 R·Arit. l lop-level session included Secretary nr . "'hen she "'cnt tn 11sk "'hY his trash cans "'he re he did thP cabinet work . but we a~ assistant rfcreation director for the aparktft a aearclt by the fleet tug USS voled against the am~ndment but told his State \\rilJiam Roaer~: Oavid Packarrl, had n"t been moveti . are trying to ftod out," Amburgey said . city of Burbank , then later became <:;howanos. The operations Were 11oon colleagues in final deba te: "This has rleputy defense secretary: Richard C. Detective Sam Amburgey s11id an .., recreation supervisor ror the city or I I • ""' Be "" l<:i l K1 <kl! '" ... ' I j ( wi Vi! II]• po all "" IT sh ·~ joined by the aircraft carrier USS been a wr'ong "'ar. We never meant t1'1 Helms. rlirertor or the c en t'I' 11 I autopsy revea led the man had died of Torranct. R.ancer. v"in this war and "·hen you don 't mean ln Intelligence Agency: Henry Kissinger. Sn•· Book Jssu ,ed Mfrocm 19~1 until hi~ retir~enl in 196B. The t1.te:nsivt aurface search, Aided bv win a war, for God 's sake don 't get lnto N · 1 S · Alf · d . d ~ · r. arpenter served a irector ()r ri< i . . . ii·• at1ona ecurit.y 11rs A visor : A m: P11rk!! and Recrt.ation fort e city of •-n 1·n: he icoPte.rs. continued unUI nightfall . Thomas H. Mnnrer . chairman of the Joinl K . n· . Q . ~ without turning up a trace of the missing SuP.porters of the .amendme:n h11 ti Chiefs of Staff : and Jnttph P. Si5C('I, nS lX.00 fills " ~1 re ·.o'leg.e Gabriel. After retiring . he moved to po -rnur.----'---------':_-'m"""od>!il!.!ied.,_\h~e.)ci~'1'"''Uln~IQOJ>t.l!JOfL.i' ln1n1 _888lstanl.....s.cr.f!t.lr:y--of-Sta~---for-Middkl-----------''------''.1IL1..J.L_..! '(. ____ l_.ei11urt. W,o.-.r0ld,;,. =-~=-"°' ti' 11upport. East Affai'rs. lf,.-Carpenler was ;u~t~iil rne.---11-'~--'0, .The changes v.·ould ha ve eiitendcd to . Persoimel Post RALt:IGH. N.C. IAP I _ A Jl-P••e Southern California P.1unicipal Athletic tk: Marihe Ordered ... To Face Hearing In Baby's Death ,· A young Huatington Be1ch Marine who atlqedly caused the death of a one·y.ear· cid baby by feeding him cbckt11\s has ~ ordered to race 1rrai1nmeni.'.'.6ept. JJ in Superior Court. ,:.Judge Samuel Drei.t~ 1et lhal date for ~e plea to be offered by Guy W. Rapp, Jl, of 2m Delaware SL, Huntington Beach. The presen~ charges ha ve b@en !'.educed from the murder count first filed by Huntilgton Beach police !1st Juiy 24. . Rapp 1nd Mrs. Carmelita L. Reynolds af the Del1ware Street "1dress were 3r· i:ested shortly after her 5011, ~1yron, died Qf. acute alcohol poisoning. Investigators Slid the evidence available indicated ~at tht baby had been fed A number ('Ir cocktails in the hours preceding his death. '~irs. Rey•1olds was la1er releaseti. II Was stated in municipal court lhat she JI\ I barmaid i11 a Beach Boulevard tavt.rn ind she lert ht.r in ranl son in Rapp's care ~uring her working hour~. DAILY PILOT Oll•ltG! CO.t.IT llUl l..111-<ll'HI• (OMP.~Y R•l!.,t N. ~ •• ; p, ......... .,. '""'''"" \IM;t "'""'""' 4..0 ...... ~ ... •• ..... ".''' llie"'•• Kt&wil E•;oer 1~1"''' A. M ~•-1'·~• .lo\t"ll ""t ...... Al•" o;.~:~ w~· O· •"9• C.ouMI' 'l!dotor .... lbo•I W . R~t1 1 H1111ti11t••• lke&lll Offit11 j JIJ!, ltlCh ··~l tYt •li M1il1119 Adei•tn: ,.0 . le• 760, 'lb•t Ot"6, OHllH t •au ... ·••••" m ~&<•1• ~""'"' Ce1•• MUI 130 Wtll ••v S••1•' . ,...,""'' '''ti' n11 w1" a o111e1 ll"'lt•••tl' ,,~ C.lt"'61'1!t. JO.I Nor• .. I I,, ....... lh•I 0 &11..V ,II.OT, .,.,,~ ......U. "-t0'"'6'fltf '"' H"""''"'" " llUtlltl'lf• <ltll, ..... , i,,... •• ., ... '"''''" t•l•-«tr llfWll ••• ,~. Mt-1'1 l t !cfl, l; .. !I M .. t . l'll"'"'f.D• lttd" -~ ...... ttlft Vt llt'f. tllflt "',., l•-1 ••*"ti H n'i9M. Ort"" tt·.. "uti l, ...... ~"' ~•llttlflrl .. , .... '" •• nu ""'"' ''""' 11..C ' ,., ......... ,~ ..... Ull ""'11 atV ii'"'' ,., .. M.,I T~e,ii1M f71 41 •42·4JJI, Ji. .. W1tt1t1!Mt..-C611 l40·1 Jlt Cl•ltt.4 A~"rthlltf 641:•1611 Clif,,.,..,, ,,,., °"'"'~ l..~111 ,...,., .... ~ ~'f. Nt ... WI 11•rl... •llllll<l!'t~I, umetlal ,...l'ltl" tr ,t • ...,lot"'t"'' .,,,..1~ "'l'f I» <11""'oKtd ~111611! IMf.!t t "'" .,....,., ot <OIYfi.to• ewn .. , tM.eM d 111 .... ti .. 6f,I •• Ntw11rt ""ell "t Uttl ,.__., C11ff9>~•• ~r\ttltll' •1 f t NI• 1:..1111 -">\~(JI ih> .... !! 1J Je -l~fJI ffllllTtf'f •M!IM H61'11, 11 OI ....,,.,,~ • ' . "'ilhdrawal deadline from June 30 to Dec. ·Ft':deration . Kiwan is, and the Muons. He wi JI. 1971. and would have given the book let with IJJcts nn sex is among tht w11 s 11 member nf the Abiding Savior m President an optkn1 nf keeping troops in Prisoners Flee At 0 v· orienlBtion materials ll:Vllilablt. I 0 Lutheran Church nf El Toro. Q: Vietnam for ;:in addilional perinrl nf up 10 Ce3fi JeW studenli:; al North Carolina St a I! The family suggest8 contribulions to ne 60 da ys beyond Dec. :11 ir he found lhem • University. lhe Frank B. Carpen(er Memorial Fund exposed tn ··unanticipated clear and SoutJt Vi'et Camp·, Mrs. Kr is D!llnn ha~ resigriPd as cha ir-11t !he Church of the Abiding Savior, El present danger." man of thl" Oce11n View School Oist.rlrt The book.let., 11vail ablP upnn reque~l Toro. Jn such a situation. he also wnuld h11ve ~ersonnel Commis!!ion. She will be m!'.lv-through dormitory rounselors, w a lli been empnwered to ask Congress to 1et a ]_} SJtol Down ;J)~ to northern CAiifornia "'ith her fsm-prepared .by the universi1.y·s division of new "'ilhdra"•al dat~. st,denl affa irs. S f h I 'd ·1 t\1r~. Diiion. "'ho ha~ srrvcd ;:is a Teachers Gather For Beach Meet upporl.er_s o t e proposa !!al I 8::1\'P · · · It contains detailed d0 •. cr1'pt1'on of lh• "-ng e e h nee to v t t d th r SAI C.ON IAP I -Fort.y prisoner<. of Cflmm1ss1oner ~1nct' Drcember. 191i7 h;:i.o; .. UJ r ss c a o t' o en e w11 h biologi cal factor~ lnvol ved In conception, as in effect they voll'd for White House war E'~caped from 11 prlsnn deta il on Phu c a.lred the lhree-man boarti for a year. h aulhorlty to wage the war with approv8! Quoc Jsl111d Monday affer killing one or The commission adm inisters the mer it met ods of contraception . ~w to of the Gulf of Tonkin rtso!ution In August , lhtlr South Vietnamese guards an<i system for sch~l cmp1oyes and serves as rleterm ine pregn;inry, how tn obi.t in .- 1984 \4'0U nding ;:inother. tSee \\'ar Story, Page an advisory group ro the sc hool bo;irti in legal abortion, fa ctlli on venereal disease About MO teacher~. student le:adt.:rs and _ll"UeslS are expected to attend thP ninlh annu .. 1 co.nvocat ion or t he Huntington Beach Union High School District Thursday Sept JO. · 41 matters concerning the non·te:aching and other infonnation. Nint. of the pris('lners wert' killed anti staH. Murphy Meets Newport Backers During Luncheon U.S. St'n. George Murphy (R·BevPrly Hills !, mt'l with somt Ml key Newpnrt Beach supportf':r~ ~1onti11y following llis conference "'ith President ~ixon A\ the 'Vei:tero '\'hi1e House in San Clt"!m cnlc. The i:ena1or alt 11.Mch al the Irvine Coa~t Count ry club "·it h some of tht. rity's biJ!ger contributor~ after a h11lf- hour privAte briefing session \\"ilh the President in the morning. After lhe briefing , the twn 1trol!ed on the back lawri of Nixoris Smt CIPm enlP retreat and discussed the senator'! lsraeli trip for newsmt.n. ~lurphy spokr for about IS minute.~ before the Ne"•pnrt group and expressed nplimism lhai ·•" permaneol peace can be reachrd in thf' ~1 iddle Easi.·· Thf'TC harl been 110 11dvance publicity nr Pl-1urphy"s appe11r,11nre in Newport Bl"ll Ch. a lthough 11 Apparenlly had bee n scheduled well jn ad vance . • 7 Hospitalized In Gas Leakage ATI,At-.1TA , Ga. (AP) -St!vt:n person" \\•ere taken to hospita l~. thret> nf lhtm In poor condllian, t\1nnd11y nlp:ht "'he n cholorine gas leaked frnm a tank truck nn lnter5tate 20 and about 17 miles east of he re . A llpokcsmi:in al 1;rady llospit•l io At lAnt<1 said tht thrte In poor cnnd itlon included 11 fireman, a 1rurk rlrivrr 11nd 11 pas&rrby. All harl iliWaled the aas. the spokesman ~1d. Several hourlli alttr the lncldtnt traH lt had re1urned lo nnrm.111. TherP 14•as no eviieuation nr r~ltiPnts in the 11rl"11. although officP:r!'i llr•t r1poMed thty removtd residents. Gas experts from Th.ird A rm \' hea dqoarte.r1 al •·ort ~lcPherson. tn A!lant1 were stnl tn the scentJ to assist loc.111 la14' enforcement offic ers. • < lwo wounded in a gun batlle, but 29 wt.re Superlntendenl Cl11rence Ha ll s.11iti the still at large today, South Vietnamese ;ippointment to fil l Mrs. D 1 x on ' s ht.adquarters announced. unexp ired lerm is for rv.·('I month~. The A llipokesmsn said tie did nol know ~uceesslul c11ndlrl,11te ma y Ix-reo11ppoin1ed WhP ther the pris('lnerlli were North Dec. 1 for 11 three-year te:rm . \1ietnamrse. Viet Cong or both . Ht ~aid Applicallon form5 m11.v be pickf!rl up t>~· there are more than 20,000 in tht. Gulf ('If registered voters Al the .o;chool~ nf rict', Slam just off the southwest coaat of Reach Boulevard at \.Varner, ijun lington Aussies Bar Gregory CANBERRA. Australi a f AP \ -The ~overnment ha~ b11.rrt.d black comttlian nick Gregor y from coming In Auslr11l ia !n participate lri an anti-Vietnam "'ar tnnr;:itorium in Sydney lhi' monlh, lmmigr::it ino nep;irtment nfficial~ s11ld tncl;i~·. A11thnri1irs rcfuscrl tn .~a.v "'hy hi~ rrqur~t for 11 visa h;:irl been rcf115ed. The convocation. set rnr !I a.m. in the Huntington Reach High Se ho o I auditorium. will feature Vick Knight., ;issistant superintendent or educational services for the Placentia UnUied School Districl. as guesI speaker. Vie!nam. Beach, R47·25.'i1. Th,~· mu~!. be re!11rnrti Faculty meetingi:; will be held Sept. S, 1n And 11 to complete plan~ for the operilng of .~C'hont Monday, Stpl.. 14. A cnmmuniquP said the pr ison break by Friday. Sept. 11. lntl"rviews 'll'ill be occurred late ~-londsy afternoon "'hlle cnnrlucted Sep!. lfl. South Vietname!!e na(ly rilt.n were bringing the ~o prisoners back to thf! rriM1n c11mp in ::i truck from a work detall al a navy ba~e. Some of the prisoner!! seized the sailors' weapons half A mile rrom the camp. killed one of !he guartis anti wounded another. Military police M.Jshed from the e.a,mp lo the lliCene, smd lhe pri.sonerlli attai!lted them, thf' communique conlinued. '"The military police returned nre anl'I killed nine prisciners anti wounded two others. Twenty-nine prisoners escaptd and took along a small arm.'' - Volatile Liquid Triggered Blast In Anaheim Shop Thi' Pxpl('l~ion which dlri an rstimalt.c1 1100.000 damage tn a neighborhllOd !'ihoppin,1: centrr In Anaheim Sunday ni1ht "'as lgn ilt>rl by a v('llatlle liquid which had thl" hl!cnsity of 10 !'ilick~ of dyn11mi1t.. Fir(' ri<'partment invPsl igatnr.-1111.iti today the fla mmablP liquid, which they tieclined to irltn!ily, wa~ p nu red thrnujlhOul the J & ~1 Auto Parts. I 127ts. f\111gno\ia Avr. A witness told pollu.e hr. saw two men ln11lde lht parts store re moving 1Mt11 from display ca11Ps shnrtty before the bla~t ;ind a station "·agon parked at 1he re11r nr the establlsliment. A rew seconds after the blast tnrt the ~1orf to bit11, the ststion waaon sped awa y, the witness related. Pollet descr!bf:ti tht. art.A Mond•Y 11s re~emblln~ illl !Cf'l'lt 11her an 11.1r i-11h!, Eighl store~ in the small cenle.r were Fevere ly damaged. • , I What's. • • My Line? YOU WON'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN 'S. • WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOYAL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YO U JU ST WANT TO BROWSE , BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF ·YOU WISH , WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN W( DISC US~ CARPET LINE S, WE WOULD HA VE TO " M 0 D E S TL Y " ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, BER VEN, !EA TIIE, MAGEE, MONARCH , BARWICK,, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIK AN , ARMSTRO.!"G . • i.t.Nf.t.' ANa, OIANll fUtflN c.i1 , .• ALDIN'S llD HILL CAl,m & DlA,.llU I IJ74 lrYh11, T••tl11, C•llf. aJa-J J4-4 ALD·EN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 P'lacentia Ave. • • COSTA MESA 64'6·4138 , ' Pi Vi th .., I , d• .. rll pc ra pl '" in pc .. In 81 R e: r: l• c " " • • c • F ( l ( ' l ( I I , ( l ----~ I ----.-,~==- - ' NewPort Bea~h EDITION Today's Fl•al -N.Y. Stoeb • ~ VOL."63, NO. 209, 2 *· SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ·------ City Eyes Eff.ects of . Shore Bu.ii ding Halt t By L. PETER KRIEG Of tilt ruolly l'li.t l l•ff Al pressures for a moratprium on all oecanfront construction in Newport Beach build, the ramifications of such a flM>Ve are under .close study by the city's lual and planning departments. 'Mayor Ed Hirth and Councilman Carl ~-ymla Monday both said they would en- dorse aome kind of building halt while $Miles are made on the fu ture or the ~aterfroot. lrru1e Co. Asks-Limit On Airport The Irvine Cdlnpany today filed a letter with the Orange County Board of Super visors fannally asking that there be "" ~re expansion at Orange County Air- port. The letter contained live nlain state- ments and recommendations. They are: -Expansion would be "environment- all)' illcompatible with the model com· munity (the planned city of Irvine)·we are building." -Either Camp Pendlelon or "an off. shore site" be considered as sites for a second county air facility. -A planned phase-out of the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station as a jet fa- cility. -In expansion plans. the county con· rider "potentially destructive economic impacl." of an expanded-or a second air· port. along with considerations ol posi· tive economic factors . ---~Any-decision-on-the scope-o(· opera· tiOns at die airport "should be made with al least equal regard to the environ- mental needs of the residents of Orange County as '""ell as the transpartation needs." PLA~ ENDORSED The letter, sigied by Irvine Company Vice President. Richard A. Reese, cited the land deve lopment firm's consistent endorsement of ~ findings of the Phase l Orange County Air Transportation Plan developed by William L. Pereira and As- sociates. The phase I report said the airport tllould ret8in its role as a metroport pro viding commuter service limited in range in number oC flights. Reese also sai d that the company's plans for industrial and commercial land use ntar the airport "do not anticipate inttnsification of use of said facility. "The company has, for example. pro- posed no major commercial development Whose success would obviouslv depend on Increased commercial jet traffic,'' he said. The letter pointed oot that any such re- gional commercial activity would "gene- rate irresistible pressures to expand the Airport and thereby greatly increase the · number or commercial jet flights." RESIST EXPANSION Reese said the company would "resist" expansion "in an effort to respect the rights of property o~ners in this and ad· jacenl areas of Orange County." Citing the company's commitment to 0'better urban environment." Reese said. "\Ve are fully a~·are of the negative con- !tquences created by the jet aircrafl ~ra. "As :11 result," he said . "we ha ve re- comn1enc!E>d against the location of any airport with jet capability within the ~See IRVINE, Page %) Both slreSsed, ho~·ever, that before acting to establish such a freeze, that they would have to be told a Dew master plan, or civic district, could -be created in a reasonable period of time. Kymla had proposed the civic district approach at last week's city council meet- ing. · He initially proposeQ the district. which would crea1e specific buUding criteria, govern only the lower bay, ,Monday he sai<l the area misht be PPlDdecf to cover the outside of Balboa ptninsula as well. The council last week diffi:ted the city staff and Planning Commission "to ex· plore the · desirability, legality and feasi- bility" or creating a Lower Bay Civic District. Pressure for initiation ~r such a zoning move, and the moratorium necessary to allow preparation of it, is growing simply because the city has suddenly round itself Under ~ gun for answ~rs from proposed DAILY Pit.OT Sien..,_.. Drivewa11s Are for Parking Even planes, like this 1948 Stinson owned0 by Bflf-Wathen, of 21' Sierks SL;-Costa Mesa, who purchased it for $1,100 after it was ground=looped and in need of repairs. 1\.1ondee Wathen; 9, on bicycle, is pl'obably the envy of every neighborhood playmate. Other planes are parked around Costa Mesa, but her dad has the only one on Sierks Street. Agnew Joins President F 01· Meeting on Mide!!st By RICHARD P. NALL r Of tllf 'llllJ l'llM Still Vice President Spiro Agnew cut short his Asian mission to join Presidenl Nixon in Sa n Clemente loday for a National Security Council meeting on the Middle East. The vice presideiit shdrte'ned his stay in Honolulu by one day· -cancelling a golf match -to deliver a per sonal assessment of his J J-day Asian tour of Cambodia, Vietnam, Taiwan, South Korea and Thailand. The President reportedly w a s especially anxious to learn more of Agnew's conversations with Cambodian Premier Lon Nol and his view at the chances of his country's surviv•I under communiSt allack. The President. Agnew and t o p diplomatic and military advisers also will assess the strained ~fiddle East cease fire. Israel is in the midst of "a very bitter argument" with the U.S. over Israeli charges of alleged cease fire violations by Egypt, according tO Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir. It has been charged that Egypt violated the agreement by moving SAM missile bases closer to the Suez Canal. ~ The U.S. has maintained that it cou ld not verify such charges conclusively before setting up elaborate electronic surveillance in the area. City's Trash Pickup These attending loday's S.n c1,m<nt• loI>-level session included Secretary of On Normal Schedule state Will iam Rogers; David Packard. --deputy defense secretary; Richard C. The normal schedule or trash pickup in Helms, director 0£ the Ce nt r a I Newport Beach wlll l>e followed on Labor Jnielligence Agency; Henry Kissinger\ Day. the ~neral"'Services Department National Secu rity Affair5 Advisor; Adm. said today. Thomas H. Moorer. chairman of the Joint Residents who regularly r ec e iv c Chief5 .of Staff; and Joseph P. Siseo, pickups on P.1onday have~ asked to assistant Secretary of State for Middle have all containers at the curb by 7 a.m. East Affairs. Jet Crackdown" Approved But Workability of Mesa Resolutio1i ·Questioned A resolution aimed at forcing airlines Into beltei" control of jet noise and pollution-or getting out of <;>range County Airport entirely-was unan imous... 11 approved Monday by the Costa Mesa City Cooriil. . The workability or it was im.mediately challenged. P.f1yor Robe rt M. Wilson's proposal "''ill be sent to all Z3 Incorporated cities in the totmty, however, plus !he Orange County oBard ol Supervisors and other agencies. He hopes to sain \11/:ldespread support in -th! campaign. ''This thing will be sent nationwide,'' ht p ld, mentioning the UJ. Oepairtrnent of Transportation and the National U:!ague of Cities. p "The time to acl ls now. Right 09w," he continued. • W 11 son • s three.page. 12-paragraiph rc.~olutlon is somewhat complicated, but he_...belle~·es It can be use~ " a club tc. force manuracturers lo make needed changes. ~ Enj\Cll~nt of the stiff regulations at lhis juncture would be the responsibility of county $Upervlsors. Dan Emory, chairman of the Airport Noise Abatement Coinmlttee and member (If a statewide panel sludylng the problem. wen! bl:!fore the council td say the Wilson .. concept seems rather inerrecuve. HTcchnolV;tica l change isn't the answer for Ora nge County Airport,1' he e11:plaintd. mentioning stud les and statistics aimed al creating a quieter jet engine. He implied tt can 't be done. "If they don't want to _buikl i. silen t engine, then they can take their coUon· pickin' airliners somewhere else." !laid Mayor Wllson. • ' "We're fed up." "Our position aod Dan Emory·~ 11 rl! quite different," the mayor explained after adjournment. "He's taking the old slow, cauUous approach." Essentially, the Wilson resolut.lon calls for strict controls and penalties for violations or proper noise and pollution ' standards to be enacted by the county and related agencies. Th e paper admll..!i the jetliners are probably here to star. along with Orange County Airport, and\that no regional or International facility is coming to the Soulhland In Ifie foreseeable future. En gineering aM t.echnical studies on the twln probltms are under way, It Dotes, and county supervisors should Tefuse to renew airline pennits until conditlonA are met through such improvements. The £f:!i01ution ~ificaOy says this I& to be done before ntW leases are approved, th!JI tn effect setU11g a November, 1971 dea_dline for A Ir !See CONTROLS, Pap !) .. • • developers and redevelopers along the water; The Balboa Bay Club, wi th Jta now-re- jected tower on ltilts proposal, seemed to start the ball· rolling. The BBC hasn't given up on aome form ol deviation from pre;tent helglit limitations, and is seeking a mtttinc ol the minds with the Planning Commissloq to study alternate proposals. n,e Qay Club plan has been clo-sely followed by another request for high-rise apartmentai on the beaches. This lime Its the owner ol the property that was fornlerly the site for the famed ReDdez.. \'OUs Ballroom who Js petitioning for an II-story, SS-unit complu. A public hearing on thiJ request will be conducted by the plaruiers Thursday at 8 p.m.J n City Hall. Tbe quandary that the' Newport Beach city fathers hive found themselves in is loaded with myriad conRqUence!I. The council members. u expected, will at least say they are "reluctant" to en-- dorse any kind of mofatotium. poinUn1 out this would delay the plans ot mlftJ property owners. · On the other hand, in the words ol Ma,. or Hirth, "We have to protect our Wlf.er.. fro~t and if necessary to go to thia u- treme to protect It, as a temporary measure., it may be acceptable," Kymla obvioosly doesn't like the tenn "moratorium,"· bu t admitted there wu no half-way method to institute while. Utt (See BUll.DING, Pip l) W.ar Bill Defeated Ilawks Chalk Victory Over Doves WASHINGTON (UPI) In a signHicant test of sentiment. the Senate today refused to tie President Nixon's bands by ordering hJm to end U.S. participation in the Vietnam war by a gpeclflc. dea4Jine. The vote against the Hatfield-McGovern amendment was 5S to 39. The hawk vs. dove showdown ended a protracted and sometimes emotional debate on the war issue and the pace Nixon Is setting in withdrawing American troops from Vietnam. . . Advocates of the amendment held little optimism of winninl outright but had hoped to make the score closer than it was. They lost key votes at the last hour. Two Republican "doves" -Sens. John Sherman C.OOper of K!ntucky and Cltarles Percy of lliinoi.s -announced opposition to the amendment on grounds it might undercut U.S. peace negotiation efforts. When the tensely waited roll call came, only seven Republicans joined 3 2 Democrats in voting for the proposal aimed at virtually compelling Nixon to get all-American forces ~ IDdochlna by Dec. 31, 1971. Voting to ~ject the proposal -,as an amendment to a $19.2 billion military procurement bill -are 21 .0emocratl a.nd 34 Republicans. The spectator galleries were . aboat three-fourths full as the vote was taken. A number of young people were Jn altendance. There was no audience reaction when the result was announced. The amendment had. betn upected to lose. County Boosts Property Taxes By thr-ee Cent" 840 Million Complex Azimuth's Hotel Plans Jly JACK BROBACK Of .. INI" Pff9I lllll Set for Another ·Hearing Orange County'!! 1970-71 property tax rate was set 1t $1.70 this morning by the Board,o_f Supervisors. Th! figure represents a three-cent increase over the 1969-70 rate of fl.67 per $100 awssed valuation. Faced wlth the need to absorb a deficit of abnost $3 million because of 1 recent reduction in state Medical aid to the county, the ·Supervisors decide3 to comPromlse and cut .&bout $2 million out of the adopted county budget of $212 million. ~ •t.70 rate was suggested by Supervisor David Baker. He included in his motion, whic h was a d o p t e d unanimously, that "the c o u n t y admfnistrat.lve officer and the various department heads find a way to cut the neceu1ry n million 6ut of the budget and report back to the board within a few weeks. The dtcision to peg the rate between last year's $1.67 and the $1.75 figµre which would have been required if no budget cuts were made was vigoro'-"IY opposed by the Orange County Chamber of Commerce. Clarence E. White and Robert Sigmund of tM Chamber's governmental -a~fairs committt"' urged the Supervisors to hold The hoUy disputed proposal of Azimuth Equities, Inc., of Newport Btach to build a $40 million commercial-hotel complex adjoining Oranae County Airport will have Jts nex-t aJring before the Orange County Board of "Supervisor• late in September. Azimuth origii\al]y tried to obtain Newport Beach CJty council approval to annex the 52 acres at the northeast corner or MacArthur Bou.Jevard and Campus Drive. Newport couhcilmen deadlocked over the proposal and Azimuth withdrew the request for the merger "to the city, which had been opposed by the Irvine Company. Three weeks ago, the county Planning Commission turned down Azimuth's request for a zone change on the parcel from industrial. UBe to commercial. Commissioners ruled that the office building-hotel complex was not in conformity with the county 's general plan for the airport aru whJch is part of the Irvine Industrial Complex-. Jn the meantime, the Local Agency Sen. Carpenter's Father, 65, Dies During V acatipn the line at the current rate, noting that Frank Henry Carpenter, father of a.ssessed valuations of county property recently elected State Senator Dennis Carwnter (&-Newport Beach), . died have gone up 17.6 perctnl. Saturday while on vacation in Hailey, "You can do like businesses have been Idal)o. He was 65. forced to do in the past year of tight Funeral services were held this fiscal conditions by i n c re a 1 i n g afternoon at the Pacific View Mortuary productivity per man lf you have to lay ChB artopel lnFCorG~a de! ofMfalclr wtinglth lheBRealv. lo ,, \l'b' '"'""' u n . 1est a . ur1 off some emp ye!, 1te ar.......... followed at Pacific View .Memorial Park. Supervi.aor William Hirsteirr-sugguted-Mr:-cirpetite!' Js survivett by his wife, that lhe fl million beach acquisition fund Helen, of the family home, 2260 8 Via in the adopted budget be ellnUnated and Puerta. Laguna Hill!: two sons. ~nil, th t ·~ 000 be cut from other and Donald·Cirpenter of San Gabriel ; a a .......,, sister, Mrs. Ruth Young of Sunland, and department budgets to meet the $1.~ SiX grandhclldren. rate fi&ure. A native of Grand Forks, Minn., Mr. · But Supervisor Robert Battin didn't Carpenter taught physical educaUon at agree. He urgtd that lhe entire P million several M~neso.ta schools, ~Iii· coming t t f lhe edl t te •..• 1 to Callfonua witb hls .family 22 )'tars ~ cu ou o m . ca cen r uuuge ago. ~aUse t~ center is the cause of all After coming to Call(omla, he served tlft trouble.. aM a1slstant6reartation dlreCtor for the city or Burbank. then later became Board Gets 'Breaks' From Regular Meets Orange Qot.inty supervlson will get two days "off" this week and next week, rrom formal sessions at least. • · W-dnesday 's regular meeting has been canctlled because IM!lt board membtrs will be at Mammoth Lakes attendln1 a 10.CounlJ eon!ertnct on polluUon and other subjects or the hour. -N'txl week Admission Day fall.s on the regular Wednesday d&tc 11nd so that session has been cancelled also. recreation tupervieor for the city of Torrance. . From 19S3 until his: reUrcment in !989. 'tl1r. Carpenter served a! Director of Parks and RecrtaUon for the city of San Gabriel. Alttr reUrlng, he moved to Leisure World. Mr. Carpenter was aictlve tn the Southern Cllifornia M'unlcipal Athletic · 1'~ederation, l lwanls, and the Ma30f'IS. He was a member of the Abiding Savk>r _Lutheran Chute!> o( El Toro. The family IU((gotl8· <Ontrlbillioro !0- the Fran~ 8. Carpenter Memot'lal Fund •t !he Church ol the Abldln1 Savior, Et rToro. • Formation Commission (LAFC) Jut Wednesday approved annexaHon of the 171-acre Collins Radio Company property to Newport Beach despite 1 t r o n c opposition from the Irvine Company and residents of the future city of Irvine. This property adjoins ·the Azimuth SS acres on the northeast IO the "anneuUon plOt" thickens. Newport council iav! as one reason for not approving the Azimuth annex to tM city, the fa::t that the property ls nol conUguous to city boundaries. Only a 4Q.. foot section of the 52-acre parcel is cloae to Newport Beach and this section ii separated by 100-foot wide MacArthur Boulevard. tr and when, the Collins annex-ation is finally approved by all parties concerned that-property will be contiguous to Newport boundaries for almost one mile. and coincidentally the Azimuth propertJ will become contiguous to the city, However, lhe lrvlne Company served notice before the LAFC that it wW ro to tourt over the Collins property. Irvine owns the 177 acres but Collins bolds a 95- year l!ase on them. The legal point to be settled In the courts is whether the land owner (Irvine) or the long-term lessee (ColliM) hu the right to approve or disapprove an annexation. So lhe stage is set for the next battle over the 51rparcel ·which Azimuth i8 purchasing from McDonnell Douglas Corp. The Irvine Company ii expected to oppose the wnc change when it comes up for approval or disapproval by the supervisors .. The board will have to rule on the commission decision to deny the rezone which Azimuth has appealed. ' The complicated maneuvers resemble aomewhat the famous dialogue by Abbotl jSee AZCML'TH. P1ge I) Oruge We•tller Coastal (Qg will cloa k the beaches in the morning. but sunny skies will reign through most of Wed- nesday, with temperatures ruminC from 70 to 85 degrees. ' INSIDE TOD.\ l' Alodtrate 1tud1n11 are strik- ing back 011 comptue.s aeron Cnlifornia wi th· the formation o/ "Frontlash '70." See Page 20. C11lfw~l1 1 Clltc-lnl UJI 1 CltnlllM 11·fl C-WI 1J Cr1n...,,. U fflfll'i.t ,.,. • IMWT~ It f'll!MI:• • 1 .. 11 _ .... ,.... -. l.1'111 Ll !Mltn U Mii... • MMIM It I ..~ , J I ' ------- ~ D~JLV PILO.T • " l'rom P .. e l SHORE BUILDING ••• . dty regroups. He Insisted, however, thal potentlal de- velopers wOU,ld have to !le allowed to talk to cfty oUicia4 ~t tPeir, glans, or tve.n , to 6Ubmit thtm for reactions, whlle the freeu was in effect. , ·They· shoukl be allo~ed to contribute \oput into the clty:, <'teatinn 6f new har- bor guidelines, he~ taid. Eeveryone seems concerned. about. the ~fies· of any moratorium thlit might lie established . City Auorney Tully Seymour sald I.here ls no doubt that a legitimate "toniog u:eeze" WQU!d bt legal, !or up to two n~rs. . Nobody.ls talldng ·about hold ing up con. atruction lhat long. • The mor8torium "would have to be for • limited time.'' Mayor Hirth stressed. •!onJy sufficient to get out some standards tq. guide development." · Kymla said the time needed to formally develop plans for a Civic District wou ld fie the key to the feasibility Qf a morator- ium. He said a freeu would be called fQ!' if ~Jans coo.Id be prtpared "in two or three 9ionths." He said this would be a Plan- l'rom Page l l~VINE ... area encompassed by the Irvine General Plan." At this point Reese expres$td the com- . pany's hope that jet use afEI Toro wou\~ be phased out. .. Nevertheless." he added, "the Irvine Company rec()gniz.es the need for ade- ..quate air transportation facilities within reasonable proximity to Orange County restdents." • · He said the Camp Pendleton area would be within reasonable proximity. "In addition," he said, "an offshore ilte should alse ·be given serious consid- eration as an alternative iolution." · .. llOUBLY CONCERNED · Saying the residents in .the area of the future city are "satisfied.'1 with the com· pany·s Positk>n on airport development, Rtiese said the firm is "doubly con- cerned'' ,about pro(:IOSed development of ,second county airport with commerciaJ jet capabilities. "The Irvine Company believes this present.$ the Board of Supervisors with an unenviable task," Reese said. "It is a twofold task, neither aspect of w~ch can be reasonably ignor~, '' he. laJd. "In order lo carry lit out it is necessary (or tHe Board of Supervisors to : I. at •. f:empt! with the assistance of· regional and subordinate agencies, to locate, pur- diase: and develop a suitable site, and t. while doing so, pursue with equal vigor ~lutiOn:r' to 'the major oV~iding prob· lem i~d by air transportation MY· where; that of noise pollution ,'' Reese 'd . ,, ""'. ' ' t ' ' •••• EQUAL JIEGARD "In· summary," he said, "it is the opinion and recommendation of the Ir· Vine Company that any decision on the ~pe of operatipns at Orange County ;.\JrPQrt should be made with at lea st Iqua! regard to the environmental nteds jf the residents of Orange County as 1"ell as the transJ.l()rtation needs of its tit.ens. "To analyze solely the positive econom- fac~rs related to a .. cotnmercial air ration in the center 9r the county's . h. pattern, ~hile Ignoring the ·Po- tially destructive economic impact such a facility, is ·totaJfY incompatible f'ith sound planning principles. •' "This same evaluation should be aP- .pljed to considerations for the location of JJlY new air facility serving Orange '(;ounty whether it be located •ithin the ~nty or adjacent to its boundaries,'' ~ese said. ~ IJ,oose Screw Award ~ .~aptured by Early • : The list of winners in Saturday's eh t Boat Parade. sponsored by the arbor Chamber of Commerce e's Club. has grown by one·. ;. The annu8.:t .. Loose Screw Award" for jhe best animation was captured this 'ear by the lively baseball scene on Jack· Jarly's Artista. . ·.-------------, '· • . i ; • • t: • ' ' • ' l t. . f. ! :· . • • • • i·· . • • • i I DAILY PILOT OltA,,.G!: COAST PUILISHlllG i:OMli'AllY Rolu.t N. W11i J•c~ It. Curl1y iho'"•• A. Mu rp~'"' M•"•'l~o e.,,,, H .. ,..rt lffcll 0"ict 1111 W11t l1lk1 l oult •tr4 M1ifl11t Aitl~1111 ,,O. le• 1111, •1•61 O•~ OHket (0111 MHt i ))I)'*"•' l1y '""' l..-i"' IMCll: m l"«UI •w~u. H1111111111t11 lttt": 110S lft(ll l,,,_1tv1111 Stn Cilt,,.."!t: JO.I Ntrlll El C.mlN lt .. 1 o.tilt,Y '"ILOT. '"'''" ,..,1•tl'I i., <~tlr>td 1n1 1<1~Jlof'9.11, h M lltl\MI <ltllV t)(fll a.,.... ••v In 1111r1tt cdHIOlli itr L••-ltttJ>, H1ww1 •••ell, Ce.11 Mtll . H~ftlll'lf\tOI ltlfOI IMI F-"!" Vt!lcy, t l1711t wll~ lw& rtOlelltl Hirt~•. O•ll'IOt COU! lutll1~I ... i;OMN"Y l>flOlllflt lllMt t tl II H!l Wt>I Stlbef t :w., lltw-1 ttlth, tMI lXI Wnl ••r Stt11r, (HI• Mt11. T-'-"'" t7141 6•2·•311 Clenlflff A~rti•I-. 642·1611 (~yr)OOlt, '••d, uNf!Dt Col11 l'utll1~1t11 ce"''""'· Ho "'""' 1t1•4!1, ""''""-· t 111trl1I "'-'"' tt .i<1vttll1t,.....•1 htltl" IN.y W f'1'~fi WI!-t1Kl1! ..,.. ........ el (OIY!'ltf'I ow,-, k tN (II .. ~etl'lt (II~ fl IHWWT Stltll ..... '"'" Nl"tt, t!l~lf. kiM<"-''°" tv <.,•ltr fJ 00 l'l'IO~l~l1; &'I' m•H st ... mMlllf'l'I f!IUlll,,. fltl""I-. l..00 mMlhl1, ) nin& department decision, but lndJcated he Wll Confident that is enoo&h time. . The .scope or the moratorium ts also hl&hly Jlexlblt, the halt could be dlneted at ooly certain type's of co111trucuon. City Attorney Seymour pointed thit out, noting: that it could be appUed to build~ ings that would be higher than a c;ertaln limit, or any other criteria · eitlblisbed by the city. • ' Seymour £lso said. Jn answer lo one 'JC Kym la's orjg!na'I stipulation~ on the po!I· • slbility of rreating a Civic District, that, the ,v tpo, are legal. ''The philosophy, the general approach is possible,'' he sai~. but he noted that he has not yet had sufficient time to study the specific proposal made by K.vmla to deterrrline lts legalily. Commenting on the variations in si ze and scope suggested by those involved. he said that it would likely not be possible to offer an QPinion until a spe- cific proposal Is solidified. Kymla, Monday. proposed a specific plan that is an expansion of his earlier recommendation aiid that likely coYld be the one finally tabbed by the_corulcl!.l.. "I would like to see the city create a Civic District in both Lower Newport Bay and the Peninsula oceanfront which in- corporates areas presently'"zoned multi- family residential , commercial and in· dustrial," Kym la said. • He said-he was not that concerned with single-family zo nes. "They pose no real threat ;it thi!I point to irchitectUral control and height limi. t.ations.'' he said. So. the pressures do build. However of all the pressures involved, the Diggest right now art likely those brought about by time. · · All persons involved say they are aware of this. High Rise Plans For Rendezvous Site to Be Aired A bigh rise apartment on the Site of Balboa's Conner Rendezvous Ballroom in Newport Beach "ii the only economically feasible" use· of the property, the architect for the proposed Sl.3 million project nid today. A public hearing on the proposed 95- foot tower project is scheduled Thursday at 8 p.m. in City Hall. Costa Mesa architect Rolly Pu\ask(this morning said he feels there is "no alternative" use possi ble for the property that would make money. Calling the area "!Iemi-blighled," PulaBki pointed out that commercial enterprises th~re are mostly operaling only marginally and said 56 families would provide a "real shot in the arm'' for them. He said a commercial us~ on the 20.000 Jqilare foot site, located af 6oo-8'1.4 East Ocean Front, could not survive. The property currently is zoned fo r business. The Cl tone has a 35-foot htight limit. There has been no immediate indication Qf what. if any, opposition can be expected at the public hearing. A 3imilar tower apartment proposal fostered by the &!boa Bay Club .drew considerable opposition from nearby residential areas and subsequentlY. was rejected bY both the planning commiJsion and .the city council. The BBC is currently preparing alternat.e presenlaUona for submission to the planners. The rental price of the proposed peninsula project, which would be built at 000:614 East Ocean Front, has not yet been determined. Pulaski said. He said 48 one-bedroom apartments are planned along with eight three-bedroom suites on the upper two stories. Newport Resident • Found Strangled In Hotel Room Newport Beach police today are investi gating the strangulatio;i death of a Newport man whose body was found Monday morning in a McFadden" Place hotel room . b1vestigators estimate Bert Ernest \Vidolf, 55, had been dead approximately a, "':eek when his body w,s discovered by the hotel maid . The maid. Myrtle Humphrey. told detectives she last saw Wldolf alive a "·eek lartler. She discovered his body lying across his bed Jn the small rom when she went to ask why his trash cans hadn't been moved. Detective Sam Amburgey said an autopsy revealed the man had died of strangulation, but noted the cause of strangulation has not yet been detcrmined. "Right now we·re trying to gather some information on his backrround, '' Amburgey said . "\Vi! knO\\' he \\'as chlldles~ and di\'orced, and he had liVed in Newport for four or five years. He had been living In !he ~otel since April." the detective s;iid, W1dolf apparently did odd jobs on bosts d had recently done cabinet Work In so local residf!tlces. "\Ile don't know where he ·did the cabinet work. but we are lrylng to find out.'' ~bur1ey said. Aussies Bar Gregory CANBERRA. Australia (AP) -The governn1ent has barred black comediRn Dirk Cregory from coming to Austra li a to participate. in an anU·Vietnam war moratorium in S)·dney this month, lmmigration Depanment offlclals ieid tod•y. Authorllits refused to say wrty bis request for a vls'.a had been refu sed. -·-· -·"-----·-----------·--·- • =- • 1:'.i'1 • OAIL Y PtLOT Sllfl Pllt19 from Pase 1 CONTROLS. • • Callroroia and April, 1972, for Air We&t. Councllman Jack Hammett suggesl.td that particular switch ln wQ.rding from Mayor Wllaon's originer· April I, 1972 stl~latlon. ' fhe politlcat impact versus the fecl\Ool oltlcal Impact makes it Im portant to tet lhf conlractual date," Hammett observed. ''You have to put' tffth where you have the power to bltt,'' he added, · The conclusion ot the resolution calls for deposit of all license fee and penalty lines in· a special fund dedicated to researching solutions to noise and jet fuel pollution . · Emory strongly' hinted this would be pouring money down the drain, based on what is kno\vn to date about potential controls, especially on noise. He said Calt.ech has received a SS00.000 grant to try to determine precisely what factor or combination of factors creat.es IL the horrendous jet noise. Earth is for Moving Emory also .said a retrofit system being studied by the Federal Aviation Adrilinistration shows only a slight reduction of noise in four-engine jetliners, costing $150,000 per engine. Na. noticeable change can be detected by the human ear in using the rede!Iigned engines for twin·engine jets such ~s now use Orange County Airport, he said. Bulldozer appears to be attacking parked earthmov- er at construction site near Jamboree Road and Palisades Roasf in Newport Beach. Project is an ex· tension of Jamboree Road and should be completed Nov. 15. Adjacent Lockheed Cofupany property is , being used as "•borrow site" for dirt fill material for road extension, The FAA program-ir 9doptcd-.,.,·on't come before 1974 or 1975 and he doubts it will come at al!, he said. Double Ses·sions ·Blasted "ff not, nobody can make the changes. The FAA won·t allow it," Emory told the counciL ~1ayor \V ilson remarked that his legislation may not result in Ji quieter engine and if so, the county would'liave a liver with which to force jets out of the Parents Divided in Reaction to School Busing loca l airport · Emory responded by saying the resolution is self-contradictory because its wording says the jets are here to slay •• Mayor Wilson then recalled he said in a speech fi ve years ago that -in effect - smog is good, if used properly. University Park parents appeared divided today in their reactions to the Tustin Union High school board decision to bus 1.000 University High students to Mission Viejo. Mrs. Arnold Krenek. of 18345 Chicory Way, Irvine. said she had talked to "90 percent of the people involved" in the busing-double' sessions plan and finds them believing the plan "the most obvious move the boird could make." Mr!. Krenek. previous public relations committee chairman for the fledgling parent-teacher organization steer in g committee, said comments reported in the DAILY PILOT Oy other parents were "purely a political play." Mrs. Krenek's husband ! o r me r I y headed the group formed to set ~up a parent teacher organiza~ion for the new school which is under construction and e~pected to open sometime from · late October to early January. A ~trike by sheet metal workers has been blamed by school officials for the delayed opening of the 1,2QO.:;t\ldent high school which led trustees to vote e1penditure of $5,000 to bus pupils to Misaion Viejo Jor an afternoon double session. -our board is very conservative,'' ,..1rs. Krenek said. "They don·t spend money unless it is absolutely neces~ary. A great deal of thought v.·as given to the busi ng plan and their decision was made for the stiidents' good ," she argued. • Another University Park p a r e n t • Robert Platt . said he supported the Kreneks' viewpoint and be 1 i eve d comments. by othe'r pa"rfnts were designed "to. make the trustees look bad.'' However. Platt indicated he was not happy with double sessions which he said were the "worst part'' of the trustees' plan. • "We have had busing of students for several years. in this growing district,'' the father of five said. He suppports the trustees' arguments that the similarity of 1'.1ission Viejo to University High will make the lransi1ion easier for students and lhat the Mission campu! size is better suited t o accommoda ting 1.000 more students than is the 23-acre-Tustin high ca mpus. Both Mrs. Krenek and Pla tt noted the formation of a parent organ ization for the new school has been fraught with difficulties which have "polarized the Trasl1 in Harbor Cries Not Yet Heard by Chief The rising ti.de of 1rash in Newporl Harbor. "'hich has resulted in expressions of concern from Chamber nf Commerce ::ind city officials, has had little effect on Harbcir District Director K e n n e t h Sampson. Today Sampson said he has not been approached about the mailer by representative s of either group. "We jusl 'enfor ce the la1vs," he said. •·we aren't com temp 1 a t i n g the de ve\op1nent of son1e kind of a bay S\\'eeping machine.'' Sampson said Informa tion on t)\c number of Utter citations issued recently by Harbor patrolmen \\'as not readily available. ~ "We usually give war nings," he noted. ''This is a plea sure craft harbor and v.·e·re • not strong on cit3tion!I fot minor infractions.'' The problem first received official consideration from ci ty and chamber officials at a chamber board of directors meeti11g which \\'&S attended by ~ta)'Or Ed Hlrth. \\'hile discussingJ.he netd for a masler plan for the bay shbreline, 5everal boRrd members. including Chamber Prcsldtnt Charles Currey, mentioned the problem of junk !loa.tlng In thl" bay. Al lhat August meeting. Hirth said the clly would look into lhe is!ul!:, hut noted -thtre -is a question of r~sponslbll\1 y for lhe cltan!ng operations lnvoh•ed since the Hnrbor District has jurisdiction over the b·ay. He nlso s11ld there ls "no excuse for the harbor not beinil cle1µ1.'' community. '1 Platt said the numoer one issue facing the fledgling group is "who's going to be allowed to join." • "As it is set up now. anyone in the district who pays $2 can join," Platt said. "I oppose this," he ta.id, "because it allows students or anyone to join. With too many students, meetings could be disruptive." Mrs. Krenek said she believed anyone should be able to join but not as voting members. "ff you open this to anyone living \11ithin the district boundaries, activists like the Students for ~· Democratic Society (SOS) and the Weathermen at UC Irvine will take the ·fir st opporlunity to join and vote. They'll outvote the apathetic parents who'd rather stay home and watch television ." ~he said. "I know thi s could happen. because r ve seen y,·hat does occur. I sa w outsiders come 1 in, vanloads of peoplC', at a confrontation at the Bank of Amer ica. la st year." she said .. Mrs. Krenek said she was concerned that the parent·teacher organization might ra ise "say $10.000 for choir robes for the school v.·hich the acUvisls might divert lo bring somebody li ke !Chicago Seven .attorney \liilliam) Kunstlcr or a John Bircher to address students ." Mrs. Krenek an·d Platt fa vo r st ructuring the group 's by-la\.l'S lo allow only parents of children in the high s~l\ool \'Oling rights in ~organization. Le:;ser issues di viding the Universily High parents. P 1 a t t said, is Lhe re· quirements for a loyalty oath to be take n by prospeclive members. and the recitation of the Pledge of All egiance at meetings. Neither of these is presently required in the byla\\'S which are to be voted on al a meeting following the opening of school. Platt decried the porarization of the community v.·hich he blamed for swelling interest in the group "which was started \vith 10 to 12 people and has groy,·n to 90 .,. or 100 based on attendance at the last meeting." Platt indicated 1he group drawing up bylaws for the organization had consulted other schools' .Pa rent -teacher organizations and "tried to incorporate their byla"·s." "Most other organiza!ions :;;upport the U.S. Constitution,'' Platt said. "I'm aware that some people in this-eountry are trying to change our form of govemment and its constitution. Quite a few of them· like socialism. I disagree with socialism. The Constitution is the only thing that stands in their way,'' he Sa.id; ';Based on my experience at these meetings. J find people who s o vehemently oppose supporting t h e Constitution have to have some reason- maybe some of them arc Communists or Socialists." Pl.alt said. "I can·t imaglne any decent , hard- \\'orking ·citizen of the U.S. being adamantly Opposed to the Pledge of Allegiance or loyalty oaths unless they are." he concluded. Both i\lrs. Krenek and Platt objected lD remarks made by Mrs. Arlene Gooch in the DAILY PILOT last week being attributed to her as a •·spokesman" for the fledglin_g orga nizatioii. ln a letter Friday, Mrs. Gooch said v.•hile she apprecia ted the coverage. "the article included a serious error when I \1·as designated a spokesman for the fledgling p.ircnt orga nflation. l am not. I spoke. only for myself on this matter ," ti.frs. Gooch said. ' Technically. lhe grQup has disbanded unlil the organizational vote following the Qpcning of school. ~(i\, Krenek said, and thus has no formal "spokesman." However, Mrs. Gooch has been involved in the coordination of the parent- teacher"organization, she said. "She was hand·pic ked by the principal to be on the coodi.nating council," Mrs . Krenek noted. l'rom Page 1 ~ AZIMUTH ... He said it created a sensation, and with it some ridicule, but added that smogless cars are now being developed due to proper use of smog. The proper use, he hinted. is arousal o[ public opinion to tell big business in no uncertain terms "'hat it must do, rather lhan accepting what it says it can 6r cannot do. Altitudes, landing and takeoff pattern!!'., and other attendant matters are mentioned in the resolution as needing county regulation. · Prisoners Flee South Viet Camp; 11 Shot Down SAIGON (AP) -Forty prisoners ol \\'ar escaped from a prison detail on Phu Quoc Island Monday after killing .on~ of the ir South Vietnamese guards and \\'ounding another. {See War Story, Page 4). Nine of the prisoners "'ere killed and tv.•o wounded in a gun battle, but 29 were still at large today, South Vietnamese headquarters announced. A spokesman said he did not know whether the pr isoners were North Vietnamese, Viet Cong or both. He said • there are more than 20,000 in the Gulf of ..Siam jusL off the southwest coast of Vietnam . •,,, A communique said the prison break and Costello ··\Vho's on fir st." \Viii lhe superv isors decide lhe rezone issue in favor of Azimuth or the Irvine Company. Will the courts approve or disapprove the Collins annexation to Nev.•port '.' \\'ill Azi muth be successful in becoming par\ofNev.•port ·aeach son1e day'.' Stay tuned for the next epi sode. The \1'hole question ""'ill undoubte dly · be serlled in three nr four yea rs, if the cou rts mo \'e quickly. • occurred late Monday afternoon while South Vietnamese navy men were bringing the 40 prisoners back to the prison camp in a tru ck from a work detail at a navy base. Some or the prisoner, seized the ;c;ailors' weapons half a mile from the cam p. killed one of the guards and wou nded anoth er. t.1ilitary police rushed from the camp !1;1 the scent., and the prisoners attacked them. the commu nique continued. What's. • • My Line? YOU WON 'T liE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN'S; • • WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FA ST SALE. NONE OF OUR SA LESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. \ . WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST LY" AQMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. , TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGElOW, SERVEN, BEA TIIE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG. ' ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES SANTA I.NA, OUH•I TUSTIN C•ll ,, • • A~DIN'I llD MILL Cl.l,!TS 'i DRA,ERllS f 11)74 frriR•, Tw1t!1, C.llf, IJl·JJ44 1663 l'lacentia Ave. I COSTA MESA 646-4838 • • I - • • ~osta·: Mesa ED l.T I ON Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL 63 , NO. 20'1, 21s TIONS, 28 p,;,GES ORANGE COUNTY, eALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER l, ·1970 TEN CENTS Cos a A resolution aimed at forcing airlines into better conlrol of jet noise and pollution--0r getting out of Orange County Airport entirely-was unanimous- ly approved Monday by tht Costa Mesa City Council. The w6rkability of it was immediately challenged. Mayoillobert M. Wilson's proposal will be sent to all 23 incorporated cities in the county, however, plus the Orange €ounty oBard of Supervisors and other agencies. * * * Hearing Set For Report On Airport A public hearing on the Parsons • Company report on the future of the Orange · County Airport will be held October 13 at 2 p.m. in Santa Ana . After a 40 minute debate ·today, the Board Of Supervisors finall y agreed on a date at which they and the public wiU discUss the explosive subje,ct. Dan Emory I chairman or the Newport Noise Abatement Committee, forced the .,, issue of setting a date as soon as possible over the opposition of Supervisor William Phillips. . . Phillips said the board should wait until they bad time to discuss the entire Parsons Report, which will be received on SA$1ember ii, before holding a heiring on the ftrst phase of iL The final decision was made to t!nphasize the Orange County Airport at tht Oct. 13 hearing, but to allow dilcuslion of other facets of the Parsons Report. "-{(' * *. lrvi11.e Company Requests Airport Curb Expansio11 The Irvine Company today flied a letter with tbe Orange County Board of Super- visors formally asking that there be no more expansion al Orange County Air· port. • The letter con tained five main state· ments and recommendation8. They are: -E:tpansion would be "environment· ally incompatible wfth the model com· munity (the planned city or Irvine) ":e are building." -Either Camp Pendleton or "an Off- shore site" be considered as sites for a second cqunty air facility. · -A planned phase-out of the El Toro -P.farine Corps Air Station as a jet fa- cility. -In .expansion plans, ttw; county co~­ tider "potentially des tructive econo~1c , impact" of an expand~ or !I second ai~· port, along .with cons1dcrations of pos1· li ve economic factors. -Any decision on the scope of opera· tions 11t the airport "should be made with al Jea·st equal regard to the environ- mental needs of the residents of Ora~ge County as "''ell as the transJ)Ortauon needs." PLAN ENDORSED The letter. slgied by Irvine Com~y Vice President Richard A. Reese. Cited the land development firm's consistent endorsement of the findin~ of the Phase T. Orange County Air Transpor~ation Plan developed by William L. Pereira and As· sociates. . The phase 1 report said the a1rport ~hould retain ils role as. a '?e~ropo~ providing commut.er ~erv1ce Limited in range in number of fhghts . . Reese also said that the con:ipany ~ plans for industrial an~ commerc1~1 . land use near lhe airport do ~t a~t.1c1pate intensirication of use of said facility. "The company has, fo~ eJample. pro- posed 00 major commercial develoP,ment, whose success would obvklusly depend on increased commercial je~ traffic," he sajd. h The letter Pointed out that any sue re- gional comtnercial activity would "gene- rate irresistible pressures to expand the airport find thereby veaLly increase the number of comme rcial Jet nights." RESIST EXPANSION Reese said the company would "re1is:t" expenakm "in an e(fort \o rtspect the rights of property oWTiers In this ~ ad- j&eent areas or Orange County. Citing the company's commitment to "better urbsn environment," Reese 5ald, •·we are fully Aware of the n~ati~e con.-~uci'lces creiated by the JCt aircraft era. d' h --.1As " result,'' ho S&li • '\\'t aVI!. rt- rommended agAin!lt the location or any 1irporl with /el car.bllity within the 1Sec RVIN • P•re 21 -- Urgfs Controls on Jet Flights He l»pes to gain wides~ad support in the campaign. "This thing will be sent nationwide," he said, mentioning the U.S. Department or TrJ.nSPOrtaUon and the National League of Cities. "'lbe time to act is now. Right now," he continued. • \l(i 1 so~,·, three-page, l)..paragrapll · resolution w-aomewbat complicated, bot he believes Jt can be used as a club to force manufacturers to make needed changes. En_actment of the stiff regulations at this jun~would be the responsibility of county supervisors. Dan Emory, chainnan of the Airport Noise Abatement Committee • 1 n d member of a statewide panel studying the problem, went before the council tO siey the Wilaon coocept seems r1ther ·ineffective. , "Technological chanie isn't the answer DAIL 'r P ILOT Steff ....... Driveways Are for Parking Ev'!'! ~nes0 1ik1 ljiis 1»48 Stinson owned by Bill Wathen. of ;l~ Sietka SL, Costa· Mesa, who purchased it for $1 ,100 after it was ground-looped and in need of repairs. 11fondee 'Vathen, 9, on bicyc1!, is ):inJIJabW .the erivy oC every neighborhiiod .playmate. Other planes are parked around Gosta Mesa, but her dad has the only one on Sierks Street. Escrow Extension Granted For Costa Mesa GoJ! Ouh · A 90-day .escrow extension for partial transf'r of the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club was approved Monday. despite vocal criticism by one citizen who was teed of! at the transaction. Earl Atkinson, of 326( Colorado Lane, is taking over the clubhouse· and pro shop operation, but illness and the fact his capital has be:eo tied up in U.S. patent application mi tape slowed the process. He told the City Council his ailment also prevented him from getting out of the hospital in time to borrow the $26,577 privately, while tlis own money is jnvested. The cash will be freed when tlis patent on sport& stadium cleaning equipment arrives, as Atkinson explained it, while his foreign patents have already come through. Atkinson said the paperwork was mailed from Washington some time ago, but is apparenUy snagged ·at the Costa Mes8 end. • Theodore C. "'Ttd" Bologh, of 286 Del -P.1ar Ave., interrupted the discussion at the outM!t and v.·a.s allowed1o speak after an interpretation of Roberts' Rules of Order. · He demanded an explan@tion or the difference between the $26,577 on the bill of si.lt 'ind the original $36,000 contract, which inCluded liquor stock!. The iCcoholic Beverage Control Board confirmecflhah general law city cannot hold a liquor-license or alcoholic beverages in ownership and the document was revised. • "It i1 not fair lo me to railroad this motion," Bologh declared. Acting City Manager Fred-Sorsabal. yawned. Flight to .Hawaii Gets Bomb Threat LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Cootlnental 747 bound for Hawaii returned to Los Ange.Jes l:itematiooal Airport today after an anonymous caller said there wu a bomb aboard. • The jumbo jet, Flight 603. carrying 201 passengers, was evacuated and FBI agents and the Los Angeles Police· bomb squad searched the plane. A cbnunental spokesman said the caller tcltpboned the atrline 's rescrvalion desk about tl a.m., 11 half hour after the plane bad taken off. and l aid there was a bomb hidden aboanL Atkinson -pale from his hospital stay -covered his eyes wearily with his ·hand. "Ted, we'Ve been through this before. I'm not going to a'?gue with 'you publi:ly," remarked Sorsabal, who explained the additional contract figure difference. lie said it involves $'7,000 worth of used clubs and other pro shop equipment such as sportswear that Atkinson refused to buy and considers unsalable. Sorsabal said the goods may be sold at auction, adding that a golf course in Baja · California U: looking for inexpensive pro shop merchandise and may take it. Mesa Optimistic On lfarbor Court Site Selection Orange County supervisors a r e virtually certain to pick a Costa Pi-1esa site for a new Harbor Judicial District Court complex, it w.as strongly hinted Monday night. Acting City Manager Fred Sorsabal dropped the comme11t toward conclusion of a special City Council rpeeting. Supervisors do not meet agai• until mid-September due to a succession of holidays, but are tentati vely scheduled to pick a site at that time. Stanley Krause, director of the county's Department of Real Property Services, is expected to ma~e his recommendation at that time. He has not said whether It will be tht spot offered by the 32nd District Agricultural Association or one in the future Newport Beach Civic Cfnter at Fashion JslaMI. · Speculation h~s been in favor of the Costa Mesa location, "''hich is mCN central and much nearer the geographic middle of the Harbor Judlclnl District. Newport Beach officials have been eagerly angling to land th:e .. s.ite_ln their elegant new clvic center, while one must bt built ftaln the ground up at ti\e Costa Mesa alte. "Judging from a frantic phone call t Teeeived Frlday frcim our sister city to the !K>Uth, the recommendaUon Js for this one:,'' Sorsabel remarked. ' He Old not elaborate. I for Orange County Airport," be explained, menUoning studies and statistics aimed at creating a quieter jet engine. He implied it can't be done. ''If they don't want to build a silent engine, then ·they can take their cotton- plctln~ airliners somewhere else,'' Said Mayor Wilson. "We're fed up ." "Our position and Dan Emory·s are quite different," the may,o.r explained after adjournment. "He·s taking the old slow, cautlo~ approach.'' Essentially. the Wilson resolution calls to r strict controls and pena!Hes for violations. of proper noise and pollfrtioo standards to be enacted by the counly and related agencies. The paper admits the jetllners are probably here lo stay, along with Orange County Afrport, and that no regional or international facility is coming to the Southland in the foreaefable future. Engineering and ~al studies on the twin problems are under way, ft notes, and county supervisors shoald ref111t to renew airline permits unUI conditions are ·met through such improvements. The resolution specifically IBJI this II to be done before new leMet 1n approved, thus in effect aettiJ11 a November, 1971 deadline for A l r California and April, 1972, for Air West. Councilman Jack Hammett suaeattd that particular switch tn wordin& from (Set CONTROLS, hie I> War Bill D.efeated Haivks Chalk Victory Over Doves WASHING TON (UPI> Jn o significant test of sentiment. the Senate today refused to tie President Nixon's hands by ordering him to end U.S. participation in the Vietnam war by a specific deadline. The vote against the HaUield·McGovem amendment was 55 to 39. The hawk vs. dove showdown ended a prolracted and sometimes emotional debate on the war issue and the pace Nixon is setting in withdrawing American troopa from Vietnam. Advocatea of the amendment held litlle optimism of winning outright bul had hoped to make the score closer than it was. They lost key votes at the last hour. Two Republican "doves" -Se:nf. John Sherman Cooper of ~entucky artd Charles Percy of Illinois ....: announced op~ition to the amendment on groundi Jt might undercut U.S. peace negotiation efforts. When the tensely waited roll call came, only ~even Republicans joined 3 2 Democrats in voting for the proposa l aimed at virtually compelling Nixon to get all American forces out of Indochina by De<:. 31, 1971. Voting to reject Ute proposal -as an amendment, to a $19.2 billion military procurement. bill -are 21 Democrats and 34 Republicans. The spectator galleries were about three-fourths full as the vote wu Liken. A number of young people were in attendance. There was no audience reaction when the result was announced. The amendment had been. expected to Jose. Final debate began after the 5enata convened at B a.m. EDT -the earliut (Set WAR VOTE, Pop I> County Boost~ . 8Iii,OOO Benefits · Property Taxes Merchant Says Policy By three Cent" ·'Altered for Man's-Wife By Jff.r·· rqo&ACK Of Ill• •I s:~rl Orangf!: Coobly .-; ·~·ll·'il property tax rate was set at $1.70 this morning by the Board of Supervisors. The figure represents a three-cent tncreue over the 1961).70 rate of $1.67 per $100 assessed valuation. • Faced with the need to absorb a deficit of almost $3 million beciuse of a recent reduction In state Medical aid to the county, the Supervisors decided to compromise and cut about $2 million out or the adopted county budget of $212 million. · The $1.70 rate was suggested by Supervisor David Baker. He ii.eluded in his motion, which was a d o p t e d unanimously, that ··the c ount y administrative officer and the various department heads find a way to cut the necessary $2 million out of the budget and report back to the board within a few weeks." The decision to peg the rate between last year·s $1.67 and the $1.75 figure which would have been required ir no budget cuts were made was vigorously opposed by the Orange County Chamber of Commerce. Clarence E. White and Robert Sigmund of the Chamber's governmental affairs committee urged the Supervisors· to hold the line at the current rate, noting that assessed va1uations of county property have gone up 17.6 percent. "You can do like bu!!linesses have been forced to do in the past year of tight flsc81 conditiofl!! by i n c r e a s i n g productivity per man if you have to Jay off some employes,., White argued. Supervisor WIWam Hirstei n suggested that the •t million beach acquisition fund in the adopted budget be eliminated and that $600,000 be cut from other department budgets to meet the $1. 70 rate figure. But Supervisor Robert Battin didn 't agree. He urged that the entire $3 million be cut out of the medical center budget "because thf. center is the cause of all the trouble." * * * LA Taxes Hiked LOii ANOELES (APJ -Los Angeles <:cunlj IUpel"fl!ors boosted the property tu. rate todaj by $1.1825. bringing the levy le> H."'8 per $100 assessed evaluation. To an own"« of a $20,000 home, This would mtctn .~annual tax.bill of $417.60 -for county property tax alone. In enacting ~~e increase, the Uvt-man board blamed the suit• IOklslaUJre ·rar · failure to et\llCt properf.Y tax rellcl' la~t 1e.islon and urged Gov. Reagan to c&ll a special session of the legislature. ) • By TOM BARLEY 01 ltll Otll'I' Plltt Sltff l Men's _store owner Lawrence -Odenz today testified in superior Court that his purpose In taking out a $15,000 inmirance policy on the life of a dying employe was to ensure that the proceeds were paid to the man's widow after his dfath. Odenz, 17. of 2983 Java Road, Cosla Mesa, admitted from the witness stand that he and lruiurance sale.!man Paul Farowich decided to pre-date the insurance appllcation after s t o r e manager MtUTay Bronson learned that he had tenninaJ cancer. That policy, he testified. woold be made payable to Odenz' business - ~tichael's Ltd. of Costa Mesa -after Bronson 's death. But, he stressed, the money would have been paid to Mrs. Bronson after premiums paid on the policy by Odenz had been deducted. Farow\ch, 34, of Tustin, is on trial In the courtroom of Judge R o n a I d Crookshank on charges of conspiracy to commit grand theft , attempted grand Sen. Carpenter's Father, 65, Dies During Vacation Frank Henry Carpenter, fa(ber or recently elected Slate Senator DeMis Carpenter (R-Newport ~ach), died Satutday while on vacation in Hailey, Idaho. He was 65. Funeral services were held this afternoon at the Pacific View Mortuary Chapel in Corona del Mar with the Rev. BurtOn F. Giese officiating. Burial followed at Paci fic View Memorial Park. Mr. Carpenter Is survi ved by his wire. Hele n, of the family home , %260 B Via Puerta, Lagu·na Hills; two sons, Dennis. and Donald Carpenter of San Gabriel; a sister, Mrs. Ruth Young of Sunland, and six grandhcildren. A native of Grand Forks, Minn., Mr. Carpenter taug ht physical education at several Minnesota schools, until coming to California with his family 22 years ago. After comlnf to California, he served as asslslant recreation ·director for the city of Burbank, then later beeame re<rea.Uon supervisor for the city of Torrlnce. , From 19$3 until his retirement In 1989. ?.tr. Carpenter 1erved as Director oC Pttrks and RA!cr'taUon for the city of San Cabriel. After retlrill&, he moved to Lt!Jln World. Mr ...... Carpenter was active in the Southern Caltlomla Municipal Athiel)c Federation, Kiwanis, and the Muons. Be was a member of the Abldifll sa.vror Lutheran Church of El Toro. • 11ie .. fttmily suggests contributions io the Frank B. Carp<~ Memorial Fuod at the Church of tho Ab id Ill& Savior, El Toro. theft and forgery. -~ faced identttal charge• until Monday when he pleaded guilty to reduced charges of conspiracy. He was fined $1,000 by Judge Crookshank, placed on probation for one yea r and ordered to appear today as a prosecutloa witnea against Faro~ich. Odenz admitted under questioning that he personally took the p h y a i c a l examination scheduled for the alllns Bronson and that he signed appllcaticrt forms su.bmilled in Bronson's namt to !he Farmers New World Life lnsurince Company. "I didn't think I was doing anything that I should be ashamed of," Odtni: commented at one point, appamrt.ly distressed by repeated questionin1 of h1I conduct. He also pointed out that three other associates at the clothing store and his wife were aware of the plan to insure Bronson's life long before the matter was brought to the attention of the district attorney. Bronson. heavily doped and obviously ill, testified Monday that hi!! tint knowledge of his life insurance coverage came with the billing from Farmers New World for the first eayment on the $16,000 policy. · ·• 'Dhe Corona de! Mar man was asked bY' deputy dislrict attorney Joe Dlckenon what his reaction was to the Wuance of the policy. "I flipped," replied Bronson. "I stlyed up a few nights thinking about it and I cried and l didn't know what tO do. Finally I told my attorney." Bronson testified that he later called Farowich about the life insur.ance billing and that Farowich "hesitated and then told me to ignore the premium notice and that it would all be taken care of." Orange · «:out Weatlier Coastal fog· will clc>ak the beaches in the morlling, but sunny sldea will reign through most of Wed· nesday, with temperatures running from 70 to 8S degrees. INSIDE TODAY Modlratc 1tudtnl1 art 1trfk· t11g back on. can1puu1 ,oero# CaltfornUJ with tht formation of "Frontlash '70." Set Paar 20. . C1H1'nll1 1 tMt'lr!9 U• 1 tlht.llltf ti.JI C•111k 1 U c,.. .... ,, • 11 •diltl'lll PIH I fRllH1t fllfM!tl It ,,_ 1•11 l'lffw:... ,, llftft \.llldff't u ..... ,... . ' Mo!•"• tt I I I ·i· -· . '\ t . 2 IWLY PILOT Fro'" Page I t .iI RVINE .... area enc:om.iwaed by the Irvine General Plan." At lhls point Reek expressed the com· ~·1 hope that jet use at El Toro would • be pb1sed oUl. . \ -·· ''Neverthel~." he added. "the Irvine ~·~Company recogniz.es th e need for ad~ • quate alr transportation facilities v.•iUun .~.reasonable prox lmll.y to Orange County .t~l~~ ... ·~h~-C~mp-Pendleto~ area 1o1'0Uld ·be within reasonable proximity. :· "In addition," he said, "an offsho.re ~-site 6houtd alse be given .serious consid - eration as an alle rnative solution." '. PoUBLY CONCERNED 7E Saying the resldenu in the area ol I.he :'t(uture city are "&atislied '' with the com- pany's position on alrport development , ~~eese e:aid the lirm is "doubly con· -Ce.med" about -proposed development of ~ a second count)' airport with commercial 1-jet npabillties. . . ,;--. "The Irvine Company believes ~Ls : present.!1 the Board of Supervisors with J an unenviable Lask ," Reese sa~d. , JfidU. S'rJtt_mMr 1, 1970 ·-- Appeal Rej~ted • Family's W atf n Extradition Due NEW ORLEANS (UPI ) -A U.S. Sth grand jury that Watson killed llv8 -arcu1r ·eoo.rt ot Appe·a1s--pltfel "'Molldly-persont·-1~-lf&te-:-hom~nd sh~-had been told he killed either Uno LaBianca turned down 'a req uest to stop the nr hi' wife the foll owing ntght. She later ~xtraditiOn· of Charles ''Tex" Watson , a fecanted her story. member of a desert hipp ie tribe accused The circuit court's ruling Monday of killing actress Sharon Tale and iii: upheld a lower court's ruling to deny o1hers. 1Ste Tate tria l sto ry, Page 4.) \\'atson a writ of habeas corpus. T\vo fema le princi pals in the Tate· LaBian ca mu rder lrial going on in Los Angeles have testified Watson, 32. committed six of the seven (llurders. Bill Boyd oC McKinney, Tex ., Watson's .attorney, said since f\fonday's ruling was handed dow(l by a three-judge panel he would petition for a rehearing before the entire court. He said he had 14 days to file such a petition. Agnew Joins President ' In Clemente By RICHARD P. NALL ot t~• o.nr 'H" 1t1H l'rolft r..,e l CONTROLS . • • Mayor Wilson's orla:lnal April I, 1972 atlpulatlon. "The political imp..1ct versus the technological ilqpact makes it lmportent So set the contr1ctual date," Hammett ob1erved . "You have to put teei.h where you Jlave the power lo bite," he added. The conclusion ot the resolution .calls for deposit of all license tee and pt.,alty flnes in -a S peciall undd ei:licated to researching solu tions lo noise and jet fuel pollution. • Emory strongly hinted this would be pouring m-0ney dov.·n the drain, based on \\'hat is knov.•n to date about potential controls. especially on noise. He said Caltech has received a $500,000 rrant to try to determine precisely what factor or combination of factors creates the horrendoUJ jet noise. -C::mory also said a retrofit sys~m befng studied by the Federal Aviation Administration shows on ly a slight , reduction of noise in four-engine jetliners, costing $150,000 per engine. No noticeable change can be detected by the human ear Jn using the redesigned engines for twin-engine jets such as now use Orange County Airport, he said . , "ll is a twofQld task. neither aspect of ;.Mohich can be reasonably ignore(!,'' he ~.ta.id . "In order lo carry lit out it is necessary for the Board of Supervisors lo·: I. at- tempt. with the assistance of regional and subordinate agencies, to locate, pur- dlast, and dtvelop a suitable silt, and 2. while doing soLpursue with eq ual vigor 50]utions lo the ma jor overriding prob-- lem imposed by air transportation any- where ; that of noise pcll;ition," Reese said .. If the circuit court turns down the appeal again, Watson 's last chance to avotd· extradition lf!. Ca lifornia would lie wi11l the Supreme Court. • \\1atson has been _in ihe Collin County Jail since his arrest last Nov. 30. He has fought extradition on the grounds he can nol get a fair trlaJ in California.- \lice _President ]pi.r.o...Ag~J.!L~o~rl~-;;:=~:n'J.l; his Asian mission to join Preside~ Nixon In San Clem'ente today for a National Security Council m~eting. on the Middle East. The F Af. program-if adopted-won't come....befci:~'l.i.at..19.1.Un.d he doubts il will con1e at all. he said. ----· .. "U n-0t. nobody can make the changes. The FAA won 'l allow it," Emory told the council . cl!QUAL REGARD -, "ID &Ul1U1W'y," he said, "il ls the -opinion and ·recommendation of the Ir· V\.ine Company th1t any decision on the l<XIPt: of ope.rations at Orange County , :i !Jr-port abould-be ·made with at least equal regard to the environmental needs ~ ~'llf thfi residents of Orange County as ~:Well as the transpcrt.atl~ needs of II! citizens. "To analyze solely the positive econom-· le factors related to a commercial air operation In the center of the county's growth ]llttem, while ignoring the po- tentially destructive economic Impact of such a facility, is totally incompatible with sound planning principles. "This same evaluation should be ap- ,.plied to consideralions for the location of ~~Y new air facility serving Orange ~nty whether it be located within the :f.County Or adjacent to ilA boundaries,'' ille ... uid. ,, '.M~a Verde Sets • • ,..-{ ·. ~Cleanup Drive ;~ The Mesa Verde Homeowners' Associa-tion is going to pull the old Tom Sawyer · acam on i~ members Saturday. • · Like fence-painting and other exertion is more fun than golf, tennis and lh~ .. beach. The group will spen~ the day cleaning up Mesa. Verde Drive and other points within the district, using volunteer l1bor -they lovite more -and willing hand! .hired through the Harbor Area Youth I Employment Service.· Members will also meet this Thursday night to elect new directors. who wW then choose their officers for the cmning year. Linda Kasabian , who turned slale"s evidence in the Los Angeles trial, testified during the trial that Watson committed the murder!. Co-defendant Susan Atkins, 21, told a Scientists Form Joh Protection Group in County Unempfoyed technologists In Orange County are forming an action group to halt what they call "the spiraling disaster effect" In the loss of government work. Twenty-eight men met Monday night at Fountain Valley High School to write articles of i·ncorporatioR for Technologica~ Community A c t I o n Orj:anization (TCAOJ. On Sept. JO they ha ve sched uled a meeting to take in new members. In terested individuals are invited to join the group at 8 p.m,. in the cafeteria o[ Fountain Valley High School. · ·"We want to have a collective voice to stress lheJlls.Jn..the area...whtA-all-lhe&e people lose, their·jpbs," Frank G. Sch~lt, a. Founl.4.in Valley resident ,nd executive chairman of the group. said. Schott said-TCAO is concerned wi1h tethnologisl.S in aerospace, military and related indu:!itrie.s. ·••There are· abou{ 50.000 or us ou t of work bt California," Schott said. "Think of the effect tha t can have on the ec_o11omy . When a man lose! a job he can't spend money needed for other business." · Schott said the purpose of TCAO would be lb "protect the profeasional status and economic wellire of Its members." "We hope to gain a collective voice on this problem," Schott continued . "We hope lo be in a position to be critical of the effect.a Of unemployment, to identify the problems A\d hopefully to offer 1alutlons." \... . nie vice president shortened his stay in Honolulu by one day -cancell ing a gol f match -lo deliver a personal assessment of his 11-day Asian tour or. Cambodia, Vietnam, Taiwan, South Korea and Thailal)d. The President reportedly ~ w a s J:..Sp«ially anxious to learn more of Agnew 's converutions with cambodian Premier Lon Nol and bis view of tht chances of his ccllitty's survival under communist attack. The President, Agnew and t o p diplomatic aod military idvisers also will assess the strained Middle East cease fire. Israel is in the midst of "a very bitter Argument" with the U.S. ·over Israeli charges of alleged cease fire violation~ by Egypt _ according to Israeli Prime- Minister Golda fl.feir. It has been charged that Egypt violated the agreement by moving SAM missile bases closer to the Sue:t Canal. The U.S. his maintained that it could not verify such charges conclu~ively before selling up elaborate electr onic surveillance in the area . · · The1e attending Lod.;ty's San Clemente top-level session included Secretary of State William Rogers; David Packard, 'ifepulfalf~CTetary:--Rtchard c. Helms, director of the Cent r a I Jntt!ligence Agency : ftenry lUssinger, National Security Affairs Advisor ; Adm . Thomas H. Moorer , chairman of the Joint Chiefs or Staff; and Joseph P. Sisco, assistant Secrel.ary or Stale for Middle East Af(alrs. Satellite Launched ' CAPE KENNEDY (UPI ) -The Air t'orce has launched a secret new missile warning satellite, apparently lo relact one st.r:anded in the wrong -0rbit in 'une. ll waS the fourth in a series of ~ advanced surveillance s pace c r a ft designed to "hover" in near stati<mary orbits..high above Asia to flash an early alert of a miuile attack from Soviet land bases or submarines . Sea Lion Deaths a Mystery I Coast Herds Thinni1ig But No Remon Discovered ij: By JOANNE REYNOLDS i 01 t~t 01111 1'1111 tttff Sea lions have been dying In larger numbers than usual this summer along f the ~ange Coas~" according to lifeguards tin five coastal cities. <" ' DAILY PILOT C11t1 "'''' O"flc1 )JO W11t ltv 5••1t! M1ili ~q AdJ11111 ,,0. I•• ISl>C. •1•16 OtMf OMCM Ntw .. •l ltf'111 Ull Wt1• llltl(>, l'u't'"f'~ LI ...... lttUI: m F"f•nt '''~"" w ......... ,.., ltltll: 111/J ••• ( ............ ft S.11 (le-It: )Cl N .... 11 IE!(•"''"° llMI _A. No statistics are available as to the exact number of animals that have died , but lifegua rds agree ifs considerably higher than in previous summers. The firSl conclusion mosl people leap to is that the sea lions are being killed by v.•ater pollution. Bill \Valker, a marine biolog1sl for 1'1arineland, doesn 't agree. "Recent studies by Pt. Mugu Naval Station researchers and UC Santa Cruz and t:SC biologists indicate that neither DDT nor oil pollution have anything to do with the deaths. ··1n the past few years the Califcirnia sea lion population has been increasing at an alarming ra te. Conditions 1 re becoming very crowded as the herd becomes larger. "Whtn this l\appcns, you gel a higher rate of communicable diseases, pup mortality and parasitivity within the herds. "\\'hat \\'e·re scting this summer on beaches rrom San Francisco to the Mex ican border is norm11I morlAJi ty -11 balanring of the n11tural si ze or the l!ea !Jon populalion,'' he explained. The California sea lion -the specie~ in queilion -is one of the more intelli&ent member! of the ~al family. They ar1 Qlten sren Lt1 ioos and are rerul1r attractions in most circuses. Allhough thry ire often called seals, th tj are not a lrue sul. but a sea lion . The cause. of d~th of the se11 lions and 1hr effect they h11ve on the popuh1Uon Is dlff1et1l l to determine b e c • u ~ e lnform8tion on thtm In their natural stale Ill somev,.hat 1ketchy. A study dont by Bernie Buff of UC S11n111 Cru:t an d Bob Brownell or USC sho\\·~ th31 oil J?Ollution h11CI no Adverse affect on the aninu1ls, Walker stated. "They comp1red ~ groui> of ·st.A lions that had .-eater 'than 40' percent oll covering their coats and a group thst had \ -----~--- no oil. And lht. amazing thing was that the mortality rate was higher among the .animals that had no oil," he noted. Walker said the .animals breed each summer on the Channel Island!. with the cows each producing a single pup. The migratory habits of the sea lions are not completely .understood, he said. "lt'I a hard thing to study. We would have to coordinate and collect da ta from San Francisco to Mexico," Walker said. Jn addition: little ·is kno\\11 of the diseases that infect them in the wild. "We do know that &harks will attack the m and in colder waters .they are preyea on by killer whales.·· he pointed out. The la.st lime lhe sea lions died in large numbers was in 1947 v.·hen il was determined most ot them died from a form .. of pneumonia . "Wr have every reason i-0 believe that at that time the populat ion had gottt.n too large -as we believe has ~appened this year. "Actually. there's A higher death. rate during winter v.•hen off shor.e_ conditions are al their wt1rst. The deb1htated -0nes are part icularly susceptible at these limes." \Valker said. Often. stranded sea Jinns that 11re sick or wounded are brought ~ Marineland. "So far we've taken in 40 or SO. but we can't i1way1 ~ave them ."' Walker said. \Vhen nne of thue animals comes 1shore In one of Orange County'• coastal cllles, the slAndard policy ~ for llfegu1rds to nollfy !heir city's Mimal con trol olficer. If the anJ mal ill seriou~y ill. ii is dcstroytd: but v.'henever possible. thf'y are t1ken to Marineland. "We know 11 lnt about the physiology of the 11ea lion11yl'h11t kind of Information is 11vA!l1ble frnm Animals in caplivlty, but wt still Mn'i know -cririu.gh 1bout them in the wlld," Walker said . Rights Deitionstrated • Demonstrating his civil right of being able .to el~t government lead- ers. Freeman Lawrence, of Costa Mesa, is registered as voter by Orange County Deputy Registrar Mr~. WµIia.m F. Hall. Deadline to qualify for November General Elect.ion ts -Sept. 1.0 , and Lea.itue . of Women Voters members will be at Costa Mesa C1v1c Center loDby daily to accommodate. City Clerk's personnel also .register voters. Four Mesa Lawmen Pack For Bonnie-Clyde Trig,l Trial for three men charged with the savage murder of a Colorado Springs pawnbroker began 1'.1onday and Costa . Mesa police who captured them last March are packing to leave and give testimony. Qilorado authorities have subpoenaed '-klf detecti ves and given notice to a'!other two to stand by to travel in case their testimony is also needed. The trio -p"art of what was branded al the time a Bo nnie an d Clyde-style bandit gang -are charged \\'ith first degree murder and robbery. James E. Jackson. 25, of lndepe.ndence. f\10., Jack C. Matney, 31 , of Colorado Cyclist Avoids One Car, Slides Into "Big Truck La ying his motorcycle dO\\'n on the roadwa y to avoid a car stopped for a mov ing dump truck. a Costa Mesa man \\·as seriously hurt f\1onda y, when he hurtled into the big vehlcle instea d. Andrew A. Skarbeck. 2.1. nf 178 Tuli p Lane, s~f_fered multiple head Jacerali-0ns when he -1.ilruck the rear wheel s of the Springs. and Hov.•ard T. Tschirhart, 32, of Cosla Mesa. \\'ere captured March 11 at 5141f.r Bernard St.. after J aw m en surrounded the small home . They are on trial for their Jives. '-S.!:emming from the bludgeon murder of Q>lorado Springs pawnbroker Erling Nielsen, 61, in late February. ~1rs. Patricia Phipps. 24, pregnant companion of Jac kson during an alleg~d cross-country crime spree. \\'as charged ll'it h a local burglary atid is serving time at Orange County Jail. Costa Mesa police recei ved information lhat the suspec ts might be in the atea, &ince Tschirhart has rel!tives here. '_They were ordered out of lhe.-Bernarrl Street address -after leaving their guns in a ca r for-the first time in two \\'ec.k.s - and evidence connected to the Colorado Spri~gs killing was found inside. Detrcti ve Sgt. John Regan. plu.~ officers Ron Pal mer. Jo hn Stoneback and Bob Arnold have been ' subpoenaed to appear and will leave Wednesda y. Detective Sg t. Cliff McBride and Detective Roscoe Broa d may . also be required to testify. Broad is currently vacationing in Hawa ii and would be flown to Colorado and back along with the others at that state's expense. truck -0n Bristol Street at Sunflo\\·er Boarcl Gets 'Breaks' Avenue. "' He was listed in fa ir conditio n today at Fi 0 R gul a r Mee t ' Costa ri.tesa f\.iemorial tlosp ital, following • • tll C . IS surgery. Orange County supervisors will get two Investigators said William Kurica, 31 , days ··off" this week and next week, nf 521 Kod iak SI.. An aheim, had just from formal sessions at least. dumped ~and lntn the park\\·ay and wa.~ \Vednesda y·s regular meeting has been pulling out after Patricia Sampson. 31. nf cancelled because most board members 158 Magno!la St.. Costa Mesa. had will be at Mammoth Lakes attending a 1topped to jl ive him the rlg ht-0f-way, JO-county conference on pollutlon and Officer Richard Frederiksen said a other subjects of the hour. Next week flagman was on duly at the scene and he Admission Day fa ll~ on the regu lar did not cite the truck driver or Mrs. \Verh1esday dale and so that session has Sampson for any alleged traffic violaiion . bee n cancelled ;a lso. What's. • • Mayor Wilson remarked that his legislation may not result in a quieter engine and if so, the county would have a liver with which to force jets ou t of the local airport. Emory responded by saying the resolution is self-contradictory because il.S wording says 1he jet.s are here to stay. Mayor Wilson then recalled he said in a speech fi ve years ago that -in effect - smog is good, if used properly. He said it created a sensation, and with it some ridicule, but added that smogleu cars are now being developed due to proper use of smog: The proper use, he hinted. is arou.sal ol public opinion to tell big bus iness in no uncertain terms what it must do, rather than accepting what it says it can or cannot do. Altitudes. landing and takeoff pattern!, and other attendant matters are mentioned in the resolution as needing county regulation, From Page 1 WAR VOTE. •• meeting time in recent memory. In an emotional aRpeal , Sen. George McGovern ~D-S".D.), co-sponsor of the amendment, blamed the senate for letting the war go QD.._a.rul.......d.e.cla~e-scDC£,_..thi&. chamber literally reeks of blood." In reply. Sen. John Stennis fl>Mi.!i.'I.), .asserted that the amendment would "take away the symbol of our nati on.- and thal·s \\'hat the chief executive is, the symbol of our nation." Sen. Barry M. Goldwat er fR·Ariz.) voted against the amendment but told his colleagues in final debate ; "This ha! been a wrong war. We never meant to \\'in this v:ar and \\'hen you don't mean to \\'in a war, for God's sake don't get into it." SupPorters ol the a~t had modified the language in hope of gaining support. The changes would have extended to withdrawal deadline from June 30 to Dec. 31, 1971, and would ha ve gi ven the President an optio n of keeping troops in Vietnam for an additional period of up lo M·days beyo nd Dec. 3l if he found them exposed to •·unanticipated clear and presen t dan ger.'' In such a situation. he also \\'OUld ha ve been empowered to ask Congress to set a ne\\' v.·ithdrawal date. Supporters of the proposal said it ga ve Congress a chance to vole l.o end the war as in effect they voted for Wh ite House authority to wage lhe wrar with approval of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution in August, 1964. My L!~o~ ~""'"'""" ""'' '• WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPI NG LOY AL CUSTOMERS THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER. YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE. BIJ T WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFU L ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DI SCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST LY" ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, SERVEN, BEATIIE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK , ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG. SANTA ANA, OUNtl TUSTIN Cell , •• ALDIN'S lllD HILL CAll,m • DllA,lllU ... , 11J74 lrtlM, Twoh1, C.tllf. • IJl.Jl•4 ALDEN:S CARPETS e DR,4PES 166] Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 VOL - COii> Womei waitre: be Ube the I I Mexic> my s-wltcb in 10Ic' "We· said I· yo;ara, ezpell! J Orar rate• -The lncrea $100 ., FIC< _oLW ttdud count) ·r Olm~ 3 Thn lajeM llPdin -ol Island Sell! Navy three c:rall Ailor. Ano II.Iller )iovy All momi conta1 .The Island apark Chow. joineC liq Tho helll:c wltho men. Uni dlvld1 Tuotil .. bu Mlssi Mr: W1y , i:: them oOYlo Mn mmn porer comn the I "pun '!< = od>o< """ OCtol A , - .. -I F o;;,.w;uw;; • • I \ ' - Saddlebaek . * 1' I~ u . .. ' ... 9 ...... U I • I . \ Nfi +"+f""$ • • -· Today's FtMI . N.Y. St.oeka VOL 63, NO. 2<>'1, 2 SECTIONS, 28 1PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENT'S ---·· -----··-------~-·---------- W aitres·ses 'Liberated' CORONADO -In the wake of" Women's Liberation Day, 90 veteran waitresses learned they will apparently be liberat~ from the chore of serving at the state dinner 'I1lursday bonorlng fl.1exican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Ttiey're not at ail happy about the s1"itch replacing them with male waiters in gold uniforms. serve( the PreSldent and his guests?'• She said, ''Furthermore, .most of us have children at school wh> are learning about democracy and our way . of doiqg things in America... How can we answer " them when they ask, 'Is this democracy at -work?' " Tirri Elbome, a deputy press secretary. Said "State diMers have always been ~rVed by waiten." However a union spokesman said about 50 waiters bave been. hired through the San Diego local of the Waiters :and Bartenders Union, AFL-CIO. The waitreSses work six days a '11.'tek and. make $20 to $30 in tips during: their four-hour dinner shifts. They $nd to lose a day's wages\ . - From S-erving . . Nixon -. The guest lilt at the. big splash Includes Wayne ill an the guest list as is jockey They'll be on the lookout for a Y-apple former President Lyndon B. Johnson and Willie Shoemaker. Disc jockey Dick (Youth Intern a ii 0 n a I Party) hls wile, according to a hotel spokesman. Whittinghill of Los Angeles '8 also demonstration to protest ·federal If they atJ,end, it will be the second invited. · tirOe 'in a yiar thet the Nixons have An estimated 100,000 persons are government anti-marijuana pcliclea. ent~ta.ined the Johnsons in California. expe:cted for a parade and PresidenUal Diaz Ordaz, accompanied by ·his The Johnsons came t.o California for the motorcade through this islaod city across daughter, will be given f,ull military fonner Preaideot'1 II.st birthday last [rom San Diego. honors y.·hen he lands at the North Island year. * The White House has not confirmed Naval Air Station just before noon. ?&on othei' Presidential (UfSts at the hotel that the Presidents wlll tllke part ln the will greet him. WUJOn and Franklin D. Roo6evelt. The Coronado police rce of 41 men and Nixon's recent vfsit to~ VaJ.. "We've been gettin; ready for ~ys," said Ivy Easley, .40, a waitress for 26 years, "Many of us even ·bought elpensive wi&s. Aren't we &ood enou&h to He added ·that· ~ flnal decision ha_s been made regarding waiters for the dinner at the11otel Del Coronado. -They said they have . infonned the \Vest.em White House, Gov. Reagan and several of the conitessmen by telegram. U saUsfaction is not forthcoming, they say, the next step is a women's llberaUon group .. have included Harrllon, Taft. McKinley, parade, but they are e~ to . 'Ibe thrust of the ceremonial dinner knotber guest is Omar Brad1ey, retired has heen beefed up b about 250 other larta is strengthening relations between fivwtar g!neral of Uie army. Actor John--o!I.ic-•-rs------------~1~bl ..... two-.C0111lb:il . ...__------~----~ • • ,. . 1xes ar n I .. • ' $1.70 Figure Set County Tax· Rate Boosted 3 \ Cents Hawk, Dove Showdo-wn_ • , "'1' By JACK BROBACK Of i. o.llr Plil1 Slaff Orange County's 1970-71 property tax rate was set at $1. 70 this morning by the BOard of Supervisors. The figure ·represents a three-cent Increase over the ,1969-70 rate Of $1.67 per 4100 assessed valuation. Faced with the need to ab9orb a deficit _oLllro!MU)Jldllion because of a recent reduction jn state Medical aid to the coUftty, the Supervisors decided to oom\romise and cut about 13 mJllloa' out of the adopted county budget of $212 million. The $1.70 rate was suggested by Supervisor David Baker. He included in his motion, which was a d o p t e d unanimously, that "the co unt y administraUve officer and the various department heads find a way to cut the necessary $2 million out Of the budget ancl-~bldr,IOlbe boanl.wilbina Inc_ weeb:" .~ . Ends Debate . W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) In a - significant test of '1~ent. the Senate today refused· to tie President Nl:lon'a hands by ordering him to. md U.S. partlclpatioO in the Vietnam war by a specific dtadli~. The. vote aga~ the Hatfield-McGQvern amendment ~. 51 .._ · 3$_. I ' .'l'be hawk vs. doff showdown ended a } I' protracted and -IO!Detbns ' emutioO.I. ;,.. '. debate OD the W~ illl.ll and, 1M· peCll o. 1a setUng IDW!lliifaiilii Ame ICM troopa from Vietnam. 3 Navy Men Drown The deilion to peg the rate between wt year's 11.n and lhl 1us figure which would haft been required if no budget cuts were made was vigorously opposed by lhl 0.1111• County Chamber of Commerce. . Clarence E. White and Robert Sigmund of the Chamber's governmental affairs committee urged the Supervisora to hold the line at the current rate, noting that assessed valuations of county property have gone up 17.6 percent. CHICANO GROUP FORMS 'l>IC!KIT'LINE AT UCI AFTER LOS· ANGELES TRAGEDY Death·Sfrlk•• Jn •the City,,60 Prote1ter1:M.rch on ttM lrvln1 Cempu1 A~vocales of .the a'"""4menl ·lielcf ittaa opllmll1n · of w!nnlng ' ...tr!Pt but liad hoped f9 make the score cloRr than ii was..._'I1ley Jost key votes at the last hour. Two Republican "doves': -se111. John Sherman'Cooper of'Kentucky and Olarles Percy of Illinolll -announced opposition to the amendment on grounds it migb&: undercut U.S. peace negotiation efforts. Off Coast Three Navy men apparently drowned lajt Monday in a freak accident aboard a landing craft engaged in underwater demolition work off San Clemente Island's Pyramid Head. Searches through the night by two Navy ships-biiled to tum up a trace ot the three men swept overboard from the craft after a winch broke, throwing the lllilors into the aea. Another crewman working in the test silffered a broken leg, but was saved, Navy spokesmelr said. All the names were still withheld this morning as Navy personnel tried to contact the victims' families. .The mishap, which occurred off the lsland about 60 miles from the mainland, sparked a search by the fleet tug USS c.bowanos. The operations were soon joined by the aircraft carrier USS Ranpr. n.e extensive surface search, aided by helicopters, continued -until nightfall without turning up a trace of the missing men. "You can do like businesses have been forcfll to do in the past ytar of tight fiscal conditions by i n c r e a 11 i n g productivity per man if you have to lay off some employts," White argued. Supervisor William Hirstein suggested that the $1 million beach acquisition fund in the adopted budget be eliminated and that $600,000 be cut from other department budgets to meet the $1.70 rate figure. But Supervisor Robert Battin didn't agree. He urged that the entire $3 million be cut out of the medical center budget "because the center is the cause of all the trouble." Satellite Launched CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The Air Force has launched a secret new missile warning satellite, apparently to relace one stranded in the wrong orbit in June. It was the fourth in a series of advanced surveillance s p a c e c r a f t designed to "hover" in near stationary orbits high above Asia to flash an early alert or a missile attack from Soviet land bases or submarines. NEWPORT FUNERAL SET New1m•n Ruben· S•la1ar Double Sessions Blasted Parents Divided in Reaction to ·school Busi1ig Unlver.ilty Park parents ippeared divJded today in their reactions to the TulUn Union High school board decision to bus 1,000 University High students to MlJsloo Viejo. Mrs. Arnold Krenek:, of 18345 Chicory Way, Irvine, said she ha:d talked to "90 percent of the people involved" in tHe bmlng-dotible sessions plan and finds • tMrn believing the plan "the most obvious mOve the board could make." Mrs. Krenek, prevlow public relations committee chairman for the fledgling parent-teacher organization s t e e r I n g committee, said comments reported in the DAILY PILOT by other parents were "plll'dy a poIIUcal play." Mrs, 'l\renek's husband f o r m e r 1 y beasle<l '1be group formed to oet up a '. ~t teacher organization for the new ad!Ool which ls under conslrucllon and erpected to open sometime from late .. -Octobet to early J111ua~ A !trike by sheet nlti.81 workers has bttn blamed by 1chool ofllclals for the delayed opening of the 1,2(11).student high school which Jed trustees to vote expenditure of $5,000 to bus pupils to MWlon Viejo for an afternoon double seuion. "Our board is very conservative," Mrs. .\(renek: said. "They don't spend money unless It is absolutely necessary, A great deal of thought m given to the busing plan and their decilion was made for ~ student.a' good,'' she argued. Another University Park pare. n·t, Robert Platt, said he supported the Kreneks' viewpoint and be Ile v e d comments by other parents were designed "to make the trustee! look bad." However, Platt indicated be was not happy wilh doubte: HSllool which he said '\fere· the ''Wont part" of the trustees' plan. "We have had bu.sing of students for several years, in thla gro~·lng di.strict," the.. father of ttve i;a ld. He: suppportl the trustees' ariUJllents that the similarity or Mission Viejo to University High will make the transition easier for students and that the Mission campus size is better suited to accommodating 1,000 more students than is the 23-acre Tustin hlgh campu s. Both Mrs. Krenek and Platt noted the formation of a parent organization for the new . school has been fraught with di[ficulties which have "polarized the community." Platt said the number one issue fa.cing the ~edgllng group is "wbcfs going to be allowed to join." "As it ls set up ·now, anyone in the di!Jtrict who pays $2 can join," PlaU said. "I opp0ise lhis," he said, "btcause ft allows studenta or anyone to join. With too many 1tudents, meetings Could be d!UtllJUve." ~ Mrs. Krenek said she believdl anyone should be able to joln but not as.voUng niembers. .- "If you open this to ~nyonc living (See BUSING, Pagt %) Chicano Leaders Want Federal Probe lntO· Riot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1M OallT Pl .. I ll•ff Threatening more violence, Mexican- American leaders of LJs Angeles County today demanded a federal probe of a $l million riot that also cost the life of one of their most widely-read spokesmen. The <llicano chieftains were joined by officials at various levels or government. Los Angele!! Times columni~t and KMEX-TV news director Ruben Salazar, 42. or· 3115 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana, was 'killed while covering the Saturday night demonstration and rioting that followed. A JG..inch tear gas missile which can accurately pierce a one-inch pine board at 100 yards tore through his head, after being fired from JS feet away into the Silver Dollar Cafe. Spokesmen for the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Office refused to discuss the fatal incident, which incensed the Chicano community that Salaz.ar was dedicated to help. Others in the bar ~ Wbittier Boulevard differed in accounts of what transpired compared to those o[ deputies al the tcene. Authorities from ·Other age n c i e 1, Mclududing the 1Internatlonal Association of Chiefs or Police and the manufacturer of the finned, combat-type missile said they were appalled. The police chief's association manual on chemical agents expressly warns against using them In crowd control or other than against barrlcadctl criminals. Presidential Press Secretary Ron Ziegler aMOUllced at the Western White House in San Clemente that Assistant Attorney General Jerri! Leonard is in close touch. Los Alljeles County Sheriff Peter J. PitcheS' aaid . hls department would withhold comment while the iilvestlgatlon is under way, but called for eventual complete public disclosure of the facts. Congressman 'F..dward Roybal (D-1.os Mieles) and City Councilman Thomas Bradlei ,' ~lmanded i prompl-Ind ' Iilol'Ollflll probo. .Loi· Ange!U County Con>ner Thomas Noguchi announqd a pubik: lnque!l -wlli be held Sepl IO lnlo the slaying of lhe prlie:winning newsman. lnqu~sts_ determine ii deJtb ls due to_ .!ecldental, negligent or criminal me,,ns. Sidney .lrmu, attorney for saJazar11 -;j wife Sally, announced she ·will file a $1 million suit charging wronsful death at the hands or law enforcement officers. Others in the barrios -which have been fermenting with bitterness some authorities allegedly ignored -·took up lhe cry. Saliizar himself predicted violence would come if relief didn't. "We are deeply suspicious about the death of Salazar," said an angry Roialio Munoz, who organized a rally to protest the de~thrrate of Mexican·Americans in the Vietnam War. The Chicano Moratorium charges 20 percenl of all con1bat casualties is disproportiof@le to the number of that race serving. "The one man who could get our ideas acros!I through the mass media was the one man killed by the sherjffs," said Munoz, !onner UCLA student body president. Armando Rendon, who appeared with ?lfunoz, charged the violence can be directly !,lamed on sheriff's deputies, an allegation promptly denied by Sheriff Pitchess. "Neither the march itself nor the (See PROBE, Pa&e %) * * * Hundreds Pay Salazar Tribute Hundreds of Chicanos today began filing by the casket of columnist Ruben Salazar, who became a martyr to the cause he had CO\'ered Saturday night. Mr. Salazar, of 3118 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana, was to lie in~!t.ate from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m, al Bagues Mortuary ln East Los Angeles. Funeral services for the award·WIMlng correspondent who had covered the Vfetnam War, plus combat in Mexico City and the Dominican Republic, will be Wednesday ln Corona del Mar. ....~ .. The 4 p.m. ritts will be in lht Pacl!lc View Memorial Park-Chapel, .wllh private h1t.e.rme1t to follow at the park. fie leaves his wife Sally,Jhret children, Lisa.., S~phanie and Jahn, parents Mr. and Mrs. Salvad4;>r_Salazar, of El PASOi and a •liter, Mn7-ll&z:·a.neros. When the teMely waited roll call came, only seven Republicans joined J 2 Democrats in voting for the proposal aimed at virtually compelling Nb:on ~ get all Ame,rican forces out of JrQ>cbina by Dec. 31, '!171. Voting to reject the proposal -u an amendment to · a $19.2 bWlon military procurement bill -are 21 Deroocrata and 34 Republicans. The spectator galleries were 4 aboat three-fourths full as ~ vote was taken. A number of young people were in attendance. There was no audience reaction when the rtsult was announced. The amendment had been expected to 1 .... Final dthate began after the Senate convened at 8 a.m. EDT -tbe earliest meeting time in recent memory. In IA emotional appeal, Sen. George McGovem (0.S.D.), co-sponsor of the amendment, blamed the Senate for letting the wit go on and declared "in one sense, this chamber literally reeks of blood." Jn reply, Sen. John Stennis CO.Mia.), asserted that the amendment would "lake away the symbol of our natMln - and that's what the chief eucutive is, the symbol of our nation." Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R-Arir.) voted against the amend.merit but told, his colleagues in final debate: "Thia bu been a wrong war. We never meai;rt to wln th1s war and when ~~~·t meart to win a war, for God's ~·t pt into il .• ~ Supporters of the amendment bad (See WAR Vm'E, Pip I) Orufe "'eatller Coastal fog wlll cloak thf: beaches In the morning, but sunny skies will reign through most ol Wfd.. nesi:lay, with temperalW'ts runnina from 70 to 85 deareu. INSIDE TOD-'Y ftlodfratt studenta art strik- . ing back on campt1st1 acroi1 California With the formation of' ''Frontlc!h '70." Set Poot 20. ' ' II·• " " • " 1•11 " 1: _,. ' :l • }l. DAJLV PILOT SC Largest Donation • ~· Laguna Hospital Given $500; 000 By PAM.ELA RAU.AN 01 l~I l)l l!J l'llJI ll1H A "'ell-worn raincoat. a few clothes In 11 paper bag and a couple of dollars wert all B. R. Meriwether had when he left Georgia as a boy nearly 50 year9. ago. ~1onday night he gave a half-million dollars to the new Sad d I e ba ck community Hospital planned for Laguna Hiils. •' wanted to do &Qmething for our neighbOrs ."' u id Meriwelher, who lives with hla wife In !Aiaure World, Laguna Hills. .... "The money can be used ror anything _ the hospital wanL.or;. so long as it benefits geriatrics pallenlS. ·• Meriwether stressed the tact lh.!ll the donation is not a legacy, but is alretidy In the bank wa iting for the hospital whi ch Is scheduled to open ln 1973, To pro\'e it. he brought his banker along. The donation , which is believed to be the large!t priva te donation ever m.11de to a ml!dical facility in Orange County, is earmarked for a C e n t e r for Geronotology. which will dea l with the affl ictions of the aged. Frotn"Page 1 ' BUSING HASSLE , within the dlltricl boundarlea, activists JIU the Students for a Democratic Society (SOSI and lhe Weathermen at UC Irvine wt1l tab tho lltol opportunity Jo join and vott. Tbty'H; outvote the apathetic parenu wbo1d r1the:r stay home and watch television," atie said. · "1 know this could bap·pen, becawie I've seen what·does occur. f aaw oultllders come Jn, vanload~ of peoplt. 1t a con frontatJon •t the Bank of America, lait year," ahe u ld. Mrs. Krenek ••id she was conce rned that tbe parent-teacher organization mi1ht raise "say $10,000 ror choir robe!'! for the school which the activists might divert to bring somebody llke (Chicago Seven attorney William) Kuruitler or a Jobo Bircher to address atuduts." Mrs. Krenek and Plalt f 1 v o r structuring the group'1 by-laws to alltfW only paflnts of children 1n the hl1h tchool voling rights In the ot1anluUon. ' ••• tht fledgling organlz.atlon. l ln a letttr Friday, Mrs, Gooch pjif whitt she appreciated the coverage. "the 1rOclt included a serloua error when J was dtll,nated a 1pokeam1n for the fledaling parent organization. I am not. t apoke only for" myself on th.is m11Uer ,'' Mrs. Gooch said. " Technically, the group has disbanded until the org11nizational vote following the opening or school, Mrs. Krene k said , and thus has no formal "spokesman." lfowever. Mrs. Gooch has been ln\'olved in the coof<\ination of the parent· teacher organization, 1he &aid. "She 'f'IS hand-picked by the principa l to be on the coodinating council," Mrs. Krenek noted. Frottt Puge 1 PROBE ••• assembly .at it.s conclusloo were at any time peaceful," he said. Agnew Joins _P_r_eside11t The proposed 256-bed hospital Wlll ·arso have facilities for general , materiiity, pediatric, emergency And out-patient care and is being geared to meet the health need.!! of 11 valley population of -nearly-100.000 by 1975. Leuer lssue1 dlvldln1 the Unlveraity HJah parents, P l 1 t t did, 11 tht re- qultements for .a loyally otlh to be taten by prospective members. ind ·lhe recitation of the Pledae of Allegiance al meetings,. Neither oI these b preatntly req uired ,, in the bylaws which are lo be voted on at a--m eetlng1ottowtng-ttie i>pening-af-acboot. But he did say the majority of the 7,000 to 20,000 persons pre.sent a c t e d peacefully. Rendon,· however. warned _l hat they may not stay that wa y. -"we~dld not ki ll Ruben Salazar," he snapped. "We did not bust the heads of hundr~s of youths._l_wouJtJ suggest if you want to talk about rioting , then you'd better start talking about ·police riots; about National Guard riots." In C Lem.en te When completed, the fa cili!y will be managed by 'the Lutheran H06pilal Soc· iety of Southern California. Frank -Schaeffer, president of the hospital board. pointed out that a close By RI CHA.RD P. NAU. liaison v.·ith So u t h toast Community °',.... .,.111 1'1191 ll•H HospilaJ is being main tained to avoid 'Vice' Pr!$idenl Spiro Agriew cut shorl duplication of costly equipment and .his Aalan mission to join President Nixon services. in San-Clemente today fur , a National "We are extremely grateful to Mr. and Securily CouncU meeting on the Middle Mrs. 1'<1eriwether for the ir generosity and East. their interest in Saddleback Community TIM! \'ice president shortened his stay in Hospital.'' said Schaeffer, at Monday's Honolulu by one day -caocelling .!I golf dinner at Leisure World. matctl -to deliver a p e r 1 o o .!I l ''1beir gift is deeply appreciated not assesmnen t of his l l~ay A.!llan lour of only for its medical significance but for Cambodia , Vietnam , Taiwan, South the he artening impetus a111d support It Korea and Thailand. gives our efforts to build a community $500,000 DONATED FOR SADDLEBACK COMMUNITY HOSPITAL From Mr. and Mrs. E.• R. Meriwetker, " Gift kir Lif• Claim to Be Alred Clemente Couricil Sets Road Contractor's Beef The President reportedly w a s hoopital which will render the highest -l!'Specially anxious lo learn more o1 QUaJltf car'1o SaddlebiCk Valley 1'he claim by a large paving contrActor Pla:tl decried the porarlzation of the Community which he blamed for swelling .inteiest in the group •1whlch was started with IO to 12 people and has grown to 90 or 100 based oo attendance at the last mee:ling." · · Platt indicated the group drawing up bylaws for the organization had oonsulted olhtr schools' p11rent-tea~h ·e r· organization.!! and "tried to incorporate their bylaws." "Mos t other organlz.ations support the U.S. Constitution." Platl said . "I'm aware that some people in this country 11re trying to change our form Or govemment and its constitution. Quite a ' few of them like socialism. I disagree: with socialism. The Constitution is the only thing that sta nds Jn their way,'' he said . The National Mexican-American Anti· Defamation League In Washington D.C. added support to Rendon'1 alleaations Monday, urging President Nixon to order an FBI investigation. Domingo N. Rey!!s, executive director, ~a id if it is not forthcoming be will ask for a Congressional probe . Authorities in Washlngton, meanwhile, said James Turner~· assistanl head of the J ustice Department's: Civil R i g h ls Division, has been sent to Los Angel es to help. President Nixon's speciali~t on Agnew's conversatl9os_wlth Cambodian resid_ents_of all ages." _ that the city of San Clemente 5hould ---remitr Lon-Nol and .his ,yjew of the .. The ~eriwelhers setUed in Ui1ure release money withheld tor construction chances of his country's surviva l under World aittr nearly 30 years o! world delays on a road project will resume work along East Avenlda Cordoba. which h11s been widened and pa ved under in Improvement district. ·-Another hearing on the on c e controversial I now amended ) c o d e governing parkin}I of trailer.!!, boats, campers and other such vehicles on prlvate properly. The proposed code once forbade the park1ng on !mme driveways, but planning commlSllioners bowed lo opponenUI' wis hes and 10ftened the regulation!. "B.ased on my experience 11t these meetings, I find people who 1 o -Vehemently oppose supportfug t h e Constitution have to have some reason- maybe some Of the m are Communists or Socialists,·• Platt said. Mexlcan·Ameri can affairs, Ma r I ; n Ca.!lti\lo, arrived at the Ne~porter Inn by presidential helicapter Monday to confer on unrelated matters. • communist attack. travel. The Presidenl, Agnew arnl t 0 p Meriwether, who began his success In before the city c<>1mcil Wednesday night. dlplomaUc and military advisers Also will the sale promotion departm ent of the The Gr lffith--Gompany of Santa Ana has · assess the strained fl.1iddlt East cease then world famous John ·Wanamaker askt.d .. that its claim for .!!everal Lhousand lire. l>e'J)artment Store In New York City, doll afs wilhheld from the city payment Israel is in the micht of "a very bitter joined the Army when World War 1 broke be placed on the agenda . • argument" with the U.S. over Iaraeli ou~ d' bl d d Councilmeo already have held one charges of alleged cease fire vkllallons e was 1sa e an sent to the Army by Egypt_ accordiog to Israeli Prime-<Jeneral Hospital in S.n Fra nciaco where executi ve session in the dispute af t er Minister Golda Meir. . he met his wife. who was 1 nur!e. hea ring two v.·eeks ago that the lt has betn cha rged lhal Egypt violated •• "Sh~. wluhso populard. the patients used contra ctor was planning legal actio n to ••· a~eemenl by _ ... 1·0g S'" m'·si'le u ,1 w,""e er aroun ," chuck I e d , u111: e· .. ,... ,,,..., l.11 M · Jh retrieve the $5.900 which the cilv held •-ses clOH:r to Jhe Suez Canal. enwe er. ~ "ler ,._. · Jh M 1 n.. back becau&e of tardiness in finishing a The U.S. has maintained that it coold ""' utc:tr marriage, e er we .. u~rs · b ·r . applied themselves to the bualneM: world Jo · not ven .Y. such. charges conclusively, for 10 yean, then Jn 1932 they decided An employe of the firm, Stan Kelly. before !l!:tting up elaborate electronic they -had made enouch money .and would charged that the city action was causing aurvelllance m.the area .. _ta~kec.n'iol";lliaroun~:;:;.d.-'lh"'e'-"w"orc:ld,_,,w~he~r~"~'o;'..'.'~he~~'--eo•·a11ienatlon" of the second of two large -~1 . todl'.V rSan-Clement~ w ims ir . ntr1etort-who--have-done-busfness-with top.level_ ~esa1on incl~ded ~etary of They have been traveling ever si nce, San Clemente. St.!lle Wilham Roaers, DaVid Packard, circUmnavipUng the globe three times City Manager Ken Carr has told deputy defense secretary; Rlch.ard C. in two years. councilmen that the city "is: v.•ilhin it.!! Helms" director or the Cent r a I legal right!" in not pa ying $100 a day for lntellif ence A.sency: Henry Klssi'nger, 1 59 da ys during which cO't'lstruc!lon National Security Af!alrs Advisor: Adm . Chi'canOS Pi'cket exceeded the contract period. ...,!J'hom1s H. Moorer, chairman of the Jo}J)j,: The job in questi on involved major Oief1 of Stalf ; and Joseph P. SiacO. widening and resurfa cing of Camino ~ esal1tant Secretary of State for Middle y h M . Capistrano abou1 a year ago. East Affairs. · OUt eelln!! 11 is the c11y·~ second diSputc or sorl5 '.Yaser it. Shawa Last ·Rites Held Graveside services were held at II 1.m. 111onday for Yaser R. Sh.11wa of 25281 Mawson Drive. Lagun .11 Hills, who· died Thursday at the age of 36. Atr. Shawa w.11s a native of Gata , Palestine and came to Laguna Hllls two years ago. He was employed as a . :purchasing agen t for Parker-Hannefin Aircraft in Orange. 1'-1r. Shawa is. su rv ived by hill "'ife Geraldine; a son, Jason: a daughter, Noelle, all of the famil y home : mother , Sl)afika Shawa: four brothers, lllam. Abdul-Karim , Hisham , and Ali : three sisters, Siham , Lamia and falak , all of Gaza. Mr. Shswa·s father and grandialhrr werr both mayors LJf Gaz11 . Th~ family suggesU.-CO'l"ltributions to l~ American.Heart AsllOClatlon . a with pa ving cnnlr11ctors this year; At Uc Irvm. e Last sprhlg residents' co1n plaints iiparked hor words by city staff members !~ward the S~lly ~filler ·company which did the repAving of Avenida i\1arqu ita and · iN GEORGE !.EfDAL , • 'Q,1 1111 a111~1 Sl1ff A group or 60 young Mexican.American youths picketed a Whit e House Youth Conference at UC Irvine Monda y. apparently In reaction to the death of newsman Ruben H. Salazar during disturbances in East Los Angeles ove r 1he we:ekend . ,A Uci, spokesman said thr group was formed1_in Santa Ana Monday morning 11nd bu~d to the Irvine campus whe re a preli minary White House conference on problems fa cing youth had been meeting since Saturday. Picketers carrying .!l\gn11 ca 111 n g 1ttention to the problem.!! of Indian and Chicano youth gathered on Mesa Court nbout 11:30 a.m. juSl prior to A conferen ce luncheon. Aboµt 30 e-0nferees including a Harvard l;iw .!ltudent and an unidentified New Orlean1''bishop met with the pickets and discussed representation or Chicano viewpoints at the final conferenc'e set for other streets in the are11 under an improvement district project. . Complainls of shoddy "'orkmanship - Isler heatedly denied by Sully Miller represl'ntatives -came from several rrsidents. In othrr acllm al the 7 JO p.m. meetioa-.. !he council will consider· ~ -Appt:als or objections lo 1 he confirmation of assessment.!! for strret {::r {::r {:r Council to Hear Clubhouse I deus In San Cle1nente By JOHN VALTER7.A 01 I~• 01ltv ,flit S!lff DAILY PILOT -February in Washington. . The first public glimpse of designers' ideas for 11 new communif5' clubhouse in S11n. Clemente will come Wednesday night dlJrtng lhe regular city council mttling, H.-.,.,, lt9C.ll H11•tl"''" a. .. 11 L..s• ..... ,Iii ,,,.,., • .,.,~ C•hl ""' s .. ClefMltt9 l)IA.JIGf; COAST 'Ul ll$•UNG COM'"N'I' ••lie•t N, w •• d ,tUlf1~I f "I 'UOll•l\ft Jtc~ It. Cu•l•v Vl'I l"IH.01!1! t NI G"'Ot•I "'·~~ ... , 11oo,..t1 ICt t«it Efl'11r T).,0,..01 A. Mur,MR1 Mtntflt.9 Ef<IO• R.:th11d It. Nell ~I" 0flntll (flu•"J Ealltt Co1•1 M-1 JXI We~• l•v $11 .. 1 .NawooLLltio:ll: 1'11 w111 telbo1 811<1!h'1•a le9u~1 lltt t1'1 '17 ~., .. , "v•"VI! "'""'U"'I ... II••~": ,,.,, ll@tt1' IJUltv0•4 ··~(~Iii .I»,..,,,, (I''"''"' IHI DAIL'!' .l'ILOT, •""'••It.II II t ..... ..,, !~• P•le .... ~IH, lo ~I'-'""' •ol!• t•(l'OI $U"• .. , loo ..,..,.,t t•••lt<t• tw Lft""-' I'-•"· "-' l•"f"• C•lt Miu, M1'1'11 ... ,0~ awdl .... ft-tl!A Yt "l1. 1'9't WlR> ,_ t .. llMJ H Mltllt, O<-ti•" "utllt"'"' ~ ,_.jllillt iJ'IOR1• l't ti trll Wt" 81•1 .J ..... Ht•-T l1M:l'o, .,., J• Wt1I 111 i'":Ji, C..lt MIU 1 ...... 1114) ••2.•111 c1-111M """"'111 .. ••2-••11 S.. Cl .... te All llf-p-"-•K: Tel ..... 4fl .. tl• c..,....,.,,1, tUt, 0•11191 tout ~11t1111<o!ttt ~"'· ... -· ,1.,111, 11:~1011 ...... '"*Il l ...,\!# If lt,.t(H._IO llt-.IA ,.,., "" ,~.. ....""" 1-lff """ ... 1u ..... """'""' ·-... 1't(...., tlt n -!tfl' l'tlf •! "'''"--' 111-1(11 • ,. Cl)!t Mt:\I, (.tlffO"fHI . ~UOU,•,.+..., •• Uftllr UM -..1ft!Y1 ·~ .... 11 1J ,. ....,.011,1 1••,illll 'l' ~,.11,.11'-"'1. U OI -1~11. Declining to join conferee11 for lunch, lhe df'monstrator.!1 -invited de legates to \•isil the barrio.c; for a first hand look lit lhe "problems Chicanos face." 11 UC I spokesman said. A few or tbe Whitr House Lask force vi~iled fhe. SAnl.11 An11 barrios after lunch. The peacerul demonstra1ion broke up at 12 :4!'1 p.m. The preliminary \\'h ite House yout h conference drew•flo younR people from collei;t:e campusf's throuchout the nation. 40 adults and 311 members of lhe ronfercnce slaf f ror discussion of 1n m:ijor 1ssurs, such 11s narco1ics. du ring thf' three-day C<lnfcrence al UC L • Thi'" conference, held every 10 ye11rs 11incc UHO, "'as div ided this yea r into two parts. A ron fcrence nn children·~ problems vdll be held in "rashlngton in Dectmbcr. and 1he finAI youth conference is Khedulcd fOr February, alM) In \\'ashlngton. The UC! mt'el "'AS ~ponsored by th' university and v.·as described as be.Ing preliminary lo the rinal session. Tokyo R&.R Cul Out S.o\IC.ON tAPl -Tokyo v.-llt-nt lon1cr be a -rest and recuperation cenltr for Am,rfc11 n gervicemen frC'll'I\ Vlt!tnam 11fler Oct. I, t~e U.S. Command sAld today ... The redeploymcJll of lt.S. forcts from Vie.loam has nt.cwllated a realignment of the R&R proir;tam to mce~ 11dju~ted requirementa,'' the command announced. I The de.signs. drafted by Boucht'r. Drlelsma Rnd Associates . comt' lo the council on abou l the final dav of lhe 3fl.. day work period 1pecified by · the council IAsl July. According to council guidclinr~. the drawings will reflect a building CflSf ing about $200.000 ;ind having about 10.000 square feet of floor spAct'. A Spanish-Mediterranean e x t e r i o r design has been il'lc!uded tn the planit If the 11rchitects ' v.·ork wins f11vor with council men, the dl'!ligns are exprct.ed ro come before community group.!! 11nd city pl11nning 11nd parks commlssinncrs for rurther study. Ar. tht plans b<'t'01nc public. r.cver11I commnully group leaders h11ve ind\cate.d they wnuld prefer.a much lll rf:cr. more expcn~h'f' building str\·ing -ultima1r co1nmunity needs. Roy .lenkins. pre~idcnl or thr Adult AecrcaUon Associati on. rcctntl y told councilmen his grO\lp was willing to work hard for pRSSAge nf a bond issue to flnanct a large clubbousr. Jenkins received 11ssur11nces 1h11t members or the recrcAtion group "'ould be wclrome to !CATI the plans ind make their own recommcnd111lons. Previous discussion About 11 bond is!ut ltJ ralk fund! to replace thc clty'A t'Xlstlng burnt<! clubhouSt have mcl "'llh lukf'"'::irm response"bYO>\lncilmen. Tfie \'Otcrs hert wOuld never ;ipprovt. 11 bond Issue. snme h11,•e said. Curren! ph1ns call for a pa~"AS·)'Oll·go flnan~ structure for a new clubhouse. -A letter from the San Clemente Rotary Club asking for .!I 11mall site on public property fo r .11· monument to commemorate the cmnmunily's sister city, San Clemente del 1Tuyu in Argentina. Thal Latin coastal reMlrt already has a monument in honor of San Clemen te. California. -A recommendation from parks commlss1ooers tliiflhi esllmaled .000 roast tn Install grass on city bowling ,l{rf!Cns is too high af'ld that proposals or replace exi11ting comp11cted soil materi.111 ~ dropped. -A report on bids receivefi fnr a cily projecl to rep nir thr. badly i;lum ping bluffs below Colony Coves. The cosl was rstimated lo rea t h $30,000. -Reconsideration of a massive policy covering a five-yea r progra m for reconstruction and mainteriance of cil.y !'\treel!. The ideas presented last June, "'nuld involve an expense of SS mi llion. -Passage of a reMllution changing lhe namp of Via de Frente to Avenid.11 de! rresidente, along with the setting of 11 public hearing. The proposed name·· chan~e action comes after months of city activity, including rejection tw ice by the planning commis.!liOn. Via de Frente Ir.ads to the gates of the Western White House. -Expected passage of 11 stringent ordinance covering use nf I r a i I motorcyc le11. minib lketi And dune buggies 11n private property . The proposed ordinance 11tates th11t riders must h.11ve in their r,iossesslon written consent to ride by the properly owner. It also bans operation of the vehicles within 300 feel or 11 Int wh ich h11s 11 resldt.nce on it. ··r can't imagine any decent. hard- wor king citizen of the U.S. be In i adamantly opposed to the Pledge of Allegiance or loyalty oaths unless they are," he canrluded. Both Mrs. Krenek and Platt objected to remark., made bv Mrs. Arlene Gooch in the DAILY Pii..oT last weelr being attributed to her as a "spokesman" for From Page 1 WAR VO'fE. •• modified the language in hopt: of gaining support. The changes would have extended tn ·withdrawal deadline from.June 30 to Dtc. 31, 1971. and would have alven the President ~n option of keeping troops in Vietnam for an .11dditional period of up tn 60 days beyond Dec. 31 if he found them eJ:posed to "unanticipated clear 11nd present danger." in such a situation, ht also would hav~ been empowered to ask Congres1 to set a new withdrawa l date. Supporters or the proposal said ii aav~ Congrl!:.!l! 11 chance to vote to end the war as in effect they voted for White House ciuthority to wage the war with approval of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution ln Au.11ust, 1964. • Aussies Bar Gregory CANBERRA . Australia (AP) -The government has barred black comedi1n Dick Gregory from coming to i\ustr11lit to participat~ In an 1nti·Vieln.!lm w11 r moratflrium in Sydney this month . lmmlgralion Department officials s11id toda y. Authorilies refu$ed to say wh y his requr:~t for ll vis~ h11cl b£en refused . What's. • • The East Los Angeles rioting that left ·nearly 200 arrested 53, injured, and Sala za r dead , was pres um ab I y mentioned. howeve r, 11aid one aide. Tense calm hung over the county &rt!a or East Los Angeles. Montebello, and Wilmington, on Monday night, although a fe'# sporadic incidents of vandalism and looting occurred. The _polential rioters are apparently n iting to see if their long-voiced demands and call for a probe into the killing of Salazar are met . Laguna Rider Beaten, Robbed By Passengers A t\llchhiker hi Laguna Be a c h $Uspected somelhing was wro ng this mo rning when the camper he had entered began bumping along over a dirt road . He was su re of il when a fellow passenger grabbed him around the neck r.1 a headlock. Police Lt. John Zelko said later that . Durwood A. Phillips, 31. San Francisco, v.·as kicked, beaten ancl robbed of $10 by . five lo ng-haired ynun1 men . The healing apparently occurred at Top of the WGtld. Phillips was hitchhiking at t he northeast corner of Broadway. ·The camper driver said he would take him to a;i all-night restaurant. Phill ip.!! rntered 1he camper and found three ypung men in the rear. After the bumpy ride, Philli p~ asked v.•here they were going. One of the men grabbed him. He broke loose and ned bul was caught by the five. ';Try to run agaJn and we'll kill you," O'l'le. told him . Phillipll suffered cuts 11nd bru ises, 7..elko 5aid. M .L. ? y 1ne. YOU WON 'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN 'S. I WE ARE . MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOY AL CUSTOMERS_THAN MAKING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH , WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS. WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "M 0 DEST L Y " ADMIT Tf4AT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRANDS SUCH AS:.BIGELOW, BERVEN, BEATIIE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARW I CK, MOHAWK, RO XBURY, MILLI KAN, ARM STRONG . IANTA ANA. OUN•t TUITllfM••• ••• :1~1rn1 l DIAltPlb 11114 ll'Yl111. T11tl1, C1Hr. ., .. , ... I • ALDEN'S ·CARPETS e . DRAPES 166l Pfac•11tla-Avt, COSTA MESA 646-48]8 "' • ' I ( I ' w WI b< th M " In .. Y< .. I I J n & ol n Ct a • j Ii It d h ~ u c • • ~ n ' • ( j I I , I ----r. ·-- 7 • Lagu11a Beaeh·:. 1 EDITION .VOL. 63, •NO. 209, 2 SECTIONS, 28 P.AGES. ORANGE couw, . .cALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER l, ·1970 · Waitres·ses 'Liberated' CORONADO -In the wake of Women's Liberation Day, 90 veteran waitresses learned thef will apparently be liberated from the chore of serving al the ·state dinner 'Thursday honoring Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. They're not at all happy about the switch replacing them with male waiters in gold uniforms. ~ "We've been gettin.; ready for days," said Ivy Eui.y, MJ,.a waitress for 26 years. "Many of us even bought ~pemive wigs. Ar~'t we good enough to SJ.70 Figure Set serve the President and his guests?" She said,. "Furthermore, most of us have children at school Whl are learning about democracy and our way of doing things in America. How can we ans~er them when they ask, 'ls um democraCy at wor)t?' " Tim Elborne, a deputy p....., secretary, said "State dinntrs have always been served by waiten." He added that no final deci&ion .has been made regarding waiters for the dinner at lhe Hot.I Del ~.- Cou~ty Tax Rate Boosted 3 Cents By JACK BROBACK Of rflt Dlllf' Pl19t lllff Orange County 's 1970.71 property tax nte,was set at $1.70 tbls morning by the • Board of Supervisor~. of the adopted county budget of $212 million. · However a union spokes.man said about 50 waiters have been hired throug~ the. San Diego loca l of the Wait.en and Bartenders Union, AFL-CIO. · The waitresses work six days a week and make $20 to $30 in lips during their four·bour dinner shifts. They stand to lose a~clay's wages. They sald they have informed the Western Wlti~ House. Gov. Reagan and several of the congressmen by telegram. U aatlsfaclloll Is not forlhcoming, Ibey say, the nelt step is a women's liberation il"P\lP· • 1xes From The guest list at the big spla&h in<ludes former President Lyndon B. Johnson and his wife, according to a hotel spokesman. lf they attend, it will be the seconc! time in a year that the Nlxons have entertained the Johnsons in California. 'lbe Jobnsms came to California for the former Prpident's 8Lst birthday last year. • .Oilier PrnldenUal guests at the hotel have included H&rmon, Taft, McKinley, Wil!oJ\.and lranklln D. Roosevelt._ Another guest la Omar Bradley, retired flve.star-aeoeral of the army. Aclor_Jobn ar Serving Wayne b on the guest list as Is jockey \Villie Shoemaker. Oise jockey Dick \Vhittinghill or Los Angeles is also invited. ~ An estimated 100,000 persons are expected for a para'de and Presidential motorcade through this island city across from San Di~o. The White House has not confirmed that the Presidents will take part· in lhe parade, but they are upected lo. The Coronado police force of 41 men has been beefed up by about ~ other officers. . - · Today's Fl-1 N.Y. StOeb TEN COOS Nixon· They'll be on the lookout for a Yippie (Youth I q_t er n a.ti on a I Party) demonstration to protest federal government anti-marijuana polk:iea. · Diaz Ordaz, accompanied by hia daughter, Will be given full military honors when he lands at the. North Wand Nav~I Air StaUod just btfore noon. N11oa. will greet him. The thrust of the ceremonial dinner anct.Nixon's recent visit-to Puerto Val- larta is .strengthening relaUons ;,:be::t.,.;,..::;n·----r the two countries. • •• I Hawk, Dove Showdown • Ends Debate W ASlilNGTON IUPI) In a significant test ol sentiment. the Sena.le today refused to tie President ~on'• hands by ordering him lo end U.S. parUcipation in the Vietnam Wai by t specific deadline. The vote against the Haijieli!·McGovem o~nt ~u ~ tO 39, · The figure represents a three-cent ~ over the •10 rate of ,l.67 per --~•100 ......, ftluilion. riii:iilwtil> ,.,_to -a dellcK of almost Q mlllian becauae of a recent reduction in stale •Medial aiO lo the county, the Supervisors decided to compromise and cut about $1 mµtion out The $1.70 rate was suggested by Supervisor David Baker. He included in hi.s inotion, which was a d o p t e d unanimously, that "the county administrative offtoer-and the various deparlmtnl lleada find ii wa.y to cul 1be ,...,.,..,,. $1 .,_ iUIOf'llle tiudjjet' Tho hawk VI. dove abowdowit mded & ~-mn.,umorti·~·~·iiii"~";j 3 Navy Men Drown Off Coast Thrtt Navy men apparently drowned late Monday in a freak accident aboard a landing craft engaged in underwater derholltion work off San Clemente lsland's Pyramid Head. Searches through the night by two Navy shi ps failed to turn up a tract of the thrtt men iwept ovef-board from the craft after a winch broke, throwing the sailors into the sea. Another crew1nan working in the test suf!ered a broken leg, but was saved, Navy spokesmen said. · All the names were still withheld this morning as Navy personnel tried to contact the victims' families. The mishap, whi ch occurred off the Island about 60 miles from the mainland, 1parked a search by the fleet tug USS Chowanos. The operations were soon joined by the aircraft carrier USS Ranger. The extensive surface search, aided by helicopters: continued until nightfall without turning up a trace of the missing men. and report bacldo Ille board wtthln a few Wetti." The decision to peg the rate between last year's Jl.87 and the $1.75 figure which would hive been required if no budget cuts were made was vigorously opposed by the Oraoae County Chamber of Commerce. . Clarence E. White and Robert Sigmund of the Chamber's governmental affail'1' committee urged the Supervisors to hold the line at the ~t rate , noting that assessed valuaUODI of county property have gone up 17.6 .... percent. ~ "You can do like businesses have been forced to do in tbe past year of tight fiscal conditions by i n c r e a s i n g productivity per man if you have to lay off some employes," White argued. Supervisor William Hirstein ~uggesled that the $1 million beach acquisition fund in the adopted budget be eliminated and that $600,000 be cut from other department budgeUi to meet the $1 .70 rate figure. But Supervisor Ro~ Battin didn't agree. He urged that the entire $3 million be cut out of the medical center budget ''because the center is the cause of all the trouble." Satellite Launched CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The Air FOrce has launched a secret new missile warning satellite, apparentl y to relace one stranded in the wrong orbit in June. It was the fourth in a series or advanCed surveillance s p a c e c r a f t designed to "hover" in near s~liO'flary orbits high above Asia to flash an early alert of a missile attack from Soviet land bases or submarines. • debate an the war laaue and Illa pjiCio Nixon IJ selling in wllhdrawflll Aawl<an lroops from Vietnam. ---CHICANO GROUP FORMS .PICKET LINE AT UCI AFTER LOS ANGELES TRAGEDY Duth Strikes In the Cfty, 60 Prote1tel1 March on the lrv"11 Campus NEWPORT FUNERAL SET Newsman Ruben Salazar Chicano Leaders Want Federal Probe Into Riot By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 11M EUIUY Piii! St1H Threatening more violence, Mexican· American leaders of Los Angeles County today demanded a federal probe or a $1 million riot that also cost the life of one of their most wldeiy·read spokesmen. The Chicano chieftains were joined by officials at various levels of government, Los Angeles Times columnist ' and KltfEX•TV news direc tor Ru be n Salazar, 42. of 3115 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana, was killed while covering the Saturday night demonstration and rioting that !ollowed. A 10..inch tear gas missile which can accurately pierce a one-inch pine board at 100 yards tore through his head, aftei: being fired from 15 feel away into the Silver Dollar Cafe. "'"ife Sally, announced she wi11 file l $1 million suit charging wrongful duth at the hands of Jaw enforeement officers. Others in the barrios -which have been fennenling with bittemea some authorities aUegedlj ignored ..:... took up the cry. . Salazar himself predicted violence would come if relief didn't. "We are deeply suspicious about the death of Salazar," said an angry .Rosalio Munoz, who organized a rally to protest the death rate of Mexican-Americans in . the Vietnam War. The Chicano Moratorium charges 20 percent of all combat casualties is disproportionate to tbe number of that race. serving. "The one man who could get our ideas across through the mass media' was the one man killed by the sheriffs," said Munoz, former UCLA student body president. Ad"""'tes of the amendment held Ultle optimism of winning outright but had hoped ' to make the score cloeer than it was. They lost key votes at the Jut hour. Two Republican.')doves" -Sens. John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and Qiarles Percy or Illinois-· announced opp:llition lo the amendment on grounds it mJghl undercut U.S. peace negoUaUon efforts. Whe.n the tensely waited roll call came. only seven ll<publlcana joined 2 2 .Democrats in voUng for the proPOAI · aim"1 at virtually compelling Nizon to get all American forcea out of. Indocbini by Dec. 31, 1971. VoUng to reject the propoaal -as an amendment to a $19.2 billion military procurement bill -are 21 Democrats and 34 Republicans. w Tbe spectator ..Jferies were abou.& three-fourths full as the vote was taken. A number of young people 'lftrt in attendance. There was no audJence reaction when the result was announced. The amendment had been expected lo 1 .... Final debate began after the Senile· convened at 8 a.m. EDT -lhe earlitBt meeting time tn recent memory. Jn an emotional appeal, Sen. Gtor..ge McGovern' (0.S.O.), co.sponsor of the amendment. blamed the Senate for letting the war go on and declared "in one sense, thll chamber literally reeks of blood!' In reply, Sen. John Stennis (0-Mis!.}, asserted that the amendment would ..take away the symbol of-OW' nation - and that's what the Chief uecuUve is, the symbol of our nation." Double Se.ssions Blasted Spokesmen for the Los Angeles County Sherilrs Office refused to discuss the fatal incident, which .incensed the Chicano coinmunity that Salazar was dedicated to help. Others.Jn the bar on Whittier Boulevard differed 10 accounts of what transpired compared. to those of deputies at the scene. Annando Rendon, who appeared with Munoz, charged the violence can be directly blamed on sheriff's deputies, an allegation promptly denied by Sheriff Pitchess. '.'Neither the march itself nor the (See PROBE, Page 2) Sen. llorry M. Goldwater CR-Am.) voted against the amendrpent but told hil • colleagues 1in final debate: '1Tbla bu been a wrong wa"r. We never meant to win Otis war and when you don't mean to win a war, for God'a uke don't set into it." Supporters ol the amendment bid CS.. WAR VOTE, Pqe I) Parents Divided in Reaction to School Busing ' University Park parents appeared divided today in their reactions to the · Tustin Union High school board decilion to bus 1,000 University High student.! to Mission Viejo. Mrs. Arnold Krenek, or 18345 Chicory Way JrVlne. said she had talked to "90 ~nt of the people involved" in the busi'lB-d.ouble sessions plan and finds them believing the plan "the most obvious move the board could make." Mrs. Krenek. preVious public relations committee chalrmall for the nedgling ·parent-teacher orgao.iialioo s leer Ing committee, said coaunents 1:f:ported. In the DAILY PILOT by.other parenll: were "purely 1 political play." Mrs. Krenek'• husband f o r m e r I y headedrr~ grwp formed to tt:t. up a parent cher organbaUon for the nt.vf o.chool .., ch ls under COMtruction and e~ed to open someUme from late OClober to early Janu8ry. A strike by sheet" llW!lal workers has been blamed by sdlool officials for the delayed opening of the 1,7.0Q.student high school which led trustees to vote expenditure of '5,000 to bus pupils to ~fission Viejo for an afternoon double session. ''Our board is very conservaUve," Mi's. Krenek said. "They don't spend money unless it is ablolutely necessary. A great deal of thought wu given to the busing plan and their decision wu made for the students' good," she argued. Another University Park p a re n t . Robert Platt, said he .supported the Krenek!' viewpoint and b e 1 J e v e d comments by other parents "·ere designed "to make the trustees look bad." . However, Platt Indicated he. was not happy with double aeu!Ons "'hich he said were the "worst part" of the trusteee' plan. • ··we have had busing of students for several years, In this arowin& diltrict," the rat.her of five said, He 1uppport.s the trustee!' arguments > . -- that lhe similarity of ~1ission Viejo to University High will make the transition easier for students and that the Mission campus siie is better suited t o accommodating 1,000 more students than is the 23-acre Tustin high campus. Both ~trs. Krenek and Platt noted the formation of a parent organization for the new school has been fraught with difficulties which have •'polarized the community." Platt sa id the number one Issue facing the fledgllnJ group is "who's 1<>1ng to pe allowed to ,JOin." "As it ls set up oow, anyone ln the district who pays $2 can j6Jn," Platt 1aJd. "f oppose this," he said, "because' it allows student! or anyone to join. Wtlh too many students, mtttlngs CO&l1dA>e disruptive." Mrs. Krenek ·said she believed anjone should .be able lo join but not as voting members. "Jf you open this to anyone living CS.. BUSING, Page l) > Authorities from other a g e n c i e s , h1clududing the International Association or Chiefs of Police and the manufacturer ·of the finned , combat·tyPe missile said they were appalled. The police chief's association manual on chemical agent.! expressly warns against using them in crowd control or other than against barricaded criminals. Presidential Press Secretary Ron Zie81er announced at the'Western White House in San Clemente that Assistant Attorney General JerDis Leonard i.s tn close touch. Los ~Jes County Sheriff Peter J. Pitchess •Id his· department would withhold Conirhent while the hivestigatlon is under way, but called for eventual complete pUbhc dltClosure of tht facts. CongreS!lllan Edward Roybal (D.Los Angeles) and Clly Councilman Thomas Bradley demanOed 1 prompt and thorough probe. Los Angtles County Coroner Thomas NOfUCbi announCed a public Inquest will be b<ld 5epl. 10 lnlo 'Ifie slaying of the ' prlze.winntng ntwsman. . lflquesllo Otifnnlrfe If death Is dut lo accidental, negllgtnt or criminal means. Sldney lmw, attorney ror Saliur't ! • * * * Hundreds Pay ' Sala~r Tribute Hundreds of CJUcanos tcday bqait filing by the cuket of columnlat Ruben Salazar, who became a martyr to the · cause he hatl covered Saturday night. .Mr. Salazar, of 3111. S. Rit a \fay , Santa Ana, was to _lle in state from ID a:m. lo 2 p.m. at Baguea MortUery In East Los Angeles. Funeral eervk:es for the award-wlMtng ccm:l)>Oildent who had covered tht Vietnam War, plus comt.t ·it Mes:too City and the Dominican ReJl!lblle. wtu be Wedne•y In Corona dt:I Mar. The 4 p.m. rites wtD be in the Po<lfle View Mernor11l Park Chapel, with private iltennent to fOuow at the partc:. He 1.,, .. , his wt!• Sally, Ihm children, Lisa, Sleptianie and Jobn, pfrtntr Mr. 1nd Mn. Salvador Salasar, of El •J>uO; and • lister, Mn. Lua Cllnerol. • C.ut . Coastal fog wtn <leak lhe beacbe• In the mornlnc, but """'1 slcies will ·reign throuch most ol Wed· nesday, with temperaturts running from llJ lo 15 ......_ INSWE TODAY Modfrait student.I ar.c rtrlk· ~ Ing 'back .01" compuac1 'OCT'OU!' Ccll/OT11la witll th< /omuitio• •1 ''Frontlash '70." Set Page 20. 1 MllNlt..... .,. ' lfetl9MI,..... 44 n.• ~c...., • JI fylwll ...,. 11 1• 5"rft ,.II ' '*' ..... 1•11 It T....,..._ It ••11 '"-'-lt 4 w...w,· • 14 ·-·· """ ,.,. . ..... ..... .... " I • SC • • Largest Donatron Laguna Hospital Giyen $500, 000 B)' PAMELA llALLAN 01 t111 ci..uv 1>ne1 sti ff A well-worn raincoat , a few clothes In a paper bag and a couple of dollars "''ete all B. R. Meriwether had v.•hen he left Georgia as .11 boy nearl y 50 years ago . Monday night he gave a half-million dollars to the new Saddleback Con;imunity Hospital planned for Laguna Hills. ''We wanted to do something for our neighbOrs, '' said Meriv•ether, who lives with hiS wife in Leisure World, Laguna Hills. Agnew Joins -President ' In Clemente By RICHARD P. NAU. Of 11'11 ~11'1' Piie! lllH Vice President· Spiro Agnew cut short his Asian miasion to join President Nixon in San Clemente today for a National 11 Security Council meeting on the. Middle East. 1be vice president shortened his stay in Honolulli by one day -cancelling a golf match --to deliver a ·personal assessment of his 11-0ay Asian tour of Cambodia , Vietnam, Taiwan, South Korea and Thailand. · The President repOrtedly w a s especially anxiol.l.5 to learn more of Agnew's conversaUons with Cambodian Premier Lon Nol aDd his view of the chances or his country's survival under. communist att-ack. The President, Agnew and I o p diplomatic and milltary advisers also will asstss 1he strafiied Middle East cease fire. Israel is in the midst of "a very biller arguml!flt'' with the U:S. over Israeli charges of alleged cease fire vk>Jalions by Emt. according to Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir. It has been charged that Egypt violated th~ agreement by movipg SAM mlsslle basts closer to lhe Suez Canal. The U.S. has maintained that It could not verily such charges conclualvety beftne setting-up-elaborate electronic BUrVeillanCe in the area. These attending today's San Clemefi£e IOJ"leVel :""ion Wiu4e<I , jecre~ of State Wlllltm Rogers; David Packard, lleputy defense seer~; Richard C. Helms, director of the C e n l r a I Intelligence Agency ; Henry Kinli:iger, National Security Affair! Advisor; Adm. 'I'Mmas H. Moorer, chairman Qf the Joint d'ilels of Staff; and Jooeph P. Sileo, Qil!tan\ Secretary or State for Middle ust Affairs. •' Y aser R. Shawa • Last Rites Held !;raveslde services were held at II a.m. MJ>nday for Yaser R. Shawa of ·25281 ~wson Drive, Laguna Hills, who died Thursday at the age of 36. ~ir. Shawa was a native of Gaza, Palestine and came to Laguna Hills two years ago. He was employed as a purchasing agent for Parker-Hannetin Aircraft In Orange, Mr. Shawa is survived by his wHe Geraldine ; a son. Jason: a daught.er, N(le:lle. all of the family home: mother, Sl)aflka Shawa : four brothers, Isam, Ali<!ul-Karlm. Hisham. and All; three 1i!ters~ Siham, Lamia and Falak, all or ~aza. :t-fr. Shawa 's father and grandfathe r \vcre bclth mayors of Gaza. ',rhe family suggests cootributions lo Uif: American Heart Association. J DAILY PILOT Nirw,.n liMlt H111th1tt•Jt lnch 1 .. ••• IH'lt h•1tH1IJt W9'1.., c .. ,. 111... s .. er._.,. OIANGE COAST f'UI LISHING COMPJ.N'I' •o'be~I N, w.,4 l>tUo:ltflt v .d Plllll\t1111!' J•t~ It. Cur11v Vit t fl ru_e.,,r ind G-~1 ,,..~,,-, 1ha11111 K11•:t Edlf(lr T~t1..,11 A. Mu•p~i~t M""t ;ln; EGolG• 1t;th1rd r. N.n lovtll Ortf'IH C°"'"ly Edlror ,. Offlc" Coile Mn.er llll W<ll 81v St'"' 111...,.,.i Attc11: 1'11 wu1 lllto• •°""""' L•-• •Md11 m fo,....1 ""'""' M"""lllQIM &ttcl'I : ll'llJ lltt(" •wit•"• k• c~1I: JU""°"" El c ..... 1'1(1 '"I .. A . O•ll'I" ~!LO~a•~d 111, ...... ,.l"f'ft,, Is """"'~td dilly f.O'tfl!! l~ft· ••v 11'1 MPf•tlt ,,,,;o.., ftr t.tt~n• lt.:t~· ,,.,......... IH(.11, C .. 11 H\~I.. lol""'llnt:tl'I ... A w '-"'" v.n.,, 111,,. ..-1111 ,.,.. r .. llfltl flfil-. °'""""° (Otll 1'1111111 ... •ftt ~ ll"lll•!At Jll•nl• ••• •I nu w .. 1 a11Mt 8!W,, NI_., Atttll, 1•• l lO "'°"' .. ,, ll!wt, (.ot.11 M-. l-'•"9• C71•1 641·•111 C'-lf"..4 A,.,....itl .. 64J.S671 s-' Cle_.._ .t.11 ~Jett.om: t.1., .... •fJ.-4411 t:H~0,111, 1tl'O. O•tllOf Cet •I N n"'"'f (_..,,, Nt """'' 11or1n. lll¥•1t11.-. 1di19tlll "'"... ... ''"''"""""""'" .... ,111 ,...., 1$ .,,......\1(... ...,....... ._111 ,.... ... 1 .. lofl ... , .. , ... 111 ''""''· ~ t1tU OOITlft Nlf I I N••llO"I l t llf:ll ••t C-9'11 Mt ... t;t hfe<ft!t 6utua.tt1t11 •r (lfl'tt U 00 ,,.,•1111y1 ty .,.,,II It JI mt!llfll~/ fl'ltlltr..., ,. .. ,.,,,, .. ,, n • """'''"'· .... "The money can be wed for anything the hospital wants, 110 long as it benefits geriatrics patients.'' Meriwether stressed the facl that the donation is not a legacy, but I! a!nady in the bank waiting for the hO!pital which is scheduled to open in 1973. To prove it, he brought his banker along . The donation , which is believed to be Lhe largest private donation ever made to a medical facility in Orange County, i! earmarked for a Cente r for Geronotology, which will deal with the afnlcUons of the aged. · The proposed 236-bed hospital will also have facilities for ieneral, maternity, pediatric, emergency and out-patient care and is being geared to meet the health need! of -. valley population of nearly 100,000 by 1&75. \Vhen completed, the facility will be managed by the Lutheran Hospital Soc· iety of Southern Califo rnia. Frank Schaeffer, pre!ident of the h<>spital board. pointed ·out that a close liaison with S o u t h Coast Community Ho!pit.al is being maintained to avoi d duplication of cosUy equipmen.t and services. ''We are extremely grateful to Mr. a'nd 1.1rs. Meriwether for their generosity and their interest in Sa ddleback Community Hospital,'' said Schaeffer, at Monday;'& dinner at Leisure World. "Their gift is deeply appreciated not only for its medical significance but for the heartening impetus and support it gives our efforts to build a i;ommunity hospital which wW render the hightst quality ~e t<> Saddleback Valley. resldeuta of all ages." The MerlWethers settled In Leisure World after nearly 30 years of .world travel. M,e.rjwether, who began his success In the !ale promotion department of the then world famous John Wanamaker Department . Store in New York City,' joined the Army when World War I broke out. • He was disabled and senf to the Army General Hospital in San Francisco where he met his wife, who Willi a nurse. "She Willi so popular. the patient! used to wheel her around," c h u c k I e d MeriWether. After their marriage. the Merlwethers applied themselves to the buslnes! world for 'l0 y9aN,1 0ien ltn·1932 thet declded they had mai:le enough money andwouJd take: off around the world wherel(er their whlms dlt:cted. . - They Mvfi tieen trlvelin~ evtt line!, circumnavigating the ilobe three times in two years. Chicanos Picket Youth Meeting At UC Irvine By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1111 Dtll1 l'li.t l lfll A group of 60 young Mexican-American youths picketed a White Holl!e Youth Coriference at UC Jrvine Monday. apparently in reaction to the death of newsman Ruben H. Salazar during disturbances in East Los Angeles over lhe weekend. A UCI spokesman said the group was formed in Santa Ana Monday momlng and bused to the Jrvine campus where a preliminary White House confereoce on problems facing youth had been meeting since Saturday. Picketers carrying !'iigns c a 11 i n g attention to the problems or Indian and Chicano youth gathered on Mesa Court about 11 :30 a.m. just prior to a ccrnlerence luncheon. About 30 conferees including a Har.vard law student and an unidentified New Orleans bishop met wilh the pickets and discussed representation of Chicano viewpoints at the final conference sel for February in Washington. Declining to join conferees for lunch, the demonstratprs .invited delegates to visi l the barrios for a first hand look at the "problem! ChicanO! face," a UCI spokesman said. . A few of the White H<luse task f<lrce \·isitt'd lhe Santa Ana barrio! after lunch. The peaceful demon~tratlon broke up at 12:4:'.i p.m. The preliminary \Vhi t! Hou!e you th conf('re nce drew 80 young people from rol!rge campuses throughout the natio·n. 41) adults· and :IV members or the conference staff for discuss\Qn o( 10 maj.cr issues-. such as narcolic!, during lhc three-day conference at UCI. ... Thr C!lnference. held every 10 years since 1910, "'as divided this year into two parts. A C<lnference on children's problems .,.,.ill be: held in Washington in Oecemher. and the final youth coJ\ference i5 scheduled for ~'ebruar:y, also In \\'ashington. · The UC! meet WAS not sponsored by the university and was described as being prt'limlnary to the final su1ion, Tokyo R&R Cut Out SAIGON ~AP) -jokyo will no longer be a r,i;t and recu~ration ctoltr for American servicemtn from Viclnam erter Oct. I. the U.S. C'ommand saiif today. "The redeploy meflt of U.S. forces from Vietnam has nectsslt4'ted a reallanment of Lilt R&n. program to m!et •dJusttd rtqulremei~." the command announced.. . ' . From Pagel . BUSING' HASSLE • • • ' • wluiln the district boundiries, actlv!Sts like the Students for • Democratic Soclety {SOS) and the Weathermen it.Ve Irvtno will tab the Uni opportunity to -jola •llC! vole, Tbey11 outvote the •Pl~llUts wllo'd rather my home -anet watch television," ahfi said. . '-"I kno~ I.bis could·htppen. btcaust-l've .. seen whit di;>es occur. -1 saw outitdera come Jn, vanload.s of people., at a tonrront.aU<ln at the Bank of Amerlc'I, last year,'' lhe said. · Mr1. Krenek II.id she was concerned that· the parent-teacher organization might raise "say $1\1,000 for ch<llr robes for the school ·which the activists might divert t<l bring somebody like (Chicago Seven att.Qrney William) Kunstler or 'a J<lhn Bircher t<> address students." Mrs. Krenek and Platt I a v o r structuring the group•; by.Jaws to allow only parents QI children.in the high school votin_g rights in the organization. Le.sser Issues dividing the University High parenl!, P I 1 t t · u.ld, il the re· qulrementll for a loyalty oath to be .taken by prospective members, and the recitation of tbe Pledge ol Allegiance at meetings. · , ,Neit~er of the!e ~ ]!esently_nguired ., 1n the bylaws which are to be voted on at a meeting tollowtng tbe-op:enirJg of school. the Uedgllng organization. In a Jetter Friday, Mrs. Gooch said whlle she appreciated thl!! coverage, "the article inciuded a serious error when I WI! designated a apoknman for the fieda:Una: parent ora:aniiaUon. I am not. I spoke only for myself on this matter;"' /Mrs. ~h said . Technlcally, the group has disbanded until the organizational vote following-the opening of school, Mrs. Krenek 11aid, and thus has 'no formal "spokemian." lfowever, Mrs. Gooch has been lnvcilved in the coordina1ion or the parent- teacher organiz.atlon, she said. ''She wu hand·pjcked by the principal to be on the coodinating council ," 1.1rs. Krenek noted. From Pnge l PROBE ••• assembly at its conclw:ion were aL any time peaceful," he !Bid. -But he did say lhe majority of the 7,000 to 20,000 persons present a c t e d peactfully. -1lendon.-®.w.e.ter._war.ne.d that they may not stay that way. $500,000 DONATED FOR SADDL~CK COMMUNITY HOSPITAL From Mr. •nd Mrs. E. R. Meriwether, a Gift for Life Platt decried the porarizdllr:rn · of the rommunity which he blamed for swelling interest in the group "which was started With ·10 to 12 people and has grown to -90 <lr 100 based on attendance at the last meeting." . ~ "We did not kill Ruben -Salazar," he snapped. "We <iid not bust the head! of hundreds -of youths. I "·ould suggest U you want lo talk about rioting, then you 'd better start talking about police riots; about National Guard riots.'' Claim to Be Alred Platt Indic ated the group drawing up bylaws for the organization had consulted <lther schools' parent.teacher organizations and "tried to incOrporate their bylaws." The National .Mexican-American AnU· Defamation League in \Va!hington D.C. added support -to Rendon'! allegations Monday, urging President Nixon to 9rder an FBI investigation. Clemente Council Sets Domingo N. Reyes, executive director, said if it is not forthcoming he will ask for a Congressional probe. Road Contractor's Beef "Most other organization! support the U.S. Constitution," Platt said. "I'm aware that some people in this country are trying to change our form or government and its constituli<ln. Quite a rew of them like sociali!m. I disagree with socialism. The Constiluti<ln is .the only thing that stands in their way," he Authorities in Washington, meanwhile, said James Turner, assistant head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, has been sent to Lei! Angeles to help. The claim by a large paving contractor that the city of San Clemente shbuld relea·se. money withheld for construction delays on a road pr<lject will resume before the city co1.mcil Wednesday night. The Griffith Compan y of Santa Ana has asked thal its claim for several thousand dollars wilhheld from the city payment be placed on the agenda. Councilmen already have held one executive session in the dispute a f t e r hearing two weeks ago !hat lhe contractor was planning legal action to retrieve the $5,900 which the citv held back because of tardiness in finishing a job. An employe Of the firm. Stan Kelly, har:ged-that-lhe ci ly-action-was-eausing "alienation" of the second of two large contractors who have done business with San Clemente. u• City Manager Ken Carr has told councilmen that the city "is withln its legal rights" in nQt paying $100 a day for 59 days during which construction exceeded the contract period. The job in question invol11ed major widening and resurfacing of Camino Capistrano about a year ago. It is the city's second dispute of sorts "'1th paving contractors th is year. · Last spring residents' C<lmplaint! sparked hQt words by city staff members t<>ward the Sully Miller Company which did the repa ving of Avenida l'o1arqulta and other streets in thl! ;irea under an improvement dist rict project. Complaints of shoddy workmanship - later heale.dly denied by Sully Miiier representatives -came from several residen!s. In other actim al the 7:30 p.m. meet ing the council will consider : -Appeals Qr objections to I hr: confirmation of assessments for streel * * * Council to Hear Clubliouse Idea.s In San Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA 01 Hit OtllY 1'1191 $1111 The first public glimpse of designers' idea! ror a new community clubhouse in San Clemente will come \Vednesday night during the regular city council meeting. The designs, drafted by Boucher, Drlelsma and Associates. come lo the council nn about the final dav of the 3()... Clay work pe:rlod .spf!cilied by· the council last July. _ According to council guidelines. the drawings will reflec t a builQ ing costing about $200,000 and having about 10,000 square feet of floor space. • A Spanish-Mediterranean ext e r Io r design has been included in the plan11. If thl.l. archi1ects' work wins favor with (.'()Uncllmen, the <ft!signs are expeclcd to come bcfQre (.'()mmunity groups and city planning and parks commissioners for further study. As th"e plans become public, !'iever1I commnuity group leaders have Indicated th@ y wnuld prefer a much larger. more expensive building serv ing ultimate communil.y needs. Roy Jenklns. president Qf the Adult Recreation Association, recently told councilmen his group was ••tiling to work hard for passage of 3 bond is.1ue to finance a large clubhouse. Jenkins received assurances lhsl members of the recre11tlon gri>up would be welcome to scan the pl ans and make their <lwn ~recommendation$. :Previous dlM:Ussk>n about a bond issue to r1 lst funds to .rt:plece the city's existing burned clubhouse have met \.•Ith luke\varm resPQnse by counC:llmcn. The voter! here would ne ver approve a bood Issue, some hive said. Current plans call for a pay-as-you·go finance structurt for a ntw cl\JbhouM!. work along East Avenlda Cordoba, which has been widened and paved under an improvement district. -Another hearing on the on c e controversial (now amended) code governing parking of tJ"ailers, boats, campers and other such vehicles on private property. The proposed code once1 forbade the parking on some driveways, but planning commissioners bowed to opponents' wishes and softened the regulations. -.A letter from the San Clemente Rotary Club asking for a small site <ln public property for a monument to commemorate the community's sister <;ity, San . Clemente del Tuyu in Argentina. That Latin coastal resort al ready has a monument Jn h<lnor of San Clemente, California . -A recommendation from parks commi~sioners that the estimated Sfi.000 coa!t to install grass on city bowling greens is too high and that proposals or replace existillg compacted soil material be dropped. -A report on bids received for a city project to repair the badly slumping bluffs below Colony Coves. The cost was estimated fo reach $30.000. -Re<'onsideralion of a massive policy covering a fi \'e-ycar program for reconstruction and maintenance Qf city streets. The ideas presented last June, · .,..·ould invQlve an expense of $5 million. -Passage of a resolution changing the name of Via de Frente to Avenida del Presidente, along with the setting of a public hearing. The pr<lposed name change action comes after months of city activity, including rejection twice by the planning commission. Via de Frente leads to the gates of the Weste rn White House. -Expected passage nf a stringent ordinance covering use of t r a i I motorcycles, minibikes and dune buggies on private property. The proposed ordinance states that riders must have in their possession written consent to ride by the property owner. It also bans operation of the vehicles within 300 feet of a lot which has a residence <ln it. said. · · "Based on my ezperience at these meetings, I find pt<>ple who s o vehemently oppose supporting t h e Constitution ha ve to Kave some reason- maybe some of them are Communisls or Socialists," Platt said. "I can't imagine any decent. hard· working citizen of the U.S. b ! i n..t.._ adamantly opposed to ~ Pledge <ll ... Allegiance or loyalty oaths unless lhe y are." he concluded. Both Mrs. Krenek and Platt objected to remarks made by Mrs. Arlene Gooch in the DAILY PILOT last week being ·attributed to her as a "sPokesman" for f 'rom Pl,lfJe l -- WAR VOTE. • • modified the language in hope of galnlng support. The changes would have extended to withdrawal deadline from June 30 to Dec. 31, 1971, and wouJd have given the President an option of keeping troops in Vietnam for an additional period of up to 60 days beyond Dec. 31 if be found them exposed to "unanticipated clear and present danger.'' ' · In such a situation. he also would have been empowered to a!k Congress to set a new withd rawal date . Supporters of the proposal !aid it gave Congress a chance to V<lte to end the war as in effect they voted for White Hou!e authority to wage the war with approval of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution in August, 1964. Aussies Bar Gregory CANBERRA. Australia (AP ) -The government has barred black comedian Dick Gregory from coming lo Au!lralia to participate in an anti-Vietnam war moratorium in Sydney this month, Immigration Department officials said toda y. Authorities refused to say why hi! request for a visa had been refustd. President Nix<ln's specialist on Meilciii:'American cffain;-· M a r t i n Castillo, arrived at the Newporter Inn by presidential helicopter Monday to confer on unrelated matter!. The East Los A,ngelcs rioting I.hat left nearly 200 arrested 53, injured, and Salazar dead, was pre su mably mentioned. however, sci id one aide. Tense calm hung over the county area of East Los Angeles, .Montebell<l, and \Vilmington, on Monda·y night, although a few sporadic incidents of vandalism and looting occurred. The potential rioters are 11pparently ~·aiting to 5ee if their long-voiced demands and call for a probe into the killing of Salazar are met. I • I ! Laguna Rider ... Beaten, Robbed By Passengers A hitchhiker In Laguna 8 e 11 ch suspected something was wrong this mQrning when the camper he had entered began bumping along over a dirt road. He was sure of It ""'hen a rellow passenger grabbed him around lhe neck hi a headlock. Police Lt. John Zelko said laler that Durwood A. Phillips, 31. San Francisco, w.as ki cked, beaten and robbed <lf $10 by five long.haired young men. The beating apparently occurred al Top of the World. Phillips was hitchhiking al the northeast corner of Broadway. The· camper driver said he would take him to · a11 all-night restaurant. Phillips entered the camper and round three young men in the rear. After the bumpy ride , Phillips asked where they were going. One of the men grabbed him, He broke loose and fled but was caught by the fi11e, "Try to run again and we'll kill you." one told him . Phillips suffered cuts and bruises, Zelko said. What's. • • ' My Line? . YOU WON 'T BE FED ANY LINES AT ALDEN'S. WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LOYAL CUSTOMERS THAN M.&:KING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WILL BOTHER YOU IF you · JUST WANT TO BROWSE, BUT Will BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WITH TRUTHFUL ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS, WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO " M 0 D EST L Y " ADMIT THAT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA, TOP BRANDS SUCH AS: BIGELOW, BERVEN, BEATTIE, MAGEE, MONARCH, BARWICK, MOHAWK, ROXBURY, MILLIKAN, ARMSTRONG, IANTA ANA, OU.N•t TUITIN c.R ••• AlllN'I llD HILL CAtllPm & DUPlllB 11174 I"'•· Tlldl1, c.ilf. l ll·J:t4• ALDEN'S CARflETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lactntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 . • t' - ' • I l • ' < I I t I. t ( • ' s Q r ( r I ' ' I ' I ' I I < .f ' I < J ' I I ' I < • I ( t I ( ' < j \ ' • • U.S. Study Suggests Land D1·ill By HARRISON HUMPHRIES "'-cl1tM ,.,.., Wrltw . W ASH!NGTON -The petroleum industry should confine its drilling to land aod delay further of[sbore operations to pro~t the environment, a federal s!udy &uggests. The study ci\ed eruption of an oil well In California's Santa Barbara channel in January ·1969 and pollution resulting from :en oil fire ofr the Louisiana coast last February as examples or offshore operations damaging the environment. The study, released today by the Joint Ecooomic Committee ol Congress, was prepared by the environmental policy branch of Ole Library or Congress. . . -. • • luesd11, Stpt-J, 1970 L DAil Y ~!LOT 3 Berfh Too Large: Sea Lions Dying; Cause a Mystery By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot "'' 0.111 '"'' •.mt · Sea lions have been dying in larger numbers than usual this summer along the Orange Coast, according lO lileguardli in five coastal cities. preyed on by killer '1"hales," ht pointed out. The last lime the sea lions died in large numbers was in • 1947 when It was·. determined most of them died from a No statistics are available as to the form of pneumonia. exact riumber of antmals that have died, '"We have every reason to believe that but lifeguards agree il's considerably at that time the population bad gotten too higher than in previous summers. large _ as we beli~ve has. happened this The first conclusion most people leap to year .. is that the sea lions are being killed by "Actuall y, there 's a higher death rate water pollution. Bilf--Walker, a marine biologist for during winter when off shore condlUons ~ Marineland, doesn't agree. are at their worst. The debilit•ted ones "Recent studies by PL Mugu Naval are particularly susctptlble at these Station researchers and UC Santa Cruz times," Walker said. and USC biologists indicate that neither Often, stranded sea lions that are alc:k· DOT nor oil ,pollution have anything to do • The oil industry 1 the report said, has Improved its .record of coniiin~in~g~­ ---blowoots--on-land. and ,.pollution, when it ~_,,.., occurs. is localized. ~Ith !Pe deltl!ls. or wounded are brought to Marineland. "In the past few years the C&lifornia "So far we've taken in 40 or liO, but we sea lion population has been increasing at can't always save them," Walker aald. - -an~·alarming-r.ate.-Condillons._a.r_e __ \\'hen_one o( these animals come1 bec<lming very crowded as the herd · ashore in one o( Orange County'a coastir' f "With onland problems of production and transportation or p e t r o l e u m suUicienUy well in hand so that • substanUal pollution seldom occurs, the onland search for new petroleum reservoirs might for this reason and other good reasons be encouraged," the report said. Much of the United Slates bas not yet been explored in depth for oil, the report said and there are opinions that large are~ are favorable prospects for oil and gas. • "The situation would appear to deserve serious consideration, not only to _set i policy but to design a program to stimulate the discovery of such resources fully. adequate to our needs at least until the use of atomic energy i.9 more fully developed," the report said. Offshore, the report noted, aspects of .Jederal-state propriety and administrative rela UoM are not fu~y re.solved, oil spills are harder to contain, and workable rules to ·protect th~ environment prl!sent problems. Drug 'Rip-offs' ·Plague Laguna, Get Close Look By BARBARA KREIBICH , Of ,.. D91h' "'"" ,,.,. Reports of st~garm robberies or annbt robberies coming into the Laguna Beach Police Depaftment these days are getting some extra'1:areful examination. Newest headache on the drug scene, say the police, ls the "rip-off" -and it's becoming so · frequent every reported "robbery" ls suspect. . . The pattern ls simple : the victim, usually a transient, says he has been ac- costed by someone who, using trickery or a weapon, or both, has robbed him of his money. . What really has -happened,-..-Jl!l:bce discover upon questiontng, is that the vic- tim bas attempted to make a dru.g purchase. The "pusher," having taken his cash, departs to get the sought-after drug -and never comes back. For every such incident reported to them, police· believe there probably are several that victims fall to r~port, for fear they will find themselves 1n trouble for having tried to buy drugs. "We're quite sure we don't hear about the rip-offs involving smaller amounts, )ilre $50 or $60," said Detective AJex Jimenez. "For one thing, the kld.s would be afraid their parents woul<\ fmd out. But when larger sums are involved, $300 or $400 or more, the victim usually comes in with a story of being robbed . "Sometimes he can give an iden· tilicaUon of the seller's car. But usua~ly it's something vatue like 'a medlunrs1ze man with Jong dark hair" -which could apply to dozens of people."· Frequently, the victim says. he was robbed by someone who gave him a rl.de while hitchhiking, or a driver wUl ~la1m he was robbed by a hitchhiker he p1c~ed up. There's usually a drug .transaction somewhere in the picture, police claim. In a few instances, a victim has ad- mitted he was trying to make a drug purchase, explains how he hand~ over his cash and provides a car license number for police to trail. Occasionally the pusher is found and arrested. More often the gullible purchaser has to write off his )oss as a bitter experience. The police will take his report. chec~ Into ii. as far as possible, and there. It usually ends . • • with a big question mark after. the words "strongarm rob- bery." Last Rites Held For He11ha Hatt Funeral servcl!s were hl!ld at 3 l).m. Friday for Hertha Hatt, Laguna Nlgul!I resident who ditd Thursday at the age of SG. Rabbi Bernard P. King officiated .at graveside rites In Pacific Vl!w Memonal P1rk. A n11tive of Germany, Mrs. Hatt had Jived ln California for eight years, making her home in Laguna Niguel, at 24431 Los $trrafl03 Drive ror the past fiVI! years. She was employed as a saleswoman at fhe Caribbean Shop In Laguna Beach. Survivors Include her son, Peter M. Halt of Portland, Ore .. brother. Arthur Klein of Laguna Nigllel, and two grandchildren. • • DAILY 'ILOT Slltf ,.,.jf PARKING CONGESTION AT FESTIVAL : A SCENE GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN Lagunan H11 Compl1ined Parking is Illegal But Enforcement Stampede ls Unlikely . . • Festival Parking Illegal? Laguna Canyon Road Traffic Under Scrutiny By FREDERICK SCHOEJ\tEHL Of 1M 01llJ 'II•! Still A citizen's complaint about parkJng clogging the arterial near Laguna's Festival of "Arts b r ought acknowledgement from the state late · Monday that the parking is illegal. Responses from officials, however, made it seem unlikely that there would be an enforcement stampede to crack do .... ·n on the Laguna Canyon Road parking sit uation. Both the State Division or Highways and the Laguna Beach City Council have received a letter from Spero Janise complaining about the congestion and the dangerous conditions near the Festival highway to a two lane, with overflowing crowds darting out from between parked cars ... " UNLAWFUL, DANGEROUS "It is unlawful •.. dangeroos •• ·interfering with the movemen t of traffic •.. doors are flung open from cars at both sides ... narrowing the lane to seven feet ... reducing the legal speed limit from 45 lo five miles per hour," he char_ged. · "lf necessa ry, I will pursue this matter in the courts," Janise promised in another Jetter. This is not the first time that Janise has fought the Divisi0'!1 of Highways. In 1965 he took issue-over the lanei and markings on a road neaf Lancaster, took entrance. . the division to court -and won the case. "lt'.s a city problem,·• stat~ HaJg ''Finally, the 1tale wat forced to make Ay!n1an of the . .!late Dlv1SJon ~~-the-changes-they-knew-should have -been ~gfi~ays. "The~1gh~ay ~atrol ~n t made tn the first place" Janise said cite illegal park:lng in ctty lrmlts, 'so it's " ' · up to the cl~ police." Hl!.re In L.a.guna , Beach, the city . -council has made a mistake, by allowing STATE PROBLEM the Festival of Arts, the Playhouse and "Ifs a state problem:• said Joseph that other Festival to run at the same Sweany, acting city manager for the Art time." Colony. ''I don't kno'v about the legality. "The parking Is a problem to local No one bas ever tested It." rl!sidents. It's fr us tr at in g and . "I suggest you ask the city JYlanager,'' uncomfortable," Janise, a"A automobile Kenneth Huck, chief of police, said when salesman, declared. asked about the situation. Janise suggests lhl! parking be kept Jn town. "We should use the private park.ing Jots that are cha ined off at night. If we used the Jots in loW'll, we might ride trams to the Festival." But then, Festival and city officials remember another one man campaign - the attack by William Leak that rid tfle city of its colorful Festival trams because they were .Ulegal. So far, there has been no replacement. Laguna Savings Sets Art Show The second Boor art gallery al Laguna Federal Savings will be lhe home of a Septemi:;erarl Sfiowing, r e a t u r i n g paintings of clipper ships, leaf mono prints, seascapes, landscapes and enamel on copper. Exhibitors In !he varied mediums are Fay Hoegerman, Fred Flakner, Mabel Speciale, Jean Spiry, and Will Schuman. ~mhes ~~~gehar. high cities, the standarcf policy ls for en i.ills p~ns, you . gl!t a er llf guards to notify their city's animal rate of communicable diseases. pup e . mortality and parasitlvlly with.in the control officer. herds. If the animal Is seriously H~ It ii "What we're seeing thls summer on destroyed; but whenever poPible, they • beaches from San Francisco to the are taken to Marineland. " Mexican border is nonnal mortality - a "We know a lo~ about the physk>Joa rJ. :: balancing of the natural size of the sea the sea lions. That kind of information ii ~ lion population ," he explained. available [rom animals in captivity, bat The California sea lion -the species in we still don't know enough about them ln ~::nrs-0~s ~~e :ar1a~I~ l~:g: tht wild," Walker said. orten seen in zoos and are regular attractions In most circuses. Although they are often caUed seals, they are not a true seal, but a sea lion. The cause of death of the sea lions and the ef{ect they have on the population Is difficult to determine b e c a u s e information on them in their natural state is somewhat sketchy. A study done by Bernie Buff of UC Laguna Slates Kindergarten Registration ,, Santa Cruz and Bob Brownell of USC Registration for kindergarten cla11e1 1t ~ showed that oil pollution had no adverse the three Laguna Beach elementary . affect on the animals, Walker slated. schools will be held at the district "They compared a group of sea lions administration offices, S50 Blumont . that had greater than fO percent oil Drive, Sept. g and 10. ' covering tl)eir ooatJ and a group that had On Sept. 9, registration wUI be held no oil. Aiid the amazing thing was that from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and on Sept. the mortallty rate was higher among the 10 from g a.m. to 3 p.m. animals that had no oil," he noted. • fareqts or legal guardians are asked to Walker said the anlmlils breed each bring birth certlficate and polio and.,. summer on the ChaMel Islands, with the measles immunization papers wllh tlw.m cows each producing a slngle pup. when registering. • . The migratory hablt1 of the Ha Jion1 t'hildren el\gible for klndergarten musl : .art_noLcompletely-underst.ood.-he--aaid..--be-five.-year.a.-ol4-on-or-before-Dec.....2, -. "Jt's a hard thing to study. We would 1979, . have to coordinate and collect Uta rrom An orientation nieetlnC for 1>1rentl wnl San Francisco to Mexico," Walker said. 6e condi.Jcted Sept. 10, at 7:30 a.m. ln the ·: In addition, little is known of the high school auditorium. School boundary : diseases that Infect th.em in the wild. lines. bus stops, and other questions will ·• "We do know that sharks will attack be discussed by Dr. Robert Reeve111, ·: them and in colder waters they are director of instruction for the district. · '· •, "This is something that comes up regularly," commented William D. Martin chairman of the festival board. "We're trying to make the best of a difficult situation." This situation began late last week, when both city and state offieials received a letter from Janise, of 1422 Capistrano Ave., staling: "This situation has resulted in reducing a four lane PUT UP WITII IT "People in the community are willing to put up with the parking," Sweany said. "We know each year it's going to be that way." "\\1e need a parking structure out In the canyon," Sweany added. NA .• Festival chief Martin backed him Up on the structure. "But then ?'here do you put it and where does the money C-Ome from ?" he asked. Laguna T1·ustees to Study Top of World Purchases Laguna Beach UnUled School District trustees will hear a report from Business Manager Charles Hess tonight on development of the Top or the World propefties purchased by the school district last spring. The 6. 7-acre parcel is located ne~ the junction of •Alta Laguna and Park Avenues. Hess said today that he is working with the city on an agreement which would help the city e1tend Alla Laguna and at the same time get rid of the dirt hill on the school's land. "This city is planning to e1tend Alla Laguna to the Arch Beach Heights area. 'Ibey're going to need just about as much fill dirt as we want to get off our . property so we can deve1op It," Hess said this morning. Hess said he hoped a contractor could be found that would extend the road and African l1nports move the dirt ror the city. Trustees will also be asked to approve an agreement with the Capisl.rano Unified School • District for the administration or a federal program to assist disadvantaged students. Since the Laguna district receives less than $25,000 for the program, the federal government specifies it must join with some other agency for the administration ol the project. Last yl!ar Laguna aligned with Capistrano and hopes to do the same this year. Then with the government funds, Laguna will hirl! a remedial reading teacher whO will move from school to school In the dlstrict and help elementary school children who may have a particular learning problem. Trustees will also hear a reporl from Dr. Robert. '"Reeves, di rector of instruction, on the statement of purpose and overall philosophic goals of social .studies instruction in grades kindergarten through 12 .• Laguna's Lion.s Services Planned Seven furry film stars bom at 1.-ion Country Safari have been sent ·to AfMca F M B h • lo appear in the film "Living Free," a Or rs, Ue rig sequel to the acclaimed "Born Free." • Lton Country offlcials rteelved the F.lizabeth w. Buehrig of 100 R Via request (or the seven lion cubs from Paul F.atrada, Laguna Hilla, died Friday at the Radin, a producer ·with Columbia age of 60. ~ Pictures. The cubs had to be lrflpcrted Memorial services 1"111 be held at the intO Kenya because of rettntly tnacted-Gtnen-Pmbyterta:n 01urth;-L.a:gun1- legislaUon forbidding private ownership Hllls, Wednesday at 7 p.m. Burial Will be or wild animals In that country. held in Auburn, Indiana. The cubs will return to Uon Country as .Atra. Buehrlg ts rttn'lved by her soon as filming Is flnlshed and wlll again· hsuband, Gordon, of the famJly home; 1 roam wlth lhe hundreds of animals at the _ da~ghter, Mrs. Joaeph ~lando of ~ew wildlife preserve loc11ied on Moulton Yott; thi'fe 1lsters, Rulli E. McKttlilck' Parkway 11 Lagufta HUis. ' of Indiana, Barbara Brandon of Pa., 1od The cubs ranse in age from four to Alice Longsworth of Ohlo; and one l!even months and made the 10,000 mlle grandson. journey to Kenya act:ompanled by a A native of M11ine, Mrs. Buehria: had "cub alttet" from 'uon Country. Uved in CaUfornia fi ve years. • OF OUR. SUMMER SALE • !ALE ENDS WED., SEPT. 2nd TJ1en>oli . , .. t'I _AJ~n :J.faum SALE AT OUR. FASHION ISLAND STORE : ~· l • • • , \, ' '" f DAIL V PILOT • Civilian• Red c ower Lines IN TODAY'S NEWS • I\ ~uest al John Adams' y.•edding Sltnday decided to play a joke on the bridgegroom and slipped the shackles of a ball and chain around him. But the joke misfired when the guesl discovered she had for· iotten the key and firemen had.,!!> be calle.d to free Adams in Stoke- on-Trenl England. • PHNOht PENH (UPI) -Cambodian infantrymen supported by air strikes today rought their way to within a mile and a half of Srang, held by Viet Cong A·uto Firms Off er Raise, No 'Esca lator'· DETROIT (AP) -The big Three automakers today offered the United Auto Workers a 7 .5 percent wage increase in proposed new three-year contracts but declined tG remove a cap on a rost--0f-living wage escalator. --The--union-has-inslsted that an unlimited rost of living wage "escalator ''is the pri ce of peace in this industry." Dan Taylor was probably popular with both the American legio~ and rhe hippie demonstrators in Portland, Oregon this week, At anu rate the 68• year·old Downey, California man has been in t/1e Legion for fifty years. He ierued as a private in \V\Vl in Europe. • Mis s Taeko S1hod1, 26, says she bought an Eskimo doll in the Canadian souvenir shop at Expo '70 and discovered it was manu- factured in Japan-in her o"".n hometown. Miss Sahoda, a clerk 1n the telegraph and telephone office, said she bought the Eskimo doll for 83 cents under the impression it came from Canada. But when she returned home she discovered the doll was manufactured in .Tsuk.i- date, the smatrfown where she was born. The doll represents Toongak, The companies' insistence on maintaining a ma)(imum limit of eight cents hourly per year in cost of living boosts. made a strike against one of the automakers appear certain. Current three -yea r pacts covering 730,000 workers at the Big Three erpire Sept. II. General Motors said it was offering the union a package which would cost ~ company $1.4 billion in wages alone and described its offer as "the largest economic proposal in its history." The companies' offers included: -A 7.5 percent wage increase. -Retirement after 30 years service at $500 a month at age 60 at General 1\-fotors and age 62 at Ford . Chrysler said its plan wou ld allow a worker at age 6S after 35 years' service to retire at $551 a month. Retirement at 60 with 30 years !trvice now is pos.sible at $400 a month . The union has insisted that retirement at a minimum of $500 monthly be permitted after 30 years service, regardless of age. GM proposed a '* percent general wage increase, ranging from 26 to 48 cents a hour. However, employes making less than $.1.54 hourly would get nothing in addition to 2& cents hourly which goes into effect automatically Sept. ~5 under terms of current three )'ear pacts. troops who bombarded the government troops from a mountainside Buddhist pagoda overlooking the town. The Viet cong seized Srang, 2S milts so'.uthwest of Phonm Penh. Sunday after a three-day bllttle. The Communists were reported holding a number of clvWans ho!tage in the town. The Camb<>dlap command said other Viet Cong units had cut high voltage power lines supplying Phnom Penh from the Kirirom Dam 40 miles southwest of the capital. Power in Phnom Penh was not visibly affected but a Cambodian command spokesman said "it is yery clear the Viet Cong are trying to sabotage our economy." 'Ve.stem observers said villagtrs in Srang began leavirig the town two daya before the Communist offensive opened but that the Yiet COng were holding other civilians in the besieged community. - Viet Cong in a mount.aiflllde pagoda _ overlooking Srang fired mortars onto the approaching Cambodian troops. The first train to leave Phnom Penh in more than two months pulled out of the capital today for Badeng, 20 miles west of the city. Railroad officials said the line beyond Badeng to the vital rice growing province of Battambang ·was cut by the Viet Cong who blew up two bridges. Battambang is 180 miles northwest of the capital. Communiques from Saigon s a i d Communist troops bombarded Da Nang . Air Base early today with eight six·foot- long 122mm rockets. One airman was wounded by shrapnel and a parked C130 cargo plane was damaged. One rocket exploded near the Da Nang Air Base passenger terminal and sprayed asphalt fragments on a Pan America!\ World Airways 7~ jetliner. It was the first rocket attack on the big base since June 21. One rocket hit 30 yards from a bachelor enlisted men's quarters and another out!:ide a barracks .. to have been occupied within a few hours. The U.S. Command said American troops losl two killed af\d 11 wounded iTt two clashes Monday 45 miles northeast of Saigon: There v;ere no known Communist casualties in the fighting. -'-described-as-a-guardian deity-of Canadian Eskimos. Author Mauriac Dies in France Military sources said Monday American air raids in Laos had destroyed about 40 percent of the truck neet used by the communists to haul supplies dowl\. tfie Ho Oli Minh trail into the northern part ol South Vietnam. The sour~ said intelligence-infor.malion-showed the North Vietnamese. despite a ready supply of new trucks arriving at the Port of Haiphong , have been unable to replace the losses inflicted by U.S. bombings. • A Miami man went to the Dade County Consumer Protection Divi- sion last week to complain about an airline's advertising practices. He was referred to the state at- torney. who referred him to the sheriff's office, which sent him to the Miami police. who referred back to the consumer protection people, who suggested he go again to the state attorney. That's when t.he man gave up anti returned to his auto in the civic center parkin11t lot. where other authorities had ticketed the car for overtime park- ing. • Ong Fung· Chin celebrat'ed his lOOth birthday Sunday, as the rest of ChiRatown celebrated the August Moon Festival in Boston . On hand to congratulate Chin. who ran a laundrv for 40 years, was Sen. Ed- ward l\f. Kenned y. 0-1'.1ass .. Joseph Kennedv II. oldes t son of the late Sen . Robert Kennedy. Mayor Kevin H. \Vhite and Wong Chew. \vho at 101 is Chinato,vn's oldest re sident. "I never get excited and I al\\•a.vs eat the best of fOQd ." Chin said in explaining his lon rievi l.y. • For \vhat it"s "'orth . 1'\'Trs. Marv K•pplflr ha .'> th '! key to the Soviet city of Vladivostok. PARIS (UPI} -Francois Mauriac, one of France's most eminent modem writers, died in a Paris hospital early Tuesday, hospital sources said. Mauriac, a Nobel Prize winner, was 85. Mauriac fractured a shoulder in April. Despite intensive care he n e v e r recovered . Physicians at the Pasteur Institute Hospital tried their best to aave him, but 1'.tauriac continu"ed to weaken. The hospital sources said Mauriac's C<lndition worsened 1'.1onday night and death came soon after. Mauriac was once eulogized by Charles De Gaulle as "the greatest French: \•1riter" in our time. When the then French president realized that one of his li.steners was the equall y prominent Andre Malraux, the usually unflappable De Gaulle became embarr•ssed and said "well, one of the greatest.'' Wave Still on Duty In Pregnancy Flap WASHINGTON (UPI) -Seaman Anna . l~!ores, 23, a Dallas \\'ave \Oo'ho sued the Navy last month for trying to oust her from the service because she became pregnant while unmarried. will be allowed to remain on active duty. ·~ ), Atkins Surgery May Delay Trial For Tivo Weeks LOO ANGELES (AP) -Susan Akins, one of the defendants in the Sharon Tatd- murder trial, suffers from an ovarian cyst her attorney says, and it could delay court proceedings tv.·o \\'eeks. Daye Shinn, who is defending ~fiss Atkins, said Monday the 21.year-old woman has had the ryst since 1968. The trial was recessed Friday when she complained of pains in her side and abdomen. Doctors at County USC Medical Center declared her fit for trial but when she complained again Monday Judge Charles H. Older recessed the trial and ordered a second examination. Older said Shin told him that if surgery Is required. Miss Atkin s would be out of court two weeks. Other defendants in the trial are Charles Manson, 35, Patricia Krenwinkel , 22. and Lesli~ Van Houten., 20: ::.-.,,~ .:.., They are cnal-;id in the deaths of ~iiss Tate and six others in August 1969. New Hampshire Dips to 30 Liglit11ing Ignites Forest Fires in Washington State Callfornfa P11£Y1[W OF ISSA WCATHl• MlAUf0R[W1' TO J:ll A.• Ill t .. t .. 70 Temperatures ... ••• I LITTLE MISS IN INDIAN GARB ENJOYS PARADE Htr U.S. Fl•a W1vtd Among POrtl1nd Prot11tor1' Cong Flag Kansas Goverrior Blasts Protestors in Portland PORTLAND. Ore. IAP) The American Legion. which saw mild heckllng al its national convention parade r..tonday, heard Kansas Gov. Robert Docking say today he was disgusted with the minority of youths \Oo'hO tear down rather than build. "It is disgusting to allO\v a few lo Interfere with the rights of the majority of students," .Docking said. The quesion of curbing campus violence was expected to be one of the major resolutions coming before the national convention as it opened business sessions today. The 14,000 delegates were prepared to hear committee reports on more than 500 resolutions including those .... ~- giving strong support to the Presidenl's handling of U1e war in Southeast Asia aod for maintaining national security. Docking's remarks wire prepared for delivery lo the opening session. Docking told the legion, "I am certain that you, as are most citizens of our nation, are lired of hearing one percenl of our college students claim that 'doing their own thing' means disregarding and . disrespecting laws of this nation : that academic freedom means bu r n in g administration buildings and canceling ROTC reviews -legitimate university functions ; that civil rights means calling public officials names, and that our colleges are a place for the students to teach, not learn." Assassin Jam es Ray. S~ys Lawyer Urged Guilty Plea ME1'.1PHIS, Tenn. {UPI) -Convicted assassin James Ear l Ray contended fl.tonday he had been denied ··due process'' of law and that his guilty plea in the slaying of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ~·as in\'oluntary. In a long, rambling type"1·ritten affidavit, Ray said Altornry Percy Foreman had Urged him to plead guilty because he said Ra y already had been convicted by pre-trial publicity. H"CSiict Foreman promised him a pardon "After two or three years,·· through the orfice o( John J. Hooker Sr .. a Nash'vi\lc. attorney mentioned as a possible member of the defense team. Ray said Forcn1an told him the prosecution "had pron1ised a v.·itness considerable reward money'' to testify against him. Convinced he v.'ould get one trial, and no atention from an appellate court, Ray said he decided "I didn 't want the one trial faked." Coal, Oil Controls Urged by Official WASJilNGTON (UPI) -A spokesman for the nation's publicly 0"1'Tled pOwer ~yslems, claiming little can be done now to avert shortages or fuel supplies th~s winter,.has urged the Nixon Administra- tion to set price controls on coal and oil. ''Considering I had no other choice, at the time, 1 tentatively agreed to enter a guilty plea to a techn ical charge of homicide." he wrote. Ray was sentenced lo 99 years iri prison on March 10. 1969, 8fter pleading guilty to the April 4, 1968, assassination of the civil rights leader. He began immediate efforts to ha\'e his guilty plea overturned and to gain a new trial. The state filed a motion for dismissal of Ray's petition for relief of his pl ea and sentence. Ra y·s seven-page affidavit. replete \l'ith misspelled v.•ords, was in answer to that motion. Ray told of troubles he had \o:ith a series of attorneys \\'ho represented hitn . He said his original la1\'ycr. Arthur Hanes Sr .. had refused to Jet him take the stand in his behalf, though he. "''anted to. and lhat he felt Authol' \Ynliam Bradford Huie. his biographer. relayed everylhing he learned about the case to the FBI. Ray said Foreman, 1vho came to see him for the first lime two days before he 11'aS scheduled to go on trial. 1old him that ·•Jf I stuck \\'ilh them (Hanes end lluie). I would be bar-be-cued." ··1 favored taking the witness stand because I had testimony to give which I didn·t \\'ant the prosecution lo know of until as late as possible so there would· be no time to alter records. such as phone 1 numbers." he said. "Mr. l{ancs turned down this request , saying why give testimony away "'hen we can sell it." • Welfare Bill Meets 1 1 . . ~· Senate Stall .w. WASHINGTON (UPll -President Nixon's olfer to gtve hl.s proposed Welfare Reforms a year-long trial run if Congress adopts the plan thia )'ear haa failed to budge the top Republican on uW: Senate Finance Committee . In fact, Sen. John J. Williams Jr Delaware has: co1ne up with • countlr proposal: Find out how well ihe pilpt proje<:ts work before approving the $4.1 billion program. -, · · tn my opinion, it would make betfer sense to authoriu the $50 million pJlot project and then await the results of the eJq>eriment before deciding on what type of law we want to enact," Williams rsaid Monday. In a move billed as a rompromise, Nixon Friday said he \Oo·ould agrt:e not to implement the Family A s s i s t a n c e Program un til January, 1972. Pilot programs would be.gin in three states on Jan. 1, 1971. The House.passed measure. stalled In Ow Finance . Committee sin~April\ ,vould-assUfe8 faffilly of four 1 a yearly income of $1.600. Finance Chainnan Russell B. Long said he did not consider Nixon's statement a compromise but only '"A willingness to consider any amendments Congress might agree upon." Long said Nixon's suggestion of a delay in implementing the welfare reforms ootil January, 1972, was an "interesting thought'' but said he had not made a decision on the suggestion. The Louisiana Democrat said he agreed strongly with Senate Democratic Leader Mike ?\1ansfield that Congress shou1d get a chance to vote on welfare reform before the end of the session. Asked whether he was concerned a tame-Ouck Congress might act after the elections, Long said "I don 't lhi.nk it makes any difference.'' Williams, in a statement, said Nlxon'.s offer was a recognition by the administration the bill has "serious flaws.°' . \\'illiams said postponing the effe<:llve date '"and then running a pilot p.roject during the interim does not ·alter the situation, nor does it answer the q~e~~loo of v.•hether this is or is not a bad bill. Nine Terrorists Get Vruguay Rap l n Kidnapings MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI·) - Nine alleged terrorist leaders wer.e charged Monday with complicity in the kidnaping of three foreign envoys, including a murdered American .. The six men and thrtt women, arrested in a raid Aug. 7, were charged with harboring the· kidnapers of U.S. police adviser Daniel A. Mitrione, U.S. farm consultant Claude L. Fly and Brazilian consul A1oys1o Dias Gomide. Mitrione was found shot to death Aug. 10. Fly and Gomide still are believed held' by their leftist captors. . , . After five hours of questioning, Judge ~tanuel Diaz Romeu also charged the alleged terrorists v;ith conspir~ng. against the constitution and aSSOCJat1on for criminal purposes. One of the accused, Raul Bidegain Creissing. \vas charged with participating in the killing of two policemen. Bidegain could be sentenced to 30 years In jail. The others face possible sentences ranging from six to 15 years. . Police continued~ hW"lt for Fly, 65, or Fort Collins. Colo .. and Gomide. 41. The Brazilian v.'as kidnaped July 31, the same day as Mitrione , and Ffy was captured a week later. · The Uruguayan government , which ha.s steadfastly refused to -bargain with the kid napers, Mond<tY r estored constitutional guaranltts that were suspended Aug. 10 lo facilitate the search for the victi ms. Student Death Probe Set; 20 -to 'Testifv J LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI ) -As many as 20 witnesses could be called to testify today at the coroner~s ittquest into the death of Harry Nicholas Rice, 18, shot July 20 during a confrqptatjon between police and college students. •'. : . • ~ .. .. ,. ·' . ' ". " .,_ .. " " -.. ~. ... . . ,,. ,, . t;;· ~-=-- ' " ,; /. .. ~ ... :::- ' . ., .. • ' •. ,, . .. ·. :..., ,, • i • i .~ • ., .•. ' t I • • • l• • • •· i • N1rM •""' t•rlv mornlnr law clovd• I nd fot Prt•llltd ''°"' 1111 Southf•n C111!orhlt <N1t1in1 tootv, burnln• on In ,,,_. 1'TtrflO(ln tor mo1t l"f 1unnv •~i•1 I nd con!lnltfd w••m !....,Hrt!w•ll· t~ Antfl!t t rC*t our t•om lht II 1~u•111r•ut J>lltnll 1'!1kt,,tlt!d !ll1m1rtt 50IN Hit~ L .... '''" ., ., 11 11 ., ., He Invests· • ID Youth l ' • l ""°'"!"' 01<t1r(111 wl!~ l1lr 1klt1 1 <111 11l1t1rnl 1tmPt•llvrfl, 1"9 prtd!Cttd 1'11111 tois.v 11 IS, vio Ollt dt11rtt lrvn> Mor>CllY, TO!lltht'i la'# 1houlO be tS. Fr""' '"'' l)f1ci..1 IO '"' Mi.t•IL fftrMillo>\ ''"''' .,.,lavtd Clttr 1klt 1. lril!I fl!"'' ••nolnr trom 10 II-,,,. '"'' 10 "'' S011tl'•1tn Ottttt ,,..,,.,.,,. ..... ,..., ti .... '" 11 J TM ""'' Pollullen c .... 1ro1 O~tl•kt fol"tctll 11.i-! lo !Mt"" t"'Oll on 1M L• AMtltt 811111. •Ifft tw1• .. 11t or11111 (Otl(.1tnlr1t11H11 1" lllt Stll Gtb1!tl ,,.,,. 11'1' '"" "*"'tlttt ,....,.... In l tn ftro .... nclo Vtlltt. c ( 1"'"""1 '"111''"' 1~ 111,,,.,, •«d· nn.sta V.S. Sumftlarg ""' °' ~ .,,,, MalldtY -Ill -I/Id M~1tl• "'""' IM••· ..... ~ ...... alt lfl!lt •r•tw••' GI~ Into "'' J:lt In •• , "'' 11a11on·1 ""''"°' lcr tl'<t II••. Wll'llll ~l•M 1"11 "'II'""'"' "Outl ~(""" "'"' tt1mp1M ... t~v. II Wll CllGI aouon Clllc100 (IPl(l11n1!1 (1•••!•114 Otftv•r Dtltalt l!urtl\1 l'trl Wtrth ·-Ht1tnl ·~ .. •r '' ~ .. '' Al •1 ,, ,, ,, ... ... T Watts ~1<11i Mol,ds Youtli Even W'lien Ti111es Are Bad " " ,. $• " " ~ 11 2.J5 •• .!11 u ,, n " ., " 16' ,, LOS Ai'lGELES (AP) Every l~ov.• do you become a good guy? Saturday morning at 10, about 80 boys ··By keeping your hair rombed and and girls line up outside Stan Myles· auto being nice," says &-year-old Vanoy Bush. body iihop In the 'Vatts district to get Good guys also have clean faces.• ne~t their dlmes. appearance and never break \Ooindows, ;: :; Ont by one they walk up to the counter fight or get into troublt. " "• and Stan checks their name off a list he '"They also do anything their mother n . 1• 14 ket~. \\'ants them to do without protest." says : ~~ -07 Dlrnes ln hand. eRch youngster I.hen t-l yles. a native of Texas who came to prelty good guy. Besides dimes. i\lyles has handed out ba.seball equipment. swimming pool p.asses and shoes and even paid a beauticiRn to fix up a little girl's hair so she could be·in a parade. Each Christmas i\fyles th:rows 1, neighborhood party with a present fo r each guest. • ' ' l ' • l • • • • I ~ ~ b ti ~ •• Ir ~ y ~ .. ., 8 • I ir fl >I ·• D " • J ~ t 11 II d ~ ~ v ( I • r ' ( I I ( j I I ' ---<"!"' l\Jlla...~1. 10.d tor1t1i.f.-..illJ_WUJtID...l...IA...U.UOll. lll..t.llt!"ll-tram 11\t Grtal L.tk•• la Htw E .. ....... 1'"""'' llld•• l~luOtol ... _ a •• ,.. IOI!•• •NI w,..,M•O••· H1911 llld•Y Ill. l•M ''°° •IOI!• Jft• '•clfk Ca.1•. ~$. $tM• Mfnl(t ,, .... a ....... "~ .... (OMUtl llmHr•lll•tt ...... ~1 "' W1tn1lcl'IH. Wt lll .• lltl'llnlftt 11'1 HOUll$1t 1(11111• (ill' L11 V~t• LN All6t ltt Mlt MI 8Mitll Mll""'tull" Mln"lf:-'h ,....,.o,1"111 .., ........ t Otk!•llCI Omw '•'6 lllotl'•• l'lllltdt!IPll~ f'l!!111urr~ l'llOll\IW ,.&,111....i ---l~!;--~'~'---"•ro~rs to a store across the street for Los AnJC!les in 1936. 11 ~ a Soda or Ice cream.. --A gOOO report-afa ifiifiiiT"l~l'iOOr Jn five ye~r~ iincc he started handtlm out dinies,"-Myles his Jost only ·tt(r wo ~•-t----- ft. M! WI!'°" f l•M, '•!mllt lt .,·11!"1. It XI 11111/ld ffnw>e•lll,it._ re 1"9 Ctt(lff Moul\ltl"' tllrtacl ffJfftt llllver,;a. ,..,, ~I"' S.rl"'" llJ "'-tJ lo U , Wtltf fel!lttrlllltt t I "IW 1«11! 11r11, !'lrt '" NOl'lll (t tl• ltktri.neia ""'1r" Stn Olttla 11·16. tr1I W1tt1lt n•on 11"'"'" 1111 111ec'''*' S.1111 a.,1o4,, ,,,,1. ....... ,,.Im •114 Sun ltloon Tides more !l'lt n 100,eoo K•tt. .. nit Alli IJ-1, ' J l iW""tf"Ol""'I Wttf 1KtlVt 111 lRI' SOUTHEltN U.Lll<OltHIA-Clffr t>"• 1'UISCIAV t f>CI ll>t "Klllt,, 111 tt>t i.w.r Miitli. -' low ••t<ttll t i-Mlllll cau.I. SKO!ld 111111 ,,, •. ., l~J t.11'1. J .; al!J,p! Ytllt• 1/MI 111 ....,1111r11 iri,..1u. ktft,,., IN loit rm tl'>t-ft Wtd,..Wt• Stt0/14 f.ow •.It 1.m. 1,J Mort tlltll al• ~11•1 ot t t lll lt11 ..., '-ti ltlf ..... int lf\t"Ollfll .... 1., mor11111• WlOJ!tllDAY "T•rttl, T••·· •bolt• )II mllt\ •rt! al low <ltvd!"'" "''' cc.11. f"l•1• 111111 10 11 • "'· so 011111. t..0~ ANG!:L~J ANO VICINITY -f"fr•I ..... • • Jt . ''" 0,) It ... , "Ot 11111 flllmld 11'1 '"'Gull .... s-· nv-~ Wtdllt'Mll V but 1111 .lee;.,,.., Iii.~ ID:•1 p "'· 5,0 '"' IOUlll .a1111111c tltttt. 1>1tt11 ""Ir ''''" motnl,.. ~ clfl,lfl· sw.,,.., 1-'•t 1"' 1 • !:•rl~ "'ernfl>e '"""'"'"'" r1111M 1-t ~If tftlll, 0 .. r ... i.111 low U, !.1rn Ith.ft I )o t "'I. Stll 1 lf '·"'• "°"' JI tt (Ot>COt4, H.H., HI " ti .,., ... u. w.,,,..,..u. "'-""" r.01 1,1'1\, S•h 1:t1 "·"'· N..,,i.J, c.111. ·I ----------------------- llttct l!u!I .. ~ J.1cr1m1nto U.Lt11l1 $11! l1kr Ct'°" 5111 Ditta 5111 f ttM.lu e S1nt1 atrbltl lt•lll• IM:lk t M TMl'!'llll W1tflll\flOll ~ 11 ., :~ Stan, 11 SO-year-old widower with two year brings an extra I~ to 50 cents. 1~; ~: gro'A'fl chlldr,n, hat betn handing out the Stan, as the kids call him, started the tt n ppcket money for fit/e years. club in 1965 when he caught two brothers :: ;~ To eam a dime a child must be a breaking bottles behind his sllop . M n member of· the Neighborhood Good Guy~ • Instead of b8.wllnQ: them out he asked ;! !: Club. Anyone can join. them insldh the office.,-ave: them.a oil ,, s1 All of the kids are 'between the ages of drink and told them thty could eam R !! ~ 3 and 14. Al~t of their families are on dime apiece by cleaning up the broken .., it welrare and In many or the homts there bottles. 1~ ;~ .ot is 110 father. SOon the word spread that Stan was a of merchandise from his shop and has never hact·a broken window. 1 '• The weekly dimes alont CP.St him $400 1 year and he doesn't ktep t:raok or how much more he s~nds on the kids . Even lhoiigll us ncSS.1''i"i"'betn Close to won 't 11ive up the Saturday pay a,ys. ! rock bottom recently. Myles say~. he 1!' "l wouldn 't do ttult for all the money in ·1' the v.'Ol'ld," he declares. ,.,. ' 1 ,- VOL 6J, NO. 209, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES 1 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER °I', 1970 • TEN CENTS \ c-- 1- I W aitres·ses . . . 'Liberated' From Ser·ving Nixon CORONADO ""l' In the wake of Women's Llberatlon Day, 90 veteran waitresses learned they will apparently be liberated from the chore of serving at the state dinner Thursday honoring Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. They're not at au happy about the switch replacing them with male waiters in gold unlfonrus. "We've been gettin; ready for days,'' laid Jvy Easley, 40, a waitress for 26 years. "Many · of us even bought expensive wigs. Aren't we good enough to serve the Pr&ident and his guests?" She said, "Furthermore, moJt of us have children at school wh> are learning about democracy and our way of doing thipgs in America. How can we answer thefit when they ask, 'Is this democracy at work?' " Tim Elborne, a deputy preSs secretary, said "St.ate dinners have always been served by waiters.'' He ·added that no final decision hiu been made regarding wa~ters for the dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado. However t union spokesman said about 50 waiters have .been hired th~gh the San Diego local . of the Waileis and Bartenders Union, AFL-CIO. Tbe waJtres.ws work-six days a week and make ~ to $30 in tips during their rour·hour dinner shifts. They stand to lose a day's wages. _ They said they have infonned the Western White House, Gov .. Reagan and several of the co,ngressmen by telegram. If satisfaction ls not forthcoming, they say, the oezt step is a women's liberation group . • . Tile llUOSI lilt at the bil splash Includes former Pretldent Lyndon B. Jobnaon and his wife, accwdJng to a hotel spokesman. If they attend, h will be jie llOCOllCI ti!M in a year that the NUOns have entertalned the Johnlonl In Cl.Uf1inla. The Johnsons came to California for the . fonner President's llst "birthday last year. , Other Presidential lllJeafll at the hotel have included Harrilon, Taft, McKinley, wu.on and Franklin D. Rooaevell. Anolher guest is Omar Bradley, retired five-star general Of the •rm.Y~ Actor John Wayne js on the guest list as ls jockey . Willie Shoemaker. Dist jockey Dick Whittinghill of Los Angelee: is also . invited. An estimated 100,000 persons are expected for a parade and Presidential motorcade through this island city across from San Diego. 1be White House bu not conflnned that the Presidents will take part in the parade. but they are expected to. The COronado police force of fl men .has been beefed up by at!'<>Ut 250 other officers. They'll be on the lookout for a Ylppie (Youth International P1rty) demonstration to protest federal government anti-marijuana policies. Diaz Ordaz, accompanied by hll daughter. will be given full military honors when he lands al l&e North llland Naval Air Station just before: noori. Ntma will greet him. · The thrust of the ceremonlat dinner and 'llixon's reeent via.It to Puerto Val- larta is strengthening relaUons betftt!l the two countries'. ·1xes ar· .. fJ.70 Figure Set . . County Ta~ Rate Boosted-3 Cents By JACK BROBACK Of Ille IMllY P"9Ut"' Orange County's 197G-71 property tax rite was set at $1.70 this morning by the Board of Supervisors. The figure represents a three.eent increue over the 196j.70 rate of $1.67 per flOO asseued valuation. Faced with the need to absorb a deficit )f altnolt ts mDlioa beeluse or a recent . redllClloa In atato Medical aid . to lhe cowily, lhe Superviai>n de<:ided to ..,,prlllllltt .,.i cul about Ii m1lliou out 3 .Navy Mell Drown Off Coast· Three Navy men apparently drowned late P.fonday in a freak accident aboard a landipg craft engaged in underwater dt.molitioo work off San Clemente hland's Pyramid Head. Starches through the night by two Navy ships failed to turn up a trace of the three men S\\'ept overboard from the crift after a winch broke, throwlng the to the .... r crewman working in the test a broken leg, but was saved, pokesmen said. All the names were still withheld this morning a~ Navy per.ionnel trled to contact the victims' famili es. 'The mishap. which occurred off the lifand about 60 miles from the mainland, sparked a search by the fleet tug USS Chowanos. The operations were soon jOinecf by the aircraft carrier USS Bll}ler. . The.extensive sur(acvearch, aided by htUr.opten, continued until nightfall wilhout turning up a trace of the missing" men. of the adopted county budget of $212 million . The $1.70 rate was suggested by Supervisor David Baker. He included in bis motion, which was a d o p t e d unanimously, that "the county administrative . officer and the various department beads find. a way to cut the necea.ruy 1% milltoft out of the budget fnd l'port back to.lhe boar( willlln allow weeD.'' -· - The dc:ilion lo peg tht nte between Jut year's $1.57 ~the Sl.75 figure which wollld hawt' required lf no budget cuts wtre· wu vigorously opposed by the Orange County Chamber of Co~erce. Clarence E. White and Robert Sigmund · of the Chamber's governmentaJ affairs committee urged . the Supervisors to hold the line at the current rate, noting that assessed valuations of cowity property , have gone up 17.6 percent. "You can do liie busines1e1 have been forced to do In the put year of tight fiscal conditions by i n c r e a s i n g productivity ptir man if you have" to lay off some employes," White argued. · Supervisor WUllam Hirstein suggested that the $1 million beach acquisition fund in the adopted budget be eliminated and that $600,000 be cut from other department budgets to meet ~ $1. 70 rate figure. But Supervisor Robert Battin didn't agree. He urged that the entire $3 million be cut out of the .medical center budget "because the center is the cause of all the trouble." Satellite Launched . CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The Air Force has launched a secret new missile warning satellite, apparently to relace one stranded in the wrong orbit in June. Jt was the fourth in a series or advanced surveillance !I p a c e c r a f t designed to "hover" in ·near stiUanary orbits high abo.Y.e Asia to fl.Jsh an early ale.rt of a missile attack (rom Sovlet land bases ot iubmarines. • • --- Hawk, Dove s·howdown Ends Debate WASHINGTON (UPI) In a significant test of sentimeitt. the Senate today refused to tie Prealdent Nixon"• hands by ordering him lo end U.S. · · participation in ·the Vietnam war by a specific dea~e. The vote against tbt Hi.tliekl-McGovem amendment WU156 to 39. The hawk VJ. dove atiiWdown tMed a protracted" ml :-.ii-"""Qw! I ~·-lhe w.tmlie..dtlil N!»io:ls seuin( 111 WwidiawU.CADiar1: • troopa from v~ CHICANO GROUP FORMS PICKEl'. LINE AT UC! AFTER LOS ANGELES TRAGIDY Death Strikes ·Jn the City, 60 !'rolt1ter1 M•~ch on tfte Irvine Campus Advocates ol lhe -baldJllao optimism of wtnnlllf outrfdlt bat !\al hoped to make the -. dLoer Iha n was. They Jost key vutea at tbe Jut,bom'. Two Republican ~'doves" -Senl. Jofln Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and Qwles Percy of Illinois -announced oppoiiUon to the amendment on grounds Jt mJgbt undercut U.S. ,peace negotiation efforU. NEWPORT FUNERAL SET New•m•n Ruben Sal•zar Chicano Leaders Want When the tensely waited roll call came, only seven Republicans jo~ J J Democrats 'in voting for the proptU.( aimed at virtually compelling Ni.Ion to get all American forcea out o( Indoddna by Dec.~ 31, 1971. Federal Probe Into Riot Voting lo reject the propoeal -u an amendment to a $19.2 billion military By AltTHUR II. VINSEL Of "'-Dallr Plitt It.., Threatening more violence, Mexican-- American leaders of l-Os Angeles County today demanded a federal probe of a $1 million riot that also cost the life or one of their most wklely-read spokesmen. The Otlcano chieftains were joined by officials at various levels of government. Los Angeles Times columnist and KMEX-TV news director Ruben Salazar, 42, of 3115 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana, was' killed while covering the Saturday night demonstration and rioting that followed.. A tG-incb tear gas mis,,Ue which can accurately pierce a one-inch pine board at 100 yards .tore through his head, after being fired from 15 feet away into the Silver Dollar Cafe. Spokesmen for the Los Angeles County Shertrrs Office nfused to discuss the fatal incident, which incensed the Chicano community that Salazar wa' procurement bill -are 21 Democrat.: and ·wife Sally, announced l!lhe wlll~file a •1 3f Republicans. million suit charging wrongful deatlt at The spedator galleries were about the hands of law enforcement officers. three-fourths full a.s the vote was taken. Others in the barrios -whlclt have A number of young people wwe in ·been fermenting with bitterness some attendance. There wu no audience authorities allegedJy ignored _ took up reaction when the result was announced. the cry. • The amendment hid been expected to Salazar himself predicted violence 1o;ina1 debate began alter the Senate would come if relie f dl~n't. convened at 8 a.m. EDT _ the earllat "We are. deeply suspicious about the meetlng time iii recent memory. In an · death of S.alazar, '' said ' an angry Rosallo emotional appeal, Sen. George McGovern Munoz, who organized a .rally to protest ([).SD) f lh •~--the death rate of Mexlcan..Amer!Cans in · · z. co-sponsor 0 e amenufu~:nl, blamed me Senate for letting the war IO the Vietnam War. on and declared "in one sense~ tbil . The Chicano Moratorium charges 20 chamber literally reeks of blood." percent of all combat casualties is In reply. Sen. John Stennis (O.Miia.}1 disproportionate to the number of that asserted that the amendment wouJ.4 race serving. . "take away the symbol of our nation - "The one man who could get OW' ideas and that's what the chief aecutlve la tbt across through tl}e mau medJa was tJ:!.e .. symbol ol-our-natJan.~ ' ..,. _one man killed by the sheriffs," said ' Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R·Ari1 .) Munoz, former UCLA student body voted against the amendment but told his president colle1gues in final debate: ''Thia bu Armando Rendon, who appeared with been a wrong war. We never meant• to Double Sessions Blaste·d dedicated to help. ' Others In the bar on Whittier Boulevard differed in accounts of what .transpired compared to those of deputies at the scene. fitunoi, charged the vkllence can be win this war and when you don't mean to dfrectly blamed on sheriff's deputies, an win a war for God's sake don't 1et into allegation "prompUy deitled by Sheriff t." ' Pitches!!. Supporters « the amendment hid "Neither the march it.self nor the (Set WAR VOTE, Pap t ) Pare1its Divided in Reaction to School Busing Authorltle1 from other a g e n cl e !I , tnclududlng the International Association of Chiefs or Police and the manufacturer or the finned, oombat·type missile said they Were appalled. .... that the· similarity of ML5sion Viejo to The police chlef'I assocl~tion manual University High will make the transition on chemical agents expressly warns easier for stuqents and that the Mission against ualng them in crowd control or campus size is better suited . t 0 other than against barricaded criminals. accommodating 1,000 more students lhan PresldenUal Press Seeretary Ron is ·the 23-acre Tustin high campus. Ziegler announced at the Western White Both Mrs. Krenek and Platt noted the House 111 San Clementt that Assistant formation of a parent organization for the Attorney General Jerris Leonard is Jn new school has been fraught With close touch. difficulties which have "polarized the Los Angeles County Sheriff Peter J. community." Pltche:s.t said his department would Platt said the number one issue racing withhold comment wb.lle the Investigation the fiedgling group Is "who's going to be is under way,. but called for eventual allowed to join.•• complete public disclosure of the facts. University Park parents appeared delayed openini or the J,2(1().student high divided today in their reactions to the school which led trustees to vote TusUn Union High school board decision expenditure of $5 ~ to bus pupils to to bus 1,000 University High students to MiS!ion Viejo Fat an afternoon double Miaion Viejo. , session. Mn. Arnold Krenek, of 100 Chicory ''Our tx>ard ii very con.ervatlve," Mrs. Way, Irvine, said she had talked to "90 •Krenek said. "They don 't spend money perC'etlt of the people involved" in the unless it is absolutely necmary. A great bustng-double sessk>nl plan and find!! deal of thought was given to the busing tbetb believing the plan °the lllO!lt plan and·their decision wu nllde for the obvlous move the board could make." students' .good, 0 she argued. Mn. Krenek, prevklus public relations Another University Park p a r e n' l , comiolttee chairman for the fledgling Robert Platt, said be supported the PIJllll-l.eacber organization s t e e r I n g Kreneks' viewpoint and b e 11 e v e d (See PROBE, P11e· t ) * * * Hundreds Pay Silazar Trffiute Hundred• of Olicanos today began filing by lhe casket of columnist Ruben Salazar, who became a martyr to the cause he had covered Saturday night. - Mr. Salazar, or 3118 S.~ RI t 1 Way, Santa Ana, was to lie in state rrom lit a.m. to 2 p.m. at Bagues Mortuary in East Los Angeles. Coastal fog will cloak the beachea in the morning, but sunny 1kle1 Ifill reign throuih most ol Wed- nesday, with temperatures runnlnC lrom 10·to"a dep-. INSmE TODA.Y committee. said romments reported in comments by other parents. were --~the!"'JD"'AIL!"':'iYc!cP:t,li;LOT>H,.,,.b f.othe~,_,r..r:.="::..:w'-'e'-'re,___1dbaesdi.gned "to ma~e the trustees look "purely i pOliUcal p •Y· Mrs. Krenek'• husband f or m e r I y However. Plalt indicated he: was not "As It is set up now. anyone In the Congressman Edward Roybal (0-Lo!I district who pays $2 ?.!'-~in," PlaU said. Angeles) and City Councilman Thomas oppooe lils, lie ,. , ~..,.r-11'1t-1Bradiey~ promp>-aod allows student!! or anyone to join. With thorough pr.obe. Funer1l servlcea: for the award-wlmlng correpndent pho had covered the Vietnam }Yar, plus combat in Me,:lco Woderot< studtnu are •frik· big ba(k on campu.111 acro11 California with UlC /orniction o/ "FronUas.lt 70." See Pog1 20. )4All.tbo D!mlllj<an~R~•Plr.•~bl~lc,., ~w1~11~be~-1"'!!'1~"7.:~<-,;..,,ry;ii0-.r-r-----i Wednesday in Corona del Mar. ,-..,_-... U• ' ,. .,..... ,...,.. •• too many studenb, mettings could be Loa . Angeles County Coroner Thomas disrupllve:" · · N'olucht announced a public lnqutSt will Mrs. Krenek' .s11Jd she b(Jieved anyone be held Sept. 10 Into the slaying of the sboulCI be able .tO joln but not as voting prlzc'·Wlnn?ng newsman. members. Inqu~ts determine If death Is due to "lf you open thi11 to anyone ~ivlng accidental, negllge.nt or crtmlnal means. (See DUSING, Page IJ Sidney lrm111 attorney for Salaiar'1 headed the group formed to set up a hippy with double ICSllonl which he said parent teacher organliatk>n for the new were the "worst · part" of the trustees' -achool which ls under.. consiruttlon and plan. expected to open sometime from late ''We have had busing' of students for October to early January. several. years. In th1s gfowlnl itlstrfcl," A atrike• by sheet metal workers has the father of Uve said . been blamed by school officlaJs for the lie suppporll the trustees' arguments The 4 p.m. rites will be In the Pacific '""'" J'~ f::' ~ J View Memorial Park Chapel, with ~:" ..... 1! ::;: Mnth ~t;i private laterment to follow at the )li'k. '""".....,.. ,, r*"'• " He leaves hfs wife Sally, thrte children, :=:.. 1•:~~ ~ 1: Lisa Stephanie and John, partnl8 ?lfr. """ &.Miiiet• " """"'' "'"" 1•11 • and 'Mrs. Salvador Salaiar, of El Puo; =::-,; "'"M "'" .. and a slllter, Mrs. Luz Clsneroa. It DAJLY PILOT SC • Largest Donatiori Laguna Hospital .. Given $500., 000 By PAMEU HAI.LAN tlf.,.. DlllV 1'1111 ll•ff A 1 "·ell-worn rainccat. a fFw clothes In 1 paper bag and • coople ol dol11r1 were 111 B. R. MerJ-.·ether had when ht lefl Geors{a as a boy oearly SO years ~go. ·Monday night· he gave a half·mlllion dollars to the new Sa dd leback Community Hospital planned for Laguna Hills. ;·we wanted lo do something for our nfilghbors."' u ld Meriwether. who IJves with hls wlfe in Leisure World, l.Aguna Hills. Agnew Joins President -- lnClemente ... -'1Tht mooey can be wed for anything the hospital wanL•1. !lo long a! it beneJlts geriatrics patients." 1 f.1eriwether stres!ed the fact that the donation i! not a l.~11cy, but Is alre1dy In the bani waiting for the hospital which Is scheduled to open in 1973. To prove it, he brought his banker along. The donation, which Is believed to be the largest private donation ever made to a medical facility in Orange County, Is earmarked for a C e n t e r for Geronotology, wh ich will deal with the afflictions o( the aged, The proposed 256-bed hrulpital will also have facilities for general, maternity, pediatric, emergency and ()Ul·patient earl!! and ls being gearl!!d to meet the health needs ()f a valley population ()f nearly 100,000 by 1975. When completed, the. facility will be managed' by the Lutheran Hos pital Soc- •iety of Southern Cali fornia. Frank Schaeffer. president of the $500,000 DONATED FOR SADDLEBACK COMMUNI TY HOSPITAL From Mr. a nd Mrs. E. R. Meriwether, a Gift for Life • BUSI NG HAS SLE within the district boundarJea, activists like the Student. fot a Democratic Society (SOS) and the Weathermen at UC lrvlno will tab Ult flnl opportunity to Join ind vott. "t"My'U outvote the aP1thetic parl!!nts who'd rather stay home and watch television," lhe said. •"I know this could happen, betause I've se~n what doe1 occur. t saw outsiders -~l'!le In, vanloads of people. at 1 conlrontallon at the Bank of America, last yea r," she said. Mrs. Krene:k. ptir' she wa11 ccncern~ that the parent-teacher crg•nlutlon might raise "say $10,000 for choir robes for the. school which tht activlst.s might divert to bring J10mebody liki!! (Chicago Seven atlcrney William) Kunst!er or a John Bircher lo address students." Mrs. Krenek.. apd P:lall I av o r structUring thi!! group's by-Jaws to allow (lnly p_arents of children in the high school voting rights in the organlzition. Lesser iuues dividing the Universlt.y High parents. P I a t t said, Is the re · quirements for 1 loyalty oath to bl!! taken by prospective members. and the recitatioD of thi!! Pledge of Allegiana at meetings. • • • the fledgllng Organization. In a letter Friday, Mrs. Gooch saJd while sh.e appreciat@d the coverage. "the article included a serious error when I was des;,ntted 1 spo.keslTWJ for the lli!!dgling parent or11niuUon. 1 am Ml l spoke only for myset( on this matter," Mrs. Gooch said. Technically. the group has di:ibanded until the organii.ational vote following the cpe.nlni or !thool. Mrs. Krenek uld, and thus has no form•l "spokesman." Howevtr, Mrs. Gooch haa been Involved in the C90rdln1Uon of the parent- teacher organ iz.ation, she said. "She was hand·picked by the principal t.o be on the coodinating council ." Mrs. Krenek noted. From Poge 1 PROBE • • • assembly at its conclusion were al any time peaceful ,'' he ~•Id. But he did say the majority of thr 7,000 to 20,000 persons present a c l e d peacffui ly. ' Neither of these is pre.Jenlly required Rendon, howe.vl!!r, warned that they in the bylaws wh ich are to be wted on at may not stay that way. a meeting following the opeiilng of .school. "We did not kilt Ruben Salazar." he . PlatG:leCtled llii"p;orariiirlon or the snappe . •:we dtd"lfot'"busnhe-heads'l>f community which he blamed for swelling bundred11 of youth~. I would suggest if inlerl!!st in the group "which was 1larled you want lO talk about rioting, then you'd By RICHARD P. NAU. , OI tlll 0.llr l"ll1t lllH ___ Qpital boar.d.._poinl.e.d....ouLthat_L..cio••"'---- llalson with Sou th Coast Comm unity -----------~-- ______ with 10 to 12 people and•fias grown lo 90 better start talk ing about police no!JI; or-100-based-on-attendance---at-the-laM-aboul-l'tlational Guard riot!.'' Vice Presidenl Spiro Agnew cut short bis ..Asi.'11 mlssiro kl join President Nixon in San Clemente todaY for a National Security Council meeting on the Midd le- East. The vice president shortened his stay l,n Honolulu by one day -cancelling a go!r ~ 1Jlatch -le deliver a persona l '-J.ls.sessment of his I I-day Asian tour of Cambodia , Vietnam, Taiwan, South Korea and Thailand. The President reportedly w a !I especially anxious lo learn more ()f Agfiew's c<iflversatiofi11 with Camb00i1n Premier Lon Nol and his view cf the chances of his country's surviva l under communist attack. . Th e President, Agnew and Io p dlplomaUc and military adviser11 also will assess the strained Middle East cease fire. Israel is in the midst of "a very bi lle r argum@nt" with the U.S. ()Ver J1raell charges of alleged cease fire vkl/atlons by Egypt . according to Israeli Prime Mini!ler Golda Meir. It has been charged that Egypt violiited the agrl!!tment by moving SAM mluile ba~s clMer to the Suez Canal, The U.S. has maintained that It coold not verily such charges conclusively belore setting up elaborate electronic &UTVeillance kl the area . These at(endin g today'll "San Clemente IQP-level sess:ion Included Secretary of State William Rogers : David P,ackard, deputy defen se seeretary: RJchard C. Helms, director or the Cent r • I Intelligence Agency; Henry Kissinger, N•lit'Nl Security Affairs Advisor; Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff : and Joseph P. Siseo, .. l!ta.nt Secretary of State for Middle East Affairs. Y aser R. Shawa Last Rites Held Graveside services were held at 1111.m. 1'1onday for Yaser R. Shawa of 25291 MawM>n Drive. Laguna Hills, who di~d Thursday al lhe age ()f 36. Mr . Shaw• was a native of Gaz;i, Palestine and came to Laguna Hills twn years ago. He was employed 11s a purchasing agent for Parker·Hannefhi Aircraf t in Orange. -f\.1r. Shawa is survived by hi~ wife Gero:ildine : a son. Jason: a daughter, Noelle, all of the fam ily home: mother, Shafika Shawa : four brothers. Isam. Abdul-Karim, Hisham , and Ali; three sisters, Siham , Lamia and Falak. all of Gaza. Mr. Shawa's father and grandfather "'~re both mayors of Gata . The family su ggests t'cmlributions to the American Heart Association . DAILY PILOT Hewpett le111rt L ........ d1 CMHI Mn• H•llfi11tt" a.-111 'i••t•l11 Yeti., s .. c ....... l)~•NCE co.1.sr "UBLlSH!NG COM,,ANY ll.eb11t N. Weed ,,t..,ltl'll "°"' Pu~!t1~tl' J•c~ l . Cu•ltf Viet ,.,U ""' ..... "'-r•I Ml"flttl' 11<t ...... ic,, .. a E•lto~ T1'.0"'11 A. Mu,,h;111 Miln-.Olrlt EOole< 1t;ch1•4 P, N.U Soulll Or-(l)Vl'llr £011., Offfc" (01!1 Mn.I; »t'Wn l a1v "r"' MtwPOn •••t~~ nn _,.. •• $o!J, aev1,.,.,• ~ttU'141 •"c~; m ~"' ,....,.,.~ M\11111 ... \"" 11-11: 1111J ltttll 8.>U!t .. ••11 ~it11 Clemenlt: JU Norlll l l C•"'"" 11111 !) .. !\.'I' "•LOT, WI"' Wht/o lo ,_..._. 111• N,., ......... IJ .... 1"-•ll!lf H t9tlf ,...,.. ... , +~ "'"''"' t•lf ..... /Of' ~ ........ •to.:("· N...,._+ 9,.,J.. , .. ,. Mn•. H""liflt!O~ --" ,,_. ~-111<1 V1lltf, •'-... •Ill! •-• .,t.Mt tfll...,1 O<tlltf Ctnl fl'ulll'"I ... H.,pitaJ is being maintained to "oid Claim to Be Alred duplication of costly equipment and ml!!tting." The Nation.al Mexican-Ame rican n • Platt Indicated the. group drawing up Defa mation League in Washington O.C. bylaws for the organ ization had ccnsulted addi!!d support to Rendon·s allegations services. ··wl!! are extremely gra.leful lo Mr. and Mrs. Merlwelh er for !heir generosity and their interest in Saddleback Community Hospital," said Scha'effer, at Monday's dinner at Leisure Worjd. _ ''Their gilt is deeply appreciated oot only for its medical i;ignifi cance bu t for the heartening impetus and support it gives cur efforls to build a ccmmunity hospital which will render the highest quality care to Saddle.back Valley Tesidenf.ll of all ages." The ~eriwelhers settled In .Leisure World after nearly 30 year! of world travel. Meriwether, who began his .success in the sall!! promotion department of t.he then wor ld famous John Wanamaker Department Store in New York City, joined the Army when World War I broke out. He wu disabled and sent to the Army Genual Hospital In San Francisco where be. met his wife, who was a nurse. "She was so popular, I.he patienls used lo wheel her around," chuck I e d Meriwether. After their m11rrlage. the Meriwethers applied themselves to the bU!lnes.s worl d for 10· y'ears, then in 1932 they decided they had made enough money and woul d take off around the world wherever their whims dlr 'cted . They have been tra veling ever since, clrcurnna vigaUng tht globe three tlmes in two years. ChicanQs Picket Youth Meeting At UC Irvine By GEORGE tEID..\L 01 !111 Ot llY 1'1111 lt1H A group of 60 you ng Mexican-American youths picketed a While House Yout h Conference at UC Irvine Monday. sipparently In reaction lo the death or newsman Ruben H. Salaza r during disturbances in East Los Angeles ov.er 1he weekend. A UC! spokesman said the group ~·as rormed in Santa Ana Monday morning ;ind bused to the Irvine campus where a preliminary White House ccnference on prob lems facing youth had been meeting since Saturday. .Pickfters carrying signs c 11 11 I n g aUcntion lo the problem., of Indian and Chicano youth gathered on f\.fesa Court ;ibout 11 :3n .11.m. ju.~t prior to a conrerence luncheon . About 30 conrerees including a Harvard law student and an unidentified New Orleans bishop mel with the pickets and discussed representation or Chicano viewpoinl3 at the final conference set f()r February in Washington. Declining to join conferee,; for lum:h. the demonstrator., inviled delegale~ to visil the barrios ror a fi rst hand look at the "problems Chicanos face," a UCI spokesman said . A few of the While House. task rorce \1lsited the S11nt;i· Ana barrins after lunch. The J)('aceful demonstration broke up at 12:4S· p.m. The preliminary Whlle Houst youth conference drew 80 young pt()ple from ccllcge cAmpuses 1t:rcur,ltf'lu\ the nation, 4-0 adults and :lll mcmbf>r~ or the conference start for diiicu!!lon of 10 majnr issues. such 11~ n11rcotiC$, during thr three-day confr:rrnce at UCI. The ctinference. htld every 10 y('l!rs since 1910, '*'ii.$ divided this \'ellr In to t,,o J c " part~. A t'Orrierence nn c11ildfe problems will bt held in W11sh inJton In December. and the final youth conferencP Is scheduled for Febru11ry. also in ":ashington. Tilt ucr mPel WA! no! sponsored by the university 11nd wa~ dei;cribed as belni prelimin11.ry to the final session. other schools' p a re n I· teacher Monday, Urging President Nixon to order organizations a.nd "tried to inccrporate an FBI inveJtigation. theirtfiylaws:" Domingo N. Reyes, executivl!! direct.or, Clemente Council Sets "Most other organ izations support the said if it ls not forthcoming he will ask U.S. Co nstitution ," Platt said. "I'm for a Congfes,sional probe. ,. aw are that some people in this country Aut horities in Washington, meanwhile, are trying to change our form of sai d James Turner, ass istant head of the government and its constitution. Quite a ,J ustice J)epartmenl's Civil Rights Road Contractor's Beef The claim by a large pa ving C(lnlractor lhaP the city or San Clemente 5hou1d release money withheld for construction delays on a road project will resume before the city council Wed nesday night. The Grif~ith Company or Santa Ana ha.• asked lhat its claim for several thousand dollars withheld from the city p.ayment be placed on the agenda . Councilmen alrrady ha ve held one executive sesllon .in the dispute a ft e r hearing t~·o -Weeks ago that the contractor was pl8'nniog teg;il action tn retrieve the $5,900 which the cilv held back because o( ta rdiness in finishing a job. An employe or the firm , Slan Kelly, charl{eri thal the city action was c11uslng "alienation'' cf the. second of two large conlraclors who have done business with San Clemente. City Manage r Ken Carr has told coonci\men that the city "is within its legal rights" In nol paying $100 a day for 59 days during which construction exceeded the contract period. The job in question invol ved n1ajor widening and resurfacing cf Camino Capistrano about a year ago. It L~ the ci1.v·s secon(I dispute of sorts ~·ilh pa ving contractors lhis yesir. Last sprhig residents' complainL~ sparked hot words by city staff member~ toward the Sully Miller 'dompany which did the repaving or Avenid'a Marquita anri nlher streets in the area under an improvement ri i~!ricl projer l. Complaints or shoddy workmanship - later heatedly denied by Sully Mille r representati ves -came from several rC$idents. ln,Cther aclioo at lhe 7:30 p.m. mceh ng the cou nci l will consider: -Appeals or object ion~ tn t he ronflrmat1on llf assessments fnr street -{:{ * Coun cil to Hear Clubhous e Ideas l n Sa.n Clern ente By .IOHN \'ALTERZA 0! lh1 Dl!lf "lllt SJ1ff . The firs! public glimpse or designers' 1det1!'1 for ti new community clubhouse in San. Clen1cnte w!ll ct?mt Wednesday niRht during the regular city council meetinR. ~he designs. drafted by Boucher, Dr1elsma and Associales, come to the council on abou1 lhe final da.v of the 30- riay ~·ork period specHiefl by the council lasl ,July. Acrording In cnuncit guideline~, the dr;i~·1ngs "'ill relltcl a buildin11: costing abou l $200,000 and h11 \'ing 11bout 10.000 square feet or noor space.. A Spanis h-1\IP,diterranean e x l t r i o r riesign has bern included in !he pltins. lf lhc architcctl' "'ork wins fsi vor "'ith enunc~!men. lhe de.~i~n~ are expected tn come . before ccmmunity grnups and t'ity pl11nn1nR and parks comm is.,ioners for rurt.her iitudy. A~ !he plans bC'rome pu bllc. ~e\·er11l rommnuity 11:roup leaders ha ve indicaled rhcy "·ould prefpr A muc h larger. mnre expensive bui lding ~Cr\'ing ul timate romm unity needs. Roy Jenkins, president of the Adult Recreation Association, reccnll v told councilmen hi~ group ~'AS "'illing In "'Ork hard for p11ssage of a bond i.!'.Sue lo fin11n<:e A lar,1te clubhouse. few ()f them llke socialism . I disagree Division, has been sent to Los Ange les to with ~iailii;m . The ~nstit~tion ill., the help. work along East Avenida Cordob11, which has been widened and paved under an onl y thing that stands in thei r way, he Prl!!sident Nixon 's specialist n n improvement district . -said. "lexican·American affairs. M a r l i n "B~sed on my e1perieoce al these Castillo, arrivtd at the Newporter Inn by ml!!ttings\ I find people who s o presidential helicopter Monday to cOnfer vehemently oppose supporting the on unrelated matterll. -Another hearing en lhe ~Once ccntroversial (now amended) cod I!! governing parking of trailers. boats, campers and other such vehicles on private properly. The proposed code once · forbad e I.he parking on SC1me rlriveways, but planning commissioners bowed to cpponents' wishes sind softened the regulations. Constitut ion ha ve to ha ve some re~!ll'ln-The East Los Angeles rioting that left maybe so me of them are Communist! or nearl y 200 arrested 53, injured, and Social ists," Platt said. Salazar dead, was pres um ab I y "I can't imagine any decent. hard· mentioned :however, said one aide. working cilir.en of the U.S. be in g Tense calm hung over the cou nty area adam.antly opposed to the Pl~ge of of East Los Angeles, Montebello, and AJle~1ance or loyalty oaths unles.!1 they Wilmington , on Monday night. although a are. he concluded. . few sporad ic incidents of vandalism and -A letter from the San Clemenle Rotary Club askin~ for a small site on public property for 1t monument to commemorate the cammunity·s sister city, San Clemente del Tuyu In Argentina . That Lalin coastal resort already has a monument ii! honor nr San Clemente, California. . Both ~frs. Krenek and Platt Objected ~n looting occurred. ren:iarks made by Mrs . Arlene C.ooch tn The potential rioters are apparenlly _ the . DAILY PILOT \~st week ~Ing waitin~ to see if 1 heir long-voici!!d atlributl!!CI to her as a spokesman for demands and call .for a probe into the killing of Salazar are met. -A recommendation from pa r k s commissioners that the estimated Sll.000 f 'rona Poge l WAR · VOTE. • • coast to in..~tall grass on city bowling .modified the language in hope of g1ining greens is too high and that. proposals of support. replace existing compacted M>il materi al The changeJ would have extended tn be dropped. withdrawal deadline from June 30 to Dec. -A report oo bids received ror 11 city :11. 1971, and would have given the pr(liecl lo repa ir lhc badly ,;lumping President an option of ktfping troo1>5 in Laguna Rider Beaten, Robbed By Passen gel's bluffs below Colony Covell. The cost was Vietnam for an additions! period of up to A hitchhiker hl Laguna B e 1 c h cstimaten tn reach $30,000. 60 days beyond Dec. 31 if he found them suspected something wa 5 wro ng this -Reconsideration of a m;i.~sive policy exposed to "unanti cipated clear and morning when lhe camper he had ·entered covering a five-year program for present dangeJ." . ,"'began bumping aloog over a dirl road. reconstruction and maintenance of city Jn such a situation, he also would h11ve He was sure or it when a fellow ~1reets. The ideas presented last June, been empowered to ask Congress to set a passenger grabbed him around the neck "·ould involve an expense of $5 million. new withdrawal date. ;,1 a headlock. -Pysage of a resolution changing 'the ~upporters of the proposal said it ga vl!! Police Lt. John Zelko said liiter that name of Via de Frente to Avenida .del Congres.!I a chance to vote to end the war Durwood A. Phillips. 31 . San Francisco, Presidente, along with the setting .,, a llll in effect they V()led fo.i:: Whit!!! House was kicked. beaten and robbed nr $10 by public hearii'lg. The proposed name aulhority to wl!ge the war with approval five long-haired young men. The beating chanRe action comes after months ()r city or the Gulf of Tcmk in resolution in Aufl.Jsl. app~rently occurred at Top or the World . a('livity, including rejection twice by the 1964 · Phil!lps was hitchhiking al t he planning commission . \/\a de Frente northeast corner or Brll11dway. The lc11ds to the gates or the. Western White camper driver said he would take him lG House. Au ss ies Bai• Gregory an all -night restaurant. -ExRCCted passage (•f a stringent Phillips entered the camper and found nrriinance covering use nf tr a i I CANBERRA. Australia (AP ) -The 1hree young men in the resr. After .lhe motorcycles. minihikes and dune buggie5 g~vemment ha!'I barred .black comedi~n bumpy rifle. Phillip!'! asked where they nn private property . The proposed Dick, Gregory from coming lo Australia wl!!re going. One or the men grabbed him, ordinance stales Iha! riflers must have in In parti~ipate. in an anti·Vi~tnam war He broke loose and rled bul wai; caught their possessioo written consent to ride mora.tor1u.m 1n Sydney this. mont~. '1 br, I.he fi ve. "Try to run again and we1l by the proptrty owner. It also bans Imm1gral1on Department c£t!c1als !llll ld k11l you," O'tle told him. operation or the vehicle1 within 300 fee.t today. Autho rities refused to say why hi! Phillip~ sufftred cuts and bruises, nf ll lot which htis 11 residence l'ln it. request for a visa had been refus~. 7..clkr. said : I-;=:======================::::=::::==-=::::==:;- What's. • • My Line? YOU WON'T BE FED ANY LINES· AT ALDEN'S. • WE ARE MORE INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING LO Y AL CUSTOMERS THAN MA KING A FAST SALE. NONE OF OUR SALESPEOPLE WI LL BOTHER YOU IF YOU JUST W ANT TO BROWSE, BUT WILL BE PLEASED TO ASSIST YOU IF YOU WISH, WI TH TRUTHFUL ~NSW ERS TO YOU R QUESTIONS. • WHEN WE DISCUSS CARPET LINES, WE WOULD HAVE TO "'fvfO Dt -STLY '"' ADMIT TH AT WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN THE AREA. TOP BRAN DS SUCH AS: llGELOW, BERVEN, BEATTIE . ' MAGEE, MONA RCH, BA R W l CK, MOHAWK , ROXBU RY, MILLIKAN, ARMSIRONG • . , , I 1 E > Pa: gro lh• ne1 H., U.! -s at bef Ori Co• A Sy Am 196' Wa! Am Am .. cap '" bee ... con agg not. or 1 cla1 ,,, - ~ F .. ~ plet .. , fDIT. "~" '1fl'.J ,. 1:1IJ. ·~· F c-~r 11t11i11,.. it1•~1• ••• ,, 1111•w .. 1 .... """. •1...i .. "',...,,..., l•Kh. ••.d l• _, A•f lt•HI, C..tf Mh•. t~-111 41 &42-4~21 Tokyo R&R .Cul Out C4Wo..!~6Jl.l6ll--.--.1--<S"'A IGGN-+APl-Tek~it-wlll no IMger- s-,.._... AM ~·""'"": be: a re!l And recuper111ion center for .Jenkins received as!'lurancr,s th11I member,; rlf the rccr1'11Uon i:im up ~·ould be wrlcomc to stan the P.lans and ma ke eir own rccommcn 11 1on.~. ~=~~~-DEN'S-.,_,_ __ CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lac1ntla Ave. 7•"'P•••• 4t2-"421 Amerlran servicemen from Vietnam ~-:,"' ... ~1-:i.,~1'11!..":.~~ lifter Oct . I, Uw U.S. Command sakl ,, ... 1 ,..,.,... ., ••~•''"'""""!' ""•"" !od1y. "Tht redeployment of .US forcr~ ':',!..,."""., ·:=:,:~ .;:.,"';" '--'-' ""' rrom Vlr1n1m his nece!l..•ilAtcd 11 ..,_.... , ,, -".-= .... 11 ,.. •• ,.,, .,,t11 rPalignmrnt of tilt R&R prOfl'lm 11'.1 metl :!:,';."'::~;";:":!.11~''::'i..1~ ~djusle(f requirement~.'' Uie t'Qmmand ""llluf' ....... 1 ..... u• ,,_•111f. an.nounced. l Pre\·ioui; disrussion aboul a bonri 1~1uP to raise. Junds to rcplatt the cily·s txisting hurncd cl ubhouse have met ~·llh lukQ"·arm rcsponse·by-council1T1cn. The voier~ hrrr would n~ver approve a bond l~ur. some ht1\r !aid, . C'urrr.nt' plan.~ c111l for ioi pAy·a~·rou·go fina nce ~tructurl!10r a new clubhou.se. SANTA ANA, eUN•I TUITIN Cefl , , • ALDIN'S 110 HILL CAt,m 6: t tAPlt ln ., 1 a114 1m ... TllW41, c.tlt .. lll·JJ44 · -COST A MISA 646·4838 I - • . " Expert Eyes MideaSt Ex-envoy Says Guerrillas Small Tlireut By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "'9 CMll' l'liM SIMI As lhey now stand, the Pales'tnian Arab commando groups do not pose a serious threat to the Mideast peace negotiations, accord ing t o Harrison Symmes, r o r m e r U.S. Ambassador to Jordan. -S y m m e s spoke recently at the Ne wport er Inn before 160 mtmbers or the Orange County World Affairs Council. A specialist in Arab affairs. comba t patrols. But they are not capable of stan d ing a1ainst trained artillery and lnrantry of 11. pollce or military force,'' he staled. Sy m'mes S!\d another factor working against the .Fedayeen groups is internal strife. ''The various commando group s rarely are in agreement with one another apd there are even factions within eacti group," he explained. Symmes said the acceptance of the U.S. peace plan represent! a breakthrough in the ~1ldeast Situation although ''lhere is still a great deal of suspicion and wariness on both :iiides. "In the first six months or this year, the situation in the Mideast had deteriorated 1t an alarming rate. When I wal!I working on the State Depart· ment task force. to bring American citizens out of Jordan in June. t thought things had reached the lowest level possible. "The violence was at its highest level stnce the Six Day War and attitudes had harden· ed lo such a point on both sides of the line that few peo- ple believed a political solulion "'as possible. ··All talks had come lo a complete stop and "'e could only see an alarming drift toward war with the threat of a U.S . ..Soviet confrontation ) QUEENIE By Phil lnlt rla-ndi DAIL V PI LOT 9 Confident .of Calm Colleges Girdi1ig for Fall LOS ANGELES (AP) -''sick of the vlolenct. :sick )If \'oice lQ Dumke and state col- Though state• college and the police. sick of the tear gas, Jtge presidents, the Associ•· university officials express sick of tht subsUtuUon of tmo--ion Qf · Sludtnl Presidtnt!1 confidence that campuses w(l l lional oulburs\ for ratloo111Jty, consisling of a student repre. be calm this fall, they have of mi ndl e1s action f o r ~entative from eac h of the 19 taken mea1ures to prevent discussion." campuses , has been rflvived, · I r , Neither c..o I l e & e. ·nor officials sald. \ repetit on ° last spring s universities pl1n major ac-Both Hitch and Dumke op-' widespread disruptions In the co mmodatlons to 1 t u dent pose institution of any pr<r wake of U.S. grOlilld troop In· demands, offlci 1ls said. gram such as Prince Io n lervention in Cambocna. They said state col\egt University·s plan to allow Both UC President Charles judicial procedures have been sh1dents a week off before Hitch and slate c 0 11 e g e ~"streamlined " lo place major election day Nov. 3 to work for Chancellor Glenn s. Dumke s·tudent conduct cases In the political candidates . ha v e s a id that ha-nds of a hearing officer ap-Despite condemnations o( "reconstitut ion" of classes m.. pointed by the adnUDUtration. tampus radicals, both also op- to forums on the war and He w 111 ma k e re-com· posed screeni'ng of new other student concerns will not mendalions lo the ~olleae students lo ba_!.... po~al be permitted on ca mpu ses this pre1idenl , who in turn is sub-revolutiOllaries.. A-s~sm\n year. ject to Dumke's review. for Dumke said such screenin& Hitch announced fa cu I t-y To provide Ski.dents ~ith a _.}l'ould be ille1al. guidelines. at the July 4 -~;iiiiijill~!'i~!i!~~ii!iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij~ Symmes se rv ed a s Ambassador to Amman from 1967 to June of this year. He 11.·as recalled alter the 3'1li· American riots in which the American military attache \\'I S killed. ''King Husein is much more capable cf controlling the Fedayeen groups lhari has been apparent in the last year. Dog Hero Gets Medal ~!~~ more than possible." he "Walch it, Mr. Quigley-you've slopped pacinE' Symmes said the acceptance __________ •_g_ .. _._•_·_· _:_• --------- meeting of the UC regenu. DANISH •UINITUIE $ A-L E \\•ho were sharply critical of ACCESSOlllS curriculum chR11ges. prima rily at the Berkele y campus. 1'\ ,,-:t;" of the peace plan and the Dumke said he was n1erely 4.J\11\ U\llJ'l'JIJ,UA.I "There are less than 20,000 commandos and that's l\l ex- aggerated estimate. They are not.a militarily effectiv'e group of people and are limited to clandestine ra ids and five-man PHILADELPHIA !UPI ) - A friendl y St. Bernard who routed a(I eight·foot grizzly bear mauling his mlstress has been booored....-as.....AmeFiea ~ Clog .hero of the year. . subsequenJ start of three-way talks Tuesday in Ne\v York uuder the auspices of the UN represents "the fir st step down a long road -and· there are many steps ahead ." Symmes noted Egyptian president Gam a! Abdel Nassar has received support for th e lalks while some other Arab rrations "·ho disagree "•ith the peace pla11 "are keeping il to themselves. Nation_ Gets Younger But Oldsters Grow restating a yesr·t ld policy that any teacher who dismisses a class or diverges from tradl· 'tional curriculum for po\ltical purposes will be subject to formal discipline. No teacher ha s yet been dismissed on these grounds, he said. c1onr~~~ U.40 E.Coa1Hl111\h Coro•• dol Mor Do;I~ 9,JO 1oS:Jo 'l'•h 673-~7110 ~ ..... 111o5 &JA-M .. f.rCko~ 'TAI AftlWlrl Ytllr ........ WMll Y111 (lft'l-JI YH'll G1t Mltl l •1111Ni. Tel.,it.N Auwetlltt l •tff• ~05-7777 . The 180-pound dog:' himself named Grizzly Bear. was ac· ~mpanied to a dinner in his honor by his mis tress, Mrs. David Gralias, 24, of Denali. Alaska.-· Artificial Teeth Never Felt So Natural Before Now ••. Plastlc Cream Dlscove.ry Revolutlonlzes Denture Wearlnc For the tirst time. 1c:ience oll'cr1 • ... -4 •Me 1:11•f.r111/Hy. You m•y pla1tic ucam th•t holds dentUl'ft bite hard.!r, cbt"' better. uit more ••they've never been held before-naturally. . fllf1nSan cla1tic membrane t.h1t lttlp1 FtXODENT la1t1 for hours, Rei1S!.1 ho1' )'ONr •t1t111T11 i. llu '"'''"1/ lu-molature. 04-nturea that fit are u · ,,_ 1¥/ your"'°"'"· 1tntial to heeltli . See your dentllit t t•1 a revolutionarJ discoveer r..Warly. Get ea.y·to-Uie FIXOOt:l''T a iled F1xooEN14 for d11ily home Denture Adh111 v1 Cream 11 all U1t. {U.S. Patent 13.003,iM) drU( tOWltera. FIXOOINT hoJd1 denturc1 firmer "The departure of the right \\'ing elements from the Israeli government has given them .a stronger bargaining position.·• he noted. He said he feels there is a possibility that peace will be brought to the Mi deast. "The whole conflict in the ?-.lideast. which has gone on for almost a quarter of a cen· tury. is (Jfle of Jost opportunity. With moderation, flexibilit y and a willingness lo accept something less than a max· imum position. the peace negot iati ons could lead to peace in the Mideast," Synunes said . • By United Press lnternational The nation is gelling younger, but there are more O\'t'r-65 Americans lhan ever. The 1970 census figures are expected to show a con· linualion of a descent in me· dian age which began about IS years ago. The tabulations will show that if you're over 30 you're i"n the minority. If. howe ver. any advocates of a youth take-0ver Point to the youth majority as a man- date for dramatic change, they would do well to dig deeper into the statistics. The median age in the United Stat.es, according to Enclopaedia Brilannica Re· SAFE DEPOSIT 'BOXFORACCOUNT HOLDERS OF . '5,000 OR MORE. (Immediately avallable; •• no waiting)! +PLUS+ % --. to interest PLlJS •avlul!S aeeo-tlJ are insured to f20,000 ' by an agency of the Federal Government. So open or add to your account today, as little as $1.00~ -- Th• experienced place ••• ths professional place Th• on/ySl'YiflOI and Lo.n A:JIOCl•tlOl'I with oltlces in th e w.11·• two le.rgNI cltltl/Sentng SOUthem<:elik:irnia lince 1927. WOBLDSA _ AND LDAH ASSOCIATION/RESOURCES OVER s2ao.o¥.'ooo lf_;,.. .. :;..i.i,.1.a.-.1-c..../lo! .... -.~--~~ ... ,s..tt .. search Service, was ]O\.\'er 100 years ago than it ls today. In 1870. half the popul~tion The chancellor also said he Sa\v .. indications that the vast majority or sludenls and l faculty are tired of radicals and extreme dissidents at· 1vas below the age of 21. tempting to force their will The earliest a v a i I a b 1 e upo.1 them .·• n~ures show the median was , Bul other stale college of· still younger 150 years ago. In ficiats said campus security 1820, the median age for forces have been planning pro- American males was 18.6 and ce<lures for possible di!lturban· for females 17.7. After that ces and' improving relations there was a climb of a yea r or with local law enforcement of· SI> every 10 years. At the tum ficer£. of the century.half the nation ·s Securi ly force s "'iii not in· creased sta tewide . officia ls said, but individual schools may take their own measures. ma les were under 24, half the females under 23. The 1950 census showed the median age for males was 29,9. for females 30.5. That was near the high mark, The 1960 census showed a decline -28.5 for males. 30.3 for females. The descent si nce then has been continuow. University officials poMted hopefully to Leigh Steinberg, new student president at Berkeley. whose Nonviolent Action Party defealtd radic1l slates in spring elections. Steinberg has said he Is GOD'S DISPOllTIOH: God ... 1d1 ''"ft ind ~njoyed •11oc:i1fin9 will> Iii..,, H1 WALKED i nd TALKED with Adi"' ind E•1, "-in t1't1 c:1ol of th1 d1y," 6 1n. l :I. E"och WALKED wit1't Goel ind w11 <1•· t11,.,1d 10 hi9hly th1t h1 fttYer cl i1cl , but God h 1"1!1t1cl hi.., i11to H11v1ft , 6 111. 5:14. Golll ,.,,c1, "''" 1pirilu1I, in hi1 ow11 ;..,,,, end lik1n111, !6 1n. 1,l.) 10 lh<1I H1 c:oulc! 11••• PllASU RE in "''"• I.ii c•11tur1, R1•. 4: 11 C KiftO J 11. libl1l. 60.l'i DISPOSITION w11 to b1 1 COMPA NION to "''"· 1111 men ch1n91d thi1 by b1comin9 r1b1lliou1 end ••ii. Gen, 6:5·1. ONLY tl.1 ri9ht1cu1n111 of No1h ~1t1•1nl1d TOTAL d11tr.,c· 1i1n of "l".t ft, 6od'1 DIS POSITION NOW i1 to SAVE"'•" ETERN · ALLY fo r PLEASURE !both God" end m1n '1I in H11v1ft, JR, --3?1•: l Pit. J :t . l 11t God ·11y1, "-t-h1v1 no PLEASURE-in th1 d••th of the WICKED--."' E1k. ll:l I. Al10, "-th1 lorlll thy God i1 1 con1umin9 fir-:' low11d wick1cil p1opl1. D1ut. 4:14. Evin J11u1 "-1h1 ll b1 r11<11l1lll fr1M 1't11v1n, with hi1 ..,;9hty 1ft91t., i" fl11nin9 fi11 t•kiR9 Ylftfl"CI on th1m th 1I know no! Golll-," 1 Th111. 1 :1·t . IR 1dlllltion. "-if th1 ri 9ht101>1 1c1 rc1ly b1 11w1cl, wl.1 r1 1h1 ll !ht un9041y 1R4 lh1 iinR11 1,p11r1' .. Pit. 4:11. W1 1H NOW 1't t v1 our ch'1nc 1 lo b1 1 COM,AN10N with God th1ou9ho11t 1t1rn it.y 11 h1 d11 ir11. THAT i1 God'1 DISPOSITI ON. Wh i t i1 YOU AS 1 Ari you cl i1po11d lo lo•• Gad. ob1y him i nd be 11•1111 7 Will• or phon1 for FllEE boo~l 1t o" 604'1 w•~ of 11lv1lion, Chu1(1't of Ch1i1I, 117 W. Wi11on St., Code M111 , C1llforni1 t 1•J7. '1't1n1 541·57 11 , 54.!i-2441 , 646·57•1. BACK TO THE BOOKS ' $2,500 IN PRIZES • 15 sets af $ 149. 90 Britannica Junior Encyclopaedias • 3 sets of l·volume $69 .50 Webster's International Dictionary • 3 sets of Britannica's Deluxe $35 World Atlas 21 Places to Win /. These mtrcho1nts invite you to enter the DAILY PILOT"S big BACK TO T+IE BOOKS BONANZA at their stores anytime from now until closing time on Stturd•y, Sept. S. Nothing to buy; winner need not be present to win. Use coupon lalow, entry blank available at store• or a reasonable facsimile of tither. Drop the!'1 in entry boxes at these locations. A1U11e'1 fh1e Slrllft D1.,IJ·l •ow11 Applla11c•• Ho.,ie of Te,,y J.C.'""' Ci. 245 ,.,.., ..... 41 1 E.11tli St, S1wtlrl Ce•t ''••• f .. ltle• ltl•114 l1t•11• ... ,. c .. ,. M .. • H•rller Cntt1r IHll Dohl H•11ti11tt•• ...... lerr Jew1leri f111lrl ie11 Gollerr Wfttcllff Pita• N1WP*'f lfftlrl w .. t,11tt P1 ... 6•0 N. C1•t Hltltwe., New,1rt hfllt RelNrt'1 Dept. Ste1e New,11t S...:h Let1111•leeclt Lffllle·, J••lon 1116 Newp•rt llYlll. 3641 I. c-t Hltlrlwey c .. t• MeM l id••ll'• W. T. Gr111t Ce. Cir••• 4el Mer Yete'1 1467 Y\1 Liiiie lrfflilrl1rit & A!ll•111t M•11tftUrl kltffh w .. tcliff "•• New,•~ 8"clt H11111H11t,_• heck 1•71 s .... A•• Aff. N .. i-t ..... lrl C"t11 M ... Wfttclltf S-... The l 1etery Gre!lll•'• w .. tc1Ht ri ... 225 I. 17tti St. Seutlrl c-t rlu• Hew,ert rte!llKI Newport ....... Cftt• Mft• c •• , ....... 1611 Newport llYlll. Wet S..I Newport .... It .. 271 I. 17tt. St. c11114,.,.·, leek s1r1., H11yttlenie't reylen1"'-" c .... ,.. ... 3707 I. Cent Hltlrl11'•f 111 A"'"ff ht Mw 2221 ""'"' .. .,. ... S•t1tfll c ... t r111111 C1r1111• !llel Mw 5-C...._..te CetHI M ... . c.. ........ ENTER NOW FREE! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : BACK TO THE BOOKS BONANZA ENTRY BLANK : • C D,.p 11 lex At Ariy P.nklpetl .. Sp...,'1 Stetel • • • a NAME .......... ·-··-·-·"·"·-............ ,_ ........... -·--··--····-·· .................. -a .. . • STREET ADD~ESS .,_ ............................................. -.. ·····················--···-·-a • • • CITY ................................ STATE I ZIP,,_,_ ...................... ~---········-'-"'" • • • a PHONE ............................ WHE RE ENTnY ..................................• __ ,,,_ ... a a DROPPED a • • • -1 ' --~~.,.-~~~~~-,,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,.-··~~~~~~ ..... ~~----t No 1mploy•1 e1.111t"'l.11t ,r ltt1 l11"11n1•t1t1 f11111ly ef Tl\1 DAILY PILOT, l1tl"fllep1ffi1 l"ENTWOOO 11601Wllshl,..1t San Vicente LAGUNA BEACH 292 SOU th Coast Hiahway LYNWOOD (Homt Offlet) 11110 Lona B11eh Bou 1ev1td ' NDRTHRIDGE • 9036 Resedli Blvd.at Nord~ff ONTARIO 5~1 North Euelid Avenue SAN BERNARDINO 1565 East Hlahl•nd -- SAN DIEGO 1170 5th Avenue. 1t B Street WEST ARCADIA • l 200 s. B1ldwin 1t Duarte Road WILIHIRE·ALVAJtADO 2033 W!lshlrt Blvd., LosAna•les • WOODLAND HILLS 2332S Mulholland Drive .at Valley Cir cl a ROid El Ca mino Shoppln& Centar • • lrit11111ic10 1111., er p1rti•ir.1 ti11f 1llve1tl1111 1h1U l.1 elltllilt fer"'•••· Ne 111trr .. !111k1 • • c111 .. t 1cc1pt1cl f11"' 1hi 111111 ""-''' 14 y11r1 ef 191 11111111 101•"''1"1-' bv 111 14ulf': • • Efller I.I m111y '1!11'111 11 vou Ii••· Wi1111111 will ... Rotlt.111 by mill er ,ho11 1 1111111 t•ft • pick up pri11,! P_!ior te th1 1tvt •I 1choel, r1i111 will ... ~mUtll ho e11e r.•r f1ll'llly. JIU • entry co11po111 "'"'' b1 d1,01ile4 in 1p1111011' pl1ce1 ef .. wthltt• .. ., • ot!Rf 111111 •ii • • S1tu1ll1y, S1pl1111b1r l51h, 1970. . • ....................•........ , • • • ]8 DAJl.V PILOT SC v ..... Money's Worth Food Quality Dec1·easing B-/ SYLVIA PORTER month and next 3 ma1or • Afy d1ugbter 14 kl\H all nut r I t ion a I c d ucaUOn (ood. My son 16 hket campalg_n lrom coast to (O&St F'or not only are todey s oriental, kosher and lt.ahan homemakers b 11 1 s f u 11 y __ H_t is • &O.YQ!lek.._ ll~~ant-ol-lhe.ir -lamllJ&s' chocolate covered ants and nutritional needs confirms the crasshoppers My son 19 Wiii Soclal Research study, but the eat anything that \liOn't eat ignorance Is combined with him rirat ' indlffertnce •• Consider these 'M1Js \liaS a Los Angeles 1llustrallons of how we trade housewlft speaking 1n a rerer.t off health for o t h e r suney ol I 000 homemakers sat1sfachons by Socia.I Research Inc 1n OUR PER CAPITA national Chicago lier colorful \\Ords tons ump t 1 on of such Illustrate today's complete nutritional cornerstones as brealutoy,-n 1n the trad1uonal milk fresh fnuts -a n d patterns of which foods go vegetables has been dechnmg logether with "h1ch other steadily replaced to a foods They h1ghhght the considerable extent by sweet development of \\hat might be snacks sweet soft drmks called a new • et h n 1 c hlled milk non fat dry Jumbling togettier of foods mtlk Jtallan kosher Clunese :soul Kids are Increasing I y food etc and suggest our $1 concocling such incredible - b1lhon a year stampede t o but presumably tasty to them e:<OllC gourmet foods rood combmatioos a S THE L\tPUCATJONS oC the ketchup on cl}ocolate pie findings 1n the Social Research peanut butter on ham Jam on study are enorrnou s ly steak s1gn1f1canl lo a wide variety of IN Tit!: PAST two 1ndustr1es food producers generations, the proportion of p r o c e s s o rs d1str1buters, calories we as a nation eat ln the form of starchts has retailers kicthen appliance m a n u r a c I urers lutcheTI architects restaurants And of course they are utterly fascma11ng to all of us, the bu,•ers and consumers Our annual food bill now fops $1UO billion and we spend add1t1onal tens of b1lhons each ) ear on kitchen appliances and utensils Eco11omic Slmnp Doe~n't Affect Horseracing Currentl\ the "eekly bill for feeding a young famtly of four including two school children ave.rages $49 30 on 1he Agriculture Dept s •liberal plans and the cost of feeding a smgle teenage bo} also on the liberal plan IS estimated at $63 30 a month Yet despite this record spending the evidence is accumulating that from a nutritional v1ewpcnnl 11/e are eating less well than lrl the mid 50s ONLY HALF ol American households a r e eatmg a good diet today a drop of 10 percent from 19$5 according to a massive and alarming Agriculture 0 e p t study Nearly one m 10 lamihes 1n the $10 000 and up 1ncOme bracket have diets rated as poor and overall, (loe In five fam1hes have diets rited as poor up li percent from 1955 a 11 •American ram1l1e! at all le\ els of income n e e d guidance 10 meeting their nu t r1honal requirement.s, ' concludes the USDA Partly as a result of this survey and partly tn response to other d1sturb1ng dISlosures the Food Council of America an organu.at1on or 27 assoc1at1ons of food manufacturer s and distributors -\\'Ill stagl: th!S Heal y Ne\\' Ftunillrre Manager Jerry lfealy 1s the ne\\I manager of the Costa f\.tesa branch of W1nscot Company a Portland, Oregon b a s e d custom furnitu re r e n I a I corporation A record $4 240 000 in rental and sales "'as ach1e\ ed by the corporation during the hscal year ending Feb 28 This represenll!l a 47 percent Jump over the pre\ 1ous yea r s total of S2 883 000 volume Outgoing manager G a r y Duncan "'111 work al the corporation s Northern Calif orn1a office LET'S BE FRIENDLY It )OU have f\f!V. neighbors or )!;now of an)orw movln,i: to our area ph.!as.t h~ll u1 50 that ~r_ may ~~tl!nd a frl<'.'ndly wt'lcomr. and h<'l1i th!!m to OOeomc acquainted 1n their nrw 1urround1ngs So. Coast YisitDJ 4'"57' 4'4-'361 Harbor Visitor l46-0174 By JILL THOMAS C1llt...-1l1 lu•lllff• N.,,,. s ... v <t LOS ANGELES -IBW) - Horserac1ng 15 one track the economy doesn t run Jt was that way 1n 1he th1rt1es after the Second World War and during the Korean con!hcl AruLJt s thal way toda While most businesses are saddled by a sluggish economy 1n 1970 Western tracks are off and runnmg Leading the pack are Los Alamitos Race Track Los Alamitos (near Long Beach) and Del Mar Track, Del ?\-tar (near San Diego) The Jlltter talbed a 14 I per cent increase 1n attendance and 15 3 percent gain 1n bet Ung so far 1n its 4.8-day season ending Sept IZ The track bas been granted an additional tZ days of daytime racing Nov 17-10 Los Alamitos where night racing reigns cla1TQS both at tendanct. and belting_ar_e up 15 percent this season \\ h1ch ends Wednesday Sept % This year shou1d top last seasons re.cords, predicts Jim Herbuveaux. president and general manager of Phoenix based turf paradise The 43- day season which began last Nov II showed increases of 14 percent and 12 percent for at tend8'tlce and betting respe°" lively \Vhy are the tracks running -so strong when everyUung else 1s al a standstill' ' Nobody 1s really sure ad m1ts Leonard Foote ch1e( 1n ves tlgator for the Cahforn1a trorserac1ng Board But we can guess 1t has to do with a ps}Cholog1cal sort of lh1ng In the first place a Jot or people go to races 1n hard times because they need to get their minds off lhelr problems Horserac1ng to lhem is a d1stract1on an escape Another reason people hlt the races these days he adds is to try their luck - you know make a fast buck or '"° Bob \Vurth or Bay Meadows Race Track 1n San Mateo sug gests the increase 10 vlrtually all !racks attendance this ) ear 1s due to unemployment ' If folks aren t working 'he remarks They re going lo "ant to do something v. Ith lhl'ir lime But not a11 tracks rely on psychology to drum up their business these days Santa Anita probably the: l;irgest lrack 1n Cahfonna and Joc;ited 1n Arcadia, asked a band lo htlp \I. e have a brass band marching the track every day,' says Royce McKlnlt} vice president finance for the track s partnt company Santa Anita Consohdated Inc It xlves everyone a fiesta feellng you knO\\ Caught 1n the profit pinch race tracks are looking \Cir round use of their grounds \\'hy ~houldn t t h e y ' • • queries Foote They ha\e to PEOPLES NATIONAL THRIFT n e: ___ ,-.u -.. c-c--.. __ ~-· 111 .. ,,,..,... -·-,,,.,. -.-.-"""c.M llltl I' 'll~- keep up the grounds and pay taxes on them all year round so why should~ t some one get some use out ot them' lJollywood Park and Santa Anita have reciprocal Corporations Considering Ma cco Sale ltn eslor s' Firn1 great"' opportunn o profit Is at hand for tl\ose wllose ree500 has not 1lve11 ""ay to fear." W r 11 h l lnveitors' Servlcts s1ys Tht firm 1d\1ses ma1nlenance of 1 fully lnV1!J1ted pos1t1on ln top quality, lnvtstment grade corrunon stocks • OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York _Stock Li st ~larl~et Syn1bols .. ' N. ., .... ~. E•cht.,. •• ,,.,,. ·~ \ Tue sday's Closing Prices .... -~ ~~~~'--~~~~~-~-. &Wt,) MWI LN (IHI Qt fut~d1y Su1ttm111.r 1 1'170 SC f.omplete New York Stock Exchange Li st DAIL V PILOT JJ 11111 NII 1~1 I Hltll Ltw Cloot Cllt = ... ~ m.::. ,................................ 11ii!:::'i Ni.II &.tw c"''' :11·; oow JONIS AYl•AOtt ~ S k W -· NfW Y0rif!Alll l'fllt Oow-JOM\ tYtt•Qn • , ., l!~ 'I 't is .. +"' tor &.ci. en $!Jell•,.. I ~ .,,.,,. ,,.,. _\to Sll'tlOrut 1J I' )tl1 ,,,..__ 1".. ITOCltl 'I llfN,. " """ J.I• ICtfl • • 1"' tt + .. ~· .... 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"-'-J .. ''" -lvwtt VII t n . ' • ' •a .. , lllf It t•;, ,, I + \l ' YI 1Joc~• I•-• .... "" HY ....... e.. .. __ IS . • 19 .. tl<'OtW(lrl~ l• ,... ...... d \ft -t. \JI I . '''11to w x y z k • 1oOI tt '! It~, lt \'i I -+ ~' jNllllt -. -----~ f \o Sl\IW Pf1U.. J 1' ... lt\• )6.,, -"'U 1~ ! }J JOO -- • • • 111. 1' ~ l(•M'Y 1)1 lt lit II• II tl GI :kil lllJCIOJt -+II.Ii I ll I'"" t~ lh\ li s !;,illl.ibCt 6' '1 <t.• IJl< Ii _W.":c~v~ ~ I !I 11 )l I ' .:tM1H " oil ~ Hi. ,. ..... VIII...... ,"!·~ I t, -... ~1· I ,.._. ..... -ti -II rt. it" • ,.r .. I,.. I )I,~ .. _,.' "'" .. ,,,. 'W"tcl\o p 710 ' w. ,, ... 3r. -... "''""""'' 1" -I 1• .,_ lt ,. ~ loltltiol'llJ ti"'-~.1'4 Sdlltiilit A --" .. 1fo. "' -• -·g ess1on ''" llO ) lil;a l«t '"' -'" S•l<t• Ntl W1 II Hl'I JI ' 11 • ' -•• .,:F'Cn 1,~l• .ltl llloii , .. IJV.-\io ~PU· 3.cl 111m ' -~k-"' "'• , , • Ull 0 1 lto n 16+. ~~ •• -1:. w~ M~ y 0 '' '""I, .. 1. ••-£it: 44 ltl )Ito )Ii, I 'Oii llld Uf.>00 :N .0. ... ~ ,i1 • ~ ,,., I -1to 1u11C111m 40 tt JQ\io If.I.to t1lt -...... \Mt J Hit~ LtlJI (IOtt Ci!t l"A -M 10.> 1 tt • lt t Jt 1 l(YVl l-" 11 !.io lt 2' ..... "' t Pl.'bl t(p llllOO 10\i -·~"""" ... tlniilllll1tf-; Su"OlplJa j!l1 1'\loltt.-••r•w11to0 .......... 1 W•,,.~nCQ 7~ Ho,,,!" k~UAC tiO » l"-1;\;, "\lo -~• lt (n l110f ,. -1 hk.-#Ii -. tllii -\• Sunot1m tO l 11"' H ttl~-...~ Tll('"l'" "' I' > 'l -t W•OI'~ 101 l t j • \ IC1yiKt11l11 J I 71\lt n nv. + 11o 1111 H•,, °'i u _, i.11111• 1.11 I II " .. -uo Sunc1t net 10 ~ I) JO'o • , '"' -1 1 61 1 , • '• w~ "•co <>O ;i.1 , 1 1 , IJ l -1 ~~:?~',it •:JT~lt~~.=~~~11 w"'.1~r " 13 " =,~ f.1\:.';~ 11 r~'f,1~ ... '-9 ~:\?~ ... ~~ro ?~,ci~~i..l:""+Ylr;:" ~ .. 'u'v11 '~ •~+"'l:.t'!~'c:1~ 1i1i .. U.JJu t't1 1Ctno1os1 40 ..,, nl'l i.v. ,, t•~•cQ :: ft t:; '! .t.41k f "• ft; NEW YORK (UP I) -Stocks fi nl11hed lower In iuw o l 1A 21 ld lj 111 •J _, --w~ '-•" 1 JO 1 ui.. we H\...: -1..o IC.11"•Y~I 1! \ff Jj ""' 14 ., 1., 11 M•m Mo ., -ttl.i -I ~ • -" I ~ 14 , .. ,. + • ll f l h Sypm~Gn ii) ' l•'ll 1•,~ ,,ti. ... ~ v ..... I~ I UI •• ' • 1' ... -• W• II 1 .. 1,.0 l )j i·~ '1·1 -•• I( ...... ~ pl f5 1! i1VJ <ti tfl't + b di &•!fl --'''°° u" +1 r:OA lrt IG 't 11·~ If:" 1~ llscht trad ing Tuesday partly the resu 0 8 ec a 5upm~ Dll )it • .)0 it. t•Vi -"'U ... L el'° lft ! -r. • -I WI (l~ ' ~ ~ i~ ••• 1 • -I ~L~~A er I • ,J t.a :;~ ;:~~ -· #::.11 e,~c:w ,,.., llb -" co:'tl:' :t J ' I : lf~ * :? nlcal read1ustment Crom last week s sharp rli1e and l~~a .JSt g !~ I ~ .. 1!~ ~ .. ~~~~~ : ~ 60 11'· '1· ~·'; -1~:.~~p {t I : 1i-. ll "LM '" 11• 1 ,.. '' 'l 10 '°° lo.ti , .. ,.,., '° 1 1!" ' j -' partly from co ncern over labor ne•otlal1ons In the $win co "° '' ,,,., ui.. "'• + v. uMc '"" 11 1, 1.. • 11 '' wi •" Jo" 1' 11'• 1 ',.• -' IC~fOllJ N '1 • • »tl lj, J '--S(Ol\~•oor I ti Jt )t\1 6-1 I "' S•IHtllCP 1G , J~ JI :!IV. -Un•rc~ .o 1,. 1 ~ 1 1 -, Wtv~ Gil\ 1• ! 16 0 I .. Ko.hr .,. 1 H t llit 1 \t .... _ S kt• IM I <G 21 »!-. 11 1~ -\i t b I d t Sttt "" t>01111 I n;, '"' tll -lot U11 Ct11'1t I '! JI lO JO>• -'lwwo•~ \Jn'"' I t l~ 1•1 t '• I(_.,. 1 M ~ ~ ,~ ,. + .,, .,.. Hot su. 111J so I 'I~ '1 ,,,,, -1 au omo 1}1 in us ry T 1.11 c. D °' 1 ,. ,, 1 . :i-••~ p • 12 + ~or•eot• lld 11.1 , _..., (1111 J Hitll Lt• Clh• C.flt su1w11 u. l •• t • ,... - -~ .. 1.,. c .. f 1 J)., 1.. ~.._ -oiW•• ho l • 1 1 f • I"' ' l(:,::.~1t 1 ' m; .~ ~ ... =~NC1Am11~1111 .. '" ••'""' fc~,°:f1~!: 11 : I .. I'--. Shortly before close lhe Dow Jones Ind us trial i:1~~Nd '°0 1 111 1~"'10 'sir."~ ... ~ U'11 i r ... U 1~,,.' ,;'"'~i1 •1 ·~:",'M~ 1~ 'l ,! 1~"" ,~l: 0 K ooer I )0 " l,. )JI<, ""' + .... !~1~ ... IJ J Jl\i) Jl SI ... (; ,~Llt'ld JO '° ,,,. ,, '1"--.. Avera•e ••• , off 6 .. al 757 94 Of the I .. I '''"•' l • ty "" •J Wt lO IO -\1 UllOllCt I'° ,, J) )0\ l' .. . , D • 1 •J ••• -•1 L ~ ~II Jj i 11'4 11\lii U ... -.j. \lo lldW..,lcl Alf ti il1 ... '" -~ "' O't Vil T1 tY pl I JS \J\'J 1) 11 -;, Ull PM: C• 2 .~ » JS.. J.,., , 'If •F•r l ' 1 ' ~ I - -M!~ I Ii 10. !l'lt \l~• -~ -6Q Y4' 50b j 14 l )vt lt.41 -t ded 722 d I ed d 502 d T1m~ El 10 1.11 U l•"< h to -ti'! PSlnd p!l JO JIO " •• u , 1 Wn toF IJ.t ~ 1' l . It">= ' L•C Gtl I., l ~~ 111• 1 to Hllf t I '° 22 , 11 1114 ,.. .. GD lO ' '"" '""' ••• -II ra ec In an S(a1ne \•NI¥ Corp J1 U¥r •S. ~l\~ + ... U11lonll1cl1 J ,, JJ J~ 11~ ... NU!T • _.,. ~ I l' ,. ' t.11Ml\St .. 1 11 l\O I ..... •h-t ... lilo!Gl t,, 11• )I '°" 3,1 _...,, •• 1111 1 ~ 111 iJ\,, ••• 'J t IPM"(o '° JI s 11\o Ul'I0 -111,UOC• pl114 ll ., ,r .. ,. =~:0·!~~ :~~ u n l L•,,v 1ti1t .. 31 ""'""'19"-"'°"1111151·1V ••tt1.t:1111o,....+-.••• 1 "L "' ''J"l!'i•" '• Turnoverofaroundl0500000 sharescompared TtcftMl• 11 '•.i. •~ '"-"'u"••<•1«' ~, ..i. I • 1 'wi •l 1os. uri.11 11 LNr SiM a .. ff~ lf\lo -(, HoN pl! ill J l?t 1aoo,;, lOOft IDO\lo • """ .IOo IS I "' I Utl _. I~ Wllh 10 740 000 Shares traded Monday tkl on• •1 ,.._ 11 o 11 ' -U" roYtl 10 1lM I I 11' • :z~ ~.""' lO OJ ll )t'o JI LI ob.SI li > 114 ti>! II.I. NDH~11!1i11 •11 ii ~ lOlot +~I l!:DCD GI 1 l I jtoelllll<tn Co 11 3'\\ 31 ... :11 -1,.. union.om 1...0 11 I I\,. • ., + A l " ni tt'° II >.. t Ltt rSt of1 J lo ~· lt lllotN pt 50 t'9 )t n I t Sh1U D J.IO Jllll •• '°"' 1l"' 1' I lflody11 I \!ft )(Ill l\'o tr 11 -~ Unlr1¥t " I 17IO Ii fl fl 1,; W MO •O 1 li , I• 6 , 1 ftlCP O•t• '' O't \.lo ti\• -•1No~1•w l ti 111 l'" If\' ,,. + , Sti.1 l lte I U lS J! 11~ I'll-let 1 11 ,, I] ,..1 0 un,...,._ 111,. •,,", »>" M>>" Mil ->,•"\ w!."n P•t Jl ,..._ 1 l2 1 _ •••D '"I. nw. , --~ 1 -'4 HSPw pt• lO 110 l\'o i h j\,., fM!,,.;G IO 1l II . U• t. t ... American Te lephone and Tele,R:raph closed a" Tt .. Cotp 4ll I "" H.. • -• Ull IA ( I ... ... -I tO j) ])~ 12'-Jl ' -~:::;n, .a ,J2 ,,;z ~ \,+~~::;::•1"2rs_ 1t 11'! l~. ln:-'!si::.iGl ~11: ,', 1~11o \~"' \, .. (: 46011118 l•m11•11 u ,J 1~\ ~!.0 ':•-t"~~~.•d•i::;,. 1j 1:: 1:, 1:,t 1::~" .. ""1>1•!! 1 1 ~o -: ft'°"" •I or •I 14f .. 1t111+ '1Norlflrot U ltlo 1'\.o t \ Sllf,rwnWm 2 JS~ l il... lOii -1 ,:=•~l~lz.. f Ii 111 r \o.,. UnllC/ U. .. ,1 1 , I iW11 Un o•... to llO ·•·--l ffj.Ol\I .AO 10 lltt llh 14 t +I ..,lhP of\ 4Jo t 1J 22 tt +\I) 51\e W pU 00 t it ., •1 ,7 -1 V , ' Cal !I I I I We"<1EI ~ I) ii .... _..., l Ml'Ctm 10 I) 1114 Jl Ut\o-V.NwitA!rl " '11 l'tll 2014. 20\it -1<;S1Wl1•n toll .. n v, J q 11\o'l i ' ',•,•,K·~· .. '°•• •• ,,10].j"t,,~. Jallt.-:...'•u:t G1111 ' J 1 ,,. ·1W·~E of !IO u ~ Si L•h ... ., ll'ld ~ •I'> •:it ,._ -"''"''!•nc '. lt U Y. ll' .. l)i... -~, ' -HJ • • .. • I '"' "' Ford -losed at 48 off 1 1/4 GeneraJ Motors at • v ' ·-· '° , ~ • ' . .. Wt• vto 0 ~· ?1. :n 71h l thmn I U. .. 1111. 1•'41 lr,:-!.oil Nwil nd " lt\j, 1~ Mio -1 Sle 1P•< 10 6 1•io I'\• lit..,."' .,. TtoG11T t 4 ~t lS l<l\it ,,.., -~ II '"' j S J.,l'O l• 111.,, 1• J ' ~•d• '° • 11" I~ l _, NwnllpAS j S)l.I. lat. U \.\-1t Slo111(Qll'O ti S"1 IJ~ lnt -\1 727/8 off7/8and Chr:yslerat 227/8orfl Tt•G$1rl to •O•l 1'1. "•,.+Ill~: ~M·.~ ,i Jf1 fl t ,' .~:~~n: 10 ;..;) j) !14 n 1 I L•Vtll'd C .. 11 Q"' ~h •-'llNwlllllPtCI 1" JnlljJ\,-SIQ111 pl Jll1U1tl•"1 -i.> 1·~•11N1 10 161•'1i1•'11f"1 u NY(:r '~. 11 N•~~ ~·'s 011 ... 111 I _,, IWF ~ 1St 1 11 l 1 + \.lo Htn! n p •)II 10 Q U\<o It\\ -'" Sli!l>Odt 0 ,•, 1' '3'. U ~"' x I '"'' 111 IO I I II II IS ' ,.. U llH p-Ml" J t ~ 1 • 1 , Yl\ff p II S I l " 0 " Olo -o ~~i t,';;""'1 11' R; • ri: :~ + ~ ~;· ~$ ~ J 1: t:'! t1: t~ -" ~!~~" •1 'to: s 1t~ 1s1,: 1t,, l BM closed at 263 7 /8 of! 2 3/8 and erox C 011 ~:~L~1 4t; 'i "'' •11.o " • -• us FldG 1 Mi 11 11 , ll .. n ~ _ ""'"" P o1 s uo .. • d •61.t .. • f'E pf.JO • i 1 i .. ,,,., + "'HortSm '" lO M\o l.11. l41"o !mpPot Ill> 10 7• 7 f ed at 77 7/8 off 1'8 r •• u. 1.'° u ll~ ll, ~. -"!u!FOl'I ,.... I lO " lO 1'-'lqlhl(p 1"° ,. ~" s7 -. \))-II ':8" d 1.0 '! lJ lo~ l•~ -\j,,,,_, ,~ •" 1, 1, llQt CP JIO l t ,, .. •J 0 i•~ -1 ~ l•• ,,11 -H 1 , ti jl\.o +l'I u ''"' ill l Jllto 11"-73\o "wn tCM '° 60 ' l " • ' "'' '" -.,. ., "' \.J GYPlm Ja 1\ 11• 11 .. SJ._-own Cn pl() I 1f ll 1 l'f 0 lliSlll•S •s -•HvF Co 1610 9 ,..10 -•otJ~ 6IS-.11•11 1 -J h T••ln Pf20I I H"IH.~\lo+\)USG1•Pll m l l lO lO -1 Wntc.n•• ,., •• n~. ,,,_,, 1>11 Mct11 L 1 '• \'0 s -"oo• ' -' s 1-\.o 1 • 1 .. Ske11v D • •' Jt 11 ~ ll -i.. In 1den t1cal offers the natio n s b1• t ree auto Te• •11 p11 '° 1• 1 • , " 1 • + 1 • ,, ••" ,, ,, -, • ,, •• ' ~IVCP :io '11~ • 1••+ ~§lk!~Pa 10 1 s IS\\ S o -,Sk Coo 90 J S o 1S'-" lS"'-"' ,... 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Ill'! ~ ' Sl1 -• I I -"' ' " .. .. u ' • ~. -• ,_ " • .,_ ' - ·Fi11a11 cc Briefs ' NE\Y YORK !UPI) -Ci ties Service Co has b cg u n canstruclJon or new fac11lUes lo produce fuel oils anrl coke It sa1rl will meel the mos t s l r 1 n"'g en l environmental stantlartls no11. foresee n The fac11ltl!!:s which "111 co~l $7 500 000 are being added lo the company s Lake Charlcrc La refmcry One is a 25 000 harr('Js per day fuel ntl clesulfunzer while the other v.1!1 be Rn expansion of sl?" ex1s!lng un t that mRkes low sulfur 1nelallurg1cal coal CHER RY 11111 N J iu rn HCA Cor11 anr1ouncelf recei pt nf :in ordrr from the H.eg1onaJ Cnnie l11forniat1on Cc lier of C1ncinnat1 for t"n .Spcctr11 70-60 con1puter.s Th e con1puters schcdult'd r n r dt'l11er...v in !he rourth quarter "111 be wed for t'xp11ns!on Qf law enforcement {'fforls in th8 area " " , " "' " " "' ' • •• ' . '' ' .. -. "• '" -• HASTING S Neb IUl-'r) -·~ • ~ L' Nb ' 1~ ~ • ' " n • ''" • "' " • " ... 1.. r.1o • .. 01nsas-e r1!ka, Natural Gas '!'t 1! ~ .. 1 ~ Co has Asktd Lhe federal j': ~ .. -Power Comm)ss1on for ,~.... ,~ -' permission lo boosl 11.S ratf!!I • ~ .... on nalural gas salts IB I DIG .... ~G 11'• uo I. I l nt 1 ..... y II I -I 01 1 1 co~ G de ' I 1' 'I "1owH1 tn "' ' • • 1tl , • t .. L l>f •• Lt•' l 1'4 ,.... 1 I -p udFNk 10 ,.... A"' • ' INVF 0 O U• I I ll'M( C• p lJ -) 01! 1 ,~111'!11m11d ! l ~JS l1 /I I FOOOtml r J 11 ~ 11 .. 1 t -•L1 1A"" J•I 6 I• ..... ,.,_ 'OPull(~M '.J ,t~ 11 .!'t ~t}.~~·-'-~•',-_,-1)..;~: ~,:,j\1 \L~.','!.;2~ C~M',' ~~ g: ! J dn Ive ~~}!XI .ii if! 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Jt., ",,•,·,c_~•""' & \J,. ~ n~TD <>< r • ~Jr.,.,o,, ~~ i\ \ j > ,, !M tS!i 1 . 1, I" LYL,,.#t 1 I • 11 l !l•nt' •• ,. 10 ~ ~· 111 1r l Vfl •)~Lt( Ffto~ lo \o O• &~f• 11111 Ce "• o"'"°" o ! 11 '-. •LTVL"~ IO ~ 4 ,1 I' llll'DM Cit<"' I~' l • US(ltt '"'" U Jo ff ?•LVOsw C• '• -1 o-0 , t J(~u C •' I• • J -•••1t1"11 ~ • .<.t,,Lulllf•E •• • • 1 .i ... v~• ..t,t l J J JJ'""''*"' •1 '10 U8 I O)iPl•~••t(~ I -I l.Jt...,•iec lllf I !\1!1 u~ ~·(;••h i lib •• ... tLy"'"'•• If 1 l • •llftY•ITt ll( Jt t~ i.: I " " l" •• " If I -•• ! ' ,J ,~ '•.! ::: _ '! Coloradn 1'he 1ncrr.ase would • ,.... ~ ' • • 1 -'"' bOosl the compan y s rtvcnues l ltl•, ,, I.I , • , • • • 4 by $3 600 000 a ytar The com- •• ' t 0 I ~' ~· 1 ,.' Y ~ Pf\"Y ~Ald It needs the hlfhet ' .. rall!rc to offset hlnhtt tf>tls "'' '' a •. c• • bo .,. ' rro"ed money labor f0 4 " I r• ' " • ' • 8"' J! DAILY PtlDT T11~ay, Stpttmbtr 1, lq7D 20 Bond Issues Face Vote "' . Near Reoorcf Number ·Ranges Fro"': Duels to Water. (EditOT'I note: The lepij· l4turt hu plactd 20 propo- sitltonr, a near record, on tht Nov. 3 baUot Some of the measurtj art major, 1ome minor. Here ta a aum. ""' I")/.) regents for refusing to say amendment, Prop. 12, that of public inltructioo uempt bow they vQf.ed. . oo con-would allow supervisors to set from civil service. troYersial Issues lhat ha<t been their own pay scale, subject to p 9-Allo hart decided behind' Cloised cloors. a local referendum vote. Cur-CO:J~ to e~ :i~ppo:; Another higher education-rently supervborial sa1ary superintebdenta of schoola. related amendment; Prop. 7, hikes mlLSt be voted by the Prop. tO-Provlde that~loans propoSes that the : speaker · or Legislature. over $100,000 may be made to t.be assembly sh@_ll be. an ex-RELATED corpoi:ationa or partnerships By DENNIS .. J. OPATRNY officio member of any agency without regard to certain con· created or exlsUJ:ig that . tiCI-Two related -but separate stitutional restrictions. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -ministers the S!ate . College -amendments, Props. 3 and Prop. ti-Authorize t be C Iii · u •· N 3 s t 4, would allow the governor to a onuans w vo""' ov. on ys em. : State Board of Chiropractic 20 bal\o.t p -11· nging submit a budget for the next ro""" 10ns J'!. Voters will also .be. asked to Examiners t .. adopt .......,.ilied I -·u1 t fiscal year within the first 10 ,.... ~,...~ rom a •wu m.t on wa er approve a legislaU've-.endorsed rules for giverning the pro-pollution control bofid ls.sue to measure, Prop., 19', to make a days rather than first 30 days fess ion. stiffening the penalty for loan Joan shari.; .. ,. conv)ction a of a ~egislative session and Prop.. 13-Increase totally sh u .... '6 permi~ the legislature to make ar • \ felony rather tbah a misde-bl" hool . . disabled v et, e r a n ' s. and pu 1c sc appropriations It is the largest number of meanor, the present charge.. widow's pron.riy tu ex-. . prior to passage of a spending .,...... • propositions submitted t 0 Felony loan shai'king would program. I . emptions to s1q,ooo. ~ voters since 1962, when 24 pro-be punishable by a maximum Prop. 14--ExemptJrom civil posals were on the ballot. . prison term of five years. The Ottier propo.sitions : service status appointees of Sixteen are proposed con-measure, although passed by Prop. 2.-Provide .. that the the lieutenant governor and stitutional a m e n d m e 0 t s lawmakers, must be sub-State Supreme Court has....a· ooe person appointed 0 r recommended for voter 8~ milted to voters for ratifica. elusive j u r i s d i c t i o n to employed by the p u b I i c proval by the Legislature. The lion because it amends the determine when a vacancy has Utilities Commission. remaining four are legislative state's basic usury law a~ occurred in a statewide office, Prop. lf-Authorize the initiatives i-equiring voter en-proved by the people in 1918. such as governor or lieutenant legislature to withdraw a pro- dorsement. · The Legislatqre also decided governor. posed constitutional amend· One proposed constitutional to shift the responsibility for Prop. 6-Pennit expanded ment from the ballot by a two- amendment, Prop. 15, wqpld increasing county supervisor investment opportunities for thirds vote. Eskimo Goat? .. Center. The:tair \vound up before the American Legion convention came to town. repeal a section of the "con-salaries from itself to the local teachers' retirement funds. Prop. 17.a.Repeal obsolete Kid meets kid as Shawn Cotton, 8, rece'ives an af. stitution that proHibits 8 level. .Prop. ~Authorize one ad· provisions of the Constitution fectionate' nose-t1>nose kiss from baby goat at Mull· person who engages in or Lawmaken a~prov~ an ditional deputy superintendent relating to social wellare. nomah County Fair jn Portland,. Ore. Exposition challenges someone to "a duel t------'"'-~~-----'-'~-'-------''--------==-'-"'-'"-''-'-"''-'-'--'-'_;:'-'_;:'-':....:----------------------,- wllh .deadly weapo~" from voting or holding public office. Two bond issues are among the proposals. One, Prop. I, asks voters to approve a $250 million issuance to aid local communities i n upgrading their sewage treatment plants. fl BILLION FUND . If approved, the measure could generate $1 billion over the next five years - including $550 million I n federal matching funds and another $200 million raised by local agenciej. ,,. Gov. Ronald Reagan backs the proposals as a tool that "escalates even further o u r fight against water pollution." The other bond issue, Piop. 20, is a $60 million issuance for construction of recreation facilities in conjunction with the State Water Project. For the first time since 1938, Californians will have the o~ portunity to vote on whether gasoline tax revenue should be used for other than highway construction aloiie. A proposed amendment Prop. 18, would authorize cities and counties to commit --up-&o-"%....pei-cenLof their gas tax allocation for construction of rapid transit systems. Winning legislative approval of the measure marked a ma· jor victory for mass transit advocates,. who for years had been blocked by highway con. struction forces in attempts to tap the sac;red road building fund. . Voters will also be asked to approve an amendment, Prop. 5, that proposes to extend the provislonll of the state's cpen meetings law to the Universily of California Board 0 r Regents. REGENTS HIT The proposal ·was adopted by the 1969 Legislature after some lawmakers criticized the Delinquency Study Slated Countywide A countywide survey in ~'hich residents will be asked to contribute their views on steps to be taken in combating delinquency among children and youth will be conducted -Qlis_ fall_ !>.Y the League or Women Vofers. League officen made that decision after e x a m i n i n g specific problems in the area at a workShop sponsored. by the League and the Center for Governmental Studies at Cal State Fullerton. It was also agreed at the meeting that an inventory of the services and facilities available to youth in Orange O>unty should ge compiled and made available to the community at no charge. More than 50 persons, among them iepresentatives of Orange County's probation and w e I f a re departmenls, boys' and girls' clubs, mental health organizations, schools. youth grollp! and law enforce· ment partklpated in the Cal Stal< W<Wkabop. from - uidl a r1111111p fnn a frilnl A friend called Golden West. The world's largest commuter airline. A very good friend if you're a businessman rushing to a just-called confe·rence in-Manhattan. Or a brand new grandmother needed in a ~urry back in Chicago. 0 -r just a guy who hates freeways and airport parking lots. Now Golden West flies 20-passenger, twin JET-prop De _Havil- lands directly from Orange County Airport to. TWA's satellite at LAX. !!J.ink what this means. Only this Golden West/TWA com• bination cuts your connection time in half because there are no long, cross-terminal transfers. Now you just step off Golden West and you're on your TWA way. So next ti~e make your first step Golden West. For TWA's colossal new747 to New York. Or any other of their 63 daily flights. Make it Golden West Airlines. TWA's time-saving friend. Yours, too. Golden VVest Airlines -. "FhJHgrr!tr:d . -. . - .. c ~ c I p a p n • a • h 1i p h " D ti p p: C< p tu iJ; •1 th .. H th u .. , ] ( Cl ec y< Lo t.r ,--6 Ix le d< cc A> D St G: ( S< Si in 3, di .. ' Complaints· Still Coining Ove r Room s . fl.fore than a dozen new ,complain~ came forth this week that Presiden Nixon's state dinner in San Diego will cause the eviction of guests at the Hotel Del Coronado Thursday. And the President's 'Press Secretary promised a full explanation about the assertions made by 14 wives of Presbyterian ministers who apparently must find lodging elsewhere. Press Secretary Ron-Zieglerpromised 1 statement t o d a y on the letter .-. apparently sent to him from the pastors• wives in Hollywood. The women, it was learned, apparently have been scratched from the reservation list because . of room needs f o r Presidential aides. The Thursday night dinner in the posh, historiCal hotel is iri the honor of the retiring President of fl.1exico, Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Earlier accounts last week indicated that more than 100 rooms were initially planned for Presidential preemption. That was when President Nixon planned lo stay overnight at the hotel. But, faced with the scores of loud complaints by the ousted guests, the President changed his mind and decidett to fly back home to Cotton's Point immediately after the gala dinner. • -"'-• Rock Fa11s Some rooms. however, still are ~pparcntly needed. Ziegler, who denied having yet received the complaining letters promised an answer as soon as he receives therii . San Clemente rock hound s presented President Nixon with table-made out of rocks native to Cal- jfornia. \Valter Long (second from left) made the table. Appearing for the gift-giving ceremonies were _ (from left) l\1r. and Mrs. -Long, President Nixon, and Mr. and 11-Jrs. Stanley Dickson. Mrs. Dickson is the president of the local rock association. He indicated that perhaps the White House Press Corps might wind up being the culprits. • App3renlly faCetiously, Ziegler said that the rooms in question might be the "changing-<>f<lothes rooms" to be set aside for ~~ traveling reporters. Easy Ride r Bike lrvi11 e Fottndation Gives Still 'No-no' Policemen Equal At Marine Base $3.5 Million in 1969-70 Camp Pendleton commal!ders this The James Irvine Foundation gave week lifted the engine-size limit for away more than $3.5 million during the motorcycles permitted for transportation 1969-70 fiscal ye ar, according to the Clemente Police Department mo"'rc than on the base, but other st ringent rules.-foundation 's recently released annual equalled their fourth place sweep of last including a ban on "Easy Rider" sty.le report. year at the annual police ol~pics in choppers _ are still in effect. The foundation, established by James h Irvine in 1937, has contributed more thal\ Long Beach t is past weekend. A new base ruling on the size of the $I 1 million to various. educational, The team~, which entered the judo a~d bikes' engines has been changed from a community and cullu'ral institutions since t.rap shooting events, returned with 90 c.c. limit to any size. j ts founding. --=-era. fo .th-lace edals and t-the-other-r.u includiJ:ig__The_major source_of income for the Detective Ernie. Muller, a ~ete;ran o ju o"'-anowing only stock, production bikes with foundation is its 53.7_percent owners 1p o bouts, "WOn a lhir_d plate this .year. . 'ull equipment _ still are in effect. the Irvine Company. Although the All the competitors were pitted against , . 1 .d. b .the foundation has an office in Newport le.ams from the state's largest police N~ recrea!i~na .r1 ing .1 edy .e• thr Beach its main office is located in San departments 1i-1ar1nes or v1s1tors JS perm1 t in e F ' . rane1sco. Winners in the Long Be a ch huge base. . This past year the round at ion competition's trap events were Lt. Riders using bikes for transport~hon contributed most ~r its funds in the San Robert Mason, Lt. Mel P·o rt n er ; alorig regular roads must comply with a Francisco area. San Francisco area- Detective Ron Dalrymple, Detective Will set of rules which includes: based organizations received $1,244,146, Stockdale and Patrolman Andrew _ Helmets worn at all limes. those based in Los Angeles area received Gyurcsik. _Safety clothing to be worn. $1 ,129,750 and those in the Orange County $25,000 for build ing funds, and the Symphony Association of Orange County, $25,000 for "seed money" to establish local and corporate support. There are l l directors or the founda tion. They are Edward W. Carter, of Los Angeles ; Morris M. Doyle, of San Francisco; Robert H. Gerdes, of San FrancislXI; John S. Flour, of Los Angeles; Arthur J. McFadden, of Santa l,oyaU _McLaren, of Sin Francisco. Others are James H. Metzgar, of San Francisco ; John A. Murdy Jr., of Newport Beach; John V. Newman, of Oxnard, Mark R. Sullivan, or San Francisco and Mrs. Kathryn L. Wheeler, of Corona del Mar. ' TutscUt, Stptrmbtr l, 1970 ·' DAil Y PILOT :: Herd• T oo Large ? • • Sea Lions Dying; Cause By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ttlt CYllY '*' SI ... a Sea lions have betn~lng in larger numbers than usual tllb summer along the Orange Coast, accor · g to Weguards in five coastal cities. No statlstics are available as to the ' exact rlumber or animals that have died, but lifeguards agree, it's considerably higher than in previous summers. The fint conclusion most people leap to is that the sea Uons are being killed by water pollution. Bill Walker, a m8rine biologist ·for A1arineland, doesn't agree. "Recent studies by Pt. ~fugu Naval Station researchers and UC Santa Cruz and USC biologists Indicate that neither DDT nor oil pollution have anything to do with the deaths. ••Jn the past few years the California sea lion popuJatlon has been increasing.at an alarming rate. Conditions a r e becoming very crowded u the henf becomes larger. "When this ~ppens, you get a higher rate of communicable disease$, pup mortality and parasitivity within the herds. "What we're seeing this summer on beaches from San Francisco to the Mexican border is nonnal mortality - a balancing of the natural size of the !ea lion population," he explained. The California sea lion -the species in question -is one of the more intelligent members or the seal family. They are often seen in zoos and are regular attractioM in most circuses. Although they are often called seals, they are not a true seal, but a sea Uon. · The cause of death of the sea lions and the effect they have on the population ls difficult to detennine b e c a u 1 e information on them in their natural state is somewhat sketchy. A study done by Bernie Buff of u~ Santa Cruz and Bob Brownell of USC showed that oil pollution had no adverse affect on the animals, Walker stated. "They compared a group ol sea lions that had greater than 40 percent oil covering their coats and a group that had no oil. And the amazing thing was that the mortality rate was higher among the anima}f that hadJ'IO oil," he noted. Walker said the animals breed each Summer on the ChaMel Islands, with the cows each producing a single pup. The migratory habits of the sea lions are not completely understood, he said. ''It's a hard thing to study. We would have to coordinate and collect data from San Francisco to Mexico," Walker said. In addition, tittle is tnown of the diseases that infect them in the wild . "We do know that" sharks will attack them and in colder waters they are Mystery preyed on by killer whales," he pointed out. , The last time the sea lions died in large numbers was in 1947 when it was determined mo.n of theJn died from a form of pnewnon!a. "We have every reason to believe that at that time the population had gotten too large -as we believe has happened this year. ''Actually, there's a higher death rite during \•linter when off shore condiUonl are at !heir worst. The debilitated ooes ~ are particularly susceptible at these limes," Walker said. Often, stranded sea lions that art sk:t · or wounded are brought to Marineland. "So far we've taken In 40 11r 50, but--we :.. can't always save them," Walker aald •. When one of these animals · comes· ashore in one of Orange County's coasiir cities, the standard policy is for Hleguards to notify their city's · animal' control officer. . U the animal Is seriously ill, tt ls destroyed; but whenever possible, they are taken to Marineland. "We know a lot aboUt the physioklgy ot the sea lions. 1bat kind of lnfonnaUon is '· available from animals in capUvity, but v.·e still dfln't know en"Ugh about ~m in the wild," Walker said. "' ' Pa11cake Feast Slated Se pt. 12 San Clemente High School's Associated " Students will jump the gun a bit with their second annual pancake breakfast with the affair planned before classes start this fall . The breakfast will precede the Triton· ' Savannah football scrimmage Sept. 12. • Classes on the campus start Sept. 14. Donation for the 7:30 to 10 a.m. · breakfa!l are $1 for children and students and $1.25 for adults. Proceeds will go into the Associated Students budget. Senator 'Back s' Foe HONO L ULU (AP) Neil Abercrombie,.a.bearded..activist,..bas.sald_· he "'ill spend only $30 In hiJ campaign to unseat Sen. Hiram f'ong (R-Hawaii.) Abercrombi~. one of three Democratic U.S. Senate cand.Jdates in the Oct. l primary, was lnfonned Monday that Finance Factors had agreed to loan h1m the money. Fong owns the Honolulu firm. Saddlehack Classes Open -Brakes, and fenders installed on both are were given $1 ,026,781. wheels. ... The recipient s of the ro~ndation's grants are divided into five categories --Production seats, handl ebars, chain education , programs for youth, servi~s or shaft covers and other siock cycle to the community, medical and health, , equipment. and commuriity cultural projects. Accoutrments seen on "outlaw-style" Education received the lion's share of INA Registration will be held two da ys, bikes, ~1arine spokesmen said, are the money this past year, with more than Sept. 14 and 15 for the fall quarter at forbidden. 45 percent of the total funds -$1,337,500 Saddleback Community College, located So are vi sible trappings of the -going to various schools, colleges and ln Mission Viejo. cyclists themselves. scholarship funds. Registration will be from 8:30 a.m. to Emblems, ornaments and patches Local recipients of educational funds 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. on both sometimes worn by some c Y c I c were Chapman College, $50,000 for land da ys. enthusiasts aren't permitted. purchase .and Southern -'(a I i for n I a ....:.-------------------~-------College, $25,000 for purchase of • ' / J. furnishings for a student dormitory. Most of the educational funds were donated to schools in the Los Angeles and S:>n Franci&:o areas. llowever, Orange County y o u t h programs received most or the money donated in the 'program for youth' category. The entire category was granted 21.5 percent of the overall funds -$905,931 -and Orange County based programs received $612,281. Recipients included many of the Boy'.s Clubs in the area, mostly for club house -construction, -and-Boy...-.. and G.i,1J-Scout troops, YMCAs and others . Medical and health programs recei ved 19.9 percent of the $3.~ million -$791.820 -with Orange County based services receiving $162,100. The tv.·o county facilities receiving the most money were Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, $50.000 for building funds, and South Coast Community Hospital in SQuth Laguna, $75,000 for equipment and itli medical aid fund . , Community services r ecei ved 6.7 percent of the total grants -$269,126 - and local services received $137 ,600. The largest local recipient was Services for the Blind in Santa Ana, $40,000 for ' purchase property for a training center. Cultural projects received 6.9 percent or the total funds -$304,800 -and county based projects were given $79,800 of that total. The largest counly recipients were the Laguna Beach Community Players, Piran has F or1n -'-+--W.-ate~olo-Team~ 1.11°1 Tfln""' l'aking a Bre ak President Nixon (ri~ht) and Senator Murphy (R·Calil.) stroll on the Ja\vn at \Vestern \Vh ite ~louse in San Clemente. Murph,Y talked to the President about his recent trip to Israel and his talk with Israeli Promier Golda Meir. 11-1ember.i of U'le Saddleback: Valley Piranhas are forming· a waler polo tum and are see king interest~ swlmmen. Doug Burt. coach, is hoping to 'form two teams, one for swimmers 11 years •Id and younger and the other for ~ 12 and over. The game 1!1 played Jn deep water 25 y1r<b: long and 20 yards wide. Those lntl9:resttd may call him at 830- 17~ for, more information. ') OF OUR SUMMER SALE • SALE ENDS WED., SEPT. 2nd Tl1el:Pok •... b'I .AJan :J./aum SALE AT OUR FASHION ISLAND STORE ( 1 ·. • ..J • • 4 DAIL V PILOT ' Ci1'iliat•• Held II TODAY'S NEWS ' f • -4 .... IC-•llM ~ .. 1!11 1)1111 l'lltl Sttffl A guest at John Adams' \vedding Sunday decided to play a joke on the bridgegroom and slipped the shackles of a ball and chain around. him. But the joke misfired 'vhen the guest di scovered she had for- gotten the key and firemen had..,!!> be called to free Adams in Stoke- on-Trent England. • Reds Take Town~. Cut Power Lines PHNOf\t PENH {UPI) -Cambodian Infantrymen supported by air strikes today fought their way to within a mile and a half of Srang, held by Viet Cong Auto Firms ' Offer Raise, No 'Escalator'- DETROIT (AP) '.... The big Three tiutomakers today ()ffere.d the Unittd Auto \Vorkers a 7.5 pereenl wage increase in proJ)'.lsed . new three-year contracts but declined to remove a cap on a cost-0f-living wage escalator. The union has _,, insisted that an unlimited cost of living wage escalator "is the price of peace in this industry." The compani~' insist e n<C e en maintaining a maximum limit er eight cenl3 hourly per year in cost cf living boosts, made a strike against cne cf the automakers appear 'certain. \ µoops who bomba~ded the government troops from a m~ntaihside Buddllisl Jlrgoda cverlook.ing the \town. 'The Viet Cong seized Stang, 26 mile& souttiwest of Phonm Penh, Sunday after a tllret--day battle. The Communists were reported holding a number of civillam hostage in the town. The Cambodian CQmmand said other Viet Cong units had cut high voltage p0wer lines supplying Phnom P..tnh from the Kirirom Dam 40 "miles southwest oC the capital. Power in Phnom Penh was not visibly alfecte<t"but a Cambodian .command 1pokesman said "lt is ver.y· clear the Viet Cong are trying to sabotage our eeonomy." Western ()bservers said villagers in Srang began leaving the town two days before the Communist offeMi ve opened but that the Viet Cong were holding other civilians in the besieged community. Viet Cong in a mountainside pagoda overlooking Srang fired mortars ·onto the approaching Cambodian Cro6ps. Welfare Bill Meets Senate Stall . WASHlNGTON (t.ifl) -President Nixon's offer lo give his PtoP,Osed \ Welfare Refonn s a year.Jong trial run if \ Congress adOpts the plan this year hu failed to budge the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee. In fact , Sen. John J. William s of Delaware has come up with a counter proposal: Find out how we.II the pilot projects work before approving the $4.1 billion program. "In my opinion, it would make better sense to authorize the $50 million pilol project and then awalt1the results of the e1tperiment before deciding on ~·hat type of law we want to enact," Williams said l\1onday. . In a move billed as a compromise, Nixo n Friday said he ~·ould agree not to implem ent lhe Family Ass i s t an .c e Progran1 until January. 1972. Pilot programs would begin in lhree states qn · jan. I,' 1971. Th.e House-passed measure. stalled In the Finance Committee si11ce April, would assure a family of four a yearl y income of $1 ,600. ~ance Chairn1an Russell B. Long said Ile did not consider Nixon's statement a compromise but only "A v.•lllingness tn consider any amendments Congress might agree uJ)'.ln ." . Current three · year pa cts CQVering 730.000 workers at the Big Three expire Sept. 14. General Motors said it was offering the unicn a package which wottld cost the company $1.4 billioo in wages alone and described itJ ()ffer as "the largest economic proposal in its history." The first train to leave Phnom Penh in more than two months pulled out of the capital today for Badenl, 20 miles west of the city. Railroad cfficlals said the line beyond Badeng to the vital rice growing province of Batlambal'!g was cut by the Viet Cong who blew up tv.·o bridges. Battambang is UK> miles northwest of the capital. Communiques from Saigon s a i d Communist troops bombarded DaJJang Air Base early today with eight sfX·fOOl· long 122mm tockets. One airman. was v.·ounded by shrapnel and a parked Cl30 cargo plane was damaged . LITTLE MISS IN INOIAN GARS ENJOYS PARADE Her U.S. Flag W•vtd Among Portland Prote1tors• Cong Flag Long said Nixon's suggestion of a delay in implementing the welfa~.~ rtfo"!'ls until January, 1972, was an 1ntereshng thoughl'' but said he"had not made • decision on the suggestiort Dan Taylor was probablv populor 1u1tlt both the An1erican Legion aJ!Ci lite hippie demoristrators i11 Portland, Orego1t tltis week . At any rate the 68· !}ear·old Dow11cy. California man has been iii llze Legio1t far f ifty years. 1/e ierved as a private in \V\Vl in Eu.rope. The companies' offers included: -A 7.5 percent wage increase. l(ansas Go·verrior Blasts Tht Lcuisiana Democrat said he agreed strongly with Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield that CongreSl!l should get a chance to vote on. welfare reform before the end o( the session. -Retirement after 30 years service at One rocket exploded near the D.a Nani:: • $500 a month at age 60 at General Motors and age 62 at Ford. Chrysler said its plan would allow a worker at age 65 after 35 years' service to retire at $551 a month. Air Base passenger terminal and sprayed asphalt fragments on a Pan American World Airways 7rn jetliner. It ·was the first rocket attack on the big base since Protestors i11 Portland Asked whether he was CQncerned a lame-duck Congress might act after the elections, Long said "I don't think il makes any difference.'' . . . Miss Taeko S1hocla, 26, says she bought an Eskimo doll in the Canadian souvenir shop at Expo '70 and discovered it was manu- factured in Japan-in her own. hometown. fvliss Sahoda, a clerk in the tel egraph and telephone office, said she bought lhe Eskimo doll for 83 cents ,under the impression it came fron1 Canada. But when she returned home she discovered the doll was manufactured in Tsuki· date, the small to,vn where she was born. The doll represents Toongak. described as a guardian deity of Canadian Eskimos. • A Miami man went to the Dade Retirement at 60 with 30 yea rs service now is J)'.ISSible at $400 a month. The union has insisted that retirement at a minimum of $500 moothly be permitted after 30 Y,ears service, regardless of age. June 21. - One rocket hit 30 yards from a bachelor enlisted men's quarters and another outside a barracks to have been occ'Upied within a few hours. The U.S. Command said American troops lost two killed and 12 wound ed in two clashes Monday 45 miles northeast of Saigon. There were no known Communist casualties in the fighting . r-.tilltary sources said J\.f o n d a y American air raids in Laos had destroyed about 40 pereent of the truck fleet used by· the communists to haul supplies down the Ho Chi Minh trail into the northern GM proposed a 71/.r percent general wage increase, ranging from 26 lo 44 cents a hour. However, employes making· Jess than $3.54 hourly wculd get nothing in addition to 26 ce nts hourly whleh goes into effect automatically Sept. 15 under tenns cf current three year pacts. ~--lli,rt oLSouth Vietnam. The sources said intelligence'----infcnnatioo showed the North Vietnamese. despite a ready supply cf new trucks arriving at the Port <1f Haiphong, have been unable to replace Lhe losses infllcted by U.S. bombings. Autl1or Matuiac · Dies in France , PORTI..AND, Ore. !AP) The America n 'Legion, v.·hich saw mild heckling at its national convention parade Monday, heard Kansas Gov. Robert Docking say today he was disgusted with the minority of you ths WhO ~r dOl'l'n rather than build. •;1t is -disgusting to allow a few to Interfere with the rights of Ure majority cf students." Docking said . The quesion of curbing campus violence was expected lo be one of the major resolutions coming before the national convention as it opened business sessioll3 today. The 14,000 delegates were prepared tO" hear CQmmittee reports en more lhan 500 resolutions including those giving strong su pport lo the President's handling of the war in Southeast Asia and for maiptaining national secucily. Doc~ing's remarks were prepared for delivery to the opening session. Docking told the legion, "I am certain lhat you, as are most citizens of our nation, are tired of hearing one percent of our college students claim lhat 'doing their cv.·n thing' means disregarding and disres pecting lav,·s of this nation : tha t academ ic freedom means b u r n i n. g administration buildings and canceling ROTC reviews -legitimate uni versity functions; that civil rights means calling public officials narfles, and that our colleges are a place for the students to te ach, not learn." Yi'ill.iams, in a statement, said Nixon s offer was a recognition by the administration the bill has •'serious flaws.'' . \Villiams said J)'.IStponing the effective date "and then running a pilot project during the interim does not alter ~he situation nor does it answer the question of V!'heth~r this is or is not a bad bill." Nine Terrorists Get Uruguay Rap -.P.i In Kid1iapings County Consumer Protection Divi· sion last week to complain about an airline's advertising_practices. He was referred to the state at· torney. 'vho referred him to the lberiff's office, which sent him to , be Miami police, wflo re£erred back to the consumer prot~cliOn people, who suggested he go again to the state a ttorney. That's 'vhen the man gave up and returned to his auto in the civic center parking Jot. ~h~re other authorities had ticketecI the car for overtime park· ing. PARIS (UPI) -Francois Mauriac, one cf France's most eminent modern writers, died in a Paris hospital early Tuesday, hospital sourees said. Mauriac, a Nobel Prize winner, was 85. Mauriac fracture4 a shoulder in April. Despite inte nsive care he n e v e r recovered. Physicians at the Pasteur Institute Hospital tried their best to save him, but Mauriac continued lo weaken. Atkins Surgery May Delay Trial For T ·wo Weeks Assassin James Ray Says Lawyei; Urge(l Gui~ty Pie~ . - MONTEVlDEO. Uruguay !UPI) Nint' alleged terrorist leaders ·were charged Monday with complicity in the kidnaping of three foreign envoys, including a murdered American.· 111e six men and three wtimen, arrested in a raid Aug. 7, were charged v.·ith harboring the kidnapers of U.S. police adviser Daniel A. ·Mitrione, U.S. farm consultant Claude L. Fly and Brazilian t!onsul Aloysio Dias Gcmide. • Ong Fung Chin celebrated his 100th birthday Sunday. as the rest of Chinato,,il celebra ted the .o\ugust l\otoon Festival in Boston. On hand to congratula te Chin, \vho ran a laundrv for 40 years. was Sen. Ed· v.•a rd 1i'. Kennedy. D-Mass ... Joseph Kennedv II. oldest son of the late Sen. Robert Kennedy. l\1ayor Kevin H. \Vhite and \Vong Che'"· "'ho at 101 is Chinato,vn's oldest resident. "I never get excited and I aJ,va,v1' eat the best of food ." Chin said in explaining his lonP-evity. • For \vhal it 's \VOrth. 1'1rs. Marv Keppler ha!ii lhP. key to the Soviet city of Vladivostok. The hospital sources said Mauriac's condition worsened Monday night and death came soon after. r-.-tauriac was onte eulogized by Charles De Gaulle as ''the greatest French ·writer'' in cur time. \Vhen the then French president realized that one of his listeners was the equally prominent Andre Malraux , the usually unflappable De Gaulle became embar"rassed and said •·we ll. one of the greatest." Wave Still on Duty In Pregnancy Flap \VASHINGTON (UPl l -Seaman An na Flores. 23, a Dallas \Vave v•ho sued the Na\'Y last month for trying to oust her fron1 the service because she became pregnant while unmarried, v.•ili be allov.·ed to remain on active duty. L05 ANGELES (AP) -Susan Akins, one of the defendanu in the Sharon Ta te murder tria l, suffers from an cvarian cyst ber attorney says, and it could delay court proceedings two weeks. Daye Shinn, who is defending r-..1iss Atkins , said i\1onday the 21-year-<lld woman has had the cyst since 1968. The trial was recessed Friday when she complained cf pains in her side and abdomen. Ooclors at County USC Medical Center declared her fit for lria l but when she complained again r-.tonday Judge Charles H. Older recessed the trial and crdered a second examination. Older said Shin told him lhat if surgery ls required, Mi ss Atkins would be out of court N·o wetkll. Other defendants in the trial are Charles Manso11, 35, Patricia Kren~·inkel, 22. and Leslie Van Houten, 20. They are char~ in the deaths of 1'1iss Tale and six others in August 1969. New Hampshire Dips to 30 Lightning Ignites Forest Fire$ in Washington State California Hf .... ! l lld H r!Y "'0'"i"9 '°"' tle<ldl t lld frotl .,,..w1l+td 11on• tne 5o..tnrr" C1llfornl1 coe1t1lt1e loclaw, burnlno on In ii.. 1IHrnoon !or rno11t1 1un~1 ,~1t1 1fld 0Q111Un11"' "''"" tem1>•••lurt1. llllll~ .... • , ... . SHOWl,IS Temperatur.,. Allol;ll111r1u1 All11!11 fh~t•1li1ld 8 11Mlrtk loll• Wit• LIW "rte, IT •T •J 71 ., ~l 16 ,, r-.'IEMPHIS, "I:enn. (UPI ) -Convicted assassin James Earl Ray contended l\1onday he had been denied ''due process·· of law and that his guilty plea in the slaying cf Dr. l\1artin Luther King Jr . v.·as involuntary. In a Ion,::. rambling type\l'ritten ~ffidavit, Ray said Attorney Percy Foreman had urged bim lo plead guilty because he said Ray already had been CQnvicled by pre·lrial pub licity. He said Foreman promised him a pardon "Af ter t\\'O or three years." through the office or John J. Hooker Sr .. a Nashville attorney mentioned as a possible member of the defense team. Ray said Foreman told him the prosecution '(had promised a witness considera ble rev1ard money'' lo testify ai;ainst him . C-Onvinced he v.·ould get one trial. and no atention from an appellate court, Ray said he decided "l didn "t wan t the one trial faked." Coal, Oil Controls ,._ by Official Urged \\lASHJNGTON (UPI ) -A spok esman for the nation·s publicly <lv.·ned power systems, claiming little can be done nc.w to a\•ert shortages of fuel supplies this winter, has urged the Nixon Admipistra~ lion to set price controls on coal and oil. De ··considering l had no other choice, at ltie time. I tentatively agreed to enter a guilty plea to a technical charge of homicide," he wrote. Ray was sentenced to 99 years in prison on 1'1arch 10, 1969. after pleading guilty to the April 4, 1968, assassination nf the civil rights leader. He began immediate efforts to have his guilty plea overturned and to gaih a new trial. The state filed a motion for dismissal nf Ray's petition for relief of his plea and sentence. Ray's seven-page affidav it. replete with misspelled words, was in .answer to that motion. Ray told of troubles he had v.•it h a series of attorneys 'vho represe nted him. lie said )1is original lawyer, Arthur Hanes Sr .• had refused to let him take the stand in his behalf, though he wanted to. and that he felt Author Willia m Bradford l.Juie, his biographer, relayed everything he learned about the case to the FBI. Rav said Foreman, who came to see him..for Jhi:. first time two days before he "'as scheduled to go on trial. told him that "Jf I stuck with them (Hanes and Jluie). l would be bar-be-cued." "l favored taking the witness stand because I had testimony to give whi ch I didn't want the prosecution Le know of until as late as possible so there would be no time to alter records. such as phone numbers.'' he Said. "Mr. Hanes turned down this request. saying why give testimony away when we can sell it." ~1ilrione "'as found shot to death Aug. 10. Fly and Gomide still are believed held by their leftist captors. After five hours of questioning, Judie J\.1anuel Diaz Romeu also chara-ed the alleged te rrorists with cons piring against the constitution and association for criminal purposes. One of the accused. Raul Bidegain Creissing. was charged "'ith participating in the killing of two policemen. Bidegain . could be sentenced to 30 years in jail. The others face possible sentences ranging from six to 15 years. Police continued to hunt for Fly. 65. ot Fort Collins, Colo., and Gomide, 41. The Brazilian wa s kidnaped July 31, the same day as Mitrlone, and fly was captured a week later. The Uruguayan government. which has , steadfastly refuseC: to bargain with the • k id napers , Monday re sto red ;: constitulional guarantees that we.rt 1. suspended Aug. 10 to facilitate the search ' for the victims. • Student De ath Probe Set; 20 lo Testifv • ' I LA,VRENCE. Kan. (UPI) -As many ~ as 20 wJtnesses could be c•lled to tesUfy .: toqay at the CQroner's inquest into the death cf Harry Nicholas Rice 18 shot , July 20 ,during a coiifrontatio~ be'tween " police apd college students. ' ~ l • ID Youth , ' Loa Al!Hlt' btolo:• 0..1 '""' '"' n'IDf'!llrle ew1rc111 .. nn 111r 111111 t rio ... 111nt ltmllttl hKt\. T"-prtdl!ltd tlltl'I, todlV II IS. UP Oflt detlf'ff lrOM MOl"ldt '/. To11ltlll'1 l~w •hould bt IS, COOl .. • JllfhlttlCI l 111tO'I (lllCt QO (!~t;,,,,,11 (ltvtlUlll Ol<lvr r ,, ,, . .. .... ,.S IJ fl I I ·" ~ ' Watts Mu1t Jtf olds Youth Even Wlien Ti1nes Are Bcid F•om '"-brlCl\el lo ,... CltM•ll, t.crutlon ••••• "'lowrd (lttr M\I"' ,.llfl l'tltlll t•lltl~• lrom l'O 11011t 111<1 COii! hi fl-.. M!Y1Plt t" dfMrl !-•·· lurfl of UP to llJ, Tll9 Air PPll"'ton (:on!rel Dl1trlct fertclll 11.... .. ...... , '"'°' "' "'' L.ot AMtlt• 1111ft. with ht1vl111 lllfl'Ot COl'l(tn!f1U1>fll If! IM $ff! 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SI 1.111111 S1!1 l 1kr Cll't' !111 o ••• o $1~ 1'•111(1'Ct $1Mt l 1tHrf Sttl!I• .... _ '""""" W11lllt'lll!t11 j " » 1! 51 ,, jf ,, )J 1lJ LOS ANG El.ES (Ar) • Ev<'ry Saturday morning at 10. about 80 boys and girls line up outside Stan r-.1ylts' ~uto b~y shop in the \Valls district lo get their dimes. ., .!1 .. " II 11 •1 n 104 }J ~· ~· IS 11 .. ~ " . .. ,. ,, " ,. .. " ..,, .... " . 11 l l 10• .• , II St " .. " c ~ ~ tt .. )• ~· ~ " )j J1 .. " " " lit .. u " One by one they \\'alk up lo the counter and Stan checks their name off a list he keeps. .~7 Dimes in hand, each youngster then ---scam-pers10 a store acr053 tht-streeWor 0t a soda or Ice crtain. :1• Stan, a 50-yea r-old w'dower v.·Uh two .• Rrown children, has been handing out the pocket money for five year!!. To eam a dlme a chlld must be a mP.mber of the Neighborhood Good Guys Club. Anyone can join. Alt of the kids are bet""·een lhe ages <lf 3 and J4. ~lost of their families are en "·elfare and In many -Of the homes there .ai Is no father. r How do you become a &ood guy~ pretty good guy. "By keeping your hair combed and 8esides dimes. ?.1yles has handed ou t btin'g nict," say• 8-year-old Vanoy Bush.· baseball equipment , 1vdmming P>Ol Good auYi also have clean f8ces, 11 neat p.11sses and shoes and even paid 1 :ippearance and never break wi ndows, beautician to fix up a Hille girl's ha.it 80 fight or get into trouble. she could be In a parade. "They 11lso do anything their mother Eac~ Christmas ~1yles thrO\\'S 1 'Ii' ants them to do withou t protest," says neighbOrhood party v.·lth a present for Myles, a native or Tex.as "'ho came to each guest. Los Angeles ln.1-.'-,-~~~·-~~-In rive years 1inct he sta rled handing A good report card during the schOOI cot dimH, Myles has lost onlf $20 ~·orth year brings an enra 15 to 50 cents. ()f rnerchandlse frnm his 11h-Op and .hts • Stan, as the kids call him. slarted the never had a b1'1>ken window. club In 1965 when he eau&hl two brothers The 1t.·ttkly dimes alone cost him ~ 1 breaking bottles behind his shop. year an<i he doesn't ketp track of how Ins tead or bswling 1hem out he asked much more he spends on the kids. them inside the offict. gave them a !'<lit Even though business has bl!en close lo drink and Jolrl the.rn lhey could earn a ~·on'! give up the Saturday pay day,, clime apiece by cleaning up the broken rock bottom recenlly, Myles uys, he bottles. "I wouldn'I do th11t for all the monty ln Soon the word sprtad that Stan was • the world," he declArts . ' , l ' • I ~ '"' am car chc jet. 1 bla the Iri: hin cor. Mo the jus E sell be! Ed red ol . cor ~ . ( ax POI tr. 120 ins • T~sday, Stptembtr l , 1970 DAILY PILOT :J -, . • Israel Warns U.S~ ~.to 'Stop Egypt'· ·-UPI TM•llt" MECHANIC INSPECTS SOME OF 18 HATCHET HOLES IN JET Coworker Scrubs Black Peint Off Craft'i Nose at Miami Airport Man 'Avenges' Pet Dog By Chopping Up Plane FTC Tells CrackdoU1n · On Business M.IAMI (UPI) -Miami's lnternalional Airport is so big and busy no one notices a man carrying an ax until he beg ins chopping holes in a $5 million jet. llis estimate was fairly close. Airline officials said it WASHINGTON (UPI) ....:. wouldcostaboutthatmuchto The Federal Trade put the Boe.ing 727 tri-jet back Cominission (FTC) announced in the air. today il would crack down on Brown told investigators he future ca~ of b u s i n e s s had shipped his wolfhound on reciprocity -the age-old an Eastern noostop flight from practice Qf "You buy from me Miami lO' Dallas in May for and I'll buy from you." stud service. Instead the dog Harry A. Garfield I I , wound up in Atlanta, Brown assistant director of the FTC's JERUSALEM (AP) -The from Washington that Jsrae.11 Jsraell Cabinel met again Ambassador Vi~k. Rabin today em.id rtports that It was had. warned Joseph Sisco, the Uy:t~te~ to torpedo ~ ~~:'k:'~~~:.f :i!\e ~~ Middle East peace talks at the United States faces t h e United Nations unJ~ss the proSpect of a collaps? in the United States makes Egypt peace talks unless it gets stop its alleged missile buildup Egypt to stop the alleged along the ~uei Canal. lr~n~fer of ant la Ir craft Meanwhile, Israeli troops mlSs1les closer to the canal. raided a Lebanese frontier The reports said Sisco met village during the night , and with Rabin before Oying to the Israeli air force attacked San Clemente for the meeting Arab guerrilla p o s i t i o n s President Nixon is holding farther to the east in Lebanon. today with hill advisers to the Israeli military command disc uss the situation in the announced. It said one Israeli Middle East. ' soldier was killed and two slightly wounded in the ground attack. Although the United Stales has been trying to play down the Israeli charges in an effort to improve the climate for the peace ta lks, high Is r a e Ii The· ~abir>et was continuing its debate on what instructions to give Ambassador Yose( Tekoah, Israel's representative ' in the indirecf peace talks -With Egypt and Jordan at U.N. headquarters in New York. J..tN-liROOI<. The newspapers Maariv and ''ecl.iot Aharonot reported PUT WH IN YOUR POCKET -Sell unwanted Item• with a DAll..Y PILOT Classified Ad. OPEllS FRlOAV., $£PT. .. AT' 9A.M .. , source a said Mor\day Washington has indicated in diplomatic contracts it r ecogruies the E g y p t l 1 n violalkns. BUt It still has not agreect'tlf'ffiik-ff1hlS""'pu~ICis Israel wants, tbe sources1said. The Israeli raiding party crossed tblf border Into ' the village of Beit Llf, two miles inside Lebanon and 11 miles from the Mediterranean, and blew up eight houses used by Arab guerrillas, the Israeli command said. A spokesman said the attack was in retaliation for 69 guerrilla attacks In the last three weeks on Israeli targets, including frontier settlements. One guerrilla· was captured, together with weapons , mines and documeot1 , the spokesman added. Among the 69 "acts of a_gg.r:MSJM" werL.43_ morta~ shellings, JS mlninp,1 aix bazooka shellings, two small anns attacks, a rocket attack and an act of ubotage. Israeli planes made a 4$- minute raid on entrenbhed g~rrillas on the southwest slopes of Mt. Hermon1 in the southeast corner of Lebanon, the spokesman reported. He said these guerrillas have been regularly attacking an Israeli bord~r positiop at Jebel Rous. Results or the raid were not annowiced. ••• IN FOUN'TWN VAU$Y ••• «1'1l1%ES •SURPRl.SiS ~g~MSG~! • WA'f'Gll ,-ol! ~ •1,;. ~POl'INI~ AD.' PHONE 642-5678 LIN·BROOK HARDWARE -1720 0 S. Brookhurst, Fountain Valley Thomas William B r o w n , blaming Eastern Airlines for the death cf his champion Irish woUhound in May, made himself more than a little conspicuous at the airport Monday. He hacked 18 holes in the fuselage of an Eastern jet just landed from New York. said, and died shortly after ils Bureau of Competition, said ~~~~~~~~~~'.!'!"!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!!!!"'!~ return to Miami. • billions of dollars a year are 1-;; Brown. 38, a carpenter, was scheduled for arraignment before U . S . Commissioner Edward Shaw today on a federal charge of destruction of ·a vehicle used in interstate commerce. He told police he had bought a can of black paint and the ax intending to paint his fnoot porch and chop down a rubber tr ... "Then I decided to cut up $200,000 worth.. or airplane instead ." For Weekender Advertising Phone 6424321 Brown said a veterinarian spent·on reciprocal purchases. diagnosed lhe cause of death "We are concerned that pric:es as heat prostration. but the might be increased as a result airline refused to take of reciprocity," Garfield said · , responsibility for the dog's in ao interview, although the death so Brown could collect consumer is not ' directly on a $5,000 insurance policy . invol ved in the deals. Copilot Jim Boardman w Rs G a r fi e I d gave this in the cockpit after passengers hypothetical example o f left the plane. and noliced reciprocity: A railroad agrees black paint oozing across his to buy its freight car wheels windshield onto the nose of the r r o m a p a r t i c u I a r jet. Then he felt the thump of manufacturer, in exchange for the ax bitiog into the-plane's the manufacturer's agreement side near a ~ng. to ship its pnxlucts on that When the copilot reached railroad. Both profit, but the grouhd , he said he was too potential competitors are startled to stop and think. squeezed out. "I walked over to him and The FTC never has issued a asked him lo give me the ax." formal antitrust complaint on Boardman said. "He handed it grounds of reciprocity. Since to me without a word." 1967, the agency h as Boardman turned Brown informally challenged 11 ix -over-to -U,S..._-marshal.---who-ftrrns-for-allegedly-buying and later turned him over to Dade selling on a reciprocal basis. County Airport police. He was ' taken to the coqnty jail, then turned over to the FBI. Shaw ordered him held under $100,000 bond pending arraignment. ~~I lke Film Premieres Knolt'.11 newest attraction-the exc iliqg Log Ride- is already a favorite of all who vieit Ghost Town. KANSAS CITY (AP -A color motion picture. "A place in History," which relates the story of the late Dwight D. Eisenhower, was premiered in Kansas City Monday. The 27-minute motion pic- ture is narrated by actor Lorne Greene. It opens with a view of the wind-swept Kan- sas prairie and goes on to trace in photographs and film clips Eisenhower's youth , var- ious incidents and events in his mili tary career. as presi- dent of Columbia University. his entry into politics, and the years of his administration as president or the United States. . .. 11 \~lill be your favorite, too. ~ft':1'1bcr Fttlt ral Deposit /rl.fllftlllCC Corporation of the fines t banks in Oran ge County are named ...... A FULL SERVICE BANK • • m • I • Does it cost a lot to live in a Medallion All-Electric Home?' Without gas? To get the facts, ·we compared utility costs. Our study was based on 8,000 homes. Bills were typical of families of four living in 3-bedroom homes. Half of the homes used both gas and electricity. The average weekly cost for gas was $2.27, plus-$2.61 ·for electricity. That totals $4.88 a week. The other half · Gas ... \ ' were Medallion All- Electric Homes where everything was run by electricity. The average weekly cost < of electricity was $5.44. That's a difference of 56¢ more a week. And no gas bill.· And no flames, no fumes, no by-products of combustion that dirty walls and windows. For an average of 56¢ more a week, wouldn't you rather live the good clean life flam~lessly? - lml!!E!! MedaJlionAll-Electri.e . I ' ' '. - I I ' I • . • '(< r • • -. • _/ DAILY PILOT .EDITORIAL PAGE • ' Riles Could · End . Chaos r \ • Wilson Riles,· the candldate opposing Max RaJlerty ~for-state S\fperintendent of-Public -lnstruction,-wasj n . Orange County last week. He left many Orange Coun- lians convinced th.at he ip_ the mart who can restore some onler and sanity to a s~aky and badly bungled educ•· tlon program. :-\· . _ An unfQ[~ .Q.YLall-!QQ:tfue crlsi_s exists i~ Cih·_ fornia education and much ofllie1ilarne W the c11Sls must rest at the feet of ~r. Max Rafferty. He ls Wilson Rites, a 52-year-old dep~ty ~uperintendent , - - of_public ins:truction_w_ho ..ba won~_rti!_an acclalm J. , for QPerating one of '1he few well~rU.n CUVJ.s ons rrtbe--' ~-ll!'trlt-----ll.: Department of Education . ~~ ~~~ As an indication of Riles' support, he can count t t ~A among his endorsers such educators as Dr.·S. I. Haya· ~~(··~ ~h. kawa:i>resldent of San-Francisco State, and Dr. Char!es ~-~ \,,, ~~- WUson;-.11reMdenl-of·the-North Oran~e~County...Juruor--'-~~-"" __ College District. And with Republican Assemblymen . t..~ such as· Paul McCloskey and William Bagley in Riles• · '"':""''i}j corner, Rafferty will have a difficult time pinning a 'J~~) · phony left-wing label on him. . , ~"',....,. Ril~.s is vigorous, imagi~ative and in a prime p~si­ tion to exercise the leadership so sorely needed to bring ordei-out of a house of chaos. 1. • • As an example of bureaucratic mismanagement, the Department of Education has gotlef! so. bad the California Le~islature has begun removing programs from its control. It is one of Sacramento's least-kept secrets that Rafferty has failed miserably as an adm~ni­ strator of the multi-million dollar department which controls the educational des\iny of millions of California )'oungsters. To be specific. Rafferty has: . . · -Misrepresented reading test scores to 1nd1cate that children are really doing better than they are. -Bureaucratic Absurdities ' " -Misused and wasted federal funds. • -Submitted a budget that failed to disclose what \VOUld be done with much of the money. -Used a non-partisan office for obvious partisan activity -inch.~ding an unsu~cess!ul bid for the U.S. Senate. Dr. Railerty has been explicit and direct in his verbal attacks on a variety of topics. Hi has plenty of colorful language to describe his feelings On sex educe· tion. busing practices, campus violence and other emotion-laden topics tb3t will win him a headline .• But when the hard facts are down on paper, Max Rafferty has bungled badly-in running the.Department of Educa~ lion. Under Rafferty's eight years of leadership, the non· partisan state education. department has)been dragged so deeply into the mire of partisan politics and so poorly administered that it has lost the respect of educators and legislators of both parties. . Fortunately for California, a candidate of stature will appear on the November ballot opposing Rafferty. An Obs tacle Dear Gloomy Gus: ·To Policin g ! Urban ~olice 'Sydn~y .,., ~ -·------_ _. ...... .,,. Whenever a mayor or a police c.hie[ In a big city is confronted with evidence of connivance or curruption in the police fcirce, he brings out his familiar barrel of apples. Ha, Women's Lib Day was a bust! But what more can you expect from wnmen? · • -A. M. C. Tllll '-~r•1 nti.ct1 ,,_,rt,. ¥i.wt; Ml 11-...r11y "'"-.i IM n.,..,..~. IMf "'' ,_. ,...,_ 'f. ....... , OW. Nltr Pll1I, Part ~ of this is due to the alliance between pollUcs and the police,. when privileges or promotions can be granted or withheld by powerful figures in the party councils. But even when this is not true - as in New York City uoder Lindsay -there &till remains a stubborn obstacle to effective policing of the police. "There's alway!I bound lo be a few rotten apples in any barrel," he pro- nounces, with an air or profound philosophic discov- ery. This is supposed to excuse, if not re. lute, the ugly charg- es. But it misses the point. WHAT IF THE BARREL itself is rotten, BO that even when you throw good apples into it, they sooner or later become contaminated? It is not the isolated individual cases of crookedneM on a police force that bothers anybody -it is the feeling that corruption may be built into the very structure of the organization. This obstacle ls the relative autonO{lly of the force ltself. Althougb nominally. subordinate to the mayor and the city · government, the police often operate as Independently as the Pentagon -and are as resistant to direction or reform from the eut.side. TemptaUon being as great and om- nip,resent as it ls for these lowly-paid and -sorely·lried men, there will always be a certain nwnber who succumb to ll: lhis is understandable. and statisti cally acceptable. It is only when crookedness is sewn into the very fabr ic or the police organization that the public has a reason, and a right , to worry. AND, lN r.1osr big cities, the plain fact is that there are not enough internal or external checks on the integrity of the force. THE BASIC LOYALTY of the police is to the organization Itself. Police will not ''snitch" on one another. If they won't get in on the graft personally, they maintain a discreet silence about It. Their "internal security" tends to be far more self-protective than · self- regulatory. They resent public intrusion, and look upon their connict with law· breakers as a private matter. ·Such a police force is really a legalized gang, with its "code of honor" turned wholly inward. In such a setting, good men quickly become either corrupted or cynical. The problem for the new urlian society is not so much getting rid of the few rotten apples as changing the shape of the container they are tossed into -and making it. for one thing, more transparent to public scrutiny. When_ ~earch ls lllegl_!l lf a policeman slops you for a lrafflc violation. may he search your cir? This question might seem minor. But it r~ises some major constitut~I issues. According to the Fourth Amendment, you are protected against "unreasOnable searches." And evidence obtained from such a search cannot be used against you in court. But what is "unreasonable ":' Gradually, through a series of court .rullngi. several basic ruli;s have become fairly well established. . " '"' ,.. . . .... Law in Action ' . • I On the other hand, police who stopped a motorist for drunk driving were hclc1 jusUfied in looking for whiskey. Thei~ \ discovery o! a bottle of gin, hair empty, helped arterward to convict the motorist of dri ving while intoxicated. t'URTHEfUl.tORE, the search ts la\\·ful The dog days of 1970 now nearing their end saw the normal quota 'of hot weather antics by the 'Bureaucracy. by·th~Potomac. Amon.g those worthy of notice were these: · -The Equa1 Employment Opportunity Commission revised its guidelines on employe testing. Henceforth all such tests must measure skills that are relevant to the job in question. What marvelous logic! -The Internal Revenue Service attempted to get library records of who borrowed what books. It was soon frightened oU by the clpmor. ' -Then the IRS reinforced its anti-literacy campaign by ruling that the books received unasked by the na- tion's book reviewers are tax.able income to be declared as such at market value in computing the:reviewer's gross income. · _ . MA.v<-'i::::.1 ..... Reviewers of the books, generally underpaid, likely will be inviting IRS agents to gauge the absurdity of the ruling by trying t.heir hand at sifting literary nug- gets from a landslide of rtiostly wasted words. Income ? Yes, just like sand blown by a Santa Ana wind. ''AS FffiT I LIZf~ WE DON'T -SEEM TO BE 1>01NG MU<H 600~:'. Idea of l1nposin9 P e ace . . -. by World Police Power Fulbright Sounds Like· J. F. Dulles W ASHJNGTON -Strange as this may. seem, J. William Fulbright sounds astonishingly like John Foster Dulles, the maligned sep:~ or st.ate in the Eisenhower administration, in his Jatest proposals for settling the Israeli-Arab problem. There was some- thing haunting- ly familiar in Ful- bright's proposal that peace be im- pased in the Middle East. by a "world police power0 -the United Nations. sec- ondarily enforced by a treaty between the U.S. and Israel. The files finally yielded the notes. research and ~veral drafts of an In- terview with Dulles ·for a magazine arti- cle when he was dying of cancer, apd there it was : Dulles was advocating an international police force to impose set- tlements of international disputes under a greatly strengthened United Nations con- cept. DULLES WAS SKimSH on the sub- jecl When he saw in manuscript that he was proposing an international pallce force he insisted on having it fuzzed up lo read: "Organized sanctiona: to deter those , ' f .,, .......... ---. ' ~-" Richard Wi oon I. that the present cease-fire results from Soviet-American agreement that the east had to be cooled before it involved the superpowers in a confrontation --. ; neither wanted. who would negate the rule of law and principles of justice by aggression." That was the way it was published. This was in 1958 and Dulles was soon ' dead. Memory says-tha~ he had a well formulated idea of an international military force lo_ impose settlements under a much broader body of inter-· national law admiriistered by a new and more effective world organization. J"ulbright .may be no more able to revive the United Nations than was Dulles, but he is going in the same direc- tion and considering all the changes in the world since 1958 the way might con- ceivably be easier today than then. The reason it might be easier is that it is easier to get along with Russia than in 1958, and no "world police pawer" is con- ceivable without cooperation between the two great superpowers. SUCH COOPERATION is implicit in Fulbright's proposal. He eschews the nicety of the Nixon administration in maintaining that no settlement is being "im~d," whereas it is clearly obvious- So there is very little purpose in castigating Fulbright because he wants a treaty wilh Israel to back UP' a U.N. en- forced settlement but simply desires lG get out of Vietnam without any residual · assurances to the South Vie tnamese. In the manner of an afterthought he applies his Mideast theory to Vietnam also but with very little likelihood that anyone would ever agree with it. NOR IS THERE TOO much likelihood tha t the Nixon administration will find the Fulbright proposal pra ctical. The firs t reactions were of astoni$hmenl. lsrael does not wish to satisfy Fulbright's desire that it get out of the territories it has occupied in exchange for U.S. guar. antees of its future. This is a -he<1,vy commitment for the United States to take on unilaterally in the present atmosphere of disillusionment over Vietnam and disengagement by the Nixon administra- tion from such direct responsi bilities. What remains is Fulbright's id ea of revitalizing the U.N. as a world police force which he says it was intended to be in the first place. This seems rather dreamy in today·s world and considering pouglas Resorting to New WAS HI NGTON -Justice William 0 . Douglas is res0rting to a new strategy in fig hting the House drive 16 impeach him. The ultra-left jurist is brushing aside as inapplicable those chprge.s of improper conduct made against him by House members, and is flatly maintaining that the only basis on w~ich he can be im · peached is "indictable'' or •·criminal" grounds. This extraordinary clai m is categorical- ly rejected by House Republican Leader Gerald Ford, Mich. Citing numerous precedents a n d authorities to the conlrary. F o T d vigorously assserts that "conduct of a federal judge properly subject to im· peachment need not be 'indictable' or 'criminal,' and might even consist of con- duct which would be blameless if com· milted by a private citizen." Allen-Goldetuith strategy: (1) TO rt1AKE IT appear that Congress, in seeking to oust him, is at· !empting to ''increase its own power (and) to subject another branch of the government) to its domination." (2) To dismiss the various charges nf misconduct against Douglas. and to maneuver lhe oJ)poSition 1il!At1He 'po~tion of arguing the issue of hiS removal !!IOlely on Rlfkind's thesis of limited im· peachment power . Striking directly at these diversionary tactics, Rep. Ford declares : or "criminal" grounds. For Congress to challenge a ·jurist on any other basis is. in Rifkind'9-opinion, an atttempt t o •·subvert the CQnslitutional system which ha s proven its value over nearly two cen- turies." IN SUPPORT OF this thesis, Rifkind cites a few authorities and prooounc.e- ments. Rep. Ford 's retort is to brusquely brand these references as J'to a cons- iderable degree grounded nn historical in· accuracy." "For example," says Ford. "Rifkind claims that past impeachment proceed- ings, notably that of Justic Chase, con- clusively establish that impeachment would lie only for 'criminal conduct' or ·crimina l of(enses.' The plain fact is that Loss of Freedom ' ' -' Ma ilbox ' . ' _, Tn the Editor: the low state into which 1he U.N. has fallen. But It is at least worth noting that the older men grow (Dulles was 70 when he talked about an international police force) the more they tend to revert to the absolute necessity for an international peace-keeping organization under rules of international Jaw. TlllS \\'OULD BE especially true of Israel which is not only a natio n but the ancest.ra l home of the Judea-Christian and Moslen1 civilizations. If international cooperation is to be of use anywhere it surely would be there. Du 11 es thought .that Russia would change, and Russia has changed. As he was dying he was looking ahead 50 or 100 years when new internation a l mechanisms backed up by "organized sanctions'' would enforce pea<;e in the world. He was filled with missionary zeal . · Fulbright, apparently no longer content with mere carping, has also found a cause. As unreal as it may be in many aspects, the central thought has a recognizable va1idity rising above cynical attitudes about the worthlessness and waste of the U.N. but it I.$ revolutionary; It means direct military cooperation between the U.S. and Russia and un- believable forebearance by Israel and the Arab world. Strategy !he Chase impeachment m c re I y established that impeachment was not lo be a purely partisan weapon." Similarly. Rifkind cites as an authority the late ''illustrio~enator Elihu Root." AGAIN CURTLY dismissing Rifkind's argument, Ford declares, "The Root quotation was clearly taken out of con- text. Carefully read, the quoted language does not in fact support Rifklnd's pro- position. Other action by Senator Root established the very contrary.·· • Ford points out that there have been nine federal judiciary impeachments in the history of thlie counlry: four wert ac· quittals, two were not defended. one resigned, and two were convicted - Judges Archbald and Ritte r. ''The R.if\incl memorandum ." says Ford , "airily dism isses the principles established. by the Archbald and Ritter cases .. ..the solemn recognition given by the House of Representat ives to the prln· ciples in Cannon's Precedents and the virtually unanimous view of historians and Other authorities ..... that the meaning of 'high crimes and misde- meanors' has: broadened to include elements of 'good behavior.' " By Robert S. Alltn nnd John A .. Goldsmith• FOR ONE THING, the search is not If. alter the car is stopped. police observe : lawful If the motorist was stopped on a some telltale sign of criminal adlvily. DOUGLAS' .. CHALLEN.GE of t he House's right to impeach him for alleged misconduct is made in a length y "legal memorandum" by Simon Rifkind, N.Y .. former federal judge who is acting as Douglas' atto rne y. This document is being circulated am ong members of the House .Judiciary Committee, which for more than four months has been con· ducting a dawdling and highly criticized investiga tion of Douglas. "The Rlfkind memorandum neglects to reveal that virtually every learned stu- dent of the Constitution since the foun- ding of our government dCnics 1he Va!idi· ty of Rifkind's argument that ·only c r i mi n a I conduct is impeachable' .. .It is an incontrovertible fact that virlu~Jly every recognized legal authority completel y demolishes Rifk.ind 's thesis that only 'criminal conduct' is impeach· able."· \Vhy are The Girls working to give away the freedom and equality which is trumped-up charge, merely as an excuse For example, while an officer was for making the searth. wrilirig a ticket for speeding, a passenger In one case police suspecttd that a cer· in the car shirted his position -ac- tliin car contained illicit lottery tickets. To find out, t.hty halted the ca r for "pass-cidentally revealing a hiddtrfJ'.listoL The iog•on a curve"-even I.hough passing on officer promptly made a se arc h , that particular curve happened 10 be discovering not only weapons but stolen perfectly legal. merchandise as well Under these As il turned out, the police did indeed circumstances, the search was-held find lottery tickcta In the c a r . lawfu l and the evidence admissible in Nevcrtheles&, this evidence was held !.,.. court. ' a.drilliSibl~ll!l-ihere-wan10-0f-coun:e.--the-safest-procedw'.e-for-the-- valld basis for ~ arT'eSt in I.he first police Is to get a warrant beforNTiaking place. their~. But the Jaw ls Jess ifl3islent Nor ls the search lawful, even whni on• warranL for searching a car than for tbttt rully was 1 traffic violation, lf the &earthing a bousc. sarqi has no 'logical rtlation to the The rea.90fl Is obvlous : whisking a car vkllaUon. Thus.' pollce who stopped n out of the Jurisdiction is ea.'lier than motorin for·maklng an ln1proper U·tum whisklnsi a house. were held not Justified lo teatehing the An Americnn Bor Association pub· car for narcoticl. lit: 1trv1ct Jeaturi bu \Vlll B4!rnard. A reque.1t by this column for a copy of lUfkind's memorandum was refused by Rep. Emanuel Cel ller, D-N.Y., 82-year~ld committee chairman, on the ground he had not yet read il Despite this Sett'f)'. an examination of Rifkind's JO.page memorandum reveals tv:o main thrusts behind Douglas' FRO AND CON-Bipartisan House theirs by rlghl of birth in this, our land? critics of Justice Douglas are privately Once they give the govemnent the right raising shafp questions regarding the to dcllne their freedom and equality, they basis of Rifldnd 's employment as h'ave Jost both. Douglas' counsel. ·The constitutional amf!ndment-Whidi ls Being asked are £he follo~·lng : Whether now befog conside red In eongrcss. as an Rilkind is being paid, and if so, how the articles of the Consti tut ion and Its much and by whom? Also. whether amendments. i!I a transfer of powers and · ----- Tuesday, September !, 1970 Rlfkind 's Jaw firm has cases pending rights lnhcrcnl lo the individual mem.· 1---811 GeoJ"fle befort the Supreme C-Ourt; whether he Is bers ol this nation and would spet:iOcally personally representing cllenLs there: remove from women their rights to The editorial page: of the Daily Piloi seek.I to infonn and stim- ulate reader$ by presenting t>J:is new.rpapcr'.1 opinion1 and com- mcntory on topics of intercs! and .1ignificancc, by providing a Dear George: an~. w!to !MY arc. . either freedom or rquRlity. -wtry are teenagers-of-today 11101,-1 -.....,fkind-1-largWlrm-.has..a.n..uten.\lve.~-htlp--the-dear-vromen· htn- conscious of sei lllM 10 ye"rs corporate practice, much of It befo~ Congress has the right and power IQ ~m-ror--vree?1J'fflfmrof-fede t j dg H ruoars f cquently 1n our readers' ophnons-, and bl/ ago? ra u es. e 9Pi-~ r ...,,.,,. define and thereby limit their freedom pre&l?llth1g tht. diverse: t:iew- Dear E.E.: E.E. such courts,, . and the d~ee of thelr equality. ' ! Jn Rlfk:ind s memorandum, he com-~a· NORMAN J. OeGRACE po nts of Informed observtr-1 Because 10 years , 11go teenagers • of today were just little kids. (Boy, the. dlngallngs you get in my business!) Plcte!y •·-·es the numerous charges of ond spokt.tmttn on topic1 of the 'ti'IV1 L•Mr'S l!'M'I tffOl!n •N Wikomt, ........... 11'1' wrl""' ,,~ Improper conduct against 0 o u g I as . 1hou111 _,...., 111ttr ~ 111 • """'°' ,, iu.. ""I'll· • i.. ___ .. Tl'tt rlolll N Clll'lffllM ..,,.,, IO m •Kif .... Olll'llJ. RHkind's ·involved argument is UCIR"U 111111 m:1e1 " ~ All .. ,,,,., ITlll'I fll(IVCN ti• entirely on the CQntentlon that • federal ~11«. INI "''111.,. 9dd-.n. fllil 11t111tt ,,..~ "Ot wttlllltN ~ """""' tt tllflltfflll tt•-" UllfWlll judge is lmpeachable only on ''Indictable" 'OI"' wiu 1111 111 .wi1...._ ' • \ Robert N. \Vced. Publish~ • ' C> k " h• N w tt h' rr IE tt V• p· ·b. N a " A w g s ,-h • y e L !1 I; H " y ti A n ~ t ' i: s I l i ' ' • I • •• • • -· •• • ' CHECKING •UP• • _,Hosp~tal COnditions Draw Fire Tu~sd~y. !eptembtr 1, 11}70 DAILY PILOT 7 . '.,l'eamsters Stage Impromptu, Strike Most Salinas · G~owers .flolding Out I SALlNAS,, Cali!. (AP) -workers are still 1trlklna 40 banners re a *cl Ing "Citizens Union contract called for $1 .IG Growers hCld fast to their major growers, w~ refuse to against United " and American an hour, five ctnts above Men~ave. B. et· ·t·e·'l''----"""'""~''"-"~'-1.!!~:::C'" conlracl! wlth lhe Teamster! recogni~·the UF oc. '!lags said they had no union wages ror organlie~ WQf):ers. -•-. ~Union today u _thousands oe ln 1 major brli'akthMua:h, sanctlqri. Another major g r l w e r , , 1 Califortill. Nunes Msocialion acre, of ripe produce lay lnterh•rvest Co., 'ij;-~alad · No · ~sters spokesmen Ric'n Pac Foods, Inc., report!<! official charged Moodaf that k bowl'·,1 b1'••est I et tu c e were ayailable for comment. 1,100 acres of its strawberries unpic ed in lbe ninth day or a oo remained unwatered a n d conditions are .so bad~ at the Saliruu: Valley lettuce strike. producer, parted rank.!· with Despite the cooling plant unpicked state1s helpllals for......mentaUy , _ _.,ee.,, .. ar-Chave1' United Farm. 0~'! gro"."th"'1lFW8'tld shippers by ,tncldent!, the fiO.mile long "They ~oo't let our foremen lll -~ tall oa..z....i th 1 s1gn1ng w1 OC over the valle · rod t• ~11.1 men rei.Nucu __ , ____________ W_o.ti.e.Ls-O.r.g-a.n.1.:1 1.n.g-weeken J, .• P uc ion c r el._ t _inJ9jo:l&ate.::.said..P~ Pac :---4heYc"onstitute a m-iitter of • Committee eatlmated 5 000 ' u P w a r "ir in-ederal·state President Anthony Grcich. ' r d R Aid ' Some l ,OOO workers returned m.a r.k et Ing stat 1"st1'cs, "We 're not 1·us11os·1ng a crop, STATISTICS SHOW a wife cook! 40 meals on the average for her husband for each restaurant meal he treats her to. ls that cricket? ... AM NOW ADVISED a baseball. will fl y farther and faster through dry air than through humid air. Definitely. , .A matrimonial c o u n s e 1 o r of lengthy experience contends those three men most ipt to di· Vorce their wives are the prizefighter, the actor and the bartender. THE PERFECT GIRL - Now some old boy has averaged out the v l ta I statistics of all the Pt1iss America winners. To come up with a'picture of the perfect girl. Quite a beauty, no doubt. She is a blue-eyed, brown- haired young lady, aged 19 yea rs 2 months. She comes · either from Philadelphia, or Los Angeles. And she stands 5- fj!et-6, weights 123 pounds, and tape measures 34:y,.24.351,~. How do you stack up against such an imaginary .female, young lady? Satisfactorily, J trust. OPEN QUEST I ON - Among dogs, why is it the male is harder to housebreak th.in the female? . IF A GIRL chooses brave brigrrt colors in her clothing, she's apt to be insecure. Such is lhe contention oI a Penn State researcher ' n a m e d Beverly S. Cave. She says her tests among coeds there indicate the flashier t h e FJllld Backed By Cranston WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Alan Cranston <n:s:alif.), says he supported a $200 miHion fund to help the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. con- tinue producing CSA aircraft for both security a n d economit reasons. Cransl.ott said the CSA 'fas needed for defense reasons a11d bankruptcy for the huge aerospace• firm would mean loss of jobs throughout the country. • clothing, the less confident the girl. . .IT WAS CAUFORNlA, as all the world knows, where the gold rusherS' went with such abandon. But In each of the last 20 years, South Dakota has turned out more gold than any other state. And who is rushing there? Nobody. I don't get it. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Which has the better sense of humor, men or women'!" Men, certain1y. That• 1 generally accepted. Women, however, have the better sense of sentiment. Which i1- almost as important. But not quite. · CONS I DE R THIS - Understil'l1d the science. boys have found out air pollution throws a significant batch of ammonia and nitrogen onto the soil. These fertilize. They boost crop yields. Remember that, sir. If you ever decide to become a gentlemarl farmer, better get yourself a little pJac_e downwind of town. NOTE IT CLAIMED the most widespread use of silver is in coins. That's wrong. It's in photographic film ... AS TO THAT CITIZEN who has personally viewed the most U.S. Presidents, mu st be Seatt1.e·s ~1. R. Morley who has seen 11 ... OUR -LOVE AND WAR MAN reports !he chances now ate only 1 in 19 that a bride ever will nin home to her mother. SOFT DRINK SA.LES go up as the tapwater gets pollulier and pollutier. Did you realize the bottlers now are turnint out twice. as much e<>P as they produced 10 years ago? .. ~ NOW I KNOW WHY you don 't hear much about that tactful, soft-spoken ' Mr. Mar Ion Brando anymore. He's the observer w ho said, ''Emphasizing a woman's hips is like putting falsies on a cow." Your quesnon! and com- ment! are wefconM!d a.nd wilt be wed in CHECKING UP wherever possible:. Ad· dress Letter1 to L, ·M. Boild, P.O. Box 1875, Ntwporl Bea.ch, Ca.lif., 92640. life and death" for staf an e ..A.. .A. to the Interbarvest lettuce ly d patients. eagQJf, w w 1:f fields Monday, but a handful appar:nt t I ue to l he we're losing our plant!." I led ~ of Teamsters Union members p r 0 u c 0 n return of The company will lose The charges were eve at • M C }J Jntcrharvest, producers of 15 .. a news _conference called by Questio eany a s shut down the company's two perceiit of the nation's lettuce. m11I_1ons ol dolla~s, he said, the CNA. cooling plants by picketing. lnterharvest, a subsidiary of adding that Pie n Pac will B tt E d A coffipany spokesman said United Ffuit Co., signed a two press a suit today accusing J'ame.s Gallagher, CNA Water Vs·age oyco n lruck drivers were~permilted ye~r conti:a~t with Chavez' lnlerharvesl of violating • ~nomic coosultant, said an to enter with produ-ce., but union providing a $2.10 first· grower~· agreement. example. of conditions is a SACRAMENTO (AP) SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -were threatened with ph)'licat year h~rly wage and $2.IS In· Grcich refused lo talk with violent episode at Agnews AFUlO President George harm by lhe pickets as they the s~~ plus 10. cents an Chavez saying, "This ls a State Hospital last July 15, Gov. Reagan's top natural Meany, hailing a successful tried to leave. hour in fi:rnge benefits. revolution or .something. It wbi.Ch he described as a riot, rtlOUrCeS advisor has warned effort to organize-vineyard • The • pickets who carried The withdrawn Teamsters isn't a strike ... -- in which women patien.ts U.S. Interior Secretary Hickel workers , . says h I s 1r==============:;::::;::::;::::;::::;:::~:;;~~;;;;;;:~=====, attacked . three nurses, two he his 10 major reservations organization's bocyott of patients stashed their wrists in about a huge federal water Calllomia· table grapes is suicide at.tempts .and furniture d.Jversion project but be officiaUy over. was snashed and used for C o m me n t i n g at the •~ped just abort of outright California Labor Federation weapons. op.-ition. "-t' M d h "We consider the situation ,..... vunvcn ion on on ay, e Norman B. Livermore, slate noted the success of Cesar· to be extremely grave," resources agency chi e'f, Chavez' AFUJO U n It e d Gallagher said. "Lives are informed Hickel he w as Farm Workers Organi.rJ.ng being threatened and lost. Jt is concerned the East Side Committee. a life and death matter in our Project, proposed to send The boycott, he declared In state hoapitals now." Northern California wate r a keynote speech. "is an Margiret, Nichols, assistant south to irrigate farms along • exam'ple of the AFUIO cba1nnan of ·the n u r s e s the ea.st side of the . San giving strength and internal ass o c I a t Ion 's steering Joaquin ·vaftey, may leave resource.3 to help people who committee, contended that inadequate water supplies 'in aren't able. because , of under.s.talfing at most Qf ~he the . Sacramento-San Joaquin adverse economic conditions, institutions is "so acute that stream system. to help themselVes." HAMS .. So 'Good It Will .. Haunt You ·'Til lt'1 Gone" RETAIL STORIS 1700 E .. t Cff•t Hl9hw..,, C•r•11• ftl M•r-'11·;001 1222 S, lrookhur1t, Anah•lm 6U·2461 the lives 2f nurses are imperiled," .---------------"'------------...:.·------------------.. In Sacramento. spokesmen for Dr. James V. Lowry, state director of mental hygiene, said they knew not h ing previously about any trouble at Agn~s. Gallaher declared working conditions at all s l a t e bospitals have deieric.'ated apt)ttCiably since 1967, when staffing cuts were made. Cyclists Held In Bomb Probe CREl;CENT crTY (AP) - Investigation continued today in'9:the cases oC fiv~ members of Uie Devil's Disci ple s metorcycle club arrested here Monday in connection with the bomblq'.of an officer's car. Sheriff Tom Lawre y withheld names of th e arrested men but said they were . being investigated for assiult with intent_ to eommlt murder. COMMUNITY EVENTS SEPT. 9th WELCOME TO . NEW TEACHERS Ntwport Harber High Luncheon 11 :45 Sponso1-ed by Women's Division Chamber of Commerce ARTIST OF THE MONTH Oil p1inlin91 · bv Mti. luc:IU• Hou1• "''" b• 011 cll1pl1v I~• moflth of Sopl•l'lbtr. Mn. Ho111• c:•m• to 01•n9• C011ntv four v11r1 •90 from th • Northw••'· A m1mb1r of +h• O r•119• Ari A11ri., M;,, Hou•• J i1,l•v• • wid• c:hoic• of 1ubi•c:l1 -pro• ¥idin9 1om•thin9 ~f int1r•1I for I W•fyOfl•. ' NOW! 4WAYSTO EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! ... CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS ···--- NOW PLAYING Only on Cablevision • ''AMERICA'' Stont119 Uonel larryinore l'EWPORT: Mon.-Fri. 1t 9 PM; tlso Set., 5111. .t 6 PM. MlssloN VIEJO: Mon. Vkd., Fri. et 9 PM. Ne-before on~ Cont TV: the origNI, lllc:lll dasic. Locol • STARTING MONDAY. SEPT. 7th "ROSHOMON" J•P•lltM Tw•rd Wl11Mf, Vet1lc• 'II"' fati"'I -Grll!Mt Priw 1912. Ac•6tmy •-• -Int ferel111 f'h11. ' Channel l Cablevlllon Call 642·3260 "There's More To Su On Cable TV!" INSTALLATION $14.95 ' MONTHLY SERVIC! '6.50 ' ' -- • • 5 25 3 gu111ntlld , O annual • rat• 90 Day Certificate Accounts* 5.39% Annual Yield lf all savings and Interest remain a year. N·o minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from dale of deposit. 6 3 .guarantHd 0 annual rate 5 75 3 guorantHd 0 annual • rale 1 to 10 Year Certificate Accounts* 5.92% Annual Ylold If all savings and Interest remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 7. 5 3 guaranteed 0 annual • rile ·. 2to10 Year Certificate Accounts* 6.18% Annual Yield 1 Year Certificate Accounts* (Adjullobl• ratu lor 1horter 11nn1) 7.79% Annual Ylold , If all savings and interest remain a year. $5,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. 1f all savings and interest remain a year •. $100,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. Earn from date of deposit • • S% Pa11book Account. Curren I Annual Rate. Nl><ltllnlmum deposit Dally compounding. lntereat day-in to day-oul . . . . Cal!f.Q!!!!"!.~4.~!!!!.h;,§.~!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL . ""'""•• -1 i l ,_:j COS_TA Mli$A OF.El.CE: 1 2700 Harbor Blvd. nett Adama • 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGE~ . qonvtnl1nt Offic11'1hroughoul Los .Angeles, Orang• •nd Ventura Counties AttOtnlt.. ,,. ln•ur.d' tlJI to $20,IJOQ utldtt prOYl•IOl'll of fl• '""•' t11Y1n111 a LMn tn1111•rte• ~n>o11t1an! • "'"''"•"\ 1~11cy ol •~• Un!lff auw. Gow111m1nt. • • • I· • •• I ., j • I DAILY PILOT For Th-e Record Marriage Licenses Death l'Votlcer ATKINSON l!lelftOI' !, AlklMOtl. AM 51, of ll51t VIiie 0.1 />Mr, Plly1 dll A..,, D1!t o( clMltl, Au111111 30. su ..... lved by husi..nd. Dr, Rober! E .Alllln10111 ton1, J""" 1nd Mlch11t; dauthrtrs. Aober!1 011111 11\d l11<Y Ptr1,,,,s; 1nd 12 •r1~lll!dren. Aowrv, lorl!ohl, Tueod11, 1:30 PM. At · oaulem MIH. We<1~1d1v. ' AM, both ti St. An11111l1 Cl!l>O!lc (11.,rch, Wt1lcht1· t...-. tnlermeflf, Holl' .CtMi Ctmt11rY, Smlrll1 Mol"lu1rv, Dlr..-1111'1. CAAPf;,tT•ll l'~rolt H. C1""""'fff. 7260-11 \'11 P....rt1, LH Ulll Hiiis. O.!t of '"'"'· Au1inr ,., survived by wfi., H1l1n1 '°"'' Seflttc<" c.Mll E. C1rl'l9flflJI', NltWPDrl llMcfl, i nd CloMld C1rl>9(!ler, S.n GJbrl<lh 111- ,..., M.-.. ll:ulfl Yount. S1111!1nd; •I~ 1r1!>ddo1taren. St rv!cts were Mid '°"'"' Tuetdt'f. l PM. P~c!llC v ...... Ch~~I. lnltrment. P1cl!lc View Memorl11 P1rk. f1mll"f' """'"'' ltlau wlslll"9 lo .mt~e ..._,111 c""lrlbu!lon1 p11e•• con!rlbute ta 11\e Fr•ni; H, C•rpenltr M...,..,,111 Fund •I ,,.. Churcll "' Ille AbldiM Sav- ior. El Toro. Peclllc v i .... Mor1u•rl'• D!rtcior1. GOLDAINI! Ml l'IC S. Gol<Uolne. lU E. Oc1en F1onl, ll1lbo•. D1te of -In. Autu1! ». 5u•- Vlved by 1111 .... Ml11 llll Gald•lnt. 1111· l>lls., llos•rv, I PM, lonltfl!, Tutld•v: ltt1111ui.n. Miu, WedMHltY. ' AM. both 11 Our L•dV of Mt. C.r""'t C•lholic Cl'lllrcll. lnllrt'Mftl. Mooty 5ei>Ukller, 111111 C•I• Mine Mortu1rv, Dlrtclor .. IClfCAHUNA Miki M. Kelll"f• ... son CMrvl Or .. H.,.,11.,.ton llHcti. survived bv l'lulhlncl, •kMrd D.1 detltll!tr, M1rl111; !Nf!Wlr. Mn. lltn M•IWO; bro ..... r. Norjtedl M1lluo1 1nd two 1l111r .. 5ervlcirs. W.0- .,.Hl•Y· lO:JO AM. Pre-F1mUv Colonlll Funtrt1 Home. MONTGOMlllY !"trl M"""°"''"'· n1 Vlf'llllll P1Kt , CMlt Mis•-0.te of -•II. ""'"'' :JD. Slltvtwcl bl' •llt. Frl MH! two Mll\t, Jt mn H., Coslt MOii, J-llobertr., Norin Holl\'WIDI; two dtuohltrs, Mn, a ... ertv PGM<1, Nllrttl Holl.,.,..oedr M,., l lfllll l .... J.., Fr._rt, G1111d BtNMlll 1l11tr. Mt1. M1rlt Ar,,.,ld. S111 Btr,,,r· dll\01 brother. Ltont rd Monltomtrv. FDfl. 1•M. Gr•.,. 1ld1t 1ervlce1, Wednffdtv. , PM. M(Hi!KllO M•mo•l•I Par'k. Stll .,,.,,n11,,.,. e.1111 Cos!• MHI Mortu.rv. Dlrtclorl. SAL.AU.It ltuMtl Stl•ror. 3111 5, 11111 W1v. s.1111 ....... O.tt of c111111. Au9Ull 21. Survived bv wrtt. S.tlv1 '"'" cllllclrtn. Lb•, S!111t11111t •rid JoM ;per..,11. Mr. •nd Mrl. Stlvadl>r Sllt!tr, El PlllO; 1l1t1r, Lui Chntrn. Vlsl!t llon. T!>lldlv. 10 ta J, llt tUll Morlutf'Y, .n21 8rooklvn. E11l LM A1111eln. Servle11, Wtd11e1<11v. ' PM. P•clflc V!Nf (l\11MI. Prlve!t ln!1ttn1~1. Ptcl!lc View Memorlal Ptrk. P1clllt Vlww M0<'1ut rv. Oi•eclon. STAUSS Cl••• M. 511111.•. 1M1'1 21111 St , Newpart '"ell. O.lt of c;leam. Aut1u1t :11. 5ur- •'1vtd by l'lu1bllld. Eowl"~ <l•utllllr, 011111 G•rrtU; P1rlflll. M~. •lld Mrl. C, w. 51,.,,,._1; brolll.,.. Ernlit Marrl11 9r,lldl\'lo!ll•r. Norm• W!lk1~110ll. tll from Al•tctcltro. S1r>1lce1. Wt<lnel<llV. 1 PM, Ptcll!c VI-Cll8HI. Pacl!IC vi .... Mor· tu1rw. Olrtctors. WOODWAllD 'E"""I Wood'w•r<I. Aff 7l. ot '7'11 0cffn Aw .. H.untln910ll 8eecll. SuNh19" bv sliltr, Ml1P Ulll1n Wood'w•r<I. Strvlces, W~ntS01v, 1 PM,. Smlt~I C"'HL tnter- ,,_,, Good Si'll<>fttr.d Ct<Yltlerv. $tnllh6 Morlutrv. D!rtctan. ARBUCKLE 6 SON Westcllff P.tortuary a7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa -• BALTZ MORnJARIES Corona dtl Mar OR S-1450 Cotta Me1a Ml 1-ZtU • BELL BROADWAY MORnlARY 111 8r01dway, C01ta MeN u 1-3433 • McCO~DCK LAGUNA BEACH MORnJARY 1715 Lapn1 CanyOI Rd. 4M-MIS • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK «Amel.ery e Mortuary Chapel ) N:opo~~':c:~e~~• lff.!'111 • PEEK FAMILY COU>NIAL FUNERAL HOME ----'ll01 Bolu Ave. • We1tmhu1t r m.s5!5 -· SHEFFER MORTUA RY Llpna BtlC~ 4M-I W Su Clemente 4f!.OI• • SMITH$! MORTUARY m Mila SL e .. u.,..._ - futsday, Sept;mbtr 1, 1970 Humm-dinger Ecologist Gets Group Post LAGUNA Jf!LLS Ecological emphasis will be added to the meetings of the Orange Coast division of California Retired Teachers. Paul W. Colburn of Laguna l lills, naturalist, 39 • y e a r teaching veteran and perfector of the now fami l ia r hummingbird feeder, w i I I chair the retired teache rs' organization. Si~ winning a medal for an essay on birds at 15. Colburn has been interested in nature. A native of San Diego Cou nty and graduate of Pomona and Claremont Colleges in biology. he centered his teaching career in Southern California .. He also followed h i s interests as a seasonal naturalist wi th the National Park Service and as a former director of the Tucker Bird Sanctua ry in Modjeska Park. While head ing the sanctuary, he perfected lhe hummingbird feeder whi ch Students and friends made and sold at a dollar each. Proceeds from the 50,000 feede rs they sold helped support , the sanctuary -and presumably fed more than a f e w Among numerous or- humn'iingbirds. organizations of which Colburn is a member are the National Audubon Society and the Save the Redwoods League. His wife , Helen, was a refugee from the Russian re voluLion. They met as students at Pomona College. The Orange Coast Division ·of California Retired Teachers draws its membership from more than 600 former teachers living in !he area from Huntington Beach to San Diego, according_w to Mrs. Harriet E. Bowline, of Laguna Hills. Another 250 retired teachers from California and other states make up the Retired Teachers' Club at Leisure World. "Since Colburn is a popular lecturer on nature lore, we may expect some of his scholarship and wisdom flow into the meetings and sharpen our interest in ecology," Mrs. Bowline said. Hughes Man to Gain Local Firm Control? SANTA ANA -A ~aring under the existing manage- has been set here for Sppt. 15 ment." on a reorganization plan for an The Mahell plan will reduce Irvine Industrial c 0 mp I ex the. existing 386,000 shares of Elpac common stock by a 1 firm which would give Robert . for 4 reverse split with A. Maheu, chief executi ve of app roual of shareholders.· On Howard Hughes' N e v a d a completion of the plan, Maheu operations, majority control of would own about 2,103,000 the company. shares of the new stock and Federal referee A a r o n the existing holder.s would own Phelps set the hearing date on about 96,000 sha res. the plan which was submitledl,jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij/ by Maheu, for reorganization of Elpac lnc., a manufacturer of electronics components for computers. Elpac has been operating under Chapter XI or the Bankruptcy Act since January and Elpac president B. C. Danner said today he agrees in principal to the proposal. He said Maheu is acting ror himself and not for the Hughes organization. DIAMONDS AND ESTATE JEWELRY PURCHASED "\Ve have been working on the proposal with Maheu for some time,'' he said. ··with approval of ·the plan, the com· pany will continue· to operate South Co•ll Pt•r• Bri1lol •' th1 Sen 0 <190 f•v. Co•fa M111 540·9066 >I <. 0 0 .... ..J < :;: 0 z < Q. ..J u I I • • I NEW CAREER OPPORTUNITY! L•A"N INCOM• TAX PR•PARATION Tttouaands .,. "mini good money m th• •••l-ifrowi1t1 O.ld of ~I k1com9 111 Hl"lice. TM work 11 I,._. mn\tng and utWy4ng. AAd ll'MI dem1nd tor tr.tned ~ ii lncr.-ng •Kh ,,.,, Now, H & R lklcll-AIMrka'a larges! lnCOfl'l.9 T11 S.rv• D---wtU tHcll you "'-'" axcl u.lve method ol preparing JnqoMe ... returr., In·• .,.cl1l 12 ,...k tulllOfl courw. ~ by ••~ Block klatruclor1. Couree ~current t•• llWI, lhHf)', •ltd 1ppllc•tlon ~ " pt"tctked lfl H I A ltock olflct• from cNll lo cont. Feetur98 incktde: • 24 .... ...ion. (2,., WHk) • ctiolc'9 of dep Md cl ... tlrnH • Dtp-.. 8W8fded UpOn 9r1ctu.ll011 • IErnp~l (full or pert Urne) for qutilin.d ....... CLASSES START SEPTEMBER 14 • Pl1111 lel'ld mt lfH 1n101m•tlon 11boul tt11 1971 H&R B10fle lncomt Tu Cou~. This la 1 request for 1nlor1n11• ilon ol'lly •nd pitc:n me undtr no obll;1tlon to enroll . OP 9.1 ""'"---~~~---~~--~-~~ (') r ,, z 0 ;:: I> r ... 0 0 I> < •• Discuss Sign Vse,· Airp~t Space ~P·roud Bird~' S~ek County Nest SANTA ANA -The "Proud Bird Witb-ihe -eoJden Tall'' has not and may not eyer fly out of Orange County Airport, but Continental Airlines has 1nade a "landing" al Anaheim Convention Center. The firm owns two ele<;lrical signs at the ~nter and is about to battle county Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw over alleged "possessory interest" in the installations. Conti-nental has also received Ci vi I Aeronautics Board tCAB) approval to fly out of the county airport but has not yet requested terminal building space from the Board of Supervisors. The terminal is overcrowded today, having been constr u cted in 1963 to accommodate about 300,000 commercial passengers per year. Currently, more than one million passengers are using lhe facility. And lhe supervisors are expected to hold to the one -million figure if Continental asks to bring their Proud Bird to Orange County. Attempting to make certain that the board turns down Continental are the city ot1-=:::=:;:::::::==========i.-:;:=:::====::;-:==--=----""New1>0r1 Beach,-the-Ne'Wport I - Airport Anti-noise Committee us and ·30,000 residents .of the Upper Newport Bay area . So ContinentaJ will face a us difficult task in g e t t i n g permissiori to exercise its CAB-approved franchise to fly from Orange County to various points in the state and the Pacific Northwest. On the other hand, the airline has a pretty firm foothold at the convention center. A long·term lease exists for the outdoor, ·,electrical billboard and the arena scoreboard. Contlnentel paid for both installations a·nd uses them for advertising purposes. Hinshaw has assessed the airline $122,500 for possessory interest in the signs and John Woodlock, director of taxation matter,s for Continental has served notice that his firm will appeal the Lax. S.. hldlclo PSA hangs around where you live. With Olldli.. 160 flights a day and lowest air lares; In the meantim~. Continental got a $30,630 reduction In the o r i g i n a I assessment o nthe signs last week. The difference, Chief Deputy Assessor Jack Vallerga told supervisors was due lo a "compulation" erior. S.CJ ••D picks up where we leave off. When you .. 1 S..Jcm we're within easy reach-. And PSA Valcar __._ *=.:: rent a Valcar you save 30o/o overHertz 1.-........ and Avis rates, based on average mile. P$A ' Ollllwto ... age. Air yourself out. Call your lravel 9"$.JIDll S........ 1111enl or PSA. 2nd hanger lrom lht !ell. -a llfC l I ' ' I • • ' 'i ,. • On t he inside cover of every phone book are spaces .:fo_r those telephone number.s you migh t need in an emergen.cy-such as th e pohce, .the fii:e department, your docto r. Make sure now that the spaces are fill ed in with the pro per numbers. Just:-in case of emerge ncy. @Pacific Telephone w~re here to help. • ' ' • • ,. I .. ., .. f; .. .. .; :· :: ·: '• ·. . ~: :· :: :· ,• . : " .· . : :: :· .. ·: ·: . . " E E. By As Fa le! grou ) threa nego1 Harr U.S. Sy at ti be for Oran Coun A ' Syn .o\mb. 1967 was Ame1 Arnet r.·as "K capa' Feda been "1' comr agge not a of p< clan< - - A ft '" plOl~t .... ·~ ""'' l llU • '" elUto "~· F1: - -· ~ -.-------- • - -· Expert Eyes Mideast Ex-envoy Says Guerrillas ·small Threat By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 !flt DtllJ '11•1 f llll As they now stand. the J?elestinian Arab commando groups do 11ot pose a serious: threat to the P.fldeast peace negotiations, according t o Harrison Symmes, l o r m e r U.S. Ambassador to Jordan. S y m m e s spoke recently ;it 1heo New porter In n before 160 members or the Orange County World Affairs Counci l. A specialist in Arab affai rs. Symmes ser-ved as Ainbassador to Amman from 1967 to June of this year. He \\'as recalled after ihe ariti- American riols in which the An1erican military attache "'BS killed . combar-patrol . ut they fte not capa.ble or standing against trained artillery and lnianlry or a police or m·llitary for " e slated. Symme aid another factor working aga t the Fedayeen groups is Internal strife. ''The varioos commando gr o u p s rarely are in agreement with one anolher and there are even factions withi'.1 each group,'' he explained. Symmes said the acceptance of the U.S. peace plan represents a breakthrough in the Mideast situation although ''there is sti ll a great Oeal of suspicion and wariness on both sides. ••tnthe Orsl 'six monthSor this year, the situation i'n the ltlideast had deteriorated al an alarming rate. \Vhen J was working on the State Depart- ment task force 10 bring American citizens out ot Jordan in June. I thought things had reached the lowest level possible. ''The violence was at its highest leve l sh1ce the Six Day \Var and attitudes had harden· ed to such a . point on both sides of the line that few peo- ple believed a politic:.il solution ~·as possible. ''All talk s had cqme to a complete slop and we could only see an ~g drift toward war with the threat of a U.S.-Soviet confrontation being more than possible." he S.t1id. Symmes said the aCcepta·,1ce • . QUEENIE -'-· -I By Phil lnlerlanclr· "Watch it, Mr. Quigley-you've sl opped paclnl?' again ••. " ~t'6lly, !tpttmbtr t , \970 DAIL V ~lLOT U Confident of Calm Colleges Girdi1ig for Fall ' . . . LOS ANGELES (AP) -·''sick ol the violence, lick or \'Oice.,to Dumke and state col .. 'Though stare college and -tht police, sick.of the tear aai. legc.. prcsld nts. the -Auocia· university official:ii ex press -sick of the substltuUon of em.o-tion or S1ude11t Presidents, confidence that camp!Jses will tional outburSl for rallooality, consisting of a s1udenl repre. be calm this fall, they ha ve or mlndle1s acUon Io r sentatlve from each of the 19 taken measures to prevent discu!1lon." campuses, has been revived, repetition of la st sprina's f'.'elther ' col 1 e & e nor ofHclals said. 1 . . . . un1 vers!Ues plan major ac-Both Hitch and Dumke op- widespread d1srupt1oris 1n the eommodaUons lo 11 1 u d>e n t pose institution of any pro. wake of U.S. ground troop in· demands, officials said. gram such as Pr i nce Ion tcrvenlion in CambOdia. They said slate college University's plan lo allow Bolh UC President Charles judicial procedures have been students a week off before lUlch and state c 0 11 e g e -s1re;1mlined" to place major election da y Nov. 3 lo work for ChanCfllor Glenn s. Dumke student conduct cases In the polllical ca ndidates. h a v e s a id th a t hir.1ds of a hearing off icer ap-D;.liplte condemnations of · ''re constitution·• or classes iu-point~d by the administ ration. can1pus radicllls. both also op- 1o rorums on the war and He w 111 m a k e recom-posed screeni'i1g of n e w other student concrrns will not mendations to .the college students to bar potential be permitted on campuses this president. who in turn is sub-revolufionaries. A spokesman year. ject to i>umke"s review . for Dumke l!Bid such sc reenint: ll ilch annouticed r a cu It y __ T:o;,ipiiroii'iiiiide~siituiid~eiin~tsiiijw--il~h~a iiii•ii•ouiiiiliidiibeiiiiiiiilliiegiiaiilii. iiiiiiiiiiii;;~ guidelines at .the July ·~ 1neeting or the UC regents. DANISH FURNITURI s A L E ..,,·ho \\'ere sharply critical of curriculum cha·ages. primarily A.CCESSORllS ··King Husein is much more capable or controlling the Fedayeen groups than has been appar.ent in the last y~ar. Dog Hero Gets Medal or the pea ce plan and the ----------------------- at the Berkeley campus. 1'\ h-:t';- Dumke said he was merely 4J\tl\ JIJ,A,ll.I restating a year-old policy that - "There are le ss than 20,000 commandos and that's a-n ex· agge rated ~t imate. They are not a militarily effeclive group of people and are limited to clandestine raids and five-ma n • PHILADELPHIA IUPll -· A friendly St.'. Bernard who rou_ted an eight-foot grizzly bear mauling his mistress has been honored as America·s dog hero of the year. subsequent start or three-way talks Tuesday in New York under the auspices of the UN represents "!he fi rst step down a long road -and there are many steps ahead." Symmes noted Egyptian president Gamal Abd el Nassar has received support for the talks while some other Arab nations who disagree with the peace plan "are keeping it to Nation Gets Younger But Oldsters Grow any teacher who dismisses a ' i~let!QfS • iwiports clonl;-~oe 2'40 E.CoAll~°""" Corona clel Mor" class or diverges rron1 tradi- tional curriculum fo r political purposes \\•ill be subject to formal di s<'ipline. No teacher has yet been dismissed on these grounds. he said. Do;I~ 9,30 !oS'la T•I, 673·2?qo ~",.,."'' 1t.+.S &JA -M•s~e,..Ckorg& TAI At11Jt'1 Yfur ~htllt Wht!> VH Cfll'l-k YfY'll Otl Mtrt IYlllltll. 135 .7777 The 180-pound dog, himself named Grizzly Bear, was ac· companie<rto a dinner in his honor by his mistress, fl1rs. David Gralias, 24 , of Denali. Alaska. Artificial Teeth Never felt So Natural Before Now ••• Plutlc Cream DlscoYery Revolutionizes Denture.Woarlnc For the llrit time, ll:>tnce oll'l:r1 • , . , n l _,t co,,.f01f1bly. You may pl••lit cream that· holds dentures bite h1rmr. chew better, eat more 11 they'vll! ne1·tt been htld before-naturally. lonn•an tlutic llM'm bcane that Mip1 F1xoosNT lai;ts for houn. Re1atJ "'111 J'fttf lklilutu lo lilt Mlin-1 /JJ-inoilture. Dtn1ures that lit are ti· IUU of .)'OWT lnOIOf.t. lefllial to health. See your <knti!t I t'1 1 revolutionary d itc.overy "'IUJar!y. Get tQ)'•ti>-u~ FtXOOEi'<T 1:1Ued F1i;oo!NT" for d•lly home Denture Adht11v1 Cream 1.t all uae. (U.S. Patent #3.003,988) drur countera. FJXOO!NT hold1 denturu !irmu ,. themselves . · ··The departure of the right wing elements frorn the Israeli" government has given them a stronger bargaining position:· he noted. lfe said he feels there is a possibillty that peace will be brought to tfie ~1ideasl. "The whole conflict in the li.1ideast , which has gone on for almost a quarter or a cen- tury, is one of lost opportunity. With moderation, flexibili ty and a willingness to accept something less than a max- imum position. the ·peace negotiations eould lead to peace in ihe Mideast," Symmes said. • By Unit~d Press lnlernalional 'fhe nation is g e t ti n g younger, but there are more o\·er-65 Americans than ever. The 1970 census rigures are expe<:·ted to show a con- tinuation or a descent in me- dian age which began about 15 years ago. The tabulations will show that if yoo're over 30 you 're in the minority. If, however, any advocales of a youth take-over point to the youth 1najority as a man- date for dramatic change. they would do well to dig deeper inlo the· statistics. The. median age in the United States. according to Enclopaedia Britannica Re- SAFE DEPOSIT BOX FOR ACCOUNT HOLDERS OF •5,000 OR MORE. (Immediately avallahle ••• no waltlag): +PLUS+ % to ·.IJlterest search Service, '-''as lower 100 years ago than it is today. In 1870. half the population y.·as below the age of 21 . 1'he earliest a \' a i 1 a b I e figures show the median was still younger 150 years ago. In 1820, the n1edian age r or American males was 16.6 and for females 17.i. After that there was a climb of a year or so every JO years. At the turn of the century half the nation's males we; e under 24, half the females under 23. The 1950 census showed the median age for males was 29.9. for lemales 30.5: That was near the high mark . The 1960 census showed a decline -28.S for mal.es, 30 .3 for females. The descent since then ha s been continuous. The chancellor also said he l ~a"' ··indicat ions that the vast majority or students and l faculty arc tired of radicals and extreme dissidents at-i !empting to force their ~·illl upon them.'' But other slate college of- ficials said campus se<:urityl forces have been planning pro-I cedures for possible disturban · ces and impro\'ing relations \\•ilh local law enforcement of- ficers. SeCurity forces will not in- creased staleY.•!dc. offlcials l said, but indi vidual schools 1nay take .their own mea sures. 'University ofhcials poi"11ted' hopefully to Leigh Steinbe rg. new student president at Berkeley. whose Nonviolent Action Party defeated radical slates in spring elections. Steinberg has sai d he ls GOD'S DISPOSITION: God mtd• "'"" •11d •"iov•d •11oci•tin9 wilh him. H• WALKED •nd lALICED with Ad•m 1t1d Ev•, "'-111 ih• cool of th, d•y," Ge11 . l rl . • E11och WALKED with God •nd w•1 .,,. f•tmed 10 higl>.ly l't.et lie 11tY•r died, buf God l•1n1l •ltd him i11!0 H••"•fl, G.11. S:14. God m•d1 mt!> 1piril111I, i11 Ir.ii •"'" im191 •nd li~tlltll, l61n. 1:161 10 th<1I He co111t! 111 •1 PLEASURE i11 men, hi 1 crt1lur1. Rev. 4:11 IKl119 J1 •. l ibl•l. God'1 DISPOSITION wt1 lo bt • COMPANION to men. l 11t m•n cho1nq1d thi1 b~ b1comin9 rebtllio111 end t vil, Ge11. 6:~-1. ONLY the ri9hfec111n•11 of No1h or1v•11l1d T.OT AL d•1iruc- lion of"·'"· God'1 DISPOSITION NOW;, lo SAVE m111 ETERN. ALLY for PLEASURE: !botk God'• 111d m111'1I i1> H., .. ,,., J11. 3:16; 1 Pt!. J:9. l ut God 11y1, "'-I h1v1 no PLEASURE in th1 d11 !h of the WICKED-:' E1~. Jl:l\. Aho. "-!hi.Lord tlriv God ;, e co111umin9 fir -," low 11d wick ed p•ople, D1ul. >1 :14. Ev•ll J11u1 "--'<h i ll bt !I Yetl•d frem ht•"'"• witk t.i1 mitt.ty 11>9•1•, I" ll•111i119 l irt l•ki11t ~•n9t1>ct 01> thtm lhtl k1>ow nol God-:• 2 lh•u. 117-•. 1,., .dailiot1, "-if th1 ri9hl1ou1 1c1rt1ly b• ••~•d, wh••• 1h1ll tlr.1 untodly •nd lh• 1innt• •PP•t•7'". P.1. >1 :11. W, .11 NOW h••e out cho1t1c• to bt • COMPANION with ~od th,outhoul •+tr11ity •1 k• d11ir••· THAT i1 God"1 DIS,OSlltON. Wh•I ii YOUllS1 Ar• you di1po1•d lo lo .. • God, ob•v him 0tftd bt 1•vtd7 Wrilt or pkon1 fo r FREE bookl et Oft G1d'1 w•v of 11t•1lion . Cl>iurth of Christ, 217 W. Wil1on St:, Collt Mt1•, Ct lifo1ni1 91617. Phot1• ii41-571 I, 545-2441. 6o411o-576 J. BACK TO THE BOOKS $2,500 IN PRIZES· • 15 sets of $149.90 Britannica Junior Encyclopaedias • 3 sets of 3-volume 569.50 Webster's htternational Dictionary • 3 sets of Britannica's Deluxe S.35 Warld Atlas 21 Places to Win These marchants invite you to enter-the DAILY PILOT'S bia BACK TO THE· BOOKS BONANZA at th•ir :1;toras anytim• from now until "closi ng time on Saturd1y, Sept. 5. Nothing to buy; winn•r need not b• present to win. Use coupon below, entry bl ink avail1ble at stores or a Teason1ble f1cslmile of either. Drop them in entry boxes at the•• locations. A.111111"1 Fine 5ho•• D111.,i1-lro"" Apptio11r;•1 Ho11M ef Torry J. c. '""¥ c •. 24$ For"t ..,.,,, 411 1. 17tti St. $011th Ce•t ,, ••• F....-ie11 lt.1•114 L .. 1111• loMh Coit• M"e H•rlMr Cellttr J .. 11 Dehl H1111t1119t .. ._.h l•rr Jow•l•rs F .. hio11 Gollory W"tcllff '*"• N•w,.rt IHch w .. 1cllff r1 ... 660 N. Cocru Hlthw•y Now,ort t..&111 lohtott•s Dept. Sto,. 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So open or add to your account today, as little as fJ,00~ Th• experienced pfacs ••• the professional pf ace ll~TWOOD 11601 Willhire at Sin ViCtl'llt LAGUNA IEACH 292 South Coast H11hw1y LYNWOOD (HoriteOfflce) 111 ?O Loni Bitch BO\l ltvard NORTHlltlDQE 9036 R1s1d1 lllvd.1l Nordhoff ~~~~~~ Euclid Avenue SAM BERNARDINO 1565 East Hi&hland SAN DIEGO 1170 !5th Avenue at B Street WIEST ~RCADIA 1200 S. "'JClwln •t Du•rta ROid WIL$Hl9'E·ALVARADO 2033 Wilshire Btvd., losAnae !es • WOODLAND HILLS 23325 Mulholland Drive •t Valley Circle Road El Camino Shopplri1·C.nt1r J707 I . Ctftt Hltll••Y 111 A•Ot114e D•I Mer 2211 Hethr llff. C1ro11• 0.1 Mer S.11 Ci.t.!Ollto CN .. MIM Cette MIN ENTER NOW FREE! • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • BACK TO THE BOOKS BONANZA ENTRY BLANK : • • • (Dr•JI 111 hi ~t AIY Pa-tlclP9fllf S,llMl'I ltefel •' • • • NAME ······-····--··-·····································--········································-·.a • • • a STREET ADDRESS ···········································································--···--a • • a CITY •.............................•• STATE l ZIP---················-·················--·· .. •• • • a PHON E •••..................•....•• WHE RE ENTRY .............................................. a • D.ROPPED a • • N• empl•Y•t or ll'ltmOe" ef hi1 i1r11neJl•I• f11t1ily of Thi DA ILY PILOT, lncycltpeo4ie • • l rlt•nnic1, Inc., or ptrtic!J1lit19 t4•t rt11111 1h1ll •• ell9lelt fer l'rlat1. Ne e111ty Dl111l1 • c111 a. tcc1ptff f101r1 childre11 u114 1r 14 .,.,,, ef •1• 11111••• ''''"'r •11letl a,. •11 •'•It. • Enl•r •t mi11y "lim•t •• vow li~t. Wit1n•11 will •• 11ellflti b., 11'111 or phofle t fli e11t a • pick wp_,,;,,, prior to !ht 1lt1! ef 1cllool, Pti1•1 wlll •• litlriil1d to one r.•• ftmity. All a t 11try co11pot11 mutt bt J1potile4 111 tpo111orf pl1ce1 •I llw1i11111 Dv c 011119 th11• •ri • ii S1h11tl•v. s.,1, ... 0,r s1h, 1t10. , • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' • _, . . • ' .. .. • ,. • • • • ' } J - I ,I ( ' • • J O DAILY PILOT S Tutsday ~tpttinbtr l , l'l,u l'our Money's Worth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List Food Quality Decreasing • ,... . .. t!Mlt I Hltll UW C1"1 (flt. " HEWYVOll:iC fAPj MotldtV I COll'IP1tlt l•••••••••••••••••••••••••a••I tw wl: iiodl ~,... "'"-' ..... ""c111Ml$1'1' .. ' •• '"' GCA ~OtP ')6 ll"' 111. u~..-. NASD Ll1tlnt1 for Mond•y, August 31, 1970 , ..... , ...... I.Mr (1-Cllt 1,;1'11MI 'p l)f (1 l\\ 1 ,. 11 l +hlGem!~j c,. 2i1 '" lS)1 lSI, + ' _,.,_ ~11-;":'t, J,. r~ tri: ~. r;: + i! g~l~v" 1~! ; 18\: 2~. ~: + ~ By SYLVIA PORTER month and next a major ~1y-daugbter-14-1ovu--all n 1t1ritl011 ..-1..--e a ucaUon (ood. Aly son 16, likes cnmpa1gn from coaJl to coast Calorl .. we.s.natlone.ltn ll••t-1!1¥ellitnw ... IW-'....._lf...,...•l-telt'ta.fft.t1'""1i11Alll ·~-~., ... , ,. ''" ''" ''" \illtkt> Cll'oW ~•, i.~ 1; +""GAnou .ti'~ '~' d ',,, •,•, =t~ l'rk• ................................... " ............ -~v .... .. ..<'!' ... ;~ .• ..,~ 1..noic .. vu Ill/' ill I • • • I -i.. ATr1n I JS •IS 11i. fh-r-~ta~ _..,,., _ t11u.11,.-111--... _,.._.., .... ,.nr~~-3, t \li ,,.,., .... + Alt"-'l'll. 11 lli! 'I -• ':---e orm 01 s 1".ues 1u1S -ACF 1 .... 1..0 11 jt\t 39h n~+-uw~cn ''"' , 2'' 2. 2• ~~••"'" •11 11 "''l ~t-~ __...,. Pritt Acmtei.ve I 13 4 u._ 13\li -\ 1..1Vom11 "" 1J •\II 11.1 .~ -" nCab e to '3 ' 1 19 • -• drop~ ... from 68 to 48 percent IM..,....,. '"A-..~ AclmE~ 1 i. 11 11?.4 11~ 13" -"''""'-1 ,, .s , .-i .. ..,. _...,YI +•l'J 111 c I ,,. • l "" u~. 11 • ~ For not_ only are today s oriental kosher and 1tal!,.P homtmakers b J 1 s s f u 11 y H~ b a gourmet-He likes--jgnorant ot-thetr---famllles chocolate covered ants and nutt!Uonal needs confU'ms the grasshoppers fl.iy son J9 wlll Social Research study but the •H-h rt! th AO Mlllla 19 12 lib 1 lis 11\i • OllV111' ,.0 .SI ~· • .,i. ~HI -ft n.tleYe Jlt 13 I 211~1 ~ -'I WmK. t e propo on l.ll e MEW v~K 1APl j•ll on 11 1ni ,1111 3~ti ''"' uli N•"" e ," U\~ A<1c1.-.1 •• 1 c .01 im 11~ sn1 -ti c1111111.i1 I .ci • .9, ), ... nw + l< n OYn 50p .a 1• 11~ 1111 + i'" f f nd th Thi fol I~• bid rl• f"K t'• l~ 'f.IM ·~ ~ ~ Cl 15 Allm rt '' •f\ "" l'A -11. t,,;1111'1 ~f ~ 1S "" ..... ,,... •• I -~ I'll l'ol« 160 2d ,,_. 11~· ,, , -7 orm 0 sugar a 0 er -11(1 •ill ~ a '"'° \1 " 'Pel ~ ~ I .... f'I -" 1~ MIMI.If 1.40 1t 43\lo .t2'A .O'h --.1;1-l:i ot• • II~ N .,. •• ti Fl•.,. A • !' " iii+ " sweeteners-has iOUed rrom.32 fl:m.__ •uHt~ ,. ... 1111-3\lo-l PM;""" •M ~ 1 ,. " ~ ""'""'-" 111 a 11 ,.,~ 37h im -v.'" n 1.tE 11 • • ~ ,.""\i ~111 .wMi + ~ en Fo,.,a..o ~" 1 i.....i!" ! -u;, Nll!(ln•f Aftoot lfr:1'hlY f\lt ! ~·· HI( 11 I tDO Flf Ht:!.. Aaulr. co·--11 2\e 10'1 I -lii c: 111'1 M!\ l;t,I ~ l5\'l ... +11... II ffOST JJ ,., .. ' ,., ,, • .! -• •· 52 percent 1tion of kwrlli.t F ndl•f '°"• 111) "~' 2ft. \lo 1mo• os 1 AAI"'" Inc • 60 33 n Ult. '"• \' n .Iii 111 ...,\'1 ..... ..i n IMI :JOt •• _.,w 0••111'1 I~ ''' F "9f'tl •rt -,, 2'11. f J•llCler •~ 1 Ar Prod JOti !-I '514 .s .uv. -v. 1.:11 t•~vc ~Jt l:.o.l ,.... •l'I< 1 \It -\'I Gt11 Miit• q ~c 2n1 Hi• 2114 -~. The old fashioned potato 11111 ·~ull lr•l'ISK> Ftl" ·~~· 4 • 1\lt " Min 14 !14 llfllt " Ii: Ar Rtll~ '°" 180 1714 "~ 11 -\\ t,,;U~• Ill • ~ I bv I b~·· lw>-. -•• Gf!\Mo! 2 i5-no, 7Ch 73~• 73lo llotll I .,. '"'" F•lG " 11/o " P11 ,,,... 2 ! • j•'llot w " AJ ll'lcluitrlet ~t •l'li •l'a-,rl\lt c I) CVOf'l.i~ ~ -~ .. tit. ~ I G Mal Sill s 7lt• 7H• n~ + •• eat anylhlng that ~on t eat ignorance is combined with one of the richest SOW'Ces of ••141'1111 i!i: 11111 .... "'' Fll'I ~ , s NM 11\lt ' flt(l§I l:\11 All Gtl 110 • \S\.i. Ul.l IS\11 + " ...... lllY ""' 31, 1 .... 1~.., ... -G Mol Pll Ii 1 Ullo Sll.o .52 ~ l '' k II d I cM1l1r 111 ti M ef f'lld!llt I~• t'h 1'11 l NC 10\I 61.l. TV COITI 'h 1 A1•Uc1 lnlerl 2t l! 1 U 1 1"'4 -\lo i.; 1v1nv •1 IJ1 •t 71'•• '''"' •~ -~. GmPCtm Ill .0 2) 1 2l • 23 • l o him fttst ' lndilference ' COnsJder these ey v amms an m1nera s lS 111s11•oalm1 "' J Food "" 1u • P"ubllhr ' '" 1.-nn.nt I " 'I'll Alo.rioc .JI 11 33.r. 3'1~ ,2~ _ ._ "l'v 11 01 • J .H>:1 ~ 1 GPubut 160 u s 19 19 It\• \o being shunned a It b OU g b 11 m ti Wl'll<ll !tine Font 011 11\;\, 11~ 11'11teol S~-V.. ertd~n I I \It Albtnans :If • \1>41o 1Q~ I~ I, ~~:~r: 12: 1! ~ ,•"'-l 'Mo_\\. Gin A"lr•el 11 I\< II~ llo This was a Los Angeles illustrations of how v;e trade MaWIUu CGUld Formlt 2h ""I' ,~,I 10 2 Dl4 l•1i.t. AS ,' Ill? Al<1nA!u 1 2CI 13llO Zlllo 2 \i 221.li .... 11( vii ~ ~· ~ \.'t y;, , 1, -ti Gt11 Sit 1 20 !Clio !D\l !D>h I potatoes actually c 0 n ta In ~;:e.i ~~-""':, fo•t Grnt 30\IJ )jll =~ cJ 1:11o u, +rn~~ ~ '"' ~~ Alcos1111c1 2• 1• 1~ U\ii 11~ -~'" 1.,,1111 1..., J.l .................. ~ \• G~n s111 pf c 1 1.1 •) • -~ .housewife speaking 1n a recent off heallh for o t b er f ' for -·· <•"f I,.., ,-, 1 c.~ ?!; v.; l?,I" •• •·•!II''' ,, 1,, , ~",..,'""c" "• r .o 20 1~ 1v:u. • ..11v1: 1, ~ ' _.. ••, .u, •... , .,. , G.,, 11nc1 •B 10 ,",,, •,~,,•, ,'"'•, _ • ewer ca1ones on •n ounce-Hirer kl m•rt<.et• ""~:::t:ln e: ~ " c M ,11 1~~ •n 00 , 31 " 11 o. ~ J\oio .,.. 't~ · i.;IOl'Oll IM .. 1 ...... •• ,1 -~ G rt1 E1 1 n lll -survey o( l 000 homemakers salisfacbons bv Social Re:>earch Inc rn OUR PER CAPITA national b •-th I be di nit 111 Ollll~ F fv1 1"' I" ·~· !\lo , Tr.e Co• 2"" t~: Allt'IJLud 2j'.O .>tl'9 30 • "1 30 + ._"" u• t>•• tO u 1~\"l I• •ll + • GT11F oll 25 1SO 1,~,,t ',l\, '"'•>• OUDCe as!)) an Im& ans our tl. di< f.rrt.s ,~u":"';-JW l'li "i tel •n I i.to Trncnt G UU :11'1 A!lt91.ud l •i Jn. 3'I .. 9\, + ""l.IUI 1;> ol ~ '"-I.~ I~ -Gltl Pl81 lO J10 • .,. nk d Rhl C \II T n ~ All'9Pw.3ll0S11\0o:IO'lo2G 1 -\lo'-l'l"'"ln.30 wu .. h ... ~w-Gt~Tlltlll "6111,oll~~U'l+t prunes rice bran a es an ni.u nDI n!~.i':.C: ~tt·J~ 3~ ~u A:n:t El ' ,:~ T~~ H '~ S'I\ Alli:Ch I i!IJ ;m 22 21\'o ~ +\.'.I \;HA II Al II 2. :iu .. i' ""'" T \... Gtntt(I) I 19 1)1' 22 l 7Ht -~ most rnnts canned 1n heavy :r,~~:*" Of '°"' ~:;1 stc r~ l3,. ::rm s: ~11,\ 1: l~~!1r"cl =,i a4, :11~n1 11: \~ ~~ ~~ ~~ = ~ ;:~~~ ,~· :: ;'to,:. ~ ~ :1:: -lo:. i=. ~"' ~ l. l~ 3~~ ~" +1'• Chicago Her color!ul word!! c on s u m p t I o n of such illustrate Lodav•s complete nutr1honal cornerstones as syrup Our per cap It a AAA Eflf 1~\ '"" G Aird! ' 1'-'I 111:.eoq_ r.~ I "' l1'6 Ttoolc• l2:\lo 3J\.\ "\llcl PO " 26 u ,~. lS t .... \;OCllUI• l.a:J ;II "'"' Al-". + Vo S• F'•< IOb 1J6 52 11 52 5ll1' -• breakdown tn the traditional mlik fresh fruits an d Ml Cor1> 3\'oo 34'1 G Kine! c ll .. ,\4 Itel Ct 31V. 13 Tvson Fd IV, 1 Al toSlf l.111,1 Jl 4\o4"-~41'1 !' ~1 1;0 t I'll l.:IO I' :Ill• Joo.., :i. ... -lo G•P•< Pll lO I ~2 ., SJ~ 52~ + l pallerns of which foods go vegetables has been deehn1ng AIO lr>e l•~ IS~ 111· E~I t\,\ 1\4 ltY Sto !' 11 Vn lllYm 21 27\~ A 1 Chim ,., h\4 l~ I t,,;Ot II) Alk I •• V\' i1\.1 1"a ,. v.. GettvO 1 °"' % .$i "''" S6 + 1 • consumption Of potatoes 1S 110 Al"Al'r s 1•\.'i ,. I LtlSilt ~. • 11:,1fljr u 13\0i ll~ Unll" 211 )\'oo A\1111~1111 Uo 2YI ~ $k if< b Co." 1'1i ~ ~ ) ~l ~ +1 Gerber I 2'0 10 J7l• l" 36~• - pounds a year half what Jt Alt' ~ ( 4 "~ IO!fl Pn , Ro.cl Ex J 2J Vn McGU JI.~ '\lo A Clh1PC )Ill I u IC 14 l;O llllfll -* ~ ·~"' t~lili 124' GtttY pit 2\1 , Uh 161\ Uh+ l together "Ith which other steadily -replaced to a foods They h1ghhght the oons1derable extent by sweet AlG I ) 2~ lfftn ' 'llo 11911(1 M 21 tJ U! Ok~1 11/o 1'!~ AIC010 _!.lll llf .Sii.ii S Vo )!\Ii + 1'" COIOlnlll 114 1 :II l$'lO ~ .... -\4 Olot1tPC 6(le l' 9 , tilt 9 1 + ' \V8S In 1910 A G 0 ·~ J\4 lttltll n,,., 2A llO&tlOn 3\1. cu. u ¥nv1 2'0 n An')•I-1..0 I 21 .. 2l:W. )')loi COii hid I 11 11 l•V• , .... -y, Glbr•tl F-!\ 50 19. """ 11,. -• od df AVMC11 t1'101i le&lnW 1H'l2 Rov~tl 1'11 2t10 un; .tg •1u,AMllAC.!CI l)(ljOl't t'1 IO\\!'lloColttn11U2S l.C'llot4 1 ._l -lilGklclL1W.20P 13 t 8\o 9 +•i development of what might be snacks sweet soft drmkJ 8eg1nn1ngl ayan Or ttVO AIMtlt: 111 Cit ~ltGlo& Rub 1'4 l ,Ru• tv ')\l?~US rk 3H.3'\o::e~1E1,.ll: :W0 J!, ... !~i~, IJI-llo1,;01lt1 tnl.O U 11\lt 11~1 17\'l+~G!lelll 1 ~0 ll •O 391' :JllU -1 tbs food eXN>l1S WllJ Acme El I t~ t'.akl CYC I l \Ao Yl!'I 0 4) 42:\11 Vf. Pen »i.i:'' 21 \IJ AM HH> l5r a.IS 31i: '£t. ~"·~~CBS I.COO )2 29h 2f'lol :»"" -l,;, G mbt Br I Ji 26'• 15'4 H\~ + • called a new • e t h n 1 c'' filled milk non-fat dry mon .. -An .Six '\) 7 r:ii LS 7~ 7'4 S~alfli.t 3ta C\11 ~Ill Slcl N AmeH of)..)11 " IJ3 """' .,\oi l.:BS Pl I 21 11, 11~ 11'14 -14 G""' fl( JO 31" 30"1 31 -~. campaign to convince you lo ~l~til~~ 1~ ,~ 1n! =r c~ 1\'• 7'4 u~r lii 3j¥: ~"' v!1i' ~b11 1:v... 'f'• MlrFuir 111 v _.. .... 1.. 'I: =1:i11 co1u G•• 1" 1d JJ" 31\~ " 1 G tn Akl•ft loo 11~ 6h 1h -• 1umbhng together of foods milk lbff ti .., .,. 1>4 l Colr ~ 2\~V S ISV.:i~AmAr J~ tO 15l 21~• 11~1 21~+ ... ColuPkl .AM lH lo+i. ~i• 101.4+ IG e~Akl ~IJ 1 '6 ·O CJ +l't rearrange your food buying ~ltltrts ra ~;, Gi1""M1~' i~ l]\lo ~I 1111 ~t 4 vr.~:... 1 '\\ ... Am B•ker ( •I l»o ll U\.'.I + l:i ColSoOll 1 l• •I 2tt. U 1 2> .. + V G!onAI ~!11! l 1! ~ 1j 'I: lS'll + ' Hallan kosher Ol1nese souJ Kids are I n c r e a s I n g I y 'tood etc and suggest our $1 concocting such 1ncred1ble -I t d h llh A I •. , ·~· G Ml l~"· 14" m Soni 11\\ ll~o W1ch It.It ltV. AtlrtnG& 2.1 2111 1' .. 39\lo l'l\o'l + \\ CombEn I 30 95 "2 •l"t 41\o -'!ol GIOb.11 Mir ft •s JP\ l U Pr or1 1es -upgra e ea co ic ,. rHn ... .,. r 001 H lt 1, wm P ''" '!"" AmBoc1 1 20 \ 1 2>to 25,.. 'l»i. + "' com So1v .o 101 2:R. 22~ :n~ + \'l G oo. un •O 1 '"' 9•• '"' + • Alleo Lnd l• 1•V. Grl!ll RE IT l7•j sc w 1nv.r 1 \(,j Am C1n 2 •II l2 u~ u -'Cl, + l'I comlSol Pl l"O '"3 11 11 11 + V. Goocrrleh 112 • 9 '"' 26 O 16V~ -'• downgrade pure ea t 1 n g :1 111'..t'E. l~ I.., §fG~~ f~ l ' ~~ s!f,!~0 t; 1fjl 12~ ::Z11~t:ad• !"" • AC•n 01 115 11 2•t• 2•~ 2-c~ -l'I comwec1 2 70 11 "'' ~>I.ti :tiY:o ~.,. cooociv~r u m ,, , 21111 11 • --. Pleasure At stakes for us JS Aon G" •lo_ 5 u••dCll •4 mlli",,,',-.·~ ,••tt •w•~?_llw1• ,. 304AmCtm ~ •J l\'o Jtt. I + ..... cmwE 111111 20 21\'l 11 21>,;, GotGJVA 2( l 10, ,.,., U.\11.+. b1lhon a year s tampede t o but presumably tasty to them e..xot1c gourmet foods food combinations a s Amade 1vn.~v; II l~I ,.,., )\~ •• .,.,. l~• ,.~. A,,c111111 160 )ll ''"~ 2'\') 2 111 -""Comw 0 I '° oil 11':1 1711 11".a + h Gouk!ll'I( 1.40 ' 2' .. 181.. ,. + • how we S""'nd thousands of Am au1n ,,.,, iov. Gvrodn 1 •·~ vc,,,•", •,. ,•, , ww',"v e ·~ l 't rv~Uf! 1...0 s 20 it~ lll + v. com1>111 sci 1no t • • tV. +1'1'1 Gr•ceco 1 •o ,,. 2'~~ 2! ~ 2' .t + • THE L\tPLICAnoNS of the ketchup on chocolate pie, d 'h' f food t A El Lall 1 • ll~ H111ovr S le 20 s V "'" '' t r 7 ::a A Cry Pl •J.O i•O • l1i ''~' tl V. -II. com~•• ' .a l9 ~ Ml -t-~; (; a!lb't' 1 60 71 27h 26 ~ 26 ~ -• r1nd1ngs 1n the Social Research peanut butter on ham Jam on ollal'll eac year or a Am Expr '-"• '~\\ lta11tn In IV. 1~ ~1't'ncloll•"" M ',,' •1> ww'•'i'• Rt • '"' ~mo'','"i I 2) 2lS l:lh l:I,_. n14 -.,., Con.t Miits 1 • 1~ is"' 15"4 -._ r.r•ndU" so 60 ™• 2111 ~1;, -\. h d Am Fryn 6 ,..,, Heftrtd F ''"" 2t • 1\~ t " ·~ tl'J " 151 I J0e ll 1J 22l0 22:W. + 14 COPll'IM • 30t S 2l 221'.1 ~l t V. Gran !tC I J~ 11 h 11 11 ~ stake for I e In UStrle.5 IS A Greet c& .1Wi H•rll CP 'rk µt ttcllf sw,s, 1 ',~' 1',•, WW'•' ~. M0 16 ''~ Am Dua Ve>I 2l 1* Ali 711) + \lo Conr•CCo 60 2• 11'\t 11~• 17i.I. + h ti anllev 1 1 t 1-A'o 1n• U•i -r stud} are enormously steak. s1gn1f1cant to a wide variety of JN THE PAST t \Vo 1ndustr1es food producers, generations, the prop:Jrt1on of h I sh th t f A ~Cit t4V. lS l'llllot: Inf 31/t J"i • ~ '(J ,.,. 10 AOual Pl..... l 12 11'14 1 1~ con ElclS 110 119 2l~• 231• 2lli -.,. <:;raftlW l SD ~i •'Tl:• ., ... ~. + • W a are ey ge 0 Arn Ttlv 10\fo t 14 ltlllhYn A'~ ) .. i:~E !ti ~ •Vt ~o11n IJ..A i>4 ~~ AmEIPw l.U 21S :.i6t.:. 2il'.I 2.Wt + V. ConEGls pt I 6 76 751o JS\'• -l • r, 1~0 n \"" 11 2flh 20 .... XI -' hundred' Of billions AM.us tJ ''" '614 Holm l!P 35 .o 1 • nGoC~ i•v. l•Vt w! ~ PJg 1,,... 1 Am Enkt I• u 30\lo :J:i JO,_. -1io canfclls llf 5 9 59\~ SI\,, it + "ca A&P 1 lll a9 2A • 21 11v1 + Anlctn I" •1• W l'lolobm 1 1"'1 EIS H I~ WI Wh 5¥1 6 Am Exp Ind 75 ''' fli 9\0 + V. ConFood I IQ 3'I ~\4 34 J•\\ -l• !Hot r 1 Sa 1 12\:1 11 I, 12'4 ~~~ftt'/1 :~ ~\~=~·· .. 3:•'1"" :'..cervvc CV.. s WI::.., lt 1t~:~xlnG PIM IS40 ~lira 50 so -1.loConl"d pl•50 '" II II _.,,GNoHek '::! 1~ ~ ~'lo :o~·-: '°"' -\0 "" ,_,, -1 o> 1~ 1,••,••nclv!,10 " fl" -W••lwOvfL 191.!o If~ ,..!_~1"1 50 l1J 1214 I \4 11 :1. +Vi. ConFr•!i ht 1 19 23~~ 2l'o:.o 22' -\lo Si "'w" ••,• ' ~. 21\lo '°"" 71!'4= '0-p r-o c e s s o r s distr1buters -' retailers k.icthen apphance m a n u I a c t urers kitchen architects restaurants And of course they are utterly fa scLOat.ing to all Of US the bu3 ers and consumers Our annual food bill now tops $100 billion and we spend addthonal tens of billions each year on k1lcben appliances and ulerwnls Currently, the weekly bill for (eeding a young family or four including lwo school children averages $49 30 on the Agriculture Dept s liberal plans and the cost of feeding a single teenage bov also on the liberal platt is esl1mated at $68 30 a month Yet despite this recnrd spending the evidence 1s accumulating that from a nutritional v1ewpoml we are eating less well than 1n the mid 50s ONLY HALF or a 11 American households a r e "' ., " A .... 20 ... 1~. 2" ........ In "1180 II 231• 2l~ 2~-\4 eon l.11•n11 21 S'n J 't 5~ " tll n ~~, 19'i(o 19 lt• .I. .. SI D ' Ark /'NJP lJ'.lo 13'-lo Howm In 17:'11 ,, lfn HPd 271'1 loll! t9 4 20 AmHolJI 70 le I0411 10\\ I~ CooH01G 116 , •• 29"" 21. 211' -Ai Gw.'1nUft•'• .~ ''. ,., J81< +I .. E 0 t Arrow It ?nlo 21'4 l'ludl Mf Silo ' Mrlfi Sir t i.', OIA Yrclny e •V. '" A Home l 60 101 ~\.. $6 36 \Ii N " > 3 3\\ + • v" P Ill . 0 ., Conomlc Ulnp Oesn ArVldt /\\'i 7¥ Hiit! PP ,. ,. A .. llf 2 -COM Powr 2 IV. • r.twashln ~ ,•,•,· ,•, •• • •'•"-AtCC ljl UU 21'/io H1111 Gtt U !> J)\41 Am o:i"'..! >o 1010 ~~ ~ !!, -l Conf'w Pl' S2 y30 SI SJlo SI 'I t I' "-etnGnl ff 6 -Aufo Se J•:. •V. Hunt P 1 1'1• ,.,p _.,. "" ~· -~ Cont C1n 2 40 II 61!.'t ,,.,, 61 '10 r, eenS~ 1 70 1 1• ~ ~'~' l•\ol + \ 81!rcl Al 3~ •llo H111n C11 15 , 15~ Amlnvtll 50 25 9"" 9 \ 91'> .+ \~ c1 can "'' 25 zlOO sa \ '811 !IV! G ~vhoun'1 1 175 u ; u • u \, ' B•k• 1•\•lSiaMv•ll 1111 s Slo AMt1Ct11 1o111 .. 12' ll'o lli lll'l+Y.con1Co1> n1 tt tlll t 9\lo -\\roller t:1 '' 7J 't 12 1211>-, Ila P•lnl '" ~ kvde Ath l\~ ~ AMt!C K pt ' 1 II"' ll'llr. 11'14 +'I\ Cont CP 2 11 ni.t '2, 32~ + v. r .., ..... co l 111 1s,,. 1111 sv.11 \ Aff H • 81rwdlr I V.t \"'•o•Sy 1'I n.. M L AmMOlor• lff ,, 'i;• 6'o-YICfCoPIAlSO 1S39,.39'43t • Gt!LfHtd •Ile 11516 ?l~•15\lt +2., eel Orseraclng !•,~!!rl• ,.l~f J" .~ GH~·'• ',',',:, ll,• UTUA ANitG1s 2 o 111 Ml~• 3t)'l 3'\l:i -~ CO!'l Mlp M c1 Ii U\\ 16 r, !MOh 2 101 ,,',' S3'111 5J SJ~ ltt " vn• ., ..,v, ,.., .... ., Am P'-o!o 12 l•S 9\tt f t -\lo Conl o I l SD 111 U 1• ~ 14 ~ -._ Guli Clll I 50 2,._ 'o' : 2ry: !!"'\ 81Yletl 1140 14\~ l""llCO 0 I 1 1~ ARt$0V l:Je •s $6 SJV. .U -1.\-1 Con\ Oii pf 2 4 ]t\, JS\.I lN t V. Gulf Res Ct$ n1 ! StKllm 2l 2)'14 lnfr1•cl 2to 3 A sm11 lllO 276 u~ 1~ 25 _\,con T•I to •s ll~O 70)4 71, \, !Res 11170 131,~ IJ\o l \\ ~ s~ue I• t 171"' 1~ lftl Cont f 6< AmSoAlr 10 N ._* <01.li 41~ + ,, control 0111 225 314 ~S~'i ~+ ;to G 1Re1 on :IO 1,1 11•\ 11 'oo 17 " :i: -fltlm 11111 S ~'i ln1rm I" 5 ~ s~, AmSA! ln 10 s .O\IJ 3t~ Jt.,., Cn01t pU 50 1 00 4 •.t OI~\ •l'ill 1 ul!S &UI 9' J ''"' n~; :U(': J.1'1 By JDJ.. TH0!'.1AS 'keep up the grounds an '!;J, ,•,•[!> ,",'• •,',, g,, I~! f>.W,/,,', ,,•~. 10•1 FUNDS Am Sid 1 10 31 ~ l6~' _ v. coo1c unrt 50 1~1 ~• ':ru ,. +1 G1111su ~u :1 z~ lt"' 1~i~ l•l'I _ • •• ...,.., ,., AmS cl pi. 7! • 100 nu nv. _ ,... Coo11er1n 1 Mi •7 JlV• 30•• 30~• -'O Gu 1w I'd _,, ~1 ~l -1 C:tllterlllllaWllMUN-Sttvltl taxesonthemaUyearrOU ,s1~1uPj_:1 31•hJ lmi~IJI ~ iloh AmSJerll .. 4' 11~ 17~ 1114-~Coo~rlAl 116 19• 16 1~·.~~ 11/jr, ~ ~V. 39\ 3'•"+•\ LOS ANGELES (B\v) ' "' , , A S1111r J 60 XI 2'\11 11~ 291' + 41o ~°""' Pll 15 1 t1 • 17" 1"4 ~. u o ?o s 1-tt Horseracing JS on;-track lhe so why shouldn t some one get II~~~· Ml 2f~ J.tz 1~1:; ,~» 1~1~ •MF •w !q'i¥' .:/ u ,g :~ ::z l:Z _ ~ ~=~;: 1Jg ~, jf\' ~ ~ ~~i: 1~ u ton 11111 -H·•-some use out of them? ::r,ue11l.1 I':,; ~,,.. ~~c~sU'J 2it; 2f< "A Am 11. l 2 60 '3' ~ mo .. l't :;: h c-Sit 1 lO ' l5 1''~ lS I• a•ckW•I , 20 ' '.lolo XI ~ :lO • + •) economy doesnt run &ooltot e I~ U4 J1a11rn C &14 1'lo NEW YOll:K fAl')jll\cltpnG 505 551 ilmWWk' J.6 I 9\'t t\ '" r:rlnlll8 2le 11 1mi 1i~~ 1J~~ V. •IPrl 16"1 l 29'h 29111 29V.-., Hollywood Park and Santa Booi ~It 1~ 1614 J•ll'I w.1 si~ ' ~ -The '° 1owin1 _ Ii"°''"' l e1 • 01 AW P<~f 1 2s 140 le '1 l•YJ 1•"1 -v. 0~,1 ~..so~ J; m-. 22"" 22" _ , .u 1;1ur1 1 os 11121 40 ~~ :w~li + 1• It was that way In the 80t IP 1'h ' JamH F 2'\· 31) NTG"f 1 u 7" AW • lpf t q 160 17"1 171'1 17'i'.o + ,,.. c .,, 1~ l~ 3"' t • Hem\\l•I 2'11 2l s • ,.... 1~ + !.o h d Anita have re (Ip r 0 ca I s,~nkJ'" "!ti"~ ,",'T.•I>,•,, t lO f.\'o l•lloM tllPPlled by Inv f.oA 11 3'12 ]f Am Zlnc I l:i.lo '"" 114 + \lo c~~~~a1°"':io l 1 ~~ 16 . \6Ji t{ H1mm Piil 1 10 lt 1~1· ''i .... thirties after 1 e Secon ,~• c1 11 191"' Ito/ 3Y, • Ille N•ll0111I Al-.! 1nv ;lull 710 110 Amer11n 60 7 !~1 11\.lo 17\;o CPC ln!I 70 131 ffil 29 't 291/t -o 1'11mmnd 70 •S t:ia 1 21 + W Id W d d h gr. ments to lease Sl.bles Brw" Ar 914 ~~1ft Pd 1tU 2'0\.11 11 an ol SewrlllH nv 1111 c 5 7S s 75 Amt!H lllll 111 lH• 11 \'J 11 ""+ .,., crine 1 ~ 11 6 l1"i 3J\\ lJ\'I _ i.;, H111<11rnn 61 30 2n. 11 11,, + ,: or ar an ur1ng I e a e llrY•h Se 1114 1a~ •ls~r s1 ~1'h :,1v. Oeiltrs Inc ire lnv11 Bo1 10 •1113t AMF 11'1( '° ••l 2s~. 2s 2st' + ~ lrt:11i11t Fin 1 , 16,,. lt 161\0 + ~ H•llll H•,• ~ ~~ ~\:" 13~ 13,.. _ .. K fl' t And t S that d t t t k l'luduv fl• 7 1!151 ol 11•, • ,, , "' orlt•• 11 Which lnvn,.,,.J Grouo Amfac 10 1 .:19 • JI~ 311V. -1"· ,,.,., " , 14'1'! 1• 1c, _ 11.i Hines o ...,, ~· '' '' + , "•',,"0 orean con c I an equ1pmen o one rac 11unn ,, s!il ~•lv•r .., "'rro11e 10s 11(11 l..5l ' .. AMP inc 51 li1 51\.'.I '9\• w.1o+i ,.. Crooie'Minc1 , 1 21 " 11 4 'I" fl1nn1M 1 JO lA 11 '" od Bur11up$ 1J\.f 2C •l-Grn "' ~d h1v':Cl.IP~ Miii IS2f»Ampe,,Cor1t ISlll lt\~1,~-~CrcwCol1071 .a 11 ,1l~1l,,.,,-l\tllrCOUll 1 l~~"•s ~~t.: M•Ckl wayt ay wh1 letheother1s1noperation c1c LeMs w1 '~~::"'r i\~ i~$0Jc1c111c1>orbo1t1111 i':r,''oa-1j~1~t~Armi.ci 160 1• .10~ 311 30~+Vicrown cork ut 1si.• i..ii-. u H~:,;1~t:1 8 16:it 1~11, 6~-• ~1•cv Wh'le most bus'nes••s are Cal w Sv ?1;, 13'4 i{111111 l 1~ C•tkedl MonlltY ..... Am1t1 32 ... 1~0 1 1 CrownCk 111 2 c .13 .cl ~ •11h -1 " 1 Mr• to 1 n~ 21'11 n:o,:. t • :1,.'", "" for example Cemco 1 ~1'1 15:,; K llwcf lt~ :xiv;, • ., A.lk v~fiov =~ ~ An•tonc1 l to 230 1.»W 11'4 23\o\I + 1~ crwnZt 160 1 ~ 3114 31\\ 31:i,, t ~-:r~ Al 110 16 11 1~ 11 'I M saddled by 3 ~uggish economy ca ...... M u " !:i,H i; !V: '"" Abefcfn 1 1c 1 ti Inv A:•ih ~ M •A """' ock 1 31 :u "•• 26 +\Ioli !rn z au XI ''° S6 st u YI Hiwll ei , n 1 26Vt 1iv. ~l':I -1., M!:iu Bayl\teadows he points out c,',","',.' •,,,"!" •v• ¢111 1}.171i1iA<1mlra111 Fun111 lllel 16!417 ,uAncor!Nsv 1 11 I.Ra IS.,., 15Va-~ lSCwP .o "15 1•;!. tl'o ~HaYe$ Alb 1 2 "•ti~ 1.ol0 _, ... , .. in 1970 Western tracks are off c .. en c"" 1v... t \i Grwt" s 11 .S.60 Ano elf: 110 s lt :ioy, :t + lld&l'IY •81 11 10~ i~ 111v. H 111 11 t"'li • -'!'. ., .. "" is being used almost year C•1tM111e 1.s1t 1• •vst pc '"" 7 tncorn 31!9 312,"" '1 '2'"".m P 1.s 1 •• 13v. 131'2-Cll(I~ ... 1n2s l i"' 1~\lt 1•v.-"',1:1,.,"3 10p lO .,.. •It •""+• ,,...1or and tunning C::tP Saw 1'le 1V. Kl I l l \lt ( lnwr t 41 7 Ol John~k 1, ff I~ J~ A~ I 1 l11 ID1 :U 'e ?JV. 2$\'2 -10,:, Cul g•n 71 19 13 • 12\t ll!o +11.!o Hee aMn \Jr 9 U~o ~ 26 J + \• Mtnll round by fairs and private ,",',,.,rn1A ',,', ,m 1<1:::l, 11EI , •'4 Advl&rJ • •7 •It K.,.,.11~ Funth A L Co o H 11>:1. 16'1> 1~ + •t, Cull'lll'lln IOI! 1 1tio 79 • 191':1 -v. Hein• HJ fl '61 35' 35 10>,, .-,•, ""'~ Leading the pack are Los h ''It Klrlc Ca 3~ 3U Affl llld • S• 1 GI A ·llo 7Jl • " APL pf Cl °' 5 1~~. 1$1.:o IS·-v. Cun~oru • 48 10 1, 9\, '~ -'H t CYrt 6 "'' l \'o ..... '-"•nli Orseracmg aSSOClahons ~:~. Oa" •, , •,• ",!',,,Vol '' U Afrlr! 5 16 ! N i: '81 111 11 92 All:A Svc 1 °' S' '9 , tJV. ft +l CYtllu WM 1 43 ll'lli 13'1> 13~ + V. 1-1~1f1"( tnt .60 12 10 19\0 1¥~ -~ MAPC Alamllos Race Track Los •• ,. IC •• 'l~2 •"\'•' !' 6c u182 17,1us.iAreal•N !Cit m11 17~17lo-\.\CurtWrA2 224~o2•'4 2t'-' Helm,Pdsl x7Holl'lH"'+•~ MAPC Del Mar too JS)easedto C•tlr a 1t\•1•~LMCOal 1~1:.,,;A tl•I• tOt11 BC , .. , .. Areh01n1 101S 271"2"' CulltrHIXI .u m ."""70'1+ .... H I llPXI 1'1P.•11 lt>t-• M••" Alamitos (near Long Beachl l lJC NG 9\t !"' l.1nce In ~·u U'..\ AIPllM Fd t I' 10 01 ~: Kl 7 Ol 7 u Ar111'$vc 1 Cl ll ,.... :m· U'I) -"" CyelOP' 1 fO 1 25 2t1/t " + ~ H~~.""' C1p 5 • • ' (\1 M& ((lo the San Diego County Fair Jn c"i~~~•''t. ,'," , ,, ,'°,," •we1 3\~ lllli Ame•! s 01 s ss ui 1<2 • 19 • 59 Arl•"s os XI 166 1111 1 ~. -~ CY11ru1M 1 60 22 '9\li S1V1 Sl\li: -"-Hem lftc ?le 1 tlA 6Vt 61-. -._ Mtrcoo and Del Mar Track Del J.!far ff .. t d ,,. n "-"' YI 111 3!7 !us SI 1Sl0171•"""'0SI ''° 110 11\'o 20"-~ -D-He cine 15• 714 )I!.~. 35'io l~ ,,.,,, ... llS 0 season ~.!''1.\•05 1!~, .l ,'°,,~ M ,..., 2 Am Dvln t U 10.00 YJ S2 t" t ,2 Armco Pl? 10 Jt6 11'/o 211• V\!i -IA 0 He lhFd 1 10 35 2 4 15 2S + M•r ,y, (near San Diego) '" • ,..,1, " .,.. 1s>..< 16 t Am•r E•11rn' ui s3 , :l'tl , 1 Ar1T1D11r 1 60 1 ~ ~ ~ OenR vr 25~ :"11, ,','• 1 1• + Meubl' n !O 1 39 39 39 + • M•r ,,... What about Sunday racing' hir1 o ' " •14 r:.cav Lei 11\, lt\l:i c1011 a as 7" c\1$ s4 l..5• 3 17 ~rmr "' ~ 15 , 5sv. 55 35 + ~ g•n• ca l 25 • 2:1 • ,U'4 •L Hew l'•dC 20 121 u" 2• ~ 261~ -~ Mira., Thelattertallledal4lper hmLt• t t Vt el!Cet1 n1 11 lncme t1tsn Potar 301330 .. rrn,tCklO N17v. 7•t~7•11i -'~ ar11111130ll l 92'~•2••••y +·•Hi9hvena11e J.6 t~u. ••t 1• -.M•'"" t d • Well we d like to do •t of S~!,' .1r:c1, ··"· ,1li !!!,",' ,•, ,.,,. 1•.U. tnvt1l 7 13 156 Knick II '25 'lj Armll:ub l 60 I{ 2 29\li ,.,,,, 21;t + n. Dirt 1"11 pl 2 ,.; ',,s ~ )JV. 35 ~ + ·~ Hob•rl l 20 J Jl l l lS • • "'''. cent increase in at en ance ('"" ,,.,11 ,. ; .. y-12\li ll.\i S11«1 1 22 Knlek Gt 1 io 7 71 Arti COl'P to • i. 1• 14 .. 0111 Proc111 ,., 11 111.,, -\? H«rnwa1 '° J '°"'-'°"' 10'\ -'• and 15 3 ~rcenl gaon on be! course says a spokesman >"•'• ,•, °'•' •"•• ,•11 't:t'~,,.t.1111 7~ 111i s11) 1 ,. 11s Ltl{ Gr111 , n , 56 ~rv.rn ,.J,1111 1 s 20\li. 19'4 1t14 _ v, gavcoCP 1 u 11 1a 1sv. 16 t, Hpff Elf<! n 11 51, 5'-m i \a ;:,·~·~ ,. 1·· nt.Am Cl!V •ot ••IL•x AKI! 1?9'1•BS"'ld""!l1(1 76 ,, 12~ 12'4-\, IVCO pl4 75 150 60 6D 60 HollvS119 l:ZO 11 ,," 1"" 1~ -i t f t "d fromlA>sAlamitos and wed,",'.,'",," "•""•" .~-c,ov,, 21h Am r111 5 24 5J.3L111tr111 sn1 550 A1J10111112o10 4 .. ~ A4 '6'1<1 +111o o1v111Hvt1 so 11 :nit 2s~ ?5V.-~Homeitke 1a 1&1 2s '"• ,.,. •1 Mrv1C• 1ng SO ar 1n l S W-ay season " •> ~ E 10111 1'11 Am Inv ~ 61 • U l ife Stk 4 59 5 01 JM! 8ttw I 9'1« r~ I~ -14 OttVlnl'l j 60 rt !I 1 11\~ 11 • -'1 Hon•VWI I :l(I Ul 871-/o IJJ... 15 ~ -2 J M•seo -•mg Sepl L2 The track has probably get a Q'ood turnout c1111i *tti ,•,•~ '•'•"~ '•',~, "•'•• u •~ Am Mui 1 n • s1 Lift 1nv 5 ,5 ,.lll AJsd oG 1 10 11 3s J5 ls OPL or A 1s 1100 .-c1 ,7 -1 Hoe1 81 1 20 a 1 • 21 't 21•~ i ~ M1tOt1 ~uu ~ Ct1 ""' 13•1AmNGlh1*262L"cN11 lil9t21iAUdS1>11 70 l,. 29 29 +,.1 oPL(ll07 ... U!'IOl'JV.lt'l89 ~+1\4ko$I nl!lll 28~\?t~)l)'o 'I Mtnro. •·-n granted an addotoonal 12 but I don t think there s a c111l u & 11 2.1 Mil R!IY S\lt ., Md'lro Group unc l 01 a 21 As111r1n GSP 1' n~ '" 1~. + ~ OMre co 2 n 311\.1 301., 1(,'lt -v. HOU<! i~d 80 50 011 o • o ~ l R.1nt u= Cll't'fll Ml 1•,,, ,, Ml ~rt ... YI C•Plt In 1 C1 [oom!\ Savin AlhloM Ind 11 1•'4 h lio 14\~ -\'o 0er ... 1rl' 1 2 31 17~ 17 • 11 \ -.... HOU'O M 11 '° J IS" 15 ,., 13\o • ~ ,. .... os eating a good diet today a drop or 10 percent from 1955 according to a massive and alarming Agriculture D e 'P t study Nearly one 1n 10 tam1hes 1n the $10 000 and up income-bracket have diets ---ir'-'area as poor a a overaJI one 1n five fanuUe.s have diets rated as poor up lS percent days of daytime racing Nov track that could afford to pay r.11r1c M 11l· 1Tll Mam As 1~~ • crwrro • 1110 1s l•n.d Jl J7 31 n At Ctye1 1 :u. 1 21"" ~ 211,0, + '14 oe1 Mnte 1 10 11 uv. n.i-. 1•,. :I: \.J Hall!thF 110 16 31!~ 31., 11\li + ~ i"o """ its labor for Sunday time 'am1,r:111A,, ~~t tv..~:~ ~ !:J. r~ ~7"'l~1 ~r. ~~ ~IDll •07 iG7All Rkhlk12 1111 61'1\ '° '° -U•Dtl!I Al• so 1&7 ;)CR• 2'"t ~~4 'lt lfousl" pUJO 1111·.~1,u •,,·.+· t" ..... !!! L:.ll,I cl; 1W:!lf-fflrl.! M '-"" i2V:---1:>111t--\l...t---'!1ff' ... , "' 112'1 ltAllAch PfSl'S J10 ....... +11>0tltec tnl 41 6'/t m ,;.,_ ~H-F p/?37 5$\lt 58• ·-'-"r--1 ' I h ht Mo't~a1~•1ator•""a ~at1 .~ c ~" ., 0 , t: -erv-ie;U>1 t'2 Att._lch ~•-'l0JW10t,,...,01~ 0en1• M._ '9-1S-~:JYJ-17-~ ~t-.nrcn1.,-.i<, Los A amllos w ere nig " \,U .. n. e <S\ .. .-. M1rrn r 2l 2:v. =·Fd I vr·'i'~!. ~·o~• In 1'11 • '11 All Reh Pl2. l• 17Vt "'"' ""'=·~· Dtnfl't'Rit 04 •111 1\lt ,.,.. ru, + v. 1-too.11!NG1 • 5 •W. ~7" '~it + :+ <f« racing reigns Claims both al triple time " El>flllfi1~ gP .J ' J14 ~ • .,,T,f ,,_ 1014 Astron 3 13 4 2, M:" nFd , ~"",'l\1 A1!1' Chtm 1 c1 21\li 2l ~ 2m _ ~ OtntsotY nt 1 39 73\i 23 n • • • HouGs I'll so 1 44~ t',i~ ;6 ~ t : ·~•• Co m E ) '"" M91r O ll'h It />,JI Ii hi H U Allis C0<P 12 1'4 m '"' Oetew ol A 1 37 3'l~ !7 -11'1 K0W John 24 3jQ 16"" ' , ~ ~:. tendance and belling are up 15 What then can help (atten s:ic:...""sfr ;01~ J~ llcllc ... H 2!iii 1~ t~~OIJ~· ~~~ l 11 a:uJ ~~II 1\ n lilt ~~hcfnc"' ~ 11~ '~1~ 1~,,, 1}?, -v. g:;:;:1.:' ~o 2! :: 1m ti,r. + ~ ~=:· 1; ~ !fil i!i: ~:: --~= ( • ·-- from l9M •American families at all levels of income n e e d guidance m meeting their n u t r1honal n!QUtrements concludes the USDA Partly as a result of this survey and partly 1n response to other d1sturb1ng dislosures the Food Council of America an organizatton of 27 assoc1at1o n s of food manufacturer s and d1str1butors -will stage this Healy Ne'\' Furniture Manaoer ~ Jerry Healy is the new manager of the Costa J\lesa branch of W1nscot Company a Porllaod Oregon b a s e <I custom furniture r e n t a I corporation A record $4 240 000 1n rental and sales \las achieved by the corporation during the fiscal year ending Feb 28 This represents a 47 percent jump over the previous }ears total of lt883 000 volume ... Oulgo1ng manager G 11 r y Duncan '.lj.11 "ork at the corporation s Northern Calif ornta ofhce LET'S BE FRIENDLY It you ha\ro N:''~ nclghboN or know of an}onr moving to our area pleatt tell us ~ that \\c me.)' ('1't~nd .a frlcndly "el come and l1t'h1 th~m to becomr acquainted Jn their 11('Y.: surro1.1nd1ngll So. Coast Visitor 4f4.f3'1 ,.¥ ' COfll Cir 31 3f M~rn l2 f1h Sd CP COt •CSMtrld Fd 1)6t1177A111om1n hid 1SJ 514 ~. J\lo VI Del Ell OIS.50 U 71'4 71V, 71'1 ~4~~ ln\10 l', r.:i11"'161h 16J-<-c E ""'rcent this season which the. tracks profit!? ~-' ' td MN 11va lt';. 3tock ,,.. .s" M1tl!lri t ,5 '" Alll'or1 PrOd 11 ·~~ '"" ll'ii t !4 0e1ed1• 1 "° ,, 1• 1111 11 +V1Huc1na1 1"' o·~ 0,_,, n\ • il~' ends Wednesday, Sept 2 Assemblyman W111lam !:..,mr;:,' ~1.~Yl :F!1~~: ':i: ~v.::.~ 1~~1f!J=...M&10~1i}l~::c~)~ l~ 11\lo 1t~ Ml.. ~~les1et'i1 .~ ~;~ lnt lj ~-I 1la'fio,:l.60 7tt't rh n~=}! c ~ This year should top last Bagley (R.San R a fa e l ) orn Htttt .f'\• .W.Mkh,.0 , ,'~ '"'j•'11 Knt 1.3s 1.l6Moodv"1 ll.57tj"Av••Y"'a l'O 2c ,. 21v. :tt>,itv,011tF1n•n ..o 6 1oo.i. 1ov. 10.-~•m·~:~:,t: 'JC:iJl111 2J ,1 +t• •'•'"•"• d d ts Jlm om l'•v 11'2 1 Mtdw lwJl\~ tl'kG"' •.• 5.33MIF Fd 160 :J2AVMlln2<1P 31' 1~ 1 1' ... ~Dl1mln!l lto 1'3ra!l~l~~~~ .,, lo•llh• •l'l"+ri K• season s recor s pre JC thinks he has the answer ••d am• A 4 oA1o Mo11 G•' 30Vt 4 l•lr rc1 .s i• s" MIF ••• , ,, , • .i,v-t't.• -1 ~ .. ~ ~· 011m s11.m 1 ,2 1•~~ I'~ 16""'-u 111 ctn P13,.. 11 ~.,•, , ,,, _ McL•• • .... mp Cm I ll, , ... Miu VIG 1,•:-i-1,N' Bllllltl~ J.2t 5 n MuUS GY 10 0410 It .... on,. 110 1aa M ~"' ~t!v. _:;; Ol•S Ill 01 20 • l•~'t • ~ '"' -,,.. l11 ~~~12'11 Sf ~ v,,., 2~\? -" MCLOU Herbuveaux president and many racing people thin k he s 1m" '"'' 3 iv. Mo ••ch • ~t 1011on st '" 1 22 Mu 0mo c >7 •rs "''-u 131 1t 11~, 121-1 11r _ !-' 01c11""°" '* l' '°" 101• 1~. + ~ 111 Pw 012 fM ;~ 21 ~6 , 11 +1.,,, M',',, ,' ge""•af manager Of Phoenix the ht t r. m11 Tee l ~ Moel kl '• OJl FGn '40 10j7 Mt.o Omln t 07 t U 8-O~tocitd •t1 I 56* 56\lt S6 o -4 I c A OU 12"41 1 io 11\• "'' d ~ 00 rig raCa. c!Trl~• >'> ,,•• MM!!Wk, co'• 1 'Ii I• 'i Ol!on 1 31 • ~ MUI' SJ\rs un1v<11\ -OiGIOf11(Q fl) 31 12 11'-llh + Vt mp P m 21 1 1& 111o f ~ MMO based tur( paradise The 45 c-· ~.. "~ 1 .... 1~ 1rn ,ro:.i s,1 1un1va11 MY! Tot ~nn11 '!','" 1w so u it:v. llVi 1r,t _ l~ Olll'"9hm '° 6 111, 10'1) 11 v. +1 :;:.."onfaP c11~1 1;: 10 10 1• 1a ' Mectuti His bill approved by the c:~~~~ , 2~, = 'J.li: 1 • , ~~lie~ •\~ 1. u :i& ~:1A 1~ut : ~ :~ :1,~J 1~ 203 21~ 1(1"" 2 "' + 1v. 011 no "'A 2 2 pl'l ~\} ~.Sl'o lrid l•n Hd 111 31 ll"' n 11 , ~ .=~vs~ day season which began lasl legislature and now s1ttlng on ~~:''s l ljt 15~ .t::r1·T;A l~ ::~ CM<lcln 17 •I 1t" ~II l~Vll u ... v. I 1'1 IG ""' i~ ~ ~\lo n'h ~ ~ 81~':' ... ~)Obu .~ 1J '°"~ 1J'., -1~ .. \~P;:rL.,,l ~ '1 ,r.., ll I:"' ~ .M•lv $ Nov llshowed1ncreasesof l4 Gov Reagans desk for Sl""' Co,m Yr 9 •1' Mtq r .,,,., 4 , c:a 01v1• >3 l &l 11 sewr s•r •1>11Pn1 uo 11 ••• • .., tti+lltDitSeeg 120 t c..•~ +1 \'> "r•-l'l inaitiN~i fO 1 ia ia 11 Memor percentandl2percentforat f 0" f.""'1'd 1.s~1~14~g~11 c~bv.\1i.J1\1 ~«"'tn~1~~rni: l!~'<in ~~'t:le:':"c.F'~~ 11 ~·· i~ ~1a=~81:t:g'41?: ~ ,r" 41 ,? +u.1n9R':i"~'his l&~ ~!~' ~!1 ~\i1? ::::~~:r tend a.ice and belting res pee-•hong wou d gdlV£_ C~forn1a s c~::1 ~ t~i f~ Muenrr ,,,, 7Y> !fl~~cll"cl ~ ~ : ;! 8~\'r.""" l:.n in ::::=. o//"r .1 l~ •7'h ~~ UU: -l.i Orl'IPll!lf 30 15• ltV. 11'• If t ~ 1~.1111 t I 2 IDB 2• 231 2l .. -1~ ::~:i rseraCe In UStry an $8 3 tro1s Cn 2t 3n My!R E' 2~o l\'I totmr 7 OS 1 11 Pl $11: • 02 t 51 fllrb 011 1..5&1 10 ff:: 32\l )')\!, 'Ii Oort'ltMln 80 n ~ ~1 $9 2 Inmont 2'l> 1 I ' 9 I -r Mei 1 tiVeJy • miJJIOnOnCrease frOm Jheparl CC<N00~ <R •O .S ~yer,C0E 'l 231? 1pjt "v 1'77 303 tnc&m •lll •:?tg•rcl Cll: ?.S 12 Jl~'i JI\\ 311 +\.-Dornfnd 'e n,,t•,,••,.!,•++•1M!ko 10b ',' '10"' Jllo 0•0>~-.. Me1tl' ~ ~ 1n 84 .. cc n • •V. epll !hr .so 5'' Stock 10t 115 ~'le 11'1( 10 1 11 • 11 11 00!\nelley "' l ,... 'o ""'" m.plr Cop 31 t • • ~· • Mti1bi Whyarethetracksrunrung t 1• 01n1Lba 1;1oniN•l flrnd l'o111ocentShr 9uro1t1HelGr111 1u•.ng•lnM•o 1 , ••, +"°ll oorlcCp:l1 71~15 •15"1i "'i1n1erco 110 11 30••30 o -~ """'' presen , percent lo 15 25 D11n1Y M 11 • 11 N111C1r A •~• •'lo Chinn"' Fundi Ntl.I"' Cet j,, • u 11t1 Ml •I 1 -. • ll 11>! 11 + ~Dorr onve• 11 10 ,,,. ''• -v. 1n1rlk nc 1 &O s 1•~ '' ~ 1•, ~ MGM sostrongwheneverythmgelse t H 1 0111 oe1 s'ia , NCmo Co t:i. n, ••*•~ 10 11 11 05 Nt11w Fd, 1•11i1e1t11 Ind M 1J 11,, 12~ oowChm 260 ~n 1o;i, "'"" 6t1ot -1•111M •.&O n22t.t1?2~ i1o11 ~ MtJ•M percen Orsemen WOU d get Oah Gen 2l 23\ Nlf Ecul ll ls Corn SI 1 tl 1 SI New W!d 11 S 11 It S•lhln 1112 SO 1 ll \ l• 1 3•~ Or111oCp 1 <Ill 10 17111 26,. 2~ -~ Int Ch Hue r 35 '1 .0 40 -'*' Mt Ell JS at a standslJ!l? an estunated u l mo Ilion a• o,•~•,," ,', 2 7"11 N•t &<> 15 ., u1~ Grwth • 3~ • 11 Ntwlon 11 .. 11 ,1 &•u$chL11 .10 " , ui. 31,. 36.,... + \lo oreu1n11 1 Ao m 30 2'-30 + ~ MIFl•Fr !Db "' s1 S>"-~s•, -111 MGIC ., •r ti , l~ •\.\ N1t ~b 1S '' lll((lm , to 7 '3 Nl(ll S!ro I 62 1 61 B1111r1.11> 10 138 15\\ 2• i. 1s Orto;sr •112\1 21~ m ll \'I--, ">l In' Harv 1 eo 109 2C'lio 2J • 2A + •• Mll:hG Nobody IS really sure ad nually and !he tracks $!., D!t,," ,r 11 11 N•11 ed 11 ~ 1'"' SPKt t u 1 J.6 Nw1111 12 ,, lJ tl Bt•• 110• 1 1 31 lJ 11 _ j Dr•••r Pl e2 12 11.,. 11.,. 3t~ -ntkokl 1 Jl ' 12 • 12~ n • t "" M~~ f •O .. l 5~t9'o Nt1PH 2\'o'\.>hll!ltGros aOc:nooh 591S9SIH!Fdsl 11 1~1~79 l'f\T+1iOrtVf1t1Cpl lSltlillU .,lJ't:o lnl!nd!lll 302 'l.\l.1 1-l•l1 •i"' Mcrod m1ts Leonard Foo le chie 1n mlihon out of the increase ~'•"• ,_•, 26 '~ Hai !\ecR • t •\ c1p11 5,. 5 M Omtu• 5..52 s u rum1" so 1t ,.. l'l:I 21 _ "' ou~-p-,,,. l ca il 1g . 11 , ,1,., -b 1n1 11111 "n 10 u n"' 21 • ,, • ~) MfdCn f h elf " 1i1 mN•f how 1 ~1 ~ F~nd 1X1111lOOFd l7H1J.291ect01c•l0x11'W•l'V.36' Dunfl'r1dlJO ~S•'•'''-••~• ntArli: 17110 • ~ ~. ~l MdS.Ol vestigator orte a1orn1a Wh th th lux e~ S? n N•I Iv• •lo•l\i Frnt ,1,,.,ll1alFd acatl,flttcl!Arllb 3411 ,11.,_nltt+'lllDlllll•n60t 111u~1111t18 +ti!nt Mno:ioe ~12.1 1ik t2~:. ~ Mdd B d B e er e governor signs Oet c~nT 1•14 1A\~ ~jnN~tf. l~:. 1f\; ShrM t 1J ',, g"O w,, ms 12 S6 U.56 Se co Pel so 111 11 11~. II +v. dul'ant ] 1Se 11 lliU' 124\0 125 4 +v. •''1' ~ c~ l siio ii~ )l • ~\, ~ ~ + ~.. ""dw11 J{orserac1ng oar Ut V. e the bl!J SlllJ JS Jn doubt DI!! II •Vo 19 4 N h I" '9 30 SPKI 7 16 7 11 nt 11 38 11 38 Se den I 60 6 24'• ?•'4 2•'111 _ ~ ctuPonl pfC 'ill ' 63 6Uo ,,1, -\; II a11 ' ' M l <11> can guess It has lo dO With a Oev An"' 10 • ltm Nl~lisn, 3•<. :15\~ Cllemd 15 05 U 'S 8°'"nl'IM * ~ 10 j' Se cl!'ICIH 60il J 15 JJfo IS + v, duPcn f13 SO I il9 "i •9 ~ 1!9\l -~ I n:I P~~r: 4 isgt »7;. Sl7 ~ sa~ + ~ MM!~09• however Say Spokesmen But Oewev E '• '"' H• '''' ,., ' lnv~1rn1 DVI Pl' c Sell How 60 71 3JV.. 3) 23~ + • 011<1 L 66 «I 11•\ 21 ~ 1 >Ii n 3 • -M bl I rt fth Olm Cr 14 \'i lSA.NCI NG lOV.lO•~ColOnl~ OTC5e( tl5•9Cf1ell lnlercon J2 l'lll 7 1 OU.I.TAP 7 tl'0076 15 !t 2'~ l"t5e!lol0 9 31 31• !' ~· Mnnl'I psyc 0 ogica so 0 Ing 1£ he does the new measure Dhc inc • • ~ NEii~ 011 ?\• 2¥1 Eqyty l 30 J 61 Pac~ "nd ' 11 1 i1 fltmli ca 1 s 161:. 16t: 16,1 ovrno 1nd s 10 • 1n 10 • -1n1 l& l 1 os 50ll • '• •O\• • ~. t ... M .. nc lnthef1rstplacealotof oivt•CM l~~t'NPAGi• 1111 Fu!ld tc1 1035 P1u1J1ev 6COftta,!'dxl60 ,.21 ,22107 ~~ 111 ovn•Am 20o 2'(11 • .,. s. 51, 1n1&Ta1D• ''°1.n l•O uo SU MH lt will help horseraclng to stay 0oc0,.J,•!• , 5>11 5 • NW Ni G 1~ 111 crw1~ , ,. 5" Penn os 7 2J 1 'l aenaix Pl 3 1 "°''" '° .aVJ -ii E F \Ml& r prF 1 2 111 • 1 1 ~ 111 to 1•11 Mo "• people go to ra~s 1n hard lsf' C l f ou .. 1 7'h NWPySv 1i•1a 1neom t 11100J~~1M11t 13.st ll:aeneuc11 1'° ._.n..16 46 .,-- -nT&T p!H• 2 n II 77 -~'1 MPCe times because they need to g"t on I ee In a I ornia '6::1e Jg!J ~~~ 1:,; gN~fJ ~~~ ,'; 1\· 10Yt'G,111 1~~ 1~~ ~r·~im, ' ~ r,11•10 1::;:~.pf4 )0 .;~ ll 'h 1i.l-i 1!~ +1 .... ~::c~ .. l~ = 11 ;~ ~u ~Vt:!:~ r~TJ&f11 :11°• 2i ~!~ ~~ ~ ~~~+ 14 ~~.~ Orew N l 't 2\'t Illa W<1t il 2$ omS Bd •19 •15 lie f • !"o 1 • -'"Etsl ~Ir L!!I ''.19 111 11 11 -Volnt&T ptK• 19 71 71J~ II \, Mo~wk the1rm1nds offthe1rproblems ounklno 1~\111:1o I Sc: wl!1tAll 111121PonEn1 S'1 u '"llut11" '' '"" '" '"'\' EiitGFn1 3816h261.\'41~-"",,rTPrL.sso1 10•1 '' 'l +~ Mo•toe Oyr fO!\ )\ ~ '' ~montln '1~1 ~ wUI! CO l o10 I Sl p °" jt'll(I 10 OS IQ f~ :erktY Pl!O 171 4~o a\lt I \ ~ V, Fti!tVtll l ICI $ 17 l~ • 17 .o. ~ lnTTpfN 1 7J llO 52 5 'I ~H Mo vb Horserac1ng to them IS a Co , ~ El'. Pel~f 10 11 ot1tr 1,. 1,1 17~ ornp At 1" 1 7J P11n Inv 1 tl t 16 e•mec c,,.,,, " ,•,,, 2"<i l +v. E•fltoclak 11 2'7 ,,~ ~t\ ~•>-< + ~In ut 1 l jQ 5 76, 76 i6 -)\ IJ.on& t ti ~··tc WI l ~ ... Over NA 3,: l'I ornoe• 5 1] 'H Prla J~rld~ Btf~ 511 1 to lS9 22.-. 12•' -\• "•tonY• 1 40 12 "" 10 ,.. • + ·~ tnl vr I A ' i1 211 ~7 , Mo_!~ distraction an escape 1·po1· a 0 s 111 Sh 11't I Ox¥C•I t 11 10\li omo Sci r '' • 6J 2"'E I ~ ~~ ~ M =~ J" ~: tt s.i,, •7V. ~!~ A1~\ +\oil E•ton Pll It l 2t 2t '9 +14 tn t pace I H 1l I ll il -" Mo.~, Another reason ~ople ht £con L ~b It \9V. PEC I rl ''"' ll 'I !°"'p Fcl I lo! '01 H •' 10 •• -• J ., .,. ~ .. -t I<(~'" Ml •! 4• ,5 ,, , ,~ nt fl and 90 ' " • • ~~.·.· t'.. I Edue SY1 ;~ 2l•Pe~l Br •7 •l\.'J om1tk 3'j• •Ot or ,,..,.,3c1ar111>n ... I 1~ le'4 ll"i+~Ec~e clJ 70 11 2<• iJ\o? ~ nttrsPw Ii• 1 11 16 17 ..&.j' i.l~, the ra~s these days he "I P• E 1;1~ 1~•\ P1e Au~ s:i. 61.i onc:orc1 t •• 't' ;;: ~~~'~ •~~!:'I e,,~•_1 .. "",uir .] 11 n " 1s:i,; u , +v. PG&G 1~ ,, 1:u.1 ,, , ll -.... in e ••Sir 60 s1 ts H Hl. ,_ • .., MGn•• Co •d <I l'ba~~!I l•l'~PK FIE '9~1 3l .... OMo ln•6l B00 p GI 39 "'-" ""'~4J.6 o SS•'o S! +t111;M~1cQ9e lr-t Jlo ~ • -?<YOl•Betf "'61 19 16 9 T'l~ ~iGnO adds IS to try their l\Jck llSI enn ~l<Mr 8t 5V. '\.!i Pe~to Co 2~ 3 4 !Oflllj In 2 ff J 2l p~~r117. 1.: i ~ Slut 8eU ) l'O 1 .o~. ">"'° C<llli + \It l"l&cl As•nc 11 ~ • • • ~ 1owaE/l 1 JO lt 17lo 17 • ''• f fil~ ' you know make a fasl buck or E: ~~: ~l I': ~=~~·or 1°1 J t :::1 ('~ 1 "!! tfi 11'£~~11 F""f\o '" =~~ r::,.~s 3~ 'lf~ 1Jf11, 'H~ + .. \~ ~1:..:" .. ~i1 ~ H~ l~. ~~'~ ++'"' =:PL~ l: : ~~ ;f: ~~,; ~ {! ~a• £etc..... 2 l /t P111tW k ,,., '"or• LG 13 71410 Georo 11Ull ~1 fl<itlrogCo., *" 11\ 11 11'1 t "9ElolnH~t Ind ~ 61.'o 5 , SU IW IPSV IJ4 6 19 , .. , .. _,, o •t' tl.\.O ' M E1t l!l'l'O 5\\ ' P•uler, P 4V. 7 nl't' C•P lo 9 11 O'I I:"" I" 9 32 Ools(:11 25b lll C.\'I ~ .a, V. "\"•i~NG •• 11 1• 11 -1. YE 11110 60 16 '1.li 7 1 11 1 o Ni d SI •1 csv1 '•i•>'•"""•velt 11 "121o rnWOlvJ 1•SU llClll'l'I os 710 flondlnG'7 ! lft l 'I 6•->u i:-1riC1>l'!O 1121 ,73•1,1\IJ-1tekCMP tlJJlllo7"!1 191+\'I Mooo 8ob \Vurtho[8ayh1eaO\\S acco a e "Oat~ 4 PeeriMI 91"'tl.i rnWOel 577625 _onvtst 59!&s1BOOkMll!l21 J11lo 71 11 +YoFlt1oll•O 1t•~77 '1 ~?A -llTSvplt!D 3 91 9J fl ~Fye R T k S M ' ""' \ • 4'4 Pttr•~1 T '' ,,.., ~VIII M !5 26 1511 VI••~ t It 1 Sl Boraen 120 tl 23\ii 21> ~l -\I i:=mer i; tt 1 7! :V\• 5' , s1 -1 -J K-MIS al ace rac in an ateo sug EmPS o 1~' 13n P• EM n 1 ~ 1v. 0e11y1" Group vov•o s u , 16 6or11w1r 1 2s •1 72 llVI 71~0 + "m~rv•, ., 11,3 •1•~ .., ~ <11 • _ "" MSL h I £~erov C 2~ 'A P1 &W It ltV. Ott81 10 i • 1111 Revoe t 1* , <IO Bormans IC 17 u ~ t]i.;, l]l -v. Emh~rl l XI u 19 , ;o 70 + ~ J~e~1nA 1• 14 1 7 • 1 -\\ MuO• gests l e increase 1n v1rtua ly Great Southwest Corp and ~',:[,' ,i:re i Ao i"li Penn Pac n~ 1 ~ 011wr 10 11 n 92 R "' .t ,1 !O ll ll BCI! ea s , 2• li l•h 33 , 34,,.. _ \i "'moo st 1 IA ,~1 ,,..., ,...,~ ,A.., J•<kA Pt .a 2 '• &-• ~. Mu "" II' k It d th •\•\lt l'~dW• 7 1 ~ Otll1 '"'15Rosenth J H SJ1 81>11rn11n, 3311 IO't lO&i+\.IEnol~Mln40 1 .. 1" 11'!'.•"'1~+\J&ntten 6Qb I ••o l 1>ol7k +•~ ll ure~ a racs a en m1ce IS Cerro Corp of New York f~~~! •• r~~ f ~,,,,",',u f ~~\~·.·. &··~1r,nu11 •1~emf!'d •60 S03flr•nlfAr SD S4 . ~\ i\(-:GF11nl~flus,, 111:1).l 1,~ ,,j J~PanF" 06e '~II 10 1 IO~-·~ Ml/P'I Year. 1s due io unemplovmenl • 'L!__ ..,. fly, univiu dluilr 12 55 11.Jl BrlaaSt tcoa_ 11 cl ~~"4-4"oi-+\.\ E• tG•s ':ro _ 1 1'l!i n11o. ~"-~ ~ Joofd nl 06tl _ 14 ,.", 1ci, l~ Muroo -Coty:lirecimtly announced they ..,._,_ Ortvr v un•v111 udefer F11fltk ariSIMv 110 12' s1•.1. s ~ S)~~ _ .., ElB lne 1 70 '' 11>1o "l 11 _ ~ JeffnPlfo1 ta ---i n • n ~ + I\ Ml! ;1 Jffolksarentworking he E1I011&1tow•rd !"'Inv 1'to1J1s11r1J1Mv pt2 1 '°'' •O ~ -llA "s•u•t :io 1 114 '"\ 1 +~ Jep~n•A lO • u, l•• JS •-'~ currentlyareconduc t1n g !''':It ,:'~/fO!J' od '1131112 11r11 P.r »e •• 10 ''• tio Euex1n1 1"' co"• 11 11 n•• JerCP1. Pl' 1M1 .so . SO > S(I -11 remarks They re g01ng to I rvr '. > 1111 ll 1' 13 16 Sr Pel In ""° S 9\~ t t'" l"<1erU11t 11t I .I l•lti 11~• 111. + Jewel Co I 5'I 54 '~ 4J • •6 +l,. 1vant to do so mething 1vllh .. ff::!• 710 1 S.cur1111 F11nd~ arl!wY GI 60 31 11 26 i 27 + u i::1nvt Pl? •n 11 1~-. 1~ 35 -J mw-1 "' • ts.co I?., 11 i1 -. .'(; Prehrrunary negotiations con p } M-! corn st • l2 • 32 1111WovH11 P' 2 1 11 31 ~1 e•~~• CP .. n 11:1.:o ' 11 -JI'" W• .., 1 ... :io ~ :io • Jo their t'me cern1ng the PoSS1ble sale of res ey Ebf; Si \l l: ll n f,011IY 1 II ' ... Sklv"UG I n • 111, 23.1/o iv.i. -llo E11rolnll 2Se s l&i.a l~ ~ u~ + JcMM~!'I 1 '° •• JI 3& ' la -f· ~ t nvttt ' • 1 '1 8 own (9 t 5 • 5\'t l\lt \'o F~~MP 6llb ~ :It 3 Jli. -"" JOl'ln JCl!n 11 $9 '9 •• ,. ... • ., But not all tracks rel y on pnnc1pal assets of Grtal "'~ ~1t HJ!:~~""' 1~::1~""'"Sh•rir "'-,5 .,.., '"'-'~:+~£11Ct110 l fJ n 11 '° '°111 ._ \J~n~svc ~ ': '~· 2.P• 2&lo + 1_.. So th t' Le d sh H ner9y 1 :JO 11 JO r Sflecs l 11 l• o~ e .... snce I 50 2 Wi 26~ 161.6 ~~ ~~?9 i,.i,\ l• • 1 ~~ + '' J n vc 0 to ' •9 •~ t t1o pS"ychology lo drum up their U wes S a er IP OUS De l t io,,• J 34 .nil Glh 1 oc 165 lryn•wlt lo 7.ta I'"° isio 15'1\ -"° ~eio:;c .SO 3)~'k_t f:il':~~ l~P : :i ! l'ii : a ,' 4: J business these days 1ng Systems ~is1on to ~er.ro ve opmen 1~~IVG!h J ~~ Ii~~:: :g ,//f1of !i B~~eCo' ~ ll l:l: 1:J: 11;: .... F:l~Hnl 15e Int N... 7 . N. -J~i&~ ylJO ·:·· ·~ ~ ,. , ---1. Santa An.I' Pro">bJy the Corn .-qvt Pro ' un1v1ll II D1111 1• 09 U ff Blllld Co "' S l >O Sl S1 l $l +2 F,•,••~,, ' ,'., ~ Ul\~ IS 1• -..1. ,~,',', >O ~-~~-~ ,! i + • v ·.r-t1e• 1?•11.2 •1 111 t12 190llud;Ftn60 1 ~h n . ~ .. -\\ ••'' ... ,., •~ ~•+•M• ,,-,--~ C S l Vtflll tn IC .. MO Slam• Funds Bvduet n ., ,. ' ~ft ·~ + ~ F~m1YFI 611 38 u 11\11 +'•Joy Mto 140 II •1 •O'I '°' --largesttrack1nCahfom1,....ana erro Corp htadquarlered T }d D.C•• un•••J ca1111 111 r 52 Burtliore1 10 • 31i1 3,:ii, ,,~.,._~. IF)•n•l'e<'' rnc 1\ Jft •• 1n 1t1 M-• />. 1 tt "1• 1t 1<1 1-1\ located'n •-cadoa,askeda In New Yor' IS an In a es 0 Felrff 10017 '""~"' 9'1110 ffllllloVIWIOXl1517•1 111n~.o.~·"•r Wr•IF~ 111 11ia1~111 ..1.~1t•11A!pU ) S55~1s1.5s1 ..... .t\I K F&•m !u 16$ .$5 Ttu•I , .. !57 11111111 Rl'llO 111<1 8 , I l"' 1" \."t PttlhMI ll'lb , $11 ... •• • ..._ 1 K•sCeM 10 1)1 19 11 1• ..LI\ b·nd to 11clp ternatlonal producer of non Fet G•th 11 '1:l'tl ~1111 s 1t2 ''Bun•• 1111 so • 76 26 ' + 11o "A~ 1n11 ,161 .,,, 7A 1 1 -... K11sc"' ,, ' N , u ~ 11 .., + i , " 'Id C11> l011112J W$11nv 761 11Bull11G t«r !11 •1~~ 11 •1 \-iFl!t'lde:r 1•~ 21 )II '') '9 l -~ ~ e hove a brass band ferrous melals and a Sales and earnings of F • \11!'d 13 se14 •• wtnv Gt s o.o s .u BYr\Nor 1 he 110 2s 1z•r. 2,1. +it ~eel!•" , ~. ,•, ''~ "• !• '""' + Fd rllll 100l11ff e Inv 112/lJ•l lurNw o!" tt ali \'i ;~ t-ed oo o l?h 1 '1 -'i marching the track every manufacturer of w••e cable Presley Development Com Fln•nd11 Proo 'tc''' s 1 • » '~'"° .... 10 t4 1' • 1• 1•\t + li et1NM1t1 ,. •1~ ~ ... .JJ .. 16 .. Ovnm J SJ J 16 Frm GI ':it '3t surrtt>J t.o 1lil 109•; 106:111 JOI~ -1\/i Fedf'ac Elee 11 1~ i f\\ t • + ~ day says Royce McKinley and brass moll products on the pany (OTC) Newport Beach 111du11 un•vau st•te s1 '900 .cioo B11111unv '" 1 111'1 11~ 11"' -v. F Pac '" '' ' t•tll 1, I• -~ ' ll'l(otn ! , !.6l 51tadmsn Fundl " Fe<tl'tPSO 1 1 11 ' II ~ II '> + l VICe pres1de.n1 ftnanCl" for the U S based bomebUIJding [ I r m V~nt J tl •JI Affl tnG 'If 6 7S --e Pe p Pit lJ 110 XI' ,n • i~ • track s parent company Santa were $6 652 533 and '$234 953 ~:1r, R1i :,5~ 1j l~ klf;'"t i :: ~ii s:f"'~1~nl IO .·.!. l\. ,r,: r~ ~ ; F:l!.:n~ 1.: ,, ·i~: '{!? 'l ~ .: • Anita Consolidated Inc It \Villlam C Baker chairman respectively for the second ~:I 1~l1~ ,.11 ~~~ siii:. R08 1ffl"n ~:m'11h;L M1:~ ,... Ut 2s11 11~~~ ti~ :::0&-;,~5'( ... 1 •c5 ~<.\ ';~ ~:~ +"' of the board of G r e a l rt ded J1 1 Fit Mu 11 1 6~ 1 " C•o 0o 1.r. 1 oa CtmPSp ro " 21 , 2•~! , -i.:. F•rro c, 10 31 1t ' 11'-161~ +I g1veseveryoneatlcstafeehng qua eren uy311970 Fii N•' ,,..,, s1«k 1t..i11.A.ltdnBr1W d ~' 1 ... 1 .. n.~ "lbrrhrd 10 '' ''• 1i• 1• -~ l Ou know Southwest Corp and Macco For the sonul ar ~rood 8 "~' s11r1 33 • :i.13 ,~, • ,nGt s.,,10 ~JS can Pie 210 1 51'.1 ~ s.s~-. + ~ FHtro1 l •o u '' ,1 ~ " <1 Co lh bd tl..A t'~ FlelC8D SJ.$ uont !·'' •~C<1P<1efnJ70 11S~5''l"''' 1<nl'tdt ~n -~1.1 1~t••-c h I h f rp e SU SL 1ary ~J.l:lt Ill--rt f h hFtt Friel •16 v11~r Gt If 4C1n<11ft11110 1 1c ~ l•l.. j•Y.-, l"lrr.;!ne lilO 1" ••'> .i• " .1. aug I n I e pro 1t pinch Jud Le d shl lfb year ago a po ion o v. 1c Ft1 crro • n s 11 Mii Ao 'A' 1G .R c1~ c: 9110 1 2 ,.:u. 26~ "" _ ,.. "'" c~., '10t 111 ., , "" ~ .~ , _., itlarl~et Syu1bols T~• ffllll'IWI"" fl • kl"Y tQ l"ITl'ltocilt YW fl ttit ~lad: mtrtcet ''°°''' r~ce tracks are looking icar c es a er p usmg \\as prior lo the comt1ony s F""' G111 1 •s '32 T-'''"~ ,'" !'5'1 ca llrun 1 50 s ... " .. * + u Fs• M"'' i an •6 ,, '~ 11 • - round use of their grm.,ds S)stems siud that n ° public offering sales i;aJed ~,:~~•,',' 0 ~ti~ jT~~1 ,J}},::i;"6 ~::~is~a.o': s u~ U ~'" U" .).'1 f~~'~'!.s1l..!': •,; ~.·! ii,1.. 6,~.:; 1• • dcnnltive anreement has been r&ft n ""'~ R c1raPL1 1.41 n nlio '11~ 2J11o 4-" Jc ... ""' .. , 11 ,.,~ '' -• 646-017~ Why shouldn t I hey., , 0 ,2 699 706 ON c t•7 l.$3 ~: c~ :11 : 00 Ctrpl(/! I 60 IS 2• WO 2:Rl -r. F 1hr Fcl ,~ l~ 1l I"~ 1 ~ 1-A.IM ,~111 or 6 lr1t., b-Am111•! rt11 !i• '' llfu"'' Ire unofl ef1L l\' !!!!1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111!'.'.!_~~ut~r~l="~F~"?~:..::T~h~~~h~a~v~_I~ reached at nus lime Should Earnings per share for the 8fif'h 5 Ii ! ~ fTIY E<iD IOI • ll C111rlerCo to •• 21.. Jlt\ JJ -~ ~ ~~I.,),' '; r~ :w : • -Glut llllek Olv cltncl. t--1.\quldflln• "'* th be h L f"""" 1 U 2 ~ udol' Fd 11n13 Ol Ctrr Pile" tl! " il l: --..-"111~ 1 49 1S\I. ,1~ ;Jt ~r>cl o-Ottia ere sue an agreemen J3 week n11riod "ere 28 ctn ls l'reHm 120 1 ri wnc Gt t SI 1 tl carrGn l 1111 111\ '"' 211• + .--. ,. in PIA• .II! 110 o11:-. 6,~ ~~4 ~ .t., r•o er 01111 In 1m a1111t Prepared It Ill be bje<:t t .. ~ Fa lrMul • n I 7l Twl!C Inc 312 a Ill C8 lfrW ..eoa 1°' 15"-t lS lS 1. "'A t: ca. .. 1 .. ' ~1 ' 'tock Glv!de~cl ... ,~kl It. I )'ttr ,_ w SU 0 Earn LO gs per sbare for the "' nd •nc Gr• ~U~/~ Mui I :l .11 ,','!,'.",.'' '•(If) ,:o, u.~· 22 'I 2l't +l~ .... !:et ... ~ •• \ i~ .. 0 ; P•Y•blt fn •tO<k Our!"' 1,10, ft! m•I .. thcappro\l'llor1ht.boardsof fl cmrc '"'Ill c"" .... ~i.o ~-.,..F11Ptiw1to :r11 •1 ~ ·~· ~·-· rst quarter 'Were 16 cents 1m~ t 11 i ff unitt:PF' ""'11n1v• 1 cc1 Corp 11 • ' • • :\i + l'I "' •f'Co""Lt 2 ·~ -... -t , ~·""' _, ' e1>11 "'t~• °" •io1f!vlcfr1111 or o ·.:U•" bu di.rectors or ,,tacco Corp based on sale' or $4 207 U65 ~,~, "' \.~~I l ~ 'l~«rn u 1t1,·,~ 1: E:f:~J.p r .. 1~l ~~\~ lr' 1,\\ + ~ :~c~:· 1 ~I 1~ ;~~ ~ ) Jf ~ • • ,,.,., d4!ei.. •-f>e~llrtcl " ... II ff ,,, Gre.,t South1vest Corp and d I f$!"921 Fu!'ld Am !'Stli ne°"'nn 1 C.•np!A4.W ,,. 5l"" s1:i.a Sl -"'F "''' 1 o J' n thf '"~ 11-Dtti.rea er~• 111.,. an tarnngs o ""' r .. t~ '!'ru ~111 1•,,•:71 cnroc;o •lll :l'(I ,, 3ll ;io , :n1Jo+11 0:1v11!'' '" 1111». 1•• c >1 -t1Q(lte1v1c1tnc1o 11 Cerro he said SI ti ho I d ~n sec 1 I 1~ V•M j5 151 ~' "" \"' 'I n • '1'• 27'' -\\ l'MC ca t} 111'1'.1 1t~~ 1• • ~ r •~ t.o• k-O«l•r• x mon l me. sa es Jn Giii ~nr j !7 SJ UFcf C1n 1 1 7 61 t~ lllLI ., ut1 l"ll• "\o -h "M( oli' 11 l! • ~I 'l'I • ..1 • or o•l« lhrt rt&r •n 1c~11mu!1!Jv1 ~\;fl earning~ totaled $10 859 598 ~a:. 'r 'l) ''2 'Vt!~ 1.\'"' ! ,t 11· .:,,1h~spf:'1so ~'! •'• i:1, ~fll ::1 ~ ~=r~~ : 'l m 1f • 1: .. :!:. =~~.~., ~1"°1 In 1r~ ... !'I-Hew tw.r. • d 1368 87.. • II I 1111 Fd , ,, I u r.· n ii 1 t Lf el l6 !" 11 ' -,, "°"'' M " 13 '' j ,,.. I ~ ' I ~··· d v Oe"'1 omltlto. 1>f. 'I ! F• n r spec ve V ~am $1 11ff1 &t ~1 ~ 71 , _...MP• 1 16 " .v. Jt I.flt llOPll' an"" • , ,, , 1 '''" Ol' no ~ulon 11~1n • l•ll arviotnC n' cs lot·s l.l'fil comrur.red to home sales of 11, ~"· A I • 111 Vnc.~5 IOI J ll '~i en1 .,sw I '° ,, '°11 • G ' + ~t "•dMOI 1"' ) ' ,. • .,. ' " m,...! "' r-O!'C ~'1"11 or Pt II ~ lt1U 011111 $4 )~-()61 for the first half Cf O~,Pllt~M -h ff lt~ ~=~I l ;f i 1J !:Te11J• .:: v. ilt~ ?11"; nit. .:. l~: ;1,;'~".:it u i ri .... ~.; r. , : ~ l"Otk alvlU/11~ 1-P'-o 11 I~ 611f'I"' A •great oppor(untt) for lest "tar Eftrn1ngs ""'r share2~::.~n 1 ''~r-'1M1nc1,. ~·ii :j :~r.1.!,~'° ljl• lit! 11..+1:~:l:tfn"""' 1 12 t:~ l~! .:, ... .:. •10 "1 "'1'"'c11~v11uton.,ott 111•t111 l ..-"'' un1v•!I w1 tSl In '10 I! rufl•A llb l 5 I • 'Id\.\ 1Sh. + I~ "°"......, .J>~ •~ j '• )1 t -. _ Ill' 4~-6 11rlbllf .,., 111~ a-s.1,1 111 flm. prorlt Is at hand for !host Jor the six month period were 11~~ ;U"J1u ~~ •• ~"""t"u 1~c:e. ~~d~~ ~· 11 1 t.' ,It" ,lr\. , =~~t,~ .:g ~l 1\: 1~~ l': ... ~ cfc c•ntd ••-!•-dvldtf14, .,_.,.11"' ... " whose reason has not glvei1 44 «nts H~r;twr ~i ,,! n 1r ~1°''!'' c111mos 1'.iS ti 2~ ''" ,.._ _,. '•llht11 1 !Ti i~' 11" h I ,11 • .;. ~ 't "' •nd J111e1 1n •~1L x-d,,_h,.11,r., my to rear ' W r I g ht Jlome sales ror the secon 1~ Cr 1 ~ 1• '! ~ .. ~ 'l·" •,;i ~11:re~~.~ 11t S" ;l{t :l,~:: 'Z '1111111 111 201 n',.. •1o ' ' -• 1111 kln. ••-Ex ri1111 ,--w 111ot.o1 .,.., j Th l I-• -· l 0.t t Kii.. J1t !'llltMl!l1 Ti' I l f¥..11 1•1,f, )t + lt -•I t1 --W 11'1 I \est ors Serv cts: 5ayg c quarttr Ota ~ .. , Zit, bi:tnglna ., Ill• 1t I " lr1111 t 'OG t ... hfdtef Miii ,. tt i U\i " + Iii GAi C-• , )0 10.1 7Jll a JI ~ -• df11r ...... ,.. ' ..... ""''"'" • IO!l-Wll• I d I of to 372 lb I U lol I f m Mtll!'I 1 .U 'l ti Wt!ll!I lj.>Om llt"INI .h •1 I'~ ·"-' I + -flA C<1 pl 1 1 ~ )0 "" W<-.. "•n li;,ueo,. no-Nut rm a \11ses ma ntenance a e cumu a v' " or to•mn .•! 11 Wl"lf• u m•"o\ 1 1 ''" '•\• ~Yi -11 4A core .co 2~ JG ~ , 11 i .._ " 5•v atl ..,.,v t1t-rn 1 •n11rutr1 .,. f II t d It I t th n t h " I th M I'"' j.. 1e \\ltst "111\f 191 s • MimNY .40 •l 11 ll0\1 '? -\i <-A Jl'l11'0 IJ , 1;, 0 1~, cJ or 1tte U f in Vt.$ e J'>08 IQn n Op e rs 811 -gf'ell t:r an SI 0111 tt 4 ~ ~l!wh!I g,111vtl l\ell'lwr JOI) f 1:1 r.: .._. i tm "o I f J4 u \ ti , -1 •r1~ • or Cl! nt r-11nfteod lll'!ftr IM qua lib' Investment & r a d e the contpany s t:nllrt last I~• •ice.. f:. • i.V~'lm1!d n' l . ~·~'l 't:.i.1 ~o tj ~ti. ~ 'q !. s G.m~ t.'>o ; ,,JJl nP ·,..: -1·~~1\IPl(J Ac! O!' lmtrlt!" "" 1ue• c~mmon s1ock1. year s ·"•les of »6 ,,.., I'!~ } \ !• wf.c Ila o ,,111_ ' •tJ.J lj'"" J,,1 -• ~ •n",,._ !' " I '' ' " , , °"'"'~ ... fn-i=or• •ft b-l\ltll•d • ,. ll'IC ..... ' n Wwlh J• II cfl ll IQ " • II 1 lltW'11 !'Id ' • • I + ,, inlllf~I tlllllllt11J1111 11 .. n·-· -·· -PEOPLES NATIONAL THRIFT , __ __ -,,----• ' Au9U5l Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Mru·ket Moderate Af tei· Big Boost ' . 7• '~ • 1& J• J\ )I " .. ~ . ,, . , ' ' . ' ". " x 17 1,. •• " "' • '" • "' ' .. " 1970 DAILY mo r 11 Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exehange List • I i •ltl Ht! Cll .. ) H 111 Low Ch"t C:llt H '' ' l~ ~I 1l I 1l 11~1~· 61 11.:. • JI n. 1 • l t l o • ' i • l . ~ \. n: . l ,. :.~ .)· ~ .. ' :U• 1\· II 1' 19 o.i. • • . ... . "" ... '" \1 1i" i·· . . . , • :i.> 3th '.Ul o lO Q I? 11 l IO"-10 • , •• l \o ll • • ) ~· ~ s ~ ,, ,.,. l • • l • • ' "'' '~ ,, l • l 76\lt ' ' I 12 "-\;. :n ~ 1• 3t I •111 \' ' 1 \ 7 • u ·~ ... 6 tlo '" lS " U o ,, 10 • '"' • • • • ll"\+ ll'-\ :IOI 1S • 11\ • • • • l '4 .. ' .. , ,,, ,~.... ltl;i ' , • .,,, l• s t J I • s • J •• 1• 0 u .. ' . . •• • l • 1 l\.o ) 1•0 SJ SJ 2 s • J • l•l 10 . ,, 1 11, 1'• 6 I I\ Jtl 11 ,, • ' . . . ' ' 4 '" I ' 2 it~ 6 t l t • ? l 1 ~ -NO-, .. ' • " '" '" " "' " • '" ' ' ' " • ,. " ,, "' ' . ' • ' . " " •• • ,. ' . • • • ' ·~ , .. ,, , • " ' . , . • ' . ' 'I , ' " . ! !O 5• o , . . :ii • ) 9 11 1 I :n '1 !lo 1 • • • • 0 • • • H '' • ' ll~ ~ ~ i . ??0 1 19 •1',,,,_ . . ... 0 ,,. ,, l••-?I 1t 1~ 11 9 I I s • 1-'<r '" l't 6 • • • • • • 1 ,, • IJ • • Y )011)<•10l• Ol• . . . . . .. J~lo,l• 1 t o I o 1 9 o I I H l l I '\ j 10 10 6 • l-. l 0 U I I I 1V 1'. ,~· 'J 17 !9 • 1• l 11 , 11~ I ) o !Jh I !'I !J o J ~.. J '!1 ll • 10 ,,,,, u 1' ,t • ' .. ' . • •• '" • J: • '" • '" " • " ' ' ' ... ' ,, . " " . ' "r. " ' •• <l Sii" Htl tMI I Hltll LIW Clftt (hf • l , .... H :a.~ 3t . ' . 2 • • • lJ 1 .-.. l t Jl>l> U'I Io ,, . . . .. } 11 • 11 .. 11 I 6\.'o , .. ·~ '""' I S i o J I '"" J 'IO I • I• 12 .. Ult -RS- • , ' p. ,, ,. . .... It lo 11' • • • • • 11 ,~. 1 2 I t 7111 2t s •• t 11V. 11 • M 10 Ill. 0 l l 0 n ' ' ,. l'• J ,. . .. . ... 2• llh 11\o 91 h V. U'1. ,, ) .. J .,.. :It .... ,. .. JJ ' • , •• , •Wi .... 11 ••• • 0 , 7 .. 1 • ,, 5 • 0 • IS•o 1! ... ,. . ' .. ,. l , .. I ' ' I V, Jt 11 • 11'? ,,.,, .. JG th l'l'o ' 1 •• ' 1•~· 1• ~ l ..,.. Ull :, u: i~l' !0 I Q n 10,.. 1t111 lJ ll:V. II " " • r J J " JI S 't S • 1r I~'! !~\<) , . . ' . Sf J ! 0 1.. '~ 11 ! • ; ,• ,' ,. 11 .. lt .... 1 s "'' ,. J 1< ,J • I 1 '> I lS 13 11._ • > •VJ 0 ,, • 11 . ' ~ l1 I )lo I 1 I I' 111 16 ,~~ t >l!o lA l ~ ... d'~ 1 ~ !\< l 7 > I s! ; ~:: JI 1 o ' S \ 1 I) o !I 9 11'4. i : : t ~ 1l : • l . ' . . o I ' ~ ! i • 0 ·~ ,, ·~ J 1• • . ' ' 1 ,.. t I ,~ i J .. JO ' • J o o1 I I J • s • ! i J l " II I "I 6 o Sii 11 1 • ) • • '° ., ' I 1 '"-' . 5\ 6 • t Jlo .. ' • • " , I 0 ?6 ' ' . ' " .~ ,• 1 o n .. n •• J I lo ' " " ' "' ' I--. • -4 i 1ln ,,. .. tll1h J H tll Low Cl-CM .. ' " l• 10 ? S•o ' ' • • . ' . • • ~ " " ' • " .. " " • • ' ' •• ' ' •M " " ' " • • " • '" .. • 'I ' ' • " ,, ' ' •• " •• .. '" ' . ' ' . ' . • .. • .. • • • " • .. '" ' " ' . '. • ' • • • ., • " ' ,. , I l\o " . 6 11 • " .. " ' " ' J ~· • ,, • ' ' '" • • ' " 1'-1 r u • OS. I !0 ' . . .. 37 ll , • " " ' ,., " '" ' •• • • • • -· -· -. . -. " ., + ... I o -h • • • ' ! " + ~ , ,,,_ .. , no -"' ,. ,, +1 ,, ,,._ \ 6 I • -.. '"" • 1 • '~ ''-"' 10 ' I ~ .. , .. -· . . ' .. } u ., -• • 6 • -~ J\ ) -• 11 "•+• ' . . . -. l 3 • + .... l .. '" ) 0 J•-. S•o "' -\ 1S U -i'> '. "' " I \ + • 1 J + • • 1'4 -s 0 6 + ' 111.o IJ l, .. ' .. • • ' -. s. -.. 1\ 1 1• • • • 1~\o l~l,, =~: ,. ,"', -11 ~u .. +:Z • 1 •Ill ll th t ~lllo Fi11ance Briefs 1 he stock tnRrkel has $Orne c:uch1ng up 10 do .end a con struclh e lnvl!strnt!nl po.st urt ts defln11el)' ~arranted Argu s Research Corp be I 1 eves Inflation is n1oderat1ng and bu s1ne.11s 1nd1cators suggest th e econo1n)' l.s turnmg around 1t adds Corpora.le prof\t!I should 1urn up 111 tile currenl quarter and a drop In the bank prime rate within the next few months 1s a rtal poss1b1l11y, 1t says PARAMUS NJ (UPI ) - I'M' Arctic Services Tnc, has obtalnM a 14 7 mllllon ad· d1hnn to its conlrac:t for ope.rahnR fhc Air Force White --Alice communlci'!tlons l)'ltttM in Alaska • I • I • " • . . ' • • J ! DAIL V PILOT 20 Bond Issues Face Vote Near R ecord Number Ranges From Duels to Water (Editor's nott: Tiie legl,,:. regents for refusing to say amendment. Prop. 12, that of pubUc instruction exempt loturt has placed 20 propo-how they voted on con· would allow supervison lo set from civil service. ~i_titom._a__ntor.J.e.cord. O'll.. troversial issues that had been their own_._NL~alej_ubject to Prop, &-Allow -noncharttr aeadecn>eliiiiaCloseQ OOors. a Jociif referendum vote. Cur· counties to el-t or appot"nt the Nov. 3 ballot. Somt of t · · I -Another higher education-rent Y supervisoria salary superintendents of schools. the rneasures are mo;or~ h'k t be oted b th .. · related amendment, Prop. •. 1 es mus v Y e Prop. 10--Provt'de that loans some minor. Here is a sum· Le Isl t proposes that the speaker of g 8 ure. over $100,000 may ~d~ to maf"JI.) f.he assetnbly shall be an ex-JlELATED corporations or partnerships By DENNIS J. OPATRNY officio member or any agency T 1 1., b t 1 without regard to certain con-created or Cl.isling that :td-wo re .a P' -u ·Separa e sUtutional restrictions .. · SACRAMENTO (~Pl) -mlnlsters the State College -amendments, Props. 3 and Pro 4, would allow the governor to P· II-Authorize the \ Callfomians wil vote ov. 3 on System State Board -' Ch' ti c · submit a• budget for the next · ---iroprac c-~ ballot propositions ranging Voters will also -be aSked to fiscal year within the first 10 Examiners to adopt specified from a $250 million water approve a legislative-endorsed days rather than first 30 days rules for giverning the pro- poltution control bond issue to measure, Prop. 19, to make a of a legislative session and fession. stiffening the penalty for Joan Joan sharking cohvlct.ion a permit the legis.lature to make Prop. 13-lncrease totally sharks, felony rather than · a misde-public. school appropriations d~bl~ v e t e r a n ' s and It is the largest number or meaner. the present _charge. prior to passage of a spending _ 'v1do~ s property tax ex· propositions submitted· t o Felony loan shark.mg would . ro ram emptions to $10,000. voters since 1962, when 24 pro-be punishable by a ma.ximum p g · .. •. Prop. 14-Exempt from civil ,posals v.·ere on the ballot. prison term of five years. The other propositi~ns: service status appointees of Sixteen are pi:oposed con-measure, although.,passed by ~rop. 2-Prov1de that the the Jieutenant governor and stitutiOOal a m e n d m e n 1 8 Jav.·makers, must be sub-Stat~ Supre~e ~urt ~as ex-One person appointed 0 r reeomm~ for voter ap-milted to voters for ·ratifica· elusive. Ju r 1sd t ct 1 on to employed by the pub 1 j c proval by the Legislature. The lion because it amends the detenrune when a vacancy has Utililies Commission. remaining four are legislative state's basic usury 1aw ap-occurred in a statewi~e office, Prop. 16-Authorize the initiatives requiring voter en. i;>roved by the people in 1918. such as governor or heulenant legislature to withdraw a pnr dorsement The Legislature also decided governor. posed constitutional amend· One proposed C5K1Slitutional to shift _the 'esponsib~ity for Prop. 6-Permit expanded ment from the ballot by a two- amendinent, Prop. 15, would increaslQg county ·supervisor investment op1X1rtunities for thirds vote. Eskimo Goat?- . . Center. The fair wound up before Legion .convention came to -town. the American repeal a section or the coo-salaries from itself to the local teachers' retirement funds. Prop. 17-Repeal obsolete Kid meets kid as Shawn Cott on, 8, receives an af. stitulion that prohibits a level. Prop. 8-Authorize one ad· provisions of the Constitution fectionate nose-to-nose kiss from baby goat at Mult· person who engages in or Lawmakers apt>roVed an ditional deputy superintendent relating tq_ social welfare. nomah County Fair in Portland , Ore. Exposition challenges someone to "a duel 1-------'---------'-""-------'-''-----------'--'---''---,-----'--:.....:.:....:c_;..:_-'-'------'--------....,.------- with deadly weapons" from vo.ting or holding public office. Tv.·o bond issues are among the pr'lposals. One •. Prop. 1, asks voters to apprOve .a $250 million issuance to aid local communities i n upgrading their sewage treatment plants. $1 B!LLION FIJ)'1ll If approved, the measure could generate $1 billion over . the next five years - including $550 million I n federal matching funds and another $200 million raised by local agencies. Gov. Ronald Reagan backs the proposals as a toOI that "escalates even fUrther o u r fight against water pollution." The other bond issue, Prop. 20, is a $60 million issuance for construction of recreation facilities in conjunction,, with the Stale Water Project. For the first time since 1938, Californians will have the op- portunity to vote oo whether gasoline tax revenue should be used for other than highway construction alone. A proi>osed ilmendmenl Pftl\1. 18, would authorize cities and counties to commit up to 25 percent of their gas tu allocation for construction of rapid transit systems. Winning legislative approval of the measure marked a ma- jor victory for mass transit advocates, who for years had been blocked by highway con· struction forces in attempts to tap the sacred road building fund. Voters will also be asked to approve an amendment, Prop. 5, that proposes to extend the provisions or the state's open ' meetlftB;s law to the University of California Boca'd 0 r Regents. REGENTS HIT The proposal was adopted by the 1969 Legislature after some lawmakers criticized the Delinquency Study Slated Countywidc A countywide survey in '1:hich residents v.•ill be asked to contribute their vie\\'S on steps to be taken in combating delinquency among children -• and----ymrth will be----conducted this fall by the League of Women Voters. League officers made that decision after ex a m i n i n c: specific problems in the area at a v.·orkshop sponsored by tbe League and the Center for Governmental Studies at Cal State Fullerton. It was also agretd at th<: meeUng that an inventory of the services and facilities available to youth in. orange County should ge compilt>d and made available to the community at no charge. More than 50 persons. among them representatives of Orange County's probation and w e I r a r e departments. OOya' and girls' clubs, mental health organizations •. schools. youth groups and law enforce- ment participated in the Cal State workshop. I . ' • from uith ab II~ frln a frind A friend called Golden West. The world's largest commuter airline. A very goocJ-friend if you're a businessman rushing to a just-called conference in Manhattan. Or a brand new grandmother needed in a hurry back in Chicago. -Or just a guy who hates freeways and airport parking lots. Now Golden West flies 20-passenger, twin JET-prop De Havil- lands directly from Orange County Airport to TWA's satellite at LAX. Think what this means. Only this Golden West/TWA com· 'bination cuts your connection time in half because there are no long, cross-terminal transfers. Now you just step off Golden West and you're on your TWA way. So next time make your first step Golden West. For TWA's colossal new'74 7 to New York. Or any other of their 63 daily flights. Make it Golden West Airlines. TWA's time-saving friend. Yours, too. Golden Ylest Airlines lmHghRxd • • I ' • • •• • ' - ' -- ' . ' • ~men- Stores Polled Heavy Stocking Sk.irted by . Most The hemline story in the Orange Coast l!rea is that wome11 may have to go to any lengths to be in fashion. A survey of department store branches indicates that skirts may fall into three hemline categories for autumn. As the fashion coordinator for the 1\1ay Co. put it, "We are showing three different skirt lengths, with many different looks featured-the midi fashion will be just a part." The 111idi·length skirts, center of a storm of fa shion controversy all over the nation, will be shown at the store as approximately 20 percent of the fashion picture, and often in combinations-such as the midid.ress or coat with paF1ts, or midi separates in the collegienne department. Three skirt lengths will be available : the standard knee length or two inches above : the length just below the knee and the mid-calf. At the Broadway's department stores, many ensembles will reflect the rashlon coordinator's belief that the most popular hem length for the average woman will be just below the knee. However, the Broadw:iy is showing midi fashions as 2S to .30 percent or its stock, and or1e stylist commented that "the gaucho look will be especia11Y popular in both skirts and pants.'' Fashion ma,.agers for Buffum's said that the· mldf-fashion there was being "heavily ordered in moderate to bette~ d r e s_s.e s , ' ' -- Including costumes such as midi· dresses plus battle jackets, coals with knee-length dresses a n d midicoats with pants. J. C. Penney's stores are showing the midi look. "It's ht demand," a spokesman f o r women's wear at the Fashion Island store declarecl,"particularly in better dresses." Another firm supporter of the controversial style is Robinson's. Fashion planners there affirmed that the store was behind the midi 100 percent, ' "We definitely believe ill It," one representative said, "particuJarly in the longuette styles." Joseph Magnin's also is JOO percent behind · the midi. "We are ' stocking lhe midi fashion," buyers saf<!, "in coats, ensembles aJld collegienne wear." Less firm in support of the longer look is Sears. although there, too, the midi fashions are being displayed "quite strongly" in the misses' departments and junior bazaar. . fll~omery Ward's fashion coordinators were cautious about the popularity of the midi look, commenting that they w e r e purchasing --"approximately-1-i- percenl" midis in all departments. So milady· of the Orange Q_oast has the Intriguing faslUon option of a CHOICE. It Is her choice, and how strongly She makes it, that will determine which style will rise-or la!L J ' • ..... --• -·~· .. I ....... " ~ j4, .. • • •• •• . .. i • MIDI A MAXI LOSER I f: i t ' i Unanimous choice of Europea n fashion houses, the midi (left l is unanimous ly voted down a nd minis continue popularity on the Orange Coast. • • _:_ Shopp-ers-Say,' · No -WaY' By JEAN WILLIAMS Ot HM o.nw l'U...Sl•lf The answer see1T1J to be ''no." j "No midi-not fQr me," said one sbop-·1 · per. Another added, "I haven't even tried -any --on because my husband can't stand them." The cross-section of opinion gleaned by the DAILY PILOT was in the negative 20 to o.£ The question was simply whether or not each Orange Coast . area woman s1toppec was considering midi length skirts for her fall wardrobe. ' . j ' ' ' ' I "I think they're ugly," 38.id a college coed, while a young housewife and mother commented, "I don't think they're for me.'' Some women were more eloquent in ,their reactions. For example, one said, "I don't like the way we 're being pressured il\f.o th.is new style. I~ women should wear what they like." Anolher said, "I'm not In favol'Of the midi style al all. I'll stick with what 1 like, not what's in fashion." Students especially were against the lowering of the hemline to. rhid-calf. "I'll wear maxi or mini, not midi," said one high school girl from Costa ,Mesa. ''Definitely not midi," salt! another. •'Long or short -but never midi," added a third. WAVERING VIEW College coeds were slightly more flex- ible. "I don 't think so," said one from Chapman, "but I'm not as against it as my fri endS." Another from Southern California College added, "I'm still not sure. I 'll wait and see how many others are wearing midis. I wouldn't want to be the only one." 1-lusbands agreed with the negaUve viewpoint. When one wife said "No, never," when asked if she would wear the midi fashion, her husband added "I agree 100 percent!" Another spouse comme nt e d thoughtfully, "I believe it's a poor time Tor a change in fashion, because of economic conditions. A man can't afford lo buy his wife a whole new wardrobe." On the other hand, a young married teacher was in favor of midi skirts all the way. "I think they're neat," she said • ''They're darling!" Her companion, also a teacher, disagreed. "I think they're atrocious," ~he said. STRONG REACTlON Others were equally vehement. "I think the midis are-dumPY. Horrid!'' said-two young Fountain Valley mothers In ·chorus. A young business woman commented, "I don't lik~ them. They make people look older." . Climate influenced the opinion or one or two out-Qf-lowners. The midi length skirt was "Too bot for the islands," accordin& MAXIS GET STAMP OF APPROVAL FROM COEOS to a Honolulu visitor. On the contrary, tbe midi length would bt considered favorably 11becauSe ~ lhe cold cli.m.ite," by another traveler from the state of \\lashington. , One woman was making a midi length vest -"To go over all my short .!lkirts," ahe said. AlmQSt au shoppers inteniewed would agree to an i~eal skirt length as bting at the knee or,wo inches above. The majority seemed to agree wltb a young woman from Huntingt.On Beach. "I'll consider the midi length if I have to," she said -"but only if that's all' the ;tores are selling." A fashionable young mother bad the last word '.'Midi length? Count me out!" \ J ACCESSORIES ENLIVEN SCENE ( ( _, ·-.. • ~ ' ;. • Directi"!$ the 9a1• above the midi will be dog coll•r1. Givenchy of P aris 1how1 the m lllion-doll•r diamond dog collar by Vin CIMf •ncl Arpel1. .1 I By MAJIJAN' CHRISTY The midi muddle -with all its accompanying bafflement -is being heightened by what has been christened ''midi mates." Women, poor souls, get di.uy thinking about overhauling their heads and feet with new accessories to which they are thoroughly unaccustomed -but which no midi can exist without. When added to the midi madness, a look most women say is easily resisted, the accessory problem is formidable. The most basic midi mates in which to invest _ are old·fashiooed boots, a brimmed hat and thick suede belts sprouting fringe and worn under the bosom like those ·ghastly wa!St·CIJ'IChers Of yesteryear. And, for heaven's sake, dOn't forget your Victorian choker. If you're thinking these accessories are a motley bunch of discordant 'doodads, you're right. The intense disorder in the current fashion picture can only be blamed on couturiers who want to insUgate a fashion revolution at any cost. DREARY BEYOND RELIEF But, really, midis would be dreary beyond relief without the frivolous touches. Every designer showed the dog collar in some form or another. Visually. mid is represent a loog, drawn-out stretch of fabric from neckline to mid·leg. and woman needs some comic relief around her face. Dog collars to the rescue. The ones with supcrstalus have either a swan or butterfly design on them. Nobody can explain the significance of the swan but designers such as Philippe Venet, who caters to the Duchess ol Windsor. put swans on everything from leather bells to saUn evening bags. . Butterflies are explicable. It seems that many American and European designers have betn traveling to Tokyo to Investigate the idea of opening boutiques there. In the process some Oriental superstitions have .rubbed off. Japanese folkll>re has it that' on the wings of the butterfly comes good luck. Hence the touch o( voodooism in fashion. Now heads are encas«t in a cloche pulled down past the hairline and, in } exaggerated cases, just .above the eyebrows. . From the head lhe gaze is downward because there's little to dazzle the eye and tickle the imagination between neckline and hemline. Coming into sharp focus is the Jowet leg and what fbu do With your ankles and feet is positively crucial. Boors ESSEN~ Midis often have slits front dead center ~ some shooting up to the thigh -and dark stockings are a must. And a little happy news for women who despised the thick-heeled "monster" shoes of the 60s with a vengeance. Shoe!. fO[, the 7~___!JavLblgbe_r heels. __ Roger Vivier, the footwear designer who designs shoes for the Yves Saint Laurent collection, showed high-heel versions of lace-front oxfords as worn by nursemaids who stroll with rich kids through Les Tuileries. A certain amount of Victorianism is see;ing into f.!ishlon. Boots are an absolute must -as basic as lipstick. New ancs are really boot-shoes, made of unlined butter-soft glove leather and geared for all-day wear. Jazxiesl versions are made from caUskin stencilled to look like furs of jungle animals -zebra, jaguar, leopard. Granny boots,•with lace fronts. have superstatus. ' And every influential designer ·in the European couture brought out boots for evening. When you go to a posh formal affair: forget your dancing slippers. You stomp into the nighttime scene booted in satin or silk. Midi mates require 1 new set of altitudes. You can't be scared off by the current slew of acce!sories. AdmlUedly, the fashion picture is confusing, but you can't act confused. You-must be cool,.aure-of yourself as you dabble In the ne,w lookl • Anything Jess than a savolr faire attitude will indicate a lack o( confldence. Just remember to face fa.ah Io 11 sensibly. You don't have to go hog wild with the new looks. Des{gnera art s}vlng yoo all the little tidbits in ohe basket., When you slip Into a midi, wear only one or two goodies and leave the mt for another day. ' . •• I ' '" , ~ . ' • Ji£ DAILY PILOT Nursery School Motto: Jee cream the old-fa shioned v.1ay is being created by (left to right) Nancy Rosenber,g, Debbie l\'fann and Christine Thile, youngS!_ersrenrolled in the \Vest- minster Nursery School"'W"hich. has as its m otto !~ea rning by Doing . .l\1others interested in the schoo l '"ill be entertained at teas Tuesday and Wednes- Horoscope day. Sept. 8 and 9. in the home of l\1rs. Russell L. Reilly. Additional information re~ard in,g the teas, or the ne\v term \V hich starts ~londay. Sept. 21, may be obtain ed by calling l\1rs. Reill y, 847-5117. or Mrs. L. M. Lundell; 8311-4186: • Wh~ Wants to Pass Test? DEAR ANN. LANDERS' Today I rece ived two copies of yaur ad vice to "Nosy Landladies" in the mail. Of course there was no hint as to who sent them, · but I can guCss. . /\ --No wonder-you haVl!ia--tbt.-nf-ian!-. -\too look the other way while people do every rotten thing they can think of and call ·It "minding your own business." I am a NOSY. I .. andlad and I'm proud or it. Some pri)pCrty oWners on f care Who they re nt to so long as the n1oney co mes in. I'm not one of those. I have nine apa rtments, all occup ied by decent, law- abiding, God-fearing girls. Fi ve of my tenant s are under 30 and they come from small towns in Indiana 8Tld Illinois. I don't rent unless I get the right answers lo my questions. Before I take a girl's check I want to know ~'here she stands on cigarettes. alcohol, dope, fornication, adu lte ry, religion , gllTI con- trol , SPX education in public schools, communis m and fluor ine in drinking v.•ater. !\1y home is my castle and I intend to keep it that wa y. -A.B. DEAR LADY GUiNEVERE: Thanks for the latest ·word from Camelot. If l run Into any girlii who arr looking for a room, I'll have thrm checked out by the FBI, give them li e detector tests, have tbtir bodies x-rayr.d for Impurities and send them ovtr. ' DEAR ANN LANDERS : v/hy can·l married children leave theii.' parents alone? Our tY.'O are in their early 30s. col- lege graduates and considered bright. Our son and daughter both married· ANN LANDERS ~ "well" (wh;:ilever that means). Now. all they do Is fight with their spouses and over the craziest things you can Imagine. I've begged them to leave me out or their family argUments but they keep dragging me in. Do I owe it to them to serve as mediator for the sake of the children? The little ones are getting the worst of it. They are so fearful and anx- ious, y.·ith all the symptoms of insecurity -bed wetting, nail chewing, stuttering, une xplained skin rashes. Pastoral counseling has not helped. The fou r of them are like kids. It makes me sick and it is ruining their children. Wh al can I do, Ann ? -CHAOS IN KY. DEAR C.l.K.: There's not a great deal you can do. but YCMI ca n do 1omethln1. " First, refuse to act as the referee . Pick ' up an d leave the room 111·ben storm clouds gather. If they start to battle· at yoar house. tell them to knock it Qff and settle their arguments al home. Spend as mu eh time wllh the crandchlldren as you can. If their· }>edlatrlclan feels the children need professlonal help, prge him to sug- ge5t it to their parents. And don't Jet the wacky warriors give up on counseling for · themselves. A change In counselor has provided th e answer for others and It might work for th em. DEAR ANN LANDERS: \\'hat ire the chanct11 for this ma rriage succeeding?_ The boy ls 23. The girl is 22. They were of· ficl ally engaged In J anuary. Norma has thrown the ring in Bob's face three times. When he gets home his telephone is ringing. She is so rry and wants him to come back y,·ilh the ring . Last night they had a hair.pulling fight. Bob refused to come back when Norma called. Her mother tele phoned him and said Norma was going to jump out of the window if he didn't bring the ring back . I am Bob·s mother . Do you th ink afte r they get ma rrieq they will settle down and grow up? Please advise. I am worn out and so is everyone else. -OHIO DEAR 0 : Marriage is no cure for these two dingbats. The letter above will give you an Idea of what is In store f<1r kids like Norma and Bob. They oeed to grow up before they consider marriage. w1•1o good coun1ellng it will take at least . , months. Whefl romantic glances turn to v.~ar n embraces is it love or chemistry? Send for the booklet "Love or Sex and How to Tell the Diffe rence,'' by Ann Landers. Enclose a long. stamped. self-addressed envelope and 35 cents in coin with your request in care of the Daily Pilot. Home in Switzerland ...__1 Astrology Keys .Club Publicity Gathering Announ.ced Newlyweds to Travel ·Aries: Attend to Mate PTA Notes 1 J FY High PTSA t.lrs. Rudolph l,a Blanc President Getting to Know You Through the Mythology of Astrology will bt the theme or a model meeting of Beta Gamma Chapter, E p s i 1 on Sigma Alpha, in .the Fountai n Valley home of Mrs. George A chapter night pro~ram for the enrollment o( new members will be hosted by the publicity committee ore the Women of _the Moose, Chapter 1158, on Thursday , Sept. 3. ExchaT'Lging !heir v•edding vows a nd rings in Chr ist Church of Westminster were Gin8:er Fay Kri ckbaum of Huntington Bea ch and Dennis. Gordon Lindsay of Lausarrne, Switzerland. WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 2 By SYDNEY 0~1ARR ARlES (March 21·April Jil l: Lie low ; play waiting game. Be sure of legal procedures. Gh·e necessary atlention to mat~. close aSsociate, bu~incss partner. Be recepti ve y,•ithout appearing doc ile. TA URUS (April 20-1'.lay 20): Be ronservative Y.'hcrc hcallh, employment . arc conrcrncd. Don"t tempt fate. Means ma i n I a i n mode rate pace. A void excess speed a n d demand s. GEMINI (~lay 21-J une 20): Some obstacles persist. But romance and crea tiv e endeavors will triumph. Know this and respond accordingly. CANCER 1Junc 21-J yly 22 l: You come into , o u r own-means 1here is d(·,Tland for yo ur unique ;ibilities. Co1nmunicatc id~:.is. G e t promises in writing. \"aricty:-But be sure you do nol offend family member. VIRGO (Aug, &J..Scpl. 22): You can obtain genuine bargai n. Key is to be discriminati ng. Be ck?ar in you r own mi nd about "'hat is desired. Then state needs and do some com parison shopping. l.fBRA tSept. 23 ·Oct. ·22); Take iniliativc. !\'fake ne1v starts. Sho,.,. older person you can handle r~sponsibility. Fine ro~ _purchase of w c a r i n g apparel. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 211: Finish rather lhan begin projft'ts. D9n 't be burdened by problem noi really your own. Cast aside doubts v.•hich gna'v at self-confidence. Someone is tr)'ing to· tell 'you something. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): A new friend provides s t im u la t i o n . incentive. Give o{ yourself - VFW Auxiliary returns "'ill rrohably exceed Friewald. · expectations. Refu se to be di~. CO~\ING UP : ~1rs. Richard Presiding dur ing the couraged by individual who Hppper and Mrs. Rudolph sings the blues. La Blanc, ways and means meeling at 8 p.m. Thursday, chai rman and president. will Se pt. 3, will be Mrs. William Leader CAPRICOH N (Dec. 22-Jan. Hewston. Members w i 11 t9) S ti. ht h" t be in charge of a committee : po 1g on al' 1cven1en · answer a roU call with their •1 · t · 1 d serving refreshments in the :• ain ain s ca y, su re pacl'. school ca feteria when Zodiac sign and briefly"tell its Deal with those in positions of meaning. h · s · 1 · achievement and aptit ude aut only. a g J ta r 1 us Invitations have been issued · d. I I I tests arc givtn lomorrow 111 1vidua 1e ps you g c t d T lo pros pectiv e members by ed ' I ' led "d 11n hursda.v. Sept. 2 and 3, start . \\e c01ne nect al . Mrs. Eleanor Cassell, rushing beginning at 7:30 a.m. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Feb. chainnan, and they will be 18!: Good lunar aspect Prince of Peace PTF identified by Zodiac name coincides y,•ilh gain through tags. special forniat, subn1ission of Herbert Nn rdquis t t.-lr s. Kenneth K;ehm . y,·ays n1a:1uscript, publicity. 'Vidcn Prel>ident and means chf1irn1an, will hnrizon!'i. Look beyond the C0~1ING UP: Annual (lrien· repol-t on a rummage sale tak-i11~1ncdiate. Perceive potential: talion tea will be given in ing place Saturday, Sept. 19. in PISCES (Feb. 19-!\larch 20)~ the school al 2 p.m. tomor-the P..-toose I.odge, Santa Ana: "You ge t chance"t~ areas-of--" 1rsw. Spea kers will be r.l iss !\-1rs. Robert McG!amcry, acti\'ity previously fenced , Esther O!son, principal and educational director, w i 11 obscured . Check cflr~(ully for llerbcrt Nordquist, PT F Pr c s en t a Program apparent n1inor errors. You president. P~Boo~ter Club demonstrating how to make could 1nake riiscol'cry of memberships will be on boutique items from scraps l'':lluc. !llean s more rnorlcy and sale. l\-lrs. James Simakis is round in the hornc. Assisting prestige. Ira chairman , assisted by will be !\1rs. George Keller and the :'.Imes. Hal"rv Baker, Mrs. Verne· Carlsen. Mrs. h'.cith Blun1 , DaYid Durr. Eleanor nuppell is in charge Charles Ferguso n and Nord-;=o-'-'-'-"-'-'h-m=cn-ls_.=====; quist. The meeting will take pla ce from 8 to 10 p.m. in Moose Lodge, Costa Mesa. and-a talk will be givi:;n on Good Publiei· ty. ' Rcfreshmenls "'ill be served and alt off icers and men1bcrs of other Moose lodges and chapters are invited to attend. Calendar Procedure Discussed Conducting the a fternoon c e remon y were the bridcgrooin's father, the Rev . (:ordon Lind say.and the Rev. George Rohrig. The bride , daughter of ?.fr. an<i !\1rs. Clark S. Krickbaum, was given hl marriage by her father. ~1iss Nancy Nylen ~ervcd as maid of honor, and other attendants included Miss Ca r o l L i nd s a y , the bridegroom's sister from Jerusalem: !\1iss Lind y Huntley of Oma ha: ?-.1rs. Lar· ry Mazzard of Bakersrield . and Miss Shirle y Hellend, Costa MRS. D. G. LINDSAY Savi Vows Mesa. from CJleyenne. Wyo., Steve Flower fiirl was ?o!ichelle Romines and Terry Lindvall. Coimer and rin g bearer was The newlyweds both at- Scotty Kincer. le-nded Southern Califor nia Mrs. Mary Hwit, past presi· The bridegroom. son or the College where the bridegroom dcnl of Orange County Legal Re v. and !\1rs. Lindsay of served as senior clas presi-. Secretaries Associ ation, "'ill Dallas, a skcd his brother, dent. He pe scntly is attending be the principal speaker when Gilberl Lindsay, to serve as the Alpine S c hoo 1 or the group meets at 7 p.m. on best man. Guests were seated Languages in Lausanne, where Thursday, Sept. 3. in the by Joseph Robinette, Corky the couple "'ill make their RevCre House, Tustin. Kr ikbaum , lhe bride's brother home . Master calendar clerk at the ----------------------- LEO (J uly 2.1-Aug. 22 1: Turn oo charm y,·hen dealing 1vi th neighbors. rel ative,;. You may . receive surprise-(lf pleasant County .Scene Eyed Garden Club Pours Tea For Members Make a Sharp Trade: Use Dime-A-Lin es Superior Court in Santa Ana. ~·lrs. Hunt y.•i!\ speak on the cnurt Calendar-and Schedule Of Trials. A 6:30 c;ocktail hou r will precede dinner. IU.UTIF!il.L CLOTHES • , • Only S1i9!\lly U1ed BY 9'1ll -<•n't t><r•• IO be 1etn !w•<• on th' ••-drtu lhei• Lou -YO\lr G1ln THE SECOND TIME AROUND _. .. E. 111~ SI., C1t1• Mtli o"" 11 11 J -~,., ... A MONTES~ORI EDUCATION CAN HELP TOUR CHILO lEACH HIS FULL POTENTIAL AGES 2'!1 TO f FALL ENROLLMENTS NOW ~--CALL ---, Costa Mna 645·2122 N1wpart l1ac~ 5~1·2516 Wed.· Thurs.· Fri. Thurs. eve Sept. .2. · 3 · 4 • Beginning her official visit to Orange County o n Thu rsday, Sept. 3. \Viii be i\lrs. Alexander Co!lonc of Olc<1n, N. Y., na\innal pr!.'sidc nt of the -ofa Jl J<!oJ e o/ S,,L/ll/11 (?1' .S~1!e • Jf.DJri\ tn hQ ( ' \Iv " Wc>tcliff Plrz• _ Veterans of Foreign \\'ars Auxiliary. A general tncct ing arid ban· quet v.•ill ta ke pla<"e that cvcn- ing in the Charter Hnuse, Anaheim. i\lrs. \Vallrr Liebig or San Cleinente h;1s been ap· pointed general chainnan of I.he prcsidcnl"s visit. Assisti ng her arc 1 h e !\lines. Alfred Brig~s. table ar- rangc1ncnls; J a111es Torrl'ns. decorations, anti 1-1 o m er Ear nest, resrrva!ions. i\tore than 2.')(] guc~1 s arc ex - pected to attend, includi ng 1he newly elected Comn1ander-in· (.hicf of the VF\V and ~!rs. H. H. flai:iy.•atcr. The Junior Girls units or C<1sta !\lcsa and 1·ustin will parti£ipa1e-..i.a..-g_ r c et i n g {'('rcmonies. i\lrs. Col\onc 11·111 1ravel to San Diego on Frirtay, Sept. t ' A membership lea y,·ill be hos ted to \\'Cicome new and prospective n1ernbe rs to I.he first fall mt'!!ting of the tian Clcn1cnte Garden Club on \Ve.rlnl'sday, Sept. 2, at I :30 p.111. iri the \'FW Hall. 1'hc program \v ill b e prrsrnted by ~lrs. Zelda Lloyd, a mcrnber of the Amcritfln Rose Society and an accredited rosarian, y,·ho y,•ill give a slide lecture. The first annual v.·orkshop is slatrd for \\'ednesda~'. ~pl. 16, at 10 a.m. in the home of :\!rs. Fr11nk Durfee. Orienta. tinn y,•ill be -,e:-iV e n nn club prncertures and starling cu1lin,e:s for flo,,·er shows. I See by Today's Want Ad s \ .' • Csin'I i;!r;rp~ Bu.v 1h\~ '- dnuble m111ple canopy brr! \1 l!h ~pl'l:'arl illld gel a good llll!'ht5 rt.SI. • Tiu~ 'li9 Bti.g !~ onlv SI;).)() Buy it 11nd go pJaCe8 . . e 611rhl'lnr a·(ll. t...:111 1111'!1 p111d Only $!111. 11. 1non. + cltan1ng dt posu . • Nearly ~veryone, Listens to Landers SECRETARY PRIV.AlE $60G + lo l~•I mind. E•Cl!i'>!I ll(H l!lol1 1,, plu1~ ol!lc•. M"r lnltrft!ing Po<l- pl•. Btntlll•. '"· C•ll J.,." Curll1. PUILIC REL.AT!ONS CK. $JOO .i.11111 ••d lu •n 1~1 P II. bu1in tu. GrN! Cll•ntt to 11111 •n t•Cl!ln~ ctrHr. FN. Ctl! Bel~ W~ltnty PERSONNEL l YP!Sl S•OG Ll~e Pfl!Plt? Oo "''v 1110 )'tu, 1-it<t'• 111t c~ln<• ol • h!lllm1 In 1tur • '""'· frw. o1.110 IH. Ct ll '"" llu.,t l!. LOAN t>OCUMENT CLK. $415 M,,,. K C<'11"" ""''lt<>U ~rtl. "'''' • lllt """'" to •dvt n<• lft .,c.., ... Ht :d ''"'"" "f co. f ff. (tll !ti~ ...... lfl"lty. OF~ICE MGR. ASST. S•OO JOll" llttlt IUOO•. Tt>• C~l'(lot ""' •"1>Wltdg1 el t ufll, ~omt, II"'"'· lh ll"f rvoo. ""· c111 M•rr Lierd, 1313 N. BROADWAY ADM IN, SEC. TO $511 11 .. ~,1~i, J><••Oft to !••• "'lnu!to, att..-.d bet rd "'tttlr>;•. TOD lo8 !or IOD J><r>tV!. Ftt. (I ll Elltn Rl>ljrn. GENER.AL OFFICE S•OC + Wo-nd•"ul "bo" netdl 1l9M h•nd r>O•ton w IM llek~rnt! •n run M• of· f1<f Gd Oil'".tflt<. FH. (Ill Joa~ Cutt''· AUTO CLERIC $40G If VII" h1v1 ..,., .... in "" IU!O •9t<>- cv t>tint ''"" "~~! hord. m • It fer .,.,..1 FH ' (111 Ann 11....stlr. RECPT. SEC. MGMT. S41 5 Jl(~ OI •I! ........ D req 1->•tVY llflkt O•IHHUff J .. w •ftllt)r>J10 !J. IV l f<\tli" Fru , • 1<> IH IO DJ • (tOf .Y.uy LIO\'d RECE Pi lONISl $476 r 1•1 """'*'" IY•I" "' n olli<• Jlylt le -~ lo• •r<M'l!Cll In 1~-­ Dll Cf oflkt. Ftt. (111 Nine~ C••I· ·~. SANT A ANA 835-3811 J.JN-11ROOI<. OPEllS FRIOA~ $EPT. ..- J.T !J A, M ... 126 varieties · domestic and imported chec.s_e at hickocy.f anns ·Bulk.-are cut tr.ob &om natural whtt1"-Tbe bE!lt way to buy cheese. &unpk fint -jaot uk the cleri<. ~~~~ ~alil~. &atb roast 'tmatlFIJ{//IJ l rl1tnl It l~t Sa ~ Diegn Frwy. (;oa1a Mt11 P hnne s.&o-l9'l JllllfJ'J JIJl/71 fllllr lfll/f ... IN FrJll!(f)41N VAJ.J.SY ••• 11~1~S·SURPRISiS ~!J~~"5 GN.Oi~! WArc.H FOR. O(.Ml .,,,.. ~NP OPIFNING AP.' LIH,BROOK HARDWARE--17200 S. Brookhurst, Fountain Vallef . . I .. ' • • . '"("" .... , ... ~ .... ,....~~ ..... -· .. -,.,~ . ~ . DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF YOU WANTED TO MAR:RY JANE SO MUCH YoU GAVE OPSMoKING FOR HER'?. JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE ! PRHIJ'S "E ltJSLi\ID IT! FOR HER l GAVE UP SMOKING, DRINKING, GAMBl.ING,urrE HOURS. !M NE.llTER,CLEANER AND A GENTLEMAN · OF GNITY.' HE WANTS< 11\1:, vti:IVE~ TO (ALL Mil.\ WHEN . HE 6ET5 &:CK ~ r---. ... , " 4 ... -__ .... +,,_ . ·""' ....... . MY GOODNESS! W1L.l. 51-tE MARRY YOU NOW'.' By Chester· Gould AND COllT l'ORlllT .._ .. Al!MECf•. AllD·-·15 •RIQPeL.. .-:;.....-, By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith· YE$, BUT I WON'T! l'MTOO GOOD FOR HER! By Frank Baginski 1'! kN<+o.~..-o-1'1 he.-cli...y btto ""/~ • PERKINS I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS Cl Pi!Ce of glass Y!st,rday's Puzzl! Solv,d: l Fus s and Cl Auto bolh!r, caravans in Scotland 4-1 Eye S Fin!-· irritation 9 "--in 45 Roofi ng Toyland" material 14 Singer 411 Tumuli JS Sm!ll to 47 Kind of bore high -1'1 Fastener heaven 53 Wealti,rman's 16 To tile device 'l(tlusi on 57 Pomme de-· of all else 58 Ease of! 17 Lead'r of a 59 Elliptic Canadian Ill Wtll-drfl!ing r~bellion equipme'll 18 Military tia t 62 Smoke 9 Basr.ball player 19 Breaklast 63 Weste111 lltm US city JO Not -whisper~ 11 Male a11imal 12 Noun ending 13 Hardens "20 Farm!rs' 64 State: f r. units 65 Shi p 2Z R<!!nders bottoms I unf it for li6 Criminal 21 Burris Zl Si<;kntss .. 25 Co'mmand drinking b7 Rooms 124 Nixes --rzo '"-The-!:tUer--· OOWt-J --· 111 to dog 28 Place for Blatk'' 1 27 Fastene;r 2'J Posstssiv' wo<d ,JO Large tlums ~ hand I )J Siqnlficance 37 Comb. form for an Asian nation 1 J8Many--ago IJ'J On tile other hand ~o Display of bad manners " .. • 1 E1ectrita l scientific un it work 2 Carroll 30 Of many tharacttr color!> ) Unsympathet ic 31 Mrs. 4 Ace: Shakt~P!art ,J words 32 Troubles S Ancie nt 33 Other vessel people's 6 Clarinet children oc obce 34 Part of 7 Primitive cas tle's abode defense "8 Derma-35 E11 uine tolog ist: Jb Ecttntric" l word s per;on ' '111no MISS PEACH 37 All over the place 40 Boy or Girl -· \ '1Z Productd • 43 Kind rJ roast . ¥.AM? ~r..l."( .45 Tratk riil!I!: l officials ,,,..,.-· 47 Answer 1o /- arithmetic CHAl2.M c~ss problem 48"flood ccntro l device 50 Highly u.oirl" gin a I 51 Over or kidney 52 Fils one withi11 tile other 53 Part or tht body 54 Boy's nickname 55 Fad Sb Sounded 60 Record of a voyage "\.(<. .. ~···· • STEVE ROPER l<"ASEY/ PARL1"1' / YGOTTA &.I.STEN TO ME.' I· FOR A~ lrKNI, l'VE llS'TENfO 10 MY HEART IWSTE.AD OF MY IEAI>, MIKE/-BUT NOT AAY MOl!E/ ........ , .. , .. ' ---.-. ----• ~ ::--;;;<:-;", ;;;:;-, _;;, I• •• /.. ~14>•• LJ'L ABNER GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ~.c _,.,.,,,-s,.... '. .. Tuesday, September l , 1970 ... ANC> OUR;, II. •• EVEl'YTHING FOLDS AWAY NEAT, SEE? By John Milts By Men '*"1 SHUT ')'OUR OWll .SfUPIO MOUTH! -. · <.Jt.. '5\lRE 00 ~ s"~ ! •. 1111-1<.> oooir !./A TAKE A W- MllllJTI:: m>J<?_l1LI .. WA•i M&~ FQl;'l/A. . . ' Hfl.J, "Jli\IJKS J • !Hf ST#ANGI WOt tO ~ ----MR_. MUM • DAILY PILOT J !; By Ferd Johnson By Roger BoUen _J.llc::Kll..<,), 6t.lATlS AP:r;. TR\15TllJ<s SOUkS. · By Saunders and Overgard DENNIS THE MENACE ' ~ ' ~ .. " -'t .. ' . 'DlllNT 1 HAVE r«> ClOIMES WllEN l WAS A IW3Y '?. . ' ' -. )1\ .. J : ) I- I J \r • • ' Tutsd~y, $rpttmbtr 1, l"fi'O ' • Gorizalez Joins Angels Tonight ' I ' ALEX IN PURSUIT -Alex Karras (71) or the Philadelobia Ea2les. ehases Detroit quarterback George Mira (10) out of bounds after· a seven yard gain around right end. The Lions scored a 31-7 pre-sea- son victory Monday night in Detroit. Landry Stands Out ' 56,032 Watch Detroit Disnihntle Eagles , 31-7 DETROIT (AP) -Philadelphia is the City or Brotherly Love, but when the Philadelphia Eagles leave home they must leave their love behind. They left it behind Monday night, but they sure weren't angry enough to handle the growling Detroit Lions. The Lions came out fighting and crushed the Eagles, 31-7, in their Na tional 1'"'ootbaJI League exhibition game be(ort a record preseason crowtl ·of 56,032. Although there' were se\ieral fights during the game the biggest fighl seems to be the one developing ove r who'll be Detroit's No. l quarterback. Greg Landry won his bout against the Eagles, firing a pair of touchdown passes. "I thought Landry did an eiceptional job of handling the team.'' coach -Joe Schmidt said in the Uons dressing room. "I felt "'e had to give him the opportunity to start." Bill Munson had started Detroit's first three games, allhough Landry has played considerably. Munson didn't p\~y al all against the Eagles, who have losL their three School Dropout BecameT011 College Gridder BO ULDER , Colo. (AP) Remember the name -Herb 0 r v I s . Orvis is a defensive end on the Colorado rootbsll team. Coach Eddie Crowder \\'ill vouch Jor lhc fact that Orvis is a great one. Five years ago. Orvis was a junior at Flint-Beecher High School at Petrosky . Mich. After that football season. he quit -the team, hi gh school, everything. He got a job al\(i broke in with "the wrong kind or crowd." He donned a leather jacket. a pin stripe shirt. tight trousers and. like the crowd he ran with. ~ got into 11 lot of fights, real gutter llg)lts. He wa s 19. an orphan, 11 high :school dropout. • - He went the way or a lot of dropoul11 - the Army drafted him. . "I didn't resist," Orvis said Sunday, 1ddlng with a grin : "I didn't . have RTIY Can ad i an connections. So I went into the Army." The Anny shipped hlm off to Berlin. '"Being. drafted ," he 11Jd in a moment of reflection. ''Thlt was the best thing tbit ever happened to me. The Army -' e1hibitions. Third-stringer Greg Barton played the fourth quarter for the Lions who have won three straight in a 3·1 record. "Overall this is the best game we've played both offensively and defensively,·• Schmidt said. "The performance of the offense was to me very encouraging.'' It is generally conceded Detroit has a fine defenSe. The Eagles only score came on a one-yard plunge by rookie Lee Bouggess with a minute left in the game. with Mark Moseley converting. Landry put the Lions ahead 7.() at the five-minute mark of the first quarter with a 29-yard touchdown pass to light end Charlie Sanders. The sensational Sanders. r ec ent I y returned from the Army. made fine catches on two ot her apparent TD tosses from Landry only ·to have them nullified by penalties. One was a 46-ya rder in the second quarter and the other for 42 yards in the third. Sanders didn't only shine as a receiver. Landry, who likes to run. found his receivers covered and so sprinted the 33 yards for his TD in the third period. The Calilornla Angels, pennant hopes pinned to AJea: Johnson's hilting al\d Andy ~fessersm.ilh's painful pitching, trail the Minnesota Twins by three aames as they open a homestand that winds up with three ·games against the leaders of Lhe AmericanMJigue W~1L The Angels, who.cut the Minlesota lead by two games by winning 6 of 10 on the road the past week and a ball, return to Anaheim Stadiwn tonight for the first of three games with 'the Kansa s City Royals. Both teams were idle Monday. The Angels strengthened their attack by acquiring left-handed hitting ouUiekier To11y Gonzalei from the AUanta Braves. The 34-year.old Gonzalez .was expected Final Ontario Tests Slated Today, Friday ONTARIO (AP) -The 33 cars making up the Califomi.i 500 championship rield returned to t.be Ontario Mot.or Speedway today after selling a record four.Jap average of 172.540 miles per hour during a weekend Of qualifying. Today's runs, were labeled ''carburetion tests" but for most of the drivers ii was to be the next to last opportunity to get in practice rtmS over I he 2 . 5 -m 11 c Indinanapolis-type oval. A final round of, tests, giving crews I chance lo work on thei r pit stop procedures. are scheduled Friday. ln the carburetion tests, the cars rlfll "'ith full loads of fuel and team managers keep a close check on tire wear and the way the cars handle under racing conditions. "These tests are extremely important . before a 500-mile race," said Frank Del Roy the SS.year-old chief of the U.S. Auto Club technical staff. "Three pit stops will be mandatory for the California 500, and the speed with whic h the crews get their cars in and ou t of the pits on these stops could make or break their chances in the race." Most of the cars were fitted with fresh engines Monday, when the :sparkling new $25.5 million speedway was closed to the public. Several drivers were still talking with considerable awe about the blazing .speeds posted during the t"'.o days of qualifying runs. "That was the fastest I've ever run , in anything," said 35-year Jim italloy of Denver. Colo., Malloy qualified his Transitreat tu rbocharged OUy at 172.331 miles per hour, good for a sixth row start. ''It was so easy it wa s almost ~Jievable." Nevertheless, fi1alloy's four-lap <1r 10- mile speed was below the 172.540 average for the 33 starters. Jl. was more than fi ve mi les slower than Lloyd Ruby's pole- winning 177.567. "I'm happy," the slightly·built Malloy said . ''I think the pace of the race, ~·ith full loads of fuel and with 500 miles to go. will be about 171 m.pJi All 1 want to do is hang in there and be around at the finish." Malloy hopes the Sept. 6 0 n ta r i o inaugural \\'ill treat him a little better th1t11 the "-femorial Day cla~ic al Indy last May. He missed taking the green flag when a radius rod snapped on !he pace lap as the field was coming out of the fourth turn lov•ard the starter's flag . The accident :sent ~1alloy into the wall and out of the race. While his four-lap qualifying average at Ontario was the fa stest of his JS.yea r career. fifalloy still holds one speed mark at Indianapolis. He "·as clocked at 214. m.p.h. on the backstretch traps there in March 1968. ---1'0ke-mt up. I was taught-discipline., I wras reigmented. The biggest thing I learned was humlllty. -·Orvis remained in the Arm ¥ t~·o years. H~ studied h&j:d and took a six-part test that comp/etea his high school education. In Berlin, he played a year of football with a brigade level te.11 m and drew the atttntfon of Cro-Ader while the Colorado m:tch Wll5 on a European tour in 1967. • An exchcn1ge or lttWrs between Otvit 1Dd Crowder followed. .. l.ll"IT .... h Crushing " Y 111ahee . . Paul Blair of the Baltimore Orioles, has a knt!e in lhe bead of"Yankee catcher John Ellis after a wild piCkoU throw by Pitcher S1an Bahn· :;en w.ent over third base1nan Danny eater's head. Blair sc1ored on the play a nd the Orioles "'ent on to crush th e '\'anktes. 10-2. . ~ the minors July 27 for 10 days because ol his sore :slde, li1essersmith has made five lo repcrt before tonight's game against Kansas City in Anaheim Stadium. The purchase Monday· for cash i11 excess of the waiver price was .made on the last. campalgna at PhlJadelphia, San Diego and AUanta, his llfetlme average ls .290. -Belote... tbe,_&ho"".dO . Twins starting ·Friday night, California will try to gaill on Mfuntaota at the eii:pense of the lourlh·plact lloya~. Tom MUJ'J)hy, 1'- 7, .. wUL~ on the '1"W"I tonlihl-agalnat Kansas Clty's Wally Dunkel', o.8. • relief appearances. Three were vk:tories 'l---·brtng-bisTeCOl'd1o1 1-..10-and-the-othen---, A11t1el Slate AH .. -.. KMl"C ,tnl) Se11\. 1 Ant•lt v• Ka1111• (Ill' 1:!5 1.m, ~ •• : 2 AnttlS VS Kans•• Cllll' J;iS p,m. St11t. a Arwtt• v• 11:..,u. cur 1:!5 p.rn. day in which a player can join a team and be eligible for the World Series. Gonzalez, a line-drive hitter, had seven home runs, 55 runs batted it, 55 runs scored and a .265 averau: this season at Atlanta. In l l National League .. • Meaersmlth, a 11-game wllmtr as a starter Jn tile9, waa dropped from the· rotation because pulled rib muscles prevent him from throwing more th.an a few·innings at a time. Yet the 6-foot·t, 1200-pounder Is still a stopper <In manager Lefty Phillips' · tiilching staff. Now he's a premier reliever at age 25. After being optioned to were 'Saves. He grimaces when he plkhea and cbe~s ~ll!li pills between inninp. Yet he baa given up onfy one l\111 and Iii h!Ls in nearly 14 innlnp of relief sinct Aug. 14. "He iS as tough as a~ pltthe.r I've ever seen ," said Phi Ill pa, who was a Dodger coach when Sandy Kou!ax pitched despite an arthriUc elbow. Messersmith describes the pain u a ''stabbing throb. not jus°t In one apot but all over" his left side. • • DAVIS CUP SWEEP ~ The United Stales made a clean sw~p of the Davis Cup mafches, defeating- Yhst Germany, 5-0. at Harold T. Clark tennis stad- ium in Cleveland. P osing around the CUp after the victory (from left) are: Cliff Ri chey, voted the out· standin,g player in the event, Stan Smith, Ed Tur· ville. non-playing captain, Arthur Ashe and Bob Lutz. Give -People Tenni~s ;;;;;;;:-J\sh-e > U.S. Davis Cup Team Completes 5-0 Rout CLEVELAND (AP) -If lhe Davis Cup Is to survive, it may not only have to go open, it may have to go public, as well. This was the feeling of leading tennis figures after the United States completed a ~ rout of disappointing West Germany Monday In the cozy and Somewhat reslricted confines of the Clark Memorial Stadium in fashionable CI eve I a n d •!eights. ''\Ve .must lake tennis oul of the country· club atmosphere and return it to the people," said Arthur Ashe Jr .• of Richmond, Va., mainstay of the U.S. Davis Cup team for the la st seven years. Alasteir Marlin of New York, weallhy president of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association, agreed. ··1 think we :should start thinking about putt ing the Davis Cup in the big public staditnn -the ball parks or the coliseum," MarUn said. "lt should be a big show where the average !ports fans could attend." Donald Dell, the ex-U.S. Davis Cup captain, said. "The ghetto of the country club is holding back t.he progress of the :sport .. , Pele Davis. whose father Dwight Davis donated the cup 70 years ago, said he knew of no restriction against playing the Davis Cup in a closed . arena such as Madisori Square Carden or the Houston Astr'Odome . "I would like to see more people ·given a chance to-view the mate.hes,'' Da\'is said. The future site of the Davis Cui) challenge round became a question mark when the USLTA indicated it was searching for another city. Cleveland has held the last three -in 1964, 1969 and 1970. The city built in a hard surface court in a junior high field, constructed bleacher· type stands and proceeded lO hold lhe world's top team tenn is :show for a capacity 7 ,5(1(1, m01l of them affluent . DODGERS PLAY~ TWIN BILL TfJD AY ATI..AJVTA (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers. their hitters Ufl!Tlasked du ring a dismal homestand, try to maintain a terrifying road show today with a twi- night doubleheader ;igainst the Atlanta Braves. ~tanager Walter Alston blames the Dodgers' 3-6 homettand on his hitters. \\'ho averaged only 6.7 hits during the nine games arter a post-All.Star binge that made them the league baiting leaders as a team. "We 've got alck bat.s1'' Alston $Aid. ''These are the aan'lt felk>w' .who were averaging J4 hlta i game a wetk ag~. '' -. -· . residents of the community paying $6 to $12 a seat. · " It was a hea\IY price for the du ll , disappointing show put on by the weary \Vest Gennans. ''How many fans are you going lo get at $12 a seat?" 8sked Ashe. "Tennis is too snobbish, anyhow." The West Side Tennis Club at Forest Hills, :seating more than 13,00>, i.s the logical :site but Forest Hills can't accommodate both the Open and the Davis Cup. Los Angeles, suggested by the Los Angeles Tennis Club, seals only 3,500 and has poor parking facilities. Football and baseball are erecting ~orts i11 Brief modern istic planls which might be used for a Davis Cup challenge round but to date the ~port ha.s not shown a wide enough national interest to warrant ··a · move into one of those giant arenas. "There are said.to be 10 million tennis players in the United States now," said one tennis oUici~I. "I think you could expect 30,000 of them to want to see a Davis Cup." Perhaps , but the Davis Cup must Improve its product. The U.S.-Germany match was a sham, with the Germans putting up only a feeble fight. Jn the final . :singles, Cliff Richey of San Angelo, Tex., defeated Wilhelm Bungert M , 6-4, 7..S and Ashe won over Christian Kunhke 6-3, 10- 12, 9-7, 1.>-11, 6-4. Sl1oe Needs 8 Winners; Laver in Doubles Loss DEL ~tAR -Bill Shoemaker cut the magic number of \\'inners needed lo break John Longden's record to eight Monday by registering lhe 6.025th victory of his career aboard favored Derby Day Boy in the flfth race of the afternoon. Derby Day Boy. the 4-5 choice in a field or six sprinters charged .between horses entering the stretch lo overhaul pace- !elting Long ~Posilion and win by I\) lengths in 1.09 2/S for the six furlon gs. • SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. -Jaime Fillet and Patricio Cornejo of Chile won the men's doubles title of the inaugural $25,000 Marlboro Open T e n n i s Championships Monday with a comeback victory over mett's singles champion Rod Laver of Corona del Mar and Andres Cimeno of Spain. Flllol and Cornejo, veteran Davis Cuppera for Olile, rallied for a 3-6, 7-6, 7· 6 victory worth 11,000 by edging their opponents in a second straight best.of· nine point tie breaker gamt, $-4. The match was halted Sunday by darkneu with the Chlltans ahud m gamta 2-i) In the th.ird set. • LOS ANGELES -The Loli ~ngcles Lakers acquired U lonolard Fred Hetzel fr om the Portland Tral\blazers on waivers Monday, a club spokesman said.: lletzel's a fi ve-year National Basketba ll Association vereran from David.son who has averaged 13.6 point.I per game w1th four teams. His career freethrowln& I . perce.n:age is .818, one or the league's be.st. He played in 63 games for Phlladelpbla last year, averaging 6.1 points per game, and was claimed by Portland in· Lhe expansion draft. It had been aimounced that the Milwaukee Bucks had acquired him, but the Laker spokesman said Los Angeles had entered a prior claim. • ATLANTA, Ga. .....;. Promoters are predicting an overfiow house of mor1 than--'3,ooo here Wednesday night when former heavyweight champion Cauius Clay returns to the ring for the first tbnt in more than three years. Jesse Hill of House of Sporb, which ls promoting the four-round exblblUorl matches between Clay and two oppon. enu, said ~1onday that only a small nwn· ber of tickets are stlll available. • NEW ORLEANS, La. -Owners of the '"NeW -Ofleans Buctanetrs sold-lfieli American Basketball A s s o c i a t I o n franchise ~1onclay to a Mls.slsslppl m•n who will !hilt the team to Mempbil. Tenn. · Maurice Stem, operatton1 manqer and R co.owner of lhe New Orleans franchise, did ·not rtveal·the prtce-paidlby 34-year. old P. L. Blake of Greenwood1 Miu., a one-timCDro football player iumed rtal e.state dealer. ~ ---- l cl C( a IV bl th le •• i.n of cc tt SL st SL th I' M N h• B tt " .. D w w " h .. a e: p " • p 11 p r $ ti L c h r r • • ' I t • l '""""''-~~~~~ ... ,,.. ... ~··., ,..,...,...,.-.,..·----:._~:<~o~>"'•"<"" ....... ,.., ... ~ .. r;.;::::;;:;;:-;-;-:~;;-c;""-;:~;-~cc;c:;:-;-:;-:-~;;-.-;-c:;:,-,,c.-.:>.~17.~"~·;,~:;:i.::;:-,-;:-r:;r.1;;o'"''"'~""'""'r;:-,-"\;~..,"1""' .. """""'"' .. ""'"" .. .., ............... '='""'""=""• .-... " ............. , • • ....... 1•1... ... ·--.....,_ 1 -:~;::;sne:Jit@A C r crnmu:aa .--..---""-..--.,.·-,,.~ ,.. ---..... ..-v ·~.,... ~ ,...----~ Madison Wins 10th Annual West Coast Elims Crown GARY MADISDN,.WEST COAST ELIMS WINNER I Botli l11jt1r11 P1•01ie lnexpe1~iencecl Twosom e Holcl l(ey £01· Miss ou1·i . ~ 1/, COLUMBlA. Mo. CAPl -~1issouri's chances or ret8ining its place in the college football sun this season depend to a great degree on V.'hether one or both or two inexperieneed quarterbacks can blossom into a reasonable facsimile of the departed Terry McMillan. The two quarterbacks, both non lettermen and juniors, are Mike Farmer and Chuck Roper. Both are prone lo injury and have been pl agued by ailments of various sorls thro ughout their coUege careers. Farmer and Roper bolh missed hair or the 'Tigers' spring \.11orkouts. Farmer suffered an ankle sprain and Roper had a shoulder separation that r e q u i r e d surgery. If -and coach Dan Devine thinks that's an i1npo rlant word -eilhCr J.'armer or Roper comes t h r o u g h • f\lissouri likely \vil l hang on to its 196!1 No. 6 ranking or improve on it and \viii ha\.·e to be labeled the team to beat in the Big Eight Confe rence. ?o.t issouri shared the champ ionship wit h Ne braska last season. "'il.'e're going to assume both Fanner and Roper are in good shape ." says Devine, the thin. black haired lrishman \vho has coached the Tigers for 12 years \vilh phenomena\ success. ' ' bu t , realistically, you've got to assume '''e have some problems there. "In evaluating Roper and Fanner. I'd say Roper is a be tte r passer and Farmer a bette~ runner. Farmer needs n1ore experience thro\ving the ball but he can .. pass better than most people think. "Both art very good leaders. With recei,·ers like ~tel Gray and John Hfnlcy, whoever turns up as the best passer probably will get the quarterback job ... Devine admit." 'he has some great football players and that f\tissouri's Boosters' Eve nt A football kickoff dance is slaled for 8 p.m. Sept. 11 by lhe Newport Harbor lligh boos!crs C'lub at the Balboa Pavili on. Tickets for the fund raising event arc $5 each with a midnight bufrct Included in the program that benefits Sailor football teams. Further information can be obtained by calling either 646-0203 or 673-8713. defense potentially is as good as last year when the Tigers won nine and lost two, including a 10-3 Orange Bowl defeat by Penn State, even though they yie lded an average of more tha n 17 points a game. The outstanding players Dev ine refers to include Gray , a ll-·ide receive r who ca ught nine scoring passes among his 705 ya rds in receptions: tailback Joo li1oore, 1he nation's No. 3 rusher in 1969 with . 1.312 yards; defensive tackle Rocky \Va!lace. who missed all or last season exC'ept . for half of the Nebraska game because or a pulled thig h musc le. and offensive tac kle Larron Jackson. a unan imous All-,Big Eighl selection. The re and 22 othe r lettermen form the nucleus of the new Missouri tea m wh ich, Devine says, will take the field Sept. 11 ·ag ainst Baylor in St. Louis. "Wi thout a No. 1 guy -so meth ing our lean1s have always had -and with more uncertainty lhan any team since I came to l\tissouri ... Besides Gray. l\1oore and Jackson. the offensive unit has six lettermen back, "including center Bob \Vilson, end Tyrone \Valls, Lock ie Eric Lowder, guard Scotty Belney and fullback ?.1ike l\1cKee. The other end will be John Matuszak. a 260-- pound junior college transfer fro m Oak Creek, \Vis. Except for safe ty Pete Buha, Devi ne·s starting li neup on defense will be composed entirely of lettermen. With \\'allace are ends ti.like Bennett and John Brown, tackle John Cowan, gua rds Adan1 Vital an d Steve ~1izer, linebac kers Nip \Veisenfels an d Sam Britts and halfbacks George Fountain and Lorenzo Brinkley . -Devine wilt presenl a someW hat differenl style of attack than last season. I le has eliminated the slotback position l:lnd will use a wide rceei~r. The chang:e is designed to utilize l\\'O lig ht ends al times and will enable Devine to have both Gra y and ~lenley, "'ho alternated last year .. in the line up at lhe same lime. "Right now. th ere is no way this is as good a foo tball team as last year's Orange Bo'A•\ club," Devine says. "Only Joe ~foore is back (rom last vear's backfield. i\.1issouri tea ms have lalways jelled but \Ve do have some question marks about this one.'' After a pause, he add s: "I'll be disappointed ir this learn doesn.:t come along ... " SlJ n., Bernardino . I Resident Posts Lopsided Victo1·y B.'' CRAIG SllEFF Of lft• D•Hr P'lltt l!t ff Gary ?.1adison celebrated his birt hday 17 days early Monday night at Kona Lanes in Costa Mesa The Sai. Bernardino le.ft·hal)der, who will be 31 Sept. 17, captured !he 10th annual West Coast Elims bowling bUe in relatively easy fa shion. ~ • Madison , recent winner o( the Cal Sta te P.tas ters title in San Diego. defeated UCLA dental student Farriel Hinkle for the championship, after capluring a round-robin series' from a pair t'!f opponents. In the two-gante litle 1natch vdth Hinkle, l\fadisori rolled a 190 in the e>pening game to Hinkle's 176 then capped the evening "'ith a fine 231 while Hinkle had a below·par 170. 1'.fadison opened only once in the championship decider, and that, came i11 the ninth fra1ne of the first game. when he had ii all wrapped up. In the second game, the Omaha, Neb. native had seven strikes, getting four in a ro\v (third throuafi sixth frames ), capping the night by striking out in the 10th. 0The viclory brought Madison $720 and advanced him into the state elims champiol)SltiR this weekend. -He y.·ill bow l four·game blocks in Sacramento and San Francisco Sa turday, return for a fou r.game set in San Diego Sunday and finish in Costa P.Iesa f\tonday night. Madison, along with elims champions from Sacramento, San Francisco and San Diego \Viii bowl in -the s t-a t e championship. The Ko11a part or the tourney will begin at 5:30 Monday. Although 1\-fadison had it fairly easy ht the fina ls. it was a lot tougher in the round-robin set. Jn the first game of the night against Carson's Walt Block. Madison defeated Block. 184-178, but it look a finish of four st raight strikes to do it. That. and the fact that Block opened i11 the 10th. Block was then eliminated in the seCQnd roU11d when Dana Poinl's Clyde Lachel""edgea...him. 1~178. In th'13Toct=ta-ch'erm-atch:;--the-two bowlers were tied at~ 152 in the elghth. Block hit a strike jn the ninth but only got eight pins in lhe decidi11g 10th frame . Lacher followed with spares in both the ninth and 10th. Madison finished with 170 in his due l with Lacher, while the Dana Point cement contractor could only hit 122 through eight frames. After sparing in the ni nth, Lacher COltCeded when he CQUJd only knock down nine pins on his first ball in the 10th. Madison, who was awarded a four-fool trophy by Dick Stoeffler, t h e tournament's originator and director. succeeds Reseda's Lamar Keck as the Elims champion. Keck won the title t\\'O years running and also was the 'Slate champion for t\\'O consecutive years. Rams Cut Four; Josephstn1 Okay For~Oiler Game LONG BEACH (UPI ) -The Los Ange les Rams Monday an nounced the release or four players to bring their roster down to 56. Released on waivers was Frank Richter. a four-year veteran linebac ker from Georgia . "'horn the Ram s obtained in an off season deal with the Den\·er Broncos. Also released were Leon Moore , a rookie cornerback from Tennessee State, and Ron Sva re. a rookie place ki cker from the University ol California ;it Rive rside. Don f\fartin, t · roo kie place kicker from the Uni versit:y o f \Vashington, who v:as just taken off the injured list this past week , received his release.· Allen termed the past weekend 's San Diego game, wh ich lhe Rams v.-on 16-14. •h" he~t game ih term s of Injuries for the team. Running back Les Josephson re· hlJUl'td his knt.-e, but was expected to be ready for Satu rday's game wtth the Houston OileJs in the Rose Bowl. Mantle Back With Yankees NEW YORK fUP ll -Mick y ~1antlc is back for two reasons. He can use the money. That's the first reason. He was going bananas doing nothinQ. Tbs.l's Lbe..s«Qfld one. f\ti<:key l\1antle came back. lo the \-'arikees Sunday as a coach after being away nearly two years. lie ne\·er \\'as -. ompletcly away ·because he sho"'ed up here for the old·Umer's games and he even dkl a little ct>llthing for lhe Yanks lhls past spring in Florida. • tie officln lly rejoi ned lhc club Sunday though. They gave him. a locker., he put tn tnr~e innings on the ftftt ~se hne and look part In the rustoma ry post-game celebrating when !he \'ankees beat the • , T"•ins, 5·2. on Roy \\'hile's grand slam homer. · l'he \'ankces didn't realize Mantle \\'anted to come back into baseball until a montb.a&o when ht wal in ~tiami Beach for a ciric promotion. Lulher Evan11 d U1r P.tia1nl Herald asked Mickey whe· lht'.r he 'd Ilka to return as a manager or a coach and Mantle i;a\d 1JU~ 1wouJd. Charlie Finley or Oakland got Wind of lhe sto'rv and said he 'd Jove to h'a\'e h1lckey ~1anlle on his ball club. The Yankees hcart1 about that and said good golly, l\1iss: Mollie, we lost" Jo c Di~faggitl to thti t guy nnce before: and arc we going to lose Mickey ti1antle lo him 110\V 3\S'O? ' ' . Al that point, Lee l\.1ecPhail, the Yanks' general manager, qu ick got on the phone to Man tle at his home in Dallas and asked him what about this story out of l\l iami? ~1antlf talked aboUf tha t phone -call Su nday. •·L.ct said he read the story about me \\'anti ng tq come back aad asked'me \\'as money lhe reaso n?'' Mantle related. "I said, 'Htll. yeah , I gotta eat you know.' It ~·~n't all that. I was.just \\'asling away '1dllg nothing . I'll be 39 In October and thi t's a little young to just sit around and do llOlhing. What I'm gonna do b try !his ror a month . C<111chlng I me&n, and if I 'llke it I'll try It egaln next year." GLENN WHITE Sj)Ort• Editor Michiga11, Bo ·in Top Shape For '70 Seaso11 ANN ARBOR (AP ) -Coach Bo Schembechler says Michigan's football team has "the incentive to v.1n'' the Big Ten championship -even lhough the \Volverines can 't go to the Rose Bowl this .season. But more th an incenti ve they have: 1. one of the finest defenses '.n the country: 2. one of the better quarterbacks in the country; 3. one of the ·best running combinations in the country; and 4. one or the best coaches in the country. "Teams who have incentive and talent are going to win ,'' reasoned the 1969 Coach of the Yea r at a recent press luncheon. 1'11lose who don't, won't. It's as simple as that." "As far as I'm concerned the important thing is the Big Ten championship - \\'helher we go to a bowl game or not ," he added. U·M's incentive will be sole possession of the canference title. something it shared last year with Ohio State via a stunning 24-12 upset or the Buckeyes in the final game of ttle season . --- The victory brought the Wolverines to the Rose RO'A'I which they Jost, 10-3, to Southern Cal only hours after Schembechler \vas hospitalized \\'ith a heart attack. "I'm in the best shape I've been in since I became a head coach, mentally, physically -and socially," smiled the former 11-tiami or Ohio head coach as he flex:~d his left bicep. Bo. who was 220-wunds in Pasadena but is 180 now, said hC doesn't expect the pressure-of the new season lo affect -his health. Seventeen lettermen, including_ six starters, return lo the offense while 16 lettermen. including eight starters re- 1urn lo the defense where P.tlchigan 's strength lies ma_; rily this ye ar. "It is well stacked and \\"e could propably sustain an injury or two ar:id still come out all right," he sa id. Offensively senior quarterback Don f\1oorhead will be the key. "As long as f\loorhead is whole, in my opinion. we have as good a quarterback as there is in the country," Schembechler praised. "He's a great football player." The 6-foo t-3. 198-pounder, v.·ho is cocaptain. passed for 1.261 yards and fi\'e touchdowns last year. Running from the option-T formation he added 625 yards on the ground and scored four times. U·M's record books underwent an overhaul in 1969. including game marks in first downs (34), yards rushing (523J, and total offense (69:1 ). All were conference records. The Wol ves were No. I in four categories and second in 12 more. Billy Taylor and Glenn Doughty div ided runn ing chores from the tailback spot last year as sophomores and led the team with 864 and 732 yards ru s h i n g respectively. Schembechler will use Doughty, who has recovered from a knee operation. at tailbac k wilh Taylor al fullback in place of gra duated bloc king ace Garvie Craw. ~ Tursdar. Stpttmbtr 1, 1970 DAILY PILOT ;. :' Hungry Sueeess Ne iv MV Grid Boss Speaks By ROGER CA Rt.SON ----•DJ lk.DAllJ l'Utt $1111 -~.----------~ Four years or varsi t:t 0 lootball h8s produced .all of fi v.e \Vins for Mission Viejo Jligh School. On 11 occasions the. Diablos ha\'e allowed opponenu 40 points or more. , A~, ii;! 38~ different outings ~lission Viejo ~s managed to SC<lre in doufie figures six times. So, with those less Limn happy facts on hand. new coach Bob l!lvner feels relatively sure of himself when he states, "J think the ltids ·here at Mission Viejo are hungry for success." He goes on to say, "it's a case here of winning-and once we do that we'll have a going program. "Some of 'these kids. have been afr\id or unwilling to extend themselves In pr act.ice. Perhaps it's been .an out fOr them when lhey lost on Friday. After losing they could tell themselves they dldn 't work thal hard for it anyway.'' Hlvner, a Westminster resident, will shake up the offense with a new fonna- lion-switching the Diablos frOm a tight T to the successful !-formation that be employed while at South Gate High: "The T has its advantages but I thi nk \'\t ha.ve some capable personnel for the I," sa,Ys Hivner . Hivner's first brush wi th the I came (hile playing at Compton College under Tny Brown. He later played under coach Jim 1Jwens at the University of Washington -\\·here Hivner says he "'as most influenced by \vork and dedication reaping vie· tories. Surface appearances are near equal be t"·een Hivner's last place of employ- ment (South Gate Hijh} and f\fission Viejo. The obvious difference Is the size ot his sta ff. "'here he· has the aid of siI assistants. Al South Gate he had three. • Included in the varsity picture at the present are Bill Crow and Randy Edwards {offensive and defens.ive tine ) and Chuck GaUo , who'll assist Hivner with the quarter- back and wide receivers. ,.. In the Bee picture are John Stonebarger and Joa Reid while Don f\1artin and Bill Smith have the Cees. Jn all. the Diablos have 195 grid aspirants on the practice field . Defensively the Diablos figure to employ the wide-tackle.six formation witJ1 \'ariations. "I don't think we 'll surprise anyone defensively, we'll slay pretty basic,'' says the ex-Washington quarterbac~. BOB HIVNER AUNDRE HOLMES Holmes Missio11 Viejo's Bread and Butter Runner In some respects. the 1-fonnalion is reminescent of lhe old fashioned single wing -'vith the tailback the bread 'n butler ground gainer. Miss ion Viejo will be employing the I this year under new coach Bob Hivncr and if ever the Diablos have had a bre<id ·n butter lype runner, it's Aundre liolmes. lfolmes, \vho starred for i\fission Viejo last year as a sophomore halfback, is inked for duties this year at tailback. He's a 5-9, 160-pounder with excellent moves and balance. Although not O\'fJIFj blessed with speed, Holmes has displayed rieree competitiveness and the ability to bounce back in any given situation. "I've watched him in films and he 's definitely not a quitter. He was clobbered several times but he didn 't quit," says llivner. "And he's a pretty smart kid, too." Holmes was nearly the entire Mission Viejo offense last year and defenses had little trouble with the Diablos' full house T-formation, simply keying on the Deet- footed Holmes. Despite the added pressure, ~lolmes accounted for 472 yards on 117 carries - good for a 4.0 average. He scored three times -including the winning touchdown against El Modena 17-6 }. "•lolmes is one of the key reasons why we went to use the I-Jormatlon, but I thin k even ir we didn 't have him we'd use the I," says Hi~·ner. As for other sports, Aundre seems to shu n them. ·During the basketball season he could Pe seen in the Diablos band - helping to exhort coach Pat Roberts' quintet on to success. One of f\1ission Viejo's top players on the court las t year was brother Rudy, a senior, "'ho wasn't in the football picture. Major League Standings DEAN LEWIS AU.UST SPICIALS ArilERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. Baltimore 86 47 .647 Netv York 74 59 .556 Detroit 69 63 .523 Boston 68 63 .519 Cleveland 64 69 .481 \Vashington 63 69 .447 Wesi Division f\1inne&ata 76 54 .565 Angels 74 56 .561 Oakland 70 62 .5.10 Kansas City 51 61 -,316 l\1il"•aukee so 63 Chicago 49 86 . Met"1•1v•1 lhtulh l•hlmore 10, Ntw Y1•k 1 l o11on 4, Oetrelt ' W•1lllnQlon J. Clt<1tl•n!I • TNey"I 0 1n>n .376 .363 GB 12 16 ~~ 17 22 2211!= ' 7 26 211:: 291, Clllc•ll'J IJOlln ll·l•J ., O.kltlld !Ool11on !11-U l, """' K•NH (lff (l u;,lctr G•ll II Al!lek !M\l,,,.'f IJ.U, nlQlll Ml,.,..,1M1ta (l"trry lt.11 tl'ld 11:•11 10·10) JI MJ .. or11~k" (Kr111ut 11·1' l lld CownlflO 4·111, J, h¥1• "10111 (ltvtlll!CI' (Hll\CI ,.,1 II W•1lllno1on flelf!ll" l•·•l, "IOllt lttllmort: CH1rdln f.I) I ! Ntw Y1rk ll"t'11r.on IS·t). n!Qflt l)etf'l)I ((Aln lJ•JJ t i IO'Jlln fSltlltrl 1).71, .... NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvlsion w L Pel. GB Pittsburgh 70 63 .5211 Chicago 69 64 .5 19 NeW York 63 64 .515 \I' ,, SI. Louis 64 69 .481 6 Philadelphia 62 70 .470 7~i Montreal 57 1> .432 12\1 ' ¥.'est Division Cincinnati 86 49 .637 Dodgers 72 58 .554 11 ~l San Francisco 69 6.'I .52.1 15~ Atlanla 6S 67 .492 1912 11ouslon 62 70 .470 22~1 San Diego 50 82 .379 J4 ~l MW1y•1 111111111 Htw 'Verk 11, SI. Loul1 I °"'~ ~·mt t<lltcl\llt<I, T ... l\''I Otrrttl PHlllM/'111 !Ve•l<I •·U) ., MO!ltrul !5ton4f!lllt f.U), n19ti1 P'ftllr.dtlphlt ltl\IMl"f 10.1)) ti ClllctOI !Htlll· 'ntll If.IQ) Htw Vor-{M(Al'lllrtw 1·1!) t i St, L0\111 (Glll-'°" lt•Sl, "IQlll Oill>!tl'I CMot!ltr , .• 11\d Ollttn 1f.11} I! Al• 1&"11 (llted l-6 Ind N191crt 10.!6), 2. IW .. lr\tl'll Stn Fr11Kl1ce (Ptff'f U-Jll ti Clr!clrvlttl jM<- Glolllllfl 11-.t!, 1119111 Stft Dlt90 (~ 16-Ul, t i HOUlloo'I I01t r-1r !l·lll. flloltl DEAN LIWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646°9303 Se rvice, Parts, & Body Shop Now Open Until I p.m. MonCloy Nights I I Oran ge County's Lorgest and Most Modern Toyota and Vol•o Dearer S,\CIAL 1970 TOlOTA WAGON = $1817 .... °""' ...... '" $tecl Merli: U-Hllo P'klt•~ LeH Cn1IMn C•r- v .oLVO D~MO SAVE $466 #SU8782 1967 TOYOTA CORQlllA Sedlfl, llldlO, HM!lr, AlllOl'Nllc lrtM. (Vl!V )111 $1095 4 I •• • ' , ... JI D•Jl' PILOT Tut sd1y, Stptt mbtr l, 1970 Coliseum FV Ri se By rh1L noss 01 lht Otl!' Piie! Stitt Fountain Valley Jligh n1adc a sharp rise lo the upper echelon of the Orange Coast area football scene in 1969 hy l'OJning up \Vith a 6-2-1 record Jn the tough Irvine Lcagul' This happened after three n1<'diocre c a m p a i g n s ~'{If grid1ron v.•arfare for the red and blue clad Barons. And perhaps the on c indi11ld~ost responsible for the ..rt'Jdden upturn in Baron foo tball fortune~ i.~ Bruce ., . BRUCE PICKFORD JIM HOST.ETLER Los Alan1Jtos ·Racing Entries Pickford. v.•ho has doubled as L O~ AlAMITO\ ENTR IES FOR •'d UD c1a.m 1~a. Pur~ \)7{1D. head footba!l coach a n d wEONEso,.',',·,'~!'· 1. 1t10 c111m1n~ P•lt• usm -, t l;i•m•no 'ice Sl.)t>I\ athletic director on the Baron ,f~sETA;o~~~:fsAi!M. ~:~1i;~1avt~~ l::i~f-11 \1 NIG NTLY OOUl!ILt: Oft lST & lND Sr-.1e AttOYnl IH•rlj campus si nce ve nturing \Vest RACES 1110 oano·, (W•to.onl IS EXACT.lo ON •TH I tTH R#ICES Prle!o l8•nks) from Sioux Cit y, Iowa in 196ti. FIRST RACJ. lSo n ro-. Miloen 1 11r "~eo~~1e ILl"ll•ml "'*'' 11101. Clt l..,lna. PurH t ltOO. 8ta1lno H1rr~ (Ad1lr! 119 At Central High in the Iowa ~1,r:i;"!'.F..';1«'Fo::~1 110 '-~tX~"Hff.),~£.(~••t/a, 1 ,,,,, 01'~' city, Pickford tutored gridi ron =~t0 oe!:~ l~~!~~: 11~1 ~t&"lno. P11rse go£. c111,.,1na 11r?ce pe ts f 16 d h. "" M•~ !(•0\0¥1 170 Coomlc !APOd•c•l pros c or years an IS l u•nt 1r1oe• !H••Oln<i\ 110 Dr•w Pia• !Stn l!hl TOii R<Kktl Gii (1(1n!>) ti/ Mhl R~rt C!>k (Wil•°"l last two teams !"64 and '65l P1•1Um ~hi (Mor;1,ori1 111 S•tve Tllo ve1 IP1ool Roc:ke l Jp \1111<1v IHlr!I 12'1 llootiir ic• !">r•Mll there were both undefeated Tr°"""' sn1tc1>tt <P•IH'l 110 Slet"Oln c11~11e· iPorned P10•'• l'onv IW1ll1J 1;0 S~rron Sid IS1r1u~tl and 'rated among the top fou r Sl!CONO R."CE. uo v••d1 l ve~r ~rlt Lark tuft~~,,,, ~11~~mfr'.::' .~ft". ~1'~":1"a. Pu• .. s1100. Mr.'sf;:J'."<~v:;:1~,1 teams in the entire state. ~""'""''" .. " CP•<M> i:n Sl!VENTH RACE. Ba v11a1. 1 vo•r o _ · k G<irl °""" ll-ltrll 115 alG• aria ""'· Al-nc:••· Purse il/00. ucsp1te some roe y going Roow••t•a Tom 1P111.ol 111 Vor>dfr Go 1L;p1>1rnl 10 Mr BOii Dtt IH&fllllnci l !IS Rl'O(f'1 Toritp IWtllsl 110 lh<' first three seasons at '"'lit Clown ISmllhl 119 First [);vi !Ortvtrl II& Gonl Up Jot IAGt'•l 111 Nlllw No•r CAcl.llrl 11• Fountain Valle". the Baron s1un F11"" 10 •• ,,.,1 11 ~ Moon 1110 1s1•1un1 11J J Pllprl'" 81ro IL!Ol'l•ml 111 w1r Gal•~lt 1w1t1Cftl 1)(1 gCJ.dl.COO program r e a C h Cd ll Plt11 J19 ~Por.,..rJ \il llc11not "&•"' (r0$0Y) 111 lt•lh Ste (Wrl<;M ) t" Ptlll>lr CWll,Olll ' Ill · THlRO RACE. JO' v1ra' Mo<d•~ 1 l••<I l on !Per.,..rl 1 n1atur1ty last fall by rel'ordin g "'''' 01a1. c1e1m1na. Pun• s1too. lrut'l<lln ""'n c ~m11~1 IXI c111 .. 1na pri(t 'HOO. EIG HTH RACE. l!oll y1ra1. l . . . Ph ysical Ed CJ!l ss Fincl Blo sso111i11g for Ba ro11s \\'hile l' on d u r \ 1 11 S .tn af1.croo.uu phyi;ie<1l ctlucciilon 1:!11s.1; 111 0 }e~rs ago Fouult'in \lallt'Y ;1sl!isl a!1I !OtJlllall c.:1x1th l\t:n Dudrlr1dgl· \HJtirc-d a young. weJ.hbu1h sophon1orc,111 the crowd. lluddridge sunlJllOnCd tht' youngster aside und a~kcd hinl \l'hy he 1vasn't out ror foot'oall. \Vhatel'er advice J)llddridgc gave the young li!d th <ll day evidently \\'as con v I n e l n g enough because up 10 this day husky Jim Jloste1lt'r h:is l>ecn u1 a Bar0t1 rootball s1111. Although his u n 11 :; u a ! J ~ articu1 <1 te and nu1tur1· n1an11or hC'lle his 16 ycars. th1: j .Jfl. 195- pound tl\'O-\\'ay gu:ird pro~[J1't't 1~ clCrnally J: r a l L' I u I to Duddridge fur gi\'lng him tonsideratiQn thal one fall aft ernoon. Hostetler started one contl•st (;iga1;1Sf · n 1i Ana Vallr~·f in 1969 bul pl<1yctl enough tu letter. Jlr z"l·c.:al!s. "\\'e ha~t four &o~·I J!un r!ls lil~L y ca r 1 !le tt1:cr, S!C\'f' R:iuf)p, "Bob !!uf/111;.n :1n<l U11l l\ri~tinat f ;11ul 11 c all goL J(;) ~.ce a lo~ o[ p!11yfng limc ."- l.111111cd to offense last sca~on Hostetler i-; looking forward to operating bo\h 11 ays II~ f;)JI. .. Coach Pickror d wants us to think one platoon because l1e \1 ants to play the l I best IJt>npic." he says. "BUl I am lookin~ forwarO to plaving defense. lt"s just a 1i1tll1 f{lr e\'ery drfensive hnrn1an \\'hrn he can make a l<it·kil' behind lhe line of :;.:rimrnagt' \\'here 11111 Hostetler play on defense'.' ··\\'e use a six-man defensil'e fronl alignm{'n l. J'IJ be playlng ;1l guard and v.·ill normally hnc ll[l head on against an offensh·c guard.'' ~--~~~~~-:_: .... ~ ... ~G~l:::VESYOU ""0-.1 COAST -TO·GOAST SER VIC E 70 .t.AMCO c.~1111 '" C1llloml 1 a fine 6·2·1 m ark and Born! Mlrt:llt CMarrl•oril 111 ola1 &NI up. C!1lmlnci. Pur .. LuPeo 1WlllOlll 110 Cl10mlno orice 510,100. dcadlockin<> pecennia[ ,,,,,·nc lon1110~ T1>nv ~H•rt l 1:0 Off M1>Unt {Pt'"''' YOU CAN TRU ST YOUR TRA!JSM ISSION 1> Ila Pol)Ofl cw.1nl•l in Rockfl Mk• (Drtvtrl titlist Loara. 21-21. 1=~:,.s~~afa''!~~rrifrl 110 Geronoino M••0• IM•rdinal TO ANY OF AAMCO'S 550 CENTERS. L ar · ,_ f c , Ot VJ!'IO Olrl ~WoU1) gg ~i!~~~~~·~~·l~~am l 1n WORIOS LARGES' >RANs••/SSION SP!CIAUSTS o a IS now a memix;r o a'"'"'"* l•rs 1w11w111 110 e1r1.., Roe••! <l•n•il -nt ' ~ . .• . • • .1 ''"'I E ,, I M "' ! l• ~ to lh ,, I a a ~ E II' II ll !J Iii Iii ,, ''"" ''"" &: a I[ Ii ll ll !I ~ Appearance For Pele Racing Results Ou1!1r l1rtl """ !81nk1) lll Wltcfl E!l lit.~dir) • 1,, il.n•htom-6l}-Ol60 lu""~ P1rk-SU·IJM the Sunsel League, but the tie Ju~~uiffH :1'C'l'.J •OO ,...,0, 111 NINTH ""'E. JSO v1rd1 -, ve•• 0111, 1~1 w. Lfncaln a1vd. 4tlO Stinton Ave. ,. •o vtat end uo. Ct•lmlna Purlt S2100. ls the only black mark on it s o"''· .. 1ow1nces. Pu•"'! 12100. c11;,,,1"" orlc~ IJOOO C•ai1tr1no llt•ct>-o•-1n1 Go Pll ll Go !Pffnl!rl 111 •• 0 1 , '' , 1 JJ1f0 Dll~eny P~rt Rd. ·o R th h 30 f · lll lJ;!tr !Lipham) 12n '' or UC an I J ur ey roug rv1 nc ou-.n For A 01,.. !Srriu•il 1i. ~~l::'r? :i~h 1~:,.:,~r;>""l co11~ Mo1~.....,.•~h•• oawn1v-1111) 5Jl·tttO Le · L••.,t'a Go M1n 15mi!flJ l\S Slick Jlck (Weihl !115 Nowoort llvd, llH Ro!O<••n• ague OUtJflgS. Lll!lt (anl1u1 JWtllt) HI Poc•n l•r !H•rdino) •t L~~twood Iii a ''"'I ,, Pele, the king of the soccer world will lead the Santos of Bra z i l team ag a i n s t Guadalajara of Mf xico, iri an international s<>«er match at the -Los Angeles C-Oliseum, Sonday afternoon. Sept. 20 Pele will be joined by six members of the Brazilian team that swept to the World Cup champKmshi ps at Mexico City. last June. Among the famed Brazilian winners ar.e ClocloalOO. Edu, Ze Maria and Carlos Alberto, t:aptain of the National Selection, three times world cha mpions over the years. Tickets can be purchased at the Coliseum box o f l i c e , \Valli ch's Music Cit y and any Liberty Agency. The lickets will be priced at S6. if purchased at the gate, and $5, if purchased in advance. Children under 12 will be admitted for $1. SY STE.MS AN,lt,LYSTS SPS. $1 s.ooo Tnl1 I~ • unique Of>POrlunot¥ to• • .. ,11 ciu•llllld IHl'IOll In !llt <D"1· PV"' tlo!CI E~. ~11'1lh. For (•II JACk Nel•Oll. MARKEl lNG DIR. $2S,OOO ln••ll+vtn! wol! Qu1!ll·od l11n1vldu•I wo!ll prover. pe•lorm1nt• In •Ill O\· 1111 l'lll•kt llnti rfltlrd1. F<tf. ~''° fH lab•. Colt J•ck J<UI•~ DIR. OF PROP. MGT. s2s.ooo Or1;11nl1tt 11eldeo 10 •"ume full ••· 1p0n1ll>\tlty of .... ~1...,,..,.111ft •011 e•ltle <pr09r1m. t<te, •110 I•• 1~01. C1ll J1ck Ntl50fl. PRESSMAN $7200 Are ya.i rtll1Glof, -•~<ie• le ~· to -•k7 Tl>t !lmt " l'IOW •o 1 1~• ldv•nlll9t al fh .. -rlvnlly Ft•· Ct!! JKk ,..,,..,.., AMBULANCE [)RIVER $b000 ReU1t:1i.. Pl:•..,..''"'°"'' premecl o~. Mu1! l\tvt mtlvr t lu<111tmt111 111 crilkl l l•tu-o1i0rll. Oaod '""~+b. F"' Ct ll Jeck Nt l1ori 2323 N. BROADWAY LOS ALAMITOS RllULT.S M1N11y, Awt. JI, 1'1'1 Cl11r 111111 ,-,II ~IRST RACE. olDCI vtr~h. M1ickn 1 "'"' olds. Cr.lmlM. Purso $1900, .Slofrr1 l 1rblo !W1!1011) 11.IO TA I to WH We.> !Cro.Ov) l.10 1 . .0 TOkM'I Ct>icl< fPorner) l *° T!mt: .n 1111. Al\O r111 -l,.1 Lt l t1twll. M•<1k (h1r111r, Tl'loloriorl, ~ur1111·1 Mi11, Mor-tom, Rt<IOKlc, IOIO lrllll.. Scrllc~d-Tl11or 1110, W1!cl! St>lrlH, Jwsl A. S1>Ur, l!lil Poison. S£CONO RACE. «lO '1'1rd1. l 'l'ttr olas '"" uP. Cllimi"9. Pur11 \1900 s11f1v B1r c.1on1l•f J OO 1 . .0 J.fll L011-(V•AlORI ~ til l.60 S1l•IV !Ur (Adtir) l lme: .10·1 ro. •• Alia fin !.. S!rlwdOr•, E•lh! Twtnlv, FlllhY Hollen. SPY (ll<her, Gl••Y Bo, LldY L1n•1n1, Ful! 01 81r1. !tcrtlC~td -MC""Y M(.LI. Qo;dl1<lall, R1Pi<I Nlbt:IS, Flfff RCK~el." 'l NIGHTL'I' OOUILI!, 1·5ltrrt 11r1111 & t -''''" l1r, ... 1111 SM.•. THlltO R"C t . 'SCI verds. M10<1tn 1 .,,, cldl. Pur\e il'IOO. Ml .. Go lid !SlflUH) Ht•~ku (Wlh0"! ReddV Wl•e !WHIOfll l'lmt : .ll ·l /10. " .cl J.l!O ? "° 2.60 7 ?fl ,. All<I ''" -Bl•<-Aou1rlu1, N••M !Ud, I ll 01 Oeclt, The City Girl, Tln~y 5ove<i Sc<llC~od -Ootk•v 81• l~r. !'OUR TH RliCE. 11'11 v1rd._ l 'l'ttr aid• Incl UP. C•1lml110. Purse UCIOll. Ho11N T1>1 9lh (PttM•l •.IO l.:IC 1.llO Wt• On Poverty !K111i1) J.IO 1 llO Cttch OK-!#IOalr) 2 IO UNDERWRliER $1100 for (&SUll!'I' ln1. IO~tfll..,I OPP f'O• a<tv•ncemeot, Mtome 1 memW• ol >1•!1 E•. !lfn Froe. 1110 !tt !GG1, Clll Eric Wood . JR. ACCOUNTANT $7100 + lmmO<lodltlY •vaolaOlt lor herd· wor~lng. ~nowl!'dgtaOlt l)t'rJO<I. G•tl! l>fnef"• Fee, (oll Erot WPolll. FINANCI AL CONSULrANT $SOOO + No e•O. """'°eel, Woll trti"· Ou•· 111,..,lno OOJ!Of!V111tv for a !)er, -,,,,, Ho•o '""" '"' Fee Call E•I< WOOO ,ACCOUNT £XECUl lVE S'.OO!l Comrnw~it•ot '"I t~ftu•lve !evtl I bockgrou"" p•l<I . l<Ottll bf<>J <<>m1Mnv ci r F·~•. 11\0 !lt join. (Ill Eri< WO<>O COUNSE LORS $4l 00 + l«ruo< Ol'(.O<\wn•1• lr1inl"g pro-gram Th•• <•" le•d ln10 tnt n•11.-Gr1•1 Ot<o•!•t>. l'reo, 8i5<1 ltt I~. (111 Eroc Wood, SANTA ANA 835·3811 LIN-BROO;i< OPENS F~tOAV, SEPT.4 AT 9 ~.M ... P. kl d I r d. ·r· ~··· View ("OOCl•<•I 111 •orll Oi•I (Adair) t<ulltr!0<1...:t1lf-H1~ G•rd~n Grov ......... ll-1200 " l imo: .•1·1/IG All<I ••n -R1g. MrCov, T~t WoP, Glrflt"• R!ck1t, Tfn' R.oc~ol, J•<1'• Sun. .S.:rll<~ecl -Mr CUP•d. C•ll (OllK!, JC or ee s 1vers1 !Cation Th1 Count 1w11 ..... 1 111 Sle-rov c~trQf IF.ncl'ltrl 111 Soyin ••<lid ,5•1 G••~•n ~u~ Kiiiin Ad1ln l?tl CCKkv KIO (Ptrner l from his normal style of allack M1r(1u11 tH!"' 1!• M11no111 E1a1t cua,....,1 ~~~~~~~~====~===~:::•:·:•:•:•:':"~'t·:::~= l'l,TH It.lo E. t111 Vl•O•. J •t i • old• Mick·, Moon (O•tYOT) \vas one of the princi pal -r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;i;.;~;;;;;;;;iii;;;;;;;;;;i;~;;;~;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.ii reasons for Fountain Valley·sll rootball success in 1969. O• " " II Go!l1 Hu...:~. Husttlno l!lo• 2 . • l'l,l'H RICE. l~ Yf'I" 1 Yetr .:.1<11 11•1<1 In Ctlllor"I•, Cl1>m•11v. p.,,., ·-· Rocke! l1r lo• !Ad1lrf S llO l 60 1 . .00 c;u.,.'• R.e<1uo1t rw1twinl s 00 Joo Gt Mls•v J<1e (Str1w111 J.00 Tom•' 1a.l110 11.11<1 ''" -Pt9'<1er••" Out•1. MMI· Ot!!1, R•v,,,_ l1r Bov. l;..,,,n,no Bid. Rockt1 Oqocllo, Roc••n' Hu n ... Ou•••r l1rlet1t. ~cratchlO -1a1 Run, 0-1 Too Gor!, v1u·~ ~ l rvc•. Cfo1tr 1!11r lld. SlllTH Rj11CE. 170 vlt<'• l Y••r ol<tt •"" ua. Cl1lmln9. Puroe l:IO'lO. \panilh Loc ket !AOtlrl 100 •.I03 •0 OM ~lldOr\1¥ 10••v•r) • 40 l llO ~llU(k 'Em IVimon~ l • .a T lmo~ •6·,110 it.I"> r~n -Iris~ lrc<rut. l1•rtn'1 !llocuil. Ti><o O•ndv . P"•'l<l1><1lor, No- i.re Fort L111v Scr1t<~f<I -Winni"" Hour. Mr Lon<r ~~o!, Polo ltllt. O'Ar<V W.1v. U EX"CTA, 4 °So1ni1~ Lock1t I 1 · Ono ""Ill Only, plld HO.Oii. SEYEHTH R"CI. JSO v~•D• l vter Old• 11nd UP. Clelmln•. Pur•f '1'000 Flt l>btr (H•rdln9) I! ..0 • "O & 70 C~!ll f11r !ll~nlS! I 00 •Ill CMc RfQUf" ~5tr1u .. 1 11 00 Time· 11·1110 .1110 ••n -Flvin• Co• Olt + l•~"d~. Befl For Luc\, Vin r.11 .. , Hf'\ A Rt<>UH:, C\r>do B•V ll~r 5cr1lcllftl ~ Do" Puohla. AP•ll Pl•> 8AV I•• MO<I••· ~ • ..,.. N·o~! Oot. P1num R..,~11! EIGHTH RACE. !.<• v•rd• 1 '""' olD• anO uo AllOW~""IJ P""' ilnHI. lft II• P1llY !A(lllrl 0 00 ' •O '~~ Plun<llt !Wtllll I 1'0 1 •O l;ov Go 4 Ptrnt• I 1 60 l'imf· 11 l/tG 11.1,0 '"" -L1unt~~· '"""' 1'•~'1•· l•oMmt!ICI JooPotrd, C~•rQ• Ro~tl, Bot ~P~. No 1c•1h1>e• NINTH lt"CE , t00 ••rn·. l v••r QIOI •nd uo. Clfl,,,ln9 Pu"t 'ltilO In R~mtmbr•ntt (AO~•d 4 00 J lO 7 60 OD11bl9He1IY ()(1no1l 1100 .S .i:i Otc~· Rtv •I !Pt•"etl l 00 T;..,., .10-•110. A•IO ••n -Doobl °"" Cool "· Slier! Rockfl, Y1llP• luf!onn, ~l>f"\ l•r!l>daY. 5<>"0 A L~t. l•r!omh• 5n•tc~f'd M1ct>oao lnr .• ,.,.,, nunt. Leo 01nd• B•'. P•r T G"I '5 !KACT.t., •·In Remembrance & I · Oouble ~111T, p•llll llU JO. Deep Sea Fish Report ~"N OtEGO !M~nlokul PJtrl 1!'0 A~al,..1; oil •IO<icoro, J lyn1, •I ~·1 1.,...1 •• 1. S~AL llACH-111 •""if"· II b.1«. I! ton•ID, !Cl 0..rtl(IJCl.I lr.,..._l)j •r<>le.r•; 111 oonllo, ,. ~lffft\ld•. NEWPOIT jjllrl'• Ll"dint l -n '"" <>•~11. 1S ll•rr•cun1. 115 t>onl!o. '' b>Ju, 1 mltkr•t l, 1 h•l·bu• 01vtv'• Leeker) -195 1n11lrro; 17 t lt:ll<"'•· u ~•How!lil. 711 0on;10, \oo b<IH. 19' blfrACll~l. • htlltlli!. :>f fD(~ Cod LONG 11!.t.C H !Pt(Hlc S"trtli1fllntl -11 or19la .. ; 1 VtilDW!AI!, ll b8fri· cucl~. 1 htllbl,11, 7171 <1"1:0 b.111, •.i:i b0n•1a. II! roe~ coo. C ltl,.,enl Piof)- 11 1nt1a•1; 401 b1u. II ba.,1tu<I~. 71 oanHo. 37 ~~llb~t. ll••ViP-11 An•l•ro; 61 !MIS, ll bOnUc. lie says. '"what you are as a coach is predicated by lhe ma- terial \\'hich vou have to work v.•ith. • ··Last year "'e had the type of boys v.·ho v.•e threw the ball v.·ith more. But I tend to lean towa rd a ball-control offense ... Picklord-would_Jike--things run like the Darrlill Royal approach at the Unive rsity of \ Texas. That is, one of using running as the bread and but- ter of the attack but utilizing 1 passing when necessary. I He doesn'l think size has 1hat much to do w iLh performance on a football 1 field. I .. I ha ve coached excellent 1 footb11.ll players in all shapes! and sizes. He add~ '"I rate the mental i.lnd ernotinna! parts of the l(ame mueh higher than-the , physical elements. Althous:h 1 having ,wme abili ty helps. I football just requires more dl'stre and emotion than most o!her sports... 1 Noting 11 1\'0Uld be hard to compare the two, Pickford ~ees the difference between last ~ rar"s squad and this year"s. '"\\'e ha\e 81 bo~·s oul lor the I varsity this Fall and wr see1n I to ha\'e be ll l'r :1thletes than \Ve did last fall al the ~am<' I tinl<'." he sa~·s. I "I underline the 11 o rd ••athletes'· bec.iu~c L h 1 s f'u rrcnt grou p includes <1u ic k, 1 last and agile people who can run.'<"<Hch and do other things ! ur this nature and do thetn 11('!1," he a1lds. /\ na!ivc nf r h j l" a g Q . P1l·kford originally 1nade his n1a rk on thr gridiron a ~ a s111gle-wing prep v.·1ngb;u:k in the \\'indy City . ill' advanced to lo11a·~ ?>lorningsidl' Collegl'. \\·hert' he played three years undl'r prl'senl LA Rams· head <"oach Ceorge Allen bE>fore a~sun11ng prep coaching duties in Sioux <.:ity. . • There's no tloubr the Baron J(rid chief \1·ou!d likr to ushrr in his school"s fifth vear or a thletic competition \~'ilh the 111ost potent fl'rnedy lo the plgskh1 blues -a 'no t h c r winni ng season. ••• llV FWNr,AIN VA/.LEY .•. 1 <~1%ES •SUIWRISiS ~B~~MSG~~! WArr:.H FOii. Otlll •IG- _...._,t#RA!VPOl'f!N/NG-AP .' , GENERAL TIRE Save on General's best 4-ply bias tire! n When you buy the first tire at our everyday low price. • General Jet-Air m 4-PLY NYLON CORD WHITEWALL or BLACKWALL • F£1n1ous Dua l Trea d Design • Duragcn ;' Rubber·l'read • Conlourcd s'hou1der fo r n1ax1rnum stab'il1ty R"IN CHEC K .M ,,.,. '··' r • ~' •n·~• 1,,. 'I•' .,, l·nt• •~" ,~,..,""',~I~"""""'·,,.. ., 'I ''""" Ar t "'""'> f)!ac•d "<'"Ir• !, ',·~ 0• Yf"f •I T~t l l'°"<!•••~ l"•"•I WHITEWALL GENERAL JET·RIB NYLON CORD BOAT and CAMPER r TRAILER TIRE Hig h f !o lation • f1 ce Rol l1~J? for High Speed Operation · Tough Nyton Cord Piles · Available In Whitewall Or Blac~wall • Don Swrdlwnd COAST GENERAL GENERAL TIRE . TIRE 1st Tire _s1 2.JJ_ I SlJ.48 s 1 ~.40 $15.78 S~4 bO •s17,3tl s2a 80 s 14.40 s11 '•'> S15.78 ~J.: ·O $17 JO ---1---- s:·7 -,., s1J.a8 ~?"[)5 I S1.t48 !!9~ :~,;~~~-=:::·::=\-:~~:~ SJ~ 9.1 S17.48 S •. 33 ~'I~ 8.> S3 I 'J:i 5 :s' '.> $1 9.43 SIS.98 S17.'18 · $19.JJ S22.40 $22.13 BR AKE RELINE FORDS • CHEVROl:ETS • COMPA CTS 95 t' "I , .. lu~ •Pe d 1.1 ~ rc 11nr <! 1·ur .. ric e1, 11o 1th N.ti;ner br<i ke 11n.nr~ lf'I rr·r 1 · .t I 1n1.1r d •·"'~ Cher ~ .,.. .. eel cyllnde1<; ~nd rt'IU n ~fl''"~ C e<11 .trd l1.t11 c.ite bl • n~ plale. ReoJc~ l1or t l!.·'l~r: bear1 "I•~ ... ,t.1J1u·t b·dles_ re~lore llu1d .. RtJd tesT your Cl' A i:~v Gt:NEC!A !. Tlli'C: ·sf RV ICE a Ii ll " " II' ll -1--"-.a---111 . .' .. ~ • ' ' • • • • .. • ,. • a ,,,., ., JOI •• ,, ~ " bJ, to ~ " " " " " ,, " " I 1• " M " ,, Go &: u ,, .. ,, ,, E a ~ ,, I! w ' a 7,55 E '"' c 1' " • I ' ~ E ( - I - ,,,., • • ''"'I (• ~ ,,,. . -.UN-BROOK ~ARDWARE 17200 .s. Brookhurst, Fountain Valle~ 585 W. 19th., Costa Mesa 540·5710 646·50lJ 1 '19"11,. f!cc«;h !oulcvard, Hwntinq ten ll rocl\ 647·565 0 ' ' . l I -------------GENER AL -Tlf • .:::: ...... .i TC ,","N TO (l.t:T ' l " • 1utsd•Y. Stptembff l , 1970 50 l' ears of Mule Fire Ruins TV DAILY LOG Bard Fest • 'Caval~ade' Lavish, Superb TUESDAY SE.Plt.MBER l &:00 II 111 NM (C) (60) Jerry Dunphy. 0 KJllC N....mc. (C) (60) Tom Snydtr. 8 C.11 YH T., Tlil? (Cl (30) Monty Hall, Soupy Siies tnd M0te1 Amsttnllm 1111st. 0 Sir O'Clod hil: '1"1idty IM Sl11ntrl" (drtlTll) '52-Gi1 Voun1. Julie• Ru!t, Keenan WyrtA, W'd111m tampbell, Rith1rd AndtlDI. A doc· tOf. 1 priest tnd 1 puach-drunk fi&lller try 1x1pin1 the haBhntss of lhtir lives durin1 Mardi Gr11. 0 Abbitt tnd Coit.lit (C) (30) m n.e ntllblo• IC> (Joi OJ Stir Tret (C) (60) (i1) flJ Alt E'l'lllln1 Nm (C) (30) fEl Wbt'1 Nrw (C) (30) t'Jj (J) CIS Nnt (C) (30) III!> Dlfti1Klt/Mllllt1l1 (C) (30) I!) Plllblt 1111 [JptltlUI (30) £D llillllb hi tie ~II (C) (30) ai) Tutn dt 111 Utrtll• (JO) a> c..11op1111 c.....4: (C) (30) Gri. ham Kerr. 1:20 taJ (I) Wtlttltf CC) Mar11 stiles. &:30 IJ YtrJiitll Cr1M11 Sllow (C) (60) 0 Clfldii:"Ca-. (30) ma C1J .. , fMrff• MaM• 1301 !Hirn..., •-(60) ®I@ NIC NiPtlJ News (C) (30) ED Ln I• tt1e ·10s (C) i30J By TOM BARLEY • Of llM Otltr •li.t lltff 1:05 £!)Hit~ MOHllO ifiO) SAN RAf AEL (UPI I -An arson qre destroyed $6,000 _. worlh of costumes a n d the luster or U1e show'• work of John-Gree.n and his -ra-cltltlts early Monday-at the openinf nlght. orchestra. Their $Ure touch • Marin County Shakespeare l :!O Q Q) ClJ i!!l l•l1 ~-(JD) (R) '"Abitnct . Mikes !ht, Hurt G11'.1W'.'' Juli• meets 1 ch1rmln1 m111 who alto lost llis SPO,USI In the Vietnam 'Jllf. YOur critic's uafalllng reaction on ~Ing told that some impresai-io ls about to stage an extravaganza ~ were among the songs helped to ensure the success of . . -we he•M In ·this utterly this glittering e\)ehlng, F:esUval 1n Forest Meadows. ~~ r====;~=====:;I Director John B r e b n e r n Ont-Man Show (C) (30) Morty spanning America's musical Gunt1 11 featured. growth Crom the European O @(})Gl UC Movil tf tu imports to Rodgers and Wnll; (C) '1iM LM W11" (sci-Ii) '7G--lloyd Bridees. Anrle Dickin1Dn. Hammerstein and Leonard Two peoplt 1111 i11 low d11ri1111 bil· Bernstein is to wince and 11r1 sflu1gl1 lntwttn two lorcu · 1 I l •-be [ with !ht luturt of tile world 11 SI ent y vow no w presen 1hk1. when it Ls staged. m o.,w rro.a s:.. (C) (ill) For the errors, in our m lttl TM 'ktnllldy (C) (60) experience, have not always P1eitie Gas & Electtic, Lois Hettlt· been in the staging of such toll, Marty ln1les. Coco tnd Coco-producUons. They have been dominance in the field of lii:ht nut ,111est. more often errors of omission , music. m Science •fld s.a.ty (C) (30) Dr. in whid'l , sympathetic as we J Jonas Saulk iJ fe.tured. were to the motive behind the ~e Kern, Ceo r g e m Fisher f11nu, (30) program, we could not forgive Getshwin, Cole Porter, II) La Ctutitllclo1 (69)_ ... the organizer's failure to Rodgers and Hart, Rodger3 9:00 o QJ (i) m first Tllltday CC> (2 include names of composers and Hammerstein, Lerner and hr) The Kitn1st quintuplets of Hew .who have done far more than Loewe and Leonard Bernstein Jersey, born list f1bru1ry; ind • most to put American light 1·1 d rt L.b · 1 1 d are among them and the 1 me 11po on 1 e111 111 11 ure, orv>ra where it i:I today. Also shown is • report on minute-r-commendable selection o t min missiles burled on firm i nd Which · brings us t o ranch l1nds. Ano!her report retatt's "CavalcBde" at the Los representative numbers is lht makinr or a prize.wlnnin1 lllm. Angeles Music Center and our ttioroughly in keeping with an "SOS," by a 1roup of Monterr)' Bat 1·mmedi·ale assura""e ·for · delightful and ab S 0 r b In gl NAT1oN1.t.. Ge:N•ltAL'I appealed for cpstumes from ''Cavalcade'' -'"Night a n d Fce19.,._ other theater groups and Day ", "Smoke Gets In Your OX SDIJH COAST universities so the productions Eyes", "Luck Be A Lady f"LAZA ~ could continue. He said all the Tonl...,t'' and "Old Man ,_~,._.111lriMl·S.U.J7Ji costumes for performances of 5" "Henr"y V" and "The Taming River." CONTINUOUS DAILT of the Shrew'' were destroyed It was good to bear them all FROM 12:ll P.M. and some of the clothing for again and to .see 1 show wh..ich "The Tempest." contained them received with such enthusiasm. This was a splendid venture on the part of the Music Center and it is to he hoped that it w t 11 be repeated ere long. A last word for the fine Sean Starring HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Sean . Connery, the original James Bond in the -007 thrillers on screen, will slar in ''The Anderson Tapes" for Columbia Pictures. ~I 'THf CHmttNE SOCJALCWB hli!I school students. '"' extremelf a r t 1 s t i c and 'n Pl•ybtJ Att.r DI!) (C) (60) Mort producer Edwin Lester that cl~verly staged production. lr===========;il Sabi, Linda Ri:rns11dl, Billy Eckstine, none of the foregoing remarks Juliet Prowse and BOb Lindi 1nd'Billy, Joe Cocker i nd Th• can possibly apply to his Gretse Bind and Sid <Mar iuest. lavish, superbly presented and Wright are delightiul and m NU Flltivat (60) ''Ellinrton 1M1 thoroughly comprehensive extremely effective in their the Cole d'Azur."' Tb1 im composer· analysis of some 50 years ol roles as mistress and master pianist with his orchestra •!Id Ell• American musicals. (I( ceremonies and e a c h Fitz1erald is sli:lwn at tht Antibes Jw Festival 1ftd p1intrr Joan Miro This glittering production is departs from that function to · is le1tured 11 tll1 Mlllht Museum the best cross--section of the offer splendid contributions in Jn CJp d'Antibes. era that we have cOme aqoss their own artistic fields . IIl) Ovtrlldi/r~11 (C) (30) and we could not possibly Jean Fenn, Frank Porretta, (I!) Nit.KM (60) quarrel with the selection of Manli Nixon, Gilbert Price P,t..NAVtSION8 TECHNICOlOR$ l ~=·~!al-1!filDOffiJ!f Al.50 EXCITING-CO-HIT NCWroltT llCACH • Olt.3·1Jsb DAILVPILDT JI IALIOA 673-4041 o,..· t :4S 7"1 ... ... .. , ... ....., .... NOw::eNDSIONIGHT • ..Ii..-.. .... _, .111\fS Sl?WAAT ~·= -- -ALSO-, . 'AW ALK IN THE SPRING RAIN''[~ Anthony Quinn COL.:S. ~ Ingrid Bergman e St1rt1 WtdneMlaj • WALTll MATIHAU INGllD IEIGMAN GOLDll HAWN "CACTUS FLOWER" & NATALI! WOOD "BOB .&.~ROL .. &.TED .& ALICE" .. • RATID R • j Gloomy Gus Is ~r Kinda Guy . AT THI INTIANCI TO FAIULOUS LIDO ISLE @Ii) Plttlnl for Uwin1 (30) @El Notidtrt 34 (C) (60) t :lO R 9(i)Till '°'*"" a!ld J.J. composers and songs used to and John Bryant also caught ("fl (30) (R) When Governor [)fink· depict the . growth a n d the eye .and the ear with water's molhl!r (Llnd1 Watkim) d• expansion ol the American pleasing and c a ·P a b I e cidn to rtrn•/TJ. tht Governi:rt be-usical scene. renditions of many of the tlOfrif>o joo<l i.o.t e jH ''.'.'~.... • -.f'iil r •lo gulhn. .. ridoi.1.o .. ns • 1-i.....in. ~ m Tm Dtllft ~ (C) (30) Kim Mttriner. a;) s.11 ... di LllM (30) aJ • """' -(C) (30) :;ies~~ti!;~1:'::iJ~; !\~11i!: A-nd ·if Franz Lehar, Gilbert lovely songs that we seem small or l111e. and Sullivan, Victor Herbert. fated to hear on just such 0 Q) N1W1 (C) (30) Sigmund Romberg and Rudolf occasions only. 7:001JC~s EvMtlnl Ntn (30) W•!tei €Ii.)Mllllc.ll/Pador's Dist (Cl (JO) Friml are ideal choices for the Therein, we feel. lies a _U ....... ..__ Cronk1tt. g;) Nl!Sica' Eltrtflu (C)°(30) beautifully staged first half of tragedy that may defy ·--- 0 m MIC Nl1llt1r NIWI (C) (30) the program• -th'ey convey soluUon; the dealh. through D11'icl Brinkley, Fr1nk McGtt, .lohnlO:OOIJ~(jJ 60 Mlturte;s (C) (60) A the European tradition -dating, of a show 'Nhich may ~ _111.'!!E..!!. Chincellot spec11I sllilw hl1111r11111n1 th• 1969· -.ually so are ••e -mpose-,..,....,,Ain numbers that come M · 70 tell!'llsion suson, featurln1 Tri-~'1 "'1 ... v •" '-"''wu AUO (GPI O wut'1 lilJ' llrw? (C) (30) ci1 Nixon's tour throu1h the l1mily used to depict the American through to to d a Y's .. A Man Called Horse" EXCLUSIVE SHOWING m 1 Low t..y (30) liwin1 11u1rte11 ol the Wh ite Hou5t. idiom and the spectacular sophisticated and supposedly a report on th1 rthlbllit1tion ol wth r th. a 1 · • adv-'-~ audiences ·with all Cfft. Mny fr•• 2 FOR ADULTS ONLY m INt tlll Clodi: (C) (30) U.S. tmpulees wounded in Virl111m ~gr~0::_:0::_.::~:__:n:_:::..1 0:..::n...::.• _::::~=~==--===::...::.:::_:::::=========="II -RIST OF THE @Ci) lralldlcl (C) (30) 11\d a loojt at the stran1e mrstelJ I 05 of 1 British y1ehtsman who dlap· $1HCOQK --1 ED Yop llf M•ltll (30) Pro1T•m of Ptaied 1t set.• ll"'-" txertisea l6r the correct funclion in1 of !ht or11ns. 0 m Ntws {CJ (60) Qt! (])Trlltii or Conleqllll!CM (C) Pi fi1J (l)<lD Marca WllbJ, M.D. ~ •~ d10 l'~I ~., IC) (JO) ( I (60) (R) "Tht Other Sidt ol the ~ ....,.., "m ..., Ch11t." Dr. Kiley btc0mes tnvolvtd --Gm Sl.,._nfe YariL(55) with • llustr oillield worlritrwho _,:;:M;;.i-1-,c tar cl SUll'tl'Y ltidthliil!O tu (I) JW lirt (C) (30) IWIJ lfom !hf llGspitlJ. Don StfOlld 1~ 1J ft (I) CIS T...;,, MIN: (C) 1uests. "11111141 111 tllt SIM" (dr11m1) '57-0 Call of ffll Wiii (C) (!O) J1flM!s'M1son; .IOln FD!lltlnt, Dorothy • D1ndrid1e, .Join Collins. Mich1tl OJ ...... Llw (60) Rennie, HlrlJ Belafontt. Tht story ED Sptculltion (C) (60) "A Con· 9' th• rrad11al c1umblin1 of social ver111tion With Anthony Quinn." and economic barriers between blacks and whites In.• British colony e> Trn ridas Dlstintu (30) In the Wut Jnd lu. Gii) flltlv1I M•ica1HJ (60) Pi ~ (I) ID I Dr1111 or .lunnil 10:30 0 Twffipt l.ont (30) }~r C.,,0~ ~rid.::~~:"~:~~~ 8re:~ m Mi M..-. (30> and Roa:er win It poktr, and lhty 11:00 IJ CJ 0 g;) m "-' (C) 1rt suspected of bein1 Clrd shirks. II 0111 Slip ~ (C) 0 I SPl<1lC I lilly 5r1lll11's N" 0 l\eatr• 9: (t) "1111 Yiriln fed Crwudl (C) (60) "Why Youth ~ ., D · Rebel." Guests indude Myrtlt H1!1 Queen" (dram•) '5.-..ettl 1v1s. and Hlc ky Cruz, author of "Run, Richard Todd, Joan Collins. 81by, Run." m Movie: "'llpntion Madlllll" U [ft\(j)G) Mod Sqllld (C) (60) =~) '57-Jlck ltmmon; En11t (R) ~ ToWn Called SinClft." Pett Ind Lill!:. whi!. on 1ssl1nment in m Topper Mexico, find 1 motorc1tl1 11n1 ltr· ~ rTI s. H nt roti.zin1 ptople In 1 small vlll11e. \lll l1.I 1 u Tom Stem, Ford R1inef and l is.i tD 00 ~ (j) Jkws (C) Gtyt fUtsl. (DTir1 star (C) Torn Seidt! 11ve1 O Milllon $ Morie: (C) "Cift ti his tho11itits on stars and art. LO'lt" (dr11111) '5S--l.1ur1n B1t1;ll. (f) Lii's M1•1 a Dul (C) Robert Stack. A brllt11nt s:ltntrst Ind hil f1tan1 ill will adopt • IOVI· ll:lO IJ ®J Cl) ..... Crifrin (C) tess orphan Into ttreir home •~ 0 @@ fD Johnny tar1011 (C) hearts. m Trut• « Coft1111111ncn (C) (30) &J hrry MuoR (60) fI1) TM TDJ TIMI CrlW Up (60) "M' ea,:• Jackie Coo1an stars ln this 1921 film about 1 pathetic otph1ned w1if who berr}ends l lj. old a1 dof. iI!'l Slltdtd FillM (t) (30) ID Ma f111rt1 11111 111 Antlt (30) 7:S5 ml Clllltion .. 5tfUllOol 1:00 .Q I!:) Dtllbil 'Reynolds (C) (30) IR) '1ht Produce1."~Ch11fotte is produein1 i PTA lafent Mraw •nd seeks Otbblt's help In t1Uin1 il g DMrc:t c..rt tC> (30J O MD'til: '"TM Stran11 Outti of Adolph Hill«" (mys.tery) 'U-G1l1 Sonde111rd, Ludwil Don1ttr. O @CIJ C!JD<> ''"" (t) IE) Mowie: "Dewir1 Mtmnier" (hor tor) '61-Lon Ct11ney, Kar.ii Kad lt1. 1 :tlO IJ Mowit: (C) "bttl• .t Rope River" (western) '54-Gtcxl• Mont- 1omtry, Rich11d Dtnnint M1rtll1 Hyer. • aa-•t> 0 Co•11111nity l llllttill folrd (CJ Q) Mwll: ... 1111 C#dtnlr" (West· ern) '53-Richucl Conte, An111 Bu· I•. m T• Tiii tlM Trvt• (C} (30) 2;00 m Alf·Ni11rt . Shor. ~-Up,~ ~ (j) n. INltt Sptelal (Cl (30) "fitt ="Pipit" and len11 Cof· £i) flit kispll I~ IC) (30) mpo IE CMcllt A"1llaMt (Cl (30) 2:301J Mlft/CIM OI TMs DIJ (C) . . VVEDt<ESDll\ DAYTIME MOVIES l :JO fJ "Cmldiftt" (1ct¥tntu11) ~ Joh11 C.r1Clll, M•la Powtn, Jim Btctus. 1:00 D "A n....d Hd OM Nietib" (•Mnt11r1) -.S-COrnel Wlldl, Ew· ""·-1:30 CJ "TM MllH TFlf'" (dral!ll) '59 -Ernest Bor111lne, Dnid Bri1n. m '111t tal1nd1r" (drama) '48- Creta G)'"I, Jolin McC•l111m. J:(IQ e '1illlapore" .{lci\ltn!Url) ''7- fred M1tMurr11, Aila Gardner. m "T1Mr Cer1111nl Jun ..... (dr1m1) '57-l•e J. Cobb, Richard Boone. 2:00 0 (C) "1111Hy a..M th nai leys" (mmtcly) '59-f»tul """"•tt, Jo1n111 WoodWlrd. m '11K1dm" (m!Aiul) '44 - Rowmuy line, Jollnny Oo'Jlns. 4:JO IJ '1l&ftt Spit" (dr1m1) '55 - Clnttr Ro1111. Bri•n Keith, FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321- • Invites You YOUNG GUYS AND GALS ( • lresented by Sean . South Coast Plan Fri .. SepLt atlP.M. to Join the Fun Fri., Sept. 4th •Rock Musical by The Californians •Full Length Movie 1'Boy Did I Get a Wrong Numlter'' with Bob f\ope and Phyllis Qi lier. •Grand Stand Fashions "Surprise Gifts To Ticket Holders FOX SOUTII COAST PLAZA .TJIEA TER TICKETS50¢ Available at Sears Costa Mesa Cosmetics--Lem.on Frog··Jurtior Bazaar Depts. JS~arsl Costa Mesa Bristol at Sunflower ta'tbe ~ Coall Plua ,_D.r..t.yl., -llllll' lllll•tftl• lf!Ell' lllDI .:MD M U • 1 mlfl. l.Dllm ' lllllO ,_ "-"'._,_ .. _,,Ul.-.rJ ........ -.em ·..,~auOOT .... n ,_...c.-,a1.- X91 rl~1"11 H• Pltstl!~ ElbalMda --........ ·~ ·lechnicolor® from woiner bros. RATED "GP'" ,.,, ... ". DIKIWIM I $ ...... , .. Ell Iott Gould Donald SutherlanCI Mo11. tlr11 hi. tho-.t 6:J~t:45 Set.-7 •11tl IO:JO Sp-1:1S-4i:JO·t:4J o,.. 7:o0 NOW AT .IOTH THEATRES RATED '"R" r ' . ill·1\S·ll ". Plus -AUDREY HEPBURN e ALAN ARKIN lo "WAIT UNTIL DARK" ' ·- , • ' . " • ' ' • • • • -• • • • • • • • ' r I 1 \/ ) I - • ff DAILY PILOT 'Freatra.la ''70 ' LEGAL NOTICE ,_J-EGU...NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ••• fPtJ P4IJM c••T•••C•T• ... •UlllC•Q NOTte• TO calOlnNlf Campus Moderates Unite 1'4m6 Cl•Tl .. ICATI 0" SUSINI U• l'ltTITfOUI MAM& SU,1111~ COIUllT ff Tiii Clll':,~~~l:u~" ._:~\ll•IU TM uncle~::,:·:= ~~~ M 11 ton. C~Ud~1'::1ntt~I <:;!W N~~~ s;:~·,:~Nc:;1:r:~~H":: Tl'le di M led cit Ill llltV OllCll ... I bu1lneu 11 mt CUH Dtlvt, llYd4 Cnfa ~. (1Utor1'd1, lll'ldM IM NO. .... ,. Uftdun:-i-r~· ' ":" ,r., ,.~.~ft "-' '""" C1Utornl1, ""'"' lht UC· lldlllcM flfrol ... ~ OI CO.UT A.UC110N E11111 OI AUGUl"JA It. WEDGE .. I • -· • ,,,_n,., 111-... l lrlfl ... -of f'LU"°HI! l:N• 110USI! .n:t IMI Mkl """'II '*'-«IOI Dttfflotd ' • Cl!;ll Or,, C•I•.,.,,..., C;AlllONll .. 11..., TEltl"IU51!!5 •M tllel Mkl llrm 11 '°"'" 1111 "'llclw'lftt --. WllOM ,..,... Ill lull HOTICf IS Hlltl•Y Ol'llN t. tlot- 11\t ftctltoow '""" _,. Ol LAlel' l"ll!lt ~ ef 1111' foll8wlti9 .,.,-. Wl'oOM t11111 ... Ke o1 ~ 11 M follows? (l'«lllCll'l If ltlt elliWe ""'*' ..... • OECI( CO., ..i ltoelJ!fld flfl!I le_,. "''l!l-ifl ho!!!, •flll p~ " ,_klM(e ii 11 $1tf!Mn J. McH11J1, ml lttvtf 11111 ell_._ l\tllllle clelrnl -lnll 1119 "f'ronUub '70'' a moderate 1tUdent activist organization ls forming at Cll S t a t e , Fullerton and IO o t be r C,]fQrnla Clm(>lllOI. Viet.n.n Vi!lenn E d w I n Evers, 2.1, hNds the Fullerton dlapler Miich hlll tnrolled JI atudt.nta: durtnc the aummer aod wW .aeei more mtmbers during fall 1emes1er registration. The Nn'port. B e a c h insurance salesman and scnior in business admlni!lrallon and political science feels the group will offer "a rational outl~ for people who wanl to express their wants; deslrea, boUefs and goab." FronUash '70'1 p r i m a r y purpose "is to be co m .e politically active -not as a unit supporting 1 p e c i f I c candidates but by encouraging students to work for candidates that erpresa their views," Evers sald. Evers and another mocff!rate CSF campus leader. Chuck Lovele~. a960Ciated studenls' president, have been working in the election ·campaign or Congressman Richard T • Hanria (0.Westminster). Evers' chairs tbe VletnaJDese COOjJ'tSStnlD'I committee ti O<&anize high achoo! student campaicners to help reelect the man Evers describes as "definitely a moderate." While Even 1ay1 ht ls moderate to conservaU~ lh his polltical Jeanlnaa. membera of Ji'rontlash '70 ranee •from "moderate to liberal", Dr. Jon A . V inger, u.wciate professor of pollUc al lc.ience and adviler to the new organlution, believes t h e group wUI "mobilize the liberal ailent majority." Vinger feels Frontlash '70 and Communlty for Peace were organized to counter actiyllies the coJWetvative organization ~ety o v e r Sedition (SOS) fonned by Fullerton attorney Matthew Kurilich last sprin&, following demonstrations on campus. Loveleu and others founded Community for Peace (CFP) during the height of tampus confr ontations last year. CFP quick!}-drew t h e support of mort than 100 moderate students on carnpw and expects to c ont inue functioning this year, Lclveless 1aid. "Since our go&ls and Unwanted 'i IOtld If lfle lo!lowlt)t "'"°"'' '""OM: lol)Ooin: A-. M .... -' IM(fl, C1llt. wkl cl«edttrl 1rw r-lr .. le 11111 1""-a<UV/·ties art broader than -Black militants who seek ""n'lft *11 11111. 1ne11 P1*'-"' '~1~ M1ct1ee1 Mulltf, mt Cf!tf Orlvt, OelN A1.1tlllt J1. ''"' w!ll'I '"' fttCttw"' voucllera, -.,, 1;.. ott1ce ' I " to t -let b t to I ll It followl, M....-1 81K11, C1l, S.. J, M<Nlll'I ol 1'111 Clflf'lt ol 11'11 lllo.,. tnll!IH court, Of' those of Frontlash • 7 0. not over urn s...... y u F'reotrlclr. J, F1ttt. :nu C1kwMO Olitcl A11111" 10. 1'10 STATI!! OF CALIFOANIA, IO PftHlll 1iw=m. wllll !lie lll'«IMrV Lovett.SS said "we t.X"""l enter it," Lii,. Colll Mell " MlcMll Mllllto' ORANGE COUNTY : \IOl.Klltr1 to lllt u~r1lgMCI 11 ll'lt olflct • r-w lrvlnt L, 09-JIC twllltY Ct .... Slete ol t.ilfof'!\11, Or111N c.tntvt On AUOllll JI, 100, lleftl•t me, • Not1rv o! 111e!r ' lllOfMYI' CO 0 I( $ E y l'e'll mahltaln an identity -Young: white radicals who °"·· c-11 Mt"9 °"' "-'•' .. ''"' betor• ..... I MQl1fy l'llbrlt 111 tnd '°' wkl 5t1l1, "''*°"''ti" KHUMACHER., COLi!W.N, MlN'l'.t.110 ipar.t. from Front'ft"' "JO." usuaUy are the children or the 011111 M An~ 1f)o li'Ullllc .M "" fw Mid jlllt, -u., IPH•led s~ J. MCNtt#I kno-lo IN Inell HOWAAO ISS T-· .... COU!lltY ""'"'1'--l l'r•rlck J, Ft br• ·-twl Mlel\MI Mlllllf' kllowft M -to 10 tit 11'11' Mn.on ~ ftflM b llOld 0r-. C.llfot.U. ...... twl'lldl II Lei I • kin r ' "elitei• of !OClety who ••want •rvlnt L. 0...., M ""' --wtot-. -'' ...._,"* tublCrlbld to ""' wllflln 1111lr\HMftt 11\d IN .iace 01 IMIMM e1 t111 w.otnllnllf "" ve ess 1a wor g or I to overturn society • ._ 51•1• e1 ce11fom11. 0r.,,.. cou111y: ta t11e w!lflln '"''"'"""' ""' ,ckl!Owltdto """''""*' .... 111 nec:1111c1 111e .. mt. ,11 """~-Hd•lllltW 19 "" •teM °' """ program that woukt allow • Oii AUfl)lt ID, 1910, a.to•• -I N• eel ... fttcllled "'--COl"FICIAL SeALI 4'Cllll-"I )Jllllfilll fOvf' ,,,,..., .... ,,.. tilt poli"·at set·e-majors to -Backlash white youth wlio ,.,., "'1~,,-1n 111et for wld siei., "'" IOl"l'ict~~i'!"'H'ELSON Jt•11111 L. N11soo 11111 1ub011c111on et "'11 11D11,,; i.a; '"'"' , • ,_llY u-red Frllllerkk J, FllN't t M • Nollrv P111>111; • C1lllo<'"LI Oiied Allt'Ull ~I, 1t70 1...-the two weeks pn'or to want ·an equaJ place 1n the 1n11,,. L. OllGll'kllown 1o "" 1e i. t11t "'0111• P11••1c · C•lllDl'nl• Pr1nc:1 ... 1 ott•~• 111 Flul Ni11o11e1 link 01 .,.._ " d Bl·•• I •t HF-...._ ,,..,,... 1r1 tubtalmll IO l'rlnclNI Otflc• Ill Ori,,.e CDllnlY °''"" (O\l!llY election5 pounding precincts SUD an see """"' m nor1 Y "" w1111111 IMlrll<Nflt 1611 .w-.-...i °'"'" Counti • Mv eomm1111'" £••Ir• 8 Mkh"I p O.krind. for candidates of their choice gains as a "threat," and ,....,, utcuttd "" wme. ~:.~~1:~~ Eulr• Au1. 1•. 1t1• ...:.1st1111 Tnai Ottk« Th ,, . to ,, (OfflCIAL iEALI Pllbll""9d Ori.;.e Cotit 0.llV Piiot Pvfl!IU.td Or11111e CM•! Dlll'r Pllol. • Eiecvtor o1 1111' Wlll el to gain pract.ieal experienet in -e renuncta ry types M1r1tt1 •· II•-... y..,,91 u •M S...tt "~ 1 • ii s..or....w 1. 1. u, :n. 1t10 1..u.10 1i.e 111ov1 ,..,,,.. ~' pol,·11·-, Evers said. who reject the 'ystem and No11"' Putilk • c1u11rn11 ,,70 m ' 151.,.19 LEGAL NOTICE COOKSIY, SCHUMACHllt, COL£MAH. "" • • , . • Pr!M.IPel Ofllc:t \ft MINVAllD enell ..OWAllO Frontlash ,70 does n 0 t refuse to par(1c1pa.te m 1l. a..-cou11tv LECAL NOTICE" 1ss T-11 .,,, c ... n1rv 11 .. • Fro Uash '70 .. -·'d provide "'' c_..1111on IEx-irn BAlt tm ore"''' c1~1111111 ft* expect to setk this fof all CS}>' n WU\U ....... II 10. lf7.J T'4U17 MOTICI TO ClllOITOltl Tth J41·tUJ students, though ii w i 11 an organized!. thex~ssJ:on. or lhe1 A~~'~ fl,111n ~::•' S::,~1'°:: :~::.11•g: cc!t~:~11:r ... T .. "o~ ~~:~:1g: c~~~::11 :1"..,, ::: ""..'::~'-:.!:'"c .. 11 0.111' ll'llot, en<oUrage members to work v.lews 0 e maJor1ty 0 ,.,. 1....... THI! COUNTY OP OltAMOli THI COUNTY 01' Oii.AHO• Sepltmbo:r \, .. 11. n. ltN 16lf·IO America's youth wbo are still Ne. ""'"1 Nt. ........... ·for p:illtical candidates and 1• 1 th b ik h MoT1c1" op H1.1.111MG op Pir:T1T10N e11,1, 01 llUTH M, iuH1tlMG, 1150 LEGAL NC1l'ICE i 'd , lo·~ politically conven 1ona , e u w o LEGAL NOTICE Jto11 P11o•ATI! OP WILL ANo Jt01t k.-n .. 11.UTH ~. suHlllNG, or."1.., l---==~~===~--g ve gui anc ~"" still believe in the verity of the LETTlltS. TIS-TAMIHTAltY NOTICE IS HEllEB'I' GIVE H ~ ,,.,. NOTICE TO ClllOITOltS naive, he Saki. .. E•lt!t el LIE ROY MAHEW SMITH, credllor• et lht 1tiov. llfl"* c1tceci.n1 SUl"ElllOll CO\lltT 01' THI system the youth Llpset .... It ""' D>KffNO, !hit I ll __ , hlllh'lt Clelm• INIMI 1111 STATl.OF CALIPOllMIA 1'011 Among natidnal advisors to contends outnumber all four NOTICI TO CltEDITOllS NOT.ICE IS T HEREllY Cllll!!N Tl\&! Wld d..:llll~nt •r• •tcwlred le Hit '"""· TH~ COUNTY DP OllAHGI h fl·•gli i Dr SUl"llt'IOll GOURT OF THI ELjl A, SMI H M• filed nottlll • l>f-with the neces11ry YOIKl'ltl'I. 111 11\e llll<:t N .. Ao'42tt t e cu ng group ! • types ol young act1vl.sts. ST.I.Tl! OF CALIPOltNIA Jl'Oll 1111°" lor'.P•olMile of wlM •no lor IU\111\Ci of ttw (lfn. el 1111 1toove 1111n1ec1 C.Ur!. or E1lltt of JOHN c , 0-LAIJGHL.IN, Seymour Llpsel, prominent -THI COUNTY 0 , OllAHGI' °' Le!Mt• Tttllmtr11try IO 1111 .. lllk>Mt, ta PflJt lll l ... m. wl!n lllt f'«esll.,. Olcttttd. • Among other campuses In HI A-4UJf ''"'""' lo wllldl 11 m1de lot """'"' ¥OU<:"'"· 10 lht uftd<!rtl9Md •! lhl ollltt NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN to !ht }{arvard political·sociologist California where the group ts l!lltti of MARYANN HEIMll!!CHEll, •1•t!;cw11•1, 1nc1 '"'"' Ille time •lld •'-c• 01 "'' 111or11ty: HUGH A. MOii.AN 111, cr1>11Uor1 o1 111e 1bOY• 11111*1 c1tc..i1n1 and author of several bOoks on DKuwa 01 ,,..,,,,. ,..,. 11!'lla-he•-1Ne11 Ml IOI' MO E ColoradO 11vc1 suue set. tn11 •11 --11tv1ne d 11m1 ... 11111 111. formin! are San Francisco NOT I[ ff 1i HEllEIYGtVEN 10 ""' ~~Dtr 11• 1m •I t • •.m ' rn '"' Fiwc11,;., c1111or1111 11101, wnicn 11 Hid c1ec1<1tn1 1r• •l'lul•H to 111t them, sludent unrest intluding "The State, UC Berkeley and San crec1no ... of 11\e 1bov1 namtd cite;'°""' :'wr1::f",: c~~= ~:i~.J w°!atw~ "'' Pl•c• o1 111.11!11tu 01 tht 1111e11ul111ec1 ;nn •he..,~;~;: -;:cn•r~11i:."" ~~c• Ber keley Student Revolt" and o · St I • Illa! •II -IOlll hlVll'lf Cle/ml ... IMI Ille Cltr ol Stll!I AN C1Utornll • '" •II .... "'" perltln.1"9 lo 1111 11t11t o• 1119 < I I:."'"" COUI'. OI' tego a e . 111t u kl d.c:~t ,,. r...ulred to tilt O.tllll ""9wt 14 1,;. • .. 111 --n1, w1thl11 '°"' ..-n.1 1tter to Dl'lfffll 111t111m. ~1--1 " "Students in Revolt." uc· 1rv· u· I i h ll'ltfl'I. wUh "" necnstrr _.,...s In w e ST :.0HH. Ille tlrst 11<1otk1tlOI! of 11\tl llOl!Ct . YOU<llln. ,,.,. • <16 me 0 IC as ave not 11\f Office ef lht cl••• of ""' ....... c . i C ... k O.tllll AutUSI n, 1'10 WAl.5WOllTH. jElOEL .. CllAIL, l•U FronUash '70 -if auccessful receiVed a request f 0 r lf'llllled COllff, DI' la flrtt.-it ,.....,, wllfl CLA'f'To:'".-THOMAS • GRACE ltOSE SCHEIBLE Wt1lcllll Oriw , SUiit :iot. N....-1 ~"· Id dd fiflh r . . "" llK91MrY VOllCMl'I, IO Ille lff'I.. • Extcutrl~ ol lllt Wiii of c1111ornt1 '1'60.-wt'llcll II Ille PleC'I of -WOU a • tyP.e o r ecogrullon of Frontlash '70 on dD1"1l1r1t<1 ,, lht 11w otfkee. 01 Mtowtn ~:!'..,~:."~:, •i;:;;i!".::: !~!~ "" •llcw• nefl'llo! dtct<lent bu1J11111 of "" unC11•1'9n111 kl 10 .... 11er1 youthful activists to a lisl of that campu s as Y•t ' L G•ffll IB'r' ltOllEllT w. lltlGGSJ, Tel· 11\JJ ,.WU. 111111 •11·D11 HUGH A. MOllAH Ill Hr!Olll!ne to , ... ,,,,,. ol uld dtctdtnl, • ' ' • U0 E. ClltPmtn Avtn1,11, Orlhfll, ' 1.,. Piii!' Ml I. Ctlwffl IMI., $Wiit )ti wUllln IOU• mlllllhl lllDI' Ille flr1t four outlined by Lipset during Evers said the organ1r..atlon C•ll">rnll f2'66. wh1c:11 F• "" PIK• "=.i orin:""c0til °'"" Piiot P1....,,., c 111t. t1111 11<1bllc111ot1 o1 thb ~•le•. a summer ~"ssion s......,.h on has no nationally estabFni.n..1 of tiu1!net1 of ""' u..oe<s'9<11<1 111 i 11 'u""1 ts. " •1'16 ie11ttmlltt' , 1•70 Tel; uui ..t-4716. lloMl1' o1rec1 A1.11u11 25. i.,~,...,,, -.,~~~ QU...., .... otn "'11lllln9 to Ille .,.1111 ol ' AllOr'MV fH' l!xtc.trlx H1111 A. n the CSF campus. policies, but sets only general wld dtcedtnl, 0w;1111n 11111r montn1 1111r 1m·10 PllDlllllld 0r,,... '"''' o11ti Pllor. ,.Executrix of""' wrn o1 Lipset describes the types of goals. • ~::~=~~·~'.°':.;:.this IWlk•. LEGAL NOTICE *'1embD!' 1• 1 u . n. 1910 llll-IO wALswo11j~ ::io.L111a~A'!r'edlf'I' voung actlvista: a s being: "One goal is that the A,,..11 M. Htrt LEGAL NOTICE .. u wn1c~11 Orlw• ' • t i •-I I Adml11l1tr1trlx of lht e1111, ,_. T~" NewNFI •-n. C1Uhnll1 t1* orgaruia on ut: a peace u 01 IN ·-· llflmld Otclllltlll IUl"BlllOlt COU•T OP THI! Tel: en•) M2·~ tt t to h • d ' 'd aJ , McOWIN & Olll!l!M STATI 01" CALIJl'OltHIA POii Ul"EIUOll COURT OJI' THI! AOtr"''I'' i.r l•tcUlrl~ a emp reac m IV! u s •w: 1t0••11T w. •RIMS THI t.:OUNT'I' OJI' OltANG• STAT• OF CALIJl'OltMtA l'Oll l"Ulllllllld °''"" Cotll Ollll' l"lklt, objectives, .• he said. Jfl L -CU-Av-NOT-ICI OJI' :: ... :tJ:' OP PnlTION THl~o~::r~ o:ITOA~~::-SIP!embtr '· .. u. n. '''° lm-JIO Evers hopes "getting people t:":"wf.:llttr"'-""' POlt l"ltOIATI 0, .WILL AMO In Ille Mell .. ol 11\1 Pelitloft '" LEGAL NOTICE Cambodian Bias RamP".lnt interested in working in i:li.. ., .... """ r ... A4rnl111tlr11r1...-COOICIL AMO 1'011 LITT•llS Tl'ST· AdOPllOtl by ltlLE'I' LYNN SANl)EltS, • " • PubUw..d o •• ,,,. COii! 0.lly Piiot AMIN7AllV AcloP!l"I s.1-111111. 1-------------- tica) campaigns will Ip Autu'I JI, u. u Inell $t•llml>I• ,; fJlllt of Loll M. S!1l>lulfl'I. Dtctl•ed. To: MARVIN RAY SANDEltSOH. 1"4UtS ease tension! on the campu.!1 1•10 1415-70 NOTICE l!li HEltEBY GIVEN TMI BY Ol'cllr of lh[• COUrl, YOU t rt l\D!'ebY ClllTIJl'ICATI OP COltli'OllATIOH fJOll --------------1 ••nlr. ol ........ 1c1 N1llan11 TrllOI I nd SIY· cltf(I to ll'Pfff bflort 11\e JU(lge TltANIACTIOM 01" •us1HISS UMOlll this y ear. • lflQ1 A.»ocJ1tlol!. • lllllonal 11111\klne P•flkllnt Ill Otl>ertmtnl I of ""··-· Jl'ICT1TIOUS NAMI Whil Lo i f It sh i LEGAL NOTICE tuoc:ll11on, 1111 tlltd Jltrtln 1 Nllllon for ..,1111ec1 C11<1rt Ofl December 11, 1t10, II THE UNDEllSIGNEO COR.li'ORATION e ve ess e o r! Y 1><otot11 o1 w111 •M coc11c111Nr11p 1nc1 1or t:u o'clock 1.m. o1 ,,,.., c11y, """ •M don ,.,.,.ttrr ctt1uv !Mt 111, cencludlnt • PHNOM PENH (UPi) - The Cambodian d!Jlike for Vielnamese' :.... whether they come from the North or the South -is baaed on fierce na- tionalism. Some a n a I y st a describe it more blunUy as racism. On the surface official Plmom Penh smilingly Jumps Americana, Thais, Vietnamese and othen h elp ing fight the Communists into the-category or "allies." But the same olficialll admit in private the alliance w ith the Saigon regime. which hes South Vietnamese lrOop!i on cambodla sou, is i sh ort-term expediency, A press censor ln Phnom hatred for the Vietnamese goes 1 long way to making up what they lack In arms and training. . • While accepting aid -rrom I.he South Vietnamese, about 200,000 ethnic Vietnamese - one third of all those in Cam· bodia -have been shipped out o r the country where they are no longer wanted. Maj. Am Rong, the military spokesman who g tyea detaUs of a crushing Cambodian defeat w ith the same aplomb of a smashing victory , repeatedly refen to the war- rior herilage or the Khmerll. Take a If.year.old boy car- r ying a World War II bolt-ac· l ion Springfield rifle almost as big as himself. arter his eJeciiOn aS president llSllll!Ct of l.tlltrl T1!!1mtnllrY lo tr.. ll\IFI la ShOW (•UH, il lllY '°" heYt. WIW bUllnfH loelltd 11 2'Cf NISa.u, (olte h d body h T ... Ulf PtllliOfll'r, •d.,.tne• to wllldl 11 mede tor !ht Plllllon ol RILEY L'l'NN jANOERS Mew, C1lll01'nl1 11-r lht lictllklln llrm untll all Vietnamese are out of o r t e stu ent t c MOTICI TO Clll'DITOltl lurthtr Pt•llcull f'I, IM,,,.., lht """' 11111 !Of !ht MloPlloll ol CLINTON OWHIT£ ,,. .... of lllCAL AS60C IATES, INC. I nd Our -·~try." . campus could expect dilficult SUPElllOll COURT 01' THI! Pl Ke al 111ar1,.. 11\e iemt ... , bftn NI SANOEll50N tM TERf5A RA 'l'LENE 1111111ld litm ,. comPOtld or 11\f follow I~• -· ,. lh. • r II ·-d E 5TAT• OP CALIJl'O•M•A !or SIPltmbtr n. 1'70, ti t ;JO ··""·· l" SANOeRSON, your mlno• IOI! •nd corPOrallOll, Whole IN'lll(IH I Pitt• ol 1mes IS a • l ie an vers POii TH• COUNTY OF OltANO• lllf '°"'"'-" of Oet>.rtrnlnl No. J el cl1U9'llt•. 1no111d nO'I bt o••~lllll, DUS1M'I• II IS lOllows: He meant the Communist are optimistic that at least I!: H•. A~l'IJ wid caurt, 11 100 c1v1c cent., orlv• D1tt<1: A"'. n. 1t10. NI.ME oF CDlll"OllATION: ••riot Vl···-mese, bui h1's reg1·men· "th f'~ th'·" of the hool • lllle ef OAHIEL RUD 'I', 1\1 DAM Wul. In,,.,. Cltv DI Slntt AM. Cllltor11!1. w. E. jT JOHN Eleclf......,., Ill(, ..... e U~l u;u SC UDY. O«t•Wll. ' 0.11111 A ..... ust ''· lt111 Clct~ PRINCIPAL FLACf OF I USIN ISj: tal commander went f··•'er. year will be ..... aceful .. Both NOTICE 1$ HEltEB'I' GlllEH 1CI IN W, E. ST JOHN , ,., JANET L. SCHREINEll ''° Nt»IU. Coslt ,,.,..., C,1111-nl• w I.I.I ,.... • crllll!tor1 of ""' •llov• 1'111'1\td dee-CM111tv Cl«-. 0.PUIY Clerk WITNESS Ill lltncl 1nl1 1611\ ,.., ef Survey"'. g the ll\JS. t nd . ho.... the peace will last !Ml •II llt<"SOlll n.v"'9 tl1lm1 •••IMI ""' w11111 .. A. w... WAI.LACE. •ROWM & Cll.AIN Jlflf:< 100 a rain-h~ h t ho Miki detldent ••• re<iulf'ed to 1111 , ... m. -Wiii!• l"tr11 BlllNl111 """""'''•I L•• llARJOY ELE[TllOllEl"S, INC. ahrou ded plateau, 56 miles t roug OU , wever • w!!~ thl 111Ceu1rv vauc111ro. 111 "" Dftlce ,,.. -.r1111 s1.-suit• lJ OovD!' •u11d11111 !Con>M•t• Se•U th I f Phn ol lhl <ltrk ol tl\e lboYt lftlllltd ~I, or RI"""'' Ctllitol'nll tulll UJ Oovtr Oriwe Allin Olts, • r... sou wes 0 om Penh, the LEGAL NOTICE to P•tttnl lhltm. Wllh "" lllCHSlllY Tel: Ul4) MJoltlf """"...., ... , ... C11!tornl• Secntl••Y -7rMWrll' commander said bluntly he ¥0\ICJltrs. to ,,.,. """''11,.,... ti , ... o111c1 At..,_ .., ••'"'*" T••: 11141 """277. M1-m1 Rk11trc1 o. 1todtfk11.. ~ BAii WJ: ef hll 1ltor111r•, llOBEltT L. TON.S 111<1 Put11!1htd Orl"'t C0t1! Otll1 Piiot, Ali.t"-1 I" l"t!llllMI' Pf'Uk)enl did not want uth Vietnamese HOTICI TO Cll•lllTOllS N!CHOl.AS. lltOLLIHEll, ..... y E II s ' Au.us! x. 27 ""' SHI. J, lt70. 1JJf.10 P111>Ushtd Ori "'' Cotll 01111 li'llol, STATI!! OF CALtFOllNIA, help In atta ng the Nort.h SU P•lllOll COUllT OF THI 0 ANGELO .. Gl\ll!!NS, MOO Wllllll•t ~temller 1, •• u. 22. 1•10 U32·10 COUNTY OF ORANGE. H. STAT• 01" CALIJl'OltNIA 'Oil lllole'Yerd. Los Al!Hlts. CtlllMnlt toOSJ, LEGAL NOTICE 011 rn11 16th dl 'r of Ju11t A.O. 1t1t1, Vietnamese and Viel Cong. TNI COU,.T'I' 01' Oil.I.NOi wllkfl 11 ""' l>ltct el bu1lnt11 of "" LEGAL NOTICE bltlort ,,,. Mllrv I( G1111..i • Hel•rv "They do not drop the1·r "•· A·'4+'S u""•••ltnfCI t11 i ll m1nw1 Ptrt11n1ne to •• -... PU!lllt 111 .,,,, "" wid Ceu111v •M litre 1111 11111 of Mkl dtcldtftt, wllt\ln ltu• --' born'-· th • ht I ,. 1!'11111 ol FAY HAWl<INI, Olctt••d. months i tttr lht rlrst Pllbtlcl llo!\ ol llll C•llTIJl'ICAT• OJI' BUilMBll T•IJoM realdlflt lhtrtlll, o!UIY aN'llll\lUlont<:I elld u.:I In e rig pace, M07it:E IS HEREIV GIVEN la "'' notlct . I PICTITIOUS NAM• NOT ICI! TO Clt•DITOllS . ·-11. Pt•SOflltl~ ·-·-' lllclltrd D. said the commander who cl'edl111r'I OI "" 1-fll""" dtctcltnl Ollto! AlllUll 21, 1'10 Tiit llftdtoltntd o!ott CD!'lllr lie 11 tOll• SUPlltlOlt COUllT 01" THI llodtrkk •lid Allin 0111 k.-11 to ml ,, . , IMI •II HriOlll Mvlne <!aim• llllllft EO'NARO W . OERENIA dUCl!lll • b<,til11t!' •I 45 Xll!i, Hewoort ITAT• OF CALIFOllHtA 1'011 bl !he Pr11l<lllll I ncl SlcttllrY • fought In South Vietnam ror !ht Mkl decl'dtfll trt •fCl<tl•td '° Ille Exec~1or al Ille Will letcll, Ct lltorlllt , llMC't the lictlllaus THI COUNTY OF Oii.i.MG• Tr11wr1r. •t111tdlvtlw, of tllt tOl'Hrtllott the Americans unttl war broke !hem, wl!h lht ll«Hll,., YOU(l>erl. In OI ""' 1bav• """*' dtct<l<!nl litm ftfmt ol MICllO COMl'ONEfOTS , .... A .... ,, !hat tltclllM , ... Wllhlll IMt"""*l! .., ll\I o!l1~t of !1\1 clu~ ol ll>e l bOvt IOBEllT L TOMS ASSOCIATES u>d 11111 Jl!d Orm Ii tam• E1111e of ROBE•T PAUL GOltCJON, bthlll ol lhe CD!'POl'tllon '""''kl nemM. out at home last M ar ch. tntlllell' court, ,,.. to "''11"' lh~. with NI CHOL.I.I, l(OLLIMl!ll, /'lo'l'lllS, POied of 11\f •allowint PCrll>fl, Wl>OM .1 ... ~nawn •• PAUL GOROON .,,,, II Ind 1rt,_11<1Md 10 -11111 wen tor- Th I. 81 f th c' k-..1· lllf lllCtl!.lt'r voucher•, to lhl 1111' O'ANGELO & OIYl!NS nam• !ft lull I ncl Plltf of retldtnct IJ ROB ERT P. GORDON , D«IPSf!I. _.t!lon extc~ted Ille Hmt/ In WllPll•• l' Ir 0 e amUVl.!l<lnS ders!gnf(I "1 !lie ollltt al he• &tlorneyi· J6" Wlhllltt aoulev1tc1 1 \I • NOTICE IS HEltE8'1' GIVEN to !he Whereof, I hlYt Nrw1110 111 m'r II.Ind wbo relurned after training in MITCHELL. HART " BRISCO. "5 Clvk Les AA1111n, C•lllO•llil '"" ti ~ ... "::i willtrm•r HllWl•d iu crt<lllan 01 the 1bav• n1mtd dl(;edc<>t '"" 1tl!•H mr 0H1c111 1u1 IN d•'r •I'd So. h v· In • h Ct111fr OrlYI W11I, J1nt1 Ant, C•Ulor11I•. Tel: ft!Jl Jll.t\JI Luoonlt N-Port ltldl. Ctlll ' 11111 t!I ptttonl hlwlnt dilms t ellllll IN YH• 111 thil c1rllllc1lt llr1t 1ll9v1 wrl!l•n. ut 1e a m were not muc whldi 1a ,,,. •11<1 ot t.J~ ..... e1 llMI ..,,....,..,, t" ._._..... Otttd A,,,.~, 11 1,70 • wld die.,.,,, 1,. rtc1111,.., 10 111t 1nem, !OFl"tCIAL SEAL! • • -PtnbJ:.mnfu remarked Jhat "Jl i.s not our policy to criticize our friends." But with a !lraight face added, "We will deal with them (the South ViethameseJ after we have dealt with the Communlsts.'' PJw wee• ma~L.lo_..00 him and about 3,000 other equally ill.equipped Cambod- ~ iana up the steep Kirirorn mountains for a fronlal assault kinder. "For the record " one t:'i..!llntll~·,,111 of•1:..klm·~~';"'!'h~': Publlll>ed °''"" eo.11 0.llY Pilot. Cl'l1•lls w. HOWlrd wltll , ... NCfHI"" -..C:lltrl, Ill 1111 ottlu MAllY IC. CUILLIET '.l.d "we are 1~,nds· nut ,..., m!i'h"e-r-tfir""fl~1c.11on AU_.-lS-e11et-~t...--1,.-.L----u.-1•JG sT-ATE-Of-CAldFORNIA.---Jd..lllt..clttk..O'f~___HIY1_t!!!l.!l" ~.or --~.!Z..c'.;'";;,;;";,'"'='c:'""'occ•c.. _____ 1 ____ 1 • II • U17·10 OltANGE COUNTY: to .,.,,_,, niiift.Wltll ,,.... f'«ftSI.,. ··- p rivately I don'I think lh °' "'11 l!Ollu. 0n A11tU1t u , 1t10. btlor• ""· 1 ,.,,,.,. vauc:Mrt. 10 tN unc1t•1l1nld 1t 1111 otlkt Mr '-"'""°' IEaplra Cambodians and foreigners generally agree that the tradi- tional feeling of contempt and againat well~uipped, well· trained Communists. "I 'm goin\ to kill •II those Vietnamese," he 1 ho u t ed . "I'm not going to slop killing • ey 0.1.cl Auo~I 7• lt70. P11bllC 111 •NI ,..,.. •tlcl 5t~t PtrlOll.llly of ht• tt!C>< ... ,, J. JASON GALI!!, ISd A••· IS, IJ,. ' are very good." ~=L~17"~f1"'J 1119 IE!.. LEGAL NO'.J'ICE -•Id ·Chetlet Wlllffm~r Howerd P1!os Verdtl Orl~t Wtsl. Pllol V1rde1 WlnMAN & SCllMIDT G • onJ f t• ..... m 11 s '' r • • ' know11 to me. to bt Ille Ht'IOll whose Esrete1 Celltor1111 wtll(h It Ille lJlticlt Of 1"1 Wl'tdltf Orin. 1ven Y • rac ion of ol IM •bov• n•mM dtcl'dent l"•Jl.tlJ ,..me 1, su1>11trlbecl 10 '"" w!t~ln 1,,, bu•!~; o1 tht ~r1lone11 111,.1i """'" HtwHrt B11dl, c1111. -what the Alllericans have MITCHELL, HART & llllSCO C•llTll"ICATI! OJI' BUSIM•I• 11tument •NI l tlr./loW""'91d "' e•tcUtl>d perl1lnlnt IO 11\e t$1•1• ol lol,kl' d«edlnl, AllDl'MT• , 6U Clwk Cellltr Dliwt WI'! Ille Ml'""'· wlthlll '"'" montlu el!W the flrsl Pubtlthld Or-C11t1t 0.lty .. llot, donated to the South Viet-Stnle Al\I, C.Jl..,.,.lt Thlt unt!,'.~0'!! ~:.1~ 11\fl I (otflelll SHI) ....tilk•llttl of ll'l!s l!Ollc•.t. .t.1111111 If. u '"' *1tm""' 1. •• name .. the C. m b 0 d l• a Tel: IU.f2t1 -,. .... r ,,_ c rt JO•i!'Oh £ O.vl1 Ott.cl Awu•• 11 ,,70 1110 • 1~·10 ·. , na ,1,11..,...,,..,.a-Fnl!Jrl!rl• t uc'"' •""'""'ti .... 1n111 ournv. •-,·,,. c 11_. ,,,_ ,:. 11 0 ... 1 ------------~- ld ,.. 0~ p Cllllornlt IHlllt• rht tkllllou• firm ,......_ v••"' u .... a ,,,,1111 "'' •"9 " 1 DI'""'' wou be more than a roatch PubliM!M o''"'' Ce1•1 •••tv 110'· of CAll ic'ATURE WATCH co 1ne11 •nat PdnclHI 0111ct in Mm1111ur1t•fx o1 1111 ttr1t1 ar LEGAL NOTICE ror the Communists he said Auouit 1!, U, U I M Jtpltm~~] ;c 11kl firm 11 tomlMISed ot tll~ foll-l"I Or1nff COUii!~ 1"1 t baYt 119meC1 dectcltnl !--------------' • ltJO • ,...tonl. whott n1met In 11111 11111 pllCll MY CommlH!on E~Plrn J. J aSON G~LI! • HOTICI! Of s11•1t lFf'S SALii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9i1lof •Hlclel!Cf lnl IS ton_, J11111 JI, lt1• li41 l'tlOI 11'''" Of'IYI Wnt HOUSTON CALIFOltNtA lNVE$lMl!NT J•~ G•NOl'Y Scllrtllftr, "°' lllfft' l'11bllUIH . °'"'" c ... sl 0.11., Piiot, PllO• VN'dtl Elllltl, c1111-11 CORP'. Plt lnllll YI. JULIUj J. GOMES. II Don't Be Fooled By The Beard, Long Hair, Grandpa Glasses And 'Message' THIS IS NO LIPPY HIPPY This Is Gloomy Gus, Invented by the DAILY PILOT a doze n years ago, when hippy stili mean! maybe vou needed a new girdle. tte appears daily on the editorial page where he stars as a sort of ventrilo- quist'& dummy who taJks only when 1omeone {DAILY PILOT readers, in thi s instance) puts words into bis mouth. ' But he has been saying a mouthful every pubUcation day for years now. Want to know \vhat your neigh· hors are thinking ••• what's wrong (or righl) with the worid, nation, state, comn1unityLneighborhood yo u live in? Want to give: ol' Gus a piece or your mind to pass on~ Then set With the hippest lip in town, Gloomy Gus, "communicating" daily (Monda y through Friday) ON THE EDITORIAL' PAGE OF THE • Aw•·• NtwPOrt .. tel\, A"'"'t 19, :U 11'141 S.,lwnlMr 1, I, Tel: !JIU '*"'* .... l1M1ll t i Otl!n41nl Na. 51706 Ht<ltY JOM Ftr,..ndel, 1t1' N. ltlt lUJ..70 Atf ... llfi" for Aftnl11it1r1trl1 8y ylrlut ot in tXKlllloft fUl.lfd en ll Flowff, Senti AN l'ubll1htd 0.tnt1l CH•I Ot llV .. ltol, A11111111 1t" I»" 1111' Mllnkll>i l Court, c .... Rlcl\lrd Armour •etitr.1'IO ... ,, J09. LEGAL NOTICE Sllll .... bt• I, I, lS, n. 1t70 1u.i.11:1 ,... o....... c_,., JllClklt l Dl1lrlc:I out" SI., LiltllM •IKll C°""lr ol Ort nt1t, Sltlt ot C1!1tor11l1, 01tec1 A11tu11 24, 1•10 ,..1U11 LEGAL NOTICE """" • 1uc11m1111 tr11trld 1n 11vor at Jtv k hflddlf' ClltTll"ICATIE OP BUSllllllS HOUSTON CALIFORNIA IN VESTMENT H...,., F11"111nclu ,ICITIOUS HAM• BAii i.n COllPORATION ti lu0tme111 tr1111;1 ... Ind Rlchilrcl ....... Thi "'""'-"""" don ctrllf'tf Ill.II ht II NOTICE lO Cltl'DITOllS ltllnl! JULIUS J. GOMf.S 41 lllClllNl'll 5t1te or Cl•ltonM, , .. ,,,,,, ''"'' 0 , -•• detilor. 1now1ne 1 11t1 MllfKI ot n.~u.oe Or1noe COllll!'' ~UC!lnt 1 MIMll 11 Ml Crnl ll:Old, v v ' ttllHlllY dllt Ofl Miki !ud•mtnl on lht dtl• · Ort ..... Ct lllor,,11, Ul'Mlef 111t rletlllous STATE' OJ' CALll'OINtA '011: ol lo ,,_ On Autllll 14. lf70, Oolort IM, t Moterv firm Mme , of llll.L JO H E ~ THI COUNTY OJI' OllANOI !he 1nu111<1t ol .Ml txec.ut_., I lltvt Putlllc .,, llld IOI' Mid 51111. --1iv OISTlll•UTOA Ind 11111 wld firm II <em· Nt ......... 17 l•Yltd UOC><I Iii the l'l1n1. 11111 ll'ICI l11ttresl ... ,..,.., Jtr G•MOf'Y kllrlddlr, Htnrv POSed of llWI foUowlnt --whoH E•t•I• ol HAllOLO JOHN StSIC of llld lllftmtnt dlblar In llM! P•-1v 111 John Ft•M1Me1 11111 lllchlrd A•moul' 1'111\e In flfll •M PIK• ol res1c1W. II 1$ OecttMHI. • the Cou11tv Of OrenH, 51•1• OI C.lllorni., lltbtr ~nown la me lo l>t lht ltlr$Ol'll follows• NOT1CE 15 HERESY GIVEN lo 11\e dtKtlbltcl •• lftllowo: whott 111meot ••• lllDICrlllifd to !ht wllhl11 Ll~J J Ltrson 2000 Monr""ll Cot!I ctf(l!tarl p! l~e •bOvt nemed cl«tden! Lots II, l'O Incl 7l I" Block tell ol lllllru~nl •ncl t<:iv-ledttoil ll'llr IX· Mtw c i 111 ' thll t ll Olttonl ~1¥1"9 cl1lm1 ... 11111 tht We11tr l'1rk1 Stello<!. Huntl,,.,1on Kiiie><! 1"1 11""· Ott.I Auou'tt 11, 1t70 .. id dO'l'ed.,,I i re rf<lulred ~ fllt ll>em. Bfl<ll, Cltv of Hunllntron ltKh, Ctu,,. 10fFIC1AL SEAL! , L.lrl J . LtnOfl with !hi lll(elMltY --·· In !ht ofllct tr 11 Or1n11t, Stale of C•lltot11lt, •\ JOSIPll E. 0.wll STATE 01' C~LIFORNIA, ol 1111' <IDl'lr. ol ll>e lblft tnl1llfd court, or Ht mtP f'~Oti:ll'd In IOOlr. 4, F•ot 11 Nollry Pllbllc:, Ctlllornl1 ORANGE COUNTY: to PttHnl !hem, w!lh !lie f'«ffw.,. ot Ml1e.i11,_. M•PI• lt~tds el Prl11<IP1I Oftlc. In 011 Aullllll 11, 1t10. bltfort me.• Ho1trv v011Chttt, to Ille underslll!H 11 1111' otllct °''"" c-iv. ll<"•nH Counl~ Pullllc 111 Incl 1or wld Sl•le, 1>1ttontllv ol her f!larntYt: MITCHELL HART & T00tlher Wllh t ll tncl ll11tular Int MY CommlHIOI! EXPltn tPPetred le•• J , Litton know11 la mt IO 8Rl5CO, l lS Clwlc Cll!lu Orlvt Wi$T, t1111mtnt1, Mt..,ll1mt11tt •l'ICI ID• Junt "' "10 bl 1'111 -*°"' whoM Mf'nt 11 aubscrlbl'd Suitt ru. S.nte Ane, C1ll1. '2101 , wtllch 11 P11rl1111nct1 ll1tflt111110 IMlan.,lng or In Publlll'led O•tntt C011! 011lv Piiot, 10 the wllfllll lnitrument Inell ICknowltdl· !flt PllCt ot DU1!ne•s ol th• ulllltr•ltl""' 111 tlll'Wlll •-l•lnl111. """"'' " Incl $Hilemblr I, •. u. eel hit •Wtcll!ed 1111 w mt. •ti m•tt ... 1 Mrtt/"1"9 ro '"" 111&11 of Mid NOTICt' IS HEltEIY GIVEN 11\ll on 13 nie 1513-10 IO!tkil l Sffl) OKedfl!I. Wllhlll '°"' mon!M •f!•r lllf Seo!tmbt• 191!1, •t 10:00 O'doc:-A.M. ., LEGAL NOTICE ..... 1176 NOT!Cf. TO CREOITOlll SUPlltlOlt COU RT O,_ THI jTAT• OF CALll'ORNIA fOll TH• COUNTY 01' OllANGE Ht ... ~,.. E1t1lt el OOt.LY HALL SCOTT, t lto k ~own tJ OOLLV H. SCOTT, Otc111td, Jo1111h E. O.vi• !ir1t Plltlllctllon OI this notice. Mtln Lollil•. Couri"""•· 1tlO Civic Ce1111r Nol•ry P<lbllc. C11110f'n!1 Diie<! All911SI n. 1970 DrlV• Wt:.i Cllv ol s. .. 11 Alll, C-l'tf ol P•lnc.INI Ollkt In llERNa tLA 5151( Dr•llH• Sttlt OI Cl fll<lfnlt , I wl!I 1111 •I Orei.t Counh Admlnblt1lrl~ of tlle Ellott Pwbllt 1ucUon to lhlt hflthtll bkldtr, lot' Mv Commiulon Ewplrtt pt I"" tl:Ovt 111m..i cltct<lent ~11n ln ltwtul m-y ol I~• U"lled Stitt . ., Jul\I 21, lt7~ M1TCHILL HAllT f, llllSCO 111 l~l r11ll1, lltle 1,,,, lnllre1I ol 111d PubllJ.l'ltd 01'11111t Cot$1 D11tv Pllo!. •U CIYlt Ctnltf Drlvt Wnl h1d1m.nt dtblOf 111 IN ·-· described A"""I 11, lJ 111e1 StPltmDll!• 1, 1, 191!1 s..111 ns "'""''''· ,,.. to m11tn tlllrftlf •• mtr bf # 153'-10 Sl ftlt Ant . C1lllOl'11lt '17'1 necesHrr to 1&ll•IV s1lcl cxtcllllon, wllh Tll: llWlt1 Kt"""' lnlt•tl1 t /\d c.otlt. Att.nll'n t9f Adlltlftlal•1lrlx Otte><! ti """ Ant. Ct lltor1111, A111u11 LEGAL NOTICE l'ubll1~tcl Ortn~t C1111t Olll'r Pllel, 21), 1'10 JAMES ,._ MUSICI(, S1Pt..,.bfr 1. 1, u. n, 1t10 lt.ls.10 s..,,111 · NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIVEN 10 llW,!------c,' .• 7 .. "7------ <•ftfl!ott ot 1he abOYt "'""" cltct<11111 lh1t 111 Pt1•1011s ll1vlne d timt etilflH the Cl'-.TIPICATE OF •USIMISS' Slld o!Kedenl 1r1 •IOUlred lo 111• !Nm. FICTITIOUS NAME wtln tht'lllCUW•Y llOUChe'rJ. 111 !ht olllct TM uncllrsleneoo ~oet ctrlllY 1\1 I• con·l -~-----:::-:'°"::---~--1 ot Ille cler~ ol lht •bove fftfllltd coun °' d1Ktl"' • DUtlfltu II t015 Ao!lm• Avt., •All t6n 10 ornenl tl'ltm. wll~ Ille nite:ff;..,. Hunli119ton leacll, Ct lllor11l1. u-Ille IUPl!lllOlt COUllT OJI' TM I! V®Che<s Ill th• Unclltlltl!H ., </• lklitlous firm "'""' al DESIGNER srATI! OJI' CALIJl'OltNIA l"Olt YOUNG.' FR ENNER & HEWS, lli Wn l FAlllllCS 11111 IMt u id llrm h <-THI COUNTY OP OllAMGI LEGAL NOTICE County Ill 011n11, C•llfor11le J. Qul911, """'" ll11t1n & TIH:•tt Plelllllff'• AllDI'- .. , Clwlc Ce11tw Of. Wnl S111u A..,., c111t. nni Thlf'll Slrlltl, 51nt1 A111, Cilllornl•, '2101. ol the lal"!Wl"9 lllF SOI\ who .. 111m1 In Nt, A~SI wh ich II Ille PllCI or Dllfll\fn of !he lull '"" ptiC• ol 1nlde11ee 1$ .. , !allow" NOTtCI OJI' HEAlllNG PETITION ul\dtnlt ned (11 •II "'""•" ~rtalllln• 10 Jl(k Hv•n1, !0'.111 JOI! Dt~ Or •• Hull· COHVaY llEAL "lt01"1!1T'f TO Pu1>tl1n.., '"i1111!111tlon ••-en O.i1y P!lo!, AUPUll ll Ind So!ember I, .. 1'10 1m10 tl\I eJl•lt al il\d decedent. wllhlll lout llntton Beech, Ct ll!, ,,.,.., 1':1t1" of EDGAR I. WITMElt, mlll!lhl •lier "" llfll PUOllt ttlOI! el 11111 Oiied A111. "· 191!1, D«e••l4. LEGAL NOTICE l'Olkt. JKk H111111 • NOTICE IS HEREl'I' GIVEN !Piii Ot lod Autust !I. 1t 10 S!1te al C1lltornl1, Ortnoe County· HARlllETTE F. WITMER, !tit b.ecutrl~ CASI MO P•Jff1l CaDi'lal• Ht l1 ltdhtm ll\4 On A!lt. ''• 1t70. bttore m.t". 1 Nola.,. OI llH! t1t1i. .11 EOGAll 8 . WllMf.ll, lllt I.I.II 1'" Rolanll HtU l'ublk '" 11111 for 11jcl Sitt•. pttto111Ur dtCMen!. 1\11 !Ued htrtln. Pt1fllon lor an ce1tTIJ'tCATI OJI' COlllPOltATIOM •olt Co-E•tc:w!or1 of !he Wiit IPPetfM Jf(k Hut"9 k-11 10 .... ta !It order-llllhor(llllll lf>(i cllrtctl"t tllt E•Kll· TRANSACTION •F BUSINass UMDlll ol lilt •DO~• lltmtd .......,,, 11\1 P9t10n wnau ,,. .... 1'1 JYll>e•lbltd 10 trb ol lhe ltllllt o• ,,.,. 1bci;l .... tmt<1 de· l"ICTl710US NAM• "ouni , l"renntt & Hntl !ht wllh!11 ln1tryment tnell lt knawlftfte><I t ed111t IO Hll tht Pr-rl'r descrlbltd btlcw THE UNOEllSIGNED CORl'OlllATION llll Wnt T~INI Sltwl ~t IXCCU!ttl lht Hmt. to GRACIE C. STEELE, I wlcklw, 111 com· c!Otl hertbW <tfllly tllll lt It cllllducl!Pll 1 511111 ant . Ctllftrflll '"'1 {SEALI a!IJllCI wlln tllt lertn1 ot !~ wrlllen buslntu lgctte>(l •I Mii Slllt Street, T•I~ .... , 17Ul Ml ... )Jl Jfffl L. Jotl1I • ·--16 toll Incl PUr(l\tM ~~ed ""''" G11t. C•lllor"1 •• •1111 II JU ,,..,"' Allor~r• tor C•••tculor'I Nolt.,. Publ'!= -C1lllor1111 11110 bY Meedtnl In h11 11,.llmt, 11 Wll•r l tOIClwt•, S.nll Ant, Ct l!IOl'nie, ul!lfer F'ubhll'ltd Ott"" C.,.11 DlllY l'lltlt Pdnc.IPll Ofli<e I~ •• to •n uncll~lde>d -.Mii lnltrt1I, I"" lht flctllloui firm lltmt 1;11 •NAHllM lite~!! II, ll Inell Si'Pl .... bfo' I. I 01'•~ coun::,, E WILLIAM BltADLEY WITMER. II Mllff SECURITY l'AlROL •NI ·~•t Uld tirm 11 tflO 1n1.10 ::rchor;"';~:i ""1'11 111 •" ufldlvldecl -.11111 lnt1r111. •1111 bY <ClmPO!oed ot !ht !ollowlno c""-•''°"· ' bl. l>ed 0. c ' ' I"• Piie Ille PU•tNoer Nmfd lltttln. IJ buwet. l"<I Whoslt P•~ll Pll<t .. busl""H ;, It LEGAL NOTICE 11 •S '~"" .,., 1 ·~ 1· tllt ptll!lon "•• M>en 111 tor llt1r1nt 111 IO!fOw•· ·< l,1------:::-:c-::::-:------1'-'-'-·-'-'·-'-'-· _ind S.al. 1, 11, 1no 1u1.10 Deotrlmtlll I ol "" •boYHnl!Ul>d c..,.. Pai:IFIC DETECll\llE I UltEAU AND IAll 11M Oii 11\1 11th di~ ol it91tmtoer 1'10 11 t:XI PATllOL INC., 1141 ltllt Slf'HI, 5oulh N0TIC8 TO t:lll!OITOltS LEGAL NOTICE o'cl6ck 1.m., lot•IM " 100 Civic Ctni.r Gttt, C.Uforlllt. SUl"l!lllOlt COUIT OJI' TH• Orin Welt. Slntl Ant , Cllllornll. WITNESS ltl 'fllncl 11111 lllh • ., Ill STATE OJI' CALll'OltMIA '0" p..ll1fi Tl\I ••ti _,., lo M IOld II AIJOUSI, 1'70. TM I COUNTY OP ottAMOI! CEllTl•ICATE OF aUSIH•IS clltlcrtbH ti lollfW•: ICO llPORAlE SEAL) Mii. A"6m l'l(TITIOUS JIAM& ~l's lriltfHI In Tiit IUMhlkl FACI FIC Ol!Tl!!CTIVI BUii.EAU E\tllt OI THOMAS ll, ltUTTEll al111 Tiit Unclt•lltnH "" (tftlly lhtv •• , 11t1t1 Ill • ...,"' LOI. OI Ttl(I Nt, lOt•. ,lND ..... TllOL. INC, ~-" ,n THOMAS ltl!~AUO RUTlEll. ~ucllllt • DUllM$1 It Jl• M. HtrbOI It l/!OWn on . "''P reeoroed ii' SOOIC 11. II. E••I S.1'1e9111~ • 0.CNHd. , l fvd., $Int• A!\I, C1!110rnle, llfllltr !hi Ptff SO ol MltctlllMOUI M•Jt, ttc:Ofdl ..... lldt!ll NOTICE IS HeREl'I' GlllEN lo II•• lk Utklu• llrm Mmt ol GEMIHI Ind lh1! ol o ...... COUflh , CllllO-llll' <•t 1tl!CI tly STATE 01' CALIFOllNIA crtaltor• ot tilt 1bel ..... llflmtd dt('°'"' ulcl flrm I• a>mPOM!CI ol Ille 1o1111wl11t ,,.., (tnl lt'I L .. M I!•'" "'"""""" u , COUNTY 01' ORAN(;E II lhtl t ll --Mvlnt Cll lm' ... 111'11 !!If l>tflor"' WhoM lllmts 111 tu" Inf -ltcet ltU. l•KU!.cl DY The IMlll\I (-ny, On IMI 11th dlY 01 .:u9111!, lt1!1. blfort Mid dte"1ent •rt rtcwlre>O 11 11._ 11\tm of rnide11<1 ,,.. •• follows: 1 cor-1111111. 11 Ltnor 11\d Wlnllm s. m1 Miry IC. Guill.et 1 Nott,., l"ubllc 111 wltl'I t~t necent,., vouchett. 111 tl\I olj1c~ .. 1111111 L. ~·· Ill.I II~ Drlvt, Wllmtf incl E•lllfr •· ~1"""· hlllMllll •Od ror Mkl Countw 11111 s1111, reoldl11t ot !ht ci.<"11 ot !~ 1111Ne fftllllN '°"'''·,,.. Co.st• Mtw. C1llfor!\11. I ncl wlft, •• lol11• ltnt n I ••• Ltttla. tn.vti.., 11111¥ tommlHlollto! I ncl .-.... to .,,.,It'll ll\lm, wltft !ht lltctsWf~ Jllmtl T, Moor!, 1-.S llhotlft Orlvt, rtc0te.d Otnmbfr J, ltS.. Jn look Dtr,_11y leH••"' I . EAltL 5HEEH,l*'I Yll!X .... ,. IO Ille u!'lderslllllld ti IJl..,pfflct Co•I• Mti•. C&lll.,..nl•. '115. P11t lllJ. 01nct11 llKOtdt ot tl!Ow .. I• '"' to Ot lllt l"fftlcMftl el lht o1 111• U!o•r.ev1: OURl!'EA. CARPl!!NTER 011td Av1u11 ?1, 1t1(1 · Or1111'1 COUii•-· C1lllOl'nle. ht1d 111 1~t cor~r•tlor\ tl'l1t txtculttl lhl "'"'r" & 8A.NE5. BY ERNEST J. K HAG, JR , l~lt L. MOii'• ntmt OI Wllll•m lt~llt'r Wllmtl" 1"11 l~l!rumtnl QI! btl\111 of the c.,._l!IM 'US Mlc.ANlllll' ll!vd., "· 0 Ill• UN JI'""'' 1, ,,,_, Ed••· ••1t1lew Wit"""' It 1e11.11111 111 lht•tln "'"""· '"" l(kf'IOWIN-to'"' N-1 a...cn. Ctllf, .,...,, which It IN S!•tt or Ctrlltl•n!1, tomfnOll •• HI I n u,,..l•lcltd -.nt!I 11111 111(/1 (W-•llon •• ti:.,,. lht ........ Olla ol Mw.t Ot ""' _,.,,9ntd In tit (ounly OI ~I AnH IH u • lntttfll kl HCl'I. Ill W1tnu1 Whltrtol. I 1141.,. 1'11f'9w1Jll .wt nl:t Nttl Hrl•llll"9 to ""' tslltf Ill t•kl °""""'''JI , H1'11, MIO-• ....... Nolt.,. Rt.fltlll'IC;I IJ mt<le to ""' Pltlmtfl Otnflf '"v II.Ind •I'll! lttl•t41 m' lltllcltl _, "" ~ectOfflt, w11~111 '°"' f'nOllll'lt •"'' 1111 l"utilk In 11111 lot uld irt tf, ,....sonel!Y Mrt111 for 1ur1111,. P>1rlk11l1rs. di¥•"" YllF lfl 11111 c.,.tlllctll flrll t M'<HI lirtt IWllct!lon 01 th11 111111c.. _,.., atttlt L. ""-'• •Ill! Jlmt:s T OATEO· .l.1111111! 11. 1t10 wr1rt~ft. ,. 0.IH A"'1111 1t, 1110 MOl"'t tnow~ 10 mt IO bf lhlt --• Ourvet, C..,.Cltnttr I N l1rn11 !OJl'FICI AL SEAL) J. l!d9•f' Thlltfttot\ llutter whoW ,,._ 111 1ubltr!bltd 10 11\1 w!ln1" ly; E•l\lll J, kh•9· J» ""'"' I(. G\lllltl laKUtor ol Ille Wiii el lntf~I I"' Kll"'lwltctNCI lllft¥ IW· A"""''' tor ·-· NOtt tY Plltlllt·C•lllarnl• , !"-•-t 111mtd de>U(lt11t ICU!e><I !ht Mrrit. EoKutrl~·PttU..,. .. r Ori"" (OUllh \ llUllY•A. caltPl!NT•• & IA•M•S fOF"FICIAL SEALl llUll'l'liA. CAltPeNTEI ANO IAlllNIES MY C-h$lon E•Pl•tl BY1 lltMIST J. KHA&, Jiit, llYlll'"°"' Gal\lrl IY EltHf.ST J, itHAQ, JI, A.,H u, 1tn UH N\e(Artl!wr ...... NOtt tY l"l*Wc:<tllll'T!ll ~ru MtcArfn.r IOllll'llN WITTMAN AND $CHMtOT "· 0 .••• '"" ... Let An""-' C""n"' •• o. 1011· ,,.. UOI Wetltltff °""· '-"' "' Htwll0!1 IN<JI. C1lll. """ ~-com ... lt•IOll ••• ,,., HewHrl Bn<ll, c•Ntornl1 l'IUJ N-1'1 I Mdl. C•lllonlll n ... Tf11 "''"°' 1 A,,_,.l ,, 1'1a 7 .... llOnl 11111 Jf1•"'9 Totl 6' .. 111* A.119rl't¥1 tor lllPl,.IOI' ~Ubll!lllll Ortlltt CO.II ~llJ "ilot, Atltt!"YJ ltr l!•«U!tlr·PttllloMtt AllD!'llrrl Publl1hK Orl'Pltt C011! P11te 1"111>1, Al.ltlllt U •"' ilPltmOtt I, t . U, P11!)HUll'lf O•l~H COft11 O.llv ,.11111 l"utll11htcl O'lnfl Colsl Qel!y .. [lclt, ....... ____________________________________________________ ,I H!tttmlMI' I, I, It tt. 1t1t 1•11•10 lflt U1f•f0 1n rtmbtr I, 2, 1, 1tlt l .. pO Stilltmlllr \, I, ll. U. 1tlt lW·lt I l • I ' i I I I • ' ' " • , • • .. .. . . . . . .,, • ••• • Tt.1tsday, Stpteml'Mr 1, l97Q DAILY PILOT • HOUSES FOR SALE ' HOUSES FOR SALE ~USES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE HO..!:!!_ES FOR ~E- 6-ntral 1000General \ 1000 _General · 1000Genertl ' 1000 * * * *_._ * :fa oil J. J -" ~H=O=U=S=E~S~F~O~R:...::SA=L~E:_l :H=O~U~S=E=S~F=O~R~S~A=L=E:......IHOUSESFO~SALE 1000 Costa Mesa G ~;,,:-=•;,,:•;:.1 ____ .;.;1000::: General .J!.llLDERS New Tri0 Ple1es ·.JUST A PITClf __ ·IMMEDIATE TAYLOR PRESTIGE ~ATfRFRO~T e HOMES AmNTION!! Drive by this bto:autlful half· acre Jot (66x305'l, ml Or- ango Ave.; zoned for unlt1. Ha• small house plus &ePi-f· ate dbl. garage in park-like sett!~ of trtts. 10% dn. f'ull price $24,950. Call now: 646·7171 2 -units~ Front 3 Bedroom home with fireplace & a nice apart- ment in the rear. Prtsent in- come $300 a month. $57,SDO AND Pun '""d" '°"''~•v•ll S.pt 10) F . fcvi If 1 b T k POSSESSION Lar&e, beautiful "homes with roll\ ~c ~o cu ' \1(1 · 3 ~ Jkdroon-1 , family room, an income" located In the "d •>t'll.Y in dC'slrablc Irvine hru1cd I fiHcrcd pool, car· fine st Ea.stside area of Costa Tcn:4CC· Onl! 8 • few i;hort prts ,t-drapes. nice & clean. :f.fesa. Feat~ing (l l 3 BR, block~ to l'ashion island $25,000 full pdce. Gr no 2 BA "owners unit'" + (2) shopping center. Vac;;nl 1"''l nioney do..-.n, move r ight In! CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Corner privacy! 2 Bedroom tront unit with fireplace plus l bdrm rental in rear. Patlo & charm. See this ne\v exclusive offering today & profit! ONLY $421000 101 Linda Isle Drive 1 5 BR. 4 baths; fam. rm. Mexican tile Ors ., -./ exposed beam ceil .. cpts, drps incl. W/Pier & slip. ExceUent Terms .... ~· ..... $135,000 For information on all Jot s & 'homes CALL: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR \0 THERI:AL ·~ I:STATEHS $25,995 2 BR rental units. See at bedroom ~ dco '.loll house. 2035 Tustin Ave cor \\'ood· In move in condition. Only land Pl. or call.,6424905 S~.ooo. Call ~· (Al&0 flC'.N Income units for sale in Dana Point). REAi) THIS $20,500 PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP--$79,SOO 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642..4620 3 Units G! nn money do\\•n, IBA just $350 total Citsh needed. Sharp 3 bC':froom rancher "'ilh w w crp!g & drps. A ITal cutr homr. \Vlll no1 Ja~t the \\'l'ekl'nd. \Ve recommend this 4 bdrm "Broadmoor" vie"". home in Corona del ~l ar for a large f~~1ly & execu tive entertaining. Formal a1n1ng rm. A garden setting oi unu sual beau· ly. Look no further until you have seen this! • OPEN.DAILY·1·5 • lOOO ...... ~~~--~== 3 Bedroom home, a 2 bed-'Til sold! Assurnt" 6%~ VA BROAPMOOR ,V'."'frWJ··· • J'QOm garai:;e apartmC'nt loan. $148 eer mo. RC'decor. BEAUTY 1111•--·~111 and ll secluded J bed.rom 3 Br, W/\V cpts drps. Im. . . DANA HARBO.R apartment wilh a steady in. med. possession/ Only $22,· l-11d·\Vtst owner 1nstruc1i:t Consider ~his five bedroom romt> ol 1395 a month. _ 950 1984 fo'ederaJ Ave us 10 sell a!I 500n as possi-• LARGE FAMILY? General 1000 General , _________ _ "Our 25tli Y ear" home on II. quiet, tree lined INCOME HOMES cau; Patrick \Vood Ms-2300 ,ble! 4 BR . 3 Ba. \•lcw hoinr: 5 aEDRM + POOL WESLEY' N. TAYLOR CO., Rea.Jtors -irtT't'<!t in Newport Beach for 3 DUeLEX]::S.AS34.95lb$44.950 A 1 • NEAT $37 ,500 e Bill H•v•n Realtor comp .• <'plcl., drpd., all bl!-This house ls loaded with "x- 2 TRtPLEXES.$63,~$66,sOO du t occupied 3 Bt>drm .211 1 E. Coast cdr.t 673-32U ins. Profess. Jndscpd. 6A4.-;, tras. ·10' Heated I fHtf'red 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road only $44,950. 2 FOURPLEXES. Pacesetter. 13 x 17 E nclos· ' Assun1able loan. Reduced to NEWPORT CENTER 644..f910 Thi'! ~h~rnier Mi a sec.lud-"d pal.lo carpeted le used as Assume $19 000 $64 50.1 pool ii·/lo!s of dec,king. * * * * -* ed living rooin. spacious · .$61,950-$69,500 1 .1 . Newport 51, ,, FHA' · Sprinkler system front k · * (3) 3 BEDROOM HOMES. am1 y room. New carptt in ~• '' bl · ; 1 lam,·1 coom and a modom ••· T ""· r.lcc llus, iv w crp G Y • -.· Ji ving rm. This hom" is •t Loan on 3 BR 2 ba, largc ..... i.. 0 " I::;::;:::;:::;::::::;:::;:::;:::;::;;:-:::=;::::::::::::::;:::;:::;:::;:: sunny kilchen. • ••. $30,950 2809 1 II Co M tJ·.M.Jout, custom draper. Ask. Brand new, undrr CO!l!''-·o-cozy, See lhis "'ttkend. F • • heated poo . $30,000 fu RBIN• ARTIN1;i . 112 700 11 1 "'"' ---: The back yatd (it's 171 feet u u S"· 0 11rv1ew .,.,.,,. By '"'n"c. 2l" Joa"" •====''~'~~~·~·~===-~J j ing • . . n:o; rca General 1000 G.,neral 1000 across the b;i,ckl has 8 de-1ion. Large buildin~s wi de· •-nntar r. -" "" "' '"' .: · FJIA 6~ '} loon to a.uume. ' ;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ---------·I luxe ownen; units. """an 446-8811 1 ~5~1·c:.54~..,....:..:5~1~·-----OLE' lightful patio and lanai. 11 ..,._., .. C NEWPORT lawn volleyball area CAN O v iews, xlnt locations. Take (inytim•) EAST SI DE: 2 BR/I BA. The chann of "Old i\lrji1,'()." OU nlry ISLAND A POOL\. -advantage ol good rental in. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ I R j; I 0 t . ~e_c I u ~~ Quarry tile floors. brick fire--It you have a large family 1..'0me + property value in. w re cs -gt en. platt set !hr n1ood for this REAL ESTATE L• • R-2 arid need mo re space. you creaset dUe to the new Dana .:::;::::==::::=::==:;::;"° C<lnst. provid~s gr ea 1 11ln1ost ne\\· ("\JS\om 3 Bdrn1 ln.JNTINGTO:"' BEACH OFC. l.vlng · al Po;"' Y"ht Huboc. ROOM TO . NEWPORT WEST '"''""'.·-BI M•. l t6,000 & f•m. rm. horn•• ~"' 89'5313 4••7511 2·Bedroom hoint-"'ell built really should ~ th11 v ue. r-HA 5" • ·. Loa 123 000 ~ -.Phol'IP Builder 642-4905 or GROW INTO r .,.. '" n. · · tx-ach. lofasrer 51f'. "''oc:can 0 A Full A by Gordon P, Findley. Al· C<VJ. now MS.2316. 34616th Pl c i\1 518.-2122 Open 7 days . 8:30 to R:30 n er• 1rac1ivc uscd briCk FIRE-5C" at 33792 Cop~r Lantern-A large 2400 q ft famUy SLEEPER .I . • view" secluded sundetr.·· 1., ... ~~~~~~ ... ~1 \\'Ith ranch type 3 bC'dhn PLACE. i:: 11. s log~ & Dana Pomt home with 4 8 bedr~ms, 3 • EAST SIOE-3 br, 3 garagf!. Wesley N. Taylor Co. VACANT-- home. l'Onlpletely repainlerl. HF:ARrn. OPEN _ BEAl\.t I ~'!'!'l~~'!!'!~!'!"'!!'!~~ ba ily f 1 $24,000. Easy terms. By REALTORS &ll-1!110 newdshwshr&disposal. Lge ceilin"' & loads of CUP. HUNTING't:ON BEACH ths. fam room, orma.! We have just lilted thatl:io=:w:""::',:,·::::64,;6-::2fl85=::=:·====1 UNHEARD OF Vets Move 1·n Now d h... . • LDC TE EAR SHOP dining, three car gara.ce. CLOSE TO TifE BEACTI erac cov: patio. outdoor BOARDS . A sun-n'-shadc A D N PING la""e patio. Only "'" 10 Before school starts. lohu;.si\·e brick frplc & BBQ.' !l.lany ,1---------;;;I ANO SCHOOLS ~,hly ... home you've been looking Mesi Verde 1110 5bed ........... s, 3 ""'"'· l"m"y PATIO wilh NO \"ARD · .-"' comn1unily po o I, tt>nnis -• ....,... u '" fireplacr in sunkcn living shade frt'f!s. Owner "'ill fine. \VORK! Flat.roofed garage H I• f ·1 7 pa inted inside and out. Four courts and park. Only for. 11'1 a sharp home with room and a charming se· room. "'ith 4 quern sized at g1~~;,. Hurry this "·on't s1rrsscd for SECOND UNIT ave urge aml y • bdrms., 1% bath home with. 2 Call 67J..8550 an ovirsized backyard fully ON THE FAIRWAY t luded palio -ONE BLOCK bedrooms. & n1uch much last! Only........ ii•ilh ranal &: boat vie \V, ., . fireplaCf', f /A heal lt. BI N $'1 ·950· landscaped, Can be purchas-Custom built, 4 bed.rm. fam. TO OCEAN. Only $48.!'>00. nlOrc. E~rythi~ just paint-$49,500 f\larkels nearby _only a Need a large .hon1c · This Kif. New carpels thru-0u1. ed GI 00 do"'" or a1SUme a ily room, 2 big fireplaces. Call quick 673.8550. I'd for quick in. No do"'" for fciv steps "10 priva!c park & lo\·rly home 11;1! \\Tap your completely draped. Washing 5" 'to existing VA loan. Move This beaulilul home over-Vrts. $1800 down for c~ry- A word to the wives canal beach_ 3 short blocks fa n1ily 1n spaciousness & lacilities in oversized Dbl. In belore school starts. Call looks tke 17th fa irway ol one else. fo'ull price $28.950. to BLllE PACI FIC! $36.?JO. safrty. Aln1os1 2700 sq. It. garage. 15'x20' patio • prG-for details. Mesa Verde C.OU Course. C I h \\'ill take rarr. of !>.1om Pop fcssionally landscaped in-$22:,500 -COATS 6~· assun1able loan. By own.1 ........................... Wa Iker & Lee 0 eswort Y .all !hr kids.' and rtie' pel~ elud ing sprinklers -com. • &. er. 3036 Java Rd, 540-4095. DELUXE DUPLEXES too~ It's a VACANT 4 bed-plete-ly lenced . NO 00\VN 2 HOMES. 1 LOT WALLACE $63,500. O"LY 2 LE•,.,..· On Brookhursl, room 1v i t h EN0Rfl.10US VETERANS • L 0 W trlA Start bulldini::-your ES-REAL TORS 1• • • Next to Gcmco & Co. REALTOR N'e\\lXlr! Beach Office 1028 BaS'sidc Drive 675-4930 . ROOJ\-1$. ~3S,500. l\l'ay \\'e TERMS. Vacan!_._Quick pos. TATE with this lerrific va1-Niwport Beach 1200 South of hiway. 3 BR 214 ba, !168-3371 • Fountain Va!JC'y sho\11 you through? i;ession. Full price on I y On.mn Evenlnns 2 BR 2 ba. Cpt, sundk. self. COATS r: " . . -WALLACE ue in exceUent rental area. r~ • $29,950. 2 bl'droom + 1 bedroom + e 962-4454 e .. clns:: oven, Corning cook top, M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. double garage. Sellcr wiU Newport Beach Home wlk-1n closets. Great buy, 64~ Eve1: 545-8308 $69,500. Open daily or call pay points for your FHA or FHA BUYERS 644--0286. CUSTOM TOWNHOUSE WOW! $16,750 is sufficient! A clean, adult occup irrl '1 ;;;---------1 bedroom home in ll.1esa REALTORS -54'·1141- (0pen Evenings) 4 Bedrooms $26,950 VA loan! just a short block ,.,,..,..,..,..,..,!!!I!!!!!!!!!! I Wa. Iker & Lee sh.,.."'""· '""•m built. 3 f I I " J"ST u sTEo • .,. ,. BR. 2 BA. EXTRA. EXTRA rom C i f Dr. 3449 QUIET COVE '< i s grea · Ven:lc under $30.000 on a quiet cul-de-sac street. Barh in master bC'droom Cflm- plr.tely redone ... al'll1 llcll'. Jy tiled. fo~irst time fJfft'rtrl , •. he the first to ins[>C'CI it. Call 546-2313 BACK BAY * Immaculate home * Just rcdecoralcd * :1 Bedrooms. 2 ba1hs * Large family playropm CORONA DEL MAR Real!or~ ''Our 2Stli Ye•r In tli• Harbor Area '' 673-4400 OPEN WED. 1-S Relax & enjoy carefree \iv-lii:f' living rm w/dining + Spacious :I bedroom 2 bath -in~. No up.keep "'orrics. 20t3 Westcl!H Dr. dining area, hrdwd firs, good master· bedroom adjoining 7 BR .. 3\~ ba. Fami~y & rum. Li;c. master suilc. Cozy liv. • ~7711 qual ity crpts, dhll' gar. \Valk lile bath wjth built ins plus pus rm. Largest \'L~\\' lot in rm. gounnrt all elec. kit. lnimcdiale possession. Fresh'l;;;;;;..IO~!"~"-·u~·1;;9~;;;000liPmMiil"" tn shops, Gov 't appraiM.I ful: balh ..C·iih built \n~: !iv-l~arbor Vil'w Hills~ incl . ii·asher & dryer. Pri- ly painted insidfo & out, new $28 IXXI iny room with firC'plac(', din. DON V. FRANKLIN ...... · c · Only Needs P•int W;.,T· ''AST ACTION!~! R It vntr ""' pa.t1q. ommun1ty carpeting, 1111 bltins. family tu• ing area and larGc picture ea or clubhouse & pool. Low. Jow rm' walk 10 park & school5, 1-·ix up this 5 bedroom home "'indows overlooking lovely e 673-2222 e down, with ppymenl5 much NO"DOWN ro-vtTERANS, and you~will have plenty ol DUPLEX $20, 950 secluded lanai; '\\'Ood carpet. cheaper than rent. Better or low do"'" F HA. C a 11 room for your growing fam. Lie bedrooms, (l) each, near ing and drapes, electric UNEXCELLED VIEW hurry! Call (711 ) 962-5585. Need more bedroom~. Look 545-8424 ily, A steal at S26,950 and downtown, C.M. Park, Wcr • kitchen wit_h baj_Jt-lni;. Gar-of Jlarbor & ocean. Attr. 11.1 thi!';, S T~mendous bed-assumable 514% loan. Cl age off alley l\'ith electric split•lev<.>I home On R·3, 5100 G ,I. room,, 3 full baths, H"ge, (O""n Evenings) men'•, Boys & Girls ub. '---4 A $500 Cash .,.. Illness fo~s saJc. eye openr.r, room for ........ tor s<t ft, lot . ldcal for pl. Hujl'.e l i\•in~. room. family ~ 5'l-YIO • camper. Beautiful Jandscap. units. $200,000. 2501 Oocan f.lovrs you in! 2 Story, 4 room. modern rlream kltch-MlltcinllM!NllNt Lachenmyer Rlty ed corner 1.01. Blvd., CdM. By appt only. bednTI, 2 ha, scp. lamily t"n. 2300 sq, fN"t of wonder· LEGE REALTY CALL !;46.3928 or Ma.3483 Drive by 328 Aliso then call Bill Grundy, Realtor rm. t'lcc kit, <1pprox. 2000 ful hl'ing. FHA and VA .-..11Mittier,CM/:iz~=====z=:I owner for 11ppointmenl to 833 Dover Dr., NB &12-4620 llfJ. ft. Close to l!Chools .t rrrms. Asking $37,500.00. A BUNCH OF ~""".:··~13!:'7~,"'°~·_!6'~64~03~2;;,. --I=::=:::;:~== shoppu, * Extra garage for boat, l 'i::::iii~ camper or zhop I ' 546·8640 BEDROOMS A CAREFUL e za,.. wi~:·io$~f~H ~::.i T~!~~ 84m78507; E:m: 't1¥' FOR THE !~~!'~ H~!e~t~e MOVING ~i~, 2C:r!i'. ~~~~·~fi~s, drps. At1 un its rented. • .. •Z!t:! j ('f'";" B I G FAMILY EAST South r>r hhva)'. • •" lo Nowpoct Ho;ghi. ooa "' x CAYWOOD REAL TY Brickmakers Deliglit You 1nay appreciatt' lhill stonemason's masterpiece of used brick 1\•alks, beautiful planter!' and sturdy "'alls. A lotASSIVE pa.tio READILY CONVERTIBLE to a·BONUS ROOl\.f adjoins your combln. a.lion fa mily bilhasd and din. 5 bedroom!!, 3 baths. family 127 fool lot. Rent or live ln Must sell shMp, spacious 3 6306 w c t H NB * &14-02Ei6 * * Quiet VlCW 5trC'el • 541.000 * Better hurry! ONLY S21,500 room •-• a charm•··g ••. d .... ,. bedroorrui, 2 baths, complete · r:,.0:"'1290wy., $18,000 nu " .... this until your rea y to .,...1 .,._ BARGAIN "·" "ba I bl · Cl"d-• pat'-_ o·~ BLOCK 1 bltlns. oversized garaa:e, 3 o•:uroom. :. lh. rec tin "" "' ''"" your dream home. Best o-ba I TO OCEAN. OnlY $48,500. cation in the Hci(l:h!s for park like yards, cpvered pa. BLU!-"FS Condo · 4 Br, 3 lototivatrd seller leavini:: ranee, oven. gar gc d s- k 673-8550 . tio &. geparale play area. Ba. Best area. Below mrkt. <1rea. 7 BR 2 ba, terrific posal. FA heat. drpg1 crpts. Call quic · $19.950. Call for showing Walk' lo ~hool & park. Full By owner. Af t 5 &: wknds. ocean vif'"'· Under $40,000. dble i::ar, cov patio, fenced howai:th towson ja.. acctl.toiz 341G Via Lido 6i~562 Vrry fP\Y left Rt this pril.'e. l•iiii;;;;;;;;;;,..;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii•I Locatt'd on tfCC'l ined strcc!, 10 THI: REAL \~ ESTATERS 546-23l3 price $24,950. Low, Jow FHA 644-4869 MORGAN REAL TY & lalldscapcd, payments down p8yment OR ASSUME 67J...6642 67.S.6459 less than l't'nl. Just Steps To Oceon Where C'lSc can you find a ne"·cr hon1c w/2 BR .. conv. dr.n, 2 Ba., beamed ceilings, bltns, shag carpels, cozy patio -for only $27.9.'j()'.' "Please call for our p1c1urc brochure of curre'!.l lislint:s" cp ... I ' ~~1·1 1 • 833-0700 644-7430 For The T1lente d Young Couple : Ex~llcnl floor plan 11 1!h 2 bcprooms. st'par11te rlrn and }1(i baths in. top i'/C\\'port n e I g h Ibo r ho~o d . T•1•n fireplatts. space for boat or camper parking off allry. Nttdi; ''HER" idf'as 11M "HIS" handy"·ork. PRICED AT APPRAlSAL $31,!KMl C. F. Coleswortliy & CO. REALTOR. 1028 Bllysidc Dril'C' 675-4930 ~~~-ATIENTION VETS $15.00 To!al C'Ash 1nnvr~ you in, lf scllel' pays you costs. 'Thi5 three bcdroon1 Costa Mei;a grm Is otrer..."'1:1 Rt a low $23.500. 'I'\\'<) full lmlhs, double garage 11nd a para- dise of landsrapln11:. Hulli! covrITd patio. II u r r y: 546-8&10. ,- W ith ·_Fortitud• & 0 1t1rmin•tion Thts C"Dedrm, dlnlrut rm & family rm l\'lln \Veil5 home ttl $58.000 \\'Ill match an)'· one's $6j,OOJ hon1r. Exc't'l- lcnt pl11n lor famU,y, large yard. PETE BARRETT RLTY thii; nice homr is close to shoppin;; & schools. lnstC'ad of N'nlinJ:, 11·hy no! buy this homr ,If;, in two years have $.'l(JOO. lo $4000. cash to buy a largr.r hon1e? Homes arc in- creasing in \'Riue faster than ever bcforr. 'O THE REAL '~ ESTATI:RS . . . inf" rm. An RO fool concrctr ...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiOiiiiiiiiiiO..I dr1\'r !rads to the dctacht'd Make an Offer ---~~~=--- 21i car gar. & !ihop: Three If you have imagination you $155.00 kint;s1ze bdrms IOO! AS. must see this 4 bedroom SUl\1E ~1,,; ·t~ LO\V INTER. Coun!ry Cluh home. Huge per month pays all EST EXISTING VA, Your ganie room big enough lor a Just a.MUme lhis Sj.4% VA Nichols Real Estate ~~M~il~As~6::·DE , Rltr. ~:~~1~~: d~~~hed1= !:~:~ ~~ t't~s~:~!: 6·16-05.'l.i Eves: 673-61Hi age. Owner anxioul". patio double garage, dream 5~9521 CAMEO HIGHLANDS <Open Evenlngsl kitchCn. ·ouered at 11. low Be~"! rvcr in Corona dcl 1'1Ar ~ 546.5110 $26,950. HUtT)' on this one. location. "Ocean Virw'' {ntwcirll!Ntlllltlt'I 546.8660 while swim ming in your gnr· LLEGE REALTY ~coos pool 1\·ith tropical set-1fa>AdMllatKlttllr,CM ling and lols of lighting~ PRIVATE BEACH av;iiJ. 5~7o loan. Just listed • Newport Heights 1210 I' 11/age Real EstJte hurry! Call ~llSl . IMPORTANT NEWS Lovely 2 BR Ranch Style home on wide Jot -we call tt a Ranchcllc. Lots of level Kl'OUnd, zoned for horses + guest room with % baths. Lots of storage & plenly of room for expansion. Locat- ed in one of our fine~\ horse areas. Aliking $33,950. Balboa Peninsula 1300 COLONIAL MANOR . . W. Bay Wate rfront A ~e5,°~l' home at a ba rgain Beautiful, nC'\'IY rcdcc. 4 BR pnce . ~ Sly. colonlRI, near-+ bonus room. Patio-de<:k- ly new, hrnut decor. Lge hc1>ch·pier & slip. $175,000. COWl!ry kitchen w/all mod· 8 ·ii Grundy Realtor ern blt.n!. f'rpl~ flf 1tali11n 83.' 1 Dover Dr. 'N.B. 642-4620 marble. Chandeliers, Jge Hv ' rm & din nn overlookini:: 27x42 h&f pool w/lot11 of dr.r king. Ocean view rro m Lido lsl1 1351 962-4471 ( :::: ) 546·1101 REDUCED I Bii:: & clran :: story move in hrfort' school slat1s :1 BR .v lam rm., 11<!ar utisoo Ht. r.1 or Fl!A lcnns. Only $32,jQ(). Call 817-8S3l. -. ballroom size balcony. 4 Lgc• I;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;,..;;;;: BRs, 2 Ba . A beautih11 homc 11 JOG TO BEACH I-'°' oruy 156.000 ., trndo lo-LIDO'S BEST BUY 3 " 7 Bed'"''· 2 to 4 baih•. cally. up ro JO()(} !CJ. fl., i;hak{' HAPPY HALE CREST "hi". 4 Mani bedrooms with Superlative Living n " .,. " "Thi Bluffs" all !he extras, for under SroHc!i!I <f herlroom or 3 and a $5t.OOO. 1800 sq. II. of the greatest Take A Dip •tJLt.WHi'li CALL CS> •••·141 • o1 Bedrmr, 3 ba!hs, newly· TOOis. aJJ hit~~· <'Bt"[K'ling. That's right! BeauUlul tN'at· A ,,A!~ decorated. modern kitchen. E·Z financin~ fmm $26.990. drn ClnSf' 10 kiddirs para-w 1 k & L Jiving. Master 1ized bed· di!<('·. l..an;c nr.11· club hon~r a er ee rooms, 3 baths, 49 x 19 fl. ·ed &: liltered PC>OL, 3 111.rgc CA.RNABAPf -M... 50' Jot. \Veil landscaped. Rancho La Cuesta ' aa•LTT ce. , REALTY · IRrge southern patio. As-Brookhurst &: Atlanta "·11h ~1• 11n1nln-:;: riool. rrno1s glas1 enclosed sundttk with bedrooms + family rm. , Nt1r Ntwport Po11 orrfr t ium~hl• 6.,,. loon. ...,,0 """"· • II Ao'I fog P'.' lireplaCt's. 11nd Rbove all a~ 1093 l:iaker. C.M. .. .. ,. JU<>'L,,.... " "' a nd 0111ny 01hrr arui·111r.~. '.!790 Harbor Bh·d. at Adams a brealh taking upper bay Room for Dll<fs boa! or ;;4.J-016.'l Open 'ti! 9:00 P.!1.1. \•lew. Priced below n"place. trailer. l\IRke yuur dollars -E xc eptional Financing. mcnt. 842-5581 or 540-1720. '"m' 61\" loa•. I:==== NEWPORT Jean Smith, R_ealtcr SlfXll. Bofow f11A. 4 "'· co"d. (()pen Eveningsl INVESTORS HEIGHTS Pool, elect. bltni=, ref, owe n1C'an more. Not just 8 home, 10•;, Down-5¥••/o LOAN _T•"'•""•'•I ______ ;;; ~ $46·5110 bur a \\'llY of lire. Call for Bcautifui \\'cs!clifl home has • ~~~~mt, sho\\·1ng 5'16'2313. lnrgc assumable Joan. Pric. Swimming Pool l500Alllmlet~,tM. C'd right 81 $411.:1()(), 4 Bedroom. 2 bath. wood ~~"!"~"!"~~~~~ OPEN EVEN INGS floor. FP. 2 ye11r11 old, Cus-: b ·1 134 ~ READY NOW 7~07 E. Coasl lhvy !Om UI I. . ......... W II M C cl,I RI' Jvr n \Veils nl!W 4 Bedroom, 3 Oppositr Ma,cAr1hur Blvd. , • •-c ar •· rs 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. bath + powder room. View LEASE OPTION New 4 BR OR. & FAM J;>.11\IEDIATF: POSSES."l lON. Ll11 !e money nrcdcd. Stun. nin):: 4 hui;te bedruomB. Dou- blr hreJllAN". 1"0R;>.1AL Of1ll·1·---------T~G. F'llmi!y r00nl , Gourmi·I LIDO WATERFRONT Kilchrn. l\lOVf' wit h option APTS •• 320 LIDO NORD m~ll<'Y and rca.i;on;il:>lc rC'nL NOW REDUCED TO &l..-O.'l,03 $1 50,000-Xlnt T1rms FOREST E. OLSON 6 """';1,1 ""'"· 6 '" fJl('. Rral!ors Macnab-Irvine HC'Alty Com puny i:arRgl'S ,f,z ulility room wilh 80 ft . fronuni;: on f'Xcellent ~<A·lmm1ng beach. Uni!s af1! nc"•ly lurniRhed. Bill Grundy, Rtalfor R.13 Do~r Dr .. N.B. 647-4620 LOTS 01rona !1l1;:hl1nd~ Viri\· B AYFRONT APTS. Spf!1·1acular \'IC\\' ot ocean VISTA, DEL LIDO Hi;:h nn thr hill.'\)! Stlffi P ier & Slip Availabl1 trontA:ZC'~. ree propcn.y. $~.!JOO AND UP Allktnq s.'!5.lXX). G 1org1 Wiiiiamson 642·1235 675-3210 REAL TOR 673-4350 645-1564 ..... \ 548-7729 Eves: 64'1-0684 home in Dover Shores. R!ch ly p<loellcd family rm . -2-Housi.-c>ne Lot w/frplc & wet bar. Swim. Near 16~th & Tustin ming pool In wa11C'd • In Fronl home, 2 bedrms, i;hake patio. Roy J. Ward, Realtor roof. Both homes have clec _64:.::.&~"'°=·~·cc.•P'c,..."~"~;~1'~·-,.­ ranges/disposals, fireplaces A LOT FOR A !.!"~'°'· 130.soo w1th l3000 UTILE Costa Mes• Investment In this rustic home faClnr 541-7711 Beautiful Sanla Ana. countt)' NEAR club, 1500 sq feet -·ith a lqe family area and din. C-0-L-L-E-O·E P-A·R-K Ing: room, Double car gar· $2.1,950 age with drlv@-lt1mugh boat .3 Qfd_room• 2 Bath& door. 76 x 120 foot-R-2 k>t. Bu lll-ln.1 11·1 • buy at $24,500, call Double C11r GA.rage now ~6-2313 Inte~m· 1-'llA or VA Term• Ct.II "6-231l \0 THE REAL ,, ESTATERS . . ' --'======= O THI: REAL \~ f.STATI:R!:; NEED Jn:LPT ~ tor 1t 1n Pllol Classified. Phone Ml-56'71 Deluxe Triplex $22 500 646-3255 2nd., assm. s~. ~ FHA. Stepg to Bay & Ocean, 2. -' 493-34111 4 BR, + 1-3 BR. 6 mo. old A dandy fixer-upper 2 brd---l A-RGE-HOMe-========= Income o/$15.000 yr, $87,SOO. room & balh plus 1 1 bed-5 Bedrm family rm xlnt Huntington Harriet Perry, Rltr room .& balh nca~ shori;ilng street 1~ street 4S f;, Jot. Harbour 642-9178 642;1994 ~ Cant be bc1l t with II httle B·· app't only. _R_E_D_E_C--.--,.-,,-,-,-,-. ,-, 1405 2 HOMES .. 1 LOT cl~anin' & 1ixin'. -J">horil' ~ $97,000 \\.atel'lro.nt 3 an & d~:k ror Finest E-sldl! location, 2 BR 645-7l7l -to sec. Owner may trade down for 3 s1ilc, tsr, or lsc opll<ln. 1 BA each. fo'rcshly painted Bdrm. 1".omc in Tcrra«s. 6-14---1221 . I Id t 13, ~.IVI Cdf\f. 1v\lh ocean view. =--.=-=-~-==~-~.--nz e & ou .. ,.,..,., Harritt Perry, Rltr. LIDO REALTY INC. Fountain Vall•Y 642-7994 642-91781 --"'""'======:::' 3.17 Via l.ldo 673-1300 ----I 1410 OPEN DAILY 2 lo 5 EXPANDABLE cozy com- -403 16t h Pl., l Bed ~m. p11.ct. 3 Br. en lg. sunny lot. Barrett Realty 642-5200 $52.500. Ownr.·67s.-~3. Cciita -w11 1100 ESTATE SALE. Charmina: 3 Univar slty Park 1237 Huntinnton Beach 1400 bedrm home, h 1. rd wo od l;:;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;:;;;;:;:;;;I • floon wilh lush n e w ------·-------- O&l'f>'tlttg. "'"otry ''" 6 1'2% LOAN NUDfSll kitchen & loll and lots ol y&J can take over thl:o1 6•,~ frnit tree1. One of a kind al •--I $22,SOO. FHA Ol' VA terms '°""on th s 2 BR & d('n !ll'p-•• "Stratford Sq. Home I" Low Inte rest Loanl Pool · he111Nf ,t. fllrlri·d. 4 BR. lovely yrord. Oest area. 0 1\'nrr lrittt.~fCl'frd. HAFFDAL REAL TY 842"4405 4 BR Ii: fam. rm, 2 b11. new crpts, Xlnt oond. SJ60d down to assume l'"'l!A loan. fo\111 price $21,650. By o"·ner. 1i82l AMt St. 9&8-603S. availllblt . Call 54 5-8 4 2 4 , ante horn!!. ~autlfully drc· Allen1ion getter and ~ Is 1hi9 SOU!h Coul'"Rfill~ -,o;-atcd, lotn.ainl.l~ICPn@'.il beRcifl)eltill:YWlfh-iiiHiTIJllF WESTCLIFF area, 3 BR on ~3~~ 10 shopping. r p .t:•rdcn patio. Pnfl('l('d 12.~ '-""'--=:--:.--o=,-..,=:== culodf'·UC. Alley. Lie boet ' R. d . I M-par1tlf' fa1nll,v room "rlth L•gun1 Beach 1705 yard. As11ume 51ii% FHA •. 1 fi.d R.talt~ wet bar and' "inc r•cks. Sc- i $21 850 Owrt I bkr tJn1v. Park ~n!er, Irvine eluded master 1111He. * $34,950 * :m . . . Oil! Anytlm~ &U-M20· Walker & Lea @!JO' tu bch. View, Xllll cond. A1sume $22,000 51/4'/. GI JT'S \VOND£RFUL . I h fl Pl.ACE REAl.TV ~94.9704 INn on 4 BR, de n, 1'4 bn.. mnny buys tn app"8nce1 Rrn\tors LA)?UNA HIDEAWAY- Crrt!drp. 270 Robinhood Ln. you find In the Cll1.111ficd 7682 Edlnl:('t Exqul~he. aardcns, putiQI:, 1 i:n.000 t"P 64S.1294. Ads. Check 1hem now! M;:>-t::..:;<;::511:_ ___ ....:."'::l).1.::':.;' ~:..:.·..:br:::·c.'::":::"::""::..cl::lll:::,500:::::·..:":::::'·:.:'132ii~ i I 1. I • ll! DAil V PILOT T11tsday, Stpttmbet l , 1q70 RENTALS RENTAL) RE NTALS RENTALS RENTALS R E N TALS RENTALS HOUSES FOR SALE Lag~ ~:h-:-J;o; H~ Furnished ~o~Ht Unfurnished • Hou••• Unfumlshed Houses Unfu rnfahta 2 P!!:._FurnfthM Aph. Furnished AptL Unfurnished l"'-'--'""-;.c..-"'.;;.;;-'--'--""-1-'-'-'-~ --• ·~ MEX ICAN ST·YLE Balb.. 2300 Ge nerol -Nowp0rt Beach . 3'.!00 Leguna N iguel 3701 Huntington lleadt -Huntinglon lleadt -Cotta Masa 5100 Aaobe bricl< • ..... ..... Spoet><tllar °"''"' Vl<w * o· ,.,... & Dr-m ~. "'· 2 ba, ""'" "'"· - 1 ""====:::-..:..;.;:::.:.::::::::!!!::::~~'.!.-:=-HARBOR GREENS Te:{t\lftd Ooort. Beamed Penln Pt. 4 br. 2 ba bch TT - -IT. - ---bltnt, pvt beach. Clubt\s.e it. ccUlna:a. \'hought Iron fix. S225. Avail 9115. ~. Jn the pool while . tots and lllOYe Up TO pool prtvilrges. m mo. GARD?:N .t: STUDIO APTS 1u~.thnJout...MWCAC1 oook. pets romp safely in fenced 495-St98 or m.472'J. THE HIGHLANDER Ba.ch. 1. 2. 3 BR's, from SllO. style fireplace. Ocean Yiew Lido Isle 2151 atta. 3 BR 2 Ba, atove, THE BLUFFS = "Scottis{"fieat" 2700 Petenon Way, C.M. from all Olnl A.NQ.. ·---· washer &: dryer, Near M ' • Vi • 3708 16 6 546-0370 -.b kf :°°ma. r: Bed· •• • FlJRN or Unfurn 3 BR. school. Sl85..' CALI. NOWi Several cOOice brand-new 3 ISSIOn •1° 1 I Parkside Ln. rta as 2 ~-$56500 3 BA home. Winter or Home-F inders 64$-2951 Bdrm 2~ balh towne homes. ·~------Mgr. 842-1969 VILLA MESA APTS. "'° 1 . ml ~-. M It · I ' I ... • yearly le~. Call 673-3948 Cpt/drp, priv. ptiUo, pools, 2BR & den, 2BA, curtalNi & 2 BR, Prlv patio. Hid pooJ. _ nc uu~• ex can urn :!ln· or 837_2532 FOR ttnt: We repre&en waJk to schools & &hopping drapeis thruout, w 1 w cptg, 2 car cnfl'd garl Child1tn U'liS, 18,000 rentals throughout _ Vacant iparkllng aod fenced yard, close to schools welcome, no peti please! -:::MTan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenne~ St. 494-9473 5'1~16 M ission Vie jo 1708 SAVE! BY OWNER.. 4 br, 3 ba, fam. rm. profes,, lndscpd, r;prinkltta, fenced, playhouse. etc. etc. Across from park. 1 blk ach1. 137.900. 830-27"1. Dana Point 1740 DECORATOR'S horn~. ocean view, model-like 3 BR, 2 BA. lndscpd, custon1 fixture & dra~. bltinJJ. P.1any xtras. Make oHer. Bier. ......... RENTALS Houses Furnished General 2000 ---·-----$125-1 BR BEACH Cottage. ~ 7 Br. duplex $135. * BEACON * 645-0111 GUARANTEED/LICENSED Rentals to Share 2005 BED ln art studio, you share room with artist's equl~ ment, Private closet. chest of drawers. Forced a.Ir heat. color TV, home privUf!ges. StuOent only. Nr OCC 546-3634 SllARE home with family ol 4. Private room, co!or TV. Home privile11:e1, Near OCC. Mu11t be student or cool under 40. 546-3634 WORKING Girl wishes to share Bal Isle home w/aame, 673-2383 anytime. S HARE my el~gant waterfront home wl dock. Polan. 30-60 )'l'5. $150 mo. 615-4331 P.tALE in 30's will share 2 br home w/sa.me. Roofdeck. patio. 4 blk! to beach. So. Laguna. $125 mo. 499-4307 19.28, 3 slory beach home, 4 ~rm. 4 bath, 3 trplc. Call 6T>868!I eves. Costa Mesi 2100 3.BR. 3 Ba. oU~water home; Orang_e County. Houses, ready, $350 mo. ~ shopping, dlshwu!icr, San Diego Frwy, to Sl65 mo. 719 \Y. \Yilson. furn., $130 ?t1onlh ApartmentS, furnished, un· oven. -range,·dllposal. Avail Beach Blvd, 4 blks 646-1251. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620 furnished, 11.ll '.prlcea. Save 3 Bdrni 2 bath furn1ahed tri. Sept l S250 836-2722. So. 1.(1 Holt, W. on T"" & Mo"' LI °""' Holt 1 b!k. OUIETI ALL NEW! 2355 e y, ce · • level "doll house" at $315 RENTALS Cpts, drps, blt·ln~. 2 BR. bonded & guaranteed. Tele-mo A F I h-, Tttnd Sys!ems Inc., 832-7800. . pts. urn s """ Adults, oo~Harbor lo LA QUINTA HERMOSA & Adat'iii"' Garage available W SO. BAYFRONT * R I & E • * Premium hOme -"Linda" General 4000 * 540..399'1 * 4 Br. 3~~ ba. waterfront e ax n1~Y plan on major greenbelt. "Modern Spanish" home & 2 Br. 1 Ba. gar. apt. Your own UtUe Kingdom. Choice one level 3 Bclnn 21 -R-E_N_J __ f_U_R_N_l_J _U_R_E_ 16211 P.trkslde Ln. $170, 2 BR. bath & i,; studio, Dock !or 2 boats Neat 3 BR home. Crpts, bath at S385 mo. Mnr. 847_5441 drps, cpta, patio. Avail 9/1. Bill Grundy, Rltr 642-4620 drps, fenced yard. $115. • 714: 5t8-8301 or 213 : ========~I THIS \\10 N'T LAST. The Big "E'.:: Plan _ end *DIRECT TO TENANT FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN ~5'2-'221~==~---- Laguna Beach 2705 Hom•F inde rs 64S-2:951 unit with swceping green. 24-Hr. Delivery Lush landscaping, Cabana, covered court-* DELUXE l & 2 BR -::-=:-::-------IVERY CLEAN & VACANT belt view. 21.00 ,q. ft. of Iux. lOO'fo Pllrchase Optlon Y3:rds, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & foun· Garden Apts. Bit-Ins, priv. RENTALS/LEASES Custom apt with bltins, uryliving-2or3Bdrmand Complete 1 BR Apt as tams. paUo, heated pool, 1rplc. UNFURNISHED c11>ts, drps, 3 big bedrooms, 1am rm. $475 mo. Low as $22/mo. ''THE UL Tl MATE IN APTS'' Adults. $145 mo. 516-5163 1.ge. 3 bdrm. & lam. nn. $190 mo. Agent 546-4141 30-0ay Minimum 1 BR's-From $150 . -2 BR's-From $175 QUlET ADULT LIVING hon1t>. Custom decorated, * LANDLORDS Executive-Bay View -4 * WIDE VARIETY 1 ====A=ll=u=l=il=·=i=n=cl='='F_u'=r=n=&=U=n=lu=r=n."====ll & 2 Br. Shag crpts, hllns. new carpets, fireplace, bilt-Bdrm 2\.; bath split level -CUSTOM FURNITURE •· pool, beaut. lndscpd. $15(1 & in1, exc. ocyan view. l yr. Free ll('l"Vice to you. Save privacy & elegance at $475 RENTAL ,N:.:..:•~w~po=r~t_B::;:ea=c=h"---~42=00:.: Ba lboa ls_la_nd ___ 4355 $170 mo. incl all util.241 lease. Rer. req, $350 Mo. Advertising costs, We have mo. 517 w. 19th St., CM, MS-3481 , · Avocado SL 646--0979. FURNISHED RENTALS tenants ~·ailing in Jine: A New WaY. To Live BAYFRONT W/Picr. 3 Br/2 2 bdrm. apt at Woods Cove, CA.LL Lavishly appointed -spac· REMARKABLY -In Newport Beach Ba. Upper apt. Sept..June, 7 BR, "l BA·. up-sfair'!Nr. 150 )'ds. to beach - Lg'e. Hom•Finders 64S...295t iou1 3 Bdrm 2~ bath spilt UNBELIEVABLY ' OAKWOOD GARDEN $750/mo. 615-1909 or OCC. Crpts/drps. bltins . level -outstanding B•y and EXTRAOROINARlL Y 577-7263. f'reshly painted. S139/mo. tree shaded patio. Lease for .... TUSTIN. Rent or Buy 3 APARTMENTS 5518151 " night li<>hl view -for the> BEAUTIFUL "-·,:.;.;~·-------Sl65 Mo. BR.. 2 ba, $220 mo IS\I!", Resp .. V I D" G d A On 16th Street btwn • ·--~ 2 bdrm. at Victoria Beach. cpl. 00 smoke, re t • 5 . particular family at S500 mo. a •sere If •n pts Irvine and Dover Dr. Hun1ington Beach 4400 2 BR: N1!w paint & crpls. Exe, viC".w, flrep!c. A few 646-5593 Putting green, waterfall & (7141 642_,170 -·---$160/mo. 557-9746 or In· steps to sand. Lease Others Available at: iritream, flowen everywhere, .ON . a· EACH! quire at 1343 Bay, Apt B .. S275 Mo. Costa Mesa 3100 45' pool, rec.. room, 'iUiards, WINTER Rental, -Norking _c_M_. _______ _ Charm ,tudio, dcci< w/ocean BBQ's, Sauna, furn .. unfum, girls, maximum 3 -3 BR, 1 * NEW 2 Br. 2 Ba. Bltns. view, ocean side of hwy, at 2 BR~ dbl gar·+ spact: !or &st M' l & 2 Br. also Singles from ba, garage, $300 mo incl e Single apl.s from $165 garage. l child ok. $115. \\"ooda C.ove. Lease ·boat & U:lr, Man/wile, sm · $135. See ft! ab:I Parsons util. No pets Avail 9/8. See e 2 BR Furn. From S285 962-4180 $135 'lo.. child, no ...... 1.5, $150 mo. l sl Rd., 64U670. Between Har-wknds or ad 6pm 116 "A" e 2 BR unrurn $260 c.,~EW;..;=,-=BD-"-''!--B--•• ..--t• bor&Ne..,.,,.,rt .2BlkN.19lh 341h St NB " ,..., · earn Artistic studio cottage, fire-& last mo + dep. &16-4913 .... * ~..... · Carpets-drapes-dishwashe.r ceilings, \\-'Ood paneling. All p~ce, high glass windows, aft 3 pm. Just for Single Adults NEWPORT Riviera. 3 BR/ heated pool-sauna.tennis rec featurei;. $165. Adults. path leads to beach, Leue $200-LRG 3 Br, 2 Ba, trpl, 2414 Vista Del Oro SOUTH BAY CLUB 2~ Ba tam/rm, bltins, rec room-ocean vie1''S no pets. CaJI nov; 646-0073 $185 Mo. r;tv; can luhi. Sngls ok. Newport Beach 64+1133 APARTMl!NTS pool &: rec/center. $325/mo patios.ample parkifl&. * 381 \Y. Bay Strttt. * P.1ISSION REALTY 494--0731 * BEACON* 64>0111 Newport Beach + util. 645-2089. Winter ren-Security guards. X-Lrg 3 BR, 7 BA. New THREE A.ROI BAY * $215 GUARANTEED/LICENSED 880 Jrvlne Ave. tal w/9 mo Lse.. FURN. also Avail. crpts, new drps. 2 child. ok. 2 BR, drps. fr1>1. dbl gar, SHARP house for University Park (Irvine and 16th) MESA MOTEL HUNTINGTON Sl65mo + SGOdep.557-9752. patio, blk to beach. ocean lease/East C.!\f, 4 br/fam/ (714) 64S.0550 * U)\Y WEEKLY ~TES * PACIFIC LARGE I Br. Crpts, drps, view. Adults. 499-4079. din'g, close 10 schools & For Rentals in University Kitchen, TV's maid service. bltns, patio, garage. Adults, 3 BR. 2 BA. $115 mo., 9 mo. shOppipg, S30IJ. 642-1228 Park & Turtle Rock, Call: ..,.From $38.50 Wk. Heated Pool 711. ~N ~~ri HB. no pets. Sl.15. 646-1767. lease. Quiet, no traffic, WESTCLIFF area, 3 Br, lge From $165/mo. Lwcury Sh~ &46-9681 Ole, open 10 am-6 pm DaiJ.y ./ LRG 2 & 3 BR. 2 Baths. ocean view, 2 blocks from fncd yard, Quiet cul-de-sac. gle Apts. Complete maid \YAT£RFRONT, Yrty or Managl!d l:ly Frp!c, bit-ins, crpts, drps, brnlch. 494-7424. $250 mo. 54()...2266 service, housewares, linens, v.•inlcr, 2 hr. t ba, wfclock. \VILLIMt WALTERS cq,.. e.ncl gar, palio. S46-lOJ4 Rent at Jse. option 2 BR, 1 ~ $130-NICE 2 Br, patio, garg, aU util, heated pool. 360111.i Finley. Ph.• (714 ) LRG 2 Br1 1% Ba, tamilit's BA. spacious, view, adults. ·children &·pet ok. VILLAGE INN 673-8249. Adults onl$', no 2 BR. Pool. Adu I ts . only, 7 child. ok. No pets. $700-$2'".i:l. 49'J.4021. *BEACON* 645-0111 Laguna Beach 494-9436 pets. Beaut/~iet! Util 1nc 1 $150. 726 Joann St, C\.1. GUARANTEED/LICENSED lst Western Bank Bldg. BALBOA' INN 3 BR-2~2 BA C.ondo: f'urn or $200/mo. 17676 Cameron, $175 UTIL. pt\ 7 Br. 1~~ ba. 2710 $145-CLEAN 2 Br TriplCx. Unive.rslty Park Balboa 675--8740 unfurn. $300 unf. Pvt/ 847-6171. Pvt patio. See mgr 339 ----------Cp!s, stv/rerrig. Child ok. Day 83UIOI Nights _ patio, pool. 407 F'Jagshlp'Rd, AT Beach • \Vinter P...atcs. Cabrillo. Ph. 846-:l6118 ON Golf Course. 2 BR. du-* BEACON * 645-0111 *l'iOT & TIRED?* NB. 213/682-31XKJ OPEN 1 & 2 Bdrms., pool; furn. or 3 BR. 7 Ba. Ap!. Bltns. plex. Heated pool. W1k to GUARANTEED/LICENSED 2 Bdrms, l·bath $280 . SUN! unfurn. Adults. 219 15th St. Crpts, drps. $175 mo. 2515 bch. $175. mo. 244 Del Ga.do ~~co'-..:..:,.c.~-~.:..::_:.,14 Bdrms, 2~ ba Sl"iO After a hard days. worMn-·OCEANFRONT Deluxe l & '220 1_2th St. Orange Avt', CJ\1. 673-0053 e 3 BR. 2 ba, fenced yard, 3 BR 2 ba RP home S375 joy a dip in lhe pool, 2 Br. BR 2 BA l il San Clemente, 496-6301. crps, drps & sprnklrs. Call 3 Br tnhouse Easlbluif $400 furn. util. incl. Tot OK. $140. lOti. $350 rr:.rp,;v;~~! B:~:~ROc~tJlN!Pa~lt. 2 BR triplex, bltns, cpt/drp, after 5.30, 540-0096 • RED HILL REALTY HURRY .FOR THIS! 673-1053 LINDBORG CO. ~2579 ga.n.&"e. patio. $135. 548-1861. Summer Rentili 2910 ~1fEti C.J\~. B~~ 2 1°t!,· Univ. Park Center, Irvine Home-Finders 64>295 I BEAUT 2 BR, v:nrr on 1-BAOf. $95 util incl. Lrg 1 Newp;rt Bel ch · 5200 op on · · Call Anytime 833-0820 HOUOA Y PLAZA oct"anfmt. lrplc. total furn BR. extra closets. SI40. bltns. S275. 646-8720. DELUXE Spacklw 1 Bd.nn. xcept linens. $300 mo/util Pool, patio. Adults. 536-6117. • 3 BR. 2 ba, crpt, drps. Back B_ay 3240 HFurn_ .. apt. 1Sl35. P11us ulilk. pd. &45-3839. DELUXE l Br. furn .• ~ ...... le. PARK NEWPORT • can' Ba lboa Island San Clemente Ba yfront-Bal. Penin. LOVELY 5 BR. 4 BA. Pier/float Avail Se~t 1st. FOR Lease-Furn. condo. 2 Also avail for winter .-en- br, 1 ~-t ha. Adults. Swim· I •'"ei;'·~·~""c..:;.,c'°~"=-· ----ming pool. Sl77.SO mo. MuJI. RENTALS College Park. $~. eatcu poo · Amp e par · ~--~------1 .,. free livg ovrlkg the water. 7 549-2SM Back B1y View & Poot ing: No children -no pets. IDEAL FOR SHARING-3 br, Cl()S(! to beach~ S160/mo. pools, 1 terutis els. $7:i0.000 2 STOR" , Br. Ex•c. Hom•. 4 Bedrm .. den, formal dining, 1965 Pomona, C.M. 2 ba upper, 5 u n deck' Call 536-l459. Spa. From S175 to S.150. i ., .. dshwhr, avail lse 9/1. 1 br -========== Avail. Sept. 5th. $Xl0/mo sm family area, cov patio & avail 9112. 544-3J4S L B Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 sty * ~()..65.19 * . pool. Avaij Sept 1st. $375 Costa Mesa •100 aguna each 4705 Townhouses. Elcc. kit. pri an Realty 540-2960 or 646-6257 Houses Unfurnished • -··-. B'~. ••2 •~s • NE'IY 3 br, 2 ha. On waler. pat or bat 0 ··b•-"· p' S .....,.....,., '" ....,, BLUE Lagoon: Elegantly · . ""' u11 P•"S· o • Newport lleadt 2200 WATERFRONT PIER & FLOAT 3 Bcdrm., 2 bath, formal din. lng nn, fireplace, w/w C!1J!5, and furnished com. plete. Obie gar. Lease only. $500 per mo. ReaHor ~·4353. ARTISTIC Home·2 br, frplc, patio on Newport Isle across from park & waler w/mooring. 3 blks lo beach. Adults, 9 mo Jse, $225. 6~7236. 401 39th SL 7 BR. Beach Cottage. F'Umished. Year round ren- tal. :275 mo. 1st & last mo's required. Call 675-11184. LIDO SANOS. Pool privil., 7 blks from Ocean. 3 Br. 2 Ba. $275 per mo. Winter only. * ~2-aBOO. 3 BR. Bayfront J-lome. $365 mo. For lease or for sale. * 536-3143 Corona d el M•r 2250 $200 l\fo-7 br hse partly turn. Ulil incl. Nr. market & restaurant. Adult5 only, no pets. Avail 9/1. 673-8936. 3 BR cpt/drp. lrpl, yard, open beams. S250 mo. Lse req. Sept 15-June 15. 606 JAS~f!NE 2300 2 BR: NPT. lfT . area. 1 Avail Se pt. 12 or sooner. ·• ·-pt d J t 3000 Adul!A: no pets. $165/mo. ---E as·l _B_l_uff----:---42 A~! "'ut!AI P~, .• a~tr~~ve, $300, yearly or winter lse. rurn. 2 BR, 7 BA apt, chann. mai .,..,r, .c ~. rps. us Plull sec. dpt. S42-5308 ~' rvu, pa , ua1....:n 67~7408 ing atmospbere, 2 pools, ten. N. of Fashion Isl at Jam- ----------1 Jiving. Adulls, no pets. ---·-------nis, patio, private beach. boree & San Joaquin Hills * Swim Swim!! * DUPLEX -Separate hse, 7 LUXURIOUS 3 BR 2 ha on 1 BR-Sl50. 2 BR-$175 • ~·INTER RENTALS e beaut. ocean vlew. Adulis Rd. 644-1900 for leasing in· hr: encl. gar & patio. S135. one levt>l. Popu]ar "Linda" 1800 Wallace Ave Ch-f Rent NOW tor Sep!.! fo 3 Br. 2 Ba. Stove, crpts, drps. Will check refs. 5"18-4445. model. Beam ceilings, beaut DELUXE T ho ' 3' B, 2 ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 only, no pets. 499·3266 or . + POOi... Bring the kiddias greenblt Joe patios near own use, r, i]:if:i<i"fi~'&,~:iificf,;~ 1 04~99~·~2200~~· ~~----Nr:ir Ocean 2 Br. $195 yrly. &. smaJI pets, Sl?O, THIS IM1\1EDIATE possession S'l15 pool. So!OO. • ' Ba, drapes. w/w crpts, DELUXE 2 Br. Westclifr loc. 2 BR, 2 BA, Choice Joe. Nc1v cpls & drps, re( & WON'T LA.ST! ii BR. norlh C.M. area. e RED HILL REALTY' dshwhr, patio. S2 3 5 /mo Pool & bltns. Adults $210 no Year-round. Ulil pd. SlB5. range Fireplace 4 ga1·: Hom•Finder s 645-2951· Agt>nl 546--414 1 Univ. Park, Irvine fum. Nr all sch11 (elem thru '°"''~'"~";...,.2-6"-=27_4~. ~--~-538-7095 Af! S pm. avail now 309 36th St. PEE WEE . 2 I 25 Mesa Verdo 3110 =~Ca;;:ll~A~o~y~t)~m~o~ll.13--0820~~~=l ;iOC'iiC~)~. SJA°PooiJi~I'~· u833-iiSl6-:"01(.&' LGE. l-BR., Penin. Pl. 1'~ FURN ISHED l BR. Cl-· to _64_64626 __ , _A_d_ll_,_. ----. tiny • l Bkr -:: ./ NASSAU PALMS _ 1 & 2 Blk. to ocean. Winter $160; .,.,.. Jltrr 1-NUT ' $95 Bkrl----------1--beach & shoppi·og. n-,p. VJE\Y ; 2 bdrms, fi!'eplace, v• • • c • d I M 3250 BR A t '" • u r Pool ""'arly Sl75. Agt. 6T:i-1642 , .... Bathlub w/ heh $130. 2 Bier f.1ESA Verde 3 br, 1% ba, or na • ar • P s. r:i ·• 11 • • ,~ Adult. 494-7079 garage, split level. Adults HUG this hse tight 3 bd Sl 75. dining nn . Immaculate! -h---------1 pinr.-pong, BBQ. .shad Y 1 br rurn apt ror sublet Sept. RENTALS only. Noon until 4pm. 7001 Vic\\' of sea. Bkr. S2.f5 mo. Owner 545-85.54 CllARJ\11NG . beam ceilin'"', ~~~-' ~~·.-, 177 E. Z2r.d St. I thru Jitay 15. 1/2 l:llock K,ngs Ro ad . $250 mo. ·~· ~ -1 ~ h 114' S7'8299 _A.pts. Unfurnished " .• 0 3974 . HOUSF;BOAT! not really but 4 BR, 2 ba home soon avail 3 Br. homt' + den. 7 baths.I-''=-"-''=-~~~~=-rom .,.,ac · · · "' •~•o- beachy 2 & sun P. $145 Bkr Back yarri patio. Nr schools. Patio. 2 car gar. Jo"enced. No Fum Bachelor & 1 BR. .DELUXE 2 BR oceanfront. General 5000 * OCEAN VlE\V * A JUNK. sorta. $75 Bkr SJ25 mo. 546-2574. pets. $.115 mo. LeaSt'. AU 6 Ext'l"Ptionally n!Ct'! _.,,vail 9/12-7/1. $225 mo. 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; \2! 2 Bdr. l ba. duplex yrly RUN'G WATER OlITSIDE I='==='======= pm, 675-7909 Below renlal value! 548-4928 11 or mo. 642-3639 Sea scape view 4. $170 Bkr Ne wport Beach 3200 VERY Nice-~c. 3 Bdrm, 2 zuo Newport Blvd, 0~· 2 BR Bay view apt. nu cpls, VEN DOME * * 1 BR. BALBOA BAY CALL EVELYN '956-2200 Balh. Sunroom frplc CLEAN2Br.1¥..BaStudtos. drps,S200mo9molse.S250 CLUB APT. S,150 mo. Call ./LANDLORDS BAY VIEW-BLUITS Ne\V 4 Adults no peis Refs. Furn avail. Cpts, drps. pool yrly. 675-8638 li\1l.1ACULATE API'S! ~2918 \Ve've got the people hr. 2n ba twnhse. Fam rm. 675-4497. · · \Vrk'g cpl pref. $145 & up. ;\OULT and " . t ••-1 frpl c, crpt'g, drps, pool. 646--0496. N ~ Hgt '210 FA' " 0 -t. i ou ve go .. .., p ace Lea!le $395 644-5268 3 BR. 2 Ba., cpls, drps.; frpl. , •WPo• r s. ~ " ~ .,..,c ion \Ve'll do the sending · · Dix. duple:i1:. S295 on lease. l or 2 hr apt w/gar. pa110. Close to shopping, You'll do no spending 3 BR., furn. 9 mos lse. S250 3 Realtor 675-lliGt. Very l'lean. Unlil June 15. Winter rt'Tltal , 2 BR apt, * Spacious 3 BR's 2 hll CALL EVELYN 956·2200 BR .. yearly. $265. 4 BR. 675-2562, 94: aft 4:30, 54~ fireplace, patio. Sl!X.I. * s~im pool, putli:rce channel front. yrly lsc $$375. 2 Br, 2 ~a, near ocean. Cou-1974 311-B \\'ood!and C.M Adults. no pets. 646-TJ84. * F'rpl, Indiv.fln c'l~ *By the Sea* Caywood Realty 548-1200 pie 0 y, S.lOO. G.il . · · ·1 ~=====c'=='===I 1845 Ana ho1'm Ave. Robertson, RC'.altor 67!'>-2440. Furn. 1 BR & Charming 2 br. home away •• 3 BR. Fam rm, bllns. -· __ _ BACHEL'JR Corona del Mar 4250 COSTA :.tESA 642-2824 rrom rhe smog. S'!ove. re-2 127",,.B~r,/m"o"". 54•0 >;'1421· Lease Lido Isle 3351 2110 Newpor t Blvd, CM 2 ·Bc~~hM. with I ~~""~""~'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!• frig., & yard. Li!Ue Clnes ., ...-,..., NE\V 1-Z.3 BR's. All bltns, I ' . _ * WKLY-Lovely op1. Bach fi1'CplacC". f)('ar shopp ing, t/d 5 V>e come. S 10. , TIME FOR llSO th 67,9103 cp rp, gar. Nr. . Coast Home-Finders 645-2951 4 Bdrm, 3 Bath. across from or cpl. )?um. Kitck. S35 v.·k ___ m_oo_. __ ~_0_·__ Plaza. 54()...1973, 5-15--7321 tennlscrt,playground. & up. 546--0451 S:vlALL Apt for si nglel~====="::O:'=='=== General LANDLORDS "UICK CASH clubhouse & beach! QUIET Adult couple only. 2 n1ature \\-'Oman. 2 hlocks to Vac1 ncy Problems ,,. $650/per mo. 613-7489 or BR. No pets. Drps. crpt8, beach. Reasonable. 675-4943. Ended 642..fi500· dsh~·hr. IJCaren pool. Sl45 e 1 BR APT, FURN e L k !\lulliP.,le listings rental net. THROUGH A .. -·-. --"""'-P "'t i e Living in Y,pur H , n.io ...... ~a acHic Ave, '-'' • 675-4952 • OWN HOME. , I I '''Ork available to serve all unt1n9fon'"'Be•ch 3400 54~78 or &12-4-129 property owners, house or PENlN. Deltlj: dupll'x~un1-"1hlUl'RY $115 for an apt'!'. Costa Mesa 5100 apartment. Vacancies filled DAILY PILOT . 2 BR rum, newly dttara!ed. mC'.r SJ;,(} ..,.,.k. wintt'r $175 whbn \Ve can rent You one CHARMING 4 Bdr or 3 Bdr. at no c~~-1!" to you. For ·I LSE: Nu 4 br/2 .~' Close to shop'g. Adults, no mo. 2 BR l'a, 711 Cypi"l'ss. for $140, 7 BR, ne1vly dee, '""6 tam/rm. All ele<:/blt1ns. pe ts. Inqu ire 179 \; 213/69S-6012. Ud 6. den Ba.I pen. avail Sept· last, t>Uitienl "service caU. Cslm drps & Avco/crpts. Rochester. crp rp, encl patios. spac June. 2 b.1r upstairs, furn. Tele-Trend Systems, Inc. WANT AD co rn/lot-j>iltio • !ml/bck. . ./ 2 Br. upstairs, 1',rplc. .r:rnds • 2 Pools! Adults only. ~mo. 675-1.971 832·6600. Nr. sirs & heh. Avail 9/li '** l Br. Furn. No children dC'Ck. $710 mo . .Nr. beach. 2283 Fountain \Vay~. (Har. ==========''=======;;:==~========:=:I $300/mo unlurn-.$350/mo or_ prts. Sll~ mo. Call Cati 675-364i bor, turn \Y. on "'ilson}. General 2000Gene ral 2000 General 2000 furn. 962-2348 • &la-lS4S. e 1 BR FURN APT NE\Y 2 Br, 1<1 Ba w/ gar. l;:.;;;,;.;;;..::.;_ ____ ..=;c:;..:..:c::.;.;.::;_ ____ ::.:;::_::;::;::..::;_ ____ :;:;;:__1~11~4~,_~NT.E;;l'-v'tYi;';D«;o:::-;;2 -,B~,-. ~..,.=-, 1 Br. New beaut. rurn. w/garage, $175. 6Tr~ $155. Adults. Crpts, drps, • F'ncd for klds & pets. l'J~~1o. Adults only. 2211 :=:===::;::=:=:==:=:==I bltns. fncd yrrl v.·/ patio. $©\\~1A-.!££trs9 The Punle with the Builf./n Chuckle I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' /10-I I I I I I I I I I I I SCRA M·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000 *BEACON* 64S.0111 Elden. 646-977& eves. _B_a_lbo_• _____ 4300 66i E. Victoria {E), 7619-L GUARANTEED/LICENSED 1 OR 2 BR. Lrt closet!!, pool, .,... Santa Ana Al'e, 636-4J20, 1 ndults. no pets. Ulil pd. 188-1 BALBOA Peninsula Beach QUIE'T ADULT LIVING l Br. Townhouse, 1 ,~ Ba. r.1onrovia 548-0336. Front: 3 B~. 2 ha. \\'inter Cpl. drp'd. \Vshr/dry/stv in· • . . Rental. ph: '194-45.lt 1 & 2 Br. Shag crpts, bltnJJ, cl. SISS. Available 9/1. 1 BR $175. 1ncld"~ u t 1 I. pool. beaut. Jndscpd. $150 536-7914 Adults. no Pl'1S. Nr shop-3 BR. 2 ba, dshwshr, disposal. & i11c mo. Incl all util. ' · plng. Call 5-10--0623 [rplc. Avail Sep\ 15, S250 2'11 Avocado St. 646-0979 TO\VNHSE-J br. llt ba. no . * 2 BR U E * nio. 6T;).2825 or 615--0062 •1 Q NT I CE t t Q p1•ts. Applianct's avail. $180 't: D.f:L X • " e 0 m- 1110. Brookhursl. & Adanis. Cathedral ce1hng. P oo I . BACHELOR apt · furn. Yr!y , plcx~cluxe 2 br. 2 hll.. aulo. 962-49'26. · ,\dults. $15."i. &\2-7508 Sl30 mo incl util. 67S-2825or garage opener, clubhouse & 1 !n"ORY honlt' • 2 br, 2 ba. 1 ~R. F!"Plc. Beam clngs. 6~5--0662 ~~dulls, No pels. $225. Villa Pacific. Pool, terutis, Pr1v patio. Viii )'>d· $149. 1 sauna, Jacuzzi. S 7 2 5. adult only. St7-8520 Immed. occupancy. 642-3737 Bacht'lor-Spac, bca11t. turn., 2 Br. 11ouse ideal for rttired elec bltns., $120 Incl ulil. couplt' or adults cmly, Call 546-1152 NR OCC. 847~\3. lbr furn • pool, spacious Fount1in Valley ldt'al for baeht'lora. Sl25. 3410 1993 Chuun:h 548-9633 4200 Westm inste r 3612 S750 !\to furn modt>rn 2 br,, ---gar. Pet.s/Chlldttn OK. 216 $JJO..COz·y 2 Br. Blln~. prg. 20th St. 10111 &.-f>t'"IS wcilcom~. 1-.-.~~,-,,--,~B~R~.,~.r~rp-,lc-. *BEACON* 64S.0111 YEARL, .. 1 hlk 10 Beach! GUARA NTEED/LICENSED Cltiin! Call 673-.24ii.'l Ba lboa Is land 4355 \VATERFRONT. Boat dock. I Br. on Grand canal, Little Ba.I lsl r Jo'urn or uni. Yrly only. No chlldrtn or p<>ts. $225 mo incl util. Eves. 673-0207 $170 3 Br., l ~~ Ba, patio, bit-ins, crpts, drpJ. Ask about our discount plan. 8So Ctnter St., 642-8340. $100.. I BR. Oldli'r prer. Ava[! 9/1. 122 l\1agnolia, Cl\{. 494-4695 or 548-2171. r/ 3 BR trearl llPl/sep house 1 °,~a=R-. -.,.-.,-.'--',"-'-"'-'-'hl=to-.-.~,., UtU Incl. t .:a.sc S225(n10. .r:ar + park'Jt, AdlL'I only. Nr, South Bay. P.'ISildt'nn. 2214 "B" RutgC".n Or. (213) 798-4Q0.1, 646-6ll19. NEARLY NE\V J Sr. 2 Ba, i BR $150. 2 BR $1~. Pool. all elt'r I kit, frplr, patio, · F.fec. & "'Ir pd. Adlt.s, no UBQ. Alao '4 Br, 3 Ba. l..«e profs. ~ft?sa l\fanor. 2'11 Sept.June. 638-8410, ~I. "-u~n Av~. O ·I ~3-i405. YEARLY RE:NTAL .. ~ 1 rtfODERN 2 Br. Crpts .. drp1, br. open bcan1, dulch door, GE kltcb, patio, encl 211r. dshll'&hr, hltnt. Cht1rmlng, J\'r. bu.s. Sl~~. Adul!s. 120 E. you'll lovt> 11! ~2916. 20th St. ..;,......;,;. ____ _ DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S -leading ' Marketpla~e IS.ES1 ' 11••\~s1 c L A s 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642'5678 RI Nt Z I •• "' Pl '" • LU a l n 61• 111• Ti Irv - Ne- '" '" hd pi1 t'O! c" 0 E a • 3 E !no "' "" \\"' Z B dr: llp I > . .. •• - I & Fir Poe 900 ff',f; -70l 2 B< ""' :: t bl t- !llo ... •C " pm 61:-t LC:!:: '" cril s2:x 2 B mn 5-16- , R (:\,!; Sl!X LRG "'" S!SI &al' PJo:X BR IJ;i r· A\·~ 61: .. L id1 LRI'; Stul frpl :i. $ H ur :! B Cleoi snu '.! 81 rroir 11.B '\12:1. L:Ht • REI " F ou RENTALS Apt1. Unfurniah.d ----Newport Beach 5200 ... ... . . . ~-~ .. " ~· .1 ••• ,, -· ••• • • rutSdlJ, 5tpttmbff 1, 1'10 D,\ILV PflCIT :?3 , RENTALS 1 •-----~-------~I REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCIMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY-sE"RVICE DIRICTCSlif Apts. Unlurnhll~ • * * . * * ~ General ond NOTICIS and NOTICES Contractors 6610 HouNCloanlng ;:;;7~=:;:::::=;:--;;.;-p~~___.:~ Huntir.9ton Stach 5400 Offtc• R.ntal 6070 Annovnc:Mn.nt1 ~ 6410AnMunc•m•nt1 6410 * THE RD100ELt'RS * 6135 w•L• , ""'' •• """~ 1-IP~R~o)FFieE!s~s~io:iNN~A~L:-· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil,.,... "" · ioo11< ""''"""' Aln10NI new lg 3 BH arit. WANTED KHcherui , gftrage~ • carport,J Dbl gar. '1ll, w/w crpts, MAN Comple!e Remodeling. HOMEOWNERS f1oon ftrippeod & wa.xed, tpl1 clC"aned, Wlnctov.·s WL'l.hed It general house • cle.ani'\11: 2 Br. unfurn. C11>1!i, drp!!'. patlO. JIOtll, bltTU". SISO. &>at'hff ~humr Aplli, 152:i Pla1..-..nlli1. 518-2G82 11. li k 11bo111 our tlll'C(lunt. • B'A YFRONT • LUXURY Apt$. Sta~tins; •• $375 .• 642·2202 1Jrpi, dsl:11'&hr. z ba. J22j' WANTED Quatlb' eontn.ctoni 6-12-3660 1111), ~o sii;lli/pt'Ls, childn MY WAY, quallly hO/'fle 01\. ~1711 Quiel, 11'tll apoplnted oUlce OVERWEIGHT LADIES repair. \Vall11. tttlin&'. IJoors NEAR llunlln{:ton !ltirbaur on busy, beautiful Forest rte. No job too small . Nt•w Triplelo:C'Jll. Quiel a•'CI&, A''f', in Laauna Be.ach .1200 5'3-1494 "'"" ava.llable by an e::xpand. - inQ: profeuk>nal Janitori&l 51'.'rvlOi?. For last iruarantited servlcf! call 642°2551. 1 .. 1~ t BR. Di11h"'a1ihcr. tJ.~J('J. sq. ft. For weight reducin« program to establish 1=========- 1nrnnt/JX't ok. \ 21 3) Bill Shields <t94-3028 statMtlcs for rapid Permanent weiiht loss, Carpet C l•anlng 6625 2 SH. l'"rp!('; n111.turt ad11lt1i, 61.111 ~ Clubhouse Ave. Sl75 n10 l!'.'nsc. Call An11he1n1, (1) 592-262:: or (71~J 8~64JJ9 HI LLGREN SQUA E conducted by qualified physical culturists. --- AT Beach • Winier Rah~$ 1000 J\q ft Oeluxt: Otflce1 Must be a minimum of 20 pounds over· Ironing 1i1-2z.ri. -1 ,t, 2 Bdr1ns., pool: furn. nr Whaddy• W•nt? Whaddya Got? AvaU. for 1mmcd. ll!Ue in weiaht, have transportation and not cur· unturn. AduHs. 215 l~th St. SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR 011£ ol cilleA builest ·1hop.. rently under doctor's care. All inquiries com· 'f""j ~ ~ .. 'v * IRON ING * l\1y Home. Sl Hr. Pick Up & Dcliv. 54.>-7641 2 BR. l b!k 10 beach? $165 ii10 yl'al'ly. l5t &: la st + 1·leun . fee. 6T'.r4281. & 220 12th st. NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS ping cente.rs. \VW divide. pletely confldential. s,,.clal Rat• Air-cond .• music, paneUna, CARPET STEAM CLEANED REASONABLE RATE5 Allio carpel lnstall&tioo 646-5971- * IRONING. SLSO hr, btlns: hangers. 4.59 E . FloWl!ll' St, Co.<!ta l\1esa. Irvine 5238 NOW LEASING! ~r11, lanuly and adults unit~ l\t1h 101at rc<;{'l!ation club and prl' .. sl·hool. I. 1, k 3 txinns fron1 Sl50. Nr. shop- pinJ::, gfll f, school5. Jusl routh. of San Diego f'li•y fin Culvc•t' Dr, lrvinr. ~-3733. CONDO. Lrg, 1 br, 2 eflr gar. priv. patio, d!hwshr, crpts, flrps, 1 child OK, aft 6 P~t. 5:1G-<1l47. J\10RA KAI :t & .1 BR. 2 BA. Patio. Pool. 81Sl Garflrld. 1.., blk E. of Beach Blvd. (oU Garfil'ldl. 96z..mt TO\\'NHSE For lease-3 br, 2 1 ~ ba, frplc, Cfl>ll, drps, \1'shr/dryr, ref, pool, tennis, rre. S200. 536-38Jj, ~LOVELY NEW APTS Near Ocean & park. 1 & 2 BP..'s. 423 13!h St, 847·3%7 PARK WEST APARTME'.NTS 01\!Wd-and t.tan{lj;:f'd by Th<' Irvine Cri'mpany· l BR : Bllins, <'l'J>lfdr[)s. !~~~"'!"'!~~~~~·I frplr. patio , garagr & --sm/yrd. Call 847-53-06 E ast Bluff * 5242 SPAC 3 BR. 2 BA. lrg yard, e NEW DELUXE• l'nclosed garage. s 190. 3 tl1l, 2 BA Apt for lease. Adults only. Call 8424549, Incl spac. master suite, din MOVE JN NOW rm & dbl garage, ~uto door brand new 2 BR apts (JfX'llC'r avail. Pool & Rec. * from SI35 * :u'Ca. • 1 B~. NE\V? Fireplace. • FROM $26j • !\'ear Ocean. Patio. Adulrs. Sll:i An1igos \Vay, NB LINDBORG CO. 53&-257!1 n.ranagecl by I IA'! I\' II TERS CO 3 BR, 2 BA. Crpts. drps. \\'II.· 11 ' " • blt·in.'!. Sundeck. t block to PRIVATE VIEW REA CH! Sl'iS. 842-408:>. 2 6drn1s., 2 baths: eat1)Clrd, e NE\V 2 hr, crp1s. Jrps, draped. bll-i ns. d li>hwshr. j:'at•ag<'. patio. ~16;i nio. Up~l11irs. $2~ t>Ionth. !-t in. ri.11Hi!127. l ycat• ICH~f' S Lines-5 t lm11 -5 buck1 crpts, drpa:, Max, park'g & ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537.5414 1-Wh•t Y"• "•w• ll,!'~~~7 AD MUIT ~~"~~',.. ••llf Ill t1u1. maint. 270 E. 17th. St., C.M. )-'l'OUll ,,_, • ..-,.,. ... ,".. .._. llffl ., ••wt11lalftt, Mr Bram 213: 651-2700 collect J-NOTHIHG POil U.I.• -Ttu.O•S ONl.YI -======;,;;liilliW:rwnr.;:;;;:;-:c;;;~;;;; i FOR LE ASE. Lr& F ncl (F •d ) ,._ C t L t "ll DIAt.tOND Carpet CJPaning -----------· ------6790 . SPARKLE Janitorial It WJ~ rlow cleaniJla Serv. \YI~ doll's, tTsld .. comcl, coMt. cleanup. Free es!. 962-0672 To Place Your Trader's Paradi1e Ad PHONE 642·5'71 m<Xl~m. ocean vie1v, Qt. OU rH "' 1 -•m• •ry 0 1 -Back to School Sf)f'rial tk:e&-S~ps. Suitable-prof. Small black and while q.1ro==.-sa1-c,-,-,-bo-l-c~---.,.-..,.-,-,-...,·i:ioo· .sis. }'l'f'e f~JI, Lovely hon1e in hl.<Jese.rt ror 1vttkencf or pe:rmancnt h~·ing. Value $30,000. Trade for your local prope:ny. 49.14746, 499-1331. 3 Units on 2 lo!s, Via Lido area. Equity Sl'i,000, Trade for T.D.'s or ??? ? Geo~e \\'illiamso n Rl'11.lto1· 673-4350 673-1564 Eves, 62 Diesel ya<'ht sips 8, f.linl Cond, SUO fol value. Trade for apt. oUict', bu\Jdlng, Jg, :lOme, mor1gage1t. stock. Owner P.O. Box 897, HS. 1st Jaod coniract payable $100. nio, 6% int bal 18,450, Trade (or ofl icr spc. Alin. 2.000 sq ft. Con1. as dn or prepatd lse. \\1rite o~·nr. 4017 Channel Pl NB. or busmess. l999 S. Cout N~ on tag ia "Sparkle", lei at discount, ar maus-Repair-Install. fi41>-l317. '27 Chevy Cou?e H~ La"-· .. a Bch 494-9471 ··~ 5""' · · Found near park lll ln•int oleum. Pacific View hlemor. RE:\1ARC Services. 3 roomi; \Viii Trade foi· DESK· SPACEI -le Dover, N.B. ~2626 or ial Park. 4924510 $21 .50. J•'ully guaranteed. block "''all. lOS No. El C•mino R•al 635815· SERVICE DIRECTORY Cttdlt cardJ Ofi:. 847-6688 CALL S•n Cl•l'l'l•nte KEYS Found on beach vie. STEAi\1 jet carpet cleaning. 67~78 , '492M20 Wand 6 Balboa. lnquin Appli•nc• RIPJilrt By 0..rKare, natXln-wide ;=:::=::;--::;;-;::=:l"=========I at front counter, Dally Parts . 6510 se.rvlce. Free est. 642-405:i Landscaping 6110 NEW . LAwNs:-~tiii. roto-till~. r e nova t I ne , clean-up. 897-2417 or 8'6--0932. Commercial and income 60l5 Pilot, 2211 Ba1boa, N.B. prop. dov,.ntown Laguna.1 C_o_'."_m_•_r_ci_a_l _____ lyoung "''hite female cat. 1 e \Va.sher .i Iln'ir R~peln• Drafting S•rvlc• 6637 Palnti'ng, ·· STO >,rtt Estimate11, \\'ork older. Trade for San F'ran-• ;i RES. l ll0,000. 686-blUe l!ye 1 ITffn f.'Ve Vic Guarani~. Call !>3&-3l5' f\ll:CltAN JCAL En11:ineer, Paperha~l!L~ cisro or No. C1tlif. rec:rea-698 \\I, l9lh :::t. Btthel 18th. &. Pomont1, c.~t.' 640-Calif · H h. iioual acttage. Owr 494-16:)2 To,,·ers comer. 548-1168 qt 3014. . res:1s. vy mac: tnery, METICULOUS PAINT. c I 4 .. '115' be cc1•~---------1 Babv1lttln1 6150 piptng, marine de11ign ·"' BLUE CHIP STAMS INS · l x · can us TAN poodle· n1 in i a.tu re cost eatim, Drafting or 11-c 1 · · · Want res:isle~ stock for for bul'. or re.~. l yr I~. 222 greyhound mixture 6 mcrl BOARD Your child for lusll'ations from y 0 u r .rcw co. studenls. lnt-e.xl • • $400,000. Equity Jn 3,300 W. Wilson, C.f.f. 64:>-1395 yr. Vic: S.A His area. wknda. Competent mother / criteria. 6'1S-16TI. • houses. Exp. Docks. 675-5812 ' RENTAL N •t to ... ,. N>::.• daua:hte:r combJna.Uon. Aaes ========== HOUSES. docks, boa•· ..... acr!"s, near Rancho Califor. : e .. ............~.... ., 14 1.1 J-iunt'ngt H bou 3200 Sq "~over. !'.fesa. Vtrde area, Floors • 6665 poles, anything • evtrythl nia. Agen! P.O. Box 201, San f t _.,1 1 .. 1;,g°;_24:I r. FOUND 1irl's bike in Lido ~5--0894. • ---reasonably painled. For b-ee ... Clcmen1e. Calif. 92672 ' " Isle area. . -CARPET VINYL TILE QUALIFIED i\tature woman eatimate 646-9752. Sacrifice 24 ft cabin cMliser Industrial Rental 6090 1;,,=;;:;-;;---"~~-8~"~'=-;;,:::;-: wisl\ts to baby1lt "''kly in LlC CONTR. FREE EST. PHONE lhe l'f'SI • lhen phone • P I I -----·--~ BICYCLE In f.fesa Verde myhome.PtfesaVerde~a. * 5'1~'1262 '* lhe best: Jol"di.n •. Son 1 :i hp. t!r ect shape. n M·l, 12:.io· 1q ft . ortlce, 111:e 11rea . Call and identify, ~2062 a: ,,·ater now. Reduced price · F it R t • Painting. Llttn.,e:d, bonded JTar door. :'J.p cur1<en1. s1:-.:> 5"~3283 urn ur• •l or1n11 • d ••• ., • C-1 LOT, 89'llllS' S2200. Trade for house down VERY Reliable mother of 2 • insure . -"0-J.)~ Tun buildings. payment. Call alter 7:30 pm mo. &'6-ffiSt, 1240 K Lo:r•n''E~-v~EG=~LA~SS~ES=-,~.,-,-,-n-,~ .. -.. ~ "''OUld like to babyalt by & R•flnlshlng 6675 AfcAdams P&intina Serv. $:>5.000. Equily, 493-3996. 51 · C.l\t. on Bray in CM. ~or day. Prtfer infants. f.lJRNITURE StrippirJ&: & Inter. & Exter. Speclal rales '''ill e:ii;change for hon1e FOR lse -5300 sq . It. prime: 546-777T -54!>--0223 refinishln~. OJtapts. 646-3645 or duplex. 66U95 11 Units, good rental area. "''~re h s r. ll!pace-all/part. BLUE B1cycle 646-6244 Ci\1 \\'ILL Babysit teacher11 child •642-9575• METICULOUS PAINT. $3':':.000 equity; income lrv1nc Ind. Alr. Bullard FOUND bl k k' . 1 ,·n my hom• "-k•r & BLU 1966 Dodge Conveftible Po. S 3 500 F house 546-8()j1 • .c 11ten VlC. o · Dtl E CHIP SfAMPS. INS. >: &75.6050 0· 1 ;S;a;n;to;;;A;;;na;;;;;;;;;;;;;;5;6~20~ I Iara. Trade for horse, ho~ 1 · · or ' conl· ==~~~=-~=~ Len\\°000 Dr •• 01. 646-5923 Fairview atta ~. Gardaning 6680 crew col. student.. Int-at _:; n1ercial or horae ranch. NE\V bldg, J368 to 2300 fl,i;:==-;;-;---;:c=c:-c== ••· W• IA•'Ult Cl..,lk trailer or small fore i&"n O\\INER 675-62S9 Nr Baker &: J.'aln •le:w 1 FOUND 8-28. femaJe poodl~. TEACHERS Oildrn. Child AL'S GARDENING houses. Exp. Dock.~. 6~5812 VILLA MARSEILLES c~. yr .lease. SUIUvan 548-2176 54;>-4188 S/3 Can! 10 4 pm. i\~y home for Gardenin£ lj: small land. * PAPERHANGER * .· _ or on a dl!I Mar 5250 r1. c;,, ::"__~ ,._,~ ON 1'EN ACRES l le 2 BR. Fw·n &: UnfWTI Fireplaces I priv. palic;i; I Poo!J. Tennis . Contnt'I Bldst. 900 Sea l.i.r.e, OU.I 64+2b1.1 (1'.far.Ar1hur nr. CoiJ•t Hwy) BRAND NEW :;.;7.9359 COi\t~tERCIAL lncomf' pro-* OFFIC&\\'arehcnise.fenced BLK ne:ute~ cal area of WUTl('r .i Magnolia Area. scaplng lf'rvices call 540.5198 Recognized Authority SPACIOUS 4 BR HOi\l.E, .FULLERTON perty, free & clear. next to ya:-d ~pace avail for rent, Ne\lo'J)Ort Bl\'d & 22nd alt 1 S42-'1674 Scrvirig Newport. Cdf.f, Co~ Prior Instructor 646-mtl & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Aiu;umabte lo in!erest Joan, Scan. Val. $6a,OOO. For H.B. * Ca.II 5J&..1686. '-=Cal=l=64=""~"'°====== e LOVING C&re in my la MeM. Dover Shorea, FOR Adult Living S13,000 ·eq FOR b(h hl;e or units, hou8" or beach prop. 1 hom..OOt lunche11, fenced \Ve1ilclifl. Fast Courteous Service, Furn. & Unfurn. OWNER 6'5-62.19 yard. Call 646.&151 . , 20 Yl'S ll_ay exper. Call Bob, duplex. Lots 6100 Lost 640l NITES "ENTLE CARE ALS Land"caplng. T ree 1 ~ ....... =~"'=~~=---I Dish.washer. co.tor eoordinat. 714/5Z}.o1435 0 HP ------=----u removal. Yard remodaling. YOU SUPPL ed appliances • plush sh.ag I ",,~.-c~-,~b~in-,-,.-,,-..,-,-. ~,~._~I-t"'"P. ll' Bollton \Vhaler, 4 CORONA del Mar: corner ----------t"OR YOUR CHILD. Call Trai;h hauling, lot cleanup. · Y 1'HE PAINT C'arpet • choice of 2 color J ohnson Seahorse w/t.rlr. 101, R·2. So. of Jiwy. DOG. rrddi1h bro"'" mlx, 642-3289. Repair i;prnklen. 673-U66 SIO Per Average Room Scheme! • 2 bath.s • still Perf('ct shape. Trarlc for Like nC\\', valuation S2100 0 67" ,701, f ... 1 h Frtt Est. · :157-86!8 h ' _.. ard small ranch dn payment in t'QR truck or ~?? 673-9131 "'ner: .,..... ,,.,. r.m, mo:u. s le', rectnl mot . CHILD CAR.E LAWN &. Garden Care, PROFESSIONAL. 30 5 owers • m rro~ w • San Juan Capistrano. R-4 LOT C:\f. C11n build 40 er, So Lquna, Aug 22· Ang. ~ly Hoine. Infanl -4 Yfl. beaullfication, "'·tt"Cl ing & y ri robe door,: • indirect li:::ht· 493-3996 aft 7:30 P?.l ask for t.1r. Smith. units. 'Phil Sullivan, Rltr. we:n to Jotle. Chlldttn's S.A, Civic Center area. cleanup by college students. e>Cp. paperhanging & pll.in- lng in kitchen -breakrast I"~~-=-~,.--.,.-,.,.., Havf! !mall eommercial 548-6761 ----dor. Reward, 494-l!M5 5'12.SO~ Reas. 543-7363. Calina Bros. ting, from England. 968-746\ bar • huge prlvate ltnced 1..ftJ\ Vegas To1vnhouse. 2 i:tr. 1 G INT & Ext Painti·,... • --·• Bldg, S.A, Rented 10 je\\1:' • CHtlD GRIEVJN ! LOST RESPONSIBl..E hi1h school GARDENING SERVICE · · .. ., . ....,..., patio • plush ''lnusca ping • Z BP., all etec, 2 car gu, ..., & luggage stores. \Viii Acreag• 6200 Blk & Wht Toy Poodle. 8/Z7 girl \\'ill bllby siL Newport Eic-riencrd .Japaneuo ref's, lic'd, ins .. ~ est. ' " O""'CHID brick Bar-B-Q',. la .... e heat· ""'I. tennis court. no maJnL, ·~ ---~-----r-... -""-'I Chu•k '"' -705 & 707 11 ..1n. ·b ...,.. !Tade up for ocean vu hm Noon. Vic. Fairgrounds, l~eights area. 642-0022 548-0228 • ~ " · '".rvov~. ed pools &: Jana!. $7000 eq for bch an>a in. 22 ~lultiplr zoned acreag~ COLl..EGE s ..... _ 3 2 Bdrms .. 2 baths. \\'il h sun. JlOI So. Bro'stol St. .,_ -.... 113-~~on or bch income. 673-20 0 Cou C.i\I. 548-8;,87 WANTED -"LDREN TO EXP J G _,_ ~ · ,.....,.nts, :yn k ,,50 ALSO 3 Bd :omc uni..,,, •v~ 1·...,.,., rangt' nry : o...ru • apanei;e: lln.1ener. exper. Net drlnkifla:. Bill or ri£'C • $-· : rm$., (% f.fl. N. ot So. Coa·'1 Plaza) * * ""attfa ..,l'a(ft• LOST: Pr. ti,fen'1 &!uses, aABYSIT lN i\1Y HOltlE, Gen. cleanup. Hauling trees. Steve 518-4549 .~ haihs. C;irpelcd. rir&[M'd. Santa Ana * * * * JP a 9 gold r ims. Vic 1Dth St. V.'KDY S. ~t. ~taint. yard 646-0619 · · bJ!.111s. Cov, ,,araJCr. S32S .... ,.,e,..,,,, N t 0 • ch R -~• * P•PERH•NGING • ,,.;P~H::;O:N~E~';.!5;57~..S~l~00::..., 11 '1,!~'!"''!'!~~!"'!!!!!!!!!!~P,~~!'l'~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! '"ru:.,,, cwpor °"11 • ~w .... u. BABYSITIING In my home.. JAPANESE Garden I n g "" "" JI.lo.: n1in 1 )'Car lease. 1 -~G~o-,,.-rnm--.,,-,~land-~-s.;~,-=--1 637-5136 Fenced yard k rtference1. Serviee. Neat \\'Ork. Clea!lup & PAINTING. * 968-24.25 ,, '75-&0SO 0 CAN'T BE BEAT REAL ESTATE . REAL ESTATE ''"' ... ""°" Poekagt, us:; '';~LB=M~A~L~E~dol~ • .,-1><.J&~i-•'"'. brw,.._-_n 3:M "'•·-~ yd. mainl 968--2303. Pl General GeMT al Arrowhead, San Bndo 92410 & blk, Wire hair, Lae brwn WOMAN w/2 youna ~bildren C I ~ y _, C I -•1t1ring, Pitch, ... ••MHIRT Cl..& eyH, 10.._ tail, An11w'a to omp ••• ara are R•Pflir '8IO Rent.I. W.nl.d 5_,,, lncom• Property 6000 wishes lo care for child, m : 5t!M837 Single SlolJI 7 7V R E E h 6230 .. Tiki." .673-7&40 Rtward! 2~i:. ... 54&-5271. · * COROLJDO APTS. 2 Br, 1 -~ ·---------I '"-·=.·..;o.•c.•=a-"n'-'g'-'o--'= ~ Gardening· Land cleanups., * PATCH PLASTERING I "bl WANTED: Balboa Penin {or ' -LOST • all black female cat · All types. Ftte e:sflmate:s .~· l1!! BA .. lrpc, " rar· South &a Atnlosphcre N 8 ) 2 BR ~PLEX $70,000 ORIGINAL ownen will ex-"''/lge -n eyes Bl~. B I k M aprnklr 8yll, roto-cement J><>1'1 ,t, large Pool. $1S5 & u[). an)"\'here in . . ' I hly •·-· r C ·' atonry, 'Ork CD Yancey 646-5860 Call ~ •' yard (yr! nol ilt'c. if ocean-$900 mo .•. income. Fres ·change 5 BR custom home 567-7585; evet96i:.259:i etc 6.560 w · · · • l"========'==I lii.1-3.lifi -2 Bed~nl 2 Baths fru nl) !>'urn or Unfurn, up decorated and landscaped. in Sunnyhills Ea:tates. F ut. LOST. <t mo old orange &l·---:-------1ROTo.-TIUJNG. new lawns Plumbfng 6l90 LG E ne1v 2 BR, 2 ba, fl'pl e. to s150. Couple \\•Hh 1 child. Excellent EASTSIOE Costa lenon for similar home in 1,,hile striped male kitt~n. Bl..oc:KWAU.S • Plan!er1 • trtts & shrubs removed. __ _;.;;,;;,;::,_ ___ -=:.;.::1 all blLns. cp!s, drps, beamed Carp<' IS & Drapes Have ref's. Pleue call Mesa Jocalion (near Tustin Laguna, or Corona del Mar. Vic Mesa df'I Mar. Call PatiOI Orl"eway.1 Reu. Free .est. 548-5924. f~OME H.EPAIR€ cf'i!'g, pvt pat, So. of Hwy. S46-ll!IO, a~k for Da"·n. Ave.) with 300' deep lot near G.E. self-deaning oven, trc-557_91.92 Side11.'81ks. 642-!ml morn or cut & F.clge Lawn Plumbing-electrleiLJ S2~IO-s;.!7.i 5'18-7!183. 1\ir Condilioncd M:hool and park. Adjoinin&: menedouJ11 kitchen, storage, evt'. Ma.lntenance, Llc'd, In.ured $7.00 Hr. i Br, l ba, gar apl . bl1!1 Rooms for Rent 5995 2 homes + triplex also avail. very large hobby· aervlce lRISH Sl!tte r. male. approx BLOC'KWAU.S. Planler. Pa. 548-4808 alt 4. 642·2755 or 642-0506 rang<', crnts. rlrps. Sl80 1110. P1·1vatc Patios ---· able from same O\lo'fler. Call room wilh separate iewlng, 1% yrs. Lie No. 7834, tiOll Drl~ways SldewalkJ &-1&-1740 ~; 5'16-1330. }'URN. Rn1 . Em p Io y ed for details on th is fine in. office area, formal d.r., fam antwen to Red. Reward! 642-~ mom. ~ l!Ve. CLEAN UP SPECIALIST 110Al' REPAUtS llea!ed Pool \\'Clman kitchen & laundry veitmenl! nn. pool. \VIII consider 96&-3838, NC°t't' fence & repair. odd Plumbing-electrical. S7.50 Hr. ·.1 Br. 2 Ba. So. of llil\'a)' I JIB BRICK * BLOCK * STONE jo~ R ,.~o ""'"" 642 2755 .,. ,., --priv. C <1.'ied garage. · w I k & L propertie" to $120,000. Prin-FLIPPER -No. 788! (2) "'" eu. ~ -'"~ (~larguerile). Gar. No [)C!S Pl"n1y ol la\\·n $11/wkly Call before 2 pm . a er ee •"'· "'"2011 Shad f bl W"tbou --" By the hour, alter 5:30 PLUMBING REPAIR S\9(11110. 213: 4:11-110.;. .. ,.,, •·,~. • ci.......,. only. _.,,. ~11 o ue. i t IRW. 642-1948 * 645-0758 General •-rvlco1 6612 ~ ~ BUSINESS .•nd Approx. 10 day~ 1ro. -No ;oo loo small LRt.; Upper 2 Br, ('pis. drps, C"at·po•\ & Slo>'age BEAUT bo I I h 2043 Wc!ilCliH Dr. * 6-3859 ... e 642-3128 e ' · me '1 ' poo as _ _!".cl!!i•~!'.!S~~·~----IB;:;\ci(&,~lin-·G"m; Ca-nterl-'590 APT CLEANING -Painting '--,""":;;;:~~=-=,---rrfr1rng(', gar. l\1aL Adl!s. BR f I • .a 646-7711 " "' ·,.... .,. 1 · 24 HR PLU extra or emp oyo:u BLACI\ &: tan Germ _ Rug Shampooing A: Lite AfBING SH\O nw I!<!!. 70.1 Narr1s~us. l_llDDF.N VILLAGE I d P ·1 1100 Open 'Iii 9:00 Pl'll c•RPENTRY & RE"ODE" -·G a Y· rvi · mo. ~~-~~-~-~~•Business Slll"p, choke chain/flea col-"' Repalr11 . REMA RC ,., .........,., Balboa 5300 PF:NIN Pt.-01\nt'r's upper '.! BP.. d111 rm. fl'pl, 1\/\\', Ii; ba rk yd. Utll inc. s2:i0 lse. A\'ail 91\. i:ioo ll1ram11r. 67:...sti82 I 213 I 69::-5.\~. Lido Isle 53SI LR(: B1\ Y VIE\V-2 BR., :'\!udy, crpts. c!rp~. 1~ ha ., trpt(', 11~h-rlry, Avail Sept. :l. s.1~.o r~r . f;73-7502. Huntington Beach 5400 2 Bn. Crp1s. 1!rp~. ra:1gC'. Closrd ~ar. Childr('n & sniall pee ok. Sl<IO. IW2-836.'l. 2 REDRi\I 11pt.. 2 1 ~ hl<x:ks h·nm hcach. 4371 S!h St .. 11.B. SJS:. m(1. ~31 32. '\l:f.1~2 RR. Cpt~. Drps. Ul1 n.~. Gara~r . • ;\fl •I pm. !1·17-3'i:li •_ •1:.0 2 BR. Cpr.:. Drps. fll1i1s, Rrfnl!.. Garagf, * 1\1! ·I pm 11·17-3717 ti! RENTALS Apts. Unfur nished G>\RDEN APTS ~&-Oi40. 5 Blclgr;. l\f.l on \i ac. Pia-Opportuniti•t 6300 lt1r, no tags. ''Nero .'' MINOR REPAIRS. No Job SERVICES, 347-6688. 557-9644 2;.oo Soulh Salra GF.NTLEA1AN-Be11.eh, shop-~tia, CM. S7S,OOO terms. ----------i ~1710 Too Small. Cabinet la pl' Ed'& Cleaning Si'rvice ~;1n1a Ar .•• * 546-152.'i ping, pool, tenn is, Relrig. 675-6968 leave mess for Aflil •~=~-~~~,.-~~I apt A otb•r cablnata. •1 A 1 · w•NTEDI I [)()(; 10111 in Bluffs. Beige ,, ........ , U "° ·-r ... ,. Carpets -Uphol!!tery. Win· Romodollng & _Repair 6No Laguna Beach 5705 ------·-------OCEAN VtE\V Lr g Bachelor. l & ~ BR apts. Furn nr unfurn. Crpts. ;!rps, bltni:. patio.<:. w a 1 If in g dlRlantt lo to\\·n. 100 Cliff Dr .. Lai::. Beh. ~94-71~9R * * \VOOO'S COVE * * B<'ar·ll 1 .. blork ne1v 1 & 2 Br. Gold r.ienallicin apt~. Each hUl'f' 1 1 ~ RA . Pool. $200 up. Leas<' 211:. s. COASI }{\\y, ~!17-16.'lO or 499-3929. RfllL ESTATE General Rent•ls Wo1nttd 5990 Vic/bch, Coast llw y . "fin', g · ,., ~'" --...... 1 Cue 5--0487 536-S"lS -=:::::======= . . Samoyed puppy. tr found mac at f46.2S'72. Jl o. dows Foor . 54 " . ,-R('J1able pet30n for lhts area call 644--0562 Reward Andenon ~modeling, fence blrlg ., Nid' rm for older cple or 2 • ro collect and refill candy painting &: gen'I ttpain . sgle ladies. Oiautfer prl''• BuJiness Rento1I 6060 mflchines installed iii com-RE\VARO.LOST PARROT Qua! Constr. carpentry, roo- GEN'L remodelin& &: maint. No job loo small .. Lic'd/in1ured. ~183. C..d food & gd t'IITT'. 642-0026. · ------merci1d and factory loe11.· Anir. 10 "C.ptain'", finger Uns:. 11.ll homt iniprvmnls.1-"'="=·="'="='·=";1;''=· ;64;2;·"=71=· N. 1 bu . 600-1200 SQ. FT. office also tiorui by our compaey Ye , trained. 496-1696, 496-9140. No jo.b too sm . f'ree eiil. Hauling 6730 !_ow·on• 6960 '" _room or s1nr_s~ er 600 ''· ft. sto~. 1~ & 1150. · 'd -• •~1=• • k /k I h ~ "· ·e a nat1onw1 e co. rat. .... LOST M/Cockll"""' p "p. J.J<I"' v.R. --·-· --------~'----'---'= \.1-'0l' 111~ man w 1 c en C.t.I. &16-2130 """ -· · E C'I &12•~"" 1n Dun & BradAlree1. Ex. Newport Pier. Rt>: ward! CARPENTER: Remo del, T.N.T. Lawn Service. I (•an help yoo k-.,,....,. pnv, · ·1 " • • ,uu. South Laguna. Cst ""'Y ctllt'nt imn1ediate cuh in-642-4028, 540-9TIO (ext 23) p11.Uo "'-ork, cement work Garage clean-ups, haul.Ing wardrohe sharp &~,.u~-j~ * St:> PER. Week·up wl & 2nd. 700 Sq. Ft. $160 mo. con1e for 4 lo 8 h~ v,·ee:kly & ?flinting:. No job too &. light movtna. 548-5863, date, Former deaigner now ki1chen. $371 per "·eek·up McCuf', Bkr. * 642-7799 "''ork tday!I or l'.'ve~l. You BLK/\VHT l''ox Ten·ier. ans ~mall . Free est .. ~1944 S,11-3729 located in thl~ beiutlful ApL'>. 1\frn'EL 5'18-9755 may (!)(panel lo "full" time l.o "Snoopy." Vlc. Al11bama, QUALITY Woodcraft. aml Y"'A'R°'D't"G""•~r~.-"c"I~e7an=u"'p. COl'l~t area. :>18·1443 Eves LARGE: Ri\1: \V/Bath & later '~'ilh our financing It HB. Reward. 536-3073 gtn'I COlllllr. Ar: carpenlery. Remove trffs. Ivy, trash. Leavel!. k1rchen. S6:l/n10. Offlc• Rent1I 6070 you desire. No e)(perie:nce }"ree consultation & quole. Grade, backhol!!, 96U745 'Q=u=A=w=T=Y~-y-0-,-•• -,--.,-..,.--1 e 646-5872 • neces.~ry. We will train. Call K 645-0044 548-4""~ ,17;.n TOTAL PerJon1l1 M0S en · -· J-IAULING $10 A LOAf?, ""ante-0. Dl'E'umakin&: SLEEPING room. privale SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY ·111 REPAIRS • ALTERATIONS Clean up Trtt Serv Gen alterations. Key Say, 1763 CASH REQUIRED · '" · · . ' liome, nice &re:a. 642-5000. ;;~-!r~~;1i~:S. ~m~C:. :: For personal interview In Single:. Wido~'td. DlvorCed * CABINETS. Any lll7~ jOb Pturilfl'l..646-2528, 543-8)43 Orange Aw., C.M.,645-1292. S48-0:\00 C'UpanC'y.. Orange c n ty, your art"a, send name, ad· M & w 2.'i yn exper. 543-6713 TRASH & Garagt clean-up. 7 Alterations -642·5145 Priv. sgl rm. in lllJ'ge C.~f. AirpJrt Irvine Commerc. dress anrl phone 'no. to : en omen GEN. RtPftlr. add, cab. dicys. SlO a load. Free est. N,gat, accuf"!tt', 20 year .. exp. pool Mme: w/young tam. Yg Complex, adj. A1rporter Tran!l-\Vestern Formica, pane.Ung marllte. Anytime, ~S031. • Dressmaking-AlteratJorw f1•n1all', tr.<1.ell"r. 27, has $11).1 ~'='d='~'="-'~-_.,_~_3_7;.._·=· ~~~ Jlotel & Restaurant, banks, Distributing Co., F.Yeryone's looking far the Anylhing! Dick, 673-4459 J{AULING &: cleanup, trees Designed to l!uit you. SGO 1nu lo sJll'nd on l'E'nl·1vUI AITRAC. furn rm . Great for San DiegO & N'pt. FW)'s. ..DIS1'fllBU'J'OR DIVISION right one. We hllve a "''lY· &: shrubl removed . Reas. Cail Jo *' 646.&446 maintain pren1iSl's-W11at can 1;rudents. Comm. b a I h. UNCROWDED PARKING •23". P.O. Box 1739, 547-6667 24 hr. ~· . Cem•nt, Concr•f• 6600 Frtt e:8fim. 548-5924 you offcl'? :148-616'l. .J.'emale only. S6.'i. 642-&l20 LOWEST RATES Covina, Calif. 91722 & call U& .i beRJn 10 hve? CONCRETE. All types. Free MOVING, Garaa:e clean-up 1 ~*=-'L"A"N~D.=-,..L=o"R"°D~S~*~-l\\IALKING dist.a~ OCC Owner/mgr.2172DuPontDr., COIN LAUNDRY _ mot1I •MASSAGE & SAUNA eif. Sawing, breaking, haul-lite hauling. ~uonable. FREI': RENTAL SERVICE Lovely room in privale Rm. 8, Newport Beach. beautiful in S. Ca 11 f . i.OveJy girls/ EXPERT MAS. Ing &: .!lkipload!ng. Service FrH: e:st!males. 66-1602. BluP Beacon 645-0183 C~I rcsirleflN'. r·orttd air heat, 83J.3223 Courtesy to Brokers Located at Baker at SAGE, Ask about our Las Ii: quality. 548-8668 Bob 1-IAULING & cleanup, tret?& 6974 Fountain Va lley 5410 Fountain Valley 5410 color 'JV. Home pl'ivilel"S· MEDICAL _ DENTAL Fair v I e ...,., Established Vega~ vacatloru;, lo.Ar.I to MORE Concrete pa.tlo lor & Mrub• l'E'mo\lf'd. Reas. Student or under 40 only. Sullr.s avail. Beil location. trade. Terms avail. to 2 Af.f, 7 DAYS. 29~ W. less money. Artistic acttlna. Ji'rtt estlm. t>43-5924 , 7>4~J63'I Xlnt parking. t.1odern facil· qua.lilied buyer. Sec·thtn C08.l!t llwy, NB. 548-3S08. Lie., call Max at 644-0687, PICKUP_ LIGHT TRASH * Verne, The Tile f.f;u1 * Cust. '\\"Ork. ll\litall & repairs, No job loo smJ. Pla~ter patio. Leaking s h o we r repair: Jhe :J.ounlain_j i\ledilt!rrctt1~on Styl~ Lu%ury . '""' 1 t, Z Bedroomlli -% Bath.\ A1lult • J.,l,1ng }'urnl'lhed {; Un.funtl!btd • Dbh~I"'' • Sh•• C•rr" e Prf,.if• Pn1lo1 e (Jo~ /;tir•1r1 e 3,,.,;.ff.CiJfln'• 9565 Slaltt Avenue e Room for ren1 • private ltleir. Immediately available.1 ~'='=11;. ,.",,...'·~''"~'-:-=:::-:=:-"'7ol * f"ULLY LICENSED * CEMENT W k f ·'i '· G I 110 load honi", Brookhu"'' & Adams' I "" ... Hind S I I 1· • or o ., :1.lnd1. arage f' ranup ' BA VSliORF. CENTER LETTER Shop, mimeog. Al '""'nowncu u P r tua 151 Frte e11t. 54(}..3697 84 7-1957 /S.IG--0206 Ceramic fll e ln111allM or re. pairc?d. Rrmodelinit my 8I)f!Cialty. Work 1uar. Reas. pri1:ed. F'tTit e1t. Call 536- 2426 11.rt:a. 968-?.051 601 Dover Dr ., N'pt Beach equip to •tart own business. Advice on all matten. 6.16-0l7<t Sl500 T.P. cash or term11. Love, ~larrlage, Bu11ine1111 4 ..., H I I 6735 Motels, Triller Courts 5997 •.• &15-&050 o 675-6968 leave n1ess. for Readlna:s given 7 day1 a DECORATIVE t CONtjfETE ous•c •a!'_n~·---- • -. ' Mary. Ag!. . Wttk, 9 Ai\I • 9 PM DRIVES-WAIJK~ PATIO otrrcu Mlllnt. Servf~. car- ... M''NIAll CL.& UNIQUE Beauly •bop: (3I 312 N. El C"mlno Rea.I, CALL DON, 642-3514 pet cleantn,, noor ,va)(\ng, -===========I * * \VEEh'LV Rates. SEA LARK ~IOTEL. 2 3 0 1 Ne\\'Port !llvd, Costa A1e!la. Guest Homes 59'1 Pvt l'OOM In hcenlled RtJeSt Mme:. for a1Vbula1ory senior clii!en. Lnvtly yard Ii: pRtio J?OO(t fnQd. "''ail now. C.P.t flltt, Ms.522"i • Income Property 6000 DESK SPACE 222 Forest Avenu~ Laguna Bea ch <t94-S166 -LUXURY New offices, prime ne11eh 131vd.. air , cpt.s, drapes. rlc. ~ or 6 rm. aul!cs. (21.3) 394-00ll call collrcl. APPROX 700 ~ fl at 16.12 N"'Pl Bl, CM. Ntw crpt, •lrp.\, SJ50/mo. 642-2821, 21•:. Return It. 1J)(>nd11hle:. l "'~'-2->-llJ6=. -~~--- 0t'tltl, f'f'nted tiou~1 A: Ol'W' IJP to 3600 aq ft.~Dtluxe. a\r apartment , nf"(r Bcarh cond, crpltt, drp~. Jn com· ·Blvd, llunt lni;:lllfl Be.1(':h. c PLil•r ctnltt bid&. 646-7425 • 1.orie. '10.c«t Down. S35.000 I or M6-6080 °' Total. v OmCE Rentals, Laguna Rcalonom!cs Qlrp Bell, SIOO mo. Ca•~t ll""'Y· Cnmm .. rcb1l Bkr. 6Th-6700 ReAI Estate O.K 4!»-9727. S Cl t TrH Service 6980 Stallons. Illness Force 1 an emen e. * CONCRETE work: patios, window washing. 537·15<! U Sale. ~16-9527 3-1 PM. 492·9136. 942-0076 drvways, etc. LI ce n a e d . no ana call aft 3. BOB'S TRtE SURGERY :i.tEAT i\IARKET &: DELI. PALM READINGS Phllllps Cement. ~8-6.180 BA'' & &ach Janitorial ia back otre:rtng I~ same Nr. llunOna:lon !{arbour. Cards Ir Sand Rtadin&! e CONCRETE brl k .i C~rpcl11, "'ll'ICkM'$, tloon, Fine Qaullty ~Service. :l:n') llQ. ft. 2131592-2444, H~lp Jn All Mal!e:l'li stone worlc'. ~ e:sJmate. r.re, Res A C omm c ' I . * 51(1.3798 • * \VtG SHOP. 8 a Ibo" lO AM·IO PP.f, 7 dayi e 968-8609 e 64&-l«:tl. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Ja!And. SACRIF1CE? Call 213 • 697-9272 La llohra _ wt';;;;N"oo""'1"vs,.-;•c-::•:::all&;;:-::,:::.,:;,""'""· \Ver! tt1ru sun ~. 613-7262. nJLLY LICENSED Chlld Caret Firs, atrlpped, ·H•IM & Job Wanted, M•n iooo =======::::~I FORMING a group-Need Lie ttd "lO waxed. f'rP.e 61. 897-?SJ.1 Mon•r t• Loan 6320 bas.• l '"ad &. rh)'lhm ens day or nl£"ht . 673-3090. ATTRACTIVE; pl In JO's . RUll11r. Aif11 13-16. Call MY llome, bot lunch, fcnctd JOE'S CLEAN SERV. de11lre1 1>11rf or full llmt 1. I TD L 646-9762 • ,yd, aupeM1!1ed play. Aaes We do Everythinst·Re1 &. r:mplOym4!'11t with nlct boss S -. 01 n SWINGERS! New Orllnae ~.call 616--0352. Comm. F)'re Eal 642·75,;1. or bolses. Type 50, $11 80, II": INTEREST 0>. Gulclc. },or f'tet: Info. • Mesa CleAnlng Servfcfl f!~I In n1~tii;:, peop~ ,\ 2 d "TD ~ Writr S.C.S.G. r .o. Box Contr actors "20 CArpe:t ... \lo'i ndow•. fioon. etc. J1 ne wor · me k· n 01n .2lll, Anaheim, 92804 ~1 It Commc'I. 5'8-4lll kttplna:. Mullt be blu1y·bU11Y· ln111y! NR·Cl\f area only. ff!neyrlch Dru -Swlm11.'tar Arldlllons: * Rfmodellna Ge:n'I cle11ninr, Homes Call Ann 54s-6&41 Tmna b,,.ed on tqulty. Perton"l flttlnp by Appt f.)'ed 'lt. Cf:rwfck, l.lc. .i 1plll, Niie or Day RN k 1 ti 642·2171 54$-0611 54!'!-0026 OI' 546-.0029 6il-6(HI * s.IS.2170 •~745* ' . M:f! I l'llln'I Ill pa.rt <>r IUIJ time posllion. Oay1, Sf!rvl111 Harbor IJ!& 21 )TL ALCOHOLICS Anonyrnous ADDITIONS, L.T. Construe-HOUSEWORK. Exvtr. o"·n :iton·Fri, Ten ye~rs ex. Settler Mert1e1e Ce. Phollf' MZ-7217 or wrilt 10 tlan, ainalr. <>r 2 11.Dry. plana, t~portaUon. S3 bout. Call ptrirnct. ,Box Pl079, Dally 3l6 E, llth Srrt'!el . P.O. Bo:< J.23.1 C'Sltt ~ltaa. est It l11yout1. M7-i~u. ~_S.._"1_I. ________ P_1_1o< _______ _; ... I T ~· ........ " llAll. Y PILOT J ... s & o;MPLOY M~Nl J1 .. 1 M!n' WOft\. 7100 Check Here with the . ' Job Kings! *°"' 2 Olfl<H Cover* All Of Or•"'° County FEMALE · ' ACCT. CLERK TYPIST $500 MO. Mwit know payroll, Type pur. chue orders, bill of Jading. Able tu take a lot of pres- ""'· BILLING CLERK TO $500 MO. 1')'pe :'IS, no Short Hand. Type orders & invoices. 10 key adder, North Oranie Counly ....... RECEPTIONIST $400 MO. Type 40, Short Hand 80. Busy S button phone. Neat front office appearance, North Qr. ange County Area. GIRL FRIDAY $10 WK. Lite typing & filing. Pre~ material for mailing, ?.lust knO'N Orange County because you wW be runnin& errands. BILLING .CLERK. $90 WK. Accurate typing. hand post. lng «> Jedgel"I. Casual oltlce, &lacks or caprls OK. ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS TO $3 HR. Electronic a. Mechanical A1- semb\y experience. NASA cerlllied. FACTORY TRAINEES FRO"\ $1 .65 HR. All .areas o1 Orana;e. Co. MALE ' .. Tund.ay, Srpttmber l, lq'IQ Schools and . \ Instructions 1'his variety of fine scho!) ls could introduce · you to a new tomorrow. For further informetlon re91rdin9 the o.ay Sc hools end lnstr1.1ction Directory • • • • • • CALL .642·5678, EXT. 925 Af-Jtln1G Hot lt1!111c•d lwnch•• Sn•cl.1 Holfl •·li•• •l11101ph1r• Coner•!• I ''''' pl•1 Cre•li•• •cti~ili•1 Coll et• lr1in1d f•1ck1r1 CERTIFIEO KINl]ERGARTEN IN. COSTA MESA- 2 LOCATIONS 1937 Church St. • (1 btk. east of Newport •bove 19th) Phon9' 646-3636 795 P•ul1rino (2 blks. W . of Bri1tol near So. Coast Pl11a) Phon•' 540-1919 . . -· . .. • ... _,-;+~ Aircraft Flying Service Offers A Back To School Special PRIVATE PILOT LICENSE-$550 . For :i; Hours Flight Training. A Fully Equipped Cessna 150. We Are Not A Club & Do Not Charge Initiation Fees Or Month- ly Dues. Rental Aircraft Available At Reas· Ontiible Rates. Fly The· Special Cessna/Doyn Skyhawk. FAA & VA Approved F1ight ~chool. 19531 C1mpus Drive, Suite I Orang• County Airport, $40-9656 ' Enjoy Success in Life through Modern Cosmetology COLLEGE . of BEAUTY o"ffers only the most advanced, "Updated Courses and Techniques. Your skills ·will be only as good ~s the training yo u have been given. New Classes Start Each Tuesday Register NOW 646-2919 Of'" Te P•ltllc -TMICMy Tiir1 S...rHy Ho ... ,,.1""""9 H~ -W..t 0-ly ~ 1895 Newport Blvd., Cost• Mes• _28.17 S. •. Bristol,~_nta An• 540-0667 . . . . ' . . . . . . JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Schools-lnstrudl .. 7600 Sc~nstrd'di~ 7_6fJO MEN...,, •• ....: ........ '"' ,,..,WOMEN l • INHALATION THERAPY • MEDICAL ASSISTANTS • DENT AL ASSIST ANTS • MEDICAL SECRETARY • EKG TECHNICIAN • REHABILITATION TECHNICIAN • ORTHODONTIC ASSISTANT a STUDENT PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE e DAY i EVENING CLASSES e OWNED I OPERATED IY MEMIERS Of THE PJl:OF~SSION e GRADUATE PLACEMENT SERVICE ~"'-" ~~ CALIFORNIA • \ PROFESSIONAL ,.~o HELP THE WOALD SCHOOL OF MEDICAL. & DENTAL PERSONNEL 1895 Newport Blvd., Cosio Me.. 645-2922 Introducing Frog Lovers To Chopin Parents, don't 'vait until . your child is out of the Frog Lovers Age before you give them the gift of music - You wait and it may be too late! Children in the Frog Loving stage (4-8) are the perfect age for . learning music. Yamaha,·after years of research, designed the Yamaha Music Course to assure that all children can learn music. You do not have to buy an instrument, there is no home study -just lots of fun for your children while tQey learn music. Classes are now enrolling -won 't you please give us a call and let .us show you the whole story of the Yamaha Music Course! Your biggest reward will be when your frog lover looks up at you a~d tells you ... "I gave my frog a new name, Beethoven." Yamaha Music School )N COSTA MESA__ 642-1844 . I GLAD TIME PRE-SCHOOL 15th & Monrovi• Streets N1wport S.ach (Hoa g Hospital A rea) GLAD TIDINGS PRE·SCHOOL -ELEMENTARY • Applic•tions Now Being T1ken For Fill Clesses, Full Day Kinder91rten & 1st. Gr1dt. Small Classes lndiyldu.11 Help Phonics l iceued Pr•khool Wkla 91.tlfitd Ttoellen Ii DlrKtor SPECIAL RATES FOR FIRST 25 PRE:SCHOOLERS WHO REGISTER!! 646-6620 or 546-7866 SAUCERMAN SCHOOL • ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS" 88 FAIR DRIVE • COSTA MESA Grades 1 through 9 Small group and individualized teaching to meet the re8listic needs of youngsters. Abilities will be challenged by good teach- ing and a variety of educational materials so that more effectiye learning will result. MOTIVATION Operates only from within a person -nol from the outside. Good teaching can stim· ulate motivation within a youngster by building on successful learniny experiences. Nothing .succeeds like success. , WHERE THE -PROGRAM FITS THE CHILDI \Villard H. Saucerman, Ed. D. Telephone 540-4060 School 548-1151 (eve.) ENROLL NOW FOR FALL J -.b. ·-M··· ··w 1'1_00_ J-L-••--. Wom. 7100 - -------------.. -Job W•nted, Men 7000 Jobs--Men, Wom, 7100 ° 4 4!~·-_!~· v--...n I ·I Young exe<."Utive with exten-A.;;;;0>:;.;-p;rktng * BEAUTY COUNTER Glf\,L, part time. ~ • • •1 sivemarkt:tingandgeneral Se rv ice For Local OPERATORS* Pref.student: afternoon 1 management experience in Restaurant has Im 01 ed . lfai r t tyllst .,.,i th clientele u·o r k · EAST BLUF }' top Fortunl! 500 Company openings incl. r u n n e r s, 6.'i';'o comn1, pd. vac .. or CLEANERS &44--0932 ' • I seeks pos!Uon in small doormen, & 0 per at i 0 n booth space for rent. Also DEL IVER YMAN-Young, I ~ manufacturing or service !!upervlsor. Call 642-1224 room for 1 ·new Ucense-no neat e.ppearing for job with SEPTEM.BER 14 I business in Orange County. day or eve. · foll. ~q'd. Apply in person growing corp. 1'.1ust have 1 Position should offer event· ·APPL y NOW FO Hair West, 330:> Newport good driving record. Apply uaI ownership opportunity. AFTER LABOR D:Y Blvd, N.B. 2221 Fairview, C.M. . 11 Excellent educational back· Steady part-time job BROASTER-Coonter g i r!, DENTAL ASS'T I GET MORE FUN Out of Life! ground and references. exper in pre.paring Chairside. Exp. pref., 2 days I ACCOUNTANT Write in confiderte to Box 1 sandy,·ichcs & salarl11. Bal a wk. 645-!·121 . TO $900 MO. •Pl076, Daily Pilot. nleresting survey-IYJ>e work Beach Broaster 5l:i E. I r I GOLF INSTRUCTIONS I ===~~-.,-,.,--from home. NO SELLING . Balboa Blvd. DONUT SHOP I ad ie s ' ' I Recent graduate wt th data REFINED Lady des i re s Good t 1 h v.•anted 25-4a no exper =~~~":,~~~oo~~ IT:~tio~se~~':i~~ u1:~: ~~t:a: :~ft:1~~ --CARRIER ~~p~-~~·s1~~~.r.~N·~~: I EARLY ACHl~EMENTS CENTERS, INC. 11 M~t ho willing to mov•. Su· l.ooal Rel"• oxcl>angod. Call M 2022. Daily Pilot. 2211 IV. BOYS * DRIVERS * I / pervillO!"Y ability, 646-9769. BaJboa, N.B. &. Include tele-On September 14, the Sunflower Early I '"'"" ""mb". WANTED No Experience I Achievement Center wUI open its doors ta SKIP MA'( Pro-O wner Compl 1t1 Stock of Golf Eq ..,ipment Job Wanted, N ORDER DESK CLERK Women 7020 A:~J.l::~g~~~~r :~ for the ecessary! children ~ges 2·11. The program is designed I $3.15 HR. ------DAILY PILOT !\lust ha\·e clean California 1 to support your child's ind1v1dual gro,vth Order processing &: customer LET me address your req'd. Own tr as n s P · driving l't'Cl'.lrd. Apply I 545-9993 I aervice background, neat ac. ~nvelopes, circulars, etc in desirable, personal rel'a a Dana Point, San Juan YELLOW CAB CO. pattern \Vhile building his character, inde-I curate typist. warehouse my home. 642--4981 aft 4 PM must. &12-l22·t ·day r eve. Capistrano and 186 E. 16th st. I pendence, respec£ for others and respect for * A SS I S T A NT Capistrano Beach. experience. ~---K-Costa 11esa sel( (i n addition to meeting hi s baSic.. cir· I Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 Y. EE p ER. Ex rn:e ' Contact ~tr. Seay at ELECT . I d ) al•"· am;abl• bookk ' DAILY PILO_t RONICS SU p I' L Y I rtCU ar nee s . c ·os1A MESA ~TE~R$ . ...,~~LI..E...R..SALESl\JAN, -·--SPRAY PAI~ ,,, A Better Position · 10-wol1rwt1.h-rap1dly-gnrn'~ -s8i1Clemeii <' o ce -1~ \\' \V ·i ht c 1770 N I • FROM $l HR. Jng firm. 30 hr worJ< Y.'l?C'k. 305 N. El Camino Real port Biv~.~ C.M~·· eii·. 1 For information and application lo lhr. 1 GOLF RANGE 3 Ye.an experience with tex. T •"'-J v•a11:e" open <le.pending on 492-4420 Sunflo\\.'er EAC-2515 \Vest Sunfl ower Ave .. pain all m.tal •tr qualifications & ellperience. E wecut1"ve Sec t y ture ts on sm c co '"' re ar 1 Santa Ana -call Mrs, Ruth Brewer, Su n· 2717 N Bl d .. -.r1... Apply In person only. Z221 AKE DE RATOR. ex-Call Loraine, \\"e!lh•liff Per. I ewport y . ~ -..l: ~ Fairvirw Rd, c.r.1. perlenced. Apply in person flower Director (714 ) 5'"4750 S<>lll'IC'I Agenry, 2043 \Vest· . • 'W" • I Costa Mesa - 9 am • 10 .._ * ASS'T HELPER * FRENCH"S PASTRY 1170 cliff Dr., N.B. 645-mo L pm GEN'L MACHINIST 'fi,'-t::,:!"J,,' .'~= = \V. Baker, C.'.\1. A MEMBER OF THE U.S. FINANCIAL GROUP at Orange County Fairgrounds M '3 HR _._,,_~c~Alfp#f COASTAL AGE.,CY Expert Typist - - - - - - -..c-~~·1~~~..,~~~~~"i"~~~~~~~~~1 FRO " • thorlf Jf64JJI FUU. OR PART Tl?.lE "' '.\la.ii ord e.'<p, bondable. -~ -----: 5 Years job shop experience ==========I Age 19-31, 6 .months resdcy. A member of ~iZU. Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 ,Jobs.-Men Wom 7100 ;:b-.:.. -W ---7-1·00 J_b ___ ·-on all machines. re<(d. $3.85 pe.r hr. Snelling & Snelling Jtl('. ---·-• -•• _ ~ a.--m.n, om. o s--Men, Wom, 7100 The World's Largest EXPER"O., ~latu~. femaJe , . GENER.AL HELP .. HO'.\lf?'\'ORKERS Needed J--:u;-rro;, l,ir hrs per nite, ;ODEL T)•pe Girls :or FACTORY WORKERS $2.62 HR. Draft exemr1. husky men. WIJling to work a.n.)' 1hlft. APEX Employment Agency .-raE EASY V..'AY (ask u1 why) 1873 HARBOR ILVD. I~ block So, of 19th) COSTA MESA 548-3426 ·' abilities an Li mite() agenccv . TRISH HOPKINS 438 E. 17th,'Sulte 2"14 C.~I. 642-1'70 Account1nt-To $800- E.D.P. e.xperient<'. Good backgrounrl. Call Loraine. 645-2770, Westclilf Personnel Agency, 2043 \\'estcliU Dr. N.B. • ACCOUNTS PAYABLE * *CLERK* Ph: Jim Thommon 956-287:i Professional to assist front medical of· $4.25 an hour for 1mmed. open Ing s. Kentucky Fried Chicken hospitalily !ltn'i~. Xln't A-SLt~·f-GYM-~-.1,-1,....-h-el~ !!'Hp0lo,y00m,•8n1tc~•1 r::.~!~"" ficc. Ph: &16-44GJ. Lg. expand. chain, II or pt :;:per. ~0.t b7'"d. oy,•n 693 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna.' pay. S.l.R. 83.l-!Xi\. "'"" •• .,,..,..._,.., e Experiehced f'l'tall groc:. lime help for Sllles asst. Age .nsp. esira '· personal Ap{f. ahcr lpn1. e i\fOTEL '!AID • rlemo'llllrntr v.orld !I .~o. 1 Harbo Blvd'. a Ada l" "" N!f s a must. Call &12-122-1 exe!'tlser ,T; f'lfT'flt'li•rf' f'T· r t ms nu1n & an experienced re. :r-.N. 6 mo·s rcosdcy re<fd. day or e\"e. Janitor needed _ Ed\\·arcls R('liable Steady \Vorker riti,.,..., ™-"v SLIM C";Y!\I ,lfIT COCO'S. REUBEN'S ta ll produce man 67>5766 Call !\Ir. Nelson 956·2Si3 . . Cinema rheater, Harbor & 494-15.:JT J\.\TH. No l'xDl"r. Nee. -COMPLEX -Jfousekeepcr-Live in, some Ada-· C.!\f 54;;,99'.)9 ==-~-----Experienced Chairside Den. GEtJERAL OF FICE-cook" II' ..1.· ...... • • NEED mature "·omen lo sit !'~irl,.v Grnh11.m 897-1986 or • ing, Pvt rm. 011,1ng 6 pm 646-4871 1al assistant. Contact Box ASS'T BOOKKEEPER f~m. Sp. speaking ok 1 ..:..:.,c~·===~=~...,-\Vilh n"Hlther 6:30 to 4:30 'Iii · 4647 1\facArthur Blvd. l'f" 1077,,Daily Pilot Should be R ' good typist. 96&-6:?Jj. . * KITCHEN HELP * after holiday, then 1lo4:30. AUTO MECHANICS Nev.rport Beach ~=~~~=~=~!Sh orlhand \\'Ould be helpful, HO USE KE EPER·mature ;>iS.3061 Sl.25 hr. No house\\'Ork. Call Temporary 12 10 4 wk!l.l $3.49 FAT & UGL Y77? but not necessary. Salary IDS 1 eCI" 1 · aft 6 p.n1 ., ;)18-718j, per hr. One yr. general au. INTERVIEWING !\10N·FRI hab open. Send complete resunte responsible>. Live In, 2 MA , mm La e ope~1ng, 1--------- 1omotlve> ex?>crlcncc. vii.lid 2 TO 5 Pi\1 lJ YoU are, we pro ly can't \\'f references to box, school age children. Pvt Top \\"ages, Meals provided, Cal., d · JI --i use you, M-200l. Daily Pilol. 22ll \". roont & ha. color TV. i\tust apply In per!On. 1 . rivers cense. b"""' CALIF. CASTING CO. ·v \Veekl'nds on. References. &lm-.1pn1. Jan111!ca I n_n physical cond. Day and nigh! e COOK • Is continuing Us seareh In Balboa Blvd. Ne IY P 0 r l 897-0S&t. , .c"::.";:•l::.·..:C::d:.."::.·--~~~ shirt availnbi4!. NO EXPERlENCE NECES. Orange Co. for a variety of Beach. r· Apply Personnel, CITY OF SARY. F'ULL TIME, PART t.vpes, for \\'Ork In mag. mo. ---------HSKPRS En1plyr pays fee ;\fAiq Nt'flled_ 11! rclif'f c~crk newport . personnei .agency NE\\IPQRT BEACll, 3300 Tll'w!E. DAYS OR NIGHTS. del" 1V ml' Ind * HAIR STYLIST* George Alle n Byland Agen-.al sport hsh1ng tandin~. Newport Blvd ., Ne\vport ·fll nig, G com 1·1 "tt ' MUST BE TOP CALIBER, cy 106-B E. 16111. ~1A. \Varied hours, N.8. re!\ident p f . I S Beach, Calif. 92660 (TI4l 1r COOKS \VANTED, Apply w:~ ~~~tpaypa,irl~ ~ :: FOR BEST CLIENTELE 5'17--039j. preferred. Perm job. ro ess1ona ervice 6'73-6633 In person, :\IESA l.Ai'iES, OUTSTANDING COi\l;\llS. 673-1434. for the employer · 1700 Superior, Costa ?.fesa, Not a school. SIONS. BEAtmFVL SALON. 110USEKt:EPER \Va.nted-51--~----~,-, I and the applicant BABYSITTER \\'anled for 64&-3993. FREE "llJGGI" 335.5 VIA LIDO hrs per rla~. afternoons ~ton ~IAN To assist nlgf' of local 833 D 0 NB • ·ARE YOU ol'IC' girl 20 nionths old,1..:...:...-=o=~=--,---I TV SCREEN TEST NE\VPORT BEACJI. • Thru F1i. $2/hr. :\lust ha\'e appliance store. Neat ap- 0 ;:;_381'0" · • Costa ?.fesa 111rea, your COOK !Dinner) PH: cn4) ~ car & referenC('s, 616--0936. pearance. 496-2383· lo.Ir. ---------BEAUTIFUL 77 home. Call bl'l'IYeen 12 noon $30 Shilt lo :\lll'"t 10 AM to 6 PM • 673-6800 * \Vrlght 9-10 am only. wanled for resort, $500. per !1!0. Hole.I experie n ee desirable. Write: Box ?>l· 2027 Daily Pilot. N.8. Il'a all ln the tre of Ult be-&. 2 pm only. 646-7565. Bo.L'.'.;U~E::_,-;B:'.;E;E;I ==;;67'-;;,990~1 I i';m;;i;;-Piii(i"'a;;;;;;:e,:j;;j HARb\\'ARE S\ln Stock HOTEL • • •:\ _rE ... ..:Cl:..IA-N~l~C--....:..-~ . TV -:-Female PBX for ans11:erlng ~fan. Jl.W, \Vright Co. 126 i\lale student \\'anted f 1 · holder, CMclc the com-BABYSITTER In my OOme. • COOK·HOUSEKEEPER * service. 1°"A'O ahlfts avail. Roe or n. GOLF COURSE ?.fECH~NfC ml, you watch and If )'O\I Lile Hsekpng. Call Apt. 5 Gl'ncra.: Ute duties. 12·7 pm. 7:3MP~l & 3-ll p M . --"'-'-"-'·_c_._,_1·____ tr.resting \\"tlrk. \V\11 train, Counll")' Club JocaUo1' In fetl you'n aa pretty as pm. 613-4260. Good &Jary. ~lust ha\'t 64&-8000 HIGH Mhool gtrls "'llnled for First_ clau hn_t~I. PJeaMnt NewPort Beach area. iiecks. aome of those people, tall us. BABYSlTfER ·wan 1 c rl . car. 64+-UIS. ----ll'll'phone rtte)itioni!t & V.'Ork~ng conchflOns. Pref. nie<:h11onlc \Vilh txpcrie.nce CALIF. CASTING CO. Paularino sch!. district Ph: ~c~oc=o=-·~S~R~E~U=B~E~N~'~S-IFIVE neat appearing men contact ii'Ork. ·No exp. Spe.n1s~ ,\English 11.peaklrtg. repairing and malnienance b -onlinulng Us aearch,i(~r !>t0-6992 flfl 6 P~f~ -COMPLEX-rhor light city delli~"try. Mwt l'lt'Ct.ssary, Short hrs. Good ~..'::.)' 5h1f1. Call 6#-1700 Ex!, of small engines,1tn0\\'<'.rs. evfryday people who ha:~• BABYSlTIER, JU p lo.I . · avt own car .. now area. -y,·ages. Apply 9-4 P'.\I, 771 .,,a, and rela.lt'd gol (Oursc • de11lre to work or 'TV Of ~1on·f'rt. Sln rt L\ft\IED. A&Jl '• 1•oAnh·•• Blvd. App~'l!MHP~f 771 \V, 19th \\'. 19\h, Suite ll, 01 HOTEL Ot:SK CLER K' e q u Ip men I , I PAlntlnng. mode.Un& Jobs. $75 to $125 SALARY OPEN. MS-878'l 't " St,""' te · ,...., ~--~-----male, \Vfhcnvy expcrir1W)f' \\'tiding, carpe"n.ry , a d per day. No 1,;:i 1 y(IU ever. Ne\\'J)Ort Beach •• ~RY COOK..ot.yii llO~IE\VORKERS \VANTED DEL \\'EBB'S NE\\'PORTER plumbln& apr.r, desirable. * FOR ON CA'fERA Banklnit ' <Envelope Addte891?:rsl. " * ~,l)MMJE~RCIAL 1NT£RVIE\\1INC MON·FRl e FRY COOK.:rtlle:I Ru&h glamped, 1elf ·Rd· Jr.N, llO?Jambom!Rd,NB. eo-ce.lle:nt \\'SZts benefits NURSES AIDES e All Shilts • Permanent • Full time for our new faclllties Apply in person HUNTINGTON ·BEACH CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL AUDmON '* ~TE LL R 2 TO 5 P?.t The Collage "Coffe41 Shop 562 dressed fl n v elope-. 64.t-1700, ~nd war k In K 'l"OndHlon11. CALL in~i 81\-8282 \V. l9th St. C.?.t. LANGDON IVORL b I I t 1•8 10 AM to 6 PM tt.xp'd. Aflply perAOTl 0\-rr 17 )"tAl'l D INSURANCE Ofr. ti e Ip , Plellse llU mt Ct t.r or 11 1''1orld1t St. Newport Ni lonil GIRL To help In tllotel clean-TRADERS, P.O. Box 1127· Typln11: & clerical, to S:Z.511 ~sume oullinina qu(ll!fica· (S tani;:-Lane\ ttfE QUICKER YOU CAU. &enk e BUSBOYS lnsi Saturdayg & Sundays A21, Redondo Meach, Calll. hr, pftin1e, SanlA Ana arta. llon• to Box rit-2021 Th~ lfuntlngton Bt'ach ~--~~-!'!-~-!!~-~-!!!-~~-!'!-~-!!~-~-!!•I ~£ QUltKER YOU ·S Superior l Plac:tnlia. N.D. :__•_D_l_S_H_W_A_S_H_E_R_S ___ .. _s-_24_3_1 _____ 190278 / Call l>U1369 10A~t-2P~f. i ~O•~l~ly:_:P~l~lo'.:.t,..'.N'.:.O~.~~'--,,-: • ..'.-'.:-:='.:-'.:-:'-'.:~·-'.:-'.:-:='.:-'.::-:'-'.:::'"',.) • • Jo Nit ID "' "' PA ti• • Tl PR to '" •• v. c. Op In m "' LI p1 '" p1 y< .. 7 11' .. a m lo A SI B .. Ji; H " ..E: Kindergarten Readine ss Arts & Crafts - Music & Rhythm Physical Fitness Phonics Colors & Numbers Educational Field Trips Hot Lunches · Basic Bible Stories • .... ~· . .. ' . --' ' ' . ..-.~.-, .. "' . ' • . . \ TOTAL CHILD DEVELOPMENT 20-PC. "MADl<ID" 3 ROO/,\~GROllP FROM MOD'EL HOMES ~ NURSING SCHOOL Teaching Practical, Nurses Aides, Nursing Assistants, Ordtrll11, Prlv1t1 Duty & Home Ci1r1 "" Full Weeks Comprehensive Schooling. "" Full Weeks On The Job Training In Acute Hospital "" Student Job Placement Assistance. INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU INVEST! (No New Front-No Fancy Equip.) Good Plain Nursing Taught By Qualified Registered Nurses. New Classes Starting ENROLL NOWI Nurses Training Institute 4016 W. Commonwealth, Fullerton 525-7521 SEW-KNITS SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS ond LINGERIE . WI HA.VI THI' P'INEST SILICTION OF kNIT FABRICS ON THE ORANGE COAST. 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA 540·3268 S-T -R-E-T -C-H· & SEW (T.M.) 8 CLASSES 2 hr. Lessons '1500 Morning -Afternoon and Erening ·~12 -For 6 Weeks Course on the HAMMOND ORGAN You do not have to O\VD an instrument. Free practice time available. Register now. Beginners register Tuesday night, Sept. 22, at 7 P."'I. Teacher, Laura Mae Shelor. Also classes for secondary & intermedi- ate organ students, register same time. Sign up no'v & avoid the rush! FUN · ENTERTAINING · KNOWLEDGEABLE Rent OrCJans Available DurillCJ Term of Course. Register NOW1 Inquire for details Hammond Organ Studios 2854 E. c .. 11 67J~fl0 Highway, Coron• d,.!1 Mar Ope91 M•....., • Fridcrr E•n. ENROLL NOW! All•Day Classes - Kindergarten thru 8th Grade e TEACHING THE 4 R's WITH PHONJCS e DOOR-TO.DOOR BUS SERVJCE e BEFORE AND AFTER SCHOOL CARE Call or write today HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN. SCHOOLS IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS For Men and Women e Travel Agent e Reservations • Ticket Sales • Air freight Cargo e Communications • Operations Agent Day and night classes AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Accredited: Santa Ana 543-6596 610 East 17th Street National Association Trade &: Technical Schools Approved for Veterans Eligible institution under the Federally in- sured Student Loan Program S AL ESWOMAN Ex· erienced,-l ul l time. Intimate apP-Brel sh<>p. call 6#--0170 for api)ointment SALES trainee-Stock. Alert. sharp. Full time. Apply A1-.f'. 1()...4, 27 Town & Coun- try, Orange. SALESLADY, Thoroughly exp e r., for lad ies' rt>ady-to-wear. Top sal for qu<U person. 4!»-3458 eves. SALES \\IO~IAN ~·anted, CX· perienct>d. 819 \V, 19th SI, Costa Afesa, e e SALESMEN, v.·holC'sale accounts for poster m CREATIVE DIST. 54~. SERVICE STATION -MANAGER- SAN CLEMENTE Xln! salary. Days. No prev. ious experience n;g"d but it Y.'OU!d be twtpful. \Ve train. Older men OK. No lube or I.ire repair. Afu&l.. be neat and dependable. Paid benefits. \Vrite for application, Box ---------- &me MIWl'I an more n1DGrrlinq. THE DRYMAN SCHQOL L••r,, How You C1n Tr1ln In Just A Few Months To Becotne A ••. e Medlc•I Assist•nt • Dent•I A1slst1nt e M.dlc•I Rec1ptJonl1t Be The \Gl rl You Were Meant To Be, In A Re· 1,1.·a1'tiing Career For The 70'1. Help Others & F\llfill Yourielf! can Or Write Today For Our Free Illustrated Brochure, "Some careers Are Jo.tore Rewarding," THE BRYMAN SCHOOL 1120 N. 1r .. kh11r•t An•lmm, C•llf. fJI01 Phont (714) 771-6500 I \Vould Uke A More Rewarding Career, Please Send Me Your Free Dlustrated arochure. Name' ............................................... ; .. _ Age ...........• Address -.. ·······-··--·-··········· .... ·····-···-·····················-City .................................... State -····-Zip _ ....... . Phone ................................................... _ ...................... . Last Grade Completed ··············-·······-................ _. , Includes: Quilled 10fa I chair1 2-end-til.b1e1 .le coffee table,~ l,iunpt, dttsscr, mir- ror, headboard, quilled box · springs & inattreSlll, 5 pc dlning room; ·table .I:. 4 bi- back chairl., COMPARE AT $1(9.95 $399 ' ' N'o down Pn;its. QnJy S16 mo: WELK'S WAREHOUSE «ll W, 4th St., Santa Ana SCRAM-LETS .ANSWERS Corpse -Loo!!e -·Cable - Sadist -SPECI' Ao.ES Il's easy tG !Ifie through people whcl make SPECTA· CLES of lbe~lves. FUJL'lfITURE returned from display ~tudl.es_. mcide1 hGm- e~, d.erorators cancellation. SJl:&llisb .t Me411eri'a.nean R D FURNITURE ' 1844 Newport Bl., C.M. 1 ~ every nlte •111 9 Wed.; Sal l Sun. 'ti! S , 16835 Brookhurst Street r.1-1os.1 The Daily Pi!Gt , N.B. LINGERIE CLASSES Fountain Valley •• Calilornia 92708 SERVICE St•. Pump i.t nt-(7141 '962-3312 ,. • Expcrienced •Full Time •Permanent 3 2 hr. $600 tcndant. Exp'd prcfd. Over LesJOns 20. 2801 E. Coast H\.\'Y at l~!!!!'!!!"'!~'!!!"'!!!!!~~~'T"'!'l~~'!!!"'!'!!!"'!!!'!!!!!!'!!!"'!'!! • Goldenrod, Corona del &\tar. 1· °'=o=~:==:::==:="i'=::==:=::=:::=::=:::=='i1_61_5--0533_-~·~~~~- 7100 Jobs Men;Wom.. 7100 Jobt Men, -'A(pm. 71001,;Jo1n;;;;;;;M;10;;n;•;W;o;m;;· ~7;1;00~1SERVICF: SIA. Allendant. NIGHT COOK & COUNTER * TOP \VAGES * RETAIL Sa.Jes Oerk, male, 6. RESTAURANT - Now taking Apply in per!IOn during HELP, full time & part day ~·k. Sat, Sun, aome applicaUona: for •COOKS• See Betty Bruce at morning hours, Ba)'l'ihore time, Apply: ClfOW BEl.J.. evt>s. 00-113.l, ask for Phil Apply, Colony Kitchen, 3211 m f1 Richfield. 200 \V, Coast P~~~;'JlO~: c.~~rk part Restaurant *H;bor Bl~RC.M. •LVN i6.:f Cx12c II\\)'. Ne\vpt, Bch. time, painting trucks, nights Relief. mainly w-eel<ends. 11. Agency for Career Glrb SE~VlCE _Station .A!lendant, &: \vk. end.~. Bo AT Reuben E. Lee 7:30 AM shift. Ph: 646-I624. 410 \V. ·eout Hwy, N.B. s\\1ng !1h1ft. Lorin s Arco, TRANSIT St&-7172. RN for Dr's Office l"'B~y!!a!!p!!po!!t!!"I,.. !!!!!!!!!!!!G4!!&.m!!!!"'9I 3201 1-lnrbor Blvd, H8_!:00r N I & San Diego F'rwy, t..l.t. PRIVATE School. needs n1an ow nterviewing Top salary 64&-3003 Sale• Interviews Mon . 3-7PM for general maintena~ & clean,,.-Apply '"" NICJht lus' boys **SALESMAN GRANfS SURPLI~. Brookhurst St. Fountain _ ~ va11ey. 962-3312 & Dishwashers R bbe Mold" c ..... In RHI Estate u r ' tnCJ Openings for young nie.n will. * APPLY * and Bonding ing to work and wanling to l:il E. COAST ff\VY. make a minimum of $1000 NE\VPORT BEACl-1 per month. NEED NOT BE I;;===-----LICENSED to apply. Special Restaurant program av.1il•ble for the licensed. Excellent training program, can earn \\'hile you learn. Call 540-8!M4 e.nd uk for the f\fanaaer. ~OCO'S Fashion Island * JNTERVTE\VING * Pl'Ogrcssivt' manufacturing Co1npany. located In Orange County, haa requlren1ent ro1· salesmen, experienced ln rubber technology, tG 11timt1- . late growth of It's rubber facility, Now Interviewing ' ·SALESMEN Must be full time permanent employee .Experienced preferred but not neeell.!lary. Under 30 yrs, pref'd, Many com· PllJl)' bene:tits. Apply in ~ only between 2 and 6 P .?il Ask !or M1ke Grant. Serv Station Mechanic-Sales. n1an, topW, 1495 Superior.- a' Plac:Cntia, N.B. SHARP· Glrl J.S..40. no eos- lume,, straight beer bar. "TI1c Place," 2000 W. Balboa, N.B. '"The Loclll," 219 S. Bristol, S.A. 675-5171 or 835-2382. rn.JDENTS, 11 yn & up to sell canrly in your own area. Make gorxt motJCy ln spare time and help nttd,y AChool. No cash r(!(Juired. Call 642-0803. 9 AM lo ~ PM. Apply In person only THE RIGGER No. 16 rashion Island Newport Beach **WA1TRESSES URGENTLY NEEDED FULL TIME Please Apply e SURF & SIRLOIN a W30 \V, Coast Hwy. NrWpOrt Beach OVER SEAS JOBS HI PAY- TAX BENEFITS We may be able to help you! FREE INFORMATION 213/277-8738 The•trlc•I DINING Jet $25, ~~ S15. EIEC Motor & be n ch • bedroom sets S25: good grinder, basketball stand. 1 cond. WED, 8196 Wild\\-'OOd, TV repairman case, 50 new ' 1:1.B. tu~s. Angeles French Prov. CANOPY crib, w h t t e , breakfront, $85. '"5&ortment 7900 complete. Chlntz curtai111, tool!!, furniture, misc ltem!i. rods, rings, complete. Reu. Cape l:luntU.-ton Condo 's. 968--3783 20'l76 Lantana W.B. !JGS.5946 WAJTn~ES. 21 or over, ACTING • DBLE Afaple canopy bed Bl?RMISET (bJondc), drpa:, i lunch & dinner, exper. pref. Do you want to be a full time w/spread, canopy & kitchen &tep-stool, vinyl but rot req. Apply bet 3 & working profeMlon&IT Do drape1. Call after 6 pm, chr,.: (lan~rine). 1'-11SC; 1 5 p.m. Jo.1on.&t., Village you have the seU dilcipllne 96&-m ~.i°.. o k s-.chlll8~1 ... '>lond · Inn. 696 s Coast Hwy, La-.to subject y.xinell tD a I'll· ... '6 • towels-rugs.tbl/bnens. guna Beach. 494-2770 kl Brltlsh training coun. ii: MAPLE g.1m/dlnlng table, Worf!en's I girl's + men's WAITREflS. Exper. tor :;ta.::~°:~~: round $MS48-2152 ::~c~4!1~11 9 x 8 1 lunches only, U..J. Apply in training period b complelef BEAUT. Ornate CU RI 0 surfboard. 9 x 12 ftua. pmion, Old Bru ssels Il ., THE LONDON LA-CABINET. MimJr back. 4 WeddJ.rw set. Play Pen. Restaurant, 2007 SG Coe.st GUNA ,A'C T "I Ii. S WORK. shelves, 62x2T. SAC! $550 • ..cJock: radk>. Used bed. BUSBOYS DISHWASHERS Applicant slx>Uld have kno\y. ledge of nibbe:r chemistry, rubber • to metAI bond.Ill&. and precision moldi~. PLEASE APPLY Ji.iCl Nt>wport Bh·d., C~f High'A•ay, Laguna Beach. u. ......... Co'-"--• 111sc * TELEPHONE "* SHOP might be able Ill help ~-· ~man ~-. r. · \Vomen tor eve. \\vrk, 6-9 .. \VAITRE~ \YAN TED you Nopreviousexperlenct ,. •~ M 1.-,...,_,__ 7841 Slater Ave, Apt No. 3 i REAL ESTATE OPEN· if<G FOR QlJAL IT I ED ~lAN. E xce ll e nt commission. tchedule plus many bonu1 benctlll -Ask fos; Mr. Srtyder or Mn. J oy AS.SOC:JATED BROKERS SE!\_ VJ CE, 2125 W. B11.lbo8 Blvd., N.B. or call 6'f3..3663; evts 642--22M Relief CObk, LVN .t Houstkttper. Bayview Con- vale1etnt l.fOl!p. 2055 Thurln, f;J\r. 642-~. APPLY IN PERSON"' •78 Fashion Ii.land, N.8. Restaurant Reuben E. Lee Now Interviewing *. HOSTESSES * APPLY 1~1 E , \°J&!il H1cy., N.B. ' Scope of exptrietlet! shOOkl lnCI~le ot tubbe:r 'Jll'1). ducts to both a(!l'Ollf)aC(! & oommertlAI markcta, Exccllcnl l"Qllnd floor oppor. 1unitlea In fast e-ro\\·ina com. pany, I '-'IESA . _.II -11 -V"rTWr ff B PM. our ofrloo on &Jboa App Y 111 pt'l'IOO. " neceua?')', no age barrlcr. * &46-4!M5 * 1 ,::;·;:;·~~=~~~~-I S ALESLADY • Some Island l\.talure iipeaklng .LANES. 1703 Su per i or , Members ot this exclu.a.ivt SAT &: SUN -all day. j nptirienca lor parl time voice.' Approx. S25. wk. Ph: Co8la. J.1eM. 646--3993. rroup will only be accepted FUR Sale, hooM Ml or Furniture, baby dothe11, leading to full t Im e 6754573 bftwn. 3 & & PM. WAITRESSES.fo"Ull or part u.pon a satisfactory penonal furnltu~ plus 2 aquariums. children's dothes, mite. i employment. 1'1u&l be able llmt'. A!tracllct, with happy interview With the ditectt.lr. Ph: 548-1658_C.M. 1519 Wettmln91er Ave, Q.l, l' - to work nights & Sundayg In TclephOnc \\>erk, 1ilaturo wo-faces. THE ZOO E . Coast Call 49M40C for ·appL roR.NlTURE-FOR am G. ARA.GE Sale! B/4 &. 9!S. i Chrlsfmlls period. See Mn . man needed now, plc(Wlnt • ......., lfaUey, 16181 Harbor Blvd. P'lrt time pennanent. No Hwy, N.B. MERCHANDISE FOR OREN. 2 wtt lMnk beds: 419 Westminster. N.n. l'u,m. F.V. !le.lllng, <'llY hoon, ~ WANTEd ·~xp/dl11hwl'sllml. SALE AND TRAOI Desks; ActfvU;y tbl. 6'13-1015. OotJ'llng & OODS & ENOS. l I ,_ S4Ml35. , I ·Sl\LES w/Sllm. Gym, YoU pay. 546·5438 for fUU lnfoJI. Penn po1 Uon avail. P~ase M~DE:R.N 8' ~fa "°; 2 6' x 1'.fail resume of qualltlca. can earn what you'r"t matlon.1-4pm. conlsct MMager. Be:ach Fumftu,.. 8000 9 ru.p; ~..T~aqU&riwn. Appllences 1100 1ton1 and f!Xptrltncc 1n Box wOrlhl Call Mary Lou.Good, T EL EPllONE Operator., HouftO Inn, 497·ll88 -· '°"'_.:.Pl_e_re_. _.,.... __ "---1--- M·1084 Dn.111 PUo!, N.B. 968--24l6 or S4l4329 weekend shift 1':30AM to \VAN'JED: Exper Scrvia' ·t'f'E:""9,...,.otrtor~. GOOd Dinette tet Xlnt cond. Ex-REF-R-IG-ERA--TO;;s- rJtE QUICKER YOU CALL. :\:30 Pt.1, 228 Forcs1, Lag., $hr ll!lll!smnn, 22-45. l<\76 eondlUon. $35 or bit orr. tC'ne.IOn table A t clah. $35. $35. $55. ,,E_ ... _._1_._,,._,1_,.,_1_1Y_,.•_1_n,_1o_,., __ n __ IE_Qu_1CKE __ R_Y_o_u_~_ ,_lk_h_. ___ • ____ . Pallndn Rd .• C.~f. tlJ4...;')308. 11 Eve•. 54~14() F.xcellcnl Mntli\k>n 646· - - I • •• ' I !8 DAI LY PILOT TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION. TRANSPORTATION T RANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO~ MiRCHA DISE FOR TRAN~~ORTATI ON , ____ 1 --- • SALE AND TRADE ---·-----l;:;;-;F;;R;-E-;E;;:;-T-;:O=Y::"'.O::U=· I !6:.'!o~it~•_!l~Y!!•~ch~t!.'-!:9000~ Alrcnlt 9100 '!'~-~<'!,•_ 9500 Imported Aut os '600 lmpOmd Autos '600 Im ported Autos Appll1nct1-1100 T1lovl1lo"'"'---~12os 110:,•o;ilkyoid .!~:'.''~,;"',~:; FOR SA~E . LEASE 11 INTEREsr 1" Mlt •~ 1970 G-M-C--·i AUSTIN HEALEY KARMANN GHIA MG OR CHARTE R i;trument equipped 19&1 GE \\1ASffEit & DRYER. 21" Color Packard Bell ho1ne Older children or ri.tOoney Mark zi . 300 hours 1 - -~ Bell models, slightly used, 8\\-edl h modern console, adull.s Pre!. 3 wks ol tree $1-$5.0001'.SOwn,5y1~balance. S~tOH. f inancial statement 1500 PICKUP '5.9 HEALEY '66 GHIA _._.......--.,. i:opper1onc, both for $200. A-1 eond, $175 or best offer. dog food comes ~·/her. 1980 4£' flybrldge 'Vht!c'ler Crn~ required 116 86 80 or 100, 6 cyl, Wirt y,•hef:li, 4 .apd, • THINK ~ Ms-.J.'>77, \\'a\la~. C.M. (front). 9/2 er. Sl.tepi a. Complete y &W-0889: -wloverdrivf'. 2 top11. S150 or '·'~G" NORGE Auto wuher, late -H·;--F I ,.-·S-1210 ADORABLE Altt'?'M-mal ~I~ "'0 ... i!lo~1.1NT-~-r.==="======o-f--1 WfJH CAMPER -otter. t.t U1t Sell! 892·2970. Sp.rklini; yellow ...,1u1 black mode~ $65. N011:t dee dryer 1" t•rto 1tn. min. c:oroa poodle. All '" " M bll H ---SHARP1t60 -vtn,1 inlerior. Radio, plus $40. "'BOl."h X1nt con a. 100 \VATT Stereo "10 am/lm 1100111 gd ...,,/children, ~sb.rk. XTRAS PLUS? 1.1'ake oHe~! 1 __ 0 __ ,-__ ._,.,_--,_-, ___ ,. __ m cna:tne, heater, delwcc One hundred-six r.erits air 1.-ond. ISRV!OOi !<7-8115, .......,,, ndio, Garranl 1abl•~l2 a~ w"ch dog ""' h;•h 1""1 D•" -E"' & w -•••••••••• cab, llb.,gtu. tU.. with Mcchank•ll> P<rlcct $1450 ''fRIEDLAHDER'.' •-" • ya~ -•493 --1.«~ 911 '""' .,,...,,, • 1001 ••b ... , '"-of • MAYTAt..; • .,.,. .... ce ~Ian, ~Ullpfnded r;peaken. New '"...,.,.... v• O;J ~ 0 ... ~ ""'K Sacrifice sr.oo. 540-6539 NEW MIDGET $19'$ has ...,.ashert, dryers&: mat-for "115. Sacritice $250. "QUEENIE" Lovable blk. & 25' Pacemaker -alglas 1961 Road Cllmpt_r, Stove, retrig.l..::=========1 lmli •••CH IHWV. :ttl clWig ~ts. Bst. Guarantee. 646--086Z Brw. fem. G. shepherd 8 Sportllsher compl~t~~1Y Don't Be Ldte c.>:rator, :ID 1al. water tank. CORTINA 893-7500 • 537.682-t .-~1.-n. 11\0, gd w/chiJdren & other cqulei:· s=t 20~ do ·~ Pick Your Choice Now natural v.'OOd with Iota of Harbour v w NEW-USEO.SE RV. __ .. r & Cam•r e1 & ~. nds feoctt yard \\'ce e ' • w ln the room~ 1966 2 o0oR Cortina GT, • • .._ ---------.-:t, NEW/\J~ ll.PP 1ances. E 1 t 1300 l -529-SOSl; 529-S34S 9/l v.·!th appl'OVed credit or $3295 ---------TVs All guarantee d . qupmen trade 11ma1J acrea1e . MEADOWS l'uns good -good rubber -18711 BEAC1-I BL. 8'12-4-135 Dunlap's, 1&15 Newport, CM NE\V Mansfield Sky I a r k 4 Midget Kil!ens 8 weeks 673-1385 or 6-14-17l1 • f t i below low book. al5-6811 HUNTINGTON BEACH I========= 54$-7788 automaUc 35 mm camera. old. 3 white & 1 calico. AlliO • CHARACTER TUG BOAT ~ L • '. • go~~ as Serini 58744 afternoons. LG. -coLDSPOT REfl\lG • $20. 6#4i88 2 older 5 mo old k1t1ens. or y,·ork boat. 20' LOA. Eng uxurio us '"ew UNIVERSITY '68 Karmann Ghia, air-cond. Nldlals, stereo system, lo mi'~. S2l00. 673-2312 . MGB .~'eron-;:"'. """"';;:,..,.,,, • ....,, & """" ,.. 1969. u,11 ""' Adult Park OLDSMOBILE ......, Sporting Goods l500 KING size box spring and r;ound. Dock avail. VERY Small pets a llowed DATSUN KENMORE Washer $45, GE mattre", Ken1nore v.·asher, CUTE! $2,0CKI ::;.A. Fwy at Jeffrey Rd, eiec dryer S35. Both Xlnt POOL TABLE needs repair, box of Navy * MS--0440 * 14851 Jeilrey Rd_ '65 MGB ROADSTER 2850 Harbor Blvd. $--Colita ~lesa 540-9640 -METRO cond. 841--8U5, 546-fti72. 4 x 8 Regulation. unifonns. 934.2 ?-talahinc, BOSTON \V ha 1 e r 13', 714/832-~ call colh.'Ct Complete with all JIB. 968-78JO. ~/1 l.'vinrude ('lectro-shifl 40 531-8105, 530-2930 ·s~ CHM YAN -"'"u• -E.'lic-cllent condlt io.~1 __ v.1re y,•t ... ~ls. (VNE 099l . Owned by JitU e old school !cacher. Take trade or sn1all down. Will fin. pvt. ply. Dir. Call Pat aft 10 am 540'3UIO or 49-1-1029. -·-Antiques 1110 PE~BR.00~ Cherry dropleaI table, Sheralon loveseat, Vic pcs, 6 t'l8k malching chair$. R. S. · Prussia & Cranberry. 548-5150 HOUSEF U L of OLD FASHIONED WICKER FURN, Good cond, 644-288.1. accessories. Xlnt cond. BEAUTIFUL Kittens, 8 1-vks 111., mOT, Its, ~ing-cotrcr- S35(1. 646-362!1 old-durk calico & ~ilver trailer. Xlnt ('Ond. 615-1371 M lac•llan.ous *AUCTION* l'~lne Furniture tiger. Call eves or wknds 14' BOSTON Whaler, 25 hp 84Z-63'l9. 9/J John.son '69 riec start $91~ S:.\t. Dogwoods daisy dog 112 W. Coast Hwy, NB fmiale l\sbrk gd with olde.r ~18-00:11 ~~~'~":~· very gentle 00f:911 .. -:41~'"CH=ru"'s"OCFB==.""""''"".s;-;::h''°Y" "'"'~'"" ONAN, auto pi.lot. 130\V & Appliances "I EXTRA Jong haired & 1 Auction1 Friday 7:30 pm short haired kitten pl. Sewing M1chlne1 8120 W indy's Auction Barn PeN;ian. Solid orange, silver 20751-i NeY.'PQrt, CM &J6.8686 v.tilte, solid wht, Russian radio, RDJ.', Fathomt"lt'r, sho\l.'t!r, 2 hca<is, clec galley, $21,!MXI. 644-4221. 1970 Singer touclH>-rnatic, Behind Tony's Bldg, Mal'I. blue. 897-5480, 836-4493 9/3 Sailboats 90)0 rlgl-i..ag, bek '"'b· wt~ntithocol n-HAND-KNIT sv.-ealer of. a'"'"' LOVABLE yng Si I\' er -H-0--BIE CATS ao e, ma es u wn es, ... -Cockannn i. Adr. "';8, P"P overcasts geams, bl l n d Blm Barn . Too big for knit· .-- hems, designs & etc. Guar. te:r, size 36. Professionally would like home together. ALL COLORS all •~ finished. \Viii sell tor my ?.1olher Hsbrk. gd. w i I h ~~~ or sm pym..... COflt only $40. fendleton children and cats, needs ... •,FREE DEMOS --~~~---• wool labnc lor •kl.rt $8. '"""" , .... ,, ,,._,,.,, CAP'N EDS •••••••••• ADLT Park, Lido Village, 1'1ob. homf' 8xli, plus 2 nns . . "LeaderinTbet.eaeb Cilles" METRO VAN l'Ai Ton enc1'>&erl fre ight box 1953 ~ T builtin camper. <G96J69Jl dl r. \Vlll take .care ZIMMERMAN Stove, sink, Ice box, carpet. in lradc or finance pr1vat" 2145 HARBOR BLVD. ing, · panelling, bed, new parry. !">1&4057 or 494-0811. 540-6410 paint. Xlnt condition. 10X35 & 10Xl8. Air oond, 1960 Ford ~~ ton-V8. H.D. l''ull·SZ bath, Nu cpl8 &. suspension, &ply tires & rlrps, Nu util shccl. $7500. tarp. $515. 540.3660 alt 6 S BENZ Bes! olfer or ca.o;h , & pm. Silver finish w/black vinyl MERCEDE '66 1600 ROADSTER * 54 ,_ ""' * -',.'-.'"'-..""'-T_.0D,. •_·1..,"'°-,,-"'== ,,._,,,,,,..=;:--;;:-=:=:=::I interior 4 speed. Dir., (RUC. -----·----• '60 }~ord Pil·k Up ,,·/camper __ Mbl Home Buyers Serv. shell, Isl S200 takes. CaU 851) \Vill take trade or fin. Buying a n1obile horile? Save 6-16-5&17. a54n.,C:""'2rrlva4~~ .,.,pa11'1ll call SIOOO's. Let our money-sav-1 .,:=::==;:;;:==== , ,,....,..:; or ;n-uo , ing cxper1s rrp1·esenl you in J e•pl 9510 DOT DATSUN the purchase of your mobile ---~---- home. 714/494-4446 1967 Seoul 4-wheel drive, OPEN DAILY b I P k K. S\950 or be~! offer. Good AND ADULT !\'lo 1 e ar . 1t SUNDAYS Trojan 31· x a;;· Double Cond. Call 646-6580 18835 Beach Blvd. ~xpando. Unfum. &12--0J(t7 liunttna"ton Beach Ca mpers 9S20 Orange Coun !y '~ L ,lr(l'!~I Selection Nl'W & u ~ed M!'r c£"<lf'~ Bent Jim Sl emons Imps. W .H ner & Mai n St. Sanl.J Ana 546-41 14 '69 t.IGB • GT, A?-f I l"M stereo. overdrive, ltOOO mi. A white beauty S 2 9 9 5 . 644-5687. PORSCHE '61 PORSCHE CABRIOLET * REPAIRS* ,,,._171l! l!J&.4!93 9/l _ Clean oil & adjust your . 7200 w. Cst. lJwy. NB &1>2244 Motor Homes 911S ' home .LQl fl, KrlvinatQr ..ll!rig ! WHT, I tiger, I ~Y & v.·ht =.=~=~~=-,.-•-----~~--1967 842-7781 or Y.G-0442 Hrrdtop, gleamini; metallic silver, with brand new in- terior; chromf! \\•heeb, ra- dial tire~. AY./fr.t z;ad io, '66 DATSUN Roadster 1600, MG Lie, WY\V 715. machine in your .-'35: llOV 250 fath om JO ens. Welineti &: ,24 .HOL_,ID!t.Y Yawl-~ps-4, 5 -NE\V •it n1od cl Vaca- Special $3.95, all work euar-lathometer S35: \Visconsin trainrd. Mesa Verde area. -i;iuls, inhrtl e~. radio, elc,c tioncl'r--lhC' finest in inini antttd. S45-8238 V4 20 HP a ir cooled Sl50; !;46.1570 9/3 sy~. gal., head, all a~ 1 hon1cs, 19' fully .self-<.'On- ADLER sewing machil'lt!, l'A 6V air horn f14· Door NEED I e m p 0 r a r y or "'race & ciiil11e e q u 1 P · taincd. Your inspection in- yts old, $50. chimes $3; D~~g parts permanent home for a ~ecently o'hauled. ~lust vitcd Scott's, 914 N. Harbor, ** 497-1251 ** $4. Simca eng parts. pregnent cat. Probably will i;cll . 499-206&. Santa Ana. 5J6.-3912. hove mitten toed kittens. STURDY 20' wooden aux. ========== Musical GAS stove, nearly new. \Viii help place 1 a I er. filoop, sips 2. plley & head. ln1trumenh 1125 '"" · bl & 4 892-8881 before 6 9/3 Nu dacron sails, M is SISOO. 1---------u 1n1fW'/game la e 642-39n/Sam-5pm, 548--3918 GOOD Used band in-:!:!~.eredPai:ha:hois1t:r: lc:;u~Em~~:n~:n ~::~~ e~. . struments: 7 flules $40 e:a. l swivel/rocking chairs. All hair 897_5480 836--44S3 913 26' SOLING '6!1 Olympic cl. trumpet 163. 1 E--flat alto excellent. 649 Darr e 11 . ' ' Abbott North :sails. Lots of hom S75, 1 f b r g l s 64&-:WOl C.ORGEOUS amber, long-. xl ras $3950. C.OUrtesy 10 souAphone $90. 893-1486 ask 1 --------~ haired malrt killen, 6 mo. brokers. 112 \V. Coast Hw-y, for "carter Engle", AMF Grand --Pri-..: Slate A190 adorable loving short-N.B. Mlh\'iat regUlation pool table with hairs, 3 & 4 mo. l\tust be .,_"===~~=-,--,,I all accessortes, llawless kepi r;trictly inside. All • COLUMBIA-29 \\1ark II II SALE II Big Plano & Organ SaJe: going on RJGllT NOW at WARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO 1819 Newport, CJ\.!, 642-MM PIANO Music • Wedding receptions, Dinner parties. Plano lesson.s, H.B. 21J/ 431).6182 e New Hotner ll string • guitar & case, $225 • 615-8748 aft 6 1r' condition. Original cos I "'/shots. f>.l!)..l846 9/3 Fully eqp!. Just hauled & $1500. Mo v l n g, must polished. Xlnt Cond. Price sacrillce for $900 cash. Ask POODLE Ir terrier mixed 10 sell~ &15--1410 * to• °'"'' ~PP "'"9100. puppie~. 6 "'ks o l d . ' " '"' .,..,r -9 3 COLUMBIA 26, '70, many or a fter 9:00 Pt.1. 54>71>51 S1X"l89 / xtras v.·/slip. S2SOO down. 3S6 A Pon1ehe bumper, Pur- isr Delight! Never been ding. ed $75. Kenmore 7 sp, "-'a.Sh· er, S15, u i!. 548-8404 alt 6 Pl\T. MALE Beagle, 2 yr old. All rMUme loan. 832-0561 shols, Jovei1 childt'\"n. 649 Dam>ll . 646--JoKll alt 6:30 27' f'EATIIER Sloop, !rbgls P:\f · 9/3 o/l'o'd. Gd cond, mui;t sell. SI695. 615-1393 or 531-5363 8 PUPPIES. same littC'r, but e 20. Sloop-wood keel boat, I 2 V\v a.II sizes. & colors. Small MOVING, Must sel : mixed breeds. &12--0l76 or sleeps 2. snow tires $10 ea, V\V rack fi42-3l5.'i 913 $1 1011. 837-7039 $10, King-sz bed. 1 yr S90, 7' SJ\rl.ING DJ NG HY • LJKF. NEW e Old chest ol drawers $10, SM, Tiger kitten 7 tno old COMPLETE. $90. ~otorcycl•s 9300 nrv'U"V'I THINI HONDA ... ''FRIEDLAHDER" 127• ••ACM (HWY. Wl 537-682~ e 89.1-IJ66 NEW-USED-SE RV. nn.n.n.n ·\Vholcsale. &12-8102. l-------~-Nu titts, Needs pain\, ~2199 1969 DATSUN 2000 .,fl.top, MG CHIC IVERSON CAMPERS xlnt cond, Pric:ed \O\\' for ~~n;i!:~ VW · quick sale, SJl;iO. 833-l092 All Model.I ~1,.3031 Zxt, 66 (Ir 67 COSTA MESA 3 TO CHOOSE FROM 1-E;;;;;N,;;;;G;;:U;;:;SH~FO;;;;R;;:;D;;;I l91Q,,,HARBOR BLYD. 1• '60 PORSC HE Cabrk>1et, 1600 All. Fully Equipped ALL NEW ENGLlSH '"''"· with hard lop. N•w FORDS NO\V IN Sl'OCK • 1 OQO'o oR••srrCALLY 3100 w. c.out Hwy , N.&. engine, :new clutch, new " ~ ,,.,-,, -w paint, AMIFM. G ed REDUCED 6'2->100 ><0-116' • "' uarante TO CLEAR Authorized MG Dealer just like new, can be seen USE AS CAMPER ' ·LARGE SELECTION '63 MGB al 2089 ""'"°' Blvd., 0• TO CHOOSE FROM 4 speed, wire ...,,heels, radio, phone 645-1982, 9am to Spm OR BUS Thoodoro 1988. · 1961 PORSCHE 16'JO. GO. 1967 I UOL-8731 ROBINS FORD HARBOR A'1ERICAN '°"I.'""'""' $2200 ot' bot 1967 IUOL-6311 206011.,,;,,.lllvd. 1969 1=1Blvd. 01'· 53&-lJ ... 536-4911 1967 I U9H·6921 [<c~ .. ~t·~'~"~"'~~~"~>00;1;•1 ~::'~~"==~~Rand~'~· ~====:;~ $2295 I~ Used C11rs 9900 Us.cl Cars 9900 FERRARI FERRARI Harbour V.W. N.zr'eo..!i~mly~!i~ 18711 BEACH BL. 842-4435 lzed dealer. HUNTINGTON BEACH SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach 642-9405 54~1764 APOLLO 1967 GRAND PRIX f1cl, 1;t cond. c"1 fh ;1 b1•ulif11I 9old e1r , with bl1ck inl1rior, Black "inyl lop. Er• c1ption1I co11ditio11, !TRHJ77 ) $2095 e CO.\fPLETE DRUM SETe Davenport .$1.5. 673-8458. male 8'12-7379 H.B. aft 7 9/3 * 5-~t2B * ---r~~~~m.~!-~-~== ""F:OfILY man "'OU1d llke foJ1'PAARTii'f'-st"Siaiimiie<..,i£'kl"kitrttoii·nmcf-==.~ .. ~.g:s~loop~~.~=~I GOLD Bundy Saxophone buy relrigerator. Reasm-male needs Jove &15-0137 \\'ood keel boat, Slf!f'PS 2. , _A11 tboriU'CI EerrarLDealr:r MOTOR ll0\\1ES 1970 MUSTANG MACH 1 ' alto. Excell. condition, $150. able. 646-7820. 913 ri.1a.ke oflt'r . 8J7-i039 * All S1ef'l Conslruction FIAT . 847...()154. Brena Shotgun • O/U 12 ill· 3 Mo. old German Shepherd L•hm.an 12 S.acrifK:•-Drum Seti Sl40. Call airer 5, 536-8971; mix lo\'ing personality, * Xlnr . t-ond. 673-1468 * 1 Yamaha, l Trixon. Xlnl USED •-o-Pool 18' x 12' , tihots, ~t 9/3 J<:-... BOAT for Sale. KIT~-; Ail *AU ~~i:GA~•no' '69 Fiat 124 Cpe Tniiler Sales E."oUc 1-ed with black \'inyl ]'3951 Harbor Blvd. bur:ket ioeats, Low 'mUcli, ha.s cond. Make offer. ~I 4' with t\\'O decks, filter, CUTE &. healthy guinea pigs. boat & hand cart. Good con- f"ENDER Jaguar. Must Sell ! vacuum, Ltt<idcr, 5kimmer, Make xlnt pets for children dition. 675-3212 - m •~• 1 U 1249 54• •-• --•y ••• ~49 ~ 9/3 ·HONDA SJ....350 '70, lo mi. -'c.-=c'-=:c:=::O"'':==:'==c i Carrlcn Grove * 537-2852 had e.'lic:ellent care, Sacri-;;; Jice! (XLY235} Take older "ONE ONLY" SALE $150 or best offer . ...,.,......,'-'> r.ss ncr. . ..-.u.... "'"' · ...........,, M MALli\tUTE She..i...-.J ix * J'IOBIE CAT-&il no. !i62. Xlnt. rond. Xlra11. &c at Ask lor John yer. N.B. Tennis Club charter 1""''u m READY TO RACE! $100:>. ON> \Vhi1110n's Chl"vron. 2801 m. m b . '. h ' . p, 0000 + pup femalf' \\'hite w/sholo; 8 1 , C ,. •~ k ,_ ·-''' Call 6-W-2406. J-h1rbor 6 \"" :'11 As 1ng Pianos & Or,.1n1 -1130 •--·•er fee. 6 4 2-2 413 ,w ·~•_:~=;:;'.'.:':.'~-,..~-,.-.,.:'.· ~ 1-"i;'cii..-,;;;;;>.;;:mi;;;;;-• u •u .... ~ !!"'EA s k s.·i•-r S72.J. 51~1i~i:i !>15--0548. 3 l\1CX'I. old female gold mbced '"' · nar 1 """' territt "& Lab. Housebroken. F1i>gl,, Good cond, $125 HONDA S-00 dirt bike $9j , Ne'v & Used NEWPORT Beach Tennis 675--5049_ 913 • 546-7947 • ~lini-Uike S;\O. Ducan. 12.icc P IANOS Club family membership. 1 -1~,~,.~. ~L~IG~HT=N7.1N=G-. -x°'l"n t rfirt liikc $6:"1. 5.IS-1945 DecorBtor Spine, ...... S399 $575. 644-1136. PETS ind LIVESTOCK r.ond., 11.'/lge \l.'heelf'd tr1r, e 1969 Suz:uki X·6 New KIMBALL Console S699 JAKE'S Continuous Swap P•ts, G en•r.al HOO many ~tra.o;, $1200. 492-818.7 Bt..,;l offr r. Call 673-1794 KJliffiALL Grand •••••• $795 Meet Bargains. Buy-Sell • S IF ICE ORGANS'" Trade ll7 E. 18th. CM Six pr Quail $S pr. 22' ~RCBRGLS SLOOP 100!! Yllillahn 305 CC-Slr(orl. TI10MAS 0.....,,., $179 2\2 p CM I r 3.000 ml. Xlnt cond. $495. ,,,_, ··••·• NEWPORT Tennis C l ub Aster I., a ter 4 PM 5-18-II64 OR 67a-419a Eves 492-1824. New '70 Datsun car in trade. \Vill fi nance 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. private , lrly. Cal l Pat dlr. er. Sale ptice S209'J dlr. aft 10 : .1 494-7503. 540-3100. <• 677!l8l Will take c~r in NEW FIAT trade. Will finance pnvate 1970 ISO SPYOER party. Call s.t64C52 or All t'Olors to choose llom. •19-1-6811 . S23.'ti + Tax t.· Lie. METRO VAN All modcl:r.;: 10 choo~. 1'153 ~" T builtin camJl('r. California Sport Cars Slvve, i;ink, it:e box, car. 901 E . Jsl, S.A. 5-12-8801 pcling, pancllin~. bed, newl.;o======== paint. XJnt condition, * 515-7245 * FIAT HAi\lMOND Chord "A-1" ~ Mcmbcn;hip. $185 + initial I--'-"'""=~=-~,-, HA?-t~tOND 83 ...... $1995 Fee. 496-3600 Cats 1820 9· LAPSTRAKE Sailboat, '6R BUL'TACO i\1ark Ill. Gd Nf>:\V It', Special Clearance --------- -----------------frbi:"ls & leak, full r;ail rig, for street or dirt. E.xtras. prier, $14'15. Scolt's ~ tnc.ludes bench, delivery &. v.·arranty • , , Many other Bargains. , • COMPLETE dMng 5C't, like % Black & 7 calico ~ xlnt. cond. 6'7>-2398 $5P:i. f,;10-.'il!l.'l Campc~. ~I~ N. Harbor, THINK :;, C:fi'~a~~: 54=70 Siamc..o;e kittens, ~hall!, $5 I ========= 2 =0 "'6S"'H"o"""=-oc"'L-·""llll"°'S."'·ra,,-,.m7b"l•"'r. S.A. 8 "flAf' 1'1USf BE SEEN! • • 3 • each to good home, 548-0021 Pow•r Cruisers 90 xln·r 1>ond. Lo mi's, Call =========I aft 6. 6-12-{;757. D 8 ' 9'25 SU 9 ALSO e YAMAHA e Kll\!BALL e THO!'IIAS KOHLE R & CAh-lPBELL M isc, Wanted 8610 , =-~~~-~-=-35' CHRI S Craft Cruiser Sips une ugg ie1 ~ Pur•bred S•.alpoint Si.a· 6. cmpHy renev.·cd, incld 2 12:> CC WHITF.. NC'('ds \\'Ork. XLNTS~T~A-R_T_F_O_R __ , "fRIEDLAHDER" Wanted: Wine Press & Stemmer * 546-8620 me1e kitte ns $25. Ca ll t'K'w v.s A1.>ro i'l1arinc Eng. r.lakf' orrER or TRADL! 646-6384 .after 10 am. auto/pilol. direction fir.dC'r, 157 21st St. c .,\I. DUNE BUGGY I J750 IEACH <Hwy. 391 COAST MUSIC NE\VPOr T & HARBOR Costa l\1esa. * 642-2851 FREE TO YOU Dogs U2S Aug, Hn Only 10.6 1\1-Sal OllHUAHUA, v.'Orth SljQ, SAVE NOW l\TAI.E ~: St. Berl"lll.Td, 1h 1.-fale AKC. make off(>r. J-lu5ky, 6 mos. Xlnt GrandfatherChampion, DURING SUMMER ...,·/children. Nl'eds 'Joa. ol owned by Emperor of CLEARANCE SALE room ':>57--8380 9/3 J apan. \Viii trade also for We have trade-ins, repo:s, COCKAPOO 1\::. yrs, Xnf1 what have you of value? ~nt returns &. floor models y,•/childN'n 10 good· home ~~~=~I-~~-,--= of every model lfammond only. 6-1&4i87 9/3 SILKY Tenier Puppies. AKC Organ. Buy now & receive · t -• s ·1 bl t 3 LOVING fluf{v m a 1 p ttgis e,.,.,.,, 1 vcr ue, an extra di5count. ~ -1 6 1 JO j puppies. 540--0383 after 3:30 po1n ~. o poun s, llA!\-ll\fOND P:'\i 913 lovable, ...,iondertul wi th ln CORONA DEL l\1AR chUdrrn. $125 • $1 5 O, 2854 E. Coast Hwy. 673-8930 ADORABLE Kittt>ns 10 good 962-1057 • Open ~Ion & Fri evfll, hon1c~. (4l male & Cll I,,.,.,-,,-,-,-.,,-,.-,--..,..,--.~""=~-=---~-1 female 646-1843 91 1 1.IALE Lab Retrh:•ver l \~ yrs HA:'ll ~tONO Organ ""'/pt.re, AKC. all :shots. XI n I 'll'Srnnty $288. New piano PART \\''eimaraner & part temperament, Obedience made in USA, ...,.al., all ex-Labrador Retriever puppies. training. 6T.'')-JIM. h '61 V\V pan , includes front-i:;hip to short' phone, dept '66 BSA 6.'iOcc, GO(Kl Mnd. 8!~!-7566 e 537-6824 rnd. rront brakes, pedal~ & finder. haUeries, bail pun1p, Par!illlly disas~cmb!cd $35(), NEW-USED·SERV. cablrs. ~·All asS<'1nblcdl elc. In!. cabin like new. 1:i7 7111! ~I . CM II U'l.rV'U'M I · ,__ · • Must Se • Once in r. lie hmc u..rga1n. '70 < ... , .. ,, 1-~ s •-e1/d1·rt. 6 ' • I I c II TI4/"'"3966 " " ~v u« 646-4665 or 646-5678 ext. 314 or n . a <>.;)<I" ~ears, 400 mi. likl" new. 1-:iiii!iiiiD:mmmmiiiiil Btw. 5 & 6 Pi'll !'acr ifice SJ50, 5.)7_9819 alt J!l69 "i\lark II"' Dullf' Bug I W,www_,il SACRtrlCE • 24 ft cabin 6. T·B11ck,..t Top, curtains, ~fi cruiser 135 h.p. big Chrysl<'r 1--======== rui::!', low-OO r, cover. etc. ~n J l'o1arlne. Ju~t paint e d Auto Servic• Buil t for custom. !"l49-0508 .. ~ thruout. P1.>rlect shape all • & Parts 9400 GRASSllOPPE~7 T-Bucket nrour.d. In "'alC'r J"IO\\', w/moldt'ri top, itldiv\dual GUtO sport Jtd Reduced price $2200. Call I----------braking nn !'f'ar \\'hls, buck. aft 1:3(J p.1n. 493-3996 • V\V pan~. lt'R ns a.'liles i;t~. Call :i-l~7!l:l afl 4:30. Salcll Open Sunday SACRlf>'ICE 24 fl . Cahin k bo<i~1)ar1s. l' '70 Dt B 537-7777 Cnll Collect e 641-0-1.tl • OF.LUX ~ • uic 11ggy. -Cruiser. Perfl't't shape. In --X!nl cood. Lllw mileage. uaLIJfJUl.••W \\•atf'r TIO\\', $2100. 493--3996 I 942r S2200. Call !1~1-9~.,\2. ----· --- alt uo I Trailor, Travo , JAGUAR e CUST0\\1 Baja s I y I e 17' CABIN Cruiser, '15 hr bug-M11kr 01!1.>r. Johnson. Fish or ski, xlnt TRAILER Call after 6 548-tii02 cond . Trlr or slip. 673-5655. Sl<!e~ 3, large CIOS<>t, JAGUAR tras. l :'J yr W1\tnulty S·199. 4!!7-1849 9/1 I B~E=.A~UTI===ru=L-fm_al_e_•_ll_k>- GOULD ;..1 us1c co. \0 s od •kl B t 9030 ' UNG Spayed female kiHy 11mbcr In color &-Amber is P9 ~ o.a s Since 1911 nero~ loving home.'\'/ariull. ht>r name. See at 33.l E.17th • 14. SKl BOAT Ice hox S275. &16-52'16 fmPort.d Autos 9600 HEAD9UARTERS 16' THAVEL tttt, "'11-ro"· ===----·I to incd, 5Jccll!I 5. Xlnl con<!. ALFA ROMEO The only authorb:ed JAGUAR 2045 :~7~8i~,* S.A. ll'KlOQr llf'1. 53&-iW37 9/1 St. G16--0142 4:; lf.P. MERC & Trailer S T EI N \V A\' & SONS 3 Little lilack i(111ens 6 \l'ks 1 A=DO~R~AB=L~E=-~Coc-k-.-.-_-,..-$.ilO. *** 962.IJ.l<IT old, need good ho m c. "urw, Jllack, 2 female·., GRAND. Pf"·\l·ar, hand ~ 1°"126 '11 " ,.. ~ a "7'"'\' • n1aJes, SlO each 546-9927. made. r;olid m 11ho 1;11. n y, SUperb inti!rumtnt in bMut 6 \\'KS old k!Uens 3 \\'hite, 1 DAOISBUNDS AKC: 9 ...,•ks, oond. Call bt...,·n 6 &· 9 pm. ll gcr, 1 grey k y,·hi!c, \\'ean-Blk & Tan Red./Brn $10, 6tl-45l2 f'l.t /.r Boxtnilnefl. ~lfrl570. 897-7297. - M •rine Equip. 9035 3S HP EVINRUDE SJ4j * &12.t>581 $1100 S.18-1-1.~I dealer in the entire Harbor '(i8 Nli\·IROO. Of'luxc , Sips fi. e '63 1600 AL'FA Vrloce· xlnt Area. Stove, \1-ebox, dln'g table. rond . ~cw cng, lrans. J.l!)j. !;.IS-4136. 67~9 31' Sil\"Cl'lilN'ali. 1959. Xlnt cr0 nd. 1 2:1 00. Ph : 642-112l l&MN302. ALPINE Complel1; SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER ST£fN\\1AY-Beautiful Ehony 6. rart German puppi~. 8c ,.,-.,=c,,,,cc,-S'°'ho-,rt"·H"a~~-,Po""'in,--lm', upright, 80 yrs ...,./11 nHq. "'ks old. 54).6517, JU8 Tri· 8 mo'& old. shots-papcrg. stool. $500. 5 4 S .. 5 2 ~ 0 , i'll ry C.i\1. Xln'f hunting dog. 5S7~7$40. Boa t Slip Moor ing 9036 Tr ucks 9SOO '67 ALPINE \\1/\\•hf.r111, good conrt. 642-2114 BUICK IN 642--6176. WURLITZER m(l.plc spinJlt't xlnt cond, $550. Sec all 6 pm or wknd1 116 "A" ~th. NB. e PRACTICE PIANO XLNT COND. $15i0. * * 6374'88 CONSOLE Planc>lveni .t. Pond. xlnt cond Ir tone. $550. 96Pr2016 ll1dlo 1200 e SLIPS 32'-38'. Also Dry Ar1~tocats for Aristocrats BASSETT' JlU))S AKC 9 "'<'eks 1!101·age &: hOllil launching, IH4-54\t or 61S-3SS8 oli:t. TT! 8nd t:an-whl!c tn ~,,..,=*='='=,,_==·=== A~k !or Happy c...">t'Jlnr. fi33..3.~7 ~ Bo.at Cha rter 9039 1\ll1'~NS 6 locd calico Rn<! • GRE.,\T DANE PUPS,/ ---·------ 8ll0 regular pule-\\'ht kit· Bl'1Ck. Al\C, 5 \l.'kS $100 ICn!I, 8.'\644!13 9/1 t f 1) 525-00$3 * KITT ENS Gray" 11.:~t liJrrr 0 A FGHAN PUPPIES ll lripe JO wkJ . 54(}..4S4;, 9/J Al\C 1' Sl50 * 646-7S89 ~ . \\'ht Albino od d f'>'t'i1 Afgh1n P upa. AKC Reg S1ame"° ~7-5480 911 QUALITY. * 962-9989 1 LOVABLE Spayed tortoist' cal 1 yr i;botr;, 5411-0813 9/1 BEAUT. lr1sh .. Sctttr Pup, ma.le, 10 w old, II.hots It EXF:CUT JVE l\larll n F ishing. 6 piw: Tackle i.Q· eluded. Sll.i + fuel . 646--9000 ·--------:& f'OflD Vsn-Xlnt ~hll(>(", outfitted Jor llvlni:;. 8 s JO a,,·ning w / J'1Q rs r u 11 y <'1i>HI. j\lu~\ !l('IJ lmmed. ;\IJ'k e otr1.>r. 6i:1-6172 Bill. '6:> F'ord P~ck·UP 4 Spd flood rorwl nu brk!= Sf'811' hfltt Will tl'!ld~. fM..4574 • '6.~ f.-ord Van AUSTIN HEALEY AUSTIN AMERICA SAies, Service, Parts t mmcdlale Delivery All 1'1odels J1rtuport ~l 111po1·1 ~' !100 W, c.out Hwy •• N.B. COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Strec!I 5<.!-'1765 e '61 Jagua.r MK II 3.8 ...,·ire wh<'tls. fll\'r l\11.>erlng & brakes, 64.000 ;.ct. miles, new valvl" job, 4M-5297. KARMANN GHIA · '63 ~HIA &12-9~<& 540-1714 R.ad!o, lleatcr, Run" Cl'f!•t! f;•••Y 1•lr1 i"d, f1<;I. 1i• condil, A Rollo Roy<;• tr1d1 &: o"lv b.000 mil11, 1071 · ACNl $3495 1969 MERCURY COUGAR !tp1rkli119 ivory & bl1ck vinyl ...... Wlrflrtly. fZXEIJ9) $2695 1968 VALIANT lop. One f1elorv 1ir conditioni119 on !hit bttulif.JI c1 •. CWVF4•!t ) $1895 1967 OLDS LUXURY SEDAN Eve•y co11c1iv1ble 1¥lr• 011 thit 1xc1ll111! f1 mily or buli111n car. One owner IVHf. 57bl $2495 1968 CHEVROLET MALIBU 1 d• ...... dtop. J17 v.1 1n9., •u+e h1111., pow1r 1t11erin9. butl1t 111h, A be1uiiful derk i ii.er. IYER092 1 S2195 1964 CORVETTE STINGRAY fou• 1p11d lron,,.,;,,;011 I ouh+•ndi~9 condition. 0 11e ..,,,,. w1 ,,1nty. IVCJ99JI $2495 1969 GTO HARDTOP • Speed tr1111., di1c b11k1t & power •l111 rin9, 1p1rH0119 9•1111 l only 11 .DCO "'il1t. ~7114.AFYl $2~) 1968 PONTl~VENTURA 7 d r, h1rdtop, l1clory 1ir c:o11d., pow., window1. A C.0"1plrtV 1x1culi•1 Cir with {1 ,lory ... 1rr1nly, I 1043 771 $2695 1968 FORD MUST ANG 2 door li•rd rop, r1dio, t.11 11•, •11lorn1ti1 lr1111m inio11. A b11utilul i.;1r1111 fini1il. !WVXll l' $1895 1964 PLYMOUTH WAGON Fury 11ri11 wit~ pow1r 1t11•in9, \I.I , •u• IOl'llllic l•1n1mh tfon, A 9r11l f1mlty cir, tOYS2!tJl '$995 196S .CHEVROLET SEDAN !111 Air will, r•dio. ~11111, pow11 1!1t•• i119 I. 1 ulorn1ll< lr1111n•u11io11. 34,000 mllet 011 lh11 1111b1li1v1bly w1ll .~1 pl cir. (RIWbio )I $1295 PORTABLE radio din'ctlon KJ'M'ENS • 7 lOrtoise, 1 black papers. Sl~O. 198 49-1-7664 9/1 ftndtt LW/AM/SW, ~ith TOY Poodle, AK . . v.•kl. TIME FOR 9Ul'CK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT For Sale Or Tnlde $l6!i0 646-26.!l!l t TON Dodge. l'~ttUent m!:'Chanlcal r.ond. 961 \V. 11th. UnlJ N, ~95 '68 G:'.tC H11ndy V11-n, rn.dlal,, low mi's. xln''I co"". $1500 or orr. ~S..-1115. • AU!horirfd MG Df!aJe-r F\111 Price $799 ' dlr. -* '36 HEALEY·IG-1 * fXf.:V 171). \VUI t.Me car In 29lS HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA 11-1ES A WANT AD Reya.l '700 ntYlgatar. $50. UL.ACK Mxlrt hair lmi~r. r;llver. Bought Im $1001. will ~6~4t!;:0613~~-----_Jl.!&1~2-985~!!2 _____ 91l l!t'li lor $73. 64~71. TOP COND. $700 'T'r•d<l or Finance. Prl\'i\lt S.t6 .4ol4·t RTW~PM. ~2-672'.J ~p~,,~IY~!5"""'2::::~~or~~::::;~l~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!'"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l- R. ( ' " . .. . ' . ' • 0 I j D ·' • *'· ;p; . .... :is ...... ;wa .. ' . ' , futsday, Stpttmbtr l, 1970 DAILY PILOT :l1 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION !!_AN~PORTATION TR~~ORTATION TRANSPO~Tl~N __ !.R_A~SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION lmport•d Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 1,,,ported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 lm.-;':lr••d Autos 9600 lmpor tt d. Autos 9600 l.'1ed C•rs 9900 Uttd Cars 9900 Used Ciirs 9900 ·--·----· -~-··----------·I PORSCHE 'SAAB TOYOT4 VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 1----------1---. BUICK CAMARO '63 SUPER 90 Authori•ed Dir. :65 VW '65 vw '58 VW "" 19$1 BUICK '69 Camar~ Z is <27, 4 1pd ~Ew If. ReltWJ 2&l + .Sa.l~~bt_~~~e: :0ar~s ITffllC)ITIAI BUG Orig;.nal blacl.. tlnith with Elccellent transportation car, ET, Amcru:an fl..lags, ora_nge 4 1~ tra.ns. lAW m . As Oea.n s Braria-Nf'w. -CHOOSE •RO'! • li:iil.:.-.. -· conlf'astlng-n!d Interior Lie new radiator • ~w host1. metal !lake, bla.ck vinyl top, lmm&.culate con di lo n . -CHEVltQ A,\1 /~t. (JZY 5:?SJ dlr. \Vil! ._1800 CPfs. ~ st~k DEMO Amirlcan -maas. wiOe lires, -Ga~· lQ. · _Good, Hi:.c~ .. $1~: MU§! ~~~2851l~f».~34 -M&-200$ l akecar1n-Trade-orFinance • ln1medla1e Oel!vf'ry _1.70$WA8GON-t9l) \ ~:~~ulm~~l~ty~~~ Seda~~ $38 Down SE!:. 67UU'I att»m. '67 C'AMARO Conv. Pi s. '67 IMPALA 2 dr V-8 RIH'-~s.~~i~ Party. 546-4052 or Service ti.Ionday 'tlll 7:00 P~I 1 17 901. S3b 1vn, ~ $29.78 for 24 ·s: 0 > Sulek WLDC.: 2 Dr. l :,ut:~ ~t~:;. ~Tzl~!nt cond, PIS A1.1to. Lo mi. New ' Sat 'till Noon Se\'eral other cu~tomizcd mont, s. APR is 21.5% total ."·oor-X cond. All Xtras ' 11 tires. \Vhite w/blue int. • '61.C Porsche, A~f I rr-.1 COAST IMPORTS V\V to choose frnni Sunroof, radio. (t.JJR988) interest. $148, Total cash ~ Appreeiale. $749. ' e CAMARO '69 Z2I e Priv. Pty, 213: 699-4356 radio, chron1e rims, ski 01 Orange County lnc. Check our deals CHICK w·IYl!RSON , $ pric'e '$738. "'644-5055-* 14.000 mi, $25.'.50, 536.8291 '6l4 DR"l>eluxe "'agon. Auto, rock. !.1_"'1. 64""2271 <V'5. 1200 w. Padflce eo .. 1 H•y 8 OTHER DEMOS VW-937 CHICK IVERSON '60 -BUICK 4 OR. 6 <>I•. $200. '61 PORSCHJ:: CABRIOLET \AcrM~ froni .Balboa AT BIG SAVINGS VW Air, \\'/S/\V, PIS, P/B. 673-5935 r-.tust*se~l7~[3~s~ ofter 6~2-:~y ;1u~~4529 DEAN LEWIS ~~~l:~R66B~~~ Harbour v w 5'1!).3031 Ext. 66 or 67 $200. 540-8053 CHEVROLET ·:r!~pf'o~n~;~ ~~v~: Porsche '-==--=-==,.;;,====' 1 l96S Harbor, C.l\I. S4S.9303 COSTA MESA • • · .l970-i:IARBOR BLVD. 56.0IXI mi's. $71Xl. 673-5433 66 912 Cpt'. S27:xl TOYOTA '69 TOYOTA Corona, air ---~----lS1Jl BEACH BL. S<t24435 COSTA ~fESA CADILLAC 1962 Chevy BiK'ayne. 283 * ,64 MALIBU S.S. 673--J7.'J6: ~0--5886 ---------~ conrl. am/fm rad. ~1ag '63 . vw HUNTINGTON BEACH '69 vw s d :::::...P'•s3~~ 6ti4~1~1l ~ Xlnt Cond. Org. Owner v.·hls, xlnt cond. O"·ner, l -==-=~=~G~-1 e ans . ~u-"·st otter. ;o~" 1663 SUNBEAM BILL MAXEY 642-75" NEW' VW BU · -· -· '65 CDV look> & '""' lik• ""I ;:"'~y~m!!:'"'"· -~-~-h,,:i'-~~;:::::_:.:,::·~:-;;:=;:;;I '65 Sunbean1 st>rlan, 4-~prt. 2~ mi per gal, Runs good. $29j. ii46-43&5. l e '69 Toyota Corolla e • Srveral to chons1> from. All from vin~·J top to poly tires. ·62 Chev 9-pass \\lagon. Rum' 1964 Chevy Impala, p/1, R/H, Tart' deck, s11sg. Sedan $55.89 pr. month /l!'r undC'r either our 100"'; All E'Xtras. A "n1ust-see.': .i:,ood, Needs hody \VOrk. $200 am/fm rad. $595. Pvt: (T ~Q~VIQI T IAI ====*=!16=2-8=1=08=*=== I used car 11·arr1u1ty nr n!'\\' Call aft 12. 4!!6-344Ji firm. 54&-43Sj, owner, 96;z.oo97. c " """"" • $147.78 dov.gn Includes car \\'arranty! ...,J?.ricrd from • '63 COUPE DE VIU.E '67 CHEV V11-n. Clean, good '64 Chevy Impala, 18881 BEACH BLVD. TRIUMPH Radio, tASL6341 tax & Lie. Open End $17so· Reblt enginr ,,, trans $500 cond. S.JS mo ba. $1250. 157 4 spd . needs '"'Ork SAAB. Hunt. Beach 847-8555 $ VW LEASlhG ' Ptv pty540-2-192. 21st St. Cl\1 548-4928 3 ml N. of Ooa5t Hwy, on Bea 885 AT Authorized Dealer Sales e &rvicr e Parts Sonet CotJ!l('s in S1ock Orang-e County '~ Nr\1·est D!r. '68 TOYOTA h1'1t p, Am/Fm, '67 Triumph TR6 CHICK IVERSON. With autom•llc (YCY!16\t u .. d Cars 9900 Used Cars . 9900 • 4 sp<I, xln't · cofld. lo mi's. 4 speed y,o/ov("rrlrivf', \vi.re VW H b v w Orig. 01,1·nr, $l450 673-:1655. 1vheels, Ar.1/Fl\[ cllr. low Ha· rbour v.w. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ar our • • n1iles. Runs like a line C6STA l\1ESA TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH ~A DAILY PILOT COASJ IMPORTS o{ OranR<' County Inc. 1200 \V, Pacific Coast H1l'y. Across fron1 Balboa Bay Cluh 642-0406 • fl•l6-1f1:.'9 WANT AD Imported Cars 9600 Imported A~tos 9600 1~Nw COSTA -MESA HONDA 600 SEDAN 1vatch. (UOV8-16J \Viii take 18711 BEACH BL. 842-4435 -----,c-c=-cc.,.-- car in trade or finance pri-HUNTir\GTON BEA CH '57 vw 1·a!e, party. 546-4052 or 1--,6-3-\IU/--. -,-U- 9 -- 494-6811. .. •J_ t.IECHANIC SPEClAL 11\~~C~l2 Sedan VOLKSWAGEN CHICK IVERSON e '68 V\\'-Bcig 1 f'. r/h. $l2W VW l\lus! sell. Paving f or 5-19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 F:ut'OJM'. 646-4370. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '66 V\V, Sunroor, Good Buv, COSTA l\1ESA $87j, Son gone to Europe. ---"~"-'-==-- '7:!--0152. WANTED - '63 Ii\1r.1Ae inside & ou!. I'll pay lop doUa~ tor your New ~unroof, radio, x!nt VOLKS\VAGEN today, Call cond. Pvt pty $650. 536-1729. and aSK fur Ron PinchoL '6-t V\\I Convt, Good 549-30Jt" Ext, 66-67, 67J.-0900. Great 1i";:u1spor1atton buy. • P\l\\'7411 $488 Harbour V.W. 18711 REACH BL., 84~-443.'"J HUNTINGTON BEACli 18711 BEACH BL, s1i4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '63 \r\V LO\.\• miles on rebuilt engine, ne111 clutCh. new brakes, radio, perfect condition. Can be seen at 2089 Harbor Blvd, or phone 645-1982, 9am lo 6pn1 VOLVO transportation car:-moving, 1965 KARi\1ANN Ghia, · xln1 ~L-a-,-9-e-~S~e~l~e-c-t7io_n_ !'llake off!'rf ~5599 transportation for ·co!leg:I'. d l ll ·.=,;68~vw~°'8:0-,"•-". ::08'°1,-,-.-"""'kct l Very cl~an! i\1ust sell $800. Of VW Campers, 2 r. Demo. rat!. Red/blk inl<>r, Sha ...... · 545--6519 or 962-17ft2. V K b" * $2750 * e AIJt COOLED FRONT ENGINE • FaONT WHEll Dlt lVE • POWEii ASSISTED SELF· ADJUSTING I'll.ONT DISC 81tAICE 5 • MAXIMUM SPEEO 1S MPH e UP TO 40 MILES PER DALLON • POUll·PASSE'IGER, 2 Oii . SEDAN Plu• $10G Ntw Cir l'rt11•r1tlon Loci! Tr1n1. Tl~ & Lk•nit • UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILI '285~ HA!BOR BLVD. -cosTA M!SA 540'9640 ~ .... ans, om 1s, u 110 •E•cM (Mwv. ,,1 Pvt pty. $1395. 548-8836. '66 V\V FASTBACK. xl111 & U d R!l3-7566 e 5.17-6824 • '66 V\V Camp('r. rll'l'dS cond, 39,()()0 mi. $9'35 or hcsl Buses, New se NEW·USED-SERV \1•rirk. $1300 or be~t offer. offC'r. 494.7;,si I mmed,iate Delivery ~ Call art '.\ pm , 645-2154. '6,:JV\trVcCkam";~· rrbl!AeMn~~,· CHICK IVERSON _' ____ _ • 'fi4 VW BU~ a s~reo. ~ -r :• VOLVO GD. COND. $1000 r adio, stpve, i("r box $16.10 VW _ of.-~2-5936 * <'r Bt'5t.Offer 642-2299 afr 5 5-t!l-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 '70 I:>cn10. #8782 -~,;64;...;::VW~::;B~U;G~--l e '69 RED V\\1: \\'ide Radial 1970 HARBOR Bl.VD. SA VE Gd cond, $750. 646-7618 Cl\.1 fires. \Vooclen stet r i nj:; COSTA l\1ESA "·heel. .... $466 '66 V\\I Sedan, xln!, cond. Sl:J9;1, ,. * * 837wl276 J64 VW BUG Orig. O\\'Tl('r. $950. Call v Ca · I · Check our deals S.'lG-1248 aft 6. '65 \\' mper, reb I engine. 8 !Tack sterro, A:.t-r :.1 fuldio, Heater, ITAZ 3001 lSOO r~ ~pe Jor delivrry • 1967 VolkS\VilJ!!'n radio, slov!', i~ bQx $1650 Small Do1111 1,1·iJI finanC'e 01·crseas de! !-;Jl('ciRlist. $1200 or best offrr. nr Be~! Offer &12-2299 11ft !'t Pri\'aff' Party. Cali 546-40:12 DEAN LEWIS Call 968-8125 '66.KARl\IANN GHIA or 494-6811 l!lGFi lfarhor, C.l\I, fi~&.9303 • MUSf llf'll '68 VW Bug· SlfXXl Cash. 2449 Orange A"l•m•tt'•, Good ---~. J 963 VOLKSWAGEN \VANTED: Class.ic or an· " '" uttK• Avenue. Costa :.tesa $1100 5<\G-5661 Ex~Ul'nt Condition! Good tique car enthusiasts to '66 V\V Bug, blk. sunroof, tires, good red paint. $1000 share nice shop & storage '69 V\\' Ru.c:. R&H. d-io •1fXX1 1·i·m. '!UST SEE? 6'13-6434 facilitles. N.8 . 67&-7498, $!'.°J.'iO ra . " . , " •_fil.H915 * l--·,.*~545-,,_1,,oo~'-'-'.ct.~5,.:p_m.,,-*,_....l~'='=' "'°'p"m'°,==""'=""'-1,::>1:;;""""17;;1;,. =:::=::::=:=:=::;:: ~~!!!!!!!! '-'•""·s=l~V~W~B~lk~/~w~h~t.=."";n:,1. '67 V\\' Convertibl!'. Beige, '68 Bug, beige, R/H , XLNT Antinues Classics 9615 Xlnt Conrl . Nu trs. $1150. Nrw brakes, PXcellent C9nd. cond .. ~1UST sell. $1250(bH.t ~ . .!_ .,- Pr.l p!y. !"l46-l379 $1295. 646-8049 offer. 6464370 e '47 FORD P .U. ClaAAic-·-~~~=='=============00:.======'="'==:=-I Sirlr spar!', olrl ho rns . lmmac. body. $2SO. ~ PRESTIGE CARS AT SEN s ·IBLE PRICES '67 CONTINENTAL GOOD VALUE . USED CAR·S· '65 OPEL '64 LE SABRE H.T. 2 lo choo1e from. VI, eyto., R&H, P.S .. P.B., f~clory !KAG697l IZXVO l6 ) BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS '66 CHEVELLE H.T. VS, a utomatic transmission, radio and heater, power steer. in9. IY PW 837 ) $1367 '68 PONTIAC LE MANS Sport Coupe. VS, a ut.oma.tic, .radio, heater, ing, vinyl roof, black vinyl interior. I DVL2 72 I $1947 power steer· '69 CHEVROLET NOV A VS , a utomatic, radio, healer, power 1teering, low mile•ge, fa ctory warranty av•ilable. !ZER731 l ~ $2073 '65 VOLKSWAGEN tranimi11ion, radio end he eler. I PIY862 I • Better hurry on '69 OPEL Sport sed.tn. Automatic +r ensm ission, only b,800 mil es . !ZAE205 ) radio and heater, $1588 _.-'67 CAMARO RS va ,. a utomatic, radio, heater, power ,teerin g.---faelory air, I oWner gem. (U ZZ65 1) , • $1997 '69 MUSTANG VS , fl utomatio radio, healer, power factory air. Low mileage. IZBNb85 1 steering & bra ke's, $2487 '69 OPEL LS Sport coupe. 4 speed tran,mi1•ion, radio end he ater, gol d with black in terior, whi te walls. l.YDA63 I ) $1393 \ Race Cars, R_,od=•:_..:.o::. '64 CHEVY Van Camper 1vith EXTRAS! $700. Cail ti7;i..78J7 9 am to 1 pm. Autos Want.d WE PAY TOP CASH for used can & trucks just call us for free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales ?ttanager 18211 Beach Bivd. lluntin(lon Beach 847-6087 Kl 9.3331 TRANSPORTATION CARS Our Specialty AS LOW AS $99. \V( carry oar 01,1·n contracts Crerlit 1~ no problem Blue Chip Auto Sales 2145 Harlxlr Blvd., C.f.T. 642-.9700 * S4Mm WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. Costa l<fesa 51r .. 1200 T WE,,,, . CARS! Call fl.1anagcr ' &15-0466 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS U your car is extra clean, SCI: UI flrst. BAUER BUICK 231 E. 17th St. Costa t.11'SA 548-7765 IMPORTS WANTED Orange Counties TOP $ BUYER BILL 1-fAXEY TOY OT A lMSl Beach Blvd. H. Beach. Ph. lWT-11$.i. BUICK e '67 ~IVTERA: Atr l:ruc:/seats XLJ\'T COND. -* 962-9790 • '68 ELECTRA 225, 4 dr hi, ....Ail'. pwr, new tiru, lo mi'5, $2700, 673--027~ . .. ONLY Al CONNELL CHEVROLET '69 CHEY. 3A-TON PICKUP YB WITH 11 Yi FT. SELF CONTAINED CAMPER - He•vv d uty th.ru·ovl w:th oir l•vel1r r11r 1hot;••, power li11rin9, ,;, cond., •ulol'lelic i111<1. C*f!'IPI• complete wi!h furn•ce, 1l1clriir; r1f1i9er1ior, 1icl1 i1tk1, 1iove, buten•, 1how1r. (l8474El '69 53899 FORD 1;, TON VAN Automatic, radio, nice. {18268 1 '67 FORD 1;, TON VAN lleavy duty. Stick ghift, \VU\ pa\nt to suit buyE'r. IQ74696) · '67 CHEVROLET 'I• TON --Srorl:-\llln;-Autnmatic;-V8;-radi , sidr '"·i ndo"'S, stron,£: vehicle. ( 110700) '66 CHEVROLET 1;, TON P.U. Radio. stick. (T5095l) '68 CHEVROLET 1;, TON P.U. 6 cylinder, stick. <22331CJ 17a· CHEVROLET NOMAD 6 pass. wagon. 3,000 miles, shO\'-rt"OOm frf'sh, radio, st.lck, factory guarantee. 1720ASAI , '69 '69 '68 '68 '67 '67 '66 '65 '65 '67 ~68 CA MARO VS, po1vt'r s!Prring. remaining gttarantee. l..chV milrs. (YWS232 ! IMPALA CUSTOM Cpr. VS, ''inyl roof, P.S .. auto .. R&J-1 , Lo\\' miles, 100'/n guarantee. (ZVL180) CAMARO Radio. heater. 11utrimatic, po~·er s teering, VB. nice, rVTilt2831 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE Nict>. 427. <1 SflPed, vinyl '"'hite roof, also soft tnp. Brau1iful blue car you 11-i!l Jikr. (XO\V0881 CHEVROLET an AIR <1 Dr. Sedan. Vf;, auto., P.S., air. radio, Real nice car, Lo\1', lo'"· pricf'. ( UWZ085) CHEVROLET WAGON VB Bt>l Alr 1vagon. 6 pass., P.S .. auto., l!ir. Lo~'. lo"' price. {TZH933J CHEVROLET S.S. . Coupe. A11t11matic, radio, heal!'r, P.S .. nice car. Conwlr, buckct seats. (TEP300) CORVAIR SPIDER Coupe. Radio. {PIG176) MUSTANG VS. automatic, raaio, stereo. WU! paint to suit buyer. (JKR8fi71 PONTIAC GTO Couf)('. R11dio, heater. a utomatjc, po1ver &leering. Low, Jo"' price, {\VCA940~ V.W. SEDAN "Bug." 13.000' miles. IZSF845l 51699 51399 '66 ~u~~~~l~y~~~~.tl o. p s' m!Jo. s1199 Low, low price. (Sl<D939J ·coNNELL -C-HEVR-OJ;R ' • 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 . . . • ' I ' • TRA~SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION --c:.... CORONET R/T ~=0 '70 DODGE CHARGER 8~::0 '70 DODGE CHALLENGER B~~ EORONET . 500 WAG. 9 PASSENG ER No. 235405" No, 101430 'No. 115494 No. 110211 .. ,13 DISCOUNT $7.08 DISCOUNT ~57. DISCOUNT $797 DISCOUNT 5,000 BLUE CHIP "Jutf 1•• m• first tnd you'll receive 5,000 Blue Chip St•mpt i( you buy from rne or eny othtr detltr," STAMPS "JUST SEE ME FIRSTt.. '66 CHEV. BEL AIR 4 Dr. Automatic, radio, heater, WSW, t inted 9lass. (RSB960 1 '69 PLYMOUTH FURY Au tomatic, radio, heiiter, P.S., WS'!!, t int. g!ass. (XTF984 1 '67 DODGE DART 2 Dr. H.T. Automatic, r1dio, heater, W.SW1 tinf. glass. ITBY3 68 ) '66 PLYMOUTH ~URY Automatic, radio, heater, P.S., WSW, tinted 9l1ss. ISAX20 l ) New Cars 980ll Used Cars ., ----CHRYSLER CONTINENTAL ..CONTINENTAL FROM FACTORY STICKEi PRICI FROM FACTORY STICKll-PllCI PlOM FACTOIY STICKER PRICE I w•nt to th anlc ell of you folk5 who have bought .cars at Worthington Dodge and I Want to thank you for r•ferring your friends and relatives to Worthing. ton Ood91. You and your friends have made this one of the larges t Dodge Dealerships in the world. If I ~an helP. you in •ny way, p_lease drop in. NOTICE! . ' If you are short of money fo r the down payment and need extended terms and very low monthly payments, bring your good credit references and come to Worth· ington Dodge and see for y'ourself how easy it is to get the financing you need. '68-CHEV. CAMARO Radio, heater, white side wef11, 91"" IORI06ll tinted • '66 CHEV. WAGON ~/6 Autom.itic, _ndio, hea ter, tinted 9las1. ISLE78l l '68 OLDS. CUTLASS 2 Dr. Automatic, radio, heater, P.S., fact •. air, WSW, tint. gless. IV FK6961 ' '66 OLDS. 88 4 Dr. H.T. Automatic, r1d io1, ""ater, P.S., factory 1ir, WSW, t int. iglass. IRDW9601 f!ORD MERCURY 9900 Sincerely, Ca/Worthington Pll £S OFFEa EXPIRES WED.o SEPTEMI ER 2ND Used Cars MUSTANG '68CHEVEL_LE2Dr. H.T. Automatic, radio, heater, P.S., WSW, tint· ed glass. I WXK625 I '69 CHEV. % TON Picku p. Automa tic, radio1 heater, lo n9 bed. l53 816CI '67 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 Or. H.T. Auto., R&H, P.S., WSW, tinted . glass, fac. eir, viny l top. IVAE5461 '67 MERC. COUGAR Automatic, radio, heater, PS., WSW, tint. glass, vinyl top. 17J91 11001287 1 9900 Used Cars PONTIAC PONTIAC T-BIRD '69 Ch,rysler New Yorker. 4 Dr. Vin. top, air, full power, ·new tires. Xln't Cond. Call 846-582-t 1967 LINCOLN, 2 Dr. Xlnt condition! $2450, Air & po\ver. 675-3332. '66 CONTINENTAL, LOADED! New tires . Sharp-(:Jean cond! $1700. TOP DOLLAR '69 Mere Marquis 4-dr sedan air cond, AM/FM radio, cruise control.. $ 2 9 0 0 • 644-2832. ~TEMPESf'WAGQN '68 Landau V.S au tom, pwr '68 LeMans: RadiaJ tires, '6J T-BIRD, air, full power, strg, radio 25.000 mi, mint alr. Many Xtras! $400 & Air, Xlnt Cond, $925. 30,300 mi's. Best in Orange DlAL direct 642-5678. Charge your ad, then sit back and lJsten to the phone ring! Is you ad 1n the classified SECMON'! Someone is \vatchlng for it, Di a I 642-5678 today! Imported Autos 96001mported Autos 9600 '69 vw $1375 lt1dio, httl•r, look• t nd driv11 Ii•• 1 f1ctory fre1h <t r tXUV-98))" ----'67 vw $1095 Ftitbiick IZWL·1981 '68 vw $1195 R1d io, hetf•r, <u1to"' 1tee•i n9 wh•1l, ••cellent mech. condition. • (Wff.1651 '64 vw $649 R•dio, ht1fer, good tire1, new ptint, ••ctllent mech•nic1I condition. ·'67 FIAT $CJ49 Cpe,. r11dio, h11t1r. Good t ire1. ITR'f-086 1. '68 FIAT $1350 150 Spider 2 dr. rtdio, "••*•'• ultr1 1h1rp! cwn.6161 '69 VW BUS $AVE A·I Sh11rp! Red wifti wh lt1 roof. Set & drivt thi1 be1uty to eppr1ci1tt. (#92691. -'67 VW CAMPER $AVE 8,tdio, h••ttr, wtlk thru tt•h, fully tqUipped including ice \toll', plu1 rntny rneny tlllr11, f ully •nclOsed caben•. '65 1 PORSCHE $ 795 ••built •119!M1, rtdio, h11ter, tll tht •idl1U 11I 111ic1 "' '68 OPEL $11-95 Ytllow With bl1ek bucktf 1t1h, ,,dio, ht•t•r. 4·speid, 1::•cvl1t1I PLUS A LARGE SELECTION OF VW BUSES, ALL COLORS • ., ........... Joe B e rlettl's T&M MOTORS 8081 Gordtn Grov• Blvd. SALIS OPIN SUNDAY PARTS, HIYICI TUI$., THUIS. TIU 1.00 IJ4.2214 f \11 1111. L .t IHc•I 12·1111 :oos."'-"'2'l83"·=· ====:::! CLEAN J s ED CARS cond. S1895. 499-2539 take over· payments . ___ •_54s-7574 • County! Must St>e to '67 l\lustang 2-dr vinyl HT,1;50,;;·;;;1""8~25".,-:;;::-.,--;:,...,---,--T·BIRD appreciate. 494-7431 or V.S auto., r /h. clean & rca-1970 GTO 400: 4 Spd, custom ---·------644-5182 CORY AIR • '61 Corvair • Stick shift. Xlnt cond. See Andy Bro1l'n THEODORE ROBINS FORD MUSTANG sonablc. Call 9G8-42i:i2. int. F ull warranty, 492-1343 '69 T·BIRD: 2 dr. Landau. '62 T-Bird, Air-Cond, All e 1967 :.1usrANG • 6 cy\, ~~::e & wkends. Ask for l''ully equipped, air, etc. po11·er! priva1e party. Call stick, r/h. $1100. 269 Knoxl-:::"='=::======::=:-:--.:*7*.:":::;6-0:::2::;84:.;:*:._:*::-~-"(l")=5:0U.o=808:=9.=====-I $240 644-1370 2060 Harbor Wvd. e '66.Mustang 2+2 Fstbk e Costa Mesa 289 cu. in, 4-spd Pl. C.M. 548-9G90 New Cars 9800New Cars 9800 New Ca rs &f2.0010 New tire & Braker; CORYETIE '66 Sq • w CLEAN!! OLDSMOBILE ---·----·I · UJre agon See at 1825 W. Balboa Blvd. 1969 Corvette, g. Fairtane, with wood grain ex. Newport Beach 540-8308 • •66 OLD'S CUTLASS. mo's old. Private terlor, dlr. 390 VS, power XLN 0 Party. 962-9572 steering, air cond. Stereo '67 Mustang Hrdtp: 289 eng. • T C ND. ASKING =========I tape, auto: trans. (TAY279) Auto I trans .. P/S -R/11, $14:ii> 644-4377•• DESOTO \Vill take trade or finance tj]:lted glass, console, 30,000 '69 CUTLASS Supreme-Vinyl ·-----I private .,arty. Call 5464052 mi Aqua. Xlnt con d . Hrd!p, air, auto. Xlnt cond, •55 DESOTO-good cond, new "'•,.',,'.,,94-6811=...,,,· -,;:---:-~ ''=M=S-4=12~4~. ~Da~"'="'-----Best of1er. 673-8U8. tit'es, Good transportation '64 Falcon Sta Wagon, 6 cyl. MUST Sell '67 hlustang-Lan-1 •,~.,-J~ET=s=T-A~R-1-,-1-o-wno-r-,-.. I car. $200. 644--0940. Auto trans, Lug, rack. dau $ll50. P/S.R/H·S/S orig. pain! ,r,, Int. Xlnt cond . Air-cond,· Good shape! ~75. Good rond. 646-8529 alt 4 s,j25. &Mi-~ DODGE OOS-5946 1966 MUSfANG convt. 6 cyl, '62 OLDS F85 $200 "66 Dodge Sportsman Van-6, JAVELIN Good·cond, Spare+ 2snow I-------~-­~~""'°""' =$'°'!;;so"'"'. ,.cM,_5-3="'7"74'=--'69 Javelin. Beaut rond. 343 e '67 CHARGER e V-8,all options. inc air, new Sharp! Mu!t sell, 842-TI05 tires, $1995. 646-4455 days; FORD ------'66 Fairlane Convertible, · Automatic, VS, radio, healer, dlr. Excellent cond, CZZV 074}, Will take trade or finance private par. ty, Call 546-4052 er 494-GSU, 'Ii~ FORD RANCHERO · :iyl Automatic, l!I dr 268), Nill take car In trade or tlr.ance private party. 546-4052 Ot' 494-681 J, • 1961 Falcon 4 dr -Xlnt tond. Best oiler. Ph : M2-6l% or &15-6331. '67 Fairlane GTA, p.a., ~oo~l'i, Make offer. 642.-9643 1967 COUNTRY SEDAN Sta· lion Wagon. Air added. ·-· '611 Ford Country Squire 10 pas.s. 1\•ag. Loaded. air, Jo mi's $2600. 541Hl75t '69 LTD St11 !Kln \Vagon Air, Lug I n.ck. Nu llreSj-19,000 ml. $3h200. 962-2159. 646-7040 eves. standard, new paint & top, * 549-0)81 aft 7 pm * $1050. 675--0636 aft 6. '65 Mustang Conv, Stick shift, p/s. Xln't cond. $1000. 846-4201, 4 Pt-.f-!I PJ\1. '67 MUSTANG Convert. Clean. 673-2662 PACKARD 19-10 PACKARD Conv, Ne\\' motor. Fair body, \Vill trade. 546-3634 Bos LONGPRE PONTIAC 1967 We expertly perform oll Ponlio c war ranty work • . . regardless of w h e r e you originally purchased your Pon ti ac • • • 1968 1969 '70 ' Nobod y knows your . Pontiac better !hon Ponlioc people • . • we have been sellin9, servicing and satisfying Pont iac people for over 15 years • • , SERVICE FIRST I BosLONOPRE ..... . ··- PD NT I AC - I 9800 --------------------------~-------~~-----~~~---~---------- ' • j • .I J • ' I I ·I ' " '