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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-08-11 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7 " .. 1 .. ' . ' . ' I . l I . Youth~ 19~ .. --~ Dies In Laguna Jail • ' . • -.. • . --' ----. . . -' -. Even Jet F,,es n ·ow • . . • ' .. -. • Nixon on Odd 'Vacation' DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * President Opens Busy Week at San Clemente MONDAY, AUG.UST ·11, '1969 SAN CLE~tENTE (UPI) -President Nixon opened a jam·packed week at the summer While House today with a series o{ high-level foreign policy conferences, a message to congress on welfare reform and an announcement on reorganization of the federal agency primarily responsi- ble for the war on poverty. The President scheduled a late morning meeting at his new office complex, ad- joining his summer home with Secretary t1f ~ St.ate William P. Rogers. The Secretary arrived here during the night Laguna· Police Find Youth, 19, Dead in Jail A 19-year-old Northridge youth died Saturday seven hours after being booked into the Laguna Beach jail by police. Stephen K. Mundahl of I 7 9 3 I Devonshire St., Northridge. was pro- nounced dead on arrival at South Coast Community Hospilal afler being brought from the jail by ambulance. Cause of death is as yet unknown, Coroner's Deputy James Bisner sai d to- day. There appeared to be no external cause and toxicology tests are now under way, he said. Police said Mundahl 1o,ras found lying apparently unconscious in a jail cell at about 4:35 p.m. Saturday, A number of Seconal pills were found ln the jail ha!- way, but officers decined to link them to the prisoner's death. Mundahl had been booked into the cell nt about 10 a.m. He was accused of possession of dangerous drugs and being under the inrtuence of a drug. The dead boy and two other youths were arrested following an accident at about 9 a.m. in the 200 block of Broadway. Mundahl was passenger in a car allegedly driven by Raymond Eugene Strauss, 17, of Northrldge, which collided \vlth the rear of a vehicle driven by Dorothy Ellen Springe, 41, of 750 Coast View, Laguna Beach. 1'-1rs. Springe Is the wife of Laguna Building and Planning Director Clyde Z. Springe. alter a fast trip to Japan, South Korea, Taiwan , Indonesia Australia and New Zealand. This was to be foll owed by a n1eeting between the President and Ambassador llenry A. Byroade who slopped off in California en route to his new post In Manila. Such was the starting pattern of one of the busiest weeks for Nixon since he took ()([ice. In addition to today's welfare mesMige and statement on reorganization of the ollice of economic opportunity, the * * * Lands quietly President planned within a few days to disclose his selection of a .new Supreme Court associate justice to r:eplace Abe Fortas, who left the bench May 15 under heavy critical fire. The President also planned other messages l.O Congress this week before the House and Senate begin a long Labor Day recess. The basic content of the messages was outlined by Nixon Friday night in a speech broadcast and televised nationally. The Presidenl's message to Congress * * * President's Plane Wins Approval of Noise Foes Not only did Air Force One's landing at Orange C<lunty Airport prove that a Boeing 707 · can land at the small terminal, but it proved it couJd land quietly, too . ' In fa ct, said critics or the airport's jet noise, the huge aircraft made less noise landing and taking off than the much smaller jets that use the terminal every day. And because of that demonstration the presidential plane's pilot has won Police Seek Ma11 111 Pink Nig htie A man wearing a pink, knee-length nightgown under his <lrdinary clothing was report.ed attempting lo n1olest children Sunday morning on t h e playground of Bushard School, I lun- tinglon Beach. Police said the man. described :is bet\\·een 30 and 40 years of age, with black, slightly graying hair, approached at least two tots about 10 a.m ., Sunday, revealing his nightgown to them and trying to touch them . According to witnesses, he lert the area by leaping oo,rer a wall into the neighbor- ing townhouse complex, then left by ca·r. honorary membership Jn the Newport Airport Noise Abatement Committee. Committee Chairmah Dan Emory bestowed the honorary membership to Ralph Albertazzie. pilot of the president's plane and praised the pilot's takeoff pro- cedure. "He gave us a dramatic demonstration of what can be done to reduce the jet noise over Newport," Emory said. He said that any apprehension about the jers landing al Orange County Airport v.•as dispelled when the craft look off for a short hop to the El Toro f\.1arine Corps Air Station. "The huge plane climbed sharply, cu l back power when it reached Palisades Road and made a sharp left tum when it reached 750 feet .'' Emory related. Emory said as a result of the pilot·s maneuvers only a small area of N~wport Beach received a substantial dose of lhe jet's noise. "Even that area receio,red less noise than that prcduced by the smaller jets th<it use the airport every day," Emory said. Besides creating little noise, the huge jct landed without using up all of the airport's 5,700-foot runway. JI lelt about 2,000 feet to spare. The runway size and preliminary weight estimates v.·ere the original fac- tors thal caused airport officials to ques- lion whether the huge jet could land. Man Wins $500 for Walk But He Had to Cove r 70-Miles in 24 Hours By RANDY SEELYE Of !flt o.ttr f'lltl ll•lf ' .. , · "J will never do it ag:Un," panted Gary t.fcAlllster this morning. ''I don't recommend anyone else trying ... McAllister 30, Huntington Beach, had jus t won $500 <ln a bet he couldn't walk 70 miles In 24 houni:. He completed the 240 lap!I with 45 minutes to spare at 7:15 a.m. today on lhe Orange Coast College track In Costa Mesa. It all started last week during a coffee break at Shinn EngJneerlng Co., Santa Ana. where MeAlllsler Is the night foreman. When the Huntington Beach man said he could walk 70 miles in 2.4 hours 1botlt a dozen cmployes laughed. The laughter led to a $500 challenge. f\.1cAlliater accepled ·lh• bi~ al Ulree 'lO 1 .r rive odds and started at 8 a.m. Sumlay morning. He took three shor\ breaks during the day Sunday and almost lost bis share of the bet -'300 -when he stopped to rest in the evening. At lhe mid.pOlnt las\ night however he :stopped for a hall-hour lu nch break and , was unable to get back on his feet. Finally he pulled hi11111elf up and for the nexl hour wobbled Into a slow pace. But his strength ret'urned and McAllislrr disappeared Into the night. Gary Gardner, a fellow employe at Shinn Engineering, said he stayed with McAllU-ter unlll l a.m. toda.y, but left because "sltUng w .?S tiring as walking." "Aitct.hisJunch &tQp at 8 p.m. Sunday, Gary didn 'l stop again. He knew that If he did, be wOl.lld never start again,'' Garoner sard. "lie paced himself very well, averaging between IO and 12 laps every hour," Gardner noted, "but after his lunch break last night h! only went about els,r. laps the flnt hour, then regained hia litrength." tt.fcAJlister wea~ed the ordeal quite well. but complained or problems with his leg muscles toward the end of the tilke. He ate llghUy during the walk and drank water frequently'. During the dark hours lanterns were placed around the !rack to keep him from stumbling. Hi!J children camped on th• OCC football field dtlring the night. .. Employes at Shlnn Engineering say he is sleeping today and they don't e11pect him lo show 'up fOt" work tonight. "lie ma t not. be able to v.·alk," they i:iid. _........._ Tuesday wUl spell out In :some detail !}is 1>lans for expanded manpower training. On Wednesday, if he followed the tin1etable announced earlier by his staff, a message would go lo Capitol Hill asking for a :start on a controversial system whereby federal tax revenues would be &hared with stales. The most dramatic period <lf the week promised to be Wedneaiay ni&l}t in Los Angeles when the President presides at a mammoth dinner honoring the three Apollo 11 astronauts and tbe'.ir falpilitll \t the ultramodern Century Plt\Artlot.ef. Far mor.. hrvilations-reported~ -have been lssued than the Century Pina banquet hall can acOOmmodate , and thousands more were trying . to get in. Rogers was with Nixon for the early part of the President's r·ecent ASian trip, but the secreta:iy left the White House party after Manila and set out on a long itinerary of his own. Rogers spent 11 days touring the western Pacific, touching bases which the Pi'esident was unable to include in .his 25 ,000-mile trip around the world. ·Rogers' mission ws to explain Nixon's plans for ending the war In Vietnam, plus his post- Vielnam outlook for relations between the United Stales and Asian nations. · 1'-1ost of the speculation about Nixon's next choice for the Supreme Court was (See VACATION, Page%) Berets' Attorney Calls Viet Victim Double Agent Fnim Wire Sel'\lices SAIGON -An American attorney charged in a petition filed with the U.S. Anny today that a Vietnamese man eig~l: Green Beret soldiers are accused of murdering was a double agent employed both by Hanoi and the C e n t r a I Intelligence agency. V9k'1; MO: ltl., 51CTIOHS. >4 ,AO IS ~ • Ul'I T•lll!Ml9 FIGURES IN CASE-Actress Sharon Tate cllats wi!hhusband, Polish film producer-director Roman Polahski, in this file photo. Polanski was in London when hi s wife and four others were murdered in tfie couple's Beverly Glen home. LA Police Se~.~ing Link . ' The attorney, George Gregory, of Cheraw, S.C., said the alleged victim was discovered to be employed by 'the CNC inlelllgen~ organi1.at.ion of the North Vietnamese Anny. Gregory said he also was employed by U.S. m 111 t a r y authorities and the Central lnlelligence In ·7 Bi~zarre I Murde.rs Agency to spy on the North Vietnamese. "I hope they can find the body because when the facts of this case are disclosed I ... believe you will find this person won't be the old lady that you heard about as the vidlm of many things In this war," Gregory said. Gregory told a news conference in Saigon the charges were brought against the eight Green Berets by an officer he identified only as C<ll Ed V. 11endren, ot the Adjutant General Staff at U.S. Arm y Vletnain headquarters ln Long Binh, 15 miles northeast of Saigon. 11 Anny spokeii:men at Long Binh could not be reached Immediately for com- ment. U.S. military officials have divulged. no details of the case beyond saying that the 11laylng occurred June 20 near the Special Forces headquarters at Nha Trang. Gl'fgory'1 statements supported earlier st.elements by American military sources that I.be man -whose body hU not tieen found -was a North Vietnamese. agent and his slaying was an assigned "military misaion." Gregory said the alleged slaying oc- curred on or about June 20. He contended Lhat his client. M11j. Thomas C. Middleton Jr., 30, of Jcffel'80n. S.C., was conUncd to the stockade at Long Dinh July 20, a month after the killina allegeilll-oc> ooi>d. I r1 LOS ANGE!,ES (UPI) -· Homicide squads fanned out acros.~ this Sprawling' 1 cily today atte1nptlng to tie together the murders of actress Sharon Tate and four others with the bizarre deaths of a mar- ried couple a dozen miles away. Both murder scenes were similar. The five bodies found al the blonde ac- tress' horne Saturday were mutilated by· multiple knife wounds, as were the re. mains of market owner Lef\O La Blanca, 44. and his wife, Rosemary, 38. The latter were dll!covered In their Silverlake home Sunday night. The. home once was owned bf the late Walt Disney. The word "Pig" was scrawled In blood on the door oC'Mlss Tate's Benedi~ Can- yon hOO'le. "Death to Pigs" was daubed oiill1eltfrlgeralor door In lhe<La Bl•nca horn<. Further evldenct oC a possible link between lhe multiple rpurders \Ye.re ritualistic ~oocb on some of the victim11 .• Hair stylist Jay Sebring Was round tetbertd by a white C<lrd over a beam. The other end of the rope WRB tied tQ Miss Tate's bodY clothed In brassiere t 'ntl bikini panties. -Bruta11iy of Uie murdera or the La (Ste. LA SLAYlNGS, P0:1e 2) Weather Old Sol will break through those patchy inorning cloud! early Tues· day and boost tbe temperature in-. to the upper 70's along the shore and baC:k up to 90 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY Fhmncial columnUt S11lof11. l?orttr •toda11 btgini a /our-port serit1 on the areal land boom Oti'it ttll.t Wlfether ~OU CCl'I Qet in 01i the aciion. l t'a on Page 22 ' l•~llltf CtNlantllo Cltt•lnd ''''"' c ..... ,.r.i 0.•111 J8tltH Ml,.,.., ..... l'frf•ftl1Mft911f ·-. ... _ AIMI l.•llft" u -.... n t M1tlellll ,._ 4J,f 21•l1 Or•""' c"""° n ,. l•tvl• f'wtw ' 1t tl SKiii """ 11"1t 11 s...... ,, ... • Ii.ct llllll'tlltl aa ti T~IWl'lflt M n..t• n...itr• ''· 11--JW A 1J W•/1111 N•fft 4, a. J • -• OA!l Y '1lOT -~. Nixon Sellds Congress Incentive, Welfare Plan , S,\N (;!.EM!j:NTE (AP) -President Nboln ...i to COop'us today hb pro. poilll far .. new $f billJon rederal wdfare J""l':&m lo pmlde a basic Income !or t•Y ~ lllnil1 unable lo lake c.,., ltaoll . Nlxtiin lald.til.a new approach would end wh•t he: deacribed as the· ''blatant un· falroal" of the prtsent welfare system and ere11te a stroncer incentive ·among the poor \o wort. · •• The messace to Congress contain~ lhe ~ he ootlined in a televlskm•rad.io iiddrtss1<rthe .,uon ~~ nl!bL , • • It l.lcluded a tPecific ?!quest for MOO inullon additionat luadJ !or child care Ctntt.rl to IJd W.Cl'ting motbtrs. ' . I JJea~h ·Off er!Jig \_ ' . ,, ' ' ' ~ex &lucation for Parents I \ Do pare:nta need to lq\ow more about famUy Ufe and sex education~ Several Huntington Beach church leaders and Golden West College officials lhlnk they do. They are: now organizing a broad-«ale program to help them teach children the .bll!lcs of life in a more meaningful way. L The program, spo1110red by the 'Lutheran Council ol lfuntinglon Beach, Ii icheduted lo begin in early Noverribtr. It will consist or two mass meetings at Golden-West and-seminan at "Parent F.ducaUon Centers" in the city's five Lutheran churches. , Dr. Dale A. Miller, a·Lulheran lll!"""n and dean ol lllude!lls al Golden'West, aaJd !he program will be ...,.. to 111 p&r.n1s In the dty. An tnlormaUonol milter ,with registration form, will be sent to every home early in "'September. Churches participating in the venture are Faith Lutheran. 8200 Ellis Ave.: Grace Lu.theran, 69:3l Edinger Ave.: King of Glory, 17791 Newland St.; Church 0£ the Resurrection, 9812 Hamilton Ave.; and Redeemer Lalheran, 16351 Spring- dale St. . The Lut.beran Council strongly backed the Idea of the parent information cOurse ••m the abtence of any other meanlnsful proarams ln sei education In the com- munity." A ~I spokes!JU!n pointed out that branp County is experie"nclng many \eriOUI problems relaled lo the ,aelllal ~uct of children. "Venereal disease has re• ch e d epidemic proportions, illegitimate births rre on the Ux:teue. and many cl. our ~ people are eoterin& info early mar· rlages with limited preparation for family .file and aexual adjustment," be said. ' • 'Newpo11 Woman Misidentified In Fraud Case A Newport. Beach woman, Mrs. Cleo M. JohlllOn, was erroneously identified as a defendant In criminal fraud and grand theft proceedings in DAILY PILOT edi- tions published Dec. 4, 1968. The actual defendants in the case were ?i.trs. Johnson's husband, Cleo Marvin Johnson, Harry L. Hibbard, Thurlow W. Hartley and Richard M. Silverstein. Mr. Johnson v.·as later acquiUed of all charges involved in the indictmenl befor_e ..(he case went lo an Orange County Superior Court jury. At the time the stoty was published, lhe Johnsoru resided at 1901 Kings Road, .Newport Beach. ". The misidentification apparent I y ..resulted when court officials assumed thaL "Cleo" was a woman's name and thefefore referred lo the defendant as :·,.fn. 0 The DAILY PILOT regrets the t rror. ,, • . ' ' DAil\ ~1 lOT OANfOI CO.Ul fl'\llll5"1NO ('OMHtfl' ••"•ti N. w ••• ''"'*"" ..,,, ~· J•t\ a. C11tl.., YU,,_._.,. ... O.r• !Mftf"' 111.,,.., lt•t•11 --·-lh•''"' A. M•l?'-i•• ~~~·"" -C.fe MIMI lJI w.t .. w l+r11! • ....,.,. ...,,, "'" ..... , .. ,... ..... ~ ... _... ._,,, m .._, .. ........ tM!INMfl '"41: ... Jiii ...... Nixon said he wanls lo. prOvide child care for 450,000 chlJdren of the 150,000 current wtUare reclpienta who will go ln· to work trllning prog:rams. The new •Y•ttm he proposes, NiJon told Coogre.ss, will lessen red tape, end bitterly reSented "welfare snooping'' •J'ld make federal pa.ymentJ on ttie basis or certlficli.Uon or 1ncome, with spOt checks to prevent abuses. .. ... • Nixon said he was ouUlnlng his con- clusioiis lo provide a "coherent, fresh ap. proach to welfare, manpower training and revenue sharinc/' Spedfi.s: legi~liUye proposals \Vill be sent to COllg1"flll1 afttr the summer rectss by the . Secretary of Health, Education ' . 'NOT EVEN A SWINGER' De•d H1lrdrt1Mr Sebring and WeUare, Nllon .sald. Nlron 11 calllng ror ao end lo the present wellare system and the aid to lamlllts with d•pendenl chlldren pro. 1tun.--.~ing in ks place • new famUy aaistance program. · . It would provide minimum ba1Jc benefits of $1,600 a yi:ar for a family of four 1 payable to ... the worklng or OOtl'NOr'ltlhg poOr , and to families With dependedt chikiren whether headed by father or a mother. Nixoo stressed equality or treatment, a ~·ork requlrtment and a work inctoUve in the ·progrira. • He t; eliminating 3ny requirement that a housebol<L be without a fa~er lo U"I T11Pl!ttto 'A RESTLESS GIRL' Murdered Heiress Folger Coffee Heiress' Death 'Shock' .w SF Society S.\N FRANCISCO (UPI) -Sin Fran· ci.sco society circles still were in shock today over the death of Abigail Folger, the pretty heiress slain in a mysterious weekend massacre 1t Bel Alr. ' ..,.. .. MJss Folger, U, w11 the da.!!Jhl<r of Pet.er Folger of Woodside, chi1rman of ~ J. A. ~er &,eo.,: tlpn. FQends 11""'1becl lier as a' ·yoong woman interested 1n 1lbual ciuSes. She was an honor student at Radct'lffe and bad worked in a New York bookstore and an art museum at the University or California at Berkeley before becoming a social worker and going.to the Southern California area. She worked for some time in tbe ghetto allea of Watts and also labored Li Thoma~ Bradley's I06ing mayoralty campaign a few months ago. With her family's approval , she in· vested money in the chain of salons operated by male hair stylist Jay Se- bring, 35, also \llled in the weekend slaughter. Other backers Included acton {{ Paul Nev.•man. Steve ?.1cQuecn. Warren Beatty and Peter Lawford . Through Sebring. she met and mingled with many of -Hollywood's most famous names. But she had the misfortune to be at lhc wrong place at the wrong tlme last weekend. Sebring was also well.known in the bay area where be opened a hair styling salon last ?.1ay in partnership with public rela· lions executive Art Blum. Blum, who said he was in a stale or "stupor '' from the tragedy. denied reports characterizing the five per.sons slain as "hippies." Blum said Sebring was "not even much of a swinger.·His ambition was to become 1 millionaire." \Vhen Sebring came to the bay area, he would usually visit Lt. Col. Paul J. Tate. Tale, father of slain actress Sharon Tale, 26, is nearing retirement as assis· tant chief of the staff or intelligence at the Siilh Region Anny Air Defense Com- mand at Fon Baker here. Fron• Page l LA SLAYINGS PROBE • • • Biancas was similar to that found at !he Tate murder scene. Police said both La Bianca and his wife were found with makeshift hoods from bedclothes pulled over their heads. La Bianca's boc:Ji,I ·was carved with a series of X marks and the word ''\var" was cut int.c his chest from which a knife prolruded. Despite the remarkable similarities of the two cases, poli ce said it .,..,as "ery possible no coMection existed. On Hollywood movie and ielevision !'itage stars and stagehands speculated about the murders. Police were terse and uninfonnative. A unlrormed officer stood guard at the foot of a long and windirig drive that led to the ran1bling estate v.·here Mis5 Tate, Sebring and the others were murdered. One officer said as many as three persons cou1d have been involved in the . ritualistic butchery at the ho1ne of Miss Tate and her husband, director Roman Polansld. Detectives said there was a possibility the m1trderer or murderers were "in· volved In a persona l way" \\'ith the vie· Urns. 1'hey searched in particular for an unidentified susatct whose-name wai> provided by \Vllfl'lm E. Garretson, 19. a caretaker on the Polanski estate who ll\'• ed. in a guest house. lie was the only person alive when officers arrived at the scene Saturday morning. "At this stage, we have not ruled out anything or anybody," homicide Del. Lt. Robert Helder, who heads the ln- vesUa:ation, told a news conlertnce. "We have no solid lnfonnallon which would llmlt us to 1 single suspect. It could ha\'e been one man, il c:ould have been two me.n, it could have been up to hlgh as three men.'' The vktlms: -MW Tate. 26. ,vife of film director Rman Polaraki, eq:ht months pregnant wllh a baby boy. died of multiple stab wounds of the chen and back. Polanski flew here Sunday from Europe and im· • medi1tely went lnlG seclusion. -Abigail t"olger, 28, 8an Francisco, . ' Ul'I TtMMI• VICTIM IN BIZARRE CASE Act r1s1 Sheron Tat• l1elress to the Folger coffee fortunr, delicrlbed 11s a "rich hippie " who at- tended seance sessions, died of stab .,..·ounds In the chest. -Jay Sebring, 35, innovator of hair styling for men, once fl.11u Tate's {lance, died of mulliple stab wounds of the body. -Voll yck Ji'rokowsky, 37. worked with Polanski as an actor and writer In Poll.sh Hims. died of stab wounds of the body and limbs and a gunshot wound in the back. -Stc\•tn Partnl. 18, a friend of Gar- ret.son who left home in wburban El P.1onle frida,y to visit him . died of mulli· pie 111~ v.·ound! of the chest. Ga rre '1 attorney, Barry 'Tarlow, said Par nt dropped by tM guest house to visit the c~u·ttaker. who IOoked arter tie"eral dogs and cats belonging lo the O\\'ncrs, ' become eliglble for beQC(its. "That present requirement ln many states has the effect of bre.aklna up families aod contributes to delinquency and violence," Nixon said. He propoaed that all employable persons who accept lhe welfare payments be required to regiater for work or job ttaJning, and that adequate and con- venient day care be provided for ,chlldren wherever It is necessary to enable a par~nl to train or work. In 20 states, Nixon estimaled, the present average benefit payments are lower than those be ls proposing. And these are areu, he says, where poverty is often the Jn.Oil severe. The new system would eocourqe work, * * * Millions Plan To See Apollo Dinner on TV From Wire Servlct1 LOS ANGELES -The Apollo 11 astro- nauts and 1,600 or the nation's elite wUI dine with President Nixon Wednesday night while millions of uninvited guests watch on television. 11lt entire event-from hors d'oeuvres reception to seven-course dinner -v.•ill go on the air . Dignitaries, entertainers and aviation pioneers began arriving today for the festivities. t.1any are staying at the elegant Century Plaza Hotel where the dinner will be held. Among those invited to dine with moon voyagers Neil.. A. Armslrong, .Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Michaef Collim are the other 52 astronauts and their wivel aod the widO\\'S of eight astronauts, the • governors or the SO states and their \¥Ives, 300 members of the diplomatic corps and the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court. Also, the members or the Nixon cablnet and their wives, the space committee 1nembers of the Senate and the House of Representatives, top administrators of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, leaders or the aerospaace industries, and famed airmen of the past. Known to have been invited but not known whether they have accepted are Jacqueline and Ari Onassis, lloward Hughes and Charles Lindberg. (Oran~ Coast residents invited include Dr. and Mrs .. Arnold O. Beckman, Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Kalmbach and 1Jud1e and fi.lrs . Thurmond Clarke. 1 (All are Newport Beach resident! and all have indicated they wjJI accept the President's invitation.) "Everybody coming is a dignitary in his own right ," said a \Vhlte House spokesman. Few have turned down the prired in· \lilations to the fete. So select was the cuest llst that invited single persons were instructed to come without dates, "Some friends of mine offered to work as busboys just to get in," said a hotel \'ice president. The lunar exploration Iheme fill be carried out in centerpieces, candy boxes and a special moon-shaped dessert being prepared by the hotel chef. It's a globe of vanilla ice cream over Kirsch·soaked raisins and coated with a thin meringue to give the impression of a moonscape. The program for the evening bas yet to be announced. The President Is expected to toast the aslronauls before dinner. "I would imagine he astronauts will then say something," said :i White House spokesman, "but It may not be a fonnal speech." To keep the dinner nonpartisan, Nixon has not asked political figures to speak. What will the elegant evening cost? White House sources aren't telling, But they say funds v.·ill come from several government sources, including the State Department, the Nationa l Aeronautical and Soace Administration and Nixon's O\\'n $50.000 \Vhite House entertainment allowance. Nixon said, by allowing a new worker to retiln the !irst mo ct his yearly urninp wltho(lt any beodlt r<duction. Ni:<on wged Coniress lo begin lllu<ly ol 11-pnlllOull promptly ao that laws can 'be enacted and fund.I autborlzed as soon aa pouible. He eDvilloned that "for the first' time, all dependent families with chlldren in America, rqardleu of where they Jive, ~ould be assured of minimum standard payments based upoo uniform and sing~ eligibility standards and "would ~ en- couraged to train and wark an stay together." ''These are far-reaching dfecls," he told Congre ... "tiler cannot be purthased Cheaply, or by ptecemeal eff«ts." With lhe establ15hment o! hlB "new •> pro1ch" to welfare, Nixon said lhe n ... Uon'c antipoverty agency, Olli.ct of Eco- nom1c OpportunitY. wl.11 cooceotrate on flodlng new waya of. opening f'C'00901lc oPPOriunlty to tho.se who are able to work. "Rather than focusing on income sup- port activities," he said OEO "must f1nd means of providing opportunities for Jn. dlviduaJs to CGntribute to the full extent or the.ir capablUties and in developing and improving tbese capabilities.'' In a presidential statement also issued today, Nixon gave the OEO the highest priority to develop a new splrit of·4•10cii1 pioneering'' to better 1he lot of all Americans. * * * * *· * . Pea~e for Prez ,,No Pickets Mar Nixon Holiday··Yet By JEROME F. COLLINS Of tM o.i1r rutt Sl•lf President Nixon came to San Clemente looking for a little peace and ·quiet. Sun- day he found it. The President said hello to his neigh- bors in Cyprus Shore, strolled aloni' the beach near his estate, chatted with sun- bathers, took a leisurely drive to Oceanside, and then swam in the family pool . No incident of any kind marred his day, "There wasn't a picket in the whole town ," said a White House aide. And tourists, \vho filled San Clemente's public beach, apparently respected !he President's wish for leisure . They stayed ~way from the Nixon compou!ld in droves. · ?.-1r. Nixon began the day by put-putting from his estate grounds in his goU cart early in the morning. He was ac- companied by P.1arine Major John Bren- nan, his military aide. They drove around Cyprus Shore wav .. Ing at youngsters, patting a few on the head and talking-lo residents of the ex- clusive residential community. "No, they didn't borrow any cups of sugar,,. quipped a \Vhite House staff member later. The President and fi.faj. Brennan then walked along the beach below Cyprus Shore. Startled beachgoers quickly flock· ed around and soon be was surr~ed by a group of about 30. A1any or them told him they supported his new welfare pro- gram, announced on TV Friday. P.1r. Nixon was overheard to say he hoped the program would help people to help themselves. Later, the President climbed into a Lincoln Continental, and with Major Brennan at the wheel drove to ~nside. They took with them the Nixon family's Irish seller, King Timahoe, named for a village in Ireland. The journey was just a sightseeing trip. ';They took a look at the harbor, turned around and came b:11ck," said a Presiden- tial staff member. A Secret Service agent closely followed in another car during the 44-mile round trip. The huge White House press corps Sun· day stayed more or less put at the San Clemente Inn and the Surf and Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach. Toward dusk, Sunday the President and Mrs. Nixon swam in the pool on the fonner Cotton estate grounds. A quiet dinner in the mansion ended the day. ';There were a few staff meetings," said a White House spokesman, "but mostly it was a very pleasant, relaxing day off for the President." Today the Nixons expect to welcome their daughter Tricia who will be flown in al El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Beach Couple 'Fair' After. Plane C1·ash l(ills fuf ant A HunUngton ~ach coup\! whose 1g. month-old daughter wa.s killed Sunday in the crash or their single-erigine plane in Los Angeles are reported in fair condilion 1oday at Orthopaedic Hospital. Pilot Ray1nond Houghton, 40, of 17362 Apel Lane, told Los Angeles police he was trying to land after his plane developed engine trouble about 20 minutes after takeoff from flieadowlark Airport, near his home. The family v.·as headed !or San Jose. Houghton tried to zero in on the Pep- perdine College baseball field, but the Fron• Page 1 VACATION ... coming out of \\'ashington and consistl!:d largely of long lists of jurists "'ho ha\·e figured in earlier speculation. Nixon told a cro.,..·d at the Orange Coun- ty Airport Saturday v.·hen he arrived in California that onl y two people knew v.·ho the new appointee would be -fi.1itchell and himself. This indicated nol eveq the prospective associate justice knew as of Saturday night he was about to be ·pro- posed for the nation's highest court. disabled craft struck a tree and spun to earth. The baby girl, Lisa, was pronounced dead on arrival at the holipital, possibly from a broken neck. Houghton sustained a possible skull fracture and his wife, \Vanda , fractured ribs. The plunging plane narrowly missed the home of Pepperdine College president Norvel Young. He and his wife were out of town , but the crash awakened their three children y.·ho called for an am- bulance and attempted first aid. Houghton was not well known at Meadowlark Airport where he had used a temporary tie-down space for the past two months. Marge Turner, wife of the airport 1nanager, said she had heard the family had sold their home and were moving soon to Phoenix. 79 Gary F ire1nen Face T rials Over Strike GARY, Ind. IAP ) -City firemen ha\·e ended a six-day strike , but 79 of them fare trials slartlng today that could result in the Joss of their jobs . The 79 firemen - out of a total force or 278 -were suspended without pay last \\'eek for participating in the strike. If you're 5'8'' or over, we've plenty of suits · left for you ntiddle of Lite 11ight, grabbing arn1load& o( fi Uils., a11d driving a"'·ay "·ithin 71 ~ secortd!i of ema!h.ing tl1e l£laes. Usually the hurglars are caught, but in lhe mea11ti1ne we're out se\'t-n a r111loads o f suits. 1l1e h11rlitlars slripped th e rack 11eare. .. 1 1l1e ~'indo"'·· It conlainetl n1oslly our suits iu 0 sl1ort sizes. If y9u're 5 Ct. 8 i11che1 or ta.lier, don't you let our little burglary '''orry yo1.1 for one mi11u1e. We l1ave a !nit in yotU' ei1.e. Or several d ozen, for 1hat matter. ~laybe you read in tlte Pilot "·hat l1a.ppertctl. We 1lidn°t order a t101e in our "'i11dow llul we a•~l 11ne • ' At 3: 29 a.m. laAt l'uesday, August 5th, we bad M>rnc win· dow shoppers. I don't know ii ... •hou ld be n auered by this, but apparently.they liked what they uw. They 11ammed a milk crate tbrou"'1 our tlOn'l wlntlow, pthered uri several fa1t armloadt 4lf ()Or 1uils. eeun-ied back tot.heir r.:ar. and raced Rw•y inl9 the niRhl. Funny th in~. F.xactly 7 dayo l..efore, a t the lime "'e renewed our burglary in11urence., the co111 pany insittcd 1l1a1 w~ in· ftla ll ot1e of those 11ew tilent alar11111. ll wo rked beautifully. The police tla11hed over l1ere. Out tlto@e l>11rglar11 were o lla@li aod o half ahead of tJ1eu1. Go11e -without a trace. Helen (my wife) &nd I have been told that there are 1everal underground Dur1lary Collefmt in &etsion thl1 1um· mer. They instruct young n•en in the . late1t methods for breaking fnto a atom in the A.t1y"·ay, it"1 ,·ery 1111u sual for our store lo be open at 3:29 a.n1. Our resr:nlar 11Jtore · hours are 9:30 to 5:30, !\loo~ clay througl1 Saturd•Y· When you e111er, remem· bcr. Don't come 1l1rough the window. U9C the door. The police know about thio ad. Jack Bidwell 3467 Via Lido at Newport Blvd., in Newport Beach 11ext to Rle11ard'11'larket and The Lido TI1eater. Plenty of 1...,. parkins in th~,..ar. Phone 6734510 Copyright 1969, Jack Bidwell. j I , • I , I ' •' . . • • •• , ' hntingion Beaeh Today's Ehaal VOL. 62, NO. 19 1, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1969. ' TEN CENTS Beach C01&ple Hurt Infant Pe.rishes In Plane Crash A Huntington Beach couple whose l&- mootiKlld daughter was killed Sunday in ' the crash of their slngle-englne · 11Jane in Los Angeles are reported in falr condition today at Orthapaedlc HO!pital. Pilot Raymond Houghton, 40, of 17362 Apel ·Lane, told Los Angeles police he was trying to land after his plane developed engine trouble about 20 minutes after takeoff from Meadowlark Airport, near his home. The family was headed for San Jost. Houghton tried to zero in on the Pep. perdine College baseball field, bu\ the disabled craft struck a tree and spun lo eartb.. The baby girl, Lisa, was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital, possibly from a broken neck . Houghton sustain"' a possible skull fracture and his wife, Wanda, fractured ribs. The plunging plane narrowly missed t~ hoine of Pepperdine College president Norvel Young . He and his wife were out of town. but the crash awakened their three children who called for an am- bulance and attempted first aid. Houghton was not well known al Meadowlark Airport where he had used a temporary tie-down space for the past two months. f..1arge Turner. wife of the airport manager, said she had heard the family had sold their home and were moving soon to Phoenix. Nixon Opens Busy Week At San Clemente Home SAN CLEf..1ENTE fUPI) -President Nixon opened a jam-packed week at the summer White l[ouse today with a series of hlgh-IE':vel foreign policy conferences, a message to congress on welfare refonn and an announ~ement on reorganization of the federal agency primarily responsi- ble for the war on poverty., The President scheduled a late morning meeting at his new oUice complex ad- joining his summer home with Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Th~ Secretary arrived here during the night afttr a fast. trip to Japan, South Korea, 'Taiwan, Indonesia Australia and Ne\V Zealand. This was lo be followed by a meeting between the President .and Ambassador Henry A. Byroade who stopped off in California en route to his new post in Manila . Such was lhe starting patlern of one of the busiest weeks for Nixon since he took office. In addition to today's welfare message and statement on reorganization of the office cX economic opportunity, the President planned within a few days to disclose his selection of a new Supreme Court associate justice to replace Abe Fortas, whO' left the bench P.1ay IS under heavy critical fire. . The President also planned other messages to Congress I.his week before the llouse and Senate begin a long Labor D<1y recess. The-basic content of the messages was outlined by Nixon Friday night in a speech broadcast and televised nationally. The President's message to Congress Tuesday will spell out in some detail his plans for expanded manpower training. On Wednesda y, if he followed the timet<1ble announced earlier by his stafr, a message would go to Capitol Hill asking for a sto.rt on a controversial system whereby federal tax revenues would be shared with states. The most dramatic period of the "''eek promised to be Wednesday night in Los Angeles when the President presides at a mammoth dinner honoring the three Apollo 11 astronauts and their lamilies at the ultramodern Century Plaza Hotel. Far more invitations -reportedly 3,500 -have been issued than the Century Plaza banquet hall can accommodate, and thousands more were trying to get in. Rogers was v.•ith Nixon for the early part of the President's recent Aaian trip, but the secretary left the While House party after Manila and set out on a long itinerary of his own, Rogers spent I l days touring the western Pacific, touching bases wllich the President was unable to include in his 25,000-mile trip around the world. Rogers' mission ws to ell:plain Nixon's plans for ending the war in Vietnam, plus his post- Vietnam outlook fGr relations between the United States and Asian nations. P.1osl o( the speculation about Nixon's next cl}()ice for the Supreme Court was coming out of Washington and consi$ted largely of long lists of jurists who have figured in earlier speculation. Nixon told a crowd at the Orange Coon- ty Airport Saturday "''hen he arrived in California that only two people knew who the new appointee wou ld be -P.1itchell and himsell. This indicated not even the prospective associate justice knew as of Saturday night he was about to be pro- posed for the nation's highest court. Millions to Watch Nixon's Dinner f 01· 3 Astronauts From Wire Services LOS ANGELES -The Apollo 11 astro- nauts and J,600 of the nation's elite will dine with President Nixon Wednesday night while millions or uninvited guesls \\'alch on television. The entire event-from hors d'oeuvres reception to seven-course dinner -will go on th~ air. his own :ight." said 1 \\ihite House spokesrr.<1n. Few have t.urned down the prized 1n- \'itations to the fete. So select was the guest list that invited single persons were instructed to come without dates. ''Some friends of mine offered to work as buSboys just to gel in," fiaid a hotel vice president. The lunar exploration theme: will be (Set: BANQUFT, Page %) Protesters /(ill Annex Of Sunset Opponents of the annexation of Sunset Beach to Huntington Beach have ap- parenlly won the battle, Huntington Beach City Clerk PauUones conceded!.<>- day. "It's obviously protested out," Jones said. Final tabulation of property owners opposing the merger total more. than sa.77 percent of the assessed valuation of the unincorporated community. The city clerk said protes ts reached $1.43 million of the $2.46 million total assessed valuation of all property in Sun- set Beach. 'The City Council presumably will a,c- cepl the protests and rule the annexation dead on Aug. 13. A successful protest means that pro- ponents of the annexation cannot legalJy renew their efforts for a period of one year. _ Richard Harrison, superintendent or the Sunset Beach SaniLary Di.strict and leader of the protest movement, said this n1orning. "Whoopee, I'm glad we have v.'on. Now we can go back to living our provincial beach life in peace." Proposed for annexation were 85 acres representing almost the entire area of Sunse t Beach fro1n Warner Avenue to Anderson Street, and from the ocean to Pacific Coast Highway ; and 3.5 acres on the eastern edge of the community ad~ joining Warner Avenue. f..1rs. Virginia Strain, secretary of the Sunset Beach Chamber of Commerce, led the proponents of the annexation move and several weeks ago filed a petition with signatures of more than 2S percent of the voters of the beach community. If the opponents ,had failed to ae1:1uire protests representing more than 50 per- cent of the assessed valuation, lb• merger would have been decided by · a \'ote of the. peOple later this fall. Thal election ii now cancelled. Seventl1 Person Lost iii Sm·f A Los Angeles laborer became the ap- parent seventh victim Saturday to be. Jost to the Pacific this summer off Huntington Beach's state and city beachei- Javier Mendoza, 18, was reported miss- ing by his sister, P..1rs. Rose Navarro at 9 p.m., Saturday. ,.1endoza was with several friends at the beach Satqrday night. lie wa~ in the waler at a time when the beaches are not patrolled by regular li!egllards. Only tv.•o of the previous six who drow ned in the ocean here were swim- ming'. 'at a lime or place that lifeguards are on duty. Mendoza's body has not been found. Police Seek Man In Pink Nightie A man wearing a pink, knee -lrngth nightgown under his ordinary clothing was reported attempting to molest children Sunday morning on t h e playground of Bushard School, llun· tin gton Beach. Police said the man, described as between 30 and 40 years of age, with black, slightly graying hair, approached at least two tots about 10 a.m., Sunday, revealing his nightgown~ to thm and trying to touch them. According lo witnesses, he left the area by leaping over a wall into the neighbor- ing townhouse comple1, then left by car. ' -. Death ~ink ~!>ugpt Murder of A i:tress=,--6-..~rs _Probid LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Homicide squad! fanned out across this sprawling city today atle1nptlng to tie together the murders of..aelress Sharon Tate and fOtJr others with lhe bizarre deaths of a mar .. ried couple a dozen mllea away. Both murder scenes were similar. The five bodies foqpd at the blonde ac- tress' home. Saturday were mutilated by multiple knlfe wounds, as were the re.. mains or market owner Leno La Blanca, 44 ; and his wtfe, Rosemary, 38. The latter were discovered in their Silverlake home Sunday night. The home once was owned by the late Walt DLsney. The word "Pig" was scrawled in blood on the door cX 1.fi!S Tate's Benedict' Can- yon home. "Death to Pigs" was daubed on the refrigerator door in the La Bianca home. Further evidence of a possible Hnk between the multiple murders were ritualistic hoods on some of the victims. Hair stylist Jay Sebring was found tethered by 1 while cord over a beam . The other end of the rope was tied to P..1!ss Tate's body clothed in brassiere and bikini panties. Brutality. of the murders or the La Blancas was similar to that found at the 'Tate murder scene. Police said both La Blanca and his wife were found with makeshift hoods from bedclothes pulled over their heads. La Bianca's body was carved with a series of X marks and the word "war'' was cul into his chest from which a knife protruded. Despite the remarkable similarities of the ll'.'O c'ases, police said it was very possible no connection existed. On Hollywood movie -nd televisio11 s!Ogo .i&n •nd otagehllldo opecula!ed about the murders. Police wen l.erJe l.nd uninformatiu~ A uniformed ofUcer stood guard at the root of I long and winding drive that led to tht rambling .estate where Mlss Tate, Sebrlnl and lhe ot.her1 were mu.rdered. One officer said at many as three persons could have been Involved in the ritualistic butchery at the home of Miss Tate and her husband, directo r Roman Polanski. Detectives said there \Yas a possibility the murderer or murderers were "in- volved in a personal way" with the vic- tims. They searched in particular for an unidentified suspect whose name was provided by William E. Garretson, 19, a caretaker on the Polanski estate who liv- ed in a guest house. He wa."I the only person alive when officers arrived at the scene Saturday morning. "At this stage, V•e have not ruled out anything or anybody," homicide Ott. Lt. Robert Helder, who heads the in· vestigation, tQld a news conference. "We have no solid fnfonnation which would llmit us to a single suspect. It could have been one man, it could have been two men, il could have been up to high as three men." The. victims: -Miss Tate , 26, wife of film director Rman Polanski, elgl'li months pregnant with a baby boy, died of multiple stab \vounds of the chesl and back. Polanski flew here Sunday from Europe and im- mediately went Into seclusion. -Abigail Folger. 26. San Fra11cisco, heiress to the Folger coffee fortune, described as a "rich hippie" who at- tended seance sessions, died of stab wounds in the chest. -Jay Sebring, JS, innovator of hair stylin& for men, once Miss Tate's fiance, died of multiple stab wounds of the body. -Voityck F'rokowsky, 37. worked with Polanski as an actor and writer in Polish films , died of stab wounds of the body (S.. LA SLAYINGS, Page%) . - ~ ' .. -FIGURES IN CASE:..:.Ac1ress Sliaron Tate chats with husband, Pollsh ffim producer-direct.or Roman P0tan5k:i, in this file photo. Polanski \Vas in London when his wi(t-and four O"'Jlers were murdered in the couple's Beverly Glen home. , Both Pro11aitaent San Franciscans Shocked At Folger, Sebring Death SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -San Fran- cisco society circles sllil were In shock today over the. death of Abigail Folger, the pret ty heiress slain in a mysterious weekend massacre at Bel Air. f..1iss Folger, 26, wa!I the daughter or Peter Folger of Woodside, chairman of the J. A: Folger &. Co. coffee firm. Friends described her as a restleiis ,young i woman interested In liberaJ causes. She wa11 an honor student at RadcliUe and had worked in a New York bookstore and an art'museum at the University of California at Berkeley before becoming a social worker and going to the Southern California area. 1'.She worked for some time in the ghetto · area of Watts and also labored i,1 Thomas Bradley's losing mayoralty campaign a ' few months ago. ' With her family 's approval, she in-' vested money in the chain ol salons operated by male hair stylist Jay Se- bring, 35, also killed in the weekend slaughter. Other backers included acton Paul Newman, Steve McQueen, Warren Bfatty and Peter Lawford. Through Sebring. she met and mingled with man)' of Hollywood's most famous names. · ' · · But she had the misfortune to be at th!'! • wrong place ' at ' the. wrong Ume ' la11t ut'J'T9 ...... 'A RESTLESS GIRL' Murdered' Hair11s Folger Dignitaries. entertainers and aviation pioneers began 1rriving today for the festivities. Many are staying at the elegant Century Plaza Hotel where the dinner wUI be held . Among those invited lo dlne with moon voyagers Neil A. Armstrong. Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and P.1ichael Collins are the olher 52 astronauts and their wives and the widow!! of eight astron<1uts. !he governors or the 50 states ancl their wives, 300 member!! of the diplomatic C<lrps and the justices of the U.S, Supreme Court. Man Wins $500 for Walk weekend. _ Sebring waa aiM> well known in the hay area where he opened a hair styling salon last May in partnership with public rela- tions exccuti\'e Art Blum. Orange Cuast Also, the members of the Nixon cabinet and the ir wives, the space committee members of the Senate and the House of Representatives. top administrators of the. Nallonal Aeronautics and Space Administration. leaders cl the aerospaace industries. and famed airmen of the pa.st. Known to have been invited but not know n whether they have accepted are Jacqueline and Ari Onassis. Howard llughe11 and Charles Lindberg. (Orange Coast reside.nll invited include Dr. and t.frs . Arnold B: Beckman, Mr. and P..frs. Charles S. Thoqlas, Mr. and fltrs. Dennis Carpenter, P.lr. and 1t1nt. 1-ferbert W. Kalmbach and Judge and J\trs. Thurmond Clarke. (All al'e Newport Beach rtsldenll iind 1111 have \ndlcat.ed they will acetpt lht Pre&ident·• Invitation.) "Everybody coming Is a dignitary in But He Had to Cover 70 Miles By RANDY SEELYE Of ""' 0-ll't' Pllilt llttt "I will never do it again," panted Gary ~tcAJlister this morning. "I don't re=ornmend anyone else trying." ri.1cAlllster 30, Huntington Beach, had just won $500 on a bd he couldn 't walk 70 miles in 2.f hours. He completed the 240 laps \'tith 45 minutes to spare at 7: 15 a.m. today on the Orange Cotst College track in Costa A1esa . II aU started la5t week during a co!fee break al Shinh Engineering Co., Santa Ana, where AtcAllister is the nigh t foreman . When lhe JiunUngton Beaeh man said he could walk 70 mlles in 24 hoor s about a dolen employes laughed. The laughter led to a $500 challenge. McAllister accepted lhe bet at three to llve odds and .started at I a.m. Sunday mornipg. He took three short breaks during the day Sunday and aJmost bt his there or the bet -$300 -when he stopped to rest in lhe evening. At the mid-point last night however he !topped for a ha!l-hour lunch break 1r.J was unable to get back on his fett. Flnally he pulled himseU up and for the next hour wobbled into a slow pace. But his strength returned and McAllister disappeared into the night. Gary Girdner, a fellow employe at Shinn. Engineering, said he stayed with McAllister unUI J a.m. today, bµt left because "sitting tJ as tiring as walking." "After hl9: lunch litop at a p.m. Sunday, Gary didn't atop again. He ltnew that if he did, he would never start -apln," Gardner said. Blum, who said he was in ·a fitate or in 24 Hours 4'stupor" from the tragedy, denied reports characterizing the five per.srinS slain as "hippies." , Blum said Scbrln11 was "not eVen much 'lie paced himself very well, averaging ..-of a swinger. •Us ambition was to betome · ~tween 10 and 12 laps every hour." a mlJ,IJonaire.." . Gardner noted, "but after his lunch break W~en $ebtlng_ came to the bay area, he , last n!ght he only went about eight laps would usually Visit Lt. Col. Paul J. Tate. I.he first bout, then regained his , Tate, fatbcr o.f slain actress Sha~ strength " Tate, 2ji, is .nearu:ig retlremenl as ~s· P.icAllJ~ter weathered tl.& d 1 .1 tant ~ief of ~he stalf or intelligence at ll'l:l or ea . qui e the Sixth ReglOtl Army Air Defense Com· well, but compla1ned of problems with hls mand at Fort Baker here. leg muscles toward lhe end of the hike. He ate lightly during the walk and drank water frequently. Duri"8 the dark hours lanterns were placed around the track to keep him from stulhbUng. His children camped on the OCC football field during the night. Employe1 at Shinn Engineertng say he It sleeping today and they don't expect him to show up for work tonight. "'He may nol be abJe to watt,'' they . en.Id, • Slaek Markel• NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market cl~ with a moderate (06$ today, alter a vory alow trading 1es.sloo marked by little buying demand, (See quotatk>ns, Pases 22-231. A~lysta said 800)e lnve1tor1 tppar .. ently rea·cted lO d_evaluatlon of the P"N!:nth franc by wllhdrawlng from the acUoo. Weather cild Sol will break lhrough time patchf morning 'Clouds carly·'fl!u- day and boost the temperature In- to the upper 70's along lhe shore and back up to llO further inland. INSIDE TODA 'l' f"i"11ancWl columnist S11lvfll Por.ter todn11 begins a fotAr·-part strtt.s on tl1e-f)Pl!n& land boom oud tell! whethe r 11ou tan get in on the actio11, lt11 on Page ~2. . ...... <•llltt'ftl• Clil."'ltW ...... c,.._,. OM!h ~I<•• Edlttr\tl , ... '""rtl"""trlf . ... ~ .. _"."' 41111 LIH.,, .. • ,,. .. a " " • " n•• " " Mnlt• n ft•"-• ,,._. u .1 Or ..... CWflfr 11 '""''' ,.,.., tt leclfll ....... '''" IHl"tl ,,_M SIMll Matlllh U •tt ''"""'" ,. ""-"""' " 'W•llltf' • Wtr• H"" 4o S. r ' I' I •V • • ff - Parents' Welfare Plan Re.adi·ed f ' PropQSOO ·Sex Cla.ss Nixari Sends .Cgngress $4 _Billion ,f roposal DAILY PILOT lllff PM .. IT'S ALL IN F\IN AT HUNTINGTON LIFEGUARO CARNIVAL C1rplnt1rl1'1 J1c_k F1une,.1 1 (llft), Newport'• T~r Hor11k . . Do partnls netd to kno\v more about funily life and &eX education~ Several Huntington Beach church leaden'and Golden West College'. olrlclJla think they do: ' They are now or1inl!ina: a broad-acale P..ar.am to h<;lp them teach children tile basics of life in .a more meaningful way. s,\!'I CLEMENTE (AP) -Pr.,ident NlX6n sent to Congrtss today his pro- po1alifor a new $f billion federal welfare pregram to provide a basic income for any Amerie1n family unable to take care of itself. Ni1on said his new approach would end what tie described as the "blatant un· fairness" of the present welfare system and er.ate a stronger incentive among the poor to work. The message to Congress contained the proposal& he ouUlned Jn a television-radio address to tht nation Friday nJ.&ht. It included a specific request for $600 million additional funds for child care centers to aid working mothers. Nixon said he wants to provide child care for 4&0,000 cfl,ildren of the lS0,000 current wollare recipients who will go in· to work training programs. The new system be proposes, Nixon told Congress, will lessen red tape, eod bltf.erly resented "welfare snooping" and make feder•I payments on the basis of certification of income, with spot checks to prevent abuses . Nixon said he was outlining his con· chlSioos to provide a "coherel'jt. fresh ap- proach to welfare, manpower training and revenue ~-" Specific Jegislatlv& propcsals will be sent to Congress after the summer r~ by the Secretary of Health, Education iind Weliare, Nixon said. Nixon is calling for an end to the preirent welfare system and the aid to * * * The program, sponsored by the J..utheran Council of Huntington Beach, is scheduled to begin in early November. It will consist pf two mass meetings at Golden West and seminari at "Parent Education Centers'' in the cily'1 five Lutheran churches. Dr. Dale A. Miller, a Lutheran layman and dean of students at Golden West, said the pro_gram will be open to alJ p1renl, in the city. An lnfonnatlonal mailer ,wtth registraUon form, will be sent to every home early in September. for p ·rez Churches P.articipaUng In the venture No Pic~ets Mar Nixon Holiday--¥ et are Faith Lutheran, 8200 Ellis Ave.; By J EROME F. COLLINS Grace Lutheran, 6931 Edinger Ava.; King !'l IM o.ur P'1111 '''" or Glory, 17791 Newland St.; Church of President Nixon came to San Clemente the Resurrection, 9812 Hamilton Ave.; looking ror a little peace and quiet. Sun· and .R!!tleemer Lutheran, 16351 Spring· d I S day he found it. a P. .1. The Lutheran Council strongly backed The president said hello to his neigh. ed around and soon he was surrounded by a group of about 30. Many of them told him they supported his new welfare pro- gram, announced on TV Friday. Mr. Ni.Ion was overheard to say he hoped the program would help people to help themselves. the idea of lhe. parent inlormation course bors in Cyprus Shore, strolled along the )I. 11 n_tm· gt· ~ on Surf Carn1· val "In the absence o( any other meaningful beach near his estate. chatted with sun---programs in sex education in the com· bathers, took a leisurely drive to munity." Oceanside, and then swam in the family A council spokesman pointed out that pool. Later, the President climbed into a Lincoln Continental, and with Major Brennan al the wheel drove to Ocean.side. They took with them the Nixon family 's Irish setter, King Timahoe. named for a village in Ireland. orange county is experiencing many No incident of any kind marred his day. A.ttracts 3,000 .Spec.-... *"""FS ... 1ou• problem• related to th• sexual "Ther• wasn't • picket in the whol• Ul'lU --~conduct·of-ehildtenc. _______ _,oo•wn,'!.&aid-a-Whik--ffouse-aide.--- "Venereal disease has r e a c be d And tourists, who filled San Clemente's epidemic proportions, illegitimate births public beach, apparently respected the The journey was just a sightseeing trip. • 'They-took-a-look-et-the-haFbor ,turned around and came back," said a Presiden- tial staff member. ,Llfef,Jards from all over Southern Jn. the musical flags competition, Car· California are ad®'g up trophies and pinteria took the f\r&t two places, fol· kudOI today from athletic pertorm&nces olwed by Santa Monica for third. • in the Fourth Aruipat Huntington Beach-Huntington Beach City lifeguards won Surf CarnivaJ the four-man surf-mat r,elay, outpaddling · . seco~·place Newport Beach and tli'trd Some 3,000 persons watched Friday as place Los Angeles Coiµity ov,r the ... ifJ. 200 lifeguards compeled,in,searchl.ight il-y&rd distance. luminaUon in seven events ranging from Tbe ten-man, 1,000-yard running relay musical flags to dOry races. -was ca.ptured by Newport Beach, follow- A team from the~ Carpinteria State ed. by Carpinteria and Huntington Beach District 5 took home top honors and a State District 6. ~ perpetual trophy after defeating the Hun•~ Slx-man ch ariot race winner was the tington Beach city llfesuards by a score Huntin&ton Beach State District, with of 40 to 38. • Carpinteria taking second and Newport Newport. Beach 1ileguatds, the defen-Beach third place. ding champions, took third over aU-.ttb The finale, a dory race over a son.yard 36 poinl3. distlnce was won by the Long Beach ~ Winner of the pillow fight was Seal lifeguards who edied out rUMet·UP Hun· Beach, "ilh Los An&•lel..C.imty ,laldlll .il!ll!on 8'~0l!Y and lhlfd p~ce Lo• seoood aod Newport Beach third. An&elea Co\lnty.. • RohltaWe SneeessO'I". • .. New Beach· Detective Chief Pick Due Soon A n~. ~hie[ for the detective bureau of the Huntington Beach Police Department i;hould be selected by the end of Sep· tember -or earlfOctobe.r. The slot. was vacated by Earl Robitaille who moved up last wee.k from Detective Captain to ,Huntington Beach Chief of ~olice, succeeding the retired chief, John Se)lz<r. · Roblt.aille said today that written ex· ams for the top detective post would be liven the week of Sept. 15. with oral ex· a.ms following during the week or Sept. 29. -"J hope to announce a selection as soon ~s possible after the oral exams," said Robitaille. within the Huntingron Beach Police ~partment. "Al the same time we pick a new cap- tain," said Robitaille, "a new lieutenant's post will be opened in the detective bureau." No-lieu~enant slots !!Urrently exist iQ the deteehve bureau, but the city council rec,s;nlly approved creation of the pos~ for this yeaL -. Detective Sgt. Forrest Lewis is cur· renUy filling in as temporary head of the detectives until the new captain has been chosen. 5 Beachgoers Jailed on Drugs are on the increase. and many of our President'! wish for leisure. They stayed young people are entering into early mar· away from the Nixon compound in riages with limited preparation for family droves. Uie and sexual adjustment," he said. Mr. Nixon began the day by put-putting \Vhite the initial rocus of the council is from his estate groundii in his golf cart on parent education, a secoad phase may early in the morning. He was ae-. include direct family life and sl!x educa· companied by Marine Major JQhn Bren· tion for youngsters, provided paren tal ap-nan, his military aide. proval is gained. They drove around Cyprus Shore wav. The course will begin with mass lng at youtigsters, patting a few on the meetings at Golden \\lest College Nov. 1 head and talking to residents of the ex· and Nov. 23. elusive residential community. In the first session, a keynoter and "No. they didn't borrow any cups of other speakers will present information. sugar," quipped a White House staff Grou;i discussion will follow. At the s~ member later. cond meeting, the program will be The President and Maj. Brennan then evaluated and plans' made for the educe~ walked along the beach below Cyprus lion of young people. Shore. Startled beachgoers quickly flock· At least three seminars will be held al A Secret Service agent closely followed in another car during the 44-mile round trip. The huge White House press corps•Sun- day stayed more or less put at the San Clemente Inn and the Surf and Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach. Toward dusk, Sunday the President !.nd Mrs. Nixon swam in the pool on the fonner Cotton estate grounds. A quiet dinner in the mansion ended the day. "There were a few slafi meetinis, ·• said a White House spokesman, "but mostly it was a very pleasant, relaxing day ofr for the President.'' Today the Nixons expect to welcome· their daughter Tricia who will be flawn in at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. each of the participating churches between Nov. 1 and Nov. 23, with repre!entatives of lhe clergy and medical and education profr.saions taking part. Fro1n Page I Or. Miller, who vdll head lhe council's st.Hring committee, said the enllre pro- gram will stress the moral aspect of sex. "The emphasis will be on a proper relationship between parent and cl\ild. This is not a clinical relationship, but one or love and understanding, coupled with , sound guidance,·~ he saict, Chief J tistice Burger Proposes Penal Probe DALLAS (UPI) -Chiel Justice. \\rar· ren .'t Bu~ger today ~oposed that the organized bar undel'take a massive study or lhe nation's penal systems. The Chief Justice sald the systems should be examined ·~•from · beglnninB' to end -parole, probation, the prisons and related institutions, their staffs, their pr!)grams, their educational and voca- tional training programs, the standards and procedures for release." The prepared speech was Burger's third al meetings related to the 92nd An· nual Convention of the American Bar Association CABA). He has been al· tending luncheons and dinners at every turn and is obviously attempting to show ASTRONAUT BANQUET • • • carried out in centerpieces, candy boxes and a special moon-shaped dessert being pre~ared. by ~he hotel chef. It's a globe of vanilla ice cream over Kirsch-soaked raisins and coated with a thin meringue to give the impression of a moonscape. .,, The program !or the evening has yet to be announced . The ~resident is expected to toast the astronauts before dinner. · "I would Imagine he astronauts will lhen say something," said 'l White House spokesman, "but it may not be a formal ... &peeeh.'1 To keep the dinner nonpartisan. Nilton has not asked political figures lo speak. What will lhe elegant evening cost? \Vhite House sources aren't telling. But they say funds will come from several government sources, including the State Department, the NaUonal Aeronautical and Space Administration and Nixon's own $50,000 White House~ entertairunent all5})Vance. Helping Jland Tri ggers Crash r.tot~rist William R. W h l t ten berg couldn t see because the sun was in his eyes. So his wife reached over to lower the Pan A111 Worker.s sun "lsor. •. ""'. Her arm Was·tougtrer on his vision tl'l~n Vote Today on Pact !he seuing sun, Costa Mesa police said lodav. . • NEW YORK. (APJ._ Ground empolyes .. -rh(t car driven by Whitt~nt:Jetg, 27. or of Pan American \Vorld Airways com· 57} Han1ilton St., headed south on Harbor plete voting today on a tentative contract Boulevard at Fair Drive Sunday evening. agreement lo end the strike that began collided with another auto In front. Friday. r-.1otorist Robert H. Wheeler, 24, of 1552 About 8,000 members of the Teamsters ~1iramar Drive, Balboa, and his wife -Lin· Union were scheduled to vote. Union of. da. 21, \rere tlkcn to Costa 1'.1esa ficials declined, to discuss the pacl. until ~lfmorial Hospital with minor injuries the voting was complete. and released after treatment. 'The new detective captain will be pick· ~ from 'current lieutenants or captains Undercover detectives, playing the part by his example that he does not feel • ,. ' DAILY PILOT CllAN<;I: COA.Sf J'UlllSH!NO coM'PAN'f lle~••f N. W1,d l'ru!6'11t w P11~n.ii.r Jtek R. C11rl17 Viet Prt1U!tn1 INS GIM•t Ml lllltr ·Tll'"''' K11 .. U E•llC>r Tho,.,11 A. MM•1thl11t M1n1;1119 E«l•Or J..!l.erl W. 't i lt• A11«lflt ~·ti~ H"1tl1MJt•• h Cl(.11 Oftlct 3C9 5th Str11t .. _ M1Hi119 Addr1111 P.O. Ito 1•0. '26~1 c o.-ornc" N ....... 1 ltt Cll: Ill I \'i,-11 8A!b'!t l!l'JlcVtr4 <e111 M~,.: lJO Wot l•Y ~t•rt• LHllM Sttc.111 ~lJ Fg.1111 o1~1n11t OA ILY 'lLOT, "''tit ... 111<11 i. comll1"'4 fflt Jl Hft'l·Pl"tlt• i. .,,.l)lllf>M ~11,. t~ttlll '°""' •1Y !II ._,Ptttll tcl!l""'I tor H\ll'lllololO!t lttdl. FClllll!t <n VA1!1y. (81111 Mhf, Nt- of beachet>mbers in Huntington Beach, ......, ju?ges s~~ld withdraw into a "monastic arrested five persons Saturday and two existence. . . more Sunday for lhe sale d . T~e. Ch1e~ Justice h.as refused to an possession participate 1n any te.lev1sed programs, of seconal tablets. however, on the theory thal speeches to Arrested for possession of dangerous an audience composed StJiely of attorneys drugs were Stephen Cruz, J9, of Los. would be dUferent from those prepared Angeles ; Louis Rovarte, 19, of Alhambra; for laymen. R~roond Vasquez. 18, of Alhambra: Robert Avila, 19, of South San Gabriel and Linda Ray Estrada, 22, of Rosemead . Two juveniles, both of Los Angeles, were· arrested on the beach Sunday. when they were identified as associated with the group arrested Saturd11y, Wh1dow Taken In Station Theft A burglar removed the glass louvtrs from a Westminster service station Sun- day ni&ht, climbed through the window, &id removed '930 In cash and checks from the tale. From Page I LA SLAYINGS. and limbs and a gunshot wound io the back. -Steven Parent, 18, a friend of Gar· relson who left home in suburban El hfonte Friday to visit him, died of multi· P,le gunshot wounds or the chest. Garretson's attorney, Barry Tarlow, said ..Parent dropped by the guest house to vis!~ thi;! caretaker, v.·ho looked after several dogs and e1ts belonging to lbe owners. · Tarlow said Garretson sat up reading until fi a.m., Saturday but he.ard no unusual sountb from the main house, separated from the guest house by a swimmtn.a pool and shrubbery. If you're. 5'8'' or over, we've plenty of suits left fo~ you 1\faybe yoa 11t•d ·it\ tl1e P ilot whal h appened. We didn'l order a l1ole in ou r window llut we ~· """· ul11rn1!. lt wo rked beau1i £11lly. l11e 1.01ice tla!!hed over l1ere. But those burglare were a da$l1 and • half ahead o f lhem. f.one without a trace. Helen (my ,..;fe) end I have been told that there are M11·eral underground Burglary Colle,re. in teA&ion thit 1ume mer. They inslnlct youn g men in the latest m ethod1 for break.in~ into a 1tore in the fa.mhles wlth dependent chllelrcn -pro· gram, addpOng in its place a new family assistance program. tl would provide mlni,mum. : •basic bentfit.s of $1,600 a year tor a family o! rour -payaQle to the working · or nonworking-'p0o1'a na to ramUJes with dependent , chil:dten whether headed by father or,~~·m01her. -' · Nixon #tressed equality of treal.!Jlent , a work requiremeot and a work incentive i~ the prqgram. • , ·• He is ,ellmipating any requirem'ent that a household be wlthollt a father lo become eligible !or benefits. ''That present requirement In many stateS has the effect or brealting up families and cootrlbutes to delinqu'"ency and vk>fence,'' Niktio said . . Hf proposed that all employable persons ~·ho accept l.l)e \VClfare payments be required to register for work or job training, and that .adequaU. and con· Ven.lent day care be provided for children v.·herev~r it -is neCess.iry to enable a parent to train or Work. In 20 states, Nlxon estimated, the present averag~· benefit paym1;1nls are lower than thoSe. he is pfOP,O&ing. And ~ese are areas, be says, where poverty, is often the most severe. The new system would encourage work, Nixon said, by allowing a new worker to r~tain the first $720 of his yearly earnings \Ylthout any benefit reduction. Nix:oo urged Congress to begln study of these proposals promptly so that Jaws can be enac ted and funds authorized as soon as possible. He_ envisioned that "for the first time, all dependent families with children in America, regardless of where they live, WQ._ul~-be assured of minimum standard p~l'.!ft'~!.ll§.. basfl9, upoq UJillorm and single eligibility standards and "would be en- couraged to train and work and stay together." · "These are far·reaching effects." he told Congress, "they cannot be purthased cheaply. or by piecemeal efforts." With the establishment of his "new ap- p_r~ch " !O welfare, Nixon sa id the na· t1on ~ antipoverty agency, Office or Eco- n.om.1c Opportu:.ily, i;i.·iU concentrate on finding ~ew ways of opening economic opportunity to those whQ..,.Jre able to work. "Rather than focusing o~ income sup. . port activities," he said OEO "must find ~e~ns of providing opJ?Of1unities for .in- d1v1d~als to contribute to the full extent ?l their.capabilities and in developing anci improving these capabilities." ln a presidential statement also issued t~al'., Nixon gave the OEO the highest P:1orll~ to develop a new spirit of "social p1one~r1ng" to better the Jot o! all Americans. Recall Tangle Solved; Plans Move Smoothly· A slight tangle involving nomination paper, for the Sept. '23 recall election iB Foun_tain Valley has been untangled and election procedures are moving smoothly: today. ' · • ~st week it was ,Piscovered that.eight • Of the ten Candidates had listed their OC• cupalions incorrectly on papers filed with the city clerk. Occupations. mu.st be listed exactly the same on nomination papers as on voter registra~ion. The cJty clerk's office said tod11y all candidates had .Cliared up the prol.ilem by reresistering as voters with a new occupatioii li.Stfng. • _ · Ten men are.-seeking th&-posls now held by Mayor Robert Schwerdtfege r Vicf' ~layor Donald Fregeau and Coun: cilman Joseph Coureges who are the targets of lhe heated recall campaign. Next step taken by the city toward the recall e!eclion will be the printing of elec· liof'! ballots \vhich must be complete 30 days before the election date. ruitl d le of 1)1e uigl1t, ~ebbi ng arn1loalls of s11its, autl dri,·iug •"'BY v.·ithin 71 ¥.? seconds of srna&bing the 1_1:lae11. U!ually tl1e burglars are caught, but in the meanti me 1ve're out seven arntloads o f &uits. 111e but'plars stripped the rack 11eare!ll I.he window. It contain ed n1o!lly our !ui._ls in til1ort si7.es. 1£ you're 5 ft. 8 inches or taller, don·l YO U lei o ur little burglary "''orry you for one 1nin u te . We have a 8Uit i11 you r size. Or lle''eral dozen, for th.at matter. Ai1y\.\'&)'. ii,! \•ery unusual for our 11 tore to Ile open at 3:29 a .01. Our 1'~ar etore l1oure are 9:30 10 5:30, ~lone day throu11h Saturday. ~en you enler, remeJ!!!, her. Don't come through the window. Uise tl1 e door. The police know aboul thio ad .. • ~ 1.1611 ... t/I t r.d Uglll\I ... ,~. tlofl(I •ltll " 1--e r.m-1 111.1UDM. or•"" t.1111 P>1t111111· ':! '"' ~llY llt1Mlflt ... ,.,. ••t '' n11 w.,1 l t lth t M ~ti t .. <11, ~"' U0 Wt ll llt~ $1 ... 1, (Cl\tl MtM. -f ftlfo,hoM 17141 '42·4121 ·f frt111 WfftMl1tttt1 Cotl 540·1210 ci.wti1c •n.n1s1., ,.2.1•11 Westminster poUce are now fingerprin· ting the louvers left behind in the be.lit lo possibly lead them to the arrest of the suspect. Gas station altendant Dennis C. Noble, 19, or Wettminster , discovered the theft at 6 a.m. today whe:ri he reported to work al 6292 Wertminster Ave. "There was a party at the house the night of lhe killings," Terlow said . "From the Investigation made by my of· flee. our be3t guess b that whoevtr did It was Involved in a per30nal way these pcopl& who were killed." At 3:29 •.m. la•t Tueoday, August 5th, we bad M>tue wi n4 dow 1hoppere. 1 don't know i f we ahoold be fl•ttered by 1hl•, bat apparently they liked wbot they .. ,.,. They alamm<id a mi~k crate throa,.L. our 1tore window, galhe.red up M•eral fail armload11 ttf nor s11it1, 11curried back to their car~ and raced n1vay i11to the t\igl1l. Jack Bidwell .. CMVrltftl, 11•, 0.llltt <.et" P111Jt•tll•,.. ,_~,. ""......_ 1 111\1 .. 111111+•t llfftl , t f\IV;•I -•i.• O' H"ltlll~-•h "'''"°' I•_, et ,f ... fMff .. I_,, •11t(•AI ""''l»q"t Cl c.w'tfltftl C'I'••• Mft"'ll OIU eM'"O' ... IS •1 ,...,,.,:.trf ACf!_~ i.. *"° "''' Mt1a, (f!I•"~·• "'-Mo1r41•·c.-• l-t "'1'1u J.I 00 -lflfY• "' """ t~ !4 _..111i,-1 .... ml lt .. y CIOlllWI ....... tl (It -.111•y. I Police theorise that the safe WIS elthtr left open or that the burglar knew .the cOmblnaUon because it w1s not forced open. Attention today turned to the second suspect sought by pollct. Helder &aid, "We are looking for an ln- dividuAI. We don't have 11.ny deflnite In· formatton that he was involved. Hb name came up in conversation with Gar· ref.son." Funny lhlns. Exactly 7 dayo befo re, at lhe Li.me we re.newed our burglary in euran«:, the con1pany in lleted tha t ~·e in· 1tall one o f thoee new 1i)ent 3467Via Lido at Newport Ul vd., in Newport Beach next to Rich 1rd't1 ~larket and T lte Lido Titcaler . Plenty of free parking In the rear. Phone 6 734510 Copyright 1969, Jack Bidwell. • . ............. ... ( ' ' .. .! I i I II • ' " -· . . ' .... . ~. ·' U•ITt......,.. Elvis Hits Jat!kpo~ • I lly MVl\AM BORDERS LAS VEGAS (UPI) Swtvel-htpped linger E I v I s Praley broke all attendance ,_rds on the "Strip" during the lint seven days ol a moolh·loog engagement. About 125 persons were: lined up at the showroom reserva· Uon counter early Monday, normally a slow day. Saturday same 500 persons wen! there at 10 a.m. in hopes ol getting mervaUons during the buay weekend. Many were turned away. Officials al the International Hotel said weekends were sold out and that bookings ·during the week were "tight" for Pmley'a first eppearance before a live audience ln etaht yem. Some Prtsley fans catne all lhe way from Eu.roi>e to sff the show. The hotel received a Jetter from a woman Jn France with a 100 franc note enclosed aa a deposit for 10 abows. The woman WJnted reservations for botb the dinner and late-- night shows for five straight days. "So far we ha"e yet to have an empty seat in the house. He Is the bollest thin( that haa hit Las .Vegas," said Bruce Banke-, an HecuUve of the hotel. It was his first stage ap- 'Sunday ita NY' peareoce in •lihl yur1 end hb ooly return enpcement to Lu Ve1u la 13 yeu1. Pmley In the Oeah had lost nothlnc. It WU still ell the!<, Gynnlnl lega ••• wide llaDce ••. • boliblng heed with lalo<d black hair, .• rotating guitar • • ..... bendl .• •nd the poun. dinl rhythm of tuch tunes as "Blue Suede Sht>e,s" ••• "Round l>Gi" .. "Jallhoust Rock''. .. "HeJrtbre&k Hotel" .• , and one ~ his newest recordings "In jbe Ghetto." "' was contracted to appear here for an uncUlclosed salary. "We are very happy with the • deal," Mid Col. Tom Parker, th e distinguWled · PreaJey manager with the hoiiorary Sutbern title. He I .-.----- DAILY 'llOT Las Vegas Si~t lithely sidestepped the ques-audience. But he later con- Ion of how m u c b the tided that after fou r weeke in rfonnance was cosUng the Lu Vqu be wanta to appear lotematlooel Hot>I. '°""'whero ellt. Reportedly1 Prtsley· is bting Ha said there was no in- aid as much as Barbara spirit.Jon In iqing before _ isand who opened the movie cameras and sald he I rt In wlr JuJy for a returned to the stage. becaUM · ' ~ported $1 lhillion during a he milled live audiences . ~ree-week period. · Prealey arrived In Las ~.Parker bas deftly guided Vegas• week before the July --... ~resley, the Tennessee coun-31 operllne and pracUced dally. ry boy, io the top of the He alill was rthearahig at S eap in money earnings. p.m. on openLnc nl&ht -tw6 realey has recorded almost hours before the invited guest& ~ g1:1ld records, an unprett-began arriving. dented number, and has made ·Actor George Hamilton was r 111ion1 in mo v I e s. among the fJrst nighters aloog ''Jt ls the firtt Ume I've with performen such q: carol forked in front of people for Channing and businessmen of r.eart and It may be the last, I the Howard Hughes organiza· on't know," Presley tell s his lion. HIT IN VEGAS Elvis Prtslty Bowl Opens For Summer HENRY'S Arlslo.,rat of Spanish Food & Steak• Extends A·G•t-Acqu•int•d Off•r -SPECIAL FAMILY NIGHTS - In TH Jatlsco Room INTERLOPER -Beverly Garland and "daugh· ter," Dawn Lyn, 61 joins Fred MacMurray and Wil- liam Demarest on "My '.J1U'ee Sons" this !all. Comedy Benefits By New Staging l ~~.!u!!d:~. k ollywood Bowl 1969 summer Season, opens Tu9day with ~bln Mehta, music director Pf the Los Angeles For a Limited Time Only Mon., Thurs., Fri. I S•t. Sunday Only S to 9:30 p.m. I to 9 p.m. MENU 'My Three Sons' Get A Mother This Year By TOM TITUS Of 1M Dll.., Plltl Sl1tf It is, ord.lnartly, inadvisable lo draw comparison between two community thea ters' pro- duction of the same play. Yet the Long Beach Community Playhouse's staging of "Sun· day in New York" invites ex- ception. w l n n I n g Philharmonle, conducting a performance. 'Al••rf•' program of Berlloi and • J Rossini . Ron Filjan, strong and solid The v;orks· of Berlioi have as the urbane airline pilot been featured this summer. in otherwis e By VERNON scorr HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Henry, Higgins was rj&ht In "My Fair Lady" when he sang never "Let a Woman in Your Life." Fred MacMurray will find GUt this sea.son. As "My Three Sons" moves into its 10th year actress Be?trly Garland moves into the Douglas home, then! to stake out her claim as mlstress of a house full of heretofore happy males. 1be fact that she has a love- ly figure, pretty face and trim ankles is no excuse. Not only will she exchange vows with the un.suspect.ing MacMurray on the e i g h t h show of the new season, she'll 11lso saddle the Douglas men with her 6-year-old daughter. For Beverly it is almost a replay of her own life. This is difficult to follow. On the CBS-TV show Beverly pdrtrays a widow who marries a widower with dtlldren. In real life Beverly wa! a widow who married a widower with c!Uldren. She is now Mr!. Fillmore CrW. Jn addition to his grown children, the couple now hu two youngsters of \heir own. "1 hope my television mar· riage works out as well as my real one1" Beverly said during a break in filming. "But. I expect a lot or . At;~O!:i~ 43 Pronoun l 01Hgtttftll'lt 41 Bdy's X11111 pttstnt S Roa111 In 45 favoritt J1l I t •sl Set !pot: 'Sword Col!oq. strokt ~6 "•Woe·--I": 14 Recent: 2 •OfdS . .Su ff it 48 FQnner l~ Min's n111e htlY}'tWtlght l• .Swiftness .dJam~· oJ motion 5l..P11n n !17 '41111 1dvant e ,_ 11 Mike 56 Lumbt r va 1ut liss sourer l' l'urthss1bl1 57 Mtan at lh e issue dwe!llng f'"" ~8 Vtry dry •ords 59 Grant IO Rtl1tfv1: bOUpto ell Abbr. expecbl tlons t1 1968 ski •l Comt out cha11pi&n: 1econd btst 2 words •2wordol 21 EMotion approval 2S Musltal bl -t loth lnstN111 t11 t t.4 Lookt d ovl'f t• l'l1y In 65 Disturbance summ er ol lht pub· stock lie ptlCf 27 -squid 29 F1t111 1ni111I DOWN 31 Thet In which on • l llt11 of txttls winltr wtlll' '' Toti' t Wrst lnd~ts nrceulllts vo lc.,o J' In-: ) Fish women viewer! will resent me because they have s u c b personal feelings a b o u t characters who have been on the air as Jong a! the cast of this show. "Some of the females feel as it they're losing a chance at marrying Fred MacMurray themselves. "And if I know some women, they'll criticize my hair, my clothe! and lhe way I talk." Male viewers won't be so picky. They'll just resent her being there. Beverly, who once played Bing Crosby's wile on the crooner's s~ort-lived situation comedy, already has been ex· posed to male suspicion. "My first day on the set was fr ig hten i ng,'' Beverly reported. "The cast and crew had been working t.ogeU1er all those years and l thought they believed I was an intruder. "When Fred. came in and said good mol'Jling to me they were the friendliest words I heard all day. "Then the first scene we had together required that we sit on a couch and spend the day kissing one another. When l went home and told my hus. band about it he wasn't too thrilled with the idea.'' ·Neither was ~{rs. MacMur- ray -June Haver -who just happened to choose that day to, visit the set. Boy, was Henry Higgins right! Saturday'• l'uzzlt Solvtd: I Ont ot famed radio tram 'Plain Jn .1111cltnl Pa lrsUnt l O At 1noth1r limt 8111/69 )) M!gr1tory wo1kt1 ; Col1oQ. 34 Kind ol dog 'S Ttr111 of endt1r111111t lit Cl aw 'Ibis version is, for the most part, an instant replay of the •'JVWOAY IM NO YOltKH A corneoif'I" b'I' Hor,,,.!'! Kr••ne, di-rec~ tr/ R"' AIMrtlOI\, twdWllClt dl- ~or 8111 M~r.cl. st-l'l'llM111tr Ann Fiii.ti, Pl"Ge!'\'rd Fr!Un 1nd ~IVnMl'I l!lf"CllJ9l'I Aw. 1l 11 tt>e L-B1ldl Con'ltfl\lnltv PtlvtlouM, S2GI E. ,,,.,.1Wlm $1., Lont lffdl. TM• CAST EIWtn T1y1or .......... Maditl1,.. Dr1k1 M lkt M!ldltll. ............ bndV K-A ... '" T1vlof' ............... Ret1 Fll\9n R!IU WI~ .............. John EHll Tiie',...... ................ e .... 11s1"*' Tiie' ""°"'"" C1rol J-1 brother in the Huntington commemoration of the Beriloz production. comes off even SniotJi ers Centenary. more so at Long Beach. The Tuesday 's program w 111 muscular suitor whose arrival S S • l open with the Berlioz Roma11 et PecUl carnival Overture, and will in· is the ca talyst for a hi13riously elude three dances from the straln"!<i situation is also well "Damnation of Faust." Played by John Eagle. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. CAP) • Soloi.n. '-1arilyn Horne wiU . -The Smothers Brothers, Stealmg the show wherever fired last spring by CBS, have sing two arias from "Dam· I nation of Faust": "King of they can are the ubiquitous agreed lo do a special next Thule" and "Romance.o man and woman, played with season that will be made by Mehta will conduct the comic gusto by Carol Jones an Indianapolis· based pre> orchestra Jn 0 v e r tu r e to and Bernie Simon , the latter duction company. "William Tell" and two another holdover from The 00.mlnute special will be danct! from the same opera Huntington Beach. The i r se t in San Francisco, with by Rossini. scenes, however brief, are Simon and Garfunkel and Bob Miss Horne, will sing "Non among the funniest of the Dylan as guests. It will be sold Temcr D'ufl ,Basso Atfetto" evening. to individual station! by Na-fr om "Slegdl " Corinth" and A word -several words in tional Telep roduclions and "Tenti Affetti" from "La Don- fact -must be said for the broadcast in late November na del 1.ago.h . highly enjoyable. come d Y new and excellent sound or e~ar~i~y::llec::•;:m;be:::r~. '7""iiiii:'l--:;::::::::::~;;::\I presented less than a year ago system now in use at the Com· ,. at the Huntington Beach munity Playhouse. Wisely in--M.111n-. a.ur 11 i :• Playhouse -it features the st.ailed for this production, ":9::"'~'~s':i. ~7:- same director, technical direc-which depends to a large ex.-s.,.,. J '·'"· "" ...... O.lty 11 11• M•. Ill"' T~.,._ l.~"7 I PM. ,,.,, l•I., I:•. tor and three of Uie sii: cast lent on technical acumen, it 1!5T PICTUll members. And this shared ex· bursts forth in sharp, clear Of THf YIAI t s ... 1 ,M. perlence, along with a playing tones coordinated w I t b S p1ci•~r~~:htr111'1 area almost double the siie of precision by the original HUJt. 1~ 1 U11d1r-$1 .so t h e Huntington horseshoe, tington Beach man, B i 11 make_, for a production of no-Moreland. ticeably heightened pace and "Sunday tn New York" will polish. be around for one more Direct.or Ron Albertsen has weekend only at t h e mounted much more than a Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim v.·armed over version of his St., Long Beach. Whether or earlier effort. Long Beach's not you 've seen the Huntington "Sunday" abounds with added Beach version, this one comes blocking and stage busine~ highly recommended . calculated to draw far more laugh ter than the first produc-lf.=========~1 lion, which was a comic gem m its own right. He is ably abetted in this ·task by a vaslly improved Randy Keene, more polished and relaxed th is time around in his leading role ol the stranger from Philadelphia whose life in tertw i nes hilariously with the heroine's. Keene has benefited mightily by his familiarity with the show. · Young Madeline Drake, as ~ the "world's only 22-year-old virgin " V.·ho a lte r na t e ly pursues and flees fl'.Qm her quar,,., shows hig11 promise but does not realize her full potential. A tendency., t o overstate her case, to physically emphasize scenes which dialogue alone can carry, detracts rrom an NOW . ENDS TUESOAY Held Over -2nd We•k ~F--I ,.,_ DIW" SOUTH COAST ""'"' 1,A PLAZA THllATRIE CXIRPllATOC San Diil&o FNIWIJ at Brlltol • 546-2711 ZERO MOSTEL KIM NOVAK CLINT WALKER "THE GREAT BANK ROBBERY". Plus f"nd Hit Fe•tUre · JAMES GARNER JOAN HACKETT 11 Nottd wlf11tr rrsort: 2 words lt Mr. MUsltll 11 In lhis lot1l lty 21 Scrupuloua 22 Sttond l1111g1in TV 14 Wood· •orkrr's mach lnt 38 r."~':' with w· f ll Co111m1nd lo , ••• rlflt IQUld ...., ,, Ft 11d I " ''"'" JJlWJ .... the-bt1ns ~ c-• •e1 M•r PUUI -Also- ----' M•llnMs O.lfi at 12:30 - Box Office Open 12 :15 STARTS WEDNESDAY-I WEEK ONLY * The F1ntasim•gorlc•I Music•I * Dick Van Dykt -Silly Ann Howes -ln- 27 Utltred 11 Vllillt 1!J011 ITS Hiil 48-· tfftt l MOST PANTASM.&•OllCAL .. , F1igranl MUSICAL IHTllTAINMINT 1esln 50 Sporting IN THE HISTOIY t vtnl Of HllnHIN61 51 FBI memb1r -SHOW TIMES- "CHlm CHlm BANG BANG" HENRY'S COMIO PRONTO PLA'll SAUD. •t•I' TACO l llP •NCHIL.l.DA CNSIS• •NCHlUDA lllllP TACO, SPANISH altl l'LU'l'V CHILI lllLLINO 1'11:1110 SllAHS. TOITIL.U.J S,.AftllK llCI, l'altO lllAMS .fUnllll:, COPPll TOll:TILUS, IUTTlll. CO,l't:I i2 00 $2.SO FROM OUR HOILU GOADO'S DELIGHT ftlW YOll:K. TOP l lll:LCllH CHILI ltSLLtNO I'll.IT MIGNON tNICKtN llHCHIUOA Olt l"O•Tlll:HOUSI \ t'IUIO llAHS, COl'l'll SOU i', SALAO, COl'l'lt $2.00 $4.00 For lov1 ond Gir ls Under 12 MAMSUll:Or•. llAMJ, M'tl.K 1 TACO. aa:ANS. ••elf, M~LI( 81.00 $1.0CI' HENRY'S RESTAURANT PatllGdts Gftd Newport loultffrd COST A MISA 545-SS71 W1L'' •·-~-~ preJenfs At¥J HOOK. SMOKESTACK LIGHTNIN SAT., AUG. 16--8:00 P.M. CAL STAn FULLERTON llClln AT All ltfl UIUAl l'f.AC"ff nam. ~·• AOW.-"-» oooa • ---.... ·---... ·-·-''""• lt!IO'll,.l"l'l " ... _, nm. --· ....,_..__ ...... == ... ...._ . . , ...• M.yl71o l\?1iJijftttt1Gt!1£iij -·-- 2nd POPULAR HIT FOi ONI WllK ONLY! 1tt T1111e Site"" T .. ethtr MATINEE TODAY "00008Yf. COLUMBUS' IS I OUNO 10 8E A. GAU.1' SUCCESS!" -· • J Wholly 4 Infusion JI·~""' 11td1 fra S 1n1 drltd lt1v1s JI Addlctl• S Man of 9 Slnfter r,ofound 40 Ile er to•• ernlng an e1111pl1 • In tl'lt 'l Htlp out courst 11 42 lnu11dst1011 1 St cul1r mocklng words 21 NtWSPIPtf vrt1I statistic lO Mr. H1rb1cf'I 31 Goll tlub l Z Frtnch 1111rsh1I of 11.1 52 Sound ol 1..-lllfl 7:tt 6 t :JD I bulltt I ..... kt. ' s... 2:11' 4:11 S:t Wu I J0t•ry 54 Adjeotll¥e sufll• .55 City on 111• Hudson Rlvl'f 5' Vtl'lltlt ~do WIWfOtf .. Aaf -...... ..,,.._ f+ le~ lW• .... -Of. l ·l )HI EXC:LUSIVE!l! NOW! ticktft ot Co111puticli•t fflfef1 i"cluding lulloclt'1,ltcolph'1 Mo,lttlt,Wollich's orot lh• ~ ··1 -- DCLUSIYI rlEMlllE IUN ' ' ' 10 11 I .. -·-.. " & Return ShOwlnt By Popul1r Otm1nd P11a1Eum ....... 11111.Tmls" . --· lo•Offi<•· A JOth-Centwy cutle in a 20th· Century war I tt,-J(lllfl ~-.. 1\-"'!-- Bmt I.am••• 11wtll llmDJ'SID,allll C--. B'.eap l!I ~·T~ SJ Complete Printing Service Top Quality -Fast Service Pll<JT PPIN T INC 642-4321 2211 w .. 1 lelbo• Blvd. • Newport Da1ch West Coast Premier• Engagement ' rl ' i NEWPORT . (;....,_,, .. • .• , ... ,.,.!" \\I-WAY 'lq oR1\lf IN :: •• , ..... tmll ·1 .. ........ ···················- •• • ' •. JI DAil Y l'ILOT H • Fortllftes in IAllld··I Rich ~~ .......................... -;;-;:;; =--"'l!!!!. • .::;;f'!! ................... __ -· llJ SYLVIA PORTER The price ol • lln&Je -o(land oe1r Homtoo'1 algantic le Attrodome has, In one dec-ode/ rocketed from ~.000 to tod1y'1 range ol N7,°'i)O-inO;ooo. 'Ile price of a single acre ol la~ in certain areas around Arizona has. since th s. zoomed from $3 to ~ 'rJIE PRICE OF A single fl 1lnd near Houston's gigant· ol ~them Vermont bas risen frorft $25 to $2,500 In just the pa~ five years -and in some "in" aki regions, and acre which was Worth next to nothing a few years ago now brings $6,000 lo •10,000. Today, tortunes, large and small, are being made In land -tor aurburan housing developments, v a t a l I o n raorts, shopping centers, in- dustrial plant sites and evP.n in reclaimed swamp and desert land. What's more, a great variety of investors seems to be getting involved, from in· divlduals, to corporations to land developers, etc.. But bow can you, the amateur investor, get a piece o( the action in real estate now! In this and the nei:t three columns, I'll try to give you precise guidelines. FIRST HERE'S • an n·1 Free Concert Little dicalion of today's trends In real eMate investment and the areas in which pro!essional1 · have been chalking up profits: ln the past two decadea, lhe value ol raw land in thla coon· tty bas' been risiqs al 1 average of 10 ta 20 percent a. year. Since 1950, the value of a single acre or U.S. farm land has on average more than tripled, and some 150,000 farms are now being sold each year. Since 19SO, the average price of · a homesite for a single family house has nearly lripl· ed. And wices being paid for Industrial sites have been f'U.. ing on a similar s c a J e lhroughoul lhe U.S.' Acres •lso the approach of the decade GI lhe YG11111 m&rrleds . With the blibie.s ol World War II oow being manied in record numben and settin1 up homes ot their O!"n. the scrambJe for housing o>ukf be reaehln.I • t •mp e de pro- portions by the mkl·l970s. A lhlrd force is the almple shrinkage in the supply of land appropriate for development, Not only is It being gGbbled up by laod-bungry lam.Illes, cor- poraticns and investors. It also Ls being absorbed by our Federal, Stale and Io ca I governments. These are tak- ing over some l million acres each year tor public uses, ranging from airports to parks, heal.th and educaUonal institutions, post o f f i c e s , military posU aod other purposes. Right oow, one-lhlrd of the land Jn our countiy is publicly owned. It does make sense for an lndlvidu.al American with a n~tegg you want to protect, to study the field ol real estate for part of your funds. My' next columo, therefore, will spell qut the key ad- vantages and disadvantages, to help you decide whether th!I makes sense specifically for you. Flight Cuts Explained .By Air Cal Uf'IT ......... FAMED BRITISH TRAIN TO TOUR U:S. Milllon1 ir1 Peiler,With Iron Horst Great Rail Raid · Con.ipleJe-New York: Stoc ~EW VOllK IA")• ~ ~ter. N.. Nit ,.._ Ill• Heiw Yott 5todl: 1-.. tr•wi c-.> .... '--t•or. c..._, ... ....,, ... ar.. StiN N.. ' •I , ..... , .. ""Us C:IMCllS. -8--D-I •-\;I,• ' II.. Ill! ,~ + U ~''::.'~ l~ ~ t t +Si -A-~=-IM .s1 .. Zf: ~ 7~1 -1, .I ti" b: t1 =1 :~11~.l ! Mt llS 1-.. ::f"' ::~ . ~ I 1N ·~~ ,. • u ~ .... ""'",. " .~ t,= !!.~ -• i -E· -' ' • TI ••• "''""" :.. -' l!!! -l!§..;I u::"'-. ""i ... I i ... {: . . \l ~· .ii) -1"'t!;!J1~ I 'Sf~.,. . ~-.... UOI • ... ~ '!: + 1,1 l~ l~ l~=~~· 05 ~ ,, .,.. ~ ... ~ ,. 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AmMFdY .till •" lt'!ll !Ml 1~ +\Ii 81111e~Sll .IO 1l l~ 3'~ 3W. +1 f~r"' Cp .111 1!1 1• 2 V. 23* ..,-~ .t.MetChl 7.10 M •P'li •l·• •• .....1 .1 -( Flbrebrd .10 SS 1Pli 1Aio 1!l' +;•\ A.Md "' olU I !'1\li 1011'11011'1. -Sllo -Fleklc'IM 1 .~ 11 16 2~ 2'" +,.~• Arn Molort 143 I"" 10.. l'lo 1-\o ~bOI Cp .60 .~ tt,1\ "'It 71'11 -\Ii flll!'ol 2 f J3 ll .. )Ull, .••. AtnNl!GU 2 j( W JJ\i »lot. -"9 I Flnlfll -II 111-'ii 101.I -"-flfl Fede•P"" SI 21'\ 1~ n... ->\ "mPno1 ·"°' "1 '""' 1u11o 1•4. -o.. 11t.llM .nf 51 t51o 1~>o11 1~. --. Flrntne 1.60 1ca 5ftl n .12 -. 11 All.!Vefl ..... '° m111 212 ~ .. + "' C1mpllL .•St 4!17•... 1'~ '3\• +,.. '''°'" I... JO "~ .. .Ullo ~ ... "'" l!srcti wl JO s1i. 51.1\\ JIJb -:i,i, C.m.r>SP 1.10 •7 :llG'o >00 lO -'' FstNC~ 2.JO SS 5'1h stt. st\li -•• ....,, '"' 1 II n'" 22'NI ~ -"" ~dfl 8~w ,.0 ., 11'> I -., F1INStr .509 JI ,. ]f )f +" r., Am XhP ,IO IJ 11 •• 11 .. 11-. _,.,.. on PK l '° 11 6f'1 "' " -"' FIKflb(h .• •10 '-'"' l1l~ 21ri ·~ \• A ~ti I.till lSI :JO'"' 1t"-3010 + '0 lnllRd I 10 6 !'" •"••-]4\\ •• •• fllflHSc:I .1' 13 )1 16\.'J 1~-. 1-. AmSoAfr .10 "' ..... o~ ~+•Ill !11 c '""'' .. It. .. 7114 -""Fletnlnt .so i U"4 IS'olo 1.SV. +.11 AJnWr In.JG •l ••"" l•-'1 •• 'J rbnln l.olll ~1 '2~• '210 "11o + \• FUntkolt 1 ]( 26"4 211,,., ~ '. •. "'" Sfd I " •lll :mt Jl'i'o !-. 1r111i. ·'° n ,,Ii II 11 -Vi Ftlnl PIA.4,JO llO 1fl.I 1fU mi. +-t 1 A!'llS•.:I al4.IS 19 \Ii• 1!.I 110 2l'J ••o,f•, ""• J rMI 7 ii..10\lt 10'.'I ..... Flfntkl ... ' 1110 '° "° '° -1 Al'll SIW!t .4 .S 2t1' :l''Mo 2"11 ~ ero '" ··• JI fill ~ + ~ Fl• £ Con! 21 31\lo JOI\ :ioV.. _ 'l A weir ...... u ,:i 7•1'o ts 14 C.n>~"c •.~. ' ·' • ~""-:t iZ Fl• G•• .00 10 1ll'I II II -\!lo A5ut ~"1.65 I ol4 '4 U +1\lt C•rr..., D • )S( .. Fl• P11W I 52 36 471\ l] 11 Am)Uf Pl .61 u lU'lo ·~ 10 -,,. ,,,.,.n ,,II) • 100 \lo i'h• -~ FJaP .... 1..1 1:11t !! '6\lo 6J'4 " ;_:·l' Tlol' 2.«I Jll ~ 3ll'I 53 -V. ,,. J '' ~\'< ~ 2l _'Ii Fla Sitt! .90 2~ 1'?o VIII -, ArtoWWkJ .~ ' l1 I~ li -+ "" • 11.ri..:1-,.u ii.29'\ w~ 211 ... -,, ftYOrC... 2.o.lf JO lJ 3'll'o """ -~ • AWWSPI 1.U. yfO 1111 1"l llV. + ~ f.,;, l io .. "'° •111> .,,. ->(o Fllll!' Pl 8 J J '1n,.~ 4'111 -\j 11\W l!•d \·.~ ..,,., ,,,_ 11 1 ..... + '• 1 Mirodf 1~ 10 10 _ .. f1Tkler .10 l l 16-\l 1111.i-~-. Am Ziii(: 61. 21'"' M 20\io -"6 Ca to ) " )A''I 2Alio -Vo FM(.lfep .15 ft 1 lil.ro 2~ ., Amelell .60 2J ~-' fJ -.c.ii t lj .. ,. 63-. 6.o -•., FMC P'1.1S 4 .U!h.Uon U\lt +4\1 ! • " ' I 9 p.m. TONIGHT Fashion lslallcl REAL ESTATE investment and development corporations have again become. glamour JllOCk!. According ~to t h e Studley Realty 1ndex1 publish· ed by.Studley Realty & Equity. Corp.., a New York r~e&late Investment counsel(oa: finn, prices of 11 representative stocks in U.S. real estate cor- porations more lhan doubled ln 1968, far outperforming the · stock market as a whole. Fly O g-"8 Al'lll6Clnc: .a ll 51 .,.n SO\li -'lo olln PIA(.JO '3', 6J 4J\o\ + <~ FOPCIF•lr .90 2J l1 f'~ fll'i .,, . ~ .,. . co• ~OUJ'S r 1. ~. _ :M~~ •. 1.iolw .... ->: ~ ... t"' r~ if"'+1"' ~~·~ 'Li t:t? r.u +~~::i:~n-• , 1~~ ,~~ ,~n=~t Air Calitomia has no In· a. a. v-.1.-~ ·--111 ,.,..._ ~ ~tili...-t.'>tl Foo111 Pll.?O 1, ''v, nv. nlli -~ Ntlpn Corp lJO ~ ll , ~" -V. cen 1111..t 1.:12 ' J • 21'11 ~-~ ~, .... -.,.~~· O!I ~:0 .. 7 .. ".--IH l-- lention of --' · · 1 .t.mnH ~-.,, ~ ,,, ~ -c~EJ!'tPs 1 12 ,, lf:!to 1•~ 19\~ . . ... or ...... ., ' ... • ... i 26141 ""' ... rll;\.tuc•ni service NEW YORK (UPI) _ o-~. promotion campa,·gn. be 1-T!!.L:.",.-• 11~ 11 16 .. -~ c..., •El _.. 1,• 21 ... """ 11v. .... FMd< pf1.to 1• .n11t ~ ~ _ ., . 1' • NIWPORT CENTER s.~ "" t""'"" ~-,.. "' m, JIO'O 29~, -11:1 C: Pw' 1,12 1~ IN. 11\11 + 141 Fo:stWllt .60ll !a• 11 """ lt\i _ •t .....::tween Ontario and San Jose. ol lhe _ t pect 1 d . .....t • s.-"""'Heid .ID '1" """ •I*+._ c..,1.sw 1.-0 11 '°'• ~ • -u FP11tW11 Pl 1 ~1 16 it ,, -+. ·~ . ., .. os s acuar an JUmr-':' at 1.t. uuwler at a~~P.H.s.•, . ..!. 11 tt\o :n n --.ce111Sov1 .ta 21)1.3 ll v.., ~+\o\Fo.dloir/ AO '' >0 7'\'1 lO -no Oakland aod dld not r.-uest a . ~' fi• • )Ii.., '~ ~ -""' ..,TtlU• .• L• ~ ... \ lA -~ Fr...it Ir n I ,, lS\i '~ .;.. '. ~'1 expensive raids Britain ever rakish an"le and urni.rella APIChe(.p .le " 21'h 201('" e-· g•rro !,..,., JU . 7>'' 1.ll· + '1 F~Sul i 60 ~95 1~1.sv, ~ -•• reduc,10• n 1'n' lh l 8' ·-f rib ''ll y • • 1J "" ;!Nii -\.i itrl·I ftd.. 107 13 n>1 2' !iot-lll FrwhCP I.Ill Sol ~S~1 J,9rto + '•' a rvi....... rom has pulled on . the No fi"miy cl lched A..;:;.··cr..m· " ~ Jo6 11 + \'.a rrt 1ec1 111 to l "" j3'4 ,,,., -1~ fuou1 Ind «> ll :n~ 31.\lo "" '• b C i'f · i u U · ARA Sv( .9' 31 100 ft\IJo 100 + \:, ce .. naAJr 80 1 ?6•1 ~ M\6 + ~ -G • See our full-page ad in this week's TIME Magazine lllFIR6T CALIFORNIA COMPANY Whet• th• inY•1tor olway1 comes fir1I 11$1 VII LNt """"ti ..... 11 """'' '7f-Jf4t Wllli.111 f, Mc(---• Foreign tnvestors, too, are reported to be alloting an in· creasing share or Uielr in· vestment funds to U.S. real est.ate. Obviously, a great force behind the land boom is I966- 69's inOation spJral. Real estate is a traditional hedge against lnOation aQ<l rea l estate values are currently climbing two or three times as rapidly as the government's Consumer Price Index. A SECOND FACTOR Is the anticipated upsurge in the de- mand for boo.sing, for vacation homes, for a "piece of the landscape." This reflects not only our growing affluence but ELEVEN ACRE CORNER OF PRIME M·l PROPERTY BEING OFFERED FOR SALE . N.E. CORNER FAIRVIEW & ~UN FLOWER, SANTA ANA. CALIF. $50,000 PER ACRE -T tm11 Ed Rlddle Realtor, Inc. M6·8111 t e a I onua. Pubic Utilities Amer1'ce kM ill ll The . AJ'(ll0efl 1.60 I .. l.SVt 4!\lt + ... CFI Sii ro l ,, 11>1o 111\ -n mar c• w gc nu~-car train lo be pull-win·~11svc: 1 9 1m 2s"" uu _\Ii c~n iw: s• ~ u u..., ~ i.~ G"c c. 1.JO u s11o ~ CommissJon, Carl A. d lhi f ii .-..1,"'os .111 1' ~ J1111 .:io•.-""t11arn1>s 110 'j nv. 11.., 71'-'l+t GAFCoro .io 11t ,11~ !"'-un er way s a . ed by the Flying Scot includes ArlllCllSt 1,60 .ss 21~ u 11 -'°' ~••ltrNV 1 4t1~ •11i ''"' -v. llAF oH.:!O 11 ~ 2' Benscoter, A i r Californla Arrrv p1 ~.15 2 '2"" t2\li ,, .. + \> ~•sfM" 1.eo 1" •1" •s .u>Jo + v. !l'"' sto 1.JO ' 1•v• u" That's when s te am two Royal Pullman -·ch ~ ·<.~ ..... •2'1 :i. • :wv. ,. .. -\1 hecic•• Mal .! lG'IJo to'I> :io,,_ •• ••ms p11 1s 1 1'!/o H'i d """"' es Arfti°Rub i.60 6 ll\li ~ 39~ -""Cl\tnM!r~ 1D _,. 3000 1'Vt :w!!'I ""' Gt"IS pff.~ i 6"1 1~ presi enl, said today. 1~motive buffs of Am er•·ca d 1 Ii'" •--l' ...,... corp " s n ""' 22,., _"" c11emNv 2.&0 11,s SA'• u,,. 56\.i .+ l'i i:.,n,..11 n 1 1~. 31 .... "'"v an a g ass wa cu ou.:.crva ion........,. Ind ·1 10 71111 2n.. 2, _._ ..... S::!.'!!"m .. lG 11"• 11·~ ,,.~ -'• "i1r Wood n • Tuesday 1'¥ PUC granted will get a chance to see and car dating from Britain's gUd-=10it"'~~ 1{ fi11 4 .,,. +. ~ ~"' ri. ;; 2~ ~~ ~ :!: ~ 8!:::'0:..11i1.~ 71 -!-t 1 • 32 Air California perm.lssion l• ed Edwardi'a ""~ BtN 1 1~ T~-11 ti. _ ~ ChkEKI in t 1111. U\, 11'• . G1•1oc~ .to s ~ ~ inspect. the world's most n age. oc; , n ~" .. 0311 .t.lVJ _ ~ c~1M11 s1P P s ,~,,. "'• 2•1~ +l:ir. ~1ew-r1" .60 , 11 filil reduce from '(our to two the This car has been converted ~J09 1.loti• l Joi<--»> .. 331'1 -.._ o.1111s1•P d c 11\;l JOI.II t1\;lt11<> Gem,111 c10 1 1't~ 16'" famous railway engine, lhe ... ..itr... oo 1P1o 12v. 1~ +·._ o.MSPP p1 5 1 sa sa " ... GM1i111" .s.w 11 1oi. 10111 m''ni'mum' number of dai'ly into an Edwardian pub byA11C1VEI 1~ 25 li1'1io U'4 21·.--.. c.MSP plctS 1 i1''1 n u; 52\~-t GnAl"v 1ttt • t,m 161 Flying Sailsman ll will be IY . . "'c11VE1 111 • t20 "o.:. "o.:. Miio -1>< C111 Musk 1 1s " 2s10 2si.. -\\ G.i.m0+1 .60ll u ""' .51v. . . atney s, famous Thames-side All Rldlf!CI 1 111 11 1'.'I \Dt\11110t~ -"'ChiP ...... T l '~ 3S•~ lA"' l5\lo + l'I GAT••n 1.IO 11 :MV, 3' round-trip .night! between 11· 1 1 8 'll b l •• b Aull~ p1115 1to 51\lo 5"'-!At -*" C11R1P o:1 \JP ' n11 nlli nYr ... GA Tr" D'2.SO 1 •7\'J '71-'I pu mg a Ol o n s r8U'C rewers. Atl 1t1c11 of l 1 1w,, 11.s.,.. 11.s'-'1 -c"RIP e1t1w s 22"° n n -.. G~ ••nc ,M ,,,' i. 11t". H 0 11 y w 0 ad-Burbank and hopes 0 2 200 'i l .-,1411~n pfl.to Sl 1l n "" -~ Clll Tlll~ 2.JO •1 g SI SI + .. Gn Cab~ l.l'O 19'4 11\'il ver a , m1e roue AtllsChtm 1 176 7~ ''°'"' 1n.-~Cl>odlF11ll ,6CI , 11\lo n.\oo n•• + •,ge" c1y 1.70 u '''• 121-. Ontario a....i between San J~,. which will take si.I w--1·-lo MOTORCYCLES AU•• corit i~t 5..., j'• 5-\li ... c11r~ c11 .6CI •6 n n"' 1n1 -._ ,o!',ew .:..1111, u, •• • • .,.. V<n'< ~ AUl'"or'I Pll• 17 13'• I ··~ 131'1 -CCU prpf I 1 11 17 " +' ~ .. ''1"8'" ~ 1$.. ,.v, and Oakland. lraverse. Trade exhibits will include Au1SP111r ·°" ~ 1111 :ri• \l''" -\ii c"'""''" .•• 1t '"'' 11><. 1111t -'"Gen EIM 1.60 ,,, &41~ ~· D Automtn ll!d 6S 11•;,,". 1l11 +•\C~rom1I pf5 11161'1 11t\lilli\lo +J:t.GflFl~I .7'•• •SOil'• l?h This apple green and .. 0Jd en by po It er y from A .. c.o c '1.10 " ts..., 25 ll"' _"' c11n1$""" 1 111 31 .. :11 ll'" + 1~ G .... Fo• 1.60 JS 1:1>~ 111 "The PUC's announcement I"" . · " De by h' h 1 1 .i.vco ofl.,. " H~ MUI .,. -1 c1....GE i i• s1 '"" '' 1•'4 G... Hot.• " 11"• 11 ...... ton iron hOrse was the first r s ire, os ery r o m A..,.,.., Pd .a ,, 52 s1~ .n .+ Vi c1" G! p1 , ~o •l', 611• 6J\o7 :i. .... c;e,. In$! .Soll ~J :11.. l~ that it had. granted our ......,uest locomot•'ve l• h•'t 100 miles an L, 1· c ~ hi 'ndu l · 1 Avne1 tflC • 11 l•"-11\1 , • ._ .. c:1n1o11" 1.«N 21 ...,, .. .. -2•• G•n1""" "'3 10 as,., ~ ·~" e ,,.ers re. 1 srta A_,Pd 1.ta 651r,~1.u lll\.i:-I tins.ttii !i'° J O h au, <C21~_.,,c.enMIH• .11 "':io>io lO to reduce service f r om hour, It was rest'IJ~ front lhe valves from 'Lancashire and Az1K' 011 c;, ..... 13u 1A -ll t1TF1~ , ., ·~ ~~ tt"' r,'"' + 11 2-'ttJ' ~~ 3:1 ;J~ ~f1'i Ho\lywood·Burbank and scrap heap after 40 years of m. otorcycles from Birm-1,-·w , .. -8-~llFspf'f 11 50'• "'' ~-..,g~,,~ 1 1 r.~: tr" h "'""' ""'" 11 2N ti\~ ?l\o\ -141 Cl~l,;.c ..JOb 160 JJb 20)o m.io -V. GPlll>UI l '° ll 2•'o 1~ Ontario was mlsleadi · service between London and mg am. .,;..r•lltf .&> ' 19 '~'• 1• -1~ c11V1rw ~ 112 151 .,,, •1 ,1,, _ ·~ Gt'fl R•••.c• , 1p·, 11 .. ng, 1 n Ed' b ~ b Al p gl Britain's general M-' olf1'ce t:ef'EPl~4:io ,~ fli~ ~~ :l'l"" ...... c•11•n pf1,ii 1 sii., SIVI ,,v, + '"' Gfll jlll t :10 J •1:i.. •11, that it'. did not clarly st.ate that lD urg.. Y an e er, a 1 ill be ~"d .lh 81t1G ~c• ,. ' ' -C111 51" .«> 1 13'• ,,,1 ,,,., +llJ G.!n 10 Pl' l " " Nottinghamshire bus.inessman a so w represente WI ~an1P"fll ,loll J~ ~ ~~ nt! +,,. ~·1:~e0l,I.~ ~\ ~;: ~~ ~:t +1' ~~11J7"1 :'/ Jo ll~ n~ we only requested relief In the who spent $120,000 lo refurbish $1-m1llibn of commemorative :~llOT{ 1~M r, IOI\ r.:~ u1· + "" ClevCn!f 1MI ' :IS"• 31!'o .... + l~ GTel of81.J(I r:<1o It 11'11 Hollywoodo-Burbank rrlllrket," the "Scot.'' stamps ii will gladly sell. ••rd CR .2S I !t'"' 5l~ 52~.:. ~ E~o'i.111!1~1)4 ~ r-:;,: ~ ... r;;: =~~''fr.~ ·f: u 1~!: it:" ~enscoter said. c11M11P11 .90 ., 1•11J '' J6'1> -11r Ge~..:11 1 . .0 " :nl'I J1~? On Oct. 8 lhe Flying Scol ciuenP ~ 1 • ~ .... "" JO -'4 ~'~':foi' ' J1~ 11 •:. ··we sought permission to ' CNA F1n1 .10 11 111\ 21 21v. ... • 1e . 103 * "' d · will steam out of Boston on a CNA p1 .i.1.10 u 1e•~ 11 11 -~• •P•c I' ,., ~ u "'~ re uce .service between d lh II J HJ h G coui s1 Ci•• 60 ;ia :µi~ 341i -1''1 ertier .10 Ja 3 '• JI~, Holl·--"' nurbank and San gran tour at WI end in n d ear c:~rsG~ p!I 1f I AGl'I fO" •W. ... 11 gettv011 Jlo 11 Silo 5'-. ,.~~ H sl ft lh h ~ C<X.ICOI 112 11 111 "" """-v, ftlY pt!J'O 5 1• 1A JGOe-Oakl,and. H 0 w, v, r . ou. on a er a run roug cni:1a111 1_10 1 D>I m. " ... + '• g11 .. 1 Pc .to 11 u•, 12'4 eastern and lh l ( Coll! Ptl \.70 6l •Pli 41\;l 45\11 + ·~ lbrolt Fin l5 •""••• » because our original PUC · sou ern s a es. colll"" Alll' ' 10 17\• 1v.1 11 -..., &:r.,."•, :fJ !! ·• ,",",, There wUI be stops 't c G F Coio1~111 lMI 11 :JI l61o • -+I t';Jmtitl 15,; J ..,,1 Jt•\ Certificate for that route ounty t . t Colll~llad Ill lti l l>lo 40'-o "°11 -~ Gle~ Allkn 5S 3:t t' I' Hart f 0 rd. New York, e s irs Coll In<! .J.OI 11 "1>\ •t 11 -'• 11-• o•J " ' JI 11 ' 1sts Ontario and Hollywood-Ph'i d i h' B i . ces 1.-n 11o·, 4S>< " -1 1en"!CI of l 1 "'"" 63 Burbank ., pair·• poin'' 1.n 1 a e p ta, a I 1 more , cc11 rn p1• 1.s ' •"• "' '~ 1-1~• 'I*' M•"n 4 ,..... 10 • .,. 11;U ..., W sh· .,.f,... All d Coll Ill p11 tO • 1•1it 1Alt 1~'~ -:i. r; ot.eu~ 111 u u'°' 1,,_ •-"lhern Caii'fornia. l h, a in"...,'" anta an c~"'Gu '·'° 101 1''• •"• i~i. .. '• r~r1c11 i n 311 311,, 31,,. .J\.IU Dallas L k '70 M d l "':;\i 1 ~1 ,, ,, ' -" r-•· ,s 1s.i 11•, M•, Puc' a' a l·-"nicalily, ' 00 at 0 e s ColuPd .(S. II ll'• ll~~ ]I._ -'~ G<wdJlvA 1l 1 2'1'• 7'•• CUI r-.15 h 1 Ii: l 31"1 l':'1 ]'I ... +'" i'-Oirt.:i!<I( fol(! 16 "'-Jl'41 lower·' lh• m•'nlmum r~•·• PIPER• ABO 'RD combEn 2.00 ,, " tl:'I w,_.,,c;,.,,Ko 1so n1 J1•• Jrl'• C\I vufl\>-"' '"""l$aiv <o 11 11'1 11'• 11'1-' '• r.,,~I!" l.l'C 1 Jll•~ 29i.:., trip requirement for both Pegler, her somewhal ec· l::~~~ ~::&' J !;~ !~'' !f.:: ! :~ ~~=:.'P.~P ~~ l~ ?:~ l:~ al rnnrts. cenlric milliOllaire owner, will By CARL CARSTENSEN J r. Ford could now claim five of ,'~-•0,•, '.·:1 lo' 11·, 7$'~ 1\•I + ~'• C·r•n11•v 1 o1C ~~ :zo• • :IOl'r rv _ ?~ · 1'''f 19''1 \O~ -.,. -,"-_,\'I I•• ·~ t1~o l~'lo • • • • • • • • • • • • • "The growth of A I r ride the cab. Bob Crabb, ex· 0111r ''i.t Auiomotlv• e1111w !he six most successful new ComPUr sci !IOi 1n\ 111. ?1'!'0 + "• G••"' "' J.Js 1111 M sa Th 0 C . . C:omn1 34 •n"o '''• _.,,.., -•• "-•••rir~ 1"" 11 '""• ,. California traffic between pipe major of the Scots ~ range ounty car\aunch1ngslnh1story c-M111s 1 ,, 1n, 16•1 l~\4-"'G' A&P 1.JO 41 11•~ 21\lo Onla · nd S J G rds <-I l l' l A l Sh 'ii tonrK(p tO t Jl"I »'~ :rll'I -\lo t:.t1N~'• 1.:1"• ? 1''• ,.,~ • rl() a an ose-Oakland ua and personal U<:!gpiper n erna 1ona u o ow WI "The public is reading the c°" eo11 1·.10· "' 1'1'• ,. "~ -1• omoP1p 1.e , si" SJ''I TAB : ::... ~:.-'"-....,.., ""k•.. is highly satisfactory and well lo Queen Elizabeth 11 , also be the firsl show in the United car precisely as we wanted it l::~~1' 11";'.i:, ,~ :'11\ lli; :r~ +:1 ~ iii ~~."Finl ~~ ;;"' 2~,,.. within our expectations. ln the will be aboard to entertain St.ates to display new 1970 to -as a high value economy 2=~,~~ ;S:O 1' 17'' 12-41 1'"' -'4 "'rwnu"1t "ll 11 ~;; 34v, IAMore '•rlo,., d1nti1h, •Hor11•y• •11d prof111ioJ11t . first seven months or 1969 we guests and visitors. domestic and import automobile designed to meetctcan p1~.21 1~ :;." t"' ton+,"'~~~~ .. r.,'1-~ J '"• ~ ... ~ TAI c h d .i I' bl lo b'l Ceonc-.30 It 111~ 11 •4 11'!11 1-I\ GreenGnt .N f ~·~ ~Iii •,..-~ •• u11 a•c•vs• t •Y "'11 •pe o11 •• •• • have experience. d a 32 percent Local fire departments have au mo 1 es. most driving ronuirement:;" et Mr" 1.70 1u :it•• ~,.., l6 -Vt "''""s11 1 '° 1 '"• ,,., • wth Th · h I ho , ""'1 ' C""1Mll! .10.. 7 20'k Uh """ -1 Gr.-.not I 6J It•\ 11lt. MIYrce. gro in traffic at Ontario," been engaged to pump 10,000 e s1xt annua s w Naughton saicl . ccwi1 ou 1.511 111,. ll'"' JJ">-at."''011Pi oa •,.. ~· Be -• b the M lor C Ccwil OH pf t J •1·~ •1 •1'!r -·~ Grommll(:p 1 ?I :i.n. 'I" • FOR AS $)450 PER • nscoter &aid. gallons of water into her twin sponsoi.:u Y o ar Reports indicate that cont ~" 1 1 J1 J1 a1 -•\ ...... " "., , m 1 n ·, 1 ·~ · nde ~aiers A•·-· ti 'ii •-'I · k 1 d c,,,..1 ,.,1 .n 75 21\IJo 211,,.. '°"" -1'' Gull ort 1.so e1 »'• -• . LOW AS MONTH le rs every-J7~ miles. ~ """""'a on WI uc 1• averic s a strong raw to control 01111 19' 11n. 1..a•\ 1~1• +,,.,.., ·•• .,,. • . " 1 ,,~ ,..,.., • Th lh~. ds I held in Anaheim Convention lh r· l l' b d · cno,1 Pf'~ lJ:!I 6JV. 67Vt ,,,., c;111titt 111.JO • 21 ,.,,,, • e 1.111san o water e 1rs 1me car uyer an is c,,.,woi1 1.1111 l 3•"" 1•·~ ,.,., "u'""•1J1 ., •• · ··~ ,,.,.. T.I Standa r<l Oil l ks lh l lined lh ii Ce.nter and w•'ll he open lo lhe I kl k cco1c u"11 so 11 Jl'l.o ,.. •• 331\ +1'4 Gu!fWr" .01 17' 11•0 '' c• ct1t1w11t .,.., plleM. an a e ra way! B so ma ng a mar . as a se-cooi>enn i:.a , ,~,., ?1'• f5Vt + "~u"'" 0,:, • , ,. , •"·) • c• NOW ,_,~,...._ _. ~. of the Uniled States 39 yeafS public Oct. 9 through 12.. cond and even third car. ~::,.· ~~7~ ·~ ;t~ }~~ 11~ T ~ ~~l~ :l?·!I ! 1~ .• !~~ __ ,. '"• ..!. '. SJ'• -v, •• + '• '"' • 14 ~"\ -,, 21\.'i + '• 1• + '• :»V. -~ 2' • -'• lt\6 •• • ,. .... 2Y4 .. . n>, +P l 16\0 -'" ,,.~ -'. Ml'/-~~ ~·, 21~ --. ''11 n ~·.ii ~ .... . 11 ••••• • B T k ago have disappeared in the Harvey 11iers, ~t CD A A Ford survey shows that cg:~=: .'d: ' .:i •''" ~ ,, Gunon 1n11 7i 11 11v. • uys a n ·ers d' I Th 1 lru f manager is general manager the average Mav-·ic'· buyer is 011w1s•1 1"' .~ ~1~ t~~? ~~-; ~ -H-1- • 1ese. age. e same s e o ,., a corl~l!!e .n. 6 11,, 11 ,.,, .,. 1\ ,.,,,D,1 1 ci~ 1 ,.,, 3<'• l6'\ _.. ., coal towers so Pegler has had of the show and dealer Dick 34, earns $10,500 &Mually, has CcrGw 1.so.. "751·~ 750 2so _,.,, Halllb<Jrt 1 01 •H 10,, .n\~ "~ _1 SAN FRANCISCO St ff · j h · c~11,. fl ll '"" 7~"'i ,,... + •·• '<rmw,o 4.i 7 1 '• 1· , ip·, _ '• IA IUP1 ) to ship anthracite coal in ad· e y1sgenera c airman. some college education, with c .... re. .10· • 11>'1 111; 11\~-"H•mmP•P 1 1 11,, :iru ,. •• !W • e Standard Oil Co. of Ca!Uornia vance for spotting 0 n Theme of this year's show 68 percenl ot the buyers fami-~B<:S:rr I~ ~ ::~ ~~ m;.= :-: =::=..;10 :1 ~:.: !r~ ~"' -.• 19 -• ' announced it has ordered sidetracks at 300-mile in-\\'iii be "Parade or Progress of ty men. ~=.1(~·~ 111 11'11"'t~14 t~u. -: -lt ~;;,:.c~r ~' 7·~ ~;.. ~. i'1 !. :; I t; Of· e three new supertankers. Two, tervals along the route. \Vheels" and exhibits will Ford says that two thirds of ~;~1"f_,/1 111 :ru. :;~ .. ~~ ="'j ~ ~:"~':, \,:ia ; i;;; i;~ _w +: ~~ •• , • • •. • •. ••••. •• • • bo,1,,·126l la·lOf!ONalgoanssak'1·'.'Jha.pawnn.1 fober The 49-year old Pegler, rlheenect llh~ pdrogrl ess . madel_!! an Mavericks are bought as ~=Jii°'!-1 n l,!lt !!!2 ~., -~~ ~=~ 1£! ,. 1\ ~ \o~ ~a +i ;~ former chairman of Britain's au o tn us ry since v...,, second and third cars -:....,.,.,1.n 1.1n '1 ...,.i, ~·.. ... -""H11rtSMn:-to s J3"' n .. d i• ' jh ' "' j . l898 II ' " C"TS C:O'P ,4'0 1,•, \'·'" '•"•" \t'' _,,. li1ry Al 1:211 :Jl 11' 1'1~ w~ + •\ e1very1n espr1ngofl971. Northern Rubber Co., is as parwvey since , nters PLVM011111 VAI.JANT ~=~.~,5 • 11;;; 11,, '""-""li.iCorP . .40 ti..,:,,.. th -'• i··v··o··u··1···,··1··o"'a''L*•E••M"·=···_········ ..... .., A 227,000-lori tanker, already much a buff for buiid;ng ••P Hiers said. CLOSING BIG r.ulllotfl .:II! n ,3 '1 'J ' li~IWlil!I 1.)1 11•1 351, lS lSl• + ... cummln .ll'ltl ' )(I •~ 3o11~ lo!'~·•· evu Alb 1 U 21'4 :IO'.\ ti _ '< under construction, will be British American trade as he Although Chrysler Plymouth cun~o ....... 10 A Y!t; :itu,; YN +··~ 81'111,,. 1' 11•i. 11r. 16111 "'° k GRAND PRIX HAS D• .. lail d Ii eri f 1urt!111 Wrt 1 U 1'''0 Ulh l~'h -i~ HKllMn!I .Ml 1fl 2)\o\ 21i4: 11l~ +ni ta en under Jong -tenn charter is for exto!Un" the vanished 1v1s1on re e v es o 11tt wr A ' 1 :in\ 11 14 l''" -... lie!"' H'J ·" " :n'·• l2 .n '-I'• : I . .• BIGGEST YEAR 111< M 1 '° 3 3Q;, 31\\ ~6~ -·~ lieleftt Curt 15 ,.\;; ,.,,., lm-.. nex spring, The company has glories of the steam .train. new cars during July are down CYt1""1 1 IC ,, ""' 1'~ loi'i -1111e11,co11 .60 1 11'\ 11~ 1 -•• Yw w•nt to Hll 1om1 Item four other supertankers ii), the When the Lendon Daily Ex-Pontiac Motor Dlyia.ion has slightly over a year agO, cvorusM 1·" ~~ 45 '5 -''" S.-~hi.." ~.I fr ~f~1 W: l1 ~ '• tMit you n!" longer need byt : 250.000 Ion range being built In press suggested Uu1:t he tie in rtported that the 11169 Grand Valiant sales are soaring. 0.., iu. 1 711 ~s 11,, 1111o 1r4 _ 1~ H~i{;p, Cap 1i 71~ 11~ T~;::: (: aomeone 1IH c•n UN for 1 . Japan and Holland. the Flying Scot with tts ti· Prix more than tripled tts Sales ol the compact Valiant g~1~ .v.? .~1 ~ 11:; ~ ~ ~ =~11~ -;:11i 11,J ~; ~ ,!;-:: = !: N 0 T 0 YER $ 5 0 lo;;;OiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiiiii00iiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii;;;;i;;;;;iiOiiiOiii0iii0iii-'i;;;;i;i;j m~l year's sales of Ulfill and were up ll per cent for Jule ~.'!!!t", "·l • SD'' Hllo se + s~we""F" 1.10 s u•. 251\ ttt' .. ii Id II ~--11 ., ..• .....,.... i " '"'" ~ '""' -•• lipvb'etn .1J 11 3''• 1.1 1.1 _" OtJlso a Ou= persona ut· over 1968. owc:o ,,.,,,, 1•11 ... ··~, ... ~-··11.,..,.11rt. .lG JS .. ,.., ... " _,, , ? ? ? ? ? "· in lb • D~~lflPl 1 .. ti ,,,.,_ " 3'U. -\lo Hi,n YllH"" l2 11~1 11\li 11~ -,._ ury lyspo11.3 cars e tn· Allbough the pria decrease "'"'· ..... -.:-~ 11" • '~ · l'I •• ,,.. ... "H111o11HD1<11 ' 1• "'" " 1s~ _ ... • • • • • • du! lh. VI oPl.•.,.0 1• 110101 1111 102 ... H11«r .u 611 n 21 'l''·-i• : s · on e a !ant a short time ri-·~ '"o; 1" · '' • '1 -..... 1' Hobert 1.1'1 5 •J\i ~ ali' + o.t YOUR 'ANSWER :I Reta•'' dcliver•'os of lhe h ·-r·. I l De1m••P 1·°' " ....... 20'1 '°"'1~411ott l!!IKTm IO IGlii 1 ... ''"1" ' I $ B T d • ago as proven ucne 1c1a o ""' ,,.~11 •o •• i : · -'• y.. ".' Holldytnoi 19 1'° ..,, lt'~ ~ . .._ • ee y 0 ay s Grand Prix topped 105,000 in dealers, sales show that the R!1!.;t'1',ni'° ~ 30'' ?!',~ ~·, + ~ ~\11~t,,1 ·7:\ 1~ ~Ii! ~'" g;:, +!~ You C.I' THE DAILY PILOT ••• k f.r the 1969 mod~J year. Valiant is a mucb sought after R!~~Q:~• 0·fl 1'; ~~ ~11~ l!~ + ·~ ~.~.•,• ,:,; llll,•, 171 ,How 71v. +j~ ! W I Ad ln addition, the Grand Pri.1i · -'· • k 1t 11 '"" 251 11• ~ re1 1 ;., lA 131 \'o. '3'"' -''1 3 CllUlfJed AdY1rti1ing, •nd place • an S: auto 1n luw:.ys mar et ~! ... '\#! ., "• ~·.t -·~=·~~c1"nll"t0 ~ 1~lo 14~ im-.. • captured mon! than 30 percent Oe<oRGr 1.10 16 Ill' J!,, !~, -., li~t !nit '30 :, al~ l~ i~ '+ :,• PILOT PENNY PINCHER CLASSIFIED AD AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE LIN E S 2 TIMES 2DOLL A RS AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I DIAL NOW DIRECT! 642-5678 f th I I '"'1'!""0 •• " I .~., -'' '. • -· _ .. -o e persona uxury sport o-m _. e I p~ sn. tr• • -. ~F "IL,/ 2 !I;: .at: mt + ~? ! Car market lO outdistance all 1'I arket f);;..._;,j,;rroc -0 ' ' ''" "._ -• H-Ml" a lt 1'11 1'l• lN _.~ . ~\d.,ts ~ ~ I~ ii"' ll = !:: i.ousetif 1:10 11 ""' :.1\ 3'1t + .,. • Full ~-·-•nd•·. Bock 10 MmnPtiton. Ott 51ffi .to 'I 11,\ ll 11 _.\Ii MollttLP 1.11 a -... ,.... s.aii r.-1 -.,ue "' -~-,-s L-W n. "°' 2, .,.., .,..., ><111 _ ,, Hol.tilNG1 ·f, It 3'1\ 3' 1114 i '' ~:;t.m~fu. ~:k 6 ~~ PPI~: l\tAVERICK EXCEEDS f1Ulvv•S g~~l~ ,f p~ }1~ m; -._ = i2: ry n-~ n~ =,~ • ., MUSTANG PACE 01~~':. -:,41 ':I R'~ ~U° li--~It:' 1111 . ., 1 6f'l:I '"' at>t.. . boxes, drnser, rocker, etc, Ford Divis 10 n,1 new In~~~~.., ~o:rt: ~~· ~ i~ l•~ ~\ 1jill';~:;: }'I 111~~:1 1;. 1! D'~ lf'* j't"' ;_, N~ ~~ ..-. n t.1"' »~ ,,. 1oi:'1ra .. 1c, 4' 1, n•l '"-... Ml'lverick set a record tor ~'-"-"" ••• .-rtkl~ ;,;r;::1o /• ,. P:·i. "'" +.,.. /~•1• ·'\"'" l . ~ n • E\'~n Li~race \\o"tlUl.i be sales during ii! first quarter"' 'it:.~::'~'~°' ~i:i::rw,.1 == 1rl!,,,"tT :.~ ~·1 ff~ ?~"' f~~ _ t• 1:1 c~..,;!£ ,•, .il? " :f ::11.1. 'l>'illina to se t hls 1:andela· after introduction e:xtttding :'to&'~ IP"'t•~ i. .":l:;,.;:";:"1\ 1" ="'~.se l! ~~ Ji111 }!!.,. :!:,~JU ;.;w ~,; ilM ~i.., ~i,o It :_ :~ hrl!I on !hi• ~O .. BaldWln even lhe f 8 s l r.•"' of lhe •tock dtv~"'':ir i.rH oi c~ ,,,t!: g111S!wi 1.JO ' "*' ·'-'lfl ·~ + ~ 11 "'"' "!:°' 1211 "'' """ ~ -~ or n:4 or :!~"lbutloll 011e. rP" -·r .., 1 1 '• /T. 1 _ •· 1rn11 Ce .., 'f !61' 1S\li Uft,_ •• Frcll(':h Prov\11('\al pl•no. Muslsng tl)e prov ous new car .-P11d ~· fft~"""""' 111.., ot Hid OumtM!n -.. ll2 fl'' !~ ~ .1o1u INA c. ·'° 11 !1 lO •i.. -'• like new at hell. price, -rd •ho' id"• :~i:::i• .,•':.rd -lfllt or.~..,1':. :, '-"'"' '·'~ ~~ 35~ ~~ = ~-;:: l::cr"c:n c~ 'll ~. 'f' '['"• -;. .... ~lavl!rlck .... Ule! sin-the =. .. :..i..ri:11 ·.:,~llJT. ~ln ... Oii:. ..ii, • { • ,~i:-. , ..... ::: " IMl"'Hll . M :ft ' n~ i:t 14 ~_. A n'! J7 in'-""~ioo ~lo'-1--' *''""" Ol'~~-!._~'11 ~ I M-c..-~,, ~ •'~ .~ \_f\t '¥:-. l:i?ia.'1 ~ l t't t .. , • That"$ a Jot of dlr1 • 900(I J'.I WVUIA'I .. C\I ~~ ! :z'"'L....,,,.Of -'\ I 0.0.CIWl'I Ht ~ ~!;':~ ~t.·,' ~.~ •,tt. :::r::=., .. ·~. ·~· I ""ff,\ ii 1 • ! IOIJ10 unil.$. Ford de;aM~ "':-'!!.~!:! c•111~•t11·B:=1.~ #> .. .-. •It 1~ ~ ~ .l.•• squat! fttt. loe1ted in sold over 20,000 In the last lt :., '"" :'~:-' '*" .. .._ •-"-1 °'.., 11tt.20 ' "' "" -.,....,. '11 111 1111r :IO'li =''" C'f'flll'lll llun!ington Bea~h. i.its 1rt 11. Or.w "' •t " ' ! + •-'<• -" ,. 1"" '' ''"' -\• I .. ,, days of July alone. ~-c.ti.o.~-s. ..,,,lrtlM. ..._£Jr ~· !, " ii + 1"":t 11u.Y 1!11 " " "' + 1t. =·or 4 units •nd ""' "IJotohn (',,B .• .1 N11u1htsl~: tForndd =~::--·~;.:':;~:"°:' e ... ,~\·.,, 1; !ill ~-1; P,it ;,~ lSJ.t~~ } ~~? t ~" ~· : ...J n or .,,,. •ice pn! """'o a ~~..!! ~ e111=• t . ·; 1 ~ 1 , 1fiu. =\lo "=,1 I.to n 111.t 11" I" ... ,, .. ,,_...,,. C.-. '""lllet division'Jeneral manager, Slid = .. 1rnt,.~·~ •• r\.9tao A.ii. e-r ~tt,: p;. • s s \ s11 ,_\.'I I , , ig ~ ~ ?~ i. ... ,... .. ..,..,.,..1'0..,..,.,.. .... '<'<>+' ..... • .. •••••••••••••M•••'"' , .. _______ ., _______________ _, Ydtb tbt P.,1ave.rick ~ "'~ 1111 ._ 1 • ~111" ~ .,\Jt.01 ~ \1'1 · 1 r'~1"' I"' :f; '' 1oci ;;;:: 1rn _ 1, ' ' ........ •' -. American Stock Exchange List ControTier • Appointed Dooalu 0. Udell of Seal Beach bu bffn urned con-- ln>ller or Sunlitt M~ Centers, Inc.., Orance. SwtJlte, the l•rcest con- val...,.nt· hooPltal ln4 medical care&ervletcorporat Ion •r•tin1 in Califomla, is a dlvllloo ol Ibo dlventfed N .. t I o n • 1 Environment Corp. OrlJ!ie. Udell iJ a rnembo< of tllt Charttred Aecomllal\tt SOclely or canada and wu fonncrlJ woci11td 1'lth c.ua BjMK:a Conv.-&.. u .... tro11tr and more ....,,.17 wlll> Eldettare Ctnttrs tnc. ln rejlional aptrad°"' oUlcct .. d controllei c.pacitits. l . -. , "''' ........ What a Candle Three-year-o1d Evie Callahan, daughter ,of Mr. and Mrs. Mack Callahan, Memphis, Tenn ., stares in awe at t.be 6-foot, 125-pound candle presented to the city. The candle came from Dublin, Ireland as part of this city's 150th birthday celebrition. 22 Junior Economists Wiri Honors at Fair Twenty-two junior h o m e economists received "Off to a Good Start" awards at the Orange County Fair and Ex· position. They are: Cake· ln+cone: Candy Sunderla~ second, Corona del Mar. Pencil Caddy: C 1 n d y Peterson, La Palma: Debbie Wynne, Costa Mesa; and CID· dy Peterson, La Puente. Bikini Scarf: Debbie Wynne, Costa Mesa, first: second place winners v;ere: Sandra HeDer, Whittier; R t: b e c c a Hopkim, Orange; Gigi Mit- chell, Costa Mesa; and Lor:I Morgan, La Hab,ra. Fair -Gives Prizes for ' • Baking Maureen IUochanl( •. santa Ana, won the SWffpltakes Aword and Olght First Place Ribbons In the Senior Baked Gooda dtvlalon at I.be Orange , . Count~ Fair and Eiposltlnn. M-a r celya \ Coiurtney, Newport Beadt, won the "Moat Outstanding Entry" awlnt •\th her open fi"ult 'pie. Other winners are: Anaheim: Mra. Judy Ma.son, d~aled , cakes -holiday; · Ptlercedea AguUa, decorated . elk .. -novdly. • Costa Mesa' Marilyn Alcala. decorated cakes -·blrthda.y, children; Connie RI c e, decorated." cakes -other; , " Christine. Eutwood, bisculta ' ~ · and rolls -any other roll; · pndy Lynne Parker, COQ!d<s . -oatmeal drop; E 11 en · . . Web5ter, pie's and pastry - two crust fruit pie ; Llnda Swearington, confecUons - fudge, chocolate. Fountain Valley: Dorothy Rayhawk, decorated r cakes - aMlversary or-wedding; Mrs. Gleilna Trano, ~ec or a t ed . cakes -novelty. Garden Grove : Mrs. Eva Weber, cookies -peanut but- ter; MR. Helen Gorsuch, pies and pastry -any pastry. Huntington · Beodl ' Chery Marlene Schreiber, cookies - bar; Mrs. Margaret Lindley, cookies -other drop. Newport Beach' Kathryn Lynd -bread, white; Joyce Beauregard. klaf or pound cakes -banana nut; Jane Walsh Coortney, loaf or pouad cake11 -other: Orange: Sevilla Sparks - biscuits ahd'i-olls -cinnamon rolls. ·• 1' Santa Ana·~)· Ros e m a ry Hil4er, bl'Sbiits and rolls - coffee ca'kei cookfus - mo I ass e1S' drop; Myra Bingaman, layer cakes - frosted layer, chocolate. Tilstin: ""'" D. L. Hofler, biscuits and rolls -any biscu iL Peterson. La Puente; and Candy Suderland, Corona del M&r, both won first and se.. cond place awards. Book Cover: Gigi Milchell, Costa Mesa. firsl Tole Bag: first plact win· ners: Debbie Wynne, r.osta Mesa; Allison Gr eg a r y •lp;;;;;;;;;;;;i:;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Orange. Second plaqe winners: Ft-ee Concert Ribbon Hairband: Second place winners: Therese Durocher. Santa Ana;' Sandra Heller. Whittier; Lor\ Morgan,, J.,a Habra ; Cindy Ann Therese Durocher, Santa Ana; Cindy Ann Pett:rson, La Palma . third place wtnoers: LeaMe ~. Orange; Jac;- queline Ciudray, Santa Ana; 'atJd Sandri Heller, Whittier. 9 p.m. TONIGHT Fashion ISiand NrNPOlltT CINTIR ROBINSON 1 S IT 'S THE CUT AND COMB OUT THAT REALLY MAKE A HAIRSTYLE! THAT'S WHY THC 11BCST -TRESSED'' WOMAN YOU KNOW PROBABLY COMES TOA ROBINSON'S SALON. WE1VE MADE A SPECIALTY OF HA(R-ctJTTJNGe FIRST WE STUDY THE WAY YOUR HAIR WANTS TO GO ANO GROW • NEXT THE TEXTURE:• 11iJN'? THfCK? WA.A.TEVER 0 EQUALLY I MPORTANT• THC WAY YOU WANT TO LOOK 0 WE STUDY YOUR FACE0 'TltE SHAPE OF YOUR HEAO e • 0 EVEN YOUR NOSE ANO CHIN; THEN WE CUT~ TH& RESULI? A HAIRDO THAT HOLDS ITS LINE. ITS SHAPE. ITS VERVE, FOR WEEKS ~ND WEEKS• THE LONGER YOU R HAIR GROWS THE· MORE GRACEFUL.LY IT FLOWS . AND YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE SHORN 'TO CREWCUT BREVfTY. BUT IT DOES TAKE A REAl.. EXPERT• COME. PUT YOUJt HEAD AND HOPES I NTO OUR HANDS . AND SEE THC Dlf'FERENCE REAt. TALENT CAN MAKr. THE arr' AT 5 .00. BEAUTY SALON. I N _NEWPORT. • • • • • • ROBINSONS NE'NFORT • FASHION ISIAND •· 6442800 • • • ' TH bEMl - ANNUAL -. 99. l HERITAGE TABlES "~. "GRAND TOUI AlST EDmON" ~7.• ', .. Blend of many •IJllu: aKtiqm c!'"1! finish; 101ni piece• with painted. ~se1. Shown: 11(6.. SAL£ Coc~il rable. 1a· 279.oo 195.Gll Round •""!OIJ tlllle. 22" 115.00 · 79.1111 oval coclllil tab!~ 52" 329.oo 191.1111 /" 7 ... ~. , - ( .• -~ S9. 149. are - HERITAGE "SALONNE" TAii.ES . Lou~ k XVI 1t11le,· medium .browA fini1li; some piecea: with painted ba.ae1. Shown: Twin cocktail table. End table, 22"128" ' REG. •. mh 99.00 139.00 SAil IUll H.ot OU.R FINEST TABLES included , in this sale ••• every table is from ,our regular stock ... bearing the signatures of America's most respected· makers. Large and small, from cla ssical to contemporary, in all the desired finishes, the choice is yours. Du ri ng our anniversary event c t true end substantial reductions -values and quality, in the J. H. Biggar tradition. HENREDON "NAVARRF' TABLES' • •' HERITAGE "NOTTINGHAM" MediteN'an.ea.n st11lei Petvter or 'Bronzl TABlES Ii English countryside 1tylei brown fi1tUh. Shown: REG. Cocktail table, 60' 254.00 Round lemp ~ble, 24" 1114.00 J.tl. da.rk SIL! 149.00 ~~00 - fini#Jh. · Shown: Twin cockta~ table, each Round lamp table. 26'' Slate·top cocktail table, 66" REG . ..., SAlf 99.00 59.1111 99.00 59.00 285.00 149.1111 FINE HOME FURNISHINGS AND INTERiOR DESIGN PASADENA ••• COLORADO AT EL MOLINO POMONA ••• HOLT, EAST OF GRAYEl ' SANT A ANA-Main at Eleventh • SANTA ANA STORE OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS " . • I • , I ' \ • • . - Fountain Valley ·-----·- ' . N.Y. Steeb I VOL 62, NO. 191 , 3 SECTION S, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY., AUGUST 11, 1969 TEN CENTS Beacla Co11ple Btart Infant Perishes In Plane · Crash A }luntington Beach couple whose IS- month-old daughter was killed Sunday in the crash of their single-engine plane in Los Angeles are reported in fair condition today at Orthopaedic Hospital. Pilot Raymond Houghton, 40, of 17362 Apel Lane, told Los Angeles police ne was trying to land after his plane developed engine trouble about 20 minutes after takeoff from Meadowlark .t\irport, near his home. The family was headed for San Jose. Houghton 1ried to zero in on !he Pep. perdine College baseball field, but the disabled craft struck a tree and spun to earth. The baby girl, Lisa, was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital, possibly from a broken neck. flooghtoo su~talned a possible skull fracture and his wife, Wanda, fractured ribs. The plunging plane narrowly missed the home of Pepperdine College president Norvel Young. He and his wife were out of town but the crash awakened their three children' who ciilled for an am- bulance and attempted first aid . Houghton was not well kno\\'n at !\.1eadowlark Airport where he had used a temporary tie..d<iwn space for the past two months. Marge Turner, wire of the ai rport manager, said she had heard the family had sold their home and were moving soon to Phoenix. Nixon Opens Busy Week At San Clemente Home SAN CLEMENTE (UP I) -President Nixon opened a jam-packed week at the kummer White House today wilh a series of high-level foreign policy conferences, a message to congress on welfare reform and an announcement on reorganization of the federal agency primarily responsi· ble for the war on poverty. The President scheduled a late morning meeting at his new office complex ad- joining his summer home with Secretary of State William P. Rogers. The Secretary afVived here during the night after a fast trip to Japan, Soulh Korea, Taiwan lodonesia Australia and New Zealand. · This was to be followed by a meeting between the President •lid Ambassador Henry A. Byroade wliO stopped off in California tn route to his new post in Manila. Such was the starling pattern of one of the buc:iest weeks for Nixon since he too k office. In addilion to today's welfare message and statement on reorganization of the o£fice of economic opportunity, the PresiOent planned within a few days to disc lose his selection of a new Supreme Court associate justice to replace Abe Fort.as , who left the bench May 1~ under heavy critical Ure. The President also planned othtr messages to Congress this ~eek before Lhe House and Senate begin a long Labor Day recess. The basic content of the messages was outlined by Nixon Friday night in a speech broadcast and televised nationally. The President's message to Congress Tuesday will spell out in some detail his plans for expanded manpower trainin g. On \Vtdnesday, if he followed the timetable announCed earlier by his staff, a message would go ·to Capitol Hill asking for • start on a controversial system whereby federal tax revenues would be shared with states. The most dramatic period of the week promised to be Wednesday niglit in Los Angeles when the President presides at a mammoth dinner honoring the three Apollo 11 astronauts and their families at the ultramodern Century Plaza 11otel. Far more invitations -reportedly 3,500 -have been ~ than the Century Plaza banquef hall can aceommodale, and thousands more li\'ere trying to get in. Rogers was with Niicon for the early part Of the Presidenrs recent Asian trip, but the secretary left the White 1-louse party after Manila and set out on a long itinerary of his own. • .. Rogers spent 11 days tour ing the western Pacific, touching bases which the President was unable to include in hi! 25,000·mile trip around the world. Rogers' mission ws to explain Nixon's pl ans for ending the war in Vietnam, P.ius his post- Vietnam outlook for relations between the United States and Asian nations. Most of the speculation about Nixon's nexl c:lOice for the Supreme Court was coming out of Washington and consisted largely of long lists of jurists who ha ve figured in earlier speculation. Nixon told a cro"·d at the Orange Coun· ty Airport Saturday when he arrived in California that only lli\'O people knew who the new appointee would be -Mitchell and himself. This indicated not even the prospective associate justice knew as of Saturday night he was about to be pro- posed for the nation's highest court. Millio11s to Watch Nixo11's Dll.1ne1~ for 3 .. i\stronauts From Wire Sfrvlct~ LOS ANGELES -The Apollo II astro- nauts and 1.600 of the nation 's elite will dine with President Nixon Wednesday night while milliom of uninvit(d guests watch on television. The entire event-from hors d'oeuvres reception to severH:OUrSe dinner -will go on t~ air. . . his own :ight." said a Wh!te llousc spokesrr.ctn. Few have tum~ down the prized In- vitations to the fete. So select was the guest list that invited single person! were instructed to come v.1ithout dates . "Some friends of mine offered to work as busboys just to get in," said a hotel vice president. The lunar exploralion theme 1,1•ill be (Set BANQUET, Page %). Protesters [(ill Annex Of Sunset Opponents of tht annei.:aUon of Sunset Beach to Huntington Beach. have ap- parently "'On the battle, liuntington Beach City Clerk Paul Jones conceded to- day. "It's obviously protested out," Jones said. Final tabulation of property owners opposing the merger total more than 55.77 percent of the assessed valuaUon of the unincorporated community. The city clerk said protests reached $1.U million of the $%.46 million total assessed valuation of all property in Sun· set Beach. The City Council presumably will ac· cepl the protests and rule the annexation dead on Aug. 18. A successful protest means thal pro- ponenls of the annexation cannot legally renew their efforts for a period of one year. Richard llarrison, superintendent or the Sunset Beach Sanitary District and leader of the protest movement, said this morning, "Whoopee, I'm glad we have won. Now we can go back to living our provincial beach life in peace." Proposed for annexation .were 85 acres represent ing almost the enilre area of Sunset Beach from \Varner Avenue lo Anderson ,Street, aiid from the ocean to Pacific Coast Highway; and 3.5 acres on the eastern edge of lhe community ad· joining Warner Avenue. l\1rs. Virgiii.ia Strain, secretary of the Sunset Beach Chamber of Commerce, led the proponents of the annexation move and several weeks ago filed a petition with sigr.atures of more than 25 percent of the voters of the beach community. If the opponents had failed to acquire protests representing more than 50 per· cent of the assessed valuation, the merger would havt been decided by a vote of 1:He't>eople later this fall. That ~Uoo is now cancelled. .J,_ _y ...... Seventh Person ' Lost in Stu·f A Los Angeles laborer became the ap-. parent se11enth victim Saturday Lo be lost to the Pacific this summer off Huntington Beach's slate and city beaches. Javier Mendoza, 18, was reported miss- ing by his sister, tifrs. Rose Navarro at 9 p.m., Saturday. Mendoza was with several friends at the beach Saturday night. He was in the water at a time when tbe beachtl are not patrolled by regular lifeguards. Only two of the previOU.!I six who dro"•ned in the ocean here were swim· 1ning at a time or place that lifeguards are on duty. tifendoz.a's body has not been found . Police Seek Man In Pi1ik Nightie A man wearing a pink. knee.·length nightgown under his ordinary clothing \v11s reported attempting to molest children Sunday morning on t h e playground of Bu:;hard School, llun· lington Beach. Police said Lhe man, described es between 30 and 40 years or age, with black, slightly graying hair, approached at least two tots about 10 a.m., Su1;1day. revealing his nightgown to them and trying to touch them . Accord ing to v.·itnesses, he left the area by leaping over a wall into the neighbor- ing townhouse complex:, then left by car. -,. ~ . . Death Link -Soiight. --4-. -- Murder of Actre,\s,. 6 Qthers_Probgd ' . ~ I.OS ANGE.LES (UPI) -Homicide squads fanned out across this sprawling city tOday alte1npting to tie together the murders or act..ress Sharon Tate and four others with the bizarre dealhs or a mar· ried couple a dozen miles away. Both murd er scenes were aimilar. The five bodies found at the blonde ac· tress' home Saturday were mutilated by n1ulliple knife wounds, as were the re- mains of market owner Leno La Blanca, 44. and his wife, Rosemary. 38. The lat ter were discovered in their Silverlake home Sunday night. The home once y;as owned by the late Walt Disney. The ;rord "Pig" was scrawled in blood on the door of f.li~ Tate's Benedict' can.. yon 'home. "Death to Pigs" \Yas daubed on the refrigerator door in the La Bianca hon1e. Further evidt:nce of a possible link between the multiple murd~rs '"·ere ritualistic hoods on some of the victims. llair stylist Jay Sebring was found tethered by a white cord over a beam . The other end of the rope was tied to Miss Tate's body clothed in brassiere anti bikini panties. Brutality of the murders of the La Biancas was similar to that found at the Tate murder scene.. Police said both La Bianca and his wife were found with makeshift hoods from bedclothes pulled over their heads. La Bianca's body was cai:ved with a series of X marks and the word "war'' was cut into his chest from which a knife protruded. Despite the remarkable similarities of the two cases, police said it was very possible oo connection existed. On Hollywood movie and television atace stars· and .stag~ands s~ted abo<lt the ri!utden. Poild wm tme anir uninformative. A uniformed officer stood guard ai the foot ol a long anct winding drive that led to the. rambling estate. where Mls11 Tate, Sebring ind lhe others \\.'ert murdered. One oUictr said as many as three persons could have been involved in the ritualistic butchery al the home of Mis.! Tate and her husband, director Roman Polanski. Detectives said there was a possibility the murderer or murderers were "in- volved in a persenal way'' with the vie· ti ms. They searched in particular for an unidentified suspect whose name was pro11lded by William E. Garretson, 19. a caretaker on the Polanski estate who Jiv. ed in a guest house. He was the only person alive when officers arrived at the scene Saturday morning. "At this stage, we have not ruled out anything or anybody," homicide Det. Lt. Robert. Helder. who heads the in· vestigallon, told a news conference. "\Ve have no solid information which would limit us to a single suspect. ll could have been one man, it could have been two n1en, it could have been up to high a~ three men." The victims : -ML!is Tate, 26, wife of film director R1nan Polanski, eight months pregnant '"'ith a baby boy, died or multiple st.ab wound.! of the chest and back. Polanski Clew here Sunday from Europe and im· mediately went into secluAfon. -Abigai l Folger, 26, San Francisco, heiress to the Folger coffee fortune. llcscrit.ed as a "rich hippie" who al· tended seance sessions, died of stab wounds In the chest. -Jay Sebring, 3."i, innovator of hair styllng for men, once Miss Tate's fiance:, died of multiple st!'b '"·ounds of the body. -Voityck r·rokowsky. 37, 1vorked with Polanski as an actor and writer in Polish films , died of stab Wounds of the body (See LA SLAVlNGS, Page%) .. -' FIGURES IN CAsE'-A'fitess Sliilron Tale chats With husbai::i.'.; film producer"'<iJrector Roman Polanski, in this file photo. Polanski was m London when his wife and four others were murdered in the couple's Beverly Olen home. Botla Protnine.at San Franciscans Shocked At Folger, Sehrit1g Death SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -San .Fra,,. risco liOCiety circles still were in shock today over lhe death of Ablgeil Folger, the pretty heiress slain In a mysterious weekend massacre at Bel Air. Miss Folger, 26, was the delighter of Peter Folger of Woodside, chairman o[ the J. A. Folger & Co. C1Jffee firm. Friends described her as a restless young woman interelrted Jn liberal causes. She was an honor student at Radcliffe and had worked in a New Yark bookstore and an art n1useum at the University of California at Berkeley before becoming a social worker and going to the Southern California area. She worked for some time In the ghetto• area or Watts and also labored J,1 Thomas Bradley's losing mayoralty campaign a few months ago. \Vith her family's approval, she In· vested money In the chain· of salons operated by male hair lityllst Jay Se- bring, 35, also killed ' In the weelterid ' slaughter. Other backers included aclors Paul Newman, Steve McQuee:n , Warren· Beatty and Peter Lawford. . . Through Sebring, she met and mingled with many of Hollywood'li most fJmoUs names." · . 'lll'I T 'A RESTLESS GIRLl Murdertcf H1i,.11 Folrr Dignitaries. entertainers and av1at1on pioneers began arriving t~ay for the festivities. Many are staying at the elegant Century Pla;i;a Hole! where the dinner '"·ill be held. Among those invited.to dine \vith moon \•oyagers Nell A. Armstrong, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins are the other 52 astronauts and thei r wives and the widows or eight astronauts, lhe governors of the SO slates a.nd the~r wi ves, 300 members or the diplomatic corps and the justices of the U.S. Man Wins $500 for Walk B'ut she 1u1d the misfortune to be at \he wrong place at the wrong Utpe la~t weekend. Si:brlng was al!iQ well known ~n th.e )Jay. area where he opened .a hair styUng sBlon last May in p;irtnen1hlP wllh public rela· iians executive Art Blum. ' ' ·Orange Supreme Court. · Also, the members of the Nixon cabinet and their wives, the space committee members or the Senate and the liouse of Representatives, top administrators of the Natkmal AeronauUcs and Space Adminislration, leaden of lhe aerospaace indastries, and famed airmen of the past. Known to have been invited but oot known whether they have accepted are Jacqueline and Ari Onassis, Howard Hughes and Charles Lindberg. (Orange Coast resident& Invited Include Or. and Mrs, Arnold O. Beckman, ~tr. and fl1rw. Charles S. Thomas, Mr. and ti1rs. Dennis Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Kalmbach and Judge and fo.1r!. Thurmond Cl11ke. (All are Newpcrt Beach residen1& and •Tl have Indicated they wlll accept the President's lnvltaUon.' "Everybocty coming is a dignitary In < -..... Brit He Ha.d to Co ver 70 Miles By RANDY SEELYE 01 1111 O.ltr 1'1191 Sl•ft "I will never do it again," panted Gary f.fcAllister this morning. '·1 don't re:ommend anyone else trying.'' ~fcAllister 30, Huntington Beach, had ju~t won $000 on a bet he coukin'l walk 70 miles in 24 hours. He completed the 240 laps with 4S minutes to spare at 7: 15 a.m. today on the Orange Coast College track ln Costa Mesa. lt all started l,st .week during I coOee break at Slilnn Engineering Co., Santa Ana, where fo.tcAJllster Is the night foreman. When the llunUngton Beach man said he could walk 70 miles in 24 hours about a doten employf:s laughed. The laughter led to a "°° challenge. J\1cAllistcr 11cccpled the bet al thrte: to ,.., !Ive ~ds and 6\<trted at 8 a.in. Sunday 1norn1ng. lie took three short breaks dur ing the day Sunday and almost lost his share of the bet -$300 -when he stopped to rest in the evening. At the mid-point last night however he stopped for a ha!f-hour lunch break and was unable to get back on his feet. finally he pulled himself up aod (or the next hour wobbled Into a slow pace. But his strength raurned and MCA11l5ter disappeared !n~ the night. Gary 6~" .., leUow tmploye a't Shinn Eilgirieerin&;' o.ld' he slayt<I with McAllister untn l a.m. tOOay, but lert because "sitting..: a.! tiring llS walklnk." "Arter his lunch atop at 8 p.m. Sunday, Gary didn'~ st.op again. He knetl that if hC' did, he would never start aealn,'1 G11rd ner said. I in 24 l:lours "lie paced himself very well, averaging between 10 and 12 laps every hour," Gardner noted, "but after his lunch break ln!t night he only went about eight laps the first hour, then regained his strenglh. '• ~IcAllister wotathered the ordeal quite well, but complained or problems with his leg muscles toward the end of the hike. He ·ate ligl:IUy during the w.alk and dtank water freque11tly. During the dark how:s lant eJ'Tl$.-1'ere_'Jllaceil ai:oond , the trark to keep hlm from stumbling. His chlldl'tln camped on Ule •OCC football field during the nlgbt. _ Emplayea It Shinn Engineering say he Is sleeping today and thli:y don'.t expe,ct him to show up for work tonight. ."Ile may not be able to walk.'' they !!rid. ' Blum, who .sa.l,d he ·was i,0 a state o( ''stupor" from the traged,y, denied reports characterh:ing the five persons slain as "hlpples." Blum said Sebring was'"not even qiuch of a•swlnger. His amblllon was to betolne • a milllqnaire ." Wheii Sebrtng carlie to tht bay are'a, 'he would usually visit Lt Col. Paul J.•Tale.' Tate, falher o.t: slain actJ;ess Sharon Tate, 26, Is nearing rtliren;ient as a!ISis- tanl chief Of tbt' staff or' intelligcnt:e at the Slxth negion Anny Air·Defenst Com- mand at Fort Baker•bert. • :. :s caek ·ltfarheu wea~er Oki Sol \\'ill break Lhrough those "' patchy mO?Qing clouds earJy TUet- day and boost the temperature iii· to the upper 70'& along the Shore and back up lo 90 further Inland.- INSIDE TODA\' ' FtiK1nciol columnist S11lvla Porler '{oday ,begina a four-pari series on tht artot la11d boom and teU1 whttlier you am get ... in on th't a<:tion. lf1 011 Pagt 22. .flt11"0YORK (AP)'._ The.ltock mar~rt 1 ~,.t;: u ""'" \o , " cl~d wll'h a mod~hrie loss today, alter a.~ u.sr :t::• c"'': "'i? a "Vtry slow trading !esslorr marked bf c-ic, ,. '"""' .,... ,, 11tUe buying dtmand. (See quot1U6na, ~~~--=tktt ?: =~ ,..... ~l? P•gcs 21·U). • l'fli..111 "''' • s1ttrr ~"'"" rtJt Analyst,,. said Mme lnve!lori af)J)&r~ r:n:•!Mel 11.:t ~="~ ~ • ently reo.cttd to•dev11lufltlo'n of the French .. ..,._,. 11 Wc•iri; • fr~no by \Vlthdrawlng from th(l action. • • "'-'-"'-"-"'-" __ •_•_•_• __ •_•.,_•_•_•_u ' 1t DAltY PIUIT H DAILY ,It.OT S11H l"lltll IT'S ALL IN FUN AT HUNTINGTON LIFEGUARD CARNIVAL C•rplnt1ria'1 Jack Faunce (left), Newport'• Tapptr Horack }luntington Surf Carnival Attracts 3,000 Spectators J Lileguards from all over Southern calilomla are adding up trophie:i: anc1· kudos today from athletic performances In th< Fourth Annual Huntington Beach Surf Carnival. Some 3,000 persons watched Friday as 200 lifeguards competed in searchlrght ii· lumination In seven eventa ranging from musical flags to dory races. A team from the Carpinteria State Disbict 5 took home top honors and a perpetual trophy after defeating the Hun. tin,ton Beach city lifeguards by a SC1lre or 40 to 38. Newport Beach lifeguards, the defen- dln1 champlona, took third over all with 31 points. Winner of the pillow flaht was Seal Bbch, with Los Angeles County laldnl s<eond and Newport a..cb third. In the musical flags competition, Car- pinteria took the fi~t two places, fol· ol\\-'td by Santa Monica for third. HunUngton Beach City lifeguards won the four-man 6\lff-mat relay, outpaddling second-place Newport Beach and third plact Los Angeles C.Ounty over the 200- Y'1'd distance. The ten-man, 1,000..yard running relay was captured by Newport Beach, follow- ed by Carpinteria and Huntington Beach State District. 6. SiJ,-man chariot race winner was the HunUngton Beach Stite District. with Carpinteria laklnl second and ·Newport Beach third place. The finale , a dory race over a 500-yard distance was. won by the Long Beach lifeguards who edled out runner-up Hun- linaton Beach City and third place Los Anjeles County. Robitaille Sueeessor ' New Beach Dewctive Chief Pick Due Soon A new cblef for the delective bureau or the Hunllngton Beach Police Department i;hould be selected by the end or Sep· • tember or early October. The slot was vacated by Earl Robitaille who moved up last week from Detective Captain to Huntington Beach Chief of Police, succeeding the retired chief, John ~t.ur. " Jtobilaille iakl today that written ex· MlS for the lop detective posl would be gt\'en the week of Sept. 15, with oral ex· anls following during the week of Sept. 29~ • '"'i i hope to announce a selection as soon aS ' possible after the oral a ams," said JtOl>itallle. The new detective captain will be pick- ed from current lieutenants or captains DAILY PILOT Clt,t.NOI COAST ,.UILISHING COMllAN'I' Rollort N', W11tf l'tn'-"" n l>ublbl,., J1tlt "-· CYrlty \lict ,ta•OIN -"""'''' ffl"llll T~111>1c K11vil Edl!~r T~'""'' ;.., Mw•11~;,,, M1n19lftt E••tlr }.lb1rf W. 1.111 "'uoc:llit Et••o• H1111l11tte11 IMdt OffJc• J09 Slh Str11t _ M1ill"t Atftf,111: P.O. 111 7,0, 92641 Otlttr Olftctt JI'*""' Sffcl\1 ~;11 wur e11~1 ...,,....11111 • (flll ll•lf''= !Ill) Wr1! l!iiY 5!rH+ LH-lt.c:ll; 12J Fottll ,.,,.,_ ~· DAl~V Pu.or, .. 11ll,..!011lt,11 •• con1a•l't4 '~' )'jewt,.~ .... It --.b4•,,.t0 •••'• t•1t1>! •un· ~y Ill MPl•llt 9dlli.ru. '" HIJftll"910~ ...... (ft, F-1.olon \11n.'(, (.Sii l'.'tH. N1w. l*'I ltldl 11141 L•O-lu,~. ~·Ol'q '"l'll ·.;M r1tllMI t•it""", Or...., c .. ,, r111>11•"" ,.n C:-\' .. 1111~ .,... .. ~ ..... 1)11 w.,, ~1ltw II ... , Hr .. pttl flN<ll. ft'<ll UO V.UI lllV Slretl, (hll MIN ~· , ... , ...... 17141 '42-4121 fr•• Wtthllilnm Cell 140.1220 Clt!ltJfl•tl J.htnh111t '42-5671 CW.rW!I, Utt, °'""" C..tl """'"""' ,_,,,. .... ~ ••• '~ ••. '"""''''°~" rdllftl4il "'""' $1 ed•ltl>U'IT'fftlt Mrt"' "Nt w ,,.,O'dllt .. •llfrllotJI ,.rc 111 ,.,.,.1.,*' If Rl"iW!f ...... l.f«~t tlolH ~0.-11~ Ill. 11 Nt~lf .. M.lt """' '""' M<11, (11>•~1~1. lt(f·ftf'(ll "' ~·"k' \)09 m¢"ltl~! lllY ~" $~ '° IMlllfll\'1 lt'•llll•r~ llU!fl'llfill• 12 M -~l~"I'· ' within the Huntinifon Beach Police Df!partment . "Al the same lime we pick a nev; cap- tain ," said Robitaille, "a new lieutenant's post will be opened In the d·ete<:tive bureau." No lieutenant slots currently exist in the detective bureau, but the city council recently approved creation of the post for this year. Detective Sgt. Forrest Lewis is cur· renlly filling in as temporary head of the dctectiv!S until the new captain has been chosen. 5 Beachgoers Jailed on Drugs Undercover detectivt.s, playing lhe part of beachcombers in Huntington Beach, arrested five persons Saturday and ty,·o more Sunday for the sale and possession ol seconal tablets. Arrested for possession of dangerous drugs were Stephen Cruz, 19, cf Los Angeles; Louis Rovarte, 19, of Alhambra ; Raymond Vasquez, 18, of Alhambra : Robert Avila, 19, of South San Gabriel and Linda Ray Estrada, 22, of Rosemead. Two juveniles, both of Los Angelfl, \\'ere arrested on the beach Sunday, when they y,·ere idenUfled as associated with • the group arrested Saturday. WiI1do'v Taken In Station Theft A burglar removed the glass ' louvtts from a Westminster service slation Sun- d1y night, climbed through the window, and removed $930 ln cub and checks from the ure . \\'estmlnstcr poUce are now flng('T'J)rin· Ung the louver• lert behind In lht hebt to possibly Jr:ad them to the arrest of the &uspect. Gas statJon attendant Dtnnis C. Noble , 19, of Westminster. dllcover«I thfl theft Rt e a.m.. today when he rtported to work at 629l Westminster Ave. Police throrlte that the: 1afe "'as eithtr Jell open or lhat the huralar ltnew the comblnaUon becauH It •a.s not rorced open. I Parents' Proposed · Sex Class Do partnts need to know more about faml1y life and sex education? Several HunUngton Beach church leadeia and Golde-n West College officials think they do. Welfare Plan Readied Nixon Serµls Congre~s . $4 Billio Proposal . , SAN CLEMENTE (AP) -P.resident Nlxon sent to Congress today b!S prt> po51ls for 1 new $4 billion fedtral welfare ptt1gram to provide a basic income for any American family unable to take care of ltselr. Nixon aaid his new approach would end whit he deacri~ as the "blatant un- fairness" of the present welfare system and create a stronger incentive among care for '50,000 children of the 150,000 current welfare recipients who will go in- to w~rk lraini.ng programs. The new system he propoaea, Nixon told Congresa, wlU lessen red tape, end bitterly resented· "welfare snooping" and make federal payments on the baais of certiHcation of income, with spot checks to prevent abuse&. famil ies with dtpendent children pro- gram, adop11ng in ils place a new ftmi ly assistance progran1. It \•Ould provide mil1imum basic benefits of Sl,600 a year for a fa'mily of four -payable to the worltll\g or nonwOrking poor and to families wilh dependent chUdren whether headed by ralher or a mother. They are now or&anizing a broad«:ale program to help them teach chUdrtn the basics of life in a more meaningful way. The program, sponsored by the Lutheran Council of Huntington Beach, is scheduled lo begin in early November. It will consist of two mass meetings at Golden West and seminars at "Parent Educa.tlon Centers" in the clly'a five Lut.heraa churches. ~e poor to work. ~ message to Congress contained the ropoaah he outlined in a television-radio dress to the nation Friday night. Nizon said he was oullining his con· cluskms to provide a "coherent, fresh ap- proach to welfare, manpower training and revenue sharinC." Specific legislative proposals will be sent lo Cong~s after the summer recess by the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Nil{on said. Nixon stressed equality ol. treatment. a work requirement and a ~·ork incentive ir lhe program. He is eUminatin1 any requirement lhat a household be without a father to become eligible for benefits. "That present requirement in many states has the effect of brealting up farnilles and contributes to delinquency and violence," Nixtln said. Dr. Dale A. ~Uller, a Lulhtran l1ym1n and dean of students it Golden WHt, sald lhe program wlll be., open to 111 parents • in lhe clty. An lnlormatlonal mailer ,with registration form, will be nnt to every hc..me early in September. Churches participating in the venture are Faith Lutheran, 8200 Ellis Ave.; Grace Lutheran, 6931 Edinger Ave.; King of Glory. 17791 Newland St.; Church of the Resurrection, 9812 Hamilton Av11.; and Redeemer Lutheran, ISSSI Sprln&· dale SI. The Lutheran Council stronaly backed the idea of the parent information courae "in the absence of any other meaningful programs in sex education in the com· munity." It included a specific request for $600 million additional funds for child care centers to aid working mothers. Nixon said be wants to provide child * * * Nixon is callltig for an end to the present welfare aystem and ~e aid to * * * Pea~e for Prez No Pickets Mar Nixon Holi.day--Yet By JEROME F, COLLINS Of tllt 01111 r lltl lt1H President Nixon came to San Clemente looking for a little peace and quiet. Sun· day he found it. The President said hello to his neigh- bors in Cyprus Shore, strolled aJong the beach near his estate, chatted with sun- bathers, took a leisurely drive to Oceanside, and then swam ia the family pool. No incident of any kind marred his day. "There wasn't a picket in the whole town," said a White House aide. ed around and soon he was surrounded by a group of about 30. Many of them told him they supported his new welfare pro- gram, announced on TV Friday. Mr. Nixon was overheard to say he hoped the program would help people to help themselves. Later, the Presidenl climbed into a Lincoln Continental, and with Major Brennan at the wheel drove to Oceanside. They took with them the Nixon family 's Irish setter, King .Timaboe, named for a village in Ireland. The journey was just a sightseeing trip. He proposed that all .employable persons who accept lhe welfare payments be required to register for work or job training, and that adequate a.Dd eon- venient day care be provided for children wherever it is necessary to enable a parent to train or work. In ZO states, Nixon e~timated, the prescn~ average benefit payments arc lower than those be is proposing. And these are areas, he says, wb'ere poverty Js often the most severe. · The new system would encourage work. Nixon said, by allowing a new worker to retain the f!rst $720 of his yearly earnings ~·ithout any benefit reduction. Nixon urged Congress to begin study of these proposals prompUy so that laws can be. enacted and fund s authorized as soon as possible. A council spokesman pointed out that Orange County is experiencing many serious problems related to the sexual conduct of children. "Venereal disease has re ached epidemic proportions, illegitimate births are on the increase, and many or our youn1 people are entering into early mar· riages with limited preparation for family life and sexual adjustment," he said. And tourists, who filled San Clemente's public beach, appatently respected the President's wish for leisure. They stayed ~ away from the Nixon compound in droves. "They took a look at the harbor, turned around and came back," said a Presiden- tial staff member. A Secret Service agent closely follo"'ed in another car durinc the 44-mile round trip. He envisioned that ''for the first lime all de.pendent familles with children i~ America, regardless of where they live, would be assured of minimum standard payments based upon uniform and single eLigibiUty standards and "would be en- couraged to train and work and stay together." "These are far-rea ching effects," he told Congress, "they cannot be purchased cheaply, or by piecemeal efforts." White the initial focus of the council ls on parent educaUon, a second pha1e may include dlreet family life and sex educa· tion for youngsters, provided parental ap- proval is gained. The course will begin with mass meetings 81 Golden West College Nov. I and Nov. 23. In the first stssion, a keynoter 'and other speakers will present information. Grou;> discussion will follow. At the s~ cond meeting, the program will be evaluated and plans made for the educa- tion of young pteple. Al least three seminars will be hem at each of the participating churches between No\I. l and Nov. 23, with representatives of the clergy and medical and education professions taking part. Dr. Miller, who will head the council's sletrlng committee, said the entire pr.; gram will slress the moral aspect of sex. "The emphasis will be on a proper relatlooship tJetween parent and child. This is not a clinical relation.ship, but one of love and understanding, coupled with sound fUidance," he said . Chief Justice Burger Proposes Penal Probe DALLAS (UP I) -Chltf' Justice War· ren E. Burgfr today proposed that the organized bar undertake a m1Mive study of the natk>n's penal systems. The Chief Justice said the systems should be examined "from be&inning to end -parole. probaUon, the prisons and related Institutions, their staffs, their programs, their educational and voca- lional training programs, the standards and procedures for release." The p'repared speech was Burger's third at meetings related to the 92nd An· nual Convention of the American Bar Association (ABA). He has been at· lending luncheons and diMers 11 every Lurn and is obviously attempting to show by his e:tample that he does not feel judges should withdraw into e "monastic existence." The Chief Justice has refused to participate in any tt1evised programs, however, on the theory that speeches to an audience composed solely of attomeyi; ""ould be differeot from those prepared for laymen. Fl'om P•11e 1 LA SLAYINGS. ~nd limbs and a iunshot v•ound in the back. -Steven Pare:nt, ts. 1 fqftlnd of Gar. retson "'ho left home in suburban El ~1onle Friday to visit him, died of multi· pie gWlShot y,·ounds or the chest. Garrelson's attorney, Barry Tarlo1,, said Parent dropped by the guest house to visit the caretaker, "'ho looked after several dogs and cats belonging to the owners. T1rlow said G1rrttson sat up rending until 6 a.m .• Saturday but heard no unusual sounds from the main house, separated from the guest house by a swlmmln& pool and shrubbery. "There \\'IS a party at the house the night of the killings," Tarlow slid. "From the invesUgaUon made by my of· flee, our best guess is lhtt whoever did lt wu Involved In 1 personal wl)' these people who werti killed." Atttntlon today turned to lhe Sl<Xlod suspect sought by police. Helder saJd. "We are. lookina for an In· divldual. We don't ha\'t any definite In· formaHon that he WIS Involved. His name came up In conversation with Gar- ret~" Mr. Nlxon began the day by put-putting from his estate grounds in his golf cart early in the morning. He w1s ae- companled by Marine Major John Bren- nan , hit military aide. Thel drove around Cyprus Shore wav- ing 1 youna:stel'I, patting a few on the head and talking to rta.ldents of the ·ex- clusive resldential community. "No, they didn't borrow any cups of sug~r/' qui_pped 1 White House staff member later. The President and Maf. BreMan then walked along the beach below Cypn1s Short. Startled be1chgoers quickly flock· The huge White House press corps Sun· day stayed more or less put at the San· Clemente Inn and the Surf and Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach. . Toward dusk, Sunday the President and Mrs. Nixon swam Jn the pool on lhe fonner Cotton estate grounds. A qWet dinner in the mansion ended the day. "There were a few staff meetings,'' said a While Hoose spokesman. "bot mosUy it was a very pleasant, relaxing day off for the President." Today the Nhcons expect to welcome their daughter Tricia who will be flown ln at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. f'l'OH& Pa9e 1 ASTRONAUT BANQUET • • • carried out in centerpieces, candy boxes and a special moon-shaped des$_ert being prepared by the hotel chef. It's a globe·of vanilla ice cream over Kirsch·soaked raisins and coated with a thin meringue to give the impression of a moonscape. The program for the evenin& has yet to be a1mounce<i . The President is expected to toast th e astronauts before d!Mer. "l would imagine he astronauts y,•ill 1hen say something," said 1 White House spokesman, "but it may not be a form al speech." To ketp the dinner nonpartisan. Ni:c;:on has net aslted poUtical figures to 11peak. Whal will the eleaant evening CQst? Pan An1 Worker s Vote Today on.Pact NEW YORK (AP) -Ground empolyes of Pan American \Vorld Airy,·ays com- plete voting toda y on a tentati\'e contract agreement to end the strike that began Friday. About 8,000 members of the Teamsters Unio n were scheduled to vote. Union of· ficials declined. to discuss the pact until lhe voting was complete. \Vhite House sources aren't telling. But they say funds y,•ill come from several government sources, including the State Department, the National Aeronautical and Space Administration and Nixon's own $50,000 White House entertainment allowance. Helping Hand Triggers Cra.sh J\fotorist \Villiam R. \V hit ten berg couldn't see because the sun was in his eyes. So his Y.·ife reached over to lower the s11n visor. Her arm was tougher on his vision lhan the setting sun . Costa Mesa police said today. The ca r driven by Whittfnberg, 27, of 5i7 Hamilton St., headed south on Harbor Boulevard at f air Drive Sunday evening, collided Y.ith another auto in front. t.·1otorist Robert H. Whetler, 24, of 1552 t.!iramar Dri ve, Balboa, and his ''ife Lin~ da , 21 , were taken to Costa ~1esa ~lemorial Hospital with minor injuries and released after treatment, If you're 5'8'' or over, we've plenty of suits left for you l\laybe you read in lite Pilot "·bat happe11ed. We dldn'I order a hole iu our wi11dow but "''e got one. alarn111. It ~·orlied lleau1ifully. The 110\i ce flashed o,·er here. But tl1ose burglan "'ere a •lash .nd a half ahead o( thew. Gn11e without • Lr•«· H•l•n (my wife) and I have been told th•t tliere are ~veral u_nderground Burglary Colle11e• in eeuion this 1u_m· mer. 1l1e~ iustn1ct young men in the latest method8 for breaking into a 1tore fn the \Vith the establishment of his "new ap. proach" to welfare, Nixon said the na- tion 's ant ipovertr agency, Office of £eo.. nomlc Opportunity, will concentrate on finding new ways or opening economic opportunity to lhose who are able to work. - "Rather. ~han focusing on income sup. port activities," he said OEO "must find ~e~ns ·or providing cpportunities for ifl. d1v1duals to contribute to !be fuU ex~t ?f their.capabilities and in developing and 1mprov1ng these capabilities." In a presidential statement also issued l<><!a>'., Nixon gave the OEO the h.igbest pr1or1t)'. to,dcvelop a new spi!iL or "soclal pione~r1ng ' to better 1he lot of all Amencans. Recall Tangle Solved; Plans Move Smoothly A slight tangie invclvin g nomination papers for the Sept. 23 recall electi(lfl in Foun.tain Valley has been untangled and elect.Jon procedures are mo\•ing smoothly today. Last week it was discovered that einht of lhe ten candidates had listed their~­ cupations incorrectly on papers filed with tht city clerk . Occupations must be listed exactly the same on nomination papers as on voter registration. The city clerk's office said today all candidates had cleared up the prob lem by reregistering as voters with a new oceupalion listing. Ten men are seeking the posts now held by !\1ayor Robert Sch\\·erdtfeger, Vice !\1ayor Donald Fregea u and Coun- cilman Joseph Coureges who are the targets of the heated recall campaign. Next step taken by the city to""·ard the recall election will be the printing of elcc· t ion ballots which musl be complete 30 days before the election date . middle of tl1e 11igl1t , grnhbing ar1nload& of s uit!!, and dri,·iug awav within 71 ~(, eecond!i of 11ma~bing the (EL.ea. Usually the hurglara are caut1ht, but in the meanti1ne we're out aeven armload• of suits. TI1e hur,zlara stripped the rack nearu-1 the ~·indo"" It containetl n1ostl y our 8Uils in al1ort aiue. ff yo11're 5 f1. 8 inches or t alle r, don't you le:t 011r little burglary worry you for one minute. We have a suit in your eize:. Or several dozen, for that matter. AllY"''ay, it'• very DUUl!U•l for our store to be open at 3:29 a.m. Onr reirul•r store houn are 9' 30 to 5 130, Mon· day thton,:t11 Salurday. Wben yo'' enlrr. remem· her. Don't rome thrnugh the window. UM! the door. Tho police know about tit.it ad. At 3:29 1.nt. l•Al TueMlay, Augu8l 5th, ~·e had some win· dow shoppe.re. l don't know If we •hoold be fiattued by thi•, bot app.,.,ntly they liked what they nw. They 111ammed a milk cnte throu? our 1tore windo"·· gathered up eeveral tut armload.a flf nur eui u, KUrried bAck to their e1tr. and raood •way Into tho night. Jack Bidwell Funny thing. Es.ae1ly 7 day• before, al the lime we Ye.newed our bor3l1ry ineorance, the company fnsieted that we in· stall one of thote new silent 3-wi7Via Udo at N•wport Blvd., in Newpnrt B .. cb n~xt to Riehard't ~1arkel •nd The Lido TI1eater. Plenty off,.,. rarking In the rear. Phone 6734510 Co r yright 1969, Jack Bidw•ll. • .. < . ' r • ' • -----=----· " • Laguna __ lieaeh-· -TedaY-'s FmaJ. -:.. . N.Y. Stoeks • • . . ... • I ' ' • . . . voi.:. 62, NO. 191, l SECTIONS, l •.PAG ES ORANGE CO.LI NTY, CALIFORNIA ' MONDAY, AUGUST I r, 1969 TEN CENl'S ,, --- Nixon Starts Busy Week al Clemente SAN CLEMENTE (UPI) -Pr.,ident Nixon opened a jam-packed wetk at the · );Ununer White House today with a series af high-level foreign p<>licy con.ferencei, a message to congress on weUare rtform and an a~nt ·on reorganization of the federal agency primarily responsi· ble for the war on poverty. The President scheduled a late morning meeting at his new office complex ad· joining his summer home with Secretary of State Wllliam P. Rogers. The Dowti the Mission Trail AppI'ova l Give n For Bi gger Signs LAGUNA IULLS -Or ange County Supervisors have g'iven approval for Leisure World tenants lo construct bigger 6igri! in the planned community on tJ:lree properties abutting the San Diego Freeway. A Denny's restaurant and Standard Oil and Texaco gas stations expected to be built at lhe intersection of the freeway aOO El Toro Ro,ad can put up 300 square feet of sign each. Previously, they were limited to 100 square feet which Rossmoor Corporation :i.rgued kept them from fairly competing v>'ith El Toro bus1nesses/•cross the f~ way in an unlimited sign siu commercial 'lone. • ' . ''I'm glid tO' tee 11).eciel tooS.idera~io.~ given to tbe area. they ere entltle:d to 1t, aiad_...,.. AllAln Allen. Criticism Grows Over Radical's . Hhing by UCI Mounting criticism of the hiring or radical leader Mike Krisman as a UC Irvine academic advisory coordinator to- day was joined by Costa f.tesa Chamber of Commerce dissent. Jack Hammett, president or the board or directors, has written the UC Board of Regents asking them to reconsider the ap~ntmenl of the 21·year-old Laguna Beach man. Hammett's letter indicates it is an in- sult to state taxpayers to hire Krisman, who was a UCI leader of Studenti for a Democratic Society (SOS). Hammett includes a resolution passed by Ole chamber bbard of dir~tors ~1ay 15, censuring SOS for announcing a P.lan· ned sabotage •ssault on American business and indli6try. Krisman -who received an A in a Santa Ana Co\lue phi losophy class taught by John l\rch Sociely member Sen. John G. Schmitz (R·Tuslinl five years ago -went lo work as a UCI staff 1nember 1;1!>t month. His appointmeqt ha~ been sharply C'riticized by various veterans groups and other organiutlons holding opposite \'iev.·poinls. . . The adminis:lrali-On defcn1ted selection or Krisman for tbe lia ison post he no,., holds, saying he is uniquely qualified to bridge the understanding gap and reach student rebels. Under university organiz.ation, Krisman holds the tille of assistant dean of 11tudent5 for payroll reference, a fact \Yhich has somewhat distorted his actual job. In ·hill letter of Aug. 8. 01amber of Commerce President I lan1melt told the regents his primary concern . v.·ith Krisman appolntment is the SDS af- filiation and I.hat group's stated policies. •·secondly. the educallonal Institutions have repeatedly solicited the aid of our chamber in supporting drives for bonds anri tax overrides." Hammett continued. "It is now apparent by the appointment of J\1ike Krisman that the sU'pport of the great majority of citirens for higher educatian may be alienated," Hammett warned. "I would urgently request thal your august body reconsider the appointment of this man because of the known posture of SOS and utili ze your veto po"·cr,·• he concluded . Stoel< ~fqrkeu NEW YORK (AP) -The st.oek merket clo.'5ed with 11 moderate loss todAY. alter a very alow trading ~lnn marktd by l ittle buying demand. (Seti quotations, Pnge1 2.2·23 ). Analysl!i said som4' lnve11t~ appar- ently reacted to dcve luatlon or the French fr anc by withdrawing from the action. Sec:rttary arrived here during the night al$e:r a fast trip to Japan, South Korea, T~lwan, ,.Indonesia Australia and .New l)ealand. Tb1s w.as to be £ollowed bl. a meeting be!Ween the President and _Mtbassador Heriry A. Byroapc who stopped off in Ci'lllornia• e1,1 route to his new post in Manjla. Such was tbe starting patte.rn or one ()f the busiest weeks for Nixon since he. took ofOCe. Jn addition to today's welfare message and statement -on reorganization of the office of economic opportunity, the Presld~nt planned wiU\in a few days to disclose ~ selection of a new.Supreme Court associate j~~ lo replace Abe Fortas, who left the bench May. 15 under. heavy critical !ire. The President abo planned , other messages to Congress this week before lhe House and Senate begin a lon,g Labor Day recess. The basic content or.' the messages was outlined by Nixon Friday OAIL y r 1t..:OT' ,,.. ... , , .. O'D9nnell NIXONS BOARO MARINE CORPS ONE FOR SAN CLEMENTE Seaside Community Becomes Center of World Power Pea·~e · for Prez No Picket s Mar Nixon Holida y··Y.et By JERO~IE F. COLLINS Of lk 011" r 1i.1 Stiff President Nixon came to San Clemente looking for a little peace and quiet. Sun- day he found it. The President said hello lo his neigh· bors in Cyprus Shore, strolled along the beach near his estate, chatted with sun· bathers. took a leisu rely drive to Oceanside, and then swam in the fami ly pool. No in1:idenl or any kind marred his day. "There wasn't a picket in the ~·hole town ," said a White House aide. And touri sts, who filled Sa n Clemente's public beach, apparen1ly respected the President's wish for leisure. rticy stayed ;iway from the Nixon compound in droves. Mr. Nixon began the day by put.pulling from his estate grounds in his golf cart early in the morning. He \\·as ac· co1npanied by t.1arine Major John Bren. nan, his military aide. They drove around Cyprus Shore wav· ing at youngsters, patt ing a (ew on the head and talking to residents of the ex- clusive residential community. "No. they didn't borrow any cup.~ of sugar," quipped a Whlte Hause staff member later. TI1e Prcs.ident and M;1j. Brennan then "·alked along the beach below Cyprus Shore. Startled beachgoers quickly flock· cd around and soon he was surrounded by a group of about 30. Manf of them told him Oley supported his new welfare pro- gram, announced on TV Friday. . Mr. Nixon was overheard lo . say he hoped lhe program would help people to help themselves. Later, the President climbed into a Lincoln Conlinental, and with fl.1ajor Qrennan al the wheel drove to Oceanside. They took with tl'iem the Nixoil family's Irish seller. King Timahoe, named for a village iil Ireland. The journey was jusl a sightseeing trip. "They took a look at the harbor, turned a·round and came back;" said a Presiden- tial staff member. A Secret Service. agent closely followed Jn another car during the 44-mile round trip. The huge \Vhite llouse press airps Sun- day stayed more or less put al the San Clemente Inn and the Surf and Sand 1-l otel in Laguna Beach. Toward dusk, Sunday the Presidenl·ond A1rs. Nixon swam in the pool on the fonner Cotton. estate grounds. A quie~ dinner in the maMion ended the day . "There were a few staff meeting~." sai d a \Vhlle House spok~man, "but mostly it was a very pleasant, relating day off for the President." Today the f.{ixons expect lo welcome their daughter Tricia .who wijl be Oown In at El Toro Mari.De CorPs ·Air Statfun~ · night In a speech broadeas\ and tele\li.9e;d nationally. The Presidenr:i message to Congress Tuesday will spell eut lD some detail ti1s pla6s for~ e1paMed" manPQwer trainlng. On Wednesday, if he foUQ:wed the ti1netabJe .announced earlier by.J\iJ staU, a messagt: woulct'go to C.pllol Hill asking for a sw-t on a cqntroversial system whereby federal tax revenues would be shared with states. The rn°'t dramatic period of. the· week -tr ·* * Nixon Tells Prop.osals On Welfare SAN CLEMENTE (AP) -President Nixon sent to Congress today bis pro- po~als for a new $4 billion federal "'i!lfare program to provide a basic income for any American famUy unable lo take care of Itself. "Nixon said his new approach would end what he described a:s the "blatant un- fairness" of the present welfare system and create a stronger incentive among the poor to work. The message to Congress contained the proposals he outlined In a te.levlsion·radlo address to the nation Friday night. · ll included a specific request for $600 million additional funds for child care ~nters to aid working mothers. Nixon said he wants lo provide child care for 450,000 children of the 150,000 current welfare recipients who will go in- to work training programs. , '.Ole .ow• -he ior:J>posf;s;..N~ ti;ld 'CQniresi ' wtlf lessffi"'reG~tli)e. end. bitterly resented "welfm snooping" and make federal payment! on the basis of certification of income, with spot cheeks to prevent abuses. Nixon said he wu oullining his COO· clusions to provide a "coherent, fresh ap- prQach to Welfare, manpQwer training and revenue sharing.'' Specific le1islaUve proposals will be sent to Congress after the summer recess by the seCre'tary of H~allh, Educy1Uon and Welfare, filxon Bid. . NiXon is calling for an end to the present welfare system and the aid to famUies with . dependent fhlldren pto. gram, adopting In lts pl&Cf a new f1µ1ily assista11ce program . Il would J1rqvlde miriimum basic benetils of $1 ,liftO a year for a family·o( fbUr · -· pa)'able to the .,.,'Ol'klng or nonworking poor and to fam.i1ie.s wl,lh dependent children whether headed 6y father or a mother. Nixon stressed equality of treatment, a work requirement and a work incentive W the program . H~ is eliminating any requirement that a household be without a father to become ellglblf: for benefits. "That present requirement in many slates bas the e(fect of breaking up families and contributes to delinquency and violence," Nfxon said . · fie proposed that all employable persons whfl accept the welfare payments be required to register for work or job training, and !hat adequate and con- venient day care be provided for children wherever it is necessary to enable a parent to train or work. In 20 stales, Nixon estimated, the present average benetil payments ate lower than those he is pn>p09ing. And these are areas, he 1ay:s, where po_verty is often the most severe. The new system would encourage work, Nixon said, by alloWing 11 new worker 10 retail'\ the first mo of his yearly,eamlngs without any benefit reduction. Nixon urged Congress lo begin study of these proposals promptly "° that law~ can be enacted and funds authorized as soon a1 possible. He envisioned. that "for the first time, tSee \\'ELF ARE, Page%) .Life·guard Strik~ Looms · Cl e1nente Guards Pr es s Salar y In crease Demands Thirty<two membets of the 34·man &in Clemente Lifeguard Department have threatened to walk off lhe bead1ea Satur· daY. if'the\r reques:ls for a waae in.orease are not met by the city. The walkout would leave 18 mllu oC coistline wlfhoUt. ,lifeguard proteetlon. Besidts the San1 Clemente cfiy beaches, the lifeguard· department is also under county contract to patrol Three Arth Bay, Aliso Stach, f.fonarch Bay, and Salt Cretl<. Tut dcpertment's coverage extel\M as far sooth 11 Coton'A Point. the slle of Pmldent Nixon's summer White Hou~. Lift&Ulrd Chief Dick lla:r.ard and Capt. Phil Slubbs h"e not joined lhe groop threatening to v.·alk out According to spokesman LL Steve Chorak, "AH Lhe striking lifegu4rds ·art askJng,is to~ ttuugltt 11p to t1-avtr11e Mlary for a.be:ttaf\han average Bfes:uard department." .. Chorak, a member of the department for 10 years, &aid. "we've been asking for a salary tncrease for years, but we'~e never been met." , Clty clerk Max Berg, acilng city menaa:er while Kenneth Carr l!'i on vec~~ tJnn. Maid the city coonc:ll apprnvtd • flte perctnt locrease for seasoMI and •· pennanent lifeguards at budget hearings Juty ·'l. The lifeguard captain l'tt(!ived a 7~ percent Increases. "Al that time~· SBid Chora)c, ·"we. weren't making demands. But we were requezUng a nlne perbtnt lncttaft fOfl the· season11I emplO)'es, plus a five day work· Ing week." Lih~guard9 now work In eseess of 50' hours a wee.IC', CllOt'ak 5ald. , Chorak also !aid the city council wa1 requel!lted to lncrtase the salatJ ol the PtMUAnC!'ll. )'f:Ar round ~mp)oyes, fnd that their salary be In parity to pre:tent , police wages. ·. • ~ to be Wedneoday nflbl lo Los Angelea .,.,,hen the President presides al a mammoth dinner honoring the three -Apollo 11 astronauts and their famUies ;at the ultramodern Century Plata Hotel. Far more lnvitalion1 -repartedly 3,500 -have been luued than ~ ~tn:Y Plaza banquet hall cap accommodate, and thQusands more were trying to get in. . ~ogers w~s wilh Nixon for the early part of the..Presldent's reeent.Aalan trip, Catise 1!11k11own but the secretary Jert the Whlta llooao party after Manila and set out on a long itinerary of his own. Rogm spent 11 daya 1oorfnl the western Paellic, touching bases wbicb the President was unable lo iaclU in hil 1$,000-m.ile trip around the world. Rogtrl' rnlaa&on ws to explain NI.Jon's plana. for ending the war in Vietnam, plus his post.. Vietnam outlook ror relations between the United Stall" aoil AAIBll oatlops. Teen-ager Die,s In. ·Laguna J ai·I A 19·year-old Northridge youth died Saturday Se.ven hours after beihg booked into the Laguna Beach jail by police. Stephen K. fl.tundahl or 1 7 !13 I D_eyonshlre SL, Northrldge, was pro. nounced deid-oil arilval ar South Coa'st Community Hospital· alter being brought from the jail by ambulance. Cau.se of death is as yt!t unknown, Coroner's Deputy Jame.s Bl.mer said to- day. There 'ppeared to be no extemal cause and to1icology tests are now under way, he :said. · -·-~-· Police said Mundahl \\'SS found lying apparently unconsclow in a jail cell at Planners Eye Changes ·~·' Building Code Proppsed amendruenls to lhe f.aguna Beach building code, includJng one to ease the rastricUon on building heights, will be considered a.t tonight'• pl~g corrµnlsslon 1tudy session. ·.Tbe·7:30 p.m. session. lo be held' at city hall, i1 open ,lo the public. The· atnendtnerits were ptoposed ·by La~a architecll Christian Abel •. Peter Ostrbn&!r and LyM Muir, .who undertook tile study at the request of Mayor Glenn R. Vedder. The major change proposed will affect hillside homes. Present regulations require a n y building on an R·l or R·2 residential zone to be built no higher than 25 feet abdve the street elevation. II a home is built atop a bank ~ fttt above the street, then it could only be five f~t high in front, according to present restrictions. The proposed change would allow the building to be built no higher than 25 feet above the so-called mean grade at tbe building foundation, without consideration to actual street elevaUo n. The same change would be true for bu\ldlngs in an R-3 apartment zone. ex· ccpt the mculmum height 'would be 30 feet. The other major change proposed by the architects deals with sldey'atd set. backs. Current regulations require a ·set· back to be determined by building height. 'J'he p~ change would det(!rminc setback by a 10 percent formula based on average ·Jot width. ' ,Visitors Find Vi~it Expensive Several visitors lo Laguna Beach over the weekend left town sadder and poorer as nearly s1;000 worth of property Wlll taken from their cars. -• Dougla.s O. Dudley, 31, Los Angeles, told Laguna Beach police that $.SBI Wor\h of clothing, suitcases, and personal ef· fecta was stolen from his car while he and his wife Wert at the festival of Arts Suod8y eVenl°". The car was parked in the 700 block of LBS!Ul•.Ganyon Road. The theft oUl70 In atereo t.'pe playm, tapes. tool.a apd a wrlstw,itch from the car ·or Richard H. Wight, 21, San M-arino, "'" reported Saturday. · · . . Lagwia Busmcs8n1cn · . . . To Disc uss· Hl ppics . . ' MeJ!lbel'I of ,the Downtoy,.11 Bu!lne.a&. AlsoC:iallon will meet Tueaday at 7:30 a.m. ll lhe tlotel LaJWla l4:I discuu "The Hipple Situation." Guest speaker at tJte presef\t8lt0n vl'ill be Lt. Robut Mcf.turray, of the t.eauna. Beach 'Police force. • j about 4:M p.m. Saturday. A munbtt o( Seconal pills were round in the Jail hal- "'ay, but office.rs dedned to link them to the prisoner·s death. tifundahl had been booked into the cell at aboat JO a.m. · He was aecu&ed of possession of dangerous C:\n.iaa .&Qd. l>e.in& under the influence of a drug. The dead boy and . two other youths were arrested following an accident at about i a.m. in 'the 200 block of Broadway. Mundahl was passenger jn a car allegedly driven by Raymond Eugene Strauss, 17, of Northridge, which collidtd v;llh the rear of a vehicle. driven by Dorolhy Ellen Springe, 41, of 750 Coa!\ View. Laguna Beach. Mrs. Springe is the v;ife of Laguna Building and Planning Director Clyde Z. Springe. Strauss, J\lundahl and Charles Prescott BanitJart, 19, of Northrldge Were all ar- rested by police after ollicers illegedly found thrtt pilk in their car. • 5_trauss and }langbart were booked on charges alleging posRSSion of dangerous drugs. ·· · Report Slated On Saddleback Strike Effects Saddli!back Ctillege truslees ·lonl.ght will hear a'. report on ,what errect two con- struction stn'kis, 'now seUJed, might have oo the :scheduled Sept. 22 opening of school. The item is on lhe ageoda as a pro- gress report and that listing should not this time draw nervous laughter u It dld last week when there was no progress 1o report. Contractor W. J. Shirley, Inc. during the week signed an agreement wltll operating engineers to get them back on the job. Last month, Shirley Inc. signed a simila r agreement with J tr Ii. Ing plumbers. The short form agreement binds the contractor lo abide by ~ termJ of ibe eventual industry.Wide strike settlement Vllthout having lo wait oot the strike on its own job site. Sully·MilJer Contracting Co., which Is doing the road work and walkways: for t.he-eampus, has not signed a·short form agreement. however. What efrect thi9 will have on campus opening will be told tonight. To . provide sophom9re as well as freshman course orterings this fall, the junior mllege is moVing ·pre-fabricated buildings rrom the interim ·camp119 in ~1ission Viejo to a permanent campu! half a mile to the south and· ln.stelUng new pre-fab buildings to double . floor space. Orange Cou& We ather 01d Sol wlll break lhroui,'h tl106e patchy morning clouds early Tues- day and boosl the temperature In- to the upper 7q'1 along the shore and back up to 90 further inland. INSIDE TODAY . rilumcial. colttmnLst S¥h:ln rorttr todo)/ J>tgins a fo11r-pare s~it.s qn II.le Qr~at land.. b~ .' amt tell.$ -uihether. yo.14 am art in on tht octiott. lt'1 on Page 22. ...... u C•ll"'* ' CltHifi.i U>.11 C•1111t1 1't c,...,_., n Dtlflrl '"tl(rtt II l!ft11,l•I f'lff I tllkf1•~ fl P!Mnct D4J "-"--,, . Al!fl lt!Wtn 1' ' J DAll.Y I'll.OT l ~Link $Ought • ·1n Slayings ,. 'A' llESTL&SS GIRL' Mu"(derecl H1lre11 Fo191r San Fra1ici sc o Shocked Over Folger Death SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -San Fran· cisco society circles still were in shock today ovu the death of Abigail Folger. t.he pretty helren slain fn a mysterious Wtektnd massacre at Bel Air. Mi!.s Folger, 26. was the daughter of Peter Folger of Woodsi.de, chainnan oI the J. A. Folger & Co. coffee firm. Friends described her as a restless young woman interest Id in ·1iberal causes. ' She waa an honor student at Rldclltfe and hid worked in a New York bookstore ind an art museum at the UniverS!iy of California at Ber'keley before becomln& a social worker and going to the Southern California area. She worked for some time in the ghetto ina of Watts and also labored i..J ThQml!'I Bradley s losing mayoralty campaian a few months •go. \\'ith her family 's approval, she in- vesled-money in the cllain of Wons cperlf.ed by male hair stylist Jiy ~ bring, 35, also killed in the weeken~d slaughter. Other backers included actors Paul Newman, Steve h1cQueen, Warren Beatty and Peter Lawford. Througlt Sebring, she met and mingled with many of Hollywood 's most famous names. ai,it she had the misfortune to be at the "'Tong place at the wrong time last weekend. Sebring was also weU known In the b•y area where he opened a hair styling salon last h1ay in partnership with public rtfa- tions executive Art Blum. Blum, who said he was In a state of "stupor" from the tragedy, denied reports characttrb:ing the five perlOlU I.lain as "hippie$." Blum said Sebring was "not even much of a swinger. His ambition \vas to become a millionaire." When Sebring came to the bay area, he would usua\ly visit LL Col. Paul J. Tate. Tate, father of slain actress Sharon Tate, 26. i& nearing retirement as assis- t.ant chief of the staff or int1lli11ence at the Sl1th Region Army Air Defense Com· mand at Fort Baker here. Zorid Heading Back hfOSCO\V (AP) -The unmanned Soviet moon probe, Zond 7, photographed the lunar surface today, rounded the moon and is now heading for earth , an of- ficial announcement said. ' ClUf~ (DAit rtlM 1$t!l"Q. COM1>.u'f leNrt H. W•M "'"""""'IN J>'*llllS Jeck t. C.ri.., vic.~ .. c;.. .. ......., Tll•Mt• K..,.il .... no111•• A.. M•1,Jii111 MtMtln• 111111 .... a.;~~,,~ '· Hill .. _ htd'I CllW •fltw L...-... om.. lit hr .. t A••· Mt!ll11t.A'ilt••111.0 . 1 .. •6'. tJ6il --Ctttt MtM1 .. *Mt...,,.,.., ......... tdcfrl1 "11 """' ......... ...,. ~ lndl1 •"" ~ Actress, 6 Others Killed ~n 2 Incidents LOS ANGi:LES (UPI) -Homicide squads fl?Md opt acroea thii sprawuna: cltr ~J .ttte1nptlng_ to ti~ ~elh6r the mutaeri ol actress Sharon Tile ~ lour • other;s with the bizarre deaUis of t ma.r- ried cqu.et~ a dolen miles away.' Bottl ~Urder scena wtrt 11.milar. . 1be fift'bodles fOund at .lhe ~oode ac- • trt1$' homt Satur1AY were mutllated by mlljllple lmlfe wl!Wldl, .,, were Ute re· . ~ . ._ ~ . - mains of market owntr Uno La llanca, 44, '.and his wife, Rosemary, 31. The lal\ef' wtre dbcovered In thtlr SilverlaQ home Sundaf night. The home OOt"e was owned by the Jate W aJt Olsney. ·The word "P~g" was scrawled in blood on the door of Miss Tat.e's Btnedict €an- yon bomf. "Death to Pigs" was daubed on the ltlrl&er-door in the La Bi.Ilea home. ssoo fo1· walk Hett.Or Does 70 Miles i11. 24 Ho urs By RANDY S~ELYE Of n.t Otll~ 'llel Sltft • HJ 'Ifill nevtr do it acain," panted Gary t.tcAlJl1ter .this morning .. , "l don'.t re::ommend a.rcyone else lryit1g." l\fcAlllster 30, Huntington Beach, had juat won $500 on a bttt he couldn't walk 70 mlles in 24 hours. He completed the 240 laps with 4S minutes to spare at 7: 15 a.in. tL<lay on the Orange Coast College track u, Costa l\1esa. It all started lut wHk durina a coffee brtak at ShJnn Engineering Co., Santa An.a, where McAllister is the night foreman. \\'hen the Huntington Beach man said he could \\'alk 70 miles in 24 hours about a dozen employes laughed. 11"1e laufhter led to a $500 challenge. J4c.AlllJltr accepted the bet at three. to fjve oddJ and started al 8 a.m. Sunday morning. Ht took thrtt short breaks during the day SuOO:ay and almost lost his share of the bet -$300 -when he stopped 10 rest in the eveMng. At the mid-point last night however he stopped for a ha:J-hour ly_nch break and wu unable 10 5el back on his feet. Finally he pulled himself up and for the next hour wobbled Into a slow pact. But his rtrength murned and ·McAllister dinppeartd into the night. Gary Gardner, a ftlloW employe at Shinn Engineering, said he stayed with ~fcAlli1ter unlit I a.m. today, but left ~cause "sitting 1.: as tiring as walking." "After his lunch stop at 8 p.m. Sunday, Gary didn't stop again. He knew that if he dld, he would never start again ,'' Gardntr said . "He paced himsell very well, averaging bet\\'Cen 10 and 12 laps every hour." Gai'dner noted, "but after his lunch break l:ist night ht only went about ei1ht laps Lite first hour, then reg lined his strength.,. ~IcA\lister weathered the ordeal quite \Yell , but complallled of problems with hi'I le& muscles toward 1he end of the hike. He ate lightly during the walk and dran k waler frequently. Durlng the dark hours lanterns ~'ere placed around the track to keep him from stumbling. His children camped on lht OCC football field during the night. Employes at Shinn Engineering say he is sleeping today and they don't eipect him to ahow up for work tonight. ''He may no[ be aDle to walk," they aaid . 3 Laguna Higl1 Classes Slate Reu11io11 for Aug. 23 hfore than 100 rradua tes of Laguna Beach High School from the years Ie43, '44, and '45 have. tlgatd up for a 25-year class reunion Aug. 13. Les! than 50 openings remain for the baiiquet to be staged at the La111na Beach Country Club, accordlng to Billie Lou Quam, rtunion committee member. Reser:vations must be made by Aug. 18. she said. The cost of·the evenin11 will be St~ per couple-, or $8 sta1 . Checks.may be sent to Mrs. Quam at 960 Temple Ter· race, Laguna Beach. The evening will feature a no.host cocktail hour itarUng at 1:30 p.m. A prime rib buffet dinner will be served at 8 p.m., with dancing lo a six-piece orchestra from 9 p.m. to l a.m. Mrs. Quam suggest~ that t h e Tho usands Pack La.g una Beac hes Over Weekend Low surf, warm water and 9;UMY skies attracted hea vy crowdJ to the south coast beaches over the weekend, with relaUvely few ~scues. Laguna Beach li(eguards reported beach attendance at 27,000 Saturday, with. guards pulllng eight &wlmme rs from two- foot surf. The water tempera\ure was recorded at 70 deg~ees. Sunday·s crowd numbered 29,200, with only four rescuu. Water temperature \1'as 75 degrees, with t~·o to three.foot surf. . . San Clemente guards pulled 44 swim- mers Salutday from the two to fi ve-foot surf. An estimated 30,000 beachgoers fro\llcked rn the 72 degree water. There v.·ere 26 rescues Sunday among the 42,300 beachcoers. Temperature or the two to four·foot iurf was 73 deirees. CBS OKs Cancella tion Of 1970 Cigarette Ads NEW YORK (UPI) -11le Columbia Broadcasting System announced Sunday it would relea&e tobacco manur11.clurers from their 1970 cigarette commerclah~ contracts if Congre11 becomes the "final arbtter" of the cigarette advertl1lng question. CBS President Frank Stanton, In a \et- ttr to ·Sen. Frank E. Moas {0.Ut.ah), said I.he network would agrtt to an offer ma.de by the Tobacco Institute whJch would allow lht canctlatlon of conlracts in t970 by the radio 11nd tele,1slon ntt- work.I. 79 Gary Fh·emel) Face Trials Over Strike GARY, Ind. (AP) - Cit y r;,.men ha"" ended a six-day strlk,, but 'i1 of thtm fiCe trial• st1rtJn1 today thal could rrs-ull ln the lo8s of their jobs. The 79 fli"tmen -out of I total fO(CI! of 271 -wtrt iutpended without pay last .,,.k for partlclpatln& In Ute strllce. graduates bring pictures of "the &ood old days" to bt passed around . Original recordings of the "big band sound" also will be played. Frona Page 1 WELFARE ... all dependent tamllies with chlldrtn in America, regardless of where they live, would be assured of minimum standard payments based upon unilorm and single eligibility standards and "wou ld be en- couraged to train and work and 1tay toaether." "These are far-reaching effects," he told Congress, "they cannot be purchaJed cheaply, or by piecemeal efforts." With the establis.lunent of hls "new ap- proach" to welfare, Ni1on said the na- tion's antiJ)Overty agency, OUice of £eo. nomic Opportunity, wlll concentrate on finding new ways of opening economic opportunity to those who are able to "·ork. "Rather than focusing on income sup- Port activities," he said OEO "must find means of providing opportunities for in- dividuals to contribute to the full extent of lheir capabilities and in developing and improving these capabilities." In a presidential statement aJIO i1sued loday, Nixon gave the OEO the highest priority to de velop a new spirit of "social pioneering" to better the Jot or sll Americans. Students Due Noontime Passes Students at Lagun~ Btach High School \\'ishing to le.ave the campus for lunch during the school year must appl y for a noon pass at tht school's administration ofnce, ll5 Park Ave. A parent must aceompany the student • in order to complete the appllcaUon, ac· cording to Student Affairs Director Gary Norton. Students who possessed a noon pass last ye.ar mus:t have it renewed, he added . Forms. will be available in the office beginning Aug. 11. An administrator wlll be available to speak lo the student and parent regarding the noon pass restric- tions. Office hours are from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. htonday through Friday . Israel Jets Attack Bases in Lebanon By United Press lntera1Uo1a1 tsrael jell today attacked Arab guer· rilla bases in a heavily woodM 1rea ln tne foothills of h11. Htrmon in southeast Lebanon, touching off a serlu of ex- plosions. lt was the &econd tlme tlfatll planes atUicked Lebanon since the 19e7 war. Ari l.vatli .11poke.sman sl.ld in Tel Aviv "• nwnber" of planu carried out a 30· minute attack on the area whate the guerrillas hA\'t bi.lilt sevtn base& ror 1l- tack1 an l.tr1ell Jeltlem~ta and mJlitaty poaj!lona acr04S the border. .. Further evidence of a possible link between the mulUple murders were rltual!Stic hoods en some of the victims. Halr stylist Jay Sebring was found tethered by a white cord over a beam. 'I't!e other end of the rope was tied to ~tl!s Tile's body clothed in brassiere and bikini panties. Brutality of the murders of the La Biancas was similar to that found at the Tate murder scene. Police said both La Blanca and his wife were found with makeshift hoods from bedclothe.s pulled over th1ir bead!. La Bianca's body was carved with a series of X markJ ·and the word "war" wu cut Into hla chut from which a knife protn.ided. Despite the remarkable similarities of the lwo cases, police said U was vtry possible no connection e:ibted. On Hollywood movie and television staae stars and stagehands specu1ated about the murders. Police were terse and uninformative. A unifonned officer stood guard at the foot of a long and winding drive that led to the rambling estate where Mlss Tate, Sebring and the others v.•ere murdered. One officer said as milly as three persons could have been involved in the ritualistic butchery at the home of Miss Tate and her hwband, director Romln Polanski. Detectives said there was a pouibility the murderer or murderers were "in· volved in a personaJ way" \vith the vie· tUns. They searchtd in pa rticular for an unldenUfied suspect whose name was provided by Wllllam E. Garretson, 19, a caretaker on the PolaMki estate who liv- ed in a guest house. He was the onJy person alive when officers arrived at the scene Saturday morning . "At this stase, we have not ruled out anything or any~," homicide Del Lt. Rebert Helder, who he;ids-the in- vesU1aUon, told a news conlerence. "We h1've no IOlid information which would limit us to a !Ingle suspect. lt could have been one man, it could have bffn two men, I~ could have been up to hilb as three men." The victims: -MW Tate, 28, wife of film director Jtman Polanski, eigbt montm pregnant \\'Ith a baby boy, died of mulUple stab ~'ound! of the chest and bac.k. Polanski flew here Sunday from Europe and im- mediately went into seclusion. -Abigail Folger, 26; San Francisco heiren to the Folger coffee fortune' described as a "rich hlpj'Jle'~ who-·at: tended seance sesaions, died ,t;-. stab \vounds in the chest. .. .. -Jay Sebrinc, 35, lnnovalor ·of hair styling for men, once Miss Tate's fiance died of multiple stab wounds of the body'. -Voilyck Frokowsky, 37, worked with Polanski as an actor and writer in Polish filrns, died of stab \\'Ounds of the body and limbs and a gunshot 1vound in the back. -Steven Parent , 18, a friend of Gar- retson who left home in suburban El Monte Friday to visit him, dled of multi- ple gunshot wounds of the chest. ~arretson's attorney, Barry Tarlow. said Parent dropped by the guest house to visit the caretaker, \Yho looked after several dogs and cats belonging to the owners. Tarlow said Garrelson sat up reading until 6 a.m., Saturday but heard no unusual sounds from the main house, separat~d from the guest house by a swimming pool and shrubbery., "There was a party at the house the night of the killings," Tarlow said. ".From the investlg~tion made by my of- fice, our best guess 1.s that whoever did it was involved in a personal way these people who were killed." Attention today turned to the second suspect soughl by police. fielder said, "\Ve are looking for an in· di\·iduitl. We don't have any definite in· formation that he was involved His name came up in conversation with.Gar- retson ." U~I Te"'IMtm FIGURES IN CASE-Actre5S Shl\"'n Tale chats wlth husband, Polish film p roducer-director .Ron:ian Polanski, in this fi le photo. Polanski \Vas 1.n London when his wife and four others were murdered in the couple's Beverly Glen home. Highway Beau tification Plan Readied for County A preliminary report on the beautifica- tion ol Pacific Coa!t Hl1hw1y from Three Arch Bay through Dana Point has bee n reviewed and b now being formalized for presentaUon 10 the· Orange County Supetvitors in early September. The report is the end product of a 1i1· month study jointly financed by the coun- ty and private indfviduals coordinated by the South Coast Scenic: Improvement Project headed by James E. O'Conner, The $15,000 study was conducted by \Villson and Williams, a Ne,vpoi:t Btach con.wlt.ing firm . The 63-page study proposes guidelines for development and lm~rovemetrt of H· isting devel.,._.."'*'r o U •lli!ll! stretch of the .bi&bway. Neivpo rt Burglar R eads Playboy \\'hat kind or man reads Playboy:' In this case, a man who broke into John Gay's hou!e wh.ile Gay and his \\'ife were al a· movie, stealing a stereo and radi os valued at $600. along with the August copy of the magazine (valued at $1.25). NewPort BeaCh Police said the suspect entered the home at 2601 Lighthouse Lane through an open rear bedroom "'in- dow late Saturday night. Pan Aan Workers Vote Today on Pact NE\V YORK (AP) -Ground empolyes of Pan America n \Vorld Airways com- plele voting today on a tentative contract agr~emenl to end the strike that began Friday. About 8.000 n1cn1bcrs of the Teamsters Union were scheduled to vote. Union of· ficials declined, to discuss the pact until !he voting was complete. I~ may also present a pilot plan by \11h1ch all of Orange County's 4Z:S coastline miles may be Improved .. The plan recommends zoning and height li1nitat.ions, rerouting of Coist lligh~ay in Dana Point, land scaping of the h1gbway, and elimination of overhead "·ires . Flood ContI·ol Req1test Studied • Orange CountJ Superviiorl. TueJ.y \1'ill consider a Laiuna Canyon flood con· tro! channel repair bid that is over the cngineer·s estimate, but nevertheless recommended for approval. Lo1v bidder is the K. E. C. Company or Ha1valian Gardens al $19,850. The estimated cost for the work was $15,000. flood Control Chief Engineer Geo rge Osborne recommends a contract be sign- ed for the repair "·ork in unincorporated territory south of the Big Bend of Laguna ~anyon. Tbe channel \\'as damaged dur· 1ng heavy winter rains. Chicago Yo uth s,vims Channel DO'IER. England (AP ) -Jon Erikson. 14-year~ld Chicago schoolboy, became the youngest swimmer ever r..1onday to conquer the English ChaMel. Erikson swam from Cap Gris Nez on the French coast to a beach west of Dover in II hours, 23 minutes. The record, 9 hours and 3S minutes, 1\·as set by Barry Watson of Britain in 19fi-1. Pre\'iously the youngest chan nel swim- mer \.\'as Philip Gollop, a British Uoy who was 16 \\'hen he made the crossing in l96S. If you're 5'8'' or over, we 've plenty_ of . suits left for you middle of the nigl1t., grabbing armloade of euits, and driving Rway "'·ithin 71 ~ •~011ds of smaeh ing the j11:laes. Ueually the burglars are cault'.h ti but in the meanti1ne ~·e1re out ee,·en arn1loarls of 811ita. The bur(llare et.ripped the rack neare111 1he window. It t"onaained n1o§lly our fluils in ehorl &i1.e!. 1( you're 5 fl. 8 incbe1 or tall~r, do11't you let 011r llllle burglary \VO;ry )'OU for one minute. We have a 1ult in your size. Or aeveral dou:n, for that m•tler. ~laybe you read in the Pilot "·hat happened. '\Ve didn't order a l•ole iu our window l1ut ~·e i;t0l cJne. Al 3:29 a.1n. last ·rue11loy, Au8'••t 51b, we bad tome win· dow sboppen. I dou'I know if "'"e flho11ld he flattered by thiA, hul app•rently 1bey liked wh•t they aaw. They ala.auned a milk crate through onr .tore window. pthered up MJYflnl fast armloada .,.·r nor tul~ ecnrried back to their r.ar. and raced "'"'·ay inlo the nlgh1. Funny 1hlq. Euclly 7 day• before. at the tin1e we renewed our burglary i,neurance, the company i1'1l11ed that "'·e in~ 11tall one of l110&e new 1ilenl ' ala1"111i. lt worked beaulifolly. The police da1hed over here. But those burglars were a dai!ll an(I a half ab~ad of 1bcru. Cone without a trace. Helen (01y wife) and I have been told tl1a1 1here are 111e\•eral underpou11d Ourp:l1ry Colle~ in session this 11Um• TIU· They in1truct young Jben in the 111"1 methodt for hreakinti into a 1lore in the Any""·ay, it'• very uno1ual for our 11ore to be open at l :29 a.m. Our ~Jar •lore hours are 9:30 to 5:30, rtlon· day t11rou~h SAl11n.l1y. Wl1en \'OU enler. remen1· ller. Don'l "'on1't 1l1rougl1 the - "'-indnw. Ute lhe door. The police knoW' aboul thio ad. ·' Jack Bidwel l • 34-67 \'la Lido at Ne"'·1:1ort DJ,•d., i11 Ne~JHlrl Beach next lo Rlrh1rd'1 ftlarket and The Lido 111eater. Plenty of free parking in Lhe IUJ". Phone 6i34,j 10 Copyrlshl 1969, Jock Bidwell • ., ' I I I ,, ... ·-------. - President NiXion . Ret ' . DICK AND PAT. BACK IN THE OLD HOME COUNTY With Feces W"athed 1n Smiles and By Oranges ' DAILY PILOT Pholos by Rfc h•rd Koehltr •nd Pol O'Donnell GREETS CROWD -Presl· denl greets well·wishers who turned out to meet bis plane Saturday at Orange County Airp<irL A crowd o! about 8,000 waited in hot sun to greet President. Bands from Disneyland and Santa Ana High School played "Hail to the Chief." AIR FORCE ONE PIVOTS TOWARD TERMINAL FOLLOWING 4:27 P.M.TOUCHDOWN Prt sid•nti1I Piiot Usts Just Over Helf of S,700.foot Strip at County Airport 35 Victims FoQd FAA Piecing Together Gamblers' Special DC3 LONE PINE, Calif. (AP) -The painstaking Lask of piecing together the wreckage of a long-missing DC3 and bringing the bodies or 35 abroad from a frozen grave high on a Sierra peak began today. Helicopters began ferrying men a.nd equipment to the t\vo-mile high crash site at dawn. The rirst to arrive "'ere in· vestigators from the Federal Aviation Administration and the Na ti ct-n·a 1 Transoprlalion Safely Board. Five persons lost their lives 1earching for the plane that vanished into a predawn snowstorm on Feb. 18 as it car· ried 35 passengers and crewmen back lo Southern C&lifomia from an evening or 1amling in a Hawthomt:, Nev., casino. • ~bad luck of the .. gamblers special"' worked again Sunday when an Air Foret he.licoplt:r with five persons aboard was slammt!:d by a· sudden downdraft into Berets' Attorne y Calls Viet Victim Double Agent From Wlre Servlcu SAIGON -An American attorney chaf'ied In • petition filed with the U.S. Anny today that 1 Vietnamese man eight Green Beret soldiers are accused of murdering was a double age.DL employed both by Hanoi and the C e n t r a I Intelligence agency. The attorney. Gflorge Gregory, of Cheraw, S.C., said the alleged vtctim was discovtr!d to be employed by the ·CNC intelligence organizaUon o( the North Vtetnamese Anny. Greg1>ry said he also 'lt'IS employed by .U.S. mi Ii tar y aulhorlties and the Central lnte.lligence AQ:ency to spy on the North Vietnamese. "1 hope they can find the bo:dY because when the ract..o; of this case are disclosed I believe you will Ond this person won't be the old lady that you heard about as the vidim of m•nY thing1 iD this war," Gl'tgory said. , snow 81\d boulders 100 yards from the DC3 wreckage about three m i I e s ·northeast of t.fount Whitney, the highest point in the continental United States. The helicopter crash left Inyo County Sheriff Merrill Curtis hospitalized with back injuries and destroyed the $1.S million HH3B helicopte r. The man in charge or investigating the airliner crash, Jerald Brugglnk of ll)e Nat.ional Transpcrtation Safety Board, sad it will take several days to gel all Ule bodies from the gnarled wreckage that trailed several hundred yards down Ule mounta in side from a sheer rock face into which the airliner apparently new. Had the plane been 1,500 feet higher, It \rould have cleared the towering eastern rampart of the Sierra and been safely over the Redwood carpeted valleys of Se· quoia N'atiocal Forest. Bruggink said some or the bcdies are lying exposed on 30 feet of mow lhaL covers the slopes and will be taken out today on two amall helicopters ren~ to replace the downed Air Force craft. The FBI ha s flown in a six-man identi- fi~ion team that has been assembling infonnation on the plane's passengers and crew almost since the day it-disap-- peared . They will work on idenlifying vic- tims in a tempcrary morgue set up in Bishop, Calif., 40 miles north of Lone Pine in east-central California. No one will be moved until all the bodie.' are tagged ond pieces of the wreckage mapped, sa id Don Talmage. Inyo County coroner. "\\It have waited a long time on this one and don 't want to do anything to jeopardize the investlgaUon 00'1 .'' The 31 passengers and three crew members apparently died on Impact, ac· cording to investigators who got to the seene Sunday. •·it is my opinion that no one could havt: lived arter it hit," said Talmage. The white and blue DC3 was found Fri· day. On SalUrday a hellcopteer landed and the pilot confirmed the wreckage was tbat of the missing Pi-1\neral County Airli nes Plane. The arta had been crls.Hro.ued by scarth planes mariy tJme9 in past montm but last winter's record sT'IOws recently melted enough for the wreckage to ht seen. :n1e DC3's pa!Sengers hnd paid $10 f!ach for dinner. entertainment and .a round·trip from Burbank and Long Beach tothe door 1tep or a casino in Hawthorne. .. County to. Hold Public Hearing Over Sand Pit • Orange County Supervisors will hold a public hearing on Wednesday t o determine whether to revoke two permits for the Burris sand pit, whose operator is now bankr~. The pit, located on the Santa An.a River near Anaheim, filled with water during the winter rains and Ule county had to spend $2,000 pumping it dry because deteriorating w a-111 threatened nearby residents. Largely because or the Burris sand pit experience, supervisors last week adopted an ordinance setting safety stan- dards for sand, gravel and mineral ex- traction operations. The ordinance prohibits excavalion within 50 feet of any parcel of land not used for the same purpos~ It requ ires that the outer slope of the pit shall not be steeper than l 1h feet horizontally lo one foot vertically. A six·foot chain link fence around the operation also is stipulated. The pennlt revocation hearing Wednes- day apparently will not be attended by the Burris pit operator, Mrs. 1t1arjorie Townsend. Her attorney said she has pro- ceeded through bankruptcy and soJd the plant and equipment at auction. The hearing concerns conditional use pennlts Issued in 1951 and 1954 the county building and safety department contends were not complied with on setbacks and slope steepness. Recall Tangle Solved; Plans Move Smoothly A slight tangle involving • nomlnalion papen for the Sept. %3 recall election in Fountain Valley has been untangled and tlectklo procedures are moving mioothly today. Last week it was discovered lhat eighr o( the ten Candidates had lirted !heir OC· cupaUons incorrectly on papers filed with tht city clerk, Occupations must be listed erad.ly the same on nomination papen as on voter registration. The city clerk's office 111ld today 1111 candidates had cleared up the problem by reregistering as voters with a ntw oceupaUon ll&ting. Ten men are seeking the posts now held by f\fayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, Vice Mayor Donald Fregeau and Co11n- cllman Joseph COurtges who are the target.a or the huted recall campaign. Lands quietly President's Plane Wins Approval of Noise Foes Not only did Air Force One's landing at Orange County Airport prove that a 80t>ing 707 can land at the mall tenninal, b'ut il proved it could land quietly, too. In fact, said crltics of the airporl's jet noiSE', the huge aircraft made less noise land ing and taking off t.han the much smaller jets that use the terminal every day. And because of that demonstration the presi dential plane's pilot has won honorary membership in the Newport Airport Noise Abate ment Committee. Committee Chainnan Dan Emory bestowed the honorary members.hlp to Ralph Albertaizie, pilot cf the president's plane and praised the pilot's takeoff prcr cedure. "lie gave us a dramatic demonstration of what can be done to reduce the jct noise over Newport," Emory said. Ile said that any apprehension about the jet's landing at Orange County Airport was dispelled when the craft took off for a short hop to the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. "The huge plane climbed sharply, cut hack power when it reached Pa lisades Road and made a sharp left turn "'hen il reached 750 feet," Emory related. Emory llia id as a result of the pilot's maneuvers only a small area of Newp:irt Beach received a substantial dose of the jet's noise. "Even thal area received less noise than that produced by the smaller jets that use the airport every day," Emory said. Couple Injured In Plane Crash Killin g Inf ant A Huntington Beach couple whose IS. month-0ld daughter was killed Sunday in the crash of their single-engine plane in ~ Angeles are reported in fair condltion today at OrthOpaedic Hospital. Pilot Raymond floughton, 40, of 17362 Apel Lane. told Los Angeles police he was trying to land after his plane developed engine trouble about 20 minutes after takeoff from Meadowlark Airport, near his home. The family was headed for San Jose, Houghton lried to tero in on the Pep-- perdine College baseball field, bu t the disabled craft slruck a lree and spun to ear!h. Tht: ba by girl, Llsa, w&s pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital, poS!ibly from a broken neck. Houghton sustained a possible skull fracture and his wife, Wanda, fractured ribs. The pl unging plane narrowly missed U1e home of Pepperdine College president Norvel Young. He and hb; wife were out of town, but the crash awakened the.Ir three children who called for an am- bulance and altempted first aid. lfougtiton was not well known at P.1cadowlark Airporl where he had used a temporary tic-down space for the past two months. Marge Turner, wife of the airport manager, said she had heard the family had sold their home and were moving soon to Phoenix. Race Vio lence Flares At Island l\l arine Base HONOLULU (UPI) -Military police fi~ 5hotl in the air Sunday afternoon to quell a "disturbance" between black and white Marines at "the Kaneohe Marine Air St.ation 12 miles from ffonolulu. A l\.1arine spokesman said 200 Marines were involved In the 20-mlnute fracas. No "major injuries" were reported, but witneMes said at least two Marines were treated for 1uperfici1l injuriu. ' ~ides creating little noise, the huge jet landed without using up all of the airport's 5,7()()..foot runway. It lelt about 2,000 feet to spare. The runway size and preliminary weight esllmates were the original fa c· tors that cau!ed airport officials toques- tion whether the huge jet Could land. DA to. Petition For Autopsy on Miss Kopechne NE\\'. BEDFORD, Mass. (UP!) -Disl Atty. Edmund S. Dinb p1'ns to petition Penruylvania 1uthoriUe.s thil week for permission to exhume the body of Mary Jo Kopechne. 83 part of tus investigation into the fatal car wreck involving Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. Dinis, whose district includes Martha's Vinfyard and the site of the fat&! crash foll6wlng a cookout July 18, announced plaiis for a judfctal inquest last week. District Judge James A. Boyle of F.dgartown Friday set the inquest date u Sept. 3. ' The parent.a of Miss Kopechne, is. a former campaign worker for the late Sen . .Robert F. Kennedy, have said they would fight any attempt to conduct an autopsy on their daughter who is . buried· in Larksville, Pa. ' "Jam not the: authority in the matw," Dini1 said Sunday. "The Pennsylvania court will make the decision about it" Dinis said he has not spoken to Mr. and P.lrs. Joseph Kopechne of Berkeley Heights, N.J. "I wouldn't bother them. They have enough \rouble," he said. The Kopechnes have been crilicaJ of Massachuselt.a authorities for not having asked the:lr opinion. Miss Kopechne drowned when a car driven by Kennedy ran off a narrow, wooden, humpback bddae on Chap- paquiddick Island just off Martha's Vineyard. Kennedy escaped and said he made several dives to rescue his paa.senger but was unsuccessful. Slaying Suspect's Mother Sa ys Son Not Violent Boy LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!) -M'5. P.tary Garretson said today her son Wi!Uam, 19, I IUlped in the 1laytngs of movie star Sharon Tate and four others, i.s not a violent person . . "He never wanted to hunt or fish," P.1rs. GarreUJon said. "He wu nevtr m. terested in killing. "I don 't know if he killed them or not. No mother wants to believe that." Garretson, employed at Miss Tate•s home, left hls home here last October for California. Lancaster polke ••Jd Garret.son was gjvtn a one-year suspended sentence two year1 ago for funUshtng bMr to a minor. He was arrested here for shoplUUng in 1954 but the char~ were dropped. Mn. G1rrell0n said her son called her regularly and that he was homesick. "lie. wanted to come back." she said. ''He also wanted more achool. '' Sh< said she last h<aro from WOliam when he lelephooed her coll«:t last Tut> day to wish her a happy blrthda1. . Garretson WJS arrested list ~y atter the bodies of Mise: Tilt, wife of movie director Roman Polinski, and the others were fouod in the Tate home: ln 1urburban Lot Angeles. C•rr•t.oo w11 hltdlblkln1 ID C:alllornla la~ February w1itn ho IOI a Ufl from PoliWkl who offered blm a job lald"I care o! the dlr«lor'a dos•. I . From Wirt Services LOS ANGELES -The Apollo l naut.s and 1,600 of the naUon'11 el dine with President Nixon W night while millions of uninvited watch on television. Tht: entire event-from hors d' reeeption to seven-course dinner - go on the air. Dignitaries, entertainers and avi n pioneers began arriving today for e festivities. Many are staying at 'the elegant Century Plaza Hotel where ~ dinner will be held. ,\;- Among those invit~ to dine with 1 voyagers Neil A. Annstrong, F..dwln Aldrin Jr. and P.tichae l Collins are l other 52 astronauts and their wlvea a the widows of eight astronauts, e governors of the 50 states and their l'-'ives, 300 members of the dlplomatK: corps and the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court. Also. the member3 of U1e Nixon cabtnet and their wives, the space committee members or the Senate and the House of Representatives, lop administrators of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, leaders 8f the aerospaac. industries, and famed airmen of the past. Known to have been Invited but not known whether they have acc':epted are Jacqueline and Ari Onassis, Howard Hughes and Charles Lindberg. (Orange Coast residents invited include Dr. and Mrs. Arnold O. Beekman, Mr. and Mn. Charles S. Thomas, Mr. and Mn. Dennis Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert .w. Kalmbach and Judge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke. (All are Newport Beach residents and all have indicated they will acce.pt the President's invitation.) "Everybody coming is a dignitary In his own right," said a White House spokem . .lll: Few have turned down the prized fn. vitatiom to the fete. So select. was the guest list that Invited l!iingle peras>ns were instructed to come without dates:. "Some friends or mine of,fered lo work a~ busboys just to get ln,' said a hotel vice presJdent. The lunar exploration theme will be carried out in centerpieces, candy bozes and a special moon-shaped dessert being pre~ared_ by the hotel chef. It's a globe of varulla ice cream over Kirsch-soaked raisins and coated with a thin meringue to give the impressio n of a moon1eape. The program for the evening has yet to be announced. The President ls upkted lo tout the astronauts before dinner. "I would imagine the astronaut.a: will then say somettung," said t wrote House spokesman. "but it may not be a formal speech." To keep the dinner nonpartisan, Ni:1011 has not asked political figures lo speak:. What will the elegant' evenlr11 cost? Whi~ House sources aren't telling. But they say funds will come from several government soUrces, including the Slate Department, the" National Aeronau&JCal and Space· Administration and NT1on'St own $50,000 White ~ entertainment allowance. · 5 Beachgoers - Jailed on Drugs-: Undercov" deleotiv<s, playing alt p1rt of beachcombers in Huntfnitoo~ Beach, arrestee! rive persons Saturday aDd t~o more Sunday for the nle and ~ of seconal tablets. ~ Amsted lor "°""''°" or ciaJl&ol:o!J• drop were St.pben a-uz. II. o! ~ Ang<IH ; Loub Rovarte. II, Of ,\lhinilirr. Roymond Vuquei, 18. o! AfilambtJo: Robert A\1111, 19, of Soolh sa~ <;J'brlel and Linda Ray Estrada, n, or JloffD\Ud. Two juvenu.., both o! !.of•~''" were arrested Oii th• beacb_~.})!!\b they were Identified 11 •~"With tho 8nlllP arr.,ted Saturday. · · • .. lkllll turned of ll8ikma of ti lbe busy ()akland. It en nearlJ thrM • goo Ulat ftood- ben a truck over· • in Philadelphia are elr latest acquisition g. "It's as rare as a • 1ald zoo director • "A generic aberfa.. e zoo's press director lier. The frog was found t, Pa., by a &.yeaMld ' • ....,, ~t U.1169 • UJ>t T•""'ltt'fto .. • • Muling tor A•••..it: Lull Shattered by Red Attacks SAIGON (UPI) -North VletnanleH and Viet Cong troops are masslne for an o!fenaive ' between Saigon and the Cam· bodlan Imler. informed U.S. in!Utary aowtis said today. CommuniJI altacll shattered a lull in ground fighting and brought lb< higheot U.S. C8311aillea in two montM. New fighling killed 41 Amull:an! and wounded 170 olhen in battles that in- cluded a North Vietnamese assault on two Marine camps near the demilitarized zone (DMZ) Sunday. • They predicted a Communist attack hi the repon before Alli. 20 and said Alll«I troops were pouring inlo the arta ta count.er the threat. ' The Communists are expected to co~ cent.rate their attack on tHt c!Ua.of Ari Loe, Quan Loi and Loe Ninh, au 111 to 10 mil., norih-of Sailon near Ille Cam· bodlan border and • ·major Communist tnfiltraUon route, the IOUl'Ct• said. "We conclude that the enemy Is preparing for a decisive military effort h1 Blnh Loog and Tay Ninh (pro~)," one source said. The United States hu been i.ntec'l!fvely bombing tbe .rea in the put five days. B52& have bombed northern Binh Long Province 21 times in the past few days and military sources said at least 110 Communist troops have been killed Jn the raids. scientist nei.lh))or In lo zoo officiali~ Co- nan said the frog is probably a male adult about a year old. ASTRONAUTS SHAKE HANDS WITH NASA .EMPLOYES ON LEAVING LUNAR RECEIVING LAB Aldrin (left), Collins {center) and Armstrong Get First Breath of Air Since Blast-off Gen. Cre.lgbton W. Abram&, U.S. com- mander in Vietnam, flew to Dong Ha near the DMZ today to confer on tbe al· tack by elell)enl1 of North Vietnam's 3<MUt Divi!'ion, which fought in the battle of Dein Bien Phu, whjch ended the Frencb-Iodochlna War in 195t. U.S. Marines lost 19 killed and al least 80 wounded in the assault. The greeo-.clad North Viet.name&& charged two Marine camps throwing grenades. Marines •repelled them with bayonets and rirte stocks when many broke through defensive perimeters. While predicting the offensive, the American sources conceded t h a t "because cf Allied pre-emptive oper• lions, the enemy's effort may be feeble or even postponed." • ecrt Goa. Ronald ReQUG1l take1 timt .ll't iA Socramt!!nto to chat with 1'amf!y 7aan Wieburg, 18 of Clm"emme, Okla., t one of hit faoorite subject.I - u. Tome.11 Jean, a woman jockey, to ride quorUrhorses at the Jair starting Aug. 25. She ho.r riding rinu she wtu S and ha.I !bUll liun&ed in California rincc May. : . · The local new car dealers asso· ciation in Eugene, Ore., recently gave the city an $8,000 limousine in hopes it would add some class lo city ball. Six weeks and tllree miles later the city fathers gave i t back. "It 'would have been okay as a ceremonial car." said Mayor Lester Anderson. "But for day.to- day use, it was a little too--uh- rich.'• • Thi! Oregon S ta t t!! Depart- l'Mnt of EJ1lergency Servicu in Salvn, hod to close while the office ii being carpeted. A.If a: rerult, it a1tnounced that "nn ~genries will be permitUd until further notice." • Floyd Wilson, 21 , of Wellsville, N.Y. figures to see a Jot of his wife in the next year. As part of a sen· tence for three traffic violations. Village Ju1tlce Phlllp 0 . Engelder ordered \Vilson not to be on Wells· ville streets for the next 12 moTl't.hs unless accompanied by Mrs. Wil· aon. lie also imposed a $50 fine. Police 5aid residents complained th"at Wilson was driving his car over their lawns. Astronauts Escaping Publicity-for Now • . SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Three modest men who bra\'ed the unknown of another world settled down to normal earth chores tod1y before racing a tumultuous public acclaim they would rather not receive. Aft.er spending three weeks in moon bug quarantine, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. "Buzi" Aldrin Jr., tried to avoid the glare of publicity. As Annstrong entered bi& ortice at the Manned Spacecra ft Center. he told newsmen be was going to "work, work, work. It's just another day." The lunar adventurers, pronounc~ "perfecUy bealtby" after their expo15ure to moon dirt, spent the night at home for the first time in five week• and then prepared for the traditional program for heroes -a news L'Ollfermce Tuesday followed by tickertape parades and a banquet Wedneaday. The astronauts were releued lrom the Lunar Receiving Laboratory's antiseptic 31-room i.!Olation su.i.Ui Sunday nigfJL a few hours ·ahead of schedule. A govern· ment commlUee of medical speclalist.3 concluded they carried no lunar germs that would endanger earth. Their departure WU quick. Within 15 minutes after lhey stepped past the quarantine barrier, thty were reunited with their loved ones in the privacy of their homes. Tornado Hits Cincinnati; 4 Dead, Many Homeless CINCINNATI {UPI) -This city's flrsl tGm&do in more than a half century left behind a $7 million swath of de!ltrnction nine miles long, four persons dead and 450 families homeless. Some 700 Ohio National Guardsmen patrolled the devastated aI'f:aa in northern Cincinnati and nearby 1uburbs to prevent looting today while officials appealed for federal disaster auistanct. Gov. James A. Rhodes, who toured the area early Sunday with Mayor Eugene Ruehlmann and other officials, called the damage "devastating." Many of the homeleaa were among some 400 families evacuated from the Lake Shore Apartments ln nearby Reading. where Mrs. JoaMe L~ 1ald, "I 1aw treea and piece• or lumber rrom the !Idea of the building flying through the ari." The Red Cross reported that 25 homes ~'ere destroyed and 85 others suffered major damage, I e a v i n g them uninhabitable. Some 350 apartment unit.& also were destroyed. Most of those forced from their homes foond &pact with friends and relatives, but 29 members of sil' families spent Sun- day night in a temporary shelter at 1 school. Over 100 persons stayed there Saturday night. Sylvester Del Corso. Ohlo'a National Guard adjutant general, who estima~ the damages, said the troops -patrolling and directing traffic -would remain on duty a8 long 85 they were needed. The cleanup already was well under way Sun· day. Fair Weather Over Nation • Heavy Downpours Hit Carolina, Neiv Orleans PllYllW OfWAWUTMU•EMfnwTTO l:NA.M.l&T I •tt-tl .. ' Temperaturu Coan al "•"'1 tiWd'!I llfllll ..,lct<owlnl!119 """" "-tty ...-. W"'°' _._, I .. II Ytttereil"t "'""""""' ... ~ '"""' t 1111!1 of '5 IO ,., lflll.flcl .....,P!lr•IU,. ,.,,._ ""'' .. 10 '1. Wtltr ....,_,,fu.rt .,,. ... --. ,.r,t """' "'"'' ...... MOM OAT ... . t~• ....... '·' •:w "''"' 1,1 TUtlDAY '"" '°"" ' .......... ''°'•·"' 01 "1"' "'"" .......... it·JO . 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(~ "' """''"' cit-ff, TPll lll'IW 11t1r"' •l'OdUt~ • --"""'r" t tll"(f 'flll• "'"""' In c.1 .. u 1111111 ""'"""~~ .,1,.., I • ··-a.iwn•i.1• 11 ...... rrt ..... ·~ ... l!.-w!llt '"'"' CllOCl,,...11 ..... ...... _ ....... F•ll'M,._. .... _., ...... ,_ Horool"'loJ "·-(lly l•1 v~ l • ... _ie. M-' M-· --~ ... , ... Nw1'll ,. ..... O.ltlll'll Ok~ (.tty .._ "'1"' """"'" "llMftly "I" ....... "•1•1'11 it .. id c"" ·-"""""'" s.11 Lek• CM'li '-" D'-J.an ''lllC:l-SN ... iPOlt• .. T.,...rm1I W1vot,,..11'ft ' Mltll l ... 'rK. ~ " . " 1~ 71 .. " '·' •1 n ., " n ,. t5 Jt ,, .. " .... .. . .. ~ IQ 11 101 " " M ~ " " 10' " '! m .. " • • ~ • .. " ~ • " .. • • • " •• • •• " n " n " " • .. • " ~ .. n " • " " .. , . • " ·~ • .. • "' '" Solon Suggests Wait for Russia Before Mars T1ip W ASIDNGTON (AP) -Tbe chairman of the House Spactl Committee said today the United States should not commit itself at tbla time to a landing on Mars. Rep. George P. Miller {o.<:alif.), said a decision about a n1anned trip to Mars should be delayed for five to 10 years wtrlle ntw technology is developed and more experience is gained in space flight. But that Unie, he !aid, there is a chance RUMia wlll Joln the United Slate! In making a Mars fllght an international exped!Uon. "It la worth waiting a few years to &ee If this will be poe:slble," said Pi-tiller in a speech prepared for House delivery. Coming from the chairman of the com· mitttt that will have to authorize funds for any space program, Miller's words should carry great weight with ad· ministration planners. HlJ coniments appear to run coonter to the expressed views of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and Thomas 0 . Paine, head of the National Aeronautics and Space Admlnistratioo. Agnew suggested shortly after the Apollo 11 launch that the oext goal of the: United Stat.es might be to send men to ?-.fars by the end of the century. U.S. military source 1 said two regiments -1,SOO troops -of the 9th Viet Cong Divlsion had already moved in- to northern Blnb Long Province. U.S. commanders laat mootb predicted a Communist offensive in Tay Ninh Provlnce. lt never came off and lhfy cited "pre-emptive" measures for lioj· ping it before it began. - Freeze 011 Prices, Profits Follows -Devaluation PARIS (UPI) -Devaluation of the frane went into effect today with a freeie on prices and profits to gtve the currency "breathing space." Tourists were delighted with lower prices and Parisian& jammed the Parll Bourse to buy &tocks with the cheaper currency. Bourse officials said it wu the first time the stock market had ever had such hectic trading in the traditional holiday month of August From 4,000 to 5,000 buyer• jammed into the columned building and pushed prices up anywhere from 7 to 20 percent. "The reactJon was Inevitable," said 1 Bourae spokesman. "It's basically a good reaction, but tt doesn't prove devaluation has succeeded or failed. We won'& k:aow that f<W ail' or eight months." France devalued the franc by 12.S per· cent Friday in a move so unexpected not even its Common Market. partners were WUN Informed in advance . Before devaluation a franc was worth 20 cents; now it Is worth 17~ cents. ' On the gold market, in the Bourse basement, gold commanded the same · price it did on the London market -the first time that had occurred since France imposed foreign currency controls on its citizens late last year. Tbe prlce was $41.51 per ounce, up slighUy from Friday. In London, the franc was stronger than expected . Its opening price represented a devaluation o( only 11.7 percent rather than the official 12.5 per«nt. The showing against the pound wa;s being closely watched since financial et· perts said it would-demonstrate either a greater faith in the franc or a le3ser fai th in the pound. British currency al5o wu undtr pressure in Frankfurt where there was an early rush away from sterlin& and into mar k.s. A F1 IE 1111 IT.'S EASY! DRAW A CLOWN'S FACE. celebrate National CtC1Nn Week by entering A&.Ws "Draw A. Clown" Cont.st. Here's how: draw and color a clown's face and bring It to this A.&W.· You'll 1et •free root beer-plus a chance to win a boy'$ or girl's bike: Ccntest·open 1o all youngsters under 15 from Monday-Frld•Xr Auaust 11 to IS~ Drawings w\11 be displayed at this A&W •n<I ludglng wil be held on Saturdly, &Jguat 16. You do not have to be present o ~Jn • IMPORT ANT: Be sure to .print name ind addross on your eniry. (Umit one entry per penon.J . A&W DRIVE-IN 2855 Hcirbor llvd. Cotta Mesa ' -- - " JEAN COX, 494-9466 ........,., -..,. 11, INf L , ... 11 Artistic Works On th 'e Block Too much bare space in your home? Want to grace your wall.!! \Vith an original painting? The time is nearing for the second annual art auction benefit spon· sored by So uth Coast Community Hospital. Dick Goldberg will begin the auctioneering at 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 30, on the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts grounds. Silent bidding begins at 11 a.rn. Sale funds are earmarked for the hospital's expansion building !llnd. Going on the block will be paintings in oil and watercolor, acrylics, sculptures, pastels. collages. weaving. crafts, pottery, stitchery, drift· wood and plastic. Prices range from $10 to $1,500. Last year artist Leon Franks offered a floral painting which went for $1 ,500. This year Franks is expected·to again donate along with A. \Veil· ington Smith, Nick Pasco. R. Russell . Re yna Fomeo, Roger Kuntz, Ken Merrill. Claude Parson, David Rosen, Charlotte Chambers and Tom Dadcliffe. Mrs. James Thomas, chairman, decided this year that a commit· tee will personally contact the area artists. Since it is impossible lo contact each artist. those not reached but whO wish .to donate may contact Mrs. J-lovey Cox at 494-3387 for pick-up service. Donations also may be delivered to the Laguna Beach Art Association. During the auction Ruth Chaffee, portrai t artist will demonstrate in pastels and oil. Thos e again working on the auction are J-Jarold Osborn. Jim Monll, Jim VanRensselar, Mr. and Mrs . Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. William Im· hoff and l\.1r. and Mrs. Oscar Hoffman. · More repeait helpers are the Mmes. Cox, J ohn Taul Bert Hen- drickson, Colesse Hammon, Victor Andrews and Fred Benning. I ----- I • • New recruits on the committee are Mrs. Peter Saltamachio, Mrs. Thomas Skelton, Vesta Curry a.pd David Phillips. Silver and Gold Chapter of the hospital auxil iary will man the re- freshments booth .· Food and coffe_e will 'be available from 10 a.m. Sales '"'ill continue until all work s are sold . ART COLLE CTE D FOR SALE -Paintings by famed Laguna Beach arti&'ls are being cataloged fOr the second annual art auc· lion benefit on t.he Laguna Beach Festival of Arts grounds Satui'~ day, Aug. 30. Proceeds will go to the South Coast Community • 111 I .......... llete H06pltal's expan$ion fund . Arranging paintings are (left to right) l\.trs. Peter Saltamachio, Mrs . Hovey Cox and James Thomas , members of the auction committee. A DOL L OF A COL LECTION -Mrs. Ralph Gibson of Laguna Beach stands with just a few of the many dolls which she has collected during the past live years. The 1ormer New Yorker designs and em- broiders the doll$' \Yardrobes, resets their jewels and can offer an interesting history on each doll. Antique.s All 'Dolled Up' By JUOY HURST Of fll• D11tr "ll!i 1"11 Dolls are not for little giri1,.onl)'. Dolls bring out the "litUe girl': in many women. One such woman is Mrs. Ralph Gibson of Laguna Beach, a doll collector. Veola also is a doll restorer who desi gns and embrotd· ers their clothes, resets the precious jewels they wear and offers an interesting commen· tary on each doll. · ' Mrs. Gib son has a fine collection. since she began accumulating dolls five years ego. 1-ler dolls are housed in a shatterpr09f gla ss showcase in one room of the Gibsons' mobile estate. "My husband converted the wall closet into the showcase," Veola said with obvious pride. Three shelves ere lined with dolls in a ll shapes and sizes. They are all modeling dress styles from various periods in history. Behind them are colorful pictures of Madon· nas encased in rimmed plastic. "One of my brides wears a wedding dress with reappliqued netting which is 70 year,; old and. another has a handmade brjdal veil which is 50 years old ." Veola also made the delicate missal which one -of1tbe br:ides,car· ries. . ' ~ Mrs. Gibson designed end hand S'litched 'most of her doll s' wardrobes. 'Mie m..inlature gowns feature velvet, silk, r~al lace Under· J!Arments, mink trim and feather bonnets. f\.'fodern day dolls can't compete.with all the ir old-fashioned finery. Many doll s renresent famous'ffi gures in history : Queen Bess comolete with purnle VPlvet gown and jeweled tiara and real wi.st; Marie Antoinette fn rich velvet, 1ace P.T11· broldered underlinen Q,nd iewels ; Queen· Wil· h11Jmi.na of the Netherlands, and a miniature Blu• Boy. . Severp,1 arP msrle pf porc,.lai., or rhin~. All are old and au'tbentic to the last detail. ''Two of my smaller dolls depict a marriage scene from Italy's 17th Cerrt.ury. "l\fy Spanish doll is 75 years old and was exhib~ted in a Laguna bank. The bank thought she was so valuable 'that they lock· ed her in, the vault at ni ght,'.' she laughed. "Also close to 100 years is the christening dress which is worn by my dream baby." f\.1akini the dolls as realls-Uc as possible, Veola ha s even given consideration to thei r accessories. "Jt is easy because I used to de. Sign and make costume jewelty. '' Celebrating their 52nd wedding anniver· sary. the Gibsons came to CeUfomia 13 years ago from New York. Ralph Gibson is a re· tired ·newspaperman from th~ old Daily Mirror .. They made th eir home back East in a beautiful. old coun1:ry house surrounded· by rollinl? hills of colorful flowers. ''Ori,ll"inelly we were from Nc\v York City on 40th Street near Gr:;:ind Cf!.ntral Sta .. tion and all the hotels. Oh. the noi se! "We li ved in peRce and nuiet in West· chester County for 12 years. ·For health rea· sons we moved to California '"'here lhe cli· mate is much better. But it's · not as pret~y he.re ... too brown," she admitted . . When the couple moved '"estward thex brou,ht 1'1:/ barrels of antiques. "My husband had · the job Of ·t>ackinl! an<t ·nQt one piece w_as broken," she: ·proudl y poi riled out. Their hom e in 'Lae:un-3 is" most interest· f11 ~ apd,colorf\11. A piario ddmineltes one wan. •·r never took les11:ons but could ~ave been a concert ni.llnist. I've nh~ved since I was 3 years <ilrt . \Vh en I '"ant t<i lea!'TI a new con· cert'l I listen to a ·record and then pick it up.'' Veol" al so is a self taue:ht nair1ter. ''When I decide to do something I do it alonP.." However. she doe5 admit that hP..r hu s .. hand ioe a "doll" whPn it comes. to helping her with the most recent collection. Spouse Found Way .to Show More Than Words Could Say DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 was moved by the letter from the wife who com· plained because her llusband never said, "I love you." My husband waa the same way, but he didn't need to say anything. The things he did apoke for him. We had been married 25 years when he died . IJe was not articulate -in fact he . wu more of a blusher than a ti.Iker. But there Were little pala and pinches, and somcilme.' a wink. I remember his wonderful gift..s during our ta.lad days - A 49 cent box oC chocolate cherries or a SO cent handkerchlef from lhe doOar BlOre. One day he bought me a botUe of cologne. He said he hact smelled It on a air! in the office and he thOi.lght I'd llke II. ANN LANDERS My loveliest memory Is the lime he came home from a two-day busineaa lrl p with an artltlclal aunnower in his suit- case. lie ~Id he bought It because he knew J loved sunflowers and it re.minded him of me. That sunflower is my most chertshcd possession. He. was telling me, "J·lol't you," without saying the words.O. CITY DEAR 0: Wll:at a mau be must bavt • been ! No woman should need word. wltlt m•&lc. Uke lh•l! DEAR ANN LANDERS: A friend of oun was the center or attention recently at a dinner party, He Is an amateur hyp- notist and told u1 tome fa scinating stor· les about what can be accomplished through hypnoois. · One of the points he made was that hypnosis can be used on alhlelts to make them perform better. Is this possible? P.fy hu.;band made the comment that if it were tru e, the technitjue would ~ utilized un iversally . Have you ever beard of lhls? Please comment. -UNCONVINCED DEAR UN: Hypnosll eaa ba\'e IOme 1urpri1lng and. exb'aordbw)r effects bat any proctd11re lnvolvtn1 Ute brain c.11 be dangeroae and abould aot be a!td u a ctmmkt. Yes, I bave beard of bypnotb:lnc · atliJettt to belp them beceme s•ptntan. Aboat to years •10 tbe SL Louis Brown• e:ngaged • hypnotist to Instill In the team a mort 1tposhl"e •ttltctde." ITbey wen to U.e ctlltt ud mor1le wu 11"'81·) TIM • re1olt: Tbe Brawu ended the 1eason tri 1eve:nth place. • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your reoent advice to teens Jn regard to where to go 11 they auspect they have VD waa u- c.ellent. You. said, "The law prevents lreatlng minon wiillout parental con· sent," but you made a point that mMt County Health Centtra do treat the kids who come In and keto quiet about It. You added, "Bless lhtnl :\ In 1967 the Connecticut General ..Wembly enacted leg~latlon (Public Liw 208) which eUmlnatea the prere- quL,Jte of parentat consent to examine •nd treat a minor. r thought you'd like l<> know. -J. R. (DIRECl'OR OF PUBLIC ' HEALTH NURSING) DEAR J.R.: Btoniy for Coitnec.tlcul. Wouldn't It be weoderfa.I If ALL 1ta&el had 1ucll eull1btentd Je•lllatort? Give In or k>Se hlm .•. wht:n a guy gi11es you lhls line, look 01.Jt! For Ups on how to handle the super sex sa1esn1a.n, check Ann t.anders. 'RetKt, her booklet, .rNeckln~ • and PetUng -What Are the Llrnlla?' Send your request to Ann Landel'1 In care of your newspaper, enclosing 50 cent.s in coin and a long, at.amped, self-addrased envelope. AM Landers wfll be glad to belp you with yaur problems. Send them to he!"<ln ca,.. of Lbe DAILY PILOT, •ncloalnl e aeU-addres.sed1 1tamped enveiope. I • lf DAILV PILOT Mondal, A1191111 ll, l16t Horos~ope Sagittarius: Patience Becomes Great Ally TUESDAY AUGUST 12 By SYDNEY OMARR NEW MOON \M.aY coh:iclde1 wltb creadve activity; brlap cllld.rea Into &M new1. Larae tpendbl prOIJm.I lllt 8 Ull· Fbwtcltl u,.tb raise hue a.Del cry about propoul whlc~ would affect r41 c reatloa facWtiea. ARIES (Marcb 21,Aprll 19)' Money, bud&et, desires m1y confiict. New approach ls ad- visable. Personal maanetism continues high ; you attract the opposite se:r. P I e a s u r e pursuits could be turned lo profit. TAURUS (April 21).May 20): Be ready tor added responsibility. Paym e nt s, loans, co llectlons are highlighted. Key is to be prac- tical and realistic. You cannot do two things at once. Reallie this and respond accordingly. GErtnNI (May 21.June 20): You may hear many rumors. Key ls to have self-discipline. Means act on what you know , not on what you hear~ Short journey could be postponed without loss. Be conservative. Pifeans avoid any tendency to appea r overbearln1. Remaln in· backa:round. Permit others to grab spotlight. This will favorably reflect upon your good taste. LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0cl. 22): Spending program should be reviewed. Continue lo go for quality. But be more selective. A new friend could point way lo exciting experiences. Keep open mind. SCORPIO (Oct. 2:J..Nov. 21): You require legal gr~n light. Don't attempt to by-pass rules, regulations. Stick with tried-and-true. Pi1eans leave get-rich-quiet . schemes I o others. Depend on reliable penons. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· GOLDEN MILESTONE Mr. and Mr1. Marion C. Dodd ' Dec. 21 ): lmmediate resulls ~~ p may not be forthcoming. aut arty future planning i s con· structive. Don't rush. Patience Honors Dodds is your great ally tDday. Ac· cent on long-distance, on travel and communication. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. On 50th Anniversary 19): Temptations feature yoor Mr. and P.1rs. t.1arion C. Los Aneeles SO years ago on . day. Tendency is: to ra-Dodd were honored on the oc· Aug. 9 and became rHideii Ls tionallze. New starts in new casion of their 50th wedding of Balboa Island in 1936. directions prove constructive. ·-. :'Music Lovers Will Love This Fashion Show CANCER (June 21:July 22): Some friends could be in- volved in money dispute. Be sure of facts . Be diplomati c in presenting views. Tbose who battle today could be allies tomorrow. Don't get caught in Know this and avoid being anniversary by a reception for After 12 years tn the discouraged. You are due for relati ves and friends in the restaurant business there U)ey valuable secQnd chance. Costa Mesa home of their moved to Corona de! Mar, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. daughter, Mrs. Joan Harrell. where they now reside. 18 ): Some apparen t Dodd, a member of the Three of the co uple'fi . Music and clothes will have a lot to do with each other next Thursday . when Newland School PT . .\ hosts a Back.rtcrschool Fashion Show to raise funds for a music Scholarihip. In exchange for a 50 cent · .ticket, a coll8ction. of fall school fa shions from Pen- __ '. ney's, Fashion Island, will be paraded at 7 p.m. in : From Appalachia, Texas :--------------- the school. Seeing new images of themselves are (left to right in mirror) Newland School students Theresa Fischer, 9, Margaret Driscoll, 11, and Rhonda Skjod, 11, Tickets will be available at the door or may be purchased by calling Mrs. Alvin Fischer, 962-2986, or Mrs. Charles Seo!\, 968-1910. middle, · LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Your ideas may be considered far- out by older individu al. No real need to be discouraged. Cycle continues high, You will get . what you want. But be sure you know what it i:!. roadblocks could boomerang Orange County Grand J ury in grandchildren are Deb b i e . in your fa vor. Be aware o( 1968, also has been president Lori and Bobby 1-larrell, who public relations. G e t point of the Newport-Balboa Rotary live in Costa Mesa with their across in best possible man -Club. Mrs. Dodd continues her mother. ner. Separate publicity from active membership in the Three other grandchilclren, notoriety. EbeU Club. Patti, Susan and Carol Young, PISCES (Feb. 19-March 2tl): The couple were married in reside in Whittier. Efforts may be spread in too1li";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; many directions. Key is effort to concentrate. C o n s e r v e strength, energy. Opportunity presents itself. Be ready - IT'S A FACT! Arrive ' -. .. . Students Soon ·Mesons Marry VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 )' Light touch wins the day. recogrµze It. IF TODAY IS YOUR BfRTHDA Y you ·have good sense of humor: you are a If you ·spent 30 •econds looking at each of our shag samples, lt would take you over 9 hours to see them all- so cqpie early and bring your lunch . ' . . I : Four \'ery important college : freshmen are coming lo Cosla f · Mesa this month and they : need hom es for one. year. l · There will be three girl s and l . one boy from rural Texas and : Appalachia and none or them : v.·l!J know anyone in this area j and none have ever been away · from home before. · . They are being placed In l . Orange Coast College through . the efforts of FOCUS, a pro. .. I gram staffed and directed en· :.lirely by college un- i dergraduates . FOCUS offers ~ J'.llnderprivileged, t a I e n t e d ·)'oung people a chance for a .. ;university career. ~ Area residents ,who have a t:COrner to spare in their homes ';for ttiese deserving young peo- 1 :)>le are asked lo contact Joe ~xroll. dean of student ac- tivities at OCC or Richard .~ . liernandez, director for the project for the disadvantaged. Coming t r o m Appalachia will be James Moore, a young man who wants to be an engineer, He is one of five children who managed to reveal his ability in science though many family dif~ ficu!Ues, in c luding the destruction by fire of the family home. Also arriving from the en· vironment of Appalachia will be Phyllis Conklin, another talented girl stelting the ad- vantage of college. Two girls. Delia Ro~ero and Janie Gonzalez come from ex· tremely small rural towns in Texas. They will be studying social sciences and American History, and Miss Gonzalez wan ts lo be a teacher. Jn the FOCUS program, 1Whittier Graduates ;~ ~Home In Costq Mesa Eichanging wedding vows S t · · t natural entertainer. People students who were helped In and rings in Presbyteri1n orop imis s generally enjoy being with th ff , .. 'al 1 Church of the Covenant were Ne·~ H·~r •--pti'mlst you. You have recently at· e e ort s irut1 year ast M M M Ro · d "'""' ~~ ~· aureen ary c ne an Club meets the first three tracted those with problems. fall now are 1· oining the staff Jerold w Ro>ens11·ne · · Wednesdays for a noon lunch. But personal advancement is lo recruit new people. Last The Rev: Bruce A. Kurrie eon in Villa Marina, Newport on horizon. DON'S CARPET SHOP 426 SO. MAIN 12 Blk1. No. of Bullock'sl ORANGE 1year a staff of 12 placed 86 officiated for the daughter of Beach. The last Wednesday of •To 11t111 out w~o'' 1uc_., fllr You 1ft students throughout the United Mr. and Mrs. WI 11 I am the month members meet in =:·~~~:; °'H4~•'"~~M~·~~ M Ro . d h f M WOIMfl." Send lllrttid1!1 11'111 50 Ctnll Sta tes, and this year a staff of c r1e an t e son o r. the same location for dinner 10 Om•rr ..,~trolow"r SK••'•· tk OAILY HOUIS·. •·•·•o DAILY amd Mrs. Jay Rovenstine, a!Jli~1~7~~dp~m~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~'~"~"~,•~~~n~•~·~·~"~"'~'~';""~"~'~";.:;:;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;::;;;::;;~C~L~OS~l~D~S~U~N~DA~Y~;::;;~ "' . I . 330 h. h h I a ; . . llon, ..... York, N.Y. 10017. 1s p acing 1g sc oo of Costa Mesa. graduates on 115 campuse! in. A gown or white brocade eluding OCC. was chosen by the bride, who The dramatic Impact or tak· was given in marriage by her ing young people out of thelr father. A p ea r I headpiece caught her illusion veil, and environments and giving lhem stephanotis and a white orchid a chance to S;ee another part formed her bouquet. or the country has been a She carried a sprig of white proven success, since 93 per-heather in her Bible, and Scot- cent of the students in the llrst tlsh pipe rs perfonned at the group are continuing suc· later wedding reception in the cessfull y. McRorie home. The FOCUS program on the ~laid or honor Jacqualine OCC campus also seeks $11'.m McRorie and flower girl lo meet financial expenses for Kathleen Scully wtre dressed the four incoming freshmen, ifP yellow and carried white including their transportation and yellow daisies . and out-of·state tuition. Tax Albert Paton was best man. deductible donations may be Ushers included Don Penelton, mailed to Kroll at the college. Bill McRorie and Gary Par· During the year, each of the rish. • ng1 Announces the Grand Opening of a Brand .New Eigure Control Salon! s---------------· I 13732 EUCLID AVENUE I I GARDEN GROVE I I ·1 BLOCK SOUTH OF GARDEN GROVE FREEWAY I •. c :..i Whittler College graduates ,..Sharon Lee Schynk.el and Ja ck .. Neil Swickard y,·ere married in rour will be making his own The bride is a Costa Mesa contribution by working at a lligh School graduate and her cam pus job. husband was graduated from FOCUS. or Fellowship of Corona de! Mar HI g h maid of honor wearing a pink C o n c e r n e d U n i versity School. He attended Orange chiffon gown and bridesmaids Students, is a part of Upward Coast College before entering Airs. Toni O'Neil and lifiss Bound, the federally sponsored U.S. Anny service at Fort I college preparatory progr am Knox, Ky ., when: the couple ,_ - - - - - - - -- -- --J OUR METHOD IS VERY SIMPLE! e college chapel. Their . t parents are tht Charles A. Scjlynkels of Mon tebello and the Clarence L. Swickards of Costa li-1esa. • The Rev. Leslie J. Ross of Montebello's United Method ist rt.c hurch performed the ccre;mony. The bride's gown was of silk 1 organia and lace trimmed with seed pearls. A crysta l . and pearl headpiece caught · htr four .tiered veil and she carried a butterfly orchid bou· quet. Miss Royce Ann Young Was INTRODUCING Sharon Eng e also wore pink. for low income students. will make their first home. Best man was W i 11 ji"-iiiiiiijjjj-iijjjiijjjj-iijjjiijjjj-iijjjiijjjj-iiijj[I Eyerman . and David Francis and William Crosbie were ushers. The bride also has earned e masters degree {rom Whittier College where she was a member of the Ionian and Forensic socie tie s. The bridegroom i s completing work on a masters degree at the same college. The couple have returned from a northern California honeymoon to the ir Costa Mesa home. FINAL CLEARANCE Women's Footwear e DRESS SHOES e $s~··:·r69o (formerly to $21.00) JERRY GUTIERREZ , e IMPORTED SANDALS e $3-90 !formerly to $14.00l e FLATS e $390 (formerly to $15.00) Sorry : no m1il or p~on• orde rs. All Hies final IN MESA CENTER LOSE 1 to 1 'INCHES IN 90 MINUTES or PAY NOTHING! • No Exercise •No Dieting • No Machine s • No Pills PLUS ... • No Contracts • No Minimum Number Of Visi ts • No Exaggerated Claims .--------------, I C•ll Today for an Appointment! I I I I 534-7950 BRING IN THIS A D FOR A $2.50 DISCOUNT I I I I I ---------------~ LADIES: Try The Glamo.ur Tape Method And Be The Envy Of Your Friends! After l,ht Glemour Contouring Tapes uo 1ppli1d, you simply rel11 for 90 minutes in our ~xurious lounqe •nd slMp • , • re•d or witch c.olor TV. 548-0460 WESTCLIFF PLAZA OPEN 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. MON. thru SAT. 225 E, 17th St. -Costa Mesa 13732 EUCLID AYE. 11 Ilk. So. of G.G. freeway) GARDEN GROVE ---~llL..__..~~~~~~~~.:......~----' ' ' ( J ' I ' ' l t I TI t s •• s y n c 0 " 0 h b " "' " w i< c n K Ii h; ct " of f!l " w. al of of co ch • lit P; '" rrt f aadlebark . ' EDITION ... __ _ Final ' ·-N.Y. Stoeks VOL 62, NO. 19 1, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AU,~usy 11, 1.949 TEN CENTS .Nixon Starts Busy Week at Clemente SAN CLEMENTE (UPI) -President Nixon opened a jam-packed week at the summer White House today with a series of high·level foreign policy conferences, a message to congress on welfai't reform and an announcement on reol'ganitation of the federal agJincy primarily responsi- ble for the war on poverty, The President scheduled a lale morning mee'ting at his new office complex ad- joining his summer borne with Secretary <>f State William P. Rogers. The Dow1a the Mission T1·ail Approval Given For Bigger Signs LAGUNA HTLLS -Orange County Supervisors have given approval. for Leisure World tenants to construct bigger i;igns In the planned community on t~ree properties abulling the San Diego Freeway. A Denny's restaurant and Standard Oil and Texaco gas stations expected to be built at the intersection of the lreeway al'ld El Toro Road can put up 300 square feet of sign each. Previously. they were limited to .100 6quare feet which Rossmoor Corporation ::irgued kept them from fairly competing with El Toro businesses a.cr06s the free· way in an unlimited sign size commercial zone. ;·rm glad to see special consideration given to the area, they are entitled to it," siad Supervisor Alt.on Allen. Criticism Gro\vs Over Radical's Hiring by UCI hfounting criticism of the hiring of radical leader Mike Krisman as a UC lrvine academic advisory coordlnator lt>- day was joined by Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce dissent. Jack Hammett. president of the board of directors. has written the UC Board of Regents asking them to reconsider the appointment of the ·27-year-old Laguna Beach man. Hammett's letter indicates it is an In· suit lo state taxpayers to hire Krisman, who was a UCl leader of Students (or a Democratic Society (SDS). Hammett includes a resolution passed by the chamber boarcl of diri:ctors htay 15. censuring SOS for announcing a ~lan· ned sabotage assault on American business and industry. Krisman -v.•ho received an A in a Santa Ana College philosophy class taught by John Birch Society member Sen. John G. Schmitz (R·Tustinl five ~·ears ago -went to work as a UC! staff member last month. His appointment has been sharply criticired by various vetera~s groups a~d other organizations holding opposite viewpoints. . The administration defended selection of Krisman for the liaison post he now holds, s11ying he is un.iquely qualified to bridge the understanding gap and reach sfuclenl rebels. under university organization, Krisman holds the title of assistant dean of 6ludents for payroll reference. a fa ct which has somewhat distorted his actual job. 1 In his leUer of Aug. 8. Chamber o Commerce President Hammett told t.he rr.gents his primary concern with K~isman appointment is the S~. af· filiation and that group's stated pohc1es. "Secondly. the educational insOtutions ha ve repeatedly soli.cited ~he aid of our chamber in supporting drives for. bonds an<4 tax overrides, .. Hammett conllnued. '"It is now apparent by tho appointment of ~like Krismfln that the support of the great · majority of ~itizens .!or higher education may be alienated, Hammell warned. "1 would urgently request that your august body reconsider the appointment of lhls man because of the known posture of SOS and utiUze your veto power," he concluded. Slocl• ~lorl•e U NEW YORK fAP) -The stock market clo.sed with a moderate loss today, after a very slow trading session marked by little bu,ylng demand. lSce quotation&, PKges 22·23). 1 Analyst, said some investors appar· tntly reacted to devaluation or the ~rcnch tranc by withdrawing (rom th4! action. ' Secretary arrived here during the night arler a fast trip to Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia Australia and New Zealand. This was to be followed by a n1eeUng between the President and Ambassador Henry A. Byroade who stopped off in California en route to his new posl in Manila. ~ Such was the starting pattern of one of the busiest wetks for Nixon since he took o(fice. In addition to today's welfare mtssage and statement on reorganization of the office of econo1nic opportunity, the President planned within a few days to disc.lose his selection of a new Supreme Court associale juslice to replace Abe Forlils, v.·ho left the bench May I& under heavy criUcal fire. The President also planned other messages to Congress this week before lhe llouse and Senate begin a long Labor Day recess. The ba sic content of the messages was oullined by Nixon Friday ' ' 'l • ' l ( ) I • NIXONS BOARD MARINE CORPS ONE FOR SAN CLEMF.NTE S1a1id1 Community Becomes Center of World Power -. Pea~e fo1· Prez No Pickets Mar Nixon lloliday--Yet Dy JERO;\IE F. COi.LINS Of tllt 0111, !"Itel 11111 President Nixon came to San Clemente looking for a little peace and qlliet. Sun· day he found it. The Presidenl said hello to his neigh· bors in Cypn1s Shore, strolled along lhe beach near hi s estate, chatted with sun· bathers, took a leisurely drive to Oceanside, and then swam in the fam ily pool. No incident of any kind marred.his day , "There v.•asn'l a picket in the whole tO\Vn,'' said a White House aide. And tourists, who filled Son Clemente's public beach, apparently respected the President's wish for leisure. They stayed av.·ay from the Nixon compound in droves. Mr. Nixon began the day by pul·putting fro1n his estate grounds in his golf cart early in the morning. lie was ac· companied by Marine Major John Bren- nan. his military aide. They drove around Cyprus Shore wav. Ing at youngsters, patting a few on lhe head and talking to residents of the ex- clusive residential community. "No, they didn't borrow any cups of sugar," quipped a White House staff mcn1ber later. The President and ~1aj. Brennan then \\'&lked al ong the beach below Cyprus Shore. St'artled beachgocrs quickly fl ock· <'d around and soo n he \\'as surrounded by a group of abOut 30. Many of them told him they supported his new welfare pro- gr:un, announced on TV Friday~ Mr. Nixon was overheard to say he hoped the progra1n would help people to help themselves. Later, the President climbed into a Lincoln Continental. and with Major Brennan al the wtieel drove to Oceanside. They took with them the Nixon family's Irish setter, King Tirnahoe, named for a village in Ireland. The journey was just a sightseeing trip, "They took a look at the harbor, turned around and eame back," .said a Presiden· lial staff member. A Secret Service agent closely follo\ved in another car during the 44-mile round trip. The huge White House press corps Sun· day slayed more or less put at the San Clemente lnn and the Surf and Sand !Jotel in Laguna Beach. Toward dusk, Sunday the President ond hlrs. Nixon swam in the pool on the former Cotton estate grounds. A quiet dinner in the mansion ended the day. "There were a few staff meetings:• said a \Vhite House spokesman, "but mostly it was a very pleasant, relaxing day off for the President." Today the Nlxons expect to welcome their daughter Tricia who will be flown in at El Toro hlarine Corps Air Slallon. · night in a speech broadcast al\d televised nationally. Tht President 's message to Congress Tuesday will spell out in some detail his plans for expanded manpower training. On Wednesday. if he followed the timetable announced earlier by his staff, a message would go to Capitol Hill asking for a slt.rt on a controversial system whereby federal tax ~venues wou ld be . shared with states. The most dramaUc period of the \Pieek * * * Nixon Tells Proposals On Welfare SAN CLE~fENTE (AP) -President 'Nixon sent to Congress today his pro- posals for a new $4 blllion federal welfare program to provide a basic Income for any American family unable to take care of itself. ' ~.Nixon said his new approach would end what he described as the "blatant un· fairness" of the present welfare system and create a stronger incentive among the poor to work . The mes..,age to Congress contained the proposals he outlined in a television-radio addr~s to the nation Friday night. It ln<:luded a specific request for $600 million additional funds for child care centers lo aid working mothers. Nixon said he wanls to provide child care for 450,000 children of the 150,000 current welfare recipients who will go in· to work training programs. The new system he proposes, Nixon tcld .eonves.1 ~ill 1 ... ep red ~· ·~ b10Aiilytesemaa "welfare IJlOOP aM make federal payments on the basis of certification or Income, with spot checks to prevent abuses. Nixon said he was outlining his con- clusions to provide a "coherent, fresh ap- proach to welfare, manpower training and revenue sharing.'' S~ilJc legislative proJ>OBals will be i>ent to Congress after t,he summer recess by the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Nixon said. Nixon Is calling for an end lo the present welfare systtm and the aid to families with dependent children pro- gram. adO(Mlng In its place a new family assistance program. ll would provide minimum basic benefits of $1,600 a year for a family of four -payable to the working or nonworking poor and to families with depentlent children whether headed by father or a mother. Niion stressed equality of treatment, a work requirement and a work incentive ir the program, He is eliminating any reqbir"errifnf !hat a household be without a father to become eligible for benefits. "That present requirement in many states has the effect or breaking up f:tmllies and contributes to delinquency and violence," Nlxnn said. He proposed that all employable persons who accept the welfare payments be required to register for work or job training, and that adequate and con· venienl day care be provided for children wherever it is necessary to enable a parent lo train or work. In 20 states, Nixon estimated, the present average benefit payments are lower than those he ls proposing. And these arc areas, he says, where poverty is often the most severe. The new system would encourage work , Nixon said, by allowing a new worker to retain the first f720 of his yearly earnings without any benefit reduction. Nixon •1rged Congress to begin study of these proposaJs promptly so that laws can be enacted and funds authorized as soon as possible, He envisioned that "for the first time, (See WELFAR E, Page %1 Lifeguard Strike Looms Clemente Guards Press Salary Increase De1nands Thirty-two members of the 34-man S&n Clemente Lifeguard Department have threatened to walk off the beaches Satur- day if thei r requests for a wage increase arc not mt:t by the city. The walkout would leave 18 miles or coastline without lifeguard proltcUon. Besides the San Clemente city beaches, the lifeguard department Is also under county contract to patrol Three Arch Bay, Aliso Beaeh.-Monareh s·ay, and Seit c,..k,_ .. • ) The departmerirs cove.rage t:xtends as far south as Coton's Poln1, the s1to...._of President Nlxon'11 summer White. llouse. Ufeauard Chief Dick llaurd and Capt. • -· - Phil Stubbs have not joined the group threatening to walk out. According to spokesman Lt. Steve Chorak, "All the striking lifeguards are asking I•'° be brought·up lo the average salary for a better than average llfeiluard department." Chorak, a member ot the dep8rtment for 10 years, said, "we've been asking for a salary lncrtase for yeara, but we've never been met." ·City clerk Max Berg, acting cliy manager while Kenneth C11rr Is on vec1- tit>n. said the city council approved a five percent increase for seasonal and· -. . - permanent lifeguards at budget hearings July 7. The lifeguard captain received a ?~lz percent increases. "At that time." said Chorak, "we v.·ere:n'f making demands. But we were requesting a nine percent Increase for the seasOOal f:mployes, plus a fivt day wOrlt· ine ·,..etki" Lifegµard s now work In excess or 00 hoUrs a wetk, thorak said. Chorak lllso said the city council was reques{ed to lncreaee the salery of the pennanent year round employe1, and that their salary be. In parity to present , police wage.. . .. -. promised to be Wednesday night In Los Angeies when the Pttsldtnt presides at a mammoth dinner honoring the three Apollo 11 astronauts and their famlllet at the ultramodern Century Plata Hotel. Far more invitations -reportedly 3,500 -have been Issued than the Century Plaza ~anquet hall can accommodate, and thousands more were trying to aet in. • RoSers was with Nixon for the early part 'Of the Presld211t's recent Asl8:Jl trl.p, Cause llnknown but the secretary left the White House party afJ.er ,.tanila and set out on a long iUnerary or bis own. Roger!' spent 11 days touring the western Paclflc, touching bases whli::ti ~ PresMient wu unable to inClude In his 25,000·niUe trip around the world. Rol!rt' mission Wll to explain Niloo's plans for ending the war In Vietnam, plus bis po.st. Vietnam outlook for relations between the United States and Aaian naUoM. Teen~ager Dies In Laguna Jail A 19-year-old Nortbridge youth died Saturday seven hours after being booked into the Laguna Beach j&ll by police. Stephen K. Mundahl of 1 7 I 3 1 Devonshire St., Northrldge, was pro- nounced dead on arrival at South Coast Comm un ity ·Hospital after "being brought from the jail by ambulance . Cause of death is as ye t unknown, Coroner's Deputy Jai:nes Bisner said to- day , There appeared to be no external cause and toxicology tests are now under way, he said . Pollet said Mundahl was found lying appartnUy unconscious In a jail cell at Planners Eye . ' Chauges .in · ' ' ·Building COde Proposed amendments to the Laguna Beach building code, including ooe to ease the restriction on building heights, v.•ill be considered at tonight's planning commission study session. The 7:30 p.m. session, lo be held at city hall, is open lo the public. The amendments were proposed by Laguna architects Christian Abel, Peter Ostrander aod Lynn A~ulr, who undertook the study at the request of Mayor GleM R. Vedder. The major·change proposed will affect hillside homes. Present . regulations require a n y building on an R·I or R·2 residential zone to be built no higher than 25 feet above the street elevation. If a home is built atop a bank 20 feet above the street, thtn it could ·only be five feet high in front, according to present restrictions. The proposed change would allow the building lo be built no higher than 25 fttt above the so-called mean grade at the building founda tion, without consideration to actual street elevation. The same change would be true for buildings in an R-3 apartment zone, ex- ~pt tho maximum height would be 3D feet. The other major . change proposed by the architects deals with sideyard set- backs. Current regulations require a set- back to be determined by building height. The proposed change would detennine: setback by a 10 percent formula based on average lot width. Visitors Find Visit Expensive Several visitors to Laguna Beach over the. weekend left town sadde.r and poorP.1' as nearly, $1,000 worth of propehy was taken from their cars. Douglas O. Dudley, 31. Los Angeles, told Laguna Beach l>Olict that $'5111 worth of clothing, suitcases, and personal ef· rcct1 was stolen from hil'I car while he and his wife were at the Festival of Arts Sunday evening. The car was parked in the 700 block 0£ Laguna Canyon Road . The theft of $.170 in stereo tspe playtn, tapes, tools and a wristwatch from the c.ilr of Richard H. Wight, 12. San M1rino1 waa reported Saturday. Laguna. Uusinessmen To Di scuss 'Hippies . . ' M!1llber1 of the Downtown Buslne.,_, AS10Clat1on will meet TUesday at 7:XI .. a:m. at the llotel 4a&un• to dl3cus& "The IUppie SltuaUon." Ouest speaker at the prtse:ntallon wlll be LI. Robert McMurr.,., ol the Laguna Beach Police force. T about 4:35 p.m. Saturday. A number Cf Seconal pills were found In the jail hal· way, but offlcen decined to Urik them to the prisoner's death. Mundahl had been booked inlo the cell at about 10 a.m. He was accused ol possession of dangerous drugs and belng under the Influence of a drug . ,The dead boy and two other youths v.•ere amsted following an accident at about 9 a.m. in the 200 block of Broadway. Mundahl was passenger in a car allegedly dri\'en by Raymond Eugene Strauss, 17, or Northridge, which collided \\1th the rear of a vehicle driven by Dorothy Ellen Springe, 41, of ?SO Coast View, Laguna Beach. 1'.1 rs. Springe is the wife of Laguna Building and Planning Director Ct.yde. Z. Sprihge. ·· Strauss, Mundahl and Charles Prescott Bangliart\ 19, of Northrtdp were all ar· rested by police after offictrr' all~~1 foo nd three pills in thei r car. Straua and Bangha~ were booked on chargea tlleging posseftlon or dan&erous druas. Report Slated 011 Saddleback Sb·ike Effects Saddleback College trustees tonight will hear a report on what effect two con- struction strikes, now settled, might have on the scheduled Sept. 22 opening of school. The item is on the agenda· as a pro- gress report and that listing should not this time draw nervous laughter as It did last week when there was no progress to report. Contractor \V. J. Shirley, lnc. du ring the week signed an agreement with operating engineers to gel them back on the job. Last month, Shirley Inc. signed a similar agreement with s t r i k i n g plum bera. The short form agreement binds th e contractor to abide by the terms of th e eventual Industry-wide strike settlemtnt without having to wait out the strike on its own job site. Sully·Mlller Contracting Co .• which is doing the road work and walkwa~ for the campus, has not signed a ahort fonn agreement, however. What effect this will have on campus opening will be told lonlghl. To provide sophomore 11s well as freshma n course offerings this fall, tlie junior college is moving pre-fabricated buildings from the Interim campus in ,.fission Viejo to a permanent campus ha U a mile to the. south and lnstalilng new pre-fab buildings to double Door space. Ora11ge Coast Weather Old Sol will break through those patchy morning clouds early Tues- day and boost the temperature in- to the upper 7tl'1 along the s:hore and back up to 90 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Fhtonclal columnist Sylvia Poi-tcr today· bt9itu a four·port 1er.le1 on the oreat land boom and telf.J whe ther yov con gtt tn 011 tilt action. lt'f on Poat ~2. • I ---~ -• ·, l Link ·Sought in :S·Iayings '° T 'A RESTLESS GIRL' Murdtr.d Heir••• Folger San Francisco Shocked Over Folger Deatli SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -San Fran· ciaeo society circles sUll were in shock _Joday over the death of Abigail Folger, :_&he pretty heireu alain in a mysterious "wttkend massacre at BeJ Air. -Mi.ss Folger, 28, was the daughter or petu Folger of Woodside, chairman or "Oie J. A. Folger & Co. coffee firm. Friends described her as a rtstless young ·wornlD interested in liberal causes. She was an honor student al RadcUife ind had worked in a New York bookstore ~nd an art museum at the University of California at Berkeley before becoming a 50eial worker and ~oing to the Southern .California are.a. -She worked for some lime in the ghetto ""iru of Watts and also labored L1 Thomas .Bradley's IO!ing mayoralty campaifn a few months ago. With her family 's approval, Ille in· ''esf.ed money in the chain of salons operated by male hair stylist Jay Se- bring, 35. also killed In , the weekend slaug}lter. Other backers included actor.a :Paul ·New:marc, Steve McQueen, Warren "Beatty and Peter Lawford . " Through Sebring, she met and mingled with many of Hollywood's most famous names. ' But she had the misfortune to be.. at the :,vrong place at the wrong time last wetkend. • Sebring was also well known in the b<iy ~rea where he opened a hair stylin1 salon 1ast May in partnership with public rsla· tions executive Art Blum. ' Blum, who said he was in a st.ate of ''stu por" from the tragedy, denied .reports charact.eriting the five per50n.s .11lain as "hippies." Blum said Sebring was "not even much -Of a swinger. His ambition was to become a. mlJUon.alre." -When Sebring came to the bay area, he y.·ould usually visit Lt. Col. Paul J. Tate. , Tate, rather of slain actress Sharon ,Tate, 26, is nearing retirement as assi5· tant chlel of the staff or intelligence at the Sil:th Region Army Air Defense Com- mand at Fort Baker here. Zond Heading Back t.10SCOW (AP) -The unmanried Soviet moon probe, Zond 7, photographed ·the lunar surface toda y, rounded the moon and is now heading for earth, an of- f icJal announcement said. OlllMOi! CGAsl ..Vll.Wt1NO <.Oi\U'AHY lt•Nrt H. w,,4 ................ ~ J •• 1r: a. em., Y'lct,.,......, -~ ....... lll•111•1 IC1~il .... Tli111W11 A. Mlf'tlil1e ~ ........ ''""' k!d11"' r. N1Q l--•..u Cir-, ftlllw Le,..M.._.~ 2lt f•t•il A••· M•n;~, ,y4,, .. , r.o. 1-. •••· t1u2 OtWOffl- C.t• Mcu: JM <Nnl a..,''"" .. ~ ~; ,,,, 'Nwtl ....... ....,.,. • ~ ~! -11'11 atrwt ·' . Actress, 6 ·0ther_s Kil~d.in 2 Incidents LOS ANGELES (UPI> -f!omlclde l'l••ds flJlllld out· ac,.., lllls sprawllnc dly t04a; 1tte1npt.1ng to tlt tocetber the murdetl~of.acl~!! Sharon Tate ind1®r othera With the blz.a.rre deaths o[ I Df&r· ried couple a dolen miles away. Both mUrdtr Sttnes were ahnllar. ThO flVt bodlu found at the blortdt ao-ttin• homl Saturday we:re 'rnuUlate'd by muMilt tnlte -w~1 as wtre the rt.. n\alns ot martet owner Ltno Lf Blanca, 4t, 11\d bis wlfe, Rosemary, 38. Tttt latter were dilCOvered In their Silvertake borne Sunc:ky..n.lght. The home once was o~ed by t.he late Walt Disney. • The v.·ord 'Pig" was scrawled ill blood on the door o:f ltttSI Tate's Benedic('Can- Yor\ home. j'Death to Pigs'' was dal&btd Oil U.. mrlprater door Iii lhe La Blal!ca home. $500 for Walk ' . . ·B~t'tor Doe$ 70 Miles in 24 Hours ' . • By RANDY SEELYE Of 1111 hl!r f'llM 1111t ' -:.,J. wfll ne•er do it agaln," panted Gary McMJ11ttr tllis morning. ,"I dea't . f'f:»mmend AJ1¥0De else trylne." McA.lli&ter JO, Hunllngton Beach, had just Yt'On $SOO on a bt!t he couldn't walk 70 miles In 24 hours. He complettd the 240 lwps with 45 minutes lo spare at 7: l5 a.m. today on the Orange Coast College track ir1 Cos~ Mesa. It all started Ia.rt week during 1 co!ree break at ShlM Enginetrlng Co., Santa Ana, wh~re McAllister Is the night fortman . \Vhen the Huntington Beach man said he could walk 70 miles in 24. hour! about a dozen employes laughed. Tiie la~hter led to a $SOO challenge:. ~1cAlj.!S~r a_ceepted the bet at three lo rive odds and started at 8 a.m. Sunday morning. He took three ihort breaks during the day Sunday and almost kist his share of the bet -$IOO -when he stopped to rut in lhe evening. At the mid-point last nl&ht however he stopped for a ha:f-hou.r lunch break and was unable to get back on his feet. Finally be pulled h!Inself up and for the next hour wobbled into a slow pact. But his atren-th returned and McAllister di11ppeartd Into the night. Gary Gardner, a fellow employe at Shinn Engineering, said he stayed with t.fcAlllster until 1 a.m. today. but left because "sllUng ,., as tiring as walking." "After his lunch stop at 8 p.m. Sunday, Gary didn't atop again. He knew that if he dld, be would never start again," Gardner said. "He paced himself very-well, averaging between 10 and 12 laps e\•ery hour," Grudner noted . '·bu\ after his lunch break );1st night h~ only went about eight laps the first hour, then regained his strength.'' ~IcAllister \~eathertd the ordeal qui te 'vell, but complained or problem~ with hi.s leg muscles toward the end of the hike. He ate lightly during t~e walk and drank water frequently. During the dark hou rs lanterns y.·ere placed around the track to kffp him from stumbling. His children camped on the OCC football field during the night Employes at Shinn Engineering say he Is aleeplng today and they don•t expect him to show up for work tonight. "fie may not be able to walk," they said. 3 Laguna Higl1 Classes Slate Reunion f 01· Aug. 23 l\1ore than 100 graduates of Laguna Beach High School from the years 1943, '44, and '45 have signed up for a U.year class reunion Aug. 23. Less than 50 openings remain for the baDquet to be staged at the . Lasuna Beach Country Club, accorditli lo Billie Loo Quam, reunion committee member. Reservations must be made by Aug. ti, slii:: said. The cost· of the evening will be $15 per couple, or$& stag. Chtcks may be · sent to Mrs. Quam at 980 Temple Ter· race, Laguna Beach. The evening will feature 1 no-host coc:kt.ail hour starting at 6:30 p.m. A prime rib buffet dinner will be served at 8 p.m., with dancing lo a six-piece orchestra from 9 p.m. to l a.m. Mrs. Quam suuesttd th1t t h e Thousands Pack Laguna Beaches Over Weekend Low surf, wann water and suMy ski.es attracted heavy crowds to the south coast beaches over the weekend, with relatively few rescues. La(Una Beach lifeguard3 reporttd beach allendance at 21,000 Saturday, with guards pulling eighl swimmers from two- foot surf. The water temperature was recorded at 70 degrees. Sunday's cro\\'d numbertd 29,200, 'il'ith only four rescues. Water temperature "'&:! 75 degrees, with IY.'O to three-foot surf. San Clemente guards pulled 44 swim- mers Saturdly from the tY.'O to five--foot surf. An ertimated 30,000 beachJoers !rollicked in the 72 degree water. There lrere 26 rescues Sunday among lhe 42,300 beacha:oers. Temperature of the tl'!'o to four -root surf y.·as 73 degrees . CBS OKs Cancellation Of l'liO Cigarette Ads NEW YORK (UPI) -The Columbia Broadcasting Syttem aMounced Sunday It lvould release tobacco manufacturers from thtlr uno cigart:tte ct'lmmercli.ls contracts if congress becomes the "final arbiter'' of t.he cigarette advertising question . CBS Prtsident Frank Stanton. in a let· !er to Sen. Frank E. t.foss (D·Ulah), siid lhe network \\'Ould agree to an offer. made by the Tobacco lnsUtute which would allow the c•TlCtlaUon of contracts tn 1170 by tht radio and teltVisl.on net- works. 79 Gary Firemen Face Trials Over Strike GARY, tnd. (AP ) -City flrtrnen ha\•e cndtd a slx~ay strlk,, but i9 of thtm f1Ct trl•ls lll•rtlng lOdey that could re:tult In the lo&s of their jobs. The 79 firemen -out of a tot al forct of 1i8 -were suspended without pay last ~·eek for participating in the !lrlke. graduatts bring pictures of "the good old days" to be passed around. Original recordifllS of the "big band sound" also will be played. ~ Fron• Page 1 WELFARE ... all dependent lamllies with children in America, regardle.u of whtre they live, would be assured of mlnlmum standard payments based upon uniform and single eligibility standards and "would be en· couraged to train and work and &tay together.'' "These are far-reaching effects," he told Congress, "they cannot be purchased cheag)y, or by piecemeal effort!." With the establishment of his "new ap- proach" to welfare, Nixon said the na* tion's antipovertr agency, Office of Ero- nomic Opportunity, will concentrate on finding new ways ol opening economic opportunity to those who are able to v.·orlt. "Rather than focusins on income sup· port activities," he s1id OEO "must find 1neans of providing opportunities for in· d!yiduals to contribute to the full extent of their capabilities and in de veloping and improvlng these capabilities.'' In a presidential statement also issued today, Nixon gave the OEO the highe st priority to develop a new spirit o! "social pioneering" to better the lot of all Americans. Students Due Noontime Passes Students al Laguna Beach High School \vishlng to leave the campus for luoch durina the school year must apply for a noon pass at the school'.s administration ofrlce, 625 Park Ave. A parent must accompany the student In order to complete the application. ac- cordln& to Student Affairs Director Gary Norton. Stud,ots who possessed a noon pass last year must have it rt.newed, he added. Fonns Yi'itl be available In the office beginning Aug. II. An administralor will be available to speak to the student and parent regarding the noon pass restric- tions. Offict hours are from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. fltonday throu1h Friday . Israel J ets Attack Bases in Lebanon By Unlttd Preas lattraaUooal Israel jets today attacked Arab guer- rilla bast! in a heavily wooded area in the foothills ot l\1t. Ii'ermon In southeast Lebanon, touch.Ing otr a series of ex- ph)slon.,. It was the &econd Ume lsra'll pla11ts attacktd Lebanon since the 1'67 Yl'aT. An l~raell spokesman said in Tel Aviv "a number" or planes C1rtied out a 30- rnlnute aUack on Ule area where lhc guerrillas have built stve.n basea for al·· lac~~ on Israeli settlement! and military pos1t1ans acroo1 I.he border. , .. Further evidence or a possible link between the multiple murders were ritualistic hoods on some of the victin1s. Hair stylist Jay Sebring Y1·as found tethered by a white cord ovet a beam. The other end of the rope was tied to Miss Tate's body clothed in brasi;lere and bikini pantie.s. Brutality ol the murders of the La Blancas was similar to that found at the Tate murder scene. Police said both La Bianca and his wife were found with makeshift hoods from bedclothes puJJed over their beads. La Bianc•'s body was carved with a series of X marks and the word "war" w1s cut into his chest from which a knl!e protruded. Despite the rema rkable similarities of the two case!, J>l)lice said it was very poss.Ible no connection existed. On Hollywood movie and television stage stars and stagehands speculated about the murders. Police were terse and uninfonnative. A unifonned officer stood guard at the foot of a long and winding drive that led to the rambling estate where Miss Tate, Sebring and the others Y.'ere murdered . One olfictr said ai; many as three persons could have been involved in the ritualistic butchery at the home of ?i-111s Tale and her husbarid, director Roman Polan.ski. Detectives said there was a possibility the murderer or murderers were "In- volved in a personal way" with the vic- tims. · They searched in particular for an unidentified suspect whose n•rne wm provided by WUfiam E. Garrelsrut, 19, a caretaker on the Polanski est.ate who liv- ed in a guest house. He wu the only person .alive when ollice.rs arrived at the scene Saturday morning. "At this stage, we have not ruled out anythi n1 or anybody," homicide Det. Lt. Robert lie Ider, who heads the in- ''estigation, told a news conference. "We have no solld information which would Hmlt us to a sinele suspect. It could have bun one min, Jt could have been two men, it could have been up to high as three men." , The victims: -l\Ilss Tate, 26, wife of film director Rman Polanski, eight months pregnant with a baby boy, died of multlple stab \vounds of the chest and back. Pe!ansk.i flew here Sunday from Europe and Im- mediately went into seclusion. -:-Abiiail Folger, 25, San Francisco, heiress to the Folger coffee fortune described as a "rich hippie" who at'. ltnded seance seuions, died ct it.ab ll'ounds in the chest. -Jay Sebrine, 35, Innovator of hair styling for men, once Miss Tei.e's fiance, died of multiple slab wounds of the bodv. -Voityck F'roltowsky, 37, worked with Polanski as an actor and writer in Polish films. died of stab y.·ounds of the body and limbs and a gunShot wound in the back. -Steven Pare nt. 18, a friend of Gar- rttson v•ho left home in suburban El ~1onte Friday to visit him, died of multi- ple gunshot y.·ounds of the chest. Garretson's attorney, Barry Tarlow . said Parent dro pped by the guest house lo visit the caretaker, who looked after several dogs and cats belonging to the owners. Tarlow said Garretson sat up reading until 6 a.m., Saturday but heard no unusual sounds from the main house, se:parattd from the guest hoiue by a swimming pool and shrubbery. · ''There was a party at the house the night of the killings," Tarlow said. "From the investigation made by my of. nee, our best gue:ss is that whoever did it was involved in a personal way these people who were killed." Attention today turned to the second suspect sought by Police. Helder said, "\\re are looking for an in- dividual. \Ve don't have any definite in· formation that he "'as involved. His name came up in conversation with Gar· retson." > -w;J-M5'01lio U"I Ttlt.....,. FIGURES IN CASE-Actress Sharon Tate chats wiih husband Polish film .Producer-director Roman Pol anski. in this file photo. Polanski 'vas in London when his wife and fou r others were murdered in the cou ple's Beverly Glen home. Highway Beautification Pinn Readied for County •• A preliminary rePort on the beauhnca- tlon of Pacific Coai;t Highway from Thrte Arch Bay through Dana Point bas betn reviewed and is now being formilited for presentation to the Orange County Supervisor! in early September. The report is the end product of a si1- month study jointly financed by the coun· ty and private individuals coordinated by the South Coast SccnJc Improvement Project headed by James E. O'Conner. The $15,000 study was conducted by Wiilson and Williams, a Newport Beach conirulting firm . The 66-page study proposes guidelines for development and improvement .of ex· i1Ung developCQWJt along· a 3..5 mile stretch of 'the -highway. · Neivport Bztrglar Reacls Playboy \Vhal kind of man reads Pla yboy? In this case, a man Yi'ho broke Into John Gay's house \vhile Gay end his wife \Vere at a movie, stealing a stereo and r~dios valued at $600. along with the August copy or the magazine {valued at IL25). Newport Beach Police said the suspect entered !he home al 2601 Llghthouse Lane lhrough an open rear bedroom win· dow late Saturday night. Pau Arn Wo1·kers Vote Today ou Pact KE\V YORK IAPl -Ground empolyes or Pan American \Vorld Airways com- plere \·oting toda,v on a tentative contract agr::ement to end the strike that began Friday. About 8,000 n1einbcrs of the Teamsters Union were scheduled to \'Ote . Union of· ficials declined. to discuss the pact until the voting was cornplete. It may also present a pilot plan by \1·hich all of Orange County's -U.5 coastline miles may be improved. The plan recommends zoning and htjght limitations, rerouting of Coast Highway in Dana Point. landscaping ot !he highway, and elimination of overhead l'l'ires. Flood Conb·ol Request Studied Orange County Supervimrs Tuesday "'ill consider a Laguna Canyon flood con· trol channel repair bid that is over the • engineer 's estimate, but nevertheless recommended for approval , Low bidder is the K. E. C. Company of lla\l;aiian Gardens at $19,850. Th e estimated cost for the work was $15,000. Flood Control Chief Engineer Georg e Osborne recommends a contract be sign· ed for the repair work in unincofllOrated territory south of the Big Bend of La,Huna Canyon. The channel Yl'aS damaged dur- ing heavy winter rains. Chicago Youth . s,vims Channel DOVER. England (AP) -Jon Erikgon, J4.year-old Chlcago schoolboy, became the youngest swimmer ever t.1onday to conque r the Enslish Channel. Erik son S\van1 from Cap Gris Nez on tlle: French coasl to a beach west ol Dover in l l hours. 23 minutes. The record, 9 hours and 35 minuteg, \\·as set by Barry \Vatson of Britain in 1964. Previously the youngest channel swim· mer was Philip Gollop. a British !Joy who y.•as 16 when he: made the crossing in 1965. If you're 5'8'' or over, we've plenty of suits left for you · middle of the nigl1t, grabbing ar1nload11 of suits, and driving a~·ay \\'ithin 71 ~{! ~onda of sma!hing the p:las!. Uaually the bot"gla!'ll are ca11ght., but in the meantime we're out &e,·en armload& o( 11nil!. The bur~lart etripped the rack nearest lhe ~'iudo"" It contained mostly our auih in sltort si7.e!l. 1£ you're 5 £1 . 8 inches or taller, don't you let our litlle h11rglary 'worry you for one minute. We have a au it in vour i;ize. Or &e\'era) dozen, £or 0 1hat n1a1ter. J\laybe you read in lhe Pilot "hal happened . We ditl1i"t order a hole in o nr '"·iutlow hul "'e ai11t our,. At 3 :29 a.u1. las t ·ru,.s•loy, Augutl 5 th, we barl some v.in· ilow shoppers. I tlon't know j f we !hou ltl lte n a1 tered by thi•, bot apparontly th•y liked wb•t they uw. They 11lammed a milk cnte throo~ our 1tore window, t(atherefl up 1everal fMt armload1 of -.ur 1oi11, scurried bae.k to their 1:ar, and raced av.·ay into tJ1e night. f'Wllly thiJI,!. Exactly 7 d1i .. before .. at lht time"''" re.newt1d 011r J)Ur@lnry ini urance, the con1pany insitted 1h1t ~·t in· it.all one of 1hose new •ilenl alarn11. It l'l·orked beautiftallJ:._ llie police dashed o,·er here. But t11ose burizlara were • dash a111I a half nhracl o( 1hc1n. Cone "'·irhou1 a lra~e. 11e len (nty "·ile) anti I have been lolcl that there arc ~'·era l untlerground Burglary f.olle~es in 1e1aion 1bi1 mm• m er. They instrnct young men in the latest method1 for breakjng into 1 •lore in the Any"·ay, it"a '~ry unu11ual (or our atore lo be open at 3:29 a.m. Our reJrular elore l1oun are 9:30 to 5:30, ~Ion· day throu,rh Sahtrday. When you cuter. rtmem. her. Don't con1e tl1rougl1 the ~'indow. Uae the door. The police know about th.ii ad. Jack Bidwell 3467 \'·la Lido al Newport Bl vd .1 in Ne"'JlOrt De-a.ch n ext lo Rirl1ard's ~larket and The Lido Thealer. Plenty o( free perking in tl1e rear. Pl1one 6734SJ O CopyTi11l11 1969. Jack Bid~·ell. I I • l \ . . • ·Newport Darhor · ED.ITION VOL 62 , NO. 191 .• 3 SECTIONS, Ji. PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST I I', 1969 TEN ·CENTS Nixon Starts Busy Week at Clemente SAN CLEMENTE (UPI) -President Nixon opened a jam·packed week at the summer \Vhite House today with a series of high.level foreign policy conferences, a n1essage to congress on welfare reform and an announcement on reorganization of the federal agency primarily respoosi· ble for tbc war on poverty. The President scheduled a late morning meeting at his new office complex ad- joining his summer home with Secretary of State \Villlam P. Rogt:rs. The after a fast trip to Japan, South Korea, Secretary arrived here during \he night * * * No Troubles Mar Nixon's First Day By JERO~tE F. COLLINS Of ltll 0 9111' ,lllt Sltff President Nixon came to San Clemente looking for a little peace and quiet. Sun· day he found it. The Presidenl said hello to his neigh- bors in Cyprus Shore, strolled along the beach near his estate, chatted with sun- bathers. took a leisurely drive to Oceanside, and then swam in the family pool. No incident of any kind marred his day. "There wasn't a picket in the whole to1vn, ., said a White House aide. And tourists, 1vho filled San Clemente's public beach, apparently respected the President's \\.'ish for leisure. They stayed 11way from the Ni1on compou nd in droves. f.fr. Nixon began the day by put--putling from h~ estate grounds in his golf cart early in the morning. He was ac- companied by Marine Major John Bren· nan, his military aide. They drove around Cyprus Shore wav. Ing at youngsters, patting a few on the head and talking to.residents of the ex- clusive res.idenlial community. "No, they didn't borrow any cups or sugar," quipped a White I louse staff member later. The President and f.1aj. Brennan then "'alked along lhe beach below Cyprus Shore. Startled beachgoers quickly flock· ed around and soon he was surrounded by a group of about 30. Many of them told him they supported his new weUare pro- gram , announced on TV Friday. Mr. Nixon was overheard lo saHe hoped the program would help peGp'le to help themselves. Later, the President climbed into a J~incoln Continental. and with Major Brennan at the wheel drove to Oceanside. They took with them the Nixon family's Irish setter, K.ing Timahoe, named for a village in Ireland. The journey was just a sightseeing trip. "They took a look at the harbor. turned around and came back," said a Presiden- lial stafr member. A Secret Service agent closely followed in another ca r during the 44-mile round trip. The huge White House press corps Sun· day stayed more or less put at the San Clemente Inn and the Surf and Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach. 6 Youths Attack Riverside Girl In Beach Caves A 15--year-old Riverside girl narro\\·ly escaped a rape attempt by six youth' after she was accosted in the ca\'es or Little Corona de! f.1ar Beach Friday night, police revealed today. The girl told officers she was walking on the beach at 9 p.m. with a girlfriend \Yhen a boy asked I.hem for a cigarette. They talked together for a few minutes, i nd were then joined t1y five other youths. all of about 17 years or age. They continued to talk. but the victim '& girlfriend became nervous and walked orf. The \1ictim, too. began lo leave. As 1ihe riid, the six youths grabbed her by the legs and pulled her into the cave, where th@y began to tear at her clothing. She asked one youtb to tr.II the others to leave. hoping she CflUkl ·escape U she appeared willing lo cooperate with one of her assailants. Five of the yoolhs Iert , and th~iclim \'!'as 11one in the cave with the. remaining youth. . At that moment, htr companfon return- ed with a serviceman, 1 friend of both gl.rls. The boy In the cave told tier to ao to her friends. and he dashed out. The girl eKRpM unharmtd . Taiwan. Indonesia Australia and New Zealand. '.this was tq be followed by a meeting_ between .Ole Piesidplt and.Ambassa<l:Or Henry A. Byroade who stopped off in Callrorilla en route fo his new post in Manila. Such was the starting P.&tlern of one of the busiest week' for NixOn since he took orfice. In addition to today'! welfare message aiid Sta.temeiit on reorganizatio.n' of the office of e<:onomic opportunity, the Presid~t planned wlthip.a.1 few days ~ disclose his selection of a new Suprerne , Court ~iate juil.iCe to •rep!Jce Abe . ' ' . • Fortas, who left the bench f.fay 15 under heavy critical fire. The President also planned other ' . messages lo Congress this week be.fore tl1e I louse and Senate begin a long Labor ROGERS FINDS ASIAN" SUPPORT: SEE ¥AGE 2 Day recess. The basic Ctinlent_ oI the messages was outlined by Nixon Friday night in a speech bioadcast and ieleVi~ optionally. The PresideTit's message lo C~~ , Ul'I T1i.1M .. FIGURES IN CASE -Actress Sharon Tate•chats with busband, Polish film producer:-director Roman POlanski, In this file photo. Polanski 'vas in London when hls•wife and four others mre murdered in the couple's Beverly Glen home. Congress. Gets Ni~on's $4 Billion Welfare Plan SAN Ci,E~1 ENTE CAP ) -President Nixon sent to Congress today his pro- posals for a new $4 billion federal welfare program to provide a basic lnCXlme for any America n family unable to take care of itself. Nixon said his new approach would end what he described as the "blatant un- fa irness'' of the present welfare system and create a st ronger Incentive among the poor to work. The message to Congress contained the proposals.he outlined in a televislon·radio address to the nation Friday night. It included a specific request for WJO million-additional funds -ror child care et>nlers to a.id working mothers. Nixon said he wants to provide child care for 450,000 children of the 150,000 rurrent wellare recipients \vho will go in· to work training programs. The new system he proposes., Nixon lold Congress, ·will lessen red tape, end bitterly resented "welfare snooping" aod make federal payment.& on the basis of certirlaa tlon of income, with spot checks to prevent abuses. Nixon said he was outlining his con- clusions lo provide a 'ltoherent, fresh ap- proach to welfare , manpower training and revenue sharing." Speciiic legislative proposaLs will be sent lo Congress after the summer recess by the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Ni1on said. Nixon is calling for an end to the pre&enl welfare &ystem and the, aid {o families wilh dependent children pro- gram, adoptlng in Its place a new family assistance program. It would provide minimum basic benefits of Sl.600 a year for a fatrtily of (See WELFARE. Page%) Tuesday will spell out In so me detail·hls plans for expanded manpower training. On Wednesdi!Y, if he ·followed the. timetable announced earlier by his staff, a message would go to Capitol Hill u~ing for a start on a controversial system "'hereby federal tax revenues would be shared with slates. The most dramatic period of the week promised to be Wednesday night in Loa Angeles when the President presideJ: at a mammoth dinner· honoring the three Apollo 11 astronauts· ind their families at the ultr.amodern Century Plua Hotel. Far more ~vilationa -reportedly 3,500 -hive been Issued than the Century Plaza ·banquet hall can accoonnOOate, and lhousands more were teylnj: to get In. Rogers was: with Nixon for tbe early pa~ o.f the President's recent Asian trip, but lbe secretary left the Wtfite House party after Manila and set out on a long itinerary of bis own. Rog~ spent l l day1 touring the western Pacific, touching bases which the President was unable to include in his 25.tlOO·mile trip around the world. Rogers' mlulon ws to explain Nixon's plans for ending the war in Vietnam, plus his poat-- Vietnam outlook for relations between ~ U.nited S~tes and Asian naUona. 'Afost of the speculatloo ~t J':i'ilon'1 ne.1t choice for the· Supreme Court wu coming out of Washington ,_nc1 ~t:d la"rgcly of long lists of jurists who hive figured in earlier speculation. · Nixon told a CQ'.lwd ,at lhe. Q[aoge.~ ty Airport Saturday wben he arrived in Callfornia that only two people knew whO the new appointee wOuld ~ -Mitchell al'ld him.self. This lndfcatedJlOt even the prospective associate 'j\l!lice knew as or Saturd ay night he was about 'to be plo- p9sed for the ·aatlon'1 highest coUrt. Bizarre Deaths Probe.d ~ . . . Couple's Slayirig Similar to Murde1· of·5 LOS ANGELES (UP.I) -1-lomicide squads fa nned out across this sprawling city today attempting to tie together the murders oC actress Sharon Tate and four others with the bizarre deaths or a mar· ried couple a dozen miles away. Both murder scenes were si milar. The five bodies round at the blonde ac- tress' home Saturday were mutilated by multiple knife wounds, as were the re- mains ·or market owner Leno La Blanca, 44, and his wife, Rosemary, 38. The latter were disC1lvered in their Silverlake home Sunday nigh t. The home once was owned by the late Wall Disney. ,The word "Pig'' was scraw led in blood on th e door ot Miss Ta te's Benedict Can- yo n home. "Death to Pigs" was daubed on the refrigerator door in the La Bianca home. Further evidence or a possible link bet\vetn the multiple murders we.rt rill!&lllllo ~ OD. IOm• qi il)e YjcUnp. ·i'Jtair"ttyUst -:J~y ~brihg was found tethered by a white cord over a ~m. The other eod or the rope wu tied t!> Mis1 Tale's bodJ clothed tn brualere and ' bikini panties. Brutality of the murders or the La Biancas was similar to that found at the Tate murder !ceoe. Police said both La Bianca and his wife were found with makeshift hoods from bedclothes pUlled over their heads. La .Bianca's body was carwd with a series of X mark! and the v.·ord "war" "·aa cut into hb chest from which a knife protruded. Despite the remarkable similarities of the two cases, police said it was very possible no connection existed. On Jlollywood mov ie and television stage stars and stagehands speculated about the murders. Police were terse and uninformative. A unlfonned officer stood guard at the foot of a long and winding drive that led to the rambling estate \\'here Miss Tate, Sebring and the others were murdered . One officer said as many as three persons could have been involved in the ritualisllc butchery al the home or f.tiss Tate and her husband, director Roman P.olanski. Detectives said' there was a possibility the murderer or murderers were: "in· volved in a persona l way" with the vie· Urns. They searched In particular for an unidentified suspect whose name was provided by William E. Garretson, 19. a caretaker on the Polanski estate who liv- ed in a guest house. He was the only pe rson alive when orficers arrived at the scene Saturday morning. "At this stage, we have not ruled out anything or anybody," homicide Det. ~t. Robert Helder, who beads the in· vestigation, told a ne~·s conference. "\Ye l1ave no solid inrormallon \\'hlch would llmft us to a single suspect. It could ha\'e been one m11n. it co11ld have bctn two tSee LA SLAVINGS, Page. 2) ' ' 'NOT EVEN A SWINGER' D•1d H1lrdrt11tr: S,tlrln1 Both Pra11ii1ient San Franciscans Shocked At Folger, Sebring Death SAN FMNCTSCO (UPI) -San Fran- cisco society circles still were in shock today over the death or Abigail Folger, the pretty heiress slain in a mysterious weekend massacre at Be.I Air. Miss Folger, 26, was the daughter of Peter Folger of Woodside, cha irman of the J. A. Folger & Co. coffee firm. Friends. described her as a restless young woman interested in liberal cai.ises. She was an honor student at Ra dcllfre and had worked in a New York bookstore and an art museum at the University of California at Berkeley before ~mjng a socia l worker and going to the Southern California area. She worked for some time in the ghettG area or Watt! ltld also labored 1.i Thomas Bradley's losing mayorally campaign a few months ago. With her family's approval , she in- vested money in the chain of salons operated by male hair stylist Jay Se- bring, 35, also killed iif the weekend slaughter. Other backcrs ·includcd actoni Paul .Newman, Steve f\tcQueen, Warren Beatly and Peter Lawford. lions executive Art .Blum. Blum, who said he. was In a ilale of 0 stupor" from the tragedy, denied reports characteriting the five perso111 slain as "hippies." Blum said Sebring was "not even much of a swinger. Ills ambition was to become a ml llionalre." When Sebring came to the bay area, he would usua lly visi t Lt. Col. Paul J. Tate. Tate, father of 1lain aclress Sharon Tale, 26, is nearing relirement as aSSb- tant chler of the st.aft or intelligence at the Sixth Region Army Air Oefe~ Com- mand at Fort Baker here. Stock JtJarkets NEW YORK (APl -The !tock market closed with a mode.rate11QSs today, after a very slow trading ses.o;ion inairked by little buying demand. '(See ~uotations, Pages 22·23). · Analysts said some · investors appar· en11Y reacted to devaluation of the-J?rench franc by withdrawing from ~he action. Man Wins $500 -for Walk Through Sebring. she met and mi ngled with many o! Hollywood 's most lam~l.lS names. But She had the misfortune to be al the wrong place at the wrong: lime last weekend, Orange .But He Had to Cover 70 Miles in 24 Hours By RANDY SEELYE Of ,.. DailJ l'ltlt 11•11 ''I will ne\•er do It again,'' pan~td Gary f.t i;:Allis.ter lhls morning. ''I don't re~end anyone ebe tr1·irrg." · t.1 cAlllste.r 30, Huntington Beach, had just won $500 on a bet he couldn'l welk.70 miles In 24 hours. Ile. completed· the.240 l<ips with 45 minutes lo spSre. at 7: 15 a.m. tudny on the Orange Coast College track in Custa Mesa. It all 1tart~ last wetk during a coffee break al Shinn Engineering Co., Santa Ana, whe.re A1cAUister is the. night foreman. When the Hunllngt.on Beach man said he could walk 70 miles In 24 hours about a doun employes laughed. The laughle.r led to • f500 challenge. McAllister 11ffi!pted the bet al three lt> rive odds al\d started at I •m. Swtday morning. He took three short breaks during the day Sunday and almost lost his share of the bel -$300 -When he stopped to rest lillhe evenffig. -; . At the mld·polnt la~t night howe.Ver he stopped for a ha:J-huur IUl'lch brhk ahd wu unab le to get back on hill feet. Finally he pulled himseU up a.nd lot the next hourr wobbled into a 11low p.ace. But his strength returned and McAllister disappeared Into the night Gqty Gardner, a fellow employe at Shinn Englnetring, said h,.....layed with McAllister unUl I a.m. tOday, but left becaust •1sltUng IJ as tiring as walking." "After hJs lunch stop 1t I p.m. Sunday. G!lry didn't stop again. lie knew that if he did, he would never 11tart sgain," Gardner said. ' "He paced him&elf very well, averaging between 10 and ll Jape evef)' hour." 9ardner notril , "but after hi!! lunch bru.k last night he' only weot about eight lapa tJ1e fln:t h'our, ·then re·gained his strength." · ~TcAILister wealhfred the ordeal quite well, but complained of problems with his · leg muscles tO\lfard the. end ol the hike. lie ate lightly during the: .l"a\k and . dranlt water frequentl.Y. DiJrlng the dark hoor11 latne11ns werf! 'placed around the · trJ1ck tv ktep....hlm from ·stumbling. His chlldrtn camped oo lhe'OCC football field during the nigtit. Employes at Shinn Engineering u.y he Is 1leeplng today and they don't expect him to show up tor work &onight. "He may not be 1bft to walk,'' they SP id: • Sebririg was al so Well known in ttre bay area where he opened a hBir styling ulon . last May in partnership with public reli· ' ' Barry to Lecture ' . . . . Ort Grand Can yo1i · While the 1968 Republican choice vat•· • lions In Sin Cleniente·this month, a 1984 echO will' appear in thf: Harbor Arei for an Orange Coast. YMCA benefit lecture. Senator Barry Goldwater wlll be featured Aug. 27 11t 8:30 p.m., !howing color slides and speaking on the. Grand C1nyon 11nd hia home state. Ariiona. Reservation! are $10 per penon and may be made by celling Dorothy Yardley at the Balboa Bay Club, a favorite Goldwalt:r 8J>1 on the former pres\denUal cendidate'1 coastal vlilts·. \Veatlaer Old Sol wlll break lhn>ugh thol;e patchy morning ck>uds early Tues- day and boost the temperature in- to the: upper 'rots along the 11hore and back up to 90 rurlher inland. INSIDE TODA\' f i"14i1eial columnJtt SMlvin Porter today begins a four-par t ttrit't on tht areett land booJn nnd ttUt whtihtr you can (11& iii ott th« actiott. lt't on Pog1 22. .. / ~ J DAll.Y PILO: v • $ .M~y; A11,.,11 ll, l!IH • • 1f ogers Says Asia P~licy ~ellBacked ,, ~ ol:Slalt WUllairr p . Roser• 1ljd tod&y he IQUnd •'!troa&. <nthusliatic ·~~· for tht President's new Asian f;~~~ a 100,000 lhlle tour of the r JJe told .a pr(Ss eonterence In San qemente he . was ~raaed b..f the ....... ol th• lflp. • " Pruldenl, Nixon two wtclta agQ an-• noQ~ the United Stt~ in \he (ut1:1re would lend material and --advisory 11s.1Sf.. a.nee to eastern Asian nations against Cornn{untst aggression, internal aod ex· ternal. llat»U.. O.S., •ai41he Prwden~ !'Y.!d comnilt no lroop.i. ' . ~Without e1ceptlen, ,, said Secret&rJ Ro(en l:t ot;iooii today, •1every leader t ·~ tp v er y entHuslasUcallJI ind 1'lror,gfy "'J>por)ed tli< Pr'"1!font'• poll.,.. • "nre mtlons-vltlt.ed by Rottten Included J-1Seutb 'Korea, the 11eP"blic of Qjlni," Australl.a and New •. Zealand. ' t 111 WIS stroqgly ~raged by Ull 5Uecess of the trip," 11ald Rogers. -· ~secretary•-*' aaJd the lull ·in the fi~htiitg in Vietnam is continuing, de- •p1te bloody outbreaks. Rogers Wll5 askf!d whether any or the Pacific nations had asked that their troops be withdrawn from Vietnam, as the U. S. is atte.mptlng to do with its trooos. "No," he replied, "but they did show interest in wanting to be phased in (the withdrawal ) at some point along the line." . He said his talks with U. S. military leaders indicated that enemy infiltra· tion of South Vietnam "is down to a con. siderable extent.'' Rogers said be i!1 llnible to under· stand Red China's bellieose reaction to his statement last week that the U. S. wished to enter talks with the Coounu- nist nation. "1be next day," be noted, "they vilri- ollcally called me a pique of war. I have dllOculty undtrt.saodlng that. Our point Is that we'd like to reduce world tensiO(lS. Cl>viou~ly, Red China is caus- ing a gree.t deal of these tensions." :Newport Woman ' 'Misidentified In Fraud Case A Newport Beach woman, ?i.1rs. Cleo ~f. JohMon, was erroneously identified as a 'de.ftndant Jn criminal fraud and grand theft procttdings in DAILY PILOT edi· tions published Dec. 4, 1968. The actual defendants in lhe cau wtre Mrs . .Johnson's husband, Cl$0 Marvin Johnson, Harry L. ·Hibbard, '111urlcrw W. Hartley and Richard M. Silverstein. Mr. Jcihnson was later acquitted of all charges involved in the indictment before the case went to an Orange .County Superio·r Court jury. At the tlrne ·the story was published, !he Johnaons resided at 1901 Kings Road, Newport Beach. The misidentification apparent I y ·resulted when e-01lrt officials assumed that "Cleo" was a woman's name and therefore referred to the defendant as "Mrs." The DAILY PILOT regrets the ~rror. Ne,vport Eatery Plaque Stolen A thief walked out of l-Ienry·s Restaurant tale Saturday carrying a fi\·e· foot coat of arms valued et $500. The huge plaque, made entirely o! mosaic tile, was di scovered missing by Henry Placentia, owner or the restaurant •t 2~ W. Coast Highwa y, Newport B'ach. It features an ''H" in th e upper lert corner, cocktail glasses in the upper right, a ~1exlcan sombrero in the lower k!ft corner. and crossed tennis racquets in the lower right. All are on a field of blue, gold and pink. llAllY PILO I DU.HOI ~n ll'Ull ISMlllCI CO##AHY ••~ N. Wee41 .,_....,._ ....i P*bllff Jedi 111. c.t1,., ~b ''-*"" -O-• .t,\ffrllllfl Th•,_.,, tCe.-.il ,.j ... Tl!•"''' A. M••••i•t ~..i .. 'di"" _ J•r•m• f, Ce11li111 ---Clty h i._. ---2211 w .. t ltlb•• '•"""'" M1U!•t -'4'••HI P.O .... ltJI, tt&&>. °""'-C•ll ""'"I IJt Wt1! M ,..... ~ lffd'l1 m ,.,., a.-......,.."" kW!'! .. lflil ..... CAIL'f' PILOT PMI• llr 011• s-k•• Derric·I, Dis11ta11iled \Yorkers today began dismantling 136-foot oil exploration derrick on northe'ast side of Costa ~lesa after geologists for Occidental Pe- troleum Corporation despaired of finding any black gold under the city. Drilling site near Bear Street and Paulari~o Avenue actu~lly is in county territory. Project had met heavy resistance from neigh· -boring Co6ta Mesa residents. Mesa CofC Joins C1·itics Of UCI Hiring l\.1·is1nan Mowiting crJUclsm of the hiring of radical leader Mike Krl!m•n as a UC Irvine acaderiiiC advisory coordinator to- day was joined by Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce dissent. Jack Hammett, president of the board of directors, has written the UC Board o! Rtgents askjng tbem to reconsider the appointment of the 27-year-old Laguna Be1ch man. Hammett's letltr indicates it Is an in- sult to State 'taxpayers to hire Krisman , \vho was a UCJ leader of Students for a Democratlc Sociefy (SOS). HAmmetl includes a resolution passed by ihe 'Chamber board of directors May 15, censuring SOS for announcln1 a plan- ned sabotage assault on American businesa and industry. Krisman -who recei ved an A in a Santa Ana College philosophy class taught by John Birch Society membe r Sen. John G. Schmitz (R-Tustin) five years ago -went to work as a UCI slaff member last month. Hi.s appointment has been sharply criticized by various veterans groups and other organizations holding opposite vie\\'points. The administration defended selection or Krisman fnr the liaison post he now holds, saying he is uniquely qualified to bridge the understanding gap and reach student rebels. Under university organization, Krisman holds the title of assistant dean of :students for payroll refere nce, a fact which has some\\·hat distorted his actual job. In his letter of Aug. 8, Chamber of Commerce President Hammett told the regents hi1 primary concern v.'llh Krisman a'ppointment is the SOS ar- filialion and that group's stated policies. "Secondly, the educational institutions have repeatedly solicited the aid of our chamber in supporting drives for bonds ancf tax overrides," Hammet t conti nued. "It is now apparent by the appointment of Mike Krisman that the support of the great majority of citizens for higher education may be alienated," Harrunett v•arned. •·J ~would urgently request that your august -body recons:ider the appointment of this man because of the known posture of SOS and utilize your veto power," he concluded. Largest Beach Crowds Of Year Hit Newport Sunny skies, the 'varmest water of the year -72 degrees -and scorching weather inland Sunday accounted !or the largest beach crowd of the year in Newport Beach . Lifeguards eslimalcd that I 10,000 sun and surf worshipers cro1rded onto the ..:ity's sands Sunday. Normal Sunday totals for beachgoers, lifeguards said. ranges around 90,000. Saturday·s crowd, 90,000 persons, met From Page J \VELFARE ... four -payable to the working or nonworking poor and to families with dependent children whe ther headed by father or a mother. Nixon stressed equality of treatment. 11 \VOrk requirement and 11 work incentive 1r the program . l{e is eliminating any requirement tha t a household be without a lather to become eligible for benefit!>. "That present requirement In many slates has the effect of breaking up fami lies and cnntributts to delinquency and violence," Nixon said. J~e proposro that all employable persoM who accept the welfare payments be required to register for \fork or job training, and that adequate and con- venient day care be provided for childun wherever it is necessary lo enable a ~rent to train or work . ,n 20 slates, Nixon estimated, the present average benefit payments are lower than lhoie he is proposing. And these art areas. he says, where poverty Is often the most severe. The new system would encourage work, Nlxon said, by alfowlna a ne1v worker to retain the first $720 of his yurly earnings without any benefit rrduct1on. Ni1on urged Congress to begin study of lhese proposals prQmptly !IO that l11ws can be enacted 1.nd' lunds authorized as 500n as pos:d ble. \\'ith larger \\'aves than S u n d a y . Lifeguards performed 160 rescues. The rescue rate dropped \vith the \\'aves on Sunday, "'hen only 60 persons needed help. Besides the scores of rescue!-i, tir~t aills ;111d lost children reports on Sunday the lifeguards were confronted with \\'hal they termed an elaborate hoax - numedous reports of a dead body in the irater near the 17th Street beach. "We hall several reports <>f people seeing or brushing against a dead body, hut \Ve looked for it all day and found nothing but a bun<:h of live ont's," one lifeguard said. In the area's inland \\'ater\\·ays it 1vas crowded, too. liowever, Harbor Depart- ment patN>lmen said there v.·ere no serious aceldents in Newporl Bay over the weekend. Saturday's breezes v.·ere light. They picked up Sunday. ca using "the usual nun1~r of small sailboats lo get dunl· ped," one patrolman sairl. The boats were righted wlthoul mu\'h trouble. he added . Newport Beach's roadways and parking areas 1\·erc janlmed both day~. Police said no · serious accidents \vtre reported. Bm·glars Rob Peninsula Store Energetic \\'ttkend burglars worked hard for their 5mall take of $20 In coin from a Balboa Peninsula market. police 5ald toda y. They escaped v.•ilh appartnt cuts from the glass of a skylight v.•hlch they shat· tertd, and they mi5sed a bundle of money hidden in the market, l"e\\·port Beach police said the safe was bcini repai red and a large amount of cash stashed In one of the dra\\·cr1 of a cabinet ,v.'ent unnol\ctd by tbe thieves duri ng the Friday night btlrglary at 608 t;. Balboa Blvd. - Lifeguards· to-Strike?, Clemente Walkout Threatened Over Wages Thirty.two members of tht U.man San Clemente Lifeguard Department have threa tened to walk oU the beaches Satur- day U thelr requests (or a wa1e increase are not met by the city. The walkout would leave 18 miles or coastline without lifeguard protection. Besides the San Clemente city beaches, the lifeguard department is also under count y contract to patrol Three Arch Bay, Aliso Beach, Monarch Bay, and Salt Creek. 'f11e department's coverage· extends as rsr south as C<>lon's Point, the site of President Nixon's summer \Vhite House. , Lifeguard Chief Dick }lazard and Capt. Lagu11a Police Find Youth, 19, Dead in Jail A I9·year·old Norlhridge youth died Saturda y seven hours after bt!ing booked lnto the Laguna Beach jail by police. Stephen K. Mundahl of I 7 9 3 1 Devonshire St., Northridge, wu pro. nounced deid on arrival at South Coast Community Hospital after :!i'eJng brought from the jail by &mbulince. Cawe of death is as yet unknown, Coroner's Deputy James Blsner said to- day. Tbere appeared to be no external cause and toxicology tests are now under v.·ay, he said. Police said Mundahl \\'as found lying apparently unconscious In a jail cell at ::ibo\Jt 4:35 p.m. Saturday. A number of Seconal pills were found in the jail hal· \vay, but of{icera declned to link them to the prisoner's death. Mundahl had been booked into the cell at about 10 a.m. He was accused o! pnssessiori of dan1erous drugs and being under the lnnuence of a drug. The dead boy and two other youths l\'Cre arrested following an accident at about 9 a.m. in the 200 block of Broadway. Mundahl \\'as passen&er in a car allegedly driven by Raymond Eugene Strauss, 17, of Northridge, which collided "'ith the rear of a vehicle driven by Dorothy Ellen Springe, 41, of 750 Coast View, Laguna Beach. ~1rs. Springe is the Wife o( Laguna Building and Planning Director Clyde Z. Sprin1e . . Strauss, Mu ndahl and Charles Prescolt Ilan1h1rt, 19, of Northridge \\·ere all ar· re!lled by police after officeri allegedJy found three pills in their car. Strauss and Banghart were booked on charges alleging possession of dangerous drugs. Netvport Burglar Reads Playboy \Vhat kind of man reads Playboy ? In this case, a man "•ho broke into John Gay's house while Gay and his wife 1vere at a movie, stealing a stereo and radios valued at $600, along with th'! August copy of the magaiine (valued at $1.25 ). NewJX)rt Beach Police said the suspect rnt e.red the home al 2601 Lighthouse Lane through an open rear bl'droom "'in· do1v late Saturday night. Zonrl lleading Back r.10SCO\V (AP) -The unmanntd Soviet moon probe, Zond 7, photographed the lunar surface today, rounded the 1noon and is now heading for earth, an of- ficia l announcement said. Pttil Stub~s have not joined th~ ireup threatening to walk <>ut. According to spokesman Lt.. Steve Chorak, "All the striking llfecua~ are asking i! io be brought up to the average salary for a better than average lilei:uatd deparlment." Chorak, a member or tJ;ie department for 10 years. said, "we·ve betn ukin& for a salary Increase for yean, but we've never been met ." City clerk Max Bera:, acting city manager while Kenneth Carr is on vaca· tion, said the city council approved a fi ve percent increase Jor seasonal and . . .. permapent 1Ue81J1rd& ll bu<Jiet hearlni• July 7. Tte lifeguard captala rectl•ed a 7 ~! pe~t increase~. · ' . '\U I.bat tlme,'' saJd Chorak, "we weren't ma~ demands. But we were requesUng "'nine percent in<:A!lase for the seasonal employes, plus a five da.Y. work· ing week."J LilefUards DOW WO~k in .e~efS ol 50 hours a w•1c. Chorak uid. Chorale fl.so said Ult city council was requested \o increase the salary of the pennanenl year round employes. and that their salary be io paritY to present police waaes. Honor Stuaent Select.ed To Reign as Miss CdM Susan Reed , an ts.year-old honor slu· dent with a love for music and sports is the Corona del Mar's new queen. !-.1iss Reed, daughter of Mr. arid Mrs. John A. Reed II of 2718 \Vavecrest Dr., Corona del ?i.1ar, won the title and gifts lrom the colony's businessmen at the an. nual in~llaUon banquet of the C.Orona del Mar Chamber of Commeree. She woo the title from a field of eight finalists, who each gave two.minute speeches to the JOO chamber members prexnt. Miss Reed, a slim strawberry blonde, was graduated in the top 10 percent or her graduating clus last June at Corona de! Mar High School. She will be a !restunan student al UC Irvine in the fall. Four judges, including musical con· d1.1ctor David Rose and radio personality Chuck BeMetl, pondered their tabula· tionJ for almost a hall hour at the Friday night dinner before finally making a selection. "They're all wiJ!ners," Rose told the group assembled at the Irvine Coast Country Club. Besides the beauty com pet I ti on, members saw the Jnstallatlon or the chamber's new olficerJ for the coming year. Former Newport Be.ach councilman Dee Cook was installed as preaident. He vowed to double the chamber's mtrn· her.ship. DAILY PILOr Sift! I"~ ... CORONA DEL MAR 'S CHOICE Queen Sus.an Reed Fron• Page l LA SJ,AYINGS PROBE , • •• men, il could have' been up to high as three. men." The victims: -Miss Tate, 26, wife <>f film director Rman PolanskJ, t.lgl1t months pregnant with a baby boy, died of multiple stab wounds of the chest and back. Polanski flew here Sunday from Europe and im· medlately went into seclusion. -Abigail Folger, 26, San Francisco, heiress to the Folger coffee fortune, described as · a "rich hippie" who at- tended seance sessions, died of stab wounds in the chest. -Jay Sebring, 35, innovator of ha ir styling for men, once 11iss Tate's fiance, died <>f multiple stab wounds of the body. -Voityck Frokowsky, :17, worked with P!l\anskl as an actor and writer in Polish film s. died of stab \\'ounds of the body and limbs and a gunstiot wound in the bac.k . Jr-Steven Partnt, 18, a fr iend of Gar· rCtson \1·ho left home in suburban El ~lonte Fridav to visit him, died of multi- ple gunshot \..·ounds or the chest. Garret.son's attorney, Barry Tar\o,v, said Parent dropped by the guest house lo visit the careta ker, ·who looked after several dogs and cats belonging to the owners. Tar\Ow said Garretson sat up reading until 6 a.m., Saturday but heard no unusual sounds from the main howie, separated from the guest house by a swimming pool and shrubbery. "There was a party at the house the nighl of the killings," Tarlow said. "From the investigation made by my of• lice, our best guess is that whoever did it v.·as involved in a personal way these people who \\·ere killed." · Attention today turned to the second suspect sought by police. Helder said, ·:we are looking for an in- dividual: We don't have any definite In· formatton that he was involved. His name came up in conversation with Gar· retson." 79 Gary Fire111en Face Trials Over Su·ikc GARY, Ind. (AP ) -City firemen ha\'e. endEd a six-day strike, but 79 of them face trials starting today that could result in the loss of their jobs. The 79 firemen -out of a total fo rce of 278 -were suspended without pay last week for participating in the strike. If you're 5'8'' or over, we've plenty of suits left for you middle or the night, grabbing nrmload1 of 1uits, and driving away wi1hin 711J.? 11CCOnd1 of •mashing the (tlas11. U11ually the bnr@lars are canfZh4 but in the meanti1ne "''e're out 5even armloads of suit1. Tlte hurp:lar1 •tripped the rack 11eareet the window. It tottlainecl n1011ly onr 1uit1 iu ~hort ei7.cA. 1( you're 5 ft. 8 iuchee or taller. rlon't you let Ottr liltle burglary "'·orry )'OU for one minute. We have a euit in yo11r sir.e. Or 1e\·eral dozen, for that matter. ~fayl>e ) ou 1·cad in the Pilot "'hot hat)Jlened. We <lidn't order a hole in our "''intlow but "'C ;rot 1111r.. At 3:29 a.1.11. la111 ·rue11day, Ausu.111 5111. we had 1ome "''ill· tlow 11hoppert. I don•t know if we 11,l1ould b& flattered b y 1his, hul apparen1IY they liked wba1 1l1ey uw. They 11lamn1ed • milk crate throt1gh 011r store window. f?lhen:d up several f11 et armload11 of nur 11ai11. er11rrietl 1,1ck to their r.ar. and raced ""''RY into the nlg)tt. Funny 1hin8· Exactly 7 day1 before, at 1h~ time "''f' rene"'·ed 011r burglary ln8U1'&nce, the con11>uny in"i11ted tha1 "''te itt· 1tall one of tbote 11ew sileut alor1111. 11 "'·orked beau1ifully. The 1>olice tlosherl over here. Uut those hurgl11.r11 were a da11l1 and 11 half ahead of lhem. Goue without • lr&ce. Helen (my wife) and I ha,•e been rold that 1bere are .. veral und<J'8l'Oond Burflary Colle,:e!!I in ae1sion thi1 1uin .. mer. The• in111truct youn1 JOen in the iate11t methods for breaking into e •tore In the Anyway, it's "·ery unu1ual for our etore lo be open Rl 3:29 a.m . Our re~ar 1tore houn are 9:30 lo 5:30, Mon• day through Saturday. 'When you enter. remem· her. Don't come through the window. u.., 1he door. The police know about tbi1 ad. "' Jack Bidwell 3467 Via Udo at Newport Dlvd., lu Newport Beach next to Richard'• ~larket and The Lido T11ea1er. Plenty of(...,., parking in the rear. Phone 6734510 Copyright 1969, Jock Bidwell. ( i ( ' l ·I I ' .. . . ............ \ . BEA ANDl!RSON, Edit .. Mel!M't• ........ n, IM 9' .... 11 A moratorium on work hu been declared by Mrs. Colin W. Reynolds, president of the Newport Chapter or Assistance Le.ague. . "But, It Is just for an even- ing," hastily adds Mrs. Roy Hall, publicity chairman for the organiz.ation. Saturday, Aug 16, has been deslgtu1ted as the rare time for fun and relaxation for the energetic women who devote the rest of the year to raising funds for charities and provid- ing rhany communHy services. • ·~ 'Ji Looking south of the border for"the party theme Is Mrs. W. Phelps Merickel. chairman of the hospitality committee who promises members and guests an evening of mariachi music and Pwfexlcan fare when they arrive at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Holstein 111, party setting. ·~ Gi;1nt pots of paper nowers will deco rate tables around the pool and pinatas will hang in the gardens. ' ' Assisting Mrs. ~ferickel with arrangement.s for the more than 80 expected partygoers are the 111mes. Wilbur Chap- man, Edward A. Boyd, Sherrill Mart.in, Joseph l-.1et- calf. Charles Peyton. Wilbur Reynolds and George L. Wood- ford . ' -· f,,I.., -I ~ ,)._ ~".,>,; EASY HOMEWORK -Assigned the role of mannequins for the Back- tC>-school fashion show next Thursday sponsored by Balboa Yacht Club will be children of yacht club members. Ready to step from summer fun to school classrooms are (left to right) A1ike Shepardson, 6, Carol Haley, 17, and Lisa Eddy, 7. School Bel Is Ring In Middle of Play Seems like summer bar.ely gets underway when thoughts of school come popping up. Children and teenagers shouldn't mind thinking about school, how~ ever, \vhen visions o! new school wardrobes fla sh 'through their heads. Members of the Balboa Yacht Club also have started thinking about school fa shions and will host a Back-to-school !ash.ion show and luncheon next Thursday in the clubhouse, beginning with an 11 :30 a.m. cocktail hour. Modeling clothes from Sears will be members' children and offer• ing comment \Vil! be Mrs . Beverlee Kelly, Sears fashion coordinator. Serving as mannequins ·will be Anne Marie South, Laurie starr, Heldt Hall, Lisa and Scott Eddy, Kim Linderman, Kim Deaver, Suzanne and Sheryl Smiley, Amber and Cindy Cottle. Mike Shepanlson, Dalynn and Dovell Smith. Carol llaley, Vickie Cox, Virginia Headden and Roger and Richard Gales. , ,_ · During their more serious hours. league m e m b e r s operate the Thrtft Shop at 505 32nd st., Newport Beach. Funds from this endeavor support the Children's Dental Health Center, a Social Serv. ice office, an extensive schol· arship program and numerous other community servic,s. · Plans also are under ••ay for the Newport group to host the annual· Orange County Auto Show preview night in October and they also will deVote the last week iJl August to refurbishing and restocking the Thrift Shop for the opening oI the fa11 season. ' FIESTA TIME , OLE I ~In lhe mood lot the Mexi- can party to be staged for Newport .Beach Assist- ance· League members and guests are (left to right) -~-. ..._. -...:.....::.._ Mrs. George M. Holstein III, hostess; Mrs. W. Phelps Merickel, hospitalitY chairman,. and Mrs . George L. Woodlonl. Assi'sting the young mannequins will be the Mmes. Tom Andrew, Earl Spanglel\. William Headden, Cooper Johnson, Gared Smit.b and Ray Bay Clubbers Corn er a Little Bit of Haw aii Bulloch. . · Arranging the luncheon is Mrs. Edward Lethen and coordinating the fashion show is Mrs. Almon Lockabey. Balboa Bay Club members and their guests will make a quick trip to Hawaii Friday, Aug . 22, !or the annual Summer Luau around the Bay Club's main pool. Between the first strains of Island music and the last aloha. 'I.he "natives" will eDjoy enter- tainment presented by the Hawaiian Kalua Serenaders, sword and knife performers, the Polynesian •lawaiian Band, and Ronnie Brown and his Hawaiians; a plank walk , and finally an exotic Luau !east. Amorig the hosts 31\.d hostesses will be (left to right} 111r. and Mrs. Mike Craig, Foster Garn , Doug Mack and Mrs. Garn. Spouse Found Way to Show More !h.?tn Words .Could Say DEAR ANN LANDERS: t was moved by the letter from the wife who com· plained because her husband never said , "I lo"e you." My hush.and was the same way, but he didn't n~ to say anythina. The things he did spoke for him. We had been married 25 years when he died. He was not artkulate -In fact he was more of a blU!her Utan a talker. But there were little pats and pinche1, and £OmeUTnes a wink. I remember his wonderful gill.I auring our salad days - A 49 ce.nt box of chocolate cherries or a 50 cent handkerchief from the dollar store. One day he bought me a bottle ol cologne. He said he had smelled It on a girl in the office and be thought l'd like It. ANN LANDERS My loveliest memory Is the lime he came home from a two-day business trip wllh an art.IUclal sunflower In his~ 8Uit· cue. He said be bought tt becauae he knew I loved sunrlowen and Jt reminded him ol me. That 1JUnflower ii my most cherished possession. He was telllna me, "l love you," without saying the wotda.O. CITY DEAR 0 : Wbat a man he must have btta! No "oman sboold nud words with music like th•t! DEAR ANN LANDERS : A friend or oun was the center of attention recently at a dinner party. He is an amateur hyp- notist and to1d us 80n'\e fasctnatlng stor- ies about wha( can be accomplished through hypnosis. One of the points he made was that hypnosis can be used on athletes to make lhem perform helter. hi this possible? My husband made the comment that If it were true, the technique would be uUllred universally. Have you ever heard of lhl!? Please comment. -UNCONVlNCEO DEAR UN: Hypno1l1 cu hive some. 1urprt1lng and ettraordlaary tfftcU bit any proc:tdure lnvolvlog tbe br•in can be dan1eroa1 and should not be astd as a gimmick. Yet. t tiavt 1te1rcl of hypnotJaln1 albkk• t.G help them become suptr1lar1. AbOut 20 yean ago the St. Lolls Browns tngagtd a hypnotist to lnsUll lo the ttam ' • more uposlttve attitude." (1\ey were la the cellar and morole was 1aggtn1.) Tht ' . re1uU : The Brown1 ended the ltlllSOll In seventh place. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your recent advice to teerui: In regard to where.to iO U they suspect they have VD was ex· cellent. You said, "The law prevents treating minors without parental con- sent," but you made a polnL lhat moat County Health Cenlera do· treat the kids who come In and keen quiet about It. You added, "Bless thenl .•• In 1967 the Connecticut Central Assembly enacted legislaUon (Public Law 205 ) which e.l,lmlnates the prtte· q1.1isite of parental consent tn examine and treat a minor. J thought you'd like to know. --J •. R. !DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC HEAL TH NURSING) DEAR J.R.: Hooray for Conntttht. Wouldn't Ii be wonderful lf ALL sta\es had 1ucb tnll&btened leglll1tors? • Give in or 1ose him .•. when a guy gives you lhis line, look outl For tips on how to handle the super sex salesman, check Ann Landers. Read her booklet, "Neckini and Petting -What Are the LimlLat Send your request to Ann Landers ln care or your newapaper. enclosing &O cenls In coin and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope. · Ann Landers will be gla<I lo help you with. your problems. Send thtm to her In care ot the OAlLY PILOT, enclosing a st:lf:addressed, atamped envelope. ' • • l · .. Horoscope · " • Sagittarit:Js : Patience Becomes Great Al /y TUESDAY AUGUST 12 By SY.ONEY OMARR NEW MOON today colnejdes wltb creaiive acdvlty; brings cblldren Into tbe news. Large spending program11 bJ& 1 snag. Financial experts raise bue 3.nd cry about proposal wbich would tfltct recreation faclUfles. ARIES (March 21-April 19): * Money, budget, desires may conflict. New approach is ad· visable. Personal magnetism continues high; you attract the opposite sex. Pleasure pursuits could be turned 10 profit. TAURUS (April 20-P..tay 20): Be ready for added responsibility. Payme n ts, loans, col l ections are highlighted. Key Is to be prac· fie&! and realistic. You cannot do two things at once. Realize this and respond accordingly. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You may hear many rumors. Key is to have self-discipline. hteans act on what you know, not on what you hear. Short journey could be postponed without loss,. Be conservative. .MeaJJS avq!d any tendency to appear overbearing. Retnaln . in background, Permit ottiers ·to grab spotlight. This wi11 favorably refl_ect upon your good taste. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct.. 22): Spending program should be reviewed. Con tinue to go for quality. But be more selective. A new friend could point way to exciting experiences. Keep open mind. ·SCORPIO (Oct. 2J·Nov. 21): You require legal green 'llght. Don't attempt to by-pass rules, regulalion.s. Stic k with tried-and-true. Means leave get-rich.quick schemes to others. Depend on reliable person.!. SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Immediate results may not be forthcoming. But future planning is con· structive. DOn't rush. Patience is your greti.t ally today. Ac· cent on long-Oistan~. on travel and communication. CAPRICORN I De<:. 22-Jan. GOLOEN MILESTONE Mr. •nd Mrs. Marlon C. Dodd Party Honors Dodds On SOth Anniversary ' 19); Temptations feature y-0ur Mr. and Mrs. Mari-0n C. Los Angeles SO years ago on day. Tendency is to ra-Dodd were honored on the oc· Aug. 9 and became residents lionalize. New starts in ne\V casion of their 50th wedding of Balboa Island in 1936. directions prove constructive. Know this and avoid be.ing anniversary by a reception for After 12 years in the fliuslc Lovers Will Love This Fashion Show CANCER (June 1l·July 22): Some friends c.ould . be in- volved in money dispute. Be sure of facts. Be diplomatic in presenti.ng views. Those who battle today could be allies tomorrow. Don't get caught in middle. discouraged. You are due for relatives and friends iil the restaurant business there lhey valua ble second chance. Costa Mesa home of their moved to Corona del Mar, AQUARIUS (Jan. 2t}Feb. daughter, Mrs. Joan Harrell. where they now reside. 18): Some apparent Dodd, a member of the Three of the couple's Music and clothes Will have a Jot to do with each other next Thursday When Newland School PTA hosts a Back·to-school Fashion Show to raise funds . for a m.usic scholarship. In exchange for a 50 c'ent . ticket, .a collection of falJ school fa shions from Pen- ney's, Fashion_ Islana, will be paraded at 7 p.m. in . From Appalachia, Texas . . the school. Seeing new images of themselves are (Jett to right in mirror) Newland School students Theresa Fischer, 9, Margaret Driscoll, 11 , and Rhonda Skjod, 11. 'l'ickets will be available at the door or ·may be purchased by calling Mrs. Alvin Fischer. 962-2986, or Mrs. Charles Scott, 968-1970. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your !deaf may be 90nsidei:ed far· nut by older individual. No real need to be discouraged . Cycle continues high. You will get What you want. But be sure you know what it is. roadblocks could boomerang Orange County Grand Jury in grandchildren are D e b b i e • Jn your favor. Be aware of f968, a1so has been president Lori and Bobby Harrell, whrt public relaticins. Get point of the Newport-Balboa Rotary live in Costa f.tesa with their across in best possible man-Club. Mrs. Dodd continues her mother. ner. Separate publicity' from active membership in the Three other grandchildren • notoriety. Ebel! Club. Patti, Susan and Carol Young, PISC~ (Feb. 19-March 20): The couple were married In reside in Whittier. Efforts mQY be spread in 'tooli";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; many directions. Key is effort to concentrate. C o n s e r v e strength, energy. Opportunity preseht!{ it.self. Be ready - IT'S A FACT! Students ·Arrive Soon Mesons Marry VIRGO <Aug. 2J.Sepl. 22): Light touch wins the day. recogniie It,' IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have good sense o( humor; you are a If you spent 30 seconds looking at each of our shag samples. it would take you over 'I hours lo see them all- so come early and bring your lunch. • Four very important college : freshmen are coming to Costa : Mesa this month and they : need homes for one year. • There will be three girls and one boy from rural Texas and • Appalachia and none or them • will know anyone in this area : and none have ever been away .. from home before. ; They are being placed In ~Orange Coast College through the efforts of FOCUS, a p~ {gram staffed and directed en· •.urely by college un- ,. dergraduates. FOCUS offers .underprivileged, t a le n t e d yoilng people a chance for a 1 university career. Area residents who have a conler to spare in their homes for thete deserving yoiJng J>eir- ple are asked to contact Joe Kroll. dean of student ac· tivities al CX:C or Richard Hernandei. director for the project for the disadvantaged. Coming t r o m Appalachia will be James Moore, a young man wbo wants to be an engineer. Re is one Of five children who managed to reveal bis ability in science though many family dif· fieulties, i n c J u d l o g the destruction by f1re of the family home. ' -t Also arriving from the ea· vironment of Appalichla· will be Phyllis Conklin, another talented girl seeking the a(l. varitige ol colleg"l. Two girls, Della Romero and Janie Gonzalez ·come from ex- tremely srilall rural towns in Texas. They will be studying social sciences and American History, and Miss Gonzalez wants to be a teacher. • ln the FOCUS program, Whittier Graduates Home 1n Costa Mesa Exchanging weddtng vow s S 1. · I natural entertainer. People studen ts v.·ho were helped In and rings in Presbyterian orop 1m1s s generally enjoy being with the e.fforl's inllial year last CMhurch ofMthe Covenan~ were Newport Harbor Soroptimist you. You have recently at· aureen ary McRone and Club meets the first three tracted those with problems. fall now are i·oining the starr Jerold w R en 1· e ' · ov s 10 · Wednesdays for a noon lunch· But personal advancement Ui to recruit new people. Last The Rev. Bruce A. Kurrie eon in Villa Marina, Newport on horizon .. year a staff of 12 placed 86 officiated for the daughter of Beach. The last Wednesday or To 11n<1 °"'' wl'lo'' 1uu., 1or vw in students throughout the United Mr. and Mrs. W i 11 l am the month members meet in =~:1,•'l1~1 °"H1~ '~~M~~~ DON'S CARPET SHOP 426 SO. MAIN (2 Biko. No. of Bullock's) ORANGE M o. • d h f M I d' Women." Stlld blrlhd1r1 1111f 50 Qt11!1 States, and this year a stall of C1wne an t e son o r. the same ocatlon for inner ro 0m1rr A11ro1ovv SKr111. 1tie .DA~LY HOUlS: •·l:JI DAILY CLOSID SUNDAY 60 is plac.ing 330 hith school !r~os~sM'!!!. Rovenstine, all ~a~(~7~:30~p~.m~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~?'~w~~·~~~.;:~.~~-~·~~.'1~il~u~'~~"';;;.' ~··:;~;:ii;~~~~~~~~;iii~~~~ graduates on 115 campuse! in. A gown of white brocadell eluding OCC. was chosen by the bride, who The dramatic Impact or tak-was given in marriage by her lng young people out of their father. A p e ar 1 headpiece cau ght her illusion veil, and environments and giving them stephanotis and a white orchid a chance to ·see another part formed her bouquet. of the coontry has bee'n a She carried a sprig or white proven sue<:ess, since 93 per-h th · h Bibi d •-t cent of the students in the flrst ea er in er e, an <,AV • tish pipers perfonned at the group are continuing sue-later wedding reception in the cessfully. McRorie home. The FOCUS program on the Maid of honor Jacqualine OCC campu.s also seeks $1000 McRorie and flower girl to meet financial expenses for Kathleen Scully were dressed. the four incoming freshmen, in yellow and carrjed white including their transportation and yellow daisies. 1 and out-of-state tuition. Tax Albert Paton was best man. deductJble donations may· be Ushers included Don Penelton, mailed .to Kroll at the college. Bill Mc Rorie and Gary Par· During the year, each of the rish. .. ng" .Aniwunces the Grand Opening of a Brand New Eigure Control Salon! i9--------------. I 13732 EUCLID AVENUE I I GARDEN GROVE I I BLOCK SOUTH OF GARDEN GROVE FRE EWAY I Whittier College graduates Sharon Lee Schynkel and Jack Neil Swickard we.re married in the college chapel. Their parents are the Charles A. Schynkels of ~1ontebello and the Clarence L. Swickards of Costa Mesa. four wlll be making his own The bride is a Costa M~ contribution by working at a High School graduate and lier campus job. husband was graduated·.from FOCUS, or Fellowship of Corona -del__Mar H i g h maid of honor wearing a pink C o n c e r n e d U n 'i ve.rsity School. He attended ·Orange chiffon gown and bridesmaids' •students, Is a part of Upward Coast College before,.tntering Mrs. Toni O'Neil and Miss Bound, the federally sp-Onsored U.S. Army service at Fort college preparatory program Knox, Ky., where the couple ,_ - - - --- - - - - - - - J OUR METHOD IS VERY SIMPLE! Sharon Engle also wore pink. for low income atudent.!i. will make their first honle. Best man was W i 11 jjijjiijiiijjjii-iiiijiijjjii-iiiijiijjjii-iiiijiijjjii-iiiijjjjiJI , The Rev. Leslie J . Ross of • l\fontebello's United Methodist :church performed the ... ceremony. . The bride's gown was of silk organza and lace trimmed , with seed pearls. A crystal and pearl headpiece caught . her four-tiered veil and she , carried a butlerOy orchid bou- • quet. : Mis.s Royce Ann Young was Eyerman, and David Francis and \Vil\iam Crosbie were ushers. The bride also has earned a masters degree from Whittier College where she was a member of the Ionian and Forensic socie t ies . The bridegroom I 1 completing work on a masters degree al the same college . The couple have relamed from a northern California honeymoon to their Costa Mesa home. INTRODUCING . . . JERRY GUTIERREZ • Forl'!l1rly ,.. Soulh Co•1t Pl111 ORAMA TIC SCISSOR CUTIING ~~~- 548-0460 WESTCLIFF PLAZA • FINAL CLEARANCE Women's Footwear DRESS SHOES • • Joyce • Gepetto $590 &$690 lforl1)erly to $21.00) e IMPORTED SANDALS e $390 {formerly to $14.00) e FLATS e $390 (formerly to $15.00) Sorry: no mail or phone orders. All sales final IN MESA CENTER 225 E. 17th St. -Costa Mesa LOSE 1 to 7 INCHES IN 90 MINUTES or PAY NOTHING! • No Exercise •No Dieting • No Machines • No Pills PLUS ... • No Contracts • No Minimum Number Of Visits • No Exaggerated Claims i-------------, I Call Today for an Appointment! I I I I 534-7950 I I I I I BRING IN TIIIS AD FOR A $2.50 DISCOUNT _____________ _. LADIES: · Try The Glamour Tape Method And Be The Envy Of Your Friends! After the Glamour Contouring Tapes •re •pplied, you simply relax for 90 minutes in our luxurious lounge •nd sleep ••• rHd or welch color TV. OPEN 9 a.m. to 9 pem. MON. thru SAT. 13732 EUCUD AVE. 11 Blk. So. of G.G. 'Freeway! GARDEN GROVE • I I r l ~osta . . . Mesa Today't1 J'lul ' VOL. 62, NO. ·19 f, l SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C>,LIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST I f, 1969 TEN CENTS Nixon Starts Busy W eel( at C emente SAN CLEMENTE (UPI) -President Nixon opened a jam-packed week at the sumnler White House today with a series or high-level foreign policy conferences, a message to congress on welfare reform and an announcement on reorganiZation of the federal agency prlmari\y responsi- ble ror the war on poverty. The President scheduled a late morning meeting at his new o(fi~ complei: ad· joining his summer home with Secretary of State William P. Rogers. The alter a last trip to Japan, South Korea, Secretary arrived here during the night Taiwan, Indonesia Australia and New Zealand. This was to be followed by a meeting between the President and Ambassador llenry A. Byroade who stopped off in California en route to his new post in Manila. Such was the starting pattern of one of the busiest weeks for Nixon since he took office. In addition to today's welfare messagt and statement on reorganization of the office of economic oPJ)ortunlty, the President planned within a few days to disclose his selection of a new Supreme. Court associate justict to replace Abe Fortas, "'ho left the bench ,.,lay 15 under heavy critical fife. n1e President also planned other messages to Congress this week before lhe Hou~ and Sena~ begin a long l,.a.~r Day reces,,. The basic content of the messages was outlined by Nixon Friday night in a speech broadcast and televised nationally. The President's message. to CC>Jtgress Tuesday will spell out in some detail his plans for expanded manpower training. PRESIDENT RETURNS TEARFUL TEO GARRISON, S, COSTA MESA, TO-His.PARENTS Afte r Fall From Airport . Fence, A Lift FrOm t~e President 1rid • Souvenir Pin Nixon Send s Welfare Plan To Co1igress SAN CLEti.1ENTE (AP) -President Nixon sent to Congress today his pro- posals (or a new S4 billion federal welfare program to provide a basic Income for any American family unable lo lake care or itself. Nlxon said his new approach \\'OUld end what he described as the "blatant un- fairness" or the. present welfare system ;:ind create a st ronger incenlive among the poor to work . The me.~sage to Congress contained the proposals he outlined in a television-radio address to the nation Friday night. It included a srecHic request for $600 million additiona funds for child care centers to aid working mothers . Nixon said he wants lo provide child care for 450,000 children of the 150,000 current welfare recipients who will go in- to work training programs. The new system he proposl":s, Nixon told Congress, will lessen red tape, end bitterly resented ''welfare snooping'' and make: federal payments on the basis of certification of income, with spot checks to prevent abuses. Nixon said he "'as outlining his con~ clusions lo provide a "coherent, fresh ap- proach t-o welfare, manpo\.l'er training and revenue shari . " Pea~e for Prez No Pickets Mar Nixon Holiday--¥ et Dy JERO~tE F. COLLlNS Of 1111 Olllf" Pllll S11n President Nixon came to San Clemente looking for a little peace and quiet. Sun· day he found it. The President said hello to his neigh· hors in Cyprus Shore, slrolJed along the beach near his estate, chatted with sun- bathers, took a leisurely drive to Oceanside, and then swam in the lamily pool. No incident of any kind marred his day. "'There wasn't a picket in the "'hole town." said a Whitl House aide . And tourists, who filled San Clemente's public beach. appare.;tly respected the Presidenrs wish for leisure. They stayed away lrom the Nixon co1npound in droves. ~tr. Nixon began the day by put.putting from his estate grounds in his goU cart early in the morning. He was ac- con1panied by Marine lt1ajor John Bren· nan, hls military aide. They drove around Cyprus Shore v.•av· ing at youngsters, patting a few on the head and talking to residents of the ex- clusive residential communily. "No. they didn't borrow any cups of sugar," quipped a White House staff member later. The President and l\.laj. Brennan then walked along the beach below Cyprus Shore. Startled beachgoers quickly flock- ed around and soon he was surrounded by a group or about 30. ?.1any o{ them told him they supported his ne\v we lfare pro- gram, announced on TV Friday. ~ ~1r. Nixon was overheard to say he. hoped the program would help peOple to help themselves. Later, lhe President climbed into a Lincoln Continental, and wit.ti Major Brennan al the wheel drove to Oceanside. They took "'ith them the Nixon family's Irish setter, King Timahoe, named for a village in Ireland. The journey was just a sightseeing trip. ''They took a look at the harbor, turned around and came back," saici a Presiden· tial staH men1ber. A Seeret Service agent closely followed in another car during the 44-'ml!e round lrip. The huge White. House press corps Sun- day stayed more or leSll put at the San Clemente Inn and the Surf and Sand •lotel in Laguna Beach. Stock lllorkeu NEW YORK (APi -The stdck market closed with a moderate Joss today, after a very slow trading se:ssion marked by little buying demand. (See quotations, Pages 22-23). AnalysL'i said some investor:s appar- ently reacted to devaluation of the French lranc by withdrawing from the action. On Wednesday, if be foUowf'd the timetable announctd earlier by his staff, a messag..: would go to Capitol Hill asking for a stort on a controversial system whereby federal tax revenues would be shared with states. The most dramatic period of the week promised to be Wednesday night in Los; Angeles when the President presides at,a manlmot.h dinner honoring lhf! three Apollo 11 astronauts and their families at the ultramodern Century Plaza Hotel. Far more Invitations -reportedly 3,SOO -have been Issued than the Century Plan banquet hall can accommodate, and thousands more were trying to get in. Rogers was with Nixon for the early part of lhe President's recent A:sian trip, but the secret~ left the White House party after Manila and :set out on a long itinerary of hi! own. Rogm: spent II days louring the western ~aclfic, touching bases whlcb the President was unable to Include In his 25,000.mlle trip around the world. Rogers' mission ws to explain Nixon's plans 'for ending the war in Vietnam, plus his post· Vietnam outlook: for n!.laUona between the United States and Adan naUon.s. Most of the speculaUoo about Nixon'• nut choice for the Supreme Couit wu coming out or Washington an<J consilted largely of long lisj.s Of jurlm who · have: Ugured in earlier speculat.ion. Nixon told a.crowd at the Or~ \:oun. ty Airport Saturday when he an1yed in California that only ~wo people: kneW who the new appointee .wooJd be: -Mitchell and himself. This Indicated not even lhe prospective associate jusUce knew as Ot Saturday night he was about· tQ lie , pro- posed for the nation's tughest court .. ·Bizarre Deaths Probed . ' ~ Couple's Slaying Similar to Murder of 5 LOS ANGELES (U PI) -Homicide iqua<U fanned out across this sprawling city today atte1npting to tie together the niurders of actress Sharon Tate and four others with the bizarre deaths of a mar- ried couple a dozen miles away. Both murder scenes were similar. The five bodies found al the blonde ac- tress' home Saturday were mutilated by multiple knire wounds. as y,·ere the re· mains of ma rket owner l.eno La Bianca, 44, and his wife, Rosemary, 38. The latter were discovered in their Sil verlake home Sunday night. 'l'he home once was o"·ned by the late \Valt Disney . The .word "Pig" "''as scray,·led in blood · on the door of ~1.iss Tate's Benedict Can· yon hoine. "Dealh to Pigs" was daubed on the refrigerator door In the La Bianca home. F'urther . evidence or 1 possible link: ~tween the multiple murders were ritualistic hoods on some of the victims. •lair styli.st Jay Sebring wu found t~ered by a white cord over a beam. The other end of the rope was tied lo f.1iss Tate's body clothed in brassiere and bikini panties. Brutality of the murders of the La Biancas was similar to that found at the Tale murder scene. Police said both La Blanca and his wire were found v.•ilh makeshift hoods from bedclothes pulled over their heads. La Blanca's body was carved with a series of X marks and the word "war" was cut into his chest from which a knife protruded. Despite the remarkable similarities of the two cases, police said it was very possible no connecLion existed. On lfolly"·ood movie and television stage stars and stagehands speculated about lhe murders. Police were terse and uninformative. A uniformed officer :stood guard at the foot of a long and winding drive that led to the rambling estate \\'here l\.liss Tale, Sebring and the others \Vere murdered. One officer said as many as three persons could have been involved in the ritualistic butchery at the home of f.liss Tate and her husband, director Roman Polanski . Detectives said there \Vas a possibility the murderer or niurderers \\'ere ''in· vo!vC!d in a personal way" with the vie· Urns. They searched in particular for an unidentified suspect whose name was provided by \Yilliam E. Garretson, 19, a caretaker on the Polanski estate who !iv· ed · in a guest house. He was the only person alive "'hen orricers arrived at the scene Saturday morning. "At this stage, we have not ruled out anything or anybody." homicide Det. LI. Robert lielder. v.·ho heads the in· vesligation. told a news conference. "We have no solid information which would limit us to a single suspect. It could have been one man. lt could have been two (Sec LA SLAYINGS, Page.%) UPIT ....... FIGURES IN CASE-Actress Sharon Tate chats wrth husband Polish film .Producer-director .Ron:an Polanski, ·in this fiJe photo. Polanski \Vas in London when his wife and four others were murdered in the couple 's Beverly Glen borne. Rogers Says New Policy For Asia Well Supported Secretary of Slate Wiiiiam P. Rogers said today he foond "strong enthusiastlc. suppon" for the Presidenfs new Asian policy during a 100,000 mile tour of the Far East. He told a press conference in San Clemente he was encouraged by the success of the trip. stand Red China's belliC08e l'HctJon to his slatement last week: that· the U. S. wished to enter talks with the Commu- nist nation. ''The next day.'' he noted, "they vttri· olical!y called me a plague of war. I have difficulty undert.sanding thar. our point is that "'1e'd like to reduce world . tensions. Obviously, Red China Is caus- ing a great deal or these tensions." Specific legis live proposals "'ill be i;ent to Congre after the summer recess by the Seer • ry of lleallh, Education and Welfare, Nixon said. Nixon is calling for an end to the present welfare sy~tem and the aid to families with dependent children pro- gram, adopting in ils place a new family Man Wins $500 for Walk President Nixon two weeks ago an· nounccd the United Stat~ In the future would lend material and advisory as~l-. ance to eastern Asian nations against Communist acgression, internal and ex- ternal. But the U.S., said the President, could commit no troops. Orange Coast assislance program. • It would provide minimum basic bcneUts of $1,600 a year for a famil y of four -payable to the working or nonworking poor and to families with depelldent children whelher headed by father or a mother. Nixon stressed equality of treatment. a work requirement and a work incentive ir ·the program. lfe is eliminating any requirement that a household be wllhout a rather to become eligible for benefits. "That present requirement in many slalcs has lhe eUecl of breaking up families and cnntrlbutes lo delinquency and violence," Nixon said. He proposed that all e1nployable persons who accept the welfare paymC!rlts be. required to regbter for work or job training, and thal adequate and ct1n-- venient day care be provided for children wherever it 13 necessary to enable a parent to train or work. Jn 21) states, Nixon rstlmrtled, the ISce \VELf'ARE, Page %J • But He Had to Cover 70 Miles By RAND Y SEELYE Of 11M D1ll1 Pli.t Jl1ff "I will never do It again," panted Gary ~-lcAllister this morning. .. 1 don 't re:ommend anyone else lr)•ing." ~1cAllister 30, lfunlington Beach. bad just won $$00 on a btt he couldn't walk 70 miles in 24 hours. He completed the 240 laps with 45 minutu to spare at 7: IS a.m. today on the Orange Coast College track in Costa Mesa. It all started last wetk during a coffet break at Shinn Engineering Co., Santa Ana, where h1cAlllster is the night foreman. Whtn the Huntington Beach man said he could walk 70 milt! In 14 hoora about 1 dozen emp\oyes laughed. The laughter led to a $500 challenge. r.t cAllJster accepted the bet at three tri li ve odds and started at I a.m. Sunday morning. He took three sl'lort breaks during tl'lc day Sunday and almost lost his share of the bet -$.100 -when he stopped to rest in the evening. At the mld·polnl last night however he stopped for a ha!f-hour lunch break and was unable to get back on his feet. t,inally he pulh:-d hlmseU up and for the next hour wobbled into a slow pace. But his strength returned and rt1cAllistcr disappeared into the night. Gary Gardner. a· felk>w employe al Shlno Engineerini, said he stayed with McAlll.lter until I a.m. today, but left because "sitting ..;; as \iring 1s walking." ''After his lunch stop at a p.m. Sunday , Gary didn't !top again . He knew that if ht did. he would never start again ," Gardner said. • i.n 24.Hours '"lie paced him.self very well, averaging bet\"een JO and 12 laps every hour," Gardner noted, "but after his lunch break l11st night ht only went about eight ·taps the first hour, then regained his strength." lilcAlllster w~athered the ordeal quite well, but complained of problems with his leG muscles toward the end of the hike. lie ale lightly during the w11lk and drank water frequently . During the dark hours lanterns werr placed around the track to keep him from stumbUng. Hh1 children camped on the OCC football field during the nJght. Employa3 at Sblnn Engineering say he Is sleeping today and they don 'l expect him to show up for work tonight. "He may not be 1tblc to walk." they @flld. '"Without exception,'' said Secretary Rogers at noon today, "every leader r spoke to v e r y enthusiastically and stro ng I y supported the Presiderit's policy." The nations visited by Rogers included Japan, South Koreil, the Republic of China, Australia and New 7.ealand. "I was strongly encouraged by the success of the trip," said Rogers. The secretary al so said the lull in the fighting In Vietnam is continuing, de- spite bloody outbreaks. Rogers was asked whether any of the Pacirlc nations had uked that their troops be withdrawn from Vietnam, as the U. S, Is attempting to do \Vlth Its troops. "No," he replied, "but they did show lnterest In w111King lo be phaiCd In (the withdrawal) at IQme point alOilg the line." He said his talks with U. S. military leaders indicated that enemy lnllltra· tion of South Vietnam "is down to a con- siderable extent." Rogers 1ald he is \lnab!t to under· Weatlter 61d s.1 will break through those patchy morning clouds early Tues- day and boost the temperature in- to the upper 70'• along the shore and back up to 90 further inlaod. INSIDE TODAY Finnncict columnist Sulvi11 . Porttr today beains a four·part tt.ries on thl' great lond boom ond tells wheflttr 1'0" can ott 111 on the acl ion. If1 o" Page 22. ... 11... 14 CtllMll'I• t CllUllltf 11"1 <Wl'lk• " ''""""' ti °""' Helle" • ' ••li.rttl .. _ • &iil.i-llll!mtlll ti l'!lllftcl »·11 ... ..._ '41 A!lfl l.tflftA U _, t j? DAILY PllDT c , '· Occiderital Starts Dismantling Oil Derrick . . No WeJlFound Under Mesa · U'I 'A RESTLESS GIRL' Mu rdered H1lr1n Folger Bot.la Pro1ninent. ' 'NOT EVEN A SWINGER' Deed Hairdr1111r Sebring -The nttle of a t!!-foot•)llcb oU ~ct be!ng dlsmantle.d and a COllkllve. 1l1h or joy and jubUalion could be htard In norUleast Costa Mesa today. Otcldental Petroleum Q:irp. is calllng It quits. . One week lo the day after a stonny ci- ty counc:il sessicn on th_, ccntrovqaial petroleum exploratk>n, the subcontract dtlUer annOWlCed the job is done. Hale Fund Hits $4,650 Aftel' Rotary Raffle The scholarship fund for Balboa boattng accident victim Colston Hale, 16, swelled to $4,650 Sunday nlght afte r a "hUJely successful'' raffle ol fishing tackle, spokesmen for the event's 11ponsors ;innounced today. The rafDe, jointly sponsored by the Balboa-Newp<>rt Beach Rotarians. the Balboa Angling Club and Pacific Anglers, added $3,400 to the college study fund for the Newport Harbor High School student who lost most of his fingers last May. San Franciscans Shoclced A dozen persons, mOflt of them Harbor Area residents, won new fi.stung tackle donated lo the raffle by several manu!ac· turers. The dozen winners were chosen in a drawing :ield during a Pacific Anglers At Folger, Sebring Death Banquet. .,..... The winners are Dorothy Spearman, Ba lboa Island ; Tony Ba.galta, Downey ; Jed Walsh, Long B.each; 1'1ary Zamboni, lluntington Beach ; Frank Burchfield, Ccrona del Mar; Jack Smith, Corona del r.lar : Dorothy LaFever. Huntington Beach; Art Mace, Costa Mesa; Howard lt·larcove, Newport Beach; Bob Fortner, Cul ver City; ArnCal Construction Co., Troy , Mich.: and Hank C. May, Harbor Island. . . SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -:-san 1'rao- t1Jco society clrclea <till were in shock 'to4ay over the death of Abigail Folger, the pretty heiress slain In a mysterious weekend maa.sacre at Bel Air. ' . From Pqe 1 LA SLAYINGS. men. It could have been up to high as. three men." .:.:The victims: . -Miu Tate, 23, wife o( film director Rman Polanski. eigllt monUu pregnant with a baby boy, ditd or mu!Uple &tab 'llounds of the chest and back. Polanski flew htre· Sunday from Europe lnd iJll.. rntdlately went into seclusion. -Ablgail Folger, U, San Francisco, htil'Ull to the Folger coffee rortunt:, ~eacribed as a "rich hlppie" who at.-fended seance rusions, died of stab '"'ounm in the chest. : ~ay Se~ring, 35, innovator of hair stylinJ lor J'flen, once Miu Tate's fiance. died of multiple stab wounds of the body. -Voltyck Frokows ky, 37, worked with Polanski as an actor and writer In Polish films, died or stab wounds of the body and Umbs and a gunSl'lot wound ln the back .. -Steven Parent, 18, a friend of Gar- ret.son who left home in suburban El 1'1onte Friday to visit him, died of multi- ple gunshot wounds of the chest. Gamtson's attorney, Barry Tarlow, 1aid Parent dropped by the guest house to visit the caretaker, who looked aftet sever al dogs and cats belonging to the owners. Tarlow said Garret.son sat up reading until 6 a.m., Salurday but heard no unusual sounds from the main ho~. separated from the guest house by a swimming pool and shrubbery. "There was a party at the house the niaht or the killings," Tarlow said. "From the investigation made by my of· fice, our best. guess is that whoever did it was involved in a personal way these people who were killed." AttenUon today turned to the $CCOnd suspect sought by police. Helder said, "We are looking ror an in· divldual. We don't bave any definite in· formation that he was Involved. His name came up In con versation with Gar- retson." !lAJ l 'Y Vil OT OIWtGI c:cwt Putl ""'IM COlll#Alft l •Mti H. w • .1 .. ,...... ................ 1~ ..... , •-il .... Tiit lfltt A. M1111,lil11• -·-----JJO w .. t .. , $tr••' M•lll111 A441'1ttt P.O. Ip llJ60,'t!1!6 --.,..,...,.._, ttU .. , ..... ...._.. L-"' ""'°' m ~1 ,.......,. ............. «Ill .. 1111 Mrttt · Miss Foi1er. 26, was the daughter of' Peter Folger of Woodside, chairman of the · J. A. Folger & Co. coffee finn. Friends described her as a restless young woman interest!d Jn llberal causes. She was an honor student at Radcliffe and-had worked in a New York book•tcre and an art muse.um at the University er California at Berkeley before becoming a social worker and going to the Sculhern California area. • She woi'ked for 90me time In the 11hetto area of Watt& and also labored l.1 Thomas Bradley's loalng mayoralty campajan a few months aao . \Vilh her family 's approval. she in- vested money in tbe chain of salons operated by male hair stylist JAy Se· bring, JS, also killed In the weekend slaugltl~ •. Other backeta inclu~ actor:s Paul Newman, Steve McQueen; Warren Beatty and-Peter Lawford. 'tbroligb Sebting~ ihe met and mil'lgled with many of HOllywood's friost famous nime.9. aut she had the misfortune to bf: al the wrong place at the wrong time last weekend. Sebring' was also well known in the bay area where he opened a hair styling salon Jut May in partnership with pub\Jc rela· tions executive Art Blum. Blum, who said he was In a stale of "stuport1 from the tragedy, denied reports characterizing the five persons slain as "hippies." Blum said Sebring was "not even much or a swinger. His ambition wu to become a· millionaire." When Sebring came -to the bay area, he would·uSullly visit Lt. Col. Paul J. Tate. Tste, father of slain actre5s Sharon Tate, 26, is nearing ·retirement aa aasis· t.tnt chief or the staff er intelligence al the Sitth Region Army .Air Defense Com- mand al Fort Baker here. Fred Swenson, spokesmen ror the notary committee supervising the fund, said the raffle more than trebled the amount raised thus far for the young Balboa sllJcient. Hale, who will be a senior at Harbor lligb Utis fall , lost nearly all his fingers when he caught them between a line .and a cleat as he tied up a sportfishing boat on the docks of Art's Landing in Balboa . Swenson said financial donations and gifts of household furnishing for an apart- ment for Hale and his elder brother, Frank, are still welcome. They may be made th(ough the Rotary's post office bo1. on Balboa island. Persons wi!hing to contribute can ad· fires~ their donations to the Cole Hale Fund, P.O. Box 165, Balboa Island, Calif. 92661. Nixon Will Consult ABA on Judge Nods DALLAS (UPI ) -President Nixon, v.·ho will be able lo name a record 120 federal judges in his fir.;t year in office, has promised not to make any air poinlments without g e t t I n g recom· mendj lion from the American Bar Association CABA). Nixon's attitude was relayed to the ABA 's judicial selection committee Sun- day by Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard L. Kliendienst, who does the spade work for the President in this area. F rom Page 1 WELFARE PROPOSALS • • • present average benefit payments ai'e lo\ver than those he is proposing. And 1hese are are as. he says, '4'here povert y is often the most seve1 e. The new system would encourage work, Nixon said, by allowing a new worker to retain the·first $720 of his yearly earnings Y:ithout any benefit reduction. Nixon urged Congress to begin !iludy of these. proposa.ls promptly so that laws can be enacted and funds authorized as soon as possib le. He envisioned that "for the nrst timr . all dependent !amities with children In America. regardless ()f where they ll•e. "·oold be assured cf minimum standard payments ba.9ed t.IP,On uniform and single ellgibilily standards and "would be en- couraged to train and work and stay logether." "These are fa r-reaching effects," he told Congress, ''they cannot be purchased cheaply, or by piecemeal efforts." W1th the establishment of his "new Jl:P· proech" to welfare, Nixon said the na· tion's anlipovertr agency, Office of Eco-nomic Opportunity, will concentrate on finding new \\'ays of -0i>e.nin g economic opportunity to those who are able to wo.rk. Newport Bur glar Reads Playbo y Ylhat kfnd cl man rtadl Playboy~ Jn this case, a man who broke lnto John Gay's house while Gay ind hl1 wife were at a movie, ateallng a &tfreo and radios valued at $600, along wilh the August copy of the mM1azine (valued at It.II). Newport Beach Potlce <tald the &u9~t tnlertd Lile ;.ome at 2601 Li ghthouse t~ane 1hrough an optn rear bedroom win- dow late SatW'day night. "Rather than focusing on Income suir port activities," he said OEO "must find means of providing opportunities for Jn. di vlduals to contribute to the full extent or lheir capablliUes and in developing and improving these capabiliUes." In a presidential statement also issued today, Nlmn gave the OEO the highest priority to develop a new spirit of "social pioneering" to better 1he lot of all Americans. Helping Hand Tri ggers Crash lt1otorill William R. \V h I t le n berg couldn 't see because the sun \\'as in his cye9. So his wife rea ched over to lower the sun \'isor. lier arm was toU&her on h.is vision than !he setting sun, Costa lt1csa police said loday. Tht car driven by Whittenberg, 27. of sn Hamilton St., headed south on Harbor Boulevard at Fair Drlve. Sunday evenina, collided with another auto in fron t. 1'1otorlsl Robert H. Wheeler. 24, of 1551 ?iliramar Drive, Balboa, and his wife Lln- d11. 21. ••ere taken to Costa Mesa 1'1emori1l Ho1pltal with minor injuries and relea!td after treatment. l\lesan Kills Self Coroner's depu Ues said today that Oon11 ld A. Young, 82, commilltd suicide Sunday by shootin& himself with 3 io.hotaun In his Apartment at 2831 Bristol St.. Cosla f\fe1a. Acqualntanc.e.s told ftutho riUrs Young had been despondent recently over marital dUflculUcs. ... ll is also a failure. ~1ineral samples pull«t out ol a core hole poked 4,300 feet beneath the city in· dlcat.ed there is nc point in continuing the angled probe further. "The soil under Costa ?-.fesa doesn't contain oil, so our operations are finish· ed," declared a spokesman for Camay Drlltina Co., which had a permit totaling 120 days. Workmen toda y began dismantling the derrick at the site near Bea r Street and Paularlno Avenue, 'A'ilh the job ex~led to take 10 days. This will doubtless be good news to area homeowners, who ccmplained bit· lerly to the city council last Monday, despite Lhe fact councilmen could not have pre.vented the well's construction. The site is in a narrow strip of county territory and the council's 4 ta 1 vote. in favor of the project was only to allow slanl--drllling under city limits. "They had plenty or time left on their permit, bu.t decided it would be good public relations to take it down im- mediately," said A1ayor Alvin L. Pinkley toc!ay. He was the only councilman to vote againgt the slant-drilling. Vice Mayor Robert li-1. Wilson, assailed last week for his pro-slant dr ill vote earlie.r this year, said at the time he . hoped the Occidental job would close Ct:lat.a Meaa's oil coolrovery for good. . Oil producUcn is prohibited by city law, v;h.iJe slant drilling can be allowed il the rig itself is 100 yards or more outside city limits. The vice mayor said when he made his vote that if no oU were found, It should mean the end ot efforts by petroleum ·companies to flnd black gold beneath the city. The Camay company !pent two weeks seUlng up heavy machinery and scaf· raiding at the slte, after posting a $2S 000 bond to insure cleanup and any st;eet repairs needed. . Twelve days after the sampling opera. hon beaan, geologists lhreW up their hands in despair or finding what they \\'ere after and the job ground to a halt. Teen-age Thief Shows •Remorse' A Costa A1esa teenager jai~ euly today an sufspiclon of car buralary ad· mitted the erTOr or his ways lo police of- ficer!. He was allegedly remov~ three stereo tapes V.'orth $18 from '-~ers' van outside a market at 2l35'°":Bi.rbor Blvd., when the owner came out after making a small purchase. "J don"t even know why I took them:• he told Officer Ted \Vilson. ··flly buddy has a four.track set and these are eight· track." lHesa Home Looted Of 8185 Valuables A vacationing Costa Atesa man return. ed to his home over the weekend to find it looted of $185 in valuables, including a pistol, cash and a watch. Glen L. Campbell, of 961 Union Ave., told police the loss included a $100 bill but investigators could find no evid~ of rorced entry to lhe house. . . . .. 79 Gar y Fire1nen Fa ce Trials Over Strike GARY, Ind. (AP) -City firemen have e.lded a six-day strike, but 79 of them faC'e trials starting today that could re~ult in the loss of their jobs, The 79 firemen -out of a total force of 278 -were· suspended without pay last week for participating in the strike. • CONTROVERSIAL OIL EXPLORATION oER"RICKLODiSMANTLEDr No Bl•ck Gold Under Costa Mesa, Drlll1r Decl•r•• Mesa CofC Joins Critics Of UCI Hiring l(risman Mounting criticism of the hiring of radical leader Mike Krisman as a UC Irvine academic advisory coordinator to- day was joined by Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce diasent. Jack Hammett, president of the board of directors, has written the UC Board of Regents asking thelri to reconsider the appointment of the 27-year-old Lquna Beach man. Hammett'sletter indicates It ls an In· sul! to state taxpayers to hire Krisman, \\'ho was a UCI leader of Studenls for a Democratic Society (SOS). Hammell includes a resolution passed by the chamber board of directors r.1ay 15, censuring SOS for announcing a plan- ned sabotage assault on American business and industry. Krisman -who received an A in a Santa Ana College philosophy class taught by John Birch Society member Sen. John G. Schmilz (R·Tustin) fi\1e years ago -went to work as a UCI staff member last month. His appointment has been sharply criticized by variou!!l veterans groups and other organlzations holding opposite viewpoints . The adm inistration defended selection of Krisman for the liaiscn post he now holds, saying he is uniquely qualified to bridge the understanding gap and reach student rebels. Under unive rsity organization, Krisman holds the title of • assistant dean of students for payroll refere nce, a fact which has somewhat distorted his actual job. In his letter of Aug. 8, Chember of Commerce President Hammett lold the regents hls prinlary concern with Krisma n appointment Is the SOS af- filiation and that group's stated policies. "Secondly, the educaliona\ in stitution!! have repeatedly solicited the a.id of our cham~r in supporting drives for bond.1 .and tar overrides," Hammett continued. "It is now apparent by the appointment of Jl.1ike Krisman that the support of the great majority of citizens for hlaher education may be alienated," Hamm,ett warned. "I would urgenlly request that your august body recoosider .lhe appolnlaltnt of this man because of fhe.known posture of SOS and utilize your veto po\\' Cr," he concluded. $500,000 Heroin Seized by Agents SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police and state narC?tics agents seized 60 ounces of pure heroin val ued as high as S500 ,000 in A shopping center parking lot, and an Anaheim couple wa s arrested. The arrests late Sunday were an· nounced today by Joseph ll House, area supervisor of the State Narcolics Bureau. David Morales. 24. and his wif e Cecilia. 21 , were arrested on suspicion of furnishing to sell, transporting and im~ porting enough heroin to provide 100 ,000 "fi xes" when cut. I-louse said the agents negotiated for the heroin 48 hours 'A'ithout a break clima11:ing an inves tigation in Lo~ Angeles, Orange. San Diego and Imperia l counties. Nine agents and police seized the heroin near the Sports Arena . "This is one of the largest seizures 1'11! ha ve had in many years,'' House said. "It elim inates a large quantity ultimately headed for Los Angelts and Orange County markets." If you're 5'8'' or ove1·, we've plenty of suits left for you 111iddle of 1l1e night, grabbing a rmload• of suite, and dri,•ing away wi thin 71 M second1 o f smashing lhe fflas!. Usually 1he bn~lan are eaup:ht., hut iu the meanli1ue ,,.e·re oul seven armloads of suil!. Tite burll'.1an slripped lhe rat:k neareel the "'indow. It ronla ined mo11ly nur 11ui t!!I in ~horl !!li 7..e!!I • If yo u 're 5 II. 8 i11cl1es or taller, don'I you lei our litlle Lurglary worry you for one 1ninute. We have a soil in yo11r size. Or se1·eral dozen, for that 1n111er. J\faybe you read in the Pilot "·hat happe ned. We di<ln't order a hole in our "'indow but "'e ::ot tJDt:. AL 3:29 a.u1. Jail Tue1<lay, Au(ll•l 51h, wt.1 had some wio- ,Jow shopper.. I rlon•t know i ( w~ !liould be flattered by thi11 but appa~ntJy they liked wh•I they taw. They •lammed a milk t:rale throu-'1 onr t tore wi ndow, ~tl1e~d ••r teve.r,t,J fail 1rmload1 of our 1uit&, 11tC11rTied back to 1beir ~ar~ and raced •way into lite 11ight. F unny thin@'. F..x•etly 7 dare before, 11 the time wr renewed o ur hurglary insura~nce, the con1pany in1i1ted that we i.n° 11all a ne of tholft r1ew 1ilen1 alarm!. I t \\'Orkc1I hcau1ifully. Tl1e 11olice J a1 hed O\'er l1erc. Out. tl1 o&e hurf(lara were a tlash and a holf alitatl of lh cw. Gou~ without a trRct!. Helen (my wife) anJ I hal1e been told lhal the~ are ~,.·rral underground Burjil'lary Colle,re1 in &es9io n thi! sum· mer. They in1tru~t young n.1en in the late1l 1ne1l1od1 for bre11c.inc in.to • •tore in the Anyway. it'1 ,·ea unusual for ou r !lOl"e lo he o pe n at 3:29 a.m. Our ~Jar 11tore 1100.-t are 9:30 to 5:30, ~ton-. da~ 1lu-ough Saturday. W11en yo11 enltr. remeni· be.r. Don't come throa@h the wiiltlow. u~ the door. The police know about thit ad. Jack Bidwell :1467 Via Lido •I Newporl Blvd., in Ncwpor1 &ach next lo Rteh1rd'1 ~l1rkct ind The Lido Theater. Plenty of fro. rarking iu the rf'_ar . Phone 6734510 Copyrlglol 1969. Jack llid~ell. ' MoM,y, Auourt 11, 19" ' '1 s Pr,esident Nixon Returns -- DICK AND PAT BACK IN THE OLD HOME COUNTY With Fac11 Wreathed in Smiles and By Oran911 DA to Petition Court For J(opechne Autopsy NE\V BEDFORD. Ji.lass. <UPI) -Dist. Atty. Edmund S. Dinis plans to peUtion Pennsylvanla authorities this week for permission to exhume the body of Mary Jo Kopechne as part of his investigat.ion Into the fatal car wreck involving Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. Dinis, w.hose district includes Martha's Vineyard and the site of the fatal crash following a cookout July J8, announced plans for a judicial inquest last "'eek. District Judge James A. Boyle of Edgartown Friday set the inquest date as SepL J, The parent s of ~1iss Kopechne, 28, a forme r campaign \vorker for the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, have said they would 'Old Yeller' Bus TradedhyOV "Old Yeller" kept Ocean View School District chlkfren protected on their way lo school since 1952, but just didn'l cut it anymore. He had gotten feeble aft.er 17 years of service and the district trustees decided that reUrement was In order. The Tl-passenger bus was traded off to California Bus Sales, Inc. for two new 72- passenger models under a five-year $23,561 lease-purchase plan. Ocean View's old bus broughl $200 as a trade-in for the new vehicles. fight any attempt lo conduct an autopsy on their daughler who is buried in Larksville, Pa. ''I am not the authority in the matter." Dinis said Sw'Klay. "The Pennsylvania court wiU make the decision about it." Dinis said be has not spoken to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph • Kopechne of Berkeley Heights, N.J. "I wouldn't bother them . They have enough trouble," he said. The Kopechnes have been critical of Massachusetts authorities for not having asked their opinion . Miss Kopechne drowned when a car driven by Kennedy ran of( a narrow, wooden , 1humpback bridge on Chap.. paquiddlck Island just off Martha 's Vineyard. Kennedy escaped and 5aid he made several dives t1> rescue his passenger but was unsuccessful. Race Violence Flares At Island Marine Base HONOLULU (UPI) -J\1ilit.ary poli ce fired shots in the air Sunday afternoon to quell a "disturbance" between black and white Marines at lhe Kaneohe Marine Air Station 12 miles from Honolulu. A Marine spokesman said 250 Marines were involved in the 20-mlnute fracas. No •·major injuries" were reporttd, but witnesses said at least two Marines were treated for superficia l injuries. Beautificatioti Plata GREETS CROWD -Presl· dent greets well-wishers who turned out to meet his plane Saturday at Orange County Airport A crowd of about 8,000 waited in hot sun to greet President. Bands from Disneyland and Santa Ana High School played "Hail to the Chief.'' Mental Hospital Foes to Unleash 'Mothers Marcl1' ?.Jembers of the Westminster·Garden Grove Homeowners Associc.lion, battling the Westminster City COi.:ncil over a mental hospital in their neighborhood, are about to unleash a secret weapon. They have called for a Molher's March on City Hall Tuesday to emphasize a let- ter of appeal they plan to hand council members. Sal Guzzetta, president of the associa- tion, said approximately 200 mothers and their children are expected to participate in the 6 p.m., 3.~ mile hike that will lake them from the corner of J\1elrick and Ward Street. to the city's administrative offices. They will carry picket signs to demonstrate to the council that th er~ is residential concern over the matter, he said. Involved is construction or a private long·tcrm mental hospital at 10542 Bolsa Ave. Members of the rect:.1tJy.formed association have protested its con· slruction repeatedly because they allege that it would lower their property values and serve as a detriment to the neighbor- ing residents. The.ir hopes vanished, however, wilh a. unanimous city council decision to over- rule the planning commission and allow the 112·bed hospital. But they have vowed to conlinue the Bl.Tuggle in any way possible, including calling out the mothers and hiring at- torneys. Valley Sprucing Up Streets Bare bonltvard1 without manicured ]awns, nowers and green trees don't lurn anybod1 on, The Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Department knows thls and has just submitted a street beautification plan to the city Coun<!il for approval at the Aug. 19 meeting. \Vhlt it Involves ts the placement of medians 11long the major arterial roads -some planted and some not -cu rved ~idewalks With 11.rCet trees, and five fountains at the major entrances to the city. lt won't happen overnight, but if the ci· ty council approves the plan the program would be instlluted from funds mads avatlablt under Fountain Valley'110-year budget. Total eost or bringing about the lanmcaplng changes wou\d be cklse to $421 ,000 with a yearly maintenance cost or $00,800 at the end of 10 years. Stanley E. Stafford, chairman of the. cily's street beautification commltt~. said the purpoSt of the facclirting is two- fold. One is to beautify single-family residential neighborhoods and the other lo create unlque changes that tend to enhance the image of Fountain Valley. Same medians to be constructed will feature tW'f, kept green by automatic iprink:Ung systems. Specimen trees which best suit the area would also be planted, along with year-round nowen: to be located at the entrancu of the city. Sidewalks and walls would be adorned by properly stleded street trees with the use of ground cover. both for coverage and color. Clingirig vines would be in· stalled .on tract walls. The plan also urges that a permanent but unofficial bcautlflcat.ion committee composed or city re.sktents be established to concern it.self with ae!lthetic Im· ptovements in Fountain Valle.]• ._ DAILY PILOT Photos by Rich1rd ·Koehler and P•t O'Donnell AIR FORCE ONE -Presi- dent's plane pivots toward ter1nina.I at Orange County Airport following touchdown at 4:27 p .m . Saturday. Pilot Ralph Albertazzie used just over hall of the 5,700-foot run\vay, bring the modified Boeing 707 to a halt opposite airport tower (background) before turning toward termi- nal. OFF AGAIN -Alter landing at Orange CoWlty Airport and greeting crowd, Presi- dent and Mrs. Nixon board A1arine One -for helicopter trip downcoast to their 8an Clemente estate. Center of power in western world shifts to the seaside com- munity wilh President's ar- rival for month-long vaca- tion. Golden West JC Plans Community Musical Groups HB p2 HTK MUSIC ea Concert band, crchestra and chorale groups will be fonned for the community this fall at Golden West College. Directed by Warren Peterkin, a day school teacher at Golden West, the chorale will meet Mondays. 7-10 p.m., in the music building. They will be directed also by Thomas Hernandez, a member of the day faculty and trumpet player who was rec1>gnized tn a Life magazine story. Peterkin is a graduate of California State College, Long Beach, a n d Hernandez attended Colorado Stats College. Area mu.sicians are invited to register. Continuing evening student.s will register in I.he College Center, Aug. 16. by ap- pointment Others will register from 6 to 8:30 p.m. In the sarne bu i Id in g alphabelically by last name: A.C,. Aug. 18: [).J Aug. 19; K-Q, Aug. 20; R·Z, Aug. 21 . Open registration will be held Aog. 27, Sept. :. and vacancies permitting., Sept. 8, 10 and 11, 15 and 18. and 22 and 24. There is a $5 tuition fee at the Ume of ~gistration. Y oqth Spotlight On Tap Tonight "Spotlight on Youth ," an event recognizing the achievements of youngste rs participating in the Le Bard School summer playground program, has been scheduled for 7:30 tonight in the Huntington Beach Recreation Center. Playground Director Leo Garcia and Recreation A!lsistant Lisa Bloemke will present awards to participants in the various summer activities lncluding baseball teams. Farmer, G~lfriend Escape Red China •!ONG KONG fl1Pl) -They art In love but she cannot swim. So he tied her to a bicycle tire. Two refugees, a 25-year~ld funner and his glr1£rlend, 20, escaped from C-Om· muntst China by swimming 1cross a b•Y today. ,. 35 Victims Found FAA ,,Piecing Together Gamblers' S pecinl DC3 LONE PINE; Cali£. CAP) -The painstaking task Of piecing together the wreckage of a long.missing OC3 and bringing the bodies of 35 abroad from a frozen grave high on a Sierra peak began today. Helicopters. began ferrying men and· equipment to the tw e>-mlle high crash site at dawn. The first lo arrive were in· vestlgators from the Federal Aviation Administration and the N at io n a I Transoprtatlon Safety Board. Five persons lost their lives searching for the plane that vanished into a predawn snowstorm on fo~eb. 18 as it car- ried 35 passen11ers and crewme n back to Southern California from an evening of gamling In a Hawthorne, Nev., casino. The bad luck of the "11amblers special'' worked again Sunday when an Air Force helicopter with five persons aboard was slammed by a sudden OOwndraft into snow and boulders 100 yards from the OC3 wreckage about three m t 1 e s northeast of Mount Whitney, the highest Labor Day Luau Slated by Valley KiwanisOuh Polynesian fire dancers and Hawa iian songs are all part of a Labor Day luau being organb:ed by the F o u n t a i n Valley Kiwanis Club. The event, scheduled lo begin at 4:30 p.m. ln the Founlatn Valley Clv:lc Center, will feature name dances by Ulan!, music by the Greenwood Brothers and Hawaiian dancers Monu and Kauilanl. Amateur tnterbalnmenl will be pro- vided' by the Maul Maul Sistm, a foursome compmied of Kiwanis Club members. T\ckets, priced at $1.2$ for adult.s and Sl.25 for children, will ht on sale soon by Kiwanis Cub members. Followina the luau, "The Rapps" and "The Illusions," two rock bands from the Fountain Valley area, wlH play (or the younger !t':!t In the Fountain Valley RecruUoo Center. point In the continental United States. The heliC-Opter cr.ilsh le.fl Inyo County Sheriff Merrill Curtis h95pitaliud with back injuries and destroyed the $1.5 million HH38 helicopter. The man in charge or Investigati ng the airliner crash, Jerald Brugg\nk of the National Transportation Safety Board, sad It will take several days lo get aJl the bodies from the gnarled wreckage that trailed several hundred yards dowr1 the mountain side from a sheer rock face into which the airliner apparently flew . Had the plane been 1,500 feet higher, It would have cleared the towering eastern rampart of the Sierra and been safety over the Redwood carpeted valleys.of Se· quoia National Forest. Bruggink said some of the bodies are lying exposed on 30 feet of snow that covers the slopes and will be taken ou t today on two small helicopters rented lo replace the downed Air Force aaft. The FBI has flown in a six·man identl· fication team that has been assembling: information on the plane's passengers and crew almost since the day· it dlsap. peared. They will work on identifying vie· tims in a temporary morgue set up in Bishop. Calif., 40 miles north of Lone Pine in east-central California. No one will be moved until all the bodies are tagged and pieces of the wreckage mapped, said Don Talmaae. Inyo County e-0roner. "We have waited a long time on this one and don't want to do anything lo jeopardize the investigation now." The 32 passengers and three crew members apparently died on impact, ac· cording lo investigators who got to the scene Sunday. "It Is my ·opinlon that no one could have lived after It hil," said Talmage. The white and blue DC3 was found Fri· day: On Salurday '8 hellcoplter landed and lhe pUot confirmed the wreckage wa,, that of the ·missing Mine.rs) Count¥ Airline.! plane. The area had betn crlsa.croued by 5earch planeg many limea In put months but last winter's rtcord wnows recently melted ·enouah for the. wreckaae to be seen. The OC3's passengera had paid $10 each for dinner. entertainment and a round·ltlp from Burbank and Lona Beach lo the door step of a casino In Hawthorne, • ' - • ' ~ ........ ,.,.,., < Motorl&ts' dispo<llloas t u r n • d sour when thousand• ol gallons ol molaues "sweetened" the busy Nimitz Freeway near Oakland. It took highway workers nearly three bOlll'I lo remove the goo that Doocl· ed. t.he roadway when a truck over- tumed. • Zoo o{jj¢als In .Pblladelphi~.8"!- . -~ • . · ' ~-------·-. - Mcualng tor Aaaaalt? Lul·l Shattered I · by Red· Attacks SAIGON, (UPI) -North Vietname1e and Viol C<\118 troops are muaing lor an offensive between Saigon and tbe1 Cam· -bodlan border, tnformect U.S. mHlt.ary soureet aid l<>day. Cnmmunilt attacks ehattend I lull I<> ground fightfuJ •nd brought the highest U.S. casualties in two moolhs. ' • ~ New fi&hting killed 41 Americans and Wounded 170 othefs In baules that in· eluded a North Vietnamese ~ult on two M~ campa near the de!Dllltarized lllne (DMZ) Sundoy. '11ley predicted a Communist att.ack In the region before Aug. 20 and uld Allied troops ,..,... pouring int<> the area I<> counter Lhe threat. The Communi~ are e1pected to cort- centrate their attack on lhe clUet of An Loe:, Quao Loi and I.Ge Ninh, all IO I<> 70 miles northwest of Saigon near \he Cam- bodian border and .a major Commwlist infiltration route, the: sourtts aaid. "We conclude that the enemy ls preparing for a decWve military effort in Binh Long and Tay Ninh (pr..inc.o)," one source said. elated with their latest acquisition -a blue frog. "It's as rare ~ a blue moon,'' said zoo direct.or Rog.r Con•nt. 11A generic .abena-- tion," said the'"%oo's press director Jtck Chtv•ller. The frog was found in starlight, Pa., by a 6-year-old girl. A research $cientist neighbor handed it in to zoo officials. Co. nant said the frog is probably a male adult about· a year old. Ul'I .,,..,...,_ ASTRONAUTS SHAKE HANDS WITH NASA EMPLOYES ON LEAVING LUNAR RECEIVING ~AB Aldrin (left), Collini (c•nt•r} •nd Armstrong G•t Flr•t Br•ath of Air Sine• Blast-off Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, U.S. co~ mtmder in Vietnam. flew to· Dong Ha near t.be DMZ toc11y to cooler on the at· tack by element.. or North Vietnam 's 30fth Divilloo, which fought in the battle of Deln Bien Phu, which ended the Frei\c~lndochln.a War in -19'54: tr.S. '-lalines IOst 19 killed and al least 80 wounded In the assault. The green-clad North Vietnamese charged two Marine camps throwing grenades. Marines repelled them with bayonels and rifle stocks when many broke through defensive perimeters. The United states' has been inten!ively bombing the· area in the past five d1ys. BS2.s have bombed northern Blnh Long Province 21 times in the past few days and military sources a.Id at least 110 Communi$! trooPs have been killed In the raids. While predlcting the offensive, lht American sources conceded th a t "because of Allied pre-emptive opera- tions. the enemy's effort may be feeble or even postponed." • Gou. Ronald Reagan takes time out in. Sacrmnt11to to chot with Tomey Jean .W~burg, 18 o/.Cl.aremore, Okla., about one . of hi1 faoorite subjects - horstl~ toJMy J{rrn, a woman ;oc1c.t11, planr to ride quortt1-horse.s at the state fair 1tarting Aug. 25. S~ hta becm riding since she was S and has been Ucen.std in California lince May. • The local new car dealers asso- ciatton in Eugene, Ore., recently gave thtt city an $8,000 limousine in hopes it would add ~mtt claas to cily bJIJI. Six weeks and three miles later the city fathers gave it back. "It would hav'e been okay as a ceremonial 'car,•• said Mayol' l•ste.r Anderson. "But for day-to- day use, it was a little too--uh- rich." The Oregon St a t c Depart· mtnt of Emergency Services in ~ Soltm, had to close while the office is being carpeted. As a ren:lt, it announced that "no t1'W!rgendes will be permitted until further notice." • Floyd Wilson, 21 , o( \Vellsville, N.Y. iigures to see a Jot of his \Vife in the nert year. As part of a sen· tence for three traffic violations. Vlll•o• Justic• Philip 0. Eng•ld•r ordered \Vilson not to be on Well s· ville streets for the next 12 months unless accompanied by Mrs. Wil· son. He also imposed a S50 fine. Police said residents complained that \Vilson was driving his car over their la\\'lls. Astronauts Escaping Publicity-for Now SPA~E CENTER.. Houston (UPI) - Three modest men who braved the unknown of another world settled down lo normal earth chores today before facing a tumultuous public acclaim they would rather mt receive. After spending three weeks in moon bug ·quarantine, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil A. Annstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. "Burz" Aldrin Jr., l.ried to avoid the glare of publicity. As .Armstrong _entered his office-at the M9Jllled Spacecraft Center, he told newsmen he was goint to -.. Work, work, work. It's just another day." 11le lunar adventurers, pronounced "perfectly healthy" after their expo11ure to moon dirt, spent the night at home for tlie first fune ln five weekl and then prepared for the traditional program for heroes - a news conference . Tueldly followed by lickertape parade• and a banquet Wednesday. The astronauts wer~ releued from th• Lunar Receiving Laboratory's antiseptic 31-room isolation suite Sunday night a few hours ahead of .schedule. A govern- ment commiUee of medical 5pecialists concluded they carried no lunar germs that wotild endanger earth. Their departure was .quick. Within 15 minutes after tbey .rtepped past. lhe quarantine barrier, they were reunited wtth their loved. ones io the privacy of their boo\t$. •"if' Tornado Hits Cincinnati; 4 Dead, Many Homeless CINCINNATI (UPIJ -This ~lly's lirst tornado in more than a half century left behind a $7 million swath of destruction nine miles long, four persons dead and 460 families homeless. Some 700 Ohio N1tlonal Guardsmen patrolled UJe devastated areas in northern Cincinnati and nearby .Sl.lb\lrbs to prevent looting today w_hile officials appealed for federal disaster a.Wstance. Gov. James A. Rhodes, who toured the area early SUnday w1th Mayor Eugene Ruehhti.aM and other officials, called the damage ''devastpting." Many of the homeless were among some 400 families evacuated from the Lake Shore Apartments in nearb y Reading, where ~frs. Joanne Lee said, "I saw trees and pieces of lumber from the 11des ol the building flying through Ille ari." The Red Cross reported that 25 homes \\'ere destroyed and 85 others suffered major damage, I e a v i n g lhem uninhabitable. Some 350 apartment units: also were destroyed. Most of those forced from their homes found r;pace with friends and relatives, but 29 members of six families spent Sun- day n{ght in a temporary shelter at a school. Over 100 persons stayed there Saturday night. Sylvester Del Corso. Ohio's National Guard adjutant general, who estimated the damages, said the troops -patrolling and directing traffic -would remain on duty as Jong as they were needed. The cleanup already was well under way Sun· day. Fair Weather Over Nation • I Heavy Downpours Hit Carolina, New Orleans Ctdltornl• ,.CYllWOf'~WU1'MllllUMfOUWTTOJ :HA. ... llT I ·•t•" .. Temperature• "-""" t10lo'Ch' ""'~ "'~'"' 1l'ltfl ..--tty W""'I'· Wln<fs IOll""*'I I 111 11 lll'IOf1, HllPll toMy l'I. Y•1ltr"9Y"I ~f\lr. "'""'"' ..,_ • lllMI ol &I lo l'I. rnltnd ~.,..,,.., ,...,.. Wf!. .. 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" " Solon Suggests Wait for Russia Before Mars Trip W ASIUNGTON (AP) -The chairmsn of the House Space Committee said today the United States ahould ml commit it.self at this Ume to a landing on Mars. Rep. George P. Miller (D-Calif.), ~td ·a decision about a manned lrip to Mars should be del1yed for five to 10 years while new technology is developed and more experience is gained in space flight. But that time, he said, there is a chance Russia will join the United States Jn making a Mars flight an international expedition. "If is worth waiting a few years to see If this will be po&Sible," said Miller in a speech prepared for House delivery. Coming from the chairman of the com- mittee that will have to authorize funds for any space program, t\.1iller's words should carry great weight with ad- ministration planners. His comments appear to run counter to the expressed views of Vice President Spiro T. ~gnew and Thomas O. Paine, he.ad of the National Aeronautics and Space AdmtniJtration. Agnew suggested shortly after the Apollo 11 launch tl'tl\.the next goal of the United Slates might be to send men to Mars by the end of the century. • U.S. military source 1 said two regiments -2.500 troops -of the 9th Viet Cong Divlsion bad already moved Ur w nnrtllern Binh Long Province. U.S. commanders last month predicted a Communist offensive in Tay Nlnh Province. It never came ofi and they cited "pre-emptive" measures for lllop- ping it before it began. Freeze on Prices, Profits Follows Devaluation PARIS (UPI) -Deva1ualion of the franc went into effect today with a freeze on prices and profits to give the currency "breathing space." Tourists were delighted with tower prices and Parisians jammed the Paris Bourse to buy stocks with the cheeper currency. Bourse officials said it was lhe first time the stock market had ever had such hectic trading in the traditional holiday month of August From ~.000 to 5,000 buyers jammed into the columned building and pushed prices up anywhere from 1 to 20 percent "The reaction was Inevitable," said a Bourse spokesman; "It's basically a good reaction, but it do@sn't prove devaluation has suceeeded or failed. We won't know that for s1:r or eight months." France devalued the franc by 12.5 per· cent Friday in a move so unexpected not even its Common Markrl partners were tnfor:med in advance. Before devaluation a franc was worth 20 cents; now it Is worth 17 Y.1 cents. On the gnld market, in the Bourse basement, gold commanded the same price it did on the London market -the first time tn·at had occurred since France imposed foreign currency controls on its citizens late last year. The price was $41.51 per ounce, up slighUy from Friday. In London, the franc was stronger than expected. Its opening price represented a devaluation of onJy 11.7 percent rather than the oflicial 12.5 percent The showing against the pound w~ being closely watched since financial et• perts said it would demonstrate eithez: 1 greater faith in the franc or a lesser fa1tt\ in the pound. British cunency also was under pressure in Frankfurt where there was an early rush away from sttrlinl and into marks. IT'S EASY! DRAW A CLOWN'S FACE. Celebrate NatiOflBI CIC1Nn Week by entering A&Ws 110raw A Clown'' ConteSt. Here's how: draw and color a clow n's face and bring It to this A&W,·YOU'Jl get a free root beer -plus a chance to win a boy's or girl 's bik.e: Contest open to all youn~sters under 15 from Monday.Friday August 11 to 15. Drawings will be displayed at this A&W and judging wrl( be held on Saturday, .tiugust 16. You do not have to be pr.sent to'!'!"· IMPORT ANT: Be sure to .print name ind address on )'QUI' entry. (Umit one entry per person,) · · A&W DRIVE-IN .2855 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ... . .. • Worker Mashed Directs Rescue, Then Dies MEXICO CITY (UPI) - While his wire and infant children watched in horror, a young v.·elder calmly directed his own rescue from a rock· crushing machine that mashed the lower half of his body to a bloody pulp. He died later on an operating table. "Cut that plate there. Now take out thore two. bolts. No, no, the two on the right," shooted Pascual Moreno, di· recting the hour and 45 minute inl!neuvering that freed his body. J\1oreno, 24, was working at 11 gravel pit Sunday eight miles west of Mexico City when another workman ac- cidentally switched on the rock-crushing m a ch i n e • Screaming "stop il, tum it orf," Moreno was carried by a conveyor belt between the two i;teel roller! that crush rock. By the time the machine was switched off, the rollers had crushed his legs, pelvis and abdomen. Moreno, who remained conscious throughout the ordeal, ap- parently realized he was the only man present capable of dismantling the machine. In a finn, clear voice be directed lhe olhers, u:!ling a cutting torch and wrenches. i n disassembling the crusher. ri.1n1. Moreno, holding the couple's tiny children in her arms, watched from a few feet away. Tears r o 11 e d silently down her cheeks. The lower drum or the crusher began to :!llide away and a worker moaned "you've lost your legs, Pascual." "I know that I know that. Now pull it backwards. Lilt up t Oh, Chute! that chain there. That's ia. Now get me out of here." A Red Cross worker, 1tan- ding by with a stretcher, suf. fered a heart attack, as Moreno's body was released from the rollers. Moreno died on a hospital operating table two houn later, from "massive trauma and heavy I~ or blood." SF Murders Now Total 96 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - San Francisco's murder toll for the year now st.ands at 96. Gary Collins, 24, died from a gunshot wound in the stomach at Mission Eme rgency hospital SUnday. He was shot by an unknoWh assailant ln his Tenderloin Ratel room earlier Sunday. Police said that the weapon blew up and piece:!! of it were foond in the room. Collins managed tG stagger in- to the street and hall a cab. Tree Topples, Kills Woman SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK (UPI) -A falling ,.. quoia tree caused the death of a north Hollywood woman in a freak weekend accldeot. National Park Service· of. fi cials said Stella G. SL Johns, 60, wa_, hit by the top of a trtt snapped off by a falling giant sequoia Saturday. She died before reaching a hospital. A promise of a nude skydive into Running Bares Nudist Camp at Lyons, Wis., turned oul to be a put on -the seven Milwaukee jumpers were fully clothed. The six men and one woman were greeted by calls of '1cbicken'' from the 300 members ol. the nudist colony. After. the jump they apparently "IJl'loo dressed" for 111• occasion and c·nny dipped with colt nlf members . . sale shirts c >liop Hrly end 11vo 20%' on personalixed Christmas cards During th• •ntire month of Au9u1t, Mey Co is offerin9 you 20 -;. 11vin9s on beautiful per· soneli11d Christmes cards. The collection includes designs from leading artists end cerd nwilt1rs. may~ st1tion•"Y. 66 ( - .. a. tli< opttad collu mibs ned1 ....,, kmgtt, belf" broaden your laoe b. !he. W-1piad ~-llotgti~ lmgt!ions occk, bro..i-the fwi c. die Joiig point malie. ilit 1itooO f..,. •!'P"' . ' mw:h longer and llimmer d. the pin point tbort.n< die Jonrr neck and broad.;,, the IW1'0W' face e. ti;. ~ lmgtlioii"dit sliorter neck and bdpa alim the f&<O • 1n -.,, -11. 1'69 DAILY ~LOT !; • • 5 collar styles now you can 1fford to be choosy Be dioooy. '.At saving< like thiJ )'Oil can indulge you...tf. Pidi die a>Uar· that tuitl you best. Since it's right up front where everybody DQtices it. make llUie that it addo to your appearance. The hey-look...,...,... mlon include ra5pborry, bra.u, olive and Freodl blue. The bu-clowna &tW available ooly in otripes ••• bruh and subtle. niere • white too. "EadJ ia a blmd of oo-iron polyester and cotton. Short >leeves ooly, ll4Yz lo 17j ~.00-6.00 ~alun 3.39 ·---------- Save more oo 3 £0< 10.00 may c.o mm·~ furnishings 6 may co south co•st plaxa, sen diego fwy at bristol, costa melo; 546. 932 11 shoP. mondoy: through saturdoY, I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m MAVCO • ' 1 DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Broadenin g Horizons Growing pains in rapidly-urbanizing Orange County Uk• many forms. The d.aya of an •gricultliral com- munity and its government 10~ of "lazin~ in the swi" are gone. Controlling and onlenng the env1r0nment are bolb complex and necessary. F.clng up to tho problem, Ille Orange Coul>ty Boord of Supervl!ors signed a '51),000 contract last November with a private consu!Ung firm. Its purpooe was to gain expert advice in designing a countywlde 1eneral plan program. Now completed, the "Program Design Project" Is an effort to broaden horizons in planning and opera- tions. Its emphasts ts on developing a viable planning process instead of a single master plan with all of the usual rigidities. county, city and local district ¥,ov•rmnenta, plus pri- vate lndualry, to plan tho county s futl1ri on land, water and In the air. But planning won't do the job, important u that Is. What will COWi! Is close coUabol'.allon at au govern. men! levels, and within governments, in the intelligent execution of future project.. Once there ts gen~ recognition that the action• of one unit .of government may VfllY well atrect for good or Ill the quality of Ille for all others in Orange County, then there can be real progress. Will He Have Authority? Hiring of a county public information officer bas been authorized by the Boan! of Supervisors. Stripping away fancy verbiage, the report by the consultants is primarily a reminder that governments -county, city and special district -should be talking with each othet a great deal more than .they have been. The same is true of departments within: county govem- ment. (!l's lronic, incidentally, that a sizeable sum of tax dollars should have to be spent to bring ·home to all conc•med the Importance of informational input at all levels of government. But such, it appears, is hwnan nature.) The job description put forth by the supervisors leaves unclear exacUy how he'll operate. They say be isn't to be a Public relations man or a press agent, al· though there's a world of difference between the two as the terms are used professionally in the east. A PR pro assists in getting out public information without hampering the press or the public. This ts ap- parently what the supervisors have In mind. The county's growth has brought encroachments everywhere. No longer are cities simply islands, able to go their own way wtthOot thought to neighbors and their concerns. A drainage district, for instance, should know before ii puts In a drain what the effect will be on the neighbors and whether there's a better alterna· live. Recognizing tho growing problem of "lo~ether­ ness," the new program proposes a partnership of They don't say, however, that their information man will have authority to force out information to which the public has a right, despite possible objec- tions of a county employe who may want to keep it secret. Unless the person filling the new post has such authority, and also can serve as a kind of ombudsman, or go-between, for the public, the job could well be a waste of money. Recent Events GiveNew Lustre Moon Walk Results A re Unforeseeable Democrats Move on Policy WASBINGTON -Thal long·promised Democratic PoUcy Council is finally beginning to take shape, and under cin:umnances which suggest that It may play a more significant role than bad been upect& Fonner Vice President Hubert H. Htnnphrty diacllued the co u n c l I membershfp here last week with Sen. Fred II. Harris, D-Okla., chalnnan of the Democratic National Committee. Harril Js expected to name the CtiUDCO and IU cmstituent committees In a wttk or two. Humphrey, as the 1963 prtsidentiaJ candidate has been all but formally an- nwnced u chalnnan of the new policy group. Less well known is the fact that Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, n.Me., Bum· phrey's running mate, has also agreed to 1SerVe. RECENT EVENTS give a new lustre to a Hwnphrey-Muskle policy councll. The members of the 1968 tenn rank, now, as the top amtendt.rs far the Democratic presidential nomination in im, and that Is oomelhing of a switch. Only a few weeks ago it appeared that the policy council was fated lo be a pallid bit of w i n d ow dressing for the Democrats. Sen. Edward M. l<ennedy, I). Mass .• bad declined to serve on the coun- cil, and Kenned y w.i.s then viewed as the all-but.certain Democratic presidential candidate for 1972.. t ._.,, , Allen-Gol dsmith 1 '-""""~-.;:...c..,,,_...,..., __J It appeared that tbe beat lndtt of DemocraUc policy In the pre-1'72 ln"rim would be Kennedy p:>Ucy u developed by the young Masaachusetts senator in bis role u usiltant leader for Senate Democrats. AD that ii cbanled now. In the wake of the auto accident w~ killed Mary Jo Kopechne, Kennedy bas ruled blmself oot of the I 972 presidentla1 contest. fill policy incllnatiom are «udC:enJy a good deal )eu important than befort. CONGREM, A NON-POIJCY? -In 1956 tbe top coogreaaioaaJ Democnll, then Sen. Lyndoo B. JOO..... and Speaker Sam Rayburn, re!isted the fonn1Uoa of a similar policy group known u the Democratic Advllory Council. Their ob- jection was that Danocrata in Congrtu must set the policy line wben !be Wb!le House is ill Republican hands. The same ol>le<lioo bas boeo made by some congreaklnal Democrats to erea-- ~ lion of lhe new Policy Council. 'Ibeir ob- jection hu bt much of its force. however, u It bu become appartnt that Democrats In Coogrea cannot chart a policy line In tbe ..... that the Raybum- J obnao!\ leadmblp cbartad II u the Eiaenhower admlnistr1Uon'1 loyal op- posiUon. In fact. the recent maneuvuing over President NlJ:on'1 request for a ~year ertensioc of President Johmoo'1 lncome ta.I surcharge resulted in a ralber em- batrasaln1 noi>poliey from coogr.,.iooal Democrats. FIRST HOUSE leaden, under Speaker John W. McCormack, supported the Presl:dait11 requeat. However, Senate leaden, under Sen. Mlte Mamfield, [). Mont., Aid they would oppooe the surcharge eztenslon unltss 11 wu com- bined with • poet.age ol real ln reforms. Then, on tbe voting 1 b o w d o w n , McCormack and company provtd·unable to supply die needed Democralk vote., and the Prolldent bad to loot el!ewhere. Finally, MllDSfleld and company agr<ed oo • &ix months mmston of the 1Ur'Char1e, with auuranca that reforms would quietly follow. In that final procesa Mansfield Wll lhar)>ly crltlciud by the HOO!e Democratic whip, Rip. !We llogp, 0.LI. In ...... the combined --leadenblp evolved no cooN!nsled polley at all OD the IUl'dl.arge. The net -rtSU.ft -to mate tt cJeor lbal ....,...1ons1 Democrats would not unito just to h<Jp i'resml Nmn In what he Aid WU • vital move qalnst inflaUon. By Robert S. All .. and Job A. Goldamllll Turn Moon Into Museum? Since more trips are to be made to U. mooo. why not turn our lunar orb into • museum ot manldnd! 1ben if man1 in a frenzy of self-hate, should ever destroy himself and his works on earth. a record of his race would still exist in artifacts pre.served forever in the cold storage vau1ts of the moon. In sOme future eon, perhaps intelligent forms of We from outer space might ex- plore our solar system, stumble upon this treasure trove of hwnan relics on the moon, and ponder the magnificence and misery of man. The proposal is an interesting one, bound to appeal to the vanlty of the human spirit, which undoubtedly desires to leave a record of its passing. IT IS AU<> A controversial one. Whal tesUmonial 50UVenirs should be exported to the lunar warehouse to &how what kind d. creature man was and how he 1pent his time upon earth before finally u- tenninating hltnself? No two people \\'OU1d draw up the same list, but certainly the moon museum would be incomplete wllh<'ut these mementoes: ----- Monday, August 11, 11169 TM editorial poge of th< Dau, PUt>t u11u to ~nform and atl"" ldott rtadcn b~ pr11nti11g lhia -Pl"· opinlOtU cmd -mcntarv on toplu of fnf.lreat alld dgnl/ianu:e, br providing • forum for Uur upnuaon of °"' <radnl' opinion&. and b• prtunthlg the diotT'u oitw- pofma of fft/onnfd obs'""'" and rpokuntn on topics of th< do •. Robert N. Weed, Publisher •, .. , .. , . ·-/ ... ....... ~ ·,!", , .-·~ 1::, ..... i: •• _-4.,... 11·· '" • , -· • . ..,. . ' . ,.... -1: " ..... I ( ] ;--: ' I : •, _ t-t ~ <..' ,-,: • ' ·'ff' . .. » . , . ~--;:. '.. ' · .. -~ ·~ •••• 4i.; a"~ A bolUe ol aspirin tablets and a boUle ol vitamin plJJs. COples of the Bible and the Koran. A b:>• and anow, a pistol, a rUle and a shotgun. An encyclopedia, a multilingual die· tlonary, a world history, and collections of great world prose and poetry. A very dry mart.Jni, 1 can or beer, and a magnum or champagne. DIAGRAMll OP aD tbe great lnventlolll from the wheel to the hydrogen bomb. A wedding drea, a mJnisklrt, a bltlnt bathing suli, and a pair ol nylon 11ock· ings. A Sunday edition of tbe New Yort Times and any issue of the Congressional Reconl. A packet of dogs, a tin of tun1 fiah. • box of crunchy breakfast cerea1, • piece of burnt t~t. and jars of mustard jam, marmalade. and peanut butter.· The farewell speech of Socrates and the latest oration of Sen. Evemt Dirk· sen of tllinoi.1. An lno>me t.ll form. a crossword r;:z~· and several chlldttn'1 comic COPIES OF THE Declanllon of lndepmdence, the Communlat Manlfeato, and lhe U.S. Oonslilulion. Several penc:Us. a ball point pen. a can opener and an u:ec:uuve brief cue cc. talnlng a llv""'111'St ssndwlch doused wllh kelclrup. A yo yo, a hula hoop, a deck of emfs and a p1lr of diet, sets of chess and checkers, and a book on 1strok>gy. A broken v1cuwn cltaner, a broken washing machine. a broken power lawnmower, and a t.elevision-Kl with a fu;zy ICft<ll, A history ol rporll from stonwllnglng UUle D1vid to lootblllolGAin1 "Broadway Joe" Namalh. A sslety pin. a hairpin, a &lrdle, .,,.. bair curlen and 1 pair ol .q>1t.s. A cI1ar. a pipe. 1 package ol clpreUe,, and a packet of sslely matchu. A FINE FILM from severaJ countries and ooe dirty movie from Sweden. lleconl!n&• from Elvis Presley, the Beatles, Julie Andrews, and any opera lung by Enrico Caruso. A sbimmering Christmas necktie, never woni. A bottle of cola, a bottle of grape MXl.a pop, an ice cream soda, a lump of sugar and • llcdwine tablet. An illustrated aes: manual, a rallroad timetable. a mall ontu catalog, a novel by Jacqueline Susann, and a collection of abort stories by John o· Hara. Some taweh:, ban of soap, and ubtrays ltol!n from the Americana and New York Hilton hotels. A collection of the best jokes told by Calvin Coolidge, Milton Berle and Bob Hope. Surely aome visitor from space. pawing through these exhibits in a lunar musewn, wouJd wonder why man sun•iv· ed the wear and tear of bJs own creations as loJ!i u be did. Dear Gloomy Gus: Drive carerully, Ifs not only cars lhal can be recslled by lhelr maker. --Q. P. Th-! world-wide acc:Wm for Apollo 11 ls an .excellent e:iample of Newton's law of action and ~action. M the lunar landing prospered, It wu atteod«t by a rising skepticism regarding the hwnan and historical proftt to accrue from the enterprise. The primary el~ ment In this •kepticl!m wu an ex· prwion from many quarlus that the cost ol Apollo could be more lntelli(ently applied to the urgent problems aisling on earth. The actual mooey cost, golng back over several years -'24 billion ...... was an ac. Uve factor 1n the doubt. But this cost about equals that of 1en month& of Viet- nam warfare. a venture \D1productive of any value whatever to man, an utter failure, while Apollo was an unqualified succeu. BUT THE MATERIAL investment is not logically tbe centra1 issue of the rtmonstrance, nor b It the major weakness of the cause of the highly resp!\.."iable anU-ApoUo, and lndeed anU- apace, group, sctenUfic and lay. The weaknes1 of their position bears direct!)' on the extreme diWculty ()f of- fering an objective judgment of any great event while it is occurrtng, whether the event i! technological or lies In the buman!Ues. In the humanities, few great works of art are acknowledged as creat until years and often centuries have passed. To all but a handful of his contemporaries, Shakespeare's plays were only clever and appropriate to their time. A hundred years passel before It dawned on the Western world lbal they were surpassing poetry, and that the playwright was an unpredecented genius in discerning the human relation. But this is a com. monplace of human achievement. and far remaved from the technology at hand. YET THE GENERAL rule holds. Contemporaries of great invention and great diM:overy almost never see where the Invention or discovery is going. Mlle. Curie was honored e n o u g h for demonstrating radioactivity, but nobody saw where it "'as going. Even Edison's light hardly foretold the electronics enabling earthmen to talk to moorunen . In recent days we ha,·e heard much of Christopher Columbus. the world'~ most notable gtographical discoverer. NOW' Columbus was a zealot, a nut, tn subscribing to a very okl conviction of educated men that the world ls a tphere. 1be :nasses thought this nonsense , and be hid lo overcome them with a iales t.alk. But what were Isabella's motives? Nothing more than the glory and riches ol the newly.joined Spanl.sh Crown. Columbus by technological navtgaUon and sheer audacity served that Crown.. BUT NONE OF THE European greot ol the time fomaw the ...WL Wbat they foresaw for 200 years was new land to plunder and a new Spaniah power to m. vy. It WU, as you know, wretchedlr mismanaged on two conUr>enta. No 11\ling man can forttee the result of the futt moon landing, tither ln lechnolOI)' or thetumanlllos. U money Is all you want, it Id return tht $24 bi!· lion a hundred old. But U you want tomelhlng more ror mankind, havtng taken the risk you'll ba\•e to watt and eee. .• • (I 11W8t con/1!$8 it_ ®es look temptingl;y empty' 'Ecology~ Is Key Word to Future In the flood of June's convocation and commencement addresses -to which 1 contributed my own full measure of pom- pous generalities -there was on1y one talk I ran across that deserves more than passing attention. nus was a convocaUon speech at St. Albans School i n Washington by the articulate and abrasive VJCe Admiral Hyman G. Rickover. According to a report in the New York Times, Rickover exprtued concern "by tile ease with which purveyors of technology have pressured the general public into letting ·~ailed progress' alter their lives." \VHAT HE ~1EANT, the admiral e:r:- plalned, was that "much harm has been done to man and nature because: technologies had been used with no thought for the possJble consequences." This is ar unpopular position 1 have been taking in the column for some 20 years now, and 1 am delighted to find rein- forcements from such f or m l d a b I e qua.rte.rs. 111e kev word to the future, Rickover said in effect, is "ecology." The ero\ogy of our planet demands that we become more familiar with the balanct of nature before we continue tampering with forces that may spin out of control and have consequeaces too fatal to rectify. We are currently so infatuated with all the "miracle" toys of our technology that we have scarcely stop~ to assess their negative aspects. BY SOMETHING more than a coin- cidence, I have also been reading at the same time a new book, ''Technological ' Si_dney J. H·arm i ' .. ·- Man," by Victor Fer kiss, which is the best, latest and most comprehensive study o! the vast changes not only in man's relation to the world, but in his relaUon to his own nature. Ferkiss, H~ Rickover and Barry Com- moner, and a rew other serious viewers of our technological age, is worried that since all the new seientific issues .are beyond the comprehension of the ordinary citiun, we may simply sit back and allow the technological element. rather than the human element, to become the central and determining fac - tor in society. TECHNOLOGY, of course is a rnean1 , and not an end; but it tends to become an end unto It.self if not checked by humanistic values -like an elevator that keeps stopping and starting on a timer, regardless of the specific needs of the pe<>ple who ride it every day , so that the people rearrange their time for the elevator, instead of the elevator serving their schedule. In ~ Unal chapter of his illuminating but frightening book, Ferkiss suggeru that if our technological genius cannot create a genuine ''world society" wherein man and his environment are in balance, then this infinite possibility for good might easily turn into an infinite possibility for evil The time to think it out is now, not later. Discouraging Corr uptio n The Justice Department's suit for an accounting from Bobby Baker opens 11ome inleresting possibilities for d'aUng with corruption in government. It says in effect that any public servant who u.ses his influence and the powers or his office for his own enrichment must turn· over his ill-gotten gains to the goyernment because he was acting u its agenl Some eyebrows may be railed at the government 1eeking to. draw into ita own coffers money presumably paid t.o cor- rupt il!: operations. but that outcome la preferable to leaving the booty ln the hands of the culprit for his own en- joyments:. Presumably Bobby Baker will be punished for some of his mi.sdeeds, u he was convicted of larceny and .incom~lax evasion two years ago and is now under bond while awaiUng an appeal Of course he has already been puniahed ln the sense lhat he was driven out of his office as secretary to the Senate'• Democratic m•· jorHy, and he Is under seotence to Jall lor one to three years. IF IT IS TRUE, -.er, u the government alleges, that he boosted bb net worth (rom $11,000 to fl .'t mUlioa from 1956 to 1963. he may consider 12 months in the potey a relativdy small price to pay for hll fortune. Jn anr evtnt, the public u wen as :he govemmtnt has an enormous interest in ~losing the door lo thls kind of enrich- ment If an agent Jn private bll!Jiness wrongrully abus«!! hi! trust to line his pockets. he can be called to account In court and (()feed to IUJ'T'tndtt his II· legitimate profita. Wl!Y SHOULD NOT an employe of the Senate wbo abuses hlJ trust be treated likewise! The complain! In this case [ ~~e:t~~:~~~~ ... J alleges that Bobby Baker exploited hls of- fice dealing& with companies doing buslneu with the government -that he was In effect selling, not his own aervices, but the influence of a high aenatorial ofnce. U it can be shown that money was paid for thia J>UT'PCl5e, it certainly should not remain undisturbed in lhe hands of the uploiting official. WITH A BAR to enrichment of un· failhlul public servants thus estabJJ.shed, it would have wider application. A member of Congrw who rep~ts a client before a government agency fur a fee would not 0011 be violating the law but might a1'o be subject to an ac- counllnl! u on agent ol Conir<ss· To oay the !wt, ll will be vuy In· teresting to • how far this principle can be carried 1s a means of discouragtng corruption and stripping the official ln- flu"1Ce peddlers ol their lllqjlbmto gains. Wul>!n""° Pa1t .---B11 George --~ De11.r George: t have a "yen" to become a "wrlttr." Could you "Lip" me on .any "&rade aecrets"? IRV Dear Irv: "Yes." File the ·~atloa marts" off ;'your" typewriter. CHECKING •UP• Anti-gas, G~rmWar Bill OK'd . Your Brain Often WASHINGTON (UPI) - The senate unanJmously ap- proved today the toughest set ot restrictions ever imposed by Congress on gas and germ war(are weapons. Takes a Catnap Wilh controversy removed by support of the Pentagon ltaelf, Senatora approved 91 to 0 an amendment to a $20 bUllon military procurement bill to set up strict standards for transporting, storing and testing chemic.al and biological >ft•arfare (CBW) agenlS. By L. M. BOYD LOVE AND WAR -Her husband of two months has just been drafted. That ·is the complaint of a San Antonio girl. She is afraid her soldier 's absence will shut doW!J his af. fedion for her. Our Love and War man says this youhg lady oughl not fret. 1f he returnrln high desire, that's true h>ve. If he doesn't, it isn't. You know what old Roger de Bussy· Rebutin said, of c o u r s e : "Absence is to love what wind is to fire; It puts Oll' the little, it kindles the great." LAST REMAINS -A gentleman who desc r t be s himself as sllgbtly over 6 feet taU, weighing abou t 2 o o pound!, writes: '• I ' v e sometimes wondered h o w much my ashe11 will weigh aft.er I'm cremated. Can you rind out?" Can indeed. About 8 maybe 9 pounds. GET IT RIGHT CLUB - Did I say one of identical twins can never be a father? Boy, what a dumb mistake! That's just flat out wrong. Lefs change the subject. ll's a scientific fact the average man 's brain catnaps for a total or approximately 1 hour 15 minut.es during an 8-hour shift., but sai d man is rarely aware of il. With some col· umnists, these naps r u n longer. OPEN QUESTIONS -I. Can you think of a single Chinese dish that calls for the use of milk? ... 2. ls there any reasonable explanation for the fact that more babies are born between 5 and 6 a.m. than at any other time of day? ... 3. Why is it all the really good car mechanics are Jean and wiry men ? CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q, "How many times did that in· famous old girl Lucrez.ia Borgia get married? How many men did she polton~ A. What men did she ever poison? Know of nooe. In the matter of matrimony, she married four times. At ages 11. 12. 16 and 22. As Lo what happened to her husbands and Joven, eithtr her father Alei:· ander VI. the Pope, kept ship- ping them out, or her brother Cesare. a tough customer. kept killing them. Incidentally, she was a blonde ... Q. "IS IT STIIJ.. against the law in Communist China to ~·ear a necktie?" A. Not anymore. LANGUAGE P.tAN -Here's a fancy sentence. Each word in it starts with the same Jet· ter but the intlUal sound or each is different. It goes: ••Psuedepigraphou s pneumatics p r o d u c e phan· tasmagoric phthallc phthisic." This moving quotation was created by R. Adm . W. V. Combs, our Senior Language man in the Pacific. in humble tribute to typesetters and proofreaders everywhere. M1LKING TThlES -A cow will give up to 25 percent more mUk jf milked three times a day. That is the claim of a col· legiate agriculturist. P.1aybe that's good ne\o\'S. But when I was a lad on the farm, we milked at 4:30 a.m. and 4: 30 p.m. 'lb.at was all 'Illat was enough, too. If the dairymen start milking tbree times a day now, they'lf have to look for another milker. J won't go back under those conditions. Nor under any other con· ditions, either, come to think or it. Your questicn1s and com· 111ents are we(co1ned and toill be used wherever po.~· sib/e in "Checking Up." Address mail to L. :.t. Defense Secretary MeJvin R. Laird gave bis full approvaJ to the effort. meaning likely House approval . too, when it considers the bill. The amendment was worked out late last week bet,,.een Pentagon research officials aad a hall-dozen Senate CBW critics. Before Senate papqe, the measure was atrenithened by adding a new section designed to prevent the Defense Department from using "back door" methods to finance germ warfare ltStlng. The new section, conceived by Sen. Vance Hartke, (D- lnd. ). would ban any CBW weapons research and development . -even o n nonlethal defoliation devices IUte those used In Vietnam - with any runds other than the $17.7 billion earmarked for CBW tesling ln the pn>- curement bill. Hartke said the offlcla1 DefeMe Department U · pendJblrt.! for CBW devices were uauaplciously low." He aald he had heard estimates that the total yearly cost of the program was more than '600 million. Sen. Thomas J . ?tfclntyre, (0.N.H.), floor manager of the amendment, praised Laird for backing the proposal . Mcintyre pledged continued surveillance or tht CBW pro- gram by his Armed Services Subcommittee on 0 e f e n s e Research. Boyd, in care of Daily ----------1 Pilot. Bo:t 1875. Newport Beach, Calif. 92663. SBA Loan of $80,000 To l\1illionaire Assailed \VASHJNGTON (UPI) - Charles "Bebe" Rebozo, con· fidant and traveling com- panion of President Nixon. has received special favors Crom the government and should be made lo return an $80,000 government Joan , House Bank· ing Committee Chairman Wright Patman said t.oday . "From 1962 through the pre sent. Mr. Rebozo has been a prtferred customer or the Thousands See Fatal Auto Stu11t LE HAVRE. France (UPI) -Film s tun l ma n Jean Tomitch died early toda y trying lo break the world record for the distance an automobile can ny through the air. Tomitch, a 2 8-y ear· o Id Yugoslav. drove a car along a ramp jutting out into lM Siene near here and hit the take-off at 60 miles per hour. As lhousands or spectators watched under floodlights, the car leaped 4:; f~l in the a'ir and hit the water about 90 feet away . But instead of settling into the water. the automobile turned over ln a strong cur· rent and trapped Tomltch. He had a bottle of oxygen with him for emergencies. Frogmen and r e s c u e 'WOT'kers could not budge the automobile for more than an hour. Tomitch's oxygen bottle ran out and he was found dead. l\'liss l\f unsel Reports Theft CHARLOTl"E, N.C. CAP) - Adress Patrice ~tunsel has told police that Sile·s missing two jeweled bracelets ·worth 111.000. She said ahe last saw the bractlets Wednesday, the da y art.er she opened at the Cbarlotte Summer Theater ln "Marni." One bracelet was described 8S a straight dla· mond bracelet set in pladnunl and the other as ha ving ~ rubies and an unknown num• bcr of diamonds sci in 8 trellis of gold. Administration." the Texas Democrat said in remarks prepared for a House speech. "Time and time again. the ~1iami millionaire has receiv. ed special favors from the agency-even though SBA staff members strongly questioned the concessions being made to Rebozo." The loan Patman s al d should be canceled was made in 1962. Patman said Rebozo - used the monty to purchase. lhe Land Title Co., a rival finn to his l\tonroe Abstract and Tille Co. "There can be no jusllfica· lion for SBA lending money to an individual under the guise of a small businessman wh o then turns around and opens a bank," Patman said. Patman released a memo from his staff of investigators ·which said the circumstances surrounding the $60.000 loan were "strange." 'T'he memo also said that Thomas A. Butler, regional director in SBA ·s ~Uami office "i! a stockholder in Ille-bank owned by Re.bozo, and has also participated in other Rebozo ventures." Zond 7 Heads Back lo Earth JODRELL BANK, England CAP) -1.ond 7, the Soviet Union's latest unmanned moon probe. swung around the bade of the moon today and headed back toward earth, Jod.rell Bank Observatory reported. Sir Bernard Lovell, head of the observatory. told newsmen that althouah Zond 7 was a carbon copy of Its two predecessor•. Zond 5 and S, it wa s ca rrying more sophisticated equipment and Its signall \.\'ere m o r e powerful. Cugat Remains 'Satisfactory' LAS VEGAS (UPI) B&ndleader Xavier Cugst r'e- mained Jn satisfactory con- dition today at Sunrise ltosplt.aJ where he was ad· mlt~ about a Wet.k 1go. ni. hospital reCused lo reveal the n a t u r e of Cugafs illness, but friends said he suffered a stf'Clke. Only members of the immediate. family wr.re being permitted to 'isit him . v,,, ........ WEDS DIVORCEE Ex-bishop Sh1nnon Pope Upset By Bishop's Marriage VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pope Paul VI is deeply sad· dened by news that former auxiliary Bishop James P. Shannon of Minneapolis.St. Paul has married a three-time divorcee, Vatican sources said today. ShaMon. 48, reslgned as bishop stveral months ago to protest the Pope's 1968 en- cyclical against artificial birth control but the Pope never ac· cepted the resignation "and did all he could" to tty to persaude Shannon to chana:e b!s mind , the sources takl. They said that under ex· isting canon law, Shannon is automatically excom- municated by his mar· riagc to Mrs. Ruth C . Wiikinson, 50. Bul they noted the church no IOQger pro- noun c es rormal ex· communications in such casv:. 1l wu the fourth maniage for Mrs. Shannon, who ha1 worked as a ~tary to former Sen. Kenneth B • Keat1ng (R·N.Y.). and New York Secretary of State John P. Lomenzo. She lived in the Rochester suburb of lron- dequoll The couple will live in Santa Fe, N.M., whtre he will teach at St. John'• Colle&e... a private 1ehool with an enrollment of m. The school ls not affiliated with the Roman Catholic Churth. Vatican IOW'cts tald Shan- non was the finl Amerlun Catholic bishop to marry. Such cases have betn "Yery, Yery rare In the world In Uie last couple of centuries," they :said. • ·- MOftdaf, August 11, 19" DAILV l'ILOT 7 Start your back-to-school sewing now with our scholarship material ..... Dan River Penn-Prest 9 solids or fancies • 98c yd. 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' r ' • • y Pll.OT ,, ~----­' . 'Fortune' Built Up By Ex-com .. • ., • , .---. r-!...-- / NEW YORK (AP) -The clerks wear prison clothes, they sell articles made by ex- convlcls and a jut-jawed J. Edgar lloover glares from a poster In the window or ft new litUe shop in Greenwlch Village. I i.-n<~ rr ! ~ II I Nixon Gets Few Marks By Black Congressmen 'That's our 'law and order' window," George Freeman, 30, says with a smile. He's aisistant manager of The Fortune Store, wh ich opened Monday. Freeman and abou t half a dozen others working in the narrow, basement shop are ex- convicts. They wear their former prison numbers sten- ciled in black on prison-Issue blue denim shirts. "I had my choice of 141985 rrom Sin& Sing, 44109 from DannerllQla, or 42871 from New Je'tSey . Slate Prison1" says Freeman. He was parol· ed three weeks ago after' spen- ding portlqns W fjve Y®rs in each ror armed robbery. "J finally chDSe mf New Jersey WASHINGrolf· (AP) League convention meeting in number because It was Uie Several black congf'eS!rrten ·frl· Washington Sunday, M f. s. shortest·io stencil." • Chisholm said 0 the time is not Th Fort St I dicate they "" begl'nning to e une ore s far away when black ~ple, ated 1·0 I 1· w·th see themselves as a kind or oper· assoc a ton 1 Indians, 1.1exican Americans The }o~ortune Society, a na· government-in-exile becall!le and other Spanish-speaking t1onal organization of 2,000 ex· they aay President Nixon has Americans, young white peo-convicts who try to keep each abdicated h1s responsibilities ple, poor white people and old other out of jail and who seek ·to the nation's minorities. white people will force . the penal reforms. politica1 robber-barons of this Th · h h sh "In this administration, the · 11 .. e society opes t e op country up agamst the wa · will train ex-convicts in retail demands QI the poor, of Clay ,. Stokes and Conyers skills' as well as providing an minorities -and of black~ listed their grievances With outlet tor merchandise from pie in partlcular -are falling the Nixon administration : ex.ronvicls trying to g 0 on deaf, lnsensitlve ears," said -The absence of blacks on straight. Rep. William Clay, D-Mo. the Cabinet. Articles offered for sale "lt is quite evident that we -Giving ''five south e ~ n Monday included : moderately n school districts -which had priced jewelry made by a will have to have our own ag disregan:led the law of the movie theater janitor who ever the neit three years -Jand since 1954 -extra time spent 20 years in hair a dozen implant it on our grounds and to meet federal standards." prisons. leather handbags pro- flgbt lo h9Jd it. Nothing short -The award of $9.4 million duced by a 46-yea r -o ld or indivldaul concern can pre-in defense contracts to three Brooklyn man v.·ho spent 18 vent a total repression of southem textile mills accused years in a Georgia prison and of discrimination. crocheted dresses made by a minorities." 2t-yeB<-old female f ormer -The replacement of Equal Clay's rtmarkll came in Opportunity c 0 mm i s 5 i 0 n heroin add i c l v.·hile in mate.rial recenUy inserted in Chairman Clifford Alexander P..1 an hat tan Rehabilitation the Congrtssional Record. with another Negro, William Center. Joining Clay were Reps. H. Brown IJI, the day after The society also is trying to .. -·=· Stokes of Ohio, John Senate Republican L e a d e r convince s t a t e corrections lNllQ Everett M. Dirksen attacked departmenls to allow men and Coeyers: Jr .• of Michigan and Alexander for "harassment of women in prison to send tlleir Shirley Cblsholm of New York, businessmen." products to the store for sale. all Democrats. .Al.o, ihe office -The ,Justice Department But, in the meant I me. of ~: Owln C. Digs Jr., recommendation that the 1963 businesses a nd individuals J>.Mich., said he iJ preparing Voting Rights Act covering have contributed articles to be seven southern states be sold. Columbia R e c o r d s a almilar 1t.a.tement for House replaced by leglslation cO•er· donated albums recorded by delivuy. ing all 50 stat~ · singer Johnny Cash on visits "AJ for myself, any hope of -The closing of 59 ol the 109 to Folsom and San Quentin nporting lo black America Job Corps centers. prisons in Cali(ornia. Dr. Karl that the federal 1o~ent -The bu d' g e t rel::Om-Menninger donated 100 copies mendation to trim education of his new book "The Crime of ·will move with more com-Punishment." pub l i ah er 5 · t d to spendinfi to $3.2 billion - a m.1tmen or more spee donated other books dealing -$400 mi lion cut. overcoming the inequality in wilh prison themes. -Disi:nanUing of the Of[ice tbh countrv is Tap l d l y of Economic Opportunity and The store's debut ha s fading," ••ld Conyers. the apJ)ointment as director of brought no reaction yet from ''ll 5eem5 to me that if the Donald E. Rumsfeld, "a penal atithorlties, but local · ·~ f th. d former congressman w h 0 pOlice response has been grati-firsl Ill'. moau... o LB a • fying . · · ··--1-f represehted a district where mlni!tration IS any criu:.i-0 • ..,_ • 19 300 •·Tue po11·cemao on the beat wo:: average mcome was , what the poor, the uneducated _ a man who knows little stopped by;" says Freeman. and the black citiun of This aboul poverty, a man who "He suggested we keep a light nation can ezpect, then an op-voted agaimt. the original on at night to keep burglars portunity for greatnesa wtll:.-Econo::..::.:---m.::i_c.::Opport.:.:.c::..::.:":c'i.::ty_A_c_l._" __ •_w_a.:..y._" ______ _ have eluded this Presidtnt," aaid Stokes. "It's all downhill in tht na- tion's capital -priorities are sadly confused whUe 'this President acts on his obvious decision to accommodate con- aervatlves and southerners," uld Clay. "Presently the incidents of discrimination . of, by and for this government are flagrant abuses of responsible leadtl'lhip," he added. Mn. Chisholm urged help for "our new-style -our revolutionary politicians." Speaking to an U r b a n SA Church Sets Fiesta SANTA ANA -Th< Santa Bublra Catholic Churdt, Sal> ta Ana, 11 holding the third an- nual Poor Clare Guild's Fiesta Aus. Ji through 11. The fiesta will be he.Id in the churdl parking lot, al Euclid Street and McFadden Avenue, and will feature food. rides, •-.mes and hourly dl"lwings '"prises. 1lie pnicteds wlll help Ille Poor Clare nuns, who operate a day Cll'e DUnet)' hert;. Ft99 .C-ert 9,..... TONIGHT ......... 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Removable front and back safety guards for easy cleaning. Powerful motorcirculates2000 · CF M. Complete with handsome chrome-plated tubular steel stand. A great buy! Other great fan-tastic Penncrest® fans! Penncrest® deluxe 3-speed reversible · fan ......... 29.99 Penncrest® deluxe low tilting floor stand ............... $6 Deluxe roll-about fan stand ................... · ......... ~10 LIKE IT ••• CHARGE ITI .. AVAILABLE ~T YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE • . .1970 Preview? Alioto, Unruh Assail Reagan LOS ANGELES CAP) -Riglit now people can ,.. no Cov. Reagan was under sharp meaningful lU reform except C'J'iticlsm today from two the abolition of lhe business p o t en ti a l De m o cratic challe.ngeri to his expected re-inventory tax. As for the election bid In 1970. universities, now we've had 15 The barbs cam e fr 0 m incidents at Berkeley and a Assembly minority 1 e a d e r statewisd9' mess." Jesse M. Unruh of lngJewood When be left on vacation and San Francisco MayOr Frida;:, Reagan-Issued a state. Joseph Alioto. . ment blaming Dcmocra~ In Both men addressed a tho A>sembly, ~ by Uitruh, meeting o( Lhe Mexican-fOr blocking bis (az re.form American Political AsrociaUon program. Reagan said the ac- in nearby Compton Sunday tions d . the I o w e r house and Unruh caUed a news con-Democrats "have proven that ference in Los Angeles today they have. had no JQtention of to comment o'n the 190 aeeking \!! improv' OW' 'ta1: leg islature in his c;ritlci.sm. \ structure." Saturday. \ The one biU in · pukage Unruh told the· ir®P · ~un-to· get through boosts the ex- day, "I ques tioned whether emption from the business in· Gov. Reaga n has an y coo~pt ventory taz from 15 percent to of the needs of the state. ffis 30 percent. The bilJ, now administration has b e en before Reagan for action. dominated by representaUves pasiied with support o f of wealthy ReP,u blicans, not members of both parties. M e X1 c an· Americans or A four-bill campus unrest blac~s." • package on Rea'gan's desk in- Ahoto t n cl u d e d the eludes some Of th"! provisvons elgisl~ture In his crlUCisfil be bad sought, tiul-oot all. '"This le~islature ca n ooly Unruh and Alioto met brief. come up with a proposal to.tax ty at the Compton s~ion, church-owned propt.rty. It s a shaking hands· and chatting for commen tary on tbei leg!slature a few morhmts. Then they that. they leave the 011 com-turned to greeting others at pon1~s and ,?°1e.r mO!IOpoly the meeting, much as they lobbies alone. Alioto said. . would as declared candidates T.he lawmakers passed a bill foi higher oCflce: ~ "'h1ch removes a tax e1.emp-tion from church-owned busi-None of the three men - nesses that are nonreligious in Rea gan, Unruh and Alioto - nature. The blll was supported has al)Jl()UJl(ed his plans for by most church grou ps. 1970. But each acts as if _ht io- Unruh said. '-rhis governor tend s to run. came into office promising tax Some politjcal observers say reform and peace on campus. a hard-fought Unruh-Alioto primary battle could ilep the Democrats split ;-and' help assure ReagaD!s re-eteotk>n. Smog to Get Worse Up To October LOS ANGELES (UPI) Th e smog is bound to get ·worse from now until October. It always does. But there is some good news about the smog. Statistically. by this time last year Los At the COmpton mteling, ~lioto and Unruh both spoke or their friendship for the state's Mexi~ArnerlcB.ns. And Alioto added, "The Democrats must put t.Ogether 3. coalition of Mexican • Americans, blacks, blue collar workers, i n depe n dent businessmen and growers who are victims of monopoly, pl us Kuchel-type Republicans who have a social conscience." Angeles had a first stage smog Bad N alert. Th~ Y<&l we lolven't. • ews A first stage alert Js when · -,.. ...; .. ~ • • ! Probe Into 2 Knifings Stalemated .SAll JOSE (UPI) -The ~eek-old inve:stlgaJion Into the savage slayinp of two San Jose High Scllool girls b "silU a stalemate." That's how San Jose detec- tives today tenned the in- vestigation Into the Aug. 3 kill- ing:; of Deborah Furlong, 14, and Kathy SDOO%J, 15. The oUicett· are supplfing litUe Information on t h e details of their findings other than to~ note thtt the in- v:estigatlon ls "still aoing full blast." They also announced during the weekend that .a possible link between the victims and the l~year..old son of a Baptist minister had been ruled out. Tiley isaid there was "no con- crete evidence" to 11 n t Charles D. Johnston with lhe kill ings. Police theorize the two pic- niking __teen-agers were tilled in a wblte van seen at tbt site of the tuilogs and their bodies were then dumped putslde. They had been stabbed more than 100 timea each. Johnslon was picked up ln a stolen van, but detectives on the c~ said they were cer- tain the van Johnston was driving w~ not the one seen in the area of the murders. Babysitter Found Dead Strung led PALMDALE (UP I) -An autopsf on the body of Darline Marie Smelief, 15, Palindale, .-• • • DAILY l'!LOT • I Mystery Slayer's ·Code Crack ea • v Al,! F,lO &1 -"Killing people la more fUn than ldlUng wild same.'' says the mystery writer of a codecl:message and a letter clal~ he slew three Vallejo 'Jleople tn r e c e n t months. • - Whether the writer is the actual killer is oot knowt,l. but a reputable psychiatrist who asked that hLs .name not be us- ed told the Vallejo Ttrnes· Herald thP writer Is severtly mentally disturbed. "If it's not a put--0n, the guy probably will klll again. He wants t.o be caught, aod If cor- nered probably will lake his ' ' \ . ' , ··' gwn lilel'' the psyclUaLrl5l said. Tbe mystery writer recently sent the coded message wtth a letter to lbe Tlmes-HeraJd and the Sa,, ~ncl9co Eutniner Ind the San Frand8co'C'hroni-' clc. ., Jn the hand·prliited letter he claimed he hnd killed a young couple_, Betty Lou Jensen and David L. Faraday, each 16, in a lovers' lane shooting last Dec. 20. He also claimed he had slain ~1 rs. Darlene Ferrin, 22, who was shot to de:itb in another Jover1' lane killing near here July 4. Htr male com~nion was wounded , but h a a recovered. Police ccnfirrii<d the kUI· lngs. The coded mesaa.ge re- mained unre~able until last weekend, when a Salinas high school teacher announced he had cracked Jt. Donald G. Harden, 41 , who t e a c he s-hi s tory and economics, said he and hls wife worked 20 hours before they solved the riddle by locating enough four-letler combinations t.o decipher the word "kill." Tlle encoder bid llled 12 c1j!,_ more-fun than k!IUo1 w:ll<I ferel'lt l)'Dlbols for the com-game In lhe forest because ....,..t letter In EngUah, the man b the !Mii clangttOtU "e," and bad used the "q" animal ot au to kill something backwJrd 11·-tlmea where it gives me the most lhril.HftC e•- mlght be ml~lnterp,..te.d,.,!s ptl'lenc. the best pru:! J>I It an "e" iii an dfort to misle$l lbat when J die"? J wJI~ ~ decoders . reborn in paradice and all tlardeo's trwlaUon of the have 'killed will ~e unpunctuated me ,.~ a g e 1h. slaves 1 w:itl not 11•• you . ' naflle because you wW try d1cate1 •. poor speµer preoc-sl~~ doWn or...,1toR rriy col- cupled witb-Vlotence and sex. leCUo(' of slaves for i my . A _garble at the end could . ff: l¢r1ife ebeorl eie me ~ , still another code conceahng plU " ~ ~ bis identity, Harden believes. Detec;tlve Sgt. Johft-~c · The message read : says be ii con_~ th 1'1 like killing p e o p I e Harden's translatbl . ii because it is ao much fu.n it is cura"-'• ·-l ___ Furniture Fai,.-, 20% OFF SAlE! Save thru Saturday on Fashion ~MQnor custom uphOlstered furniture ' YOU PICK THE FABRIC •• , from a fanfasiic assortment of colors, · · patterns and blends •.. everythingfrom elegant velvets ta homey, I _tweeds! YOU PICK THE STYLE , . , to mix or match any room decor. Sofas, chairs, love sec:ats in easy-to-live with 'Early Americari', 'mo4em', 'traditional ', 'Spanish' or 'Mediterranean' styles. Beller not waltl Come make your selection today •• , and save! ~·, ALLOW 9 TO 10 WUKS FOR DEllVERY • • • I ,, '" " .. ~ '• ,. OJ • . .. q •• ·~ ... •• ~· "l " m -... ... ' '" ,. lo they tell you lo .. lqp 4Jjving 'Bl;} .Ji d' f. - unless you absolutery have to, a11ie or and nobody pays any at-whose nude body w a s .i-... 11!:~=:=:,::;;;;;=="' discovered last week In a field, has revealed the girl died of ·····~~~ lb Press 'Gap' · strangulation. The girl was reported miss- tention. It's declared when the ozone in the atmosphere reaches .35 parts of ozone per million parts of air. 1'he Air Pollution Contrpl Board said that 90 percent o( the ozone in the atmosphere comes from the ezhaust o{ automobile engines. LOS ANGELES (UP!l - Otis Chandler, publisher o£1he Los Angeles 'Times, says a credibility gap exists between the public and the news media because people ,do pot want to bear or iead bad news. ing Friday night after she ;;;;:.;:~======:1===::;;;;;;::= disappeared while baby-sitting . two blocks from where . her body was found. Last week an e1.pert was saying that, actually, the en11ss1on o r smog-causing gases from cars has decreased over the past two yeers. "Yes, 1 read that," said the man from the APCD. "[ believe that gentleman was v.·ilh General ~1otors, wasn't he." LEGA L NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN 111•1 """ loUo ... lnv H•ml of IOYnd or uvl'd Pnl!IUfV h•v• bttn hrld bl' Ille Polite ~er'lmenl al ttir City of C01tl Mr.a ter • per!W In t•tP•• er! nine!¥ (901 d•YI: Atd trlcycl•, blue blk•· ' blk11 · un~""w.. color. NOTICE: IS FURTHER GIVEN Ille! If l'n owner eopeer1 •"" 1rovn 1111 o.,.ne•1M1 of 11'11 otOPet!V wll!!ln HYtn f1l davs tollowlno Ille 11ullllc1llo11 ol ·th11 Notlc~. the !Ille !lltr1to Viell ve1t In l~ fondor. If there ~ ""'• or In llle Cllv of <c1!a MnJ, ln w1>ld1 t•ll tllr orDPedy 5~~11 bl wild et publlc 1uc!looi er e llme •nd d~te lo bt lll"'IUllC~. OATEO: AllOull II, 1'69. R, E. NETH CHIEF OF POLICE f'ubll1ned Or•ntt CNl1 Oelly p11o1, AVll<nl 11, 1'69 14'Ut LEGAL NOTICE H .... SUPElt lOlt COURT GI' TME STA TE 01' CALll'OltNUti l'Olt TME COUNTY 01' OltANOE NI. A-'»14 NGT1CE 01' HEAlttHO 01' ,eTITlON FOlt ,.IOIATI! 01' WILL '-HO 1'01 \.ETTEll S 0 F ADMINISTIATtON WITM·TMl..,,,ILL ANNEXl!O Eita!r of CHAllLES A. STI EETl!.lt, DecN1~. NOTICE 15 HEREllY GIVEN TM! JOAN W. McLAUGHLIN fle1 flied lltr11'1 n llt!llfloll 1or 11...Wll of win ..al for l\•u•r>e• of Ltlh!'1 crl Admlnl1tr1tlon wltll·lhe-w!ll enne•Mf to ltll ,..,111-•, ••ference lo which !1 m~ for lllrther p4t!ku11r1, and !till Thi llme end Pioe« 111 heerlll9 1111 wme 1111 bwn wt for "uqu1! n, 1'6', 11 f ;:JO e.m .. In the c<:u•!room nf 0 ... ........,1 Me. 3 of wld <:cud , 11 70f Wnl l!.1911111 $1. In !he Cllr t!f S1nl11. AM. C1!11.,..nl1. 011f!d• Autrutl •.·ttff.' • W, E. ST JOHN. Counh Clerll KltAG AND KltA9 100 Solil~ Jllnl Sir~ Alh•mbn, C1lll. 9ltOJ Tel: 12111 •t-1U4 A ttotM~' ttr l't!ln.Mr P11bll\f\fd Ori.... Co-It 01ltl' 1"1101, AllOU\I f, 11 , 16, Ifft Uf1-4f LEGAL NOTICE suit•lllOll coU•T OJI' TH• STAT• OJI' CALIPOllHIA Pia TH E COUNTY Olt 0111.t.NGI: ....... .,.,. NOTICI: OP Ha.t.llHO 0111 ,fTITKlfr<I l'Oll ltltOIATI! 0, WILL AND f'O• t.ETTllltS Tl!STAMl!HTAIY E1lele of PHILLllt ANDREW HOOO. Dec:NWCI, Chandler said Sunday critics of the press are unhappy with the media beicallse it ill the bearer of bad lldings. He noted· that during s o m e periods of history, couriers who bfougbt bad news were killed. Chandler, interv\ewed Sun- day on KABC-TV, said there Is very little to report that is not negative. Because readers -of the Times have already learned the bare bones or a new story through radio or television, Chandler said his pa Per· must also place the story in context. "Television has the problem of not ha ving a sanctuary ol time as papers. There ts time for renect.ion and analysis through rewrite and editing," Chandler said: "TV goes on cold. rt is exciting and dramatic but at times the public is misinformed -not intentionally -by oot having all sides." Building Strike In 4th Week . LOS ANGELES (AP) -No break came over the weeki!nd in the· three· week s tr i lt e against the buildi11&. industry in Southern California which industry officials say has idled more than 300,000 workers and 90 percent of construction. . Last week, the strike was intensified when heavy equip. ment operators set up picket lines thal other craftsmen refused lo cross. Sgt. Bob Wood, of' the homicide division of the Los Angeles County sberifr1 of~ fice, said, "We have not linked this with any other crimes. Also, we don't have any clues to link this with any specific · suspect." The girl's body, which deputies said was virtually un- marked. was roond by a woman who lives near the field. 0 Detectives said it was n<t immediately determined whether the victim was sex- ually molested. The girl 's clothes were found in a weed-<:il ve red lot near her body. Deputies said the girl was caring for two small children when she disappeared. Fire Sweeps Through City LIVINGSTON, Mont. (UPI ) -A Ure roared out of control through downtown Livingston for more than thrtt hours before firemen contained it early tocray. It started in the Grand Hotel and 1 p r e ad through six other buildings. -- Now Possible To Shrink Painful Hemorrhoids NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN ,,..., 1.ARRIAHE MARIE KEAFEI, ello k'IOW" 11 LORRAINE A.\AltlE KEAFElt, "'-• fllod Mr1l11 e Hllliorl lot" ~i., <If And P ti S Th J, ..1.:-~ win ~ tor '"''en<;t "' Ll'tt•., rom~ y loM e ,t~, ,.~,._",e"' ,, 11111n111ner. ~t io R ,. • In ,, ___ _ w111c1• "' made "°' ,,,.r,.,.,. •• ,,~" .... eftd eueve am oat ~ tti11 1P!t time •1141 1~1 crl r.e1rl111 !tit ~ • ,.me 11a1 .,_, ttl tor AU9U1I "· '"'· " New Yorll:, N.Y. CSPKUIO: Scl. • JO 1.m. 111 11\t c.wlnlDfl> of °""'"" enc. hu found • medic1tion m•11! Ho l er! w\4 .tOV''· -1 ,.. WHI •1~M11 si'"'· i., 111t CJIY If ""'' """· with the ablllty, fn most cua «-J1!i'~1~1111111, .. "'' =--~la prom1 ptlyd •top itchi~r. w. E. sT JOHN, c-tr CH•ll: ~ ~t pa nan actuall7 ahnnk NAltWOOO. IOOl!H • AOIOHSOH he.morrht1lda. flO.lea1't1 "'-·bd •~rt 111<11, c1Hf. ~-ta 1 octon pl"01'td that T•h 11u1 11-14-Ull ln cue after cue wlille aent.Jv ~lll'M'f'I •• f'1lllltfltt' • • • # .,.ub1J111.c1 o·-~•· Cont 0111\' ,.11o1. rtb1vinr pain, actual reduction A~lnl I ,II. I• Ifft 1"'1-61 o! the inflamed hernorrbold1 took'P1aee. Theaecret b Preparation H•. Thert1'11 no other tor rnula l ike ltl Preparation ll al10 1ootbea irritated ti••Ue• and helpa pre'V'lnt turthtr Infection. In ointment or 1uppa1ltor1 form. I Corner Your choice . .Re , $65 ............................. NOW 9 Save $48 on our great Fashion Manci'r 3 pc. ,El Roya le' family room set sale ! • t Abo •V>lleble, • R11. $517, NOW ••• $469 Love seat .. -·--·-Reg, $199 .N0W $180 Spanish style sofa, Jo.bock ond hi-bock choirs ore covered in wipe clean expanded vinyl with button tufted semi-attached bock cushions. Wood look arms are actually one piece mo1ded plostic to resist scuffs and scratches. In block. Ottoman Reg. $45 NOW $tO Recliner --·-·-Reg. $159 NOW $145 Rock-a-lounger ............... -........ _...Reg. $169 -NOW $149 USl PENNIYS TIMI PAYMENT Pl.AN CANOGA PARK DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA ,, ~· " -· "' s! nt "' •• •• "l ;, .•t iO. ; lb .. .. •• ,, ,, •! ll " 0 . ' I ' " • ;, " - - I ) • . . .. . . ":.l0 Olll V PILOT ·~ • •• t" ' -, .. .-r ··~ ••• " " ' . :> ... ' . ' • •• . , .. r ... .. ,r- 1 ' I • ' I I ! ' • • Love Ya, Sarge Who in the IsraeLi army \vould have complained serving under a sergeant who looked like 'lhis? She's Aliza Adar, cooling off in the Tivoli Fountain in Rome where she is representing her country in the Lady Universe contest. She's a retired iergeant now. State Switches Mind, Old Design of Bridge SACRAMENTO (AP) -On a 3-2 vote, the California Toll Bridge Authority F r id ;;i y reversed an eai:lier decision and adopted a "diamond· tower" design for lhe planned new bridge across San Fran· cisco Bay. The mo\•e came on a motion by Gov. Reagan , authority chairman. He was supported by Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke and Gordon C. Luce, Reagan's t.ransportalion secretary. Negative votes came from Finance Director Caspar W. Weinberger and Floyd W. Sparks, Hayward newspaper publisher, 'Illey were. not present but sent messages favoring retention of Ute "lied arch" design earlier adopted by the authority over recom· mendatlons of its advisers. The tied arch b r i d g e !iomewhat resembled t h e Sydney Harbor bridge in Australia. AL!s~!!~'I~ .. ~~ fl.Rt \"\ ~ \f\'NG ~ Answer These liems on -•Who Done lis' NEW YORK (AP) -Do you estimated that about 40 per-a movie called "Murder, She Roberta Rine.hart's • '1' he Doyle lhan from any ot.her "Amnesia" to "Universities remember the name of the ctnL 0( the American readlng Said," and Wi! publtshed elrcula:r St1lrcue," f l r • l author's;-" He-counted 106 and Colleges.'' delective in Edgar Allan Poe's public choo5eS de t,e ct t v e, under that title in softcover. publiJhed 1n 1908. films about Sn er Io ck, LISTS so BOOKS "The Murders in the Rue mystery and liUJi>ense fiction Hagen Incorporated some Jo all U.S. edJtk>ns, the top "including 17 Vffslona of the Ile lists ao books that have Morgue,,, ''The Mystery or sellin& Utle of this genre Is ''I, Jlound of the BaskerviUea.'' Marie Rogel'' and •• The for leisure reading. statistics on best sellers from The JUQ1.'' by M 1 c key chi dren or juveniles as prln-"' "70 Years of Best Sellers" by Spillane, which 81 last. count l~e is not very happy aboul clpal characters, among them Purloined Letter · P08SIBLE 1'fnE Alice Payne Hackett, \\'hlch llollywood, agreeln& with Mrs. Taylor caJdwell's "Wicked d l I bad sold 5,390,106 copies, c h How many e t e c v e • In his search for every was published by Bowker in hrlslie t at It take.a a well Angel," Graham G r e e n e ' s mystery and suspen1e novels po&slble title. the author ran 1967. CROSS INDEX ploUed story, ch• n g es , "Brighton Rock" and Davis have 90Jd more than a million tnto many puu.les because Of the 151 books in this field One section of ffagen's book mutilates, and then slaps a Grubb's "Night of the Hun. copies. counting both tltlesoftenhavebeenchanfed· that have sold a million or i~ devo~ to cross-Indexing cllche tlUe on lL He rePorts ter.'' hardcover and softcover? One example: The original more copies, 91 were written the more than 560 thrillers she-was reluctant to sell her "There used to be a taboo 'fhe earliest known film title of one Agatha Christle by Erle Stanley Gardner. that have been made into sto ries to the movies, and about using children in about Sherlock Holmes was book was 0 4:50 from Pad· followed by Richard Pralher movies, with comments on when she did part with some myi;tery and detect Ive made in what year? dihgton." It was serialized a.s with 16, Ellery Queen 13, several dozen writers whose of them, "enjoyed Immensely stories," he comment$. "If Dedicated mystery buffs "Eye Wllness to Murder ." Mickey Spillane 12, Ian Fle-works often became films. the bad reviews they got from they appeared at all, it was should be able to give these When, it was published in the ing II , Mrs. Christle 4. He found that ''perhaps the critic,,." only as vlcUms of kldnaplng answers? c. Auguste Dupln: United States It be ca 11'1 e Dashiell Hammett 2 and John more movies have been made Another section clwl!ies and they were invariably 151 and 1903. "What Mrs . McGilllcuddy 0 . MacDonald 2. The first from the _Sherlock Holmes the thrillen accordinJ to sub-returned safely to the l r They are just three of many Saw." Later lt was made Into millk>n-oopy thriller was Mary stories ol Sir Arthur Conan jects, from "AdvertJs1ng" and pattnt.s it the end ol the story fascinating tidbits to be found i--------------------------------'-------''----'--------- in ''Who Done It?" by Ordean A. Hagen, just published by R. R. Bowker Co., with the sub- ti!le "A Gulde to Detective, :P.1ystery and Suspense Fie· lion." Nearly half the book's 834 pages consist of a giant bibliography of approximately 20,000 titl es -novels and 5lorles -giving author, tiUe, year of publicaUon a n d publishers. COVERS FROM l!U It covers the period from 1841 -Poe -to the present. Some entries consist of a single tille. For example : "Faulkner, Will iam. Knight's Gambit. Random, l 9 4 9 ; Signet, 19~:· Bul many veteran pro- fessionals in the thriller field have scores of titles after their names. The list of John Creasey·s works takes up more than seven pages. Hagen also dug up the pseudonyms which the more prolific writers use. I n Creasey's case there are 16 - C..ordoo A s h e, M. E. Cooke, Norman Deane, Robert Caine Frazer, Patrick Gill, Mlchae.l llalliday. Charles Hogarth, Bria n Hope , Colin Hughes, Kyle Hunt, Abel Mann, Peter ~1antoa, J.J. Marric, Richard Martin, Anthony Morton and Jeremy West. Hagen, who until his recent death "''as a librarian at the Chester Fritz Library at the University of North Dakota. SALE! THIS WEEK ONL YI .DRAPERY .SLIPCOVER • REUPHOLSTERY fabric and labor Shop at home! • ,,.. consultation! • ,,.. estlmatef • No obllgationl • We bring sampled Call collect (714) 523-6511 @m~tro.ng CORRIE MARBLE Now is the time to redecorate at a huge 20% savings. Call our trained consultant today to show you our tremendous fabric collection right in your own home and help you achieve just the effect you've been wanting. You are sure to find just the right colors and styles to give your home an exciting new look . We'll make slipcovers and drapes, in addition to reUJ> holstering, to your exact specifications .. Your choice of beautiful fabrics and expert workmanship every step of It.. way ore yours at tremendous savings for a limited time. VINYL CORLON. DO A 10' X 15' KITCHEN fLOOR INSTAWD FOR AS LITTLE AS 107.80 PRICE BASED ON NORMAL INSTALLATION Don't miss this opportunity to have the luxurious look of marble at a · tremendous savings. Armsfn:lng's Corrie Marble", one of their more exciting, new patterns in top quality thick gauge vinyl comes in beige, white, gold, green, or tan and orange. Huny, while sale prices ore in effect. Come in or Phone HUNTINGTON BEACH 530-0981 FULLERTON 671-4343 MONTCLAIR 621-3811 NEWPORT BEACH 833-0792 LAKEWOOD 634-7000 • .. ' Old Mac Settles In Viejo COP Del.egates Slate SF Session A NA H E I M -M. n y at the San Francilco Airport D.111.Y 1'11.fT Jl nesermerg·· Gets Post At Irvine d<lol•t<I to the JI It Inn. Au1. 23 wUI brln& IRVINE -R. N. DooeobtfL v-•ucaa Sta(e Convention tocether itand1ng committee lonn•• pub"•ber ol I'• By TOM GORMAN Of h O.Hr l"I ... '"" b;;" ,.111 get • IWO-lll<lllth member&· from N o rt b tr n ~ Bu; Poot, lw ~ { jump on the lonn•l m~lng at Call!omla. Their aim t.s to ~ coordinate work on issue-named dltector of In. MISSION VIEJO -Old MacDonald's fann ls to coun- farm, but never like the one 1pringlng up here. -a__,pJannln&_sess:lonL1iniwSanO!!!'c....C•>tri1tena1t.,ed_matetlal for t.be_ strucUona! media wvicts at The 1969 version of Old MacDonald's farm is to C'(IW)o try llfe Uke the Houston Astrodome Is to baseball. Just about the ultimate. The stables aren't ve!vet lin- ed, but if you gave owner Fulton Shaw the idea, be just m!ght consider it. The farm represents a $275,000 investme nt for Shaw and his wife, Kay. That's just for the tittildlnjs and ••every type of anbnal farm life:'' The 1.1.ission Viejo company financ- ed the landscaping and Wl- derground utilities. The animals are to serve curious youngsters. DAILY l'ILOT l'htl• lor TM! Gii""'" BIG FELLA -''Old Judge," said to be the world's biggest mule, tot.es (from left) Cindy Shaw1 9; Jeanie Mercado, 81 and Erin Porter, 9, as the girls g~t a preview of Old MacDonald's farm in Mission Viejo. Jeanie is from Costa Mesa; Cindy and Erin from San Juan Capistrano. Francl.1co later this month tbree-dl,y convention later th.la: UC Intne. A re&tonll plannin( ...,Ion year, ac<O<dlng to DeMil E. Deaeoberf will be In cbarge =: ~ ~i:bn":~ of audli>vlsul aids 10 C.Oast Firm Files Suit State Centrll Committee o1 Armor Car te•ch1n1 1ncludtn1 Callfornla. photocr•Pi>Y, motlao plclures, The seml·annuat convenUon dle and televl&lon. He will lllo be wlll be held in the Anabelm T 0 Han involved in --'"' Coocention Center Oct. SI. ncwative means ~ lmtruclioa. Nov.tand2. C C h SANTA ANA - A Laguna The two planning sessions OUnty QS A graduate ol stanford Beech firm has sued the city, will enable sltndlng commit. University, DeoeqberJ recelv· Orange County and tht State tee members from Northern AN Or ed hb: doctorate at Ohio State and Sou"'-Cal"omla --SANTA A -ange University in 19111 end laugbt of California for damages WCI U U · ' 11-· ill that are expected to total, it of whom have little persooal County 1ovtmmenl w switch sociology there for lout years~ · ed 1--~ •105 000 con-act with each other, lo from sberUf's depuilea lo He was · publllber ol the approv • at allK • ' • meet wtth tbetr chairmen and armored car seaj~ to handle Laauna Stach Post from 195Z That was the amount claim-accelerate their pr~ convert-lo 1967 •nd abo publlabed tha ed from all lhree agencies by tion research. its cash. Orange County' Sun Mqazine, Telonics Industries Inc., 21230 The one-day session in San The Board of Supervisors During the put yur, Dr~ Laguna Canyon Road, in the Francisco will begin at JO a.m. has approved an agreement Desenberg bu been. employed wake 0£ flood damage last with a meeting oC the 78-mem-with Armored Transport Jnc. as an associate research poll- January and February which ber executive committee of 1 ku of sh cy dirteior with the UCI Pu~ allegedly caused he av Y the State Central Committee. to make Pc ps ca at UcR~ Organization 1"" damage to the company's U.S. Senalor George Murphy various county department.a vesUgaUng the poaalblllUes lot, power plant and equipment. will be the speaker at a noon and deposit them in the bank. educatonal teJevlslon I n "I enjoy country life," ex- plained Mrs. Shaw. "I have fOOd memories of visiting farms when I was young. In S(lme ciUes, children don 't Jiave a chance to hold a chicken or walk around with farm animals. They can here." Pigs, goats, chickens and moved so he could enlarge the rabbits probably were never farm. The Superior Court lawsuit luncheon. He is expected to To date, money has been Orange County. He served in asks the court to detennine deliver a major address at the brought to t h e co u n t y 1965 as the first president of the trails 75 years ago _ ls the damages claimed. All luncheon. treasurer's ofUce from courts, the UCI Friends or the also available for party use. three earlier claims are re· A similar schedule is plan· the sheriff's office and the tu Library a11.d assisted with the jected by the city, county and ned for a Sept. 20 session in colleclor and then taken to the organization ol the UC! trained to perform comedy "Every kind of farm animal DEATH NOTICES skits 100 years ago. lfere, they there is, we have," says Shaw. shAnd, of coursl e, th~the'.s a girt state. Los Angeles. bank. Oceanology AasoclJ.&U. op, compete WJ a potl--------------=----------------------.::..---"---- CARTER have been. One animal stands out in Et~yn A. C.r1tt. 1.e. "" no ,.,"""" Shaw is the trainer. 11e partlcular -because it's too belly stove and a cash register with eight stparate cash drawers. It's more than 50 ""'"" 0r1 ..... N-t a..c11. su ... iv..t trained a rabb1"t •· spell with big not lo stand out. It's "Old by rwanc1, Ptt. C.rt«i twil ~"'" w years old. '""· J•"' r11omto1 -i su. M8dc.. building blocks for a well· Judge," a 1,800 pound, 20-year swv1c" w111 tie ,.,,... ""'°""" '' n Imo I . I Id A··' ul "d t But it's the people, not the man-made attractions, that make the farm satisfying to the Shaws. "The most touching \hing we've e~ done at our other fann was to bo6t Pre- Sdlool blind children." Shaw said. "It was a real expe!ience for them to feel the curl on a •·"'· ,, P.c:111e v1ew ~. '"'-wn tt evi!ion commercta . o , .,.._0068 m e -sat o ,,_, PK'ltle view Mem«i.1 P•~ Shaw trains his animals In be the largest mule in the sm11111 Mor'l'u¥Vyo· U~N, ...... G . world. the most humane way he o-1d v-. SMJVk:• --.dint, west. knows. ••vou can't whip a A fann must also have Its l llfT HIGrt ........ STANDLEY chicken," he said. "You jWit share ol working animals. s11111eY A. s 111"1C11..,. AM n. u1M w.. give it a reward when it does Shaw has his. In the center of :i ~~~~~"~~; ,!':,".:;,~ something right, and ignore it the 8.5-acre complex is a E. R. Mid s. A. s11fld11y1 111'" ,,.~ when it does some th Ing mule-powered. merry.go-round. <.111idrlfl. SeNIC'H ....... hlld todl Y ., " ou···d th I . 10,» 1n Wetlclll! Ch-I. w111c1111 wrong. ..al e e ann ts a pony pig's tail ." Mor11;1rv. 01r~Tors. His animals do it right. And sweep for the small children. z~v• Elli•bll~O~~~ 116s, s.11,, they have been for many But animals aren't the only Rou c1rc11. Fou111•1n V•IWr. 011e ct years now. Though the farm feature here. Mri;. Shaw's duttl. Aygu11 '· Survlv~ bV d1ug,,. · • ted •• 1·1 "d nd · · I ed It's quite a place, this farm is. And one gets the im· pression lhe Shaws are getting just as much of a thrill out o[ it as the youngsters. tet. Piull"" w.1~10 1411, w1111.,., 1sn t expec w open un 1 pr1 e a JOY ts cen er Roeder; ,;,,.,., M11. Ltl•fld cr1r~. Sept. J, the animals have been around three party room s that ~~·~,nr;:.0:~~·..J~en~·s.~~~ on center stage at Shaw's youngsters can rent for birth· will toe l!eld 1 P.rn. T"611•V 011c11v previous farm at Knott'& Ber· liay parties. And an original The animals Jove it here, too. 'lbat's straight from the horse's mouth. e..-ra Oo1Pll. tnl..,.,_t Good ~ n.n:i cemei..v. 01ldilr erv1f'ltr1 MIK· ry F.arm in Buena Park. He cook wagon -that labored. on !1;10', DJrecton. l-..:._-------------"-------------------1 S~fITH Jol'lll C. Smlltl, lDOI LtklllMrf Dr'!..-, _ Alenwdt. Sl./Niv.d trv ftlClll'lofr. Grttt I(. Ll111<1. s.rv1c" wm br httcl J '·"'· Tvesdlv P.c:lllc View °"'"I. 11111! ... inent P.c:l!lc View ~191 1"1/t;. P1¢ltlc VlfW Mort\HIN, Dlrectcn. ATON r,..,.., Al'On. "91 '9. 16-67' HutoYr L-, Hynt~ llelOI. SYNl•td bY w~. Mn. AlbttT• Alon; d1uvh!tt. MIL Tvrrv19 Ack.ck, N11W ...... 11lco1 -gni~ Gr•vttlOe ~-will ~ l'llld TIM'Sdl1 It •·'"· F1ll'fltYlfl Memorial Pirie. Mtttltr Colanl9l Mo<· ,,,....,, Olrt'cton. ft.tITCHELl.. l.ol"rt!~ A, Mlkt>ell. Apt II. •Ul ~ylvtnl•· L• C•flMI•. SYN!VM br vr•...xi.l'Oht«, Mn. C•rolt 51fPlelOI', S..-vlctt wll! be ,,.l!f 11 •·"'· Bell Bn11dw•r Clw11>tl. Rw. 0'8•lt1 smn~ ottlcl1t11111. lnkrment P1clflc View #Mfnllrl1I P•rk. lhll ln11dw1y Morlv. 1ry, DlrKlon. WRIGHT RO'tw A,, Wrftl!t. ,.,,. ~. 1912 Mtp)e, C!lf" M9t. C.19 (If '"9ttl, A11gy1t '· Suf"liwd by hlllblnd, Htrold, 5,., C.xt. Milw1 ti!,_ ...._ Htt111d, Jr •• W!lllW!I I .. tnd llllbefh two d•YOll- lllr$, Mn. f~ '""""""' Gtrde!l Grow, Mlf MrL. 8411Thi lomtn, ArJ.. IO!llll """ brV!lten, Clll'tfl<.f. £1rl. INI FIO'flll 611191", Mn. Elll MIY WOQotwlrd. W-'!.I _.m1. Mt. 1...i Mn. IN!ne eoi.. SI~ ,.,., ll grind· children. OM tlff'f-111r..-dclll!d. 5'-N· ~ will bt Mid TueMS11 11 •·"'-8111 l!lra..:1-r C"-1. In!~! H•rtllll' ~st ~191 P1r~. Rw. G. Wlll1rd 5ttmt tnd R.,... Cll1rlH Crvte ottk:J.. •llM. llelf Brv.d'w1r Mort\hl..,, DJ.. "''°"· JOHNSEN Ernrrat C. JOll<lwn. Wk!-of Ptul M, Atli 11. O.te of datll. Aut. I. J8' W. 11'1' Street. Co<"a N-•. ~ ·-····-~ ._, -b"'4tlef', Mr. C1rl Fll"'°lflll'I'\ llllnols; two nlt<.~1. '"''· i. • ' tnd Mn. H•rr1t't Sdlllvon, tlolll of Hthin. Servlcfl wlll bit IW!d 7 , ....... Tllf'Sdly, 8'41 B"*"-r C~I. 111- urn..-t '•dfle V~ ~111 (IMl1>-.i. 81!1 8rotdWaY Mortu1..,, Ol!"Klon.. ARBUCKLE & WEI.SB WestcWf Mortuary U7 E. 17th St.. Costa Mna 646-4831 • BALTZ !\,ORTUARIES Corona del l\1ar OR 3-9450 Costa r.tesa AU 6-Zili • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costs Mes• IJl-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS llwllin(tao Volley M°""lrl' 17111 O..ch Bml. Huntington Beach W.7771 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Road Lagnna Beach --• -4tf..9il5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortuary Cllapol l50t Pldfic View Drive Newparl Bucb, Clllloralo -• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL f'UNEJIAL HOME 'i'IOl Bois• Ave. Westminster au.aS15 • SllEFFER MORTUARY Llguna Beacll ~ISSS San aemenle 49MllG • SMITHS' MORTUARY 117 Miii S• JlunUnitoa Beech m.4531 Major surgery or just an aspirinJ There's !!Q guesswork at Penneys Auto Diagnostic Center. Either there is or there isn't something wrong with your car •.. and we.'11 find out scientifically I MONTCl.AIR ln less than one hour, we put your car through • series of act- entific tasts (212 of them, to be exact) that pinpo\nt any existing problerr.-end warn of potential ones. Steering. Engine. Bra~-. Transmission. Electrical and cooling and fuel and exhaust syslems. Expert analysis of everything from headlights lo tall pipe. ·vou watch the resutts come out on an electronic typewriter. A skilled dlagnostlclan goes over the report with you. II you wish, he·n give you an estimate of any necessary repairs. You'll be able to take care of small problems now, before they d~ valop Into big problems cotting big money. And, H you wish, Penneys will make 1he repairs-quickly, ac- curately, economlcaJty, Repeirs that could prevent a needless highway broakdcwn. If you prefer. you can takettte report anywhere you like. The cost?°"'' 9.88 Pretty re11enable for a doc.tor, these dayt. ,, Penneys Auto Diagnostic Center Tho Scltnlifle Troublllhooloro HUNTlNGTON BEAOI -~--- -------------- enno.•1 ALWAYS FIRST GU~., AU 18CEN I ER\ Brag about a retread? We're bragging about ours! 18 MONTHS GUARANTEE WITH 9 MONTHS FREE REPl.ACEMENT FOREMOST TIRE GUARMTEE G•••lllimttrtml Nt II ycor tW -0.ut dllring lhl tnt llllf ol .... ---· ,_,. It --~ certificlte nl ,......,.. wll ,.. ~your tn with1wtlre,d'•GlftilYoU "°" -1hon .... -. lllllnt -including Ftdlral ElCdle Tax: If Y0111 th wan out during 1hl -=cnlMlf,Yoll pey 25" -1hon .... -ll)Jlng pric:o including Fedenl Excilt Tax.· G.wa11W_.f.n.. If we replace 1he t1r1during1he _....,._. ment period, ttMn is no chlr'ge; jf M ~ 1t1e tir1 •ftw the fr•~ plriod. you p.y 5C1'rt or 25,. te. thlf'I tht curnnt selling price of n tire lnctuclnt hdlnl Excite Tax. c ...... ...... Thil p w1• la toid ..... I ¥i tirm .. u.:I on trvdcl, -1-d tar ll I • or --30/XIO_ln __ _ __ ._ _____ _ i... ·-, 1 ,.nod··------··-· 11 ..... ,,. .. ,. c ............... -...... ··-·,.. ...... ~ .. ,.w ·---··--·-'Mt-14 _.. 25" .. ,..W ••••·--··••·---·ls.II_... FOREMOST RETREADS 9.88 6S0.13 black twbeless pl•s 31 c: ~·tax 735-14 blac:k twbeless pl11 35c: fed. tax BLACKWALL TUIELESS SIZE 775-1-4 775-15 825-1-4 815-15 855-1-4 l'RICE 11.88 11.88 12.88- 12.88 13.88 FED. "TAX 37c 'gc 39c 39c .(Oc 845-15 13.88 -40c . VOLKSWAGEN SIZE 560-15 9.88 32c 3 DAYS ONLY! COMPLnE CUSTOM BRAKE OVERHAUL SPECIAL FOR SAFER DRIVING, NOW! • We inllall ,_ bended linings •We...,,'1d,.wheolc11iidoe1 • W•1-r-....,..m-l • w. blood and,. ....... ~ • We repack frcm wl-' "-i9 • We install """front ;tecae -Is 29.88 Most cars 6 PACK FOREMOST PREMIUM MOTOR OIL '3 BUENAPAAK • FULLERTON (Ol•l\#11-•) v.-- HUNTINGTON BEACH CANOGA PARK I I I DllLY PILOT Mond,y, l"""t 11, 196• One for All, All for ~e Two American "Gls from the Ninth Division help · each other over a make-shift bridge in the Mekong Delta 20 miles south of Saigon recenUy while oil a reconnaissance palrol. These men are.from1.he·<?11e brigade of the Ninth that,)Vill remain 'in Vietnam. Hostelry Serves Jiist . For Seals Along Coast Now-a new ENCINITAS AP -The year. 15 have been rescued. office better register goes unsigned at 'J'he latest include a n H F c :r.taria Lloyd's hotel, after a elephant seal, a porpoise, a year in operation, although 65 harbor seal, 1 sea lion and a occupants have checked in. baby beak whale. T h e accommadations. in· Aller being nursed back to eluding a fan.shaped clear health, they're turned over to f water pool are reserved for the .San Diego Zoo where tV{O 0 r seals, porpoises and baby of the seals are now perform. whales washed up along the ing in daily shows. ' beaches from La Jolla to norUl ' Ernest V. Woodward Tll , of Oceanside. humane offk:er, said one of • It's a project of the RanchG the seals tr~erred lo the ~~~nu..i~::~anor ~~~ie,:rCh~~tis0::.ili: money service boatman will shoot. a sea lion, society's director and 1 · and whales have washed crusader for prevention of . a&hore olten ln a desperate cruelty to animals • N ~ "These ieals and sea lions pup," Mrs. IJoyd recalls. "We -for food. "It was '" el;phant ... , I n ewp·o rt would die. many at the hands both weighed the same -93 of thwgbtless people who tor-pounds." ment them," Mrs. Lloyd said iii"i=======-t! Friday. Free Concert B h Fifty such seals were found , ea c· still alive btil many sick or 9 TONIGHT . sulfering, during lhe first p.m. ,., .. months after the mam· Fashion Island mal refuge was put into opera- tion in May 1968.. So far this I NlWl'OltT ClNTER WE QUIT! EVERYTHING MUST GO ' . . . 20 On All Mercha.ndise Lumber Hardware Tools Plywood Electrii:al Paint Sash & Doors Mouldin9s Desks Files Shelving Office Equip. Fencin9 Floor Tile Sl9M LicJht Bulbs Wwlh« StrlppillCJ Locks Panelin9 Sheetrock Cash R19lster Addl119 Machl11e Chairs Tables TOO MANY ITEMS TO UST! -CASH AND CARRY - All Sales Final-No Refunds COSTA MESA LUMBER CO. 1700 SUPERIOR AVENUE Iii COSTA MESA • NEWPORT CENTER 2087 SAN JOAQUIJI HILLS ROAD PHONE: 644 45n Need up to $5000 .?· When you need money to pay bills, buy 1 bette< car OI meet other Important money ~ JOU may arrange for it right In J01Ar own hometown ollice of HR:. HocMhold finance. The HfC.IMMfltll .. UjJlll I ••arytl•c '°" neec1 11111nm eboal ,aur1oa11. What's lllOl'e, he'1 tell you what 'f'N'·loen win oost. in dolars and cents, before you borrow! And at Household. there's a 'convenient repayment plan IOI fNetJ budget. Each year, more than 2'h milf'ton people trust their money needs to Household Ftnance. Wiry don't you? stop in, caR 01 apply by ma~ to HFC's newest office today. HOU81 . - FINANci· ' ' COITA •IA oma1 Harl>or llvd. at 19111 SI ................ Ml M416 South Coast Plaza, Lo-Level, •••••••• 5'I0-9703 KUllTllleTOK llU'CK OPPICI Five rolnts Shopping C.-... , ·•· .. , .. VI 7.:JST7 IAIRA AllA OfPla 204 W. Fourth St ....................... 547'-5491 • \ U.S. To Underwrite Club WASIDNGTON (AP) -An A&r'iculture Dtp&rtmeot acen. cy, plowlnl put IOl1IO of Ila own rules, ls about to un- derwrite a 13G$,OOO loan to build a aolf courae in the MJoalulppi district of Rep. Jamie Wbltten, chairman of the approprlatlona 1ub.(Xllnmitttt that approves .... .-•• budpt. Tbe P'armera Home Aclminhtration already ·hu approved the loan guarantee for the all-White Natchez Trace Golf Club, Inc., but for· mat closing is not ezpected for a month or more. BUY LAND • The loan will enable ·the country club to buy land it has been leasing for a 9-hole golf course. buy and build an ad· ditional nine boles and con· struct a clubhouse, swimming pool, tennis court.a and other facilitiea . The club Is in ~ County, whtre, accon!lnl lo aovern- meot figuru, about ..0 percent of the famllla live below poverty locome levels. Lut fiscal year, The Agriculture 0.partment IPOl!t !300,000 - about the 11me as the gblf COUrte loan't face value -on food at.amps for ~.ooo reci-- plents !hue. Agency olficlala· both here Ind IA Mlulalppi laid they could rm 00 lndi<:ation that Whitten, a Democrat, had ez· erted any pressure or made any lnqUlry about progreoa of the appllctUon. But WbJtten told a· reporter be had in fact written a letter asking about the project'• status. "l did in lhat case a1 l did In many otber1," be said. "When tbe local people are for something, you naturally a.ai for them how It's -g." · The loan is one of about 500 made for golf courses since the program began Jn l~. In- qulrl" dlaclooed, lhou&h, that tt excetjs the agency's usual practices for the recreation loon program. Ill MEMBERS government must put up ad- ditional interest lo make th• arran&ement acceptable to the honk. If the loan closes at the cur- "We try to avoid in-rent I percent rate, the debtednesa of more than fl,000 government would put up an per family membership," ad-additional 3 perecent interest. miniattation loan o f f I c e r If the money market remaln.s Robert S. Crites aaid. The c::lub stable, the government would bad 221 members at the J.!me pay out $271 ,000 as it.a sbare of « ill applicaUon ud now hu the Interest over lhe life of the 231, which would put the in-loan. debt.ednesl at fl,147 per fami-The 40-year term given lhe ly, or 15 percent above the Natchez Trace group is the iuJdeline. maximum permitted f o r While the Government Is not recreation loa ns. The club is d1rectly loaning the $265,000, it putting up $71,410 for the pro- may pay oUt more than that _:_iec_t_. ------- amount in servicing the 4lJ.. year loan. 1be Bank Qf Mississippi at Tupelo, Miss., is making the actual money available. The golf club is paying only 5 per~ cent interest, however , so the Nearly Everyone 'Listens' to Landers -• • • • • • • • at El Rancho: the supermarket • • • ·~ •: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • where the price is right! SNACK BAR. TREAT! REFRESHING! COOL OFF! LARGE! YOU'LL LOVE SLUSH! FIVE DELICIOUS FLAVORS! TAKE A SLUSH BREAK! Doii't let the kids lave all the fun ••. order one for yourself ••. you'll Jove it! Oatmeal Cookies ..................... 59* Tomato Sauce .................. 2"' 15• Big 22 oonc» packaP. ••• from Sunshine! From field ripened tomatoe.s .•. Springfield, 8 oz. Macaroni & Cheese ................ 39¢. Tomato Juice ...................... 4 "' '1 Kraft'• Deluxe .•• 14 oz .• ,. aa.ve tOc! Glorietta ••• big (6 oz. can .•• big servings! Instant Potatoes ................ 4 "' '1 Finish ............................. : ....... 59~ Frencb'.s ••• 7 oz. Pkl' .• , • eave 'Oc on four '. For automatic dishwashen ••• 33 oz. pkg. Meal Makers for first-of-the-week menus! London Broil .... :. ............. $1 39 ,~ EnjoY, the hearlJ flavor al finer beef earJ7 in. the week ••• u well u the convenience of this favorite I Cube Steak ........................ $1.49 ll. Sliced Bacon ........................... 79~· Ready· to 1enre ••• tenderly • , • fn m.fnutet ! El Rancho'• own ••• & little thicker ••• leaner I ' Scallopini Slices ...................................................... $1 .79 r&. So tender, •• so flavorful •• , and so convenient for you to serve thi.11 Old \Vorld fa\•oritel Super-Produce! Gllvenstein Apples apple ••• cri11P, I The perfect al~pUl'J>O'• 2 l 29' full-flavond ! S I Priet1 i11. efft-tt M01t.., Tiu•., WM., Aug.11, Jt, JI. No aol" to dtakn. Super-Delicatessen! Van de Kamp's Dressings ChOOM: from Blue Cheeae, Thousand Island, Louie, Soafood or Tartar Sauce! •• 8 oz. AICAlllA: 39' s-i Ind lflltti-Dr. IP R.mcho c.nt1t1 PASADENA: 320 West Co/Diido Blvd. SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont •nd Huntington Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: W•mer •nd Alfonquin !8oardftlll Cen!ll! NEWPORT BEACH: 2n1 11ewpor1 111111. m1 2555 f.utlllull Dr. Jdlull 1'111111 Clldltl • •' •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • Pe~tagon Budget~ ·Cut May :J\l.~o . .I ..... ~ .. • .Sp~ed Military Cut ,. WASHINGTON (AP) -The new White House • ordered sl~ In de!ense 'pending may speed reducUon in the slie of U.S. military forces , Penlagon ,sources indicate. The!ie sources also sug. guted a continued slowdown in Vlelnam fighting could help the Nixon administration cut spen<ling for ammunlUon, B5Z boinber ·missions and Other war-related purposes. President N l J: o n has directed federal agencies · to come up with fUrther spending reducticn.t totaling $3.5 billion, and Budget Bureau oUicial~ forecast the Pentagon will absorb more than half the amount. Defense '1Jthor1Ues,. who earlier pared 11".7 billion from the Johnson admlnlstratlon'a 179 bil~ fa.-.well military budfl:et. anticipated the flew White 1fouae order and had been searthing for places to cut deeper. "We're g1*tg to have to squeeu: hard on personnel," sald one official New U.S. withdrawals from Vletnam, ei:pected late this summer and fall, probably will be translated into total foi'ce leveli well below the 3.45 million men projected in the budaet now before Congre1s. . The firs! lroop pullouts from Vietnam, now under way, will result In a 15,00l)-man drop In over.ii Anny atrtngth and save about $150 millloo • year. ears· Regular '99.95 Scientifically Designed Luxury ... / ~JI Sears-0 .. Pedic Foam Latex or Innerspring Mattress •Deluxe 6-in. dimple-top{qam lalex -riialtm• for •uperfi.,.1e.ping eomforl, firm posture support. Quilted top, contour conformLDg - • Fir1n innerspring mattress-1,000 coils in·full 6ize, 600 coil&.J.a.twln aise. Puff.quilled top for luxurious •urf ace •oftness $99.95 Matching Posture-Mate Foundaiioru..---------79.88 $279.95 Quee n Size Se1,· Ma tire,. Plu• Foundatio 229.88 $379.95 King Sue Sel, Mattress Plu• 2 Foundation 99.88 (\ Im.meditate Complimentary Delivery, of course! • For;each adclllional man cul fr'Ofll ~the military rolls._ the Pfnllgon (fcurei' tO save a~t $10,000 t.,year. . ,Li>Qldfl& _b!Y~ tho war,, defeblt ;1e&d8Ps. have been ti\iiikblg 11(·1~fri_g11.s. arm- ed 11....,glh: · criidUaay to around s.1· millkin men thwi reapirig a saVbll~ of ah6ut $8 bUJl9n a .fear .. > · , The Defense Departmenl's civilian force' •lso Is a likely iar&et for more trimming. The NI.mt administration tn April moved to lop ZG,000 civillan worlters from the payroll at an anticipated an~ nuol "'""" ·of: aboot 171> m!Ulon. • ' Officials hinted that, If the level of fighting 1wys low, ' - ( .. they may be able to trim the jecta are c o n 1 l d 4 r 1. more than '4 billion in the vulnerable lo stretchout ar btidget for ground, alt and · canceUaUon under the ~ naval ammunlilon. tensUyin1 budget squene. 1 Shortly alter comlna to of· Among these are the mucholt fke, the Nixon adrnlnfslration · crltlclied \Ve.st Gmnan-U.S. sliCed more than $900 millloo developmen' ol a main batUei froni lhe Johnson ad;, tank for the 1970., a new .Flt ministration's ammunition' re, fighter planeJor the Navy •ncl' quest , , a no th e r nucltar-powereC Some military Weappns pr1>-aircraft carrier. . . , .. . 1 • ; " I l • SA VE $128! Four-Piece Mediterranean Bedroom Regular ·•4 27 Includes: • 9-Dr•wer Triple Dre!llcr Base •Framed Pl1te Gl11s ~1irror •Four-Drawer Cbe1t •Full or Twin Chairback Bed or King.Size Headboard Elegant Mediterranean styling inspired by the splendor of Old Spai n. Old oak finish with embossed-effect detailing. Textured plastic tops fo r easy Cilre and long lasting beauty . .Antiqued hardware. Spacious drawers have center guides for smooth opening. Completely dust-proofed. Maiching Night Stana_ ______________ _.59 Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans ' . ' • ~ -----------·----_._ ------·-. -·--------------. ---------' '"""' ,.,. 1 ... 8.Hoo, 521 •030 n MONTE GI ~.JPll · tOHO.NACH.HE s.0121 """o""' eo 2.114s, N" 9.51 61, vu 6-6751 rico we s -4262 sourH c0As1P1Att. 540.33~3 I I CAHoGA PAIK 340-0661 Gl!NOAU CH J.100~, ·C 4-4611 O\YMllC A SOTO .AN .. ,211 SANTA ANA kl 7.3371 lOllANCf 542-U) I . I COMl'TON NE 6-2581, NE 2-5761 HOll\'WOOO HO 9.5941 -OJ~NGI 637-2100 SANTA fE SPllNGS 944-8011 VAllfY PO 3·8461 , 914·2220 I COVINA 966-0.lll INGlfWOOO OR •·2521 PASADfNA 681-3211 , Bt·4211 Sears !ANIA MONICA EX 4-671 r V<OMONT PL 9-1911 ~---------------------~--____________________ , . "Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your MoneyBack" .....,, __ "" Shop 6 Nl9ht1 Monday through Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. -.. , I I J .f CAn. V PILOT Hurricane Firm Sued On Design MIAP.fl -AUOtne)'1 for naval architect Ray Runt. in· ventor of the plarining deep Vtt bull, have flled suit tn the federal distric;t court of the southern district of Florida against Hurricane Precision Iodustrlts, Inc., of Hialeah, Fla., the builder of hurricane boats, for alleged infringement of hull design. Precision Industries, Inc., is a su~dla'ry or Elgin National lndllltrles, Inc. Fresh from' a r e c e n t milestone yictory over Flbra Boats, Inc., in the same federal court for the same rta.son, Hunt. through Hunt Industries, lnc., charges that Hurricane " : .. has for a long li,meo. past, been and still is" infringing on the original Ray Hunt deap vee hull design ''by ma}dng, selllng, and/or usfng boat hulls embodying the patented invention." The suit asks the court lor " ••. a preliminary and a final tnjundlon • , • an aceounting for proUts and damages ... , and treble damages" against Hurricane "due to the willful and wanton nature" of their alleged in!ringement. Ordinarily the royalty fk for use of another's patent is five percent but in the case or "'v.illlul and wanton" patent Infringement ~the amount can be trebled by the court. In a history making deci'Sion in the 1narine industry, Judge Ted Cabot of the same federal district court ruled that anoth- erf liitlami-based boat builder, Fibra Boats, lnc., had in· fringed on the basic Hunt design concept and that Hunt had a valid patent on his deep vee hull. 1be. court ruled in the Hunt Industries, Inc., vs. Fibra Boats, Inc., case that the plaintiff was entitled to enjoi11 Fibra from doing business and a further trial on the issue of damages. Fibra and Hunt later arrived at a settlement on these issues after the rul- ing. Heretofore. hull designs in the pleasure boat rield had been open to considerable pirating. A spokesman for 11unt lndustries explained today after filing the Hurricane suit that they in no way want to put a crimp on the booming iale of deep vee hulls across the nation nor to damage th~ pie.a.sun boat industry in ant way. Miss Nielsen Wins Sabot SAN DIEGO -Nina Nielsen of Newport Harbor Yacht Club edged Bob Burns of California Yacht Club by a quarter point in winning the Sabot Junior National championships here Salurday and Sunday, .P.1iss Nielsen carded 2-1-1-2-7 ror J2~:i points and Burns scored 12"1• points w i t h finishes or S.2-2-1-3. Others in the trophy lineup' were Jerry Stewart. SDYC: John .P.fcClure, NHYC and Dennis Durgan, BCYC. Kellie·Ley Craver of San Diego Yacht Club won the con- solation series. Runner-u p was Vicki Lohman. L YC. and lhird was Curt Olson, CYC. l..eweck In Santana 22s Tom Le.week or California Yacht Club won the natiooal championship regalta of the Santana 22 fleet at Long Beach Yacht Club Sunday. There were 27 entries in the regatta. il'.'nal results l I) Squirrel • Cage, Tom Leweck, CYC: (2)1 Sparrow. Scott Burke, CBYC:, (3) No name, T. Doyle Blagg j Ill. Fresno YC : l4J No name , Lee Aggerl . CYC; 15) Briga· doon, Ari Knox, llHYC: (6 l r7~li~e, ~~~~ ~~~in~~-,,~~~~'.' SMYC; (I) tie between Count Down. Lee Booth. SSSC, and Twinkle. Frank "1hi tc, BYC: (10) Sealark, Bob Romer. SCCYC. Elms Captures 4th Snipe Title Earl Elms or San Diego won hit fourth national Snipe ' Mond.1y, August 11, 1%~ 15 Classes Compete I 200 Vie in Newport Race Two hundred boats in 15 li!!!~ classes braved the hot •. muggy \\'ealher in Newport itarbor Yacht Club's three-day Race Week Regatta Friday, Satur- day and Sunday. A highlight of the regatta was the one-shot Gold Coast Race Saturday for the Ocean Racing, Pacific Handicap and Midget Ocean Racing Fl~t. Winner in the Ocerui Racing Fleet race to Long Beach en· 1rance buoy and return wa'.I Dick V a I d e z ' Columbia-50 Escudero II from Long Beach Yacht Club. The PHRF wlnner was Joe Kallenback's Libra from Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, and the MORF winner was BHI von KleinSmid from VYC; (3) Fried Hockey, Grant NHYC in An ita. Baldwin, NHYC. Gaudio, NHYC; (2) Jim Lord, BVC. SABOT B -Cl) Gigi de Y..losconye: NHYC (2) Vlckl Call, NHYC: (3) Steve Schock . NHYC; (4) Jamie Bedall: FCYC ; (5) Barr Sm 11 h , NHYC. . KITE A -(I) Bob Haskell, LIVC; 12) John Da!gh, NHYC. KJTE B -(1) Maryann Coleville, NHYC; (2) Ringo Wagner, NHYC; (3) Elaine Sliger, BYC; 14) Steve Ros.s, BYC : (5) Phil Rem m i.n g, NHVC. l..100-14 A -(I) Jim Tyler, BYC; (2) Chad Twichell, LIYC. Ll00·14 B -II) Bob Car- roll. BYC; lZ) Pal Dunigan, Gold Coast Ra ce Soling-(!) Tempete, Andy • OCEAN RACING A & B _ Zimboldi, NHYC ; (2J 0-Sole-FLIPPER -(I) Frank BYC. ( 11 Escudero II , Dick Valdez, Mio, Lloyd Johnson, BYC. Browne, BCYC. l..BYC. STAR -II ) North Star. SABOT C -(I) Katy B t• OCEAN RACING C & D -Lowell North SDYC ; {2) Han-Barnard, NHYC; (2) Kathy ea IDfJ (Jp the Bay Volante JI , Mike Hirsh , BYC. nah, Barton Beek, NHYC: (3) Klock, BCYC. 13) Bettina PHRF _ 111 Libra, Joe Cubalibre, -Kevin J a free , Benls, NHYC ; (4) Patsy The S\\'iss Navy may be overstrength. At least Ne\vport Harbor in pursuit or yacht, Nocturne, KleinSmid, NHYC: t2) 'l'wist NHYC. Taylor BYC; (5) BilJ Jeger, Dick Deaver's Cal-29, Swiss Navy, appears to be during t\vilight match off Harbor Isl and. C.M. Gibbon, BYC: (3) fl,1ist,, __ s_AB_OT __ A ___ ,_,_J _M_ar_>_N_H_YC_. _________ w_.,_·g_h_t<G __ d_ow __ nb-'y_too_m_a_n'-y_h_a_n_d_s_a_s_i_t_b_e_a_ts_u:_p ___________________ _ Allen Heller, BCYC. 1 MORF -11) Anita, Bill von Klen.Smid, NHYC: (2) Twist JI, Andrew Morthland. NHYC. Race Week Regatta . PHRF -Proto. Ed Feo. ABYC; (2) Bonila, Goldie Joseph. LIYC : (3; f\,1isty, Allen Heller, R YC. INT.-14 -ll) 14 Karat II. Roger Welsh, NHYC : 12) Varuna, Dick Hendrickson, MBYC : Pursuit, Ch a r I es Stark. PVSA. • L U DE R S . 16 -(I) \Vindsong, Bill Fundenberg, NHYC ; (2) Kildee, Ben Hromadka, LYC: (3) Shibui, Rick Gartner, VYC. SHIELDS -I 1 I Aileen, ?i.tarilee Allan, NHYC; (2) Katherine, Carl R e i n b a r t , LAYCWins J u1i.ior Class ~iary Griffith of Los Angeles Yacht Club won the Western R e g i o n a l cham- pionships of the Flying Junior Class in a five race regatta sailed at LA YC Saturday and Sunday. The Flying Junior is a 13- foot iloop dinghy which also carries a spinnaker. The series drew 25 entries. Final results: I. Mary Giffilh. LAYC. 2. Richard Palmiter, Jose SC. 3. Scott Schock. J\IJIYC. 4. f'red Paxton. San Jose ~ SC. 5. Slan \Vest, J)anvtlle SC. Let us copy your favorite old picture ... Preserve fond memorie1 for all the family.,. let u1 make fine copies ot a beloved picture lo share with them. SALE! ORDER NOWI only3QS ~·7 tap~ al P•CIU!I ;,, good eand•l•Clfl II p1ctut• 11 llll!l "'O'M, th• odd • 1,~n•I ~htuo•• lo• •••lo••I!•~ •'• "'"' ••l•·P'il:H, h~ot You• er1,. lnat picl11•1 11t11•n1d unh.,med, HUNTINGTON 892·3331 , Ext. 283 ' .. 1 ' ' Kenmore Automatic WASH 'N DRYER SAVE s51 34888 Regular 399.98 Just. sett.he cycles and push the dial ,/ and you're washing AND drying YOW' clothes in one operation ./ \Yater le"el and wash •ction adjust automatically to wash load ./ Hot and warm water wash •• , automatic warm water rinse ./ Options to wash and dry, wuh only or dry only J Easy·reach top-mounted lint screen J Acrylic-finished top and cabinet J Conve11ient Load-A-Door mak.011hel! Electric ~lod e! 89500 I 1 " > ' ' ' ll· -- WASH 'N DRYER with Automatic Dispen~ers 41988 Regular 449.95 • ./ Water level and wash action adjust automatically to wash load J Fi•e wuh·rin• water tempen.turea Automatic diapenaen la< bleuh. .J fabric ooftener and deterg..U reloue contenlA during wuh cycle .J Powerful Roto-Sp<ay wuh aetion ./ Optioo.1 for wuh and dry, wuh only, dry only and air tumble for fiufflng J Euy·reach top·mounted lint ecreen .J Mar ....Ust.nt porcelain-rutlshed top J Convenient Load·A·Door makes 1helt Electric liilodel 87:-oo • Lady Kenmore Automatic WASH 'N DRYER 45988 Regular 499.95 ,f l'u9h button no-gu.,nvork eontl'ola ,f Water llml and wuh action ll<ijaa automaticall:r to wuh load ./ Fbe wuh-rimo water temperatweo ./ -.J Roto.Spn:r wuh acdoa ./ Special wuil and dry cool-down1 tor permonent presa fabrics ./ Automatic chylng time and temper.tat• control ••• top-mounted lint ec::reen ./ Adju11Able end-of.cycle algnal Automatic detergent, bleach and fal::mc J softener dhpenwen rdlease contonta at desired time during wuh c:yde Elee.,ic Model 89900 Seara C<ire Senice -the •alue ol,...., K ....... - matlc WASH 'N DRYER. We 9el"T:ice what we aell where"'° JOU live or mo"fe in the U.S.A.. Use Sears Easy Payment Plan No Trade-In Required tUINA ,A~l( TA l • .(.f00, 521..1$30 C4NOOA ,AA!C 3.f0.0661 CO.WION Nf 6.2581, NC 2·5761 COVINA 966 .0611 t l MONTI Gt 3-3911 Gl(NOAlf Oi .S.100.f, 0 4•4611 HOttl'WOOO HO 9°59.ft ltlGllWOOD 01 1-2521 lONO llACH Ht 5.0121 HOIWAU: l..H .C·776t ClTMl'tt: & aoTO AH 8..521 t ~AHGI 6.37°2100 t~ MU 14211, n 1-4211 ...o> WE ~262 l'OMOHA ID 2·11.CS. NA f.$161, 1'D '"'151 .we fOHAHOO 1M 1·7121 IA.HfA M4A ICI 7.J37 I TOWHCt.S,J..1514 \'Alt.ff PO 3-t.C61, ft~-2220 \'WllONf PL t -1911 SEARS CATALOG AND APPLIANCE STORE S championship In the regattal~~~~~~~~~~J 1-------------------just concluded at J1ckaoovillt,/; F11. Etms finished tM scrl~ ON THE TUBE ~~~.2:!1~~ ~~riH~~~' =~,.:'::!,., ----ltUIDA MU1t1 SANTA ff PDQ f«-IQ1 1 MHfA MOH1C4 IX 4-6711 10unt co,ur ~14 540.llll W\AHD ftJ.1Pf1 vm1<HD111.,...,. WDTMll'Gltll tn41 WHm!B 6f14d66 WllMl«>n::.4 Q).()011 with. aoore of 11.7 points. CHINO 6)7·1S71 G,1,RDlN GltOVI 6Jl·f100 HUNTINGTON ltlACH I0-2.WI SAH PIDtlO W-"ll IHlllMH OAKS ft14'00 aNNlliD.CU1 Rwmer-up With a acore OI Fot tho boi l t u•d• te wh1t't C!AVf-Cll"Y aJ7.12fl GU.NAP.\ HIUS 3'0-10JI WlWOOO .u.14«t S3.4 WU Dave Ullman of h•pp111i11<J 011 TV, rt•d TV ~$$ 126-lSJO HACICNOA HGT$. 3)0..lMI lO$ AlTO$ "7-Sl4 Balboa Yacht Club, and third WEEK -di1trii111to.I w1th lh• WU A•un1Jtine Dfu ol MlamJ S•t11rcloy tdi1io11 o( th1 DAILY _.. 'ILOT. with • tc:ore ol U.•. •Sotisfoc.tion Guarant•.d or Yovr Money Boc.k"' -------- Shop 6 Nighh Monc1oJ thn>u9h Saturdoy 9:30 AJA. to 9:30 P.11.. Scars • f ' D•llv Jl llc1,l----cLc1o0~,=L-,•=o=,=,.=,=----·ll l"fl·'9 NEWPOIT·MISA U.HJFIED SCHOOL lllSTlllCT LEGAL NQ'lirCE Notk.e 1inr111111 •!ft 1 " NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thtt ,,.,_ .-,-,-,-,-,-0-,--,-,-,-,-,.-~~,-,-,-,-,-0·,lao.rd 01 Ed11tatlon of the NtwPOfl·MeU flEFOltE THI f'UHNIHO COM-Utlllled Sc"""I 0~1•1d of Or1noe County, MISllOH OF THI! CIT't' OF f'OUN· C.lltorrtJ1, ""ill •Kelvt SNled bld1 ""' hi , .. IN YALLl!Y ll:ICI A.M. on the 1'111 .s.v of Auv1111. lfft NOTICE IS HEREBY i lven !hat on •I lt'le of/lee of Mld :scr-1 Cl(ltrkl, WPCI-.~, ,11_,.,,., 70. 1'69, lll 1:311 P.M., loclltd •I 1151 Pl&ctntll Avtnut, Co1t1 '" tt1t Coutl(ll Cham.b9t1. CllV Hill 10'2ll0 MH.a, C11Jtor11!1, II wl>ld'I tlmt Miid bld1 F I V ; t *Iii bto Putlllcl• ~Ind 'ffd IOI': ~~1~7;rnle~v~h,uei>1tnn::''~:.,.,.,~lon e,.:;,j GRAPHIC ARTS EQUIPMENT hold 1>11llllc hurl11511 o~ 1i.. lollow1"9 IP· All. bids i re lo be In Ktt:rdlr>e• wltll ,,11,~tlQ'\1 : ;~~'W:,!' r!:'z:'','i,;',11'':,. ~~1c::': Ill ,.reclM Pltn Ne. 111·A (l'Uw 2, •an P'urdwafne Atlrnt o1 w !d Schoal Dl•lrld, 11r• Wtt./) ~lltlhCn lubmlll..:1 bv 1_,7 Plattntll Jt,ve~ CO.II Maw Rl!llUOl!c .......,., klr. tlle c11111tructlon of C.lllo•nii. ' ' 3'0 1Ptr1intnl "'"'' uPOn ••-h' Eld! hidcler mu.t 1ubmil 1 hid dKICKl! kK1llCI llKl'lh of Wt,.,,... Avtnue ll'll>ft In lt'le klrm of 1 ce•llllr:d OI' U'111w'1 or In• '60 feel 111t of Srookhurtl cflldl! « 1 hid bond equ.ol to live per unt Street. I (~) of '"' • .._nt of the Did IY\ldt {1! z-c11-. Mt. • A~llalllln 111'11-PIYlllM to tr. ordtlr of lflt N.....,;.t<Mn1 milted by LArw!n Coonltn'I' '"1111llnt Unilll!ll Sc:'-! Ol•trkr. A P111orm1nci c111,,.11 of !Ofe. P1'$1rt'/' lotlllld lond mav be re<111lred.1t lt\1 dlicr9'1on of hl'tw~n T1ID11'1 & E1U1. ind N~lstld a. '"' Dl1!ricl. In t!w-eYtnt d 1111ure to.,.. M19nol!11 Str""' tOllSlltllll of N>-''' Into 1ud'I (tinlrfct, Ille 11rcaed1 of the P•ll•lmllttv 10!!.U ~ti ''""' Rl-1 ditck will tit. fprfell~ or In t•lt of 1 Stnolt F1mlly R;e1l6enl\1I DT11r1ct, ont hand, 1~ lull tum llltrfff wl!I ht ~ere minimum, lo IUPD"6600, 5ln91e tor1elled lo 1111d S<.llool Dl51rlcl of Ortntl l'1mll'I' Rt1!d1nll1I •nd PO comhlnl"!I Ccuntv Dl•lrict R~u11tl011$ or more rHlrltl'l-n No h0lc1dor mllY W1t!ldr1w 1111 hid ff:f 1 d>1ttlct. PerlOCI of lortv>llve UJ) 111'1'1 11ttr 11\t C011dlllori11 Ull Permit ND. 50 111~ !n dl!I! 111 for !Ill D1>1!nl1>11 tlw!reot. {Dniundlon wllt'I 1hl1 ZOM Ch1n1e. Tiit Board Qf Educ.ttlon of the N-1- IJl Zone Ch1n11 NI. ltJ Submitted bv Ml!1.a Unilll!d Stlloo! 0 1,trlct •eierves the Thom1s J. Gr1Uon rec11,.1Hnt tMnee of rlellt to relect env 01 llll hldi, •nd flDI lone on oro11ertv lo<:•lr:d 1! lh~ ..e<eiwrllv 11ct~I the klwr-1 bid, 1nd 1o nort!lwn! corner cf Edln1>tr 1,..d Eutlkl w1i~e 1nr Jnfcrmi lllr or lrrquterllr In lrom Al Gl!ntr•I A11•lcuttur1I Ol1trlct lo 1nr bld reulved. A3 Multlole F1mllv Dltlrltl or mare Oiied All9Ult 1, l'6f restrkt!ve ltlllrlct. NEWPOltT·MESA UNIFIED (I) Cor.dlllonll UM i-.. mlt N1. JI Ao· SCHOOL DISTRICT ollc1!1on subml!ltcl 11'1' Din Cos""°" Of Or1tf!llf Countv, C1Hf«nl1 db& PRINCE OF WHALE$ Rt1l•11r1n!, Dorotl\Y Hlrvfy on oroPtrfY loc;llKI II !lw! norlt'lwKI Purcl'>IS!riv A91nt comer cf H1rbor end Ecflrgtr, to o11111ln '6.!100 11ermlsllon IOI' It'll! -~ 11="!1! "1 Pllblli.hed Or1noe Coast D1llY Piiot beer 1f'ld wine In conJUM11on with the A119111t I 1nd Avgust 11. 1969 IG6..; r~t1Llflnl, • LEGAL NOTICE T~ m11te,. '"' bll"' P~~ Pt1rw1nl lo !Ill Pl1""h'l11 LIW. of !Ill Stile at C11ifornla (~I Code fl.000 .-1-------------- ~.I 1nd "'" Founl1jn \l.Ailrf Zanlng P-l4tn Ordln1nce. Tiit tont ~l'lffl will ln'llOl'l't Cl;ltTll'ICATE OF COAl'O•ATtOlt •mef'ldm~h lo Sectional Ofslrlct MIPO P'Oll TllANJACTION o .. IUSINIESS 17-S-ID lf'ld l&-S-11 . Tt\9 Zonl"' ord!nanc::I , UMOIEll FIC!-flTtcl'IJS NAME 7.onlnv MIPS.. Plol Pi.rt• Ind PrtclH THE UNDERSIGNED CORPORATION Pl1ns '" Cll'I me In IM PlllMllflt O.C.•rt· dots ""'"""' «rt!fy 1118t II l1 (Cll\dll'Cllnt I mrnl 1JICI 1r1 1v1ll1bll for 11ubf\t \ft. bvslilt-ss ioal.IM ... J017 S. H1!llld1v St. IPttclicn Ind eir1ml111r1on. fl".0. llox 2'lfS1. S.1111 A,,., C1flfotnl1 Ttw:iw llfSlrlnv lo IPSlll'I' In f1"°r at In undolr tho f1dltlou$ nrm n•me ol ~l>llO\l!lon to !hti.t r11<111e$IS 1nd 111'_.ll W E ST E RN ALLOY .S T E E L wll! be olven 111 opportunll'f lo do 10. JI 1tld met 11ld firm II comPOSICI Of lht l ur1Mr lnlormttlon Is <1111!•..:I. YOV m111 ro11owlft9 corPO••llon, ~ PrlnclP1I (ont1t1 !tie P l&~nl"' 01~rlmtfll II '62· PIKt cf b~iM•• ii I S lf:!loWI: 1•1• 1l'llt rdor In P rttilt Pl~" No. 111-A. ENGINEERED EQUIPMENT COM- 2of'll Cl'lln~I No. 201 I nd No. 207, Con· l"ANY 3017 S. Hlllld.1¥ SI. (P,0. dlllon•l U,e Permit No. ~I . lo.: 1lt'1, S1nta Alil, C1lllor"T1. PLANNING COMMISSION OF WIT"IE5S Iii hind It'll! .. , di'/' or THE CITY OF FOU NTAIN ,l,Uf!"•t. 1'6t, \1.1.LLEY (CORPORATE SE ... l) Stanlev R. M1nstltld, ENGINE ERED EQU IPMENT ·pl. ... "INING DIRECTOR AND COMPANY SE'CllETAAY TO THE F, D. SlePl>tniOn. PLANNING COMMISSION Pf1!1ldo11t r ublllihed Or1r1tt Coat! 01llv P!lot, COUNTY OF ORANGE ) 1s }.yg~st \l, 1969 1190.dt STATE OF CALIFORNIA ) LEGAL NOTICE NOTICIE OF TRUSTEE'S SALi! On lh!1 ht a1y of J!,11tUJI, A.D. 196f, belf:re mo M&rv IC Her.ry 1 No!lr'I' Puhllc ln 1nd tor 111id Counl'I 1nd Sl1t1, tnld!f!ll llllreln. ltuly comml11loll..:I 1nd 1worn, 1>1ri.ontllv 1oi>e1r..:I F, D, F·ll76 ' .-S!Hll'lenlon, known lo me kl ~ tht on 1ht 1'111 di'/' ol A.1191111, lfff. 11 1 .... p,.,.!dotnt cf ,.._ COOIOl'lllorl lflll ••· ~.m ., INLAND MO~TG ... GE COMPANY, ewl..:I !I'll wtlt'lln lmtrumtnl on befllll cf ~ corPOrlllon, IS T111111t under I nd !Ill c;orDQl'lllon ttw~lll Nlmed, ,,,.. PllfSUl fll to • dl'ld of lrllll ntcutld ..., ldl;,_leOt..:I lo IM tMI wdl COrlOrlllorl WILLIAM M. V.NSDAI.£ Incl MAR\I S. llllKVled fM ll lM. LANSDALE, l'ltll.b91!d IAll wlft .S.t..:1 Aorll In Wlllllll Whe<.-il, I lie..,. iwrwnlll HI ,I. IJM. rtcOfUlll ,.,,.., 1. 1"6 1fl Bo'* m• II.Ind I nd •tfl•ed "'Y offlcf1r 1111 "" 1911 Pagr .,,. DHklll lteconl• of Orl1'19'1 dt'I' Ind ., .. , Ill tllls c:trlltlUtt llrsl l bcri<t (')llnt'/'. C1IHMnl1, H<urln9, •mor'l9 alMr -ll1'trl r;l!ll111tlons, 1 note for W .OGO.OG In l1¥0r lDFFl(IAl SEAL! ,., PAOl/IOEHT FEDEll:AL SAVINGS Ml"I' I(. H~rv AtlD LO"N ASS 0 C I AT I D N OF Notl"I' Pu!>llc-Ctliforr>\1 IHl/EASIDE now "" O"'ll':' Ind holder PrlMINI Otlk t In mereor, w:n 11!1 11 putillci 111dlon Ill IM Ori nee Countv "''~"' blddtr !or Cllh (PtY•blt 111 llwfu! MY Comml11lon E•Pirel rrcneY of me U11lled SltlH t t llmt cf Nov. u, 1f72 ~•ltl 11 l~t SJ.th S1rt'f'I Entr1nce lo lht Puhli'11ed 0,1...,, Coast Dilly Piia!, OttflOO Countv Cou•I ~ou1e In !ht C\1'1' cl .t.u11111l • 11, 11, 15, l'" 1.Q6..•t ~•nt• Ant. Ccunty of Or1n9p, Sltle at, ____ , ___________ II c~ll!orn11, 111 rl9!ll, 1!111 and l111tre1t con-1 · LEGAL NOTICE v•ved lo and now lleJcl ti¥ 11 undtr t11d rl"!°d cf !rut! In end lo 1ttt lollowln111------°"=------ll ~•"Crlbtd »reel cf r~I 11ttll>ertv 111-741n ,1~ted ln Hid Countv o1 Ori n", S11t1 of NOTICa OF INTllNTIOM TO Cilifornl1. •nd de1trlbc!d tt follows: CAE,,,TE S«CllRITY INTE•IEST LDT .$1 cf Tr1cl NO. lllO, In l!lt tltv ol (Siu. Ull • '1t7 U.C.C.) Co•IA M111, ts P9f mlD rKordfCI in NOTICE !1 hvtbv llvon lo !ht hook Ul PtOtl ]~ to 3' IMluSIVf of Cr.dllors cf THOMAS c. llACK Ind MiscelllntoUI M1p1, ln It'll Ofllel Of !hi HEltlERT W. RAIE, Deblors, wtloll countv RocoNler ol Hid Countv. bu1lne11 .xtren Is 2121 Phtc:1nll1 ,.,......,..., Sold ••It will be m1dt, but wltl'lo!Jt Colt• Mell. COOJnt'/' of Or•-, s1111 ol covenA11I or w1rr1ntv, e~orHi or lml!lled, C1llf!lrnr., 11\tt I llCUrll)' ln ltrnt 11 •t•~rd!n11 !Ille. pm11ulon or lf'I-•bout to ~ cre1led b'I' Delli« 11111 tumbr1nc:t , lo Pl'/' !ht remtlnlnt orl~ 1r1nlecl lo HARTFORD FINANCIAL <li>ftl ium of Hld note. lo-Wll: 131,ICll.31. CORPORATION, Secured P1r1'/', whotl ln!ere>!, .tc1v1ncti. It any, under lt'lt hlllintQ lddrns ls IOI Nori~ L1 llr11 ,.,"1, of 11ld cltr:d ol tru11, IHI, dl1rte1 A'feflt/t!, Los An1e111, Countv cf Los !Ind t•DC'nHI of !he lr1111 ... i Ind cf lru5IS Allll'lt.a, 5111t of C1lllor11i1, c"aled bv stld dHd of 1ru1t. Tilt Prwtrf'f In which flit SfCurll'I' ln1 1>1ntlltlaf'I' undtt 11ld dfoed cf 1m.~1 wlll bt cret!td ls, In een.r1I. 111 l•ust, hv r11ton of t bf11cll or dl'f1u1t In fl•lut11 ind f<luipm.fnt, lurnllur1 Ind '"' ClbllalllOl'I 11curfd ll11rirl,.,, 11.,tlolort lumlllllntS of Dehlor cowtll'lll 11-1'1 r•etul,.ed 1nd clellw•td lo tlU 11nc11r11tllllf -!Ktlr:d 11 21'1 Pllotntit .-.. ...... c°'" • wrll!!n decllr•llon of lltl1ull 1nd <It>-Mell, Counl'I' of Or111t1. s1111 of mind tor 1111 1nd I wr"ttn llOtkt of C1llfoml1, ind tlvslna1 k-11 11 dtfaull -cf elKll,,., to U llff ll'le PllOM.<llX MA.CHINE COMl' ... NY. ~~de'llGntd lo i.eH lllcl l!Wlrl)' to TIM 1tor111lcl ..Wr!tv lrMlllC'lloft will •Ml•I• $111d ohll1111ioni, 111c:I llw're1t11r, on bt consumm1tlCI on or 1fltr lt'I• lfltl ,,., "'arll lY. 1Mt, 111t uPldtn'9nKI <t lKICI 1111d of A119111f, 1'6t, ti 10 A.M. 11 It'll offlc11 not•co cl c1<1l1ull ~ t~tlon le Mill to be ol L1bc1Wt & \ltl'ltrtu. 1Dt Wttl Finl ·~ortted In llcoll "216. PIN 1U ol DI-11 .. 1..9' Allvtlfs, C1lllornl1. AllOl'nt'l'I fol' !•(ill RttO!'dl In !Ill offlt• cf ''" (;ounl)' Stcurtd P1rl'/'. Nctlct It 11 Iv . II ftC(:o•.,.r of 11ld Count'/', "'-' L1bowe & Vtnll'ft1 11'1 not 11crow Oa!ftl JulY J, Ifft. hokllrs wUl>ln tf11 m1111l111 cl Stc:lloo! !SEA.LI :MAO.I C!'l'll Codt, INLAND MOATAGE COMPANY SO t1r .. k-to mt S«vrtcl l"lrl'/', 11'1' Loult J , G11tn 111 bvslf'ltll llllTllS tnd lddr'l'l!lft ut..:I lno P1nldont It'll Dtblor tor lttt fl\tff y11r1 Iii! P11t, r>~hll1hK1 Or1ng! Coasl Dill'/' Piiiot, 1r1: S.m1. Au;ull •· 11, 11, !Ht UOt·6f DATED: A119u1l 5, 1tft. llo HA~TFOAD FINANCIAL LEGAL NOTICE COAPOA ... TION Se<:urod P1rtv su,ERIOrt COUit'!' 0, lH• Bv: Aon.,,lcl B. L1b0Wt, iTA7• 0, CAL IFORNt• FOrt J!,9~nt THI COUHTY 01' ORANQ• lflltWI & Vlnlrtu NO. A4U51 Alltn'lltt ti LIW OltDEI TO SHDW c•USI! Int Wnt ,,,,, Sll'MI FOii CHAHQI! 01' NAME. Lii A11•1lt1, Cl l!larnll t0t2' 111 t!le M1t'9r of: lllUCE ALVf~ PED· P11hll$llr:d Ot•n91 Ca.11 D•ll'I' Pllll!, DY M•d HILL ... RY AMANDA PEDDY, A.119.,.! 11. 196' 1111-6• ~or C~•ntt ol N1m1. WHEREAS lltUCE Jt,LVOI PEDDY 111C1 LEGAL NOTICE MILLAllY AMANDA PIDDY, Nllllcmel"l.1--------------~&Vt lllt!d I N l!llon WU~ !ht (ltt11 Ill It'll.I 1"40M (OUrl far 1n order d'l-1111 Ptlllloners CfrtTlllllCATI OP IUSINIESI ~•"Mi 10 BAUCE Al.VIN Pf.DY •f'MI f'ICTITIOUI MAM• ti!LL ... AY AMANOA PEOV. Tho wndt<'aillntcl do ctrtll'I' fl\ev 1r1 ll IS ORDEAEO lhll 1n ... nons Jn-condlltlllll I bullnen II 1011 El Ctl'l'l!no. 1trt11td 1!1 the 11!cw.-enlltlld m1tkt •• c.i.11 Mesi, C11lf!Wnlll, undolr tht llC• r>"lr lw!ort lt'lll court 11 t :lt l.m., on fflltw llrm -of VILLAGE 1'UI 1nd ~lft'f\Def I,, , ... , Ill It'll ~~ of 11111 Nici llrm 11 ~ of Ille lol"°""" D11>1rln'lil'ftt ND. l 11 !hi! <~ .. 11'1 h lllf M~. """'°"' n.tmn In futl l !WI C•tv ol Slnlt ""'' (.91.Mt'I o1 Orlf!M, tlK• ot ""kantt '"' '' follows: CttllOl'nll, lllld IMW Ul/ICI, II 1n'/'. wftv How1rd E. Hlllltlrll Incl ll1trk.11 ll>fo l>lllllon for <I'll"" of ,,,_ tlllll,llol ftOI Htll!loff, HU Lort ie SI .. (Mii Mt'M, be grtnllld. D•t..:I Alltull 1, '""· IT 1$ FUltTHER OltOEltED tti1f • 1iow1rd E. Htllflofl tOOY ol lhl1 arder fD "'8w UUM bt Ptlrlcl• Hellholt m1b1111'11d In "" Dill\' l'llot. • """,,,_r St111 o1 C1!1tor1111, Or1nt1 c-1v: et o•..erll ,1rt1ltllofl 1trlni.tl In !ht Cown-On A111ust I, 1 ... , be1or1 me, 1 Not-lY Cl! Or1111e. C1lllornr1. onct I ~ for l'~bllt In 1f'ld IOI' ttld Slllt, PlfMNlllY '"~' aua1u1w Wfflolt ar!Qr ta 1t1t Hr. ,_.rl!(I How«c:I E. ~llf'ltll -P1trld• .. 1 Ill' ~t1•ln1 on ,.,. Dtl!llol!. He!tl'lotf lcllOWn i. mt kl bt. IM "'"°"' 011..:1: ,JUIY JI, lfff. wl!Ole NI~ 1r1 tubl(rlii.d to """ wlrt1l11 rtAYMOND THOMl'SON 1111!rtJ111tnl Ind KkfltlW""'"'9 ll'ltY ••• JUDGE OF Tiff ' KUltd llW 11mt', SUl'EltlOrt CDUllT !OFFICIAL SEJt,L) - TM, 1r10•1. ' C·RAIL Mttlhl M. o·s~!llv•n Mlt OPIW, 111119 ~ Noftr'I' l'ubllc: • Cflfl6f'fllt 11<11, C1l-~ll n6"H Orlntt CCVC'lf'I' tl4.f<lft, ....... n MY COITlfl'llUlon E•-tra ~ ltt l'tlll'ielltP'I Fi•. 2), lfJ1 r:. PuttlMW 0,.,,,. Cer;I Dtll'I Plllol. ,.Ub!IJl'ltel Or•"" Co11r D•11't i-1101, A.,gll.il " 11, It. ~$. 1ttt Jill.cit A111~~t " 11, I&. JJ, JM' 14.l}·d 1 ' . DAILY PILOT J & Sears AM /FM Radio Solid state. Dua! power. ·Dial lite for easy tun- ing at nighL AllR88 #2278 ,.., ~ . Portable Radio l~trnnsist.or. Earphone, AC adapter. Color<oded controls. Lug-39uG gage style. •2270 AM/FM Radio Dual power F~l/A~t ta- ble radio. AC line cord 11.ncl earphone. 2900 .;;.~030 .t\sk About Sears Convenient Credit Plans "Solid Slate 6" AM Pocket Radio Black 2Vi x 41;8 -1¥s • 2-inch speaker. Shirt pocket size -complete with earphone. J.1 o d e I .#:2201 Clock Radio FrH Concert 9 p.m. TONIGHT Fashion Island • SA VE S3! FM/ AM Portable Radios Regular $29.9;; 88 • Drift-free F~f. grent for music "·hile you're studying • Distance-powered to bring in fringe-area stations • Cha r-brown, burnt orange grille or black with bl\le- green grille e Earphone for private listening. l\Jodcl tt2267-8 'Solid Sta.le' FK! A:M/ Ali'C 3888 Cassette-Type Tape Recorder Portable Stereo Phono Sears Silvertone Music Center 4-speed automatic phono- ,, Snap in cassette and record or 2988 play back. \Yorks on batteries or house current (with AC adapter at extra cost.) Fully automatic with 2 front 4 988 mounted 6x2-in. speakers. ·_Uni- tized chassis, changer consh c- tion. Rugged cabinet. Terrific graph. Automatic ele<tron-16988 ic shut-off at end of last record. Bass and treble tone, controls, On--0ff indi· •3416 Stereo Wall Mounted Speakers Al\f/F.'bl stereo radio with 2 aeparateapeaker cabinets. Sol· id state chassis. Lighted dial. #2048 6988 Value! #3262 Sears Standard-Size Guitar Play either steel st.rings or ny- lon string. Great student in· strument because it's easy to handle. #1205 ·1988 cator. #7403 Hollow-Body Electric Guitar Double cut.away style. Sensi-5 988 ti\le dunl pick-ups with 3-way selector switch. #1455 40-Watt Guitar Amplifier 12-in. 11peakers. 3 guitar inputs. 2 chan- neb, 1 with reverb, other for volume. Model #1422 ,-~-----------------------------------------------, I BUENA PAJIK EL MONTe tONG BEACM PICO a1 Rlmpau l'OMOHA SO\lllf CO.l.$T PIAZA I CANOGA PAJIX GlENDALE OLYMPIC & SOTO SAmA ANA TOlllANCE I COMPTON HOLLYWOOD ORANGE ~ SANTA fE 5"INGS VALllY' I COVINA INGLEWOOD PASADENA ears SANTA MONICA VERMONT at Slauson ,________________________ . -------------~------' "Siitlslactton Guaranlttd or Your Monoylla•k" __ ...,,. Sh.op 6 Nlshb Molldoy ti-p Sqlwday 9;30,A.M. to 9:30 P .M. • • I U~IT~ New Bridge for Old Steel structure work is to be completed in two weeks at Point Pleasant, W. Va . on replacement for ii.I· fated Silver Bridge crossing Ohio River to Galli· polis, Ohio, which collapsed Dec. 15, 1967 killing 46 persons. Temporar y Capital More Permanent BONN, Gennany (AP) -three ministries ;Jnd towers ing completion. This "temporary" capital of over a complex of government West German policy sl\11 is West Germany probably never buildings at the "Tulip Field" aimed at re-establishing the will be a . glittering world between the center of Bonn capi tal in Berlin, along with capital, but It's no longer just and Bad Godesberg. Nearby a reunificalion of East and \Vest a small town. za..story bu i Id in g for Germany, but lhere is no talk One elderly Bonn resident, pointing out the new govem- 1nent buildings to a visitor, observed: "Let me tell you, there are many people who say the governinent never will move from Bonn." An ordinance that went into parliamentary <>ffices is. near-of a move any lime soon. effect Aug. t doubled &nn's --'-------'----~--------'-----------------! population lo about 320,000 and quadrupled ils area by an- nexing 10 towns and villages, including Bad Godesberg , ,"'·hen all the embassies are. &nn once was mainly known as Beethoven's birthplace. A statue of the town's most famous son glares over the old Cathedral Square v.·here on Satu rd ays tradesmen lean a g a i n s t mounds of fruit and vegetables shouting ' • Fi n e French peaches" or "fresh liolland tomatoes.'' 1t1AlN STATION The main railroad slation , built in 1883-84, disgorges visi· tors into narrow streets where automobiles. st reetcars and pedestrians battle for the right of way. Tunneling for a subway has started. Old Bonn pretty much belongs to the university students and the people who Jived here before l h e Rhine.side town was made the capital 20 years ego, unt il the govenunent could ttlurn to Berlin. But Berlin c a n ' t beeome the capital again until the division of Germany is ended, and there is no pro· spect of that. With. the annexation of iLo; neighbors, Bonn now stretches oo~·n the left bank of the Rhine past Bad Godesberg and takes in ty,·o or three miles of territory on the right bank, in· eluding the industrial towns of BeueJ, Holzlar and Oberkassel. G o vernment construction \\'iii (ill up the area between Bonn and Bad Godesberg, ""'here pear tr~s grow along .,1he Rhine and there are fields tr wheat, carrots and cabbage, 'A third bridge over the Rhine i!' being built, cutting through the field s. BETTER PLANNING The expansion will alJ OYi' better planning for roads and coordination of public serviets such as sewage lines and garbage disposal in t he suburbs where most people now live . Boon lies bet\1:een ranges of hills. It's hot and muggy in the summer and cold, rainy and foggy in the winter. A main railroad line slices'. through the length of the toy,·n. Twenty years ago there '\;ere only three railroad crossings and 150 trains passed through daJly. Someone computed that the crossing barriers were down 20 minutes of every hour. A new ma in road over the tracks makes it easier now , but lines ol cars still wail at the crossings and monumental &rallic ja.mea result when parliament ls In session. Despite IUCh annoyances. Uving can be gracious in e Bad Godesbery vUla ohaded by chestnut btt$, in a 1 diplomatic eocLtve or In one of the hillside commun1ties on the rigbl bank ol the Rhine. NOO' TEMPORARY Al a capJtal Bonn doesn't aetm JO tcm-por1ry any more. A new 20-1tory buildlo& houses Sears Sewing Machine· $48 •Overcasts, satin slilches, se\VS on buttons e i\fakes butlonlioles, 1t1onograms anti n1ak e-s decorative sti lcl1es 1nan- ually •Front-mounted l>ol,l1in \\'inder lvith auton1alic cut off wl1cn hobl}in 1s full Model 1204/9i07 Sew for Back to ~cl1<>ol Portable Zig-Zag s ·ewing Machine •Complete with ' button revene •~nap release for darn- tng •~titcJ1 lin1itcr foi-en s· ier button l1 olc n1ak· rng Model 1206/9707 Free Home Demonstration · .- Satisfaction Guaranteed rs==i Shop Mond•J Lhru Satarday or Yo"ur Money Back ~ 9:30 A.~I. 10 9:30 l'.M. IEo\AJ, &OllVU UiD CO. • , Oil . Poli~y Under s~rotiny Critks Say Public Soaked $7 Billion a Year WASIUNGTON (UP I) - For lhe first time in years, Congress and t h e •d· mlnl§tralion are taking a hard look "' national oil pollcie.i Whlch, pities aJlege, cost the U.S. public about $7 billion an- nually. The 'petroleum industry, one of Uie nation's biggest and richest, ls mounting its own counterorfensive. It contends that national security requires more rather than less govern- ment help for oilmen. lhvolved in the controversy are three basic government policies. One requires that Imports of foi'elgn oil be limited to 21 percent of total U.S. con- sumption. This insures that 79 percent of the oil used in America comes from American wells -\vhich sell oil for '3.10 a barrel comparPd to $1.50 to $1.75 a barrel for oil imported from the Middle East and Venezuela. The second policy is called "proratloning." Its effect is to limit the output of each operating oil well in the prin- cipal producing states -Tex- as. Louisiana and Oklahoma. The level of output is geared to market demand, to guard against any domes!ic overproduction which might drive down the prict. The third policy is special tax treatment -notably the famous "depletion allowance" under \\'hich oil producers pay no taxes on 27 .5 percent of their income from oil well s. Sen. William Proxmire, (D· Wis.), contends that import quotasandp ro rat ion i 11 g together cost American con- sumers $S billion a year in the fonn of higher prices ror gasoline and heating oil. The tax breaks cost· another $1,S billion to $2.25 billion J>rox- mirt says. Sen. Rll""ll B. Long, ID- La), replies that the three pro- grams benefit national securi· ty, J:!e says import quotas are needed to maintain oil pro-- duction at home. which would be vital in case of w'ar, and to keep the United States from becoming dependeot on P.tlddle Eastern oil and Lhe "whims uf Arab monarchs." Long defends prorationing as a conservation device whlch helps maintain U.S. oil reserves and maintains pra- duction from smaller wells which couldn't s u r v i v e unregulated competition but might be needed in time cir emergency. , The depletion allowance and other tax breaks are designed to encourage exploration tor more oil reserves. \Vithout tbem, Long contends, U.S. oil !inns would never have in- vested in the hunt which turn- ed up huge new oil reserves on Alaska's northern slope. But Proxmire and oth~r critics are challenging the ra· tionale behind all t h r e e policies. "Surely Congress can devise some much cheaper way lo provide for a secure source of oil d u r i n g emergencies," Proxmire says. "Between the oil import program aad all of oil's tax loopholes. t he American consumer and tax- payer is being forced In subsidize the oi l industry by over $7 billion a year." The debate has b e e n sharpened by a congressional drive for tax re!onn and a growing gull between the price Americans pay for oil and price tags in the rest of the \\'Or Id. Tbe Treasury Department, In a report to . congressional tax writing cont(!}ittees, caUed the 1 depletion iillowance "a relaU,ely inefficient method ol encouraging e:rploraliort and the resullalll discovery of nc\V domestic reserves of liquid petroleum." The Treasury report cun. eluded: "The lnvesligaUons reviewed during the course of the study were in substantial agreement that the current situation "'as one of economic inefficiency, and that any changes were almost certain to be beneficial la t b e economy in the long run. Oil's depletion allowance has not changed since 19'l6, but price trends have. Seven years ago, U.S. oil cost $1 a barrel more than the prevailing Y.'orld price . The gap is no1v $1.25 to $1.40 a barrel. 'Vh1lc world priet!s have declined, the U.S. price 11as risen 15 cents a barrel since January. The Oil and Gas Journal, a leading trade m agaz i ne , recently reported that the average retail price or regular gasoline, not counting taxes, rose 5.9 percent between t.ast December and April. \Vith criticism mounting. President Nixon has appoiated a commission headed by Labor Secretary George P. Shultz to conduct a thorough study of the oil import quota system, which Pre si dent Dwight D. Eisenhower in- augurated in 1959. The House Ways and Means Committee meanwhile is con- sidering tax reform proposals. with depletion allowances high on the agenda. Harold M. lttcClure Jr., prosldenl of the I~pendenl Petroleum AssoClalion of America, told the committee lttarch 20 that depletlnn allowances, import quot.as and other mechanisms "have serv· ed the public interest well." McClure said the price of U.S. oil should go up, not down, oil Import quotas should be hardened into law, and Congress should "improve the errec.liveness of percentage deplelion and other provi.sions of the , federal income lax laws." He said the United Stat.es Is 1;1sing up more oil than it Is finding in reserves and the government should give the in· dustry more incentive for el· ploration. Critics CQntend U1e best In· centive ""'ould be abolition of import quotas and pro-- rationing, 1orcing U.S. firm! to look for more low-east, high-production oil fields like the one in Alaska. They also contend that go ve rnm en t storage. akin to the stockpiles of other strategic materials. woold cost far less than the present system. Another investment I n security, they contend, would be research on ways to cheap- ly tap the huge oil shake reserves in Colorado, Utah, and Wyo1ning. F o r t u n e magazine says U.S. oil shale could be converted to 3 trillion barrels of oil, enough to supply the nation for 400 years at cur· rent consumption rates. Last year, the 12 blggert U.S. oil CQmpanies rolled up combined profits just under $S billion. Each ont has set a new profit record four yean in. a row.· Deaf Recruit Called Liar, Traitor MIAMI !UP!) - A deaf Army recruii who was call· ed "a liar, a traitor, and a coward" because he couldn't pass a hearing test has been disc~arged after 23 days of service. Louis H. Cole .Jr.. 21 . couldn't convince his local drart board he was victim of deafness despite assurances from his doctor and several pre-induction tests at the Coral Gables induction station. His draft notice and re-af. firmation 0 r classification from the state appeal board came the same day, and he "·as promptly whisked off lo Ft. Jackson. S.C. "They kept us up all .night," ' tie said. "I got Into a hearjng!p;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;OiiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOii;;;;;;;;;; booth. A private was giving BAHAl'S I OF COSTA MESA me the test. When he fini sh-' PRESENT ed. he opened the door and cused me out. He called me a liar, a traitor, a coward, everything. "He said they were going to Jock me up." Cole recalled . He finally persuaded recruit processors to send him to a doctor. "Wha t the hell are you do-- ing here?" Cole recalled the doctor as saying when he looked at his file. He was scheduled for discharge July 3 but it was yet another 20 days before the Army would release him ·.:.-"'"' .·.~· ' -~ • ' •• "+' ''" "' , ' •• I ' ,, ' SP EAKER-ROBERT & MARY HATCHER TH EME-"A GREAT SPIRITUAL LEAP FOR MANKIND" TIME-AUGUST 11 -s,oo P.M. PLACE -985 VICTORIA 1 •;so Powerful Is Unit"'" Light Tl1nt It C:an lllumhie T he lt'laole Earth" -~ . J 1 J • • " . > ' 0 ... '"" v SAHA 'U'LLAH ' • • ·,. " .. . • ) ,, -\ •· ') '1J i . ; ·' .J ' A Great Starter Set for tir e Family! 5-Gallon Aquarium Tank 98 • J\lade of heavy gauge, non-magnetic, highly polished slainleos steel ' e I-pc. top frame couslruetion adds beauty, strength e Educati onal, yet hour• of enjoyment for the family. Pump, filter and tubiJ1 g -1. 99 Use Sears Revolving Charge ,------------------------------------------------~ IUtl'l.t. ,.UK ll /llON1f IOHO ~ PICO el .......... '°""°"'A SOI.mt COAST P\A%A I (ANO(;• , ... tr Gln«IAtf ot.Yloll'IC .. $OTO IAl"IT•...,,.,., lOIUNCf I I CO.WION HOllYWOOO OlAHGl ~ S,t,NIA Pl~· VAUEY I COVINA 11-fOltw'OOO 'AS ... OINA SAltTA MONO. VT~ at Si...-, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ears--------------------' "'li1lhf1ctio11 G11a,011111d otYourM1n1rl11tk" -" .. '"' -· $l<i•p6 fl!9l.1t ~ 11w..,,.,., s.tiirdoy 9 )0 A.M,,. 9,:11,,111, • I " > • -.. , . -. ., ' . -.,, ~ ..... ....,. -~ JODEAN HAST INGS, 642-4321 MMUf, ........ n. IHI $ Patt: U Jun iors Provide Staff Mobile Unit ' • t Eom-e-s to Town Health is a principal concern of the Junior Woman's Club of Hunt· ington Beach . For area residents who are feeling well, lhe Junio~ still sugge~t they take advantage of the mobile X-ray Unit which they will staff dunng an area visit bet\veen 2 and 8 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, Aug. 13 and 14. The unit will locate in Huntington Center, according to Mrs. Jamey Jacobsen, health chairman, and residents may ob'l.a.in chest X-rays f~r a nominal charge. Mrs. Jacobsen also added tha'l teachers may obtain their required X-rays from the mobile unit. Another service provided by the Juniors is their "hospital closet" in which they maintain an assortment of equipment from adult crutches to hospital beds. The equipment is loaned free to area residents in ~eed and to obtain items, residents are advised to call Mrs. Ole Almaas, cha.trrnan, at 847-0397. Other summer activities sponsored by the Juniors include a pool safety program under the direction of Mrs. Karl Hammer. Residents who wish to donate a pool or learn the technique of mouth· to.mouth resuscitation are invited to call her at 842-4563. Demonstrating for the program are members of the Huntington Beach Fire Department, and residents donating pools receive safety post- ers in addition to a telephone sticker for emergency dialing. Residents Invited to 'Take a Card' for Ho~idays --.,u ---· .. -· ..--··· • e ~) "" t RUN-DON'T WA LK -Trying out the equipment in their recovery closet en route tO staff the mobile X-ray Unit which will be loca·ted in Huntington Cen- ter \Vednesday and Thursday, Aug. 13 and 14, are 1"1eft t/n~lrt) the Mmes . John Flanagan, Ole Almaas, Ted R'eddick and Robert Farah. Staffing the units is occupying {he time of club members during the summer. In Seal Bea ch European Ed.ucators ·Visit Host Families Mr. and Mrs. Jess Corwin and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Knapp '"of Seat Beach will be hosting v.isiting European educa1:ors this week as . part of the 4 American Host program sponsored b)' ·the Seal Beach Junior Woman's Club. Arriving from F~ance to visit the Corwins will be Miss Anne-Marie Poussard, 27, an English teacher wJ]b lives in Paris. flouseguest of the Knap.ps will be Karl-Heinz Buck, 29, from Hem• mingen-Westerfeld, West Germany. He teaches German, English sports _.,,./ and geography in the small town located near Hanover, capt'ial of Lower Saxony. The teachers have expressed: a foremost interest in seeing the Amer· ican way of life. They are scheduled to visit host families in Indiana a week before arriving in Seal Beach , and then will travel to Oakland for a two-week stay in the Bay area. Bath families have been corresponding with their visitors for the .past several weeks. ~me of .the activities which alread.v are planned by the area resi· dents include tickets for the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts', a 'day at Dis· neyland , a tour of Rancho Los Alamitos, a party for city officials and member? given by the Seal Beach Juniors, a Long Beach .MunicipaJ Band concert 1n Naples colonnade, and a tour of several schools in the area. The American Host program began in 1961 and his brought more than a thousand teachers from all over Europe for a month in America. At the end of their tour, the te·acbers assemble in New York and return to Europe together. Entirely financed by private business and individuals, the American Host prog'ram has been wannly Cndorsed by the U.S. Department of State, several other government agencies, congressmen and senators. The program is administered by a nonprofit foundation to make it possible for elementary and see'ondary 'school teachefs to tour the country as guests of American families. Jt will be !<Christmas All-around" in a group •Of area homes when the Little Mermrud Guild of Huntington Beach sponsors its annual pre-holiday card sale for area residents. The month-Jong sale will benefit Children's Hospital of Orange County, and displaying an assortment qi Christmas cards which will be offered at a dis- count this month are (left to right) Mrs. William .Thomas, Mrs. Ray McCullough and Mi's. Michael Brick. Mrs. Andrew Holtz will host the next party on Wednesday, Aug. 13. In aMouncing ~he arrival _of the teachers, who wiJl leave Saturday, Aug. 16, Mrs. Lee Risner, president, said that the educators were being brought to Seal 8j:!ach to promote international understanding and friend- ship by giving the visitors an insight on America and its people which they will be able to take back to their classrooms and students. · ' Spouse Found Way to Show More Than Word.s Could Say DEAR ANN LANDERS : I was moved by the lelter from the wile who com- plained because her llusband never said, "I Joye you." My husband was the same w•y, but he didn't netd to say anything. The lh.ings he did spoke for him. We had been married 25 years when he died . He was not articulate -in fact he was more of a blusher than a talker. But there were litUe pats and pinches, and 60mel.imes a wink. I remember his wonderful gifts during our salad ,days - A 49 cent bot of chocolate cherries or a &O cent handkerchief trom the dollar store. One day he bought me a botUe of cologne. He said he had rmelled it on a girl in Ole office and he tmu&ht I'd like iC ANN LANDER S ~ hypnosis can be used on athletes to make them perform better. Is Lhls possible? My hwband made the comm.ent that if I\ were true, the technique would be utilized universally. Have you ever heard of this? . Please comment. -UNCONVINCED My 1oveliest memory Is the Ume he came home from a ~ay business trip with an artificial sunClower In his suit· case. He said he bought it because he knew I loved sunflo•ers and it reminded hlm of me. That sunf.lower Is my most cherished possession. He was telling me, "I love you," without saying the word:i.O. CITY DEAR 0 : What 1 man be must have been! No woman 1beu.1d need words with masic llke that! DEAR ANN LANDERS: A friend ol D~AR UN: H)'J>llO&ls CID ltave tome surprising and es:traordfnary effect.a but any procedn Involving the btaln can be dangerou1 and should not be used as a gimmkk. • ours was the center <1r attention recently , Yes, I bove heard of bypnotld.ng at a dinner party. He is an amateur hyp-· aUalelet Ui help them become supentars. notist and told us some fascinating stor-About it_year1 ago the SL LouiJ Br.wns ics a~t what can be accompl ish:N:ngaged a ltypnot11t to Instill tn lhe learn through hypnosis. mm ';positive 1ttUude." (They were tn One ol the pohrt! be mode was that «Dor ud morale -UUlnl·l Tiie result: The Browus ended tbe teason ln seventh pJace. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Your recent advice to teens in regard to where to gD if they suspect lhey have VD was ex- cellent. You said, "The law prevents treatlog minors without parental con- sent,·~ but yOlt made a point that most County Health Centers do treat the kid!I who come In and keen quiet about il. Yoo added, "Bless them:·'" 1 ln 1967 the Connecticut General Assembly enacted legislatlon (Publlc Lsw 206) which eliminates the prere- quisite o( parental consent to examine and treat a minor. J thought you'd like.to know. -J. R. (DlREcrOR OF PUBLIC .. HEALTH NURSING) DEAR J.R:: llooray for Connectlcat. WouJdn'l U be woaderfal ~f ALL, slal.ea bad 1ucb enUgbteDed ltgl1Jaton? Give in or lose him ..• when a guy gives you this line, look out! Ji'or tips (in bow to handle tJ:le super sex salesman. che<ilr Ann Landers. Read her booklet, "Nee~ and -PeJLing -What Are the Limits? Send }'Wr request to Ann-Landers tn care or your newspaper, enclosing $0 cents in coin and a long, stamped, seU-addrtssed envelope. Ann Landers will be glad lo help you with your problems. Send them to htr 1n care or the DAILY PTU11', enclosing a self-addressed., stamped envelope. • • , I Mond>y, ""'"'t ll, 1969 Horo~cope Sagittarius: Patience ' Becomes Great Ally TUESDAY AUGUST 12 By SYDNEY OMARR NEW MOON loday colncldes with creaUve acU\'lty; brln1s cblldta late the news. Large speodiq ,,..rams IUt a &nag. Flnanelal uperl• raise bue and cry about proposal wblcb would .Uect r e c rea ti o n facWdes. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Money, budget, desires may conflict. New approach Is ad- Vlsa ble. -personal magnetism CGntlnues high; you attract the opposite sex. Pleasure pursuits could be turned to profit. . TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Be ready for added responsibility. P a y m e n t s • loans, co l I e cl Ions are highlighted. Key is to be prac- tical and realistic. You cannot do two things at once. Reali.ze thls and respond accordingly. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You may hear many rumors. Key ls to have self-discipline. Means act on what you know, not on what you bear. Short journey could be postponed without loss. Be conservative. lt1eans avoid any tendency to appear-overbearing. Remain in background. Permit olhers to grab spotlilll!~ This will favorably reflect upon your good taste. · I LIBRA (Sept. 2l-Oct. 22): Spending program should be reviewed . Continue to go for , quality. But be more selective. A new friend could point way lo exciting experiences. Ketp open mind. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You require legal green light. Don't attempt to by-pass rules; l'egulalions. Stick-with tried-and-true. Means leave get-rich.quick schemes to ethers, Depend on reliable persons . SAGI'ITARIUS INov. 22· Dec. 21): Immediate results may not be forthco1ning. Rut fulure planning i s con- structive. Don't rush. Patience is your great ally today. Ac- cent on long-distance, on travel and communication. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. GOLDEN MILESTONE Mr. and Mrs . Marion C. Dodd Party Honors Dodds On 50th Anniversary 19): Temptations feature your ~fr. and ~1rs. Marion C. Los Angeles 50 years .ago on day. Tendency is to ra-Dodd were honored on the oc-Aug. 9 .and became residents tionallze. New starls in new ' Music Lovers Will Love This Fashion Show CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Some friends could be in- volved in money dispute. Be sure of facts. Be diplomatic in presenting views. Those who battle today could be allies tomorrow. Don't get caught in middle. . directions prove constructive. casion of Uieir 50th wedding of Balboa Island in 1936. Know this and avoid being annivenary by a reception for After 12 years in the discouraged. You are due for relatives and friends in the restaurant business there they valuable secood chance. Costa Mesa home (If their mGved to Corona del ~tar, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. daughter, Mrs. Joan Harrell. where they now reside. 18): Some apparent Dodd, a n1ember or the 1 Three of the cC1uplc's 1'1u sic and clothes will have a lot to do with each other next Thursday when Newland School PT.I\ hosts a Back·t~school l<~ashion Show to raise funds !or a music scholarship. In exchange for a 50 cent ticket, a collection of fall school fashions from Pen- ney's, Fashion Island, wilt be paraded at 7 p.m. in From Appalachia, Texas Students Arrive Four very important college freshmen are coming to Costa ~1esa this 1nonth and they need homes for one year. There will be three girls and 1 one boy froin rural Texas <ind Appalachia and none o[ them "·ill know anyone in this area and nc;inf ha\'e ever been away from home before. They are being placed In Orange Coast College through the efforts of FOCUS. a pro- gram staffed and directed en- tirely by college un- rlergraduates . FOCUS offers underprivileged, t a I e n t e d -"oung people a chanct for a university career. Area residents who have a corner to sp;tre in their homes "'for these deserving young pe<>- ·ple are asked to rontact Joe ',Kroll, dean of student ac- tivities at OCC or Richard Hernandez, direclor for the project for the disadvantaged. Coming tr o nl Appalachia will be James ~1oore, a young man "'hO wants to be an engineer. lie is one of rive children who n1anaged lo reveal his ability in SCit'OCe though many family dif- ficulties. i n c l u d i n g the destruction by fire of the family home. Also arriving from the en- vironment of Appalachia "·ill be Phyllis Conklin. another talented girl seeking the ad- vantage· of college. Two girls, Delia Romero and Janie GomBlez come from e:ic- lremety small rural towns in Texas. They wi\l be studying social sciences and American History. and ~1iss Gonzalez wan ls lo be a teacher. In the FOCUS program, '.,Whittier Graduates .. '.Home jn Costa Mesa the school. Seeing new ·images of themselves are (left to right in mirror) Newland School students Theresa fischer, 9, Margaret Driscoll. 11 . and Rhond a Skjod, 11. Tickets will be avail able at the door or may be purchased by calling Mrs. Alvin Fischer, 962-2986, (If Mrs. Charles Scott, 968-1970. roadblocks could boomerang Orange County Grand Jury in grandchildren are Deb b J e . in yGur favor. Be aware of 1968, also has been presid~nt Lori and Bobby Harrell. who public relations. Gel point of the Newport-Balboa Rotary live in Cosla ~1esa with their across in best possible n1an-Club. lti rs. Dodd rontinues her mother. ner. Separate publicity from active membership in the Three other grandchildren, LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your Ideas may be considered far- out by older individual. No real need to be discouraged. Cycle continues high. You will get what you want. But be sure you know what it is. notoriety. Ebell Club. Patti, Susan and Carol Young, PISCES (Feb. 19-~farch 20): ·p;;;;T;;he;;;;C<>;;;;ui;p;;le;;w;;e;;r;;e ;;m;;a;;rr;;i;;ed;.,in;.,~'";;;;id~e.;i;i;n ;;W;;hi~·1~U~er~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Efforts may be spread in too11 Soon Mesons Marry VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Light touch wins the day. many dlreclions. Key is effort lo concentrate. C o n s e r v e strength, energy. Opportunity present., itself. Be ready - recognize It. IF TODAY IS YO U R BIRTHDAY you have good sense or humor: you are a Exchanging wedding vows S t• . t natural entertainer. People stude nts who were helped In and rings in Presbylerian orop 1m1s s generally enjoy being with' the effort's initial year last CMhurch or the Covenant were Newport Harbor Soroplimisl you. You have recently at-I aureen Mary ~1cRorie and Club meels the first three tracled those with problems. fall now are i·oining the staff Je-ld IV Ro"enst1·ne •u · • · \Vednesclays for a noon lunch-But personal advancement is lo recruit new people. Last The Re v. Bruce A. Kurrie eon in Villa Marina. Newport on horizon. Year a staff of 12 placed 86 officiated for the daughter of Beach The la~ Wednesday or To 11nc1 our w~o', 111c~r '°" l'W '" student! lhrOughout the United ~r ~A ~.nd Md r.s~ W i 1 lri aMm the m0nth m;~bers meet in =~·.:~~:~°J'S~1:'i:z;M~:;";X~ S t nd •L· air r .. 1crwr1e an u1e son o r. the same location for dinner 111 Orn••• ... ~1r111ot• s..:r1t1, 11111 0A1LY ta es, a u11s year a st o , s amd P.1rs. Jay Rovenstine, alt a1· 1·30 pm · 1tor. aa. no11. Gr•l'ld cantr1r I•· 60 is placing 330 high school or Costa Mesa. 1;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;;·;;·;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""';;;;;;· ';;;-;;;;;v;;;"';;·;;';;·';;··;;;'~;;;';;;'·;;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;; graduates on 115 campuses in-A gown of white brocade eluding OCC. was chosen by the bride. who The dramatic impact or tak-was given in marriage by her ing young people out ()( their father. A Pe a r 1 headpiece caught her illusion veil, and environments and giving tht'm stephanotis and a white orchid a chance to see another part formed her bouquet. IT'S A FACT! If you spent 30 1econds looking at each of our shag samples , it would take you over 9 hours to se e them all- so come early and bring your lunch. DON'S CARPET SHOP 426 SO. MAIN 12 Blks. No. of Bullock's) ORANGE HOUIS: 9-S;JD DAILY CLOSID SUNDAY of the CGuntry has been a She carried a sprig of white proven success, since 93 per-heather in her Bible, and Scot- cent of lhe students in the first tish pipers perfonned at the group are continuing sue-later wedding reception in the cessfully. McRorie home. The FOCUS program on the Maid of honor Jacqualine OCC campus also seeks $1000 McRorie and flower girl to meet financial expenses for Kathleen Scully were dressed the four incominn: freshmen, in yellow and carried white including their transportation and yellow daisies. Announces the Grand Opening of a Brand New Eig.ure Control Salon! and out-of-state tuition. Tax Albert Paton was best man. deductible donations may be Ushers included Don Penelton, mailed to Kroll at the college. Bill McRorie and Gary Par- Durlng the year, each of the rish . four will be making his own The bride is a Costa Mesa contribution by working at a High School graduate and her campus job. husband was graduated from r---------------. I I I ,_ 13732 EUCLID AVENUE I GARDEN GROVE I BLOCK SOUTH OF GARDEN GROVE FREEWAY I _____________ J Whllti er College graduates Sharon Lee Schynkel 2nd Jack Neil Swickard were married in '-he college chapel. Their rocus, or Fellowship o Corona del Mar H lg h maid of honor wearing a pink Concerned Un I versity School. •te i tlended Orange chiffon gown and bridesmaids Student!, Is a part of Upward Coast College before entering ~trs. Toni O'Neil and ~1iss Bound, the federally sponsored .S. Arnty service at Fort college preparatory program K x, Ky., "'here the couple OUR METHOD IS VERY SIMPLE! Sharon Engle also wore pink. for low income students. will ake their first home. Best man was V.: i 11 )iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ll arcnls are tha Charles A. • .Schynkels of ~1ontebello and the Clarence L. Swickards of ·costa P.1esa. The Rev. Leslie J. Ross of ~·lontebello's United J\lelhod1 st Church performed the ceremon y, The bride's gown was of silk organza and lace trimmed with seed pearls. A crystal and pearl headpiece caught her four-tiered veil and she carried a butterfly orchid bou- quet. P.1iss Royce Ann Young was INTRODUCING ' Eyern1an , and David Francis • and William Crosbie were ushers. The bride also has earned a masters degree from Whittier College where she "'as a member o( the Ionian and Forensic societies . The bridegroom is completing work on a mas ters degree at the same college. The cou ple have returned rrom a northern California honeymoon to thei r Costa ~1esa home. JERRY GUTIERREZ • f.o""'•rly /4.t South Co•1t Pl••• DRAMATIC SCISSOR CUTIING [p)ll~~sml 548-0460 WESTC LIFF PLAZA FINAL CLEARANCE Women's Footwear e DRESS SHOES e Joyce· Gepetto $590 & $690 (formerly to $21 .00) e IMPORTED SANDALS e $390 (formerly to $14.00 l e FLATS e $390 {formerly to $15.00 l Sorry: no mail or phone orders. All sale, ·fi nal IN MESA CENTER 225 E. 17th St. -Costa Mesa LOSE 1 to 7 INCHES IN 90 MINUTES or PAY NOTHING! • No Exercise e No Dieting • No Machines • No Pills PLUS ... • No Contracts • No Minimum Number Of Visits • No Exaggerated Claims .--------------• Call Today for an Appointment! I I I I 534-7950 -. I I I I I BRING JN THIS A D FOR A $2.50 DISCO UNT --..I -----------LADIES: Try The Glamour Tape Method And Be The Envy Of Your Friends! After the Glamour Contouring Tap•• aro •pplied, you simply relax for 90 minutes in our luxurious lounge and slee p •• , read or watch color TV. OPEN 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. MON. thru SAT. 13732 EUCLID AVE. 11 Blk. So. of G.G. Freeway) GARDEN GROVE E 13 • 1.. 13 ' . MRS. JACK B. CHILD JR. Los Angeles Home Morsel of Magic 61399 \ -\-,' .I • JOSET WALKER Lv -... I This little morsel of French magic by Joset Walker was Originally made in lilac pink knit with heavy gold buttons. The fold-over front panel that buttons smartly to the hip flaps nicely in the walking breeze, and the hip-side tie pulls in for just a bit more sugges- tion of you. Try it in jersey or banlon for day and maybe a waffled cotton for those end-of-summer evenings. 61399 is cut in Misses sizes 1~18. Size 12 requires approximately 2-318 yards of 54" fabric .. To order palern 61399 ; state size, include name, address and 1iJ> code. Send $1.25 plus 25 cents first- class postag.nd handling for each pattern. Send orders for books and patterns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford, N.J. 08848. Happiest ship to .the happiest places! \; •. ,~-fF,:•.;·.·7 Princess Jtalia South Seas Crtiise. -42 days. Deoart LoaMQeles. Oct. 30. RetUm Otc.11 . Thi re}Qnlng belutY ol th• Peclflc heedt lor new ·conqueata-the legtnd•IJ lllanda. With ctlla et Honolulu, PIQO Pago (Stmoa), Suv• (Fiji), Mourne• (Nn Caledonia), Sydney, Aucld111d, Nukualofa (Tonga 1111nclt), Bora Bora, Paptele (TahltO, and Nub Hlva (Marquua tetands). A flw cl'lofce cablne .Ull avallet>ll. Also 21 d•YI Air/Sea on ,.quMt.,. Cail now. NATIONA[ TRAVEL SERVICE • U.nTI' IJrf'°"MATIOHt Tiit ~"I»!'-.• ,..,_,., 1111\lly, """'9 l11\ff-- 111tlorltl ltletY 811Mtrdl for ntw .tllpe *"'lope(lft 1tl0, Inf flllltl IMI ""' •"IY fl!lllll1911»M1. • +>+•<$] S J U""U §'P ' J F ' • ''Kt '.'J ).'. J' ' ' . -~!) '"' ,,_-,....,,,..~ ~ ... ,...., .. -. Anniversary An anniversary dinner in Costa Mesa Goll and cOuntry Club ls being planned fur Tuesday, Aug. 12, by TOPS Harbor Lighters. Further Information t s J!ivailable by calling Mrs. Frank Polizzi al 64Ul89. Three of Kind ST. LOUIS (UPl)-<::all for a policeman in. the 9th District and you're very likely to get Officer Townsend. The district has t h r e e Townsends In uniform -Don- nie, Dennis and Billie. Let TV WEEK Turn You On Frff Concert 9p.m. TONIGHT Fashion lslond NEWPORT C!NTllt WANTED YOUR DIRTY CARPETS TO CLEAN 124.50-i\I AVEltA6E LIVING ltOOM, DINING ltOOM & HALL 15 Y 1tr1 bptrl1nc;1 - Stti1f1~tlo11 Gu1r111t11cll fer ffff "tl!MN CALL •• , 642.0521 BOB BEIERSCHMITT CAll'IT CLU.HllS °"ILV !'1LOT JD NewpoJJ Setting · • ' j . Maze-Irwin Vows Said ji Regardless of how much or how little you need to lose, this week only, you not only take advantage of Gloria Marshall's low low prices on weight reduction, (costs much less than other Programs) but in addi· tion, you receive a $20 Gift Certificate free. Cmne in for a free sample visit, actually use, under eupeM!ion, the Gloria Marshall machines deaigned for quick, oalo weigh! reduction, No charge, no obligati.on ••. see why, based on our actual record!, our average patrons LOSE 10 INCHES WITHIN THE FIRST 10 VISITS ••. from hips, waist, thighs, tuinmy and arms. Come in comfortable c:asual clothes, undressing is unnecessary MRS. DAVID ALLEN MAZE Evening Wedding ·-- sailboat from the Elb ctub follOwlhg the reception. COsti MeU ffigli Setm1Tnd OCC, now attends Californla Slate College at Long Beach. They will reside 1n Corona del Mar after returning from Mexico. The ne.w Mrs. Maze was graduated from Corona del Mar High School, Orange Coast College and University of lhe Pacific, where she af-Jp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-o fillated with Delta Gamma YOUNG LADIES Sorority . Her husband, a graduate of LEARN FAST Jiii! ... ,._, ....... ""' ...... (Oft ..... llow ... , It It .. 111111. 'l'..,.H 111¥1 I llu .. llvl WI"''"' fir t1r 11n t11111 ,.. lmat!Mll ,......_ We'll 11'11 ,... 111 1111 Htellf.. The KNIT WIT WHY GLORIA MARSHALL'S became the WORLD'S LARGEST Figura Control System for Wonian (26 locations In California alone. Grand . Openings this ·week In Lu · Vepa and Sall Lake Cl17 ••• Soon Denver ••• Chicago ••• New York) " An individuol Program la -pared for you, based on the pounds and inch• you need ta lose. ,I Special mle!>in• are deBigned to bal1ish "'"'1 correctable %· me fault. ., Reaullll """" quickly,' wi!haut . pills, drup, llrenllOUS aacise or atarvation di.eta •• ". (No :mem- ~p reqaln<L) { No di.sroblni. Wo are not a,,.,.. " Free child care. • { Call now for boo ampla viii!. f • . Gmnd Openlnp tld& Wlolc hi • Lu v ... ml Solt Lake a17. FIGllBB CONTROL SALONS hUJ ... , Sit. N • .......... 11111 Mater Dilll-.... ALSO IN !'If ~,,i.r, k'4~1 I/tin "111rol or- NEWPORT BEACH • Anaheim, Beverly Hiiia, Covin•, Crenshaw, Downey, Glend1le, Lakewood, Long BNch, Newport Be1dt1 N. HoJlywoocf, Ont1rto, P11aden1, Sin Diego, S1nt1 An•, Santa 81rblr1, Sunl1nd, T1r11n1, Whittler. S1lon1 1110 In Fretno, S1cr1SMnto, Sin Jow, 430 P1elflc CoHt Hl9hw1y442-3630 12 9~1 E••I tf 8tlbOI 81Y Cllltll SANTA ANA Sunnyvelt, W1lnut CrMk. • _ -I 1840 W•ot 17th Strtot-543-9457 ' _, • I ~ • . .....-''•·'"···'·"··· .,WEDDING WOES -Annissa Jones and Brian /(eith, two of the stars in "Family Affalr" which may be seen tonight a< 9:30 on Channel 2, usually have a real understanding between them. But when ~e plans to marry a beautiful womfQ'l in Rome An- pissa and her twin brother make plans to keep the pilldren together. Mr. French comes to their aid. I 1TELEVISION VIEWS Shows Right Off Headlines By CYNTl11A LOWRY HOLLYWOOD (AP -Television scripts in the coming season often will seem to have been wriUen right off the headlines. The medical shows will string their stories around surgical and research advances and ethical problems arising from organ transplants. SPACE exploration will be handled in down-lo- earth fashion. One series will have a show about long-distance diagnosis and treatment of an astro- naut who becomes ill in space. War, peace, student unrest, drugs, and ne'v freedoms, racial confrontation , and , of course, the generation gap will continue to be up front among popular treatments. Fonnula drama is essential for the mass pro- duction that su pplies television, but in content and a~proach, it seems to have moved far av.1ay from ttie predictable pace or such old·time favorites as '1Perry ?\.1ason" and his win-a·week cases. Even the sudsy quality of the old Kildare and Casey medicaJ shows will be artfully concealed if not ellmlnated. JO SWERLING Jr., producer of the eight epi· god.es about a legal firm which will constitute one-- third of the shows in NBC's "The Bold Ones,'' has scripts bu1lt around contemporary controversy that include the effect of recent Supreme Court deci s- ions on law enforcement, the law-and-order issue, a lawyer's responsibility to his client , and capital punishment. But SWerling emphasized that the first consid- eration is entertainmerrt: "We . are not going in for tract. and editorializing although we can inspect pros and cons." ONE DRAMATIC series has postponed inde- finitely production on an episode that bad a coin· cidenta1 similarity to the recent auto accident of Sen. Edward Kennedy on Chappaquiddlck Island. The drama of politics is popular. but any script with political overtones is inspected closely in the in- teresU of good taste. Swerlin g was associated with ·"Run for Your Life," in which for two se ason s Ben Gazzara play- ed a man crowding adventure into the short time he had left before death. The series ended without tying up loose ends. ~ "lt would have been too grisly," swer\ing said. "When the series was created, we had a ch aracter with a year or two to live, suffering from a disease that had no obvious symptoms and \vhich \vould not impair his activities. We asked the advisory board of the American Medical Association if they had a disease that filled the· category. "THEY SAID they did -a type of leukemia. But they asked us not to pinpoint the disealie be- cause every hypochondriac in the country 'vould go running to hi s doctor convinced that he bad it. We agreed. because we didn't' wint to get specific about it, either.'' Dennis the Jtlruaace PEANUTS ••• PERKINS JUDGE PARKER CA.N YOO TB.l ME ONE TI.UNG, MISS JASPE"? WHY WA.S I 'TDLC' ro COME HERE IN 5lAC:K TIE? MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF . -HELLQ JEFF! T...ilS 15 Joo~ OSENENKO.' , j. !• !I fl' l ) r GORDO ,, .JOHN! HOW AR< You• --..... ... ,• ly Cliarfet M. Schulz . ·--- iw.rs A. auES- nOM 'llOll\L HAVE. TO A.SK MISS Sl'£llCE« ! ? I e, , . I/ .. -.. ·:: . ' •' " ' •' • • ' • • ' 'I ' • • ,, __ ........ By John Miln By Harald Le Doux TM 601N6 !J.C.I( INTO THE MOUSC, Ml~ JASl'ER~ '1()(1 TEl.l. WS5 5PENlER TMAT rll 61VE HER EXACTLV T'M> WNUTB lO TELL lf\6 WMY SME W.\NTEU ro 5EE ME! By Ferd Johnson By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith ! GOTTA BE CARE~UL +lOW I ANSWERnlE PHONE AFTE~ IHIS.' By Gus Arriola 1 MA~ CJ.Tell UPSl.OOJ!Nf l CJ.Tell """ F-Af>T! ~S ~.~r • 50 WHAT? HIM! '>tlll tvER 1<£'1't> C1F ANYONE F~LllNG IN L.O'IE ev THE U3MT.~ SA'(, PET~T,~JCMIGAN T MONDAY AUOIJIT II L-Qll.llle Ill -(C) (IO) lo"1 ·-· !\Cf(.!tt...=-... ~ ol•:a. a---(C) l90l SllelieY 1«111111, AtlM-M1tlt Btiltt- lbt.11\. 1oen BMZ 11Mf Toni ,ltttt• ........ n,....,........,.,_ .. fifcln9 (dra1111) '60 -£dmulld P111dom. Gelll'lim 1'11e. &'ll I ... (C) lEOl IDI IM'-"' llOl ·-(C) (30) IHl (I) ... ....... (C) l90) !WU!'• ... 1 (30) Muri DMlna of'lphi th1 r .. nnt al Po'llnt· fl uttlopt; °'· °'" PNlfl ti· pl1h11 fl'rtllJ: ind Tony S.lebn 111111 ctilnue tonp. Ill JWtnlld DiwN y..,. (30) G!J ""'9 (C) (60) Jack Hlekef. 1'30 Ill UIC N_,,ko (C) (EOI ID P1ttr DllM (30) fii) Twl1 Ode Hta&t (t) (30) a C1J m -'" (30) m ,_, 34 !Cl <.,, 7:00 8 CIS &.11111 NM (C) (30) Wall• Clw.kltl. D Wut't MJ LIM? (t) (30) Hest Wiin., Brunar, with 111ul11 p1ntlist Arlent Fr1ncis, wtlcomn 1uest p1nelist1 Robert Aldi, Gnn ;nlnt· II Ind Anita GHlette. m hllwonl (C) (30) llose Marie and A11n Kina auesl GJ Mdl1Ws ""' (JO) (fl Entet11 Wlsdo11 & M .. nr lift (30) "TIM Dllclpllnt of Zin." Alan W1Hs looU Into th• tile. wort Ind medltalkl n 11'1 a Zen stmfn11y. Sketches ind 11hotov1pl11 from .lapin il\ustntl his points. !HI Cll r •• u, Mair (C) CJOJ m c..-1 World <C> 130> m Drtl• He1111 ct> (30> 7!30119 ()) llllllBIOkt (C) (60) "Th• Good Slmttllln1." Marsl'l1J Oiiton, en roul1 to Ood11 City, with a dealh·brd '11t1ment nttded 11 evl· denu In 1 trill, finds rtfu11 in 1~1 amp of 1n a ·MYt hmily 11ter be Is wounded bJ baunty huntus aurd1ina: !or tb1 PIPftS. , .. D ll1ll1Jw"' -II "'1 tiiiMll (t) (30) "Jifll Slftnttt'I l1dy." Jlmu $o11Mft 11 IH llllo • trip t1J 1 wom111 wM It lllltlnl him up lot • 11111 wll• ..-. ,.. .,.: (I} .. -'"" (C) (90) CD._ • '"' l11 ~ (liOl ID oo -<Cl llOl '! =' -· '"'"'""" • ~ C.11di111 AIJ:. llf•ld. ""'·-... (C) l!O) """ rlfkt, Mlllt he Ind Mlllle jol11 fotct1 to blk S.111 Into llttlnt tt11 bo1 llM I -(It) Ill __ ....._ ..... ffM-(drtllll) '62:-'llfk Oourllt. Mld\HI KIM. eo.t.J, llfviftl tt-ctPtf from )Iii, bud• tor Ille lflOll(l~IM tnd b pUl'Mltd .,. ahtri41 ..... --e Ille ,_ (C) (EO) "T1M t.oq. Loni Off," Thi Baron 1t1d t fritflt. 1ned 11r1 ire '*""" br 111nl'lllrt In 1 $111111 ltlllen v~lap. o IHI mm n. ,.._ !Cl (60) "Tlii T"ow1 TllJt WCIUWl'L .. Ruth Rom111 tllllb 11 ...... I saloon WOlllll'I, OM tf lb ltw 1'111· c1tnu or 1 sm1R towii • h4ft llOt tied under threat of 1 t1id by Mart ftnlltf'111na. f.111 Cor'1 t!ld Jtm1I Owid 1r1 offtrtd $500 to he!' prutect !ti. f11111lnln1 dtlllns. They llfUH, but Whtn thtlr "°"" lfl s!Glen tlleJ' llm nD dlolct. Plpp1 Scott aunts n Au(lllf.l lltJIU. (Rl 9 Ci)......, SM9 (C) "For lAYt Of MOn..,.- m: Jl(f JMIUll (60) "f•M Your sut 811!." flO rtCOlllllfUcb: t!t1 e'ltllb INdillc to 1lrpl1M ICd6lntL E)'flrltnm reports •1111 hdllfl0rl1 by •Ir trlfflC 1uthorltln point 1111 1111 ntemlty ol UPIJtdlnt IQott bdlltilt to klep PICI witb lf'W· ln1 1ir tuffic. 9 Cil Tiit Fli1b1M&I (C) (30) t.30 IJ F1111llJ Aff1lr CC) (30) Uncl1 1111 pl111S lo marry a t>tautiful ll1li11n (Brklnl f11r1ll) ln Rome, ind the twim 1r1 sur1 It 11111af\S 1 br11tup ct the lami!J. (R) B ..... (C) (JO) T Id M1Ym. m rnmm-"'"""" Tftt ~ (t) (60) Modw• 1\0f Bill Burrltd 11 joined bJ thrM distlnrulsMd panellru: Or. Irvin( Btn&tl.s6oc1, Sdt11t1 Editor ol LA. Times; OJ. Roa11 o. Ectbtrt. °"" of Ille School of MedldM. USC. 11111 Chalnn1n ol tflt MedlQI Commit· lee et Planned Parenthood, U: and fatlltr John Urtian, Director of Cemmunleltlon1 lor tht Rom111 C1thollc Arthdioclw of Los A"" 1t1es. Thi procram b 1 «mbl111· tkln of live diatuulc>n ind film. (R) ~(I) Mdblt'1 Nt'l'J (30) a:1 Rwlstl M11tlal (3 0) <R> 10:00 a 9 m n111111t hdpn 1C1 <60l 0 Jld: .._, (30) Pllnlif lfo"itr Wlll!1m1 ind comtdi- D lJ7l (1) Q) n. k(npn (C 1n Scoty MltdtUI 1uest. 110> "EjlC.... Envna r .. 1 b kilf. om " ... (CJ (60) :rt s::i di=:;,,_ to i:.h~ 'b: D O}l CD m ~ t1'11tt (C) (50) st11 111 1 mtJon pict\n titled "TIM l:rtmson Sltliu11 111nts. Destnlcllon et MrL Em1111 Peel." 0 Della! (C) (60) ltol\lrd lllT (R) and Thi Trtn1111 iutst. OMllllH $ lllMr. (C) -rrm Kell to TIUI" (wd1m) '55-tlon Mur· ra1, Diane V1nl. m Truth It Cout111111&11 (C) (30) Voluntnr contlltlnla 1tttmpt to lmltat• Ille \'Oki of Dolllld Duck, and 111 1r1 1n\llld tlltt on1 ptr· son 1ive1 • ptrftd. lmltltion. m PW1J M1aon (60) @!) fi1q Une (C) (60) "Probl1rnt of 1 Clllei' bttutM." Wllllun f. BuckleJ Jr.'s IUnb ltt Pit Bu· chanan and Ray Pritt, special •• lirtants to tile Prllid111L fl) Mis Alla dit )I Mlllrtl (C} (30) 10:30 ID Nm (C) (30) Bill John1. @D f1llW Cot11oa (30) Etl l11nev1tions (30) "'Mor• Uu for Epol.!es." Or, Htnl)' ltt, Vite ~~~·~i:~rd' s~.:!~~ ~~~ :! 11:00 a a a mm m " ... cC> uw for epoxy. Thi ruin.b111 0 Alfre4 Hitdleoek 'product is ll5td bJ dentiJI~ bJ dot· 0 MoM: "Ho1tlddat'" (hMrai) '61 1011 1nd In Ill.Inf lndustrill 1rea1. -Glenn Corbett, Patrltlt Brulin. a:1 DM dt PllMonel (JO') ''°' 111 ID CiJ _ ..... ,., !Cl (3~ 0 Zane C11J (30) mHutl (30) ED World Pftu (C) (60) A sum· miry of ilobal prus ru ctions to iuue1 Jn 1111 Unlhd Stites. Elperls 1n1ty11 storits from more lhtn 80 newsp1pers ind m111zintJ. m llldden'I ... .., (C) Bobby Vrt. Pit Htn!J, SU"An Saint J•mu 1n• The Beet Pordl M1jority ~ Portt1Jts: ktrns lnl"fd BtlJ!!Mlll by Muriel o.nid•n: ind baleb•ll 11ut Willy Meys bJ IPO'b colum~ ist Chults EIMl:tin. (£J Morie: "Htl1'1 ~ Holfl" (d11· m1) 158-Step~en Mc.H•llJ. lill CD @ (J.) 9 CIJ ""' lCJ a:I Hit P1rtd1 (C) 190) l:lO 1J ~ 1Her1'1 Lucy (C) (30) Jae• Ban 1u1stt wh1n Lucy d&- dde1 !hi the ban~ needs • celeb· r!I}' u 1 deposHor to enll1net lb lm1p. (R) 11:301J Me¥k: "~ Utt llOod Oft Mr Htnds" (dr1m1) '4P-Burt Linea• !tr, .klan Fontaine. 0 m I Dru11 ti l..nnll (t} <30) "Bl11ut St11 In Hollywood."' Din Row1n 1nd'Dic:k M1rtln help Junnlt O @(I) m Tenl1ht stlow (C) O Mcrwle; "Plrilout Htlldq' t"· venture) "46-f•t O'Brien. 0 lllJ CD Ill '°" ,_ CCl launch 1 mcMI t.lflet to make Tony 12:30 m Cittl lW Jtllous. JllfJ C.rnt, Mt Johnson m ktlot n.tn· "Wlcbd Cltr • and Ga11 Owens, plus producer ' ' GllOlll Scblahr 1ppet1 IS them· HML Ill Cel .. 11 VoJtp (C) (JO) "Th1 fWo Aultri1J.,. OAY!\ME MOVIES t :OO 0 ~rin Cmes " C.ilt" l•IM"· lure) '43.....,.nne Baller, franchol 1,... 0 (C) • ., ... -, ...... cal) ·~ Gltbl1, Da11 Dlllty. &'ll "IM ..... ,_., - (lltnn\mf). '!i().-Orfld Brit.n. Mir> klrit R9ok1L l:OOOON1n ICl O Ctni1111111tJ l ullttl1 1Mr4 <Cl 1:30 ID~ W (adWn1ur1J '65.--0tvld fllvtn, M1rtln Bll11m. 12:00 .... qMI ~ ("'11ftry) 'l2-M1r!1111 Dletrith, Clive Broo~ U:lO ID "LIWlflder HAI Mob .. («mtdy) '42-llec Guln"ess. "Tll1 1'41111111 tnd tlM lltntpdes" (1dvtn!ure) '64 -Jen Htt\. Lon Ch1ne1. 2:00 m ...... lit Ult HollMI" (drtt111) '$-MarjoN Rho4es, Patrick Barr. l :llO D (C) "ltt's DlllCI" (mlllbl) ·~ Hunon, Frtd AltlllL 4'1111 (C) "fMI ...... l"1ll" (Dn) ·~Jeff Morrow, r11t11 Dcwtraue. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Quality Printin g and Oep•nd1ble S•rvlc• for more thin • qu1rt1r of • c•ntury. -. PILOT PRltHING 2211 Wllf IAUO.A ILYD .. NIWPOft llACH -'42 ... lll • - DAILY PILOT Elwis Hits Ja~kpot L a s Vegas Stint • Ill By MYllAM BORDERS LAS VEGAS (UPI) Swivel-hipped singer E I v I s Presley broke all attendance records on the "Strip" during the first seven days of a mohth-long engagement. About 125 persons were lined up al the showroom reserva· tion counter early ~1ooday, nonnally a slow day. Saturday some 500 persons were there at 10 a.m. in hopes or getting reservations during the busy Wft:keod. Me.ny were turned away. Officials al the International Hotel said weekends were sold out and that bookings during the week were "Light" fo r Prelley·1 first appearance before a live audleol.1! ln eight )'ears. Some Presley fans came all the way from Europe to see the show. , The hotel received a letter from a woman ln France with a 100 franc note enclosed •! a deposit for 10 shows. The woman wanted reservations for both the dinner and late-' night shows for five straight days. "So far we have yet to have an empty seat ln the house. He is the hottest thing that has hit Las Vegas," said Bru ce Banke, an executive of the hotel. It was his first stage ap- pearance ln elght years and his only return engagement to Las Ve1as in 13 years. Presley in tile flesh had lost nothing. It was &tUI all there . Gyrating leg.!! ..• wide stance •• ,a bobbing head with tossed black hair ..• rotating guitar ... knee bends •• and the paun. ding rhythm of such tunes as "Blue Suede Shoes" ... "Hound Dog .... "Jallhouse Rock'' ... "Heartbreak Hotel" ... and one or his newest recordings "'In the Ghetto." He was contracted to appear here. for an und.lsc.losed salary. "We are very happy with the deal," said Col. Tom Parker, the distinguished Presley manager with the honorary Suthem title. He blithely sidestepped the ques- tion of how much the performance ~'as costing the International Hotel. Reportedly, Presley Is being paid as much as Barbara Streisand who opened the resort in early July for a reported $1 million dur ing a three-week period. Parker has deftly guided Presley, the Tennessee coon- try boy. to the top of the heap in money earnings. Presley has recorded almost 50 gold records. an unprece- dented number, and has made millions in movie s, "It is the first time I've worked in front of people for years and it may be the last, I don't know," Presley tells his ........................ "-"' ....... ,.,,.,,..,,.,"":::::::::;::;:m .............. ,.. ........ ~ ...... ""' .. ""'-..... 'Sunday in NY' INTERLOPER -Beverly Garland and "daugh- ter," Dawn Lyn, 6, joi ns Fred l\1acMurray and \Vil· liam Demarest on "My Three Sons" this faU. Bo,vl Op ens Comedy_ Benefits ' .~·~~ . __ 1 · For SU1111D er I ~ _{J ~ On Tues da y B N S • ' (';'jj;.. ' The sixth week of the Y ew tagmg ~~ r' ~=~~-' ;;,o~::~,.~:1~~~!~m::'1~ 'My Three Sons' Get f .. Zubln Mehts , music director o t her w I s e w i n n i n c . , • nnft.yalllllhlT ·1. ~hith;~oni~ co~~c~I~~ e ! performance. Ulla&: ~' progran1 of Berlioz end By TOM TITUS 01 1M D•llJ PlMf Sl»fl ~ A Mother Tliis Year It ls, ordinarily, inadvisable to draw compari!OO between two community theaters' pro- duction of the same play. Yet the Long Beech Community Playhouse's staging of "Sun· day in New York" invites ex· ception. Rossini. Ron Filian, strong and solid The works of Berlioz have as the urbane airline pilot been featured ltrls summer. in By VERNON soorr HOLLYWOOD (UPI) llenry Higgins was right in "f..fy Fair Lady'' when he sang never "Let a Y.'oman in Your Life." Fred MacMurray will Hnd out this season. As "My Three Sons" moves into its 10th year actress Beverly Garland moves into the Douglas home, there to slake out her claim as mistress of a house full of heretofore happy males. The fact that she has a love- ly figure, pretty face and trim ankles is no excuse. Not only will she exchange \'OWS \\'ith the unsuspecting ~1ac~furray on the eight h show of lhe new season. she'll also saddle the Douglas men Y:ith her 6-year-old daughter. For Beverly it is almost a replay of her own life. This is difficult to follow. On the CBS-TV show Beverly portrays a widow \\'ho marries a widower with children. In real life Beverly was a widow ~·ho married a widower with children. She is now Mrs. Fillmore Crank. In addition to his grown children, the couple now has two youngsters of their own. "I hope my television mar- riage wo rks out as well as my real one," Beverly said during a break in filming. "But l expect a lot of Al.RO)S l Olsrgrrtm.,l S Room in a casa 'Sword sltokr l C Rrcent: Suffi1 15 Man's n•m • 16 Swlftnrss of motion 17 Plant 18 Make valurltss l' Purch1s1bl1 at the I 'sue i ic t : words 20 Relat lvt : Abbr. 111%8 ski champion: 2 words 2J Emotion 2S Mus lcat lnstrum91t 26 Play in summ er stock 27 --squad 29 Farm 1ni"'1t 32 Thal In wh ich ont r•ctb 35 Tots' necrsslllts ]6 In-: Wholly Jl •r,provt: Sang 38 Addi ction '39 Slngtr AI O Reftrto as an e11r1mpl t .Cl Ht!p out 42 lnundallo" .. " " ' " " ' " • 7 .43 Pronoun 44 Boy's Xmtl pres ml 4S Favorllr Jtt Srt spot: Colloq, 46 ''.Wot--!": 2 'Jlords 4 8 F ormtr heavywrlght champ 52 Plan In , advancr 56 Lumber sourer 57 Mtan dwrl!lnq 58 I/try dry 59 Gr ant 61)Upto 1ll txprctations ll Comr out srcond b11t 62. Word ol 1pproval 63-clolh b4 Looked OYf'I' b5 Oisturbanc1 of lht pub- 1 lc pract OOWH l llrm of winter wrM 2 west lndlts volc1110 3 Fish 4 lnfuslo" 1111dt 11011 drlt d ltlVtS 5 Man of r.ofound t1rnin9 ~ In lht COIH5t Of 1 St cul1r ,. " women viewers will resent me because they have s u c h personal feelings a b o u t characters who have been on the air as long as the cast of this show. ''Some of the females feel as if they're losing a chance at marrying Fred MacMurray themselves. "And if I know some women, they'll criticize my hair, my clothes and the way l talk." Male viewers won't be so picky. They'll just resent her being there. Beverly, who once played Bing Crosby's wife on the crooner's short-lived situation comedy, already has been ex- posed to male suspicion. "My first day on the set was frightening,'' Beverly relM)rted. "The cast and crew had been V•orking together all those years and I thought they believed 1 was an intruder. "\Vhen Fred came in and said good morning lo me they ""ere the friendliest words l heard all day. "Then the first scene we had together required that we sit on a couch and spend the day kissing one another. When I wenl home and told my hu s- band aboul it he wasn·t too thrilled with the idea.'' Neither was Mrs. MacMur- ray -June Haver -who just happened to choose that day to visit the set. Boy. wa~ Henry Higgins right! Saturday's Puzzle So1vrd: I One of famf'd radio tram •Plain In 1ncitnl Pi I ts tint 1 O At anoth1r time 8/ll/b9 33 Mi9rato11 wor~!r: Colloq . 34 Kind of dog )5 T!rm of rndt arment )~ C l•w brother in the lluntington commemoration or the Berlioz production, comes off even S 1not Jie 1·s centenary. more so at Long Beach. The Tuesday 's program ' 'Y l 11 muscu1ar suitor whose arrival S s , l open with the Berlioz Roman et Pecla Carnival Overture, and will in-is the catalyst for a hilariously -elude three dances from the This version Is, for the most part, an instant repllly of· the strain'!ti situation ;s also well IN°DIANAPOLIS, lnd. (API "Damnation ot Faust." pla)'ed by John Eagle. Soloist Marilyn Horne will -The Smothe rs Brothers, o St.ealing the show wherever sing two arias from " am· fired last spring by CBS, have nation of Faul!t": "King of they can are the ubiquitous agreed lo do a special next Thule" anti "Romance." •'1i UNOAY IN NIW YOlll(" A comedv ltY Norm.n t<•••..,., dl- r.:led 111' Ron Alblrhon, '-<.f'tnkal dl- rKl!Dr Biii Motel11\Cf, ''"' m1n1~r All'> Fll~n. p.r~ FrldlJI 1nd S1h1rdtVI 1'hr'W91! A\18· 2) t i lt>e L""11 eltdt Cornm•lf•lt'I' Pltvl'ICIUM. SlO! E. AnlMlm SI., l-8"dl. THI CAST Ellttn T1yl00" •......... Mldellne Or•~• man and woman, played with season that will be made by ~1ehla will conduct the comic gusto by Carol J ones an Indianapolis· based pro-orchestra in 0 v e r tu r c to and Bernie Simon, the latter duction company. ..William Tell'.' and t w 0 another holdover from The 90-minute specia l will be dances front th e same opera Huntington Beach. Their set in San Francisco, with by. Rossini. scenes, however brief, are Simon and Garfunkel and Bob ri.tiss Horne will sing ''Non among the funniest of the Dylan as guests. It will be sold Temer O'un Basso Af!etto" evening. to individual stations by Na-from "Siege of Corinth" anrl Mike MltdleTl ............. Rlt'dy K~ne Adt"' Ttvklr ............... Ron Fllltn RU11 Wll1on ............... J~n Et11le A word -several words in tiona l TeleprocluctiOns and ~·Tenti Affetl.i" from "La Don- fact -must be said for the broadcast in late November na del Lago." Tl>t m.1n ............. Bernle Sl""Oft TM wom-n ...•....... C1rv! Jon~1 highly enjoyable come d Y new and excellent sound _<•~rie~a~r~ly;De::c~e;m;be~r-~:;;:,~J-~;=~====:;;:-1 1 presented less lhan a year ago system now in use at the Com· I at the Huntington Beach munity Playhouse. \Visely in-,.,.,,1 ...... o.u, 11 1:io Playhouse -it featur1eds. the stalled for this production, ":9::~~ .. J'."'1':i. ~7:- same director. technica tree-"'hich depends lo a large ex-5""· ' '·'"· tor and three of the six cast tent on technical acumen, il IEST PICTURI members. And thil! shared ex· bursts forth in sharp. clear OF 7HE YI.Al ! · I "lh lay1·ng Sp.,;,1 Childr•n'1 per1ence, a ong w1 a P · tones coordinated w i t h p,;,,, area almost double the sii.e of precision by the original Hun-1 • l Und••-51.so t h e Huntington horseshoe, ling' t B ch B · 11 makes for a production of ~ on I ea man, J ed d ~1orela00. . tictably heighten pace an "Sunday ln New York" will polish. be around for one more Director Ron Albertsen has weekend only at t h e mounted much more lhan a Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim "·armed over version of his St., Long Beach. Whether or earlier effort. Long Beach's not you've seen the Huntington "Sunday" abounds with added Beach version.·this one comes blocking and stage business highly recommended. calcu\aled to draw Jar more1'F,~==========ll laughter than the first produc-11 tion. which \Vas a comic gem BALBOA In its own right. A He Is ably abetted in this 673-4048 task bv a vastly improved """'"'" 0,.11, ,, ,,,. 111 .... "',. Tlllln. l•eL I ,M, F•I., Sfl., l;)I, s.... ' ,/rot. Randy 'Keene. more polished ~~ and relaxed this time around 7" r . ._,._ in his leading role of the ... ._ '"'"'-'• stranger f r o m Philadelphia 111----;_:;_:= \\.'hose life intertwines NOW · ENDS TUESDAY hilariously with the heroine's. Held Over _ 2nd Week .. 11"" Fff xsouTH coasT "1i!R~ PLAZA THEATRE UIRPOllAlllN San Oleco freaway at 8Ii~ • 546-2711 Keene has benefited mightily by hiS familiarity with the show. Young ri.1adelinc Drake, as the "world'S only 22-year-old virgin" who a It er n a t e I y pursues and flees from her quarry. shows high promise but does not realize her full po tential. A tenden cy t o overstate her case, t o physically emphasize scenes which dia logue alone can carry, detracts from an ZERO MOSTEL KIM NOVAK CL INT WAL KER "THE GREAT BANK . ROBBERY" Plus 2nd JAMES GARN ER Hit Feature JOAN HACK ETT 11 Hot!d wlnt«" resorl : 2 WOl'dS lZ Mr. lillisltll lJ ln th is localitl JB p,11 ... r ~ ~·· rorce f •z ~r~ms•Q:~Jo ~~.1111 ,, Fttld I •• 4l Spill•< THllTrl h b ~ • • "" . ,,.... ""'· Cot.01 tlf llel111t tJ 11rt1d Al'ft•tt -Als~ -Metin•e• Daily at 12:30 -- Box Office Open 12 :15 STARTS WEONESOAY-1 WEEK ONLY * The F1nt•sima9oric1I Musical * Dick Van Dyke -Sally Ann Howes -ln-Zl Strupu OUI 22 Second imilgt in i I/ z• wood· workrr 's m 1ch ine 27 Ulttrtd mockln9 words 21 Newsp1ptr vita I statisllt )0 Mr, Harbach JI Golf club JZ French • mars hal of WW-I .. I t rans ~; C•...,.. .it1 Mar Uuu.t 47 VilllicatlOfl IT'S Hlll 48 ---· t Ut<.l MOST FAHTA SMAGOR.ICAL 49 F r•gr~nl MUSICAL INTl lTA.INMEHT lt'Sln SO Sporting IN THI HISTOl't rvtrlt OF IYllYTHINGI 51 FBI met11ber --SHOW TIMES-. 52 Sound of 1 ... .i.,. 7:00 & t:JO 1 bullet I Mat. s ... & S••· 2100 & 4:JO 5l Was a jockey ~4 Adj «ll~r suffix 55 C Hy on tilt Hudson Rlvtr St Vt hlclt .. " " " .,.... .. .._. .-'Dick'Van'.l)yke 1 Sally Ann 'HoWes 'Lionel Jeffries ---• Chit!)' Chit!)'. . ~·)9 'Baig 'Baig' -• SUl'Ek·PAHAVISIOI" TECHMCOl.O~ 1W IRllllAr• ' ;,<If "" & Return Showing By Popul1r Demand PllER SEUERS "I lnE Vav. llmlTllllUS" .,, ____ .. "CHITIY CHlm BANG BANG" ~do IUWPOll ll•Clt •• '' tM .,.,,._ I• l•looLolH 114• h it •• 0 1. J•I UO EXC LUS l 'Y'E!l ! now iho"W ing fro"' 7:00 P.m . Sot./Sun.conl in uou1 from 2 P·"'· --------------- NOW! tlcl1 11 al Co1T1putlclr.el out leis including B11lloc .. 1, R<>lph's Morke15,Woltith't oral th• Bo x Office. A 10th-Century caatle In a 20th.Century war I 1 ' I i j Complete Printing Service Top Quality - Fast Service PILOT PRINTING • • • 642-4321 21.11 Wei t 81l boa Blvd. Newport Beach I ·- audience. But he later con- Hdcd that after four weeks in Las Vegas he wants to appear somewhere else. He said there was no In- spiration In singing before movie cameras and .said he returned to the stage because he missed live audiences. Presley arrived in Las Vegas a week before the July 31 opening and practiced daUy . He still was rehearsjng at 5 p.m. on opening night -two houn before lhe invited guests began arriving. Actor George Hamillon was among the first nighters a long · with perfonners such as Carol Channing and businessmen ol the Howard Hughes organiza- tion . HIT IN VEGAS Elv is Presley HENRY 'S Arisloernt of Spn11ish Food & Ste alu E,ic tend' A-Get-Acqua inted Offer SPECIAL fAMILY NIGHTS - In Th e Jalisco Room For a l imited Time Only Mon., Thurs., Fri. & S•t. Sunday Only 5 to 9:30 p.m. I to 9 p.m. MENU HENRY'S COMIO PRONTO PLATE SAU.Do IEIP' T.l(O •IE,. INCHILAD.l , CHaEUC INCHIU.D.l tEE' TACO, 5,ANISM AICa 'LUP',Y CHILI IELLENO ,llEO IEAN5, TOllTlLU.5 S'ANISH lllCE, ,llltO II.ANS aUTTlll, C(!,P'll TOllTILU.I, 1unE1t. COFFEii! 82 00 .$2.50 FROM OUR llOILEl GORDO'S DELIGHT NI'# YOllC, TO, $11tLOIN CHILI ltlLLENO FILIT MIOMON CMICl(IN INCHIU.OA 011 ,OllTllHOU51 Fll!EO IEANS, COFFIE SOU,, SAU.D, COP'l'll 82 .00 $4.00 fof lovs and Girls Uftder 12 HAMIUll!Ot:ll. •EANS, M'•LIC I TACO, •e:•Jrn. •tel , MILIC 8 1.00 8 1.00 HENRY'S RESTAURANT Palisades ond Newport lcHilavant COSTA MESA 54S-557' ALSO HOOK• presenb SMOKESTACK LIGHTNIN SAT., AUG. 16-8:00 P.M. CAL STATE FULLERTON TIClfITT AT All THf UlUAl n.ACIS nam, i.i.111 A0\1.-.sl.so 000t: FOlt OHE Wl EI ON LY! l it Tl-Show• Tot.ther MATINEE TODAY -··-,..,...,.,_...._n·M•.- 111n1• ·-· lm'11. ' .... DILM , ..... --· ,..., ____ -.lol RlclsudS- aJDllulwood ~v .. ''Where Eagles Dare ' .. ,_ .... _ • "'COOD8't'E, COLUMBUS" 1$ BOUND 10 BE A CAEAT SUCCESS!" -·-IOlllZIE, IXCL USIYI l'll!Mllltl l UH 1iilitd.h.d1111'1kl W._-;..11s. .. flllli .. .-. .. -... 2oth Century-Fox presents liREliORY PEIN ADDEHMll• An ArthlA' P. Jaoobe Proc;luctlOn "THE IHAIRmRn" I ...... 1 lFf•C4JIM'•- @ 8 :-..a=i --' •' ..... -•111t.111t• 1' .,. .. 2.2 ................ - • ! t $ ] I :I ' , I I ·I 'I J I S M"'4af, "-t 11, l'lb'J . .. ' .... t Fortt1nes i n Land··I • Rich -':£-" -·-.......... Nt'ltt- 1 =.,--... ~ "' ......... M> By SYLVIA PORTER fte prke of a sln,gle acre of1and near Houston's gigantic f le Astrodotnll!: bas, ln one dee- ' ade, rocketed from $20,000 to today's range of S8'7 ,000- Sl*l,OOO. The price of a single acre of land in certain areas around PhoeniJ:, Arizona has, since the JM(b, roomed from $3 to $20,000. THE PRICE OF A single of land near Houston's giganl· of Soulhern Vermont has risen from $25 to $2,500 in just the past five years -and in some "in" ski regions. and acre which was worth next to nothing a few years ago now brings $5,000 to $10,000. Today , fortunes, large a!KI small. are being made in land -for surburan housing developments, v a c a t i o n resorts, shopping centers, in- dustrial plant sites and even in reclaimed swamp and desert ; land. What's more, a great variety of investors seems to r be getting involved, from in- f dividuals, to corporations to land developers, etc. Little dication of today's trends in real estate investment and the areas in whJch professionals have been chalking up profits! In the past lwo decades, the value of raw land in lhla coun- try has been rising al a average ()( IO to 20 percent a year. Since 1950, the value of a single acre of U.S. farm land has on average more than tripled, and some 150,000 farms are now being sold each year. Acres also the approach o( the decade ol the young marrieds . With the babies of World War JI now being married ln record numbers and setting up homes of their own, the scramble tor housing could be reaching 1lampede pr~ portions by the mid· 1970s, A third force ill the simple shrinkage in the supply ol land appropriale for development. Not only is it being gobbled up by land-hungry families, oor· poratioos and investors. ll also ia being absorbed by our Federal, State and I o c a I govtrnments. These are tak- ing over some 1 million acres each year for pubUc uses, ranging from airports to parks, health and educational institutioru, post o f r I c e s , military posts and other purposes. Right now, one-third or the land In our country is publicly owned. It does make sense for an individual American with a nestegg you want to proteet, to study the field of real estate for part of your funds. !'tty nut column, therefore, will spell out the key ad· vantages and. disadvantage.., to help you decide whether this makes sense specifically for you. • ., -' ~ ' Finance . ' Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) -ar .. t NorthenU'\pet Co. -..lll lpel!d ~ million on ezpanalon oi ils mill at Mtlllnoclel, M1l11t.' A new machine to m a t e groundwood specialty papers and new groundowod and 1Ulphite pulping equipment will be installed. SAN FRANCISCO (UPll- Sea-Land Service, Inc., oper- ator of the world's laraest con- tainers:Np fleet. w 111 in- augurate direct contalnership service between Hong Kong 1 and Taiwan and Long Beach, I Calif,, via Yokohama, JaPBJ.1,: July 29. Sea Land already 1s operaUng containershlps from Kobe and Yokohama to cawornta. NEW YORK (UPI) -The Federal Reserve S y 1 l e m ' tightened credlt again !hi! week. Daily average net bor- rowed or minus reserves of member banks were $1.25 mlllloo compared with a cor· I rected dally a~rage minws figure of 94.1 million for last week. But how can you , the amateur inveslor, get a pi~ of the action in real eslate now? In this and the next three columns. I'll lry to give you precise guidelines. Since 1950, the average price of a homesite for a single family house has nearly tripl- ed . And prices being pliid· (or industrial sites have been ris- ing on a similar s c a I e throughout lhe U.S, . . Ul"l 1't....,.... FAMED BRITISH TRAIN TO TOUR U.S. MELVILLE, N.Y. (UPI) - Republic Electronic Industries, Inc., has obtained an $850,000 Air Force contract to provide tacan transceivers. Republic Electronics is a division of Heath Teena Corp. Flight Cuts Explained By Air Cal Mil llon1ire Pegler With Iron Horse FIRST, HERE'S an i In· REAL ESTATE investment and development corporations have again become glamour stock&. According to t h e Studley Realty Index, publish- -i!d by Studley Realty & Equity Corp., a New York real estate Great Rail Raid LONDON (UPI) -Imperial Chemical Industries, Ltd., will s~d $24 million to enlarge two plants making polyester resrns and yarns. The yam plant at KJlroot, Northern Ireland; will have Its capacity I raised by U million pounds to nearly 100 million pounds a year. At Wilton, England, ICI will build a copolymer plant tQ make 15 million pounds cf cot-[ ored polyest'er copolymer -yearly.- I Free Concert ' 9 p.m. TONIGHT investment counseling finn.. Air California has no in. Flying Scot Tours U.S. I Fashion Island I NEWPORT CENTER ' .. I See our . I full-page ad I in this week's I TIME I Magazine I mFIRST I CALIF OR NIA COMPANY Whtre lh• inve•t.or always comes fir51 UU vi. Life Ntwl'lrt Ifft~ • prices of 12 representative· tention of reducing service NEW YORK (UPI) _ Ont stocks in U.S. real estate cor-. between Ontario and San Jose-of the most spectacular and porations tnore lhan doubled Oakland and did not request a · 1968 f t f · th expensive raids Britain ever in · ar ou per ormtng e reduction in that service from stock market as a whole. has pulled on the No~ F lg . 1 1 the California PubHc Utilities Amer1·can market wi'IJ . get ore n 1nves ors, oo, are reported to be alloting an in-,C o m m i s s i 0 n, Carl A. under way this fall. creasing share of their in-Benscoter, A i r California T h .a t • $ w h e n 5 t e a m vestment funds to U.S. reaJ pres1'dent, sa1·d today. I t· b ff f · OCQmo 1ve u . s o America estate. Tuesday the PUC granted will get a chance to see and Obviously, a great force Air California permission to behind the land boorn is 1966-inspect the world 's most 69's inflation spiral. Real reduce Crom four lD two the famous railway engine, the estate is a traditional hedge minimum number of daily Flying Scotsman. It will be against inflation and real round-trip flights b e t w e e n pulling a tot of British trade estate values are currently H 0 11 y w o od-Burbank and hopes over a 2,200 mile route climbing two or three times as Ontario and between San Jose which will take six weeks to rapidly as the government's and Oakland. trav:rse. Consumer Price Index. " , • This apple green and gold A SECOND FACTOR is the anticipated upsurge in the de-""""'' us-n4t ' mand for housing, for vacation The PUC s announcement t~ton Iron horse w85 the first that it had granted our request • 1ocomGtive to hit 100 miles an to reduce service ( r om hour. It was· reswed from the H o 11 y w o od-Burbank and scrap heap after 40. years ol Ontario v.:as misleading, i n service between Lon(ion and wmi.111 E. McC111wt911 Vlu l"rnlmtll :1 homes, for a "piece of the ; landscape." This reflects nol '• ".I only our growing affluence but ;:::=========:::;::=:=========;1 .I ,• ELEVEN ACRE CORNER OF PRIME M-1 PROPERTY BEING OFFERED FOR SALE N.E. CORNER FAIRVIEW & SUNFLOWER, SANTA ANA, CALIF. $50,000 P£R ACRE -T°""' Ed Riddle Reaftor, Inc. 646°8811 t """."""*"" , YOUR PROBLEM: ' I I t I I ? You want to ... n some ttem th•t you no loftflr need ·but 1omeoM el" can uM for NOT , • OVER , '1 • • $50 , • , • YOUR ANSWER: - 3 You till THE DAILY PILOT, ask for Cl111lfied Adv•rtising, and place • PILOT PENNY PINCHER CLASSIFIED AD AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE L I.NE S 2 T l,Mf.S, 2 D l> LL A R S ANO YOUR CREDIT IS GODO I DIA L NOW DIRECT ! ! 6 4%-5 678 i Edinburgh by Alan Pegler. a that it.~ not clarly state that Nottinghamshire businessman we only requeited relief ln the I 000 rel " Hollywood-Burt>ank market,,, :1: .~~tt ... 120, to urbi:a.11 Benscoter said. On Oct. a, the FJying Scot "We sought pennlsston to wiU steam out of Bostoh on a reduce service b e t we e n grand tour that will end in Hollywood-Burbank and San Houston after a run through Jose-Oakland. H 0 w e v e r • eastern and southern states. because our original P~C There will be stops a t certificate for that route Ha rt r or d, New York, lists Ontario ~nd Hollywood· Philadelphia, B a I t i m o r e , Burbank aa paired points in Washington, Atlanta and Southern California, the Dallas. PUC, as a technicality, • lowered the minimum round-PrPER ABOARD trip requirement for both Pegler, her somewhat ec- airports. centric millionaire owner, will "The growth of A i r ri~ the cab. Bob Crabb, ex- California traffic between pipe major of the Scotl Ontario and San Jose-Oakland Guards and personal bagpiper is highly saticfactory hnd well to Queen Elizabeth II, also within our ei:pect.atlons. In the will be aboard to entertain first seven montha of 1969 we guests and visitors. have txperienced a 32 percent Local fire departments have growth in traffic at Ontario," been engaged to pump 10,000 Benscoter saJd. gallons or water into her twin Standard Oil Buys Tankers SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) - Standard Oil Co. of California annour:ced it has ordered three new supertankers. Two, of 2til ,000 tons each, will be built ·at Nagasaki. Japan, for delivery in the .spring of 1971. A. 227,000-lon tanker, already under construction. will be taken under long-term charter next spring. The company has four other supertankers Jn the 250.000 ton range being built in Japan and Holland. tenders every 175 miles. The thousands of water tanks lhal lined the railwaya of the United States 30 years ago have disappeared in the diesel age. The same is true of coal towers so Pegler has had to ship anthracite coal in ad- vance for spotting o n sidetracks at JOO.mile in- tervals along the route. The 49-year old Pegler, former chairman of Britain's Northern Rubber Co., is as much a buff for building up British American trade as he is for extolling the vanished glories of the steam train. When the London Daily Elt· press suggested that he tie in the Flying Scot with Its ex- I See By Toda y's Want Ads: • Full cycle ends: Back to primitives: 6 Pine PIRnk cha.in , oak coueh, pine bo.xea, dreliSe:r, rocker, e1c. • Even Libe race would be willing m set hl1 candela· bra on th i5 40" llllldwln Frenc'h Prov incial plaoo, !Ike new at ha.If price. • ThRt'!! I kit of dirt • 9000 3C{u11re rl'C'I , JcJ(atcd In ~ntrel llunllngton Beach. mom !or 4 unit• and R-2 "'""'· tt ............ C•11.., 141·1Hlf ! J-. ............................... ...., ... .., ................. 1•""~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I • ports promotion campaign, he jumped at it, bowler at a rakish ~gle and umbrella firmly .clutched . The nine~ar train to be pull- ed by the' Flying Scot includes two Royal -Fullmatt--eoaches and a glass walled observation car dating from Britain's gild- ed Edwardian age. nus car has been converted into an Edwardian pub by Watney's, famous Thames·side brewers. MOTORCYCLES Trade exhibits will Include Denby pottery from Derbyshire, hosiery f r o m L e i c e stersbire, industrial valves from "Lancashire and motorcycle! f r o m BJnn· inghatn. : Brifa~n's general post office also will be represented with ·i1-mllllon of commemorative stamps it will gladly sell. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Standard Container Co. an- nounced receipt of a $4 .5 million Anny contract for metal ammunition boxes. The work is scheduled f o r Homerville, Ga. A Navy contract for $4.5 million wa1 awarded t o Admiral Systems Corp. for aircraft radio sets. Admiral is a subsidiary of La Pointe Industries Inc. SEATTLE (UPI) -Boeing Cq. has obtained a $40 million contract to design, (build and lest a new Minuteman missile launching ayst.em. In High Gear County Gets First Look at '70 Models By CARL CARSTENSEN Jr. O•Hr 1'1191 All~lvt Edl!tr The Orange County International Auto Show will be lhe first show in the United St.ates to display new 1970 domestic and import automobiles. The sixth annual show sponeored by the Motor Car Dealers Association will be held in Anaheim Convention Center and will be open to the public Oct. 9 through 12. Harvey Hiers, f\.1 CD A manager is general manager of the show and dealer Dick Steffy Is general chainn1n. Theme of this year's show \viii be "Parade of Progress of Wheels" and e1thibits will reflect the progress made by the auto Industry sioce 1898, partively since 1898, Hiers 'Hiers said. Ford could now claim live or the six most successful new car launchings in history "The public is reading the car precisely as we wanted it to -as a high value economy automobile designed to meet most driving requirepients," Naughton said. Reports indicate t h a t Maverick is a strong draw to the first lime car buyer and is also making a mark as a se- cond and even third ·car. A Ford survey shows that the average Maveri<:k buyer is 34, earns $10,500 annually, has some college education, wilh 68 percent of the buyers fami - ly men. Ford says that two thirds of all Mavericks ire boughl aa second and third cars. · PLYMOUTH VALIANT CLOSING BIG Altbouih Chrysler Plymooth GRANO PRIX BAS DlvWon retaU deliveries of BIGGEST YEAR . new cars during July are down Pontiac Motor Division has slightly over a )rear ago, reported that the 1'6f tGrand Valiant sales are soaring. Prix more t ban tripltd its-Sales ol the compctct Valiant model year's sales of t9d:e and were up lt per cent for July outsold all other personal lux-over 1968. ury sports cars in the In-Although the price decrease duslry. on the Valiant a short time Retail deliveries of the ago has proven beneficial to Grand Prix topped 105,000 in dealers, sales show that the the 1969 model year. Valiant is a much sought after In addition. the Grand Prix auto in today's market. captured more than 30 percent -----------11 of the personal luxury sport car market to outdistance all competitors. Market MAVERICK EXCEEDS, Symbols MUSTANG PACE n. .,_ • , "" • ,_ Ford D I v i 1 I G n ' 1 new '" !ht lllrdl -,,..rtM · ,_..., -~ Maverick set a record ror ~u,,._ -t sales during it& first quarter 111 ,,.. .i::'~tJU1~~, .. , i.;! after inlroducUon exc:eeding fioct9~'1,..''),.., _:,~ n?.blt.iu: even the f a 1 t paee of lhe :,~~ it;.O.CJ-~~ "::- Mustang. the previous new car :nt;.• •tectt ~\\'i:l~;cir ~ record holder t-OK~ea (II' " "'~l'ff' "' •c-• • tllll'IUlll lullt w 11 d i.i ,,. Maverick sales since the re•"--•Ill"'" ... ,. ~ :....rn.t1 , • IHftorrwll flf l'lt~tQ-'n:1 d!v~ April 17 introduction totaled Mid """'1119. ,_Otc: ,,.; er .. '\. 111 1:: 101,210 unlts. Ford dealers ~":\4~.d n ._ I a:·:~ JI' sold over 201000 In the last 11 ~d~ :t,~~•lflbuffefl 4'1&. •-1 days o( July alone. ~~1~ ~h •rv11tr111. •-Gtt-£, John B. Naughton, Ford dh•rllMlt"°". rr-1• '"""· •-Wlflllllt Motor Cc. vi~ president and ~l:c"..r~wt tw :,:,[ ~= division generar manater, said ::=~,.,,~ "'* t1t. ... ~Uh the Maverick ream:! • .., ""' · • Who Reads the Stars For the Sta.rs? ' ri. .. It's Sydn~y Omarr And now this Mticulate writer who has been called the "astrolbqer 's astrologer" reods 'the stars for you. Sydney Omorr. longtime personal astrcXoger to many of Hollywood's ond the literory world's m1Ht famous stars, is a DAILY PILOT column ist. Omarr's record for accuracy of predictions based on astrological analysis is amazing. Whether you read astrol09ical forecasts for fun or as a serious student of star-gazing, you 'll enioy Sydney Omorr's doily col umn in the ' DAILY PILOT ! I i I I • , ·f I l .l t ' •• t ' : l •• . r . ' ' . . t •• . . . ! .. • . . -' .. . ' • . . .. • • • • • • , • • , • • ' • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • , • • • • < • • .. :f •• • •• ! :1 •• .. ~1 •• •• • • .. • • . . •• .. • .. .. . . ! .. . . ;i •• •• ·I • .. - ' • ' J ' I I: 1 ... ' 1.-J·( - NO MATIER WHAT they're in the market for, our readers find the DAILY PILOT is the best place to put the bite on bargains. And they do it with the same gusto as the gourmet here showing how much he appreciate• the wares of the famed Alkmaar Cheese Market in The Netherlands. You don 't have to travel so for to find good things to eat, nice things lo wear, new appliance. al bargain prices, o real cer buy-or even e chunk of chee•e. Just shop the "armchair markpt," the one our advertise" deliver to your door every day • !L-------' . --. ..,. ... -.. ~-. ·-~-~-................. --· \ . . " I I I DAILY PILOT • ' 1! I ~ I r .. .. ... ..... . .. . . . .. . . ' .. . -• . . . . .... • ' • . • • • , ' I I I • ' DAILY PILOT U,I T ........ What a C:andle Three-.year-old Evie Callahan, daughter of Mr. and Atrs. Mack Callahan, Memphis, Te~., stares in awe at the 6-foot, 125--pound candle presented lo the city. The candle came from.Dublin, Ireland as part of thls city'.5 150th birthday celebration. 22 Junior Economists Win Honors at Fair Twenty.two junior h o m e economists received "Oft to a Good Start" awards at the Orange County Fair and Ex- position. They are: C a k e -ln·a~ne: Candy Sunderland, second, Corona de! Mar. Pencll Caddy: c in d y Peterson, La Pallua; Debbie Wynne, Costa Mesa; and Cin- dy Peterson, Lil; Puente. Bikini Scarf: Debbie Wynne, Costa Mesa, first; second plaCe winners were: Sandra Heller, Whittier; Rebecca Hopkins, Orange ; Gigi Mit- chell, Costa Mesa; and Lori Morgan, La Habra. f Tote Bag: first place win· nen: Debbie Wynne, Costa Fair Gives Prizes for Baking Maureen Riscbard, Santa Ana, won the Sweepstakes Award and eighl First Place Ribbons in the Seniot: Baked qoods division at the Orange County Fair and Expo!illon. Marcelyn Courtney, Newport Beach, won the "MO!! Out.tallding Entry" award with her open· !rult pie. other winners are: Anaheim: Mrs. Judy Mason, decorated cUes -holiday; Mercedes Aguila, decorated cakes -oovelty. 1 Costa Mesa : Marilyn Alcala, _ decorated cakes -birthday, children; Connie RI c e, '" decorated cakes -other; Chrlsllne' Eutwood. biscuits and rolls -any other roll; Cindy Lynne Parker, cookies' -oatmeal drop; E 11 en Webster, pies and pastry - two crust frail pie: Linda Swearlngton, confections - fudge, chocolate. Fountain Valley : Dorothy Rayhawk-, decorated cakes - anniversary or w~g; Mrs. GleMa Trano, deco.fated cakes -novelty. Garden Grove: Mra. '.Eva Weber, cookies -pean\it but· ler; Mrs. Helen Gorsuch, pies and pastry -any pastry. Huntington Beach: Chery Marlene Schreiber, cookies - bar; Mrs. Margaret Lindsey, cookies -other <f!op. Newport Beach : Kathryn Lynd -bread, white; Joyce Beauregard, loaf or pound cakes -banana nut; Jane Walsh Courtney, loaf or pound cakes -other • Orange: Sevilla Sparks - biscuits and rolls -cinnamon rolls. Santa Ana : Rosemary Hilger, biscuits and rolls - coffee cake; cookies molasses drop ; Myra Bingaman, layer cakes - frosted layer chocolate. Tustin! Mrs. D. L. Hoffer, biscUlts and rolls -any biscuiL Peterson, La Puente: and Candy Suderland, Corona del Mar, both won rirst and se- cood place awards. Book Cover: Gigi Mitchell, Mesa; Allison -Gregary,[p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""i' Orange. Second plaCe winners~ Therese Durocher, Santa Ana; ·Cindy Ann Peterson, L a Palma, third place winners: Costa Mesa, first. · Free Concert Ribbon Hairband: Second place winners: Therese Durocher, Santa Ana; Sandra Heller, Whittier; Lori Morgan; La. .Habr._; <:;:indy Ann 9 p.m. TONIGHT Leattne !&ch, 'C>tange; Jae· queline ~dray: Sallla. Ana; and Sandtjl Heller, Whittier. Fashion Island •NIWPORT CENTER IT '5 THE CUT AND COMB OUT THAT REALLY MAKE A HAIRSTYLE! THA.T 15 WHY THE 11BEST-TRESSED11 VIOMAN YOU KNOW PROBABL.Y COMES TO A ROBINSON1S SALON. WE1VE MADE A SPECIAL.TY OF flAIR~TTING . FIRST WE STUDY THE WAY YOUR HAIR WANTS TO GO ANO GROW• NEXT THE T EXTURE. THIN'? THICK? WHATEVER. EQUALLY IMPORTANT 1 THE WAY YOU WANT TO LOOK , WE STUDY YOUR FACt. T HE SHAPE OF YOUR HEAD.,• EVEN YOUR NOSE AND CHJN;THEN WE CUT~ THE RESULT? A HAIRDO THAT HOLDS ITS L INE, ITS SHAPE:, ITS VERVEt FOR WEEKS AND WEEKS , 'rHE LONGER YOUft HAIR GROWS THE· MORE GRACEfUU.Y IT FLO\VS , AND YOU OON1T HAVE TO BE SHORN TO CREWCUT BREVITY• BUT IT DOES 'TAKE A REAL EXPERT, COME, PUT YOUR HEAD AND HOPES I NTO OUR HANDS, ANO SEE THE DIFFERENCE REAL. TALENT CAN MAKE, TH E CUT• AT 5 .00. BEAUTY SALON , IN NEWPORT, • • • • • •• • • • • ROPJNSON'S NEV\roRT • FASHION ISlAND • 644·2800 I I. .. --· ..... .. .. . .... . . -. . TH SEM .. 1- AN N UAL l y HERITAGE "SALONNE" TAii.ES . Loui8 XVI atyle; mtdium bro'Wft fin.Uh; 1ome piecu ·with painted bas ea. Shown: Twin cocktail table, End uw~ 22"!28" R£G. SALE each 99.00 6'.1111 139.00 99.00 ' ; HEIUTAGE TAii.ES . :::....<' 199 "GRAND TOUR, Fl~T EDITION'' ~ 7 •. . -· -'T Blem! of m<t~Y •!~!u; antiQ1« cMrn; f ini.ah; 1ome P.~cu with. pai~ted baaea~ Shown: RE~ SALE Cocktail bble, 7fl' 279.00 195.0ll Round accmort ltble, 2l' 11~00 19.1111 Oval ~ktail !able, si:• 329.00 199.1111 - 59. 149. 79. 195". OUR FINEST TABLES sale this included • '" are ••• every table is from our regular stock ... bearing the signatures of America's moil respected makers. Lorge and small, from classical to contemporary, in all the desired fin ishes, the choice is yours. During our anniversary event at true and substantial reduction•-values and quality in the J. H. Biggar tradition . HENREDON "NAVARRE". TABLES M1:ditetTa.nean 1t11le; Peu;ter or Bro'lt,ls fin.i&h. r'' HERITAGE "NOTIINGHAM" TAii.ES English countryside stylei brou;n f iniah • Shown: REG. Coc~t&il table., 60" 254.00 . R•md l11mp ltb le, 24" l~.00 J.tl. dark SALE 149.1111 15.1111 ' • Shown: REG. S.ll[ Twin cocktail table, each 99.00 59.00 Round lamp labl~ 26" 99.00 59.1111 Slate-IOp coc~ail table, 66" 285.00 149.1111 • FINE HOM E FURNISHINGS ANLJ INT ERIOR DESIGN PASADENA ••• COLORADO AT EL MOLINO POMONA ••• HOLT. EAST OF GRAVEY SANT A ANA-Main at Eleventh e SANTA ANA STORE OPEN MONDAY EVENINGS ' -· .~...-.·- • DAILY I'll.OT 2fi " Boswell Call·s Martin Liar· • Ill Twins'~ ·Hassle MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP) - Dave Boswell, ti-1\nnesota Twlns pitcher knocked out In R fight with Manager Billy Martin, told his version of a battle royal with Martin and outfielder Bob Allison in Detroit last Wednesday. Boswell, in a telephone interview loday from Baltimore with the Mlnneapolis Tribune, said Martin was not telling the truth by saying Boswell went after the manager. Martin 5aid Sunday in Baltimore that Boswell hit Allison, knocked him down Sutton E11ds Cub s' Hex; Cards in LA LOS ANGELES (AP) -'For a while, It seemed as If Loa Angeles Dodger pitcher Don Sult.on mi~ht never beat the Chicago Cubs. When Victory came , it stopped a losing streak al 13 games. Sutton beat the Cubs and Ken Holtzman, the Dodgers' prime nemesis, 4-2, Sunday afterooon, With some ninth· inning relief help from Jim Brewer and Pele J1,1ikkelsen. St. Louis opens a three-game series tonight, \\'rapping up the Dodgers' c~r­ rent home stand. Claude Osteen, 15-9, pit· Doilger Slate Aut. 11 Doffo!rl YI SI. LOUii SP.m. KFI {...0) Aut. If°"'"'" YI $1. lowl1 7:SS P·"'· ICFI 16'!1) Aw. ll °"'9 .... YI St. lllllll 7•SS P.m. ICFI {'41111 ches for the Dodgers against Steve Carlton, 13~, who started the All.Star game fOf the National League. "When I came out here today," said Sutton, "I just sensed we were going to get it." Sulton, 14·11, had never bealep the Cubs in his career, although he came close. His 12st appearance against them, in Chicago, he lost 5-3 on some freak plays. "I had never been so upset about a ball game -I pitched as well as l had all year and I was snapping out of a slump, as well," Sutton said. It was in that game, too, that he first used the knickleball. He's not going to make the world forget Hoyt Wilhelm, but Sutton said he is proud of his knuckle(, v.1lich he said he used Sunday more than ever. "He threw It eight or nine lime!," said Dodger catcher Jeff Torborg. "We used it v.·hen we got ahead of the hitter, and he i;truck out Don Kessinger with tt in the third inning." "The knuckler was lhe first pitch 1 ever learned to throw." said S1,1tton. "l, v.:as eight or nine years old. But 1 only used ii C<lmpetitlvely once before this year. That was in junior high school and Lhe kid hit it out of the park." He said he first thought of using it in the majors before his last start in Chicago. Dodger Manager Walter Alston had spoken to tr. pitchers about using more off-speed pitches. CHICAGO LOS ANGl"LES 1~rkrtl •br~rlil k•H1"9ft. 15 • 0 I I Slumor•, .Jb • ' J 0 Beck•••· )'b ' 0 , 0 Mall. If • I l 0 8W111111T11,lf f OOOWD•vl1,cl 1111 s.,,,a, Jb l I • 0 ICO>CO. rl I 0 l I WSITll!ft,lb lOO COJ!Hn,pr OOOG e1n111, 1111 1 o 1 e .. we-. • o o o o 1-!undlrt. ( • 1 2 Mlk-t ll(!I•, p 0 0 0 ~ Hlck"llJI, ,, 1 0 l Sudlkls. Jb J 0 1 I Qu11!1, d J O O lel1bvr•, lb J 0 1 1 N Ollvu,PftlOO Hunan.lb 1000 POPOvkn, I'll 1 0 0 Totbor9, c 1 0 0 0 HOlll"ll"• o 2 0 0 Grblr.wlll, 11 3 0 0 0 So1ngl@r, pll l O 0 Sur!On. o 2 0 I 0 Re9•"· p o 11 O Crowtord, 11 1 0 0 0 H11Jh, on 1 o o Tot11 :tJ 2 6 Tolll 31 4 10 I CMClllO 000 000 011-) Los Anetlts OOll :IOO OJ~_. OP -(lllc;QO 1. lO!I -CftkftgO 7, lO$ M- l!ltl J, 21 -!lecktrr, Moll, Hunalt~. 11" K It ill I B SO 1-1o111"''" t , 111-ll 1 4 2 1 2 S Revtn 112100 Sulton W. U'-111 I • 1 1 I J llrtw~r !JI 1 1 1 1 0 Mlkktl .. ,, 1/J 0 0 D 0 0 $1v1 -Mlkktl11n. T -2:11. A -27,595, O.J. in Ca1np; Chargers Nail 10-7 Triu11111h United Pm• lntem•ttonal O.J. Simpson ls anxious to pursue his goal to become the golden boy of pro- fessional footbali now that he has settled his salary dilferences wilh the Buffalo Bills. Simpson. v.•ho seldom yielded yardage , rluring a fabulous ball carrying career at the University of Southem California, gave a little ground Saturday v.'hen he signed with the American Football League Bills. Of the do1.en exhibition games played the past weekend, seven were interleague conlests between the AFL and lhe NFL. The AFL's teams in Kansas City. Buffalo and San Diego won three of the seven. The powerful Chiefs rolled over the Detroit Lions, 38-13, with quarterback Len Dawson, who pl&)'ed only the first half, lhrwing I pair of TD pa.sses to frank Pitts. Veterans John lladl and Keith Uncoln led a 70-yard thtrtl quarter touchdown drive in San Diego's lt-7 triumph over lhe NFL New Orlean1 Saints. BuUalo. evening Its record al 1-1, lilol the AFL its first wtn or the season at the expense of an NFL club when lhe 8Ul1 u~et the Washington Redskins, 11·17, Friday night. Chicago, St. Louis, l\Unnesota and Baltimore upheld the prestige of the NFL 1\'ith Saturday triumphs against AijL 1eams. ' and kicked him "'"Ide a Detroit restaurant. The manager said Bo.swell also at4 tacked him •nd landed several pone.bes before tt1artin retaliated. , "I was always on Billy's side befo~,'' said Bo.swell. "Bu( he really mauled me and you can print that. He Isn't telling the truth if he said I went after him. .. Allison didn't have his hands in his pocket as he was quoted In Baltimore. I'll admit l hit him first. After 1 hit Allison, I wasn't going to let him up. He's too big . Up~ and for me lo handle so I dld evtrything· t could to keep hirn down." Bowell is 6-fool-3, 185 pound.!i; Alli.son, e-t, 220, and Martin, $-11, 170. "That's what )'OU have to do when you are a one·handed fighter," said Boswell. "I have one hand that I can fight with. On my other I have a finger that sticks straight up in the air. What can I do with that? ''The nex t thing T remembered there were three or four people holding me and Allison was still on the ground . I remember boldlJJ.8 my hand against tht ll'lll. But I don't remember going after MarUn. "I do remember a foot kicking me in the fpce. After that I recalled waking up once In the.hospital and another time in the hotel room. "The doctors who examined me· at the '1oapital asked me Who tiid hit me with a pipe. In my 25 years. l'Ye 'been in a lot of Ught.s. l !lave been hit many limes. But nobody did Ule damage lo mr left eye that they did." . Downs of Sports · , STRATEGIC POSITION -Umpire Frank Dezelan landed on his wallet at second base during the ac· tion in this play al San Francisco Sunday. St. Louis' Vada P inson {sliding) was trying to stretch a single Into a double and knocked the umpire down in the process. Naturally; Dezelan called him oul. Second baseman is Hal Lanier. Still's Wallet Thickening, Eyes Britain • MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP} -Ken Still, a talkative, personable veteran and klng- lime non-winner, now has two victories this )'ear, but the greatest thrill of his golfing life is yet to come. "It's the Ryder Cup," the lean 35-year· old said Sunday alter his two-stroke vic· toty in the $100,000 Greater Milwaukee Open. "There's no greater thrill than that -it's got to be the greatest of my career. "I didn't expect to make it. and I juM can't believe tllat I have. To represent our coontry . in an international match has to be the greatest thing in my life." StiU's victory -he made the Citrus Open in March the first title of his nine· year tour career -boosted him into 10th place on the Wit from which 12 players will be choseii to play against Great Bri· tain in Southport, England. in September. But while the elated Still nailed down a spot on the team, a disappointed Arnold Palmer failed in his quest of an improved position in the standings. Palmer bogey~ tbe last two holes for a 72 and 287, far back in the field that lack- ed most or the great names of the game. He didn't gel a point and now must finish no lower than second in PGA championship that starts Thursday If he is to make the team for the fifth lime. He now is 15th on the list. Still shot a remarl:able 65, seven under par on the 7 ,07}.yard, par 72 North Shore Country Club course, and finished with a 277, two strokes ahead of South African Gary Player. Player also had a 65-desplle an em· barassing moment On the 18th when he split his britches while lining up a putt - for 279. UPI Tt~ THAT'S MY POP I -Butch Yarbrough looks a little embarrassed as he accompanies his father, Lee Roy Yarbrough, in the winner's circle at the Dixie 500 auto race at Hampton, Ga., Sunday. Yar- brough won the event in a 1969 Ford \vith an average speed of 13.1.146 mph. Boswell made the comments rrom his parents' home In Baltimore. He was to Uy to the twin cities later loday. Martin said Boswell vtat leaving the restaurant to "to get $QUealer" Art Fowler, Twins pttcttfng coa'ch ~who reported Boswell had not run. necessary wind sprints. "I don't ever remember threatening to get Fowler," said BosWeU. "I did think they were making a big thing out of nothing. r did open my moutb a little loud to my manager and hls partner Alllson. When I decided to leave , Allison did try to c•lm me down -the way ht has tried lo do for the p&st four years. "Allison said to me, 'If you are going to be tough about this wtiy don't you hit me.' I was In a bad mood so I did hit him." Boswell aaid he still wanted to pitch for the Twins this year and help them win the pennant.. "but this will be my last year with the Twins. 1'm go(ng to 1tick wllh this. I won't change my mind." 4 RBis for V o.ss As Halos Roll, 9-1 BOSTON (AP) -For a change, Manager Lefty Phillips had a cbance to enjoy an afternoon of relaxation. Hoy,•ever, he had to admit he had a cou- ple of tense mo1nents with his C8lifornia Angels. "It was the most relaxing afternoon I've had in a long time," Phillips said Sunday after the Angels built a 7.(1 lead Awge l Slale A119, 11 Mgtlt •I Otlroll 4:ll p.111. IC.Ml'(. 11101 Auv. n A~1 11 o.1rolt •:» p.111. KMPC 11101 Aug. U Ang111 11 0.!ro11 l:ll p,m, KMPC lltOl and breezed to a 9-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox. NeWport Beach's Bill Voss led the al· tack with a three-run first inning double, a single and a run-scoring triple. Jim Spencer chipped in with a pair of singles and hls fourth homer. Calilornia moves to Delroit toda)' for 1 night·game with the Tigers. Rudy May. 4· 9, of the Angels. faces Earl \Vilson, 10-t, of Detroit. "I must admit I had a rew anxious moments, in the fifth and seventh in- nings," Phlllips said of Sunday's win. With dark clouds looming. the Angels stuck to baseball. Jn the Boston fifth, starter Tom Murphy v.•orked as usual against the Red Sox hltter1. \Vith one out, Joe Lahoud walked and then >A'ent to second as Dick Schofield Sports In Brief walked. Mike Andrews blooped a double to right, scoring Lahoud jusl as a cloud- burst virtually flooded lhe park. That forced a 47-mlnute delay as the ground crew Uled sand lo repair the in· field. "When I saw that rain, all I could think of was that I should have had the pitcher throw as quickly as possible, without any signs,'' Phillips said. "We had the big lead and had to gel in five innings in their ball park. H<1wever, things worked out okay." Phillips' second anxious moment came with two out in the Boston seventh. l\1urphy suddenly lost control. walking three straighl batters to load the bases. But Ken Tatum came on to save ~lurphy and the game. CAllil'OllNIA •OS TOM 11trllrlll •11•-rM Aloln1r. fb 6 I 0 0 SdlPfl•kl, u 1 0 I I s ...... c1r, It s J l I AndrfWI, 7b 1 o 1 I Jal\J11~, cf ~ O 1 I 'l'ttrnukl, II 1 0 0 0 Fr1901I, H • I 1 I R $mlltl, cf I 0 I Ml:lrton. If 1 1 o a kan. lb 1 1 C-llt, If I 1 0 0 O'l!l•ltfl, )b ! 0 Vo1s, rt j I l ~ A Cord1lro, rf • ~ A Rodf'9tl. lb S I S t 0 JoM1, lb ~ I Et•n. c s o 1 o GlblOll, c ( O Myrphv, p 3 O 1 1 lattl>o•t, it O O I( Ttlu111, • 1 f 0 O La<.k, pl\ I 0 Bl",p 00 ~ •lloud, pl\ O 1 J•rvi1, • O O ICllM. It 0 0 ""°~''' pft 1 0 Tot1I «I t ,, f Ta!1I 1• I $ C•!!tarnl• •10 110 O»-t OP -C1n!a•~l .. 1 1. LOI -C1llforril1 n. l!lorton I. 11 -vo .. , A.l>drtw1, Jahn11Pns, Murphy, J1 -Vot1, ti~ -~Hnc:er •. ~.--Jotln1ion.. Laver Thumps Pancho; Studstill Passes Test BINGHAMTON, N.Y. -Rod Laver of Corona del f\.1ar and Billy Jean King of Long Beach, won the men's and women'io; singles championships Sunday in the an· nual ,.faslers Tennis Tournament at the Highland Racquet & Riding Club. Laver defeated Pancho Gonzalez, 6·1, 6· 2. In lhe women's competition, t.1.rs, King bested \\'lmbledon champion Ann Haydon Jones, 10-8, 3-6, 6-4. • FULLERTON -A pulled hamstring muscle that sidelined Los Angeles Ram wide receiver Pat Studstill had healed enough to allow the veteran to work out Sunday. Studstill ran patterns in a light workout and Ram Coach George Allen said he was pleased with the Improvement. ''But it's too early to tell whether or not he 'll play Saturday night against the Clevelanc! Browns." Allen said. The Rams, who beat Dallas 24·17 last Friday night to open their preseason Na- tional Football Leagu'e schedule, also got good news about defensive tackle Roger Brown, who had a cast removed from a hand broken early in training camp. Brown worked oul with the team Sun. day and may be ready for the Browm game. • \VATKINS GLEN, N.Y. -,,1ark Donohue y,·on his third straight Trans. America series automobile ract Sunday on the Watkins Olen Race Track, highlight of 11 races durlng the weekend, Donohue, driving a Sunoco-Camaro, avera~ed 107.33 miles an hour on the 2.l- mlle circuit and edged out second-place ParnetU Jones by about one minute. Jones had led the race for the first 62 la~. but Donohue streaked past him v.·hen Jone11 was forced to the pits for a tire change. Jones spun off the track on the final lap just before the finish line. • SOUTHAfo.fPTON, N.Y. -Clark Grae~ ner of New York, the No. 1 seed, defeated U.S. Davis Cup teammate Bob Lutz of Los Angeles, seeded second. 6·2, 6·2, 6-4 to win the Meadow Club $12,000 Invitation Grass Court Ter\.nis Tournament Sunday. Graebner ranked second nationally, broke Lutz' service lhe first two timu he faced it in each or the first two seta for a 3-0 lead in the first and f..-0 in the second. • WASHINGTON -Funeral services for George Preslon f\farshall, president emeritus of the Washington Redskins football team will be held Wednesday. ~farihall-was chief stockholder or the football team he started In Boston In 1932, but since 1962 when illness forced him to retire, il has been directed by Milton W. King and Edward Bennett Williams, close friends and court.ap- pointe-:1 guardians of his estate. Marshall died Saturday. Hew~ 72. • CLEVELAND -There's sort of a frac· tured Golden Rule governing Britain 's play in today's final matches of the 41st \Vightman Cup tennis tournament. It g!)es something like this : "Lei's try to do unto them what they did unto us." And although Great Britain's chances of overcoming the Unilfd States' 3-1 ad- vantage in tht first four matchts were slim, hope was mustered by looking back to the 1966 event. Thal was when the U.S. overcame the same deficit to win the ·best-of-7 competition, 4-3. Lolich La~ds Sacl{ed Coach Sain The sLster combination of Nell Truman and lvfr~. Christine Truman Janes had just salvaged a come-from-behind doubles victory over Mrs. Mary Ann Eisel Curtis and Vl!-leria Ziegenfuss Sun· day 1-6. 6-3, 6-t. Their triumph followed an 8·6, 6-0 win by 20·year-old Peaches Bartkowicz ovel" 23-ycar-old Mrs. Janes in a singles match \\'hich gave the U.S. a}() edge. Saturday, America's Julie Heldman beat Virginia \Vade and Nancy Richey downed Winnie Shaw of Great Britain. Tige r Ace Devot~ Radio Ti1n e to W hat Sain Did for llim CHICAGO (AP) -Mickey Lolich had just fired a four-hit S.2 victory ovtt the OUcaao White Soi for his lMh victory of the season. but Detroit's hero o( the 11168 World Series was unhappy. Lolich's dilemma stemmed from the firing of pitching coach Johnny Siiin earlier in the day by '('l,ger vice presldtnt Jim Campbell. Sain. one of the hlghesl paid pitching coaches in the buslne88 at an etitlmated $30,000 a year, had voiced dl9~atl.sfacllon last w~li: by $aylng, "When my ad vice isn't used and there are no rtsul\s from what t'm doing lhtte, lben I fiiure it's Ume to leave." Campbell met With Sain Swlday morn- ing and. after .a brief chat, Sain \\'as ri.r«t. . "It's hard ror me to ssy anything without getting Into trouble," said Lolich, who recenUy devoted a 15-minute radio i;how to how mu ch Johnny Sain had done for Mickey Lolich. "I've got to keep m)' mouth shut.'' he added. Under further probing, Lolich said : "Last year 1 won 17 games and three more in lhe World Serles. This year. I've won 15 so far . In 19117, I had lost 10 stralghl before. Sain Mralghtened me out and then I won nine of my la1t 10 games. I would sa,y John Sain hU Md qWt'e an inlluence on 111y career." Denny McLain, who won 31 games under Sain's tutelage, wasn't around v.•hen Sain got sacked. Denny became the first major leaguer to win 17 Saturday and was wllh his wife, who is ill, SU.nday, The 3aln story Is a strange one. He won 139 ga1ne1 Jn the majors and teamed with Worrcn Spahn to hurl the Braves to the pennant In 1948, when the' theme wi5 "Spahn, Sain and pray for rain." As a cooch, he \\'8! with Kansas City In 19719 and New Yurk from 1961-1963 -all Yankee penn:int·wlnnlng years. He was with the Minnesota Twins In 1965 \\'hen they won a pennant and the Tlgers last year when they captured the world cbam· pionahip. Sain ha1 shown re9Ulll aJ a coach, but It's hi1 methods . of coaching w.hlch are nqt accepted by the establishment. The accepted theory for training pitchers 11 to have them run daJJy and pltcll batUng practice at certain times. Sain refuses to allow his pitcher to run And would rether have them throw under h\1 guidance r a t h e r than in batting practice. It got to such a point In spring lralning that the Tigers hnd to bring In mlnor league pitcher to throw biatllng practice while Sain wor eel With the re1ular staff. • ATLANTA -Lee Roy Yarbrough charged home the winner in the Dixie SOD mile cla.sslc at All•nll JnternaUonal Raceway Sunday and bec•me stock cir racing's newest aoldtn boy. ll was the ~year~ld Ford drlver'.1 fifth major victory of the season and th• $17.~ first place. check ran hfs eamlno for the yeer to $t40,000 -both new stan- dar<ls on the NASCAR ar•nd naUonal record books. • · Yarbrough completed tht 334 lap& around the 1 ~(z.mlle sauceMhaptd oval In 3 hours, 45 minutes and 35 seconds for a Dlxit record 13S.001 miles per hOur. The old record was 132.248 m.p.h. et in 1967. I I. I, U OAJl.V l'ILOT MoM.1, AUfl/si 11, 1'16• Legion 'I'oarnej' Newport Wins, ' • Reaches Finals BY-DAVE CEARLEY Of .. DllltJ ..... lt•lt The Newport Harbor area's entry In the Fullerton Legion Touriiamtnt, lhe Ha r b o r Dodgers, overwhelmed Anaheim Sunday with a 10-1, no-hit vicLbry and qualified for Wednesday's ehaJnpionshlp game at Fullerton's Amerige .Park. Coech Let Fisher's le.am, 1>10 on the year, plays powerful Los Alamitos, 25-3, at 7:30 p.m. It's the climactic game of the year {or Qrange County's 20 Legion baseball teams. .The Dodgers nipped Pitchers Steve Schoettler and Bob Stafford combined Sunday for a no-bit effort on Anaheim. Stafford went the fint three and two-thirds in- nings and Schoettler mopped up. Fullerton on f'rlday night, ~. gaining the quarter finals, 1 then upset strong Anaheim Schutte, 8-4, to gain a iemilinal spot. P.fidway City, the only other area squad in the tourney. was eliminated +z by powerful Los Alamitos. The fledgling F o u n t a i n Valley nine v.·as eliminated from the Anaheim legion tournament. as th~ squad was bombed by Santa Ana. 3-2. Steve SchoeUler picked up the wia in Newport's Friday I' ', contest as he came on in relief in lhe third with the bases full ~ and no out. Schoetller fanned the side and erased the last Full~rton scoring threat. Tom J(jng scored the: win- ning tally in the fifth on a squeeze .bunt by Jeff Blan· chard. King drove in three I Newport runs in the third with f • bases loaded double. I In the quarter final contPSt. , Denny Bean picked up the t~ hurling win, coming on in relief in the fourth and shut· ting out Anaheim for the last t three frames. I Newport trailed f-2 g~i.ng in- to tbe bcittom of the thf~. but I Dodger batters led o[f the ln- 1 nlng with four straight walks. A single by King scored the ucond tally, and .a sacrifice • for lhe ((her two talli~. • ~a.lktd, Kvanct:d._ on a slnale and then scored On 1 doul>le steal. , , 'Los ALAMITOS (() Pf'IWWltl\l. II t._ ... OUlllll. lb ........ ' ......... 11. :II Hinson, H Mtcl.. ~ AOO, c1 R.-t, rf Witt, rl Ttltll .... I; ti ltll 2 , 0 • J I I I J I I I . ' . . , • 1 1 J I t I ] 0 2 0 l • •· • 2 • • • 1 0 • • ,, • s 2 MIDWAY (ITY UI R-.11. lb °"''" P.~,tb Dlticlrlc:tl. )II J•tllllk~ rf T-llt. H Plott, lf,rf c~ .... .s 11\Mell, c ......... 1 ........ 11-.• Al • H ltll ' . . ' 1 ' 1 I 0 ' . ' ' . . 1 • • ' . ' ' . . ' . . ' . ' ' . . tDftls » ' ' ICWI '' ,...._ . '. 011 OlO 1-' J 1 llOO • 1---l J J "UlllkTOM fO .. ' l un1, rt ' 0 ~lr"IOl'll. c l 1 Scflllur, tb l 1 Clwt'-lld• • ? 1 CloclNtttr. • t o AndrfWI, )II l I Vuti.t, '' 1 0 l 111trd. If J o ..,.,.,.IOdi. cf ) 0 '""· ]b 1 • T01al1 15 • NIWPOllT 'H.AklOa II) Mvtln. c M.lln<IH, 111 P-11, :Ill 1 .. 11. If t.....,, H ltlr>t. rt Piii, cl Scf'oololler, " li.ndlt.rd. cl·H Vtlllrl, lb l'Olllf', Jb W1hOA,,. S!Mlord, P~-111 , ... , " ' ' ' ' 1 ' 1 • • ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' . ' ' ' . n ' k ... ,, llwtintl H llll • • ' . • • ' . • • 1 ' • • ' ' . ' ' ' • . '. :IOI 000--I • I lOJ DI~-$ 1 • NIW~T HA•IOlll ti) .. ' ' ' ' ' , ' Mtl'llfl. c .OM!lnotl, lb ~-n. 1b lt•¥r, •• K"lt. rl St•!fllfd, If Foottr. lb Piii, cl W•bon, D ~Ill," H kll ' . • • • • 1 I ' ' ' ' ' . ' . , . ' . , . T1t11l1 " . ,,.,.. " '"111"9t ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' . • • ' . ' ' . ""-">t1m S<.h~ll• 10] OlXl--I l 1 ,..,_rl H•<t>or ~ 20>:-t 1 l HAll•Oll OOOOilS 1111 M1rtl11, c MtllnoH, lb Powell. 111 l n•y, H Kll'lt, rt S!lffor~, ., II FO'lllf', 311 8llllCll.trd. If kholttllr, p Piii. d TDl•b Htrbor -· Al I H kll s l ' 0 • • l , J I 0 1 1 I l I 1 0 l 1 J o 1 I 5 a 1 D 1 0 0 D 1 1 I I 3 I I 1 ll1010 f . '. 011 OCll \._ID II • 001 OOOOQ0..-1 f I I fly ti.iy Bob Staffard and a single by Steve Pijl accounted How They Stand NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut Dlvltlon Won Lost Pet. GB <lllcago 7l 43 .!23 - New York 62 48 .564 7 SL Loo~ 63 •$1 .553 8 PltUburgti 58 54 .518 JZ Phlladtlphia 4-4 67 .396 2S•f.i Monreal 35 79 .307 36 Wt1t Division Cincinnati 61 45 .575 - Atlanta 64 53 .547 2 lh Los Angele! 61 51 .545 3 s. Francisco 61 52 ,$40 3 1~ Houston 60 53 .535 414 San Diego 35 79 .307 30 ,.111 .... .,.. ·-Its Clilut& 6, LOI A,....iie1 t ~ J.. MOn1r•1I 3. U ln11inta hi-YDl'll !, Atllnlt J Clndl!lllltl I, PtllltOlh>l'lil f , 12 I""· ... s1. L111111 s. s.n Fr•l>(l1co a '1111•1r'• lt1Mll1 lCll Ar>Wtln •. Cl'llU19CI 2 Hou1ton J, MontrN! 1 hltw Yortt l, A!l1nt1 a C!nc!nrittl IO, Pl!lltdl.h>rll1 O Pltt"""'911 1 ... Sin o~ }.j s1. l1111l1 1. s.tn F,.ncii.co • TWIJ'I C..me1 Pl'l\lotdrlohlt (Wl1t ~·f) 11 Con<I,,._ N II (Arrltro 1·2 0( ~rll1 11-!!, nitfll Norw Yott. (M<.Andrew l·6! 11 Hou•· tp,., (Griffin l·H l'l!tlll "· loult CC1rftoii 13-41 11 lo• An· .,..._ t011ftft IS.t i, ni..it 0ntJ "'"" Khe<!Ulta TllMUJ't hmn Cln<!nNll ti Mon!rft l. 1, 1w .. n11nr Pl•ll-1.i.11 11 AU1n11, 11rtn• !<kw York •' HO•UIOll. nlolll Clllalllt 11 I.In OI~. nltl'll 11. loult 11 LO& Al'lttlff, nlt hl Plllobwrtll ti Sin Fr1nc;l9<0 ~ BAFECC INSURANCE for special GOOD STUDENT DISCOUNTS on your Family Auto Insurance AMEl\ICAN LEAGUE Eaal Dlviaion Won Lost Pct. GB Ballimore 79 34 .669 - Detroit 64 48 .571 14 1Ao Boston 60 53 .531 19 Washington 59 57 .509 21% New York 57 57 .fJOO 22 ~ Cleveland 48 68 .414 32~ West Division Minnesota 68 46 .596 - Oakland 65 40 .586 I 'h Seattle 46 65 .. 414 20~1 Kansas City 45 67 .402 22 Calirornia 43 66 .394 22\S ChlcagG 43 70 .381 24'1.!: S1Nrdlr'1 lt-11• O!:troll 1, 0tk1.o • 801!1wt '· C•Ufornl1 • «•ttNt Cllr JO, C11¥til!'id I hl'w Yortl t. 0.~lolnd I ll1t11'nore S. Mlnr.esol1 I INlll L Wn/11,..llwt ' 5~11d1J'I llH\1111 Dttroll 1, Cl'll~ 2 C1llfomi1 f, llo1!9n 1 CllVl!llnd I, K1nw1 City 1 N~w Yort S, 0.kllnd I ll1Ulmort 1, MllYIUOfl 0 W11hl"9Tor> 1, 5elftll J TMl1r'1 !ilmt1 lo&ton 4hl•tY ~! t i Chlc.tto !Ed· mOl>dson 1_.1, 111""'! C.llf0<f1!1 \Mir '-fl •' Dtlroil (Wll· M~ 111-6), n\9111 s...11e cs-1 1.•1 •t Citvtl•lld ceu .. -"" M l, 11ltM Dtkt.nd COdom l'-6J ti l1lllmt1rt (MCNltlf U-ll. nloto! Ktnstl Cl!y (11--er '·'I 1t Wilt!· 1"911wt fk\mln 1-J), n!thl On!v 9'1met sclwaulecl Tw .... n G11Mt l o&ton 1! Chl1c10, n!fl!I c11Hornl1 ti o.troll, n~t ,e.ni. 11 ci.wltnd, l!lthl O.~l•lld 11 1141H1"'-· n~I KlllMI City 11 W19'hl"'loll' "ltfll Ml~I t i hi ... YOl't. nlltlt Osborn Shocked AtOCffi Two-time world champion Bennie Osborn was upset Saturday night at Orange County International Raceway's annual Race or Winners event. Kona Fi.eld Continues To Pursue Alexander Deep Sea ' Fish Report MIWP'Ol:T 10.'ftl"• L.drffl -251 •lltle'91 1,lD MllllG, fl1I llfH, 60 .. ,. Roland AleUnder and 15 Alexander, 38, carries a 208 f'K\11&1, ,. •tllKwe. , .,.11m111, ., others continue their semlfm1l average ln Wen LA league ae-rod!" • ' 1111111111. ,...,,.. '-"">- competition tonight tn Kona tion. A former pro baseball 1~ -'9n: 11 •"'-· 164 .. ,,.. Lanes' West Coast Match p'·-r, AleJaoder ls in bls C111111, m bol!lto. m .,..,,, 1 Y'tl11wt111. G Eu-~-" bo ,,,.,,.. 2'1 l"ICt. """ 4 IMllllut. ame nuiw..,,ons wlln1 flt!t try at the Elma. He'• .... ,. cuM•NYl--at -'-"! ,,,,, tournament. averaging 211 for the tourna-bollilfll.S 11 Mrncl>dll. • ..... • "'" Alexander, -a 'West Los ment, ~\i111t11110101t taAc,._,, •11t1trt: Afl&eles entrant, waa threaten· The Orange Coast area's its 11tr•1e'*-11t bo!ltt.. 12' tint. Ing to turn the ninth annual two entrants ln the tourna-~$·~, .. ~i.~,:,:.'1'°• 2• Nia. ·Costa Mesa event Into the btg. ment will have to hustle to oc1A1<1t1u• _ ln 1n1i.r.: ,,.,, tier• gest rout since UtUe Big make the finals Aug. 18. r~. •11 ... ., •2 bol!lto. ' .,m1i. -Nu. 6 .,..llowMU. 20S rlldl cod, JI Harn. He had a 172-pln lead Westminster's Fred Rlecllli ls Mn11111. over runnerup Foy Belcher in J3lh and Fountain Valley's "'" 01aGO !Pt. u-.M&M-11Wlefr. Ill '"-· -D' k a----• · !Siil """"' L.Mt!MI -1.on 1,..i.n: Hl e 1-1u~uonlh tournament IC 1ildl>01 ts . •lbteote. 1 blwl'ln tu .... • Mrr1C11N, going into last Monday night's '· 1toi.nc1 A.llJI.....,., wnt LA '·"' M llOflllo, :tt ~11co Mn. ~PM .everr m1nulesto San Jose! 7 1m to 1:30 pm. 8olh waya. 7:00·1:30· 10:00.11 :30 am·1 :00·2:30..C :00-5:30·7:00·1:30 pm. More 01t weekendl. Osborn, from Sand Springs, OkJa., red-llgllted in his semi· final top fuel duel with Jim Warren of Bakersfield. 'Mle top fuel winner for the evening was Kelly Brown of North Hollywood, who reached a 204.54 speed in 6.88 seconds. nd bu' the I d red l. 1rM ty ANlo'r ,. htlr'n "5 LOHO th.CH tPacltk S(llWtflslll"') rou ea was pa , 1 FO: e.1c11tr,'°"~~i. : ... 1 -DJ 1J111«1: 1 -,.11ow1t 11, ui Lltr••· and not by Belcher. .a. L-K.ct. eMdt t,41 NM, ts IYllbut, 1.011 ,.11co .,ld 111111 Why worry about a r11servallon whtn PSA has ovtr 180 I ti ghts I ""'-s. M~• suwr,__ orr.111Ct •A~ •u. 41 OOl'llto. m mtOtnl. 25 rid: day? g,,. •• ..,,_,..,. ...... mber achedule you c1n cir"' It 111'1:" new runner-up -and '· Otle Glrlrll!. "'iU LI'! ' ooct (Plff!Nillt \.1 ..... )-m ,,,..,.: " -· ..... 'I that's realJy the only source of I: b ... ll"""°di,'""~• , ·~,"'" :,:. J 1~ berrKUCI., 1Jtt *" l.llf bonito. around In yO!Jr head. Why rer:iember lowest ral'ls1 Or all Jell? Dave ~eebe of Anaheim drove JoHn A1azmanian'1 Bar- racuda•fJinny car to a 7.61 se-- cond -197.3' victory ln the funny car division. Runne.rup was Ed Lenhart of Long Beach. 't nl . Anah Im ' Ii" II er G 1111 I> n flltk 11th, 4 lllltltlut. '""""'' ll'lerl 0 t I S F I Oakl d S exc1 eme ·~ IS e 's 11: . sc ,..e,, 1 trne ,,1i? _105 1,...1,,., m 11err.cu<1i, i:zt bl••· r grea serv ce to an ranc.sco, e.n , an Marty Anderson, wtiG rolled a 1 : R~~l":' ).~~T;,'1101 ::1n 221 11o11110, &11·--11 11111111'1: Jal t.o. Diego, ltld Sacramento? or l'lat k1ds under 12 hol ·938: four.game block last lt ~R~ut. W•••mll!ller '·!ti nHo, 2 "'"· I Mllb\lt. tly PSA (with their parent3) for halt fllll1 su1r M da !'· g Probtft, G~Grovt t, 1 SIAL llAClt-1116 •nt'-": H Mr· on y. He's only 42 pins j ·~·-t•l11V•11tvt.1 r.cude, Vt 111111111, :1t1MM11e11, n wentareaervaUon7 JustcPS\':ll rtravelqent I the I d l · Al • "' tMJ helllbUI, :U rod; CCIII, 11.-IG l i'I" • e.t away rom ea . "''" 'i ..J, _ ,•-· 1, .,_., ., ..,,,., 11 or Yrf'l.ltlltlname airlines. _.,.. .... Belcher slipped ba~y to ~··~"i:~l::i:~~=~~·~~~!;;,~·~J.~··..,~~~~~.;;;;"."'_·~.,~·~·~ff~ .. ~-........ ~~·".'.':·~~~_:_~===========================================~ thi.rd with an 833 last week. - Willie Barsch of Los Angeles downed · Leon Fitzgerald of Fullerton in the fuel altered final with a 7.68 -J98.23 clocking, Gas supercharged winner was Manuel Herrera ol Montebello. Next major event on OClR's calendar ii tbe handicapper's championship Saturday. Street racers will have a shot at a $1,500 prize under the popular dla.J.your-own ban· dieap system. The 16 semtfinalists continue until after next Monday 's round, when the field will be pared to the final rour. The )"inner wilt then be decided Monday, Aug. 15. He'll then take on the winner or a similar tournament under war, at San FraDcisco's L&L Caste Lanes. That match will be a horn~ and-home confrontation over ~ Labor Day weekend. The current San Franciseti El1ms leader is Don Bell who has a !Of.pin lead over his closely bunched pursuers. MULLEN &BLUE I I GRODl:NS SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE Don't miu this onee·1-seuon event ••• your opportuni1y to get ftmOUl brand footwear at SUBSTANTIALSAVINGSI Choose t!ip.-ons ... boots ... handsewns ... dress oxfords. Even the newest styles are included in this speci1l sat11. Positively final wt11kl Coma in todav tor best selection of stvl• and 1ii:a. And ~I MULLEN &BLUE I I GRODJ:NS SOUTH COAST PLAZA lrlstol et S.. Di.t• fwy., C"'9 ~ ... ANAHEIM · lrfftlw•y·AMhel111 c .. m. IKll4 • L..,. Sears When You Pay Too Liltle For A Brake Job ••• You C.t TOO LITl'LE! Snn will QOI: ,giYe_J'C'U-•"Too Linle• B. Job at ANY PRICE! Your dritioa SAFETY d KIO im. porwu. Sun will price your Bnke Job • reuooM>Jr • ~ 1ib&e ••• cons.isteot wilh SAFETY. Sea Btal:e Jobi psot"ide wt.. )'Oil abould ti.tie 10 make JCNt bnftj -.Ork bat mad a.. ~ If you wmc '"ana" the·(tc ~ able at eml CDllt. You baYC San iuwua: a( "SatisfetioD Guw.o-teed Or Your Mooey a.ck. .. Don't wait! tee Sc.I ibPC'(t '°"' bnkel for ufety.,. at DO cHrJe:., Heavy Daty Shocks GUARANTEE Check These 12 Reasom Included in Sears Brake Reline ......, Inspect Master . Cylinder ""Bonded Lining Installed on 4 Wheels ""Rebuild all 4 wheel cylinders ""Arc grind brake shoes ""Re&Urface all 4 brake drums ""Rep.ack front wheel bearings .... Inspect brake hoses ""Inspect and Adjust parking brakes 1""' Inspect grease seals .... Bleed all lines and add fluid .... Free adjustment j for life of lining I .... Road test for i brake reliability Ade Aboat Sean Convenient Cn:dit Pu 88*1 All American and Volbwa1on Can 'Chrysler products having 6 wheel cyliade:rs and cars with disc brakes slightly higher. Any necessary additiocal pans and labor na.il· able ac Sean low, low price! Regular '799 Save '232 Each 67 Each •Rugged •inlered iron piston and chrome rod • Patented Elaotomeler ring means no fading • Aluminum cooling fins prevent beaS build-up I· ALL PASSENGERS ON AIR WEST'S NEW SUPER DC-9's GET MORE LEGROOM THAN ON ANY OIHER AIRUNE IN THE UNmD STATES. tr lle•ry-Duty Sho.ck .U.Orb- tT f•il• doe to (1al11 m•leri1l1 •nd .,.·orlu:n•mhip or .,..e•rout while origin•I purch1"Cr owoA the <:11r, it will be Tepl1ced apon return, free. or chirp:. or lite po.t'- c1we priee will be f'efaaded. J( the deCeetiYe thock ab- IOtbu WU iB11lllJ.ed b7 Sean. we will in1t.U new Mock ab- eorber with no eb1rge for labor. •Built to wear far better than original obocks I L ,, I I lob Paley and Assoclatea INSURANCE 474 E. 17th St. COSTA MESA 642-6500 We call these new planes "Space'.:ships". sO call your Travel Agent or Air West-the extra space won't cost you extra. ' •Terrific at this low, low price! \ Expert Installation Available A.k About Seara Convenient c..,d.it Pl•lie · Satisfactio11 Guaranteed ~ Shop Monda1 1hn Sa11nlay or Your Money Back ~ 9:30 A.M. 10 9:30 P.M. llAIS. IOUOCI .\MD CO. ---------- --------··--..... • ··---·- HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES POR SALE 1 -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ HOUSES FOltSALI HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES POR SALE HOUSES l'Olt SALE HOUSES POR SALE G1n•r•I • 1000 General IOOI Gonoral IOOO General IOOI Goner•I 1000 Gonenl 1000 General 1000 H~ ... ch HOI HUll!lnf!an llNch HOI SHORE CLIFFS Atlractive Rustic Home Jiat listed on Evening Cah)'(lft Roed 3 Bedrooms, 7 Batha Uving room with Open bean1 ceillnc and Used brlek fftplace lt'a.mily room Gpftllo onto Speciouii patio ar y&rd too.000 .C.all John A·beU Res. 673-7365 HA"BO" Las Than $18,000 4 Bedrooms· 2 Baths For the wise shopper IJ1d I.ht handy man with a paiot brush and sharpf!ned lawn mower, you just can't bea1 this NEAR THE BEA.CM SHOPPING FOR A HOME ? TRAILER-TRADE Be Sure And Read Call, write or visit our office for your free Guaranteoed Ple or your mo-This Ad copy of our ••Homes For Living" magazine bile home. Exfban&e and 'th · 'Is mcwe up to NEWPORT the !!"..!lh In Jendtnc: law -WI pictures, prices and deta1 of our BEACH. Fine Dilt living _ won't '"1 Ull tell you how select listings in Newport Beach, Corona del ~tertain )'OUr friends in the mucb the payments are on Mar and Oosla.MO!L TRANSFERRING? Ask -mood poo1 _ BE thl• 4 bdroom °"''"" Parl< us for a "Homes For Uving" magazine from FREE or y ARD wOR.K borne, but we-can 18Y any part of the country. We have associate while you tnYel! Sound they're )Ow •nd they include offices throughout the U.S. RED CARPET greet! Watch your wife'• taxee, and we e&n aay tbal REALTY, 2025 W, B1lboa Blvd., Newport E!YN light up wbe't she di.a-the aYerage aMual lnlu. Beach 92660. (71 4) 675-6000. ewers the HUGE MASTER e!Jl rate ia S~t;t.. an f1IA ""!~~~~~~~~';'!~~~~~~~~!!'I BEDROOM SUITE, and Joan whkb metm you c1.11 ;; bath witb '·man-sized" ctt· adlJf1loe it, and \\"e CU'! 111.y G•n•r•I 1000 G•ner•I 1000 amlc shower!! Top value now mueh· U~ down pe.y--;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;, I -'--------·I for S29.960. Come. light ,your menl will be, but wt will • say it's well worth you're Here's What tire!!! 11.•hl1e to tind o.it, we can ,!11!11!1!1111!11!11!!1!~~~ j teU you m~ about It over Small Horse Ranch 2 BR 1 bath homr & 1arage c:ompletely Ienctd. T r y S2350 down. 20nalot Newport Hts Area ? BR 1 bath each. On l y fl7.500. Dream Kitchen Happens When '"' p1ioo,, but ,...·u h"• You Move .,...., , to call u. cauM: we don't To The Beach I .... """nom""• ..._ your eyes don't burn from smoa: becauSe therp isn't any, you reel better becau!!f! the a.ir is fresher, that cool Evenings Call 613-6116 afternon ocean bree-~ a n d Wh p 81/ OI ? that fresh salt air is the-y ay 2 /0 greatt'st, 100 Pxpensive! Assume 51/2°/o not lllO, you'd pay $26,500 for this holl.S1!: no matter where FHA At is OW'1'. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 29! E. 17th St., 646-44'4 -$l(SOO PRICE-ANO- llOO BRICKS 'Tis Th• Season Money Maker To Go llere i1 your chance to invest -Jn )'OUr future. 6 choice units Skinny Dlppn' d<>1e to the s. A . Country Privacy is the word lot this Oub. Pride of owneMp back bay executive b. o me throughoul with lath and featuf'inc a bMutiflll ~•ltd plaster construction and con- anci fill,el'@d pool 1urrounded crete driveways. Plenl)' of by landsc:apln&:; remi.pi~nt ircen llJ'et. S69.SOO and ot an island paradise, oU wcrtb it! the pool I.I a prof~ added, fully encloltd 1 u n room with upandible root that ope'hs or closf!1 autom•· llcally with thennostat con- trol, inside are l mastcr-siz.. ed bedroom!l and ~ ba.tl'Ll, built .in kitchen, 1eparate double <k'tached &ara&e and courtyard rntcy. $39.500 is 1 NO\V price, owner erud· ~ -see it &nd call 64M494 ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST "For A Wise 8~" Colesworlhy &· Co. 293 E. 17th St., 41~4~6 ~44~941 ~C~ot~t!!a!...Ma~s!!a!..._ _ _!l!!!IOI -ASSUME $Ii.ODO 6% G.I. LOAN FHA-VA EASTSIDE MOVE IN BEFORE SCHOOL STARTS New homes, ready to move ln, 'h mlle from beach. First payment up to 60 dJ ys after move in. Tarrne VA/FHA. from $22.990. CORAL SHORES (on Garfield. between Beach 962°1353 & Magnolia . ----------- Newport leach 12«1 Lido Isla II.II DELUXE Condo, m a n y xtras. 2 Br, 'Z Ba pool S28,500. Xlnt terms. A,t. 646--0132 Nawport Haight• 1210 A COIY PLACE to <:Orne home to. Used brick fireplace, Knotty-pine kit. 3 BR., Lana.i-plUJ rm for boat or trailer storage .. $32,500. Graham R•alty 646-2414 Near Newport Post Ofiice 1 YEAR OLOI ELEGANT 2-story custom home featured in '69 Lklo Home Tour. A real ••must see" tor the quality bolne buyer. $84.500. LIDO REAL TY INC. 3400 Via Lido 613..sa.JO OELUXE LOCATION On cor. Udo Piazza, klvely front pe.tio. Room for boat Dbl. aar. 2 L&e. bdrm1., 2 bas. $61,500. Ca.n assume ""'" R. C. GREER, RN.lt,y cu!ie with ROOM FOR Close ·111 homt on i•orner R-~ BOAT? All t'lectric kitchen~ Int. Bedroom 11•lll handlr Quiet SI.reel! VACANT and king-s1ied bed, All this for must be sold NO\V~ ! ! H o w SZ3,500. about $l800 00\VN. h it \1'8S but it jUSI IJappE'ns to 178.00 moftth ht> al 1he beoch and it's TOT Al. sharp only fi yt'ars old. Comt' , to \\'here the smog and heat Don I 11o•orry about quality. lsn'I. 646-4494 ing. you don't have lo, just take it over at 5\~%. it"s at 4. bedroom 2 bath bomt, built in kitchen, covered pa- tio, there·, evt>n a play house in the back yatd, ex- ccllent Costa Mesa area, Call today. r.111ke up the massive pa tio~ Where in the world can you llnd a 3 bedroom, :! balh home, NEAR THE BEACH with elt>ctrk built-ins, ext'f'l- lent carpet, boat door to back yard . .and VACANT!! LESS THAN $2.000 00\VN!! At $141 per month TOTAL~! Lovely shake roof h o m e l\0ilh 3 large betlroo1ns-and 2 puliman baths! \Valk to Park!! Carpets and drapes. ALI. ELECTRIC KITOIEN AND DISHWASHER! Love- ly cWitom fire place a n d beam cdlln&" family room! Gorgeou8 back y1trd w i t h COVER.ED -.PATIO, a n d block wall fencing. lma&I~ a 3 bedroom, 2 bath N•w~ Shores 1220 OOme on ti~ "astside. Larg~ I '--3"9'"R-~2B~ •. --235-C.-,-.,- Pnjo)'ab!e bat·k yard with family si:er oovert'd patio. S14 ,950 W/11,500 down or All this wilh only 1100 IOl al S25,950 w/M,oo:> nt down to l35;; Vi.a Lido fi73-S300 CllARMlNG 2 Bedrm, beam criling, 1t~et to slrecl, xlnt t:Ond, l'oom for ex'J)l.n. $39.1:-.0. 213-199-8771 down. liee. inside call 673-1754 WE SELL A HOME Lac enmyer EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 546-2313 81ycrnt 1223 Balboe Island 135.1 20.U Westclifl Dr. 646-7711 Open Eves. TRADER'S DELIGHT You wiU be delighted with this oulslanding 4 bdrm 3 bath hoine + guest house. Submlt YOUR PROPERTY in exchang" for th is oul· standing homr with 1n- comf'. Priced at on I y $38.950. • co:Ts WALLACE REALTC>a$ 516 4141-f()pooo _,,., $21,500 NEW CARPET NO QUALIFYING Everyone cap. assume this high FHA }oan, 546-9521 or 540-6631 Gl!!I] J K "NICHOLS 1860 Newport Blvd , Q;t Rltr. . 646-3928 Eves. '46-2290 BACK BAY EXECUTIVE HOME 11. ~autilul 3 bedroom ho1ne with his and hers balhs, a pool 5urrounded by lush lroplc.:il landscaping, large added sun room, lanai or ca- bana for your entertaining convenience, t.'&ll today for appl, O'\Yflef' anxious, •sking $39,500. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th $t .. 646-4494 ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St., 646-4494 BEACH LIVING AT ITS BEST this two bedroom 2 bath ho1ne has a den, 2 patios. an atrl\lro oU the master bed· WE SELL A HOME EVERY, 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 27(1) Hartxir Blvd. at Adams 545-9491 ORANGE COUNTY'S 1,....,,.°"'._",.'t,.;1,.•,.P,.Miiiiiiii LARGEST 1• room. courtyru'd entry, 293 E. 17th St., 646-4494 forced air heal. brick fire-· ---Stwi> 3 bdrm 2 bath Condo. REDUCED $1000 plarc and much more. Sleep In choice localjon across to the sound of the 8Url ifs lrom pool &: elub house. right at the beach. S26,500 Priced· for quick salt!. ~ Sh1ggiestl PERRON -..1~ ~ ....... ··1•• WE SELL .A HOME EVERY JI MINUTES Walker & Lee 7682 Edinger &.124455 or ~140 Opt'n eves. O THE REAL '"\.. ESTATERS • • * * * * Horne & Income 3 BR. ho~ with 2 BR, ttnt- al plu1 room to expand on huge 66x:300 R·2 101. Enjoy plum, figs, oranges & other fru it !f'C(?S, quiet East.side LIDO'S FINEST toe. """ '"" '"'' m.500. REPOSSESSION IN BAYCREST Large 4 bedrooms, S bath, all I~ Cll!lk>m luxury a.p.. pointmenlll prolesaionally lal'ldscaped. Drive by 19117 Santiago, call owner fM appoinlment to see. Jo"1exlble terms. Phone 642·2835. Beyahor•t. 122.1 $1 97 500 Call 5'ID-ll.51. lleritage Real ' Estate fOpt>n evesl MAGNOLIA P.1.ANOR 5 BR . -I 6 8;1. + drn • * * * • * Newport's moat Beaut. 2-f;ty, + ram. rm. 1-2 wet bnrs.1 ~====-0---.,.,,.,-=~ I colonial home. 1,;, blk. trom 5,00l IQ. fl .. of ('UslOm IUX· FIXER-UPPER S 2 O • g ;, O prjv, beat h &: bay club. lm· u-;" COfllp. nrlvac, 00 3 Priced !or ; m m e d i a I e -~"' 0 s -• ., "' ... i bl """"· poi. pl'n u.,...ay. lots. One o( lhP Wesl'• out-anle-&ubni t .-ny reasoiia e 245(1 Marino Dr. Owner: ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST Tilt' shilggil!:st shag car- prt in town ill in thIS 3 BR Mesa Verde home. atandinjt: rnidencPs. offer. Eastside Costa P.fe&a 5"4S-23Sl. I Joe Clart.son -:\BR, hwd. Uts., lam. rm. ========= 642· n1 Anytim• ....... -needs tender, loving CM'f'. Do Sho 1227 Oiarm1ng decor, many · 11 h I \t.-Vff res 29! E. 17th St., 64M4'4 NEWPORT--Bring o ers -ca;; a""· lea ture-s &. cklsf, lo Ille C•LL 54~4 South Coa11l oil t 3210 I " * UNIQUELY Try Now ts.~• owa.. 51/•% LOAN R~al E8tatt Dille~nt "Old World" Con-8 La Ba.ycreset. 4 Bedroom•. llugE" Colllwell, Laker & Co.1 -~1"°M'"MA~C~.-o=u~P"L"E'"X,,.-1eompora.ry, •xecutlve lux-uy ter master auiteo, 2~ baths, for-550 Newport Cenlf't Or. 1 ~l22 Greenvalley, ·rut1tin ury home. Unobstrueted ,, __ ,., ..:..4.1" 1;v, in TIDS --• din'!• -m 2 llre"'·"-· '"" 'll>" ..... .., '"" · .,......... NPwport Beach, Cnlil. 2 Bdrn\s., :t baths. Beaut Bay I: Min VU-most rma. QUALITY 3 bedroom 2 bath MESA es, family room. 540..1720 133-0700 644-2430 landscaped, a P r Ink It r a. 5000 sq •ft. 4 Br, 41,1: ba + DEL MAR home for~ per l.--oi--iii::===:iiiiiiiiliiilT~A~R~B"'E~L:.'L:!,29'.'.5~5-'H~•~r~bo~r I!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!! ... ..,,,..,...., $35.i:JO. m.aicls qtn. Ideal for enter-BAYFRONT month for one year -some POUNDING SURf l.ARGE Spanillb bomf"on 1\~ $17,500 TOTAL PR.ICE-CORBIN-MARTIN tainina:. Easy mainl. lmmed Pier I; float. A very beaut!· down now and buy biter. fl'!\ ac. tor horsfs, in Nt11o•port $1,750 DOWN WITH REALTORS. 6T:>-lli62 occupancy. Fumished. fuJ, fonnal 3 bedroom, pan. 11\arp and clean. Don '1 Back Bay area-30 11c. in 5165 monthly! 4 bedroomi, 2 3036 E. C.."lt. Hwy, CdM Sli8,000. Assume 6% % loan. eled den hor:ne. Deccnted make a n1i1take -call now. is only 11teps away from this mountains nr. EI 1 I n or . baths, EI.ECffilC BUILT-ALL 3 BR'11-BY OWNER Box 1632 N.B. 548-Tl49. .. Own ~2313 3 BR 2 bath 'CORONA DEL TI4/646-56111 JN KITCHEN!!! I.Aw main-,.~n V•'•to,·,, 119,500 GI in exqwSJte taste. tt' MAR home localed on Dah-1 ========= ~ " mu!! i;ell NO\V. Rtoduced bo b. Cor lenance yard and NEAR 1903 }o~ederal S21.000 5%. lia Street la ve 1i . 1 ;G='="=a=r=a=l=====l=OOl=.I TH.E BEACH!!! 1\vo blocks ~"" w-•n,1 121,500 6" $15,000. Offered at Sl39,SOO. ) ~ .. .,. NEW MA TH \Viii consider $30,000 down. ona • $)7,500 lo .1Chool and shopping! This 20:J Susannah S26.SOO 5~ University P1rk 1237 212 Sapphira 3 Br, 2 Ba &. den. U X 30 brick pe.Uo, 6.posed beam ce:ilin&s, tGmpiettly re.mod. By owner $52,500. 6T>0:20f. Huntington llMch 1400 $20,200 FULL PRICE IBA Loan at 5% % 11.'ilh to- tal payment of $123 P.J.T.t. Real 1ha11> doll house with 3 queen 11iie bedroom!, Gor- &POU8 pullman bath. Any- one qualifies. Huge 75 x 100 lot 11o·ith double garqe. lloOH" has a built in vac· uum. Sub1ni1 your down to WE SELL A HOME EVERY !I MINUTES Walker & Lee 1682 Edinger 142-4~ or 541).5140 Open eves. WALK TO BEACH You own lhe land, 4 bdrms, completely carpeted I< dta~ ed, built-in rang:e ~ o ven, very large family room, aep. &rale living room witb fitt. place, &ervice potth, pa~ try, shake roof, Fenced .&: landscaped. Owner out of i t.ate -Take over bis loa.n with $3500 down -no 2nd, sm ~r month incfudifl8 laXea. Call to see mis sacrifice. FOREST E. 6 year yoong c!Pan-e r upper Large take over loans 29P.f @ 6lh% + 0\VC 2nd • b 0 L s 0 N ii on quk-t slrHt and reed)! ee548--t059ee equal 5 BR In low 40'a w/ 10hft mGCftG Owner Noeds Halpl to mov, '" NOW"' low DP. Courtyard Pool Immediate possession -big Newport WE SELL A HOME BY OWNER: Eastside CM. 3 • Red Hill Realty (714) 642-8235 5 bdrm Carriag" Estates t Bdrm, bltn kitchen. natural "Forever Vic,v'' New \Veils' 901 Dover Drive, Suite 120 tabout 2900 sq Ill with pool • EVERY 31 MINUTES birch cabinets. 66xl26' lot 18008 Culver Dr., Irvine ~··· pJa.n rea~y 1or Sept_ deliv-Ne11.1>011 Beach in top Mesa Verde location. Victori1 Inc. Realtors wa·1 ker & Lee w/ alley acce!S for boa.I or OPEN 9 AM·S PM Sll-al20 ery. 4. BR J'.11 ba, PQ\\'der BEACH BARGAINS Out of area owl'lf'r making 6'6-lll I SPANISH -SENOR ~ tniltt. 61,~% loan can 8tie 2 YEARS YOUNG room, lam rm, "''/bar & doUble payments -11o•an1s 2TOO Harbor Blvd. al Adams assumed . .$24,950. 64.2-417 This .lovely 3 BR. I< family frplc formal dining room, 3 Br., ram . rm. 2 Ba. $26,51)) oiler. reasonable or not! Anytim• ~ BEDROOM S 545-!M.Sl BY OWNER: Clean 3 Bdnn rm. Dome. &aut. lndscpd. 19x31' pool. l'iiijjifij;jjii'ij;;jijjill N "•"' I< avail. almo111 immed. Span ish t>\egance. 4 Opt'n'li1 9 Pt.t Ea1tsid e. tw '''"'6 Roy J. Ward Co. 2-Sty. a·franu: charmrr S46-~llO large bedrooms. 2 t ilt!<I 0 carpeting. Extra Ira; Ya rd $36,500 iBayCl't'st Offit'('•. S29,500 (L'£~eTL~~ "UltT+W'"· 1 baths. Spanish tile entry. wner 523,900. 646--068;, PROPERTIES WEST 1430 Galaxy Dr. 6.16-l;p() >Uln , ...... _,... Ill 11111 ~1 as&iVC' double fireplace. w.·11 F1'nance """'='==-.,.·B"""'"r =-=·I um Bay11ide, N.B, bia..4130 4 Br. J Ba. 11r oi•can $32.000 wuuAcilmcl ""'-·'""" Open flame cooking in B't' O\VNER: l R. am rm, Santa Ana Heights ":;~=:=::::::~:::::=::::::1 "gour1nct kitchen + de-rmagine a 20 x 30 )i\•ing )~· BA, crpll, drpB, bHm. Coron• d1I Mar 12SO 1·!->ty. A-lrame. lo\\' al $2:l.SOO • CONDOMINIUM luxe built-ins. Huge play room, 3 bath11 -l electric new dishwhr, ht wtr htr I: CAYWOOD REALTY * 3 BR 1* bath, hdwood Spanking clean 3 bdrm room Rlld only 529.950. kitchen. LBrgr pool, lot 125' displ. f}:S,950. 642-5570 NEWLY LISTED l/2 ACRE 630; \V. Coast Hwv .. N.8. ,"""'w·' cpts / dr'P5.:._ trpWI~; in family .ection nf call now senor! 645-0303 xJOO.' 1.oncd for borses. 5 BY O\VNER-3 Bdnn., 11t. 2 Bdnn on corner Jot with i BR!. ._, J oue g a r agf",.,.,au.., ., ixer upper, Un ...... ieva-e 548-1290 e fenct'd yard. SU.500 J\'fonticello. 2 story with FHA LOAN 53/~ ;1, car garage, with large pev-baths, double 1arage, 1959 hdwd Hrs., forced a ir neat, ble value. adde'd panelir.g and l!d work are;i. -Compl<"lely • .:"":=:;"';::m;•:;:'Y:,;P"l""=>ts-=81=86= I lge. country-style k i I.; nr, DAVIDSON Rt•lty NEWP0$R1T 9 500 HEIGHTS * 3 BR t 1h baths, carpt"ts, shelving . Maintenanre $196 MONTH fcnc{'(! S79,;i{X}, No loon COllt, 1; 11hops and beach. Ufl,500. draJX'S, lar(::e fenced ya r tl . 546-5460 1.Ves. 545-5142 V & mlortabl Vacant_ immed, posscliSion, fret-living wi1h equity PAYS A LL lmv tnlerest ratr -a pcrtect Mei• Verde 1110 Delancy R•al Estate SAVE S \Yith 51' 90 GJ. ery C01.Y ' co e $20 750 build-up. Lo"' down, buv 2828 E Coast Hwy CdM Newport \Vest 3 BR 2 BA home. Most gracious living Wt,lls-.McCardl•, Rltrs. low priel" -$21,950, Assume fliA loan of ·. 6'6-7)71 LARGE Jot with playhouse. 3 • . 673.3770 ., home.% m"t 10 beach. CpU, l'OOln with in inviting fire-$24,700. No recs! :.i story Berlrnl, new wall-to-wall 1--=,_...=...,•=~- place, Excellent (cation. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 3 bedroom, 3 baths. crpts, t.m;hly pa i n te d , BY THE SEA drps. All CE kit. fenc-ed, 540.1720 548-7729 anytime FonnaJ din I n g room. Owner ~784 Owmlng 2 Br. + conv. den landscaped. sprinkle.I'll &; TARBELL 2955 H1rbor """"""""'"""",_...,..,I &parate family room. 1 ~~=,,_~,--,;o,--:=ol + formal din, rm.: attic patio. f>"'reshly painled & --l ONA LOT--Qualltv that '>''ill excite 4 BDR!\1., 2 811 ., crpts, space, 2 ltpl.: walled gar- \VCll cared for. f.!8,700. CONOO: l 'i!i !l'tory, 2 bdr, 1~ --MESA VER"'D'°E~-11 you. Price slashed $31,-drps, clean. Assume lo. den, VIE\V of ocean ar jet- Owner will c.a ...... , 2nd. 22022 ba. cprs. dr""'. wel bar, bit· $2,000 Own $23,950 000. 1clle.r to help in fin-ll•0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii•I FHA. $27,850 owner M5-64r3 ty SI 0 "-h A "J ... ~ ~ .. _d 1 bath ho . h n · I 645 o·30·1 3 BR $17 950 . eps o .....,ac. ssumt Ca · trano Ln HB 540-9540 in kit. 2-car gar. bit-in strac .. ""' rooin, mr Wll anre. ia -v. . . __ % pis • · ... 3 bedroom 2 bath rental unit. Hard 10 rind 111 1hi.~ lo11o• priet! - , loan at 6~ . $108,500. or 968--lll2 SJ!L, pool priv. f\iust sce 10 Out t star(' owner. in such a desirable location. BEACH LIVING College P&rk lllS Wtilker Rlty. 675-5200 BY O\VNER $73,900 a pprec. sn.soo. a45-26J7 HARRY A. BOGGS l Bedrooms. 2 SC"patate \\-'alk to eXL-tllen1 shop.. -~ 3 B<lnn .. 2 bo .. """" ,,,,.., i, y"" Ad'"''"'""'"'""' R ,.,, Pho ~""~ bat•• B""'·'" rang, & , • ., LARGE DUPLEX p;ng Swimm;n, _1 • OUIET OOUBLE w·ChOIYd CHBSQARMER •• ea flt ilU4·uo.>• • • """ \Vcsl Bay Ave.. duplex. 3 Br. II oul oor center frplc. 2 patios. 6~ ~ Cl 0Sol moo0.,aln;~~78be lookin& Jor sunny kitchen 540-1770. Sand pebble's throw recreation an!& only lihelte,.;n., trtts. Below b""'. Joan. 646-7034 -scx;K IT TO 'EM? TARBELL 2955 H•rbor from that wonderful sea. sleps away, Adult liv· 2 ba. lower; l ·BR, 1-ba.. up. -~... '"J l':"'=":'=====;:::-:::-==:===="".':=:..:::==':"====::;==l"""'""'"'"'""'""""'"'"iii•ll Two large bedroomli and ""'r. CUlltom built attractive on R-2 lot for extra income. ing at il!I best. ReaM>n· ,,. o I 133 ooo G.n.r.I IOOI Gan.r.I IOOI ~-n•r•I 1000 2 balhs each, Larg~ kit· units, 3 car gar. All in a n Y • · ..,.. OCEANFRONT chen + deluxe built·ins. able tenns will buy this qulet neighborhood, S59,000, Hal Pinchln & A11oc. 3 BR borne on excellent Sun deck!-Great 1oca-beauty. BURR WHITE 3900 E. Con.at Hwy, 6T>4392 tlon! Good rents! Only COAn beach; $34,950. $38,500. Tod a y '!I best • REALTOR OCEAN VIEW 4 BR, 3 BA. G•or9.,ero!!i:rolliR1mson buy! Call now 645·0303 A&. 2901 Newpor1 Blvd., N.B. t 1 m nn + 500 llQ. fl . ~-u.. W LLACI 6~ 642-2253 Evei. sundeck. Guest rm 1; ba ad· 673-050 Eves. 61l-t564 TAK E OVER Jl/1 °/.. REALTORS ja.~nt to 1ua.ge. L rg '"'~""""'""'~~'!'!!!!!'II S77.250 AS&U11'"1e 5!4 'lo I' FANTASTIC BUY S4Ml41-boatl.,.rport. All on ti' le< S©~l!A.-L&"B~s· Sol.,. a S-""pl< S=mbl•d Won! Puzzl< for a Chwcklc FARM STYLE 2·Slory home, l Bdrm1. ' baths + lge, recreation room . I n I e r c om 1yatem throughout. Lee. CUI de Sac lot. Owner moYing out of lila te and must tell. Onl,y S2ll.!IOO. MUTUAL REALTY 142-14!1 Anytime GLE:N ~fAR by O\vner: 4 Bdnn 1% baths. lireplace, new paint inside I: out. Very clean. Good nei&}tborhood. liOO sqfl patio. Lots of ce- ment It. raised planters. C11rage, htllldymans dttam, cabls. 1 ml. all cha.In 1tores, \\'alk to elem. IK'h. 1 mi. to HS 2 mi, to JC $416,500. Prine only. 962-I&:iS -FATRMONT_P.LACE- Corner 101 n1a.kes it great for boat/trailer ownt'r. Got· geous 4 BR. home with hun- drcd11 of e:-clras makes It great for any family. sm pays all, VA Loan. Rex L. Hodgas, Riiy. 84i-2.l25 --oiiTCH HA""'V""E~N,.- 5 MIN. to Doualas a: Frwy. 3 B<lrms., 11'. baths. Maftl- lmpl'Ovements. 22x30 Palio. Block fence. 10' comer. Take over 5\).,_ G.t. Owner ttan!. BRASHEAR REALTY 847-8.jJI 536-2123 Ewa. Assume Sl/40/o (~ Eftftl J Cbllege.Parklrl3B<inn, 1'-' simple lot. $74,900. 219 Ft1nt.astlc $20,900 lOM. -,...,.. "P Ba. f're!;h pamt In A out. By L.flr~pur, CdM. ow n er. • WESJlNGHOUSE $141 MO. PAYS All No r~. One of 35 bl!au-ll :::::::::::=:::=:::;:::;::i .:•;::"""':=o,· 54~'""3~1====::::: 6r:>--075l _ VACANT o~ .. J:ers,_c;. t Sow to fomi tow limp!. word&. IOITSEW I . I' I I r I . ITIDOT I .' I ITI' . ICALIL Ii I I I ........ cbnbbo!L 1ha po. ":::'.-::::'.:·=-:=:~-=:_~grams ahe wak:MI an TV ore I""" 0 -:. cs.light. IVOXTER I 8 -lt "'"1 ...;l,_;.,l-=.;l'~l--1 ~ e-:= :-... "::. ~ " -" -. you d~ frOM Wp No. 3 belovt. & ~~~HE~~~~f~[nflS I' r r 14 11 I' I' I C) IJN5CRAM8L£ l £TTERS TO I I Glf AN:!iW~I! I I I I I I $21,950 tlful town homes In ex-II --· -- J •·-" 2 "" h 2 f']Ul!\v!" Nt'llo'fJOrl fkoach H 1 H 1 N rt 8H h 1200 LOVEL y FINISH BONUS R~I "'""'rooni. vol ' r 1 r area. TotAI prlet< $23,250. orseS. OrseJ. ewpo C B-.. d-r llonie . I",.,..._,, 3 BR. l: df"n. Lush cpts, CM/. i;arsgc. E'(crllent condition, T "'"' """' -» 1""" t hlk -'i nkl HARRY A. BOGGS 2 "xtr11 l11r1:!" bedrooms. CharmingvitwcwtomhOml'. WATERFRON LeM than a yr, okl. Beaut, p&lO, w .... spl'i era. \ R!"alty Phon{' 962-6637 $19,995 No Down G.I. Monthly payrnentA less than rent! Loads ol charm, a 11 modem k1tchen 1pa.ck>us living I dlnlnc rom. TARBELL 146 0604 ASSUME 5 ~% LOAN S182, mo, i1X!1'1, prln.. int., taxes, IM. -that'• all -3 BR + htd. pool wtU deeked, bit-In ldtch. Quality w/w C1l'tJI I driis.' 2 bA . S31.lXI. P.W.C. .146-5440 -OUPL EX/G.I. 2 baths. fire1i lace, built-........... I "---3 bd'm " < 8 I d" boat are.a Only S28 500 · low 1111 + club house and ~"'''-"' or '""""''" ··• Qulel estful, with no irat-r .. am. rm .• in. rm.: • .~ supt'r pool Only 10,1~ bathlll, 2 fireplaces. in bc1111-fie or parking problem. Ex-2'1, balh!I ft 2 trple5. Adull dn ttlA no dn GJ. dn. liurryl Call 645-0303 tlful condition. Owner anKI-cifing view I.tom 6() rt pa· ~pied. Prof, lnditef.1, H~FFOAL REALTY OUA. Biie~ Ba,y. t io, Pier anct dock wilh CMthlr~ Reil E1tate 8740 \Varner, F.V. 847-4405 51/, '!. GI -JEAN SMITH "°m for IO IL. bo&L 3 8'd· • 675-2'03 • VETS $I 62 MONTH Realtor """"'· 2 "°""· spic and " BLUFFS " s.. our '"'' on tho v....,t apan condition ttaroupout. r......tJ end unit 1 level 3 I NEWPORT BEACH &16.3255 168.51». "" be ,... ...,.. Bii.'1'> BA • .,.;tom a-Pi. = ~~ '::!",! Beat high lnlet'ellll lAJ'le 400 E. 17d:I St., Coeta Ml"IA Umt, drpa, atru, 2 r-Uos, hand)' lll on QPC'OWd c:rtdit. CIJJ cu.1tom lwo bedroom to pool, $30.aM> 81 ownt!f. Art.Slo.Jt.T~S REALTY home in Newporl Hghts. Vett-Ho On. Pymt. 64f.1l79. •&n4SU, E'Vtt:. 538--4551 Plenty of llah t .l charm. ~Cd;;,.;;1:-.. • .. ;; .. ;;;;.~;;;~c;NEA;;;;o;R;-;;~;;;;;;~ 1 ..::c..:::""..;;;~:;_;,c;;:.. __ l Alley 11.cctflS. High o.r. Neat .. and tamlJ.y rm. on " "''Y~I ~nL< 4 BEDROOM loan at $20,600. Room oorner In )o~ly ~1caa dcl OCEAN. 3 Br. 3\i ba., den. Tri-level 2•~ Ba , tam rm. tor pool, bolt. camJ)ff. fl lar. Room for boat, trailtt, O\VNER'S SAcrunCE 2 frpl, din rm. 3 Gar. Can a-p11, bltu, etc, '"""' Only $26,900. Inttrutcd' etc. 4 or 5 BR, 2 mo. old Harbor build anoir.er hOme on lot. loan. no J)ointa. Principals Call 64.S-0303. llUls 1>o1ne. LR. OR. Fain. Some vic11.·, nr, beltl.Ch & nll Owner, !·12-4606. ~4&·5110 n with 1-1 • ·--' D-8hoPf. Bkr. 673-2010", lnt¥cint11Wthettil'l .,, .,..., °"' =~=c-=-oc,.---,.,, -1 BY 0\\nt'r, Htintfnaton Cres1 645°0303 Or rllA ternltt. Livr r' n I I\~ T·lal'hor Crnt<'t' LLEG E REALTY Crph1, d~. murtY Xtras. LGE. hilltop lot. Perm. v1tw Spanish 2 mior')'. ttd lilt l!CIDAdlml~H1tbol',c.M Xlnt fina.ncina. ~l48-3281 or (IC('an & hlllit. PrlvAC)'. roof 1 DR 2J' BA de (M"r. 2 BR. r itl'h, Garai::es. 22!1.l Jf11.rbor Blvd., C.:'-1. nlE QUICKER YOU CALL. Rcallor 613-20!0 tam: rm. din ,;,, 3 ~ . ..:;.: l11E QUIO<Ut YOU SEU.. DI.al 642«71 tor-~ULTS 1714 )968-2092 ------------------· SOCK tT TO 'EM! , __ s_c_R_A_M_·_L_ET_s_A_N_s_w_E-1R_1_N_c_LA_s_s_1_F1_c_A_TI_o_N_a_2_0_0_ .!;.!:mr;:;,,~~~':: 64"'"' CHARGE,.,.,_,.,,, ..... ·1 I -....-.. .. -......... ,... .. . ..... . ·- \ . -' • WITH · Don't iust SIT there! Grab hold of the BIG action today! Dial Direct: 642~5678 Just say: "CHARGE IT!" !North County, 540·1220, toll free) • I IT'S EASY TO PINCH PENNIES-EVEN DOLLARS / . PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS NEW-LOW-RATE ·3 LINES l T!MES ·-.. $2.00 ANY ITEM $ OR LESS . e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e e NO ITEM OVER $50 e NO COMMERCIAL FIRMS e e NO COPY CHANG ES e NO ABBREVIATIONS e \ Let PILOT PENNY PINCHER Want Ads Work for YOU! ' • I I . • • J • .HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS HoUMt Furnished RENTALS Ho_. Unfumlahed Huntington Botch 14001-------- RENTALS Aph. Fuml.,,.. RENTALS Apia. !'urnJohod Coron1 dtl Mar 2250 Ntw)l<>rt llt•<h 3200 Gontrol 4000 Oran,. County 4600 $19,850 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;::,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1-------S!N'Gu< ~ ..iul11, ~,. 4 Bit Bedrooms .t BR. 3 BA. $400. mo. &0'7"!• HOtt.DAY ,PLAZA ury ...,ae. apb. w/Ml c.omtort qualil)'. 4 batl11. Begonia. Alao unfurn . 8/1 DELUXE, 1paeklui 1 Bdrm. recrtltlon.f.o.cUltlea & tom· Lovely kllehen, Built.ins. 673-3800 or 675-0023. TOWNHOUSES Furn apt. SW.. PIU& utll. p!t!ott' prfvtcy. south 81,y ~e landsca~ yard. I-========= 3 Bedroom, 21i; batbl; 2 car ~l!ated pool, Ample park· O ub Aptl. m So. TARBELL 142-6691 Lido lite 2351 carport. Built-int &: fit't'· 1fli· No cbildtt!n -I1D peta. =urst Maf'lelm (nt> Senti Ant 1620 \VATERFRONT HOM~ ~~~ts • dr.pe,. s:. !'°:~~~:~pping. ====··===== Avail. Aug, lS by week or ALSO AdultA:. avail nowt Broker G•!ct!n Grove 4610 BY Owner 1750 sq. fl. 3 BR month. 224 Via Lido NtmJ, 2 Bedroom, 2 bllth.s, buUt·i.us &15--0Ul JoCal. -1 libra.ry. Auume 6%. ]41? WE 4-0920 or BR 0..4547 &. fireplace, Carpets & dra· _ SINGLE YoWll Adult• Lu.i:· Shawnee, SA. 540-9258 HAPPY · t tal ho $225 U! ( at M .ClQO ury pnfen aplJ. with cowt. I-=========-=-2 "'-"'•" "2~-"h me. pe1. mon ' o I Ill try club atmO!!phe:re. and L1guna Be1ch 1705 .._ .. ~ 6e~MQ~· lay le Beach complel8 privacy. SOUTA Realty, inc. $30.oo· wk. up BAY CLUB APTS moo PRICE REDUCED ruRN -I BR, 3 BA, conlemp. 901 Dover Dr., NB Suite 126 a 0 eek th CHAPt-.fAN Ave., G a rd en *VIEW HOME* Ntwly dee. Avail Sept. 13, 64f>.2DOO Eves. 548.6966 • St~~w. aa· cmoh. ".,,·.. 1 ·=G=""=' =(TI='=)=-=_,=·==-'vntr rental or yrly. 675-361J.1 1 .. '!!!~!""~~~!"""""' BY OWNER 1: e tncl Util.s Is Phone serv. - PERFECT condition! AfttJ>I Huntington Be1ch 2400 4hoBDRM./12 ~th ~crest a Maid~. TY e.vail, l',!un1 &e1ch 4705 see interior to appreciate! me w en~ ya ..... AJ. •NI!\' Cafe & &r 100 CLIFF DRIVE 3 BR, 2 BA. Jorge Jiving m1, S 15 0, ATT R ACTIVE tractive, modern Cape Cod. 2376 Newport mvd. 543-9755 fi~plaee, dinette, all elec-spacious, air cond. mobUe Ch!ldren ok. Ntar schools. WANTED-COUPLE ~ :1:: F~ hie incl kitcllen. Tflermo home In desirable location $350 monthly lease. l,.or 8~ MODERN FURN 2 BR controls each room , Beamed Teacher/owner on leave. pointmenl Call 543-2914 Walk1.!f.K_D"y"""",." .. '°le.,.Beacb 2264 Maple by Wll90n ua ... .,, ceiling thnt-0u1, \val! to wall Avail Sept 7lh. Can be seen $775. 3 BR. fam, rm., .,, __ 1 Sha Bl ~« N ~2"9 carpelS, drapes, lge cor lot. by appt. References req'd. gardener incl, frplc. Chil-n..... • rp_ tns. -· 0 .. "" - shrubs. Good deal for C.l. 536-2'288. drt:n & peb O.K. Bkr. 534-pets. Kida over 16. Call 2 BR duplex, fum Ir unturn, O\vner moving to ranch. 6980. I --o:"~1~1"'=01.~2L!""~/~S~l=Wl35o.=Oo--nr Vic H u Io , new Prier-S37,700. Vacation Rentala 2900 2 BEDROOM"°uble earage. CHATEAU la POINTE ~E,~1056d_rps, frpl, Ii'. a r , MAKE OFFER fenced ·-...a _ NEWPORT Lovely 2 Br. tum, apt Pool, ...,., wn··-po Bo 914 La DUPLEX with view, private: '"'" carport: adults, no pets NICE 2 "-'-2 Ba u:-• • x • guna HEIGHTS. $185 month, 421 ocw·ni.. ·• yr. Beach or call 494-4726 any. avail. "'·eekly during Aug· Catalina Drive. $150 Mo, plus utilllles round Sl?S. Patio, 538-2095. time Sept. 2 Bdrms, fireplace, 1941 POMONA, C.M. . garage. 2001~ Kings Rd. "PARR UDO", like new, 21-,,====-,_,,=--,,,,.-ftENTAL~ VIEW HOME • • A'l'TRACTIVE, I BR., utlr1. • t U I . h~ 548--2394 alter 6 pm. Br, 2 Ba., rrplc., pool. 2 car pd. S'99.SO. \Vant older, ,..p s. n urn1s wu RIN1'Al.S llENTALS " Apts. Unlurnlahod Apll. Unfurnished Cotto M-. 5100 L"r•• llooch 5705 COllSIRllCTIOll JUST COM9U11NG Horbor Holghll Fcwr 2 &: 3 BR UNfl'S au with flreplact'l. dishwuhm " 2 bath&. LU:<URIOUS Modern~ 8', 2 Bil, bltlnt, actults1 no pilUJ, 1235. 411.1«$. REAL ESTATE Gen1r1I 5990 • * ' """ * * , 0411. V PILOT ,, * , ' ... __ Rental Manager - ?alnr. Ouistleni1tn 3117·.A Clnn•mon Ave. e ATTE~TION e Ownen in thi!I art• who may have iocon1~ propert.Y i11 VIC. ol L.A. AIR.PORT: TI!· spon~iblc couple & 6 yr. old , daught~r (no pell), !tek 2.J Br. unfurn. home (coU(t. Wh1ddy1 Wont? Whaddy1 Got? Coate Mtt• Phone 546-1034 SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR ~!!'!~~!""~"'!''"''"'!!!I sgl. dwellini or some a.pis, 2 BDRM, l 'i) ba, bltns, utU L'Onsldred), nr. school. Jn rm, gu-, patio. New crpl& &: nice area, Descrvlnr: fam-drl* No pell, 1 mile occ. Uy will give best of care, as $160 mo. ht & last, $50 own home. to you r rental NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spe<i1I Rite 5 Lines -5 time1 -5 bucks 'lULEI -AD MV$T INClvoe 1-Wllll '1'111,t lltv• le lrtlk. ~Wfl•I 'j'Oo;I WAM In ..... :t-YOVlt ,,._ f l'ICl/Or 1$1..,,._ ~ ""'' ot ..,..,.,,It. deposit. After .C, 968-7272 Can pay Sl25 or a bit nton!, • ~NOTHING FOlt SALE -TR ADES ONLY! but please submit what you N rt llt h 5200 have Area or Hawthorne, ...ctw..,;poc;..c..;;.;.;•.;;;•c......;=.;.1 La\\•ridaie, etc.: husband em. PHONE 642.5678 To Pl1ce Your Trader'• P1radise Ad EASTBLUFF. Brand new 3 pl~ by \Vestenl Airlines. SH<?PSr.flTIJ .. 1·on1pl~1e bdr., 3 ha. apt., full water en1r locally: 642'-3389, eves/ l'Quipmen:iu Jlgsawj pa:nt view from huge !iv. rm. weekend~ spray, m ng equ p: a so · 5 string bass fiddl~ f 0 It Spacious bdrms. Log ~ ~· . tlreplare. all bit-Ins. $315 011 I Ill auto or camper cqtuly. lease. No sm&ll children or RENTAL FINDERS 11-"'"'-2823_. _____ _ pets. ~ at 745 Domingo IEPDMl IMIUflll LIFE si:l:e Polar Be A. r Dr .. NB then ca.II 645-1260 .-,:'. ~~ mount or man rating tig- or 548-8482. .... ~ An,+lmllltlllml er, etc. ~"OR late n1odel NE W P 0 R T Be a ch UIW.1t+lo. Cett.M•ia,WS.0111 Cad. Con!'!, T·Bird, or sin1. Waterfronl 2 bdr, 2 ba.. New JULY-Aug ,70. i · b d r ," ilar ·Ju.'(Qty car. 962;8671 :! OR n1ounl.a1n home, near Running Springs. Equity St'.l,700 for TD's or 1n1all hurnc Costa Mr.sa area. 546-6217 r.RAND ll('w cvntemporary !urn: chair & otto. tablt11, t'lC', \Vant latc·modc.I VW, O;itsun. boat access. (Sea. 1:ull l'fl.1:, elect windlass.I ~75-5.135. e e BY .OWNER gar. 1250. Bier. 646-0732. single gendeman only. Call _ N~ J Bdm'I & Oen. Beam Summar R•nftls 2910 ---aJt.5PM 642-6197. ceilings, out!ltanding VIE\V. CLEAN Balboa Beach Units. Bay Shores 3225 LOVELY bii 2 BR. 111' Ba. General luxury bldg. bu I It· l n !I· modt>rn. Dix on S. TOWNHOUSE 3 B 21 b subten-anean parldn;-boal · • • r. ,, a. sll avail ' Bay{ront, Balboa I s l e. Btaut. appt'd, Priv. patio, 5000 LAI<E Arro\vhcad Drama· Ile 5 BR 4 Ba. Golf Cse. & Lake. Vie'v S125i\f C1car. Lo On. Plane nr Boat Trade. 01vner (Il4l 459-3103 nr ::~7·3169. • General 2000 ~200 AU elec kitchen. Roman bath. 1'1 ..... sell . ,A7,500 or Sleeps 2 to 10; for summer Pool, patM>, adults, $190. O"••. O-PEN' SAT~• SUN reservations call Ji73-9!K5 WATERFRONG Near BBC, 2310 Sanla Ana. 645-2933 1 " ' « 315 E Bal~-Blvd Bal"-• luxury 3 BR, 3 BA, \V ilh wk 10 am • 4 Pm , 1495 Skyline · ......,.. ·• .....,.. gan:I, yrly Sept. 15 to 41 ~~· ==---~~ Drive, " phone 830-2825. NJCE 1-BR. duplex, sips. 4. •<'= n -Sl.20-CLEAN, furn., be.ch. years. ¥>-JU mo. ru.:sp. U ·1 i I d~ C I I HANDYMAN'S l·Blk. ocean. $275 now 'ti! adults, no pels. 714-642-5674 Ii. nc u ""· o st.. n. Special! 4 Income units 120 Sept. 7, or $85 wk. 3TI1 W. or 213-799-48S6 Adults. no pets 548--0522 yds. to beach, Patios. de<:k! Balboo., N.B. &12-1272· l BR. $145. incl. util.!1. Heated w/orean view. Nds. paint, BEACH HOUSES Corona del Mar 3250 pool, adulb. no Pets · etc Should gross $9 000 an-2 BR, furn. 7308 Ocean----------1 54.~2627, 968-1740. nu~. Pr. $69,600. 'Trades fron t, 962-9810. 4 BDR duplex, 21).i ba, ALL Utll pd, 1 bdr duplex, considered. 2 BR Balboa apt adj bit-ins, dshW!lhr , 22IJO sq ft. older adlts, inlant, Ptls OK l\flSSION REALTY 49t-07Jl Year lease. S300/mo. 54(}.75?3 1100. 2l35 Elden, CM beaches/pier .$75-S150 wkly. MAGNIFICENT 536-3911. 675-5810 2 BR House, excellent cond. FURN 1 BR Apt.IJ It Studios "--. I 16 9~ Small I =~=~~=--,--~-I Married couples a: no avail Stpt lsl. $110 &. $120. ..,,_..,an view ot: • ""· , BALBOA 1 BR, rtdec. Nr. childrell. $250 mo. * 6/:i-3291 but level. $1,000 Down, bal. beaches. STa-$135. w k l y • 2135 Elden. Apt. 6. at $70 month: 536-3911 or 675-5810. COZY 2 Bedmi cottage. f-rpl, LARGE BACHELOR 497.lfl'21. 497.1210 RENTALS beamS200eeiling, .,.!~~ .. ~311cs to Adults. No. pets. B E AU TI FU L I BR.. l~bc~h=.~=mo=·-"'~~---1642-2550 or 540-6716 HouH1 Unfurnished Bayfront custom furn. Will l BEDROOMS, dining room, · well on contract or lse op. General 3000 view. Adults only S-450 Newport 8"ch tion. $.32,500 owner. 673-2:159 month. Call Agent RENTALS $165. 2 BR., w/w, patio. Obi. 6'12-823.l 673-5653 Newport Beach gar. E-Side. Bkr. 64f>-01111o-l 'N°'E"°W~3o-;5,,R,--.,f~il---1 COUNTRY CLUB HouHI Furnished am Y room, N cal. cabana·pool-club. $345/mo. LIVI G S165. 2 BR .. lY.. ba. townhse. lease. Agt. 833--0504 Luxury garden apartments RI fr' h ' I ===="======o I offering complete privacy. F1JRN win1'r rental. 2 lxlr , l Ch~d reoi~., B': a534s !:,..· Lo'do Isle 3351 beaJJtil.Yl.J..ros:c;fplnr & un· ps Caribe Balboa Fa1nlly. 675-2789 pool; nr bay, Val. S32,500. 3 Rooms Fiurniture 310 Fernando St. e LANDLORDS e Eqty,for T.D., car. ~amper 673-3003 FREE RENTAL SERVICE or ? • Owner 61~ • RENT e $20 • $25 & UP WESTCLIFF 2 Bedrm, Cl'pts, Broker 53H98:1 WILL 1.rade surfboard, Month-To.Month Rentall . drps, bit-in!, pool, no ELECTRONIC sales engineer liobie 9'6,"' for scuba tank WIDE SELECTION childl't'n or pets. $165 n1o. needs 1 bdr, furn apt on & regulator. 645--0757 and Appliances It TV'1 avail. 543-&il5 the oceanfront, ycarl,y. 6'12·0120 No Security Deposit 213 8n-0-10-1 468 ro1----------HFRC Furniture Rentals SPAC new 2 BR, 2 BA. elec • C'Xl or TRADE 2 ADJACENT 517 \V. 19th, CM 548-3481 kit, frplc, el'IC gar. Steps to Box 675• Bal~. LOO'S on Santiago in \\'t'st· 156& W. Locln. Anhm 774-2800 bch. lsc. $250. Mo. 673-1990 MATUR:E . '~"Ork1ng '"°'Plln, cllU for income property, -~~~~~~;;;;;;~• [, ;c,"~548-318~~1~~-o:~·~-1 no drinking, smoking or NB area. $30,000 each. VENDOME BALBOA BAY CLUB t'lC· pets needs small apt or &1&8565 · · 1 Br Fu , house, "''/gar, CM area. qu1S1le apt. rn or 675-5545 eves, &15-1900 days. LAKE Al'fO'li•hcad "'atrr- unf. Lse. $400. 642-7633 fro nt lot S50,000 val. Pacific L~~~V~i! YEARLY-Avail now 4 BR, ELECTRON I C sales Palisades Ocean VU Jot, SECTIONS AVAILABLE 2 BA, 117 33rd St, Apl B. engineer needs 1 bdr, furn S27,500. WANT: Income. * fin..5536 * apt n the OCt"anfront, year-Brkr 548-ml Close to shopping, Perk ========'I Jy. 12131 87~nn or PO Box · · * Spaclnus 3 Br's, 2 Ba E 11 , 5242 6.75, Balboa. 29' srARLITE cnilsi~g • 2 &drooms , aat Blu sloop, 10' beam, built '61 Sw. 0-1 p v -* Rental Strvlce * * im ~......, u green • NEW DELUXE • FREE TO LANDLORDS headroom thruout, galley * Frpl, Indiv/lndry fac'l1 .S Br. 2 ba apt. for least: Blue BtaC('n 6G-0111 & walk·ln head, all A-1: 1145 An.helm Ave. 1 cl , 1._ ,. trade for ! 828-0200 COSTA MESA 642-2824 n · spac. mas r. su '""· in NICE 3 or 4 BR. apt or house.1---------"':!!"'~~!!!!~'"''"'!!0~ I nn. & dbl. garage, auto. unfum. Prerer bluff!!". Resp. Laguna cxcc·~ split-level $135. 2 BR. Deluxe studio door opener e.vail. Pool ~ 675-5139 home; '1 Br. 5 ba .. Sauna. rec. area. Nr. Clthohc H Dea h Ocean apt. l~l: ba .• Adults only, Church & school &: Corona NEED 2 Bdrm. apt in . \lge rrns. nr c · . avail 9/1 Bia. 645--0W del A1ar High. Harper Sch. area by Sept. 1. v1c"."·s. Val. $87.500. r or loc&I. -a ONLY S'!::ii. • Reasonable. 645-ll55 TD s or Comn1. 494-4~1 \\'ILL trade Hoyer bed I b.1t h pn ti.r:nt hfe fS500 val- t1c~ or antiques for piano. 5-!o.9l5S ~O AcN>s ranch. l J\.1odem homrs, 2 weUs; fenced. n·aining irack, huge barn. 11 sTalls: FOR land, tmits nr ? S~5.000 Eq. 675-6259 :Z.DUPLEXES E-Sidt, Cos· 1a Mesa, $15.000 t'Q. W/Tr rur lot + paper, Entire pai;cel 60x305. Bkr 642-5140 or lii:>-40.11. H01"1:E "'/hdwd. nn. on J2!hcl50' lot w/manY trees. Will excllange fOr N.E, $an Diego home. lot or i t-1. r on in, Realtor 642--5000 '60 CHEVY 1A Ton PU, 348 V-8, 4 spd hydro, 8' Alaskan telescopic eamp. rr \Van! 4 wheel drive Je£.p, wagon or lJ11ck. 548-1086. c: u e s t r m , 2 b a , I ===""==·=· ="='·==v=~· parallel~ recreational facil· \vashcr/dryer. 13th & Bay Costa Mesi 3100 HAPPY winter rental home itics in a country club at· ~+ 2 BR, 2 ba 4-p!ex. Gar, St on Newpor1 Peninsula partlally furnished. 2 Bdrm, mosphere. Now leasing in r/o. Children & pets 865 Amigos \Vay, N.B. NEED 2-3 Bclr. unf. Adults, ..a. * * * * * · -250 oo pc1s. By Sept. 1. Lea.'«.'l •"i!!J!!'!!!!!~f!!J!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!J!!!!!'!!!~!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.I ;,..;: "~12 ,_..,., '''" Ne"""'rt Beach. kr. 534-6991. u1~ EASI'SIDE Home. C.Ozy 2 den, 2 bath. v'"'""""O ~...., Coron• del M•r S 646-9236. I! EXECUT Bedroom with ...;natc garage. ==========-1 1700 16th Street IVE homes turn. & -... Furnished or unfurnished I •5 • 6 8 F Adults only S15Q.Call Ttrry Huntington Beach 3400 l -2 bdr, stove, cpts, df'P.', pool, dshwaher, disposal. patio, Fireplace:. 545-2181 1572 Orchard Dr, Santa Ana Heights. REAL ESTATE REAL ESTAT~ -Gu_.t Homa 5998 General General un um. ... "'" r · rom McCardlc 54~2313. Models oPt.n noon to 9 pm '°"l300=·="=""=·=645-0=='=11=1=""=al=.== I 7~=~~~-~~-4 BR Home freshly painted. 714: 642-8170 -v -----~----(-6, _ -~-PRV room In He'd: Board & Office Rental 6070 E h R E 6230 1~ 3 BDRM., 2 Ba.. E-sid.:, 11 t al R It 842 1418 00 Rentals to Share 2005 quiet · street. $195 mo. u u ea Y · _ OAKW D ...,. ~ Care home for elderly, am-xc anges, . • bulalory rnan or \\'OmA.n. NEW Deluxe oUicc spaces &17-<411 "548-631.0 F • v 11 3410 GARDEN MATURE woman to share 2 2 BR tlo ts ounta1n • ey Co1ta Mue 5t00 ' ON TEN ACRES Nourishing meals, congenial 320 to UJO sq ft at Santa TRADE 1 A: 2 BR. Furn It Untuni a~osphe~; lrg yard & Ana Fwy It Crown Vallq )Vant Orange county exec "s'o· 2 r-~. aRpte w/,"'m'A·vailn.r drps:: :r::~~ .. '~iatl LEASE. Immaculatt year old APARTMENTS s."i • s46-42Ss c. ac. setting tor adults. 1 blk to ·Spanish 3 Bdrm., 2* Baths.. HARBOR GREEJIS Frplc1 I priv. patios/Pools, patio. Avail now. 548-5225 turnoU. 831-1400. 499-4198 residence, indus, prop or ? Tenni1 • Contnt1 Bldat. put-·• 608-0 . Burbank M2 $100 M & or • :-;hop $145. Mo. 544-4780 968-4066. Bach 27 will share 2 bdr ========= P' NB w/non k ·~ 2 BDR. house. SUD. "'· 5 t A H I ht 3630 a .. -smo er. """ school & shopping. 2 an a na e g t mo 54S..3335 NICE man <ll' woman to children OK. ~2634 2033 2 BDRM, bltns, crpts, drps, ahare 3 bdr. bon1e, SIOO nio. \Vallace, C~f raised f.rplc, dbl garage, 642-3167 NEW 2 BR unfurn., married patio. $175 util pd. Aval! couple or adult lady only. Aug. 25. 54(}.SOM, $135. 1 BR. duplex, avail now, yard Child O.K. Bkr. -· Near everything, no pets. $140 mo. 642-3837 after 6 pm Laguna Beech 3705 WINTER retilal. Lge crptd 2 Br, 2 Ba, bit-ins, closed pat i o It garage, washer/dryer Avail Sept. SOOO~i Neptune. Ca.II 714: 629-1492 ttni sreen. Misc. Rentals 5999 lndu1tri1l Prop. Pasadena Rl (7 ac x Int BACHELOR unfum fro m 000 SN Lane, C.dM 644-26ll for sub.di\/ $150 fl.1 & or SllO. Aho avail 1 · 2 & 3 <MaeArthur nr. Co1st Hwyl STOncl~~E Agarilage~ t 1f1i LOT siZe 100x1711 \viih off!tt Glendora Mt SSO M & or Bdrm. Heatt:d pools, child 1 1!!!!!'!.'J![!!!i'!!~~!!J!~!i!i!I e ~. va P s · &: 40x40· slab wi th slt'cl Invindale fl.11 S75 /l.t care center, •dJ to shopping. MOD. 2 BR, bit-Ins, R&O, g. $20. mo ea. 548-292l. C.M. framl' only -ideal for hiJck. 7)4177·1.UJIO Mrs. Brown No 1"2100~· Pel•-·o Wftv disp, Up.I, ferre.ct, view uW. 1--p ~ 6000 Jng firlll. $26,000 . bes! of' BEACll CO'M'AGE-Newporl * ON THE BEACH * ·-...,. Sl!IO mo, 54~2:266 ncome rope, •r lerrus. Chvner will carry 1.sl Jo~C<' l!l nd. noon1 to buiW. CoSta fl.fesa 546-0370 \Vinler Sept 7th-June l.llh.1 --,,_,.~o='O,.,~~~-2 BR south of hiway, crpts., 4 UNlT t.10NEY MAKER TD. /\"-<iUmc 6.!i·;~ lo..i.n. Trade rum Ocean front duplex. J MARTINIQUE drps .. frpl ., garg. No child. S58.'i mo. Income. lmmac. WeJ15.McCardle, Rltrs. for lnco1Tie properly. C1.ll nss. 2 BR., b!Uns, v.·/w, util. pd. Avail now. Broker 534-6980. 2 BR, crpts, drps. garage. Adults only, no pets. $135. 646-7509. Br. 2 Ba, sundtck upstl'!I. GARDEN Am. no pets. Yrly lse. S180 mo. cond. nr. O.C.C. & So. Coast 1810 Newport Blvd., C.1"1. four Star R.cnl1y. 835-4422 3 BR., 2 ba., 3 car gar., $250. per n10, 2 Br, 1 Ba, pa. Avail 9/1. Art. 7, 675-3717 plaza, Sell at 6.8 x gross. MS-7129 anyti111e panoramic ocean view, ne'v tlo down Strli $200. per mo. EX~llent, park-like surround· AVAIL Now. large 2 bdr. Subm it small house on TD. __ R. E. Wanted 6240 FfXER upper-.1 BR., 2 ba. hon1e. Needs lots \\'Ork. As is S179~-22'll, 646-9666. crpts., drps. $260 mo. Offic(' 545-821J, home ings for adul!s only. apt. new crpU; .. painted. bit· ~~' .. A.!.our Star fkally Industrial Rental 6()901;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 494-9937. 494-2:935. Bach, l, 2 &: 3 BR. Apts. ins Sale or ren! at S200. o.Al"""TU~ • Cost• Met1 2100 LUXURIOUS Modern 2 BR 2 SINGLE Young: Adults Lux· Pool, nr shopping:. Couple over 45. 673-0130. 1 NATTY NlFI'IES M-2 INDUSTRIAL space in ba. frplc, bltins, dshwshr. ury garden apts \vith coun· lm Santa Ana. Apt. 113· -All 2 BR -Elec bltins. Lush concrete bldg. 300l sq fl. 746 $$ MORE CASH $$ 2 BR, gar, patio, cpts. drps, 2 BDR Duplex. unfurn, gar, stove, refrig, tropical setting Jg yd, 35 or older, no dogs. for adults. 1 blk to shop 54&-2720 UUI pd. 497-1405.. try club atmosphere and • 646-5542 a Balboe 5300 patios AND ovet 12% ntl \V.17th, CM (213) 434-5082 =-='========I complete privacy. SOUTH LGE Bachelor unit. Sharp. return. Make me prove It! FOR Lease-New ZiOO Sii. II. $175. Mo 544-4730 I========"' 3 BR on Irvine. Prefer rol- Jege men. $210 mo. Sleeps 4. 1 Man $65. 545-2740 BACHELOR House • male only. S90 mo. .. 642-2657• Newport Beach Single 2200 DOVER Shores bayfront home, 6 BR. 4 BA, large patio, 70' private dock. Avail Sept 1st, yrly lse, SlOCXl mo. 213:780-5013 or Mesa Verde 3110 4 BR., family room, lea."Je, clean. immed occupancy. $325. Gardner. 541)..3885 SZ.10 LSE. ;~-+ 2 & Jam rm. 2 frplcs. crpl._, drps. bltns, no f.l('ts, cul-de-sac. :i46-3090 College Pa rk 3115 MODERN 3 Br. house, xlnt condition. Yrly lease. Avail no'v $225. mo. Call 54Q.63l4. 213'~ B h 3200 Newport eac 2 BR., den, 2 Ba.. near I'---'---'-'------ beach. No pets. l child OK. * 968-4064 * DAILY PJLOI' W Am' ADS! tT'S Beach house t ime. Big. gest selection eV('J'! See tbe BAYSHORES Unfurn. 3 & 4 8.R. Years IPllSE", ''C" THOMAS Realtor Z24 \V. Coa.~l H\\'Y ~5:al L1gutt1 Niguel 3707 3 BR, 2 BA, beautiful view. Bltin.~. dshwhr, crpts, drps, lrplc. 836-5750 or 542.-1215 Condominium 3950 Country Club Villa Lovely 2 Br, 1\l Ba, crpts, drps, bit.ins, pri patios. S25.'i. 837·9830. Duplex•• Unfurn. 3975 2 SOR. Duplex, crpl!!., drps., bll·ins.. gar .. 'C I ea n ! S145/mo. 210 Cecil Pl., CM. 64~7535. BUSIEST marketplace in town. The DAD..Y Pnm Oassified section. Sa.vt money, time & ellort. Look now!!! START MAKING . MONEY NOW! CALL . 642-5678 ASK FOR YOUR DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT! • BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine at Cpts/drps. Nr. So. Coast $170. Newer 2 BR, 2 Ba. Jo Hansen, Rltr. 646-82'l6 induslrlal hldg. 9c. ft. 1639 16th Newport Beach. Plaza. OCC. Sl25 il'ICI refrlg:. yearly. Laundry & aa.raae.l~~=~~~~=~~l~M~o~"g"'~'~;·~·~C~M~·i'~n.~90~1~1== 1714) 645-l}jj{l & util. See 11l 973 Valencia Nr library. 673-3986 evts. lauiln ... Rentel 6060 *NEW BAY-FRONT* Apt 2 aft. 5 PM wkd""' • Lota 6100 2 B ' o .. '"" " 1 all wkends. Huntln .. ton Beach 5400 BALBOA ISLAND BARGAIN. 28of't0is-eoSii r, .,.., .,......, yny se. • T 1oc lo 300 + ft Sl~p avail. Furn" adults. 233 THE SEVILLE 2 BR, 1 ~~ ba o P at n sq ' Mesu A 19 unit & a 55 unit 19th st., Apt. C. 675-0236. W/garage. $150. Adults : 2d BEDRbOOIMI Cal 'blPk• t ',· '111~n rema.iw·nr,ng p'"o 1 .. Bosc. Excci Joe. 645-2060 o; 1 & 2 BR aplo;. F'rom $!35. to crpts • drps • Bit-in!'!. Fen<:· rapes Ul t· ns, to ::i. mo. rte. . , X 5.16-(]L11. Anytiin e. ed yd. 2619 Santa Ana Ave. point -store~. Owrier, 15315 Las Vegas, Nev. ' 2 ADJACENT UJTS on San .. $175. No children or pets. 636-4l20 642-2835 or Kt>y at 7701 PROFESSIONAL 0 11 ice . . IV ,1.11 £· 1:>25 Placentia. Also avail. -==~·~~---~-Ellis Apt D si.i-_ tiago 1n es1c 1 . asy unfurn. \ MODERN 2 Br. cptll, drps, ' · J. space, _S155. mo. Must scr to terms. price $30,000 each. GE k.lteh, encl. gar, nr bus. NEW 2 BR duplex, stove, appreciate. 1862 PlacenUu. &16-8565 MAGNlflCENT View, '"eek d h h ts d S170 CM Pho c 642-8007 I I. I Sl40. Adults, Mgr. 124 E. 5 w r, crp " rps. · · · n ' LARG" "2 I I 9 000 I> or year y. spit evr:I, 2 20th Adults only. 1J08 Olive. MARINERS CENTER c. .'"" 0 '. ' . St./. ' bedrooms. flrtplact, garagt, . Co.n tnuld >I un11.11, Con1rally 2001% King.!! Road. 548-2394 *TOWNHOUSET 536-8521 OUice & store bldg, rent or localed In HS. 536-9567 alter 6 p.m. 2 BR 111 BA ts d 11 NE\V $14~ up. 1.2.3 Br, 2 Ba leue. $75 to Slal per n\O. $8000. ' '' ' crp ' rp ' htd & sauna pool•. rcr: 1-m. 149 Riverside Avr. &16-2414 LOWER fro W pal!o. Adults. S150 .. 134 E. ocean nt • Melody Lane. S4U872. G.E. Dish1vshr. Mgr 846-3137 e PRIME ~tail Localion • Ranches 6150 Newport. 2 Br, 1-% Ba. •· &'" •144 1 '" I t It t l'ii-iiliiiiliO••""'"""" Frplc & gar, avail Sept 1. FOR LEASE 3 Bdrm, 2 ba., "" ..,.... Store 1 x"", x n . & au 01• - \!>inter lse. S210. 646-5832 crpts, drps, builtn.~. encloi;. NEW $150 up. 1-2-3 BR. traffic. 1871 Har?or. C.M. MONTANA 3 BR 2 BA •17 t'd "olio, nml & clubhouse lteatcd & sauna pools, rec 646-6654 ' , upper . ., 5 mo. ,.... ,~ H il & Al I M lc'~=~-~~~~=I RANCH \Vin!er rental prlvl. 546-4074 rm. e gonqu n. gr. $60 PER month. Eas1 17th . 21, o~ ""'" 0• 6'"7821 N 2 846-3137 or 846-4144 s:. CM Streel Exposure. Bitler Root Vnlley ,,..,.~.......,.,,,,,. • 1.-E\V Bdrm apt. E·aide. 2 & 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, pvt patio, Realonomics. 6'11'"~00 47 miles south of l\1issouta. 2 BR. Apt&. furn. or unfurn. C a r P 1 s, drps, bit • ins, d 1 I Mon1ana. Both creek & re~ To $200 Y.••!y. dlsh,vhr, encl .............. Priv h e a t e Po o . n e w Y BAI.BOA lSL/\ND • Lease -•---d -1 d --· •rvoir waler. 450 acres in'1· Patio. 642-6257 tco ... e · ~~;r'! 2 Stores, together or 11tp. Anita, Jones Rlty. 67~2101;;.::;~:;:::;:~=---I· -==========I ... ated. to1al 620 IH'f'('H; pan 307 f\1arlne Ave. 673-87~ " 1 BR xlnt loc. Close to Bay & SPACIOUS 2 BDR. cpls, Tustin 5640 Or see your broker under gravity sprinklt r sys. beach. Adults only. 67f>.7876 drps. stovc. 357 Vlctorifl, ~---::=~=:::::::---1==='========1 'em, Low down payment, U no ans . .t!K-9471 C.OSta Mtsa. THE ASPENS Office Rentil 6070 6% Interest. Cali.fo1'llia in- • WINTER RENTALS e $150. 2 BR, 2 Ba .f.plex. 15652 William St tere5ls force sale or h<l<ie. WINIFRED L. FOSS. Ag L Gar, w/w. RIO. Oiildrtn & Tustln's prestige address MODERN OFFICES Days. 546-9842. aft. 6 . • 642-3850 • pets O.K. Bkr. 534-6980. Adult living, no pet! FROM S65 PER MONTI! 644-0123. '-==========-12 BR l t Shag C8J1)f'ts Air·cond., parking, central Jo.I~~~~~~~~.~~ • • garg. new Ct'P • 11 ovc. Total air conditioning 1-: 81fboa l1l1nd 4355 refrig, drps. 174 Monte. Furnished &. UnfumishM cations. Secrelarial RCrvice. Acreage • 6200 Vista. 230 E. 17th, Costa t.1esa __ .::... ______ _ BEAUTrFUL Upper duplex1 2~8~0~R.~,-.. -.-.-.. -,-.-CJ>-,.-.-b-ll· Gl;:;i:~s' ,~::1~s 642·1485 Laguna Beach Apt. Very close to St. Bay. 4 1 Josed Adult Sl40 For inlotmallon 835-6687 PRIVATI!; offitts w/balh. 1 ACRES W/PERMIT For Your Home Equity Absolutely no cost ••• to you the Seller! 12 yt>ars of paying more cash for Orange County property. Call the Rest . , . Then call the Best BEVERLY JACKSON REALTY 847-6033 or 54S-824S PIZZA Br. <Iba. S400 pt.r mo. yrly. ns, c gar, '· 'i==~====~=~I TO KEEP HORSES Sali!ihury Rlty. 673-6900 liarbor·Bake.r area. 540-6038 DAILY 1-'ILOT WANT ADS crpls., drpa & storage spatt AU p~7.l'I C'Qul11 ror pl·tza . ~====~====:=: [· Find 11 with l\ want ad! BRING RESULTS! in the Glendale Fed Saving5 Adlactrit subd1\/i$ion o n e huusc. u1l'I: oven. e!cct 1 • .. -,.;.,;.,;:;:;:;c;:;c;:;:H:~::-1 Bldg .. Corona del Mar. $65 mil<" E. of h"'Y. ut tl 11va1l. 1.·hecst> r,;dndc-r, piu.1 PMS. Huntington ISetch ~ ...._.,,.,,,,,,,,,, .......... , .. ,,,,,.,,.,,,.~... n10. Call Evelyn Halbakken SJ.i.000. ~;, Ca~h. bal Jst lJ'Ulit hot ch0<·. ntachine. Sanl· DELUXE beach Apls, l &. 2 N E w I 67j...~.j4 or 5'15-316.J detd. Serve it:e-el't!am maker (wa· Br. $llS. to $180. 219 15th SL , DELUXE offl~ in Costa MAKE OFFER I I tcr • opcrah:d l, Toa!!tmasttr Apt. 7. • •• f11csa . 1500 sq, ft . (33c). Air \V rlte or co'nt.act; George R. 1•t1 fe french·[ryer. etc. 95% FREE APT. 10 nian for cond., crpl!I .• drpi;, 543--0761. J{res.<i, Bo)( 914, L.11una ~~!l_t margin. Total Value painting etc. Office & desk1 apace, Beach or phone· 4,944426.. ;e;~ie~r a~f~: SJ&.1366 ~3m o· A t• Secretarial se.rvlal. TAKE OVt'r 10 Acres no le.:t. lme • • 1ne Newport Civic Center, down. $25 mo. Ranch sltc l --:-;==~~==='-SunHt 8eich 4455 67$-1601 nr. huge lake. 894-4743 "81. fl'LIQUOR. l~ICENSE5• 1nler-County Tranatr:n S U fltMER re:nt-Octanfl'ont apt. l ·:I txtr., tittplatt, patio, pr. FUily turn. $140- $160/wk. 17th A S. Paclf'lc. SB. WXURY (l(.'f!a.nfront apt. 2 Bdr., fit't'plact. patio, pr. Year ltlll!"e. Starting Sept. $220. Ulil. pd. 171h & S. PllCitlc, SB. PL.ACE your wi.nt aa where ...,. ... loold"'1 -DAILY D di• CARPETS, drapes. air con-Mount· & 0.Hrt 6210 * ORANOe COUNTY * ea lne dlllonlng, plenty of parkillll:. • --on $(41<: sro.ooo.on !llle . $70 • up. \Ve\111-McCardle, AIAKE your bon10 ' in i;cenlc Sl3.500 Llmiled Quantity! Rltn. 548-7729. hlJ;h d~rr!. See our lnx. Winston {213\ 272-4219 rollect 3 00 P M LARGE EJtecutlve Office urio11S Gold ?afcd11lllon I-la· NOW'L THE e N .B. Allio small oUict fron'I clcndu In Sky H.1rl)or ~ • • • 145 mo Owner. 615-4641 Ra......, 121.900. 2 BR. 2 TIME FOR . --F-DA. f)ll.ne.lll!f.I tfeo. r Qr locnl 600 to 1200 Sq. I. lnio rail ""· P•ngborn QUICK CASH F .• DAY Ot'FlCE. C.M. &tb-ZllO 873-1328 THR u H rr·s Beao~ ..... am;, Bll> •obcrt S<:hoonlobcr. Inc. 0 G A gest 11tlocUon rvrr! See fht Controctor, Subdi vider DAILY PlLOT PD.OT dauifled 6C2-S671 1.!:••t•t•t•!j•!j•tj!tj•tj!::!•::!•::!!::!!::!!::!•:!:•:!:•*:!:':!:'!l'!l'!i*!i•tj•::!•!!•::!•::!•::!•::!•::!•::!•::!•::!•:!:•:!:• DAll.Y PILOT Cautned ri6189 29 Palm& ltighway WANT AD · teetton NOWl; )'ucca Vatlf':y , • 1 ' I l • • • -r0··...--.--.-----. ~ . ' DAILY. l!llOT • -PllWICl,t.L ~"""1. August ,11, IW.,=ii., --·------... "" . . -J~IS &·EM".'~OYJMNT JOU:& IMPl.OYMENT JOBS & EMPlp,YME NJ' JOBS & EMPLOYMlltT JOBS & EMPLOYMIN'I' ; When You L HZ;i~.-f ~-~ ~~W_,;J ~noil t1o1;w •• iJ.i.-noo"'lpWonlod,;,....?200 Woman 1~ . W 'f d "'!! .i"\!!!' ...!. '-'-Exacutlva Sain Halp, Wa nlod • Nathn at l'ol<~ -anf'1 one • • --~~ · IMMEDIATE St&rUn .u .. Bo Y-Own Bon • hf • ~~ST~TI~~ KAIS · HELP WA,.TED First i ,.:J' .0:1:':; Part Time" Full Tlma fig • • 0 l'l"'J\.!!.1 'AN'l:l"'iCO ,.,_, '81ll" ' DMSIO>I 112.000 pluo -hie 2 1•u Be )'OUl" own bola .e.nt1 run // . f ftAm,. blli(I :Tutt ., --; • tn.inJn& pn:cram by ttn. "°"'"""""'in.a.NATION-Ca ,one o ff0.to~IB,...men111 l:esb u.H .. ~WSIO~. ..., old .not'!. 'compa,,. RELIABILITY DATA CLERK AL POK..()..G()U' anr:iousxa fh . rf ~ 1 •• • '"!"1" . . ~ ...-' Busl~u or aale1 ba(ljc. available dllhibutonhip1 ln tJ e expe $ . CITY ~' AnnMalil '!._1 ....... "'. for PnMdt~~ .. tA 11'0Ulld helpful. No travel. Qut.Uty UIWMCle ,Dept to ,.,.... attl. Thb I• • fantu-fi'sfed beJow.1/!" .ffEWPORT\•IACH .. 1• ,.. _,,,,___ g.::-..,>· Mgmt opportwrltle•. Equal ooUect -· audit aoo ,,... tie .,,..nWllcy 1or unllmlt· } , ( • CVPERIEN'cED """'' °" ......,.. ..._ op, tmrili'. .,... f&ll..,. data thN corn- ed money.making poltotial J ' ·"' • Upparalled ~ and Uv-~ -~·~1. . ,•rH.. Exper1cricill1tli't MCe• Rwld A. Smith puter, report wrltlnl, etc. with our golf puttinc ma. 1 ~ concpt»ns,. ~,aa~t .S(A;r:"'-tdVER · 1&rY1 as ~ t.raln*ni: 8'l7·7900 l(no\vledae of electronic chine. We i..i ow-pmduot SERVICI Dl~CTOa.Y SIRVICE DIRECTORY SIRVICI OIUCTORY" "'-! . ~ ~ . INST•tLER llcf\im!ll>edsT··;.T u.1 W 1_, i.rnitnoto&:Y and math ,... can1 prod~ more money , 1----------1 1'tn OflliertunJty. Requlrn • · ~ ~~ n. P •n -quired. pet locaUon than the ••elJ.. Bllryalttine · 6550 Gardettlftl -'6IO Papel'h .... lftf , lfachelor's ~ Jn Ac--• AT · .{ ~· Won,en 7-400 ,~=..~:·!ii~'! YOUNG -ble "'"'' cLEAN-UP SP£!'W.ISTl Pa1"""' • 6UO =~=~i: ; .. -M:~~."E1c ' u :=-U!i=.. RN--PIX OPERATOR will ~ up yoor business tor will baby 11t eventrc and MOWin&', edging, od4 jobs SUBURBAN NutiQr/Dee tlted field, mt ~ years -qn 1111yroU .lbil;,.__ , An't Dlrtctor 11~7 )'OU in a PtOYeD metmd. al weekmiL ,o-,m tl'aniporta.· Rnsonable. 548""'965 Expert Guarufeed Work . d. Proi'essionfl ~Hrc , 'ALSO FOR ~ HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE lnY'Olvtment lo: auccus. All you do is sen--tion $1 hr. m.-OQ22 after ~WNCED · J ~tat: Ho.jpb.too q. ~enct, 6ne ol which FULL--TIME ' AGES »tTO 40 1 • • NW'ling & product re-ke dealers. 5:30. ~ ............ ·~• too~-~" _,..,..., mU1t hfvt ~at the &lo ' •.a•.1•u•N <Ob PUBLICLY OWNED gardener. Reliable. 541),:r.ns . ~ ... ~. _............ Jf!fVIM LeVel • .,,~-I;, 1tm: .. _ .. _...,. 1 YEAR•R.EfilDENT sea COMPANY Brick, Ma--.-.. tar t.rM estimate , PAn..flN~.,Ipt lc'Ext ~Welt m~,1a·?· ~ .i:.i.: 'Pe~""'"' Hard aurface flooNOVering IN ~ • Qurlt for quallt)' nursing • r ,....,.. contracted~ Fully ins ,~11 ,,.,. <>g aid )n~r decoratinJ'. .cALL Mon. « l1'eB. care . 1( accepted, you wUl aha.rt 6560 JIM'S Gardening A lawn Sa.tidictlcin cUAi Fret L Olflce bffOre 5"?.-M, Ffld&Y, ' 71~1253· e Prqp111111ve patient ,care In 1.br. profits ol one of ~ maintenance. Re:s. le C.om. I· ,Jtm Weclt:B 673-u'e6 es Au I u at 22, 1969. (n4) pt'O(l'am directed b)' a fastHl growing, moe:t ar BUILD, a.model, rep&jr. ~-* 548-8W• ., •. ~ .. ~JkwRort Blvd. i:iceeuent·~ EQtJIPMEN.T · Total S Restoritlve Team. Three poe.ltion mu 1tIp1 e b o a r 4,-rour day week, Tbunday thnl Su n d a y, Swill&' shlft. SECRETARIES eressive companies of t ls Brick, block. ~~. Olt • EtJ&e Lawn EXT/~ j)nta". A~r rm. $:11: Newport ~ch,, CaWorrrla " PIUI MECHANIC Re<rulred for positions type whk:ti hu diw:nllled carpentry, na job too small. Maintenance lJ«Med + IOod paint, neat w6rk. 92660 ~ • •~t aha:rint! openine in.larp, ~nd@d Minimum three yrars·secte- lnto other fields. Uc. CMtr. ~ 5'8-tl:llt64>ino aft f k>c. re.ta. lloY. tM'l-1358. i. : '··R • • ffo.pita'.lhaflon . · $6$1 fo '$7,9J, per month c~ hospital. ta.rial elQ)Uf~. Prefer ao- NO FRANCHISE FEE! I========="= l-''iJ:;;olwo:::;;:0;:.,=:;;:GaMud:::;c::;:,,..;:-•Tar be~er painting call TREE FOREMAN e·CfiOup H:fi Ins. \ tive ~t clearance and Minimum Investment or C•blnttmaking 6580 Flnest equip., ~ care. experienced painters at • . ' • PaJst vacation CITY OF C•li ROYA.LIE' engineering depfbackground $-197S ~~ugh~·1 WE Clean out your garage, Plalitine, clean-u])li. 9'i-3l35i.'~"-·"4071-· .._._·af_te_r_~~J""~·---t '$66fto$111 ~r npont~ :·~::mt ' ~EWpPRT BE~CH --=-"""~-""'--!Shorthand 80, type 50 on Leasi"i'. available with ap-haul tne truh and build * EXPG~~ENJAl>ERAN§E c= ~=G . ' c·1rv OF • .• WAITRESS eleettc"'o· LLINS proved credit cabinets on one wall. Tota.I .u-.u .• 6'1Z..2!13&. • Apply 1n Pe~l ·OttJce'· Invoices, diagnosis and AVERAGE EARNING PO-Price Labor Ir. 'MateriaJ Free Estimate. 646-mlO NEWPORT. B~ACH MOhda)I' thru Saturday repair of meChanical de-Experienced Dinner House TENTIAL of $1,500.00 A $225. Also remo<teJ kitchens, IRV 'S GARDENIN~Reii:., p A PER SPECIALISTS'"..:: 10 ~ to 4 PM ft'cts of general automo-waJ~&S 1 or Corona de I RA 010 co. P.fONTH! baths. Dutch Cabine t Comm'I It 1 ndu 1 tr l i l . Cal'a bea t for vh1yta., lloclcl; J\eq'Wrel h110 )'e&n auper. tive and mo1arcycle Mar's Zll0$l elea:•nt A: de- \VRITE US TODAY. J>leue Makers. ~9 or 645-1786 S4Z..T156, foll, m\ll'lla. 847-1659 evt1. v,l!ory experience. in .~ SEARS equipment. ~uitta llghtful new restaurant. Include name, add~u aod -----"------PAINTING ,Papering lG-?TS iprnml"I' and/or rtla.ted r, three years ot recent, Pmnanent position · 5 days telepl>one number. Full de-C.rpenterlng 4590 JIM'S GARDENING & lawn fr "Harbeit' &reL. Lie .. I: ,area phis twd ye'aft · ~ R•""""' & CO. genmi.l automotive and -dinner· only. Call for in· scriptive literature will Joi. mainlent.n0e. Rft. il Com· bonded. ~ ft8'tt. 642-23Sf' thlnin1' fn a doaeJY retatett UllllUlft'R, motorcycle mecb'anlcal tervlew or ·apply 5 Pltf· T PM. Sow. CARPENTRY mercial. * 5e8Ul. , &kl. Apply before Aul:. experience. Apply im-CHARLES BISTRO NAnONAL POK.Q.GOLF MINOR-REPAIRS. No Joh J•P,.MM G•nltntr TIIE partlcqlal' palnter 15th., 1969 to Ptraonnel Of. SOUTH COAST PLAZA m~t to Pl"rsonnel O!-2325 E. Coast Hlebway Box 123 Too Sma1L Cabinet in pr. Exper, com.pt yard Jervice! .w particular people. ' flee, City Of Newport Beach. 3333 s. BRISTOL lice, City of Newport TI4 • 61J.8267 lt»07 Liberty ~ & o t he r cabinets. Freeest.548-7958,54&-0T24 ~ 3300 Newport ,fl,lvd .• New-t,051".AMESA Beach, 33® Newport f\111 Time SL Lou•. Mi""'1<i '3132 ....,,,, ll no ..,..,. !<av. pOrt !!eaoh. -, Calli. 92000; Blvd., Newport Bea ' h, HOUSEKEEPER 314-423-UOO rmg at 646-23Tl. H. o. Gtineral Services 6682 Pl•stering, Rep1lr 6880 '--'-<7l.;.•::.>,:m<roa~:;::·~=~--J An Equal Opportunity CaJII. 92600. 19700 Jambor.M Road Newport Be~ch Equal opportunity employer Part Time KITCHEN HELP Apply In person ASK FOR MR. DENTON Andenon • CPATCH PLl\STERI>IG. ' -SALESMEN EmplQYer <n<J '13-"33. HAUL1NG General tteea ....._ Apply in person CHOC·LIKS REPAIRS. Al.TERATmNs ........ ·....... rrimme<1: CaJJAll ~!;..,,Free ••ttmate. r lo. Our GUI) °'''·" ---P.-!A~R-T~n-ME"--i'""""''°" Be"h 1'1•n or woman needd in this CABINEI'S. Arty size job removed. Big John. 642-4030 ~=~======= ully ~ •. needed. ITJ JABSCQ Huntlfl&'ton Beach Convale&eent Hospital area to ~ part ot. the 25 yrs. exper. 54S-Q13 -1'u1l time._ ·Appfy: ' ev~ \\:ork Conyale!IC'ent Hospital 18192 Delaware St, H.B. ereatest candy discovery QUALITY Repairs -Al.lent· H•ullng e730 Plumbing 6890 GRANtS ·. 18792 Delaware_ St, H.B. """" ...... .,., ., .. ~ ... "~.~":: •• by ...., HAULING, deanup, tots''" PLNO\li!o iObma,.. J\EP 1 ma1Jlll\ •u __ R,PLUS -J..ata• lndusll'W nnn. PRODUCT COCKTAIL/HOSTESS SECRETARY Th;• excidlli new kl .. " ~· cc -.> ·~to On.nee~"' ENGINEER'! NG """'°"'Jble ,...;(Jon '" .. ,. ~eeping the coontry. Be the REPAIR Partitions. Small Handyman anytime you call, • 6t2-Jt2s • ·11.,0 NEWRORT BLVD. Pt>nnanent position available manent girl in regk>nal firstin yourareatobecome Remodel, etc. Nile or day, ** 64Z-3398** COSTA ~tESA WE rieed 25 ml"n 'to work for combination Cockta.il sales otri'ce ·of nationally .part or this very high profit Reas! can KEN ~ YARD/~r cleanup. Remove ~~model, Repair, 6940 STOCK CLEllK evenlnp 6:30 to 10:00 PM. Oi-ahie CoUnty location, waltress; hostess In C.orona kno\vn firm. Newport Na· businesL trees, 1vy, dirt. tractor BUILD Remodel ~lpping. ~recetvfnr, f Ill No.exp. ntt. We train. Deglft and i hrte to five del Mai'.J most elepnt & lional Bank location. 2-giri ! r I I I I ' -· • ~.,, .,: .... ._.., 10 • ...... Cement, Concrete 6600 backhoe, grade ~(5 • • Repair tim-... r.v•~ N . • years ex~ne~. Me· delightful new reat&urant. office. Good skills required. r.JloU..,.1.1 ...._ ......... .,. ...... ,;co;:::::;;,~=.::=-::=~ I Brick, block:, cob c r e t::e. T7"·~ ~ -{{· 0 ex. TOP sr•ar1NG P"Y/ ~ engineer for de· Xlnt benetitJ:. 548-USB be tnlhed In this national-* CONCRETE Work. bond· Q..EAN UP &: lite movlnc crpntty,:ro job too small perknce necessary. $450. "'"-~ Ca.U for interview or applyt-===~-~--· 1 , ly advertisftl. product. Tree & shrub remaval. Lie. Contr. £162...8945 Per month_ to start. Five c1a,y Ah1o ·openlng!i. for .11ien aad ~velopme_nt ,or · 5 PM -1 P~r. MATURE WOMEN ... : p-~ ti'm• OR full t!mo --'-ed a: Uc. Patios/drvwys Reasonable. :>4~1359 ·week. Wnee ·to '•dvaJICI!!. StUdent.& Te•ch,rs n,.~-handU'· [Jf; p~ps & CHARLES BISTRO If you hai,ie lite skills _....,. a .... .........-etc. Pblllipa Cement. * IF ---.1 --'-1· :r: 111•-· -·" ' .1 .. , .. ..,, ~ ..,.., tions available. Only Sin-S48-QllO FATHER & 2 .sons, trash & you ·~ ttn~ !!lg, . Write qualifications, he'libt · or ..,~ew ~ ~ E. Coast H.ighwa.y math aptitude, please call _ n-~ ,.~ •• v-"·-, -====~---g I F painting or repairs. Call and weight to Box M 'u M<lndf.Y .Ac 'Tueilda.y EQUA' OPPORTUNITY n« .. 673-8267 ........ """' l't"J' """"'"""• ~ a rage c ean. up. re e Dick, 642-1797 . . ' r ··· ._., . 77•7••1 " small investment of $996. to * CONCRETE flrs, patios estimate. 842-8182 The Dally Pilot.· ~ ~ EMPLOYER M/F. NEWP.ORT _ Independent P.ersonner $2,99a. Investment return etc. Concrete le blk top saw. Boats -•.• 1TI6 Orange Ave., Suite c ""he reofuedvecy 0,rddy. ing. """·Don. 642-851< Housecloaning 6735 Saw;np 6 960 • CARPENTERS TV(Q BUSBOYS, 1485 OAIX WAY BEACH CM 64~00'l6. 545.f\919 r..-furthe< Wormotion CEMENT WORK. ""job loo '-"==="'--...:.;..;.;; 25 YRS. "'"' Se.ms.,..,.; • TOOLING NEEDED OOSTA MESA, CALIF.""' AD AGENCY EXPERIENCED Mite small, reasonable. Free MAINT-res/c:omc'I, windows alteralions & repair, mens fTI4l 5C>8251 NEEDS W Nation1I Suppliers Corp estim. H. Stutliclc. ~ our 's=:itz..~t wurk, clothing specialty. 645'-0'l'n ~ Ei:Peiienctd Onl,y Apply I , ENGINEERING' Pa. rt time halp. Good AITRESS 0~ South 0·--• w 1 reas. · -O'D•v Yachlo · • ·" person ~ ~~N " C t Cl I 6625 """ -AIDE-. lypist"for clerical d•• Salt LaU City, Utah 84100. •rpe un ng CARPETS, Windows, firs, TILE .. Ceramic 6974 309o Pullman, Colla Meta REU'. . e:o"" ..... Ap:rily 'n p Indud etc. Res or C,00,c'I. Xklt 546.80TS' BEN'S ...,,"· to $700. per month ties, errands. $1.65 per S t e rson e phone number CARPET Ir. Fum. cleaning; work Reas! Re!S. 548-4Ul * Verne, 'lbe Tile Ptfan * hour. Call Ba rbara at U F & SIRLOIN • ., •-~~·-"-th~"""-'--"-'---' tor 1 day service&: (iuality CARP~ W' ....... ·-. "-Cust ~"Orie. Inatall &. repairs. GARDENER'S · D_.~ ~ear 6q,erlence u '4t-3tlO. 5930 Pat. Cst. Hwy. VENDING ROUTE work. call Sterling fur etc. ~ Ol' c:i~~L Xi:i No job too small. Plaster ASSISTANT· coc· O'S U1altJman, one year collere, Newport Beach SACRIFICE I brightness! 642--853> k DAn-n nr .... o itt~ paten. Lt:aklng s b 0 we r ena:lneerinl" major substj-EXECUTIVE Keypunch n....ralors ' Can ~ bandied eveni""'s o.t Ca-t Layln• & . nW::: ... ,........,Be.a'.h~Cl~:::-repair. 847-1957/846--0206 NEWP.ORTER INN 1555 W. ••ams tutt!d 1or experi@nce. Hi gh --..-"I ... .,..-• """"'., ... o: ...... ,. -=•.,. -Scix>?I rraduate, File appll. SECRETARY -Mature women, at least 6 =~ ~:e':1.m~~ 0~ Rep1ir 6616 catpeta, windOW9, floors.. etc 'TrH 5ervlca 6'IO ~ntaCr Mr, LinAey Stocka -=·7C:y0!;;;ta~,~:;-~-.. ;;. ~~-1 cation aA City Hall, 8200 Needed for vi:cltillg tem1»-months e:xpetience. I "'Oman. Vrry luctative. Res & Comme'l 646-1401 "-"'<-~--'----="' ~ 644-1700 'MAIN:TEN~N.C'E· Watminifer Avt., WeabnlD-nu;' usJ8iih\tnL'~ short. $2,IQJ casb ior entire ope_r. CARPET LA.YING GENE'S TREE s ER v : I ---.8:;;0;;:Yi;S~lti'.C..,.14.---~ . MAN rter, Olli!., by August 25th , hand and 'transcribing ma· Independent Personnel ,I, ation. u you att ready to C.A. Page 642-2070 Jenitori•I 6790 trees/shrubbery removed, Carri Rou 1969-5 pm. \\'rltten exam by chlne skills needed. ln6 Orange Ave .• Suite c start business now aDd have trimmed, hauled aw a y tr tor tea Open· NEWPORTER INN September 6Ui. 1969. Western Girl Inc. CM 642.()()26, 545-Cm9 the cub, write your name, E:;;l;;•d:;;.;.r;;ic;;•:..I ___ _:6;:644,::0; 1W:~. W=~i~ -~--13S9~------Laguna Beach,. So. Lquna (7U) 893-4511 Ext. 200. 540-0.125 0 E p END ABLE• exp'd addttu &: phone number to: ELECTRICIAN, no job too residential. Daily, wee.kly ESTATE Maint Tree Serv DAILY' PILOT 1 pennan~t position, aood MAINTENANCE SECRETARY: Seil starter. ~'Oman for part time sales &x M495 for immediate small. For prompt service and/or Mo. 897_7350 Removal Ir. trimmings, free ~ benelitJ:. Evenlnt ahlft 4 MAN -1· Expanding div. Great oppty in ""Omen's apparel Apply gel-together. call 545-4614 • i.es~te. Call 54I--0088. 2 VOLKSWAGEN ·mecha.Dlca P~f to l2. $·198. to $604, per montb !or advancement. Starts in person. WE DARE YOU 6665 Lendacap1ng 6110 Uphol-"'--... -for uri1ts room only, two . Contact BiU,Ba.it~y o . SSOO. Call'"~!!..~lart. \VHAALIVTAA!Hl CLARKE'S to check up out Nationwide Floon. •rw.1 .,,.-yv tune .up ahcf'rbake mech., 1 ~--=,.--:cc;,644-~!7--'00-'-·---1 ne year ga.rdenini, mainle· .,...,.""""' AN SHOP Co. needs a distributor in ;_;;;=:.:.__ ____ ..:::::;;:: * Llc'd landscape contrac-CZY'KOSKl'S CUST. Uphol. helpno rot lub A: oil, S0.!50 ' CredJt Mauger na.nce or 1eneral repair ex· COASTAL AGEN~Y 26 Fuhlon Island )'OW' area. 2 to 8 hrs p e r Cat'plt V inyl Tiie tor; compl,m lnd!cpg I-also European Cratts'maMbip 3-4 years experience Collec· perience. Completion of A member at: Newport Beach week <days or eves) for high All styles ~.'Jd colon Japanese gardl".IlS 830-3037 100% tin! 642-1454 rarantee, we pay full .in>uP llon, etc., COllllfNctiOn and/ eighth if'&de, valid Cali!. Snelling 6 Sr.elllng Irw=. S.cret•r-v to •11:50 · N Ill y Free nl Lie. con tr. , .... , ns., vac. I: bolldaya. or building trades, . drivera license. Oral board 27ro Harbor Bl Costa. Mesa · 1 ~ e1mmg1. o ae ng. ou ....u~DSCAPING Yuccaa for 1831 Newport Bl., C.M. 536-1491. and • Fee reimbursed. Beaut oUic- ean keep present job. $Ui50 1 ==540-="62~=54=6-<4=";,,= aa.le, call Juan Pantoja, lndepanclent Porsonnal pe.rformance test Sep-SECRETARY es, Irvine Complex with xlnl -"~ ( ~1 F ,_ Wblte .tlerhtnts'! Electricel O.sinnars tember 9 & 10, 1969. ,.._ ·~"u""""' secun.·u · or u.. 6680 White elephants! Dirne+U111 BRING RESUL_ TS! • l n6 Orange Ave., Suite C (7141 E ~ terview in your area, R nd Gardening and Dreft1mtn CM _ 6U-002f", 5«>0919 89.3-45µ e~t 2m. EXP RIENCEO . ABILITIES name, and phollf!' no. to: ----'------Minimum or 2 years eXper, * DRIVERS · * Permanent, 20 Hour, 5 day UNLIMITED AGENCY I Diatribut()r Division. 590 N. ALLEN BROS. Your"'" Shoulcl Be Mitre, Commercial & lndustriaJ ACCOUNTANT week position available 488 E. !7th St.. Suite 224 : Azusa, Covina, Calif. 917'12 GARDENERS STUDENTS buildings. Top Wli'OI and A small mtgr {20 employees) Ho ~ence Newport Beach, hrs. l0-12 Costa Mesa m 1470 j AFFILIATE ;;;;~"~~· They' ... Looking For It! =:Newport B<ach. ~ .,.:, :..., ~~ Necessary! :0~';.;,,;;';u~;;~iwnr. G IRL FRIDAY-I MANUFACTURER · the jnls, Jdgn, 1tmta, Must ba•e dean 'Calllomla SECRET•RY --Front otrice. Sell starter, ! desires iwociate \l'lth man. ~~!!!!!!!!'!~ TOOLMAKER or Clau A ""' agement or englnec?ring ~ ~ Machinist exper ln tooling ~b~ul~S4-7lOl Ask for ~~uwrc~tyco. A~heim, ~o sales m~r. New ~~ful.Elitate background I background to join expand· BUSINESS •no ANNQ.UN~EMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS and protOtype-. Cape Engl. --,,;;;1;:-;:. ;_-;--,.---1 lB6 E. 16th St. doefJ~~ee!:, wallill 0"'.,wo, u'k.s''". M"?.~ MISS EXEC AGENCY int manuf'g. co, $7,500 in-FINANCIAL -and NOTICES and NOTICES neerln,g & Manu!acturing, atms Trainee cu .. ~ .. ~. vestment. Salary $250 per .27694 Camino cal>tstl'&.DO, Oeil'ff neceuary, mature, Costa Me.sa be well organ'd, and a seU 410 \V. Coost J-lighway J wk + equal share or prolit. Mortg1911, T.0 .'1 6345 6401 Announcements 6410 ~ Ni&uel. 831-11£4. iood driving record. CABINET -MAKER starter. Ne,vport Beach 64&3939 Should retum S25.000 per _Lo_s;.1 ______ .;. MAN to ""Ork spilt shilt job TRAINEE Young man for MISS EXEC AGENCY l f C l'f . yr. For appointment call P.tr. $5,000 2nd TD on loc. apt. LADIES \\-a:llet Vic Center ~ In Lq. ik:b. area. Some Independent Personnel 1teady employment. Some 410 \V, Coast llighway anz 0 a 1 ornus Obenour, TI4-5.19-5GXI complex. l yn. due 6%% St, CM or 3rd Ave., Laguna U d t t bl M ' mechaniul exp requittd ln6 Orarce Ave., Suite C exper. In wood\\'Orking & Newport Beach 646-3939 F•shion lsl•nd •LIQUOR LICENSES rst% ~:~~·64!....fis.seasoned Beach, Fri 8/L Valuable n e ec 4 e en S 35 hrs/wk. $400 ~.Taylor: CM 642-0026, S45-0979 eager to lea.m cabinet mak-Gal Frid•y $450 up Ne wport Beach lntcr-Oxlnty Trans!en: Pa Pers. Rev,.ard. 4gg.2369 CUstom.made hairpiece from Dunn,· fu4 '\V. Ball Rd. SHOP ll'l1'• ~ Ing In small, cu• tom Unusual opporluni(y w i 11 Experienced assistant mana. $5,9501STTDonoceanvlew transparent artillclal skin. Anit.hc'-.""K I!~ •u:.MC".c.n.Yowieman f urniture Mfg Co · ger CaUM J h •ORANGE COUNTY * aft. 6. Comf -..bl tunJ Ui.J ...........,._, with some ha.nd drill Ir drill· J · · sharp gal for buyer. Xlnt · rs. o n •on, Off u.le $10,000 -on We Jot, 8%, due 3 yeara. 10% 1---'-------o ..... e, na .Joolcing, SALESMEN, Shoes. Fl & pt oryensen F\lmlture Co. 786 company Irvine area. Pret. &W-44-U. $13,SOO. Limited QuanUty! discou(.!!~.!!!~~nl-l S=~ f~~~~~ ~ ~n~Cen~r.~irNR .. ;eu~ Guar. comm, Pf.f's ~~ts_~;;dyC.C:l'9D~ N!"'1on \Vay C.M. 645-0010 ty offices. ''A"'ID~l"Vo-,'°kl~n-g_mo_the~,.-,-,-., Winston (213) 272~9 collect ...,, ........ ,. • ., ''bd East Blutl. 644-4529 Orange, (t) 6l3-0Ul ... lin1e men. Exper. pref'd. ly. YCl'UNG man for local jewel-J•son Best wk. 8:30 to 5. Starting Sept LAUNDROMAT_ Success:ful, ANNOUNCkMEMTS If; r 1f\,. .,,. & Guar. comm. PM'a ODUSTIE ELECTRIC. ry I tore. Sal~ & related Employment Agency 1,i time. Lite housekeepirw. 1.fost automated s e 11 • end NOTICES Personals 6405 .. ·• Apply 333 E. 17th. Cl\!. 2120 PlaCentii Ave, CM. wbrk. No e!Cpenence neces. 21.20 So. 1i1ain, S.A. own trans, mature woman, ! servlce. $6500. 675-5622 ( ch MAN lo 1\-ork part time in MAINTENANCE AfAN·FuJI 18~-,:pply: NURSES call alt 6 pm. 839-l75.9 ' FOOD TO GOOD Found Free A ) 6400 e COUPLES e ~etery Lots 6411 rentals yard, morning!! & time 6 a..m .• 2 p.m. Saluy I K JE'!"ELERS • Ri'i·RelieJ duty, hvo days TYPIST-Clerk. Must know CAN'T keep young male e SINGLES e 4 LOTS ln Blue Sp~ ~ \Vttkends. Will train. Apply meals. 2300 1-lartior Blvd. per week. lO·key adding machine, bu!il'lell. Good profit record. wblte dog wlth red collar, 'Mred of Bars, Mall le Ki Cost lion, Harbor Reat Afemorlal 1930 NeWport Bl\ld, CM. Apply to' Afr. Simon Coata 1tfesa, ~if. • LVN-Rcllef, tour shills 549--0377 Mrs. Myer ·I "'.,._,.,,==~· =~~---I found In Back Bay a~a. computer clubs: JOIN TJIE Park. 54SJ075. FULL TIME Service Station l\fcOONALD'S RE'J'.IRED man for pt-lime per \l.'ttk. Laguna Beach f\.1esa Verde Country Club ·1 ESTABLISHED beauty a1on Owner pis. contact & iden-FUN! THE IN CRO\VD -t ·J°'O"'B°'S""&"'E'"M"P"'L'°'O°"Y~M=E~NT= J1clp. One, graveyard. Ex· 635 \V. 19th St, Cl.I maintena.ncc wot k al Nursing Home QUIET Middle aged couple in CdM, .. 6 chain, newly tily. 64&-1403 DIV. OF 1.M.P. ?.feet otben . . per. pttf'd. Richlielrl, 19th DELIVfRY. Boy I c;:ieneral ta .. -ern, CM ~7301 494-307S des.ires gen. c I ea n in g (-o....,..=='.,"',,·.,67S"'4al=====IBEAtrrll~L all black kit· with YOUR interests at our Dom"tlc HilP 7035 & Newport. C.M. NO pl'I. Hclpar F\J.U TI1'M position. ·~1AClilNIST Exp or. mills EXEC SECTY \\"Oman 2 mornings a wk. ten, red collar. Vic Ocean =~nd~~ 0~ (= Georae Allen Byland Ageoo;y calls Afust be neat and depm. ~ lathes.' PtototYpe &: tool· To President. Top skJUs, re-Referer!C8. 0 w n transp. ,;Bl;::vd;;;:, .. :,CdM=:::·,:6'J3.-0833:::;::::::.... __ 1 join FREE) Call Leab 1-9 Employer P&y1· Fee AUTO .MECHANIC _dable. Opportunity for ad· ng. 540-&&52 . aponsibJe position with much OR 3-2618. · · Interested parties with FOUND male Siamese cat. p.m. 635-m. 106-B E. llith. SA 547-0.195 "1th engine exper. vancemen~: Apply 8 "'m to 4 iECEIVl~G CLERK dlve"illcaUon . Exper. Waitresses re.cly uth, loolci"I Mesa Verde nrea. Lost for Chinese livc-ina. Oleer1ul \Valt M'ays. Automotlvt pm. ~Ora~ Coast t>la.stics. Kerm Rima Hardwere MISS EXEC AGENCY BAYSIDE INN for r ight Hoffbr•u lo-aometlme. 549--0695". * 1·1ve! Permanent. Experienced. 2007 Harbor Blvd., 0.f 850 \V, J.Sth., Coata l\fesa. Some ~pe~nce.prefe~. 410 W. Coast Hi&hway 353 E. c.oe.111 Hwy., NB 63o5 Bus. W1nted cation Newport/Cott• iOUND: Irish> Setter . on Far East Agency 642-8703 Gfl-SU3 BUSBOY, 18 or over. Start C H A UFFEUR. part· tune. Newport Beach 646-3939 615-m28 ~.-• St Call • Ide tif,y SERVICE St•t~ •tte~·-t. $1.65 hr. Apply In -New Port· B aiboa att1li;;""';;,;;;:::.:':,.,-.:=:=:f:==°"'.::::=:::_. __ _ u.,a a r 0 a. 642 ~I ~ ...... ~:.._ · « n · ""' '~" •-·-BEAUTIFUL GI" w/good WOMAN c ..... ·r .. -' """ -~ ?l·Jeet that special someone Help W•nNd. Min 7200 bp'd, aie no banier, Full Th~ Cottage. Coffee SboPt F\n-nlsh age and refs. R. . '' -uuu:.o:wi e,""" your •ft. I P .M. --0---~----&. begin lo u .. 't'. lime, salal')' .+ c omm , / 562 W. 19th st, Costa Mesa. Schmidt. PO 8o."< 75671, fiaure for modeling. Great apa.re lime to earn monty. BLONDE Pekingese male. ORANGE CO. Mi-6668 ?11ANAGER ASSISTAN"f lfobll Sta lion, 24362 El Toi-a FACTORY TRAINEE, Santoni S t at ion Los Pay! 3 ta 4 houn per "'-eek. \Vin prize!', no age llmlt. no Talbert & Bushard. FV. 24 ho record. YOUNG nian 1.,.tcooking & Rd., Laguna Hi\ls. St'N lte completed, H . S. An~es gum ' No experien~. J.lobby -time l!n1lt, \VIII trnin ., 1 Money te Loan 962-0862 ur in11: kitchen exp lo &SSlst In ~~~;:;::;,.~~--1 strictly for fun. Write box Beauty Counselors, 847-<846 BIKE round Ba,)o"lidc Dr., LICENSED operation of family CUSTODlAN ll. graveyard dlplomt. Phone for appt. S~IVJt~meST_!.!':,,,•m•,•.".,,', r.1869 Daily Pilot. BIKINI Bannald/da.ncer. _,, _.. ,_._ il ~ ·~ •••'rll•"I Re•d•·-d ,_ 1 1 A ~1 · Shi.ft. Inquire fltr. Olet111ak. 5"s-6ll6 0·-•"1 '" SE ET I .,..,. auu ,.,.,n! y. "'..--..u ~n ali matters."3~ ~-viii: res auran ' p.,.y in penon Saddleback Collere 837·9700 GARDENER, Ind u at or •nd 1-Plll't Tim~ eve. tl wk. CR ARY Full or part-time. Costa ' Lost 6401 Camino Real, San Oemente ~E: ~ r ;~ ~: ·or ~7 · comm'!. min 2 yn exp, xlnt. ends. Must be expttlenced Altemoons ottly. Tralntt ok. fllesa 492-9136, 496-9507 CM:. • !ERV. STA. ATTND'T over oppor. Call ewa. 6'-5427 le neat In .,pe-arance and Gd. typlng & &horlhand or 646-7?.01 I DOG, amall lone • haired blonde ""°'· curled up !All. nea. collar, ans. to Rikki. Vic CamC!O ~. CdM beach. eppro.x 7/28. R& Morf11111 , T.0.~1 G4S WARD.~. $75.000 1-1 TD on ll.000 Ill· SILVER tipped t err a. I e ft. brick commerc. btcfa, on ShepheJ'd, 1 )'l". ''Rf.nee". &ong.term leMcd I a n d , ALSO Boxtr/plt Bull mix, Payable $750 per mo. tncL m..ie '7ney". Vic C?l1. 10 • bnLIJ lnccmc $2.«X> Rev.·anl. 642--0467. pctt mo. 10'1' DlacowlL LOST: Baby raceoon vtl C'Ol· BROKER 49'7-UlO tar 1: leash. vSc Jlntg $1.158 2rxl TD •I $20 Month HN:bour Tl.me 6: scared. Ind. l@IO UL. all due 3,,... -· 84'-1143 on ocean Wfw lot. La(llna e J,100 f'OR RETURN ~ " d faeo11 nt Malt-, Sable brown BUR· .._un. MES& co• CDM m.1099 ! 10 AM. 10 PM , ~==~~~---·I \J.8.. Exp. ntc:. See' Mike lTit) handwriting. See >;Jim Zt0 Stenorette required. 962-6912 MATURE: "'Oman lor night • G-RAN--D-'-0-P_EN_IN_G_;_;A;_U_G_.;_U_ EXP Fiberglas ahop meo AlRPORT 'TEXACO, 4678 SERVICE staUon attendant Neport mvtt., C.M. before 1 pm. sbiH 11 to 7, floor duty. MU&.RAY IIEALTI'i SPA 'l1~P~~ Campus ~.,iN.B. exp'd. 1992 Pauaades, U TRAINEE ... YoUOI man, ftt' Housekeeper Wantl"d SAW y ER H 0 M E. 'I 2930 W. O:latt Jiwy, Newport FOAM GUN Of!!R.A?OJ\s SPORt!IRG Goods §Inman. Hgbta. 56-9151 riOC P,tenHal, . outst&ndina full time l-::"'6-61l=:;6:;. =-=~---I Beach, 7 da,ys a wk. Tra.lned ROLI.ER.S .'Nta1'1 Sportin& Goods. 211 Serorlty . GUudl ~~-Start S550 call ·-&IU044 001.JNTER 01R4 over 18, m""""" Ml-3151 ~~· 'E. <U. St, !U. Ne-·-Theo. 645-rnO. Mttehanb EX-D SALESLADY io,,tucl<Y Fried O.ICloen '! ~ u,~ .. ...,., --Pel'l90nneL :704,3 Westclttf r-693 S. Coast lf'A?' • Attr1ctlve EJCpctrt Top tcale. Call BW (Jll) OOOK, breakfast, shift. i • Call 637...¥n0 Drive Men A W'lmen& OothhJ& Lag Be h YOUNG WOMAl'I m-<150 AM Tiytng BuUer PART tbnt· BOOKKEEPER.. . • * 5tt-5383 * una ac rlancer will teach YoU all RELIABLE, ex""-'l'·-.a ' · .67l--097T , Matutt A: exp·d. W. 5 .1~•-OIEMlST BS .• ~· !I to 5 Ex;Ptritoetd In si""le ........ le LlCENSED Shampoo clrl ..,., .. u1, .. ,~ ...,.,,.. yn. exp in ft31'1C!Ulture .,.. ·~ needed. Tup pay la!l!lt 11tcps. Call Ardell mature lady u CUhicr, A-SruSTANT QtEF A all· wk. 63!Mll7 · chem t ca I II &urfactan .. and 0""!1ock. Cood pleCI!' • S..2--6857 *' 2.ll: 591-4.538 l·lO PM Hottest or Rtteptionist. p.round eook~ntry club. DRIVER to drf\'li car ta Ohio LABORATORY' l 11 '1'ork pnccs, slta<ly work. :-,,:;,,,c;-;;;;,,;;,;:;:::,_:_...,.._f . G~~"N. 39, &'I". Pff'lerCM·NBatta.Partor lop•-•.,, r he! A U G p ot EDDY AIOSS 14042 Locwitl>•Uj Y!)I J1'ER.SdaY$ 7am· .,.,,,~ full time. 548-4633 -... °"'. UI· 17. R ENT! )'ll1ont "-ork. U.S .• Cillztn. St., Westmlmtu· ~ 3:30 pm. cosa l\!e~ vie dealtt1 lo bffr fn'lm lady 25 YOUNG MAN, Pl!rt 1im1. for 1,.,64&-""2m='-------Rdutnl' box l\f 3SS Dall.y ' Htbr le Baker S(9-l2l7 -to 41). Write Box M t22 Delly EXPERIENCED ahoe aD fi,ntral reslaW'&nt w 0 r k. Y}.!C\ ,,_..,. mainttneru Pilat. T\'PlSl'...SS wpm It 1ccurate. · · Pilot. man. J-•1-S45 F___, ""l be 16 "•1-d -..~ Se as on• I until Dec * • * AIAIO * * * Ave., La;; Bea~ ...... ... ~r _..,.... -· man. 131;.,.. hr. wk, Ovtr EXPER. attvke: at1rion at· Ca..lilornia Arti1ll llJ. Mt.I , , LACUNA REEF MOTEL ALCOHOLICS MOb.)'mout I ,_;::~,;::,Q,;;U1='~==:;:Y;O;u;:.~=•,,~ ESTABLISHED Jnsuraric.' . 2t. 642-9990.. f'QI' appl 1 te1:!.,~t. Full nme. APl>tY fn st.: !kai Bl'ach. ( 2 1 3 n) ~ s.. O>ul. -.as 1 .. , Phone 542-1211 o&• wr1te to .. n.o:. "'""'n ~ Leads a'\11.U. N.B. Dfh. PART-tili'lt owr n, • ., bn, pe ....... 2096 Harbor CM P.O. Box 1;3 Q,sta Meu. THE QUJa<ER YOU SELL .;C.::.""=--•:.::PP.::.l::.-.;.SlM381~=--· ..i ..... ,..,.,.i::...,<CdM. 81!t-l!I04 Wh. I ..,_.. • ...'.. . . .Ul-1321 for appt. nIE QUICKER YOO CALL. ...-_..... It ..--..--t F.qual opportUnlty employtt THE QUIOCER YOU ...,. ' ~ 1 ~ -r· .,i1L T t•P+t••••w --SI ••JO _._ ~ ... -..... Mond.q, A-l l,l, 1969 DAIL'.' Pilar I JOIS A IMPLOY~NT JOU & EMl'LOYMINT JOU.& IMPLO"l'.MIHI' .IOU &;~t~ .~ &.~O:'(MINT Ml@C~. ISi 1'91! MUCHANOISI POii i\111CHAHOJSl _FOlt Mill~HANOISI H5l"-.>A = -.sAk!__ TRADI . U.ll liND TUOI SALi AND TRAOE SALi AND TUD9 He~ Wontecl 7«11 Help Wantod Noli' W-·· Jillo, Mon; w_em; 1Sll J1llo , Moo,. W-7500 1'"""""9 -l'umltu~ . -PumltuN -l'umlture --w--7• w...,.. 74GO -- DEPARTMENTAL • COASTAL -CL l llK -REC lf';TIONIST il~agtllC'f· Im~ ' AtMllCY • . l'ur< ..... '"" 'plonniJ'c ... ,,..._,., .,........., ., " ... -Ot ilne~ pe.rltnce neotll&r)', to tue • srow~ tlectronlct 2790,...., ...... over oara. of all clerical, COf'QIU1Y bu a ~ COSTA MESA plArmlni and pu.rchultw d"' me po11Uon for a ptl'IOB-Huillr ., " --ties, and aultt man..iu 1n •hie 'fom&n. Mutt be 833 l)()VER DRIVE 5*405S neat awm..i-and be NEWPOR'r ·BEA.CH ~ vendol' folJow.qp. Prevloua ............ 642...s8'70 ex:peritnce detired, Typlnc able to mett and com- acuratd,y 41 wpm, municat. wdl with peo. We are inlerviewl.ng for Call Jtm lbama. °"'' 612·2400, ""'" _, ~ULTON INDUSiruE!I 1644 Whittler Ave. C.M.. F.qual oJ)Gl'lunlt,y Mnployu • REUBEN'S • Costa Mesa NOW OF FERS A BOOKKEEPING -POSITION- ( part time) .... Dulles "111 triclude the following local posi- 1Jtt:Unr and aMOt.tno. tions thla week: Ire ... u.... and - eanta for empfoym<ot.' Atct t. $jSK IP~· Soma. t'l:IU'lt' de1ired. CPA or MBA. ~lnt OP" TYPlftl' SO ~ pty for younrma'h tq 1et APPLY in on the around floot DANA ol a fine or-Uon. Laboratories, Inc. Acct to .$12K EPI' Degttt. Another srowth opportunity ln private enterprlae. 2401 Canipua Dr. Irvine, Calif. (Near Oranle Co. Airp)rt) Equ&l opportunity emplo)'tt . . Ole M,r/Cash$600CRF Mwit kno'"' lite insur· a nee. Secretary to $600 CRF ACCOUNTS M•c """'" ·•1e •••P-PAY .AILE tui. BOOKKEEPER (<dm Sac to PrH 1'25 Apply in perton AP.F lfi65 \Vest Ado.ms, C.M. .. •.• TOR'"""'"' d,.,. . .:o. ... ,..,,.,. .. ~wtlh --~!!'~~, .. ,_bl~·-~· fi&• c Hf E'Ji' TEU..ER/~K-·~ l&llU CYCl'°'t"'~ ~ •P . KEEPER, A g'a re• a J v e· conthndng building program S.cty $600 APF young company nee.di alrl seeks coristruct.ion bookk~ To engr. VP. -Opply to with teller, new accowits er. Should be qua.lifted m ad and bltkpg. experience In cost control bookkeeping, v. Bank or Savtng1 &: Loan. t ~ txdtkeeplng, stand-P1rs. Asst $550 APF to 2 yrs pre.f'd. 21 to 45. &rd office macblnes and Mu1t be famlllar with Pleau.DI, amall office al· llOme lite typln&. emp grp ins & personnel mosphere. Contact Mr, Send resume detaillnc ex· clerical functlon1. Gd. Lapp, , perienc to: \ypini req for fine Co. OOWNEY SAVINGS lo: Emp&oymtnt Mlln-ser UOlmtd rrowth. oppty. LOAN ASSOCIATION. MACCO CORP. Rcpt/Typst to $550 EPF 837-4911 or &IJ..&5l3 blust be youne, attract. e e • .P.O. Box 21i5 and a .i::ood typlsL Experienced -HOSTESS- Apply in person REUBEN E. LEE 151 E. Coast Hwy. N'""°rt ... .,,, Seely to .. ~ EPF C.alit. 92663 ..- NCR PROOF OPERATOR For JTUU\&Jer o( RilD Clk/Typ to J550 APF J'or a bright attract. young lady w/2 yn. tt· cent gen offc eicp.. Clk/Typ i•l 1o $425 APF For a bright attract. young lady w/'J yn. re· cent gen. offc exp. 1.., .... N•"wpo"'""rtiiBaiiiiaiichiiii• I UNITED CALIFORNIA 1-BANK Accll/P•y $450 APF abilities unlimiteC> a9enc;y Quality Positions 1or Qualified Applicants 488 E. 17th SL, SUlte 224 C.OSta Mesa 00-1470 30'19 Harbor IDvd. Costa ?tfesa.. caw.. ;..- TELLER UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 6 J\lonarcb Bay Plaza South LagW>a 499-1361 F.qual opportunity ~ployer EDP knO'A·ledge plta111e. Girl Friday to $500 CRF One girl office. Secty to $450 CRF SH 80, typin1 60 wpm. Recpt to $450 EPF 555 l'XP and lite typing Bkkpr $500 V. EPF Const 6: coal acctg b/g. Acctg Clerk $450 APF Good G.o. background. PT PERMANENT e Se<l)I, Tech~' 'Top enar .. om~. Great op. Pt.Y tor"·sd .ittu .. · i:soo. ca.ti • Jean_ Brawn, Mo. .... • Sect10 'l'orylllc •oI>Pt> for divel'lif)ed ra:p.:fop be:ns. to '550. call Gloria~ ... ~ e Peraonnel Clerkf Stlf· a tarter. '350.. cau Salb' -~-• Sectf, Leral: .. Tmitlc new offke. Wow behe· tits. From ·.$5215: eau Jean Brown.,~ • Steno: Excltin& w.rietJ" ..,.. iq.t.udnatinc field, trtt benefit&. to '.$418... Call Gloti& J<>.x, .540- 6065 • e Rue.ptlo n i1~ Will groom<dlo<•"Plridto& Co. $400. call Silly Hart. ,54()..6005. e Teller: Sin. brancft..-.t• mocphere for sharp, able person. $400. Call Jean Brown. 54.~ e Typl1ttBkkpr: Gttat op-- pl)' for all-around 'in· ctivldual to take. charge Ir. greet public. To $375. Call Gloria Kay, ~ .... • Secty: ~nding di· rector of large Co. $475. Call Sally Hart. Mo- 6065 •Personnel Clerk: llff:t the public. Active, rrqw· Ing Co. Exc!Urtg held for selr starter. To S350. cau Glori'a Kay. 540-<;055 e Recpt/PBX: Can ~ type! This la a •ro!den oppl $475. Call Jean 8~11.~. • ~~~~~~rJ:i~nfi~! type,. tenific .mgr. Call Jean er.own, 540-~ • IAgal Secty: P,ush new office. Xlnt carttr·apOt. Great Co. beneflt11. To $525. Call Gloria Kay, 540.605S . e Steno I Trnee: Rtspon• slble to ~rdinator. $400. Call Sally Hart,. 540-<;055 • • A r t I a t : Advertisil]f. great spot in D6.lgn Co. To $520. Call Jean BrOW?I.,.~ • Banlc feller: ~t 1urrounding1 in small branch· ottlce ,f«' mp. person.. To '$4.00 .• Call G/of\a ~' S4o.$055 SECRETARY ~in the: sales do!part. ment of electronic manufac- twing company, Minimum five ~ of secretarial tx· perience In enginttring or general sales office. 80 wpm Gen Of$. to $2.25 hr •St.mo I Recpt: -Prestige W 111 possibly become , .<re. for w6}-s~ full time. Casual dn!U, high· gebed pr. -To pleasant ~ ~pie. ~ ;Jean Brown. Receptionist $400 Beautiful new oUice11, Irvine area. Xlnt opportunity to ad· Vance with fine COID.pal:l)'. Call Diane, 546-5410. Gen Ofc/Secty'$2.25 e Gt-ne.ral Office: Capable, Flexible hrs, manage ofc. h a rd. working. $375. Jason Beat Employment Agency 2120 So. Main, S.A. -· 80 wpm typiJ>&. , caII Sally Ha.rt, 54(). Girl Frklay 6055 ' PT General Offlc1 Beautiful surround!nas, dl- ve~ified duties. 4 hour day, 5 day week. MISS EXEC AGENCY 410 W, Coast J-llj:hway Newport Beach 64G-3939 Call Jim Hyams Days: 642-2400. Ew:s: 546-0319. CULTON mDUsrRIES 1644 \Vhlttier Ave. C.M. Equal opportunity ,mploYer PAYROLL CLERK NEWPORTER INN To as1lst young dynamic:. ml]rr of mngmt/empl re· JaUons Ol'i· FuclnaUng "'ork. 10-2, :S day wk. MEDICAL Mod Trane $450 8 :30 to 5:30, NY/M.ATIC exp. A/R Bllng Mtr to.$600 WOMAN Office in La&una Beach, to leue n e ..., Bank or America computer moving to San Juan apartments In HunlillKlon system payroll, 300 10 400 Capo. XI.NT oppt. for Beach tract. No children, m employees. Pennanel]t posi-1alary Increases. pets; 1 Bedroom un-. 5 d week. Salary furnished apt, utilities & bon. Onlyays a . __ __, _ _. Registered Nurse $600 commlssk>n. S o me ex-open. expenuM.~ -= Over 35, please. Excel~ ....,.;ence he.lptul. Call Mr. apply, Accounting office. lent "'orklng conch. .,.... • 6#-1700 Ext, 513 \Vylie 84Ulll btwn 11 a..m. ''TEA=~CHE=R~-....,--chee~rtul~·.1 * EPF, employer &Sp.m. '· .• 1._ dependable 1 i t t e r 11 t t IMIYI nie MR. Best One Hou 1' housekeeper for active 18 • APF, appllco1n t Oeaners, Pacific Co as t bo •1 F 1 '"' JS f mo. y. · , :'W"o): • pays " Hiway, &: Iris, CdM. At-'""'·-R f -·•~ • vwn transp. e. '"'l......... CRF, company tractive ~uner girl, full-548-4595. relmburt0• •-· time. Sh 1 rt presser, part-1 ===-===-~ , ·;;-,;=;;>'ii:~=-,::-:.:..._,. time. No exp. nee., gd. WINDOW • COUNTER glrl.s 1 WANTED, Mature woman to working cond. Apply in 22 • 40. Salary + meals. 11 1it in my home. CM, w/2 penon, Mr. Pierce. a.m. • 2 p.m. school age thildren. Short • Apply to Mr. Simon .. _ .. _ __. Secr1tar1e1 to $450 J\fC DONALD'S uuuni, iuuu pay. I am a leach8. Tram. &: refs.· re-Sevual, choose your field, 6.t"> \V. 19th St .. CM qui.mt. MG-3668 top skills. HOME needed for six-year-LAW firm desitt!I exp'd Independent P•raonntl old dlllll'.hter ,att.u 5Chool. legal secretary Est pin. Mo.nte Vista School Dist exp. valuable. W-111 ~ ,,; e Recpt /Typist: G r ee t customers, variety of duties. Accuracy come• first ~hen. To $344 C4l1 Gloria.Kay,.~ e ClaJm S 't en o: Short day, rreat company, $381. C&ll Sally Hart. 5;40-6{\)5 e Lepl Secretary:•Depen• pendabl.e for. busy at• torney.•$500, C&ll Sally -~-.Steno Girl: Good sk:Uls for Jons standina: Co. wo. can Sail> Hart, -•Steno Ttalntt: Attrac· Uve appeen.n~ 6: lit@ SH wtll Put you ln this enjoyable spot To $381. Call Gloria Kay, 540· rol5 . e Exec Sectttai:y: GObil typing il SK ·11kllls for top c~~panf to $550. Call Sally Hart. 540- ""'5 e Keypunch ,Oper:' Rapid adv, old line firm. Are you rekp.! Mature! Start '330, Go.•, Call Jean Browtl. MCl:-6055 MALE ins Ora.ng:e Ave., Suite C 644-1531 or 642-2732 MTST. Pd hen's, u1 open. CJ\f 64.UXJ26, 545-0979 TEAOtER needs reliable 83.1-0581 • fl.fngmt Tmtt : Gd out· NURSES needed for Private BABYSJ'ITER for 2 yr old ==,...,,-,-,-...--....,.~I look with new ldeu. Duty. p r a c: t t ca l's • no c:blld, oUr home, Top ol EXP'D Bookkeqler capable Dig resp •• to '$9600. Ca:ll license. Aides. Uve in or World, Laguna Sch. Ca.n pro. of financ:ial statements. 4 GelT)' White, 54()..6()M aey ahill. A1!1o I n fa n t vlde tramp. 4M-l.842. IOme tax exp. for public e Sales: Est-territory With. Nut'leS tor new .bon\t. M111t 1-'"-=,M.;.E~D.;.IC.;.A.;.L~--I '°'acctg"'°'c,' ,,.olfi77""-· ,.,54""611--~~ I plin& more! $7200 ,)T ha~ refs. Call ~ RECEPTIONIST R=rn::~e u:,~r.r::. ~ Gerry White, ACCN'I'S Rec. l billirw airl Experienced • Sf&.3003 wanted. E:irper. on1)', Ac-~ a.cttve rental qency e Sales: Know about •dd Iv w D . & JOUnl woman to •tart machl.nies d Acct. curate typist. App.., • · BEAUTY 0 PE RA TOR$ bnmedlatl!ly. 66-0lU. Great rut;~n with Co. Schock Co. 3502 S. Green-wanted: No fo.ll owlng ===='=====I ville St., Sanla Ana necessary, 67>-4232, 6/,;,.-3701 Jobs Min, Worn. 7500 gjFc!9~ ~tit~, ~~ BABYSITTER wanted: M.Y BABYSl'M'ER Wanttd:-cJ)ft 6055 hOme Mop.Fri. 7:4>5:30. area. 2 chUdnn, g & lO. Full MATURE Woman for reiail Own trans. 5l6--8685 aft 5:30. time ""HI ••bool, ·~-aJ•-bake-u.les "' 0 r k. Shift 0 Sales: No a&e barrier! ... , -. uicu u::a ., Trained by owner. BEAUTY operator, full time, school. 675-1815. o Pen lofon thru Thurs., fo.'lostly Ins 1 de sale&. euar wqe It comm. Cwt.n's HOUSEKEEPER, ll\'e in, 5 11 :30 AM to 8 PAI. fo.tany $7200 yr + full bene· Bty, Shop, 49'1-3294 day week. B9Z-31M. Call beneflti. Apply In pel'IOn, fits! Call Gerry \VbJte, &tOTEL MAID. Experience. afle.r 5 pm, moming•, at Sn a c k Shop S40-60M ~ _ H b 1 ..,==-";.----~~ Bakery, 3444 E. Cout Hwy ., • Sl!'.:BI ping • ~-t·'--·. ~~~· ~M a r 0 r PART time typists. no SH, at Narcluus, Corona del .... R,,•,.1 .. ~~ _,;.'-'i.a.hr Bl ............. ta eaa. hrs Oexlble. Extra dollara fo.f ~· -~~ PART. time hou1ekeeper Your S""' .... time. 545-9178 ar +.Also 1%. overtime. ..--~ BABYSl'I'I'ER ot h0u8tkpr, Call Gtrry White, 540. own transp. Vic &tth St., WANTED! Woman tor Ber. 9/4 for .3 .chool• q:e 6055 NB. ~. CHILD CARE, Ii.Pt hllcpr, ctrU:· Near 'Beach il e Janitor: supre.rvtse 'two TYPIST, for commercial 5 du., live out. Laguna Garfield, RB. Aft. I pm matdl order aupplies. blueprint ahop. Over 21. Bea.ch «M-83ZI. after 6 pm. -...U76 $5200' ff· CaIJ -Gerry PH.: 5«>-9.173 UV.&-IN HOUSEKEEPER 'l"ELEPHONE SOLICTOR \Vhl~ 5f0..6055 DINNEll·fOOD WAITRESS Emerald l!q, I.¢ .ll<h. ... pm dalf,y Mon-1'1'. E>tp'd e 1'uck l>rfYen, $2.25 hr. Ex:perietloed, ~Imo. frte rm. I: brd. pret Dependai., CM otticl 1 'i overttme. '1\1.11 bmei- DI')' Dock Rfttaura.nt 494--6022 sa hr. 5«t-l1M flts11 c.J.t Getr1 White, 2801 W. Cout HW)' .. N.B. D"'ENT=~AL.,_""1.,-_•t_ao_t_, -.,~llce~A ATTR. woman 1M5 to in-640-imS Uw-ln be.byatttrr, 11) pm to cha.lnldc. 4 9 6 -5 TT 9 ar 1tntct ln makl!Qp techni~ 8 AM. 2 email childrtn,. .. ~. -499-15311. of ~IS mode.JI. Wt •W 1 l 3, M0-24,92. PRIVATE Duty NURSES tra1n. 83W'lt3 MA IDS ahlttl. Call any hour . WIG StYlla:t. Attr, exp'd in Hotel/Motel exparit.nct needed. RN's, LVN'.. All synthetics. Beaut. n t w r1J.9410 &l2-69S5 ..ion. 836-6743, 1().6 WTDOW, to IJve-ln, tile hOUle--BARMAID wanted. op'd WAITRESS • OVER 21 'kpv. !C<at drkoe. Rd. Pttf~. A pp I y the: Evtnb'll Shift ~ \VAILLE'l~OoeanHB. Cllh 5'M86S· • • ~k Boy: Work for boat co. $3.00 rl II benefits. Call Gel'TY White, ~ COASTAL . AGENCY %190 lla>bot-Blvd. COllTA M&SA (heck Here I with-· J~.~. l<ings! . ~ .·(tlALE COMMERCIAL . .. Salatmoit$Ullwk+ Exp. ouWde Alea. sci. c:loaer, II .speak Spanlih. ~at! Jr. S.le1man S- P1us • car It hpensea. Sharp young college man, learn bua from P'QUnd Ui' ' · Office Mtr hi J750 ?.lust be-hm with all ~es ot &eel& 4 have \\'Ork exp. ' "Aect· to $600' .. 4· yn. college + exper. Cou~i.r Man to $55• If YoU know auto pts I: counter work, you're our man, WAREHOUSE SALE · Ow...,"· 0,..." l'llWlc' lot""' s,.i.-... ....... . .. ..... FUlllTURE . . S ·-Fvm. Value 0,.,$·1000. Now $389. • 5,., _ .. ,,.... h 'Mli .,... ... ~iUf. .. Mhl , wltlt .56 a. iUtcWlt '"9 MltJ. er chllr • I.pc. SpMlllt -., Nit t1W..,., e S M.., 11"' ..,,. .... .,.,., ......... ttp• nnw. ........ for fliotlop-•. . £ic1111ples of 11001 Ufttimt Specials APPR VEO FURNITURE JOBS & EMPLOYM!NT JOBS I. EMPLOYMENT J~Mon, Wom. 7500 --------------·- " . .. • r ' " ' ' i . ·l . ) •• I • -~ Hilp Wontod Women 7(00 ,F_u_m_l_tu_r_• ____ -_ I G1rage Sale ------r.rN ,. • I022 :; ,. babysit l month okl baby ¢ in my home. 8:30 to KIND, dependable woman to ~ TECHNICAL '''°· ""'· thru ·rr;, call . ......_lo after 6 o'clock SM--m9. ._.,,_ TOO much furniture for new PRlMITJVE g pine plank 1• hOme! Bargaina gal~ on chairs. oak couch, plnlt box-- many line pieces. Some an-e.$, oak thalrs, rockers, oak Uques. (WUI trad~ for dresser, torui ot iOOdlel. • 1 carpentry.} 549-lm 3300 Clay st., Nev.opt. Bch. ._ Plan Prod Mtr hi $'500 L"';:,:'';";"':•;• ;required;;=='=· == Have bkmd In plant food I'"' prod II pre:Jll. Stable and DON'T Give upJ You may 1 find it at A11".erlca's Jargnt, Appli1ncn 81Gp depen. • Mechanic hi $4.Dll All around mech· on heavy ~ulp. Taal 0.1i.nar to$IOO Jr, colttae. mechanical A: Shett meta.I layout ...... Mfgr. Engr to $l50 Defrtt In Mf(cr. Enrr. ex!) in ordinance fOt" de· fense. Plant Main! fr $3.U hr Electro·Mech·bkrnd. <X/X-ay Tech fr $3.DO C•blnet Maker $3.17 hr Actual cabtntt maklni exp. awn tools. • c Workl"I ln•p Ir $3.50 hr Manutacturtnc bkrnd. Hotp Malnt M•n $4ff ""'· M~hanlcal, all around 'man, Glazier Trnee Or exp. to $2.75 hr. UtjSK·l~LED : Furn StockmOfl $1 .70 hr Clean cu.t younz man. F•ct Trn/He.rp.r1 to $2.52 Drlver/,Dalv to $2.25 Oe111 ddv)n' reco'rd. not afraid ot work. FEMALE Ole Mtr/Bkkpr hi $700 All around bkkpr to PNO Legal Sac fr $450 Top· notch c1rl, SH, type. NCI Proof Opor t. $25 l\fu11t bf: experleneed Jebs Min, Wom. 7500 FRY COOKS Top ware•. pennanent, boll- est, and woddnr conditions l.n area'a le.adille tt•taurant. Apply 9 am to s. pm tor iD- terviff at MANNING'S COFFEE SHOP • 24031 El Totv Rd. Lei.sure World Lquna Hilll 837-1014 -·INSTRUMENT - ASSEMBLY TRAINEES ASSEMBLERS most unusual unfinished ,t I furniture 1tore. Car. Redhill le Santa Ana Fwy, Tustin. 1 G.E. automatic wuher. xnlt One or more ye&N eltt· tro-mechanlcal assembly f'xperience lncludlni; IOlderlng. ml ~. of Newport Fwy. amd. ~·84'1-Sll5 * Open 362 days per yr. ' • 514-54;o G. E. Refrigerator w/croa Call Personnel Dept. (714 ) 494-9401 i--~SP_A_N-IS~H--top""""""°""'""""· llSO ' 642-91»9 aft 6 Pf\f. ( 1 TELONIC ENGINEERING CO. L19una Btach MEDITERRANEAN Al Shown In model homes. 3 Rm• of furn, (dl.n rm, liv nn. & bedrm) priced else· v.·here at $89a ls yoors t('(lay at on1y s.199. Easy Credi! TenTUI. . Santa Ana Furniture ~ W. 4th SI., Santa Ana. 547-0789 G.E. AM/F~f Stereo Equal opportunity employer wfG&tTard turntbl. Salem fo.tAN-WOMAN part or full-maple Prov. ~like new, time, Pleasant, ea1y work\ $125. Salem Maple double KENt.10RE Wa.sher, lillr I' new $ 1 0 I) • Phflm..Norp fT Dryer, used SSO. 613-4481 • 30'' Scan gu ~. XI.NT ., "'""· $35. -· HUI> " I tington Shores Motf.I. >fl , Antl qun 1110 : ! .0 BIRDSEYE MAPLE r' I Two J.pc Bedroom lets . l Ooe year eltctronic school· good salary, No exper, no dresller, twin bed, nite tng:. High School or Jr. Col. obligation, CaU alter 8 pm atand. new lavender spread Iqe requ.lttd, One ytar ex· B L l:dwards, ~74.2 or It. curtains, $100. 21532 perience anembly of small '\\Tile 12262 Maypole Dr., Kaneohe Lane. Fa ib i on eltttro-mecbanlcal P9.J'ls de-Garden Grove, 92640 Shott11, HB 962-1478 * 6«>21"' NB * • ; 1 Sawing Mochlnn 1120 •" 1969 SINGER toucb--o-matlc, :r.\g zag, butt.on holes,, llieWI ~ on butkins. blind hemL ' aired but not riec.Yssary. RESIDENT DIRECTOR for 3 ROOM GROUP $34.88 or $4.16 mo. 5'.6-6616 J Call Jim Hyams Dl.)'s: boys. Older man or couple. Living rm, bedroom, dinette Musical Inst. 1125 &12-2400, Evet: S46-0.ll9 Sm1ll private • e boo I. $297 ·------ CU1.TON'. INDUSTRIES 673-94.ID. \Veekly Payments • • • SALE or trade: Framua dbl. l&f4 Whttt~r Aw •• CJ.1. at 642.-2454 We carry our own contracts pick.up bus wlc:aJie. Al8'.J Equal opportunlt)" empJoYet -1 V•n's Olscount Furn Fender aCOOWIUc eu!tar. LIBRARY· CLERK School,.ln•tructlon 600 411 W-'11'/il.,·S.A. >!Hill Both..,..54&-n4S ' Full time 10 mo11lha p e T EducaHonal Vace.tlon 5th Ope:n Dally :i,o..a * Sat lCMi F EN D E R B a I am a n , 1 year. R@qUlret g:nduatiol'l graders ••• Sr Cltt%ens QUALITY King bed, quilted, amplifier. '69. Used only / , from ffiah SChooJ..·lncluding Oillcoat 10 leuon typing Complete, unused $105; twice. Complete w/stand I • dr 1upplemenred by coJJege Sehl. TrlaJ LeS&On. 173 Del worth $250. Aft 5 or wknds covt't"!I. $450 549-1503 1 1 level courae in library sci· Mar, C.M. SCS.2859 847--0406 • ence, cataJOeulng or ttfel'> WESTMINSTER Presbyter-Cl!JLD'S crib & niattress, Pianos & Organs 1130 I ence work. Two years of re. ian Pl'e-School open to all white. iJS. i • tp0nslbleUbni.ryclericalex-31.4 yrolds.Callnow 646·8128 BRAVE THE HEATI J, ~rie.nce. Ftna1 applicallon 962-4045. MR. & fl.ks. chairs, good Drive In to Santa Ana A lff date Augt.11t 15th. Newport.. SITA'S M0•~0nRI School condition can be used with 111 about 8 Piano Of' Orsan Mesa School Olstricf. 1901 ni~ mod ' --'al for )"()Ur children's f!duca· N wpqrt, Colla, Mesa 2~i to 6 yean. Enroll now ern or provluo decor. !Ion lo: pleasure before you j ~. · for Fall. 646-3106 or 541~ 833-2021aftu4:30 p.m. get involved with Labor MONTESSORI Teacher of. NEtGHBOA.HOOD G a r a g e Day v.'eCkend & and all thti ' E • I _..... fen mu1lc Instr, begin'r all Sale. SterlliJ:er, furn, things that go with rettlng • . Bocxkpok r •nc-nd v.'Olldwlnds, advc:'d flute le clothes, misc. 15461 Sha.sea your olisprfng ready f o r l ..,.r I oboe. &c2--0957 Ln, HB. sehool. Rentals from $10 1 ~ General Office W~k MERCH ... uDISE FOR CLOSING home -misc mol]thly. Spinets 6:-Conmln I ?il/F m.atlll'e. Day &hilt. 5 "'" . from S579 1 \ da,y'week, Apply in penob. SALE AND TRADE Items. funuture. See Mon-Gould Music ComP41ny ull Inlervtew• betwttn 10 AM· Thuni only. 342 Broadwa,y, 2CM5 N, Main, SA 547-/., ' PM. Fumltu,.. IOOO CM. 67J..867L -;,.;;.==::....---~-1'M"o"o"ERN="•"1a-ck"""&-wh-,,ll"'•"'lri"'·. Open Mon & Frl 'Ul 9 . !.1 SUMMER pie dresser, matching hi-boy Franchise Ctoseout • FIVE CROWNS RESTAURANT Ofc 9lr l/M9r $400 3801 E. Pacillc Coa.st HW)'. CLEARANCE! ISO ...... 841-&19 The'"""' ... oro<red clooe I tt10VINO ual qull eel out oI 4 Console il 2 Spine! ' New beds: King $9!1.50, Queen • untm 1 Pianos on a cost-plus hula. 1 I $89.SO, Full $49.50, '?'Nin rattan IO!a $50. Matching Never &&"aln piano be.rp1ns ' $39.50. fully ruaran. Sleeper-table $10. 54&-6666. like Fin sofa mattresses, reg:. a:. 2 BROWN sofa. beds Ex-these! t come· finl > Schedule Clerk $2.50 hr 1 ___ eo_"'-."",.•'"•"I _M_ar __ Sharp ltBI on phones, -LI NE - able to handle pre11ure. INSPECTORS served. $29.50. New 9 pc corner ar· ecllent condition $40 each. WARD'S BALDWIN snmro I rang. cho\tt ot clrs, reg. 642...(1896. 1819 Newport, C.M. 6f2..8484 I $230, now $149.50. lfcadbrds: FURNITURE ; couch e 1, HAM:.10ND. Ste.lnwll)'. Ya-- Kings, $15, Queens $12·50• tables chain etc 20052 ma.ha • new A uaed pJaJIOI Girl Friday hi $500 Savings .l Loan Exp. Stat Typl•1·$350 Cl•rk Typlll $75 wk • Gan;Ofc Clerk fr $2.00 Sacty to $550 Xl'nf secty 1klllll. Dlllvtry•Gfrl. $1 .71 Clean driving ~d. Inv Typi1t to $400 Accurate typllt, rood with fliS. Aceto/ Pbl Clk $400 Put A/P exp. a mutt. cos..,tlc Girl. $2.52+ 3 years experien~. Fact Tr-• t. $1.ll MEDI CAL RN Bek Ole $600 Ute rec:pt, m01lly back office \\'Ork. Lie X·ray Tech• fr $55' Day It. Eve. shifts. Hur.Ht At de T rn1 \Vork nev hom@ ! Employment ~gene, • nIE EASY WAY (uk us wl\y) 1873 HARBOR BLVD. (.,. block So. of 19th) COSTA MESA 54B·3426 Experience tn elertro-m~­ chanical . assembly, hellarc ~!ding and spot welding technlq~1. Must know NASA aolderlna:. Call Jim Hyams. DaYI &12-2400. Eves. 546-0319 GULTON INDUSTRIES 1644 Whittier Ave." Costa Mesa, Calli, Equal opportunity employer e. BUSBOY.S e DISHWASHERS e COOKS Full $10.50, Twins $3.95. Birch' SA H.i::t;, 546-00so. of all make•. Best 1v. .... •~ Sleeper sofas, choice of c:lrs: 1~~..,· ,,-+-,---,,,--·~--Reg S2l9.50, now $1C9.50. * Studio Couch with one So. Callf . .rl,lht here. Kina-site spread1, choice of bolster, $15. 645-0114 SCHMIDT MUSIC 00 .• dn:, ttg. $20.9!i, now $12.99. 1907 N. Main, ful sz. $9.95. SJESfA SLEEP Office Furnltyre 8010 Santa Ana · SHOP. 19'27 }farbor Blyd, W U R L I T Z E R Spinet CM. 64>2760 d a 11 y 10-9 Need •pace.! Walnut, exec Otgan. Italian Provincial. sat.sun 10-6 desk, glus top, iWfvel chr, Llke new. ,1200. Ca 11 17 P 'Ki Slz I a m p. typcwr!I" $160. 545-6428. c. ng e 847-6.119. '===~----"1 Bedroom EXPERT ptano "'"""' • Large 9 drawer dresser, mlr-Offlc• EqUlpment 8011 npair. n yn. exp. Rkh.ard F. Mone 675-4012. ror1 ... ,: bed ..... '~ !:_~~qullki~TYPEWRITER. Adding BAL.DWIN 40'' French s ,,..a uuor.n1, u•nn:, .. mach, ca.lc:ulator, Very ed mattttsa, aheets, blank-nuonable. Xlnt con d • Provln. pl.aoo. Coct PD, e WAITRESSES APPLY lnt.matlonal Hout0 of PancakH l29 E. 17th St., Colt.a Me11 e\.5, etc. 89'l-U23 tvl'I aell $600. Like new. 5f6.2759 CllOk:e of Spanish · WANTED 1 i ,. or Modern Sl>ie HOUMhold Good, 8020 SPJN>:l'S & GRANDS All For $249 .,..,.., No down. Ptn11. only $9 mo. NEW carpet, 90 sq. )'da. PIANO WANTED e EXP. COOK e WAITRESS e Dlshwaaber' WELK'S WAREHOUSE Ntagra Indoor. 0 u l d 0 0 " (:113) 877·1035 Pvt -avocado green, 1~lal price Apply in ptl'80ll. Swill 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Ano 13 per ... ,d. 528-0986 Rodlo 1100 Chalet, 41, N. Newport, NB Open Dally 9 • 9 G_1_r_•,,,v•_S_1l"'• ___ ao_22 PRODUCTION MANAGERS Sat. 9. 6 sun. 11. 6 • 5 MEDIUM height black bar SCR·AM-LETS • ANSWERS SUPERVISORS &c JNSPEC LEAVING atale. Beaut. 2 stool with bl!lek $20 ach· TORS T jobs UBl P1a mo. old 8' sofa Ii love 11e1 t. 8 s, e • ctDUa: C:ta M;sa, • 6' coUee tbl, 2 end com-Office lbl, SlO: bnlldtd rug, modes; hide-a-bed, 8 pc:. SlS: bemboo mirror. $3.51); W~est • Dttto. Ulac. V<lfl- &XPERIENCED c:oople Span, ktngstze bedrm aet. maple mlm,>", $10; camttts, tex • VJDIOT'S motel rnanaaement. Will sacrif.loe· call collect $2; chlldnm 1 and adult com· 11tf mo. &uney Acres Motel. ... ~ .. ~ ... ~.,.. • le T shirts,.. U; comic ~at Female dumbbell: Ttie pro.. ~ "-gram, ahto watchff on TV j l,-;====----..,IMAHOCANY d teat di lhirts, $2; lelllllhl"r top ta!)le, ani a VIDIOI"'S deil&tlt. APARTMENT -· • ·-""'-" .. SIS: poo1able HJ.a. 3 ...... •Ill wUU CM po chlldru or '"6 room aet, uni\, rame $15: 323 Ja.smine, Ccrona pet&, s9' IZ'* rent&la. ta.~, 1 upholsterM chair. del Mal'. ...._,... Sp. 134, 6>11 Wamtt AVl·l===-,---=--,-I Ttlovhlon r..._._ SeaAlra Mobile Jlome Prlt., Am'IQUE It modem mile l205 ,, RESIDENT DIR!X."TOR HB. 847~2689 furn., dining tbla.. chnl., $4,98 HOUSE c:&U en all color for boys. Older man or brlc brae. Jewelry • .U.S Sil!. makes: er drop It ott befoni couple. Small pr l v a t,e l ELF.c Simmons •ln&le beds thru Tuts. 1991-B Qwiv 10 A.M 4: plclc: It up tt 5 PM. ldml. 61'Mt10 ~~ ... ~~\= ~ CM. (ht blk. W of Harbor: AU c:hannel color' 1nten~ WAITERS, w a 1 tr e 11 e 1 , boord$. Orfa'. coat oJ $500 S or llamltlonl. tncludina-tnstallaUon $31.9! Busboy. Pn.l l'Xp'd. Appl)': ra., •tklni $195 ea .646-31211 G~R.AGE s.le: You wanl ti, Do }'OU bavfl a Hl·n or • I I 1121 E. c.out Hwy.C d M. tsoral. Scotcb•"'•ardcd. i m. you price. It. 311 NUA.u S~ereo probmnt ll•ve 11'1)' ·-Rd CM ,...,. .... ...., que11;tlonsf Pltal!B can ua. I BABYSI'IT.ER 'Qll1*d: Hn J\.1atching Jove,~t S T 5 . .. . .,_. .. wv. S3fi..337't ~ 'T:»-J. Non-Fri.. Local aru.. ITAL. PROV. UV. SET GARAG&RUMMAGE SAi.t DAIUK>ll '1'.ELEVISJON' Call eves 529-1161) .. 8' aofa, chair, 11mpe. orflcr 2023 * GOt.DENEYE, 01 S£8Vl<l'C 'CHURCH OltOANIST d<tk. dtnetto ..i. 642*19 SAT k SUN !146-®1 1880 Whttlter, """"'19th 1 540.2211 or 5'-ftU. aft &-PM. "'°lAROE tt1 A Wh1U.ler, Cal1a MC'A I \ • \ lloodq, .._ u. 1'169 MlltCHANDISI fDll SALi AND TRACI FREE TO :YOU TaANSl'OllT A TION • TltANSPOltTATIDN TlµNSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION i 21 .. PB coklt TV. $4'' walnut Sp, cab. R.tzmte eontr. dual F """"'-Gd. -Coad. ~ M4--UU nltn or -Hl.fi & Sto,.., 1210 1969 STERD> Conlole, dlx, m beaut cabinet, complete 'f/new a:uarantee . 4 Sl><~r IOWld .,...m, •,.. Enill.sh chanJrer, IOI.id 1tate • diamond needle. P&)" ot1 bal of $19.10 or euy pymnts. Crodit Dopt. 530-1389 SONY 600 tape d e c k , 1Um-table, amplll~r & ~er $115. tJ13.4651 C.moroo a Equip. 1300 ARGUS C-4, Uhr, be.i;, trtpod. $2(XI wmb of equip ~ acceu. ftlten. fltC. $50. MJ.2989 $por!ing Goods 1500 SURFBOAIWS '67 PERJ''ORMER 9·&· Paid $90. sell $30. . __ 7• • lD" .RICHARDS ~ 117 E. Bay, B&lboa ~60 BRAND new set of Arnold Palmer Goll CJubs. Very reasonable price. 67J....1500 SURFBOARD -$65 or BEST CASH For tumfturt. appliances. Colottd TV, pianos, OfEUIS and antiques. Ot.y or nlaht GERM. s.Mp, purebred, 13 AQUACAT ~· ,Sal Ii n g mo. male. Beaut. It trlend· C&tamuan & traUef. Fut S WE BUY S ly. ha• all ""°'" Only 50 lbi. A eu,. to 1&11! Ex. """'· 'full grown. Cood w/cblld. $600. 675-3794 aft 5:30 To gd home. 675-1369 aft. SAILING Out:Jiaer, 220 s qft 5:30 p.m. 8/J.3 full b&tten.·dacron sail. 18' $ FURNITURE $ APPLIANCES Color TVt-ri•rto-S+or•o1 1 rt.ce 9f' "-.... CAJH IN JI MINUTn • 5"1-4531 • FREE to qua!. home if ranch lol'll', built Carter Pyle. or Ji:. acreqe. BeautUul Traller. 6n.7003 pure bred Beqle 1 yr. Must 12' ALCX>RT SAD..FJSH be with children. SG-095EI. Mahogaey, IYWly finished. --=-~---='=/11 $169. * 6U-S1.23 -~WE=~p.~y~ca=SH~-BEAUTIFUL Bla<k • tao woo 14, ex<ell•nt pedtsreed German condition. $650. Shepherd, male, I yr. old.1 _~=*=613-447~·=·~·=~-• NOT Checks All ""°"' to ...,.i home. HOURLY RENTAl.'i 5'8-S915. Bill * Rbodes 19's * For GOOD, USED P~RSIAN '"""" 1,.,..t Fun Zone Boat Co. Balboa F'umlltitt, Slett0, TV or cat, tortoise shell. to good * SABOT, fbgla., eqp'd for HoUHhold Items of any kind. ho~. Owner la 11 I , _,,1 .... r:i_.i:. e 5'7•5722 e 836-4493 8/U ·~•· 64..- WANT To buy (ho~) bar. FIRE .wood that pCIP5 Ir. --L'°'UJO~;:l;,4::N"o'-.-:,..:=--- % round or L shaped. Mlllt cracks lrom Ge rm a n Y. H.igbway trailer w/rover be reuonable. Phon·e Bring box on •trina:· 2116 642J3949 after&,P?,i 644-4681 Republic, C.M. 8/12 =,,;;;;;:.;;..:~:.,:..:.::: __ RHOD&s 33, Ready to race. NEED bricb one to 1000, GERMAN shepherd female 5 9 sails, outboard, $4000 or reuonably priced. 644--4687 month&, houte broken, all OFFER. CX>N-9', no nicks .• Mlchinery, etc. 8700 968-48+1 ·..:.::=="-'=-..::.::: shots. l.oVff cbltdren. Dog ,trad::.;:::';,· ::;543-3531::;,::=;,,-=,,---., house included 646-2946 8/12 CAL 28, No. 19. Outboard, COCK·A·POO, black female eqp'd for=· $8800 8 mos. old. Had shots, has ---~~~=~-SUR.rnOARD 8' 10" Needs fini&b coat $ll 642-8111 30' YORK towable, 6,000 1 Lb h,yzter pneu. Se.ve r a I Otbtt Forklift trucks. Must sell! ~2691 dog house. To i:ooc1 home 14' HOBIE CAT w1th children, 642·9150 8/1 1 No. 363. 675-4808 eves. MltHlltneous l600 PETS 1nd LIVESTOCK LABRADOR Re tr 1 ever ' SpHd-Slci Boab 9030 male, S mos. old, bad &hots. -'-------'--":.:.: MOVING must sel l -25' Cats 8820 Nt"eds tence.d yard . 121.1· GLASPAR. dbl hull upright freezer flS. 645-0503 8/11 ,.,.lth covert'd bow, 1~ hp, * SHELIS * 9500 Import«! A- DATSUN SJ&ht Frel11't Damqt OIBAP! 139--llllO 'ff DATSUN Bis oedan, • dr, dlr, • -· C..:;m;po;;;";;;;;:;;;;:;;::;;';5;;20; I lltnt dlo.: braku, ...,..., • cam. tP"dome.W' re.ads 3200 milts. WW make e.Xeq>~ CAMPER al ct.al to prvt '"'· Full.,.. Safes .. Ra11tll1 nm. YNW l46 LB. Call Vk, Authott%ed ~r. 49'-9113 or Sf.S.0634. Eldorado -Four Wlndo '68 DATSUN Scotsman • Bat\"acuda FREE ZEBRA 1.UNI BIKE Bil 1ta&n wqon, auto tn.11.ll, with purthue of any ovtrhet.d cam, dlr, disc bta• 1969 SUZUKI 250 'Savage. 900 camper or camPer packq:e! kQ. Perfect coodlUon. Taki mile1. 1 yr. warranty, like. Theodore trade. Saerifloe. WBJ 589 - new $650. ""-"46· ROBINS FORD LB. Call Ken, 540<634 - '68 SUZUKI 120 Trail 2200 '65 ALFA Romeo GT Sprint mi. Ex. rond. G 0 0 d 2060 Harbor mvd. Coupe, red w-bl.ack int, '60 CHEV. $395 dirt/street $250. 675-l?W aft Costa Mesa MUOlO 1ttre.o tapes, $lSOO u ia. Tif.-496..14-Ste W•g VI •1,1!0, ~. klH Yes' Our clearance ""',,'""',.==~,..--c~= _,=='"~=== 11 """ •xn" '67 TRIUMPll BoMie, 650 8',CAJ.~ER.,zlps 2· iCI! box, ORANGE COUNTY'S '62 c~ev. $395 sale I'S 0ne Of 3 cc. k>ts chrome. new eng, l c oset, int. ites, fits Chev, NO 1 ;n "nd ~Best ob' over S975. ~~re!:~~ truck. $175. DATSUN bEALER IM PALA. 4 Or. 6·c.yl, euto, klH. PAk41?. , DATSUN kl ' ' • ' ' 61 O<EV. GlaM bocli<d dirt RENT·A·SHELL DOT DATSUN bike 175cc BSA. M&ke oUer. \\'EEKENDS. \VEE KL Y 18835 Beach mvd. Yi1t• Crui1, 9.p We9. YI, 2218 P\lente, CM MONTin.Y · * 83S-1800 Huntincton Beat:h e1,1t•, eir, PS, r l , AIH. 8f2..TI81 or S4l).6"2 v1us1s. SUZUKI Trail Bike 120 cc 1ofUSl' sell. '59 Chev. truck I -:=i="'=;,_::,:,;;;:111 -~==--~$~7~9~5 .Excdlcnt condition~. 611 and '63 cam~r. Best oUer. '64 FORD Kinp PL Newport Heights Gd. cond. 96Pr7~.l ENGLISH FORD Cu1t. 500 2 Dr. VI, Auto, COMFO •ir, PS, Pl,. OLSO•li. '67 SUZUKI II) Trail-street, SUS. =LE~~~~: ORANGE COUNTY'S '66 CHEV. $1495 exceU cond, oil inj, .. xtru, 1 ............ "'~a-. G IMPALA 'Z Or HT. VI, awl•, 1185 Wk.nd ~14= ~"'Q ~ "" VOLUME EN LISH '65 OLDS $1595 ' • I I :I l1 .. '69 PC51 O · s-eves 0 ',,.. '-' I-~-------pow•r tle•r., rellio, h•tl•r. '69 BULTACO Pursang &: ex· MUST 1ell, '69 Chev truck FORD DEALER SOL Ol J. 2 Dr. R&:rl, defros ter, tras! Xnlt cond. $675. Alt s and '63 camper. Best olfer. SALES . SERVICE ~~;:,,~--==5, II AIR COND. One of the pm, &42-669'1 Gd. cond. 968-7063 '6.9 MODELS '64 FORD $89 many fine demonstra-11 ,~==~-----.0, METRO Immediate dt"llvery GAL liOO 2 .J1. H.T. Y-1, tors that we have avaJI· '62 TRIUMPH Bonneville 650 ..., camper van. •uto., redio, h,eter. TYS able. A real savings? cc. Just rebuUL Best oiler. New engine & brakes. LARGE SELECTION 426. $2295 670-1080 Buokl. =-Thoodoro ''~66.,-.,M"'E"°R""C"U"'R"Y'"$"16"'9'5 11 ROBINS FORD '64 BSA 650cc. xt?-o;1, clean, C•mper Re_nt1ls 9522 CYCLONE G.T. 2 dr. H.T. $450. Runs well. 54>Z759. 2000 Harbor IDvd. v.t, euto., fee. ei•, power 1969 ---* EXPLORER * eo.1a Me.. ..umo ""'· , .... '"'"· '"" Trailer, Tr1val 9425 •1 •••h. TSA 121 . D 's By week Ol' month. Luxuri-1695 A UN .... st .. -6. Sell "'ntoon· . FIAT '67 FORD $ 17 1'""1'. Airfloal Trailer -"" CUSTOM !iOO 4 cir. Y. I, 6l 8 -•-ed. Limited numbe.r. Call eeps , surge b1iU\l!fi, built text eufo ., fee. eir, P"'" 1l•er., in range and oven. new LEi 5URE RENTALS 'S9 FIAT 1100 ,.cl io, h••*•r. VDN 201. FriP!aire $30. S 1 u d i o LILAC k chocolate point kit· DARLING, ugly k I t t e n Scott outbrd with 31' gal upright piano $75. Maple tens, re a: I 1 t ere d $25. w / J 0 11 of penonality, fuel tank. C.Omplete price, 11,...-..J dinette set $95. Nauaabyde \Veekencl.! or alter 6 , fem.alt' 6 wks. p a r t $350 or best ofr, 52tr9'386 11 w at" r pump . n cw I y Rebuilt enc. 4 sp. Stick. ,66 FALCON $995 redecorated interior, good (714) &lU611, (TI4) 837-3809 Bt'"autUul cond. Must See! tJres, over a11 excellent COf). $250. 646-9603. ? dr. 6 eyl., ,tlc.k, h•e••'· Dun1 Bu-les 9525 l ,O:""~=":::C:-=-~~--ll k••I •co"omy, low mll•••• RMtta IOfa bed $35. Down-1 =5G-=1J71=~~=~--Sla.mtte. 67>0471 8/11 16' SCHIADA, blue metal filled sofa $40. Antique SIAMESE Km'ENS. 2 mos. C H I L D R E N bore d ! flake, back-to-ha.ck bucket leCfetary $50. Misc lamps, old. f.12 each. Fa.sclnatln& hobby, bnutUul M!alA, 85 mp ?.1erc, immac. chell, table, etc, $3-$2.5. 3061 962-'193Z p i e 1 0 n 11 homin&: & $1600. 54~1159 l-C&rnb~-·c,NB.=-=..._=,.,1254=·~~-I =sIAME.SE~=~'-'Ki"'·•"•".,'-.~.,-,,.--& 1 tumble.rs. 714-828-4319. 8/12 18' HORIZON outboard Ski * AUCTION * S.al Pomt. 8 wko. l2D. HAMSTERS. Two b&by mal• boat. 1'>N profilo. US HP u you will selJ or btey 546-ru?. brothers plus cace. All must ?.terc., custom trailer. Xlnt give Windy a try """-stay together. Pt"ts only. cond. $2495. 846-21M Auctions Friday '7:30 p.m. .. ..,., 1825 1 ___ -=.......,::..:::c•.:_ ___ 11961 16' Glutron, so h.p. Windy's Auction Barn SHIPPING Cnte for do&. l yr, spayed, altered cats, Mercury. Xlnt cond. $1495. Aturd,y, especially built for w/all shots, Nffil id home.. Call 613-~ ___ _ Behind Tonr• Bldc. Mit1. Trish Setter's a.ii-tnpro -897-Mso -I~""°'""'°"""'""'~~-­ ans11. N-CM .,,,,,,, ..,,.,., ~""'""'~=-~-~· 116' GLEN L (Malahini) '67, ~ ~~,.., •• , .,._..,.,.,., West Coa.sL Make good PLAYFUL little ll:l t te'n, 85 hp Johnson. SlOOO. V3 OFF on a11 bikinis & doghouse f Or "outlide" female, 6 wks., b I a ck 6'15-3880 CCM!l'-Ups. Any size lop animal. Sl;i, Call 847..fi640 w/white. feet. 646-4(121 Sill =='=======- w/any bottom. S14 suits after 6 PM now $9.80. Anything: ~ TEMBRO===KE=-=w7e71ob~~Cors~i. 2400 \V. Cst. Hwy, N.B. champion aired, 5 males. 3 Open Sundays! fe males... Prioed according SHIPPING Crate for doa:. to quality. 546-4928. 2 ALTERED male cats: one Russ blue, l p-ey & white.. ~nt shots. Owner died. Don't like chi ldren . 549-1846 8/11 Mo.;;:_~•i~n•;:...;E~q~u~ip~·~-:9035 25 HP JOHNSON It 3 HP JOHNSON. X1nt oond, Call alt S: 30, 646-0760 5turdy, especially built Jor SAMOYED pups, AK C KJTI'ENS· Coal b 1 k VtLLA Marina, lives on boat. lri&h Setltt's air trip to (])ampion line bred. Worm· . · a. c ' Brand nt'W Nottol.d DE zj) West C.out. Make iood ed., h:lusebroke.n. 894-6711 tigers, Wt & pepper, etc. ·boat fri&'.. Ice tray. UO dOChouse f o r "out&ide" 836-449.l 8/ll AC/DC. Never used $125. &nima.1. SlS, CAii 847-6640 ~-~ PUPStand_:.., fern~~· Jt..!<C 2 MALE, lon&" haired suinea -'644-=23<5==· ====== afte.r6PM ~ a ...... u, U>G.mpJOn pip w/mt"tal are. • '"'==.,--,,.-~,.-= lme. $35. 96S.J04<, ....-. m."'6 8/U Boat Slip Mooring 9036 OOUBIE bed, complete $41). LAB. tttriever pup I, "'C"b"""" le 8 •-maJ New dulr: $95. Ten n is A.KC Oia.mp / Sbow/P'ldd ~~n.c..c.pupp 1 w._ e WANTED· 25' alip for racJcets, tennis s ho" r; • &. female. Small breed, to · Planta. Miac. 644-2'187 220S stlt. Euters Kennel 6.13-7340 good b:>mes. 642-80tl 8-ll aailboat. 1otr. Bi.Mell, at Fortuna., The Bluffs. AKC PoodJ~ puppies. brown .;G:;.RA:,:,V;;;E:;;L:;;&:::..d;,:lrt:...::.nux.:.. -.-Y.:.ou.= c54"'=·"=1'======::; & black. 7 wits old. S'75 & .... FR.OSTING &: Tippin a: up. 6444916. haul. 536-1956 S/11 Boit·Yicht SPECIAL 1 wk. onfy. Reg. ~·s 6 w"-Al., Charto • •'11:: IRISH Seiter puppies 1 wb. ""' 1 ..,.., • n.a. r ~. now Sl.7.50, 8/ll -8/16. . mother cat. 646-1218 8/U --------""-' ~P=~~orld, So ~~ ~~Mmplon blood TRANSPORTA'i'ION VINYLTILE.L l noleum, STANDARD Poodle, AKC. Bolts & Yachta 9000 Aspbal! Tile -Beautiful col-MaJe. 8"11 OUu. BLUEWATER CHARTERS U Drive Sail or Power Skippered local sport fishing Harbor Cntlses ~ ors a nd pallems. Free * 968-0479 * 3S' SI'EPHENS S e. d a n. estlmatt's. Lie. Con tr . 1 --AK=c-co=L-LlE~-P-UP_P_lES_ Beaut. cond. May tradt" Mobile HomM 546-4478. For show or for 1ovt down. Must sell. 846-9518 GREENLEAF PARK V 3 OFF on all bikinis & cov. ST~. 642-5802 FIBER~LASS Supply cenk:r in clear. clean, COOi Costa er-ups. Any size top w/any I -A-DO~RABLE---,od~d-y-.. -.,.-.-AK-C 1 now m CM-NB a r e. a · Mesa. New 9'J gpe.ee adult bottom. $14. lUlts now reg. Samoyed, 3 mo. Make. ~n& for )'Oltt boat, park. Mode.ls & Sales ottice $9.80. Anything Gos, 2400 offer. 548-9740 5 . • ca.r or home.. located at Parle. Open 9 AM \V. Cst Hwy, N.B. Open Sun. Boat resm spedaJ now only 10 6 PM KIRBY Va cu um Ceaner ~~~:~t.toys,Be.a~ $3.9S gal re.tail. Wind an' Aci:ENT P.fOBILE with a t I a chm en Is & heavy coaU. 84Z-1263 Se:a, '"'J.7J7 Supuior, C.r.t. HOME SALES polisher. Takt" over r;ma.11 642-'1607 lT;iO Whittier Ave.. pymt.1 or $4.1.10 cuh. Credit GERMAN SHEPHERD '67 GLASSPAR ct tat ion. Costa ft1esa 714 : 642·13:ll Dept. SJS.1289. Pups $15 536-1829 lnboa.rd~tboard. UO J\.1erc. l;s;;U;;RP=L"u"'s-,-1a","1o'°..,.-d.,-,-,-,-sl AKC 811set Pups cnrlser with power jct & fa.brics & remnanl!I. s 0 Id Tri-color 6 wks SSS. S4l).8638 ~r trim. Full cover. Ready to enjoy. A 11 to tht" pUblic 84 1.fonday malnie..-iance ttcord!. J thnt Sal. 1820 Monrovia, HOl"'lff 1830 owner. KI 6-4444 CM. -~~~~~~~~ HORSES BOARDED -\Vith QUALlTY king bed. quilled. feed $40, without $20. Complet~. unused 1105; 549-3591 FREE TO YOU NURSE'S uniforms 12-14. worth $250. After 5 or wknds I"'======== 847--0400 MARLINE ER Like ne\v $46,000 Da,ys 774-6110 l'i1rt, Brown Eves 673-9191 Mr. James Pollera costume, Best oUer. ADORABLE kittens ll'&Y ·OJ' 1 3 ' 6' ' O U T B 0 A R D. Sal, ll-4. TueA, ll-4. sp. 28, black, part Angora free to "P1eelliner" Control 1, S:U W. 15th, NB only good home call 89J.-61!18 Evinrude 35, gm/whl trlr. NEW bed!!. d re 5 1 e r 1 , llfter 2 pm. 8/12 = ~~~ & tail Jiles. refri&s., desks. I a m p :s , fREE kittens, completely 1..:=;,,:;::...:=---- l BLK . from Huntington SlAle beach. 3 Blinn., 2 bath unfurn mobile home. Asking S!JCXXI, tenns. 846-2b74 wknds. & aft. 5 wkdays. 28' MOBILE Home on Space 1 blk from Bay. $950. Joe Abraham 673-1418 aft e r nooo. 24 X 60, 1968 MOBILE Home. Reasonable. 2 BR. 2 BA, den. Adult Park. 64;)-2635 Mini Bikn 9275 Mini Bike • Mak• Offer C&ll aft S, 67l-6787 bathing 5 u i ts , Misc. housebroken box·trod. Used 15' FG 40 liP El~Top furniture. 64&-9~. to kid1 and big dop. shape! S595. Must sell this MOTOR HOMES 9215 h1NG st. Red sat.Jn shttU. 894-4249 8/11 = 44 Fremont. Lido I~~~~~~;;;:~ washed once. 4 lheets, 4 ADORABLE kiltens. grey or I 1 cases. SSO. 642-3167 black, part aneora. Free to 26' Frisco flye:r Sloop, TEAK dining table, $50. 7 x 9 good home.s. Call 893-6818 Fibergla1 hull, "'itb leak red"'wd 1tor~ 5hed, Sj(I, alter 2 ~i 8/12 trim. Cheoy Lee bit. I•1bd, 642-4432 encl Mad. Boat l1 wry !,;;===-;;:;==~= PLANTS: S111'0fdlem, ap.w, clean! $1200. Broke.r 494-3916 ~'EU'PORT TENNIS O.UB J'Ubbtr trees. philodendom, fa m 11 y membershtp, $450 misc. You r e.move . GOOD 12' flberglua out· plus tram ftt. 833-1469 675-0054 8/12 board hull w/dua.I ~r-1h.ift, cable, whee.I, Xlnt LADIES clothing size 12, SI· 2 etrrE Duff)' grey kittens, l "ship-to-shore.:" boat, tow1 D:I-Girls clothe! size 10-14, male, 1 female 8 wk!. old. easily. $125. 67~18 SOc:-$5. 644--0317 lo aUOd home, box tra\ntd & BRYANT 17'7" length OU!· $1000 Cash for Austria \\'ea.ned. 646-\40..1. 8/ll board: 35-tif" Evtnrude nag Mobile contc1t or FREE to qua]. home with \\'/ilttle Dude tnilcrr, Xlnt $200 For Norway. 6-t'>-24i~ large yard, lovable. female fishin& boat. &t0-9663 TRADE 1 books green chip Collie like t..a.ule. Loves -23-,-1-ROJ=---C.-b-C:U--,-1-m-n-,.-,, stamps for 1 books Blue. childTt'n. 897-2187 8/ll Inboard. SIS radio, Mad, Chip 646-4032 1''REE to Jood home 1alte.y, oovt'n. $2695 «)T' MOVING • F\irniWng5 for w/cblldren adorable. 3 mo., trade for trlr/boal. ~2389 Ille • after 8 • 5 •.m. 421 female, p I C h I h u ab u a 1964 Owens XL inboard 19' OatJ.llna Or .• HB. NB, 847-1927 or 96MS51 8n..t SUpe.rb condllk>n incl trlt. MOVING: New doubJt' bed, 2 81:!! = r.":les: $3$00 m.8593 mattrus. aprl"is. &: In.me ==-....,......,....,..--..,., lor ale Call 833-2338 BLUE panlceet, J )n. old. SaJlboets 9010 am BTU Air cond.ilione.r. us.1..:.11=a:.'.:""',,,:;:..· 546-:=.,:ll:.78.::.._ __ STAN MUlflo aabo1, ami.pl. e.d 3 times $100. Sp. 88 321 B E A U T J F U L bunnies tqulp w/raclnc attr. dolJ.y W, Wlltotl., Costa Mt'u.. 546-#U ~ ('(MT; all no. 3350. $DI. Misc. Wanted 161 0 MALE Slamewe eat, M<tda 120 Colllna, Bal 11'. 6'J5..47!1S home. f'ritndl,y, r e n t I e • SEA s c o u t ' 1 delpera.lely CARPET 54S-0695. 8/U need a MAIN all for 22 Ship. tweeds, hl·Jo pile. All PUPPY, fem . mOAtl.y bl!qlt. FOOT ALB AT R 0 SS . c:olon. f"rce l!d. Uc Contr. 4 mo&. brown It v.·hlte. -":..:h'>:..;."9c::,._~~--- I ;:54j~6-44;;:11.=..,==~=~-I ;;;;8'7:;;--06:;~-1';;;;;;--=:=-,i:"=U' 1 e LtOO 14, Decron aalls, DAILY PILOT Dll'if&.A· COCK·A·POO puppy, t~m. at'IOd cond. Ji5D, l>ayl: UNEs.. Yoo can UM them 2i;. mo. 54GJ57S 8112 8.15-6:ns. e\-e:s: 673-5964 tor lUlt peookol •cloy. Dl&l FEMALE "°""· 3 ..... old 2'' T-B IRD SLOOP '424Sll ocl"..:.•..:.•::""'..::':..· :.:"2-«Xrl::...::::.:..._..::1~11;• '-'"":.:·.:"..:.•OJ!"';:..:.'.:ak..:.":;..:;-=::... HEADQUARTERS FOR ·MOTORHOMES Gtl llSPUT tllt All tll"I DDD&t "EXPLORER" lftl<,..._. •lfll * c-'I· ....... ""' ........... ~ ..... tfe!IL Al..L t ir'" 11 toot. n 'oot. n '"'· , TlA.tlll ,HIA•C-1•• A• Al"f'llOVle Cl!IOlt. '69 SRC 311 IXECUTIVI CAR 4-Dr. 200 cc, 135 !-J.P .. Real nice demonstrator. Equipped with oval tires, R.lH. SAVE! -SAVE! $3195 DATSUN- dltion. Included al no ex1ra :..o=-0..;.:•=•-"---'= '66 FIAT 124 Sport Coupe.. XAW 5tt. cost, easy.Jill trailer hltc:h, DUNE Buggy Sho\v Sale. Like new. $25:ill. Private .~6-5-F=A~L"C~O~N~~$~1~9~5 l\\'O side mirrors, 1\\/0 ad· Bodies from $1"9. Chaufa Party. •• 613-8662 l·,..1abl lands A ai 2 Jr. v.t , 1tic.k, redlo, h••f· c s · re (rom $249. La Paz Dune. · · •·-; l $795 °-F er. Reel 1h•rp. NGO 169. ...........,n a · ""' e Bu&ZY Supermarket, 3623 ERRARI anytim• ot 1146 Charlosloo w. wa""'· SA. 546-4045 --------11 '69 MUSTANG $2495 St., Costa Mesa -just south OPEN 9.7 wkd)"ll, Sat 10-5 FERRARI FASTIACK. v.a, •t i c. k, and east of San Diego h•eter, like "••· YCS Sll. F i-eeway and Fairview Rd. DUNE BUGGY Newport lmpmU Ltd. Or-interseclion. FULLY EQUIPPED anie Count;y'1 <m1Y author-'67 MUSTANG $1795 Fun or School MS-8195 ized dealu. H.T. V.t , 4 Spe•d, pow•r lJ' STARFIRE travel trailer, I ~,:_:=.,::,.;=::.:,;;_::,,::=--I SALES-SERVtCE:·PARTS •'••r., redi•, hee ler, wld• sJi:eps 'I. extra cuW:ioards, RENAULT DUNE BUGGY, 3100 W. Cout Hwy. _0Y.el1. TYX 60.I ~ cpld, reduced price $595. $35(1, Newo~~P;,~n• Newport Bea.ch '67 MUSTANG $1695 1S88 San Bernardino Pl., I ====~=::;,=== 642-9405 540-1764 "2913 Authorlted MG Dealer H.T. V.f, •u••·· pwr. •*••r. CM 64..-· red io, h••l•r, vi11yl roof. Imported AutoJ 9600 TRAVEL tr.UI", 14', slP' 4, KARMANN GHIA TUR OTO. ,,.,1. abann nn. '65 mod<I DATSUN '67 OLDS $2195 In gd shape $700. 847-l358 196.i GHIA. Xnlt condition. CUSTOM surREME 442. '69 DATSUN 1952 1-IANSON 16'. Xlnt cone!. '68 DATSUN Pu, 8,000 miles. S12!15. Call n4/776-5900 or v.1, •uto .. fee.. •it, pow•• $550. 1530 llampshirc Cir., Like new, All t"X lras. $1625 638-4310. 11••,., pow•• "'•~••· vi11yl EXECUTI VE CAR NB. 646-8291. Priv Prty, ' ......... 646-1290 I -Cii::'ii''i;-=,.,-=--o-.,-,.-11 top. TU P 422. ,_,,J" For Daily Pilot Want Ads Station \Vagon. 4 · spd., \Vhlte Etephants? I DAILY Pll..OT \VANT ADS! Dial ,,_~ '68 MUSTANG $2295 rack, radio, white in 'l======"===:;:...:========c-'=====~==··==--11 color w/lUrquolse trim. II H.T. V-1, eu+o., pwr. ••••r., 1o1:any, many extras. Imported •IJtos 96001mported Autos 9600 Imported Autos f600 redi•. he••••· VDr lf7. '67 FORD $2095 '69 LS21 PICKUP LU I Than 2000 Milas! Com plete with No-Cost Ea:tras. Husky •Nhllc\1:all truck tires, healel' and defroster. outside n1irror, cxtrn interior package shelf, batt!'ry 11avlng al- ternator. t o r sion bar stabilizer, du a J head- l!ghls, cii::e.r(!ttc lighter, Uc-down hook!, &. many more standard rC'aturrs -all add lo a con1plcte value packa,i::c: Val 11 ro thal makes Dats11n lh<" No. 1 selling . in1porl truck in thC' U.S.A. $1695 '68 DATSUN 4. Dr. R&Jt. defroster. P.tany, many e :ii: tr 11 !>. 5,000 n1Ues. Driven by Mni. Zimmerman. $1795 '69 DATSUN IXI CUTIVI CAR Chrome \\'ht'rl~. Pirrclll tirrs, radio and heater. Real niet: ~ $2195 One Of The Lar9est Selections of Sport Cars & Imports In Orange Co. ZIMMERMAN DATSUN Phone 540·6410 2845 Harbor Costa Mesa L.OVE ~ BUGS! \WJ ''Home :of Herbie''· 11'1 th• c.•r th•t won't l_live you e11yth i119 to worry ell out. w. 111••• 1wr1 of thet, We give it the VW l6-poi11t 11f•tv e11!1 pett'orm e"c.• let!. ll he, to p111. So we give it our I 00 '4 9uer1nt•• thet we'll replec.e ell m•lor 111ech •11ic.1I perh• for ]0 llev1 u, 1000 tnil•1, whichever c.0111e1 first. h11'! thet whit • new cer·owrter 11eedi1 A b1,1g the! wort'I drive vou riuh. Low, Low Prices on These SPECIALLY PRICED . BUGS! HOME OF THE LOVE BUG SPECIALS '61 PORSCHE '63 vw '61 GHIA •12 COUP! SIDAN COUPE Ouhle11di119, orioai"•' f;n• Autome li c: Ilic • 1hift . R•di• Yellow with blec:k i"ler;or, c1,; ... 1119 t 1r. Five 1peed he 1ter. Ebony with CDI!• Eco11omlc1I 1um1111r '"" tr1n1111 i11io" • FM red 1o. lr•1!i119 interior. Low Mile· c.••· Redio •"d heeler. l ie. ,,, with 01.,~ interior. •9•· Lie.. No. XEW 61 ], No . VTU 544, L+c.. l GJJ49. $4399 $1899 $1699 '67 vw '63 vw '61 vw SEDAN C.t.Mrll 1 IOAT FASTIACI SEDAN White witt. blec.k inlArOor, 1011 i1 ce•1ied D" lop of Gold•" 9'''" fi11i1h -e redio • h••'•·· l1•uliful c.emper. P1rf•cl i111te llet;o!I b11uliful color. lt'i reelly o'iqi11el ce r. Co111• i" end •"'* c.emp•t i"'''io, ii ~•ry dill1re11tl ll•die l he1ler. te1t drive lhi1 c•r. Lie. No. c.!een. PNH 4511. llHX9JI VEO 66 J. $1699 $1799 $1699 '67 vw '61 vw '61 vw IUS S9UAkl IACK ... witlri bl1c.k i11te1ior. CONVIRTllLI Heid lo find, •••Y lo buy Show• ••t•U•"' ,., .. So Re.l io ... h•·•··· Do11't '"' 111ce11tio"ellv cle111 , 11ice ., ... roell. R1dio 111i11 th i1 •n•· SIS 155. YXY576 l h••'•'· l!c. No. PIY 161. $1999 $2099 $1499 :--,~P 549-3031 '-" J' EXT. 54 & 55 445 East Coast Hi9hway al BAYS ID E DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH RANCH WAG. V-1, euto., f•c.. •ir, pwr. tl••r .. pwr. !:tre k••· lu vt•t• r•ck. TYO 101. '61 MUSTANG $2195 CONYERl lllE. V0f, 1ute., pwr. ale1 t., rAdi•, htel•r, c•P11ol•, ll uc.k•t ••th, pwr. top. VRR 151. '59 FORD $295 FAIRLAN E 4 !Ir. V-1. euto., Rwr. sl••• .. r•lllo, h1el•r. koel th•rp. GVA 676. '67 MUST ANG $1695 CONY ERl lllE. V-1, 1ul•., pwr, 1+•••·· r•di•, h••ler, pwr. top. uo"' 24f. '67 TOYDT A $1195 CORONA 4 dr. Stick, r•· dio. heel•,, low mil••f•· UA P 621. '64 T·BIRD $1295 H.T. v.1, euto., fee.. eir, PS I Pl, power wi11llowf, pw,. 1eeh , ,e!lio, h•el•r. POL 611. '67 CORTINA $1195 G.T. 'Z !Ir., 4 Spd., he1t.r. TSP 247, '65 FORD $1095 GAL. 500 CONVERTl l LE. V.f, •ulo., PS, r1d io, he•f· er. UYR 192. '65 FORD:c---,$~1"'49~5 LTD 2 dr. H.T. V.f, •ule., f,,, 1ir, PS I Pl , redio I he1t•r. RTU 419. '65 DODGE $995 OAkT 4 cir. 6 (..,.1., euto •• ftc. ei,, PS I l'f , t1dia l heel•t. NIV lJO. '66 FORD $159S GAL. SOD 2 dr. H.T. v.1, •u+o., fi e!. ,;,, PS, kl H. UOU S•O '65 T·BIRD $1495 H,T. V.f, •ulo., f1ct. eir, PS, Pow1r ditc llrk1, P·wi11!1 kl H. PIX 455 . '69 FORD $329S GAL. 500 Fettlio1c._ V-t , '"'•· f1ct. eir, I'S, Pl. re· dio, he 1I••· KTH f JI . '66 FORD $1395 Cu1t. 500 4 !Ir. V.f, ewle., f•ct. •i•, PS, RI H SI, t 4l '66 CHEV. $1595 Mel:bu 2 ·d•. H.T. Y-1, t ulo,, PS. RI H. "Yi11vl top, lluc.kt l •••h. c.0"101,, UEL l5?. '67 FORD $1495 C111t. soo 2 II•-v .1, •wt•~ ,S, kl H. TJM 96•. '64 FORD $995 Co1,1"lry S'l~ire 9 1'111. V.f, ewlo., •ir, PS, RI H. SYE 92). '66 FORD $1795 Cou"lry S..wit• 10 p•11., v.s, ,1,110., PS, Pl, RIH, l"tt•t• rect UTI 7tl. DUNTON FORD 2240 S. Main Santa Ana 546-7076 , • Mood'1, All94Ht 11, 1969 DAILY PIUIT ~RANSPORTATION TRANSPOR-TATION 9IOO New Cars 9100 Ntw C1n 9100New C1r1 NEW CAR CLEAN-UP-AT JOHNSON & SON DON'T WAIT TOO LONG!!. 196' NEAR NIW LINCOLN·CONTININTAL t Dr -. F,...1 a. r•r mll\o lffhr lnJtrlflt, l>la<;k Vlol\ll no!, ll!ofl ~ tJClt. W1 -II {Molt41d !lrn, ~ vtnl wlndo-6 .. y pllWW _,, A¥• malk. •Ir otnd, AM r..ilo, lt.S . .,...k.,., llllt 11eu, C~I --~ temi. ,19)'1\MMl2J NOW ONLY·-···----$592C» , llA.ND NIW COUPI 1H9 COUGIAI Modol 91 MM. 91W llll'ttllk. Alllamtllt. ..... It. PGWW •'*• Wd.•, llr (lllf!d, rtidlo, tint llffl. tfc, kt, I MIDI Sltldl: I ..... WA• .~~YE 551548 NOW 311S.t7 LINCO"'N·CO~TINENTALS • • • .................. .._.. ·------------.... IRAND NIW 1'69 CONTINENTAL COUPE e11ulltul plallft11111. P:&lt ...,.b, ltlrtw, venh. 6 wey ,...,, 111"1 CO\l'llr, !lit -~ IUIO,, 1lr c.otld. AM..f'NI rMlo. 11111 •I-llcU. wtltOl4 ~ Ww '"" not 1l/lhllorlud Ill ltll Voll llow 1111,Kll rou'H w111, Wt It'• pltflty. s.r. I to15'J llOd: I IW NOW ONLY-····---·· $6084 auND NIW COUPI ltH COUGiAI Model 91 1.l!Jtlt Ivy yellow. Ainonwil'IC tl"ll'llo W.Wl lb. CllNM• ~ •'-Int• ".ii:•6..'"' OOllll. #tM rldlo, tint IWIU. tln'IO'e ll'lifrw, :i;,_• 1111 _..., llock I 41111 WA• .~~vE s51700 HOW lilt.ff I 1 '69 NEAR NIW LINCOLN·CONTININTAL t Dr. tOUPf, Lt 1r-. LM,._.r lrlllrili', * IOld vltiyl HGt, Ill ..,....,,. ui.. WI -llt 'ISlllJ Mil~ ~ -' •"'*'-'· ...... ., PO"'"( -'· 1111 ltMf' wllMt. tvlO, •Ir c.ond. AM·FM. rtcflll, , .. , •/>Mk .• linl oleu, cc1m1llt11 Pl)WW lodlt. lltrell wttetl l;O'VVL ltYllMV261, NOW ONLY ... ·-·····-·· $6080 SI• 101 MANGAN COUGARS • •• • a1tAND NIW '\ 1Ht COUGAI Model 91 LI. "Ull' Hiid t.llrtt. -111. poww 11-, bt"-•• llr cond, rldla, o.cor ''°""' tint ••111, dtlux1 CflY. 1n . .S.r, I ll20.J1 Sl«.k #.SU SAVE WAS 416f.60 NOW 1645.64 523 96 ! '69 NEAR NIW LINCOLN.CONJININTAL 4 Of' .ed111. /Md, ''""' IMltl•r lllhlrlw, dk 1111i. ¥1ftYI roof, lllOi'I lwq1i19 Ule. Wfwtll Wit .. tfr-. ~ wnt windows. 6 ""'I POW01r .-1, lilt 1•-~ 111fo, 1Lr c:ond, NI<· M rMlo, rMr IPMkt<, tint llhl. ,._ 000!'" lllocb, ti.nd wlletl ~ I t'l'l2Mt1tJS. NOW ONLY.--····-···· $6260 Sii WAYNI SQUlllt. lltAND NIW 1'69 COUGIAR XR7 ll:IOlll Ptll\t, wlllte rool. Selle! 1hllt, wswelll, conaolt . power llft!", bt..W ... •ti" carw:I., AM rldlo, !1111 tllM. 5tr. f J106f.l SIOC:k i •...a SAVE WAI 4111.40 MOW lt14M 196' NIAR NIW UNCOLN-CONTININTAL ' CW MoPft. 'l'Oltt 6 , .. , nwi.. '"""" llltwlw, vinyl root, lllgfl Mt'M ••It. 1n-.1a ,i.u "'"• .,_.. -' wlndowt. 6 -.y ,,...., ••U, il"r. tlr• (-. lilt .,_"" wl\Mt, otdr: tld , ...... ,,...,.. <ltltrol. , .. , dlfltuw, •IM> t lr '°""" lt.Nt-,.M rtllle, '"'' ,1.111, 111(1. prttglltrt (lnlUfl, """"' ..... lodl .. llolrtd wllMI ~ I fT'UAINnt. NOW ONLY ......... ·-···· $6490 Sii PITI PILIUlll SELECTED ~W CAR TRADE·INS. MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM! ................. • • 1967 CONTINENTAL • 1··············~ ···············~ , .............. ~ , ..•.........•• ~ • 1965 CONTINENTAL • • 1968 MERCURY • • 1965 MERCURY COMET • • 1968 MERCURY • c1111,,...11t111 bHulllvl Oc•11 TUl"QUeb• lil'llsh wlttl 8 • m&ttlllng lnllfflDr Ind Wlllh: top. Complsltly IUllvrY • • eqti!Pl>fd, lull "°""'" AM/'M r•dlo, fKfOrY 11r, • Corivwllblt. Sit!!\ blKk !Wall Wlfll tlltdt lffll'llr • 111111'1« 1tld bladl: !OP. 1'1111 pllWll" """"*· rldlo • 1nd heattr. lactoty 1ir, PM!.lllftit COl'lllllloil. Ofl¥ttt • P1rk l-l't'l'lwrtlbt.. IMUtlM 91kl tlrorut 1111111! • • wflll 1111tdllnCI lntwrlOr tNI """1'9 tDp, l'titl ~ S!llloll W1p0n, ...... ll•ln\ld• e1u1 M11! wlttl 1111~ • ~<1lpped1 rldlo Ind llH!lf', 1 lr CO!ldtllenlnt. c-• • • Ing lnllrl<tr. Alltotnallc It-. rldlo I. llMllf, JllOWlf' • • • (llln't' Pt~ t ~ 1!.ll'°" w~. Alttattl\<9 • C..rflMI 11: .. llfthll wlltl black ~-wlftyt • • lnllf"IOr. All-lie ll'lftt., ndlo, hellW", Ill,_ • ''"· ltdOr'Y t i• CO!Wllionll\9. ...-, ............... 1111 -1. etc. 4 bt•NI MW ttrn. Thi. liM CM -I • • • DI H111 ID DI 1ppre<llTllCL UQAlM. onlY :111.000 ll'lllH. NOZIOl. • • new. drlYM only f.0.0 "'11111.1 5P«loll PWO;f\t11 • u .. rina. i lr «Nldlllonln;. utr1 t1111" ll:IHM.i tl"Oln 1'111"11 Molor CO. lrld w¥1n91 paUld Ofl ID • • • Ol'"tk-. ChHI a(!iorl 1111 11119, ()ftly lt,000 "11111.. • • $ • : SAVE AT ··················-3195 : •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• : SPORTSMAN'S SPECIAL : 1"' JEEP WA~EElt tllllDn WIO(lll, Chtvrolft • • V..f coovtrtld lffl91f141, •wh•I tlrl" w'lltl d1i111f.!Nlt~ • f'°"' wllNI• rMllo &. llullf", ,. .. , """ Cortwnendo • 8 llrnl S. encl drlv1 tll 1pprtclltl. UOTOU 8 =-SAVI AT ..................•.• $1495 : '··············· you. WVXl#. • • $ • : SAVI AT .... . .. ·····-3195 : •••••••••••••••• • BHull!ul 1t11v11 m.roon wllh blkll: lntvlor. "4i!kl. • • No. •14 • $ • • $ • • SAVI AT ......... . ..• 1395 • • SAYI AT ··················-3995 Ill • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••• •! • 1966 THUNDERBIRDS • • 1968 CONTINENTAL • • • • • • CHOlCI! OF TWO-flTl72,, Untltu. llrlll11! IMll'tlk: • • trt!\1 .• rldlo &. ,...,,,, -11.,,11111, fKIW}' •Ir • condltlonl119. EXctll""t ltlrqhoul, VEU12 • • AllfKI! ... Lim& """' 1111h.h wrn. 1111kl'llng fl\ll tlol". Al/IO. !!'am .. rM!lo &. llMll<, _, 1'"'11111, ll:ldloll Ply llru, t ic. ~ utt lltl\I U ri. UONl 17 O•ffl'! lln!ll'I w!lh inald'lll'llt lnl•lor •NI blldt i.ndati • • rc.ol. l!QUlPl*I wllh auto. ''""" R&H. P.$., P-wlM,. • • • P·•NI, loctorv t lr cond!tlorill'll!, tit. Prktd lltloW!' ,_DOOll:. 1.lndl\J. l tll.llftul f orat Gr-Mllf flrlllll • Wllfl lllllclll!IQ 11'1,...IDr, lllll:WY tqUIPPld Ill~. 1'1111 .--. rldlo I. ...... ,. t.ttorv •Ir tondl!lorJtno • • inor1. Orl\tlf'I on1r 17,GOQ 11'11111. Ltkt ntw. J:L.Hl21 • • • •• • • Ktlly'1 wtiol_.lt e1u1 look, • • : SAVE AT ·······-·-··-$2650 : : SAVE AT ··········-···--$2175 : : SAVE AT ·················$' 825 : '··············' 1 •••••••••• -•••• ,,-1 •••••••••••••• JJ WE NEED YOUR TRADE-IN -MORE THAN ANY OTHER DEALER • $ • • SAYI AT ············-·-··· 4395 • \ • ... ...,. .... -.... -.... -.... -.... I NEW CARS 540-5630 • 642-0981 ~ohnson.son f Lil!CGILI! Clllrll!IEl!YAL • l!llX m • ·llllEllCUllY • CIHllllll 2':11-IOULIVAU, CDnA llltA" USED CARS 540-5635 Imported Autos ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~ 9600 lilfPdltod' A"UIR ____ 1n1pomt1·A-MOO Allfill Wf--9700 Used Cars 9900 Usod Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Usod Cars I I 1 I j I I 1 II " MERCEDES BENZ MERCURY 9900 i --------·! VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN Will Buy CADILLAC CHRYSLER /1961 Mercury C.Ommuter OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC '68 YW , Camper Deluxe Like n~. Fully equipped. Hurry! Lie WAB-314 '68 VW Sedan abo '6i' VW Sedan/or trade lor VW Bua. ,,..._ Your Vol.kswqen or Ponebe '67 CADllLAC .C door &edan 161 CHRYSLER Station Wqon. Luq:~ REAL Sharp '66 0 Id '65 BONJl£Ylllf lt pay top dollars. Paid for, de Ville. Orig owner. air, NEWPORT _ 2 Door rack. Well kept. i 3 8 5. CuUass, Ho!. Coupe. Gold HJ / or not. Call Ra1ph leather upholstery, 1tereo, CREAM PUIT _ Black with 546-8180 or 546-8315 with blk. Landau top, lo 673-0900 loaded w/extnu. if us I black int., auto. tran&., NEW ,66 CONVERT S55 Xlnt mlg, nu wbt/wall Ure1 l Full pwr, dlr, fact alr ccn. l ' WE PAY Top sacrllice! See al l 7 5 O battery, radk>, heater, power cond. Beautllul. Ab-, P/S, brkl, R/H, cu1tom blk lthr dltlontnr, pwr windowt, low, I OOLLAR Ne~rt Blvd., C.~t. Pr1 ateerlfli. Have record or P/B, $1600 646-4310 Int &:: bucktt seat1. Console Jow mlleq:e. Xlnt condlUon VOLVO • • " ' VOLVO pty. wbat has been done to carj-.:======== with tach, P/S, P/B, PIW. in and out Total Price nag9, !or rood. clean used can, •61 CADILLAC Stdan d~ In put. Only 2 owners. We fact air. ?o.fust eee to Will f1nc prlv prty. LB VBA I all makes. See George Ray vrue. All power lncludlnl haYe owned car past 6 ___ M_U_S_T_A_N_G__ believe! Private Party Best 319. Vlc, 54S-0634. I 1960 Mercedes 190. Clean, ~-~,,.. Rob'·-Ford ofter. 962-_,_ · ..,,.......... .,.,. fact"'"" alr. Nl!flls some mo-v..111 .. 1 I-lave 3 ,....-·slen--~~=~-==~-~-i '66 GTO Conv, '"w "'•· 2000 Harbor mvd. .,.., ,~-. .... .. ,, '68 FORD Mu.stana aJr con-=~ C P..f &42..(Xll.O tor work. Body ls sharp!! must sell one, this is the ditloning take over pymnts 195.S OLDSMOBU.E. Good paint. brakes, front a1ign. j Best 0.111 Ar• At DEAN LEWIS · new tires. $750 f I r m • : oo;-4452 ev~. · · $375.00 879-MS ONE! Xlnt running cond!-$450 fil3-l500 • transportation. Lotu miles Pol,ygla.s. Best otter. DRAF-1! A~;;L."etlng 9810 '81 CAD Sedan De Ville. Good tlon! $395. Call 8-41-6640 af. . le ff $125. 5'6-0129. TED! 646-125.1 aft 6 p.m. I MG C<>nd. 1495. 6U-.1850 °"'' "' 6 PM. Owner/Prlvai. OLDSMOBILE '6' OLDS 442. 4 on !he floor. '67 FIREBIRD 400, di.., Sport Cars 9610 J .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;, ,;•;;ve;:•;· ;;67>-~'699;=;.:;;--=;--;=l-:::Party==· ====== Good cond. P..tu1t l&dlf Best brakes, tadl, pis, vinyl top, I 1966 Harbor, C.M. 1961 ?.IG Roadster 1600, 5-l9-303l Ext/ 66 or 67 157 PORSCHE LEASE -RENT· 1962 CADll..U.C mo. 1350 FORD • • offer. 646-2129 22,000 orta: mi. Forced to rtblt motor gd, top, tires, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1.. b'· k ALL POPULAR Hampshire Cir.. N, e . '66 OLDS l'-85 Dlx f dr. air, sell $2195. ~2840 l tonneau covers. ~ or COSTA ?.tESA Sunroor, coupe, .,..t l&C · 6f6..829'1 1---------·I pwr ster & brkl. Sac. prv '59 PONTIAC. XlnL cond ,83>-4;;;:" ~·~"~=-.---;-:=::: ~ ... ~V\=v-. -,-,.,,-,-ti,7k-. -,.,,~..,-,I JKF 343. 'SAL$139E'1 'ft.i~s "'""·s~t"c~A~o~1~L7L~A~C"'$~3so"'°"-1 '68 Ford Torino •"· ,...:J507 arts p.m. But oll". . ' 1963 ?tf '' gc · ow • Beet Deals Are At AUTHORIZED good condition. 548--2622. ~"" 16" pe.,.onnance, " s · .,.. • • pwr atrJ, ·~========•I .., G 'lid 1 I ner cond.. Radio/heater, tld ....... h'~ J • pd TORONADO ••• OLDS R/H * 646-4:1.l-4 * ~~~~~"e~~~~: ~~: ~~1~3!1~5. Hoff-DEAN LEWIS LEASING :ne0e!~!~~· ~ ~:,t =~~s, 1 • •. . SHELBY i MGB '68 vw, xlnl O>nd. 11225 or SYSTEM CAMARO older .,.., In trade . WIL 871 0 OS R/H tri btst offer. 1966 Harbor, C.M. C46-930.1 Get Our r'i::-:ze Rate.!' 1---,-,-7-C-AMA--R-0---1 LB. Call Ken~-NEW & EXECUTIVE ·~w ;t ~vs, ~e:WJre~. i i·,67--SH-E-l.B_Y_G_T_OOO __ C<>_bn>_ ~--~"-'~"'_.,_. ___ AZTEC Sport Car, VW eng. ROBINS FORD 32'7, 4 9pd, dlr, xlnt condition? 167 FORD Fairlane 500 ONLY 6 O\\'Tler $800. 646-0028 Jet Much 11pecl&I equip. '6.3 ?t1GB, hard &: soft top, new Utes, radio, wire wheel!. Very good cond. Muat sell. Make ofler. 49-1-9808 ../'67 V\V BUG. 2 new Utts. Good tire• & battery. SSOO Flaming red ext., pluah Excellent condition, Brand menL Ove.r $6000 invested. Vl!ry good condition. $1275. or best oUer. 536.2()2.t 2060 Harbor Rlvd, black Int. Sacrlf.lce! Like new tire• -tape deck -PLYMOUTH Asking ~ or best oUer. RJ&...9033. Cotta Mea 642-00Ul foreign car in trade. Full pr $1800. TO CHOOSE FROM &tl-4358. ' '" vw. xlnt. oond. 11225 or Antlqun, Claulcs 9615 "'""'"~~!'!:'!!~'!""!!!!I 11599. UJll 113 -LB. Call Bill 531-6306 BIG SAVINGS I '64 Plymout11 Ga MGB blue, red int. \V:re whl1., 48,COO mi. $ll95, gd. cond. 494-fi828 best oiler. 646--6245 or Y' LEASE Y' 494-9773. · '80 FORD Slation Wagon. u • •1y 67>-3014. 1938 FORD '68 C.dlllac eo,,. d .. vw..l========I Radio, •••"'. whlto n1vers1 Valiant '65 BUG s,nroo1 35 ~ m·• Orla"lnal Ford Coupe. Very fully equipped, $129 mo, CHEVROLET side.wall&. Good cond.. $250 V..S, auto, dlr, one owner. 1966 T-BIRD, full · · ,vw · rood condition. '67 Ford, 10 ra-station Wit J T·BIRD power. METRO 59 1\-IETRO dual FU. f"eblt eng, 4 speed, bkt-1eal1. Best offer. 847-0971. New tire~. tuned exhaust. lh. Ir 175 • cuh. 543-2879. 237 E. :M>th, Take low payment&, Fu I LOW BOOK. Good nd S9'75 646-4200 ~..-. on, r a , ps, mo. •66 CHEVELLE SS. lmmae. CM Old b"I price S69'J. OTU 691·1.B, Call * ~2737 * '68 V\V ~i~k s:i~! $1500 Ex· ........ '6-. ro~ Ncw&iS~ $67 . .50 mo. 4 sp, 396, map, Dunlap sr-4.1 •.,"1"-ro=R"o~""'c-a1---.~. """N-.w-1 smo I e Ken, 494-9173 or ~ ~·ss="'T"-B"'mn=-. ~full~-.,....--. -."'"11 cellent condition. Lo mi. CAR LEASING $1550. Sat 213/434-0164, SUn generator, ~'O new tires. '69 S83 ROADRUNNER, 8 T cond, wholesale blue book Xtras 646-1003. 645-1441 30C. W. Cit Hwy, NB 64.S-21.82 434-3S83. Good transportation/ltt'Ond 2&50 Harbor C.OSta Mdl stueo le nnt Gdyr GT tires, price, $1550 6G-Oll6 ,66 V\V engine &. trans $300. I;:========= '65 CHEVY. Xlnt cond. Auto car. Radio/Heater. $200 or 540-9640 1 ,,a1r='""'=~·-c!Jl00=,,·..,oo-:-71'6()=-:-:-: ''"56"T"·"B"JRD"'".""'c'"o'"mc-cp--:J-,"'°t.,.•'"'I y PORSCHE 419~ii Fernleaf, Corona del Autos \flinted 97CO UHd C1rs 9900 tram. P/11, new ~tltt1, be.it oiler, 642-6401. • • 1957 Plymouth 2 Dr, Auto, v. ret1tottd. Like new con- itar. aft 7 pm. brakes. shocks. Pvt prty. 1963 GALAXY, factory alr, 8 $175 Cir best offer. 54.5--2469 dltion. Make oUer. 673-5308 ?.tUST Sell -,66 VW C&mper. WE I'AY · · · TRANSPORTATION CA'RS $995. Call 494-568': power windows le: aeata. _ * '6S CONVERT * Fully ..... '• mil•~ xlot CASH llWPORilR MOTORS i9fiiChev,u, 2-d' "' Tp ,.; new ""'· xlnt cond. PONTIAC l<l10",'. ~::i !~."~~ pnt, i,;;'°:,nd~. 0'12C:,,4C,950,.,064~~..,IS36-'-=~= htr auto P/S tac/air S,000 961-1661 '83 OLDS 88 Holiday 4 dr. l ,;;:'-=~i:i.;..:.;;':::::-r:;:r· 2036 HARBOR BLVD. ml $2000. S.f&.6140 alt 6 PM '66 Ford F1lrl1ne Fact alN:ond, P/b, P/1, '65 G'IO 3S9. 2,080 mi ';;9 PORSCHE super. For .• TWO '69 vw BUGS, 9,000 rosrA MESA xl t nd. ln&kt & t. A On reblt enc Map. 4 spd sale or trade for V\V, • I 1.2,000 mi. MOVING. for Ullld can • tndar Just 1:-s1t4 1:J1• •1: '65 Chevy impala 2 Or. Good $495 ~ ~ .• IHIM ~OU Sl650 * 64f.2l88 $1795 ea. * * 49f.3l98 call m for free n timatt. _.. or __.._11 j'..'Oft(f. Auto, V~. $1.700. i Door Loaded. V8, etc. Uc. re ..,..., _,.., 548-1"'3 GRODI CHEYROlfT FINANCING AVAD..ABLE 6'15-6!78 IRM'949 Phohe 64~ Ob'. 0 RSC JI E ·~ 9UT 5..\1 '68 V\V, xtras. '59 VW $300. . P '"" ' Must ~II bolh. 675--1932 TEACHER leaving entry, '62 BEL AIR 2/dr Sed. Gd 'll6 FORD \Vagon, fully · warr. MJ/n.1/S\V. Immac. M I II ' XI t nd ••' t bit h/ bit 1965 vw 1500 s square back. Aak for Sain Manapr u1 i;e car, n co • .,....n, ruar re-mu re equpd w/air, P/S, P/B. Prl Pty, 54.').9403 lJ211 8eacb ffivd. See at 300 Marguerite No. 2, rad, Quick 118.lel OR 3-7460 $2350. 64l-3tOO day 1 , $1150. COM ' "'UNBEAM 497-1835. A•k to. DON Hunlln(ton Bouh 51 CHEVY, 210 Station :IS3 548-0797 ••"· ~ Kl 5-3331 '68 SPORTS. eedan, 13,700 A.T. R' H. Good condlllonl'·ss=ro=RD=-c=a1ax---1.""""r<XJ""", 390=""v". 167 ALPINE ·:~1.~· .. ::to, lo ml&. WE PAY CASH ml., alt, pwt'., vinyl top. Top $300. 547-3182 8. 4 ipd tran•. S!IDO or best Roadster. 4 spd, dlr, win ~ condition. 49'-3232. '56 QIEVROLET V. 8 , otter. 6t2..a434 aft 5. wheels. Like new, 29,600 On '68 VW Bus. like new. 8500 fOR YOUR CAR GOOD transp. cal'!!; '61 &Luter broken, new tires, 68 GALAXIE 2 dr Fastback. , Speedo. Drlwn by little 'ole mUes. all extni. Owncn ' Ve.llant wp., '61 Corvalr~ i100. 546-9Cl9'l PIS ~ P/B, Auto. wi t.ape le : lady. Full pr S1499. Pymnta transrerred, su.n16 art &. St.SO ea. Ml)..2498. rodk>. 5'5--'13S3 • lo Iii "'"' budget. YPSIU. .68 BEIGE V\V, xlnt oond. CONNELL CHRYSLER '67 TORO COrtlno, 4 •J>d. :, Call Bill 4>t-9m or "5<l6M 11100.· '-IJ "t•r 5 . 3 0 CHEVROLET BUICK ---·· ·---·1 tnna., I ownv, xlnt """'·· ~ u • • ---=· --· 1 '67 CHRYSLER 1117!1. !!45-lm •n. •· ii T~YOTA ·~=per,New cogint, c::=.-:.~ ·:;:~s~i::n~,;'. l1J-;;;;:;;::;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;; J XJnt """'-Best oll!r. ' CONFIDENTIALLY A~. llhr, w/w, P/w, P/b, !, ~flnilVlnlTIAI 536--21~ P/1. u. srttn-nremist Lac-L &:I~ a '61 vw Uke new, orig OWl'll!r. \Ve PU More For qutt, Rtlcftlt tune-brakes I ' •-ft-I A At Forel&n Or Sports Can: , u.11 .,.. 1 r• Stt50 rad 1 o, air vtnLI. PAID FOR OR NOT llrH. Dr's csr. Sli"!6 or best 1 DEAN LEWIS !i0-!068 ollor. $t6-016' "' -e. I -68 vw BtJC, "'"'· !9.lnl me B. J, SPORTSCAR '64 BUICK Sl<y18'k oorwt, I . 966 ll•rbcw, C.7'1. 645-9303 WarrantJ. $IT;J(). Xlnt cond. CENTER p/,, bucket seats. STI5. LL AXEY 64$-0087 2833 Harbor Blvd. Aner 6 pm, 54S-OL20 pvt. ' Bl M lc.!58~v'°".w"°.-Wh~~11.-.... -. ~In-.-,. c.m MH& !14M4!11 '';..;'·==---=-- celle.nt mnd.!Uon, S.1650, tape llJPORTs \\" ANTm '66 RlVl£!;t.A. All Extn.~ . (TIOIYIQITIAI tteonier, ~I. Onna• Cbuntle• plu1 11treo. Must Sell! c ~ ,._., .,.,_ DON'T give It away, aet TOP s BUYD ~ 968-lllllf 11.fl 5 • 11111 BEACH BLVD. quick cub for fl with a en.L MAXEY TOYOTA '61 BUICK Speelal St.a. Wgn .• Hunt. Beach 147-1555 Dally Pilot n.nt Adi 18891 Sea.di Blvd. rn Ola.I tlret. a/e. Cood 2nd : ~mt N, or CN•I JTllo').-', t1n Bch ---•r-.--56-" _11 ____ 1 c"'"· .:.B.:."o.;c;;;h'-. -_...;Ph_T_..;84.:.1_-...s=,-'-'-'-· 14;_00_. _61.:.3-0ll...:..1_1_. -- 2-DOOR HARDTOP MElCURY v.a, automaUc, factor')' air, .J.. power slttrf,.-, power bra· '67 Mere Cd. t"K. Wtn. 10 ke1, radk> a: heater. lmma· pus, ale:, rack, PIS. PIB. culate. (UDE 7411, PIW. pwr. aeata, &pd. cont, $2295 1utn doo• Jock, AM/FM, \ much mott. $2650. m-M48 ATLAS BUSIESI' marltetpl&ct ln town. The DAILY PD..O'T OaasU1ed eecdon. S • v t CHftYSL£!-'t -rLYMOUTll money, time • e.ffort. LoOk 29'29 HARBOR BLVD. now I ti COSTA .MESA 548.,00•1·0"•°"1L"Y,;.,,.P~!LOT=~w~A~N'l'~·~ADS=! Open Oaily 'tit lo p.m. DIAL dlroct 6.f2.5m. Cht.11' Fnr D&U.Y Pilot want. Ad1 )'OUr ad, then sit blclt and Dlat 642-5678 lor RESULTS Jl1l1n tt the phone rll'l(I;! • ' TEMPEST '8' TEMPEST CU.tom 1-dr., v..a. new er11 6 tltta, r /h. $695. 8Jl...6594 I J I 34.. O~llY)!(OT_ ~onday, }""" 11, l '169 w ·atts Changed Undern ~ath Bu~.N9t on Surfac.e t:dJtot'' Notti l"e.lr """ .. o ""', munlty Im pl o v em en t, available bv the city, WLCAC One Innovation has been to drUg abuse, van~all!m. lQjter. out 11ke that with in offiter. clubs, business gr o u P s ' bi.cti _.,,ty " Wttt• t1n:~· ,.. ; b -'-I I I' I I h . ~· u -"' °" .., >11< t •· mai'chlng and group rccrea--is converting arral;l\& no send police 'officers ·once a in,. We Lalk to them abotlt he doesn't want to run Into mi 1tants, peep e n ous1ng NATIONAL SPEED Cl!NTER Now 111 tit. ~ Cities A,.., GRAND OPl~ING S,_d ..... CHROM I AND MA• WHllLS Adi Abe11t CJ11 .. Dhc.••ltttl ' r,:: ~=~~~1J~ lion. They ~are paid $21 a nicely appainted dormitories year into every individual driving . car11 and the hiril again when be la in trou· projects. "''~" :i:;:~t~ ~ week.. It operates two gasoline for 500 LUJderprivileged,_youlh.s classroom ln eveo school to responsibility thtAt entails'. .. bl~~ He Ls. 'ashamed to face "We are trying to get o~ 2110 HARBOR BLVD. '""'""' w • 1· • W•"' stations and is making plans from age 16 to %7. ·give children a good closeup "We try to have a raUo of him 1 •·the d INe:ic t To MR. "T") ,...~. to open four grocery stores. The goal is to build a first look at a C1)t>-and let them ask about J5 ~reent 'talking IJ}d "On the adu1t level we try to peop e to 'fC' eyes an ears COSTA MESA BJ JACK V. FOX Food prices in Watts run 7 class educational institution qtiesUOns. They begin with the 75 'percent 'liSteriing. A lot of Ji;eep in toucti with whal people of the poUce department. We * 646-6700 * LOS ANGELES (UPI) percent above white areas. training people In hospital toddlers io the Heads:tart the kids.say theJpo,ice pick 00. are thinking. We have one big want to get over lhe idea that,1~~~~~~~~~~! The street they ca 11 e d A great deal of faith is plac-work as engineers, me· classes and go up through high them and .we teJI them. that's •tru~et"'g at the station house good or bad, It's THEIR pollce 1: "Charcoal Alley ." 103rd Street ed in the Dr. Martin Luther chanics, c I erk s, caterers, school. right, we do pick,· 011 you once a month to listen. to what departmeni, not THE police tn the.heart of Watts, has not King Jr. General Hospital now cooks, carpenters and a var· Gonners Is an articulate because we lhlnk 'your parenfii they have to say. 'llley may department-It's the only one had 1 new building con-being built by the county. It is le!y of jobs including agri· m1:1n. Here is what he say&: want to know if you are complain Or overpollcing or they've gol. •-·~ .. sJ !he rlol of e1pected •to create 1.400 to culture on the 'Sizable tract "F r· d J •·-• t ·tot bl 1 k f 1· I Uthe· "Tb silenl maj ril Is ot su-11\;1~ nee . of farm land. or the 1\'e an s x year suirtrng~ o get 1n rou e. We ac o po IC ng. re are e o y n Penney Pincher Ads Turn Sense Into Dollars Augu~ 196$. There are gaping 2,000 jo~ w~n opened in 1971, olck, v.·e tell them .about our don't lie to them. That's the , charges of police brutality, we ~silent as it was before. Tbe vacant. 'lots where the flames and will brtn~ mOdern hospital Another reason for hope in uniforms, show them our gun• worst thing we could do. try to get down to the hard peop\e ~ve served warning on once soared. service lo area. Agree· \Valts is the i.mproved1 re Ja. and explain why we have to "We take the kids campln.g,. racts and refer them to the the 1 tioublemakers' t b al Neerd employment has im· ment was reached whereby at lions between Us peop e and carry them. We talk to older to· the ball games, Lbe wo, the c8ptair.. There . are also. COil· violence and burning is not Proved ·in the overall Los lea~t 50 percent of the con· the police department. One of kids aboot specifics, about beaches. When a kl~ has bt:_en tinuous m, eetings with black their w), f of li!e. 8 t · w us ·1 structlon v.·orkers now on tbe those closest to it is Sgt. Jerry -=.:::.::::.:_.-=.:::.::::.::::.::::.:::::;:_-=:::.::::.::::.:.c....:.:._,__~--.,.,:--+:+--~-'-r---'--.,-~.,.-,--;----Angtles area. u 10 8 1 · f I ·•• Conners or the 77th Division, a ts just as tough for a young job are members o m nor1-: man to 11et a job as it was four group!\ young Negro who grew up y~lll:S Bio. On a 58-acre site at Saugus, near Watts and has been on Sixty percent of the families north of Los Angeles. a former the force for six years. He is tn Watts were estimated to be institution for rehabilitati on of head of the community rela· 0~ relief at the time of the:,--al_co_h_o_lic_s_h_a_s_be_e_n_m_ad_e __ u_on_s~p_ro_g~r_a_m_lh_er_e_. __ _ ri9t~ fjgurt ~still a boot the same. . One Negro businessman got a $100,000 government Joan for a small lighting fixture en- terprise. It is one of half a dozen new businesses at· tempted since the riot. Now the creditors are closing in and It afu>ea,rs-about to fold. Tbfi·Weather has been swell· ering In the 90's as it was thal August four years ago. The Watts Summer Festival last week attracted crowds of bol'i!d youngsters to \Viii Rogers Stale Park where an a l t empted "conciliation" meeting in 1965 sparked new vioJcnce, particularly \\'hen a Negro teen-ager b e g a n screaming in lranl of a TV camerfl that they were coming into other neighborhoods to "get whitey." On the surface, all the in· gredk!nts seem there for another holocaust. A good many Angelenos held tneir breath last Aprll when incumbent Sam Yo r t y defeated Negro Councilman Thomas Bradley In the run-0ff maYQral election. A white ''backlash" vote had been ·largely-responsible and poliee stiffened (or trouble. It did not come. There were riots in a dozen American cities after the assassination of Dr. Pt1artin Luther King Jr. in Memphis. To the frank astonishment of many, the nation's third largest city had no serious trouble. Wh)'? You can get a dozen different opinions. But one ~ltive answer ls that the.re is in air of hope in Watts, a sense that a $lart ls being made. that·peopte inside the community and out are trying to do something to bring a change anc. particular- ly to help young people. The group whose activities are most in eviderice Is lhe Watts Labor Community AC· ti on Committee (WLCAC) headed by a bustling Negro named Ted Watkins whose daily round seems to get into every area. Supported by a number of labor unions and v.•ith funding from the U.S. Department of Labor, WLCAC has projects ranging from a little poultry ranch to produce cheaper eggs for the community to an am· bilious vocational training pro- gram. The commiUee has signed up 1,300 Walts boys and girls this s-ammCr in a program of ll.'ork, remedial study, com· SpectalU.18 tn Campus A ttir e The New· Country Look in Tr;ulitional -""-. Ivy-Style Sla cks Glen plaids, a subtle, taste- ful difference that gi,·es your wardrobe the elegant. ly cas ual look.,NEATN IK •lacks'"' PERMA-PREST" for easy care. $9 CHARGE rr oaSean ReYOlvi.ngChqe Sears ' Custom T a iloring ... tOt/a Off New Fall Line of Fabrics Treat yourself roacomplerewardrobc of custom tailored suirs, sport coats and sponduos. Choose from all the oewest f1brics in Fall pauerns and colorations .•• rai lo red to your exact mcuurc· mc:ntt and specifications. 9 0 .. s190 Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back Sears Guaranteed for 21 Months Aek About Sears Convenient Credit PlanA. SIZE 6.lthl3 1)ibe1eu Bl1ckwall11 PluL79Fed.Exe.Tu AndOldTir• Tnrle-ln F.E.T. Prir.,. TUBELESS BLACKWALLS 650x l3 9.95 1.79 7:i5xl4 12.95 2.07 775xl 4 14.95 2.20 825xl4 16.95 2.36 775xl5 14.95 2.2 1 TUBELESS WH ITEWALLS 650x l3 12.95 J.79 73~x14 15.95 2.0i 775x14 17.95 2.20 825x14 19.95 2.36 855xl4 21.95 2.57 775x l 5 17.95 2.21 • • Extra-wide tread dceign P\111 ~ore rubber on the road • Quietcom'ering, cosie r steering • Gu1ranteed by Sean to wear for a full 21 months ALLSTATE Pa!-ScngerTire Guarantee TREAD LIFE GUARANTEE C:u1r1n1ttd Ag1in~I: All fail11rft of rhe 1ire re-111lri~ from nonnal toad haurd1 or di:fi:<:f! in marcr11b or workm1111h1p. t'or l{ow Lon&: for the life o( 1he oriA1nal tttat.l. ll'h11 Will ~•1"11 Do: Repair n.111 punc1orci .i no charJe. In 1he cUe o( f1ilure in nch111~ (or rile Ii~ rep Laa i1, clwgi111 onlf the proportion of curttnt rel\llar .cllit11 price phu Fedt-r.I &d tc Tu 11111 repttXOtl rfftd IHed .. TREAD WEAR-OUT GUARANTEE · Ga1nnteed ..\pintc T~ WffM>UI. For B'"'" Long; 'The 011mbqo( months •P«ificd. Wh•t WiU Sean Do: ht aclwi&!: for the cin". ttpl.:e ir, ch.,-giiw 1he rurmic ttgulu ~Ui!IA price pl11! feden.l Eicitc Tu ln11he followltlJ ..UO..nct: ftlonth1 CuatMtttd 1% IO %4 Alli:u••nc• '"'' -, _________________________________________________ , 11.11*,MICTA 14400 S21 •,lJO 11 -1\GI J.Jf11 IOMG M.OCl!Ht 5-Cl121 <ill: Mo wt 14161 .,....u~il 1.1111 n:.tAMaJ42·1l11 I I t.1J«JG11, ,~ ;uo0661 eu'11l'11 Ol i.100•, a 4.o1e1 1 OITW!I; • '°io ~ 1.5211 POW)tlil, ro 2.11 '-5, NA .. ,14t. 'l'U "61J1 1ANT11, 11:~ t••.t011 ~ ""''m I CQl;/TON NL "'J11, Nt 2-Sl't.I llOUT'fl'OOO 1'IO '·'''' oto1-1t1 t.J1.:1100 Wfl11, .t10111U u •·Vil ....un '° 1.1~1. fl.4.az» I «;Wo111, ~11 MW.l\ll'cx1D Oii 1·)521 PAl.\Dtt>il, 6lt.J1! I, lll ,4)1 I IOUtll COMT rlAV. J'°'3)3S 'l'lMCM Pl r.Jrll • ,________________________ _ ___________________ , Scars "Satl sf attlon Guaran11td or Your Money Batk" • • 7 •