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1970-09-04 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
I - ·. ---------------------.----------..---~ Abortion DAILY PILOT Draws_ Fire Frona Solon * * * 1oc * * * FRll;>A Y AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 4, 1970 VOL, U. fllO, 111, 4 l•CTIOJt l , tf """'' Riptides Sweep Pair to Sea • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • •• • • • • • • • ·~- ' 7 a una In Ca1nera Eye ' .. ·~ :· •• [j '· :• •' ~~ ' }:;fr ' ~ ~ : •. Garden Grove police are looking for a man who escaped with ,2,000 Aug. 27 after threatening a savings and loan firm teller with an al· Jeged bomb he said he was carrying in his briefcase. He demanded $10,000 on threat of using the explosive but settled for the lesser amount. Police don't know who be is but they have his picture, ob- tained by hidden camera. Blind Swimmers Rescued Off Huntington Shore Tt'eacherous riptides swept the Orange Coast despite sma ll surf Thursday, pulling two young Los Angeles County residents out into a sea of salt water and darlfness. "I knew we were rar out when we couldn't touch bottom anymore." said Oruge Coast Weather You can sieep lat~ over the holi- day weekend and wake up to find the sun shining -about noon. Temperatures wil l stick to a cool :-65 along the beaches and a warm- er 78 inland. INSIDE TODAY For all you census·mindtd statistician.!. there's o full page of information on the recently announced U. S. population Jigure1r -showing Cali/ornia'1 tltvation to the top state spot. • Page JS. ....... " MIJN1I l'llllllt .. C.WNnll• " N1tltil1I Nl'WI •• Cllldlfltt U• ' Otl-C.wnty " ca..tlflt' 11·•4 .",_'"" ... x C~kt " lrl'flfl '""" " c,..,_,.. " ... ,. .... Dutll Hetkin " Sltdl M9'11tlt 1 .. U •..n.i '"' • l•NVI.... '1 ··-· 1 .. ,, Tl>tlttn t7·H ·-" WHltll t • AN! L .. Mlltt .. W-'t Mt .. 11-11 M-lllle .. ' w ... M Newt .. M9Vltl ., ... ·--.... i Steve Fort, 24, of Bell Gardens. Fort and Mary Otten, 17, of San Gabriel, remained amazingly c a I m although they were adrift 200 yards offshore from Huntington State Beach. They are blind. "They were very relaxed," said State Lifeguard Mel Tubbs, 22, who pl1ots the rescue boat, Surf Witch. "The first thing they asked was· hoW far out they were," added Tubbs, of Balboa. Tubbs maneuvered the boat closer to the blind swimmers -who had been pulled out from shallow water -and lifeguard Jon Campbell plunged in to make the. rescue. Gampbell, 22, fastened rescue tubes around the pair and only then discovered that they were &ightless. "f wish all the people we rescue were M calm as those two," remarked Tubbs. Not everybody among the 25 swimmers rescued from rip currtnts Thursday were calm. Campbell WM trying to guide the blind rescues when two girls and 1 boy 100 yards further toward shore panicked and began screaming for help, He had to leave Fort aDoat In his lnnated reacue tube and 11t'im to the aid al the panicked bathers, who were in a worSe situation becat11e they were fighting the sea. Aided by a third lifeguard, Rick . Ram baud, the team was able to haul In all five swimmers . Hunlin11ton Beach city lifeguards said th~y were surprised to Jog ()nly nine rescues for a summer day, but added activity wu qUite low. I • • ru ac e e1ze • •• • • • • S'tate Dinner by Nixon· ,, Combine~ Pomp, Power : ~~gp~:f;~e~t · . . . Fete·"~rids · I - · AtWee'Hour CORONADO · -Pomp, power and ' pageantry wu the theme of the day as President Nixon hosted M e x i c a n President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz It a magnificent state dinner that finally wound up in the wee hours <>l today. The chief executive accompanied the Mexican head of st.ate to Chihuaheua - his version of Air Force One -parked at North Island Naval Air Station. Dignitaries and dishes from both nations mingled at the three-way exchange .of friendship, whic~ included former preside'nt Lyndon B. JolmoIL A ·motorcade and . parade wound throu11h a crowd of ft2,000 who cam~ to the small navy town lying in sigbt of the Mexican border. President Nixon personally shook hands with the 660 VIP guests during the gala dinner. Gaiety prevailed from the hors d'oeuvres through tht: petit fours, except for one solemn note sounded in a warning by President Ordaz. He said an increasi n g trend ()f protectivism m u .s. trade circles is discouraging to neighbors south of the border and could spell economic disaster for LaUn American nations. "There is: true .alarm in the countries ()f Latin America because in the United Stales protectionist tendencies seem to be gaining strength," he said. "Should they prevail, there will be a tremendous blow to the eeonomy of the rest of the continent." He apologized for being so serious in the midst of festivity, but said he had already distributed copies of the remarks to the press. An impressive array of military planes and smartly dressed col()f guards from all four branche& of the service greeted the two Presidents at the naval air stati()n. , • President Ordaz Was honored by a 21· gun salute and a tour of the giant base, then accompanied hls host to the historic Hotel del Coronado. Many Mexicans crossed the border and brid11e and ferry tolls were reduced for . the occasion. The four-course, black-tie dinner was served on gokl·rimmed plates flown in from the Wbite .ffouse. It featured prime bee.f from NebraSka, sea bass from l!{eilco, red and white wine and --cllampagne, plus a deisert of ice cream and strawberries. Filty-.si1 Me1lcan dancers from Guadalajara, in bright, native costumes, danced before. lhe fish course was served. Nixon and Diaz Ordaz were seated beside· each other at the table, with John!on and h~ wile Lady Bird at the (See DINNER, Pap Z) t •• .... . . PRESIDENTS TALK SHOP AFTER STATE DINNER Mexican President Dia1 Order (left) chefs with Nixon (right) After Feeat 350 Switch LSD, Marijuana Seized in Raid On Woodland NarcoUcs detecUves in a sweep on Laguna 's Woodland Drive area Thursday night seized almost 130 pouftds of marijuana, more than 5,000 LSD tablets Assemblyman Criticizes Pl\iest's Approach ·~) and slx suspects. ORe Roman Catholic assembly'man Is They esfimated the illicit value of the condemning a plan i11 which more than drugs at $3;8,165. one-third of Oran11e County's parishes are Police: boo~ed Rel!inald Workhoven, 29, banding to11ether to protest the and his wife, Janice Michele, 19, on a Democratic .Party's blanket views on variety of charges after arresting t,hem abOrtion. at their residence, 205 Woodland Drive. The Rev. Michael Collins, pastor of St. Armed with search warrant!. ()fficers Barbara's Church in Santa Ana. is from Lasuna Beach, Newport Beach a~d leading the campai1111 to have Catholic the State Bureau of Narcotica m()ved in Democrata re-register as Republicans. shortJy before 10 p.m. The protest agai•st the party's 1970 The alleged that they recovered from platfonn calling for repeal of all state the Workhoven home 30 ounces ()f hasish, laws restricUng abortions began last 410 grams of bulk LSD, 2,700 grey LSD Sundayl as Father Collins Issued hla call .. tablets and Z,100 ora11ge LSD tablets. About 350 of the faithful decided they'd DetecliveJ also ra1ded a house on rather switch -and li11ht. VK:tory Walk where they claimed to have l\.n!fWerl.ng the call Father · coruns ' found 51 kllograms (1.J pounds each) or Issued from hia pulpit 1n each of eight marijuana. masses. 14 of the 39 Catholic churches in Patrolmen were posted around tf: area the county will have deputy votiftg tor surveillance during lhe search ind registrars present this Sunday . arre11ts. They arrested six more persons They will not, however, ur11e the lot alleged drug violations. change as Father Collins did. These tn'cluded Jeffrey t=m~a~.~-The Republican Party estlm1tt11 most Bodman, 11, of 161S2 Theseus Drive. or ill 200 registrars will be kept. busy. Huntington Beach, and a 17-year-old San Assemblyman Joe A. Gonsa lves ([)..La Juan Capistrano boy, a 17-year-old Mirada) i11 crJUclzlng the movement Laguna Beach gli:I ,and a 17·year.ola begun by Father Collins, and llnt told (See KILOS, P11• I) the priest ao by letter. • Gonsalves, a Catholic and father of nine sons, saYs the reglstraU0111 switch ts grossly unfair · to ~rats who are anti-abortion. He also poh1ts out many Republicans favor relaxation of aborti()n laws, saying the viewpoint is more personal and moral that patenUy political. Gonsalves voted against California's 1967 Therapeutic ~bortion Law and vows to oppose any additional pro. abortion legisl{llion. ''It would be wiser and more effedive to attack those individuals who support anti.family laws," the La Mirada legblator said. uMay f sugjest, Father, that )'1)U turw. your efforts to convincing the s t Individuals that aborting human life ia not an answer to our social and ecological problems," he continued. 111e protest generate<J by Fatbtr Collini was sparked after the Democratic Party Convention Aug. 15 In Slcramento that led to the abortiow stand. Catholics consider abortion a mortal 1tn In all but aeveral extreme cases. ) I DAILY Pilar 5 Frld11, Stpltmbtr 4, l'l70 Death Photo Discounted By Sheriff DramaUc photographs of the scene moment.I before and after newsman Ruben Salazar was slain by lawmen In East Los Angeles don't impress Sherlff Peter J. Pltchess as revealing much. They show armed deputies around the Silver Dollar Cafe, caf'T}'ing bolh conventional weapons and the type of tea r gas gun that fired a 10-inch missile through Salazar's head. The Los Angeles Times -columnist and KMEX Channel 34 news direcctor was covering a protest rally and the violence that !ollowe<I wherf1awmen arrived. Shots taken by publishers <>f the community newspaper La Raia appeared in that -weekly ·and tOday in the Los AngeJes Times. Controversy bas raged evel" slnCf: the slayl.n:g of Saluar, wlx> lived at.3118 S. Rita Wiy, 8anta'A:na, and was a constant crusadtr> for :the ·oppressed Chicanos of the barrio. Publication of .the pictures Thursday drew this comment from Sheriff Peter J. Pitche!s: "The photographs appear to authentically portray the exterior of the Silver Dollar Cafe; in and or themselves they ,offer no evidence of improper proceduf~ on the part of the officers present." He Said the officers were "acting under duress "occasioned by ·highly hazardou.! and tense riotous activities." The aberiff's office has said grenades were Used at the tavern after depuUes were told there was a man inside with a gun. A .. Spokesman said a loud warning was given to evacuate~~building:- The La· Raza quoted Joe Raw, 33, and Raul Ruiz. 2.8, as saying that only after sheriff's officers tired four tear gas shells into the Silver Dollar bar was threre a warning for persons to leave the area. The &herifl, in a news release, said, 11Emotional, unfounded charges and speculations can serve only to incite and further divide the community. Ruben Salazar would not want it so." Ruiz and Razo said a crowd began tG gather and deputies ordered them "to get the hell out of the area." In another development, Abe Tapia of the Ollcano National M or a t o r i um Committee, reiterated that the East Los Angeles ·rally will be rtsumed on a 1tatewide bast! Sept. 16 -the 160th anniversary of MexicG's constitution. Sargeant · Shriver, ex-ambassador to France and first director of the Office of Economic Opportwlity, addre.ssed the East Loa Angeles Community Council •. He spoke of Sa1azar as a "journalist who bridged the gap between the Chicano and the rest of America, wl;lo was able to make others aware of the problemL'' l Nudie Arrested Despite 'Cover' Another Bude dancer at Costa Mesa's F'irebouse bar was taken to jail Tbursday night, after alleged1y straying too near o patnlo wllile doiilg her -d thing. The law says six feet is minimum. Cynthia L. Drey, 23, of Tustin, was ilooked on charges of lewd conduct and released on $625 bail, despite the fact she lad wom a loin cloth·type veil. Vice officers said she had 1t en sideways. Judging the precise distance betwe<n he dancer and the patron's face was no ?fOhtern, they added, since he lit t match tl that point. Miss Drey escaped unsinged. County Soldier Dies Air Force Capt. Michael J. McGerty, husband of Mrs. Karen J. McGerty, 2231 8. Nut wood Ave., Fullerton, has been lilied in action in the war in Sout:.1east f\sia, the U.S. Defense Department announced Thursday. DAILY PILOT N_,..t I••• H.-t'illff" a..11 l .. •11• l••t ll F•liit•I• Y•H•Y C•" Mn• ·~ .. Cl_.,. Olt.AHGE CO.t.ST "U8LISHIHG (OMl"AH'I' Jtob•rl N, w,,d '"•>dtftl •l'ld ,. ... ~11.-J.,. 11. c .... 1 • ., Vk• l'ru .oen• ena Gener•! M-'"' lko"''' ICte•il fdi!O<" 11io111•t A. M11fplii•e M~lrlg f:Gl!OI' Jti,kerd "· Nt11 So\1111 Of-'""'"'Y [d!IOr Offlc" CO!oll Mne: JJO WfJI ll•f $11'ftl H...,.....l •••C~: 2211 WHt llilbol 8ou1rvM'll L"GlllM 8NCft: m Fwn1 """'" Hllflllflllll"" lqcll : ,,.,S &ticll 8"'1e~•fd s..i Oantnt•; JOS H«lll IE! Ctm~ iltMI CAIL'I' ,.1LOf. wi"' w'lidl kc~ flW H1 .... J1rts1, ii ~"-chi!¥ •~c• ""'-''' Ill -rue ,,II _ fw ~,_ •t.:Cfl. H•'"'°'I •tK JI, Cklt Mht, H1111!1foft.., •Nd! .,,. F.....,11., v1 n.y, •W w!IJI 1 .. .._loft•• H i,lon1. °''"'' Coui ,.\lllll1~lrl9 c_., Dr1n11nt pi.11i. ••• •• n11 _, •ilM "aMf .. Htwporl 8H(ll, eUI »II Wal .. t 'lrMI, Co.II ~. Tlll1,ti1• 17141 642 .. :.21 Cl...m.4 .t.~.+itt MJ.5671 s-a. ..... .till nc-,.,....,m1 , ........ 49J .. 4Jt clll'rrlll>:. u10,, Or•,,.. c:o.11 J1111>tlfft1,.. ~-. .... -•'-'In. hli.nt••1-••ll..,ltl INl!tf' Of' id-'IMflllflll 119••1" _,, M n:,....n.c.td wit""' '"'Ill ,.,. mlulM llf mnfill'I twllfl". ~ <llM -liltf JNJ41 t i Hl'W_, lffdl ,,.. O.N ""'"6, C.lltOl'ftlt , S4M(rloll"' 'Y c.,rlOI' '2.• _,,,,,1,,-.,.-11'1111 SJ •• 11'111111rl'U ... m1..,. 11f1tNt'°"'-IJ.OI -!Illy, l Tate Case Link Boy Tells Court Of Finding Gun .. .. ;; :· .. :: " < ' r I LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An 11-year-<ld . boy told today of finding in his backyard the long-barreled revolver which the pro- isecutloo charged was used by the "Man. 1>on family" members at the killings at the Sharon T{lte residence. · 1'Tbere was not even a smudge. J! il \ had been handled at all, there would have been at least (ragmentary prints." . • Cement Mixup Steven Weiss, a small sixth grader who wu completely calm and poised on the witness stand, said he found the weapon near a water srpinkler on a slope behind his borne on Sept. 1, 1969. Five persons were killed at the Tate home on Aug. 8-9, 1969 and two o! them had been shot. Jn testimony (lfficers testified family members Charles "Tex" Wat.son and Patricia Krenwinkel left their fingerprlnfl at the Tate home. The boy said he had been fuing the sprinkler and ooticed the gun lying beside it. He said he took it down to his father who called police and turned it over to them. The courtroom rocked with laughter when young Weiss was cross-examined about finding the weapon and testified that he picked it up gingerly by the lip of Dolan said he had matched a print taken from the front door of the Tate residence with a print of Watson 's right ring finger. Watson, 24. was indicted for the Tate.LaBianca murders. but will be tried later because he has been fighting extradition from Texas. Dolan said a print found on a louver on the French double doors leading from the actress' bedroom to the swimming pool matched a print taken from the Jillie finger of Miss Krenwinkel's left hand. Dolan said he found 50 fingerprints in the Tate house, including 22 prints which belonged to the five victims -Miss Tate, Jay Sebring, Abigail Folger, Voityck Frykowslti and Stephen faren l. Some prints were too smudged to be compared and the others were unidentified, he said. A total of 25 fingerprints were found in the Los Feliz district home of LaBianca, a grocer. Nineteen of the prints belonged to LaBianca, his wife, or her son, Frank Struthers Jr., Dolan said. Six were unidentified. A huge ConRock cement truck flipped on its side Thursday mornjn~ at Ward Street and Ellis Avenue in Fountain VaJley. The driver tried to avoid a Mav- erick which had failed to yield the right of way at the intersection. The Ford was slightly damaged. No one was injured in either vehicle. Firemen wash- ed out the inside of the mixer to prevent the cement from hardening. the barrel with his finger tips. Defense Attorney Paul Fitzgerald asked him why he did that and the young man replied so that it would not interfere with fingerprints on th e Dolan said he had been unable lo find any finerprints at all on the surface of a refrigerator where the words "Death to pigs" were written in LaBia nca's blood. Finch Has No Desire 10 Airlines weapon. Fitzgerald asked him whether a police officer who came to the house subsequently handled the gun and the youngster said: "Yes, the officer put both hands all over the gun." He said the entire refrigerator, including the chrome handles. was completely clean of fingerprints, as though it had been wiped . c:.' ..Jb c:' In mid-December, after the accusations T-B us.-P a----------~-IMU-~-o-kite--agains~ Manson---and-the-family-were 0 e ' . res1° ent ,J made and they had been arrested, young • Wei.u said that he and his father F P ll t • telephoned police. Dolan said he had attempted to locate prints on the walls where the words ''Rise" and "'Healter Skelter'' were written-1n-blood, and had found no prints there either, He 11&id there were no print.s found Qear the bodies of the LaBiancas. Robert H. Finch says he is not after his boss' job. "It sounds trite or presumptuous," said Finch, a presidential counselor. "but I literally have no desire to be president." Finch said he balked at being Nixon's vice-presidential-candidate in l 9 6 8 because he has no desire to move on to the next step, the presidency. · The former HEW secretary said the vice-presidency was discUS!ed with him in 1968 before Spiro T. Agnew was chosen by Ni.Ion, and that be withdrew himself Blaze Explodes At Oil Drill Site In Santa Barbara An unmanned oil l!rllling plaUonn In the Santa Barbara (]Jannel ezploded into flames early this morning aM blazed for four hours before being brought under control. Flames licked 200 feet into the air and were visible for 15 miles up and down the coast, but there were no injuries and ll<l oil pollution, according to the Coast Guard. The robot rig, five miles of.f Santa Barbara, was destroyed by the blaze. said a spokesman for Standard OU Company, operators of the platform. Cause of the fire and explosion were not immediately detennlned, th e &p0kesman &aid. rrom conside ration. He said he would do the same if asked to be a vice- presidential candidate in 1972. However, he noted that he Is considering running for senator or governor of California in 1974. Finch served as Lt. Governor for two years in the Reagan administration before Nixon was elected in 1968. Gov. Reagan is running for a second tenn this year and the office will be at stake again in 1974. when Democratic Sen. Alan Cranston also will be up for re- election. Finch was known to tiave seriously considered running for the Senate this year i! incumbent Republican ~. George Murphy had decided not to seek re-election. Finch said Murphy "will probably win" a rough race with Rep. John V. Tunney, the Democratic 1e111torial nominet;. Stogie Smoking Vandals Sought Vandals who broke into the Girls Club of the Harbor Area and caused widespread damage are being sought by Costa Mesa police today. They may be a liWe green around the gills. Whoe ver entered the clubhouse at 1815 Anaheim Ave., ate copious amount! of candy and smoked several cigars, investigaors said. The cigars were not OD sale there. Still Talking Martha Says She's 'Clearing House' By HELEN TltOMAS Ul'I Sllff COrr••J'llndt11I Whether in W&;snington or at the Western White House In San Clemente, the wife of Attorney General John N. 1'-1itchell is lively, outspoken, involved - iind candid. Sbe says she is constantly surprised at the volume of mail she receives. She reads practically all of it, and dictates answers be sent to most letters-handled by volunteers from the .Republican National Committee staff. "I imagine I get the mos t fascinating rpail of anybody wbo has ever been in Washington," says Martha ?i-iilchell. ln fa ct, she says, "I fet!l like a clearing house." "There's something w r o n g in government that doesn't provide people with an answer," she ad ded. "I'd like t,p have somebody make a study of my mail and come up with an answer .• :• Mrs. Mitchell said that her mail is fascinating because "it runs the gamut.'' "There's somebody who writes lrom prison who wa nts to shorten his term. Then there are those who a r e complaining a~ut the state department. Some write that their refrigerator is not working properly aiid the kids write me all about their schools." Mrs. Mitchell says she al.so gets letters from abroad. She gays they generally carry the message : "\Ve're all for you • lt's wonderful that you ca n speak." She said some of Lhe foreign lette r writers say, "You don·1 have freedom of speech in Otis country." "It scam you," sbe sai d 1h ao lntervie"" On another subject, 5lie said she stayed av,.ay from activit ies of the women's Uberatlon movement -but not btcause she did not believe women are discrim- inated agai nst. "They are." she snid; "Job v.•ise, salary wise, professionally nnd i;oclnlly. • 1'l get mail about it but I stayed away from it. This is something you have to study." As for her husband, f\.1rs. 1t1itchell says. 1'J'm liberated as far as he's concerned -yes ma'1n. ''I just like to be liberated. 1 don't like anybody telling me what to do," she explained. Her mail load is so heavy she had considered writing a column -which someone suggested should be titled ''Martha's Washington" -but indicated demands on her time make it impossible. President Nixon, she said, "loves to kid me more than anything in the world." She gets along fine , too, with first lady Pat Nixon. On a flight to California from Puerto Vallarta, Mexi t'O, fli rs. Mitchell - v:ho does not like to fly -said "l just sat ln a corner and said nothing." She said she was so subdued that at one point fl1rs. Nixon said to her, "aime on fo.1artha , speak up." f\1rs. f\11ft'hell said she al so gets along fine -"beautifully, fabulously" -with other cabinet y,·ives. She also insisted that it was not \Vashington life that made her outspoke n a bout controversial issues. "I've been like this all my life,'' she said. "This is me. I've made the newspapers before \~ith things I've said." f\lrs . .r.titchell. who has been spending a couple of Y.'eeks in California while her husband stay~ near the Western \VhJte }louse, said 11he had been busy with inlerviey,·ers and photographers from Life Magazlnt for a special piece be&ed on "A Day in the Life of Marth a .f\litchrll." "I hnven'I had a chance lo catch my breath." she said. "Al\ J want to do now is sit." But she said she wasi>ltased with telephone calls from Washington. She said the gist of them v.·as "oh, f\1artha, please come back -it's dead here without )'Ou.'' • or 0 . ft J,OJJ "We told them they had · th~ gun and "Mr. LaBianca was lying in the living room in a heavily carpeted area surrounded. by upholstered. furniture. which is not conducive to fingerprints ," Dolan said. BOSTON (AP) -Atty. Gen. Robert H. Quinn filed suit in Suffolk Superior Court today against 10 major airlines charging them with maintaining a public nuisance at Logan International Airport. The suit alleged that the airlines are responsble for substantial air pollution and demanded that immediate corrective action be taken. The court was asked to order the airlines to: -Immediately undertake programs to mOOify aircraft engines with available devices to abate atmospheric pollution. -Report to the court and the attorney general's office periodically en the modification program. -Report to tht atlomey general the development of all new atmospheric pollution abatement devices a n d negotiate the tenns of a program for the instaUatioQ of the newly developed devices. Quinn said the suits were filed after an intensive inve s tiga t ion by his environmental task force and pollution experts at the state Department of Public Health. that tliere might be some connection wit..b this case." A 'police fingerprint expert testified Thursday at the trial of Charles Manson and three female codefendants that a pearl-handled carving fork stuck in Leno LaBianca's abdomen did not have even a -smudge or a fingerprint on it. ''It gave me the impression that the handle had been wiped off," said Officer Harold J. Dolan. From Pagel DINNER ... end. Other head table guests were Mrs. Nixon, Mrs. Guadalupe de Nasta, Diaz' daughter who stood in for her ill mother, and california Gov. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan. The White House managed to preserve its tradition of having waiters serve at state dinnen, despite the · protests of waltresaes at the hotel wh:> felt they were edged out of tht!ir jobs. About 33 of them were among the several hundred persons serving guest! at the dinner for the vbiting Mexican President but they only operated on the fringes. Said Ann Lee, a waitress for 12 years. "I'm happy they let us come in. But I'm not happy they did it the way they did." he said. From Pagel KILOS •.. Huntington Beach boy. They were arrested on charges of marijuana possession. Jerry Frank Hapgood, 27. 1025 Genoa, San Cleme1te and William Roger <>mu, 21, of La Palma were arrested on suspicion of marijuana possession and possession of dangerous drugs and possession for sale. Police asserted they recovered from the t)air's car 22 grams of hashish, 12 capsules believed to be LSD and about U grams or marijuana. Police were to seek complaints today against the adults and the juveniles wert to be processed through juvenile etiurt. The Work.hovens were booked on charges of marijuaAa possession, hashish and marijuana possession for sale, dangerous drugs for sale, posse"ssion of cocaine and mescaline and possession of paraphernalia. Police said the arrests occurred without incident. MOST TRUSTED NAME IN ru RNl'NJRl MOSr 1RUSTEO NAME IN fURNITllR( ·~1 .. ., ' l· ' t ' ! !\ ! <L ,.. ..................... - CHINA PARSONS TABLES ·1 ! I ·1 I ' i ' i Now av ai!oble in g r e e n as well as yellow. An exceptiona l Io o k. On d isplay now. This fine collection of tl'lb les is avail. able in a multitude of si zes from t he smallest cigare tte table to a large Clin· ing table wit h !eaves - DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wostcllff Or., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY "TIL 9 INTERIORS Profe11lon1I Interior D•1i9ner1 Avallabl.....AID-NSI D LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coos! Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FR)OAY "TIL 9 ~ '"' ,,.. ....... o,.... c. • ..,. 140°12,J . . I ( • t ' l J l Hi w in ... wl ch of Slo ad de Sit yo all Ar I m: "" be' $Ii E Jl 1 R h" jus1 luc.1 A In t Bro end con. Pac par I Tl eye! pos! the mee F1 Ree look effot mini can ::ifou ordh vlrh inlet "1 lot o little "II ::iwa! will ex ha Fu kitk1 op po ch an hom1 ~urr( plant Be Pit Tix HunU Day. A• ~fond Thu rt plcku, from hGJld l l I l \. H~ntington Beaeh EDITION Today's Flniil N.Y. Stoeks VOL o3, NO. 212, ~ SECTIONS, # PAGES ( ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI.( FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, '1970 TEN CENTS - Orange County Joins 'Substantial Jobless' Li·st Orange County will be added lo the list of "substantial unemployment" ar~as on Oct. 1, the U.S. Labor Department a'nnounced '11lursday. · The designation means that firms in the county will receive preference In bidding on certain federal . buying contracts and public works projects. The county achieved the unemploymtnl status because the jobless rate here has been above six percent for the past two months. WO 10 Nabbed In Beach NarcoRaid Ten persons were arrested in a Huntington Beach n a r c o t i c s raid Wednesday, concluding an undercover investigation spanning three weeb. Only three of those taken into custody were charged with sales of narcotics, while the others are behind bars on cbarges or either furnishing or p<Wes.sion ()f the illicit materials. · Arrested for marijuana sales was Troy Slone, 21 , who gave a Cypress Street address, and two female juveniles. While officers from the p o l i t' e department's narcotics bureau made the Slone ar:rest, they also arrested another youth, Gregory Haydon, who had allegedly been AWOL from the U.S. Army for about one year. During August the city's policemen made 314 narcotics arrests which rtsulted in the confiscation of 19,422 benz.edrine tablets. LSD valued at $175,000 and'Tllarijuana valued at $50,000. Beach Cyclists Might Get Hole To Cruise In Hundreds or cyclists who no longer have a place to ride th.eir mach_ines m,ay just stumble into a big hole-if they re lucky, that is. And what is probably the biggest hole In Huntington Beach-the 2(}..acre Bruce Brothers gravel pit on Gothard Street and Talbert Avenue-is currently being considered by the city's Recreation and Parks Col'Mlission as a possible cycle park. The location was recently suggested by cyclist Larry McCa rty as the .be.st possible location for a cycle park ~il~1n the city limits during a oomm1ss1on meeting. For several months now. t h e Recreation Department start has been looking at va rious chunks of land in an ('ffort to provide a motorcycle and minibike riding area where cnlhusiasts can practice their sport without running ;iJoul ot the law. A recent emergency .. 1 ordinance which makes off road riding vi rtually imposible within the city has intensified their search. "That 'black pit,' as it's called, has a lol or potential as a riding area with very Utt.le work." McCarty pointed ()Ut. "It has I.he added advantage of being awa y fr om residences and the high walls will aid in deflecting the noise of the c~hausts.'' lie added. Further, McCarty bel1eves the dust kiC'ked up by the cycles will have ample opportunily lo settle before it has any chance to enter the windows of homeowners. The 200 fl-deep pit is surrouncd mostly by small industrial plants. the Huntington Beach Police (See CYCLISTS. P11e ZJ Beacl1 City Trash Pickup on Thursday There will be no trash pickup In l!unUngton Beach on Monday, Labor Day. A spoke sman for Rainbow Disposal said ri1onday's routes would be collected Thur&da y in Huntington Beach. Trash pickups in Fountain Valley will be shifted from Thursday to Y.'riday because of the holidey, tht spokesman said. State Department of Employment of· Iiclals said Thursday that lhe unemploy· eel rate in the county was 6.6 percent throughout August, a jump of three- tenths of one percent Crom the July figure of 6.3. The county will become the nalion ·s most. popolus suburban area to be declared eeonomically depressed. lt will also have the highest per capita income of any area in the nation in the category. •• Ill • The State Human Resources Department listed 33,000 persona out of work last month. 1",500 more than July, and predicted further declines at least through November. Orange County joins Oakland, San.Jose, Fresno and Stockton as large areas in the slate with substantial unemployment. Imperial County is the only other Southern California county to reach the substantial unemployment status with an 8.8 perctnt rate of jobless workers in August. Los Angeles County recorded a 5.8 unemployment percentage rate in July while the entire state had 8.2 percent. The job picture in Orange County is the worst in eight years and Is blamed largely on IO, 700 layoffs in the aerospace Industry during the past 12 months, aCC{)rdirlg to the Human Resources Development Dept. figure. • The county's rate of unemployed a year ago was onJy 4.3 percen~. In contrast to other depressed areas in the state and nation, Orange County boasts an annual per capita income of $3,610. Executives and highly trained technicians lead the list of unemployed outstripping blue collar worker! who have been laid off this year. The jobless situation has meant that spendable income of about p)0,000 a w1mmers ................................................................... ··-··-·--················ .. . . ' . ,. .... . , ., . ' , ... 1"11t'9 ll'f'.1111• L.11....,. M .. t ... A•N'•ncR ~I 'Slrf W.icll' . '' . ' ' TWO BLIND SWIMMERS, CAUGHT IN RIPTIDE OFF HUNTINGTON B~ACH,AI!~ l!ESC\IED OFF STEAM PLANT BY. STA'fE GUARD~ In W•ter (left to right ), Victim Mery Otten, of San Gabriel ; Lifegu.rd Rrclc Rambaud, Vict!m Steve', Fort, Be~I Garden1 ; Li:feguard ·John ~ampbtll Hearing, Delayed In Knife Killing A preliminary hearing for two men accused of taking part in the knife- slaying of a Huntington Beach business executive has been postponed lo Sept. 15. At that lime Miles C. Cox, 18, of Westminster will answer murder charge! while Frederick J . Yanke, 20, of Gardena, will appear on charges ()f harboring and concealing Cox, Both were arraigned at West Orange County Municipal Court ()ne day after they were captured by police and accused of slaying hardware store owner Walter Christie, 51, in his Huntington Beach apartment Aug. 24. Smoking Mari j nana SAN DIEGO (AP) -Thirty pounds of marijuana caught fire inside a car on Interstate 5. 1'wo men stopped the auto near the La Jolla turnoff late Thursday and escaped on foot, police said. The marijuana was being :smuggled too cloee to the car's manifold exhaust, of· ficers said. Seal Beach Recall Bid 1,000 Signatures Short By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ltte ~llY 1"1111 l ll ff Further ct1mpllcations were introduced into the volatile Seal Beach politica l squabble Wednesday with an opinion from the city attorney that a petition to recaU Councilman Conway Fuhrman doesn't have enough signatures. Under state law, the petition needs another 1,100 signatures to comply with a requirement that such petitions contain 25 perctnt o( all registered voters in the city, according to Attorney Jim Bentson. Officials of the Save Our City (SOC) organ ization ..... who initiated the recall thought they had more than the -25 percent when they turned in a 1,868 petition, currently being verified by the city clerk. But the trouble ls that Seal Beach elects its councilmen by districts rather than at large, ao the 25 percent requirement does not apply to only Fuhrman's 2nd District but the whole city, according to Bentson. Fuhrman was served with a recall petition during a stormy city council meeting July 27 when he and Councilman Thomas Hogard and Mayor Baum voted to fire City Manager Lee Risner and City Attorney James Carnes. Those spearheading the drive to oust the veteran councilman were quite unhappy with ntntson's opinion . They are now weighing whether to accept. his Opinion or seek legal advice. "It looks to me like he's mixing apples with oranges," said a spoke9man for the SOC group. She basically contended it was unfair for vote rs In one district to elect a councilman and then give the privilege to remove him to the entire city. Shop Area Out of Date Top of Pier Sect i.on Not To Be Used for Years Bv ALAN DJRKIN ot 1111 O•llY l"li.t Stiff Jf you look at. a map of the Huntington Beach Top of the Pier Plan, you will find 50,000 square feet of specialty shopping marked between the Huntington Pacific apartments and the foot Of the municipal pier. It 's out of date. The plan was adopted by the council last Nov. 17, On June a the city filed • beach accw suit OYtr that property and the adjacent 2'.1i mlle.s of slrAnd. The litigation will be Jong And costly. Nobody ii 1oing to build anything on that property for years unless the action is settltd out of court. Not the city, nor 11' opponent in the case, Huntington Paclfic ' This is the concluding article in a tl1ree·part series discussing Mptcl..1 o/ the redtvelopmcnt plan proposed for downtown Huntington Bepch. Corporation, owned jointly by the Huntington Beach Company and Southern Pacific. U>oking back on the plan from today's vif!wpoint, a court ban on development along the beach will save the clly some face . Planning even specialty shops along that st.retch would seem to contradict. moves to preserve public lcces! to the sands. Wlitrt will lhe specially ohoJ>I be pul "/ ___ _ now? Harbors and Beaches ·01rector Vince Moorhouse says they could be built behind the block-deep parking lot that will stretch from Sixth to First Street along Coa!t Highway. He envisaies a Ports O'Call area for a mall styled 'alter Disneyland's Main Street. City Administrator Doyl6 M 111 e r believes the shops could be placed in the p a r k I n g lot area -in a land-swap between the city's Rede v e 1 op m e n t Agency and the Parking Authority de~ibed In yesterday's article. Miller Also said he underslands 25 perce~t or the property condemned by' the Parking AUlhorlty could be (lloe PARKING, Ptfe I) -- Salazar's . Wife Said 'No Anger' In Her Request The ·widow of writer-broadcaster Ruben Salazar tcxlay said she meant nothing angry or personal in asking Los Angeles County Sheriff Peter J. Pitchess: and his men to stay away from the funeral. Salazar; 42, who lived at 3118 S. Rita Way , Santa Ana, was buried Wednesday at Pacific View Memorial Park in Corona de! Mar , with 700 persons at the runeral. Sheriff PitcP.ess had personally called Mrs . Sally Salazar to offer condolences about the tragic slaying by depuUes and ask if there was anything he could do. "f said I Would appreciate It if he would have no one around the funeral home,'' she explained. "l only wanted' to avoid trouble, there was nothing personal toward him." Mrs. Salazar said she was afraid incl· dents might occur to mar the solemn tribute paid to hei' husband If hJs many friends from East Los Angeles saw de· puties present or nearby. . Newport Beach police provided traffic control for the hundreds of cars carrying mourners and no incidents occurred. Cigarette Fire Guts Apartn1ent An abandoned cigarette today waii blamed for a fire that gutted parts of an apartment in Fountain Valley Thursday morning. Firemen 1ald the occupant, .John Wat.son, reportedly in his early 20'1, had 1 appan!ntly been smoking ln the .bedroom of apartment E-18 at 17080 San Bruno Ave. After he left for the night, the fire erupted at 3:-44 a.m. Damage to the apartment w a s estimated at $10,500. The bedroom was gutted; bathroom, hall and cktset were severely damaged ; and smoke and ~al ruined pa.eta or the living room and kllcl1en. wetk has been cut from the county's economy, according to Odessa Dubinsky, HRD's research director for this area. Higher employment this year in such fields as building construction, retail stores, restaurants and motels has not been greal enougtr lo offset the aerospace declines. Half of August's 1,500 lo-st jobs came from the eleetronlc field and other aerospace firms. ave Riptides Take Pair Out to Sea Treacherous riptides swept the Orange Coast despite small surf Thursday, pulling two young Los Angeles County residents out into a sea of salt water and darkness. "I knew we were far out when we couldn't touch bottom anymore," sald steve Fort, 24, of Bell Gardens. Fort and Mary Otten, 17, of San Gabriel, remained amazingly c a I m alt.hOugh they were adrift 2QO yards offshore from HunUngtba,Slat.e Beach. They are blind. '"M1ey were very ttlaxed." said Stale Lil~ Mel Tubbs, 22, who pilols Ibo r~ boat, Surf Watch. "The firsl thing they Mked was bow far. out they were," added Tubbs, of Balboa. TtibM maneuvered the boat closer to the blind swimmers -who had been pulled out from shallow water -and lifeguard Jon Campbell plunged in to make the rescue. Campbell, 22, fastened rescue tubes around the pair and only then discovered that they were sightless. "I wish all tbe people we rescue were as calm as those two," remarked Tubbs. Not everybody among the 25 swimmers rescued from rip currents Thursday were calm. Campbell was trying to guide the blind rescues when two girls and a -boy 100 yards further toward shore panicked and began screaming for help. He had to leave Fort anoat in his Inflated rescue tube and swim to the aid of the panicked bathers, who were in a worse situation because they were fighting the sea. Aided by a lh.ird lifeguard, Rick Rambaud , the team was able to haul in all five swimmers. Huntington Beach city lifeguards said they were surprised to log only nine rescues for a summer da y, but added activity was quite low. JOB Goal Falls Short ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The JOBS hiring program. pride of the Nixon Ad· ministration's Manpower Program, fell 80,000 jobs short of its goal of putting 338,000 hard<0re unemployed persons to work by July I, 1970, the National Alliance of Businessmen said today . Oruge Cout Weather You can sleep late Over the holl· day weekend and wa'ke up to find the sun shining -. about noon. Temperatures will stick lo a cool 65 along the beaches and a warm· er 78 inland. INSIDE TODA. Y For au !JOU Cd1UUS·l'ninded statistician&. thtre's a full pagt oj tn/ormotion on the recentlt1 annovnctd U. S. population /Jgurts, showing California's eleootion to the to::i stac1 .tpet. Pogt 15. .... ... " -·-.. C111tW11a. .. ............ •• CliltUflltl I.If • .. _ ....... " Cl~ltltll ... fl•l111c1r•nh ... .. C1 k1 tt $ylvl1 l"tf'ttr .. CrtllWfrf tt ... , .. .. " DMlll Htlk" " lledr M111lth , .. " ••1trtal ..... • T•ll'l'hl9il " ,lftMCt , .. ,, Tllt•lm ,,.,. .. _ " W11!11•r • Allll lo11111tri • " WtlNft'I Mtw1 l)-11 """"" • w ... _ .. _ .. 11•11 w ... _ .... • , J DAJLY PILOT H Frld1y, Stpttmber 4, 1970 Schools Set For 'Gift' In Valley Officials of the Fountain Valley School District expect to receive a "gift'' of $9,675. 77 from the California Board of Education in the near future. lt took a federal court ruling to pry the money loose from the sta~. but school officials say it will cover some recent expenditures In the budget. ''The state money was held back during 1969-70 because we had received federal aid as an impacted area," Charle! ..Wood. fin, associate district superintendent, ex- plained. An impacted area ls one where a large number of residents work for companies with government contracts. The federal government pays money to school districts for the children of those federal employes. DAILY l'ILOT Sl~lf l'llcll• I Pageantry Theme ~· "' .. Big State D~nner Conc.ludes Late •\ - CORONADO -Pomp, power and pageantry was the lhemJ of the day as President Nixon hosted ~1 ex i c an President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz at a magnificent state dinner that finally wound up in t.be wee hours ol today, 'The chief executive accompanied the Mexican head of Jtate to Chihuahaua - his version of Air Force One -parked at North Island Naval Air Station. Dignitaries and dishes rrom both nations mingled at the three-way exchange of friendship, which included former president Lyndon B. Johnson. A motorcade and parade wound through a crowd of 112,000 who came to the sm.all n1tvy town lying in sight of the Mexican border. already distributed copies of the remarks to the press. An impressive array of military planes -·~· and smartly dressed color guards from ~;-,_ all four branches of the service greeted tbe two Presidenls at the naval all'. station. President Ordaz was honored by a 21~ gun salute and a tour of the giant base, then accompanied his host to the historic Hotel de! Coronado. .·,' .f ·-;,S· J; -~: • J o Many Mexicans crossed the border and :~~· bridge and ferry tolls were reduced for ;~:: the occasion. :.; The four-course, bla ck-tie dinner was :.:· served .on gold-rimmed plates flown in ~· from the White House. It featured prime :::;· beef from Nebraska. sea bass from ·_,; ~.· h1exico, red and white wine and During the 1969-70 school year the State Board of Education withheld a portion of money from local schools because of the federal grants. The U.S. Court of Appeals in Sao Francisco ruled that illegal. THIS IS THE HOLE BEACH BIKERS MAY WIND UP IN IF CYCLE PARK PLAN IS APPROVED Gravel Pit on Gothard StrH t May B• Answer to Search for Public Trail Park President Nixon personally shook hands "'.1th the 660 VIP gues~ during the gala dinner. champagne, plus a dessert or ice cream "*: and slrawberries. Fifty-six Mexican ~·:~ dancers from Guadalajara, in bright, ,..;: native coslumes, danced before the fish "· course was served. ~:: From Page l V al,ley Invite s Nixon for Golf HUNTINGTON PARKING ••• President Nixon won't be playing goU in Fountain Valley this week, or next - but he might make it in the future, He was extended an invitation to play on the Mile Square course by Fountain Valley Mayor Edward Just. 'The mayor wrote a letter Aug. 18 polnt- lng out the nearness of Mile Square, its location in Fountain Valley and the ract the course is built on land leased from lhe Department of Defense. Mayor Just also said the Marine Heli- copter facility was located next to the goll course. "Helicopters are a common sight so yours would attract no special attention." A speclal assistant wrote back to JU!t thanking him for the letter, said no play- ing time was foreseen at the mc.nent but the President would certainJy ketp it in mind. Terry Rites Held In Huntington designated for commercial use. This is a touchy topic, however. City Attorney Don Boffla declined to give his opinion on whether this would be legal under the California Parking Law of 1949. .. Jt would be just apeculaUon lo comment on ft right now," be said. "It's all designed for use as parking at present. If the ULI Committee (citi.zeM · steering committee of the Urban Land Institute) recommends: a change I would research it then." Miller's remark recalled the State Senate Local Government Committee bearing in Long Beach la.st Jan. 9 conducted by then state Sen. John G. Schmitz (R·TuslinJ. The hearing wu on whether Huntihgtoo Beach was guilty of a "violaUon of the spirit" of the parking law. Schmitz drew a ruling from Attorney General Tbomu C. Lynch that the city would be unable to develop commercially the apace ovtr the lkae parking facWty. Another question eouncilmen will f1ce Tuesday ev.eniilg will be whether to keep the five-acre parcel east of Lake Street Funeral services were held at 11 a.m. and own~ by the Huntington Beach today at Smith's 0.pel f 0 r Jong-time _ C.O~~Y m the Parking Autbcrlty area. Huntington Beach resident, Andrea B. Wilham F~, general manager of the rerry wtio died Wednesday at the age or company which owna about 1,300 acre1 In Sl. ' Huntington Beach, most of it ROrth of Mrs. Terry, who was a member of the Golden West Street, bas formally uted Eastern Star, had Jived in the HunUngton the council to e.iclude the parcel Beach area for 47 years. The clUzens steering committee ls to She i~ survived by a son, Victor Terry, report at Tuesday's meetJng whether the bf Huntington Beach, one grandchild and project would work wllhout it. two greet-irandchildren. The land is vacant and is already a Valley Hardware Facility Opened Opening ceremonies were held today at Lili-Brook Hardware's new Fountain Valley store. Fountain Valley Mayor Ed E:. Just was on hand for the opening of the gia1t store, located at 17200 S. Brookhurst. The new fac:ility Is the first step ln the Maheim·b a s c d company's expansion program , which is to include two new 1tores each year. A unique feature of the new hardware 1tore is a weekly program of do-it· rourself classes in the store's auditorium. Cement Mixup parking lot at SO cents a day. If it is condemned by the city it will be paved and the weekend rate biked to $1 or $1.25. The city maintains the Huntington .Beach Company parcel is necessary because it is the easiest lo develop and because it brings down the average cost of the overall project. "The cost would be astronomical without it," Moorhoose revealed. "lt'1 part or lhe write-down technique." The final appraisal on the total area fixes the land acquisition costs at $4.2 million, over a million more than the first estimate. This averages at $7 a square foot but th e average would be even higher if the Huntington Beach Cmmpany land were not included. 1'But the project as a whole would be $1 miUion less if they kept us out," Foster pointed out. "The average square foot cost would be higher but the overall cost would be less." Another softly spoken reason for Including the Huntington Beach Company land is the politics of jt. Citizens may charge favorlti.mt U the parcel is excluded. 'lbe campaign contributions that the company gives council candidates at election time may hann the finn's cause as councilmen may feel obliged to take a hard line. One who questions the costs of the Parking Authority expansion is Robert Terry, bead of the Downtown Property Owners Association. His group is working to consolidate the property for development by private enterprise. On Tuesday evening tbe councilmen will consider the progress of their efforts -and decide lf they 1hou1d give them more time or if the city abou1d 10 ahead and Ila.rt condemnation proceedlngs. "It setm.9 every time 10methlng different happens they can change their tigures to matt it come out right," Terry i::ommented.. He was refening to the million dollar Increase in the appraJaal. After rece.iving the aecond estimate, Economic Research Auod1les of Los Angel .. added IM,000 in 1Mual revenue from on-1trtet parkfni meters to their projections. "I question the revenue they expect to get from parking from the specialty 11hops ($163,000 the first year)," Terry said, observing that the shops can no longer be built according to the original plan. ''I question half of lheir total income'' he went on. •·1 question the revenue troin the present parking lot." Terry summed up his feelings by stating, "They have everything to Jose and nothing to gain if they move ahead - they should agree with us to get busy on getting a private developer. If they move ahead it will be a legal battle in the courts. It will be a mess." So it goes. The picture Is like an abstract painting. The longer you look at it the more angles yo• see. But the councilmen have been weighing the arguments for a long time and on Tues~ay evening they will probably decide if they should color tbe plan green for go or red for halt. ... -----------. 1 1 A huge ConRock cement truck flipped on ils side Thursday morning al Ward Street and Ellis Avenue In .Fll'1nlaln Valley. The driver tried 10 avoid 0 Mav· enck w~Lc_b_ ~ad_!ailed lo yield the right of way at the intersection. The Ford was slightly damaged. No one was inj ured In either vehicle. Firemen wash- ed out the Inside of Lhe mixer to prevent the cement from hardening. l From Page l CYCLISTS ... shooting range, and undeveloped areas. Although a pool of water lines the bottom portion or the former gravel quarry, McCarty believes the water can be fenced off so that it will not create a hawd. '"lbe water is rather deep in some spots but the pit i! sort of a tri-level set up w!Ut an intermediate level between the water pool and the top that would allow riding very soon with very little, if any work." Recreation and Parks Director Norman Worthy said the site is being investigated and the owners have been contacted for further negotiations. "But we haven't any; answers yet," added Worthy. The commissioners are expected to make their recommendation about the sJte public during their regu]ar meeting next Wednesday. Two other possible locations-a minibike course in a deserted oil field and expansion of a local race track to accommodate pleasure riding-have been laid aside until a decision is made on the pit. Meanwhile, local motorsport journalist Mike Capalite who has designed riding areas, including the one at Huntington Cycle Park, said the pit site natura1ly Iendll itself to riding trails and that he will provide a la,yoot U l!ie project goes through. How AhoutLuncheon? Gaiety prevailed from the ho111 d'oeuvres through the petit fours, eicept for one solemn note SOUDded in a warning by President Ordaz. He said an incre a sing trend of protectivism in U.S. trade circles is discouraging to neighbors south of the border and coold spell economic disaster for Latin American nations. "There is true alarm in the countries of Latin America because in the United States protectionist tendencies seem to be gaining strength," he said. "Should they prevail, there will be a tremendous blow to the economy of the rest of the continent." He apologized for being 10 serious in the midst of fe:iUvity, but said be had Pre-school Set In Valley Based On Montessori lt's "back to school" time In Fountain Valley -even where there was no school last year and for youngsters who have Dever been to school before. The First Christian Church will hold open house today from 7:30 to 9 p.m. to introduce the community to the newest pre-school in the area. It will be a full day .school using the Montessori method and geared to teach youngsters from 2~ to 5 years old. Miss Monigue Baudet, who will be in charge of the pre-school at the church's fad)Uies, 9040 Talbert Ave., will be avail- able to meet parents and IIl!lwer ques- tions at the open holl!e. Miss Baudet received her certificate frol;n the School In Paris, France, and is a lifontessorl method teacher. CORONADO, Calif. (UPI) -Mexican The Montessori method is an approach President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz gave a to education which emphasizes the luncheon at the Hotel Del Coronado for po.tential of ~he child and which develops his official party Thursday soon after he this potenhal by mean.s of unique arrived. •·we have to eat," he explained. teaching and didactic materials. The The White HQllSe had not made any child is'fret to grow at his own pace and lunch preparations for the visiting is free to utilize his time constructively Nixon and Diaz Ordaz were aeated ~~:· beside each other at the table, with ,::;: Johnson and his wife Lady Bird at the ~;~: end. Other head table guests were Mrs. ~:~: Nixon, Mrs. Guadalupe de Nasta, Diaz' ~;:· daughter who stood in for her ill mother, ~· and California Gov, and Mrs. Ronald Reagan. The White House managed to preserve .. .: 1ts tradition of having wailers serve at ,'• state di.i.ners , despite the protests or waitresses at the hotel who felt they were edged out of their jobs. DAILY PILOT O~ANG!; COAST PUSLl!IHING COMP.aN't Rob t tf N. W1td P l'll'IO..,! tr.cl l'uo .. 11\W Je<k R. Curl•v l/lte PrHidtnl •nd "'·•~•ti M~n111r Thomes Kt•vil Eo;- Thomto A. Murphine M1n1gl"" Eootw A l1n Oi•k in W•I o. 1noe Count'( Editor A!btrl W. 111111 A.nod llf Edllor H11•ti11tto11 h«lt Office J 717S l 11ch loul1w1rd Mtilin9 Add'''"' P.O. lox 7t0, !2641 Otlter Offices ~ l10....-•••ell: m Forni A....,..,.. Co$11 MHI: l» Wal 81J Strlsf t.lfWPCI•• ,,,CIO, 2111 WtU 81!bo1 8Milt"I~ I $1n C1t~11: lOl lolorlh l J ~rnl,. ltnl ~.JL, tlAll Y PILOT, wllll wtol<.11 a f;Qt'l'IOIMlll IN9 New;.Pru•. is P11bll11'1<d dill., tillCtpl s.,... cl•J In ..,..rite cdmona far (19...,.. IHcll• Ntwoort 8t1<n. C<nll M"'' HunU111111011 Bit ch and Founllln V1lltJ, 11011111 will! lw~ revio..11 ed!Hono, Or1nv1 CoJlt l'uo11111lne Co1111>1nf prlnllnf pl1nl• 1r1 .tr 2211 Wnt B•lbo' Blvd .. N•WllOrl 811c11, 1nd JJll Wat 81~ S!rttr, Cost& Mn•. 1 Tele,he11e 171 41 ''2-4)21 Fre11t W"t111h11tw Cell 140· I 221 Cl•1lfied Advertid .. 642·5671 C0pvr<ia11r, 1t10, 0••1111• .;0111 Ptlbllll'llnl COMP•""· No l'leWI· $(Orin. lllu1tr1tlOM, <di1orill rn.tlet or ;tdvtr11tt'1'11nlo """" ,.,,., be •CflrOdllc~d wll hOul lptoeJ.I per• tniuk>n ot <011'/'rlOlll owntr. Stcond c1111 pot.11111 ~Id 1; Newport l•dl a <d C<nlt Mesi, Ctlllornll , Si>J>KrlpOon bl' c1rrler s;.:.oo ...,~ll•IJ; DV 111111 n 50 rnon1My1 mllll•rJ c1n1in.111Ht1, i;.1111 '"""1n1r. · .. . .• .. ., . president. under teacher guidance. =~---___:::::=...::~:::=:::=-----========·· \ \ ' ! tAf ' () .. ·-··· ~ lRUSTEO NAii[ .. R.#INmJR! 'il'll"~·'T..-, '' ' 1 ' • ; ' l I ! ' •• ' •• CHINA rAt SONS TAii.iS Now avo~able in g re en a s wen as yeOow. An exc.eptionol Look. On displo~ "°"· Th is fi ne cofiection of tables is ava~ able in a multi tude of sizes from the SITlones! c igacelte table .lo o Iorgo ;:w,. ing table with leovM - DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE LAGUNA BEACH NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wetlcllff .Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 Profe11ional Interior O..lgnen Avtll1blo-AID-ljSID 345 North Co1tl Hwy. 494-6551 . '.OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9 ..... ,. ""' ...... o..e. c..., l40-11Q \. ! r I I E! l J I l ' i ' ' Ar the nar 1 fOU! con F I v.·e1 • COil I nil Gu~ T Bar saic Con c not •pol n put mid wllL drill Tl Uni+ l96S 1 I 01 1'·hei I fron Assc Gm ··~ I flrga "we Wi 1tcti1l 1 rejoi I boa" On ' Roge boao CSB1 vaca· On meet withe: d"'" suppc .. c progr oppoo Jor ''aI 1 Ande and J CSBA a "m Anc meny meml Ande1 the ct "f\ critld ' Eyes Big One Miss caJifornia, Karin Kasher, 18, Hayward, flew off to AUan- tic City today to compete in the Miss USA contest. The &-foot 8 inch blonde will know Sept. 5 whether she will be Miss Amer- ica or just a freshman at Hay- \va rd State CoUege. Either way, she's a beautiful girl. Blaze Explodes At Oil Dl'ill Site In Santa Barbara An unmanned oil drilling plaUonn in the Santa Barbara Channel exploded into names early this morning and blazed ror , four hours before being brought under · control. I Flames licked 200 feet into the air and 1 v.·ere visible for 15 miles up and down the • coast, but there were no injuries and no I nil pollution, according to the Coast , Guard. The1 robot rig, five miles off Santa Barbara, was destroyed by the blue. said a spokesman for Standard' Oil Company, operators of tht platform. Cause of the fire and explosion were not immediately detennined, l h t spokesman said. The U.S. Coast Guard said the blaze put out at 5:30 a.m., centered in the 1niddle seetion of the three.deck rig which contains the main compressing and drilling equipment. The platform is near the area where the Union Oil drilling rig blew out in January 1969, apawning a massive oil slick. ..... . .. eathPhoto iscounted By Sheriff Dramatic photoaraphs of the scene moments before and after newsman Ruben Salazar was slain by lawmen in East Los Angeles don't impreu Sheriff Peter J. Plttheu as revealing much. They show anned deputies around the Silver Dollar Cafe, can-ylng both conventional weapons and the type of tear gaS gun that fired a IO.inch missile th.rough Salazar's head. The Los Angeles Times columnist and KMEX Channel 34 news direcclor WIS covering a protest rally and the violence that rouowed when lawmen arrived. Shots taken by publishers of the <:ommunity newspaper La Rua appeared jn that weekly and today in the Los Angeles Times. Controve.ny has raged ever since the slaying of Sa.lazar, who lived at 3111 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana, and WIS a constant crusader for the oppressed Chkanoa Of the barrio. Publication ot the pictures Thundty drew this comment from Sheriff Peter J. Pitchess: "The photographs appear to authenticaUy portray the exterior of the Sliver Dollar Cafe; in and of themselves they offer no evidence of improper procedures on the part of the officers present." He said the officers were "acting under duress occasioned by highly hazardous and tense rk>tous activities." The sheriff's office has said 1renade.! were used at the tavern after deputies were told there was a man inside with a gun. A spokerman said a k>ud •aminl was given to evacuate the building. The La Raza quoted Joe Razo, 33, and Raul Ruiz. 28, as saying that only after sheriff's officers fired four tear gas shells into the Silver Dollar bar was threre a warning for persons to leave the area. The sheriff, in a newa release, said. ''Emotional, unfounded charges and speculations can serve only to incite and rurther divide the community. Ruben Salazar woold not want it ao." Ruiz and Razo said a crowd began to gather and deputies ordered them "to 1et the hell out of the area." In another development. Abe Tapia of the Chicano National Mo r a t o r i u m Committee, reiterated that the East Los Angeles rally will be resumed on a statewide basi11 Sept. 15 -the 160th anniversary of Me1.lco's constituUon. Sargeant Shriver, ex-ambuu:dor to France and first director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, addmled tho East Los Angeles Community Council. He spoke of Saluar as a "journalist who·bridgtd the gap between the Chicano and the rest of America, who wu able to make otberl aware of the problenu." Supervisor's Job Take1i By Cat Vacationing Assistant Superintendent Rex Nerison had a 1tand·in a t Wednesday's meeting of the San Joaquin Elementary School Board. A scrawny, 1punky calico cat hopped Into his empty chair and proceeded to bathe in full view of the audience. Arter suffering the indignation, of beinr .. put out" early in the meeting she felt she had a right to the assistant superin- tendent'1 chair. Before seating herself she nuuled each or ~he bord members, one by one, getting smiles and affectionate pats from all but 011e. Figuring the vote to be 4 to J, she occupied the chair and napped during the rest of the meeting. . Trustee Calls CSBA Drop Out 'Cop Out' _ Orange County's trustees "copped out'' ":hen they dropped their membership ' rrom the California School Boards AssociaOon, Trustee Don Jordan, Garden . Grove, asserted Thursday. "Rather than working within ~n \ orga.niiation to change it," Jordan said, "we just cop out." 1 With this description of the board'1 t action, Jordan promised to move to I rejoin the state organization at a future board meeting. 1 On a motion of newly elected Trustee ' Roger Anderson. Huntington Beach the board earlier in summer voted to dr~ it.! CSBA membership, while Jordan was vacationing in Colorado. On Jordan's retw-n for the Aug. 20 meeting, Anderson explained he favored "'ilhdrawing from the CSBA "because it doesn't re present the people it is suppcls.d to." "CSBA advocates a statewide tax program for education which I am opposed to." Anderson told Jordan. Jordan. who says he doesn't have any "ax to grind" believes the opposition or Anderson. Dr. Dale Rallison of Santa Ana and Dr. Doris M. Araujo, or Orange, to CSBA membership for Orange County is a "matter or ideological viewpoint." Anderson has said he objects to "too m11ny liberal 1peakers'' address Ing members, Jordan said, noting that Anderson and RaJIJ90n were members o( the conservative John Birch SOClety. ''I've frequently heard conHrvaUves criUclze youth !or clropplOI ou\ aod not ; working with.in the systtm for ch.aJlit ·• Jordan said. , ' "Yet, they are perfectly willin1 to 'cop out' themselves . "Regardless of how you feel, board members benefit by usociation wtth people from throu1hout the lllte, by listening to what's said by people acUve in national and statewide educaUonal affairs," Jordan reminded trustees. ''Regarding representatton in CSBA T'm not happy with the deleg1tte ayste,,.; mysel!," Jordan aaid, "but I think we could work within the organiuUon to improve it.'' At the August meeting, Jordan wu told he could attend CSBA seminatl on the memberlhip of school boards in the county other than the County board, or could join hl-U il be chooe to. "l'd be embarraaed to (0 to the CSBA Sylmar conferenct and wouldn't feel free to take part if I were representin1 a board that has no membet!hlp," Jordan told trustees Thursday. "I think we are depriving ourselves of worthwhile ~tacts and communications · by dropplOI our membership." Jonlan II hoperut llChoo! cllltrlct officials and board memben wUI pressure Anderson and others to change their minds about C)BA membership for lhe County Board of Education. He proml&ed to bring the matter up again for a vote to approve the $300 expenditure that already has been budgeted. However, he said he Is "not too optlmlatlc about clw!glna tbelr mlnda." I' 5LB . Have You Seen This Man? -Garden Grove JJOlice are looking for a man who escaped with $2,000 Aug. 27 after threatening a savings and loan firm teller with an al- leged bomb he said he was carrying in hia~briefcase. He demanded $10,000 on threat of using the explosive b\lt settled for the lesser amount. Police don't kno\v who he is but they have his picture, ob- tained by hidden camera. Hippie Dies at Church The Orange County Coroner'11 Office is today aUemptina: to determine the identity of a hippie.type youth who appannUy killed himleU Thursday in the church yard of a Jesus Christ o( the Latter D.ay Saints Church in Anaheim. Police said the Jong-haired youth appeartd to be about 11 to 20 years or age. His body was found in a 11iUing p1»ition against a block .wall in the church yard with a .32-caliber Colt revolver on his lap. Police have ruled out the possibility that the youth was murdered. He was dressed in a brown, pink and blue plaid shirt, blue levis and aandalJ and sitting on 1 multi-colored serape. 2 5 2 QC OU $&!-·Gil I Tate Cue Link Boy Tells ·Court Of Finding Gun LOS ANGELES (UP!) -An ll·year,.ld ,. boy told loday of !lndlOl In hit boc:kyord the long-barreled revolver which the pro-. leCl.ltlon charged was used by the .. Man. aon family" member• at the killings at the Sharon Tate residence. Steven Weiss, 1 small &llth grader who was completely calm and Poised on the witness stand, said he found the weapon near a water srpinkler on 1 slope behind his home on Sept 1, 1989. Five persons were killed at the Tate home on Aug. 8-9, l96t and two of them had been shot Jn testimony officers testlfied family members Charles "Tex" Watson and Patricia Krenwinkel left t be l r fingerprints at the Tate home. The boy said he had been fixing lhe sprinkler and noticed the gun lying beside it. He said he took it down to his father who called police and turned it over to them. The courtroom rocked with laughter when young Weiss was croSs-examined about finding the weapon and testified that he picked it up gingerly by the tip or the barrel with his finger tips. Defense Attorney Paul F'ilzgerald asked him why he did that and the young man replied so that it would not interfere with fingerprints on th.e ""eapon. Fitzgerald asked him whether a police officer who came to the house subsequently handled the gun and the youngster said: "Yes, the officer put both hanm all over the gun." Jn mid-December, after the accusations against Manson and the famil y were made and they had been arrested, young Weiss aald that he and bis father lelephoned police. "we told them they bad thll IUD ond that there m.l&ht be some connection Witb tllis case." A police fingerprint expert testiOed Thursday at the trial of Charles Manaon · and three female codefendants that 1 pearl-handled carving !ork lluck In Leno LaBianca's abdomen did not have even a smudge of a fingerprint on it. "It gave me the impression that the handle had been wiped off," said Officer Harold J. Dolan. "There was not even 1 smudge. If it had been handled at all, there would havt been at least fragmentary prtnta." Dolan said he had matched a prb1t taken from the front door of the Tate residence wllh a print of Wat.son's right ring finger. Wat.son, 24, wu indicted for the Tate-LaBianca murders. but will be tried later because he has been flgbtina extradition from Texas. Dolan said a print found on a louver on the French double doors leading from the actress' bedroom to the swimmlne pool matched a print taken from the UUle finger of Miss KrtnwinkeJ's left hand. Dolan said he found 50 flngerprinta tn the Tate house, including 22 prints which belonged to the five vicUma -Miss Tate. Jay Sebring, Abigail Folger, Voltyct Frykowski and Stephen Parent. Some prints were too smudged to be compared and the others were unidentified, be said. A total of 25 fingerprints were found ta the Los Feliz district home of LaBtanca, a grocer. Nineteen of the prints be tonged to LaBlanca; his wife, or her aon, Frank Struthers Jr., Dolan said. Sir were unidentified. Dolan said he had been unable to find any finerprints at an on the surface of a refrigerator where the words .. Death to pigs" were written in LaBianca's blood. .. : .fun clothes 7 fashion island, newport beach 644-5070 • • • DAILY PILOT Frid_,, Srpttmbtr 4, 1970 iCfOl'll" h ._ 01lty l'tltl lltl'll For six years Irene Wick s has served an as unolficia l, nonsalaried nagger of litterbu~s in Islip, N.Y. Now. l\1rs. Wicks may receive town recognition and support in her cleanup campaigns as a "litter maid." The to'''" board has ~rant· ed Supervisor Clyde \V. Pearsall permission to hire Mrs. Wicks, 53 .• of Bay Shore. "I kept after them so much they cleaned up just to get rid of me." said Mrs. \Vicks of her visits to shopkeepers and she>ppinJ( center landlords. Pearsall i;aid he would arranji!e an interview with the woman and pl anned to hire her. • .... . • ' . .:...~ Escape Twi~ Bomb Suspects Captured, Let G~ Ll'M'LE FALLS. N.Y. (UPI) 7 Two fugitives sought in a fatal bombing 1t the Univtl'llity or Wlscoosin , feU into the hands of polict for the second time Thursday and for the second time were released by authorities who f,ailfd to link their names with !ht case. Police said t~·o men carrying drh·ers license:!! identifying them ~s Dwight Armstrong, 19, and David S. Fine, 18, we re stopped here because their car had a faully muffler. They were questiooe(ffor about an "hour and then let go by auth9rllies who did not recognize their names. parking place alxiul a half mile from the Penn Central railroad depot in lhe New York suburb of North \Vhite Plains. ll belonged lo Gene Pentenero of White Plains. The Armstrong brothers, Fine and Burt all v.'ere named Wednesday in federal \\'arrants charging !hem with sabotage , <lestruction of goverament property and conspiracy in the bombing in r>.1adison. Sheriff Ralph Hearn of Sauk County, "-'is., said Thursday he would seek a warrant charging Karleton Annstrong with the attempted bombing of a power su bstation. The Royal Canadian ,.1oun~d Police, alerted by the FBI , said Thursday they were aiding in the search for the men. Moments after London detective Chief Inspector Al•st1ir Thompson Wednesday ni~ht had !inished tell· ing a truck drivers' group "the Barons of hot merchandise are J?raduaUy bein~ sq ueezed out of existence," he was proved \Vrong. Police said thieves hijacked a trail· er truck not far from where the meetln2 was bein2 held in a police station, gettin~ away with 840 cases of J::in worth $57 ,600. GOVERNMENT TROOPS REENTER CITY NEAR CAMBOD IA CAPITOL Communist Occupation Ends After Bitter Figthing 20 Miles From Phnom Penh It was reported earlier· this week that police at a roadblock near M1dison, Wis .. stopped a car carrying Armstrong, hi~ brother Karleton, 22, and two olher men shortly after the Aug. 24 exp1osion but did not detain them when the brothtr!'i said they were on their way to a vacatioa area in upsLate Wisconsin. Little Falls police said D w i g h t Annstrong and Fine told them they were on their way to visit "Leo Byrt in Utica.'' Burt, 2l, wa:!I the fourth suspect named by the FBI Wednesday. Jobless Totals Pass 5 Per cent; Workers Do wn • J•y Ch•mbers of Fort Worth, Tex., made reservations for a brand-new hotel in Mexico City \~•hen he planned his honeymoon. Because of that, the honeyrrioon was one surprise after another. When the newlvweds Pirived and asked {or their room, the hotel mana~er sent them to a luxurious suite. Then he sent up champa,!!ne, flowers and a wedd in~ cake. The best surprise came \.Vednes- day when the manager told Cham- bers: "Because the hotel has not been otficia1Jy opened and you and your wife became the first lll:Uest~. all the expenses will be our wed- d! .. ~ present." • Lo1l°s Ba rber Sllop tvas clip- ped down the center T11e$day night by n pnrtici~lar burglar in Seattle. TM thief stole the cen· terfolds from. 40 Playbo11 maga. tines in tht shop -and diJt'Urb- cd nothing t l$t, police rtporUd. •· Harry Baker, 18, said he was drivin2 home in h is 1969 van when he heard a rattle in the four-wheel drive near Tampa, Ariz. l~e pulled into a field behind his parents home and crawled underneath the verucle, leaving the engine running. "It just popped into gear and started rollin~ over me." he said. "Tt rolled up my leg, over my stomach and chest and off the side of my head." Bak- er !iaid that when the 4.300-pound van started up his leg "I just took a good breath and decided tn hold on. I lll:Uess you might sa.v J was extremely lucky." Aside from a f~· scratches and feelinlll:' stiff and sore. Baker reparted no ill efiecls. • \Vhile 180 fire1nen battled a ra,e-- in,e: blaze in a hotel in the north beach area or San Francisco Tues- day. a ha\•lker stood amid a maze or ho ses and urged customers into an adjacent topless and bottomless club. BeCB\jSe or the inferno in the Dante ·Hotfl, 100 ,e:uests had to be evacuated. But there was no injury. Daven Rosenberg, publicist and manager of The Condor Cl ub down- :;;tai rs. declared. business would con· tinue "a.s usual". Red Divisions En Route To LaunchN ew Offensive PHNOM PENH f AP) -Up to JO Cormnunist divisions are now I n Cambodia or moving down the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos with orders from Hanoi to launch a major new offensive in South Vietnam, senior Comm unist diplomatic sources report. American military sources in Saigon 1aid they could not confirm or deny the report. The sources said American warplanes tia v« flown about 2,000 l!Orties against North Vietnameff position.!! in Laos and Cambodia during the past week to blunt any enemy plans for a massive offensive acr055 the bon:fer into South Vietnam. But they uid this was not unusual, that American planes have been waging such a bombing campaign for several months. A sortie is one flight by one plane. An American source in Phnom Penh said any enmiy force of the size reported by the Communist sources would never be permittfd to mus on the Cambodian border as llUCh force1 have done for previous offensives. He implied that Landslide Kills Six in Manila MANILA (UPI ) - A landslide caused by a torrential downpour crushed 1 family of six to death today and brought to 49 the death toll from five days of prodigioul'! rains. President Ferdinand E. Marcos said the worst was over in Manila. Another 7.7 inches of rain fe ll in the ~1anila area in the 24 hours tnding at I a.m. today. bringing to 32 inche:!! the total since Monda y. MarCM said lhe state of emergency had passed but he extended for another week the "'state or calamity" he proclaimed Wednesday. "I hereby decree that the relief and resc ue operalions center be shifted into a resettl ement and rehabilitation center to take cart of fiood victims." he said. The rains were spawned by two !ropical storms that passed lo the northeast of tht PhiUppines major north- ern island of Luzon and by the seasonal monsoon. Ainerican ground forces might enter Cambodia as they did last r>.1ay and June in tht operation which the U.S. Command said cleared out many of the enemy bast camp!'l on the Cambodian i ide of the border. Cambodian Bnd Western military xourc<!! sa id there is clear evidence that the North Vietnamese art rebuilding their border basf.15 in the remote jungles of eastern Cambodia, bordering So uth Vietnam . Some nf these bases are sai<l to be in the same position as those clea rtd by U.S. and South Vietnamese troops during their May.June action. One Communist source with indirecl lines to Hanoi aaid tht gathering force included North Vietnam's 1st, 2nd, Sth, 7th. 9th, 20th and 25th di vi:!lions. Cambodian intelligence already has reported the !st, 5th . 7th, 9th and 20th divisions in the country. Some sources believe tht attack Ml South Vietnam wiU begin in about two months. Communist sources u y the plan for a major offensive in South Vietnam renecls a decision in Hanoi to make the main targcl South Vietnam again and not the destruction of Cambodian Premier Lon Nors regime. Possible aims were :!laid to be the disruption of the Saigon governmenrs increasingly strong military machine, reversal of the Vietnamization program and the inflicting of serious new casualties on American troops tD quicken the antiwar sentiment in the United States. Russians lo Return U.S. Space Capsule MOSCOW (UPI ) -The Soviets will return In the United States a n "experimental U.S. space capsule" plucked from the sea • by Russian fi shermen, transferring it to a U.S. icebreRker this Saturday, the official Tass News Agency -said toda y. ··The eitperimental space capsule which w1s launched under the Apollo program and w1s found in the Bay or Biscay by Soviet fishermen will be transferred lo U.S. rtpre:!lentatives," the agency said. Windstorms Hit Midwest Tornado , Funnel Clouds R e ported in l1idiana , Nebraska C'•llfoml• Slo:litt r'l!fMlnecl mcn•IY t.or lod1v ...,.., 5oul!M<'11 C1!!lornl1 Wiit! ~ ••Cfeltioll DI l'""° .. 11 ... (IOllCllN U I M suttvfod l!luno.r 1"°'""1 tl'o•ee•e<il"' '"''"" ...... CODltr IPITll>t"ll11re• 1ffl'd'11 l11!1nd .... !om Wl'!l!e low tlaudl I ncl COlllltl fl'OI 11am!~tfCI !M ''''" "'or11irio P>oun . 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" " .. • n " " ·" .~ "* 1 01 ~ .~ " ... ~ " " " " » " " ~ ,, " " " " " ~ T .~ .., • •• ·'' •• IRS Checking Jerry Rubin's Revolutio11 Book \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Internal Revenue Service has begun a new investigation ol 1 tax·fr~ foundation established by Yippit Leader Jerry Rubin lo shelter from tht tax collector royalties on his revc>lution-oriented book . An IRS i;pokesman said the foundation apparenlly had not com plied with law requiring annual reports of income and expenditures. The spokesmaa ~id the IRS wants to determine if the foundati on has violated other statutes which could result in Joss of tax-exempt status. The government routinely approved the lax exemption f\1ay 2.1, 1969. The foundation, officially knowa as the Social Edu cation Foundation, has a single tn1stee , Rubi n's wife. Nancy S. Kurshan. Rubin apparently set up the foundation lo avoid paying laxes on revenue from his best selle r .. Do It!" It was not until four hours after Annstrong and Fir-.. wert released that Little Falls police discovered they were wanted. . Federal authorities have said !he fugiti ves ma y be hea ded for Canada . It is a drive of about two hours from the Little Falls-Utica area to the Thousand Islands bridge leading to Canada a b o v r: Watertown in Northern New York . A FBI spokesman in UUca said the FBI wa:!I "Doing every thing logically possible to try and locate these indi viduals in thi:!! area. It's a big search of a big area." Although the four suspect~ Yo'trt gubjecls of B nationwide hunt by the FBI, a spokesman at state police ·headquarters in Albany said they had received no special alert. The spokesman said thr: u s u a I procedure is fc>r the FBI lo mail flyers with namts. photographs and details of a crime rather than lo teletype informalion to local authorities. Littlr: Falls police :!lakt a check of the car showed it was registered lo "a privale party in Wr:stchester County" and had not been reported stolen. But police in Westchester County said loday the car had been stolen between 7:30 s.m. and 9 a.m. Thursday from a WASHINGTON (AP ) -The nation's unemployment last month inched up lo a near six year high of 5.1 percent or the \\'Ork force. \\'hilt total employment dropped nearly 400,000. the Labor Depar1menl said toda y. Asst. Commissioner Harold Goldstein nf the Bureau or Labor Statistics said the August rise of ooe·tenth of one percent in the national jobless rate was not significant. but the reports ind icated the nation·s cont inuing economic slowd0\\'11 including a shorter work week and Jess overtime. The report said the actual number or jobless v.·orkers declined 300.000 to a tntal of 4.2 million last month, but that seasonal fac tors and a decline of 700,000 in the labor force caused the bureau lo compute the one.tenth of one percenL increase in the tme.mployment rate. In the past year. Goldstein sair:I. unemployment has soared 8S pcrcenl among m~n and 30 percent each among \\'omen and teen-agers. The August jobless rate of 5.1 percent efJUal\ed the highest rate since October or 1!164. The rate last "'as higher, 5.2 percent, in June of 1964. Goldstein said. Enter Chrysler Plymouth's Oean-Up Sale ,,, , ... and~~~ HERE'S HOW: Follow these car buying hints and make the clean-up deal of your life on a Chrysler or Plymouth .•• or any other make for that matter. KNO\V WHI CH CARS HAVE THE lllGHEST TRADE-IN VALUES. If you're thinkin g of buying a make with a traditionally low trade-in value, you'd better make up for it with a ~super-good'' deal now ••• or else buy a car with a traditionally high trade in value. (The Kelley Blue Book shows Plymouth Fury as the trade-in leader of its class 1""'~36 months in a row.) 2 WASH AND POLISH .l'.O:tJR PRESENT CAR. The better yow: car looks, the 'I' better trade-in you're likely to get. After all, dealers arc hwnan ... and they respond just like you do to a nice shiny car. 3 FIN D "THE" CAR BEFORE YOU TALK PRICE. If you've already picked out a particul;.:ar~o<tlt car from the dealer's lot, he knows you're serious about buying, and he'll be more inclined to give you his best deal Mt. 4BR ING YOUR VICIOUS DOG "S PIK E" ••• the one that snarls a lot and bares his fangs. Don't wony, the dealer will get the message. All yoa baYe to -Is ro• ar,.Ier/P.,_ dealer's showroom. Huntington Be•ch Atlas Chrysler • P~mouth Inc. Huntington Beach Chrysler · Plymouth 2929 H•rbor BoultYtrcf 16661 Beach Boulevard I . ,. ,• ;l ·' " .. " .• :: ~~ .. .. .. .• :: ·- I .· •• .. :-.. .. .. -' ~· .. .. , .. '· -< " • . • . I ~i "'" lric ~ ~~~"""c:--:-.· ~.,--r··--.,.-~.~ .. -:r-,. .• ,--~~~~-:-:::'.'.'~.~-.~Hr . .,,..~~------•?1"¥'?~.• .... s•.~•"!"li~'"!"lllSl ..... •:•z .. •s•z'!" .. ~1!111!! .. 112!1&'91121QP!!!l21' ... 's11~.lt1!23!!!!l'j!S~!!!l !l!i~Jt~t ... "!!~i~~ Friday, Stpltmbtr 4, 1970 DAIL V PILDT 7 Saturday; Sept. 5tl1 and Sunday, Sept. 6th! 1'11110.-.Y, AUGUST ii: ifii '32.95 "The llegaJ:• Natural Part Wig ·Lfst 2 Days! Hurry In For These Values! Last 2 days to take advantage of these great savings. . ,. :t •• ... ... . · -: . • . . . . SAVE 253! • :!4 Sears Natural Cup B ~as i... ~Day•! 2 99 '.l imited Quantity! .. . ·14 Contour Cup 2.99 · $4.50 Padded Bra 3.33 ~White. Nacunl cup 32-3Gi\.B. 32-38C; Contour cup :32.36A, 32-388-C; Padded cup 32·36A, 32-388. · Bra 1111d Girdle Dept. ~ .. · f 0.98·'27.98 'Starline Luggage • ~2_D•Y.•! 6. 58 ·1398 ~mited Quantit)'! , · l~ . t!0.98 Cosmetic Case-.6.58 S 1.6.98 Pullnian. 26-in. 10.18' fl2.98 Wie"eken&r, 21-io. 7.78 SJ9.98 Pullman.. 29-ilL 11.98 IU98 Pullman, 24-in-8.98 $9.98 Tot~· Ba,g 6.44 S 27.98 'D~ss Big . 18.98 .. . , •• . ~ • . .. ~ SAVE $90! ~459.95 Deluxe Gas Range ·Last 2 Davs! !~mited Quantity! 36988 :With jnfra-red broifc r~ -elccrroniC ignition. .2 auro- ,fnatic ovens, pilodess burner, black glass door. Elec· ..-ltic clock with 1-hour timer. #78680-4. White and . iWajor App/iaflctI D,PI. Regular '179. 95 Dial-Adjust Power Mower [..m;l 2 Days! 12988 Dial height of cut, ad. just handle to height de· sired. 18-inch cut. With grassc~cher. Model 81601 fl11rJwart Dtpl. Sheer Stretch Panty Hose Last 2 Days! Limited Quantity! 87p? 100% nylon stretch panty hose in proportioned lengths; petite, avenge, ta11. Nude heel In Bare Beige, Mocha and Sunset. Stock up now! H(J.Iiny Dtpt, '199.95 Contemporary Sofa Last':? Dayi;! Limit~d Quantit1! s149 Day·nighter sofa opens to full s.ize bed with poly. urethane' foam mattress. Long, wearing vinyl cover. Reversible Polyurethane foam seat cushions. F urnil111't Dt/JI. '76.95 Sears Sewing Machine La1St 2 Days! Limited Quantity! s43 or 158 in console Porcsble sewing machine sews sttaighr stitches, docs mending. darn ing. Hinged pressure foot. Sews over pins and scams. Model 1104/9710 . Stwing ftfachint Dtpl. "'Se•" Fme.r-•11d A111111 .. 11i1io11 Poli.,, .. "All f l1Pt5, il't(ludit11 88 8ftd pellt1 Pl"" IOld onlr 10 l1!sidt'!l11 of Nut wl\f!T putth&M" io milk. iPrOOf o( ~siokl'ICe rrquiral.) PuttlllMr o( fil1!1nn1 and am- ""'"i1ion ""'" 11£ 21 yC"aU o( ~ .,,J 1how proof. No .Xliy,rr1t1 will be-111.M: 011nide o( MOl1'. All .,.Jn fUbiec1 10 F~I. Sure llM Mt.1nicisYll 1-s Ind J;rpl1dons." Fast-Firiug Shotgtlll• J.,11st 2 Days! 12 or 20 ga. fast-firing, variable choke pump ac· 1 ion shotguns. Rocary front locking bole. Sponin& GooJs Dtpt. Sears IUINA PAIK TA 1·4400, l21-4SH fl MOHR 01 l..'Jtll CANOGA PAIK :MO·Mt1 OLINDALI CM S·IOOC, a 4"4611 coMPfOlri NI 6-2511, NI 2·S1"f1 ..OUTWOOO "° ...... SEAR&,11.0BBUCkANDCO. COVIMA ,.._..,, tNOLIWOOD OI 1·2St1 Shop Nlghu Mondoy thr.ough Salwdoy 9~0 A.M. to t :io P.M., Svnday 12 Noon to 5 P.M. Shop early for ·best selections. Quantities are J:,imited! ·""'----. ~ Polyester Tops and Pants Knit Pants Knit Tops 791 897 Choo.sc long print tunic tops in exciting styles, sites 10-18 or regular $10 straight-leg pants in sizes 8-20. Both in machine washable polyescer knit. Sportswtar Dtpt. '5.98 "Yorkshire" Block Bedspreads La8t 2 Daya! · Limited Quantity! 397 -Yorkshire• block bedspreads in pre-shrunk 100% cot· ton. Machine wa5h, warm; rumble dry. Block plaid pat- tern in 3 colors. In fu ll or twin sizes. Dra/Jtry Drpt. .. '149.95 Lawn Building,'7x5-Ft. Last 2 Days1 Limited Quantity! . 109'88 .. Greenbrook .. lawn building with stream.lined trim on the two wide, full-access slid ing doors, hung on outside to allow maximum inside storage space. 811ilding Arattria/1 Dtpt. Great Value! Sears Garage Door Opeuer La~l 2 D11ya ! 10988 The Constant finger pressure Co nvenient activates door -release buttt?n to srop door. Solid· One! state transmitter. B11ilding /iloltrid/J Dtftl. •• "·( . wash and ·~u 10099 modacrylk. ·Color b1enO ed with na.rural side pm Many shad~s. Co.stnt1ia Dept • ~· a~pl• ISO 11: ........ s. .......llM' SALE 11• !iALE al.M WI ,., ... •e~~ R'1£.U.IST :z(i.t.rl tT tfg'-130 :mwtu • ~ee ,8 ••1•lar t i1 lt~pl..-125 ll•rl• l lT ..... QI SAL& 21,M SAL& lie SALE ..... 1.u.r; *4• '24 to '109 Stone Rings L'8t2Day•! 20~ OFF Limited Quantity! . 0 R~I• · Pnce1 Our encire collection of elegant stone riop now tt 1 these great savings. Wide assortment of sry!•• and colors for men and women. }tu'tlt"J Dtpt. '6.49 Cloud Supreme Ruge Last 2 Daya! Limited Quantity! 3 24 ' 24d6.t.i. DuPont nyl on for that resi1tance. machine WI.sh and•chy. Cushion' grip latex backing. In blue, pihk, avoaClo. gold. Other sizes. ' · · · · ' ,' Domtstirs 'Vtpt. .. '7.99 Latex House Paint Last 2 Days! Limited Quantity! 4?.! One coat covers similar colors, dries in jusc ll.2 hour for less dirt and bug pick-up. Resists blistering. White and choice of decoNtor colors. Pai111 Drpt. Regular '5.89 Latex Tiat !! Wall Paint La11t 2 D<1y1! GllAIWfl'EED,-fllfroot . ~{alt '""1 3~7 LATEX FLAT ~---.. --II Dries in jusr 30 minuttS. Oripless. Acrylica seal ~· . colors. Fini~h ia -wuhable. ·, .:::: . colorfast, srain resistant. Paint D1p1; lONO llACM HE 5·0121 POMONA NA 9·11f1 IANfA MONICA IX 4-67•1 SOUfH COAST PlAIA S40:'J'J'J'J OlTMJlfC & IOTO AN 1•5111 PICO WI 8-4tft O«ANot 611"·2100 SANTA ANA Kt 7·>)71 PAIADl'NA fl1 ·3211, lS1°4211 SANTA rr IPllNGt '44·1011 "Soti1faction Guaranteed or Your Mon11 tack11 TOllANCI 542°1S11 'tAWT PO l·l-461~ t&4·2JM VllMONt" t -tttt - • ·~~~~··• ~~ :au= IW ~· .. ~-:-:-:-;-..,...,,......,.,,, ..... ..,,.,,~,,,, ................ ~~ ......... ""' ... "'-" .. ""''"" .. """ .... "" .. "' .. """"""l!llllll!lll!!llll!lll!lll!lll!lll!ll ...... 11!1 .. • . . DARY PROT EDI'i 'ORIAL PAGE Time for The Huntington Beach City Council may move back or 1on1;ard next \veek on the controversial project to level fi ve do\vntown blocks and turn them into a park· inj! lot. The appraisal s are completed and the downtown property O\vners -to everyone's rei;!rel -seemingly a re unable to form a collective body for private de- veJop1nent. The issue demands a decision. Expansion of the ParkinJ! 1\uthority to create a lot from Sixth Street to J-'irst Street plus a parcel east of Lake Street is the next step in the Top of the Pier plan already adopted by the COUilCi!. The decision may be made Tuesday evening. Jndi· cations are that the city councilmen \Vilt vote to proceed \Vilh condemnation. The DAILY PILOT supports a yes \'Ole on th e project. But there are some observations to make_ The public should realize that there may be some law-bending involved here -if not the Jetter, at least the spirit of the law. By this, we mean that th ere may be something more than parking facilities built on the land. Though this would seem inconsistent with the role of a Parking Authority. il should not come as too mu ch of a surprise. There has been talk of the city leasing the air space above the l~acre facility and also of using 25 percent of the surface commercially. An apparent ruling by Alty. Gen . Thomas C. Lynch against such uses hos muffled the talk but it has not stopped. There is also the possibility that the City Council \viii activate the Redevelopment Agency to condemn s urrounding properties. Then, in a land swap between the authority and the agency (both of which \vould in f act be the City Council) shops would be put in the park- Jng lot area. This is getting to the heart of the problem. Shouldn 't the council have used the Redevelopment Agency in the Next Step first place? Ideally, yes. But Ideals and Politics don't aJways mix and the council chose whet It considered a more acceptable tool. The council may have. been wrong but to switch to the Redevelopment Agency at this siage would result jn a costly delay. The appraisals would fall out of date, the land val ue may spiral and the opportunity may be Jost. The great pjty is that private enterprise has not been able to do the job. The council has certainly given the property owners time and encouragement and even a l this late date we are confident that if clear eviden~e of progress of consolidation is produced the c.ity will stand back and let private enterprise go ahead. \Vhat should not be forgotten in these considera· lions. however, is that the purpose of providing addi· tional parking downtown is to give an incentive to priv- ate development. So, failing a tangible demonstration of property consolidation, the council should move ahead. Economic consultants have provided the figures to show the feasibility of it. Everyone knows the need. -Good Time, Good Cause The Kiwanis Club of Fountain Valley will sponsor a city golf classic at Mile Square Golf Course Sept. 10. Golfers from throughout the county have been invited to play and the proceeds will go to benefit children's or .. ganizations in the city. Besides providing a good time for more than 100 amateur golfers, it's a good cause and the Kiwanis Club deserves a hand for its work. Sometimes clubs earn repulations as social outlets bringing little value to the city, bu~ the Kiw_anis Club. certain}y r~nks with top groups rn Fountain Valley in showing its community spirit and willingness to work for the good of the city. H Liberals Flubbed Law and Order Issue $4 Million Overcharge For Medicines Humphrey's Big Discovery Yl ASHTNGTON -Hubert H, Humphrey has made a remarkable p o I i t i c a 1 discovery. If he had made it earlier he mig ht now be President of the United States instead of a candidate in f\.1 innesota for election to his old seat in the U.S. Senate. Humphrey 's discovery is that the self· .st y le d and sell. conscious liberals of America missed the boat on the law and order issue out of soft-headed stupidity. T h e y had better get ab oard now, Humphrey counsels. or the conventional liberals will m iss t h e i r second and probably last chance for a voyage out of the darkness. In all fairness to Hwnphrey he was a law and order man in 1963 but what he fa iled to see as clearly then as he does now is that the llberal community on ·which he had to plate his reliance had no grasp of the issue, and does not now. THE LIBERAL CONCEPT of the citizen concerned by the Jack of law and order was a fat-headed know-nothing .sitting in his undershirt sipping beer and blea ting aDout law and order because he hated blacks. ,,..eHare client.!, and Jong hairs. The conce rned citizen on the law and orde r issue y,·as regarded as 1 \Val\aceite. or a Bircher, or one of those ugly Americans \Vho liked Nixon because he hounded the Communists. Thus it was that Allorney General John 1i11tchell and \'ice Presidenl Agnew in their identity with Middle America and the hard haU became the embodiment o( ignorant, racist. illiberal oppressors cracking the whip over downtrodden people seeking justice in a bard world. LiberaIS bled for the armed and maliciow: Black Panthers, cavilled ove r lhe crime rate in black communities, deplored patriotic sentiments in the blue collar class. .sympathized with the yearnings of the campus bomb throwers, castigated the police as callous brutes, and let their own beards and sideburns grow to prove their affinity for the now generation. BUT HU~fPHREV, released for nearly two years from the Washington atmosphere to live in an academic climate with its share of violence, has come to realize how necessary law and order is in making liberal progress. It is the basic essential. Liberalism is a form of moderation and it cannot even exist in a disorganized society. The concern over law and order is as pertinent, perhaps more sO, for open-minded, progressive, hwnanitarian, non-racist, reform ist people as for the under~ucated wh ite c o n s t r u c t I o n worker trying to protect his own concepls of how life ought to be lived. That ls the Humphrey discovery and the fact that he made it was not unrelated to his campaign for reeleclion to the Senate in a community and state where bombings have wrecked public facillties and bomb threats drove 17,000 beseball fans from the stands. Nor is it unrelated that Minneapolis elected a former policeman as mayor on the law and order issue, nor that the University of Minnesota where Humphrey taught is one of the Big Ten centers of violent student revolutioniJrn along with Michigan State. IF HUMPHREY BAD stated his position during the presidenliaJ campaign so eloquently and convincingly as he did recently at the American Bar Aaociation meeting he might easily have overcome the fractional margin by which he was defeated for President, comldei;ing the way things were going in the last JO day1 of the campaign. And if he is now elected as senator from Minnesota the Senate will acquire an articulate spokesman for liberals who belatedly realize that on law and order • their interest lies foursquare with the bard bats. This is the big political fact of 1970. Law and order is not a racist cause or code phra~. It is not a matter of political ideology in lhe democratic sense. It is not the fetish o( rea ctionary conservatives. BUT IT IS A COMMON concern running through every level of society, black and white, rich and poor, liberal and conservative, racist and non-racist; everywhere, that is, except among the student extremists and their faculty mentors and the black and white terrorists. Pacific: Our Obligations r-- Pre~idcnt J-~erdinand 1'1arcos or the Ph i I 1 pp in e s said Japan would •·ultim;itcly'' be con1pelled to take over preservation of international law and order in the Paclflc and in Asia. \Ve ha\'e no measure for "ultimately," bul Premier Salo of Japan rejected the Jl,1arco view. saying hi:s people y,·ould not support it. · Yet it is an in- lerl'sting view. and invi1es an e~t1m<1t<' of the Alncr1can ob\Jgation and c<1pa- t)iJi1y in the Pacific ll'Orld at thi s lime. It is .a hi!itorical estimate. and one I~ ~t llberty 10 diff('r ,. from it. in tt3tl or in \\'hO!t'. On the. lung view, suy i11ncc 1900, the Anleri con prople and leaders ·wrre take n by sur1>rlsc y,·hen the Japanese Friday, September 4, 19i0 The t ditoriaJ pogl Of tht' Dai/V' Pilol seeks to inform and 1tim.. ula-ce rtader1 bsi prtsentlng !11if nel0$pa~·, opinfonJ end con~ me:ntarv cm topics of inttrtst and tfgn.f#canc~. by fl"OViding a forum for the "Prcuion of our f'tadtri' opfnions, O'?ld b11 prtstntfng the divtr1t t.'iew- points of fnfot'fMcf ob1tTWr1 and 1pokerrnen on topics of cht d4~. Robtrt N. Wood, Publisher ('"'~ .. -· ...... ··~,,,.-..-...-----.-- 1 Royce Brier --) in HMl attempted to seize military con- trol of the Pacific world. The challe nge was so ex ige nt , the American people and Uteir leaders were forced to meet and overcome it. They did so, at an immense cost of life and treasure. Having achieved their aim, they £aced a duty to tJlfmselves and the world to lnsure that !;uch an aggression did not rttur in \'i!)ible li me. Over a quart er-century thi s aim has been met, but if it will stand for another century, we do not know. A VITAL PART of thi s obli gat ion Is lhat the Japanese. an energetic and competent pl'ople. should Jive in J)('ace :ind freedom against any othe r people "·ho ·would disturb ihem. So fRr as concerns Pacific waters, the United States ca n pol ice the m \\1hlle It retain.~ its air and nava l pr€!en1lncnce. The Asian land mu s is another matter altogethe r. Unfortunately, American 11.'aden; ln- \erprrted Paciric security to Include the hind ma!S. A br ief war in Korta mny have bt>tn justified by Korea's proxlmily lo Japan. A protracted war in Indochina is not justified by any lnteJUi;:ent 11nd prudent view af our Pacific oblig11tion. 111e second war has beCO!ne a trap, and extricaUon from it is proving fX· l.rtmely dlfficull This war indeed ts rooted in an historical delusion, and diverts ns from our primary ro le In the securily of tht Pacific area. When wt can escape from it <which Wl' "°""' knnw ls nccrssll.ous to our dcthny), what rt m1lns of the Pacific security obligation to whlch we must revert? FlRST, THE CONTINUING in· violabiHty of Japan , a rich naUon at present unanned. She is confronted across narrow seas by the Soviet Union at the north and Red China at the 'vest. Any nuclear or other attack on her must bring our immediate in- tervention in our own imperative interest. Second, Australia, a small but im· portant continenl inhabited by friends. Inviolability of Australian soil is a man- date on us. The same is true of the vart Pacific Island world, down to the smallest rock and up lo the Asian littoral . This include s the Philippines and the Indonesian archipe lago flanking Australia. This area is subject to political change in the next 25 to 50 years. Mao will be gone, which is all we can know. We should try to persuade the Chinese or our tn1e role ir ..,...e can, but if we can't, the :ilternntive can never be a land war in Asia, which we cannot win. Dear Gloomy Gus: fs It true that meny attorneys In lhe Huntington Beach • Fountain Vallty-Seal Bench area wear law suits! -F. A. S. f~ll It•!.,.. "91Kh r.t•HT' ¥'"1. Mt ~Kl .. ;ttl~ "'41\1 ., '111 ftewl,.fli'f', I~ nvr "' "'w 9' 0"""9r ey., Dtltr 'llltt, WASHINGTON -Ast unpublished official audit shows that pharmaceutical companies have overcharged the State Department $4 million for medicines pure.based over the last decade. The drugs were bought by the Agency for lnternational Development for distribution to underdeveloped countries. The newly completed audit was done by the ~ntrolle.r of the agency. Discovery of the $4 million in overcharges comes on the heels of this column's disclosure that the Department of Defense spent at least $8 million on worthless and unproven medicines. Price padding on AID purchases Is particularly serious because of the severely lim iled budget the agency has for helping the poor in foreign lands. AAfONG COMPANIES listed as violators of AID drug pricing regulations are such familiar names as Merck Sharp & Dohme1 Abbott Labs, American Cyanamid. Olin Mathieson, W y e I h , Pnzer, Schering Bristol Labs, Eli Lilly, Sterling Products, Upjohn, S. E • AfaS.!lengill and Parke. Davis. AID prkes are tied by law to the phannaceuticals. Nevertheless, A I D auditors found 53 firms with 109 violations not only of pricing, but or commissions and shipping regulations. 1'1e leading violator listed in the rep:>rt Is Gedeon-Richter with ;so'l,617 in overcharges. The case was referred by AID to the Justice Department for action. Roussel Corporation, a foreign firm, is second with $721,814 in claims against it, most of them also referred to Justice. IN MORE THAN ri million in violations, the companies have made refunds lo AID. Abbott, for example, paid back $379,7~7 for its overcharges. American Cyanamid, paid $322,894. Olin ?\.tathieson, $'263,000. Aferck Sharp & Dohme and Wyeth both still owe over $200,000 each, according to the audit report dated August 20. Some drug firms insist that such overcharges are ml!llkts, not intentional milking of the government. Yet figures obtained by this column from Sen. Gaylord Nelson's Small 8 us in es s Monopoly Subcommltttt shed a light on other oversea! sales by drug companies which are difricult to explain away as mistakes. The Nelson rigures show fhat AID paid Amerlclln Cyanamid $1 ,800 per kilogram for an antispasmatic drug called Artane for ust in Colombia. but paid the same company only $303 per kilogram for the identieal drug in Brazil. • Wl'ETH GOT $150 per kilogram from AID for Zactane Cltrlilte analgesic, although Nelson Hsu simple 1splrln as the ''Lheraptutlcal equivaJenr• at $1.32 a kilogram, a price difference of more than 11 ,000 percent. AID paid U.250 per kilogram for Pfiw "s Vlbramycln v:htn tetracycline. the "therpeutlcal equivalent." was priced at $24 to $29 ptr kilogram. a di£ferenee of 9,375 percent, according to Nel!On. Note: Although AID has a far better track record thin many federal agencies In catehlng prlce violator!, it is at a k'l5S to explain why It pa ys different prlcts for the: same drug In different lands. Drug companies defend thtlr marketing of :dlghlly dlfftrent \larlations of the same basic drug by saying each preparation has its own special uses. KILL FDA PEACE 'Hold m.Y siJm whUe I riC 111Wlher bom.b, brother.' Worst Form of Disappointment Tboaghts at Large: The worst fonn of disappointment often consists in getting euctly what you wanted. • • • U adults could realize the immense boredom and lack of interesting actJvity provided by most communities for teenagers, they Y.'OUld be gratified instead of surprised at th e relatively small amount of van- dalism a n d way. wardness on t h e youngsters' part. • • • Speaking oE communities, It's hard to believe that the most affluent nation in the world, in this age of advanced medical knowledge and technology. still possessell some 5,000 comm unities without a single doctor -and where the 1ivestock get better and swifter medical care than the people. • • • If someone dislikes you, try asking yourself whether the dislike is rooted in something with.in him or in something wlthln you; if within him, nothing can be done about it; if within you, a lol can be done, if you care lo. • • • Some men are so provocative with fale that they keep up a running competition with their car's gas lank. to test if they can get where they're going before they run out. • • • "Dogmatic" Is a word we apply IG those who have firmer beliefs on a particular subject than we havt; our finn beliefs are called "principles." • • • Obviously, our whole p e no I o g i c a 1 system is a failure, either a deterrence or as rehabilitation: the rate of "repeaters'" is distressingly high, perhaps increasing, and as Judge Thoinas McMillen remarks, "'It has been said that a youthful offender has a better chance for rehabilitation if he is not caught." • • • The highest trulh for m;1n has been grasped by the conservative -that society exists for the sake of the individual -but what he fall s to grasp ls the liberal truth that unless the individual places the concerns of the whole society above his own, then both he and the society will perish . (Warm-hearted conservatism, alas, is as rare as cool- headed liberalism.) • • • I approve of the anonymous fashion arbiter who told his clients : ''Your gown should be tight enough to show you're a woman, and loose enough to show you're a lady." • • • When a married woman thinks she needs a lover, she usually needs just a few more lovi ng words frmn her husband ; much of what passes for sexual abandon is just injured vanity. • • • Punctuality is the loneliest virtue in the world. A Curtain of Privacy "See your spirlluat adviser.'' That suggestion is often made to the man or woman in trouble. lf you do talk things over with your spiritual adviser, is the conversation eonfldentiil in the eyes or the law~ Could • clergyman be ordered to tesilfy in court as to what you said! Or Is this information "privlleged"-lhat is, protected again~t public disclosure? The common Jaw, generally speaking, did not recognize any such privilege. C.ourts were reluctant to give up access to what could be a valuable source of in· fonnalion. Obviously, the more facts available to a court, the better il could do justice -boUI in punishing lhe guilty and in freeing the innocent. HOWEVER, &fOST states have now passed !ipecli1 statutes (called "prlelll- penitent'' laws) to change the rule. These statutes, in varying de11ree, grant a privilege of privacy to commun ications confided to a clergyman. To be sure, there are 1llll limits on the scope: of this privilege. For one thing, in- formation given 19 a clergyman lh an ordinary eonversaUon-not as part of a rtgular church procedurt-1$ usually not protected. Thus, a court round no pril'ilege in the remarks of a suSpected rapist to a minister. voiced during a casual en- counter in a railroad staUon. The judge ruled that lhe minister, just like any other citizen, would have to ttll what he had heard. NOR DOES THE privilege appl y to a clergyman 's gener a I nbservatlons. unrelated to any apeclfic 11dm1Jslon of wrongdoing. -··--.... ---~·~ .. Law in Action j For example, a court saw no reason why a minister should not give his opi· nlon o! the mental cond ition of a woman whose will was being challenged -an opinion based on Jong years of ac~ quaintance with her. But in most situations, the person un- burdening his tailings to his spiritual ad- viser may count on l'l legal curtain o! privacy. As one court pu t ii : "The hwnan being does sometimes have need. or a place of penitence and •confession and spiritual discipline. When any person enters that secret chamber civil authority turns away its ear." ' A 11 Amtrican Bar Assoclation pub- lic service feature by \\'Ill Barnard. By Geo1"9e ---. Dear George : Everybody tells m~ I'm overly sensiU\'e and too quick to take offense. They sav I read INUI L into statements Where none is ln- ltnded. How e.an I tell If I 1m tru ly overscnsltlvr? COi\CEJ\NED Dear Concerned : Vou·ve taktn the most tm partant slep already! You'"e isolated your problem! This mt.ans all )'QJ have lo do now Is kttp an objectlvt viewpoint and don't read insults lntn perfec l.ly innocent state.menu, numbskull. I m •• IV m "\ WI ., F1 up ·~ •ti U• p t ; g fQ 2 a; :s::z ;e I I JS 1 I .. -. ... Thrift Shop's the Key to Philanthropy As aJways , there \Vilt be a double profit for bargain hunters who di s- cover the Assistance League of Ne\vport Beach Thrift Shop, scheduled to reopen on Tuesday, Sept. 8. · Along with the gain of finding nearly new items of clothing, houser hold articles, books and furniture, budget-minded shoppers also may profit in the knowledge that proceeds from all sales go to Assistance League phil- anthropies, particularly the Children's Dental Health Center. ~1rs. Carl Service Is chairman of the Thrift Shop, loc ated at 505 32nd Et.. Yl'hich will be open for the fall back to school rush from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. daiJy and from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m, on Saturdays. t.1embers now are busy restockin g merchandise. discarding summer leftovers and replacing them with nearly ne\v items in au departments for fall sel ection. Some toys v11i1J be on the shelves for children's delight. but many more now are under the care of Mrs. La\vrence Pfister and members of her committee, who work to repair . paint and reassemble used and broken toys for sale at economical prices during the Christmas season. Each Assistance League auxiliary has its special day at the Thrift Shop, \vith the Las Reinas Auxiliary laking over on the fir st Thursday of each month and tbe Junior Auxiliary operating the shop on Saturdays. Offering a designer's rack of women's clothing. the Las Reinas group entiUes their special fashion corner the French Room and they oiler some of the finest quality dresses, coats and ensembles with bargain price tags. Teenage buyers al so may take advantage of the Assistance League's bargains, for the Assisteen Auxiliary operates the shop on the ~econd Satur- day of each month for'' a special patio sale featuring camptis fashions and boutique items. The fund s ra ised at the shop furnish support !or the league-operated Children's Dental Health Center, which will reopen on Monday, Sept, 21, fo r school-age children. Mrs. Edwin Wachter and her comm ittee work as receptionists. chair assistants and x-ray technicians during the clinic hours from 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. on Mondays and Thursdays. Four dentists provide expert care for hundreds of children who otherv.•ise would be unable to afford treatment. Another leaiue project is a program called Go Forth, which aids in derermining leaTJ!.mg dilliculties in school children. The league provides a $2000 annual scholarship fund Cor students at Orange Coast College, gi ves a medicaJ scholarship to UC I. provides a loan fund for dentaJ students at the Univer.si~y_ of Southern California and con- tributes to Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian. Other groups receiving league support are American Field Service. Youth Employment Service, Girls Club of the Harbor Area, Girl Scout Campership Fund, Youth Problem Center, !lope Haven School and Sitton Home Day Care Center. WARDROBE BUILDERS-Arrangin g attracti ve and varied dis- play of nearly new clothing items to be offered at bargain prices when the Newport Beach Assistance League Thrift Shop reopen:c;i on Tuesday, Sept. 8, are (left to ri~ht ) Mrs. R~bert Hurtt and Mrs. Guy ~1iner, both provisional members of the league. P~ c:eeds from the shop sales go to support the league-operated Children's Dental Health Center. BEA ANDERSON, Edit°' Prid•J'• ~r 4.o lt11 H Pt " Ii " " --- .......... • , ' • • 'SERVICE' ENTRANCE-Carrying merchandise to be labeled and placed on Thrift Shop shelves are {left to right) Mrs. Robert D. John- son , co-chairman of the shop, and Mrs. Charles Ripley, both of th e Newport Beach Assistance League. "Open" sign will be placed on the door beginning Tuesday, Sept. 8, at 10 a.m. when bargains will be available for back to school shoppers. NOW, OPEN WIDE -Even the pl aster cast seems to smile at the prospect of the reopening on Sept. 21 of the Newport Beach Ass istance Leag ue Children's Dental Health Center. Joining in the anticipatio n are (left to right) J\.1rs . Edwin Wachter, clinic chairman, Debbie \Vachter. 9, and Mrs. Wynnett Bedall Jr. Approximately 350 children were treat- ed at the clinic last year. j . • Daughter Keeping Her Cool Though Mom Makes Her Burn . DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a girl, 17. "'ho needs your help. Yest~ r.1om was supposed to pick me up dov•nlown. I waited ror 30 minutt11 and she didn't come. so I took the bus. \Vhen I got home ~lorn was like a raving maniac. She screamed ror an .hour - "\Vhere were you ? \Vhy weren't you where you "'·ere suppqsed to be ~ I rode around till I was dizzy. You're an idiot. From now on, get home on your own." When l didn't. answer her. she pickcrl up my transist or radio and threw it against tht wall. Tl}e transistor fell :ipart but it ~till 11.orks. I hsu1 lo ta~ it and glut il ~nd use rubber bands to keep it .logelher. I ANN LANDERS ll:no"" it won"t last long and l 'll have lo gel It fixed or buy a new <lne. My mother say11 she ·will not pay for it because T made her mad and therefore it is my fault. I hll \'e a small savings account but I don't v.•a"t lo ta ke Anything oot. What do you i;uggcst? -POOR RECEPTION DEAR P.R.: The best solution, (If cour~e . i~ fnr )'nu r mother 10 dn 1omethlnc 1~t her temPf_r. People who brtak lhln11 (t1peeially tbings tbal don'l belong to them l need some looklog Into. In tlle meantime, your mother 11bould buy you • new tran1lstor and •pologlie for b•vlng busted Utt old one. TlEAR ANN LANDERS : I !hough\ I was strong enough to handle any problem that came my Y..ay bul I was wrong. Please hell" me before I lose my mind. Our youngest child Is 8. Alter he w;is born. my husband had an opcralion so we wou ldn't have any more children. To ma ke a long slory short, I am six monU1s pregna nt. My mother-in-law insists the child is not my husband 's. I KNOW th is h1 utterly impossible. My doctor has told us this is a rare occurrence. bµt it ha s hap-~nl'd before. My husba'nd was upset, all ynu can imag ine. but he accepted the rlnctor's explanation and · we never discuss it The rea l pmblem.. ls my mother-in-Jaw. Wheneve r she gets ~er son it/one she rile!!'. him up and lllar!-5 new trouble. She telllll hlm he Is" big rool, lhat 1 most certainly have a lover gomeplace and he should not let me geL aws.y with it. She keeps repeating, "If the operation cAme 'Un· done' why didn't you r wire get prcgnRnl before?" This ls, of cou rse, a hard ques· lion Lo answer. J love my husband very much, cind he love5 me, but our marriagt! i:i> becoming 1haky because or these recurring doubts. Surely, Ann, this has happened to other couples. Please check with your con· sullanls and print something to help nic. -FAITHFUL IN IDAHO DEAR FAlTKF1JL: If Ole spermatlc tordl'I were se vered, • pregnAncy could not po11slbly result. lf the ettrtl~ ""'e !ltd, howeve:r, tbe tying ml&bl have come W'.I· done and eoncepdon could have ott11rreif •. As In ""by you clkl not bt:come prtput htforr, there are at least a dote• reaMOI -all valid. Your docto'r can •nswer t).ls que11lnn. A.<1idc frnm lht' medical aspettl, dtert't a ~"onal problem ltere which mast be regarded 11s, lnterferenca. ''The Rr idc's <•uide,'' Ann Landers• booklet, tlnSl''Crs SO!llf: Of the most frt-- quentl y asked questioniri about weddings. '10 rr.cch·e your copy of this com-- prrhcnsl"<' guide. write to Ann Ulnderlll. In t'art! nf the OAll.Y PILOT cnclOl'ling a llJni;. ~l t·Addrcs~. stamped envelope ilnd 35 c('nls m coin. l • 1 t ' '" . DAIL V rllOr' If Your Horoscope Tomorrow ..,,,.,...,.,.,.(apricorn: Surpr ise Indicated SATURDAY SEPTEMBER S By SYDNEY OMAIUt Wllere he1er1 ire cteetnted, Tung ii I a MllludlDJ 1lp. Wba ff c:emes te mall.er cMI•, It' ii Cancer. The entertllDen of tile lldlac ire moll apt &I )le Leo, wbUe teacben, repll1erl ud pll«oirapben ft 11 re promllleDil)' la Gemt.i ... Vqt. AR~ (March 21-Aprll lt): . E1ceUent news due concernln& mate, partner and bidden resources. Travel I! favortd. Attending convention would be especially good for prestige. Get up and state your views. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): What appeared a setback is due to boomerang in your favor. Family member provides moral .!I u p p o r t . Money come.!! from une1:pected source. Play cards close to chest. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Improvement in h e 1 I th indicated. But you must follow expen advice. You gain if self. dl.!!clpline ia applied Otherwise, you I n v i t e dlffleulties. Act accordingly. CANCER (June 21.JU)y 22): Relations with c h i I d r e n improve. Your emoUonal life accelerates-to the good. Past speculation pays dividends. Vital time; you 1et al1D01t anything you can handle. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Investments favored where property, real estate are concerned. Older individual confides dilemma. You gain by being sympathetic without getting directly involved. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22): Short trip. connected with relative, is favored .. Be independent without b e i n g arrogant. Try some new ideas, procedures. Give full play to creative efforts. Make vital changes. LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 22): Follow through on hunch. Emphasis on money. Good news comes via s p e c I a I messenger. Avoid trying to force issues. What you need will be made available. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Sf. Andrew's Setti ng Be "''iiling to take a chance on your own abilities. Overcome tempta tlon toward overindulgence. No need to rush. Circumstances f a v o r your efforts. Sense of timing is sharp. SAGf1TARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Some of your secret fears, doubt.!! are eraHd. You find solution to perplexing problem. Be aware of fine print, other details. You are on brink of important discovery. CAPRICORN {Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Delightful surprise indicated. Involves friends. social activity. Area of creative communications is accented. Encourage Gemini tlldividual. Works to mutual advantage. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): PromoUon, boost in standing due to intervention of friend. Show appreciation with f. home-cooked dinner. Protect reputation by fulfilling obligations. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Public expression of your private thought.!! p r o v I d e s needed stimulus. P e r c e iv e subUe nuances. Separate f1ct from fancy. Travel Is °" agenda. Seek best opportuni· lies. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are active, display talent in creative fields, with emphasis on writing. You gai.n 8J'eater recognition when you adhere to own style, policy. 1'-fany who think they are of help to you oft.en merely get in the way. Harborites Say Vows LINDA YOH E Fill Bride • CHANGING SCENE -Newport lloach lo<!•Y is a flr cry from the Newport that teachers at Newport ltlementary School knew durinl( the war years. .Rtmlnlacing about their days together on the staff ' .. • of the area's first schooJ are (left to right) Miss Grelha Tubbs, Mrs. Stan Hill and Mrs. Henry Vaughn. They joined 13 others for an 11auld lang syne:" luncheon. Exchanging vows and rings before the Rev. Charles Dlerenlield in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach, were Nancy Oonellen WeUs and Michael T a i t Wilson. father, the bride asked !\liss Nancy Strauss to be maid of honor. Bridesmaids were !\11 s s Jenifer \Vilsan, sister of the bridegroom , ~fiss Ka thy \Velch of Seattle and Mrs. Phillip Cotton of Riverside. ' < ' ' 'Happy Family' Reunited Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. °"'1ald Wells and !\1r. .and Mrs. Horace S. Wilson Jr., all of Newport Beach . Escorted to the altar by her Serving as best man was John Featherstone. Howard Shempp of New York, William Luther. Michael Irwin and Dan Christy seated the guests. January Date Set ' Fi rst Te ache rs Look Back at Old Newp0r t New/ands Tell News They were a staunch, happy c-ew, those who were teachers ai Newport Elementary School luck in the days of World War n and bef,... ·ney remember the school ~hen there were only 16 teachers and around 400 childnn in the whole dlstrlcl; tile teachers ud principal "'ere jwt one big happy family. Sixtee n former teacher• met for a luncheon in j the Stuft Shirt to reminisce and recall in between offering warm greetings to their f e 11 o w teachers. Thirty years had JBSsed since most w e r e together, and eager chatter fllled the restaurut as they began to catch up. . 1'lrs. Gretha Tubbs, who c;ame to Newport in 1929 as a ~hool nurse, was t h e <J>Ordinator of the reunloR, which included ont teacher ! who now lives in \Vi\co1, Ariz. .. J was so enthra1led by the windows of the school over- looking the bay \hat I some- times forgot to gil·e tbt next spelling wwd. ·• Miss C I a r a Ellen Speilma.ll of Santa Ana. remembertd. She said that there were almost IO buildings on the peniAsula around I he school then, and you could Jooi: across the beach lo the bay. "We all went through the "Nar years together," added Mrs. Bruce Handy of Newport Beach. "We did all the registration for the draft :ind issued food stamps, and a blood bank wa& set up in the cafetorium." Mra. Henry Vaughn of Costa Mesa described the bomb drills when the children were trained to go lnto the halls and crouch, another part of the bleakless of the war years. . -"' "\\'e had t"'·o student.!! fr.1m Corona del 1'1ar then,'" said 1'Uss Spellman. "There were no .!lpecial teachers, and we "'·ere a sell~nt.ained school." "It \li'aS almost li:C:e a private school," Miss Isabel Bowles of Balboa Island added. A kindergarten teacher, she con.!!lders ;t 1he most enjoyable of grades. Miss Agnes Carlson, JtOW or Leisure World, Laguna Hills, liked the system because it was small, had a congenial faculty and boasted a superintendent who was "one of us." "Teachers were able to plan the ir own work and execute their ideas without too much lnterfertnct," 1 h e added. Mrs. Jack Harris, no\Y a Garden Grove resid en t, believes the N e w p o r t Elementary School experience was the "be.lit teac.-hlng I ever had. The teachers were sucn a cohesive group. It was during the war and rationing, ar.d all we had to do was visit and play gin rummy." Do the teachers, some of whom now are retired, find a dUference between students of the 40a and students now ? "The difference is the same difference that there I! ill the world. "nllngs were more relaxed then," litiss Spellman aald. Mrs. Harris summed lt up best : "Children remain more or leu the same." O\bers attending were Mrs Agnes Craig of Wilcox, Ariz.; Mrs. Meta Bachman of Santa Barbara; Miss Mary lte ltlurphy, Pasadena; Mrs. Slan Hill and Mrs. Robert Phipp.!!, Long Beach; Mrs. Dorothy Hall, Newport Beach; Mrs. Carol D e n t o n, Huntington Beach, and ltli.!IS Marcella Robinson, Newport Beach. January i rites in St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa are being planned by Diane Newland and Steven Reece. Their betrothal \Vis announced by Mr. and Mrs. George Newland of Costa Mesa, parents of the bride- elect. ltllss Reece attended Kofa High School In Yuma, New Dorp High School, Staten Island and is a graduate of Westminster High School. She also was a student at Orange Coa.!lt College. South Coast Cl t1 b Her fiance, son of Mr. ;ind 1'1ts. Willard Reece o f Newport Beach, is a .graduate of Newport Harbor lligh School and now attends the University of Ca I l for 11i a , Berkeley, where he is affiliated with Delta Tau Delta fraternity and plays on the football team. DIANE NE WLAND Future Bride New Off ice rs Bow Rosarian Sharing Know -how Drug Use Discussed Committee chairmen and riew officers were introduced during a board meeUn1 of the South Coast Club in the home of the presJdent, Mr,. Harry Belcher. Serving during the coming year will be the 1'1mes. G. P. Kristensen, Paul C. HUI and James Hoffman, vice presidents; J. W. Long, assis- tant to lint vice president; G. S. Pell, treasurer, and Selby R o b i n s o n , corresponding secretary. More are ltfi" A ii n a McCallum, rtcordlng steretary, and the Mmes. G. M. Vance, newsletter editor; John T. Fortune, Junior chainnan: C. L. Stratton, bridge; Joseph Kane, com· munity service. and Ted J, O'Connell. hospitality. Others are the Mmes. M. E. Brotman, luncheon; R o z Jackson, per so• a I cor· re.!lpondent: Philip T ow n e , publicity; Ora Stickel! and R. J. Kelsey, reservations, and Charles E. Lucas, telephone. Club meetings take place the first Wednesday of each month in the Towers restaurant, Laguna Beach. Jnterested women may call Mrs. Towne, 499-1531, for further infonnatio11. ' Colonel Ana lyzes Defense 1'tuch to Do About Roses will bi Ule subject discussed by John van Barneveld, regional governor of the American Rose Society, when the Orange County Rose Society meets on Tuesday, Sept. 8. 1'1embers of the group vdll gather in the Weslrnin.!ller Ch•ic Center Re c reation Build ing at 7:30 p.m. with the meeting to begin al 7:45. How to show roses, how to grow them, and how to have School Daze will set the lheme for th e brunch and meeting of Orange Coast California Council of Beta Sigma Phi when the meeting convenes at 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 12, in the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana . Bob Unnston, school teen coordinator for Orange County Tetn Challenge, will speak on l Drug Abuse, according to Mrs. Beverlee Soow, b r u n c h chairman. Cou rt Forming h d I d fun with a rose growing hobby A public meeting sc e u e A ne\v cou rt of the Ca tholic v.•ill be among suggestions by the Cavalier Chapter of given by van Barneveld, who Daughter.!! Is being formed in Colonial Dames will enable In-Is a rosarlan for the Pageant the Huntington D e a c h - terested citizens to hear a talk of Roses Garden in Whiltier. \\·cstminster area, according on national defense to be Film Tri o On Vi ew delivered by Air Force Lt. Col. to ~frs. Ada Pasquale. -JRei.l Franklin w. Frickcy or Wa ter Plan ts Mcclings will take plat<! Anaheim. each \Vednesday at 7:30 p.m., The meeting will begin at and addilional information ! 2 S ~ .• da •• 1 1 'Valer plants with Ice. Set may be obtained by calling 1 : I p.m. on .1 itt:"S Y • .,..p · • the cube on the soil, being 1'1rs. Pasq uale at 531-4442. in the Old Brussels restaurant, i~co~re~lu~I ~l~l ~doe~~sn~·1~1o~uc~h~Ut;,e~~~~~§~~~~~ II A vie\li·lng or 1'tovle.!1 Under Lagu'na Beach. Reservations lhe Star I I ned f Labo plant. The ice melts: slowly, s .!I P an or r for the luncheon meeting may Day weekend at Fashion be made with Mrs. Beatrice F~ EsthnatesL Island Center. Crist, president, 4f4..5421, or The program will begin at Mrs. Fred C. R0>s. IK-1651. RE•UPHOLSTER 8:30 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 4. 1.lrs. Grant v . Rymal will lnchJded In the show wUI be pre .. nt Col. Frickey, whose 2" Complete Seleetl•" o r The Clown, story of a young years of millt.ar:.· service In-Fabric• fncl11df"9: -boy who loses his dog and then elude 15 yeara as a com· find• him 1ea<11n1 • blind man: mun1callona siarr omcer in Linens and Yelnts ;Dashing Fashion i\mong the latest fashions to be shown at the May Co. South Coast Plaza on Friday, Scpl. 18 al 7:30 b.m . Is th.11 gaucho fashion patterned by Vogue. The tashion coordinator from ·vogue will aircct the show- ing in lbe Terrace Room. • Juggtmut, a travel film the Fir East. takin1 lt.s audience on a 6001',...-=~---=-----.I milo tour of lndla: and sea of STARS Cortez, which features scenes Svcl11•v Ol'lltu I• •11• •f '"'' ot lhe southernmost part of ..,,,1c1·, t rt•I 11lrolo9tn. Hlt 81ja California IOUlb of La col"'"'" it '"' ef th• DAILY n.,t.. PILOT'S 9r11t f11t11ttt, Ma1t•r Cratt1men Alw111 •• • CzyKOSKI 1131 NIWPORT ILYD. COSTA MISA INMr "'*'' (SV·ICOS·ICf:V! ~::l Plaone 142·14G4 The newlyweds are graduates o! Newport Harbor l!igh School and will be seniors at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The bridegroom will be co- captain of the water polo team. The new Mrs. Wilson also attended Willamette Univers.i· ty where she was af!iliated y,·ith Delta Gamma, and her husband attended O r a n g e Coast College. Their first home \vill be in Goleta. Happiness Described A program on the Definition of Happiness will be presented by ~trs. Richard Mitchell of l .. untington Beach '''hen Pi Pi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi meets at 3 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 8, in the Garden Grove home of Mrs. Phillip Wakefield. Conducting the first meeting · of the new season will be Mrs. Tom Thompson, president. Picn ickers Gatheri ng Parish loners from St. Joachlm"s Catholic Church \\'ill gather in Costa }.fesa Park on Sunday, Sept. 6, !or an annual church picnic. The event will begin at II a.m. and conUnue with games and refreshments: until 5 p.m. Lag unans Will Wed The engagement of Linda June Yohe and Jerry Bashe \\'as announced by the bride- e\ect's parents Dr. and Mrs. Perce P. Yohe, during a fami· ly dinner in their Emerald Bay home. Miss Yohe is a graduate of Orange Coast College and at- tended California State College at Long Beach. Her future husband. son of 1'1rs. Mary Bashe of HoliY"'ood, attended schools in the East. The couple plan an October y,·edding in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. THE ORANGE CO UNTY ASSOCI ATI ON FO R RETARD ED CH ILDRE N .......... na FALL SEMESTER ..... HOPE HAVEN SCHOOL Starling On 14 September, 1'7D c1 ..... will b. h•ld ••tkcl1y1 from t :OO A.M. to 1:30 P.M. - 1f Thi fittt Pr11byftrl111 Ch11rd1 of 61rd111 6ro .. 1 I 1132 Euclid Strief, 6 1rd111 6ro1'1, C1lifor· 11i1. A911: 2 1/i to 6 yttrl lfl,,.. ibl1) Thi pro1j1 r1111 pro¥id11: Tr1;11M T11chtri, 1 pro9r11n t1il1r1d fo tll1 child1 ;,,d; .. ,.~1i.I n114h 1..S fi1ld irip1. 11111 h1n1p1rt1tion i1 1v1il1blt .) htiStf .. iH ,....,...,, .. : ....... 541·4451 ... 141·J''' Wt Ai-0,.,11, SMIT ......... .,.., "" """"' ......... . Ate 16 YHl"I NMI .,. ....... -.. . .. ·~ '"COLLECTION COLOR" OIAMONOS IN THE FIVE MOST WANTED SHAPES Here are five beautiful ways to pop the quaation. From our special folio of "Collection Color" diamonds-selected for their outstanding fine color. All in 18 karat whit·e gold. From the top: Round cut, $395. Emerald cul. ~475. Oval, $550. Pear. $676. Marquise, $750. Others from $150. Cht't't At-'1 t.ivhtCI . AlnftlU" E_._, le111-A1ntrk1rt 1111t Ml•llt Clllrtt. '" SLA.YICK'S 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644 .1310 .. \ f. v u • • c 0. s a & s Y' ., A rr " b< 11 1 } 1 ha ju: IU< In Br an COi Pa pa: CY• po! lhE mE f R• ion eff, I mn Cal alo O<d vir inti .. lo! lltl .. 'w wil ext ,, kic op~ cha hor. sur pla· I , B I 1 ) p T Hur Doi A ~lot Thu J)ic) fror holl \. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .............................. s•s .. !111112""'~1~\,..i~s•s ... _s .. •z ............... ,lilllt~;~:~;,.. ........ lill!lillml!IJ .... lll!!I~ • Fountain ·v ·atley Today's Final N.Y. Sioeks VOL bl, NO. 2 I 2, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL!FORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER·4, 1970 TEN CENTS .. Orange County Joins .'Substantial Jobless' List Orange County will be added to the list of "1ubstanlia1 unemployment'' areas 4ln Oct. I, the U.S. Labor Department announced Thursday. The designat.illf'means that firms in the county will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buying contracts and public works pr.oject.s. The county achieved the ln1employmenl status because the jobless rale here has been above six percent for the past two montha. · State Department of Employment of· ficials said Thursday that the unemploy- ed rate in the county was 6.6 percent ~!,lghout August, a jump of three-. tenths of one percent Crom the July figure of 6.3. The county will become the nalion's most populus suburban area lo be declared economically depressed. It will also ha ve the highest pe r capita income of any area in the nation in the C.!lteeory. ' • The Slate Human. R e s o u..r c e s Department listed 33,ooq/persons out ol work last month, 1,500 more than July, 8Tld predicted further declines at least through November, Orange cOunty joins Oakland, San Jose, Fresno and Stockton as large areas in the state with substantial unemployment. Imperial County is the ornly other Southern California county to reach the substantial unemployment status with ao a.a percent rate of jobless workers in August. Los Angeles County recorded a 5.a unemployment percentage rate In July while the entire state had 6.2 percent. The job picture in Orange County is the worst in eight years and is blamed largely on 10.700 layoffs in the aerospace industry during the past 12 months. accordiTlg to the Human Resources Development Dept. figure. • • The county's rate ol unemployed a year ago was only 4.3 percent. In contrast to other depressed areas in the state and nation , Orange County boasts an annual per capita income of $.1,610. Extt:utives and highly traiTled technicians lead the list of unemployed outstripping blue collar workers who ha ve been laid off this year. The jobles.. situation has meant that spendable income of about $.J)0,000 a WO Ill w1mmers 10 Nabbed In Beach NarcoRaid Ten persons were arrested in a Huntington Beach n a r c o t I c s raid Wednesday, concluding an undercover investigation spanning three weeks. Only three of those taken into custody were charged with sales or narcotics, while the others are behind bars on charges of either furnishing or possession or the illicit materials. Arrested for marijuana sales was Troy Slone, 21, who gave a Cypress Street - add ress, and two female juveniles. While officers from the p o I i c e dcpartmenl's narcolics bureau made the Slone arrest, they also arrested another youfh, Gregory Haydon , who had allegedly been AWOL from the U.S. Army for about one year. During August the city's policemen made 314 narcotics arrests which resulted in the confiscation or 19.422 benzedrine tablet!, LSD valued at $17S,OOO and marijuana valued at $SO,OOO. -' .,,. . • ' -- ,. : I • , l, • --.... .) ... .. . !:*""" • Beach Cyclists Might Get Hole To Cruise In TWO BLINO SWIMMERS , CAUGHT IN RIPTIDE OFF HUNTINGTQN llEACH, ARE RESCUED OFF STEAM ·PLANT BY STATE GUARDS In Water (left to right), Victim Mery Otten, of Sin Gabriel; Lifelu•rd Rick ltambaud, Victim Stev• Forr,. Bell Gardens; Lifeguard John C1mpbell Hundreds of cyclis ts who no longer have a place to ride their machines may just stumble into a big hole-if they're lucky, that is. And wh at is probably the biggest hole In Huntington Beach-the 20-acre Bruce Brothers gravel pit oo Gothard Str~t and Talbert Avenue-ls currenUy bf!1ng considered by the city's Recreation and Parks Commission as a possible cycle park. The location was recently suggested by cyclist Larry McCarty as the .be~t possible location for ~ cycle park ".''t~1n the city limits during a co mrr11ss1on meeting. For several monlhs now. t h e Hearing, Delayed In Knife Killing A preliminary hearing for two men accused of taking part in the knife· slaying of a Huntington Beach business executive has been postponed to Sept. JS. At that time Miles C. Cox, 18, of Westm inster will answer murder charges while Frederick J . Yanke, 20, Or Gardena. will appear on ch;ifges of harboring and concealing Cox. Both were arraigned at West Orange County Municipal Court one day after they were captured by police and accused or slaying hardware store owner Walter Christie, SI, in his Huntington Beach apartment Au1 . 24. Recrea tion Department staff has .been \-• • • looking a1 "'ious chunks or 1and "' an Smoking Mari Juana effort to provide a motorcycle and . . minibiki? riding area where enthusiasts S~~ DIEGO (AP>. -:"11.rty pounds of can practice their sport without running mar11uana caught fire Jns1de a car on afoul of the Jaw. A recent emergency Interstate 5. 1'wo men stopped the auto ordinance which makes off road riding near the La Jolla turnoff . late ~ursday · II · 'bl withi the city has and escaped on foot, pohce said. y1rtua .. Y 1m~s1 e n The marijuana was bein11 smuggled too intensified their sea rch. close ta the car's manifold exhaust of· "That 'black pit,' as it's called. has a ficers said. ' lot of potential as a riding area with very little work." McCarty poiflted out. Seal Beach Recall Bid 1,000 Signatures Short By RUDE NIEDZIELSKI Of nM DtllJ Plltl lllH Further complications were introduced into the volatile Seal Beach political squ abble Wednesday With an opinion from the city attorney that a petition to recall Councilman Conway Fuhrman doesn 't have enough signatures. Under state law, the petition needs another 1,100 signatures to comply with a requirement that such petitions contain 25 percent of all registered voters in the city, acrording to Attorney Jim Bentson. Officials of the Save Our City {SOCI organization who initiated the recall thought they had more than the 25 per cent wh1" they turned in a 1,868 petillon, currently being verified by the city clerk. But the trouble is that Seal Beach eleCts its councilmen by districts rather than at large, IO the 25 percent requirement does not apply lo only Fuhrman's 2nd District but the whole city, according to Bentson. Fuhrman wa s served with a recall petition during a stormY city council meeting July 27 when he and Councilman Thomas Hogard and Mayor Baum voted to fire City Manager Lee Risner and City Attorney James Carnes. Those spearheading the drive to oust the veteran councilman werf! quite unhappy with nentson's opinion. They are now weighing whether to accept his <>pinion or seek l11gal advice. "It looks to me like he's mixing apgles with oranges, "1 said a spokesman for the SOC group . She basically contended it was unfair for voters in one district to elect a councilman and then give the privilege to remove him t.o the entire city. 1 "It has the ~dded advantagf! of being ;iway from residences and the high walls will aid In deflecting the noise <>f lhe exhausts,'' h~ added . Shop Area Out of Date Further. ~1cCarly believes the dust kicked up by the cycles will have ampltt opportunity to setUe before it has any chance to enter the windows of homeowners. The 200 fl-deep pit is i;urrouned mostly by small industrial plants, lhe Huntington Beach Police (See CYCUSTS, Page %J Beach Ci ty Trash Pickup on Thursday . ' There will bit: no trash pickup In Hun tington Beach on Monday, Labor Day. A sf)Okesman for Ra inbow Disposal said 1'1onday's routes would bt colltt:ted Thursday in Huntington ~1ch. Trash pickups in Fountain Valley will be shifted rr-0m Thursday to Friday betauM: of the holiday, the spokesman said. '-• Top of Pier Section Not To Be Used for Years Bv ALAN nmKTN 01 I'll• DlllJ PllM Sltll If you look at a map of the Huntington Beach Top of the Pier Plan, you wllf find 50,lnl square feet of specialty shop(>ing marked between the Huntington Pacific apartme.n~ and the foot of the mwli cipal pier. Jt's out of datt. The plan was adopted by the council last Nov. 17. On June a the cft'y filed 11 beach acce" suit over that property and the adjaooit 21' miles of strand. The litigation •ill be long and emtly. Nobody is going to build anything on th1t propert.y for years unles,, the action it settled out or court. Nol the city, nor its opponent in the case, Huntln&ton PacUic Thi.~ Is the concluding article in 12 1/irtt·pari series disc~.sing aspects of the redevtlopmt'nl plan propo.sed for downtown Huntington Beach. CorporaUon, owned J jointly by the Hun tington Beach Company and Southern Pacifk:. Looking back on the plan from today's viewpoint. a court ban on devel<>pment along the beach will save Ujl city S()llle face. PlaMing even special#shops along that stretch would aetJn -to contradk:t moves to preserve public access to the 1ands. Where will the sp<daily shops he pul now! Harbors and Beaches Director Vince Moorhouse says they could be built behind !he ~lock-deep parking lol Iha! will stretch from Sixth lo Flnt Street along Coast Highway, He envlsage5 a Ports O'Call area for a mall styled alter Disneyland's Matn Street. City Adminlslralor Doyl< M 111 er believes the shops could be placed In the parking lot 1rea -in a land swap betweenthe clty11 Red e ve I op men t Agency and the Parking Authority descrlbed in yesterday's artlr:~. Miller also 1aid be understands 25 percent or the property mndemne(t by the Parkin-g Authority could be (5ee PARKING, P11e l f ! ' Salazar's Wife Said 'No Anger' In Her Request The widow of writer-broad caster Ruben Salazar today said she meant nothing angry or personal in asking Las Angel.es Counly She riff Peler J. Pitche'ss and his men to stay away from the fun eral. Salazar, 42, who lived at 3118 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana. was buried Wednesday nt Pacific View Memorial Park in Corona del Mar, with 700 persons at the funeral. She riff Pitchess had personally called Mrs. Sally Salazar to offer condolences about lhe tragic slaying by deputies and ask if there was anything he could do. "I said I woukf appreciate Jt II he would have no one around the funeral home.'' she explained. "I only wanted to avoid lrouble, there was nothing personal toward him." Mrs. Salazar said she was afraid inci- dents might occur to mar the solemn tribute paid to her husband If his many friends from East Los Angeles saw de- puties present or nearby. Newport Beach police provided traffic control for the hundreds or cars carrying mourners and no incidents occurred. Cigarette Fire • ~uts Apartment An abandoned cigarette today was blamed for a fire that gutted parta of an apartment in Fountain VaDey Thursday morning. Firemen .said the occu.pant,. John Watson, reportedly Jn hb early 20's, had apparenUy been smoking in the bedroom of apartment E·l6 1t 17080 San Bruno Ave. After he left for the nlght, the lire erupted at 3:44 a.m. Damage to the apartment w a s estimated at $10.500. The bedroom was gutted: bathroom, hall •"9 clolet were aeverely damaged: ind 4moke and heat ruined parts cif the llvin& room and kllchen. week bas been cut from the counl.)''1 economy, according ta Odessa Dubinsky, HRD 's.research directgr for this area. Higher employment this year in .such fields as building cOnstruction, retail stores, restaurant! and motels has not been great enough to offset the aerospace declines. Half of August's 1,500 lost jobs came from the electronic field and other aerospace firms. ave Riptides Take Pair Out to Sea Treacherous riptides swept the Orange Coast despite small surf Thursday, pulling two young Los Angeles County residents out into a sea of salt water and darkness. "I knew we were far out when we couldn't touch bottom anymore," iaid Steve Fort, 24, of Bell Gardens. Fort and Mary Otten, 17, of San Gabriel, remained amazingly ca Im although they were adrift 200 yards offshore from Huntington State Beach. They are blind. "They were very rel axed.'' said State Lif21\W'd Mel Tubba, %2, Who pilota the reacue boat, Sul'f Watch. ·~nie first · thing they asked was how rar. dbt they were," added Tubbs, of Balboa. Tubbs maneuvered the boat closer to the blind swimmers -who had been pulled out from shallow water -and lifeguard Jon Campbell plunged in to make the rescue. Campbell, 22 , fastened iescue tubes around the pair apd only then discovered that they were sightless. "I wish all the people Wf! rescue: were as calm as those two," remarked Tubbs. Not everybody among the 25 swimmers rescued from rip currents Thursday were calm. <;:ampbell was trying to guide the blind rescues when two girls and a boy 100 yards further toward shore panicked and began screaming for help. He had to leave Fort afloat in his Inflated rescue· tube and swim -to the aid of the panicked bathers, who were in a worse situation because: they were ' fighling the sea. Aided by a third lifeguard, Rick Rambaud, the team was able to haul in all five swimmers. Huntington Beach city lifeguards said they were surprised to log only nine rescues for a summer day, but added activity was quite low. JOB Goal Falls Short WASHJNGTON fUPll -The JOBS hiring program , pride of-the Nixon Ad~ ministratkin's Manpower Program, fell 80,000 joba short of it! goal of putting 338,000 hard-core unemployed persons to work by July t, 1970, the National Alliance. of Businessmen said loday. Oruge C.ut l\'eatller You can sleep late over the. boll· ~day weekend and wake up to find the sun shining -•bout noon. Temperatures will slick to a cool es along the beachei and a warm- er 78 Irtland. 1 INSIDE TOD"l' For all you cemu.s·minded 1tatistician.s, there 's o full pagt of in.formaiion on. £he rtcentl11 announced U. S, population fiatlrts, showing Callfornia'1 elevation to the top 1tate spot. Page 15. ...... " -·-.. Celtltnlle .. ... , .... ,,. .... .. ClleclllM u. • ..._ ... .., " c"""'" " ... ' 1 .. 1111rat1h .... C""kl H s,1¥11 ,.,,.,. " c,..,_. H ·-· .... DMtll •tk ft " lltdl ,.,.,. .. '"'' •flteNI , ... • T•le•ltlM " ··-16-lf ""'"" .,,,. ·-.. ... ~ . A::i L•IMIWI " Wtrneil I ,. ..... 1•14 ...... • ·--.. -IJ·!t --"" ' / % DAILY PILOT H Frlda,y, Stptembtr ~. 1970 School s Set For 'Gift'~ In Valley Officials or the Fountain Valley School District expect to receive a "gift" of $9,675.77 from the California Board of Education in t.be near future. It took 1 federal court ru ling to pry the money loose rrom the state, but school officials say it will cover some r ecent expenditures in the budget. "The state money was held back during 1969-70 because we had received federal aid as an impacted area," Charles Wood- fin , associate district superintendent, e1- plalned. .. ' Pageantry Theme " .. Big State Dinner Concludes Late CORONADO -Pomp, pawer and pageantry was the theme of lhe day as President Nixon hostfd M e x l c a n President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz at a magnificent state dinner that finally wound up in the wee hours of today . The chief executive accompanied the Mexican head of state to Chibuahaua - his version of Air Force One -parked at North Island Naval Air Station. Dignitaries and dishes from both natio~ ming led at the three-way exchange of friendship, which included former president Lyndon B. Johnson. A motorcade and parade wound through a crowd of 112,000 who came to the small navy town lying in sight of the Mexican border. . already distributed copies of the remarks • to the press. An impressive array of military planes .;. and smartly dressed color guards from .•: all four branches of the service greeted • • ... the two Preaklents at the naval ail'.. .:. station. • President Ordaz was honored by a 21· !!~; .. gun salute and a tour of the giant ba~. • •,· then accompanied his host to the historic !} . Hotel de! Coronado. · :~· ·..;< Many Mexicans crossed the border and · ~- bridge and ferry tolls were reduced for •• ~ the occasion. :~. The four<0urse, black-tie dinner was :~~· served on gold-rimmed plates fiown in _:~:: from the White House. It featured prime ~;::: beef from Nebraska, sea bass from :::: An impacted area is one whert_ a large number of residents work for companies with goverruncnt contracts. The federal government pays money to school districts for the children of those federal employes. During the 1969-70 school year the State Board of Education withheld a portion al money from local schools because of the federal grants. The U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco ruled that illegal. ' •· DAILY PILOT Slllf Pho .. President Nixon personally shook hands "'?th the 660 VIP guests ·during the gala dinner. Mexico. red and white wine and :.•. champagne, plus a dessert of ice cream .~.· and strawberries. Fifty-.!lix Mexican :::: dancers from Guadalajara, in bright, :_::· nalive co~tumes, danced before the fish THIS IS THE HOLE BEACH BIKERS MAY WIND UP IN IF CYCLE PARK PLAN IS APPROVED, Gravel Pit on Gothard St r"t May Be Answer to Search for Public Trail Park -course was served . :::: :-:' Valley lnvi~s , N ixon for Golf President Nixon won't be playing golf In Fountain Valley Olis week, or next - but he might make it in the future. He was ex~nded an invitation to play oo the Mile Square course by Fountain Valley Mayor Edward Just. The mayor VrTOte a letter Aug, 18 point· Ing out the nearness of Mile Square, its location in Fountain Valley and the fact lhe course is built on land leased from the Department of Defense. Mayor Just also said the Marine Heli- copter facility was located next to the golf course. "Helicopters are a common sight so yours would attract no ~ial attenti-On." A special assistant wrote back to Just thanking him for the letter, said no play- ing time was foreseen at the moment but the President would certainly keep it io mind. Terry Rites Held In Huntington Funeral services were held at 11 a.m. today at Smith's Olapel for kmg-timl!I Hunt.ington Beach resident, Andrea B. Terry, who died Wednesday at the age of II. Mrs. Terry, who was a member of the Eastern Star, had lived in the Huntington Beach area for 47 years. She is survived by a son, Victor Terry, 11f Huntington Beach, one grandcltild and lwo great-grandchildren. Valley Hardware Facility Opened Opening ceremonies were held today at Lia-Brook Hardware's new Fountain Valley st.ore. Fountain Valley Mayor Ed E. Just was on hand for the opening of the gia1t store, located at 17300 S, Brookhurst. 'Ille new facility is the first step in the "1aheim·b a s e d company's expansion program, which is t.o include two new &lores each year. A unique feature of lhe new hardware ttore is a weekly program of do-It.. rourself classes in the store's auditorium. Cement Mix up From Page I HUNTINGTON PARKING. •• designated for commercial use. This is a touchy topic, however. City Attorney Don Bonfa declined to give his opini~whether this would be legal under the California Parking Law of 1949. "It would be ju!t speculation to comment on it right now," be saJd. "It's all designed for use as parking at present. If the ULl Committee (cltizeM steering committee of the Urban Land Jnstitute) recommenQs a change I would research it then." Miller's remark recalled the State Senate Local Government Committee hearing . in Long Beach last Jan. 9 conducted by then state Sen. John G. Schmitz CR-Tustin). The hearing was on whether Huntington Beach was guilty of a "violation of the spirit" of the parking Jaw. Schmitz drew a ruling from Attorney General 'Ibomas C. Lynch that the city would be unable to develop commercially the apace over the l~aae parking facility. Another question councilmen will face Tuesday evening will be whether to keep the five-acre parcel east or Lake Street and owned by the Huntington Beach Company in the Parking Authority area. William Foster, general manager of the company which owns about 1,300 acres in Huntington Beach, most of tt ROrth of Golden West Street. has formally uked the council to eiclude the parcel. The citizens steering committee ts to report at Tuesday's meeting whether the project would work without IL The land Is vacant and is already a parking lot at SO cents a day. If it ts condemned by the city tt will be paved and the weekend rate hiked to $1 or $1.%5. The city maintains the Huntington Beach Company pam!l is necessary because it is the easiest to develop and because it brings down lhe average cost of the overall project. "The co.st would be astronomical without it," Moorhouse reveaJed. ''lt'I part of the write-down technique.'" The final appraisal on the total area fixes the land acquisition costs at $4 .2 million, aver a million more than the first estimate. This averages at $7 a square foot but the average would be even higher if the Huntington Beach Cnunpany land were not included. "But the project as a whole would be $1 million le!s if they kept us out," Foster pointed ouL "The average square root cost would be higher but the overall cost would be less." Another sofUy spoken reason for lnduding the HuMington Beach Company ,..land ls \he politics of it. Citi:.ena may charge favoritism if the parcel is excluded. The campaign conbibutions that the company gives council candidates a• election time may llann the firm's cause as councibnen may feel obliged to take a lianl 11n .. One who queition1 tile cosll of the Parking Authority ezpansion is Robert Teny, head of the Downtown Property Owners Association. His group Is working to consolidate the property for development by private enterprise. On Tuesday tvening the cou_ncilmen will consider the progress of ~lt efforts -and decide if they should give them more time or if the city lhould 10 ahead and start condemnation proceedinp. "It seems every time something different liappom Ibey can change tholr figureg to mate it come out right " Tmy c:ornmented. 1 • He was refening to tbt rnUIJon dollar Increase in the appraisal. After receiving the ae:conct estimate, EconomJc Research Auoctates of Los Angeles added $66,000 in IMual revenue from on-.street parking meten to their projections. ''I question the revenue they expect to get from parking from the specialty ahops ($163,000 the first year)," Terry 1ald, observing that the ahops can no longer be bullt actording to the original plan. "I question half of their total income " he went on. "I question the revenue fro~ the presenl parking Jot." T~rry .~ummed up his feelings by stating, They have everything to lose and nothing to gain if they move ahead - they should agree with us to get busy on getting a private developer. ff they move ahead it will be a legal battle in the courts. It will be a mess." So it goes. The picture ls like an abstract painting. The longer you look at jt the more angles yo• see. But the councilmen have been weighing the arguments for a long time and on Tuesday evening they will probably decide if they should color the plan green fOr go or red for hall A huge ConRock cement truck flipped on its side Thursday morning at Ward Slreel and Ell is Avenue in .Fountain Valley. The driver tried lo avoid a Mav· enck whlcb __ had laUed to yield Lhe right of way at the inlersectlon. The Ford was slightly damaged. No one was injured in either vehicle.· Firemen wash· ed out the inside of the mixer to prevent the cement from hardening. -- From Page I CYCLISTS •.. ' .shooting range, and undeveloped areas. Although a pool of water lines the bottom portion of the former gravel quarry, McCarty believes the water can be fenced off so that it will not create a hazard. .. 'Ibe water is rather deep in some spots but the )'it is sort of a tri-Ievel set up with an intermediate level between the water pool and the top that would allow riding very soon with very little, i! any work." Recreation and Parks Director Norman ,Worthy aaid the site. is being investigated and the owners have been contacted for further negotiations. "But we haven't 8DY. answers yet," added Worthy. The commissioners are expected to make their recommendation about the site public during their regular meeting next Wednesday. Two other possible location s -a mlniblke course in a deserted oil field and expansion of a local race track to accommodate pleasure riding-have been laid aside until a decision is made on the pit. Meanwhile, local motorsport journalist Mike Capalite who has designed riding area.s, including the one at Huntington Cycle Park, said the pit site naturally lexls itself to riding trails and that he will provide a layout il tile project i"" U.-ougil. How About Luncheon? CORONADO, Calif. (UPI) -Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz gave a luncheon at the Hotel Del Coronado for his official party Thursday soon after fie arrived. "We have to e.at," he explained. The White House had not made any lunch preparations for tile visiting president. Gaiety prevailed from the hors d'oeuvres through the petit fours , except for one solemn note sounded io a warning by President Ordaz. He said an in cr ea.sJng trend of protectivism in U.S. trade circles is discouraging to neighbors south of the border and could spe ll economic disaster for Latin American nations. "There is true alarm in the countries of Latin America because in the United States protectionist tendencies seem to be gaining strength," he said. "Should they prevail, there will be a tremendous blow to the economy of the rest of the continent." He apologized for being so serious in the midst of festivity, ~ut aa.id he had Pre-school Set In Valley Based On Montessori It's "back to school" Ume in Fountain Valley -even where there was no school last year and for youngsters who have never been to school before. The First Christian Church will hold open house today from 7:30 to 9 p.m. 'to introduce the community to the newest pre-school in the area. It will be a full day school using the Montessori method and-geared to teaCb youngsters from 21Ai to S years old _ Miss Monigue Baudef, who will be in charge of the pre-achoo) at the church's facilities, 9040 Talbert Ave., wtll be avail. ~ble to meet parents and answer ques- t.ions at the open house. Miss Baudet received her certificate from the School in Paris, France, and is a Montes.sort method teacher. The Montessori method is an approa ch to education which emphasizes the po.tential of ~he child and which develops this .potential by means of unique teaching and didactic materials. The child is free to grow at his own pace and is free to utilize his time constructively under teacher guidance. Nixon and Diaz Ordaz were seated . ••• beside each other at the table, with :::'~; Johnson and ltis wife Lady Bird at the ~ ~:,: end. Other head table guests were Mrs. ;..-• Nixon, Mrs. Guadalupe de Nasta, Qiaz' · (. daughter who stood in for her ill mother, .;: and California Gov. -and 1'trs . .Ronald Reagan. ' The White House. managed to preserve - ' its tradition of having waiters serve at state dinners, despite the protests of .•• waitresses at the bot.el who felt they were edged out of their jobs. DAILY PILOT OitAN(i.~ COASr PUll.l~HING COMP,l.N'I" Rob1Tt N. w ,,d Pr"ide<1t tnd Puo"'""' Joel: R. Curftv Vi(f l'rf•l<ltn! •nd ..,,,,_.,.,1 ""~n1g1r lhom•' K11•il Eoi""' Ali " Di,\.i11 W1:$1 O· """' c-tv Edllor )11btrl W. 81!11 ot.ssocit!t fdll« H~11thttto1 le.ch Office 17175 l11ch lo11l••t•d M•iling Addr•n: P.O. l ol( 790, ,2641 o .... OffkH ~ ltOllM ll•~t;ll: 712 l'CH'HI A-, Cos11 Meu: uo Wut lltr Srr1et fl~, Btld'I: 7111 Wnt lltlbol ll:oulnl'flf $1n Cltmentt: llll H0<tn El Ct mil'A 11.ul _A7 DAILY P ILOT, wllll ~ » comlllMlf 'Ille Ntw>·Prus, Is pull!lsll1d <11llr 1~c99! SU»> <l•r In 1ep1r1rc 1<11!i0n1 f<lr Ltount lucl!, N1wDOrt 811c11, Coslt M"'' H11n1inglo11 llt!Cll '"" FO\ln!tln Vt lfty, 11111111 wllll !W.jl •eaion•I ~1Hon1. Or1ng1 Co:ot Pullllshl"lt Comp1nr prinllf19 pl1nts tr• '' ~Jll wn t Bolba9 arw .. Newp;orl 1111c11, •~d JlO wut 111~. $Irie!, Coslt M .. 1. Telt pho" (7141 642·4J'21 ~ From Wnt1t1instor Coll 140-1221 t Cl .. sifiod Ad¥ortish1f 64 2·5671 1 Copyr'911t, 1'10, Or•1111• C:on l Jlvbll1hfnt Comp1nr. No newi 1lodn , lll1ntr1ll°"•• cdllorl1I m•llff or l<IYffll1r.n1nl1 ll~r•h• mJr be rcprod11<cd wlllloul aJN'l;fl l ~·· mis.lion o1 cOPrrl!ln: .,.,.,,..,., ~ond d •H Pll'll~ 111ld 11 Nt'#pOl'f Bttcft ;a~d Cos!t Meu. CtllfCH'n lt . 5ubK•lplion b., ctrritr :i.;:_oo mo~lllly; Ot moil 113' ,,_1111r1 mili!fry dtlllntllon1, i.·.oo ,,_1111y. ' ' ' PAISONS TABLES Now nvo~oble m g re en as wen os yeDow. An e•COl>iionol loo I. On displor. """"· ;This fine conection of tobles is ovail- 'llble in n muHitude of s.izes from the >tT1<1llest cigarette teble lo o large !:Jin. ing teble with le-. - DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7ed11111 NEWPORT BEAC H 1727 W"tcllff Dr .. 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prol111iotl•I Interior LAG UNA BEACH ~ OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ..... , ......... ., 0...,.-c...., 140.120 . Dlllt..,. Avallalll-ID-NSID 34S North CoHI Hwy. 49,'I ----------- j( '· - • ' l .. ! . • • . I r ' l I I ' J 1 ] P1 "' A1 di co th ac pl. or p, Ni ofl 14 or .. Fi Clo \V: ho lei I Sa an Co m• ~ ~w, RI • Co • lur ' • ! . Mr . I •l> • ISi •o DI ·a _, I! " -·-.. --~~--............. ~ ,....,,..,_,.,....,., . • New-port 1 Beaeh EDITION 'J'oday'• Final N.Y. Stoeks vo e 63, NO. 212. 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COU FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER ~. '1970 TEN CENTS Orange County Joins 'Substantial Jobless' List • Orange County will be added to the list Qf "substantial unemployment" areas on Oct. I, the U.S. Labor Department announced Thursday. The designation means that fi~ms in the county will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buying contracts and publif works projects. The county achieved the unemployment status because the jobless rale here has been above six percent for the past two months. 1 I L State Departmeilt of Employment of· ficials said Thursday lhat I.he unemploy· eel rate in I.he county was 6.6 percent throughout August, a jump of three- tenths of one percent from the July figure of 6.3. The county will become the nation's most populus suburban area to be declared economically depre'ssed. It will also have the highest per capita income of any area io the nation in the ca tegory. .. The State Human Resources Department listed 33,000 persons out of work last month, 1,500 more than .July, and predicted further declines at least through November. Orange County jOOns Oakland, San Jose, Fresno and Stockton as large areas in the state with substantial unemployment. Imperial County is the only other Southern California county to reach the a;ubstanUal unemployment status with an ' . • 8.8 per~nt rate ol jobless workers in August. Los Angelts County recorded a 5.8 unemployment percenlage rale in July while the entire state had 6.2 percent. The Job picture in Orange County is the worst in eight years and is · blamed largely on 10,700 layoffs in the aerospace Industry during the past 12 months. according to the Humaa Re.sources Development Dept. fiiure. The county's rate ol unemployed a year ago was only 4.3 percent. In contrast to other depressed areu Jn the stale and nation, Orange County boasts an · annual per capita income of $3,610. Executives and highly trained technicians lead the list o~ unemployed outstripping blue collar workers who have been laid off this year. The jobless situation has me.ant that spendable income of about '300,000 a week has been cut from the county's economy, according to Odessa Dubinsky, HRD's research director for this area. Higher employment this yea r in such fields as building coruitruction. retail stores, restaurants and motets has not been great enough to offset the aerospace declines. Half of August's 1,500 lost jobs came from the electronic field and other aerospace firms. VIPs Eat Re·gally Pageantry, Pomp Mark State Dinner CORONAOO -Pomp, power and pageantry was the theme of the day as Presidc::t Nixon hosted Me x i c a n Pre:sident Gustavo Diaz Ordaz al a magnifi~nt state dinner that finally wound up in the wee hours of today. The chief executive aceompanled the Mexican head of state to Chlhuabaua - his version of Air Force One -parked at North Island Naval Air Station . Dignitaries and dishes from both nations . mingled at the three-way Harbor Vie'v Prezone OK~d ezchange of friendship, which included by President Ordaz. former president Lyndon B. Jol:mson. ' , He said an i n c r e a s i n g trend of A motorcade and parade wounQ...ryfotecti vism in U.S. trade circles iJ through a crowd of llZ,000 who came to 'discouraging to neighbors 50Uth of th e the small navy town lying in sight of the border and could spell economic disaster Mexican border. for Latin American nations. President Nixon personally shook hands "There is true alarm in the countries of with the 660 VIP auests during the gala Latin America because in the United dinner. States protectionist tende ncies seem to be Gaiety prevailed from the hors gaini ng strength," he said. d'oeuvres through the petil fours, except "Should they prevail , there will be • for one solemn note sou nded in a warnln& (See DINNER, Page %) Planners Opposed Balboa High Rise Plan PRESIDENTS TAL~ SHDJ' Af_TER' STATE !J INNER. , Mexlc1n President Di1z Orda.1 (left)1ch.lh with Nixon (right) Afhr Fe11t After Debate Tukell . From -Calendar Yorty, Envoys To Meet Nixon In San O emente Back from his successful state dinner, President Nixon met in San Clemente today with Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles. a high German official and two diplomats. Nixon turned his attention to the Far East and !\1iddle East in half hour sessions with Henry Swank, ambassador· designate to Cambodia and L. Dean Brown, ambassador-designate to Jordan. It was believed that Nixon and Brown concentrated on the uneasy cease fire in !he Middle East as Israel demanded U.S. action to remove SAM missiles sites placed near the Suez Canal. Both Yorl.y and Rainer Barde!, leader nf the opposition Christian Democra~ic Party in West Germany. challed with Nixon in separate appointmen~. Although • the President Thursday offered further compromises to get his $4.1 billion family assistance program out of committee, he failed to gain any aiSura nces from the reluctant Senate Finance Committee. The Presidenlial party will leave San Clemente during the holiday weekend for Washington D.C. where the President will host a Labor Day dinner for top labor leaders. Salazar's Wife Said 'No An ger' In Her Reques t The widow of writer-broadcaster Ruben ~ Salazar today said she meant nothing o1 angry or personal in asking Los Angeles ! County Sheriff Peter J .' Pitchess and his men io stay a~'ay from the Funeral. : Salarar, 42. who lived al 3118 S. Rita ·~way, Santa Ana. was buried \Vednesday ! at Pacific View ti1emorial Park in ! Corona de! Mar, with 700 persons al the : funeral. Sheriff Pilchess had personally called ; Mrs. Sally Salarar to offer condolences : 11bout the lragic slaying by deputies and " tSk if there was anything he could do. "I said I would appreciate it if he rould have no one around the funeral / ome.." she explained. 1 1 "I only wanted to avoid trou~le ... there ·as nothing personal toward him. -ti1 rs. Salazar said she was afraid incl· I ints might occur to mar lhe solemn bute paid to her hushancl if his many ends from East Los Angelts saw de· 1ties present or nearby. Newport Beach _police. provided trafrlc ntrol for ille. liundreds of cars carryln& iurne rs snd no Incidents occurred. . .. . . • r.· .• • • • • ~ I STATE GUESTS LBJ AND NANCY REAGAN CHAT More Th i n 600 Guest Attend..t Coron1do St1te Dinner N ~port-Balboa Savings Changes Name, Own~rs Newport Balboa Savings and Loan Association, an instituti on on the bay in Newport Beach :si'nce 1936, has been merged and given a new name. The local association, acquired by the lmperial Co rporation of Am erica last year, will now be known as Imperial Savings of Newport-Pasadena . community affair• that has b e e n characteristic of the association since its founding." Other directors will be Jack H. McDcvlald, president of the parent company, and Ralph P. Maskey and Walter S. Spicer, Newport Beach busi- nessmen. Ne~p;rt 8fl~ J\linnlng :~· ers · purautd a "cbiclcen-or-eg"· argu- . ment for mor• tharr 111 bour -1bursday night before yotin& '-2 to preione an area of Harbor VfeW HIUt prior to incorPota· ti on. The d e b a t e on prezoning centered around the fact fhe area is split by the boundary line between tl}e Newport-Mesa Unified Scflool DistriOt' on one side and the San Joaquin Elerrfentary School Dis· trlct and Tustin Union High School Dis- trict on the other. Two of the commissioners wanted the school district.. to change the boundary be.tore pre:zoning while the majority want· ed the prezoning to proceed so the school districts could continue with· talks on the boundary change. · The 356 acres are owned by the Irvine Company and are located north of San Joaquin Hills Road and east of the exist· ing Bren development along MacArthur Boulevard. Jame.! Taylor. general planning ad· ministrator for the Irvine Co .• told com- missioners the firm needs the prezoning 50 that development of the land can be· gin as soon as possible. "\Ve would like to have the first tami· lies in homes a year from this date," he said. Dr. William Cunningham, superinten· dent of the Newport-Mesa schools, sa id changing the school district boundaries would be easier if school officials knew wheth er the property wou ld be annexed to Newport and knew the timetable or annexation . Larry WUson, city pJaMing directer, Indicated that city council members were in favor ol prezonlng so that school .boun- dary negotiation could move f8$ler. Commission members , nevertheless. in. 5isted on debating whether the school boundary chan.11:e should come before the prezoning or after it. Commissioner Don Adkinson took the minority view , telling his fellow com- missioners, "there's no wisdom in tak· Ing a po!!ition that will pressure !be 15'< PREZONE, Pase ZI u .j, ~ ..... ·! ,..,:; h By JOANNE REYNOU>S Of 1111 Dlltr PUii l fafl An application for a pern\tt for in l l· story hlgh rise apar:tment wn Uiken oft the planrilng commiS!IOn calendar TbUrs. day night as commissioners m&de It clear they would not approve plans for · the tower. No official action was taken on the matter other than to remove it from the .agenda, but in discussion of the proJ>O\\&I commissioners indicated to architect Rolly Pulaski the plan was unacceptable because of its height and the residential density. As proposed, the apartment would have two levels of off.street inside parking which would accommodate 61 car1, plus 20 off.street outside spa~s. Floors three through ·eight would have eight one-bedroom apa rtments and fioors nine and 10 would have four three-bed· room apartments. A storage .area and machine room would be built on the roof. The apartment is pla nned for the site of the old Rendez vo us Ballroom. Pulaski Ray Finn Gets School Contract The J . Ray Const ruction Company of Costa Mesa was awarded the $1.44 mi1· lion contract for remodeling and expan- sio n of Newport Harbor High School by school board members Thursday night. The project will expand the capacity of the school by 550 student!. A new two. story building will be erected on 15th Street adjacent to Beek HalL and a wing will be added to the main building. A school spokesman said the contract also calls for remodeli ng Beek Hall to accommodate more students. as well as a number of smaller projects involving gym dressing rooms and lunch fa cilities. The merger is with another Imperial· owned savings and loan association, Investors Savings of Pasadena. Redvers W. Kingery, presid ent ot the Pasadena instituation, was appointed president of the combined firms. Agnes BIQfTlquist, president of Newport· Balboa. and one of its founders, will serve on the board of directors. Paul A. Palmer, the cotoundcr, will serve as board of the new company. Education Red Tape Cut Robert R. Hiekl, e~eculive vice president of Newport Balboa, will serve in the same capacity with the new com pany. He will also serve as a director. The new name was selected ''to establish more firmly the c I o s e relationship between the association and ils parent company," Heild said in making the announcement Thursday. Imperial Corporation of America, which owns four other associations In California, six In Texas, two in Kansas and one in Colo rado, has Iola! as.'>ets of $1.4 billion. It is headquartered in San Diego. Local officials stressed that the_mcrgcr "wlll not a.Uecl tbe traditional local management and participation I n .. County Board Approves School Plea By Ex-Marine By GEORGE LEIDAL DI ,,.. Dtll1 ,llM Stiff The Orange County Board of Education Thursday slashed educa tional red tape for a Tustin Marine Corps veteran and his wife allowing them to transfer from Saddleback Junior College District to attend Santa Ana Junior College -within walking distance of their trailer home. Mr. and Mrs. Lorin Grover appealed to the county board after being told by a Saddleback counselor "distance is· not a factor In granting transfers." Pleading hard.ship before trustee!' Thursday, Grover said he. and his wire could not afford the 80.mite roundtrip to Saddleback College. Ha and bis wile, also 8: veteran, have 1 combined totil of six year1' servl~ to > , their country, Grover said. "We jwt want to get an education. We can't affotd the trip to Saddleback on the $2 an hour J gel paid from the best job I could get." Appearinit for Saddle.back i!bUege at the trustees' hearing were Hans W. Vogel. Saddleback trustees' president, Ind Dr. Fttd H. Bremer, superintendent. Vogel warned that gran~ the appeal would "Ht precedent" noting . that "48 percent ot the county Is In our district and the largest populalk>n ii in the Tustin area. "One.sixth of our $3.2 mUUon budget i' set aside to pay for ·students 1ttendlng other echool1. We ·have claSSta ·that aren't . full,"1 be said1 "mcanin& that taxpayers art payln& aouble." . • .Interrupting the hearing procedure, A. E. "Pat" Arnold, county board presld~nt, said he didn't buy the double payment reasoning which he termed a "ridiculous excuse." · "Here's a boy who put his Ume In the f\.1arine Corp11 who Is now looking lor an education. I think we'rt here for only one reason," Arnold told other trustees, "to see he gets an education. He stild he can't aff~J'!f to go to S~ddleback. I'll lake his word for it. ''When you have a hardship caie lllce ·this, I just don't know why ~he college can't bend a little and grant the transfer," Arnold said. , , Vogel , noting tha t his board had granted 700 transfers for r~ason of (See .RED TAPE, P•I' 11 ' . n id an apartment would be the bnt use for the property which is zoned commer- cial. . "It Ja difficult to lm.ag'lne any commer. cial development which would be econ. omically feasible for that site," he said. "If a high density residential use ls not approved, the property is destined to al· ways be the dust of the Rendeivous." Commissioners agreed with Pula1ki on the impracticality of keeping the property zoned commercial, but disagreed with the density he proposed and the amoont of traffic that would be generated by tbe &P'Jlment. Commissioner William B. Marti n sug. gested Pulaski . study the possibility of finding a middle ground of density. "1 think you might ha ve problem s or lncompatibilit:V between the t w o types of people who would rent the one.bed. room apartments and those who would be able to alford the three-bedroom ones," he said. · Commission Chairman John Jakosky tnld Pulaski the groop would be willing to consider a shorte r building lhat occupied all or the property. "You've· got the right amount of park· Ing spaces and bedrooms , just elimlnate some of the living rooms," he said. "Thl! property is such that we're not concerned with a window on the bay, so why don't you plan on using the whole property7" JOB Goal Falls Short WASHINGTON (UPI) -Th< JOBS hirlng program, pride of the Nixon Ad· ministration's Manpower Program , fell 80,000 jobs short of its goal of putting 338,000 hard~ore unemployed persons to work by J uly I, 1970, the Nalional Aniance of Businessmen said today. Orange Cout l\'eather You can sleep late over the holl~ day weekend and wake up to find the sun shining -about noon. Temperatures will stick to a cool IS Along the beaches and a warm- er 78' inland. INSIDE TODAY Fo1 all uou censu,.·minded 1tatislician1, there'1 a full po.ge oj injormation on the Tecentl11 onnovrn:ed U. S. population figures, 1howing Cnlijornia'• elevation to the top &tat« spot. Page 1$. t DAILY PILOT N County Site Of Chicano • Celebration I Oranke County will be the 9CCnt Saturday of a Mexican-American celebration, Russell O'Campo, chairman of the e.vent, announced today. O'Campo said that although a turnout of more than S,000 is expected no violence like that which rocked East Los Angeles last weekend is anticipated. "Security police have been hired and the Orange County Sheriff's Office plans a day-long 'wa'tch' of the festivities," be said in order to avert any possible disturbance:. 1'be event will ht held from 10 a.m. to fi p.m. at Rancho Santiago Park near Irvine Lake. Attending the first aMual Gold ~ Silver Fiesta will be several leadmg political figures including Jess Ulll'Uh. DemoCratic gubernatorial candidate. O'Campo said other political figures wh<> have premised to attend Include Rep. Richard T. Hanna CO-Anaheim): his November opponent William Teague of Huntington 8each; Rep. Charles E. , Wiggins CR-Fullerton): State Stn. Dennis Carpenter (R-NeWport .Beach); State Sen. James E. Whebnore (R-Fullerton); and Wilson Riles, candidate for state superintendent of public instruction. O'Campo .said that President Richard '-1:. Ni.Ion and Gov. Ronald Reagan .have also been invited. The chairman stressed lhal the fiesta Js intendOO primarily as "fun day" and an opportunity for the Mexican Americans to meet their political repre.sentatives. " He said no speeches, rallies, or demonstrations are planned. omce holders and candidates will be introduced at 2 p.m. and then invited to mingle with the crowd for about two hours. DAILV ~II.OT Iliff iti.t. At 5 p.m., O'Campo said, poUlical representatives are expected to meet with Mexican-American leaders to discuss such matters as educaUon, welfare, housing, unemployment and the r e<:ent East Los Angeles violence. Promotors of the Saturday event believe, he said, that Mexican-Americans can achieve their goal without resorting to violence. JUNIOR COLLEGE REO TAPE STUNS MARINE VETERAN, WIFE Mr. and Mrt. Lorin Grover Hear Appeal Decision From PG!fe 1 O'Campo said the fiesta will be the basis of better relations b e t w e e n Mexican-American leaders cl Orange and Los Angeles counties and will serve as a prelude to a planned statewide gathering o( Mexican-American leaden Sept. 19 at Irvine Park. Entertainmenl will be provided by lelevisioo personalities and martachl bands. Mesan Gets Six Months in Fraud A Costa Mesa woman who defrauded a Newport Beach physician or more than $10,000 bas been sentenced to six months in Orange County jail and ordered to make restitution. Superior Court J udge Samuel Dreizen set that jail term for Mrs. Patricia Leigh Lugo, 28, of 212 Del Mar Ave. The former clerk-receptjonist also was placed on three years probation. Mrs. Lugo was charged with grand theft alter it was alleged that she em- be72l.ed an estimated $10,838 fnm Dr. Hansel D. BenvenuU, 1419 Superior Ave .. over a six-year period daUng Crom 11163 to April. 1969. RED TAPE ••• program requirements, told the coonty board "the distance factor j1 not a cmipe1J!ng factor In l!fanlillg lrllll!fers.'' Grover lndiclted he wanted to ...U in an ••accredited police acimce program,N which he'd been advised he "coold aet al Santa Ana junior college. Vogel and Dr, Bremu ~ llJal their police 1ele:nce program JrU accredited -or would be wben lbe college achleves full accreditatioa 1n November. Trustee Don Jordan questioned whether Grover had followed the a pp ea J 1 procedure outlined by Dr. Bremer and Vogel. Grover replied he wasn't aware of any appeals procedure since he had been given a "flat no" by the counselor at Saddle back. Jordan sUQested that Saddlebu~ olficlals make their appeala procedure known to ltudenta requesting trmmers and moved to grant the transfer after Vogel. speaking for . the Saddleblck. ~rd, recommended the "PPt&l be &ranted. Tnulee Dr. Dalo E. llalliloo, wllo earlier .kJ. the bearing bad moved to refer. the Grovers bad: to Saddlebadr: to folJow .tbe comet _.is proced-, voted with other .trustee• to grant the transfer. However, he s uggested the county education department staff also provide more infonnation about transfer appeal procedures to students. Another Sadd.leback district resident, Sherry Turner, who has received three transfer penniss.ion, told trustees her last request had been denied. Bremer and Vogel quickly r ecommended that her latest appeal be. granted. Jordan again directed the Saddleback officials to be sure their If.aft informed people of the procedures, noting that "the bruah oll doesn't wort In tbe lolli run.'' In vestigators said Mrs. Lugo told them she borrowed the money to buy c:lotheJ wigs and groceries "and always planned to put it back but never got around to it." Still Talking County Soldier Dies Martlra Says She's 'Clearing House' Air Force Capt. Michael J. McGerty. husband of Mrs. Karen J. McGerty, 22:11 E. Nutwood Ave., Fullerton, has been killed in action in the war in Southeast Asia, the U.S. Defense Department announced Th ursday. By HELEN THOMAS UPISl11fC~ Whether in W&:!hlngton or at the Western White Hoase in San Clemente, the wife of Attorney General John N. Mitcliell is lively, outspoken, involved - and candid. DAILY PILOT OIU.NGE COAST PUlll$H1NG CCMit,lNY Roherl N. Wee4 J1clt R. C11rl1y \'la l'ralcknl and G_,.tl Me111tw 1hom11 k11wil Ellltor Thtt1111 A. M111,\l"• M1111,Jnt EllllOI' NewJN rt -..111 orrrc.e 2211 \¥111 l1lho1 lo11l1w1"4 Mtlllnt A~dr•1n P.O. 11• 1111, t216J .,_ """• ~I M-: :DO W•I 9n S,.,.... ,- l.-o-••crt: m "-' "~ ....... llflOIOtl ll•cn: 1711J l1tdl 8;iulirY•~ ltll C.lclllM1~ illS HWlll f.I C'"*" A•I She saya abe 1' c:onstanUy aurpr!Jed at the volume of mall she receives. She read!: practically all of it, and dictates answers be sent to most letters-handled by volunteers from the Republican National Committee staff. "f imagine I get the most fascinating man of anybody who has ever been in Washington," says Martha Mitchell. ln fact, she says, "I fee.I like a clearing house." "There's somelhing w r o n g In government that doesn't provide people with an answer,"·she added. "I'd like to have somebody make a study of my mail and come up with an a11swer .•• " Mrs. Mitchell said that her mall is fascinating because "it runs the gamut." "There's somebody who writes from prison who wants to shorten his term. Then there are those who a r e complaining about the state department. Some write that their refrigerator is not v;orking properly and the kids write me all about their schools." P.frs. Mitchell says she also gets letters QA.ll Y it1LOT, •"" •11;dl " CllMllld 111. from abroad. She says they generally Hcw1-l"nff. It pu111111>n ••llT n c• ..,.... carry the m «•• "W • U f .,., 1n _,,,ff um10M tor l....,. •.adl. e_e: e re a or you. Ht-1 ••te11, t •i. MltMI, """'11..,1... lt's wonderful that you can speak." .. a 11 1n1 l'-t•ln y,ri.y, •'°"I w1111 1-She •d '"*"' "1t'.-. 0r-tout ,..,.1...,"" sa1 some of the foreign letter ~,. ~1111"" itltnt• ••• •1 nn w ... 1 writers say, ''You don 't have •-·•om of ••II•• 1:...,~ H~ 111dl. .,.,. uo w**' u~ .. , s1rw .. c.11 ,,.,..., !p«!ech in this country." T•I•••• 1714t '42·4JJI "It scares you,'' she said ln an ct...itw """""'"' u2.11n interview. g::::· ~~., ,.;::~-e~"lu='·= On another subject, she said she stayed ,,!Witt -•*' ., 111w.,or•-•• ""'"' away from activities of the women's "''' IN ~.. •HJ'lllll >PtClal ,.,.. liberation movement -but not i.--ause m!MllOI fll CIP'l'l'W!I .. 119,, i.._ Lm.: ~ dtll '°''"' ,.1111 "' ,......., tnc11 Sue did not belleve women are di.scrim· ~ °"'• MtM. c.u,....1a. "'*'"'""' "" Jnated against. °"""•'"'*"""'.,. '"'" 0 ·• -1t11V1 " ."The.y are,", •• said ·. "Job w'··, 1•••-... 1111.,., d11!1Mtioiw. t:t.llO ...,1111r. '"" iai.:: -1 ._ _________ __, wise, pn>fe,.looaJ1¥ and llDCiali,. ' "] get mail about it but I stayed away from it. This is something you have to study." As for her husband, Mrs. Mitchell says, "I'm liberated as far as he's concerned -yes ma'm. "I just like to be liberated. I don't like anybody telling me what to do," she explained. Her mail load ls so heavy she had considered wriUng a column -which someone 1t1ggested should be tiUed "M~rtha's Washington" -but indicated demands on her time make it impossible. President NiJon, she said, "loves to kid me more than anything in the world." She gets along fine, too, with first lady Pat Nixon. On a rught to California from Puerto Vallarta, Mex ico, Mrs. Mitchell - who does not like Jo fly -said "I just sat in a corner and said nothing." She said she was so subdued that at one point Mrs. Nixon said to her, ''come on Martha, !peak up." Mrs. Mitchell said she also gets along fine -"beautifully, fabulously" -with other cabinet wives. She also insisted that it was not Washington life that made her outspoken about controversial issue!. "I've been like this all my life," she aa.id. '11tis ls me. I've made the newspapen: before with things I've said." Mrs. Mitchell, who has been spending a couple of weeks in Calilornia while her husband stayed near the Western White House. said she bad been busy with Interviewers and photographers from Life Magazine for a special piece based on "A . Day in the Life of Martha11 Mitchell." "I haven't had a chance to catch my brealh." she said. "All I want to do now ts sll.'' But &he said she was pleased with telephOne calls from Washington. , She said the gist of them wu 11oh, Martha, please come back -It's dead here without you." Blind Couple Saved .-• •• •• ' Coast Riptides ~weep Pair Out to Sea ·' ··-TmcberoUI rlplldea swept the Orange Cout detplt< amall IUrl Thursday, puJUns two yolllli Loa Angeles County resldents out into a sea of salt water and darkneu. "I knew we were far out when we couldn't touch bottom anymore," said Steve Fort, 24, of Bell Gardem. Fort and Mary Otten, 17, of San Gabriel, remained amazinaly c a l m although they wer< adrift :11111 yards offshore from Huntington State Beach. They are blind. "They were very relaxed," said State Llfeguard Mel Tubbs, 22, who pilots the rescue boat, Surf Watch. From PG!fe 1 DINNER ... tremendous blow to the economy of the rest of the contiJtent." He apologized for being so terlOUJ 1n the midat of fesUvlty, but said be had already distributed copies of the remarks to the press. An impressive array of mllitary planes :and smartly dressed color guards from all four branches of the service greeted the two Presidents at the naval air station. President Ordaz was honored by a 21- gun salute and a tour of the giant base, then accompanied his host to the historic Hotel del Coronado. Many Mexicall! crossed the border and bridge and ferry tolb were reduced for the occasion. The four.course, black-tie dinner was served on gold-rimmed plates flown in from the White House. It featured prime beef from Nebl'aab, sea bass from Mexlco1 red and white wine and champagne, pl111 a.dessert of ice cream and strawbenies. Fifly-1!1.IJ: Mexican dancers from Guadalajara, in blight, native costumes, danced before the Wb course waa aerved. Nixon and Diaz Ordaz were seated beside each other at the table, with John.!IOD and his wife Lady Bird at the end. Otber bead table guests were Mrs. Nixon, Mrs. Guadalupe de Nasta, Diaz' daughter who stood in for her ill mother, and California Gov. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan. The White·House managed to preserve Us tradition ot having waiters serve at state dinners, despite the protests of wailresles at the hotel who felt they were edged out of their jobs. Excessive Smolte · Found in Car A Costa Mesa policeman who stopped a car for emitUng ei:cessive smoke early today alleged he found excessive smoke o.n the inside too, but not the kind that causes smog. Patrolman Dennis L. Hossfeld smelled a familiar, weedy aroma about 3:15 a .m. when the driver rolled down his window on Harbor Boulevard at Princeton Drive, Randy T. Ziesenis, 22, and Carl J. Werner, 20, both of 1219 Huron Drive, Santa Ana, were arrested and booked into city jail on charges or possession of marijuana. ti ' f ~ i, ~n ~"'" CHINA "The first thing they asked was bow far out they were,'' added Tubbs, of Balboa. Tubbs maneuvered the boat closer to the blind swimmers -who had been pulled out from shallow water -and Ufeguard Jon Campbell plunged in to make lhe rescue. Campbell, 22, fastened rescue tube. around the pair and only then discovered that they were sightless. "I wish all the people we rescue were as calm as those two," remarked Tubbs. Not everybody among the 25 swimmers rescued from rip currents Thursday were calm. Campbell was trying to guide the blind rescues when two glrls and a boy 100 Yards, further towarli shore panicked and began screaming for help. He had to leave Fort afloat In his inflated rescue tube and swim to the ald ol the panicked bathers, who were Jn a · "'; worse situation because they were ·!t figh_ting the sea. ~~ Aid~d by a third lifeguard, Rick ·~· Rambaud, the team wa.s able to haul in . ~.-;:. all five swimmers. ..~ Huntington Beach city lifeguards said ::::,: they were surprised to log only nine .::~. rescues for a summer day, but added .. .:;:;: activity was quite low. ..~ :;:: 350 Switch -~ .... Ass,emblyman Criticizes :J!! ·""· Priest's GOP Boost :~ :..;,. ·$' Ole Roman CalhoJic usemblyman Is condemning a plan ja wh ich more than one-third of Orange County's parishes are banding together to protest t he Democratic Party's blanket views on abortion. The Rev. Michael Collins. pastor of St. Barbara's C~ch In Santa Ana. is leading lhe campaiga to have Catholic Democrats re-register as Republicans. The prote9t agaiJ1st the party's 1970 platfonn calling for repeal of all state Jaws restricting abortions began last Sunday, as Father Collins issued his call. About 350 of the faithful decided they'd rather switch -and fight. AnsWering the call Father Collins Issued from hia pulpit In eacb ol eigbt OCC Enrollment Climbs by 20% Day enrQ:llment at Orange Coast Col- lege already has climbed 20 percent over last year with registration to continue through Sept. 18. At midwee~. 7,854 students were en- rolled compared to 6,532 registered last year. Anothtr 7,100 evening students have been reiistettd with a large open reg. istration day still scheduled for Tuesday from 6 to 8:30 p.m. RegistraUon for night classes will close Sept ~. vacancies per. mitting, a college spokesman said. Last year, 7,400 evening students were registered at this time, From Page 1 PREZONE ... schools Into making a decision." Commissioner Gordon Glass proposed t:he commission approve prezon ing but recommend the city council take no furth- er steps in the matter until the school boundary queet.ion has been settled which 1s l'Alat the planners finally did. --· ··~ ' ' i I I ·~ masses, 14 or the 39 Catholic churches In · ~ the county will have deputy votiq ... registrars present this Sunday. .. They will 1101, however, urge the ·7 change as Father Collins did . ~ The Republican Party estimates most of its 200 registrars will be kept busy. ·~ Assemblyman Joe A. Gonsalves (D-La •.!- Mirada) is criticizing the movement ;~, begun by Father Collins, and first to\{ .~. the priest so by letter. Gonsalves, a Catholic and father of ·:· nine sons, says the registratio• switch t.1 . .::; grossly unfair to Democrats who are ~ :: anti-abortion. -::; He also poiat.t out many Republicans ":~ ~ favor relaxation of abortion laws, saying the viewpoint is more personal and moral that patently political. Gonsalves voted against California's 1967 Therapeutic Abortion Law and vows to oppose any additional prir abortion legislation. "lt would be wiser and more effective to attack those individuals who support anti-family laws," the La Mirada legislator said. "May I suggest, Father, that you tura your efforts to convincing these individuals that aborting hwnan life 11 mt an answer to our social and ecological problems," he continued. ,~ The protest generated by FaUier ; Collins was sparked after the DemocraUc Party Convention Aug. JS in Sacramento . that led tb the abortioJ!I stand. .. Catholics consider abortion a mortal sin In all but several e1t.ceme cases. Barbecue Scheduled By Newport Chamhr.r A "Let's Get Acquainted" party will be sponsored hy the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce Sept. 16 at 6 p.m. Jn Bommer Canyon on the Irvine Ranch. The seventh annual event this year will • feature a barbecue ""·ith • an the trim- mings," and is open to members of the chamber and their guests. 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Finish it wuhable, colorfast, stain resiacaat. P11in1 D1p1. LONG llACH HI S.0121 Ol.YMl'K & IOTO AH 1·5211 OlANOI .a7·2100 POMONA NA f ·51f 1 SANTA MONICA IJl 4.tn1 SOUTH COAST Pt.AJA J40 1111 follANCI 542-1S11 PASADINA tl1·1211, 351°4211 ,.co wr 1-42t2 l &HTA ANA Kt 7·3>71 IAHl'A fl Sl'llNOS '44·1011 0 Satisfactlan Guaranteed or You r Money lack'' VALLIY JIO 1-14t1, tl4•llM VllMONT PL f·191t \ ' l°1 . :.. • • • • ·~ ~ -• . . • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Ha ·sty Action by LAFC It's mighty unusWll to complain about a govern· mental body acting with too much speed. · But we \Vonder If Orange County's LocaJ Agency Format-ion Commission (LAF€) really needed to be· in such a hurry in approving a proposal for annexation of 177 acres owned by Collins RBdio Company to the city of Ne\vport Beach. Something might have been gained by \vaiting a shOrt period. Basically, the picture is this: Collins owns this key indu strial plot on MacArthur Boule.vard west of Orange County .1\irport. Both Collins and Newport Beach city officials think it would be a good idea to make it a part of the cilY of Newport Beach. But the Irvine Company -along with University of California officia1s and nearby residents -feel the Collins property more properly belongs in the new eity of Irvine. Some nearby ind'ustrial property is already in~New· port Beach and other land on the other side of the air· port has been aMexed to Costa Me sa. The rest the Irvine. Companr would like to retain for the proposed new city. After hearing arguments from both sides, LAFC directors voted 4-1 in favor of the annexation. At this point, that seems to be the direction the, prqperty wit.I go, although Irvine has pledged to figfit' the dl!cision in the courts. Without judging whether the LAFC vote was right or wrong, it would appear that the hearin~ could easily have been delayed for two months in order to assess more properly the role the city of Irvine will play in Orange County. Hearings and explanations of the city of Irvine plan are schedul ed in .November. Until then, no one -not the LAFC, not the Board of Supervisors, not Collins Radio -can really weigh all of the factors that enter the annexation decision. The Irvine Comp@}', university administrators and residents who live ob Unincorporated portions of the lrvine Ranch are keenly interested, of course, in pro- tecting an industrial tax base for a city that may some day nlimber more than 400,000 \,opulation. Collins and Newport officials, on the other P.and, feel that !be de- cision is theirs alone to make a1! that the Irvine yom· pany really has no say in the ma,tter. ! We don't really know the meitlts of either arj(ument. Uut we suspect the LAFC would have been in a better pasl tion to make a judicial appraisal of the issue. if the decision had been withheld until after the city of Irvine plans bad been unveiled. Two months isn't that long a wait. Now: a Lon g Bus Ride Whatever the total story is behind the decision to bu s University Park students to Mission Viejo, at an extra cost of $5,000, it smacks of a di smal lack of ad· vance planning and coordination. Whe n Tustin Union High School DiStrict officials made the decision last week, P rincipal Robert Bosanko of Mission Viejo High School was taken aback. He said he had no previous indication from the school board that his school was even being considered. Two weeks earlier, District Supt. William B. Zogg bad said he expected the University Park students would attend Tustin High School , which is closer to University Park. The University Park students must go somewhere because their own school is not complete. School of· ficials said they thought it would be ready by Septem· ber. Construction officials point out that it was not due to be ready contractually until Dec. 10. Add to this a strike by she et metal workers some time a~o. \Vhich should have alerted school officials. Now both University Park and Mission Viejo youngster~ face double sessions. Tustin youngsters do n?t: Ag_gr1eved parents ~all it a hometo\.\•n political d~ c1s1on. 1n favor o_l Tustm. Even giving the board the ben_ef1t of doubt, 1t showed bad planning and communi· cation. N ~ Liberal• Flubbed Law and Order Issue In Defen.se Humphrey's Big Discovery Of Police Helicopters THE UBERAL CONCEPT of the citizen concerned by the lack of law and order was a fat-headed know-nothing sitting in his undershirt sipping beer and bleating about law and order because be hited blacks, welfare clients, and long hairs. ihe concerned citizen on the law and order issue was regarded as a Wallaceile, or a Bircher, or one of those ugly Americans who liked Nixon because he hounded the .Communists. Thus it was that Attorney General John ?i1itche11 and Vice President Agnew in -------q Wilsoii '\ lo the Senate in a community and state where bombings have wrecked public facilities and bomb threats drove 17,000 baseball fans from the stands. BUT HUMPHREY, released for nearly two years from the Washing t on atmosphere to live in an academi c climate with its share of violence, has come to realize bow necessary law and order is in making liberal progress. It is the basic essential. Liberalism is a fonn or moderation and it cannot eve n exist in a disorganized society. '11le concern over Jaw and order is as pertinent, perhaps more so, for open-minded, progressive, humanitarian, non-racist, re formist people as for the under-:educated white c o n s t r u c l i o n worker trying to· protect his own concepts of how life ought to be lived. That is the Humphrey discovery and the fact 'that he made it was not unrelated to his campaign for reelection Nor is it unrelated that Minneapolis elected a former policeman as mayor on the law and order issue, nor that the University of Minnesota where Humphrey taught is one of lhe Big Ten centers of violent student revolutionism along with Michigan State. IF HUMPHREY HAD stated hls position during the presidential campaign so eloquently and convincingly as he did recenlly at the American Bar Association meeting he might easily have overcome the fractional margin by which he was defeated for President, con1idering ltie way things were going in the last 10 diys or the campaign. And if he is now elected as senator from Minnesota the Senate will acquire an arftculate spokesman for liberals who belatedly realize that on law and order their interest lies foursquare with the hard hats. Th is is the big political fact of 1970. Law and order is not a racist cause or rode phrase. It is not a matter of political id eology in the democratic sense. It is not the fetish of reactionary conservatives. BUT rr IS A COMMON concern running through every level of society, black and white, rich and poor, liberal and conservative, racist and non-racist; everywhere, that is, except among the student extremist.. and their faculty mentors and the black and white terrorists. Pacific: Our Obligations President Ferdinand Marcos ~f the P hi lippi nes said Japan would "ultimately" be oompelled to take (Iver ~reservation of international law and order in the Pacific and in Asia. We have no rneasure for .. ultimately." but Premie( -Sato of Japan rejected "the fllaroo view. saying his people would not support it. Yet it is an in. teresting view. sncl invites an estlmate of the American obligation and capa. bility in the Pscifi c world at this time. It Is a historical e5timate and one is ~t Uberiy 10 dlfh•r from It. In part or in whole. On the. long \'ie\O.\ say since 1900, the American people and leaders were taken by surprise when the Japanese ...... ~ Friday, September 4, 1970 Thf editoricll pogt of &he Dail11 Pilot tttki to inform and rlim- rdote f"taderi by P"tStntfng thi.s ntwspaper's opinions and com- JMRWJI ml topia Of intt'f"tSt and 1ignffi-C011ct, by provid;ng o f0t'l'f11 /or the t%pTtS$ion of our rtadtr.t' opfnfom, and b11 presdcMo tht dWtrse t.'itw- poinu of ln/0rmtd obstrvtr1 and qlOU""'" on topic• of th< day. Robert N. Weed. l'Obll1her in 19'11 attempted to seize military con· trot of the Pacific world. The challenge was so exigent, the American people and their leaders were forced to meet and overcome it. They did so, at an immense cost of life and treasure. Having achieved their aim, they faced a duty to themselves and the world to insure that such an aggression did not recur in l'isible time. Over a quarter-eenlury thi!I ai1n has been met, but if it will stand for another century, we do not )<now. A VITAL PART of this obligation ls that the Japanl'!'ie, an energetic and coml)(?tent people, should live in pericc and fretdom against any other people ~·ho would disturb them. So far as concerns Pacific waters, the United States can police them while it retains its air and naval prre.minence. The Asian land mass is another matter altogether. Unfortunately, American leaders in- terpreted Pacific security to include the land mass. A brief war in Kore.a may have been justified by Korea·s proximity to Japan, A protracted war in Indochina Is not ju!ltifie<l. by any lntelllgcnt and p~rlent view or our Pacific obligation. ,,1e second v"ar has become 11 Lrap, l)nd er:trlcation from It Is proving ex· tremely difflculL , This war Indeed Is root~ ln an hi:Rorical delusion. and diverts us from our primary role In the Sf'Cur\ty of the Paci fic areri. \Yhm we can escape from it (which we now know Is ncce&sitous to our destiny), wluil remaJns of the Pacific security obligation to whic!I we must revert ? •. FIRST, THE CO NT I N U I NG in· violability of Japan, a ric!I nation at present unarmed . She is confronted across narrow seas by the Soviet Union at t.be north and Red China at the west. Any nuclear or other atta ck on her must bring our immediate in· tervention in our own imperative interest. Second, Australia , a small but ifR. portant continent inhabited by friends. Inviolability of Australian soil is a man- date on us. 'Ille same is true of the vast Pacific island world, down to the sma llest rock and up to the Asian littoral. This inclu des the Ph ilippin<"s and the lndonesian archipelago nanking Australia. Thi s area is su bject to political change in the next 25 to 50 years. Mao will be g11ne, which is all we can know. We should try to persuade the Chinese of our true role ir we can. but H "'e can't, !he alternative can never be a land war in Asia, which we cannot win. Dear Gloomy Gus: The Newport·~!esa UnUied School District is already topheavy ~'ilh adnlinistrators -~nd stlll ~nother has recently been ndded. We now have assistants to I.be assistants ! -J. H. H. f~h. l!Nfvr• l"*llKtt nMMt• '"""' ...i --r111 "'°'' tf t1!t •twtNHr, '-"!• fffr "' _.,. " OIMmr •"" Deil't Pl"''· t'.,. _.. ~ ~~ ''~';J'N'- f ·~ . .#, ' ' <) : .~ iUJOi, . ,..~,~ ' '"' ' .. .... \.~ ............ ~ ... . .J To the Editor: Would you be so kind as to convey my best regards, and the following lo those "'!lo complain about police helicopters: I wonder if it has ever occured to them sitting snug in their living rooms watching TV and grousing about the no~ they have to endure from a police hehcopter overhead, that the officers in that machine may be following a robber, a bold·up man, or a kidnaper, and directing the ground patrols as to his course so that they can effect a capture. Or that the officers up there may be using the wide view the helicopter provides to search for a lost child or any other person w!lo mu.st be found. OR. THAT THEIR spot searchlight may be plnning down some housebreaker or someone who has committed an assault, so that the officers in patrol cars can make the arrest. And don't forget that there have been times when these officers have used their hellcopter on errands of mercy, such as the fast pick-up and transfer of a choking child to a hospital. I am sorry that this is too much for these people to bear. Personally 1 thank God that we have such officers and such equipment avaJlable for the protection or our community. P. F. BAINES Lettrn Jf"cnn f"ta4tf"1 art wtlcomt. Normally writer1 should conuty thtir meuage.t in 300 word& or less. Tht f"ight to oondtmt ltttns to fit space or t ltmfnot1 Ubt l U reserved. AU Je~ ttrs must inchtde rignature and mail- ing addrts1, but namta may bt with· lletd on reque,;t if 1uffident f"t<Uon is apparent. Poe tru will not bt pub- lishta. Water, Water Press Comments l ' u• Lancaster J\1agatine: "\Ve Amertcans use over 250 billion gallons of water dally. II. takes two to 20 gallons to shave. five to 50 to wash dishes and 600,000 to produce a ton of synthetic rubber! (.)ur need(!: are expected to double by 1975. and a 'shortage of pure 'A'ater may very well curb our country's economic growth." Tbe Tru mpeter Magatlne: "As late as 1920 (lhe first year the U.S. Depart· ment 0( Agriculture Jssued (lfficial riguresJ, 23.4 percent of our take.home pay would have been rcquirtd to feed our famlly. Today, thanks to modem food distribut ion and m<'rcha ndislng, our food tab is only 16.5 percent of our spendable income." • low1 Public Service Company Bolletifl: "One of lhe important ret1son$ why your car's tires have treads with grooves Is lha t they let water run through when you brake on wet pavtment instead or pushing the water ahead of the tires. \Ylthout grooves, the c11r would &tart to 'hydroplane.' resultiOf; in loss of driver - control and car stability. • ------- KILL FDA PEACE 'Hold mJ1 sil:n. whiU! I Tic OJl.(}/.her bomb, broth£r: Worst Form of Dis.appointment Tboagbll at Large: The worst form of disappointment often consists in getting exacUy what you, wanted. • • • If adults eould realize the immense boredom and lack of interesting activity provided by most communities (or· t eenagers, they' would be gratified instead of surprised' at the relatively small amount of van. dalism and way. warclness on t h e youngsters' part. • • • Speaking of communities, it's hard to believe that the most affluent nation in the world, in this age of advanced medical knowledge and technology, still possesses some 5,000 c o m m u n i t i e s without a single doctor -and where the livestock get better and swifter medical care tllan the people. • • • If someone dislikes you, try asking yourself whether the dislike is rooted in something with in him or in something within you; if within him. nothing can be done about it; if within you, a lot can be done, if you care to. • • • Some men are so provocative wilh fate that they keep up a running competition with their car's gas tank , to test if they can get where they're going before they run out. • • • "Dogmatic" is a word \Ve apply to those who have firmer beliefs on a particular subject than we have; our firm beliefs are called "principles." • • • Obvious ly, our whole pen o Io g i c a I system is a failure, either a deterrence or as rehabUitation : the rate of "repeaters" is distressingly high, perhaps increasing. and as Judge Thomas McMUlen remarks, "It has been said that a youthful offender has a better chance for rehabilitation it he is not caught." • • • The highest truth for rtlJl-fl has been grasped by the conservative -that society exists for the sake or the individual -but what he fails to grasp is the libera l truth that unle~ the individual places the concerns of the whole society above his own, then both he and the sociely \Viii peri s h . (\Vann-hearted conservatism, alas, is as rare as cool· headed liberalism. l • • • I approve of the anonymous fashion arbiter who told his clients: "Your gown r should be tight enough lo show you 're .t ' woman, and loose enough to show you 're a lady." ' • • • \Vhen a married woman t!links she needs a lover, she usually needs just a few more loving words from her husband; much of what passes for sexual abandon is just injured vanity. • • • Punctuality is the loneliest virtue in the world. A Curtain of Privacy "See your spiritual adviser." That suggestion is often made to the man or woman in trouble. If you do talk things over with your spiritual adviser, is the conversation confidential in the eyes or the law? Could a clergyman be ordered to testiry in court as to what you said? Or is t hi s I n formation "privileged"-that is, protected against public disclos ure? The comn1on law, generally speaking, did not recognize any such pri vilege. Courts were reluctant lo give up access to what could be a valuable source of in· ~rmation. Obviously. the more facts available to a court, the better it could do justice -both in punishing the guilty and in freeing the innocent. HOWEVER, l\-10ST states ha\·e now pas~ special stat utes {called "priest- penitenf' laws) to change the rule. These statutes. in varying degree. grant a privilege of privacy to communicaUons confided lo a clergyman. To be sure, there are still limits on the .scope or this privilege. For one thing, In· form ation given to a clergyman in an ordinary conversaUon-not as part of • regular church proctd ure-is usually not protected. Th us, a court found no privilege In the remarks of a suspected rapist to a Tninister. voiced duriQg a Ci"19U8l en· roun ter ln a railroad station. The judge ruled that the mlni.stt.r, just like any other cillr.en, would have to tell what he had heard. NOR DOES TllE privilege apply to a clergyman 's genera 1 observatlons1 un related to any 1pecilic admis1iOn or "Tongdolog . Law in. Action I For example, a court saw no reason \Vhy a minister should not give his opi. 1 nlon of the mental condition of a woman whose will was being challenged -an opinion based on long years of ac· quaintance wilh her. But in most situations, the person un- burdening hi s failings to his spiritual ad. viser may count on a legal curtain of priv acy. As one court put it; "The hum an being does sometimes haye need of a pl11ce of penitence and confession and spiritual discipline. When any person enters th nt secret" chamber, clvi l authority turns away its ear." An American Bar As.~ociation pub· lie service feot11re by Will Barruird. ,---B11 George --- Denr George: Everybody tells me I'm overly sensitive and too quick to take ~ffcnse. They say I read insult into statements where none is in· tended. How cnn I tall if I am truly oversensith·c? CONCERNED Dear Coacemed : You've tnken the most Important step already! You've Isolated your problem! This means all you have lo do now is keep an objective viewpoi nt and don't r~ad Insults inlu perfectly innocent iUttment.s, numbskull. I I 1 r 1 j I • ' J r t • ~ I I w. 1<> i;, cl· ra tr. In M V.'l no '" W< jo: ra no sh C1 tho lrr J of wl Co . . an ' An Clll In• I ' • • Costa Mesa Today's Final N.Y. Steeks yoL 63, NO. 212, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PA(;ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, '1970 . 'TEN CENTS Orange County Joins "Substantial Jobless' List Orange County will be added to the list of ''substantial unemployment" areas on Oct. 1, the U.S. Labor Department announced Thursday. The designation means that firms in the county will receive preference in bidding . op certain federal buying contracts an4 public works projects. The county achieved the unemployment status because the jobless rate here has been above six percent for the past two months. State Department of Employment or· ficials said Thursday that the unemploy- ed rate in the county was 6.6 perei!nt throughout August, a jump of three- tenths of one percent from .the July figure of 6.3. The cou nty will become the nation's most populus suburban · 1rea to be declared economically depressed. It will also have the highest per capita income o~ any area in the nation in the category. The State Human Re s ources Department listed 33,000 per~ns out of work last month, 1,500 more than July, and predicted further declines at least through November. Orange County joins Oakland, San Jose, Fresno and Stockton as large areas in the state with substantial unemployment. Imperial County is the only other Southern California county to reach the substantial unemployment status with an a.a percent rate of jobless workers In August. Los Angeles County recorded a 5.8 unemployment perce!'ltage rate in July while the entire state had 6.2 percent. The job pic\Ure in Orange County is. the worst in eight years and is blamed largely on 10,700 layoffs in the aerospace industry during the past 12 monlhs, according to the Human Resources Development Dept. figure . Mesa of Tomorrow Eyed Parks, Plaza, Prosperity Projected in City's Future By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of t11e Dlol!f' ,lltl Staff Downtown Costa Mesa in 1985 will feature parks, a plaza and new prosperity, in the visions of men whose job it is to begin building the cities of tomorrow today. Rough prenminary concepts for the ambitious urban redevelopment project were shown Thursday by Cost.a Mesa Associate Planner Brooks Cavanaugh. • Mayor Robert M. Wilson-<>bvlously impressed-sat in to orfer s o m e additional comments on what he predicts would be a $20 to 30 milli o n transfonnalion. "I am very much impressed with the work to date," Mayor Wilson said of the preliminary development plan being done by consultants Wilsey and Ham, of Arcadia . The Downtown Redeve l opment .. Commi ttee met Wednesday night to get the same general briefing given to the press Thursday and told the company to continue its work. Major changes would occur in the downtown area if the 19M concept becomes a reality. Cavanaugh stressed the $50,000 study is far from complete and any final form would be subject to lengthy public hearing s before adoption. , . •, PRESIDENTS TALK SHOP AFTER STATE DINNER Mexican President Dial Ordaz (left) chats with Nixon (right) After F•ast Mesa Officer Injured Severel y . In Car Accident A Costa Mesa police firearms specialist was severely injured en route to work today, in a rear~nd collision on the Newport. Freeway just outside the north city limits. Patrolman Jack W h I l t I e, 43, rangemaster for the department's pistol training facility, was admitted to the Intensive care unit at Costa ~fesa Memorial Hospital. Nursing personnel said his condition "'as not yet established shortly after noon. but police said they understood he tuffered concussion, fra ctured jaw and would require dental work. The 20-year Marine Corps veteran who joined the department to run the pistol r.ange was southbound on the freewax north of Bristol Street when his car struck another. Investigation is being conducted by the California Highway Patrol, which said the other driver's name was not immediately available. Stog ie Smoking Vandals Soug ht Vandals who broke Into the Girls Club of the Harbor Area and caused widespread damage are being SOtJght by Costa Mesa police today. They may be a little green around the gills. WhOtlvcr entered the clubhouse at 1815 Anaheim Ave., ate copious amounts cf candy .and 11:moked several cigars, lnvestlg3ors said. The cij:ars Vt'erc not on sale lhcre. Assemblyman Criticizes Priest's GOP Boost 011e Roman Catholic assemblyman Is condemning a pla n in which more than one.third of Orange County's parishes are banding together to protest t he Democratic Party's blanket views on aborlion. The Rev. Michael Collins, pastor of St. Barbara's Church in Santa Ana , is leading the campaigR lo have Catholic Democrats re-register as Republica ns. The protest agai11st the party's 1970 platform calling for repeal of all state laws restri,i:ting abortions began last Sunday, as Father Collins issued his call. About 350 of the faithful decided they'd rather switch -and fight. Answering the call Father Collins Issued from his pulpit In each of eight masses, 14 or the 39 Catholic churches in the county will have deputy voling registrars present this Sunday. They wUI not, however, urge the change as Father Collins did . The Republican Party estimates most of its 200 registrars wlll be kept busy. Assemblyman Joe A. Gonsalves ([)..La 1'-1irada) is crillctz.ing the roovement begun by Father Collins, and first told the priest so by letter. Gonsalves, a Catholic and father of nine sons, says the registratioR 1wltch Is grossly unfair to Democrats who are anti-abortion. He also poi~ts out many Republicans fa vor relaxation of abortion laws, saying the viewpoint is more personal and moral that patently political. C'rnnsAlvcs voted agaln~t Celifornh1's 1967 Therapeutic Abortion Law a.nd vows to oppose any additional pr~ abortion legislation. "lt would be wiser and more effective to attack those individuals who support anti-family laws," the La Mirada legislator said. "~1ay t suggest, Father, that you tur1 your efforts to convincing t he s e individuals that aborting human life is oot an answer to our social and ecological problems," he continued. The protest generated by Father Collins was sparked after the Democralic Party Convention Aug. 15 in Sacramento that led to the abortioR stand. Catholics consider abortion a mortal sin in all but several extreme cases. Nudie Arrested Des pite 'Cover' Another nude dancer at Costa t.1esa's Firehouse bar was taken to jail Thursday night, after allegedly st.raying too near a patron while doing her torrid thing. The law says six feet is minim um. Cynthia L. Drey, 23. of Tustin, was booked on charges of lewd conduct and released on $625 bail , despite the fact she had wom a loin cloth-type veil. Vice orflcers said she had ·u on sideways, Judging the precise distance between the dancer and tilt patron 's face was no problem, they added, since he lit a match at that point. Miss Drey escaped unsinged. Next step in the process-now under way, with a report due soon-is a study on just what it would co9t to accomplish the job and methods of finance. committee members · heard a report from consultant Dale Beland, prepared by Economic Research A s s o c I a t e s , Wednesday on what market merchants will be dealing with 15 years from now. The ERA prediction is that 600,000 IS.. CONCEPT, Pa .. Z) State Dinner . ' By Nixon Part. Pomp, Power .... . nd CORONADO -Pomp, power a pageantry wu the theme of the day a• l>resldent Nlxon hosted M e :1 I c a n President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz at a ma gnificent state dinner \hat finally wound up in the wee hours or today. The chief executive accompanied the Mexican head of state to Chihuahaua - his version of Air Force One -parked at Nortr. Island Naval Air Station. Oigni taries and dishes from both nations mingled at the three-way exchange of friendship , which included former president Lyndon B. Jolmson. A motorcade and parade wound through a crowd of 112,000 who came to lht: small navy town lying in sight of the Mexican border. . President Nixon personally shook hands with the 660 VIP guests durin g the gala dinner. Gaiety prevai led from the hors d'ocuvres through the petit fours, except for one solemn note sOUnded in a warning by Preside nt Ordaz. He said an i n creasi ng trend or protectivism in U.S. trade circles is discouraging to neigh bors south of the border and could spell economic disaster for Latin American nations. "There is true alarm in the countries of Latin America because in the United States protectionist tendencies seem to be gaining strength," he said. "Should they prevail, there will be a (See DINNER, Pa&e Z) * * * Yorty, Envoy s To Meet Nixon In San Oemente Back rrom his successful state dinner, President Nixon met in San Clemente today with Mayor Sam Yorty of LoS Angeles, a. high German official and two diplomats. · Nixon turned his attention to the Far East and Middle East in half hour sessions with mnry Swank, am bassador· designate to Cambodia and L. Dean Brown, ambassador-designate to Jordan. Jt was b!:lieved that Nixon and Brown concentrated on the uneasy cease fire tn the Middle £ast as Israel demanded U.S. action to remove SAM missiles sites placed near the Suez Canal. Both Yorty and Rainer Bardel, leader of the opposition Christian Democratic Party In. West Germany. chatted with Nixon In separate appointment!. Al~h the President Thursday offered further compromises to get his H.1 billion family assistance program out or committee, he failed to · gain any assur ances from I.he reluctant Senate Finance Committee. The Presidential party will leave San Clemente during the holldaiy weekend for Washington D.C: where the President will host a Labor Day dinner for top labor lcader1. • • The county's rate of unemployed a year ago was only 4.3 perce.n t. In contrast to other depressed areas In the state and nation, Orange County boasts an annual per capita income of $3,610. Executives and 'highly trained technicians lead th list ol 'Unemployed outstripping blue coUar workers who have been laid off this year. The jobless situation has Tnelint that spendable income or about $.ll(),000 a week has been cut from the county'1 economy, according to Odessa Dubinsky, HRO's research director for this area. Higher employment this .year in su.ch fields as buijdi,rlg COrtftl:Ucti~n. retail stores, restaurant! and motels has not beeft great e11ougb to offset the· aer09:pace decµnes . . H1tlf of August's 1,500 Jost jobs came from th,e electronic field aod other aeroemi:ce firm!. IMILT PtLOT ltefll , .... PLANNER BROOKS CAVANAUGH UNVEILS CONCEPT 1'15 Downtown' C01ta Mesa! Wltti P•.J"k,, Pl•zf, Protperlty Massachusetts,· $ uillg • Airlines for Pollution BOSTON (APl -Atty. Gen .. &bert H. Quinn flied suit in Suffo!IC Su'P'erlor Court today against JO major airlines charging them with maintaining a public nuisance at Logan International Airport. The sui t alleged that the airlines are responsble for substantial air pollution and demanded that immediate corrective action be taken. The eoort was asked to order the airlines to : Excess ive Smoke Found in Car A Costa Mesa policeman who st opped a car for emitting excessive smoke early today alleged he found excessive smoke en the inside too, but nol the kind that causes smog. Patrolman Dennis L. l-lossfeld smelled a famil iar, weedy aroma about 3:15 a.m. when the driver rolled down hls window . on HarOOr Boulevard at Princeton Drive. Randy T. Ziesenis, 22, and Carl J. Werner, 20, both of 1219 Huron Drive, Santa Ana, were arrested and booked into city jail on charges or possession of marijuana. President Suharto In West Ge rma ny aoNN .(UP I) -PresldenJ Suharto of , TndOnesla arrived in West Gertniny today from the Netherlands where he spent 14 hoVrs protected by extreme security measures. Similar precautions were teken 11t Donn's 'Vahn Airport where West German Pr,sldcnl Gustav Heinemann . Bod Foreign Minister Waller Scheel were on hand lo ireet &ihart.. ( -Immediately undertake programs to modify aircraft engines with available devices to abate atmospheric pollution. -Report to the court and the attornt::r general's office periodically on the modification program. -Report to the attorney general the development of all new atmospheric pollution abatement devices a n d negotiate the terms of a program for the installation or the newly developed devices. Qu'iiin said the suits were filed after an tntensiVe lnvt:stlgatlon by his environmental task force and pollution experts at the state Department of Public Health. Oruge Weather You can sleep late over the holi- day weekend and wake up to find the sun shining -about noon. Temperatures Wiii slick to a cool 65 alo11g the beaches and a warm- er 78 inland. INSIDE TODAY For dll uou censut·minded 1t.atisticians, thtrt'1 a full pagt oj injormatlon on the reCenUJ/ announced U. S. ·'population jigures, showing Colijornia'1 tle.votion to the toi> statt 1pot. Page 1,. 9Mthltl ti Mvtttl ""' ,. Ct!"'""" It Mett.el '""' 6J CM-rtl" "' ' or"'" CMl'ltr t1 Cl-lflf'. '144 •tttavt...... U-1' Ctmk t tt 1¥1'1111 '""' 1a ,,......,. :tt • ..,,. , ... Dfftll "'-fkM It S9"11 Mtrltttt 1 .. lf l •l•rl.i ,... ' T•ltvltlMI ff ,llllllet 1 .. 1, TllMi.t'a l,41 Ho~ It WHflltl' t •• UfMkn 11 w-·• ....... ,,.,~ MlllW• • Wttlill .._ W •.• ,,.. w........ IWt \ I -· t D.\ILV PILOT C Ceunty Site Of· Chicano Celebration Sa of a Mexican-American 5 Cotmty will be the 1eene ce K>n, Russell O'Campo, chairman of the event, announced today. O'Catppo said that although a tumout of more than 5.000 is expected no violence like that which rocked East Los Angeles last weekend Is anticipated. · "Security police ha\'e been hired and the Orange County Sherifr's Office plans a day-long 'watch ' of the festivities," he said in order lo avert any possible disturbance. The event will be held from 10 a.m. to I p.m. at RancbO SanUago Park neat Irvine Lake. Attending the first annual Gold and Silver Fiesta will be several lead.tng political figures including Jess Unruh. Democratic gubernatorial candidate. O'Campo said other political fiCUrel "'ho have promised to at.tend include Rep. Richard T. Hanna (!).Anaheim); blJ November opponent William Teague ot Huntington Beach; Rep. Charles E. Wiggins (fl.Fullerton): Stata Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach); State Sen. James E. Whetmore CR-Fullerton); and Wilson Riles, candidate ror state superintendent of public tnstruction. O'Campo said that ~ident Richard M. Nixon and Gov. Ronald Reagan hive also been invited. The chairman stre:s!td that the fiesta Is intended primarily as "fun day" and an opportunity for the Me:r:ican AmericaDI to meet their political n:preaeUatives. He said no speeches, nlliel, at demoostrations are planned. Ofllce holders and candidates will be introduced at a p.m. and then iDvitad to mlDgle with the crowd for about two hours. At > p.m., O'Campo said, polltltal representatives are espected to meet with Mexican-American leaders to discuss such matters u educa.Uon, welfare, housing, unemployment and tbe recent Eut Los Angeles violence. Promotors of the Saturday event believe, be said. that Me:rican-Am.ericans can achieve their .goal without rt90rting lo violence. O'Campo said the fiesta will be the basis of better relations between Mexican-American leaden of Orange and Los A?lleles counties and will aene u a prelude to a planned statewide gatherinC of Mexiean-Americu leadtn Sept. 19 a' Irvine Part. Eotartaimnenl will be provided "' lelevilion penooalltlel and marlacbl bands. Mesan Gets Six Months in Fraud A Costa Mesa woman who defrauded a Newport Beach phyalclan of more than $10,000 bes ~ sentenced to siI months in Orange County jaU and ordered to make resUtution. Superior Court Judge Samuel Dreizen set that jail term for Mrs. Patricia Leigh Lugo, 28, of 212 Del Mar Ave. The former clerk-receptionist also was pla~ on three years probation. • ~1rs. Lugo was charged with grand theft after it was alleged that sbe em- bezzled an estimated $10,636 from Dr. Hansel D. Benvenuti, 1419 Superior Ave. . . . over a six-year period daUng from 1963 to April, 1969. In vestigators said ~frs. l.JJgo told them s~e borrowed the money to buy clotbe.& wigs and groceries "and always planntd to put it back but never got around to it.'' CQunty Soldier Dies Air Force Ca pt. Michael J. McGerty, husQand of !\trs. Karen J . McGerty, 2231 E. Nutwood Ave., Fullerton, bas been killed in action in the war in Southeast Asia, the U.S. Defense Department announced Thursday. • DAILY PILOT OllAHGE COAST f'Uat.15HING COMf'ANY Rol,ort N. Wooi f'rAIMnl Wiii f'lllllW.. J t ck R. Curlty Vll:t ""''""' -'"'-"-' ~ l ho''"' IC•t•il IEdllior Tko"'•I A. Mur,ki~• Mt,..11"'4 IEdltv c .. , ...... OfftM JJO W11f l1y S!r11! M•ili11t Achlrtu1P.O.101 ,,.o, tJ•14 OtMf Offl&M 1"wwl .._II: :n11 Wftt a.!MI -.Ulwtrd i:.,-•fKll: m ""-' """"" M""llnt*' lttdl• 1'11$ Sfl'C;ll l)lliowl ... kft C.,_r.: lO$ lo!~ IEI Ctn'!M 1: .. 1 DAl\.'I' f'IL.OT, .t., ~ldl .. ~ ... "''_,.._, .. PllMllMll ••• ,., .re:• """' ..., lfl -''" "'"""" "' '-"""-'-Iii. ,........,. .. t<fl. C.11 Mow. Hllllt'"""' htCll .,,. ll'-11111 V111ty', '""' '""111 '" , fttllNI "II""', Qr ..... CtHI l'lllMllll"" c.........,. ..,..,,lflt ,i.1111 ,,. " nu .,,_., ltl-91 ... ~ Ht-1 f4't(ll, ..... lJt .,,._. .,~ Slrftl, Coo•• Mtu, f1'Jft I I 17141 tdJ .. 311 ~ ... , .... w .. 641·1671 c...,..,..,,. ,,,., ~ c-1 f'1i•11•lfll' ~. ,... ~ ""''"' t11..,.1r1•- .. 11 ... i.1 -'"'" .... """'""-" ..... 111 ,..., 91 ~ wllllttll t...U.1 ,_ "'lltlori tf (..,,,.I -~. ~ clMt Jloltl.,. .. !I ft Ht..,.,. .. tdl .... Ctttt -..... Ce11i.r~i.. $...-Cti,llM 1W ''"'"" U,• ..-1111'1'1 .., IMH U.IO -tfll'll "'""'"' ., .. , ......... u .• """"'!.,, I • • STATE GUESTS LBJ AND NANCY REAGAN CHAT More Th•n 60G Guest Attended CoronHo St•t• Dinner l'l'Otlt Pqel DINNER ••. tremendous blow to the economy el tile rest: cl the continenl" Ila apologjzed for being '° ltriouJ In the mids! of feaUvity, but said bl had already distributed copies of the remarks to the press. - An Impressive array of military planes and mw1Jy dressed color cuafds from all four branches of the service greeted the two Prelidents at th! naval air station." President Ordu wu h>nored ,by a 21- gun salute and a Lour of the giant but, then accompanied bis bolt to the hlatoric Hotel de! COrooado. MIDY Maicam croaed the bonier and bridge and f«ry tolll were reduced fer the occasion The four-<OW"lt, blacl;-lle dinner wu aened on gold-rim!Ded plata flown In from the Wbita Home. It feotund prime beef from Nebrub, tea bus from Mexico, red and white wine and champagne, plus a deuert of ice cream and strawberries. Flfty-slJ: Mexican dancen from Guadalajara, In bright, native costumes, danced before the fish course was served. Nlxon and Diaz Ordaz were seated beside each other at the table, with Jolmlon and bis wife Lady Bird at the end. Otber bead table gueata ., .. Mn. Nim>, Mrs. Guadalupe de Nula, Dial' daughter who stood In fir bet Ill mother, and California Gov. and Mrs. - Reogao. 'Ibo 'llbllo ijooia ""l'"lOd to pr-•• lta tndltlal el bmoc wallon -n -cl-., delpite tile protata el -at Ille hotel who !tit flleJ wn ~ all el their jollo. Square Dancing In Costa Mesa Do )'OU d<><klo ... don't )'OU c»<l-dQ? The Costa Mesa Recreation Department announces beginners ICJUl1'e dance instruction will st.art Tuesday, Sept. I>, at tbe Community Recreation Center on the Orange Co u n t y Fairgrounds. New dancers will be taken lnto the claM for the second and third weeks of instruction, which runs a to 10:30 p.m. and costa fl per - Cal State Riot 'Ringleader' Gets Sentence A Cal State Fullerton itudent who was alleged by police to be a ringleader in rece nt riots on the North Orange County campus has been sentenced to 10 days in the Orange County jail. Davjd MacKowiak, 23, drew that term from Judge Jame31 Cook in Fullerton Municipal Court after being found gnilty on charges of failing to disperse and dllturbtog the peace m a cnllege campus. Judge Coot IUSpellded a 60-<lay jail term for MacKowtall: and ordered the young mllitanl to serve two years In formal probatloo. The lo.day jail term ii betog beld pendina a hearill8 Sept. :Iii oo the student's moUon for a new tri"J. If MacKowiak serves the term Imposed by Judge Cook it will be bis second ten- day spell in the county jail. Superior Court Judge Ronald Crookshank introduced him to the facility last June 4 after finding MacKowiak guilty of violating a cow1 order whlch barred him from further participation in campus disturbance!. Charges on which Judge Cook ruled Thursday stemmed lrom MacKowiak's interruption of a speech 1.ut Feb. i by Gov. Ronald Reagan. He was earlier found guilty of Bimilar offenses stemming from 1 tu dent disturbaw Ga tbe Ful1ertoD QMl'JI last Marc:b I. OCC Enrollment Climbs by 20% Day enrollment al Orange Coost Col· Jege already has cliinbed 20 percent over la.st year with registration to continue through Sept 11. At midwee~. 7,154 students were en- rolled compared to a,532 register.d lut year. Another 7,100 evening students have been regjstered With a large open reg- istration day llill scbeduled for 1'Jesday from I to ~:30 p.m. Registration for night cl~ WIR close Sept zi. vacmc.ies per- mitting, a college spokesman said. Lut yell", 7,400 evenfng studeats Wert registered al this time. ' Still Talking Martha Says She's 'Clearing House' By BELEN THOMAS Uf'I Sl1tt Ce,,.....,.., Whether in WUhlnglon or at the Western White House in San Clemente, the wile of Attorney General John N. Mitchell is lively, outspoken, involved - and candid. Sbe says she is constanUy surprised at tbe voJwne of mail she receives. Sbe reads practically all of it, and dictates . answers be sent to most letters-bandied by volunteers from the Republica n National Cammfttee staff. "I imagine I get the most fascinating mail of anybody who has ever been in Washington," says Martha M..ilcbell. In fact, she says, "I feel like a clearing house." "There's something w I'.' o n g In g~vernment that doesn't provide people with an answer," she added. "I'd like to have somebody make a study of my mail and come up with an answer .•. " Mrs. Mitchell said that htr mall is fascinating because "lt runs the gamut." "There's somebody who writes from prison who wants to shorten his term. Then there are those who a r e complaining .about "the rt.ate department. Some write that their refttgentor ii nol working properly and the kJds write me all about their scbools." Mrs. ~1itchell says she at.so gets letters from abroad. She says they generally carry the messqe: "We're ill for you. It's wonderful that you can speak." ~he said some of the foreign letter writers say, "You don't have httdom of speech in this country." "lt scare.s you," 1he: said in an intervlew. On another subject, she 1a1d she ittyed ~way .rrom activities of the women's hbet11t1on movement -but not because: sl'le did not. believe women are dl!crlm- lf\lled against . "Tbey are.," she said: "job wlte, aalary w!Je, prvf..,l...Uy and llOC!lll1. "I get mail about it but I stayed away from it. This is something you have to study." AJ for her husband, Mrs. Mitchell says "I'm liberated u far as he'a concerned .-yes ma'm. "l just like to be liberated. I don't like anybody telling me what to do " she explained. • Her mail load is so heavy 1be had considered writing a column -which someone sugge.md should be titled "Martha's Washington" -but indicated demands on her lime make it impossible. President Nilon, she said, "k>ves to kid me more than anything in the world." She .gets along fine, too, with first lady Pt1t Nixon. On a flight to California from Puerto Vallarta. Mexico, Mrs. Mitchell - ~ho does not like to fly - said "I just sat In a comer and said nothing." She said she was so subdued that at one point Mrs. Nixon said to her, "come on Martha, speak up." Mn. Mltthell said she also gets along fine -"beautifully, fabulously" -with other cabinet wives. She also insisted that it wu not Washington life that made her outspoken about controversial issues. "I've been like this all my life," she said. ''This Ls me. I've made the newspapen before with things I've uJd." Mrs. Mitchell, who bas betn spending a couple of weeks in Clllfornia while her husband stayed near the Western White }loute, said she bad been busy with interviewers and photographe.n from Llfe Maga.tine for a special piece hued on "A Day in the Life of Martha Mitchell." "I ha~n't had • chance to catch my brtalh," she said. "All t want to do now Is sit." But !he said she was plealltd with telephone call" from Wublngton. She Mid the gist of them Wl!I "oh, Martha, plt1111 come back -it'• dt1d be.N without you." -' . CQuple Saved ::: .. . , . .. ·"-.; :: Coast Riptides Sweep Pair Out to S~a . • -!' ~ r1plsm. swpt the Orange that they were slghtlesL JnOated rescue tube and swim to the aid of· the panicked balhers, who were jn A worse situation beeauat they were fighting the sea. Cout dllplte small " IW1' Thursday, "I wish all the people wt rescue were paDtng two yoanc I.GI Angeles County as calm as those two,"iremarked Tubb!. resldenta out into a sea of aalt water and Not ~verybody among the 25 swimmers darkness. rescued from rip cu'rrents Thursday were Aided by a third lifeguard. lltck Rambaud, lhe team was able to hauJ in all five swimmers. "I knew we were far out wh~ we couldn't touch bottom anymore," aald Steve Fort, 24, of Bell Gardens. Fort and Mary otten, 17, of San Gabriel, remained amazingly c ' I m although they "'"' adrift 200 yards offshore from Hwitingt.on State Beach. They are blind. "They were very rela xed," said State Lifeguard Mel Tubbs, 22, who pilots the rescue ~t1 Surf Watch. '"!be nm thing they asked was bow far out they were," added Tubbs, of Balboa. TUbbl maneuvered the boat closer to the blind nimmers -who bad been pulled out from ahallow water -and lifeguard Joo Campbell plunged in to make tba rac:ue. Campbell, n, futened mcue tubu around the pair and onl,Y then discovered Newport-Balboa; Savings Merges; Gets New Name Newport Balboa Savings and Loan Association, an institution on the bay in Newport Beach sincf; 1936, has been merged and given a new name. The local association, acquired by the Imperial Corporalion of America last year, will now be known as Imperial Savings« Newport-Pasadena. 'Ibe merger ts with another lmperial- owned savings and Joan association, Investors Savings of Pasadena. Redvers W. Kingery, president of the Pasadena instituation, was appointed president of the combined firms. Agnes Blomquist, president of Newport- Balboa, and one of its founders. will serve on the board of directors. Paul A. Palmer, the cofounder, will serve as board of the new company. Robert R. Hield , executive vice president of Newport Balboa, will serve in tile same capacity with the new company. He will also serve as a director. The new name was selected ••to establish more firmly the c 1o11 e relation!lbtp betwftn the association and Its pereni company," Heild said in making tht mmouncement Thursday. Imperial Corporation of America, which OWDS four other 1saociations in CQfamia, m lo Teus, two in Kansas and Me in ~do, bas total assets oC 11.4 b!Won. It ii beadquartar<d in San Diego. Local officials stressed that the merger 11wlll not affect the traditional local management and participation i n community affairs that bas be e n. characteristic of the association since its found.i.Jll." Other directors will be Jack H. McDonald, president of the parent company, and Ralph P. Maskey and Walt.er S. Spicer, Newport Beach busi- nessmen. • CHINA calm. Campbell was trying to aulde the blind rescues when two girls and a boy 100 yards further toward shore panicked and began screaming for belp. He bad to leave Fort afloat in his Huntington Beach · city lifeguards said they were surprised to log only nine rescues for a rummer day, bu t added activity was quite low. :.".· -.~ ... ::: ~-... . .,.., .. ..;= .· .. • ~· ::;( ~· -,. From Pn9e I CONCEPT 1985 • square feet o! commercial floor space will best meet the demand. To put this in perspective, South Coast Plua bu one million square feet of commercial floor space, thus the downtown eo,ta Mesa marketplace would be slightly more than half its aize. More more more "Traffic pat~s and cirtulatlon have been one of the most critical considerations to date," Cavanaugh explained. Great changes will come w i th redevelopment -or even without it - and l(affic engineer Tony Gschwen, retained by Wilsey & Ham, appears to have solved some problems. Mayor Wilson, who fought the westerly Newport Freeway route whose final adoption 18 months ago spurred the redevelopment campa ign, explained some Thursday. "By doing this," he said, gesturing toward the map showing land uses, green areas, parking and commercial pr~rty, "they've changed several interSections that are critical." North-sooth Oow would be carried by an est.ended Harbor Boulevard swinging east of existing Newport Boulevard, and bending southwest, down to East 17th Street at Fullerton Avenue. 'nie route would lie into Newport Boulevard again at CommerciaJ Way. Realignment of non-connected east and west 17th and 18th streets would carry crosstown traffic, with 19th Street retained as it is now. . .. ~· ~" ..... •: '"' • • ii Existing Newport Boulevard would -~· become the very center of the ti· redevelopment area -felturtng a ~~: central pedestrian mall and plaza ...... ..~~ between 17th and 19th streets. .1....,.· Conceptual renderings show a large ·~~'. triangular park or green area bounded by • Newport Boulevard, 18th Street and ... ~; Fullerton Avenue, in addition to Costa ~~X· _, . Mesa Park. -· ~-. A third such area is shown, bounded by -~ Newport Boulevard, the future freeway .. ~ and 19th Street. but only, at thi s stage, • · • ~·· because the land would be vacant. :~; Besides the 600,000 square feet ol . ~· commercial property within the ·, :;; redevelopment area, the Wilsey & Ham • plan shows 63 acres or residential land, '.:_: with 1.251 dwelling units. Parking area, heavily landscaped and planted with trees, would mingle among sho ps and stores, providing 2,621 spaces with easy acress to malls and walkways. •• · Alignment of crosstown streets and ::: north-south routes would break lhe basic area up into five individual parcels of ;~ land which. would be developed on the :~ same motif. :;· A colonial Spanish flavor . has been f. suggested. : ~ Nothing is planned at this point, but ·:-: tram systems could become a feature ot ::: the layout to move people more easily. · -· and efficiently about their bus.lnes.s. Mayor Wilson mentioned such faciliUes · -· as those in Pomona, Pitl.5burgh, Pa., and Miami, Fla., in discussing the Costa Mesa of the future. Finch Has No Desire To Be U.S. President Robert H. Finch 1&)'11 be is not altar bis 00..' job. "It sounds Irita or _,mptuous," said Finch, a presidential counselor, "but I literalJy have no desire to be president." Fi.ncb said he balked at being Nixon's vice-presidential candidate in l 9 6 8 because he has no desire to move on to the next step, the presidency. The former HEW .secretary said the vice-presidency was cli.scussed with bim in 1968 before Spiro T. Agnew was chosen by Nixon. and that be withdrew himself from consideraUon. He said be would do the same if asked to be a vice- presidential candidate in 1972. However, he noted that he is --... ~ considering running for senator or governor of California in 1974. Finch ,,. served as Lt. Gi:ivtrnor for two yean ln the Reagan administration before Nixon was elected in 1968. ,:; Gov. R¢agan is running for a second • :"· term this year and the office will be at stake again in 1974, when Democratic Sen. Alan Cranston also will be up for re-,,· election. Finch was known ·to have seriously ·• considered running for the Senate this year if incumbent Republican Sen. George Murphy'had decided not to seek· re-election. Finch said Murphy "will probably win" a rough race with Rep. John V. Tunney, the Democratic sen.at.orial nominee. ..---=~=~ ±~Rll·t==_=-- jUOSl fRu5TE-O NAME IN rURN!TUR!.' •• r ... ~-, I } ..... r i I . j I I · -. · l • ,, • -· I : I PARSONS TAii.iS Now avenoble in 9 re en ·~is wen as yenow. An e11<:eRtioool Io o k. 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VAWY PO 3•1461, 914•2220 YllMONf PL f •l911 \ I I • • ....... .. _,, .. • " l ' -.... ___ _ • DAD.Y PROT EDJTOBIAL PAGE Ha ·sty Action by LAFC It's mighty unusual to complaln about 1 govern· mental body acting \\'ith too much speed. But we wonder If Orange County's Local Agency Fonnation Commission (LAFC) really needed to be Jn such a hurry in approving a proposal for aMeX8ition of in acres owned by Collins Ra~o Company to the city of Newport Beach. Something might have been gai!' ed by waltinR a short period. Basically, the picture is this : Collins owns thi key industrial plot on A1acArthur Boulevard west of Orange County Airport. Both Collins and Newport Beach city officials think It would be a good idea to make it a part of the city of Newport Beach. But the Irvine Company -a1onR with University of California officials and nearby residents -feel the Collins property more properly belon~s in the new city of Irvine. Some nearby industrial property is already in New- port Beach and other land on the other side of the air- port has been annexed to Costa Mesa. The rest the Irvine Company would like to retain for the proposed new city. After bearing arguritents from both sides, LAFC directors voted 4-1 in favor of the annexation. At this point. that seems to be the direction the property will f!:O, although Irvine has pledged to fight the decision in the courts. Wilhi!Ut judging whether the LAFC vote wa s right or wron~. it V{Ould appear that the hearini could easily have been delayed for two months in order to assess more properly the role the city of Irvine will play in Oranj?e County. Hearings and explanations of the city of Irvine plan are scheduled in NQvember. Until then, no one -not the LAFC, not the Board of Supervisors, not Collins Radio -can really weigh all of the factors that enter the annexation decision. The Irvine Company, university administrators and residenls who live on unincorporated portions of tho Irvine Ranch are keenly interested, of course, in prl'.)o tecting an industrial tax base for a city that may some day number more than 400,000 population. Collini and Newport offJclals, oo the other band, feel that the de- cision is theirs alone to make and that the Irvine Com· pany really bas no say Ill the matter. ...1 \Ve ~op't really know the merits of either argu1ment. u,~t we ~ltspect, the LAFC would have been in a better ~sit.ion Ito make a judicial appraisal of the issue If the dC10ision had been withheld until after the city of lrvllle plan~ had been unveiled. Two months isn't that long a wall I Now: a Long Bus Ride Whatever the total story is behind the decision to bus University Park students to MissJon Viejo, at an extra cost of $5.000, it smacks of a dismal lack of ad· vance planning and coordination. \Vhen Tustin Union High School District officials made the decision last week, Principal Robert Bosanko of Mission Viejo High School was ta.ken aback. He said be had no previous indication from the school board that his school was even being considered. ~o weeks earlier, District Supt. William B. Zog,1? had said he expected the University Park students would attend Tustin High School, which is closer to University Park. The University Park students must J!O some\vhere because their O\Vn school is not complete. School of· fi cials said th~y thol!g~t it 'v.ould be ready by Septem· ber. Construction off1c1als point out that it was not due to .be ready contractually until Dec. 10. Add to this a strike by sheet metal \Vorkers some time ago which shou ld have alerted school officials. ' Now both University Park and Mission Viejo youn~sters face double sessions. Tustin youngsters do "?~· A~grieved parents call it a hometown political de- c1s1on. 1n favor ~f Tustin. Even giving the board the ben.ef1t of doubt, 1t showed bad planning and communi· cation. Liberals Flubbed Law and Order Issue Music Review Brought Back 'Barley Tooth'· Humphrey's Big Discovery WASRINGTON -Hubert II. Humphrey has made a remarkable po I I t i c a I discovery. lf he had made it earlier he might now be President of the Uni~ States instead of a candidate 1n f\1innesota for election to his old seat in the U.S. Senate. Humphrey'• discovery is that the self~ gtyled and sell. conscious liberals of America missed the boat on the law and order issue out of soft-headed stupidity. T h e y had better gel aboard now, Humphre) counsels, or the conventional liberals will miss their aecond and . probably Jut chance f<lr a voyage out 0£ the darkneM. • In all fairness to Humphrey he was a law and order man in 1968 but what he railed to aee u clearly then as he does now is that the liberal community on which he had to place his reUance h11d no grasp of the issue, and does not now. THE IJBERAL CONCEPT of lhe citizen concerned by the lack of law and order was a fal-headed know·nothing sitting in his undershirt 11lpping beer and bleating aboot law and order becat11e he hated blacks, welfare clienta, and long hairs. The concerned citizen on lhe law and order issue was rtgarded as a Wallaceite, or a Blreher, or one o( those ugly Americans who liked Ni.Ion because he hounded the Communists. Thus it was that Attorney General John Mitchell and Vice President Agnew in their identity with Middle America and the hard bats became the embodiment of ignorant, racist, illiberal oppresso rs cracking the whip over downtrodden people aeeking justice in a hard world. Liberals bled for the armed and malicious Black Panthers, cavilled over lhe crime rate ln black communities, deplored patriotic senUments in the blue collar class, sympathized with the yearnings of the campus bomb throwers. casUgated the police as callous brutes, and let their own beards and sideburns grow to prove their affinity for the now generation. BUT HUMPHREY, released ror nearly two years from the Washington atmosphere to live In an academic climate with Us share of violence, has come to reallr.e how necessary law and order is in making liber•I progress. It is the basic essenlial. Liberalism Is a fonn of moderation and it cannot even exist in a disorganized society. 11>e concern over law and order is as pertinent, perhaps more so, for open-minded, progressive, humanitarian, non-racist, reformist people as for the under-educated white c o n s t r u c t i o n worker trying to protect his own concepts of how life ought to be lived. That Is the Humphrey discovery and the fact that he made it was not unrelated to his campaign for reelection lo the Senate in a community and stale where bombings have wrecked public facilities and bomb threata drove 17,000 baseball fans from the stands. Nor is it unrelated that Minneapolis elected a former policeman as mayor on the law and order issue, nor that the University of Minnesota where Humphrey taught is one of the Big Ten ctnters of violent student revolutionism along with Michigan State. IF HUMPHREY BAD stated hls position during the ptt.Sldential campaign so eloqutntly and convincingly as he dld recently at lhe American Bar Association meeting he might easily have overcome the fracUona.J margin by which he was defeated for President, considering the way things were going in the lut 10 days of the campaign. And if he is now elected as senator from Minnesota the Senate will acquire an articulate spokesman for liberals who belatedly reallr.e that on law and order their Interest lies foursquare with the hard hats. This ii the big political fact of 1970. Law and order is not a racist cause or code phrase. It ls not a matter of political ideology in the democratic sense. ll is not the fetish of reactionary conservatives. BUT IT 1S A OOMMON concern running through every level of society, black and white, rich and poor, liberal and conservative, racist and non-racist; everywhere, that ill", eJcept among the student extremists and their faculty mentors and the black and white terrorists. Pacific: Our Obligations President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines said Japan would "ullimattly" be-compelled to take over pre servaUon of international law and order in the Pact.fie and in Asia. We have no measure for "ultimately," but • Premier Sato of Japan rejected the l\.1arco view. l!laylng bis people would not suppcrt it. \'et it Is an ln- leresting vlew . .and invites an estimate of lhe American obligaliori and capa. bility in the Paci/Jc ( '. world at this time. .A It is a historica l estimate and one ls lt liber(y lo differ ,,. l.rom \I, In oar!. or in wholt. On the. long vl<'w, say since 1900, the American people and leaders v.'ere laken by surprise wb n the Japanese --~-- Friday, September 4, 1970 The tdttonol pcoe of the Doau Pilot 1tt1c1 to inform and 11im. ulott reader' bu presenting thiJ ntwspaptr'• opfnion1 and com- nkntd'lf on topic1 oJ intere1t and tfgnffkxmce, by providing a f orum for Cllt ezprtu 1011 oj our rtaders' opinion1, and by preanadng the dlvtrst t'ft10- po!n.t.s o/ inft)f"rMd ob1t,,,tr1 and Jp01urni.n on topiu of the day. Robert N. W<ed, Publi&her ;> • l . ' Rovce Jlrier · r· ;,)~' lfA •I ~.Mi.,.~~ _J ......... in 1941 attempted to seize military ton· trol of the Pacific world. The challenge was ·so ei:lgent, the American people and their leaders were forced to meet and overcome it. They did so. at an Immense cost of life and treasure. Having ach'ie,•ed their aim. they faced a duty to themS<'lves and the world lo Insure that 3uch an aggression did not recur in ''isible lime. Over a quarter-ct>nlury !hi~ aim has been met. but if it will stand for another century, we do not know. A VITAL PART or this obllgation i,~ that the Japane!e, an energt'tic and competent peopll!', should live in peace and freedom aga inst any other people who would disturb them . So far as concerns Pacific wattrs, the United States can police them while il retains its air and naval prtcmtnence. 'The Asian land mass Is another maller altogether. Unfortunatelv. American leadtrs ln· terpreted Pacific &tCUrlty to Include the land mass. A brltf war In Korea may have bten Juitlfttd by Korea's pro.xlmity to Japan. A protracted v.·nr In tndochlns is not Justified by any intelligent nnd p-udent view of our Pacific obligation. Th(?: second "·nr hns become a trap. and extrication from It \5 prov ing ei:· trtmely difficult. This war indeed Is ro0ted In an historical dth1Sion . and diverts us from our primary role In the security of the J'ac\lic area. Whtn we can escape from it (which ~·c now know is nece"l1ous to our destiny ), what remains ' ~ -u of the Pacific secwity obligation to which we must revert? FtRST, THE CONTINUING in· violabllity of Japan, a rich nation at present unanned . She Is confronted across nRrrow seas by the Soviet Union at t.he north and Red China at the "-'est. Any nuclear or other attack on her must bring our immediate in· tervention in our own imperative interest. Second, Australia, a small but im· por~nt continent inhabited by friends. lnvi O!abllity of Austra.ltan soil is 1 man. dale on us. The same is true of the vast Pacific islt1nd world. down to the smallest rock ' and up to the Asian littoral. This includes the Philippines and the Indonesian :irchipelago flanking Australia. This area is subject to Political change in the next 25 to SO years. Mao will be gone, \\'hich is all we can kno\v. \Ve sho'uld try to persuade the Chinese of our true role if we can. but if we can't, the alternative can never be a land war in Asia , which we cannot win. Dear Gloomy Gn11: The Newport-~tesa Unified School District ls already topheavy with adn1inistrators -and stil l another has recently been added. We now have assistants to the asslstanta! ~.H.H. Tiii• It•"'" Nl!Kft ""''rr •"-..., flk"1'<1r!l'f "'"• ., fllt .... .,.,.,.,. I.ii• ·-"' .......... lli!Htltr .. to 0.1.,. '"''' To the Editor: ( have learned through experience that it is better if_ I don't read Tom Barley when he writes about music. 1 react .similarly lo a toothache. It is always a strong temptation to explore t h e offending_ tooth with the tip of the tongue to see 1f the pain is still there. On \Vednesday, Aug. 26, however, in a moment of weakness, I decided to see if my "Barley Tooth" was still offensive, and read "Foster Applauded in Bo"•I Concert" 1 would like to quote the three con~udlng paragraphs from Mr. Barley's review: "Pianist Leonard Pennario must lake the blame for the fact that the program wasn't with what could onJy be described as an acceptable renditi on of Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme or Paganini. "HE WASN'T exactly rhapsodjc in his approach lo some key passages ln this fine work and this critic was much less than lhat when Pennario concluded his program, a la Liberace, with two entirely uncalled for encores. "Those encores would not have been forgiven if PeMario had brought Rachmanino{f from the grave in rapture at lhe beauty of his offering but in the circumstances it was an affront to music in general and concert pianists in particular." What does the first paragraph say? In the second paragraph, does Mr. Barley imply that encores are only played by Liberace? Does he also imply that the encores were uncalled for; that the audlenct did not respond favorably to the Rachmaninoff? Isn't it possible that Mr. Barley's function u: a music critic should more properly have been to inform his readers what lhe encores were and to then assess the quality of t h e performance? TUE THJJlD paragraph quoted makes no senae at all, and 1 am sure that any proo{reader would reallze this. I have enjoyed t.tr. Barley's reporting on non-musical assignments but when he is given the task of covering a musical event. he lapses into flowery, arthalc expressions, employing the editorial "we" ln a manner that is most annoying. This technique does not conceal the (act that he is not sufficiently competent in the art or music to be ~Tiling on thls subject: ~1rs. Barley's arti s tic accomplishment!! to the contrary, not· withstanding. Your otherwise fine paj>el' owes more intelligent music coverage to those readers who are Interested in the art. ROBERT D. LAGERQUIST Letters from rea:dtn art welcome. Normall11 writers should conveu thefr mt1.sage' tn 300 1Dordl or less. TM right to condcnle lttitr' to fit space or eliminate' libel b rcserwd. AU ~"" ter1 mu1t tncludc 1lgnaturc and mait. i11g addreu, bur namcs mo11 be tmtJa.. held on reque1t ff auffk:knt rewon f,t appartnC. Poctrv will not bf' pub- llrll<d. Quotes Cary Grant. IJollywood actor, 01 fashion -"I don't care whether it's a midi. maxi or none at 111. The woman Inside 18 aU that matters." . .. KILL FDA PEACE, 'Hold 111.Y sizn 111hile I ric an.o/Jwr bomb, brother.' Worst Form of Disappointment Tbought1 at Lar1e : The worst form of disappointment often consists in getting exactly what you wanted. • • • lf adults could realize the immense boredom and Jack of interesting aclfvily provided by most communities for teenagers, they would be graUfied instead of surprised at t h e relatively small amount of van. dalism and way. wardness on t h e youngsters' part. • • • Speaking of communities, it's hard to believe that the most affluent nation in the world, In this age of advanced medical knowledge and technology, still p<>Messes some 5,000 c o m m u n i t t e s without a single doctor -and where the livestock get better and swifter medical care than the people. • • • If someone di slikes you, try asking yourself ~·hether the dislike is rooted in something within hirn or in something within you; U within him, nothing can be done about it; U within you , a lot can be done, if you care to. • • • Some men are so provocative with fate that they keep up a running competition with their car's gas tank , to test if they can get where they're going before they run out. • • • ' . ' . Sydney J, "~ ... particular subject than we have: our firm beliefs are called "principles.'' • • • Obviously, our whole pen o Io g I c .t 1 system is a failure, either a deterrence or as rehabilitation: the rate of "repeaters" is distressing ly high, perhaps increasing, and as Judge Thomas McMillen remarks, "I t has been said that a youthful offen<kr has a better chance for rehabilitation if he is not caught." • • • The highest truth for mp;n has betn grasped by the conservative -that society exists for the sake of the individual -but what he falls to grasp ia the liberal tru th that unless the lndividua places the concerns of the whole soclet above his o""·n, then both he and t society will peri s h . (Warm-hearte conservatism, alas, i.s as rare as cool headed liberalism.) • • • l approve of the anonymous fashio arbiter who told his clients : "Your gow should be light enough to show you're 1 woman, and loose enough to show you·re a lady." • • • When a married woman thinks she needs a lover. she usually needs just 1 few more loving words from hrr husband : much of what passes for sexual abandon is just injured vanity. • • • ''Dogmatic" is a word we apply to Punctuality is the loneliest virtue in the lhose who have firmer beliefs on 1 world. A Curtain of Privacy: • J "Set your spiritual adviser." That suggestion is often made to the man or woman in trouble . II you do talk things over with your spiritual adv ls er, is the conversation confidential in the eyes of the Jaw ? Could a clergyman be ordered to testify in court as to what you said"?' Or is this Information "privlleged"-that Is, protected against public disclosure"! The common law, a:cnerally speaking. did not recognize any such privilege. Ccurts were reluctant to give up acc ess to ~·hat could be·a valuable source of in- formation. Obviously, the more facts available to a court, the better it could do justice -both In pun ishing the guilty and in freeing the Innocent. llOWEVER, MOST stal!'s ha"c no\v pa ssed special statute s (called "pricst- penltent'' laws) to chanae !he rule . These statutes, in varying degree, grant a privilege of privacy to communications confided to a clergyman. To be sure, there are still limit'S on the tcOPf: of this privilege. For one thing, lo-- formation aiven to a clergyman in an ordlnary conversation-not u part of a regulsr church proctdur~ls usually not protected. ThUJ, I rQUrt round no privilege in the remarks or a Mpected rapi!I to a minister, vu Iced durin.& a casual en· ('Ol.lnter In a rafiroad station. The judge ruled that the lhinlster, just ~e any <Jther citlien, would have to t,u~what he had heard. NOR DOES THE pr1vilcge apply to a clergyman 's gene r' I observations, un related to any specific admission of wrongdoing. ' " • Law in Action· Fer example, a court saw no reason ""ilY a minister should not give his opi- nion of the mental condition of a woman whose will was being challenged -an opinion based on long year1 or ac· quaintance with her. But in most situations. lhe person un- burdening his raU ings to his spiritual ad· viser may count on a legal curtain of privacy. As one court put it: "The humnn being docs someli1ne~ have need of :i place of penitence and t:onfesslon 11nd spiritua l discipline. \V hen any. person enters tha l secret chamber ct vii authority turns .away its ear." ' An America1l Bar Association pub- lic service feature by "ruz Barnard. .---By Geo,..e ---. Dear George: Everybody tells mc I'm overly sensiUve and ·too ql.ttck ,to take offense. They Slly I rl!ad Insult lnto statements \.\'here none Is In· tended . llow can I tell if I am truly O\'frsensltlt't ? CONCERNED Dear Concerned : You've Uilktn the most lmPortant step already! You've lsoloted your problem! ThJs means all you h11ve lo do now ii keep an objective viewpoint and <lon 't read lnsulta lnro ptrf~ctly innocent at11temcnts numb1k1lll. ' 7 • l 11 Saddlehaek VOL 63 , NO. 212, 4 S,ECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ,, . Today'i -jtUI N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS . Dana Point Yacht Club Receives· 'Approval' By JOHN VAL TERZA Of TM OallJ ~Utt Slaff Plans for a large, new Dana Point Yacht club in Dana Harbor won "in· principle'' approval by Orange County's Dana Harbor Review Board Thursday. And if officials of the club return soon with complete data on parking facilities and other relatively minor details, spokesmen for the Orange County Harbor district forecast official approval of the plans. The club, represented at the meeting by Commodore Bob Hoyt, expects to have ils new, permanent clubhouse by next July. It would include a 1,SOO..square-foot clubhouse building, 12.000 square feet of dry boat storage and parking areas. One aspect of the club's operation will be different from lll03t established yacht clubs, however. ~ District spokesmen said that no priority on obtaining the harbors coveted boat sJips will be given lo club members. While many members already have been assured docks for their craft, boat size dilferences and other factors will mean that member boats would be spread through the marina. Many yacht clubs in other harbors have Jieir own docks for member boats only. The land for the entire yacht club will be offered on a sublease basis from the ori~inal leaseholder, Marine Capital, Inc., of llewport Beach. The club, district spokesmen said, would rent the entire clubhouse facilities on a monthly basis for $1 ,250 a month. An estimated 300 members are projected for the active club, which in recent years has operated from two tiny buildings above the harbor. Because of county condemnation or land owned by the clµb ~long a bluff leading to the harbo r below, the Dana Point Yacht Club won -. priority in consideration of who sbollld operate a yacht ch•b in thl!! new marine comple.r. The review board -which is scanning all aspects of the concessions, businesses and attractions at the harbor -will resume deliberation on the yacht club proposals at its next meeting Sept. 17 at 8:30 a.m. in Harbor District Headquarter•, Newport Beach • • ac e1ze Opposition J in Council Defers Public Beach Use By RICHARD P. NALL Of tllt DIHY P'lltl SllH Opposition, both in-town and neighboring, has mushroomed in the face of a possibility that Laguna Beach might go to t:ourt to leaglize public use of privately owned beach sands. In the absence of vac ationing Councilmen Eilward Lorr, the council Wednesday deferred action. But first they listened to citizen commentary, mosUy opposed to city legal action under a ~w State Supreme Court decision. County Joins 'Substantial' Job less Areas Orange County will be added to the list of "substantial unemployment" areas on Oct. I, the U.S. Labor Department announced Thursday, The designation means that firm s in the county will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buying contracts and public works projects. The county achieved the 1.1'11employment status beca use the jobless rate here has been above six percent for the past two months. State Department of Employment of· ficials said Thursday that the unemploy· ed rate in the county was 6.6 percent throughout August, a jump of three. tenths of one percent from the July figure of 6.3. The county will become the nation's most populus suburban area to be declared economically depressed. lt will also have the highest per capita income of any :irea in the nation in the catego ry. The State Human Re so ur ces Department listed 33,000 persons out of work last month, t,500 more than July. and predicted further declines at least through November. Orange County joins Oakland, San Jose, Fresno and Stockton as large areas in the &Ulte with substantial unemployment. Imperial County is the only other Southern Califor nia county to reach the substantial unemployment status with an 8.B percent rate of jobless workers in August. In an 81h·page report, City Attorney J ack J. Rimel had spelled out the si gnificance locally Gf the February high court decision. Although each case is judged individually , the decision changed the law and opened the door to successful liligalion to establish r e c r e a t i o n a l easements an privately owned beach property that the public has previously used. Merrill .Joh~n. owner of the Surf and Sand Hotel, asked i! the lax assessor would give credit to property owneri for loss of property rights. He also asked if the city would take over the chore of cleaning all the beacties. Johnson has his beaches cleaned. Rimel said once a r ecreational easement is established the beach land in question has only nominal value. He said he assumed the eounty assessor would have to be guided by the decision that there was a recreational easement overlaying the property. Councilman Roy Holm predicted state legislalion requiring the assessors to recognize this. Not.Mg the hlgh value and tax producing quality of ocea n !ronl land, Johnson said, "I suggest this could be quite a loss of revenue.'' C-Ommenting on the effect of publicity given the decision. Alfred Jackson of Shaw's Cove said, ''A lot of skin divers from Los Angeles just mo ve in on us now.·· He said he recently called police to remove an offensive person from hi s beach property and was told by the officer police have been briefed that they cannot consider the matter trespassing until the situation is settled. Jackson said a former protection has been lost. Loren Haneline, owner of the Seas Vacation Village, said in the past properly owners had shown remarkable restraint in not putting up fences, allowing the public to use their sand. He asked if it was lair to property owners to take their rights just because they had not surrounded their land with barbed wire, mounted guards or posted notices in required concise I e g a l l8Y1guage. Failure lo keep the public from using the land in the past is a strong element in the State Supreme Court's decis ion. Haneline mentioned that the city a few years ago was studying means to limit access to some beaches IG keep the (Set BEACH, Page Z) \ "C;· • ~·· -.. I l .. • PRESIDENTS TALK SHOP AFTER STATE DINNER Mexic•n President 0 111 Ord11 (left) chats with Nixon (right) After Feast Yorty, Envoys To Meet Nixon In San Clemente Back from his successful state dinner, President Nixon met in San Clemente today with ~1ayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles, a high German official and two dipl omats. Nixon turned his attention to the Far East and Middle East in half hour sessions with Henry Swank, ambassador· designate to Cambodia and L. Dean Brown, ambassador-Oesignate to Jordan. It was beJieved that Nixon and Brown concentrated on the uneasy cease fire in the Middle, East as Israel demanded U.S. action to Lfemove SAM missiles sites placed near the Suez Canal. Both Yorty and Rainer Barde!, leader or the opposition Christian Democratic Party in West Germany, chatted with NiXQJl in separate appointments. 'i\1though the President Thursday offered further comprt>mises to get his $4.1 biillon family assistance program out of committee, he failed to gain any assurances from the reluctant Senate Finance Committee. The Presidential party will leave San Clemente during the holiday weekend for Washington D.C. where the President will host a Labor Day dinner for top la bor leaders. Pomp, Pageantry Mark Nixon's State Dinner CORON ADO -Pomp, power and pageantry v.·as the theme of the day as President Nixon hosted !\f e x i c a n President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz at a magnificent stale dinner that finally wound up in the wee hours of today. The chief executive accompanied the Mexican head of state to Chihuahaua - his version of Air Force One -parked at North Island Naval Air Station. Dignitaries and dishes from both nations mingled et the th ree-way exchange of fri endship. which included former president Lyndon B. Johnson. A motorcade and parade wound through· a crowd of 112,000 who came to the small navy town lying In sight of the Mexican bord~r. P1 csident Nixon personally shook hands with the 660 VIP guests during the gala dinner. Gaiety prevailed from the hors d'oeuvrcs through the petlt fours, except for one solemn note sounded in a warnin& by President Ordaz. He said an increa si ng trend of protectivism t11 U.S. trade circles is discouraging to neighborYfouth Qf the border and could spell economic disaster for' Latin American nations. "There is true alarm in the countri es ot Latin America because in the United States protectionist tendencies seem to be ga ining strength," he said. "Should they prevail, there will be a tremendous blow to the economy or the rest of the continent." He apologized for being so serious tn the midst of fe~tivity, but said he had alFeady dislrlbuted copies of the remarks to the press. An impressive array of military planes and smartly dressed color guards from all four branches of the service greeted the two Presidents at the naval air station. President Ordaz was honored by a 21· gun salute and a tour of the giant base, then accompanied his host to .the historic Hotel de! Coronado. Many Mexicans crossed the border and bridge and ferry tolls were reduced for the occasion. Los Angeles County recorded a S.8 unemployment percentage rate in July while the entire state had 6.2 percent. The job picture in Orange County is the worst in eight years and is blamed largely on 10.700 layoffs in the aerospacl!! tndustry during the past 12 months, according to the Human Resources Development J)epl. figure . Education Red Tape Cut The four.course, black·tie dinner was served on gold-rimmed plates flown in from the W,hite Hou!te. It featured prime beef from Nebraska, sea bass from Mexico, red and white wbl e and champagne, plus a dessert of ice cream and strawberries. Fifty-six Mexican dancers from Guadalajara, in bright, native costumes, dan ced before the fish course was served. The county's rate of unemployed a yea r ago wa s only 4.3 percent. ln contrast to other depressed areas In the stale and nation. Orange Cou nty boasts an gnnual per ca pita income of $3.610. Executives and highly trained technicians lead the list of unemployed outstripping blue collar workers who have been laid off Uris year. The Jobless situation has mf':ant that spenda6re" income of about $300,000 a week has been cut from the county's ccollomy, according to Odessa Dubinsky, HRO's research director for !his area. Higher employment this year in such fields as building construction, retail stores, restaurants and motels has not been great enough lo offset the aerospace • 'declines. l{alf of Atigust's J,500 lMl jobs came from the e:lectronlc field and other •erospace firms. County Board Approves School Plea By Ex-Marine Nixon and Diaz Ordaz were seated beside each other at the table, with By GEORGE LEIOAL Of ""' Dtlff' P'llll "'" The Orange County Board of Education Thursday slashed educational red tape for a Tustin Marine Corps veteran and his wile allowing them to transfer from Saddleback Junior College District to attend Santa Ana Junior College -wit~n walk.Ing distance of their trailer home. Mr. and Mn. Lorin Grover appealed to tht county board after being told by a Saddleback counsr:lor ''distance Is not a factor 'in granting transfers." Pleading hardship before trustees Thursday, Grover uld be and his wife could not afford the SO.mile roundtrip lo Saddleback College. He. and his wife, also 1 veteran, havr: a combined total ot 11.s: years' 1ervlce to their COU11try, Grover said. "We juSt want to get an education. We can't afford the trip to Saddleback on the $2 an hour I get paid from the best job I could get.'' Appearing for Saddleback College at the trustees' hearing were Hans W. Vogel, 5addleback trustees' president, and Dr. F(OO H. Bremer, superlntendenl Vogel warned that gran~lng the appeal would "set precedent" noting that "48 percent of the county Is In our district and the largest popul:itlon Is Jn lhe Tustin area. "One-sixth of our $3.2 million budgr:t ts ltl aside to pay for studr:ntl atltndlng 01her schools. We -have clas,,es lhllt aren't full ," he Sllid1 '.'!"'eaniaa: that ta1payera are payin& OOUD1t." Interrupting the hearing procedure, A. Johnson and his wife Lady Bird at the E. "Pat" Arnold, county board president, end. Other head table guests were Mrs. said he didn't buy the double payment Nixon, Mrs. Guadalupe de NasUi, Diaz' reasoning which he termed a "ridiculous daughter who stood in for her iii mother, excuse." and Ca!Uomia GovJ'and Mrs. Ronald ''Here's-a boy who put his time in the Reagan. \ Marine Corps who is now looking ror an The White House ma1d1gcd to pre1erve· education. I'thfnk we're here for only one Its tradition of having wailers sQT'Ve at · re;ison," Arnold told othe.r· tMtces, "to state dinners. despite the prnt.Mtl of see he gets an educatlon. He said he can't ' waitresses 1t the ho\el who felt they weft! afford to go to Saddleback. l'U take his edged out of their jobs. word for 1t. About 3.'l of them were. among · the "When you have a hardship case like several hundred persons serving guesl!I this, I just don't know why lhe college at the dinner for lhe • visiting Melican 1 can't t>end 11 little arid arant the President but lhey only operated on the transfer," Arnold said. fring~s. Vogel, noting that His board had Said-Ann ~e. a waftrtss tor 12 years. granted 700 transfers for reason or "I'm happy they let us come In. But J'm ' (S.. RED T.\J'E, P.,. II not happy Ibey did It lb< way Ibey did." ' ' 5,000 LSD Pills Found; 6 Ar1·ested Narcotics detectives in a sweep on Laguna's Woodland Drive area Thursday night seized almost 130 pounds o( marijuana, more than 5,000 LSD tablets and six suspects. They estimated the illicit value or the drugs at $38,165. Police booked. Reginald Werkhoven, 29, and his wlfe, Janice Michele, 19, on a variety of charges after arresting them at their resldence, 205 Woodland Drive. Armed with Jearch warrants. oUlcers from Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and the Stale Bureau Of Nareotia: moved in shortly before 10 p.m. The ane,ed that they recovered from the Werkhoven home 30 ounces of huilh, 410 grams of bulk LSD, 2,700 grey LSD tablet.I and 2,100 orange LSD tablets. Detectives also raided a house on Victory Walk where they claimed. to have found 59 kilograms (2.2 pounds each) of marijuana. Patrolmen were posted around the area for surveillance during thl!! seari:h and arrests. They arrested &ix more persons for alleged drug violations. These included Jeffrey Lyman Bodman, 18, of 16152 Theseus Drive Huntington Beach, and a 17-year~ld Sa.i J uan Capistrano boy, a 17-year~ld Laguna Beach girl and a 17-year~ld Huntlllgton Beach boy. They were arrested on charges of marijuana possession. Jerry Frank Hapgood, 27, 1025 Genoa, San Clemente and William Roger Oman, 21, of La Palma were arrested · on suspicion of .. marijuana possession and possession of dangerous drugs and possession for sale. Police asserted they recovered from the pair's car 22 grams of hashish. 12 capsules believed lo be LSD and about 11 grams of marijuana. Police wfre to seek complaints today against the adults and the juveniles were to be processed through juvenile court. The Workhovens were booked OJ) charges of marijuana possession, hashish and marijuana possession for sale. dangerous drugs for sale, ~ss.lon of COCAlne and mescaline and possession of paraphernalia. Police said the arresta occurred without incident. Oraage ·Coast Weadler You can sleep late over lhe holl· day weekend aod wake up to find the sun shining -about noon. Temperatures will slick to a cool 65 along the beaches and a warm· er 78 Inland. INSIDE TODi\ Y For all yot' census-minded 1tati$tieians, thtrt'I a full page oJ inJorm.ation on the rtctnll11 anno1tnCed U. S. population fiaurt1, ahowino Caltjornia'1 elevation to the top ate~ spot. Page 15. ........ ,., C1IH1""• It CllK-1111 U' t Cll••lllMI l\o44 CMlll« It Crtu....,. tt .,. .. Nllkn II ... ~ ,... ' P'lfllMt , .. ., -" .,,..,~ n Miii .. • t Me'lla ''"" *'"I,_.. ,. Mtllllltl Ntw. .. J °'"'" Ctulll'Y 11 ll;ht .. tllllt ta.It s,1v11 ,.,.., u """' ""' lltdl Mlflltt• , .. ,, 'Ttll!MIM " 'TllMttn U·• ·-. .......... ..... ,.,. Wfflll Ntwt W ........ .... • % DAll..r. PllJJT . SC Friday, Septembtr 4, 1970 Golf Course? City Tries Lure For Hills Site I In an attempt to lurt matching federal funds for acquisition of a Sycamore Hills greenbelt, Laguna Beach city oUlcials In the dayi ahead y,•ill be trying to WQrk out a funding proposal acceptable to the federal government. Mayor Richard Goldberg raised the possibility Yi'ednesday of rounting in the cily's $3 milion Main Beach since land can be counted a.s part of a municipal contribution. The 52o acres sought, a triangular section of property once slated for estate- ,;ize ·residential development, is owned by Great Lak.., Properties Corp. The asking price Is $4 million. The Citiz.erul Committee for a Laguna Greenbelt has suggested raising the $2 million municiQal share through private contributions and funds obtained by using the area as a golf course. The plan, thus far, would be to pay off the mm:ticipaJ share in four years at !500,000 annually . James Dilley of the g?eenbelt committee told councilmen that the property owner will continue a hold on the property until negotiations between the city and the Department of Housina and Urban Development have matured. Dilley said fiU golfers are waiting lo embark on a fund gathering drive for developinent of a goU course with money from state and national g o I f i n g associations. He said golf courses are a very profitable enterprise and would be "'an enor!DQUS advantage to the vital industry of tourism." Dilley noted that 36 organizations have endorsed the greenbelt and many are waiting to donate. He said $7,000 has already been given. Street Hearing Set in 2 Weeks Objections -if any-to San Clemente city plans to rename Via de Frtnte to Avenida del Pruidente will be beard by city councilmen in two weeks. Councilmen Wednesday set the bearing as a courtesy and a sampling of opinion in the monthH>Jd campalp to change the name of tbe frontage road leading to the gates of the Western WhU'e R0tue. The hearing im't legally necessary, the city attorney told rouncilmen, but the panel dedded to bold it anyway. A somewhat inconclusive survey taken along the road showed that the majority or the land and property owners liked the new name. RespollleS from less than a majority or the residents, however, showed that most o( those answering want the name to stay the same. The hearing will be beld at lbe council's Sept 16 meeting. Military Rites Held for Proulx Private military funeral rites for World War I Veteran Harry Joseph Proulx of San Clemente were held Monday Jn Long Beach. A1r. Proulx died after a long illness last Saturday. Mr. Proulx, who leaves bis widow, Edna. "'as_ a member of Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church and the Knight.I of C.Olumbus Stella Marie Council 3772. Mr. Proulx, with his wife, operated the Casa Catalina Motel at 2fi01 S. El Camino Real. It also is the Proulx residence. Burial was in Veteran's Administration Cemetery at Sawtelle. DAILY PILOT N...,.,, I••• Hntl ...... .... ....... lndl ,. ...... ..., c .... ,..,. s.. Ck .... OllAHGE COAST flUll LISMING COMPAHY Ro\i••* N. W,.d l"">Hltfll •NI Pwbllllow J.ck 11:. c~,r,., Vlei Ptl>.Ollrll • ..., Gt!'lerll Mt""" 1ho1t1•t tc,,.,;1 EdJ- Tho1t1tt A. Murplli11e Ml""'"' fdllW l!icll•rd P. Nill ""1111 OtlllH Cou"'y Edlttr om.. C.11 M~1 ll6 Wu l "1 lw..t JiltwPOrl •110!1 2111 Well l111ioo1 llo\f....,.. L.f ...... •NclB '1) l'erftt .l-~ .... llnelOtl ll'Kl\; 17115 l1Ktl la,,lt\tltlf Mii tllmln19; a» NOl'lfl El '""""" 11 ... OA.ILV PILOT. •1111 •:11i;t1 11 c:ll"ltllflltf Wit He_,,_., lo Mli.tid ''ilV ~ """" "'' .. ...,, .. ,,,,,..._ "' ue-.._..,,, ,,...,.... ~ c .. 11 111eo.. H""11for.en s.dl .. ,_,.;,, \l'tlity, '""' wiltl - ..... I eifltl9M. °'"""' (IUI PvbJW."" ~ ... lllllr'lll ,i.,,11 ... •I 2111 W•U ll•ft!Ot lllW~ Ht...,..,, It~ ..... lJI Whl .. , $1rftt, C0.!1 Miit, , ........ (7141 441-4111 c ..... w .,,.,,it, .. 6f1·S-•71 S-C,.._.. All ~,.,._.tu T1l.,1t111 4fl-44JO ~. t'1t. en--eo.u 11\e!h"""' (..,..,.... H• ,,..... I~ ll~t..11..,1. (11~1 1"111,_, .,. Cdftf11t-1f Mftffl ,.,.... -·~ .11 ..... 1 ... w.t ,...,. ...iu,.,, f/f .,.,,.11111 .. ,..... ~ <ll •l -Ntor .. !. 11 ",.._, ltldl .i'lli (fthl _...,. C.lll«ft'-." i-·V·t'-.., ,.,,..., u ... -11J1ty1 ~ 1911!1 lut "'°""''') "''fftt'Y d11ri...11111•. si.ot """H'lty, Dilley spoke of a f&r-reathing radio Md television campaign to spark the fund donations. ';We fully eipect to have the cash ($500,000) by Chr-8'," DUiey said. Anthony Demetriades, president ot the Laguna Beach Civic League, pledged $1,000 from the league and offered a friendly challenge to other organizations: to give equal or higher amounts. In talking of the application to HUD, City Attorney Jack Rimel said that a city cannot commJt itsell to more fUDds than are available in a year's bud.gel Goldberg said, ''l wonder if the federal government would be interested in open space on the Main Beach, it would certainly meet the f i n a n c I a I requirements." City Planner Al Autry said the city I! required to outline in its application for ·federal funds the means of making funds from the city available. Councilmen authorized Rimel and Autry to work out such a proposal and bring it back to the council. Councilman Roy Holm commended Dil- ley and the greenbelt group for working up a "magnificent" opportunity and an enormous challenge.'' Oliver Qziits ' Capistrano School Post Ray Oliver, assistant superintendent of instruction for the Capistrano Unified School District, resigned Thursday. Members of lbe board of trust«s will be asked to accept bis resignation and temporarily appoint Dr. John Crain Assistant Supt. for Instruction and personnel at Tuesday's meeting. Oliver, a Newport Beach pres.ident has accepted a position as Associate Supt. for Instruction ~ Jn the Santa Ana UnHied School District. Crain, who has been with the district nearly 20 years, was appointed Director of Personal Services in December. His preserit salary is $20,295 a year, but if appointed to the new pooltlon bis aalary Is expected to be inc:reued. Dr. Crain, who resides In Capistrano · Beach, received his Ph.D. last year at the University of Southern California, the first employe of the diltrlct to receive his doctorate. He has served as prlnclpaJ of Concordia and Palisades acbools and was an employe of the old San Clemente Elementary School District b e f or e unification. Oliver, who has been with the district for several years, served as a teacher at San Juan School and principal of Crown Valley School befo~ becoming the district's dlrector of e I e m e n ta r y education and later a 1 s 1 1 ta n t superintendent for lnstruction. He served as a principal of a military dependents school in Europe before coming to the capistrano distriot. "We 've known that be was considering this move for about a month." said Dr. Robert Beasley, chainnan of the board of trustees. "But we're very sorry to see him go. Yet we realite this iJ an opportunity for him to step up and applaud bis efforts to better himself. I guess that's the way We . " IS. From Page J RED TAPE ••• program requirements, told the county board "the distance factor is not a compe11ing factor in granting transfers." Grover indicated he wanted to enroll in an "accredited police science program," which he'd been advised he "could get at Santa Ana junior college. Vogel and Dr. Bremer countered lhat their police science program was accredited -or would be when the college achieves full accreditation ln November. Trustee Don Jordan questioned wbelher Grover had followed the a p p ea I s procedure ouUined by Dr. Bremer and Vogel. Grover replied he wasn't aware of any appeals procedure since be had been given a "'flat oo" by the counselor at Saddleback. Jordan suggested that Saddleback officials make their appeals procedure known to students requesting transfers and moved to grant the transfer after Vogel. speaking for the Saddleback Board. reccmmended the appeal be granted. Trustee Dr. Dale E., Rallison, who earlier in the hearing had moved to refer the Grovers back to Saddleback Ul foUow the correct appeals procedure, voled with other trustees. to granl the transfer. However , he suggested the county education department staff also provide more information about transfer appeal procedures to students. Another Saddleback district resident. Sherry Turner, who has received three transfer pennlsslon, told trustee! her last rtquest had been denied. Bremer ;and Vogel quickly recommended that her latest appe11\ be gril nted. Jordan again directed 1he Saddleback officials to be sure their 1t.aff lnfonned peopl~ of the procedures, nollng lh1t ''the brush off doe!.sn'i work in the Iona run." • Access: Commie Plot? Lagunan's Charge Brings Council Reaction A South Laguna realdent'a charge lbal any publlc takeover of privately-owned beache1 ••openly sma ck 1 o( Goldberg said he t ~ o u g h t Rimel'• flgu.re of $50,000 to run test cases on the beach issue was much lower than what It • 1 1 eommunlam," today brought 1 variety of comments from four of the Laguna Beach city councilmen. "In view of th~ lwo cases, the council would be derelict ln Its duties 1f It didn't instruct the city attomty to tell us the rights or lbe public," Councilman RoJ Holm said. "We'd have to detennlne what the rlghts are and we should also k>ok at the other steps being taken by other cities to affinn public rights for beach recreation purposes." actually would run. -•• "Right noW, I think we should get the • ·' necessary lnfonnation on what develops I l l Eyes Big One Miss California, Karin Kasher, 18, Hayward, flew off to Atlan- tic City today to compete in the Miss USA contest. The 5-foot 8 inch blonde will know Sept. 5 whether she will be Miss Amer- ica or just a freshman at Hay- ward Stale College. Eilher way, she's a beautifuJ girl. Police Seeking Complaints on 4 Over Robbery Laguna Beach police today are seeking complaints against four other persons suspected to have been Involved in a strong-arm robbery Tuesday night in Laguna's Top of the World area. The four youths gave themselves up to police Thursday following the arrest of two others allegedly involved in the robbery. Complaints will be sought against Robert J . Catlley, Jr., 18, of Tustin; Thomas M. Thayer, 20, 2031 Westminster. Costa Mesa; John P. Kiel, 111, 19 of North Hollywood, and 1 JS-year~td Laguna Beach youth. Complaints of grand theft and assault and battery were earlier issued for Scott C. Gilbert, 18, of 441 Mountain Road and Gregory M. Gray, 19, 267 Fairvlew SI. Victim o! the attack was Durwood A. Phillips, 31, of San Francisco. He was .kicked, beaten and robbed of $10 after climbing into a camper and being taken to a desolate area at Top of the World, believing he was going to a restaurant. Monument Eyed By San O emente For Sister City San Clemente's parks and recreation commission will work out details for a possible donation of city land for a monument to San Clemente's sister city in Argentina. . The proposal submitted by Rotary Vice President Phil Ellsworth, is planned as a mearui of thanks to San Clemente del Tuyu for ll! "plazaleta" honoring this city. The minipark with its monument honoring San Clemente to the north was completed several months ago and occupies a prime boulevard area in the coastal resort town. Ellsworth made his appeal for the city Jand to city councilmen, who agreed that the local Rotarians would sponsor the monument and landgcaping for the local "plazaleta" if the city provides th~ land. FBI to Seek Police Killers in F uture? WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. HarriBon A. William> Jr. (1).N.Y.), plans to introduce legislatJon ne1t week lo allow the FBI to enter au cases where a polictmt:n Is killed 2t bours after the crime. Will iams said the l'gislatlon would be simtla r to the "Lindbergh law" whlch perm its lhe FBI to enter all kidnap catts after 24 hours on the assumption that the perso\ who committed the crime bas crossed state lines and ls subject to . federal JurisdicUoo. Robert B. Benner of 57 Lagunita, in a Jetter to city councilman Roy Holm, slated: "To condone gov ernment takeover of private sands establishes an otremely dangerous precedent." ''I caution you not to discriminate against owners of private sands. As a council member, you must be aware that a considerable amount of revenue comes to the government from t.ues on private sands. In speaking of public use of privately owned lands, Benner stated: "Isn't this what we have supposedly been flghUng against with considerable loss o f American lives? I wonder if you ever had the opportunity to see how people live in countries where there Is no private ownerstti p?" Benner's attack referred to Council consideration of a recent California Supreme Court decision which, in effect, says if prjvately owned land has been used by the general public for a number of years without special pennission there is implied dedication to public use. However, each case must be Sndivldually determined. Five years public use without the owner stopping the publi c use could tum the land over to the citiz.ens for recreational use. Whether or not the council will appropriate funds -perhaps upwards of $50,000, as City Attorney Jack J. Rimel has said -is still up in the air. "I'd stand opposed to funds being appropriated for premiptlve righ~ to lhe beaches," declared Councilman Peter Ostrander. "We can do a lot better with people's money." ··1 suggest we cool the whole issue and not get everyone riled up." Ostrander noted that the real problem Is with fences or barricades on the beaches, such as the one at Sleepy Hollow. · Following Rimel 's suggestion, the city building department, in light of the two decisions, is no longer issuing permits for construction on the sandy strand. "It appears to me, since we can't allow buildings or fences on the beach, now there is no problem." Mayor Richard Goldberg said if land! which are now private became public, the city would lose considerable tax revenue and would be faced . with the cost of maintainillg the beaches. in other cities." "l don't think anybody in Lagyna ls being denied subatanual beach uae," the mayor added. Vice Mayor Charlt(Jn Boyd said the goal of the city should be to "attain the maximum possible amount of beach lot lhe people of the county." "We should pursue prescriptive rights immediately, parUcularly in view of the recent construction of fences on our local beaches which forces the city no alternative but to t~st the legality. "The total cost that Rimel gave Is irrelevant. 'Ille cost for the individual parcel cases is rel evant," c.ouncilman Charlton Boyd stressed. "I do feel strongly that the ocea n and the sandy anl:I rocky approa~ong to all the people," the vice mayor declared. Councilman Edward Lorr, whG is on vacation, was unavailable for comment on the public beach use issue. From Page J BEACTI ••• public out. Joaquin Board Rejects Extension of Building Holm said the council's duly is to 14,000 persons in Laguna, not just ocean front owners. ''I want to know what right the property owner has tG construct a chain Hollow," he said. Holm said he had "a couple of molions" he would like to make hut in deference to Lorr 's absence would postpone them; •· 1 am not proposing any litigation at this point." he said . San Joaquin Elementary S c b o o 1 District trustees dealt their first blow Wednesday in their war a g a 1 n s t construction delays. The board voted with ·onty one abstention to deny a request for an 8-da.y eztension submitted by Harwick and Sons, contractors for TurUe Rock School. . They further voted to b'y to collect liquidated damages for the delay, despite the fact that the Orange County Counsel's Office deemed the request valid and told them they could not assess liquidated damages if it were denied. Superintendent Ralph Gates reported that the delay bad been caused by a llhortq;e of lathers, He said letters bad been received from the Long Beach and Orange County locals of the Lathers Union attesting to the fact that tbi!y were Mt able to provide the coatractor with workmen. Since the delay was beyond his control, the contractor asked for the extension and the county counsel concurred. "Let's get another attorney besides the County Counsel and go to court," suggested Trustee Robert Dam eron. "I'm tired ol being stepped on." said Trustee Ed Berry. "I move we deny the request and collect liquidated damages." The sbujecl: of liquidated damages has been one of great concern to the board at recent meetings. The County Counsel's Office suggests that a fee of $50 a day is collectable for unauthorized delays beyond a school's completion date. 'I'nmee Ed Berry stated in a recent meeting that he'd like to raise the f~ to $250 a day. District architect Ralph Flewelling had cautioned the board that it might not be Jegally possible to raise• the fees, bu( has since reported that there is no legal ceiling. By raising the liquidated damages charge, the board hopes to discourage delays and prevent another situation like Aliso School in El TGro which is opening one year late on Sept. 14. Motorbike Curb Ordinance OK'd San Clemente's damper on motorcycles and minibikes will be become law early next month. City councilmen have unanimously passed the ordinance requiring written permission from the landowner in the rider's possession -if the trail machines and dunebuggies are used on private property. The code, which be<.'omes effective 30 days after last Wednesday's passage, also rules that none of the machines can be used within 300 feet of a residential property Jine. John Gabriels of 1316 S. Coast Highway, said he did not wish to be denied the use of beaches and suggested the council proceed with legal action to secure the public's prescriptive right "in a charitable way.'' James Lower, attorney for the South Laguna Coves Association, which is fighting to keep the public off privately owned beaches there, contended th at the high court decisions were not intended to apply to Private beaches such as these. Urging the city to abandon the litigation possibility to sec ure recreatiorial easements, he said, "there was not the slightest indication that the California Supreme Court intended to. prcwide mass takings of private property without paying for it." And although arguing that litigation would not be successful, Lower called the decision "a dangerous weapon in the hands or any public· body." He said the council was ba c k in g itself lntG a dangerous corner. He urged discretion in taking private property. Holm said, "There has been a fence constructed denying access. I don't think the council is backing itself int() a da ngerous corner at all.'' Holm said later if it had not been for the chain link fence at Sleepy Hollow he 1 would not have raised the question. He said he would be happy to see the f ce removed at city expense, the owner<----- reimbursed for it and then "I'd lay hack and say lefs forget it." ) j WOST .~TlO NAME IN fl.lffNlf\f:ll: \. lllOSJ" 'MUsT EO MAME IN 'llfNTUAC ~ ··~ j I ' t ' i' ' t ,l i ' I ' '; CHINA Now available ln 9 re e n ~ wen as yellow. An flce1<lionol Io o k.. On Clispl.y now, ! 1 J ' ' ' ' I j ' ' r~ .... .., ... ,... • ~ ' I I I .... ""~ l PAISONS TAii.ES I ~ :Thrs fine collection of lobles ls ....,;i.. ~ble ;,, • mulHtude of siies !,,,.. the srMilest cigorelle table to o large <Jir,. ing t,,ble with leaves - DEALERS F.OR: HENREDOf'I -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7eJ• NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WMtclllf Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS l'-lon•I lnt.rlor Dt1-ignen Availabf._AID-HSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 .... , .. ,.,.. ....... 0...,.. c...., 140.12.6J ...,._... ___ _ .. ,_, --- I ' I . -..... -·~--~ Laguna Bea~h . VOL 63, NO. 212, 4 SECTIONS, +I PAGES f ' ' EDITION ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA • Today's Final FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, '1970 TEN CENTS . I i Dana Point Yacht vJ luh Receives 'Approval' By JOHN VAL TERZA 01 1M 0.11~ ,Ott St1H Plans for a large, new Dana Point Yacht club·...m_,.0§.nt Harbor ...-w.on !'ip· principle" approval by Orange County's Dana Harbor Review Board Thursday. And if officials of the club return 500n with complete data on parking facilities and other relatively minor delails, spokesmen for the Orange County Harbor district forecast official approval of the plans. The c1ub, re_p_resenled &L the meeting by Commodore Bob Hoyl, expects to have its new, permanent clubhouse by ne1t July. , lt would include a 2.~square-foot clubhouse building, 12,000 square feet of dry boat storage and parking areas. One aspect of the club's operation will be different from most established yacht clubs, however. District spokesmen said that no priority on obtaining the harbors coveted boat slips will be given to club members. While many members already have been assured docks for their craft. boat size differences and other factors will mean that member boats would be spread through the marina. their own docks for rm: ts only. Many yacht club1''\ o.rbors b,ave The land for the entire, y · t' club will be offered on a sublease' basis Crom lbe original leaseholder, Marine Capital, Inc., of Newport Beach. The club, di.strict spokesmen said, would rent the entire clubhouse ficillties on a monthly basis for $1,250 a month. An estimated 300 members are projected fot the active club, which In recent years has operated from two Uny buildings above the harbor. Because of county condtmnation of land owned by the club along a bluff leading lo the harbor below, the Dana Point Yacht Club won · priority in consideration of who should ~perate a yacht club in the new marine complex. The review board -which is scanning all aspects o! the concesslona, businesses and . attractions at the harbor -will resume deliberation on the yacht club proposals at its next meeting Sept. 17 at 1:30 a.m. in Harbor Distr ic t Headquarters, Newport Beach • • e e1ze Opposition J/n Council Defers Public Beach Use By RICHARD P. NALL Ot ltlt 0.UY ,i .. I llt tf Opposition, both in-town and neighboring, has mushroomed In the face of a possibility that Laguna Beach might gG to court to leaglize public use of privately owned beach sands. In the absen<:e of vacatlonlng Councilmen Edward Lorr, the council Wednesday deferred action. But first lhey listened to citizen commentary, mostly oppqsed !o cit:r legal action under a new State Supreme Court decisi~. County Joins . 'Substantial' Jobless Areas Orange County will be added lo the list of "substantial unemployment'' preas on Oct. I, the U.S. Labor Department announced Thui-sday. The designation means that firms in the county will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buying contracts and public works projects. The county achieved the 1JY1emp\oyment status because the jobless rate here has been above six percent for the past two months. Slate Department of Employment of- ficials said Thursday lhat the unemploy- ed rate in the county was 6.6 percent throughout August. a jump of three- tenths of one percent from the July figure of 6.3. The county will become the nation's most populus suburban area to be declared economically depressed. It will ·also have the highest per capita income of any area in lhe nation in the category. The State Human Resources Department listed 3.1,000 persons out of work last month, t,500 more than July. and predicted further declines at least through November. Orange County joins Oakland, San Jose. Fresno and Stockton as large areas in the state wlth substantial unemplo)1llenl. Imperia l County is the 0.1\y other Southern California county to reach the subslanlial unemployment status with an 8.8 percent rate of jobless workers in August. In an ai,,.page repart , City Attorney Jack J. Rimel had spelled out the significance locally of the February high court decision. Although each case is judged Individually, the decision changed the Jaw and opened the door to successful litigation to establish r e c r e a t i o n a I easements on privately owned beach property that· the public has previously used. Merrill Johmon, owner of the Surf arid Sand Hotel, asked If the laJ: assessor would give credit to property owners for loss of property rights. He also asted if the city would take over the chore of cleaning all the beaches. Johnson bas bis beaches cleaned. Rimel said once a r ecreati·onal easement is established the beach land in question has only nominal va lue. He said he assumed the county assessor would have to be guided by the · decision that there was a recreational easement overlaying the property. Councilman Roy Holm predicted !late legislation requiring the assessors to recognize this. Noting the high value and tax producing quality or ocean front land, Johnson said, "I suggest this could be quite a loss of revenue." Commenting on the effect of publicity given the decision, Alfred Jackson of Shaw's Cove said, "A Jot of skin divers from Los Angeles just move in on us now." He said he recently called police to remove an offensive person from his beach property and was told by the officer police have been briefed that they cannot consider the matter trespassing until lhe situation is settled. Jackson said a former prolection has been Jost. Loren Haneline, owner of the Seas Vacation Village. said in the past property owners had shown remarkable restraint in not putting up fences, allowing the public to use their sand. He asked if it was fair to property owners to take their rights just because they had not surrounded their land with barbed wire, mounted guards or posted not.ices in required concise l e g a I language. ,Failure to keep the public from using the land in the past is a strong elementjn the State Supreme Court's decision: Haneline mentior.ed that the city a few years ago was studying means to limit access to some beaches to keep the (See BEACH, Pase !) ' -[ .. ·-• -, l • '"' ~ PRESIDENTS TALK SHOP AFTER STATE DINNER Mexican President Diaz Ord11 {left) chats with Nixon (right) After F111t Yorty, Envoys To Meet Nixon In San Clemente Back from his successful state dinner, President Nixon met in San Clemente today with Mayor Sam Yorty of Uls Angeles. a lligh German official and two diplomats. Nixon turned his attention to the Far East and f\.fiddle East in half hour sessions with Henry Swank, ambassador· designate to Cambodia and L. Dean Brown , ambassador-designate to Jordan. Il was bel ieved that Nixon and Brown concentrated on the uneasy cease fire in the ~1iddle East as Israel demanded U.S. aclion to remove SAM missiles sites placed near the Suez Canal. Both Yorty and Rainer Barde!. leader of the opposition Christian Democratic Party in West Germany, chatted with Nixon in separa~ appointments. Although the President Thursday offered further compromises to get hi:oi $4. t billion family assistance program out of committee, he failed to gain any assurances from the reluctant Senate Finance Committee. The Presidential party will leave San Clemente during the holiday weekend for Washington D.C. where the President will host a Labor Day dinner for top labor leaders. Pomp, Pageantry Mark . . Nixon's State Dinner CORONADO -Pomp, •power and pageantry was the theme of the d_ay as President Nixon hosted M ex 1 can President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz at a magnificent state dinner that finally woond up in the wee hours of today. The chief executive accompanied the Mexican head of stale to Ch!huahaua - his version of Air Force One -parked at North Island Naval Alr Station. Dignitarie~ and dishes from both nations mingled at the three-way exchange of friendship, which included former president Lyndon B. Johnson. A motorcade and parade wound . through a crowd of 112.000 who came to the small navy town lying in sight of the Mexican border. President Nixon personally shook h!!onds with the 660 VIP guests dur ing the gala dinner. Gaiety prevailed from the hors d'oeuvres through the petit fours, except for ooe solemn note sounded in a warning by Preside nt Ordai. He said an increasing trend of protectivism in U.S. trade circles is discouraging to neighbor:s south of tht border and could spell economic disaster for Latin Am erican nations. "There is true alarm in the countries of Latin America because in the Uriited States protectionist tendencies see~ be gaining strength ," he said. "Should they prevail, the.re will be a tremendous blow to the economy of the resl Gf the continent." He ai)clogized for being so serious In the midst of festivity, but said he had already distributed copies of the remarks to the press. An impressive array of military planes and smartly dressed color guards from all four branches of the service greeted the two Presklents at the naval alr station. President Ordaz was honOred by a 21· gun salute and a tour of the giant base, then accompanied his •host to the historic Hotel del Coronado. Many Mexicans crossed the border and bridge and ferry tolls were reduced for the occasion. Los Angeles County recorded a 5.8 unemployment percentage rate in July while the entire state had 6.2 percent. The job picture in Orange County is lhe worst in eight years and is blamed largely on 10.700 layoffs in lhe aerospace industry during the past 12 months, acCQrdh1g to the 1-luman Resources Development Dept. figure . Education Red Tape Cut The four-<:<>urse.. black·tie diMer was serVed on gold·rimmed plates flown in from the White House. It fe.ature.d prim• beef from Nebraska, sea bass from Mexico, red and white wi.ne and champa gne, plus a dessert of ice cream and strawberries. Fi.fly-six Mexican dancers from Guadalajara. In bright, native costumes, danced before the fish course was served. The county's rate of unemployed a.year agn was only 4.3 percent. .. In contrast to other depressed areas in the state and nalion, Orange County boasts an annual per capita income of $3.610. Executives and highly trained technicians lead the list of unemployed outstripping blue CG\l.ar workers who have been laid orr th is year. The jobless situation has meant that spendable income of about $300.000 a week has been cut from the county's economy, according to Odessa .Dubinsky, HRD's research director for thh1 area. 11igher employment this year In such fields as building construction, rel.ail store!, restaurants and motels has not been great enough to offset the aerospace dtclines. Hslf of August's 1,500 lost jobs came from the electrofii.e field and other aerospace firms. ' "· County Board Approves School Plea By Ex-Marine · By GEORGE LEIOAL Of tlll OtllY ,, .. , "'" The Orange County Board of Education Thursday slashed educational red tape for a Tustin Marine Corps veteran and hls wife allowing lhem to transfer from Saddleback Junior College District to attend Santa Ana Junior College -within walking tfutance of their trailer home. Mr. and Mrs. Lorin Grovtf appealed to tht county board 1fttr btlng told by ll Saddleback counselor "distance is not a factor in granting transfer!." Pleading hardship before trustees Thursday, Grover said he and his wife could not afford the 60-mlle roundl.rip to Sadd!Cback College. He and his wlfe, also a veteran, tia·ve a comblncd total of •ix years' aervice to -·- their country, Grover said. "We just want to get an education. We can't afford the trip to Saddleback on the $2 an hour 1 get paid from the best job 1 could get." ' Appearing for Sadd!eback College at the trustees' hearing were Hans W. Vogel. Saddl<!back trustees' president. and Dr. Fred H'.1Bremer, superintendent Vo&el warned that gran!in1 the appeal would "set precedent" noUng that "48 percent of the county is in our district and the largest popqlotion i• in the TUsUn area. ''One-sixth of our $12 million budget Is 11et aside lo pay for student!! attending ()!her iJChools. We have classes that aren't full ,"· he aaid1 "meaning that taxpayera are paying aoublc." Interrupting the hearing procedure. A. E. "Pat" Arnold, county board president, said he didn't buy the double payment reasoning which he termed a "ridiculous excuse." "Here's a boy Who put his time 'in the Marine Corps who·is now lookfng for an· edllcation. I µilnk we'rt htre ror onJy one reason," Arnold told other trwtets, "to see he gets an edutall6n. He said he can't afford lo go lo Saddleback. I'll take Ills word for it. "when YoU have a hard&htp ·e11se-like this, I just don't know wh.Y the college can't. bend a little and 1rant the transfer," Arnold said. Vogel, noting that his board had &ranted 700 transfers (or reason of (See RED TAPE, P11e I) Nixon and Diaz Ordaz were seated beside each other at the table , with Johnson and his wife Lady Bird at the end. Other head table guests were Mrs. Nixon, Mrs. Guadalupe de Nasta, Diat' . daughter who stood ln for her ill mother, and Callfomla Gov. •nd Mrs. Ronald Reagan, . The White House managecj to pr,ea;erve lts .lradllion of havjnJ waiters serve IL state dinners, despite the prp'esta or waltrei~s at·the hotel who felt tpey were edged out of their jobs. . About 33 of them were among the several hundted .perlOl')s serving guest.a: at the dinner for the vlslllng Me1ic•n President but they only oper1te.d on the fringes. Said Ann Lee, a waitress for 12 years. "I'm hoppy lhey let U$ come in. Bui I'm not happy they did It the way lhey did." 5,000 LSD Pills Found; 6 Ar1·ested Narcotics detectives in a sweep on Laguna's Woodland Drive area Thursday night seized almost 130 pounds _of marijuana, more than 5,000 LSD tablets and six suspects. They estimated the iUicil value of the drugs at $38,165. Police booked Reginald WorKhoven, 29, and his wife, Janice Michele , 19, on a variety of charges after arresting them at their residence, 205 Wocxlland Drive. ' Afmed with search warrant$. offictrt ·froni Laguna Beach, Newport Beach ind the State Jjureau of Narcotics moved jn ahortly berore IO p.m. The alleged that they recovered from ' the Workhoven home 30 ounces or hasish, 410 lrams of bulk LSD, 2,700 grey LSD tablets and 2,100 orange LSD tablets. Detectives also raided a house on Victory Walk where they claimed to have found 59 kilograms (2.2 pounds each) of marijuana. Patrolmen were posted around the area for surveillance during the search and arrests. They arrested six more perSOllJ lor alleged drug violations. These included Jeffrey Lyman Bodman, 18, of 16152 Theseus Drive. Huntington Beach, and a 17-year-old SaR Juan Capistrano boy, a 17-year.old Laguna Beach girl and a 17-year-old H~tington Beach boy. They were arrested on charges of marijuana possession. Jerry Frank Hapgood, 21, 1025 Genoa, San Clemente and William Roger Omu, 21, of La Palma were arrested on suspicion of inarljuana possession and possession of dangerous drugs and possession for sale, Police asserted they recovered from the pair's car 22 grams of hashish, ti capsules believed to be LSD and about 11 grams of marijuana. Police were to seek ccmplaints today against the adults and the juveniles were to be processed through juvenile courL The Workhoven.s were booked on charges of marijuau possession, hashish and marijuana possession for sale, dangerous drugs for sale, possession of cocaine and mescaline and possession of paraphernalia. Police said the arrests occurred without incident. Oraa(e t Cout ..JA. Weather You can sleep late over the holi- day weekend and waJl;e up to find the sun sh.inlng -· about noon. Tem)>eratures will stick to a cool 65 along the beaches and a warm- er 78 inland. INSIDE TOJtA.'l' For CU JIO!l censui·minded ~ataiisticl.ans , thtre's a full page of h!formotio11 on tht recently annottnctd U. S. population /igu.rea. .showing California's citoo&ion to tht top state 1poL Paar 15; 1..i1 .. • 11 C&!~lt II Cllltkl• ti.. t ci..0111t11 11,., CMl'lltl tt ,_ tt Dtttll Httl"' II lfllltl"ltl ,... ' ,lfl_, , .. ,, "·--u Allll L.tnftn U ""'""• ' Mhln 1'1·tl Z DAI\ Y Pl\OT Goll Coarse? City Tries Lure For Hills Site I I I~ an attempt 't~ lure matching ft'deral runds for acquls!Oon of a Sycamore Hills greenbelt, Laguna Beach city officials in the day1 a.bead wlll bf: trying to work out a funding proposal acceptable to the lederal government. · t.tayor Richard Goldberg raised the possibility \\'ednesday of counting in the city's $J milion Main Beach since land can be counted as part of a municipal contribution. The · S20 acres sought, a triangular gect.ion of property once slated for ertate- gize residential development, is owned by Grut Lakes Properties Corp. The asking prict!: is $4 million. The Citizens Coounitlef: for a Laguna Greenbelt bas suggested raising the $2 million municipal share through private contributions and funds obtained by using the area as a golf course. The plan, thus far, would be to pay off lhe municipal ahare in "four years at $500.IXK> annually. James DUiey of the g r eenbelt committee told councilmen that the property owner will continue a OOld on the property unUl negotiations between the city and the Department of Housing and Urban Development have matured. Dilley said 60 golfers ·are waiting to embark on a fund gathering drive for deve1opment of a golf course with money from state and national g o I f i n g associations. He said golf courses are a very profitable enterprise and would be "an enormous advantage to the vital industry of tourism." Dilley noted that 38 organlzaUons have endorsed the greenbelt and many are waiting to donate. He said fl,000 has already been given. Street Hearing Set in 2 Weeks Objections -iI any-to San Clemente city plans to rename Via de Frente to Avenida del Presidente will be beard by city councilmen in two weeks. Cowl-en Wednesday .. t the bur!ng 8! a courtesy and a sampllnc: of oplnlon in the months-old campaign to change the name of the front.age road leading to the gates of the Western White HOU9e. The bearing Isn't legally necessary, the city attorney told councilmen, but the panel decided to hold it anyway. A somewhat inconclusive survey taken along the road showed that the majority of the land and property owners liked the new name. Responses from less than a majority or the residents, however, showed that most of those answering want the name to stay the same. The hearing will be held at the council's Sept. 16 meeting. Military Rites Held for Proulx Private military funeral rites for World War 1 Veteran Harry Joseph Proulx of San Clemente were held Monday in Long Beach. Mr. Proulx died alter a long illness last Saturday. Mr. Proulx, who leaves his widow, Edna, v.·as a member of Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church and the Knights of Columbus Stella Marie Council 3772. Mr. Proulx, with his wife, operated the Casa Catalina ti.1otel at 2601 S. El Camino Real. It also is the Proulx residence. Burial was in Veteran's Administration Cemetery at Sawtelle. ' DAILY PILOT M...,..., l ellC• HntltftM ..... "-I•• ... di ,.,.,..,. ,.., c.... ,.,.. s.. er. ... ,,. OIU.HG£ COAST PUBll!HIMG a>M,ANY •o'llt rt N. W11d Pru-• '"" P~ilMI' J1c\ k. c .. ,1 • ., Vi(I flrtJ:O.,,I 11'111 Gtntrll Mllltlf'I' 1~'"''' K11¥il Efltw Tlto"''' A. M11rplli11t MtMDlflO flllllll' fti~lltrd '· Nill leu!ll OTl!lllCI C-.ry Edlltl' °"''" Col.II MtM! llll WtJI lty '''"' ,,...,.,, l11ch; 2211 Wei ltllMt IWl""'11 Llfll'IA llHtll; 77! ll'lll'MI A ..... vt Hr.t'lllnO"" lffell' 17'/J llt1cll 1~1"""'' St!\ Cltft'ltntt; lDI /rlor!ll IEJ Ctl'fllnl llffl OAIL Y "ILOT, 'fl'l!ll •:Md! la ~ ,,. J Ht•~t. k llllbll'°""" 11My llllClllll Si,on. I .. , 111 ...,,ft< ,1111M1. lor ~ kt/\, H-1 h«.fl. C•lt #IWN, HW1!1nt:111 a.di 111111 F-kilrl VtlMY, ''-"I •1111 I• ,......... f0flll•11t, Or-CtHI PIJl>lltlrlnl ~ .. .,,..,. ..... " .... •• nu •"' Bt .... 9tWI,. tk-' 9eKI!,, .,, UI Wal .. ., '"""· C...tt ,_.,.., T.,._ .. 17141 142..-321 C....,,... A'-tl1I .. &42·1•71 S.. C--... Al .,._, .......... : , ... , .... 4t2-44 JO C~t. ttre, er..,.. COtu "ubtlt~i,.. "-"'' IW -l llWlft., !lllfl!t1I ...... cllltwit1 ft'lllt• ., ''"'"''-'' lllrtill _,, tic .......... •"""" -ltl ,.,.. f!'liatilll .. -"'*'' -· h(Wll tl•H ..,.,,. ~t• 11 HftllM'I Bt1dl ""' c-i. M-. C•lllwl'llt, -...cr:,i1111 .., urrlw ltM -""'''' IW .... 11 n .• "'°""'"' 1n111..,., ... 11Mtiln. a>.• IT'IWl!llly. Dilley spoke of a far.reaching rad.lo and television campaign to spark the fund donations. "We fully expect to have the cash. ('500,000) by Christmas," Dilley said. Anthony Oemetriades, president of the Laguna Beach Civic League, pledged · $1 .000 from the league and offered a friendly challenge to other organizations to give equal or higher amount!. In talking of the application to llUO, City Attorney Jack Rimel said that a city cannot commit itsell to more funds than are available in a year's budget. Goldberg said, "1 wonder if lhe federal government would be interested in open space oo the Main Beach, it would certainly meet the ·fin an c 1 a l requirements." City Planner Al Autry said the city is required to outline in its applicatio n for federal funds the means of making funds from the city available. Councilmen authorized Rimel and Autry to work out such a proposal and bring it back to the council. Councilman Roy Holm commended Oil. ley and the greenbelt group for working up a "magnificent" opportunity and an enormous challenge." Oliver Qziits Capistrano School Post Ray Oliver, assistant 1uperintendent of Instruction for the Capistrano Unified School District, resigned Thursday. Members ol the board of tnutees will be asked to accept his resignation and temporarily appoint Dr. John Crain Assistant Supt. !or Instruction and personnel at Tuesday's mffUng. Oliver, a Newport Beach president has accepted a position as Associate Supt. for 1nstnlction in the Santa Ana Unified School District. Crain, who has been with the district nearly 21 years, was appointed Director ot: Persona.I Services in December. His present salary is $20,296 a year, but if appointed to the new polltloo his salary ii expected to be iDcttaled. Dr. O'lin, ..... -In ClplltraM Beach, received bis Ph.D. last year at the University of Southern Ca.Womla. the first employe of the diJtrlct to receive his doctorate. He has served u prlndpal of Concordia and Paliiadea 1Cbool1 and was an employe of the old San Clemente Elementary School Dlltrict b e f or e unification. Oliver, who has been with the district for several years, served as a "teacher at San Juan School and principal of Crown ~ Valley School before becoming the district's 1lirector of e I em e n ta r y education and tater a 1 s i 1 t a n t i;uperintendent for instruction. He served as a principal of a military dependents school in Europe before coming to the Capistrano district. "'We've known that he was constdering this move for about a month," said Dr. Robert Beasley, chainnan o( the board of trustees. "But we're very sorry to see hlm go. Yet we realii.e this is an opportunity for him to step up and applaud his efforts to better himself. I guess Ulat's the way life is." From Pagel RED TAPE •.• program requirements, told the county board "the distance factor is not a compelling factor In granting transfers." Grover indicated be wanted to Cfll"Oll in an "accredited police science program,'' which he'd been advised be "could get at Santa Ana junior college. Vogel and Dr. Bremer countered that their police science program was accredited -or would be when the college achieves full accredita.lion in November. Trustee Don Jordan questioned whether Grover had followed the a pp ea 1 s procedure outlined by Dr. Bremer and Vogel. Grover replied he wasn't aware of any appeals procedtue since be had been given a "flat no" by the counselor at Saddleback. Jordan suggested that Sadd.leback officials make their appeals procedure known to students requesting transfers and moved to grant the tramfer after Vogel. speaking for the Saddleback Board. recommended the appea l be granted. Trustee Dr. Dale E. Rallison, who earlier in the hearing had moved to refer the Grovers back to Saddleback lo follow the CQ'!Tecl appeals prOttdure, voted with other trusteef to grant the transfer. However, he suggested the county education department stafr' also provide more Information about transfer appeal pfoeedures to student& Another Saddltback dllltrlct resident. Shel'T)' Turner, who has received thtte transfer permission, lold trustees her last request had been denied. Bremf!r and Vogel quickly recommended that her latest appeal be granted. J ordan again directed the Saddlf!back offic ials to be sure thtir sta ff Informed people of the procedum, noting that "lhe brush oil doesn't work 1n the Ion& run." Eyes Big One Miss California, Karin Kasher, 18, Hayward, flew ol1 to Atlan- tic City today to compete in th e Miss USA contest. The 5-foot 8 inch blopde will know Sept. 5 whether she will be Miss Amer· ica or just a freshman at Hay- ward State College. Either way, she's a beautifuJ girl . Police Seeking Complaints on 4 Over Robbery Laguna Beach police today are seeking complaints against four other persons suspected to hav~ been involved in a strong·arm robbery Tuesday night lo Laguna·s Top of the World area. The four you ths gave themselves up to police Thursday following the arrest of two others allegedly involved in the robbery. Com plaints will be sought against Robert J. Cattley, Jr .• 18, of Tustin : Thomas M. Thayer, 20. 2031 Westminster. Costa ti.1esa; John P. Kiel, 111, 19 of North Hollywood, and a 16-year-old Laguna Beach youth. Complaints of grand theft 3'1'1d assault and battery were earlier issued for Scott C. Gilbert. 18, of 441 Mountain Road and Gregory f\.f. Cray, 19, 267 Fairview St. Victim of the allack was Durwood A. Phillips, 31, of San Francisco. He was kicked, beaten and robbed or $10 after climbing into a camper and being taken to a desolate area at Top or the World, believing he was going to a restaurant. Monument Eyed :By San Clemente For Sister City San Clemente's parks and recreation commission will work out details for a possible donation of city land for a monument to San Clemente's sister city in Argentina. . The proposal submitted by Rotary Vice President Phil Ellsworth, is planned as a means flf thanks to San Clemente del Tuyu for its "plaialeta" honoring this city. The minipark with its monument honoring San Clemente to the north was completed several months ago. and occupies a prime boulevard area m the coastal resort town. Ellsworth made his appeal for the city land to city councilmen, who agreed that the local Rot arians would sponsor the monument and landscaping for the local "plazaleta." if the city provides the land. FBI to Seek Police Killers in Future? WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Hanilon A. ·WUUams Jr. (0.N.Y.), plans to introduce legislation next week to allow the FBI to enter all cases where a pollctmen is killed 24 hours after the crime. · Williams said the legislation would be: similar to the "Lindbergh law " \\•hlch permits the FBI to enter all kidnap cases aft er 24 hours on the assumption that the pcnlOn who committed \he crime bu crossed state lines and Ls subject to lcderat Jurbdictlon. . . • Access: Commie Plot? , Lagunan's Charge Brings Council Reaction A South Lquna rmldent's charge that ··~n view of the two r es, the councll Goldberg said he thou¥ ht Rlmel'a •DY publlc takeover of prlvately~wned w~d be derelict in lts-~tles 11 lt didn't flgure of '5(),000 to run telf1cases on the b e a c b e 1 1 1 o p e n I y 1 m a c k s of Instruct 1the city attorney to tell us the ~ach issue was much tower than what it com"\wiism," today brought a variety o[ rights ot ~ public.'' Councilman Roy actually woulq run. commfnls from four o( the Laguna Holm said. "Right now, I think we should get the Beach city councilmen. . "We'd have to determine what the necessary information on what develop& Robert B. Benner of 57 Lagun1ta, in a rights are aod we should also look at the ln other cities." JeUer to city councilman Roy Ho).rn, other steps being taken by other cities to "l don't think anybody in La Is stated: "To condone gov e r nm e n t affinn public rights for beach recreation . . . gwia takeo ver of private sands establishes an purpoees." being derued sublstantial beach UR," the extremely dangerous precedent." Whether or not the council will mayor added. "I caution you not to discriminate appropriate funds -perhaps upwards of Vice Mayor Charlton Boyd said the again st owners of private sands. As a $50,000, as City Attorney Jack J. Rimel goal of the city should be to "attain the council member, you must be aware that has said -is still up in the air. maximum possible amount of beach for a considerable amoont oI revenue comes ''l 'd stand opposed to funds being the people of the county." to the government Crom tues on private appropriated for prescriptive rights to "We should Pursue prescriptive rights sands. the beaches," declared Councilman Peter Immediately, particularly in view of the ln speaking of public use of privately Ostrander. "We can do a Jot better with recent construction of fences on our local owned lands, Benner stated: "Isn't this peopJe's mooey.'' beaches which forces the city no what we have aupposedly been fighting "I suggest we cool the whole Wue and alternative but lo test the legality. against with cOJWderable loss o f not get everyone riled up." "The total cost that Rimel gave· Is American livts? 1 wonder if you ever had Oslrander noted that the real problem irrelevant. The cost for the individual the opportunity to see how people live in Is with fences or barricades on the parcel cases is relevant," Councilman countries where there is no private beaches, such as the one at Sleepy Charlton Boyd stressed. ownership?" Hollow. "f do feel strongly that the ocean and Benner's attack referred to Council Following Rimel's suggestion, the city the sandy and rocky approaches belong to consideration of a recent. California building department, in light of the two all the people," the vice mayor declared. Supreme Court deCision which, in effect, decisions, is no longer Jssuing permits for Councilman Edward Lorr, who is on says if privately owned land has been construction on the sandy slrand. vacation, was unavailable for C1>mment used by the general public for a number "It appears to me, since we can't allow on the public beach use issue. of years without special permission there buildings or fences on the beach, now is implied dedicatioo to public use. there I.a no problem." However, each case must b e Mayor Richard Goldher1 said 1f lands Ind ividually determined. Five years which are now private became public, the public use without the owner stopping the city would lose considerable tax revenue public use could tum the land over to the and would be faced with the cost of citizens for recreatiocal use. maintaining the beaches. Joaquin Board Rejects Extension of Building San Joaquin Elementary Sc boot District tiustees dealt their first blow .Wednesday in their war a g a 1 n 1 l conatrucUon delays. completion date. Trustee Ed Berry stated In 1 recent meeting that he'd like to raise the fees to $250 a day. Frot11 Page l BEACH ••• public out. Holm said the council's duty is to 14,000 persons in Laguna, not just ocean front owners. "I want to know what right the property owner has to construct a chain Hollow," he said. Holm said he had "a couple of motions" he would like to make bul in deference to Ulrr's absence would postpone them. "I am not proposing any Jitigatio n at this point ," he said. John Gabriels of 1316 S. Coast Highway, said he did not wish. to be denied the use of beaches and auggested the council proceed with legal action to secure the public"s prescriptive right "in a charitable way." The board voted with only one abstention to deny a request for an a.day extension submitted by Harwick and Sons, contractors for Turtle Rock School. They further voted to try to collect liquidated damages for the delay, despite the fact that the Orange County Counsel's Office deemed the request valid and told them they could not assess liquidated damages if jt were denied. Dislrict architect Ralph Flewelling had cautioned the board that it might not be legally possible to raise the rees, but has since reported that there is no legal ceiling. By raising the liquidated damages charge, the board hopes to discourage delays and prevent another situation like Ali.so School in El Toro which is opening one year late on Sept. 14. James Lower, attorney for the South Laguna Coves Association. which is ... fighting to keep the public off privately owned beaches there, contended that the high court decisions were not intended to apply to private beaches such as these. Superintendent Ralph Gate!I: reported that the dtlay had been caused by a shortage o( lathers. He said Jett.en had been -Crom the Long Beach and Orqe C.OWlty locals of the Lathers Union attesting to the fact that they were not able to provide the contractor with workmen. Since the delay was beyond his control, the cootractor asked for the extension and the county counsel concurred. "Let's get another attorney besides the C.Ounty Counsel and go to court," suggested Trustee Robert Dameron. Motorbike Curb Ordinance OK'd San Clemente's damper on motorcycles and minibikes will be t>ecome law early next month. Urging the city to abandon the litigation possibility to s e c u r e recreational easements, he said, "there was not the sJigbtest indication that the California Supreme Court intended to provide ma.ss takings of private property_ without paying for it." And although arguing that litigattorl would not be successful, Lower called the decision "a dangerous weapon in the hands of any public bod y." He said the council was backing itself I n t o a dangerous corner. He urged discretion in taking private properly. ·' ·: "I'm tired of being stepped on." said Trustee Ed Berry. "l move we deny the request and collect liquidated damages." The sbuject of liquidated damages has been one of great concern to the board at recent meetings. City councilmen have unanimously passed the ordinance requiring written permission from the landowner in the rider's possession -if the trail machines and dunebuggies are used on private property. The code, which becomes e!fecUye 30 days after last Wednesday's passage, also rules that none of the machines can be used within 300 feet of a residential property line. Holm said, "There has been a.. fence constructed denying access. I don't think the council is backing itself into a dangerous corner at all." Holm said later if it had not been for ~'i the chain link fence at Sleepy Hollow he would not have raised the question. He •, The County Counsel's Office suggests that a fee of $50 a day is collectable for unauthorized delays beyond a school's ' lltOST TRU~TEO NAME IH rURHITURt: ,-. I ' ! l I CHINA Now avaitabte in g re e n ~s wen as .,.now. An ••cei:>tionol I o o l. On display """. j ! " _.) said he would be happy to see the fence removed at city expense, the owner reimbursed for it and then "I'd lay back and say let's forget it." jMOS;T ~RUSTED NAME IN FURNITURE._ p----··· ,,. I • t • t l· .,. .. ' ~CS I ' PAISOllS TAllES ;n..:s fine coDeciion of tables ls miil- able in a multitude of sizes from the $mallest cigarette table to a large .Ow,. ing table with lea..,es - DEAl.EllS F.OR: HENREDON -DREXEi: -HER!TAGE 7ed11111 " NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WMtcllff Dr, 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TtL p INTERIORS Professlonat Interior O..lgne" Avoll1bl-.AJD-NSJD LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Cotll Hwy. ~94-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 . ' " I ll ti ol " p. ( f 1 to lo cc w Go CJ i ' OY wl ce be $.l. M' Co is ' of I Joo COi h~ "' ( fin WO b• rer I me ms I est wll 1 159 m1 La1 I s H v .... ,.. bur p rar1 Cor en to .. 11 A wat ,tap. Ille Hm I' : a :as: u : u:a sscsu2020 222 22 t .z: c ; a E I I JS Qi ( 'rldar, Stpttmbtt 4, 1970 L DAILY PILOT J Summer's End " ' Ju111ping for Joy in Laguna Guard Phase-out 'Circle' People Gripe No Parking Signs OK'd Near LagunaHighField Resident! adjacent to Laguna Beach High School near the athletic field won their fight Wednesday night for a series of signs prohibiting parking in the area. City councilmen gave their approval to several "JtO parking between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m." signs which will be placed ot El Council Agrees Ori Health Study Location Funds Laguna Beach councilmen have agreed to pay up to $3SO monthly to find a home for the l2·man team that is studying the community's health needs. Councilmen selected the ( i g u r e Wednesday night, after Mayor Richard Goldberg suggested that Councilman Charlton Boyd's office plans for the group wouJd be too cos Uy. Boyd had suggested using the city· owned former Barefoot Bar building which most recently served as a teen center. The city leases the premises out as a bttr bar but would have had lo give up $316-per-month rent from Sept. 15 until :P.fay 15. The study by the Orange County Community Mental Health Survey team is to take only four months. Goldberg said that would mean a loss of revenue of $2,824 to the city. Boyd recommended that Goldberg not Jook at the matter in terms of dollars commenting that many call mental health Laguna's numb« one problem area. Goldberg said he was not arguing about finding an office space but argued that it would be cheaper to rent an office building for four months rather than lose rent to the city for nine months. He said, "taking the space for nine months is not good &0Wld dollar management." Dr. WUliam Routt of the survey team estimated that about 2,500 square feet will bt needed. The group which has"' • budget of $59,100, is collecting fact and opinion to make a report on how better to eerve Laguna's health needs. Stamp Collector Robs Laguna Men Vatican and United Nations stamps were taken from a Laguna Beach restdenoe Wednesday as part of a $790 burglary. PoUce said the thief' took five boob Of rare stamps belonging to Charlu W. Corbin, 263 Sin Joaquin SL. after entering lhe unlocked home. They were valued at $500. Also taken were two Swiss wrist watches and $200 in the currency of • Japan and Ult PhillpPne1. 'M'lese were th< property of James T. ll,.tz of the a:ame address. Bosque, El Crunino, and Los Robles. The area, known as the "circle" has been an area of controveny between local residents and school officials for several years. Re!idents ch a r g e d students loitered, smoked and disrupted the area during the school day. School officials found litUe could be done, a!I many or the people did •ot atte111d the high achool, but would park their cars in the area, waiting for high school friends. &hoot officials back the new plan. hoping that the students who used to park their ears on the circle wi.11 now use the student parking lot on Park Avenue. The signs are expected to be up befor~ achocll begins Sept. 14. ,_ In other related matters, councilmen: -Approved a limited.time w h i t e loading rotte 40 feet in 1ength in front of the Laguna Moulton P1ayhou3e. It would serve as a passenger loading zone from 6· 12 p.m. -Approved a two hour parking zone in front of Roberts Gauthey Antiques. 1290 N. Coast Highway to eliminate all-day parking i• front of the shop. -Approved a no-parking zone at the Eloise Morton reside'flce 2647 Victoria Drive. Mrs. Morton reported that parked cars in the vicinity often blocked her driveway. -Approved a request from Mary Clark, 192 Nyes Place for a no parking %Olle across the street from her driveway so she can back out Ollto the narrow l!ltl"eet. World Premiere Of Auroratone Set at Festival Auroratone, a tectmique of. translating music into color variations, will world premiere to the public during the Laguna Beach Winter Festival, Feb. lt through March s. Gt:rald Eilltnbower, who is marketing the technique, has a one haH hour Auroratone program on film ready to be ah own. Although ttie conctpt of translating music into color is not new, the Auroratone process simplifies the technique, doing away with the need for a color organ, thm expanding applications in televtslcn and film . Pennlsa\on for ~ public premier of the technique has been granted by Bing Crosby Ind Andre Kostelanetz. So far, the new teclwllque has only been viewed by private groups. • It Is prellUl!IOd that the technique will be shown -eral tlmu throughout tho Winter Ftltival on a no admlaaion charp basis. Eloise Fulmer, Winter F e s ti v a I coordinator, II soon lo be busy contacting groups and individuals lo join in the Festival activities. Mrs. Fulmer will welcome calls Crom lntel'f!11ted groupa wishing to participate, .. 494-717~. I DAILY ,II.OT Staff ,Mla1 Two Views 011 the Beach Why are these boys, in th°';)adin~ days of summer, running, jump- ing, shooting, and playing so hard ? lt might be because pretty Karel Fentiman, 17, o~ lrvine is watching all the action on the Main Beach at Laguna. I __ In Laguna Nears The beach lnva.slon will be all bUr over Tue.sday. Beachgoers will -be get Ung ready for school and work, and most ~.. Beach meguards will "r<lir<" until summer of 1971. Following the Labor Day weekend, lifeg(lards will be phased out 1t Boat Canyon, Picnic Beach, 1'Wia Street, Laguna School Of Art Entering 10th Year Soon Bluebird, Mou Sine! and cr.-it Bly during the WMk. Guards will _. to cover the beaches durina \be wetUndw until later In the month. When the surfing ordlnance end.II sept. u, the lifeguard stall will go down to three fUll t I m e employes during t b • week. Weekend 1Umllnl durinl tho winter and •pring will depend Oii the crowd attendanoe and weather Condi- t.ions. Guards remember this 1ummer u a quiet one. "The surf hasn't been too high and rescues may be a lltUe lest thu Wt year," said Capt. Rod Riehl. • Of course, sald Riehl, in a w1y it wu not so quiet. "BelCh attendl!ICe iJ up. And witb that The Laguna Beach School of Art and we've had a k>t more city onHnance and Design will go into its 10th year thb beach and water control enforcements." month, offering a variety of fundamental Guards spend much of their time citing and advanced courses for persons people for littering, drinking on the interested in art. bear.h, and letting their dop roam Classes wtll begin at the school, located without a leash. Th~ there are the band- between the Laguna Moulton Playhouse aids for lhe cut feet, the alcohol for the and the Festival of Arts grounds, Sept. 21 jellyfish stings and the more aerkm and continue through Nov. 21. medical problems. 1nterested students must register Most of the 45 man-force art students before Sept. 21. A free brochure listing 111 who will return to school thil fall. The courses. times, and fees may be obtained three who do stay on the payroll durtnl by phoning 494-1520 or by writing thp_ ,_the ~nter -Sklp Connor, ~ school at 630 Laguna Canyon Road, dePaulis and Michael Hutley -will Laguna Beach. busy lhemselves with cleanlnc, repatrtn1 The school ls 1pproved by the and painting equipment and planalnc for California Department ol Education and next year. is approved for veterans. Applicati-0ns ror new guards ire The staff of 12 instructors will teach accepted throughout the year. courses in art history, ceramics, color After the weather l'f:ls beUer In the and design, drawing and composition, spring, the lifeguard test ls hekt for all jewelry making, methods and media, applic~ts. Prospective candldata bave p a i n ti n g, waler~lors, printmaking to SWim, ~".' and demoutra&e tap sculpute, and children's art. physical condition. .• :-:fun clothes 7 fashion island, newport beach 644-5070 •P•rt 1und1ys. clurlnt the sum"'•' 12 fe I • = .. ,, ..- b41lY PILOT Frld«Y, Septtmbtf 4, l<J70 For six years Irene Wic:lr:s ~as served an as WlOUicial. nonsalaried nagger of Jitterbugs in Islip, N.Y. NO"' ~1rs. \Vicks may receive tov"n recognition and support in her cleanup campaigns as a "litter maid." The town board has J?:ranl- ed Supervisor Cl yde \V. Pearutt permission to hire Mrs. \Vick s,"'!'!>3, of Bay Shore. "I kept after t}1em so much they cleaned up j ust to get rid of me." said Mrs. Wi cks of her visits to shopkeepers and shoppin2 center' landlords. Pearsall said he ,..,ould arrange an interview with the woman and planned to hire her . • • • •'' -• ... • • • ,< -~ Escape Twice Bomb Suspects Captured, Let Go LlTl'LE FALLS, N.Y. (UPI) -Two· fugitives sought in a fatal bombing at the University oC Wisconsin fell into the hands of poli~ for the llCCOnd lime Thur.sday and ror the second time were released by authorities who failed to link their names with the case. Po1ice said two men carrying dri vers 1icenses identifying them as Dwight Armstrong, 19, and David S. Fine, 11, were stopped here because their car had a fa ulty muffler. They were questioned for about an hour and then let go by authorities who did not recognize their names. "' • It wa s reported earlier this week that ""~ police at a roadblock near Madison, WU., f1 stopped a car carrying Armstrong, his -. ~ . ': brother Karleton, 22, and two other men parking place about a half mile Crom the Penn Central railroad depot in the New York suburb of North Wh ite Plains. It belonged to Gene Pentenero al White Plains. The Armstrong brothers, Flne and Burt a-U were named Wednesday in federal warrants charging them with sabotage. destruction of government property and conspiracy in the bombing in Madison. Sheriff Ralph Hearn or Sauk. County, \\lis ., said Thursday he would seek a warrant charging Karlelon Ann.strong with the attempted bombing of a power substation. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, alerted by the FBI, said 'Ibtmday they were aiding in the search ror the men • l Moments after London detective Chief Inspector Alastair Thompson \Vednesday night had finished tell- ing a truck drivers' group "the Barons of hot merchandise are graduaJJy being squeezed out of existence, 11 he was proved wrong. Police said thieves hijacked a trail· er truck not far from ""here U:le meeting was being held in a police station, getting away with 840 cases of gin v.•orth $57 ,fiOO. GOVERNMENT TROOPS REENTER CITY NEAR CAMBODIA CAPITOL Communist Occup1 tion Ends After Bitter Flgthing 20 Miles From Phnom Penh ;,~:If shortly after the Aug. 24 explosion but did '.!!;;;"1Jii,; not detain them when the brothers said they wen! on their way to a v.acation area in upstate Wisconsi n. Little Falls police said D wight Annslrong and Fine told them they were on their way to visit ''Leo Burt in Utica." Jobl ess Totals Pass 5 Percent; Workers Down -·-. . -· Jay Chambers of Fort Worth, :~ Tex.. made reservations for a brand·new hotel in Mexico City when he planned his honeymoon. ( ' Because of that. the honeymoon 't was one surprise after another. ! \Vhen the newlyweds arrived and a sked for their room. the hotel manager sent them to a luxurious suite. Then he sent up champagne, :~ flowers and a wedding cake. ~ The best surprise came \Vednes· :: day when the manager told Cham· :: hers : "Because the hotel has no( :: been o£ficia1ly opened and you and :: your wife became the fi rs t guests, ·· all the expenses will be our "-'ed· ~· :· di:1,g present." .. ,. t: ',• > ... ' ... ,. - I • Lou's Barber Sliop 1oos clip- ~d down the ce11ter Tuesday night by a particular burfllar in Seattle. The thief stole the cen· terfolds from 40 Plti11boy maga· tines in the sh np -und disturb- ed nothing else, police reported. • .: Harry Baker, 18, said he was driving home in his 1969 van when he heard a rattle in the four·wheel .: drire near Tampa. Ariz. He pulled .; inte a field behind his parents home :·. and crawled underneath the vehicle, f~'IeaNing the engine running. ''It just :·!· poJ)ped into gear and started rolling :~ •. over me." he said. "Jt rolled up : .. "' ~my leg. over m.v stomach and chest :·t and off the side of my head." Bak· ;: er said that '"hen the 4,30().'POtJnd :: van started up hi s leg "l just took :: • ,a good breath and decided to hold ·'_·~on. I guess yo u might say I was ·:·~extremely lucky." Aside from a ·:..i-: fey" scratches a nd feeling stiff and ' sore, Baker reported no ill effects. • \Vhile 180 firemen battled a ra~· ~ ing blaze in a hotel in the north beach area of San Francisco Tues· day. a hawker stood amid a maze of hoses and ur,ged customers in to . " " . : '· •. ', an adjacent topless and bottomless c lub. Because of the inferno in the Dante Hotel. 100 guests had to be evacuated. But there "'"as no injury. D•ven Rosenberg, publicist and manager of The Condor Club down- stairs. declared business would con· -Red Divisions E·n Route To LaunchN ew Offensive PH NOM PENH (AP ) -Up to 10 Cormnunisl divisions are now I n Cambodia or moving down the I-lo Chi Minh trail through Laos with orders rrom Hanoi to la unch a major new offensive in South Vietnam, senior Comm un i s l diplomatic sources report. American military 50\.lrces in Saigon gaid they could not confirm or deny the report. , The sources said American warplanes have flown alxiut 2.000 sorties against North Vietnamese positions in Laos and Cambodia during the past week to blunt an y enemy plans for a massi ve offensive across the border into South Vietnam. But they sa id this was not unusual, that American planes have been waging such a bombing campaign for severa l months. A sortie i.! one flight by one plane. An America n sou rce in Phnom Penh said any enemy force of the size reported by the Communist sources would never be permitted to mass on the Cambodian border u such f~ ha\'e done ror previous offensives. He implied that Landslide Kills Six in Manila MANILA (UPI) -A landslide caused by a torrential downpour . crushed a family of six to dea th today and brought to 49 the death toll from five days or prodigious rains. President Ferdinand E. Marco.c; aaid the worst was over In !\1anila. Another 7.7 inches of rain fell in the. Manila area in the 24 hou rs ending at 8 a. m. today. bringing to 32 inches the total sinct!: 1'1onday. Marcos said the stale of emergency had Passed but he extended for another '''eek the "slate of calamity" he proclaimed Wednesday . "t hereby decree th at the relier and rescue operations center be shifted into a resettlement and rehabilit ation center to take care of £Jood victims." he said. American ground forces might enler Cambodia as they did last May and June in the operation ·which the U.S. Command said cleared out many of the enemy base camps on the Cambodian side of the border. Cambodian and Western military ~ources said there is clea r evidence that the North Vletnamese are rebuilding their border bases in the remote jungles ()f eastern Cambodia, bordering &>uth Vietnam. Some of these bases are said to be in the same position as those cleared by U.S. and South Vietnamese troops during their !\fay-June action. One Communist source with indirect lines to Hano i said the gathering force included North Vietnam's lst, 2nd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 20th and 25th divisions. Cambodian intelligence already has reported the tst. Sth , 7th, 9th and 20th divisions in the country. Some sources believe the attack on South Vietnam will begin in about two months. Communist soUrct!:s say the plan ror 11 maj()r offensive in South Vietnam reflects a decision in Hanoi to make the main target South Vietnam again and not the destruction of Cambodian Premier Lon Nol's regime. Possible aims were aaid to be the disruption of the Saigon government's increasingl y strong military machine, reversal of the Vietnamiiation program and the inrliC'ting of serious new casualties on American troops to qui cken the antiwar sentiment in the United States . Russians to Return U.S. Space Ca psule MOSCOW (UPI ) -The Soviets will return to the United States a n "experimental U.S. spact!: capsule'' plucked from the &ea by Russian fishermen, transferring it to a U.S. icebreaker this Saturday. the official TaS!l Ne"'-'S Agency said toda y. ... linue "as usual". The rains were spawned by two tropical storms that passed lo the northeast of the Philippines major nonh'· ern isla nd of Luzon and by the seasonal monsoon. 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" " • .. ~ T "' ... •• ·" ·" ... -~~~~~~~~~ IRS Checking J erry Rubin's Revolution Book WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Internal Revenue Service has begun a new investigatio n of a tax-fru foundation established by Yippie Leader Jerry Rubin to shelter from the lax collector royalties on his revolution-oriented book, An IRS spokesman said the roundallon apparently had not com plied with law requiring annual reports of income and expenditures. The spokesman said the 1RS wants to determine if the foundation has viola ted other statu tes which could result in loss of tax-exempt status. The government routinely approved the tax exemption J\tay 23. 1969. The foundation , officially known as the Social Educati on Foundation. has a single trustee , Rubin 's wire. Nancy S. Kurshan. Rubin apparently set up the foundation lo avoid paying taxes on rev enue from his best seller ''Do It!" Burt, 22, was the fourth suspect named by the FBI Wednesday. lt was not until four hours after Annstrong and Fine were released that Little Falls police discovered they were wanted. Federal authorities have said the fugitives may be headed for Canada. lt is a drive of about two hours from the Little Falls·Utica area to the Thoosand Islands bridge leading to Canada a b o v e Watertown in Northern New York . A FBI spokesman in Utica said the FBI \\'as "Doing everything logically possible to try and locate these individuals in this area. It's a big search of a big area ." Although the four suspects were subjects of a nationwide hunt by the FBI, a spokesm an at state police headquarters in Albany said they had received no special alert. The spokesman said the u s u a 1 procedure is for the FBI lo mail flyers with names, photographs and details of a crime r.ather than to teletype information lo local authorities. Little Falls police said a check of the car Sho"'-'ed it was registered lo "a private party in Westchester Coun ty " and had not been reported stolen. But police in \\'estchester County said today the car had been stolen between 7:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. Thur5day from a WAS HINGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment last month inched up to a. near six yea r high of 5.1 percent of the work force, while total employment dropped nearly 400,000, the Labor Department said today . Asst. Commissione r Harold Goldstein of the Bureau of Labor Statistics said the August rise or one.tenth of one percent in the national jobless rate was not significant, but the reports indicated the nation's continuing economic slowdown_ including a shorter work week and less overtime. \ · The report \aid th e actual number of jobleu workers declined 300.000 to a total of 4.2 million last month. but that seasonal factors and a decline of 700,000 in the labor force caused the bureau to compute the one.tenth of one percent increase in the unemployment rate. In the past year. Goldstein said. unemployment has soared 85 perce nt am ong men and 30 percent each among women and teen·agers. The August jobless rate of 5.1 percent equalled the highest rate since October of 1964. The rate last ~'as higher, S.2 percent, in June of 1964 . Goldstein said. Enter Chrysler Plymouth's Oean-Up Sale ... and~~ oo;i~ HERE'S HOW: Follow these car buying hints and make the clean-up deal of your life on a Chrysler or Plymouth ••. or any other make for that matter. KNOW WHICH CARS HAVE THE IDGHEST TRADE-IN VALUES • If you're thinking o! buying a make with a traditionally low trade-in value, you'd better make up for it with a "super-good" deal now .•• or else buy a car with a traditionally high trade in value. (The Kelley Blue Book shows Plymouth Fwy as the trade-in leader of its class 36 months in a rol)'.) 2 WASH AND POLISH YOUR PRESENT CAR. The better your car looks, the /'jf" heller trade-in you're likely to get. After all, dealers are bumao ... and they respond just like you do to a nice shiny car. 3 FIND "THE" CAR BEFORE YOU TALK PRICE. If you've already picked out a particular c.ar from the dea1er's lot, he k_nows you 're serious about buying, and he'll be more inclined Io give you his best deal first. 4BRINGYO UR VICIOUS DOG "SPIKE" ..• the one that snarls a lot and bares his fangs. Don't worry, the dealer will get the message. All yoa han to.....,.. is JOllt ChryalerfPlymolltb dealer's sbo"1oom. Cost• Mt1a Huntington Beach Atlas Chrysler · P~mouth Inc. Huntington BeacJ\ Chrysler · P~mouth 2929 H1rbor loulev1rd 1666 1 Baich Bo ulevard I • San Cle1nen:te 'Capistrano VOL 63, NO. 212, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, ·1970 'l'oday"s l 'lnal ' N.Y. St.eeks . - TEN CENTS Dana Point Yacht Club Receives 'Approval' By JOHN VALTERZA 01 Ill• O.Uy P'll•t $1atl Plans for a large, new Dana Point Yacht club in Dana Harbor won "in· principle" approval by Orange County's Dana HarOor Review Board Thursday. And ir ofricials of the club relum soon with complete data on patking facilities and other relatively minor details, spokesmen for the Orange County Harbor district forecast official approval of the plans. The club, represented at the meeting by Commodore Bob Hoyt, expects to have its new, permanent clubhouse by next July. It would include a 2,500-square-foot clubhouse building, 12,000 square feet of dry boat storage and parkin& areas. One aspect of the club's operation will be different from mosr established yacht clubs, however. District spokesmen said that no priority on obtaining the harbors coveted boat slips will be given to club member!!, While many members already have been assured docks for their craft, boat sii:e· differences and other factors will mean that member boats would be spread through the marina . Many yacht clubs In other harbors have their own docks for member boats only. 'Mle land for the entire yacht club will be offered on a sublease basis from the original leaseholder, Marine Capital, Inc., of Newport Beach. \ The club, district spokesmen , said, would rent the entire clubho1.1Se facilltl" on a monthly basis for 41,250 a month. An estimated 300 members are projected for the active club, which in recent year$ has operated from two tiny buildings above the harbor. Because of county condemnation of land owned by the club along a· bluff leading Lo the harbor below, the Dana Point Yacht Club won priority in C<Jnsideration of who should operate a yacht club in the new marine complex. The review board -which is scanning aU aspects of the concessions, businesses and attractions at the harbor -will resume deliberation on the yacht club proposals at its next meeting Sept. 17 at 8:30 a.m. in Harbor District Headquarters, Newport Seach. • ru e e1ze Opposition J in Council Defers Public Beach Use By RICHARD P. NALL Of tlle l11llY Pilll ll1H Oppos itio n, both in·t.own and neighboring, has mushroomed in the face of a possibility that Laguna Beach might go to court to Jeaglize public use of privately owned beach sands. In the absence of vacationitlg Councilmen Edward Lorr. the C<Juncil Wednesday deferred action. But first they listened to citizen commentary, mo.lilly oppo!red to .city legal action unCler a new Sttate S,upref!le.Court decision. County Joins 'Substantial' Job less Areas Orange County will be added to the list of "substantial unemployment" areas on Oct. 1, the U.S. Labor Depar:f.ment a'J1nounced Thursday. The designation means that firms in the county will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buying contracts and public works projects. The county achieved the lhlemployment status becauSe the jobless rate here has been above six percent for the past two months. State Department of Employment of. ficials said Thursday that the unemploy- ed rate in the county was 6.6 percent throughout August. a jump of three-- tenths of one percent from the July figure of 6.3. The county will become the nation's most populus suburban area to be declared eC<Jnomically depressed. lt will also have the highest per capita income of any area in the nation in the category. The State Human R esou r ces Department listed 33,000 persons out of work last month, 1,500 more than July, and predicted further declines al least lhrough November. Orangi County joins Oakland, San Jose, Fresno and Stockton as large areas In the .state with substantial unemploymenL Imperial County is the only other Southern California county lo reach the !'Ubstantial unemployment status with an 8.8 percent rate of jobless workers In August. In an 81/.i-page report, City Attorney Jack J. Rimel had spelled out the significance locally of the February high court decision. Although each case i! judged individually, lhe decision changed the law and opened Lhe door to successful litigation to establish recreation a I easements on privately owned beach property that the public has previously used. · Merrill Johnson, owner of the Surf and Sand Hotel, asked if the tax assessor would give credit to property owners for loss of property rights. He also asked if the city would take over the choi-e of cleaning all the beaches. Johnson bas his beaches cleaned. Rimel said once a recreational easeme'l'lt Is established the beach lan d in question has only nominal va lue~ He said he assumed the county assessor would have to be guided by the decision that there was a recreational easement overlaying the property. Councilman Roy Holm predicted state legislation requiring the assessors t(> recognize this . Noting the high value and tax producing quality of ocean front land, Johnson said, "I suggest this could be quite a loss of revenue." Commenting on the effect of publicity given the decision. Alfred Jackson of Shaw's Cove said, "A lot of skin divers from Los Angeles just move in on us no .... ·." He said he recently called police to remove an offensive person from his beach property and was told by the officer police hlive been briefed that they cannot consider the matter trespassing until the situation is settled . Jackson said a former protection has been lost. Loren Haneline, owner of the Seas Vacation Village, said in the past property owners had shown remarkable restraint in not putting up fences, allowing the public to use their sand. He asked if it was fair lo 'property owners to take their rights just because they had not surrounded their land with barbed wire, mounted guards or posted notices in required C<Jncise l e g a I la11guage. Failure to keep the public from using the land in the past is a strong element in the State Supreme Court's decision. Haneline mentioned that the city a few . years ago was studying means to limit access to some beaches to keep the IS.. BEACH, Pa&< l) • ' • \°"~ I '!, .. a: • .. . . PRESIDENTS TALK SHPP ·AFTER STATE DINNER Mexicen President Dier Ordez: (ltff) chet1 with ,Nixon (right) After Fee1t ; Yorty, Envoys To Meet Nixon In San Oemente Back from his successful state dinner, President Nixon met in San Clemente today with Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles, a high German official and two diplomats. Nixon turned his attention to the Far East and Middle East in half hour sessions with Henry Swank. ambassador~ designate to Cambodia and L. Dean Brown, ambassador-designate to Jordan. lt was believed that Nixon and Brown concentrated on the uneasy cease fire in the Middle East as Israel demanded U.S. action to remove SAM missiles sites placed near the Suez Canal. Both Yorty and Rainer Barde!. leader of the opposition Christian Democratic Party in West Germany, chatted with Nixon in separate appointments . Allbough the President Thursday offered further C()mpromises to gel his $4.1 billion family assistance program out of committee, he railed to gain any assurances from the reluctant Senate Finance Committee. The. Presidential party will leave San Clemente during the holiday weekend for Washington D.C. where the President will host a Labor Day dinner for lDp labor leaders. Pomp, Pageantry Mark Nixon's State Dinner CORONADO -Pomp, power and pageaTitry was the theme of the day as President Nixon hosted Mexi can PreSidenl Gustavo Diai: Ordaz at a magnificent slate dinner that finally wound up in the wee hours of today. The chief executive accompanied the Mexican head or state to Chihuahaua - his version of Air Force One -parked at North Island Naval Air Station. Dignitaries and dishes from both nations mingled at the three.way exchange or friendship, which included former president Lyndon B. Johnson. A motorcade and parade wound through a crowd of 112,000 who came to the small navy town lying in sight of the Mexican border. President Nixon personally shook hands with the 660 VIP guests during the gala dinner. Gaiety prevailed from the hors d'oeuvres throtigh the pet.it fours, except for one solemn note sounded In a warning by President Ordaz. He said an increa«iing trend of protectivism in U.S. trade circles is discouraging to neighbors south o.r the bor.der and could spell economic disaste r for Latin Ameri can nations. "There is true alarm in the tountries of Latin America because in the United States protectionist tendencies seem to be gaining strength," he said. "Should they prevail, there will be a tremendous blow to the eC<Jnomy of the rest of the continent." He apologized for being so serious in the midst · of festivity, but said he had already dislributed copies of the remarks to th e press. An impressive array of military planes and smartly dressed color guards from all four branches of the service greeted the two Presidents at the naval air station. President Ordaz was honored by a 21· gun salute and a tour of the giant base, then accompanied his host Lo the historic Hotel del Coronado. Many Mexicans crossed the border and bridge and ·ferry tolls were reduced for the occasion. Loi; Angeles County recorded a S.8 unemployment perct"l'ltage rate ln July white lhe enti re state had 6.2 JSercent. The job picture in Orange County is the worst in eight years and is blamed largely on 10.700 layoffs in the aerospace Industry during the past 12 months, according to the Human Resources Development Dept. figure. Education Red Tape Cut The four-eourse, black·tie dinner was served on gold·rimmerl plates flown in troin the White House. It featured prime beer from Nebraska, sea bass from Mexico, red and· white wine and champagne, plus a dessert of ice cream and strawberries. Fifty.six Mexican dancers from Guadalajara, In bright, native costumes, danced before the fish course was served. The county's rate of ur1employed a year ago was only 4.3 perei!nl. In contrast to other depressed area! Jn the state and nalion, ..Orange County boasts an annual per c~pita income of $.'.1.610. Executives and highly trained tec hnicians lead lhe list of unemployed outstripping blue CTttlllr workers who have been laid on this year. The jobless situation has meant that spendable income or about $300.000 a wetk has b~n cut from the county's economy, according to Qdcsg Oubi'nsky, llRD's research director for lhis area. Higher employment this year in such fields as buildlng construction, retail store!, restaurants and motels has not been great enough to offset the aerospace d~llnes. llalf of August's 1~500 lost jobs c11me from lhe ·crectronic field atld other 11erospace firms. County Board Approves School Plea By Ex-Marine By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 l1M Dt llY Pl .. 1 Sit t! The Orange County Board of Education Thursday slashed educational red tape for a Tustin Marine Corps veteran and his wife allowing them to tramfer from Saddleback Junior College District to attend Santa Ana Junior College -within walking distance of their trailer home. Mr. and Mn:. Lorin Grover appealed to the county board after being told by a Saddltback counselor "distance is not a factor ln granting transfers.'' Plea.ding hardship bc:!Dre trustee.s Thursday, Crover sald KC and hil wife coold not afford the fiO.mllc roundtrip to Saddleback College. He and his wife, alM a veteran, have 1t combined total of 1!1 years' service to their country. Grover said. "We just want to get an education. We can't arford the trip to Saddleback on the $2 an hour I get paid from the best job I coo Id get." Appea ririg ror Saddleback College at the trustees' hearing were llans W. Vogel , Saddleback trustees' president, and Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent. Vogel warned that gran~ing the appeal would "set precedent" notlng that "48 percent of the county is in our district and the largest PQPU!ation ls in the Tuslln area. "Onc·sixth or our $3.2 mllllon budget is set asldci ·to pay for students attending other schools. We have classes that Aren't full.'' he saJd, "meanln1 that taxpayers are 'payinJ double." · Interrupting the hearing procedure, A. E. "Pat" Arnold, county board president, said he didn't buy the double payment reasoning which he termed a "ridiculous excuse." "Here's a boy who put. bis time in the Marine Corps who is now looking for an education. 1 think we're hert for only one reason," Arnold told other trustees, "to see he gets an education. He said he can't 1ffOrd to gO to Sa'ddleba'ck. J'U take his word f6r it. "When you have a hardship case like th ii. 1 ju.st don't know why the college can't bend a liUle 1nd grant the transfer," Arnold silld. Vogel, noting that his board had granted 700 transfers for reason of (S.. RED TAPE, Plat l) Nixon and Diaz Ordaz were sea~ · beside each other al the table, with Johnson and his wife Lady Bird at the end. Other head table guests were Mrs. Nixon, Mrs. Guadalupe de Nasta, Diaz' daughtty' who stood in for her Ill mot.her, and d!lifofni:r Gov. and Mrs. Ronald Reagari. . The While House managed lo preserve Its tradition of having waiters serve at Jila te dinners. despite the protest! of waitresses at the hotel who felt. they were edged out or lheir jobS. About 33 of them wert :among the several hundred persons .serving guest! at lhci dinner for the visiling Mexican Pffilldent but they only operated on U'f: fringes. Said Ann Ltt, a waitress for 12 years. "I'm happy they let us comci In. But J'm not h~ppy they did It Ille way they did." 5,000 LSD Pills Found; 6 Arrested Narcotics detecHves In a sweep on Laguna's Woodland Drive area Thursday night seized almost 130 poW1ds of marijuana, more than 5,000 LSD tablets and six suspects . They estimated the illicit value of the drugs at $38,165. Police booked Reginald Workhoven, 29, and his wife, Janice Michele, 19, on a variety of charges after a'rresting them at their residence, 20S Woodland Drive. Armed with search warrants. officers from Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and the State Bureau of Narcotics moved tn shortly before 10 p.m. The alleged that they recovered from the Wor:khoven home 30 ounces of hasish, 410 grams of bulk LSD, 2,700 grey LSD labletS and 2,100 orange LSD t'ablets. £?etectives also raided a house on Victory Walk where they claimed to have foul'ld 59 kilograms (2.2 pounds each) of marijuana. Patrolmen were posted around the area for surveillance during the search and arrests. They arrested six more persons for alleged drug violations. These included Jeffrey Lyma n Bodman, 18. of 18152 Theseus Drive, Huntington Beach, and a l7·year-old Sall Juan Capistrano boy, a l7·year-old Laguna Beach girl and a 17·year-old Huntington Beach boy. . They were arrested on charges of marijuana possess ion. Jerry Frank Hapgood. 27. 102S Genoa, San Clemente and William Roger Oma11, 21, of La Palma were arrested on suspicion of marijuana possession and possession of dangerous drugs and possession for sale. Police asserted they recovered fro m the pair's car 22 grams of hashish, 12 capsules believed to be LSD and about 11 grams of marijuana. Police were to seek complaints today against the adults and the juvenile5 were to be processed through juvenile court. The Workhovens were booked on charges of marijua11a possession, hashish and marijuana possession for sale, dangerous drugs for sale, possession or cocaine and mescaline and possession ol paraphernalia. Police said the arrests occurred without incident. • Oruge Coast Wea Cher Ynu can sleep late over the holl· day weekend and wake up to find the sun shining -about noon . Temperatures will stick to a cool 65 a(ong the beaches and a warm· er 78 inland. INSIDE TODAY For aU you cens!ls·minded statisticiiin.t, thert.'s a full page oJ information an the recently announced U. S. p-0pulntion f igures, showing California's eleva.tion to the tov state spot. Paae 15. 8Mllllll ti . "'""'-' '""'" ,, t.tllltrfll• It N.ii.tuil ,.... ... c11.u.rn1 u~ ' °''"" c...., 11 'tltulll.. Jl·O kttlNrffl" U<M (-In 1f $fltle .._,.., II (1'9H'""' .It $_,t 1a.n lleeltl Nelk'fl ' 1 11 Sloe.II IMrt.th 1 .. 11 lfl..,,_I P.ttt I TM'fltltfl tf Pl11"°" 1 .. U Tiit•~ u.11 Ht .. ~t... U WH!tltf 4 Allll Lllldtl't t ) W-11•1 """ IJ>lt ,...ui.11 • .,.,11111 N.-. ... •vltt IJ•H WMll....., ,,.._ ' I ., I Z DAILY PILDT SC Friday, Stpttmbtr 4, 2q70 Golf Course: City Tries Lu ~e For Hills Site . 1n an attempt to lure matching federal (und.! ror acquisilion of a Sycamore Hills greenbelt.. Laguna Beach city officials in lhe days &head will be trying to work out a funding proposal accept<bl• lo the federal government. Mayor Richard Goldberg raised the possibility Wednesday.cf counting in the city's '3 milion Main Beach since land can be counted as part of a mwUcipal contribution. The 520 acres sought, 1 triangular section of property once slated for estate- aize ~identlal development, i5 owned by Gr .. t Lak" Properties Corp. The asking price is S4 milllon. The Citizens Committee for a Laguna Greenbelt bas suggested raising the $2 million municlpal share through private contributions and funds obtained by wilne lhe area U a goli course. The plan. thus far, would be to pay off the municipal Eh.are ln four years at ISOQ,000 annually. James Dilley or the greenbelt C<>mmittee told councilmen that the property owner will continue a hold on the property until negoUatiorni between the city and the Department of Housin& and Urban Development have matured. Dilley said &> golfers are waiting t.o embari: on a fWld gathering drive for development of a goU course with money from • state and national go I t I n g associations. He said golf courses are a very profjtable enterprise and would be: •·an enormous advantage to the vital Industry or touri!m." Dilley noted that 36 organizations have endorsed the greenbelt and many are waiting to donate. He •aid fl,000 baa already been given. S treet Hearing Set in 2 Weeks Object.ions -if any-to San Clemente city plans to nname Via de Frent.e to Avenida del Presidente will be beard by city councilmen in two weeks. Councilmen Wedne..day S<t the hearing as a courtesy and a sampling of opinion in the months-old campaign to change the name of the frontage road Jeading to the gates of the Western White House. 1be hearing Isn't legally necessary, the clty attorney told councilmen, but the panel decided lo hold It Bll)"!&Y. A somewhat inconch1sive IUl'Vey taken along the road showed that the majority of the land and property owners liked the new name. Responses from less than a majority of the residents, however, showed that most of those answering wanl the name to stay the same. The hearing will be held at lbe council's Sept. lS meeUng. Military Rites Held for Proulx Private military funeral rites for World War I Veteran Harry Joseph Proulx of San Clemente were held Monday Jn Long Beach. Mr. Proulx died after a Jong illness Jast Saturday. Mr. Proulx, who leaves his widow, Edna, was a member of Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church and the Knight. or Columbus Stella Marie Council 3m. Mr. Proulx, with his wife, operated the Casa Catalina Motel at 2601 S. El Camino Real. l~ also is the Proulx r esidence. L Burial was in Veteran's Administration Cemetery at Sawtelle. DAILY PILOT N...,.,, le•• H ............. ...,._ ... ,. .. .. ,., .. ....., CMtll Mn. s..a-... OJl:-'NGE COAST PUSl.ISMING COMl'ANY Robert N. W1td l'rtlllllfll! 1M Pu.b11"*°' J1c~ R. Curl1v V!e• Prc1:-1 .... Gfllv•i Mll\IOlf" Thorri11 K11wil E.tllll<" Thorri11 A, Murphi111 M ..... lflt f i lter R:ich 1rd P. Nill leu!h Orlll!ICI C.untr Edlllr OffieM Cftll Mftl; JJO Wlll lrt Sit""' H..,..,1 .. &<II: 2U1 WM! l1lllo1 aoulf\lerf L._. IHC:llt tn Forest l\Jt11w NIJllll"'!ori 8-11: 1711S l .. cll IJ1Ul1V1,. .. ,. C:ilil!llnllt$ »S Htrttl 11:1 """"" 11•1 PAIL,. PILOT. wllll W1ldl k CJft'lbllll:• ttie H~. 1J ...-.1.,_. e111y n <llH ,_ ..,. Ill ...... '"'"""' .... wt ..... le.:tll. N..,..I ~ j'; .. 11 Mft1, H""!lfltl..., ... di W "-lllio V1kJ, ,..,_. •1111 •- , ..... 1 d ll""". Or ..... C.111 l'lltllilo .... ~ "'"''"" ... 1111 ... I I 7111 W..t l•IW• 11"'11,. Nc"'"Plff 111tc.:t., ., .. JJt w"' .. , ,,, .. ,, (ftll MCMI, T•:JI r r r7141 642-4321 o..HW .......... .,.. ••2·1•71 ... c .......... hJNr'Mllhl T ... ,.._ 4,J-4420 ~. •m. Or,..e (Ml! .._.l ... i.., ~.. ... -· '"''"' '""''''' .... " c41 .... llil ,.,._!Ill' "' •d#tl'll--11 ,_,,+~ _, lie ,.......... Wll!llVf 11*5'1 ,,..,. ""*"" I/If """"""' ..,... l.aiNI ~ltU .... """ ,., ....... ......,., lnctt If• C*l.1• "'""'" Clll,_,,.11. t.uow:rll'lieft •r "'"" u.• -..i11rr1 ., """II.JI .-1111)11 trltll......, <f&JIMtllM. U ... """"'lfltr· Dilley spoke of a !ar·reachin& radio and television campaign to spark the fund donations. ''We fully expect to have the cash ($500,000) by Christmas,'' Dilley aald. Anthony Demetriades, presld!!'nt of the Laguna Beach Civic League, pledged $1,CXX> from the league and offered a friendly challenge to other organizations to give equal or higher amounts. In talking of the application to HUD, City Attorney Jack Rimel said that a city cannot commit itseU to more funds than are available in a year's budget. Goldberg said, "I wonder lf lhe federaJ government would be: interested in open space on the Main Beach, Jt would certainly meet the f i n a n c i a I requirements." City Planner Al Autry said the city ts required to outline in its application for federal funds the means of ma.king funds !rom the city available. Councilmen authorized Rimel and Autry to work out such a proposal and bring Jt back to the council. Councilman Roy Holm commended Dil· Jey and the greenbelt group for working up a "magnificent" opportunity and an enormous challenge." Oliver Q1iits ' Capistrano School Post Ray Oliver, assistant superintendent of lnstrucUon for the C8pi!trano. Unified School District, resigned Thunday. Members of the board of trustees will be asked to accept biJ resignation and temporarily appoint Dr. John Crain Assistant Supt. for Instruction and personnel at Tl!esday'1 meeting. Oliver, a Newport Beach president has accepted a poeiiUon as Associate Supt. for Jnstructlon in the Santa Ana Unilied School District. Crain, who has been with the district nearly 20 years, was appointed Director of Penonal Services in December. His present aalaiy ill '20,296 a year, but lf appointed to the new pMition his aa1ary 11 ezped<d lo be Increased. Dr. Crain, who realdes ln caplatrano Beach, received his Ph.D. last year at th• Univenlty of Southern California, the first employe of the district to receive his doctorate. He has served 11 principal of Ccncordla and PallJadea achools and was an employe of the old San Clemente Elementary School District b e lo re unification. Oliver, who has bet!n with the district for several years, served as a teacher at San Juan School and principal of Crown Valley School before becoming the district's director of e I em en ta r y education and later a s s i s t a n t superintendent for instruction. He served as a principal of a mili tary dependents school in Europe before coming to the Capistrano district. ''We've known that he was considering this move for about a month," said Dr. Robert Beasley, chairman of the board of trustees. "But we're very sorry to see him go. Yet we realize this Cs an opportunity for him to step up and applaud bis efforts to better himself. I guess that's the way life . " lS. From Page J RED TAPE •.• program requirements, told the county board •'Uie distance factor is not a compelling factor in granting transfers:" Grover indicated he wanted to enroll In an "accredited police science program," which he'd been advised he 0 could get at Santa Ana junior college. Vogel and Dr. Bremer countered that their police science program was accredited -or would be when the college achieves full accreditation in November. Trustee Don Jordan questioned whether Grover had followed r the a p pea I s procedure ouUined by Dr. Bremer and Vogel. Grover replied he wasn't awan! of any appeals procedure since he had been given a "flat no" by the counselor at Saddlebeck. Jordan suggested that Saddleback officials make their appeals procedure known to students requesting transfers and moved to grant the transfer after Vogel. 1P"3king for the S1ddleback Board, recommended the appeal be gr11nttd. Trustee Dr. Dale E. Rallison, who earlier in the ht!aring h11d moved to refer the Grovers back to Sadd!eback to follow the correct appeals proctdure, voted with other trustees to grant the trans!er • However. he augg~ted I.he county educatlon department staff also provide more information about transfer appeaJ procedures to students. Another Saddleback district resident, Sherry Turner, who has rtceived three transfer ~nnission, told trustees her last request bad been denied. Bn!mer and Vogel quickly recommended that her late.st appeal be granted. Jonlan again d~ected the Saddleback officials to be sure their stat! Informed people of the procedurea, noting that "'the brusb ofl doesn'l work In the lone run." E 11e• Big One Miss California, Karin Kasber, 18, Hayward, new oU to Atlan- tic City today to compete in the Miss USA contest. The 5-foot 8 inch blonde will know Sept. 5 whether she will be Miss Amer· ica or just a freshman at Hay· ward State College. Either way, she's a beautifuJ girl. Police Seeking Complaints on 4 Over Robbery • Laguna Beach police today are seeking complaints against four other persons :suspected to have been involved in a :strong.arm robbery Tuesday night in Laguna's Top of the World area. The four youths gave themselves up to }X>lice Thursday following the arrest of two others allegedly involved in the robbery. Complaints will be sought against Robert J. Cattley, Jr., 18, of Tustin: Thomas M. Thayer, 20, 2031 Westminster, Costa Mesa; Joh n P. Kiel, III, 19 of North Hollywood, and a 16-year-old Laguna Beach youth . Compla ints of grand the!t and assault and battery were earlie r issued for Scott C. Gilbert. 18, of 441 Mountain Road and Gregory M. Gray, 19, 267 Fairview St. Victim of the attack was DurWOOd A. Phillips, 31, of San Francisco. He was kicked. beaten and robbed of $10 after climbing Into a camper and being taken to a desolate area at Top of the World, believing he was going to a restaurant. Monument Eyed By San Oemente For Sister City San Clement.e's par)cs and recreation commission will work out details for a possible donation of city land for a monument to San Clemente's sister city in Argentina. The proposal submitted by Rotary Vll'f! President Phil Ellsworth, is planned as a means of thanks to San Clemente del Tuyu for Its "plazaleta" honoring this city. The minipark with its monument honoring San Clemente to the north was completed several months ago and occupies a prime boulevard area in Uie coastal resort town. Ellsworth made his appeal for the city land to city councilmen, who agreed that the local Rotarians would tponsor the monument and landscaping for the local "plazaleta" if the city provides the land. FBI to Seek Police Killers in Future? WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr. (0.N.Y.), plans to introduce Jegi.sl1tlon ne1t week to allow rhl!l FBI to enter all casts where a pollctmcn is )citied 24 hours after the crime. \Vllliams said the legislaUon wouJd be similar to the "Lindbergh law" which pennlts the FBI to enter all kidnap cases after 24 hours on the assumption that the per.90n who committed the crime bas cro'5ed state llnet and ls subject to re<1eral JurlsdicUon. Access: Commie Plot? • Lagunan's· Charge Brings Council Reaction A South Laguna reeident's charge thal any public takeover of privately-owned beaches ••openly smacks of communism," today brought a variety of comments from four of the Laguna Beach city councilmen. Robert B. Benner of 57 Lagunita, in a Jetter to city councilman Roy Holm. stated: 1~0 condone government takeover of private sands t'Slabliahea an extremely dangerous precedeat." "'I caution you not to discrbninate against owners of private sands. As a council member, you must be aware that a considerable amount of revenue comes to the government from tu:es on private sands. In speaklng of public use of privately owned lands, Benner stated: 41lsn't Uiis what we have supposedly been fighting aga1nst with considerable loss o f American lives? l wonder if you ever had lhe opportunity to see how people live in countries where there ls no private ownershi p?" Benne.r's attack referred to Council consideration of a recent California Supreme Court decision which, in effect, says if privately owned land has been used by the general public for a number of years without special pennission there is implied dedication to public use. However, each case must b e , individually determined. Five years public use without the owner stopping the public use could tum the land over to the citizens for recreational use. "In view of the two cuea, the council would be derelict in Its dutle! if It didn 't instruct the city attorney to tell us the rights of the public," CoWlCilman Roy Holm said. "We'd have to detcnnine what the rights are and we should also look at the other steps being taken by other ciUes to afflnn public rights for be:acb recreatiOn purposes.)' Whether or not the council will appropriate funds -perhaps upwards of SS0,000, as City Attorney Jack J. Rimel has said -is still up in the air. '"I'd stand opposed to funds being appropriated for prescriptive rights to the beaches." declared Councilman Peter Ostrander. "We can tlo a lot better with people's money." "I suggest we cool the whole issue and not get everyone riled up." Ostrander noted that the real problem is with fences or barricades on the beaches, such as the one at pleepy Hollow. Following Rimel's suggestion, the city building department, in light of the two decisions, is no longer issuing permits for construction on the sandy strand. "It appears to me, since we can't allow buil~gs or fences on the beach, now there 11 no problem.'• Mayor Richard Goldberg said If lands which are now private became public, the city would Jose considerable tax revenue and would be faced with the cost ol maintaining the beaches. Goldberg said he t bought Rimel'• figure of $50,000 to rwi test cases .on the beach issµe was much lower than what it actually would run. "Rigbt now, I think we should get the necessary information on what develops in other cities." 1·1 don't think anybody in Laguna Is being denled substantial beach U!I!," the mayor added. Vice Mayor Cha rlton Boyd said the goal of the city should be to •·attain the maximum possible amounl of beach for the people of the county." "We should pursue prescriptive rights immediately, particularly in view of the recent construction of fences on our local beaches which forces the city no alternative but to test the legality. ''The total cost that Rimel gave Ls irrelevant. The C<lSt for the individual parcel cases is relevant," Councilman Charlton Boyd stressed. "I do feel strongly that Uie ocean and the sandy and rocky approaches belong to all the people,'' the vice mayor declared. CoWlCilman Edward Lorr, who is on vacation, was wiavailable for comment on the public beach use issue. From Page J BEACH ... public out. Joaquin Board Rejects Exrension of Building Holm said the council's duty is to 14,000 persons in Laguna, not just ocea n front owners. "I want to know what right the property owner has to construc t a chain Hollow," he said. Holm said he had "a couple or motions" he would like to make but In deference to Lorr's absence would postpone them. "I am not proposing any litigation at this point." he said. San Joaquin Elementary S c h o o I District trustees dealt their first blow Wednesday in their war a g a I n 1 t construction delays. The hoard voted with only one abstention to deny a request for ·an &day extension submitted by Harwick and Sons, contractors for Turtle Rock School. They further voted to try to collect liquidated damages for the delay, despite the fact that lhe Orange County Counsel's Office deemed the request valid and told them they could not assess liquidated damages if it were denied. Superintendent Ralph Gates reported that the delay had been caused by a ahortage of lathers. He aaid letters had bee:a rectlved from the Long Beach and Orange County locals of the Lathers Union attesting to the fact that they were not able to provide the contractor with ...... ian<n. Since the delay was beyond hi! control, the contractor asked for the extension and the county counsel concurred. "Let's get another attorney beside3 the County Counsel and go to court," suggested Trustee Robert Dameron. ''l 'm tired of being stepped on," said Trustee Ed Berry. "I move we deny the request and collect liquidated damages." The sbuject of Jlquidated damages has been one of great concern to the board at recent meetings. The County Counsel's Office suggests that a fee of $50 a day Cs collectable for unauthorized delays beyond a school's '. ,, I ~ ; r~· i CHINA completion date. Trustee Ed Berry stated in a recent meeting that he'd liie"to rai!e fhe fees to i2so a day. District architect Ralph Flewelling had cautioned the board that it might not be legally possible to raiae the fees , but has since reported that there is no legal ceiling. By raising the liquidated damages charge, the board hopes to di!courage delays and prevent another situation like Aliso School in El Toro which is opening one year late on Sept. 14. Motorbike Curb Ordinance OK'd San Clemente's damper on motorcyclet and minibikes will be: become law early next month. City councilmen have una nimously passed the ordinance requiring written permission from the Jandowner in the rider's possession -if the trail machines and dunebuggies are used on private property. The code, which becomes effective 30 days aft.er last Wednesday's passage, also rules that none of the machines can be used within 300 feet of a residential property line. John Gabriels of 13 16 S. Coast !tighway, :said he did not wish to be denied the use of beaches and suggested the c;ouncil proceed with legal action to secure the public's prescriptive right "in a cha ritable way.'' James Lower, attorney for the South Laguna Coves Association. which is fighting to keep the public off privately <lwned beaches there, contended that the high court decisions were not intended to apply to private beaches such as these. Urging the city to abandon the litiga tion possibility to secure recreational easements, he said, "there was not the :slightest indication that the California Supreme Court intended to provide mass takings or private property without paying for it." And although arguing that litigation woufd not be successfu l, Lower called the decision "a dangerous weapon in the hands of any public body." He said the council was ba c king itself into a daggerous corner. He urged discretion in taking private property. Holm said, "There has been a fence constructed de'tlying access. I don't think the council is backing itself into a dangerous corner at all." ~ Holm said later if it had not been for the chain link fence at Sleepy Hollow he would not have raised the question. He said he would be happy to see the fence removed at city expense, the owner reimbursed for it and then "I'd lay back and say let's forget it." ' jl!IOS • ~RUSTED MAME IN FURMTUftt ~ ,.~ • i ,. '. l ( • i I ' I l ,~-·· .. ·•· . . ··-·1 I -4. " I I PAISONS TAii.ES Now avnnable in g r ee n ~ wen lJ5 yelow. An eJaP.tioool loo l On a rsplor. now. - Jhis lirle collection of tables is eve~. ~ble in lJ mult itude of sizes from the smonest cigorette toble Jo • Iorgo <lin· ing toble wlth leoves - DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXEi: -HERITAG E 7al11111 " NIWPORT BEACH 1727 WMldiff Dr. 642·~ OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS "'°'""""" htto.lor ~iftton Anll•bll>-AID-HSID LAGUNA BEACH W North Cooat Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 -· .. ----~-.... --------------- I DAIL y "1.0T I~ ___ LEGAL __ :u---:-.-OT1-CB ___ 1---.~~=T= .. =.Al.:T:T:-"=~::n~.:.~=.=.-.--1--.. -.-T-~.~~.~:.u.-T=~-=:."~-.-~-.E-.. -.-.• --1--.... -.-,~~~.~:~~~ ... ~.~~;,~~~.~.~~ ... =-,-.-·1Calif orni~ Now N 11111her One CllTl"ICATI O• IUtlNltl ) SU,fltlOlll COUlT Of' TMI PICTITIOUS •AMI TS H-. 11._1' r'_/ ,l(TIT!WI PllM lfAMI .. STATII o• CALll'OlNIA •o• Tiit ~ " C.-11t't tllot'( .,.. °" S.te<nbw it, 1t10 •• , 1l;t111 A.M .. 'The UllCll't•l•IMlll don ...,ffY ttt1;fo,o THl COVNTT M OlANOI CON:llldll'lt • -IMu II USU INC.II TITLE INSUll.A!Kl ANO Tl U IT ltiel lOAll( M. GOUlleY k terldlKf. Ne. ~ llvd4 llt Hu11llflll1111 l loKtl, Callf9rnla, COMPANY, •I 11\llY •-'~ltd TnntN t.it I Whol ..... 111111 rtllll ~!WllCl~rll'lt rsr.11 tf el!lNICf. •• JElOMI .,,,.,.... tlll fl«ft .... firm ,.,.,, of THIE """"" 111111 -.wtll to °"" .. '""' 111111 att ~lit llutlMI• 11 City al Ntw· ~Md. 1!1.l!OAHT HAYITACIC el'ld t'Mof Mi. firm 4-ltd StPl...illff tt. 1Hf l!•«vltlll ll'l _, ltatfl. Cwnt1 ol Ot1111;1t S1tlt ot NOTICE 1$ HEltE8Y GIVIN lo fM II COin-" t'I ttM '9HOWllW --t. Ellt-telt GltACE MC COltMICIC _,.. (1Uforftl1 llftCltr the fletl!lwf fr crtdilori ol lht 1boY1 llln\td _.,.. ~ lllmtt In fv!I ll'ld Ill.CW ti •KOt"dtll J111111,., 11. ltl'O, 11 11\itr. W.. WA.SlllNGTON (AP)--C.U. ---------------.. ·---------'"".'!." fornl1 has displaced New d 1 ' ""' rm 111"" 11111 111 ""*""' 11tv1M c1t1m1 -!Ml ffle rnldenct tn 11 lollo#I: 1.ao. In MM. "61, ,." M. ol Ottki.1 r • tllll Wllkl'I Oou flCI! 11\0W ttlt ... Id dtcfdtill l ft ,._.,1,.., It lllol """"' Dwi-I , Hull9"Wfl, lt't11 Jl>lct LIM, lttcOl'di In the olllct ot the Co1'"rr rw lllmt .,. Ill"'" of 1119 ""'°"' I"" will! fti. nte:.,M,., ~I In !ht ot• H1i111tlMIOll l fldl. (1, RtcOl'ot!' ot Ort l!OI COUl'llW, (1lllot'nl1, ~flltd Jn ... 111 llu1l11tt1. ID-Wll: lltOTH· n..,, 01 the Cltt'll et ttw .~. 1111tlllt111 11-c. Ktnl"91(. ltltl ,.1lrw1y WllL SEll AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO It AltT Ind 11\tl ltld llrit1 !1 corn"°'"' cWf"I, w hi prfNftt llltfrl. wltll tllt Lt111, Hun1l,,.1on IMCJI (1, HIGHEST l!IDDElt FOR CASH (Nr1bl1 ef lt.t l'llt!owlnt "'"'"' WllOH n-11\f llCCl•Mrv YOllC!I• .... ID ..... Vfld ... •ltMd II Dttld Aut. "'· lt10 II 11 .... ot M ii In l1wtvl ._..... Of ""' l ddr1n trt I I !oj1owu ,,.. oUice 01 I'll• lllOl'MYI. llYHOWElt. Dl!ltllENI! II. HUlTGfll!H Unlltd ""•ti" !he Horrll 1•111'11 tl'll•lnct lta.-rk M, Gourit•, ,,, Yl1t1 Grtndt, LONGLEY & Pl!THERl!lttOGE. 1m llEHI C. KESSIHGElt lo lilt Ortn .. Cov111y Covrtl>ol!H toc:tltld HewPOM llttcll, C11llornl1. N:irlll 8!'0fd'wtv. sinlt Ant, (tltt•nl• lttlt of C1llto•11l1, Ortnt• <:tut1IV; ti 700 (l~I< Centtr Drlvt Wfll Uormttlv WITHl!SS rnv htna lhl1 Utll O.V ol Y.17°' wllk ll is tllt oltcl of blnl,._.i ot On A\lfl,lll ff, lt10 Defoft l'fll, I HOtfry W..t 1111 $1rftll S1nl1 An1, CtlllOl'nlt 11! A11tv11. lf111. th. ~ndtr•ltnl'll Jn 111 ""'""' ""11lnf11t ~vbllc It! 1nd IOf ••kl Stitt. Ptl"llll'ltllV rlfhl, title •nd lnll•tt• C91\YWVl'd 10 end RNrk M. Gour11v to !ho ,11111 ol aald <lti;.i;j.,.t, wl!hln !Our ,,,..,,,., Dtrltllt 8 , l'!Ullt•tn Ind II-flO\ll' lllla bY II 111><11r 1tld Dftd of Trv1t StATE OF CALIFORNIA I mGlllllt tllel' t!MI fin! PIK!Ucetkln of 11111 C. ICtM~ •nown lo IM to be 11\t In lllt ll<OHrlv 111u.ltd In tl'll tlt't ol York u the nation's most populous state, the U.S. Cen· 1us Burtau has rtporl.td. Texas jumped from alrth moot popu!OO. lo the fourth. Other 1tatu and their rank· Jngs, baaed on prellmlnary in- formation gaJned in the I970 COUNTY OF ORAHGI!: ) H. flO!ICt. Hrtonl wtloM lllll'lft ••• Wbierlbtd IO COtlt Mitt. In Mid Covnlv I $111• On 11111 12111 dtV OI AU'llUS!, A.0, 1t 70, Otltd' A1.1tvtl ~6. 1t10 1M w11!11n IM!nllM!lf Ind tdtnowltdltd ~rlbtd 11! CeflSUll, Were: bt1or1 mt, Ille Unatnl1"9d, 1 HG!lrv FltAHIC E, l!OOUE, J lt. mw •tc111" !Ill umt. lol $$ ol Trtcl Ho. ~. 11 l'ICOl'dtd ~ubllc In •NI tor i.kl C011n11 1nc1 stttt. Ad"'lnlt•••!Or ot '"-"11r. (OFFICIAL SE.\ll In 80<* 13t, ""' J.I, M •ncl 11 -' 1970 Prellmln11ry rt1ktl119 lhertln dUIV comm!1tiorltlll tnd Of 1111 t bOYt 111"'*9 dfC«itl'll, JEAN l. JOl!ST MllCl lltlllOllt Mt ... r«Wdl of Dtl"" , • 1worn, M•IOlllllY •PllH•ecl ltNtk M •• .,,._, lttMil'I' & ,tltllr.,.... Hortrv Plll)lk • C•Hfornlt C111,1nry, C1ntor11!4o, l CalU:omta CiOurlt'V kl!OW" IO mt lo l>t tilt --int """" 8.....-WtY ~rlnclMI Ofll<t In S1ld Wit will bl mtllt, but w""9ul 2 N y k Wfloll "''"' II lli(IKt'lti.d lo lfll Wlltllll \NII Au, Cllllwllllt ft106 ()r1 .... COll!'llW COVlfllftl ot Wltllnl'V, t~1r111 or llftlllltd, ew or ln1trUl!lft1, •nd 1cknow1M1t111 1o .,,. 11111 Ttl; rn41 w..u1 Mr (0tnm1 ... 1o11 b.t,. r-'ltlne tur.. • o 111 • • 11 n , or :l PeMsy!vanla ht •~tcutl'd !Ill ~-. At~ fOI' Atfl'llfllttrt.., Mtn::ll 2. 1t7~ tneumOr1-1. to NW 1111 ""11lnlne c WITNESS my fllncl 11'1111 ollklll ... 1. l ubll,llld °'"'" Coll! D1ll't ~!If!. l'\rc>tltllld °''"" <=••I Dlll'f ~llot, otlnclH t ...,... ol tlw not• MCUrllll ti' Mld 4 Texas 0,FICIAl SEALI IJJ9u•I 21 Ind '""'""' ......... 11. lt. ""'~" '11 .,,.. ltc>IM!lbtr .... n . 11. o.ci Of Tl'lllT, -It; M.IOl.76. II Ill l&ld 5 11Unoi5 1t1111\ Wtrd 1'10 1411·70 1t70 1•11·10 llOlt Pf'OVldtd, IChtlllCt-3, tf '"'· llncltf' lllt Noltf\I P\ll>llc In 111e1 LEG., NOTICE ,.,.ms of ... Ld Oetd of Trvt.t tttl, chi.-6 Ohio b St ld COUl'llY 1na Sf1i.t ru.. LEG" NOTICE tnd """i.n of tilt Trvtt" tnd of fllt • • ~uttlilllff Or11111 Cot•r Dtllr ~llot, ~ trv11t ue1tld tw u kl Detd of T•11ll. 7 ?i.11ch1gsn Au1. 21. ?I lr.d ,.,,, •• II, tm 1W7·10 NOTICI: 0' RIOl:MPTIOl\I ........ T~ tltnelkltry llnck<' llld 1>11111 Of 8 New Jersey LAG\INA 81ACH lODOI MO. OM, CllltTl,ICATI: 0, IUSINIS• Ttvtl, by rH IOll o! I IH'tttll or Mt1111t In ,,., • ... "" ~u,.11om ...,urtc1 , 11 ., • 1o • , 9 Florida LEG.U. NOTICE 8UILDINO (l:ltTll'ICATIS '1CTITIOUI AMI l\fttlotore uteultld Ind 11111\'lfld lo 1M PU<'Wlnt 10 ...._ of G11no1 lofff, Thi vndtnl.....i 11on ctr'5~ 11t h -IHICl~l•lltd 1 wr1n... decltrtllOfl 01 10 Massachusetts T .. 1•1 1-voltnl 1nd Pro!tcllw Ordlr ol' Elkl. Nt1119 • bll•IM11 11 17'22 l!...:ll llVd .• 0tt1vn 1nd Dtmt nd tor Slit, tnd w.111.., 11 J " IN THI! IU•l•IOlt COUltT 0, THI !Ill Inn.Ifft of Lill'Vnt 11111;11 l.odll Ho. $ulft 100, Hvllll1141ton l!tlCft, Ct!ll, Uncltr no!lce Of b-ll t nd of t ltc!lort II CIUM nuiana STATI: O, CAllPOltNIA l"Olt 172.l, wilt rlOtem, ,, ftc:I Y1lue, 111 vetld 1111 fktl1lov1 llr"' n•mt of IE11r lt1cl9r !I'll vndtt'lltMd IO .. u u ld .,._.v to 12 North Carolina THI COUUHTY 01" ORANOI! tfld ovtitindlni bvlld"" c1ttlfk1t" Clltr"ltr t l\CI "''' 111d firm It tomNMd u tllfy ... 111 obll..,tloll•, t l\CI ""''""fl", on 13 M" I "'· A....,1 •ndlor bonOt ri.•rtotort b111H trv Mid of "'-totl-lfltr ..,. ...... -.. "'""" April 21. ino, 111e 11nc11ntetlld ,,ulfd 111d 1ssour I D•Dlll TO SHOW CAUi• IDd~· VllOll wnlndtr of 111d ctrtllktltl lfl full Ind P1-CH " f'll~ ..... llO!kt OI brMCll Ind ot tltcTIM 10 r.. 14 Virginia " •~• m111er ol Ille Anillc111ori of ro ukl 1rw1111 11 1111 office of lt:Oblrt e . tollowt: recorhd 111 boolt '27S. P•M '°'' of u ld . LAWlt:EHCE GltEGORY ltAMIREl tor wttoti, SOt Flrit w.-1.,11 e1nk 8v11111111. c111r111 J. H111 ... '"'1 101.,, L•""· 0111c:1t1 Rteordt. 15 Georgia lffVI to(""""' tilt n1mt 11 LAWRENCE 10. Wtft Fourtll $Ir"'· ltnl• ,.,,., H1111llntlon l!tl(:ll, (till. ~11: 51111...,,1111' 1. lt!'O. 16 Wisconsin GltEGORY ElllOTT. Ctll!ornl1 t2101. G-Gr"Jllfl' »40 Olvltl Lint, LOI TITLE IN$UllAHCE AHO l.AWRENC!: Gltl!GORY ltMlltEZ S.ld certllletltt ni1111 be dtll'ftrld It Altmlt0t, Ct llt, TRU5T COMPANY 17 Maryland ll1vln1 flied hi• Petitloll lfl !ht 1bovt-tn-Sl'll by r"l"''td mtll bf:trlnt lll'ld1r•1 Dlltd Avt. 10, 1'70 11 u la Trui1" lltl..i c1i.e, Ind ••Id P.i111on h1v!ne r• lull tcld11u not Iller 1111n Novfl'nbtr 1, 11111 of c1111orn11, Or1!\f1 COUl!lv1 ev Elmtr w. 1i1l11111' 18 Tennessee •ue1ttd ot•m•uron to ch•nte Pt11tlllftll"1 "10 on AU9v11 20, 1'70 bela<t me, • Nlll•l"f' Authorlild s11111tu•• 19 Minnesota "'"" from LAWRENCE GREGOltY • Ttllll-.. llGUf\I 811(11 lod" ~~Diie In Ind "' ltld Sl1!1, -llV ,.ub!l•l>td Or11111 COii! 0•11• ,11111, •. ltAMlltEt ID LAWRENCE Gltl!GORV Nv. Jn( IPPllrtd (111•1" J , Htllll' Ind GIM 5-ttmber •• 11, 11. n10 101.70 20 Lou1s1ana ElllOTI. RQOtrl a Wtbb cnt!tmtit Gr"IOI\ known TO ,,.. lo bl llM --21 AJ · IT IS liEltEl!Y OROEltED that 111 1tv111U Tt nMt 'Tr\lllff ~-ntl!\ft ••• IVbK•lbld to Ille wllllln LEGAL NOTICE &oama M•son' 1n!lftlttd In ia!d mflttr •tllllffr Dr. ltotxirl G. RObb, Tr111tft lnllru"""' •nd 1cknowltVltd llllY 1.t· 22 Washint' ton Mfo-1 fflli C111,1rl 1n IP\e Court HovH 11 It ...... I w.... tcV!td 1111 llmt. OtP•rlmtn• J 111ertol on Oct. t , 1970, 11 llt..-nev it l•w' !O,FIC!Al SEAll ~.JI~ 23 Kentuc :y Ille holll' ol f :Jll A.M., t nd 11\ell I nd l1'ert Jlt ,lril WlllWR 8anll lufllll,,,., J1111 L. Jobst ClltTll"IClTI! OF 8U$tHISS 24 C C'°C t 1'-Clvtt • If 111'1' 11\trt m1r bt, WhV Slnlt Alli, Clllonllt '1101 Noltrv ~Ubllc: • Ctlllom!t 'ICTITIOUI NA.Ml! Onne \.1 U tilt 1i.llc111on lllwld not bt 1•1n11d. 11 11 Ttt • 11141 JO·UM Prlncl1111 0111c1 '" Tiie u..dtrtl1Md do cfflllv 1111v ,,. 2.5 Iowa fvrthlf' ord<lrld 11111 I COPY of lhl1 orcltr p''bll11\td Ortntt C I Dtl!Y' ~llol Or1nee Covn!r C-UCtlllt t t1vt;l11e11 11 111 W. 1'111 c lin tit PUlllllllH In I/It Or1n11t COit! 01l!V Au:Vll 21 29 l"'1 Sfott°.:.:O.r 4. l1 IL :; Mv Comml1110n ExPlrH 51., Stn!t Ant, C1llfornl1, Vl\Cltf' IP\e 26 South 8r0 a P l tot onc1 1 WHlr. IO• lour tucc .. 5lvt na Oct~ 2 , nn ''"'"'° Mtn::ll 1, 1t1J fktilio111 firm n1,,.. or JltG & WPM 27 O>'ahoma ......... Ind ll'ltl ••Id PUll!lcll!on bt '°""'. ' . Plltl!1Mtd 0r,..._._ CO.ti O•llV ~llOI. INSURANCE AGE NCV I nd lhll ••Id ••• P!•tfd 11rlor to '"' hurlnt If th/1 oratr. A1111111 ti 1tw/ ~,..,....,. ... 11, 11. 11rm i• <Oll'lllOMO °' 1111 fotlowlnt "'"""' 28 Kansas Dtlllll AU9. lt, 1910. LEG" NOTICE 1910 161 .. 1!1 wllost "'"'" 111 l\IU I nd PllC•I Of 29 ,. I d RAYMOND THOMPWlN ru.. rnlcllnc1 trt It ltllowi: '-'0 Ora 0 JUDGE oF THE LEGAL NOTICE w 1111tm P•"• Ml11er, lJOu S•ndY 30 Mississippi SUPEltlOR COURT '1211 l11M, eow ....... Ctlllor11l1 tMa. JOHN A. ffAll''I' NOTICI TO Cltl!OITO•S 0' ~-*'I J1mei Rlllmtll Glblon. SU Korl1'I 31 Oregon UI W11t Ocwn 11¥~ .. Switt ,... IUllC TltANS,E• AND NOTICI 01" ClltTl,ICATI OP 8USINISI, E1$1Wood, S1nt1 AM. C1Ulornlt, 32 A k SU l.-l .. dl, C1lllornl1 to101 IHTENDl!O TllANll'E• o, 'ICTITIOUS NANtl Dtlld JvlV ti, 1910. r 8D 'T•"'"-= 01l) HlmJtoc:-J.lOt \.IQUOll llCIHll OR ltCl!NllS Tiit und"•l•lltd doll <erlllr llt 11 ~ W!llltm PtfT\I Mm., 33 Arizona #1119fM'f 1w "'''llC1•! NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN IO !Ill dlilClllll I bvtJn11t t i ltt2 Htrtlor, (Diii J1mH RtlllTllll Glb)Oll , •• PubU1hed Ottntt COit! Dtll' Piiat, Crlldltoo. Of MARCEL MEERSSEMAN, Miit, Ctlllornlt , V"'1tr !Ill flctlllovt firm Slllt of Ctlllornlt, °''"" COlllllY; 34 West Vlrllfll8 Avtutt 21, tt t nd Setit1mbef' ~. 11, so.:111 secvrllr No, l71·11:1J.'U, Tr1n11.,.or "'~1i1:" 1~n;!111 1 & co~=°''':: On J11lv 21. 1t10. bttor• '"'· • Holt" 35 N"·raska 100 1M2·1'll Md llctMtt wl'lost butlnn1 •ddrtH II I nd II rm I l"vbllc 111 Ind tor uld Sltlt , PlflOntllV .... --------------1 l1Qll P11,tt111•. Ill '"" c11v o1 cost. Miii. '°1-1"" ""'°"' w11<>u ntm• rn. iun a11111 1_,..i wmi."' P•rr1 M111w 1nc1 J•m.1 36 New Mexico Cllllnh of Oftntt. Sllll of Ct lltornlt , thtt Pltcl Of rtlldf!IQ II II fotlowt , lltltm111 GIDoon know" to mt to bl 1 b<ilk lrlnll.,. It tboul hi boo ,,..a. to Ktl11\ P. C1nllfld, "'2 811M Line, Ille ""011t "'llol• 11111'111 •r• aubicrlbed 37 Utah JAllCEY INC. 1 c 11uon111 Corp0r111on lrvlnt, Cl. to Ille wnllln 11111tu1M111 1nd 1ckrlol(ltc11· 38 Mam' e LEG.U. NOTICE , - I •·• o II • p '" I ~-I I ~-11 • D1ltd Aue. 26, 1'10 11C1 Tiiey t •tcultd lllt t.tmt. · ,.,.,n • amy, '" n • ......,. • ..... ur Y $1111 of C1lllwn11 Or11111 Countw1 (OFFICIAL SEAL) 39 Rllod J J ' ClltTll"ICATI OF 8UllNISI '60. SU.•11((1. no Ftdertt TIX No., lo 0" Aul, ?6, 1'10, befort ""' 1 Noltrv Frtnctl ~. (rtnlton 8 S anu- l'ICTITIOUI HAMI: <ltW IO r111. Trtftl111'ti! tncl lnllfKftd ~~btlc In end for 11td 51111, illlrlOntllv Noltrv Pvbllc. Ct lllor111t 4() D.C, Tht 11""'"!1111d do ctrl!lv lhtl" 1re Trtnlfffff. wl'M»t bv1lnt11 tlldrt:n Is .00 1_.rRCI 1C1lth P. C1nUtkl knctwn lo mt Pr!nclpll Oflkt In 'I con<1uetln1 1 Dlltlntn 11 6lJ w. P1ul1r!no ~1t1 Clc:t1n 8 1vd., In tllt cnw Of l-to bl .,,, HrlOI\ WftOit 111,... II Oriftllt county 41 Hawat Av1., co111 M111. c11Uorn!1, 11na1r 1111 1t1ch. counw of l°' ""'~-. S11111 01 iulllcrlbtd to lh• w11111n 1n1tn1mtn1 1"'1 Mw commlulon 1u1ru 42 New Hampshire fltlltlov1 llrm nlmt of KElOll:OH I nd Cltll<>rlllt 90ID(I, tcknow!edftd lie txtculld tl'll Mmt, July 1, U1a lhtl 111d lltm 11 comP01td of !ht follow· The !lrOl>ertv 11 ducrlbed In ll'f/lfftl n : \OFFICIAL Sl!All T°'"'I 43 Idaho Int H r1ont, Whole n1mn In IUll •NI .Ul 1Toc~ In tr1cll, tl•lur11. l'lulpmtnl t lld Mtrk K Henrv Pub11ihiKI or1111t (NII Dtlll' '!lo!, 44 M l •lt tl l ol retldlftet tr• II loll1;1W1: -wtll "' • cffitln cockllll lounM NoltrY P11bllc • C11lfornl1 Awv1t 14 31 21 Ind $tp!tmbl!' ' on ana Wlllltm A. ICoelscll. Jr., 0 1 PrJncllon Clll•lnns "-" 11 "ROYAL CREST ~rlMIPll OfUct In 1t10 ' • lSOt-10 45 South Dakota Drive. C0tlt M111. COCKTAIL LOUNGE" tnd locAll'd 11 1100 O•ttlff COlmlr lttloll w. D•on1, 21901 Sttt!dt lint, P11e1nU1. In 1111 City ol C0tt1 M-, Mv c ommlnlon Ea1lr11 LEG" NOTICE. 46 North Dakota Hun!1119l11n 1!1ec:h. (fll/ntv of Ort ntt. Sl1l1 of Gtlllorf111, 11111 Nov J.a. lt1J ru.. 47 D I Dtltd AUIVl l 1), ltJO lr111tl"° lhl tolklwlnt t lcollOllc bWtrtot Pvblt.htd' Or-(~.-1 Dtl1V PllDI, e aware WIH11m A. KoelKh. J r. lame (or llctnsetl: On-kll c-r11 Avi u11 t1 end s111ll!l1blf' ... 11. 11, 8Alt :1661 48 Nevada Rtlpl\ W. D'llnt Lkluor Number 4 2Jot.S.C, rwM IK\lld lo 1t711 1'1~70 HOTIC• TO Clll:OITOltl STATE OF CALIFORNIA 1-'1•,.,.;H loc'eltd ,, 1100 Pi.ttnll1, Coil• IUPEltlOlt COUltT O• THI 49 Vermont OltANGE COUNTY ,,,.,... c1u1ornl1 tor 111• 11r.m1~ locrtld LEGAL NOTICE STITI' OP CALll"OltNIA l'Oll 50 Wyo ming On AVllUll u , 1t10 btlor• '"'· • Nolll"I' It nOo Pltttftll1, In Tiie CllV a! Coil• THI COUNTY OP OltANG• . Pvbtk In •nd tor 111d s11te, HrlOf\lllY ,...,, Covntv of Orinv1, 11111 GI c 1n. Ml. A-7• 51 Alaska 11111t1rtld W11111m A. ICotlKh '""' 1t1tp11 lot 1 p.,..., E1lt11 of WILLIAM w lltYINE ·-' 1960 Fl I w. er---" IO -lo be ttw "'""' Ti;;; 111.e •mount of pUIClltlll •le• °' ClltTIPICATI 01' 8UllNl:SS, WllllAM WINTElt tRYINE, Dt<e•itd. na w11ose 111mt1•••1ubK•lbtd 10 the wtnlln ~ildtriti.on In connectkln will> .,.Id 1"1ct1T1ous NAMI NOTICE 1s HEREll'I' GIVEN lo 111e 1 New York l111l•vmlftt t nd 1ck110Wlldetd llllV ••· lttnllt!' of ukl llctnM t nd ... 111 bu11nni. Tiit unc11nr1n..i clots ctrtirv 111 11 COft-crldltors OI lllt l bovt NtT\ICll Oecllltnl . • ..:u1111 "'' .,...,,, 1nciu1111111 1111 Mt1m11tc1 inYlnllltV, 11 1111 ducll"' • 1>111Jn111 11 nu· A v1c1or11 s1., 11111 •II --111v1..,. cllhni 1911,.., 2 California IOFl"ICIAl SEAll t\#1'1 ol w.000.00. wlllcll con.111!1 Of ..... CDllt MtM, C1lllornl1, ~nder 1111 fie· -U kl dl(tdtl'll ••• ftgvlrecl lo Ill• 3 p I . JDlnll £. D1vl1 ~1119. IJ50000 CASH 11111m,llon If t!llou1 firm 111mt ol' Jtff l Auto ~tl' lllln'I. wll!I 1111 lllCM ... r"I' -I In ennsy V8Dl8 Not1rY Publlc<1111on1l1 Stlltrl 11;b11ii1n · 01 1 ""; o •I m• 111 w tnd tti1t Mid llrm It cOf'IPOtld ol tllt !Ill oHk t ol' tlle cltrlt OI 1111 ,t-., 4 Illinois P"l'lnclPtl Otllce I'! su:ioo.oo ind blltnct on ' Natt 111 ltllOI' IO!lo'W I,.. """"' -• n1mt ':" tu11 tnd ...tll lld ~ • ., I• 1r111nt !tit,.,, with 5 Ohi OrtllPt Cllllflfv DI lht Stlll!' PltCI of fllkltnel II 11 lolkrwt. !Ill nteftU•Y vouchln to the ..,.._ 0 Mv comm1111on Eaptr11 All otti" bull ..... ,..l'l'lfl end ldd,__ Jtttlt K. Slnord, "s1 J.tnt• 1t111 w 11lftld 11 Ille olfloll ;i 111 l tlof'Mrt. 6 Texas Ju111 21, 197( lnfd bw 1111 Tr•"•ttror wn11111 tllrft "'""' Av1., Gt•d., Grov•, tull coo1111w, Sd111rntcl\w, Coltmtn, Mln~•rd , • l"utlllllltd OrtMI CN1! 01Ur •llol, Loll Piii " 11r 11 k-n to the Dtltd Aul. 11, 1t10 t nd Howi rd lil T-n •nd Countrv 7 Mtch1ian Allltlll 14 21, 21 •"'1 ~1tmbtt '· fr9Mltree 1,., SAME Jlfl1• It. s111or• Roff, °''"" calflornlt fJMI, wtilch 8 N 1r10 1SU·70 Tl>ll " "" Dffn lffMCI btlwltn l.lld 51111 Of Ct lllornlt , ll ""' Pitt• of lMlnHI of lllt l.IMtUlt l'ltd ew ersey "12-ind 1n11ndtc1 '""'''"' •• Oran'"" c....,,,,.,.,,, ,,,. blfor•,... , Noli-in 111 "''".,• _.i11n1 ... 1o 1111 111111 9 Massachusetts LEGAL NOTICE rt11vlrt111 bY $tc. ~.074 of 1111 8utlntt1 end """"'' • • • • • of ... ld 0tel'd1n1. within lovr "'°"'Ill lO Fl "d ---==::.:::,.:.:.::.:::::::_ ___ I P1'1t11ID111 Code, tlltl tht con11<1tftllon 'Vbtle In Ind tor uld &!tit , PtnOlllllr 111., t11t Hrtl PUblklllofl ol 11111 l'IO!kt. OTI 8 ,.JUU 111'\ 1111 1rin11er o1 1tld butlnn• 1nd •-•1111 J1ur. •· Sltlord krwMn "° flll IO 0.1"' J1n~1rv IL 1t10 11 Indiana ClltTIPIC ... TI! OF IUSINISI, trtnSlll" 01 1.1111 llce1111 11 ro l>t tfkl only IHI 1iht 7i~t:"I w;-a..:.:.";~111c== UNITEO STATES HATIOHAL 12 N rth C 1 . ,l(TITIOUI HAMI! tl'tr l t ld lrtntftr hll betn I PJlttvtd IW :, hf :ICU!lllln~,: Mfl\I l!ANI(, 0 8T0 ill8 The vndtr1l1ntd dott Ctr!llv ... II con-U'!I 0-...rtmtnl ol AlcolMlllc: 11 ......... (DF;lCIAl SIALI . • fllllDntl l>tntlns IOOC:llllon 13 Missouri •uc1ln1 1 M !ne11 11 1601 M11rlltwOO<f, conrror. M•rv K Htnry Eirtcutor ol 1111 Wiii '' • , • c1111 Meu, c11uorn11. under th• lie· thtr 1 Mii, tr111Jft1' •"'1 111l11nmenl of Noftn' • P~llllc:.C•lllornlt 1111 •boll• 111rn1111 llectdirnt 14 V1rg1n1a t l!IOVI firm n.int f!1 AM EN0tNEElt1HG 1111 1lor,Uk;I llOC:k In lrtdt , II.turn , p I I ti Olllq lh CDOICSl!Y, ICHUMA(Hllt, COllMAN. 15 w· . •"d ·~·1 Hld l!rm ft Clln1110ltd Ol '"' ~lpmenl Ind 9110d •Ill of u ld bv1lnn1 0 r nc pc I MINYARO. HOWAltD ' 1scons10 tollowlnt P111011, whoff n•m• In fvll •nil w'I be mtde. •nd 1111 t0Mld1••11tn M';.'"l'ommo:':.i:,. E~Plfft ;:: TIWRc'~~,t:.:''" 16 Georgia p!t<t ot •ttldenct I• 11 lollcwt: ttJrefor toltlht!' will! ''-COM1d<lr•tlon Nov Ji itn 111111• • I Artllur M111 ... 11a2 M11rt1twooc1. <:e111 to• 11>1 tr11111tr 1nc1 1n1tn,,..n• of '"' ,111>lltlltd. 0;,,.., coitt 0 ,1111 ~not Tef#liMMr,:;1:1 ::;::.SI 17 Tennessee ~rT·.;~~:;, 70, 1'79 ~~ri:,.ld,:;,i 1 :::::: ~:...":'-;',:, •vi:v" 21 Ind 1$1...,ber 4 'li1ih1~~ed or:_ (NII Dtll\I ,llot, 18 Minnesota Arlhllt Mlll•r tt Ille fK'l'OW dttl•rtnitnt Of LA.WHOA.LE It VII 1•, 21, 2* Ind Stpl""~ .. :o 19 Alabama 11111 ol Ct lllornlt . Or1n91 C111,1nlf~ ES(ROW COMPANY. 1t lZM Soulll l'lrftl, LEGAL NOTICE 1'70 15 20 Lo · ·la On Awvtl :l!I, lt70, btlort mt, t ffot1rv In 1111 Cl'IV Of lont INCi\, COllnl'V Of LDI UIS na ~utillc In t nd for u ld s1111, HrlOll•ll• "'1111t1, s1111 01 c1111om11. 1rwktld 11111 su,1:1t101t couttr 011 THI LEGAL NOTICE 21 Marvland ll•Htfld Arthur Mllt11' kl!OWll to mt lo bf! ~ Dts"rlmtnl of Akollollc l!tvtrltl ITAT• 011 (All,O•NIA 'Oil '-----'·---------!( Ille PlrlOll wlloH .... fl\I It JUbKr!btd lo Ccrlrol hll IPlltO'ltli u ld 1r1Nf ... Of M kl THI COUNTY 01' o•ANGI: T .. u.. •. tllt within ln1lrvmtnl Ind t cknowlMOfd tltel\ll, Ne, A.WfU __ / SUl"l:ltlOlt COUit" OP THI: LEG.U. NOTICE ht t •KU!ed 11\t 111Tll. Olltd AlltllSI 26, 1'10 NDTICI 01' HIAltlNG 0, ,ITITIOll' STA.Tl OP CAll,QltHIA l"Olt (OFFICt,1.l 5EAl) !OFFICI AL SE AL) l'O• ~ltOIATI 0, Wilt. A~ THI COUNTY 0' OltANOI su~•1t1:;;1t COUltl 0, TNI t~:.~~HP~ti1~.A~~~!~rrnl1 ~A~;l~:,lll~N~.~.,kln ~:~i~.:T .... ':tY PO• L • T T • ' • NOTIC• 0, .. ":A:1~1:5 01' PITITION s;~~· c~~N~l1::11o"~!N:~· Prlnclp1I Ofllct In Bv: Jofln Btll•"'Y· Pr11Jdtnl Eit1!1 ol' "'· Edrv• ,.., ... •kl ........ ,Olt lltOIATI OP Will AND Ht. A-47'1• Ortnte Covnh llv: JOllPh Ct rdO&t " Mtl"I' Edrvt N11le, Dtettsed, COOICILS ANO l"O• LITT I It I NOTICI: O, Hl:A•INO O, PlTITION MW Commlulon ExplrH Secr1t1rv·Tre11ur•r NOTICE IS HEREl!Y OIYEN Tiit! Tl:ITAMIMTAltY ,Olt PltOIATI: orr Will AHO •01t Jvnt 11, 197~ Trtn1l•rft t"ll T11Pm11 T. RDlll ... lol 1111 llltd lltrwln t E1t1h! et JOHN l . KAiSOFI', llTTl:ltl TliiTAMINTAltY P 11btllhed O•tlllt CNtl Dtilv ~l1o!, lflltndtd Tr1n1fffft Pllltlon tor "'11111!1 Of will tnd Codkll OKttHd. _j Ellllt of MARIE I(. It 0 NI y AU9Vll 21, ti Ind Sf.pt."" 11, 1910 IM.f.711 M•rctl M .... u .... 111 end !'('( l11111nc1 of ltn.,., THl-!1ry NOTICE rs HEllE8'1' GIVEN The! Dtc:ftltd Tr1n1lt'P' tncl Lie"'"' lo Potllloner, rtltnrv;t to wt!kh I• """°' EMMA ICASSOFF htl fllld .... tit! I NOTtCf: IS H!'Rl!l!Y GIVEN Tlltt UWHDALI! ESCllOW COMPANY IOI' !urtlllr p1rtlcvl1r1, •nd tl\11 "" lllM DtllllOn tor PrObllt Ill Wiii Ind Codkll1 Lindt Gltlltr 1111 lllld lltrtlll I HllllO!I LEG.U. NOTICE llU lot.ti• Strtn Ind PIK• OI Mi r!"' flll u m• hit """''"" for l111,11nc1 Ill l.ittn TtlltlMllllrY lot' problt• ol will Ind tor IHU.l\Ct "' -------~~-=---IL.Ol'lt l••cll, Ct l!Wftll tolOI .,., !or StP!tmlltr' II, 1170, ti f ;lO 1.m .. It Ille Pll!U-r, rtl.,enc:t lo whlcll 11 L.etT"t Tltlt"'tnlt'Y to l'ttlt'-" NOTICE INVITING 110$ EKl'W NI. U16 Ill 1111 covrlroom of DtPtfllMnl Ho. JOI mtdt fo.r lu•lller Hrllc1111r1, Ind lhtl 1111 rtt..,tnee ta wfllcfl Ji ITlldl tor fvrlhe; Hotkt 11 htrtbr 1lvtn lhtl !he 8Dtrd of Pu0111hld O•t n" C1>1il Dtllv ~llol. ltld c....,.,I, 11 100 Civic Ctn!lf Dl'lvt II"" 1"'1 Pll CI ol' lletrlnt lht ·M"'I "-• ltrlkultrl tnd 11111 Ill• llmt Pnd llltct 1'rv11111 of th• CN~I Community Collfft Stllltrntll'r 4, lt10 1631-70 w111, 111 llHI Ct!V ot S•"11 Mt, C1lltorftl1. bltn stl 1or Sto!Ml-11, 1t'111, II t :)O of llt1r1119' 1111 "''"' 1111 bttn HI for Dlllrtct Ill°''"'' COlln!Y, CtUtomla. Wiii D1!td Avt111! 26, lt10. '·"'" In,~. courtroom Ill D1p1rtment Ho. ,...,1!11111r 11, lt10, I I •1)0 1.m., In 11'11 rKtlvl ltl ltll bldl llP IO l :OO P.m. T\l'tl• W. E. ST JOHN 3 of ... Id (Ollrt, ti 100 Civic Ctnltr Dl'lvt fllUMrOOfft of DIHflmtnl Ho. J of Mk! dtv. Stpl1!1111tr U, lt10. II !ht Purer.et· LEGAL NOTICE C111,1ntv Clerk Weit, In lhl CllV of Stn!I Alli, Ctlllornlt. c.oui1 ti 71» Clvk Ci"ter Drlvt Wt•I In lnl Dtpt. of ... Id IChPol dlllrltl IOC:t!ld II Tllllftl,.. trlll Mltlw Dtlld StPttmlltf' l, 1•10 lllt City of Slnlt Ant, Ctllltrnll , • 1110 Adtrn1 A.vtnvt. <:<11!1 Mt.... JU4 l'llfllff Av-W. E. ST JOHN, l>lltd S11<•1!11btt 1, 1t1D. Ctlllornlt , ti whlcll ll"'t t.tld bid• Wiii be p.JHIJ Whittler, Ctllklrnll Cou"lll Cltr• W E $T JOHN l>ubllcl'I' OPtnld 1nd •tad 10 r : ClltTll!1CAT8 0 1' IUllNISS, T11! UUI •H.&JO Inf 11).1.. WAlZllt, WllHITDCK, cciuni.. Cltrk Mlcrvteoffl, Aer1lr1tr1. An•IY11!1', COJ l'ICtlTIOUI NAMI AltorMl't ..... PllllllMr MANION • ICING, INC. ,.Tiit TG•HAY PPM Rtcordet, t nd S.mpllnp S~ll1!11. Thi 11nderiltntd do c ... 111r thw ire Publlll1td Ortnee C011t D111w ~not • ._ Stutll ll'ltr1' Oflv1, S•tt• • ,,.. ••-• lwn~ N.,,,..., * AU llld1 1r1 ro IHI In 1ccord1n'1 wltll comrilr::t!"' 1 Dllt!n111 11 '1:'.:Z f~~USt .. Au-I 21. n 1nd llllltmblr .i. 1'7' kVttlY KUii. Ct111trftl.I fflll CMll Miit 'callftt"ll tuM tllt lnit•uctlon1 1"'1 ConclltlOn• t ft.11 5111 llllllcn. C1tlfornl1, u~I( FO = 1'0t-10 Tlli UlSI llt....,..w t"411 Tll: 17141 ~ S-llktlillnl wlllch ••• """' on Ill• •NI llrm "''"' ol WOOOST M • AllorMYI ,., ~ttui.... At!Orntv "' 111111..., mt v IHI 1ecvrld In Int o!flc• o! 1ht 11111 u ld '""' Ii cornPOMd f ~~ LEGAL NOTICE Pu1111U.ld °''"" C011I Otll'V Pltot. P~b!lll11d or1.,.. Co.II Dlll'f 'Hat Purcll11ln1 A.tent of 11ld tcl\001 d11trlcl, loll~no personi , WlloH nt"':1 11 ~ . StJtM!Otr J, •· 10. 1'70 16Jl..70 SIPltmblt J 4 10, 1910 1iu,O Etch blddlr mvll wbm!f wllll ll!t bid ~ 1/lrl 1111(11 01 r11lclt11C1 ire It o O\n, •·>n'2 0 -----·--·------------". ctlhltr'i cl\tck, ct•!Uled ~h..ck, or bla· o.Ye IC, Mc.Morrin. JlOVi flh SI., S.11 ClltTll'ICATI: 01' IUSIN•I LEGAL NOTICE 1· dtr'I bond m•d• 111v1bll lo 11-Ol'"W OI St.ell. Cit. 907(1) ,ICTITIOUI NA.Ml! th• CNtl Cornmunlll' Coll-Dl11rkt ~Obef"I' L Oworrl!v. llll'h $111 St~ Tiit llndtr111nld do c .. 1111 M trt • ,.l&JtJ LEG.U. NOTICE &Olrd of Tfvllffl In tn ttnaunl not ltH $"' Buell, Gii. tGlolO conducllnt 1 bvtlllltl 11 o111 Ettl 11111 (l:ltTl,ICATI! 0, I UllHl:ll lhtn ttvl perctnl ($~}of 1111 1um bid II O.'ld Avtull )1 1170 $1rttl fl trvlnt, Co11t Mtll , Ct ll!On'llt , Fl(TITIOV'I HAMI: ,,.ti • eu•rtnltt fl'ltl ""blddtr w11l "''"Into DIYt IC. McMon•" II-1111 tlcll!IOlll llrm "" .... ti lltV1NE Tiit undtrtloMd don ttrtlfr he .. Cl:RTll'ICATI 0' 8UllM IJI, Ille 1r-lld Conlrtct II 11\1 1111'11 II Rober! L. O-i1'r ~EltSOHNEl SEltYICES ANO AGENCY eondllctllll I b<itllltU 11 lU G•t nd Ctnel. , 'ICTITIOUI NANtl twanStd hi lllm. In IP\e f\ltn1 of ltllvrt 10 lltlt ot C1lltor111t, Ortnte COlllllY; Ind tlltl 111d llrm It (omptltd OI n... l!tlbot hltnd, C1Utornl1, vnOtr 11'11 Tiit unckflll ntd -Ctrll!V P\e 11 ""'" lnlo II.Id! con1r1ct. Ille proc:ll'd1 at o~AutuSI 31, 1'10, btfor1mt,1 NGl1rv ta!l°"'lnl --· -• -t lft fVH fkUtlou1 flml ,...,,... af MEADOW Condlldl"I • Mlnll1 11 1101 Jt"'1110r1t ""cMc.k wlll llt IOrltlttd. °' In the u ... PllblC In .,., tor n ld St<, --•ltY Ind t 11Cn of •111denc• •r• •• torloWI: INVESTMENT GROUP II , , "'11. d ltd., Ntw-1 ll11ch. Ct l., ...-'"' If t bond, !ht lull IU"' tlllt'tof will IM'"'"'" Dive ti;, McMorr1n 1nd llobtM Ptlrlclt HOPlilnl Porto. Sl1 Orcl\lf'd llr1MfShl1>l llfld 11\tl N II Hrm h llctll~I llrm lllmt ol' Hl!WPORTElt torttlltd lo llld Kllool d\1l1lct, l , tJiwDr<lcY known tg me Ip r.. 1ht A.YI., Cor-dtl Mir c.Clm.POHd Of "'°' lollowlnt ,..,_, wMMI MENS SHD~ Ind llltf Mid firm fl No bldd.,. m1v wlT!lll••w hll bid tor I """'' whole 111mt1 ••• lutl•t•lti.d to Johll lOllll Porto. J11 Of'd'llrd AYI., n-In 1\111 Ind llKI of !'911dmct 11 11 ComtOtld of lllt followlnt --· wfloN Htlod of lortv.flvt !di dirt '"" Ille 1111 111111n 1n1trumtnt 11111 ICV.O•lldllld Conint dtl Mtr lollOwl: ntm1 In tvn I nd 111tc1 ol •11Jdtnc1 II •• 0111 1tt lor Ille -"I"' tlltleo!. ,...., ••tc:vtld 111t 11m1. 0•11111 l-1J-70 Clltrln E, J-tt. 311 Gri nd C1111I, lollowl1 Tiit IN'll ol Tr111!tt1 .......... tllt !SEAi.) Jot!ft LOUii '"'O tit~ h lt r.I. Ctlll, l?U!, Robtrl VOl'l'I (llff, 11JO w111nr. An .. prlvlllot ol rtltc:llne trrt t"'1 I ll bld1 °' FltAHK L SHUFELT P1!rk l1 HOl>klM ~trto DI"'!' Sfolfl'nbtr !, lfl'll 511ce 6S, C11t1 Miit 10 WtlYt l "V l"t1ul1rl1l11 OI' In-Noti rv Publlt ITATIE OF CAllFOltHIA Ch•tlel E. Juent'I Dttld Avtr, 71, 1f70 to-rntlll!ll lft t nv bld or In the llldd\1141, Mv Corl'lmlu fon E•plrt1 OltAHGE COUHTY IGtntrtl Ptrtner) ltollert Yom Clllt DPefl; lloltmlllr JS, l ·OO P.m, Oct. 1&. 1m on AUllll! 13. 1'10. blforl ""' I 5111t OI C1lllor11I•, 51tlt of Ct lllornlt, Ort,,.. COllntv: Slt/\td NORMAN E. WA7SON T-.IUU Not••Y PubllC In tnll IOI' Mid ,,,,., °''"'' '""'"""' On AvtrUll .... 1t10 bi'IOl'I '"'' I Hol1r1 ' Stcrtltrr. llotrd ot T•wllfltl p ,ii1htd Or111te C011I Dtl!v P llvt Hnll!V ·-·" ,11(.kll HOPlr.1111 Dn I *'"""°''· 1'10. bllort ..... I Publk Jn Ind !of' Mid 11111, __ t,... Plltllllhld Ortntt C011t 01nr Pllot, s.J..,..w 4, 11. 11. 2J, 1110 1'4-7' ~ro t l\d Jol\n L011l1 ~or111 k_,, le mt Not1rv P ulltlc Jn I nd tor 111• llt!t, "'"''td llobtrt T. Yam Clwl known 11 Avtrull 21 tnd Stolt "'lle< "-lt70 un.111 1 bl •~• "'"°"' w-"""" tr• Ptrtont !tv 1ppe1rtc1 C1>1rln E. Ju•ntll mf ro me lt\1 ••n.on ..,_ "''"' 11 =::::..;:c;, _____ -co ---LEGAL NonCE 1~rlbtd 1o rht wll~lll r111trumirnt Ind --n t~ mt fCI bl fllt "r""' ~ tublCrlbtd 10 111t .,..Jtftln fnll•urntnt Ind LEGAL NOTICE j_Jl ____________ 1 k-ltdfld lhtr extclllld 1'111 Mmt. nt m• 11 IVbK•lbed fQ lllt wlll\fn t cknowlldffd Ill IXICUltlll llll 11""" ~~F,ICIAl SEAll l111trvr111nt t nd 1ckrwN1ltd1t111 ftt IXIC~ltd tOFl'ICIAL SEA.ll t \JU Jattpll I! 01~1' "'~ ume. JVAHITA M. IHEFFlflD fltM HOTIC• TO ClllOITOltS No!lr'f Piib11<'<ttlfOl'T111 (OFFICIAL SEAll tlollrr Jlvbllc-C1Utornl1 .. OTICI: DI' 1HtEHTIOH TO OF IUlll: TltAHSP•1t Pi!ncloti Olt!Q In Cllllltr l't,,.11 S11l1bur"1' II Or1n11 COl/n!\I CltlATI $1CUltlTY IHTEltl.ST lltct. 6111 -"'' U.C.C.t ?<•n .. Cov""f"'"' Not1ry •v~llt<tlllot11I• HIV COl'!llnlll~ Ea1lrt1 ISK• 1111 -tltl U.C.(.) NCflCE 15 HERESY GIVE N TO THI Hiii CDf'l'lmlllJon 1!:1-''" • ,rlMlotl Ollkt In SIPI, 1. 191) NOT ICE ,, lllrtllr elvtn to "" Cr~O'I ot "'°''' Clllla<d, TrtMI••., • Julll 11 1'1' Or11111 Count'!' Publllftld 0••-(MJI Dlll'r ~llol, C<td!IOl'l of JA8CEY IH(., I C•lllOl'n~ w~ bv1lntU 1ddrn1 11 112.S.A YIC!ot'li ,Wlltllllll 0;, .... Coill OtnY ~!lot. MY C-ml ... lon I XPlrtl $tPl1!11tllr •• 11, IL 2J, 1910 1"6-10 Cor~1tlon, °"!Of' wll-bu1IM11 Sr,. ;o111 Mt.,., Countv of Or1 .... , 11111 I u , '' • I nd Stpltmbtr ~. Clc:lot>er J, 1111 ,, itddr•11 It .oo E11t Clc:••n ltvd .. lone ot c•1ton111. 11111 1 11111-iriMttt 1, ibaut AU9vl ' u1i..10 Publ!1/ltd Ort,_ CG11t o.r"' ~lkrl, LEG""' NOTICE Bu ell. Covnw ol ln Antetn , S!tlt at 10 II( "'•d• lo J~llt Sltlol'll. Trtntltrft. "" Se!llMl~r 4, 11, II, 3S. '"' lUt·IO /----===:.;i';;;.;;;:.:.:.;;:::; ___ 11 Celllornl1, 11111 • 1tcurl1V !"ter.tt 11 .,..NIM M l""" 1<1dreu k ")2 111111 ltllt LEGAL NOTICE '""" t boVI t0 M. crt1lld llY' DtblOI' •nil A'ft, c;......, ~rO'lt, COUl'llY 111 Ortflll, LEGAL NOTICE Clltfll"ICATI 011 IUllNlll crrttMd ~ MAllCl!l MEl!llSSEMAN, s .. iltlf of Ctlllorflll . SUPlltlOll: COll•T 0, TMS ,ICTITIOUI NMI cvrwd Ptr!Y, -111/llfltH tddrt" fl TM al'OOtrll' to be tr1n1fl!1'rN Ii lau!N ITITI 01' (Alll'OlttlllA l'Oll ClltTll'l(ATI 0 , 8USINISI Tiit llnd~tlentol dOtt Clr"lll~ I'll II CM-.a.io Hlltrll W1r, NfWOOrl ll•ttll. COllnlV 11 t!l~ Vlctorlt SI .. Cotti Mt.,., Ctunt11 TNI COUNTT 0' ORANGll ,ICTITtOUI lllAMI ihlc11119 t IMllllU ti 1'17 Anll1 L.n., ,, o"""' 11111 ol Ctlllorn!1, OI 0 .. Me, Stt1t " C1liforril1, .... A"41S• TM llndfnltlled ""' Clll11f'V Ill ,, N-1 lllCl'r. C1lltorrrl1, 111\dtr "" lie. Tiit -tv In """1cn 11>1 StcvrllV S1 • p.._tv 11 <ltKrlbfol t11 ttnttll MOTICI OF Hl .... IHO 0' PITltlON CG'ldlldlM 1 bUllntu II W w lflll St , illlou1 lltm 1111'11 of Ill COMTl!IC 121 lnttttll wrn bf e ... 1111 ls, In ........ 1. •II ~ .... t!odr lft IT .... "'-· ..... """" ,Dlt PltotATI 0' Will ANCI POlt COtll #Mii Ct lllorftlt II~' ""' Clll'llftllflktllDM Ttetlnolol'I' 11111 ""-' ••!ti llAlllf'll I ncl 11vh•l'lt111I. lvrnllll'I tnd M4 teed wlN ti tll'lt 1.no '"'°Iv bl.Ill· LITTIRI T•ITAM«NTAllY ll°"D lkllll-11,..,.:, l'ltfnl If 'ct bbt ... IM firm 11 COl'!IPOlld of ll'lt fol10wln1 ... rlOfl. tvrnll/llM• Of DttllM c-llltl • prQOtrh .... n ~"'""' ., llMCll AlllO ""'"""' I nd WAIWIO~ Klflll tnd trul lollld flntl II ---ol 111'1111141 -lft IUll.,.,. '*'" rllldfnu -localtd II 11'00 1'!4octn11• Cnlt *•'" •I ll)W. -Yl<torlt S•~ c.11 1:11111 11/ltO\I L. Sl\tltr, Dtet1Hd. .,,. "''""''"' -· """'°"' ... "" ffi"Nn le II lol!OwJ: • -Mn1. c-IY' OI °''""' 5!1k .. Mt ... Covntv ol Drl lltf, Sl11t " Clll• HOTICI ,,, Hl~EIY QIVl!N Tll.tl I ncl "'~-0! flllotnct .. II Petltwl: 111n1.,. ... LAYl111, Im AllH1 Ln .. C1llf0rt1J1, ind bu-'""' k-'! lornlt. MlrlDn '· ,111111 .... h11 lllld fltflltl t """ 1!1~11 lltll, tCGI w. 11111 11 .. Cltlt H"""°" ..,ell. "llOVAL CltEl.T COCICtAll lOUNGI. Tit DI/Ill """'" win llt (Olll\/!flfflflld lion lot ""91_11• of wm ..... lw 11-nc• Miii. Cant. D1ltld #lulVll ll. ,.,. Tiii 1fot1111d llClltlt'f lttMtdlDn Wiii on it 1nl!1' tilt l• dtJ Of Swttmbw, 1t10, GI \..Ill-Tnt11ftfr'!l1rv "' l"t!JI'-Oiled S..lffl'lbtr J, lt70 Sllnlfl' j.. LAYl111 bl COllMl"""'lld 111'1 or 1/ler Ille JOlll dolJ 11 11A.NI.11 llttl!n, llfltln & C011n1. 1100 4~ W,,...I, rdtrtnt:I IO wlllcll h Mn 111111 h ll STA'rt 0' CALl,OltNIA or Sfplernber. 1m, t i 10~00 A.M. ,, W11t Third Sr., Len Ane1111. COlllllY' "mlclt "" ""1Mr Nrllcul•"-Ind 111111111 Stt•• at etifll)l''lll, DR AHOI! CDUHTY LAWNDAll fl(ltOW COMPANY. itlt U. A11111t1.. 5!1t1 ot CtllfDrlllt. 11n'll t nd jllfct If llMrlne lllf """' .._, Ott!181 Covntr: On AlltU11 lL 1'70, btfort '""I Nottrv Soutti Sl'1'fl, lOfll 8t1dr. Cotltornl• In k ,,, ., ·-ft to '"" Tri"•'-· Ill llfll'I "' ........ ~ ti, 1170, ot ,:)0 On ..... 1. J, lf70, btfw. ""'· I Hot•r'f Pvblk Ill tlMI tor H id Sllll, --·IY lnllltlr1>"'!t. 11111"11 ,..,.... tnd tddrt111t llHd 11\1tllt1.m .. In tllt ~tr-of ~rtmtnl Mo. ,~bllt 111 tnd tor ttld lltr.. ..,._II, tPl>ffrwd l ttnltY L UYl!'ll lllOWfl It .,.,. So ••• II ·-le Ille $t(vfff P1rtr, T .... ,.,Or '°' , ... lll•M '"" ia.i ... ,. J If 11ld ~rt. ot 700 Ch'IC (1111 ... Drlv1 •oot••f'lll Ellt11 1,1, ~-fO ""' lo " to bl 1111 "'* Wf'IOtl "'"" II W!Hcri. •11 111,11111111 n1me1 l l\CI tdd•flln uHd .,., .,. Wttl, l11'fllt (llV Cl Stnll AM, cttllllor!llt . "" H rwr1 whftt ntmt It tubK•ll!trt It H 111 Ille wlll\ln ll'lllrumtnt Ind tilt Dltltor tor 1111 lllrrtl Ytl" 1111 "''' ''"" 011 .. ,t:'"lrfl>il H, 1'111. 1111 wlll'lln !mlrvmtnt Incl t tl,_ltdffd td!ncrwltdll'd ht ••tcutfd IM MJ'M. t rt : NON I!: Olttd; A.wust :I, lt l'O . L IT JOHN 11!1 IKICV!td tllt Ul'lll. iOll'FIClAL IE"-ll Olttd AlllVll J6, ltJt Jtl!l1 It Sll!Ord ntv (Irk !OFFICl°'l S!Al) Jet.fllll I , Dtvl1 Stcurl'd Ptrtv Ttl nt.ll•H "~ .i.rw111 ~ ··-Me.,. IC. Htnrv HtlltW Pllbtk-Ct ll!Oml1 Mt•ctl MH!'Utmtll •1n1H, 81:TTIH • COONS 4 111'111 NOJtrv ~U(lne.(1lltci"'t• Pr1MIN1 Ollkt lit L ... WNOAL.• llC~OW COM~A1'Y a n1111 "'"" 1'1111n11 .. 11 N"" 8NCft, Cllllf11'11l1 '•l11cl111 Dnlct Ill Or1n11 Cwntl' 11M 1111111 llrtll 110!' WM! Tlllf1 llrH'! Tth I ti OJ.tOlf'. Ort"" (llvnlv Mii (omml11IM1 l 11lr" . fRaNT, CHANGE IN POPULATION, IY STATE 1960•1970 . ¥'t ..... /" IU I -••• u ..... CHART SHOWS POPULATION CHANGE OV.ER I.AST DECADE IN U.S. N1tl~ G1ln1 14.2 Percent; Onfy flv• St•t•• Show Decre11M In People 22 Kentucky 32 Oregon 42 Montana 23 Washington 33 Colorado 43 Idaho 24 Iowa 34 Nebraska 44 Hawaii 25 ConnecUcut 35 Arizona 45 North Dakota 26 South Carolina 36 h1aine 46 New Hampahlno 27 Oklahoma 37 New Mexico 47 Delaware 28 Kansas 38 Utah 48 Vermont 29 AtiSsis11ippi 39 Rhode Island 49 Wyoming 30 Westll\l;Oginia 40 D.C. (esUmated) 50 Nevada 31 Arkansas 41 South Dakota 51 Alaska . LA Jn1Dps to 3rd WASHINGTON (AP) -The Censu1 Bureau bas released Uti1 table, ahowtnc the population gains and kues or the nation's 25 largest. cities. Jackaonville, which apanct.. ed its city limit!, ahc>wed the largest increue in Uie number of people while Chicqo bid the largest loss. City New York Chicago Los Angeles Philadelphia Detroit Houston Baltimore Dallas Wash.lngton lndlanapoli1 Cleveland Milwaukee San Franciaco San Die10 San Ant.onJo Booton Memphis St. Laub New Orleans Phoenix Columbua Ohio Seattle Ja<:ksonvUle Denver Pllll\>W'ib 1170 Cl!ft, Preliminary 7,771,730 3,325,283 2,782,400 I,928,529 1,492,914 1,213,0&4 895.222 836.121 764,000 742,613 738,956 709,537 704.209 175,788 '50,131 628,215 620,1173 607,7J8 585,187 580,275 533,41! 524,263 513,43!J 512,!91 512.178 1Me Cen. 7,181,984 3,5$0,404 2,479,015 2,002,512 1,670,144 938,219 939,024 679.684 763,956 476.2!8 176,0SO 741,324 740,316 573,224 587,711 697,197 497,521 750,026 '27,525 439,170 471,316 537,087 201,030 493,887 604,33.! Cbange Per CUI Chance JO,lM 0.1 225,141 u 303,385 ll.I 75,983 3.8 177,230 10.S 274.145 21!.3 43.802 4.7 156,437 23.0 266,35$ 53.9 137,094 15.8 31,787 4.3 36.107 u 102,564 17.9 62,470 10.8 88,982 ••• 123)49 2U H2.308 19.0 41,738 8.7 141,105 12.1 62,102 13.Z 32,824 5.9 312,409 JM.4 18,804 3.1 91.61f . 15.2 -.,. .. I l I I I s 4 4 5 5 I 7 7 I I II • I to • II I 12 ti IS 12 II II 15 J1 16 11 17 22 11 It It 15 20 • 21 • 12 II 23 II 21 IS 2$ 11 California Gains Most WASHINGTON (AP) -California had the largest gain ln the number of resident.I during the last ten yun but Arizona boasted tbe largest percentage increue, tbt U.S. Census Bure1u reported Tuesday. The list of the gains and loS!es of all 1tates wu made on the buts of prelJmlnuy lnfonnaUon received from the 1970 caisus. 1970 1160 Cba.ge JllO lo 1171 State Prellmlnary Final Number Pfl' Ceal United States 200,263,121 )79,323,175 20,916,793 11.7 Alabama 3,373,006 3,266.740 106,266 3.3 Alaska 294,807 226,167 60.440 30.3 Arizona 1,752,122 1,302,161 449,96 1 34.6 Arkansas 1,886,210 1,786,272 99,938 5.6 California 19,1196,840 15,717,204 3,979,1138 25.3 Colorado 2,195,887 1,753,947 441 ,940 25.2 Connect!( 2,987,950 2,535,234 452,716 17.9 Dtlawar 542,979 446,292 96,687 21.7 :x-D.C. 764,000 763.956 Florida li,871,1112 4.951,560 1,719,602 34.7 Georgia ,492,038 3,943,116 548,922 13.9 •1awa ii 7411,575 632.m 115,803 11.3 Jdaho 698,275 667,191 31,08< 4.6 Illin ois 10,973,!186 10.081,158 892.823 u Indiana 5,143,422 4,662,498 480,9'24 10.3 Iowa 2.789,893 2,757,537 32,3'11 u Kansas 2,!22.173 2,178,611 0 15e2 2.0 Kentucky 3,J60,555 8,038,158 122,899 4.0 Louisiana 3,564,310 3,2$7,022 307,266 9.4 Maine 977.280 16f.265 7,!195 0.1 Maryland 3.874,142 3,100.1189 773.953 25.0 Massachuaett. 5,M0,%24 5,148,571 481 ,646 9.4 Michigan •.778.873 7,123,194 953,679 12.2 Minne.sot• 3,767,975 3,413,864 3S4,ll 1 10.4 Mississippi 2.158,872 2.178,141 19,269 0.9 Missouri 4,636,247 4,319,813 316,434 7.3 Montana 682,13.1 674,767 7.36& t.t Nebraska 1.468,101 1,411 ,3.11) 56,77"1 4.0 Nevada 481 ,893 215,2'18 198,815 118.9 New Hampthire 722,753 l!Ot!,(121 115,832 19.t New Jersey 7,091,995 8,066,182 1,025,213 16.9 New Mexico !198,257 951 ,023 47,234 5.0 New York 17,979,712 16.182',304 1,197,408 7.1 North C.rolln1 4,981 ,832 4.5511.153 405,677 3.9 North Dakota 610,648 632.448 21.798 3.1 Ohio 10,542,830 9,706,397 &15,633 1.6 Oklahom1 2,498,371 2,321,284 170,094 7.3 Ortgon 2,05S,171 1,183,!87 287,484 16.3 Pennsylvania lt,tl!l,301 Jt ,319,366 343,935 3.0 Rhode l.tand 912,4'11 159,418 62.973 -7., South Carolina 2.522,881 2.382.594 , 140,287 5.9 South Oa kola 66J ,408 680,511 19,IOS 2.1 Tennessee 3,131,'177 3,567,!M'l -271,888 7.5 Texas 10,969.123 t.579.177 l,409.446 14.7 Ullh 1,060,1111 890,1127 170,00I 19.I Vtrmon\ 437,711 389,881 47 ,163 ll3 Virginia 4,513,249 3,966,949 576,300 14.6 Wa.shlngton 3,:152,892 2,&M,214 499,618 17.5 West Virginia 1,701,113 1,060,421 158,508 I.I Wl&consln 4,366,766 3,951,777 414,989 JU Wyoming 328,591 330,068 1,47~ 0.4 . ·-~· -~ ., ., , ' . ' . ; ' • . . :ii ' ' ~ ' . ii . ' ' . . ' , . . : ' ' . •C . ' ' ' ' ...... INtll. Ctlll, fltOt I.II Allttl•t; Ctlil, tOlt1 All.,,,...t ftr '"'""'' M' C01111m1ulerr h1lrn JVflf I). "'' •tc:-Ne. lffi hrllllil\ICf Ort"" (Ott! b1li'f' l'llot, ,~llllltd Of•... (Oto! Dlll'f ,!IOI, N6v, 7(, l tl'J 'utrll11\ec1 Ot1n11 COlll Dtl!r •1tot, ! ~bll\htf O••n11 Co•tl Dtll• Pllel, s.lt111N1 4 "'° lut-7'1 At.oevlll 11, JI •N Stll!tmlltr 4 lt'111 ~1,1bl11~ftd Or1!'111 C0t1! 0 11!1 •llot, Avtllll 14 ti, JI 1111 hllllllblr . 4, ·.1 1-Eltlmal& 1et111111111r 4 1•ni _ lffl·l'O 1'°"111 kP!1m11tr ~ 11, If. U. 1m 1~7' Jt18 111 .. 11·•------------------------------------------.1 t ' • SC • OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List , Sneak Preview NASO Listings for Thursday, September 3, 1970 ~ IPs'ht ....... llW-' ........ _. • ._..,..,Llft.,_~ ""*' ........... ,..,. • ...,., ............ c:tlMll ....... Abe<vt ,ft! All'>l l•b 1.1, Aunti'Clewt ACfl'ltMkl tb Adm£._ 1,24• ,.,_. f'1'ar Ad MIU!\ •• aie ...... alt •1t MllM Me =I~ .~ MEW V~•IC. IAf'I l'"W11 Oii' 11 11.., PllllS HM 1!1'!, II~ Sltbo Ftl l'-' =~ t.,~ -This fol WlllO bier llOfmkt J JI' PUCI $ H( I '4 ~ T•m1n 176 17t Atulrr1 & = Mk Olllil.., Oii Gnlt :IO Sl1• PUl)l~r ''-~ T•S'41t 11 11\11 Alltlft ll'IC: ~.1t='1ut.:,.Jt "oi" j11 ~Pu':,~ ! -~ ,t~~ ~=r~, w '°~ '' Air P•od ,10b ifror1" Of Secwlti.t F I! , l" ~urllv "!1 ~,.. u JV com t" r' !/: "•V'~ 0911.,j' Inc., ••• Fii ew ,,., ... ~11!,,c:" ' 4\'Ji trn'l.lnt ""' lll-' AJ IN!u,ir••i not 11 lrtMK· Fou• Ji: _... 6.14 114 TtrtdYn 17\'J I Al•sll• In , .• lloftl I ~· rtP. Fout l 311 Out l CM ,,,. 10\4 Tt~•s AS , l\'J Alber!OC ~· ,....nl1t YI lnllt" Ill mg ' 4\11 ll:T Sys! •U S'4 'r"4rm A 2 l Alberl11\1 .M <OHier IJflCH I II ol •rfnkl ,l"" 12 RMI Dy I 11.:. Tlflny Co ' ' AlaMtu 1.70 -oal1t1tle!Y l .. SW 1 'i 14\lo A.ii.II ~ ~ lo llltny Jn 1 .lil<:OS!tl!d .:M D.m~ II Wfll<fl IMff :/''" Ir.. m 11tn$b El U 11U Ti11n (;p :N .. A!•~ftd'5 ,)Of' =lilt\,., coukl Mlle 4 ... Ill~ Cp ,, 70 TrK Cpq 2~ '"-At"19 CP ,JOe cl'41ltd 1i:ICl1 llll!,: Rr-4ffi m 10 R1ym Cp llllo 1~~ Trr'ICnl (; lt 1 ... An"Llld 1 . ..0 ..id (b d), ntitr-.. t"' 2\'J ! Rf«l!I E13 11 11'-'I Trr><nt o 1.v. ,,,.. Aflfo!ILlld f" dl•l•r m.er~t!i uen 1 'Mo Rt! trtcl 3j n 1t TrlMotl H ~~ ~ ""Hw Pw .n do ""' I n<:I""' l•l"ll 21\'i 71 Rlddr Pu ' "" u Trleo Pd 29\oJ )(11,lj ""!tlettCll 1.XI -·~ m1r11uo, li:lll w Jl\'J 1j\\ It lty 510 I 13 Tldtl l~ 3~ Alll!ll.l,~j "'° m1r down or com· Rub j\:. Roect E~ 221.\ 2311» To11rc1 311-.i 33\oio AlldMlll .fib ll'll•t . CY' 1. !"' Robln M 21 23 TyM!I> Fd I'll "' u11e<1 Pd .~ MA Ent 1\'o l'\ l S 7~ ~ ROMton 3'• •'~ UnUec 1-. '"'° Al i«!Slr I .0 Ml Coro 3"' l" WY c 1¥1 J'• RCIP C••I 71, Hol Un lltum 21'11i 27~ .. u~s ..... 1'" ·~APr S 1• 1 .... rlllfl Cn o'o~ >>"' Rin. SIOlt 1• 7! Un MCGll S SV. All•~ C""° m : fs l'rric I~~~ I~~ lr"Mt~ 3!;;; ,.~ RY:i~. Ho •ii~~\ .. ~f ~~::: I~ '"' :=Pf to• A Ind 2\'• 21'1 r.eti Mt 1 ~ ltl'lo ~intn E ,., 1 us Suo• ~~ 11 t.m~rsuo;i 1.60 A pl •~ S•.lo rnfl RE 11 17'\0 kilo!! In l 'l ''' US T~L 32 ;~~ ~::,A~s ·SfJO AVM 'f , ... 10)'! fll'ff Pr m ,, Sd Cl!1r 1'1 2l• UP PenP 701~ 11U1 Am fl pf?:60 :~ ef : 1su ::::: t~ ~ ''"' Sd lr1<1 l '• •\~ Ulan SLd I 1\\ ""m H~n .72r Arr"11x ,._, n ulf lnl ll't Ji~ ~-Son~ 11~1 II Ulll Ind JJ 14 AMtlf oil~ t1~~ndu,,' l~~ l~ H:=~ s 1J~ ~ ~~o ~ '~,. •: ~=~.c;0s. 1~:~ it~ ~11;~·!~~ ~ ~t=.,H i~ J""a=:s 1~ "~" s.11 c,.," 1 t;?1!~:~~~·~ ::~~~~&1,.~:-,.1, Akol.e; '" '" •" Go ·2i ~llt. Stnlln'I t ,,,. W•ltt !I 11\/o n Am!IOC• 1 20 Ch Allco Lncl l• ll~ Idec '"' J Vi s.,"C Gf-11 ,.., St,., w •-11 3\li ,....,. •m ca .. 1,70 ~-evrolet's new small. Vega gets unusual appraisal from onl.ookers urin anival A1• ·~ 1· ' a 11111¥n '"' ven VI .i 17 WilHW d Jl~ 314 AC•n Cl'I I.IS t C I Ch A 119!1 EQ .... l olm E.e.. ,ts Shendotl s~ s Wt\11 NG 1•'·• u-.. AC•VSIXI LIO a onne I evrolet 1n Costa Mesa. The Vega goes on sale c-.l 1 but inter-A on G• '" v. 11lob!n ·," .......... sm1111 M 1 1'11. w ... 11 •e ''' t Am c..., .•1p t · b · I th ~.. Amide 11'1 Vi ~ ,,.. ,..w; SolldSI s 2 ?'I\ war Ts 6"0 7o,;. AC:n11n 160 es IS O VJOUS y ere nOW. Am 11111" 9\111 10\li Horii flt I ! K •l W•I U 1'~ Webb Rt 11, t AmCvan l.U .---------''-------------------------------------IA El l•tl 2h ~lioWl'd GI at\ 'lllSoNE Tel l$'1\JSl'IWtHrdn f tl.~AO!ilT•! .30e Am E•EI• 15 iUVt Howl!\ In 171-1 11 SoUn GI 2:1 ... ?l Wtll"ll M lS,_, 16'• Am °'HlVMI Am Furn N 'Yi ~k MF t11o. ,:"" Sw G$Co 1nr. 14111 Wlltlf p I~ 11 AmEIPw 1.11 ~ AA~~ ~t? ~." ~ ~. T,"" uv. l:.C~!~'<'( 1!~ 'i" :::~ ~ ~~ :~ ~ ~;~1 1~ Am T .. IY 12\li n"" thin! p ~ 7Y, Stt lldyn 21 Yo 12\f) Wiii> Pub , .. ·~ AElll~ OIA6 Al>l'lt"' a .. .. .... HYIH (p 16 1.-... SIO llfl)ll 10v. 11 WhlQ Wh \.. 6\, AGenln• s.o Ank..,, In !" !I'll H"l'~tt Int S\11o S .... S1t n HPd 21\<o 21 w;nti.ll 11t< U AGnln f!l.lt:t A•t• 1116 \IJ H'YOt Allt 3\l!o 3"' Sh!rltl Sir 01\ 101-lo WIK PL 1, l fl.'J AmHo\1 .70 Your .Jloneg's Worth Arden M '"' • lmt0t Sy .... 7\oll Sl•IW Ct 91 " Wrotw E 21,\ 1loi A Homt I.IQ Arden 0, 271,; " Ind Gii 2a'U 11\lo SlltlK TY 1"' 1\lo WrlQhl w lf""' ,.,.,., A Horne pf 2 ~~~ M~ ~I Utt 1:::•t=ucJ ~~ 21::? Sugo11 F JY, ' YrGnY E. •'4 4\-1 ~1 ~:.f. ·~ fil~w 2~~ :J~ .n1r1ro 0n lo 11.ii A. Mtrlll! 1..tO Auto $cl • <IVo 1111 Conl 1'16. :::eteMo~I 4 81lrd Al l o,\ • lnlrt" In •Vr J A,.1tG11 2.10 Pawnbroker's Business Up By SYLVIA PORTER For pawnbrokers, the 1910 busineS3 recession has , increased business an average of 20 percent -and, said the , bead of a mJd-Manhattan hock shop a few days ago, ••we could have increased it by 100 percent if the funds were available. We are getting 10 to 12 calls a day-from people looking for loans of $20,000 to $50,000 for their jewelry." The pawnbroker is not the costliest (lf all loan S<lurces but he's close to it, almost as far down the list as you can go. He certainly, must be classed as a source of last resort for the desperate borrower. FOR YOU'LL pay an annual interest rate running from a m1n1mum average of 3 6 percent to easily 511 percent to much, much more. You'll be able to borro>N only 1,000'1 OP OIL PAINTINGS WHOLISALI WAIEHOUSI Ol"IN 10 THI PUILIC t•lt •• ~~NG~ :rH1A AH.\ PHOH I m.4611 OEALl!AS WAHTE!I Tho Finest In Pipel, Tobaccos And Gifts SOUTH COAST PLAZA .. _ ..... N.., Tiie Moy Ce. Phone: 54G-8262 a fraction -2$ to 80 perti!nt -of lhe auction value ()f the asset you pledge and, to get your funds , you'll have to tum over your property to the pawnbroker for the life of the crediL Your loan usually will have a life of a mere 30 to 180 days. although. you m I g h t get another 180-day extension. Jn many parts of the country, tf)()ugh, you must r edeem kour though )'OU must redeem your collateral within » to 60 days ()r it becomes the property of the pawnbroker who can then offer it for sale. A GOOD remedial Joan society is much to b e preferred to an ordinary pawnbroket; but there are (Inly a few good ones, and you still must pledge your asset during the life ()f the loan - an asset which you might badly need. It's always this way when a person is desperate for cash - either because o! financial errors he bas made on his own or ~ause be is a victim of a deliberately en g i n e e re d economic decline (mich as I NEED 2 MEN e WM ..... HA.SD eH 1111. u.-• wm .. •Mk e Hrre ..u.uhf rK•"1 •• ,. .1111 .. • ....... Md ... .. r....,.,_..__._..... "W'lll .-11tw t1111 BOB HARBISON 645-2111 B1kt r l•lt. 1•'° tnl &win J S'lt Am Phato .n 111 P1\nf •V• •V. Int MulTll 1t 70 A.lle•O~ .IJt irwck l'Ao f lnl Sy1 70 Jl \1:1 MUTUAL A S II I ll•1!n p 1V. l\lo Int Sy of IS 11~) ....;:: ~·,,r: .60 !9'1•"1 -SS>0° n has been). "'r." 'lll tt• 1nh!JI l '/o 7lt AmSoAtr .10 y ....... !ttY ••• l Iii• onfcs ,, .... UV. ' ,., ' - Th " f ,. d ,_ g1ecnm 2) !4 It SoUlll 11\lo 21\lo A::i S!~ r·"' e op ... ons o u1e esperai.c: •II• 111t 11 ,.,,. j•cobs F 4\"J s AmSld £1f4.1S bo I I l eHn tncl s J"° ""In C '"" M FUNDS Am Stt rU .4 rrower are a ways severe y ••k Ha 11 Jim w11 s~·. l \o\o A s11111r 1 .act llt ll lib lflli 40111 J1rnt1 F JO\o\o )10:.. ASUO pf.t.).'5 limited and he, the person 1111~1FS: JV. ,,~ jt~·~0, ;:: :'"' ~~lr ~I ·" least able to afford the I ~\ftf' HI ,J,l,t ,3: ~~v:, ';~ ~Vint:: ~,,,v!~t 2·~ OQU. £1 2¥. 17 11 A~ ,,f i°.H horrendous interest rates, ls 1o11 11er ,,,.. ~![:~~ p1 11•4 u11o stttt111bt• , tnv.1100. G•ouri Am ~inc oo!he e 1 1~ 11... G ,.. ... OS • -always ... one who pays l°"l AH l~ lS'll Kiit rn ... .. NEW YORK CAP\ ' ncll l .$ 3 16 mt•on ·-w .. CID ~ I~ K•Y"" 3\11 l\:o -Tiie lollowlnt1 ouo-Mlfl 1.7? .:56 Amtlril .actl "-1rlnllt 1n 32\lo SJ Kt1r T t t~ 1•11-. WllPllK by Prog 3 37 J 66 AMF Inc .90 Uft:m. rk• $Clo II """ Kt lM!tl l \• 31.'i Ille NlllOl\tl Auoc:r-Stoel' 1s:6, u :os .. mlac; .IO l rwn Ar Tl4' l:t l(ell'Wd \9:W. l'Oih 1ilon of SKurllles SetPCf I.act t ,lS ~P In~ .5' But Whal jf You a--t '" .. , •. > ,,_ IC•ulf E t l4 t Oe•ltrt. Inc., lrt V1r Py 1.00 6 S2 !TIMI! Corp '" "" 11~ktv •ij ~·a Ktt• F ib 11"" 1:M in. e>tica1 11 w111c11 1nv Rein •.04 .:.2 ~m•tf' 3J.fll desperate but are eagerly i11~~::.,..c"s '~"" ,: ~:::, 'P1C :~ ;~ ~~~ lllY~~ur~~ :~'.j1 1~-~ 1!·i~ A~'ioM 1.to seeking a cash Joan £or any of 1c L••• 6"' •~ 1e11111 Int ,,,. 3i~ r,1d fbld\ ar boullgt J Hncodl: 1·69 727 Al'IC~ Hoc-1 •I w SY 23~ 2l~ Klllllt El • 4¥1 ••ktdl lluftdV. JOhnstn 11'92 ifn Ancor11NSv 1 various nnnv .. :es? What if you ""to 14 IS Kirk Cp J\lo ,,. Bid Ai.II Kevstont Fuiioi · • And ciav 1,70 h rd-~ .ded . l 'ICll'I M 61 ff l(N P Vat ?JU 21"" Abtrdn I.IS l,rl Jrirotto I ll6 •162 Ap.a,neCp ,IS ave eel a g a Inst 1n11M 8 as " Krel1Jr ~ 2~~ A~~~~IY Fsu;"f'i11 COJS el 11.1s 11:u :riOll11ar1.3n bo • f I •= t nrld 2'° 314 LMC 0.1 H~ 1'"° lricom l.SJ l ts Cu• 92 11.n lt.62 "'' ,\, ', ~ rrowmg rom your re auves 1" Ml9e 151'1 l•V. L111C• 1n 23u ''"" lm.ur , s,i 7 17 Cu• e• 1.n ,,, · or frien<h or asking your ~:: f:,'A ~~ ~ L•l'MI "" ''"' lv. A""'"' i ., • ,, cus Ki 1.~1 1:61 Ar( 111"' · 1°' I P7cn .... 2 LIM Wd 6''o 1" Alllllt1d .:u 1:11 Cus K2 4.22 .... ~~~~,·~.;"1 ,1 employer for a salary advance ,,, °"" l 1\l L••'°" 1v. 1 AfUl•I! s.t• 5.96 ,'" ,',' is.1s 11.lf AriiPs~c 1 °' d · ,_ d I k. f C1rte 81 2v, JV. Ltrwn M l Slllo ,.,,. Atl Am F' .~ ·" 11' 9.0l 9.U Arla1>s os io -an lDSr.c:a are 00 mg Or C1r1r GEi 171'1 11111 L11dv Ld 1'~ U l't Al 1111• •.II t .11 CVI SJ 6.71 6.86 ArmcoSI 1 60 ! ISC NG ··~ , ...... c-·· 1 2"· Alf>fta Fd f .lt 10.0ol Cui S• 3,$1 l .'2' -· an impersonal 0 u ts id e ••II ,.., H't lft ti1wr G IJ·~ 1~ Amcep S.10 5 j7 Por1r 3.01 3.JO A~~. 1·J0 edl·-, Wh t ml ht he ... _ enlt• , .... t!\olo Lewll !IF 13tt. , •• ~Am BVI 2.11 3 l Kn ldob ,,,. 1.19. ,,, ·,, er wr. a g UIC "'YPS l6l1 11 Llftc: MIO 7'11 ,,.Am Ovln t.11 10.0JKnld< Gt 7,la '·"Ar'"t~ DI)/$ I hf ' 111rnt1 1YI m 'oOO ,~ 7~ Afl'lff hwn1~ Lt!! Grtn ~.N 711 rm · S<lllrees or cas or you. lllrt 0 s!i •v. Lott 1'C:ctv , • 21 c1011 1.,., '·"' •• 111.1;11 12 ,, 1.,:14 ArmRub '·'° L IFE INSURAN ~E ~-1e1 I'"" E 1014 11,~ lricmo l .ltl.titltitrlY !;OolSSl AroCOfP90 -=-nn "" 3,,. 3~, Loi lrn 1 lnve11 7.IJ l ,SI !le Slk i6" s'UT Arvin lflCI I POLiey ff h lltl Vt!l l>'L lJ'L LYf!Cll C U • 111'1 $oecl 7.ll .... Life Inv ,·,, ,·,, Aihld Olt 1.70 : OW muc you can 111 llr&I ~ ~•»""Mad GEi 1~ 1~~ Sioc~ 1.11 1.11 ,Linc Net ·univ:.u Asl\011 £111.10 borrow WilJ depend 00 the C~~~\~\ i, I~ I~ =:11~~111Y 6" 6S'• :~ a~:~ t·i~ tn t::..1~ $1Yl3.!~ 3.41 ~k51-,,11:e'.":10 Cas h lu f I. b t ''"'' o•.\ .... Mgmt As 1~ H1 Am Inv '77 4.11 C .. · Alftlane lrod va e 0 your po icy, u 1111 MIO 10\:1 1i~ Manin M 3h 3111 Am M11t 7.M 1.57 .... Jl.61 Jl.61 AltClrEI 1 l• . t u Ml llOr c '"" 7 AmN Gift 1.•2 2.64 Cao.I t.il f,:13 AtlCEI .. u :11 your tn ttesl rate Wi be Only !:::~ ~ ~ na ~!:1: Mtr MIO 111/t. 11\!i Al>Ular Gr-: Mui 12.•! 11.45 AllRtll plJ,IS 5 '• 6 percent a year and YOU ltv!n Ml lSV. lS'lo M1rm Gr' 9\\ f$1 CaoU 6.71 7,n Luth Br11 10.SS 11,S.I Ail AIC:llJI > w ' ' •• ' ' M • ~r ,, ,. ~rwin '·" 10.22 Mi;M •n 7.ts 1.69 AllR"• .IO (• I r 1 V, f'4 rvw t'"-10 ll>Cmt 7,12 7.IO M•nllffl 4.11 (,11 Atlei""Chem 1 can lX your own repayment :r:,t~er ~:i i~ ~~~,L~ 11,,1, 18~, Fd 1rr.r 1,S1o 1.11 MaH Fc1 t.si 10.•2 Arta• carp terms. !lln!on 0 •'Ill ·~ McOuv 11 1• Vtnl 37.16.o.n MeH Giii t .CJ 9.91 ATO Ir>< Oii low Co 1• lS Medic w 4''" A\'o Aoallo Fd unr11U MI H Tr ll .Od ll.11 Auror• Prac1 FULL SERVICE COMMER· otUr o s~ av. Mid MtQ 11'111~1'1 AHocl• 1 " 1.H M11'H 3.21 l.27 Au•omtn lfld 1 ootr Co JO 5J IM-<tlrn 31 :11''> Asl...,., l tl •.21 M•Tntrs 9.SJ '·" A~co CEI .tar ClAL BANK: You II be a_ble ."-,,_, •, •' .l~ Mer1d tn II 141' A~e Houohlon: Merld I'd 11 .1' 1113 AY(O pU JO " .. Mldld c 4.l~ ... Fund A '·" 5.U MldA Mu 4.66 s:ot A\ltfY Pd .. lt to get a personal loan running oion ~tr ,, 2s Mlo1t~ 1 11~ ,,_. ~'f'eo ~·,~ ~·~ MoOcrV, C:P 10.91 n .oo AYMl In JOo In• •-•"A·----..1-I dolt f °'"'" 1 ' Mldw GT ,.,,., uv, 1 • ..., 1.00 1•00 MOOdll i 11.•2 n. Avnet D!'7.J.o w .. ..,~ o ars or om S'! :IA~ 31"4 Mr,I• G•• :J:tV. 31v. ••con 1 ·41 i i'ci MI F Fd 7.61 1.n AvonPd 1.10 ()De to three years at an an-· om ¥:1' ,1 :--Jr.? M It VIG 1.,,. Ullo •• ., K~I 1' 34 i:M Ml" Gin 4.'5 "'· AUK 011 .731 I In of 5 3 -I-lit ,., •"-Mo Rscll , •• J Bitrk Gth •. ,. s"..oM us Gv 100$1010 nua tere.rt rate 11. to I .5 ::.:.: ,,, 7~ , ..... Mod Sci ' •1' g11r Fd u"'Y•11 Mu OmG •. ,, •'.10 _., " Mol!Wk It lJ•' lA ondstk 5 JI S II) Mu Om ln t.11 t,H 8abtk W .50 percent. lf you have the credit :i,;:0 c!. '• ,ol.\i Motif Col 7:\{ ~ Botton St • 11 f.l3 Mut Sllrs 12.as 12_,, &1kro11r 6S M Pk 11 12 !lost Fdft '" 10 n Muf Trtf 117 I IJ 8111 GE ).11 rating, it's an absolutely to~ ~ t~ ~"" j4t~ M::;: P ~·" •t.1 l°'1°" .,;,, 1;10 NEA Mirt 1:62 1:to a.•G p1111.so h omrH 2 11J -· S 10' 11"r r-$1 lt.06 ll.11 N•T Ind 1.61 1.11 81r>11Pnt .lSEI note SOUl"Ce. !on R«k tsV, 2 Ml!H Tr A l7"' Jiiii Bullock C11Y1n· Ntl lnYll 6 Jf 'N llallQP pl ! PASSBOOK LOAN Y 'JJ I Id " Bulick 17 rl U.31 NII Sttur Ser· ' Ilk of Cll l.::M : OU on r ™' 1 MhlTr wt • ••.:. Colldn 11)0 lt:SI B•l•n · t .$7 io . .i •"•"'• ~.",'••' lo t bo ontron 1~ 2 Mol,11 M s·~ ' Olvkt l.:M J.lt Bond (.61 s 00 " ' · pay 9 to percen to rrow -· L 1•''> lS\t Mot Club ,,.., 11•.r. NalW s , st 10 u 0 1v1d 3 62 1·"' Barb 011 1.sa1 b k In b t CorEI s J!\fo l llo M11eller 6\lo 1\JJ NY v .. 1 ,, 6' l il6 Grwtll ,·,, •.• , ll•r" CA .?S ac your ()Wn sav gs, u ~"',,. Yr 1 "" MuTRI E• ,,., i:i. iu""' Fd ,_0 7:01 Pt Srk ,·_,, ,.·• Ba•lt inc ,Mt t Ill " (:rwfrd 16':. H M LE 121'> n CG FO 7,6t ,.Jl lncom 1 41 4 O> Batel Ml11 your nes egg w remam r•• MG1 •~ 7Vt Nt.r tnc1 •1• s\\ C•El•mr 7.0I .1, s illdl 7·11 119 11a1e1 Ml "' 1 intact and will continue to ~r:,.•: M:C J J"' N1rr" c 12''> n1~ cao11 1nv 1.1t1 1.0 Ne1 Gr111 :'1s 111 l:l~1 1nc112 50 . t t ill •Yid! II •Vt ·~· N•I &rnd v:. "• C1111! Slv 5,41 '·"' Neuw Ce! l.14 ,·,1 9 ':i& .... earn tnlere-s , so your oan w Yfll'"U c 1 1v. ,,..,c,, 11: ••• t l:i Ceiir snr 9.tt 10.'2 Neuw i::o 11.70 1i20 e:u:"'L b •10 I. J t n• Lbl l1\ nt. NCmp CP 1'• 1~ C/\ilnn!no f ulldt: New Wld H 72 11.16 II•' ti ·)Q cost v ery 111 e ne . ntv M 11 11:i.i. N11 E11Ut 11• . ., 111., 11111n 10.11 11.n Nirwton 12:s113:7, e:::."1'11<1," f SMALL LOAN COMPANY· 0.11 OU SI'> ' N11 G&O 1~'-1 16'" ~~11SI ~ 2 tif N!tn Strg 1.67 1,67 Beal Fd• 1 · • ~~" Gfn 24'h 2S'.:. Nt t Llbl '•'••• •,:,, lrw;orn 1.7• J.)J ~':"ea•• lJ,fl ll,tJ Bectm•~ .so Your loan c o u 1 d be 0:~1'M1~ 1J 120'111 ~·.,".,",~, ,, · _ s.oec1 '·"' 1.60 .,.,nqi>11 •.01 1.ot Beet 01e~ .:io " 'o >0' ~ Chas,, Gr Bot: Omeoa S.55 S.67 Bfe(l\Ar .l)b comparatively large, might °'ll:le~ ~~ ,',:1,',.L ~'', "', ... • '• caotj .s.Jt s ., 100 Fd 11.111J.i1 ee1co Pet .jO "',., ,,.,w I'~ I'~ Fund ·7.•I ·1. 101 Fd l.4J t.11 Bel!len 1,60 run one lo three years but il 1111 Int 7~ 7~; Nat Sllvr • I'~ Frnt ill J'2 6'.11 Ono WmS U.6111.9 bt'tdnl!H .60b WI.II cost 30 to 36 pe;cent a 8:,~·c.~~ ~~'• ~!11o ~fnN~t~ l S'"• 16\~ snrnd 9.74 10.1aO'Ne11 ll.3111.Jl Beil How .ICI 0.1 re r 11>.l. ltut •• , ., 1&"1 17 Soec:I '·jl JJI OoPtM 6.11 1.J llel Inter~., Y••r Of course sma\I loan Drl Am IOt.. l!P.1. ~.,',',,'", 7'V. ll ~t'mCI IS S 16.67 P lllM '·°' 9.f3 Bemis Co 1 • •• 0 -7-''"' P"' ._.. • ' lllw-E: •''• , ... ,. 3' ll Cotonlt l: TC Sec t It '.'PS eenollt 1.611 " ""''' ' '' '" · t J r credit •• C. > • >>"" Nltl1 II ~·~ l~V, Eoulv 3 :M l .65 Pace Fl>d ,·'° 7 34 l!tncllx p1 J • w..tttl.,. wtlllltMt companies acce p owe 81:mi lnc ! •V. NA Re\C '"' 1•,, Ful'IO '·"' 10.•1 Paul , Rev 6,so iio ll1nel1Co 1.60 ti' Mftf .... v-11ox 711. C11t1 "''" risks than banks. ver CM .1'·~ l\\ NCar NG> IMO lo•' Grwth S.04 i .Sl Penn s11 7 t• 7'1• B0Mell ~15.SO iiiiiii~~i~~~iiiiiiiiiiii ~uell !l o n• NEur 011 7111 7\.to fl'ltom t .20 10.05 P• Mui ,·11 3'a7 ~t f'l4 .!o0 LAKEWOOD FAMILY ·VILLAGE, LTD. osn L 6-. 1\' NPA Ga~ 11 11 Vt nl J.l l •.19 Pn111 1i11 13'3' ll•llell o!•.JO Jll"' '6"' 21 NW Na1G a~ l\lo !ol Grtll 10 . ., toA Plkirtm is,i 1 ,4 llerw:f son.~ ti DB 11\;I 1'\~ NW P11Sv l Tq ll'~ OR"S Bd UNIVI Pint St . 1 la. 9 llet19>Jel Ofrw NL 2\\ J Nucl AK 1'~ •I~ w11h AB 1.11 1.1 Pion Ent 5 71) I JJ Be..,,,el In Dunkin D 10~ ll•'o'Jl\le .I.rt IQ 7·~1wltn C l .lt I.Sip'°" Fnd 10·1211·06 Ber11..,. Pno Dur!ron lS 1\'14 Otlle Wal '2Y, 71l'o °"'" A• I IS l.9J Plan Inv ,.OJ ~:17 lle.mec Co•• EZ P1lnl 9''> lOV. Opt Scan 71 ??'Ii _, 5 1t 6.3' Polee Fund1: . Betn S!I I.Ill EtalC WI 71,;; 31{ D•monl , 1'11 omo llct 7,95 1.64 Grwrn <5 lit•> 8 1• T~rtt .60 Ea•I Sn "'' I D 7 Como Fd I.JS t.CI . . er~ D-88 "~ \•b l&.,, It ner P 16'4 16\lo Corntlk J.ll l.O'! N Er• I.II SIB fltallJO/ln '41 i'duc Vt 7'~ 1•0 0Ye< NA )It l'lo< Concord IO,ll 10.16 ... N Hor 20.51 J0,12 811U Lau11' I F.I P .. EI UY, IJV. OxvC1t '~~ 10~' ConMll In t.SO 10.CO .-ro Fund l."6 l ."611!00: liR 36 Elbl SV\I I l\lo PEC brl l7h IJ ..... i°""" In 2.'tl> J.23 Pro PO<'lf Ufllvall Ill~ Bell 1' :1G 'I"'' lie ..,~ 1'Ji P1tl1I 8r ~1'l •1'>1o onll Ml, 6.41 a.•l Pro~dnt 3.•s 1.32 bo>tlble 8rk• P. Nl11 11, 3\lo Ptc A~fO SI.lo 11.:i ont G111 7,•4 J,52 Purl!an 117 t. ~I"; Co .0 Et Nuc IOI'• li'4 P•c F1E ,, 31 orD Ld 13.JO h .as Pul'Nlm Ful'Mll; &>lsC•• 21b ElctcOY 7 ~ l'akCD Co '"' 3"11 ntv Ceo 10.24 11.01 E1111lt t.36 6.•s 8011<1 1nc1' .61 E!lrom ·~ P1ricol t 714 Crn WOlv .S.70 S,.a G~•D 12.1S 11 lt 111.ok.M!~ 1 ,. El c SYI 1'6. 7 P1rkr Dr 6'~ ~ Crn WOii S.lj I.JO (;r1n 1.62 ,.42 &~en I 10 "I OoO• ••• SO ,,-. H ,,.. t MYQn M ~s.1 SS.I J tncom 7 ICI > > 0 ' · 0 7, E Mo<1ul ·:"' '"' Pa~iev P 6,.. a'-'I Oel1w•r1 Gr..,p·• Inv.II 6 01 6 57 OO'Q\ ar · Emo~ 011 131; 13~1 Ptvellt 11 l:l~i Dec~! 10.lO fl.16 Vista 699 7',w ~0""8~1 .IO Ener11v c 24•,1• Pffrl Ml '"" 9111 O.lwr 11.0211.01 Vov.-11 5:75 6:118osEd11 t .,4 E""" Rt t''t 1 Peerlet T 211\ 71y, Delle 6.09 6.M llevere I l l 9 6a OUfns In( Ennis s •11i •t~ P• e"ll1n 2•1. 2•1t ~:or Fd \k~ U:~~ •1n1re1 i1.•1 iJ. :;ral·1~~1r2.~0 En1Wl1I ,,_. J~~ P1 G&W 111/o 11\4 Orn! lv 11.2112.11 Ro~lll J .J'2 S 11 llrl1 My 1.JO F.on COfD 1\\ l~ PtrYI Pi e 1\\ I"" flh>rl&Howlrd: Salem Fd •.67 S,05 Brls v ~I 1 ~llUll 011 1014 10\ii Pepsi WI 7 1\.\ Belin 9.21 10.GI Schu1lr 12.66 U,116 fir!! Pet llt F ~i.c"!.:~ f~ ~~Pelrom 36\~:ll Grw1n 10.n11.~5 ScuOdi'r Funo1: llrPft 1n'ne Fib lek µ, lll. PnR'! £1f S~ St lnt0m .S.4J S!J tnl Inv uM~alt &-lilllt ~90 Ft.rll'IO 1l• 7i,. P~ll Vb 11\lo 11 !OKI l.'Xt 1. 7 Spet '1.J.I 71.'U llrkw.,c;I ·60 il f\dlllY 10~ U'A Photon t 9'.\ lock II.IS u .is !tal 11.26 ll.'H B~lv"UG 1'n narlll 9 9\lt Plnkrtn "6\111 '""' Eller~! 11.10 U . • Cam SI 1.1' l.:l'l 11, ,·re · tt am t 471.(i '3\1< Portr HIC 11 Hh ~11re1 10.7411.11 Security Fundi: e::s"nirr: 70 ~:f~~ ~va 1tz =~:O ~~ ~~ ~\~ e:'.':iv$C 1 t!11f·~ ~~.7i j·gg 1~ !lwnSMi 1:so Fllc-1111 J 1! l"rud Ml" 2 ,.,, Enlorst i .•I . : .. Ullrl 's n ·a. !truntw-10 Food FP ,.. "'PuM Ntf ,., •• 2Sl.O Eoul1'¥ ,.IS I.ti ~IK Am 1.17 t .06 B~E,r 1 .~ Equt Gth .'1 l .S1 Stl Spec-5 17" 1• 70 """ o "y Eou• Pry 1.l1 1.•s .1.en11 Gth 1:10 1:n ,F, ~·n 03 170 ,F·DC EI • 5nam Fd l •S I n . offering •. PsticipiltioA witb 1r1 expsienctd So. Car.I. bond6'/--in lhW ,_$1,250,000, 82-unit l1111My apanmentdMiopmollt in ta<-. Air Cal Ever1! In 11.01 U.OJ S~tar All 91•1010.f OO'o 1,10 F-0 C111 y~av111 s~ oe1n 1i20 rt' w .act ~::·~0 s~ 1'12 1'·e sic1e 1:70 1: :lr.°so Flld G••n 11:,, 1 :ii Siom• FUndi: Sur nd LIO Fl" c.a o.JO 11.21 t1on 6.t• 1 BurlNM 1.179 i<ld Fund 13.'5 1'.rl Invest •.67 IO.SJ 8ur1Nor Pl.H i<la T•ncl 20.u 2:2,01 lru11 711 I.act llurftdv .lO Calif •••• a limited s-uter111ip fsfcrmed to offer $2, 125.00 per unit shares •• , minimum purchasa: two ""'"" assurance .• ~-KavlnllJtlh Ind 80.U •e malning 40S pwdc:ipetlon "1 the limited s-tnet· "1ip ••• M""" ~till Ind Bwd will Ibo bea' 111 expenses for fari'nldon of the limJt.:I parllrer· ship end any c:ostJ chariieabla to lnlUll sale< of po'1· nenhJpshlres. Thisadvlfti:leinent is neither an offer to buy or 11111 dMSe securities. The offtr is midi only by 1hl PrmpectUs tnd restricted IC»tly to bona fide Califomia residents. _________ Recurn Cou~~~Free~~----- KMnlUflh/Bmf Dmlopmmt Co. 3911 BlrdJ St. N""'O<I 8"dl, ColK. 92660 l'hono: (714) fi40.7434 N...,-----------------------........, __________________ _ '"""~-----~----···•...._ __ ....... .__ __ _ Increase Announced F lntl>C(l l P rOQ: jmltll II 7 '6 7.fl BurroM .le OVrim J.J.1 J.16 wsf lnY 110 I ll B111nUnY .Ht llld\lt.I 3.>t J.61 SwlnY GI S.OI 5.• ln<om J.Y 5.U Sover lnw 12.31 ll.SI Vtnt 3.1 '·I' Spec!r• s.111 1 41 C~t»I co .~ F'llF VI 9. 10. 9 ~IF'rm GI I.Al A.•2 C11 F'ln1nl FJ!ln Oli 6.st 1.12 S!~te St 3t,,S «115 ca111nn M1111 F•I lnG1h 1.0t 1.1) Slt1dman Fu,..h·' CamPRL .is. F•I lnSHI uM~lll Am Ind 615 i,.15 (tlfl!>So 1.10 F1t Mu111 7,'f 1.11 Fld!X. JU St& SB Irie 170 "" NII •• ,. •.• 5 kll!n ito J·o, Cdn B<tW .ol't II F11 Sltrl :ll.71 ».ff S~ln Rot Foi· ' Cdn P•~ J.20 Air Calif oral a carried In s F1e1 cap S.lt:! e11 16 st '16 " c1P c soc•1 Flt! ,ncl ':;h • .... Cap Oo 7 lO 1·10 C•rt>run I 50 !atellite ma r k et s 77 8SO F11 Giii 4, s '·1l s1ock 1(50 11.50 ~·•1ls1e .t.0 ' ~~~~h {'f': ::l3 Sup lnGt 5.1! ~.30 c::!~t~ \.'to passengers for a total ()f FouoQ ""· t .1t ~~~~5'Gt J-~: i·W C•rr11•C• ,10 28 45 . Fr1"klln GrO\lo. TMR AP t 59 \O Ill Ct~r Pl2.1S ,I ,100 revenue passenger ONTC. i·U 7.6J Tea(flrs 1 10 1,. c1rrGn 1.10. • 8.Wlh 'tl' 1''~) Te<nnct i111 JI Ct•l•rW -olCI• miles nown during the month .~~ 1:11 ;0, 'fKnnot •.H '·" ~:r!i-f..k 1·.~ r A-t 1970 d. t Frtf(lm 7, I .to TtmEI Gt 2l.ll 26.0I Cci Coro o ugus , accor mg o Fd """"'' 1.n 1.n !,,_ MA 4,» •.76 cc• CP .,,i.,.s • • Fund Inc; Gni· r1n C10 a,46 7.02 Ctllflt~KP 1 Dudley F. Miller. v I t e !m•( l .3i t .OI Tr1v Eo 111 •. ., Ctlln DIA•.50 mol t a.Jt '·" TUOOf' Fd 11.IJ 11.'3 Cfflt'O t11 30 president Markrtlng for the !Id Trd 11n•vlill Twnc Qt t .62 ''' C•n• Fdv · PHol j ·U i.71Twtl( Inc ],JI ,,IOCen HuO 141 eirline l'uno Am 1~ !·If u n11 Mut l·'a 1.~1cen 1111.1 1;.w • illfWY •-· Unlld .OI 1.79 C 11\LI llh 50 ~ h d I I I en see t.ot !·°' un C1E1UI 1.11 t.56 cenn!PS 1 70 1 u s c e u e C(lmp el. on 11:1r111r • s.n -" un~ Fum11 cen1 L• el 1 r 4 •-:$1(. , R ,A«m ~.'9 i .!>a C..-MPw 1.16 actor f or Aug. 1970 was ~a. ~:r"'F' f·~ !' tr><om 11.13 n .n cent sw ''° s n'~ 1 ·, k~n •,1, "'' Cenl Sovt .10 percent With J ,137 0ightS 00Wn G~~d ). l' ' 1:11 U•V•'°' '> 'o'> f•So! C1mTtlU .'IOll Grin 111(1 I • I .OI C,lln , ... Cerio l,IQtl • between N o r t h e r n and &'vlllln ; : 1 lf:j' v~:T L~~ 5.~: J.t1 ~~t'i:: !lf~Zo S 0 U t h C 11. f O 1 I a M:,~~· 111torn •.tl • &.t Cn"1•A ,tab e r n a HFI • I fl '·'• s111 s11 •. ,. ~·:: cF1 s11 .Ma Perform~nc~ rtterds showtd H~::,; :oo !~.7 ~=~J111 t: t.os ~=n ~'::J " rnl • ~\:; '-SI 1 v,"" 3.42 J.n ClllmEIS I'° 95.4 per cent of Air Caluo a a .,, 1.!0 •· V•r 1nc1" ~.21 •.A c111r1itrNV ·, a.a •. v111,1~ l't: •.01 cr.awMn 110 fil ghts dep.arted on time or := 'i'.f:i 'i·!t w1u' ·~ .9~ 10.16 c111oeMan Tr within tS tTltnutes of scheduled -~~n 1,1:1 j.; ~:M'no~nu cl~oJp\1 •11 ~~:.': !f1ot d tu n;,n · · 1 E.aolr lj ~I'•> Ctwme!ron l epa.r re. Grli"' j r;-1~•\ ,,,.,, ' ·\; •.OJ er.em NY ''° Air Co.llfomla ope:rat.es a I r11t ·?!-.: !(;:., ~ 01 •.Ji g:,mv. illJ neet o f Boeing 737 SuoJctt 1:: ~: :ir I J,~:., 1:·: itn 11'11'1 °"1' '1 serving San FrattCilco Sao ~1 ~.tj\ t w1nor 1.50 •" ~l~11 Jose Oakland Ont Ar I n ,'~&" J·~ •: =;r:r11111" 11 ~;i~~1J ~/:II ~l!P flf ' ' ,,.. '!icll 11 1 Wl~I, F~ '01 'IS ll!Pl'l'uf' Orang• County A Ir Port , " ~~.. h l :zi• ·~ l" j-!I "I"" "' Disneyland and Palm Springs. i~t..:1~ ,.._. ' :... w:W.. ' 'i~ ,:r. ~~1;v1ftit Market Syuabols , I I ... ., ' i ! ' ' l ' l ! f ~ t ,, ,, t: ti t: • f rld11y1 Stptembtr 4 l'j10 SC Dill Y PILDT ? 1 Friday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ..... ..... .... .., ".. . .. .-------------, -... ..._,*a..°"'""-• cw.1 .._ uw ''"" Clll. 4•1 M._ .._..a. Cllt. "-... ~fi'1ft' C.-'=:~"'r-c-.1 ICWi '-"a.. a..1 lg '"°"'J '" ""' ff'-Stoek Leaden 1tot11 AH • ' ' \\ :u~ ''i• • S••rc:; ~~ ~ iol ,'wt t' I\ [," "';" ~ STocKs Offft JC"' ~· 'i 'fi ~Jn11~.,~o ,... !: ;1*\ ~~ i~_.. ~ ~''" • •• '°Yi W '.+' ~ Roc:11nd, i iee !t ;l11o l'h '"' :; ~ ~,!!•,l,•,,r• "• " .. 1, .. .,.. _+ ., •n ~· "'• ·-··!.! 1 .2 1~ If. f \ v'•""""'•-_,. i• i,' "•" '•"'• • ...!'_~!, I! ,• j•,!~--~ •tOSTC!'ll•n-ROICllTt' \'.!. ·,i, ~,,.,_ ,•,•,, u,, .. _.. M k H" I .. I l! !!' ?!'" Vi 1x. •• 1 -i u '.1 ....... 1.JI :Cl ,~ .... +\'I ~ :=-""1..o; 7t .. ii .. "'"I;; ar ets 1g ter 1=.:~ne!t .Ji uli \l fN + :t ~ ti: mu lll~ b..1 1.tL 11 ~=~~""".::: 1:~~ = ffS'·= = t.\\ 'fl! I ~ ~ STOCICS ... Tr.• SP'OTLIGKT 11:1111• ~· ~ "' '"" lil~ ir t? ,..,.,,~c "' 1 yi~ 11\\ It l!!? 1~n11ctlon1 111 1lock• u fn tVfl'U,,11. v.e: .. P .. ' '-i~ ""' -\l :~\:t 1 : ~ ~ ~ = ~ NEW YORI( IAP -J.l'nti..!to1l119 f f1C1 :0111n1 nc_, ': 2fl,? 'f'li 1141 ... t:c°"I""_,. 6 ~ ~ ~ _ i; Tt~~1 ~ ~1~ ~% Q !~ l"° \'ft :t = :Ut ,•:: 20 f, ~ ~\~ ~ .!,:: r~ ~~,n::J' "'fll\,! ·it.f i'=t &: ~U::~· Jo I! w: }!~ I:~ t :; t;t:fd,rt; t t.,"4,.~ ~~ :t: +: iJ ~111 ,..::.= ~tc:"u~~· fi 't TI l\~ fl t t: i:~:a'·:i . I *" ~~ h"" _I+ ~ 5!:, ht 711* = !''\'I ::~;i., ~ '= ~,, 2~ ll1\ + n l~ .. lklrti(. ~ t H~ f2U ~ + \It Stlt• Kif -w~x-v-Z-t ltr ll'ld ,. l~ 11\fo 1Ri Ii Telt• Corp 2 14 \It ROl'O fftl 0,. u •It\ 41" ·1~ In H T dm" g ub l'rr , '° t m~ ~ ~I -• • c Cllt W.etlllvt 1 to 'JQ SH\ '" 111' -... tlVOCI td •1•20 21!\1 i.,~!"'1~1~•1 oao 'L.._ l":\vJ'1c1nd_, 41ih,1i~ ISl\=t! eavy 1·a ~~1~'°.a 2, '!\:~ 1': .t +.1 ,..._, .. t.w !OM Wtcllol>l1'JO 11 W S1 I' :=u 1il ~ Ii~ gut', ~ ~ hflw 1=1n111 l&J.ooe l1~ 1 Rubrn:~ ~4 t ~ '.,."' ~.~ ++!? sun 011 1e. 1• 4l ,. 1% ll r11w 1>11 !II • 1• I! " ~r •·~-1 1• 11•• 11 1.\u "'.i ~ .....,....., .IO ,, ~ Vi r~ Iii Tranttm ••.JOO lS u Ruc:t;ff Co » roo ,.. ..... s"::~~m""'I." ~ ··~ 1··1, .~,1~-·.\4 lR,~ ~ ... , •• ,, '1 ·'·'•i . I ,M,•. ~: a'ur~.n; 11 ~ :f~ 11'11 + ~ "''Cf"~ ~' .i ,~ ~ il..I ~edN11 Ml• ,•,~,"" .. Jilt + ~ RuuTeo1 " uo l' u~ 111~-1.0 ~ncli!rnd 7l' ,,,.,~JI"'~\'..::, • n '' '' "j _'low• Qrth Cg l4 4\'t 1\lt i\'ll ·' ICFCh 1 11 ' u" ~~ 1• +" t""12'r Cmp 2111o +1111 Rvdtrlr1 $0 n 2m l1~ :n~ t'~ nd ~1 ~ "" ..-..... \It r ~d 1.101 ·1 \•• 1~~ 11\~ f • K•r,IC 1 t 1 •• .. 'W>M~ ,... sLs F ''° 17 15 ).I ltlll th NE\V YORK (UPI) -Stocks fm s g e r •Vt"' 11a " h• itv; Jl l+ • UV w .. tco 1 ~ 1 J:3 n u I.lo ~.Y,rl{11 \~ .,: ~-\\ .. ~ ... i-,1' ·.!~_ .. ~,J.',",1 li,,lli., ~ti: +:., m:=r.. 1;'0 :J11 24JO tlh l,oi~l\i -Vi J hed bl h ~~p'1t' ~. I~"" 1°~ ''"" :j: ~~ r::. :~ :If :J • ~ I~ .. w:rnc:9 '° " • .,,. 114 J.M ~ ~Qft". -~ " ~ CN\F tt.SOO '~ -I tr 31 .16\'I 31 +1 fth k SU...Of ,., ''* lu , -• -W1• •m 1z: 'fl ff!)*'"~. , ... ~~~~J1ti 1 5 iJ;. ~~ \ 1~,111111,..!.'1 ~-= ~~ !'l~ siR".,. 1 M ~S-Fr1day in the heaviest trading o e weed , r:~~~" ~ '~ 2':t 2~ w;J + ~ uAL ~ , P' "tt u~ l'~+ .-. =~~:: 1150 ~ n ~ J'1'1,, .. i'~, ~l~~ik 1."° .~ ,~ ~,. 11r! ~ n St#IOGi• 1 °' 10 32 21" 22 + O p timism was generated b y Thu rs ay s unex w1n11 .ea. .u 1.U u~ 1 w. + tl~~co 40 110 11 11 11 j'i,.. J 11o + IJ: w1111w" 1.>S • 1•11o 1r.:1 ttli K noios1 '° ~1 11 i~ 11vi s.rio.r1 .01., ~ uy, n 12 d h th k t t dit onally at ""1" co " '' ~'.·• """' J' • + ~ uorcl "° • fi•: '"' 11\'t -":z:~~"d,°"~l "J 'm \1\it \1¥~ ~ ~l::::~"~1 y 'I ~"' ~-y + "" 1,.,.. "'" s.~•mo ., 100 1w. 151' 15111 + "" pecte s arp gain - e m ar e ra 1 • ~~t::C:n.: ~ :::? ~ ~ = it uMC Ml :n ~ "tz \. 11~ : ,. ,,, 0 llf'IM • uto 11~ Pl4' ·--"~11 co 1 ,3 ~ ,...,. "" + .,. tlllk.J """ '-CtMe a.t. ~te:::: Jf' '71 1~t:' 1~ 1m ++~ tracts l1tUe d emand pr1or to Labor Day-along with sv11ron o-11 oi<o ~ lt!\ + 11 ~,,:, l'" -J ~..., J! i ~ :zt•11 ~~\" { d'-' ,•1• ,•,~• + t; IS~ A 11jt "2 3'11t n1; lm -1• ,.,.., Pow 1 t• ,•, nt-t 311, 31"" '"' ~nFt n• :>0 " uy, 2s14 2s1.:o -" the spr e ading bel1el that interes t rates will be com -T-. .i,1.~.'"c!! ' J,' ;;1,, , , -,. ~,, w::n. d Jf.! • tl< I.\ Yo l('il '!..~1 » l61't l6tli l6\o + ""' New1>e1ry 1 1~ '' 16\.li + ..:.. krWtlS.d set 11 10" 10 • 101'• -V. Tilt Ord '11 1~1 '°~• ltto 1(1 't t 't iJ11 "'ilk -f,. 79 lf\lo u :ui 11f; Wff>D 011 E 131 t 1'9 t + •\. ,..,.' ,r· 1 60 loe~ y .. ~ ++~ ,••,•• '•"•'•1s u,o, •2 •2 ,," ... -~ !'..t!~,,.e •,,12 ~ !~ ~!~: W! t ~ 1ng d own soon and tha t the economy ts o n the road T11cor N 110 ., , 1s 'I ,, ,,. un 1 Pl4.$0 i>OO tt..., s. u -..., welOI • 111 11 :tl\' J • v• ...1 --.. •• ntEI 20'4 20 .. ,., ....,..., ...,.... tt" j .. T1 lev lrw:i l)t 1)' 1!"°11 11 1 "• I ~ , ':!! s SI Sl I' WehsF1r I'° I ' "" .i\4' J11V. + (1 1(11-r• "' ' ...-.H JOU 51 +1"1 lolEngtT 2 3' ,'' £'-, """ """" -\\, ScMnleY I Oii 2S n 1. ttVI ... ... to -overy T1 lev Pl 11 3' ! I " ,., 4' W<!.,«>F 1 :m JO• 1•\0 1• \ ~\ l(ort COl'P Ind 2' 11"1 1 1VJ + \\ Newmflt 111" ,, •• 11 11 -1 ~ pf1 40 21 29,. ltlo 70\.:o ... r"'" T11m11 El Ill I 2~. ,~'I:: ~~~ :!:. , u~~ llt.r'l~ so ~ ~ :;. ,~ WntT•-511 ,, 1·~~ It .. l~t + ~-~;:~C.0s~ 7~ ~i; ~: ~~ ~ru = ~~ ~~~~ ,~ 17 g" u~ ll'-\ :!:. n =~ l)lto!Q s 1 ' 1 ~Vo+... Shortly befo re t he close tbe Dow J ones Indu s Tt"°" C~p u• ,.,, ~n. ol9 ~ •1 ol pf'2 so HI 16. •4 46\;J ~-WPr> pl 'f(I 1110 ~ 511\ Sn.t -~ 11:1oe11~· * u 1tl'. i1~i 1•" +114 Nt•1 M 1 10 _1n 1u• u;; 1J! + "lkh\Ck 't ~ ~~ ~\t t rial Average was up 5 27 at 770 54 Of the 1 605 ~::~;:.,~~0 1.;f 21 1~~ '~': 141: + l't ~~1~~ic'if I 1?~ ll~ ~{: J~~ t: ~/iPP118~ tI: liq Jl II.. -t1u. l('Olltr 1-'G 15 3.4 3:1'1! '3~ -\\ N!ttM w tf S~ t+I '""-1"'4 SdlUll•r l 40 :ll llVI 60t~ •1 n + 11 Ttc,,..ICOll CP t ,._. lt • JI + k Un.Pac p1 Oii I ..-~ ::i.. ~. W.tn Air Liii 'I lll4 Ult fui 't L 'H•oM __., 10 ,--.,. ·-· i ,. ···-, "° 11 ~ n"' n issues on the tape advances topped d~!ines 1 002 Tt11•,0<11• '' ,., " -_ -""r::i , • ,, ••• ,, •>"+ '' wn 1111e 1... ' wv. llh 1~ - -Nlt11M ~J fO ..., m:; '1'11 47\; " ~i.nt Rtsre IJ l V. 3"" lVI t '-' "'° • ' Ttll'd¥n 'Oii 61l4 !t'I \111 f~ .i. ~ 'Un •o• ti 10 406 11 ""' II ... + U Wlln Md 1'.,; 4 1-'4 11\lo 11 4 L•C GI• 1.. l tt tltlo 2H• -"' Nlt11M Pll 6D "~ 44 44 44 tt SdRH ... lk • 5'4 s J\'I "" t o 346 Ttltcly PIJJO l SJ m~ IJ t 1 Un rOl'•I "'I 12.10 9J tJ\'J tJU, -1h We1rn Pt< ,, n }ll:'~ 12 ., l.,oan~ I l 1114 1114 11V.+laffl1111M PIJolO 11" •11'1 ~IV! """-YllSCMC• 600 111 I m 1414 1mi1v. TtJti!Yn• or• 4 u,i., IJ t.6Y,+1U11l1hoolt ..ct 15 JO..., JO » -\\WnUnonl ~ 111• l• ~..-11 '',M•c:J,',',,' •M '•'• ',.'"' ''""" ,.''r<, 1 ~ ,N''' s,"'w,,"! 1, ,1~.... 14~ \!~ -.~ ~£CA,,.,'""• !9 2 1~ 1s"" 11~ ._ Turnover swelled to around 15 000,000 s h al'fS Ttle• corp uu " ''• l' t 1 , un •A Ire 1 110 ~10 ,.... n \1 ).I • i ':i.o wn un 111 .: 1 u " _, L n... , .. orfO .,.., SoWi ....... .... -u ... 1 II\\ 1•v. lll'i 14 T...,p~lft ts 17 ,, n~ ,... ~ Un ltlltdl ,., 15 I •• n . I Wn Un pU<O l n ,, n t' Lii 51 U11 ~ Iv. ...., t\:o 1' NorllnC• 31r 2 ·~ ' f\1o + " SCllll'tll llO 7J 13',\ U'I\ llllo ~ from 14 110,000 shares Thurs day Some anaJysts said THW\KO 1 l2 311 101'1 10 • :'Gl'I + v. U~l•d Pll 20 JlO "' SI "' J HloEI I IO II "" tlfl~ "~ \\ lell" Slev .JG 1'Jf l)'6 11\li 13\li + " Norrhllld IO 6 11\t 111' ln1 -~ Sciol!FOl"t 60 JS lPli lnlo 1111 +I'll lped b ild TtMtC P6 SO 1.1 76 1J 1 76 UNB d I'll to 41 1$.. IS l~ ~ WHo E pfJ IO l lSCI J-!7"t SI 1"9 u•SO on :u .u :u:w. ~ 3"" t+oAinC•f 1 19 "° 19~ 70 kol1 P•"' 1 i.2 2..., 2fl1. 'Hl'o + "" 1ncreased Jnstitut1onal p art1c1pa t 1on he u Tt)u•ro 1 .a 44! 31~. 11 ' '" + "' u~1 c11 1 os. :ii • 9 ~ 1~. ' -\• n111n1 1 OJ 21 21 !J" 22-\0 -~ lMKO Dtlt •• n ll'i n +"" NAmCc. 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SIO Ind 2.30 U• 4'~ •11/J •I I 'It Tr•~ CD .o n 1~ J't• ~ +2 Ur 1 Bklq ., ll n•i 12!h 12 1 \~ Wr~ tY ~ I 104 llM 04 "'"TVol i ,,,.. 2j"""' .... 0•~.!tPdlO 1 15""\S11.o1~'4 -•~,·· ,•K ... ~ 54 ~ Jl.. ~+14 11NG•s "° 1ll5~4t'liSl"la l jtOINJ2,IOt ,.,,,,,IJl.'Jl1 ll'J Tr1n1Unl70 91 30 '21~:1fll1 -\l.usL1Fe.SO IU :lf••11111 7'1 o ,,.wurllllfl Ill , ·~ l\ll~-· C .4o1 JI.ill It Siio -0\.lo Occ.., Pt! 1b 7176 ~ ~-:!Olli +•l!r mmn l ~ ~ ~-li PK llO 116 lO ltl• ~ Yi tQO!h Ju 41 •si:1 ,.Iii ·~ 1 T~-W Air 11' 1-AI 1•'-Ull.o '"-V. USMC• 1 60 'I 21.., 2J n -"'X..,.,•Co 60 60! 11\'t '°""Ill.Ii +I LIOlltt ll'P ••• •• ·-· '' •• L OccldPel Pl • 11 n J~ 62 t' SlmpPll NII n 13 n 1l hrn lly l In •Vi •7'1o •Vi 1 !tO °" pfJ 75 '"° SJ u 5l I TmWF n "" n '"' 9 ' .,.,., + ~ .... '" 10 JJ • 31 l 31 .. >o:Tll'-11'K-4S 2•~ 21\'o ui. -•\ ',,~ 1,12f... 1;-23• nli Ullo + \I: OccklP l)IJ.60 ISO '2\\ ~"" 62 U\':I 11-co 2..-0 5l "'"' '5"' 661/i + "" Sou RY p1 1 1 12•~ \'"" 12\/o 111 1 PKk1t11lnci JI s:w. -Pt i"" v. Trt Mm•• 1ss ltoS U•t ln u + v. UsM "' so 1100 1'\t l•~ " , f v. Ztle p1 ,. Ill • 2' 24 '' + 1v. Lii•• -~' l 4 • d +"8=:-~ V> ••H "" ., 0 "' -·• ... "' '~ ' ! ,. l.'t ,,. ,. •• • " •• + IJ.'° "v•~ •• ..,. •• +>• """ pt ... OccklP PD.I' ' ··~ ... ,L ••• 1··-l.,.W 1112 Sit 3 15\\ """ 15V, +1"' S .... A rm l1f , 'jl" 31, 13\\ + " Id Pr~u 12 Iii "• J\,;j 7"' Tranocon 6 s I~ I"' lllli .. ,,.,_, •• ,, -• .. VI z.~·11 ND•n 94' 1t\41 174~ lt -i.11.l< l l ~· pj"iiJ I• t7\.lo u.... 2'1,lt ~ ..._. :KID U I~ ~ ,,_. ~ Slcelly I l U ' ••vo ... 1w11t I'S ,?~ ,, .. , 1 I 0 0\lo + \'I IP ""•nl .U "' .,.. "' Tr1n1e I Inv 41 ... 6 • " uti~ PL I t2 l) 11 .. 71'11 2t"'o \lo ZtPINor 11! 2 ~ll 38 3' -'a l .!!"',, ..• '" >I ll>\l IO'~ I~+-~ _1 ~E 1111.lf ' 21\\ 21V,, 11Vr lit Skll Corp 90 ,.. 11 l~ 1 >'o _.., .... D1rl1n• .,.. 1 I jldPrud tll.10 1 l 19 1 l'o "°s Trtn•\lfOll 30 4lt l\lo '• ,; Virltn Ano l~ 11 1 111'1 ll~• 1141 ZtYtt Corp 19 'l6 1N 'M + ,. "" _,, Y11 un O Oil 1.54 U n'4 ~11/,i 22 .... $li;VUnt Ii 1•1 ~ U\\ 26'A t 1 SNrltllA 60 14 l'lio 1111 1111 ltnWks 1.~ 1 O'tt .UW .u\1 -\\ Tr1vt tr. ICI 361 )IP.~ '91.t '.'IQ 'r +1 ... VCA Corp f11 u 24h 2'~ 2•'l -O Zt nlthR I .cl IO:S 31\'1 ~ 31~ + \1 L0tW1Tllf U ~ 21111 21 21\'J I'~ Oii ~d pll ~1200 61 tl'lo 3e\lt -1Vt Srnl11\AO I 40 II ).Ill J3'4 34 + "lo 1119"' Hirl I lj °"i '2\lo a~ +llolo f""''Y 60 'f 11\Q 10 lfl + V. TrjCon1 2 2.i. ~ '6'• 16 • 11'1t VCA CP ril 111 1 1• \ 2•\lt J-\'lo -~'o Zurn Ind :!I 441 \~ I~ ~11\ + • t::~":.m221P l: ,;~ riv.. 23~ t 8't: e: :a ~ tt r, ~ +l"' ~~~ ·~~ ;o J !!-. = ~ -1 \lo s=~RK rr,.1 Sll t~t! ~ ... t~t ti;, ,::~~ '°'° 111 ~ ~'t! ~ +U'I ;~~""/:' 1'° IJ~ ~~ ~ ~ +1 VMdtr 1 '° JO '""" ~ ~ -\lo ,..,., ghltd tlr Tiit Altoe:ll led" tU 1910 L-.sG1 l 2' '6l U \\ 22111 ,,.... Olr.11 GE 1 1' n 21'1 22~ tt\.li -'t""~~ '•>"s If 211/o 72\lo 2214 V.OI< Ge ptl o 100 1 1~ 11 ... 11.,1 + \\ IL '" Yl10 S2 ~ SOU -l1NGs 1 12 131 U\11 11~.l 11'!1. -\ii ort l Of'P 6 411& •It •'Ao t 01111 Cor11 ... 100 ...... 111-. 111'" l• Li nd I fll 211 Soi jj\• Soi 1 Oni1rkln -"'f m 11111 1J n ~ + Vt Lou11GE 1 JI 11 :S.C,,., \\ :MV. \fo OntldtLI 70 J Hlo 14 • l~ + .... LfN Nill! •1 1 ll~ > nu Ol>t!Uk1 1 I U~ h11 1''1't L;:nstn fO 60 2 14\li 15\ -'It 0 lnpeR I 10 «I ltV. 11~ lUo l t&I 70 u SS 5,~ f l"" 0111 etw 1 ..:i ""' ~ ~ IA Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ~Rrll 511 I 6 19 11 .. 1114 -"I Tttflt 1 «I JI ,,.... 2t + ~ NEW YORI( IAPI Ftlclll"'I «Nl'lllltl' Stiff Mlf St.. Mtl SlllH "" CIMlt.I Hltll Lew CloH Chi St iff Mtf llMll.I Miii' ltw Cle11 Chi tLuo1:W 5',J.Ob t~ ~11~ ~m ttv. +l~e°"'~ ~: ·..: 3! :r-1r.; l\" '" Uf!lt. Inc 71J 7\~ 6'-' 1"I i 1141 Ct 75 ll llV. J1\lo 31 _to lcln Slacil f~Cl'lll'IOC prlcn ilildt.I Miiii L-Clllle Oii. IM'l I HW! 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UP !I s F•rri Co .·1~ _., ... 8il ! ·, "" .Jiii • "" t h "' '!' ~ •fcOll Slld '·' ·s . -• ~Olll!*ln ... !I ·i·· 'fl: ~~ -,\; .. ~"""" ,, ' .• \lit J ~ ll(hn co .Jllp ,,, 11ro 11. I li -v COr• j oc~ 111 ,, \6 '"~""' 1nnt F .15" ' l•• 14 11~ -\Q "~"''" • ' t ,.. .. 214 -Yi 11:h"llro1 '1 41.1 4\t t\o. i Finance Briefs WASHINGTON (UPI) The Air Force has canceled development work on tts AIM short range air to-air mismle, which 1s sull in the drawing board stage A total of $9 6 million has been spent on studies or the cance lled m1ss1le performed mainly by Gener11L Dynamics Corp • Jlughes Aircr aft and Ford Motor Co s Philco Ford unit NEW YORK I UPI) Royalpar Jnd~tr1es Inc a technical serv ices firm said it has bt.?en hired by the governm ent or Costa Rica to studl' tht teaslblllty o f bu1laJng an oil pipeline and an 011 rennery hi the Central Amencan country The p I p e 11 n e stretching between Costa Rica s AUanbc and Pacific coasts would CO$t abOut $180 m1lhon and the refinery with c11ipaclty or 300 000 barrels dally would cos t about $300 million th• company 51lld • ..,., d-'• UP u 'r' ,,ICk t\lo -'It I -..,_ t(I Rt1"{" !l l ' HI -\' ,.,.. lf'!C: !' ... ,J"' f: -~ ,.::Cl'"1"''•' ..... 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"• \ I " ... -, .. ... 11 • '!" ,,_,,, .• f, ~ '" ~, .-fll, ~ .~~'"',]: j , ! t 11 '"' 'l"' 11 "' "" 11'1 -•\ D ime-A-lines " ! • ''"''t '"" 10'• ~. ' • -'"' I" l ~ -,,. En! • .,,. --Grt •• ~d~ 0 d ' ~ ' +•• n d ta Uf ~ -. "" ,_. Ctfll I Lf'rntt'Slr WI M Vi "" IJ Ill I ,., ',', -l ~C,:'0 .. ... .. IOC .,J~ t f1 IJ~ U ICOlll•l>ll lN -~ Oii' '"1r'=~ r~ 1.:.. hto f 1o1. T 'ft t 111 A, 11 flcl 11• f\'o +-\\ ~Ulll.._. oOb \IJ 1t ll 11"' 11"-.. i-1\fitut • "" ~-------------' ' rttt 1;..+-v.10 •• ·- •: • . Ja DAILY PILOT Frldiy, S.ptembtt' 4, 1971l •' Stage Set for Angels-Twins Showdown Serie ~~ U Ille Calllornla An11tls w•re looiinl :. a lift to 1et them In u.e proper frame ot mind for tht Mlnne®ta Twln11 Tom Bradley deijvered tile 100<b. He altD delivered a seven.bit shutout 'and a 1.0 victory over the Kansas City Royals Tbul'9day night, moving the Angels to within three games of the Twins in the American League West and seUing the stage for a three-1ame con- frontaUon with Minnesota, beginning lonlght. California will aend left-hander Rudy May, g..11. q1lnsl 1 .. year~d rookie Bert Blyltvtn, who attended nearby sanuago High School In Garden Grove. "11ie first game Is the big one," Angel second baseman Sandy Alomar sakl, moments after Bradley hurled his first major le1gue complete game and shutout. Bradley, in only his second season or pro ball. was given a run in the second inning and made It stand up, surviving taut moments in lhe second, third and fifth innings. He st.ruck out ei&ht and waited only ooe and admitted to feelin& the pressure. "I rot nervous around 7 o'clock when t began to thlnk about the game aod what it meant," he said. Hl5 nervousness was Dot apparent on Atege l Slate All .-• ICM'C 01'1 Stlll, 4 Afl9fll YI M!l'!M.SOll 7:i$ p,m, St,r. s A!\9111 VI MlnllffO!I ,,,! •. m. s..1. ' A1111t1• VI MJn-•1 11:U P.m. the mound. With runners al atcQnd and third and two out ip the second inning, he struck out rlval pitcher Jim Rooker, who allowed but four hits bul lost hi8 151h Tricky First rurn ConcerQ.S Drivers in Ontario Field r· •, Ul"I Tl..,...._ LAVER STONES OPPONENT -Allan Stone, third·ranking Austral· Ian amateur player, slips to his knee chasing a hard smash by top- .seeded Rod Laver of Corona del Mar during action at Forest Hills in the U.S. Open tennis championships Thursday. Laver the defend~ ing champion and generally recognized as the best teruiis player in the wortd, wen i-11, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2. U.S. Open Play Laver, Roche, Ashe Shake Off Slow Start FOREST HILLS , N.Y. (AP) - Awitralla'• two left-handed court killers, Rod Lever and Tony Roche, and America's ArUwr Ashe, Jr., all had to shake off first set patchiness Thursday for victories lbat sent them into the third round of the U.S. Open Tennis Cham- pionships. The only mull resembling an upset in • long day of men's and '\\1>1nen's singles at the West Side Tennis Club was the defeat of trigger-tempered Bob Hewitt of South Africa at the hands of Bill Bowrey, fonner Australian Davis CUp player, 5-7, U, 6-3, 1-2, M . Hewitt was seeded 20th. Hewitt is an ex-Australian v.·ho migrated to South Africa ••here he became a member of that country's Davls CUp squad. lli! tantrums are legend on five continents. sophomore from Lookout Mountain, TeM. Ashe won 6-7, 6-4, &-3, 6-4. "I wasn't teme playing on the center court~I decided I had everything to v.·in, so. I iust vtent out and ~lted the ball, .. said young Tanner, the nation 's No. J ranked junior. "Tanner is 1 fine player, he has a great future," acknowledged Ashe. Ashe said he did not like the nine-point sudden death playolf, adopted in the tournament UliJ year to avoid long dous- ed sets. The lie break goes into effect v.·hen the score reaches M. "I blew my chance when I lost my servil!f: in the ninth game or the second set," said Tanner. 1'J'm not accustomed to playing anyone who can return the ball so low. I missed two key volleys." Son of an attorney, the v.·ell·bullt Tan- ner is a left-hander with a lot of power and poise. He is the national amateur clay court champion. Front-n1nners Goin g to Have Trouhle--Pollard ONTARIO (AP) -Art Pollard, who starts In the back row of Sunday's California 500 field, says be may actually have an advantage over the other drivers in the $727,000 race. "The front-runners are going to have trouble getting through that first turn. I promise you, it's going to be wlld. 1'm glad J'm back in the rear wbert I can watch the fun for av;hile." Pollard, at 43 the dean of the regular USAC championship driving corps, was talking about the tricky first turn at the new $25,5-million Ontario M o t o r Speedway, where 33 drivers will compete in the second richest race in history. The narrow turn has caused more con- cern among the drivers during tw.o weeks of practice and qualifying than any other spot on the course. The reason is that the elevation in the turn drops from nine degrees on the track itself, to about four degrees on the apron. Driven traditionally try to cheat a bit, particularly in a similar corner at In- dianapolis, and get below the white line that marks the line through the turn . At Ontario, the line mlU'ks the change in elevation, causing a driver to have to pull his car back up the incline when be gets below the line. "To keep from being forced down into that apron," Pollard said, "a lot of guys are going to have to learn a new groove around the turns. "If they don't stay wide there will be big trouble. 'That's why we are going to emphasit.e staying high when we have our drivers' meeting S a t u r d a y • Everybody is going to have to use bis head instead of bis foot in that turn, or there will be disaster." A, J . Foyt, three-time lndianapolis winner, also has been critical ol the first turn. "A driver is inviting a ticket to disaster if he tries to go low in that turn with someone running on the out.side of him," the 35-year~ld all-time USAC m o n e y winDer said. :fi.1eantime, speedway president Dave B. Lockton said Sunday's winner should col- lect a minimum of $160,000 from the purse made up of $500,000 in track guarantees, $175,500 in al"Cessory awards and $51,500 in lap money. He also said only a handful of reserved seat tickets remain unsold and forecast a gross gate for the race oC $3 million. Gales will be opened at 6 a.m. Sunday for those wishing to watch the race from the intleld. Lockton would not say how many people would be allowed into the infield at $5 each, but estimates indicate the number would not be more than 30,000. Thirty·two of the 33 drivers took final carburetion or practice runs Thursday. One of them. Gordon Johncock of Mt. Pleasant, P.1.ich.. lost control of his tl-1cl.aren-Offy in the third turn and col- Uded with the wall. The right front suspension was smashed, but will be repaired before race time. Gary Bettenhausen, \\110 will start the race in the second tow, blew the fTlgine in his Gerhardt-Qffy. And a member of Swede Savage's pit crew, John Dobesh, 23, of nearby Santa Ana was treated for an ankle sprain when his car struck him in the pits. There was no activity at the track to- day. A drivers' meeting is scheduled Saturday morning. game ol the year. In !he third, Tom Malchlck singled and one out later Tony Gonzales was obliged to race into deep right-center to spear Amos Otis' bid for an extra bue hit. "That was the big play," said Angel manager Lefty Phillips. In the fifth inning, Cookie Rojas led off with a triple but ~adJey replied to the challenge by getting Rooker on a grounder to third, Matcblck on a tapper lo the box and atrlldni out Geor1e · Sprig~ Bradley wu 11v1n hil only nin In the llCOnd when q lu by Alu J-Ind Tommy Reynolds: put runnera at aecond loci third llld lllowed Jim Spencer's ground ball out 1" 1et Johnloo home. "I'm glad I cot I chance to help the team," Brad1ey said, pollshlng the hom· rimmed glasaea which make him appear more like the schollr he ii th4n an athlete. "I never drHmed that I would be In- volved in a pennant race but even in two years In this rame I've Seamed never to be surprised at whit hlppem." kAlllU.t CITT CALIPDIMl4 ... • ttrllrtof Mrtl Mtktlldl, 11 .. t 1 t Alemlr, Jt .. I •• I llWllll. rt ..... c;..,_.ltt, d ... 0 ... 0t11, cf •• ' • Fr ..... II ' •. ·a ,llllelle, If .. t t I A.J°"""", If J ~· IUl'k111trlctc, c • t t t McM1.1lltn, lll J _:t •• 1t.01tvtr, lb .. I 1 t 1teynoM1t. rl J 1 krrt>ll, ab J t t ltepo:, rt 0 0 t O 1toja1, 2b J o 2 t 'P'f!C''• '" J O 1 I ltOOlr;tr,, J OOtA.IC\le,C ~Oi i lrMl1y, p I I l • TC111l1 SJ I 1 t TC111l1 U I , •,1 KlotUM Clly ' o00 000 000 -I ~, Call!Omlt OIO 000 OOx-I, ', Cl' -Ct ll'orflll I. LOI -ktl\111 Cl!,)'' f. CtlHOrfllt '· ,. -Jt.1111. S -lr6dley, " ·, IPM1tllt ll '4t1 I • 1 I I $.' t 1 t I I I ' ltllCltl., IL .. U! l r6dltY (W,f·U W, -lrldlt'f, ..... TlnM -1:11. AntnM11e1,,-• "'' Tt..,11111 '·• . Chicago Cubs outfielder Billy Williams (right) Is cheered by fans as he walks to the dugout for a radio interview after sitting out a game with the Philadelphia Phillies Thursday. Williams ended a string of 1,117 games, the third longest nwnber of consecutive games in major league history. He was .·:, purposely held out of the game for a rest since h•• already holds the Nalional League record. The Cubs .,. won. 7·2. ,·,. Sports in Brief Vault Mark Set (17-11); Pulford Goes to Kings TURIN, llaly -Wol!ga n g Nordwig of East Germany climaxed the World University Games Thursday by clearing 17 feet, 11 inches for a -wl>rld record in the greatest pole vault com- petiUon of all time. It was the second world record of th~ day. Heide Rosenclhal of West Germany jumped 22 feet , sy, inches in the final or the womtn's long jump for a world record. Nordwig broke his own record of 17 feet, 1014 inches, which he had set earlier this year. Chris Papanlcolau of Greece cleared 17·9Ya for second place and a Greek record. • LOS AN G E L E S -Larry Regan, manager of the Lo! Angeles Kings hockey team, calls 34-year-0ld veteran Jeft wing~enter Bob Pulford "the kind or player we've been dreaming or getting and not feeling too optimistic about our chances." The Kings have him today, thanks to a lengthy deal announced Thursday by the team's owner, Jack Kent Cooke. Pulford was traded to the Kinp by the Toronto Maple Leafs, who receive wingers Gary Monahan and Brian Murphy. The lf.year veteran, however, is ob- viously the key m3n . Toronto general manager Stafford Smythe once promised Cooke a shot at Pulford and when Smythe got around to talking about it again, Cooke persisted that he had made a pro-- mise . • SYRACUSE, N.Y. -Jim Brown in- dicated today thal Syracuse's football team could run into more opposition off the Cleld than on it this season if no com- promise is found to get eight suspended blBck players back on the squad. Squaring off agai n st Ben Schwartzwalder, hls fonner college coach, Brown qulcldy thrust himse-lf into the center of the controversy by reemphasizing earlier charges of racial discriminaUon a1atnst tht a t h l e ti c deparbnent. Returning to the place where he first gained football fame the fonner NaUonal Football League star thrust himself into the controversy by saying th e suspensions and alleged diacrimlnaUon at Syracuse would be presented to the Na- tional CoUegiate: Athletic As90Clation for investigation. • ClflCAGO -Former all-star second baseman Nellie Fox led Thursday in the guessing game over the likely choice by the Chicago White Sox for a successor to deposed manager Don Gutteridge. nie rumor mi ll began grinding • few hours after Gutteridge was released at his own reques t Wednesday after new General Manager Stu Holcomb infonned Don in Oakland be would not be retained for 1971. Coach Bill Adair was named interim manager until Sept. 14 when Holcomb is expected to di5close a new pilot whom a Sox spokesm an said already bas been contacted and accepted the job. • LOS ANGELES -World bantamweight champion Ruben Olivares, of Mexico City one of the most potent bantam boxers of all times, had a record ol 28 victories and one draw with 2S knockouts in his flrat 27 fighls. RodoUo Martinez, another Me1ican 'll'ith hopes of a bantam title, will have exactly that same rec-0rd Saturday night when he steps into the Forum ring to race Japan's Shintaro Uchiyama. The bout is one on a atar-awdded in· i.mational card. Dodgers Face ... ;: Houston After> "' 114 Setback -~ " HOUSTON (AP) -Pitcher G~ Stone of the Atlanta Braves w+· 0 Th.ere's nothing like a lot of runs." . , ·. And that wu e1:actly what be lol-, TJiursday night as three of his ~~ mates -Henry Aaron, Orlando Ceped'!, and Clete Boyer -blasted home 1'W\I with men aboard to .give Atlanta an Ii.{ decision over the Los Angeles 000,ers;,, • The Dodgers send Sandy Vance, .64.: againat Houston's Don Wilson, 7·5, in ftte. first game of a three-game series ~ the Astrodome. · Stone, picking up his loth victory of the s .. 1. • SIP!. 6 ~1.1 S..t .• Dodger Slcle · · · ,,:. .... ••-• ICPI 1'401 Docleeri 11 Hov11oft Dod1•r1 •I Hou1to.o Do611et• "' Atl1rrt• 121 Clodt•rl "' A11.,,11 J:ts '·"" 111.ss •A s '·"' J:Sf ... ,,., year against nine kisses, scattered 1is hits in the contest. He was tagg!d; however, for solo home runs by Blb' Sudakis and Andy Kosco. , . .;... Outside of those two blasts and a ~e by Bill RusseJ.l, the Dodgers \\'ere limited· to just three other singles, two by Billy Grabarkewltz. :• • Grabby's pair of singles gave him eia~ bits in his last 20 at bats, a huge ·irir provement from the previous month•i work at two singles in 39 trips up. The Braves' southpaw, who says he has been pitching better lately, indicated Ile. was pleased with his performance although adding, "Kosco's home run in the ninth kind of bothered me. ''That ruined the whole night," he said. "Sometime! you relax too much or get In a hurry to get the game over. You ttn'1* the ball over the plate and that's when you get hurt." ·> . Aaron's homer, a three-run shot In ~ third inhlng, was his 36th or the year ind the S9oth oC his career. It sparked 'tht Braves to a 4-0 lead, since they picked up one in the second when Bob T!Um¥..i double scored Cepeda. · ~. It was the same against Bowrey. He bad the young Aussie in his pocket until be started missing volleys in the third set. Fuming and lreUlng, he procttded lo misa shot after 1hot until none was !ell. · 'A crowd of 12,000, slttlng in raw, threatening weather, auddenly wu :shaken Lo attention when Allan Stone, one of the lesser known In Australia's unend· lng assembly Une of tennis talent, grab. bed the first 1et from tht world's grtat. est player. Nation Mourns Death of Lombardi Cepeda's homer, bis 32nd or the ~lit and third in two days, came with Aaron aboard in the fifth . Boyer blasted his l~(b the same inning after Rico Carty walk'ei°f; Leis Angele! got it! first run on Sudakis' homer in the alJ:th, his 13th "Of the season. • : 'Ibe Dodgers picked up two more In the eighth but the Braves added three· jn.. But the thrill was brief. Corona del t.far's Laver got. hiJ hlgh·kk:king service nipping the Uoes and ltarted acortng with hi8 wrilly p)aoonents finally winning ~ 6, '-2, 1-1, "'2. Roche, runner-up to Lavtr htrt a year ago and his conqueror in the rectnt world pro dwnplonshipo at Boston, also bad 1" rally to but Mark Co1, the blonde Bri- ton, U, 1.a, 7.f, 6-2. The two middle set.I were decided by lhe audden.de11th Ue· brtak. Ashe, wlnner of the flrst U.S. open in 11181 and Americ1'1 hope IO take Laver'! crown, had e11rly trouble with IS.year-old Roscoe Tl.Mer, • Stanford University WASIIlNGTON (AP) -A nation of football fans, led by No. I fan Presidtnt Nixon. moumed today the death of Vince l.()mban:li, the Washlngton Redskins coach considel'fll by many the best tht g1me had to offer. The body nf the S7-year-old Lombardi "'ho died Thursday, was to lie in ~ funeral home in the naUon's capital for one day before being sent to New York, the city In which ht was bom. Mass will be said In St. Patr{ck's Cathedral tl-fonday by Terence Cardinal Cooke, archbishop of New York. Burial will be at r.Joun t Olivet, a cemetery in '-tiddletown Townshi p, neitr Red Bank, N. J. President Nixon aaid Lombardi was tops In his field "because he was able to help others" discover the best that \\'U in themselves. Like the power sweep which lhe gam'e has trademarked, the power of Vince LOmbardi'i personality awept the world of sports and made a lasting lm· pact on the life of all it touched. '"The lesson all Americans can learn rrom coach Lombardi's life," Nixon ssld In a !tatement issued In COron1do, "Is that a man can become a star when he becomes an apc>stle of teamwork.'' In Tampa. Fla., where the Red$klns are preparing tor an exhibition 11:ame Sa turd•Y night, a ma ss will be said by the Rev. Wiiiiam Scweder at the motel where the team Is lodged. The \Vashlngton cmch and exa::ulive vice president of the Redskins died Thursday morning in G e o r g e I o w n University llospital arter a tw~month fight with cancer. He entel'fll the hospital Jlme 2S and underv.·ent an operation two days later in which doctora removed a tumor and .a two-foot length of colon. He was read- mitted for another operation a month later. It wu not untn Wednesday , however, that the family .said publicly Lombardi 1uffered from •:an e1traordlnarlty vlnllent fonn of cancer." 1 He l~ave.s the widow, Marie : a son. Vln· cent of St. Pa ul, Minn.: a daughter, Su~nn Bickham of Green Bay, Wis.: his parents, fl.1r. and ~1rs. Harry. Lombar<U of Brooklyn, N.Y.; two brothen, Joatph, of Englewood, N.J., and Harold, of San Raf1el, Clllf., and a sister, Claire Brandsbagen. of Hazlett, N.J. Lombardi became such a legendary, larger-than-life fl(u.re on the American se<ne dw'lng the pn> football boom ol lhe 1960s that lt'a often forgotten he didn't achieve su~ until late In life. He was an obecure aulstant coach at age 45 1nd wtll-known only ln football circles when the Green Bay Packers signed him Jan. 21, 1959, to a flve-ye1r contract 11 bead coach and general manager. rn the next deca&!, he teached such htlghU he was compBred with such pro football coaching glanl8 u Geor&e Hala1 and .P.aul Browa. aura.nee runs in the same frame. • LOS ANOILIS t it , II 1111 ALT•HTA lh111tl!, ti .. 1 1 I L11m, cl MOii, If 4 0 I I Mlll111, 7t> Si,111111.11, t • I 1 1 H,All"Oll, f'f W.Ptr\ff'1 lt 4 I I I J .Ht H, ,, Kotcl, n .. I I 1 C"*'-, rt L~. )lo • I I I C1tty, If St!_., 711 J 0 I I 0 .8ntW11, 11 Gr1 .. tll.'WIQM J I l I C IOY'fr, J11 , .. ,.,., .. I 0 0 I TllllTlln, c Hfu911, P I I I 0 G1rtl0o, H WHfl,, pf! I I 0 I G.Slo!M, ., NorrN11,, 01oe ·~ ,,. ... ' I I, I J I l I l J .I I 0 ••• ' I .. J I I l I I I I I l 1 i-l . . . ' J I I ~ ,... 12 4 ' .. ,..... J1 11 11 ., LM Ar191'1ft DOii (1(11 '71 -• Allt11,_ 11) e40 Of• -n • E -O. llCW'lt, 0" -LOI Atl09! .. I LOI •' Lei A!llM!M J, At11nt1 I, '' -l l!rrn111 ·LI/Ill )1 -ll;u111ll, H• -H. l\1ror. !Ml. C1Ped1 tni Go ......... IUl. ludtklt Cl,I, KoKt !I!. 51 -C•11id1.. ~ -Pnl1r, L11m, ,, ..-Otltf' {L ... 11) ._i:,J : ~ t,• 111 111(.' HOl/91'1 l·l!J ' I 1 1 1: Horm•n 17 1JJ G.Ston• IW.l~tl t • I • I ;• WP -NorrNn 1.,l !l!le -l :U. l\llrl'd•r\(t ... .iJ.t. I t c I , f ' ( ' t ' ( ' t ' , ) • ' , $150,000 ' Ill' JORN VALTDIA .................. Chopptnc -ut1l1IJ polu nqulra a c:hlln -and --But putllnC 1t111r --rll'>Ulld needs much -than that -·-lll0,000 to be -.., sll&htty ...... _J thin 100 l'l'OPll'\Y OWDlrl 1n San Clemente, PRIZE WINNER SHOWS DIVE AND SWIM FORM Bobby Tuttle Cops First Place in Under 10 Event AFTER A WHILE THE WATER GETS AWFULLY COLD Young Conte1t•nt1 Drip and Shiver Waiting Their Turn Tadpoles Splash Kids Compete in, Lake Forest Pool lt was wet and \\'ild in Lake Forest, in El Toro Wednesday night, as nearly 200 boys and girls showed up for the community's second annual ''Splash Day." The event. staged at the Beach and Tennis Clubhouse pool, brought to an encl the summer aqua tics program al the t:lub. Events ranged from sw imming and diving lo team races and "sweat.shirt'' S\Vims. About 250 spectators were en hand to root for the ir favorites. · · Early in 1he contest, two small glrls, swimming in the four and under freestyle category just couldn"L make it, but a riuick thinking pool guard quickly brough t the two girls safely to the side of the pool. Otherwise, everything w e n t smoothy. Al the end of the 52 events, ribbons and trophies were awarded lo the participants. First place winners were: Kevin Straka, four and under kickboard ~'vim and freestyle swim: J u I i e Hubtnstein, girls six and under kickboard i;~·im: Eric Slagel. bofs six and under li:lckboard swim: Julie RuJ>ensteln, girls six and under freestyle ; Bruce Ray, boys six pnd under freestyle: ~renda Gor~on. J:irls eigi)l and under k1ckboard swim: .Justin Aumond, boys eight and under kickboard swim. Tom Wuesthoff, boys eighl and under .. one length free style; Janet Pipe, girls eight and under one length free style; Wendy Wing. gi rls 10 and under backslroke; Tom Ray, boys IO and under backstroke : Lori Wing, gi rls 12 and under freestyle ; Bob Burghardt, boys 13 and under freestyle. Kelly Bennett, girls 10 and under freestyle ; Tom Ray, boys JO and under freestyle. Kelly Bennett, girls 10 and under dive and swim for distance; Bobby Tuttle, boys 10 and under dive and swlm for distance. Lori \Ying, girls 12 and under swim and dive for distance; Mark Pequet, boy1 It and under swim and dive for distance; DebPie Slemmons, girls si x .and under diving; Bruce Ray, boys six and under diving: Jo-dee Green, girls nine and under diving; c.1larlle Ray, boys n1ne and under diving; Lori Gordon, gi rls 12 and under diving ; Scott Burghardt, boys 12 and under diving. ~1ike Santobianco and Dino Vakoulls, eight and over team relay; John Santobianco and Jeff Wilson, nine and over team relay; Dana Wing, nine and under sweatshirt race; John Zych, IO and ever sweatshirt race. David Hetchkiss, eight and under lndi\•ldual medley; Tom 'Ray, nine and JO individual medley; ?\11ke Straw. 11and12 individual medleyj ScoU Bur&hardt, eptiona l dives. Tbat II, II they WDI lo lake an a bill that Illa !Of!!'" aakl o1 beaut¥. Sao C1-ia city-launclled stsn an underlfGUllCI uWlty plan lhls week In r-lo a pel!llan ll8ned by a -t ol the -la In u.r.e tract. In the p_,.llar-Jlllkrq\ ana. '!be raldenla spoclllcally Uk that the <117 -lndl aoeumulated lrwn the Edlaon Cam(>lll1 ,... -..-uWlly d1ltrlet.t. New Director Set For Teen Center Dick Nlederbaulv ol Mlalon Viejo has been elected to replac:e Perry Snell as a Teen C..Ptt dlrtetor. Snell resiil\t(I becauae of a heavy work load and reuons of hulth alter IU'Vln1 as one of the prime movers of the center's oraanWnc commJttea. . The Teen Center Board ol. Directors U •till in the procus: or 1tlectin1 a site, acconilng to it& ebaJrman, John Moers of Ae1ean Hills. A Ille obould be oeleeted by S<p1. H after whkh the committee will begin selectm1 • structure. Motrt aakl a teen Cftlter mau1er will , not be ehooen until the Ille and otruc:tur. are Hiiied. f'rldif, StpUmbtr 4, 1'70 S DAJl.Y l'IU'I f to Bury Clemente Lines Ulln& lhe nalllllln& thet the !undo - which nuld top llGl,000 by lhll year'• «Id -llilould be uted !or their dlltrlct, lhe mldellla bave ubd that all tho money In tbe lund be uaed !or their project. But an •-llom the council -Councilman ~ O'Kee!e -will appareatly be the uy vote to determine exacUy how much money the 1\Jlld ahould yield to the property owners. A aerlea or-. on apecilk: amount. fell to a S.2 atalematl th1I week. Community leader Ed Chaffee, the apokemen !or the rtoldenla, told councilmen that h1a ne!Pbor• art enUUed f'I th• lull amount becauoe the Pacesetter chnUen were denied the underground uUllty money two yars ago. 1119 money. inltead, went to anotbtr development. In tbe meantime the money has aecum.ulated and the P • c e 1 • t t e r rtsidenta •tarted tht1r petition drive •l•ln. 'Ibey presented the •lln•IW'h lul 11\0lllll. In the meantime, other Pacuetter area mklects not Included In the currenl drive, have e1pruaed a wilh to have their poles removed, too. The "race" of aorls leaves the council tn the bot.seat to determine how much 11\0lley should be given to the llrtt.ln line and what to give the runnera-up. Councllmen unoHlclaDy dkl decide, however, to chip ln money tor street llgllts In tbe underground dlalrkl -the cost for uch light eaUmated to be llOO. But even with the ctty contributk>n and Restoration of Bluffs Expense Found Clwaper San Clemente will pay less than It expected in a large project to restore crumbling bluffs below the Colony Coves community, councilmen le a r n e d Wednesday. The council accepted the low bid for the 10,000-cublc·yard earth moving and compacting project. The B. Q. Halloran Company of Newbury Sprlnga will do the work for $24,180, which is more than $2,000 cheaper than city staff had Rf'OJecled. The project. which is expected ~ end before the rainy season, will involve sr1ping away un.ttable portioos of the Caplslrano shale formation, instilling pipes to carry away aeeplng water, then rebuilding the llopes with bulldozers. The bottom of the bluffs will have a 0 Lincoln·log" crib wall made of treated wood beams to serve as a foundation for lhe new slopes above. The bluffs, under city jurisdiction because of a flood control easement, have always been prone lo earth slippage, but the problem became .,acute after the subdivilllon on top was built. Water sprinkled on 1awn1 aeeps throu&h the soil, then oo:r.es out through the aoft shale. The water serves as the trigger for the release of tons of 11U1ltrlal which topples to El Camino Real below. Traffic lane CIOl\U'rS becauae of cleanup operat.lonl are common. • • . .fun clothes an orpiCliil~IN;aot fr • ha 11o WldtrlfGUllCI ull1lly llnl, lie I ' ·- ol the -lot lhe job '11111 --•veractnc up to ta,000 for wb r.ld11t Involved. To lap lhe oplnloD • lie n '= expenaa, c~ .,,... tt --procoodlnp ...... a belrlnc In two woob le "' If Ibo. restclenll ba .. bllliod --IC Ibo price. Jn the rnanllmt, 1111 lltlPbOh ,.. lncludtd In the dtltricl bavo """ eltweol help from Cbalfee In .«&lllllllW Iller - p«ltlon cb1vo to be ........a I« - funds. '!be -• poll! .., lhe alllllJ .Ji, "" under a dedalon hondod -"1 .. olale Public Ulilltl• c-1-. -10 to aoy 1m_..---reqUNll it. Viejo Computer Parts Help City C.mput.r puts -Ill lit planned community al llllllen Viejo will help plan lot a new Br!lllll dty "11m lho Populltlon II espeete4 to <limb le ..... by the early 111111. Part of the computor ~ ,Yolem wUJ be I bup d1llt - system tr•'lufaetund by the hi ... Corp. in ........ ,,,. Viejo. J• ... blip pidl the developnolrt ol Ibo elty al. 1111M Keynea to be located • a n.• an area mldway behrta1 i..doo _. Birmingham. ,,,. fUl,000 ,yotem wUJ be -1111 only !or publle -pa-., ""' le ~ ...io..-nlc -••• ffi)U!ftmtala ol -In N , .... hellth, emplc:-lenl, rdPn. ...,,.,., 1ramJ>Ol'lat1on aod ....,,.,.. 7 fashion island, newport beach 644-5070 •pe" ••ufeys tlurint the summer I 2 te I • I ' ; • Friday, Stpttmbtr •. 1~70 For six years Irene Wicks has served an as unofJicial, nonsalaried nagger of litterbugs in Islip, N.Y. Now . Mrs. Wicks may receive town reco,l(nition and support in her cleanup campaigns as a "litter maid." The to"'" board has .l(rant· ed Supervisor Clyde W, Pearsall permission to hi re Mrs. \Vi'cks. 53, of Bay Shore. "I kept after them so much ttiey cleaned up just to get rid of me." said Mrs. \Vicks of her visits to shopkeepers and shopping center-landlords.· Pearsall said he would arrani?e an interview with the woman and planned to hire her. • . . • • -• • • Bomb Syspe.c._ts_ Captured, Let Go LITTLE FAUS, N.Y. (UPI) -Two fusitiv~ sought. in a fatal bombina at the University ol Wisconsin fell into the hands of police for the, ·second time 'Thursday and for the lecond time were ~~ :::::, '::i'::~~e;:_o failed to link Police said two men carrying drivers licenses Identifying them as Dwight Armstrong, 19, and David S. FiM, II, were stopped here because their car had a faulty mufner. They were questioned for about an hour 1nd then let go by authorities who did not recogniu their names. pirklng place about a half mile from the Penn centril rallroaCI depol in the New York suburb of North White Plains. It belooged to Ceoe Penlenero of White Plains. Tbe Armstrong brothers. Fine and Burt all were named Wednesday in federal warrant.. charging them with sabot.age, destruction of governmmt property and conspiracy in the bombing in Atadison. Sheriff Ralph Heam or Sauk County, Wis., said Thursday he would see.k a warrant charging Karleton Armstrong with the attempted bombing of a power substation. The Royal Canadian ~founted Police, alerted by the FBI , said Thursday they were aiding in the search for the men • Moments after London detective Chief Inspector Alasta ir Thompson \Vednesday night had finished te11· ing a truck drivers' ~roup "the Barons of hot merchandise A:re gradually being squeezed out of existence," he was proved wrong. Police said thieves hijacked a trail· er truck not far from where the meeting was belnJ? held in a police station: getting away With 840 cases of gin worth $57 ,600. GOVERNMENT TROOPS REENTER CITY NEAR CAMBODIA CAPITOL Communist Occup•tion Ends After Bitter Figthing 20 Miles From Phnom P.m It was reported earlier this week th1t police at a roadblock oear Madison, Wis., stopped 1 car carrying Armstrong, his brother Kar leton, 22, and two other men shortly after the Aug. 24 explosion but did not detain them when the brothers said they were on their way to a vacation area i,n upstate Wisconsin. Little Falls police said 0 w i g h t Armstrong and Fine told them they were on their way to visit "Leo Burt in Utica." Burt, Z1. was the fourth tuspect named by the FBI Wednesday. } obless Totals Pass 5 Percent; Workers Down • Jay Chambers of Fort \Vorth, Tex., made reservations for a brand-new hotel in Mex ico City when he planned hi s honeymoon. Because of that, lhe honeymoon \vas one surprise after another. \Vhen the newlYWed s arrived and a sked for their room. the hotel manaj!'.er sent them to a luxurious suite. Then he sent up champagne, flowers and a weddinJ? cake. The best surprise came Wednes- day when the mana~er told Cham· bers: "Because t.he hotel has not been officially opened and you and your wife became the first ~uests, all the expenses will be our wed· · d!.,~ present." • Lou's Barber Sl1op was clip- ped down the center Tuesday night by a particular burglar in Sea.ttle. TM thief stole the cen· terjolds from 40 Playboy maga- zines in the $hop -and di$turb- ~ ed nothing el3e, police f'eported.. •· Harry Baker, 18. said he \Vas driving home in hi s 1969 van when he heard a rattle in the four-wheel drive near Tampa, Ariz. He pulled into a field behind his parents home and crawled underneath the vehicle. leaving the engine running. "It just p<>pped into .l(ear and sta rt& rolling over me." he said. "It rolled up my leg, over my stomach and chest and off the side of my head." Bak- er said that v11hen the. 4,300-pound van started up bis leg ."I just took a good breath and decided to hold on. I iuess you might say I was extremely lucky." Aside from a few scratches and feeling stiff and sore, Baker reported no ill effects. • \Vhile 180 firemen battled a raJ!- ing blaze in a hotel in the north beach area of San Francisco Tues- day. a ha wker stood amid a maz~ of hoses and urged customers into an adjacent topless and bottomless club. Because of the inferno in the Dante Hotel. 100 RUests had to be evacuated. But there was ~ injury. Daven Rosenberg, publicist and manager of The Condor Club down - ~t-airs. declared business would con· tinue "as usual", Red Divisions En Route To LaunchN ew Offensive PHNOi\t P&'l'H (AP) -l 1p lo 10 Communist divisions are now I n Cambodia or moving down the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos ~·ith orders (rom Hanoi to launch a major new offensive in South Vietnam, senior C o m m u n i s t diplomatic sources report. , American military sources in Saigon .!'iaid they could not confirm or deny the report. 'The sources said American warplanes ha ve flown about 2,000 sorties againi;;l North Vietnamese positions in Laos and Cambodia d~ing the past week to blunt any enemy plans for a massi ve offensive across the border into South Vielnam. But they said this was not unusual, that American planes have been wagin g such a bombing campaign for several months. A sortie is one flight by one plane. An American source in Phnom Penh said any enemy fortt of lhe siz.e reported by the Communist aources would never be permitted•to mw on the Cambodian border as such forces have done for previous offensives. He implied that Landslide Kills Six in Manila J\tANILA (UPI) - A landslide caused by a torrential downpour crushed a famil y of six to death today and brought to 49 the death toll from five days of prodigious rains. President Ferdinand E. Marcos said the worst was over in Manila. Another 7.7 inches or rain fell in the Manila area in the 24 hours ending ·at 8 a.m. today, bringing to 32 inches the total since Monday. ~1arcos said the state of emergency had passed but he extended for another v.·eek the •·stale of cala mily" he proclaimed Wednesday. "I hereby decree that the relief and rescue operations center be shifted into a resettlement and rehabil itation center to take care of flood victims." he sai d. The rains were spawned by two trop ical storms that passed to !he northeast of the Philippines major north- ern island of Luzon and by the seasonal monsoon. American ground forces might enter Cambodia as they did last May and June in the operation v.·hich the U.S. Command said cleared out many of the enemy base camps on the Cambodian side of the border. Cambodian and \Vestern military sources said there is clear evidence that the North Vietnamese are rebuilding their border bases in the remote jungle!! of eastern Cambodia, bordering South Vietnam. Some of these bases are said to be in the same position as those cleared by U.S. and South Vietnamese troops during their ?i.1ay-June action. One Commun ist source with indirect lines to Hanoi said the gathering force included North Vietnam's Ist,. Znd, 5th, 7th, 9th, 20th and 25th divisions. CamOOdia n intelligence already has reported the 1st. 5th, 7th, 9th and 20th divi sions in the country. Some sources believe the attack on South Vl~am wilJ begin in about two months. Communist sources say the plan for a majo r offensi ve in South Vietnam reOects a decision in Hanoi to make the main target South Vietnam again and not the destruction of Cambodian Premier Lon Nol 's regime. Possible aimi;; were said to be the disruption of. the Saigon government's increasingly strong military machine, reversal of the Vietnamization program and the inflicting of serious new casualt ies on American troops to quicken the antiwar sentiment in the United States. H.ussians lo Return U.S. Space Capsule AfOSCO\V (U PI) -The Soviets l\'ilI return to the United States a n "experimental U.S. space capsule" plucked from the sea by Russian fishennen, transferring it to a U.S. icebreaker this Saturday, the official Tass Nev.•s Agency said today. ·'The experimental space capsule which was lauoched under the Apollo program and was found in the Bay or Biscay by Soviet fishermen will be transferred to U.S. representatives," the agency said. Windstorms Hit Midwest Tornado, Fu1inel Clouds R e ported in Indiana, Nebraska Cellfornl• s.11.1.. ~•!Md mMllw l•lf fod11 evt• *"'~" (1llfo•.,I• with 11\f> ,,clPlloti of l11Ct•11,,. cllllldlrwu l'lld ..;•.,,..,..., th11nOrr .,,.,_I ltll"Hten!,,. ll'llfl\d t fHl. Coale." ~..,., ••• u ... 1 ll'IK letl '"It~ rwlonl while 1.,... doucr1 •ncl co1.,11I fat e1omln•IM 1111 t••lv mornl1111 l>auh. Let A!1111l•1 incl v!dnltv v.Hr!en~ nl-"f 1nd 11•1v mornln1 low tlaud1 wllPI "''" IU!'lli'llM In "" .. 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Mi.tit ""' ID IJllfl!.IUOtl: AND Dl•l!.llT JllGtONS -Metl'l'f ttlr t11ru $11Urd1v '°"" In· -M In Ctwd"'"-' ..... th Incl 1111 -'""' wl1fl c:r1tnc:t of liW 1h1r-,,.,. ...,_Int fhundtrl~. Ovt"'lltM ~ ._ ~ "'"'' ,, ... .,,_.,,.r,. J5 .. 1t flit,,,.. "'''"""' ., ~ ., lowt'I' v111av1, LottllY CO.ltr 111"' wlrll llltl'lt ltttoflr 'Ill M..,., v1l1tvt.. fl to 10! io-¥111 .. 1, \.octl t Ull't t lltrl'IOOI' WlfWll ilO ... JO m•, co .. lel Hll'f Ml'tlltlne "'°"'· lltM V~"~lll• Wlnclll ..... , I ncl """"lfl9 llou'l f)Ool'om• lttt Wt lll•lr I to U knoto In •"""°""' t<ldl'f Incl $1!1,.<:t•Y. M\tll INIY 10, c;...,,1,1 ~·•u11r11u•t• ''"" lreno .. It 1•. lnltncl lfl'l\ller11Ure-t ''"'' Ir..,.. Jt >e II, Wltw tt11'1Nr1tur1 6J. 1.1.ru•OAV 11 .\.!" "'· • ~ •·OO 1.m, I,) fl••' .... ~ "00 ...... s' 111 .. 1 iO'w J )01111. 11 Hconcl ~Ith 12 11 t m, ) l $l«'O'ld If# ••4 I 'II 1.4 kl~ •+ .. , •.Ht "'· \tit J !\ 11.l'I, ~ •i..-f;St ••!Tl· t.t11 I JJ • m. Sun, "loon, Tides !•w ro wlni:t•torm1 l.911\0>d Ptrl ol lni:tll "I• 1(1'1'!1~ Incl l'f•l>rl•)• I•!• r,,.,,..,,y 1ne1 • .,1., '""'"· a.neti'M'• ,,.,,,., tllnfel t•ltn1lv1 Clll!l.lt41 In Wt1h'rfl Pf'flntYIYonl~, WI.,. t u•h row It! U "'Jin "" l'IOu• ot ~111 ..... NIHI . •ncl 1"f J.li ""~ 11 C.••ncl l1tenc1, fwe tuftlltl (l-1 """''' •1-1..i ,..., Cu•h•, HM .. e111rt,,. 1111 ·~·· ......... 1 .... M1n1ton1n. K1t11~ tt-!M w+nll 1u111 u. to 10 mill. " lo<nff9 •-11\•0<itll • +t11l~r1. Ind • ar1v1 '" rr111ura"t T!<u.,Cl•v. lntv•ln• •out H rlMI•• on~tt~I"' t1l111 .,,., 11Haetl11t ''''"· Nt>n• ol th• tn1ur1'•1 w11 11rlo<.1 ''"' wt'tf fl lll'd •"Cl -·· ll'lfl w•t• bf'Q•'" !II w,~!••~ P~nn1'flv1n11 11\o tu\1'¥ wlntt11etm• In ll•~•r• C:e""'" Th• OutiUfl"f' Llt!\I Ce. l<:t ~1 Qt ,M°"''(', 111,0 Wll wll~I POWI , Iller lllt l!orm. . . l'l!lllJN!ftlf•re• Albt""' AIDl/ll-t .At11n!1 lll•mt•l - 8olw llo•!cn 11vt11ro t llorlol!o (lllrtoo (lr-.tln"ol l (+tv~l•"<:t Ol!nyf<' 0.:1 Moln.,. Dl!f'OI• F1lrbll111<1 Fort WO<'IPI ......... lfl(llt"•ll<ll" Jtt•-111• J11ne1u IC1~1(l1'¥ LMA.nttln llNl1vltlt M...,p1119 Miami Mllwtult"" Ml,.t1e1""'l'-SI. "•lfl Hew Orltt /11 Hew Vorl! ()t:!ohOft\I C:i-1'¥ """" Pllll_l,l\lt Pl\ol>flll Pltllbutlt~ ,. ..... 1 ........... . Portlol'ICI. ()re, ltt<>lll tlty ltlcl'lf!'IO"ll St 1.oult s111 I.•~· C:l!v S1n DfH o Stn ''tM"ll(9 liffl!llt ,.,,, .... ....... ~1.,.1&11 Wlnrtt- IOtlll L .. ,r.r. 10 ... .01 .. ~ ,, '1 .. ~ ,. .'10 " " ,. 61 .11 .. " .. .. .. • " ~ .. " " " ,, .. " " .. " " " " n '" • " ·~ .. .. M •• " ~ " .. " •• .. n " " " " ~ .. .. .. n 6 .. " .. " ... ·" ·" .~ N ... ... .~ 1t I.Ill .. ~ " ... .. .. " " " ~ " n ~ " n " " " " .. ~ ' .M ·" •• ·" ... •• IRS Checking J erry Rubin's Revoll1tion Book WASHINGTON (UPI) -The lntemal Revenue Service has begun a new investigation of a tax..free foundation established by Yippie Leader Jerry Rubin to shelter from lhe tax collector royalties on his revolution.oriented book. An IRS spokesman said the foundation apparently had not complied with law requiring annual reports of income .and expenditures. 'Mle spokesman said the IRS wants to detennine if the foundation has violated other statutes wh ich could result in Joss of tax-exempt status. The government routinely approved the tax exemption Afay 23, 1969. The foundation, officially known as the Social Education f oundation, has a single trus~e. Rubin's wife. Na ncy S. Kurshan. Rubin apparently set up the foundation to avoid paying taxes on revenue from his best seller ''Do Jt !0 ' It was not until four hours after Armstrong and Fine were released that Little Falls polict ·discoy,..ed they were wanted. Federal authorities have said the fugitives may be headed for Canada. lt is a drive of about two houn from the Little Falls-Utica area to the Thousand Islands bridge leading to Canada a b o v e Watertown in Northern New York. A FBI spokesman in Utica said the FBI was "Doing everything logically possible to try and locate these individuals in this area. It's a big search of a big area." Although the four suspeels we re subject.. of a nationwide hunt by the FBI, a spok,esman at stale police headqua rters in Albany said they had received no special alert. The spokesman said the u s u a I procedUR is for the FJU lo mail flyers with names, photographs and details of a crime rather than to teletype information to local authorities, Llttle Falls police said a check of the car showed It was registered to "a private party in Westchester County" and had not been reported stolen. But police in Westchester County Mid today the car had been stolen between 7:30 a.m. and t a.m. 'l'huf'!day from a WASH1 NGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment lll,lit month inched up to A near six year high of 5.1 perttnt of the work force. while total employment dropped nearly 400.000, the Labor Department said loday. Asst. Commissioner Harold Goldstein of the Bureau of Labor Statistics !aid the August rise of one-tenth of one percent in the national jobless rate was not significant, but the reports indicated the nation's continuing economic slowdown including a shorter work week and less overtime. The report said the actual number of jobleS!I workers declined 300,000 to a tota l of 4.2 million last month , but that seasonal factors and a decline of 700,000 in the labor force caused the bureau to compute the one-tenth of one percent increase in the unemployment rate. In the past year, Goldstein said. unemployment has soared 85 percent among men and 30 percent each among women and teen-agers. The August jobless rate of 5.1 percent equalled the highest rate since October or 1964. The rate last was higher, S.2 percent.. in June of 1964, Goldstein said. Enter Chrysler Plymouth's Clean-Up Sale ... and~~~ HERE'S HOW: Foil ow these car buying hints and make the clean-up deal of your life on a Chrysler or Plymouth ••• or any other make for that matter. 1 KNOW WHICH~c;..\RS HAVE THE JDGHEST TRADE-IN VALUES. If you're thinking of buying a make with a traditionally low trade--in value, you'd better make up for it with a "super-good" deal now •• ; or else buy a car with a traditionally high trade in value. (The Kelley Blue Book shows Plymouth Fury as the trade-in leader of its class 36 months in a row.) 2 WASH AND POLISH YOUR PRESENT CAR. The better your car looks, the /J" · better trade-in you're likely to get. Afler all, dealers are human ... and they respond just like you do to a nice shiny car. 3 FIND "THE" CAR BEFORE YOU TALK PRICE • If you've already picked out a particular car from the dealer's lo~ he knows you're serious about buying, and he'll be more inclined to give you bis best deal tirsL Atlas Chrysler · P~moulh Inc. 292t Harbor Boulevard 4BRINGYO UR VICIOUS DOG "SPIKE" , •• the one that snarls a lot and bares his fangs . Don't worry, the dealer will get the message. Huntington Beach Huntillfton Beach Chrysler • P~moulh 16661 Beach Boulevard ' .. ,.,.._ .. :-·-~·--. ---· ·--~---- Frldq , Septtmbtr 4, llJ70 Parents Face Court -on School ~IE '{___ By Phil lnterlandi Israel Says U.S. Demands To Egypt, Russ Not Enough Next Cha11ip? Gene Tunney raises his baud in v.ictory gesture as his son, Congressman John V. Tunney, open his fall campaign. Tunney is seeking a .seat in the U.S. Senate and is opposing Sen. George Murphy. With the two seniDr Tunneys at Riverside's Mission Inn is Teddy, the congressman's 8-year-old son . Antiwar Cadet Mav Face " Draft Upon Resignation NEW YORK (AP) -A West Point cadet. denied a discharge as a conscientious objector, faces possible callup to active duty -even i£ he resigns from the academy. U.S. Dist. Court Judge Marvin E. Frankel denied Thursday the petition or Carey E. Donham, 20, of New Baden, Ill., who sooght a writ of habeas corpus to affect the discharge. Donham's bid for a t'.!o·n,s c ientious objector dilebarp was turned down earlier by an Army review board which found the cadet Jackjng in "the deplh or sincerity to qualify r 0 r discharge as a conscientious objector." The cadet may r~ign from the acad.emy or face dismissal. In eilher event, however, he wou1d be liable to call to active duty, as he would be subject to the Selective Service system as a citizen. He may also appeal Frankel's ruling to a higher cpurt, Uruguay Businesses Hit by Terrorists~ M 0 NTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI) -Terrorist attackers today bombed at least six business establishments and private homes and machine g u n n e d the quarters of members of the U.S. Embassy Marine guard, poli ce said. No victims were reported and damage was light, police said. They said the residence or the U.S. lt1arines was raked by machine gun fire by assailants who fled withou t b e i n g identified. The attackers t h r e w homemade Molotov cocktails Target Gets Donation Front Con BALTIMORE (UPI) -Six years ago James McCall of Baltimore was convicted of trying to assassinate Verda \\'elcome, a black s ta l e senator. and dynamite bombs at the homes of prominent persons, including television station director Francisco Rodrigo and bankers Enrique R • Marlin and Juan Car Io s Peirano Facio, brother of foreign minister Jorge Peirano Facio. It was unknown whether the attacks were connected v.•ith the kidnapings of U.S. farm consult.ant Claude L. Jy, 65, of Fort Collins, Colo_., and Brazilian c_onsul Aloysio Dias Gomide, 41. Police tiave been searching for Gomide since Jul y 31 when he was taken from his home by armed kidnapers. Fly was abd ucted Aug. 7, three days before Tupamaro terrorists shot to death another An1erican victim, Da n i e I Mitrione, an adviser y,·orking \vilh Uruguayan police. Early today an anonymous telephone caller told a Brazilian embassy official that Gomide would soon be Creed at an unspecified date. Andre Guimaraes, Brazilian embassy first secretary, said mor, than 100 simi lar calls had been received in the past month. Man Tried lit Onassis Kidn.ap Plait LONDON (AP) -A man charged with demanding $3.4 mil!Wn in a kidnap threat against Aristotle Onassis and his wire J acqueline was c h arged t oday wit b threateJling to kill her. The extra charge w a s revealed as John William ,Humphreys, 58, was ordered to remain held without bail until a jury trial begiJIS next week. Humphrys, a British electronics engineer, was arrested July 24. In the preliminary hearing at London's Guildhall Court, Humphrys was accused or sending John Newnham, a shipping agent for Onassis, a letter threatening to kill the widow ol President Joh1t F. Kennedy. Furfu:er details of the alleged threat were not disclosed. · At an earlier hearing be was accused of demanding more than $3 million f.r om Newnham to prevent a kidnap of the Onassises. P o I i c e sources at the time said Humphrys "has bee11 making telephone calls to in surance companies and other finns in London, telling them about a kidnap plot.'' Humphrys also was charged with obtaining by dishonesty a $22,000 Rolls·Royce limousine belonging to a British company in sUrrolk, En·gJand, and tools belonging to a Suffolk man identified as Edward Ernest Cole. Police did not say whether this was connected witll the other charges. Thursday a prisoner's aid society here revealed McCall , serving a 12-year sentence , sent Airs. Welcome a $50 check for her re-election campaig11. Cons' 1st Lady McCall, 43, told the sc11ator, N E d 24 -'S h' "I am well aware of lhe UTSe n S •y ear tretC damage I have done to you as an individual and I feel very ' bad about it. I've died more SAN QUENTIN (APl -''There was only 01te man I than a thousand deaths." After a 24-year "stretch" the was ever afraid of, because of 'Mrs. Welcome. y,•ho v.•as 11.urse they called "the firsl· h. h ti n H wounded in the assassination is J>SYC o c persona 1 y. e attetnpt, rerused to accept the lady ot Sa1 Quentin Prison" was in there for a perfectly check and tumed It over JO :i has ~elircd. horrible sex crime -and he halfw(ly house for former Luelle R.' Scr0en, now 62, fell madly in love with me."' - inm ates. She thanked ~fcCall was lhe first woman permitted She observed, "Afttr all, as and told him, "there is some to work inside the walls of the a woman working in a good in.every person .'' 118-year-old prison . Fo1·u111 Jleld segregated society of 3,600 "I just hope I can make lt on the out side," the plump men I didn't have much grandmothe r told a cheering contpetitioll;" Mrs. Schoen group of convicts at the re cent Once found herself in a prison retirement party they gave elev3tor -with a· 19--year~ld her. tough who asked her wh.1t she M.rs. Schoen said in all thl' y,·ouJd do If he kissed her. • S•'"°" tM C1""' Drlwe To Obtol11 Needff C.,ltwl h •• hr TM Celt• M..o·Nnport IMcltYMCA. 5 25 3 guatmtffd 0 annual • rot• 90 Day Certificate Accounts* 5.39% Annual Ylold tr all savings and lnlerest remain a year. No minimum depo!Jit Dally compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 6 3 guaranteed 0 annual rate 2to10 Year Certificate Accounts* 6.18% Annual Yield tf all savings and Interest remain a year. $5,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. ·Earn from date of deposit. e1sy-c1r~ ac+iv• W••r for - min and l>oy1 crushed corduroy fl•r•1 by h1rris cemel & ru1t •P•ll S11114•y•.,, fo r the Sumr•i.t 12 fo 5 li•11liem•ric•rd e '"''''' '~'''' 7 f•dii•11. id•ntl, 11•wporf lie•ch •44-1010 5.753~*4 1 to 1 O Year Certificate Accounts* 5.92% Annual Yield If all savings and Inte rest remain a year .. $1,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Eam ·from dat a of deposit. 7. 5 3 guaranteed 0 annual • rote 1 Year Certificate Accounts* (Adjualabla rates for shorter ltrmo) 7.79% Annual Yield 1f all aavl ngs andlnterest remain a year. $100,000 minim'um .;teposit Daily compounding. Earn from d~te of depoait. 5% Pa1abook Account. Current Annual Rale. No minimum deposit. Daily compounding. lnlerost dey·ln lo day-out. Cal!f Q!!!!!!v.,,_~.4..£!~!.h;,§.~!!Jtgs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blv'd. ne~r Adams· 546·2300 CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER years she served as ch.lef "I told him there wouldn't · • c.onvenlcn\ Ollices lhroughoul los: Angeles, Orange end Ventura Counties MEXICO CITY (AP) -The first world symposium on arid zones will be held here Nov. 9· 12 with represcntative!t from &(')() un iversities in 27 nations attending, symposium officia ls announced. nurse I~ the prisoners she be anything to do -after he • ""COllnl.t. ''' huur•d yp l~ 520,00C ~nd•r protl•lcn1 of th• F•dtt.t.I Stv1n;s A Loin ln1~r1nt• Ccrper11l1111. 11 pe1m&11•nt •Qtnov cl lht Unlllll $1a1tt Ocwm111e11., ·walked unafraid with one picked himself up orr tht1L ______ _; ______ ..;. __________ ..;. ___________________________ _. exception: floor." J1 ·-. \ _, I I ... • • Ool\LY PILOT f'rldl1, Stpt.eo1btr 4, 1970 ' Wer e '7-'8 ! Women's Summer Shift Clearance - 199 : ~ of:sirrlc• and color cornbinacioos. As$0rced fair II ridl,·tl:iimd"Pftina-PresC-. Sites 8 co 18. ")J : ~ • • •· c Lingtrit, Dtpl. ! '15.99 ·Girls' Navy Pea J ackets L11t) Do-! LiJ,Di~ Qa•ntity! 1297 McltQ~, f~i~ in .. a blend of reprocessed wool and nylon. Red quilted acctacc l ining. Navy blue with bi:ass buttons. Sizes 7 ro 14. Girl;' W1ar Dtpl. ,_ - '12.99 Children ·s S~fety Jackets Loot J Diil"! Limited Qu1nri1y! 991 Nyl6n shell with acrylic lining 9 n cotton ~k. Drop-in shrll hooi:I. Mal::hinc washable. Has after dark "safe<y stripe'"' trim.' 3 to 6x. Jnfants'-Chi/drrn's Dept. 1104.95 Constella tion II Typewriter Last 2 DaY1! Limited Quantity! 8499 12-inch carriage. Full wid th tabulato_r. Deluxe 44 key- board. P~e.,giuge. Steel case. Line fi~drr, line retainer. Push vat iable. Terrific buy! Sttzliontry Dtpt. ' ' Sears Ba•e , or Utility • \ Cabinets • '!; Last 2 Days! < 2197 Heavy duty gauge s!ecl. Reinforced doors. 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MOHt1 Gt i.itll &.ONO llACM HI S-0121 '°MONA NA. f ·J161 SANTA MONICA IJt 4-Dll IOUTM COAR l'UU 140 JJJI CANOGA PAl:lt ~ 0611 OUNOAU CH 1·1004, a 4o4611 OlTMPIC & IOlO AN 1•1211 pt(O Wt t-4,62 Sears COMl"fOM .• 6-2Sl1, .. 2..S761 MOLiYWOOO HO f·SM1 1, Ol.ANctl 6'7·2100 SANTA ANA Kt 74J1t TOtt•ANCI S42·1S1t ' Jl!Al5,l 018UCltANOCO. COVINA ff6.0611 INOUWOOO OI 1·2521 Shop Night• Monday thro1111h 5aturday tiao A.M. to t:ao P.M., lunday 12 Nooa to J P.M. PAIADltlA .. 1·1211, lS1·4211 SANTA fl IPllNGI M4·10ll '1htl1factlon Gue1rante1cl or Your Money lock" VAWT PO l·IU1, tM-'"9 VllMONr ft. f.1t1t • I .. • - -. . ' " • DAILY PILOT E DITORIAL PAGE -Greenbelt f o.:r-~-La-gu-na- When a Laguna Beach greenbelt was mentioned prominently a couple of years ago, it seemed -al· though a desirable spatial buUe.r against urban sprawl -probably just another castle in the air. The land in question was awfully ex_pensive. And al· thoug h many pay lip service to open space preservation, how often does it happen outside of park s? Surprisingly, the ,t!'.reen belt dream begins to loo k Ills though it h3s a good chance ol becoming reality be- cause of a dedicated task fqrce named the Citizens Committee for the Laguna Greenbelt. They've sorted the nuts ,and bolts to put together a workable acquisition pl an {Or 520..acre cSycamote Hill s. lt involves federal and priva~e fundlng and self Jiquid- dation of purchase Price by development of the area as a golf course. • Given the municipal and private backin2'. it de- serves, acquisition of th e •triangular shaped $4 million property might be the keystone to a band of greenery girdling Laguna. It's too early to count the heritage sycamore trees secured but it's just the right time to get behind the very worth\vhile project and make it a reality. • Wes tern W~te House Ploy When in doubt, mention the \Vestern White House. That seems to be the new fad in City Council cham· bers in San Clemente these days. The statement, in fact, has been used so often that councilmen, who usually avoid the \Vhite House refer· ence. can see it coming a mile away. It usually Roes: , "Gentlemen, our fine commuity now has ,gained an international reputation as a city w,here the President has chosen to live. It is a splendid community with high ideals and we must 1naintain this very high quality, thus (insert your special cause here) should be considered a benefit/detrimen t (cross out one) to the city which President Nlxon chose as his second home." Variation& on this laborious theme came at least five dllferent times during one recent councn meeting. During one hearing spokesmen from both side1 of a hassle used the same tactics. It doem'toway the council. Th ey know that the President Is here. They also know that he doesn't reaUy care abbut a new development across town. He's more concerned with the Middle East right DO\V. Fair Ground Rules Needed Seeking some type of hammer to speed up school conslrUction, San Joaquin Elementary School District is look ing at the possibility of assessing more than the $5().. ver-day pena1ty for unauthorized delays in fini shing the school buildings. The San Joaquin board was told by its architect that S50 per day penalty is the "suggested'' amount that the legal adviser, the county counsel, feels is collectible . The. a rchitect pointed out that the penalty is much higher in private and other non-school contracts usual· ly insuring their timely completion herring acts' of God or organized labor. lt does appear that the penalty should have some realistic relationship to the dollar size of the project othenvise there is little incentive for a contractor tO keep steam up and possibly pay workmen overtime. . The. board has. indicated unofficia ll y that it might write higher penalties into contracts and go to court to try to collect them. Uf!Iortunately litigation costs money a nd higher penalties usually mean that the contractor adds them to his bid unless work time is ample. What is needed is a thorough assessment of the whole situation by both si~es and some new simplified ground rules that are frur, clear and workable. ( $ .KILL FDR PEACE 'Hold m.Y lliJln. whi.le 1 ri8 a/Wlher bomb, brother.' Liberals Flubbed Law and Order Issue $4 Million Overcharge For Medicines . Worst Form of Humphrey's Big Discovery WASIDNGTON -Hubert H. Humphrey b as made a remarkable p o J i t i c a l discovery. If he had made it earlier he might now be President of the United States instead of a candjdate in Minnesota for election to his old seat in the U.S. Senate . J~umphrey's discovery is that the self· sty led and self. conscious liberals of America missed the boat on the law and order issue out of soft.headed stupidity. T h e y had better get aboard now, Humphrey counsels. or the conventional liberals will m i s s t-h e i r second and probably la.st chance for a.voy""'.put of the darkness. .~· ~ · _. In all fairness to H!lmf>hrey he was a law and order man in 1968 but what he falled to see as clearly then as he does now is that the liberal community on which he had to place his reliance had no grasp of the issue, and does not now. . THE UBERAL CONCEPT or tbe citizen concerned by the lack of Jaw and order was a fat-headed know-nothing silting in his undershirt sipping beer and bleating about law and order because he ha ted blacks, ·welfare clients, and long hairs. The concerned citizen on the law and order '6sue was regan;led BS' a Wallaceite, or a' Bircher, or orie of those ugly Americans who liked Nixon because he hounded the Communists. Thus 1t was thlt""Altorney General John ?.1itchell and Vice President Agnew in ~ f ,Richard .·, ) . --· Wilson their Identity with Middle America and the hard hats became the embodiment of ignOrant, racist, illiberal oppressors cracking the whip over downtrodden people seeking justice in a bard world. Liberals bled for the armed and malicious Black Panthers, cavilled over the crime rate ln black communiUes, deplored patriotic sentiments in the blue collar class, sympathized with the yearnings of the campus bomb throwers, castigated the police as callous brutes. and let their own beards and sidebwns grow to prove their affinity for the now genera lion. BUT ltUP.1PHREY, released for nearly two years from the Wa s hington atmosphere to live in an academic climate with its share of violen ce, has Come to realize how necessary law and order is in making liberal progress. It is the basic essential Liberalism I! a form o[ moderation and it cannot even exist in a disorganized society. The concern over law and order is as pertinent, perhaps more so, for open-minded, progressive, humanitarian. non-racist, refonnist people as for the under-educated wh ite c o n s t r u c t 1 o n worker trying to protect his own concepts of how life ought to be lived. That Is the Humphrey discovery an<f the fact that he made it was not unrelated to his campaign for reelection to the Senate In a community and slate where bombings haoJe wrecked public facilities and bomb threats drove 17,000 baseball fans from the stands. Nor ls it unrelated that Minneapolis elected 1 former policeman as mayor on the law and order issue, nor that the University of Minnesota where Humphrey taught is one of the Big Ten centers of violent student revolutloni.sm along with Michigan Stale. IF HUMPHREY HAD staled hi.s position during the presidential campaign so eloquently and eonvlncingly as he did recently at the American Bar Auoctallon meeting he might easily have overcome the fractional margin by which he wu defeated for President, considering the way thlng.s were going in the last 10 days of the campaign. And if he is now elected u senator from Minnesota the Senate will acquire an articulate spokesman for liberals who belatedly realize that on Jaw and order their Interest lies fou111quare with the hard hats. This is the big political fact of 1970. Law and order is not a racist cause or code phrase. It 11 not a matter of political ideology in the democratic sense. It Is not the fetish of reactionary conservatives. Btrr IT JS A COMMON cooctm running through every level of society. black and white, rich and poor, liberal and conservative, racist and non-racist; everywhere, that is, except among the student erlremlst.s and their fa cu lty mentors and the black and white terrorist!. Pacific: Our Obligations President Ferdinand Marcos of the Phi Ii pp in es said Japan would "ultimately" be CQmpclled to take over 11reservation o1 internntlonal lilw and order in tfle Paclllc and in Asi:1. \\'c have no measure for "ultimately," hut Premier Sato ot Japan rejected the ~1arco view. saying his people would not support il. . , Ye~ it ~ an In- teresting view. and in oJltes an rstimatc of the American obligation and t!!pa- bi llty in the: Pacific world at this tin1e. IL ls a historical estima te. and one is 'll liberty lo differ from it, In part or in whole. On the long \'icw, say since 1900, the American people and leaders v.·ere taken by surprise when the Japanese • Friday, September 4, 19i0 Tht editorial page of the: Daily Piloi 1tck$ to inform and 1tim.- ulaU reoder1 b11 presenting tliit ne wspaper'• opinions c11d com· mtntwv •t10fllc1 of intere1t Ont{.4'lgniffccmc~ bu P':'OVkfina o forum · fQr the tzpr~ssiot1 of our rtadn1' aplntonl, and bu presrntinq the dftietst i:iew- pqfnts of ,in/onMd ob1ervtrs arid rpoktlmen on topics of th• !14~. Robert N. Weed, l'oblisbu ''-~~~~~~~~~~-' I • ,...,......~....,.,.,..,.,...,.,, ..... "'"' ..... -"' • I ·,Royce· Brier, 1 \i.,,\.-.,.· .~ in 1941 attempted to seize military con· trol of the Pacific world . The challenge v.·as so exigent, the American people and thei r leaders were forced to meet ' -and overcome it. They did so, al an immense cost . of life and treasure. }laving achieved · their aim, they faced a duty to themselves and the world to insure that such an aggression did not recur in \•lsible time. Over a quarter-century this aim has been met, but lf It will stand for another century, we do not know. A VITAL PART of this obligation is that the Japanese, an energetic and competent peoplr, should Jive in peace and fretdom aga inst any other people who v.·ould disturb them . So far as concerns Pacific waters. the United States can police them while It rct.alnJ its air and naval prreminence. The Asian land mass Is another matter altogether. Unfortun11tely, American leaders In- terpreted Pacific security to include the 1Rnd mass. A brief war in Korea may have. IM!en justified by Korta's proximity to Japan. A protracted war in Indochina is not justified by any inteUigent and p,ment view of our Pocille obligation . The second war has become A trap, and exlrienllon from It Is proving ex· tremely difflcult. TI1is v.·ar lndctd Is rooted In an historical delusion, and diverts us rrom O\lr primary rolt In the security of th(! Pacific area. When we can escape from H (which we now know ls necwltous to our de.s1iny), "'·hut remains of the Pacific security obligation to which we mu st revert? FlllST, THE CONTINUING bl' violabillty of Japan . a ri ch nation at present unarmed. She is confronted. across narrow seas by the Soviet Union at tbe north and Red Olina at the west. Any nuclear or other attack on her must bring our immediate in· terventlon ln our own Imperative interest. Second, Australia, a small but im· porlant continent inhabited by friends. Inviolability of Australian soil is a man.. date on us. The same. Is true. of the va$1 Pacific. is.land world, down to the smallest rock and up to the Asian littoral. This includes the Philippines and the Indonesia n arehipelago f1anking Australia . This area is subject to political change irl the next 25 to SO years. Mao will be gone, which is all we can know. We should try to persuade the Chinese of our true role If we can, but if we can't, the alternative can never be a land war in Asia , which we CaMOt win. Dear Gloomy Gu8: Laguna Beach dog lovers ha\'t themsclv~ to blame for the new restrictions. Too many un leashed pets biting children, fouling beaches and turning over garbage cans finally brought out the bt:ast In the council. -Mrs. R. B. f~lt lfflvrY l'tfllld• f'Mfll"I' ......... llff -Wilrll'f' IM•• .. ttie ntn,.,.... ltfWI '"" "' ~" .. CIMl!ly 0 111, .,_llY ,lttl. Disappointment WASHINGTON -An unpublllhed official audit shows that pharmaceutical companies have overcharged the State Department $4 million for me.dicines purchased over the last decade. The drugs were bought by the Agency for International Development r 0 r distribution to underdeveloped countries. The newly completed audit was done by the controller of the agency. Discovery of the $4 million in overcharges comes on the heels of this column'• dl.9clostD'e that the Department of Defense spent at least $1 million on worthless and tmproven medicines. Price padding on AID purchases Is particularly serious because of the severely limited budget the agency has for helping the poor in foreign lands. The worst form of disappointment often conmts in getUng exactly what you wanted. • • • lf adult.a could realize the lmmense boredom and laci of interestJn&' acUvity provided by moot communities for teenagers, they would be gratified instead of surprl!ed at th e rel.aUvely small amount of va~ dalism a n d way. wardness on t h e youngsters• part. • • • Speaking of communllles, it's hard to believe that the molt af(luent nation in the world, in this age of advanced medical knowledge and technology, still possesses some 5,000 c o m m u n i t i e s without a single doctor -and where the livestock get better and swifter medical AMONG COMPANI~ listed as care than the people. violators of AID drug pricing regulations • • • are such familiar names as Merck Sharp If someone dislikes you, try asking & Dohme, Abbott Labs, American yourself whether the dislike is rooted in Cyanamid , Olin Mathieson, Wyeth , something within him or in something Pfizer, Schering Bristol Laba, Ell Lilly, within you; if within him, nothing can be Sterling Products. Upjohn, S. E. done about it; if within you, a lot can be Massengill and Parke, Davis. done, if you care to. AID prices are tied by law to the • • • pharmaceuticals. Nevertheless A I D Some men are ao provocative with Cate auditors found 53 flnns ~ith 1~t they keep up a running competition violations not only of pricing, but of with their car's gas tank'. to test if they (.'(lmmlssions and shipping regu]ations. can get whert they're going before they The leading violator listed in the report run out i.'> Gedeon.Richter with $802,617 in ovettharges. The case was referred by AID lo the Justice Departmetit for action. Roussel Corporation, a foreign firm, Is • • • "Dogmatic" is a word we apply to those wbo have firmer beliefs on a particular subject than we havt; our firm beliefs are called "principles." • • • Obviously, our whole: pen o Io g 1ca1 system is a failure, either a deterrence or as rehabilitation: the rate of "repeaters" is distressingly high, perhaps increasing, and as Judge Thomas McMillen remarks, "It has been said that a youthful offender has a better chance for l'J!habilitatlon it he is not caught." • • • The highest lruth for m;>n· hu been grasped by the conservative -that society exists for the sake of the individual -but what he falls to grasp is the liberal truth that unless the individual places the (.'(lncerns of the whole society above his own, then both he and the society will p e r i s h • (Warm·bearted conservatism, alas, is as rare as cool· headed liberalism.) • • • I approve of · the anonymous fashion arbiter who told his clients: ''Your gown should be Ught enough to show you're a woman, and loose enough to show you 're a lady." • • • When a married woman thinks she needs a Jover, she usually needs just a few more loving words from her husband; much of what passes for sexual abandon is just injured vanity. • • • Punctuality is the loneliest virtue in the world. second with $721,814 in claims against It, most of them also referred to Justice. IN MORE THAN $2 million in violations, the companies have made refunds to AID. Abbott, for example, paid bac k $379,757 for its overcharges. American Cyanamid, paid $322,894, Olin Mathieson, $263,000. Merck Sharp & Dohme and Wyeth both still owe over $200,000 each, according lo the audit report dated August 20. A Curtain of Privacy Some drug finns insist that such overcharges are mistakes, not Intentional milking of the government. Yet figures obtained by this (.'(llumn from Sen. Gaylord Nelson's Small Bus I ne s s ~fonopoly SubcommiUet shed a light on other overse as sales ~y drug companies which are difficult to explain away as mistakes. The Ne lson figures show that ATD paid American Cyaaamid $1 ,!00 per kilogram for an antlspasmatic drug called Artane for use in Colombia, but paid the same company only $303 per kilogram for the identical drug in Brazil. WYETHr GOT $150 per kilogram from AID for Zactant Citrate analgesic, although Nelson list.a simple aspirin as the "therapeutical equivalent" at $1.32 a kilogram, a price difference of more than 11.000 pe rcent . AID paid $2.,250 -per kilogram for Pfizer's Vlbramycln when tetracycline, the "therpeutical equivalent," was prictd at $24 to $29 per kilogram, a dlfft:rence of 9,37$ percent, accordirfg to Nelson. Nole : Although AlD has a far better track record th an many federal agencies In catchin g ptict: violators, It Is at a loss to explain why it pays dlffuent prices for the same drug in dlffertnt lands. Drug cnmpanies defend their marketing d sli~htly dlffl':rent v-arlalkms or the same basic drug by saying each preparaUon has· its own specia l uses. "See your spiritual adviser." That suggestion is often made to the. man or woman in trouble. If you do talk things over with your spirltual adviler, is the conversation confidential in the eyes of the law? Could a clergyman be ordered lo testily in court as to what you said? Or is thi s Jnformatlon "prlvlleged0 _:that ii, protected against public disclosure? 'Ille: (.'(lmmon law, generally speaking, did not recognize any such privilege. Courts were reluctant to give up access to what could be 1 valuable source of in-- formation . Obviously, the more facts available to a court, the better it could do justice -both In punishing the guUly and In freeing th• lnnoconl HOWEVER, MOST atat.es have now passed special statutes {called "prltst.. penitent'' Jaws) to change the rule. These statutes, in varying degree, grant a privilege of privacy to commW'licatlons conrJded to a clergyman. To be sure, there are still limits on the scope of thl1 privilege. For one thing, tn- form1tlon given to a clergyman in an .ordinary conversaUon-aot u pan of a regular church procedure-is usually not protected. Thus, a court found no privilege tn tM remarks of a IU~ rapist to a miitlster, voiced during a casual en- counter in a railroad station. The judge niled that the mini.ster, just like any other cltlie.n, would have to tell whit he had heard. NOR DOES THE privilege apply to a clergyman's 1 e n e r a I otJRntaUons, unnlated lo Jf\V 1ptclfic admission of wron1doll\i· r---.. -,..-·~----...-. ' ! Law in Action J > For example, a court saw no ;eason why a minister should not give his opi· nton of the mental condilion of a woman whose will was being challenged -an opinion based on Jong years of ac- quaintance with her. But in most situations, the person un- burdening his failings to his spiritual ad· ., viser may (.'(lllJlt on a legal curtain or privacy. tu one court put it: "The human being does sometimes have need of a place of penitence and confession and spiritual discipline. When any person enters that secret chamber civil aul~ority turn s away ill ear." 1 An Am~rico1i Bar Association pub· Uc strvlct feat-Ure by ~Vill Barnard. By George ---. Dear George: Everybody tells me I'm ovtrly sensitive and too quick to take offense. They say I reart insult into statements where none is in· tended . Jlow can I tell if I am truly oversensitive? Dear Concerned : CONCERNED You've taken U1c most imPortant step already! You·ve ltolated your problem! This means all you have to do now ls keep an objective viewpoint and don't read Insults into perfectly innocent itatemenb numbskull. ' • I ; CHECKING •UP~ - Marital Quarrels Mostly 011 Mo11ey AM ASK E D WHAT proportion ol the married couple.! hereabouts have no children. Just 14 percent. Latest breakdown goes like this: One child , 17 percent of the couples. Two childre n, 25 percent. Three children, 20 percent. And rour or more dlildren. 24 pereent . . . A MAKER. OF THEATER SEATS s~ys the average American man is getting bigger every decade in that place where he sits down. but the average American won1an is not. On the contrary, she's getting smaller ttiereabouts. it's reportt!d. Would like to go into this matter in greater detail, but am too shy. Sorry. LO"XE AND WA R -That money is what marri e d couples qua!Tel about mostly is widely known. At hand is another survey which says so again. After that. what they disagree about, in order , are: flirting, wor k, in . I aw s, children and finally sex. This survey furth er contends a happily married couple can expect to quarrel about every six weeks and get into at least two serious fights every year. OPEN QUESTIO N -When it comes to roaming the neighborhood, l\'hieh has the greater range. a cat or a dog'.' housefly?" A. Nothing to It. A man could even outwalk one . Average speed of the housefly is fou r and a half miles per how-. ODDS RUN 116 lo one a secretary will never marry her boss • . . YOU CAN'T THROW a masquerade party in New York City without police permission ... WHAT'S the w o r I d ' s northernmost town? T h a t Hammerfest, Norway .•. IF YOU AREN'T in bed by 10 ~15 weeknight s, you stay up later than the average American ... OUR LANGUAGE l\1AN says the word "villa in " orig in a 11 y 1neanl nothing more than "farmhand ." HISTORICAL NOTE Were it not for malaria, that superweapon known as the martini. might never have been de veloped, I'm told . In ':.. the Empire days when the British occupied so man,v tropical zones. they spiked their \'ermouth with quinine. To fight the fever. And tqok it down with gin. To fight the boredom . Your questions and com.· m.ents are welcomed at1d wilt be used in Checking Up whenever possible. Please address your letter! lo L. /.f. Boyd, P.O. Box 1815, Newport Beach 92663 HERE IS a m a r r i a g e -----------1 counselor who contends only one husband in 10 is unraithJut Lili..._ ~llf~ to his wife. Horseradish! . . . ~ftP'\rr • ... ,,,_ ... NO l\tAN ever got. more f?,5'tlt 1f' :., .~· ~ _; ~~ ' · -~ honorary degrees t h a n tlerbert Hoover . . . IF · SEA ITLE'S LONGACRF.s ~' isn't the prett iest 1 i l t I e ."£ racetrack in the C{)untry. ,.~- which is~ . . . J UST ONE . A PERSON in 20 is sa id to have •,,, ~ hazel eyes ... NUAIERO US .t ·• COMMUTERS. H's reported,_,, ... \!!O~ travel as far as 100 miles to ~'1!: '"' ~ · work in New York Cit y. I . wonder why. CUSTO~tER SERVICE -Q. If · "ls there any reason at all a " man should give his car· ... engine a little tim e lo warm :-·· up before driving off?" A. ~).'iZ:'~ Nooe whatsoever Q. ~~ "Could a man outrun a DOl'T MISS THIS NOW ONLY 3.-B BERWYN "MAGIC TOUCH" ALARM CLOCK Evtn IO o'clock scholars will enjoy this electric alarm with 1 "drows111 f11ture! Al.arm buues at pre·selected wakin& time ••• 1 firm touch on top lets you drowse 10 minutes then wakes you •&•in. end 1gail\ and 111in. Lighted dial for 24-hr. rudlbllity. 4" hifl, &hH wide. Antiqul whitt caM. ·-"" ... ,. .,- \ v all stores closed mondoy, sept. 6th, for labor day. ezp o; • AM *S§f •& ; 4f g ¥ *'%' " - f'rldil)', $tpttmbtr 4, 1'70' DAILY l'IL9T f • SALE men's wool or wool blend suits and famous maker sport coats A biq group ol ossorted styles in single-breasted two or three button models. Your c hoice of .mony ha ndsome c.olors. It's o wise time to buy for foll ond enjoy savings. reg. 85.00 · 130.00 69.00 group of sui ts ••9· 50.00-75.00 24.00 sport co•ts > men 's suits 21, sport.wear 45 .. • WE Will BE CLOSED ON LABOR DAY may co south coast plaza, son diego fwy ot bristol , costo mesa , 546-9321 shop mondoy thru soturdoy I 0 om lo 9: 30 pm . sundoy noon 'Iii 5 pm Hours : 9~9 Mon .·Fri. 9-6 Sit. 10·4 Sun. MAVCO ) I I • • - ... __ A } 0 CAIL Y PILOT Alcatraz Occupiers ~ix Plan SAN FHANCISCO !UPI) - 'fhe Indian occupants o f Alcatraz Island Thu rs day rejected a s e If -a ppointed mediator's aue1npt to win them a five-year lease on the forn1er prison site in San F'ranciseo Bay. Lanada Means, a spokesman ror the Alcatraz Jndians, said her group had never agreed to 'vork for a settlement with the federal government through Or. Thomas W. A1atthews, president of the National Economic <: r o \V I h and Reconstruction Organization \NEGRO). "Not~ing was ever approved bv ·anybody," r.1iss t-.1eans s'ai d ... \\1e're standing firm on our position -it has got lo be tille f<ir lhe island and l't'e're not settling for anything less. After all. it is our land." ~1 att.hews . whose organization seized E 11 _i s Island in Ne\v Yo~l1er tl:iis year and \Von a n agreement rrom the government allow ing ii lo build a rel:iabilitation cent.er lhere. visited A I cat r a z \\' ednesda y. He said the Indians' governing council had agreed 10 hls proposals to s~ek a rene1,1•able five-year lease on the island and a $50,000 to $100,000 yearly contract witl:i the gover nm e n t for maintenance of its lighthouse. "\\'hite House sources." v:hom he declined to reveal, ,vere described by Matthews as enthusiastic about the plan. But be said it was rejected Thursday by the full Bay Area Council of Indians. t h e mainland group supporting the Alcatraz invaders. A spokesman for the U.S. (:e ner a l Service s Administration, which i s responsi ble for the island, said he "kn ew nothing about it.., But he said Region a I A dmi ni stra tor Thomas Hannon would •·certainly want 10 discuss a solution with any group and this sounds like one." i::: 1' Part Owner Plan Asked For Alcatraz SACRAMEN'f'O IAPl Rep. John v_ Tunne y, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, says the Indians who have occupied Alcatraz Island should be given part of it because or il.s symbolic importance to them. "I think the Indians feel it·s important symbolically t o them." said Tunney at a Sacramento airport interview after a campaign sv.·ing which continues today. ideally, Tunney said. the U.S. I n I er i or Department should hold hearings into di s!Xlsal of the form e r penitentiary site in Sa n Franci s co Ba~'· Bui. regardless of the outcome of those hea rings, l:ie said. the Jndians should get al least part of the island. Friday, Stpttmber 4, 1970 2 Radicals $240 Milllora Antitrust Action Filed By Cl1avez SALINAS. Calif. (AP) -ln the latest legal action in a 12· day-old lettuce strlke, Cesar Chavez' United Farm Workers Organizing Committee has filed a $240 million antitrust suit charging Salinas Valley growers with price fixing and limiting production. UFWOC's strike over groWer- Team.sters contracts held by some 200 lettuce b o w I growers. He also said Soledad Prison inmates were working in lettuce fields near Gotuales to help preak the strike. The Grower, Sh.ipper iind S t Deadl 'ne Vegetable Association or e J, Cenlral California and 36 Soltdad warden Cletus J, Fitzharris r e p 11 e d that "nobody has left t b I s Institution to pick lettuce on the outside." On Pullouts BERKELEY, Calli. !UPI) -Radical leaders Rennie Davis and Tom Hayden have ·given the government until April 30 to withdraw from Vietnam -or they'll sign their own "peace treaty'' with llanoi. The two "Chicago Seven·• defendants held a n e w s conference Thursday in the offices of Ramparts Magazine lo an nounce the "People's deadline" for withdrawal from Salinas, Santa Maria and Pajaro valleys growers were named in the U.S. District Court suit filed Thursday in San Francisco. The suit charged that the growers and shippers began conspiring Jn 1965 to control production th ereby limi ting work available to f a r m workers. Jt claimed workers suffered $80 million damages, and were entitled to treble damages under antitrust laws. The court a1so was asked for injunctions to halt the alleged conspiracy. Other court actions affecting As an estimated 5 • 0 0 0 UFWOC workers picketed, some 300 members of "l,e Amalgamated Meat Cutten and Butchers Union were expected to return to produce cooling s.heds today. At a rally here Tbursday night, Chavez annonuced the union would remove pickets from the 14 plants to reinforce UFWOC field picketing forces. Representatives of some 800 Jnter Harvest Co. C i e I d workers pledged to j o i n UFWOC pickets until they can return to work. the war. -. . ,, the strike sprang up in various They sa~~ 1f Jl is n:o~ mel, a ·urisdictions throughout the ~uge coahtl~ of mihtan.~ a~d ~tate. Inter Harvest, the only Salinas firm to sign a contract with Chavez'~ union, tried earlier to move produce to rnarket but 200 pickets blocked 65 loaded trucks. liberal antiwar gi:oups ~JI -rn San MateO Co u n I y . ':°nverge vn Wash.in~~~ to Superior Court Judge Melvin stop the gove.rnment . in an E. Cohn issued a lemporary all-ou_t campaign ,,agamst the urder Wednesday prohibiting U.S. invo lvement. the , . Teamsters Union and Since Inter Ha rves t rescinded an agreement with the Teamsters last Sunday, farmers and growers calling t he m se ve s ''Citizens Committee for Local Justice" have prevented the firm from harvesting a n d marketing crops in proiest of the UFWOC contract. Davis and Hayden said major growers from harassing radicals also would send their UF'\VOC pickets. vwn delegation to Hanoi to Jn San Luis Obis!Xl. a group negotiate a "solidarity-peace of growers filed a $5 million treaty between North Vietnam civil suit against UFWOC. and any Amer ican charging harassment and organizations and people who illegal picketing. It a sks want to sign it." $100,000 a day damages as "The failure of Senators Jong as the strike continues. Carpinreria Offshore Well Burns Mark Hatlleld and George At a Salinas news McGovern Tuesday to set a conference Thursday Cha vez deadline for withdrawal was charged growers had agreed the last gasp vf electora l lo production quotas during strategy for ending the war." J!ayden declared. "We are proposing a b r o a d • based strategy of civil disobedience to shut down the military." ti 1:l * Anti-radical UC Faculty Group Set LOS ANGELES (AP) -A slate-wide faculfy group ha~ been formed •·to oppo se fa("l.Jlty and studenl extremisL..- who endanger the integrity of the University of California .·· thrt't! UC professors have annow1ced. Named the Council o f Faculty for Academ ic Responsibility it will provide a forum for faculty who oppose "those faculty 1nembers and students who seek to impose their ideologies on the academic community by coersive or un c ivil ized means." the professors said Thursday. The tri~political science professors David Wilson of UCLA. and Paul Seabury of Berkeley and phi I osoph y professo r Harry Cirvetz or Santa Barbara -told a news conference the council is neither leftist or rightist. l11digents' Protection CARPIN'I'ERIA (UPI) - An offshore oil well platform v.'hich caught fire early today Ruling Made was reported burning itself out. SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The Coast Guard said the 'fhe California Supreme Court llize of the bJaze, which was ruled Thursday that a c.'On!ined to tht platform's convicted person cannot be c 0 mp res 10 r area, had imprisoned only because he is too poor to pay his fine. diminished by 7 a.m. EDT, The ruling does away wi th about three hours atter it !he well-established practice started. of orde ring "$30 or 30 days" The Standard Oil Co., which imprisonmenl for nonpaymanl of fines. owns the rig called Platform The 6-1 decision held that it Hazel, said the well was "shut is a -violation of lhl" U.S. in" and the pipeline leading Conslitution's 14th ashore was depressurized. A Amendment' equa l protection spokesman said the names clause to impriSon coovicted apparently were feeding on indigents lor failure to pay gas residue aboard the their fines. plaUorm. The court £reed a San Jose Flames on the platform, 1nan who was ordered to which js fully automated and remain in ja iJ while a man unmanned, were visible in the convicted of com mitting arson harbor at Santa Barbara. six with him was released after miles away across the Santa paying his fine. Barbara Channel. The niajority vpinion by ,;==========:;,! VNITED STATES NATIONAL BA NK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH Ai1· Limit Tol1I J ustice Raymond L. Sullivan said halthough a direction for confinement for defaul t in payment of a fi ne may appear lo apply equally to both the rich offender and the poor one, actually the former has the opportunity to escape his confirrement while the right or the latter to pay whal he cannot is a hollow one." The court said the practice of ordering imprisonment for nonpayment of a fine -$30 or 30 days -is well established in law. But it added lhat "an abiding ccmcern for equality in all areas of today's society has n'ot ~pared esla blished practices from exposure under Lhe spvtlighl of e qua I protec1ion." NOW OP'IN SATURDAYS Southland Gro'wth Barrier? SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The expanding population tlf Southern California may soon be halted al 14 million pt'rS011~ by a d\\•1ndling supply or breathable ai r. an environmental spec11.1lis1 said Thursday. f\.1ark \ion \\'od!kc, :l n assistant profe si;nr ul cn,•ironmental desig n a l California State Polytcchna~ College. Pomona. said local and state plans arc geared 10 an eventual population or 20 million or more . But the slate water plan. state freev.·ay projections and market analyM>s by investors a11d banks all t:ontain a •·1nass1ve flaw" in I he i r failure to recognize the finite lirnits on air, land and water resources. he said. • Von \Vodtke, writing in "Cry California," an environmental quarterly. said 11.8 millio11 µersons now live in the Los Angeles Basin. which includes Ventt1ra, Los A11geles, Orange, San Diego and the we stern riarts of Ri\'ersicle and San Bernardino Counties. The professor said th<1t despite much ''ecolo gy vtrbiage," th ere 'have been no re al ltchnological breakthroughs in air pollution or smog control. f'w ral 1-01 f•• lliil. Wttt.end -~ 11: ... , •• Gold-C...lt.ade. al C-••rr lt ''~l!rft Mn~lr. frid•f• '111.e Ch.,.....a.: S11tu'tl•;o, Jlerlin ll ~A> a.,.; S .... ,. Eadie O.• .,.rt Monrla1. J,.•tinie ('.. RH.,. flrewtlf'L -dte l•ke Ml f'ie.ta Vllli.J~ e•·tty •'-"'I I J ''•1P'.M. MON .• fHUlS. 10·1 P.M. PllDAYS 10·6 P.M. 17141140·1211, Lec:aml II•: S•. CMlt Piere, Cfft• Mft• At.It. VIC:1 Prtt.-M.,,11tr E. H. LEVAN VINYL WALL OUR LARGEST SELLING PAINT! OYtk 9,000 GALLONS U5lD LOCALLY $3.75 ••.. "Buy locally and Save!" WALKER PAINT WORKS 116 W. 16th St., <;osta Mts• 642-S776 ?TEER last chance to' mu'lch your lawft ancl 9arllen at th•s• fantastic IOYi•91. C.ome j,, 'f o- • BmDING PLANTS Pony Pac 4/JI Pansies, Pellaias, Snaps & Stock IEST S..11 & 5101 Polltt1 Rf11. 98< •••••..•..•••........ 59< CLOSE-OUT lortt Citn11 lfl. $7.95 .•..••••.........• $3.98 YOl.CAIK IOCK. • decorative. good for londsc:oping, will not fade .• nfttr needs repkicing .• .coven 6 sq. h. 2" rh ick Reg. S 1.89 •.••• 99, JUNIPER SALE ()tANDEf2- '"""'"''M. ·s1 J.dr ... .,..s'"" i11 uy tlimott i11· (l1t1di111 Otolti Vol· , L '-f.1 gal. ~ • .,. s1 .1• PATIO SHOP Sammer is on it's way out! But, there will always be another. ''SA.VE'' now for the balance of t~i .~ year&: be ready for next year. ''SA VE'~ Loads of Goodies Special section artificial flowers ••• odds & rnds .. . candles. •. all 1/2 Price . ·g ft. Reg • ..._ ________ _. '4.50 •~Jlll•IT'< c;,w#,, A'"""'"" •#•I a,.1,,k• Ult AUH ~ H•ri • COPE PLUS f1it1cti11tttil c1•~iti1111r, •••frtliltl ti· lltli & t1ftt1U ....... ,. .. R0,:98' for Grass x.;u, lllOSI commo1111on• fl'OH ...is . .ftl'Tiliien o! -· lime •• ,mokfl !lfl!H 9fOW,..._., .R19. $6.9~ ...... •$1.IOOff • ~- Baildcr JUNIPER SALi ••• lorge. 2 gol. Reg. $4.98 •. $2.91 AFRICAN VIOLETS., .ex1ro large Reg. $1.59 • 89c ASPARAGUS SUN FERN ••• extra large Reg. $1.19 •••.• ~ .••.......•.•......• $1.29 GARDENIAS ••• 5 gol. Reg. $6.95 ...•.••• $4.95 ' ~GHOOWA FLAl; .. ·. n ~·, ftll 1n hart ··,, •P•U ... moh• ~ ." ntw l•wn .• Rt1. $1.49 --- PLUSH ANO BLADE l•rt• SO I~. llat •••• Now $1.00 olf SUPER WEEDlllZER . ~ .for dichondro lowns .. apply Sept. thrv Nov. ond CRABGR· ASS STOPPER ••• stops crobgross before it starts plus feeds gross, dic:hondro, or mix!<! lawns •••. _ • , _ • . • . . . . now $2.00 Off For Oicbondra Pr.'ltnts winlr w"6t btt1 oll orwnd & fri. litts IO grHntl' btouty, (lion, o4or!tts ond IOSJ i(I \"t, Rtg. Sl t ,Slftw ,2.00 ... '6REEH HAYEH GARDEH CENTERS t1n 1..,.n l lvlll.,co,ftt MMo •••••:•4•Jt2J ,, .. , ...... .,.~Gt...·~ FOf" Gr111s M Dirhondr11. ,....s,..nc DOI.I Wt fM'ttH11i119 ,_.,. tf ,._ ~ Mt Mdw. Cown J,000 IQ. fl.l11J.$9.9S ...... , .. Off Crtlil T#,.., Al'111/t,,tlt··B~••· A~-G"'"" R.t>ttr't Or" C~l•I ,,,, .. • ' ' ( • ' ' ' ' t ' • • ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' • ' ' ' ( ' ' ' ' ' c c r rtd11, Septtmbtr 4, 1'970 •• DAILY PILOT J J Patient "Hits The RUMMAGE SALE CHARITY BENEFIT r SANTA ANA -Rules are made to be broken Santa Ana pOllc:i discovered this week. elder!:t man to two shots of called to say that th e 1oHe had a s.ati.Slled smile on whisky a day end they feared wandering p a t I e n t haci his face," reported an aide, that he skipped to tlnd •n1-'-'_w_m_ed_ho_m_•_· ______ ··_bu_t_h< __ .,_•sn_•1_111_1kln_g_:_· __ ll 233 Flower Cost• Mesa DEADLINE -Debbie Closson (left} thumbs through sample ballots while K a- thy Dwmin~ reminds Orange Countians that Sept. 10 is tile deadline for regis· tration in the Nov. 3 election. '' z:n rg For The Record MARRIAGES f>tlEPPARO-GOAN, 01nl1I, lt, vi 13'11 L• Pit, W111lmln1ter Ind Sui1n, 11, of 1~191 Stengel, G1rdffl GrOY1 HEPLER·l<OLUNGER, Kent1elh A .. 19, of 220.Q Surlddlr LIM Ind Terna A .. 17, ol 19602 C1n0trr1 LI,,., bctll ., Huntlnvlon a .. ct.. AUG. I OAVIS·OAVIS, ltlchlrd L., 23, of :w4l Wilton. L-8ttth Ind ROMM E., :io. olf Jljl' ,,..,...,., Orlv1. Wllltmln- 111r EWOLDSEN·FATJO, H1ns M .. ». of 75' H. 8e11vl1, Of1n111 and P1trld1 M .. 71, of lfn St n Bruno, NtwPOl'I 8 N th SHELDON·HARltlSON, John G., '14. ot 81ru1olen'llW Aoed, Middletown, CCll'lf>. 1nd Bettv J .. 23. ol 17062 Ven Ov~• Line. Huntlnvlorl Bteeh HETZLEA-KNUFE. Tlrnolnv c .. n. ind Liw L .• 21. both of :m2 Port cne1oe1 Piece, N•-' s.e.c11 HURTADO-GARMON, Wt lttr "-• .f2, of 20361 Acldl1, 5.,11 Alll I nd Pllyllil A .. U . of 200I P1r1.0fl ROid, ADI • .U, 111 5~J~H".\"3~as, K111neth w . 2s. of l:r:t E. ":lard SI., AP!. D ,,.., Evelyn J .• P,• ol ?SI Brtntwood 51.. both of corJOv~~~~ROLElt. Lnt.r E., '.lit, ot 11JO N, RIYlflf'MI St .. Anllhtlm I nd Dll nM J., 11, of J02' Ze\I, L-111 ,J~'f:M.au1cH. Cherin o., ». ot 1:120 E. O<Nntronl, 8 tl-l•l1nd 1...:1 ll1rt.r1 W .. 2!, ol 11\i> 0 I Im on d vf'N'81111t~~elf.1~~K. Ch1rln A .. 77, and Vlrolnll R.. JO, boll• of ~JI ltlYtrsldl AYe., NewPOl'I Be1cll Death Notires BOMMAlllTO J1mn S. aomm1r110. A~ :n, of UJD MlntO WaY, llllffM Ptfk. Dlhr of ~th, SeJltem~ J. 5uNIVtd by wife. Plwm11 dllldren, Ptkr, $lei>h1nl• tnd LI~; lalhe<", Pek BomtNorfto: three broll•l'U . Pete, Nick 1nd Leon1rd1 ll>rM 1l1!en, Luc:ll•, Anllll R~ u>d J .. Je. Mr. Bommerllo w11 a mm~r of Knloht.. of Columbus Councll 3926 of W11lmln1rer . G••Vil•ld-e 1 1 rvlc1s $11Urd•Y• 10 AM. Good St>ft>l!f:rd (Hntterv. Smll!\1 Mortv1fY, Dlrltdors. DOLEIHAL C1rf IE. Dolnhal. !'O Elml'lul"ff L1.,., Cmt1 Men. su ..... h•td b'I' two 1l111t1. l~tt1 Gr~ Mid Mir.. Dol1"11I, Ros1,..,., tonklhl, Frldly, I PM, Re<iulem MIU, Salurd•Y ,la AM, bolt. at SI. Jofln n.. 8">!11! C1ltlo!IC O.Urdl, Cmll t.VS1. lnttrment 11 C11Y1rv Cemel•ry, Los Al'llllH, l'Hk Fu"llY Colonlt l Funert l Home. D1rector1. JONES Murie! J. JOMI. l!IMI Eton Clrd e, Hunl!l'll!lon lluch. SllrvlYtd by h1111Mond, CelYln N. J-1; -1l'lt>lon, C1lvln L. J_.; fw1I 1~11t1Mel'I. Mrt. NMllne Slotl and Mn , Pelrkl1 Lyon; tour bn;>!hln, Al, Roland, Ch t rltl ar'ld Johnn? 5-; two 1l1ten., Mrs. Ntom• Sd'luler 1nd P"t v; 1eYen 1r1n0-dllldrtn. Servlcn , TWJda't'. lO:JO AM, Peek F1ml!'t' Cotenl•I FuMrl l Horne. ll:CNEY Ql(ye M1 r!e ltonev. 1'116 ll:OVll P alm Dr .. Cosl1 Mesa, 01Te of death, Aut1usl '9. SurYIYt'd bv nephew, Robert C. 11..-n. Yosiltnll, Mfcnlt tn. l'11ne•1I 11Nlct1, Sund1v, 1 PM, ll1ltz Coilt MH.11 ChlPf'I, wllll lleY. llrute A. !Currie offici1li1'111. B1ll1 Cott• Mes.11 Mortu1rr, Directors. SAU.ZAii: llfn M. Sill111r. 37' LI C~n1d1 W1Y, Deadline Near Registration Ends Sept.10 SANTA ANA -Voters wh o !ailed to cast a ballot in the 1968 General Election or have moved si nce that time must re-register by Sept. 10, to be eligible to vote in the Nov. 3 election, D a vi d Hitchcock, county registrar of voters reminded today. In order to aid those who have not registered r h e Registrar of Voters at 1119 E. Chestnut St., Santa Ana will remain open until 9 p.m. next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Hitchock noted that a legal holiday is i nclud e d , Wed n esd a y Sept. 9, Admlssion Day, in the extra hours service. In addition more than 900 deputies are s ea tter e d throughout Orange Cou nty in shopping centers and other places of heavy people traffic. General requirements for eligibility t() vote a r e citizenship of the U.S.. 21 yea rs old at the date or the election, residency in the state for on e year, lhe coooty for 90 days, and the precinct where one votes for 54 d a y s preceding the election. Deputy r egi strar s in Newport Beach, Hu ntington Beach and Costa Mesa and their hours are as follows: Newport ·Beach: Richard's Market, 3433 Via L id o , Monday through Saturday. 1 to 5 p.m.; Newport National Bank, Westcliff Avenue at Dover Drive, Monday through Friday, l to 5 p.m. Costa Mesa: South Coast P laza in front or the Carousel, Monday through Saturday, 1 lo 5 p.m. and 7 to 9:30 p.m. Friday. Huntington Beach: City Hall, Sept. 8, 9, 10 until 9 p.m. ln addition to the regular 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. hou rs; Huntington Center, B e a c h Boulevard and E ding er A ven ue, Penney's Department Store, Sept. 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, l to 9 p.m. Voters needing furth e r information are asked lo call the Registrar of Voters office, 834-2255EJ Schmitz' Local Offices Now in Newport Beach TUSTIN -Congressman John Schmitz (R-Tustin) has mov.d 1<> Newport Beach. Al least his IC1Cal office has. A spokesman at Schmitz' new offiee, 4340 Campus Drive, Suite 214, says tbat the federal government does not provide as mudl opera.ling money as the state does. When Schmitz was a state senator prior to his June 30 congressional election, h i s local staff was housed in a three-room suite in Tustin. However, shortly after his elevation lo congressman, he was forced to make the move to cheaper lWM'OOOl quarters in Newport Beach. County's Tax Rates Still Near Bottom c ... 111 Me11. D11e of death, Sei>t. 3. survlvt'd by wjfe. P1ullne; "''"sen" SANTA ANA -I-low do tax rates adopted by the Orange ll1m1rd, of St!tltle; 0.Yld G., ~mi C d of S · T d 'th 1969 70 An8, ,,.., 01n1e1 11. s~1~11 r, co111 ounty Boar uperv1sors ues ay compare WI - Me$oll: fllree d1uehet11, Mrs. Gerildlne rates and other South land county rates. Following is the an swer. Boctl. Cotl1 Mfl1; Ml'I. Lll1l1n Ltllto, . , 0•111t11 Mf'1. Fr anen PMIP1. or1nee1 The rirst six listed are countywide, while the library and 11,1..-. M•t. M1rtln Gl l lt e rl , I f' oJ · I I I lo · ted AtbuQll9"Qlle; • n d u •••ndc:hlld~. structura ire pr ecllon ra es app y on y un1ncorpora ADHrv, tonteht, Frkllv. • PM. aen areas and those cities which contract with the county lo supply B.-IY ChlHI. llteciul.m Miss. • . h' h . bou d . s111ur11av. 11 AM, st. Ja-dll"'' ''""'11c such services wit 1n t eir n ar1es. Churcfl. Lnt.tment, lolol't' S..Uk"N c emeterv. lkll Broed'w•'t' Mortu1ry, 01rK!of'1, TOWLI! John Wllll1!'ft T-1•. 11 15 fl'1ul..,i110 AYe .• (Olli Men. SeNlal ... ndlne ,, 8111 Bn>lllwl'f Mort1.11rv ARBUCKLE 6 SON WestcUH Mortury U7 E. 17th St., Colt.II Me11 fll 1111 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR J.1'51 C..bl Mesa Ml WC4 • BEi.Lo.BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadw1y, Cottli Mtu LI 1-3131 • McCORMICK LAGUN.1. BEACH MORTUARY 1715 Lacan• Cnyoe Rd. IH-H!5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C.melery e Mortaliy Chapel UM P.cttfc View Drive Newport Be.1th, Callfomlll 144-17111 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1381 Bois• Ave. Wnlminster m.3SU 196&-70 County General ................ $1.6700 1!170-71 $1.7000 .%505 .IM83 .0000 .0011 Flood Control ... _ ........ , • . • .. .3591 Harbor DJ1trict . .. . .. . .. .. . • .. • .0865 School ~fodilication Aid •... , • . • .fl830 School Institution Tuition ...... , , ,0019 (Children In Institutions) Development Center .......... , , .fKM7 (School for Re larded) County Public Library ......... . Structural Fire Protection ..•• __ * * * .1636 .1577 * * .0061 .19ZO .l54% * Wblte tax rates levied by Callfor11la '1 SS counties are not com· pletely comparable, Orange County's rate has tradlHonall y rank· ed among the state's lowest. Following ere the rale1 either prG- posed or adopted Tuesday in the six southern counties. 1969-70 1970--71 Orange County ...................... $1 .67 $1.70 Lot Angeles County ................ %.90 4.08 ruvenldt County .... , ............... %.54 2.96 San Bem..ttlno County ••..•••••••• %.SS %.SS San Dfego County ... ! .............. %.35 %.74 Ventura County .................... 1.90 %.:S •Rate ll1ted Is per $100 a1sessed value. Property In Ce lifor· nla Is assessed at ZS' perce nt of actual value, hence a $20,000 property 11 assessed at SS,000. . • Below are listed Orange County basic general fund tax rates for tht past 10 years: 1911-61 ··········-·······-············-·····-Sl.59 IHI.ft ...................................... Sl.8% 19&!"3 ...................................... $1 .66 1963-14 ...................................... Sl.66 1914"'5 ··········-·--············-··········· Sl.7% 1165-&e ···························•·•-······· Sl.71 1966-67 ··········--···· .. ·-·············-···· tt.73 1967-611 ...................................... Sl.71 1~! ····--·····-·························· $1.63 1969-70 ••..••••.•.••••••......•••..••...•••.• Sl .67 1176-71 ··-·--·-····-·-······--···········--·-Sl.70 • SHEFFER MORTUARY Laguna Bfacb •M-1535 11;:====================.I San Oemet1te •tMIOO • SMITHS' MORTUARY 1t7 Mila SL Huntington Beacla 53HS39 Nearly Ever yone Listens to Landers The station ru.'eived a call from a corivalescent ho!pltal asking assistB.nee in finding an 8().year-old patient who had disappeared. additional supply. lie was last seen wearing pajamas and pushing hi!! wheelchair. Police courtd t he neighborh~ bars withollt success. La ter lhe hospital For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT SATURDAY, SEPT. 5 9 •.m. • 5 p.m. Al TR USA CLUB of Newport Bt•ch They to ld police the hospital had a rule cf re!t'rkti.ng the '· 2DAYS . I ONLY. SUNDAY MONDAY ' COVERS IN ONE COAT! BOYS CUSHIONED SNEAKER socks Fa\'orite style with fu ll cushioned foot. Cool 'n Comfortable cotton; 7 to IO!h-Ask For Style TK36 .LUXURIOUS Sale • 100% cotton • Luxurious wondasoft fi nish 20 GAL. PLASTIC TRASH CAN 94 SIGNn , TYPEWRITER SALE 86 Sale 1-1!/i-2 Jine1p1ceTouch ,., • . margins a-pm.per bl ~caJa, wide <arriage takes stand• d bu "' • Iopa;. r SIDUS Ul•e- More Tools More Power 88 ACRYLIC LATEX WALL PAINT Reg. $4.99 Gal. 2 Ga~ 5 Sale 2nd Gal 1' on smooch· Sale • Unbre11.:1blc, 1111aterli1ht • Lock on cover, bandies limit 1 percu11omtr. Safe More power more 100Js more - o11 stairs as well as for all convenience. Great U•c the foe ••itch(. your wuaJ \l&cuuming, 8 attachments aJJ in:i'ud1J.ff. Blo.-er, tool cadd1, L·-,,.,e Mioui y ire11tmtnt th•t fiiOH A 011r colt ""' h bl \y,Jrits f1t~t. Dur1ble. 11118 1 c • T.en1then1, thickerni ~ • Cvrlt a~ .ep.aratn ~ sa1e lie • Aaorled colon •Sizn 4·t6 LIMIT, 1 ,., '""'~" ~ ~ ~l!OlifBi/71/tV)l/llDIWl/ltll/l/liDh'J'J'Cl'r.~ ~/llf!/J/lll/Jfl/J/l/l/lll/J/Jflfl!f/fll!f//J/!Jm. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ with 1hU cnupon ~ ~ AOUA IET9 ~ HllRSPUY i llA'n'f/( ~ Sale38~oLI ~ ..... - .. • Rl'i:ular nr ~ '"'~dlold ~ •Leaves h1ir ll()ft t lMIT1 2 C.11t ,.., n11 .. 111er lilllit 2 Kids c-h!IWl111 0-In A klto Wlt!i MR. BUBBLE A ••h r.n..i whh Mr. ••hl>ll" Lo f•• (o• 26c ~i<I•"' hothf: tllt •-It '"""" ... -~ 1hoo .tin .rr •it' e1 ,,.,11 ,,,,1.,, •• or••h- hi••• TfHf ,..,. ,..._-10 O Mrptiw .Salo '""lot!~ !Mo,. HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST AT ADAMS -GRANT CENTER . Houri: 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. D•ily ·Sun,, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. -Ph.: 962-3317 • ' I ~ I J2 0'1CY PILOt Friday, Septrnibtr 4, lQ7\) 'f I I ~ • "' -~ ·o ~ ... t1I ~ I <-~ i pl ·~ I . • " • ears • ' -. I ·. ' •. \ ~ \ .... '\., ' ., . . I Come E~.rly ~nd1 Ha.v~ Cof~~ On U ! . 8:-3(). ~M.: t.o· I -2'.i30 P.M . I ~iop ·Early Bird ~PECIALS -.• " •. ·.··"t". $ ·Gardei).: ' . ' -·- ' SAVE 18% to 3.!)% on Garden Food Needs SAVE 410/o on Regular 66c Bedding Plants ~-.,... . • • Al\. PIJRPOSE ~FERTll\ZER li!iiiiiif . : ~-·:·· SUPlRfl 'LAWN fO t r, -. . :==.=.-......;;:· .: -.... --•' ......... ---.·~. _. ... __ .,, . ·----" _____ .. _ -GREED GLADE 1'·il•S {WITW 1N5~CTIC.1Da'\ * t•rn ,,.,.=11·•~''"' ~t-r..~i.:.~·;s. ....... •~•>Soll"'"'""' 1"COW'llM: 110.ll•'S'l &A .:;.. .... .......... .... ,.. ....... ''" ... ,.,.,, ... ~,,_ .......... . '"'" ............... ~ .. ~ ...... ,,.... .. :.-......... .... ••• ,..,•&"•::,'\a. ... :0\ .... ' ' : • • " , Sulphate of Ammonia • :.!0-llui •••• U!e rOr R egular 99c •1ui<kgr.,n·up 6 7 • ~apid growth tnd · c rich green color • Formulation :!J-ll-U All-Purpose Fert~er • !!l}-lhe. U"t"en 2000 1q. ft. • Fonnulatio111 11-3-4 • }'or me on tree1, gardem and lawn.& e _.\ gtQcral u1e fertiliser! Gre1t ''1iue! Regnlarl$2.99 12v7 • $1 Green-Glade Dichondra or Lawn Fdod • }'er1 ili~r coven up tol.2000 eq. fL. •His 2 inftctirides fo r control of in- lif!l.'11 • 1-'ormolalion IJ.:..S • U1e on ejther W. cbondra or ln'll! Regular $3.79 2 ~1 $1.32 Superfine Dichondra and Lawn Food • J,ighl"'tigbt, t':leaa, odorJe•• 11nd ea11 to h1ndle • £:0,·er• 4,000 to s.ooo 1fr. ft. Regular $5.99. Choose From The8e Fall Color Producers e Snaps •Pansies •Stock • Calendula ,- Add brig1it color to yout home ·and garden with these easy to , grow bedding p,lanrs., Choose · from a large variety ••• all have long Jasrirlg blooms.1 Add vibrant color to your fall garden. · SAVE 52c! Regular'l.79 I-Gallon Camellia Plants • Exqui:-ite blooms .•• glossy ever- ~recn foliage ~ e Beautiful accent plan ls for )'Our gar<l cn •Effective as hedge>, fo undation plantings •Available in pinks, r ed s and V.'hitcs }27 -· . •Granula r Corm • . -c~n he •J>- plitd 11ny lime or 1he year 3~7 Use Sears Revolving Charge I ! ~ I I ). ,.tf!IT\ ---. -~ -·--:. ' . ' .. ' .. • . y-1 •\\''ill not harm n ew ly eeeded Ja.,.,,n, •Formulation 25-5-10 Big Four'Dichondra, Lawn or Ornamental Food 11.egular Sl0.99 97 SAVE '2 Regular' 1.29 to '1.39 Ornamentals, SAYE 3.2% to .38%! Gardenia ••• Evergree n white flowering .shrub to add beauty and fragrance to your gar- den. In 1-galloo cans ••• ready for planting. a.=..:= : : -r-- • • • Big l'~our dich·ondra or la""'D food. kill.!! V.'ecds, crllhgra11 and ins~ts • t:ontinuous fcediflg up lo 6 months afler ? a pplicalion ' .. SAVE 52" . Decorative Bark • • l3!it' for "'a lk\\'llV il . 11lan1 c.r i-. fltJ\\'f'r }1;·11~ • R t'<lU('f'~ n1 oi1ilUrc 1 lo~s. inhi l>il~ '"f't"tl :- • ;J ('U. fl. l'i7.t' n1t•rlin1t1 anfl c;nat'~f' " .. • 1;0,eN 2.,5IJO &qnare feet, l·'oro1ula1ion I (~84 •Ornamental food, for 1a'-''D!, grourid ·~o\•er. no\.li·er i;ardens • l'revents \\'eecls, cnnlrol1 inseclA •Covers 2300 sq. ft. 1-'o rmulation 16-8-4. ... .... "'· . '· Compost R,•,ul~r~2 22 $2.•)9 .. • I tnprove~ :-Oil . te xture • Oi sc'ourages "i. fungus. mold and weeds e 60-lb. hag . ""'~-...... __,,_, .. /Sears I l_UINA l'All:IC TA 1·4400, S21 ·4S30 IL MONTI GI 3°3911 CANOGA PAll:K 340·0661 GLlNDALf CH S·l004, Cl 4-4111 COMPTON NI 1-2511, NI 2·S711 HOLLTWOOO MO 9-5941 SfAU,J.Ot!IUCICANOCO, COVINA 966.0611 •NGUWOOD 011: 1·1511 Shop Nights Monday through Sorurday 9,30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon fo S P.M. .. ' Tams ., •. ~xcelleot fo.r landscaping as a foun- dation ar ground cover. Fast growing juniper evergreen. Herrdy, .sun-loving. \ I . . . ' l talia~ (ypres& ••• Tall symmetrical evcr- xreen foliage.. Shade or sun. A favorite plant of che land.scapcr. • "' .. 2.99.12-Jb,b ag .................... .. Snail Pelltnc · · .. "') ~97 .................. . 0 , •'' ••• ·-··.'~·.••.Aft.,.,• L• , •''.LO•• '' O• LONG lfACH HI .S-0111 POMONA NA t •Slll OLYM .. le & SOTO AN •• ,21 • PICO wr 1·4262 01.1.NO( 07-1100 SAH1'A ANA, Kl 7-4371 ..... ADINA ••1-:1211, il1·4211 SANTArr IPRINGS 944·1011 11$ati1fa,tion Guaranteed or Your Money ladt" .,,, -~ • Super Value! 14-iiich Redwood Tubs • }97· e Ditttincti ve patio { ac'cei;so ry • Bra!-l;o colored slra1_,s for slrr n,i:th 11nd beauty SANTA MONICA llt 4 ·6711 SOUTH COAST '1.AIA !ll40~33.J TOllAN(( J42• 1J 11 V.1.U(l' ..0 i ·l4•1, 914•2220 VIII.MONT Pl. 9·1911 • ' LUAU FISHERMl!N LAUD HUSBANDS-A luau planned by members of the South Coast Ch'ristian \Vo mcn's Clu b \Vii i feature the latest in sporting equipment along wit h J-Ja\vaiian fare. danc- ing and entertainment. Getting into a festive mood "'ilh sotne pre- luau fishing are !left lo r ight) i1rs. David Paxton and Mrs. David Da:-h. The Tale of the \Vh ale restaurant, Balboa. \Vill be the party setting. Flowers for the Fai r T res Osos Greeters Bid Colorful Aloha Na tive greeters \Viii \Velcon1e gue sts lo "f res Osos Guild's sccnnd annual luau. a fund·rai sin g event for Children's l·lospi lal of Orange County (CHOCI. As \Vo men arrive, dressed in costun1es approp ri ate for the !!<1· \vai ian setting. they "'ill receive orchid leis from lhe hosls of the event on Saturday, Sept. 12. in the Airporter Inn , Ne\\'port Beach. The Tres Osos luau will include an authenti c Ffa\\1aiia n buffet \\'ilh appropriate nati ve beverages follo\ved by an evening of dancin g. Dur· ing intermiss ion . the Tiki Dolls \Viii perforn1 native Tahit ia n da nces. fire dances and knife dances. Proceed s from the event \viii be given to lhe hospital lo help offset the cost. of part-pay patients in outpatient. specialt y clinics. Tick- ets can be purchased from any guild member at $20 per couple. l\1embership covers the a re a surroundin g Mi ssion Viejo, Lake :F'orest and Laguna Hills. Those serving on the luau co1nn1ittee and ass isl in g general chair- man Mrs. J ohn Shannon include the Mmes. c;rat ian Bidaert , pat ron.~: Dani el Carr. tickets: Forrest Duni vin, lei s: Alston J ones. \Velcome, and Tom Reeder and Ric hard Shannon. publicity. BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 ,riUJ, k,""1 ... r '-Ult ' .. , .. U Sporting Event Luau Fetes Husbands A luau designed to honor husbands of members of the South Coast Christian \Vomen's Clu b will .e:et into swing at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 12, in the Tale of the \Vhale restaurant, Balboa. A buffet dinner of Hawaiian fare will open the an- nual casual affair bolstered by folk .e:uitar music play· ed by Ken and Joni Gulliksun of Costa Mesa . \Vith an eye to sports-minded hu sbands, part of the evening will be dedicated to a preview of the season's latest sporting equipment for fi shing , hunting. golfing, skiing and tennis from NeaJ 's Sporting Goods in Fashion l sla nd. • Speaker for the evening will be Or. Ralph Byron·, A-1.D .. chief of oncologic and general surgery in the City or Hope Medical Center in Duarte. Dr. Byron also is clinical professor of surgery at UC l and consultant lect- urer in su rgery at San Diego Naval Hospital. Tickets, priced at $5 per person, may be purchased by Monda y, Sept. 7, from Mrs. Walter Ellis of San Cle- mente. 492-6542. l\1embers and guests are invited to attend. The club is inter.denominational and is open to wo- men residing in the area between Laguna Beach through San Clemente. Monthly lun cheon meetings in Ben Brown's restaurant at Laguna Beach Country Club fea- ture a special program and speaker. r Also on the lu au committee are the l\1mes. Andre1v 11inshaw and \Va ller Caldwell . deco rations; Gordon !·licks. program :. l\•lichael Col- lins. donations; \Villiam de Vries, be ve rages. and Robert Schriefer . fooct. Tres Osos was the 14th guild to join the ranks of Children's \J os· pital and its charter installation took place on May I, 1069. CHOCO GO ES NATIVE-Children'.~ llospital mascot <:hoco enjoys his nati ve surroundings as he anticiP.ates U1e Tres Osos luau. llelping him celebrate are (left to right) the Mme s. Alston .Jones, Tom Reeder and Jo'hn V. Sha nnon. Members will dine on authentic Iiawaiian food, sip native beverages and dance. Daughter Keeping Her Cool Though Mom Makes Her Burn • DEAR ANN I.ANDERS : I am a girl, 17. who needs your help. Yesterday Mom was supposed l.o pick me up dol\nlown . I waited for 30 minutes and she didn't come, so I look the bus. \Vhen I got home ~1om wa s like a raving maniac. She screamed ror an hour - "\Vhere were you~ Why weren't you where you \\'ere supposed to be:? I rode around till I \Yas dizzy. You 're an idiot. From now on, get home on your ov.'n.'' \Vhen I didn 'I answer her. shr pickM Up my transistor radio and lhrrw il against the well. The transistor fell apart but ii sUJI \\'{Irks. I h.11rl 10 tape It and glue h anrf use ru bber bands lo· keep it together. I ANN LANDERS Jinow ii won't last lfJng and I'll ha ve lo get it fixed or buy a nt'W one. My mother ~ays she will not pay for it because I made her mad and thererore it is my fault. I ha\'C a small savings account but I don'1. \\'ant to take anything oul. Whal do you suggest" -POOR RECEPTION DEAR P.ft .: The be!!t soluUon, of too rse. i.~ lnr y o o r n1other II) rln somethin g about her t.cn1pcr. People \\'ho hreak lhings fe1peclally things that don't belong to them) need some looking Into. In lhc meantime, your mother should buy you a new lransistor and apologize for having busted the old onel DEA it ANN l..ANDERS: 1 lhought I \Vas slrong enough tn handle any problem that came my way but I was wrong. Plrase help me before I lose my mind. Our youngest child is 8. After he was born, my hu sband had an cpefation so we wou ldn't ha ve any more child ren. To make a long story short, I am six months prl"gnRnl. My mothcr-in·law insists the child Is not my husband's. I KNOW this is 111 terly impossible. My doctor has told us this is a rare occurrence, but it has hap· pcncd before. My hu.o;band was upset, as ynu can imagine. but he accepted the doctor's explanation and we never di~u.ss it. The real problem ls my mothcr·in·law. Whenever she gets her son alone she riles him up and starts new lrouble. She tells him he is a big fool, that 1 most certainly have a lover someplace and he should nol lel me gel away with it. She keeps repeating, "Ir the operation came 'un- done' why didn't you r wlfe,get pregnant before ?" This is, of course, a hard ques- tion to answer. I love my husband very much, and he loves me, but our marriage is becoming shaky because of these recurring doubfs. Surely, Ann, this·nas happened to other couples. Please check with your con· 501lants and print something to help me. -FAITlffUL IN IDAHO DEAR FAITHFUL: If die spermaUc cords were sevtrtd, • pregpancy coul~ not possibly result. lf the cords ""·ere lied, bo~·evrr, Utt tyin& aUght have come UD· done and conception could have oetarred. As to why you did not become preput • before, there .!lrt at least a dozen ttllOlt• -all \'alid. Your doctor can answer lllls . question. Aside trnm the medical aspectl, tltert'• a personal problem here wbJcb miut .. regarded as lnlerferenc._ ''The Bride's Guldr," Ann Lander~· booklet. answers some or the most fre-• qucntly askl'd quesUons about weddings. To receive your copy of th is com- prehensive guide, '~rite lO Ann Landers ... in care or the DAILY PILOT enclosing •: long, sc.lf·addresscd , stamped l?llvclopc _ and 3S cenls in C-Oln. ' ' ( . OAllV PILOT Friday, Sfpttn1btt 4, 1970 ~ftANG ING SCENE -Newport Beach today is a f~ cry from the Newport that teachers at Newport tJementary School knew during the war years. ~~miniscing about their days together on the staff of the area's first school are (left to right) Miss Gretha Tubbs, Mrs. Stan Hill and Mrs. Henry Vaughn. They joined 13 others for an "auld lang syne" luncheon. You r Horoscope Tomorrow Capricorn: Surprise Indicated SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 5 87 SYDNEY OMAllll ellp<<1mlc.e,121ui~u. _BeJYIJUna to iu. 1 chtnce o d ls c l.p I i D e is applied your own abilities. Overcome Otherwise, you Invite temp la tlon toward difficulties. Act accordingly. overindulgence. No need to CANCER (June 21-July 22): rush. Clrcum.rtances I av or W ~ e r e b t • e r I a r e Rel!atlons with c h i I d r e n your efforts. Sense of timing is ctDCtl'Ded, ,Turu ii a• imie. Your emotional life sharp. ..Utaadbac 11Jn. Wllea . It a crates-to the good. Past SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 22- etmea te mu&tr ~f~ It 11 s llon pays divi~ends. Dec. 21): Some of ~ur secret Caacer. Tbe eaienainen of Vita time; you get almost fearll, doubts are erased. You u.e· socllac art mod apt1 &e be anyttiing r.ou ~an handle, 1 • find soluUon to ~perpte:11ng Leo. wldle tucbefl, "pOrien LEO Ju J y 23-Aug. 221 : problem. Be aware of fine and pltttosrapberl f f1 ! re Jnve.stments favored. where print, ether details. You are promlaently in Gemlal aid • property, real estate are on brink of i m p o r ta n t VI.rs•· concerned. Older individual discovery. ARIE!! (March 21·Aprll lt): Excellent news due conceming mate, partner and hidden resources. Travel iJ favored. Attending convention would be especially 1ood for pruUge. Get up and state your views. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May :10): What appelred a setback is due to boomerang in your favor. FamUy member provides moral s u p p o r t . Money comes from unexpected source. Play cards close to chest. GEMINI (May 21-June ·20): Improvement in h e a I t h indicated. But you must follow confides dilemma. You gain CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. by being sympathetic without 19): DeltghtfUJ surprise ptting direcUy involved. Indicated. lnvolves friends, VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22 ): social activity. Area of Short trip, connected with creative communications is relative, Is favored.~e accented. Encoorage Gemini independent without b n g individual. Works to mutual arroganl Try some new I , advantage. prcudures. Give full play to AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. cttative efforts. l.1'.ake vital 18): Promotion, boost in changes. standing due to Intervention of LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): friend . Show appreciation wlth Follow through on hunch. home-cooked dinner. Protect Emphasis en money. Good reputation by f u I f 111 i n g news comes' via s p e c i a I obllgatlons. messenger. Avoid trying to PISCES (Feb. It.March 20): force issues. What you need Public expression of your will be made available. private thoughts prov Ides SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): needed stimulus. Perce lv e St. Andrew's Setting Harborites Say Vows E:1changing vows and rings before the Rev. Charles Dlerenfield in St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach, were Nancy Donellen Wells and Michael T a i t Wilson. father , the bride asked Miss Nancy Strauss to be maid of honor. Bridesmaids were M i s s Jenifer Wilscrn, sister cf the bridegroom, Miss K a th y Welch cf Seattle and Mrs. Phillip Cotton of Riverside. The newlyweds are graduates of Newport Harbor High School and will be seniors at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The bridegroom will be co- captain of the water polo team. subUe nuances. Separate fact from faricy. Travel is on agerida. Seek best cpportuni· lies. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are acllve, dis play t.alent in creative fie lds, with emphasis \ on writing. You gain greater recognition when you adhere to ow11 style, policy. Many who think .they are of help to you often merely get in the way. LINDA YOHE Fe ll Bride Lagunans Will Wed 'Happy Family' Reunited Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wells and Mr. and Mrs. Horace S. Wilson Jr., all of Newport Beach. Escorted to the altar by her Serving as best man was John Featherstone. Howard Shempp of New York, William LuU;ier, Michael Irwin and Dan Christy seated the guests. January Date Set The ·new Mrs. Wilson also attended Willamette Universi· ty where she was affiliated with Delta Gamma, and her husband attended O r a n g e Coast College. The engagement of Linda June Yohe and Jerry Bashe was anoounced. by the bride. elect's parents Dr. and 1.Irs. Perce P. Yohe, during a fami· ly dinner in their Emerald Bay home. Miss Yohe is a graduate of Orange Coast College and at· tended California State College at Long Beach. Her futur e husband. son of Mrs. 1'.lar.v Bashe of Hollywood, attended schools in the East. Firs t Teachers Look Back at Old Newport New/ands Tell News Their first home will be in Goleta. They v•ere a staunch, happy crew, those who were teachers at Newport Elementary School back in the days of World \Var ll and before. They remember the school when there were only 16 teachers and aro und 400 children in the whole district : tpe teachers · Mid prlncipal were just one big happy fiimily. • Si:Jleen former teachers met for a luncheon in the Stuft Si)irt to reminisce and recall irt between orfering warm ~etings to their f e 11 o w teachers. Thirty years had ~sed since most w e r e !.08:ether, and eager chatter filled U1e restaurarit as they began to catch up. · Mrs. Gretha Tubbs, who c!ame to Newport in 1929 as a Sdlool nurse, was t h e QJordinator or the reunion, 'lttlch included one teacher L 'Dashing Fashion who now Jives in Wil cox, Ariz. "I was so enthralled by the windows of the school over- looking the bay that I some- times forgot to give the nex t spelling word ," Miss C 1 a r a Ellen Spellman o( Santa Ana remembered. She said that there were almost no buildings on the peninsula around the school then, and you could look across the beaeh to the bay. •·we all went through the war years together," add~d Mrs. Bru ce Handy of Newport 'Beach. "We did all the registration for the draft :ind issued food stamps, and a blood bank was set up in the cafetorium." Mrs. Henry Vaughn of Costa ?i.1esa described the bomb drills when the children were trained to go into the halls and crouch, another part of the bleakness of the war years. Among the latest fashions to be sho"'" at the l\1ay Co. South Coast Plaza on Friday, Sopt. 18 at 7:30 f>.m . ts this ~aucho fashion patterned by Vo~uc. The fashion coordinator from Vogue will direct th e show- ing in the 1'crrace Room. t \ • "We had two students fr<1m Corona del ?i.tar then,'' said Miss Spellman. "There \\'ere no special teachers, and ·,ye were a self-contained. school.'' "It was almost like a private school," 1t1iss Isabfol Bowles of Balboa Island added. A kindergarten teacher, she consJders it the .most enjoyable of grades. Miss Agnes Carlson, at1w of Leisure World, Laguna Hills, liked. the system because it was small, had a cocgenial faculty and boasted a superintendent who was "one of us." "Teachers were al.Ile to plan their own work and execute their ideas without too much interference,'' she a.dded. Mrs. Jack Harris, now a Garden Grove resi d e nt, believes the Newport Elementary School experieflce wa! the "best teaching I ever had. The teachers were sucn. a cohesive group. It was durlng the war and rationing, and all v.·e had to do was visit and play gin rummy." Do the teachers, some cf whom new are retired, find a difference between students of the 4-0s and students now ? "The difference is the same differenct that there Ls iJI the world. Things were more relaxed then," Miss Spellman said. Mrs. Harris summed it up best: "Children remain more or less the same." OUlers attending were Mrs Agnes Craig or Wilcox, Ariz.; Mrs. Meta Bachman of Santa Barbara; Miss Ma:y LE.e Murphy, Pasadena; Mrs. Stan Hill and Mrs. Robert Phipps, Long Beach; Mrs. Dorothy Hall, Newport Beach ; Mrs. Carol D e n to n, Huntintton Beach, and Miss Marcella Roblmoo, Newport Beacb. January 9 rites in St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa are being plaaned by Diane Newland and Steven Reece. Their betrothal was announced by Mr. and Mrs. George Newland of Costa Mesa, parents of the bride- elect. Miss Reece attended Kofa High School in Yuma, New Dorp High School, Staten Island and is a graduate of Westminster High School. She also was a student at Orange Coart College. South Coast Club Her flance , son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Reece o f Newport Beach, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and new attends the University of Calif or 111 i a , Berkeley, whe.rt he i s affiliated with Delta Tau Delta frJtemity and plays on the football team. DIANE NEWLAND F uture Bride • New Officers Bow Rosarian Sharing Know-how Drug Use Discussed CommiUee chairmen and new officers were lnll'Oduced duri11g a board meeUng of the South Coast Club in the home of the president, Mrs. Harry Belcher. Serving during the coming year will be the Mmt9. G. P. Kristensen, Paul C. · Hill and James Hoffman, vlce presidents; J . W. Long, assis- tant to first vice president; G. S. Pell, treasurer, and Selby R o b i n s o n , correspond.Ing secretary. More are Miss A 11 n a Mccallum , recording secretary, and the Mmes. G. 1'1. Vance, newsletter editor; John T. Fortune, Ju ri i or chairman: C. L. stratton, bridge; Joseph Kane, com· munity service, and Ted J. O'Connell, hospitality. Others are the Mmes. l\f. E. Brotman, lunchecn; Roz Film Tri o On View Jackson, perso•a l cor· respondent: Philip T ow n e , publicity; Ora Stickell and R. J . Kelsey, reservallons, and Charles E. Lucas, telephone. Club meetings take place the first Wednesday of each month in the Towers restaurant, Laguna Beach. Interested women may call f\1rs. Towne. 49&-1531, for further inlonnatio11. Colonel Analyzes Defense l\1uch to Do About Roses will be the subject discussed by J1>hn van Barneveld, regional governor of the American Rose Society, when the Orange County Rose Society meets on Tuesday, Sept. a. Members of the group will gather in the Westminster Civic Center Recreation Building at 7:30 p.m. with the meeting to beiin at 7:45. School Daze will set the theme "for the brunch and meeting of Orange Coast California Council of Beta Sigma Phi when U1e meeting convenes at 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 12, in the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. Bob Unnston. school teen coordinator for Orange County Teen Challenge. will speak on Drug Abuse. according to Mrs. Dever lee Snew, b r u n c b cbainnan. How to show roses, how to C F . 'grow th•m. and how lo have ou rt orm1ng A bl. 1· h d I d fun with a rose growing hobby pu 1c mee 1ng sc e u e A new court of the Catholic v.1ill be among lluggestions by the Cavalier Chapter of given by van Barneveld. who Daughters is being formed in Colonial Dames will enable in· is a rosarlan for the Pageant the Huntington Be a c h . terested citizens lo hear a talk of Roses Garden In Whittler. \Vestminsler area, according on national defense to be delivered by Air Force Lt. Col. ID '-frs. Ada Pasquale. (Rel.) Franklin W. Fricl<ey ol Water Pia nts '1\lcelings will take place Anaheim. each \Vedncsday at 7:30 p.m., The meeting v.·ill begin at and additional information 1 \\later plants with Ice. Set may be obtained by c Jli 12:15 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. a, the cube on the soil, being 'I P a ng A vie\\•ing or "1ovles Under careful It doe11n't touch the the S•-· . I ned { Labo Laguna Beach. Reservations plant. The lee melts slowly. ri 1 the Old Brussels restaurant,1j~g~~~~~~~~~~"~"~· ~·sq~u~al~e~a§l~53§l-<~«~2~·~:11 1.(1.1 s is P an or r for the luncheon meeting may Day weekend at Fashion be made with Mrs. Beatrice .. Free Estimates.' --..a.:~ Island Center. Crist, president. 494-5521. or · The program will btgin al Mrs. Fred c. Ross, 49W656. RE-UPHOLSTER 8:30 p.m. on Frkiay, Sept. 4. Mrs. Grant V. Rymal will lnclud<d In the show will bt presenl Col. Frkkey, whose"" co .. plete Seleetlott ot The Clown, atory of a young years of mllitar:.· service in· Fabric• i"clutll••: boy who loses his dog and thtn elude 15 years as a com. finds him leading a blind man ; munications staff officer in Linens and vei....... Juggernut, a travel film the Far East. ''al~ taking its audience on a GOO•r-'=.:..::::..:=;;:.... ____ _,J mile lour ol lndla: and Sea of STARS Happiness Described A program on the Definition of Happiness will be presented by Mrs. Richard Mitchell of Huntingl.On Beach when Pi Pi Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi meets at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 8, in the Garden Grove home of Mrs. Phillip Wakefield. Conducting the first meeting or the new season will be Mrs. Tom Thompson , president. Picnicke rs Gathet ing Pari s hioners rrom Sl. Joachim's Calholic Church will gather in Costa ri.1esa Park on Sunday, Sept. 6, for an annual church picnic . The event will begin at 11 a.m. and continue with games and refreshments until S p.m. • • The couple plan an October v.'edding in SI. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. THE ORANGE COUNTY ASSOCIAT ION FOR RETARDED CHILDREN AIHIOllKH ... FALL SEMESTER of ,..., HOPE HAVEN SCHOO L Starting On 14 September, 1970 Cle1111 will be he ld w1ehf1y1 from 9:00 A.M. to 1:10 P.M. - 1t Th1 First Pr11byt11i1" Church of Garden Grov1 l llll E11did Str11t, Garden Grove, C11ifor· nia. Ag11: 2 'h to 6 Yll'I !fltJ· ibl el The p•o9r1m provid11: Tr1in1d T11ch1r1, I pro9 r1m t1ilor1d to the d1il d1 i01div1du•I need1 •~d Ii.Id trip;. l8u1 lr4111porl1lio11 i1 l ¥1il1bl1.I letlstn11tio11 l11forll!Otio11: L'ho.-. 541""4451 or 548·l611 Wt AIM 0Ptf•ll sn.lttrtd wor111,.., ftr y..,.., Adu!ll Aft 1' 'fN•• and "'· "". H O ~·~w.•o!•1•t,,,;,)~ "COLLECTION COLOR" DIAMONDS IN THE FIVE MOST WANTED SHAPES Here are five beautiful ways to pop the question. From our special folio of "Callee 1 " diamonds-selected for their outstanding fine for. All in 18 karat white gold. From the op: Round cut, $395. Emerald cut, $475. Oval, $550. Pear. $675. Marquise, $750, Others from S 150. Cll•rot Accounll ln¥1!td. ....... 1c ... E:tpnss 1!1MAmerlc1'11 Ind M1111r Clolf'!lt, IOO. SLA._VICK'S J1w11tr• Sl11c1 19 17 Cortei, which features 11eene1 s.,d"'" o,...,, h 0111 •f 011 of the southernmost pnrt ol wo rld'1 t r••t 11tiolottn. Hl1 Btja Calilornla aouth of La col1111111 i1 011• of tit• DAILY CzyKOSKI 1131 NEWPORT ILYD. 11 FASHION ISLAND ' COSTA MISA "'~ .. , "1""1 NEWPORT BEACH -644 · I 380 l&'l'·l(Ol·K~Vl ::::;:::,:~;.i P•oa e 642-1454 ::;:--:::;::;:z:::i1IL ___ ~o~,..~M~·: .. ~"'.'...'.'.",.~"~;~··~·~·~·"~' ~·~··~· ____ _I "'""-\. "!LOT'S t r••t f••'11"'- \ I , ·-·---~--•• t • I I (,l'ldl1, Stpttmblr 4, 1'70 DAILY PILDT J/I. · __ LEGAL_. ___ N,OT_l_CE __ , __ LE-=-G=AL=-,.~l:OTl=CE=---1---LE-GAL""'"',_,=NOTl=--CE __ , ___ u:_o_~-.:-.OTl-C_E _,(;alif ornia Now N u111ber One •• , :lllM NOTICI TO c••DITOIS caltTll'ICATI o .. IUllH IJS. NOTICI 011' 'llUSTll'S SALi Cl•Tl .. ICA1• OF tUSI Nl$1 SU,.llUOlt COUltl' OP TNI l'ICTITIOUI lilAMf: Tl 1iN. llt.Jt l'ICTITIOUI l'lllM NAME lfATI! OF CAll"OltNIA l'Olt 'tlM' 1111det1llNll 1119 C«tlfV ni.., Ir. Of! ~ ,,, Im, 11 U rW A.No~ "Ille--rtltfMCI -..... t'OV rflllly THI COUNTY 01' o••N•• cotldu<ll .......... 11w .... llltZ IN<l'I TtTLt: INSUllANCI AND T. us T that JIOAlll( M. OOUltLl!Y !1 C0"4UCI+ NI. •..w.U& • l lYd .. f lt Hvrit11111on '"di. (;1ll10N1l1, COM .. ANY, I I OUll' '""'"* Tru"" Int 1 wllal-!1 tlld r1!.lll 1Nnu11elu•ln1 1!"1t1!1 of BERN ICE E, JElitOME Undtr 1111 tlc111klul II"" ,..,,... of THI llndtr tftd __ ,,, to D1.i tt TPVll 1na 1rt •• 1 .. bu1ln111 I I City of NtW• Oett1MC1. El.EGANT HAYITACK I NI lhlf uld llffn II•'--' ltPIMIW n . lftt ••teullll 11'1 _.1 IMC~. (Ollnty ol cr1111111, $11.lt ol NOTICI! IS HElt!aY GIVEN to lhl l1 """*"°"" o! l"4 fellow!"" "''°"" 11,tNOll GltAC I! MC CDllMICK •1141 Ci lt!Wftll uncltr !ff !ltHl!DUI llrm tt•me (re<lllort ot lne ebove ntmld llK911tnt Wfloll "'"'" In IUll end pltett ol rKorlltd Jl"Ul fY 11, lt10, It IMlr. Me. w ci..Je~tlon which doei no! 111_ 111, 11\11 tll H•10111 111vlrllil cl1lm111111111 1119 rttl<ltne• ••• 11 lilll-l.: 141>0, In "* »01, Hit IMO, Ill otll<ltl WASHINGTON (AP)-Cllll-.-------------------------,. fomll hi• dlJplaced New tr 0, n mn ot 111,,. " 1 Mid <1Kt<1.nt ttt tt'lllu!r*<:I to lilt tl\tn'I, Dtrl-a. Hullll'tfl. 1n11 Joie• .... ,., lt11Cor111 In lht olll<• of lht C011"t' ut "'"" 1 ''°"1 I\> wit/I llw ...cttr.e•' VOU<fttrl ,In I/It ol· H\ln!lnllon aMc/I, Ct. ltKorM!' of °''"" Coun!Y, (lllfornlt , ~~"l':T"'!:~11::i·~~;1i1'0-~lt· lltOT~~ II~ Of !he Cltfk Of !ht •tlOvt "'llllld u-c. Kt11ln1tf". lt1t1 Ft llv•,W1LL SEl.1. ,t.T l'UILIC AUCTION TD 1 rm 1 com.oi ... court, OI' lo P•t-t 1twm, will'! 1119 Unt, HIOM1Mlon INCll (1, H101>4l5T l lDOElt POii: (AlH {N'tOlt of Ille i,llowlnt -.on. wllOtt ~•11'11 •l'>d ...c:1111r' ¥01>Chtr1. to 1111 INIClt!'lltnM 11 Gttlld Alll. ,., lt10 Ill llmt of Ml• lft 1twt11t _., ol ff\t •Hrtu ••• •1 IOllOW1; '· I/It otllct of h!I lltor,...., ... IYHOWIElt. DEltLl!Nl •. HULTGltlN UnllM 111111) ar '"" Nortt! 1'9111 tl'llrll'ICI llllMlrk M. 0-lt,, ~II vl~lt Gtt'IOt, LONGLE 'I' & PETHEltlltlDGf, 1122 ILENE C, K1!$11NGEll 19 n'l9 Ortfltt C_I, (Cltlrt"-loClt..i N-1 lflrtl, C1Ufornl1. Nott/I llotclWI,, $111!1 Al\I, Ct llllll'nlt Si.It of Cttllornlt, 0tt"'9t (-ty: ti 100 CIVIC Ctnlw Dr1Vt WMI (forlfttl'ly WITNESS ,.,,, ,..f\d IM$ ll!ll G•v ol ,.lllM. Wiik.ti I• lhl pllCI ol butlntlt at On Au11111 ~ .. 1f70 btlCll'I mt, • Noltty Well tlh """'' l1nt1 ""'· Ct llfor"I' t fl ....... Ill!, lf70. lht Ul\dtt1lontll In 1\1 m .. 11,. ptrli)nlnt P11bllc 111 t flCI !Or ttld Sltle, Ptr"lllllllY 1111\1, llllt lf'ICI ll'lltHlll COftYIVtd to I nd , Roar~ M. GDU•ltt to 1111 111111 "' 11!4 df{tcltnl. within IOll• •l>Pffrlld o.ri-•· Nlltlttlfl 111d 11..-,_ lllld, bl' II 11nc1tr 11ld tlffd ff TrulJf STATE OF C-'Ll"Oll:N!A I moot~ •tltr 1111 't1tll\11'W~llc;t!lon ft lftll C. KM1l1191r kl'IO'Wn to l'M to bl ~ In 1111 pr-ty tllu1ltd In lht tt!Y ot York as the nation'• most populous state, the U.S. Ceo. 11us Bureau has reporttd. Texu jumped from ll1l1h most popul0111 to tht fourth. Other Ital.ea and thetr rant- log1, baaed on pr11lmlnary h>- lormatlon 1t1nec1 tn tbe ll70 COUNT'!' OF ORANGE J _,., r>Qtlc;.. "''°'" WllOM Nmtl 1rt .Wtcr111W It Cotti Ml••· In Mid COllfllY 11141 lltll On !hit 12th o:llV ot l.119utl. A.O. 1'10, 0.11d Aue""' 16, 1t10 Ille wlll'!I" l111lrum.nt 11111 1(k1111wltdtecl dtKrlbt<I 11: CWUS1 Wert:: bt1ort IM. Int Una1r1l1111<1, • Nolt,... fltANK E. I OGUE, Jll:. l'hl'I tlllcutl(I Ille •lmt, l,.ot .U of Trtcl..NI. :MDI, 11 t~ l'ublk 111 •nd 1or 11ld CD!lntv •'Id srert. Aam1n11111ror °'!ht n1tt1 !OFFICIAL SEALJ 111 Id lJf, """ ». )6 •nd ~' " 1970 p,.llmlnery rt11dlnt lh1<eln dUlV commlHJoMd I nd at ll>t IOOVI Ill/Md dtelcltl'll, JEAN L. JOIST MIKtlltNOlll ,,,._,.. tKlrdt ot Drlntt 1Worn. Mf10t1111v 1110Hret1 '1:ott~ N\, IY"t•••· Lflltlt11 ~ ,.t111arw.... No11rv ""'*k . C1Utoml1 COIMI,, c11ttorn11. 1 CallfOrniR Gou•lt' lu>owll 10 t111 10 bto 11\t Nt10n lltt N•rfll 1,..aw1, "•lnclHI Ottkt In S.lol Mii wlll ~ mtdt, bllt Wllflllll 2 N y k '""°" ....... It sllbt(:rlllf'd lo lh1 WIU•ln Stnll Alli, Cl llllrllil '270' Otll\fl COll<llJ COV911.tnl or w•rrt ntw, l)prll'lt or lfl'lltOM, eW Of 1n11r11m1111. 1...i •c-nowlt<lffd 10 me 1h11 T•I : 1,,,) su..ut Mv CerM'llHlllot l••"• •-•dl11t1 11111, •a•••••I•"· ., 3 PeMsylvanla tit t•K11l..:t 111t wmt. .,,~'"''' IOI'" Adn'>l"lt1ri ttr ~rd1 1, 1m fl'ICumbrtl'C9t, 19 ''' !flt rtmtlnl111 WITNESS..,. 111na •nd ofllcl1l ltll, Publlt~W O•~n .. COii! 0111'1' 1'!10t 1'1.>lllllhld OrtllM COttl D•ll~ ,.llol, 11rlll(l1"tl •um ot fllt nolt -urtd ... H id 4 Te.xas !OFFICIAL 'SEAL) AUtllU 211 I nd s.Pttml!ti'" 4 11, 11: 1.ututl 21 '"" StPltmbrr "' n. 11, Died of Trutl, fo.Wll: .... tcll.1• ••• 111 H!~ 5 llltnoi• RUlll Wlrd JtlO 1•!1·10 U711 1•12•111 llOll ffoY!Otd, tclVtnett. If tflJ, llfteltr lllt No11rv P<1l:lllc 111 tl'ld ,.,.,... o1 itld Dtld 11 Trvtt 1-. clllrtn 6 Ohio tor Mid count~ •110 ~111e LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 1fld ·~--or 1111 Tru.191 '"" of tM Micb~an' l"YlllMtcl Or11t11t Cots! 0111' 1'110"!, lfllllt ,.....,,.. bl! H id DIM 91 Trvtt. 7 Aue. 21. , •• ..., Sep!, '· JI, 1'70 1i..1.)Q NOTICE 0,. R•CIEM,.TION ,.,..... Tiit bMtl'lclt,., unOt• ••Id o.d .. 8 New ersey LAOUNA l•ACM LOCl<il: NO. lrM. CIRTIJllCATI OP •UllNllJ, Tl'\llt, '" r-If t b<HCh w lltl1111! In LEGAL NOTICE •"°• n.. .it111111on1 Meureo '"''''°'· 9 Florida IU!LD1N0 C-lltTIFICATtS FICTITIOUS NAMI lltrttof-lltK~ ind -.ilv..-.icl 10 tht P11r1u•111 10 or11e• of Gr1110 Lod•'· Tiit ill!d..-11"'" dDtl cm!tv 119 •• eon-11nd..,l•l'ltd 1 wrtn1n dK1t11non 91 10 Massacbuaetll T-tUOI 9et1t vol11U 1nd Prolt<:llvt Orcltr of l!lkt, d11e11,,. t °""lntH II l?ltt IHCll 111111 .. DtltUlt encl Dlmlftll tor Stlt, tnd wrtn'" 11 J dJ IN TMl" SUl"l!RIOR COUllT 0~ THI !ht tru1!H1 of LtOUM Betel\ LOCllt No. Sull1 JOO, NuM!nt!Oll lttch, CtllF. Uftdtr llOllCI ot tlt .. ch Ind ot t ltetlon II ctu.. n 8Da STl.TI!' OF CALllfOllNIA P-011 1n•. will rtdftm. ti i.c1 v1lut , t h Yt llc:I Ille lldlllout llrm n1m1 of l!ttY Rl4tt lht undtrllt ntd to 1111 "'" tlot*'I' IO 12 NorUt 'Carolina THI COUUNTY OP-0111.H<il! 11111 outiltlldlne bulldl"" c1rt111c1111 Ch1rt1r •not !!1tf 11Jc1 firm •• com110H1d 11111,., ''" otin1111on1, 1nc1 lht•H FIM", on 13 Mt'ssourl No. ""'"" lfld!Cll' bond1 htttlolwt luutd ~ ttld of "" follow!nt P1•.on1, whott nemtt -'"" tt, lf10, Ille UN1tt1 lontc1 ct\IMlll 111'11 OltOIR TO SHOW CAUlf I ... II "' ' I ,_, •-l' y · ' ' 1 1111 N 1 i~-A 1 1. •• IOCIH UPOI\ wrrtnder of i.tlcl ct rUtlc1111 " '" • P t en a '"..., .... ''' •• llOllet ot &rttch •nd ti t h.et_, to btl , irgtnta 11 "'' ... o '"' 1191 Ct "'" "' IO Miid ltU11tn ti !flt otfkt ot Robtt! S , follow&: f'tCOfdld In lloOlr; t21J, tlM '°" ot Mlrl! LAWRENCE ·GREGORY llAMtREZ tor WtlWI, SOii Fl"I Wt1tern BtM l ulld! ... , (lltrlH J. Htlltr 1'911 •o1-Ltnt, otlkltl lt-.11. 15 Georgia lttvt IO t~tn1e ~1. "l"'f lo LAWRENCE 106 Wnt FDUrl'h Slrftl, St nlt ""'· Hu1111.,.1on lttcll. (1111. Cltlt; Se¢"'*•,, 1'10. 16 Wlsconain GllEGOllY ELLIOTT CtU!Ornlt '1701, G-GtNIOll, U«I Dolwld LIM, LOI TITLE INSUllANCI AND LAWRENCE GREGORY 111.M!llEZ Stld c111lflct1n mutl bl dtllvt,ld °' AJ1mllot. Ctl\I, TlllUIT COMl'ANV 17 Maryland htvln• !!led 1111 Ptlfllon b tlit t bovt-111-It/II CIV •••l•tt•ld mtll 11t1rl1111 ltf'ICIW'I D•ltd Aut. ~. lt10 ... Mid Trutlff 1111td c1u. '""· •tlll Pt1lllot1 havlnt tie-lull 10clre11 no! ltter llltn November 1, Stilt o-t c1111or1111, Ort"" Countv: a, El""' w . M1ln1tr 18 Tenne11ee llUtl!td lltr"ml110011 to c/111111 11111/IOl'fr'I 1tl0. On l.11tuil :Ill. 1'10 lltt'ott "''' I Nt11r'1" l.uthol'llld "'""'"" 19 Minn sota ""'" trom LAWRENCE GREGOll.Y Tru1ttn cf L1oun• 8t 1Cll LOCllN Public In t ftcl tor 11ld S!tlt, H tlCllllllV 1"11bll1htd Ort .... COii! D.ltl' 1'110!, e RAMIREZ to LAWRENCE GREGOR! Ne. 1n• IPP9•'" ClltrlM J. Ht!ltr tl'ld Gl fll ...... ,.,,btr •• II, ll, U10 16.17-70 20 Loulatana ELLIOTT. RelMrl e Wt Dtl chilr ll'lll'I Grtot.en k!IOWn lo 1•11 to 0t th1 Mrton1 21 AJ b IT ., HERE8V OROEllEO fftt l 111 Rus .. 11 i1nn1tr 'Tru1!•t wtiou n.,.,. •••• tUbMrll>td lo"" wllllln l...EGAL NOTICE a ama P1•10t11 '""''11.a In 11ld mttter •1>1191• or RDWrt G '1toob Truit.. 11111r11.....,,1 11'1d •ck.-ltclt>td rht' ••· 22 Wash~lon btlCll't Thi• Court 1" Ille Coo1t Hou11 .i llobtrl I ·w .. b . • tculld Ille ""'' °""''"""' , ,,...,"°' °" 0c1, 2. 1110, .i Arror"" ;1 L•w' 10FF1CIAL SEAL! P..-W 23 Kentu ~ I/It hour of t ::IO A.M .. Ind 1ftM tl'ld lhert jOt Flt1I w.,, ... ~ ..... ·~iloillllt, Je1n L, Jobi! CIRTIFICAT• OF aUSIMISS 2' Connec cut -Cl ust, II •nv 1htrt mtv "'· wtw ''"" Aftl, c 111or1111 '2111 Nottf'I' Putilk. C1llfOHl1'o l"ICTIT10U' M-.Ma , ""1111111ce11an 1n011ld ""I be 1rtnted. tt 11 Ttl • 0 111 ~1•61., 1>r1nc:l11t1 0111c1 In Tftt lllldtf1ltnlld dll ctrtlty tlltY '" 25 Iowa fllf"lher Ol'O'.e•td lhtl • COPY ot !Mt o•dlr Piit111.n1c1 O••'ll• co.11 D1l1r l"llol. °'"'" COllnlV COlll(UCUl'll .. M!ntH •I Ill w. 1J1h bt .ubl11hed In 111• Or111oe Cot•I O.llv ,...,uu 11. 21 •fld Stol mDe ._ 11 11 11 MY Commlu~n Explrn •1.. S1ni. Ant, C1lltornl1, ufldtr 1111 26 South Carolina Piiot one• • wttlr tor !our 111cceu lvt ' r ' ' Maren 2 1172 tk1lllou1 llrm ntml o/ JltG & WPM 27 OkJah wetlts I nd Iha! ltld publk1!1C11 bl com· t nd October 2• f, lt10 U~·la Pub!llhed Orin1t Co.11 Otl" ,.llol, INSURANCE AGl!NCY t ftcl !1111 111d Om& f>lt!t<I Prior to 1fte n1tt!11~ er 11111 ord1r. A111u11 11 11>11 $ti:lttmbtr •· 11, 11, 1trm 11 comPOltdo11111 Jollo't'IN P1.--.on1 28 Kansas 0.1911 Al/O. It. lt10. LEGAL NOTICE lt10 I"'"" wnon ntmn In tMll 1114 pt1c11 of 29 Colorado '1:AY MOND THOMPSON rllldtnet t r• •I !Ollowl~ J UOGE OF THE LEGAL NOTICE wm11m ,.ttrv 1111111r, 1:iou St/Id~ 30 Misst'aaippl SUPERIOR COURT tltt,I Lint, Oownty, C1llfornl1 toin. JOMN ... tl .. LEY MOTICE TO CRIDITOllS DI" ~ Jt"'" lttllft\tn Gll>t«I. s1• North Sl Oregon 11t Wiii Oct1~ Blvd .. SMllt 1164 I ULI( TRANSP-IR ANO NOTtC• Ofl c•1tTIPICAT• 01" SUSINlll, E111wood, ""'"'' Ant, C1llfw"l1. 32 •-k·-·u LMll IHcl'I, C1Ulotni• l'OICt INT!!NOfD TRANSFIR DI' l"ICTITIDUS NI.Ml Otltd J11tr ~. "'°· ru ...... T~: (JUI Hl mloc~ S-10t LIOUDlt LICIENSf OR LICINS•s Thi undtnltl'ltd -· Ctrlltf l'lt .. COii-Wllllt m ,..,,, Mlhtr 33 Arizona l.ltor111v tor APPllttnt _ NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVE N Iii !lit llVC:llnt I bu1lntt1 ti 1"2 tl1rtor, CDlll J•mn lttl!mtn GlblOl'I Pullll"'tct Ora~1t Coast Otll' Pllo!, Crettl1or1 ol MARCEL MEERSSEMAN, M.u, Cllllot1l1t , ""'°'' 1'-l!cillloul llrm 51tlt ol' Ct ll!ontlt, Ort"ft CCllllllY : 34 \Vest Virginia Aueu11 21, n and SePttml>t:r ~. n , s..ci11 s.c:urllv No. 311.10-,~u. Tr1n1!1ror ntmt ot Crvittl t. Acc.,.ll •• ''-On JulY 21. 1t1ll, Mlor• rM. • Nottf'I' 35 Nebraska 1'1G 1~1·10 al>d l.fc.,.sM. wllOlt bllsl"tH •cktrnt 11 11\d !hit itld firm Is comp.o11<1 vr "" ,.ubllc In 1nd lor MJG 11111, HrlOl'llllY --------------liioo Pl•ct11u1 , 1111"1 cuv c1 CM•• Mt1t. 1011ow1119 "''°"' wll01• n1m1 1".fuH 11111 ,_,.., w11111m l"tr•v Mlllt'f" 1nc1 J•""" S6 New Mexico C<>111l!V 01 Ortn11t 51111 cl Ct lllDrnlt !ht! Pltct cl rHldtll« II I I lcllow1, lt tHmtn GlDIOll k,_n lo mt lo bl Utah LEGAL NOTICE • bul~ 1r•""ft" ;, .tboUI to bt ~. fl) Ktllll P. Ctnlltld, »62 101111 Lint. "" "'-wt>oM "'"'" ... .W.Crlbt<I 37 Jl.ICEY INC .. 1 C1llrornlt Cor-tllon, lrvlnt, Ct . to ll>t within 1 ... 1rum.nt Incl tcU'IOWlld .. 38 '!lll!I' O ,. J12'1 Joh I tL p •~ I ~-1 I > 1... Olltd A\11. 26. 1t10 Id 1111'1 t~Kvlld 1M Jlmt. 1' · " • ,,.,v, rn ... •n ' ....... 1 IC'Ur '' s1111 of c1111orn11 Or.,111 C°""IY~ tOfFICIAL SEAi.i 39 Rhode Island C:lll:Tl,ICATE OF I USI N!!SS MQ, ~._.11.0. f\O Fld••tl TtM N&., to On AUi. 2., lt10. btfort mt, 1 Noft rY F••nct1 I". (rt nafOll FICTITIOUS NAMI MW to <l it. 'Frtrutertt tl>d l"ltndecl Putillc 1ft •M !Of' Mlcl Sttlt, HrlllltllV NOllN "'°'lie:. (tllfornll 4Q D C Tiit 11nder1lor>e<1 !lo tl!<"!lr, -t r• T••nsltrH, wllo..e bu11MU t llllrt11 11 600 tope.&r.,;I klll l'I "· Ctnlltld kl'IOWl'I to 11'11 Prll'ICIHI Oltl(I t11 H'aw' all ConduCll"f t bllSlntu ti 6l5 W. P1ultrlr>0 Etll Ocff" l lvll., In Ille City ol' l.oM TO bt Ille PlflOll -· ,....... It OttrtH (OUnly 41 1.v1 .. co111 Mtt•, c 1u1or1111, 111>11er the 1e1e11. Collnl'f of Los """'"' Sit!• ot •wbte•lbtd lo th• wl!l'lln 111t1rvmt111 end M, comm1111ot1 E•lrtt 42 Ne w Hampshire llctltlC\11 firm "'"" 01 ICELOl:l:ON tftcl (1lllernl1 90800. t ckr>CWltdlff II• llltcUlld 1119 MrfHI, JulY •· 1t1l lilt! ••lei firm ls com1>111e<1 ot In~ to!law-The pn111tr'Y Is ~crlbtd In llf"'tl l ti: (OFFICIAL SEAL) T""'1 43 JdahO ln1 Persons. WhOll n•m•• 111 lull tnd All 1!ock In t•flle, tl~l11rtt, eoulPment t nd Mtrlt I( Htl\fY , bl!•he-d OrtMt CDlll Dillv l"lltl, "' Montana l'lten of •t1lcltnce "'' t • !<1llow': ODod will al • Certt1n cock!tll klYnlN Nottrv Public. Ct!!f'onllt Alllu 1 14, 21 29 Incl "''"""" ' -W!tllt m A. Kothch, Jt,. 'la Prll'ICO!on bU•lntll kf'ICrNll 11 "RO'l'AL CREST Prlnc1Pt1 Ortic• In 1f10UI • ISONO 45 South Dakota Drive, CO'lll Mt1•. COCll:TAIL LOUNGE" l fld loc.t!td •T llGO Or•lll• Cou"lr R1t011 w. Drone. 11to'l s11tld1 Lant, PIK1ntl1, '" the Cltv of Co111 Mn•. Mv commln lol'I Enll'ft LEG•• NOT!-46 North Dakota Hunllnalon Be.ten. C11Jn!v of Or1nt11 $!1te ol' Ctlllornlt , Ind Nov '' 1'71 tu.I "'r. •7 D I D4111d 1.ut\111 ll, 1110 tr1n1!er 1111 I01io'.,.,i11p llC-!lt btVtrl~ "ulll1tllfld. ~ll!M COISI Dtl!' ,.!kit, "I e aware Wllll•m A. Koel1<h , Jr. 11ctt111 cor "'"""11: On-Slit G.,..,.11 Auou•t u 11>11 ~!tmbtr" "-11, 11, •AR 2"' 48 Nevada '' .,, ·.·,'~,."!·Fo,•,D"'.,91 . ll•llOf. Hwmber ""'us•. ,_ IMutd lo 1110 1111).)Q NOTIC• TO <••DITOlllt 49 Vennont " "''"1 "" preml1M loetlM ti 110!) P1<1cenU1, C-oll1 SUl'lltlOlt COURT 01" TN• ORANGE COUNTY Mt1a. C•ll!Ctnlt 10• IPll PrtmlHJ loc:llM LEGAL NOTICE STAT• OP-CAL\1'0111101. l'Otl 5() W ing Oii Aveuil u. lt10 before..,,, • NOii•' II 1100 Pl.1c111tlt !ft !ht c11, of (Olli THI COUNTY OP ORAN•• yom Public 111 .11'1<1 for ••;~ s11te, pe••O~•ll' M , ,, 01 ',._'"'t u111 °' CtU-"' ...... ,, 51 Alaska IP9flrt<I Wlllltm A. l(Dll5Ch 11111 Relph eii, oun "' • ,...XWI • w O•O"I• kllOWn to mt to De !hf "''°"' 10'111•· ClltTIPICAT• OP-IUSIN IJI, Elltlt ol WILl.IAM w. lll:VINI', •kl 1960 Final wi>Ost Nmtl t rt iubtcrlbf<I 10 !hi wllhll'I Tn1t I~ tmeu~I 81 purcn111 prlct Ot l"ICTtTIOUI NAMI WILLIAM WINTl!!lll llllVINI, Dtc11tld. Instrument tl>d tcknow\eclot<I 111,, •v, cot111dtrttlon In conntellon "'Ith 111d T , ,.. .., ,,. ,.. 0 _ NOTICE IS ME•EIY GIVEN to lllt 1 New York ..... """"" o1 wld ltctnu 11>11 Hkl 11111lt1111, ht llNlttl I 1 '" '' 1 c ... ~ trldltort OI lllt •tieY• 11111'11d Hctdtn! 2 Calif ml K Mll(I the umt. lnclucllntl 1111 u llmt!HI Ln111tr11orr, It lht dUCllllll I b\11lnet1 II \US• A Vldor\t II., !fie! 111 -M 111\'IM c:ll lll'll eHl,.1 0 8 IOFFIC~!~nE~LID1vl• sum ot m.000.00, wllldl cDn1J111 °" "" e-o.11 ~· c111i.;,n1~~u~.~":.;"" Miii •*""" ''' ,_,,.., to tut 3 Pennsylvania Notir"f' PU!.Hc<t lllornlt tollow!111: 11.500.00 CASH, 11111mPllon 01 n.,11ou~! '"' ,'!'..,.1, , ......,.' °' ,,... 1111m, •1111 ~ MCMMrY ¥OUC:Mn, lft 4 lilin I Selltr"I ll1blllllt1 cl t p • r o J; Im • I •I ' I ,,,.1 ...... rm ' c 1111 of!lcl Cit ff\t cltnc II 1111 1blv1 O S P'rlntlPtl Office In U.000.DO tnd ... ltnct on • Nol• In 11...or 1011ow1,,. 11trton. whOll "'"" ':" full l l'ld 1ntlllld QllUrt, ., to "'""' ""'"· "'"' S Oh' • Or•nn Counl'f 01 '"t Seller Pleet of rnldtnc:t I• •• tol10W1. 111, l'llC .. 1,,, vOllClllrt to ff\t 1111-10 Mv commlu lon E•t1lr1i AU arne< buir'llu "'""" tftcl tc1c1rws1n Jettl1 K • .i1tord. un Stnl1 1tn1 lltr•ltl'ltd 11 "'' olllc•• :r, 111 '"°'"""· 6 Texas Ju"I 1l, \91' uffd bv !ht Tr1ns1tror within lftrH vlttl Avt .. Gttdtn Grovt. '2Ml (oobty, SCl!llmtchtr, Cotl!llln, Mfl'll'ltd , Publl1h1<1 Or1nt• Cae'I OtllY P\let, 11,1 ptst so I•• •• known 10 the DITM AYt. 27, 1"0 and ttow•rd \U T-n 11>11 (Ollnlrv 7 M1ch1an AU;Vtt U. 21, 11 i ncl Stl>"ml>t:~ l , TtiniltrH lrt: SAME Jlfllt R. Sltlorll ltotd, Ort. Ct llkH',.11 '2'61. wl'licll 8 N im n s-10 Tft•t 11 h•• bttn •••ttc1 btlwMn w1c1 11111 c1 c111101n11, 1, lh• •II<• o1 bullnn1 o1 ff\t MlldtnllMoll' ew ersey · lkt111" 1nd 1111tfldtd 1r11111-.. •• o~"'!.!.~"",,' ,,_ ~ _ , .,.11..., 1n 111 fflltttr• Ptr111n1n1 ,. n. "''" 9 Massacbuaetll LEGAL NOTICE rtQu!red bv Ste. 2.t014 of 11\t l..,.JMU Ind "" .... .-w.. • "" ... ,..,e """' ff Mid ~. wltl'iln tour ll'llftfllt "d .----""''-'"''""~-----·JProitHlt:ll'l1 COCle, 11111 !hi COl'l!cltrtllon ,.Ulllk In tl'ld fct' H id Sltlt, __..Uy l fllf !hi llrll fUMIUllotl tlf tlllt Mllea. 10 f10rl a l"·JIU6 for '"" trt111!1r OI wld 11111J11a1 ind •P"•rld Jtllle It. Slltord known to"".!: Dollld J1-r"f' u, lfnl 11 lndi CtrltTIP-ICATI! OF I USINtss. ,.,.., .... of u ld lktmt 11 IO tit ptld Dfll' bl:: ~~r"1 ~ ~~~1·K=il0t" UNITED I T•TES NA'FION-'1. 12 N ahnac I' FICTITIOUS N .. MI! lfllr ttld 1r1111fer hll bttn tppl"O\ltd 111' :i ht w ~ecln;,z .. me BANK, Ort aro llll. TM llndertTt ned 11ot1 c1r111, ht 11 COii-..-1<1 OeP1rtm1111 Of Alcotionc l1Ytr1H <OFFl~f,ttu SEALI ' • n111on11 bl11kl"' 1..oclltlolt 13 Mi.!!souri dUCtl"f 1 bllt!neu 1! 1607 MvrtlewOO(I, Control. MltV K Menrr l!~KUICll' ti 1111 Wiii ol' Co111 Mt••· C11l!ornl1, yndtt lht Ile· Thll • wit. lr1n1fer •rid •wlonmtnl °' Nottr"f' • Pull!k-C•llfornlt Ille 11111.,.. 1111mtd dtc:9<11nt ., 14 Virginia tlllout f!rm ""'" of AM ENGI NEE'lil:l ~ the tfortuld tlOCk In Tr•dl, ll•turn, ,.rlnclpt l O!tlcl 111 C:OOICl•Y, KNUMACNIR, COLIMA 15 WIS Sin tnd !Pitt 1~111 !Ir"' ii tornP!lse<I ol !ht l'QlllPmlnl tnll •ood .. 111 cl Mid blltlntH Or (OUh!Y MINTl.11:0 • MOWAll:O COD 1011owt"111 fff't.en, wnose N mt 111 full •rid w111 t<t melle, •"<I 111e c111111111r111on M:"l'-.miu 1on E•tlr• 1u T-~,.,. RMlll ]6 Georgia plt tt ot rtsldtnet 11 11 fo!lowt: ""''"Ill' folll"IM•r wltl'I 111e cor11ldtr111on Nov 3, Hn Or-. C1 ~ Artllllf" Mlll•r. u 02 Mvr11ewooc1. c0t11 1or 1111 1r1111tt• •NI 1n 10,.men1 o1 ""' ,.111>lli11tc1 ' 0:1,..1 coe11 D•Uv l"llot, T....._1,!11:1 M:t.,!ll 17 Tennessee M••· C•lll. t lort5"1cl 11aint1 i. to bt co11wmmttt<1 on 11 n nd s 1 w 4 11 11, .. ,..,,...,. •tit 18 Minn l DI.TED Aue. 10. 1t70 or t l!tr l~t :llOIM div 01 Sffltm-lt10. Auiu 1 IP tm 1;11,_70 l'llblltllld Ortflll CttlJf Dtll'I' "llot, ellO 3 Artnur Mille• t i lllt ncr-dtPtrtmtnl "' LAWNDALE ltlO Allllllf I.. 21, • tnllll lti<ttmtttr .. 19 Alabama S!tlt of Celllor1111, Or•n;e (DUl'llV: ESCllOW COMPANY, 11 122• SOlllll str111. LEGAL NOTICE UIO Ull).10 20 Lou! . On 1.uou•I 2tl. lt'IO. be!Ort ml. I Nollf'/' In !ht CllY o1 lont lffch, C01111tv ol' Lot Sl8n8 l"Ubllc 11'1 •l'lcl ler $1!cl Stile, 11e,.on111v Anttltt, s11tt ol C1lltlll'nl1. o•ovldtd 11111 SUl"l!•IOlt COU•T OP-TN• LEGAL NOTICE 21 Maryland IOPttrecl AllMllr Milltt ~110W11 lo me to bfl lht Dffl •lmtnt of Alcchollc ltYt tllf $TAT• OP-CALll"DRNIA POlt l------u;;;;.------11.::...::::.:::.:::.:::::._ ______ ,1 !111 person wllo&t ntmt It •Ybtcrlbed IO Con,rol Met awrovt'CI stlO l•t ntler OI Mid THI COUNTY 01" ORI.MO• I T .. t lM lht wl!llln ln1h11mt n! end ICknGWleo:lged llc11111. M1, A-Mtu SUl'•tlOlt COURT Ofl TM• LEGAL NOTICE ht •~KU!fd Ille Simi. Dllt<I Auou1t 16, n 10 NOTtCI DP-N•ARINO OP-l'ITITIO. STAT• OP CALIPORNIA l'CHI tOFFICl"L 5EALJ (OFFICIAL SEAL) P-011 ,.ROIAT• 01" WILL AND TMtr COUNTY OP-0111.MOS IU,.•1111011 COU•T 0,. TM• JOSEPH E. DAVIS JAICEY INC.. CODICIL AMO POR L •TT I It I Ne, A .. 1'ff Hora•' P11tillc, Ct llllll'nlt A C1lllornl1 COtPO•Ulon T'''•"•NtAltV NOTI'' o• MIAll:INO OtJ PITITllN ITATI OI" CALIPO•HI-' tJOtt • ' ' 011, I ' ' ,..,.. TN• COUNTY OP-ORAN•• r l'Clo• t i II fh ; Jol'ln Btlllm,, Prlfl d'" Elltlt of M, E~l'YI Nt1le, t lM lrl'IO-POR ,..OIAT• 01" WILL A 0 Ml ...... ,.., Orantt Countr I v: JoMPh Ct•dllrt ti Mt,... fdf'l'I N1111, DtctlMd. CODICILS AND l"O• L•TTlll:S lllOTIC• 01" MIAltlM• Ofl l"l'TITIOM Mv Commln lon E•Pl<n Stcttltrv·Truswrt r NO'FICE IS HEREIV GIVEN Thi! Tll TAM•NTAaY POR l'ltOS .. TI OI" WILL AND l"Oa ,.ublli~:• ~;.~~11' C~tll Dtl!~ Pllet, T00•,·,~~ .. trn .. ,,',"',,,,_ T110m11 T. ltouuttol 1111 llltd htrtln t E1!tle pf JOttN L. KAISO,.,, L•nlRS TlltAM•NT.f.flY 1 "" • ~ 1>1lltlon tor probllt ot will tftcl (OClk.11 0.:fflecl. Elltlt of MAltll I(,, RONEY ....... UI. 21, n •1111 kol. 4, 11. 1110 l~ 0 Ml•Ctl MHn••"'~" tlld ~r l11111nct ol Lt!llll TtllUYltM•r"f' NOTICE II Hl!RflV OIVEN Th•I Otc911td LEGAL NOTICE Tr•n1lt rCll' and Lltt111H tc Pollrl-r, ttltrtllCe to Wllk.h lt mt dt EMMA K.l.SSOFF hll l!ltd lltlt ln I NOTIC! 11 Nl ll:!IY GIV•N Thi! L .. WND .. l! ESCROW COM,.1.1'1'1' tor '""'"" 01rtlcul1r1, '"° lhtl"" l!mt H Ullon "r probllt "' Wiii Ind clldlcll1 I.Inell Gltlltr 1111 ltlld lltrtln • Mllllt!I 11'2• sowt11 Siren tnd Plit t cl 119trl~ 1111 itm• M11 bttn 11111 tor 111 ... nc• OI LM!ltrl Tt 1Tlmtnlt f'I' for ., .. ,. ot .:11 tl!d tor llllllnet 11 ------~=-~=--· l1.o111 ltt~ll, CtllfOfftlt IOIOS 1111 lor S.Pltmbfl> 11. 1'10, t i t :JO 1.m., lo 1119 "'11!1ontr. rtltrll'ICI lo wfll<ll il 1.t!ttrt Ttlllmtnllr"f' lo l"O!lllolltr NOTICE INVITlN~ BIDS fl(rOW No. 2111 In !ht courtr_.. ti 0.~rlmtn1 No. I of m-1111' lurtlltr ttfll(Ultr1, Ind 11111 n'l9 rlltfll'ICt to Wlllclt Ii ..,. .. tor ~ NO!kt 11 htrtb' 1lv1n llltt lht SOlld 81 pyblltlled Ortnff Cots! Otl!r l"llCI, 11ld CO!.ltl, 11 JOO (lvtc C'"ttr Oflv1 lllM t nd t it« ol htlrlnl lllt i.tmt hel to1rtlcvttr1 Ind !Mt Ille HIM Ind llLIC:t Tru1rllft ot tllt Cotti comm1111nv Collett SeP!tmbtt •· ltJO 16.11-10 wt1t, 111 1111 C!tv of .S..1111 Ant, C1llldtnl1, bttn 111 Iii• Stll.,.,,btt 11, lttcl, ti •:»of ,...,1.,,; 1111 "'"' "" btt'1 "' tor Dlltrkl 01 Or1n111 Countv, Ct llfoml1. wm Dt tld 1.11111t1 ''-1110. 1.m .. i.. Ille COllf"froom of Otlltrtmtnl Ml .... le!fllltr 11, lt10, 11 t i• •.m., 111 1111 rK t lv1 ... led tlills 110 lo l.00 P.m. Tues-W, E. ST JOHN ] of ttld c1111rt, t i 100 Civic (11'11tr Dl'lvt ceurtroem of OeHrtll'llftl No. I II H lrl! lltv, St1111mber IS, 1t10, ti tll9 PuM;llt\-LEGAL NOTICE (Ollf\ty Clttll w111, !" '"' Cll'f Ill S..M1 Ant, Ct llfor/lll . CDllrf 11 JOO Ctwk (tflltr Drlvt Wf'IJf In ln1 Dltl. or Uld ttllllol dlllrlcl loc:llfd I I TllM!"lfl tlMll MHllr Pt!ld :kPlll'!IOtr I, 1t10 Ille Ctlv fl! S..nlt I.lit , Ct tltornlt, ' lJ10 l.d1m1 l.Vlftut!, COSll M.,.,, JIM ,.llnltr Aw-W. E. St JOHN, p"fll SWftmbtr l, 1fl0, Ctl!to•nl1, 11 Whlc~ llmt »Id l)id1 wl!I bl ".JISU Wn1n11r, Cttlftrnll Ceunl' Cltrk W E ST JOHN Pub!lcl~ OPtnfd ~nll ·~~d Io r : Cl!ltTtl"ICl.TI OF IUStNflS, Ttlt (111) ffl .. l'J ll'ld n>-IOll WALllR, WllMSTOCK, cciuni-, Cltrk Mk.rotCOH~, Acr11,1er1, AnelwHr, C03 l'ICTITIOUS MAMI Alltrl'llJI tor ,.llll!Mv MANION & IUN•, INC. ,.ITIR TOllH .. 'I' PPM Rtcerd'°'' tnd S•mp!ln1 Stlltm. T~t undt"lt nt<I dO Ctrtll' lt!t'I ••t P11bll1hld Ort"ft C0t1t Otll'I" ,.llol, ... IMlfl '"""' Drln, 111119 .. 1,. A"'"" hll ._.. Ill All bl(IJ '" to tit In tccorduw;t with c11n<111cU1111 • bu1lne11 •1 UO'll l tn St., 1.1111111 v, 21 11111 Sto!•mbfr 4, lt10 ,...,.,.., 111111, C1lllntll Mlt c: .. 1, Mitt Ct~ "'*' ttie t1111r11ctl011l tl'ld CondltlOftt t'ld 5ffl BttcM, Ct tllot11l1. Miider 1111 11Ctlllou. UOl-1'0 Tth Ct111 Slt...iwtw 1 ... 1 T9' en I ........ Soteitk1tl0rl1 which ttt now on lilt 1M nrm nt'l't Cll WOOOSTOCI( Ml'G. Ind A"'"'"t flt ,. .. II.... ..~· .. lltll mtv bl wcur..i In the c/llct ol Ill• tft1t i.tld !!rm 11 com-Id of !ht LEGAL N011CE l'ubUtlltd or1n.1 CMN Dtlll' l'llot, l"vltUilltd Or lllltltc 111 Purchtll"f Agin! ot 1•!0 ICl>O(ll cllllrlcl. toll-I~ J>l11Ct11. whoM MITlll "" lull Stlitlmbtt l " ,,, 1'11 l&a-111 - , • -,. ·-°' 0111, l"ILot, E•ch bidder mull wbmll with 1111 tlld I •nd p!tttl ot rt•ldtM• t rt 11 lollawl; l"·infl ' • .., ., •• lU." c11nltr't tflf<t , certltled c11ec~. or bid· D1v1 K. McMorr111, 2XI~~ 1111 SI., Sltl ClltTIPICATI 01" aUllNlll LEGAL NOTICE dtr'l l;IOncl m1dt PIYtbll IC IM Cflkr o1 lt1ch, C1I. l'C1tll fl !CTITIOUS NAMI Ille CN1I Communl!V Cellftt Dltlrltl Rlllllrt L, OWon~'' 2)0111 11'11 SI.. Tiie ulldtrlllntd do c1r!ll'f !llty trl , l"••D LEGAL NOTICE eotrd OI Tr111!N I In a" amOYnl no! lt!ii SN! Dtlth. C1I. 9())41) tel>ducl1111 I bu•tntu II ... E11l 17th CI RTIPKAT• .,. •"91Nllt th•n lfvt DefCt nl !$'1bl ot 1111 111m tl!d II Dt!t<I AYIUll 31 lflO 51rMI tt !rVlnt, (otll Mltl, C1lltor11!1, •ICTITI0\11 Ml.NII ..... 1 eutt111ttt 11191 lht blddG1" will enter ln!a Divt K. McMorr•~ Yl'lclt• tll9 llclllloui firm,..,.,,. ot !ltVINE Tl'lt ul\Olrtllntd dttl ctrllf'I' ht It t•llTll"ICAT• OP SUllNlll,. Ille prapOWd CDn"ICI It Ille 11me 11 lllobotrl L. Owor1llv PERSONNEi. SERVICES AND AGENCY ctltlclucllM t bV1ll'lltt t i JIJ 0 ••1111 C-1, l"ICTITtOUS M-'M• 1w1rdld 10 tilm. In lllt t v.,..I of l8llU•t 10 $!ti• ol Ctfllcrnll . Ortnt' Caun11: tftcl lhtl ttld lltll'I II comflOlld of lht ltltMM tflt lld, Ct!ltort'llt, undtr !ht Thi Ml'lclt,.ltntd -• C•rfll' ht 11 tftlf". lnlo $11Cll contr11Ct, 1111 procffds of 011 A~""' )1, 1'10, bt1ore n11, 1 Nol•• loll-L"f ,.,...,,..,, w11o11 "'"'" I" fVll ftclltlout !Inn "'"" 11 MEADOW cond11Clln1 • W11Ms1 11 1111 JIMltol'H !ht clltclr will be ICll'lllt..:I. or In lllt cti.t PMblk In tl>d tor ttld 5tttt, Hroonllfv lftcl plt Ctt of rtlldtttc:t 1rt 11 fQlllWt: INVESTMENT OltOUP Ct I Im 11 Id lt d .. flewP;Ort It.tell, C1I., llNltr lllt ot • -· Tiit lull •um lt>ttlOI ll'lll ~ tl>ott-.d Ont K McMor•tn •nd ltobtrt Pllrkl• M0.-1111 ,.oft •• J17 Ordlt rf O•t!Mr .... i.I 11111 ""'' Mild .,,,.,, ,, nc1111o1n 1 .. .., fltmt ti Nl!W..CltTElt lorltlt911 If i.t1d KllOol cllslrlCI, • L, 0-.kv trio:.." IO IM to tit ~ Avt ,, Cor-Gel M.-r <OIMOllf of 1111 tollowl ... Mrllft. wllltt Mf:N'S SHO,. -"" l'lltt llloil l'lrm la No bMkltr ll'llY wlllldrl"' h\1 bod tor I lltrlOtll wllO•t "'""' i re 1yi...,,1btd lo Jolln LOuli Porto, 111 Orchlrd Avt~ n11nt lft full ll'ld Pitel II rttldlMI II It C-..d of !ht lollowl111 "'NI", wllott ptrlOCI OI totlY-ilvt ltJI dtVI tlltf tht lhl w\T/1111 lnllrumf"t tfll ICMl'IO'Wlldlld Co•-1111 Mar IOllCwt; ........ Jn !vii Ind Pllte OI rtiildtnct I• •• dtll Ml tor 1111 Ol)tnln1 llltr1al, tlltv extcutld llll 11me. Dtlld l·lJ.10 Ch•fltt E. Jutllftl, )1) Ortnd Ctntl, loll°"''" Tiit lot•d o! Tr111tees •n.etvtt 1ht l•EALI John LOull Po1l1 l t lbot l1l1fld, Ctlll. '26'2, ltobttl V-. (ltft, UM WlllftLll' Aw .. .,lvlltff cl rtltc!lnl •nv 11>11 .ii tlldl or FR ... NK L 51-iUFELT "•!•kit NOPklM Pot1• DtlH kt>llll'lbtr 1, 1110 JPttl 6,1, COlll Mell to welvl tnY !tfetUIOrlrlfl or Ill· Noll•Y Pu.l:llk STATI OF CAL11'0ANIA (hl•llt f , Jlltl'lftl 0.1911 Aut . 2', lf70 llll'm•llllet in •nv bill or 111 Ille bldlllno. My Comm1n 1on EAPlrn OltANGE COVNTY (<itnttll l"t"'*I ll:ot>trt Vtm Cltlf OPfll; 5'1>1.,.,,btl' IS. l :M p.m. ()(t, ti, !t1' On A~llllll IJ, 1'79. btWt -· 1 llt lt tlf C•l1tornl1, Sti lt ti Ct lllornlt , D•tl'IM C°""lr: $!1~ NORMAN E. WAT!>ON T .. uu NOltr' Puelk '" Ind tor •• 111 Ullt. 0f•llt• COllftl'y: Oft A\111111 21, ,.,. ....,. ""'· I Hlt1ry Stc-.110 .. BINtd ol Ttvtletl PUbllthtd Ortntt COii! OtllY l'llOI. __ t.., _.,.., ,.,.,)ell HCllllllnt °" 1 Slllftlnblr, 1tl'I. blfor• -• PulJlk: In Mid for Mid Sltlt. __ ,.., Pu~llllld °''"" Cotll Dt\lr P1lol, Stl>!tmblr '· 11, 1•. ts, 1'10 161t-7D Porte tftcl JlllVI \RULi ,.orto k.-n " !!'It Hot•rY PMbllt In IM 18r 11111 U11t, •-rl(I ltobtrt T. VMI (Ill! --n IO 1.1111u11 fl tlld 5.tPttmblr '· ltlO 11""10 10 bt 11>1 l"tl'toM """"' ....,.... 111 llf''°"'ny -•I'll Cll9rlff f:. J-11 11111 It "" ttw ,.,-IOl'I wnott "''"' 11 ---LEGAL NOnCE i.ubltrltltd to "" ..-111>1n IMI""'""" 1nd .,_,, to me to bt !ht 11t11011 """-1111t1erlbtd 11 tM w1111111 in.11'"""" 11111 LEGAL NOTICE ec~ltdttll 1111'1 utcultd lht Mml· ~IM 11 Mtetlbtd 18 11'11 •lll'lln Kkl'IO'Wltdttd llt e~tcuttd !ht ttmt, ______________ 1-------cccc------·1cofFl(IAI. Sfl.I.) IM!rvmlllllond 1R.-lldlH"' tlllClllM tO,F!CIAI. "SfALl ~ tlMI Jostcfl E D1vl1 llw llrnt. JUANITA M. SHl!FFt•LD t Ut4 NOTIC! TO CllEDITDltl NottrY piJbllc.(t!llor"lt (OFP-ICl .. I. IEl.LI N0!11y "uttllc<t!llOrl'llt NOTICE OF INTllHTION "TO 0,. IULllt T•AN5,llt "''"''"' Qfflct In (ht11tr F1mn kllttvry II O•l lllt County Crtl!l.TE SECURtT'I' INT•ll&ST (5tfl. '111 -'1t1 u,c,c.1 ?r .... Counlv N&tlN Plltltlc-CtllltPftlt Mr CornmlMlolt l•p!r-. (Stet 6111 -11•1 u.c ,c .1 NOTICE IS HEll:E6'1' GIVE N TO '!'NI Mv' (Cll'!lfllltllon l Al"I"' ,.,Incl••• Oflk.i I~ ""'· 2, Im NOTIC'E 11 ht<ellY t l•llfl le ITlt Ctt<1llor1 of Gtortt Cll!lord, Trt11tlt rw, J II 1.,1 Or11191 Cou111Y "lllllllllM Ort1111 CMll Diiiy l"lltt, Crldllon ol J,t,I CEV INC .. I C•t1torn1t w11ot1 butlMlt t<ldtnt b 1115-A Vk.lor11 "ubll.:: O;lll!M CNil 0111°1' 1111111, M' C-tNIOfl fqlfM $wltrnbtt 4 11, II, 25, tt71 1.._10 Co•POtttlQn, DtMor wl'ION M l,..., $1 . coott Mti.t. countv ot Ortltff, Sltlt 1 1 311 Ind S..ltmlltf> '· Odobtr I , ltn .ciartn h 600 'E•ll OC••" ltl'd • LOllO ot Ctlllornlt , !ht l 1 Wik trtntllr i. •bout ~.u:i•I ._ 1• lJIJ.1' l"ut11ltltH Or-Cotti 0.11'1' •llot, LEGAL NorICE .... a.. C-IY o1 LDI ...... It\. Sll!t OI" bl midi lo Jtfllt Slltord, Tr1111t-.t~:::;:!=J~~~~~~~;:r"'~1~~:"~'i'i·~"~·~·~·~·~·~1~·~~~E~,-~~111 ii..-.. CllllO.-nlt, lhtl t tee"'llY lnlf•f•I 11 wt>O•t l:lvll,,.11 10G•n1 It ''13 Stnlt 11111 LEGAL NO'I1CE 11M111t 10 be c•1119ll b'I Dtbt<ll """ A"•·· G•td"' Q10vt, cou"" ot er.,,.., LEGAL NortCE <l•T•l'lCAtl °" •ut1tt1u I ''"'""' to M .. llCEL Ml!ERISl!MAN, S..· Sll!t of C1llfOl'11I•. IUl"•fllO• CDUllT 01" TM• "lCTITIOUI HAMI c-urld PtrtY, wflOM bull,._H <lddfftl II Tiii pr-ty to tll tl'tfllf•lltd 11 loutld ITATI 0, CALIP-Oll:MIA "OR c•1tTt,tCl.'1'. OP IUtUtlM Thi lll'ldt1tl1M11 °'"Ctr!!,., 119 t1 - '240 Hlltrlt W1w, N•WPC>l'1 lftch, Co..rnh ti llU·A VFtlOl'lt 51., Coil• MtM, COllftlJ '!'NI COUNTY OP-ORAN•I l"ICTITIOUS NAM• dudlnll I MllltH t i 107 Anllt L~ .. ol Oronff. Sll!t ti Ctllfbrftlt . ol O•tht•, Sl•lt ol' (tll!C•nl•. Not. A ... flt Tll9 ulldtrolt ntd delfs t tr"llfY l'll' 11 NfW'POl'I lfotctt, Ct llfonllt, .,,...., 1'111 11<- Tl>t proHrlv tn whlth !ht St<urllY St!d Pt-Iv It dtktlllff '" tllltf"ll NOTICI o• 11•A1tlNO OP ,..TlflON CllnCl~I"" 1 bl.ltlntM ti $4 w, ltl!t St., llllllli nnn nt-II Ill COMTIK UJ !"ttttt1 •ltl bt trttll'd II, In 1.ntr1!, t 11 11 : Al 1lldl \ft tr•"· ll•Tlll'li. MWll"-ltl •ot11 "lllMAT• OP WILL ANO POI COiii Mt.It, Ci!li.rnlt , urllltr ll'lt C-lcllitllf TtchlltlolY Ind flltt tlld fl•IU'tl t nd to11i,m111!, lufn!lurt tftcl tM -~ Will ti llfJI t ufo 1-ty M l• LITT•1ts T•ITAM•NTA•Y llOJllO llcllllollt llrfl'I -11 c1...._ Ind 111'1'1'1 II~ tlf t1>t ll!IO\lllN ,..._, lurnltllll'llll ol Dob!Oi' COvtf!M I .r-l'ly l'IHI -l'l<IW!I •1 tHUI Auto S11111tf'f t ftll WAIVIDI K11ltl Ind 1f1111 MW flfnt It ..,....... et WllOl4 flt"'ll 1111111111111 l"ilcl flf r•ltlifMt "°"" 10C11"'11 11 UM Pl1tf!lllt COlll 10<.tlld ti Hu.A Vklotlf SI., (Otlt f1t111 tt Rl'tl L. S11ti.r. OIC .. Nd. ttll '911N'1119 l"trlOll. wt.-n.1111 In !UH lt It ltli.wai Mt1•. C-l'f "' Or•-· Siii• OI MtN, (.Wn!Y 01 O!"•ntt. Sllll• .. c..11. NOTICI IS 1'1EltflT GIYIH• Thi! 11111 ~Kl cf •MldtllCI It II !ollOwl: 111nll'f l.. Uotlnl, IQ1 Miit LA., (lll!onlll , ll'ld llutll'lllU l<l'P'W!I II lorlllt . Mlrlon , ll'ltttr 1191 llltf lltrtln I Hfl-'""" 11n fm W 111'1 If C.I MIWPOrt 9-11, "'ROYAL CREST COCl(fAll.. LOV NQt " lnt llul~ lfl11Jltr wm bt UllllllfM\111(1 llofl !(If .;,..,,of W1" Intl -lltlllftCI Mllf1 C..111.. • .. • °''" """"'' U, 1t7e Tnt t!ottl'ld 1ecvol!Y lflntaellon will O!'I CH' •lttr lllt U dl J 01 StPlll'tbtr, lll'O, Ill 1.l!IWI TMttmt!lft ..... 19 1"9111'-' D l'M S..ltoll'lbtr ,, lt70 <n.., I... Le<llM tit D1111111111m1tld Ofl Ill' t!ltr Ille :IOlll cit~ ti IO A.M,tl l!!lln, tl'11111 & COlllt. 2100 !ldntl Wt1vM !, '""""' to wllltlt II f Nori. &!ltrl .. II STAtf Of' CALIFO•NLA ol St!j!ftmt>ff, 1110, 11 10.00 l..M. •I Wnl T~l'11 SI , Lot Mttltt, COlll>!Y ot m111t tor turlhtr H l'll(Wltl"I, Mid 11!11 ""' J!llt Of C:t!lfot"lt. ORI.NOi COUNTY LAWNDll<LE E-SCllOW COM,.ANY, 111' Loa A!lltl!,, 5,.11 ol O llfc1nl1. llmt tlllf lit e. of !lllrlnl 1111 lllT'I hit Ofll\ll COiin~· 0.. .w.ittt IJ, 1tnl, ~tre -. I Note" 111.itft Strwfl, Loni Bt•t ll. C•IU0,1'111 In SO lit 61 '-llOWll IO Ille Trt "lftfft, 111 *'""' 111 tor S..ltmlltt If, 1910, ti t :)O °" lelll. ), it10, btfori ""' 1 Niii ,., ,.i.*lk Ill t!llf lw ttM Sttlt, Httol!llllY 1r1111nm11111. bu1lM11 n•mn tl'll •ddtfUft 111H bY 1111 ''"'" In N COlltll"Ofm ot OfP<ltlllllfll Mt. Pvbllt 11'1 Ind for Mid 51111, ..-1" -•H Sltnlfr L l.l'WIM kl'l'WI! 11 "II St "' •• lr!ICWll lo Ille '"'wrtd Pttly, Tt•tt•ltrtr IOr 1"4 '~'" , .. ,. 1111 ""· l"' ttlcl cu,,, .. 10f Cl .. k C•11llf Ori¥• ·-··"' Ell'" 1111 lll'lown te "" It Ill IO Ill !flt l"ff"torl Wl!OM Nlmt •• llllllUl!lt-111 -lntu 111m11 11'11 tddttutt wUll br ••• Wtll, 1i'1 t!>t (llY et k nt• Ant. Ctlllll'n_i.. ft>t _..,, wf11M "'"" It .UllKl'lllllf Ji! Id It !Ill w-f/llln 11111,_I tM llW DttUCll' lor "" tnrtt rNrs lttl 1111. S..mt Dlltd A11t111tl 1 .. 1110. !hi wttllln lnlt""""" 11141 tc•_.....,. Jdl"°""ltdltlll l'lt t~ 1119 Mllll. 1rt : NONI! Dll ... Alltlut1 l'I, 1'10 W, I!. IT JOttM illt to•utfld !ht ttmt, (0,,KIAL dALI Dlltd Autvlt 2'. Uni Jtllot It. SJl!brd (Ol/l!IY Ci.rt C0j1Jlil(IAI. JEA\.I JHIM! E. D.1¥b Stt\ttecl PttlY T•lntltfft Nwwflt. Hvrwtll .... ·-"""' K. Htnr"f' NOi .. , l"Wtlc<t ll .... 1'11• MIU'ttt M11ru•m1~ t lMlfl, •ITTIN & COONI •>142'1111 Stl'llf Noll"I' l"Wllc<t lllttnll fttlMINI Otrkd In LAWNDALE fSClllOW COM,1/llY Atlto111 ~ flltlilltlYltn N"'"" ltMfl, C1llfllilft l"l'lfl(lh l Dmn 1,, er.,.. C°""'IY 1m s..111 """ 21tl Wttl Til!tl "'"' T•h ""' .,,.... o, ..... Ceyftlr ~ My CtllMlltiltft lwlr .. """ ltt(h, c;t11I. ,.., L• AMII••· C..HI. MU """""'' tit •ttl"""' Mr COIMl!llllrl ILu!ttt Jvl'll n .. .,,, It'""' ,.._Ult l"llbllllltd Or11-CNrl 01lly l~t!. 1'\Jtlltdlld Or11111 Ctt1t Dt11Y Piiot, Nov. )~, lt2j "lllllltl!ld Drlntt Cotti Ot llY l"llof, • :>EaaNT CHANGE IN POPULATION, IY SJATE 1960-1970 . 1p. ..... /' ••• II.I " ..... • ,i; .,. -. -, •; '=====~~===----------'·.' •n&•l"•t1• .. n•-·-----·All ...... -·-· 22 23 24 2S 26 27 28 29 30 31 CHART SHOWS POPULATION CHANGE OVER LAST DICADE IN U.S. Nation Galnt 14.2 Percent; Only Five States Show Dtcr11u In People Kentucky 32 Oregon 42 Montana Washinil<>• 33 Colorado 43 Idaho Iowa 34 Nebraska 44 Ha wall Connecticut 3.1 Aril.ona 45 North Dakota South Carolina 36 Maine 46 New Hampshire Oklahoma 37 New Mexico 47 Delaware Kansai 38 Utah • 48 Vermont Mississippi 39 Rhode bland 49 Wyoming West Virginia 40 D.C. (estimated) so Nevada Arkansas 41 South Dakota 51 Ala!ka LA Jumps to 3rd WASHINGTON (AP) -The Census Bureau 11at releaaed thi1 Llble, llhowln( the popul1tlon 1alns and losses of lhe natlon'1 25 l&rgtst c.lUtt. Jecksonvllle, which expand· ed. its city limtll, ahowtd the laraest increase 1n the number of people while Cbicaao bad the lu1e11 loll. City New York ChJca10 Loo Angel .. PhUadelphla Detroit Houston Baltimore n.uu Wuhlnston lndlanapolia Cleveland Milwaukee San Francilco San D1e10 San Antonio -Memph!1 St. Loula New Orl!W Pi-Ir Columbus Ohio Seattle Jack80nvill1 Denver -Plttabttrllt 1'70 Celt. Prellmlaary 7,171 ,730 1,325,:tll 2,782,400 1,926,529 1,492,914 ),213 ,084 8115,222 13$,121 764,000 742,1113 738,~ 709,r.!1 704,209 175,781 llO,Jllll 113)15 820,173 807,718 585,111 580,175 533,418 521,263 513,439 612,1191 &121171 1980 Cea. 1,711,984 10,2$4 3,550,404 225,141 2.479,015 :103,!aS 1,002,511 75,Jl83 1,870,144 177,230 938,219 214 ,JM5 939,024 43.802 679,684 156,431 '163,956 471,2.11 211,!55 815,050 13'7,0M 111,321 !l,111 140,311 Sl,107 513,221 102,564 561,711 lll,470 897,197 A,9111 407,524 123,349 750,026 142,308 627,525 41,738 439,170 111,105 471,316 n ,102 557,087 32,824 20!,03<1 312,409 493,1117 11,llOI llOl,332 11,651 Per Ceat Cbnp O.l 6.1 12.Z 3.S 10.6 29.! u 23.0 55.9 JU 4.3 u 11.1 JO.S ... IU 19.0 "' 32.1 JU 5.9 155.1 3.1 15.1 lluk .,. .• I I 2 2 J 3 4 4 5 5 I 1 1 • • " • • JO :ti ll • 11 ll 13 II JI JI 15 17 JI lJ 17 .. II JO 19 IS 20 II 11 21 22 II 23 II 24 23 25 15 California Gains Most WASHINGTON (AP) -Ctllfornla Md the lupot gain tn the number of rHl<lent1 during the I11t ten yur1 but Artzont boated the Jaraest percentage Increase, the U.S. Censua Bureau reported Tueadly. The lilt of the galna and 1 ..... of 1111 1talft wu made on the bull of prellmiwJ lnlormaUon received from the 1970 cen.sus. Sl1te United State1 Alabame Alaska Arizona Ark8n48.I California Colorado Connecticut Delaware X•D.C. Fhrlda Georgia HawaU Jdaho Illinois Indiana low a Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Macyltnd MassachURtti fi.11chfgan Mlnneaotl Mlsslsaippl MlslOUri Montana Nebraska Neveda New Hampshire New Jeraey New P.falco NewYort North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Ptnnsylvanla Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Ten..,... Texas Ullh Vermont Vlrglnl1 W ashlngt<tn West Virgin!• WISCOMln "Wyoming .x-E1tlmate. 1110 Preliminary 200,...,,721 1,371,00I 114,!0'I 1,752,122 1,8811,210 19,1196,840 2,195,887 2,987,950 542,979 764,000 • 11,671,162 4,492,038 748,57} 698,275 10,973,986 5,143.122 2,'1811.8113 2,222,173 3,160,55$ 3,564,110 9'17,2'0 3,874,842 fi,ll30,124 1.171,813 3.787,975 1.156.172 1,636,241 682,133 1,468,101 481,193 721,713 7,091,115 "9,257 17,971,711 4,981 ,132 510,648 10,M2,030 2,4118,371 2,0Ml,171 11,11&3,30 1 922,481 • 1,521,Jllll 661 ,406 t,838,m 10,111,123 l,0&0.831 437,744 4,543.)41 3.352.m J,701,112 4,311,7151 "8,691 , ... Final 179,323,175 3,266,740 226,167 1,302,161 1,786,272 15,717,204 1,753,947 2,535,231 416,292 763,9511 4,951 ,560 3,943,115 532,772 667,191 J0,081 ,1~ 4,662,498 2,757,537 2,171,811 !,038,1511 3,257,022 9811,215 l,100,eatl 5,148,571 7,123,IH 3,413,!le4 2,178,141 4,319,813 674,767 1,411,330 211.171 IOl,921 8,068,712 151 ,023 18,711,3114 4,Ma,155 132,448 t,708,187 2,321,114 1,718,1117 11 ,31 9,386 859,"8 2,382,594 A0,514 !,5'7,11811 1,579,877 890,117 319,Mt 3,JJJ51.H9 1,851,114 l,ll0,111 u11,rn 330,oeG Change Number 20,916,793 106,266 68,140 419,961 99,938 3,979,838 441,940 452,716 • 96,687 1,719,602 548,922 115,Mll 31,084 8112,112S 480,924 32,356 43,562 112.399 307,2Jlll 7,965 173,953 481 ,646 953,679 354,llt 19,269 316,434 7,386 66,77 1 l!Nl,815 . 115,132 l,025,213 47,234 1,197,408 405,671 21 ,798 835,63.1 170.094 237,484 343,935 62,973 140,217 19,1118 171,688 1.409.416 170,004 17,863 171,300 499,171 156,500 41"1,9811 1.171 1960 to 1170 Pu Cent 11.7 3.3 3<1.3 3U 5.6 25.3 25.2 17.9 21.7 34 .7 13.9 16.3 u 8.9 10.3 1.2 1.0 4.0 9.4 0.8 25.0 9.4 12.2 10.4 0.9 7.3 I.I 4.0 11.9 19.t 18.9 5.0 7.1 8.9 3.1 8.8 7.3 18.3 3.0 7.3 5.9 u 7.5 IU .19.1 • 1L3 Jl.5 17.$ 8.5 10.5 0.1 • < < .. . 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WtlOM w ,, ... 20'~ AE.oclnd p!At t:260 5114 Jl '!'\lo +H<o C~Pw pll . .S2 110 59 Sf st _.,,,.. ••YOto 1,JO 1, 70\• ?O''o :Mt~\+ \lo Arrow H n ff'I• •-•<• 0 ''' ,, .. _,, r 51• ' 'l'rlin~ E 61/o '°" AG1nln1 .511 Ill 1.Thi 13\0 1 'lit. + 'It ConPw 014.JO 1100 60\lo 5911. 601'1 +1 I A&i> 1.:IO n 2~• JI'!. jl~il -Vt Arvldt 7\.lo 11':1 1;,frorcl 2,,., J\4 AGn111 plJ,IO » 21\t 2l\io 13\o -(0 (~!Alt .15o " 10\0 !Oil lO\'i ... !Horlr 1.llo I 121• 121:0 Hi -~ .. A1CC llol :Ul'lo 21V. >o> <-> > a><. AmHel!I .10 30 10"-9•1 10" + \1 Cont C•n J.. n •t '"'° "8'1:; + ?O ~!HoNek 1.60 'I II 45~· '6 +I "I' 5d 4 4"'' > -· '" -, A Home I.Ml 270 SI~} 56" Siii> +1 ~ CI C•n ot•.7S i7Sll'I 1 Ol\'I 51\lll .+1111 INN 0181.60 1''1t 191 ltVi -'Ir B• ,. "' ]'"' • ft .fl" In ... " Home pl 1 I 15\.o IJ\o &SI.. -1"' CCHll Coo .n. II ~ t t•\ INN DIA.40 s n··· 11 1;• • B•ktr lt" 141'1 I~ 8Wtll 1 fl'I Am Hoso ,7, ll2 Jl\'1 31iZ ltt. tl"" Conl CP t 2'17 :n10 ll'4 lJlO +·~'I GI Wt~I Finl J~ JI~ r.i: ~1~.:t:,~ :::..:;:int :~ :u 1n1 T.:1~'" U ~fv, MUTUAL ~:!'ICT~1 1:: i! ,;~ 1;v. ,;~ + ~ ~:..,c;~r'"~M.so ~ ~ ~tt ~·.i + ~ c;gWJ'~~~n :tt ' 19 11,,. it ... .. Oo>ln p l\\ 3llO Int SY pl' IS I•'' AM<•<••· • ' > -,. ""'~ ,,,, ! -1W1sllln 511 ' /tO 7>) 1'.I ... .. By SYLVIA PORTER a fraction -25 to 60 percent l970's recession has been). =~~:: l~ n~ I~\;~ 1t~ ,~~~ ".~ •• • •• ",",'.10 uo .,,. 6!i 1 +·v. ~::: ~,/ ~-50 ";~ li~ ~\> lj~: a G~=~~i:i' l';t 1' ll~: rs~: rst: + ~ F or Pawnbroker ' "e 1970 Th U ( .-. d •· IMdlm 21 tt 11 SoUlll 2&'~ '°"" •-, •. ,, ,, on '910 l""" l'"" + ·~Cont Ttl .to 16' 21'• 711• 11~ t '"" t";rewhol/nd 1 11 11..., 11 u -\' 1 •u -of the a uction value of the e op one. o "'"" e sperai.c ,11, 111e 11 11~ J•tobt. F ··~ s ,,··,,0'~ .••-&S ~ ' •~ +~ C:onrro1 011• 6•l 61\i lll"' 411\ Ht Groll•r .90 1! 11 22~:. 21.., + lo b usiness recess I 0 n has ~!"" !: ,.,, 1..., s 5" Ji-·in c 611 w. FUND , ,. ,,,.-, 295 S11-. 56'4 51 111 +1\4 c11011 1114.JO 11a 11~ .. ~ •1olo . Gr~mmtlCo 1 •lo u~ '"' 153, + t, a s set You Pl~•e and to g ( bo-wer •-aJW&yS •-•erely > -• ,, s m I 4 11\/o 17 l l'Vo · Con\OIOOCI I.to J ll\o lll'I J] .. + \.> Gl\LIHld .40e 92 26 24'• ~ .+ ~ lncreas., bUSlll. -·an average ... ...,. ' e ••v ...... --~ ' H• 61 43 Jim w.i ""'" ~ •m Ship .aa • 1' 11 11 +""cook vn11 JO 11 ti\<o :i.s.,,. 2111o +• .. G1 Mont.IOI 11 S.1'1 51':1 s.i~. + ~ ~ ·-ou fu ds ~»11 •· tot II" \..lb ,,.,. '°v. J1me' " '°,.. 311:. .. s""'u 1.JO , •• ,, •• ,, .. ••• .. • c ,. , o' '' ,,,_ + .. y r n , ,,.,... 1klve um 1un· 1·1·• and •· the person llllO• w ,.,. 1u Jimib'r ,.... •v. ,_,..,, ·'' a. "' ,. ,. -••n . .io 110 31 ~ :n ... 1 .. Gull r 1..so )1)4 11•0 •• .,,, Of 20 percent -and, said the .... in;, l l'd Son J] " I S\.':I "' '1 IJ'4 ~ ,,.. -1 ,_, Tit I 2 16\\ II.., 16 ... +!Jo c..11 Rel'(H ,, ••• ' ' ,. h d d nha h over your property to the 1 t bl t allord ,,. 1rlmt 3" "'j.:' F~~ '° 1'1 ~ Am s111 J 11,• ,!!.,., ,"",... ,ll, -t ~ coc-11M 1.20 n 441.1. .u '""" +\to GURe. 011 .~ 11 110.. 11'1 11'~ + .. ea or a mi -Ma tlan oc.k pawnbroker for the life Of the eas a e 0 . u1e ftlKt. H\ 27'4 "1~ IC•l::r SI ISVt 16\lo :~~f,,!i'"!f 15 17~ 11.; 17.\; ! ;z ~=/J1 i~ 1~ f~~ ~\'r ~~~ + ~ tJrn~IJ~fi.~ zl~ ~~:: nt; n~~.:.: U sbop a few days ago, "we hor-~ous 111· terest r a•·s u· 1-., , E 2~ IC•IJSt !If 11 11 . "$~r 111> n ,,.... at~ 2t , , '"' -.. , 11 ....... ,, .. _ '"Gui.Su o14M zlll ss 55 5S -I\') credit. '"""" Kt .., ... Kilver llllo 16'~ S.._..rl IA11tllor1 "·-· AmSua •'.61 I O'\ I' l''t +'iii "*" ... ., ,.., .,.., "' •>'-"""' could have increased it by 100 1 oGllM c 11"" 11 Kiii Gm l\~ l \fo NEW YCJllC !AP! 105 11111 "'if!' AT .. f' wt "J l'l(o .tt .~ t " COIGW 2·5111 1 1~~ 1= 1g~ ..:t"~ ~:R.Xnr'Ja l~ {!.,., ,. .. "'~ + •• percent if the funds were Your Joan usually will have a ways the one. who pays r,r:~~fn ll1~ ll1f: ~:!~T ~"'. ~ ;;T~ •. IPI.';~~ ~:~ fn l ~-XM, 1~ u1 .,J:, ~ u~ + \; ~=-rJ~ 1p ,,:., 1~ 11' ++Z! &::I:: ~"f, 2i U" u., ~;~ :!: ~~ available. \Ye are getUnrr 10 to a lire of a mere 30 to 180 days, them. • la~':. 5, .. , •,,. I~ ~:\::.':. in': ~ :':r... N•~\-~u lltl; j~ock,_, IS.ff 17. ~,z~"' .... ; l~~ l~ ,,~ +· ··~·. Ci>C Intl 1.79 tu 2' .. ,. ,...., + "' GvlfW au.is J sn! 51~! :1~ + ~ ·~ ·'tho gh 1· g' t t B t •· f , • ., ", , ..,, , ..... 1.60 t1s · ''' , •• ,, •• 1_ 1 ,,,_ '·"' ,, ... k ~ .. ~ •• , +'1< G11llon lltCI 12 ··"· d f I ai U you m u ge u Wn1d 1 you are ...... t """ •• 17'1 1 \a ev" E iv. •fl. nc., ''' Vt • ,.., 1.00 ii Arndt!! .too .,. ... ... •• ,,..., ... .., "" H l.:<lWi 8 ay rom peop I!: anoth M, •-llKktt 6\lt ·~· I("'' Fib 11 .. It\\ IM Drkll 11 whkll tny ll:tlll 4.CM '-.0 AMF Inc .JO 2}1 151~ 24'• 2S6' + Credltft Fin I 6 ltM. \"-l&>to + ii -~1- )00k.ing for loans of 120.000 Lo er 1111M.1ay exteMion. In des-te: but are r:agerly 11nro eo ,,. '"' ""' cu' 11/i ''" 111et1 1K11r111es 111e1 17.a. 17.57 •m11c "° , 1 37~ »n. 31,,., ! " CromolCn .IO 1f l:"' Mw l:~ +.Jt H.ctW•t ,,20 2 301, :1wt )II" t " I the y~·~ Burnuo S t lYI J• ICeYJt PC 6\'0 T\'oCOUlit ~YI bttn1vy '" '-AMP tnc 5' IO(~ .. ~, "'16' , .. c,oui.eHll!d I llJ n 11~ ll!i-\.ioHellPrt 1.609 l 21~• 11\o 11~. '• $5(1,000 for their jewelry." many parts ti rounlr)', seeking a cash Jean for a n y of c 1c Le•• '"' ••• ICl"V 1"1 S\li :r. t:11.li,1c1~11or IMMlhel J Hncadc ,;If 1.11 '""'~ corp SJ'I' ll.~,. ~~~ ~ -t ~ ~~:::o1cJJn 164 u ,...,. 11,. ... H•UIMt 1.~J 10, 31'• » JI'•+ .. though youmustredeemkour • 1•1 w5.., 2l~2J¥o tclnQ• El 4 •"4. •1 11't.f'· Jot>n1tn un 11 n•""'T'3 1.lll --.......... ~+ '"c v. 32'-,...H•mW•t '" J\~ s\o 5to +\.o The pawnbroker is not the • various purpose:s? What if you •mco M u 1J Kitt <iJ, 3"• 314 Abtrdn ~ )J ~t K1y11-Fu"no·· . :m1e ..d'D I '° 11~ ;,,. ~u. ~\~ .. "' c~f·1~,~:= "~ ll .... ]~~ JS\% !104 HllM'I PIO I n 19 1::: 11:: ·~ '• though you must redeem your have decided .a g 1 Ins t :~ 11 ~,., ll,,, ~;,•r.,ir ot ~~ 2;:; •<!,m,.'",,'" ',',""• ,,·,, ,',"', "•• ,•,M,, ,",·!? ... ,~w .. oek, "• 10 :I.Sh 2w. :nt~ + 14 cTs Cotp .40 • 111\ "~' uit + "'~•mmnc1 •10 21"' u w ,,l, .. 1oo cosUiest of all loan sources but, II I .,.. 30 to 60 d Ml ... . ... ncoro .. v "' 1s,. 1Sl\ 1~ + 04 Cu<1111v .611 l • 1CRto 10•\ le', -""' •l'lcllnln •611 91 11,. "'• he 's close lo it, almost as far co .atera WJuitn . ays borrowing from your relatives :::' M!Oe u~ ii·~ t:~e 0:~ ~~ 2~~ f"'om ,,·!~ l '•,•, ~~: 13 1~·;1 ',':,•, ""° c11~ 1.10 1 n » n .. . c1111io1n .JI 1• 1w. uv; llli ..-,,. ~·"°Ht• ·ljt .0: l:\,, 11i.. 1•• 1· i'" or Jt becomes the property of (Ir frie n ds (Ir asking your 1= f~ ~... ~~ L•n<S Rt., l'~ 114 .. ~l:/1 4:4; ~-" cui tci 1:os 1:61 ~::Coll1f Pi.i~~ '' i3i, 11·~ 11"' + !A cummln .IOll ss 21 ''"" 211'1 -1v; H:::,M 0 1 '» 11 •? 62 11 ' I\ d O'An lhe Jist as )'OU Can go. 1he p awnbroker Who can then •otcll i"' 2V. Lt~ Wd 6'• 7" AlllUITli •.51 1.11 CuJ k2 4,n 4," APL Cor• ~ ~:;; ill:: 1:~ -i: ~~~a~'t:)',,·'f ll 1:'-'J 1;1'> l;VJ = ~ t1:;~r.~n/ J .: ~J: ~~ ~:: n H e certainJy must be classed . e mployer for a salary advance .,r DeY •~1 1.1•son •."• 2 Atul•e " s.11 s.11 ~u• 11 11.n 11.19 ARA sv~ i.i» JJ '19\l 95\.'r .,..., t3V. Cuti•• H 1.10 12 '»Ill ~ 11.l'~ + v, Pirice co 1 50 16~. uv, u,,. ... as a .source of last resort for offer it for sale. -and instead are looking for E:~:: ~~ l~~ iiil t:;rvi ~ ~!t !;~ ~U,t.T. ,:t: 1:li ~~! .J !:U ::1& ~~~l:~ ;l°! '•' iJ"-~ ¥.., +f"* ~:~:'F 1i~ 3i ~ M ~ · +~ ~:~a~~~ 1:~ 1~ ~ll; ~!\·, ~l·~-: '~ th di! t bo A GOOD remedial Joan a n impersonal ou t sid e 1:~1 ~!'. ~:~ ~nt:rsu;~J I~"• ,i~:~:o"d ;.-,1 :'g·s1 p~r.r54 j:lf tn~~f:ps~~"i.~ ,: r.\! r,~ r~.:.:·~ -D-~:~:~.n~lb I 1'i'J3~~ l~~: 1i~+.~~ e spcra e rrower. society is much to b e . creditor ' What might be the en11~ , 't'" 15,,.. Lt*11 eF 13''• 1•·~ ~~ ~fn i·tt 1~ A~ :~~tb Gt •.tt '·" ,., •• "'as .10 11 PO l'I ra ! \'I 01n111wr .1s11 1s ,._ 1v, 2'1i + v. HCA•rio .10r:i 1 "'' 4\• '"' FOR YOU'LL pay a n annual -en VP 1 \0 1 Linc Mlfl 1•1 •'• ,...,. E · · 1 c 1.1, 1.9' ••n"ICoS• 1 . .0 l.sJ ~ 10 7f'Ai v. g•n• CP 1.2J 21 2:1v. 22\s 1l ...•. ~tt11Mn ,llr 3J 27'1• ''""' '7 -+ •• Interest r ate. runn'·ng from 8 preferred to an ordinary sources (or cash for you' 111rni. "' 2~• Lobi.w e"1 '"' c.~n .ocor'.11r,' '" e~ ,Grih '·" 1.01 Armco p11.10 n 11 ""' ?61\ v. 1r11n11 .'.!Ob 210 32~0 12 +2v. einz HJ .n 211 35 :i.o :i.o·~ ~ h • Clllrl 0 !l't t l'o lotl C<IY 2 2\\ I •'t 1.IS •• ICfl IJ,'41114Armo\lr 1.6CI l :WV. :WV. 3'1\1•-""'0trllflll 1112 ~I JN )6'\(o J l'olo +lllo 1le1111 •Curl 2.l II• 1111 l\o +:i.,. m '·ni·mum ai•eragc of 3 6 pawnbroker; but t ere are LI F E I NS U R A N e E !',m \"'" •,~ •,~, Lou E1tn i o•4 1n , !~~"'1 ,-1J •51 P,", "•Y .i.CM s:" Arm"ct .IO •as '""" 7.S'4 U!'I -v. 0111 P•oc•u "' l?~ 12 ,, + ~ Hell.,. int .60 1•2 19~ n·~ 19', +'• f ood d •• ... LYnth c 16l~l7'• ~ iJS .... Ill '·"' 5.01•rmRuD 1.60 21 U V. 71 11\.:1 -llo O•~coCp 11, 4 11 U'AI lS'lll Hell••1>U 07 J •s ..... _.,, ·1 '" tt onlya ewg ones, an you POUCV: H ow much you can hn, •"•"•' U ""a'1>M1d GEi n •.11i.. s~~ 1·11 1·4j1.1,1• Inv •.01 .. ,, .. roco•P ."> ? 14t'o 1""" 1#\I~o.vco ~11.:u •"' 5tVl l!V. s111o +"v.He1~Po1' 1 10 1ru """ ui•-+"• percent to eas1 y .,.. percen o t 'll t 1 d t • 11 • Mi/ Rny 51• s1 .,'" E tY , 11 1· L M N•r un•••ll •rvln 1rw1 • s 1•·~ 1"-• i•11o ><1 OtvtnHllCI JO •l :U\.'O .,., 26•.i. +.,. H<-tmr11P .20 10 111o 11 11·~ -·~ m uch, much m ore. ~ i . m~ f.r' g; ~o~ asse borrow will depend on the ~~\!~ ~ 1~ ,~ ~:!,"A 6:.,. 'f~: :"' f~th fl, ~·1' t!:..11 S.y~~! J.•1 ~!".: ~.~io ,~! 21~ 1r' ~ it g;rn:il flt ,U !t~ n~: !-:~+·lot ~:::::~ -~;: :~ :.,.. I~ : .. :.: '• You'll be.able to borrow only urtng e I~ O e oa~ -c ash value of your policy, but i\r,e11:...1~ 1g;? 1 f,:~ •nln ,;. l'• 3,: A~ ,;~ 1.11 1:n C•n.d 11.~ Jl.61 AM CG 1.2a 7' lOV. 3S :i.1', +1\io Df'L p10 1," 1JO p\li .,,,.. 1t\1 ..... Herc 1...: .1Se 150 :M 1~·~ J~'" -'·• an asset which y o u might your interest rate will be only !IU~ ~: ~Rt J:~ :=~M~ ,t;? 1t14 :;:;,~ c·~.~:? ... ~·,r ,r;1J ,t~ :~~~';;' .~:' i? 2:.~ 21~ 21~ t :! F:t~.7"-0 1.12 1U ff~ ~f4 i'J'"' +1"" =~:.~ ~~~ 2f1 Y\t y,., ~ ! :~ • badly need. 5Lolipercentayearandyou ltvlnMI lJ'<U>to Ma•m Gr t\.t '" Ceo11 6.11 7.41..,Lu111l!ro10 . .ssn.s.•1111on11n<1 20 u >.:o """ 1411:t-Vo0tt Mn111.10 J1 26 J• 2• -\\11ewP•c-.20 lSI JS\~ 26\~ J•'{o -•, f . ""' Ml "'~' tlJo M B•DWt' 21 " Grwth t.1110.n Ill '" '·'' •. AllCIYEI 1.l4 I 20\lo 701/:t 20\lo -\;i Dell• All SG :Ml acl'.4 2'\'e 19'111 i ~~ Hltlh Voll••• Ill •I• ..... •V. -+"" 1,00l'l 0,. OIL PAINTINGS [ It's always this way when a can fLI your o-r epayment !•••on ,.,, H\ M1u1 LP "" 10 1ncrne 1.1 ,,., M•""'" 4.11 4.n •11CE1 p15.11 • 11\~ IOI' 1111o + ~ o.nec /nt 11 • ~-. 1 'It H1flonH0111 1 221 l511o :u ll.,. +•~ .. W .'Hou'. . ( h .. ,. Clln1 Mtt l'l 9\lo MIYer 0 11111 11 Fd lnV 7,5' l .H N\fu FD 9.S"l )0.'1 All ll:kllllO 2 l ll 5'"1 51111 Sll'I + ill OtlMI MI .60 51 171Ji 11 17\'I I'll Ho.rnW&I .fO lt 20tt '°"' :!0~1 t » WHOLESA A person IS desper ate o r cas -terms. i····-0 ··-'"· .,.... -,, Vtftt JI.II .o.n Nltn ~·ti f.Ol •. AllRCl'O pll,15 l2\IO .. .. .. t l OtftnMfq pl I I 11 11 11 -"' Hoff Elec:ltn .. ,.~ I ,., , 0 ' •• u.Llc -· " ""' '"v " ...... 1. ,, ~ I ll N\f '' • ,,_ • > ' -'' .. ' ,.,,,,,, ... ..J I IV. I + V. u•-•oo .n "> ,-, ,..,L -.... • orEN T H either because of financial FULL sERVICE COMMER-=· c8 1~h 1l11o ~1c:M~ 1i:,; ,:~ •uoci. 1 •• t~ Mar!. • ffj 1~:11 .. :11Rch",.,,.., •1 ;f.t, 1..i~ .. ,. -.-i. °"''"'1r1n1 1 1' 2P~ 22"' ~ + ~. H111~~ 1.10t1 ""! ,;\,, ,;;;4;;'~ +1 $5 he •• d h " Coe1•• t:. so §3 Me0!r1'0 ]J ])\ AllfCHI 39'! •-21Mllt..rs •Jl. A!lo1c11 .... 1 :no l,... ,,..,, JJ>or.+•40enllGr 1.1a '11\\ u:;. llV.-V. Hol1v5ll<I 1.10 12 !Mt""" 1••·+•'t _.. errors WIS ma eon IS own ClAL BANK : You'll be able Colf<TI E 1 J''> Me•lli in u 1.,.: ••• H-i.ICH1: Mt•kl Fd 11:1, u :13 Au11 Cor1t ln 21,; '"" 11' + 1• O.roco 111 a 1 :i. » J1 H<imtt11,. ·'° ., 1•l• nl'I n11. -.. bee h • •ct• f Callln1 F f f\I Mldlcl C 6"11 6\0 Flll'IO A f.1• J.U MklA M41 6 61 S 119 ATO l"'C 1111 4 1'" 7lo. 1\lt -t V. OeSolOl"'C ... 1• 11 16'4 11 i' lot M-l'Wt l.» 244 11"1 M 11>1 ... 11'> Sneak Previetv Your Worth Pawnbroker's Business Up 1,lt •• EDINGl!ll. SANTA ANA or . ause e lS a y1 un 0 a to get a penonal loan ninning !°'CHI !Ir 2• " Ml.Ste~ • ?\~ 16' .L'r'"Cll !·~~ ::: MOD!S•, Co 10: .. 11:00 AIH'O*I ,.;OCI ' .... ..... ''" 0o1 E.S!1 1.40 n• 11 11~ 11 ..... HOO\' Bl 1.20 ,, 21\:o ,,..,, ?JV, -I~ 'NONI ·~ deliberately e ft g In e e re d into thous.ands (If dollars for :::C'~1r 3J.~ ~1..1 Mldw GT 16~ 11Vo ll•ttson 1:00 ,.Gii ~F~ 1J"tf 1i·!! :u'°'t'" ~ 1! 1,S:: 1fi! ,f;: +·~ ~: \~et'ill.>O ,: ~;~ 7,~~ {~ !"'ii, = 1r..::i ·~ lg ro:: l:t 1'0:: + (: !~~~~·~ ... ~,~·~·~·~w~·~-~T~·~·~~~~,,.~~~~-~~g~~·~~~~~~~~ G 11~ IJ'Vi. Mpll Gal ~tilt! Be•con I 'l 1 Al MIF G . . ... ""° 0 . d l6\'o 3014 ~ t \l; ~le• .2• ., 1~ """ 1,.,,, VI HOUll Ml" '° ' lSV. IS\lo 11•1 ... •i economic me sue aJ one to three years at an an· ~-T;1• 11 2114 Miu VIG ""' uu. a1ro ICnt 1·,,. 1.:u Muus g' toti ..n. :wco ~.JO s> _,,. Jat\ ,. i ,, 11F1111n .'II 2 11 l O'olo 11 11o l'louwllF i'10 111 ,. JI\~ 11u + •• I · t t of 5 om Hllfl 5~ 6'' MO lll(PI ,._ J a .. t <iri> 4 f f J.IO M Om<l IO.JO V.o' .'XI l&S 'i 7\', I \I Ol•m1ntl 1.110 4J 31"'-3114 31'-" -'II "lousF pl4 °-o 21 llR lllUi 1 15>~ +214 nua 1neres rate JI. tol3.5 om p111 71~, Mocl Sci • •'lot!::.cnl'.s ~n•••,\!M~Orrtr :·:f'·'°:vMT i:ii;' 1 41 41 11 s 011mS111""1 .. ,,,,, l""" 16l'oi~HolltF ..nso .1 u1;. 41\~ 11.,, I NEED 2 MEN percent. lf you have the credit c!~ ,• •, •,1.1 .:=:""',.,, 1~~! 1;;. aos1.,:~ st 11.1~ l~ "•"• "', .!' u:u 1;:: .. ~;:; 1t1 1 10 t u v. 1,,.., 1''" "~11sn 111 q ' u v. r.v. Hv. ~ Hw11' 1>12 31 r sa1<1o st !.ii'' + ,,. · I • b I I to ,,_ , • ,,. , "onm P> '' 12 80ll Fon .o$-11G 11 •II I.II 1.11 AvonPd 1. 2n 6t!O '*~ 6f IV. 111. pf Ol .. O 11 11 """ 14~~ HOU1!LP 110 IJ 4U~ •IV. 6l•, -~. r ating, l S an I SO Ute Y p. ::: l{'; 3" l\~ Moor, p 9~~ t\~ 80llDl'l 1,41 1·1 NEA Mir! l.U 1.IO Azloc CH .7>1 2J IW. 12 11\:o \.lo 1'1:~ .. : !i = 1'a.io ill: 2~ :::SJ~G:n ~ 21 41~';._ "..;:°t. ':;~ .. .._ :% C•r WOMEN) notchsour-On'lr"1 1 jl'IM-• s IC-~111'>Brold 51 11.°'l .llt!•I tl!d l .'1 .... -&.-. l~lorg!o ,.., :II l:r.I 1;v. liiii 'N"fQwJohn ,, 12 16'" 16 16••+•L -· !Oil riock JS'~ 2 Mtoe TrA ln<I ll'lo llullo<~ C•lvln· "ti l"Yll 1.7' .... •llll l'lh 11,,., lA\ + l!'I ool:!!!lllm •.• , 15 IJ'4 1 llio ll l\ot How-I ,10 » l~Y, 141.'o 1''~ + {~ PASSBOOK LOAN: You'll on:t!cl {~ ' MtoT• wl •. '\It. ,~~~ li:l: l::n NY.1~"' ,1fJo •• ::~11~ ·~ .... ''-n ,,u~_,1 ....... 0 111on l! .'4 l it'" if'" lf"' :.::: ~~~.d. •,·'2.-~ •• !!,~ ,", ... .?:!:',• -. ~·. e WM hnl' NASD u ..... e W•.,t• worll: Olld ...... • Hot• 111cceuf11I ractird e ,1,,. w\111"' to loor11 Hd "' .. , lftOct.n tooh Mid '"'" .. 9 to lo per-·t lo borrow CHI''". '"' '''" Motch M S•'o I 'Oivlli J.M l.'6 a-4 61 s'• B•IT <iE 1.11 """ ~· .. •• ' -·-·-· ':l:Z ..... ,.. .•• '". 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'' ' •>> C , intact a nd will conbnue to ,_, -~ -JO N1rrau c 11', 11v, C1011 Inv 2.IO l·o Mei •••• ,·,, ,., .. , Bt'1k ot NY l 1J •7 u;i 47 v. .,..,,,, ·"" " "' -·• -en ° J i.o 31 •1'0 4 '" 41\t + ~ ......... ·w1•-~ I"·"' c 11511 541" . '. '' >U ''' .... '' • .,,_ ... DomFncl .fte 31 '"•I\\ 1 ... -...... U Powet? so :16'41 36 3M\+\\ The F inest In Pipes, Tobaccos And Gift• SOUTH COAST !'LAZA Lo-L*"' BOB HARBISON 645-2111 • t I to 'II rY•tll It IV. 4lo • ""' "'··'tc•P 5 ' '"10·,,N!uw Ctl JI' 411 tn r · .. ;!, .. ,,,. ~·•+>•~"'11,., « 1013 l~ 1!'4 lS~\-\i, !II Pw ~!Jo• rl'OO 26 26 ,~ earn1n cres,soyour anw1 cwa<e1C 1 1..,N11c1r1t •'~ 9~ ent 1 ~rF . · NfY ... Fc1 u ·1011•10 a1rbOll1.S1! -, iiil ,,·;; Ji\::1'1'" •ltCP 32 '14•1 14\" 16\'o-Vl lmocoAr.. 231 0 ,,.12•i. uv. ... ......,1 very little ne t O•~• Lb• '~• 1"" NCme. C• 1''4 1$0 Ch.:'ni" na 1~~·j1 13 New w1.s n ·2111'u Bird Cll .1S , ,,.. , 1,~ n•~ \'• rr OllY•~ 1 •<'• '"'-..,. ..... INA c11 1 40 201 n·~ 2,,.. 111 + •i .... ., . 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BIUKllUI "° 2J 37"' :16 rr +• 0 ol1°M ll l5 S:J\9 lS !' .. .. comparatively large, might fb 1: 2~~ 2!11o t'!•,', ""•··' •,, .. •,~ '~:;-11 Gr 11?.\i. s.1t loo F~ 1~J~ .~:;: :::~l~,D 1:1a •11, ~" ?~~ ?~?~++!. o~:lt~ pf i12 u JlA\ ~ JIVI 1'\lt :;:::~111:~;,:. ·;<' 5~ ;;;~ ~~ .. ~;;: :i vf I ,.. 7~' "' • ..,w " , Fu..O ~·r" I 101 Fd I •J t 11 .... ---OreYIUt 'r 1 l• lf ..... lt\~ ll'Vo .... ll'IQll.S 1112 l S • ll'• l• :141~ + lo) nin ooe lo three years, but it 8:~~ l~ tl S'l ~~El s~er 1; •. ,:~~ Frnl '3.:ri '6.li One WmS u :.111:11 t:~:i~~ 1. .. n 30uU .. lli': .. if~ t ~ &:~:~w.,,.·fg ~ ~\.!" lo' ..... u~ ~·v. ~~~I S~1~D7 1g~ ':. ':" '~~ .... will cost 30 to 36 percent a §'::' T;~T 1:a l~~ ~t nNllG 16"~ 111'< r~'1 tj~ 1':if O::::!t. 1l:ff 1~:~ =~o~~k ·rSb "'3~1'~ l1Yl36'"t ~ ~ ~=r.~~~.10 ,:J th': # mt t :t l~I~ nf~lb'S 5; ~. :::i :;;~ ~,:: N"' TM M.., Co. Phone: 540-8262 l13t '·"'" T.,.,,, T'"""" •rl. 11 Jll-42tl Ill WHl!llUb Year Of course small loan Am IOVi 10'4 N~~ ...... F ~""' ll ~.emr1-lS s 11·' Opp. c ~~~ '·" •.'l 8•1co Pd :so Jl'I 1 ... 11\• 1~ tU• PCHll ].7!.t J.lol 125h 12S 1H -v;, IMP(• COD •• 01 41'' -,,,, •••• • ' IY I!' •'• 5'111.,, ,, ,, Oll l . OTC~ t .lt9.'IO•"·o>•• > •• >• >• ,. • >••-, • .,,, '''" •••+" .., .,. .,. comruinies accept Jower credit 11m cr l •v. 15 .. ,,'",~. ", •• ",,• E~!" 3, "•• ·!·~, •,K• Fl!d '·"' 1.s.i 11.id',..,H ·"".ob ~ •• ou~CHI "'" -... "' -.,, ... 1n1•'co 1.10 ' 79ito 111.1 l'»t i • ~· g1c ''"' 6 ,,. ..... .,., • Fu.... . 1 IUI R!Y I.SO 1,lO lltll Ho*·.., 11&2 317 3:!. .... 1:wt~·++~w..:or: ri50 ~ i?~ ff~ N ... -...... ,.,•Mrfk!nc ... ~ .•,,·,t.~,'.' . .!~.J~!~ .. ~ , •r HM r..-8•• m. Cnl1 M-risks tha n banks. Iver CM l" i;:"•' !'!',", •0•,, ",:' 1~,.. ""', •• .!! ,s.~ ,, •• 1 ~enn Sq 1.2• '7.1• Bell lntercOn • ,., > o '' --11 f • · ·~"" "'' ·~ .... .S L 6'-Ni>A Gl5 11 11 vlAI 4 i>hll l · •• ,. 2 11\lo 11•.~ 111~ + ,_ Ouqll lpl l 10> 2'6'4 UV! ~ \~ ln!~llF• ~ 11 :Sit Sf:l~ 55'4 +l l'o Eu.II Jl.t •" u o -. ,;~" ,·,-, .,, ~• Myl l,,, l II,_,, Co < 2 ... -'\ Oo l,2'0Dl2.IO 1100 ..,... 'I~! Ch Nuc:I• 131 J11', 36' .. JI + \, IA f7 NW N11G ••• ·~ 1°' G1tl'I 10:.it 10'." I • 1.11 13.]• Bt..OI• J.IO 12 ,~ ,,~. 11.\o. + v. Oq J.nott.11 t:220 26'/o 2• 2•!4 'l>io fnl H~rv i IO 7'5 '~·· , .... , ..... + ·~ • ',~ u,~. "," -,._, •,u~!" ','~ 11,:~ -.,1 .... ..•M, '•'.•'•' ~.l~lmst '·S:.,,··~~ a,!!!!',•,,," •. ~ 9 .fQ>., 40 40\o t ·~ O~mo Ill([ ' 11 Ml4t II v. lnn~n•d 1.U. J Uh ,,., 11·• + '• ·LAKEWOOD FAMILY VILLAGE, LTD. offering .. ~-IO-IJlllCSI So. can1. ooll<krfdo..loP,..1n thoir ,_$1,250,ooo, 82<mlt family..,..,_ dentopment in Lok-. Calif. •., I llmlted ps111eni>ip b lonned ID- $2, 125.00 per unit••· .. minlnun ~:two ,,,.. ... assurance .• °""'-' Kalnqh and Bun! we maining 40% pank:Jpation in the limited pWt:IMf. ship ••• Mes:srs. Kavan&U£111rd Bad will abo • .. , expenses for fonnation of the limited pnns- lhip W1d arty costs chargeable to tn.itill sates of part· nenhlp shns. This adwtrtisement is neither an otter to buy or 81 these securities. The offlf is made onty by lhe PrOlper;tus.tnd restrict~ IOlely io bona fide California resldertu. Return Coupon Now, fot Fr11 ~os:pectus ------------------------------~-------KIYSl~/Elt•d Dt'ltlopmtnl Co.. 3911 Blrdl s1 .. 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FrH:ptSUI ID 1M Hi. l !S•1 +-.. •-"• Ww1n ,,mmu s o SC U1CU MIN! 111M1i.r,w.111nt1" G•Ovo;' c,..:ii'illO 117 .. ~ ;e;; .w."-i :"•vtl'IC' 1:,0 "'1,., ''"I"' c ........ ~ ~-b-c11v11t1n11. '-E11"41• d e p1trlure. is:'i:'1=1n1 ·rt.-~11~ ~~r ~:·,.~!::Jg:•fr.:•n rr 1)0 ,.., ,_ 7'\t. 1' F11q1111n .JOI lm lllll t i. 0\1+1"c.""' •not w111 In rllll. a.41-li•411tTlo Air California ~ratt1 1 II ?: 1:it !:ft 'f:::1 ~·\\ ,.,, ·~,.': T.111 , i~ 1t~ ':14 ''~ ;: -G-t111t1D11. w-E• '''""· .-w1tn1u1 w1,. n t ( Boe. 737 s . mo Cto 03 I ,,,,, . l'ltftlt!tl)ll 12 ,.,. 11''1 '"' 111 GAC CP '50 Hi ,Jlt n'· lo''·) + '• 'I""' --wltll .,,tl"•f'm. wo-Whtol ee o 1"1t un1e ts '"" 0111 -~ . :l."11 1:-:,r·Jl r"'"""v 1"41 111 ,11~ ~~ -:~-1'1 &:~c;.~10•& t:, :,1~ 114 . d11tr111iut"". w1-W11t11 IMlll'IL 116-lff.tl serving San FrAM:isco, San ~~a .,,9 f·H" wi:.C:.~ 1:so •'.1;'~1::"V. ,.: • '" 211, 211,t··;, G1111~~0 1.• ~· "11• .. +• 1,1.,o.1tvt"'.•l-l11btln1crutr1C'fwnc11 ... Jo-O•kland 0 t 1 r . n11urv ~ 1 Wt11 '1d w.,.v. 1 !"" Ott!o ' 1oe o ,i.._ •t•• ~ 1•m5 111'1.1' J '''' !\',', u,~ h '"""'P °' 111.i-, ___ ,_. -"" -"'"'· ' n I 0' N fG~ ' I; =·~ 111111~ "'t'fl>wt I 't ~l.i 31~ >t'* ~ .... i. ,11.f/l 1 ,,,~ u;· ., .. --.... n .... Orlngt O>utllY A Ir p 0 rt ' : ~~ 11: I, ·U :11111~ :• ~!: lJ: ~t~r'Appn 11 ,:! ' 'Ill =!~ :~~~n·flo u ~: i1:: n~ i~:: ::::i: ~~e:r."~="'Mi.;U: Dtsn~yland aDd Palm Springs. :v.:'1":. 1~.~~ 1 .u ::"'1 c1 ~~ 1.21 c~l~r!uV' ,'' -it ~'il ii:, ~\t t ~ 1.':11:f..,·':31!d 1'1 1 ~;-. ii,~ •" r 1t•nttm1 .-11111u11t11 1111. Sy111bob Air 'Cal Market Increase Announced --------------~-------··---- • "'"""" ' 1970 OAILV PILOT Thursday's Oosilig Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List -American Stock Exchange List Finance Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) -n.. cOst of cans, bottles and j1ra Is going higher thJs fall, adding millions .QC doUan to the overhead of food and beverage companies lbat u. U:lem. Aluminum CO. o f America and Reynolds Metals Co. have scheduled prla Increases on a I u m I n u ra cannnlng ahett for Oct. I, thl same date I.he atecl eompanltt boost prfcn on tinplate an4 tin-Cree ltt:t:I for maktna cans. Two Wet ks later, Qwen., lllinols. Inc. boosts prices on glass containers a.cl"OSI the. board by four to si. per«nl ' I JI DAIL V PILOT F'rldlJ', Stpttm.btl' 4. 197Q • ;,,: Stage Set for Angels-Twins Showdown Serie S; U the California Angela were looking for I lift to itl them in tbf: proper frame ol mind for the ~1lnnesota Twins, Tom Bradley dellvtred the goods. He alto delivered a seven-hit shutout and a 1:-0 vl~tory over tht Kansas City Royala Thursday night, moving the Angels lo within three games of the Twin.I in1 1 the American League West and setUng the stage for a three-game con- rrontatlon with Minnesota, beginning lonl8hl. California will send left-hander Rudy t.fay, 6-11, against l~year-ol.d rookle Bert Blyleven, who atttnded nearby Santtaao High School in Carden Grove. "The flr&t game Is the big one," Aqel second baseman Sandy Alomar said, moments after Bradley hurled his first m·ajor league complete game and shutout. Bradley, in only his second sealOn of pro ball, was given a run in the .second inning and n1ade It stand up, surviving taut moments in the second, third and fifth lnnings. He struck out eight ind walked only one and admiued to fetlini Lbe pressure. ••t got nervOUI around 1 o'clock when l began to think about the game and what It meant, 11 be aald. H1a nervousness was ·not apparent on Angel Slate AH .--'™'C cnt) Sttt. • Anttlt VI MlflllnOI•, 7:SS J .m. '-t. J An"ll VI MINW.ot•· ''" J .m. S.,1. 6 A1'111l1 VI MlllMMll U :S.I J .m. the mound. With runners at 1econd and third and two out in Ute second Inning, he .struck out rival pitcher Jim Rooker, who allowed bul four hlls but lost hJJ 15th Tricky First Turn Concerns Ontario Field • Ill Drivers LAVER STONES OPPONENT -Allan Stone, third-ranking Austral· iao amateur player, slips to his knee chasing a hard smash by toir seeded Rod Laver of Corona del Mar during action at Forest Hills in the U.S. Open tennis championships Thursday. Laver, the defend· ing champion and generally recognized as the best terutis player in the woI1d. won ~. 6-2, 6-1, 6-2. u.s. Open Ptar Laver,. Roche, Ashe Shake Off Slow Start FOREST IITLLS. N.V. (AP) - Australia 's two lefl-handed court killers, Rod Laver and Tony Roche, and Amerlca·s Arthur Ashe, Jr .. all had to shake off first set patchiness Thunday for victories that sent them into the th ird round of the U.S. Open Tennis Cham· pionships. The only result resembling an upset in :t long day of men·~ and women's singles at the Y.'est Side Tennis Club was the defeat of trigger-tempered Bob Hewitt of South Africa at the hands of Bill Bowrey, former Australlan Davis Cup player, 5-7, 4-6. 6-3, 6-2, 6-4. Hewitt \\'as seeded 20th. Hewitt is an ex-Australian who migrated to South Afrit'a where he became a member of that country's Davis Cup squad. His tantrums are legend on five continents. ....... sophomore from Lookout Mountain, Tenn. AShe won 6-7, 6-4, 6-3, 8-4. "I wasn't ter1.9e playing on the center court-[ decided I had everything to vo'in, so I just went out and belted the ball,'' said young Tanner, the nation's No. I ranked junior. ''Tanner is a fine player. he has a great future," acknowledged Ashe. Ashe said he did not like the nine-point sudden death playoff, adopted in the tournament this year to avoid long dous- ed sets. The tie break goes into effect when the score reaches 6-6. "I blew my chance \\'hen 1 lost my service in the ninth game of the second !t't," said Tanner. "I'm not accustomed to playing anyone \\'ho can return the ball so low. I missed two key volleys." Son of an attorney , the well-built Tan· ner is a left-hander with a Jot of po\\·er and poise. He is the national amateur clay court champion. Front-n1nners Going to Have Trouble-· Pollard ONTARIO (AP) -Art Pollard, who starts in the back row of Sunday'• Calilornla 500 field, says be may actually have an advantage over the other driver• in the $727,000 race. "The front-ru nners are going to have trouble getting through that first turn. 1 promise you, it's going to be wild. l 'm glad I'm back in ibe rear where I can 't\'atch the fun for awhile." Pollard, at 43 the dean of the re&Jlar USAC championship driving corps, was talking about the tricky first turn at the new $25.5-mllllon Ontario M o t o r Speedway, where 33 drivers will compete in the second richest race in history. The narrow turn has caused more con- cern among the drivers during two weeks of practice and qualifying than any other spot on the course. 'Ibe rtason is that the elevation in the tum drops from nine degrees on the track itseU, to about four degrees on the apron. Drivers traditionally try to cheat a bit, particularly in a similar corner at In· dianapolis, and get below the white line that marks the line through the turn. At Ontario, the line marks the change in elevation, causing a driver to have to pull his car back up the incUne when he gets below the line. "To keep from being forced down into that apron," Pollard •aid, "a Jot of guys are going to have to learn a new groove around the turns. "If they don't stay wide there will be big trouble. That's why we are going to emphasize staying high when we have our drlvers' meeting S a t u r d a y • Everybody is going to have to use bis head instead of bis foot in that turn, or there will be disaster." A, J. Foyt, three-time Indianapolis winner' also has been critical of the nrst turn. "A driver is inviting a ticket to disaster if he tries to go low in that tum with . someone running on the outside of him," the 3S-year-0ld all-time USAC money winner said. Meantime, speedway president Dave B. Lockton said Sunday's wiMer should col- lect a minimum of $160,000 from the purse made up of $500,000 in track guarantees, $175,500 In accessory awards and $51,500 in lap money. He also said only a handful of reserved seat tickets remain unsold and forec1st a gross gate for the race of $3 million. Cales will be opened at 6 a.m. Sunday for those wishing to watch the race from the ln!!eld. Lockton would not say how many people would be allowed lnto the Mfield at $5 ea ch, but estimates indicate the number would not be more than 30.000. Thirty-two of the 33 drivers took final carburetion or practice runs Thursday. One of them, Gordon Johncock or Mt. Pleasant, f\.lich., lost control of his !\tcLaren-Offy in the th ird tum and col- lided with the wall. The right front suspension was smashed, but will be repaired before race time. Gary Bettenhausen, who will start the race In the second row. blew the engine in hls Gerhardt-Offy. And a member of Swede Savage's pit crew, John Dobesh, 23, '.lf nearby Santa Ana was treated for an ankle sprain when ttls car struck him in the pits. There was no actlvity at the track to- day. A drivers' meeting is scheduled Saturday morning. 1ame o! the year. In the third, Tom Mal<:hlck singled and one out later Tony Gonzale• was obliged to race into deep rlght~enter to spear Amoa Olis' bid for an extra bue hit. ' "That was the big play," said Angel manager Lefty Phillips. In the fifth lnnlng, Cookie Rojas led off with a triple but ~adley replied to the challenge by getting Rooker on a srounder to third, Matchick on a tapper lo the box and •lrlklnl oul George SprJgs. Bradley wu &IVtn hls only run In the MCOnd when llnJla by Alu Jcbmon Ind Tommy Reynoldl put n.mner1 at aecond and third and allowed Jim Spencer's lfOOnd ball oul to pt Johnson horn<. "l'm glad I 1ot a chance to help the ~am," Bradley sald, pgliahing the bom- rbnmed glasst1 whkh make him appeer more like the teholar he is than an athlete. "I never dreamed that I would be in- volved in a pennant race bot even 1n two year• ln this 1ame l've learned never to be alllJ>l'lsed at wblt happens." KANS.U CITY CALlllORNIA ,,, .. ..a .. ,.,., Mtfetll(.11. .. ' I 1 I Aklnlft, 1l I t ~·Ii S1N'lff•1 tf t I t o 0...11ltl, d I I ~!..ifo' Otl•1 <1 I I) I Fr990tl, N II J'lf 'i, l'll\ll lle, N t I t t A.J-. If J .l !' Klt11'9fflct, C I t I t Mc.MU!ltn1 :Ill I I I 11.,0ltv.r, It • t 1 t l.fYNllCl1, rt l I 1 t S.rtell, 3CI J o o I llt1111•. rl t I t O lttltt. 2• J t t t ai-c.,., ll ~ : : ~ ll .... tr,I' JOOIAlc",c OOO lrl41rf, II 1 Tt!tlt ~ I 1 0 Tllltl1 11 1 l •t K111111 Cltr 000 000 000 -0 · ' , Ctllfomlf, 010 ODO 00• -1 OJI -Cttl .. ,,,lt 1, LOI -Kan.-t City 1,· Ctllfomlt •. JI -Rol••· 5 -l rtdltt , , · 11" M ll •ll II SO . ltool! ... ll...&-lfl I ' I 1 I J llttdlty (W,)-2) t 1 0 I l I w,. -lrNl•'f, Time -2:11. Attt'!IClll~ - ,,NO. UPI T11Blltft Chicago Cubs outfielder Billy Williams (right) Is cheered by fans as he walks to the dugout for a radio intervie\v after sitting out a game with the Philadelphia Phillies Thursday. Williams ended a string of 1,117 games, the third longest number of consecutive games in major Jeague history. He was,~ purposely held out of the game for a rest since he ,, .. already bold1 the National League record. The Cubs.: · won, 7·2. .-,r ,. Sports In Brief Vault Mark Set (17-11); P.ulf ord Goes to Kings TURIN, llaly -Wolfgang Nordwig or East Germany climaxed the World University Games Thursday by clearing 17 fttt, 11 inches for a world record in the greatest pole vault com- petition of all time. lt was the second world record of the-day. Heide IRosendhal of West Germany jumped 22 feet, 5~·. inches in the final or the women's long jump for a v;orld record. Nordwlg broke his own record of 17 feet, 101A inches, whiCh ht had set earlier this year. Chris Papanlcolau or Greece cleared 17-9V.. for second place and a Greek record. • LOS ANGELES -Larry R<gan, manager or the Los Angeles Kings hockey team, calls 34-year-0ld veteran left wing-eenter Bob Pulford "the kind of player we've been dreaming or getting and not feeling too optimistic about our chances." The Kings have him today, thanks to a lengthy deal announced Thursday by the team's owner, Jack Kent Cooke, Pulford was traded to the Kings by the Toronto f\faple Leafs, who receive wingers Gary Monahan and Brian ?durphy, The ll-year veteran, however, is ob- viously the key man . Toronto general manager Stafford Smythe once promised Cooke a shot at Pulford aod when Smythe got around to talking about it again. Cooke persisted that he had made a pro- mise. • SYRACUSE, N.Y. -Jim Brown in- dicated today that Syracuse's football team could run into more opposition off the field than on It this aeason If no com- promise Is found to get eight suspended black players back on tlk squad. Squaring off aaainst Ben Schwarlzwalder, his !onner collep coach, Brown quickly thrust himself into the center of the controversy by reemphasizing earlier charges of racial dLscrirnlnaUon against the •th let i c deparbnent. Returning to the place whert he first gained foot.ball fame the former National Football League at.ar thrust himself into the controversy by saying t b e suspensions and allepd diacrlmlnaUon at Syracuse would be preaented to the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Assoclatlon for investigation. • CHICAGO -Fonner all-star serond bueman Nellie For led 'nluraday in the guessing game over the likely choice by the Chicago Whlle Sox for a succeasor to deposed manager Don Gutteridge. The rumor mill began grinding a few hours after Gutteridge was released at his own request Wednesday after new General Manager Stu Holcomb informed Don In Oakland he would not be reta.ined for 1971. Coach Bill Adalr was named interim manager until Sept. 14 when Holcomb is expected to disclose 1 new pilot whom a Sos spokesman said alrtady ha.s been contacted and accepted the job. • LOS ANGELES -World bantamweight champion Ruben Olivares, of Mexico City one of the mo!t potent bantam boxers of all times, had a record oC 28 vlctoties and one draw with 25 knockout& in his flrat 27 figh ts. Rodollo Atartlntz, another Mexican with hopes ol a blntam Utle, will have exactly that same record Saturday night when he steps into the Forum ring to face Japan's ShlnlarQ Uchiyama. The bout is one on a star·ltudded in- temaUonal CArd. .. Dodgers Face ..;'" Houston After :·: . '·•, ' ' 114 Setback '• ... HOUSTON (AP) -Piicher Gecirj.i Stone of the Atlanta Braves .. YS;. "There's nothing like a lot of runs." , ;1 And that was exactly what he .. ~QJ Thursday night as three of his le~, mates -Henry Aaron, Orlando Ce!)e#. and Clete Boyer -blasted home .nP.i~ with men aboard to give Atlanta an 1~~ decision over the Los Angeles Dodiers ... - The Dodgers send Sandy Vance, Sr$, against Houston's Don Wilson, 7-5, in,.l,be first game of a three-game series uOOe'i' the A.strodome. Stone, picking up his 10th victory of ~ Sr111. • s"''·' St11!. 1 ~I.I Dodger Slate AH ••-911 lli,I 1'401 Oodou·~ •I Hourton Ood11tr1 11 Housto11 Oodg1r1 Vl ,,111"!1 UI Doc11trs VI Alll~!I .. J1H J,,.W. ll:JJ •.m. J p.m., J:» '"' year against nine losses, scattered ;tit hits in the contest. He was tagie1t. however, for solo home runs by Pin Sudakls and Andy Kosco. · Outside of those two blasts and a triple by Bill Russell, the Dodgers \\'ere lim,i!MI to just three other singles, two by Billy Grabarkewitz. · ... , Grabby's pair of singles gave him eigl\t hits In his last 20 at bats, a huge 1m. provement from the previous month 's work at two singles in 3V trips up. The B:raves' southpaw, who says he has been pitching better lately, indicated he ~·as pleased with his performance although adding, ''Kosco's home run in the ninth kind of bothered me. "That ruined the whole night.'' he said. "Sometimes you relax too much or get ia a hurry to get the game over. You throw the ball over the plate and that's when you get burl." .· ~- Aaron's homer, a three-run shot in the thlrd inning, was his 36th of the year ind the 590th of his career. It sparked the Braves to a 4--0 lead, since they pick~ Up (lne ln the second when Bob Tillril4!'1 double scored Cepeda. ··· It "'as the sa me against Bo~Tey. He had the yowig Aussie in his pocket until he started missing volleys in the third set. Fuming and fretting, he proceeded to miss shot after shot until none was Jefl. 'A crov.·d of 12.000, silting in rav.._ threatening v.·eather, suddenly was shaken to attention y,·hen Allan Stont, one of the lesser known in Au.,,trall.a's unend- ing assembly line of tennis talent, grab- bed the first set from the 't\'orld's great- e!l player. Nation Mourns Death of Lombardi Cepeda's homer, his 32nd of the~- _and third In two days, came with Aardit aboard in the fifth. Boyer blasted h!J~t!tfi the same inning after ruco Carty walked. Llis Angeles got its first run (ln Sudakis' homer in the sixth, his IStJ\.of the season. · The Dod1Jers picked up two more in the eighth but the Braves added three 1rf. But the thrill "M'as brief. Corona dcl Mar's Laver got hl.s high-kicking service nJpplng the lines and started scoring with hla wrilty placements finally winning 4- 6, S.2, 6-1, 1-2, Roche, runner-up to Lavt:r here a year a&o and hiJ: conqueror in tht reoent world pro champio111bips at Boston, also had to rally to beat Mark COs, the blonde Bri- ton, S-8, 7-6, 74, f..2 . The two mi ddle M:t.s were decided by the suddtn.dealh lie· brt:ak. AJhe, wlnn r of the first U.S. open in J96& and Ame.rica'1 hope to take Laver·s crown, had early trouble with 18-yesroQld Roscoe TaMer, a Stanford Unlver$ilf l ) \YASHlNGTON (AP ) -A nation of football fans, led by No. I fan President Nixon, mourned today the death of Vince 1..ombardi. the \\'ashlngton Recbklns coach considered by many the best the game had to oiler. The body or the 57-year-old Lombardi, who died Thursday, \\'as to Jle In a funeral· home In the nation's capital for one day before being sent to New York, the city in which ht wai born. ~1ass will be said in SL Patrick's Cathedral ~tonday by Terence Cardinal Cooke. archbtshop or New York. Burial will be at Mount Olivet , a cemetery in f\1iddleto't\•n Township, near Red Bank, N. J. President Nixon said Lombardi wa1 tops in his field ''because he was able to help others" dlseover the best that was In themselvts. Like the power sweep which the game has tr11de!llllrked, the Power cl Vince Lombardi'• personality swept the world of 11ports and made a lasting im- pact on the lite of alt ti touched. ''The lesaon all Americans can le111m from teach Lombnrdl's life," Nixon said in a 11taten1enl Issued In Coronado, "Is that 11 man can bttome a star when he becomts an apo1tle of teamwork.'' ln Tampa, Fla., where the Redskins are preparing for an exhib lUon game Saturday night, • mass will be said by the Rev. \\1\lllam sc"·eder at the motel ~·here the team ts lodged. The WNhlnitOll aiach and exccuth•t vice president or tht Redskins died Thurtday momin1 in Georgetown University Hospital after a two-month fight With cancer. Ile entered the holpltal June 2S and undenvent an operation two days later in which doctor1 removed a tumor and a two-foot lenath of colon. He wai read- mitted for another operation a month later. It was not unUI Wednesday, however, that the family said publicly Lombardi surfertd from • · a n extraordinarily virulent fonn or cancer.'' He lt<aves lht: widow, Mar1e ; a son. Vin· cent of St. Paul, MIM.: a daughter, Sus11n Bickham of Crttn Bay, Wis.: his parontl, Mr. and Airs. Jlarry Lombardi of Brooklyn, N.Y.; two brothtra, J ... ph. of Englewood, N.J.; and Harold, or San Rafael, Calif,, and a sister, Caire Brandshagtn, of Hulett, N.J. Lombardi became such a legendary, larger-lhan·Ufe figure on the American scene during the pro football boom of tho t!eOs that lt'o often fo,...uen he didn't achieve suct:tst until late In life. He wu an obscure assistant coach at 11e 45 and wtll·known only In footb&ll circles when the Green Bay Pad.tr• slgntd him Jan. 2.11 ltst, to a five-year contract a• be.ad coach and general manarer. In the nut decade, ht Niched such helghlt he wu compartd wllh such pro football coaching giants as George Halas and Paul Brown. suranct run.s in the same frame. · LOI .. Nell.II •II r It r'4 ALTAMTA l!;un t ll, d' ' I I 1 Lum, ct MOii, 11 ( 0 0 1 M111111. l~ Sull1klJ, t ' I I 1 H,,,1ron. rt W.Plr11tr. 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' s~ . !Vlth . now hJ lootb<ll nutside Gaucho on 'the "We hitting coach lime Wt And il : for...us. ·tw~ miiti.kt Is loj, t ?Iv> ( .. ,..mi.,. nn del Thurad; "Our me tha; lime. I Fletche onl)o in1 vefy pu he 'was thibft w runner . Also t meotor pound I was ver lallbacl }ltft't.ma ':Wt'\' the last lo get 1 ria)'s. ' everythi the las concemr go·out a Hartn: •laTting scrirnmt Don~ TeriY ·~ the ~It Brian W Tlfe " 11nd <me· tailback quartert and \Vhi Deren~ Cu mmin Colbert Lack Jes middle I Mike ( Ill tH& .• SeedbOrt and Rud. "It's o .. ;th so lettenne 11lcx ne tle~in \\'t!"re ..,, H11rtman ~<tlloW tM'.Cauc nltf. we Atithnio Sa\Orday 'I,'be Ge ~.19. Mi'l!ion . · .. · Sho 3 . .M DEL Ill lhr'-< lri) BllI Shoe n.afured l'llisc n iD his b: 401, Slioem1 n~dfng I re.co!d o wh!ttetu: . ,• '· 8altfrno1 New Yo1 Detroit 9"'ton CleveJant l\laabing1 Minoe:sol AafflS Oakland KJnsas ' MiT~awkc Ch if ago "~111....: ,C1f1•I•• ,, _D, on ~~:'° MIT.,.•11k "(1\.;.11r fl!Mf -~.oft ••> .... ~. l1lllm.. "'"'"' o•!;flk-).to-. 1111111 IC•"'llt 1J.1(11, "'""'' ..,l .. ftttO' ••M . ' 19 .,. 0 Saddlel)acl{ --• V.• s·crimmages Sanfa A11a ' With the lint wee): or twice-a-day drills now history, Saddleback Co 11 e g e 's foothill team get:i: its first taste -0r outakle competition Saturday when the Gauchos scrimmage Sa11ta Ana College on 'the Dons' field. ''We feel like it's necessary to start hitting somebody else ,'' said Gaucho toach George Hartman, "it's the first lime "'e've ever scrimmaged a bigger JC 11nd it should be a tremendous challenge for~-:us.; ·~ .. know we're going lo make lots or mir.' ikes. But tha t's what Ult. scrimmage Is of. to correct the mistakes." '[\t Gauchos went through a defensive ~:.:rtmmage Wednesday and conceptrated on defense in a short scrimmage Thursday. "Our first string offensive line showed me that it was pretty far along at this lime, I was very impressed wi th Rocky Fletcher (fullback). He has developed not onlY into an outstanding blocker but a vety punishing runner as well. Last year he was mainly used as a blocker but we lhibk we'll be able to utilize him as a runMr also this year," said Hartman. Also drawing praise from the Gau cho m4fttor was freshman Don Wilson. a ISS· pound tailback from Mission Viejo. "lie "''U very impressive as our second team lailback." (behind Toby Whipple) Hattman added. •:'We've been working on fundamental~ the list couple or days. "We haven't tried lo get everything in the first couple ol days. We just want to make sure everything's in and the timing is there by the last week. The main thing I'm concerned about Is who has the desire to go out and hit the other person." }J.artm.an announced a t e n I a l i v e starting lineup for s a t u r d a y • s serimmage. DoJJ ¥artin will be the center with TefiYMunhall and Chuck Lockv•ood at the ~qrds and Dave Limebrook and Brian Whitbread at the tackle spots. Ttre receivers will be John William~ ~nri 'Rick Day. Howard Hoyt will be al tailback with Chris Hector a i quarterback, Rocky Fletcher at fullback and \Vhipple at tailback. Derensively, ,Ray Tyler and Rnd Cummings Y•ill be the guards, Bryan Colbert and Clay MacBeth will be the tackles wi th Rocky Flelcher at the middle linebacker spot. Mike Coit and John Fletcher will starl 11t tHe ·linebacker positions with Rusty SeedbOrg, Steve Smith. Larry Hernandez and Rudy Holmes in the secondary. "It's our philosophy at this st.age to go with sophomores and rel u rain g lettermen. 'They're given the first shot. '£11ep; ~xt two scrimmages will actually rfeW"mine who will be our ball club. \V~re very undecided right now," said H~rtman. l!'q1lowing the Santa Ana scrim mage. t~C~ Gauchos wi11 return to double drillif nlrt week before meeting Mt. San Atiibnio College in a 7 p.m. scrimmage S.larday, Sept. 12 at Mt. SAC. 'I,b'e Gauchos open the seaSCln Saturday. ~· 19. h06ting r.Ura Coita College al Mi'S:Sion Viejo High. ···'. Sh0emaker Needs 3 .More Wim1ers DEL MAR (AP) -Shut-out in his first lhr~ trips around the race lrack, jockey BIU Shoemaker came through to ¥.in tile ~fured $5,000 Del r.far Rotary Club ·PUTSe Thursday and gain another notch in tiis bid for the world career riding 401. ShOemaker now has 6.030 winner~. slill .n~dfng two lo tie and three to break the record ()f 6,032 '!et by Johnny Longden wfutretured in 1956. f/~:~LASt' ,YE'AR -LIKE IT NE.VE!? WAS. NOW : l'MtNI< f'Odl711/e-,. Y'l<AX>W-~It., IS A 5UOO-IN AS A FE:W "COM&MCK OF ~ "»fa YEAR',,., 7Ut! A.~. WHEN UIS I -. 1,69 5£A50N OF -· .·. ~ . : 'd 1 Wtll-8 LO$ES IS COMPAl?f.0 •. wrr+1 /415 RE:COl<D "TODAV ... 11 . ·,: . ' .. ' ~.. ... ........... .ff_~ Former Rustler Grid S.tar Headed for Orange Coast Junior college football teanls lake off the "Taps of another long summer Saturday with most Southland teams engaged in controlled but informal scrimmages. Those teams that delay the action Saturday will gel into the swing or cont.act work sometime over the weekend or on Labor Day. This is alS() the time for rumor1 to MOWAllD MANDY llOWARD HANDY starl spreading and one: of tM more , prominent ones concerns an all-timf' great running back from Gclden WesL College. Steve Cashdollar was a member of lilt' rirst-ever Ru stler team and set rushing marks that remained on the books until Charlie Buckland came along last spring. Cashdollar then spent time in the military service returning to G\VC for the last spring semester. Reportedly he is disgruntled with the GWC coaching st.a.ff and will enroll at Orange Coast College for lhe fall i;e1nester. To which the Rusller staff has little lo say except that he must retain passing ~ades ror two full semesters in order to' be eligible to fa~ the Rustlers in 1971. * • • Another rumor making the round~ ronccrns entry of UC Irv ine into the CCAA beginning with the 1!171-72 u:hool yea r At least Lwo UCI coaches are in favor of the move ahd reports ind icate a meeting or the st.a.fr will be held shortly lo determine what course the Anteaters will take . "·tt will give us a definite answer each :vcar about entry into NCAA playoffs and 1ve won 't have to be constantly concerned about the politics of such a move," one mentor staled. '\'ith scheduling of univusity and college events made a year ahead of the season. entry must be made thal Iona in advance in..,,rder to compete for the circuit championship in any particular sport. • • • Edriie Bane, flashy young left·haiided pitcher and quarterback for th~ \\'estminsler Llons last season, will coolinue his educational pursuits at Ar iz- ona Stale University according 10 UC Irvine coach Gary Adams. ''We lost him to Arizona State," Adams related upon returning from ceaching the Rapid City, S.D. -S.sin League entry this summer. * • • Ever wonder v.1ly there i~ such • riisparity in size of crowds for junior college football games? One of the big answers at Cerrito~ where the crowd5 continue well abovt aYe rage is an active booster club known as the Cerritos Bench. This group stages a barbecue lo get tilt season under way with fathers and other community leaders invited to break bread with !he grid squad, coaching staff and other school ()fficials. Other events during the football sea30n include a banquet, awards, after-game entertainment and discussions with the <'<>aches and other events oC a 1imilar nature. • • • D·Day is virtually here and auto racing fans will move into Ontario Motor Speedway Sunday for the fas t est championshi p car race of all lime. By comparison, did you know that tht average qualifying time al Indianapolis on Memorial Day for the 33<ar field was 167.139 mph? Now, check the qualifying time of the J3rd car in the Ontario race driYen by Jim Hurtubise. It was 169.101 and the average Sf>ttd for I.he entire field was 172.540 -better than S\! milts an hour fa ster than Indy. Barring the unexpected. this should ht the fastest race of all-time for the lnd y· lype cars. Major 'League Standings DEAN LEWIS .. AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAi. Ll':A GUE East Division Baltimore New York Detroit Bo.ston Cleveland -lngton .. Minoesota Aillfls Oakland X.nsas City MiTwaukee Cb!cago . ' East Olvf1lot1 W L Pct. WT 49 .640 76 60 .S59 71 65 .522 70 65 .519 66 70 . .a'i 6i 71 .474 1''est Dlvl~lo11 78 55 .58fi 76 Sri .56.1 7:\ 62 .541 52 83 .385 51 Bl) .:ri5 -49 3ll .355 GR II 16 161,1 " 221': ' ' " 2'J1>'.i 31 "' W I~ Pel . GB Pittsburgh 71 64 .526 Chicago 71 6;'i .522 1, New York 70 65 .5 19 1 St. Uluii; 65 71 ,478 li'4 Philadelphia 63 7'Z .467 A r.tontreal 58 76 .133 12 ~i \\'cJ!:I Division CincinnaU 118 f>O .638 Oodge r11 74 fiO .S.i2 12 San Francisco ifl 65 .51~ 16'~ Atlanla r.7 li9 .4~l 211 Houstoo r..1 72 .41i? 2.11l San Diego 52 83 .385 34~ Tl!u•Ml1v •1 •nwt11 ~t Lau" J, Nt,.. Vo•'< > (hlC~90 7, Pllll6dtl11l!I• 7 "lf!tl..,rVh 1t M""t<tll, r1l11 1t,t11~t• 11, OH"" 1 ~·" D"-'" -· liau11':111 e C!11cl1111•ll 7, $111 Fr#ntlito t TN1y'1 011"11 '-l•W Vo•~ 111.¥111 6-IGl 11 (llit.'1111 11-h"t'l\ l\.!7) Pf!1111ttl1llll !Wlv IG·ll) tt ,!tl't""1flh f(I"'· '"''' 0.1!, 11111\t Mo!l!rt<fll (lri1 10-tl 11 $1 1.0Y!• Ultl'lll111 IHll, 11l1M Sin '••r>c'-U Pt•ti.r11• J·lJ •t ,l!lt n!1 fJl"""1 1S·111. 1111~1 Stll Dl-.O 't~!111 ~·61 at C!ntl11111!1 (M...,.ltt J'0.111 , 11!1M O.Cttn tVffKr J•JI 11 Hou1tpi (Wit-7·J), llltllt DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Strvic1, Parts, & Body Shop Now Open Until I p.m. Mond•y Nighh I I ,. Orange County's LMgesl and Most Modern Toyota and Vol<o Dealer SPIC I AL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON ::::. $1817 A•OtWMe4.hl•,_. M.t It-HM•• ,., •• ,_. L-4 Cndtt'9 C1,... DEMO SAVI $466 •SU8782 • DAILY PILOT 19 Coaches' Dream at GWC Rustlers Scrimmage Glendale Saturday at OCC Eternally optimiJtic, this year with good caUSt'., coach Ray Shackleford ree ls the Colden West Colleae Rustlers have put in three aolkl d#lys of heavy practice In full uniform this weei and Is looking rorward to Saturday's sc:rimmage with Glendale with enthusiasm. "We have a tot of compeUtlon for 11lmost every p(l8Jt~ on the team this year." be Mys. -·nus Is a good and healthy sign and it iJ a coaches' dream.'' Asked U he would single out probable starter• for the acrlmmage with Glendale that begins at JO o'clocll: Saturday morn- in1011 the Orange Cout College gridiron, he declined. "J know pretty ftll who Will st.art Ill our llneba,cker1 but the offensive line is up Moro Injured lo Gene (Farrelll and T ha ven 'L lhe slightest idea who he. will pick . "Don Rowe has the defensive line and f.'red (Hoover) the de£ensive secondary. l haven't checked wilh either o them to find out who will be starting there, either. "We'll probably 1nakt a decision tonight but it won't be anything final . We will switch them around throughout the !ltri1nmage and will do the same. th\nc again next week at Santa Maria." Shackleford feet's this is the only wa y to give all hands an opportunity lo show what they can do under game condition.~ anci a selection of teams or three deep11 will not be nade until after the Sept. 12 ()Uting. Pirate Offense Shines· In Opening Scrimmage By CRAIC SHEFF Of .... "D.llY ,..,. '"'" Linebacker Paul Moro, a cop freshman prospect from Huntington Beach High, suffered a 11ight shoulder separation durinJt a n Orange Co a s t C.OUege 3Crlmmage Thursday and v.i\I be sidelined for an undetermined amount of time. "He butt it the first day ()f practice." said OCC coach Dick Tucker ".and reinjured it Thunday. He wu pretty stiff when he left 10 we're not going to even put him in pads until he's ready lo go. I couldn't even make an educated guess to how long he 'll be out." MOf"O, a ~11, !~pounder, was an All· Sunset Lea~ first team selection and earned first-team All-CIF honors at a linebacker spot for Huntington last year. Tucker announced one other injury. Tackle Kermit Simons injured an ankJe and is expected lo be out three or four days. Othrwise., Tucker opbted that occ·, linit ICrimmage went well. ··For a flrK scrimmage, we thought the offense did better than tre expected. UsuaJly the defense is way ahead of the offense and we know we have some pretty good guys up front on defense. "The offense wasn't awesome and I don 't know if wt would have scored if we had been keeping down dlst.anc e, but at least we made some respectable gains." Tucker singled out the running of back! Ken Eppelheimer, Coe t.if:yer and ?.1ike Hayne~ and also had praise for the quarterbacking or Bill Shedd and Gary Valbuena. "AISCI it look! like V.'e ·ve got receiver~ lhis year. Young (Doug), Malone (Tomi and Barnett (George) are all going to be pretty good receivers and Cummings lGary) and Ventimiglia (Tony) are going to be okay on the other side." Tucker also announced his starting ()rfe1;15ive and defensive lint:up$ for ~ionday's 10 a.m. scrimmage with Mira Costa at OCC. Offensively, Barnett and Paul Hart will be at the end spots, w~th Dennis Walters and Karl Pedersen opening at tackles and Harvey Suprenant and Rich Durante al the guards. Durante is a transplanted fullback. "fucker is undecided aboul a starting quarterback, but it will either be Shedd or Valbuena. Haynes and Meytr will be lhe running backl!I. Defensively, Harry Carmack and Dave Gleason will be the tackles, with Kurt Cle mens at nose guard, Lee Walters and tither Mike Davi! or Bill Durkin at the ends with Bill Curry , Jess Hernandez. Craig Zal~ky and Paul Renfrow in lhe !eeondary. OURBrn'ER HALFlOSTA LrrTLE WEIGHt •• 1 And gained a lot of friend•. The new Early Times Half Gallon bottle ;. now two pound• lighter. And 1tronger. Which makes it easier to carry, easier to handle. Easier to pour, too, because of it.a unique built-in pourer. What'• more, our Better Half is easier to buy because of a bigger savings on the bigger •ize. Early Times in the new, lighter half gallon bottle. Our Better Half thought you deserved .. break. ~GAU.ON SAUE'I~ NOW 5ll~ Buy a case Save 10% more The Rustler mentor figures to 'have around as players out for practice every day with 58 of them suiting up for game~. "That's .au the W'IUorms· we have or we. would suit them all up. Injuries and othf-r ~ituatioos will take care or the balanr:e. ·• Sh11ckltford'1 decl~ion to wait unti1 tonight to name probable starters for thf'l Saturday scrimmage nieans that thing~ , 11re about as eipected prior to start ot the Workouts. .. All or the boys who worked out durini 1 he 11ummer are still with us and are in lop shape. Every position is up for grab:ii and I am sure that freshmen realize this as well as the vetuans." Shackleford has made s e v e r a 1 time sv.·itches in the daily rout I ne . ~toming v.·orkout.s are held from t to 11 :40 with a 10 minute break. From 11 :45 t.o 12 noon, time is spent in running. Meetings open the aft.ernoon sessions at ~:30 with players on the field in full gear ;it 4: 30 and working until fi : 15 followed by another 15 minutes or running. \\'hether this same schedule will remain in vogue Monday (Labor Dayl .:ind Tuesday before start of claues Sept. !I, "·ill not be determined until after Saturday's K:rinnnage. Al last report, Tony Bonwell. la~t year's starting quarterback. and Charli~ Buckland. starting tailback, were still both working with lhe d e f e n s i v • secondary unit under lloover . This means that lettennan Steve Griffith will share the signal calling duties v.·ith freshman Rick Saeman from htarina High Saturday. The tailback spoO is still wkle open with lettermen Bob Cornuke 11nd Don Fischbeck vying with 11everal freshman candidates for the starting role. Mack Sidelined With Eye Injury LONG BEACH (AP) -Offensive guard Tom Mack of the Los Angeles Ram1 underwent surgery Thursday night for a laceration ()f the right eye, sustained in an afternoon practice session. The injury was not considered seriou11, a Ram spokesman said. but surgery will keep Mack out of Saturday night's Ram preseason game with the Houston Oller• at the Rose Bowl. Mack will be replaced by fonnt.r Stanrord guard John Wllbu r. g...3, 250, whit was obtained by the Rams in a trad" from the St. Loui!i Cardinals aJter I raining started this year. ! I ' i 1 ~ • ~ • i I ! f • i t i I ' I .. -,----- H DAil i'-PllOI Start Yow· Engines! by Deke Hou/gate ONTARIO -Promoters of the orld's mosl expensi e sports arena, Onlario Motor Speedway, spent $25.5 mHli~ bu !ding it, tnd it certainly is appreciated by folk!i like Larry 81 , a. Oiscexlla, a self-(lescribed "'andering ~1~ioner, is the wor~d's DlOSt fana tic <1uto raci ng fan. Here are his \•1ews on the stadium where the California 500 v.·ill be staged Sunday: '1For spectator viewing. it's very nice. In years to 1..'0me ifs 1oing 10 gro~'. Like planting a tree in the ground, you ha ve to it.art '.\'ith something small and help it grow." Small ? Operators like to boast or the fact that the en_ormo~s ·acing facility could swallow up three Disneylands. To B1scegha tt Is a new track needing more development before it can be CQm- ,arcd with his favorite pla~. Indy. •·t•m glad it 's out in the western part of the ('()lJOtf,Y." con- Unued Bisceglia. "I'd like to see a few more like II around the tountry." Another is already o-buildi ng, the new Pocono Tnternation:il Raceway in northeastern Pennsylvania, where a third 500-miler Yill be added to the USAC ''super speedway" circuit on July 3, 1971. BiSceglia came by his cretlentials the hard way. He has been Natching lndy SOOs since 1925. He hasn't missed one since 1916. First i11 1,1,.., al Speedum11 Every springtime the former Long Beach cesidenl. \\'ho now ~\·es in a motor home provided him in apprttiation for bis rac- ing enthusiasm by the Ford Dealers of Indiana • couple of years ago, 11 flr1t in line to get Into tbe speedwa)". He has been first evu y year for !! years. According to Bis-- 1eglia, the first ti years v;ere tM hardest. ''There was a man and bis •-lfe from Florida."' he said, "\\'ho leok their vacalion for 1 month e\i::ry !\lay. Tbey h.ad a Nash "'itb fold.down seall lhat they slept in, and I had 11 old panel truek. rhat truek is supposed to go irlto lhe new speed\\'I)' museum 1rhen they build It. •·Seems like every year I showed ap tbey were a cooplt of lays behind me. I just seemed lo make ll barely in time. "Then Tttr. House died. and they stopped coming. but fllrJ. House ame to lhe i;peedway a couple of years laler and looked me up.'' Biscegtia's ahortr111t wait fot the gates to open on Atay 30 was II day1, and bis longest was fO, a sort or ttrtmonial thine be ~Id In 1968 lo celebralt his ZO years of waiting for the race to 11arL The 7z..ye.ar-old race fan was on the. scene at Ontario on Aug. 1%, and he \\'ls given the ted carpet treatment. "'They gave me a pass lo tbe garage are.a." be said, "and Ibey proml1ed me a Licket In the stands on race day. Every- body bas bttn rear nice to me ben." At Indy Bisceglia has become not only a tradJlion but a rriend of speedway owner ToDy Hu1man. lie watches lite race there from the. tow~r •. "where l~ movie slan . astronauts and lhe other ttlebrities sit up with the timers and scorers." Start.ed Wat.,hing Ra .. e .• h1 '20• I-low did Bisceglia get to be .!UCh a fan" "1 ".ve been v.·atchi n' races since the early '20s at old Legion Ascot in L.A .. " he said. "Those were the days of Frank Lockhart Babe Stapp and Rex Mays. ' "Auto racin~ is j~ in my blood. 1 suppo.<te some folk.~ h:i ve football or golf in lhei.r blood. Golf might have been a lot better ~or me, but l liked auto racing. tr you like one certain thing you JUSl follow it. That's what I did.'' ' Jot1es Be.,anu• .')pe,.ial Favorite In all lhe years of watching the Indianapolis SOO.milcrs only i.ne driver became a spe.rlal favorite of his, Panielli JOnes.' "I picked Pamelli out the first time be came to the Si>ttdway in .1961 ." Bisceglia said. "When I first saw bim run. t said by gosh I.bis track wall made for Ibis guy. '•Jn all the years I watched him, I can't remember that he c~·er tpun out there. Ob. be span once in the turbine in IH7. but be did th al on purpose to keep lrom bitting another car, Re never once lost control of a race at Indianapolis. "J!ve gotten lo know Parnelli. of course. and ht has beca vrry nice to me. I con111idcr him a good friend, 1till tOd~y.'' Bisf!eglia Fncor• l/1uer it• 500 \\'ith Pamelli Jones. the 1963 Indianapolis champion. nnw the tar ow.ier of Al Unser's Johnny Lig htning Colt turbo-Ford. it is onl,v na tur:il , one \\'ould lhink. that Bisceglia favors Unser in the l:alifornia 500. Unser is the No. l fan·s favorite, but for a different reason. •·rd like to see Al \VI II t.he race .so that he ca11 bceome the ~ccond man in history to ·win l\\'O 500-mile races in the same ye<1 r.'' said Bisceglia. Un~r would be second. Bisceg lia said. lo Jhnmy Bryan!, 1he 1958 Indianapolis "'inner. "'hose second 500-m\le victory that yea r in an Indy car was at Monza, llal y. It would take a rea l devotee of lhe sport to co me up "'ilh a sti1Tistic like that. ''I v.·ould like to sec all of them win," he said. "but Uiat can·1 be done. There's a lot of boys \'o'ttnt to win this one real bad -D<1n fi urnf'y, Lloyd Ruby. !\tario Andretti. A. J. Foyl -and that v.·ould be all ri~ht "'ith me. but I \\'Ould like to stt Al get that record. llard ftC'cord lo Be11t Inducted into IM Hoosier Auto Racing Fans Hall of Famt In 1967, tb~ fi rst spectafOI' to be so honored, BiSttglia \\'OUid just at "900 se~ .somebody break his rttord of %% years being I.be flrsl man wa1ung for lbe gate &o open at Indy. "f don·1 cart now what happens In my record." he said, '•I nnly .waoled to go 10 )'eani anyway. All I can say is tbal somebody Is going to ha\'e a hard time beating my record .'' As an arter·tbougbl, he added : "I know this i~ impossible. but I'd likr to llvi: long enough ta ~hake lbe man's hand "'ho beats me.'' • 15 Prep Rule Changes Till!re are 15 rule <l lffere11ces for hlgh school football game ll Ibis com ing staM>n, according to th e National Federation 1970 foot ball rUl1!3 book. Perhaps the IT\0$1 Jn1por t11nt ror fans to nole is ruli: 10-2-2. "lf each leam foul s during a down in which there Is 11 cha11ge or tea m possession. the team la.st gainin g po&SCSSion may retai• the ball. provided its foul was not prior to the rlnal change of possession and It dee.lined the ptnalty !or Us opponent's foul." tn the past, this would have been a double foul aAd !he play and down would ha'" bee:n played over with f!iCh pct11alty nullifying !he other. An example.. Team A h•~ pos!Jession 8nd is ofJsi<lcs at the snap. A forward pass is thro"''n and intcrecepted by the defe nse. (Team 8). During the r u n b ar: k or the i n I t' r cc p t ion, Tea m B is guilly of chppi11g. \\'hen the captains ;ire called 1ogcther. Team 8 may refuse lhe offiddcs penally and rMa1n possession or the ball allhough Team A may accept lhc IS yard lftfractlon for clipping~ Of lrsser iml)Ort on 1hr g11me nus year is rule l·t which recommends 1hc use Ill rour officials. referee. u1npirc. hocsman an<I fie ld JUd(:.r. bul provides lhat gnrncs nloy bf play~ "'llh more or ]~1 officia ls. ' 'I UCl's Masshnlno Massimino Gives ·-...: Political Caree i.. f UCI Shot • Ill Arm Not Out of Line !: By HOW ARO L HANDY Of , ... Dlll\f ..... ''•" F'erdy 1.tassimlno learned early in li!e that there aren't enough hours in the day to gel everything acc;:omplished. Perhaps that's the rea!:IQn he look lime oul from a busy curriculum at UC Irvine to serve as student b o d y president last year. His decision could also mean a national championship in water polo (or the Anteater irulitution this year. The young pre-med student will be in his filth year at lrvlne and it isn't grades that have kept him fr o m graduation -he boasts a 3.2 grade point a\'erage along with his myriad of exl.ra· C\!.fJ'icular activities. For three years he v.•as a starling player on the Anteater water polo team. Two years agot his last season of play, he was the team ·s leading scorer with 66 goals and that squad finished third nationally. Ferdy is one of lhree Jrvi·,1e players, along wit~ coach Ed New land, who reeently toured Europe with an all-star water polo team representing the United States. ''It was a great experience and our showing (7 ·4-2) brought an invitatian to the U.S. lo compete in the Adriatic Cup competition in 1971 with Russia , Hungary, Yugosla via, ftaly and D.D.R." TEAltf PRAISED Robert H. }felmick, U.S. Olympic wate r polo committee chairman, praised the teani for its efforts in Europe and said upon its return: •·f'ro m the standpoint of the Olympic committee. o u r objectives were abundantl y met. Our top water polo players gained v a I u ab I e tix periencc againsl two of the four top waler polo powers in the world. "Our coaching stall had the opportunity or ob se rv ing preparation for the Europe an champions hips aT1d we proved to many Europeon water polo leaders that-the United SI.ale& Is capable o! beating the top world waler polo teams. "The objective of the trip was a trainll'lg mission. IC we had not needed training. obviously we would not bave recelved an Olympic Training Grant." Newland's Corona del ~1ar club team finished in a three- way lie for lirsl place in tbe AAU championships b u t eventually was placed third with the coach and three players making the European trip. In addition to Afa&!imino, l\iike '-fartin and Dale Hahn also bave eligibility remaining at UC!. Bill Leach, a former Anteater star. also made the trip from the CdM squad. THICK OF CHASE Looki ng ahead lo competition this fall, Ferdy feels the Anteaters will be in !he thick of the chase for the NCAA title. "The teams are getting much closer and no one team is domina ting lhe ~cene any more." he says. "UCLA, Berkeley, San Jose State and Cal State (Long Beach) are all going to be tough. Long Beach will be extremely tough if Bob Saari returns for his final year or competition . "One thing about i I . however. When ~·e get back to practice at Irvine. Newland will act like nothing has happened and we w:Jl work just as hard, or hMder. to prepare for the 1970 season,·• Massimino opines. He looks back to 1968 when Irvine felt it had its best team. "We still lost and finished third," he recalls. fi'erd y plays the two-meter position or in the hole a.'! it is kno\vn in collegiate circle!!. This is paramount to a center in basketball. "I control the area that makes the offense work ," the 20~pounder says. "A bit of \\'eight. if you are in sha pe. he lps in this l)Of;itioo." Ferdy feels his lhinkjng 011 wattc polo blends well with that or .Newland. "We think along similar lines. It Isn't necessarily talent that brings victory. Desire and ability to achieve through hard work makes the best players 11nd teams. "Mike Marlin has worked hard to gel where he Is. He If lhe 1nedlal profes5ion misses the boat and lets Ferdy Massimino slip from itS' grasp. don 't rule out a career in political science· for U C Irvine's immedia te pa s t student body president. only weighs around ISO pounds FERDY MASSIMINO but he works hard the year ---------- around. I think the UCI team Ferdy is a young man "'ho looks ahead to tomorrow y,·hile living for today. this year will be as good a5 any team around and we have a shot at the NCAA tiUe." SelecUon of a team to compete in the Pan-American Games neit summer will be made in 1.fay. Approximately 18 players will be selected to go to a trainbig camp with l l making the Pan·Am squad. After the 1•mes, three or four others will be added for anolher European tri p and competition in Adriatic Cup play. Tu·o Europe3'n lossc!i were to Yugoslo via and two to Hungary. "Both are older tea m~. the Yugoslovia squad averaging 27-ZB years and Hungary 25-u:· But the b i g g e st disappointment for F e r dy came "'hen his y o u n g e r brother Rick \\'as sele<:ted as the fi rst alternate a11d wa sn'L able to make the European trip. "I ~·as really dis appointed that he didn 't make il. He was ClF player of the year in high school at Fullerton a n d purposely went to Stanford because he didn 'l want to be •tn my shadow at Irvine. I really wl sh he had made 1he team to go to Europe and I think he wi ll be on the Pan- Am team next summer." OBSERVATIONS His other observation~ on the trip included amazemeot 1hat the entire Yugoslovia learn was smoking. ''It really opens you r eyes up but I guess that is one of lhe !ew luxuries \hey have. "We have far be 11 c r toaching in this cou ntry than they do but experience is their Freshmen Dominate Gauchos Allbough only one letterman returns, Saddleback c r o s s country coach 0o.. Guyer is optimistic aboul the coming season. "\Ve will nol have 8 large team. by any . means, liUf r think we have qUite a bit of talent." says Guyer. \Vith just John Dauss back fro m lhe 1969 D e s e rt Co 11 f e rence championship team. Saddleback will rely on freshman. Oauss, fourth in the conference last season, along with freshme1 Steve Patterson tFoothill), Lowell Blum (San Clemente) and Sandy Beach t Laguna Beach) have been working out all summer, according to Guyer. ·'They're in pretty fair shape right now," reports the l:aucho coach. Other freshmc11 expccled lo compete for the Gauchos include Bob Guthrie (TU.!>lin) and Jiln Van Colt (!\-11ssion Viejo I. So phom o r es R l (!h A three-year veteran of UC Irvine water polo teams. he took time out last year to serve his school as student body president. "It reaJly didn't presenL a problem becau.se I anticipated It in advance and dropped some of my other activities. •·J also took ·classes where individual study and work on my own rather than lectures gave me time to handle the student body pos:t."r}le recalls. Ferdy estimates h' spent an average of 40 to 60 hours a week working on s l u d e n t government probJ.ems i n addition to bis academic work. But he doesn't regret a minute of this time. "I learned more about political science. p e op I e • politics and myself than in the other four years I ha ve s?ent at Irvine . It certainly was worth my time and I wouldn't hesitate lo do it all over again.'' He became interested in student government as a sophomore when he served for a year on the student senate. "As t saw what it was all about. I became interested . I looked at ii as an opportunity to do something about things. In high school it is more of a social thing. a slatus symbol. "Al lrvine ii s eemed worlh1vhile and an opportunity to learn. I saw what was happening around the rountry Fisl1 Report lluddleston and Dean H0Rnt1:e NEWl'OltT II.ACM IA•l'i L•Mlin•I also will run for Saddleback. -11t '""''••$; 1•• 11on110. 6fl b1ss. '1 di v•ll-1111, lt rocl cad. 1J mtckert'I. Hud eston sat out last yea r ID•~•V'• L-k••I -Hl 1nvler<; o with a knee operation a11d tlblcare, Jl -,111ow11n, 1,sn 11on11a. J.:i 1>1111, st bllrrK\ld1, I h1ll but. llonhe.U.e didn't co mpete in SAN DIEGO IMwlliCIHI f'lefJ -•U ~ and decided to run lor student body president ., •·A lot of lhing11 were happening and nobody Was taking lhe tlrne to do anything about the.m. I Celt J had to. do what i did and l ·put everything I had into it. "I !eel student govemmi!nt at lrvioe is going in a poslt!~ d.ireetion and in a small wa)! ' . feel that I have helped a~ some others involved. ·: "l only wish I had the ti~. to do more about it by servtttf another year. Unfortunat~ty, that isn't the case or the wa,y life is. ·~' "The e:tperience t have 'bad "''ill lead me to take ·b'rT community responsibility la~ oo ." ; .' Massimino recently returti~ from a 17-(iay trip lo EurOpt with a U.S. water polo tel~ and is looking forward · to""• return to the aq uatic spoft'1tt UCI this fa ll after his ytprr1 lea\'e of abseoce. -·~··· Upon hi s return to the U:S: he stopped off in BaJtinlq:~ ~1d. for a visit to JOllns Hopkins medical school.· .; 1: "This is probably the ~ such school in the country tftd I felt a personal visit would-BO more than just an app~ for entrance to m e d t e.,•' school," he says. '' Anythiflf you can do a little diff~.er:i.t helf>! your chances." -"·' Ferdy isn 't dropping 4 tht matter on the doorstep.. ai Johns Hopkins, however.,Jf(fs· also applying at Stanford .~ 18 other schools With me4J'~~ programs around the coun,try .. ''There are some 100 .s~ schools,'' he says. "Aid ;~ percent or all student~ , l!h~o could makt it througti ,' ."ii!f program and e v e n I u 'a_ l.1 y become good doctors. 'wi~(t get a chance ." " ... Students and fa cu (1 y Los Alamitos biggest ally. If wc had all of our yout h nuts over 1vatcr polo like they do. maybfo they would be co ming over here to play. cross coui:itry in 1969. 11191en: "'••blcort, 1 ve11ow1;n tun1. 11 .,ellowtall, 20 bt<rrKlfd•. 201 botllto, Honnette was ;i quarler· " rock coct. members at UCI re<iurnn,a: overnight hospitalization .'~.t the Universitv health cet1h!r will become better acquainte<t with Ferdy this school yiaf~ He will be one of two orderli~ at the health center along wlfh · playing water polo and · .aiso doing some studying to furtll!r" his medical career. ' • Racing Entries "Our biggest HTiprove.mrnl i~ in shooting. We ha ve always had good swimmers but th r 1:ombination of the l w o LONG llACH !1111'111111 •ierl -'It mi ler and hurdler on lasl •nilers: :1111 tNlss. ?17 bollHo. 11 h1libut, season's track a111d field tean1. 11 1>err1c11111. ''"" -•~ •n11ers: , nu.•. JD bonito . .w """""'el. c•11-r"1111 Guyer, also the track and L111t11111 -u' ar191er1; tll c1ll(o field coach, replaces Tom ~:!!;J:!,':;"0· ~OJ r~k '!!1i:i~11;, Gilmer as the head cross •tbllcore. 1 Yellowl•ll, s barr•cudt. 1 lltlib!i!, m tt llto b1111, IU 110n;10, 121 lf he doesn 't get lritft ' medical school {don't "1)el against. him. however), don't be surprised to see his· TreJt activity in the lield or po~~·J science. 4 •• ·• 1..01 ALll.MtTOI INTltlll l'Oll lll.TUllDll.Y. ll:l'T. J, 1"1 IJrd O•r CIH• I 1'111. l'lrtl 1'011 1:0 f',M. 11 "ltllllr 0.U&ll Oii IJI I J"ll 11.Ktl Racing Results LOS 11.Lll.MITOS ltllULTS T11t;r'4!1r, ''''· 1. 11,. Cl11r 111<11 P11I l'lltST ltll.CE. l !ill 'f'••d•. M.tldtn 1 .,.,,, olds. Cl1lml11t. Purst $1900. Oki HorntsltM rs .... 11111 '"·40 o '° 1a .a W1rc11 Sll!rl1111 fCrDby) 1,ot •.1'0: W1!tll Cur Go ILl11h1m) 1.00 llmt: .1t.111a. Scrnchto -Mud In Yllllr E.,.,, Ml11 N~ Moon. SECOND ltACI. JKI 'f'l•ds. J re1r Olds 1nd UP, Clt!ml1111, PWrlf lllOI'. Gold 111oot !Pt•n••l S.60 l.ao l..O O!o Vn" !11.cltlr! J.10 '·"' 8obbi1 BIYOU IH1 rd•ntl J,10 Time: .11-1110. Scrl!thN -ll:ockr Emt nem. Mic A. Bob, Bret~ To Win, VIiie~ BUI'-. n NIGHTLY DOUILE, '·01• Ho111t- ••••• & 1 · 01ld t111t1, ••I• Mii .... THlltD ltACE. 350 Yltds. Mtldtn ) ~••r Old1. Cl11lm!n9, Pun., 11'00. 1C;o1y•5 Doll !APOd1t•l 1.00 •"II 1.1'1 Oltkt\> lllT Bar ISml!hl l ,ol) ! . .O Ttl!ll's B1rrfll !Wl1i.onJ 1 . .0 Tlmf: .l'-S!IO. Scr1!chfll -Pfr Nell, O Gosh. '0VltTH ltACI!. IN \>frd1, ' re1r okl< a"ll '"" Cl•1ml119. ""'"' \7!DO. Tri, !lab lWllMlft) II.oil 1.DO l.?0 Watcll M• Trtvfl l lltnlul •.20 1.111 ltule•ll tL111h1ml 2.10 Time: . ...-110. ~cr1tclpfd -Tllru C•l!1. l'"ol'Wt r• l1Utrv. Don 11:111•. St<rtl Gfnpe" l'Ll'TM ltA(I. UO v1nb. T \>N r Old•, c11lm1...,, ""'" 11100. Il le! W/111 tWt tM>nl II.or•• To• Ber fP11t! '"" ll:el11 IStr•unl flmt : .II 11.i. Strlld'lt<I -M1lfll1C MfOrl, 5t)CTM ltACI!. ~ v•rdt, 've1r Ol<lt •~II up. Cl1tml111. f'urlt' 11t«I, Go!cl Diii CAdt !r) f.?0 1.11'1 1 d Trutklt ltMt IWtlhl l.~ 3.00 Mr. Pete Ila• !11.POdllt•I 1 00 Time; .10·tll0, $cr1!Cl\td -Mt, Merl, U 1!1111.CTll., 1~·!0110 0111 & I • Trvc•lt 1t111, ••If tJ4.K. Sl\IEHTM 11.t.C•. ~· 01rd•. ' o,._.r ''°' 11!>0 uo, A11owtncu. P11r11 17000. Lth Go Sim lC•o1tnl 5.10 ~-11111 ti 0...11., a.tr llor !Smilll! 1•-10 1.00 llOfl Sk•I• ( .. t•flt•) 1 IO """'~ .7'·1110, N• t.(tllthH. l10M1'M llACI. IOO "lrG1. I Trfr olds. Cl•lml111, f'urN ,,~. Fllahl lot tWl l!IOOl l 10.00 '00 l Ill Lilltt LH' llotr tCretb•I 1 20 1.ta BOid Chide IH1ri!ff!t) I.GO Tlrnt. JO.S/10. Al~ r111 -DK~ "•'fOlf, Lt!llt ,_,, cent, S.ft!Y c.oos11, Sir Ber N l oci. ......... I.uh... Sltrlf w ........ ~. kO'I lltr End Ht K!tlt~tJ HIHTM IAC•. JJO w1•d1 l""rold1 •fld ue. Clt!mlftl . .,ll<M 110. I'm Serio (1..1111\lm) •.>0 1,'6 1.M JOM Mc(OY ~"'t'-u6t>I J,-'I J IO l !I Grt ndl c!CIY 1'$trl~~•! J,llO ,,,,,.. ,,...,, •. \t•t!doe!I -I••~ TOP. 1tor1I Ille•. leii D1'1.11r Bir, Grl!twln H EXACT A., 1. I .... l•rlt I •· J•1• MtCt't. ••" 11\,M. fl EU1tll 011 tlll I tlll ltlCH FlltST ltACE . .U0 Ylrds.1. Yttr <>It!,, (lllmll'IQ Purse 12JllO. Cit mlno P•k• \2JllO. Secom! Al'IClel !Pern.•I 111 AQUIPOO,jlf (SlriUH) 120 \li!1•s Son Sr11t• lt11rl) 111 Oteo Tonio (Or...,.,J !10 Pro.perous Out1I CSml!ll) 11 1 Id• Run ,,,_I 111 Clllet ll•r Bid CLklhtmJ llO Ccnmic IA.oodtc•J 111 Mon!lf!lt (W11son1 1!1 Del Too Girl fH DfClll'ICI\ 111 AIH El .. 11111 RQ(~et Ooo!llf !C•°'bYJ $1trred Tl11¥ IP1~l Gufn't llfQ"'1! CWa!son) P1ii.'1 Tony tWel!sl »> '" ". '" "' '" '" '" "' ' " '" "' ... '" co untry n1 cnl0r. Gilm~r h<is roe~ ~CCI. ·• I o ll to JC tMl'Ell:IAL flEACH -w •~•le•s; 3? mov..:u on o r U er n . ..,11ow1111, ii1 birr1cud1, w bon lf<I. brought the in vitation to the Adriatic Games. ''h1 both Hunga ry an fl Yugoslovia most ol the good athletes go lo s oc ce r , baskelball or \\'ater polo. They don't ha ve professio nal sports S a d d I e b a c k wilJ be -.:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~§§§~~~~~~9 competing in the Alission I Conference for the firsl time VW BRAKE !•.-.; this season and Guyer figt.rcs Grnssmo nt "d Chaffey as lhe $ P E C I A L .. .' :'' teams to beat. l.k b b 1'1t S•lklleDK~ 5CfltCIUlt I e ase all and football 1o fd .. s.-01. 1~11:lvttl•Oe •"" Sou1h. distract them and this makes -.rern •I 1tl~rsi0e• ff s.it., Seal, :U.-t! ~,..,~ l11vllt· a big di erence " """"1 F'erdy Massimino. watrr F~;. °"'· ~-Choll!...,. 1-1 Fri , Oc!. ll-P•lom1r •»Cl 5 f 11 polo player. c:t-student bodv Be•~td<no ~1 "''°"''"'' Relln• 4 wti ... a . -:tl Machine 4 Druma . .·: " O'O'•rheul 4 Wheel Cyllnllec:t, •· .U,llOI Miit Ull(lllldltlontl Ch1rl/lftl (HOT l'•O-••T•OI $39.95 • '· . ,-.,. ' president. world traveler and c.!:~;1 Oc•. lJ-Groumont •1 c itrus• VW SHOCKS ................ $7.tS IMtoW'., a pre-medical student is a Fri .. 0c1. :JO.-.o1 Ml. sin •~1an1o 100.000 mile guaranteed (nol pro-rated).· young man "'ho understanrls. 111;~11~.'~o'... 1-AllK l111•U1tion11 t i \VE DO AlL FOREIGN CARS. but does not condone, the sa11 o;f90 e Dl5C IUU 5PICIALrsT e hippy generation. rue•-· NO'<', H1--Mi•1ion Cot1f«1t11et meet cs•e111..,1:1c•1 COSTA MESA STORE ONLY He is the type all parenls Fri .. He~. 20--Sou tht•n c1111of11i1 1111 Hllrkr llH. 111 1vish th · h.ld (ll<ttnPio"•hlo~ •t Moo•P•rt. "' e1r r I ren would s11 .. "'""· 'lll-S1are meet 11 Moot1>1rk 149-4022 ef 14f·225t Nfii•p~a~l~le~r~n~lh~e~lr~c;ol~le~g~;a~l~e~llv;•;s=~-~~·~~";•~M~";"~m~<;m~"~"~M~•~~;·~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ arter in this day and age All -ml!t'ts '' El Nt1ue1 country TH l•D ltACE. UO 'tltd\ J "e•r ota1 · Club. •l'MI uD. Clllmlno. Puru 51POO, --~ll";i!..~:"(\.:il'!· "' Et~! lnd!111 IWllHlnl 119 II Cta't Flllt /H1rdl11<1I !If Gold lnaol Perl>l'r) 119 Truly AmlllO (l~am) 111 ~:\:2,.810..~~:..) '1 l 1: flGMTH 1111.(£. OCI Ylt<t .. J "I'' tldl Ille! UO. T ... l ttllt lfMb-nd o:.. Pw(H 11sco. v11lt111 Prlnc:tn (W•ll~\ I" lloundlf'IO ~ Mt¥ (Wlllor>I n 01_,._ll!l'I' !Sml1'!!) 1 F•ou[f'~l(ll !Htf'di""I I Swlu-1r !~tl 11 Ktwttll Eou1 II•• !'°''"'') "! lt ll(ICll S-Y &11'1 ...... ,. I' lmotdtf Jio(111 !Ct1nbv1 ! NINTH ltACl . U0 ••rel> J .,..., ol~. t'ltt.,,11111 PwM U103. Clt lm!!'4 1111Cf ""'· Flrt! To De tU11111m) 170 11\1(" C:«kllfl 10.•re•I 'll hen! k -tH1rd!110l t I "l Touch !C1otb1/ 111 BACK TO SCHOOL - BOYS GYM PANTS-1. 38 REVERSIBLE T SHIRTS 2.35 ATHLETIC SUPPORTERS 95c ' ALL STAR BASKETBALL SHOES 8.95 COLLEGIATE BASKETBALL SHOES 11.95 ATHLETIC SOX 59c · 79c · 95c · 1.25 LEATHER TOP SIDERS 25.95 DUCK FEET FINS . 8.95 Pr. MASKS 1.19 · 3.49 · 4.95 SNDRKLES 95c · 1. 79 · 2.95 WATER WONDER BOARDS for BODY SURFING 4.50 CANVAS & RUBBER FLOATS -7.95 to 25.95 SKIM BOARDS -4.95 & 10.95 CHAMPION HANDBALL GLOVES 3.95. 4.50. 5.95. 6.50 OUTDOOR HANDBALLS 95c INDOOR HANDBALLS 1.10 . WILSON -DUNLOP -DAVIS BANCROFT TENNIS RACKETS WILSON T2000 STEEL RACKETS PENNSYLVANIA XTRA DUTY TENNIS BALLS DOZEN • 7.50 .. WILSON XTRA DUTY TENNIS BAUS DOZEN · 8.35 TENNIS DRESSES 13.95 to 26.95 MENS TENNIS SHORTS 4.95 to 12.00 MENS TENNIS SHIRTS 4.95 to 8.00 BOYS TENNIS SHIRTS f. SHORTS CONVERSE TENNIS SHOES LADIES 7.50 MENS 7.95 TUBES ,, '. '"' •,,!, ., . ~I MK 1..t.ln (Ptotl lfi 'N Jt1.0y IWlll-O'l1 •UI\>'• C:Ol'l'lft YIMll 1 I BIKES -PARTS -TIRES RACKET STRINGING . .. Btll• Mt.o't !,..,,,.,) '* F•11 EdclJt (H~fl I l'l•~um DtelC well•!, n • Ae.lltl1 \ 538 CENTER ST. 646-1919 CLOSED SUNDAYS Kokt MMt1 IWlllOni 111'10. ____________________________________ ._ ______ .. _.~·-ol: : . ---------------- l f • I J . ' ·.-. •,ll • ~! ~.OI ~;a illl"' 4'.411 ''-"' .~oul ~i .. , .... ' ,. I" ' ... ~c . ' rare jlµt .· t J!I' fflo<· -~ dan~ Ne .~ j;l<IPI lBLE >. 1. Th :fhe I r<-1.,, ~fcC !'vali: !qucr ' •tepo ::~ ~tdt !pres: :Jr\1 C I hilii :'.~~ ~me . .A Poisi •• :R>-:Fren ;con ti :~·ent . : "B ',tCaS< ;1the '.)'act ;1ve re ~-1l y, J.r f< ;. 11' •' "' ,. ., v ~ > . I i: l ' ~ ~ J l T .~ o! ' a 'C '• I 1 I C 1 [ . q . ' . ' • - ---~·-------·~-·-~--·------• rrldaY, Stpltmber 4, 1970 DAil Y PILOT %1 • Baron Bich Bitter Over Fia·sco in Cup Trials Frenchman Raps ;~A ban:do.n' Charge .... , :;~By ALl'fON LOCK.ABEY ~ • ..,.tt11• a111tr .,,Q.ap>n Marc e 1 Bich, ~.i:'1,_dent of the Association Fr~caise Pour La Coupe de i.:'~rica -y.tJich means the trench Association for the 410erlca 's Cup -is a bitter ~ well he slloold be - ruLQOUgh some have called liim a "poor loser." ·~ ij.is bit1emea stems from sjeing five years preparation ~ three million dollars cilveloped and sunk in foggy ~e Jslond Sound l a s t ~<id~y. • ~ that he would have won ~e, fourth and final race ~t the Australian ~Uenger Gretel II. As Bich said himself: "I am not so eicpert a skipper. But I ~v,Bire abandon the race.'' , :,~t was his complaint against the national a n d jRkmational press which told ,IJ\e . \V<ll'ld that F r a n c e ;.'fbapdoned'' the race 42 ~l\Utes after Gretel 11 had ji{li§bed. • .Not so, says the ~. ·~~'At' long as my mast stay in tfie boat -even in ·a storm - £1:;eep racing." '.f~!('EN IN TOW '~1a.l'be so. But the official ~~;.from the internalinal ~o'1t1inJttee was that France ltad been la kew-in tow and 'afuindoned the race. :~:;~Ut'. the fiery ·~renchman's gr,eat~ accusations w e r e ak"~i~t th~ committee itself. Tt..CrC were five of theifl, to be 'eX3Ct. • .And he spoke loud and clear ...;~olJ. two occasions -when he :i31a 'he would not challenge Mflifl . for "la coupe de ~'.~ca" in 1973. Asked re.PE;atedly if that meant he .~Ould never challenge again, ,lie:.ieplied ' ,,'~;·!N9, answer.'' .. ~o.,he wasn't protesting the fa~ Committee and asking ,t4at the race be resailed. He ,.Nst wanted it made clear that JW,.;. didn't think the race ~ttee did its job in not ;mj.rig the race under dangerous conditions. Neither was he protesting ~ JI and the Auslralian ~iitPer Jim Hardy. ~LEW COOL •:The baron first ble\v his cool !Uie day after the fateful race ~·hen he walked up to Bob ~lcCii.llough. s k i p p e r or •Yaliant, who was being :queried by about a hall-dozen !teporters. ; : ~~o i\1arcel," s a i d ;)1cQullough, interupling his :press briefing. The baron took :7\1: c C ulJough's outstretched ~ aoo explodtd. : ~ .. l~, I will never come the :A~ica's Cup again." : . .,A half-dozen jaws dropped. Poised pencils forgot to write. .. ~ •. brok~n English and ;Frciich the baron, redtaced, :continued his tirade as pencils :1\·ent into action. .: "But Marcel," McCullough '.teasoned, "it certainly wasn 't :.the fault of the Ne'' York ,Yacht Club comn1ittcc. You ;were racing under t h e - internaU9nal committee. Bob Black, the French association's able New York. press agent ran up. "Please lellows,11 he pleaded. "But Bob, he said 11. Loud .and clear." IMPE1tJOUS MAN "I know he did. I heanl him. And you've got to report it. But remember, he is a very impetuous man. He could change his mind by morning." BY this time the baron knew the fat was in the fire. He told Bleck to call a pr e s s conference for 10 a.m. the next day. At 10 a.m. the next d1y he hadn't changed his mind. Jn fact, he had it written out in plain English. He wouldn't come to the America's cup in 1973 -maybe never. \Vith his son, Bruno, at his side to occasionally correct hil': faltering English, the baron expounded for nearly an hour on the written terl. First it was his accusations against the committee. To wit: 1. "I accuse the committee of dishonoring. the skipper and boat by Jetting the race go on in conditions of visibility which did not allow for contenders to find the marks. 2. I accuse the committee of not having assured th e security (safety) of the boats as it must under the racing rules. J969 if the New York Yacht Club, and to have let France race for 40 minutes in visibility practically zero. AGA INST RULES "To have, against all rules, sent this message to Cheetah (France's tender) 'go and tell France that she is 180, degrees off thEi line.' I learned of this message only the followiag day. France was therefore higher than the line. "To have frequently sent raltio messages indicati11g the position of the 12-meter yachts not related to m a r k s . Specifically, at the f i r st windward mark, the Martha S (windward stake boat) an· nounced by radio that she saw a 12-meter overstanding the mark. "To have ignored the basic inter~ational rule of the road requiring that a boat be able to stop within ball the distance or visibility. "\Vhen visibility is officially zero (as pronounced by the Coast Guard In a message to Cheetah) and when one cannot see one's forestay from the cockpit, one certainly cannot bring a 62·foot »ton boat traveling at eight knots tO a stop in half the distanee of plained. Wh al the baron was saying, in effect, v;•as that he lowered his sails and allowed hi.s boat to be taken in tow for the safety of his 10 crewmen and the dozens or spectator boats -plus commercial traffic - that was still groping through the 30Up. A lot of people along the waterfront agreed with the baro• that the race should have been stopped when the 'OS ALAMITOS Wi!ST 0,.. DISNl.VLAND ON KATBLLA DAILY l'ILOT 1'11411• ~y AlmH LKllHty NAUGHTY BOY -Baron Marcel Bich, French baJlpaint pen 1nulti1nillionaire. was castigated by Frederik Horne, member of the Internationa l ).'acht Racing Union committee afer his five-point accusation against the committee. Bich. flanked by his son Bruno. is shown here at his Sunday press conference al which be lashed out at the committee. rog closed in half y;•ay through th6 race. Others pointed out lhat "ranee and G re t e I were racing under the a c tu :t I Americll 's Cup rules which state that once a rllce is started it cannot be stopped short of the Ume limit. There was at least a mile visibility at the start of the race. The upshot of it all is : The baron has excused any of his entourage who must go back to France because of personal or business rea3011s. But he will keep France and a crew in Newport to honor a previous agreemeat with the Australians that which ever won, the other would remain as a trial horse unUl the Cup races begin. Il's still a hell of a way to Jose a yacht race -not to mention three million bucks and five years work. And the baron still coatends that France could ha ve taken Gretel II in 13 knots of wind - "for which the boat was designed." That's America's Cup for you. Encore Wins Series Race Encore , the Columbia-43 sloop sailed by Dick Blat· terman of Balboa Yacht Club v.•as the overall and Class A winner of Balboa Yacht Club's 66 Series. Final standings were based on the best live of seven r.tct>s sailed in the series. Committee· Orders Bulkhead for Toilet Fearing a further protest from Sir Frank Packer, head of the Australian America's Cup syndicate, the cup com- mittee has ordered t h e Intrepid syndicate to make certain chang~ in the boat. Intrepid is the American 12· meter which will m e e t Australia's Gretel 11 in the 20th Cup defense starting Sept, JS. Henry S. ti1organ, he.11d of the New York Yacht Club's America's Cup committee has requested that the bronze fair· ing strips be removed from Intrepid's rudder and that her toilet be enclo s ed by bulkheads. William Strawbridge, head of the Intrepid syndicate said: "\\'e will comply." Packer raised the issue in a formal protest before the start of Gretel ll's challenger series Gaudio Wins Sabot Race Mark Gaudio of Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the "'inner last Sunday in the Balboa Fleet championship series for the Sabot Class. The championship series v.•as based on five races held under the jurisdiction of Lido Isle Yacht Club. against France, claiming that the fairMg s trip s sometimes called rudder flaps -increased the waterline o! the yachts. He also claimed that marine toilets which were not enclos- ed violated the 12-meter rule. The "heads" on most 12- meters are enclosed by a cur· tain for we ight s a v i n g purposes. Packer said in his protest that his own yacht Gretel 11 met all of the measurement particulars or a true 12--meter, but that all of the American yachts, as well as the French were in violation . Strawbridge s a i d !he changes to Intrepid would be made this weekend while the yacht is hauled out aL the Ne,vport, R.J. shlpya rd. Wes terly Wins Cal-23 Hegatta Ray Corbelt "s \Vesterly of Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club "'as the winner of the Cal-28 nation1JI championship regatta held at Del Hey Yacht Club. Runner -up was Scorpio. skippered by Don Reeve of Little Ships Fleet ; third was Glenn Thorpe in Puff , California Yacht Club : fourth place went to Chuck A1anning or CBYC in Flyaway, and hrlh Sorceress, 5kippe red by Ray Schchter of Pacific Mariners Yacht Club. Second overall and in Class A went to Jack Baillie's 12- meter NewsBoy from BYC. Third place overall and the·----.,--==============---1 winner Jn Class B was scored by George West in the Ericson-41 sloop Firebrand. Follov;·in& are final class results : CLASS A -(1) Encore ; (2') New Boy; (3) Sparkle, Alex Irving, BYC; CLASS B -(I) Firebrand ; (2) Destiny 11, John Hooten, BCYC : {3) tifelee, Don Ayres Jr., NHYC: (4) Atari, John Cazier, BYC; (5) Aquarius, Gary flfyers, NHYC. --CLASS C -(11 Pleides , Randy Smyth, HHYC ; (21 Ar· riba. Smiley & Thome, BVC; (3) Sanderling, Kirk & Poole, BCYC & BYC; (4) Jezebel, Vil an Couch, BYC : ( S ) Impetuous, Chuck Glasgow, YOU CAN TRUST YOUR TRANSMISSION TO ANY OF AAMCO'S 550 CENTERS. BYC. CLASS D -(I) Swiss Navy, Dick Deaver. BYC; ( 2) Volante JI , Mike Hirsh, BYC; (3) Malihini, Jack Bostwkk, BCYC; (4 ) Freestyle, Cicero & Lippold, BYC & NHYC; (l) Neja, Jim Borger, BYC. Big Selection Most Sizes WORLD'S LARGEST TRNISMISSION SPECIAUSTS ""1lltl""-'U .. U Iv..,• '••k-Jn.au4 ''" W. Li.11R 111111, 6t40 Sllnlln A111. c.,i11r1M l11clt-4t'-1111 UtfO o.l!ffJ "'rll Rd. (flll M .. ._._.....,.. 0.Wfltv-l'U) ill.,.,. 1'4J NllW'91't IJvtl, HU Rt1Krlftl •I L1~r#Mll 1"11lllrllrl-4ltf"')t Glrf ... G,..,......,.,.. Ill s.vtfl EvclW ts41 GI,..,.. G...,• '""· Big savings on slightly used new car ·takeoffs, tool * * * * * * Baron 'Bad Loser~ Cup Aide Blasts lraie Frenchman Baron t1arcel Bich, head or 1he French syndicate seeking to challenge the America's Cup, got a positive rtactlon from the International Yacht Racing Union race committee following h i s accusations against the committee for let· ting the final race between France and Gretel JI go on in foggy conditians. The New York Times printed an interview with Commodore Frederik Horne, a member of the committee, who castigated Bich in no uncertain terms. Said Jlorne : "The baron is not only a bad loser but a bad sailor. He cer- tainly did abandon the race. When a ski,pper takes down Rod Scl1apel Ente;rs SF Midget Rac'e does not return to t h t America's CU___p. •• The castigation wa., in response to a five-point 11c· cusation agaiMt the commit- te by Blch for letting the fourth and final race between France and Gretel JJ to ' go on in e1.· tremely foggy conditions. Horne said he spoke for Dr. Bepe Croce. chairman of the committee and Ernst Oscar Ahlers, the other member. Aleanwhile the baron is seeking another challenge for the cup in 1971. He has asked the NeW York Yacht Club America's Cup committee to waive the rules in-.the deed of gift calling for a challenge his sails and accepts a lo\V 011!y every three years. there is no other word for it. In a press conference last Baron Bich has a lot to learn Sunday Blch said he would not -such as how tu sail and challenge again in 1973, but navigate, lhc rules of racing, claimed that his yacht France how to handle his crews. and was not given a fair chance in how to behave as a gentlema11 her best four out o( seven instead or a spoiled child. I sailotf against the Australian <.'an only feel sorry for him. He Gretel If. has a lol to learn," said Horne. He claimed weather condi- Horne concluded by saying : lions in three out of the "It v;·ou ld be a credit lo the four races precluded a fair Rod Schapel of B 3 h I a sport or sailing if Baron Bich test or both yachts. Corinthian Yacht Club will bel ljiii~!lij"~iijjiiiipiiipijiipijiipi .. iiijiiiiiiliii the only Southern California] skipper starting today in the San Francisco to Ensenada race for Midget Ocean Racing Class yachts. Schapel will be sailing his new lslander-30 sloop Laissez Faire in which he has scored in several Southland regattas since launching it July 24. The sloo p placed f i r s t overall in the South Shore Sailing Club's Triangle race. cruise, second overall in BCYC's Indian Rock race for PHRF', and third in the MORF , .. L 1MIT,..mlt'.&-.., division of Newport Harbor ....._ • -._ ...,, .. .,. Yacht Club's Gold Coasil~''i'icei.~==~~~:~i:::::~·~"""~•~G"~"~-~==~ our annual LABOR DAY WEEKEND 3 BICi DAYS SATURDAY, SEPT. 5th ... , SUNDAY, SEPT. 6th ..... . 9 am-1 am 9 am-1 am MONDAY, SEPT. 7th . 9 am • Midnlte Get a group of friends together ltnd have a bowl No Limit! PAY THE REGULAR PRICE FOR THE 1st I 3rd, 5th, etc. l GAME ••• THE 2nd, 4th, 6th , etc., GAME JUST A PENNY! ! ! ! NO LIMIT .,.,,=. ,, ___ , ·--.....,~--- J Naw Appearing In Our Lounge ROSCOE HOLLAND • AT THE PIANO BAR Mon. thru Sat. from 9 p.m. ·- KONA LANES lllll(IPf' LAIOllt DAY) ' Costa Mesa rnstane Store -475 L 17th St -646-2444 2699 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 545°1112 • HOME OF 1011 PROBERT'$ PRO SHOP 0 .,,_ HOURS : Mon.. '''·· I 1.m. to 7 p.m. -Sit., I 1.m. to S p.m. " •• . --.-.-..- J2 DAllV PILOT Frldly, S.Pltmbef 4, 1970 Vital Statistit!s for the Orange Coast Area Births Marriage Lice11ses METIL BUILDINGS This i1 a hoon to 1be homee>Wl'l•r. Far Ie11 than building on a shed or •••n making on• ou.t of lumb.r (watch your tongue!), So you could do one of lu.mb.r. but this is a lot 1•11 labor tim• and all hardware. bolts. nuts.. etc. ar• included. White and GrHn. baked enamel finish.. , 87 5x6 J &x8 ........... &xIO .......... JOxlO ••••••••• 7717 87'' ll7'' TOOT A r•peal ol o ••llout. (JI you got. a. "rain ticket", II'• a till good.) A beautf. pet!Kt· ly 1mooth Ql'ld r•odr to 11ala ot paint to 11111. One piece cultur..t iaarble lop. loucet e.:tro. '1 could u1e on nttc IOU• eel.) FIYE LITE CBAllDELIER Loolla \I lle lh• on• tb•r took out ol Denny'• •h•n they,chcanged It oter 10 Co•aar'1. pc:iloce. ~Ava in. you're doing it!) Very •leganl. tall chimn•f gla11. bro1a ba1e and onnt, ta"ed ce11t•rpo1t. ----~---- Ad,.•rtiMd SJ)9Clal1 ;ood lhna September 9. 1970 na1t ... 1c 1n.t be.a told aae the ad wo• hdl ol surprlMa. but he wl•hed i i wo1 full of talent.) MAIOGllfY STOOLS 18" 24" •••••••••• l'' • • • 247 •••••••• 30'' ••••.....•• 297 Ye1. ifa tnie. •• o ... going to go 11111 bloat on untini•hed furniture. but w• or• allll looki11g for th• nicetl quollly line at reaao11.e1bl• pric••. But look at theM for opener•. ROTIRY MOWER A NTD inoke II think It 1ta11d1 tor. "Molle the Douqb"J, Four q;tl•. recoll 1torter, •IMI deck. encloted blode. ofl1el whMl1, Light lo 11>11 olong. th\1 011• will leave you 1trength to play a lltlle go.II or wba1evet. GAF SUBE-Snl Y-1 FLOOR mE "-1.Hm H• -llllihffl•• b:leklog. fut pMl IQICf whczp It doW:D.. Veory 11ke patteraa. loob llk9 Nell l111port9d tUe. Vloyl a1bt1tos for wear •Ith penDCJDet1t mhiil•. 45 SQ. FEET 1487 Add a lot of good loob to your entry and a lot o( saJety 011 thOM ll!JPI. Ea1y lo b.nd to lhe 1t11lr angle (U ro11'r1 er gorillw,) LIN. FT. 4 and 6 IL lo"lllu NATIONAL LATEX INTERIOR- EXJERIOR GNGt GctyUe latn. gr.at color-. gfMI c:o,.erag1. (gr.at gun .. I'm looking at lb~ ~rong co:n.) 2 7~AL. 6 FOOT ALUMDf1J)I • LIDDER Light. but stroag as th• dk:hlui. (I' n..w a ltki namtd DkM•, he waa o wlmpJ Wllh paint •hell, n ii:dorced •tein· 8'7 BLACK 8r DECKER 7 V4" CIRCULAR · SAW Thia 1a tlw hti.r one. :not the worMr one, With the ad!uatinen1a 90 JOU C<UI cut Jib a pm. 2999 POOL CHLORINE Mari•nn• .ay1 It wo.k• Ju•I oa 11oocl a• th• 17c Cl gal (with return depoall) 1lull. Saia• pot•ncy, but•• .. 11for1.1 .. lMaybe our• doe1a't laelude the cap -c> JOI.I Jail atiek your th11mb ln 117). fto depo1it. no r•turn. ' ClR TOP CARRIER NlltT'tMf.L , ..... , CMCAP , ... . BAllDY BIGS I 1 You con wnzp o aandwic:h. CLQ "99• o cabbage, eY•D G llttle bagel !Still tbe kld1 thtow it boc:lr: and yell, "Pean1.1t butter and j4olly," feb.) PAI: OF 50 APPLIANCE ROLLERS Pul q 111 under the Fridge.i hook up 1h1 motor, ond lake to th• Fr .. wciy. Or Mczyb.. if Harry wan.Ii ClllOtMr c:old drink. Ju•I puab lhe icebox oYer to him. 20 llfCI BREEZE BOX FAH So you think th• hot day• ar• goo•. Wbea Indian Sumin•r hit& you11 •lcmd at th• .regi1ter and eat your hewt wt. SaT• this week. 1277 32 GAL. TBASI CAB A clean world b.gin• at hoine, and this no-d•nt. no- ciang pla•tic tro:1h ccm with locking lid will help with lb• war on noi•• too. PLASTIC 5YR. GUAR. 297 SIFtTY nARES l"P ca lew in lhe qlove compartment, not i.D lh• tnink. II .am.on• wham• you In thereat. how you 9onno gel the lnink open. ecbmart guy? 18 c EA. HERE'S ANOTHER ·---- SHORTY'S FREE CLASSES LA llllADA STORE COMMUNITY ROGM. EVERY WEDNESDAY EVENING 7,30 lo 8'30 P.M. Clot• 1~ l1 li111it.d. but you con ritg[aler j" edwane• la Clllf •toff. The ride la worth it _, u-o"' h• the 100Mf rou'll 1a•• do.lag th• -Ir younell. REFRESHIES DOOR PRIZES SEPTEMJIEft t "How to Do Your Own Poaellng.'' By G.argia:- PoeiUc: Compony. SEPTEMIEll: JI ~eli.ni1hing ol Furnllu ... Gl'ld l>Koupag~ ... SEPTEMJDI: 23 ''How to lnatall Aluminun Wlndow1 and Doota." by th• Hl·Llle Corp. (old Markf Lart tu•t paid SIOO labor to latlall a 4'0"ri'lJ" ao 10\J figure lt out.> REGISTER XOW ·. New Surfing Movie Shot · ByLagunan .. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL 01 lllt D1llr l"Uol Sti ff ''Simply, it's a film about the trutlu of surfing," says the ~year old South Lagunan Greg MacGillivray, who is co- producer of a new surf film. "Waves of Change," which will be shown at the Balboa 'Theater, Balboa, Sept. S.15. as part of a nationwide trial run. '·Today surfing has more ol a respected position than it did, say, five or six years ago w)lh the woody kick. "Our message in the film is to show that the individual is free and can dG "'·hatever he wants. I guess a good thing about the film is that you don't have to be a surfer to get involved in it," observed MacGillivray. Greg, along with Laguna Beach's Jim Freeman (currently in Mexico working on 8Jlolher film ) began ''Waves of Change" four years ago, embarking for South America with two surrers , several cameras and lots of 16mm color film. HO\YEVER, none of the shols from Sou th America made it into "Waves of Change.'' All the footage will be used for a shorler surf film later o n • MacGillivray reports. The filming duo conti nued on around the world , looking ior the good waves and found them in France, Portugal, Hawaii and California. lt took four years, nearly !>S miles o[ rilm and $55,000 dollars to produce "Waves of Change.'' "Right now our bank accounts are almost empty, but they will get a boost from our trial showings of the film ," says Greg. The film will have seven showings throughout the United Slates. Already it has enjoyed a "very successful " run at the Huntington Hartford Theater in Holl ywood and in Laguna Beach. It also is being shown in Texas, New York and all along the East Coast. "Waves of Ch ange" opens with several minutes of surfing shots in slow motion, creating the feeling that surfing can be the most graceful of all sports. THE SHOTS were taken with a MacGillivray designed camera, capable of shooting 200 frames per second - roughly ten times faster than lhe average movie camera. "People told us, the camera wouldn't work. They said it woulii shred the film, but we got some tremendous footage with it," MacGillivray said. "In some of the other shots towards the end of the film we used a camera that shoots 600 frames per second.'' Such a camera, MacGillivray report~. has only been used in the past for shots or rocket launchings and certain military operalions where super-slow motion is required . ?o.lany or the shots were taken as MacGillivray su rfed on a board or swam with the camera ... Either way It. was pretty difficult, with those heavy cameras.'' he says. !\1acGillivray began his movie career by combining two or his favorite bobbies -surfing and photography. While living in Corona del Mar he released his fir st film . "A Cool Wave of Color," when he was 17. Two yea rs later, after moving wiY! _h~~ parents to Monarch Bay. he releasea:•·Tue Performers'' which became a I6mm favorite .. HE ATJ'ENDED UC Santa Barbara, but felt the urg e to make films so did not graduate. However, ?o.1acGillivray said he's planning to go back to school soon and concentrate on liberal arts. '·MacGillivray-Frceman Films i s defi nitely a career. Right now we are going to do several promotional films and some more on surfing." !\facGillivray said thal he'd like to do a short doc1.lmentary on Laguna Beach. ''I'd just like to see a really honest film on this town." he o~erved. Working from Freeman's spacious apartment in Pyne castle, MacGilli vray is putting in between 14 and 16 hours a day coordinating the various showings of "W.11ves of Change" around the U.S. He is preparing to have ''Waves of Change'' blown up to 3S mm for regular movit theater runs M the fall. .. We've really got more work than we can handle," he says and as his feelings about surfing pop up, he notes that with all the work and ideas: "I'm just not spendln& enouah time at the beach." -----·-------------- Friday, Stpttrnbtr 4, 1970 EE E DER go ••• DAILY l'ILOT $1.U l'hH• GREG MocGILLIVRAY EDITS ONE OF THE COMPANY FILMS IN LAGUNA WORKSHOP l WORLD CHAMPION SURFER, ROLF AURNESS, CUTS BACK ON A WAVE TO GAIN MORE SPEED Streisand Stars In Consecutive La s Vegas Sho,vs Barbra Streisand will make a four· week appearance in Las Vegas th is winter with successive engagements al the Riviera aM:I International hotels. Th is is the first time in Las Vegas history a star has played consecu tive engageme11Ls under two diUerent roofs,. The Internationally acclaimed actress· singer will appear at the Riviera from Nov. 27 through Dec. IO. On Dec. 14, !\liss Streisand wtn open at the lnternallon al. The engagement will be the hotel's Hollday auraction. carryiflg her through. New Years. She was the lnlcrrialional 's (irst star when they opened in Jul y, 1969. The appearance at the R i v i e r a concludes a nine-yea r old commitment. Since Mr last appearance in Las Vegas, the actress ha's starred io ty,·() music11I motion pictures, "Hel lo, Dolly!" and "On A Clear Day You Ctln See Forever." Her next film . in which she does oot. sing, is Columbia's "The Owl and The Pussycat," scheduled for a fall rele11se. Miss Streisand recently won a coveted 1pecial AntoiMlte P.erry A w a r d l"Tony"), their first on-stage Hall Of :Fame. Award , saluUn& her as ''The Star· ot the Dec•de." On Sept. 7, as part of the Ed Sullivan television show on Channel 2, she Will be honored as "'MM! Ent.crl8iner of the Year',' in (he first American Gufld of YN'iety Artilll lA .G.V.A.) Award s JIM FREEMAN AIMS HIS CAMERA AT SURFING 'S PURE BEAUTY pre,.nlalioo. -w1111t to tlo • •• Intermission Ferzacca 'Branching Out' With Orange Coast, SCR Ry TOM TITUS Of It" Oellr l'llOI llelf As water eventually find s its own level, so John F'erzacca believes he is finally ensconced into his particular niche in local !heal.er. The young man who se rved a whirlwind season as the first artistic director of the new Laguna Mou lton Playhouse last year before the play- house returned lo the guest director formal has set out .again on two (roots. both in Costa Mesa, from which he hopes to prepare a more n1eaty theatrica l diet fnr Orange County playgoers. ·"· .i-~· • .,., I JOHN l"l!RlACCA Ferzacca, a drama teacher by trade before his year in Laguna, has joined his old friend Bill Purkiss on the staff of Orange Coasl College's theater <lrts department. And while wailing for the semester lO start. he's directing "The Boys in the Band" for South Coast Repertory, "It's a whole new kind or situaliCJ11 at the cnlleges ." John says, enthusiastically. •·1 can do I.he plays I've always wanted to do -and I can choose them simply for I.hei r value, without bolhering to wonder whether or nol they 'll sell .'' HlS FIRST productio n al OCC will be one which didn't "sell" on Broadway, but CJ11e which Fcrzacca is anxiou s to bring ID the loca l stage -Arthur Kopit 's spraw ling historical drama ''Indians." '11 read the play and was overwhelmed by it," he relates ... J wanted lo put it on, sot wrote to Kopit through his agent and got the ageocy lo release lhe show to Orange Coast. So far as I know. it will be the first producllon of 'Indians' in California ." Although he expects OCC to keep him busy -he'll direct two plays and build the sets for two others this season - John hopes 1o act and direct al South Coast Repertory, which also makes a few demands on an artist's spare time . However, he expects it ID be I es s tiresome an experi ence than his Laguna sojourn, during wh ich he directed six of the playhouse 's eight productions and starred m two or them. One reaso n is the type of plays with which he 'll be involved. SOUTH COAST Repertory doesn't have restrictions Dn subject matter," Ferzacca points out •·so you can be a little more <laring because you'll be playing to 1 more sophisticated audience. And at Orange Coast. it'~ not a matte~ 9! dollars and cenl.S . You're not out to make m0\1ey-the student plays are put on for no charge.'' Ferzacca makes it clear that he is not exactly thrilled with the state or community theater in Orange County. 11e particularly deplores the Io ca I playhouses' tendency to stick with the "name .. plays which. were successful in New York and to turn their backs on unknown work~ by new playwrights. "I would like some day to see the theater cha'nging \hC tastes Of II community instead or the other way around," he declares. "Theater needs ll strong, vita l force -new plays by new people. Somewhere there must be a way to make theater commercial and still artistic.'' A Quixotic outlook~ Perhaps. Yet in his four yea rs of acting and directin ii; in Orange County thea ter. John Fen.acca has demonstrated a brimming reservoi r or both dramatic skill and boLmdless energy. And. at the rairly youthlul age or 30. he has plenty or time to pursue his .. imposs ible dream.'' '* BACKSTAGE -The Irvine Community Theater. kicking off its first full .season, has shuffled the order of its originally announced lineup or productions ..• the group will open with .. A Shnt in the Dark" Sept. J7, rolJowed by "Night of January l!i" (Nov. 12 ), "While Liars" and "Black Comedy" (Jan. 21). "A View From the Bridge" iMarch 18), "Goodbye Charlie" iMa.v 61. and a su n1mer musical based on ''The Drunkards," launching a lull month's run July l. flollywood Backstage Sandra Dee Hopes to Lose Movie lnge11ue Image By VERNON SCOIT U,I Htlly-4 C1rr11H"dl"I Ing in the fields kept interfering with the soundtrack. HOLLYWOOD -·sandra Dee, the Sandra had never heard a cajun accent dimpled darling of 27 motion pictu res, and the results were disastrous. wants to return to work. To this day, "Man Hunter" has not Her background is sound. if limited . been released to theaters. When a picture sandy, as she was called by indulgent is that bad, ii brings tears to one 's eyes. mDguls at Universal Pictures, for nine "All my pictures except the first one years, specialized in ingenue roles. have been disasters." Sandra com· This is fine if you are mentally, em11-plained. "And maybe that one at J\1GM - tionally and physica!!y an eternal teen-'Doctor, You've Got to be Kidding ' -was ager. A girl ca n play ingenues into her pretty good. octogenarian years _ if she takes care or "I was lucky my pictures did well al herself. But Sandy is normal, beautiful, the box office, but artistically 1hey were healthy and bright. really horrible. Now I'm looking forward to playing mature roles in adull pie· She is also 26-year-old. lures." Having started at age 15 in "Until They As if to put an exclamation mark to her Sail," Sandra never aga in reached the statement, Sandra ordered a o other heights of her rirst movie . martini. Her credits include ''Tammy Tell Me • True." "Gidget'' and ''The Reluctant ili•••••lllll•lllll .. 11!11•••11 Debutantc." WEEKENDER No matter how purile the picture, San· dra managed to spend seven year.!! among the ten top box office attractions. Now she is not even among the bottom ten attractions. "' And with good reason. She quit making movies for a year. "I look the year on to get away from my image as Gidget and Tammy," said Sandra, si pping a noonday cocktail and smoking a half-Oozen cigarettes. She didn't look like Gidget or Tammv. Sandra looked sexy, adult and a well· rounded 2& years old. "Nobody knows ho\lt' diffkult it is lo lose lhe ingenue image,'' she went on. ''l was a junior Doris Day for years. Elizabeth Taylor and N1talie Wood ·both had to overcome being ingenues." They did not, however, have the added burden of appearinJ in so many dreadful pictures, Sa ndra's final movie under her nine- year contract to Uni versal was a Utile dandy titled •·Man Hunter" In which she pl11yed a bleached bkmde Cajun girl on location Jn St.ocklon, where the cows low· INSIDE FEATURES Friday, September 4, 1970 Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park has so me li!/!fY music and enterlainmenl-" sch~ulcd for the long weekend wilh Jeannie C. Riley, who wrote lhe hil "Harper Valley PTA,'' performing on Labor Day. There is a story and picture on Page 24. Travel Page 14 Wheels and Campln( Page 24 1.Jve Theater Paa:~ tf Gulde to Fun. Page 14 In the Gal\erle1 Page U Out 'N' About Page! !S • 11 "The Prophets" Paie H Laguna Art Es:lllblt Page Z7 Amercla'1 Cup Pa1e 17 Ttlevislon Log Page 17 ' Gulde to l't1ovles Page 18 Fred ~1ac~turray11 Secret Page zt Comics P11ge !t ' \ - ---·~-~..,,-~~~~--;.~.,,...~.:-:-.~.~.~.-:'.·~.""!'.~.~-:---------~----"l"'!'"'!""""' ........ "11!!!"" .............................................................. "',..""' • Frldjy, Stptfmber •. 1970 Travel M-ennucino Red·i·scovered By STAN DELAP LANE snapper. Soak it ln lime juice in the refrigerator MENDOCINO_ The men from Maine pass ed. lor an hour. That "cooks" it-takes the ·raw taste Id out. Serve it cold with a dash of tabasco sauce and by the California gold fields for the lumber go in time 1·uice. Chopped onions, olives, tomatoes o top. t he blue sky country of redwood trees. and salmon 'lb river. Their sawmills built San Francisco ...,. lhree Yo~ can experiment with this. Put on anything w1 times. (After each fire of the 1850s.) a hot or salty taste. .* .f When concrete and steel came, the lumber baron s pa<.'ked up their mo"!ey and depa~ed. They In Tahiti and other South Seas islands, they left great gingerbread mansions whose paint pef.l~d cover it with coconut milk. Not the water inside the in the winter storms. Shutters flapped and nails nut. You scrape the meat out of a fresh nut and rk d lose. squeeze the milk from it. (They sell this canned -""'""'"-''"""-----,'.fi----------now'in-gourmet-food shops.) No hot .sauce·irrthe-- Now it's }leen rediscovered by artists and writ-South Seas version. J EANNIE C. RIL EY At Knott'a Ltibor Day Labor Dav -Means F11n At Knott 's A gala, star-studded entertainment schedule will mark the Labor Day weekend in Knott 's Berry Fann 's Covered Wagon Ca m p. Jeannie C. Riley, whose hit "Harper Valley PTA'' was a multimillion seller, will head the list of performers in shows on Labor Day, Sept. 7. A lovely young lady, Jeannie C. Riley has enjoyed guest appearances on such ~levision shows as: the Glen Campbell Show, Kraft Music HaU , the Ed Sullivan Show, Hollywood Palace, the Johnny Cash Show, This is Tom Jones, Hee Haw and Johnny Carson. Emerging not only as a good singer but as a •sparkling personality, Miss R i I e y 's career was further s k y - rocketed when she was chosen to star in her own television hour-long special on Channel 4. Her performances in the Covered Wagon C a m p at Knott's will be at 4, 5:30, 7 and 8:30 p.m. Starting the weekend tonight will be doublebarrel excite- ment, when the Chaparral Brothers take the stage for shows at 6:30, 8:30 and 10 :30 p.m. A pair of identical twins, the Chaparral's are respon· sible for a long linet.1p of hil.5 in the country western field including: "Leave," '1 The Rain," "Just One More Time'' and ''Runni ng From a Memory." Capitol Recording artist, Ferlin Hu~ey, wiU be the featured enertainment o n Saturday. Huskey's hi ts . "Gone" and "Wings of a Dove," both. million sellers, started this versatile popular country entertainer on his road to fame. Returning to the Wagon Camp Stage by popular demand on Sunday is Eddie Dean and his band . Brightening the h o 11 d a y weekend in Fiesta Village will be daily perfonnances by the Fred Hernandez Quartet from t~ p.m. In the evening from 6 to 11 p.m., the happy sounds of Los Zorros Plateados and the dancing of the Sally Savedra Dancers will add to the festivities in the Village Plaza. Spectacular fireworks on the lake can be seen in Fiesta Village eacti evening at 10 p.m. Knott 's is located in Buena Park at 8039 Beach Blvd., just two miles south of the Santa Ana Frttway. Live Theater / 0 Slots"' and "The American Dream·• Two one act plays are on atage at the Nifty Theater, YJ7 P.iain St., Huntington Beach at 8:30 p.m. Fri. and Sat. through Oct. 3. Reserva· tJons -S36-9!S8. •·0nce More With FCtung" A comedy aboul symphony conductor's sour notes on stage al the Huntington Beach Play. house, 2110 Main St., Hunting. ton Beach, Fri. and Sat. at 3,3<1 p.m. Sept. II throogh Oct. 11. Reservations -536-8861. "Boys in the Band" A comic-drama about homo- sexuals on stage at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Corta. Mesa, at 8:30 p.m. Prt. • Sun .. Sept . 11 • Oct. IJ Reservations-'46-1363. t•etfl, Book •nd C•ndle" A contemporary comedy is on. stage at the Westminster c.ommunlty Theater. '.Finley School, Traslc and Edwards SU .• in Westminster, al 8:30 p.m. Fri. ·Sat., Sept. 11·26. -...u ... -817"315. ' ' I ers -and. of course, by the tourists. ~t's a ~eisurely drive up Highway 1: Start at Russian River and stop at the old Russian Fort Ross. Lunch or over· night at Timber Cove Inn. Jv!endocino is worth a co uple of days. There are two good resort hotels; Heritage House and Little Ri'ver Inn. Se1food is excellent from these ice-cold waters. The restaurant you want is the first right turn over the bridge as you enter Fort Bragg. * Skin divers get abalone in 20 feet of water off- shore. Any of lhem wiJI show you a way to slice them. (New to me, and I come from abalone coun- try.) Nail two wooden coat hangers to a board so that they form an oval. Put the abalone meat in the cen· ter, and use the coat hangers as a guide for slicing. The thickness of a coat hanger is just right for an abalone steak. Pound to tenderness. Flour and fry -not over 30 seconds on each side. * . "Wt had• cocktail in Mexico they said was raw fish. But It didn't t aste that w•y." Ceviche that is. Say it "say-VEE-chay." Cut a firm white fish into bite·size chunks. They use red Guide to Fun Newport Library To Show Films SEPT. 4 NB UBRARV Fil.MS-The Newport Beach Library audi<>- visual department in cooperation with the Santiago Film Circuit is presenting free filrru: each Fri. at 8:30 p.rn. in the mall at Fashion lsland, Newport Beach. This Fri. the program includes •i ne Clown," "The Jugernaut" and "Senti- nal West." SEPT. 5 -SEPT. 1Z JAPANESE Vlll..AGE -Rock groups and light shows will be the "heavy happenings" at Japanese Village on Sat. even- ings this summer, from 7:30 p.m, to midnight with the "Samu- rais" and "The Prophets'' performbig with the aid of Fila- ment -a light show. All this in addition to the other attrac- tions at the village including trained bears, a teal show, karate exhibitio111 and tame deer. Food is available. I W Knott Ave., Buena Park. Phone 523-2381. SEPT • .f -SEPT. IZ DISNEYLAND SUMMER -Disneyland is c e I e b r a t In g its 15th birthday with over 500 entertainers all summer lor1g in the "Super Summer" celebration. There will be 28 special shows and talent groups with "Show Me America ," musical comedy on the Tomorrowland Stage at 8 and 10 p.m. Mon.-Fri. The Tomorrowland Terrace will have "Sound Castle Ltd." with new sets, new costumes and top rock favorites every evening from 9 except Sun. The "Minority of Sil" will take over the Terrace on Sun. and may also be heard on the Tomorrowland Stage on Sat. and the Plaza Gardens on Fri. The "Entertainment Com· mittee" plays 0111 the Terrace Mon.-Sat. afternoons. The Plaza Gardens will have ''Big BaJ1d" sounds for ballroom dancing, nightiy except Fri., with Tommy Dorsey Band led by Lee Castle with Helen O'Connell and Bob Eberly. Sunday brings ''Country Jubilee" on the Tomorrowland Stage with a different group each week, drawn from folk·music experts. Jazz will be heard in New Orleans Square and aboard the Mark Twai11:. All this plus the 53 permanent fun-filled a!! summer Jong. Hou rs: 8 a.m. to I a.m. daily. SEPT. 4 • 7 KNOTr'S BERRY FARM -A Golden Cavalcade or Country and Western Music will be staged each weekend at Knott's, through Labor Day, Sept. 7. with showtimes -Fri. -Sat. 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.; Sun. 5, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. j'The Sound Generation." a group of 24 young men and women from John Brown University, will present shows Mon.-Thurs. at 7, 8:30 and 10 p.rn. Hou rs: 9 a.m.-11 p.m. Mon.·Thurs.; 9 a.m.-midnight, Fri...Sat.: Close 10 p.m. Sun. Admission $1 adults, 25 cents for children II and under. No additional charge for shows. 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. SEPT.'5 TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster ReCreation and Parks Department will hold a Teen Club Dance in the com- munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for Westminster teens) each Sat. from 8 p.m. to midnight. Adm ission, $1. for members. $1.SO for non-members. The "Third Side" group wll play for dancing Sept. S. SEPT. S LAGUNA BALLET -The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Com· pany is presenting its fifth .annual Ballet Alfresco in the Irvine Bowl, 650 Laguna Canyon Road , Sept. 5 at 8:30 p.m. The Company will perform "The Stone Flower'' and "Three Plus Two" ballets. Special guest star, Edward Villella, will dance two "Pas de Oeu x." Villella is from the New York City Ballet and considered America's leading male dancer. Limited number of tickets are still available at the Irvine Bowl. Phone 494·1147 or 494·11 48 for information and reser- vations. SEPT. II TRAVELOGUE -The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Foundation is presenting a travelogue in OCC auditorium, 2701 Fairview Drive, 'Costa Mesa. Sept 11 at 8 p.m .• narrated by Chris Bor· den. The title is "Bali" and is the first major film to ht made about Bail in 15 years. Tickets at the door. $2 for adults, $1 for students for single performances. SeRson tick· ets for six travelogues are $10 for adults, $5 for student$. SEPT. HARBOR TOUR -The Pavilion Queen, Newport Harbor's newest fun attraction, Is making sightseeing trips at 11 a.m., 3 and 5 p.m. daily, departing from the PJv\Uon for the go:. minute cruite of the bay. Cocktail cruises w4th an open bar saU at 7, 9 and 11 p.m. The boat is a replica of an old·Ume river boat, lavishly decorated In rich reds and golds. (Avail· able for charter parties. too.) Fare for sightseeing Is J2 for adults, ti for children under 12, tots uoder 5 free with adults. Reservations -t73-$245 . SEPT. llARBOR CRUISES -Fully narrated cn1ises around New· part HMbor ll'ave each hour, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. and a moon. light cruise at 8 p.m., from the Fun 7..one Dock by the Ferry Landing on Edgewater Ave., Jn Balboa. Boal! cruise in sheltered water around the islands, viewing the homes and yachtJ o! the area. Tickets, $1.25 for adults ; Cblldren ''Wt must sptnd Christmas in Europe. What would you suggest?" London is a wonderful town for Christmas. Little Georgian squares with yellow lightea windows are like a Dickens postcard. It's lively in ~ndon. A lot of music. Good theaters. Cheerful ~staurants and plum pudding. The Austrian Tyrol is snowy. Warm inns. Steaming grog mit der Jamaican rum. Sleighs in the street. Christmas decorations of green fir and red candles. Th e food is wonderful. I'd get into one of the lively ski resorts: Kitzbuhel or St. Anton. * ''Is it safe to drive to Mexico? How are the high· ways?" Safe enough. 1 never have apprehensions about driving in Mexico. You MUST buy Mexican auto insurance at the border on the American side. Your States insurance is no good. Highways are excellent. Back roads-terrible • * Do NOT drive at night. The side of the road - outside the range of your lights -is filled with loose burros, cows, horses. They have a '(vay of wandering in front of you at the last screeching minute. Adio s, m uchacbos. * '"We wrote you for your free 'Living Abro•d in Mex ico end other places1 ••• " Coming, coming. That mail ran 5000 requests. Some will be Jost - a forwarded envelope that m ust have held 50 letters came empty with a postoffi ce notation "'contents lost." One in every hundred let· ters has the name but no address. We may lose or misdirect a few. * All should be answer.cf by next Wffk. If you don't hi ve It by then1 a sk me a geln. In the Galleries David Barnes Oils Now on Display FIRST WESTERN BANK -18022 Culver Drive, University Park, Irvine. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil paintillgs and collages by David Barne!, through Sepl. 18. CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY-420 Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar. On exhibit through Sept. during regular library hour!, water color portraits by Peggy Sheppard. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Hours : 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Currently on exhibil, a one-man show of Andy Warhol graphics - silk screen prints, 1966 -1970; signed limited edition posters and original paintings, through Sept. 7. LAGUNA ART GALLERY-307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours : noon to 5 p.m. Mon .• Sat.; I · 5 p.m. Sun. Admission SO cents. On exhibit through Sept. work of Taiwan artist Liu Kuo Song; Ralph Tarzian's bronzes and hard-ed&e paintings by Florence Arnold . MARINER'S U BRARY-2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. During regular library hours, the Jr. Ebel! Artists of the Month exhibit featuring acrylic paintings of old Newport land· marks by Gretchen Williams. BOWERS MUSEUM~2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours: 10 a.m. -4i :30 .p.m. Tues .• Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun.; Wed. and Thurs .. 7 to 9 p.m. No charge. Pre-Columbian ceramics on exhibit Sept. 5 -through 27. MESA ART LEAGUE-513 Center St.. Costa Mesa. Hour: Sat. and Sun. I to 5 p.m. continuous exhibits of art work in various media by Art League members. No admission charge. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive. New· port Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours throu gh Aug., woven wall hangings by Micki Lippe. 1\-fARINERS SAVINGS ANO LOAN-1515 Westcllff Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, paintings by Kirby Harris, through Sept. IO. NB CMC CENTER GALLERY-3300 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, through Sept., a collection of photos gathered by the New- port Beach Historical Society from 22 sources, showing old Newport Beacb and Balboa. CHALLIS GALLERY -1300 S. Coast Highway. Lagu na Beach. liours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Current exhibit, one-- man show of Shirley Weekes' recent paintings. through Sept. 27. COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast Highway, Corona de! Mar. Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon ... Sat. Currently on exhibit through Sept. 30. The Hurschler Collec- tion of Modern Tapestries. r GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -500 Newpart Center Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business huos, oil paintings by Faye Curtis. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE -15744 Golden West St., Hunt· 'ington Beach. On e.xhibit in the campus Library, Community Center and Administration Building, contemporary Japanese graphic art by 37 artists, Sept. 9 • 30. For Th• First Tim• In Or1n9• County The M19nificent Color Film Series duih~alion Written •nd n1rr1ted by Sir Kenneth Cl1rk for the Bri tish Bro•dc•stlng Comp1ny. An inspired motion picture history, spanning 1000 years of Western Man's cultural achievements. . Sp6nsored by the Newport H1rbor Art Munum and shown for seven consecutive Sunday after· noons starting September 27th at the Balboa Thea· ter. Showings will be at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Serles tickets arc ,r.s.oo. Make checks payoble to: ' Newport H1rbor Art Museum, Box 507, Balboa, C3lifornia. 92661 or call 675·3666 !or informauon. • MRS. SCHLICHT AND HER CHILDREN MAP OUT CAMPER TRIP Texas Mothtr Won U11 of Motorhwr\e for Two-wH ks •nd $500 Cash Mom Wins Vacation Texas Woman Has Trailer, W ill Travel CHALLIS GALLERIES REPRESENTI NG aanr;-~ 2'40 E. Coasl H 111!1•• Corona clef Mor Doll~ 9:30 '° S:Jo Tel : 673·21Qtl .s...,.. n .... s a.tA -Motf«Coorgc Just Barely Open HUNTERS BOOKS THE WEST'S FINEST BOOKSTORES FOR 120 YEAR~INCE 1151 NOW IN SANTA ANA AT FASHION SQUARE ILA ll'.I IJIA.NDT COOMEJt HAMILTON MIX ROESCH WEEKES 66,500 looks I< Paperbacks DAN 32,000 Unusual Greetlnl') Cards IARGAINS GALORE! lltO So. Cfflt Hwy., Lot11J10 kach OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAYS LOOK WHAT WE HAVE IN PRODUCE! FINEST FLOWERS! MELONS LOWEST PRICES! ICr•nahowa, CoubH, '°"''"'• CENTERPIECES•. S•nt• Cl1u1, Canttlou,.. BERRIES, All •••••• ......... ARRANGEMENTS! VEGETABLES, .,...,.h1•1 .. ,.... WEDDINGS! "ouY' of ....... CORSAGES! LEnUCE, ••m•'"'· '"''Y•·-•1e•rit1•. •ND .aT ••D1cuLousLY llbb, BottOn, Butttr, RM ,Wit or "All a ...ty LOW PIUCI SI ~ To11N " In t ctllo b1gl Wllv , .. , 111.,. 1 • Naturally Open All Day :·~:. ::;-.:: .. ::·;: Labor Day! -~to:~~~ --- FINEST OF MRYTHING AND LOOK AT THE LOW PRICES I 1········~·········~·······••\ I• o., Pf•~ D•pt I• Ou Fr8lla v ... hpt. I• Our flower Shop • NEW Cl:OP' ' • LOCAL • Fl:ISH CUT • • APPLES • TOMATOES • ROSES • • • u .1. #1 Qu1llty 1•LL SIZES YOU I CHOICI I • I OC u.. • I OC Lb. • 99C DoL • • LIMIT I LIS. • LIMIT 6 LIS. • LIMIT I DOZ. • • WITH TH IS COUPON • WITH THIS CO UPON • WITH TH IS COUPON • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE SEPT. 7th. 1970 Thesa restaurants dem1nd the finest fo r t heir customers. That's why thty ftaturt NEWPORT PRODUCl f P•tronitt thtm! How•cls, Ntwr,ort; D•laney's s .. Shen· ty, Newport; lal 1"4 .,_,.,. 81lbo1 : hrllshfrft ' In The Sky,' A.Hey Wnt, Newpo,rt; end OYtr 200 others. How ebout you c1llln9 us 7 "ORANGE COUNTY'S l'A.STEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGA.NIZA.TION" ~ NE!!q~I w.~~~~~CE 261' Nowpon ... ._.. oo Tlit Pool-lo Phefll 11wn1 67W 711 671.Ufl "35 Years of Produce K11oio How" "Whtre QunUty Is Th< Order' of the Hot.Uc" . \ . -I i • I I I l 1 I l I 2 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' •• I, 'I ~ I • I [ I I I I I I 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 ' ' ' . . -.-----.. -.... ~-.---.------..-----· -----·~-~- DAILY PILOT .a;& • OUT ' N' .. . ABOUT By NORM, ST~LE\' • ~ ---- ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERT A·iNMENT ~CENE :-·: • . We Get Letters ~ __ -A..JllceJetteu:am~.11ttk.JWD~ Mr J..~ thur of Seal Beach telling us about a new restaurant in Costa Mesa. To quote him, "We were wildly pleased with the new Armen:s Armenian,Res~u:ant on Placentia between Hamilton and V1ctona 1n a small shopping center in Cos ta Mesa. It is a family operation and not fancy but the food is excellent. "The combination skishkebab dinner is $3.25 (highest priced item on the menu) and leaves you feeling stuffed, satisfied and wanting to come ~ack again very soon to try some of the other offenngs. The dinner included baklava fo r dessert . 11The night we were there, there was some im· promptu entertainment by a good duo. There is no scheduled, set entertainment, we understood. but talented people are likely to show up at anytime and give forth with the music. Great fun." 1'1ia~fk you sir, jot the Li!J. \V1: 1uill try it out and lr.r. nil 01,r readers know abput the other good thi11g1 at Ar· men's -ju1t a:i soon as we can oet it on our schedule. Shipyard Inn Would you believe a marina in the middle of Anaheim -and the opportunity to dine in a delight· ful restaurant overhanging the water? It's true. The new Shipyard Jnn in the marina of the Disneyland Hotel, adjacent to the new tower building, is built rip;ht on a marina and the whole effect is one of be- ing on a large body of water. Dining one can look out at sail boats cruising on lhe water, the lovely landscaping surrounding the area and, if the time is right. a magnificent sun set This was our good fortune one night last week. The structure itself is most interestin gly buil t to be an old shi pyard. Rough lumber, pilings and stained wood predominate. The chairs are comfor· COMPLETE IRU.lFAST FROM 1 .&.M, FEATURING OUR FAMOUS CORNID lllf OR P.&STl.AMI OMLmH • EeG llNIDICT HOUSE SPECIAL TIES COl.NED llEP e PASTRAMI e SALAMI IAGILS a. LOX e IAR·l ·Q HAM Ol. llEF l.OAST lllf e lNOClWURIT 305 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND 675-3375 Food To Go Opttt Fri. & Sat. to Mldn'9ht DON JOSE' OPENINli WEpNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 THE FANTASTIC PRIMO KIM AT THE PIANO • COCKTAILS • Enchilada and Taco .. , ........ , .... $1 .3.!t Chil i Relleno ·Enchilada ............ $1.50 s.nM wltll Rke, ....... 1Mt11ditn •Ml S.IM 9093 E. Adamt (at Magnolia) Hunt. Beach 962·7911 William Von Sultzer's ORPHANAGE . -RESTAURANT AT THE VILLAGE INN, LAGUNA RUTHIE Get it on l1ingin9) with JOHN WALLACE & THE ORPHANS :iTEAK HOUSE DININOO Noltll°' 0.... $3.'5 You can get it tog•th•r on a pillow in L19un1's 1oft•1t most down.to.it ccc.kta il lou nge 696 S. Coast Highway, Uguna 8t1ch •94·2700 table canvas captain tYp,e and the tables ot planked knot~ wood have been 'glassed" so one can see the grain . The waiters are dressed as deck hands in faded dark blue denim shirts and slacks, and the casual- ness of their dress belies the prompt and efficient service they purvey. The lower floor is a cocktail lounge and bar with an open deck where one can enjoy sipping while \vaiting for dinner or just watching the sky. The up- per story is the restaurant which also has outside ~ining . ~ John Pohr is the maitre d' and with a finesse born of years of experience, he guides the person- nel . food and service, makes suggestions to patrons and in general makes dinner an occasion to remem· ber. Among hi s staff one will recognize waiters who have worked along the Orange Coast at the top,spots. The menu itself is an interesting item to note. It is a reproduction of the blueprints for a 40-Gun f>""ri~ate (Circa 1790 ) with the sail and rigging plan on the inside of the bill of fare. The food selection is plentiful. There are 12 ap- petizers listed from 85 cents for lobster bisque to $3.95.for a whole crab. Fish dinners. which include a sensational oyster dip with corn chips, salad, ve- ~etable .. a choice of rice or potatoes, beverage, and a loaf of Shepherd's bread. to cut as you prefer. of· fer seven choices from $4.95 fo r British mussel brose to $6.25 for po mpano \vit h a sauce of shrimp, crab. \vine and herbs. The dinners are specialties of coun· tries around the world and are so named. In the steak category (there are five). the pr ices range from $4.95 for bi-ochette of filet mignon to $6.95 for the top sirloin and broiled lobster tail. .A sensible wine list of several California and THE BERLINER German Family Restaurant Fa~For SA UERBRATEN w;th POTATO DUMPLINGS Visit Our New Hofbrau Room Open Daily For Dinner From S P.M. CLOSED MONDAY 18582 Boach Blvd. Town & Country Center HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-5800 DER BERLINER DELIKATESSEN 0ttl1 S .... ltl'll OW... l',.111 lt•lllltlAI I• TIWll a C..11111ry C111!1r c,... 11 t11 4 -C .. ttel l11n. & M911. -,...,.. THE S.po>DINNE!lS'""1! FAauious 'Beef Baron 1(001111 o1<ron C1SNFmo.i1> (Form'!fly The Rib Room} Nl ., lo'l:lOO'l'll NP SEE THE All NEW REVUE WITH THE * Gil SRllTO# IV '-"""Sol."-•• ... SHOW rLACE LOUlf&f DANCING • coan.r.u CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH (1<11,N l·fMIM,_ 11 .... 7o,t.~J •wr1• ~ COSTA MESA GOLF , COUNTRY CLUB Proudly Prtients George Tipton (Fo,_,,, et .... c",. C.C.l WED. & SUN. AFTERNOONS THURS., FRI., SAT. NITES COMl'l..l."Tt !'\ILL a!Uf!Sl MtAl.a j f.J.11 11931 JDM S41·6263 1821 tJORTI..f TV$TIN SANTAANA Sp1ci1U1ift9 ;, IANquns ANO WEDDIN6 a1c1"IONS . ,.... ""' :.::._ ~,...., --· -·-......... _ .. ---- .... ,,, "D•1~le htey" HMr, M•itdoy rflr• hl4-y, 4 te 6 ALL FACILITIES OPEN TO PUBLIC -FOOD 1701 Golf Course Or., Coita Mesa 540-7200 imported wines finds the prices for a full bottle;s to $7.50. And the five desseris on the menu s d appeal to most appe~ • \V e suggest reservations tor th is spot -there are a tot of out of town visitors the year 'round in Anaheim -but a litUe planning \\'ill reward you with an enchanting evening. Walking Sky The Walking Sky in Huntington Beach is a com~ pletely new idea in res~urant.s, offering American Indian and early American foOd. It features home cooking by a 66-year-cld lull blooded Quapaw-Osage Indian lady. Out N Abouter has not yel had a chance to try her cooking. We are looking forward to doing so very soon and will br'ing you details about the food served as soon as possible. The Walking Sky is localed al S04 Main Sl.. HunlingU>n Beach. White Horse Inn Buffet lunch at the \Vhite Horse Inn in Newport Beach, offers a virtual feast for a nominal $1 .65. On the day we lunched there Nancy Olsen , one of th e owners, joined us. She is one of the hardest work· ing women in the business. occasionally doubling in brass as chef, hostess and on more than one OC· casion, waitress. Despite all this activity she greets each customer with a dazzling smile. ~ SALADS Lunch began with a trip to the buffet for the salad assortment. This included toased green, tuna. cole slaw with pineapple, cot~ge cheese, fresh fryiit and assorted relishes. Nol being at all shy we tried a bit of each and found them all delicious, well sea· saned and ice cold . ENTREE SELECTION The entree choices ottered a staggering assort· ment. Thinly sliced prime rib, tamale pie, fresh rt V Ser.,lee ta ' ara art we praetke " "'"""'" dav. Welcome to the Wonderful World of OMELETS PRESENTED AT THE EGG AND ALE CHOICE OF 30 OMELETS D•lty l11tNe1 l••• er DIH• ,.,..,... wltlr Rtlllll Tr.y er H•n •4....,... Tue. tt.r1Set.-Lll••11 .. I : DftlNI' l•lt S111-L1111ell f·J: DI_. l·t-cLOSID MOHD.I.Tl Now-Tue. thru Sat.-1:30 to 1:30 TIM SCHAAF TRIO Starrine Th• Southl•nd'1 New Slngint Sen11tion S111c!1U1l"9 in S11foo4 AIMI St••~• wilh th• Oc111t At y,.,, T1J.l1 IANQUIT PACILITln Jl7 PACIPIC COAST HWY. HUNTIN•TON II.I.CH ll:1••'"''l•n1 Act1,11totl S:t6·Jl51 "GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE" s p E c I A L Your F•mily Rost1ur•nl ALL DAY SUNDAY MONDAY 4 TO CLOllNG WIDNllDAY 4 TO CLOllN6 STEAK DINNER 2 ....... s300 POI s.,,.,4 .,ltfi to111d t r••" ••lo4, cfroic• of 4roulr19, 011io11 ri"''· fr••c~ friM ,.t•t..1, het r•lt• onil \~"·'· SIN-LE DINNEll:-$2.21 OORANTS HUNTINGTON aEACH BROOKHURST And ADAMS . I • zuccini, barbequed ribs, home made English saus- age and deep fried white fish, each was careful ly prepared and kept piping hot. • · The entrees are alternated each day and some •· of the other delicious dishes.inciu.de.b.eru..t.ukJUe. ·• beef stroganoff, beef or sea curry and stuffed cal>-J. bage rolls. DINNER Dinner prices range from $3.50 to a top of *6.50. Prime rib, the favorite and top seller, $4.95 regular- ly, is offered as a Monday night special for $3.7.5. \Vednesday night's special offering is beef Stroga· n~ff with champagne, $3.25. ENTERTAINMENT, TOO Entertainment is provided by a new, versatile group called the Marc Ill. The leader Wayne Mills playing bass guitar, sax and nute. Tary Butler holds the group together on drums and rythmn section \Vhile Jim \Vatson joins in on guitar. Each is an ac- complished musician and the combination forms a great sound of polished perfection. The White Horse Inn, so like an English Pub one thinks he's been transported to 'jolly old," is localed at 3295 Newport Blvd.; Newport Beach. Res- ervations for dinner are suggested. I Orphanage Restaurant One often puzzles over determining factors for success in the restaurant business. The business ii highJy competitive but for those who survive the rewards of success are sweet. A major part of our job is keeping our fingers on the pulse of the industry, appraising each new undertaking in its fledgling stages. SHOULD BE A HIT An opportunity presented itself the other rught \vhen William Von Seltzer opened his Orphanage Restaurant in the Village Inn, Laguna Beach. The Inn has hou sed other establishments in the past, and was originally named Saddleback Inn, but for one 111 JITH ST.' NIWPORT II.I.CH Continued on P19• 26 RUIRYATIONS 671-llot Prime Aged Eastern Beef OIANlol COUNTY'S MOST IU.UTIPUL IUTAUIANT THE DUKE MITCHELL SHOW WI .. Tiie N-.h Do"ci"9 To Thi li91•"-' Sou11tl 11106 COAST HWY., SO. LAGUNA-AU. 4tf-l66J CASA GARCIA f .. nMrl' Mr. ld't) NOW SIR¥1NG AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD Nee11 lwH.t 11 t. J Dl11MJ 4 te lt Fe-turi119 Your Ftforit1 Mowic111 Oi1htr Food to 60 C•c•t•ilr THE WHISTLING OYSTER Wedding Receptions & Banquet Facilities No• opon for Sw"d1y Ch1111p1f"' l tu11c.h 10 to l THE RAY BROS. App••rl119 FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS l -~ 16903 ALGONQUIN STREET (OJlll' l"Atl"lt C.OAIT MleHWAY & WAltNllt AVe..) HUNTING.TON HAUOUR 146.JJ77 JJ ~ Je6lauranl """ AMHICAH CUISINI 'IROPJCAL COCKTAILS POLYNESIAN SHOWS lt61 A'DAMS .&YL 19' M .... liel HUNTIN•tON llAC-H 968-5050 • . ' I i j I ' I I . --- ---• ... •• JI •DAILY PltOT Frldat .. StJlltmbM ~. 19 fAMIL Y" DINING COMPLETE DINNER UNDER $3 "BREAKFAST WHE NEVE R" Open 6 A.M. to 10 ,.m. Dally . UIS YlA LIDO; NIWllORT llACH 67)·1101 RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE f'iaH lat Entertelnment Friday and Saturday HAPPY. HOUR Mon. thru Fri . S to 6 LADIES NIGHT Fri. and Sat. 10 p.m. ~o 2 1.m. WEEKENDER . ' '' ,.- Continued from Page 15 reason or another all the ventures here were short r.,..ple Gardens -GM.,,.e--Re1tatirant------..!jlf--41 Jive~e Orpha nage seems~o have every cha,oce of being a great success. lt has au the ingredients. William (never Bill) Von eltzer has ·put a great deal of thcaught ~d \vork into the new restaurant " here. • • • • • • I • • • • ) . CARIBE UNIQUE LOUNGE The interior has a comfortable almosphere, Spanish in D.Ccent, with touches of modern art on the \Valls an<f hints of the far East in the all floor· cushioned seating in the cocktail lounge. It was to this lounge that our attention was drawn the first night we dined there. The fl oor is almost covered in large velour pil- lows around redwood tree stumps forming low tables. The dance floor is visible through wrought iron gates and dinner hour entertainment was pro- vided by Charlie Spe'ncer on guitar. _ To say that Charlie plays the guitar doesn't tell the whole story. He actually wraps himself around the instrument until it becomes an extension of him- self, pouring out beautiful music. captivating the audience. He add s to the enjoyment of dinner with~ out intruding upon it ,< ON TO DINNE R With regret we left our lounging pillo\v.s and went into the adjoining din ing room for dumer. The menu, on a child's slate, is selective with seven entrees priced from $2.75 to $3.95. This includes salad, potato and a loaf of hot French bread. We ordered filet mignon and top si rloin d inners RMEM IU:&TAUltANT Continent1I ~uisin• Cockt1ils Serving Luncheon and DinnE:r Mondat1 through Saturda»'. Closed Sundays W • •re loeeted nt)l't to the May Co. in SOuth Coast Pl1z1. JJJJ s. lrlltel Con MftO 540-ll40 br tbt finest 1r.Ji1iorr <-. <j I ht lnlt inrrhepa' s llft. 3801 EMT COl.sr IUmY.&1' c~.a.lfA&,~ PROJ11I:: (714) 67>1.374 Fiii! THlll HOUIS OF CONTINUOUS MOYllS Pizza Palace 16121 HarMr 9' ldlllfW I Non te Zody'1I 839-7190 WE MONOtt ALL PIZU. COU,.ONS ROOM Presents -Entertainment -Dancing -Mon. thru Sit. Returning From A Smashing Succ:ess .In Las Vegas Gary Grande Opens Sept. 7 In The Caribe Room BUFFET LUNCHEON MONDAY thru FRIDAY Songstress/Song Writer KATE PORTER 5:30-8:30 P.M. Mon. thru Fri. 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BEACH-536-1421 THE OCEAN TOAD PRESENTS ••• Prime Rib .................... 5.50 Gr<1und Sirloin ....... _ 2.50 Top Sirloin .............. 4.25 S~re Ribs _, ............. 3.25 Terly•kl .................... 4.50 IHf Kabob ........ -.. 3.25 Pl•fe 'OIHf .......... _ 4.50 Potorflno Shrimp •..• 3.95 New York .............. ~ 5.25 Swordfl1h ................ 3.95 Fllet .......................... 5.25 lrolled Center Cut Lob1ter ...................... t .25 Pork Chops ..... -... 4.25 Combln.etlon ............ &.25 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS I I For on e egc;int evening Goach& GJiorses Superb Dining and Dancing SEVEN NIGHTS 6 P.M. lo 2 A.M. !'OR ADVERTI SING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642~321 GUT 'N ABOUT The Prophets Play .Japanese Village and Deer Park in Buena Park "is more .th an a Deer Park,'' as the child on a radio commercial says. On Saturday nights starting at 8:30 the place is popping with all oft.he regular at- ($3.95 ) \vhich arrived carefully broiled rare. a s \Ve had ordered. Dinner began with a huge crisp salad on an ice.:cold dinner plate. The tender steaks v.1ere ac- companied by stuffed potatoes, golden wi th cheese. and a loaf of hot French brf(ld. There is an exten- sive 'vine list with many imported and excellent California selections. ' .. MEET CHEF MANFREDI After our leisurely meal we asked to meet the chef and were escorted through the Orphanage's efficient kitchen to greet Duke Manfredi the tall . jovial. master of the Spanish tiled kitchen. Duke \Vas carefully prepating the cocktail hors d' oeuvres deftly moving through his duties. He is so tall v.•e marveled th at he manages to miss the edge of the vent hood. BACK TO THE LOUNGE We returned to the lounge and our pillows again. PRlllCE oi . W~ES Seafood Restaurant l:•tabli1Mtl 1 flt 15975 HAllOl ILVD, FOUNTAIN VALLl:Y 839-6no 400 Main Balboa Peninsula the FLING IEm Bqttr ]l{nrsr ]tttt Dance and Turn-On to the Sounds of The MARC Ill Mon . thru Sat. 9 P.M .· 1 :30 A.M . SUNDAY BRUNCH & DARTS 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. BILL OF FARE MELON e HOMEMADE SAUSAGE QUIC HE LORRAINE e BAKED GINGER CHI CKEN e SWEET & SOUR POTATOES e SWEET ROLL $1.95 CLOSED LABOR DAY 3195 Newport Blvd., Newport 8e1c.h Re1ervation1 673-1374 tractions go ing aJong 'v ith v.•ay-out rock played by The Prophets \.\'ho are spelled by a J apanese Sam· urai group and ped with a light show by the Fila· ment. Catch it all 'vhile the music pl ays Sept. 5-12. this time to listen to the group, billed as John \Val· lace and the Orphans with Ruthie Le\vig. This is a ne wly formed group and while most of them have been on the professional scene sepa rately, this is their first engagement together. This may be the beginning step on _the road to fame and fortune for them. The lead singer, Ruthies Lewis, is fantastic. Her warm, throaty voice has a jazz-blues sound that applies itself to rock songs and ballads with equal ease and tale'hJ . The Orphans back her sing- ing with great sounds. for dancing or just listening. You can find them Thursday through Saturday, from 8:30 p.m., 696 So. Coast 1--lighway, Laguna Beach. Out 'n' Abouter solicits comments, criticism and praise about Orange Coast restaurants and night clubs. If you have something yo u would like to sa.v. v.•r ite Out 'n' Abont , \Veekender,Box 1875, Newport Beach. California , 92663. Real Canlonese Food eat her• or take home. MR. MIKES HOUSE OF PRIME RIB PRIME RIB -·-···-·--$2.95 ~!,!'$. 'Z:! DINNER SERVED TO I A.M. THUR., FRI. & SAT. NITES LUNCH SERVED DAILY FROM 11 A.M. TO l P.M. 209 Palm, Balbaa ""'"'"'"' (ar "" l •lbM F•rrv L•IMllntl 675-5774 ~Jol\U :flog,r FAMILY DINING Al Reasonable Rates ARTICHOKE APPETIZER COUNTRY FRIED ST EAK BAB Y BEEF LIVER BUCCANEER CUT OF PRIME RIB STEAK AN O LOBSTER CAPTAIN'S CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN MM• ft;t Uttle Pirates Ullffr 12 JOIN US FOR OUR BUCCANEER BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR Mon. thru Fr i. 4 to 7 p.m. In Our CROW 'S NEST LOUNGE WAYNE GABRIEL ENTERTAINING T ue5., thru Sat .. 8:30 p.m. lo I :30 a.m. OPEN LABOR DAY 5 PM to 10 PM 2300 Harbor Blvd., Casta Mna HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER Reservations Acctpted 5~8S3S ' ·- • 1:001: .... D C .... '""' 0 1 ... .... ' 1 I I I I I 1 ' hom 1:30 I c e I ' I 1 ' ' ,,. I I • I I 1 ' 1 ,,.,.,: . ,, 0 1 ... "~ ... ''"' ?.\ Sena ~.D.) Md.) -01 (df1 • Gam, -l n1rr1 hilfll as: 1 '""' .. •. II• "''' fli) I Bh1lc Ii 7:5511 ""' e .... •~< .. . ... , to p, "" ' f.1 I: Madi 1· I 1:05 I l:JO t I I ln1." fr1n '" "'" .. ,_ ! ~I •m '"" ... Ric.h tails ""' mad "m ! 1:30 • IO:Oll ( l mPU *Mc Mi .,. "' Ritt BuU "" e (;111 "'' "'' "' • 10:30 11:00 {Ki m "" '" I 11:•I , .. •• fJ F !=-~· I D A • SE'1£M1Elt 4 l:OD I Ills,.._ (C) (60) Jerry DunJ)lly. ¥1C .._.let (C) (60) Tom ..... m Mtvit: "H1nlble Dr. Hlk.Kocr' (iCi,/iJ '64 -RoWrt nem~na. Bar· b1r1 Stetl. ID Notld«o 34 (C) J:OOllMHit: "'Tiii Stnnp "!'•it 11 l1ilcJ1 fUil!J" ($UllltnH) ,5 ~ Georr• Slnders. Ell• Raines, Gell dine Filttmild. oo-m CD MO'M: "'l'np!lld'" (m~stery) '49 -lloYd 8rid111, B1rt1ar1 P•yton • ---..,............------· --.. ~--~ F'rlcfay, Stpt~mber 4, ltnO DAILY PILOT 21, A11aeriea's Cup Yacht Trials on Television l--1Cbe.-A~ckl"-~'PP~fr:J;lall.l _wbo.are..Ule..ones to..bcat... the.. selection c.ommittee-ap. races will be shown In a 'spec· Narration ror "Due.I in lhe proaches. F'or the winning ia program on ChaMel 9 Wind" is hanc;lled by Wally crew, it is a moment of sheer ne t Wednesday, Sept. 9, at King. Conversations revolve 10 .m. Bill Ficker, skipper around Intrepid s ~Ip p e r agony until the launch passes or-IntrePid won, and will Will iam P. Ficker, Heritage by and heads for the other re esent the United States in · skipper Charles E. Morgan, boat. The committee goes on the race lo capture America's Jr. (who also designed as well to the losing craft and then Cu to be held Sept. 15. as owns her), and the Valiant quickly returns lo the winner e three y a c h \, s , the!r skipper, Bob McCullough. to announce its selection. dubbed il~Wortb co..iderab.ly_ less today in a curio dealers shop, the Cup, wheo, rlrst won by Americ•, w&s displayed at the Astor Hou3e in New York. Described d ow n through the years as being "ugly" and "unattractive" and "pol· bellied "• and "Victorian," a~ one time it was suggested thati &I CH Yot TGp Tltb! (C) (30) Monry H1H, SoupJ Siles •fld Morey Amsterd1m. J :30 O Cotn11unitJ l1llltti11 8o1rd (C) z:QD ID AH·Nlfftt Sbow: "Lil Vq11 ., stotJ " (C) "Dr1111 ltet." Ind O Sil O'Cltet Mowlt: (C) 2l hcM "H ' .,. n.-it Y•• Liii." te llUr StrNl'' (dr1m1) 'S6-V1n •PP ..... ,. bui!Ben, their designers, their Twelve-meter yachts are The Cup was valued at only skippers. and the crews are usually manned b~ a crew of JOO guineas in 1851 when the the-~u_bJect--~hou.~.Jong-I0:-0 f1-e---n-a-skippei::-w-t-1"1~YifY8ctifSQuadiOn of Eng. telev1s1on ~pe~1.al titled, Duel name ~lternates for his ~~w land originally put it up as a In The Wind. . . who will hav17 a turn tra1.n1ng prize. Since then, millions the Cup be melted doWn and 1 made-tnto--six-t-n·l'e-r-i-h·e d--·•---_, medals. Whatever its history, JohnlOll, Vtr1 Milts. &1:308 ...... /Glvt u, Thlt DIJ (C) A*'lt 1RCI c.t.111 (C) (JO) \ .......... (C)(30) .., Jltll (C) (60) Wlllt't ""' (CJ QO) o.tt.ldl/Muiult (C) (JO)' lltrip (30) Tiit Mericait .... (C) (30) TMh " 1u Estrt11n (Joi I &ano,iftt loll'lltt (C) (30) Cra· ham Kefr. 1:30 Yircinil Crtlll111 Sllow (C) (60) 6:25 IJ Ciw U1 Tllit, DtJ (t) C.ndld CllMfl (30) 6:301J Su11mer Stwtntlr (C) S (II My Fnorile M1rti11 (30) 7:001J OdJSW'Y (C) "Psychiah)' Lew 111' Ille '70. (C) (30) Criminal Justice.~ htttr. for llvlnc (30) 0 ~ 'i'-. Heckle l Jedd• (C) lhticttro 34 (C) (60) ~ ~.J WI TM Dtwrt Jleport (C) (30) O @ (l)Culllwor (C) Slntl IOll de Liu (30) m Mr. Willlbont (C) A W.nd Apert (C) (30) 7~30 8 Dtisty't Trllilou:M: (C) 1:9 CIS EwM1 Jlteft (CJ (30) @ CIJ Srlot;17 the BNr (C) ltl NIC """" ._ (C) (30) l'OO I) 9 (j) n. k-(C) jfjlf'• ..,. Unt? (C) (30) . 0 ID (i) m Her• Co11111 VI• I Lin l11q (30) C (CJ 1ttt the Clod: (C) (30) nllllP Tiie Frtcldl cw (C) (30) (R) 0 @ m C.tanooa:• cm (C) SI•,.._.. M1ril (55) fJ Storybooll Tim• n.t Cid (C) (30) ID T11ts of Wiiis Farp J:Jlt' 13 (I) hi s.ert (C) (30) (R) 1:301J fi!1 ({) IMP l111rry/I01d llU11• m HIP CUpirr1I (C) (60) (R) nor Hour (C) ' ht JourMI ol Death." 0 @ CIJ @D 1'111k Panttitr (C) g Tiie Movie Ca111t1 (C) {30) Team 8 Cimpus Proffit members Raw Wt\ston, Brenda Y•c· ..,It: "Clint From tht .u11.._ Ciro and Geotce Peppard compete S. with Alan Sues, Dyan C.nf!Ofl and known" (sci·fi) '58-Buddy er, P1ul Htnrtid. Bob Steele. 0 (j7j 00.0J AllC Nm Spta1I m Cl.co K1d (t) (JO) ''Yietnllm-Allother View.~ (!)Movie: "MMrder Withoiit T11n'" Senilon Geo1g1 s. McGovern (D· (myslery) '53 -Cr1ig Stevens, S.D.) 1nd Charles McC. M1thi1s (R· Joye• Kolden. Md.) discuS$ their opinions on In-9:008 @ @ m H.11. Pwfastuf (C) dodlin1 polities. Mtwlt: "'Cit, WittlNt Mt11" (1~-0 Million $ Movie: (C) "Hannibal" venture) '43 -1i>lend1 Farrell, M1· (drlll'll) '60-V"ICtW M•tUre, Ritl ch1el Duotnt. ' Gam, Milly Yitai!. 0 tffl {])Hot Whffl1 (t) ~Truth « Conseqnnces (C) (30) m !lilrlt: "The Adwtnt11r111,. (drt· TH fabtloas Sixtlei (C) {60) ma) '47 -Debor1h Ken, Trevor he Yui-1966." Ptler Jenninrs Howard. "Murdtr bJ Conlr•d"' (dtl· f11rr1tn speeisl program on the m1) '58 -Vi11ee Edwa1ds. hl(hli111ts ol tile ,,iar 1966, such II) CuciHn y•Mnic.1 as: The Werren Report ContrOWflY; (ID Pinora .. l.ltlno bam1, the ''God Is Dead" conoep!· ' 6 m 8an1n1 ~lib (C) The. prograrr. will contain onboard ~ur1.ng the trials; have been spent designing and the r~tm footage fJ"0!1?-Aug. who can fill in for a. regular building yachts to compete fo r 30 ·f 1 n a Is and w1I~ be member al any po int. The th e ''Auld Mug,'' a.s Sir presented. at the conclusion of crews are s e t e ct e d by t~e Thomas Li pton respectfully. the 60-minute program, thus skip p er. who bases hls -====== not only providing a choices on experience, energy fa scinating background on the and temperament. event itself, but presenting lhe After the final race, the outcome of the competition as yachts wait at th e i r docks well. until the small blue launch of 'WHICH IS EARTH?' Painting by Liu, Kuo-Sung 'f'he yachls in competition ---------- are the Valiant, Heritage and COflltf• P.r.tmc eoAST '"' .... , !.;:" "· America's Cup Winner (1967) ~{}/){!)~ the Intrepid, skippered by Bill ~ j'\R Ficker of Newport Be.ach. - Americans are used to TONITE AT 6:00 & 10:11 Three Artis.ts Display W orl{ a_t Laguna Gallery possessing the Cup, having C'.. McQ been successful in all 20 of its .;xeve ueen confrontations ag<iinst the best 'Th D • • of ttie sailing world sioce 18Sl e "elvers when the yacht '' Am~rica" A Cinema Ct"Tl(er rilms Ple)tntl!IQ!t defeated 17 British vessels. A NMIOIYI Centr•C Piciurrs ~lene: Australians have made two 8o attempts for the Cup, Scotland AND AT 1:10 ONLY one try, all unsuccessfully; primarily it's tile Australians A well-balanced a-fid exciting show has been .Planned for September at the Laguna Beach Art Ga!lery, 307 Cliff Dr., Laguna Beach. Featured will be Taiwan arti~l Liu, Kuo. Sung; Florence Arno ld's hard· edge works and bronzes by Ralph TarLzian. Liu, 38, had his first one· man show in this country at the local gallery four years ago, and since lhen has had ten major exhibits in the Coi l- ed Slales. He ~ considered by BALBOA many critics as today's lead- ing modem Chinese-arti5\. 673-4048 Florence Arnold, w h o OPEN re sides jn Fullerton. has 6:41 taught in -the Orange County 7" I . l•JltN school system for 40 years. ,.,_ .. _, ... __ ,.. __ •-_1_._...; She has had five successfuJ1~ shows ifi Florence, Rome, NOW-INDS TUESDAY Milan, Prato. and Venice. She r"·•-~-.. · has shown al the Lcmg Beach '\\lllTQI' 1111ifiO . •1•• UlllY- Museum or Art : al Esther M31TH3U ooroman Robles and M a c k e n s i e -_;·;, .. '' "Fl0\\6""'""r •.',· galleries in Los Angeles. Her WlJIUO "'M-AS·B'IS THE BEST works are included in a the America's Cup is the most coveted priie in all o ( yachtdom; "Duel in the Wind" captures all the ex._citemen\ of competing for that honor. "Without a doubt the funniest Lurte111 W1!!ace elected Go¥. ol Al•· t·l011 ~ DIUrlflf l MuttltY (Cl tile Batm1n craze 1nd Ille Julie Th• HerdJ toys (C) AndrtwS phenomenon. 11t1dH J Cllitarns m lloH .w ~) (3~) "People n. 10.001 ~00 w1ca, 111ets (C) Kraft Show Stars Carol number of important museum j i colJections. .;._4D08 IB\fl.~ Ralph Tarzian, professor of l!k>-. n;c-:oiJ)fl' lilSI AMERICAN :WAR COMED\'1 SINCE SOUND CAME ' service comedy Bluleher,' by Eliot Asinol. ' @@Sky H...ts (C) ff!) Slltdacl Fl1111 (C) (30) • Movie: {C) "Blick Earle ti lm Mu Fuerte 11ue hr Amer (JO) Santi fe" (weslem) '66 -Brad 7:SS ES CulstioR H Segundos Hanis Horst Fran~. 1:00 II Cit! Ci) He and Shi (C) (30) (R) m M;,.,ie. ''Sllldow ol • Wo1111n" Romantic idol Fernando lamas. (mystery)' '46 -Helmut Oantine. f1eed with the need to make 1n al Pueblo sift [sps1nz1 tmtrcrnc.J leltPhone call, .P•Y• ·'·" • I a Ci) Scoob -Ooo (C) une.xpecled middle.-0f·the-n1gh! VIS.II 10.30 , OJ@ m ~ flinlstonn (C) to Pllul1 whilt her ~usbtnd, Oiek, is Movie: "Supt ._ ti!• 1to1111" out of tOWll on bu~ness. (drama! '44-R•1ph Stllamy Anne Carol Lawrence stars in her fifth Kraft Music Hall show v.·ith her . husband. Robert Goulet, and Martin Landau and Barbara Bain, "'00 are Mr. and Mrs. Landau off screen. The show will be called "Bob & Caro l & Martin & Barbara." Gary Smith and · art at Orange Coast College, --"'!!!!!!.00. holds a masters' degree in IN COLOl-GP sc ulpture . He has exhibited at the Long Beach Art Museum -ALSO- and museums in Los Angeles, La Jolla, Downey, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. The exhi bit opens tomorrow for public viewing, daily from IO am. to & pm. "AS FUNNY MD atlllllll& AS COll£DT IN 111 NATALIE WOOD @(]) (D DI lrldy Bundi (Cl Baller. M1rie M1cDon1 . I DivorCI COll"t (C) (30) · Id ' ( ) (R) •'fbe PO$.Sibl1 Drum." 0 @CIJ ~ of Nftlla (t) r>Night Hemion v.•ill produce'lr==========,JI with Hemion directing. "BOB . &CAROL &TED . .&ALICE" GIT• Ttll tM Trlltll (C} (30) tt:OD 1J'@ ~11 .<CJ f.DCinlposiu111 (30) ''To Die In 0 @ lli'M•fllt L111111 ~-· M•drid,~ by Frederic Rossif. bill ( ) "ew Yor11 Meta rt Ch1ca10 I Lile tor Todllr (C) (30) Cubs. l.Krtdt1 (C) (30) 0 (.1,Il [J) ,.~ II Toptlltr (C) 1:05 Loclll Libre (55) EI\) fitstl M .. ca111 l:JO I~ Hot1n'1 Hfrou (C) (30) 11:30 O @IJJAIHricln ....,.rtd (C) 6 ID fbfl'll el the Came Dick Clark hosts. ( ) ( ) "Jenny Wildt Is Otown-O Movie: .......,.. Sta11pede" int." Frank Go<shln ind. Pamela {wntem) '48 -Jlm•s Crilc, Joan Fr111ldin guest Tony fraf\CIOSl stirs Leslie. IS reporter Jeff Dillon, will! Susan Q) Movie: "1 Cower •• Under· S.lnt J1mes fe1tu1ed as PftO Mil· wor1d" (myslOf)') '54-Sn n Mc· well. Clary, .IOlnne Jordan. ! "'" '"'-_ .. (l~ ~ (}) (D TM &host tfld Mil. n 111r (t) _(~ (R) "Wedding Day???" ~ Dnld Frill! Show (Cl {90) 11111 T11111 lrnn«IJ (Cl (60) 12·00 I ~® Tiit Mon•tts (C) Ol'lkt Sullkind (C) (2 Ill) . . Tubt F1111illlf fllll« F1111ily (30) . , Dn•a dt Iii 5"11111 L" BMriJ dt flralv1Ho_ (30) . -fW"\ -, • .,,, (CJ t:• ..a Ci) CIS FridlJ Mov11: (C) 12.30 IJ '<!!' \.J!.i 1 · \6JWteb I 81lloon" (R) O Movlr. "hcifie lledollt" (td· Rehearsals start in New York on September 21 and the show ,.,.BJ be aired by Channel 4 Oclober 21 at 9 p.m. SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH ( ~1 '62-Rned 1Buttons. Barb1r1 venture) '42 -Ev• Gabor, Robert com""1 · • k f b" Preston Tropical Fish & Eden, Ctdric Hirdwtc e. 1 1~' 0 Mo~ie· "Si~ Town" (d11mi1) '42 Largest SeJect1'on Of Rk:ll11tl Haydn Barbara Lufll. vo· • · t ·1 at th1 "adventu11 ol seven -Constance Bennett, Brodenck Supplies in the area. •1 • who st 1 Crawford would-be e~ploreis age m • .,..-. "This Abaft A11" (drama) Now 2 '''"''"' dclp 4 000-milt b1\\oon race · mi . ' '42-Joan ronttlne. Tyrone Power. ,11 w. w11.soH, COSTA Ml!SA 1cross Afne1. , , , •• ,,., 1Dllltt41 (C) (60) l:OOU 9([J llJICt•ll u.s. Open 1or1F1rv1tw d., .... -':°E' titre Colllt tM Irides !Cl Tennis Ch1111plo11sllips (C) Bud Col· •77·G, Rlve~idt Dr. -NewPCrt B••dl ~ e ., J ~ K rt t•o tbeluno the PMI ornc:.1 iM6-t536 ( ) (R) "A Wild Colonial O'J. lins ind a..._ r1mer repo . " i:~~~~~~~~§~ill OutNltll/FRm (t) (30) tennis action from Fo~lt Hills, HOJ (30) N.Y. in this toum1ment offering llltlchl (60) Sl60,000 in prize money. Among RE "' m•-<c1 <"1 '" "' , .. """" "' '"""' THE NIFTY THEAT Mnkal1/Pntol's Desk (C) Ashe, John Newaimbe, Tony Roche, , Media T1p•tias (30) Pancho Gonz1lu. RoJ Emerson, 10:00 @ (6) m 8r1eken's World (C.~ Nancy Ridiey and Ann H11don ( IR1-"l>ap1 H'ver Sp•n~ed Me. Jones. Gt PUTNAM IS BACK fJ MOYit: "Counterplo'. (dr1ma) * M nday thru Friday '59-foHtst T11tkt1. A!hson Hayes. 0 (!)Movie: .. Mrs. Mitt" (dr1lllll) II m "'" (Cl (6i?l Stylli (C) '49-Evelyn Keyes, Dick Powell. MG)R~iive ~~' Millistei-," @I)Trt• Vidn Diltintu . ~Jn ( i~d the Gel!.ha.w 1nd "LO¥e :Z:OO 0 Doublt ~~11: "1lM ,Cul fro111 ind the Sin1ln Apartments" star Jonts lffdl (r?n;iance) 4?--R?n~ Rithlid Loni, C11udine Longe!. Rtd 1ld Reagan, Vi1g1nia Maro. \lw1 B ttons, C.ro!Jn JoMs. Hobu Mc· (dr1ma) '57-Eleanor P1rk!f. u 11y Mel Torme and Cllhtrs.. 0 ~II: "E•ll• $qMtdro11" (dr•· ~AP ol Aq111rhrs (C) (60) Host rn1) "42-Robert Sttck, .Ion Hall, l(evln Coughlin weloomH TlfW Diana B1ryymor1. Grivas.. Of. John Gwynne ("The m Ste the USA (C) Abortion Doctor'') 111d Richard Rob· fl) Stet1ln1 TMttre (ti trts lho'llling 1 6lh-minut1 film on :Z:30 O MO¥ie: ''flfl'O" ("'sttfn) '52 tilt evollllion of nun, -Wiid Bill EHiotl, Pltytlls Coates. .... Lew (60) I C.11 fo thl West (C) , ,,. Yldll Distlntn (30) lnsiPI (ti T•Cin11111 40 (2 h1) • Scopt (CJ lO:JCI Tiie NtwliCll MMll {C) (30) JR) , , Ytritd ..... Mniclks Ill MltlCnl (30) J:OO I TM Sintl 11 0..r (C) ""' at ~o ._ <cic . ···-"'"' ~ 6 tDNtws..1) Upbut (Cl ht ltJof!I' " MIWit: °'Cllkll' Confldtllti1I• · ,,_.,. t: ~-,•,n ~ MtOll (mystery) '57 -Blvet17 GarlaAd. (sci· fl) '59-Rithll rt'llS. ., I Ovtn-' lllfi.rt91 (C) ID,...._: "Tl11 0th• low Twt1 (dr1m1) '52-Dlfid NiYen, 81r1>1tl : Bil Plctwe (CJ St111wydi;. TNltl ill SNede 1 ~7_.. Sii• (RJ J:1Sll'!)DMJ l a.liltti (C) Esta '9ochl 1 ld Ontt 3:30 I) Cotrtenltitn Wlttl 1 hydlit- 1.tf• M1llll e Dtll (C) trlst~) Dr. Eitw1rd Stl1ftbrook. 11·•1 ullltn' Crilfl11 (C) 0 (})(BU.S.. Mlft'I Aa11tt•1 ' m Wttlllf C«lt1 (C) $NI .......t (C) llvt from W•Y. . ......,... tf Lattdt" •rlJ Counlry Clvb, Portland, Orqoa (WUl:•nl •49 -WiUl1m Holden, I W1gtR Tr1MI (C) M1cdol'Mlld Clrej, Mone Frttm111, • ChHcl1Wt1'1 hlptl Kttr (C) O lll!(IJOI"'*""" <Cl '"'"'"' Wotd ICI FOR ADV'ERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER FREE FORM 1970 WORLD SURFING CONTEST From Aut,rall• Sept. 2 thru I 01 1 Ir t P.M. 307 MAIN ST. HUNTINGTON IEA.tH ~ For llff....,•ll11ni ("I 11UJ S3'·1UI 250 2'° P.aple StuMtlts MO\llE RATINGS FOR mRENTS AND \'OUNO PEOPlE tlle Mi..:11" ol I"-'"""'' .. IO,,.,,.,,..,. ,..,,., ....., !M W<I~ OI --lot......,., tr,,..., i~. ·•··•······················· .... lll !C!e-~ ..... -............. -.... --......... _.._ Only One * HOLIDAY MATINEES * Soturday -Sunday -Monday "A Big Musical Hit- In The Winner's Corner!" • -A"tH(• Wll'tS1Cl't, ,.,., To•-... Of "Hilarious And Entertaining. In. The Strea~Of 'Sound Of Music'!" \ -JOYC( HAif•, lH ""'""" '""*' l1"f1<01e Rat.d "GP" ALL .1.01s ADM tn1D PAllNTIU .. OIKlnlOlll IVMDTIO FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTn • • •• • ... ~ . IN ,,, _,._ ........ • l'f••Tort<lt<' -~-AHtofaqc,...._, 00 SUlllRLIND·llillTI GOOl.D TON smmrr <o.....,.._, ____ ·1)•1<11111· ... ~ R _.,.., ....... ~"" ' llOllW..:D llPI .tBlll llllHAlllll.t._., ...=::=--·-.. ---.. --= ~ tJr DE LUX~ PAMA"'51CN9 "'.;;' Holiday Matinees-Sat.· Sun. • Mon. * HOLIDAY MATINEES * Saturday -Sunday -Monday Coll 5.u-3102 1111 .... cr .... w••Z **'""'"''"' -O.ldM .... lltwe. ......... ,..., • '-" Dltle II~ Coll 192-1493 Fattest in West I have ever seen." "'M*A*S*H' is what the new freedom of the screen is all about" "A COCKEYED MASTERPIECE!" -J""" Mt,,MJtent, H ....... NOW AT BOTH , THEATRES ..... ~ ... •C..'1 - '1he epo Amerian I wu movie that I Hollywood has alwa11 wanted to mair. but never had the , IUb lo do before~ _,,.,,......, 7th RECORD WEEK Coll 639°7860 PHONE 642-4321 f"inal stocks In 1!1 hOrnt tdlllon1. That's 1 b!~ dealt It Is In Orange Counly. Tht DAILY PILOT Is lht onl1 dally ntwn1aPtr thtt cltU•· trl Ult packagt. Buy It. Stlt Ii. Try tht fastest rtspon.se 111 tilt West a9alnsl 1011r own clock. Ttst Dlmt- A·llne Ads, whert tht action Is, In Sau1rday'1 DAILY PILOT. ' I 1~ ·• . ---.. ,--------c-::=-r:-::..,.-;::7'"!"".,.,,........., .............. ______ ~~----... --..... -----. ....... DAILY PILOT Frida.,, ~tpttmbtf' 4, 1970 Y 011r 611ide to Movies ~The Moonshine War~ Stars Patrick McGoohan Editor's No i r : This Naked Under Leather (R): 1!'._\IJ'ld Bergman and Goldie McCoohan, Richard Widmark from Ohio for a job interview. World War 11 adventure in presenled In five episodes wit h _,..,.·~MM:fc is.-prcpa~Cirl-oo-.a-Motorcycl&:!."-lliwn---------'"'4.AU.U""''------.Jack-~mmoq mtd--sandy-whtch Richard--Burton . Brillilh · tc.resting~Apb by the /ilma comtnittee CJf v.·ith a new name. Tbe Cbtyen.ae Soc1al Club Two Mule• for Sbter Sara Dennis. 1 n t e I I I gent' e and Clint On a Clear Day tG): Movit Harbor Councit PTA. Mrs. The Relver1 (GP): Steve (GP): After the Civil War, a IGP): Clint E as twood version or the Lerner-Lane Nigel Bailey is president t.lcQueen stars in lhe filmed Te:1a.s cowboy inherits a portrays an Amer I can PaUoa: S • 1 u t e lo Rebel Eastwood, American Rangers. musical starring Barb r • and Airs. William Ware version of Faulkner'i novel. bordello in Cheyenne. James mercenary in Mexico. He (GP): Portrait of General lead a team to rescue an Streisand and Yves l.1onta nd. is committee ~hainnan. It The hired man's odyssey leads Stewart. Henry Fonda and rescues Shirley MacLaine, an George S. Patton portrayed by American general imprisoned * is intended as \a reference him from a small town in Shirley Jones. alleeed nun, who gives him George C. Scctt. Karl Malden In an almost impregnable Tile letter tmmediately in de termining suitable Mississippi to 1he sinful big Count Yorga, vamp Ire much valuable infFation. plays General Omar Bradley. German fortress. after t!ie title indicatea the film! for certain a 0 e city of Memphis during the CGP ): Robert Quarry and TEENS ANO ADULTS Walt Uadl Dark (GPJ: WbJcb Way to lbt Front rating Otven the picture by oro11ps and wilt appear early 1900's. Donna Anders in ! a horror Airport IG): Film version of Tense thriller in which thugs (G): Comedy starring Jerry the Motion Picture Code. weekly. Your views are The Thomas Cro~·• Affalr: drama. the best-selling novel. Burt try to force blind wife to Lewis and Jan Murray. The Motion Picture Code solicited. Mail them to Mo-Faye ·Dunaway and Ste.vec~__.rhe Hawaliaal..(Gl!-J: Sequel LancasleL_ ~n _p,j_uJ ln_. ru~aj. whereal'Jqqts .ola cache FAMILY And Rating Program may -mtGU.fCle,-careof--.,;ntnrcQuee.n-sli r iil"th~fllm lo "Hawaii" starring Charlton Helen Hayes and Van Heflin. or heroin. Audrey Hepburn. How Ille Weit was Won G): be f ound on the molion DAILY PILOT. about an insurance sleuth who Hes ton and Geraldine Chapl in. Chisum (G): Late l9tb Where Eacles Dare (GPJ: 'The settling of the West, picture page. FREDMKMURRAY 'MM English Te• P•rty' * .becomes an i n t i m a t ' G Century New Me-'co starring I A Mu Called Horse ( PJ : .._. C!l..~1.---n.o. OMi.Dfiw.I,. ~:ompanion of a thri I-seeking John Wayne as a cattle baron. ~, .._.., • 'Jli · ho h pect English aristocrat is captured MacMurray Featured On TV Show "You know, I Lhlnk the secret of my success is that rm lazy and J don't say very much," Fred MacMurray told Carol Channing at the L<>ndon taping ol "Monsanto Night Presents Carol Channing's Mad English Tea Party," which airs Wednesday, Sept. 9 over Channel 4. "f got that way from playtng the sax. l had to keep my mouth shut to ADULTS Bob and Carol and Ted and Allee ( R ) : C:Ontemporary social comedy satirizi n g marriage a n d [riendship. Robert CUJp. Nalalie Wood, Ellioll Gould and D y a n Cannon. Cakb U (R): Account of a bizarre bomber squadron on a Mediterranean island. Alan Arkin and Orson Welles. The Landlord ( R l: Beau Bridges plays a rich young man who buys a house in the slums and becomes involved with the tenant.s. Pearl Bailey. M•A*S*H (R): lrreverant comedy about the Mobile Anny Surgical Hospital during the Korean War. Elliott Gould, Donald Sulherland and Tom SlwriU. m1 ona1re w m s esus s 1 · th For re s t T•••er and r · dln bank by Sioux ear y m e .. • o masterrrun g a Nineteenth Century and is Christopher George also star. robbery· subjected to cruelty as he Cockeyed Cowboys of Calleo Up in the c.tllar (R): Based tries to prove himself. Richard County CG): Comedy-western on the book "The Late Boy \~'onder" starring We!it Stem, Harri s , Dame Judith with Dan Blocker and Nanette Anderson. Fabray . .Larry Hagman and Joan The !\1oonsblne War (GP): Let It Be (G ): The Beatles Collins. Woodstock CR ): Three hour Story of a young Kentuckian's at ease and in rehlarsal. film or a music festival. battle with revenuers and The Out-of·Towners (GJ: bootleggers to keep his illegal Disastrous experiences of man AIATURE TEENS "'hiskey. Stars Patrick and wife who go to New York AND ADULTS Angel Unchained ( G P ) : Struggle in a motorcycle club, dune buggie fans and a hippie comniune. Don Stroud. Luke Askew and Larry Bichop. Cactus Flower ( G P ) : Sophisticated comedy in which a dentist drafts his nurse to ·masquerade as his estranged wife and rescue him from a iany b!Ollde. Walter Matthau, PORT THEATRE 2905 E. COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR 673-6260 blow!" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fred, In fact. will be sayingll MAJOR PREVIEW TONIGHT, 9z00 P.M. Net•: "The Night They l•ted Min1ky'1"' Wiii Net .. Shown Frk:ley Night quite a lot during the courst: of the hour-long comedy spe<ial which allo t1lar1 Art Carney, Sir John Gieleu<I and Sir Ralph Richardson. He plays Soame:s, in "'!be Hindsyte Saga,'' Shakespeare, Prince Charming, a BriliJh soldier and Sherlock Holmes! He abo plays bis aaxopbone. HELD OVER 3rd BIG WEEK CONTINUOUS DAILY •IOM 12:10 P.M. Open at 7:00 P.M . Show Starts at Dusk "Without a doubt the funniest service comedy I have ever seen ." -Judith Crist, HBC ·TV ''M •A•s•H' is what the new freedom of the screen is au about" -Rkhard Sc:hlcklol. Ll'ie ~,,(l mesa . ·. µ. ' .. . . ' •.. : -···. •.".'<P:IN(Q':t fll.I'/'[,.". CQ..(lft fiT MO\llCW.ft'' ···. - "• :, E .. .. Ahe -llCHAID HAltllS "A MAN CALLED HORSE" CONTINUOUS DAI LY flOM 2 P.M. fIIIIDlol~ AT THE ENTRANCE I il TO FABULOUS ~ ... I bve, peace, muric Q atorring jo011 bo.1 • joe todre<" • _,hlrl' jo. I .t.. lislt erio ~ • no,;. ..... M • f""' lwn!lri1 • )Ottl<W\0 aiyi, it. l-1., •I-• It" )'eO"I oft .. •!N who "'M '''A* S "H' is the best American war comedy si nce sound came inr ' _,..,.,,,~ l{.ef, ,., .... 'rOftPf' -DONALD SUTHERlAND ·ELLIOTT GOULD · SlCOHO ff.A l\lft[. &OTH .. CC..0- PETER SELLERS in I LOVE YOU .ALICE B. TOKLAS l I ·a\'l,trf COMEDY-RATED "R" ~ TISITA No On• Under 17 ~ 67l-'2'1 Unl•s1 With P•r•nf 2'05 lost C-Hwy. Corona d.. Mir Watch the!landlord get1his. BEAU BRIDG~~~~~ G~~~A~~~~!l~j ffARl. BAllEY.:..,. AL llOO'[R Bill GUNN i ms11N HllHCRI ~.l'M.'nf liAL"oo m.oo~~t.,,......,.,_ ll!JO 1-lll!mllll N:TUlft ~1(:1. Ml'~ OI Ulf!TlO _,lln -· AIM Plcsylllf "THE NIGHT THEY RAIDED MINSKY'S" Storrl1tt .1 .. 1 R•ltarch Ad lrftt lllud •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PftEMtEltE EHOAGEMli!HTt John W•yne ii "CHISUM" e CG! •IUI • Ai.clrey H•pD11m ··wArT UHTIL DAlllC" • CCOPI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l atbra 51,..INIMI "OH A CL IEAlt DAY YOU CAH SEE FOllEVE ll" (GJ cei.r ""'Stew Mt Q-''THI: THOMAS CltOWN Al'PAlllH ................. EJclllllvt Oriv•l11 "'-Wlflt -.... Cllnl Etllwotd I ---"ICILLY'J Hl!'ltOl!S .. • lOPI C•..,. '31·1'11 plu• AllR Alilll e lllchi,_ WMl"'lrll "THE MODHSH1 NE WAit" (Gf') e mnnl.· ,· =] -,;::u, E•clusf¥1 Orl¥•1ft IMWlftl UIMltr lt M•tl St Wllll P•rPllf ''THI! LANOLOltO~ • (ltl 'lwt • ClhtrtlN Htltefl ''THI HAWA UANI" t !GP) AH Ctlet' l~tw •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All Celer "•'"'" l:Rl«tllll!Nftl All $!t r Ctll ~How THI WIST WAS WONH • fOI ''" • Tl'lt INllel HLET IT SEw I IOI Alt C:t .. r $Mw Clint 111 ...... "'TWO MULi• •Olt StSTllt IAll .... IOPI ,IUI Jt rrt LtW!I "WHICH WAY TO THE 'llONT~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 ··11·s ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD, SAVAGE AND CHILLING COMEDY! Firmly establishes Nichols' pi.ce in the front rank of AIMrican directors." _.,_Willi-fltArtOf NO RESERVfD 5fA TS · fREE PARKING NEW "DOLLY''. SHOWTIMES!! ,\IONDAY'fHRUPRIDAY7.00& 10.00 SAT. &SUN. UJ04.00 7.00 & /0.-00 OPEN AT 7 P.M.-SHOW AT DUSK john Wayne In His Greatest Role 21 EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT' • .... ~7o11nWayne is "Chisum" Fooe.t lrler.(Jyistqlher Croge·Ben Jdnsoo·Bnxe Cfu Oem c.abett · PatOC KroMes · AndreN Prine · Richard )c1ed<.el ~ Dlr·Ard hroci.O"g.Cedfie,' CleLe & Pamela~ Executivt Ploducer Mich.lei Wl'fne · Wrilleo and Produced by Andrew ~fen.xly Oirf<ted ho,' Andrew V. MC La glen · ........... QI, lPDTh•h•a-· ~~~ ""'==-= Plus Co-Hi!· Bo!h in Color Henry Fonda · James Ste wart w CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB I I I I Dlt VEI TU Ml MIIl ARE MY JU P .. OP THEN 1 ~ PL ~ ""',;& /ff · ~ I uj I '. [M ACI l End 6 Qu1r 10 Elli 14 N1h1 a bra 15 Part Uir I 16 Broit t 11i~ 17 Forn dr bt 1., }fl Vacc 20 Fini bac~ 21 TV I 23 Br g 25 FOJ n loo l 26 Pul in p 27 Way1 Shu! '·II· 29 Bad '"' Info 31 Pou 33 Anli 34 Bel! !OWi Jb Stui • pers 40 Grr 42. Bar! '" 44 Eid 45 Mrn '" "' 47 Pa c "" shri 49 Nat Abt SO Mir "'' " l -· ... DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS Mun AND JEFF MUTT. WHAT IN BLA7.ES ARE YOU DOING IN MY PRIVATE OFFICE? I JUDGE PARK.ER PLAIN JANE ACROSS l End 6 Q111 rrel 10 Elli 14 N1 tur1 I abrasive 15 P<1rl or the foot 111 Broadly f'lllpUca l 17 Form of in· debtednt ss: 2 words 111 Vaccines 20 Financial backer 21 TV fare 23 Btgin ntrs 25 FOfmlnq too l 26 Put to stay in place 27 Wayne and Shuster, "·II· 29 Bad.manned pe rson: Informa l Jl Pouch 33 Anllquf' 34 Belgium 52 Facial fta t ur1 SJ Ct1tai n railroads: Informal 54 Statt: Abbr, 57 Hesilatiori syllables 59 Flighl of steps f,l Perin· sylvan ia 's neighbor f.4 Cover with a coatin11 t>7 Jason's ship 68 "Take mt to ·-· --·": 2 words 70 •.•• Stravinsky 71 Whether 2 words 72 .Affect with Quic k. sharp pain 73 Canonica l hour 74 Want or somtthin9 use rut • OH,! WAS GOING TO USE ~RPHONE, SIR! AHAH! I KNEW YOO~ f'E HERE! MV Fli:lEND'S HOUSE IS A COUPLE &LOC.k:S DOWW TllE ~TREET! IT'S LO~DED WITH GRC>C.E'llE5 ANP WOZE'. WE ON HOLE UP TMER'E FOR A. MONTH 1 IF NEC55-AK'I' ! PERKINS By Chester Gould "NOW'TIUCl'YOU°w Nl!N PUNISNl!D, WIUllT M1W1! 'l\:X.I OOT TO SAY FOR YOURSl!!.F, \/!RA?" By Tom K. Ryon o ... h-heh·heh!) YE'R OLV ACHILLES HEEL: A PENCHANT FOR SV\rtSllCS! By Al Smith By Harold Le Doux TI-IE PAPER: JUST CAME, 5AllL! DtD HE SAY lllf Pt:Of'li:IETOR: OF TH E WMETMER: IT WA CLOTMI WG 5~E WHO WAS WIUIE SMITH BEATEN UP M.._5 R:EGAJNEP JASOM ALWNPE C.OW5CIOU5NESS AND MAS WWO !EAT MIM (,jVfM A ~TATEAlalT ! -OR BOTH? By Frank Baginski 5 Cooperative action of 2 or mote drugs 9/4170 37 French sculptor: 2 wortls 38 Spoken MISS PEACH 6 --· Diego 7 Ship stction 8 Played a part 9 Claim pul forward 10 Come out secood best 11 States 12 Rivtr or Franct J'l Fishe1 men's gear 41 The Old ·-: Ireland 4) Lacking In brilliance 411 Holiday song 48 Having the leilSl fat 51 Stick ror drawi ng -~SOMETHING iHAi HAPPENED IN "l'OllR EARL'1'CHIL.DHOOD, IRA? Ll'L AINIR GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS Friday, Stplrmbtr ~. 1970 WMUl'FO'l'-11-'AR'S .ALWS A BASIC NEEDFO' '>'ORE PPODL<X- f fl~H!YO<J iHINK/N<ii " I~~ $<\Mo THING l , /lf,h MAM!• ? -· f' ! Ii HAl'PEAJED I AGAIN! By Jahn Miles . I FEEL "THAT MY PARENTS YES. BURPEDME IN ANOl='F·~D MANNER ... THI STlANGE WOfllD -MR.MUM By~ y By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger Bolen town 36 Stupid . person 75 Str~es ' 4 13 Violent gus t of wind 54 With torte SS In a very slow manner I j f I I 1 40 Greenback s 42 Barber 's accessory 44 Exis ted 45 Member of secrtt society 47 P1cllic Northwe st shrub 49 Nation1I: Abbr. 50 Man's nickname DOWN l GMen or RC MP: Sl<1n11 2 .... ·- a man with seven wives": 2 words ) Parasitic worms 4 Certain Asians 18 Dull peopl e: Slanq 2Z. Cubs or Expos 24 Classifies 27 Fate 28 Fore11m '"" 30 Vea1!y : Abtll".: 2 words 32..Femal e animal 35 Flies alone 56 Gas 58 Result of sf.e~pinq on one's back 60 Full or angtt 62 The long, long aqo &3 Desert lealae 65 Oregon c011111unily li6 W0tk units 69 Unit of rllstanct 1 • STEVE ROPER J GUESS KASEY AIM"T HAD ilME TGET HOME YET/-~lGaT A SETTER IDEA! PEANUTS ·"""--.. Ot<A'f! -G<>IN!I~ HER ANOTHaR LETIER/-BUT. IM' THrS OME, TEll. HER THEliCE"S NOTMIN' BETWEEN US.- All' MOW ')t1l TR:lEDlO~ US UP·-!IN' ALL lUAT.1 By Saunders and Overgard By Charles' M. Schub: DENNIS THE MENACE • ... 'L2 ... 8 .•. ELl>V~NTEe:N ••. ONe: MILL/ON ... If ... A HUNNft<T' SIXTY· SE:VEN'!UN .. .s .... • ·, I ·.: • I ., ·. .. I l I FA 'Mn M F. 0 "Y >ecn J'm : mucl Caro tapir! Pres Mad whic over way had t blow Fn quite the 1 whid s~ Ralp Soan Saga Char and I play! Fi ... - ' j , .. I ~ A l :SO DAILY PILOT FtldlY, Stpttmber 4, 1970 --------- 'NEW 1970 BELVEDERE COUPE ·. $ 5,,;,1 # Rl2 1COE I 153-40 CHOOSE FROM 8 ROADRUNNERS . ' Luxuriously Equipped With : """ "· "' ""'" """ Bucket Seab • Power J>isc Brakes Console • 4 Speed TraMmission Tinted Windshield • Undercoat Radio • Heater • Power Steering Vinyl Top • Fiberglass Tires ••• OPEN ALL LABOR DAY WEEKEND '68 DODGE SUPER BEE 4' 1p11d lr•n1m i11ion, rtdio •nd h11+1r, PO"'· •r llee•in9, power br1ke1, (15557) '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA Vt, 1utom1lic, r1dio, h11l1r pow1r 1l1e1in9. pow1r br1~1 1, Yin~I top. ITXT9 10l '66 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON V8, •ulom•lic, r•dio, h••f•r, pow•r 1l•trin9, •ir conditionin9. IYCMl 64) '66 OLDSMOBILE STATION WAGON VI, rtdio, h11!1r, pow1r 1t11ring, f1clory 1ir, 1ulom1tic. ITGA. 547) s13 95 '69 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE SEDAN A Yerv low mile•g• •ulomobilt . Thi1 ;, re11 llv 11 nic• ont. IY XX0291 '66 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR VI, 1ulom1tic, t1dio, h•tl1r, pow1r li•t•· ing, pow1r brtk•1 t ir cond. !T\IC59 ll $995 I '66 RAMBLER . AMBASSADOR WAGON A ... tom1tic, t1dio, ~11t· er, power 1l11rinq, power b11k11, 1ir c.ond, ISIZ .. Ol l ~195 '66 DODGE CORON ET SOD VI, 111lom11ic, r1d io, l>11t1r, pow•t li•tri ng. !UOA65l l '65 MERCURY COMET VB 1n9in•, r1dio i nd h••ltr. !YPY029l '69 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNE R 4' 1p11d, r1dio •nd h1•+••. IYQW496l ~995 '69 PLYMOUTH '69 PLYMOUTH Belvedere Sedan Satell ite Sedan Aulomtlic, r1dio, h••l· l/.B, •utom1tic, r1dio. ••, power 1+11ri n9, he1 !1r, pow1r 1+••rin9, !YON554 l f•cter., ,;,, !ZLNIOOI '67 CHEVROLET · '64 KARMANN IMPALA 2 DR. HARDTOP \II, 1ulom1tic, r1dio, h11l1r, pow1r 1!11rin9, f1clorv 1ir co11d i!ion · ···$f39s GHIA 4 1p••d lr1n1mi11io11, r1dio 111d h11t1r. (HUP5171 '67 International Travel·All Slelion W•gon, V8, llU• tomatic, r•dio, h•1f11, pow•r 1+•••ifl9, •l'Ct l· l•n* condition. (667· 7561 '68 FORD Custom Sedan Vt, 1ulom1iic. radio, h11l1r, pow1r 1IMrin9. !WTP616 1 AJL.AS SERVIC• DEl'AllTMINT Welcomn 1nd honors ell Cllry1l1r corpar1tlon vetllda requiring ,,,. vie.• Ir.cl w1rr1nty wor•, r•rdlq 1 of -· Ci r WIS pi;rcll•H<I. Wt i-M1s1.,. Cll1rge, Ban• Amer~ t•rd, C1r1e lll1nclle, Amerlc.111 E.•· Pl'IH1 I nd Olne-. (IUD. Mllllary 11,..nc11111 i• Oll' 1peclaltyl • '69 Volkswagen '65 MUSTANG Aulom1lic 1tick 1hifl, r•dio, h11t1r, 19 19 '65 PONTIAC Catalina Wagon VI, 1utom1lic, r1dio, h11t1r, powt r 1l11ri119, !NQX264 1 r VI, •ulom1li1, r1dio, h•1t1r, pow1• li11rin9. Viny l top. !0RY472 ) '69 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARDTOP \18, •11lom1tic, r•dio, h11!1r, pow1r 1!11rin9, Yinvl lop f1clory 11ir. B•1utiful condition. ·~395 ~--------------------------------------------------- • • r ' ' • !', 1, l· • • .. •! ,, ' . •• •: .. . ' • I: " .. . .. • ,. • • . . . , l • • ~ • • • • • r • • l ' • •• • ,, .1 • {" i r· ' ' • • • ., I . l> ~- ' ') ·-,, ' . ·, t" • • • • • . . . ! . ; • t . • . . . . :- • . . . • . ;- ... .. ,, • • • • .. • .. • • • . . • •• 5 YEAR 50,000 MILE FAOORY WARRANTY OPEN LABOR DAY -~--~-·------.-.----· • ALL RIMAINING NIW 1970 CARS•. AND TRUCKS ., " Prlda7, September 4, 1~70 5 YEAR 50,000 MILE FAOORY WARRANTY - OPEN LABOR DAY DAILY PILOT :'J l 9 AM 'TIL 10 PM c•RRY THI PORD MOTOR CO, 5 YR./50,000 M, WARRANTY WRICH WILL 9 AM 'TIL 10 PM * * * * ·* * * NOT BE AVAILABLE ON 1971 MODELS • * * * * * •t)(CfPI CORTINA & VERICIC • • v.1. ·uwis..-tlc, ,..., m ., ,...r Ilise Mlttt. All COND .. ,.c. BRAND NEW 1970 THUNDERBIRD NEW 1910 GALAXIE "500" i•I •frrer1, r•llle, •••• IC•••• ti•t•ll 1l11s, wi1i•ilily 1r1111, 2·DOOR 1.AllDAU HOUGHAM .,. ...... ,....,. ....... ...., ....... -....... -"" -h•IM. •11/W ,...._,,.., .. snn. ,....._ 01i•1•m• _ .. _..., ,._,; .. Mill ... -............ "" ...... oMcttk <leek. .... ,, ..... .ii.1-il li .... t ........... ._ ...... , .._....,,_U•tt•I .. ................... ,.... ......... _..,.,,,,_., ... ,,,..1 SAVE$500 SAVE $700 ....... ...., ..... ri .. SAVE SI 500 ,,_,.,,...,urlr,;u IMMEDIATE DI IV YI IMMEDIATE DlllVERYI NEW 1970MAVERICK NIW 1970TORINO NIW 1970 THUNDIRBIRD NEW 1970 GALAXll 500 $1888 FULL PRICE $2188 FULL PRICE $3988 FULL PRICE $2888 FULL PRICE OK91T348775 • NEW 1970 FALCON CLUB CPE. R.idio, heater. 200 c.u . in. engine. IOKIOTl983921 FULL $1988 IMMEDIATE PRICE DELIVERY llEW IXPLOUR PIOO P.U. $2488.• FUllPRICE F I OARl!30933 CREDIT COUNSELING let us help you reorrange 10IJI' budget if you feel O'l'llr loaded with bills, but would like to buy o new or used car or 111Jck 142-6611 For This CALL ;.@.11ao Free Service '64CHEV • OR26Ll 55823 OJ83N15598S NEW 1970 MUSTANG MACH. I V-8, auto. power ste~ring, disc brokes, oir cond., W5W tires, tinted gloss, spf, reor seat. Ser. No. OF05Hl67996 SA VE $800 FromFactorylistPrict MW 1970 MUSTANG V-S $248$,,• FULLPRICE OIW2F1318tl BUY -RENT -LEASE RENT: WHY WALK? DRIVE A MAVERICK '6 ~~1~' LIAll1 LTD 2•DOOR HARDTOP ,_ s1"ring. cli<c -..· 39Q 'N engioo, air<Olldiliadftg. wt.it-'l tni, 2C lllOlllh open.end ltoff. "' rtl CAURENTALDEPT.142-6611 OR.540-7780 ... , , 5os ~Tu '65 FOR' D ~~!,&!~!ER frwllf DiNttl (OllfM', 531869 $788. -'69 Must . n 1 V• ,.., •• ~···~ ....... ;.. $1788 d1cor., white ••d1w1ll tr,,,, (7211QF! • OJ55V118896 NEW 1970 F250 PICK UP TRUCK AND ELDORADO CAB OVIR CAMPER Long a.cf P.U. with "OT roW"'" • llftf!er, "Ollge, ce..-din.et~. qu-. tizad &. tllil. llzed ~ ""· IOTH OllLY $3488 FULL PIKE SBllAL NO. f2SAAG80160 NIW 1970 CORftllA SA YE $500 . .. ... ,,...,1 ... ......,1;., . -8A98.llOl9li7 . - IUY ONE Of OUR ADYIRTISID USED CAIS ·DRIVE IT FOi 7 DAYS AND IF YOU All llOT SATIS{llD TIADI IY FOi ONI OF TNI 2GO USED CARS AYAILAIU tel ....... 9"Nit1I USf TNI EQUITY IN YOUI OLD CAI TOMAIEJHE DOWN PAYMENT ON TNl lllW 0111· PAID Foti 01 llOTI CALL 842-6611. QR 540-7780 . . .. . ' ..... -. ------or~--, =-:r.,: '·"" • .,,...,..~..,,.,,....,,....,........,.....,...,..........,"""'I",...__,,_..,....~------------------ HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE SES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE 1000 -··· 1000 Genera\ 1000 G~•r•I 1000 1000 General ~~iiiiii, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiilOOii;G~-~ .. iii' iii;" --~1000~1··'.~~·~""::.::"~·*~-*~..:.:IOOO~*fG~~:::.:r:~~-:*:;:---=l~;t G·;~;~R SHORES ------- ·• FIRST TIME OF~RED rare find in Dover Shores-a truly Spanish * TAYLOR * yJe home with tile roof and featuring a pri· ~te___ga}"den court entry, 4 Bedroon1, 3¥..a --t-~lilfhs. Panelled family room, roimal dining Luxurious cwstom dwelling for the truly dlscriminating. This brand new l van Wells home with outstanding View has 3180 sq. ft. of living area. 4 Bedrooms, 3~ baths, richly panelled family room with fireplace " bltn wet bar. High beamed ceiling living room & modern '"country" kitchen w i t h breakfast area. Beautifully landscaped patio with spark# ling swimming pool. Dover Shores best buy oflnJa Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES OPE.N HOUSE SUNDAY THE TOWERS Panoramic bay & ocean View. Exclu· sive 2 bedroom apartments. Elevators, terraces, Jacuzzi pool 7% Financing with 10% down. Very special buy! $44,500 To $58,500. Open Da ily 1·5 P .M. 3121 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach. l ' • plus 9 x 11 break.last room. Vie'v of Bay f(om living rm, dining rm, breakfast rm and ~ster bedrm. Luxuriously carpeted, draped, •fftdscaped at $98,500. 90' ON VIEW drooms, 3 baths. Under 1 yea r old. Pan~ ic, unobstructed View of Up per Bay. ,oo in enclosed inner courtyard. Owner lf8ving area. Price reduced to $109,900. !;.°ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors .. _ Dover Shores Office 430 Galaxy Drive, N.B. 1;;.;;c;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;.;.. .;c.=..:;: __ - JUST LISTED· EASTSIDE POOL ' ~ 3 BEDROOMS 2 Bedrooms + Den + i;'am- ily Room. Huge Brick Fire. place. Rustic with lots of wood paneling, Big corner lot. Room for bOllt. lt's new. ly listed at $32,500. "Come SeP" or Call 546-2313. RelO' yard'! Every inch ls cot.icrete except for the pool. The':. home? lt's a 3 bedtm beadty with wall to wall cvf,f)rwhere. Financinlf No J>OPllJoan, no problems, Take ove?Jlst TD with S8000 • but lhe _Owner will help you Y.·i tb ~t! Full price, $25,650. -a· THE REAL ''."\.. ESTATERS -' • , COATS & WALLACE ' REALTORS DANDY DUPLEX ONLY $28,500 '. ~bp.n Evening s ,,.. 962-44S4. ' • =~GAIN * lh ACRE * pltd 2 BR. Eastside. $23.500. 64f¢2 aft 5 FURNISHED DUPLEX 2 bednns. each side. Garages. Live in one Jet other pay expenses. Assume lo int.er. est Joan. Call 645-0303 FOREST E. OLSON Satlutiay -DIME-A-LINES! cab 642-5618 & cha.rre it. Inc. Rea11ors 2299 Harbor 1 1 ..: Open Houses 1~ THIS WEEKEND 1 '*"" rllit. 9tctlMly dltKtory wltti Y•• ttllt weeknd • I Pt! .. h!llHl11.ti... All tM locefl"' liltN Ml-, ..,..., .............. , ._. .......... , c:..: i. .....,.. DAILf PILOT WANT ADS. htro• ~,...-... .,.. ..... .., .. ., ....... .,,... .. ! IW llidl I~ ht .... eel ........ MMJ, . i, HOUSES FOR SALE l~!I' ~1 Bedrooms & Family or Oen) ZT7 Morning Canyon Dr. (Shorecliffs) CdM . -, 67>-1662 (Sat Sun Mon 1·5) ,447 62nd St. (Newport Shores) NB I 675,.5930 (Sat 1-5 ) J (3 Bedroom ) i 1515 Bonnie Doone (Irvine Terr) CdM ' 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) · 1215 Pembroke (West.cliff) NB 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5 :30) (3 Bedrooms & Family or Den) 403-16th Place 1co rner Tu stin & 16th) '' 642·5200 (Sunday 1-5) f215 Aralia (East bluff) NB . 675,.3210 -'3316th Place. Costa J\1esa '~ 675,.3210 JSal & Sun) <Sun) ~1707 Trade\\•inds ( Baycresl) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1930 Leeward ( Baycrest) NB • 642-ll235 (Sun ) 3057 Carob (Eastbluffl NB ' 833-0700 \Sun 1·5 ) ' C4 Bedroom} ,1 ***•5 Collins Island, Newport Beach , 835-5164:673-9043 (Sat Sun & Mon 12·5) 1 ttn Linda Isle (Linda Isle) NB , • 67>-3210 (Sat & Sun) · 1130 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB · . 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) ,! 14 Bedroom & Fam ily or Oen) *1749 Skylark Lane, Newport Beach S48-82lll (Sat Sun & Mon 1-4) ~ ~124 Santiago, (Dover Shores) NB I-642-5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5 ) 1430 Galaxy Drive !Dover Shores) NB ; 64&-1550 (Open daily) ~6121 Palisade Dr, l·luntington Beach 846-2156 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) 1536 Dolphin (Irvine Terr) CdM 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 1112 Nottingham (Weslclilf) NB 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1·5:30) J.2716 Windover. Corona del Mar -644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5 :30) ~10 Morning Star Lane (Dover Shores ) NB · 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1·5:30) 1606 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) NB '. 675,.3210 (Sat & Sun) ~27 Camden (Cameo Shores) CdM , 642-8235 <Sat & Sun) '*4518 Roxbury (Cameo Shores) NB 833-0700 (Mon 1-5) (S a.drooms & Fam ily or Oen ) *1536 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB -642-8235 (Sat & Sun) ~500 Santiago (Baycrest) NB J fiU.8235 (Sat & Sun) , 'CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE (3 Bedrooms> *3026 Club House Circle. Costa Mesa ~119 !Open 12·5 P.M.) * .... ~ * * ........ , t *** ............ ., • .,, l "TAYLOR-MADE'" HOME TOURS Tailored To Y04Jr NHds Looking for just the right home can be tire-- some and confusing. Our capable sales staff can make this a joyfuJ experience. Call for an appointment for an inspect.ion of homes suited to YOUR needs. PARADISE FOR CHILDREN School , playground. Jibrary, heated pool at your child's (ingertips. 3 Bdrm, 'dining room, pool home in Westcliff. More extras when you see this home. $45,850 1215 Pembroke Open Sat-Sun 1·5:30 CORONA DEL MAR CONTEMPORARY For the young at heart and just two years new. One block to beach & short walk to shops. Custom built with fine quality detail •. Ocean vu & deck off huge master bdrm. DOVER SHORES '- Dramatic brand new 4 bdrm, den & garden rm with wet bar. Formal dining room, fine carpeting & marbJe baths. Cathe.drat ceiling in mstr ste. Be the first owner! $108,000 410 Morning Star Lane Open Sat.Sun 1·5:30 IRVINE TERRACE-$40,000 Close to Fashion Island is this delightful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. New carpeting, invit- ing patio and buil t-in range & oven. 1515 Bonnie Doone Open Sat.Sun 1-5:30 PRIOE OF OWNERSHIP-$79,500 \Ve recommend this 4 bdrm "Broad.moor" view home in Corona del Mar for a large family-hxecutive entertaining. Formal din· ing rm. A garden setting of unusual beauty-. 271 6 Windover Open Sat·Sun 1.S:30 PERSONALITY PLACE! 4 Bdrm, 3 bath on quiet Westclif! street. Mother-in·la'v suite make this home so in· teresting. Reduced price. lge yard & attrac· t ive approach. A "must see". $49,950 l ll2 Nottingham Open Sat-Sun 1-5:30 JUST. REDUCED ! Gleaming white 2 bdrm, den casa. Romantic courtyard. Close the door on the world & y·ou can almost hear the castanets. $41,750 LINDA ISLE-$225,000 Mile long water view! Fabulous custom built 2 story Colonial with 3 lge bedrooms recrea· t ion rm & formal dining. Pier & sli p. A real beauty in choice location! IRVINE TERRACE Fantastic view of bay, jetty & ocean from living rm, master hr & fam rm. This 3 bdrm home is beautifully maintained. Lge. H&F pool. Shown by appt. only. $87,500 IRVINE TERRACE Convenient to Newport Center~ Lovel y cor· ner 4 bdrm & den home with H&F pool. Sep-- arate dining rm. See today! $75,000 1536 Dolphin Open Sat.Sun 1-5:30 WATERFRONT-$85,000 81' on channel with pier and float. 3 Bdrm, 2 sty. Beam ceiling. Owner will carry 1st T.D. at low int. rate to qualified buyer. By appt. LOVELY BAYFRONT DUPLEX Never-ending view. Marble fireplaces in each unit. Live in luxurious upper and rent 3 bd· rm, 2 ba. lower. Call to see. $160,000 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Corner privacy! 2 Bedroom front unit 'vith fireplace plus 1 bedrm renlal in rear. Patio & charm. Best Buy! Only $42,000 OFF ICE OPEN SUNOAY 10 ·5:30 ·"Our 2Sth Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 211 1 San Joaquin H il ls Roltd NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 * * * * * * SEX! Now that \\'e have your a\. lention you \\'on•t \\'&.nt lo miss this b&.rgain buy 5~ GI Resale ·where St50 per month PAYS AU., rlNJSH. ED GARAGE convert~ to master • sized bonus room. "squeaky" clean and wailing lor y o u. $26,SOJ FULL PRICE. Walker & lee Re alto~ 7682 F.Clinger 842-4-l['U 540-5140 Fairway Custom Lovely 3000 sq .1t. low ran1b. Jing one gtory Cal inodel'n \lo'llh lamlly, dining & gan1c rms. Extra spacious kltch· en. Mos t attractive & tern\11 to i;uit. Under $70,000. (()ptn Evenlng~1 1000 OPEN HOUSE Sat-Sun-Mon 1-5 :2'17 MORNING CANYON DR. SHORECLIFFS CORBIN- MAR·TIN REALTORS 67S.l 6tl OCEANFRONT LOT Ba lboa Pen insula $45.000 George Willi•m son REALTOR 673-4350 64$.1564 Evos. REPOSSESSION Ivan Wells & Sons Roy J, Ward Co. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS 1430 Galaxy Drive 646-1550 (Open Daily) SCHOOLTIME? No problems here Seller says sell for only $35,000 Expensively decoralrd 4 year old homr 2 Bedrooms &: study with wet bar nr ar University Irvinr outstanding yard & patio Call now Real ton ''Our 25th Year In the Harbor Area'' 26 Lind• Isle Drive Corp. owned. 5 Br. 5 bath borne facing Harbor I sland. Jacuzzi & sauna. Comp. furn., for immed. occup. W/dock ............ $200,000 60 Linda Isl• Drive Newly listed. Prestige waterfront home. 4- extra Jg. Br. 4 ba, pwdr. rm. Lge. liv. r·m. & den; 3 car gar. Beaut. patio/garden. Deck & dock. By Appl. .................. $220,000 n Linda Isle Drive New 5 ~r., 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble entry, wet bar1 AM/FM Intercom, Huge mstr Br. has beam cell. & own frplc. Large liv. & lam. rms. w/frplcs. w/deck ..... , $185,000 Occupied-Linda Isle Or. Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/3 frplcs., circular stairway, decorator selected carp. & drapes. Shown by appt. .......... $210.000 Waterfront Lots No. 44: 108 Ft. on water ....•..•.•. $150.000 No. 76: Wide lot on lagoon .....•.• $85,000 No. 88: View. With plans ......•... $145,000 For complete information on all ottier homes & lots, call: BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR 133 Dover Or., Sult• 3, N.B. 642-4620 1000 General ----- OPEN HOUSE Home & Dover Shores View Business 673-4400 Move in rondition, Elegant j ,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I • bedroom. dining room. family room home. Adult l•o_P_E_N_H_O_U_S_EI ;:.:"'-W•lt pri«d al 3 Bedroom home on Jai-ge 84' x 233', C·l lot, IdeaJ for any home 1y pe business. Owner will carry the fin. ancU1g, submit your lerms. 1124 SANTIAGO Compacl·lmmaculate Opon sat & 5"" 1 to 5 $39,500 Priced righ!. Newport Heights area -near·new 3 bedrooin. family room home. See fo1· your~ell. $36,950. 403 16th PLACE OPEN SUNOAY 1 to S PETE BARRETT 1 lOS ~.~~.~~ l tllWl'OlT IE4CH t.' 642·5200 , ..... PETE BA RR ETT J ~v:;::;1 E;;;:w=. :;:::v,:Ew"'.:=_ v-:=1:; Ew;:: BACK BAY REAL TY ' Ovorlooki"" Nowport Contor, Costa Mesa, and beautiful 1'0S WUTCLIPP DR. Newport Harbor. The eve-* Immaculate home HEWPOIT IU.CH fl ning lights arc like a seventh * J ust redecorat~ ~~·~;lOO ~.... heaven. Well kept. three * 3 Bedrooms, 2 balhi! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•! bedrooni, fvoo bath home * Large family playroom AUTHENTIC with 1''am/Rm, Din_ Rm. * Extra garage for boat, aod Bil •loo Kit. Larg• Liv • SPAN' camper or shop SH ing room is located above * Quiel view street Luxury home with tlle roof garage which oilers privacy * $41.000 in exdusive area, almost and sur.passed view, Cool, * Betle.r hurry! 2000 sq fl on completely pri. quiet, patio and rear yard vate enclosed lot. Romantic area. Excellent schools • botvaR~ lotlJ900 j R.. master bedroom suite, opens near shopping and only min. szeoitgp on1o enclosed atrium. Fan. utes to the Dunes and sandy 34.lC Via Lido t<>stic landscaping with two beaches. Priced to sell at ,. ... '".,W;;ie..iD;ie.,liv.,o;;ir.,·• ... ..., patios, waterfall & fish pond. $55,000 with very reasonable • Absolutely beautiful. at term!!. 3 UNITS $39.950. Call now to see. M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. PLUS 25o/. RETURN W lk & L 641).05.» Eves: 673-6116 2 BR's each unit -conven. a er ee . jent location, near schools WOW ! & shopping -garage -pool On Brookhursl. TENNIS FANS I -asking S35,9fi!l -owner Next lo Gemco • will can ·y paper -anxious 968-3371 • Fountain Valley BIG, ELEGANT, -make offer! $1.00 TOTAL DOWN MOYES YOU IN BEAUTIFUL! 5 bedrooms, 2 baths. 28' FAM. ILY ROOM. built-in food Ct?nter. LARGE LOT wilh Sellt>r 'viii pay all costs for Tennis Court. Value plus at any Veteran. This custon1 $37.250 with existing 5\4 an- ho1ne is ready ror you. 3 nual percentage rale VA huge bedrooms, 2 rull baths, Joan payable $174/mo. TO. romantic fireplace, tremend. TAL! t093 Bakt'r. c.~t. Swimming Pool 4 Bedroom, 2 bath. wood floor, FP, 2 years old, Cus- tom built. $34,500. Wells·McCardle, Rlt rs 1810 Ne'"'lXJrt Blvd., C.M. ous tree covered Jot. Huge w I k & l " x " ....... ~,...... a er ee It's a steal in Newport for only S32 500. ~io. 1043 Y/estcli!f Dr. ' &IS-7711 -Farr'!IW- RAMBLING RANCH TYPE This lovely near new home. 4 lgt' bdrm~ + ram. rm. + fonnal dining. 3..car garage, Yard separatl:' from pool area -beauliful heated pool -Park & schools close by. Just $69,950 -To inspect phone 646-7171. 'O THE REAL \~ESTATERS ~ '·. . ' . COUNTRY LIVING On a full acre with ranch type 3 RR home completely re. Pflinted. nev.• dsh\\'Shr/dia. po~aJ. Lge clelchd cuv, pa· tio, outdoor brick frple & BBQ. r.tany ~hade ttte11. O\\•ner "''ill fin<' Al 8% $10.000 dn. Hnrry thi~ \\'Qn't \asl ! Only S 1!1,500. PERRON 642-1771 Open 'Iii 9:00 Pt.1 548-7779 Eves: 644-0684 Choose your ' "INSTANT HOME!" -VACANT & READY -* SHORT escrows •.• * QUICK possession .•. * BEFORE school tt•rts!I 5 Bdrm., Waterfront ........ $139,000 4 Bdrn1., Spanish ...... , • , ... $ 54,950 4 Bdrm., Newport Beach ..... $ 49,500 3 Bdrm., Courtyard Entry .... S 36,950 2 Bdrm., Newport Island (R·2) $ 36,750 3 Bdrm., Cu l·de-sac ........ , $ 33,950 3 Bd rm .. Pool ...........•... $ 30,750 4 Bdrm., Near Shopping ..••• $ 25,950 3 Bdrm .. VA Terms ......... $ 23,950 SMOG? ... FORGET IT! .. ,.,... ---.:!:~u Or\ginal builder now nscn. ing this VACANT 3 bt-dnn h0n1c with flrcphtce, bltins r te. For only $27,950, Loc111. ed near South Coast Plara and Ii SHARP & CLEAN!! Onty $1400 down to anyont'. 2 t:fouses-One Lot I-le whO hesitale!l ls JO!ll!! i Nt11r 16th & TU!;11n En,ioy the cool ocean b r e e z e and the shimmering BLUE PACIFIC from this almost-new 4·bedroom Lusk Home in the sky! Immaculate with ••• A FOREVER VIEW. 3 ·car garage • • • all for only $56.500. 12 UN ITS Front hOme. 2 bcdrm11, shak(' c I h & c t"Ouf. fl<1lh hOffil'!I have CJCC 0 eswort y 0 rang«/dis"°''''· li«pfo""' I It pa tlo!!. $30.~ with $3000 down. REALTOR Costa Mes• Investment Newport Beach Offlc. MACNAB • IRVINE Realty Compa ny 642-8235 675·3210 ~.l .D. Architect included every new & luxurious feature in this ultra· quality large home. All glass to the soarin g lam· inated beams. O\vner must n1ove to N.W. and will finance. See it. $145,000 Carol Tatum 4 BR DOVER SHORES 4 BA 3 car gara.E!e. Vie\vs from li vinJ!, dining. breakfast, kitchen & family rooms. Tiled entry court & entertainment area. "Best." $97,000 Al Fink JUST LISTED-BEACON BAY Available -slin for 18' boat & tennis. A real charmer. 3 BR. 2 bath. lmmacu· late. Lge dinin,g, hi beams. Lovely patio plus great I BR apt. $79,500 Mary Lou Marion OPEN MON 1·5 4518 ROXBURY CAMEO SHORES New Listing! Large 4 BR home in excel· Jent condition . Family rm. lanai, swim· mi ng pool. 3 car garage. $76,500 Cathryn Tenjlle HARBOR VIEW HILLS ONE OF A KIND -Immaculate 4 BR, lge fam rm & formal d in rm. Popular tri·level. Large well landscaped yard & manv extras -pool s tep s a\va v. Only $68.950 ' Bud Austin ASSUMABLE 51/2 °/o LOAN Westcliff -perfect for executive \vith growing famil v. Large yard w/raised sundeck, renectin n pool. cov'd porch. 4 BR, 21h Ba, large fam rm. Fee! $65,000 M. C. Buie " 5 BR-HARCOR VIEW Q\vner says "sell"' -distinctive solit level -new home. 1\1exican til e entry. Hu ge fam rm w/2nd fireplace. formal dining, prof. decor, walled garden. $56,· 900 Belle Partch EASTBLUFF OPEN SUN 1-5 3057 CAROB Traditional home with for ever view. 3 BR. 3 bath. Large family rm \V/\vet bar could easily be converted to 5 Brs. Low maint. yard w/courtyard $51 .500 Harriet Davies AVOID THE CROWDS Enjoy 2 privak! beaches on the Bay & secluded patio & ho m e in Bayshores. Large garden oriented living rm, dinin g rm. 2 Bdrms & den Decorated \V/fine taste & move·in condition . $49,500 Mary Harvey REFRESHINGLY BRIGHT Owner maintenance a'vare, loves to paint over fresh paint. Act no'v to be new ov,in· er in \Vestcliff. 3 BR & family rm, only $44.950 Harry Frederick WALK TO THE BEACH 4 BR house reduced tn $42.500. Jt has 3000', formaJ dining. family rm. 3 car garage & on lan d yo u own! Enjoy ocean breeze on your deck. Bill Comstock WITHIN AN AREA OF SOUND VALUES Truly an outstanding famil y home. full of warmth & charm. 5 Bdrn1s. 31h baths, $63,500 ~ In a pretty setting. 3 Bdrms, J 3A baths. Delightful outdoor pat i o. Recre,tion area includes 2 pool s. putting green. bad· rninton court & shuffleboard. All this for only $37.500 Kathryn Raulston "Please call for 011r picture brochure of current listings." Room for morr. AU 2 Rdrms. lrpl. beautiful landscpg, Be lilt f\1'!!'1 lo ~(' Thltt nl!\\' Jl~I· in~. P\'RA'.\UO 1-:XCI lANGOll." fij',5.8(lgg co: Ts WALLACE REALTORS -S4Ml41- (0 ptn Evenin9s) 548-7711 1028 "Bayside Dri ve -0~·~:;-:;.~~~~1·~~,~· 1~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!6!!!1 ... s .... 49,,.3 ... 0 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I I Re ad Dilly Pi I ot Classified .;;, - I 1 I' " .. ~ ·I '· ' ! ~ ' 11 I, a • ii ' i I t ~ ij ' ' .. " ' .. >' ·i ' :·1: ' ~ • " " .. ' " 'I !I ' 1: .. . ' .. ., " ·j ' " ,, I' ~ l j :• ' • • • ' ' ' t I . --- HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE GeMr1I 1000-.. 1 lCIOO -MACNAB -IRVINE I FINER HOMES LINDA ISLE We offer the Finest Bayfronl homes in the Newport Harbor, ranging in price from $135,000 to $500.000 and Bay!root Iola from $38,000. Each individually designed with piers and slips. CaJI 642-8235 or see our .. Speclalist at •t.1 Linda Isle. BAYCREST Owner must sell beautilul S Bedroom, 4'h bath. 2 story home. Marvelous floor plan for family living. Formal dining room, family room with wet bar. Wonderful k:itcheri, l~e adjoining breakfast area. 4000 sq. ft. Pool sized yard. Price reduced to $89,900 on fee land. POOL 51h% loan. New listing. Dining room, family room, breakfast area. Sharp decor. Can't last Jong at $54,950. Baycrest. VIEW Spectacular view lot on Galaxy Dr'ive, Jocated next to prestige homes in Dover Shores. Ask- ing $40,000. DOUBLE SCOOP 2 Duplexes-one with ocean view'. Great rental area. Both with assumable loans - $49.500 & $51,500. Call Lois Miller for appt. 675-3210 TRUE BRITISH CHARM Tucked away in a little English Village. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining-huge fam· ily room. 2 Fireplaces-immaculate & ready for immediate occupancy. $39,500. Open Swi. 433 16th Place, Costa Mesa. DOVER SHORES BAYFRONT Entrancing 3 Bedroom, 2 bath bayfront home with pier & slip. Lovel y formal dining room, family room with fantastic sunken bar. Breakfast area off kitchen. Beautiful use of marble & stone. Large waterfront terrace for your entertaining. $139,500 WEST COAST RIVIERA Beautiful Oceanfront lots. Reported to be the last in this area. Streets; sidewalks"& all utili- ties in. A view that goes on and on. Let us tell you about the financing & tax shelter. Call 675-3210. THE WAY OF LIFE Smart & luxurious -4 Bedroom, 3 bath, 2 story & surrounded by green grass, acres of trees & cool clean air. $47,900 WESTCLIFF 5.5% Loan. Spotless 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home. new kitchen. dining room on large landscaped corner lot. Reduced to $48,500. Will consider lease or lease option. MACNAB·IRVINE · Realty Company 1080 Bayside Drive 901 Dover Dr., Su ite 120 Newport Booch 675-3210 642-1235 IOOO -~·-·--·~---- DA!lY PllOT •..:::;::::::=..:~:...=~L~E,_ HOUSES,O -1242 Huntington lleoch 14• NowpOrt Booch 1200 EH tbluff '"""-=.;.;..==--""' 1".L. • ,! _ .. , -CAN u WAN!ED .,. i .. 3 n.yres. • • • 5 BEDROOM ,_ ..... imal! - HIDEAWAY DELUXE -DUPLEXES CNnnuw "'lah'" _. • ..._, 1£f>'- BEACH SPECIAL NEW-$24,880 • ' BUILT' wantodbyYoUn&",hmlwwk. If S 1"" couple with cuh. • • OR • • • CALL CD ,.,•2414 lecluded atta, 3 Br. 11' Ba. Sooth ot hlft¥ s BR nr. be Blt·ln kit. with BBQ. Great 2 BR 2 ~· cPt, tundk, M!lt: trpJc., radiant su heaL cine ~.\Comlna cook top, $32.500, You Al'(! welcome to wlk-in cl.ta. Great buy, Imped this at any time. $69,SOO. ()pen dally or caU JUST LISTED! Sparld new 4 BR. near beach. 2 run bathlf, J'rah, alry kitchen. Bu.lit-in appUancca. ~idilll Need Room to Breal"-? NLU HUNTINGTON STATI llACH 3,000 SQ. FEET l BEDROOMS -2 BATHS FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE FORMAL DINING AREA HUGE LIVING ROOM W l 9' CEILING 25' X SO' RUMPUS ROOM E1slly Converted into four edditloMI bedrooms •nd two baths-tpaeious comfort for Oflty $36,400. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY YA-FHA AND CON'llNTIONAL PINANCIN• RANCHO LA CUESTA AYRES HOMES SINCE 1905 MODELS AT BROOKHURST & ATLANTA HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-2929 e 9bf. I ll8, ! I A.M. to I P.M. lt now la the mot! b<auUIUI, ,,,..~ big: panelled game nn )'Ol.I 1 -1 ALTY • CA.LL Ci) t4f·l4t4 644-0266. l&i4'4111. ~H~A~R~BO~R~V~IE~W~H~IL~L~S 71"1ALTY ever aaw. The heme ta a ~••r ff• .. •r• h i t orrlte deccrat"" d....,., ""'°m HAPPY atau to buge covettd • ; dl'ps, lush crpta, fr'plc a · ...... -o1 ownc..ihlp HALECREST home. As a fut 8a1e la cJe.. Spotless 4 Bed.room <1r 3 and aired, owner will aeU H1A a den .a. Kiddies' paradbe or "!~ at only '25,900. Thia d oee to achools and a big po:!llltively is the best value park, -Room for dad'• on the market IOday, Call boat or trailer -... only :7. and prove it to )lOQI'· $26,950, can $46.2.118 NOW. Nichols Real Estate 546-9521 O THE REAL '"'-ESTATERS. N•ar Nt"P•rl P••t Offl~• 3 br, 2 ~ • .i&m. Xlnt oond. beaut view, prof lnckcpd. * OPEN DAILY * Prin ordy $52,000. Write Box * TOP VALUE * M 2023 DaUy Pilot, N.B. Artislic &: charming 3 br e 4 CD. INCOME unltl, on 2 home neat Marinel'!ll Schoo!. Newly ca-ted llvi"" rm adjoining-valuable Lot 1. • .--... Alwa.yg n:nttd. 0 w n t r: tlo. Alley acoell'. 2-cu pr.: qe, Huge lot. FHA·VA 11nelnr. Perteet for the D2 nu. program. Don't..,., -rr Wll.L BE GONE! Dial (714)-962-5585. FOREST L OLSON • · overlooks lge ~red patio 61:>-578'2'. Ii: Juab gardens, ~ed -:======= Inc, RQ.Jtors bathn:na & kitchen. APPi!. ~ l9U1 Brookbunt Ave. ances included. Only $32,SOO, Coron• del M.r 1250 Huntington Beach :>; ditt~ A ::-:c~~ M~· .-.-.---.~--p1=c""ru""'R'"Esa,.:;,;;,u"'"E ;,,.sE=1""11=N • • ·~ • 'lo: • t 1 I -=o646-~"55=-<o_wno~':.:.1" ~-~ 2~::: ,.ce':'.n.ri;. OPEN Sal, &m. A Mon. 12-S 11 (J PRIVATE ·& SECLUDED •1 l~Nllf'(1I) . .-..! . • • = =z=z:=z=tl -...,,,, like ncw p •ly No. 5 eoum. !•land • ...Hof Jfem:J crpt. dra.ps; cxiw:red patio. ~ 2.gtory1, Fnnch Past wrought hon gate • MANY Extras! Lrg fenced •""""ncy o v e r o o kl n g into enclosed brick pillared, : ~ BAYSHORES REDUCED! yard, on l'Xtra Ire lot. Good turning bas.in I: North Bay. F1"rst T1"me Offered coul'cyard to gorgeous "O • ' Ranch style cottaae cro.. to prlvat• eommunlty bu.ch ·-loYel)' aecl.uded yard Priced to ~ now 144.!00 • INVI ', J Mt f'J l .. Eamtde loc, CM. Ideal lo• 4 bdrm, SI\ baths A a liv;ng WORLD charm". I II: " tired ~-••• 1.,... room u 111.rge a• aJI l -re eou.,... ""°"' ~. _,__ .,. __ ,, * Hlll'bol' View Homeic -'C'... Bdrms. '+ inasalvr )lvlng • • • • • • • • • 1 out........... ..,._,"" swimming ... ,. . '-'ck •-1 • pool :-•--" B -tremely ~pular "C .. _.... .. ,., rm. wllh cozy .... , auo-J A _,,.. b9e.uliful •·-a.. , P"'• a: ,...p, y owner. ,... ......... 12' b~••--l ~~ne-:rt to Me11a v; 835-5164 er by appointment model -l 5tory l Bdhn A: place. n:tUUUt I'll\:, 673-0043 family at end ol cul-de-sac. Sliding glau to private en. ~ f'..,~n~ d~n~~ Fs:m ijj~ij~iijiiijjjjiiiiiiiiiiii I Quality cptg, completely closed patio. Few blocks - 2 ~ .. • ft--71/4 •t.-4 BR-POOL lndscpd a. le need -Decota. beach. Must ae.11! Val • ~ nn. ... .,....1, uo=.Jl'. cpt.lng, packl!d at low $2.8,600 wi :·~ Prof lndscpd, Sprlnklel'S + Like new Baycrest beauty. tor features -drive by 207'1 FHA-VA tenns. Call (114)' • ~· Fea.turea too numel'OUl'I to Owner sacrifice! Near xlnt Port Bristol Clttle and rom. 118t. 1919 Kauai Pl. C.M. schools & stores. Family rm, pare -hard to duplicate at ~ . 114/546-3573 .. , s pm. '" ""'· ·-""· "°'""''" 138·000· FOREST L OLSON•->-""'-·"'"' &ion in 4 days. 5-18-8281 e OPEN DAILY 1-5 e "'!Jii!!ii!i!iiii!!!iiiii!!!!!!!!l I Lu k H-~ VI !! * 5 -a.iuur e1v Hills Inc, Rea1tors Gonerol 1000 Real.,,., :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;Get;;;;-;;'";'";il;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'OOO;;;'.I "Our 25th Yoor 'Til BOid! Aaaume 6% % VA BLUFFS Condo -4 Br, 3 _ ''The Big One:". Family 19131 Brookhurst .A.Ye. ,,. ; I 3 Br, W/W ~P~. drps, ~ By owner. Aft 5 a: wknds. 4 Bdrm 3 bath, huge lam _ .. loan. $14S Pw mo. Redemr. Ba, Best area. Below mrkt. plan Monterey -split level Huntington Beach •, j • In the Harbor Ar••'' med, posseaiuon? Only $22,• 6'14-4869 rm, 3 car garage, upgraded 21851 Ocean View Lo-By ' 950.1984Federa1 Ave, __ B_A_Y_CR_E_ST--POO--L-a ppointmenls & fre s h l y Owner. Not yet 2 ~ olcl. ~ MOVE IN BY SCHOOL TIME !his 3 BR Newport Hts home is vacant & 1~aculate. Only 1 blk to school-a great family home. Priced a realistic $35,000. TELL THE GUARD -At the Bayshore gate that you want to see the sparkling white Early American 4 BR 4 bath house. Just steps away from the beach & dock. Stop by lo hear all about the greatest place to live. Open House 2675 Bayshore Dr. Sat & Sun 1-5 THE WORK IS DONE Spic & Span 4 BR, beautifully crptd, drpd, & 1ndscpd. home. Owner transferred-offered belo w cost. Handy to schools & University. $47,500. CDM VIEW-VIEW-VIEW Like new 3 BR, dining rm & den home. Built for architect's own home with a touch of Spanish. Like new, but make offer. 675-3000 OPEN EVENINGS 675-3000 .,,,,,,,c,,,oast Hwy. Opposite M•cArthur Blvd. fl'j II.\\ ,\ llL\fll llL\1.1"\' I \f. 673-4400 Call: Patrick Wood, 545-2300 CUstom 3 bedrooms, 1~ painted throughout All this MU6t see to enjoy ttua 100<.4 ~ l"'lN~'!!p""'""'""''!!."!_1!!!!11~"" • Bill Have", Realtor baths 1618 Irvine, nr o_n a~ Acre lot a 0 nd under ~~n'!~~ homwro·~1', ~tn cond.pf•' • o ressvre .,. ng 2lll E. Coast CdM 67J..32U u1~1~nd &12-llS9 Ow-1 .,, ... ..,,.., "5" •n1 Our ualitied IMAk>nals ' '""6'.... ' '"'' • $5 .ooo. that leads into )'OU!' own pvt wlD ~adly hel,iyou IOcate Aasume51/4•t.GI Loanl OWNER: Love1y 11pae. 4 BR court;yard. Lots of inlaid your new home ,lrom our Spacious 4 BR. No. C.M., !Ai + bonus nn. Huge play rm For appointmenlo; to view Spanish We, step down large •election of fine prop.. blk t~ elemen~ s:hl. $204 and Master BR. Pool, wlk these homes, call: living rm, din'g nn, erties Homes priced from mo, incl truces . C.Ons1der 2nd to bch. Desireable Westcllff f kilchen & tam nn w/fl'pl ,,; 1.' $30,<0J to $300,000. WATER-T.D, for part equity. Owner, area. Prlnpls only, 64fr2095. 4 br, 3 full bas, 2 p1. • ~~~~!· VIEWS • YOU =7 or=:;. by ~ b~i:~ f:oo~ob~ 1:i~ .. ~ ... ~ .... , ~-··· . ~101;8;.s~ ~I•., .lo:~ .. '.; 67>3000 OPEN EVES owner, Lee 4 ~R .. ~. ~. 64>2486-aft. 6 PM. c;-i ....:: .,,, "" .,..,....., 2401 E. c.cast Hwy be., formal D.R.. lge tam BEAQf Ilse-Bay ftont, lgc $24 750 Opposite MacArthur Blvd. rm, many xtra.s. $45,500. patio, mvered poreh. $9500 1 -·: 2873 Boa Vista. 64~1848 full price. Mfr.7823. 2414 Vista Del Oro pOOL H &: F, 4 bednn, 1* • l BY owner. 4 BR. fam rm, , ---------Newport Beach 644-1133 ba, Close to school&&: ocean. ' 'J' 1 • 10% Down. owner will c.f.; Immac, quiet st.. SU.500. N rt H • ht 10 " 2nd Submi 1718 Minorea, ~n6 •wpa e1g s ry ~ • t all off. • i 1,.;;~;:==.=:~;:;:;c.;;1' BEDR. "°""'· by own°'• CUSTOM-Built 3 b•, 2 b&. PRIVATE ESTATE Eve<' :1 LEASE OPTION NOW "°" to -ping and h<ovy •hak< l"OO!, u...r CORONA . , fl'jll l\ ,\ Ill U II 111: u .n 1\1'. 4 BR DR. & FAM """°'· 540-9148 brick h"pl" nutg•. own. DEL MAR • PO dshwshr, pantry, cove:red l' j IMMEDIATE SSESSION, e EAST SID&l br, ! PJ'I#, patio, wood Door11. new s .. o .. % block to Ocean Blvd. LitUe JnQney needed. Stun.. rn,ooo. Eaay terms. By ·-G.!..·:.. I ..,.. crpbi, new paint Inside & rarity -61 fect fl'Onlage en _ :le~hp=.~~=. cwner, 646-29&5. out, sprinkler sys tem, Orchid. Plus• 3 bedroom I---------$35 000 $5000 down no home with formal dining INC. Family room. Gourmet p:ii~. or loan ~ts: By room. guest house, cabana $500 Cash ... 1 Kitchen. Mcve with cption Mesa Varel• 1110 ~. S36-2J98. and badmlntOI\ court, With Moves )'OU in! 2 Slol'J', f : : ~~and reasonable rent. • , •• COUNTRY CLUB i .:.="-'""'-="----a little remodeliT!J; this could bedrm, 2 ba. sep. family : ~ LIVING ON COUNTRY •-one cf C.Orona dct Mars rm, el~ kit, approx. mJ FOREST L OLSON CLUB DRIVE. Nowl'!_rt Shores l220 ('; n •' t prop<rt;.,. Call •q. ft. a.,. '° """'" ~ • General 10001-:::;;~';;•~I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i, ...... ~rn~c:;;· ~R~..i~t~=;. ... ~iand when you $ee the back· 447 62nd St. 6'13-8550. ~~~·Eves: (714) 43t-3'781 , 1 LIQUIDATION SALE • , ,,.rd. you will think you are OPEN SAT 1·5 • WE MUsr LIQUIDATE the 4 B d LIDO WATERFRONT there, Beautifully appointed 2 BR. 2 Ba, large famiJy nn. II ,1 u· : '"'of th""' new duplox". e rooms APTS .-320 LIDO NORD three b<droom / famUy Lo maint Plivate patio, •' ,•h{;'!j ... j .. ll the pric& and terms are no $2& 950 NOW REDUCED TO J'OOm home with ~ balhs, .Beach living at its best-surf.. • •• ...... •• SHARP 4 BR aiteria. Builder is open on ' $150,~Xlnt Term• and an the built·in's, S~% pool-tennis anYQne? DECORATOR Approx 2 blks from St John's 'V't?N~' I price and w/lO% down the 6 Beautiful units. 6 car loan available lo the quau. BOYD REAL TY REDUCEDI I parochial school -~pt/drp II' .. , balance can be Unanced a t Immediate posseuion. Fresh. garages .l uWity room with fied buyer. Tot a I price S629 E. Coast Hwy., CdM TOUCH SOUTH• Big&. clean 2 s1ory. Move in J -bltn kit & DW -2001 sq, 8% interest 10 a qualified ly painted inside & oul, new 80 ft, fronting on eXcellent $44,000. Call 546-2ll3, * 675-5930 * Of=.. THE-before school start&. 3 BR A: ft. -2 baths. This beautiful CONDO buyer. ONE UNIT HAS 3 carpeting, all bltins family swimming beach. UnJts are HIGHWAY .tam rm., .near F.dillJl'I HI. OI I home in ready to move into FOR LEASE BDRMS. 2 BA, large living rm & walk to park &'scnooh'. newly furnished. or FHA tenna. Onb' $32,500. 41'! cond. Possession on approv. Beautiful Country Club Villa. rm. two fireplaces, Din, Rm. NO DOWN TO VETERANS, Bill Grundy, Realtor Bayshores 1225 In Corona del Mar, A dclighl-Call &11-8.'i.ll. · ! at of credit Owner asking Location nr. pool, SpacK>us BIN kit & Large Fam. Rm, or low down FHA. ca 11 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6424620 -"===;;===== CHARM.ING, open beamed ful 3 bedroom family niom $36,000 -will ronsider trade 3 bdrm, all elec kilci>en. Ne The other un it Is an attrac· S45-M24 l"'~""''t'"'~"'l"!""l'""'!!!I ON THE FAIRWAY ceiling, 2 br, lg. lvg. rm. home on a 45 foot loL Buill-I for smaller home, ctilld ren bclow 18. Pel'fect tive one bdrm, apt with B/ Superl•tive Living Custom built, 4 bed.rm, fam. frplc. $3600 6% &42--lOOS in kitchen, large secluded 1 * * * * for goUcrs. $325/mo. N's & fireplace. Each unit ·"Th• Bluffs'' ily room, 2 big fireplaces, patio, and plenly of park-: OCEANFRONT has separate yds and gar. 1800 sq. it, or the greatest This beautiful home over• Westcliff ____ ;.:l2:::30 ing. 0 n I y $62,500, Call I Sharp 3 BR 2 Ba home. Prac. ages with utility rm11,, Land-living. Master sized bed. looka the 17th !airway ct --·~ ~ 673-8550, ...,-,..,===r---1' I tically new drapes -excel-f!Caped-incJ, 1>prinklers. The rooi;ns, 3 baths, 49 x 19 fl Mega Verde Goll Course. REDUCED 1 ASSUMABLE · · I IPnt cpt -elec bltin kilch -Bargain you have been wait. :::::::::::::::::I glass enclosed gundecJc with 6%. assumable loan, By cwn. 1206 Pembroke Ln. 5%'/{, FHA loan, $28,500. I ~· garage door cpener --========= IMngfM..--L ABoCTNdOWR!!I a breath taking upper bay f'I', 3036 Java Rd, 540-4095. \Valk to schools, shopping. =:~t3~~w;: j!! •t;ridge w/icemakcr includ----------• • a r e , tr. view. Priced belcw replace-,~163,~500~."=~~=~--: New paint, lovely patio &. +&..;...... 11 .;:\lt ed. A foundation setting on Doesn't Nffd Much 6'16-055.5 Eves; 548-3265 s· ···-ment. 842-5581 er 546-l'r.I0. 10 HAPPY UVING yard. Large 3 BR, 2 ba. BHEghAlandu TI F ~LI ca,mBeRo ::-;;~· • p:ee; ~ ~sl pilings. Prime area. Better • Only paint inside & out, _._ Tarbell hll ... $43,950 1 s. vo: uxe clean t hUrTY en this one as ocean-landscaping in rear, some DANA HARBOR ...,...1-~-~~~~~-High en a I in ....:autitul University Really 673-6510 home, m.rge entry hall, all -' ! rronts an tiCarce. Asking broken glass _ a real fixer-2 on an R·3 lot, 2 BR MESA VERDE. Tri-level, 4 3001 E. Coast Hwy, CdM rooms spaciou11, Breafafrt I' j $65,000, uppf'r. 5 B«lrms though, ap.. INCOME HOMES M _:! 1 ACANhooT •,'!"0~1·m· garngCo Rles~to....:.,,11., d5000ovm. Bedroom. 3 Bath, Separate bar plus dining rm, Room ~ I CHIL T ROBINETT prox $19.200 VA Joan at 5%% 3 DUPLEXES •• $34.950--$44,950 ove ""ore sc 1 1.ifartli. ' ' ....... .,. Family Room, FormaJ Din. University Park 1237 for pool. Seriously for sate, 962-4471c-)546-llU Z REALTOR 64~128 lake ever. Equity not 100 2 TRIPLEXES.$63,950-$66,500 Spacious 4 bednn, 2 bath in +.PLEX, 2 Br. 1 Ba. $48,500. ing Room + Breakfast area. -;;;;;;;;.;,-;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;I MORGAN REAL TY 673-0642 -m-6459 large. 2·FOURPLEXES. top location near schools & Income $6360. U. down Really a fine home that you • 673-6642 675-6459 "'i;',iii.;,..w-oci.iii~-1~ Thet Old Farm (Open Evenings) •• $61,9fil.$69,500 park. 1'~ormaJ dining rm, IBA. agent 673-TI78 should see without delay. NURSERY LOW/LOW IJOWN FHling (3) 3 BEDROOM HOMES. family nn & kitchen eatingl---------I Priced at $44.950. Phone now SCHOOL BAYFRONT LOT ; \Vanl a horse! \Va.nt an in-cilllM •••• · 1,,e covered deck. Terrilic Costa Mesa 1100 to ln•-t. fl. d 1 hoo ays1 e rive ge + am Rm ,., ; 5"·SUO $30950 area. Love:ly shag carpel!:, 546-2313 for an appointment 2119 B "d D · L 4 BR F ' ~· V('Slment! Want loll! of (_. ttmftl) Brand new, under construe. 'fi ,,~~ n e ementary ic 1 are 88 Fl. bulkiiea(! with pier l>rapcd. Carpeted. Fenced -!_ , , Jll.Jld? Then call us now on ~"=:~u lion. Large buildings wi de-value at S3?,950. Call 540-USl BY Owner-$22,000. N 1 e e ~n~R a 28':~=c':;>~!~~ arc~. $220,000 (Fee simple). ean·t beat this on dn paymnt. ~ ... .,.: this nice 3 bedroom home """'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'" luxe owners units, ocean older 2 br & sunroom. st....., windows in din_,,,•-Bill Grundy, Rltr. HAFFDAL REALTY . ~~: on 26.000 sq. ft. of land. ·--------·I vie~, xlnt locations. Take SHerifage Prime location. Pvt quiet ~fer bath. Carden a1r1""'u"m•. 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642463> '42-4405 ,,..;,j HOITll? & land loo.ded w/po-advantage of good renl3.I. i~ aai.TOU •~. Very short walk to -=""°"'====~-~. , tenlial &:: cnly $25,750. Call Horses & Trees come + property value In.. shopping center, school A: Sliding glasa doors in liv JOG TO BEACHI • ;j;; no··• fo• d•la•"l•. Pt 1 ly ho i i:: creases due to the new Dana libracy'. W •s t e 11 I l area: nn & master Bdnn leading UNEXCELLED VIEW 3 to 1 Bednns. 2 to 1 bath&. ,~B: "' • us ove me on "ll acre N wport •-och 1200 t · · t "" Point Yacht Harbor. Idea.I for older er young e D9 o 11em1-cm:u ar patio in of Harbor &; ocean. Attr. up to 3000 sq. ft., shaltie-..... 1, with horse corra.lli all in tip II S r lloubl Prvt -d • •'" Phone Builder 6424.005 er Litera y -rklea coupe. e garage + N rt Beach H rear. COlh•Y entl')'. 8plit level home on R-3, 5100 rools. all bltns & carpeting, ·i"' top condition. Price firm at ,..-t k ewpo OID8 E J &eP at 337'9'l Copper Lantern Entire intericr just freshly ge sepuate. w or •li o p vcn an e ec, garage door sq, ft. let, Ideal fOf' 4 Apt. E-Z financing from $26.990. ! I $39,900. Large loan may be Dana Point redecorated. 3 Oversized Relax in well eared tor tree opener included at the real. units. $200.000. 2501 Ocean Rancho La Cuest• ;_ a.ssum11ble. Glen Qul!i!n, 1,.,..,,,...,..,..,..,..,.,. 8haded ard Abo · 't ho '·Uc · f 131 ooo Heritage Real E 11 a i.e, i ·--bedrms &;; family nn. en--Y ·-. •J'\H just• s rt block ui pn ce c • · Blvd,, CdM. By a ppt cnly. Brookhunt & Atlanta ~ 1093 Baker. C.M. 540-USI WHATEVER you need, ha.nee the beaut pool setting. trees. Owoer 1" Huntington • Bill Grundy, Reeltor 968-2929 * 11 AM to 3 PM ~~1 · I you'll find, if you read -Cul-de-sac al. adult occu-~9485 will fine.nee. Phone from Cliff Dr. 833 Dover Dr .• NB 64Z4620 BY Owner: Attrac/4 br l* ;~I GMer•I pied. Excellent 6%% FHA • Spa.cicus 3 bed.room 2 ha.th -ba. crpts/pe.tio. Forced air, •• 1 , 1000General 1000Gen.ral 1000 Joan • ti.igh bal. OOered at New Tri·PleXft muter bedroom adJoinirc Nr: Douglas & Shopping'. ' $34.950, $5 tile bath wfth built Ins. plus MM.rm• 5% FHA Loan. S©~lA-l££tfS" The Pllrlle with the Bullf.fn Chuclcle O Reorrorige .. tiers cf the ..,. .... ., __ , four 1trombled wards be-,,,,. low to fcrm four iitnPlll words. I· r i Et 11 x 1· I I s A I D y I 1 •. . I I I' I . • "\'lk ~~Ws ""'" IN r 1· 1· r r r 1 !~~~~'""'"I I' I I I I I SCRAM·Lm ANSWER IN CLASSIRCATION 8000 (Open Eveningit) 7,500 fUl! bath with built W ; llv-Balboa Peninsula 1300 ' $2'1,950. J>h. 892-9110 o. H. • :~\ (under mnstr-avall Sept 10) 1 w! 1 la lllt Western Bank Bldg, '\ &NI-Large,beautilul "home1 with n~room th irep ce,din. University Park Dir.• ~l ,_ ... ~ an income'" located in the l:ng area and large picture Day 133-0101 Nights W. Bay Waterfront A'ITENTION. ~ spaciowi, .... _: - GE 11RfALT! tinl!stEutsideattaofCollta ==o:r~~ n:a:~ =~.~~= ~~3ui!i~r ~!e~, ~.':. .. ..,~ ;ll~;;;~:;iiJ:-ii:iir,cll:1 Meiia. Featuring (1) J BR., ...... ~ I -· 2 BA "owners unit" + (2) ink and drapei, electric Turtle Rock 1239 uq,.Ch-pier & •Ip, Sl75,(Q). scll $33,IXXI! No brokers : 2 BR kitchen with buill·ins. Car-Biii Grundy, Realtor please. by cwner 962-403.l -~ MOVE IN BEFORE ~ n:~~:t~ ~ age off alley with electric BY Owner-Sale or 33: Dover DI'., N.B. 6424620 ...,CXXI BelowJo"HA 4 b cond,. ~ ' SCHOOL STARTS I land PI or ca11''., • ., -eye Opener, room for boat or lse/opt.lcn. 4 br, 3 ba, view. "' • • r. -j • ~-•· Uf"' •·--'--· ,......_ k w ~ VA""~-. 3 BR, 1g yd. Pool, elect. bllns, rer, O\YC Fast escrow! Ownera bought("-_•-me uni'" for camper. vcau .., ..,..._p. aCZ'OllS .u"'u per. f"'·~· ~~1 2nd 5vrt. -•• 1....,., ,,.. .. u .... v _ _, t t "" -Ma·sholl Roolty67r " ... _ ..... :;A18usm. ;,.1" "nn. • another home. 3 Bednn, 1% sale In Dana Point). ~ comer o. ~~;::;,::;"•:,· ===== ' -··~ ba fam nn, fireplace, ttpl!, -==:---:===--<Drive by 328 Al~ then can -;;:; d,.P,. hnlwd nn. """'°roof, FHA TERMS ownc• fw app>ln!mcnt to EHtbluff 1242 --------1 SACRIFICE Prestige 11m. 4 U .. n.. 4 ~· ,.. 137 ~ ••• --Lo"do ltl• 1••1 B•., 2% ba, trg lam. rm. ..... dble gill'. + a cy acce • ...ueta Mesa U<:Uroom 2 bath · ,_,. ---· 1132 Vista Dor•do ~ 6lZI Palisade Dr. S.2156 •• rm for boftt/can1per, In excellent location read)' NEWPORT A trelllured "E".Plan. u~ LARGE HOME CE ml · Lachenmy« Rlty for• happy family. 1:11,950. HEIGHTS grodcd cpts, drp•, •huttt•· 5 Bednn, ••mlly m<., xlnt 5;~, ~/dp, C::..."kt Calt 64&3!l'l8 E""" &12--0185 -Phone ~ts FIXER·Ul'l'ER enc!'d k!tchon. I B• 211 '"""' lo '"""'' «i fl tot. 129 ooo, by ........ SC.1'311 bath, large tam rm w/party. Bl app't only. .• 2 A dandy U.xeNipper 2 bed-perfect pt.tlo on plne-&eent. $97,000 ---------P ".!I COlY FOR ! room 6 b&th p!u. • 1 bed-ed .,...nh<ll Op<n Friday Owner -trade down for 5 Huntington • -' room .l balh near shopping, 10.2, Bdrm. homo In Ternca, Ha rbour 1405 : ... : 1 ONLY $17,900 EST~. =.TE~SALE==.-a..~.,,.-... -s1 -C.n't be b<at "''h a Utt!• BOYD REAL TY CdM, wtlh °"''"' view. RED--EC--A--L-,-.-,-.-,•d I:~, bednn home, bard w c cd cleanin' I: ftxln'. $22,500 -3629 E, Cout Hwy,, CdM LIDO REAL TY INC. Watertrcnt l BR A dock ... --: • Own )'Our home for less tha.n noon with luMi new Phone 646-'11'11 -to ace. • •75-5930 • 3P Via Lido 673-7300 sale, lie. Gl' be option, ":.; rcnl Nice bedrooms.16' Jlv. carpeting, countJy 1 lze *** 222 NORD ** 6'»-4221Tl.ME FOR -.·:."I• lrtg room. Washer, dryer, ldtcMn &;; loU Mid Iott of 1 ~E,;•;•';b;luff;;;;;;;;;;;~l2:,;;:42 Brand new bftytront, 3500 aq J refl'\g, atoVe incl. Separate trult trees. One oI a klnd at 1, ft. 5 BR, 4% BA, pJer &: -.. ~ f~;: t_~~ and =~.~1 r.:~a~'~1,BA,..::;0<;;::~;===_=;,=;.,o=. "-~=.=+•1 GoodNow T1!!P'~ ~~· ~J.~~·~~ ~~! Cf'UICIC CASH :~~ FOREST L OLSON South Cout Rcalton. Pool! CU1tom bt!Ot on cul. ·-·-"°""' Ot" <aU ownu. 49«115 THROUGH A "-} SACE BY OWNER, -·· s.u .,. "'"° to ~~~,:'~· EXPANDABt.E cozy com-DAILY PILOT :rm 11 bot" EMU;d<. • Brt, 111 BA. Unita. 148.9(,(1. E<itt m.950. .. !Ill--* .. ct 3 a. . .,, IJ. 1unny tot. WANT •·D fnc. Rullan ar custom bit. S71,000. &ti-4816 &tS-9'j28 Bkt. I••••.,,.. • ..,,.. $52.$'KI. Ownr. 615-2643. . Ill • • .. OAllV PllOT rrhlly, Stpttmber 4, l 1170 RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS -RENTALS < RENTALS _tt~_ Unfurnllhed l--'"""='';;.·..;F..;u;;.r;.;n;;;l•;.;hod'-'----'A.;:P;;.la."-F-u;..r_n..;i•.;.h.;.od __ ~!!:._Furnished Aptl. F~rn ished RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS SliS FOR SALi HouMt Furnished Hou111 Furnished Hou111 Unful'nlshtd HORSES!. HORSES 1 1430 2200 L19un1 Beach 2705 Co1t1 M111 3100 Lido late 3351 Newport leech 4209 Newport Beech •200 Huntlnt1ton 8114* '400Huntlngton B1adt 4400 T Hf. REAL ~ r:sTATERS 1705 2 UNITS L •.1-fomt't: l·Bedroom &: 2 41!dl'90m , drn. R-2 Lo1, over 8100 1q_ ft. \\talking dl~lance . to town &:. beach. $47,SOO, ---------CO~ l f> LE'r n.. Y turn. beaut 2 RENTAL S/LEASES DESIRABLE •,::c~.-::~::~su':'d~ BR. Frplc.. h\lgt patio, UNFURNISIJF.D 110:\11:: clubhou11e &: bea<h! clubhtifi, priv. ~ach. lltd Lt:t. J bdrrn. A fam, rm. 2 Br., 2 ~. cptd, drp1, fore@d .. .i.:111,....,. mo li73-'?•"" 0 pool, Guard patrol. ~dulll, tinmt. custom deeortttd, air heat. Garb-diap. bJt.iruJ:, ~ . ...,... r no pet... ~-Sept to new carpct1, fireplace, bllt-trple, patio, &IU'&it, water ,;:;;:;:,.,,==-===-=~ Junt. $200/mo. Set Sun. & lrui, exc. ocean vie'>''. t yr. turn. Adults only, no ptts. H i · --a;-h" 3400 r.ton. 142 Ba,Yakle VW-at:, lea.r.t . Ref, reQ. $350 r.10. It.ATE REASONABLE unt ngton .tc 300 ,£. Coast HW)', NS. Wk· fURNJSHED RENTALS Acron from CountrY Club TO\\'NHSE-3 br, 11,,t ba, no ~'S call aft 8 pm. 213: 2 bdrm, apt. at \\'Oods Cove. 275 Mesa Dr. * Ph 543-6706 pela. Applian<:n avail. Sl80 2-12-8563, 150 yd~. 10 beach -Lge. 2 BR. gar. patio, erptl, drps, mo. Brookhun:t &: Ad1uns. BEACH lfse: avail for "'inter 1ree iilwded pa1io. LelSt! for stovc I relr. Quit:t tropical 96i..t926. rt-ntaJ. 2 br, IO\'tiiy !gt patio, Sl6J r.10. settlrw (or a.dulls only. 1 blk 1 ~l~STO=~R~Y~ho-m-,-.~,~,-,-. ~,~,-,, I Me from ocean, btwn 1\th 7 bdrm . at Vicloria; Beach. shopa:. Sl60. .$44-CH52 <>r Villa Pacific. Pool, tt:nnl.s, & 12th St. $210/m<> incl u1ll , Exe. view, llreplc, A few .":c:.6.+!~·~311"="-~---~ sauna, Jacuzzi. S 2 2 5. ~;-,..a103 or 67>-8124 for r;tcpi; to sand, Lease s J{ AR p h <> u, e for lmmed. occupancy. 642--3737 •Jlpl. $775 ?ilo. lease/East C.;\I , 4 bt/fam/ AVAILABLE Sept. l~. 4 bdr. ARTl.STIC Home-2 br, frpl<:, Ch1i.rn1 !ilUdio, deck w/-0ttan dln'1, ciOk to AChool!i &: r.ear beach, drape!t, fenced pa.Uo on Ne\.\-port Ille across ,·u~w. OC:'t:&n sidt of hwy, at 1hoppll\&. $300, 642-1228 corner yard S210. 536-0346 from park i, water \\'ooch COYf'. Lease 3 a• >"am rm w/-lc, '" • ,. • LGE 4 br, tam nn, bltns, •,·,/~rin9g. J blka1 lo be~. Sl35 l\lo. 1. BU.na, Gardener &: waler incl. dsh"·shr, crpts &: drps, wls, m<> se, $-... Arti!lic studio c-0tta(f', ire-Incl. Nope•·, 1280 mo, l•I & · · , • . .,. -"'I •&h s "" nice yard, «>vf'red patio. " .I ,,...,~.JQ . ..., ...,., · L p:1N.', high glass ivindow5, last mo+ deposit. 548-9509 mi to beach. $325/mo. '"' · ; O ~tZH, NE\V 3 Hr. 2 Ba. A~ path leads t<> beach, Lease E-SIDE c.rit. lge 101 , 9S2-762a '.• REAL fSTA'TE dshwhr. gas BBQ. On the $\SS ~10, 1 ~~ 1"" l\'&teJ'. \Vlnl<'r -0r yr round. MJSSION REALTY 49-1-0731 Lse/opll2'1o~ "~" ~11!; 2 ba, $110-JOG lo bch.1 Br, Ctpts, 1.190 Glennc,51'e St. 714: 682-4292 or 7 t 4: 'nfREE ARO! BAY * $2'1'5 -'='~'°".:::,· .:::="~~::.:..::.~:::.· __ drps, RIO. Sngls ok. •lf.9473 549-0316 ="'=·~""~'==~--~~ 12 BR, drps, trpl, dbl gar, 1r 3 BR. 2 ba. crpt, drpti. Blue Be•con * 645-0111 Colle1e Park. $265. LAGUNA BEACH 3 BR, 2 OCEANFRONT Coz-y 3 BR, 2 patio, Nk'"to beach, -0ttan S49-25.l4 '"al. pntK>. 50'x100' lev~ ha, frplc. Yrly or 9 mo lst-view. Adults. 499-4-079. ~~~-~-~~-~ .~IJ.ltop, tu-dry. Blt-ln.11 , furn. r,.!8-8583, 5504 \v'.1-:.::::.:..:.::=::..,.;:.;_.;.:.~-$1~ :Z + dtn, [rpl, patio, lBR de l1am ~ ·~· ts, lurn/unfurn. $31,·100 Oceanlron t, · 3 BR. 2 BA. $275 mo., 9 nio. bltns, conv Joe. Child&: pet. ' n rm. r , d Av 0 l~ast'. Quiel, no traUic, Bl •-* ,., "lll bltM. $250 mo. )T lse. Call n AIL N W 2 BR. Beach c 0 l la< c, ue PIACon --before G. 213/93S-1919 or alt 414-9382' ocean view, Z blocks trom ' Furnished. Year round ren-beach. <l!H-742·1. 1~1~lEDIATE possession S27S l ~6i'=21.1=/=0=L&--O=="'=· ==== MUST SELL Luxury Duplex ta!. $225 mo. 1st & lasl mo's -4 BR, north C.M. area. -- ,]ti; yr'I. <>Id. 1400 sq ft each, required. Call 67>1084. FOR rent or -Option. to buy. Agent 546-4141 M ission V itjo d ""I n. I o=''=='--=--.,C..~C::..-fully Jurn hse, beaullful 1 --'=-.,.c--~~~--I ·~fls, .,,,, c. v.:ean \VlNTER Rcnt•l.· B • a c h Tow•hou•• '!on•;-llo .. view, 1 blks Crom bch & " .-. -" u ... ~ _ 2BR & den, 2BA, curtains &: view. Xlnt re!tidence plu.• In-Cottage, 3 br, 2 car/1arage. downlown Laguna. -494-3604. 2 BR 2 BA dbl i~ge Sl.95 drapes thruout w I w CPli come. S49,500. by ov"ncr. l9· 675-5909 Btw. 5:~7 Adlt~. no pet.II 49:>-0810 · • .i • :t-BR-ocean w ;-I.i,;--blks-lo-Jcnc~a:rd._cloaeJfltcbools pm. beach $245 mo. 1 BR. $140 Sl7:>-SHARP 2 Br. l~ Ba. 1tu. & shopping, dllhwas~r. -. ONE OF A KIND .. 2 BR. 11~ BA. furn. 3 blks lo mo. 4M...7780, 213: 244-ti386 dio. Patio. f'Ii>l. Child ok. ovt:n, range, dil:posal. Avail t\r.Y house with spectacular beach. Sept. thru Junr. Child Blue &.•con* 64S.0111 Sept 1 S2SO 830-2722. "l>Cean view. SZ7.500 accepted. 675--0642. D•nl Poin t _=.,_,.,..,2740 EASfSIDE 3 Br, 2 Ba . ...-.u, RENTALS thke Realty * ~94-2858 ---:-... ,. LIDO SANOS. Pool privil., 2 TOOTHBRUSH ALL u NEED drpz. bltns. ()n quit:t ltreet Apt•. Furnished * $)4,950 * blks from Ocean. 3 Br. 2 To enjoy my bf'autiful 2.Br, 2 S245 IM!. 837~7 or~ &50' to bch. View, xlnt cond. Ba. $275 pf!'r mo. Wlnter Ba t den home. Fine.11t 3410 37111 -Gener1I ~--------~I Oakwood: .. a new way to live in Newport Beach lt'a fun, fine neighbor. and p restige living, all in ooe luxurious package. That's Oak- \vood Garden Apartments in Newport Beach, just minutes from Balboa's Bay and beaches. T here's a 'I• million dollar Clubhouse with party room, billiards room, indoor golf driv· ing range, men's and women's health clubs, -saunas~ennis-courts;-resident1:ennis pro and pro shop, and Olympic size pool. All this, and much more, just step1 from your p rofessionally decorated apartment, e ach with private balcony/patios. Air contli tion- ing/fireplacea optional. Oakwoocl Gardea Apartmen ts PLACE REALTY 494-9704 -only. * 642--UXI. coo.st vu from prlv. patio & 1!'7'GUNA HIDEAWAY 2 BR + den 2 ba. 2 firpl. liv. rm. Adults; no pet!'. ~qui<e, t1:ardens, patios, l gar. laundry rm. 10 mo. $315/mo, leue. 496-956.l Mt11 Vtrdt 3110 l BR, 2 required. Sept, 15. ba. References S225/mo. Avail ins Iowa St. Fr (,.1 1 Gth Street between Irvine aad Dover Dr. "'. om $38.50 Wk. 111•1 .. ..,.,,. br, 1unnn SlS,500. 494-7329 s250 mo. 40911~ 3Sth St. NB Summer Rent1lt 2910 SMAU. Charming 2 BR 3 BR. Bayfront Home. Fr<>m S16.5/mo. Luxury Sln. gle Apts. Complete maid Sp1dou1 shtltio, 1a2 Wroo. naihl. Fv:nlP1d or THE HIGHLANDER "Scottish Treal" 16161 P•rkside Ln. M9•· 142-1969 San Dlc:o }"rwy to neach Blvd, ;l blk.s So. to Holt, \V. on 1-Iolt l blk. LA QUINTA HERMOSA "ltfodern Spanish" 16211 P•rkside Ln • Mt•· 147.5411 FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN Lush landscaping, caba!la, cove~ed court- yards, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ s & foun· tains. "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" 1 BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From $175 All util. incl. Furn &. Unfurn. 4705 Ntwport Bt•ch 4200 L•gun• Bt•ch :.::="'-==--""' OCEANFRO?\'T 2 br, 2 ba, FURNISHED I BR. Close to frplc. $275/mo. Sept -June. beach & shoppin1. ~sp. Agent 6T:>--8800. Adult. -494-i079 OCEANFRONT .I br, frplc, 1=========:1 crpta:, drps. No children or C•pY.!_r~o Bt•ch • .£~ pets, $175 A1ent 675-8800. • NE\V Duplex 'l BR. 1\4 OCEANrRONT • Deluxe 3 BA. $225 monthly. 4~243 ~R_. ~~ ~A. f'epJ~. Avail -ot..811Hl.424. 10/1. :S350 mo. YEARLY! ==c.=e-5-----1 67>-11>53 RENTAL BEAUT 2 BR. v.'fltr on _ Apts. Unfurnilhtd <>Ci!anfrnt, frptc. total furn Gener•I 5000 · xcept linens. SJOO mo/util I ::;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;~1 : .... :~ I 4210 VENDOME ~ g I . l!\ti\IACULA1'E APTS! CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adu!~. no pets. Lri kit. $135-l150. 2-421 E. 16th St. NB 646-1801. ADULT and house near beach. $29,j()(]. $36,'; mo. For lease or NTHKE RLTY * 494-2858 !or W e. * 53&-3743 Bay front-8•1. Penin. 838-8619. LOVELY 5 BR, 4 BA. 4 BR. 2 ba, homr soon avail Pier/float. Avail Sept 1st. Back yard patio. Nr i;;cbool.11. Al.w avail for winter .u-;m mo. 54&-2574. service, housewart:s, linens, unlunliati•d. t 1U to h11. 1-lldiat1 Occvp1ncy all util, heated poql, MDdall opa U ilJ 11 .. totp• Coron• cle l Mar 4250 VI LLAGE INN 1 ========-======= e 1 BR FURN APT 1-~AJl.1.IL Y Section Close to shopping, P.trk * Spacious 3 BR~.11, ba * Swin1 pool, put n * Frpl, lndiv/ln fac'ls S"1 Cltm"'t• 1710 CUSTO~t built ·2 Br & den, ~t~intenance free yard , 0f.lose-in, extras 492-2583 5.., Ju•n WJl\'TER-l.g. 5 bdr. Ho1n" on beacb $300 monrh 1201 Seashore Or. ~7931. 2 BR, FUrn. All bltn~. foooorl )'<l. S250 mo 'tll 7/I. l Child OK . f213~ 869-2823, YEARLY · $2001 M0-:- 2 Br. J ll I8th SI. C•pistr•no 1720 .;.:..____ 8ay1hor t 1 2215 ~RICED lo iiell by O\l'nC'r, 2 ---- BR. 2 BA. 2 frplc, lge level A'ITRACTrVJo..: 2 BR. 2 ha, ~IW> R-2 20ne. low taxes, low Winter l!iC. $300. 2 ~26 .49.wn, pvt loan assumable, Crestview. 548--5476. tefm.11 negotiable. $17,500 or ===~·~· ====== best offer . $16,500 for a cash l rvint Ttrrac e ffcr. -194-8769 ·----4 BR, 3 Ba, Bay & Oc:e11.n vie\\'. in Irvine Terr. $700 Condominium 1950 -, 1 ~" OPEN HOUSE !' O:mdom Country Club Villa I 30'..'6 Club House Cr. C~1 I 3 BR, 2~ BA , Pool. Frpl('. f"tlll Price $34.900 20'i<i dn ART ADAlR. RLTR RENTALS Houses Furnished B•lboa 2300 ----NEAR Pen in P1-:: br h.o;;e, garage, patio, Frplc. Near ocean, Adults, no pets. S210. Gentr•"'--,,.--~2DDO~ltt•or.;.u2Si1f~E.iaf'p;;;n.-:~-;;.;; ~~ liOUSE Bal Penn. for wtr, near bay & ocean S17J. mo. 67:J..-.4032 or (2131 446-83JO. RENTAL FINDERS Fr•• To. L1ndlords 645-0111 4J~ w. 1 •141. c .. t. ,.._ Lido Isle 2351 OCT. lj...June J:;, rrntal on hay, completely tum. 2 bdr. 1 bath, patio. rrple. 213--&15-3016. "'Ir Surfer's Special * 1t FURN or Unturn J BR. C6mpletcly fur11ishrd; down 3 BA home. Wimer or l9 pots & pans. 2 BR. l mln. yearly lease. Call 673-3948 or 837-2.132 1J1 beach! Bring your tots & ~=~----~- prts. CALL NO\V~ $150, 2 Bil, no pels. $300 1no Mome-Findtr 1 645-7951 yearly or $250 mo. \\!inter. ~ \\"alker Realty 67:r5200 BEAOt to~·n. 3 Br. $165 m<>. ·Yn cd y r d, pa tio. •-4 BR.2BATH * , ttirig/slove. 6 c b i 1 d r e n \V inter Rcnt11I. $350/mo ~·elcomf'. . . • Call 67;)..0116 * NEWPORT B!'.:ACH 1 St. 3 AR :l Ba. o!!-water home; •1 IZ!:l n"IO. F'n~d yrd. pal!<l, rurn ., S•l:'iO ~1onth. bl lns. pe:t I: c b i J d r( n Bill Grundy_ Ritt. 642-4620 ""''elto1ne. Oct>an \iC'\1·. Telc- Trend, 832-7800. fee $15 • •~)'I you ~ new hstlnt:s per th•Y- B•lbo• hl1nd 2355 Rent1ls to Sh•rt 2DD5 CHARMING CaJ)(' Cod 11('8t !OUlh bay &: ferry. -4 br, din'g rrn, Jrplc, patio. A 1 I r actl\•e, «>mlortable, s'u /IR r; :'II)' ~Ir g ll n I lre.11h ho1nr. \VitHrr lease Utetfront homt: vtl dock. SJ2.'.;. 79tt-96.J7 t'\<ell aft 6 "Man, »-'D l'H . SJ;)(] m<>. LRG 3 BR. dbl gar. N. 6TH3ll. Bayfront. Av! Sepe 121h. IGJRI.. 23 de"-lN'"' room1nate $375 per nio. utll pd. h> 11.hal't: 2 HR houSf'. ~hare 67;)...3803. 'rl!nt S170. •"l~oc·d .Yd. pvt ICH°"'~A~R~M~l~N~C~-~, ~.-,-.-,,-,~k. '/JOOI. ;,18.&i8 her. 6 P~1. patio. \Vlnler r1'nlal. 117 fi.tAN or \.\On1aa • ~hart" Pearl. lnquirt> "'kd•Y• 5 pm- l>t•utllul Corona rif'I l\la.r 9 pm . ·~me. No g mokt:r1 . J BR, 21 1 ba. di. nn, \'rly 1125/tlVI. 673-4169 l'l'ntal $400 or 1\·intcr only. llU. to ahare: l'louse. \.S.23 Oct 1 to Jul I, S300 incl utll. -.,..,, tnl. S80 mo. Bal Isl. No pets. 673-78M alt 7 +!T-4482 Sut:. 1010 So. Baytront: ' BR. 3't 2200 bM \\'3lerfrnt home & 2 Br. I 1;N..;.;. __ ,...;._,,_11e_._c11 ____ I b:1. 1;11r. Apt. Dock. WAT ERFRONT Blll 1.~runrly, Rltr. 642-46W ,. PI E R &. FLOAT \\'lt-.'TER. comp! J BR l b11 ;.~ .• 2 bath. f-0rmal din-family home on lit lot. Lou ·WJ . rm, nreplsce, w;w -"=""=h="='·="="=6=13-6900===· = crpfa, and furnilbed t'Orn-- plt1e. Dble aar. LeUCl cll!y. Huntington Be•ch 2400 '-'00 pr:r mo. Realtor 1:'>1~1AC. 2 Br. L'fP., drp1 .. Sf.'"'353. bll·ln&, ti;. prv. «J\', patio 1 BAYSHORE S l<lVely le:nccd if'd1, i:•r and •·or Jtue on the bayfronl boat P~ Sl60 manicd With andy beach. ' Bed-~·:.c•.::'":c":.,·'-'""'..m'-"_6'-~~f.oonu. STM per month. Pl.ANNING to move? You'll $cfi1 . tll Junt. 11nd an t.ntuln;: n~mber <>f ~B Jane »•nv-G4U23.l homr1 In 100.,.·1 ClauUled ,.,,cn•b-lrvine Re.tlty Ads. C'h~k them now. l 1845 Anaheim Ave. l..aiUna Beach 494-9436 I· 4200 ~·/garage. SI Th. 6i~ BALBOA INN Cost.t Mes• 4100 Ntwport Be1ch Balboa 6T;i.87~1----~~~~-1 COSTA ;,;ESA 642-2$24 ..... I 67>-203'1 I======== ~.2_~s Furn . 2975 College Park 3115 * SUNNY * TEAOlER-0wner J bdr.. B•lbo• ODO · J t F mod. clean, bit-ins, prv. 0::..----' NEW 1-2-3 BR's. All bltns. cpts, drps, gar. Nr. S. Coast Plaza. 54()...1973, 54:>-2321. NE\\'PORT BEACJt -4 BR, 3 ba, ne1v crpts, 135.i E. Balboa, 1st Dr duplex ficshly painted .$2j5 mo. 2i8 y,·n!r/yrly, J br, :z ba, ba.y &. Hanover Dr. 645-2552. oc:ean all xtra..'l-w5hr/deyr, us or * ACRES * patio <:ar port, \VShr-d1yer, BALBOA Bayfront. \Vlnter * M t I A ts * no pets. 1132 W. Balboa Apt, Rental. A~·ail. Oct. 1st Very 51DD lcemaker re.trig, gll.l'age, Newport Be•ch 3200 Single A dulls Stud:&•,· ..':r~m• :INTER ~nw, ·.vorkmg ~~~~is1 ~~·i;ui~;/·e~ii:.05~~ South BA.)' Club is • wholt · LOW RATES girls, maximum J -3 BR. 1 port. $150. 673-1983 I LRC 2 & 3 BR. 'l Baths . F rplc, blt-lrus, crpt.s, drps, encl gar, pa1io. 546-lO:W LRG 2 Br, l ~ls Ba, families only, 2 child. ok. J\o pet.s. $150. 726 J<>ann St. C.\1. rrplc, sand shower, dshw s hr_ Owne r 213-i9G-7173 RENTALS Hou1t1 Unfurnished 3DDO EASTBLUFF l BR 2 ba, lg lam rm, Jrpl, huge !iv rm, din rm, .spac kitchn, w/all bltit\11. Laundry, 2~.; car gar, lgc lncd yd. F ine for pet, childm.Cd~1 hi-school, Eruitblulf elem Fashion Isl, Npr! Bay & be8.ches nearby. A\•ail imml'd. occupancy, Lea111' $360. Ir you think the !ntcresl rate will drop ~2% next yr, try lze/opt &: live nearly rrnl tree . Owner 5.57-li71 T ownhou1es -Adults Split-level 2 BR. «>nvert, den, 2 ba., lrpl., bit-in~. patiO; faces pool. 3 car gar. Avail. Sept. ls!. nrwly 3210 For Rcntili in Uni\"etsil)' Park & Turtle Rock, Call: c-l ln\i'l 1l'i11I. - - -'l 1 ru llor 1st Western Bank Bldg. Uni\>ersity Park D•y 13:J.0101 N;ghts 2 Bclrrns, 1-balh S2SO • Bdrms. 211 ha S350 3 BR 2 ba sep homt S.175 3 Br lnhouse Eastblufl S400 a RED lllLI. RF.ALTY Univ. Park Center. Irvine Call AnyOn1e 833-0820 TIJRTLE ROC1' -4 Br, din'g flTI. ATl\IU!\I fanl rm, 2/3 AIR, w/w, b-0okt:All t S, pa11os. Nr school s. poolg, park.11, porch. A\•ail by Ocl. 1. S3GO mo. 114-83.~1692. Coron1 dtl Mtr 3 BR 2 bA : 2nd blk oct'an. Range, rt!, cplJ! 3250 fron1 ,,.,. Salisbury Realty 673-1362 1t LOVEL V l br. J ba Jrvmc Tl'n-acr hon1c avail on lf'ue. a.~sbulou!t \'I c: w . 6r"8971 . new way o1 Jlfe designed Day, Week or 1\-fonlh ba, garage, S3CO mo incl * LGE 2 br, frplc, patio. ju1t tor single people. It's • Color TV Air Cood. util. N-0 petJ. Avail 9/8. See Near ocean. No chlldren or fun living with 11.·arm, d)'. • Pool &, Phone Serv incl wknds -0r aft 6pm 116 "A" pe!s. Sept-June, $175/mo. nam1c neighbors. It's a • P.Iaid Sezvioe avail 34\h SI, NB 673-(j()j,) 11511,000 Clubtx>use w i t h l Signal So. <>f O.C. "-'-""-'-"'------ F · nd WATERFRONIT 91' \VINTER rental!, Sept to health club saunas, swim· a!rgl'OU s · ·:i mo. min .. pool, ·,.,,, room, biJ. 2376 Ne~'J)Ort Blvd. 1vintet . Upper, f'XIJ'a Jgc, 2 J une, 1 BR, furn SUO & $120 " 54g_97;,,; Br, 2 BA. frplc, t:lf'c kit, mo incl util. Nr 15th & liards, indoor goJ( driYing f'A, patio, deck. Boat slip Balboa. 67f>-1:l7l rangr. tcnni! courls, pro BR, r~urn $125, Bachelor extra. Adults, no pets, $250 BALBOA Peninsula Beach shop and re&idrnt tenni.11 pro. Sll5. Adults, no pets. See mo. 615-1062 ? · J 'B •1 ~·~Eld N 6 CM ·~:.;..:c.:..::::_ ____ ~1 Front J Br. -ba. Winter Single. &. edroon1 hL'C• "gr ,,,,., en o. , i • --Rental. ph: '194-4534. ury apartments \Vith all the $~2 BR Trailer. No kids or BALBOA Penin, lurn apts, 2 1-'--'--'----''--- modcrn con\'enlences avail-pets. Ulil included. 642-3375 :::. :~14~ea.n. Winter $145 MO-ulil pd. Yearly, able. Furnished and unfurn.. days. I-'-'-"-'-"-"'-----· I Peninsula Pt. Nlcf' iupperl · h·' 1--'---------MESA MOTEL 1 Br. apt. No pets. 615-5055. I! L'U, FOR Bachelors Only! l ?>100ELS OPEN DAILY lO A.?>1. • 9 P .M. B<lnn apt. All utl. pd. Call * LO\V WEEKLY RATES* YRLY or "'inler, l BR furn 5'\6-7972 Kilche:n, TV's maid service. apts <>n bay, Util pd, S145 & · up, 673-6790 RENTS FROM $150 •• $350 NEWPORT BEACH 880 Irvine Ave. Irvine & 16th 17141 64S.05SO SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS ••• L ivt whtrt the fun is I 1 BR f'URN. 1149.50 Bachelors Furni!hed from $135. mo.Imo. 01\ e POOL e SAUNA e JACUZZI 1561 ~frsa Dr. Cost11. i'ltesa Phone 546-9160 e WEEKLY Deluxe 2 Br. Heated Pool apt. furn-all utU pd. $4;)/wk. 646-9681 CaU 546--0451. UPSTAIRS apt for ~ingle BEAUTIFULLY fURN , mature v.·oman or older 2 BR, JJOOI. Adults, no pets. couple. Close to b!!ach & $16.S. 2272 ~1 aple S1. Apt ,\ shopping. R e a so n a bl e. 67.>ns9 LOVELY 2 BR. Spacious. * NEW BAYFRONT Nice furniture. Brick snack 2 BR's, 2 Ba'8. 227 19th St. har. Carpeted. Beautiful Avail Sept. 5th. $2.Xl \\'inter k i tchen, tile bath. rental. $330 Yrly, 675-0236. Reasonable rent. No lease required. Children "·eicomf'. 3 BR.-2~i BA Condo: Furn or 351 Victoria, Apt 2 unrurn. $300 unr. Pvt/ patio, pool. 401 Flag5hip Rd. Acapul«> Apt.II, attractive, NB. 213/682-3000 OPEN Pool, Utll pAid, Garden SUN! living. Adult&, no pet5, 1 BR-$150, 2 BR-$175 DELUXE 1 Br. Apt_ Steps to 1800 Wallace Ave, c.~t. the ocean. $130 per n10 Adult.II. \Vinter re n ta I . I NASSAU PALr.fS -l & 2 673-2677 BR Apts. Fur:i .': Uni. Pool, -'""":::.'.-------pinv.-ponJ?, BBQ, ! ti ad y \VINTER rent.a Iii · 4 hses :a1•,ns. 177 E . 12r.d St. from Ocean, 1 Br., 1 Ba. &t.1-3645 $1~. 2 Br. 2 Ba . $14~ mo. rum Bachelor " l BR. 91i:H9&3 keep trying. Exceptionally nice! 1t 1 or 2 BR. $175 mo yearly_ Below rental value! 1i block lrom beach. 714: 2110 Newport BIYd, C:\I. 89Z-4936 1t \\!lnter-2 br. SZOO Plus CLEAN 2 Br, I~; Ba Studios. utilities. 1019 \\!:Bay Ave., Furn 11.,·ail. Cpts, drps, pool \\!rk'g cpl pref. $1-45 & up.1..:'::1'-:..::16::14:._ ____ _ 646--0496. 1 Br. 2 Blocks to bch yrly * $14:> mo. QUIET 2 BR. lease, uW's paid, Adlts, no Heated pool. Crpts, drps, pels. 6i3-li&I. 1t DIRECT TO TENANT dshwhr. Adult only, no pets. l\IODERN I br. bl"'· ocean &: 24-Hr. Delivery '229:) Pacific A\"e, C~I. bay $150 m<>. 4401 Channel lOO'iO Purehase Option 5481878 or 642-4429 Pl. Corner -0£ 45th & Bal. Complete I BR Apt IS Low as SZ2/mo. OCEAN VIEW Lr; 1 Br. apt. 1t '*" l Ir. 4 BR's. Ft-pie. Patio, lawn. Util pd. Adlls, YEARLY . 1 blk to Beach! 30-Day l\linimum no pets $lj(]. 6-16-3894 Clean~ Call 673-3663 agl , * \VJDE VARIETY CUSTOM FURNITURE Furn. I BR &. 1 & 2 BR. furn apt.s. Pool. No RENTAL BACHEL'JR children, no pees. ma1,) 16th 517 \V. 19th St., C~I. 548-3481 2110 Newport Blvd, CM St, NB. 646-4664. REMAHKABLY 1t \VKLY-Lovely apt. Bach WINTER-Furn-2 Br. W. UNBELIEVABLY nr cpl. rum . Kitch. $35 "''k Newport adult~ no studrnts. EXT RAORDINARILY & up. 541H'.W51 Refer, $1 8:). mo. 642-9176. .., $25() ?>lo furn 1fkw!ern 2 ht , BEAUTIFUL ~ BDR~l: t'urn. l~laple l , V.tl D'lstrt Gardtn Aptl Patio, dbl/garage. g11r. Peb/Children OK. 216 Puntna: rreen, waterfall &: Call Bt"'· 10-2 pm or 20lh St. 'ltleam, [l<l\l-en ew.~·ht:~, -~A~l•~c~r-6:_:P::m~ . ...:54~S-~28::;;13:.._ LARGE I Bdrm. NEAR •~·pool, rec. room. billiards, 1 Br. New beaut., furn. Ocean. Sl50 n10-YEARLY BRQ'a, Sauna, fum.-unfunl, Mo-~to. Adu1t8 -Only. 2220 Students ok. 673-SOSS . 1 Ii 2 Br. also Singles from Elden. 646-9278 evrs. a \\'lNTF,:n ltENTALS • $135, See ii! 2000 Panora Sl20 & UP. \lr_ry ni« 1 k 2 Rent NO\V for Sept.! Rd., 642-8670. Bel"'t:tn Har· BR mobile honle~. 132 \V, ABBEY REALTY 642-3300 bor & Ne1vport • 2 Bllc N. 19th \\!il5<>n C~I :WS-9577. \\IR. :? Br. ur il paid nr. bch. HOLIDAY PUZA -.~.C::::~N~IC=E:::..~2:::...:B=r~. ~OU-p-l•-x. stores. $14:), 300 34lh St. NB. OF.LUXE Sp11-eklus 1 Bdrm. Crpt'd. $13:> m-0. Sf't: by 9-5 nnon. •'urn apt $13.5. Plus util Call ~9-083l LRG 1 BR. Avail Sep!, 7. 1-leatM pool. Amplf' park-SllO NEW Bachelor. Util pd. Ad11ll11, no pelt. Yearly. fn<>. No children ~ no -1.1. 61~ •o~ r "' M-.... ,... Nn pr.t!I. Lse. OVf'r 35. 21$1 ..::.~:..::='·~·c...:~c;;.~=~··-~~ l!ll':l Pon1ona. c.~f. f b Sc ·-'-----"!\liner No. 2. Hatbor/\Vilson t br turn 11..pt or .11u lt:t pt. 2 Bft~ SIS5 mo. Bltns, .1-.... 1 ''''" "l•l' I! 1 M bl-" ....... LARGJ.~ c:lean I Br. Adult& " . 1 ~ "'-1\ all'-CQ1xl, ntw !)&int & f "· h II<" 61"8-ovrr 3.". Pool. Util paid. $120. rom .,.,fif · .>. J' ~""'I oo rflt'ls .• _ t..ACIJNA BEACH Bachelor :"::'::'·::'::'":'=======-PELUXF: 2 BR oceanfront. SIJS mo. Crpt~. drpJ, all utll Avail 9/12-7/I, $225 mo. pd. Color TV. Telt:·Trtnd, Newport h •ch 4200 1 ___ _;;~is-<_;9_zs __ _ m-1son. FH Sl5 . hll)'I you 2 BR Bay \tfe\.\' apt, nu cpt.s., so Tlf'~' llstlnrs per day. \\IATERFRONT wfplet le: drps, $200 mot mo lsc, $250 fk>a1 for tie boat. 3 BR. I yrly. 67>8683 B•lbo• l1.;;l•::.:nd:__4355 NEARLY NE\Y 3 Br. 2 Ba, all elec I kit, Crplc, patio, BBQ. Also 4 Br. 3 Ba. Lse Sept·Junc 638-8470, ~!l-8831. \\'INTER: 4 BR 2 ba, Sl)(}/9 mo lse. 124 Amethys1. \\'inion Real Estate 61:>-3331 2 BR w/boat dock, rum or unfum. New, Yrly rental, 673--0640, 20.:i Grand Canal. Huntington Be•c:h 4400 ON BEACH! e Single apt.11 lrom $16:1 e 2 BR Furn. fnlm :S2S:i • 2 BR unrurn $260 C11..rpe1s-dra.pcs-dish1\'asher heated pool-sauna-lennis rec room-ocean vie\v1 patios-ample parkin&. Security guards. J."1JRN. al~ Avail. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 'lll OCEAN AVE., H.B. <n41 536-1487 Ole. open 10 am1 pm Daily l\tanaged by WILLIAl\1' \VALTERS CO. 2 BR. Pool. Adults . Beaut/Quiet! Util i n c I $200/mo. 17676 Can'leron, 842.-6121. FREE UHi. ~·urn 1 & 2 BR ap!!. Pool. \Valk lo beach. S130 up. 536-3777 <>r 536--7282 <>r a36-.1366. AT BcAch -\\lin!er Ra1es. l & 2 Bdrmir., pool: furn. or unlurn. Adolts. 219 ~th St. A: 220 12th SI. AT Beach-\Vinter Raic~. 1 ... 2 Bdrmr., pool; furn. or unfurn. Adulls. 220 l2th SI & 219 15th St. ]lj\'"""CHELQR. Util. Paid, * NEAR OCEAN? * LINDBORG CO. j36..2J79 ~EI..UXE 1 Br. furn. F"rpl c. Ooae to beach! $160/mo. Call 536-1459. l aguna le•ch 4705 $175 UTIL. pd. 2 Bl', 11.~ ba. Pvl patio. See m:r 339 Cabrillo. Ph. S.16-3ti-18 2 BR l Ba upstrs. !'\1·. OCC. Cpts'. drps bltns. Fre6h. painted. $139 n"IO. :>:i7-6151 LRG 3 BR. Crpll, <lrps, pool. Fan1ily & 2 chilli. 2214 CollPge A\'c. 6l6-V627 LRG 2 Br. Crpt.s, drps, bltns, 1-2 children <>k. Nr. schls &. shop'g, 962-1:..IJ e 2 BR. Cpl!, drps, S14J mo. 642--0563, Orange Ave. bltmi. 2666 NEW 2 Br, 1\i Ba \\'/ gar. $135. Adult!', Crpts, drps, bltns, fncd yrd. 1v/ patio, 66': E.. Victoria (E). 2fil~L Sanla Ana Ave_ 636-4120, * 2 BR. Unfum. Crpts, drps, bltn8. POOL! No children, no pets. $155. 325-J E. 17th Pl., C~I. 548·2i38 ~tONTICELLO com- plex-<lelu.xe 2 br, 2 ba, auto. garage opener, clubhouse k pool. Adult!, No pets. $225. 642-238~ $170 J· Br., l ~~ Ba, patio, bit-ins, crpts, drps. Ask about our discounl plan. 880 Center Sr., 612-8340, QUIET ADULT LIVING 1 & 2 BR. Shag crpts, bltns, pool. beaut. lndscpd. Sl50 & $170 mo. incl all util. 2-U Avocado St. 646-0919. $Ula.QUIET! L.-irge deluxe 2 BR, I ':Ir BA. GE kitchen. 2 car gar. Adul ts. no pets. 240 E. 16th PL ::148-6-132 l BR $150. 2 BR SlW. Pool. Elec. ,,_ \l1ll' pd. Adlls, no Jlf'l!t. t.fesa i\tanor. 241 \\'ilson A\·c, 01 S4~740i.; $170. 2 BR, bath &. 1,; stu¢io, c:lrps. cpt,, patio. Avail 9b. 714: 548-8301 or 21~: :,92-5m t * DELUXE 1 & 2 8R Garden Apts. Bil-Ins, pftv, patio, heated pool, ~. Aduhs. $14:1 mo. 546-5163 ,::: 2 BR; Nc1v p;1inl & crp{~. $160/mo, ~7-91"6 or I'll· quire at 1343 Bay. Apt 8 .. CM . NE\V 2 BDR:'ol. Beam ceiling~. \rood p11neling. All rrc fentu~. SlGJ. Adults, no pet~. Call nov.· 6-Ki--0073 • 387 \V. Bay Street t ~IODERN 2 Br. Crp~. drQ.s. GE kitch. patio, enc:J tfr. Nr. bus. $145. Adult&. 120'E. 2(1th SI. BACH Apt, I BR. no 11tOyc allov.'ro, partially furn. SlOO •ft 6'. 646-8774. VERY Nlct--1~tc-3 Bdrm, 2 Bath. Sunrootn, f t p I c , Adults, no pels. R ~I 1 . 67l'M497. Cos ta Me s.t 4100 .~~~~~~--1-="---...;;;; 3 BR, 3 ba.. F'rplc, PAli<l, pr l OR 2 SR. Lr;: ciostt1, pool, Isl I.: last 1110 + $100 .11ecur. ad1al11, no pell;. Ul\I pd. 1884 ba. tum or unturn. ~ deck I "'.:OC..::::.:::::_ ___ _ i\•/Vle~'. Yrl.y -0r \.\i.ntr:r. BAOt Apl, S"im pool, G81'1. 3601 f'inley, appt only, I blk lrom ocean. $13:> + Adult.t. no pets. 71-4: 67~49, 1 ~"~'~"·:...:"~"-C=cd::::•~•·~""-=~1~13::1_ 6"-2929 LGE. like fK'W 3 br, 2 b., bch BRIClfT Ir c:heflrful turn 2 duplex, Sundttk, i: a r _ DR apt, b&,ytront. pvt patio, ~pt-June S2.XI &-12--1()4:1. BLUE l.qoon: Elegantly NE\\'l..Y DEC:ORATEQ tum, 2 BR, "l BA apl, charm. 2 BR. crpt&, 1lrp~. blt-ilp. in& atmospl\el'f', 2 pools, ten. Htd pool. Adult~. no pct~ ni.11, patio, private be11ch, $145, 149 ER.1! Buy St. "' beaut. OC#.ln vic11·, Adult.11 CLEAN 2 br. cptsldtiJi, <>nly, no pet.!. 4~ <>r bltins_ Sl45, 2257 A. Pom~a 499-2206. Ave. ~S.-5800 ~ LRG. 1 Br. No. t>nd. 2 bib f<> X·Ltt 3 BR, 2 BA. New heh. $1S,j 1no. ~Vtt k (TplS, new drps. 2 child. \k. \\·knds, ·194-i99i wk d y , $165 mo + SOO dep, ~l7-9'i)2. ~1220 • EAST 1ldr • 2 br, t•, ~. .-'OCEAN FRO/\'T 2 BR, 2 crpts, rlrps, bl!ns. 1-clr(C .. BA. ra<lar" llf11f:, !t mo or pool , NO pt'ti. 6i&-6610 )'Car lease, 494-1663 I 0oo=N~'T,_Cl~ •• -~11-.-w-.,-.-.,"'1 BACH near be11.ch, 1tv Ir re:t qolck cub for ii lvith -.• P111fo. N k('(' Utll pd. Refs. DAlLY PILOT Cl&Mlfitd S105, 4~92j 011 642.SSil &: cMn;t II. r d"P· S~7$, 6#-0924. i\lonrovla 548--0336. 3 BR. 2 Bil., cpl11, drps.: rrpl. NICE 1 BR dptx. Quiet Sr:p DIS'. dupl ex. ms On lease. by gAr•f!J, 1 adult O\'tt 30. Rr3 ll0r 6i~lli62. no pitt11. 5-l&-1021. winter only. 6i~. PILOT' WANT .Wl 64a.5671 \ I RENTALS RENTALS A,pts. Unfurnished Apts. Unfurnished NOW LEASING! Park.like living for fami- lies with children ond adults. I, 2 ond 3 bed- rooms, furnished or unfu rni shed. Shag car- pets, drapes, air conditioned, with self. cleaning ovens. Complete $400,000 recrea- tion club in three acre park. Pools, tenn is, volleyball , health club, teen facilities and a pre -school! Next to shopping and golf course, n ea r U.C.I. and Newport Beach. from $1 50 per mo. At Son Diego Fwy. an d Culver Drive in Irv ine. Phone 833-3733 . Owned and managed by The Irvine Company ----------------------~--- -~---- • _1 REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENTS 1nd NOTICES Fr!d<1y, Stpttmber 4, 1970 0 DAI LY PIL0_!,:j3 ANNOUNCEMENTSi--'71mliillllll••·•-------ilij.i:. ind NOTICE' -1r 1r 1r °* . '!At RENTALS Apts. Unfurnished ----···· ---- Corone dt l M ar 5250 $175/1\10 liw, Lrx upper 2 Br. cpllol. drvi;, rclr/rnnge, (;ll.r. Mut, adltlf. 7(1.t Narcis- sus, Balboa . 5300 PE:NJN Pt.-Owni.•r's upper 2 BR, din rm, frpt, v.·/w, Jg hack yd. Util inc. $250 l&e. Avail 9/1. J;,00• t.tiramar. 675·2591 f213J b1)J.5388. lido Isle 5351 LRG BAY VlE\V 2 Bl', study, crpts, drps 1·'4 ba, fl-pie. Avail Sept' 5. L;e $350. 675-8592 or 642-0807. Balboa Island 5355 LITTLE BAL. ISL on Grand Canal. "'alerfront. Boiit dock. 2'1 BR, 21,~ BA. Unful'n . Avail Oct. 1. $350/ n10. yrly. No children or pets. 67J.-0207 General General.-----------1----Rentals Wanted 5990 Misc. Rentals 59'9 Announctm..,ts .. ,0 Announctm•nts 6410 \VANTED: Balboa Pcnin (or WANTED: Dbl i;::llr.iJ;<' for anywMre 111 N.B.) 2 BR, anllque eat & pit r n1 . ynrd (yd not nee If 0t.-c1&n-storage, by mo or yr. \VUI frontl, •'1rn or Unfurn, up ~ny up to S30 1no. 5-16-5.1)5(1 to $150. Couple with l child. * • GARAGES tor Rent: Jlave rers. Ple8.8E' ca.II S2S per mo 54&-1190, ask for Dawn. can ' &4Z-6.191 WIDO\\'.' 2 girls 8. &, 11th *S'l'ORAGE GARAGE for grade v.lshes Baysule y~ly rent_ $20/mo. rental.. Have R. E, he. * 616-6840 • w/cons1der man a g lngl==='======= 213:352-1196. ~:,,.;,,,,_,_,--., _____ .1 rncome Property 6000 ---- WANTED OVERWEIGHT LADIES For ! \Yeight rcducinJt program to establish statistics for rapid Permanent weight loss, conducted by qualified physical Culturists. Must be a minimum of 20 pounds over- weight, have transportation an d not cur- ren~r under doctor's care. All inquiries co111- pleteJy confidential. ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537-5414 MODERN Apt. near Kaiser ~ :;.;:.;:..c_:.;:!;C::.:.:.L-C= Jr . .JUQ:h School, 1 ad and 1 CUSTOM 4-PLEXES high student up 10 $150. S~tcious 3 bednn O\Vneni apt 837...fil20 or 646-2().12 + 13) 2 bedrm, 2 bnth t'<'~l HOUSE or Apt unfur, 2 als in exclusive area of Ne\\'. Bdnn. gar. Npt lfgts or port Beach. Xlnl ow1~r oc. COfita Mesa. To S 1 3 O. cupil'.'it $.· ta.x shelter 11ror-I !!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!l!!!!!!!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!r' -.-- ?italure (.'Ouple. 54~1793 ('t'IY, $9,2.IO in(_'Onl<', 5 build~ REAL ESTATE • • BR ho 4 ~·1-'-ings !!Old 1hls 1nonth. Only Gen•ral ,,.a use, "'"l w·o:n, Unfurn. Sept 18lh or sooner, 2 avail. S<'lf'ct your11 1oday. l---------- 54S-1729 $1a.ooo nowi. S75.ooo. ~1"• _____ 6_2_00 e '1 BR unlurn me. tor PERRON 642-1771 sehool year. WestcliH arC'a. 5 Bldgs. f.f.l on h ac:. Pl:t· f41al ~9306 collect renlia. Cl\1. S75,000 1crn1s. 675-6968 leave mess for r.tultiple-zoned acrcagt' OranKe County ilanla lti'alty Found (Free Ads) 6400 FOUND \\'ht fem alf' killen \\'Ired je\\'f:'led co 11 ~ r . S"""'6,; BLI\ n1a1e CAI found on Bal Isl. &'73-0776 Huntington Be.ch 5400 Rooms· for Rent 5995 t.lary, Agt. ~ ------·-------&12-6.'lG() OCEAN FRONT, View BEAtrr. home w/ pool has Business Rental 6060 lost 6401 """ Whoddyo Wont? Whoddy• Got? , SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS SJNcial R•tt "·1 • 5 L ints -5 times -5 bucks , llVllf -ao MUST IHCLUD• t 1-Wh.i Ttll 1111¥1 II Ir Ht, S-Wl'lll ~ltll Wint !ti lflff. \ ~YOUll ,.._ .. 1"4/1' ........... ._, llnn "' 1llv11'f ...... • $-NOTHIHO ,Oil SALi -TllAOllS OHL YI : To Place Your Trader'1 Par1di1t Ad PHONE 642-5678 1966 Dodg(' Cctn\'1.'rliblc Pl:'J. Jara. 't'radf' for ho1~. horse trailer or i.1nall foreign car. 4 BR HO!l.-1E, FULLERTON Assumable lo inrere:;t loan, $13,000 eq FOR bch hst or 13' Boston \Vhaler, 40 F~ .lohnson &!I.horse w/lrlf, Like ne\\', valuallon snqo FOR tn1ck or ,.?~ 673-S~it ask for fl1r. Smith. ' . ' '• 1, Costa Mesa 5100 -----' sund~k. heh. N('wer. spac East Bluff 5242 dlx 2 Br. blt:ru;, cpts. dl'p6, extra BR for employed ----- lady. PIVil. $100 mo . G00-1200 SQ. IT. oUice also 54&-6740. 600 BQ. fl store. $90 & $150. PVT Rm & bath CdM C.M. 646-2130 c:overnmenl land·S5 acrt \\'rile-Land Package, 1185 A11"0Whead, San Bndo 9'2'110 BLK l\lal~ Cocker-Poodle, duplex. 11ilver !()(' polish. Ans 10 714/529-4'13.i Huv~ sn1all commC'rCial Bldg, S.A. Rented to jC"'e}. ry & luggage stores. \\'ill trade up !or ocean vu, ha1 or heh inl'Ome, 673-20t2' -; HARBOR GREENS r<'rfig. lndry. Nr shops & • NEW DELUXE e pier. $175. Adults, baby ok. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. 536-2131. Resort Property 6205 "GNlrgc". Last seen at Santa Allli Avr & Pa!isa.dl.'.'I. 24' Cabin cruil!('r 185 HP. C~t. Sep! :Ind, 6 pin. s:io Perfect shaPt'. Trade ror ro.•ward lor l't:'turn ~19-l84l small r11nch dn payrncnt In ' GARDEN & STUDIO APTS Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. 2700 Peterson Way, C.?lt. 546-0370 Incl ipac. master suite, din ,,,;.cc:::.::._ _____ _ rm & dbl garage, auto door \VALK 3 blks to beach. opener ava il. Pool 1,,. Rec. Almost new lg 3 BR apt. area. Dbl gar, "1>1, w/w crpts. furnished. cooking ' p r i v: • • shoY.'t'r. etc. Girl only, $80 Office R•ntal 6070 BEAUT Lake ArNllvhead to!, A stral al $18.')(] or best <lffer. 2 n1i fro111 lake, 962-9S2~ 1936 MGT A • ll'll ot T Sf"Hti. Run!\ good. Very rare . .S19W rquitY. lrade for boat ar dllY!i. &12-0&18 f'vr~·. San Juan Capistr11no, GREE 493.3996 aft 7: 30 PJ\I 'N Sch1\'inn S1i11gray !? VILLA MESA APTS. 2 BR, Priv patio. Hid pool. 2 car encl'd gar, Children welcome, no pets please! $165 mo. 719 \V. \Vi.Ison. 646-1251. drp91 dst ... -shr, 2 ba. $225 • FROM $265 • mo. No sgls/pets, childn 865 Amigos \Vay, NB ok. 5J6-l711 mo. 673-093l. SUPER-DELUXE QUAl.lT\' ROOM. Kitch. privil: Man 1-2-3 room, up to J,000 sq. 011ly. SGo mo. 2161 M.1ner St, tt. oUice suites. Jmnwd. oe- Cl\.1 646-5289, 893-.1370. cupancy. Orange C n ty. * $15 PER Week-up w/ Airport Irvine Commerc. kit chen . $?.() per week _ up Complex, 11dj. Ail'porler Apts. MOTEi. 54&.9755. Hotel & Restaurant. bank.-;, $~Lovely roorn. Priv horn('. San Diego & N'pl. Fwys. M • & D bike stolen Adams & l.a!I Vegas To\vnhouse, 2 sty, ountatn t1•rt 6210 J\I a Jt n 0 11 a, HB S# 2 BR, all elec, 2 car gar, ?o.fanaged by \VU,LJAl\.f WALTERS CO. PRIVATE VIEW NEAR Huntington Harbour New· Triple"cs. Quil"t areu. Lrg 1 BR. Dlshwash<>r. n50. Infant/pr! ok. ( 213) 592-2623 or (714) 846-3559 AT Beach -\Vinter Rates Empt gt-nl <lr college UNCROWDED PARKING student. ~i713. LOWEST RATES The Search Is Over FF0.\71162 Rew. 968-8219 >001, tennis court, no maint,, f foun1l this outdoor p••ad1 .... · LB MAL S7000 eq for heh area in· .... ._.,.., J E dog, beige. bl"wn i" N. Cal1"f .. ""ca" YoU '. M,·1. & blk \VI '<lmt' unils. 702/737.J;~'!O " ""' . re hair, Lgr br1a.•n lions of Htll ll'«'ii, I Pine· eyes, long 1ail. Ansi\"s to COSTA t.·IESA C·l COR Cedar), hugf' lakt-, rivers, "Tiki." 673-7640 Re\\'al'fi! 00 x 117 • 2 bldg~ .sr~~.000 Commercial & income' ~fOP· do1vntov.•n Laguna. Okftt. Trade fnr San Fl'ancisCO er N, Calif. recreational &CM· age. Ov.'ner 494-1652. LGE deluxe 2 br in 4-plex. bltn range & dsh\vshr, shag crpts, drps, gar. $175, 54~2321 or ~1973 $145, LOVELY 2 BR 11~ BA Patio/Car. Quiet adult:.. :!346 Santa Ana. 54S.-Oi28 2 Bdrms., 1 baths; car~ted, draped, blt·ins, dishwshr. Upstairs. $250 J\'lonth. 1'1in. 1 year lea~('. 1 & 2 Bdrms., pool; turn. or _. '75-&0SD 0 unfurn. Adults. ns 15th St. -& 220 12th St. 111111 l'l'lllllT m.,a TO\VNHSE For ll'!!W'-3 br, . Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr~. R00~1. rur:i1shed. Jor n;nt. Rm. 8, Ne"•port Beach. F.or working man, Quiet. 833.3223 Courtesy to Brokers nice home. 64~79-1. NEWLY dee. Furn rm, CM. MEDICAL · OENTAL Jo~rmflle only. Student pre(. Snit<'s a\lail, Best location, Comm ba. $6.'i mo. 642-8520 Xlnt parking. hlodern fncil· streams • "the fiilhing & ILO '=sr=----.~ll~h-la~c~k..::cf,~m~a~l,:::...ca-t equity $.i2.000 !or h i g h huolit1g is g1i!11t", Roads. w/lge green eyes 8/26. deseri. Elet. \\'alt'r incl. Ideal for S,.)7-75&.'t: e\les 962-2595 O\VNER 646.~ rt'tirement, \11\cation, invest. !RISH Setter, male, approx Perfect Bay Boat, 16' GJspr, rnt'nl, 01oblll" borne & Climp.. JI.: yrs. Lie No. 7834, ~ lfP o/b, trlr, full equip, t'l'!i ok. The demand is great, answers to Red. R.cv.·anH Slj()(] value FOR any yr or Trade USE' or my tvl'in eng power crsr for use ort'.)'t!ut camper/motor home, ~.wlqi, Sf:'pl /Oct_ Write Box M-ltB, Daily .Pilot 221 1 \V Balboa Newp°ort Beach 2 BR lrip!ex, bltns, cpt/drp, garage, patio. $135. s.tS-1867. I 2~i ha. frplc. crpti>, drps, ----------\\'shr/dryr, ref. pool, tennis, _C_o_ro_n_o_d_•_l _M~a:.•--'-525:...::0 etc. $190. 536-3815 COLLEGE or working girl. Bal, Isl. Kit & TV rm. Tel. $10 mo & up. 675-3613 ities. Jmmedialely available. BA YSHORE CENTER 601 Dover Dr .• N'pt Beach but !he supply of property is C p u c · . 1 o._ . h" 1 96S.38.18. make ar, ... or an1ver. hm!le! . ~ •I Ct' • P Kltl(' Jim 6424312, 6115'0466. nll' today a t (TI4) 847·2608. l"El\1ALE Siamesr. vi t': I ~'-'--'-'...;..-~-'~ R.E. Broker. F'er11leaf & 2nd, An!IY.'tl to 3 Units on 2 lots, Via Llrlo 8 Units, good rental Mia. S38,000 equity: i n co m fl $13,;,oo. For house, ~· mercial or hOrse ranc)l:'-5110 NEW Dec. 2 br. 1 1 ~ ba, hltns, encl patlo & gar. Adlts, ieens only. no peL~. 644--0962. Newport Beach 5200 WATERFRONT. YEA.RLY LEASE. Lo\l'CI', extra lge. 2 Br. 2 Ba. frplc, t'..'ltc kir , FA, patio, deck. Boal slip e.xtra. Adult<;, no pets. $250 ino. 675--1062 VlE\V; 2 hdr1ns. fireplace, garage, split lr\·el. Adulls only, Noon until 4pm. 2001 K.ngs Ro a d . $250 mo. ;,4S-3974. 2 Br. unfurn. Crpt~. d11>s. patio, pool. bltns. $160. SeaclifI Manor Apts. 1:l25 Place:ntia. 54&-2682 a s k about our discounl. * COROLIDO APTS. 2 Sr. 1 & l 1,~ BA .. frplc, dhl car. po1·1 & large Pool. $185 & up. 673-3378 LGE new -2 BR, 2 ba, frp!c, all bltns, cpts, drps, beamed ceil'g, pvt pat. So. of Hwy. $251)...$275. 54S-7983. 1 BDR. garage apL. quic1, pri\•acy, lg. sundeck, stove l'f'frig., ('arpet, drapes . a.l8-49:J7 or ;:.23-65,~A. ---CAN'T BE BEAT Single Story South Sea Atmosphere 2 Bedroom 2 Balhs Carpets & Drapes Air Conditioned Private Pallos JUST stepi; to lx'ach .. 3 BR 2 1 , 675-6050 0 , ha. cpl/drp. Yr!y. ... lllMDHT CL.& ABBEY REALTY 61~-\ir.o 1 Newport Beach 5200 Newport Beach 5200 PARK NEWPORT High on a bluff overlo oking the water, 7 pools, 7 tennis courts, $750,000 health club and Spa. Bachelors. I or 2 bedrooms. Also 2-story iown houses with 2 or 3 bed- rooms. Electric: kitchens , private balcony or patio. From $1 75 to $450. Subter- ranean parking, elevators, optional maid service, convenience shopping. See 7 beautiful model apartments, open 9 e.m. lo 6 p.m. daily, Other times by appoint- ment. Located at Jamboree and Sdln Joaquin Hills Roads. in Newport, just no r!}_ of Fashion Island. Phone (714) 644-1900 for leasing informa tion. Park Newport Apartments *LOVELY NEW APTS Near Ocean & park. 1 & 2 BR's. 425 13th St. 847.J957 l BR: BJ!ins, crpl/drps, !rplc, patio, garage & sm/yrd. Call 847-5306 2 BR. Crpts, drps, range. Closed gar. Children & small pet ok. $140. 842-836..'l. S12;i, 2 BR, Cpts, Drps, BJ1ns, Garage. * Aft 4 pm, 847-3727 * OCEAN Vu: Deluxe 2 BR 2 ba. f11>I. $175> & 1 BR. $125. Bltins. Arlults, 536-6720. • 1 BR. NEWf Fireplace. Near Ocean. Patio, Adults. LINDBORG CO. 536-2.iTI! • NE\V 2 br. Cl"plS, Jrps, guragf', palio, $16."I m<l. 5.16-6027. Santa Ana 5620 "Java .. 67~1R21 area. Equity $2a,OOO, Trade , ' 675-6050 0 -··•·r=11a..& R . E . Wanted 6240 RE\VARD! -Sian1ese CUL for T.D.'s or ????? femall", 2 yrs. Vicinity Geoo;e \V IUiamson R'•al1or Colleg1' Pk, C.\1 , 5-t~7 673-43.°lO 673.1:»4 Eves. Motels, Trailer Courts OPENING SOON 59'7 HILLGREN SQUARE 1900 sq ft Delu:xe Offices Avail. lnr immed_ l('a.sc in on~ ot cilie!'I busiest shop. ping cen1ers. \Viii divide. HOUSE Y.'ANTED. PVT PTY 3.5 BR home fronl owner, Assum(' <'xi 1:1 r; n g l-~HA/VA t.todcrate down, 543-17'.!!I BUSINESS and FINANCIAL Personals 6405 FREE! RESERVE A SPACE NOW! Air-cond., n1usic, paneling, c11>ts, dn>s. Ma..x. park'g & Business HUNTINGTON BEACH 1naint. 770 E. 17th St, C.M.l--'O'-'p-'po-'-r-tu'-n-;_U_•• ___ 63_00_ POWER SQUADRON'S t.1r Bram 213: 651-2700 collect TIRED Of lay offs? Are You BASIC BOATING ./ FOR LE ASE . Lrg honest & amhitious? You COURSE II ...1 n1odem, ocenn vi('"'· Of· 1;an 01a.'n a fully f'quiped Huntinnton Beach • A private, wa e... "' h fi('('s.shops. Suitable-prof. Ll"una Bt-a<'h husiness. Hr"gh School mobile ome com-· " or bus1nci;~. 1!199 S. Coa11l Estah1ishetl 5 yrs, Will train Rooms 121 & 112 munify 10 minute' Hwy Laguna Bch . 494-9471. & i;ell to trust ·worthy party. Starting Sept, 14 and from Pelm Sprin9•. DESK SP CE Tiny do\\"n. 0 w n er : • Accommodetes 24' A g3:1-2718, <19+-!Gl3. tach MNonday through ')•' <••<h•• 305 No. El Cemino Reel ovtmbtr "' COIN LAUNDRY · mo11t * 18 hole 9olf course San Clemente txoaul iful In S. Cal i (. * FULLY LJCENSED * & d rivin9 ran9• -~~-'~92-"-'44~20::.__ ___ •1 Locnlerl a1 Baker a I Renowned Hindu Spiri!uaHsl • Lavish clubhouse ... DESK SPACE F'airvir"'· C.J\.I. Established Advice on all mattrr,1:. billards, loun9e, " h'adf'. ·rcrn1s avail. to LAve, Mat!'iage, Busines!I showers,laundry' _ 22_2 forest Avenu.e __gualifif'd buyer. ~·then Readings given 7 days a storage Lag una .Bea ch call, 644-1.'!07 week, 9 AM - 9 PM • Giant swimmin9 pool LE'ITER Shop. mlmfflR. All 312 N, El Camino Real, • Tennis & 1 ----'~"~·~94~66c____ equip 10 start own bu!liness. San Clemt'tlle. shuffleboard LUXURY Ne1v oUiMS, prin1c $1500 'l'.P. ca.'>h or lcrms. ~9'1·9136, 9"l~·007fi * Boef & +reiler sforege Beach Blvd., air, cpts, 675-SOOS , lca\lf' nie118. for drapes, f'IC. 24 or 6 rm. t.1ary, Agt. suites. 1211) 394-00li"i call CAMERA SllOP. \\'rslclilf Sin.;::le • \Vidnwr.rl · DivorC<'d LIFE * Lovely home tn hi-desert {OT' 1a.·eckend or permanent living. Value $30,000, Trade for your local properiy. 194-'1746, '1~1331. Want po11•cr or houseboat to -10· or ~!obi\(' homr. n ·nde 10 40,000 eq1y in 20 AC R·3 . hea.rt ()( town or:. \•iew lo1s O.C. Pat 114: 83()-60411, * * * SERVicE OIRECTORY Appllenc• Repairs Parts 6510 •Washer It Dryer Repairs• Free Estln1ate~. \Vork Guaranteed. Call ~3159 Babysitting 6550 RESERVE NOW PALM SPRINGS MOBILE COUNTRY CLUB COJIP.CI, Plaza -moliva1ed sellf'r. APPROX 700 sq rt at 1652 Call t.1r. lfruTis 545-342·1 Nwpt Bl, C!\f. New crp1, South Coast Rf:'al1o~ EXPERIENCED i\1othcr will habysit toddler thru 4 yrs. VJc Orange & 22nd, C.M. fenced ya.rd, hot lunt hes, toys. Referetk't'S. 548-9513. EXP'D mother will care for child or infant. my 1ge, is exciting if shared wi the cheery home, wk d y s. ri;:ht onr. Stop wasting 646-5.537 drps. $150/mo. 642-2821. I "u~N~IQ~u=E~Be~.-.~,-Y-c,ho~p-, ~(31 &t2-5l06. S1a1lons. Illness 1',o r c es UP !o 3600 sq fl.-Dfo]u)(e, air Sale. 546-9527 3--S PM . rood, crpts, drps. In com-MEAT MARKE"? &· DELI. puter center bldg, 646.7425 Nr. Huntington Harbour. or 546-fllSO :1200 sq. 11 . 213/592-24-14. OF'F'TCE Rentals, La~na Fk:h. $100 mo. Coss! Hwy. Money to Lun 6320 Real EstatP 0 .K -194-9727. yours. \Ve hnVf' a smart ,vay. 547-6667. 24 hr. record. 1"EACHERS Chldrn. Child Care IO 4:30 pn1. My borne *MASSAGE & SAUNA \Varner & ~tagnolia Ar~a. L<lvely girls/ EXPERT MAS. 842-7674 SAGE. Ask about our Las BABYSt'ITING _ i\ly home. Vegas var.allons. 10 Artf lo \V('ekly. Brookhurr>I ,ft. 2 Al'tf, 7 DAYS, 2930 W. Adairi~ area. P.efcre n('('S Coast Hwy, NB. 548-~. 968-30;)1. MEN!! Everyone of our VERY Reliable mo1hrr o! 2 6085 36200 Date Palm Rd., Cathedral City, Ca, Call Linda Valentec 714/328-6515 Commercial 1st TD Loan haircuts is a creation. \Ve, W-Ould Hl<e lo babysit by Susan, Lainda. and l\tnry hour or day. Prefer infants. strive for magnificcnee. See 54:>-0223 OCEAN VIE\V Lr" 8~0 INTEREST II s· Wal ' 200• " 2 Lt'ased cornmr""ial unils • 2 d TD L yourse at 1r \er s .Ho Bachelo1". l & 2 BR ap!g, ·.,. « n oa n Newport Blvd, C~1 RELIABLE mot.her ol 2 1vill J.+urn or unfurn. Crpts, (!rps, A rne1nhfo r of thl" 3 rented apartments in babyslt 1 chlld. age 3 to 5, bHns, pa1i-0s. walk ini:: lJ.S. f''inancial Group clown!own San Cl('mrnte. PALM READINGS my home. $2;, I \Vk, Jl.!esa distance 10 town. 100 Cliff 1;1'/o Return on $15,000 down , Terms based on equity. Card" & Sand Readings Verde area. 5-16-8118 Dr., Lag. Bch. 494-5498 *-.--\\~'E~E~.,7.1-.Y-Ra~t-e-s.~S~E-A I 6~~ Spendable + rax sh('J. 642-2171 545.0611 Help in All Matters RESPONSIBLE high school ' "' Serv1n." H:irbor a.rea 21 ""s. lo AM 10 PM 7 d•y• * * \\IOOD'S COVE * * LARK i\10TEL. 2J01 ,_ · J• • • glrl will baby ~It. Newport 0\YNER 675.62"';>9 COblMERCIAL Income' pro- perty, free & clear, neil to Sears. Val. S65.000. ~...Eor unHs, house or beach -p. O\\/NER 1)75-62,'j9, \\'ill trade 19· sloop, slpc•2, 17 gal rresh v.·ater lank 6 MP f\1erc, 2 sail5 & arlt>Jior l'OR. VW or Station waJon. 5'10·1120, 540-1123, * * SERVICE DIRECT~ Carpentering 6590 QUALITY Woodcraft, ·~nil gen'I constr. & carpeOWry. Fn!e c:onsultatJon & Q®'•· CaJI Ken 64S.00.J4, 5411-4~. REPAIRS * ALTERATibks , * C@JNI."l'S.__A_!!Y size~ __ T;i yrs e>:per. 548-6713 * REPAIRS, remodeling & patios. No job too i!!Mall. 673-5417. . ' Cement, Concr•t• '600 CONCRETE. All types. Free est. Sawing, breaking, haul· ing & skiploading. Servioe & quality. 548-8668 Bob .!\'JORE Concrete patio, br le.ss money. Artistic sellin~. Lie .. call ;\fax 111 6'J4.06S7. CEMENT Work o( all !Wld,. F1"ef:' est. 63&-0314 I--- DECORATIVE CONCRF;fE DRIVES-\VALKS-PATIO CALL DON, 642-8514 * CONCRETE work: p.atlm, drvways, etc. Licen11ed . Phillips Cement. 548-~. e CONCRETE, brick f &: stone v.urk. f'ree estimale. • 968-8609 • Beach ·~ bloek. new 1 .t-2 NC'\\'pt1rt !llvd, Cosbl Mesa. . Realonomi<'s Corri. Sattler Mortgage Co. 213 -697·9272 La H.::bra Heigh!.~ area. 642-0022 Br, Gold l\.1eclalllon apls. -==========l'C~o~m~"~'~"~·o~iru".._JB~k~r~. -~£:7'~6~IT~OO, ~~=3.16~E~·~· ~J7~t~h=S7"~'~'~'-r''ULLY LICENSED -' NOU EMENTS WO~tAN w/2 young children Child Care, "~:O Each havr !!1 BA. Pool. Guest Homes 5998 COM~lERCIAL BUI LDINGS AN NC iJISCRIMlNATING peop le ivishes to care for child, Licensed OOJ S200 up. Lea~1·. 2JT;1 S. Coas1 ----------1!\TAIN ST .. SAN CLEMENTE and NOTICES \\'ant oil portraits from 1----------1- H\\')'. 497-1630 or 499-39:.!9. Pvt room in licensed guest LENDER'S f'ORECLOSURE PL\V Studio & Gallery, 724 zih-5. 546-5271. MY Home, hot lunch, fenced e ADULTS ONLY home for ambulatory senior LO\\' DOWN & PRICE Found (Fret Ads, 6400 !\,Main, S.A. :>1~3021 Wed· •WILL be.bysit my home yd, supervised play. Jrics Quiel plra1<ant unlurn. citiz:~~v~y ~ard & ~~;o 213 -38R-9S08 ~lALE Baf:set 1-lound • rPg. l =S~u'~'==~-----behind Po~~!WM!hool , 1-;2-5::;.:C:a:ll:64:t;-OO;;::;:-:':· ==:=cl Apt , $1 1'i.CJO U1il. inrl, ~{)(I( .. ~ll now, · · e 5 srQRES. $110,000. 686-f;Ollnr. flea rolla.r bro"·n SWINGERS! New Orange I----'-"'..:::::_:_ __ ~ I ~·urn . s1urtio l'>'/kilch. area. !'li!S.522., 698. w. 191.h St. Bethel ~rldle, II. brown i!i.cc. Vic O>. Guide. }'or free info, CH.ILD CarP. my home j Contractors 6620 S\:15.00 U1j1. incl. RENTALS 1'owf'rs corner. 548-1 768 agt. Bo"•Hnc Green Dr. C.M. Writr S.C.S.G. P.O. Box days, Fountain Valley. • Ph ('fill. O\\'yrr 21:t ·l37~2(M Apts. Unfurnilhtcl RENTAL ·. N c x 1 1" 5.'i7-ll~7 '2111, Anaheim, 92804 968-3464 REMODELING a speeia!Ay · mo\ling from Glendora; to Did you ever think ol swap.. TIRED of that old turnltUtt? Huntington Harbour. 3200 Sq GfRL'S Slingray bike. Vic ALCOHOLICS Anonymoui; WILL babysit infant to 4 Yl'tl· this area. An)(lous lo bid on ing that \Vhite Elephant Jn It's really not that hard ft. 213Jaff2..2444 P.largue.rilf', Cdl\1. Owner Phone 542-7217 or Y.'l'lte to t.lon thru f"ri. $20/wk, 570 any job. call c 0 I I e c 1 the attic for something you lo replace. Just watch the 1 __________ mu~• idenlify. 67:Hlll22 after P.O. Box 123.1 Costa Mesa. Brooks. Laguna Bch. 213/963-1811. can use? Try the Traders furniture & m iscellaneoui:; • PM p rl h B s · LOVING ca-1·" my hOm- 1 d I ' IR I I 60901 c·'::_:_~· ~·-------eMy c ra!. wtmwear ·~ ~. f.1Y \VAY. o•1•lily -~-Par11disc column in the Olli· columns in the Cla~si!ied n us r1a en • p aJ ·• · b N t Sho f-d " to • ·-~ -~---KEYS Found on beach \lie. erson "-itting11 Y appt ewp res, '"' yu, Y ' rt'pair, \Vall11. ceiling, f)OQ.rs _,;,1·'=P'=il o=l='=•an=l:A,;d;;•:· ===~Sec=="='"=·======== ~1·1 INOUSTRIAJ~ i;pacl', Island & Balboa. Inquire 5'19-0026 or 54&-9029 lunch. own bed. G42--3.1SL etc. No job too snlall. 5410 1230 !Ill It w/olllcc & driW'· at front counter, Daily t, John Hov.·ard. will not be "'HNTG BEACH AREA 543-1494 • , 5410 Fountain Valley 1 doo · ' •• )240 ··c" '-""'" SI. c,M. lh th ·~ :··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iliiii~ml n r tn rear . .,1"" mo, Pllot, 2211 Ba'boa, N.,B. responsible !or any debts Call 5.16.19[")6 Additions * Remodelin" ..... Jounlain3 l 6' % ll<droom•-% Ballu Adutt LlvlnK ~·umi"1ed 6' Unluml•hed e D/ah-•ll11r e Sh"• C•r~I• • rrie .. ,.,u,. • Clo* C«Ml'f'I • B",,... r...ni"'' 9565 Slater Avenue ~'"''" -TOY Poodl(', 1vhilr with =•;•:.r;:"":;:m;;y=•=wn=·=== Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. 646--0681 iilver markings • art'n of Brick, Masonry, 673-6041 * 549-2110 FOR lse -5300 sq . fl. prime Ellis & Busha1·rl. ~· v. Announcements 6410 etc 6560 ADDITIONS. L.T. Conllll'UC- wa r e h s P space-all/part· 968-6011 lion, single or 2 story. plallli, ~51 Jnd, Mr. Bullard =PT~P~.~~~.,-.-,-.,-.-y-ou-,-.-.,.~,,-,-,-r FREE BRICK •BLOCK * STONE e't & layouts. 847-1511..-. tan in ('()lor Jound v!c.inity of By the hour. after 5:30 ADDITIONS.REMODELilo/G llarbor and Ncwporl Blvd. &12-HH8 * 6ilf>.-0758 Frtt Est. Cell Stm.2.i7J Loh 6100 '------~ CORONA del Alar: Corner 11'.lt, R-2. Sn. of llv.•y. O\\'n<'r: 675-4750. R.-4 Lm Ci\1. Can built! 40 unit&. Phil Sulliva11, Rllr. 548-6761 Acreage 6200 5 CHOICE lllCr<!ll, Jxoaur iful, cool, clear mrn d('M'rt community of Yucca Vnlley, 1111 for $3.iOO w/nmazlngly low dn k only $35. (lf:r mo. Bob Roberts Real Estate MR-mS. COMMERCIAL 4 113 At Tell, 2 hlock11 from t.1\~sion S.J .C. $30.000 prr Al"l'f', Renl111r a1it.m1 I DAi l.\' PILOT \\'ANT-AD. Dial 642-5678 & chafie II. D\1, 67:rri648 Ba~ic boating course FENTON CONSTR. co. offe red to lhe public Busin•ss Strvic!• 6562 YG MALE collir Identify. PLEASE CARI i\1onta. Vista 642-4424 N.B, m us t CALL S<:hool. KEYS In leather ca~ Near ll1<rbor a n d Ada1nS, CM. 54G-J27,') by the Balboa Power Squadron. Sa i I as v,1ell as power boat- Un g taught. Starting 7 PM Mon., Sept. 21, every ?lfonday n it e GRAY and black striped for 13 \Yeeks. At New· female k\lli>n with fl ea port Iiarbor Yach t collar. &ro-121:; Club, 720 \Vest Bay LITTLE .i:rny poodJ(' found Avenue. New p ort vie ll11m!l!on St, CM . lta.s Be a c h. Brin~ 'note-. tal(ll. ~tt!J...8717 book & p e n c 1 l first VIC, f:. \Vilson & Orahr.. nite. Any questions while poodle mixture about call 673·l855. d'• n1onlhfl. 5-18--0036 l===-,-,'-"-o~~-..,,-TIREO ot that old furniture1 MEN'S horn.1·immecl. pruc. lt'I N'!llllY not thal hard i::lll:itM"", vlf" F'ord Rd · ro n"plttce. Just "'Rlch ihc ~ln<'Arthur N.B, 968.f.92.·, fumi1urt &: m!serlla~'.Ji> GRAV, nuJl~ rnl-F'liu:1 rollaJ' I t'Oltrmns In the ClllS11ll!ed markf'rl it-15-70. ~;~'"JO!.l't &>ctkln. SPECIAL! Re~ume11 & f~xecul.ivc letters. 100 copies on "Stntus Rag Bond" $.1.75 Docufarms PrinHn1t. lTI4 Tustin. Ci\f. 642-5368 C•rP!~.::••::r.::l•:.9,_ __ 65:;;_:90 CARPENTRY l>fiNOR REPAUtS. No Job TOl" Small. Cabinet ln ..,. ~I ~ o the r c&l)lnets. 545-8175, lt no ansv."tr leave msa at 646-2372. IL o. Andoraon --Qua] Constr, carpentr)', roo- fing, all home imprvmnl~. No job too 11m. rrt~ t'!il. 5.1G-IO:'i9 .. _ ==-~- Tl-IIf QU1Ch.T.R YOU CAt.t. THf. QUTCKF.lt YOU !'El L CARPET STEAM CLEANEQ REASONABLE RATl!S Allio wrT*-t lni!SUillaU<ift 646-5971 . OIAl\!OND Carpet Cleanin& Bttck 10 ScllOOI Spec.Jal :ioo· $!:;. f"rtt t:st. Rcr.air·lnsla11. 64~1ll1. REi\TARC Scrvicts. 3 roQl"M $21.50. F'ully ruaranlctd. C'rt-tl1 t c8 rdA 01\. 847-66$8 STE1\~t Jet Carp<'! elcaal~. 8)1 Clarl\arl!', nt11lon _ .,..-itltt J<rrvl('f' f"tte t'AI. ~24003, ·-' .. • t ' ' 1 I -1 l I I ' ' ' ' I ·3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS " • (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~l1 You1•s elf A Pile Of Pennies (01· Eve11 Dolla1·s ) Penny Pinchers Dial Direct for Details '642-5678 Pile Up Profits North County, 540·1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS -' • N s. -p ~ ' I ' p 1 J • ~ ' ii ' ' • i I I 1 !' ' I ( • I E ' I s ( . • ' . . ' s ( ; ( • ( N s -, ; ' • ( p ' I • ; ' u i I I , I' I ' ( • I ' ! I s ( • [ ' ( ; ( ' ( --·-··----· --···-··--...... ~ UAIL.V PILOT .17 SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT JOBS A EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMEN1 JOBS I EMPLOYM!ENT -. ,.__. --. Dr•ftlnt Strvice '637 HouMCle1nlng 67U Job W1nted, Jobe MM, Wom. 7100 Jobe Men, Wem. 7100 Joba Mtn, Wom. 7100 ~lECl-IANIC'AL En&:lneer, \VOULD YOU BELIEVE Wome_n ___ _.;.7.::.02:;.;0 CHILD care for tnranl ~n. llO:\ttWORKERS \VANTEr ~C.~,.l!~reau;m· ~!J:? md•,',~n~' 1'81llucCICoahno·• 8Y1amour .. ~Home far R.N ..... ~l !'a: inten:slli\i part dl-!~ura krtllpon.00v.>onutn, J..4 (£11velope Addtt!.<1en). ~ hNlflnrt . ""&• .. ,..., "' "" r ,..... or'"" lime pos.ilion. Days, ...,,, "' , my n1e/)'our11. Rush ata.nlpcd, se I f·a d v••t"' c I ~slim. Dra(lit~ or II-894-GlOJ l\10ll-}'rl, Ten yeurs CX· i..:'"'1:1-;.,:;11,;:1':;,. =-===~ d re 11ed en \le lo pe personnti lW1lr;ations from Yo ur 2 \Vomen, eWcitnt. perlence. Box P1079, Dally COASTAL AGENCY LANGDON \V 0 R LC criteria. 615-1671. Jlave lrall!lportaUon. Pilot A n"M'mber or TRADEltS. P.O. Box 1121· 8Q80Cy -· ·-------===*=""====-:*==-~IRE•'INED l..o.dy rlcai r e1 Snclllng & Snelling frl('. A21, Redondo Stach, Calif. Proft'.••ional S•rvic• Fencing 6660 ·~-position w/elderty lady. The World's L•t"••t 90278 l "-r ~--ployer -'------1 roning 6755 Ute howi,k._.i....,. Uv-ln. '· • '" ''"' .... ~~r .... Prorw1•k>nal USKPRS Emplyr pays fer •nd th• applicant \VOOD f'eoccE. new '°'• * IRONING "* \ ~91!};f's exchanged, Call Employment S.rvic• George Allvi Byland f'if!n· repair, patio OO~r! k ~ly Horne. Sl Hr. .....,.... -. ~Harbor Bl 01 ~ cy 106-B E. 161h, .,,A. l3J Dov•r Or., N.B. dee~. ~~~om \\uuuWOf · Pick Up It OeliY, S.U-7641 LADY desire11 live-in position liarbor Blvd: at Adains 347-03S:i. 642•3170 Jay. fH>i .n.>· q-companion/Housekeeper. NI h J • ~-· COCO'S. REUBEN'S • HOUSEKEEPER • ' to 6 CJ t an1tor Janltorlaf 6790 ........u driVt"r. Dependable, _ COMPLEX _ i\lon thru Fl'i. $40/\\'k. Cook ruu tlm~. AU con1pl1ny bent'. Mwerthen .,.., place ~r ••• .,. tel•~ Phones Are Open 8:00 a.m •• ~:30 p.m. 9 to Noon Saturdey -Oo"d Sunday ~t: ;! , '.c;.-• .,;,.i: DIAL DIRECT ..• 642°5678 ;~t WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNfY DIAL FREE 540-~~ Huntington BHch: S40.1220 Laguna a.ach: 494-94'6 .1: ••• San Clemente: 492-44'20 Hours-Regulations-Deadlines . -' . •.; -; : . congenial, efficient. 548--0318 ...... 1,,. "•••I. M ... 1 h&''' fl 1 · SPARKLE J 't ia1 & \Vi ~"" " ..., l:i, App Y 1n Pt'f50n lo l\1r. do I !':,1 ~~-· Win-l\tED. a.o;s't. wfll yn exp. 4''•17 f\1•eArtl>ur Bt"d. car. 962-.9908. Laney 8·12 \\'l'ekd1"'I DAII.Y l•ROlll: All•wtlMrt 'lheulf check ttMlir H• tlallr ... !!Cl" fmmedl•t•lr .,_. . w c ean .. ,.. __. ,., n· Back office with Dr, near 11 ~ ·v do 'd I t New-~ o .. I JJOUSEKEE:PER ro, t••ch<' PILOT, 330 \V. Bav, r .... ,, ., ml&clluifkati.ns. THI DAILY PILOT aaaumn Ila lllty fw .,,.,, M""' f9 Y.'S, res1 " come , rotu1 , C.M. area. S49-39a9 ,,.... • ucac 1 · ..... · ~ ~ he ., Fktor1 "65 ---·-----CARPE'T VINYL TILE '.JC CONTR. FREE ESf. clewiup. Free est. 96l--0672 1-5 i\l·F $2.00 Hi·. S school l\fesa t ••tent 1'f ,.,. .. Uaftln1 the Ml••rt.......,.t cernctly .,.. flint. \-." NITE JAPAA"ESE high school gui JNTERVIE\VING ?ilON·FRl child. l'eI, c1.r. 642-mt Nun;ln"' DIADLINI . POlt COPY AND KILLS: S1H P.M. ... ••r ·~.,. .... llcati1n, TL."\fE CLEANING \\1ll live in. Mother's helper. .... _, Furniture Restoring CommerciaJ a: Residential ~8-SJ.&2 2 TO S PJ\I HOUSEKEEPER. !\lust Jove e SUPERVISOR fwMa,...ay Ultten when tl•Mlllna 11 Saturtlar. 12 nMn. • _ & Refini1hi"? '675 l===·=6l:;2';:;.23G>i;;;;;;e;;,;== II.ET me addreS!I your e COOK • c~!l~;en ;~ Li~·e i~;e ~1~~ RN or LVN, ll to 7:30 A~!. YOU MUST HAW KILL NUMllRI When kllllnt an .ti '9caVM el ttulck ri~ * S-to-7262 * vv ~ .... ,. te male• • rec9"1 •f th• klll numHr 11"" t" •1 yeur atl ta .... .., FURNITURE Strippini & landscaping 6'10 envelopes, cireulus, etc in NO EXPERIENCE NECES. Referen«s. Ne'1'port Beach Parle Lido Convalc~eenl •erifkat-. sl ,-.ur call. -~ refinishing. --· · -my home. 6·12-4981 aft 4 P~t SARY, Jo'ULL TTh.1'E, PART area, 8-16-4839 Center. Ph: 642-S<M.f.. -~~ •frl2-9J75"fl NC\V LAWNS, "°·seeding; Dayv;ork \\·anted. TIJ\IE, DAYS OR NIGHTS. ------"----t lnry effert ft mM• t• kill ., cernct a n•w at1 that h11 !NH e'.rtieretl, 1tvt _ _ _ r o to • tillnng, tt.hO\'&ling, Own li'angportation HSEKEEPER For c p I e . NEED mature \l'On1an to sit l'ltt 1uar1ntM te 1111• • •ntll th• ff hai .,,..,.... In tha p41p9r. • ~ G.rd.nl'ng 66IO clean-up, 8 9 T -2 ~ 1 7 or Rele-•ces SJ6.2~no COCh.'TAIL &: STEAKJIOUSE Lh·e-in or out. \Valet'fronl. "''Ith mother 6:30 to 4:30 'Iii ~ '"'" ""'° •'>'>"/ 67'1~=? It holldn" the 7 t 4 30 DIMl·A·LINE Alllll er. 1trlctly c11h In atlvanc• ., mall er at '"' ene .t eur SfG..-0932. \VAITRESSES w•nted Ag•. .,... .. ., mo. ,,,.. .,.,,., a er •v• 11 0 : · NO o•·--.... --'"°"""~====~-11 ~ h N ho C .....,. ,,., -~•. * LANDSCAPING * --DAYWORK. Cle an i ng, 21-25. Experiencl!d. Ap jily 10 io .~ r. o usey.·ork. all -;;.'."..:..! Ne\\' La~·ns, la\\'n rernoval, rMA...:.c:.;ID:...S~.E;:.;.R~V~l~C~E;:.;....:612=5 Ironing. By day or hour. to u Arit, Mon·Sa.t., Village 1~1~ USE ~,f ~~~ ~ aft 6 p.m., 548-7185. Tht DAILY. PILOT ,....,.... tht rl9ht te claiiify, 9"it, c•nlOf' er ref"" an~ ;M.;j E>. ....... rienced, ~l-4972 In• 696 s Co 1 H ernoons i on 1• ary 1 0=R-D=E-R~T=A~K~.=~--tlltfft•nt, anti tti cha.I'll• ltl ratu anti ..,ulatlon• wltho•t ,,1--• .. :;,_-, ·,1 renovating;. Alt pllase:it land. .,.... '" · a.s \\')', & dut\~ open, o\\·n trans. ERS-\Vomt'n ... ... ~ !!Cape install & des.!gns. Lic'd MAf;DS A~~· I~med, "XI~ CLEANING lady available r -'-""-"-"'=&=h~4~""~2700-~--oc.s-GJ18. over 19, days or eve~. Mali Athh'ff•: l•a 1175. N•wport IHCh, Callt.rnl• ;•;. f contr 12 1 p re 5• ' e \VP 0 r for bachelor or v:.cated COOK (Dinner) t----------Pleasant \l.'Ol"k fron1 our ofc, '-5J6..t2z. yns. oc. ex ' Services. 642-12'.!.t day or apts. 540-0722/~l-4483 S30 Shift to st;v·t llOSPITAl.IT\' H 0 STE SS no t'xp. nee. Sal. $1 .6,; hr. CL1'SSlfllD COUNTIRI •r• lecatM •I foll.wi: :.:-: J, l'Vr · I,,_'====-===== BLUE BEET 67~99<W SERVICE, has <i(ll!!nings for Ca11 541-1323 be.t SP,\1. ,. AL'S GARDENING mature 11l>men looking for I ==""="'°',....~~~ far Gardening l: sm&JI land-~~!n~ & _S~t~rllg4J-~ Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 *COOK-HOUSEKEEPER * Interesting, part tinie .,,·ork, PART 1Th1E General OUiet:, sea.ping services call 54().5]98 General lite duties. 5 days. ,,T\comin; ne~·comers to female, 18-45. TY PI n E', Serv!ng NeWJ>Oli, Cdl\1, Cos-RELAX On moving day? 0111 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; •trs. 12·7 pni. Good Salary. your area. Sa.lea ex P . f i I i n I, phone, f' I r . Lil , l\1eoa.. Dever ... Sho1·cs, JS. !'.loving, 642-3654. 24 """ A Better Poiitian l\1ust htivc car. 644·1318 dcitirable. i'vlust havr car. Pernianent. l-frs. Schiffner. \., I'll hOUl',', IO\\'l'St ''''·'·· 847 =14 .,. '·~ •2°• '!&h: 1 • _ COCO'S REUBEN'S CALL: 5-17-3095 ~ ......,..... ..... COSTA MESA 330 W. BAY HU~TINGTON BEACH 17875 BEACH BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 2211 W. BALBOA LAGUNA BEACH 222 FOREST AVE. ~ ... :1 . ./ iM\V.'N SERVICE: l\low-Painting, T iY!-J -COMPLEX -IT'S Not Luck It's Knov.r·ho\v PIANIST/Organh>t, ex P • il'j • Edging • Clean-up & p h 6ISO - -\\l('strliff Pel'~nnel Agency pref. '\'::'iler. Versa I i I e -:i rte. REAS 0 X A B LE! aper angin!.___ .J:: -'. 16'17 f\lacArthur Blvd. 2043 \\'astclilf Dr. "'OOd"'ind, mainJy nutf', ~ ~ SAN CLEMENTE -305 N . El CAMINO REAL 962-3·167. liOUSES, docks, boats, flag. uz A&ND£1fs . ,.~ .t,Ao, Ne11port Beach "'N~Y.:m'"°o". =~~~~ P';;~.;P~=ll, ~~~m· .. n Daily Pilot Classified ..,;"'~• JAPANESE Gardener , poles, anything • everything ei,o c_,., Dr •• 8 ,..,_, ._. ..... .......... ........, ·~ .... ..._ monthly rate, Gen. cleanup. reasonably painted. For h-ee "--/NM 0-,,. C.....q ...,.., INTERVlE\\'rNG ?-tON-l"RJ No1v Jntervif'y.•ing Jo~or: for generaJ maintenance & CLASSIFIED INDEX ;, Rearonable. Frer c s 1. estimate 646-9Ta2. r1iou J'6.Jlll 2 TO 5 P~I • Kitchen Helpers cl1>anup. Apply 168 31 ~ &12-2'2'.'.9 METICULOUS PAINT.1::::::::: O\•rr 17 ;yea.N; e CU rb liostesses ~~~~u~~l3~~· Fountain HOUSES FOR SALE ·RENTALS t A1tl'lNT11t 1N• ;£. AL'S Landsrapin:. Tree BLUE CHIP SfAl\tPS. INS. e BUSBOYS e Counler Girls 01N••A1. 1"' Apts. fur.,ished i:~:N~-~=~c~...,. -~ 1~n1ovK.l. Yard remodeling. crew col. stuclents, Int-ext e DISHWASHERS EXP ER. NOT NECESS. PROl'UCTION \\'Orktr -to.TA MllA n• ••Nl•A'-.... CONTllAtTOlll • T h h I. I I b1"L•t• mat ,,.,·--11· " I I COSTA Ml'" .,. -·· t'l ~......... -l'llS au 1ng ot c eanup. houses. Exp. Doc'-. 6~5812 a I 1es Complelc on-the-JO' b training e -...... ,...., 10 !I 9 Mllll Dl!L MAit lllS ~ ' ~ •~ 2 d h · Mii_. lflllDI "lf CllltPIT LAYIN& a Ill,, ftl'pair sprnklers. 673-1166. r•nli"mi'te::!li.. COSMETIC !ALES "·/full pay, free medical & & n s itt. Liberal fringe MllA Vlllo• 1111 HIW,OllT •••c.. '* "'""" .. KtL~ ~ No \Vasting '--4 u h . ,. . h .. , . . beneli1 s, apply A.lif. only. COLl.IGI f'llllk llll NIWl'OllT Hl!IGHTt •UI OEMOLITIO,. ... "- LA\VN & Garden Carl!, * WALLPAPER * osp1ta izatlon, ·ee c 1ns., HIWf'DllT ''""" 1,"',,, HIWf'OllT IHt'IAli ott ,, ... .,,1,.0 ,11..,rca tjllf beaullDcalion, \\'CCdill!.! & ageflC'\/ Par1 lifl1!' nighol & Su11. Cali n1eals, paid Va<'ation. 5 Dav Diceon Electronics, 18522 HIW,.OllT MllOMTI WllTCLl'f' 4131 OllYWALl. ~ ~- y \Vhen you call "~lac.. IJ "V v K I . •ALIOA COVEt "" ~ cleanup by colll'ge students. !or appt, ;>lo..5050 Ext. 56. 11 ork \\'eek. Day & eve. on arman, rv1nt'. NIWPDllT tltOlll UHl'llllllT'I' PAIK l'tfl ,..,1;1,.uu\.Al ,.. r: ;,.is..1444 64s.1n1 TRISH HOPKINS ., 11,. •AC• 1.1.v ,, .. 1ou1'M'-NT ll•NT•L• .J· · Reas. 543-7363. Calina Bros, JOSEPH MAGNIN .shifrs. Apply in person. 2-4 C11rMr In Real E1tat• ::;~:!:u ittJ l!.UT ILUI'' co ,.l!HCINt · 'It' GARDENL~G SERVICE PHONE The rest - then 488 E. J1th. Suilo 224 C.M. Equal opportunity en1ploycr PP.I or i·9 Pi\'1 , A&\V Restau. Openings for young nten will. DOVlll IMOltll im COllONA OIL MAI aJt 'UIO!ll • phone the best: Jordan I:. WllTCl.I '"' IALIOll .... -'U ltNACI .......... lie.~,.,. Experienced Japanese So p . . I d 642-1470 COUNTER Girl for dri\'e-in r"<l/lt, 2835 1-larbor Blvd .. C~I. in11. lo \\-'Ork and Y.'anting 10 HA.SOil ",',.Ml.AND> llJI •A'I' llUINDt fJ:M l'UANllUlll! lll!STDllNS ~o n......, n ainting. L c e n 1 e , k · · 1 l lOOO IJH t.100 11t.1 elfl I ftl'UlllSNllllG .,. • ....u-bonded. insured. 968-9126. cleaners, Full time, 11-7, j Insurance -ma e a m1n1mum o UNtYlllltTT ,.11111: "" •ALIO~ !SU.ND •m G.U09:NING --':xp J'-ne•• G--•ener day& \\'k. l\tr. Best Cleaner.i, p-,,1,.. mult•'pal II... per month. NEED NOT BE ~",.~1:•, .. Y Ital ijUMTINOTON 11AC" ... ••NlllAL 11avl(;1<1 ... • .... ,,.. <UU • * PAPERHANGER * APPLICANTS •Yf .. ~ .... LICENSED I t s ... IHI f'OUHTAIN VAl.U'I' .... QllAOIN .. DISCIN& Gen. cleanup, Hauling trees. wrner of Iris & Coast H~'Y. insurance rompany in o •PP Y· peel ::•TtLUl'I" 1m SIAL •E•CH .._ •tJ.ss --f\laint. yard 646-06!9 Re(.'<lgflized Authorily Cd~!. llur>l.ington Beach, srcks program available for the lllvr:i: T•ltllACt nw LON• 11ACH •• GllllM TMUMt Prior Insll'llctor 646-2449 SERVICE CENTER DEL 1 VE RY'. IAN-Youog, Clai·m Cl'''· E•. ~.·. p-l'd. lice-nscd. Excell r nt training cotOM• Dl!L MAil ::= 0•11No• couMTV '* •ufll swo, -.. • ..... JAPANESE Ga rd en j n g E I A -·' .~,... '" ' TUii. L K •••DIN OllOVI 4'11 HIALTH CLUIJ Service. Neat \\'ork. Clee':lup FOR Fast Co'urteous Serv~. mp ayment si•ncy nea t appearing for job v:Uh Xlnt bcne.tits & con1))1!tllivr program, ran earn while IAL:o! ::~,,.iUU.""" "·U: wllTM'NSTBll .. ,, HAULIMG 20 yrs Bay exper. Call Bob, * * * gro\\'il•" corn. l\lust have salary. Call per 1 o n ne I yuu lelµ'n, CaJJ 540-8944 and •••CON IAY 1m MIOW•Y Cit'!' 4'1' HOUllCL•,..NtNO• yd. main!. 968-2"..03. ,,_,,, ,,, • ., Skilled Counoelinn ~ .. 54" ~"2 ask for lhe J\Ia.nager LINDA ISLI , .. IANT• ANA .. ,. INTBltlOll. OICOll,lTIN• ""~"" • good driving recon:I. Apply U-itflJ • ••Y ISLANDS '"' lllNTA ANA NllOl!rs 4'!1 •NCDMI TllJI . Complete yard Car•l YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT Clerical 2221 Fairview, C.i\t. UNIGARD IN s u RA N c E ~:--:::--;-:::---1.ICIO ISi.i IUI TUSTIN ..... lllOt&. ~"' tlr. SlO Per Average Room ra es11on11 DENTAL Assistant. E:xperi-. • HUNT1M•To1t llACH u• u.auNA ••ACM .,.., IN,t.LATINt "$ JI~ 5ID-48.J7 p 1 · 1 GROUP ~___.,;W~•ILir ,.L••• ••1.1o.r. 1SLAMD nu co111T•1.. .,.. 11lON11to 1 Gardening: Land cleanups, Free Es1. 557-8638 Pl•cement1 ent.'W Chairsidr. Contact Equal Opportun11y e.mplo~·rr. .. MUN,INOTOM M.1.11.1ou11. ',"',,, L,!~~/:,';. N~?.°J~L :: ::~~~~rGc:,1N .. otfft'l\'lt . iprnklr sys, rolo-cem&nt PROFESSIONAL. JO 1 r 1 Bo)( p.f 1071, Daily Pilot. JANITORIAL, part time, 1 ~1 ;:~l'T1~:c:"UllY 1._ IAll CLI MEM• F •n• JAMITDlllAL '"'...; ll'Otk. c .o . Yancey, 6'9G--_._ . • . }lrlcn Scitalf!'r 644-~981 hni/night or e.arly •m. IUHllT IUClt ,..,, S.t,N JUllH Cll,.1$Tl.INO ~"' JEWELll'I' '"''"'Ill. lie. " exp. pape111angin:: . pain-* DISHWASHER • Fu ti ••••• , •••"• '''' CAPllT•ANO IUCH 4/H U.NnlCAf'ING •• ~ R-TtLLING I ti fro Engl -• ~'1"1 500 Ne1"""rt Ccntl'r Dr. NB JileRI lor studcnL ~ REAL ESTATE OPEN· ' V I v-• nc\V awns ng, m auu. """'" .... ....... tin1e . .Apply 9 to 10 A:\I only. . . 'II' ' I.OH• IE•tH .,. DANA l'OINT .,. LOCl(IMITH trees & shrub!! removed. I F°rl!t' & Fee Positions ) Kentucky Fried Chu: ken JNG Jo'OR Q U AL 1 F 1 E o t.AKIWOOD llJe TlltPLIX. 9'<. .,.. MAtD llltlflCE ...... -······ R .. ,,. ,._, •<J, "-•O ""24. R & L painting interior -1 .............................. 1 Alley \\'est, 2106 \V. 693 S. Coast Hy,"' La" &h SALESJ>JAN E xc . I I• n t OlllNOI COUNTY '"· CONDOMINIUM .. ~ MASON IT, •11•(1<. ., .. ~ .. •c ""~ "'0-"" eicterior. \Ve art' rea!IOnablf'. Occanfron'. N.B. ----~~·,_·-~·--. . • ... OUT 0, COUNtT UH MOTii.i ................... ~. *" MOVLMO & ITOJrAGI .,• Cut & Edge Lawn &la-~. 548-0823. A-l TELEPHONE Soliciting ..::::;::;:;.::;:;~~,,----Janitor ne.f!<lcd • Edward!! comn1u;s1on schedule plWI OUT Of' STAT• , ... Re NT A.LS JIAINTtNO. '•••rft.Mltlll• 'I -t~uu tim!', no l'X""r. ntt. " DR I v ER-c I a Ii ll one bo be f'ts A k ITANTOM ltll A u f • h P•IMTING, .... -:;. f'.1aintcnance, Lic'd, lnSUTCd INT. • Ext. Pao·ou··g ..... ,1 ··~ Cinema theater, Harbor It many nusd !le 1 -s w11TMINST'l!I 111, Dfl. n urn11 ed ',',',~,.•,,,,,, .-, ... ft.J8...4808 aft <'I. " .1.u1..: I mm f' diate cmploynlenl lieensr required •. Diesel le AdamB, C.l\f. 5-1'>9909. for fl1r. Sny er or l\1r&. Joy MIDWA., CITY 1611 OINlitAL '"' ref's, Jic'd, ins., free est. 1869 Ne\\'port Blvd. SUitl! F i;en1i exper. No olher need 6 pn•. ASSOCIATED BROKERS SllHTA AHA UH COST• MlSA 11• l"LAITIP.•llG, Jl•lcll, ••I!." CLEAN UP SPECIALIST Call Chuck, &l.>-0800. Cosla 'p,fesa 548-5,;()J . apply. ~t46-7172. S"RVJCE, -·, \V, Bst~a '•"'••'•'••",.., HOTt. ,,,. MISll v1ao1 Slit PLUMllNOOMO • :t• • .:::O"-:..::.::..cc.:::...~-~-r-J w ROBI so "' ~£ ..... t•H Hl!Wl"OllT '"'cH 1~• 111T ... IN• Ne1v fence & repair. OOd COLLEGE Studeo•·. ' -DRIVERS * · · N N Bl•d., N.B. or call 67~ """'~·. r•n1M l"OOL tE11v1cE I ~ J•P BABYSITTER Over 21, 11,:f' * J'""""W it•• NIW,OllT Nl'IGllT' Ull l"GWlll sw•lf'llll• job.~. Reas. 54~9,j;) f':x-r. No drinking. Bill or . r OU! t•r I • • Nl:\\'PORT BEACH • e\•es 642-22.iJ MOllTM TUST11r1 1'41 NIWPOllT IHDll.1:1 Int PUMP Slilllfl(O . ,.... in o · "an N E • ANAN•IM 1'Je WISTCLlf<I' • Jt Steve, ;,4,8-4549. preschooler. 5 days I \l'k. 0 xper1ence RESTAURANT ~rk 10:30 • llL'llillAOO ,.,IOI.,~ IUJ ' UNIVlllJITT PAltlt 1i11 :::::N~~ln. lk. ' *PAPERHANGING ?.1',' •• ,,,~!?1 •. t~·"·-~1;; Necessary!. .-__ '_"E~~1E1 ~~nCEgDlor 2:30. ~or~ days a \l.'f'ck. ~:~~ it'L"~ ::: ~=l~N:,.T ~:••MO. •0'•,•,•,•,•, •.~;:,:-i~~:;_ LA\'i'N & Yard Service Exper, Neal, Rea.'!Onabl<" ~ ~-.-s.is:.~ ~ 1~-=~=-=,--- L.. PAINTING,-*-968.2425 lJ ~..! .,., .. ,. -" -Id a.I ror-h· . ''" U.OUNA ~flllCM 111111 EAST ILUl'IO JHt ~..!. . .!... . .. .. --=-.;,, $30/1\'k. ~. "}.fust have clean California c ()'Use, ... I LAGUNA NIOUl!L -Otl ""COllOHl~ll-i.\AJr -u.-"iiw.NO • General Services 6612 Plastering, Patch, BABYSITTER In my home. Alter Repair 6UO Lite H.'!Ckpng. Call r----------· 1·--"'---------1 5 pn1. 673-4260. * PATCH PLASTERING APT CLEANING -Painting -Rug Shampooing & Lile R epairs. REl\fARC SERVICES. 847-Qi88. Ed's Cleaning Service All typ{'&. Free estimates BABYSITTER, 4 hrs, :l-J das/ CaJI 540-68'.!j wk, 2~ yr child, my ~c. <fK.9303 bef : or aft 1: JO, Plumbing Carpel!! -Upholstery -\Vin· HOM"' ftEPAIRS dOY.'!! 1'"1oor Care. 54:-H).181 BABYSITTER: F'or I !'hild, Nights &: !1(1111(' days, Own trans. 642-2420. Plumbing.electrical ST.50 Hr. Remod('ling, fence bldg., 642-?r~ or 642-0506 BABYS11TER for 1 ~mall child. Light housekeeping, daytime. only. Nr Baker k Mendoza. ~5214 painting &. gen'l repain. PLUl\ffiJNG REPAIR Reas. Xlnt. ref's. 642·5411. No job too small NEED HELP? Look us up at e 642-3128 e Newport Services! 642-LZ24 I ---24-=H~R.:.::P~L=U~!'.1~8~,~N-G- tfay or e\'e. BABYSITTER For :; & J yr old, Mon.-Fri. Bayvif'W Sehl atta, S.A. Hts alt tipm 5-l:>-1200. & REl\10DELLlNG ~1-964~ Haulin9 6730 Bankini::; Remodeling I. * COMMERCIAL Repair 6940 TELLER -==---_:.;..:.; -~---------T.N.T. Se r vice. Garage rlean·ups, haulins GEN'L remodeling &. main!. };xp'd. Apply in lk'l':«ln k l i~ht moving. S18-j863, No job too 11 ma1 1. Newport National J:ll-3129 Lic'd/insured. 67:>-8183. Bank YA RD I Ga r , CI ca.nup. I=========::':-. Superior &. Placentia. N.R. Remo\'c lrees. Ivy, trash. ~~wing_'------'-'-'° ·* BEAUTY Grade. backhoe, 962-8745 --T S I can help you i\eep youi· OPERA OR * HAULING $10 A LOAD wardrobe sharp & up to 1~11.ir stylist Y.1lh clil'ntelc Clean up. Tree Serv. Gen. 6:)1/o comm. pd. vat'. or Pnininz 646-252.8, ;yi~3 1ta1e, Former designer OOI\' 1 Al 1oca1ed Jn this beatitilul booth space-or rent. llO TRASH ' Gs•·•-cl•so••p 1 room for 1 new license-no "" o~ ... ..... · eoost area. :»8·1443 Eves loll. -·d. Appl)' ,·~ """""'" days. SlO a load. Free est. • ~., " ,... •-.. · ·1• "31 Leaves. Jlair "'est. 3305 Nc .. .-Anyhml', ;> o-.AJ • I ~""~=~~~-~--~ .. OvtNG G I • QUALITY You've ah\'ays Blvd, N.B. i\1 , arage c ean-up litf' hauling. Reasonable. "'ant~. Dressmaking 753 BROASTER-Counler g i r 1 • 1-~rtt estimates. &i:>-1602. alterations. Key Say, 1 eicper in J> r ep a ring Orange Ave .. C.M. tHa-1292. iandwl!'ht'I & saJadi;. Bal HAULING &. cleanup, trees • 2 5u5 Alt•rat1ons -64 • -Beach)iBroaster 51:> E. & l!hrubs 1-enlO\·ed. Reas. N~·al , accurate, 20 year .. exp. l ~Bot:=:bo:::;;•cl~•d~.----f'ree !'slim. 548-592-1 1-;,:;:;=="""'===' I• Dressmaking-Alfe rationa v~ • BUSBOYS Hou1•cle•nin9 6735 Designed to suit you. APi)n(ations now beinc Call Jo * 646-6446 1akcn for Fall &: Wintrr HOMEOWNERS Floon 1ttipped I: waxed, Cpts cleaned, Wind0\\'5 washed !: general hOu~ • cleaning OO'l'I available by an rxpand;. Ing profcpional janHoria.I BCl'Vlc.:. 1'"15r fa.st guo.ranteed 1terVice call &12-2S57. DUTCH lllalnt. &'!rvi(.'£', eaJ·· pct cleaning, noor \\'llXing. tvlndow \\'ashing. ~-t.;;08 if no .ans call afl J. BAY I: Beach· Janitorial Carpets, windO\l.'11, :lOQrs, elc. Res & Commc 'I. Tile, C•ramic '974 * Verne, The Tile Mait * Cu!<t. "'Ork. Install &. repairs. No job ·100 sml. Pla~ter p(t\IO. Leaking 1: ho w I': r repair. 847-.1~57 /3'!6-0206 Ceramic tile in5tall«t or ft· paitro. Remodeling-my f.J>{'cialty. \\'ork g\lar. Rc11s- prittd. Free t!SI. CNI 536- 2426 Tr• Service "" .schedules. Must be 18 or over. App.ly a11er J p.m, Th• Fiv• Crowns Restaurant 380~ E . Pacific COa.st Hwy. Corona del f\1ar. No ph. calls *CASHIER/ HOSTESS* Jo"or coffee ithop, HOTEL LA· CUNA, 425 S, Coa!tt Hwy., Laguna Beach. 494-1151 , &1'-14til. BOB'S TREE SURGERY -CARRIER BOYS WANTED for the \VTNOO\VS & waJla wuhed'. Is back ciHering the u.me Firs, stripped, scaled & Fine Qaulity Tree Service. DAILY PILOT wa.xed. FTee est. 897-78.34 * S40-3198 • day "' night. s1J..JOOO. ~Jo=Bs~&~E"M°"P"L°'O~Y~M~i!r.N~T Dana Point, San Juan JOE'S CLEAN SERV. \\'11 do Everylhing-Res I<. Comm. f'f"t'll Eflt, 642..7551. A1tu Clcaninz Servltt Carpets, windO\\"J, floors, e-tc. Res ' Commc'I. $iMl11 f'OR Any Of Vovr llonlP On'!'! N~I,, An y lhlnz 1111ytlmt Nc...,·port Scrvlct11, 6-12--l~i day or t \'f' Job Wtnted, Women 7020 Capistrano and Caplatrano Beach. Cont11.ct J\lr. Seay 11t DAILY PILOT San Ocmcnte oflli:e nJU. Cha.f1!! Bookkttper 3o:.:i N. El Camino ReAJ Experienced. Rc.fl!IVICl!!I. 492M20 ===~"""°"-"°'-~~-[ CHll.D cttt-<OOk·lf h!lkpna. 2 WO~t'EN .,, .. nt day\\'Orll, No 9;3CMl:::O, 4-3 dya:, pntf 11.·1:1111 or \\'indowa. O•ft m111nno ~m•n, M&-M33 lrll.n:>Jfl. ~2-8007 htwn 8 .l 10 am driving rcoord, Appl,v COSMETIC SALES y.•/children. No r xpericncl! MllllON v1eJo' ,,. ••Lao• J'" I:' nece~sary llunt Bch arcll. ,,.,,. C"I fi"AFllTI!' 1111 IAY ISUIMDt 1:151 llWIH• MllCHtNI • A "YELLOW CAB co. 96" -·3 . IAN JUAN CAl"lSTllAHO 11U LIOO llLI SUI S•PllC TMltS. kw.t. II~ 186 E, 16th S1. Apply in -rson 10.J pm .... ,,..... CllJllSTltllNO llACH '"" HUl'ITINOTO" •••t H S4M TAILOlltNG ~ ST UR NT N k' o•N• '01NT ,, .. l'OUN,AIH VALLI'!' 1411 rlll.Ml'B CONT•OL Costa Mesa f\lm.11~ •• lhru Jo~rida., RE A A -O\\' la ing oc111N110• llA , •• ,0, ,,.,,0 .. ,, Tile, CW•ll'lfr ~ ' I' tio J f JI I" ,,.. '" '• TILi; Lll• .. •~"' • M•r'.le ' al Personnel Dept. APP 1ca ns or u 1me IAM OllGO ins ••Al. •EACN ~I Tlll• llltVICI EXPl:.""R'D., l\lature. fem· e DISHWASHERS. No one IUV•llllDI COUNTY , ... LON• llACH »• f to assist front medical Of· • 2 1-~ashion Jsland, N.B. MOUlll TD •• MOVID .... OllllHG• COUNT., SIM tlllllfll10H, lltNk.. tc. ... ... EquaJ opportunity •mp!O"t':r under 18 net':d • pp I y. COfllOOMIMIUM '"' GllllD•N OllOVI 1411 UPHOl.IH.•Y ~;.; fitt. Ph: _...,1, -' COLONY KITCHEN, 3211 DU,.LIXIS '01 IALlf lt1S WtlTMlNITI!• u.:', :~.:-::· CLl:ANINe ·;;.:;.· '.;, File Cferk·Claim• l\IAIDS, Immediate opening, }fubor Blvd. C.l\f. A'A•TMINTI ,Oil IAL• "" MIDW•'f CfTY to $361.33 Top wage11. !\teals provided, Rrslaurent RENTAL) !!".ri: ::: MllONYS :: JOBS & e.-l"'1.0Y X" ' /gd p tty r.tui;t apply in per!IOn, TUl,IM .... JOI WANTIO. ... , .. n t oppor, w i:o. re H..,.., Furni"sh-..1 COASTAi. 1111 Joa wANTEO. w...nM • i, ollicf!!', friendly atmosphere, Sam-Jpm, Jamaica In" COCO'S ,... u.ouNa 1111cH 11-s »• w.t.11T10, .. lop benefits. Some-lite 1YJ>-1 ~H~·~·~''~·~Cd='-.. ~--~~ GINlllllL u.eUHA NIGUEL "" MIN a WOMIN --~ Fa ho Isla d "" MIUIGN \lllJO J7M SCHOOLS a INJTltUCTIOtt .r in~. Call Miss Betty, 557-6122, MAN To assist mgr or local S ion n lll!NTAU JG •HAii *5 '""' CLIMENT• n11 Jo1 11•1f'•UT10H -COSTA MISll t!M T c• Abigail Abbot Prrsonnel appLiance atore. Neat ap-Mllil DEL.MAI. tlH !AN JUAN c•PIST•ANO SJH THIA Ill l. Agency. 230 \V, \Varner, pearance. 496-2383 Mr. * lNTERVIB\VIN<; • MllA Vl!llDli 1111 ~'l'~!T::~NoT llACH ::: MERCHANDISEr~F0*1 .. Suire 211, Sanla Ana. Wright 9-10 1.1n only, ====~":::1~,. !:. REAL ESTATE , l'U~N~~~. AND T •. ' * FRY COOK-Part time MEN •nd WOMEN BUSBOYS MIWl'DllT tNOllll mt GeneTll OFl'IC• 11ut11>1rtu111 1 .. DISH\VASHER-Part linlf' lll'ftHOlll!S ,,,.I Tllll"LIX. lie. • ... Ol'l'IC• IDUll"MENT .. L \.A RE • s DISHWASHERS OOVt:ll lt'Ollll 1111 COHl>OMIMIUM ,,,. $TO•• liOUl,MINT COCKTAI I T :» • PART TIME Wl!STCt.11'1' t »t .... , .... WllNTflfl ,,.. CAl'I, llllTllUl..,.T Part lime Ask for '\'ayllt'. uN1ve11t1T'I' "'AIK "" 11100M1 'Oil 11N1 "9S 1A111 l!ou1ioMEHT Rane™> San Joaquin FULL TIME APPLY JN PERSON 11v1N1 ml 11.00M & •0A110 .ftH ,"',",','c"o°',o,1,o«ot1I _ J .. lllCI( IAY 1Jll MOTll.I, TlllAILlilt COUllTI .lffJ -Goll Course •111 Jo"ashlon lsl11nd, N.R. 1"'1' ll.Ul'I' n•1 GUl!IT MDMl!S IHI ,UlllNITUlll' AUCT ION !. . 18071 CulVf'r Road REXAIR INC. 11 T•re nw MISC. lllNTALs 1ttt Al"l't.1111r1c11 lll\11111 TllllllACI no INCDMI! PllOl"lllTV "" .lllf1GUI$ Nl'\\'J)Orl Scach COllONA OIL MAil 11'1 IUSIHISS l'llOl"l!lllT'f ... SEWING MACHtNll "" Irvine Branch ANAHEIM DIV. REUBEN·'S ••t•o• Tlltf Tll•ILlllt PAJtl(S HH MUSICAL IH5TlllUMINT IE! Nrar UCI 8::3-0112 lll'l'"ISLAllDI mt IUSINllSt ltl!NT•L HM PIANOS a DllGANI II Costa Mesa 1.100 ,,... ,,,, o .. 111c1 llliHTAL •11• 11aD10 FULL or PART Tl:\1E Nov.• Hil'ing IALtDll ISL•.NO 13" INOUITlllllL PltOl"l!.T'I' ... I T•&.•VISIONI i Evening \\'Ork 6:30 to 10 P1\<I MUNTIH•TON IEACM ltH COMMEllCIAL .... , 141·1'1 a ITl!llllO Earn up to $5. per hr NEIV BRANCI' l'OUNTAIM VALi.iT ,.,. 1NouST1tlAL llll!NTAt. •"I fAf'I 11icoao111' , . Jo"'ULLER BRUSH J4&..j14:l , Now inlcrvirWllll( ll!Al. •EACH list LOTS ••• CllMlillAI • t!OUll'MINT F..>CPANOING TO LOM8 ll!ACH Uff •AMC"E$ •IN Hoaa., IUIOl'l.111 e GENERAL ORANGE COUNTY LUNCH o•ANOI cou11rr u• c1T11.u1 Gllov1s "" Sl'01tT1No 00001 MAINTENANCE HOSTESSES =~!..!~~•• nit ~:·:~11Ho1t• :: ~11':c~~t::~·o~i0"·1' :: l\1AN. full !imc. Jack . of . TOP STARTING PAY MIOWAY <tTT ::i! •EtOll.T l'flOl'l!llTY •• MISC. WAMTID •ff all · rrtidcs. \Vf' need 22 men and \\'01Mn LUNCH cOA1rA1. 11• ouT OI" STATI 1"11.0JI. nM i..uMal!ll :.-. + SANTA AH" HllOKTS t•ll OllllNOI CD. f'llOPElllTT •lfl MACKINllllt, IH. ~ Weatminster with &II types ol work back-WAITRESSES t::~:: :~:~;L !: ~:::-i~;r0: ~=~~IT :J: ~~~~:~~ MATl•••U :.., Community Hasp. grounds. No experience nee. MtSllOM v11JO VIII 11.1AL 1ST,tTI!. sE.1v1t1 ,,,, sw•101 -. Apply Pcr&0nnel I:H>pt. ctW.ry, 1s l.'Ompany tra.lnin~ AGES ti TO ::n '""' Cl.IMINTE !!!! •,,·•1·.'.','0",','0" ,'..,"' PETS and LIVEST~· ' 1m:: Brach Blvd., 11.B. or I• furnished. If you quaUfu, ,,,. JUAH CAPIJTJrllMO .. u ' ••• , • Call 847-7807 rapid advancement to ~y APPLY ONLY TN Pt:RSON i!:~T::::i~ 1111'" ;;: BUSINES) •nd ::T:· •111 ,• 3 TO 5 P.!\t. lllVlllSIOI COUNTY ... FINANCIAL DOOi -GIH.L FRIDAY, Part t1mr. po~illon. Must be over 1.8. VAC,tTION ltllMTALI lfll IUSIN•t• WANTIO ,,., MOISES UM 11ecded immediat('!y, lor 1'~0R INTERANVTE\V CNADLLY w;i,·, \V. Adam11 ~:~~~~·u~llH. :; INVllTM•NT °'""""'""' "'' LIVISTOClt'R IA L -..... r lcctronics sales orfiL'f' in SATURDAY D ?-.10 A (($ta M!$a 1u111t111 o,.,.OllTUH•Tms '* CALIFO N I\:~ n. h p .. 77• -•J INVll,MllN1 WllNTID ISIS NUlllllltll •:er Ney,·po11 i><:ac . 0!!11ton .,.,u •RN OR •LVN RE MONl'I' TO l.OfH .,,. I . ., NTALS f'ElllONAL t.OAHI 1U11 1w1MMIN• roou -~ requ re• sccrctari r.xper. MECHANICAL Rellf'f mainly \\'ttkP.nd1, 11-'"T'°' ' • &: Rl'iorthand or s PP I'd , H U f JIWILl'f I.DANI ,,. AWMINGI :• E~ricnccd with hand I: 7:30 AM ~hift. Ph: 646-1624. ovan " urni1hecf COLl.ATlllAL LOANS t#t ....... T~NI ', ... 11'riling a musl. Ca 11 .,,... llEAL •STATI t.o•Mt u. ·-"' :>10-3105 for f ur 1 he r P.''-'et tools, Capable or RN far Dr'1 Office ••MIU.I. *' MCH1TG1.01s, """" Delft '''' TRANSPORTATl()f\ lnlonnation. aceurale WOl'k. S1~1177 Top taial')• 64fi..3903 ~~:...·:.ts.MA• ri: MC*IY WAJllTlfl ... tDAT1 • TA CNTS .. * HAIR STYLIST* ?ilUST BE TOP CALfBER, F'OR BEST CLlENTELE TOPA.TRON, INC. SALESMEN MIU. VllllDI lllt ANNOUNCEMENTS ~==A~~Ulll•• ::: ritODEL Type Girls :or ~4:'-w"~~ ~".i:11 nu incl NOTICES s'••D-1•• aDATS ... hospilaJity ~rvict. Xln't • UllCd Cara NIWl'DllT MOTi. ~: ",',•,,No ''"' 11"1 ... ..,, •,•,~i z:'.,Ai\~':fANCI ":'. • E ' d 0 I 1 MllWl"OllT SMOlllS Jnt pay. S.1.R. 33;;.,350]. )l'.pC't'iCl'IC!C n y IA'ttHO•.as' U)j f'lllSOHllLI uu •OAT LAUHCHINO ~ 00¥111• IMOOll ANNDUNCIMIMTI '41t W.tt"tNI IOUlf', W OUTSTANDING cor.1r..11s. I -'='----~- SfONS. BEAU111'1JL SALON, "i:llGGI" 335:i \'TA LIDO Nl.""\VPORT BEAOI. I • 673-6890 • HARD"'l!.RE Srore Stock J\(an. JtW. Wright C:O. 126 Rochester, c.r.t. e HOST OR HOSTE$~ Pan time. PrtJer y,•lth know. ledge of re1ta\l~lll bus1ne~. but not nee, Apply in per. ~n 9 am·ll sm or 4:30 pm· 6;30 pm, Ask tor Woody. MORNING BREAKFAST COOK • BUSBOY OVER 11 APPLY IN PERSON l TO S Pf.1 ONLY REUIEN'S COCO'S WOODY'S WHARF l~ \V. ADAl\lS 1'U8 W. NeY.-port Blvd., N.8. COSTA ?.tESA * • llOSfESS. 5 nights a .,,.k e MOTEi.. MAID • !or C:OnlinentaJ Dining R..\f . Reliable, 1te1.dy ¥.'Orl«'r C11JI for Kr. Sf.tli11, l!lCI. 383 ... ~r:ii7• .. ~rwn. 6:~11 eve. 536-1421. "1r~s~-WON=~o=ERFUL=~-,-,-., NEED lrELP? Look tot U many bu>'• fn 1ppllance1 in Pilot Clwlt\c!d. you flnd In the Classlfiflt Phone &124)78 Ada, CMck Uit.m now! -.. ,,,,_,_. ..,.,-~--. WllTCLl,ll JUI 1111,MS '411 IOAT St.IP, MOOlllN• ··1 '11o4 C..-. ,~ UNl\lllSITY PA•K ~: l'UNlllAl.I M\1 90.IT llllVICll . _, 2100 JJe.!'bor l'Jlv'd .• ~66 .. 1110 O•ITUAllY t411 ~"Al llliH1l~S ...... ~ .. ~·:-.AY = l'UNlllllt. Dlll!CTOllS t.fl• .OAT CMA .. TEll , t •tT •LUFI' JIO l'LO•ll'l'S ... ,. l'llHINO IO•TS ..... See Betty Bruce al •• T•"' 12-44 CllllO °' TMA .. 111 "" IOAT MOVING i'1'9 Gxec lllVIHI Tllllll.ACI nu IN MIMOlllAM "'' •DAT ITDIV>GI ...... COll041111 OIL MAI mt CIM•TIAl LOTt t-111 tO.-.TI WllllTID ~ lllLMIA CIMl"Tll., CITl'n Mlt llntC•Al'T 'It, IAT llUMDI r.• Ctt•MATOllllS «M Jll,VINO l.lllOMI "tt LIH '5l.I JlH Mt:MO•IA L JlllllKS 60\ lij\(l•ILI MC'l'-IF"S Aiency for catte.r Girls IAL•OA 111.fHO 1:: AVCT!Olllt ... MOTD• MOMll 410 w Cou H NIWl'GIT WllT 'nn AVIATION lllVICI .':". :LC1Yc\i..~~ CAlll • I wy . N.B. l""'TIH"TOM l l!ACH ,... TllAVll. MIMI antll -··· By appoint. 646-393!1 "UNTIH•TOM MA•90"• ,,.. 1111 TllAHtPo•t•troN ""' WllOflCTCLI$ •tll!'I Vlll.l.lT 141• AUTO TllANl"OllT£T!Olf 614 ... J M'JTOll,COOTll!l"I "'6 Sl.lt llACM S4M LllOAL NOTICl.I AUTO lllVICll 1 l'AftH...~. S3.le11 EARN MONEY Good IAIHM •llev• -TUTOllJfllG '"' . ~ \\.iJrklll!I:" condilions, flexible LOH• ••ACK UM SF.RVICE DIRECTORY ta"'l.~.~~~11~1\0"1'· "' h"" car nee. Comm + OllMtl COUN" .... ACCO•MTIN• .... r111.11.1•s. """'' .... ,.., UNT.l AHA )IM AMSWlllJM llllftCll 6MI Tt:UC•I bonu11. 5-1:>1851, r>4:M445 #llTMIWITll '"' """Ll•Htl lllllAllll'-"""' .~ .. JllJll AIOWAt CIT'I ,_,.. A .... llAlllMf ... CAMf'lll.S SA.LES w/Sllm • Gym. you SllMTI """ N•l•KTS .... lllPKAL' Ollt UH CMll'I• ••MTAU C8.ll t8tn what y 0 u • r. '°""''"' "" t\JICMITICTUll.11. Sllt\llCI 6QJ IKIN• 111118111 o' •-h•. ~-u M·~, -·Good. Jio11t11" •••<111 .,. •1110 "''"•1•' .... 1Mf'01l110 •uto• ,,.., ._ _,, ....,,. LACMIHA lllG\111 Pit Av'JO. Mel ..... T .... lite. 4UI P'Ollt Uflf 96$.2416 Of SU-8J29 MllSIOfil VII.JO 1111 ,.._.fJITttMO .aM AffTIOU•S, CUSllCI " .... ¥IN Cl IMl't11Tll 1'11 &OAT MAIMTl .. MCI .W I.AC• CUL IOOS PL.ANNING to mow1 You'll 1111t JUllM CAf'llT••NO ms tlltcK. MAIOff•"· ttc. u. aUTa ev1Nn f\nd M •ma'dng nu-bl!-r or -· l.'illl,,1'10 ••A'" '"' IUllNlll lllt\IKll t.M1 llUTOI WANT•• .• , 111iet. J"OINT .Ill• IVllDlltl .Sit MIW CAllll homt11 In lod11y'1 Cluslfil!O ;o"DOMIMIUM ,.,. CATllllH• ........ _ ...... -HIJ A.UT• LI.All .. Adi. Check them now. 1UP1.11t11 u11111u•11. "" c11•1N•lMAl.1Ne' ..,.. usl!o <••• .:.:::::.=c.::::::;.;:::::. ___________ _;____ .. •• " "• I "" ... T' ••• f,ida1, Stptember 4, 1970 OA.llY PILOT & EMPLO PLO T MERCHANDIS E FDR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR Mon. Wom. 7100 Schools·lnstruction 7600 SAL E AND TRADE ,.so.A_L_E_A_N_.,o.D_T..;R.,.A ... D..;E __ ,SALE A~ltADI SEc:ftETARY For v.'f'stern -,--------- div. mc.rchandislng n1anager CEmtAN L&nguaa~ lnm'Uc· •'ho iin't alrald of rt1ponsi· t!'>n t'VCI')' Sat. 9 Af.f.12 Pl\l. bilhy, l.ocated in Irvine 1'or children 4·14. Gcl'm1tn ParkJn Santa Ana nev.r th"' ~hi Ne"'!'°rt llarbor. 1\or alrport. Expqh!~ in the info call 6444433. Furn iture 8000 G•r•1• Sale I022 Antfque1 1110 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS retail purchaaina: area would C-150-$8.j(I, 1 7 2-s 1 3 . 5 0. W'he:.lptul, 182-W.50. Boru-$22.00, y.•e1,, t::'tcl!(' -Oiusy -Havoc - Call Mr. King Jrn;t-$6. No Docs, 892--2286. Appear -PEEVES 1 "==~t7~.1;41:,.=5'&-;;,'r.M-O:.:.;~--IPlANO Lessons in your Presen1 ten St' of a marrlt!:d SERVICE STATION honie. Experit'net'd ccucher. ooup!t': "They get along like u • ">-·~• ··'t S P'! t\lo•O PEEVES in a pod," -'""'NAGER -,-=~=~=-=~="=·=="=·=='I 1• TRANSFERRED-Se 11 i n g SAN CLEMENTE Job P r•pari1 tion 7800 lloosehold Goods: Dining table 48" e~lending to 84" "'/4 side & 2 ann cha..i.n. 8' sofa , -Ollvf! green; d b I lou~r, fake fur, rocker, chairs, occ. tbls. lamps, water skiis, inisc items. Priv pty. 3953 Mistral Hunt. i-lrbr. &16--9151.. Xlnt salary. Da,y11. No pre\·· ious experience req'd but it \\'OUld be helpful. We train, Older men OT\. No lube er ~ ttpair. ?.tust be neat and OVER SEAS JOBS depencllble. P~id .benefits. : H I PAY- \Vl'itt tor a.p~J1Ce~on, Box TAX BENEF ITS Pi.f.1083 The Dally Pilot N.B. l••lii;;;;;"'""""""" .... ;ii;I \Vr n1ay be ablt: to help you! SECURITY FREE INFORMATION 3-Pc sect. sofa $75, coflee lhl Sl:), occas. chair S5, tbl lamps S5. reclining chair S25, child's twin size bed, comp! $20. 96&-183". GUARD 213/277-8730 SERVICE Sta Attendant 3 to 12 P~t. I.Deal exp. Mature. Top pay. SHEU. STATION l9'ti & Placentia, C./.l. •WAITRESS • • I-:irpc-riel\l:Cd e }'ull TimP • Permanent Appl~ in person onl~· THE RIGGER No. 16 r·ashion Isla11d Ne11i<p0rt Beach \VO ?t1 EN wa nl ed for teiephorw reet'ptionisl & ( 0 n I ~ (' I \\/Ork. No f'XP. necessary. Short hrs. Good ,vages. Apply 9 • 4, 1n W. 19th, Suite H. CM WOMAN For full time clerk. Apply in person. No phone calls. * \'lKlNGS l''OU R • 56 Fashion Island, N.B. "'ORK WHILE CHU.OREN ARE JN SCHOOL • Woman wanted for t.-oun1er sales in air c·onditiOrtt>d. tarJ)l'led, Dry Cleaning Agency in La· runa l"igue.I. \Vill train for cOUnler ~ales, Quality alter· ation r .\'peri1'nCe rlt'cessar)'· Paid holiday!! & benefits. Jlours clln be arranged. Call R8,ym11r Cleaners 496-2640. YOUNG \Vomen. counter g\rl11, F-0untain Valley Res1., 1~2. :.1on/f'r\, Apply in pert0n. 17217 Brookhur:1t. • F .V. btY.'TI 9 & 11 a:rn . -Schools-ln1tructJon 7600 -EARNtfEARN- Complelcly n f! w f>·amlly Achievement Prosmun. Finl time SOutht!rn Cal, Excel· knl managtment qpporlun. tty • 0 1.rtributorships Avail. able. Far lnformaOon Con- tact :P.lr, Kirkendall, Room 402, Holiday Jnn, Ontnge. 633-5937 Thur!J. t.hru Sund&Y ol'll)'. * * LABOR DAY SPECIAL SALE * * W• ar• a sales outlet fo r the nation's larg- est furniture rent al corp. 3 Room s of furniture, compl. Was $600 ..................... NOW $189 1 mod. grn/gold velvet sofa . \Vas $189 ............. . NOW S 59 1 1nod . rust/gold velvet sofa. Was $189 .................... NOW $ 59 1 mod, grn velvet hi back sofa . Was $297 . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . NOW $ 79 1 Span. gold floral love seat. Was $159 ..................•. NOW $ SS 1 grn floral love seat. Was $159 NOW S 55 I blk vinyl 8' sofa. Was $300 ... NOW $ U \Ve have over 50 overstuffed chairs'. $29 & up Mattress & box springs sets. sanitized & sterilized . \Vas S69.95 . . . . . NOW $25 & up Massive Span. Bdrm set. Wa s $650 . . . . . . . . . •. NOW $239 Chest of drawers .. $25, $29, S39, $43 & $49 Other Bdrm sels ............. from ~9 up 2 metal bunk beds. Were Slo9 .. NOW s 39 Blk & \vht console TV sets . Were S269 . . . . . ..... NOW $ 69 u. 1 \\·ht 12' ReJrigerator. \Vestinghousc. \Vas $209 .... ,,,., ...... , ..•.. NOW S 90 1 grn vinvl recliner rocker. Was $179 ....... ' ........... NOW $ 69 l~eadboard s . Your choice Vi1hile thev last S4 •ach Lamps . , . . . ...... f..one over $12 eac>t Lamp shades . . . . 10c each 3 beaut. gold velvet high back chrs. Were $149 .....•........ NOW s l9 ••. Dinette sets. a new shjpment. · . , , From$29as•t up Bring this ad 1n and get sc;; discount on an y $LOO pu rchase or more. ?.1AY Co. auto y.•a;;her, 2 yrs old, Like new, S 7 ~, Delivered & guaranteed. 847-llllZi, 546-8677. G.E REFPJGERATOR. :? docirs. looks like n t w, excellC"nt condition, $.Xi or best cl.fer. 536-8296 HOTPOINT electric d1ycr Excr.ll en t c ondition Sacrifice $j(). 8.U-1948 REFRIGERATORS Sl5 • S45 • $5.l Exctlif'nt condition 646' 7820 AP T . S:i7.r Norg~ retrigrrator. S35. &12-16:.IO NORGE Auto wa~hf.or. t.'Ond S45. 317.8115, 5'16·8672 Xln! h'..EN:.IORE elec dryer Good 1'()11(! S20. t<elvinalor refrig S60. &1;,...1025 1968 DELUXE eoppertone 11tove, S75. GE re.trig, $35. Call 5-1S.9845. •G.E. AU!Onl&lic y.·asher &. dry e: r. Both for s:i0. -· AUTO DEFR REFRIG Cross·TOp Freeicor. $65 • 5404614 • Antiqu•• 1110 AUntENIC a.nliq. J91h Cenl. AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC n.,. • Night °""" u.6M6 THE USED FURNITURE FACTORY ::,';''~,:'."' ~':;:;',;,'· ~~' lllS HA RBOR BOUL EVARD, COSTA MESA 833-00'1. CJO L lflh Sl., Sa.nta Ana o, .. WMl..,, •·S:JO, lat,1r4ar• t•I, I ANTIC. C-HA IR-$20-.,. • ..,..,,...,..,.,.,..,...Jl-------•c;•;•:,.;•~·=·~·=""~'~'----..;.--J r~S.ll.i!l 1970 Singer tC>UclM>-matic, zig~zag, btaut. walnut con- 110le, makes button holes, overcasts at&InS, b I i n d hems, desigM &: etc. Guar. S44 eash or smaU pymts. 545-8238. *REPAIRS* Clean, oil &: adjust Yout machine in your Mme, Speclal $3.95, au work (Uar. anleed. 545-8238 Musical Instruments !I SALE !I 1125 Big Plano & Organ Sale going on RIGHT NOW al \VARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO 1819 Newport, C.M. 642-3484 FOR Salt': Beautiful oak upright plano 49.1-1578 or 67j...).'tJ9. solid 1225 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 ' • I Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If · You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stove 2. Ouft1r 3. Beby Crib 4. Electric Slw S. C1mera 6. Washer 7. Outbo1rd Motor a. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Cl1rinet 11. Refrlger1tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Mtichine 14. Surfboerd 15. Machine Tools 16. Dishwasher 17. Puppy 18. C1bin Cruiser 19. Goll Cut 20. Barometer 21. Stamp Collection 22. Dinette Set 23. Play P•n 24. Bowling Boll 25. Water Ski1 26. Freezer 27. Suitcete 21. Clock Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31 . Bar Stools 32. Encyclopedia 33. Vacuum Cteaner 34. Tropic1I Fish 35. Hot Rod Equ ipm't 36. File Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silver 39. ViCtorien Mirror '40. B•droom Set 4 1. Sl ide Projector 42. lawn Mower 43. Pool Ta.bl• 44. Tirtt 45. Piano 46. Fur Coat 47. Drapes '48. Linen• '49. Horse SO. Airplane 51 . Orgen 52. ~xercycle 53. Rare Books S4. Ski Boots, SS. High Chair 56. Coins 57. Electric Train SB. Kitten 59. Cla11lc Auto 60, Coflff Table 61 . Motorcycle 6_2. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Set 65. Workbench 66. Di1mond Witch 67. Ge>-Kart 68. Ironer 69. Camping Trailer 10. Antiqu• Furniture 71 . T1pe Recorder 72. Sailboat 73. Sports Cir 74. M1ttre11 Box Sp91 75. Inboard Spudboat 76. Shotgun 77. Saddl• 78. Dert G1me 79. Punching 819 80. 81by C1rri191 81. Drums 82. Rifle 83. DHk 84. SCUBA G•1r DAILY PILOT WANT-AD . ' . . be turned into cash with a :These or any other extra things around the house so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 \ ' • ·l Mli~ ' SALi -PJ1n ·-:,"1£11' uprig stool. &12-5 PiANi ""'' Plane 4'.J()-.5: SrW ! "'/be $2:i00 UPRI $13.5. $1;:i. -BA ~ \\-URI :dnt or \1· • p s1::io. • $17j Tel• 1967 : i\f a cont ~lag ~:;..; Hi·F ;\IUN' horn· in or tape. 6·16-~ Ca tT Ee •FO' yo/st Hob' ELE< If" som• 10 ga full. Bl'O\ '390 I " $3j(), SHAF 6'4", SlO. Satu GUN~ JS H \;; • c Spa!· Like BRA! tired \V/CJ. Mist Sellin dinir to g chat dbl rock Jami hein J.I Ul g4iµ, Yo I Our 1 ho1n you ice~ wha ' " C.A. -GAS Dini U\)b< mo• !5Wi\ "C! -11U~1 "·or hair- Lon• 40-h P•o nevi 831). ALL '"" 5~. - ------------~-----~ -------------------------~--· -. -----------~ --... ------· --------- MliRC:HANDISE FDR SALi AND TRADE MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE lt\ERCHANDISE FO!I SALE AND T RADE FREE TO YOU TRANSl'ORTATION Boato & Y•chh 90DO >1lda1, :Stpttinbfr 4, 1970 DAILY Pilar 3 9 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T RANlPORTAT ION TRANSPORTATION -Power CrulN rt 9020 Blcycl11 fJ2.5 Triller, Tri1vtl '425 C•m ptra .'520 Pianos ,& o"e!'...a 1130 Ml1c1lli1neou1 MOO Ml1c1ll1MOU1 l600 I;;.E;;A;:;U:;:T;:;IF;;U:;;L:--;,;::,ma:::;,,:-:,:ttu: .. :;,1---------! .i3'Ciiii1s Ctaft Cruiser Slps 1--------------- --------t bb tripod g o I o FREE 6, cmplly renewed, \ncld 2 SClfWINN Lomon-Pct!ler LtvE OR CA..'1P IN Tl-ltS VAN ... '69 F9nt. VS, auto SJ~~AYsOUe~~[i~~::'. '64 CHEVY Flat he&d 6 eyl, ~~~ inT:':~ • ;:~~ ;:rt~ .!au~r:i wht '~ 0 : a~ e new v.a Aero t-.tarine Eng. hlke-, ~spd, ,,,./cxtru-Likc TRAILE!t 16' '68 Ucld .~ 11·a1u, C1Jgtmn .. bll camper, ti"!OOI. $500. 5~8-5240 , ""/tr&n1 2:32hp In gt! coll(!. trarWer fee. 642-2413, Siamtl'e 8 mo & 2 lovable auto/pilot, direction fi nder. ntw! 1trtam 11lps. 1 rompHy sip, j, Xlnt oood, $3230. 6,1,_ '7=. $lOO. Shopamith w/aeceu. ~~~ ,.~~o. tiKer 11trl....i kittens 6 wks iihlp to ahoro phone, depth * ~71Jjl& • equip. $900. 5'18--0M4 or _8JO..~iiUC:S6ii.===--;;--I ..., •'II $75 or Mt ofr, E 1 co i1'li1"'W'tO !"'-" B · bo ti ••G-tt70 ·' --------~-1 nc1 gd home 892-8881 to 6 pm as1c a ng course tinder, ba.ttuie11, bftlt pump, WANTED: 10 11pee<I bike for '11'1 10 FT CAB-OVEJt Camper, PIANO ~uslc • \Vedding 1°:;'_11oE~~ m,,"",•1111"',". ,m, Ml·F~1 ra,rlio ror tape 836-4493 6 10 9 9/7 offered to the ~ublic etc. Int. ca.bin like new. blgh scboo_ I bol'· 16. TRAVEL trlr, self<01}-sto\'c. lcc box, sink. etc "'"ptions, Dinner pa1·tle¥, •v 1<..v " -"' •••• •>"litm p I u g b h I II · •·-· / •-·• ••~ 64' u« ,,,, .. ,Ti " · LOVAB ' "· Yr ••'Iver ~··-. y t e Ba boa ower Once In a fc tune ..... a1n. ·548~7 · taint!d, ilet!>s :i. Xlnt conct v.· '""'"'s . .-. ~ Plano lesson!!. 11.B-213: cata ta nee sas I ,,,,,ta~ dock aM-' M.I• ...... ,.. Cal n•~-~, 4~;;is2 comp1U'& n b rt d 1 e $~ ~i);~e~":0 A.\t.FM music. £; poo Ir. her bt>igc pup. Home Squadron. Sa i I as FOi" Int I r-.rvJON --SUOO St3-44M STEIN\VAY Grandi maim:-Knlght TC.0008 lubo tester. cond. $35. 54~2572 toact~ ii pouiblc or will \Veil as po\ver boat· I c6:::1.:;":,,· ;,•,::&c,;6:.;P:.;>,,c•-~--Mini Bikes 9275 e 1968 Nom!l.d G 01 den Dune Bu19IH •·/"-nch 80 -rut. •·alue i25,auorted elec.motor1 ~ ...;;:,,,,,..:.:'--"--'-~-~-, separate. Mother houat ting taught. Starting ELECTltlC Car. latest -... _ f'alcon l~". $1095. --·----- 9525 ..... ._,,. 2 \VJ.IL util traUer, 5' x 6' od 1 A 1 nd Tu XLNT START FO $'.?;ioo. yow·s $1500 673-3842. ea. Ping Pong lbl $20. "°'· gd tu'••· •• .,,"·en ·~". broken ad J'/chlld 4 cats 7 P1t1 Mon .. Sept. 21, 01 e • -co · 1 l'· Ll'L INDIAN mini bike. 2 • 962-4800 • R 56-7459. "' ..,,,, 1·525-2503 • 836-4493 9/7 every l.1onday n it e curtalns, new t res' Ape., J~• hp top cond. ·~NIMROD. Dfoluxe. Slps 6, DUN~ BUGGY u,;~~criaJ~· ~· ~!~~~ * AUCTION * ~\\' '~~~~~1:uto., like LOVABLE blk male poodle 1 !or 13 weeks. At New· ~~~e~~h· aiba1"1"1 11 ~ht M, $100. 644-S268 Stove, ictbox, din'g t.able. '64 V\V pan, Includes ll'ont. •·-d I il I t H bo y h t n'6,.t ~ IS, tery c nrge:r XI.NT r-~Ll'I I n d I an 1595-543-4156. end, front brake11, ~ A $iJ. 548--3)71 Fine FW'niturc ~" GREEK spoon, good yr g w Ch c ren & cats por at; r a C installed, Jn car. 53&-831\J. ....,,...,- ' "-I"' 11 nffds ad hon1e fll(d yd Club, 720 \Vest Bav model mini bike. 3~ji hp, .. --. ·• cal)Je11, (At assembled) BALDWIN AKROSONIC Ir. Appliances COnd .... ,n .,;, or o c r 892-$881 by 6 54~3 all Avenue, , New p 0 r't SACRIFICE 2~ It Co.bin 2-spd. SUO. 644-5268. Trucks 9SDO e Mu1t Sell e Like new S6IKl Auct10111 Fri.day 7:30 pro GlWJ.6.1 6_ 1 917 B e 'a c h. Brin~ note· Cruiser. Perfect shapt. In -----6464665 or 646-7302, 613-7894 after 7 Windy's Auction Bern ·water now. S2100. ·49J..3996 I 9300 • 1970 GMC I ~=;;;,;:;;..:.:...:"":;::'-~I M isc. Wanted 1610 2 Darling kit t ens 1 book & penc 1 first arr 7:30 ~otorcyces f\IEYERS ~lame, iold metal \\:1JRLITZER maple spinnet 2075% Nev.-port, CM 646-8686 :;;;;:;;;:....;.:.;::;:,;;:.;;.._...;;= marmalade maJe and 1 n1'te. ·Any quest1'ons 1=:::;;======1 flake. Tup Ir. skle curtains, xlnt cond, $550. See au 6 pm Beh"·• T • Bldg M · W 1-• W' Prt - - - - -c G •r,,·knds U6"A'"·34th.NB. ,,.._. ony s _ , at l. •n-: u,. I I c.dico female bOX trained9/4 call673-1855. S--'-Ckf Boat• 9030 I ......... -.• 1500 PICKUP .all's T tires, Ansen BRAND I U le th ,_... & Stefllll\er * 5'16-8620 ~2739 ,..__.... sprint mags. $2195 or besl RA"TICE PIANO new u ng m ..... 1-,,,;=::=;===== ==----.---2 Fiberglass bargl.'s, f\al THINll ' oUer. 5-18--1"0~. e P "' coot, Azurlne, standard size. 1700 FREE-Beaut. pure black deck, l0.Xl5', lull outbrd 18' Ray1'10llCrt1tt, Ford 406 HONDA CAMPER -XLNT CONO, \Von TV program, never !!\~•ry, Etc. k!t~11ns. Also some black &: control, LP stoves Perfect trlpov.'l'r. ''eivct drive, full WITH DUO carb 1600 cc, hitch, top, s1:i0. * * 637-5488 ui;ed. Appraia value $4500 Hyster forklift white. 7 wk1 old. 673--6434 river houseboal fishing or Instruments. enclosed 111 Unique blue floraJ body, • UPRIGHT PIANO Sell or Trade. ?-take OUer". 11800 aft 3 pm 9/4 ' t'nginc. Xlnt coOO. $4j()(), 29l tngine heater, deluxe yellov.• v.1hls, Je~n. St200. . party b 0 at. 1 w / oluc ' "FRIEDLANDER~ , $17:> 67~ ,'~'~'~' -"~7--350~·~;c..::•~ll~6~p~m'-~-1 See at 760 W. 16th. C~f ABUNDANT love fro m canopy, $1 395. Other "''/top -'~1~3/~6~95--046'--'--I.-----cab, fibergl&sl tires with 27'17 Bristol, C.'1:. ~2598 1205 356 A Porsche bumptr, Pur-=========== ('(lmpa_nk:lnshlp from an frame $1295 or be.IJI oiler. 17' Chris Inboard. Uljl 8 foot cab o\'tt King of <lays. isr [)('light! .Never been ding. FREE TO YOU exquisite box trained kitten Pvt pty. See btv.'fl 9&5, Sat Plank. Ne\v top & covers. Road camper. Slovc, r1!1rlg~I ~M~E~Y~'ERS=~,~,.-ru<--b-lu-,-m-etal- 1!161 ZENITH Col1Jr TV S-10. ~f a g n 11 v o x \\1/remotc control, blk & "'hi, SlO. ~tagnavox blk &. \\'ht, $10. ,j.jj...7459. ed $75. Kenmore 2 sp, \vash-v.·ho yea.ms for kind, gentle, & Sun at Advantt Marine All access $1025. 644-094!! erator, 20 gal. ~·ater tank, flal\e, brand ~w UIOO vw er, $15, as is. ~S-8404 aft people. 61<>-3492 IJr 673-4506. Transport, 2099 Placentia, 17• Ski Boaa,t· inboard. Shift tnthll'A\ wood \Vlth lots ()f eng. Poracht clutch, 2 ~ops; 6 Pl\t llELP-Lucky needs n e \V 9/5 Cl\1 roo1n h .-,,,~'=· ,,-=-.--,;:--:-=• 1 home 3 yrs. Spade • shots . 1 • V-<irlve. evy 283 eng. · $ 3295 c rn1 whla, Gate& tires. '!OVING, '!""! -·",· 2 V\V A DO RA BL E k i It e ns FOR SALE -LEASE 5.1~16. Very clean, $1495. 548-().14(). J• •• .... M;.1.1 female. Out.1Jide cat. 548.7870 snow tires SlO ea, V\\' rack !J/<t v.•/ u nu s u a 1 markings OR CHARTER 16' N-Vee boat. 4;) HP Mere, 1!169 "Mark II" Dune Bur $10, King-s:t bed, l )T $90, Siamese It long haired. $4-$5,000 Oo'A'n, 5 yrs balance. ('(lnt'nl trlr, big \\'hi, $150. SerlAl 58'74-4 T-Buckct Top, curtains, Old chest of drav.·ers $10, LOVABLE calico and orange 962-3060. 9/5 4f ' FJybridge \Vheeler Cruis-After l Pf\t 968-7452. UNIVERSITY rugs, to1v-bar, covtr, etc. Hi-Fi & Stereo 1210 ~tUNTZ Stetto, 4 & 8 track home unit &: 2 speakers (aJl in (lne cabinet) + approx 50 tapes, $150. good cond! 6~6-7588. Davenport $15. 673-84;,s. ~~~3 1 )T ()\d ca9~4 MALE beagle 10 tn() old er. Sleeps 8. Completely 1-E-N_J_O_Y_Th_o_Su_o_&_Sal_l_Se_a Bullt for custom. 549-0508 LEAVING state will discount \V/papers gd ('(ll'\formation ~nditioned throughout, Air. DehJx(! Runabout. Call OLDSMOBILE CUT down to n1ake xlnt. membership in Coto de SMALL Tiger kitten, abt 1 & disposition. 546-0387 9/5 .. 1970". fltlNT CON 0 . 968-42()j, buggy Qr take as is. '59 Caca outdr. lam. rec. club mo's old, needs good N>me. ABANDONED _ 2 yr old XTRAS PLUS! ?-lake oiler! I ~;:;,;;:~====== Triumph, 4 dr. new brakH, save $j()(). 96&-6018 646-7803. 914 male cocker-peke, 10 v e 5 Day& 539-8978 Eves & ·wk-Marine Equip, 9035 carb, need~ rod. 6T>277& Cast of Thous ands CllILDREN S S wing little girls wants gd home. ends 893-8405. Fibtr9la11 Reptlr Ca mer11 & Equipment see "Garage Sales" set-Needs paint I: new 545-2338. •• 9/5 25' Pacemaker • alglas 1967 5 HORSE-Po"·er Johnson, * 66-04.18 * Sat. only seats. 9611-6.\13. 9/4 DRY Fittivood Sportiisher cOrilj)letely longshaft out board, perfect 8300 33j1,~ University Dr, Ci\l BEAUTJ.F1JL Long hair grey 6#-l096 equipped. hlost sell this $155 18' ho rse-power •r~arRON camera as nciv LEAVlNG the State. Hide-a-kiHtn 7 "'ks old. :>18-<t537 Eastblutr, NB. v.-eelrend. $7500. 20'1o down completely rebuilt .$175 "·/stamps SllO. bed davenpoi·t. Color TV aft. 6 pm. 9/4 915 with approved credit IJr 1 _54_11-4_93_4_. ------~· ~13 • I di 6 ha' VERY ptttly k ,. t ton • trade 11n1nll ac r e age · ENGINE ll'•'t-•·. •• 'O HP. ;:iuo-vu l'fap e nette. c irs ' KITI'ENS. 2 black & v.·hHe, 67,_1385 or cu 1733. .... "'' .,. __ beds, chest dresser3, lamps; P/Siamcse seeks loving 1 orange, 1 black & grey. .....,.. • short shaf1, 1960 or nc11'er. Hobby Supplies MOO refrlgeralelr 5-18-8611 home. 673-4169 9/-1 &U-688.) art S:30 p.m. & 14' BOSTON \li'haJcr, 2:i hp 8·'6-318~. before 8 A~ .. t. :.;o="--"-'------1 COUOI, blue gr. used $65 or BEAUTIFUL ~I Siamese wttkends 9/7 Johnson '69 elec start S97S. ELECTRIC Kiln 15" deep, 1. 1 · d bl k & 1l2 W Co8't Hwy NB 8 ··t Slip_ Mooring 90•.1. HONDA Scnlmbler: Bit 337 bst. ofr. Cu~tom gold v.·oot iger s rippe ac gN'y POODLE f · --14'' across, + mo lds & kitten, 7 "'ks old. Free 10 gd • email', chOcola!c 548--5551 ' cc. Big tires, super last.1-~=~==~=~- c paints $50 546-2201 cpl 45 yds . Sl.50 yd. brov.11, house·broken, needsl.:=.=:...~~-~== • SLIPS 32'-38'. Also Ory Lots of Racing Xtras. $250, '53 CHEVY YAN ~-. ~-:. · ' 962-5619. honie. 54~2538· 914 goo d home . pr ef. 41' CHRIS DCFB, .'59• :.i.5 K\V storage & hoist launching. Bell l\lagnum hcln1et 7 & 8 Sporti!.'g ~---•-_15_00_ NEWPORT Beach Tennis 4 Solid blk 2 solid gray w/children 84&-9232 after ONAN, auto pilot, l30\V * 673-6606 * $40 Bates Racing jacket 4G 1~ Ton cnci')Se(\ rreii;ht box Club membership for sale, kittens beautiful Jaces , 6:00 p.m. 9/7 radk>, 2R?!·d F~thomalleter, e SLIPS FOR RENT e $40. Never \\'Om. 546-3901. (G9G36911 dlr. \Vilt take care BROWNING $500 . Ca ll c o l lec t act i ve, 6 wks old BLACK & h'l bb'I shov.-er, ,..,a s,eecg ey, .,7 0000 915 w 1 e ra 1 . $21000 ""221 10' lo 4D' boots l9G4 1-londa 305, setup !or ,·. t••tlr or fina»ce private LIGHTNING j(}3/22Z-5435 ..., -approx 6 mo old, ,, e r y ' · .,......... . " .. I ~"OC'-C.-'-~~~--• :>IS-2592 • dirt. Needs \\'Ork. $13S. Alt parly. f>iCi-4052 01· 494-6811. 20 qa, over & under, n1od_ & LA\VN -...y,•er 22 .. 11elf-"rop. COCKAPOO l ~~ .,..5,· ){Int friendly. Name: is "\\'inky", 13~' Boston \Vhaler. Johnison • ~" 2029 Po IA d. ""' -,.. ". p J -• Ilk ;,:,,., pm, mona pt ""S CtlEV ',"T. V-8. Stick. full. Excellent con ttlon .. rotary-3.;) horse power $50 w/children 10 good homf' 645--0077 9/7 40 hp eng. e •• ec;_co2•N, • :llff;.:.:ct_C~hc•~rt;.::•~r---'90::.:.39 D, C.hf. "'.,,, ... id, ~:_1 _ cab R/H 2 Browning gun csse included Polaroid 111.nd camera color only. 646-4784 9/5 2 SOLID ,.1,1 S •'ame ,, nt'w. Ph:_ 67·5-""" days; "' '-I.Ill · 531 8387 r 6 67 =• C T HONDA S-90' Street or dirt saddlf' tan'ks HD l!usp. '4 S390 Finn, . $30. 557-8615. INTELLIGENT Sti""r kitten kittens, blue ""'-"'yes 7 \Vks. a ter , ;i.-....,..:i. -E XE U I VE ?-I a r 11 n ik I . ,,... e.• ---_,. fuhing. 6 pass;, Tackle in--b. e, stra ght p1~. $150 (lr mi. Ex, cond. S 1 1 5 0 , POOL TABLE Ai\1ANA 2 Dr. Refrig/Free:t-8 wks old blk & wht te1nale 2 gray & v.·ht 11 wks. 14' Boston \Vhaler $14...... best oUer. 673-4537. .,.,0 14 ••. E · d I u h'll 'O eluded. $135 + f\lel. 64fr9000 .... o-..... 4 x 8 Regulation. er. )'ellO\v. $225. Vac. clean· 494-3039 9/~ ~13, 836-4493 9/4 vinru e e ec ·o 5 1 · '69 l!ONDA 750, xlnt 7,500 * .62 Ford F-lOO. 4-whl Complete v.'ith all er $20, tables, misc items. FREE Plants-Bamboo, OLDER Toy Poodle gd H.P., nav. Its .• sling cover, Bo•ts W•nted 9050 mill'!!, all original $1100 drivf', '68 327 Chevy f'ng. accelSOries. Xlnt cond. 2287 Elden Avt', Cl\I 646-5305 Rubber Trees & mi!IC. companion lo gd, home · trailer. Xlnt ('(Ind. ti75-47M· s.ts-1969. wfo'llrive, GRtrs tires. Call $3:i0. 646-3629 NE\V bellyboard w/fiberglass ~3771, 536-1366 9/5 6734042 9/4 1966 TOLLY craJt 26', fbgls, \VANT To RENT: Rpprox 20' '68 BULTACO, 2;i0 cc. Ge.I , Phil i\lanucl for t-on1pl~ info SHAPED Surfboard blank, fin $35. Full v.·et :suit, sm. FREE Poodle type• mut, gd NO Gd home for 3 darling immac. Fully equip. 125 pov.·er boat for S-16/20th, for street or dirt. Extras. 67S-.333L 6'·1"', ready to be glassed, $15. :>15-2654 \Vatch dog & companion. klttt'ns 1 male2 female box hl'S. s7ooo. a43 -t 935· (must 1;\p 3). 67~2592. s59:;_ 540-5198 l-.,~,.--,.-.,-,,-E-,•-,.-,-,-.,µ<-r_V_ao-. $10. :>18--5993 art 6 or 5-1•1·-. n15 1rained weaned 646-1403 9/4 &14-4684. c · d SET of ne\V Kee p sake o-,)()" i' • A'orcraft 9100 •BSA 6fJ0...-11ew clutch & us1on11zed ex<..~pt <,'Oil. Saturday all day. diamond rings. Reg. $200. '62 FLUFFY Kittens, black & 2 PURE black pt Siamese BOSTON \VhaJer 13" r.tcre. ::.:.;::..::::_ _____ _;_= ring11, new lires, Cood cond. mus1 se>e, • bt>$t oir over GUNS: K-22, mini; 32 I. J.; T-Bird $430. gd, <,'Ond. silver v.·hilt! & ~ih·er & kit tens gold eyes 10 v.·ks. t 40• xlnt. cond. :un~ great, ~; INTEREST in fully in-$415. 645-1725. $1000, (213) 592-2334. 38 H.R.: 38 S.\V. snub. 67~ multicolor. Call 548-3842 9/5 pure white&: 1 orange kitlen lots of extras. 57<>-5871 strument equipped 1964 e '67 BULTACO Matador '6;i Ford Pick-Up 4 Spd &l.:>-0514 after 4 pm. 1\10V. Sac. 5 New Snacl\ FREE To homt>, 2 kiltens. 6 to 8 wits 836-4493 or 10' BOAT w/motor. 2 HP l\looney Mark 21. 300 hours dirt bike. -New eng. S400. Good cond nu brks seats I Goll clubs • \\'omens Vending i\Iachines on Joe. trained for Jittel-box, 11hots 548-0813 9/7 fast·infla~~~-w~~r & SMOH. Financinl statement Call 675-8877 after 6 batt \Viii trade. !i31H574 Spalding "'/bag & cart. Orange Cnty. 83.1-1172 549-1846 9/7 2 Palm trees 1 i;m. pepper Transom · ttquired. 776-8680 or * .63 llONDA ~CC, •ecdi e '68 Ford van Like ne1v. 546-7866 tree Sti-2541 9/4 17' 4.. inboard & trh·. 644-0889 ~ " * * REDUCING .11:alon PUP P J ES, La b & 1 d h 11 1 •1 E ·ne ~===· :::::::::::::::=::::=o I work, $50. For Sale Or Tratle c BRANO new, nf'ver been fired 30-30 Winchester r ine \\'/case SlOO. ~ treatments. Moving -.r.-tust \Veimt'rane:-mix blk & J PETS d LIVESTO~K trbg S(> u ' x n ~~~; ----~C=al~lc.:"°'::.:'~117::._ ___ l'l~tfi5fl='"-------'~·t=~~"'=' $£':II at sacrifice! M:i--2656 femaJ•;, maJes. 549--1610. 9/5 an "" needs work,. $1.25. Moblle Hom•I 9200 -· --'69 Honda 300 -11treet '64 flJrd 1 ~ IQn, VS, w/delux Imported Auto1 '6DO LONDON TAXI Lots of cha r acter ! 7-passeflier. automattt trnns.. leather seall, taxi meter. Economical Au11tln diesel taxi imported from England. Good cond. $1500. 675-U.24. AUSTIN HEALEY AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Service, ParU Jmmet:liate Del1Vef1 All Modelo J1rtuµort JI 111 po rt~; e BRITAr>.'NTCA e 4 Yr. old male pediW('e P•ts, Ganer•I l800 Soilboets 9010 •••••••••• 3.~ mile11 S700 8' campc-r, l1050. ENCYCLOPEDIAS ... heaten """Ifie, likes M OWS 67' "'16 • """ 3046 * JlJO W. Qlut HW)'., N.B. $200 * * ~8-6643 ~hildren 83.i4)16t 9/S BANTANS, Ducks, Geese. -----THE EAD ---......., ~ M2·9'<&· -,.1.,., All sizes & oolors, 2612 Mesa HOBIE CATS II th 1 • 1970 KA\VASAKI 500, 3,500 '56 FORD 1,1 TQn plck up. Authoriztd MG De• . Mi1cell1neou1 l600 TRANSFERRED f'Al\11LY mon ·would like to ADORABLE K i 11 ens. Dr (Upper Bay) n • rv1ne n1iles, $350. 673-9950 11~k tor Xlnt mech cond. ~~i~ t~:se4~d extc;:~~ ~re. =~~tor. Reason· ~~~s~~~tt, trained g~~ C t 1820 All COLORS No:•;eun~i~;o:;:!es 1!~~~~\VASAf<I j()I) cc, Xln! 1':J:;JJ:·===·==="=U=56=9 100, ;~! W~ttE~~~ spd, ~~a~~: ~~·/~r!'.d!n:e ~::; NJ~~!nyBe:i~~:~~~!~ "\~A.~R"~~~E~on-,~1-.,~~~c~:,,.-"-,-,-';i.-'7b17~i"~ I P:r:brecl Sealpoint Si•· CAP•NEMEODS rif(l~r~1~~~~1;0~0~~~1~1i1y ~.~;~21 Li k ~ nc\\·. $730. Jeeps 9JJO :~;;e~i~~1e.s!1:~P~:.r~o~ :ke~~n;~irs,la=c. /~b~s;, ,1~5~75~-7&14-~711736_. ~-.--c-,, rabbits 54.5-8180 9/5 ~!s ... ~84kitt1ens $ 1 2 0 5. Call 2200 \V. Cst. H~-NB 645-2244 : ~.~re~~~:~;;0~:~:~g so---'--"-.-11-o_or_l•_S-_90 ___ DES'EnT OR SA~'AHI '69 '61 Au s I l n Healey-White lamp•, \\'aler skiis, misc 500,000 fl fiberglass cloth, 1" PT Siamese kittens 2 a.II blk, ~ a fer am. STURD'' 20• • .. oode· au,, 1 SJOO TO)'nla land cn1iser i;ort top w/black interior. $600 . . . . .. .. ('ial .ti cultural center, u!I iteins. Pvt pty, 3953 ?-fistral, \l'ide rolls, Best o(fer, must 2 blk \Vilh white trimming 2 . Black ~ 7 calico 1 ~ sloop, sips 2, galley & he;i,d. tinie. in pa tk Sf'f\'itc cen-or lwsl olfr: 64G-.)j86 4 wh cir. n1ov1nJ; sarcHicc Eves. 494-4997 Hunting I 1Jn Har b our "'"~11~-~>l<>-=94=-43-;=~-.,,.,-,7 I 646-~ 911 Siame!le kitten.~. shot ~. $J Nu dacron sails, As is SH~OO. iei·. '64 llonria 250CC, dir! & $2200. 5·1S..OOW I ::::::;::;:'====~===:' 846-9151. NEWPORT Tennis C I u b 1 RARE Albino Siamese odd each to good home. 518-0021 G4Z--3971/Sam-5pm, S-18-3918 e Daily sniog . fr'P<: OCf'an strec! legal. i\lusl Sell! $2JO, 1967 Scout 4·Whecl drivt", BMW You Think YOU'VE l\.1embership. $485 + initial eyes 1 yr. 891-fHSO 1Jr aft 6 eves. breezes. suiTQunlled by or. Call Ed, Yl2-2780 $1950 ·0,. best offer. Good Got Problems? Fee. 496-3600 836-4493 9/7 812.S 26' S()LlNG '69 Olympic cl. ange groves & mountain.'! YA~1AH 1\, Expansion cham-Cond, Call 64f3..6580 Authorized Dir. Our refrigerator needs a ne\v BEDS. ?-fetal trundle. BEAUTIFUL 2 yr old Mutt. Dogs Abbott Norlh Sftilt. Lolli of • "min from v.'Orld'~ largest brr, on, RTl, S35. ----SalP~ • Service • Parts home. \Vlth the proper care, t.lattresses, excellent condi. Has all shots. 11payed. BEAUTIFUL fa\\'ll ma 1 e xtras S3t1j(}. CourtP.5Y lo ~hopping center (Fashion 548-199;) Campers 9520 !LL MODELS TO you too can have rock-solid lion $50. 646-3564 83J.-20j7 917 Great Danr, '1 ve.ar old brokers. 112 \\'. Coa~t Hv.y, Island) e ·67 Triun1ph, Cherry, Lots CHOOSE FROM ice cream. But it v.·orks ok-e !\lens Schv.'lnn 10--speed l\,TTENS, 3 all v.·ht. l tiger, Black mask. lllJl;sehrokcn: N.B. Yi8-5~i:J1 • Champion.~hip la,i·n bowl· or chrome. Must sacrifice, 1967 • :!SOO Cpcs in stock \Vhadayav.·ant for $2.l? $911. \Vomens 3-speed ~. 6 "'ks, \\'eanell. box·trained. Excellcnl watchdog. Cf.loll COLU~IBIA ~. '7{), many. ing green Sell or tratle. 646-5983. • Immediate Delivery 917 • S II I 110, n,1 Service Monday 'till 7:00 PM 5'18·5993 after 6 613-8498. 546-1570 disposiliQn, AKC reg. xtras w/slip. $:EOO down . ma JlC' s a , . .., e '66 HONDA 300 e NE\VPORT BEACH Tennis 110RSE l\1anurP by truck or 494-2376 Assume loan. 832--0561 ~n8ioY50the abovt! 111 $300 * * _ S4G-098!1 Sat 'IUI Noon This coupon V..'Orth Club member.;hip, $2.'iO + hoxfu l l. You haul. BEAUTIFUL fomal• ,;fk~·-2'7' f.EATIIER Sloop, trbgls "' 1• per mo. CAMPERS COAST IMPORTS f f ,,. -·1 , 'I' 911 · '' rut II CALL COLl..ECT '6!1 Honda CB 350 Of 0 C I $25 trans er er. U't"t-tJOU • ..1s-1.v ,, amber in coloi & Anlbrr is o/\\'d. Grl <.'O , must st . range ounty nc. l\ith purhcas~ of RUSSELL Surfboard 7' JO" 7' SOFA " Jeathf'r chair. 301 ht-r name Sec at 333 E. 17th $1695. 67~1393 or 531-5363 ~~!j~~:t:· ri~;:~~~ J~~li~~~u~~::..O. e~~f4~ ~ n t 1200 W. Paclfice Cout Hwy CARPETING r.lini-model $40. Cerlar St_ N.B. 9/7 St, 64&--0142 32' COLUr-.1BIA raclng-cn1 i11-' ' · ••• .:::c:::::::;:_::::::c__:c:...:.::.:___13 JO CHOOSE fROM \Acl'osi from BaJboa Sep1. only (40 yds minl ,.,,. ,,21_ ••••••• • '6.i YA~1Al!A 8G-!lft up tor Bay Club) C.A. Page &i2-2070 ""u-Q J GEfu,1At'l Shepherd puppy · DOBEFL\IAN PINSClfER ing sloop. ~lps 4. Sac. $4950, dirt Sl:-lll. ~ DINGHY $19, E J e ctr i c nd.i; gd home. 537·1~1 9/7 AKC tifalt', 2 yrs. Xlnt 714/846-344:'. RIVER SPECIALS Call 61~8877 aftl'r 6 All Fully Equipped --"~'~-~=•~54~6-4~52!!:__ GAS stove, nearly new. outboard, battery charger, FREE kilten11 S92-2'll8 after watc/1.-dog. Call Afl 7 (lm. e 20· Sloop-v.'OOd keel '>o;it, Nf'1v 12' 11•iclc homC's, i;llgh11Y' --10-ST-=--,,~1~1 -'-,~--~B~S~A-4-4-1 1 lOO•'o 'lu•'6,7,_B11M11W000_160067,_0 ... ,, D'-.,·ng /.•om• t•bl• & 4 $21. Call &16-4067 6 pm 9/7 • 54~5206 -tr sleeps 2. damagrrl. Pcrfcr1 for !hr do.. 1~ 1• .,., ~ "'' " • 0 ti VictQr. Xlnt cond . \\1anl to upholsterer! chairs. L,a\\·n ELEC. bed, Beauty Re11t 1115 ='""==;:--0--..---,----, RHODESIAN Ridge b 11 c k $1100. 1137-7039 it-yourselfer. riginal S<' • Guaranteed PLUMBAGO plants & ,,vord 1 . ·~s?llflll R 1 r buy Wild ChOpper 67j..4683. CORTINA mov.·er. Pair u-pholstererl or trade for good piano. C&.ll AKC Ch. sired. Xrey clf'ar. e 20• Sloop e ng price.,.,....,.,.. · ec u · ft'rn plants. 494-2882. 9/5 d f I 1-·~ I'~ '70 y h E d USE AS CAMPER ---swivel/rocking chairs. All 833-1096 Stud serviC(' wkdyg aft 5. \\lood keel boat, Slef'pi'I 2. e or c earance ..,,.,.,. wvv. •ma a n uro - rxcellent. 649 Darr e 11 . 1 -.-,-F-R-IG_E_R_A~TO=R-good--ro-nd. r~REE bantum chickens to gd 548·8777. '.\lake orler. ~31-7039 BAY HARBOR lT.icc, $475. frtG-4571 OR BUS '68 Cortina GT 64&-3-101 hom<'. 546-~ 9/5 142:i Baker ~I.. Costa i\1e~a '65 y AMAHA 2SOc S10, coffee table $25, desk ~~'=~~--,--,..,--e GREAT DANE PUPS, 19~!J' LIGHTNING, x 1 n t Ju!n So. of Harbor Blvd , t;. ~100. 64:1816 1967 ( UOL•873) lGOO enginC', 4 t1pel.'CI, radllJ. llU:vIAN ll11 ir \\'ig. ocver S15, chair $10. 54U90~ 5 BLACK kitteflS and 1 "'l1ile Black, AKC. 5 \vk.~ $100 cond,, \V/JS:c> whee.100 trlr, ~an Dieun F r w y. 1711) j YNB9"8) \\'OIT! S20. Steam-Set instant • BAHIA Corlnlhian Yacht kitten. 8 \\'eeks o Id, * (1) 52;)-605.1 * many xtrar, $1200. 492--8187 ·""9170. ,.y '69 HONDA 450 196 7 ( UOL-631 ) $899 h,;, """· PCV"' ""' 120. 962--0936 915 ~ ·" •• ,.,~ • BILL YATES Club m•mbe,.,.lp. SHERRY 'S Poodk<. blk. SACRIFICE " ~ •~ 1967 IU"'H 692) London Fog r 3 l n c oat• • G44-ll5S e BEAUTIJ.'UL 8 "'k old kltten cock·a·poos $23, sill'er toy 22. FRBGLS SLOOP Mbl Home Buyers Serv. 1961 Honde 350 CB .,.. • 4~1ong, like nC\\' S 2 5 • dark caJico. 842-6.129 911 $l2;;, v.·ht. SGO. 546-284!1 :-rlS-I lG4 OR 675-4795 Buying a mobile h0n1e ~ Snve S2295 VOLKSWAGEN Pendlt'ton mans b;i1hrobe, * LGE Dollghboy Pool SIOOO's. Let our 1noney-sav-$4:JO, • 67>2785 never "·orn, lgr siie S20. \\'/ht'ater & fll!er. SeP at KITIENS • housebroken & Dobc!rn1an ft'm ale . 3 yr. ~· PC Xlnt oond, Rflcing ing experts ~present you in 32852 Va.Ile Road 830--0566. 3106 Donnybrook Ln. C:'I healthy 557-7141 9/4 Ch. sire~~~s kids recorr1 . Must S<!ll'. $349:; thr purchase of your mobile Auto Service Sa n Juan Co.pisrrano ALL kinds of :\leehanic's DIAL direct 642--5678. Charge PERSIAN Cats 5'\~r-2100 9/7 ** 646-l'j'lT •• hOme. ·114/494-#16 & Parts 9400 Harbour v.w. RJ7«\800/49J..1~1 1/·19!1·22G1 tools for old & new cars. your ad, thl!n sit back aOC PEDIGREED Boxer 3 )'rs. 2 \~ITE_ Pomcranirui pups COLUMBIA Defender, 29', IDEAL Bayfront Joe. Mobile MOPAR •:SG po.1!, complete 1966 2 DOOH Cortina GT, ::.48-2WS atL .i listen to the phone ring! to gd. home. 673-4042 914 AKC 1-egislPred $l00 ea. sips 6, JO HP lnbrd, full Home w/eovered Pa 110 , lrd member $75 Holley 3 lS'lll BEACH BL. 842-4435 ru n.• good -good rubb('r - 968-fi20G rac'&:, Many • "x I r as . Idea.I for slllgle person. barrel with fuel lines & HUNTINGTON BEACH bf' low low book. S45-6817 AKC Reg Airedale Terrier, fi.IG..fi047, 494-7735 G75-ii292. manlt1Jld for :J.83 Mopar $100 APOLLO ,;'~12"~"'°"=~"'=·-,_,--,--,---~ t"cmalt, 7 mo. ss:; SLOOP 21' be nched mas1 28' PARAMOUNT 10' x 55· 2 br, DuColl tgnltlon sy11tem for 'ii6 Dali;un 4·r1t, good cond. * :i4S--0989 * cabin, sails. au.'f. all like g• x 32• }>lltiO. wshr/dryr Mopar 383 complele with Nt'w clutch & brakt'!I, Be~l e AFGHAN PUPPIES ne"'" value $2500 must sell~ hook up, tam. pk. S.A. ignitk>n wlre11 $50. 633-5576 MOTOR H0111ES offt!r. 536-92:i8 AKC * Sl!'iCI * 646-7589 $75() it's yours 645--0295 1135-1136. or 642-3643. Afghan Pup1·· AKC Reg CAL 20 No. 681. 6 HP ADULT ~1oblle Puk. Kit i\1USTANG 289 en g In e, * All Sleet Con~tructJon QUALITY. * 962.9989 Evlnrurle molar..: rop cond, Trojan 2()• x 5.il' Double (.'Omplett> $GS Ford T-I04 * All Flbergl11ss Exttrior • COLLIE Pups • 1 21 2800 310 ,,,.7 !,! 1 1 G 7 a -7 34 2 or ~xpand". Unfurn. &12-0.i07 speed $2:i ,\fallOl'y Rt.v·Pol MILLIGANS OIW"'I>"' \Vflran~fonnrr tor 312 Ford Trailer Sal('!; R•aso•ahlc. 61"-•:i92 * B".AUT 5.2' 8-m•t•r MOBILE Home. 8x40', h.lr 1~ 'I al 139'111·-bo Bl"•' "' " v-o r. ._ <·onil. SlSOO or bst o(r_ Call ""· 1' nncd uminu1n vol\'e " ... r •. TRANSPORTATION SI s1t 500 T Sil coverii fdr 312 r·om $10 Glll'd<'n Grn\'e * 5'.l7·2\"i2 T ~';s . O 'c e ~"::':·1 de~ -~-__ ti~G-aAA!l. METRO VAN loat1 & Y•cht1 _____ 1_:7:;:14::_1'194-.164:::~:':;. _____ Motor Hoq:i•• 9215 e V\V pan:1, trans axles J~ ~ T bulllln camper. SNO\\'BlRD -& bndrpar1$. St.we. sink, ice box, <:111·· FREE! <'11 gla.s.q, dacron i.all.11. 1970 CUSI'OM nia<le 1'1otor • 642-0443 • Jll!1lni,:, pnnellin~. bed, new S.tiO * 673--~ Jlome. Slee ps; 6. Easy '52 f'ORD Oathead v~ paint. Xlnl C()ndltlon. I' parking. Only JG' long, 4 spd !rans wtclutch, '48 * 54>724.i * HUNTINGTON IEACH'I----------Buill·lna, comp l llCU Merc.allorpart~595 N '0 D POWiR SQUADRON'S Power C nilHrs 9020 contalool. Mu" "'"1 Only ew 7 atsun BASIC BOATING $4950. UU Vk>IA Pl, CM. Trall1r, Travel 942.5 IGOO OHC, Pickup with camp. • COURSE , ALBACOltE Special • l/3 _6<_2-3240 ________ 1""-'=c.:....:.;.;:::.:.;;__:.;;:;: er. SR.le .Prlct $2099 dlr, lnte re 11 !, .tO' die!t'I NE\V '11 mod t i Vaca· 31' Silvcrslreak. l!)jll, Xlnt I • 67798) Will take car In Huntln~ton Be•ch d 1 2•00 P b •-•-1"111 •1 ~ I ChrlMivllch i;:port fisher. tionecr--thc fine~! Jn mini <:o n · " • : u1We. ' .,, Mnce pnva e Hlg School Skipper ma I n ts Inc d . homc1, 19' ruUy sel!-<0n-1...:6c:42-:...::l12:.l1:;:646-.\3f12::::::::::·:_ ___ 1 party, Call 546-40'52 or Rooms 121 & 1tt Outsl.n.ndlng cond. S15.000. taincd. Your ln.11pect1on In· 15' Oa11!11 Camping Trallt'r -·~~:,,1-t;h=J~·------- Starting Stpt. 14 and R42-5032. viltd Scott's, 914 N. Harbor, Vl'ry Cle:an! Rr.t1!1()1lllblc! '61 CABOVER Camper, i.,"OOl.i ea ch Mond1y t hr ough 18' CJfRIS Crnfl runabout, &lnta Anit. S.19-39.;9 cond. $.'.IOO. ___ N_o_v_o_m_b_o_r ___ 1 lnhoord, fnlll ski bo1U. Full 30', 38 p11.&~12n~er Oodl(e, \l:i'ffl DON'T JU$1' \VI SH Iotl---~·~6~4~2-~157:::3~•:_ __ BEAUT 33' Sh~ph('n~. Chcyt cover. Xlnt concl. Jm, See ronvt.rt, $1000 or otlt.r, On furnishings for )'Our hOme, CA,\IPJ::R Shell tor 8' bed e11J!', Sl2.S00-$2500 rlo\1·n Onr II In water l'n front of 207 rlli;p(Ay Sal & Sun, at JOil tiM IJf:at buy1 in today's 36" ttii::h full. rear door xlnt. must .ucrlli••r! ll7l--:t'i07 EdJre\\'alf'r, BaJbolt Ba)tfronl P\111te Dr. c, \1, CllL!lsltlt!d Adi. rond. 5-16--3671. DATSUN --·---- '10 DATSUN ~ Doo r Sedan u:;ed $1199 tull prict. IOOlA,VAJ dlr, \VIII lnkc Iran" or fint•fllce pr!. va1e pnrty, cau 5~6-~052 or '1\ll-6811 . DOT DATSUN OPl!N DAILY AND SUNDAYS l~ BeaU! Blvd. Hunttncton Bearl'I ro. 7781 or ~!0-044'J -·$-- "Le.. • U1 Tbt Lari 01 ... •• ZIMMERMAN 2145 HAlllOR BLVD, 54U4IO " ' . ' ., '" '"· -· " " ,• ,· ..:-. . : ..... ,. ...... ., --. . ' .. '·' : ' " -. ·r ,., ... • ....... '" --- • .. ~ Iv, , .. llit)' '""' irpo otall .... SJ Int t "" ' ~'OU.le lid<• "I'' .. !'"' Viii< d!l.Of -1EC ;u, ....... 'uU :atio! ..... """' -· Wh 1221 \I !!!!!!!! !:RV. ime, """' .,.,, !!RV. 2 Pl op I 91!> I iliV -o. 2 "'"' ~ ~ ,.if ·~ :~ lq. ~ .... ojy. ''"IP O.:RV .... d•• :tffii .Uc .... ... Jo ' ~ Si ••• ..... To '""" Appl ·Rn Ui rr se ..... .... Jl.O'l rt . ~ ' .,,, .... -lS-04 ,..-- • Al No w. : &hi' ·&SI \lesa. iiNi --· ...... 'OM :e1ept : on ...,.. ·-N. lJJ row '""" ""'· .. '6 I TORi ""' Nanb .n air ""' c iuna :ount 1ti0n Paid !loun Rayo -OUN prls, J()..2, ,,.,.,,, r,v.1 -Choi -& ompl ..... :iJne •nt • ty • tblt, ..,, I02. l33a only, - ci l - I • c :t'1:,~' \ i: •~ 111r.;; •.s 1101 £-)I t ,,t .u: :_(J _UP~lJts,.,_ J!9tS..-ifAPt&• G P §.C E .e&J §4 .4 a 4 £.9J JYP k L 6 1 5 DAILY PILOT TRANSPOR 1 A l!ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT ION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Imported Autos 9600 lmporttd Autos 9600 Imported C•rs t600 :l m~po;:;rt:.::;ad::...:.A:.:u:;.I•:.:•:.......:"°°::: JmportH Autos 9600 Import.cl Auto. 9600 l~ported Autoa 9'00 DATSUN , __ _ '66 1600 ROADSTER SiJVtt tlnlsh w/bJack v\nyl lntu)or 4 apt!Cd. Dir., fRUi" $5.1) will take trade or tin· -nee rrlvate party call ~or 4!J4..68U. 'li6 DATSUN Roadstt'r lGOO. Nu tires. Ne<'d11. paint. \Vholt'&alr. 112-8 _-c';,:'::'·===I ENGL[ -FORD - AU. NEW ENGLISH FORDS NO\\' IN STOCK DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO CLEAR LARGE SELECI10N TO CHOOSE FROM :• Theodore ;: ROBINS FORD :• 2060 Harber Blvd. :: Costa Mesa 64.UIOIO FERRARI :;. FERRARI ·:·Newport Imports Ltd. Or- ::: ance Cowll;J"I cml.>' author- :-: ir.ed d'9.ler. ::; .SALES-SERVICE-PARTS •: • 3100 W. Cout Hwy. : ·' , N~wport Beach <· 6'2-9405 540.1764 ::: Authoriud Ferrari Dea1tr •. . . RAT ---~ 6 "FIAT' • ID ,"FRIEDLANDER" 1 )750 llACH (Hwy. Jf l I 89,3. i5ijij • 5Jj' ~'1 ~ ' llBf1fD aut o llJH•rt ltd i\u1horiM'd Sn.Jes • Service Part11 NC'W and Used Sales 0J)l'n SUnday ::i:1 · i777 Call COJll'('I , ,,.,,,..,,,,. .. NE W FIAT 1970 850 SPY DER All colors to choose !ron1. $Zlt3 -1-'fax &: Llc. All models to choose. California Sport Cars ~I E. 1st, ~.A. S.12~1 Si\CRIJ.'JCE. 196!1 f i a I Spy<ler 850. Xlnt cood, SJ.:.00/~st offer. 830-3627. ls you ad In the classified SECTION? Someone • is \\•alching for it. Dial 64z-5678 today! :;:::jj l~m~po~rt~adiii;;;Cii;a~r~siiiiiiiliiffOO~~liim~po;i;;;rt~adiiiiiiAiiuiih>iisiiiiiiiiiiiiffOOiiiijj ·~~ •r.• COSTA MESA : . FIAT Fi•t '69 I.SO Spyder Gorgroua: bolC.rlt> red conwr- 1 iblc, w/blk lc<at~n'llc ln- IC'rior. Fully tQui11, Excep. 1 1011aU~ clean Jn every de- tlLU • $1695 J1tllljJOrl 31 111p or1~, 3100 \\', Coast Hwy., N.B. 6-12-9405 54().1764 Authorized 1'1G Dealer KARMANN GHIA MERCEDES BENZ '66 GHIA sParkltng )7e.uow ·with blac~ vlnyl Interior. Radio, plus air cood. ISRV9.161 I $1450 1 Harbour V.W. 18711 BEACH OL. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEAQ-1 YES YOU CAN SEE THE 1971 MERCEDES BENZ AT Jim Slemons '1lmps. Warner & M1ln St. Santa Ana 54&-41 14 MGB PORSCHE Porsche '65 S.C. Coupa F'inished In ,xqul1lte c1imlvaJ t:ed w/tull black interior, A I I Pors<:OO &eee&SOriet. 1'1awleu !hruout, $2895 Complete invenlory reduction on 22 used Porscht's. NO REASONABLE OFFER \REFuSED j~rlL!POll .!l1npor1s 1956 100 SL Rdlllr-red "'fblk Excellenl t.'Ondition, wire ./ KAR1\1ANN Ghia '65. Int Xlnt running, new "'heels. CVNE 099), Owned $800. 201U Spindrilt Ln. radials, $1000. &1&-T;i06. by little old school teacher. '69 Fiat 124 Cpe ,;1='1·8:;;·,.:96Ul=.;:::32=·~--,~~l========I Toke .ora•• 0' small down. 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B '68 Karmann Ghia, air~nd. MG WW lin. pvt pty_ Dlr, Call 642-!MOS 540.1764 Exolic red "'Ith black vinyl _ Pat aft lD am S40'"3lOO or Authori~A .. MG ~ 1 bucket seal!. Low miles, has radials, 1>1ereo system, lo 49+-7503. £eU ....:a er had excellent care. Sacrt-cm~i's.::=':":"':· :;6:;73-:;231:::;"== I -.67 J\JGB GT Hard1op, radio '67 Tarna 911 ficc! <XLY235) Take older .-':I car ill trade. Will fi~ METRO • THINK a: heater, wire wheels, 29 000 miles 5 _.... "MG'' loaded $1995 00 ' ' s...-.~u, mags, private. my. Call Pat dl r. Jll\I si.EJ\1oNs fM.PORTS. Al\l/FJ\f. {VGP4241 '" JO' .. 4"'7503• 541).JlOO. METRO VAN ... "° IV. WARNER. SANTA BILL y ATES l•'i.1 ll T b"illin com .. r. ''FRIEDLANDER'' ~·!~PEN EVES. & SUN . VOLKSWAGEN Stove, sink, ice box, carpet. ---ing, panelling, bed, new NEW MIDGET $1995 RED '64 A1GB conv. great 32852.VaUe Road U · t XI _ _., · ll1Y ••ACM !HWY. :wi shp, moving • sacrifice San Juan Capislram JAG AR pain .* n~~;u;tiO~ 893-7566 • 537-682-"t $1100. 548-0044 . 646-217() 8.17-4S00/493-4.5ll/4~2'liil HEAD9UARTERS NEW-USEO.SERV. MORGAN '63 SUPER 90 T11o oo!y,authorhed JAcuAR MERCEDES BENZ ............ ' dealer in Qie entire Harbor 14 A.~ Oean As Brand New, Are e 1960 J\.fORGAN + J a. Mercedes Ben :t 1970 2805 MG Sealer. $1950. AJ\1/F'~f. (.TZY 525) dlr. \Viii Compleb.: Sales, Servic.:, Pana * ~o •~• * take car in Trade or t'inance SALES O\\•ncrs p!'rsonal car, !\lint Imm ~~ edlate Delivery, -===='='=====I Private Party. 546-4m2 or SERVICE condition. Every conceivable All Modell ~ 4!14"68ll. PARTS accessory. lncludins: aulo-PORSCHE matic trans .• full power :; ----PORSCHE '67 912. Ne9i BAUER faclory a i r conditioning. '69 9l l ,·-S-,--I radials. rhrome whls. A.i\f. BUICK Only 9,IXXJ milrs. Faclory F~f S/\V. New engi~. IN \\'arranty in eUl'cl. Sa v (' Denio! 5700 actual milei; S S3900. 673-4[)30 d a YI • COSTA MESA Sl:icxl. at only 3100 W. Ccut Hwy' N.E. speed trans., mag whe~ls, 673-2976 aft 7 234 E . 11th Street $6995 642-9400 !W0-1'16t AJ\f/FJ\f. Special factory '67 Pol'S("he 911, ~spd, 54&-7765 Autbortud MG Dealer equipped. Yellow with black Xlnt cond, $4700. irterior. ! #30122--11. * 833-1331 * JAGUAR TRANSPOR TAT ION ---·----Imported Autos 9600 PORSCHE '61 PORSCHl!: CABRIOLET h1ust sell for best oUer * 67i-l323 * 1969 Porsche f fl.T Xlnt COnd, 1-753--0010 TRANSPORTATION - 9600 VOLKSWAGEN '65 vw Sedan Sunroof, radio 1~IJR~I $937 Harbour V .W. 18711 BEACH nt:. 8~U4Ja 1-IUNTLNGTON BEACH SAAB '58 VW ___ .:;,:..::,,::: ___ , j Original blael. finish \\'ilh Authorized Dealer contrasting red interior. We Sales e Service e Parts GSVTIO. Sonet Coupes in Stock Orange County's Nev.·est Dlr. $38 Down COAST IMPORTS of Or-.:1.ni::c County Irle"'. l200 \V. Pacific Coa1t Hwy. Across iron1 Balboa Bay Club 642-0406 • 546-4529 ~ do\\'n, I\. S2'9.78 for 2·1 nlOnll\ll. APR is 21.5170 IOtal interest. $1<18. Total cash price $738. CHIC_K IVERSON vw 519-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 19i0 ILARBOR BLVD. TOYOTA COSl'A MESA !TIO!Y!§lT!A! !~ra~~~!!~n.~ DEMO arr under either our 100~~ 'iO \VACON (2660) usl'd car \varran~y or new $1817 "' "'ii75o ""m Check our deals 8 OTHF..R DEt.IOS AT BIG SAVINGS DEAN LEWIS \\'il h aulornallc (YCY96ll Harbour V.W. ·: HONDA SET.. • 1960 Jaguar .!edan Bl LL YATES Good rond. p,.k ed lo ""· J1rtuµort 31111port :; ' Call "''-1""' '"" uo VOLKSWAGEN '70 Targa 911 'T' 1966 "''"'"· c.u. 0.mo! ExooUy 682 m;1.... 70 TOYOTA'S 646-9303 lSTI l BEA Cit BL. 842-4~ HUNTINGTON BF.AC!-1 ;:, ;: ·: : . " ·. :. ... .. e At• COOLl"D ,llONT l"NGINI" e ,llONT WHl"EL Dllllll e ~Wiit ASSISTl"tl SELi'• AtlJUJTING l'llONT OIK l"llAKl!S • MAXIMUM S"l:l:O JI M,.H e U" TO• MILIS "Ill GAUON e l'OUll·,.ASSINGEll. 2 Diii. SIOAN $1395 l"l!n 11• NIW Cir "reparlf;.o, LK" TrlM. Tl~ ~ Lil;enll! UNIVERSITY Ol.DIMOBIU 2UO HAllOlt llVD • COSTA MESA 540-9640 3Ul() \V. Coast Hv.'Y ., N.B. 6-12·9'105 540-1764 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 49.1-45ll/ 499-2261 :;. Imported Autos 96llO Imported Autos .. :· .. . · Dot Sing Says ••• e "Thankee You For Helping Us Win The Datsun Quality Dealer Award." e "Now We Got To Work Harder Then Ever To Keep You Happy!" e "Don't Forget, Bring In Your Friends · You Nice Guys Are No. t OK!ll" IN SALES • SERVICE • PARTS MANAGEMENT• ADVERTISING CUSTOMER RELATIONS AWARDED BY NISSAN MOTOR CORP., U.S.A. Datsun Quality Dealer Award For Outstanding A~ltievement 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-7781 540-0442 sPttd. A~l/f"!\1, chrom' wheels. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN :izs.:;2 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-48001493-4511/499-2261 328.i2 Valle Ro.<1d In stock. Immediate delivery. '65 vw BUG 111Htl'• American nl&g! \Vide tlreJll, • ••M custom metall!C paint u···h m ltlfS beautiful lace v.·ork. YPU- Laguna S.ach ~~eral other euslomlzed 900 So·. Cst. Highway V\V to choose lron1 494-7503 * 54~3100 CHICK IVERSON BIU.. MAXEY vw S.1~303I Ext. 66 or 67 !TIOIY!QIT!A! i --'"-'-n~~:~,"~:c,..-sL_v_o._. 11111 BEACH BLVD. Low miles oo rebuilt engine, Hunt, Be1ch 147-1555 new clulch, new brakes, 1 mt N. or O:IUt Hwy_ en 8$ radio, perfect condition. Can TRIUMPH be seen at 2'm llarbor Blvd, or phone 6"a.1982, 9am 10 6pm '63 VW lug MECHANIC SPECIAL Lie_ OKC612 $299 CHICK IVERSON vw 519-30n Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~U:SA 1955 Pot-sche Speed11.ter, heal· "66 Sq. Bk .. sunroof. P..&H thy engillP., straight body. ne1Y tires. Xlnt cond, pvf Sl800. 49'1-0598 I pty. 673-9210. For an ad to sel! Rround th-clock, dial 642-5678. li·~N~a~w;_.:C~a~r•=-.-~_:9800.::.:~N~o~w:..:C=•~rs:.._~ _ _:9:8()()::.~N~o~w:_::C:•'~':..__~9800 Bos LONGPRE PONTIAC 1967 We erpertly perform all Ponli•c warranty work . . . regardless of w h e r e yo u originally purch ased your Pontiac; •• , 1968 1969 '70 Nobody knows y our Pontiac better t ht n Pontiac people • • • we hive been sening, servicing and satisfying Pon tiac people for over 25 years • • • PONTIAC Tl !!! , G ff 187 I I 0 B1 h c Ila S< p, °' 'G7 S7! Jl) "' Al 541 197• Ol' " "' '60 t• lit. Si! '61 do '66 '" 6T; •t oil <'V ' Or~ oU '68· iir "" • XI "' ·ss '"' oil '56 '" Af "iO Im I 'v' Us ··--··-----------------------------------------------------.. • TRANSPORTATION TRA NSPORTAT ION --,_ lm~~·~ ..... A._u_i_o_•..._9_600_, Imported Auto1 9600 ... VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN '63 vw Sedan Frldar, Stptembe r 4, )q70 OAILY PILOT 41 !_RANSPORTAT ION /TRANSPORTAT ION !_~~~!'DR T~TI ON TRAN SPORTATIO - Used C1r1 9900 Ustd Cars 9900 Used Ca rt 9900 Used Cars 990G -CHEVROLET CHRYSLER --CORVAIR DODGE TR ANSPCRT>TION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ---~---Import~ .. ~~~·. -.. ~~ V.~"-~41'f ~ UMd Cart '900 VOLVO '67 DUN E BUGGY CADILLAC / ----------Abtiolutel)' lht ultimate in ---------VOLVO t'tlllOU\ dCl&I'. New top, '£7 CAD Std d<! Vil!C', alr, '57 vw Sedan '7U [)(·mo, • S78:? SAVE $466 t'bro1ni: platiA,lf thro113hout, 11tereo. landau, v.·11w, all P\\T, Volk!v.·agen enilne, new tnink/dr locks. S 2 4 O O. rubber, fiber&!~ niarble &t4-S062. lini1h, Thi& is.a steal? 1971. -'-'-'-"=------ Radio. t ASL6.'J.11 Grt" '';';~:~:~" bey $885 $488 Harb.our V.W. Harbour V .W. um BEACJ• BL """" 18711 BEACH BL.. Rl2-4'13:> 1iUNTl1''GTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NEW vw BUG Large Selection Of VW Campers, Vans, Kombis, Buses, New & Used Immediate Delivery CHICK iVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA l\lESA '64 VW BUG lladio. I [(•atcr. r·rA7. 300) Small 0o\\'O \11ilJ financ-e Plivate Party. Call j.46..I0.)2 $55.89 pr. month $147,78 down includes t•_x & Lie. Open End VW LEASl"G AT CHICK IVERSON vw 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA J\tESA LARGE SELECTION of VW CAMPERS _ Harbour V.W. or 49-1-681 1 AUTHORIZED '67 VOLKS\VAGEN ~ .. 1siback SALES & SERVICE .$79.iOO. 18711 BEACll BL., 842-41:;.; ASNJ. $09 C.11eck our de.Us CONNELL lSOO Jo' Cpe lot delivery. CJ~EVROLE1' O\·c~as de! Specltlli)'.t, 28..'JH Harbor Bh\l. DEAN LEWIS "°''" M•" 546-l>JJ 1966 Harbor. C.?tf. 646-9303 BUICK Ant iques, Cla ssics 9615 \VANTED: Cl11.ssic or an- tique c11.r enrhusiasls to sharr nil"t-shop S.:. 5torage fucilitit>s. N.8. 67:>-7498, !'HS-8171. 19·10 PACKARD Conv. 11101or. Fair body. lrade. :Nfr.36Y. ~~!_~.!'!!_R_od_• __ 9_6_20 196.S BUICK Electra 4-dr 225 custom HT. F'ull pwr, + stt>reo. t~ac air. landau top. F irt'sto11(' radiah1, xlnt cond. S299.i ~4-4960 OFF1CIAL FORD CLEARANCE Boss 429 e '67 BUlCK S k y la rk • ~'~'02'2198796 \Vindo11 stick. Con v r I. Ai\ol/Fl\1-air-tll1 ('r $5022. Disl'OU111 v.·heeJ. Very clean. l\1ust sell $1022 at a loss! $1450. 6Th-4537. P.~•lt'I "66.RlVJERA, good cond. all ;JOUTn \,oOQST Ford -Mercury l 03 lrGadway, Laguna 9,h, S49·38S1 or 494-11515 pov.·er. air, !actory custom interior. am-Im rad i o. .,,._..,. . e '67 RI V l ER A; Air bUC'/seats XLNT CONO. * 962-9790 * Jl)I SLE)fQNS Jl\IPORTS. ·""""H"U"N,CTC:l""NG.:.TO:.Nc.._:B::E::A.::C::ll'--c./AUtos Wenttd -9100 e 19&1 Special Wagon, Auto. l:lO \V. \VARNEH, SANTA "66 ·V\V Sedan. x lnt. l'Ond. --P I s. r I h. Xlnf eo nd! .ANA, OPEN EVES.&.· SUN. Orig. O\\'ner. 59j()_ Call WE PAY TOP Reasonablr! ~31. 546-412J. 8»--1248 aft 6. CASH "61 BUICK Special. Good COSTA il1ESA '69 VW Bug, R&J~. transportnlion S200. 1970 V\V. $1850. Only 6000 $15..'10 642·778.1 CA MARO '68 CAMARD Auloma!ie, power st«'ring, low n1i1Coagt' l\rQD34 1 l dlr. &nail down \\'ill finnncf' pri. vnh• party. 546-4052 or 494-6811. e "68-Like new . 30,000 1ni, r.e\v tires. s179.> ;,.i:; ... s!IOG e CAMARO '69 Z28 e 14,000 mi, $2550, 536-8291 ----- CHEVROLET '63 ~hevy Wagon Au10., rudio, heater. VS, pow. CL' slC'ering. (J8T726l. $599 BILL YATES VO~~~!A.!'1' San Juan Capistreno 837-48001493-4511/ 499·2261 '66 CAPRICE 2100 Hatbor Bl\'d. &lf>-IH66 1 66 CAPRICE * '58 OfEVY • 28J cu. in, Auto tram; XLNT TRANSPORTATION S250 or Best Offer • &15--5105 af1 6 • '65 ,\1AUBU SS, lite blu. blk Inter, 4-spd, nu tires, Good cond. SHJOO. 675-0077. "67 OiEV\' Impala :;upcr Sport. Sll50. Call ~1760 atl 5. '&l Qi.EV S1a \Vagon 2 cir Run.<; \\'ell. $750. Ph . &16-6688 '62. Chevy Impala SS 327, auto., new inlcrior. Good MUST SELL '6.i Chry!iiler "300" roll\'. Air, JIO\ver steerlng, \\"indO\\'ll ~ood tires, excellent shape~· 531-5.121 "'hsl. BB 800. !\lake orfcr. '64 CORVAI R Autornatic, radk>, ilt!11.tf'r. f0\VJ263l $-488 11(..""' ~ 2100 Harbor Blvd, 645-().166 1966 CORSA Coupe, l<IOhp, -4 on ftoor, All rene"·ed. Best oiler. 714-492-7623. e '61 Corvair e Stick shill. Xlnt cond. UK! 644-1370 '61 Corvair, Gd cond., Auto. $200. &46.l248 CORVETTE -- -- 'G6 DODGE Dart GT Convt. VS, au10 1ri.n1, p.a.. Rt H. ln1n1aculate thrOu.)'.!hout, Musi lk."'C to belleve1 Can alTange Sl00',) I I n 1 n pa,yrnen111 unde1· Sl.'.I mo w/SIOO dwn. :i-1~7143. FALCON OFFICIAL FORD CLEARAN.CE '70 Falcon Wagon S 0A40Hl98997 \Vlndow st1e;k. er $3617. Discount $S97 lmµo rttd Autot 96001mported Autos WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • 1600'• • 2002 • 2500 • 2100 e Al.L COLORS e Al.l. MODEl.$ • 2'00 cs e IMM EDIATE DELIVERY The BMW four-cylinder engine acts I ike 1 six or eight. It's smooth and quiet •. turns out 114 h.D. 1t 5800 rpm. Cruises . 1t 100 mph. Gets up to 30 mpg. See ~ T & M MOTORS for the frff booklet, : "33 Rea10n1 Why BMW Is Better." orig. miles. i;tiJI on 1\·arran-* 61>-69t:i • ty. dk grt•cn. blk in1. Ai\t/ --,,,~~V~IV~R~,-,.~Good~-- Fflf. Very clean. 4!U-0429 SJj() or fllak(' Offt'r Ior uSf'd cars &:. trucks just call us for tree eslimate. CADILLAC :! Door Hardtop. Au!o., radio. Vt:. air cond., po1\'er strer. ing. fRYS41 1) $1499 c"°:c""~·= l650" .,_. ~55~7-""784"'9.,_. --.__-I BMW SERVICE 1--------l '66 Chev. i\1alibu Super Sport SPECIALS USED CAR SPECIALS •' "60 V\V, J usl reblt "6j f'ng, P\"' Pf)'. &t!-60G4 1500cc, chroine 1nags, !a<;k, '56 vw Bus. full 8f'ats. ~ li!e bhJC' pain!, i.:usln1 inter, cond.. r un~ 1\·eJI. SG.>O. Si95. $2-SG!l:i. 642--05().l '61 Van l:ampcr. nc1v tires, "61 VW VAN. n •blt rni;:;inc, dbl bed. 1\funy r.-.:rras. ovenizc !ires . .t:ood n1cch. * 673-32.W * cond. $700. 6~'1-16.j() "66 VW. Sunroof, Good Buv. '56 V\V bus S:i()(l Grr.rk $875. Son gone to Europe. surfboard 7';J". P C l i~a n _c":.:""°~":,"'~· ~~=~~-I ?.fnln board 7'3'". 49-1-1377 e 1936 V\\" Bu.s-SiOO nr best aft 6 offer 67Zr-\j()j da:,o~. 67j...32'19 e 'jj V\V Bug-Ne\\ t1r1•s. <'ves. • 1967 VoJksy,·agen • Original owner. $1100 or best offer. Call 96&-8125 '68-:\tint cond, r/h. ll('W •ires. Sharp uphol. Clean. Pvt ply. $129j. i36-l 729 '&I V\V Bus Sunroof, good condilion 542-4898 e '67 V\V Blk/wht. _ in1. Xln! Cond. Nu ti'!. $1150. P1·./p1y_ 546-1379 '68 Bug, beige, RIM, XL.~T cond . .i\tUST sell. $1250/best offer. 646-4370 '56 V\V-1 yr old eng, reblt trans, gd tires, radio. $200. Aft 7, 497-1674. "10 POP To11 Campe r . lmmac. Nu.c;u· "'arranty I \\'/lent. Save? ~..t8-12>IO brakes & trans SJOO. &ll-:litiJ --VOLVO Ll"l.n.n.l"'I THINK ~YOlYO' "FRIEDLANDER" 2 dr. Demo. * $2750 * 1l1H al"ACH {HWl'. J11l 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV. ~ 'j9 VOLVO -StiO or bs1 ofr. Reblt eng .t· r.arbs. Ne\\• Lires .t bait. 64~36 GROTH CHEVROLET -------'67 C•dill•c Sfi!'" de Viii•. Bl LL YA TES low mikogc. AM-FM rad~. VOLKSWAGEN Ask lor Sall'!s !.tanager leather am:! vinyl roof, 32852 Va.lit' Road 18211 Beach Blvd. radial tin's. $2.995.00. San Juan Capistrano Huntiniton Beach JI~! SLEi\IONS 1 ~1PORTS R37-'1800/493-4Sl V 499-22fil 8·17-6087 Kl 9-3331 120 \V. \\'A RNER. SANTA WE PAY CASH ANA. OPEN EVES. & SUN. '66 Chl'vy Caprice 4-<!r ;').i() .... U2j . hrdlp. landau roor, v s. auto ':c66.::._C:cA=D::_ro_"_v_. _E_l _D<>_ra_d-,-.· 1 trans, p.s. p.b. p \Y r FDR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET windows, tilt wht cniise all pwr, cltmate control. control. J3.000 orii: mi's, A)l/fo'M slereo, cruise $l600. SlOO dwn, \V i 11 l"Orlll'OI, lilt " !Cit'. 5lf'ering arr11n~r c-on1pl r i na n. 11·hl. gu1dc-mahc 1v.•ili1e sen!. lrlr hitch .. $2 160 ~ 54;,...774~· 2828 liarbor Blvd. &42-241;: "67 CllEVY r-.talibu, OOrd top, Costa l\tesa 54(' .. 1200 '67 CPE de Ville, Vinyl top, air cond, all power, Cherry \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR 3-8 2 FQR TOP USED CARS ('OllCi. $.1!.'00. 67 lj . U your car i.; extra c lean 'G.~ Eldorado -sharp! sec us Jlrst. ' 3;;,QOO. rnilr.~ -$•14~. Day BAUER BUICK G73-2990; E\'es &33--06().i. 234 E. 17th St. "&l Convt. White/red. Good Costa Mesa 548-7765 cond. All xtr as. $975. tinn. ----'196-2.)()(). WE BUV \VANT ADS SELL! 642-5678 CARS! Call r.tnnager ....... lMPOR'i'S WANTED Oran::e Counties TOP S BUYER BILL fltAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvrl. H. Beach. Ph. ~7-!S&i VS. automatic rad. &. htr., power steerini:'. RWD 272. si .29:..oo. JIM SLE~lONS !~WORTS, 120 \\!. \VARNER, SANTA ANA. OPEN EVF.S. & SUN. ~&-412J. 1963 Chev SS. 1 owner. R/H. PIS. Red w I red int. P erft'<.:l con d ! BEST OFFER. 64&-2079. Used Cart 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars good com!. $1250 673-3360 J ohn V1ulClf'a\'e. * '64 MALIBU S.S. Xlnt Cone!. Org. OwTll'r Best Offer. 536-1663 '64 Chevy Impala. 4 gpd, needs work .....,,,. • * • '62 Chevy Nova, 6 eyl, automatic, good tires. $275. 644.2j65 * • * CHRYSLER 4,000 Mile Ser•i&• ••• , , , $6.00 1,000 Mlle ~r1lc1 • , •• All 4 Crt. f r••t l rolii" •.•.•... $30.00 $20.00 S IU.OI D FANS ANO INSTALLATION '67 FIAT C pe. r1dio, k11t1r. G aocl tir11 .. R1cl with l:ol1ck huck1t 111h . ITRY-016) Joe BerloUI'• T&M MOTORS 8081 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. SALIS OPIN SUNOA.T PARTS, SlRYICl TU!S., THURS., TILL 1 :00 Sl4·ZZl 4 l 1/1 Ilk. I. •f '-9') lf2·5551 •11tlle+"l-4 • S•ln I s. ... u~· ..... My Dad SEZ ... S ALL '70'S JOHN CONNILL "NO GIVEAWAYS NO GIMMICKS" THIS WEEK MUST GO! AV AT .•• KEN JONES Garden Grove E Chrysler·Plymouth AIR CONDITIONED BRAND NEW 1970 DUSTER ~·2388 "H'""'"" I 75 DUSTERS IN STOCK I '65 Valiant woo1111. 6-rl'l .. outo. t1on•, roa10.111'<11er, N~El'lS ~i.v !N' C"'-Fll!I l'l!N 677. 6 RAMBLER WOllD"'. Auto .. rodlo, ~·· 11, Ptrlf'ci f,,. bot~ IO l(Mol! UOH ,, .. ••• Ju,t 11 Y•1r1 of H ori•1t D11lin9, S1rlin9 Ck1¥rol1h . IRAND NEW 1970 MONTE CARLO (.~! ctl•. blh,. !Int. 91111, l'·Wlll OOW•-1111rh19, Str1lo biKk!I 31~ .. •lnyl rool, ron.011. JOO HP lurbo. 1111 w-•. r111v wllll., WSW, AM ... ctlO. re•• 1-t1r. 1!t. rtt~I !1»1! FULL PRICE 53761 IRAND NEW 1970 1;4 TON Pktup He•"V duty ••o"' & '''" •P•l~IJ1. g111gf1, l'l1•t1r. St~ (111ll Cl911 FULL !'RICE IU.ND NEW 1 '70 EL CAMINO C..nl. ell•. kits. Uni. gl1S1, door tOgt groi... Y]nyt roar, 1lr cone!. oower GIM: 111-l~fl, JOO hp., paw1r UtHino. 1191!.a WSW !1•6, AM r•· ctlo, <Ill~ wllfflo. Siie 11011) {5'tll List Pr h:• ........ $4401 .27 Disco...-t . ~ 787.00 ::,"t •.. ' .. ' $3614.27 ON ALL NEW '70 CHEVROLETS IRAND NEW 1970 CHEYELLE H.T T!nred gl1n, turbo hydrlrNlk, •••P. emlulon conl!"ol, POWtr al•tr· •ng. AM rldlO, vinyl !nterlar. $11t;. 4101'1 ll""l FULL !'RICE 53063 BRAND NEW 1970 CAMARO l •nled ol•H, t VtP. 1m11110n COii• trol, 1'M pu1hbutton r1dlo, US 6 Lyl. tt19ln1. Slk, 110).j) (011)1) FULL !'RICE 52659 IU.ND NEW 1'70 FULL SIZE WAGON lw•rto h)'dr•ml!k tr•ntmlulon, ••111. etT>IHlon tonlrOI, ~ tl11r1n9, AM rl<llCI. SI~. !"1) CMlll FULL PRICE 53298 IRAND HEW 1'70 KINCOSWOOD ESTATE Wl90". t p11a .. di•. bll•., !lnl. 91•'5' P-wl11dctw .. 1tH rlno, 1lr concl., rt moll mlHo•, JOG hp ........ IU•DO hydr•""'· lie, !Ill wh"I, luot•O• ••ck, r1cl10. tic. Slit. l"I) (Ulll List Price ........ $5259.35 Discount ........ $ 862.25 ::,~ •...... $4397.10 IRANJ NEW 1970 IMPALA CPE. Cusl 1111._. l lnl. 91111. •lnyt '°"'• •Ir cond.. 76S hp MO.. 1url!Oh)'<lr•· m•llc. POwt• '"'ring, WSW, Cloe~. loM r.OIO, r1lly Mlt tlJ. •lnyl lnte" '"'· (416) 17ll01 Ust Prlc~ ........ $4652.JS Discount ......... S 760.24 ::,"t •... ' .. $3892.11 lltAND NEW 1'70 IMPALA CUSTOM CPI. Ola. DU,., Hnt g1 .... rurDO l'ly· framulc, POwtr 1lffri119, WSW, tull Wl'tttl cavtrt, AM rtdlo. vinyl lnl't•· 1or. s1w. 16111 P•"' List Prlc• ........ $3997.75 Dlscou"t .... $ 606.61 ;:,"t •...... $3391 .14 IRAND NEW 1'70 CAMARO Tlnlecl gl1u, cenl•r con10le, lurbo l'l\'<lr•ITll11c, tv1p, emluioll contre!, paw1r JIHrlnt, blt!ecl WSW, wil1el CD'ltrl, AM rldia. 51~. tlOXIJ (91121 List Price ...... $3555.10 Dlsc ou•t . .. $ 458.10 ~:,"t •. ' . . . . $3097 .00 IU.ND NEW 1'70 NOYA COUPE \'I 11n9lnt. dtlU•• 111111, llntlll ~t•u, l>QWer llff<ln9, 1'M •odlo, WSW. wlleel (OV•rt. ~T-. U60l) 136)41 HAND NEW 1'70 MONTE CARLO Tint• 9l1H, turbo hyd,.,...tk. tr1n .. mlulon, • 1ml11ion t11tttro1, paw"' tlffl"lng & bo-... fl, W5 W, rl<llct, "'· Sttl. UNI l_..I FULL !'RICE 53299 • NEW CARS USED CARS • • ----------------~ ------------------------------------- I & 1 · "<""...,.._.-..... ,--~~.,... .... ,~,,. .. ,,..,,_...r.-..."•-·;L ·-;.-,---~-·;--c-==·~·~·"'"'~"'""'"'="'"~=·,.-~,~-"' ,.,..,.,.,,., '""'"'-'"'*"'""''"w-.,e"'''"· '"'"'''""-w'""'®""'=""""l~"t!OK!"'"i"''"'d"'l'"''"EVl'''"''!"'""''""".-"s-_,. ... ...,,.,...,,,., .. e"'!'t'"'""'4"'41""l!*'" .. ..,,,%'!!'*'"'*"*""'·"~"'* ... '-••-111110 ... -, . s In; "" • ' I • ~ •' I • " ~ . iii .. JI * ;i; '" Rl .. • • i ! I ! I • .. • FORD '65 }'ORO \Vtaon, 390, pcJ\!.'4:t . Desperate, Must iell. rnakl!! FORD '66 Fairlane • deal. 6'5-'7579. Convenibl"· Automatic, VB. '69 LTD St tlon w Ai radio, healer, dlr. Excellent Ltig I rac:. Nu ti~:"l9.cxii cond. (~V 074>. ~ill take ml $3 ~ ~2159 tradf' or tina~ pnvate par. · ......... _.. • ty. Call 54M052 or 494-68ll. 'f.2 Jo"'ORD Sta. \Vlll,,'On. New 1 O RANCH£RO Ii"''· ballory. G< n-ansp. 65 FOR sm. MS-25·U FORD TOP DOLLAR '"' CLEAN USED CARS See Andy BroWn •• THEODORE ROBINS FORD 3)6() Harboi' Blvd. '65 Fqrd Country s.:1u1rt' 6 <:yl Automatic, 'Cl dt 268). Coma Mesa W•g Air nd R&ll $<150 ~,.vrn take car tn trade or 642-0010 eau ·64ki~.' ' . finance pr i vate party. '66 Squire Wagon '63 GALAXIE, VS, :sli<:k, Rurui 546-4052 or 494-GSU. Fairlane, with wood sra1n ex. \\·ell , Make oltl.'~'. 546-1812, "66 FORD terior, dlr. 390 VB, power 1241 Baker St., No. C, C.M. Srd. 1'UIJ Po\l'<'r. (RSS956J .steering air coDd. S~reo '68 Ford Count?)' Squ ire 10 $695 taPe, au'to. trami. (TAY2'7'9) pass. wag. l..oecll'd, air, lo l'IU ~--·· ... "41_,, __ a Will take trade or finance 1nl'll $18'.lO. 54f>.-0754. '~ '~ private party. Call 546-4052 1963 FORD Slation \\agon 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 or 49f.68lL Fairlallf', 11Ced$ \\'Ork. good '69 TORINO Squire, 390 eng, MU=ST=Sellc=-."°'"69=-;F,-ord-.-;Co;,-"-,._ FORD '65 FORD LTD Radio. heater, Auto. A VS, pov.·er alee~. COKV~). $699 .BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN. 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 8S7-<800/49.1-4511/$2261 ' BRAND NEW '70 OPEL KADETIE BRAND NEW '70 OPEL WAGON Fully equlpped. (31935747) Deluxe. Fully equipped. (3 99299421 1 body, Slffi. 499-3478 Sin \\'gn. FJPwr, AMJFM, try !Sedan, power brakes, 1 d W TUm tho6e Whi te Elephants t1ir, racks, 15.000 mi, $3100 power steering, air, xlnt. 62 For agon into cash thru a Daily Pilot or best ofter. 557-8119. cond. best oller over $2700 VS, automatie. p:m-er steer- Dime-a-U~ ad!! Pilot classified ad .ectioal day 646-1815 evt!. 642-5603. ing, radio. fGWB3411. ONLY AT CONNELL CHEVROLET '69 CHEV. %-TON PICKUP VB WITH 11 Vi FT. SELF CONTAINED CAMPER H••YV dutv tllru-oul wi tll •ir l1¥itlitr rit•r 1lloc•1, powitr 1tit1rin'i, •ir c.ond., e utom~tic +(~n1. C•mp•• compl•l• witll furn•C•, elitchic refri<i•••lor, boil! AC •nd DC, .. d1 ;:•· '"''"' ····· "' ;;·'53·999 '69 FORD 'I• TON VAN .' Automali1:, radio, nic!', (18268) '67 FORD 'I• TON VAN Heavy duty. Stick i;hi(t. ._ \YUi paint to suit buyer. (Q74696) ~67 CHEVROLET 'I• TON Sport van. Automat.ic, VS, radio, Gide windows. strong vehicle. (110'100J '66 CHEVROLET •;, TON P.U. ' Radio. 11t4ck. (1'50951 ) ' ' '68 CHEVROLET 1/z TON P.U. ti cylinder, stick. ~i2331C) '68 ~~:~~~~ PV:, air cond,. Jow 1nll~. Nitt car. (WQK204) V8. 110\\·er ~l<'f'rinJ!, r<'mainlng guarantrP . '69 CAMARO Lo.v mil rs. f Y\VS2:l:l I '68 ~!~~h~~l'r, autnmalic, power steering. V8, niCf', (VT1\128.1 J '67 '67 CHEVROLET BEL AIR '1 Dr. $C'rllln. V~. aut•1., _P.S .. ai r. radio. Hf'al ni•·f· ~·ur. f,(111', low p1•ice. IUWZ08.'~l CHEVROLET WAGON VI Jlf•I Air "'agon. 6 pas11., P.S .. auto., air . J.,01v, lnw priN'. lTZH933) '64 CHEVROLET CONVERTllLE Auto., P.s .. R&.H, Belonged to a mechanic. Strong car. I KAB5.16 t '65 CORVAIR SPIDER Coup,.., Radio. (l'IG176) '67 PONTIAC GTO Coupr, Hadio. h1~ntrr. 11uh,n1:itic, 1XJW('r :<l1'(•rint:. IA", IO\\' pr\1·r. IWCA940l . '68 V.W. SEDAN CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 $499 BRAND NEW '70 OPEL RALL YE BRAND NEW '70 OPEL CUSTOM BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan CapiBlrano R314soo/49].45ll/ 499-2261 KAOETTE. F"lly eq,;ppod. I 929297506 1 Coupe. Automatic:: transmission. 1919232201) JAVELIN '69 Javelin, Beaut cond. 343 V-8, all optioru;, inc air, new tires, $1995. 646-4455 days; 646-mw eves. BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS '66 CHEVELLE H.T. MAVERICK V8 , eutomatic tran1mi1sion, radio and heater, power 1f eer· ing. IYPW8371 $1367 "68 PONTIAC LE MANS OFACIAL FORD CLEARANCE 1970 Maverick • OK91L242457 Window stick. er ;2560. Discount Sport Coupe. V8, eutomatic, radio, heater, power steer .. ing, vinyl roof, black vinyl interior. I OVL272 ) . $311 $1947 '65 RIVIERA GRAN SPORT Full power and f•c::tory air, AM-FM radio, chrome wheels, IPIY1141 $1963 OFACIAL FORD CLEARANCE 1970 Maverick '65 OPEL 2 DOOR COUPE 4 speed transmission, radio end heater. ,IRGU062) # OK91T'l33115 Window atiek. er $2".J34. Discount $300 Imported A-96001mported AulOI 96001mporttd Autos TOYOTAS 1968 TOYOTA CORONA SEO. H. Alltclmltlt, Ill 1rlgl!lll tVZVl"I 1969 TOYOTA COJtONA SEO. R/H, Aute!Mlic, llK:ktl St1ts, (lllWJ:2041 1968 l'OYOTil CORONA H.T. '"· R/H, Au"m•llc, Air COl!d., Llndlff J8CI. tWl'"EUU 1965 VOLVO 1111 C .. I:, R/H, I --'• O~t • ll"lwtUI 1961 VOLVO l .. 510, •IH, AwtwMtk, All .. 1111111, IJIU.YVJ 1968 VOt..VO 141 ST. WAOON HMI«, l.lffMlllHc, IWftittt r.-ctc. Tll.ae Ir. ht"' .. flrMI. 1:UC\l't24J 1962 VOL.VO lH Sl!O. •f H, 4 ,,..., •Ir c-. 111•w .. 11 $1195 $1696 $ $2495 $195 VOLVO 1800£ COUPE IN STOCK & READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY "69 OPEL Sport seden. Automatic trensmission, radio •nd he•+er, only 6,800 miles. IZAE205 1 $1588 '67 CAMARO RS V8, •utom•tic, radio, heater, power steering, factory air, I owner gem. ( UZZ65 I l $1997 '69 MUSTANG va, eutom•tic, redio, heater, power steering & brekes, f~ctory air. Lo w mileage. IZBN685 ) $2487 '69 OPEL LS Sport coupe. 4 'peed transmission, rad io and heater, gold with bleck interior, white wells. IYOA6l 1} JO MILES TO THE SALLON $1393 4 ON THf FLOOJJ USED CAR SPECIALS 1''3 AUSTIN HIALlY S•RITl $795 111/1-1, ',l>ffCI It• ~f•CI toP <BAWllOJ 1ff.4 DATSUN 1500 IODSTR $895 11:/H, • r,j!Hd, Ell!•• c:lffn, C0M N3'7J 1ff7 DATSUN ST. WAGON ll/H, • sl)Hll, RMI <IN". tVE04'J) USED PICK UPS t 1864 CHIV. ¥!-TOM "t.I Vt, '""· ,.,,._.tk. 4Wa (ltlUNJ $69& - DEAN LEWIS IMPORTS 1"5 MGI RODSTlt 11:/H, 4 1PHd, wtrit wllft!t. tUL IC.MI! 1"6 VW IUG ll /H ' ...... fl:HI nk t. (St~Jn} 1t6J TRJI RODSTlt $1095 $1295 • 1966 Harbar, Costa Mna 646·9303 1ff7 DATSUN 1600 SED. 111/H, Automllk . RHl $11••11, IT$1lllll 1"4 O,IL ST. WAGON 11/H, ' Ulftd, LUOVttl r.U. tPIWll TRA ---OF c 19 #OK l'r $2 OF c Mu •OF' C'r $<i I .... ' Sec a· N< '6! l; t·yL 1RPl' Bl vc Sa 837- 'titi M1 :.it1ton powo $~.( Jl:\1 120 \ ANA. :116-1 '69 BO C'ngle lak<"W 8 0 0 0 I' aced trade. Used - -----,~------·------------..... ------------~-·--- i Frlda.Y, September 4, 1970 TRANSPORTATION ' TPANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T AN 5P~R!ATION TRA -Uted C1r1 9900 UHd Cart 1;:::;:.=..;.;;,;..;c.. __ _ 9900 Used Cars 9900 u..ci c.,. 9900 UNd C•rs 9900 Used C•rs 9900 Und Cars 9900 UNd Cars 9900 Used Can MAVERICK MUSTANG ---OFFICIAL FORD OFFICIAL FORD CLEARANCE CLEARANCE 1970 Maverick 1 1970 Mustang • OK9lL287957 Window sticl:. Hardtop a QJ•'02F108103, Win. er $2852, Discount dow sticker $3892. Discount $350 $634 '67 Mustang 2-0r vinyl HT, V-8 auto., r l h, clean & rea- • '66 Mustang 2+2 Fstbk e sonablc. Call 9684262. 289 cu. in, 4-spd 1967 Mustang ConvL R/H. New tire & BMlkes Air. Low miles. BEST CLEAN~! OFFER. Call 673-1895. See al 1825 \V. Balboa Blvd, •67 ~IU5"I'ANG conv V-8 Ne\vport Beach 5'10-8308 :.tick shift Xlnt. $1050: '65 MUSTANG PM'"''·"'-""" li ryl., stick, radio, heater. 1 RP:'ll3921 . '65 MUSTANG FASTBACK Good condltion, low mUe~e ~lUSI' SELL. 496-5.S44 $899 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valla Road 4 dr. t'ull po\11er. {SLC32{l) San Juar Capistrano $1395 837-4800/ 493-45l1/ 499-226t '66 1\Iuslang Convertible, VS, ~ ~ :.iu1on1atic, rad. & htr., 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 po~er steering, RPL 313, '69 CUTLASS Supreme-Vinyl $!19.>.00. Hrdtp, air, auto. Xlnt con<:!. Jl:'II SLEl\.10NS ll\lPORTS, Best offer. 673-8118. 120 \V. \VA.RNER, SANTA 1 ~~~----A~A. OPEN EVES & SUN• '&I _J ET5:fAR I, 1 owner, all ;tt6--'112Ci • orig. paint & mt. Xlnt cond. "6!1 BOSS 302, 1 OF A KIND! S."ilj. ~:2698 f'ngle hooker weber • 19aa Olds • Sl25 e lnkewood, hursl '& more.' ~ transportation SO OO mi's, Never 968-12J7 536-4634 r~ced-1\.Ius! Sf'e, $2700 !\lay Y'ou'll find great bargains t1·ade. 83&-6126 ;itr 5pm. when you "shop" Daily Used C•rs 9900 Used Cars 1967 GRAND PRIX F•''· •ir cond. on tllis h••uliful gold c•r with bl1ck int•rior. Blick Yinyl top. Ex· c•plio11•I conditio11, ITRH377l $2095 1970 MUSTANG MACH I Ewery •~I•• incl. f•cl, •Ir condil, A Ralls Royce l1•d• & Ol'ly l:i,000 mil •'· (07 1• ACNI $3495. __ 1969 MERCURY COUGAR Sparkling iwary & bl.ck Yinyl lop. Ont ve•1 w•n•nly, fZXE839) $2695 1968 VALIANT F1clory air conditio11in9 an thil b••utif~I C•r. IWVF445) $1895 1967 OLDS LUXURY SEDAN e ... ,., conc•iwahl• ••Ir• an thi1 excell•nl f1mily or bu1inen cir. Ont owner !VHF. S11:i) $2495 1968 CHE\IROLET MALIBU 1 dr, herdtop. 327 V.8 eng,, 1111+0 lr1nl,, pawer tle•ring, bucket 1e•h. A b1eullf11I dirk sil.,er. IYER0921 $2195 1964 CORVETTE STINGRAY Fout 1p1•d tr11nunilsion & ouhl1ndi.,9 condition. On• ye•r w11rr•11ly. tVCJ99ll $2495 1969 GTO HARDTOP 41 Speed +r•n1., d i1c h••kes & power •+•ering. 1p1rk!i~g 9•1•n & only 12,000 mil11. !7a4AFYl $2895 1968 PONTIAC VENTURA ? dr, h11 rdlap, f•Clory 1it cand., powe• windows. A camp•llY •••cutiw• Cir witll f1c;lory w•cr1nty. 11041 177) $2695 1968 FORD MUS;rANG 1 door h•rdtop, r1d ici, "••!••, 1vtom1~c tr1111miuia11, A b11wtifvl 9r1•11 flnhh. (WVX2!ll $1895 1964 PLYMOUTH WAGON Fury 11ri11 with power sl•eri119, V-1, •u• tom•lic: tr1n1miu :on. A 9r11t f,,..ily cir. iOYS2521 $995 1965 CHEVROLET SEOAN 811 At. witli r1dio, "••+•r, pawer 11•11• ;,.g & 1ulom1tic ff1n1m ln lon . l4.000 mile1 on thil unb1lieY1bly well·k•pt cir, IJUWC16)! $1295 ~ROY CARVER ~ROLL S -ROYCE 2925 HARf\OR DOULEVARO, <...'OSTA ~1ESA 5.J6 .4444 OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC '66 ·Pontiac Lemans, 2 dOor hardtop, automatic, radio & heater, UISS70. Sl,095.00. JIM SI.EMONS IMPORTS, -----STUDEBAKER e CLEAN, dependable •55 Commandet1o.-fresh overhavl. $400. 646-4931 '66 OLDS 88 Clb, Cpe. Fut! power. ($1of8042) $1195 12') W. WARNER, SANTA l-------- ~~ ANA. OPEN EVES. ~ SUN. T ·BIRD 546-4125. 2100 llarbor Blvd. 645-0466 PONTIAC '10 LeMam Sport • 1966 Olds CUUass _ Xlnt air, .Int stereo, all pwr, cond, 4...gpd trans. Original load~. Steal $3300. (Il4) owner. 644-4377. 645--0545 or 675-2216. 1970 GTO 400: 4.Spd, cwtom __ P_L_Y_M_O_U_T_H..___ "''-Full worraoty. m.1343 eves & wkends. Ask fGr $teve. '69 Tempest coupe. Smoolh, thrifty, OHC 6 cyl, Air. -----T·BIRD TORINO Very clean. 642-5990. '65 T-Bird, romp! full power .:..C~O=~O-..,.--,.-,, * '60 PONTIAC., 3 on floor, ind tac air cond, ivy gold * '63 T-BIRD Landau, air & 389, runs good, reasonable! Immaculate! $1400, SlOO power, 50,000 actual ml. Call 842-1386. dwn, will arrange rompl 642-0319 With just • call, )'OU can _o_·nan--=. ,,,..,._77_43_. ---• '60 T-Bil'd, Air cood, sill it all! Place a Dally '69 T-BIRD: 2 dr. Landau. ,~~ib, good cond. 642-m4 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT It's really not that hard town, 1118 DAILY PILOT to replace. Just watch the Chusified section. S ave furniture &: miscellaneovs money, Ume & eUort by columns in the Oassil:led s h o p p l n g from your Pilot Classified Ad. Call Fully equipped, air, etc. ..,.,.. direct 642-5618 TODAY! * * 646-0284 • * Saturday -DIME-A-LINES! ~ WANT AD Section. armchair. DUE TO POPULAR REQUEST, WE ARE REPEATING THE MOST DRAMATIC CLEAN UP SALE IN OUR 18 YEAR HISTORY! '·' * •• THAT'S RIGHT. $70* OYER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL BRAND NEW 1970 COUGARS, AND COUGAR XR7's, GOOD SELECTION!! SAVE UP TO ON LINCOLN CONTINENTAL $70* OYER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL MONTEGOS, STATION WAGONS, 4 DR. SEDANS, 4 DR. HARDTOPS, 2 DR. HARDTOPS, Drive Them Away For Only $70 Over Factory Invoice *PLEASE ADD 2°/o FOR HANDLING I 69 CONTINENTAL $4333 Coupe. V -8. factory a.ir con di- tioning, full r,wer, ra.dio, heater, Landau Roo . AH Continental luxury features. (YPT830) I '67 FORD LTD 51555 2 Dr, Hardtop Coupe. 390 en- gine, auto. trans .. radio, heater, fac. air, landau roof. (UES685) I '65 MERCURY $1111 Parklane. Auto. trA11s., radi(t & heater, P.S .. P.B .. etc. INCA320) '69 MARK Ill E1egance personified! This fabulous car r.quippt:d v.'ilh every possible luxvry feature Jncluding full JJOWf'r, of course, power door Jocks, tilt sl.e<'ring, AM/FM stereo, Individually adjustable 6-way power seats, Landau roof. (XDC9501 55777 '69 MERCURY COMET $1777 SPORT COUPE. Full factory equipment including radio, he&.t- er, etc. Lie. 362AYG '67 ~~~-~~s.R•H.PS, 51999 FACTORY AIR CONDITTONING, white wall tires, etc. Uc. TXU190 cauente Coupe. Auto. trans., '66 MERCURY power st~ring, radio, heater. SRM72l ~ -Nmv ls The Best Ti11ae In Ten Years To Buy A Lincoln·Mereury Prod_uct J'ohnson-.son -n.n~©®n.lttl ©®~vn~~~v&n. • &11&00~ IlIJ[. lfi1l~IIB©l!!JOOW. ©®l!!J@&im 540-5630 COSTA MESA 2626 Harbor Blvd. 642-0981 THREE GENERATIONS I N TUE AVTOltJOBILE BVSINESS THI OLDUT ISTAILISHIU "FACTORY DIRECT" LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER IN ORANGI COUNTY I '• ' . .. ~ >ill ?U , ~ "1 Si s In t -.... ftl )Jdo ;,.. ... ..., "' w.j iii l: ;u "" )> "'n :ati ~· ~ ~o w .,, 121 ._---· ftl ' ... "' ra,1 ''"' .... "' "" i:R.' II .,, op ~ ftl n! l z ""' ~ :a; n "' =. -r-"' :a: .. >I! -"' 11' z ... I~ "' u -.... .. .. l: ,. ii : ftl ,, " -; ... ~ if, ... f, ftl ,. • "' I> -• .... ' ' ' .. ·-" ·-s. .. ~ .. > .... ' _,n n •O ,, o!!Z ! .... r -<O ~t~ r . rci! fi ...... ., ... z • c~'" " ;:gt ·" r~o n "' • ~~r: ~ I) ....... .. '"-o .;i 1:n., "'-!! '"Z 0 ~ .. ' " 'I . .. " ll * ~ If " u • ~ .. " • .i " !l ~ ~ ~ ~ ! I I ! THEODORE ROBINS TELLS IT ANY NEW 1970 MUSTANG IN OUR BIG, BIG, 1 STOCK LI E IT 15 •••••• The ilrand new 1970 madel cars listed below '~Ill be sold at the actual Fard Motar Ca. II.vale• plus $99.00 to cover our servicll.g & selling expense. There are na gimmicks -or added dealer charges of any kind. You can pay cash -finance thru your awn bank or credit unian or thru our financing outlets. The price Is the same with or without a trade·in. Offer effective thru September 6. Bring this ad with you! OVER ACTUAL FACTOR·Y INVOICE e FASTBACKS e MACH 1'1. e BOSS'S e NO EXCEPTIONS! IF IT'S HERE, IT'S JUST $99 OVER OUR COST! POSITIVELY NO ADDED DEALER CHARGES! OFFER EFFECTIVE THRU SEmMBER 6 STAFF CAR SALE Big Selection of Executive Cars and Demomtrators Now Slashed to Final YEAR END CLEARANCE PRICES LEASING? ROBINS RELIABLE EVERY NEW 1970 rliucK IN STOCK oiscouiif SHOP WHILI SELECTIONS 'AH LARCiE! ORDER YOUR 1971 TODAY FOR EARLIEST DELIVERY CLOSED MONDAY, LABOR DAY ~ NEW1970 TORI NOS $99 OVER COST 2 Dr. Hdtops., •'s 434, 2074, 2564, 2627. GT "'• 2294, 2323. NEW 1970 MAVERICKS $99 OVER COST 2 Dr. Sedani, •'s 457, 451, 516, 2331' 2384, 2556. NEW 1970 Thunderbirds 2 Dr. L•nd1us #'• 596, 915 • 2 Or. Hdtop•., •'• 420, 456, 2205. 4 Or. Landau • 1254. NEW 1970 Cnty. Sod. Wagon 6 PHI " 936 • Cnty. Seel. W-eon 10 Pa~1. • 965. Cnty. Scauire W•gon 6 P•••· * 2502. G•l•xie sOo 2 Dr. Hdtps., •'s 949, 2512, 2655, 2743. NEW 1970 FALCONS $99 OVER COST 2 Dr. Sedan • 214 2 Dr. Future Sedan • 660 Future 4 Dr. Sedans •'s 523, 615. _CAMPERS $99 OVER COST Four Winds '# 2767 El Dorado r#'s 1616, 1692, 858, 859, 2388 , 2799, 2850, 552. OYER 2 ACRES Of FINE TRADE INS TO CHOOSE FROM MUST ANG SALE A THEODORE ROBINS EXCLUSIVE LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD! '69 FORD F250 w/11 Yi FT. CAB OVER SELF CONTAINED CAMPER 1 S to chooM from. '65 thru 70 models. (oupes, hlrcltops, con- vertlbl• n 2 + 2 Fastblcks. Some with 4 1pHd11, also air con· dltioning and autom1tic models. EXAMPLES: 1967 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, R&H, IZYZ26JJ OUR PRICE $1399 • 66 ~·~:~~~~~ HARDTOP $119 5 '69 '65 '65 '69 '67 '63 MUSTANG HARDTOP F11ll f1ct. 1quip., r•dio, h11t1r. F1ctorv w1rr1nty ••ail. lXXSJ17l EL CAMINO Full f1ctory •quipp•d, •ir cond. IWJL45SI RIVIERA H.T. Fully •quipp•cl. •ir, lo ftllile1. I PBV0261 C·HEVELLE MALIBU Hercltop. Fully f•ctory equipped includin9 •ir cond. IZXV332) SHELBY 2 plus 2 4·1p1ed. r•dio, lt1•t1f, new p1 int, e•t1ll•11I coitd. IUENS l41 . DODGE POLARA VI, •ulol'l'l1lic, power 1!11ri 119, IARKt2tl , . • • $1995 $1195 $1895 $2495 $2195 $495 ·l----100%-PARTS-ANO-l='ABOR,----f--.,..-ir_c:ondition ing,-V8,-4ufomatic,-power-sf••rin9;-power-brak• , WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS ·camper special, custom seats, custom 9rill, •xplorer pkg., radio. Appx. 13,000 original miles. fF25YRE74086). Off•r1 Consid•red. Co•e,.: ell meclloflicol I'°"' lKIMI .. 9'1fl•, .,._..., .. drl•• lh1e. $ '"' e11d, PLUS brakn. Httery -..... ,..... All,.,.,,..... ·A v E t1o11e I• e11r ow. aenk. • ..,......,. ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED '64 ~~.~,..~~ .. ~~.~.~XIE 500 $895 full power. INCD0421 TRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT '67 ~.~.~ ... ~!~,.......... $1699 ¥inyl roof. ITAN901l ·r68 SCOTSMAN CAMPER 8 ft. cab over sleeps 6. equipped. ( f.8C5406). $795 '67. ~~~~~~~ .. ~~ ........... ,;.,, $1495 •it, J90 •n9, IU0Ll091 '64 GMC PICKUP $795 -__ r::_~;_~_"._"<•_.J._'g~_7~_''_''·_··-----= '65 ~~~.~,.~~~~~!NE s995 pow•r 1l1•rin9. IPBHO•O I '67 CHEVROLET MALIBU $1495 ,6-9-0-~L·_;D .. 5._;,,\_',z,_·H •. r."_T·:.:_""_'·_ .. •_&_n. ___ s3_5_9~5 • 69 TORINO G. T. $1895 2 Or. H.T. 302 VI, t•dio, .. ~•ler, 1ufa ..,1tic. P.S., 1621ADW I -_ ____c._~'!..-'--11_-r,_;--:-'-;;""'-'-"-'~.-'·~;_~~-"~-'·:,_~:._·r_· -~-co-= '65. FORD LTD ·$1295 1 owner. (Z$P617) 6 CHEVROLET CAMARO $1895 2 Dr. H.T. A.ilo,,,1 tic, rid.a, ........ P.S .. f 7 VB, '"tomatio, powe. ''"'ring, _ 1 ___ ,;,_.,_"'-· 1_•0_0 '_"_'· --------- rally sport, vinyl roof. (VIS259) 68 ~~~: ..... .,,;,, ,...... $14 95 s11t l"rif ...... "' n .._.. c.rw 1•1tct ,. ,.,,.. '"'"' low '"il1191, IWWY9271. PARTS-SERVICE HOURS . ' 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 6 PM SATURDAYS I .