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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-08-14 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa.-i~~~~----~-------~;.___,~~~·--·-----.:::::::r:;:: .......... ~ __ -~==~~~:;:::::::::::::.::::r::::::::::::::::::::;;:~!:".l:::::I~~:::i:::=:::::;-:::=:-~~ I ' • • -~. • ' ... •' • • • . A ·Toast to N:ation~s • ' '' Qin of ApoUo I f receive toast (luring gttttering ;state dinner in I their honor Wednesday in Los Angeles. Like Apollo 11 's mls•ion, event w1s 11xclusiv11ffair watc:htd · ' by· million• from afar. DAILY ,ILOT Plltlt _., lllkllttf Kttf!IW • -J • ··~ JHURSOA Y AFTERNOOlll, .l>!UGUST"l 4,;'I %9 ·VOL.. 4'NO. 1tc:.1 sltti,M?HS. n ,.a.Es~ I . . _,._. . LOS' ANGELES ('UPI) -Ne i I Aml5trong choked' back tears as he groped for."orda to tell America how the ·Apo!lq 11 .• 8*onauts_reet. aboui .their ~;and ·tli:t:~j\lha'S~glven them: . '1..lfle._tffi:sti,m&l t6 setlfoot:.,Qn the rinoon , hefd . ''.gllftefing·· array. of·.'the nation's hip ...,,:il\IPlr'.ll'"l'"""nm:>s ·h~ spoki of ;seemg i.~Uitibltd~IJgn' .a'mong, the masses in New"' York al· the outset ot a Qay,'Of coast-to-roa.St"'&Cclaitn. · ~ • "Through you wt toucheci'the inoon, •0:1t read, Ann.strong looked around the room, at . ' ' SOCIAL SIDE PHPTOS, ·LOCAL COUPLES: PAGE 13 ., • • • his fellow ·astronauts, ;Edwln ._E.: Aldrin Jr., and Michael Co11irls,_..at .Pres'ident .Nixon, ,at itbe great figures· in;the au. dience and, through·television,,Bt.the peo.. pie of~the United State&. 1"ThtDUgh you we touched the moon," tfe said. '!It was our privilege t.oday to cross the country lo touch America." Touch America the moon men did as Peace Council. Problem: No Place · tor~ Marchers ' • '~ ,;~ •. ,., ,~ T "';" , • , ·r, ' "' ..,. ' _.., ., The P~e A~ion C~f1s·fri-;ir£bie. . de~~e.. h;oJll . cUslomary .la~ and , mo- lt .has no place to put us:demortstf1t0rs .. 'tiofi proceeding~. in San Clemente this weekend. • RObert,.Bland,'Laguna 'Beach PAC oi- The latest rebuff received by the PAC fiCiaJ,,_.waS -.am~ng petitioners a.sking the ls refusal of San Clemente State-Park of· court to require the state director of ficials to iillow use of th,e grounds as a parks lo pennit th~ peace organizatlQ":JO fallying point JQr part).cipa~ts in Sunday's., ·: US"' park Ian~~ adJace~t to the ex~lus1~e planned asiu-wa:r.l!~~·r·; , .,_i". , °?'~ru~ t:.i;exesident!al ~mu~dy~ , The p"k ·'' n~r>P;te1!d~r'¥·•, ·,~~me>!ttt~ .. ~i~ summer White Ho~sc. Named· iri 'uie"Wiit rmlhdlite ist'Mties PAC representatives today sought lo Whitehead state district 6 superintendent overturn ~e decision. by filing a suit in or parks a~d recreation. Orange Cbunty Supenor Court. A show cause orderhaS l!een signed by Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman Judge Robert L. Corfman, shOrtening I.he wi ll hear the action Friday, an unusual lime oI litig;i.tion. A lieiri,ng will be held at 9:30 a.m. Fri- Orange Coast Weather AnoLher dose o! the same old balmy stuff is. Friday's forecast With· temperatures· ranging-from a top ofi '74 "along the ~ne to 87 In the inland areas. , 'INSWE TODAY " Som1 1,200 new students nt UC lrvint this year will find themselve1 ha the throes of 011 acute homing shortage. Page 10. ' C1Mfim11 I Miii In s.mu· 11 (a.1s1fltol t6>J1 (•llllks 17 M"llqs t "'"'" ts c ... ,_. u Mlltfll P:llftft It DMtlll Httlnl t "ttlontt """' , .. .,_ . Ol'tl!tl Cftntr " •tllltfrtll ,.,. ' s.ti.I Hews IS.1' • •11..nlf!tMMt lt. 'lS • f'IRll!t:I II-It H-K-14 SHrtl 21·M s.-. ,Mltll•b 1•1t T11t'f11ftll 17 """ ....... ,, ,. """" " Mlllllta 1 Wtlflllr 4 Mlnifft l.ice111tl t Wiii' .. Htwt .. J day in Superior Court. Park Supt. Whitehead "told us we couldn't use the park, so we're taking him to court,"'s'.aJd Blaml this meltnlngt Last week, the PAC was refused use of a Capistrano Unified School District school grounds 1 as a staging area. The San Clemen~ Ci.tY , Council followed by reruslng the group a pennit to parade down El Camino Road, the town's main foad. , "We feel Mr. Wbijehead denied us use of ,the prlJ!lel'ty 00 •Vf!l' superficial reaSon's.I He• said 'that we1 would injure planWife·in lhe •,••~Bland. • 'Ufe. 1.also. said our· presence would disturb a few nearby reiideot.! who are employes of the st.ate par~," Bland ad· ded. Whitehead, however, said the issue "'as . a ... llit ~ more ~Heated. "The . demonslrafurt could dlsturb-regula!! visitors to the park," M told•tbe DAILY PJLOT. "°We've been full all summer, and are nOw turning people away regu· larly." Whitehead also noted that the n.llying area sought by.the PAC i.J near the park district otnce. "I am concerned about wh at 2,000 lo 3,000 people might do to that area," he~sal.d. l . ' . . they somehow survived the biggest tickertape parade in Manhattan, sent two million in Chicago into shouting jubilation and then flew to the Pacific for a state dinner Wednesday night that was hailed as the most exuberant bash since Andrew Jackson's clan tore up the White House. Nixon revealed they will start shortly on a tour around the world. It is expected to begin in mid.September and tenattive plans cal: for 49 days abroad. - Today the astronauts flew to Houston far a few days with their ··wives and families before another .super-spectacular in the Astrodome Saturday night. Members of the sopl)lsticated foreign diplomatic corps were scurrying around for astronaut autographs like schoolgirls at the Century Plaza banquet where JIOllyy;OOd Stars rubbed shoUlders wllh supreme court justices and 44 governors rose in unison to be introduced. Nixon, beaming with pride raised the toast to Armstrong, Aldrin and ColliM. "[ say simply to the three astronauts we thank you, for your courage, we thank you !or raising our sights and the sights of men and women throughout the world. "The sky is no longer the limit and we thank you for the Cine young men you are, fine examples for young people all over the world ." Armstrong, a man to whom words do not come glibly, seemed to falter as he respol')ded, but his 1incerily rang through, "We hope and think that this is the beginning or a new era, the beginning or an era when man understands the universe around him and the beginning of the era when man understands himself." Said Aldrin:. "There are footprints on the moon. DAILY ,H,OT staff ...... SCOTT:FOOTLIK· Dl~PLAYS PERSONAL TRIBUTE TO ASTRONAUTS · · · On Way .to Moon, 12-Ye~r'~ld Meke1 It to Second Floor · Those footprints belong to each and every one of us, to all mankind, and they are there because of the blood, sweat and tears o( millions of people. The footprints ar;,\~~m:::101 •ruehumanspirit." Youtli Brings Banner for ·Moon Men "Mr. President, here stands ~II proud · · • American, proud to be a member of the By' ARTllUR R. VINSEL Apoll t d t be ·t· f th to .complete bis own mission. • o earn, prou o a CJ 1zen o e oi ,~ D•Ur ,.119, si11t United States of America which nearly a "They w.ere comlOg to LA and Yr'e . decade ago said it would land men on the LOS ANGELE.s -America forgot th ht thi Id be t·ts•lf f ti Wed d Th t' oog .' wou • a good. tim.e to pay moon and did so, proud to be an in· · or a me nes i.iY· e 1me habitant of this most wagnificent was devoted to saluting the APollo 11 t[jo tribute," he explained. "Tiley.didn't have . planet.'' for taking ·the peopl~ or earth along on to: go up , there. 'They were, asked. They- 'lbe three astrona'uts were, awarded Lhe m~n's greatest ad~enture. , went.:• . 1 • • • • Medal of .Freedom, highest award the flrm!trong, Aldrin and Collins flew to American lilstory is tbe d,_ecot.1theme on , United SI.ates can bestow-on a ·civlllan,. the moon a~ 'back. . l..,t floor" of the 2kJtor')' hojel' and Scott Vice President Spiro Agnew-tead the in-~tt Footlik, J2, 111ade 1t to the sesorxt lat altt\e momeut.~.a..port.ralt.:of. the · scrlption. floor. . . late Presl~t Dwight D. ·Eisenhower. "Your contrJbutions will be remem-Lee.Lobel, 12, an asthma v1clun,. ha@ to Hanging -tlesjde it w1s .a) chronicle or bered as long as rqen wonder and dream stay home • .: . , world . .achievement during• Ike's ad· nd .... rch-for-tnit orrtbis,,Ianet-a ' wo...,CY.erly f\ills.J>Qys b•<l..q>(I)· Jllini!Jr~Uo · ' • , among the atars, 11 it read. piled · a• phOto-covered baoner honorlng "ln the itraf year of his '~ term, • ' Guard's ,ffit . ' " By Lawsuit t • .:. - In Clemente San Clemente's angry lifeguards have been o'rdered ta stay on µie job pending a Superior Court hearing of their r..Y dispute with the city. · - Judge Robert Corfman grclnlf(l _. tem- parary restraining ord~r Wednesday ~~llo~1n~, the filing ol a complauit by the city which also ask11 for: $500,000 itr damages from, the 32 lifeguard!° listed' A$_ c;l,efendant.s. , . He set Aug. 26 for ·a hfaring it1to a dispute which has threatened ta leave the South Coast community without bather protection .on the 18.6· miles of shorelJM covered by its lifeguards. . Court actjon was taken by the city 1n the oonvicUon.-that' the lifeguar(IS · were about to walk off their jobs in a bid to force the city to grant pay raises refused by city council last week. . ~ife~ard. Lt. Steve .H. Chorak, iden- tified 1n the city complaint I as t?e prin-cl~ deferx;lant, has asked the ·city to ~nng .San Clemente rates up to.the pay levels enjoyed by lifeguards in all other' areas ~om Los Angeles to San Diego. Chorak claims that the San Clemente :ate. of ti.BS an hour for seaional guardt 11 rune percent below the average along the coast.· He further claims that permanent Jieutenanl!, such as himself. make S'll.O a month or 29 percent belo' tl'!e a\rerage. The lifeguards are·demanding nine pet;-c~nt and 29 per~ent increase respecUvelf along with additional pay hikes for ~asonal lleuteflanfs, tfie 'captaJn and' the cllier. They also want'-a' five-day wor '· week. \The city su,lt:b~ands,.Jhe lifeguarda ~~ision.to.strii{:e on Satµrday as "wholJ7. 1ridefenslble and. unreasonable." It~ t~at the lifegua?ds had1every opPor1UJ1it1 "'!luring Juue, Ju(y , and August'' to d!scuss the pay dispu'l&-with the city anil arrive at a conclusion without strike ao-tion. ' City officials hav~ pointed out that the entire lifeguard department received a "merit raise" of five percent in the 1-.. 70 budget. Captain Phil SLubbs received a 'llfl percent increase. Also recently RPPllOved by the city wa1 a 'five-~tep program under which season.I guards who returned to duty atter.U>eit first year get an autom1Uc five ~ent rlise· each y,ear for five years. ~hie! Rlcfard )lazard, C.ptaln Stql>bl, aQd three seasonal guards did not )oin. Cborak and his SUellow em~jb,._ __ ttiffiiiii!s. · ~ .. ' Great as was the.list of the elite among the dramatic· moon mission and Scott the workl'a iAge of Spa:ce" bqan, on Oct. the 1,500 guests, there were notable went alone to deliver it, while ailing Lee 4, 1957," the plaque reids ' Bla•e Ht'ts Y. ''-er absentees. waiohed lhe Jlltl•rlng spectacle on S<otl FoOtllk was JO •mooths and ·two "' -Lill , FQrmer Presideni. Ll'n9on B. John'°" television. , days old. • --PORT .EVERGhADES Fla. (\IP!) -A - declined an invitation as did Harry s SltUftg near press headquarters on the "I've always Meo tnteresied In space _. smal\ hre -the roortb In aix day1 - Truman. meu.anlne· Jevel of the Century PJaza• •• -,well.,•~ lolrn GleM'• D!gbt.~ said broke oot early today aboard the t<llre\I Not a single representati ve o[ the Ken· l;Jotel Wednesday night. Scott told 00. he Scott, a geventh-gra(ler who . tried. two luxury liner QUeen Elir.abeth. Police Aki (Set-ARMSTRONG, Page l) !tied for how's, since Tuesdai montlng, (See TiUBllTE, P•se I) it.,., "dellnltely arson.'' . lJ ' DAILY 'ILOT $ A First in Silver Lt. Ancel Ha~gerty leaves Portland City Hall after becoming first Negro in l\1anne Corps history to receive the Silver Star foi gallantry in combat. With Haggerty are his mother (center) and siS'ter. Hag· erty is a for1ner University of Oregon football star. Nixon Plans Relaxation After Big Night in LA SAN CLE~IENTE (U PI) -Pres ident Nixon, Intensely proud of the Apollo 11 astronauts for proving •·the sky is no longer the limit," ne1v back to the \Vestem \\'hite House today planning mostly to relax after a big night. The chief executive planned to take it ea!y as the end of a busy week d.re\Y near. His sole appointment wa's a t :IQ am. meeting with the national security council. Tonight the President and ~1rs. Nixori host a party for the traveling. \Vhite House press corps, introducing them to the Whlte House by the Pacific. Nixon continued to keep secret his choice of the associate supreme court jW1tlce to replace Abe Fortas, who resigned May 15. Presidential Pr!!s Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Wednesday the President would not announce the appointment to the hlgh court today Sen. E1'erett M. Dirksen's statement to the contrary. Dirksen reported Nixon's chciice was Chief JudJ{e Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. ('f Greenville, S.C. Ziegler declined com· ment. N. Korea Charged In Truce Violations PANMUNJOM , Korea (AP) -The U.N. Command charged today that North Korea committed 14 major armistice violations across the Korean border between April 23 and Aug. to. It said U.S. and South Korean forces killed 11 North Korean infiltrators during that period and p:mibly two others. l Dflll\ PIL(ll ............. " .............. .__ -·;ii., --CAUPOIMtA OAA#f01 C0.U1 l""'I LISHING COMH.N'r ltMrl N, WH• """""' .... "111Mi11Wt Jttk I.. Cirrlt"f Vtcit.,...... -co-, .. Mtlll"' Tht111•• .:1..,11 .... T11t111a1 A. M1tphl~ ..,,..Int ••1w -c.a. ~I ill Wftl a1~ It'"' ~ ...,., Jtll ........ """' .......... '-•-hWll: m Jlltt.i• "'-....,1~,.._ ltdi .... ....., • ' tr. each of lhe past three days lhe President has sent messages to Congress on his new-look federal welfare program. The latest one Wednesday was. a blockbuster tax-sharing plan which would give cities and states a slice of the federal fiscal pie with no strings at· tached. \The re venue·sharing plan wrapped up tb'e Presldtnt's three-part program to revamp the wellare system and reverse the now or federal power to Washington, Of the revenue plan, Nixon said it is a "controversial plan" but there Is a good chance it will be adopted by Congress a('d it has "wid!!pread support." . . Fe1·sonal Income Rises Sharply Dm·in g July WASHINGTON (AP) -Penonal in· com~ rose sharply in July with a federal pay mcrease the largest component, the Commerce Department said today. The department's Office of Business Economlca said the $6i billion July ad- \•ance, to a seasonally adjusted annual rat' of $752.3 blllioo, matched Its revised June increase and was about $1 billion higher than the average monthly gain in the first half of the year. For the first seven months, the nation's personal income averaged $735.3 billion at an annual rate, $00.4 billion or nine percent aobve the comparable period last )ear. Most cf the July increase, $5 billion, was wage and salary dlab ur.ements, \\'hlch rose to $513.5 billion. The m a i n feature of the payroll pln was a $3 billion boost in government payrolls - about $2.5 bllllon attributable to the third and rtnal stage or the federal pay raise of December 1967. The remainder was at- tributed to the continuing expansion In state and local payrolls. , The department said private sector wages and ~alaries rose $2 billion during July. Construction payrolls, which had ri!en steadily since January, were un- changed in July as the result of scattered strikes. 47 'M i~ing' Prisoners Alive WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon annck.lnetd todt,y It has confirmed that 47 Americans previously listed as mlsl'i· ing in Vietnam are alive in North Vle(- lllmtse pri!onl. Conttnnatlon that the previously lilted men are tn captivity was based on infor- mation brou.sht back last Wte.11: by three llf!wly releUed aervlcemen, u weU as information from other IOUrctS, a de- fense aookesrnan aaid. The Pentagon indicated on Wednesday th1t llle recently obtained lnlorm1tion was helping rtaolve qu~ltlona: aboul the status of IOflle of the mo~ than 900 Amreicans currently listed as mlssin1 In 1oot:1east As ia. Names of the 47 were to be released lai.r In the Penta(on·a dally Vlemam caauaily 1111. ' LOdge In PariJ Reds'· Offensive Wrecked 'Peace ~ PAl\IS (UPI) -U.S. Amb••aador Henry Cabot Lod1e told the Vielnam peace conference today lhe renewed Communlat offenalve in S<Alth Vietnam haJ wrecked another hope for peace and hinted It may halt the withdrawal of * * * Heavy Vietna1n Battles Rage For Third Day SAIGON (AP) -Heavy fighUna ra1ed for the third day Thurl<lay north of Saigon, where allied troops are trying to break up enemy troop concentrations. Casualties were mounting steadily 1s U.S. and South Vietnamese forces strove to keep the enemy off l>alance and pre- vent any more widespread assaults like thoae that broke cul acro.u South Viet- nam Tuesday. Throughout South Vietnam, about 1,700 enemy troops have been killed in the lhree days, while from 125 to 150 Ame.rJcw have died, allied headquarters .reported. Most of the action Thursday was near the CambQdlan border area from 60 to 80 miles north of Saigon, Allied forces reported killing 69 enemy troops in a series of clashes there Thursday and 73 farther south. In the sharpest clash i n v o Iv in g Americans, elements of the U.S. 11th Ar.mare,d Cavalry }\egiment and govern- menl Rangera reported they killed !5 North Vietnamese in an abandoned rub- btr plantation about two miles northeast of Loe Ninh, 70 miles north of Saigon. Five Americans were wounded and government casualties were reported \•ery tight. Military spokesmen said Allied troops bumped into an enemy force of unknown site hidden among rubber trees and undergrowth late Thursday morning. The allies called in artillery and air strikes while blasting at the enemy with tanks and machine guns. The fighting lasted for more than an hour. North Vietnamese ambushed a U.S. truck convoy about 18 miles south of Quan Loi, 65 miles north cf Saigon. Th~ U.S. troops returned fire and called for a!r strikes against the enemy posi· lions. Sixteen North Vietnamese were reported killed and three Americans were wounded. Enemy gunners fired about 30 mortar rounds at the 100.vehicle COTJvoy, which was tranaportlng ammunition, fuel and construcUon material. Three trucks were reported damaged, Eighteen enemy soldiers were killed Thursday morning near An Loe, pro- vlncial capital 60 miles north cf Saigon, when a North Vietnamese force attacked a patrol base of the U.S. 1st Air cavalry Division. Thirteen Amerlcans were wounded before the enemy withdrew five hours later under a hail or machine-gun bullets from helicopter gunshlps and the point· blank fire ol artillery. Jl rom Page J TRIBUTE •.. days to give the moorunen a tribute he and hls buddy made. The sma1ler the tribute, the longer the wait. "It needs more &llJelng," he said, pok- ing at a rough spot. "I've talked to Mr. Callahan, the manq:er, Mrs. Winchester the social dirtttor -and her helptr -and the Secret Service man in charge or .securi- ty," said Scott. 'DIDN'T GET FAR' "But I didn't 1Jet very far. ''l even tilled lo John OleM and Mrs. Frank Borman on the phone" Scott con· tnued, "but John Glenn said he ••. just didn 't know ." lle remalned poUte and patient. "I didn't sleep for two days,'' he said, of the July weekend when man's toot· prints touched God's natural handiwork far out in space. "I couldn't believe it. What do you stcy! ~1an was landing on the moon and it was always just a ficUon-th.lng.'' During the late 1968 Apollo 10 moon orbital flight, the youngster built a lunar ~lmulator himsell and kept measured track of the capsu.le's distance from home and back. "Yes," h~ replied to lbe ne:s:t obvious question. "Definitely ~1 want to apply to the Air Force Academy ror the class of 1974. Jill have to write my Congressman." IN NASA BY H "If It all works out. I'll ht in NASA by the time I'm 24," he conUnued, adding with careful quallficaUon " ••. if It all works oul." He said he had one more person lo see about presenUng that pasted-up collection of magic which sUll tricks the human mind, to the men who proved it fact, but Ume waa running out. The main banquet hall lW'O lloors below In the crowded, bustling hotel seemed at the mom«1t as distant to Scott Footlik and Lee Lobel -watching rrom home - tts the moon. ''lt fln1lly wound up somewhere In the NASA office," 1aid Mra. FooUlk today. ''He'1 disappointed." more. American troops. Lodge to!d ttie Hanoi and Viet Cone delegatJ0111 1eated acrou the clrcular table at the 30tb session of the con. lereoct, ''by word and deed you show that you are not prepared for genuine ne1ot1ation ••• your actions match your bellicose words." Lodge added, as a rainstorm drummed on the windows of the conference room near the Arch of Triumph, "while 25,000 American aolditr1 are in the proceu of departing from South Vietnam and deetaiona are being taken on the departure· of additional American forces, your army has bffn preparin1 1y1tematJcally for a new offeoaive. •• Later, he a&.ld, 0 We have hoped that the reports of a rtliUve lull in the flg~U"i In South Vlelnam would begin to create an atmosphere in which genuine negotiations could take place, Jeadina eventualJy to peat:e. "Wt still hope thl~ can happen, but we are deeply concerned with the indications I have described which point to lbe m. tensification of the war by your side." "Your statements and your acts can have only one meaning: You are un- prepared to compromise and negotiate, and you continue to place your· trust in vlolence and temr," Lodge aatd. But he told Ute Communilf.I that ·acu su ch as "terror rald.s" against S b u t b Vietnamese schools and h o a p I t a I a , particularly against the Cam Ranh Bay hoepital Aug. 7, will get them nowhere. "This is vain and futile. The pecple cf South Vietnam have experienced your ca~paigns of terror for many years, and their resolve to defend themselvts against you have not been shaken. "I can assure you that the people of the United States also detest a u c h atrocities," the America negotiator: aaid. F rom P119e J ARMSTRONG •• nedy family was present. It was Pr1si· dent John F. Kennedy who proclaimed in his administration America's determina- tion to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis sent her regrets. Charles A. Lindbergh had been ex- pected up to the last minute. but he did not appear. Mrs. ~1amie Eisenhower, who also had been on the guest list, was not present. • The gowns and jewels of the ladies were fabulous . The dinner began with salmon poached in champagne and went CJn from there. The Marine Corps band brought the president and the crowd to their feet applaudirig with "The Halls of ~lontezuma.'' The music was climaxed by the Army chorus singing a new 11ong, "One Small Step," taken from Armstrong's first words on the moon -"One small step for 1 man, one giant leap for manltind." It wu written by Ronald Harris, 1 member of the chorus. A posthumous award of t h e Distinguished Service Medal of NASA wu made to three astronauts who lost their Jives on an ~~lla launching pad in a flash fire-Virgil L. Grissom Edward H. White and Roger B. Chaffee.' DAILY PILOT stiff ,llttt J ERRY ARMSTRONG PONDERS ASSORTED ANIMAL S Mo re Than Ca ta and Dog s at ttlt Hument Soc iety Bea~h Menagerie Shelte r Boas ts Va ried Ten£uits ~y Rubi NfEDZlµsKI CH tflt o.ltr l"Olff tttff '"Ive got fleas in my house, do you have a d0£?" the exasperated woman asked an employe at the Huntington Beach Animal Shelter. "But I thought you already had fleas, what do you riced a dog for?" "Well, the health department told me that if I could get a dog and let it lie around the living room floor.:he'd pick up the fleas and it would be easier to gel rid of them." "I think you need an exterminator for that job," said the bemused animal shelter man. It was just another one or those emergency calls the shelter gets daily. Like the other day someone called and reported, "My dog has just bitten some· one. Is there any possibility he'll get sick?" THEY ENJOY CALLS Yet no one at the animal shelter, which is located on Newland Street, just behind the Edison steam plant gets disturbed about the calls. They enjoy them .· It keeps the job interesting. Through telephone alerU mostly, the shelter now boasta cf the strange.st ''arie· ty cf animals it has ever had at cne time. In addition to all the dogs and cats which usually abound it now houses two donkeys, a pigeon, a plg, two ducks, an enormous red rooster and two snakes. Since mid.July, the two donkey s have been grazing in a small fenced area behind the main building. No one knows where they came from and what will be done ""·Ith them remains a pu:We. With the aid of fife bystanders the men tried lo wrestle, drag, push and pull the donkeys into the waiting truck wlt.Mut the least bit of.' cooperation from the stub- born anlmaJs. In a fit of desperation, Armstrong and Lewis tied them .to the vehicle and tried to pull them along. Only one complied, however. "Harvey, the old and shaggy one, dug in all fours. We could have dragged him all the way down here and all he '''ould have bad is four short legs," Arm strong said. WALKED IIL\ I lN "Le\\'is finally vralked him in," he ad- ded. The shelter is about five miles and a two.hour walk removed from the playhouse. "There was no other choice ," LeWls said. ''You couldn·t ride hin1. If yo11 jumped on him, he'd stop completely." The goat? "\Ve picked that one up at the Firestone Station on Beach Boulevard," Lewis recounted. "It just cr11isi!d in, The people just locked hitn up in the men's room until we could get there." For a short time last month the shelter had a seal. It ~·as picked up along the Bluffs area after it had bitten a liltle girl. The shelter employes did their best to keep him happy , hosing him down ten times a day, feeding him good fish and anchovies. Then one morning he suddenly keeled O\'er and died. LAST 3 DA Y5!! - STORE AND WAREHOUSE!! FURNITURE COME EARLY FOR BEST SILECTIONS 20% TO 50% OFF ON MANY ITEMS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT H.J .GARREff fURNITURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS O,• M•., """'-& Fri. 1,-. ( 2215 HARIOR ILVO. COSTA MiSA, CALIF. •46-0275 •••-0276 • • ' l l I " Bun-tingto• Beae~:: EDITION voe. 62, NO. f94, 3 SECTl9Ns, 32 PA6ES T]ofURSDAY, '.Al)&UST 14, '196' TEN CINTS Armstr_o.ng ·Fights Tears At T1~ibute .. LOS ANGELES (UPI) Ne i I 11 Arrhstrong ctioked back tears as he groped for words to tell America how the Apollo 11 astronauts fee l about their country and the honl't it has given them. ii I I ii' 1· The first man to set foot on the moon held a glittering array of the nation's SOCIAL SIDE PHOTOS, LOCAL COUPLES : PAGE 13 high and mighty sj>ellbound as he spoke of seeing a scribbled sign among the n1asses in New 'York at the outset of a day of coast·to-coalJl acclaim. "Through you we touched the moon," it rc11d. Armstrong looked around the room, at his fellow astronauts, Edwin E. Aldrin .Ir., and Michael Collins, at President Nixon, at the great rigures in the au· c,iience and, through television, al the peo· pie of the United States. "Through you we touched the moon," he said. "It was our privilege tod ay to ~ross the country to touch America." Touch. America the moon men did as they som~w survived the biggest tickerti)>e: Parade in Manhattan, sent 'two millibli in Chicago into sbOuj.ing.jubllation and then new to~the Pacific tor a state dinner ·Wednetday night that was hailed as the mOSt exuberant bash since Andrew J ackSon's clan tore up the White House. Nixon revealed they wHl start shorUy on a tour around lhe world. lt is expected to begin in mid-September and tenattive plans cal: for 49 days abroad. Today the astronauts new to Houston for a few days with their wives and families before another super-spectacular Jn the Astrodome Saturday night. J\fembers of the sophisticated foreign diplomatic corps were scurrying around for astronaut autographs like schoolgirls :it the Century Plaza banquet where Hollywood stars rubbed shouJders with' supreme court justices and 44 governors rose ir. unison to be introduced. Nixon, beaming with pride raised the toast to Armstron g, Aldrin and Collins. .. I say simply to the three astronaul!l we thank you for your courage, we thank you for raising our sights and the sights of men and women throughout the world. "The sky is no longer lhe limit and we tha{lk you for the fine young men you are, fine examples for young people all over the world.'' Armstrong, a man to whom "'ords do not come glibly, seemed to falter as he responded, but his since rity rang through. "We hope and think that this is the beginning of a new era, the beginning of an era when man understands the universe around him and the beginning o( (See ARJ\1STRONG, Page %t l'foteer s ...... • " ,. ' . Alonzo Frazle ol lluhtlnglon Beach, president of Orange County Dahlia Society. pre- pares blossoms for society's annual show Friday and Satur- day in tbe._1nall at Huntington Center. Show is open lo the public without charge. • CAIL Y PILOT l"Mi. ..,.llllclln KMlllN' THE TOAST OF THE NATION : APOLLO II ASTR!)NAUTS RECE.IVE PRESIDENTIAL TOAST DURING GLITTERING STATE DINNER IN THEIR HONOR' Railroad Puts $5 Million Tag On PE Strip ' ; . ' ~them Pacific Railroad today claim- ~ in resporw to an Orange County con· demnation complaint that a PadOc Elec· tric right of way strip through Sunset Beach is worth $S million. The pre,liminary estimate or county government Is that it is worth $1,940,000. "The matter will likely be settled in court." said Randolph Carr, attorney ror the railroad. The abandoned right of way, BO feet wide and more than a mile long, is want- ed by the county for use as a beach park- ing lot. Residents of the seaside commlDlity who live on either skle of the bisecting right of way are divided on whether the property should be used for parking or for a large-scale apartment development which is the use the railroad has planned for It. Responded deputy county counsel Arthur Wahlstedt, to the railroad's $5 million land value claim, "It's a dream figure on their part." He explained, "It is cust001ary in any lawsuit to stick in the highest figure that has any remote possibility of being cor- rect. You can always make the rope: shorter: you don·~ want to undercut yourself.'' Said Carr, "We think the property Is worth more than the figure mentioned by the county resolution . We quoted $5 million as a workable figure." Proponenl! ot the parking lot also want to annex lo the city of Huntington Beach. A principal opponent of annexaiion is Ri cha rd Harri.son, superintendent of the sunset Be-ch Sanitation Pi&trlct. Harrison said Wedhel!daY that Carlton Development cO. oLBeVerly· Hills, which holas a lease from SoUthem Pacific to develop the property, has requested of the county $2 million Indemnity. The Carlton Co. poured sOme foundations for [See SP CLAIM, P11e I) Beach Zone Battle · Flares More Factw1is Voice Oppositwn to Apart1ne11ts The already boiliq1 .:contrq.v~r11y .oyer "eValuate the'i~l?'-C~ of ioninr on adlool -~,ei~ with ~1,111~'·(11®1.· r~f '4.S ac~s.·~ ;feel.-4\llt .ljl· .... _...._ ""1.'.on!i"l!<Jj!llllt:)I& 1\1 "• ' ' ed iltit .at~ IOt' ~U!trlo property In !lie.-~"* :~~."114 ftuld'...,.,.in (D. c . • ·.. . . • , . : tjOll of Huntington 'l!e9~ for •imtnle'!I .. ....,. ii laod Iii eaclt ac:hOai dlltrlcl, ·•ll<l'.tlJl'nls. ,. • '• , .• ,,, , • ~ use toolr.,. new btttemep ~ . .foUOwed 'lil' on e.aluaUoi! ct .... ptac· • -In.11uff9rt lo -~lear the '1'· Mo,... These developmenti pi}eij one atop the lictl to that each segment If 1be, Hun· Jack Green has called a preu conference other in the debate : ting'ton' Beach populate ii served and no for 3:45 p.m. Monday. The Lusk remne . -The League o~ Women V'oters.of Hun· disservice is done to any segment.'' wiµ be up ror approval or di11apP.oval at tington Beach issued a strong con· -'J'tie Huntington Beach Clamber or the regular council session which begins demnation of the proposed rezone stating, Commerce Board of Directors Wed· at 4:30 p.m. "On two occasions the Planning Com-nesday reiterated their support for the Wednesday, Councilman Jerry Matney mission has recommended denlal of this Lusk plan of apartments, industry and called for an immediate moratorium on request made by John D. Lusk and Son.'' commercial use or the property. all apartment zoning in the city until a -Cris C. Cris, president of the Home· Dick Belyea, chainnan of t h e study can be made on the future potential Council, charged that he met with the chan:iber's industrial committee orrered ratio ot apartments to single family "prospective developers and attempted lo facts to show that s<me figures proferred homes. . work out a compromise .•. however they by opponents of the rezone are in error. Previously, Dr. Ralph Bauer, a are unwilling to compromise at all." "During the first six mooths of 1969 member of both the Ocean View and -The Huntington Beach Branch of the pennits were issued for 1,187 single fami· Huntington Beach Union High 1ebool Amertcan Association of University ly homes and only 955 apartments," distrld boards, launched a strong attack Women has asked the City Council to Belyea revealed. "In 1968 the contrast is on the proped apartments. Lodge Hints Red Assaults May Halt GI Withdrawals PARIS (UP I) -U.S. Amba ssador Henry Cabot Lodge told the Vietnam peace conference today the renewed Communist offensive In South Vietnam has wrecked another hope for peace and hinted it may halt the withdrawal of more American troops. Lodge told the Hanoi and Viel Cong delegations seated across the circular table at the 30th session of the con- ference, "by word and .. deed you show that you are not prepared for genuine negotiation ••• your actions match your · bellicose words.'' Lodge added, as a rainstorm drummed on the windows of the conference room near the Arch 0£ Triumph, "while 25,000 American soldiers are in the process of departing from South Vietnam and decisions are being taken on th• departure of additional American forces, your army has been preparing sys tematically for a new offensive." Later, he u ld, "We have hoped that f.he reports of a relaUve , lull in the fighting in South Vietnam would begin to create an atmosphere in wbich genuine negoti,ations, coul!J lake place, leading .eventually to peace'. "We ·s\iJI hope this can happe,n, '.but .we ~e deeply concernCd with .the indlcationi I have· described ·which point to the ln- terisificatlon or the war by yciur side.'' .Huntington High ,freshmen Sent .. Test Date List Letlers of welcome listing Important dates for pre-school activity have been mailed to 9th grade studenta who will be attending Huntington Beach High School thi s ran. On Monday, Aug. 25 and Tuesday, Aug. 26, counselors will admJnlster the IoWa Tests of Educational Development to in- coming freshmen. . The schedule cans for ltudents A·K Monday nioroing and L-Z Tuesday mom- ing at a a.m. iin the cafettrla testin'g 'l'OOm~ No Chairs, ·nesks? "Your stalemenla and ·your acts cari ha ve only one meaning : ·Yoo ' are un- prepared to compromise · and neg'otiate, and you continue to place your trust In violence and terror," Lodge said. · ' Foilowin< Tu~y'1 testing ·tile G~ls' L<!ague wj[ spqnsor ·an orleiltaUon tea for ninth gr'ade'girl.s frrim 1p.~to1!30 p.m. · Prospective ;athletes In the' fajl sports Pr:9&r11m 'begin thdr condlUoning week :Aug. ' 25. Physical checks· for varsity players who' have •not had a rec'ent doc- tor's ei aminaUon will be held ·on· campus frhm •5:30 ·to 7 p:ril. ·Aug.· 21; for the Freshme~,.Bee ~ C.ee candidaJ.es from t a.m. to It a.m. Sept. 4. , . Neu; Chamber Manager Has Furniture Problem But he told the Communists that acts such as "terror raids" aiainSt South Vietnamese schools and ho 1p·ItaI1, particularly against the Cp.rn Raph ·Bay hospJtal Aug. 7, will get them nowhere. "This ill vain and futile. The people of South Vietnam have eiperienc;-ed · your campaigns of teiTor for m·any yearti and thiir resolve to defend thelJ\lelves All new students and thQ6e who need to check for• program adjustmtnta shOuld call the school at 536-6531 for an ap:. polntment. . To be properly reillstered tor the sOpL 10 1Chool. beginning, student.. tnuat com'· plete .Clleduling before the Labor Day weekend. · · ' agaiNt you have not been abaken... · H ling! ~.. h Cha be J Com 1-.-. chamber ·-•"""• ..... be'•g "I can auure you that the j,eople of the un on &n::IC m r va · • "' ul'I: ....... , KU; ,....,.,. ... United States also delelt 1 u ch merce's new manager, Ralph Kiser, t1 vacated after II years by Mrs. Hape Day atrocities," the America negoUator said. Florida;Morders Tied busily preparing for his job which be Creer. Chief South Vle~ese negotiJ.tor takes over October 1. But he has one vex-''We have several Rood applicanta, in-Ph.am Dang Lam told newsmert too, p.e To n..•-~f.:st' l C •. Ing problem -be may find the plush eluding t~o . for~r ch amber rei umpUon or fighting "has put an end to ·. '!°""""' . ~ C t;tS.e chamber offices in the Town and Country secretaries, KUcr saif!. , • hopet rlli~ed )>v •theffelatlv· ,£i~o ·.-..,. . . , '"'h·i:·~ • , "•· It seems the ~hamber has been' u ng he Is making •qt: t~ tJJ;ttoeS; -.,. ' : . n'l~I of•two ·81ite q(f~ teeo· Peace Council Denied Ground ,f~r March~ Tbe Peace Acllca-11.lll - ll has no ploce to pit Its clemonstraton In ~ Clemente tllll weekend. · 'l11e latest rebuff received by the PAC Is refusal of San Clemente State Park of- ficials to allow use or the grounds as a ral lying point for participants in Sunday's planned anti-war protest. 'The park is near President Nixon's summer White House. PAC representatives today sought to overturn the decision by filing a suit in Orange County Superior Court. Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman will hear the acUon Friday, an urmual departure from customary law and mo- tion proceedings. Robert Bland, Laguna Beacli PAC of- ficial, was among petitioners asking the court to require ·ihe state director-of parks to permit the peace, org~aUon to use park lands adjacent 19 the ~clusivt Cyprus Sho1e residenllal community • The other side of Cyprus ·Shore borders the summer White House estate. Named In the writ Or mandate i.s Jamts WhiU!head, state district 6 superinteDdent of parka and recreation, A show cause order has beeo signed by Judge Robert L. Corfman, shortening the time of litigation. ' A hearing will be held at 9:30 a.m. Fci· day in Superior Court. Park Supt. Whitehead "told us we couldn't use the park, so we're ·takior him tp court," said Bland this morning. Last week, the PAC was refused use of a Capistrano Unifted School District school grounds as a staging area. Tht: San Clemente City Council followed by refusing the group a pennit to parade down El Camino Road, the town's niain road. "We feel Mr .. Whitehead denied·us~UH of the property on very superficial reasons. He ·said ' tliit ·we o,yould injure plant·Jife in 'the area," said Bland.• "He also said ouf pll:sence would disturb · a few nearby ~idents' Who art (See AtARCRERS, Page !) Orang" Weatller . · A~olher dose ol the wm:i ·old balmy stu'ff iJ Fflday11 fofecast with lemperattiru ranging from a ~p of ·71 along tlle coastline to 87 in the inland areas. . . . INSmE T~DAY , ' Some 1,200 new studenu cie Center 1trlppe<\ of furniture, _ .. The new mjiniiliet'o~·lo)ll of~°"* ' ,.....I ~,r • ., . " • • ~fl:l\<?URN& Df'J' '(fllo.. (AP) - chairs and desks loaned IJy ~ard of , acbedule and pro . · ..i • .. ~ • • • • 'l 1 ; •llt1";1 1~ wid' were catbmt itj~'l'iesklontlloler.Sfai<s anct:be~. "'We ·bive "'°P'llla ~ Steele llfai:Juiu, :~·~ll,!l.t1!i'P'lri '4ur 'other l\ilei l wMll'themback." \, • 'J boichure.," 1(il~"' <> ~>ir '. , '· " 'INl'illltiuim.01V"J>pollce~. UC Irvine thi1 t1tar will /ind thcmrtlve1 itt the thro11 of an aet<t hollil•O thor,to~-P~ JO. .~... ft ·' Mlllll'•-........ u c .. ..i..... M-11 ....._ t Chamber Pr,.ldent C. E. "Bm'• Woods chambers ha~• •Miiled me lltll lfOme : NllW YORK (AP)'--.'l'butock marlr<t .Bruard C.Unly Sbeo;tll Leilti S. Wilaon assured Kiser tllat a aoluUOll to the pr<> gooJ examples I wlQ study." I do"'d In ,iqhet terriJ4t1 tdoay It' It aald w.tnetd8y ht 1 ls ~ ln- btem would be found. ''S!Jrne attractive On membetlblp dUes be•ta "I have ' can1td Jb, •lated 'filly succeutuny vestiga~ to four~ ~W>ned offers hive been received, so you won't found three ._ 1counly cham•• with : thftiugh tlM: day. (See q11otatioo.1,.Paae1 -to r revie'I'., evldtnce •piled '°" have to sit on the floor." nominal '20 aµtt JPI' retlr~ember-1 1&-til). • ,....i..i:.._ .. , ipurden durlnf1lhe '8at HV•Y•• Cora On the brighter 1lde, Kiser reported to and 1mall busl,nf:1Smen. Somt y these I Ttadlnf wu 1 f alrly ·a,ctiw near the pOplb)e ,Unk 'Tith the UOOUQ& $19d-'Y of chamber directors Wednesday that be •re not profilablo but I h . o prove cl.,.. The llow JOllU fn<Il/'.)ri,ti~Y!<•" Conqle'Rutl\ Blllud,.17, tnd. ~ Pt~· h8S been bually interview Ina proopocta them wrong.•• · • at 2 p.m. wu up 1.ll at 11,,411, • cy Mart1A Jr ••. 11. r . T , . ( 1 1 • CM!lkt 1J MWlft IS c"""""' n ~ ""* 11 Dtttf! Httkn ' "'""" ...,. t.s ~ • °"-cw. " I~ ..... ' he.II-I ,..... ,,.,. l!Mtrf•~ , .. u ......... ll<M ,._ , .. ,. .... ~ ..,,, ~ 14 'T....,,.. 11 Allll LeMtn• 11 '""""" n MllllllN: ' ... ,,.... • Mlrrlltt Lk-' w.rlll lflWt .. I • • i 1 ' ' ' I , I ' DAILY PILOT Staff ....... SCOTT FOOTLIK DISPLAYS PERSONAL TRIBUTE TO ASTRONAUTS On W•Y, to Moon, 11·Yeer.Old M1ke1 It to Second Floor -J Boys.' Tribute Youth Brings Banner for Moon Men By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of t11t o.irr ""'' 11ett LOO ANGELES -America for1ot Itself tor a time Wednesdfy. The Ume was devoted to saluting the Apollo 11 trio for tailng the people of earth along on man's great~t adventure. · Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins flew to the moon and back. Scott Footlik, 12, made it lo the second floor. Lee Lobel, 12, an asthma victim, had to &lay home. The two Bevtflly Hills boys had com· piled a photo-covererl banner honoring the dramatic moon mission and Scott went alone lo deliver it, while ailing Lee watched the glittering spectacle on television. Sitttng·near press-headquarters on the mu.z.anine level of the Century Plaia Hotel Wedneiday nl1ht, Scott told how he tried for hours. since Tu~day morning, to complete his own misslqp. "They were comln&: to' LA and we thought thla would be a good time to pay tribute," he explained. "They didn't have to go up there. They were asked. Tbty went." American history b the decor theme on that floor of the 20.story hotel 111d ·Scott u.t at the moment under a portrait o! the late President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Hanging beside it was a chronicle of "'orld achievement during Ike's ad- rninl!tratton. "In the first year of his second term, the world's 'Age of Space' began, oo Oct. 4, 1957 ," the pllque reads. ScoU Fooilik was 10 months and twG daya old. "I've always been interested in space -well, aIDce JoM-OltM'• fllg}1t," said Scott, 1 seventh-grader wbo tried two days to . give the moonmen 3 tribute ht and his bod4Y made. The smaller \he tribute, the longer the wait. "It needs mare glueing," he said, pok- ing at a rough spoL "I've talked to Mr. C&llahan, the manqu, Mrs. Winchester the social director -and her helper -and the Secret Service man in charge or securi· ly," said Scott. "But I didn 't get very far. •·1 even talked to John GleM and !\1rs. Frank Borman on the phone" Scott con- lnued, "but John Glenn said he .•. just didn't know ." He remained polite and patient. "I didn't sleep for two days," he said, of the J uly weekend when man's foot- prints touched God's natural handiwork far out In space. "l couldn't believe it. What do you say? Man was landing on the moon and it waa always just a fiction-thlng .'' During the late 1968 Apollo IO moon orbltaJ fll(ht, the YoortiSter built a lunar simulator himself and kept measured track ol the capsule's distance from home and back. "Yes," he replied to t.be next obvious <iuesUon, "Definitely -r want to apply to the Air Force Academy for the class or 1974. I'll have to write my Congrt..ss:man." "If it all works out. I'll be in NASA by the time I'm 24," he continued, adding Y.'ith careful qu.alificaUon '' ••. if it all works oul." He said he had one more person lo aee about presenting that pasted.up collection of magic which still tricks the human mind, to the men who proved it fact, but time was running out. The mJin banquet hall two floors below in the crowded, bustling hotel seemed at the mcment as distant to Scott Footlik and Lee Lobel -watchlng from home - as the moon. "It finally wound up aomewtlere ln the NASA office," said Mrs. Footllk today. "He's disappointed." · ~ Front P age 1 ARMSTRONG TOUCHED • • • the e:ra w.hen man understands hiJn5eJI." Said· 'A1dri'.n! "There are footprints on the moon. Those fOQtPriDta belong to each and every DAILY PILOT e••Noa COAST rua1,.1sH1NCJ cOMMN'I' llt9ttf t-1 . w •• , """''*"' W l"uMl1~1r j,c.1, a. cu11•r Yk• l"rfti..nl ""' OeN•• M•!\llttt Thoni•• K., .. a E.ir.r l lit,..•1 A. Mwrpkint ,,,..nttln1 E'•IW Alltt•I W. S•h1 Al-lt11 l•l1'1r H1"tl"ft•11 l•tc.at Offlct 109 5th Str11I ).11ili"t A441t111 P.O. 111 7tO, 9264 1 'O"* Offk" ti• ... -' IBIMll . 1i1! v.·111 e..1111>1 8ovllv1t• (9$1• Mtf.lt U> v.·n• ••• 51rtt• LriuM f-.Cbl !JJ FWti.I ••t- ) one ot us, to all mankind, and they are there because of the blood, sweat and tears of millions of ~pie. The footprints are lhe symbol of true human spirit.'' Said Collins : ''Mr. President, here stands 1 proud American, proud to be 1 member of the Apollo team, proud to be a citizen of the United States of America which nearly a decade ago said it would land men on the moon and did so, proud to be an in· habitant of this mo.st magnUlcent planel" The three astronauts were awarded the J\1edal of Freedom, highest award the United States can bestow on a civilian. Vice President Spiro Agnew read the in- scripUon. "Your contributions will be reMem- bered as Jong as men "'onder and dream and search for truth on this planet and among the stars," il read. Great a!!I was the list of the elite am ong the l,SOO guests, there were notable absentees. Former Prt!idents L)'?ldon· B. Johnson declined an invitation as did Harry S Truman. Not a single representative of the Ken· nedy family wu present. It was Presi- dent John F. KtnMdy who proclaimed in his administration America's detennlna- Uon to put a ipan on the moon by the end ol the decade. Jacqueline Kennedy Oniui1 Ant her regrets. Cllarlu A. Lindbergh had been tx- pected up to the last minute, but he did not appetr. l>fr1. 1tfamle Eisenhower, who also had been on the iuest list, was no\ prtMnt. The a:owns and jewels of the ladles were fabulous. The dlnner bta:an with salmon J)Glched in champagmi and went on from there. The ~farine Corps band brouaht the pruldent and the crowd to their ffft applaudln1 with "The Halls of Maatezuma." • Court Restrains Clemente Guards San Clemepte'1 angry lifeguardi have be.en ordered to stay on lhe job pending a Superior Court hearing of their pay dispute with the city. JOOge Robert Corfman granted a tem- f'Of,ITY restraining order Wednesday foJlowing lhe filing of.a complaint by the city which also asks for $500,000 in Yote Machine s Due Further County Studv . ., Orange County's Voling Systems Task Force heard the final testimony Wed- nesday night Jn its investigation of seven ftnns vying for the ria:ht to provide automaUc voting equipment to the coun· ty. Representatives of Shoup V o t I n g Machine Cofll. of Nashville demonstrated what was described as "the most up.Io- date voting machine in the world" to the ten-member citizens committee. A Shoup proposal under which lhe firm would provide t;iO machines at a total COit of $1.8 million was filed with the task forte. The committee decided on a further study of the proposals made by Shoup and six competjtorB' before submitting its analysis to county supervisors. Naming of the auccessfUl bidder will end a year. long probe by the task force. Competing with Shoup for the lucrative county contract are the Coleman Co., whose vote-counting equipment ill cur- rently used by the county, Cubic Votronlcs, Seiscor Punch Card System, Data-Vote System, AVM PrintomaUc Sys· tcm and. IBM Votomatic. The Col!man system has been used by the county in all its elections, primary and general for the past six years. Its perfonnance in some of those contests has produced bitter criticism. County Clerk Wllliam E. St J ohn, an observer at the meeting, has pointed out that the Coleman device was geared to the needs of 300,000 voters. He has urged the task force to bear tn mind the fact thal equipment capable of rapidly recording the votes of 600,000 residents should be in use .. Shoup representatives argue that an order of 950 machines will only go halfway to meeting the county's needs . They describe the ideal voter-machine ratio as one machine per 300 voters, a re· quired total of 2,000 machines. That order -and it seems unlikely to will the backing of the task force-would cost the county nearly $4 million. Discussed by the committee at the rour-hour meeting was the possiblity that existing Coleman equipment could be renovated and possibly supplemented lo meet the county's growing needs. The Coleman oUer t.o p r o v i d e pennanent maintenance of the com- pany's equipment et an annual cost of $5,000 was filed with the committee. It was pointed out that the contract would be limited to labor only and the county would incur a further $10,000 charge for the company's overhauling of all equip- ment prior to each election. 'Ibe company's suggestion that its president confer with the Lask force prior to its final decisi on on future voting equipment is being studied by the citizens' committee. Front Pnge l MARCHERS. • • cmployes of the state parks;• Bland ad· ded. Whitehead, however, seid the Issue wu a bit more compllcated. "Tht demonstrators could disturb regular visitors lo the park," he told the DAILY PILOT. "We've been full all summer, and are now turning people away regu. larlf.'' Wbitehead also noted that the rallying area sought by the PAC Is near the park district office. "I am concerned about v.·hat 2,000 to 3,000 people might do to lhat area," he said. "Right now I'm checking this thing out "ith·the state Attorney General 's office.'' Attorney lor the PAC in the legal ac· tion is Patricia Herzog of Corona del Mar. Bland said lawsuits against the Capistrano school district and the city of San Clemente will also soon be filed, bul not unUl after Sunday's demonstration. The PAC hopes to establish lhrough the courts the rlght to conduct protest parades 1t the President's summer hometown. Wo111eu Gi ve Games, Toys to Boys Cluh G11mts and toys valued al $200 have been donated to the Fountain Valley Boys Club by a local ch11pt~r of the Beta Slama Phi women's servlct or11nliation. The gUts to the 218·member club were r~lved by Boya Club prnident George Sc-ott. They were presenled In bthalf of the XI Xi Pi chapter of the sorority by lLs pre~idenl, Mrs. Eldon Dvorak, of llun- lington Beach. ' damage' (ro!ll ~ 32 Jlfeguards listtd as defendants. rte set Aug. 26 for a hearing into a dispute whlch has threatened Lo leave the South Coa!t community without bather protection on the 18.6 miles of shoreline covered by its lifeguards. Court .action was·taken by lhe city In the conviction that the lifeguards were about to walk: off their jobs in a bid to force the city to grant pay raises refused by city council last week. Lifeguard· Lt. Steve H. Chorak. iden- tified in the city complaint as the prin- cipal defendant, haa aakecl the clly to ~ring San Clemente ratea up to the pay levels enjoyed by lifeguud.s in all other areas from Los Angelo to San Diego. Chorak claims that the San Clemente rate of $2.85 an hour fM seasonal guards is nine percent below the average along the coast. He further claims that permanent lieutenants, such as himself, make $710 a month or 29 percent below the average. • The lifeguards are demanding nine per.- cent and 29 percent increase respectively along with additional pay hikes fur seasonal lieutenants, the captain and the chief. They alsG want a five-day work week. The city suit brands the lifeguards decision to strike on Saturday as "wholly indefensible and unreasonable." It arguu that the lifeguards bad every opportunity "during June, J uly and Auiust" to discuss the pay di!pute with the city and arrive at a conclwion without strike ac· lion. City officials have pointed out that the entire lifeguard ~epartment received a "merit raise" of five percent In the 1969- 70 budget. Captain Phil Stubbs received a 71,2 percent increase. Also recently approved by the city was a five-step program under whlch seasonal ~ar~s who returned to duty after their ftrsl year get an automatic five percent raise each year for five years. Chief Richard Hazard, Captain Stubbs and three seasonal guards did not join Chorak and his 31 fellow employes in the group's demands. Fro1n Page 1 SP CLAIM ... duplexes, then stopped construction. "The answer from Carlton hasn't been Served on us yet," said Deputy County Counsel Wahlstedt "lt may atiJI be in the mail . .Any work that has been' done we'll have to compensate someone for." In another development, Sunset Beach builder Met Chase and retired civil e~eer Charles Jones presented to in- d1vJdual county supervisors Wednesday an alternative plan for Sunset Beach parking, they claim will provide twice the parking offered by the county's adopted plan at one fifth the cost. The Chase-Jones plan is similar to a re- jected county plan that provided for 2,000 parking spaces on the beach itself. Chase and Jones say the beach is wide enough -400 feet wide in some places - to allow paved beach parking and at the same time plenty of room for sunning, swimming and surfing. CA1LY PILOT 11•11 l"Mlt JERRY ARMSTRONG PONDERS ASSORTED ANIMALS More Than C1 t1 •nd D~gs et the Humane Soc iety Animal Shelter Gets Varied Calls, Clients By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1tt1 C1lb' PllH St•fl '·I've got fleas in my house, do you have a dog?" the ·exasperated v.·oman asked an employe at the Huntington Beach Animal Shelter. "But I thought you already had £leas, wh at do you need a dog for ?" ;,\Veil, the health department told me that if I could get a dog and let it Ile around the living room floor, he 'd pick up the fleas and it would be easier to gel rid of them ." "I think you need an exterminator (or that job," said the bemused animal shelter man. It v.·as just another one of those ) emergency calls the sheller gets daily. Like the other day someone called and reported, "My dog has just bitten some- one. Is there any J)OSslbility he'Jl get sick?" Yet no one at the animal shelter, which is located on Newland street, just behind the Edlson steam plant gets disturbed about the calls. They enjoy them. It keeps the job interesting. Through telephone alerts mostly, the shelter now boasts of the strangest varie· ty of animals it has ever had at one time. In addition to all the dogs and cats which usually abound it now houses two donkeys, a pigeon, a pig. two ducks, an enonnous red rooster and two snakes. Since mid·July, the two donkeys have been grazing in a small fenced area behind the main building. NG one knows where they came from and what will be done V.'ith them remains a puule. \Vi1Q the aid of five bystanders the men tried to wrestle, drag. push and pull the donkeys into the waiting truck without the least bit of cooperation from the stub. born animals. In a fit of despe ration, Armslrong and Lewis tied them to the vehicle and tried to pull them along. Only one complied, however . "Harvey, the old and sh aggy one, dug in all fours. \Ve could have dragged him all the way down here and all he would have had is four short leg s," Armstrong said . "Lewis finally walked him in," he ad· ded. The shelter i.s about live' miles and a two-hour walk removed from the playhouse. "There was no other choice,'' Lewis said. "YoU couldn't ride him. lf you jumped on him, he'd stop completely.'' The goat? "We picked that one up at the Firestone Station on Beach Boulevard," Lewis recounted. "It just cruised in. The people just locked him up in .the men's room until we could get there.'' For a short time last month the shelter had a seal. It was picked up along the Bluffs area after it had bitten a little girl. The sheller employes did their best to ketp him happy, hosing him down ten times a day, feeding him good fish and anchovies. Then one morning he suddenly keeled over and died. LAST 3 DAYS!! ' - STORE AND WAREHOUSE!! FURNITURE COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS • 20%· TO 50% OFF ON MANY ITEMS IN EVERY DEPARl1100 • H.J. GARRETT f URN lllJ RE ,RO,ESSIONAL INTµIOit DESIGNERS 2ZIS HAAl6A ILVD. COSTA o.iUA, CALIF. 646-0271 6'46.017, I' : J r • ~ ... •' " , : r AUIUIT 14 l:JO D KlllC ..... 1ce <C> <&OJ Ill PdlJ .... (30) ID CIJ •·-(Cl (30) f.D YIM lneeti,.,. (C) (30) "Into th• Fturth Dhntl\llo"." A11ri SC1ott 10:00 D@ Cil l!JI Tiit C.w.lam (C) lmstillttt thl dlmmlon 11'1 (bl!) Det111 Mtrtln, Tom'!" 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C&al ID en.ts Mut. a ... (30) P'1blo C.1tls instructs rtudlllf M•rti• tcr1us 111 BllthcMn't SoMtt No. 3 I" A M1)«, Op .. 69. m-·-~., m NET ~ (C) (II) "HI· tr.1111 Tflrltrl OI lh• Deaf Encera." A MCOllll Mnln1 of tllulrl by tll!S blenttd com,1111 ef d .. I IC· ~ta who 1,.ak wlt11 Ullit hinds. Th91 ptrf&rrn • Kabuki drt111t •M Allto11 Ohek1'11 llll'IOlll fl'IOllOIQUt. "On tht H1rnrluln1u fl TDbeoct." Ill Flllcl8•1 (C) (30) SfM1111111 11111 ~ Lhld.., 1U11t. Dells Def 1M WIHll11 I~ ...,4 IMll'frtlla. ID Mffll: ....., Iii Tfl'lll" Cftlt· 1m) '56-JofMI Pl)'lle, R~ brnan. ID> CJl ID CIJ Ill CIJ "'"' (Cl II)_ .. ll;:SO. ~ "'CIW!n· (d111111) ''7 -Rotlirt Mltlllum, ltoNrt lt1tft. Gteril l11h11ne, Robtrt Y111111- DID IJJ ll! T ..... I -(Cl 8 IW« "\M lAttn" (dr1r111} 17-.tlitniflf ~ JOltph Cottel. DIHl CJl lD .. -(Cl l :DD 8 ,._.: "'Mtlll W'ill • QeN• (herror) '51-.IMePfl C&tttn. hr- b•f'I S:t1"1'tk, D C:.HlltJ t•lltti• IN~ <CJ ..... (Cl ~IO D 9IJ)llll1-(Cl (IO) ;1Atlltter ol"Tovl •lld o.a.• 1Mo ••• ,. ht wtillfltl4 .. llVI Ill I alrfl 1111dtllCI !It" Ill .... ti frl<*: 4a.ft ti lllPI abertiollllt. (II) 8 -(Cl (IO) °"'' ("Shol· f. J.' I D f, l e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS Quelity Pril'lf ing and Depen4ahlt Service ftr rri•r• thtn • q11ert., of e century. JJ11 WIST IAUOA ILYD., NIWPOn llACN -HJ..4121 JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS PAPER, MISTER? .... I KNOW .. ,"!'f:R 60NNA ASK ME:"vmil'SA KID DOIN' HAWKIN' NEWSPAPERS IN1J.IE MIDDl-E 0'1\U:. ~ERf?~.RiGHT? MUn AND JEFF GORDO WELL, w+1A'T 0LL I DO WrTH IT? ll4. T~IN6 10 PETEltM.lNE WKA.T t MU!>T PO lO EARN rr: IF YOUr FllENPS AKE TIUlY llNPERPr!Vll.£6EP, If 1'liQtr COST YOU OR THEM A CENT! lE6AL A.IP IS Af 'fl{Blt , t .//1)1} By Harold Le Doux ..-:'°'=:-75E~E~;.~ .... ,,,-•• .,,;..-,F~O~ ...... IAV FRIENPS AJE WHAT PUD'OSQ.Y IMEAK• PllJl:POSE lM6 ™E LAW ... TO ~ TEST IT! TO .U..~E PEOPLE AWACE HOW A.HTl <XIA.TB' OUR LAWS Are •• THAT THEV'IE NOT' IEi.EVMIT lO ~Y~50CIAl. SEfVlc.E ! ,_.c·/,,~:=:~ F.::.::;:=::= NEEPS! .... · ,_, ....... .. .,., .. .._ .. .. , ...... _ .... ,., ) By Tom K. Ryan '!tXJ AIN'T ASKED MEYff! By Al Smith oooOLEBlJG ........ ~ .. , ...... By Gus Arriola lfwrsdl1, Augustl4, 1969 DAILY "LOT Jf, TROUILEO TRIO -When th' 119 ¥ear lease on the convent comes due a problem arises ih the "The Landlord Cometh" segment of "The flying Nun" tonight at 7:30 on Cb8Mel 7. Sally Field, center above, stars with Marge Redmond, Jett and Made· Jaine Sherwood. TELEVISION VIEWS TV Captures Pride of U.S. By'l::YNTHIA LOWRY HOLLYWOOD (AP)-Television cameras have been called X-ray machines capable of revealing th• genuine and the phony. Through much of Wed- nesday they showed tha healthy enthusiasm and pride of average Americans in the accomplish- ments of the Apollo 11 moon-lllnding pioneers. THE THREE networks, as usual pooling much of the camera work, followed the triumphant pr0o6 · gress of the astronauts as they traveled from coast to coast. The smiling, waving heroes were the stars of the show, but it was the affection and response of the crowds who greeted them that made for hours of stirring viewing. Keeping the conversational ball rolling during motorcade travel and parades was the major challenge for the commentators. Once tbe crowds were described, the security precautions explained. and the basic statistics explored, the job began to get tough. CBS' WATER CRONKITE shared his micr .. phone with writer Jimmy Breslin durin~ the New York parade and Breslin helped fill the time with a bright commentary on Manhattan landmarks -a sort of off-the-cuff guided tour. Frank McGee, NBC's anchorman, had an assist from a curator from a New York City museum with a store of off .. beat historical footnotes which lightened the audio portion. All networks, of course, recalled past ticker- tape receptions and occasionally inserted some old Jilin clips. CHICAGO, which seemed to have1 gone wild with enthusiasm, turned out in force and there was little need for filler. The screen was filled with cheering hordes, welcome signs, even balloons and flocks of pigeons. The holiday spirit of the crowds came through the small screens with an impact that needed no description and was a more explicit statement of 1 admiration than the well rounded sentiments ex-· pressed during the formal ceremonies. Although there was no armchair tourism of Chicago. all networks showed the Picasso statue, Grant Park and some of the city's notable archi- tecture. AN OCCASIONAL closeup showed how genulne- l.Y moved were tbe three astronauts. By the end of the Chicago reception, they were beginning to show slight signs of fatigue from the long day -and still ahead was Los Angeles' welcome climaxed by a huge state dinner attended by President Nixon. The networks pre-empted programs freely to provide full coverage, and all three. networks did smooth, professional jobs of permittinf the whole nation to share an unusual and moving event. Dennb the Metaace Jf· ~V l'ILOT 1.1QAL NOTICE • ' H LEGAL NOTICE Santa Ana Acquisition Completed -... C.-.1111111'-MCMI ... 1 I I I 'I \I ' - Tliw·sday's Closing Prices -·Complete New York Stltl Htl'\--------------------------1 111 .. ' Hltft Lew' ci.u c:a1 Mm·ket Oimbs up NEW YORK (Ul) -Stocks chmbed along a broad front today in moderate trading Monte Gordon analyst of Bache & Co said "lbe rally was technical and could be extended further " The market had declined over the three previou s days, although the hst .started snap pmg back late Wednesday • Other analysts felt the markel held up rather well in View of a basically unfavorable news climate Vietnam, monetary uncertarnty and 1nflat1on The UPT marketw1de indicator was up 0 63 per cent on l 5ll 1ssues traded Ot these, 821 ad vanced, and 452 declined The Dow Jones average of blue chip 1ndustnals was up 3 77 to 812 90 near the final bell Volume amounted to 9 3 m1lhon shares about in line with \Vednesday at that time Among the most active 1ssues \vas Natotnas '' h.ich sai d 1ts most recent well offshore Indonesia \Vould be tested next week Electron1cs showed scattered strength, several issues chmb1ng 1 or more points with Stock Exchange Li sr DAllY Pll.DT J8 tai. ,. .. Pi• t ltltfl t.ft ( ... (Ila. American StQCk Exchange List ..-~_ ................ =-"""."".'":"""""'====--========--=--------.. --------------------.. --:: .- it DAJLY<!•tLOT Thil>ldat,AllOUltl4,.1969 H M I .-1-:....--WT h d U<GAL IWrlCJ:~ ~Many U ~~. Subs ave · n t~p1~ war· -ea ~: ~£:~1~fl€ ... :~f~i~:fi?.::?~!~ .. •' • ,,~ '"' Pt!MY: AlllU" Z!, l .... •t fMI fOI. l'ltOIATI o,-'#U.L AMO '01 ··: 1>urtM1i!W D•t' of uld KhoOI dllltrkt LITT.It$ TISTAMllfTAlY • ... ••111DNGTOll (AP) military circlet. vehlclta, -with today•a new technology and appeared to be said It appeared to cam a Foster said tt wu declded ._..,. ., ,,,.,· F11ro1itw ROMt. Coll• t10N of l!THEL vll!:R01e Mve:LLe1t, .. ., ,,_ th I rod JIO ol MIRV -MMe. C.llfornle. tt wttlch ti,,,. .. ld bklt •Ito ktlowl'I M ETHEL V! MUfSLLElt, ::,..~ ..... '* the tion't But some criUci or the Ptn· MIRV by indicating the MRV fieldinl an ABM, we. have mulllple-megaton w • r he • d a P U1;w n w111 .,. 1UD11c1V ·...-11111 ,.... lot't 01 1i.o Mown 11 eTHI!-• M~ELLEtt. :.:~· alrtady 'i:ay'e d1oose to iyat.em bu very Jt·t·tJe.· depl_oyOO both typt1 or and_ 0 raised the.-possibility coMnel 8 1 1°" AlrandFoNr&cV'/ef.u~,:~a:,:-:_~,~1111"11i ~':'te ,,--.Hl!Rl!tY ;orvEN TMt •• of 1.... tagon may ~..!" a~~et Id bill! MRV I ti 'd nu em an II.Miii Ill Ufl"°""" fQr ,..,.llltwllllCf 111'1 Herry E'clwlrf MuelW Mt I~ lltrt'ln I : .. milliJes capable carry .. ,. the A3 as an argumu1~ 8'•.au;, r,: ance c•pa y. can pene ra on 8J s on our opera-that one delensive explosive Poseidon rnlsailes would be Cwfodl•n p.,_i ior "'lotl ""'"""*' ~1111on IOI' ,,..1, ot • Wiii ..,.. foi- .• 11o-... ...... Ada ···• Pen-"· adml·'·trat~•, ~posal url war•·alls In a pa»·-lo tlonal missiles " he told lhe b could d .. -vi 1 i"' """"1911 J-ao. 1t19. 1 ...... """ er ~·n.n t1t1e,.,.,wv 1e Pttr. ~·---wa11~ ..,_.., up:: 1 1.111 NU """ ue ~Kl-" -• urst estroy an 10--less provocative to the So eta ·..,11 .,,. •r• ,. tit '" .~ w11t111onv, rtftttn<t ·to wt1ldl " in= fof' ·:• .. -&ources report. for a new generation ol one tarcet: MIRV can ~rut . J1ouse Foreign Affairs sub-com ing cluster of A 3 t•·-the mort easily detected !ht 1r11trvct1oni at111 COndit1on1 efld 111r1111r "'"~'-"" •M""" ~ 1 tM 1not • ....... ailed MIRV '-~"" lo•··• ~ t"" b -mm!t',.., aUonal .......... l-ua.u 5"df1ct 1on tit. n ..r1c. ot Mll'IPll ''-..,,,. ,,.. *" ,., .._,.With Jf mlssllei aboard weapon& c uuui~ -...ef>. separa t .. Y ""' ~-on D ~... warheads. production ot single missile !TMY •' ~:ildl1""'~111o-ottf:1 of 1,. !GI' A1111~1 "·\Ht. 11~•i,._ •.m .. ""'':: !ncb sub, this means two-multiple lndivJdually -targeted_ hundreds ot miles. . tf policy and 1 c i e n t l f I c Defending the newer MIRV launchers PurW•IN A•tnt er i11<t .c.11oo1 111.rrkt. =~'°:'1 ~ £::'~'=~ ~~.:._ ef 111 ';_ :thltds of the Polaris fleet re-entry vehicles. Fosler said the United Slat. development. concept, Foster declared: SPLimNG PAYLOAD ee~':.:~mu:!J~l:"t=.11'!,.111g_i: CllY d s.n11 ~ c.111ornt1, ~ • 'th D J" S F •· Jr "e ea turned lo de •-ent of "Multiple --entry veh1'cles ""' band ......., PIYlbie 1o "" or11tr ot o.tto11 Aut~' 11. lfff.~ ... could attack a n enemy wt r. uun · · OiS"'r ·• ""' ve...,..m ·~ "We need a more reliable He said that "By splitting up 1 h, OrltlM com Junior Co!llM 0 1a1r1c-1 w. e. sT JOHN; CQw!IY c11r1c. -l .Uf warheads-that is more Pentagon's chief .scientist, of· the M"RV system and other are deployed on the existing method of delivering our the payload of the Minuteman eo.rd of Tnn.lff$ 1n 1n 1mou,,, "t '"' !'.~111Hf,':'!: a 111-· , . ;~ the 1.~ land·based flcially confirmed before a mis!lile penetration aids such Polaris A3." deception devices and our and Polaris boo6ters lnto~~~:::1=tJ!'t\:.r":11f:1e,~n~ ;:;7mc:-t:.J.•M"n111 "'Minuteman missiles. Congresslonal commJttee, that as dummy warheads early in NEW INTERCEP'l'OR warheads. We need, essen-several MIRV's we necessari~ !ht Pr-1111 eon1r1c1 If tM um1 11 AllwiMn fir "tt•tlffttt" -th A3 I "· "'· d d to t pot • 1w•rdl0 11:1 him. 1n lhl eYellf of ftlh.lre ta P 1 , "' ~--1 0 11., Piiot • Key members of con-e carr es more' uwao one uua eca e coun er en-Foster said the United tlally, to be able to spread ly lose a substanUal porUon of enter -1n1o 1uc:11 con111c1, 111e P•OCffdl of IHll shl tnM """'' • • ... -. bomb He did ot say ho "al' So let -'--'le ··r s . . Ille dlKk Wiii be forttlMd, or In Ille CIMO A119115I 1), u. 20. ltff l!QWt :gressional comnuttees h ave • n w u v nua.:u uc ense · States received indications in them out in SJ:tace so that one the total megatonnage of our. 111 , tloNI, """ wu 11Um ,.,.,..,, wnr be . .-inown about the mulUheaded many. "Since the early 1960s when 1964 that the Sovlets were Soviet defensive ntrclear burst deterrent missile forces and a lorltlh!d to 111• 1e11oo1 dlltr1c-1. LEGAL NOTICE . :.nature of the Polaris AJ TELLS CONTRAST jt became ev:ident that the deplQying a powerful new cannot destroy s e v e r a l substantial -portion of the "'Zt ~ ~1;1";:;~":t.~! !':.:o' n! f4W :1nl5slle for years and it has Foster contrasted the A3's Sov:iets were developing ABM missile interce"'"r, ca 11 e d ~erlcan warheads or a nuclear power that can be dat. fet fOf' 11141 ~n!n<11 tMriot NOT1e1 o " 1HT11NT10M :ro ,. • Y"' T II e e.MN et Trvlfeeti reMNtl t h t JrlTI a T r been a rather open secret m MRV multiple re-enlry (ant Iba 11 is t I~ missile) Galosh, around MoscoJt. He ole cloud of decoys." delivered by each booster. trlvlltt• of relecMM •nr and '" b1ctt or e1t~~i:,..1~f.~~:,V u~e.c.1111 1 _ ~ wahfl tl!Y lrr111ul1rtttn or Ill-NOTl(J; b tltrl!W • t!YM tit """ 2666 HARBOR BLVD. • 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 5a30 ·SUNDAY 10 to .5100 1088 DELTA FAUCET • Your choit1, lii,,gfa h1ndl1. 1wiv1l 1poul for kitch1n or 1hort spout fot b1th. D l11h dig9in9 • w1I. 1nyd1y, 1299 FLUIDMASTER BALLCOCK 0 . f it1 low.boy or 1l1"d1rd unit. D Sl1inl111 1+.el u,,it tnd1 toil1t 1que1I ind d rip. 0 Corro1ion proof, l111l111t 1h11t off, 111y i,,1l1ll1tion. 299 3 -3V2 •4 INCH -:-'Nylon Brushes 0 Com1 lo Rim1'1 ind 11t th1 bru1h. 0 Or 91t 11v1r1I 111d do th1 fob right. 0 Or forget tile wholt tllin9 ind j111! p1i,,+ tll1 town rid. 77c EA. SAW HORII BRACKUS ~~----:-~'"""' 0 Ho,., 11n11, Jw1t enoth1r 1'1mpl1 of 1f1bl• thinkin9, IA1119h) . '· .. 0 l11ckeh h1r1 d1tign1d for th1 work1rl. U11 fQr c.•rp11\try, 11phol1t1ry, or 111alit19 • quick picnie l1bl1. 99cPll. AND DON'T SLAM THE DOOR, JIM 0 Adw1rtistd 1p1ci1lt good thru August 20, 11169 tnd Hippy liirthd1y Tom Young lout goldtn h1ir,'lilu11yed, Vi.in9 cu1lom1r who'1 ¥1ry big in tht b••1: d1p•rlm•nt.I 31x19 PREFINISHED PULLMAN UNIT 0 V1ry f111cy d11l with full width marblt top, chrom1 ft ucel, 0 Compl1t1ly fi"ilh1d, ju·lf glid1 into plact. D S11 our di1pl1v. all color• 111d 1i111 1 110 in itock; 8988 BLACK & DECKER 7Vc" CIRCULAR SAW 0 Thi b11t p1ic1 yet o~ an 111 11ound 91n1rel purpo11 11w. D I HP motor, 11f1ty tpproved for both 7'/• '"d 61/i ineh bl1d11. 2488 . . !. ~ ·"' i BUCK OFF·· SCOTTS COPE PLUS 0 Corers 5,000 Sq •. ft .. u11 on 1 ny l1w11, 0 U11 1ny tim1 of tll1 y11r wh111 ne1d1d. O Giv11 full f11di"9 ind tontrol1 l1w11 i"11ch. REG. 6.95 59s SCOTTS TURF BUILDER 0 U10 to f1rtili11 dichondr1 or t r1i1 ''"°""' •nytlmt of y11r, 0 Prolon91cl f11di119 k11p1 l1wn1 9 r11n1r lon91r. 0 Cl11,,, light in w1i9llt, odor-fret, w1od-fr11. COVERS 5,000 s9. FT. 5•s McLANE POWER EDG ER TRIMMER p M1d1 loc1lly In b11utiful Co111plo11 by tll1 Fr1•w1y, 0 A powtrhou11 of 1ctivity tll1t'll prob1bly oull11t vour l1wn. O Sh11p edg1r conv•rh lt1 •econd1 to trlmm1r. 749~ r ' S•LENT ALUMINUM SCREEN DOOR WITH PNEUMATIC CLOSER O H111'1 th1 whol1 wor~1 for l11i thin meny 1111 ju1t ·the door for. 0 Popul1r di1mon.d 9rill1 d •silJft ;, d1cor1liv1 ind m1kt1 1ttraclive 1dditio11 to 1ny home. 77 l0-l2·3' INCH WIDTHS ME DITE RRANEAN LITE lt'1 retlly E"9li1h but it took m1 2 y1111 to l11rt1 llow to 1pefl M1dil1rrtl\lll\ tf!d 1'11'1 ll~t 11uitting now. Choice of wlllt1, 9r11n0 1mb1r, or ruby. ( N1xl I'll l11r11 ;f Riv1r1 h11 •it "i" or not.I 1288 M1k1i 1tr1i9llt, curv1d, or irr1gul1r cuh i11 1ny type of m1!1ri1I. Likt wood, m1lt1, pl11lic, or compo1ition board. ;. •• .-,;,,;...,;-•. ~m .... ~;;,-,;L,_,,,,~ 1499 GERMAIN 'S BLU·GRE EN GRASS SEED Sew with thi1 ind in ju1f t 1 d1y1 you'll 1!1ve I d111lin9 blu1·gr11n l1w11. 0 Or 1 sodden m1s1 if you l1•v1 th1 w1ler runnint ov1rni9ht. 49~u. 2 0 INCH ROTARY MOWIR O An 1eo"omy rnew1r w!tlt qu11itf h•hn• .. 0 J HI" •n9i111 '!"iflt r1co!l t l1rl1r, lttl"Y elvty ht~ol•r st.ti lt1,,dl1 wit+. r1mol1 co11trolt. 0 N1w 20 Intl! h11vy duty 14 91u9• t+.tl cli11ls. (luy •111, If you move to 111 1p1rtm·1nt, you ••11 tlw1vi e•11,,.rt It to 1 mi~[ b;k1.I 3911 tol'ffllllllel !ft lllY bid or In tM: _bld4!nt. C "''"' of' l(ASPAlt J KIHOSIAN Ind Prk1, fltfttls tftd QUllll'I' bllng tQllll. r • Pl'eltr""9 Wlll be' •l~en le ll>e Produdl CAROL KINOSIAN. Oebtorl• .,_ 1rown. R'llnufKllll'ld. or Prodllced !fl Ille llualntu tddres• 11 lolO'J f'leWllOrt Clftl•r State ef C1llfoml1 -Orlve, NtWPort 911ch, Count.,-of O••llf•• AU ""111'1111 "'°"ldtd ltlroutll th11 bld State of C1lllornla, 1"-1 I wcul'llY 1,,. sll•tl tom.PIY' wllll Govommenr Codi Sec-t1rttl Is •bout to be eruled b'I' Dlblor , ... ~S ln(:luilvt Ind trtnltd to LAO DRUG CO,, Se<:ur"' · MAN E WATSO~ P1tty, whose bullne\.I 1ddreu 11 '41 ~~:I~~ er TrU!,lffs • So\1111 EHt $1F1tt, Antllllm, Olclnty of PIJbl!IMd ·o,..... CDf"' DlltY PllOI. Or1111t. Si.fe Of Ct11fornl1. ' 1.uut The Proi>trlY I" whlclt the Sllcurll'I Autlllf 7 •. 1 • lfft tnh!rest wlll bl crNml Is, In 1entr•I, 111 mtrclltndlse, fl•lures tnd eciult...,.nt, 1vrnllvr1 and fUrril!lhlnes ef oetttor,covw• ----~----=-C7C::-:C!ll'lll prapttty "'llW loc•lei:I 11 1"°2 Nfwpa<1' NOTl(I! 01' PUILIC HI! A lit ING c..,h!r Or., Newoort Bead!, C-IV of · •ltl!GAltOINO PI! TIT I 0 N · P'OR Orll\ge. 51111 of Cal!forl\ll, 1ftd bllsl...ss 111tANSf'll!llt 01' TEllRITOllY l'llOM kl\OWft as NEWPORT CI! NT E It SADOLl!IACK JUNIOR COLLEGl' TO PHARMACY. L&GAL NOTICE OUNGE COAST JUNIOlt COLLEGI! Tho ato..,sald wcurllV transac11Dn wllf TO: _ loard or Educa11ot1, S1dd1ftblcli bl coll.lu..,,,..•'-11 on or 9f1tr Ill• 75111 d~Y Junior Colllot Olstrli:I of Aug~!, lfft, 11 Hl:Oll A.M. at AlcMr<I TO: llolrd of Educ1ll011, Or11>111e CotJI E. Mever. 405C Wll\IOlrt BIYd., SUlle '17, Junior Colltof Olsll'lct Los A11oelf1, C1Ufornl1 90005 In ln1!t!lo TO: All persons rnld!nt In stld SCllool .....,1._ Ol11<')cts '° fir •• ~now" fu the Secvred P1rtv-. NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN lo lho all bus!neu ntmes 1nCI lddr!HH used b'I' -rnlM bo•nh ti tile Stdclleb.llck Junior !he Oebtor tor ~ thrtt year• t.st Piii• cotie.1 School Dlt!rltl 1M Or1119e Cots! 1r" s1me. Junior Coll-SChool Ol1trli:I tnd all PATED: AutUit ,, 1t6f. ""°"I r..,_ldlllO In 1eld KhOOI dlslrlcti LAO ORUG CO. 11111, ou1"1u1nl to l!d11e1tlon Code' Slldtons Sfl:ured PerlV ~l-7316, 1 Htlflotl re<1Ut1ll"'lt lM lly R!th1fd E. Meyer •••llllsr ef ltl'rlforv, more p1rtleul1rty Ifs Allor...., hei'tlnllltr described, from 11\e Sad· Rlc~.,111 E. Ml't•r dlebedl: Junior Colleltt School 0 1,1r1e1 01 41151 Wl11MN BeuMY1r4 0.-tPltt County ti> ll>e Oranot Coe1I Junior Su!!• UI Collegt SCllool Dl1trtct ot Orlfl91 COU111Y, Les An ... es, C1tlfenllt toOOf his btfn filed ln 11'111 ofllco 111cl !Ml 11ld Publl~ Or11111 Coest OtllV l'ltot. pellllOll LI skl"lcl .,.,. II letJI iw.ntY·llvti AUllU$1 u. 196f 1""-'' ..ercent 05%1 et th1 revlstered ~•~"1 -------------- •esl<tl"'lt In ""' terrllorv pr1)11(11ed to be LEGAL NOTICE l•ansftrrfd In Orange Countv. Th!'I Pflttllo" for lr1ntr1r of ttnltot'Y l--------~-----dncrlbeii 111cl lefrltory 11 lollowa: 1 l'·).4Ut c-Nnell'lll ti Ille NO'rtl\eflY corrwr Cl:RTIFICATI! OP' SUSll'llESS . "' Hid Block ,,, !hence Soulll .j(I P'ICTITIOUS l'llAME Mil""' 36' 5-1" Wnt 135';(1([ •lon<J !ht The Ul'ldet$i-llr>ed does Ctrllly ..... It Cl'J'll• Northwwst•rlY line of 111d 810Ck lo the cluctlno • bu1lne11 at 17'10 Bead! 81'/il., tenter lint of MacArlhur B111Jlev1rcl, Hunl lng!«I lleecll, Cal!fornla, under n.. 100.00!I fttl wide, 1.1 cletcrlbrd In e deed llttl!lous f(rJ'l'j twome of THE Jl.9L to lllt State or C11lfarnl1 rtcorded In ESTATE MAllT 11\d that said firm 1t1 llOllll 10t7 P1111e ~7 ot Offlcla! Record' co..,oosed of 11\e ft>Uowln.g Pfl!'son, wlwit of litld cOunlYI thence South 11 deorees name !" tun and p!KO al re1l~ Iii It •r 5S" E111 376.07 1eo1 11an1 stkl 1o11ows: centor 11.,. to En;lnetrs Cenlt1' LIM Leonard E. Llth!er, .16n1 Robert Ln .• Sltllorl U!l+07.01 and t POllll In Ille Hunlln.glo" 8•1ci., C•l•f. bou!ldarv of the Newpart Mesa Ul\llltd 0.ttd Auo . ., 1969. $Chool Oldrlct ti ldapltd by lht LAOfl:lrcl E. Llcht'r Or1111tt COUl\IV Boerd of Educ1lloll bV SI•~ of Celllornl1, Orlfl!le County: Resolu1l0t> Number '-"" s"'iember u, On Auo. 6, 1969, bel<>re me, • Not1rY 1Hf; thence Soulll M dqree1 '1' !S" PubHc in a!ld tor Slid Sltle. 111r10111ll'f E•SI 37•.16 hoe! elon.g .-1d bOufld•l'Y lo 11•1111~ Leontrd E. Lldit.r known "' Ille be!J!nlllnt of 1 curvt lllerel" ~ me to be !he '°"°" W!ICISt 111m• le caw Southerly ll1Yl11t 1 radius o1 wbscrlbfod to tllt w!thll\ ln1tn,tment •NI nff.lkl fell: thtnc• Sou!l!Nst.rlY 3o!1.7A 1cknawledvtd lie e~tculfd flltl Mml. ~I along uld curve Ind 1111:1 boundtrY (OFFICIAL SEAL) lhrouoh an 11>111le of 17 devrtt1 19' '56H JNn L. Jomt ft> Ille Trve Pol11t or 8et1Mina; llllrlct Not1rv Publlc -C1Ufoml1 , conlln~lllll So\ll.,t11ter1Y 6'7.61 Itel Pr Incl pf( Office In · ,..,,,., i-ald curvt 1!1d uld bwllderv or..,a• Cciun!Y 'lllrouo~ an tl'lllle o1 30 d1!11rtt1 32' 41"; Mr Commlsi!On Etolret lllence South 3' cletrll!tl .50' 25'' Eas! Marc" 1, 1'73 3011.55 twt 1kinsl 11ld boundtrv; tlle!lu Publ!sl'lld Or1n111 COid 0.11v Piiot, lt!evl1>111 said boundarv Norlll 79 ff!lrttt AU11u1t 1, u. 21, n. IPl\t 14St-6t sr 17" E111 '41.t7 '"' Ill lllt ~1n11lno . of 1 curvo eoncew Wttteriy 11tvt1>111 ~ LEGAL NOTICE radlltS of 700.lkl IHI; l"tnat Norlhtrlv 16.ft.lll lt'tt tloM .-id eurvt lhrOUilh tn ------,-_,.,-,·1------ I P'l91-of 47 det•N'S 14' 23"; ltience IT Narlh 17 d1!111'ee, U' '6" Wut 3.S.21 Ifft NOTICI!' 01' OISSOLUTION (IP' l'A • to 1 110int on 1 Mnol1111enl curv1 con-NElt5Hlf' AHO 015CONTINUANCI 01' CIVt Norlhortv haVl1>111 I rad!ltS of l'll0.00 USI. OP' P'lltM NAMI feet, t rldlll lo 1tlcl POlnl IM:lt5 SOIJlll PUr1Uant lo !ht provltlom. or Sectlofll 17 devreos lf' '6" East; lhenCI W•sltr• 15035 S Of !tie CorPOrtl!Ofll Code Ind or ty 1407.:19 '"' 118111 Mid e1trvt·lllro111h Sedlol\•·Mff.1 ot "'' C°"" or Clvll .,.. beflnJ'll,.. of 1 curvti (G!l(.lvti Procedur, qt tho Stele of C..!llOrnl•. 5outh~lv htYlllll • redius of 4000.00 NOTICE 1$ "'9E8Y GIVE"I thll .... !ttl: llltftce Westtrtr 1150.62 'fett •'-Pflrtner1Mt c~ of: John Caroll.,.. 11ld curve thfOllth 1n '"'" d '' Jr. and Jorry T. Hog&n hen!toloreo t P'JIH• dterftl 21' 53"1 theflU North Ill ed Jn busl111so Uflder fttt llrm ntmt of clottrttl "' 31" WHt 7".14 fed to 11141 UnlvtirtllV GltH •ftd Mirror COITIP""Y 1t ·Tr111 Pclnl fll l&tel"nl1>111. 1164$ Forbes Rold. LtOllnl Nl111tl. .NOTICE 1< f'URT.HER GIVEN !fief, C1Hfornl1 wa1 dllSGIYed Is of fl'lldfllght · iuonl to 'E6ucatlor! Cede Stctl<>rl 2361, July 31, !PO; !Mt tl\erNlltr laid. firm Pill' bl! lleirlno Oii lVC:h 111tlllon to d!sconllr\llt!d Ille u1t of 111d n1rM, '"" ~ P~er C..1d ttrrttorv Ill• ble" set btlon! thtl Iller Mid dlsSGlut!on no ,.,_ hM i:rucoimtv '.B<111nl of Eclucatlon of ~ eutflorltv I~ Incur obll1tll°'11 for Mid Counh fll Or11111. tf t"• flour of 2:00 former firm • • lock p M Oii Ille tlltll d•Y of Aut111!, O.led. July 31, lff' ~~. In tt,.' Botnl ROOl'J'I •I 1111 ofl!CI of Unlvtr$!1'1' Gii" and the Ora"1111 CounlV DePtrtme"t ot EdUCI· Mirror Como1ny 11 11 11~ civic c ... ter Orlvt West, $atilt by; John Caroll~. Jr. A°,,,; cantornla 11 wllkll ti...,. ind 11r1ce Publl•hed Or1r191 Coest Oel!y "!lclf. all i.ersoni ln!~tlll~ I" Hid 11elltlort to Auousl 1, l'-21, n, 1%9 l"-2..ff' tr1111rer ,..,.rnorv mer bl hetrd. Oated 11111 15111 der of JIJlY, 196'. ROBEJl.T PETERSON. Ed.O. LEGAL NOTICE SuPtrlnltn<ltnt P'·:ll21J ~~:~'r.:i111!~~e':ir ClRT•:.it.:i~~ou~" N:~~Nllll. f'ubl!•hed OrtnN CCIII ChlllY Pnol, Tiie undtrlloned dClel cerl!IY Ill 11 COflo Auo111t 1, 14, :rt, Ifft lolll).69 ducl!ni , bus!ntu 11 713 NewtOfl W1v, LEGAL NOTIC& Cosl1 Mesi, C•lllorl\11, 'under lht flt> tlt1ou1 firm n1me of WES"T COAST FORKLll'T CO., and lhal 1ald firm II ------,,;-=--;-;;~-----lcompa1td Of lllt to!low!ng ~rson. whost BAR. ltft "'me In lull and plac1 ot resldtnc• rs •• SUPl!RIOlt COURT 01' THI! 1olloW1! ' ' ST ... TI! OP' CALIFORNIA 1'011. Hlra,,, H. Ade,,, •• 13321 Dorfsmllfl THI COUNT'!' OF OJI.ANGE Clrclo, Wntmln1ter, C1llf, 92613 NI. A.u!f7 01ted 7.J0.,19 NOTICE OP HEAR ING OP' Pl!TITION Hiram 11. Adem1 OP' Pll08ATE OF JOINT WILL ANO Stole of Ca!llornl•, Orange County: Ll!TTl!llS TESTAMENTARY On July 30, Ifft, IM!are l)'I, I Noift'Y E1l•le of SALUO ESPINOZA.. Oeq11ed. Publlc In I " d for llkl Stile, lltrlOfllll'I' NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN The! •llPl!llred Hiram H, Ada,,,1 k"llwn lo mt ROSIE FLORES h11 tiled lltrel" I pell-lo be lht 11erson wP>o11 nemt la subscrlb- tlon for Prob.Ill• of Joint Wlll •nd for td lo the w!l!llft ln1lruomenl tnll lnutnce of L•\ltrs , Te1tomenl1ry lo Poll· acknOWl...sited l>t ••.Cull!cl ll'lt u,.,., tlorler, referer>ct la wlllch !s made for (OFF ICIAL SEALI l11rlher·111rtlcul-11r•, Ind ti.at tho !!me Ind MARY K. HENRY 1>11ee of l!flirl"ll the 11me 1111 beell •ti Not1rv Pllbllc • C11lfornl1 lor Au9Uit ?t, lfft, •I •:311 A.M .• II\ tllt Principal Olllc1 In courlroom of Oepirtmonl Na, 3 or u ld Or111<11e County murt, 11 700 Wnt Elohth S!re1t, I" !he My Comml15lon EKplre1 CllY uf S1nl1 An1. Celltomlt. Nov. 7•. 197:1 0•11'11 Auoust 7, 1969 Publl'll@od Ora-co.11 Oallv l'llot. W. E. ST JOHN, July 31 tM AUIMI 1, lt. :11, l•6t J(IMt C111JnlY Clerk 1MtOWl!N • GRl!Elf $Jt I . Ch...,.,,11 A"· LEGAL NOTICE Or•nte CallfO<'Ril 1'·1ts61 Ttl: (11•) UHi,. Cl''''''''' OF IUSINl!SS AIMmtYI lot' Plttl!leltlf Pubtl$/'ltd Or11'1!1• Coast 01l1Y Piiot, FICTITIOUS HJ.Ml! &ueu1t f, t. l~ 00 1•1U9 TM uncler1loned do certlfY w1 1r1 (Oil. <r_::__;__--_;__-'---'---,---ducllno ' butlfltn 11 ltn P1rk Avtnve, -Coste M@-1.e, Cl!lforl\11, under ll\e flt> LEGAL NOTICE tln0111 firm name of PAR« AVEN UE LI• ---:;:=::=:-::-;:;:;;-:;;c;;;;c-louoR •!Id 11'111 s1ld llrm Is comoostd of SUP'ERIOllt COURT OP' THE th1 followlno H rlenl. whoH n1me1 In lull .T.T •• ' CALIP'OltNIA FOR Ind PllCll of re1lclenc1 1r1 I I follows: Rcbort s. 111C1 Nin• MIY John1on. '"' THI COUNTY OP' ORANGE Norlh Lesler Or., Orenot, C1lltornl1. NO. A..,Ul NOTICE OP' HEARING O" PETITION P1tfd Julv ll. lfft. FOii l'Jt09ATI! OF WILL ANO FOR Roti.11 S. JollnlOn LITTERS TESTAM l!NTAR.Y Nlnt Mey Jol!rison Etlt!t of Cl.IFFORO W. YEARGAN. Sith! of Clllfornla, Oranet ClllJl\fv: °"' ed On July 11, Ifft, before 1111, e Not1rY NW1c@ 15 HEREBY GIVEN That Publlt In •nll for uld St111, Mrson1llJ1 Ml i. E Ye1r11n ti.II tlll!'d ~ .... 1n • pe. IPl"!trPd Robert s. Johl\IOn Ind Nln1 1111': fpr '...obltt of wl!! '"" for l1tu1nct MIV Jollnson k"l!wn to mo to bl the fll Lllt1rn Tntimenlarv to Pt!ltl-r, ll!r$MS whosf Mmn ere 1ub1crl~ 19 • 11:1 Mell I made ft>r furtlltr the wl!hl" lntlrvm111t Ind 1ckriowle<19N r ~ w 1 nd 1 they t~ecu™I ff'lt lame 1>1rtlcull .... aftd lllat the lime " p •C• {OFF ICIAL SEAL) . or "Hrtno tM """" h•• lltM &et for s Sft>ltmbtt S. Ifft 1t t ·30 1 m !" Ille MAURETTE HAW ODU"'-11 Of °'"rtmen't No: j' ot Mid Nol1rv Publlc·Calllorl\11 o:iurt II 700 West ~!111111 Strffl, In 1111 PrlnclPll Olflc• In CllY ~ Sant• Ana. Ctllfornll. ~v•7:..,~,~'!" E•P!rri Oiied AIJ'lllSI U, Ifft. Mo -• I< '''' , W E ST JOHN Covn!'( Clerk. '"'' • M ........ 's.ii-a M1111'n1M. llublhl'lad Ort"O!! CotU 01llY fl llof. P,0. .. J 1t11, July 24, ll lftd AllWsl 7, H, Ifft 1371.ft ......., --·· Ctllfllf'llll h h (11C) .... ,,,, LEGAL NOTIC& .. .......,. -"'"""" l"v!lllillllll °"'• 'COlll ............ 13. l4 2Q, 1Ht. 0•11Y P"llot,1-------,-..... --,------ UCf·ff NOTICI TO CRl!OITOltl !.&GAL NOTICE •u•altto• COUlltT'OP' TM• j fATI OP' CALIFORlllA P'OR. THI COUHTT OP' OttANOr lUl'•11t1o:~i:.J::; OP' 'TN• esi.i. of ~~::~~E ·J. SMITH. tTAT8 01' U.•lll'ORNIA l'Ollt De(uud. . TNS CO\IHTY OP' ORANGI NOTICE 1$ HEREllY GIVEN le fl'>t NI. A""'9 crMlior. or !tie ·~ llll'PIH decHtnt NOTICll Ofl' MEARING OP' PITITtoN lhll &II ilt._,. h1vf111r Cit!"" 19111\$1 n.. 01' PRO•AT• OP' JOINT WILL AND N h:t cltced!lll -.re rtciulrl!d to 1111 "'-'-LITTlltS ftSTAMINTAlltY wl!h tllt l'IWIUlfY YOllCllen, In !"-offltt Elll'9 ol JESUS ESPIHQU,, O~. or ll>e clerk of !Ill tbovti elllllltd court, or MOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TMt to ttr$f:fll !Mm, wllll the _...,., 11.0511: FLORES fl.et tlltd l'lfrtln I ttt~ -..ctitn. IO !he 11MV1lgl'lfd 11 ll>e office !loll fpr Probl!t "' Jollll wm I/Id for of P .. IL JAC0ll$0N, A!lor..ev. ,,. Wu! rnu1nce ef l.•"-Tt"ltrMMflrv to Ptf!· Sl•tll Stroel, LOS Anteles. C1llfornl1 fOOll llolllr. relfrencl lo wtlldi II ,,,_ for wtllth 11 "" "'"" of bllsll\IU ol ""' ftlrtMr t•11kulln. Ind lhtt !tit' lllN tlld Under11tnt!d In •II "''""r' Ptrl1lnll'!I • tllCI of lltlrlPlt Ills Nml hll IM:rn HI Ille t1l1i. of Mid CltC!Kllftl, wllt'lll\ .... tor Awl/ff "' 11..,, ti t :'9 A,M,. Ill 1111 --llllf Ille llt51 Mliulltfl If 11111 covr-troom er Dnarlmtnt No. 3 of laid notice, twrl, II 701 Wnt E!tlllll JtrHI, In tlll Dlfed Allf\lll J, 19't. <ny of"~'· An•. C1l!lor-nlt. AllBIE M. $MITH Dlltd Alltutt 1, 1,.,. HEllBEJl.T AR.THUii HOUgfllt w. E, $T JOHM, E•tclllor1: of 1111 wm of"" Covnty Cltrk. tbovt n1meo:I dtctdll!I McOWIN A GRllN, ll'+llL JACOBSON nt •· Cll•-Wt ""· Jll W"I iffl '""' orent .. Ctlll. LM Alllll .... CtHl!tnri• ,..,_ T1h (714) W.Jl" Tth (II)) MA _ .. ml ""'"""' fir ""'""'''· At""'""" •u.:llfwt l'ullllsMd Ortntrt C.on1 D11ty l'!lof, l"llbH!ll\fd °''""' Cottt 0.11Y ""°' AVWll I. t. 14. I,.. 1(7Mf Autuat 1, ·l.t.·t\, ft, !Ht 1 ...... I • ' ' • • • ' • -' • 1 ' ' ' .. • , • • • ' • ·. " ' " '· , .. .. • c " • • • " " " • .. • ,_ • • • ,, •• • ~ :; .. ,, "' m .. .. • •• w ~ " • " " M " • ' •• > .. '· " ~ •• • " • ,, • " .. • .. .. •• " • ,, • '· • • • • " • • • • • • • • ... -..... "t • i 4 fooniain YOC.'62, NO. 194, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ' Armstrong Fights Tears At Tribute .. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ne i I Armstrong choked back tea.rs as he groped !or ·words to tell America how the Apollo 11 astronauts feel about their country and lhe honrr ii has given them. The first man to set foot on the moon hf'ld a glittering array of the nation's SOCIAL SIOE PHOTOS, LOCAL COUPLES ' PAGE 13 Valley • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' oasts -' ' :IRURSDAY, AUGUST I°(. 1969 • • T.-..Y1Pliull N. 'Y. Sc.M'• TEN CENTS . ---- - DAllY PILOT.....,. 1W lllcblnl KMtlW high and mighty spellbound as he spoke or seeing a scribbled sign among the masses in New 'fork at the outset of a day of coast-to.coast acclaim . THE TOAST OF THE NATION , APOLLO 11 ASTRONAUTS RECEIVE PR~SIDENTIAL TOAST DURING GLITTERING STATE DINNER IN THEIR HONOR "Through you we touched the moon," it re;id . Armstrong looked around the room . at his feUow astronauts. Edv.'in E. Aldrin Jr., and 1t1ichael Collins, at President Nixon, at the great figures in the au- dience and. throu gh television, al the peo- ple of \hg United States. ..Through you we touched the moon.'' he said. "It was our privilege today to ._. cross tht: country to touch America." Touch ·America the moon men did as they somehow survived the bjggest tickert.ape parade ln M11nhattan, sent two million in Chicago into shouting jubilation and then flew to the Pacific ror a state dinner Wednesday night that wu hailed as the most exuberant bash since Andrew Jackson's clan tore up the While House. Nixon revealed they will start shortly on a tour around the world. Jt is expected to begin in mid.September and tenattive plans cal: for 49 days abroad. Today the astronauts new to Houston for a few days with their wive.!! and families Uefore another super-spectacular in the Astrodome Saturday night. ~1erilbers or the sophisticated foreign diplomatic rorps v.•ere scurrying around for astronaut autographs like schoolgirls at the Century Plaza banquet v.•here Hollywood stars rubbed shoulders with supreme court juslices arid 44 governors rose In unison to be introduced. Nixon, beaming with pride raised the toast to Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins. "I say simply to the three astronaul! v.•e thank you for your courage, we thank you for raising our sights and the sights of men and women throughout the world. "The sky is no longer the limit and we thank you for the fine young men you are, fine examples for young people all over the world." Armstrong, a man to whom words do not rome glibly, seemed to falter as he responded, but his sincerity rang through. "\Ve hope and think that this is the beginning or a new era , the beginning of an era when man understands the universe around hirn and the beginning or (Ste AR~1STRONG. Page %1 Railroad Put s $5 Million Tag On PE Strip Swthern Pacific Railroid today c1alln· ed in response to an Ori!n~e County con- demnation complaint ·Ofati:l'-acific Elee· tric right of way st.rip through Sunset Beach is worth $5 mitUon. The preliminary estimate of county government is that It is worth $1,940,000. "The matter will likely be S<'Uled in court." said Randolph Carr, attorney for the railroad. The abandoned right of way, 80 feet wide and more than a mile long, is want· ed by the county for use as a beach park· ing lot. Residents of the seaside community who live on either side of the bisecting right of way are divided on whether the property should be used for parking or for a large-scale apartment development which is the use the railroad has planned for it. Responded deputy county counsel Arthur Wahlstedt, to the railroad·s $5 miUion land value claim, "It's a dream figure on their part." He explai ned, "It is customary in any lawsuit to stick in the highest figure that has· any remote possibility of being cor· reel. You can always make the rope shorter: you don·t want to undercut yourself." Said Carr, "We think the property is worth more than 'the figure mentioned by the county resolution. We quoted $5 million as a workable figure." Proponents of the parking lot also want to annex to the city of Huntington Beach. A prif!Cipal opponent of annexation is Richard Harrison, superintendent of the Sunset Beach Sanitation District. Harrison said Wednesday that Carlton Developinent Co. of. Beverly Hills, which holds a )e&M! from Southern Pacific to develop the properti. has requested or the county $2 million indemnity. The Carlton Co, poured some foundations for (See SP "1AIM1 Page I) Beach Zone Battle · Flares More Factions f oice Opposition to Apartments The already boiling controversy over rezoning 44.3 acres of Peck Estate in- dustrial propet;ty in ~northwestern sec- Uon al HtmUngton Jlbeh lor'Ol)artmeiil. use took. on new. bltt8rne65 te>Qy~ These develapmentJ piled ane .-top the olher ln lbe debate: -The League of Women Voters of Hun- tington Beach issued a strong con· demnation or the proposed rezone staling, "On two occasions the Planning Com- mission bas recommended denial of this request made by John 0. Lusk and Son." -Cris C. Cris, president of the Home Council, charged that he met with the "prospective developers and attempted to work out a compromise. , .however they are unwilling to compromise at all." -The Huntington ~ach Branch of the American Association of University Women has asked the City Council to "evaluate the Impact of zoning on school districts and , therefore, on 'children In our community! We Would suagest an hr ,..l«y ,. lind'<lit each '-'tllolrlCt. (olkiWed"' •P· ••aluallon ol zoaln( prac- tices IO that eaclr segment of the Hun· tington Beach f)Oplalact la served and no disservice is dene'1o ~segment." -The Huntington Beach Chamber or Commerce Board of Director! Wed· nesday reit~l!led their support for the Lusk plan of apartments, industry and commercial use of the property. Dick Belyea, chairman of t h e chamber'• industrial committee offered facls to !how that some figures proferred by opponents of the reU>l'le are in error. "During .the first six months ol 1969 permits were issued tor J ,187 Single fa mi· ly homes and only 9:)5 apartments," Belyea revealed. "In 1968 the conu:ait ia Lodge Hii1ts Red Assaults May Halt GI Withdrawals · PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge told the Vietnam peace conference today the renewed Communist offensive in South Vietnam has wrecked another hope for peace and hinted it may halt the withdrawal of more Am{'rican troops. Lodge told the Hanoi and Viet Cong delegations seated across the circular table at the 30th session of the con- ferenti!, 1'by word and deed you show that :;ou are not prepared for genuine negotiation , .• your actions match your bellicose words." Lodge added, as a rainstorm drummed on the windows of the conference room near the Arch of Triumph, ''while 2S,000 American soldiers are in the process of departing from South Vietnam a&d decisions are being taken on the departure of additional American forces, your army has been preparing systematically for a new offensive." Later, he said, "We have hoped that the reports of a relali\'e lull in the fighting in South Vietnam would begin to create an atmosphere in which genuine negotiations could take place, leading eventually to peace. "We still hope this can hapP,en. but we : are deeply concerned with the indications I ha Ve described Which ·point to the ~­ . tenslflcation of the war by your 1ide. '' even greater with l ,9lt sln&te· family permits is$ued and ~nly ~ for An.C1.rt.m.e.aia.." .. . •• ~-.:T,{~: ' ~·" , , _::!!· ·-'I" an effiX-t to "clUr thi ilr ~" )l.,or Joct·Gnen'~ callOa'a J!J'ftl. "",,...,. for 3:45 p.m Monda:11 The Lulll: NzilM wlll be up for approval or disapproval at the regular oouncil iw.lon which begins at 4:3fl p.m. Wednesday, Councilm an· Jerry Matney called for an immediate moratorium on all apartment zoning In the city until a ~tudy can be inade on the future potential ratio oI apartments to single fam ily homes ... , Previously, Dr. Ralph Bauer, a member o! both the Ocean View and Huntington Beach Union High school district boards, launched a strong attack on the proposed apartment3, Huntington High Freshmen Sent Test Date List Lelters of welrome listing Important dates for pre·school activity have been malled to 9th grade studenll who will be attending Hwftintkm. Beach High School this fall, On Monciay, AJ.lg. 2S and Tuesday, Aug. 26, counselors will administer the JoWa Tests of Educational Development to in- coming freshmen. The sc hedule calls for students A·K Monday monrlng and lrZ Tuesday morn- ing at a a.m. · in the cafeteria testing room. Following Tuesday's testing the Girls' · League will sponllOf' an orientation tea for · nirith grade·girl11 fr'om t p.m. i.o 2:30 p.qt. • Prospective aUiletes In the fall sports No Chair~ Desks? ••vour staLement.!I and your acts can have only one meaniilg: You are un- prepared to compromise. and negotiate. and you continue to place your trust in violence and terror," Lodge said: . c But he told the Communists that acts New hamber Manager s~ch as "!en-or raids" against Soulh Vietnamese schools and ho s·p I ta I 1 , , --Particularly against the Cam Ranh Bay I prQIP.'Ml begin their c:ondltloning wetk 'Aug. 25. •Pliysical ' checkJ ~for varsity players who have not bad. a recent doc- . tor's eUnUnaUon will be )lt1d on 'camW, from ·5:30 to"7 p.'m. Aug. 1f;· fdt-the Freshmen, ~ and Cee.candidale.s froin i a.m~ to 11 a.tTI.'Sept. 4. · · . All new studenb and those who need to check for program pdjlDltments should call the .!IChool at S36-653l for an ap-. . hospital Aug. 7, will get them nowhere. "This Is vain and futile. The people or South Vietnam have experienced your campaigns or terror for many years, and their resolve to defend themselves pointment. ' . Has Furniture Problem HunUrigton Beach Chamber.:of Com. merce'• new manager, Ralph Kiser, it busily ·preparing <or bU-Job which -!!• takes over October 1. But he bas one vex- ing problem -he may rrrid the plush chamber offices ln the Town and Country Center 1lrlpped or furniture.. . It see ms the chamber hu been using chaira and de3ks loaned by Board of Realtors Presklent Roger Slates and be 7"1-:"""'l·.,.-'T"-=.,,_,,,--.,..-,,..~~~~-~ants-Ulem back -----~-- j ~ Aloti:o F tier .. ·or Huntinglon Chamber Presld!!nl c. E. "Bill" Woods BeaCh. pres:idc'ht of Orange aswred Kiser that 1 solution to tilt pro- County Dahlia Society. pre-blem would be found. "Some 1ttractlve pares blossoms for society's offers have been received, '°you ._,on 't annual show Friday and Satur-have to iit on the floor." for the chamber secretary's post being vacated after 19 years by Mfa. Hope Dey Greer • "We have several good applicant!. if1-o eluding two former c: h a m b e r secretaries,'~ Kiser said. The new manager .also told of a study he is making of the organizalion's dues achedule and promotional material. "We have been lagging behln<l In good brochurea.!!--Klar at.ated. • ' O t-h-~ chambers have provld~ me wlth sotne goo'. examples I will study." against you ha ve not-been shaken, • "I can assure you that lhe peOple of Ult! United Slatu al90 detest 1 u c h atroc.IUes," the America negotiator said. Chief So!Jth Vletf}amese negotiator Pham Dang Lam told ne.wsrnen too, the resumpUon of fighting "bu put an end to hopes raised by the relative calm of the r.ecent weeks." St~k · Markeis To be properly registered, f<ir ,the Sept, 10 school beginning, student.s· must com· plete scheduling before the Labor Day weekend.' · · Florida cMwders· ~ied " To ·Out:.of-stat~ ·Case' ' MELBOURNE BEACH, Fli. (AP) - The murders Of two SatelHte Beach teen-•sers ~earller', this w!ek wire "c:8r60n coplea".or 1Jayfnp 1n rour other states that att still imlolVea, police aay. ' NEW YORK (AP) -, The stock mBrket , Brevard i;ounty SherUI Lelfh S. WllJOn c:losed In hl&het: temtory tdoaJ c as It said Weiiouday ,he '11...,...leftdin& ln- carried ill latest ,rally succeah11ly vesUgators to tour stato-not ~d through the day. (Set quotaUont, Paaea _, to review evi~ cpmpl\ld on ll-11). ' • murdm during the Ji!! five' ~an for • Peace Council . Denied Ground For Marchers 'l'1lt )'e•ce Aall.., Ceund! II IJi. WI•. ll ~ ~ lo pul Ill demOllllralon arrClement.e this weekeftd. ..... Tbt·Jalest r<buff roctl•ecf"by !be PAC Is rel'Usal of San CJemente StiJte Park of- ficials to allow use of the grounds; aa a rallying point for participants th Sunday'1 planned antl·war protest. The park is near Presi~nt Nixon'• summer White House. P ~c represent•Uves today sought to overturn the decision by. filing a suit in Orange County Superior Court. Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman will hear the actlon·Friday, an unusual .departure from 'cu,,tomary law . ..and mo- tion proceedings. RQbert 81-.,d, Laguna Beach PAC of. ficial, wa~ \Ilg petitioners a~king the court .to ti ire · the state director· of park11 to j .•• nit the peace,org~tfon .to use park lands adjacent ,to Uie exclwlve Cyprus Shore residential commup.ify. The other side of Cyprus.$iore borders . Lhe summer White House estate. Named' in the writ of mandate is James: Whitehead, state district 6 superintehdent or parks and rtcreatk>n. A.show cause order ha.!I been signed by Judge Robert L. Cor!man, shortening the tlrn~ of litigation. ~ hearlns will be he.Id al 9:30 a,m. Fi'l· day In SUJierior Court. , Park · Supt. Whitehead 4'told ~Os we couldn't use the park, so we're lakin1 him to court," said Bland this morning. Last week, the PAC Wll! refused use of a Capistrano Unified School District school grounds as a staging area. The San Clemente CitY Council followed bf refusing the grou p a permit to parade down El Camino Road, the town's mall:i road. "We feel 1 Mr. White~e~d detµed u~. u.se of the property on very !U.pen1c1al reaSOO!. He · said that we •would injure plant llfe ln'the area/'· said Bland. ( "He also ·said oor presence would disturb" a fe W nearby residents· who art: (See MABCRERS,.Pqe ZI or .. ge c.an l Weather Another dose of the same Old baltny !tuU is ·Prlday11 fot'ecut l with temperatures ranging front 1 a top of 74 alona. the coastline' to · 87 in the Wand artas. . . ,INSWE TOD;\Y . Some 1,200 new-studenu t0t ·UC · 1rvtne thb uear wilt fiHd them.telves i1~ the throes of a.n • acute housing sKbf't<fge. Pclgi 10. """ •• s.mc. ,, -. = .... -~tt .. .......,....,.. .... °"'-c.wrr 11 IMlll ,._ lJ.11 -. .,. .,... ...... ..,. ,......,. \J -. day in the mall at Huntington On the brighter side, Kiser reported to Center. ShO\V Is open lo lhe chamber directors Wednesday lhat be On membetslUp dues he said, "I have found three county chambers with • nominal .$20 1µes_ for retired member11 11nd small bu$inessmen. Some say these. are not profUable.but 1 hope to prove lhem wrong.'...-' Trading wa11 fair!! active near the polfible link with thl lhootl~ Sr.mdty of clQ8e. N Dow Jons iiidu!trial average ' Connle··JJ,Uth 'BiDard,l7, and Georp Per. 1 ll 2 p.m«wu up UI a!'lllll. · ' ry Martin Jr., 11. ' ' ' ''-----------""' -. --.. public without charge. has been bullly interviewing prospecta > I 1 ... , I• • • t ' I ~ ---~~--------------- .. ~ • DAILY PILOT lllff PMIM SCOTT FOOTLIK DISPLAYS PERSONAL TRIBUTE TO ASTRONAUTS On Woy to Moon, 12-Yoor.Old M1k11 It to Socond Floor ..J 2 Boys~ .Tribute. . Youth Brings Banner for Moon ·Men · By ARTHUR R. VlNSl!:L Of tllf 011/y Piltt l'9ff LOS ANGELES -America forgot ltleU for a time Wednesdfy. The time: was devoted to saluting the Apollo U trio for taking the people of earth along on man's greatest adventure. Annstrong, Ald rin and Collins flew lo the moon and back. Scott Footlik, 12, made it to the se<:end floor. Lee: l.Dbel, 12, an asthma victim. had lo stay home. The two Beverly Hills boys had com· piled a photo-covered banner honoring the dramatic moon mission and Scott v.•ent alone to deliver it, while ailing Lee "'atched the glittering spectacla on televialon. Sitting ntar press headquarters on the meu.anine level o[ the Century Pla1a Hotel Wednesday night , Scott told how he tried for houri, since Tuesday morning, ta complete his own mission. "They were comlng, to 1 LA ,a1141 w1 thought this would be a good tin1e to pay tribute," he explained. ''They didn't have to go up there. They were asked. Tbey wenL" American history Is the decor thtme on that floor of the 20-11tory hotel and Scott sal at the moment under a portrait of tht late ~•ident Dwight D. Eisenhower. Han!lng beside It w11 a chronicle of "'orld achievement during tke'a ad· mlnlatraUOn. "In tbi first year of his second term, the world's 'Age of Space' beaan, on Oct. 4, 1957," the plaque reads. Scott Footlik. was 10 months and two days old ''I've alway1 been inttrested In space -well, since John Glenn '• flight," aaid Scolt, a· ~-.:enth·grader who tried two day1 to give {he moonmen a tribute he and hla buddy made. The mailer the tribute, the tonger the will "lt needs more 1l1JeiJ1a," he sald, pok· ing at a rouJh spot. "I've · talked to 1ifr. Callahan, the manager, 1ifrs. Winchester the aocial director -and her helper -arid the S~et Service man Jn charge o[ securi· ty," ::aid Scott. ·'But I didn 't get very far. "I even talked to John Glenn and ~·trs. Frank Borman on the phone" Scott eon· tnued, "but John GleM saJd he. . .just didn 'l know." He remained polite and palient. "I didn't sleep for two days," he said, of the July weekend when man's foot· prints touched God's natural handiwork far out in space. "I couldn't believe it. What do you say~ 1.fan was landing on the moon and U was alwaya just a fictlon-lhlng." During the late 1968 Apollo IO moon orbital flight, the youngster built a lunar simulator hilll!elf and kept measured ·track ol the capsule '• distance from home and back. "Yes," De replied lo the next obvious question, "De.finitely -I want to apply to the Air Force Academy for the clus or 1974. J'll have to write my Congressman.•• "If It all work1 out, I'll be In NASA by the time I'm 24," he conUnued, adding witli careful qualification ". . .if It aU works out." He said he had one more person to see about preaenting that pasted-up collection of ma1lc which atlll tricks the human mind, lo the men who proved it fact, but time was running out. The main banquet 11all two floors below in the crowded, bustling hotel seemed at the moment as distant lo Scott Footlilt and Lee Lobel -watching from home - os the moon. "It finally wound up aomewhere In the NASA office," said ~frs. Footlilr: today. ''He's di~ppointed." ·' " Fro!ll Page l ARMSTRONG TOUCHED • • • the era v.·hen man understands himself.'' Said Aldrin: "Th,re are footpMnts on the moon. Those foOtprlnta belon1 to each and ev£ry DAILY PILOT t•\trl N. WeM Pm!Otftt •llC •llb\l~tf • J4t• ·JI, C.url•r VICI Pr .. llMlll .... ~ ... ,. MtllltU lhtl'l'lll k••.,11 fO:ltor Th•m11 A. M~1phi~1 MtRfJI"• {a111r ,&.lhtrl W. l•ltl Aue<ltlt f.d11&t H111tl11tlff Inell Offlct lOt Sth Slr111 M1iliR9 Adclr111: P.O. 101 790, t164I OHier OHien N'"'"'' •t•~ll ~111 wu 1 &tlb'll l w lnt td CM11 Mou JlO Wc~I 11¥ 11'"' Ltt~~ 11.C~I JU l'er•" Affnut ~-, Cl"ILY PILOT.'"'''" .. Mell 11 <Of"l,lfltl '""' ~fWt PrtM. " aybhlf>t• ...,,1. ••U·•I l u"' 41., loo '""'"' H lllfitl to<' 11vl'lf"'t1o, I N<ho F°""lfiol Vt llty, C .. 1' Mtu. Nf• 11""1 ... di ll'MI L111111• IUtll, t leflt w1tl\ t-. r.,ltoNI 1•1llOM 0<1fl0t (Olll Putltf1'1. ll'MI ,,,.,.,.,,.,. '''"~ •1•"'5 '"' 11 nn w..1 ••ltot 11'11 Nfwpttl INCi\, ..... ll~ Wll l ~r t.lrnt, Ctllt lk11 Te..,lltoi119 17141 642-4111 "•"' w.-111111t1tt c.11 ue.112e Ca.uff'lff At1Ttrtl1l11t 642·1671 (""""'"'~" ,.... °'"'" ·'''" -.....1.,., ... , CMWllt Ht -1 Ito•' t •· m1111rtt1C1~t. .. 11""11 ft\111., Of tl!Wflltt-~11 llUtifl -t .. '"'""' .. ,..,..,, .-ell• """'"~ ff IWll'flll\I lt1'" -.U .... tltu l•'r<:t '' ~ 11 NC"'llff f411;• tfNI Ct1tt M11. Clt1•1rr , l\t11.1,.1 1~ c.r urrltr U • ,...lflllT! llY tNJI ~ M .....,.111111 in~ll.,t *MIMI_.., G.00 l'!'ltlllfrtlf, ' (lne or us, to all mankind, and they are there because of the blood. sweat and tears of millions of people. The footprints ::ire the symbol of true human spirit." Said Collins: · ''Mr. Pnsident. here stands a proud American, proud to be a membu of the Apollo team, proud to be a citizen of the United States of Ameri ca whlcb nearly a decade ago said it would land men on the moon and did ao, proud to be an in· habitanl of thiJ most magnificent planet.." The three astronauts were awarded the itedal of Freedom, highest award the United States can bestow on a civilian. Vice Preaident Spiro Agnew read the in· acripllon. "Your contributions will be rem@m· b@red as long as men wonder and dream and 1earch for truth on th111 planet and among th£ stars," It read. Great as was the list of lh~ elite among the 1,500 guests, there v;ere notable absentees. Fonner Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson declined an invi tation as did Harry S Truman. Not a aingle representativ£ of the Ken· nedy family was pr~t. It was Prui· dent John F. Kennedy who proclaimed In his admin!straUon Americ:&'s detttrnina· tlon to put a men on t,tle moon by \he end of the decade. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis sent her rtgrets. Charles A. Llndber1h h1d been e•· peeled up to the last minute. but he did not ar,pear. t..fra. Mamie Elsenhov.·rr. ''1lo a ao had betn on the guest list, wa1 no~ praent. The 1own1 and jewels of the 11di's wue fabulous . Th• dlMer becon with 1almon poached In champagne and went on from there. Th• Marine Corps band broughl the preaident and 1he crowd to their feet 1pplaudl111 wltb "'.lbt Halb of Montezuma.' 1: Strike Sguelelaefl ' -- Court Restrains Clemente Guards Sari Clemente 's angry lifeguards have been ordered to stay an the job pendln& a Superior Court hearing of their pay dJspute with the city. Jud&• Robert Corfman 41anted a tem- J>Ol'IJ'y restraining order , Wednesday followint: the filing of a complaint by the city which also aska for $500,000 in :Vote Machines Due Further County Study darna1e1 from the 32 IU1guards listed as delendanta. He set Aug. 26 for a hearing into a dispute which has threatened to leave 1he South Coest oommunity without bather prot.ecUon on the 18.6 milea ci sboreli.oe covered by Its Weguardl. Court action wa1 taken by the city 1n the coiiviction that the lifesuarda were about to walk off their jobs in a bid to force the city to grant pay raises refused by city COWJcil last week. Lifeguard Lt. Steve H. Chorale, lde~ lilied In the city complaint as the prtn4 clpal defendant. has asked the city to brina San Clemente rat.ea up to the pay levtfa enjoyed by Ultguarda in all other areas from LOI Anaelea to San Diego. Chorak claims that th• San Clemente rate ol IUS on bour for aeasonal s\iant1 .,,Orana;e County's Volin.a: Systems Tuk ts nine percent below the average along Force heard the tlnal teatlmony Wed4 the coaat. He further claima: that neldJy nl1ht In lta lnvestlgaUon of aeven pennanent Ueutenanta,.such aa hlmaelf, make •110 a month or 29 percent below flnns \.ylng for the right to provldt the averaae. automaUc voUng equipment to the coun· The lifeguard• are demanding nine per· ty. . cent and 29 percent increue respectively Representatives of Shoup v 0 t Ing along with additional pay hikes far seasonal Jleutenan ts, the captain and the Machine Corp. of Nashville demonstrated chief. They also want a five.day work what was described as ''the most up.to-week. date voting machine in the world" to the The city suit brands the Ufeguyds ten-member cltl.z.ens committee. decision to strike on Saturday as "\ffiolly A Shoup proposal under which the finn Indefensible and unreasonable." It argues would provide ~ mach'-·· at 1 ·~-I that the llfeguarda had every opPorlunlty -lUQ ..,~ "during June, July and Al.lgUl'l" ta coat al II.I million wu llled wltb the tuk dlJcuu the poy dbpute wltb the city ond force . arrive at a conclusion without strike ac- The committee d@clded on a further tlon. study of the propoaala made by Shoup Clty offJclals have pointed out that the enUre lifeguard department received a and slx compeUtor1 before 11ubmlttlng: lt.s "'merit raJJe" of flve percent In the 191!19- anaJysla to county supervisors, Namln1 70 budget. Captain Phil Stubbs received a DAILY PILOT Utll Pl!li. JERRY ARMSTRONG PONDERS ASSORTED ANIMALS More Thin C1t1 ind 0091 1t th t Hum1n1 Society Animal Shelter Gets Varied Calls, Clients of the succeufuJ bidder will end a year. 7\J percent increase. Jona probe by the task force. Also recently approYed by the city was By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI "'here they came from and what will ~e CompeUng with Shoup for the lucra1ive 1 five-step program under whlch seasonal Of "" D••l'f P1i.t •t•ff done with them remains a puzzle. t t cl th C I C guards who returned to duty after their 1v· h he coun Y CQn ra are e o eman o., f "l've got fleas in my house, do you It t aid of five bystanders the men whose vote-counting equipment Is cur· 1r1st ye.arhget an1 automaUc five percent have a dog?" the exasn.rated v.·oman tried to 1vrest\e, drag. push and pull the renUy used by the county, Cubic ra se eac year or five years. "''" donkeys into the "'alting truck without Votronics, Selseor Punch Card System. Chief Richard Hazard, Captain Stubbs asked an employe al the iiuntington the least bit of cooperation from the stub- Dala-Vote System, A\'1.t Printomatic Sys· and three seasonal guards did not join Beach Animal Sheller. born ·animals. tCm lhd IBM Votomatic. Chorak and hia 31 fellow employes in the "B ut I thought you already had fleas, Jn a fit of desperation, Armstrong and The Coleman system has been used by group's demands. \vhat do you need a dog for?" Lewis tied them to the vehicle and tried the county In all its elections, primary "\Veil, the health department told me to pull them along. On1y one compiled, ;ind general for the past six years. Its that if I could gel a dog and let it lie however. performance in some of those contests From Page l around the living room floor, he'd pick up "Harvey, the old and shaggy one, dug has produced bitter criticism. the fleas and it would be easier to get rid in all fours. \Ve could have dragged him County Clerk William E. St John, an SP CIA.JM of them." all the way down here and all he would observer at the meeting, has pointed out • • • ''I think you need an exterminator for have had Is four short legs," Armstrong that the Coleman device was geared to lhat job," iaid the bemused animal said. the needs of 300,000 voters. He bas urged duplexes, then stopped construction. shelter man. "Lewis finally walked him in," he ad· the task force to bear Jn mind the fact "The answer from Carlton hasn't been lt was just another one of those ded. The shelter is about !Ive miles and a that equipment capable of rapidly s@rved on us yet," sald Deputy County emergency calls the shelter get.s daily. two-hour walk removed from the recording the Votes of 600,000 residents Counsel Wahlstedt. "lt may still be in the Llke the other day someone called and playhouse. should be in use. mall. Any work that has been done we'll reported, "My dog has just bitten some-"There was no other choice.'' Le:'•is Shoup representatives argue that an have to compensate someone ror." one. Is there any possibility he'll get said. "You couldn·t ride him. lf you order of 950 machines will only go In another development, Sunset Beach sick?" jumped on him, he'd stop completely." halfw"y to meetlng the county'1 needs. builder Mel Chase and retired civil Yet no one at the animal shelter, which The goat? They deicribe the ideal voter-machine engineer Charles Jones presented to in· is localed on Newland Street, just behind "We picked that one up at th e ratio as one machine per 300 voters, a re· dlvldual county supervisors Wednesday the Edison steam plant get.s disturbed Firestone Station on Beach Boulevard," quired total of 2,000 machines. an alternative plan for Sunset Beach about the calls. They enjoy them. It Lewis ncounted. "lt just cruised In. The That order_ and ll seems unlikely lo parking, they claim will prov ide twice the keeps the Job interesting. people just locked him up in the men's win the backing of the task rCl'ce-would parking offered by the county'a adopted Through telephone alerts mostly, the room until we could get there." cost the county nearly $4 million. plan at one fifth the cost. shelter now boasts of the strangest varie· For a short time last month the shelter Discussed by the committee at the The Chase...Jones plan 11 limilar to a re-ty ot an im als It has ever had at one time. had a seal. It was picked up along the four-hour meeting was the po.ssiblity that jected county plan that provided for 2,000 In addition to all the dogs and cats which Bluffs area after it had bitten a lllUe 1lrl. existing Coleman equipment could be parklng spaces on the beach It.self. usually abound it now houses two The shelter employes did their best to renovated and possibly supplemented to Chase and Jones say the beach is wide donkeys, a pigeon, a pig, ~wo duck!, an keep him happy, hosing him down ten meet the county's growing needs. enough -400 feet wide in some places -enormous red rooster and two snakes. times a day, feedina: him good fl1h and The Coleman offer 1o pr 0 vi de to allow paved beach parking and at the Since mid.July, the two donkeys have anchovies. permanent mainlenance of the com· sa'!'e t!me plenty of room for sunning, been grazing in a small fenced ar~a Then one morning he suddenly keeled pany's equipmenl at an annual cost or ri'~";'m~m;m~g~a;n;d;su:rf~ing~·~=;;~=~=be=hl~nd~th~e~m~a~ln:b~u~ll~d1~·n~g.~N~o~o~ne~kn~o~w~s:~o~ve~r~a~n~d~d~ted~. ::::::::; $5,000 was filed with the committee. It \Vas pointed out that the contract would ::-,~i:in:~-:u:o.l::.:~.~·~,0:~ ~~re::;:~ LAST 3 DAYS•• the company's overhauling ol all equip-•• n1ent prior to each elecUon . The company's suggestion that Its president confer with the task force prior - t.o its final decision on future voting equipment is being studied by the ciUzens' committee. From Page l MARCHERS. • • r.mployes of the state parks," Bland ad· ded . \Vhit.ehead, however, said the Issue was a bit more complicated. "The demonstrators could disturb regular visitors to the park," he told the DAILY PILOT. "We've been full all summer, and are now turning people away regu- larly." Whitehead also noted that the rallying area souaht by the PAC is near the park district ofllce. "I am con.cemed abou1 what 2,000 to 3,000 people might do 1o that area," he said. "Right now I'm checking this thing out with the state Attorney General's office." Attorney for the PAC in the legal ac- tion is Patricia Henog of Corona del Mar. Bland said lawsuits against the Capistrano school district and the c\ly of San Clemente will also soon be filed, but not unlil after Sunday 's demonstralion. The PAC hopes to establish through the courts the right to conduct protest parades at the President's summer hometown. Women Give Games, Toys to Boys Club ' Gnn1es and toya v1lued 4t $200 have been donated to the Fountain Valley Boys Club by a local chapter ol the Bell Sigma Phi women's strvice orsanlzatlon. The girt• to the 211-membtr club were received by Boys Club president George Sc-oil. They were presented ln beh11lf of the Xi XI Pl chapter of the sorority by its pr@!ldent, Mrs. Eldon Dvorak, of llun- Ungton Btacb. STORE AND WAREHOUSE!! FURNITURE COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS 20%· TO 50% OFF ON MANY ITEMS IN EVERY DEPARJ'Ut H.J.GARR.ETf fURNrJURE 'ROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS { '211 HARIOR ILV!> . COSTA MISA, CALIF. 646.0271 646-0276 ··--.......----:-::-; • zoq ,=t U ; t ;-;: I : ... ~ ·~ • r • • • • -I EDITION N.Y. foek• • YOt:. 62, NO. 194, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAG~S . . . n . • T.&N QENTS -· . . .. . ' ' ' ... .. .... . .. , -' • rX. ... Armstrong Fights Tears ~ At Tribute LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ne 11 Armstrong chok-ed ~ck lears as be groped for words to tell America how the Apollo 11 astronauts feel about their country and the honl"r It has given them. The first lJ'lan to ut foot on the moon held a glittering array of the nation's SOCIAL SIDE PHOTOS, LOCAL COU~LES : PAGE 13 higi1 and mighty ·11pellbound as he spoke of seeing a scribbled sign among the masses in New \'ork at the outset of a day of coast·to«iast acclaim. "Through you we touched the mC?On," it re::id. ' . ' . • I I I • . ~-• . b • t ' • , -~· DAILY t'IL.OT'.lltietl .. lllclllfll ........ THE TOAST OF THE NATION: APOLLO 11 ASTRONAUTS RECEIVE PRES! ,ENTIAL TOAST DURING GLITTERING STAT• DINNER IN. THEIR• HONOR • . .. Annstrong looked around the room, at his fellow astronauts, Edwi,n E. Aldrin Jr., and Michael Co!Urui, at President ~~:;~d.t~r=~~:=:.i:t:;: Judge Bans Peace March • T· rou.hle . Presideni pie of lb! United ·States. In ' . ''Through you wt. touched the modn ," s. Cle t R J -• he said. "it WU our -privilege today lo an men e . emxing crossthocoontry1o1oucbAmerica." Pickets Head for Clemente, But No where w -Rally , · .. 'Touch America the rriooa men did as 'll!ey aomebow •urvlved, the biggest Guards Strt0ke · · A·t: Clemen*1"' ticker\apa parade In ·ManbaW. sent(wo '1'11< Peace ·Action Council b in troobl~. -summer ~te · ~'""" · , .• • • 'µpOi; .,.~· OOi ' · · 'Ibo ~ !. "Ki ·mllli\lli'i0;Cbkq~lnlo.OOU!\nijub~\i0n ' • • . l"l" -, I II baa DO place.lo M..£"~ .. P,.W . ...,,, ... ,.~a ~i.. -~· ' ~-. . . ,. '. 1" • and ~!lel''lo ti!! Plclfic for 1.~-~~'1'1J111YJI(~. have bJ,Saoo.m-tlds'w . • ' ·~~~by_~• IU!l'lii P'lilto lhe sAN CLE rE !U!'IL::OJ~ dinner W!dnaday fllgh) tliat ..U. hallOd been ordered lo ri.; "' the JC!b Pendini 1 Tiie latest r<buff -by the PAC 'Orange Oow\I)'~ Court.-: u .. · ~ 118" , -CJ .......,llitiljiOll ii -. as the most an! blah~-Andmr Su . court ,,..,.. ol thtlr is refusal of San Clemente State .P1rk ot. Supel'lor d<ilit-• Robort ·toofl\W! Cyprus -1<11 -m••llT· · ..-1 "the JackSlill'1 clan !!Jr• up the l'~lloule.. penor '"' · pay ficiaJ4 lo alloW use Of" llis_gn>llllS u a .will hellr-lhe adla!!'-Frlday, ID, W)Ulllal 'I'Molher llde o1 tJ;outm-e ~ '""'-.,L ':'-~ , __ sk'"T,.11 .~ ., lf..&i ,~Jl>eJ Will 11191 llhor!ly · cllJpule ..itla.the•cliJ. rallyillgpeljltlorpartlclplllto In 1511!1day's ·depaJ1>Jre lrom ·~omarr law .illil..,. lhe -.<Mute Jibe~/ 1 -~~ --. ,,..,. -: w •• on'l~ar-u.,.-ld. Jflnxpec(ed Judie Robert coitman ai:anled a (em, planoed IJ}lt-war, protesl Uon proceedJnis. · Named In !J,;; writ of m111aate It James ~ Wblle Houoe today ~ I lo begb\ in mld.se,terobOr Ind lenatlive poraty ruttaiillilr· ord<i'"Wednesday '1'11< park is ne .. President Nlton'1 Robert Bland, Laguna Beach PAC of· Whllehe1d, ~ dllrtrict I suparilllenilint · mOOlly to rtlu alter a big nlSl>t. pl~ll! cat: for Iii dly1 .abrold. I followlng the •fllinl ol 1 <0mplaint by lhe or par~ @Ji4 ~ll<ft. • . Tiie <:tiief exectitive planned IO tin 11 · 1,..the astronauli ,.,. to Houttpn · city 'which also aSks for' $IOO,OOO in · , A show cause orde'r bu. be-' 8'cned by euy as the end · oC a· bwly weet r drtw .\1: lo ftw 'days lrHll tllelr -wiv.,l llild-damageJ from tile 31 lifeguards listed as Lodge Hm" . ts-· Red . .A.· .s~au1· is·. .· ~udge l!obefl L.-Co<fman,H1ho11lllln& the near., His ,IO]e apjlOlntmen 1':~ I • .,,. . f ea beforeanothertUper-spectacular defendants. 0 Um• of li~gat!on. ' .J • •• .. m. meeting' w:lth the natiOnal !eciltl.ly ;~ lntheA&trodomi'Sttunlaynight. · -He 1E!t1 :Aug. 'U for a hearing into a . _,,J>eariDl;wllJbe;'held ·at9:30a.°'"'rl· coqncU. 1 _ , • , · t: Menibers of the _..1sticated foreign dispute which bu threatened to· leave the day IA SupefIOr Coqrt. ,: 1 • T-: .. ._t the P-remdent and Mrt: 1'biin ..... ,,... South Coast a:mmunity without bather Pari: §upt. ~ · to\!:1 1 us we ......... diplomatic COl1* were !CUl'l')'ing around protection on the 18.1 miles°' shoreline M Hal GI w· hdr. all .. . y the . · J , • ialinc h<lll •· pany.·• 'tbe ·1NVtlblt ... for astronaut, auf.olraphs like schoolgirls covered by Jts lifeguards, ay t 1t· aw s couldn t UH: park, 90 WI l'l lfOUlt press ewpl. lllVedaclnC ~ at the CentuJ;1 ~ banquet whe~ COurt action was taken by the city In · . • · h~=·u:i::~ =:='o1 t111 Whfle Hw by;the Pldllc. l • Hollywood slari rubi,cl .shoulders wiw• the conviction that the lifeguards were' a Capblrano UnUied School DltVtct llaon continued lo t:"' RCrel Mo oupmne court juiUces and ff ,governors aboul .lo wallc off thelr joba In 1 bid 1o school grounda ., ~ slqing .,..., 1he dlolce 61 Ille assoclflte _.,,,. - '"" ir. unison lo be lnlroduc<d. ' force lhe cilJ lo grant pay raises -refused PARIS (UPI)--U.S. Amboaador , eventuapy lo peact. · ' San Clemente CiiJ ·Council ~ "1' ~lo iepl,.,. ¥", ,orlao wpo Nixon, beamlr~g with pride raistd the by city"council last week. Henry Cabot Lodge told the Vietnam f "We still lloPe· U>iJ can ha~.:bht we re1-· · .the ....,., .8 rwim)iti to ""* res May 15. "'?.'' to Armstrong, Aldrin and COiiins. Lilegual'\f Lt, Steve H. Cl)orlk, Iden-Jlllace conference today the -, ar. deeply~ lfilh ~ ~iofts doini f;I, caOJi,O~~ iciilii'llllllfu · PresidenUal ~ -.W, RODald i;, I say sunply lo the three astronauts tified in the city complaint u the prtn-Communist of!eMive i"' South Vietnam I 1have• deBttibed. which' polOt i6 .the rm. ro;l:d. ;1 ••• • Zi,gler-, sakt •Wtdpeldi;J lthe1 Prelidint we thank )'.0!1 for your courage, we 1!18nk , cipj1l.Jfefend19t,..has asked the city to bas wrecked .another hope for peace and · tensllica\ion ofJthe war by.your Ude ... , , ")Ve .feel· ,.,:r, Whitehead. denied UJ U;R: woo.kl not annoQnct. u.e· awc>lnbnent!to . you.for raismg our lllhl>~ the sigloll ..... ralelf!IP lo· :fl'. bait l\le withdrawal of ")'n'f. state_menll, and -7oor1acji1can ,ol -the property, 001 very, 1sul>«("ocill : the high court•lodAJ .Sa .~ M. of m111 and WQl!!'I! I floe .. arid.~. . > " I Mv•·. ""'y one . me~· ym• .are ... reasons. He 1&!d '!hit we wou)d:lnl<Ke ' Dlrir<en'l'"rU-t lo ,Ille: 'CO!llrily; i t!W, Jl ·•· (. 'ai.t.~ ~JIJ ' ~'1o 'coml>f~·~..,-·plaat,llfe.lli!hooru;:"aaldlllud. • Dirklm 'rejloi!ed j Nfxoci'a --· · · • : •. 1. , '• ,I ·<lili>o't c t , ,~fie ~ar ' ~-1.Qll,coql!l>ue Ip J!1~70Ut '.iilolt1 ih ."IJ• •!so . sai~ our pruence "'°"d ·Cbief:Judjje clement.JI'. Illr~·lr, · i -. .. , ' { . -,..u of 11.• an boior IOI' ~ IUlrif• table 11 iOoilOn of IM pm-, ylq"hce ~n4.,l.l'fOI:.''. l..ol!Je lild. , · ~ . 'dil\111b .a f"!i nearby reald~,11, who :"" cf Greenville, s~c: -Zitaler'~·~ · School' Getting Is _n1n .. pero<nt below the averaie along rirence, '!by word •nd ·d!'d YOll show · Ijul 'he 'to1d; IJ'e .°'!'J~Uqi>tl .tn~ cw -emp\oyu of ure .llllf1~. llllDd ad· ment. . • .,, • • ,'·-A! ,.,.,. the coast. He further claim! that that you are nol prepared for genuine 11UCfi·u ••fi\'l'or ·raldi'' •p!psl Soul& ded. . • .... I.•· ... In '. . .OC ' '.lhe 'J><isl• thl'ff a.,l.'Ole , permanent lieutenagts, such as hin\self, Jle80UIUon.,. your actions JDAtch Y9Ul' f Vlelnaltlele'"'ICIXio1a ~ ih'.011'f 'I ta 1·1·, 'Whitehead, hoWiver1 ;a1a the issue • P;resklent h~·ael'IL~~ttr!~•. "~p' rm' g Cleamn·' g I maie"fl10 a mOnth or U percent below belU'°"'' words." partlclllarly 1Dfloii1 IN! CW pnb BfY WU· I bft more ~plk:jlted. "The 1 ~n hfa.toew·lopk feder1i weli~ _.,,,, · -~ ; ~ the aterage. Lod•e added,. al i .rainstorm druipmed hospital Aug. 7, will f1LtJtem nowhe~.. Gern0111tratort· ~d ilteturb, ~plar . The 1,teat one Wjdl'9Cllf ,~ ... ~ The lifeguards are demanding nine per· ' on the windows ol the conference room "Thi.. le >ajq and:'l'Ufe· ~·~•-, · itllll<!rfJ•'°ll Jlll~:i.~!Ol•Mhe,D'ijLY . b19Cl<buster·1u .. harineiplu ""1c~ ~ "" F' 1• Fall Classes . ..,,t anc1 u . peroentJocreue.regpectlvely near' the Arch o1 Triumph, ''While 21,000 , South v,1einain h!Y.• . ·~'~!>!"'. : ~JWJ· 1'1'1•'•1 Jd!I, l!J -· atr.e-cities . and . -..., ~':.~ .. v.. 1 0 along with lddlt!Ollll PIY bites for American soldiers• art in lhe proceas ol campaigns ol (error for 1111171ean, and ana •re_, liq!I !ii!fil •"" f'lll~ .f.11 f\lcll pie iwttll .uo · 'II"'"'. · ae&.SM•I Jleut.mants, the :Captain ~~ the ,Jle~g from South . Vietnam and , their resolve . to ®feri<' ~lvel:· · larly.'~ . t J.e . · ": ~· ... ,. , "' While &tudenlll or Laguna Be1ch High Chief. They a!io' '"*" I n~y work declsioos are being taken iln lhe against you.hove-not belio s~~ • W~~~i)!!d •I'?..:,~ t ;~ !'t;!~ •rr•-.i-,W..,....i up Sct1001 are beginning to scurry around week. · , : de.parturel)fadditlonalAmertc.Dforcts. "lcanaaureyota.&hattbe" .clt))lf \ ara~t.by~ .. ,,,.. ~..-fil!1' ' 'l:""r-'~ ..-1 •"'' buylngpencilsandpaperinanticlpaUon lhe dty &Uit brancls lhe .Ulepl(ds yow'~-)w been piepariDI United Sia~ .allo · dtt;s!. •,~,cfa~·-~,olfll", ..!,.~~-!""t !:..,, Jipa~!J:flffl to e;i of the first day ol school Sept.~ the cfec:lliooitostiilr.Olfllurdd°N''lHlolly i)'ltemalicil!jfor.1""".ollenslve." alrocltlea,"theAirienca.~1.uator ... d. whal .,ooo,to '·-..-.~ """'' -to lheftow.itit •=•• or;,'i school's adminlslraUon is busy faceliftinl indel~bll'lood-!';11-Wier he said t We bave boped;lhal Chief Sooth Vletna.-ne~ that 1ro1,' be uid. · ""' 1 ~" j the campus. lhll lbe Iii~ boll•~ the ~ Of_:., relaUve lull In the , , Plwn Dae IAIJI.~ 111-·toi, the' "'RIPI -I'm ·~ lll!':lb!nl~~ · • , · · . -,;;9" .I r~"d:.:r:.~!'::".,!:;=~ "durjng J~·)'!J -""' • '" 11rhtlol•-~ .. ~:wouldbech!lojl ~=~,Q;T;~=t: 1r1~11)e~~~~~-, . st°"k _,._ ..... et• ~ Pr'l·jpalRobertReevessaidtoday. dtacd.itM(See".'6J.~ l >c1q,m =.r-~:ioin ~-=• ~-..w,W.: •· 0 ' 1 • '1 "" ~Jfl!."ll , ' 'trl Conilla dOI i ""°" lf"' ' f ' • • •• ,.._... ' • ' • ~ .••• , ,, ·~ I J ,. _I ) r ~ • l M1~!'.11~. r I . I • NEW. YORI: {il)....,.ne 1tcx:tl mar .... .J;-'· In order to improve food servl~, four " 1 .. · •.• · ' ,. • , • .,. • ,.IOled' ·.bl ·bfthet' tdritw:J tdol.X • tt ~ 11ddiUonal Windows have been inruiJled in-• • " , . • 1 r · : · ' ·1 ' 1 · 8'lniJ •id~l&.,ul\r '~ainlt ~ rariied lb • lltat rany sucteafuD7 ~ lhepurch~~et:rir; ,:~"f.J'1t~. ~ Nkn ·cate~i'a~ I , . , . : . . . . . ·=~~x~~~~ f;:p the d~r. <see qtlotauoos. p-. ~;: -I j \ • ' ; I • • not 'uritit 'after dttnoaltraUbL . f.lt)~ ... , ., ,• ,, • '4·. I ~~~:~:~~l:r~:~~~~::~~~~ . N). ·. < •• ·t., ~-'N F a' I., ... 1•1 .. :.· 1' ~: ~~tht~leh~t~~~ , ~·~.I upt!~t~~:1rn~i~;~~e:~'.~JP:":O~ •• 'OW "~;,S ) ew e , ,.'e,fa .J'.$J,µ;,' ~.£Ill .. ~-:-;'~ Or ... e : .... •lake curtain. District trustees approved , .... ~ • , , , , 1 · 1• , , , :. .- thEI move Tuesday night by authomin& a · , • ' ': livt cent tax override to provide the By JEROM'E-r. ooi.i:JNs ,_ ' monlhs ·ln office, ponc!ered 'lhe lrldllf9n. 'lict:w ~,iht,~irfl the N~ M~Wnfi_·: .. rt' '.Tfi.r o.man,'. -.. ' dislrictwilh$40,000worklngcapita1. °'""•''*'*"'', He would wait until 'hil·adn)JrilaraUve 1 ~r~tmzril4tJta.nbt~.of ,ri i,~ :·-r -:W 4 · · .neadaer " ~ th1f~· .:'~el;:m•b .. ;~nc"fi1l·uvd1,0~~ne, reslroom .. ~t'ur:00111~. FranlllJI Delano ~~·II·_,. plll)-91Y toqk .more d1-i>fblo fonn. ! I ~W'~ •. ~ · :IJ •. : U,. ,,:;'.: ,;; I T."-".,.(.],: .... r,.,;.a'd.h '.. Moilllr doorof lhe same '•Id .. , ,""1 ~ fr ...,. ... ~ thecolnineofa-pbUttc.Ie1idi~lo lthaadone'lhlLA!llj,FildlO)',Jorthe l l lbeNI..,\~~.;". ,..":°.'."'" .paJUl-VU .IU·lt'll'"P 'bolmy stuff It· Friday's foreclll co tera, Ule floors, walls, mt lowered ''"" 11 the· ha\)mlrl< of.~ nliiil1al • ~:,_ thnphre,..the ~~-!'.! j ."l'eder•''""'" -~;i;~~ • ·' ' ' ' ' · , with temper-r11111lng !rom ceijings,a0cordlngtoReeves, minlst:l'lllOn! ~--• ...,,~~-, -· 1 '•I);~_,....,., '-'-"II ""'9<A1tct ·t :c,r;of'MW '11t11·S1.\ •·lop ol 14 •lloliil ~ c:ouUlnl toi Four .cl........, have· been" set allde 1 Willl'PIJ!l,'o/ -.e,111'w11 ihl N"' by ~theprasNimw~~ • • l i;d1,irj~c;!,.7..-111C:. NfWllCI<\ -., wu ~ bicrtti.;a ' 17 In the lnlllod lfUI. ' !0< lheo lludeni. as independent sludy Deal. · •' • II D, ew.F--·:.. . and '• ........... .,..._ -_,Md.,wltll •-'1$rta todl1> II ,. ..,SIDI! --.ay · I a~ A leacher will be in altendanco In H~ Truman followed 1 b!L lomely Tiie Presldtnt ..... tliO ferm three • t uatU·"· . , Cotta M111 ~tllolpilol foUo1riio« &1• "v .. ,,. Ui .math, English, social studies and ind Cettainty deri,ativtly; wlib bla Jilt thnei in hi• weUare rrotram talk to the i ; , . 1 / -'l,. ' · 1 · : : ~molotlo· .· , 1~~.-:-_ I If.· . Somt 1.200 new, 1tudc:xtr at &ci nee deparlmenll 1o help &tudenta Deal, naUon ntday. In ~-ol tho! .JPHcio.1 t IT UN!'f1118XY , ,. , .. UC 1,,.,,... hfl ·u /ifld wi?i their individual problem>. ~il»~-ec! 6l>rTJ .!bit's 1 the phr• •Pll'!TedJli 1Uepttal letters.\ ·llot ~. the ti"' Fi<li:r1illln c,r .. l.;&ntns',1o !ht Callforni1 • 1 ~or 1111 U bil;lness "'l\C*ti ... relWd c1._.-, 4 IHl·tflo.Rold''. 1,.., olleft ' .But RitUI .,,m largely '!"noliced."11,>en atrH\!?, hUFlll~4'\foClol'I, "!j's 1.it 119'. llli!ll!r1y Patnor: 1111 drtffnl --thtmaelo" In I/le throes qf •• "i be' l.C. ed In lhe 110i.!h cam...,. applJed to hie~ yem •l'tloe n1Uoo'• • ~"IRO" ~George P. 'Shull>; JI• ~vimcli,'t:;{ ~ ~ oL the ~le oo.P-8lilil 111 u. i-.. o1 u-acuu Aolorillg-~toff. NG< JO. freeinr one nrom In the main ~ bl ciiid eucuUve. bu! nem by.lb 111-11 P<l'P "°"'irellc& 1lo 8111 Clemente Tues-ii-lt<IJ'~ In S:.n. ~ ll J1ewparl Boy",-ll>e ,..... •· 1'1116m -' 1 -• -• n typewriters. • • day, defined IL ·jult~ r."1-" qq't>I I lld1 cor-(!J"~'~ Aloi A'-. Ht< car .. u ~ ~ =-: I A new kiln for lbe arts 1od crafts NIXON WArrED 1"i'be .New FederaDtm," Aid .Shultz, Im t. ' ~ ( atruek by an oncOmlM 11uto driven bf tf•••• · • w . ..-"~ c:lasse. has been in.stalled in the art pelio, John F. Kennedy,. revlvetftthe custom, ··~. the <tecentt1U.Uon ~"-10\ltm· .~.' •1' .. F~aUJmf•l 11)'1 another Bar~ ~~. '8', d 2*"'Ptllaadtl Ptlft """'"' ' a:;.&; "11 Reeves uld. and wllii charac1erjltlc fi•l(,11.,. rr..: men~aerv1-•. a-,.hfng:/llr 1 -!~~sman. ''Wll4t cloll·lbll ~""'I ~. • ' • =::: •• : 'I>• Red bricks f<rrn1ng an °L'1 have betn tier sulrimed 'Up the dreams of hia ad· apil-IL" .a ne'.lf sense of parUclpaUon b)' 1 can tee ~ l froqtlenn)u. but. whq Mn. Baker and a ~ tn ber ur, ::"" •• 1~ .. ~ • =::' ~ ;: f placed in the cafeteria pit lo. ministraUon. locat /ovenuaenL ,.__.yet wttb .Ute fedfral • w~ to k r&' leCleralbt. ,,.,-dieil wtMa. r,t'ar~ Plt1.le, · 11., •ol .. Mmt *'-"" 14 T......_ 1r Th11udio-vilualm'!jlacesiterhas be<n Lyndon Baines Johnson's choice of"' IOV~IC<t111fruilni11oblinyolvodud ."14fn<lerlf•l)lttt0n'cllef' ., 1 ' 1 1~1Jl4*1-.. ouffend mi-·:,:.,':""" 'l ;,: j moved rrom a room adja~nt to the alogan wu the ar.t Soclet)'. ~)' ' ' • ~ · Heiiii,~.JbeY'rti aUve.aoa nll1Jni-' JilJMrle1 but wer.1~ holpitallled, tbt Mlm.t uc-• .,,.,. ...,. llbrary lothenorlhcampu•,Reevea"!d· lilchatd M. NllOll, In hie flrlloeven l'l1loll~r~•-•1o-1'U . ~· · " , Pl\Wl.aald. 1 Iii .. ~ " ' .r . ' r I t • • I IAl1. y l!LQT L 'Sour TlwNdly, A\l"'lt 14, !"-' ' • . Noie i1,-Coutii :Mmicaz CluUia Not Clem:entei Teacher's G~m~. • .. • • ~ an liolltelY'dilfettnl propoeltion to tht kinlj nf Utel!lni he II -quallflld to liyt," Jlqdq\i>lj ~ "llJI tloo)> don't . . .. . . __ __.. _,__ • ... ··--. ClpllltlnO Ul\ilied SCbool •'* ... at ~ Clemente Hilb SChoqj 14 w•111 11\ll -~ ~ .ia '!· ="~~1'~~111..:~ -..·.k1114C11nwaicwlloo~n!l!b-nfllilll i. .,...;i."!w;; lo 1111 ·- • td the· San Cl•mento tuclllr 1rom bl&l! --, . • ecbol>I t.o el!mentary classes aild thtn on :. A~ 'ir~ lluclolpb, wbo . will 111111116 111!11 '-~ Ill, In elJlct, tbOlr .., al flrlnc lilm -... we bim out nf the .,,..m bl' ~.''. · • Lagunan Heads ·:For Germany ·:·; to jwilot hl&h level. repreoenl Rjlbl>~ In . Ju!lle Corfman'• ' ,,,. vetaran m"'ic instructor feolS lt's cour~ clalme!f 1\ieaday tliit "the board Supt. Charles KeMey of the Capistrano Unified School District refused to com· mtm.t on th_e Robbins' writ other than to restate the transfer action authorized t-y the school board. 1 wrona: note that shoUld be straJlhlened iaju.st ~etermlpectto flr~_my client. -:. out "i!i court And ht'• hoping that ;i1•m a former pre,ident of the board . su ior eouri Judge Robert L. Corffuan and I kno~ th~ stc?rY.•" ~e San Clemente • wir.irave the key to the diswte at a bear· lawyer. said: This 1s Just their way ~! "We feel that he la best suited to in- struction at the junior high level," he said. "J1:e has asked to be returned to San Clemente •High School but we are not prepared to grant that request." tn scheduled for Aug. 27. sq.~eezmg. bun out of the school system. lobbins 4S t9BE Avenida Cordoba, My chent has pointed out to ;chool complains' Uuil the 1ebool board knew the dlattict otJiclala ~ numerous occasions , IOCll't long before they switch6d httn from thlt ttacJUng music at lower arade levels Dow• the Mission .. . Trail El Toro Road Purchas~ OK'!l . . i;;L TORO _ Purchaae of atttps of road ri.a:hts-<lf-way ff011! three o~ners bu been autl>orlzed by COWllY superviaors. From Georp S. and Grilca .s. Matauok• the county will buJ right..r· way for Geroaj.,g Dri ... wt of El Toro llol4 and Oran&• A•enue north from the dud eod to -i Geronlmn al • COii fU,1133. • • ' To Rooeglin Cooatructlon Inc. the CO!lll· ty will psy f37,Gll for a·attip of ZI Toro alo\lO eaaement IOUtb of the Santa Fe llalltoad tracu nteded to ,.Iden tbe road up ovor the tracks. 1lte final purcbue wit! bt from V. P. Baker for ft,500 - a strip beslcle El Toro Road east or Fron.t S~ett. e Sun>e11 Pact Ok1111ed LAGUNA HILLS -Sl&nlng of a con· tract for $2,250 with Salkin Elllln«ring Corp. to survey a portion of Pa1eo de Valencia to be constructed connecting Leisure World and Clpistrano'Hiptands has been approved by county S\lperviaon. The pnrUon to bt surveyed Is from Los Allsos Boulevard to Alicia Parkway. The ree ia ffaured at $39 ptr hour ror a Uiree- ~ _ 1U?Vey ~m. e Bridse Bids ~l11ted EL TORO -AdvtftiaiaC for con. structlon bid! to repl¥e the wubed out Trabuco Road brld(e ,..,. ... sen ... Creek .. ., Et Toro M~ All'Bali"" been approved by county 111pervilora. Estimated coll of "'Plldnl tbe former timber btid&~ wilh 1 t~lane cqncrete bridae la 1'71,115. e Road W ~rlc. 01c1111ed Laguna Teen Corner Grads Spree¢ Wings In Hunt for Colleges BY TOM 001\MAN at San Diego State (It's thal college just ot ..... ,.. Pillt .. .,. DO miles south of the western White Tlte' guys and ga1s who were arlduated House, you know ). t.rom Laguna Beach High School la!t· f.1artha Stockton has decided on Chico June ate finalJy beginning to realize they State, while Meri Stewart will pack up are at the mercy of th! diffeferit ad· for Oregon State, along with Sue Watson mi.salons oUices tl\roughout the country, and Lynn Smith. Laura Eaeleton and u fall and college quickly approaches. Be\sy Le.Bold are headed for Pitzer. Wtietber tl"a a akip 'and a·hop over the Ma king that skip and a hop over the hills· to Sadd1eback Junior Colle1e or a hllla are dozens of grads, including Hilary rlohg aJrplane trek to Micblgan Stsite Huaton, Gordon Brown, Bob c.otterell, Unfvenlty, tMnl are off and nmnln& ar-Kathie Ryan, Kris Wetul and Joe ran,atng for clutea and ~dences.. Zamudio. SaddJeback may never be the Brian Watnwrla111 and Ben SCblff (our same. · own Nattooal Merit fl!iallotl) took of~ to , Looking forward lo a rough time at Mlcblgau Stato, whml Ibey crammed In • · UCf are Tom Holm, Bob Gardner, Rob thl"ff dt,ys of teatlnl, ortentaUon, ~1au Xronman, Jamie Causey, Debbie Smith, scheduling, and whatever elie two and Brian Jones. After looking over tne Ll.iuftanl do at a ca~ ol 40,000. ·"My class load, Rob has changed his major atudeot number is , Ben revealed. from law to basket weaving .. Joan McMahon had her sights on Santa Headln' for the desert are Jeff Jahraus Clara, unW AFS decided to d_Otour ber and Dave McDonnell (Arizona State), and through Germany for a year:, where she'll Jim W&JTen (Ne,w Mexico). be &oin& to Goethe-Oyn'lllQium, a scbool WWa Calher la going to try her luck at Jn Dortmund-Bergbofen. Berkeley, while fhe Callfomla College of Footbah scholarships have sent Steve Arla and Crafts will be the new home of Wiezbowski, Jimmy Kuhn and Brian Karen Linenl:ugcl Laurie McPherson llagley to Washington Slate, where they'll and Lenriy Larson.' 1 be playing on artificial grass. It'll be a Sue Chamberlain will pursue a nursing far cry from the kind down here. career at Brigham Young, while Patil Tom Tabor and Steve Klosterman wlll Bed~ll attends classes at Redlands. be roomina: together at UCLA. Tom Sture Edvardsson discovered some couldn't have arranged for a bette~ ~· small college in Iowa -Central College , guard than Kloster·monster. Laun Bird known for its chemical engineers. He 'll is going there, too. probably come up with a wild new kind of Debbie Brekk' is headed for Uing corn flakeii. Beach State, while Eric Miller and Paul \Vell, that's a quick run-down of who's McManus "'ill invade Cal S t a t e , g:>ing where. Fullerton. Doug Schmitz will settle down If I missed you, send your complaints to Cal State, Fullerton. That's where I'm LAFC Approves . Sewer District De-annexation heading. My admission was confirmed by a form letter addressed to "Dear Stu· dent." Nothing like that personal !ouch. huh? Ben (532$07) Schiff can tell you all about It. DBA Seeks Front Against Hippies OAIP.. Y PK.OT• tttff f>llOi. PACKING H!R TRUNK Exch•nga Student MtMlihon Fro11a Pa.ge 1 ARMSTRONG • • "The sky ls no longer the limit and we thank you for the tine young men you are, fine e1amples for young people all • over the world." Annstrong, a man to whom words do not come glibly, seemed to falter as be responded, but his sincerity rang through. "We hope and think that this Is the beginning or a new era, the be&lnnlng of an era when man understands the ... f'or a year Joan McMah6n bas Mtn hoping t.o u~ abroad ... forelg1i ... change. student. Then~ ju~ two weeks ago, she was given three ~rs to make a critic81 deeilJon. Would she live in a strp.nger's home for 11 months! Now·, hei dream is only hours away lrom. becon\ing true. She lea\.'et t.oniaht for a town so miles north of. Bonn, Germany. . And she can hardly believe it. "It still ha,sn 't really hit me," the 18- year old Uguna Beach Hi&h School gradule remarked as &be packed her belongings. Her mother, Marie McMahon, superviaed the operation. "It'• tlnd al &ood I dldn~ "-v• more of a wamiDg," Jo,n, said. "My mother would be a wreck.'.' Joan wal!I one of about 20'high ICbool !ludenll lntervlewed last school year by the American ·Field Service (A1S) I! possible candidatea to apend a year abroad: After the Interviews, Joan was one of two remaining candidates. The final decision rested with AFS headquarters in New York. The other candid ate., Kathleen Collins, has since been sent to New Zealand. But a home hadn't been found for Joan. Months later -July 31 lo be exact - ' ' Joan.~• tel~ call. Slit ifamOd . thal a })ome wu available In Dartetunit- Berghofen, German)'. And she wa• Jive thrte houri to accept the Cirei. Joaq,wu1 ·be livlnc at th~ borne ot Mr. and Mrs. Heinz Qutbnll and uie;, four chlJ4ren, ranging Jn a1~ from l7 to 23. Sus~. 17, 'fllJ be'JO&D~• new 1f1ter and cluam4te at Goethe.Q~wn. An older brOther and two .o'ldtt·sisters ,live a\\·ay from home, Joan said. Her classes wil l include Gtrman, Latin, French, English. chemistry, physics, religion, math, biology, mu11ic, sports, home economics, ~ art. Joan, who was graduated ln the top 20 or her clw' and carritd a B-plus average, i! wOrried about her En&lish class. "They'll bf; teaching it in Geri'nan. and I only know two woi'ds . ..,.. Ytf ind no." . But she'll have ·a chance to bruah up on her German beofrt she meets her new famUy. All the AFS students in Germany will 'meet together tor a 17-day inten!ive languaa:e and history cout.se. During her senior year of high schOol, Joan was a member of the Girls' Athletic Association and the Choral Readtrs. In addition. sht was the school's reprtsen· tative to Girls' State (a state-wide lir1r convention), and was Commissioner of Social ActJvlties. Heavy V ietl)nm Fighting Flares Into Third Day ' universe around him and the beglnrilnc of SAIGON (AP) _ Heavy righting raged Most of the action Thursday was ne•r · the era when man understands himself.'' """---" .. "' f th• Cambodi·sn border ·-a from ~ to IO Said Aldrin : for the third day l ~tw~IY no1w.1 o -.. ""' "There are footprihts on fhe moon. Saigon, where allied troops are trying to miles north or Saigon. Allied forces Those footprints be long to each and every break up enemy troop concentration~. reported killin& 69 enemy troops in a one of us, to all mankind, and they are Casualties were mounting steidily as series of clashes there Thlll'lday and 73 there because of the blood, sweat and u .S. and South Vietnamese forces strove farther south. tears of millions of people. The footprints are the symbol of true huma n spirit." to keep the enemy off balance and pre-In the sharpest clash I n v a l v I n g Said Collins : vent any more widespread assaultll like Americana, element! of the U.S. 11th "Mr. President, here stands a proud those that broke out across SouUt Viet~ Armored Cavalry Regiment and 1ovem· American, proud to be a member of the nam Tuesday. ment Rangers report.eel they killed 35 Apollo team, proud to be a citizen of the Throughout South Vietnam, about 1,700 North Vietnamue in an at>andoned rub- United States of America which nearly a enemy troops have been killed in the • her plantation about.two miles n'ort.beast decade ago said it would land men on the th.rte days, while from 115 to 150 moon and did so. proud to be an in-Americans have died, allied headquarters of Loe Ninh, 10 miles north of Saigon. habitant of this most magnificent reported. Five Americana were wounded . and planet." government casualties were reported The three astronauts were awarded the very light. ?-.tedal of Freedom. highest award the Frotn Page J Military spokesmen aaJd Allied t?oops United States . can bestow on a civillan. bumped into an enemy force ol unknown Vice President Spiro Agnew read the in· GUARDS. sl&e bidden tmOlll rubber trets and scripUon. • • • undergrowth lata 'J1!qraday mornloa. "Your -contributions will be remem· The allia called Jd artillery and air bered as long as men wonder and dream arrive at a conclusion wit.bout strike ac-strikes while bl11Un1 at the enemy with and search for truth on this planet and tion. tank• and machine guDl!I. The filblln& among the stars," it read; City officials have pointed out that the Jaated for more than,an hour. Great as was the list of lhe elite among entire lifeguard department received a North Vietnamese: ambushed a U.S. the 1,500 guests, there were notable "merit ralse" of five percent in the 196g. truck convoy about 1• miles south cl absentees. 7-0 budget. Captain Phll Stubbs received a Quan Loi, 66 mUea north of Saigon. Fonner Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson 7 ~~ percent increase. The U.S. lroopa returned fire and calltd. declined an invitation u did Harry S Also recenUy approved by the clty was for air strikes agab\at the enemy posi· Truman. a flve-ste.p program under which 1e~al lions. Sixteen NOrul Vletnameae wtt1 Not a single representative of the Ken-guards who returned to duty after thelr reported kllled and thrff Americana wtre MISSION VIEJO -Construction of Estanclero Drive from ' a dead end through to Mar,..nto Parkway has blin approved bf:county .upervitorr. t>wnnexaUon of the Arch Beach Heights holdings of Laguna Vista Land Co. from the South Laguna Sanitary Dis- trict was approved Wednesday by the county Local iAgency Formttiqn Com- mlasion. ·' The Downtown Business Assoclat.ion nedy family was present. It was Presi-first ytar get an aut.omaUc five perc~t wounded. County Roatt Oomnilaioner Al Koch uid the >lr!OI ionn.cdon will greatly assist traffic clrtulat'' in the area. e Lath1&s pianee Set CAPISTRANO VALLEY -Lot Amigos Lltlnca will hold a danct Saturd1y Aua. ti In the Moose Hall in San Clemente. Qiuey Lopez will furnish muaic during the 1:30 p.m. to I :~ a.m. event. Admlaolon f.,. will lie $1.50 for couples and $1.75 fw 1tn1Jes. Procteds will bt ~· ed ror club projects. e Doubles, An11one? MISSION VIEJO -Friday 11 the final day to register for the doubles tennis tournament at the Recrtatlon Center. 1be event will be played on two Satur· days, Aug. II and Aug. 23. Both men'!! doubl., 'and mlxtd 'dOubles will bt of· fertd. otWfOe ~ .,,._..,. CQWtUft . . . ~' ' . l~M.Wit.4 ...,.... .. _ J"'1 .. C.rf.., ~ ,....... .. __. Miuetf n •••• r"'il .... Tfl•1111•• A. M11•,MRt ~·-­l:ich•'' P. Nill L...,,._ .. "11 c 11r ldlltt ,_ __ 112 ,.,... ..... MtlH111 A44!1"u f.O. I M •M. t1612 c .. ,.~'::': .... ,.. ........ ... ,: t'll .. , .. _ .. ......,.. ~~1MO;•a111 ..... · Now· future residents of the lift.acre area wUl receive sewer service from the clty of Laguna Beach. Attorney George Logan. representing both the city and the South Laguna Dittrlct. explained that it once appeared the. dty could service the area. Seeking assurance that service would be avallable when aevelopment came, the landowner annexed to the Sooth Laguna Sanitary Dlotrlct. RecenUy it was detennlned the cjty of Laguna Beach could service the area and at Jes:. coat because for ·sewage to now i;outh Jt would have to be siphoned under Pacific Coast Highway, Logan said. (OBA) plan,, to join wiU1 other Laguna dent John F. Kennedy who proclalmed in raise each year for five years. Enemy iurmtrs fired abc:l.lt 30 mortar Beach organizations seeking solutions to his admlnistraUon America 's determina· Chief Richard Huard, Captain Stubbs rounds at the 100.vehlcle convoy, w~ch 'vhat bas been called "Laguna 's Hippie li on tG put a man on the moon by the end and three seasonal guards did not join w11 transport.inc ammunlUon, (uel attd Situation," DBA President Robert Benner of the decade. Jacqueline Kennedy Chorak and his 31 fellow employes in the con1t.rucUon material. Three truckl were said Wednesday. Onassis sent her regrets. group's demands. reported dam11ed. A OBA representative. yet to be nam-1---------------------------------------- ed. will sit in on meetings of the Laguna Image Ccimmittee "to keep abreast of what the image group is doing," Benner said . "We feel that we will benefit more by working with them rather than working independently," he said . Benner said he has talked with the new police chief, Kenneth Huck, and that future meetings wlll have police officers and perbapg the chief a11 speakers. LAST 3 DAYS!! - Tasl\: Force Hears Final STORE AND WAREHOUSE!! FURNITURE · Vote Machine Proposal Or1111e County's Voting Systems Task Foret heard the final tesUmony Wed- nesday night in its investigation of seven flnns vying for the right to provide automatic votine equipment to the coun- ty . Representatives of Shoup V o t I n g MaclUDe: Corp. of Nashville demonstrated ""hat was described. tis "the most up-to- dat.e voting machine in the world" to the ten-mtmber citizens committee. A Shoup proposal under "'hich the firm would provide 950 machines at a total cost or Sl.8 million was filed with the Lask force . The committee decided on a fu rther study or the i\roJ)()!als made by Shoup and Iii competitors before 11ubmitting 11.s analySls to county supervisors. Naming ol lhe successful bidder w111 end a year· Iona probe by the task force . Competing with Shoup for the lucrative county ot>qttact are the Coleman Co., whose vote-counUng equipment 11 cur· rtntly used by the county. CUblc Votronlcs, Seiscor Punch C.rd System, Data·Vote S)'flem, A VM Printomatlc Sy5. tern and 1:8~1 Votomalic. The Coleman S)'stcm has oo,n used by tht county in all its elections, primary and general for the past six years. fts perfonnance ID some ol those contats bas produ~d bitter criticism . County .Clerk William E. St John, an observer at I.he meeting, h~ poinled out that the Coleman device was geared to the needs of 300,000 voters. He has urged the task force to bear tn mind the fact that equipment capable nf rapidly recording the votes of 600,000 residents should be in use. ' Shoup representatives argue that an order of 9$0 machines will only go half\\'IY to 1neeting the county's needs. They describe the ideal voler-machine ratio as one machine per 300 voters, a re- quired total of 2.000 machines. Thet order -and it seems unlikely to win the baCking or the task fofce-would cost the county nearly $4 million. Discussed by the committee 11t the four-hour mettlng was the poss\blity that c1lsling Coleman equipment could be renovated and possibly supplemented to meet the county's growing needs. The Coleman oner to p r o v i d e permanent maintena nce of the com· pany's equipment at an aMual cost of $5 .000 was filed with the committee. It was pointed out that the contract would be limited to labor only and the county woold incur a further $10,000 charge for the company's overhauling of all equip. ment prior to each election. The . company's suggtstlon that Its president confer with the task force prior 10 Its final decl11lon on future voting equlpn1ent is be.Ing studltd by the ci tizens' committee. COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS 20% TO 50% OFF ON MANY l1IMS II EYEIY DEPARTBT H.J.GARl\flT fURNrpl.RE ~ROFtSSIONAL INTERIOR DlSJGNUS • a,,. --• I'll. - l2 II HAllOR ll VO. COSTA MISA, CALJI. Ml-1271 «•.017• l I I I , . ·--·-----· -. --........ • 1' otora11aa at Fotorama Orange Coast College airline stewardess student Karen Jorgensen , 18, Costa Mesa,, demonstrates just ho\v easy it 'viii be for visitors at Fotorama to participate in "Votorama " by using Automatic Vot- ing Machine Co. 's Printomatic to vote for their favorite pictures in Fotorama Camera Contest. Voters will be eligible for prizes worth more than ~1.100 provided by radio station KOCM as part of DAILY PILOT show to be staged next week, Aug. 21 through 23, at Fashion Island. Boys' Tribute Thwarted Mission to Honor Astronauts Ends 011 2nd Floor By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1M o.lt., l"Ufl St11f LOS ANGELES -America forgot ttself for a time Wednesday. The time was devoted to saluting the Apollo 11 trio for taking the people of earth along on man's greatest adventure. Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins flew to the moon and back. Scott Footlik, 12, made it to the second floor. Lee Lobel, 12, an asthma victim , had to stay home. The lwo Beverly Hills boys had com- piled a photo-coverf':d banner honoring the dramatic moon mission and Scott went alone to deliver it, while ailing Lee watched the glittering spectacle on television. Sitting near press headquarters on the mezzanine leve l of the Century Plata Hotel \Vednesday night, Scott told how he tried for hours, since Tuesday morning, to C<1m plete his own mission. DAILY l"ILOT Stiff I"~ - SCOTT FOOTLIK DISPLAYS PERSONAL TRIBUTE TO ASTRONAUTS On Wey to Moon, 12-Yeer-91d~Makes It to Second Floor Jesus a Woman ' ' She Played Pageant· Ro"le 10 Years By TOJ'l.1 GORJ\1A.N Of ttte Oil" l"li.t Still It has been the best kept secret in the 32 years of the Pageant of the Masters. For the first 10 of those years, a woman portrayed Jesus Christ in the Pageant's living version of Leonardo de Vinci's "The Last Supper." She was the only person to be found who had .lhe face for lhe part, according to Laguna historian Merle Ramsey, who has brought this little known fact to light. Roy Ropp originated the Pageant of the fl.tasters in 1932, but it was discomlnued during World War II. Ropp had his troubles in the beginning, but none like the one he ·rc,n LIP against In 1936, Ramsey recalled. The still-infant Pageant faced a premature death due lo !act of interest by the townsfolk, Ramsey said. So, in 193&·Ropp decided lo try a new picture - one tha t took lJ people to pose. But a person lo portray the main figure -Jesus Clfrist -couldn't be found. •·without the· µ:erfe:ct face the setting would be a failure," Ramsey said. T~n. one week before the Pageanl'1 ()pen1ng, the face Ropp had been searching for came into his home. Little did l\tr1. Harry Gordon "Jackie" ~tartin rknow what lhe was getting into. He requested 3he tak! off her hat, and then he parted her hair down the middle. "At that instant, Roy Ropp knew his search was ended, provided she would ac. cept the part,'' Ramsey related. . She said she'd play the part, as long as 1t was kept a secret that a woman was cast for the part of Je.sus Christ. And, for the next 10 years, only a handful of peo- ple knew that a woman played the cm- tral fieure in the p i c t u r e that has ~me the Pageant's standard closing pW!Ce. The part to her was so sacred, she re- quested prayer each nljhl before the cur· lain was opened, Ramsey Wd. "To this day, viry few have ever known the dl!fleulUes ezperienced by Roy Ropp in lbe production of the first ahow- ing of "The Last Supper." "Had Ropp failed there-11 realOO to believe the famous art exhibit would not be showing today," the Laguna historian said. Whatever happened to Laguna's "First Jesus Christ?" She°.s living in Pasa· dena. "They were coming to LA and wt thought this would be a good time to pay tribute," he explained. "They didn't have to go up I.here. They were asked. They went." American history is the decor theme on that floor of tne 20-story hotel and ScQtt sat at thr moment under a portrait of the late President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Hanging beside it was a chronicle of world achievement during lke'1 ad· ministration. "ln the first year o( his &eeilnd term , the world's 'Age of Space' began, on Oct. 4, 1957," the plaque reads. Scott Footlik was 10 months and two days old. "I've always been interested In 1pace -well. since John Glenn's flight," said Scott, a seventh-grader who tried two days' to give the moorunen a tribute he and his buddy made. The smaller the tribute, the longer the wail. · "It needs more gl1Jeing," he said, pok- ing at a rough spot. "I've talked · to Mr. Callahan, the manager, Mrs. Winchester the social director -and her helper -and the Secret Service man in charge of securi· ty," :iaid 'Scott. . "But I didn't get very far. "I even talked to John GleM and Mrs. Frank Bonnan oit the phone" Scott con· lnued, "but John G~nn said he .•• just didn 't know." He remained polite and patient. "I didn't sleep for two da)'I," he 18.id, of the July weekend when man's f~ prints touched God's natural handiwork Car out in space. "I couldn't believe it. What do you say? Man .wu landing on the moon and It wa1 always just a fiction-thlng." During the late 1968 A.pollo 10 moon orbital flight, the youngster built 1 lunar simulator himself and kept measured track o! the capsule's distance from home and back. "Yes," he replied to the ne:rt obvious ()ucstion, "Definitely -I want to apply to the Air Force Academy for the class of 1974. I'll have to write my Congressman." "If it all works out, I'll be in NASA by the Ume I'm 24," he cootJnued, adding with careful qualification " ••. If it all works out." He said he had one more person to see about presenting that pasted-up collection of magic which. still tricks the human mind, kl the men who proved it fact, but time was running out. The ma jn banquet hall two noors below in the crowded; bustling hotel seemed 1t t~e moment as distant to Scott Footlit and la Lobel -watching from home - as the moon. · "It finally wound up somewhere in the NASA office,'' said Mrs. Footlik today. "He's disappointed." 4 7 'Missing' Prisoners Alive WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentlgon announced today it has confinned that 47 Americans previcu.sly listed a1 miss· Ing in Vietnam arc alive in North Viet'· namese prisons. Conflnnatlon that the previousJy liattd men are in captivity was based on infor· .nation brought hack llW week by three newly released servicemen, a.s well 11 information from other sources, a de- fense 1pokesman aid. · The Pentagon Indicated on Wednesday that die .... n11y oblllned lnfonnaUon WQ helpinf ruolvc quesOons about the 1tatua ol 1ome ol the more than 900 Amreicans currently listed aa missini in IOU~':east Asia. Names of the 47 were to be relwed later in the Pentagon'• dally Vitiham casualty Ji.st. KriSman Joh1J~f~Ud~d I • Chancellor Aldrich Repli~ to fltt ·- "I regret tbat you have found tt necessary to coodemn the appointment of Michael Krllman on the basls of his membership in Students for a DemocraUc Society . • • without any knowledge of him u an individual," UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldricfl, Jr .. said.today in repJy to the letter he receiv- ed from Rep. Jame1 B. Utt CR-Tustin). appointment only after thouahUul review of his pe~ormance as a student on~ttie­ campus and comments of the facully, slJ.ff and atudents about the suitability of his qualifications," he sai<I. "lt ls my belief that every citl;~ is en. tit.led to be judged on his <>WR merit, particularly where hJs fre'tdom ·or his llvellhood ts concerned1" Aldrich noted. Aldrich a1so said that Krisman had the support of the dean of students. the vice· chancellor for student affairs, the dean of various schools on the campUJI and the vlce.chancelior of academic affairs. ~r• knowledge of Mr. Klr1man'1 c;n¥:acter and record: u-i "atudent and ~rhldent of the IMOClilled. shidento:• -In the letter AJdriCb · •recei•ed from COogressman Ou. t h•e leglllat« Aid, "·"'-'·any search tor Jocic In JOUr podion is cqi;doundlni:. I relUae'to bellve )'Oii re-- main unaware' of the nattonallydfclared intentions of..-SOS ••. '" • .. A~rich refuted this itltemeat. ":At M time in my a~nce ·with Mr. Krimian have l found htm to be other than a Joyar and cOnsttuctivc dt.im:J of this campus, the conununlty and our country." Jn an open letter to the Congressmsn, Aldrich ouUloed why he backed the ap- pointment ci Krisman as coordinator of academic advising. I "I approved the recommendation of his "Their support and mine were based on YOUR CHOICE Hardy, colorful Marigolds and Vincas for picturesque gardens , •• plant now! Make your garden a riot of color with easy-to·grow pink and white vincas a nd marigolds ••• at down.to-earth prices! lri -'" pots. • • • .. .. . LIKE IT ••• CHARGE IT! • ••••• YOUR CHOICE Compliment your yard with either our Dracaena palm or our Natal plum trees! Plant now for a lush, tropical look in your yard, plus your own ornamental •plum tree. Available in 1 gallon containers. ALSO Flatter your garden with our blue flower Per.lwlnkles .• 1 CJal. 77c Sequoia bark for CJround cover In plantlnCJ areas! Our l111aCJlnativ1 40 Inch birdbath wlll add «Jarden charm! 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MONTCLAIR_ ,. • ' l ' ... ~--""' . •• > • • ' • 'nit· Tannnian c••tl!lm•nt h 1 s · •111•11dld ill penll code to '111 l k • Ill* .~'Jth Blbttne~-il!ahdatoif. for all)' '!1'4utlll1M per&o.•s wlio , .. 111ovtJ 16noll• •nd causes a pa· litnl'I dtlth. • TRICIA NIXON LISTENS TO DAD AT ASTROFETE At tht Next Table, A~t Linkletttr (Background) I Stars Turn Out r two ht~ maJI PJt bttt1f .thali ont. V.S. Celebrities Honor Astronauts fJvt dtspite '1t>J)farqnces ill this phOto, LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hollywood is ' rih• Ph.omit Zoo's pair of swans gti a liberal Democrat town, but those few ' 11lono Jint with just one apitct. Tht •eN•blicans among the stars turn. ed out .. 'normal ont·hta4td whitt!' swam ju1t '~ ,... tot thtif heads together ftw this u11· en -maJst tO mingle with President Nixon, wut.i portrait. the astronauts, and diplomata: at the state and wife Cyd Charisse, Robert Stack, Jonathan Winters, James Stewart, Cesar Romero, Ros:allnd Russell, Rudy Vallee, and Art. Llnkletter. • dinl1er Wednesday night. :_ SOtnJ ""P groups are "' bl•me Among the first to arrive at the Cen- t uj,.": · r d · tury Plaza Hotel waa comedian Red Helping to bridge tne gap between tbe PcKom•c luminaries arid Sunset Strip celebrities was Sen. George Murpl'ly, a fimne.r movie song·andod1nce man. Gov. Rmiald Reagan, also a fonner movie star, -helped introd.uce cabinet members Robert Finch, Melvin Laird and George Romney to Osle Robertson and -productrs Jack Warner and Jules Steip. Claire Booth Luce, a member of the arts as well as a politician in her own right, was greeted effusively by members of the Hollywo<>d colony. - ot the e o rugs arnong i!t,ung s~elton who said, "J d6n't know about people, Americap singer • by these astronauts. t loolted ln the sky VM~ tJid as be arrived in Sydney toni&ht and only saw a half moon. They for •· ~t club sea1on. He •ald' he m•~t have brooght back more rock tlWl ~Ileve1 the "ilnlg . situation .would .. they Aid they did." "1•1 hli•i <l~epor~ ~ti som~ JlOP BOb l!Oi>e ap-!'d on a 15th floor ?.lllln,ers ~tlilt jmb)Icly c9n4oned balcony while assorted dem~trators ~nip suoll at ·ma~,,.na. "(.;!)loke otood out1Ide the.hotel. it;;n11· _ci1e-ette1.~·1 suppose I'm a . nle"moOd of the Crowd ch•nged Im· ~I it ~fa iq~afa," bl Said. mec;li•tely to one of friendly reCognltion. . e "We IOve Bob Hope. We love Bob Hope," · • tht ccowd chanled. A ~~.~ Mass~ sranite· COit'!· Hope later sat a a table during the din· UY ibotts ll\ \UlU&tial theft from ner with Tricia Nixon, David Eisenhower ta iisrd -a ·40().pound baby rhi· and astronaut Wally Schlrra. · ~l·, ·caz!vfd. from, granite. The Randolph Scott made one of hi.s in-no. valUed at $2 000, was part of frtquent appearantes llt a social event. t\f.'Yof¥-Cl\f '~bOjipmf plda, po. polltical'.stiira inclu~· Fred MacM1"'ay • ~ea ind his wife June Raver, 'Toiiy Martin ·There was a bit of a feminine fiurry when Gov. Wi nthrop Rockefeller of Arkams introduced itimself to director Nonnan Taurog arid his wife. Both women were wear in~ jdentical dre sses by exclusive Hollywood couturier, William TraviUa. After their meeting the women introauced themselves as twins . Making a great impression . on politi· ciaos and diplomats alike w~ the com. edy team of Dan Rowan and Dick Martin out more than others. ~ rne11tailne .~.prepared for a O\her glamor !Olk llklng ,baek &eats to ee,t.!lp'~. . ~ ........ -· ...... r •• "' ' •• -· ..... · '' · <{r rv 'f( 1;r 1;r 1;r 1;r smri.eli;(1~. o(wa11e wa~ la, Wt.th., to(jay cloimtd 4 world , reocot4 4fttr sltOotin!) 275 holt .t Of tOl.f 4t the local country club -oft in .otit do.y. Fl41hlights helped hfm. out o.i ht started at S 11.M. dttci wire ¥1td · agisrirt w11.fn ht ecM,Pltt•d h-ts mani- thon. at 9 p.,n. T1tt ~oungittr ,.i<l11• llfli•••d tht old 011t·dov r<clil!I •""' 110 Miu. .'Moon Dinner' Sparkles As Protests Just Fizzle LOI; ANGELES (UP!) -The gala state dinner hon<>ring the Apollo 11 astronauts was :i ;littering success but the demonstrations in front of the hotel where it was held were something of a flop. ,Three different protest groups h11d an- ~ inlel'!tioi'Js to picket the Century Pliia He.tel and one of them, the Student Mobilization Committee, promised it would have at least 2.000 pickets on hand. But as the dinner started , the demonstrators' ranks had grown to no more than 300 to 400. Another 3,000 well· wt1hers gathered in front of the hotel ·to watch tPe celebrities arrive for the din- ner. T h e demonstrators. re11resenting mostly anti•Vietnam War and black power 'views, marched peacefully on the avenue or the stars in front of the hotel as a apecial police squad watched csrtfully. One of the placards read : l•Love the Astronauts But Hate the War." Others read: "Free All Political Prisoners," ''End the War lrt Vietnam." "Millions for the Moon, Porridge for the Poor," "Explore Space, Leave Vietnam Alone." Scores of uniformed police had taken up stations in and around the hotel to make certain there was no interference with the diMer. Police Inspector John McAllister, field commander at the banquet, said he had "adequate manpcm·er" but refused to give the number. The relatively small tumout of pickets apparently was less tl!an what either lh~ir leaders or the police had expected. The figure was far under the 10,000 demonstrators at the same hotel on June 23, 1967 when President :Johnson id· dressed a eroup of Democratic leaders. Everywhere Oln~r Off Mo11111 0t1 .. 11 "•"-M:I ,,.,., Wllflh ·~~ "'""' 1<t11Sls C!h• I lls ~ Llt V ... • " ,. • •• " ,. " u n .. " " '" '" " ff '" " " ,, " u " " " " .. u " " .. " n ·" .. (:oeate • • ,,,ummary ..;, ,,,,. .. "'"'J!:l '"'.?.,;'"'°' wt;11 "'*' _, !!It ~lloii 1"!~ J>lllteftl Mlu1•I -. .. ,.... lflt toftltl cl-I -. Wlfliilt . i.rtt a ''· 12 we111\t!' fOdty wllh le'""1't 1t;rfl 9111-Mln,,...,.111 .. u .. " ~ .. .~ •• kM!t. Wit!> 1;,t,.74. .. ~. ..-! • ..,__ •r1Uy till IM ... ,,,, 11641. NW ~Ill V~T't. rtovl9 r1.....,. "'"" A coll !Nnl ,_ .. ,,._ ,_ •1t1erft Hfft YWt I h '1 • .,,, lft14,.. ltf'llHr.---"'~•,!Mo~•1J"'""'''c"~'"~"~'"'~'~:H""~·;-~µ, 1,. """' r wt• ,,__... IL..W•ttr Mm-. ~ -""'"",.. ff .._,_, ,f,.1r111,.. Ille •nr arr '""' !Ill Wuf o.11111111 • S11h, M_,., 'J'hlea tM\Jl104Y 'lrtl low ............. J::io •. m.1,f 'It'll' ~ltll " .. lt:JO '·""· J.7 '~'0"" Flrf! 1e,f ............... I'll '·"'· 0 1 11'tn1 111tll .............. 11:.M 1.i.1, 4.6 kqncl low ............ ''" •·"" '·' Stullf llltft ........ ., 11:• ,,..,. J.J 5''1 Ritts''" I.I'll. lllS 7:41 •·"'· ~ • 111"• 1!11 1.tn. Ith t :lt •.m. "'" l.111 .. ,1,,1 Cl. .... Q , ,, 6fft. ' ""' 20 11111. 11 lr.m onor• ll!lmllll l lr fo !!It ti•11. Ol!t111.m.. ClfY It .... !let 1nd rnu"' owr T11111 OMfti• ,.,. Oki-'*"' ii.,it -ctkl h'Hll Wf l "''"' IPrl"'' l)r1ngll!f -n111tf to l'I0'1llwe11ern Pl\oeftht Olil1flomlo tlld l!M 'Inti P•nh•l'ldlf, Plfttll\lrwh TMrt wet _,.,,. Jl\OWr!' Ind 1f1Ut1- lltrt.l\owlf ee11~n1 oYtt 1i.. ""'"' 11••111 CllY Got1t LAktl -.;Oii Ind 1flt cMMtlt llM l \lolfl et IM Seoiftl"""I, 'fllff't w11 -low claud1 or '" 1lat1t lht PKlllc CHI! CIUlll!f flll mcirnf"t !lo\lri. OW'Mlelll Sows rtnttd f<'OIT\ X 11 fy-ltfl, W'fl,, lo ti 11 l lylh•· Ctlll. 'fl\t ~!lofl'I 1111111 """"""'11 Wll I!) t i Wltllllt flUt. Tt~. S111 L1~1 Ci!y S1n DW• , .. _ ll"NN1 W1Jl'llnttc<I .. • " • u " n-S1 ,., 14 .. " '" •s ·~ " " .. '" .. '" .. • .. '" .. ~ ,. " .. .. " " ~ .. .. ., ·~~----~·......., ~--------~......-.. ............. -~ . .--~-·~·-· .. ~·· _..,,._ ,........ -, .-. ··--""I' • ~ ·------~ . •, .... -.;.~.:.~ .••. ;;.;··;,.121ssi a"' 1 • • • • . _._._ __ .\ . . ~ • Dinis Fear Of 'Oswald' Repeat Told BllOCKTON;Maos. (UPl)-An as!<ICI· ate medical 'examiner today quoted Dist. A'ty. Edntind Dinis as sayirg he wanted to keep the district attorney's office out Of the Sen. Edward M. Kennedy accident case "so it won't become another Lee Harvey Oswald affair." Dr. Do~ld R. Mills, who ezamined Mary Jo Kopichne shortly after she drowned in Kennedy's car, also told the Brockton Enterprise and Times u.st he learned Qnly two days ago that an autopsy had been ordered on Miu Kopechne. Ditlls, who ls seeking a court order fr_om Pen~ylvanla authorities to exhume Miss Kopechne's body, said 1\iesday he ordered an autopsy July 20, the day after the accident an Ch•ppaquiddlck Island, only to find Mills had authorized ita removal for burial. "11te first time I hwd Dinis had ordered an autopsy was this past Tues· day night," Mills told the newspaper. He said his office records showed he never sPoke to Dinis until July !I -a day afler the district attorney 5aid he had ordered the autopsy. Milla said Dinis phoned him July 22 - the riay Miss Kopechne was buried in Larksville, Pa. -and said they "better keep in touch. We're Jetting Jim Arena (Edgartown police chief) handle this case. "I want to keep my office out of this so it won't become another Lee Harvey Oswald affair," Mills quoted Dinis as saying. Dinis' reference was to the slaying or Oswald, who was shot to death in the Dallas police headquarters two days after President John F. Kennedy w a s assassinated In Dtllas in 1963. Alaskan Fires Rage SOLOATNA, Alaska (UPI) -A forest fire raging out o( control has blackened sq,ooo acres and today threa tened the community of Solda tna on Alaska's Kenai Peninsula. Fire fighting crews worked through the night Wednesday to keep the H)·day-old blaze away from this com· munity of 1,800 about 60 miles southwest of Anchorage. ' Cfvfl War Near• -N .· . Ireland Calls British Troops' WAR CLOSER -.Gas.masked policeman fires tear gas at Londenderry rioters as NorthM em Ireland threat of civil war grows. Mom Has Twins, 17 Pounds Wort1i PHILADELPHIA (UP I) The heaviest twins ever born in Philadelphia are thriving at Lankenau Hospital -all 17 pounds, 12 ounce5 of them. Mrs. Carmella Calabrese, 40, of Philadelphia, wife of a V i 11 a n o v il University eng~neering professor, gave birth t-o a rtine-pound, six-ounce girl and an eight-pOund, six-ounce girl on Tuesday without Caesarean section. The twins are lightweights, however, compared with the world record-holders. LONDONDEl\llY, Northern Irelaoo (UPI) -British troops moved Into this riot torn city' today at request of the Northern Ireland government a • Catholic-Protestant street fightln& spiral· ed close to civil war • Shortly before the troopa rolled into tht city in Land. Rover velllclf.S Northe.tn Jreland Premier cJamea Chichester-Clark told an emergency session of Pl~llament in atlfaJt the rlolh:ta was part of a con· &piracy to overthrow him. The Irish J\epubllc set up nve ho!pilals on the .frontier of Northern Ireland to receive the hundreds oC Catholic·wounded who did not wish to be treated by Northern Irelapd hospitatl. Troop11 were 6ent to the border to support them. Chichester.Clark · ,caUed UUs an "un- necessary And irresponsible" action by the Dublin government. British Anny jefpa and ~ Rovers loaded with British Infantry enlefed Waterloo Square In the center of the city at S :t~ p.m. Britain has a total .or 5.000 troops stationed in the six counties that form North!rn Ireland. Home Affairs Minister Robert Porter told the Northern Ireland parliament the troops hP:d been requested by police "in aid of c Iv i J power." Chichester.Clark said earlier he would take all necessary steps to restore law and order. Protestant extremists raced through the streets of Londonder ry and nine other towns and cities waving guns and clubs, :ind Roman Catholics vowed a fight to the fin ish. Smoke billowed from burning buildings. gasoline bombs exploded in carpets of fire around police and clouds of tear gas swept through the barricaded streets. The spark of the Londonderry re~llion spread to nine other towns and cities in Northern Ireland and b r o u g h t repercussions in London, Belfast • and Dublin where the prernler of the lri~h Republic c a 11 e d for a United Nations peace keepipg force. The Irish Republic is predominantly Catholic and the 5ix counties that form Northern · Ireland are predominantly Protestant. The Catholic minority in the north has risen in•rebellion against what il calls persecution and dental of civil rights, PUBLIC NOTICE!! L&J ENTERPRISES, INC. WILL SAVE YOU MONEYI WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE ORANGE C~UNTY'S LARGEST CARPET WAREHOUSE OUR AUDITOR'S SAY: WE MUST REDUCE OUR STOCK INVENTORY BY1 $75,000 DU~ING AUGUST!! WE WILL SAVE YOU 40% TO 70% ON CARPET VALUES UP TO $14.95 *OUR PRICES START AT $2.74 SQ. YD. * NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED! SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY! WE HAYE TERMS AVAILABLE! TO SHOP AT HOME •• JUST 'HO~I 549-3349 • ROLLS IN STOCK t 24 HOUR INSTAUATION t"h I LOCATID IN Tiii CINTll 0,:~l' ~ Of PRllWAYS l_!-- 1 ~~~· =l~~~b~:~-~-;··:ii,;.O~NI ILOCK EN SOUTM Of WAlNll lERPRISES INC . 2406 S. MAIN SANTA ANA OllEN1 Mond1y, Tftur1d1y & Friday t a.m. to 1:30 p.m. • Tu11d1y, W1dn11d1y, SaturHy t 1.m. to 5 P·"'· •Sunday Noon t• S -·-··-. . 'Good Thin.fl' Congress Quits, Red China Disperses Industry QUEENIE ' By Pllll lnterlcmclf ' . Oil· Quotas Attacked With Little Done WASHINGTON (AP) 111ppl!er, 'dlf...ubl• b) -•llnl ,Despile &tronl preasun from ••Jndffd, by limiting ·bn· luter UIO of our dom..ilc ... ' r WASHINGTON (AP) Congress l9 on vacaUon with Jittle on the lawbooka to lihow fot el~t months In session - and Senate leaders of both parties HY It's a good thing. "We haven't been posing legislation in quantity n we have in the past .five or .~ years, which I Unk la a 1ood thing," said Democr a t ic Leader Mike Mansfield of LONDON (UPI) -Com· mun1st China has be g u n dispersing nuclear and other vital Industries as a safeguard against a possible war with the Soviet Union, diplomatic reports from the Far East said today. the oil I n d us 1 r y , ~ . ....:.JlOI_~_ .. ,;.' .... ~ .... ~ .... _..,_"' __ be_..ir_. _w_:~· _h<_ald....._ ____ _ government's anUtr:ust chief has recoiiimended the elbnlDa-1111~:... lion of importation quotas on fore,ign crude oil. In dolng so, Asst. Atty. Gen. Richard W. McLaren placed .. ' • Montana. "We've been paying more attention to quality." China's key nuclear pl.ant research Institutes and testing grounds and her r o c k e t assembly lines are heavily concentrated in S i n k I a n g province, whk:h would be oangetou.'!ly e.1posed to air and mis!ile attack in the event of war with the Soviets. ... the J usUce Department on recont against two oth~ Cabinet.Jevel agencies on a subject that a Senate sub- committee has said could mean $4 billion Jn annual Uv-t Six Finish Gulf Stream Experiment WASHINGTON (AP) -Six men completed tod ay a 31-<:lay exploration of the G u I f Stream, during which they drifted under the ocean's i;urfa«: in the submersible vessel Ben Franidi n. Ending th eir month under the sea, they surfaced at 7:~ a.m. 440 miles southeast of Porlland, Maine, or 300 miles south southeast of Halifax, N.S. The c r e w Immediately boarded a Coast Guard cuUer, the Cook Jnlet, for Portland. The ship is due to arrive Fri- day about 3 p.m. First member of the crew to leave the sub was Chester May, a resea rcher for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration. He w a s followed by Kenneth Haigh, an acoustical expert for the British Navy. DAY DARK IN OREGON EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) The state of Oregon Wed- nesday night ordered virtually all field burning halted for a week In five Willamette Valley counties after some conditions brought darkness at noon here earlier in the· week. Conditions got so bad here Tuesday lhat visi.billly was reduced lo three b 1 o ck s , motorists drove with their headlights on, and dodors ad- vised some lung patients to leave town. I i ""--.Uf'~lC£ T1fE llEW 'l'llDCRIPTIOll" P£RllAMENT &pre.wly aultd just rar yoa, La Maur'a .. hrsonalized'" Pcrmaocnt Wavc-CAPRlCE-oIT~rs lovely. deei>bodicd \ustrom 'fnl'tl with DCW' t.li~ depth aad obedience.. And ••• oo.ly CAPRICE giva JOUT pen»- 1'tflt &O e.l;CilinJ OCW dimm.oiioo--eoft to the eye. resllient. yet firm and • lon1-lmn1. La Maur's cAPRJCE .•• tho WWI thal's iodi.vidual.11 )'0Unl 1 .... $22.11 s1o's HOUSE of ESTRADA BEAUTY SAlON-"- 17430 Beoch Bl vd. lhocll.tSleMtl Huntington leach o,.. '"' •••• Tll•n. 847·9164 l•1utici1ns on Duty : Shirl•y, L1rry end 01n Boyle "We haven't harmed the country one bit," 1 a i d Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of !Uioo~. Dirksen said a legislature w h i c h doesn't clutter the lawbook! with too much legislation can help a country. Congress so far ls meeUng that test: As of Aug. t, only 49 general bills had become law, most of them relatively minor. · None of the 13 major apropriations .bills to finance the government for the year which began July 1 has yet been enacted. Dirksen said that, too, can be helpful. He said the fact that government agencies are operating under a continuing resolution, which p e r m i t s spending at the rate Congress set a year ago, tends to hold down federal ouUays and thus save money. But the new appropriations must be passed before the current session ends, which means a heecic autumn and early winter. The latest border clashes have occurred in the Sinkiang area: The reports said t h e dispersal ordered by the Com· ings to consumers. • fl.1cLaren told a C11.blnet last force on oil import control& Wednesday that the present system of quotas is an-1 ,,,...- munlst Chinese authorities af-"I think some people are ma.de vice-president& before feels entire plants. It also in-they're ready to become vice-president&." UcompetiUve, unfair to con- sumen and unnecessary to the economy and naUonal security. volved setting up alternative--------------------installaUons in less exposed and Jess known areas of the country. He suggested that i! 'ny bn- port restraints ue1 necessary a low protective tariff would To what extent the crucial nuclear installations of Sin· kiang province effectively can be moved is not known. Experts doubt whether ef- fective large scale evacuation is possible, aJthough some dispersal is considered feas-ible. The reports said Sino-Soviet tension is reflected in growing preparations for emergency, although the possibility of war still is coiuidered unlikely at present. Funeral Rites Held For Starlet, Friend be preferable. Even so, McLaren made It clear that he prefers a system whereby the doinertlc oil market is governed solely by competitive consideraUons, ln- cluding the entrance of foreign LOS ANGELES (AP) -wife Jn the morning, then join-proclucll. lnternalional movie stars and eel actors Steve McQueen and He also denounced tongstan-x jet setters have said their last Paul Newman at Sebring's ding industry arguments that goodbyes to beautiful blonde afternoon flllleral. quotas are needed to preserve actress Sharon Tate and in-Miss Tate, 26, and Sebrlng, the nation's reserves and to t e r n a t i o n a I I y k n o w n 35. her former boyfriend, were prevent foreign companies hairdresser Jay Sebring, killed killed with coffee heiress from controlling the country's with three others in a mass A b i g a i I F o I g e r , z 6 , oil supplies. murder. scree nwr iter Voityck Instead of reducing U.S. "Goody, Sharon, and may Frokowsky, 37, and Steven reserves, McLaren declared, ., the angels welcome you to Parent, 18, a friend of a an unrestricted. importaUon ~~~ heaven and the martyrs guide caretaker at Miss Tate's policy would allow the naUon .'1! Dirksen noted, for example, that the massive defense ap- propriations bill p rob a b I y won't arrive in the Senate before November. House Notes Tax Reform Loopholes your way." en toned the Rev. rented mansion in swanky Bel to draw from foreign sources Peter O'Reilly al the funeral ~Ai~'r~.:...::::::::::::::::::..:.-=::::_:...::_.cwhi~·1~e_!pre~serv~ln~g_!1ta~d~ome~st~l~c~~=~~~~==~:__:::'.;~~:::~:;:~~~ service Wednesday for Miss 1· The tax reform bill already passed by the House Is due on the floor before Nov. 1. Ex-veep's Kin Given Jail Term KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -A grandson of the late Vi«: President Alben Barkley has been sentenced to 20 years in jail for air piracy and kid- naping in the hijacking or a light plane to Cuba. "I feel sympathetic .•. but you did do an inexcusable act," Judge William Mehrtens told Wi(Jiam Alben Truitt, 35, \Vednesday. The air piracy charge car- ried a possible death penalty, but the federal jury of JO women and two men that found Truitt guilty specified that its verdict was "without capital punishment." WASHINGTON (AP) -The House left some c r u c i a I loopholes 1n its provisions to plug tax loopholes for the very rich, according to a Treasury expert. The trouble is in a seclion ol the tax reform bill ai med at insuring that no wealthy lax payer may completely escape federal income taxes. The bill a! drawn by the Ways and Means Committee and passed by the House la st week plugged most of the escape hatches but left open a couple through which many of the wealthy could scurry, tbe Treasury expert said. For years, Congress has granted certain t a x ex- emptions in one area or another -such as mineral depletion allowanc es, charitable contributions, farm losses, interest from municipal and state bonds. Tate. Peter Sellers, Yul BryMer and Warren Beatty flew from L-Ondon to attend the funeral along with Hollywood actors Kirk Douglas, James Coburn and Stuart Whitman. Roman Polanski, M i s s Tate's film-direc~or husband , attended Uie service for his * * * Police Tell Killer Oues LOS ANGELES CAP) -A "very, very sloppy look"ing" man armed with a high· pawered rifle was sought by police today for questioning in the fatal shooting or the father of the singing Lennon Sisters. Investigatort refused to disclose the man's name. They described him as 40 years old, Caucasian, 6-fool-2. 210 pounds, with brown, unkempt hair. He is reportedly armed with a .SO-caliber ri!le, police said. A picture of the man has been circulated to police agencies, investigators said. CALoRIC's NEW SEl.F-Cl.EANING OJEN IS HERE! SELF-CLEANING OVEN AND BROILER! .. from CALORIC Spattering spararlbs, drib. bling pies, drooling cassarcl. es, bursting potatoes. You knew wtrat a gunky mess they can make cf your even. But there's hcpe. Naw calorlc gas ovens that de-.gunk them. 1elve1 automatlcolly • Ccists Less Than 3¢ A Cleaning MODERNIZE YOUR KITCHEN NOW Prices Start as Low as $299.95 Sl11ee 411 EAST 17th STRm . COSTA MESA DAILY f.f, SAT. f.6 Tolophono 646. 1614 I Here is bow: Savings account dividend for 1 year on $500.00 =•zs~ Free safe deposit box for as long as you maintain $500.00 savings account = •ii!! (approxlmata JHrlJ COit IO rant boX at bank) PLUS: Free service charge on $750.00 of American Express travelers cheques OR = •7!! Service charge free on purchase of up to 10 tickets to the Forum, Dodger Stadium or other sporting and theater events through TRS (TICKETRON) Total benefits on your $500.00 savings account =•39!! Stop by and see us to open your • account. If you have any questions please call 541>-4.066. We are open 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru Friday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday. ... • ' . avings,. .. _AND LOAN ASSOCIATION-· SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA ' MAIN OFl'ICI: l401 WHITTllll IOULIVAllD •LOI ANGILU, CAUFOllNIA - ' • • DAILY PILOT EDITOIUAL PAGE Boy_d's 'Bomf ogging' . fll the &UJ111111r ol !IHI, Hubert Humph~. stood b6' fore t11e° Democratlc Convention and aave a fiery 1peecb on d.U r11hu. Tbe fnsbman Sonlll<>r from l4lnnesola had a great deal to say, and bt said It with 111111 Omolloliil fervor. At one point, he brought the ilelegates roerlni to tbeir feet by declarin& for all the world to bear: "I believe in t h e brotherhood of man under t b e. fatherhood ol God!"· ThUJ, the term "boml•i" entered the poliUcal lellcoo. Coined by a veteran newsman coverin1 tbat con- ventlon, It ls an acronym, comprt::r, most of the firsl letter• of 1fbrotherbood ol man er the fatherhood of God." Bomfogglnf, by definition, is the voicing of mean- in&Jess -but crowd·pleasing -poUUcal blather. We have it on the local level, too. ' 1 There was mucb of It, for inltonce, during Laguna Beach City Council debate over tbe newly adopted '3.4 Jllillloa munlclpel budaet. The clllef, in fact the ooly, bomfogaer, was Coun- cilman Charllotl P. Boyd. He was also the only council· man lo vote againlt the budget. · Here are a few of the observations, each of which received a big hand from some 50 citizens who turned out to wltneu the1inal painful ·budget deliberations. -"I'm cr!Ucal of the total budget, but not so much of the Individual Uems ," -"I don't want to be a renegade to good fellowship behind !he counter here, but a line-by·line, ltem·by·ltem review of this budget has not been taken by this coun· a•• Cu. - -"Jn all honesty, l don't feel we have yet done the job." . crease. down to 26 cents. Accorclin&Jy, th~ new municlpa1 levy wUI be ebout Jl.91. That means the averaae h0t+.wner will be pay· ing about SJJ more In city tax .. tlilJ new fiscal year. The majortty of councilmen weren't happy about having to approve the buds•~ essenUally as subl!lit· ted. But they were given no ·practlcal alternaUve -in 47 days of study -by anybody. And unlike Charlton P. Boyd, they were compelled to racognJze Iha! the whole is the sum of II• parts : the budget could not he reduced without culling individual Items. More slgni~canUy, the .majority of the 0.uncll did not play the gallery, They did their Job -without any bomfoaging. A Peaceful Revolution ''I want to be a •revoluUonary." The boy who 18l<>k•, a Ill-year-old Mexican-Amert· can, was one of 14 Los' Angeles minority youths who spent a few days wlth Laguna Beach tee1M1gers in a YMCA-sponsored cultural exchange, And they were all revolutionaries, of a dillerent sort. They were trying something new. They were talk· ing. It ls a peaceful revolution. For two days and a night, the boys and girls ate, played, and chatted ID· gether. • -"I'll go for a 14-cent tax increase, but certainly not for a 28-cent increase." He was then unable to come up with any proposal to trim the budget significantly, A few thousand dol· lars were eventually lopped from the spending pro- gram, but only enough to hold the anUcipated tax in· "Before the exchange," one local teen-ager com- mented, "I said·. I wasn't against the ·blacks. But 'how could I say that wit.bout really knowing them? Now I know them." The teens learned from each other. That was the purpose of the youth exchange. Th.is weekend the Laguna youths will go to Watts to complete the exchange. The youngsters are leading ·Good grief. Samson! Just because we've trimmed you a bit over the yea1'11'i' Sex Education Calls for Rare Wisdom lkl9'1 a brilll IJUle ll)'llofism for you: ~ II tbe talk of the ochools; kt ii a thlna calJed "aez education''; -.,,.., -educalloo Jg tbe task of the -IUI Ibis uerclle In logic 11 both __., and aubatanUvely !lilt. -1,11 "'1'1111 He• 1n tbe Jbiddle tenn, "1e1 _ .. F9< educaU., abolt.., ls rar!diUerent than edUCJtinl in acadeinic iul>)ects, Biology can be "taucbt" like other mnes: Ml canoot be. For human au, unme the nil ol the animal world, hu ID added dimension of personality. Its ...,motogical, moral, cultural and social owrtones make it an exceedingly aubUe, anpla and 111bjective area ol lnqulry. ' THE QIJl!lmON quivering many scboo1 boudl lbele day" "Should sex be taught in ICbool « at home'?" ls an unanswerable one, for the simple fad tha$ nobody know•, or can agree on, bow It .lhould be taught, and there are no ob- jective aaadardl for teaching it fairly, hoee:IUJ, and to the satisfaction of the --1 C<lllU!lWlily. Jt .ii QOt the. physical fac ts about sex thal children need most to learn -these are easily taqht -but the connotationl d iexual activity. And &hese connolations cut acroN the whole spectrum of West.em btliefJ, religiously, legally, ethlcllly, and psychlcally. NOT ONE TEACllEll in 1 hundred Is al present equipped to "i..cb ..... Ill a Dear Gloomy GU$: • I'm told Mayor Vedder boles down the beacf1ioen below hJs Cracent Bay home wbeoever Uwy lnfrlnp on his propeliy. Lquna Beach boopllallly? -R.C. ' ' ftll ~ ...-.. .....,... .......... .-.r11J IMM et ""' www : 1r1r. leiMI ,_ "' -•• ....., ... •ttr Ptilt. meanin&flli manner tbal woWd truly edUclte the slljdenll 1,ulll alla!J>lhelr, parent. at the same Umt: But ft la an equal falllcy to Jmqine that most parents are capable of giving their own children ihy effective sexual tn.slruction. For all our obsession with the subject, we are immensely confused, ignorant. ambivalent, and repressed about se:1 in the United Slates. Moreover, even ii we had a more rational grasp of the matter than we do, conditions are changing iO rapidly, and standards and attitudes are shifting so basically, that little can be taught with anx finality or authority beyond mere moral strictures. FOR MOST SUBJE!:TS, all the teacher needs is "knowledge,'" and the minimal ability to transmlt It. For sex education, we need wisdom, which is a much rarer intellectual commodity, in short supply botb in and out of the school system. We also require deep empathy with young people, which , too. ftw teachers and parenla are able to provide in depth. ldeall,yj parents should teach sex to their chi dren; theOretieally, the .schools should recruit and train teachers who could'2o the job; but neither of these con-\ ditions exists today, and whichever couriie the llChool boards opt for will shortchange the kids. the way. Will the adults follow? (LI Readers Express Views on VCI Action Pros, Cons of Krisman Appointment To the Editor: We have found the Lquna Hills Kiwanis Club's attack on Mr. MJchael Krisman'• 1ppobttment u Coordinator of Academic Advising al UC, Irvine not ooly offensive,. but also ludicrous. The KJwa- nians are hunting witd'lts where there are none and calling names where none ·apply. In this country there ls no guilt by association. nor is there deprivation or punilbment without a hearing. If Michael Krisman ls to be condemned for meeUng Fidel Cutro and going to Cuba, then we must aibdemn Richard Nixon for spen- ding 1hree hours with Castro and for visiting Communist Rumania hut month. If Mr. Krisman Is to be condemned for being associated with SOS. then Sl.lrt.ly Justice Hugo Black and Harry S. Thaman m1Ut be condemned for their mem- bership in the Ku Kluz Klan. OUR GRAVEST concern i1 t h e con- demnation of Mr. Krisman by a group which has not had enough respect for democratic principles to grant him a bearing or all ow him to express his views. Had they but given him an op- portunity to speak. they would know as we and others who are acquainted with him know that he is not a danger to the university or the country, but rather is a spake1111an !or the uncorrupted principles on which U\lJ country wa! founded. Those who usau1t without facts, con· demn without hearing and penalli:e without justification reprtsent a fester- ing cancer in our society and must not be allowed to determine the future of as important an institution as the univer- sity. SAM AND SUZIE COHEN 'Anarelalstlc Force' To The Edilor : f LetU!rs from Teaders are welcome. Normally writers should convey their nussages in 300 word.I or less. The right to candf-Me letters to fit ipact or eliminate libel i.t ruenitd. AU let- ters mu.st includt signature and mail· ing addre1s, but names may be with- hef.cl on request if Wfficient reason is apparent. tion.! of authorlly? Are we helpless before this anarchl1Uc force?! PAUL WESTBROOK His Teacher Approve• To The Editor: Public concern over the: appointment of Mr. MI k e Krisman as Coordinator of Academic Advising at UCI is Ull-' dentandable, given his association with both a,n unpopular organization (SOS) and an unpopular cause (the Cuban RevoluUon). I would suggest, however, that Mt': Krisman's political vjewa and activities ·have absolutely no bearing on his ability to JerVe Irvine students In the area of academic adviJing. · AS THE FORMER Coordinator of Academic Advjsing at UCI, 1nd aa Mr. Krisma!l's teacher in Jeveral courses. t strongly endorse Chancellor Aldrich's de c is Ion to hire him. t respect Mr. Krisman'• intelligence and admire his commitment to the welfart of students at Irvine. Both qualities will serve him well in bis new position. SPENCER C, OLIN, JR. Associate Profe590r of History UC, Irvine the beach a m..ile. The problems have to do with the net<! for anyone to ha ve to put up a fence in the flrst place, even a low thatched one placed by our beach crew to indicate a small area of control. (One of these "fences" is all of four feet long.) In the situation with our Vacation Village resort, aside from the more serlou1 problems on the beach, which have included rape and assault, the local beach kids "blew it" when they refused year alter year to police thelr mess (creaUng a new tin can beach dally), clean up their gross language, refrain from obscene wall decorating, and physically taking over a private beach for their athletic , cootest.s. (which injured guests and dropped volleyballs in the mlddJe ol the Inn dining terrace, scatter- ing glassware and patrons). En route to and frun our so-called private beach and the Taco Bell their flight pattern and property abuses wu destroying much of the value of our property for our guesLs who finally said "either COl'Kl'OI this non· sense or we won't come back." ' TlllS ISN'T particularly easy when your property becomes the: "IN" beach and home for a hundred or so youth! plUs assorted vagrants (on one trip or another). We fully appreciate why the fonner owners (fl3.Rl ALL) chained their beach. It is one thing to share your pools and beach, umbrellas and ice, with nice neighbors and friends, and another to control this problem. It is also abso- lutely essential to define 1hat part of your property which you intend to pro- tect if the police are to assist. could result In the state reclaiming this strip of beach. The many problems on the beach which required the study then are much worse today, as any oceanfront resident will testify. Or the police. In the language of today, it Is too often a very bad scene. LOREN HANELINE 'Presumably' To the Editor: In regard 00 your editorial about beach fencing, in ·Thursday's paper, I mu1t in· form you that facts , not someone's per. sonitl ideas· is what the public wants in a newspaper. The editorial itseU wes the word presumably, quote • • t h a t presumably, is why Vacation Village put up its beach barricade." I feel that yo~ shoQ!d fir;icl out the facts about any item printed in your paper before trying t.o hoodwink people with your thoughts. YOUR ARTICLE says the reason ls that the owner of a single family realdence would have no need to fence his beach. It Is 'plain that the writer never looked at the beach. If he had he would have seen a fence on both sides of the Vacation Vlllaie property. The fence to the aouth has betn there ror month5 and the one to the north has been there for some time. Why aingle out only our fence. THEN THE WRITER realius the $3 million beach land. purchase was not for ll}e benefit of those who disrtgard the r1ghta of others and play ball in crowd! of Foremost Frustration Re. Krisman at UCI : In reading the news &t.orles on Chancellor Aldrich ·s ap- t polntment of Krisman. I noticed several glaring unanswered questions. Listen First So now, after an absence of seven years, the chains are back and a few palm fronds about which you make ao much of a fuss. And the implications of "palm fronds marching down to the sea" are NOT as editorialized at all. The moral of the story is that if you expect to remain as a guest on someone's property you had better damned well behave yourself. • sun balbera and children, when he realizes tbe cost of cleaning the trash thrown by people who could not care Jess, when he sees the non-taxpayers and the people who don't even pay for trash col· lection downtown, using the main beach for a toilet then maybe be will realize that his tax money is beiog spent not only for h1' pleasurt but to provide a ?lace for free love to be carried out and for some to make vulgar remarks and tu expose themselves in the nude to his children and friends. John W. Gardnu, fonner Cabinet member and an urban expert, wants to ''revttallze" rural areas, crtate new cities and overhaul ezisting cities a1 na- tional policy. It ts a rather Jarae order, requiring 1n energy output al>oul a hundredfold that of reoching the moon. but 11 toodles dlroctly on the fOl'9MOlt fl"l15ll'l.Uon ol the American ~ tod<Y -inability to find a rational rMd to the dlstribu.Uon of their mounting popula.Uoa, and the resulting tedmlcal and moral decay of their com- munity Ill•. So far as concerns "new cities," we have betn buUdln& them all Utis century, ud a\ a breakneCk pact since the war. Take a cw: JD miles north of San Fran- dlco, there WU in IMO a crouroad on Hlgflway 101 called Novato. Populalioo al>out J,000,. TODAY IT Ill A small but sprawling ''c:ommuUnC0 dty of about 35,000. rt Jacb the tradllloft of most cmnpmhle ~ties In the United Slates. and II bu IO counterpartl clusttrtd about motiCj>Olltan contm In Cal~omla, It OC· 'mn in lt.11 crowded states, too. New fn- dult.tits bued on technological develop- l'.Dflrt concu.I popullllon.s. and big cltle11 tMd popullUoo. HWlger for freedom and .,.ce npud the aatelUtes. and the -doeatheml. ln a different fonn It II like the ,.,rd> flt Ir-and 1pac1 In !he -a•eueot ol the tut century. It bu the ..,. deln•lon u ·~Go westward, young _,It r.r -·of -•tellite populaticllls -all)ldlNIJ plarmtd, EllallOUI econo- ....... --be(Ol lhem, and nm11 m a• !Cotteo. tn.uud of f-lllere Is olilural decline. a1-c1 ~ .. "'l,~ ••. l~ ...:..ru: .... .. • deodl7 anacood• Into aad l. "Although faculty is supposed to han- 11.'Ji~~'"".~-:-;.. die 111 advising of students, Krisman will I, .,., advise 38 or 40 of them ." Question : Will , he advise them to join the SDS and to take part In the campu~ militancy? Thirty or 40 well-trained activists can do much havoc! thrual> the big clUes. 2, Aldrich praises Krisman for his "honesty In his comm.ltment." Question : Was Ctatro honest In his commitment. to IT IS TB.f: WORST or cllches to note become Communist dictator of Cuba? that th1a redistrt>uUoa has impoverished 3. Krisman praises Aldrich : "Aldrich the big cities. materially and spiritually, \Va~ not dishonest with the students." leaving .them often unfit for civilized Question: Is not honesty a basic quality habitation. required for chancellorship and not one Nobody Jn the new cities or in the old is to be singled out and admired as some cootent with this phenomenon. but to a unique atUtude? man all take part 1n It aod agravate it. l. KRISMAN SAYS, "The SOS is a very Where will we look ror aUeviaOon of honest (that word again) body and these such ruinous development, letakine a ra-people; wlU not be able to de~roy it.·• tiona.l reversal of it? To our public men? . , Que~on: does Chancellor Aldrich want Why, they are as bewlfdered and delud«i his 111ndestructable" organization as any of us, and as bewitched by Ute.-. dedicated to violence and government private prtjudlees aM wants. · ~ ov~ro".', to have Its own flflh~l~n The national capital is filled with mar-advisor 1n .a place of authority tn this ble inhabited by public men and by university supported by loy1l American private milery ind anthill c1esi>Uauoo tn LaJpayers? Do the citizens of CaWomia the ghetto ind out. Tht Congrea can wlnt ll't How can Ame:ieans st.op this~· blather its way to a plan for its fief, and flltraUon or activist mtlllants, into poll· To the Editor: Before more aervlce clubs rush to criticize the UCI appointment of Mike Krisman, they might Invite hlm to speak before their m e m b er sh i p . I've participated in a panel discussion with P.1ike and found him to b6 an articulate, extremely intereslina young man. I think it's only fair to liJten to him, question him and then make 1 j1idgment. To me, that 's the American way of doing things. Service club program chainnen can reach Mike by calling 83.1-5137 JIM WOOD Beacla Kio Blew ft To the Editor: Your editorial "Beach Fen c I n g Problem," misses the REAL problem of Quotes Loo II. Ntn11. es 0..,.. tu offlctal, new l~al•l1ttve akl of Cllff. Farm lareau Fed.-"Anyone who looks at what has the bureaus can wreck it with help from oongressionll committees. TOM WICX~ll In lh< New Yorlt Tlmta ttlll of aatbortutlon for a Walhlreton 11111n1. '!be bureaus j>roceeded to Cl10(> up Ille conoepc, and hamslrllli II with a Potomlc bridae whkb wooldbnlY flirtlier tont..i the city center, Som• f(-ct<y congrtssm11n. chalnnan ol a sub- commJttet, holds up tn Sll.7 million ap. proprialion ror ' st.art until he can cet tbe brldp, •" ,,_,,,_ ----. happened In California -wilh un-~--• v~• ~ pr.ced<nt<d l"'wlh in pupils -mug! You needn'l look to federal obotnlctlon and lntrtla alone. Every ,,.ion bas obelnl<lionlJll., punuJnr pettflnttmll, unawart cl, and often hoaUle to, the needs of tlle -ta a Ille """' and •blch Mt. Gantner poses. • Dear Georp: J have read several ezplanatlOM of your Sidewaya T 1:i Ink in I philosoPhY and I'm w o r r I e d because t ,un 11oa1 understand IL Can't you htlp met · CONCERNED Dear C<inc:tm«I : You're premature In your wor- ryln(. Write bacl< when JOU start to undtntand Sideways Thinking - then you'll have something to wof. ry abooL ... rtally be amazed tl the way the people have responded to the state's ed1.K:ational needs." Bmnltr A-. ~ Soooma. State Collep llodul, • ca-rl ..... "Thls horrible and barbarous m,_RI ha got to pus or the whola cooqlr}' wtl1 .. ta hell in • l>ancl butet." Victor Gntta, foudt.r of foaltdatloa for e:nvlronmenl.a.I pl1n1lq: la LA.-"Our aim is to brlna m&n from the Railroad Age, the. Automobile A(t. tlM! Jot A&e. the Spact A&• lllto the 11\iman Ai'-" IF THE DAILY PILOT is in fa'Vor of establishing "People 's Parks" on private property (your "mini beaches") your paper may become very popular with a certain element, but the hundreds of owners of expenalve oceanfront property whooe taxes pey f.., such tblnp u a M aJn Beach park will hanfly jolll In 'Ille applause. A few years ago the ~ty studied metM of cootrolling 1U betch aeceaa in mter to enhance the value of o,.ir beaches f~ city residents and paying visitors, 'l1hia ls the practice of some other resort areas, notably on the East Coast. wher.e results have benefltted the whole C'OP'lmun!ty, physically and economically. THE MAl'l'ER waa dro)lped by the council only alter it was determined that the tJdellnd.1 abuttJng the private ownerships had been aranted the city by the stat• and that restricting their ""' Billion 'J'eaaie, Aris., New1: "As income 111 ••• occ'!l'\es our d11l,y thou&J>ll, oo do the coltl of I Ovtrnn'\tnt lel'\'ices these taus pa,y for ' It 11 an Wlbelievably high price, for currenl\Y the fedOral peyroll hits or eueecll a billion and a hall dollors • month. Even _.. w1'o 'think bl&' 111dom think just how BtG-1-bllllon Is. He~'• an !du o( tta llze •.• Oirtstopher Columbus salltd fn>m Patoo. Spain, 477 y .. n qo Jul A .... J, Jiit. 11 be had llarlod a busineN lllre Ille day ho dl1COV•r.d this continent , , • and be and hl1 IUC'CtlSOrs had lost St,000 every day since &hat time ••. they would hav1 to opttatt until the year 4232 ... 1,263 years from now •• , to pUe up their FIRST billion in loutl ! " • • THE OWNER OF property still has rights, although some don 't 1eem to realise that. It's about time the people of Laguna take ll stand and protect their property. Your paper could help make the beach a clean place for all but not by printing articles like the one Thursday. When people's rights are respected and the beaches are kept clean there will be no need for fenca, and I assume they will be gone. Until then, let's print both sides of the picture and stop using words like presumably In yotir pa.per. Facts are news; your personal thoughts do not in- terest me al all. ROBERT OBERHOLTZER --W- Thursday, August 14, 1969 . TM editorial pao• 01 tht Daily Pilot tllltlts to tnform atid tCim- ulo-tc rcadtrt bv prcstn.tma thit ntwspaptr't opinions and com- mefltary on Copfet of fntcres1 and signl/ican.cc, bv proWU11g a forum for U.. UJ>r•uloft of our readers' opfnf:'r1a ll'l'ld b11 prtsentbtg · tltt di c view- points of fn/Of'TMd obstrwrt and tpoketmcll on topfet of th1 dag. Rebert N. Weed, Publisher . ' • • • . • Sadtllehae~ -. ~ voe. 62, NO. 194, 3 SECTIOrllS, 32 PAGES' " Armstrong Fights Tears AfTrihute LOS ANGELES (UPI) - N e 11 Armstrong choked back tears a! he groped for words to tell America how the ApOllo 11 astronauts _feel about their country and the honrr it has given them. The first m~ to set foot on the moon l}eld a glittering array of lhe nation's SOCIAL SIDE PHOTOS, LOCAL COUPLES: PAGE 13 •. f high and mlgbty spellbound as he spoke or seeing a scribbled sign among the masses in New York at the outset of a day of coast.-lo<oa.st acclaim. "Through you we touthcd (.he moon," il re~d. ' 'EDITION • • , ' • ' " . ._. DAlt.Y l'lt.DT..,... W ltldllrll ~ Annstrong looked around the room, at his fellow astronauls, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., and hlichael Callins, at President Ni1:on, at the .great figures in the au· dienCe and, througb television, at the peo· pie of th~ United Slates. THE TOAST OP THE NATION : APOLLO 11 ASTRONAUTS RECEIVE PRESIDENTIAL TOAST DURING.!JLITTERIN.Ci" jTATE DINNER IN THEIR HONOR "~gb f()U .we touched the moon," 'he said. -''It wu our privilege loday to cro8s Ult: country to touch America." Judge Bans Sa1i Clemente Guards Strike Touch ·America' the moon men· did as they ·<Mmehow survived the bigge.!lt ,Ucktrtape parade-'in·Manhaltan;·ient-two million in_Qlicago into shouting jubilation ·a~cf then· QW to ~ Paci!iC for a •stat~. S,g~~te's a~JJifiguards,~"vc llinner Wldnesday night •tl!at was hailed been'.on!ered ta stay on·1be m pending a as the most ·exuberant ba!h ii:ioce Andrew S . Court-. ,. .. :...-.... J:L ,. . JacboD'a.cJan tore~p Ule Whife~wse. -..--~pet~~ ,._ring...-,..,,. w.ieir "'Pi Nlron revealed they will start shortly dispute With the city .• on a tour around the world. It is expected Judge Robert Corfman granted a tem- to begin in mid-September and tenatlive porary reslrailling order Wednesday plam cal: Cor 49 days abroad. following the filing of a coinplaint by the Today lhe 85tronauts flew to Houston city which also as~ for ~000 in for a few days with their wives and damages lrom the 32 lifeguards listed as familfes before another super-spectacular derendants. . . In the Astrodome Saturday night. . ffe set Aug. 26 for a hearing mto a _ . . dispute which has threateptd to leave the . Members of the soptuslicated foreign Soulh Coast community without bather diplomatic corps were scu_rrying aro~nd protection on the 18.6 miles of shoreline for astronaut autographs hke schoolgirls covered by its lifeguards. at the Century Plata banquet where . Court action was taken by. the city Jn Hollywood stars rubbed shoulders with the conviction that the lifeguards were l!upn;me ~ourt justi~es and H governors about to walk oU their jobs In a bid to rose IL un1SOD ~be i_nlrod~ced. . force the· city to grant pay raises refused Nixon, beaming with ~de raised the by city .cou~I last week. ·- Peace March • Ill Trouble President Relaxing· ' > Picket.s Head for Clemente., But Nowliere to Rally,-. ' • 1 • At Clemente . . The P~ Action Council is in trouble. It has no place, to put jts den)Onslrator1 ·lb Sin.~10m,n1e tl¥J'n!:w" . · '!'be latest rebuff nqtv ~'.PAC ·ls refusal of San Clem art of· Ocia\s to' allOW use of the gro'unds a1 .. •a rall)'l111 point for parlicipan1' In SUnday's planned anti-war prot.esl The park is near President Nb:on's summer White House. f1cl8.J, was among peUUonefi asking the .PAC representaUves today aooaht to c:ourl .lo l'l<JUln tbe !tale dl"""1<: of .'.:J · .!w . • ·~~=r~;· ;i.· ,par~-~1 .• M·~· """ CLEMElftB 'Uri) ~ l'rtolcl<nt ·~ riOl' , 'llio>~ I~ , ~ . Nixon; intel.itly jn.i ·of U.t'°llo 11 Sunllinr ~j ~·•n C)'lln18'"~ ~ . . · l ... .! will"Wu.UlfoCuori Fil<tiy'iii'\;",J;;".t ThOotherstdeilf~.SllOro ' •-uta f°"'provii)1 •...,I ta"° deporlure '""" CUalomary 1 ... and .... the ...._ WliltO """'-• , lon(er the ltli11~~ -baa to the tion proceedingl. Nime<l In the wrif ci! mandate ta Jame. Weslml White House loctay planning Robert Bland, Laguna Beach PAC of. Whllehe.ld, !Ute dlatrtct I 111perln-nt moo!Jy lo relax after a big nJiht of parka and recreatloo.. ~ ., .nie.cbJef e1.ecutive planned to take It Lodge Hints Red Assaults May Halt GI Withdrawals A shOw cause order his been s1gned"by euy as the end of a busy w'etk drew Judge Robert L. Cof!rn!"1• shorten!ng the near. His sol~ appointment was a 8:30 time ,of llUgatlon. , • •· . am. meeting with the national security A Hearing will be.~ at 9:~ a.m. Fri· . council. dB)'. Iii Superior Coutt T 1 bt th Pr 1 d Park Supt. Wh1leheid ••told us we · o:i g e es dent an Mrs: Nixon cocildli't "" tht 1"rlc,>"' we're taklDg host a party for the traveling White him to court," said Blaod this mom4n8;.' House _press corp&, inlrodu~rng them to Last week, the PAC wa1 rduaed 'uie.of the White House by the Pacific. 1 ·Capistrano Unified School 'Dlltrtct Nixon continued ~ 'k.~p ~et his school lfO!llld• 81 a ataginc area. The cho)ce of the asaociate .suireme coort san;ciement.e .cur council followed bY Justl~e to , repl~ce{ ~be ,Yortas, who refusln( the· gr.clp la )•mil~ lo~-resigned May•l5. ' • eventually to peace. 1. \ to~st to ~trong, Aldrin and Collins. Lifeguard LL Steve H. Chorak, iden-- 1 say stmply to the three astronaut.! tified in the city complaint aa the prin-- we thank-~ for ~ couraxe, we thank cipal defendant, has asked the city to PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge told the Vietnam · peace conference today the_ renewed. Communist offefl!ive in South Vietnam has wrecked another hope for peace and hiilted it may halt the withdrawal of more American troops. "We It.Ill hope this can-happen, but we an deeply concerned with the indk:atfons I have described~whicb polnt to ,the in- tens.lficaUon of the war by your side." down J!l•Camlno )load, the tOWn 1 miln I'nalden~al Press Secretary Ronald x;. road. Zi<gler said Wedneacjay lbe Preoldent .. "We feel Mr. Wbjt~head den!~ ll;l_ u,ltt: · wOuld not -announce the ~p,oi.ubnent·t~ o( the prdperty on very . su~I . t.he high courl loday Sen. Everett M. » you for raismg our 1nghts and the sights bring San Clemente rates up to the pay of men and women"throughout the world. levels enjoyed by lifeguards in all other (See ARMSTRONG, Pace Z) areas from Loi Angeles to San Diego. SchoolGe~g 'Sp1ing Oeaning' For Fall Oasses 1While students or Laguna Beach High SChool are beginning to scurry around buying pencils and paper in anticipation cf the first day of school Sept. 4, the school's administration is busy facellfling the campus. 'Chan.ses ranging from food service to restroom decor are now being completed, principal Robert Reeves said today. Chorak claims that the San Clemente rate of $2.85 an hour for seasonal guards is nine percent below the average along the coast. He further claims that permanent lieutenants, such a11 himself, make $710 a month or 29 pereent below the average. 'nle lifeguards are demanding nine per- cent and 29 peitent increase respectively along with additiooal pay hikes hlr seasonal lieutenants, the capltin and the c~. They also want a five-day 1work week. The city suit brands the lifeguards decision to strike on ~turday as "Wholly indefensible and unreasonable." It argues that the lifeguards bad every opportunity "during June.,-July and ~ugust" to dlacuss the pay dispute with the city andt CS.. GUAllDS, p.,_ I) ., Lodge told the Hanoi and Viel Cong delegations seated across the circular table at the 30th session of the con- rerence, "by word and deed you show that you are not prepared for genuine negotiation ••• your actions match your bellicose words." Lodge added, as a rainstorm drummed on the windows of the conference room near the Arch or Triumph , "while 25,0C'O American soldiers are in the process of departing from South Vietnam and decisions are being taken on the departure of additional American forces, your army has been preparing systemalically for a new offensive.'' Later, he said, "We have hoped that the reports . or a relalivl'l ~ lull in the , fightina:·in South :Vietnam would begin to ; create an atmosphere .in which genuine negotiations could take placf:, leading "Your statements and >'Ol!I' acts can have only one meaning: You are ·un- prepared to. compromise and negotiate, and you continue to place your tnlJt in violeoc!e and'terror," Lodge uJd~ But be told the Communism· that acts such' as· "terror raids" agaimt:-S o u t b Vietnamese schools and hosp.Ital&·, particularly agaiMt the Cam Ranh Bay ·hospital Aug. 7, will get them nowhere. "This Is vain an<! futile. The people of South Vietnam have e1perienced your campaigns of terror for many yeara, and their resolve to defend themselve11 agaimt you have not been shaken. "I can assure you that the people of the United Sllites al!o detest s u c-11 • atrocities," the America negotiator-said~· Chief .South Vietnamese negotiator Pham Dang Lam told newsmen too, the: resumption of fighting "hail .put an·ena tO hope<·rllls'td .by the reiaUve -~:lbe recent weeks." 1 • • ' > • Jn order to improve food service, four additional windows have been installed in the cafeteria, where studenta can purchase II la carte rood items. 'l'hf! snack bar below lhe football stadium wUl be in service during the ball game1-only, ~eeves said . Now It:s 'New Fed.eralism'· TUSOfl:I. He Wd that we would tnJwe Dlr~'s ~ s41tement 'to .the contrary. plant Ille in the·area," said .Bland. \ ·Dirksen repor(edr Ni.100'1; choice ·waa '"He l!So aaid our presence .. w°'fld . Chief Judge Clein~nt F:.Haynsworth Jr..- clisturb a few-nearp restdfnt.t who are of Greenville, S.C. Zleg1er·decllned com· employtt of thf: ~ parlli, tt "BJanii ~d· ment. · · . ded.' . . . , . . In each' fL the -put ttiree i4YJt•the Whitehea~. boweveri said 'the ~ • Pr"idept hu sent mes.sages to, Congress was a bit more ~~lcated. The on bil new-loolr federal welfarf orwram. 9emonslrators couJd dl!ttn'b refUlilr The latest one Wednesday \ wSS -!-a vlsltora 1?, ~,park,' he told t1Je blIUY ·blockbuster tax-sh~rln1 pt~·whlcb would Pll,.oT. W~ve been lull Ill ~r: give dlies and states:a. slice of 4ie and ~re now turning people away regu federal fi!cal pie with no; strings at-larly. tacheci 1 • • Whitehead also noted that the rallying · arei soUght by l8e PAC ii near the. pafk The revenue-sharing plan..wrapped ,µp dfs\rlct office. '"l •th Conceme1f about 'the President's ~t program Ito whc!t ·2,000 to !,OOO· people inlght do to revam~ llMi Rll-l)'lleni and rev'!'" ¥.area," be ,.id. the flow o! foiloral I!"""' to Washlngtoo. "lllaht "°" 1'111 ~ng ~thing oot • ' =inili tile iiaie AJtanieY Geoerat'• o1111"." .. stoerc ·:,'lf•rk~ts · . ALtamey 1for1UW PAC'in1the legit ac-: :• t • ' 1 :tion : iJ, Patricia, H•rzcrcr ·ot. •Corona del : NEW yo'RK·(AP;) -The1 stock marltet .M~i~nd.1 l Aid '1lw~its! ·~, u;e 'closed in hliber'1tertit9fy .. tdoay u 1 it ·caplstnnc»-l·dbjiict 100 1!io c!lty of carrlid . its latest rally success!ufly San Clemonte wtll alto -be filed, !Jul through the c11y, CS..• quotatiOM, P-·not: unu1· after SuDU.1'1 'deinorldration. "l&-ll), · 1 • 1 The PAC hopes lo·allbllob thtolfll!.lll!e cowja the, rtghl , lo ·~ .Jl!iita!I par~,.•. at lbe .. l'rellde!it·• .~> home wn. , Cout' I The school's auditorium will be spruced l\P with carpeting, new seats, and a new stage curtain. District trustees approved tbe move Tuesday night by authorizing a f(ve cent tax override to provide the I the lonetrin pect of the N N · rt' W · A ' '' district v1ith $40,000 working capital. By J!!?!! !;. ~!f1NS ' ~~:~ ~~fte, :nd~:d ::~::.~:r:; ::tier :nd the i~ ambition~ . ew.po ~, ~Oman, ! 'lt'eatller .l Both the boys ' and girls' restrooms in F kll ~• ... •--ll ~.~.• .1 philosophy took more discernible form ; lhe Great Society. ' £'1.!-_:i.:, tne main building have been renovated. the :~n~ ~':';ouu;Jv;.kb;,;'~ ; It has done that. And, Friday; ror the But it de8Cribe1 accurately lhe lnten't of · lnj• ured· in 0-BMI ~:i:~Wets fl~~~u~ealls~~ 'ii:::~ serve u fue hillmark al a national ad-first time, the President announc"C?Ct his ~h!, Nixon ~~atkln. . , ' • . , . • • 1 '"1 · •• · ~ ceilings, according to J\eeves. mlnist?tiog. . : catch-phrase -which remalned uncaugbt u ~=~~e-:Srn:t;::i;i~ means. ; Mn. ·AHce:K. Cyr ... of • W .> llthj8t:, Four classrOoms have ~been set. ~side With J'DR, of coune, it was tbe New by the preu unUI Tuesd.ar. lit dlStriboted between I central1 aUt= Ne1'~ .~,· w~ rt~ .In .er~l for lbe· -.Oli •., 'IN!ep<odent aludy . Deal. ' . . · II b the New Federalism. and· 1 number of constttuept temlorill coodltlOn • .ilh, i-1 ''lnjurieo ~ '.~t. areas.IA teacher wtll be In attendance in Harry Truman-followed, 1 bk lamely .. . The . P~t uaed· the. term three units." . . , ·-• ·, • Colt.a \leil ~ernctdat ~~ the math, English, aocial studies and and certainly derlvaUvely with his "Fair times Jn ~·welfare r~am talk to the ·,~· t 1 .. ·"~.i:, ·• •. '.• • · an. a~ ·•:c• 1~.'i.af 1 science department. to help students Deal. ' naUon Friday. In cop1e1 of. lhe spe~.a{ U · Y,t-... 1 $.. 1 temdon.! '. 1' :l ti. • ·' l !. •...:. '' • With their Individual pr6blems. Dwig.h Eisenhower" Sorry that'& a the phrase appeared In alk:apltal letters., ! . No\1 , Ofe~ Jlederaftm.: Yn Cyt,:.aa:u .. tb •Jbt.4aJltcnlla ,All bus.lneu education-related qaues blank.-'~Jdldd}e.of·tbe-Ro.t" . 'war ofttn • But Iii 1Ull went larg~ly unnoticed. ~ • a~ lllbJW -.m 1·n~1 rpt no iJilPrttYJ P~tnl,. W. drlvinf1w~t)qund will be localed in lhe nort~ camjlus. applied to h1' ejght yean 81 tlfe naUM'•• Secre~y of Labor Ge6rgc P, Shultz,.•111 1 pu""l\ > ,.,. • ..,.'JMi!>I* .of !Iii Wlllle pn ,fplloidiia ·~:fl ~ hold # u-. r...ing one room In the main buildlni ill chid eucullve,butnever by Ike ~miolf 1 ~" · ilbnf!'J!"" 10 San ~e Tueti 1 H ... ,~wi!I: 1n:4"'»Clement•.'"ll • N.3'li<!l:f ~' lbf 1i>.lde a lefl-._tiJ!OWdlen. · • -~::.:=:x~:.::;:::.::I..~~~Ci~·cl~ilOll-niil1iiMt. . m-.Y 'q . • • ~·.Sliili' Avenao. Her car was 1A new kiln for .the ai:ts and crafts NIXON_. WAITED ' I' "The New Federalism," said Stiult.t:,· 'mpqndeot~ : · . ·. '• , ,. d:UCt'by In -~ auto-drtven by. clll55e8 has been installed in the art patio, John F. Kemledy reviVed the custom, "mean1 the decentraliia._tion of , 8QVtnt-1 "New Fedeftliam? ·AJ' lnothlr _ Bll'blra Baku; IO,. ti ,• .Pt..,. Reeves aaid. and with characteristic naJr. New fron. ment KrVlces .•• a;aearchln& for a Dew newsm'n. ''~ tbat COft)are -.Tl Road. . • · • . ~ , , • Red brk:ks form.in£ 11n "L'' ha'"'"' been tier summed up .\ht dreams: of his ad-spirit. •. a new sense of· parUctptUon by can He being -•-~; bat wbo • 'Mn. Baker~ 1 ~ff.In her cw, placed in the cafeteria patio. ml1tistratlon. local-government. •. yet with the federal · want,1to be a _._..."! Thef"dltdfwben M~' , "11, ."ot , the ame The audJo-vlaual media renter hM been Lyndon Baines Johnson'• choice of government conUnulng to be lnvolV'l!d-IDd Alednder ~ ": ' ~ ' "~,. l)Uffer,d ~ moved from a room adjacent to ·the slogan -was the Great Society. concerned." • He's WJ'OOMlftMr:-,:aL111&.and 'Wel\.>ln' ~ llat,fftn tnot .. Hallp&taUled~·tbl libraT)' to the north campus, Reevea said. Richard M. Nilon, in bia Ont 1eveo The New Federalism, as a •loian ml.)'. 5an Cle I , """', .. pa~~J.Aid. I! ,, I j • > • ' ' Anollleni dOse ~( the ..... :old balmy stuff i& Friday's forecast with temperatwu ranging from a lop of 71 a1arig lhe coastline to 1 > 17 In the inllnd ...... » > . ~~ 1NSJDE ·~DAY' 1 : s .... · 1~11e11, dudnl,o, ,at: :Ve• lri>IM" lhil year ...a ffl,d f.Mmltl"8'.i1' .tht throe~~·, acute\ hpu.si1'0 ·1Jutrtogt. "':t¥". "-"" C:tlll llllt .... ............ ............ ,, ....,...., ... n ~ ., -.. ,, ...... . (;,...,.. ............ ,, _. ....... ' ............... . r•...._ ' ....... _," I =:r .. : --It" --' ll-t• = ...... .::: ~ lil ~ ,, """' Lwiflt't ti ,...._ • •""1••••1-. ' -• , ~L..._.t _. ..... H • ~ ,. ~ •• ' '""1 ~ I 1"'11.Y P[LOT L T"'4f!dl1, ~ 14, lM •• ill Musical Clwira Not CJemf?nte TeaCher's Game Qoplltrano Unified SdlOOI Dbtrlci """"" )1111 '"'"''! ~ Joto v. II ">8' ldnd o1 mutlc -tho7 ""1td> • td ll>t San Clemente 't .. cha" fnlm hlJll t tiCbool to eltmentary ctusea and then on , to jllllior h!ih level. . 'lbe veteran mw lc Instructor fetb It's " a wrona: note that stiqu1d be str~arn,tened out In court. And he 's hoping that ;. Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corfm8n wlll ha\'e the key to the dispute at a hear- ing tched~ for Aug. 27. Robbins, 45, t9aE Avenlda Cordoba, ccmplalns thlit lbe 1et.ol boar~ knew the aeon iol>I befort they switched b)IJ' !run Dow n t h e Mission Trail El Toro Road PW'chases OK'd EL TORO -Purchlse of strips of road rishlfff-way from three owntrl hu beat authorlied by "°'"'IY aupervlspn. From Georae s. a.rid Grace s. ?ifatsuoka the county will buy riabt..ol· way for Geronimo Drive eaat of El Toro Road and orange A venue. north from the dqd encl lo meet G<rvnimo al a COS\ $U,131. . To Roeeglin CoNlnleUon Inc. tht cowi- ty will pay 137.at for a strip of El Toro 1lope euemenl south of the Santa Fe Railrold tracks needed lo widen the road up over the track!. The final purcbue will be from V. P. Baker for $6,500 -a strip btslde El Toro , Road ea.st of Front Street. e Surlley Pact Okayed LAGUNA HILLS -SlflTling of a con- lracl for $%,250 will> Salkln Engineering Corp. to survey a portlOn of Paseo de Valencia to be constructed connecting Leisure WOl'.kl: and Capistrano' Highlands has been appro\red by county IU~- The portJon to be surveyed Is rrom Los Aliscl Boulevard to Alicia Parkway. The fee ii figured at $39 per hour for a three· man survey tum. e Brlqe Blob Slaied EL TORO -Advutlaing for con· &tzuction bkla to replace ~ washed out Trabuco Road brld&e . acroas Swrano creek .... El Toro Marine Air BU< has been apr-roved by county su~rvillOl's. Eatlmated cost of replaelnt the fonner Umber bridge with a two-lane concrete brldle la l'll,tl5. e Road Work Oka11ed MISSION VIEJO -Coostructlon, ol Estanclen:1 Drive from a dead etld throulh lo Morguerite Parkway has beet1 approved by county supervisors. County Road Oommiuloner Al Koch aaid the street connection will greatly asalJ\ tr.attic tlrculation in the area. e Latino• D-Set ci.. ot San Cl<m-l\llb Schoell to ~ .. 'al !Owt~adt ltvtla.;:a; &Mit ... ~ " ... . ,. "-.;;...,.;--le • . cluMI. • 'Allcirne7 Norman RifdOlllb, wbo will ,_. ~ In ,,.... Corf-·· court, clalmtd Tuelday Lhat 'llhe board b jllJI delermlned lo llre my clieoL "I'm a former president of the board and t know the story," th e San Clemente lawyer 3aid. "This is jmt their way of squeezing hlm out of the m:hool system." "My cllent h~1 pointed out to school district officials Cl'I nwnerou1 occasions that teachlna mUJ}c at lower srad~ ltvtls q Ml ..i1Nlr ~iff,...t P"'l'O'ttiOO lo !he klod .... bl q -qualified to 11"-'' llN, "'"I U!e1 don't .lJllll ii 11111111. ho lflfd.· ll>tlr • ., <! flrilla blm -....... blm ... of the~ loy ~u.o.· ; Supt Charlts Kenney of the C.pi•!t•no Unified School District refused to com· meot on the Robbins' writ other than t.o restate the transfer action authorized by the school board. "We feel lhat he ls best suited to Jn. s~ction al the junior high level," he sakl. "He has asked to be returned to San Clemente High Sc.boot but we are not P'•pared ·to grant that request." Laguna T een Corner Grads Spread Wing s In Hunt· for Colleges fty TOM GORMAN oJ 1M Oellr ,lltt Slttr The guy1 and 1&11 who were 1raduated from Lagwui Be4ch High School laEt June are finally besinnln& to realize thty are al the mercy ol the different ad· missions officts throughout th~ country, as ftll and colle1e quickly approaches. Whether it's a skip and a fl.op over the hilb to Saddleback Ju.Qk)r Colle1e or a long airplane trek to Michigan State University, letns are off and runninC ar-l'lllllna for clwes and r"1dtnc... Brtao Wainwright and Ben SchUf (our own Nallonal Merit finallals) took off . lo Mlchlpn· State, where thty crarnm~ In thm days al testing, orientatloo, clw ~. .aDd what.ever tlse two Laauiiins do at a campus of 401000. "My atudent number It: 532507, Btn revealed. Joan McMahon bad her tltl)ls oo Santa Clara, unW AFS decldtd lo delour her through GennaQY ror a year, where she'll be IOina to Goell>e-Qymna.slum, a "hool in Dortmund-Berghofen. Football scholarships have senl Steve Wlnbow1kl, Jimmy Kuhn and Brian Bagley to Washington State, where they'll be playing on artiflcial grass. JL'll be a far cry from the Jr.lnd down here. Tom Tabor and Steve Klosterman will be rooml.ne: together at UCLA . Tom couldn't have arranged for a better body guard than Kloster-monster. Lauri Bird is going there, too. Deb.hie Brekke is headed for Long Beach State, while Eric Miiier and Paul 1.tcManus will invade Cal St at t, Fullerton. Doug Sclunitz. v.·Ul settle down LAFC Approves Sewer District De-annexation Qe..aMe~aUon of the Arch Beach Heiahts holtUn&s of Laiuna Vista Land Co. ·from the: South Laguna Sanitary Dis- trict was approved Wednesday by the county Local Agency Formation Com· miuion. Now fulure residents of the 156--acre .rea will receive sewer service from the city of Laguna Beach. at San Diego State (it's that college just 50 miles south of the wutern White Houae, you know). Martha Stockton has decided on Chico Slate, while Meri Stewart will pack up for Oregon State, along with Sue Watson and LyM Smith. Laura Eagleton a n d .Betsy Lt Bold are headed for Pitzer. Mal<lng that skip and a hop over the hills are dozens of grads, including Hilary Huston, Gordon Brown, Bob Cotterell, Kathie Ryan, Kz:is Wetu.I and Joe Zamudio. Saddleback may never be the ume. Looking forward lo a rough time at UCl are Tom Holm, Bob Gardner, Rob ~an. Jamie Causey, Debbie Smith, and Brian JOl)eS. Alter looking over the clua load1 Rob has changed h,ls major from law to basket weaving: Htadin' for the desert are Jeff Jahraus and Dave McDonnell (Arizona St.ate), and Jim Warren (New Mexico). Willa Cather is going to try her luck at Berkeley, while the California College of Arta and Crafts will be the new home of Karen Llnenkugel, Laurie McPherson, and Lenny Larson. Sue Chamberlain will pursue a nur sing care:er al Brigham Young, while Patti Bedell attends classes at Redlands. Sture Edvardsson discovered some small college in Iowa -Centra l College, known for its chemical engineers. He'll probably come up w~th a wild new kind of corn flakes. \Veil, that's a quick run-down of "'ho's GOing where. If I missed you, selld. your complaints to Cal State, Fullerton. That's ~·here I'm heading. My admission was confinned by a form letter addressed to "Dear Stu· de:nt." Nothing like that personal touch, huh~ Ben (532507) Schiff can tell you all about it. DBA Seeks Front Agaii1st Hippies Thr: Downtown Business Association IDBA) plans to join with olher Laguna Beach organizations seeking solutions to what has been called "Laguna's Hippie Situation,'' OBA President Robert Benner said Wednesday. A DBA representative, yet to be nam- DAILY ,IL6T Sttff rMi. PACKING HER TRUNK Exchansi• Student McMahon F rona Page I ARMS TRONG •• "The sky is no longer the limit and we thank you for lhe fine young men you are, fine e1amplu for young pe<>ple all over the world." Armstrong, a man to whom v.'ords do not come 1Ubly, seemed to faller 33 he responded, but his" sincerity rang through. .. We hope and think that this ls the Wginning of a new era, the beginning of an era when man understands the universe around hlm and the beginning of the r:ra when ma!l understands himseH." Said Aldrin: "The.re are footprints on the moon. Those footprints belong to each and every one of us, to all mankind, and they are there because of the blood. sweet and tears of millions of people. The footprints are the symbol of true human spirit." Said Collins: ''Mr. President, herr: stands a proud American, proud to be a member of the Apollo team, proud to be a citizen of the United States of America ~'hich nearly a decade ago said it would land men on the moon and did so, proud to be an in· habitant of this most magnificent planet." The three astronauts v.·erc av.·ardcd the 1\-1edal of Freedom, highest award the United States can bestow on a civilian. Vice President Spiro Agnew read the in- scription. "Your contributions will be remem· bered as long as men wonder and dream and search fQr truth on this planet and among the stars," it read. Great as \\'as the list of the elite among the 1,500 guests, there were notable absentees. Former Presidents Lyndon B. Johnson declined an invitation as did Harry S Truman. Not a single representative or the Ken· nedY' family was present. It was Presi· dent John F. Kennedy who proclaimed in his administration America's determina- tion to put a man on the moon by the eod of the decade. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis sent her rr:grets. • · Exclaatage St+at ; . ' Lagunan ·Heads For Germany · 4 E.ot a year Jaan McMahon has .bet:ft hoping to live abroad as a foreign U· chan~e student. Thtn, just two wet'ks ago, she was given three hours to nlake a critical detlslon. Would she live in a Jtran1er'1 home for II months! Now, hP.r dream is only hours away from becoming true. She leaves tonight for a town SO mile& north of Boon, Germany. And she can hardly beUeve it. "It still hasn't realty hit me," tht 18- year old Laguna Beach High School aradute remarked as ahe packed her beloncJngo. Her mother, Marie McMl/>On, su~t...i the operallon. ·'It's kind of good J didn't have.more of a warninr," Joan said. •1My mother would be a· wreck." Joe.n wu one of about 20 hilh school 11.udenta interviewed last achoof year by the American Field Service (AF8) as poeslble candidates to spend a year ab"4<1. After the Interviews, Joan was one of two remaining candidates. The fina l decision rested with AFS headquarters in New Yori:. The other candidate, Kathleen Collins, has since been sent to New 1.ealand. But a home hadn 't been found for Joan . Months later -July 31 to be exact - Joen aot a l•lephono call. SM leomtd that a )iome Wll av&Jltb~ in Dortmund- IUrghofen, Germany. Aod ~ w41 a:ivtn three hours t.c accept the of(er. 1 Joan wllf be living at the hl'!'I, Of Mr. and Mn. Heinl Guthoft PMf' their tour cillldren, ranalq lo _.., tram 17 to l.!. ~.·17, will be Joan't rilW slslflrand clumtate at ~ymnasium. An older• btothtr and two older slltel'3 live a~·ey from home, Joan said. Her cliws will Include German , Lalin, French, English, chemlatry, physics, religion, math, biology, music, sports, home econonilcs, ind ari. Joan, who wu riaduated In tht ~ 20 or her class and carried a B-plus averqe, is worried about her Engllsll class. "Tbey'IJ be teaching it in Gennan. and I ooly know two words -ya ~ no." ' But she'll have a chance to brush up an her German beo(rt: she mteta her new family. All the AFS students in Gennany will meet tQgether for a 17-day lflt.eqsjve . language and history course. During bet senior year of high school, Joan was a member of the Girls' Athletic Association and the Choral Readet'I. In addition, she wu the school's represen .. tatlve to Girls' State (a lta~wide &iris convenllon), and was Commbsloner of Social Activities. Heavy Vietnam Fighting Flares Into Third Day SAIGON (AP) -Hea')' lightina roged for the third day Thursday · north of Saigon, where allied troop11 art trying to break up enemy troop concentrations. Casualties wr:re mounting steadily as U.S. and South Vietnamese forces slrovr: to keep the enemy of( balance and pre- vent any more widespread assaults like those that broke out across South Viet- nam Tuesday. Throughout South Vietnam, about 1,700 enemy troops have been killed in the three days, while fro1n 115 to 150 Americans have died, allied headquarters reported. F rom Page 1 GUARDS ... arrive at a conclusion wilbout strike ac· lion. City officials have pointed out that the entire llfeguard department received a '·merit raise" of five percent in the 1989- 70 budget. Captain Phil Stubbs received a 71h percent increase. Also recently approved by the city was a five-step program under which seasonal guards who returned to duly after their first year gel an automaUc fi ve percai.t raise each year for five years. Chief Richard Hazard, Captain Stubbs and three lltasonal guards did not join Chorak and his 31 fellow employes in the group's demands. tif06t of the action nuraday w~ ttear the Cambodian border area from IO lo 80 miles north or Sa.igon. Allied forces: reported killing 69 enemy troops in a series of clashes there Thuraday and 73 farther south. In the sharpest clash I n v o I v I n c Americans, elements of the U.S. 11th Annored Cavalry Regiment and 1overn· ment Rangers reported they killed 35 North Vietnamese in an aba'ndoned rub- ber plantation about two mllta northe~ of Loe 'Ninh, 70 miles north or Saigon. F ive Americana: were wounded and government casualUea were reported very light Atllitary spoka:mr:n said Allied troops bumped into an enemy force ol unknown size bidden among rubber treu and undergrowlb la,. Tburaday morning. The allies called in artillery and air striku whllt blast:Jn&: at the enemy with tanks and machine i'JM. The fl&hUnl lasted for more than an hour. North Vietnamese ambushed a U.S. truck convoy about II milts south of Quan Loi, 65 miles north of Selgo,n. The U.S. troops returned fire aJ)d called for air strikes against the enemy poli· lions. Sixteen North Vietnamese wtr• reported killed and three Americans were wounded. Enemy gunners fired about 30 mertar rounds at the 100.vthicle convoy, which was tran1JM>l1.in1 ammunJtion, fuel ed construction mat.trial Three trucks wer e reported damaged. CAPISTJtANO VALLEY -Los Amilos Latlnol wlll hold a dance Saturday Aui. 11 In the Moose Hall in San Clemente. Attorney George Logan, representing both the city and the South Laguna District, explained that il once appeared the city could service the area. Seeking assurance that service would be availabl e when development came, the landowner annexed to the South Laguna Sanitary District. ed, will sit in on meetin.Js of the Laguna \r=========================================; Image Committee "to keep abreast of 11 \\'hat the image group is doing," Benner Cbue1 Lopez will fwniah music durillg the 1:30 p,m. to 1:30 a.m. event. Admlslion fees will bt $3.50 for couples and $1.75 for atn1les. Proceeds will be us- ed for club projttU. e Doubles, An1101ae? RecenUy it was delt.rmined the city of Laguna Beach could service the are:a and at less cost becaU1e for sewage to now south It would have to be. siphoned under Pacific Coast Highway, Logan said. said. . "We feel that \\'e will benefit mort: by working with them rather than working independr:nUy," he said. Benner said he has talked with the new police chief, Kenneth Huck, and that future meetings will have police officers and perhaps the chief as speakers. MISSION VIEJO -Friday is the final day to register for lhe doubles teMls tournament at the Recreation Center. T k F H F • I ~.·'A~.'1i'!:iPl~~21~a':~ ~~~; as orce ears ma doubles anil rrilxed doubles will be of· fertd . otAMoir·cOiut "'k llMlt!G COMMMT hM.1 N. Wt J ;-..... .... ~ Jed l. c.,1.., ~ P1WINllfll • Gwltrll ~ n.-•• 1.,..q .... Titt111e1 A. M11,,hl11e ' """'""' .... •1&li•t4 '· N•U L .. UM tt~ (llf ....... ---2l2 .............. . M1lll111 AUreu.i P.O. 1 ... "'· tzui ---c ... ~I Uf ~I a.. llftft ~ lkt<111 Ut! wt61 ._ .. , ... __.. '4111111119 ..... : .... .... Vote Machine Proposal Orange County's Voting Systems Task Foret heard the final testimony Wed· nesday night In its investigation of lleven finns vylng for the right to provide automatic voting: equipment to the coun- ty . Reprtsentatives of Shoup V o t i n g Ma~hlnt Cerp. of NashvlUe demonstrated wh•t was deecribed as "the most up-Io- date voting machine in the world" to the ten-member citizens committee. . A Shoup proposal under which the firm would provide 950 machines et a total coat of II.I mllllon was filed with the ta•k forte. Tbe committee dtclded on a further study or the proposals made by Shoup and sit competitor• be.fore submitUna; 11.3 anatylla to ceun\y supervisors. Naming d the succudW bidder will end a year. Ion& pi'obe by the wk force. ·compe:tln& with Shoup for the lucrative coun\y conttact are tbe Coleman CO., whole YOtHOUnting equlpmtnt I! cur· rtnU)' Ultd by tht toonty, Cubic vOtroniC$, Seiscor Punch Card Systtm, O.ll·Vot.e: System, AVM Prinlom1llc Sys- tem and IBM Votom•tlc. The Coleman 1y1ttm has been u5ed by the county In all Ila e.lectlon11, primary and 1e.neral lot the put "~ year1. 11.3 ptlfomwict lo ..... ol -COlllala {: has produced biller criticism. County Clerk William E. St J ohn, an observer al the meeting, hu pointed out that the Coleman device was geared to lhe needs of 300.000 voters. He has urged the task force to bear in mind the fact that equipment capable or rapidly recording the votes or 600,000 residents !hould be in use. Shoup representatives argue thst an nrder of 950 machines u'ill only go halfwa y to meeting the county's needs. They describe the ideal voter-machine ratio as one machine per 300 voters, a re· quired total of 2,000 (llilchines. Thal order -and it seems unlikely In vdn the backing ol the task force-would cost the county nearly $4 million . Discussed by the commlUte at the four-hour meeting was the poJSiblity that e.xlsting Coleman equipment could be rtnovated and possibly supplemenled to n1eet the county 's growing needs. The Coleman offer to p r o v I d e permanent maintenance ol the Com· pany's equipment at an annual cost or ~.ooo was filed with the committee. It was pointed out that the contract would bt limited to labor on1y and the county would Incur a further $10,000 charg@. for thf: company 's overhauling of all equip- ment prior to each clecllon. The company·s suggestion that its president confe.r ~·Ith the task force prior to IU final decision on future voting equipment is being studied by the citizen&' committee. I , LAST 3 DAYS!! - STORE AND WAREHOUSE!! FURNITURE COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS 20% TO 50% Off ON llQY ~ II EVOY IJOIAITIBT H.J.GARREJT fURNrfURE l'llOFESSIONAL INTE!IOl DESIGN EU ..,.. __ ..... _ t 2111 HAllOl IUD. COSTA MllA, C:...Llf. .. '""" '4Ul7' ---- ed 1d-.. Ir. ur u. nd In ve n, ~. ~. 20 us sh "' •W ,, VO ''· jc In n- 'is •f ar 'IO .. • 73 1g .th ,,. 35 11>- 13! '"· nd ed ps .. nd air ith "' .s. Of ed Ii• •• re Ir ch nd re \ • Newport BarlJoi.-'. • '*. ··* YP.~· ~2, NO. 194, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES *. . . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR Armstrong Fights Tears AtTrihule LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ne i I Armstrong choked back tean1 as he groped for words to tell America how the Apollo 11 astronaut.! feel about their country and the honrr It has given them . The first man to set foot on the moon held a glltlerint: array of the nation's SOCIAL SIDE PHOTOS, LOCAL COUPLES : PAGE 13 high and mighty spellbound as he spoke of seeing a scribbled sign among the masses in New York al th<? outset of a day of coast-to-coast acclaim. "Through you we touched the moon," it rei:id. Armstrong looked arourid the room. at hi! fellow astronauts, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., and Michael Collins, at President Nixon, at the great figures in the au· dieoce and, through television, at the peo· pie of lh? United States. "Through you we touched the moon," he said. "It was our privilege today te> cross tht: country le> tooch America." TOUCH AMERICA Touch America tbe moon men did as they aomehow survived lhe.. biggest tickertape parade in Manhattan, sent two million In Chicago into shouting: jubilation ancr'Ibt1(IltW ,to :the Pacllic· l0>.a "llate dinner Wed= night 'that wai balJtd tie: . an! huh,_~- Jackson's clan tllre up the W'nite Hou*- . NiZon rev~ed they will start shortly on a (OlD' arouml'the wtll'ld. It is expected to begin in mid·September and tentative plans cat: for 4t days abroad. Today the astronauts flew to Houston for a few days with their wives and families before another super-spectacular in the Astrodome. Spturday nigbt. ~1embers of the sophisticated foreign diplomatic corps were scurrying around for astronaut autogr,aphs like schoolgirls at the Century Plaia banquet where Hollyv"ood stars rubbed shoulders with supreme court just.ices and 44 governors rose it unison to be inLroduced. Ni.Jon, beaming With pride raised the toast to Armstrong,.Aldrln and Collins. "l say simply to the three astronauts ~·e thank you for your courage, we thank you for nis.ing our sights and the sights o( men and women throughout.the world. ''The sky is no longer the limit and we thank you for the fine young men you are, fine examples for young people all over the world." FALTERED Armstrong, a man to whom words do not come glibly, seemed to falter as he responded, but his sincerity rang through. "We hope and think that this i!I the beginning of a new era, the beginning of an era when man understands the universe around him and the beginning of the ~ra when man understands himself." Said Aldrin : "There are footprints on the moon. Those footprinL'I belong to each and every one of us, to all mankind, and they are there because of the blood. swut and t'ears of millions or people. The footprints are the symbol of true human spirit." Said Collins: · "~1r. President. here stands a proud American , proud to be a member of the Apollo team, proud lo be a citizen ol the United States of America which nearly a decade ago said it would land men on the moon and did so. proud to be an in- habit.ant of this most magnificent planet." The three astronauts were awarded the Afedal of Freedom, highest award the United States can bestow on a civilian. Vice Pres'ident Spiro Agnew read the in· 1cription. INSCRIPTION "Your contributions will be remem- bered u ~u men\wonder and dream and search for· truth on UUs plinet tind among the ltara," it read. Great 11 was the list of the elite among the 1,500 guests, there were notable abscntet1. · Former Prcsldcntl Lyndon 8. Johnson declined an invitation u did Harry S Truman .. Not a single repreSentative or the Ken- nedy family was present. It waS ,Prtsl· dent John F. KeMedy who. proclaimed ill his administration America '• detennlna- Uon to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade. Jal'queline Kennedy Onassis &eot beJ' regrets. Charles A. Lindbergh had been ex- pected up to the last minute, but he dkf not appear. Mrs. Mamte Eisenhower, who also had been on the euest liat, was rnx' pment. c President Relaxing At Clemente · SA!l"·CLEllENTI!: Cl/Pll :.,. Presicknl ~ ,.._ of the Apollo•u . astrilnauls for J""lhg ·"the~ sky 1.5 no longer the limU." flow back to the Western White House · today planning mostly to r~lax after a big night. The chief ei:ecuUye planned to take It easy as the end of a busy week drew near. His sokl appointment was a 9:30 am. meeting with the national secu rity council • Tonight the President and Mrs. Nixon host a party for the traveling White Jioose press corps, introducing them to the wrute House by the Pacific. Nixon continued to keep secret his choice oC the associate supreme court j~tice to replace Abe Fortas, who resigned May IS. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Wednesday the President would not announce the appointment tG ·the high court today Sefl. EvereU M. Dirksen 's statement to lhe contrary. Dirksen reported Nixon's choice was Chief Judge Clement F. llaynsworth Jr. of Greenville, S.C. Ziegler declined com· ment. · In each of the past lhree days the President has sent messages to Congress on his new-look federal welfare program. The latest one Wednesday was a blockbuster tax~harlng pl.!1n which would give cities and states a slice of the federal fiscal pie with no strings at-tached, < ~ reveauHhiriac plan wrapped up tm President's ~ 'program to ievamP the wtlf&rt IYS!tm and revuse , the flow of federal power-to Washington, ,, oasts ' DAIL-.: ,ILOT St.ti , ... APPLAUDS ASTRONAUTS APP.rKi•tiye ·Pr••ident . Girl -Scalds Self In Shower, Dies A 3-year-0ld girl -who apparently turned off the cold wa ter faucet while in !he shower and scalded herSi!lf -died Wednesday afternoon at Orange County r..1edical Center. Tina Aiken, daughter of Mr. and l\1rs. Marvin Aiken, of Riverside, suffered burns over 35 percent of her body, ac- cording to coroner's deputy John Cale. Cale said the accident happened last Sunday ·in Garden Grove at the home of friends ot the Aikens, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Gruber, of 13342 Redbird St. I Peace Council Denied Ground ... t .-..· • • TEN CENTS . ' • ~·~ ~mal~. S.lick Forming Fo~·~ar~~ery ,_. ~ 1i~.7\T ,r'l.nnnel 'T.lii.,....~,.,. ... ~ 1 l t .t .. , J. ~ • ~~......., . n w ~""" ~.............. .,. r · • " , . '"-•· rn~~· [~ --7i.-*--..... _ .... .,. -~ ~ -en~ . ...._..,.... · · Ol"· llOll><lhinc that to bii llQdlld. • Th< latest n'buif received by the PAC today began to .... ·11111if ~ llf "a Da-oaid. • ls ref11&al ot San Clemente State Park of· lfnall channel in Newport Bay. " H~ aiild ~t it ~ a 1Jltfft but s~. flclal1 to allow use o_f ,t.h_e gf?Undt ~ ti' rr1le oJl,.dellCl'lbed ~· Clty~Harbof ... and seep, poulbl)' caused by 1ri oil well w~ rallyillB point for participants m Sunday's Tid land Coon:ti G , may' have been' capped nearby · planned anti·war protest. ., e, 1 ~ator eorg,,0a~ as "'At least one rea:ident Js ·alarmed The park is near President ·Nixo'n's .preUy 8900 quality," le creatlnl a small Dawes said since the sJlmy crude l~ summer White House. slick about·20 feet across in qie Newport starting to' smudge boat hulls and PAC representli.tlves ·today sought to Island channel near.~ River Street. , bulkheads along the tiny channel.· overturn the decision by filing a suit In Dawes, city J>llblic works , ~des and Plastic foam booms would be provided Orange County Sijperior Court. harbor department engl!Jeen w er e by the harbor department if it were Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman observing the brownish patch of crue oil necessary to contain the'Oi~ patch. wlll hear the action Friday, an Unusual today, trying· to flpre a way to cap the "W~ really don'.t th1nk It -.U be departure from customary Jaw and mo-~PWP<h""l'Ml>h, Uy. , necessary, however," he said. Uon proceedings. e ave eard d. small seepa in the Beside• oil seeping from underground, Robert Bland, Laguna Beach PAC, of. ar~• 9fl «\rY I~." ~wes aakt, "but ttils the Newport laland channel .v. bu its !icial, was among petttimers asking.the J& the fltst 'time · anyone can remember proble111:1 with stinking "rotten ea" ps. coort to require the otate .director cl ~.h~""had•lealt!romthe·bayfloor. It &eeps regularly from undqround, parks to permit the peace o~tioo to · Its not.a mcinslrolls prabltm, bui,Jt!I' too. use park lands' ~~jace~t to 1the eiclµsiVe- Cyprus Shore residential commwiity. The other side of Cyprus Shore bGrdas the summer White House estate. · ', Named in the writ of mandate i5 James Whitehead, state district I superintendent of park.<J and recreation. . . A show cause order has been signed by Judge Rhbert L. Corfman, shortening the' time of litlgaUon. A hearing will be held at 9:30 a.m, Fri· day In Superior Court. Park Supt. Whitehead 41lold us we couldn't use the park, so we're taking him to coo rt," said Bland lhis momlng. Last week, the PAC Wd-5 refu.ted use ot a Capistrano · Unified School District school grounds as a staging area. The San Cleplente City Cotinclr followed by refusin1g the groop . a permit to parade down El Camino Road, tile town'• main road. · · . "We feel Mr. WhJtehead denied. ·us use of the pr0perty on ·very wiferflcill IS.. P~C, Pare !) He's ~(..t ·a ~arco Ag,ent, But He's on ·'Press' List .. . . . . . He Is not a narcotics agent. He has never been a narcotics agent. But his Newport Beach phone num~r showed up In the Free P,resa la,.st week wheh 1ila editors published a list of al11 1tatt narcoUca agents. He's been get.Ung phone calls ev!r· since. Tbey ai't ~ and· they' WOl\leo.hlm ~l\h bodily harm. They are, abdslve. AOO • always, they a re. ~1'1:"1YJ1191f'· J~ as 'be j must be ror' ~ i?I tJi .. 11ory. before this thing Is OVllf." He said, "Most guys are just going to end· up movlrig. But these speed freak• have 'such warped minds, they'll try to track· them down." He ls in the process of movhlg and hav· !n;S hiB numbe,r changed, and said, H1bJ4 is a real haule for tne, ind I'm ue it'r worse for U. nareotla qentt." " I ' Nixon Ca,tcla-elarase ·He traces Ida UWble baci to wheTi Ila· friend_ of·1 friend" moved in 'for .: brief J1el'iod, ,and ~ hfJ ...... to .the telephone ll1tlnp of hl1 two roommates. "Yoo just don' thfnk aboot anything like this happenint:," he said. "You krmw,- • guy movf!1 ln, he uys he worts for the state narCotics bureeu,· anti 1you think/ NEW YORK (AP)--The stock lnarkef closed in higher territory• tdoay as It carrit'd its latest rally 1UCCeeaful17 ihroogh the day. !See quotltioOI, Page1 ll'rl91. • Now It's 'New Federalism': • . ·sy JEROMB F. COLUINS Of tllt Dlltf ,... ...,, • . Franklin Delano Roosevelt started It - .th• cciniot ol • polltlcal catch1>hraoe to serve as the hlllmark of 1 national ad- ministraUon. l With FDR, ol CQUt&e, it was the New Deal · · • · Harrj Truman followed, ,. b~ lameij: and certainly derivaUvely, with hit Fair Deal. Dwigh~ Elsenhower? Sorry, that 's a blank. "Mlddle-of·tpe.Ro.d" '(II often 'apPllt'd to bis eight yurs as the nation's cblef executive~ but never by lb tiim.elf. NIXON WAITED John F. KeMedY revived the CUilom, and with characteristic flair. New Fron- tier SUfTlmed up the dreams of his ad- tni.1istration. Lyndon Baines Johnson'a choice of 1loa:an WAI the Great Society. Ricbard M. Nllon, In blJ flnL 1even ' months In office, pondered the ltadlllon. He would wait until his adminisralive philosophy took more discernible form . It.bas done·lbalYAnd, Frklly,1for the first Ume, the Presid"1t 8JlDOlincod his catch-phrase -l'hich remalned uncauaht by the press unW Tuesday. It is the New Federalism. · The President used the tenn ~ times in his welfare r rogram talk to the • lack lhe1 pioneering ,aspect .. ol ~the New Frontier and the immodest ambition of the Great SGCiety. , But it deiµibes accurately. the,. hi.teat of , the Nuon administration. . . ''Federalism," says Webstet',1, mUN: "A form of government in whldl power · i" distrlbufed bChteen· 1 cfntral authority and a nwnber of •connitueJtt territorial , units." . nation Friday. Jn copies of the speech, •rt ISN'T SEXY' the phrase appeared ifo alk:apttal lettcn. tNot aurprlslil&ly, the N,.. 1Federallsm But.it still went largely unnotlced. '(1ien 'alreacly· haa.·itl detractors. "It'• got no See;relary of Lilior George p,.sbulti, a\ a fl\11\CP~' lfY~ one member of the White . preu conf~· in '1P Gle'mente-·Tue• llouse, press corps in San Cl~te. "lt ; daY. delijfod ~-; • Jost 11n:• ,oexy,'! quit" • lady ,C<ll> "'Mle New Federalism, '1 said Sliultz, respondent. , "means the ¥ntrallzaUon of govern-"New Federalism.?" SJ,YS. 1J10tber ment services.,, •. I .lW'Chi"f for a new newaman. l'\Vhal doea Ujfl t»iljure up!) spirit. •. a new &enst of.~pt.tlon"by 1 can see belng a frodl.lenman, btit whO local government.., ~)'et W'ith the federal wanti·to ht a federali!t..1'ef. died wt\en . government colttinuing to be involved. and; ,\lex.af.derTH1mllton di~. H ! ~· . . concerned." ~ ....... · * ....... lie'• wronr. Tb'W're. tlfve.. w!n 1n The New F~ •. a·a.•~ .... ISfo Clemmte, · " ; · ...... ,. -· · ~ · t;. :, • ... • ·I 'well, okay.' " The narcotics agent moved out months bef.,.. the Free. Pren -.ed )n. • "!i's 1 horrlble1hfn1< One"nlghC...,,, .' sornebodf's gol\'11 t.o get Jo.~ mJ ·drtv~ up to one of these people's homes and just bklw the p"""' up," he said l<Jl<_ly., ·"I'm sure·· thel-e twill bt~ a· ~ I I ' ! • \ ' 0 • . . . West Germany.Dr.ops •· Case ~ga~nst 'Bi'h~p .. . . . ( . . ·FRANKFQl\'I'., (.O.f11111ll' (AP) -A Weot Gtrman prOoecutoi' ciecldecf 111ew , Th~y .I<> dtop ,!lie .... ...-Liie "l"1 Rev. M.lltlilu Dolregir.,Jl9mlla , CaLholJc 1uxlllary ~ of ~<fie!!, ""9 PINod •• "' Oftier • far u.., 1911 ~I 1111oot!nc of 17.Jlallan tWqera. ;ri>e,ilttjllon 'F.Fr¥idurt ~ A~ _, Dlitrlch 'I'" ·~·'!Ith • "~" ' · h V1tic1n,' A •JfOI<~· far \ht Mimlcli ~ hilllect R.ap ~Inc iht ihe J4.1-bf4bop-WU"~11( ~ilt.ed.'..... .. ~ ' Orang~ 1 .c.ut ' •· Weadler Another . dOle o( ~the aame old . \balmy llufl Is FrldaJI'• lorecut with temper.iturea ral)ling from '' top of 71 al~ the ccutllne to 17 in the inland areu. -INSmE TODAY som. 1,100 t1tlD •tudtnt• at 1UC Irvine thil ¥tor wiU /ind. thtm.1tlvei tn. the throu of on ocutt holtlin11 shortage .. Po0t JO. '-~~~~~~~~~--' • • I • ' OAlLV '11..0T St•ll ,M19 PALISADES ROAD COLLISION_W_EDNESDAY SEND_S NEWPDRT WO/,\AN TO HOSPITAL Ooor From Cyr Autq; •nd B11ker Vehicle Rest in Rud _Followln1 Cr111h . Newport Wom811 ·· Injured in Crash Mrs. Alice K. Cyr, of 890 W. 15th St., Newport Beacll, wa& reported ln.a1Ucal candltlon with -head !Djuri,. today at Cotta Mesa Memorial Hospital !ollowln& u automobile accident Wednesday af. temooo. Mn. Cyr, aocordinl lO the Cait!ornia Hlch••Y Patrol, WU driving westbound on· PalUldta Road al the hnd of IJWU Newport Bay when ahe maide a Jett turn toward Santa Ana Avenue. Her W WU struck by an ooc.oinlng auto driven by Barbara Baker, 50, of -2302 PallHdes Road. -Jlifrs. Baker and a passenger In her car, Margaret Pirtle. 18, · of the same Palisades Road address. suffered minor injuries but were not hospitalized, the patrol said. Frem Pafe I PAC ••• reasons. He said tbat we would llljure Emory In Warning Jet Foes Make .Appeal To Hqlt Mor.e F~ights Nowpor\ Beach's jel nolat Iota have made a 1•1ast.mfnute" appeal to county _supervisors to halt the "C011tiaued escall· lion of jet flights at Orange Coui\11 Airport." ' ~ Jn the formal appeal, Dan· Emqjy, chalnnan of tho Newport Airport·tW!IJ> Abatement Committee, told ..;t·h e supervisors that a growing number .'Of citizens are objecting to the "eVer·111· creasing destruc.Lion of our envfrOAiiMilt under the label of 'progress anO-~ venience'." ~ ... _ "Thece are presently pending ·a_p- plicatJonJ for fl ightl to additional cities that, if approved, will result in a score or more addiUonal jet takeoffs each day,•• he said. · .: Emory cited forewarning ·or ' th~ "complete eradication" of the co~uoity . . of Playa del Rey beca1.41e of jet noise at Los An&eles International Airport. "However, one need not travel to that area' t0r see for himself the unllvabillty under the jets. Any citizen can drive to Newport Beach, stand beside his car and witn~11s first·hand the jet takeoffs that are·causing the destruction," he said. Emory charged that the concept of jet flights being indispensable to industry is incorrect. He cited diSCU1sions with members of chambers of commerce and heads of in- dustries wruch showed that site suitabili- ty, price and housing for empktyes were the mo:1t significant factors to locations of Jndustrie.s. Emory said thal the recent federal decisioos lo allow loca l control of airport operations will help "prevent the destruc- tion of a local environment." plant life tn the area," sallf1Uand. • "He allo aald our P'"'"" would T k F H F I disturb I few nearby mid~ ... loo aro as orce ears ma employes of the st.ate ~' J; ad· ,. . · ded. ... ,\. . Whitehead. however, 11 iasUe wu a bit more compllcaled. "Tho v. te M h • p . I demonatrators could disturb regular , • visitors lo the park,'.' he told th• DAll.Y 0 ' ac me I oposa PILOT. "We've been fUll all summer, and are now-tumin& people away na:u- larl . " ~ltehead also noted thAI the rallying are1 soua:ht by the PAC is near the park district offit:e. "J." am concerned a~t what Z,000 t,;?,11111 people might ·do to that area,'' he said. - .. Rl&ht now I'm chttiing this thing out with the r;late Attomej General's offk:e." Attorney for the PAC ln the lege1 ac- tion Js Patricia Hetzoe of Corona -del Mar. ~ Bland .said lawsuiL'I against the Capistrano school district .and the city of San Clem~e -'t{ill also soon be flied, but not untll.Mter Sunday's" demonstratlol!: Tho PAC llGlf!!lf lo ~tillsh througl> the courts the .'"right lb conduct protest parades at -.the J>residenfs summer hometown. Blaze Hits Lin er POR'l'-EVERGLADES;Fla. (UPI! -A amaU firt; -the fourth in sii: day1 - broke out.early today a.board.. the reUred, hmuy lloor Queen Elliabeth. Police said, it was "diflait.tlj arson." -.. ,.-.,., -·· '"'1"'"; " ...... ~. N•MOa co.U1 P,11M llHINO COM, AN'( . . lOtrt .N.'W ... ·~ ... ,_...., Jtc\ I. c..1.., .... ""*"' Mii ... al ......... Tk-•t Ktt~ll ·-r1i ..... , A. lrAwphl~• -·-• Jtttl'l'lt F. C.lliRI --'-"' ••11tr -..... -2111 W"t ltl~· ht.!.vtrtl MtitiRt M4r .. u P.O. In 1171, tl~6) ---- Orange County's Voling Systems Tuk Force heard the final testimony Wed- nesday night in 14: investigation o! seven firms vying for the right to provl"de autom,a\ic Voting equipment to the coun· ty . . RepresehtaUves of Shoup V o t i n g Machine Corp. of Nashville demonstrated what W"5 described as "the most up-ttr date votin& rnachine in the· world" to the ten-member citizens committee. A Shoup proposal under which ~ Urm ·WOUla provide 950 machines at a total cost of $1.8 million was filed with the task force. The committee decided on a further study of the proposals made by Shoup and six competitors before submitting its analysis to counly supervisors. Naming or the successful bidder wHI end a year- long probe by the task force. Competing with Shoup for the lucrative county contract are the Coleman Co., whose vote-counting equipment is cur- renUy used by the county, Cubic Votronica, Seiscor Punch Card System, Dita-Vote S)'!tem, AVM PrintomaUc S)'!· tern and IBM VotomaUc. The Coleman sySteni has been used by the county In all lis elections, primary &nd general for the past !is: years. lts performance in some ol those contests ha! produced bitter criticism. County Clerk William E. St John, sn observer at the 'lleetlng, has pointed out that the Coleman device was geared to the needs of 300,000 voters. He has urged the task force to bear in mind the fact that equipment capable of rapidly recording the votes of 600,000 residents should be ln use. Shoup representatives argue that an order o( 950 machines will only go halfway to meeting the county's needs. The.y describe lhe ideal voter·machlne ratio as one ma~hine per 3QO voters, a re- quired total of 2,000 machines. That order - and it seems unlikely to '""in the backing of the task force-would cost the county nearly $4 million. Discussed by the commitlee at the four·hour n1eeling was the possiblity that existing Coleman equipment could be renovated and possibly supplemented to meet the coi.tnty'S growing needs. The Coleman offer to p r o v 1 d e permanent maintenance of the com· pany's equipment at an annual cost of $5,000 was filed with the committee. It Was pointed out that the contract would be limited to labor only aqd the county wou]d incur a further $10,000 charge for the company!s overhauling of all equip- tnent prior to each elecUon. The company's suggestion that its president confer with the task force prior lo ils final decision on future voting equi pment is being studlcd by the citizens' committee . Sanitation Rates Rising But Not in Harbor A-rea Directors of Orange Coonty. Sanitation District s (northwest county clUes) will ask the Board of Supervisors this month to approve a ail<tnt tu hlke for 198&- 1970. DlstriCI II <Huntington Beach) expects to maintain I~ ~t tax rate while DJstrfct s (COila r..tesa) and District s (Newport Beach) p I an to lower their ' rates.~ ~ six<tnt tax hlke, and all other rates, were lfjproved Wednesday night as directors from all county sanitation diJtrictl met at the Fo.1ntaln Valley treatmtnt plan to approve budeets. Dlstrlct S coven Orange County from Ellis AvMue north and Euclid Strt<!t west. It Includes Fountain Valley, Westminster, the northern pOrtion of RunUng1co Beach, parta al Anahtlm, Garden Grove, and Fullerton, and Buena P1rk, Stinton, Los Alamitos, Cypress, La Palma, and La Habra. The six-cent increaae will bring the district's rate to 48 cent.. for each $JOO asst~sed valuation. Fred l1arper, general monager of the counly's treatment plants in Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach, said the. tax incre11e would cover costs of tronkllne construction from now through 1985. "\Ve have about U$ mlllion in major trunk line work to do during that time," snld Harper. "and the only way to cover Jt would be bond!l or 1 tax hike.'' Bonds y,•ere eliminaled, he expla ined. because tht interest rate on an $18 mllllon bond Issue would immcdlalely boost the tax rate 10 cents. . uard Strike Nixed ' . . ... Court Steps .In .~n San Clemente Suit " . San Clem<nlo'a ~ life11118fds have bioD' anltnd lo 111aJ .., the Job pendin1 • ~ Court beuln1 (Jf their P<Y c!JiPut• 'wlih the city. ~udae. Robtrl Corfman. aranted • lorn· porary restraining order Wednesday following the filing of a complaint by the city whkh also asks for $500,000 in damages from the 32 lifeguards Uated as defendants. He set Aua. 26 for a he.arin&: into a dispute,wblch hu lhreatened to leave thf!I South Cout community wltl\oul balhcr protecUon on the 18.S miles of aborellne covered by its lifeguards. Court ilctlon was taken by the city in the convictlon that the lifeguards were about to walk off the.Ir jobs in a bid to foree the city to lflnt pay ral&ea refuaed by city counclJ Jut -k. JµelUll'd Lt. Steve H. Corak, ldeD- tlfied In tho city complaint u tho prin- cipal defendant, bu uked tho city lo bring San Clemente ratta up to 'the pay JeVels enjoy!d by llfeiuards In all other areas from Los Angeles to San Diego. Chorak claim• that the San Clemente rate of $2.85 an hour for seasonal guards is nine percent below the average along the coast. He further claim! that permanent lieutenanll, such as himself. make $710 a month or 29 percent below the average. The lUquards are demanding nine per- cent and 29 percent Increase respectively along with additional pay hikes for seasonal lieutenants, Ule captain and the chief. They also want 1 five-day wort week. The city suit brands the lifeguards decision to strike on Saturday as "wholly Indefensible and unreatonable." It argues that the Uleguarda had every opportunity "'during June, ·Ju),y a~ Aquat" to dlscuaa the J><Y dispute with the city and anive at 1 conclusion without strike IC· tion. City officials have pointed out that the entire lifeguard department received a Wife Checking Roof Not Visor In Auto Crash Investigators probing a Costa Mesa traffic collision reported one driver's young wife reached to pull down a visor to get the sun out of his eyes, blocking his view. Mr~. William Whittenburg, of 577 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, says it hap- penecl differently. "I was reaching for some stuff hanging down from the roof,'' sbe e1pla.iDed after readingihe police Version. The Whlttenhurp had just booght the immaculate used car and were sun curious Sunday about why anyone would trade in such a nice vehicle. i;Suddenly it popped into my head that it might have been In an accident," she ~xplained, saying she reached to touch the overhead lining defect as possible evidence of a prior wreck. Ka·wham, and the Whlttenburgs were Introduced to the Robert E. Wbeelers, of 1551 Miramar Drlve, Newport Beach, in the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Fair Drive. "And It hadn't been In an accident," she concluded -"until then." 11merit raise" of five pert't'nt in the llllit- 70 budget. Captain. PbU Stubbs received a 7~ percent increue. Abo recently approved by the city waa a five-11ttp program under which seasonal 1uard11 who retlll'Qed to duty after their I .. first year get an a'u\Omltic five percerit raise each year ror ftte y1-ars. Chief Richard Haurcf, Captain Stubbs and three seaaon11I guardl did net join Chorak and his 31 fellow emplo)'es Jrt the group's demands. Lodge Hints Red Assalllts . t May Halt GI Withdrawals PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambas1ador Henry Cabot Loda:e told the Vietnam puce conference today the renew Communist oUenstve in SOUth Vietnam: has wrecked anolher hope for peace and hinted it may halt the wilhdrawaJ of more Ame~n troops. Lodge told the Hanoi and Viet Cong delegations seated across the circular table at the 30th session of · the con- ference, "by word and deed you show that you are not prepared for genuine nego.UaUon ..• your actions match your bellico.se words." Lodge added, as a rainstorm drummed on the windows of the conference room near the Arch of Triumph, "while 25,000 American soldiers are in the process of departing from South Vietnam and decisions are be.ing taken on the departure of additional American fon:.es, your army hu been preparing systematically for a new offensive." Liter, he aaid, "We have hoptd that the reports of a relaUve lull In the fl&htlng In South Vietnam would bea:ln to create an atmosphere in which genuine negotiaUons could take place, leading eventually to peace. "We still hope this can happen, but we aJ'fl deeply concerned with the indlcaUons I hive dtaeribed which point to the ln- tenalflcaUon ol the war by your -aide." 0 Your statements and your acts can have only one meaning: You are un- prepared to compromise and negoliale, and you continue to place your trust in violence and terror ," Lodge said. But he told the Communi!;ts that acts suc h as "terror raids" against S o u t h Vietnamese schools and hosp It a 1 s. particularly against the Cam Ranh Bay hospit&! Aug. 7, will get them nowhere. "This is vain and fuWe. The people of South Vietnam have experienced your campaigns of terror for many years, and their resolve to defend themselves against you have not been shaken. "I can assure you that the people of the Uniled States also detest such atrocities," the America negoUator said. Chief South Vietnamese negotiator Pham Dang Lam told newr;men too, the resumption of fighting "has put a,q e~ to hope.s raised by the telative calm of the recent weeks.'' Blaiherg Hospital • Ill CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI) - Philip Blaiberg, the world's longest surv- ivin1 heart transplant pallent, has gone back to Cape Town's Groote Schuur H~pit.al, a hospital spokesman said ltr day. No reason for his return to hospital was given immediately, but the spokesman said a medical bulletin wou1d be Issued later. Inside the gold-draped eonference hall, the tan, sllm eyou1~ v1etnameSe am- bassador began the stulon by tellina the Communists they have taken no step which would show ttiey want to scale down the fightin1 and create the climate for a peaceful acilUti!'fl. 'Heavy Fighting Rages Third Day < North of Saigon SAIGON (A P) -Heavy fighting ra&ed for ·the third day Thursday north oC Saigon, where allied troops are trying to break up enemy troop concentratiOris. Casualties were mounting steadily as U.S. and South Vietnamese forces strove to keep the enemy off balance and pre- vent any more widespread assaults like those that broke out across South Viet· nam Tuesday. Throughout South Vietnam . about 1,700 enemy troops have been killed in the three days, while from 125 to 150 Americans have died, allied headquarters reported. f\.fost of the action Thursday was near the Cambodian border area from 80 to 80 miles north of Saigon. Allied forces reported killing 69 enemy troops in a series of clashes there Thursday and 73 farther south. In the sharpest clash i n v o I v i n g Americans. elements of . the U.S. 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment and govern· ment Rangers reported tbey killed 35 North Vietnamese in an abandoned rub- ber plantation about two miles· northeast of Loe Ninh, 70 miles north of Saigon. Five Americans were wounded ·and government casua!Ues · wtre rep0rted very light. l!jilitary apo.tesmen said Allied troop.s bumped into an enemy forte of unknown size hidden among rubber tree:1 and undera:rol'ttblate 'ttiurlday morning. The allla~called ·in artillery and air strikes while blasiln1 at the enemy with tanks and machine guns. The fightin1 lasted for more than an hour. North Vietnamese ambushed a U.S. truck convoy about 18 miles S-Outh . of Quan Loi, 6S miles north .of Saigon. The U.S. troops returned fire a.nd called for air strikes against the enemy posi- tions. Sixteen North Vietnamese were reported killed and three Amerlcaru were wounded. Enemy gunners fired about 30 mort1r rounds at the 100-vehfcle convoy, which wa! transporting ammunition, fuel and conslruction material. Three trucks were reported damaged. LAST 3 DAYS!! -r STORE AND WAREHOUSE!! FURNITURE COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS 20% TO 50% OFF ON MANY ITEMS IN EVERY DEPARTlDT H.J.GAl\l\ETf fURNrf11RE °'"' --& ""· ..... 2115 HAllO! ILVO. COHA MlSA, CALIF. M'-02115 "46-0276 I t • I - \ -· 4-L 14, 191>9 ' . QUEENIE y Phil lnttMildl ' · Etttl"l!r9ed r-~~~~~~~~~~~""."""""1 ' 'Good Thing~ Congress Quit,s, ROO China Disperses Industry '_·Oil Quotas Attacked WASHINGTON (AP) -111pplie1. With Little Done • LONDON (UPI) -Com· munlst China has b e g u n dispersing nuclear and other vital indualrles as a safeguard again.st a possible war with the SOvlet Vnlon, diplomatic reports from the Far East uld today. ; . ' ... Despite 111rong """"""' rrom "lodeecl, by limltlng tm· lhe oil I n du 1 try , the perts. 'l;t J\'\Q even. be 11elf- defe1t1na .. b 1 encourqlr\1 faster use o our domeatic oil.'! '*aal4· WASHINGTON (AP) - CongreN ls on vacation with lilUe on the lawboolcs to show for eight months in session - Six Finish Gulf Stream Experiment WASHINGTON (AP ) -Six men completed today a 31-da.y expl oration of the G u l f SLream, during which they drifted under the ocean·s surface in the submersible vessel Ben Frarli<lin. Ind Senate lt1der1 ol both pariies soy it's 1 aood lhJoC. ''We haven't been puainl legislation in qµantity as we have in the past five or a1x yean, wbich I link is a good thm,," aald Dem·ocratlc Leackr Mike Mansfltld of Montana. .. We've been payinJ more attention to quality." "We haven't banned the country one bit.," 1 1 i d Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois. Dirksen said a legislature w hi c h doesn't clutter the lawbooks with too much legisla.Uon can help a country. Congress so far is meeting that test., As of Aug. 1, only 49 general bill! had become law, most of them relatively minor. None of the 13 major apropriations lJills to finance the government for the year which began July l has yet been enacted. Dirksen said"that, too, can be helpful. He said the fact that government agencies are operating under a continuing resolution, which p e r m i t s spending at the rate Congress set a year ago, tends to bold down federal outlays and thus save money. But the new appropriations must be passed before the current session ends, which means a hectic autumn and early winter. Cblna's key nuclear plant research institutes and testing grounds and her r o c k e t assembly lines are heavily concentrated in S i n k i a n g province, which would be aangerow1ty exposed io air and missile attack in the event or war with the Soviets. The latest border clashes have occurred in the Sinkiang area. The reports said t h e dispersal onlered by the Com- ;, . .·. :.•. .. ~ . ., goYemmtnt'1 antitrust chie~ ' bu recommended the ellmloa. Uon ol Importation quota• on. foreign crude oil. In doing so, Asst. AUy. Gm. Richard W. McLaren placed, the Justice Department on record against two other Cabinet-level agencies · on a subject that a Senate sub- committee has said coold mean '4 billioo in annual &av· ings to eon.somers.. I w;··~M[l'i)" munist Chinese authorities af-"I think some people are made v1oe-presidenta belore feels enUre plants. It also in-they're rudy to become ~president&." ).1cJ..aren told a Cabinet Lisk force on oil import controls Wednesda y lhal the preaeill system of quotas is , tioorripetttive, unfa.P' to con· somers and unneceuary lo the ecooomy and naUonal securlty. volved setUng up alternative ------------------installations ln less exposed and less known areas of the counlty. He IJUiiested that if any tm.: To what extent the crucial nuclear installations of Sin- kiang provlnct effectively can be moved is not known. Expert,, doubt whether ef- fective large scale evacuation is possible, although some dispersal is considered feas- ible. The reports said Sino-Soviet te!Won is reflected In growing preparations for emergency. although tht ~ibility or war still is considered unlikely at present Port restraints are· necessary F l R • H J·J a low protective tariff would Un.era ites em beEi;r:,re;;,bi:;cLar.n ma~e U clear that he prefers a system F S le F • d whereby the domestic oil or tar t , rien markel is governed solely by competitive conslderallons, in- .If eluding the enlrance of foreign '.~ LOS ANGELES (AJl) -wife in the morning. !Mn join· products. · ' International movie stars and ed. actors Steve MtQlteen and He also denounced Jongstan- jet setters have said their last Paul Newman at Sebring's ding industry arguments that ... goodbyes to beautiful blonde afternoon funeral . quotas are needed to preserve · actress Sharon Tate and in-Miss Tate, 26, and Sebring, the nation's reserves and to t e r n a t i o n a I I y k n o w n 35. her former boyfriend, were prevent foreign companles 1 hairdresser Jay Sebring, killed ldlled with coffee heiress from controlling lhe country'• with three others in a mMs ·Ab I g.a i l F o I g er, 2 6, oil supplies. murder. screenwriter Voityck Instead of reducing U.S. 5ANDS Ending their month under the sea, they surfaced at 7 :58 a.m. 440 miles southeast of Portland, P.1aine, or 300 miles fiOUth southeast of Halifax, N.S. Dirksen noted, for example, that the massive defense ap- propriations bill pr ob a b 1 y won't arrive in the Senate before November. House Notes T~ Reform Loopl1oles "Goody, Sharon, and may Frokowsky, 37, and Steven re9en'es, McLaren declared, the angels welcome you to Parent, 18, a friend of a an unrestrk:ted importation heaven and the martyrs guide caretaker at Miss Tate's policy would allow the nation your way," entoned the Rev. rented mansion in swanky Bel to draw from foreign IOUl'Cei Peter O'Reilly at the funeral .!.Ai~·r~. :=..:==-=-==-=--~w!'!hil~e..Jpreserv!!!~in~g!J:lt.s~dom~esti:!§"c!::~~::::::~~~~~::'.~~::~:r;~~E~ service Wednesday for Mlss1- The c r e w lmmedialely boarded a Coast Guard cutter, the Cook lnlel, for Portland. The shi p is due to arrive Fri- day about 3 p.m. First member of the crew to leave ·the sub was Chesler May. a researcher for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Spa ce Administration. He w a s followed by Kenneth Haigh, an acoustical expert for the British Navy. DAY DARK IN OREGO N The tax reform bill already passed by the House is due on the floor before Nov. 1. Ex-veep's Kin Given Jail Term KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -A grand.son of the late Vice President Alben Barkley has been sentenced to 20 years in jail for air piracy and .lci~1 EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) naping in the biiactlnl' al 1 The st.ate of Oregon Wed-nesdily night ordered virtually light plane 10 Cuba. all field burning halted · for a "I feel sympatheUc ••• but week in five Willamette Valley you did do an inexcusable counties after some conditiops act, .. Judge William Mehrtens brought darkness at noon here told William Alben Truitt, 35, earlier in the week. Wednesday. Conditions got so bid here 'Mle air piracy charge car- Tuesday that visibility .was ried a po~sible death penalty, reduced to three b Io ck s, but the federal jury of 10 motorists drove with their women ·and two men that headlights on, and doctors ad· found Truitt guilty Specified vised son1e Jung patients to that its verdict was "without leave town. • GaPital punishment." WASHINGTON (AP) -The House left s6me c r u c i a 1 loopholes in its provisions to plug tax loopholes for the very rich, according to a Treasw-y expert. The trouble is in a section of the tax reform bill aimed at insuring that no wealthy tax payer may completely escape federal income taxes. The bill as drawn by the Ways aod Means Committee and passed by the House last week plucged most or the escape hatches but left open a couple throogtl which many of the wealthy could scurry, the Treasury expert said. FOT years, Congress has granted certain ta x ex· emptions In one area or aoother -such as mineral depletion al l owances, Charitable contributions, fann losses , interest from municipal and state bonds. Tate. Peter Sellers, Yul Brynner and Warren Beatty flew from London to attend the funeral along with Hollywood actors Kirk Douglas, James Coburn and Stuart Whitman. Roman Polanskl, M I s s Tale's film-dire<f.or hqsband, alteoded the service for his * * * Police Tell Killer Clues LOS ANGELES (AP) -A "very, very sloppy ~king" man armed with a hlgti- powere'd rifle was IOUght by police today for questiOning in the fatal shooUng of the father of the singing Lennon Sisters. Investigatort refused t o disclose the man's name. They described him as 40 years old. Caucasian, 6-foot ·2, 210 pounds, with brown, unkempt hair. He is reportedly armed with a .30-cahber rifle, police said. A picture of the man has been circulated to police agencies, investigators said. CA!.DRJc's NEW SELF-Cl.fANING MN ISHEREI THE llEW "PRISCRIPTION" PERllAHENT &ptessly created jwt for you, La Maur'• "'Pcnonalind'" Permanent Wai;oc-CAPRJCB-oncn Jo1'Cly, deep-bodied lU!ttOUS waws wilh _., alivencu, depth and obodiax:c. And ••• only CAPRJCEaives your pmna- nenl an u:citina newdimc:nsioo-«lR. to the eye. milient. yd. firm and •1 Jona-lasting. U Maur'1 CAPRICE ••• the wave that:s iPdMduall11ows! a.,, SZJ.St HOUSE of ESTRADA BEAUTY SALON 17430 kKh Blvd. , ....... si...1 Huntington h•ch o,... '"' .".,. nm. 847-91 64 8e1utici•ns on Duty: Shirl1y , L1rry and D•n'Boyle, , , ..... __ _ SELF-CLEANING OVEN AND BROILER! from CALORIC Spattering 1p1 rerib1, d rib. bling pies, drooling casaerol· es, bursting potatoes. You know what a gunky m••• th1y can make of your oven. But thtr•'• hope. New calorie gas ov.,,1 that d•gunk th•m· 11tv11 1utomatlcolly. Costs Less Than 3¢ A Cleanln9 MODERNIZE YOUR KITCHEN NOW Prices Start as Low as $299.95 Sl1tee 1947 411 EAST 17th STREET DAILY f•t, SAT. f ·6 COSTA MESA Telephone 6". 1114 \ Here is bow: Savings account dlvlde.nd for 1 year on $500.00 ='ZS2. Free safe. deposit box for as long as you maintain $500.00 savings account = •ti!! (1pproxlmate JWIJ-i to 1'1111 llOll Ill bMk) PLUS: Free service charge on $750.00 of American Express traveler• cheques OR = •7~ Service charge free on purchase of up to 10 tickets to the Forum, Dodger Stadium or other sporting and theater events through TRS (TIC KETRON) Total benefits on your $500.00 savings account =*J•!! Stop by and see us to open your account. If you have any questions please call 541>-4066. We are open 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru Friday and 1 o a.m. to 6 p.m; Saturday. acific I ' I I I I I 1 -. I ' . ' ·av1ng~-,· AND LOAN ASSOCIATION SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA llAIN OFFICI: l401 WH11'11111 IOUl.IVAllD •LOI ANGii.ii, CAl.ll'OllNI~ . -------- ' ~I l -- • Bt\:DN PILOT EDITOIJIAL ·PJ\G~ ' . Wate.r front Cleanup 'l1le tntwe problems with unruly roill!il on the &jdewall<s of Newport Beach's McFadden Squire seem ID lllYe -l1lllotaDlia"1 lbl1 wHI<. Bal the solllllou to them revived • &host that bas bee baimlial the lhreHlock aecUon for yeah -geo- cal delerloratlon of the area. -men then cast aside iniUal bitterness .Cemniq from the bipple prob!tm· Tbey united ,1 •<I -· aolutloel tn 1DH1i11g1 with city repreaenlltlvea Jut week. Now one of th..-reprtHJ1181ive1, C®ncllman H- an! Ropn, J;iu a nn •uuettton for tbe bllsy w.ater- froat bUJIDessmen. "Tiley abould keep Ibis· unity 1o1n1 and build a lliq IWOCialion. Tbey bad It several ~ ago and ft worked, but they should keep it strong wbell)er there ii a crials or not," he said. Tbe councilman's suggemon Is obviously well limed, becaUJe the chances for reviving such an uso- ciation seem excellent after the summer touri~t crush eodJ in the next five weeks or so. During thou fall days when the beaches are near· ly empty, the businessmen could devote some 'time and energy to drafting plans -with city help -'to spruce up the area on a permanent basis. then It would be easy for UJ to work with them ""' get 10D1elhlng done ," Rog en commented. Tllat tecbnlque in the past few iveeks worked to 1olve 1 knotty problem with people. 11 would ·be sure to work on problem• Involving brooms, paintbrushes, concrete and shrubbery. . . Girding for Battle On Ibo surface it seemed like an ordinary plea for more memben when the Corona de! Mar Chamber of Commerce's neW preoldent ncenUy asked tor a doub- ling of present memberlblp. · But lh•· inlpllcatlona ot former Newport Beach Councilman Dee Coot'• eppeel for 200 now members ::. much fartl)er than t)te pro~e of a big~•r · Tbe C01'<1118 del Mar chamber wlII have a fight on its IW>ds. next year, a battle against a freeway inter· change plan'tbat could wipe out at least 75 of the com· munlty's fine home..s. For the chamber to-wield a strong, effective voice In the freeway fight, Cook recognizes that the chamber must have strength, both in funds and people. As it .shapes up n"Ow, the community will need a strong army of 'spokesmen who will keep up the fight until an equitable ietUement is reached. It might take --· .. ' . There have been suggestions for pedestrian malls in the area, changing some alleys that now are trash traps into well designed and attractive walkways. -·11 the businessmen form a strong orcanization, years. · Given the proper leadership and the backing of beefed up ranks, Corona del Mar's chamber coold pro- vide that service. ·Good grief. Samson! Just because we've trimmed you a bit over the ;years'/' (N l Sex Education Calls for Rare Wisdom De~ Gloomy G~: Readers E~press Views on VCI Action . " ' ~ros, Cons of Krisman Appointment Hore'• a brlak Dille 111loc1Jm for l'f'I: Eldacatloa II tbe !oak of th< 1ehool!; there II a tbinl called "aex education"; =-· m <ducatloa II the ta!; ol 1be " To the Editor: Haw come the •'tourllll" s et . .... ,Y with the beer bulta at bil ; ' Corona t Where, ob wbere, la the male patrol! -KS .G. We have found the Laguna Rills Kiwanis Club's ·atiact on Mr. Michael Krblnan'a appointment u Coordinator of Acodemlc Advlalng at UC, Irvine not only offeriaive, but abo ludicrouJ. 1'1:1e Klwa· niaDI are hunUnc witdlea where there are none and callin& names where none TMI ....,. ~ ,_.. \ltlwl. ;. ~ ' ( 'l pplyt -...rirr -. • "" . . 1t1111 In this countzy there is D9 aullt by .,.., "' """ " •MW .... "'" "•· • association. nor is there deprivation or pu~t without a·~. JI Michael ,_ ___ ..._ _______ ._,i l KMllriin is to be condeftmed. for meeting Bui Ibis -ln,01lc II both ~and -vely la~ Wbal 11 wtonc lla In tbe middle term, 119eX fldac8&1oa," For 'edpcatfuc about 1et is far different thin educating In ae.Mltmic ..i.ject.. meanlqful manner tb8t wwJd truly ' educate the t\udlnll ""' •""1 their. ' pareritJ al the Nm& time. But ti t1 111 equal fallacy lo Imqlno th.ti most parents are capable or givinC their own children ey effective temal instruction. Fidel CUtro and lfOlnl'to Cuba, then· we muat condemn Richard Nlxoa for sptn· dlq '-houri With Cum> and for vtJIUllC Communlal llumanla lut month. U Mr. Krisman Is to be condemned for being associated with SDS. ttien sun1y· Justice Hugo Black and Harry S. Truman must be condemned for their mem· bership in the ,Ku Klu• KJan. lliolo&Y can be "taucht" like oth<r caurses; sa cuinOt be:-F0r human au, Wllll<e the rest ol the animal world, hu lft added dimtn1ion of peraonallty. It.s PQtho1ogical, moral, cult.ur11 and aocial o,.nones make it an uceedlngly aubUe, camplei and 111bjectlve area ol lnqulry. '1111: QVEllTION qulverlna m111y -I boeidl these day" "Should ses be ~ in ICbool 0t at home?" la en uU:Dswerable one, for the simple fact tbli nobody knowl, or can agree on, bow ti' ll>tuld be laugh~ and there are no oi>-iti:Uvt llandardl for t.achlng it fairly, blnntly, Ind to the satisfaction of tbt ..,.,..1 eonununity. It ii not the physical facts about aa • chUdren need most to learn -these ,._ easily taught -but the connotatiana: ol amal activity. And these connotatiONI c1lt ICl'Oll the ·whole spectrum of Wemm b<~:..tf•Ugloully, legally, etldc.Uy I and jlS)'QUClliy • • NUI' ONE TEACHER In 1 hundred Is a~ pr...m equlppecl lo "t.ach .., .. in a For all our obsession with the subject, we are immensely confused, ignorant, ambivalent, and repressed about aa in the United States. Moreovef, even U we laJd a more fltional grup of the matter than we do, conditions are changing so rapidly, and standards and attitudes are ahilting so basically, that little can be taught with any finality or authority beyond mere moral strictures. FOR MOST SUBJIC'll, all the teacher needs ia "knowledge," and the minimal ability to transmit it. For se:s: education, we need wisdom, which ta a much rarer intell~tuat commodity. in abort supply both 1n and out or the ochool 5Jlltem. w • alao require deep empathy with young people. which too feW teachers and parents.are able to proykle in depth. Ide.ally, parents should teach sex to their children; theoretically, the schools should recruit all(f train teachers who coold d~ th< job; but 'nelth<r of these con- ditions exists today, and whichever cour~ the' school 'boards opt for will sbortcb&n&e the kids. Foremost Frustration lolm W. G1nlner, former Cabinet member and an urban expert, wants to ''revltallze" rural areas, create new ell* and overhaul existing cities as na· U<tlal l"'licy. It II a ratbor llrp onler. requlrlni an -llY output about • hWldredlold that of reachln& t&e mooo, but It touches directly OIL tho fo!omoll fl'Ulll'ltlon of the Anierican people today -inability to find a hltlonal road to the dllttibution of thelr m<JPntin1 population, and the resultin& te41tnlcal aod moral decay of their com· ~ily life. lo far u concerns "new cities ," we ht'tt been building them all thil century. a~ at a breakneck pace ginoe Ole war. T• a cue: 30 mllt1 north of San Fran- dllo, there wu ln lMO a crourotd on Hitliway IOI Cllled Novato, l"'pulatlon a1"1111,00tl. AV IT IS A anall but sprnlinl •linl" dl,Y of about 11,000. ft the lrldltton of moat comparable ~unities In the Ulllled State1, and tt ~ IO .. countell>Utl clualtred about ~tan ctnfon In Caltlomla. It oc- ~ ~ less crowded ata.tes, too. New in- ~ based ('tft t.edlnological develop-llllitt congeal populations. and big cltle.~ al'llf population. Hqer for freedom and '!Piii eipand the oatellitu, and th& .... iobllc ..... th< mt. 111 • dlfftrtot fonn lL is Uk:e the search for -land 1poc:e In the wtltwlnl •;a:btnt of the Wt century. It has the ... deluaiM u "Go westward, young -'" Fir -ti -llltllite populaUOM ..... jocll\lllJ pllmled EXll\IOUI ec:ono- ll!Fmd -fodGrl b<got them, and .,. •'¢1ptte.n. Instead of I ...... II <llilllral decline, ·-,_ _.... lnllaldol-• , .. ...,.-... th& llnllp- • deodlJ ... conc1a into and tb'!'P the big ctUes. IT 18 THE WOMT Of ctlche1 to note that thll redistrbu.Uon hU Impoverished the blc cities. materially and splritually, luvtna them often unfit for clvilited habltalloo. Nobod1 in the new ciUes or in the old ill content with this phenomenon, but to • man all Ulke part tn it and 111ravate it. Where will wt look for alleviation ol 1uch ruinous developmtnl/let alone a ta· llonal 1'11\'trssl ol 11! To our public men! Wby, tbiy art u bewildend and debJded .. .., ol us, and .. --by °" prlvate prejudices and •ants. The national capital ls filled with mar· hie Inhabited by public men, and by prlvata misery and anthiD deaperatloD In the ghetto and ouL 'I'M con.,... OIJI blather its way to a plan for ill fief, and the bureaus can wreck it with help from congresslooal commitlttl. r • TOM WICKER In the N'w Yolit Tbn .. telII ol iulbortation f,.. l Wuhln&toa IUbwO)'. Tho bul'UUI ~ to ohop up tho ~· and hamstring JI wt th a -.c b • which .mi1c10.i; lln'ther congest th& ty center. Somo Kentucl<y congressman, chairman or a sub- committee, holds up an $18.7 million ap- propriauon -for a start-untlt-ht"Ull .,.i the bridge. You needn't look to federal d>struction and inertia atone. Every f'tlion has ollllnlcllonlllla, ponut111 pell)t lntt!tlll, ""'""" ol, and oltan hootllt to, the -o( tho -" and Ille ' larpr .... which Mr. Gardner poses. OUR ORA VEST concern is t h e con· demnatlon of Mr. Krisman by a group which has not had enough respect for democratto principles to grant him a hearing or allow him to express hill view:s. __ Had they but given him an ~ porturiity to speak, they would know as we ~and. others who are acauainted with him know that he is not a danger to the university or the country, but rather 11 a apol:e~an for the uncorrupted principles on'wl)lt;b'thlf country was founded. 'I'hOR:WhO usault wlthOut facts, con- demn without hearing and penalize without justification repl'tsent a fester- ing cancer in our society and mu9t not be allowed to determine the future of 1s important an institution as the univer- sity. SAM AND SUZIE COHEN 'Anar e ldstle Foree' To The Editor: Re. Krisman at UCI: In reading the news 1torie1 on Chancellor Aldrich's ap- pointment of Krisman, I noticed several llatlna unanswertd quesUom. I. "Although faculty la suPllO'ed to hlll· die all advtslng of otudentJ,-krisman will advise 30 or 48 of them." Question: Wtll he advise thtm to join the SDS and to t.akt put In the campus miUtancy? Thirty or 40 well-trained activists can do much havoc! i. Aldrich praises Krisman for his "bonesty tn his commitment." Question : W11 Cutro honal In bis commitment to become Communist dictator of Cuba? 3. Krisman praises Aldrich : "Aldrich wa~ not dishonest with the students." Question: Is not honesty a basic quallty required for chancellorship and not one to be singled out and admired as some unlque attitude! . L KRISMAN SAYS, "Tht SOS is a very honest (that Word again) body snd these eeoPlt will not bt able to destroy tt." Ql*tion: doea Chancellor Aldrich want hit u1ndestrUct1blt" o r g 1 n l z a t I o n dttUcatld to violence and g<ivemrnent ovtu1hrow, to have Its own fifth-coluinn advisor in a p\lee of IUthority in this univenity supported by Joyal American ~a? Do the citizens of California ~ ltt How can Americans stop thll ln· filtration of ' acUvlsl mllitanll, Into poll- --·· Geet'ftt--, Deir Gwp: I have read aeveral u:planationa of your. Sldcwaya T h i n k I n I phllotophy and I'm w o rr I e d because I still ~on' understand IL Can't you.help me! • CONCERNED bear-Concerned:•~~~~~- " You're J)rtmaturt In your wor- rying. Write back wbtn you: start to understand Sldewiyo Thlnki111 - lhtn ,,..·n bavt something to "°" .., •tlooll. Litt.., '"""' rellClen •111 -lcome. Norm•ll'I' wrtters 1ho\llll ~\19'1' t!M:!r """"'' "' JOO W11rd1 or len, Th• ri.tit trlll Olltlfll'IM lel!t.rt to tit IPKe or ellmlnll• 111111 It r-rvtlll. All letters must lnclVcM 1!9Mlllf'I ll\lt tntHLnl add,_, but ,..,,,.. wlll 111 wlthMlll on ,_, If sufficlrtlt rMIOl'I 11 •~rltllt Mikt and found him to bE. an articulate, extremely interesting young man. I think it's only fair to listen to him, question him and then make a judgment. To me, that's the American way of doing things. Service club program chairmen can reach Mike by calling 833-5Ifl JIM WOOD 'Particulates' To the Editor : lions or authority? Are we helples1 before this anarchistic force?? PAUL WESTBROOK People living in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa should be angrily alarmed over the spoilage of our beauUful area by Hb Tea eher Approeea the pr<10pective encroachment of the oil To Th Edito . drilling rigs. We bave but to go several e r · , , ' mnes up the coast to see the wastelands Public concei:i over the appol~tment of made by this industry . Mr. MI t e Krisman Ill Coordm~tor of But another threal to our happy al· Academic Advl!lng at UCl Ill un-derstandable, given hl.s associaUon with mosphere comes from the p~posed in· b 0 th an unpopular organization (SDS) ~tallatlo!l of two power eeneraling plants and en unpopular cause (the Cuban m Huntington Beach .. Revolution). r would suggest, however, Just one of these otl-guzzling monsters that Mr. Krisman'& politlcal views and e<i~es as much ~ 70,000 barrel! of activities have absolutely no bearing on fuel oil per day. That ll not 70,000 gallons his ability to serve Irvine students in the per year, of 70,000 quarts per month -area of lcademic advising. 70,000 BAR~LS PER DAY (LA c:ounty -. · APCO Bulletin, 1969, p.25). AS TIIE FORMER _Coordinator ol Academic Advising at UCI, and as Mr. Krisman's teacher in several courses. l stronaly endorse Chancellor Aldrich'• de c is Ion to hire blm. I respect Mr. Krisman's intelligence and admire his commitment to the welfare of students at Irvine. Bol.b qualities will serve him well in his new position. SPENCER C. OLIN, )R. Associate Professor of History · UC, Irvine Listen Fir st To the Editor: Before more service clubs rush to crit.lciie the UCI 1ppointment of Mike Krisman, they might invite him to speak before their m e m b er sh i p • I've participated in 1 panel discussion with EVEN ASSUMING an uninterrupted supply o( foreign low-sulphur oil (and the domestic oil people are all over the politi- cians to ban the foreign supply), and further assuming the use of natural gas as Juel (when the weather lookl bad), there will still be thousands of tons of ox- ides of gulphur, nitrogen, a n d "particulates" spewing out the stacks of these lltUe beauties every year. (Have you ever been particulated7) Where will all this stUff find its way? The answer, my friends, is blowing in the wind. What Is wrong with the San Onofre nuclear plant? It makes power without smog. Why not pipe In our power from there or build, one like it? Or why not pipe in our power from an area already poisoned? Smog refugees had all better 1et in close touch with their county represen- tatives or we 'll all be singing the Smogport Harbor and Smoga Mesa Blues. ANDY ANDERSON Attraetlng Traffle To the Editor : J could not help but note the front page of the DAILY PILOT Friday, August 1, wherein reporter Randy Seelye gives a story with regard to the proposed Orange Freeway (Route 57). , I sincerely hope that the city of Newport Beach will adOpt a firm attlt\J<fe against such. a proposition. I am suii that lniUally aey freeway does relieve traffic tempo..rarily (this in regard to the quote attributed to Al Koch, Orange County _road epnunissloner: ("A freeway will eventually be necessary to relieve the traffic pressure on Harbor Boulevard.") but in the final analysis, a freeway only attracts more traffic. I am quite confident that the traffic Pressure on Harbor, is created for the "Jnost part by cars going to and from the freeway. The same is true of Newport. Boulevard and in fact you can witness this phenomenon at any location near any freeway. IF THE NEWPORT BEACH City Coun· cil is interested in the viewpoint of one citizen, please take the above into con- sideration, Ill well as our own current traffic problems. t am sur_e all the traffic noted on Ba1boa Boulevard is aggravated by freeway travel. It is relatively easy to cet from large populated areas to the beach by traveling the freeways and of coorse once off the freeway the streets are congested by traffic they never were designed to handle and we are faced with problems of police, signals, parking, etc. If they must build more freeways, and l suppose they must. can't we at least restrict them from building any off ramps near the city of Newport Beach? ALAN L. BLUM Consequences of a Military Cutback WASHINGTON -Even t h o 1 1 economists who support the present con· gresslonal tendency to sluh military e:t· penditures admit that the effect on the economy could be severe. They do not -to recall the dire predlc· lion of former Treasury Secretary George Humphrey -foresee the kind of "'depression that will curl your hair." But they do foresee, in the words of J . Ken- neth Galbraith, "a sectoral depression." If they are right, this "sectoral depre!sion" will hurt. Until recently, eeonorrjstl hive ari\ltd that military spending could be diverted to the civilian economy with minimum strain. Their optniona tended to bolster the demands or liberal politiclw to atop creating weapons and 1pend the money insttad on a Ooot under poverty, or -as Gtorl' Romney hu ufl*I -on lioulill1 or http fot our cltie1 or welfare reform tn the lclnd of proaram Mr. Nixon hlmMU has advanctd. THIS THEORY WAS that government sptndlna Is homoaenous -that to keep th• -'""I' boomln&. the .....,,_ has to tptqd montY. but It doun't matter whtre. BUI -that a cul In mlUlal')' pro- curtm•nl actually loomJ, Iba economllll ore_baYinc -thoulhll. Thay -belle,. that th& esrtler formula wu far too 1imple. Thay -btlltve that K mat· I.er& a gte1t deal where the govemmat spends its money, and thll aa Congress bei\n• tht job of brlngi111 military spen· dint under ecntrol It must face up to -· dllllcull -··-· One consequence is that the erowth in technology whieh aovemment derense 'pending hll& produced will be slowed. This is where the "sectorel depresaiOn" will come about. The trouble ii that the technological ltCtor also serves what economislll call a "funcUonal" purpo1e. WE OUG!IT ALIO to be utlng ourselves whether t be re are s o m e technological advancc.s which we would rather do wtthOut. Tbe supenonic atrplloe is AD example. Because tt is technolotically poaslble lo make an a1rplut whkb will cross the country ill' two hOUrs -with problblt sonic dllturbance belO!! -ti d... not follow that we want lo build it. wistfully the Ume when a trip to the top of the Empire State Building Afforded 1 view. tn Los Angeles on a clear day you can see -not Catlllna , but your neighbor. WE COULD, in of.her words. cut down military spending and sUll keep t h e technology and lbe economy boomJng. Bot we shall have to make vast and far. reaching decisions. Even the most liberal·minded economists doubt that we can or will do so quickly enouab to -1void the crunch. By Frank Mukiew1CI ud Tom Briden --WWW.. Ideally, the national soul-1earchin1 which.~al dtprualnn"-oughUo- brllll about wlll mull In the eotabltJb. men\ of a priority 1111 .,hlcll could employ the lachnoioallll, keep th& -booml111 ancf belln to aolve ooma of the urlh'I IOrloUI problems. Wille ~I. the -l"'ln>ou~ Tbursday, August 14, 19&9 Tht tditoriol pttgt o' Oat Dailr Pilot .cctk.t to lnfonn and 1tim- ut11trmuit1-bfi!'lffiflhlQ!lm n1Wspaper'1 opinioiu and com- mentary on topfct of tntrrt1t atjd 1igni/iconce, b11 proiitdino o fotUm for the fzprtldoft o/ our reMers' optniom. and btt pre1enting tht divtrst vitw- polnt.s of fnfomtfd obstrver.t and tpokt!'tnttn 01' topica o/ the dog. la makln1 our country a junlt ptle ; urban trwportation is unchanged since World War II : we have done almost nothing about pollution. though We Erle II a giant sewer. a river In Cleveland caught flrt thls year and some of us remember • Robert N. Weed, Publisber • I 7 -' • ---- • . ' . • Costa Mesa ' Today's l'l••I • EDIY.ION • -,, . . ' --ye,(,.62, NO. 194, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES . . , • ~ j , 1'HUR$0Af,. AU8UST 14, l"' . . . • TEN CENTS Armstrong Fights Tears At Tribute LOS ANGELES (uPI) -Ne i I Armstrong choked -tiack tears as he groped for words to tell America how the Apollo I 1 astronauts feel about their country and the honf'r It has given them. The first man to set foot on the moon held a glittering array of the nation's SQCIAL SIDE PHOTOS, LOCAL COUPLES : PAGE 13 higil and mighty spellbound as he spoke of seeing a scribbled 5ign among the masses in New \,..ork at t~ out.set of a day of coast·lo-coast acclaim. "Through you we touched the moon," it reitd. • • ' . -• .. - • ' Armstrong looked arourid the room, at his fellow astronauts, F.dwin E. Aldrin Jr., and ~11chael Collins, at President Nixon, at the great figures in the a~ dience and. through television, at the peo- ple of lh~ Unit.ed States. ' . . . THE TOAST OF THE NATION : APOLLO 11 ASTRON~l:ltS RECEIVE PRESIQENTIAL TOAST l;IURING GLIT:rERING STATI DINl!IER-'IN OAILY PH.OT ...... W ltidlM ~ uThrough you we touched the moon," he .aid. "It was cur privilege today to croas tht: country to touch America." ' TO~H AMERICA Toucll America the moon men did as -. they somehow survived the ·biggest tickertape parade in Manhattan, sent two miQJon in Chjiago into sboutifli jubilation and lb!!n f"' I<\~ Pacific .for a. state dinner Wed~ay njght that w;p billed as the most exu6erant bam· since Andrew Jackpon's c)an fAl'e up the W'Wte Bouse. . NW. revealed they will ·•!art shortly on 1 tour around the tt'tfl'ld. It is expected to begin Jn mid-September and tentati ve plans cal: for 49 days abroad.· Today the astronauts flew· to llouston for a few days with their wives aild families before another super-spectacular 1A the Astrodome Saturday night. Members of the BOphlsticated foreign dl'plomatii: corps were Scurrying around for astrooaut autographs like schoolgirls at 'the Century Plaza banquet where Hollywood stars rubbed shoulders with supreme coon jusUces and 44 governors rose ir unban to be Introduced. • Nixon, beaming with pride raised tbe toast to Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins. "I say &.imply to the three astronauts l\:e thank you for your courage, we thank youJO!' raising our sighls and the sights of men and women throUghout the world. ''The sky is no longer the limit and -we thank you for the fine young men you are, fine examples for young people all over the world." FALTERED Armstrong, a man to whom words do not come glibly, seemed to falter as he responded, but his sincerity rang through. "We hope and think that this Js the beginning or a new era, the beginning of an era when man understands the universe around him and the beginning or the era when man understands himself.'' Said Aldrin : "There are footprints on the moon. Those footprint_, belong to each and every one cf us, to all mankind, and they are there because or the blood, sweat and tears or millions of people. The footprints are the symbol or true human spirit." Said Collins : President Relaxing At Clemente . . '' si.N'CLEMENTE (UPI) -Prtsldlnt Nixon. tnten,.ly prOll<I of the Apollo It astronauls for provin1 "the sky ts no loiige:r the limit,'" ttew back to the Western Whjte· House .. tod~y p_laMinC' mostly to rela:it after a big night. 'rfle ·chlef eiet'l:JUve plan~ to lake It easy· as the end of a busy week dre.w near. His sol! a11J>Ointment was •a 9:30 am. meeting with the natleinal security, council. Tonight the President and Mrs. Nixon host · a party for the traveling White House press corps, Introducing them to· the ·white' House by the Pacific. Nixon continued to keep se<:r"'et hJs choice-of the associate supreme-Court JU!tice to replace Abe Forlas, who resigned--May 15. Presidential Pi:;ess Secrelary Ronald I,;. Ziegler said 1 Wednesday the Presiltent woWd not annoupce the appointment to the high court today Sen. Everett M. Dirksen's statement to the contrary. · Dirksen reported Nixon's choice was Chief Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. of Greenville, S.C .. Ziegler declined com· ment. In ·each of the past three days the President has sent messages to Congrees on his new-look federal weUare program. The latest Of1e Wednesday was a blockbuster tax-sharing plan which would give cities and stales a slice cf the federal fiscal pie with no ltrinp at· tacihed. , . , ~ ~ • Tbe<r•"""'!"•lialm( pid wr1Pl"d'·\;p the President.1 three-part program to revamp the ,wtllare 115tein and rev.era the flow of fect.ral ~er to WuhlJlllon. • ' •I r ' 'DAK.Y",ILOf'Sltfl,..... APP,~AUOS ASTRONAU:TS' · -·Apt>reclotlvo ·Pmld.nir " Girl Scalds Self In ShQw~r, Dies A J.year-0ld girl -who apparently turned off the cold water ·raucct while in ~ shower and scalded her!ll?lf -died Wednesday afternoon at Orange County Medical Center. Tina Aiken, daughter c( Mr. and 11-1rs. Marvin Aiken, of Riverside, i;uffcred burps over 35 percent of her body. ac· COl'ding to coroner 's deputy John Cale. tale aaicl Jhe accident happened last Sunday in Garden Grove at the home o( frfends of the .Aikens, Mr. apd Mrs. Ronald Gruber, of 13342 Redb~d S_t. Nbm• C:ateh-plarae Peace Council Denied Ground For Marcners \if.t ~ ApJO.'$....n I m.at11t.', II hQ 1!1 placo ·lo lllll 'Ila o(e.-.ilon in San Clemente this weekend.. ,.- The laldt,rebuff received by lht PAC Is refusaJ of San Clemente State Park of. ficlals to allow use of the grounds as a rallying point la(' participants in Sunday's planned anU-war. protest. ~ The park Js near President Nixon's summer White House. P.AC ,rep~e;rentatives' t.Oct~Y s<M}g'bt' to . overturn the ·decision by,Jillng a sitit in Orange County Superior Oiurt.: · SuperiCJl"l Court rJudge Robeft Cdrfinan will hear the action Friday;. an unusual departure ,from customary law ·and mo- tion proceed}ng~. , Jlol?ert Blaj Laguna Beach PAC of· fidal, was ambng petitioners asking ,the court to require the state· director ' of parks to ·pennlt ·the peace organiution to use park lahds adjacent to the. eiclusi•e Cyprus Shore ruidenttal community. The other side of C)'prus Shore borders the summer·White House estate. · Named In the writ of mandate is Jam~ Whitehead, state district 6 superintendent ol park.! and recreation. ~ show cause order has been signed by Judge Robert L. Corfman, shortening ·the . time of litigation. A pearlng will be held ·at"9:30 a.m. Fri· day In Superior Court. ~ark Supt. Whitehead "told us we cooldn't use the park, so we're taklng him to court," said Bland thJs morning. Last week, the PAC was refused' use of a Capistrano Unified School DI.strict ~hool grounds as a staging area. nie San Clemente City Council foilowed by refusing ~ group a permit ·to P.flrade down E~ Gamiilo Road, tbe-tnn'i main road. • · • ''We feel Mr. Whitehead denied 'UJ' uR of the p<Operty on ;;ry auperflelal (Ste PACt P11_e I) "Mr. President, here stands a proud American, proud to be a member or the Apollo team, proud to be a citizen.of the United States or America which nearly a decade ago said it would land men on the moon and did so, proud to be an in· habitant of this most magnificent planet." The three astronauts were awarded the 1ifedal cf Freedom, highest award the Now It's 'New Federalism'· Unltcd States can bestow on a civilian. . , Vice President Spiro Agnew read the in· 8· 1'JE. -RO·:;,;.. f'. ~oLUNS .. 1 ff' pond ed •-scripUon. m.r.. "' mon1o11s n o ice, er t11~ tradition. · Or-. Dfl11J' ~111t 11ltff He would wait until his adminlsrative ~~:."!:ibutions will be remem· Franklin Delano ~elt started it _ philosophy· took more 4lscernible fonn. benid u Jone u men wonder-and dream ·the-coininf ,of a i>olltlcal catch-jbraR to tt· hu done that. ~. Friday, for the Md search for truth on thil! planet ind serve as the ·hallmark1of1a national ad--fll'Bt Ume, ,the President .announcetl hi• I among the atars," it read. mif!istrati091. ca&ch;-phrase -which rtmaided unc1uatJt Great 11 was the list or the elite all)Oflg •• With ,FDR, ot'. COW'llo H. wu•tbe: New by' the prtlll unW 'I'llesday. the l',500 guestJ, there were notable Deal.. . . It is the· New Federalism. a!J,entees. Harry Truman-foilowed,-a-btt 1ame17 Tbe l'resld"'t uoed the tenn tliree • .. tack · the pioneering ·aspect · of tbe New Frontier and the immodest ambition of the ,Great. ~1ety,., . . 1 • • 1 1But U describes •CCJ!rately the Intent of . lhe'NlXOn adminletr1Uon. ·' " .. • .. Federalism," sayl"'Webstef'l;.meana:. , .. A fortn •of' goverpmeat ;ln•which PQWet l• ~bu\ed ¥\W"JI &ft,lfal ~qt¥t1 ., and a number of, C<11111ijb!ent. ~ • units." . . . .. • ' Fonner Presidents Lyndon 8. Johnson and certainly derivati vely, with hls Fair Umes in his welfare rrogram talk to the declined an Invitation as did Harry S Deal. naUon Friday. In copie. of the speech, 'IT ISNn' SEXY'. · . , Truman. i&h• f;!l<!lhow~ the pbrue appeared tn 1JJ.<1pltal letter•. "Not aurpn.tnlly, the New FederaUsm -Nora slngl.-rep"""'1Jtlvll>r en-blank. "Mlddle-oHhe-Rotd" wu -~....,..-:Bot·it Iliff weul ler1<ly,llllllolicad.~lrsad)-haa tlo-dellacton.-'!11'<-l'l-no nedy family was present. It was Prest-applied to his eight ,..._,.111 the nation'• ~taey or Labor George P. Shu1tz.Lat a punch,"' llYI one member _of the Whl\e dent John F. Kennedy who proclaimed in chiel executive but never by Ike hlmieU pre11 emferenc:e in S&n Clemente 1-\le> Houae prt;11 ~ in San Clemente. "It his administration America's detennina· ' ' day, defined it. Jtlst Isn't 11ery,'' quiP, a "lldy . 'CCI'· lion to put a man on the moon by the end • NIXON WAITED "The New Federalism,'' said Shull.I, m~ent. ' of the decade. Jacqueline Kennedy John F. Kennedy revived the cuatom, ,.means the decentralization of petn· •Ne.... ftderaltsm?" saY, another . . THEIR HONOR • , -Lla(ed In F~ee . •re~ '.He's Not a.Narcotics • _, .... Agel}~; ".t>#,a(~r -What ' • . ,l • ,,.· .. '""' __ ..;.._ He ls'ii>t a narcotlca a ... '~ lbusive. And always, . theJ a re He has nevtr beea a narcotlc1 llent. 1nonymous, just aS he must be for But his Newport Belch pho!le !Nl'liber ~of this story. . . , showed up"in the ·nee l'ress laol weelc" He tricea .hla tro<ible ba1k to when "a wttln .,.fta editors ·publlilbed· a 1ist of all friend -of a frJend'" moved Jn for a brief state narcOties afents. ' • · period, and added •his name to the He's been getting phone calls ever tflephone llsl4r1p of.hJa iwo roomm,aie.. sioce. They ,are obscene and they ·"You just dbn't think about anythln& threaien htm:wlfh bodily hmri.·"I~i. i~ like thJ$ happe!"ng," he said. "Yqu know. a guy moves Jn, he1aay11he works for the state narcollcs bUreau, and you think, 11.ea'tjy Fighting Rages Third f!ay 1Vo,rth-o,f S~igoti SAIGON .(AP) -H~Vy flghlinC'rqed for the third day Thursday . north of Saigon, where allied troops ire trying to ' break up enei:ny troop concentration.a. Casualties were mounting steadily ~as U.S. and South Vietnamra forces.strove to keep the enemy, off b!Ian~e and pre- vent any mote wlde11pre•d assault! like those that brokt·ou{ across. SOuth Viet· nanl TUisday. · Throughout South Vietnam, about 1,700 enemy troops have been killed Jlt the three days, while from 125 to', 150 Americans have died, allied headquarters reported. 'WelJ, okay.' " 1 1 The 'narcotfcs agent moved out months before the Free Press moved ln. "ll's a horrible thing. One nl&}lt aoon. somebody's going to get loaded and drlve up to one or these people's homes and just' blow the place up," ht Slid tensely. 1"l'm sure there will be ·.1 lb:x>tina before this thing is over." Re aaid, "Most gµys are just1 Joinr to e.hd up moving. But these speed, fftlb have auctr wafped ~' they 'll trl to track them down." • . He is ii) the process of"movinl ~ bay. Ing hls number changed, arid sa'.ld, "This Js ra real hassle ror me, and l!m'Sure tt'I worae for the narcotics agents." • ' West Ger1nany DJ:op~ Case Against Bishop · · Mosb' of the action ThUraday wal near FRANKFURT, Germany · {AP) .--•A the C&m~llan border area from 60 to, llG West German, prosecutoro decided. :U.w miles ~rth pf, ~lgon. All~ .force,. 'Il'lursday to drop the case . qalnst the reported ,.klllfucJQ enemy 1 tcoopa in-a most Rev. Matthlaa betrtger, Roman ,.flei" of ·tlalhel th<R "J'bcnday'.ond 73 · Catholic •uPliatJ titshop of llimJdl, wllO farther IOUth., , ,. ~ alon,11. an pnfer for Jbe , \M4 Jn . tht! :lbarpelt •cl,ah ·I n ' o fy J n g rf:prisaJ' shooting of 171 Italian \rUJ11en.: Americans, el<ments ol ·the· ir.s. '11th ·. The decision'by Fiinkfmfpiatrtct Al' Anp~red Cavalry.Regiment and govern-t<J"ney .Dietrfch Rahn was gtieted wlUi rnenl Ranger1 re~ they killed 35 "Satisfaction" · by ' .the .Vallcan. A North 'Vfethambe if\ an' abandoned rub-· spokesman for the Munich arcbdtooeae ber plantation about two miles northeast hailed it as meaning that the ~yew~ of .Loe: Ninh, 70 miles notth of Saigon. bishop was "fully rehabllitiited," 4 Five Amttk:ans ' were "®nded • and go~~rnment cuualtie, were OOKJled ~ery light: Military SJ)Okes111en said Allied troops bumped into an enemy force of unkrf'i:n .size hjdden. among rub~r ·tr• · alid undetll'OWth late Th1""'.of•Y momlhtl. , Tfie allles called In artillery and alr• strikes while blasting at the enemy With. tank• ·•nd· machllj•-~, "]le fl&!llini 1'~1ror,mQ.re µwn ,an hOUr::,). . _ •NOrfh Vl<tiwheie' 1mbu1nl!o•1 U.S.· truck cdrivoy aboul. 111' l'lilleo IOdllli iii Q<Jan· to!,• mllO!onorth GI Siip .. · The U.S. troop1 returntd fire and called for·alr'111ka' aplnlt 'tl•I"~ jJ61J. tiQnl., Siitfea "NOrtJI vtetDailteM 1.wert I , Oraage c::.a., . -I -Another d.,. , ol the oatrie old balmy stuff fa 'fr!day's for<calt with tempera!-ranglrig from i a top cit 74 alsaa tht coastline tGJ ' 87 in. lbe'lnlilnd "'"' INSmE 'roDAY reported kltl<d 1nol three-wm r . 801M 1,200 .,.,., ,tud .. 11 or wounded. ! • . ,, 1. ' • • • UC Irvine thil "'°' will /ittd Enem ~ers "flred!lifc!1''!'bou~t.i31ir.'mortar'tihiclr.:..· -1~·.;th;;;•;,;""r.;;'hit.s ;,. the thrM• Of u rou I , 00:Y• -C , • ~~...,...,~ h... wU tramporUni amnnutldon, fuel and acu e o1U1ng .t1n11 ... 11io· nUr10. •. (Set WAR. Pan u Steele llf•rleeu <•lffwlll• • Ci..ilflf M>lt ==.,.. 11 -'"..,,.. 11 -" =-li --.. --· Onassis aent her ttgreU. and with characteristic nair. New Fron-ment services ••• a sesrching for a new newsman~ "What dots that ·conjtrre-up? l Charles A. Llndbergh had been ex-tier summed up the drumi of his Id· spirit. •. 1 new )enae ol pariictpatlon by can aee being a ftoootlenman, but ,,..ho ;NBW VORK1(AP)l..J The stock mirtet • pected up to lhe last minute, but he did mi.ristraUon. ,, local government .•. yet with the federal wanttuto be• fedtralllt. They died when ' cl08ed In hlaher tenitory tdoay 11 it .,... ..... ': .,_ . . ....,,.. ,... ' ......... PlllPI It. U ~--1•1• ::::::.., .... not appear. Ml'3. Mamie Eisenhower, i.ndon Baines Johnson'• choict of government rootlnulng to be involved and AleXMder Hamilton died.'' ' cartlH lb 1atllt rally tuCCessfutl)' who else had been on the guest liat, wu 1logan was the Crea' SOCl!l.lty. concerned." • He'a wrong. Tbey-'re allVe and wtll -11 ! tiroull\ tht day.~(See quotations, Patu .. no( present. • Richard M. N!xoo,·ln bla flrll MVU The New Federaliam, u• slopo may, San Clemente, •IHI). ' ~ I ,, ' r T t ~. 14 AM 'l__.. la . .... ' Mlmltt .. ,._ • ,_ -=--.. • " 1 ' \. --- DAILY "IL.OT Steff IJlMte ,~ISADES ROAD COLLISION WEDNESDAY SE!'IDS NEWPORJ' WOMAN TO _HOSPITAL Door From Cyr Auto and B•k•r Vehicle Rest in Road Following Crash Newport:W~min ·. Emory In Wa_rnlng lnjmed~jlt'~µ.a~ ." 'fil; ,,. • • .. ... • Mn. Alia K. Cjf, 11'11111 W. llilh St .. .:-Jet Foes ~ake Appeal . NeWport.--~in critical -__ ...,,...,..... ~-· ~ -Jl!-ill'llDopil•I CoiJc!wing an • ....,.,...,. •cW.14 Wedneaday' af. To Halt More Flights' . . t~ "' ••. ~. ","";, ,... Cyr. WWW ;· 8 it, ~ taµfornia , Hlsi-7 Palnll, ... --. ·-· on Pallrdn Rull al tlle bead of Upper Newport Bay-Ille ...ie,a Jeft·tum · town ·s.ata AM Ata1t,. Btr cai~u struet bJ' an CHa::orailW auto driven ·ti, Barbm !la)'1', ~.of 23111 Paliaail!• Road. Mn. Baker.lfld a passenger in her car, f\.1argaret Pirtlet-. _ 18, . Qf the same Palisades Road address, suffered minor injurles but were not hospitalized, the paf.rc!I aaid. • Fr-f'ge 1 PAC ••• reuGii..-iie wdftaiiI·~;e woulci-ilijiit. - NeWpon Beach's jet noi5e fl>f4 have made .a . ~~minute" appeal to. county • supervisors to halt ~ "OODtinued esc•l•~ lion of jet flights at Oi'aflge County Airp<wt... ' :. . • In the formal appeal, Dan Emory; chairman of the Newport A)rpoJ1 ~;iise Abatement Committee, told t h e ~sors that a growing number of citlzens are objecting to the "ever·in- crcasing destrucUon of our .environment . under the tabel or •progress and Con· veNence'." ''There· are pr~ntly pending air plii;:aOon.t for flights to additional cities tha~U roved, will result in a scort or mor add tional jet takeoffs each day," be aid. , ory cited forewarning ,of the "complete eradication" of tbe community • ---' -1.. ' Of f)&ya aet Rey because of jet noise al !M Angeles lnternaliooal Airport. ~Haw~er •. one need not travel to that • aru,..td~ see for himself the unlivability uuMer J~:'Jeta: Any citizen can drive to Newport 'B<aCb, st.nd beilde.blJ car and Witness first-Jtlfld the jet takeoffs that . .V~ causing th~ destruction," he said. Emory cbarte4 that the concept of jet ~iglits being indispensable to industry is incorreet. He cittd discussions with members of chambers of commerce and heads of in- • dusttles which showed that site suitabili· ty, price· and hOusing for empk>yes were the most significant factors to locations af indUStries. Emory said that the recent federal decisions ta. allow local control 9f airport aperaf.!:ons ,will nelp "preYent the destruc- ti-On of a local environment." · plant life in the area," said JJland. "He alSG said our presence would T k F H F • al -• few n..,by resldenb who are . as orce ears ill empfoyes of Ibo 1lat. parlq," Blad ad· · ~~ < 1 ·-~. ~. • ' 1·•' . " Wbitebead. boweveT, sa!I thf' i · ,:·4'•··~!T. WU I bit more compllcaled. "'I~ v~ It d--. mild -" ttpr . v-rs Jo Ibo paik," be ~ Ibo :p~Y 0 e PILOT. ''We've biin-,fulf' all swarltf', • Machine_,. Proposal -,---- ·.6uard Strike . Nixed. ... IL.,-__ ,.. "" \ ·court Steps In on San CJe'!"ent~ Suit.,.._.., " \ '• • , I ' ! Sin Cllmtnle'• ~ h,....n!o - -....... lo N,y COi the job tiending I SIP,l'!or Court hearing of their pay ditpute with the city. ~udge Robtrt Corfman granted a tem- PorarY reslralnlng arder ·Wednesday following the filing of a complaint by the city ' which also asks for $500,000 in damages from the 32 lifeguards listed as defendants. He set Aug. 26 for a heariog into 1 dispute which bas tbrea~ to Jeaye the Soutb .CO.St community withoot bather protection on the 11,8 miles ot shoreline, covered by its lifeguards. Court action was taken by the city in the conviction that the lifeguards were about to walk off their jobs in a bid to f,orce 'the city to grant pay raises refuaed by clty councJJ lut week. Llfeguard LI: Steve IL Choral, lden- lilled in !be city complaint u Ille prJn. clpat defendant. hal aalled Ibo cJQr Jo bring Sin Clemen1" rates up lo the pay Jevela enjoyed by llfeguardo in all other areas from Los Angeles to San Diego. Charak cJaima: tliat the San Clemente rate of $2.85 an hour for aeuonal guards is nine percent below the average along the coast. He further. claims tliat permanent lieutenants, such as hlmaelf, make fllO a month or 29 percent below the average. The lifeguards are demanding nine per~ cent and 29 percent increase respectively along with additional pay hikes for seasonal lieutenants, the captain and the chief. They also want a five-day work week. The city suit brands the lifeguards deciaiori to'strlkeon Saturday-as "wholly indefeiwDle and unreasonable." It argues that the lifeguards had every opportunity "during June, July and Augll!t" to di!clw the pay dispute with the clty and arrive at a conclUJlon without atrii:e ac- ti..,. . City afficials have pointed out that the entire lifeguard department received a Wife Checking Roof Not Visor In Auto Crash "merit rai1t1" of ftYe ~t tri the 1• 1ftnt year get an au_~1Uc ~ive percen-t 70 budget. Captain PbiJ Stubbs received ra¥e each year ror ~~·year~.;. T\I perc~nt ~ , Chief Richard ~ Captain S!Jlbb• Afso recently approved by the city was am.J' three seaJOnat-ruards did not jOin a five-step program under which aeasoriat Cl'tora~.and bis 31 fellow Cl'PPlp)'~ Jn the auards wbo returned to duty att.wthelr group's demands. 'Lodge Hints Red, Ass~l!dts; ' ( ' ' I I May Halt GI Withdrawals \ PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge told the Vietnam peace conference today the renewed Communiat offenolve In South Vietnam bas wrecked another hope for peace and hint«¥f Jt may halt the withdrawal of more Amtrican troops. Lodp told the Hanol and Viet Cong deleptions seated acr~ the <:irc:ular b.ble ai the 30th session af the con- ference, "by ward and deed you show that you -are not prepared tor genuine negotiation ••. your actiaiu match your bellicoSe words." Lodge added, as a rainstorm drummed on the windaws of the conference room near the Arch of Triumph, "while 25,000 American soldiers are in the process of deJ>8!11ng from South Vietnam anJ decisions are being taken on the depalture of additional American forces, your army has been preparing aystematically fot a new offensive." "This is vain and futile. The people of South Vietnam have experienced ypur campaigns of terror f« many fears, Ind their resolve to defend fJlemse_lYes against you have not been sh,aken. - "I can as~ure you that the people af the United States ,also • detest s 1i C h atrocities," lbe America negotiator said. Chief South Vietnamese negotiator Pham Dang Lam told newsmen too, the resumption of fighting "has put an end to hopes raised by the relatlve calm of lhe recent weeks ." Inside the gold-draped conference hall , the tall, slim South Vietnamese am- bassador began the session by telling the Communists they have taken no step which would show they want to scale down the fighting and create the climate for a peaceful .solution. From Page I WAR .•. Later, he said, "We have hoped that the reports af a relative lull in tbe figttting in South Vietnam wauld begin to create an atmo!pbere In which genuine negoUations could take place, leading eventually to peace. construction material. Three trucks were "We sWl hope this can happen, but we reported damaged. are deeply concerned with the indications Eighteen enemy soldiers were killed l have described which point to the in-Thursday morning near An Loe. pro- tensilication af the war by your side." vincial capital 60 miles north af Saigon, "Your statements and your acts can when a North Vietnamese force attacked have Qnly one meaning: You are un· a patrol base of the U.S. Jst Air Cavalry prepared to campromise and-negotiate , Division. and you continue to place your trust in Thirteen Americans were wounded violence and terror," Lodge said. before the enemy wilhdrew tive hours But he told the Communists that acts later under a hail of machine-gun bullets such .as "terror raids" against South from helicopter gunships aod the point· 1rivestigators probing a Costa Mesa Vietnamese schools and hosp it a Is , blank fire of artillery., ,.. • traffic collision reported one driver's particularly against the Cam Ranh Bay Sou th of this area,_ the .Nprth Vief· voung wife reached to pull down a visor hospital Aug. 7, will get them nowhere. namese attacked about 400 South Viet· l~ get lhe sun out of his eyes, blocking his namese troops Wednesday night south of view. Tay Ninh, the key pro~inclal capital 55 ·Mrs. William Whittenburg, of 577 p } J miles northwest of Saigon. . Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, -~ays it hap-ersona ncome in a hattle that continued until dilwn. pe_ned. dliferentl,y, • the -perat~rs reported killing 73 ·•r was reachirig tor some stufl.banging Rises Sharply enemy soldiers at a cost of 14 kilied and flown from the roof," she expliined after 43 woundefj.. readinJl the police version. · ' · Jn the fat north, Bs2 Stratorortresses The Whiltenburgs had just bought the WASHINGTON (AP) -Personal in-dumped 500tons of bombs on enemy posi- immaculate used car and were still come rose sharply. in llJly. wJ~ a fed'1a1 lions south of the denu1i'tarb:ed.1.0ne after curious ·Sunday about why anyone would pay increase the larg~ component, the North Vietnamese launched an attack trade in such a nice vehicle.. Commerce Department said today.; \Vednesday night on U .S~ Marine.f in ' a ''Suddenly it popped into my .head . that The department's Office of BUJiness night bivouac. lt might have been in an aCcident,''. she Economics said the '6 billion July· ad· The battle was in the Rockpile· area and are now turniic'"~)e away ~ JarlJ." ,. . Whltdlead alJO niit<e-tb.i Ibo rallying ma...,.... by Uie;i>AC-lsaear lbe pork district offic:t;:~ "I·.am concerned· a?Ju\ .... -2,000 ·lo~ P<Oi!l~ miiJ>• dO .. that area," be''afd. · · ,_ Ot!lnge County"s-Voting Systems Tas'k ... explained, saying she reached to touch vance, lo a season.ally adjusted aMual four miles south of the buffet zone. The has produced bjUer criticism. the overhead lining defect as Possible rate of $752.3 billion, matched jls revised enemy auacked · with. dynamite bombs County Clerk William E. St John, an evidence of a prior wreck. June increase and was about $1 billion and grenades, killing. two Marin~· and "Rl&ht now I'm cbedlni'lhis Jbing out Miii Ille slate Aliemey.Gentral's ofli<e." Atlomey for lbe PAC in the Jep\ a<• Hon is Patricia Betio• .. of Corona del . Mar. . . . . Bland said lawwits ~ainst the CipistraDo scbool dislfi<;I iniil lbe city of San Clemente will also llOOIJ,be fil""bltt not until iiflet SUJ!day". demonstration. The PAC hopes ·10 establlah lhrouiJ! .11\o courts tho rjibl ;o c.onduct protest .=wn.at.... lt\e •~resident's summer Blaze Hits Liner PORT EVERGLAOES,Fla.-(UPI)-A 5tnaU fire ~ the fourtll Jn six days - broke out,grJy toll~y abciiu:d. the Te\~ luxury llni:r Queen Elizabeth. Palice said it was "~tely arson1" CllUMt;I CCW1'!:NI.~ CJJWAlfl --..; ... ' t.wtK.W ... ......................... . " . J ...... ~.., Vleill ,,.,.,. ... ., ........ , n.-. 1( • .,..11 .... ~.;;,. A. Myr,liift• """""""' l~lttir ----]JO W•ll t,, St•••' Mtili~t Aifr••n p~, a., rs•o. •21tJ6 ---,,._, If.Id!; 2211 ........ ....,..,.,. L.,..,..,.~ut,.,_..A_ Mimn.tltll 1*11: M 5"' "'"' Force heard the· final testimony Wed- nesClay ·night in Its jnvestigation of seven firms vym4: for· pie right to proVlde ~utomatle yotir)g·equipment to the coun- ty. Repz:eseqtatives of Shoup V o t I n g ?ilacblne Co_rp. Of Nashville demonstrated what.1 VflS described as "the most up.to- datt! TI>(li:i4.PJachine in the world" to lhe ten·pteriJ.ber ciUz.ens committee. A ShooR ·proposal under which the firm would prOvide 950 machines at a total cost of. fl.a niillion was filed with the task force. " The committee decided on a further 5tudY ~f the proposals made by Shoup and six competitors before submitting its analysis to coWlL)' supervi~rs. Naming of the ~ccesaful bidder will end a year· long pfobe Dy the task far~. Competing with Shoup for the lucrative caunty cantract are the Coleman Co., \vhose vote-counting equipment is cur- rently used by the county, Cubic Votronics, Seiscor Pu"nch Card System. Data-Vote System, AVM Printomatic Sys- tem and IBM Votomatic. The Coleman 1)11tem has been used by the county In all its elections, primary and general for the past six years. Its perfonnance in some al those contests ob5erver at the meeting, has pointed out Ka·wham, and the Whittenburp were higher than the average monthly gain in wounding five . Two North Vietnamese that the Coleman device was geared to introduced to the Robert E. Wheelers, af the first hall of the year. were known to have been killed. the needs af 300,000 voters. He has urged 1552 Miramar Drive, Newport Beach, in For the first seven months, the nation's U.S. intelligence officers said they Co the intersection af Harbor Boulevard and personal income averaged $73S.3 billion not expect the current enemy upsurge to the task force to bear In mind the fact Fair Drive. at an annual rate, $60.4 billion or nine last for any sustained period. They that . equipment capable ol rapidly "And it hadn't been in .a-accident," percent aobve the comparable period last predicted a fall Cllmpaign marked by recording the votes of 600,000 resident.s she concluded -"until then." year. brief but heavy attacks. shoWdbeinuse. ,~:::::...:=.:=.:=~=-=-~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---''----'=-~~~~~ Shoup representatives argue that an order of 900 machines will only go hallway to meeting the county's needs. -They describe the Ideal voter·machine ratio as one machine per 300 voters, a re- quired total al 2.000 machines. That order -and it seems unlikely to \\'in the backing or the task forc"e-:wot!ld cost the county nearly $4 million. Discussed by the committee at the four·hour meeting was the possiblity that elC.isting Coleman equipment could be renovated and pos5ibly supplemented to mee~ the coonty's growing needs. The Coleman offer to p r o v i d e permanent maintenance of the com· pany's equipment at an annual cost af $S,OOO was filed wilh the committee. Jt was pointed out that the contract would be limited to labor only and the county would incur a further $10,000 .charge for the COmJ>&D:Y.'S oyerhauling of all equi~ ment pnor to each election. The company's suggestion that Its president confer with the task force prior 10 its final decision an future valing equipment is being studied by the citizens' committee. LAST 3 DAYS!! - STORE AND WAREHOUSE!! FURNITURE Sanitation Rates Risi1ig· , But Not in Harbor Area rnrectors of Orange County Sanit.atian Distrkt s (northwest county cities) will ask the Board of Supervisors this month to appr.oye • six.q;p.J. tax hike for 1969· 1970. Dillrlel II (Huntlnglon Beach) expects la maintain its present t.a1 rate while Dlsftfcl I .(C..ta Mesa) and Distriel 6 (Newport Beach) plan to lower their rates .. The six.cent tat hJke. and all other rates. were approved Wednesday night as ~!rectors from 111 county sanitation district.. met al the Fountain Valley treatment pltn lo approve budgets. Di.slrict 3 covert Orange County from Ellis Avenue north and Euclid Street west. It Includes Fountain Valley, \Yestminater, the northern portion of HlllllilJi1oo Beach, parll ci Anabelm, • Garden Grove, ind Fullerton, and Buena Park, Stanton, Los AJamitos, Cypress, La Palma, and LI Ha~ra. The six~nL Increase will bring the district's rate to 48 cents for each $100 assessed valuation. Fred Harper. general manager of the county's treatment plants in Fountain Valley· and Huntington Beach, gaid the tax increase would cover costs of trunkline construction from now Uuwgh 191$. ;!We have about $25 million in major trunk lil'le wark to do during that tlme," !'laid Harper. "and the only way to cover IL would.be bonds or a lax hike..'' Bands were eliminated, he explained, became the interest rale an an $18 million bond issue-would immediately boool the ta• rate 10 cents. PROFESSIONAL INT.ERIOI DESl6NW COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS 20% TO 50% OFF ON MANY ITEMS IN EVERY DEPARTllNT 0,.-.,-.. a M . - ( 2115 HARIOR ILV!J. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 6'46-0275 "46-0276 .. Tllundly, A"""I 14, 1'69 t. 4 0 'Good Thing' Congress Quits, Red China DiSperses Industry QUBNIE Ethi IJ.!gefl ' -ly P.htl lnttffcmdr ' ' . ~1 , Oil Quotas A~t~•ed With Little Done ~ 'WASHINGTON (AP) ~ll,., · · dtfO.lli>C b'J "1COU111111!1 Dtsplt• otrong pres=• from lnd"'2, ~Y tbnllln& Im, foster uM our ~ome.t!C ... WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress is on vacation with llWe on the lewbooks to 1bow for eight montha in seuion - Six Finish Gulf Stream Experiment WASHINGTON (AP) -Six men completed today a 31-day exploration of the G u I f Stream, during which they drifted under lhe ocean 's surface in the submersible vessel Ben Franklin. Ending their · month under the sea. they surfaced at 7:58 a.m. 440 miles southeast of Portland, "1aine, or 300 miles sooth 50\.llheast o( Halifax, N.S. The c r e w immediately boarded a Coast Guard cuuer, the Cook Inlet, for Portland. 'The ship is due to arrive Fri· day a.bout 3 p.m. First member of the crew to leave the sub was Chester May, 1 researcher for the Na· tional Aeronautics and Space Administration. He w a s followed by Kenneth Haigh, an acou stical expert .for lhe British Navy. DAY DARK IN OREGO N •· ... EUGEN!I), Ore. (UPI) The state of Oregon Wed· nesday night ordered virtually all neld burning halted for a week in five Willamette Valley counties after some coflC(itions brought darkness at noon here earlier In: the week. CondiUonS got so bad here Tuesday that visibility was reduced to . three b I o c k.s • motori!ts drove with their headlights. on, and docttlrs ad· vised some lung patients to leave to\vn. THE llfW 'PRESCRIPTION" PERMANENT &prasly mated just for JOI!, IA Maur'1 ""Pcr!OM.lized" Pamaoc:nt Wave-CAPJUCE-ofrcn Jo..ely, dcq>-bodicd IV5trOUJ wa.ws with DCW ativcncu. depth Ind obcdimoc. AJJ4 •.. only CAPRJCE aillCI )'OCIJ' pcnm- 11CDI a.n Qciting ~dimension--tol\1 to fM eye, R5Uicot, Jd. 6rm Ind •1 Janc·lutin;. U Maur'1 CAPRJCB ••• die nw lbat's indMduaJ.b' JOWi! .... Sll.11 HOUSE of ESTRADA BEAUTY SALON 17430 BHch Blvd . ............... Huntington lt•ch o,.. Int: enept n,,,._ 147·9164 lle1uticiens on Duty: Shirley, Larry and. Din Boyle and Senate le1den of both p,arties say 11'1 • rood lh!llJ. "We baftll't betn paasl.na legislation in quantity 11 we have ta tbt past five or six years, wllldi l llnk is a good thing," said Democratic Leader M.lke Minsfield of Monlana. "We've been paytna more attention to quality. 0 "We baYen 't harmed the country ooe bit," 1 a I d Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois. Dirksen aaJd a le(islalurt w b l c h doesn't clutter the la\ri>Ooks with too much legiafution can help a country. Congress ao far is meeting that test. ·As of Aug. 1, only 41 general bills bad become law, most of them relatively mJnor. None of the 13 major aproprlatlons bills to finance the government for the year which began July 1 has yet been enacted. Dirksen said that, too, can be helpful. He said the fact that government agencies are operating under a continuing resolution, which p e rm i t s spending at the rate Congress set a year ago, tends to hold down federal outlays and thus save money. But the new appropriations must be passed before the current session ends:, which means a hectic autumn and early winter. Dirksen noted, tor uample, that the massive defense ap- propriation! bill p rob a b I y won't arrive in the Senate before November. The ta1 reform bill already passed by the House is due oo the floor before Nov. I. Ex-veep's Kin Gi ven Jail Term KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -A grandson of the late Vice President Alben Barkley has been sentenced to 20 years in jail for air piracy and kid· n'aping in the hijackin1 of 1 light plane to Cuba. "l feel sympathetic ••• but you did 1do an inexcusable act," Judge WUliam Mehrtens told William Alben Truitt, 35, Wednesday. 'The air piracy charge car· ried a possible death penalty, but the federal jury ol JO women and two men that foond . Truitt guilty specified that its verdict was "without capital punishment.'' LONDON (UPI) -Com- muni5t Chlna has b e c u n dtsperalng nuclear and other Yitai lndulJri .. U J uftguard against a poulble war with lhe Soviet Union, dlp~maUc reports from the Far East ukl today. . th9 oil Industry , the ,....:.porU..;_;;.'_~..;_ma;;.·;;.Y..;_"_'"..;_be..;__..u_,_o11..::"';;."_be,:.• _lil-"d'-, ----- government's antitrust chkf '71~5r,lJr-'k:dl Otlna's key nuclear plant re:seattb institutes and testing &rounds aod her r o c k e t assembly lines are heavily concentrated in S i o k I a n g province., which would be CAngerowily expot1ed 10 atr and missile attack in the event or war with the Soviet!. The latest border clashes have occurred In the Sinkiang area. The reports said l h e : . .. : .. '~ . ., ;' • dispenal prdered by the Com-"-:::::::"."':-----7"=;;;;;;~;;;,;;.;;;~".-:'~77'­munlst Chinest authorities af· "I think some people a.re ma.de vioe--presidentl before fects entire planls. It also in-they're ready to become vice-president&.,. volved settl.n4 up alternative--------------------!MtaUaUons m less exposed and less known areas of the country. Funeral Rites Held has recommended the ellmtn8-I! lion ol lmportation quotas on foreign crude oil. Jn doing so, Asst. ·Atty. Gen; Richard W. ?.1cLaren placed ' the JU!lice Department on record against two other Cabinet-level agencies on 11 subject that a Senate aub- t"Ommitlee has said could mean $4 billion in annual sav· i.ogs to consumers. McLaren told a Cabinet task . force on oil import CQnlro Wednesday that the present system or quota! is an. UcompeUUve, unfatr to' con- sumers and unnetessary to the economy and national security. He suggested that if any im- port restraJnts are neees.ury a low protective tarl(f would be prererable. To what extent the crucial nuc}ear installations of Sin· kiang province effectively can be moved is not known. Experts doubt whether ef. fective large scale evacuatlon b: possible, although some dispersal is considered feas. For Starlet, Friend Even so, McLaren made It clear that he prefers a system whereby the domestic oil l markel is governed solely by , competitive considerations, in-,,_k. W~~VEO STl\HTS -.~ • eluding the entrance or foreign L . ~~C!l.~':.. IJ!f!I ilE~T)llCT a LOS ANGELES (AP) -wife in the morning. then join· producls. \I. -~r •t. , , '\~. ible. . The reports said Sino-Soviet tension is reflected in growing preparations for emergency. although the possibility of war still is considered unlikely al present. International movie stars and ed actors Steve McQueen and He al!IO denounced lon.gst.an-~, ,, -;r; -~ , ~ .. If,. jet setters have said their last Paul Newman at Sebring's ding industry argumenls that tt~·~ J ~ • · E lt:A: :tJi/ , goodbyes to beautiful blonde afternoon funeral. quot.as are needed to preserve ~F/~1t·; -4 . ~~ ev&, ' ' actress Sharon Tate and in-Mi ss Tate. 26; and Sebring, the nation 's reserves and to f~-~. f!l t"" "hi "l'_' ~-i..,;,;.t , • 1' ternationally known 35,herformerboyfriend,were prevent foreign companies l"""~,'H'<~f' ~-\--e; y-..-) 1-1lJ D ""'°•~ Or.' hairdresser Jay Sebring, killed killed with coffee heiress from controlling the country's r.;t~\ · , \f\\f\ · ~ ,t~ • ·~·· wi th three others in a mass Abigail Folger , 26, oil supplies. . :, ;y,... ~ \ . •W, 4' m~;Gdooder.y, Sharon, and may sFcrke-enkywriter Voityck Instead Mo!Larreduc1ng U.S, ~;>'."'-~*' · \.:;# PhOJM;~64$91 ro ows , 37, and Steven reserves, c en declared, f?!T~:,r; , • ., · · ' · • House Notes Tax Refol'm Loopholes the angels welcome · you to Parent, 18, a friend of a an unrestricted importation : iii>-. heaven and the martyr! guide caretaker at Miss Tale's poUcy would allow the nallon your way," entoned the Rev. rented mansion in swanky Bel to draw from foreign 80\Jrcet Peter O'Reilly at the funeral Air. while preserving its domeatlc service Wednesday for Miss ,------------~--~-----'-------'-----..,---...-....;""'-­ WAS!IlNGTON (AP) -The House left some c r u c i a I loopholes in its provisions to plug tax loopholes for the very rich, according to a Treasury expert. The trouble Is in a section o.f the t.u refonn bill aimed at insuring that no wealthy tax payer may completely escape federal income taxes. The bill as drawn by the Ways and Means Committee and passed by the House last week plugged most of the escape hatches but le!t open a couple through which many of the wealthy rould 3C'U1T)', the Treasury expert said. For years, Congress hll.!I granted certain t a x ex- emptions in one area or another -such 11 mineral depl eLion allowan ces, charlt.able contributions, farm losses, interest from municipal and st.ate bonds. Tate. Peter Sellers, Yul Brynner and Warren Beatty flew from London to attend the funeral along with Hollywood actors Kirk Douglas, James Coburn and Stuart Whitman. Roman Polanski, ~t i s s Tate's film-director husband, attended the service for his * * ··* Police Tell Killer Clues LOS ANGELES (AP) -A "very, very sloppy looking" man armed with a high· powered rifle was sought by police today for questioning in the fat.al shootiilg of the father of the si nging Lennon Sisters. InvesUgatol"! refused to disclose th e man's name. They described him as 40 years old , Caucasian, 6-fool-2 , 210 pounds, with brown, unkempt hair. He is reportedly armed with a .:likaliber rifle, police said . A picture of the man has been circulated to police agencies, investigators said. (1D[1,lf~£o ©[1,~(M'" JS HERE! SELF-CLEANING OVEN AND BROILER! fro111 CALORIC Sp.tterlng 1parerlb1, drib- bl ing pies, drooli ng c•11•rol· es, bursting potatoes. Yo u know wh•t • gunky mtsl they can make of your oven. But th•r•'• hope. New caloric g1s ovens that d"'11unk them• selves •utomatlcolly . J' Here is bow: Savings account dividend for 1 year on $500.00 =*ZS~ Free safe deposit box for as long as you maintain $500.00 savings account = •ti!! (1pproxl1111l1 ye11Jy cott to rtnt ~ox at bank) PLUS: Free service charge on $~50.00 of American Express travelers cheques OR = •7!! Service charge free on purchase of up to 10 tickets to the Forum, Dodger Stadium or other sporting and theater events through TRS (TICKETRON) Total benefits on your $500.00 savings account =•J•!! Stop by and see us to open your account. If you have any questions please call 540-4066. We are open 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru Friday and 1 O a.m. to 6 p .m . Saturday. ! Costs Less Than 3¢ A . Cleaning MODERNIZE YOUR KITCHEN NOW Prices Start as Low as $299.95 acific .avip:,gs ... ~ Slieee JIU7 411 EAST 17th STRm DAILY f.f, SAT. f .f COSTA MESA Tol•phono 644 • 1614 • • • • • • • • • • AND LOAM ASSOCIATIO f SOUTH COAST PLAZA ~ COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA MAIN OFl'!CE: M01 WHJTTllll IOULIVARD o LOI ANCllLU, CALl'ORNiA • ' I ' •• I .I ' c DAJJ,Y P!J!T EDITO~ P:.\.Gh . ,. .. . '. .. -c 1o·se the Book on Oil · Th• IMieli for oil beneath Cosia ·Mo~ ·II 8"PB1'!11• · Jy over. Ollo wffk allor a bittar outcry belor• the.city coun- cil, tho OCcidental Petroleum Col'JM)l'allon'• unalghUy aploration rig on th• norlheaot •kM of town ii obelnf cllanalitled. UnoUlclal tource1 1ay there 11 no oil under Costa M-news wblch can only be prov~ by · confinna- tlon from project geolo1llta. SPokeam.en fo~ Camay Drlllln& Co.. subcontractor on the Job wblcb brought mlntral 11mples up from 4,828 feet, decline to say so CIUlriChL But failure to find black 1old seems obv.ioua. Arguments In favor of the c911trover1lal 4 to l vote ~ May, by wblch councilmen approved olaot.drill· ~ l!llder the city from. ¢0un!Y land outside, now appear "1ld -to some degree. . Ma)'Or Alvin L. J>inllJey malntalned hi• traditional hard-line attitude a&alnst oU. Vice Mayor RObert M. Wlloort 111ueeted Iha probe might. Httle ....,e and for .U tbe qu11tiOlf of whether C0&ta Mesa •Its al<Jp the ume gooey weallb that blighted oldtown Huntington Beach. , If the te1t proves negative and the question Is set- tled, Ulen it will have been settled for the good of the cily. Certainly, the tour councilmen who voted for the 1lant.drlllillg could not have prevented the ugly der- rick Itself, located cleverly as it was ln a thin strip of county land wblch would be In the city except for stub- born properly owners fighting annexation. any •fllture requests to up lore for oU under tl\eir city with • llat, !inn denial. II any permissive gaps exist In lb• cl!Y'• antl·pe· troleum ·ordin8"Ce, now Is the time to pldj them just like workmen will cap the 4,928:foot.detp drY bole ill northeast Colla Mesa . • Let's c!O&e lbe book on the whole mall1r before we come to a chapter that has blighted scenery and ruined lb~ air ill other Southland cities. Healthy C.O:µswner Picture Growth is hardly a new story in Costa Mesa. Almosf any form of measulinl the co{IUnunity - population city ~ell, school att~ndance. tax bills - dUcloses ii.at e6Ch year sets a "new record.'' New rec- ords are not news In <J<itta Mesa. No one lhould be putlcularly surprised that th e city'• population ii now approachlnJ 75,000, for ••am· pie. Or even that nearly 20,000 families call Costa Mesa home or that eec!t household h~s more than $10,000 In spell(\able lneome each year. , But it might be Impressive to those who study and care about financial stability if they looked into the re- tail sales picture in the city. First National Bank of Orange County reports that the number of retal! outlets went up from 873 to 1, 742 between 1960 and 1969 -· and that saJes themselves were up a staggering 350% in that period. · • ' . • , But their peJl}llsaive vote still angered many citi· um who felt blocking even the slant-drilling would have shown better faith in the people's 1960 referen· dum vote against becoming an oillown . , The DAILY PILOT agreed, raising t h e question: Wbat happens if oil is there In produceable quantities? A little deeper look .discloses that in 1960 retail sales averaged $1,175 for each Costa Mesan; the figure is now $2,680 per person. In other words, people h ave more money to ·spend and they're finding stores to spend it in at home instead of elsewhere. A substantial share of the city's municipal income is based on sales tax revenue. This healthy consumer picture is reassuring evidence that growth brings some- Good grief, Sam&on! Just because we've trimmed ;you a bit over the ;yearsr Thankfully it now appears no on e can say "We told you to.:' But lour elected pfflclals must answer lhin& besides problems. (Cl Sex Educ ation Cal ls f or Rare WisdOm Here'• 1 brll1i llWt l)'lloeisnl (or you: !(lucatloa II tlll 11111< ol the ochoot.; lhlA II 1 lhllt ..W "1e1 educltJon"; tblrtfcn, ,.. -.11oa II the took of the tchooll. . ~~ BUI tbll -dN· Jn loJlc le both ftinnll11 llld ...... ..,,. lalll, WU! II ....... u. In .... mlddll term, ..... eduatloo." · ..... educltlnf •bout se:r Is lar dlllerent t!>aA ·ed11CaUn~ In academic aUlljeefl, ,.. I J Biology can be "laiitiil" like other cOursts;..-1e1 cannot be. For human au, unllkt the rest of the 1nlmal world, has .. added dlmwioo or peilonallty. lb mcho!oglcal, moral, cultural and IOCial oftrtones make it an exceedingly aUblle, "!""Pia Ind tubjeclive area ol inquiry. ITRl! . QIJl!:STION quivering many ~I booi'd1 theoe days: "Should sex be taught In ICbool or at home'!" ia an UDIDIWll'able one:, for the simple fact tat nobody knowl, or can agree on, bow it thould be taught, and there are no obo jtcttve ltandardJ for teaching it fairly, hDowtly, and to I.he satisfaction of the ..... al community. tt ii not. the physical facts about su t children need most to learn -these easily taught -but I.he connotations ieexual actlvity. And these connotatio'ns acrou the whole spectrum of mern beliefs, religiously, legally, cally, Ind psychically. _. err ONE TEACHER in & hundred ls 1t;t present equipped to "teach 1e1" in a Dear Gloomy GUii: 'lbt lalllh of the year II Colla M.,.., Councilman George Tuck· er lakln( !gr ~atiClll of City Manager MacKenzie'a per· IOl1ll intelJ'fty. -D.K.B. ll1tlll1nifuI manner that wwld lnlly educlte the atudenta 'Ind lltllly theif parenta at the ume Ume. But it ii an equal . faUacy to Imagine that mo.st parents are C\lpable of giving their own children inY effective llJ:Ual instruction. For all our obsesslotl with the subject, we are immensely confused, ignorant, ambivalent, and repreoed about aez in the United States. Moreover, even if we had a more rations.I grasp of the matter than we do, conditions are changing so rapidly, and standai'ds and attitudes are Ahiftlng so basically, that litUe can be tough! wtth ally flnility or authority beyond mere moral strictures. . FOR MOST SUBJECl'S, all the teacher needs ls "knowledge,'' and the minimal ability to transmit it. For &ex education, we need wisdom, which U a much raru intellectual commodity, in short supply both ln and out of the school system. We at.o raqulre deep '!ftlpathy with young people, •which too , tew. teachers and parents are able to Provide tn depth. Ideally, parents should teach sex to their children: theoretically. the schools should recruit and train 'teachers who could do the job; but neither of these con- ditions exists today, and whichever courite the school boards opt for will shortchange the kids. Readers E~press Views on l!CI Action .Pros,. Cons of Krisman Appointment· To U., Editor: ll'e hlva found the L1gun1 HUis Kiwanis 'Chlb'a attack on Mr. Michael Krlaman11,appointment u Coordinator of Academic Advising et .UC, Irvine not only ollwlve, but alto ludicrous. The Kiwa· DJana are hunting wltcbes where there are ~ and calling names where none apply. In this country there b no guilt by UIOCiation, nor ls there deprivaUon or t •nflhmaot without • beariltl· II Michael r;lsman II to be condomned for me<Ung Fldtl CUtn> and going to Cllba, . then we muat condemn Richard Nixon lnr spen· dl!lll three boilr$ wll!J Cutro ind .for vllttlnf Communist Romani• last month. ll Mr. Krisman is to be cond~mned for being associated will\ sos. thefi su~ly Justice Hugo Black anij Harry S. Truman must be condemned for their mem· bership in the Ku~KJui: Klan. . OUR GRA V1'Sr concern Is t h t con· deiruiaUon of Mr. Krisman by a group which . has not had enough respect for democraUc principles to grant him a Jiearing or allow him to express his Views. Had lhey but given him an op. portunity to speak, they would know as we ·and others who are acquainted with · him know that he is not a danger to the university or the country, but rather is a spokesman for the uncorrupted principles on"Whk:b this country was founded. Those who assault without facts, con- demn without hearing and penalize without justification represent a fester· Ing cancer in our society and must not be allowed to determine the future of as important an institutiqn as the univer· sity. SAM AND SUZIE COHEN 'Anarchistic Force' To The Editor : tions or authority? Are we helpless before Lb.is anarcltiatic force?? PAIJL WESTBROOK Db Teacher Appr oves To The Editor: Public concern over the appointment of Mr. Mike Kriaman IS Coordinator of Academic Advising at UCJ is Un· derstan<l.able1 1iVen bis 8'socl•tion with b o t h an unpopular organization (SDSl and an unpopular cause (the Cuban Revolution), I would suggest, however, that Mr. Krisman'a political views and activities have absolutely no bearing on hia ability to serve Irvine students in the area of 1:cademic advtsing. AS THE FORMER Coordinator of Academic AdVising at UCI, and u Mr. Krisman'• teacher In several courses, I strongly endorse Chancellor Aldrich's de c is Ion to hire him. I respect Mr. Krisman 's intelligence and admire his commitment to the welfare of students at Irvine. Both qualities will serve him well in his new pq.sition . SPENCER C. OLIN, JR. Associate Professor of History UC, Irvine LI.tell First To .the Editor: Before more service clubs rush to criticize the UCI appointment ol Mike Krisman, they might invite him to speak before their m e m b er sh i p . I've participated in a panel discussion with Mike and found him to bE. a.Jl articulate, extremely interesting young man. I think it's only 'fair to listen to him , question him and then make a judgment. To me, that's the American way of doina: thin(s. Service club program chairmen can reach Mike by callin& 833-5131 JIM WOOD 'Particulate•' To the Editor: People living in Newport Be11ch and cOsta Me1a should be anerily alarmed over the spoilage of our beautlfUI area by the prospective encroachment of the oil drilling rigs. We have but to go several miles up the coast to aee the wastelands made by this Industry. But another threat to our happy at· mMphere comes from the proposed in-- stallation of two power 1eneratln1 plll\ls in Huntington Beach. Just one of these oil--guuling monsters coni;umes as much as 70,000 barrels of fuel oil per day. That's not 70,000 gallons per year, of 70,000 quarts per month - 70,000 BARRELS PER DAY {LA County APCD Bulletin, 1969, p.25). EVEN ASSUMING an uninterrupted supply of foreign low-sulphur·oll (and the domestic oil people are all over the politi· cians to ban the foreign supply), and further assuming U\e use of natural gas as fuel (when t.he weather looks bad), there will still be thousands of,tona: of ox· idek ·of sulphur, nitrogen. a n d "Particulates" spewing out the stacks of these little beauUes every year. (Have y~ _ever been _particulated?) Where will all this stuff flild it.. way? The answer, my friends, is blowing in the wind. What is wr-0ng with the San Onofre nucl~ar plant? It makes power without smog. Why not _pipe in our power from there or build one like it? Or why not pipe in our power from an area already poisoried? Smog refugees had all better get in close touch with their county represen- tatives: or we 'II all be singing the Smogport Harbor and Smoga Mesa Blues. ANDY ANDERSON Consequences of a Milita~y Cutback • ( ' Foremost Frustration Re. Krisman at UCJ : In reading the news stories on Chancellor Aldrich 's ap- pointment _of Krisman, I noticed several glaring unanswered questions. WASHINGTON -Even t ho 1 e economists who support the present con- gr~sional tendency to slash military ex- penditures admit that the effect on the ecoo.omy could be severe. They do not -to recall the dire predic· tion of fonner Treasury Secretary George Humphrey -foresee the kind of "depresaion that will curl your hair." But they do foresee, in the words of J. Ken· neth Galbraith, "a sectoral depression." If they are rlght, this "aectora1 depression" will hurt. Ideally, lhe national soul-searching which the "sectoral depussion" ought to bring about will result in the establish. ment of a priority list which could employ the tectuiologists, keep the economy booming. and begin to solve some of the earth's serious problems. Waste disposal, the economists point out, is making our country a junk pile : urban transportation is unchanged since World War U: we have dohe almost nothing about pollution, though Lake Erle is a giant sewer, a river in Cleveland caught rtre Ws year and some of us remember wtstfUlly the Ume when a trip to the top of the Empire State Building afforded a view. ln Los Angeles on a clear day you can ~ee -not Catalina, but your neighbor. • '.)ohn W. Gantner, fonner Cabinet nmnber and an urban expert, wants to '~tallze" rural areas, create new el1el and overhaul eliating cities u na· u.iiat policy. It ts a ntber large order, f.equiring an ..,rgy output about a hundredfold that of rt1chl!111 the moon. but It toocheJ directly oai the foremost fNStraUon of the llliltrican people today -inability to find e;rationat road lo the distribution o! lh<lr 1111Uhtinl population, and the resu!Ung ttlhnical arid moral decay of their com· ni!nity Ille. !lo far as conctms 11new cltles." we bee been building them all this century, 1111 at a breakneck: pact 1lnce the war. Tlke a case: 30 miles north of San Fran· c9co, there wu in lMO a crossroad on Hjhway 101 called Novato, populatia:I -rut 2,009. lllDAY IT Ill A small but sprawllnl "-.mutin(" dty of lbollt 3$,000. ft ._ the lrldltlon ol most _.bl, -munitiel In the IJnlled Stites, and It 1'(11 50 counterparts clustertd. about mlltropolitan centers ln California. lt oo- aii ii1 JeS1 crowded states. too. New in· ddllrie!J ba&ed on technological develop-11!1!'1 "°"'cal populations, and big c!UOJ -popUteUon. HWlier !or !rced<im Ind .... npand the 1tteWta, Ind the liMlobile does the rest. • -form it 11 like tht.,..rch fNedlm end IPtcl in the westward ol tbt Jut century. It has the *' t • 11 "Go westward, youna: •• · -fl -u.t<lllte jlopulatiom .. -. Exiguous_,.. -fadon begot them, and I .,..tea, lnsttad ol decllne, g!Ol3ed ...... ., . Olellrangu= ~ !IA a "'""" lOIClllldl into ind • thrugli the big cities. IT IS THE WORST ol c!lchn lo note that this redistrbuUon has iinpoverished the big cities, materially and spiritually, leaving .them often unfit · for civUized habitation. Nobody in the new clUes or In the old ii content with this phenomenoo, but to a man all take part in it and qgravale it. Where will we look for allevlaUon of such nliQOUs development, let alone a ra· ilooal reversal of It! To our publJ<i men! Why, they are u bewildered ud deluded. u '"1 of us, and IS bewitched by the private prejudices and wants. The national capital is filled with mar- ble inhabited by public men, Ind by pri".:ate misery ind anthlll despen:Um la the ghetto and out. The Congress can blather tu way to a plan for iU: fief, and the bureaus can wreck it wilh heJp from --'committees. TOM WICltER In the New Y ort< Tunes telll of 1atborllaUon for a Washlqton subway. 'ftle burtaus proceeded to Chop 1. "Although faculty is supposed to han- dle all advising of students, Krisman will advise 30 or 40 of them.'' Question: Will ht advile them to join the SDS and to take part in the campu11 militancy? Thlrty (Jf .fO well-lrairied activists can do much havoc! 2. Aldrich praises Krisman for his "honeaty in bis commitment." QuesUon : Was Castro honest In his tommllment to become Communist dictator of Cuba? 3. Krisman praises Aldrich : "Aldrich wa~ not dishonest with the students ." Question : Is not honesty a basic quality required for chancellorship and not one to be singled out and admired as some unique atUtude? .S. KRISMAN SAYS, ''The SDS is a very h~st (that word again) body and these People will not be able to destroy it." QutsUon : does Chancellor Aldrich want his "indestroctable" or & an i z at 1 on dedicated to violence and govermQent ovttthrow, to have itl own fifth-column advisor in a place of authority in this untvenity supported by Joyal American taipayer:s? Do the citizens of caurornia want It? HoW can America:ns stop Ulla in· filtration of activist militants, into posl- ~-Bii GNl'ffl --, Dear George : up th.e co_ncept, and hamstrlna It with a Potomac btldp wlt!<h would· only further congest the clty center. Some Kentucky congressman, chairman of a su~ committee, holds up an $18.1 mlllion..11> _ . propr!allon for a start unUI he can ('I the br1dge. I have reid severtl explanatl~ , :Of your Sideways T h I n k I n I philoaophy and l'm w or r I e d because t still don•t understand It. eanit you help me! CONCERNED n .. r Coocemttl: Yoo needn't look to federal ob!ilNction &nd Inertia alone. Every recloo h11 obstrucllonlsll, punuf!lll PtllY lntemu, UftlWIN of, and ofWD hostile to, tht needs of the -le and the !arg<r end which Mr. Gardner poies. • You're premature in your wor- rying. Wrlte bact when you start to underSllnd Sld..,ays Thlnkh11 - then you'll hav. oomethin( lo wor· '.., tifuil UnUJ recently, economiJtl have argued that military spending could be diverted to the civilian economy with minimum strain. Their opinions tended to bolster the demands of liberal pollticiami to stop creating weapons.. and spend the money instead on a floor under poverty, or -as George Romney has urged -on housing or help for our cities or welfare reform in the kind or pro,ram Mr, Nixon blmself has advanced. TlllS THEORY WAS that government spending is homogenous -that to keep tt.e economy booming, the govemment has to spend money, but it doesn'\ matter where. But now that a cut in military pro- curement actually looms, the economists are having second thoughts. They now belltve that the earlier formula wu far too 1impl~ They now·beU<1v~ that it mat· ten a grtat deal wbtre the. rovemment spends its money, and that at Congress begins the job ol brlnBtnr mllltiry •pen- ding under control lt must fatfl up to 10me difficult consequences. One -b that .... ..-In . technolegy which iovennnent defenaie •pendl!lll has produe<d wUJ be slqwed. Th!s ls·•bert the ,.ltd.oral deprualon" wUI omtt about: The ltOUble ii that the lechnotogtcll sector aJoo ......, what economlltl call 1 "functlontl" pwJOR. ONCE A GROUP ol engineer• 11 assembled to work on a government con· tract for missile rocketry or computer c:omporients, the possibilities are great that they will produce a new Idea, or a new concept, and therefore a new need. Their work generates more work in a kind of industrial metutuis. Once thJs rnetastuia ii halted, 90me very highly edllClted men will be out_ ol jobs. But a mon lmporllnt "':'Ill will be that the enof'fl')(IQI advince in technolol)' which has marked our livtt alnct the end or World War U will be slowed, or tvm halted. That last ~uerice may well give us pause. If we put the m9ney into poverty programs or highways ·or education, we shall not get the same result. Worthwhile as the expenditures wUI be, they will nlrt be self-generating in the sense of creating as many new·demand1 and new jobs. WE OUGHT ALSO to be asking ourselves whether there an 1 om e technological advances which. we would rather do wiU.Out. Tbe 1 supersonic airplane is an example. Because it is technologieally ~I< to make an airplane which· Will crwa the country in two hours -with prObable sonic dlaturbanct ,~low -It doea not follow th1t wi want to build it. Quotes . 11re1111tr A..., ... ,_ .. N Soeom• -Cotltce .--. .. • ... ,.. rittl-"Thil hol'rlble ind blrblrous innvement hu aot to -or the whore country will go lo hell In a hind butet." Ytelot Gruen, lOUtlder of foundation for envlrolmeatal planllina la L.A-"Our aim Is to brln, man from the Railroad Age, the Automobile AJ•· the Jet Age, Ute Space Age Into the Human Age ." WE COULD, In other words, cut down military spending and ltill keep t h e technololY and the economy booming. But we shall have to make vast and far~ reaching decisions. Even the most liberal-minded economista doubt that we can or will do 10 quickly enough to avoid the crunch. By Frank Maetiewicl and Tom Braden --~-- Thursd>.)', August 14. 1969 ?'lie editorial pag.i ot the DaU11 Pilot seek1 to Inform and 1tim- llldte rtader1 b11 pr11neing thil J'l.f wspo per'1 opiniom and com- mfn1otJ1 on topics of fnteresc and signtficcncc, .b~ proui.dlng a forum 'for the upre.ssCon of our reodlrs• opinloni, and bu presentit1y the diucrte view- poinr..s o info~ observcr1 cmd.-.tpokesmen on-topic.1 o/ th1 clay. Robert N. Wee<!, Publl1ber .. . I I I I Votorania fit Fotorattta Orange Coast College airline siewarde.ss student Karen Jorgensen, 18, Costa Mesa, demonstrates just how easy it will be for visitors at Fotorama to participate in· "Votorama" by using Autorilatic'Vot- ing Machine Co. 's Printomatic to vote for their favorite pictures in Fotorama Camera .Contest. Voters will be eligible for prizes worth_ more than $1JOO provided by radio station KOCM as part of DAILY PILOT show to be staged next week, Aug. 21 through 23, at Fashion Island. No Coast Sanitation Hike lluntington Solid; Harbor Citie s Drop Rates Directors of Orange County Sanitation District 3 (north\Yest county cities) wi!i ask the Board of Supervisors lhis month lo approve a six-cen~ tax hike for 1969- 1970. District 11 (Huntington Beach) expects to maintain its present tax rate while District 6 (Costa Mesa) and District 5 (Newport Beach) p I an to lower their rates. 'The six-cent tax hike, and all other rates, were approved Wednesday night as directors from all county sanitation districts met at the Fountain Valley treatment pl an to approve budgets. District 3 covers Orange County fro1n Ellis A venue north and Euclid Street "'est. It includes Fountain Valley. \Vestminster, the northern portion of Huntington Beach, parts of Anaheim, Garden Grove, and Fullerton. and Buena Park, Stanton, Los Alamitos, Cypress, La Palma, and La Habra. The six-cent increase will bring the district 's rate tG 48 cents for each $100 assessed valuation. Fred Harper. general manager oI the count)''ti treatment plants Jesus a In Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach, said the tax increase would cover costs of trunk.line construction from now through 1985. •·we have about $25 million in major trunk line work to do during that time," said Harper, "and the only way to cover it Would be bonds or a tax hike." Bonds were eliminated,' he explained, because th'! interest rate on an $18 million boild issue would immediately boost the tax rate 10 cents. ''\Ve hope to bring in about $100,000 the first year on the ·increase alone," said HarJ)ei, "and as assessed valuations rise our tax rate should easily handle the con· struction work." Directors of District 3, second largest in the county, also adopted an $11,993,208 budget for 1969-1970. They have $7,863,893 in funds already available to apply to the new budget. ' "All the districts ·haw more money available," explained Harper, "thanks to money left over from the oceatt outfall project in Huntington Beach." The outfall project was estimated to Woma11' She Played Pageant Row 10 Years By TOM GORMAN 01 thl 0.llY f'illl Stfff It bas been the best kept secret in the 32 years of the Pageant of the Masters. For the first 10 of those years, a woman portrayed Jesus Christ in the Pageant's living version of Leonardo de Vinci's "The Last Supper." She was the only person to be found v.·ho had the face for the part, according to Laguna hist()rian Merle Ramsey .. who has brought this. little known fact to J1ght. Roy Ropp originated the Pageant of the tlasters in 1932, but it was discontinued during World· War ll. Ropp had his troubles in the beginning, but none like the one he ran tip against in 1936, Ramsey recalled. · The still-inf ant Pageant fa ced a premature death due to lack of interest bv the townsfolk, Ramsey said. So, in 1936 Ropp decided to try a new picture - one that took 12 people to pose. But a person to portray the main figure -Jesus Christ -couldn 't be found. ''Without the perfect face the setting \vould be a failure," Ramsey said. Then, one \\'eek before the Pageant's opening, the face Ropp had been aearching for came into his hor?ie. Little did Mrs. Harry Gordon "Jackie" Martin know what she was getting into. He requested she take off her hat, and then he parted her hair down the middle. "Al that instant, Roy Ropp knew his search was ended, provided she would ac. cept the part," Ramsey related. She said she'd play the part, as Jong as it was kept a secret that a woman was cast for the part of Jesus Christ. And, for the next 10 years, only a handful or peo- ple knew that a woman played the cen- tral figure in the p i c tu r e that has become the Pageant's standard closing piece. The part to her was so sacred, she re· ques ted prayer each night before the cur· tain was opened, Ramsey said. "To this day, very few have ever known the difficulties experienced by Roy Ropp in the production of the first show· ing of "The Last Supper.'' "Had Ropp failed there . is reason to believe the famous art exhibit would not be showing today," the Laguna historian said. . 'Vhatever happened to Laguna's "First Jesus Christ?" She'• living in Pasa~ dena. Nixmi Catcla•plarase cost $15 million and all sanitation districts began saving for it , said the general manager. But the actual contract came out to be only $9 million, leaving a Jot of funds available to the districts. District II in Huntington Beach will keep its tax rate of 45 cents for every $100 assessed valuation . Directors Wednesday adopted a $2,788,696 budget with $1,916,745 already available. Costa Mesa's District 6 will drop its tax rate from the current 25 cents to . 23 cents. Directors Wednesday approved a $1 ,413,284 budget, with $1,065,670 present. District 5 in Newport Beach plans to reduce its tax rate from 27 cents to 25 1~ cents. A $1 ,888,937 budget was adopted, \vith $1 ,436,137 in carry over funds ready. While. expanding District J's tax in· crease and the director's preference for an increase over a bond. Harper ex- plained that the area's highest ta:z rate was 62·cents in 1962-1963 after passage of an $11 million bond issue. Cit y Presented Funds for Police Police Chief Conner Collacott has presented the city ol Westminster with a $2,095 check as its share of the 1969 allocation ol the California Peace Of. ficers' Training Fund. . Collacott said that W e s t m i n st e r qualified for the money by strictly adher_ Ing to the standards for select.ion . and training of peace officers prescribed in the Administrative and Penal Codes of California. The fund receives its revenue from assessments on fines collected by local courts which are forwarded to the state treasurer. This is sometimes referred to as "use tax" since only law violators pay the bill rather than the Jaw abiding tax· payer. Underground Test Yields Radia tion LAS VEGAS (AP) -Small doses of radiation leaked into the atmosphere to- day from a low-yield underground nuclear explosion at the Nevada Test Site, the Ato:tnic Energy Commission iaid. A spokesman said radiation readings were slightly above what they art on a normal day and Hit is not expected that any radioactivity will be detected beyond the immediate test vea." Now It's 'Ne'w Federalism' By JEROME F, COLLINS 01 1M DllllY l"lltl S!tff Franklin Delano Roosevelt started it - the coining of a political catch-phrase to serve u the hallmark of a national ad· ministration. \Vith 1FDR, ol course, il was the New Deal. Harry Truman followed, a bit lamely and certainly derivati vely, with hJs Fair Deal. Dwight Eisenhower? Sorry, that's a blank. ''Middle--Of·the.Road" was often applied to his eight years as the nation's chief executive, but never by Ike himself. NIXON WAITED John F. Kennedy revived ·the custom, and with characterisUc flair. New Fron- tier summed up the dreams of his ad· ministration. Lyndon Baines Johnson's choice of slogan Wll! lhe Great Society. Richard M. Nixon, In his first seven months In office, pondered the tradition. He would wait until his adminisrative philosophy took rnort discernible form . It has done that. And, Friday, for the first time. the President announced 1his. catch-phrase -which remained uncaught by the press until Tuesday. It is the New Federalism. The President used the term three times in his weUare program talk to the nation Friday. ln copie.! of the speech, the phrase appeared in all-capital letters. But it still went largely unnoticed, Then Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz, at a press conference in San Clemente Tu~ day , defined It "The New Federalism." aald Shultz, "means the decentralization of govern- ment services ••. a searchJng for a new spirit. •. a new sense of participation by . local government. .. yd with the federal ~,::~~"Ja~,~ continuing to be jnvolved and The New Federalism, u 'a slogan may, lack the p\oneerine aspect of the New Frontier and the immodest ambition of the Great Society. But it desciities accurately the intent of the Nixon administration. "Federalism," says Webster's, means: "A form ol government in which power is distributed between a central authority and a number or constituent territorial units." 'IT ISN'T SEXY' Not iUrprisingly, the New Federalism already has its detractors. "It's got no punch," says one member of the White House press corps i~ San Clemente. "It just lsn't Sexy," quips a lady cor· respondent. . "New Federalism?" says another neWsman. "What doea that conjure tUJ? [ can see being a frontiersman, but who wants to be a federalist. They died whtn Alexander HamlHon died." He"s wrong. They!re alive and well )n San Clemente. I Thursday, Aug1ut 14, 19M s Krisman Joh Defended ' ' ' . -~ - Cha ncellor Aldrich R eplif!S to Utt j•r regret that you have found It necessary to condemn the appointment of Michael Krisman on the basis of his membership in Students for a Democratic Society • . . wlthouC any knowledge of him as an· individual," UC lrvine Chancellor DaJUel G. Aldrich, Jr., said today in reply, to the Jetter he i:eceiv· ed from Rep. James B •. Ult (JI.Tustin), In an ope)l letter to the Congressman, Aldrich outlined wby he backed the ap- polntment of Krisman as coordinator of academic advising. "I approv~ the recommendation of his appointment only after, thoughtrut review of his ,performance as a 1tudent on the campus and comments' of 1 the faculty. staff and students ab9ut the tuitabUjty of his qualifications," he said. "It Is my belief that every citizen Is en- titled to be judged on his own merit, part.icularly ·where his freedOm or his Uvelihood is concerned," Aldrich noted. Aldrlcb also said that, Krisman had the support of the dean of students, the vice· chancellor for student affairs, the dean of various schools on the campuS and the vice-chancellor of academic affairs. "Their support and mine were based on our knowledge of Mr. Klrsman•11 character and recotd as a student and presldent of tbt aDoclated students." In the letter Aldri~h rtceived· from Congressman Utt, t he kg.lslator aaid, ". ~. any search tor logic in your pnition is confounding. I r'1use to belive you re-- main unaware or the naUonally declared intenlioll! of SOS •• ~" • Aldrich refuted t~ls statement. "At no time in my acquaintance with Mr. Krisman h8ve I found him to'be other thah a Joyal and constructive citizen of this catnpus, the community and our ·country." LIKE IT ... CHARGE IT ! • . • . .. YOUR CHOICE Compliment your ~ard with either our Dracaena palm or our Natal plum trees! Plant""" for a lush, tropical look in your yard, plus you r own ornamen~I plum 1ree. Available in 1 gallon containers. ALSO Flatter your 9arden with our blue flowe r Periwinkles. 1 9al. 77e. YOUR CHOICE Hardy, colorful Marigolds and Vincas for picturesque gardens ••• plant now! 33• Make your gonion a riot of color with eaoy-to-gr"" pink and white vincas and marigolds ••• ot down-to-earth prices! 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Planter mix, 2 cu. ft. bag ..., 1.09 30" Redwood patio box ·-· Compost, 5 cu. ft. bag ...... 2.19 Round bird bath ····-··-- 16" Redwood planter --4.49 Bird bath ··----- 4.98 2.98 8.59 I ~-N-aw~P_o_Rr_e_EA~c-H~~~~-o-o_w_N_EY~~~~-M-o_N_1_c_LA_1_R ..... r l ' ' I 'Ille TaManian government h a.s l!\\611Md Ill penal code to Ill a k e tile death s~ntence ll)alidato.ry !or ant unquaUIJed persons who re- moves tonsils and cau5es a pa· ti"11'• deal!!. • Th"KIY, AugUll 14, 1!69 a I' , , TRICIA NIXON LISTENS TO DAD AT ASTROFETE At the Next Table,· Art Llnkletter (Background) • Stars Turn Oui U.S. Celebriti-es Honor Astronauts Two htcds mav be bitter thon one, b11t 4.tspite apPtGrancts in this photo, the Phothiz Zoo't pair of rwans get along fine with ;utt one Gpitce. Th.e normal one·hetided whitt' noans ;ust tot their heads together /tr this Ull· mual portrcsit. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hollywood Is a liberal Democrat town, but those few Republicans among the stars turned out en masse to mingle with President Nixon, the astronauts, and diplomats at the state e dUmer Wednesday night. ~e pop groups are to blame Among the first to ·arrive at the Cen· for the use of drugs among young tury Plata Holel was comedian Red people, American singer a.i.by S~elton who said, "l don 't know about VH said as he arrived in Sydney these astronauts. 1 looked in the sky tonight ~nd only saw a half moon. They fbr .•night club season. He siid' he must have brought back more rock than belleves .. :tlle drug. sjtuatiOll ·would they said :they dld." ~t have d!l!eriora\ed U some pop Bob Hope appeared on a \Sth floor ablgwa llai!;riot .pabUcly con<loued· · balcony while aJl<irt•d dem,..trators 4rdgj ~.al·m&'rijuana. "!'Smoke •lood.oui.Ide the hotel. ortly cigarettes. I suppose I'm a Ttie mood ol the crowd changed im· bit of a aquare," he said. mediately to one of friendly recognition. ' • "We Jove Bob Hope. We love Bob Hope," A Q • M • It ~ .. the crowd chanled. . !~1 ...... cran e . \;Um· ffope la~r sat a a table during the din- P4DY reports an unusual theft from ner with Tricia Nixon David Eisenhower its yard -a .40Q.pound baby rhi· and astronaut Wally Schirra. nocents, carved ftom granite. The · Randolph Scott made one of hi! in- rtiiho, v~lued at '2,000, was part of frequent appearances at a social event. a ·men•geri ... ~"Prepared for a -Other glamor-folk taking back seats to New Yo~ City sbopping plaza per political stars included Fred MacMurray and . wife Cyd Charisse, Robert Stack, -Jonathan Winters, James Stewart, Ces!r Romero, Rosalind Russell, Rudy Vallee, and Art Linkletter. Helping to bridge the gap between the Potomac luminaries and Sunset Strip celebrities was Sen. George Murphy, a former movie song-and-dance man. Gov. Ronald Reagan, also a fonner movie star, helped introduce cabinet members Robert Finch, Melvin Laird and George Romney to Dale RObertaon and producers Jack Warner and Ju1fs Stein. Claire Booth Luce, a member of the arts u well al a poUUcian in hf:r own rigbt, wu greeted effusively ~y menibera of the Hollywood colony. There was a bit of a feminine flurry when Gov. Winthrop Roc~efeJler of Arkansa~ Introduced himself to director Norman Taurog and his wife. &lb women were wearing identical dresses by exclusive Hollywood couturier, William Travilla. After their meeting the women introduced themselves u twins. Making a great impreulon on p>litl- cians and diplomats ali ke wae ·the· com· edy team of Dan Rowan.and Dick Martin out more than others. llce JlPot:'~ ' · ~ · ' an4. his wife June Rav.er, Tony MarUn . '• . . ; * * * * * * Bill Fltenet", 11, of Wolla:'Wdl- ls, Wq1h., today claimed a.world ' -Tecbrd> afkr-thootin.g-215 holt& of golf at the local covntty club -all in one dav. FlcUhliohts ·htlptd him out a& he ttorted at 5 o.m. and Wirt Ultd OOCJin when he cqmpl1ted his mAra. thon at 9 ptm. The 11oung1ter said he believed tht old ont•datl record' 104& 270 hol r1. • Modeito' ·police came running when it was npOrtod a man had rwoved away and left 1,IOO snakes l>ehind in his backyard -Includ- ing miny poisonous rep!iles. But It tumed out that only el1ht rattle-Lr;:es ' were tlttre, all but one a erllllg. ••• Peter Norbtirn of Goldhanger, Entland, l>Ougbt an old car f o r $48 and d!'l)ve it horn~ with only one ~mplaint. Something was rattling In the trwlk. A British Army Boinb Piiposal Vnlt mabed to ·Norbum's bouse fP. 1li1llinate the ratUe, a live 10.inch artUlery shell. ~Moon Dinner' Sparkles ' As Protests Just 'Fizzle L()s ANGEL!IS (UPI) -The gala state dinner honoring the Apollo 11 astronauts was a glittering success but the demonstrations in front of the hotel 'where it wu held were something of a fijp. }J'hree different protest groups had an- nOunoed intentloos to picket the Century Plaia Ht.tel and one of them. the Student MObillzation Committee, promised it would have at least 2,000 pickets on hand. But as the dinner started, the demonstrators' ranks had grown to no more than 300 to 400. Another 3,000 well- wiahers gathered in fron \ of the hotel to watch the celebrities arrive for the din· ner. The demonstrators. representing mMtly anti-Vietnam War and bl ack power vlews, marched peacefully on the avenue of the stars in front of the hotel as a spttial police squad watched carefully. Orie of the placards read: "Love the Astronauts But Hate the War." Others read: "Free All Political Prisoners," "End the War in Vietnam," ''Millions for the Moon , Porridge for the Poor." "Explore Space, Leave Vietnam Alone.'' Scores of uniformed police had taken up statiom in and around the hotel to make certain there was no interference with the dinner, Police Inspector John McAllister, field commander at the banquet, said he had "adequate manpower" -but refused to give the number. The relatively small turnout of pickets apparent ly was less thin what either th2ir leaders or the police had expected. The figu re was far under the 10,000 demonstrators at the same hotel on June 23, 1967 when President Johnson id· dressed a aroup of Democratic leal:lers. !Weather . . ' Fine Everywhere ·. W~hita Falls, Tex., Not Blyth e, Hot Spot • co .. tal Sull!'V tM•v ""' ,,,... Wt wt!ll .-tri.f •• ,.... fl\Orlllnt t:ol-111 ciwtr111a, WlllOt ••ltfl'f ' I to 12 knots. 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II Wit IWlf tlld nwtl~ ewr ltUf ,.114 Oklfh-but !tit COid 1,.,.1 Wt• brfnl1"1 -"'lwf to llW'th-lfffl Oli.1.i.om.t •lld l!te lew•• P•11"-1'dlt, n ... ,. w.• -1hl'Wer •lld 1t1un. ou1"-r Kt,...ltv -ttlt ...-0.-.11 L1k•t R ... IOll 11'0 ~ oe.tfh ef Ill• Soulfl-.1. Thtft wtl -*°"" tloudl Of I" l lOl'lt Ille PKllJc; C~ll durlt"tt lhl "'°'"I"' nou,.., Owr"l,nt low. rt"11M troll\ )t t i l¥t"''°"• W¥o .. lo •1 •! 8!v!I,., C11•1. ?ht l'Wllll!l't Ilk!~ Wtdimct.' Wit 112 •I Wletlltt Ftll ... Tt~. Tem)lerat11re• .... ,,,.."' •l•mtrck ..... I MIDfl Browr11vl\lt Clll11tto (1!'1(!1111111 °" MOlll• 0.!ftll F1""'9rflt Fon wom ... ,_ 1(, ..... , cit, l11 V ... 1 l os A11t1IQ Mlt ml MIMt1dOli., ....... °"'""' Hew Yorll Horl!I 1111!,. O.klu 1d Oil.l~Clt't' -· ..,,..,"'" l"!tltbvrth 1t111d c11, ~tel l lllff "" $Krl!Tlf~fl0 St ll Lt~t (Ur S•~ D"tto SPOkt ... Thlr""'I WtSfll"tlOll Mltll l.IW !"r.(, .. '' .20 t'l 11 .IS '°" ,, 71 ., .. '' .. " .. .. " " II iS " .. " " " " " .. '" '' 111 41 II SI tJ n .10 'N '° 11 •• •• ,. .01 .. !4 .04 " ~ " n .. " .... 10$ '' " " lot 15 •• lot '' ,fl " .. .... IN '1 ff .. 10J •i M " ... " .. 110 '° ... Diriis Fear -·or 'Oswald' , ' Repeat .Told Bl\OCIC'J'ON, ~an. '(UP!l-An USOCI• alt medlcil eiamlner today quoted Dlot. Atty. -Olllh.11 "Y!nl he want4d' to btp ·the dlltrlct attomey'1 office out Of lhe Sen. Edwenl M. KeMedy accident cue "ao it won't ~become another Lee Harvey O.W.ld affair," Dr. Donald R. Mills, who examined Mary Jo Kopechne shortly after she drowned in KeMedy's car, also told the Brockton Enterprise and Times that he learned only two days aao that an autopsy had been ordered on Mlss Kopechne. D1ni11, who 11 seeking a court order from Penniylvanla authorltlea to exhume Miu Kopecbne'a body, said Tuesday ~e ordered an autopsy July 20, the day after the accident on Chappaquiddick Isl@d, only to find Mills had authorized its removal for burial. "The first Ume I heard Dini• had ordered an autopsy was this past Tues.- day night," Mills told the newspaper. He said his office records showed he never spoke to Dinis until July 21 -a day after the district attorney said he had ordered the autopsy. Mills said Dinis phoned him July 22 - the day Miss Kopechne was burled In Larksville, Pa. -and said thl!!y "better keep in touch. We're letting Jim Arena (Edgartown p>Ucl!! chief) handle this case. "l want to keep my office out of this so It won't become another Lee Harvey Oawald affair," Milla quoted Dinis as sartnr. Dinis' reference was to the slaying of Oswald, who was shot to death in the Dilla& police hf;adquarters two days after President John F. Kennedy was assas&inated in Dallas ln 1963. Ala11kan Fires Rage SOLDATNA, Alaska (UPI) - A forest fire racing out of cootrol has blackened 50,000 actes and today threatened the community of Soldatna on Alaska'! Kenai Peninsula. Fire flehtlng crews worked lhrough the nljht WednO!day to keep the IO-day-old blaze away from this com- munity of 1,IKIO about 60 miles southwest of Anchoraee. " £1l'll War Near• 1 ---1·~~~~~~~ N. Ireland Calls I British Troops· WAR CLOSER -Gas-masked policeman fires tear gas at Londenderry rioters as North- ern Ireland threat of civil war grows. Mom Has Twins , 17 Pounds Worth PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -The heaviest twins ever born Jn Philadelphia are thriving at Lankenau Hospital -all J7 pounds, 12 ounces of them. Mrs. Carmella Calabrese, 40, of Philadelphia, wife of a V i 11 a no v a University engineering professor, gave birth to a nine-i)Ound, six-ounce girl and an eight-pound, six-ounce girl on Tuesday without Caesarean section. The twins are lightweights, however. compared with the world record-holders. L<lNDONDElll\Y, Northern lr•l•IUI (UPI) ,.... BtiUsb troops moved Into th!• riot tom' city today ai request of the Northern Ireland &Qvemment 1 1 CalllOllc-Protutanl llreel llJihllni oplral· ed cloae to civil war. Shortly belore the Ir-rolled Inti> !lie city in Land Rover vehicles Northern Ireland Premier Jame.s <.'hiehetter-Clark told an enM.ifltOC)'. telliori bl parliament in Belfast .~ rlaf.lng wis »alt of a con· aplr:acy to overthrow him. The lrWi RepubUc set up five 'hofpitals on the frontier of Northern Ireland to reeelvl!! the hundi-eds of Catholic wounded who did nol 'Wish ·to• be treeted by Northern lr•land ho!J>ltalJ. hoopa were sent to the bprder-lo support t~~· Chlcl)ester.Clark, called thil' an un- necessary and Jrrespoualble" action by the Dublin government. ' British ~ ·jeeps and Land Rovers . loaded with British Infantry ~tered Waterloo Square in the center of the city at 5:15 p.m. Britain bas a total of 5,000 - troops ataUoned in the Six counties' that form Northern Ireland. Home Affairs Minister Robert Porter told the Northern Ireland parliament the troop'S had been requested by police "in • aid of c Iv i I power;" Chichester.Clark said earlier he would take all necessary steps to restore law and order. Protes.tant extremists raced through the streets of Londonderry arid nine other towns and cilies waving guns and clubs, and Roman Catholica vowed a fight to the finish. Smoke billowed from burning buildings, gasoline bombs exploded in carpets of fire Bf9Und police and clouds of tear gas swept through the barricaded streets. The spark of the Londonderry rebellion spread to nine other towns and cities in Northern Ireland and b r o u g h t repercussions in London, Bellast and Dublin wbert the premier of the Irish Republic c a 11 e ~ for a United Nations peace keeping force. The Irish Republic is predominantly Catholic and the six counties that form Northern Ireland are predominantly Protestant. The Catholic minority in the north has risen in rebellion against what it calls persecution and denial of civil rights. PUBLIC NOTICE!! L&J ENTERPRISES, INC. WILL SAVE YOU MONEYI WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE , .. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST - CARPET WAREHOUSE OUR AUDITOR'S SAY: WE MUST REDUCE OUR STOCK INVENTORY BY1 $75,000 DURING AUGUST!! WE WILL SAVE YOU 40% TO 70% ON CARPET VALUES UP TO $14.95 . *OUR PRICES START AT $2.74 SQ. YD. * NO REASONABLE · OFFER REFUSED! SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY! WE HAVE TERMS AVAILABLE! TO SHOP AT HOME , • Jun PKONI 549-3S49 • ROLIS IN STOCK • 24 HOUR INSTALLATION SANTA AHA ' O'IN: Mo!ttlay, T~vr••ar a Frld1y t 1.m. to 1:30 p.m. • Tve•dl'f, W1tfn11tf1y, S1t11r•1y 9 1.m. to S p.m. • Sund1y Ntan to S ' Thuriday, AU9ust 14, 1969 DAI\.Y PILOT S I 'Good Thing' I ' Red -China QUEENIE By Phll lnterlanclt ..-~~~~~~~~~~~--i Enif. Vrged Congress Quits, ' Djsperses With Little,Bofie -IDd~strJ Oil Quotas Attacked WASHINGTON (AP) suppll... ddeollng 1t7 encourapng Despite strong premire from "Indeed, by UmJUng Jm-laster 1.1se o our domestic WASllJNGTON (AP) ·- Congress is on vacation l\'ltb ' . . little on the lawbook$ to show for ~ht.months in se.shlim:.- Six Finish Gulf Sb·eam Experiment WASHINGTON (AP) -Six men completed today a 31-day exploration of the G u I f Stream, during which they drifted under the ocean's surface in the submersible vessel Ben Franidin. Ending {heir month under the sea. they surfaced at 7:58 a.m. 440 mites southeast of Portland, 11aine, or 300 miles soutl) southeast of Halifax, N.S. The c r e w Immediately boarded a Coast Guard cutter, the Cook Inlet, for Portland . The ship is due to arrive Fri- day about 3 p.m. First member -0f the crew to leave the sub was Chester May, a researcher for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration. lie w a s followed by Kenneth Haigh, an acoust ic<.tl expert for the British Navy. DAY DARK IN OREGON EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) The state of Oregon Wed· nesday night ordered, virtually all field burning halted for a week in five Willamette Valley countie's after some conditions brought darkness at npon here earlier in the week. Conditions got so bad here Tuesday that visibility was reduced to three b Io ck s, motorists drove with their headlights on, and doctors ad· vised some lung patients to leave town. I -·-' -..A4jt".uce THE NEW "PRESCRIPTION" PfRMAlftllT, ExJm:ssly atated jost for you. La Maur's .. Penonalizied" Petmaomt w ave-CAPRICE-Offen lovd)', dce1>-bodkd lustrous waws will1 ~­ aliveness. depth •nd obedieocc. ~ ~ •• only CAPRICE &iftl JOOt pc:rm_a.- l!Cnt an excltin1 new dimc:nsion-eoft to the eye. tcsilicol, yet firm ~ /111 Jona-lasting. La Msur'sCA-PRJCB ..• Uio "1avc that's individually }O\ll'lf .... SllJO HOUSE .of ESTRADA BEAUTY SALON 17430 B11ch Blvd. , ..... , ...... , Huntington hach o,_ Ifft aicept T\11n. 847·9164 B•1vtici1ns on Duty: Shlrlay, lerry end Oen Boyl• I and Senate , teadera 1 of both Wiles say It's 1 good lhinC-· "vie ha.ven'l been· passing 1e'.&istatkm. ln · quantity. as , we !Jave in the' past five or six years, whlCh I tlnlc 'Is a good thing.'' u ld Dernocra&tc Leader Mike Mansfie!d of ,Montana. 0 We've been plying more attention to quanw." "We haven't hanned the country one bit," said Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen ' of Illinois. Dirksen said a legislature w h i c h doesn't clutter the lawbooks with too much legislation can help a country. Congress so far is meeting that test. As of Aug. 1, only 49 general bills had become law, most of them relatively minor. None of the 13 major apropriations bills to finance the government for the year which began July } has yet been enacted. Dirksen Said that. loo, can be helpful. He said the fact that government agencies are operating under a continuing resolution, which p e r m i t s spending at the rate Congress set a year ago, tends to hold down federal outlays and thus save money. But the new appropriations mu st be passed before the current session ends, which means a hectic autumn and early winter. · Dirksen noted, for example, that the massive defense ap- propriations bill p r o b a b I y won·t arrive in the Senate before November. The tax refonn bill already passed by the House is due on the floor before Nov. 1. Ex-veep's Kin Given Jail Term KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -A grandson of the late Vice President Alben Barkley has been sentenced to 20 y~ars in jail for ak' piracy and kido naping in the hijacking of a light plane to Cuba. "I feel sympathetic ••• but you did do an inexcusable act," Judge William Mehrtens told William Alben Truitt, 35, Wednesday. The air piracy charge car- ried a possible death penalty, but the federal jury of 10 women and two men that found Truitt guilty specified that its verdict was "without capital punishment." LONDON (UPI) -Com- murilst ~ has begun dispersing nu¢1ear and other vltal industries Ill a aateguard aga\nst a ·poMible Wllf with the ·~viet Union, diplomatic report3 from the Far East said todiy. Chfrta's key nuclear plant research institutes and testing grounds and her rock et assembly lines are !Jeavily 'concentrated in S in k I a n g province, which would be dangerously exp(Rd io air and missile attack in the event of war with the Soviets. The latest border clashes have occurred in the Sinkiang area. .. .. ... ~· I' be 11 oil," he. 1.ald. Ute oil industry , the . ....: .... _-.;.·_•_m_•..:y_ev_en ___ ,._. ___ _... _____ _ government's antitrust chief has recommended lhe elimina- tion ol importation quotas on foreign crude oil. In doing SO, Asst. Atty. Gen. Richard W. McLaren placed the Justice Department on · record against two othef Cabinet.level agencies on a subject that a Senate sub- committee has said could inean $4 billion in annual sav· ings to consumers. McLaren told a Cabinet lask foree on oil import controls Wednesday that the present system of quotas is an· ticompetitive, unfair to 'con-The reports said t h e dispersal ordered by the Com· munist Chinese authorities af· "I think some people are made vice-presidents before fects entire plants. It also Jn. they're ready to become vice-president&" sumers and uMecessary to . , . . . · .· .· "'· -.· the economy and national ,,~ · '!; <:.'f·· ~. f 'NI\ t'1'•' ' :..'\J:. 'H ' ''t seeurlty. ": ~! Rare Fee-!flJ~ . Of1\,ftl "' vol ved setting up alternative --------------------inslallaUons in less exposed He suggested that if any im· ~ .r "' "-\ ··"'PC!'~"! 'ii.•' port restraints are neces.sary f 1 _z .·Fro"\ i .t2,00fl'4.w!th ExceJlent. T • and less known areas of the country. To what extent the crucial nuclear installations of Sin· kiang province effectively can be moved is not known. Experts doubt whether er- fective large scale evacuation is possible, although some dispersal is considered feas· ible. The reports said Sino-Soviet tension is reflected in growing preparations for emergency, although the possibili1y of war still is considered unlikely at present. House Notes Tax Reform Loopholes WASHINGTON (AP) -The House left some c r u c i a l loopholes in its provisions to plug tax loopholes for the very ri ch, according tO a Treasury expert. The trouble is in a section of the tax reform bill aimed at insuring that no wealthy tax payer may completely escape federal income taxes. The bill as drawn by the Ways and Means Committee and pa~ by the House ICU!t week plugged most of the escape hatches but left open a couple through which many of the wea1thy could scurry, the Treasury expert said. For years, Congress has granted certain i a x ex· emptions in one area or another -such as mineral depletion allowances, charitable contributions, farm losses, interest from municipal and state bonds. a low protective tariff would !.;~ ,.r-: , t'·) ·~"-~ ~·" ' beE~~re~.b~cLaren made it ~'!,~ ' · Aili.§J o. ~·ftrtE ~ANOS ·afA'cH~ clear that he prefers a 'System ~.:· ~b lQ_Mt~IA , ~1.R~E~ TR1E.£:S: _"1· ,1-. whereby the domestic oil ~·· sn..)':~OCMN VteW ,SIT:ES "' market is governed solely by LL:-tA~. LA•LE l.;ITl\,JTl~S , . competitive considerations, in-W) ' ,\V,EQ, StREeTs , ~ Funeral Rites Held For Starlet, Friend eluding 11le entrance of foreign :t'>EXACTl~G E~~Tl\.!CTI · LOS ANGELES (AP) -wife in the morning, then join· products. ·-: ··~,~f~)fri;: .. f" «f/ .:k:t1ii ...• ·. · International movie stars and ed actors Steve McQueen· and He also denounced longstan-~~~ 'll'-.::~ (; ~~ ft·j:~')< jet setters have said lheir last Paul Newman at Sebring's ding industry argumenJ.tJ that ''°I~~ \.,.. TH~.l~CKBU,Rt':-t . , goodbyes to beautifuJ blonde afternoon funeral. quotas are needed to preserve . \--rn DEVELO'pE"S ~~:. : ~ actress Sharon Tate and in-Miss Tate, 26, and Sebring, the nation's reserves and to :~:. ~ ~. { '{ ,· •" . ~ " , ''\"~J; t e r n a l i o n a 11 Y k n o w n 35, her former boyfriend, were prevent fW:ign companies \.:f\ t :( . ~ r,. ,_ ~Bl~ W •!t.Chf hairdresser Jay Sebring, killed killed with coffee heiress fi:om cont.rolhng the country 's 'f~. \f"~~~ y Newpo" · with three others in a mass Ab iga 11 Fo l ge r, 26 , 011 supplies. .,.,.,., , .:c .,~ ,~, murder. screen writ er Voityck Instead of reducing U.S. ·:-. \i:,i;<,,.,_,,,. Phone: M6-02 "Goody, Sharon, and may Frokowsky, 37, and Steven reserves, McLaren declared, """' ' · ~~v:g:;~ ,;:i~;n;yr;•:uiJ~ ~:,r:;~,/8' at' w~nd T~le': ::::uc~nr:~r~c~~ow Te:~: '~~;;z~~'fzj !'.J. ~"'Jlli your way," en toned the Rev. rented mansion in swanky Bel to draw from foreign sources ~ -'\ <;: ¥~ .· ~':" ,!""$ ~:, '>J.'.~"""l!i!O"' Peter O'Reilly at the funeral Air. while preserving its domestic ""' ~.~.~.A.,..,..~ .... ;.4,,.-.• service Wednesday for Miss,....:.:::.; ________ _.;.="-'-====-==='----------------..,---.,- Tate. Peter Sellers, Yul Brynner and Warren Beatty flew from London to attend the funeral along with Hollywood ac tors Kirk Douglas, James Coburn and Stuart Whitman. Roman Polanski, M is s Tate's film-direc:.or husband, attended the service for his -tr * * Police Tell Killer Clues LOS ANGELES (AP) -A "very, very sloppy looking" man · anned with a high- powered rifle was sought by police today for questioning in the fatal shooting of the father of the singing Lennon Sisters. Investigator!: . refused to disclose the man •s·name. They described him as 40 years old. Caucasian, &·f oot-2, 210 pounds, with brown, unkempt hair. He is reportedly anned with a .30-caliber rifle, police said. A picture of the man has been circuJated to police agencies. investigators said. Here is how: Savings account dividend for 1 year on $50o.oo =•z52 Free safe deposit box for as long as you maintain $500.00 savings account = 'ii!! . {1pproxlm111 yurlr -i to rent box at b1nk) PLUS: Free service charge on $750.00 of American Express travelers SELF-CLEANING OVEN AND BROILER! cheques OR = •7!! Service charge free on purchase of up to 10 tickets to the Forum, Dodger Stadium or other sporting and theater events through TRS (TICKETRON) Total benefits· on your $500.00 sa~lngs account =$392 from CALORIC Spatterint 1per1rib1, drib- bling pies, drooling c11s1rol· es, bursting potatoes. Y o u know what • gunlcy miss thtY can male• of your oven. But there's hope. New celorlc 911 ovens that d•gunk them• 1elv11 automatlcolly . Costs Less Than 3¢ A Cleaning MODERNIZE YOUR KITCHEN NOW as Low as '$299.95 Stop by and see us to open your account. If you have any questions . please call 54D-4066; We are open 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru Friday and 1 O a.m. to '6 p.m. Saturday. • • • • • • • • • • • • ·av1ngs AND LOAN ASSOCIATION . SOUTH COAST PWA • COSTA MESA, CAJ.IF,ORNIA Slace 1947 411 EAST 17th STREET COSTA MESA Teltphon• 646. 1"4 ... ~ MA!JI OFFlCI: 5'01 WHml!R IOUl.IVAllD • LOI ANQ!W, CALIPORNIA ---DAILY f.f, SAT. f·6 II I ' I • ---·-- 1 DAILY PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE Hicks and the Recall . l!olb sides ln lbe Fountain Valley . 1"6Caq contro- versy are now ur&lng Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hickl to dlf tnU! the backJround of 'the affair to dlalover alleged 'fraudulent actions." lltcks u undentandably reluctant to step Into the middle of a local controversy and bas said that U Ibero an, Ill fact, crlmlnol actions on either slcle he bas plen- ty of time lo Investigate ln tho coming m~. Hlckl says any\hlng he might do now could only lllrlber upset Ibo boiling political cUmata In Fountala Valley. The Idea of an invesUgatlon by the DIJtrict Attor- ney originated with Mayor Robert SchwerdUe&•r and Vice Mayor Donald Fregeau, two of the three tarieu of the recall action. The other. side, naturally, took up the aame cry. So Hlcks ends up In the middle. . But by refusing to enter lbe fray before the Sept. 2S election , the District Attorney u d-.atta1 good judgment. When the whole thing is over, and if there are definite Indications that fraudulent actions did take place, Hicks could lbe~ put bis lnvestig~Uve machln· ery to work. our guess IS that by that time, no one will want a probe. Council Time•wasting Huntington Beach City Council meetings are lone and frequent. , The elected councilmen doubtless feel It is demo-- craUc to let everyone have his or her say. llCCOlllJIOJl1 lrowtb -probl11111 such u rec1eo11n1nc laws, nltlln& touib IOlilng lltuallont ud altempllnt lo understand w~f lbe lu\ure holds. In lbeir zeal lo be democraUc and fair, councllm•n .,. spending too much time fuuln& will! ltt1111 !bat should ~d11lt will! admln!JtraUvely. · They apend time quesUonlng department headl Ill public •'5•1oas about relaUvely mlaor Item•. Thi• process bypasses lbe top fllll·tlme executlve, lbe city admllllJtnrtor. The sltuaUon not only expenda !be Ume of lbe coun- cil, depertment heads and publlc, ti encourages "9arl· ment beads lo bypau lbe city admlnlstnrtor an!" deal directly wllb lbe council. This reduc .. hl1 effecUvent11. Th• council should begin maklnc a conscious effort lo shtJ'I lbe admiailtrative dellil to Ibo administrator. Protect Its-Top Quality HunUncton Beech councilmen Aug. 18 will agalll Ille up a difficult problem: What Is lo be done will! a proposed subdivision at posh HunUngton Harbour! The 2&-lot proposal oa an Island surrounded by Ramora Channel raises a good many questions. They concern lot size, street accesa; cbaMel width and expensive bulkheadtng as opposed lo lbe stone bul· warlc process kliown as rtprap. · The would·be developer's position essentially is !bat excessive city requirement. could inulf out lbe de- velopment entirely. 'Citi;ens of lbe area, will! cosily in· vestments in homes1 naturally want to see the develop- ment remain top·quality. • I I This town meeting approach to government is workable -perhaps not efficient, but workable -in a small town. Huntington Beach is no longer small. The city IJ growing and it has lbe headaches that It would , .. m lblJ has to be lbe city goal also -a top quality devel0pment -from the &tandpolnt of both general municipal Improvement and the inveatmeat of the ex!Jting bcme ownen. Good KTUf. Stz~11! JU$t because we've tri~d you a bit over the ;yearsr / Sex Education Calls for Rare Wisdom Her1'1 a brl&k little !YlioStam for you: Education ii the ta.sk of the tehoolt; tbs'e 11 1 thin& c11led "tu education"; thettfore, -education ta the taU of the ilObools. ·1u1 this~ In toalc ts both lannaPr aod .. _. .. ly falae. What Is ,jnng U.. ID the m1ddtl term, "au ............ Far educating about IU ii f• dlfferent than educe.ting ln academic eeta. , Bioloa can be "ta~" like other teS;• MIX cannot be. For human &U, the rest of the an!Jnal world, baa ded dimension of peraonallty. Its ~hologlcal, moral, cultural and social ~nes tn1ke it an e.xceedlngly 11.1btle, pplu and llUbjecti ...... of Inquiry. THE QUEBT[ON qulverlng many ochool bolnto lbeoe day" "Should ,.. be taucht in IChool or at home?" ia an ~nble one. for the simple fact ·that nobo!fy knows, or can agree on, bow It lhould be ta.uaht, and there are no ob- Joctive .Undanb for teaclllng it fairly, bodestly, and to the saUsfacUon of the pnl community . It la not the phys.lcal facts about 1e1 tbal children need most to learn -these •ire euity taugllt -but the connotation> ff eexuaJ activity. And these connotations cut acrON the whole spectrum of Western beliefs. rellgloua:ly, legally, elhicolly, and Jll)'chicaliy. NOT ONE TEACHER In a ~undred b II& present equipped to "teach ae1" in a Dear Gloomy Gus: I A> a longtime o-.er et Wiil· mtJuter and Ila politics, peopto sbouldn't fear 100 or 10 mental health paUenta In that new-mtnl- mum oecurlty home. CWU. fl&· u..s show 115,437 Wettmlnster residents without even 1 fence around the city'• bcw<len! -T.-A. P ,,.. "'"'" ,...... ,....,,. .......... ~"..._ti..._ =•car . ..., ,_ "' -'l't ............. ..., '1M. meanlncful maorier that would truly educat. the lludenta and lllilf)> their parenta II the .... time. Bat tt IJ 1n equal !alllcy 1o lmqlne that moat paten1a are capable of giving their own chfidren aDy effective sei:ual instruct.ion. For all our obsession with the subject, we are immensely confused, ignorant, ambivalent, and repressed about sex in the United States. Moreover,. even if we had 1 more rational grasp of the matter than we do, condllkm.s are changing ao rapidly, and standards and attitudes are abltUng so basically, that little can be taught with any finality or authority beyond mere mciaI strictures. FOR M°'11' S1JBJZCl'8, all the teacher needs is .. knowledge," and the minimal ability to transmJt it. For sex education, we' need wisdom. which la a much rarer intellectual commodity, In short ·supply both in and out of the IChool system. We also require deep empathy with young people, whicb too few teachers and parenta ore able to provide In depth. Ideally, pareota shoWd teach ,.. ,. their chilftren; theoretically, the schools sbou\d recruit and \fain teachers who could 'do the job; but neither of theoe con- ditkm.s exists toda_y. and whichever cour11e tht.,acbool boards opt ror wUI abortcbange the kids. f Foremost Frustration 1iJohn W. Gardner, former Cabinet •her 4nd an urban expert. wants to ''reYttaUse" rural 11:rea1, create new eWes Ind merhaul eJtisUng cities as na· Ilona! policy. ll lt 1 raiher llflf order, requlring an ~ CJ.Jtpul about 1 hundredfold that of Nochlnt the moon, but It touches diroctly Oft the (oremoet frustration of the American people today -inabUlty to find 1 rotlonal rood 1o the dislrlbuUon of tbelr mountlnl populatloo, and the resulting ~"! and DlQfal decay of their com· •ty life. So far u CQDCems "new .cltlea," we ... bem building them au thia century, Md at a brfllkneck pace since the war. TUe a cue: IO fnlltt north of San Fran- • there waa ln 19f0 a crossroad op waY 101 callels Novato, population t 2,000. TODAY IT Ill A sm1ll but 1prawling •_,.uWlc'• city of about 15,000. JI ladts the trldltloo of moot comparable ~unlUes In the Unllod Stat,.; and It 1111 IO counterpartl ctusttrod about ~polilan centers. In California. It oc- .. ln ltu crowded states. too, New in-- based on teehnoloclcal develop- to111eal popul1tlons, and big ell~ populaUon. Hunet r ror freedom and expand the ultllilel, and Iha '!:nuNle doel the mt. 1 dlrlemt form lfli Uke llie 0<ardl r., f.-. lind •Pl<" tn the wutward 1aecomt d UM lut century. ft has the -deka81oa u "Go wutward, young ...,1 .. k "* et -aat•lllle populatiom 1• GbJectl"'1 p1.-. Exlfuou• f""O: ,. llld -facl«I bqot then\\ and .... .. ........ 11... lns16od of ,,.... Ulm ts cultural ~Int, iloooed 111 .. ra _.., '°"'" -et ~ molliUI)' lo -'•Ill .......... NII Uh I -7 aoacooda Into and ' Olruib the big cities. IT IS THE WORST of cttchel .. nolo I.hat this mliatrbutloll bu Impoverished the big cities, materially and aplrttually, Jeavm, them often unfit for civilized habitatloo. Nobody in the new cities or in the old la content with thla phenomenon, but to a man all take part in it tnd aar1v1te it. Where will we look tor alltvlatlon of such ruinous development, let.alone 1 ra- tional fJ!versal of ltf To our p.1bllc men! Why, they are u bewildered and deluded as any of us, and " bewitched "1 the priv1te prejudices and wants. 'l1it national capital 11 filltd wtth m11r· ble Inhabited by public men, and by private misery and anthill duperatioa In the ghetto and out. 1'be Consrta can bl ather Its way to a plan for its (ief, and the bureaus can wreck It with help from congreuional commlltees. TOM WICJlER In the New York 11mes ttfta of auUlortsatlon f1lr I Wul>lnt1on .. ~. Tbe bureaus proceeded .. dlop up 1JiO ~ Ind bamJtrlng it with I Potomac a wlllcli wolild billY ldl1htr congat Iha ty centtr. Some kenwcky congressman, chainnan of a aub- oommlttet, holds up an $11.7 million 1p- propriatloo ror a start untU he can itl the bridge, . You needn't look to ftdml obstructton •nd inerUa alone. Every rtlion has obllnlctlonbta, pur1UID1 petty lnlertlll. unaware ol, and ofttn host.Pe lq, the Medo et the -1t and tllo larpr and which Mt. Gordner l'Ol<S· H Readers E#press Views on VCI Action Pros, Cons of Krisman Appointment To the g.fltor: We b1ve fOUlld the Llguaa HW1 Ktwan!J Club'• 1Uact m Mr. Mlchl<l Krismu11 appointment U Coordlna1or o( Academic Advtalnc II UC, Irvine not only offensive. but also 1ud1CRIUI. The Ktwa- nlw In! bunllng witdtu where there are none and eaWna: names where nooe IJll>ly. In th1s country ther< ta oo ·guilt by uaoclaUon, nor b there deprivation or llWlilhmml without I belrlng. ll Mlchael f\rlsmao 111" be ....itmned for meelillJI Fidel Caaln> and g<lillJI to CUbl, then we mlllt cmlemn Rlcbanl Ntsoo for spen-dlac three boun with Caaln> and for viltlillJI Communbt Ru....ta tut month. If Mr. Kri.!ma.n js to be ~eroned for being associat.edt wipl' sos; then sureJ,v Justice Hugo Bliek and Harry S. Trumm must be condemned for their mem· berahip in the Ku KIUJ: Klan. QUR GRA VDT concern 11 I h e COO· demnat.ion ol Mr. Krisman by a group which has not had enough respect for democratic principles to grant him a hearing or allow hlm to ei:press his views. Had they but given him an op- Por\Unit7 to speak, they would know as we and othen who are acquainted with him know that he II not a danger to the university or the country, but rather ia a spokesman fer the uncomipted principlu on which this country was founded. 'lbost who aasault without facts, con- demn without hearing and penalise without jusUflcation represent a fester. Inc cancer In OW' 9lclety and must not be allowed to determine the fututt of 11 important an ina:UtuUon u the univer- sity. SAM AND SUZIE COHEN 'Anarcltlatlc Force' To The Editor : Re. Krisman at UCI : ln reading ~ news 1torlet on Cl\&nceUor Aldrich's ap.- polntment of Krianan. I noticed seven) 1laring unanswered questions. I. "Although faculty la suppooed,. han· die 111 •~vlllng of llUdenll. Krisman will advise 38 or 40 of them.." Question: Will he .dviae them to join the SDS and to take part in the camput' militancy? ThtrtY or 40 well-trained activists can do much havoc ! 2. Aldrich praises Krisman for hla: ""-"1 In htJ comm!-." Questloo : Was Castro hMest In hia commitment to become Communist dictator of Cuba? 3. Krisman praises Aldrich: "Aldrich wait not dishonest with the 1tudenU." Question : Is not honesty a basic quality requlrtd for chancellorship ~nd not «ie ,. be singled out and ldmlred u t0me unique attitude? I. KRIBMAN SA YI, "The SOS Is a very h-(that word qaln) body and U- people wlll not be able to destroy It." Queatlon , d .. a C!um<ollor Aldrich want hi• ''lndeatrudlble" 0,' an I :1 It I• n dedlcated to viollftCt and governrrttnt overthrow, to have itl own flfth<olumn advisor in 1 place of authority In this uJUvenlty supported by loyal Amerlca.n taipaytrs! Do the citizens of California want It? How can Americans stop thil In- .---'Bf ~ ... e ---, DoarG ...... : I hive rt14 ...,...i esi>IJnallonl of your Sidewaya T b I n kt n I phtloteJil>y and I'm wot r I ea be<IUIO I 1Uil dcll1 andcntand iL Con' you help me! CONCERNED Dear Concerned: You're prtl'DI~ in )'OW' "'°"'" rylne. Write b1ck when rou atan to understand Sldcwl)'I Thinking - then you'll ~VI llOllltthlnl to WW· ,,, about, Letttrs from re-adtr1 are Wflcome. No~llr torittrs should eonvq their mts~age1 in 300 words "' llu. Tiit right to c'o!Jdn•• lettnl to fit ipcct 07' eUminat• libel ti rereroed. AU ltC. terr murt includt .rignatur1 cmd mail- ing addre11, but name1 may bt witi.. held °" ,.,qvui if iufjicWnt rea.ion ii apparent. fillnilon ol activlal mllltaa\!. Into pool- tiona of authority? Ari ,.-e helpless before tllil aaan:blallc 1..,,.1! PAUL WESTBROOK Db Tniclaer Approtle• To The Editor: 1 Public concern evtr the appointment of Mr. Mite Krisman u CoOrdinator of Academic Advlainc at UCI Ui ~ dentandable, liven bll auociaUon with both 111 unpopular orpntzaUoo (SOO) and an unpopular cause (the CUban Revolution). I would augert, however, that Mr. Kriaman'• polJUcll views and 1ctlvltiel have ablolutely ,M bearln1 on his ability to serve Irvine students in the area or academJc advisin&. Al THE FOllMiliR Coordina .. r of Acadtmlc Advhilng al UC!, and u Mr. Krlsman'a lelcher in several courses, I strona:Jy endone Chanctllor Aldrich's decl1Jon to hire him. I rupect Mr. Krism1n's lntelli*ence and admJre his commitment to the welfare of students at Irvine. Both qualities will serve him well in htJ new poolllon. SPENCER C. OLIN. JR. Aaaoclate Profes!IOr of History UC, Irvine Ll•ten First To the !dlto£: Befort more aervice ctubs rush to criticize the UCI appolntzntnt of Mike Krisman, they might invite him to speak before tht.lt me m b «Ill i p . I've participated In a panel djlawioo with · Mike and found him to be an articulate, erlreme.ly Interesting young man. I thJnk it's only fair to lliten to him , queati(lfl him and then make a judgment. To me, that's tht Amtrican way of doinl thing1. Service club pl'Ofram chairmen can "ach Mike by catJini llWll'I JIM WOOD To the Editor : Sex education 1hould be tauiht In the schools by profeatonala. l'nldent p.stow •PP'""clles mliflt IVOld the ltptlmate objections th1t hive Clopped up aorea the country. i . Boy-&jrl diSCW!lsion of aex {u in the Anahtlm school district) might lead to leas reaped for sex. I. SIECUS MATERIALS beint u!ed aren't all suiled for sex education : Dr. Gerald SandJon ol the National JnsUtute of Mental Hultb feels that the volatile materials promoted by sIECus· wUI not be professionally or psychologically suited to Utat difficult teaching chore CAl!en-Ooldsmith. 1.uo, DAfLY PfWT). Dr. Sandlon supports the "latency" concept that children sublimate lheir tel· ual drives until the bodily changes of adolescence begin to appear. The force leedini ol emoUonally charged SIECUS mat.ma.I t'Guld ·psyc:boloslcall damlji:e' · aome youq people. BUT DR. MARY S. CALDERONE (tx- ecuUve -of SIECUS) llelleveo that HJ ectucaUon must be early, explicit, complete and continuous (U.S. Ntwa I&: World Raport1 3-Ut, p. 411. New York cnlld psycholoeist Rhod• L. Lorand ·also bluted SIECUS for th1s viewpoint. Child guidance experts •~ claim Rhoda Lor1nd11 book "Love, Sex and the Tttn Ager." SJECUS violates religious convictloos in that it teaches about contnctptlon •nd prtmarltal sex without also teacbin& about morality. Several key people ln SlECUS are also on the staff or board of consultants ol Sei:ology magazine. One view nya Sei:- olOI)' ~ntl medically l!IOUnd material in a popular format. Another feels that Sei:ol~ li~lttUe more than allck smut. H SIECUS materials are used, the nsultant uproar would keep a 1ooa pro- gram from developing . S. SOME ARE concerned that isolated incidents may be rtpeattd In an improperly run sei:'education pro1ram: -A S.year-old girl ln .Rahw1y, N.J., drew a picture of a sperm unltin1 'WI.th the ovum. -A Pendleton, Oregon, teacher asked junior high school student:s to define obacene words copied off ttstroom walls. -A California high school teacher ask· ed his students to &ive their own ei:- perlences In mutqrbatlon. homosexuality and aemal exptrimmtatlon with animalo (USN•WR. Htl, p. 41). •. mosE WllO pnl!DOte I -... education curriculum · Qftail 1'f,ven~t bothered to find out wlllL tllo jn-1 Pl"" gram is. Sex education II taupt in aeveral courses (mostly elective) .in the Hun- Unfloo Beach Union, ~I Di.trlct: Home Living (Ith grade). Science 11th· 11th), Economics and Social Psycholqcy (Ulh) and Family LUe and EducaUeo (11th). The trustm COlltr'Gl whit CGe1 Into the curriculum. The7 micht conatder 90q1.e M' tht guidelleea ldopled by the C1lllvrnta State Board et EducaUon : I. Instruction lhould lie oondUcllol by a team of quallfltd lmtructon including spectaily trained J)rOIOlllllonals. Use physicians as recommended by local medical 10Cleties u confbltanta, advtatrs IQd rtlOUn:e persons. Ninety-one ptrttnt of 200 college atUdenLI l\lrveytd had no ,parental ln- 1tNctlon on datlnf. ileventy·four -t ... their llnl kllowledp ... -from obscene IOUf'ttl, frteods or tl•where. l. A cmzENS' commlUee (of doctors. Only a pe..-ltunad lll1thtllJI rr... nu-. lchool admlnilttlton. pamt their parents. &l'OUP ,....ritattves, clervmen ind The 1tvdent1 ftll the most htlpfu1 in-pollct, etc.) at.aid study co u r 1 e 1......Uon they .,...14 hive .,.,.inct ---1-rllht dltbtl ad ,..,.. ... ·"' ... s. Pt ...... llbauhl ba -ry. f'l'lll Ptiln Trulli. July 1•, pp. N). 4. l!lopb1atea Q10l'al ~ od the MANY FAVOll Iha prlncipt. of 1eX ~llOll; but ~ .. ""' k'• balllJI caJTlecl out In ~Oc hwta-: I. l!ome puptla lft told not 1o toll tholt parents whit they ltam. 2. Too few teacher• are quaUOed. A we11.1n,entioned teacher· mi1ht 1.,.. cometly -w"'t .,..Id be t1u1ht, hoW1 ai1d al wlllt op. Psycbologtcal damapmtcbtreoulL !amity. . 5. l!lllnlclloo --Hpred\lo· ttee llifuld no1 ba i-m1led w c1111v.n ........ _.of ..... I. PaflDLI thould ,.. and 1-..ev1lu1te cl•MROm mattrllla. 7. Continually evaluate pro;:rama. Study local IUC<Wlul P"'ll"lms, 8. Eliminate 1ex educ1tlon mat1ri1l1 fh>m SfECUS (SH lnfonnaUoo C.Uncll ol the U.S.). (SIEC\IS !las no coanectton with tho fed.,al 1ovenunf11L). It seems beat to tab a alower ap- proach in Hunliagton Beach. The preaent program will .do for oow. Let's fully in- vestigate and evaluate tbe preaent and proposed programs. Let's not make has- ty, uninformed ch.an1es. LEONARD WRIGHT 'Almost llttbeHellal>le' To the Editor : I attended a Hunlinlton Beach City Council meeting on August 4 and wit- nessed what might be regarded u a lklnnish between opposing force.. The citizen1 of the Ocean View School Dia1rict .'fe:rsw; the "nilnt·machine" City Council ol South Hunlinglo!1 Beach. Tbe council, which ta -poeed of South Huntinrton Beach Tetident.s, ia still bllnded by their ~em ov.er that blight called downtown and seems to care little for the futw'e or the r01l grow1n1 portion et the city, namely Ocean View diJtrict. Speclflcilly, I refer to the current state of affairs coocernlllJI the lndultrtaJ.apart. ment -p!ex propooed by John D. Luak IDd SOns. 1be apartments, 11 you know, are the sore point as they threaten to destroy the educational 1ains ncently won by th~ tu override. · AJIT£Jl THE electorate takes on an ad· ditiooal tu bunttn ler the "-lit ti !Wr ctilldreo'1 education, the c:ounctl 1inply pnipoeea ,. cancel the cain by permitting 2,000 1tmtmenta 1o be built in the diJtrlct. This .dtaregard of the YOlart' wishes seema to me to be aymptomaUc ·of · !he selflsb and lhart .. i&lrted view of the council. ll's a I m o 1 t unbelievable t h a t a r"poosible ITOl!P of city olllclals would weaken the school 1y1tem of the mmt dynamic portion of iU city. They have no imaginative alternatives to offar the developer which mJ&)lt be to everyone's beaefit; they simply ait passively and wait to pass judgment. One wonders how someone with no ideas is qualified to ]>aM judgment. · A POSSIBLE compromise might be to move the. apartment complu t o downtown Huntinfton Beach. This would accomplish several thin8S· It would 1et rid d the downtown blight aod revitalize old Huntington Beach, it would leave the Ocean View tax base intact, and would return the presently proposed apartment ?.OM to indU$tri.al or commercial develop- ment, or parU. If this came to pua, then the etttih <onunwiity would balefit In· Stead of o0e dtalrict .~ a Vtry aoocl deal wllilt another pla I VV1 bad de1l. Among the put 1-es of · 1 new freeway, a major airport, and no.-the in- dllltrlat .. pi:rtrnent complu, it appears that our city planners are either very s"eUi8b, or they are profe1•lonil amat.ei.lrt. ROllERTE.~ --..ima:ntdl_' '·t~ Th~•y, Augu.t 14, 1909 '• T"4 rditoriot -01 1114 Daflr --pjlot-snkr to mt-flJld nm..-•tol• -b1 P'fff•li!IO lhil llC11,.popcr'I oplnlotu flJld COii> mmtorv .,. 1oplQ of lnf..-cll ond riQ!llfjccnu, btl ~ng • '°"''" for 1114 •"P'fllion oJ our reoMrY OJ)ftll0"1, altd bJI J"1sentfng the diwrt• "'''°'" points of fn/onnrd obsmi.rs an4 rpok•""'" on topict oJ 1114 c1aw. Robert N. Weed, Publl1her • . ----~~~~--,-;--:-:::---::;-::~~.~--:~=.=--=::::·:=:::!:::-~~~~~·~-~~~~"~.=--:-.:~~,:--:~-------:-::":":::::--:.-.~.~:""'--'."'""-=---= ....... ""!' ... ~r"l"t • • .T!>!WJjlY, A~1111. 1169-_ DAILY PILOT !, · · · · , I -Czechs Show~d We~kiiess of.-Russ ; • . WASHINGTON (AP):_ The Russian trOops which P<M!Rd In ...,,.111ona1 ,testlm<!JIY, blue ol Military Review, llllrinl 1111 --ol lho CH.if~~ Do' Lightnillg Bolts Fr.jg4te~ 7 Yrou? Sovttt 1r1111 •lrlllally ran·out lnld Clocboolovakla ....,. 111p-Secntary. ol Doltiiie M!Mn· j,....11 ol ,lhe u.s: Army Com-occupollOO, 6'e il1lele sale!;, ol ~ ..,.,. lhe lint week ~ ta live olf lhe 111111. with R. Lil~ .,..,of ''lhe •P!'<d mand and General S t 1 f f "\Vhen 1 b r • a k d o w n ol of lt:s · Inv • 1 I on of suppUes c&tcbins up later. -and etftdciDcy with which the College at Fort LeavenWortb, trampoNUon and •. u p'/'11 . '~ovakiJ, according, to . •tow~ver, ~FY said, faod invasion wu C6rrled out." Kan. services th r efa ten e ~ ~-11. lists . on · Eulem was not inillblo from u.e UD· • Onl1 Jut -t. Ge 'n • lfhal irtlele i1fi1 "The 1>4ralyie lJie Soviet •Qllies bl _,.,.. cooper1Uve Czecbe and ta-Willlw c , w.-rolabd. s o• le l In y'u lo n oJ Clochollovakla, the situatioll Thee 1ovemmenl e1perts adeq~ ·~l ...,ply and .Alll\ll cllMC ol Stall, IGld the C" c bot I Ofilde Uj>o«~ ns lllWd by an alrllft - di'P!lled tho publlc pooillon of transport wen. uiilblt to H-.,Anilod Setvlee1 Com-serious dOllcienei<s in lhe delivered fuel, food and ._ top · U.S. Clvtllan and l!lilltary overcome the problem for mll\ee . '"Ille mlUlu)' ef. fields ·of logistics, oqaniu· lial equirment to t h· luden lhlt lhe SoViet-1..i in-cliy1. ' '. llCltllC)' -•led In u.e lion. and ldminlslratlon." airports " Vllllon last Au1. Zl wq 1 The. Amerl<an opeclalilll -milil -..,. to 'l'he stud)',. WTiltat J>-T • lleil!>ln. IVbo Jouchl wffli demonslraUoo of elficlency. also challebged the 1m.,...-be a feclor ln NATO defemlve •1111Y11Leo110\nlan, aaid ·~l\e l!lllSian puUalna 111mol th-' -•'It wun't efficient," con-that the .Ruu1ans mobWzed planniq." brePdowa Gf...Jovttt supply Gtrmam a ~ Wor\d War J~ tended 1one "!ch 1pecla)jst in •wilUy. But the contrary views of ·~ Hposed a niojor· sold li>e s..iel mnored _. ·a~ L.' M. llOYD H08PIT" DIETICl'v -an Interview as the first .... ll took 11 leut a month to the spec!a!llta on Eulel'1) we.-af So91et-1"tlallca, anioecl dlwtoos, --.C ~ -~· nlverury ol l1'e e9ent , ap--. fluosh out aome ol lhe Soviet £mope were rel!lfor<ed by 1 with the siplflcant ~on t111ckl, won left, WltMul 1111111 UC)irrNINjl ·-Some lilhl· tends ll ls • rare liea°yy proecbfd. units with mob 11 ii e d -el "SOvlel tnvuion ol th• air foree and lilbome besic •lfPUt,..n the flllnl.4al! nlflC~fivetlmeaboltetthan =~·rwhoisnotrondelllmA-,f.--------~ ·y,$. ~perts~ tho reservilll,U.S.-lild. ,.,....._., in the Aupat '""""·" oflhe-Uon.~ theourf•ceol.lhe mi~Som• , 1~...;;;....:.:o.....;.c....~;;;;;.-'-~~--'-~-...,~~~---"...:.;.c........:.;....;.;...:.;..;o:_...;....;.__~-~-~~~~~-;:--~~-., ¥ta.travel up to 17,llllO miles . LOVE AND W~Whal· • · per second. Consider that! ·quality 00.s>. lady need, moot S· hut·tle AJmoot hall the ·~ o( llsbl) lo ·be a successful wife! !!ow Statfuns Viewed . Dou lightning mike )'Oq aboi.lt a gentleman? Wbat•doa neni:owi! Never bol.hera1 me be need most to be 'a. wc-- mueh, bu! it probably ought lo. """"1 hll3ban<l! Our Love and Kllls a lot of .people. Back in . W 8r man has ~ stud)?tlg I!I' In South Afrlca,11 linlle . the I~ . lnqulrles by boJI, '!liped out 14 cltiaenl in a CU!fomen. Ind ls. ~ ready -ol 1 """"'"1. u llgbt-with Illa reply: '"n\O cefl!"'lly nUit really eares YoU -I ~~~11~~"~'~ mun if it drives you into the ,...... one .. es one 1 _., is , • clOlel -wbal yoo au11tr from ,.,_,"thel'a whit both a wife WASHINGTON !AP) -The 'ls caQeil braUllpilobia, · and huablnd JJ!Od mGll:" How leader ol lhe nitlon'• manned MOllT AJ1U>LANE PD..tlTS . a fe!low and his lady friend ·•po<e filgbl _.m envlslons ere either only IOftS M eldest ea.di • ~ come by. tbil rare ll nucle.,·poW'eted: • h u t t I t aons ••• ALL THE WOMEN C8;P•~ify our L.,.and "!· man .service for lunar t%})1oren. television reporters 1 0 u n d ~ take upanoo, that_ s a pr~ 'lbe strategy de.scribed to- alike. Maybe not exactly alike. m•e:e· Kno.w, you m~t be day by Or. George E. Mueller But much too much alike cunous. involves two space stations - evei'I so.· 1 ' CUSJ'OMER SERVJCE-Q. one orbiting the eanh, the THE FIRST W E E p I N G "Were you aware the average other cl,rcllng the moon. WIU.OW in the United states por~pine hu 30,ooe qu.il1$, Old The nuclear vehicle; ~.llid; grew in Arlington Heights, Va. boJ?" .~. No, sir, never beard ·woUld lower operalional COits ' ••• WHAT .CHANCE do you that. Knew the ·a• er a 1 e to about $200 for movin& a give that movement now afoot redhead bas 90,000 hairs, and pound of material from the" to sew a moon among the SO the average .brunette 125,000, earih to th,e moon and back, at:an of Old Glory' • • • A and the ave~ge b Ion d e against abeiut '100,000 a pound 150,000, but your report on spent under toqay'a tecbni.· POl'CUPnie quills is, news •. , ,Q\les. , Who Wants This Chair? Many Do ''Q. "W Y®R LANGUAGE ' In remarks prepored for MAN bow· come. we· call a delivery bdore the National h4Dd gun a 'piltol' .'' A. He· Space Club, Mueller said 1ay1 the, ,fjnt 11UCh weapons -IUtlilar redUCbons in the colt were Jitade in Pistoia. Italy, is ·fJf ttanspol'\l&n jo the earth why ... Q ...... "WJIAT!S a St. «bltal slalion• WOllld pennil LuM's ~er?" A. ~·t that the nation · to · consider pro-· the English ei:press1on for cessing materials in space. wh.at we call lod;ian summer? · Mueller, the N at i o·n.a 1 CIUCAGO (UPI) -The ·Think to. . Aeronaulics · Ind Sp ace chaJr is big, bulky and un· llOME PERMAN~Re-Administration's associate atf. comfortable, and has been us. centl}' reported horn~-pennan. mlnis1..rator ·for manned Sl*f: ed by only 67 persom since ents were ou~wed m France, flight, Wd' re. UJI ab I e 1930. _Switzerland, I>emnark,.., and n\oonlh!PI coilld travel from A lot of people want it. . Holland. 'Ibey wm oulawtd in tbe·lunar orbit\ng bue to the But Cook County s h er i f f Oregon, too, once. Bu~ IOre;on moon an~ leave six, exptoM Joseph I. Woods has been w~en are not u easy lo p.mb , on tf:>e aurface' for up to (our directed to give the county around as · thOBe European weeks. jail'• electric chair to the girls:They complained mighti· He said the men would then Stateville penitentiary at Jy. And the law ·was repealed return to the station, analyze Joliet. within • week. I.he · material they h ad The Cook County board gave NIGIQ'M~ fello~ gathered and rtlsupply their' · Woods the order because the who hU made a lengthy stlidy ,craft for the next visit: county jail's 14 death row of sleep uys 14e ·10.~-t~ "1 would el])eet by the end Prisoners are going to .be when a· dilld. IS most <1f ~ 19705 we wOl.ild.fiod :ao Stateville -and Stateville's 5usce~le .t o . ~· -many uses Jor . cperations In etectric cbair doesq:'t wott .. _ ... Does ~1aun Jibe with r,our syncbrol'lous orbit w~lch wwld The men are being transferted expe?ence . lt match~s mine.. bt regularly supplied. ~Y. a underanewst.atelaw. Thats about _how· old I,,wu nu~lear s~We syste~,. he Woods· said StalevUle of~ wh~ • ~1!..,~~ l'be • ~kJ.'. . . . . ficials were not the only ones _Human MOiiitir Cl{De out. · 'Thjs would provide m Wlih Who wanted th"e chiir. About a Rec~ one , ~cularly 1i~~ly · direct . televilion broad~nc dozen persons asked for it for sceh ne. Jt l;tio:wed··•1bliDd lilnt ', and direct ndio. bro:t~I v aiious purposes. c ue . a pre~ girl arouM. a ~ to the homes ~ all people in One man was going to hook . darke.be(I rOOm. ·OrUy horror the world u well ·~ with great It up 50 guests who slt in ii show ~t·eyer got to me. For s~ellar observatories .•nd a would get a six-volt electric about ~-lX weeks I wcke up. v_tewing plaU~ f~r Ill' traf· every tiight, IOl,ked In swtat. fie control, naVJ.gation Ind-for. charge. yelling, "Look Out. lady!'! a ptrmanent weather watch.," Another man .wanted to Pretty embarrauing. Second • . He said that ·Utls approach , make a bar out of It. . most ·susceptible • time tor to the me of space eculd be .Two muse~~ Wl'!ted to nightmares, ~says this sleep Mdily extended, ·cnce tM ~1splay the chrur, constructed expert, is age 4. shuttle capability has been in 1930 and used to electr<>C?te . . <teveJoped, to a matching ap- 67 persons. The last ei:ecution Your que1tion.3 and com-proaclt for explorina: the was Aug. 24, 1964, when James menu are-welc~d and planets. E. Dukes died for murder Of a wiU be wed tohtflVff po.-~--------1 police detective in 195'. •ibl• in ''thteking Up.• Famt'fy Weekly Sheriff Woods said h e Ad<!r-ess m 4 i l to L. M. himself wanted to put the Boyd, in car,·ot thl DAILY • · ' chair In his office -for PIWT, Bor 1815, N<V!porl Every Saturday troublesome reporters. B~aeh, Calij.1 92680. 1 · • -------------- . . --How about a RHUBARl pie? ~ ' -' With easy garden care you 1 can heve your own fresh rhubarb re~.d.Y, fo~ pick• in9 almost the year around. Plant 1 any· where .,in the landscepe. It's a very-at· tractive . plant with lerge tropical leaves. Well est•blished plants • • • • • ... 79~ ee, Night · Blooming · JASMINE .. REDWOOD ROUNDS • • • • Use for rustic n1tur1f pathways in tha shada gardan or fernery. Easy to build. Plont lo tho windward ancl enjoy tho most intense fragran~e of oil. Eosy to gro"' in sun or shade-. Sofid, Freshly Cilt 4" Thick Single Red HIBISCUS 98~ Heeviut bloomer of all ••• Brilliant flowers of tropical H~. l'lilnrs. 1 gal. splendor • • . loves the su,,_.. ;:::::::::;::;::;:::;:::::========::'....:U:;se;:...:a.:s _:•:_:;screen pie ntings. . :1.9·· 8P DON'l LET LAWN MOTHS SPOIL YOUR SUMMiR LAWN -' Dlllron appli•d with the Ortho l,awp SpNyer Is easy & Inexpensive. $4.98 LAWN SPRAYER•"''""',. h-$3.98 DIBROM . ' 1 quert c<1v1r1 4000 1q. ft • REDWOOD PLANTERS ·: ' " ... _,, .................... _, 11...-..... f9' ,.,.. ............ ,.., ................ , ................. ... SPECIAL FLOWER 'SHOP SPECIAL a.... fNtllfy cut 149 ........... ,. ... "M"' s.-Hap,,.. toi. ' OUR NURSERY WILL BE OPEN .ONI • GA~l.ON · .. Reg. $1.75 'NATURE INA SACK F..ds blode lawns-with • nijtUfl'S rich I balance of fertilizeu and minerals. ' . f.1ekes dichcndra · 50 lbt. Fetd~ a healthy. HOO 1q. ft. . lush cmpet $695 ofgeen . Destroys . soil pesis, too. ' BANDIN! IS THE WORD FOR FElllLllel. . ' ' ' BEDDING Pl.A T SPECIAL DWARF DAHLIAS "' . Exte"cl the flow•ring seas•,., -'"P iM• th• fell. ~VERY FRIDAY· NIGHT TO 9 P.M. ~R YOUR GARDENING CONVENIENCE. lllOULAll 79c DOZEN s11s S P E C I A l .. • •· · 3 Doz. HOUlS : MON. Tt'IJW THURS •• , .. ,, FRI. TILL. P.M.; SUN. 10 AM .. l 'PM ,' , ,. °.SATURDAY, t · ~ to 5:30 PM. , }, 2li .Mlrbor llv..a-- COSTA MUI "CALL 548.5521 • l I ' ...... ; ' •' :::;;-_ • __..... . _ .. --~--------... ----··-·. --·------' . ~.' IWl.YP1t.OT 0 l ......... • ...... > I .. .. nundq, A""t 14, IM Crash Recording· · Releas.ed Crew's Last Words Reveal Trouble Aboard Jet _ _,,.iL-"--J r LOS ANGELE.S (AP) Schlemmer: "Ah, we've had crew's last words and Frank TorrtS of Compton "What the beU wu that?" a fire warning on the No. 1 testimony of two wltnesm aald be and his ton were drlv- I I! I• ·l ., :. .. Those. words by" Capt. engine ; we abut down; we'd who said they 18" the jet ln ing on a beach road when his flight i·ust before the crash. ·-called -• "Loo" •'"dy Arnold Levenon on Jan. 11 like to come back." 1-:::.:,," ....... -. u-... ' PatU MacArthur of Playa u11:: meant trouble on a United Air T h e c o n t r o l t o w e r Del Rey sai~ she saw "sparks Torrea said he saw ured Unts jetliner that crashed in-acknowledged the call, then coming from the right side blue flames just to front of the to Santa Monica Bay, killinc communications were and engine." jeUlner's engines. all 31 aboard. loot-perhaps becalllle of •[;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ol ...... -..1 power loss. 11\e words were cay .... '"" on When communications were BIBLE THOUGHTS a tape recorder. recovered restored, the tower heard the from the sunken Boeing 707 pilot, conilot and 2nd Officer PllDHTINATION: Som• feel th1t •••· f o.. ,... t1i11 PERSONS w1r1 foreord1i111d le b1 and were transcribed or we Officer Keith R. Ostrander say 11wed or lo1' 1"4 11olhi11t th1y Clll do public Wednesday as the Na-their last words. ...ill cl.int• ti.ii. Such i1 co11tr1ry to l ible tlonal Transportation Safety Ostrander: "We're gonna 111chi119t This would rut• out m111'1 FREE Board .opened a public bearina: get ICfeWfld up-1 dce't know MORAL AGENCY, hi1 ri9ht ef clioic1, into the crash. what's going on.': .&11up1I pro1chi119 woullll bo 11111l11t. God'• i11¥it1tlo11, "WMO- Copllot . WaJter R. SchJem.. ScttlemniB: .. Keep lt going SOEY~R Wtll, lit lii111 l1ko ·•Iii w1ter of lif1 fr11lv" ! Riv. mer told his captain what up, Amit, you'rt a thousand 22;1 71 would M pof11tl1u. God DID pr1d11ti11e • PATIERN of · "that" was. feet_ Pull it up." ri9lit1ou111111 0111111 obetli•ttc• which will •••• 111y 111111 who will 111old hi1 lif, to flt th1t 'p1Hor11. Thi1° i1 *"• 1110111in9 of Ro"'· Scl\lemmer : "No. l fi~ .1.u... 11. .. 1 11.. r-rding tuKf .._ llll;: ...... v 1;29.JO, Eph. \;S, Tit. 1:2 111d oth10. Th1t p1H1r11 i1 th• Chri1-warnlng, Arn." ended. ti111 w•v of lif,, l11di11t to 11l,1tion. Th1t WAY w11 pr1d11· Leverson.· "OK, let's lake The NTSB sa1·d 1·1s in-1· d • G d I JS I d · II '" 1n1 uy o , I•. : '! tll 11 op•n to t m111 ; In• w1y• care of the warning." vestigators who recovered f1ri1111 '"'"· thou9h fools l1'111p11, u111duc1t1J, •tc.I ·,1i.u not Schlemmer: "Pull It back vital portions of the plane '" th1r1in". Th.t WAY, th1t PAITERN ;, Chri1t, tli1 p1rf1ct for you!" from the ocean noor, found no min. H, 11id, "t •m th• .... .,··. J11 14 :6-7, 1 Cor.11;1. 1 P11. Le "Y h pull It I :20. M1w1 YOU molcl1d your lif1 lo fit God', prede1ti111illl po> verson: ea , sign of any fire. Three of the l1rit of 111v1tio11 ? COME, '""'' th1 BIBLE with u1·, lol ,, 1,,,, back." i· ·"s enai~• w---•vaged. g, o~ "'" iMll :if J15u1 to91th1r. Churcli of Chri1t, 217 W. Wil1on St., Coil• . . INSTALLED CHAIN-LINK FENCING ·' Reagan Veto Asked On Disclosure Bill Schlemmer : 1'0K." The inves\lgaton' fi~gs M •••. C1lif. 92627. Ph. 541 .. 111 . 545·2441 , ~6·S76J. Thin, there was the sound or, ...'.see~m~ed~_:to~con~t:'.:ra~di~·1:1:_~th'.'.:Ce~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~============..:_ ____ _ a warning horn. 1· SACRAMENTO . (UPI) - Gov. RonaJd Rea1an today weighed a request from the League of California Cities to veto a JIUblic officials' fin~ cill disclosure bill authored by a likely opponent for governor. Richard Carpenter, lobbyist for mt I e a g u e, disclosed Wednesday he bad aaked Reagan to veto the bill by Assembly Democratic leader Jess Unruh tbat requires virtually full f i n an c i a_ I disclosure by public officials and candidates. "I doubt the governor will veto it," Carpenter laid in a telephone interview. The Republlcan governor is e1- pected to be 1 candidate for re-elecUon in 1970 and Unruh has done about everything but fonnally aanounce· he ~ll seek the Democratic gubernatorial nomloatJoa. Reagan has parried ques- tions about his atlltude toward Unruh's bill. At i news con- ference last week, t h e governor said his stall is draf-t.inc an · analysis of the measure which he will study before making a decision. Reagan got the revised bill from the legislature July 30. It would apply to all elected and A t List appointed officlaJs -aod can-gell didates -from city COWi· dlmen to Jeglslators to the B • 2 d 1overnor. rmgs n The legislature took out all earlier conflict of interest pro- H S • visions bot the bill require! uge mt public officers, including non- paid mtmben of boards and SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -commluions, lo disclose any Tbt: state bas filed a second investment over $10,000 in a business regulated by a state mammoth dmla1e s u J t or local agency. a ca i n s t anti-ettablisbment Carpenter uid the bW wu newspapers wblch published confuslnc. He said U Reagan lbe names, home addresaes did alp 1be bill be hoped the and .... 1-Mne numbers ol. govetnor would endorse clari-_,_ !yin& ... .-wben the Schlemmer : "That put! us on one generator, too." Lever50n: "Huh?" Schlemmer: "That'll put us on one generator." Leverson : "Yeah. watch that electrica1 loading." Schlemmer: "Everything off ?" The copilot then called the cont r o I tower, asking permission to return to Los Angeles International Airport which the plane bad left only moments before. Last Bodi es Recover ed LONE PINE, Calif. (UPI) -The final eight bodies of 35 persons who were killed when a "Gamblers Special" airliner that slammed into a granite cliff in the High Sierra 1ix months ago were recovered Thunday from the wreckage of the DC3. The bc:Mlies wer~ brought here by helicopter from 11,700- foot Hogback Ridge, three miles from the main peak or Mt. Whitney, the highest mounlain in the eontiguous Untted states. The bodles wen then taken by car to a makeshift moraue at Bishop, IO miles from here, where an FBI expert team identified them. narcotlc:s ......_ 1.Platurw eonvenes In 1970. --'!'be llUit, riled by 111e at·f;::;;================•I torney general'• olfice, 1eeks 'I million damages Inion Ille newspaper Dock ti the Bay, which published a list of 21 Mate narcoUcs 1gents in U.1 Tuesday issue. The stale, asserting the names were in confidential material taken lrom ltate Department of Justice file! in Los Angeles, asked the court to prevent future publication Tr"l119 to R·E·L-A·X!' Browse our ST ACKS! TM ....... u ..... ,, ..... c-M-...... 11 IMMllit TM PlllC'lllt fltMll of similar information. ":;::=:=:=:=:=:==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::;: Superior Court Judge Carl 1: Wallen Wued a temporll')' ..-a1n1n1 order Wednesday forbidding futun. such publica- tion uolll an Aug. 26 hearing on a permantnt injunction. 1be suit named t h e newspaper, t:be Bay Area Media Network and 11 in- dividuals and uked that a trust be established for the material unUl it can be return- ed to Ille state. 1be suit wu aimllar lo one filed for $10 million damages earUer thl! week by Ally. Geo. Thomas C. Lynch against the weekly Los Ancelu Free Presa. In Its issue last Thursday, Ille Free Press publlshecf the Rme infomiation about' IO alate narcotics agents under an artJcle titled ".Know Your Nei&b-Narc." UCDoctorS Plant Heart SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Doctors at the University o( CaWornla Medical C e n le r have placed the heart ~ a 3> year-old brain banorrhage victim In the chest of a 51- yeaMlld man. Price • Quality • Style • Guarantee EVERY GIRL WANTS A DIAMOND AND KIRK'S HAS ONE FOR EVERY GIRL ••• .... TEllMS AVAii.AiLE Several houri after Wed· naday'a operation, performed by a surgical team beaded by Dr. -Roe, hospital of. rtclais said Ille recipient was .. doing well"· Names of donor and reel· pent were not released. It was tho lint transplant performed •...; __ _..,,!be UC -her<. n .Diii:lin lililllii ilGiiiinUf!· • -• -.. !rain hemorT· ""° 1111 ,,_., while drl•· fiwldl--n. -ndpl<11t bid -• -.i IUacka In .. lll&_ • • • • a yean, b9d --Qy dloabled __ .._ ltopl alive by .. , ..... ca..,, ... ~ ..... HUNTINGTON CEN TElt HUHTIN•TON llACH -ltl•llt1 HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER COSTA MUA -14S.t 4t l, o,_ M..._,., ,_..,, I PriHy 't111 t , .•. C"'6TllfWA~ HELLO GRODINS! Mullen Bluett tock! Up To and more I •• 'THE NEW GRODIN$ SIGNS ARE GOING UPI TIME IS RUNNING OUT! ALL M&B MERCHANDISE MUST BE CLEARED IN AUGUST! NEVER AGAIN SAVINGS NOW ON MEN'S SUITS, SPORT COATS, SLACKS, SPORTSWEAR, FUR· NISHINGS AND WOMEN'S WEAR. HURRY, FOR THE SAVINGS OF A LIFETIME! PWS NEW GRODINS SUITS AND SPORT COATS -AT DRASTIC CLEAR-AWAY PRICES! Open a Grodins Charge · or use..BankAmaricard or Master Charge. No mail, no phone, no C.O.D.'s ••• alterations at cost ... all subject to prior sale! Most Slores Open T11ursday & Frtday Nights SOU TH COAST PLAZA lri1tol a tk $all Dl990 f rftway, Casta Mesa ' GRODIN$ on lhe alrl Follow tho L A. RAMS on Radio KMP0710. Wann Up and Post Game Shows sponsored by GRODIN$ Your now tuned-in fashion stores. ANA HEIM Broadway-Anaheim Center-Euclid at Loara .. . Tl!u""r, A.,.,1 ~f, IM * , M1\Y "LIT~ Vital Sta1is1i~8 for the Orange f;oast Are~ " Jtlee tlng• Marri age License• . JUl'I',. $NEDl>ON·IUlGllllN, Jll'Mt W., M, of 1M •• ., SI .. A,pt. J ,,,,. Jene ... "· If Mff Dr1ntl AYll., ,.,I, O, ~ of Cntt ~w. Gll'lllM.'.N-JIL\'1!111, Leon V., ?I. of \SSll $111111 Lint, Huntlnt'lon aee<h ll'M:I J-1 ~ .. 22, Ill JIJll Dolin SI,, Oirdtn Gt11vt. HAMILTON·STEVl!N$0N, Wlllltm J .• 41, ef 30$o1 J1v1 Rotd, C111t1 M111 111111 .. 1111 t. .• ''· of m Am11111 w1v, NtwJorl B11i:l'I.. Flllll!MAN·LINDIERQ, Jtffr1y fl .. n. of 17"4 El Ctollln, F1111nl1ln Vt llev Ind 1(1rl11 M.. 21, cf 2tli1 Cr...,. lllNf L1n1. Hun!l11t1!en le1ch. STEWA.llT·llElllGl!lllON, J~<~ I( .. 1'. of UJli Monrot SI .. Gtrdtl'I G ... v. 1nd Y-A., 1 .. of UHi Minor Drlv1, Wt dmln1t.r. SHA,H.O'GllAOY, lttrnt"' It., l!. of llOll S.lv1da!'1 1nd /t1!rlcl1 L .• n. of 1111 H1rbot I M!., "''· G n, beth of Co.It M•u. kO/tOWITZ-OEW .. 111. HtroH:I. 11. of nu Foun111n Wt Y W~!. C111!1 Mew Ind M1r91rtl, 31, of 1111 Bl•rY A~ .• Wf1I LOI An<ltltl. HOOGE-Kl!5Ll!R, Jlmf'1' C., ,l, of 7'01 Adlfnl W1v, Bven1 Park t!\O Sa""'' J., U, of fJ:ll N111tll~1 Df!Yt, Hiit\• !ll)(llCll'I Be1d1. VDGEL-SHILAIA, J1-1 C, ?2, ol iOt Alde1n Plett. fftWllO•! Be1rh Ind Cyn1n11 J., n of 1110 Wfe•lord Orlvt . !Ire•. l AR.DN-OAVY, Rlllkolph F .. XI. cl 103 N. Bay Front, B•lbo.11 Island ""' 5ur•nne, 19, of 1•31! L1 Hum011, L11una N!1uel. CHltlSTENSEN·TESMAN, L. $1~, 11. of lS!'~ RocM1ter, Co1t1 MeH tnd T1 m1r1 J., 11. of 111~ w. B1lbo1 91Yd., NIWPOtl l'•...:h. JULY JI RDCHA·MARTIN~, Rottr C .• If, of l lJ N. HirHr 51., Stnlt ,1in1 tnd 1'1lr!el1 Y .• 11, of fill JtMr!th; We11mln,ter. YORK-COLLINS, C~1rle1 H,, "'of 7Ht litw,ort Blwl. t rld Florence, :it. of lT7 Ii. '7nd SI., both of C"'tt Mnl. WllLlAM5-STVHRMAN, R!Chtrd H., n. or 3'11 Mtonluo •nd C'rol1n J .. ?5, of ?US Vitti Entr1C11, bor~ or lifWl>Orl l!~•(h. VANV\NT·5PR11iG, WUll1m T., )I, ot 16115 Olive Sr .• F111.1nt11n v11i.1 tnd £1111belh A .• :it. ot B-!7, 5urhlcll ColOnv • NOTT-RA.AB. Gr19orv c.. ,J, Ind C~rl1tlne M., l'O, beth ot HU Eldtn, (0111 Mesi. Tllll'PETT·RYEL, L1rlmo•o 0., 70. cl 11•1 Vl1t1 En!r1d1, N""pe.r' Betc.h •nd Su11n L .. ;>a, of lOOO CorontdO Drive, Fullerlan. FIANIC-HUFFMAN, Gtorte W., ,1, of DEATH NOT I CES rt1AT111EWS c.,;,...., A.. Mttrnews. i.574 St. Ano drt1. F111nt1 ln V•lleY. Dtlt DI df1ltl. AUii. U. Survlvl<t by d11J1tht1r, le!tv J. Federolf; •Iller, Dcr01hv Ht'"Un; flw• 11•1ndchlldrtn 1'ld !wo tr.1t1fl...,. chlldr111. ~rvlct1, Friday, Au111st IJ, 2 PM. Wlll\trn R. H1m!!tan Mcrt111ry, Cklrol!, Mlcillttn. ln!erment, Wocdl1wn C1mettr,o, Dtlroll. D'r~!fd by Dlld•v l ro!hert. Mcdu1rv. 8•1·1111. DUNCAN 011,,. D1mt1n. 160 Rcchester. Cost1 Mew. Otte at dl!t!h, "'utu1! 11. Sur· vlved by husbuid. Getirue 011nc1n; !Our child""' Gordon, Mlchtel, Tim· othv •rid Chrl1lae>h1r Murr1v. Servlce1 will bfo held Frld11. 1 PM. Westelllf Chu•el. '"'''""'"'· G('.Od S~Plltrd C!rr'tl!!try. DlrP<:"ted by We11clllf Chl~f( Mcrtu1ry, 616-llM. TAGLJAMONTE Mn. C1tml!1 T1gll11nonle. 123 111~ St .. NtWPOrt le1ch. Dire ol Ot:t!h. Autu'!.r 12. 5urvlw-d bv h111band. Vincent; son, Luke; d1ugh!er, Ro""· Rasuy, !onlth!, Tllursd1y, 7:l0 PM, Rtoulem MIH Frltl1v. t A.M, balh t! Our Luty al Ml. Ctrmet C.rllolic Chun~ll. Inter· nwn!. Fores! L1wn CyPrtH. Dir~ by wesrc!llf Ch111tcl Mor1V1r1, ...._ ..... WINGER A.lleene S. WlnOl'r. "'R 41 , cl j20(I S.011\ore Drive, NewPOtt Beith. Sur- vlwd or son. "'-'"'· of 511111 Ant : ~".':'e'~nd M~ ;ru1•~"ct.u~.1'°se~r:;: will o. held Fr,d1v. J PM, Cc1em•11 Morl\llrv, l!J N. E11tlld, L1 Habfl. ARBUCKLE & WELSH \Vestcllff Mortuary U7 E. 17th St., Costa J\t"sa 646-4888 • BALTZ l\tORTUARIES Corona dcl J\far OR 3-1450 Costa l\fcsa 1\11 6-24%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 3-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS Huntington VaJley l\lortuary 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach IU.Tnl • l\lcCORl\tlCK LAGUNA BEACH MORrUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach 494-9415 • P ACrFIC VJE\V l\1EMORIAL PARK Cemetery e lttor1lllty Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Ntwpoct Beach, eaurorn.11 144-27M • PEEK ~'A~ULY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Wt1lmlaskr Ul.m5 ·--SHEFFER MORTUARY Llcuaa Betcb 41f-llU S.. Clemeate 4ti-tlOI • S~UTllS' MO~TUARY 07 l\taln S\. l:h11Uin.10on 8t1cll - SM L 22M 9t,. C•I• ~ •NI =~I., tL ., m '"'' It., llV~T·HALE, Derltlf IC., U, tf-1"52 Go..,._.M $1, ..--lM A •• al. of "'1 aw Clrclt, lliotll of ..i1H11t111t• """' PATTILl.?WElilt,, Clllltltt M.. ,, M ntl "'"'t¥dlef St. •M JolN M;. U, of ltUI Otlt w•r• ;..,.,. A#!. lJ, fDolll of H1111H~ B•Kfl, $TROHEll!lt-H,.VMAN, .lrlflllt H,. ,,, 01 IGt S. $ulllvlfl, A,I. c:•, 1111111 Ml ftod Jo.A.nn. H. fll 12Sl GllMn'1'9 St,. laDllN BM<ll. , , GVl!llTIN-Pl!'lltAllA. lllrtnlt I),, '4.., no PelflMtlla. c~ .s.t ,.., •M Mlrl9r!e (., 3'· of W71 Ml"'ntr MW, Nl"fMl'I l .. cll. ltlVl!ltA-GUll.l..EN, Arttour C .~. of !10 C1r111e. CO!lll Mttt Ind lulltl M,. :tO, of l30S $, O~VI llu ""'' AM. GltEEJt-SCOTl, JUTY, .tt, ti •tS HtllottOPf ""I MNtllllt L., .W. of 621 Jt-lnt, tiolh of COAM .. I Mt"' VEJtGJLIO.WILLIA.#S. O.rllln A .. 1t, Of 20087 Col9•t. Clrclf, Hunllnttoll B~cto anc1 P't~i. M., U, of mJ ·w. 14111 St. LOI A,,.elQ, AUG. t ICINCAto-sMOLINSICI. Gt0r" W .• 79, ol lUlt ArKffl• l!rlvt, Ml"IOft ~•II •nd IC1rtoleen T .• If, Of _., Man AYt •• G•n:len Grovt. DllltRf-GITTHENS. Ctrl S., lf, al 11\U C•M Lind•, A.pl. B, Gtrcltn G!\Wt INI MlftN s., It, or 1iw1 lttlon'll", Wntm1t1si.r. SELIGMA.l+-SMITH, 01vkl D .. It, Of 13031 Wlllllmrlte Ind Stndr1 S .. II, Of nn tlrd St.. "''· I , be!~ of W11ll'Plln11 .... CltfECH·,.Hl'.:1."S, Yllll11m T., $4, 11111 S.lly V., JI, bllh of DIA Ctllrillt. '°'" fNM. KOLINA-S'tEH!,.E, Frtnlt J., U. of 1111 W. Bl/boll llWI., Newaorl !ltk!! ll1CI $1111n "·• 21, •U N. L•rktlltn A•I., Wnl Covlnl. ICIMBLE·WILl.IA.MS, Jtlwl "·• Jt, el l12 Ulh St. 1nd NtntY E., d , Of MT $1\ut H1rbor, beth of NtwPOr1 t•teh. ALVAREZ·BICICEL. ROllOllo M .• tl. Ind P"gy A.., lt, boll\ Of 4 1• St111'1ort Orlvt, Newport 111(1'1, POTEET-HASTIE, Jac•lt 0 ,, ti. •I flU Or11111e A.vi, 1nd Atlee 5 .• 11, 11 IU C1br!lto, bolh of Coslt IMlt . tROUSSA.RD-CARTEJt, G.01111 A. .• n. Ind C•rll!t R,, JO, Dl!tl ., lltl Eltlemont, El To,..._ OLESON-HENOEJtSON, Oltltr a .• t!. of n:M w. l'11tn. or1111f '""" M.ttttnl L.. 11. of 11032 S!t rkrf L111t, Apl. A, Huntlntlon taucl'I. LOW'E·LAK E, Gle1ves L., ~.trod Ann1 M .. n, tla!ll or 2::171 Montt Vitti Avt .• Co111 Me,1 SIMPSOH·SPENCER, llrvct E., $Cl, ol 1U11 M1r!1 Liiii Ind Rulh M., l l, ol 113S1 Kttlson Ltne. bofh of Hun- llnlton le.en. H.t.MMACK·RlMMEll, 511nltv Cl •• .U. o• lOOJ ~ls.Ion Drlvt 11111 R-• v .• JI, Of 7"1 Mffldoll, t!Olh Of CN\t M-. IC65HLEMAH-KIRKNER. Ellw1rd J .. lO. of ttt Stn JN111!n Sl.1 1.11W11 llHdo tnd Dltnl l., 23, ol U151 y_,, kren, MldWtY Cth'. VANDElt·KA.M, Jtrrv A,, fl,"' '901 V'(. lllh 51 .• A.ti. G. S1nt1 A.n1 ""' Gton- <11 J., n, of S30 W. Wilton. API. I, Cosl1 Mt ,I. GORSLINE-NELSON, A.ntl'll>l'lr I.., 39, ind D11rlfld1, 111 bit!! Of 702 Shtll'"°'' Dr lYt, A.flt. A., Cotti M111. FI Y·MO!tAS. JOM T .• tl. Of t7t7 P•rlll1r N., Lii Vet11, NtY. tnd Bir:Mirt C., If, of 107 t:. I.obit Mtr1n01. San Cle1n1nt1. NELSON·PLDUCHAllO, Dennis H., 11, ol U'll Lom1V Av•. lrld Oe"I" M .. lS. of UGI Ct Vl/tl DrlYl o btl'll tf Wa!mln1ttr. , LANSOliiL.CDRNtliLIVS. Mllc!llll G,. 70, ol "'1 P1lrlcle Drive. Cvillf'tN '"" Cll!'lsllnt f .. 11. of 11'41 C1rld!e~. Wntmlmttr. BERRY-COKER, Thomtt N., 11, ti ?!01 S!trrt v1111, NtwHrl Bet e" 11111 Oon"I M., J2, al SU H1m!llfln, All. I, Costt Mesi!. ZAKOOS-G/E5LEll, JOKpto II., 'lf, Of 117n l11C(1 LIM, Hllt\llM1'0n Bffdl Ind IC1t~letn M., n, of t \D E. ltOH A.vt., Lt H1tw1. BRA.HN>McROR.tE, lton11d L .• It, or JOlJ Dcnll'J't>rooll ll'ld JIKCl~llM, J7, ot 160 Vk!Orlt-. It.. A#l..J. boltl ol Co111 Ma.. AltNOLD-OOELLE, Wt llttl J., 1', ,..., P1"'el1 I., 11, both ol U.610 Mitt SI., Wt1tmln11er. Div orce• W~~'~!~i~o:'s1111C1 v. smlltl "* W1r- F1r11h1m1 \lldt 011!1 vt Jtmtt Ntwf Schtrt. L n<ll A.llfl vt Cil<tlttr llOM!d He!lderson, Annt-1 Mllrll VI Jemtl '" DeJ:f,~ler, Ptlrlclt Mtll11 v• ,.,,..,, Sn!tll•, LtlltY R•• VI Robtrl Lvnn Hyrllmtll, RoHrll L. YI Jl,,,.I !. Hurllm1n • IClr~. Oorl1 Ml'f vt l(enn.tftl Rt'f Holllnt, Oonnt I), vs NorVlll H. Nordin AM Vt Gltllll N. McBriil., Jo A!lft Vt Ltrry Ctvcll Jotnnlilil5. 8Cll'lll1 J11n VI Cherl• Eorw1rd Colt , Don!ll l.N "* G1ry EotWln 5tudlr, Jtobtrl o.. vt e vtlt'l'I DJtr, Rlll.1"1 J1,,. V$ Robtrt Etrl Curl1nd. El!t1bitltl M. YI Melv1n M. ltelc.h, Fr"°"'lct: W. "* HllGt At ...,,. Hoe9, Brendt J, vt Thonlu L•lto Town1r, Vlrglnl• Gwtrvcll vi Wlllllm B•lle'f L1wr~, SOndrt l" YI Rv111U ICtn-M" Morris! P1mtl1 IC. V\ G!Yfll'I W. Gold, t!IY L. YI l'hUllp J . ICl!"4, Niii Ntoml VI Gltn Ll"ll'l'lt llCW.1!!1, CollNn Ktr VI Gtrv Cl•I Osboni, Jta" ElluHtlt" n Envrlttl Wt lllnglCll'I Av111, IC11!\lt "'-""'" vi Rldl•r4 Brvntr, S. VIVltn YI 8rvt1 EutfM Ttiomnon. lvY Prl1clll1 LYlllt v1 Not• "''" Tvl'OCl1lt Dl\l'Olltd, JOln E. VI Andtra c. 5moclt, Wlllll m YI Jld!ll Gual1rdo. Em!llo v1 ICortn M HtWWI, •• ,.,. ICIV VI E1rl W••l•J MtCfultY. Cectlll A.. YI Monroe G1rvey, Fr1ncn M. v1 BtrMrlf I. D~I~~ Jotnrie E1!11tr YI R.•I"" °1kerr, Jo.Mt Estlltr YI lt•lllh eoc~=1n, Mt rv Rut!! v1 W1y"I C1r1 Llnd111, Wlllltm H. VI Ctrolyn . IN ERlOCUTOllT DICllllt 1te1d, J11n1>1 D. v1 Jtromt M~dkk~ Jtck N. YI JO'f(I L. Fd r!!, 11env J. v1 Corl Rubino, Caro! 5. YI Mkl'llet A. Menltd, PIY!lnt E. YI lll11•r V. Wheeler, Bettt Giii VI Rllllrl OOMld Jolt~. Robttl A. V$ Ana•\• DeM1r. Cilflo!'d C. "*!I 1tbitlh M.try Arns, Carol" vi Jlljl'llrd R. We/11, E~rol 0, YI 1d1 P. Rim, J udllll V. VI JOltf I . Lfllt!, Al1n Ctr1 VI Gtrt ldlne Jltfll Hunler, Andr" Htl.n. YI Frttt 111¥mot'd J1elison, Wi1U1m N. VI "'-""It Ml,-, ~~••ns. Jlmt1 R. YI P1trltl1 E. '"""'"· M111111rt1 YI Plier ICl'flll lltl(lt!llld, HjMY l.tlill' YI Vlillt Btrbrtt Ktnler. Liii.ii"" W. VJ G~1!1Y1 Aokllllfl Oot11, Hfltll Rubr v• w111i.m A.. ll>C:f. Ntlf\flee "'"" V$ GeOrlHI A. E111ty, Robert L. 111 Mel L. St~:.·· ~ry Ctl!\letn vs Robtft Pllt, M•r1M Lo.t11f vt GordOll LM H1ll, ''"" Liii.i ... HlrvtY llnxe Rl!;lt11tr, M•rlorlt M. VI K"'""" P. Aroslfslut, Jt11111t &11111t1• YI R.lllwft C. Arostlow Atchlt"f, Htlo! M. YI 5fllnl*I Jllty E1t11, Jr.1.Joron vs M•,.,. f:lllt ll M•Tt, Jttn F•tflell YI Jl!lltl '''"''' 01111 Rull\ T. VI Arlfour JoM s1f;J..;11, M. J11n v1 Vtrn R. MiMiCii.tl, t1r~r1 Sue YI Jemes LH C.tre!t. C1rt'flen ~· VS R111111 M. Hflllllr, Mildrid vi Joi•""· .Jr EofW1rlh, lltrtt'll A. VI 01Yld J111t!" Haliull", Edith L. "* i.1url ~-" l'll'r.119Mt•ll" Jull1 1!'. vt kllird E. urteri, Dt•tle A. vt Htr~ • fl'!l>llt \lfrnt M, Vt JI lo.. Oltl~~ K. Yf 0.0t'flt , Mtv1j; li~' GllMt J,11 V$ ltt1elfl H. ~w.1.,.....~~t~. ::~flfly Mrf ICtlwr, '-lrol I. YS Jtmtt L. 1(11- ell!ll'Ofln, INI::°" lM vi Jwr,-, w-lldl •. Jwr!J. A vt Ol•nt '1!'111111, • .:!!. vs Gvlee Jlttll\ S'*""-• • ~,., T YI Ht '*llif * D1~11. lll'berl Mii, n It~,.. P"r&'* Rtdllfl, l'ttrlclt A.lift YI ,.tu ffWflrlf L.,..11, SPll•l'fll ICI~ V'I Rkl\4rl D11t "INAL DECltSfS M~. C•owl1Mt lrt,,., " Lwll ,,1111:11 McSl\ttW, J11n """"' "' Hlwl a . ~1n!ot11, kl'ldrt Crill n Mlcl'lltl v:i::i-. Dl•le T ... Woldt °""' ~{.;If. Johfl EU._, " Miltlet M'~ 91!1'#, ltY Aftn VI ~Yir, L ~~~f!a'"'~.:O.·\\.'TJ: MllllJI'. .... ~ •w1,,; YI .ii:.fWll lllltbit ~ Mtl"1!1 R. n Relllrtli l. ""Slf:;!n t.WIUl-1'1 Gi l vi CllV* MtOOMld, Ctellll I'. Vim W•""' M-•· l'.-111 Kl'll n L •111 !f1t11f. IVI 1"111 vs ~Ill 4Y r;:::.r. Miry K•tMI .,. _.. "91.tft - It happens to everybody. You need Instant Cash means you'll alwaY.S cash. There's an emergency. Or a . beabletowriteacheckformorethan chance to buy at a discount.You need ~ you have in your account. And you'll cash right then and there.What's the ' always have a guarantee against answer? Bank of America's In stant acc identiir overdrafts. Once you've Cash Checking Account Service. It's ap_plied.;and your cre dit's been ap· a new dimension to Personal Choice \ prbved, Instant Ca sh is yours when Checking. A quick and easy way to and where you needit.24hoursaday. beef up your checkbook. 7 day s a week. Sound good? It is. .. • , Drop by.yoUt n~restBank ·of~ America branclt for more iafdtm:a~ "" tion. A Personal Choice Checking ac- count combined with Instant Cash is just one more way we can lielp you with the business of living. BANK OF AMERICA Bl ' rorlhe busineMtl M'c • ' (the quick, new way. to beef up-you r checkbook.) ---~·~---- • • • l1"k tf A1111rlc1 N.T. l .S.A. M1m\1r F.0.1.C, ' I ' i I ' ' I < ' M..,looln! Miiton J. "' lrtllt ,,...,.., Wt!-. .¥CY A. -I-~ FPtr.llr~ Jew. Mlrlc YI [\IOf"t Jl/1111 Stl'lllllfo, T*'I D. vt Vtrl A." M1r11M1t,,c1rt1 """ Yf Rklllrf OW... l>tl'llet, etrY l.. vt Rllbtrl A!lll'l Jt1mMvtr, P111ltttt Ii, vi V1,-,1 011' '-----------------------------------,------~---------------~;""::"°-:------"'---------·---··J " ' I • " ' ) --··-------.... - JO DAllV PILOT TltundAy, A119usl 14, l96t UCl .Housing Scarce No Facilities for 1,200 Students By .. RANDY SEELVE OI a.. oallr P\191 ttefl IRVINE -One-fourth of the students planning to attend UC lrvlne this fall may have to camp out on the Irvine Ranch. When lhe fall quarter opens Oct. 1, more than 1,200 students will be affected by a severe shortage of campus housing. Although the university has housing projects under con- struction. the supply is lagging far b' h ind t!M! demand. ac- cording to UC! hou sing coordinator Bob Hayden. "\Ye have 795 students on the waiting list for campus dorms and 250 are seeking on- campus apartments.·• Students are placed in the dorms and campus housing on a first-come , first-served basis and all facilities are filled , Hayden said. The university has on-cam· pus facilities for about 1.250 students and 150 m o r e apartments wil l open by October, but that will still leave about I .000 without hous- ing. Hayde n said the UC I hou.s· SA Police Program Get s Funds ing office lists all students students, bul observed that looking for accommodations three to five students could and ;utempts to place them in shart one apartment. the nearby communities. The room and board for "Last year we faced a ca1npus dorms is $1,080 for similar situation and by the nine months and the on-cam- start of the school year all pus apartm ents range from students were placed in hous-$100 to $130 per month. ing,'' Hayden related, "but we UC l's enrollment for the rail are unable to determine how will be increased 550 students many of those students \\'ere over last year to 4,675. satisfied with the locations.'' Ultimately, campus enroll· Hayden also said an un-ment will reach 27,000. determined number of ap-Hayden said he doesn't know plicants seeking entranc' to what the school will do with UCI go to other colleges and the increased h o u s i n g universities when they can"t demands in the future. hThe obtain housing, construction schedule w i I I However, the ·housing co-always keep us one jump ordinator is confident the behind the enrollment. school will be able to place "We will always have .600 to most of the students on the 1,000 students wait ing for current list in apartments or dorm space and about JOO to housing near the school. 300 students looking f o r "A 146-unit apartment com-apartments near the campus," he noted. plex in west Costa Mesa will -===========;i be fini shed by October and it r will be exclusively for college students," Hayden noted. Rent \viii range from $140 to $165 for the furnished dwellings. LOCAL No olh•r n•w1p•p•r t1 tl1 you rn or•t, 1w••r d1y, 1bout wh1t'1 9oin9 on in ih• G~•1 !1r Or1n9• Co11t thi n th1 DAILY PILOT. lfayden admitted the rent is fairly high for co 11 e g e'==========='I Girl Gets 4 Months On Driig Co11viction SANTA ANA -A .-Costa also placed on probation for ?i.lesa girl who pleaded guilty three years. , SANTA ANA -This city"s in Superior Court to drug The convicted woman was participation in the California charges and asked for im-one of three persons arresled Peace Officers' Tr a i n i n g mediate sentencing h\js been Program has paid off this orde:ed lo spend the next four July lJ at the Newport year lo the tune of $27,351.02. months in Orange County Jail. Boulevard address. Officers the allocation made to Santa Judge \\liltiam Speirs set confiscated two plastic bags Ana as one of more than 400 that jail term for Miche lle filled v.·ilh what were iden- cities and counties in 1he Barrell, 18, of 2376 Newport tified as secona l capsules. ~tateY.•ide plan. Blvd. ?i.1iss Barrett pleaded Court action is pending In the fiscal year ended last guilty to charges of possession against Miss Barretrs com- June 30, Santa Ana trained 44 of dangerous drugs and v.•as panions. police officers at three county l,=======''====='==========;I facilities. ?i.1any of the men enrolled under the program recei ved their training at1 Orange Coast Co 11 cg e Ac;idemy in Costa ?i.-1esa. I Stale statistics indicate that they Y.'ere among 3 . 6 7 4 California peace officers who averaged over 500 hours of , classroom training in the basic recruit course. And 7 4 O &upervisory officers averaged more than 120 hours of1 lrainin~ . in the elements of I superv1s1on. Payments to cities and counties from the California Peace Officers Training Fund j are made from revenu e crealed in local courts through assessments.. on fine!'i. Th is! :year's total allocation to participating cities and coun- ties was $2,712,979. Lung Alert Oinic Set In Anal1eim ANAHEl?i.1 -A tv•o-day l symposium billed by i t s sponsors as a demonstration of spaceage techniques and in·1 novations now available to tbe \'iclim of re spiratory dise<1se has been scheduled for Sept. 18-19 at the Grand Hotel here. "I~ung Alert" is organized by the Visiting Nurse As socia·i lion of Orange County and the j Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Association or Orange i County. Demonstrations on bolh days will be offered by the University of Colorado Pu I m onary Rehabilitation Team. I Opening day programs will Include demonstrations o I equipment. p ul m on a r y rehabilitation, br eath 1 n g r'tcaining, and ph ys i ca 11 asse ss ment under the heading: "New dimensions of care for the patient with respiratory disease." I The second-day of the pro..I ~ram wi ll be devoted to1 discussion of bedside and ' home care needs for patients• with respiratory d i s e a s e . Diagnosis, treatment, acute cases and th~ rehabilita tion phase are se lected topics. A symposium fee of $15 per day Includes luncheon. Let TV WEEK Turn You On Coming Au9. 16 Family Weekly Accidents Why They Happen- How You Can Avoid Them Psychiatris ts say that accidents are usually caused by frustration, anger,' ond gu ilt. This story tells ho w they con be controlled through theropy . ALSO e DANGEROUS SPORTS -Pep pills. sleriods and other "junk'' athletes take coul d hurt them 1nore than the roughest sport in \vhich t hey indulge. e MAD, MOD WORLD-Sylva Koscina, Fa1nily \Veekly's cover girl this \\'eek. says she 's old· fashioned girl in 1nad, modern '"orld. • FROSTY -Tropical Cooler, Cola Float, A10C'ha Shake-they're all part of Fan1ily \Vcekly Cook- book 's collection for summer sipping. • ALL COMING SATURDAY IN THE I DAILY PILOT I "Artistry in Movit1g" for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 • 580 lroadwa I Foot Progratn SANTA ANA -' 'The Diabetic and bis Feet" will be the discussion topic at the monthly meeting of t b e Orange County Chapter of the Diabetes Association of Southern California next Tues- day. · Dr. Allan R. Stark of the Orange County P o d i a t t y Association will be the speaker at the meeting, scheduled for a p.m. at the Orange County Health Department, 8th and Ross Streets here. ____ .... ___ _ -·-·· - Rights Vio~te~; , Suspect Released SANTA ANA -An Upland, Calif. man accused by Laguna Beach PQlice of assault and battery and dlltOrderly conduct won Superior Court backing Wednc3day for his argument that they wai ted too long to serve him with a warrant. Judge Robert Corf m an agreed with Russell Frank Anzaione, 23, that a 190-day lapse between the time or booking and his arrest on the warrant violated his right to a speedy trlat He granted the writ or prohibition sought by Anzalone against L a g u n a Beach municipal court. lone succea&fuliy argued in Superior Court that he did not l become aware of the warrant issued NOv. 2 by lhe South Coast court until he was halted last May 18 by !lun· tington Beach police. Anzalone argued July 2 before Laguna Judge Richard D. Hamilton that Huntington 1 Beach officers' servi~ of the /1 warrant was pointless and that the Laguna case against! him should be dismissed in; view of the lapse of time. / --···~---... - NOTICE!!! Hearing Aid Usen · we are now equipped to ' offer PERSONALIZED Service to the following brands ,.... ___ of hearing a ids _ _,_.,... • Cj)UALITONE • AUDIOTONE • mEX • SEIMANS • BELTONE •RADIO EAR • OTAlllOH •DAHLBERG • ACOUSTICON • VICON • MAICO • AUDIVOX • SONOTONE •ZENITH LAGUNA HILLS HEARING AID SERVICE IDi\'lalo11 of Otoet• ~ullty Hce1ti11t Allll hrYlcitl A Laguna Beach officer booked Anzalone last Ocl 13 on two counts of .assault and battery and one or being drunk and disorderly following an Art Colony fracas. But Anza- Judge Hamilton's denial of the request pron1ptedl Anzalone to . ask Superior i CALL 830 0530 Court for a writ of prohibition COLLECT • against the lower court. I If No Answ« eon 541-2335 His argument before Judge 2JS21 POSff M YoleKi• -Suit9 lOJ Corf~an_ was nol opposed by ) LAGUNA HILLS the district attorney's officei.iiliiiiiijijijijijiiiiiij~~-····f H1nc1 CaNt.d 1 , · Coo\(1:.a1l iabl~ 119.00 V1lue Another first from Newport National Bank SATURDAY TV BANKING ' / I ! ' i •. } SATURDAY TV BANKING IS CONVENIENT AND EASY Banking on Saturday will be an added convenieneeat Newport National Bank for people who mts~ed banking during the week. or when emergencies arise and extra cash is needed. Just drive up to our uniq ue Auto TV Drive-in screen on any Saturday and. after pu shing the button, one ol our television-selected tellers wrll cash checks, accept depos.its, make ¥tithdrawals on savings accounts, accept loan payments, i~ue money orders and even open new accounts. Our spec~! TV hostesses will seNe you and you r family refreshments and show you how to operale the 1V Banking. It's convenient, fun and very easy. Saturday TV Banking can make your hfe a little more pleasant al unique 11t these locations only IN FULLERTON SUNNY ~lllS OFFICE • Harbor at B•!I • 811·7190 UNNEJISITY OFFICE · Ea~ Ch.lpman al State C.lle&e • 879-4840 IN NEWPORT BEACH WESTCllff OFFICE • Weslcliff al Oover • 642·3lll SATURDAY TV BANKING IS AVAILABLE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9:00 A.M. AND 1:00 P.M. Afso open everyday ti/I 5;00 p.m.and 6:00 p.m.on Frl1J1y5 • \ • I I Thurtd.ty, At1t~1t lf, 191.9 DAl~Y PllOT JI • Orange .Coast Area Men in Service Arou.nd the World . , S&L Cbarle1 J . Valet W, aon ol Mr. Ind Mfs. Charles Valek Jr., of 10401 Mut·A..,e., Westminster, ls on duty at Ph~ Rana AB, Viet~. The sergeant, a navlgaUon WE QUIT! EVERYTHING MUST GO Ya OFF! On. All Mercha.ndise ' Lumber Hardware Tools · Pl)'wo0d Electrical Accountin9 Machine Sash & Doors Mouldin9s Addresso9raph Mobile Telephones Shelvin9 Office Equip. · Fencin9 Floor Tile Signs Li1;1ht-Bulbs Weather Stripping Locks Panelln9 Ceilin9 Tile Sheetrock Addin9 Machine Tables Chairs TOO MANY ITEMS TO UST! -CASH AND CARRY - All Sal•s Final__. No Refunds COSTA MESI LUMBER, CO. 1700 SUPERIOR AVENUE • COSTA MESA • • WATER HEATERS REPUBLIC "GEMINI" . 20 Gal. • • $41.88 . 30 Gal. • • $44.88 . 40 Gal ••• $49.88 50 Gal. • • $64.88 INSTALLATION AVAILABLE Thit qu•lity 9u1r1nteed 9!111 lintd w1ftr h11t1r it equipped with J1f1ty temp, 11 required by l1w. Wt h1 v1 51m1 dey infi11!1tion 1Y1il1bl., if Ll,.o~ you wi1h. All ncrmel in1f1ll1tion p1rh included, • Cell by Noon -in1!1ll fh1t d1y, Al10 1m1rg1n· cy intl1ll1iion 1w1i11bl1. AU work don1 by l!'llt• ler plumb111 . WD-40 PREVENTS JtUST PENITltATIS DISPLACIS MOISTUlll:I $110 2.75 ...... ., For A~tos -loati Ir Morlu l111ilpr. 11 ••· SprO';' .$portl119 G•och -Honelleld ltt!rM 11 11, Spray ICE CHEST 32 qt. THERMOS $599 PLASTIC TUMBLERS e:;;,;,a.10 .1• oL 7 5c l~~ PKG. OF 24 I equipment repairman, was degree from California Luthe- asalgned to the 60th Civil ran COUege, Thousand Oab . E n 1 I n eering Maintenance , - Squadron at Travis AFB; · SJI. David A. Smid, son of Calif., before his present ar-i1r. !ind Mrs. Lew Monson of rival in Southeast Asia, 137 Morristown Lane, Coata He b a graduate ol Bolsa Mesa, has been awarded the Grande High School. Air Medal with First and Se- cond Oak Leaf Clusters for braVery ln acUon in Vietnam. Set. Mic'bael L Lancaster, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lancaster of 13611 Olympus Drive,, We_stmlnster, has been assigned to Takhll Royal Thai AFB, Thailand. He js serving as a materiel specialist. Lt. Craig E. Brandt, USAF, son of Mrs. Fay J. Brandt of 118 San Luis Rey, San Clemente, is on duty at Da Nang AB, Vietnam. The lieutenant, an a 1 r weapons rontroller, ls a graduate of Capistrano High School and received his B.A. The sergeant, a graduate of N!'WJlOrt Harbor High School, attended Orange Coast College before entering the service. He also served in Korea. Data Systems TechuJcJan i.e. Wiiiiam A. Scl>ullz, USN, :son ()f Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schultz of 342 Ramona Place, Costa Mesa is serving aboard the repair ship USS Jason. The ship is i n Seattle, Wash., for the 1969 Sellfair 'vhere seven Navy ships from the U.S. First Fleet will be Personal Touch Stall Sgt. Harvey L, Semler of Costa Mesa, pro- vides extra power for a children's see-saw at Kim Long~ Orphanage in Hue. Sgt. Semler met the chil- dren during a trip te the orphanage with the Mar- ine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 462 civic action per- SO!lllel. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~= HOUSEWARE ! HARDWARE BUYS! GARBAGE DISPOSALS IN·SINK·ERATOR MODEL NO. 333 $3195 RIG. $59.95 OUR PRICE ......... , MODEL NO. 555 $4688 REG. $69.95 OUR PRICE , ........ , Model 555-J Yr. G111r1nt11 MODEL NO. 77 $5495 "':::="7 REG. $79.95 OUR PRICE , .. , .. , , .. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE DUST PANS Assorted Colors So~ Rubber Edge Ea$y•Hang Handle 49~ TIKI TORCH FUEL: 59c PATIO .. CANDLES STILL PLENTY OF SUMMER LEFT, REG. 59c • ~ti "to 'tl\e public during' Ill annual celebration. hundred i1tcr1fl In 1ddlUon to AFROTC unit at Loy o t a The •lrm!ll, a sr11Cfu4le o! provtdlllr air support for th• lJntveralty, S&nle re Sprtnp il!llftlchool, Flr!I and Third Mar! n e r1tltpded IUo'H°""' Coltqe, Staff Sgt. Wendell R. HdDt1, DlvlsiO!lS. Alrmu ~ 8 • son ·of Mr. aod Mra, Jlobert Wlttttnu, aon of Mn. Jeyce Pfc. J* W. -· lJ. S. Jlonea of 5772 Va11ecltt Drive. Pio. Terruce D. Carter, son WUllama of· 41S Belvue Line. Army, 211 eon of Mrs. LoJs A, Westmtmter, ta on duty at the of Mrs. Antoinette MaUcick of Balboa, hu been uslped to Roles, 1175 Giiier Ate., C\?ala T'khll Royal Thtl AF B , , Colle Mesa, ls ..,.,fur wltb KMller AFB, MIU.; f o r M.... hu been UIJped to Thailand. the Third Battalion, Ntntb lratninf In the air !raffle CO& the lllth· LtPI Jn fan tr 1 The sergeari\, a me!al! in-Regiment, . Third M 1 r l ft e trol field. Brl&ade. Vietnam. 1pector1 is auJaned to a unit '~i;;~;iiii;;:i~~~~i;;~;;;;~~i;;i~;;;;; of the Pacific Alli Forces. Division, Okinawa. His regl-n ment is part of the Regimen- Lt, John V. Markel, lJSMC, son of Mr~ and Mr1. Albett Markel of 345 E. 23rd St., Costa Mesa, is serving with the Second Battall<>n, Fourth Marine Re4lment, Th i r d Marine Division, Vietnam. The battalion is conducting aweep- ing and clearing operaUons south ()f the demilllarized zone. Lt, Col. A. K. Frain, USMC, of 821 Cortez St., Costa Me.Sa, is serv:lng in Vietnam with the First Marine Aircraft Wlng. 'the wing ()perates several tal Landing Team which is t>ein1 deployed from Vietnam fo Okinawa. David W. Dltbolt, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Dltbolt of 1430 Deauvllle, , Costa M e s a , parUclpated In an Air Foree Reserve Officers T r al n l n g Corps field training en- campment at the U.S. Air Force Academy, Colo. Cadet Diebolt, a 11 6 7 graduate of Mater Dei High School, where he was a member of the NationaJ Honor Society, is a member of the Let's Get Acquainted NEW OWNERS CLASSES NOW FORMING SALE TOYS AND MOSmE KITS ALL IELOW COST! HARBOR HOBBY cuns 1926 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA Announces The Opening Of Our New Location 1072 IA YSIDE DltYI IAYSIDE CINTrl NEWPORT HACH -675°6750 • We Feature • COSMntcs VITAMINS SEA SALTt YIGnAILIS flOM THI SIA OllANIC MU.TS YEGonAILI .1uic11s Dlll D P:l.UITS AND NUTS ILENDIRI Hiii TEAS JAMI MADI WITH UNPILTlllD U.W HONIY PUil TOMA.to CA.TSU, YEGnAILl AND NUIT JUICIS lltl CAklS lllKEMANNS IHOIS ORAMA At Fashion Island Aug. 21·22-23 Outa SIGHT SOUNDS • • YOU Can Win USE THE AUTOMATIC VOTING MACHINE TO PICK A PICTURE VOTORAMA at FOTORAMA PreHnted by nmmxm DAILY PILOT The Grand Prize Si'IHO CONSOLI with PM·AM 'ua10. FM M ULTIPLIX 11114 STlllO lECOkD PLAYll-4J5f,H Next 2 ·Prlzes 2 FM·AM POlTAILI llADIOS wlih IUILT·IN CASSITTI PLAYiACK/lECOiillN!O UNIT-4109,H .... Next 3 Prizes J PM·AM "CUR" CLOCK llADIOS-Ut.H -h 20 More Prizes 20 SITS Q.P l STlllO llCOlD ALIUM5-APl'"•l"'""'Y $25 ptr Ht ' ' • • . Barbara '99' F eldon Now Lady in Waiting By VERNON SCOTI' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Motherhood, a cherished meins !or prolonging ·a televi!lion situation comedy, has come to Agent 99 and Maxwell Smart becomes a father this season on "Gel Smart." Last year the two witless spies were married to give I.he show additio~l longevity. Barbara Feldon, a most at· tractive comedierme, is single and unsure about the blessing of motherhood. "So far we've -just shot the episodes where I'm stuffed with pillows to look pregnant," she said. "It's funny, but the stagehands and other people on the set are very con· siderate of me now . They treat me with great ten- derness. show announced that ad- vertisements had been taken in newspapers seeking twins for an established television series. Now that the two wacky who comes up with the most SOrnebow, one cetl the lm- spies are married and parents, original numbers for the twins presslon 99 already baa been could win a prize." too long with the show. what else can be done to bring -;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ fresh ideas to the series? ,~ "Well, this is our fifth year. Pt1aybe in our sixth year I will develop some sort of ro1nonlic attach1ncnt with the chief of control while Maxwell stays home with the babies ." Barbara's smile broadened. "Then in the lieventh year we'll be swinging so far out they won't allow us on the air," she said, laughing. "But not many situation comedies stay around seven years." For an actress involved in a weekly series, Barbara is curiously innocent of what is going on around her. Asked what the twins would be nam· I ed. she replied, "I don't.know. 1 haven't read the script. LAWNMOWER SHARPENING AND ENGINE' REPAIR WAlHU It• a Gilded Cage Diloll Y PILOT S!ltf Pllllll "I haven't any idea what they'll do when it's time to have the twins, Yes, twins. That 's what the script calls for ." "Almost every woman 1 know has children," she said. "If I have to handle real babies it will be a whole new experience for me . ''Right now I don't know iC the twins will be boys, girls or one of each. Whatever, the ad- dition of children will give us new gimmicks and directions in our stories." "Maybe they won't even have names. They could be numbered like me. My name -or number -on the show is 99. They were going to call me JOO but they thought it didn 't sound very feminine . MON.&fll.~ :s ! Peter Jason contemplates his future after being tossed in the lock up \vhilc suffering the taunts of Sandy Marino (left ) and Elaine Bankston in lh is scene from ''The Threepenny Opera," playing 'tonight through Sunday at South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa. Barbara is chary of working \\•ith infants and supposed the producers would use dolls. Her supposition was s h a t t e r e d \Yhen a representative of the "Say, il's possible th e network will have a number-I the-babies-contest. The viewer N ~ DAILY t-1 SUN. 12-5 X . Stratford's 'Hadrian' Will Tour Hy JACK GAVER NE\V YORK IUPI) -The United Slates ·will gel its first extensive look at a production of Canada 's highly esteemed S t r a t l o r d Shakespearean Festival Foundation during the 1969-70 season. The play is English Peter Luke 's London-New York hit, ''lladrian VII," still current in New York . But it is the Strat- ford production. and not the New York one, that v.•ill nu1ke the long national tour, begin· ning Sept. 4 at the Shubert Theater in Chicngo. The Canadian version is playing all this month at the Avon Theater in Stratford. Ont., which is the small downtov.·n house or the Foun- d a t Jon whose major Shakespearan e f f o r t s are presented in the large areno- type auditorium on Stratford 's outskirts. This first commerciol ven- ture into the United Slates will return a percentage of the gros,, to the Stratford }o~estival people. The tour will be spo n sored by Lester Oslerm an, who p r o d u c e d "Hadrian VI I" on Broadway. The schedule... calls for a 38· week trek. Previously, StraUord's only venture below the border has been last March and April '1·hen its productions of "The Alchemisl'' a n d ''Jlamlet" were seen for brief engagements in Chicago And AM Arbor, Mich. These visits were sponsored and not in the commercial vein. \Vhile the Stratford cast will consist mostly of Canadian and British actors little knov.'n in this country. the sta r ol "Hadrian Vil" is the familiar and popular Hume Cronyn. Although Cronyn was born and reared in Canada, his acting career of some 35 years on the stage and in films has brcn confined almost wholly to lhC' United States. This is his firs! job at Stratford. •'Hadrian Vil" is an engrofs ing, ex lremely Htel'atc dran1J abou t an eccentric Bri1 ish author of the early 20th cen- tury, Frederick \Villiatn Jtolfc _ He is best known for his novel. bearing the title of the play, in which the protagonist (Rolfe. obviously) imagines that he becomes a most unorthodox Pope. If it comes your wa y, 5ee it by all means. Ai for Stratford penetrating the United States, it see1ns that it is about lime someone arranged for one of its S hakespearean productions, ·which generally have drawn fa vorable notices over lhe years, to make an extended United St.ates tour, includ ing a big stopover in New York . Not a few or Stratford's stalwarts are well known to Broadway. LET'S BE FRIENDLY U you have new nel'1hbo~ or know of anyone movlnr to our &N!L please tell us IO that we may extend a friendly welcome and help thtm to become acquainted ln thdt new aurTIIUJldin~ So. Coasl Visilor 494-0579 494-9368 Harbor Visitor Let TV· WEEK Tvrn Yov On Sears Mid-Summer LawntBuilding SAVE 530 on 8 139.95 Building •Doub le sliding doors decorated with gold and black ,,·eathervanc decal .•• with loek and key • Wl1it e wall pa11cls; green (lecorated doors •Ce nter wall bracing all around •.. extra l1 eav) botto1n frame ••• rigid, eturdy con!truction • 7x5-fL. inside ••• 232 r.u. fL of 11torage &pace Ask Ahout Sears <.:u11\·c11ient Credit Plnt1 ~ -- • SAVE *35 on '144.95 Boildin~ • Columns with 3 non.I 1.,,r oeroU. • Sliding doon ••• lock with kOJO •Galvanized and painted 1teel ••• •erti ca] rlb panel! for extra 1trength e 7x.S.ft. interior ••• 216 cu. {t. etorage 1pace '179.95, 8x6.n. Buildin.,_ __ 15488 • SA VE $15 on Sears 7x5-ft. Lawn Building Rei;u!ar 189.95 • Inside sliding doors on nylon toll en 88 • Painted steel in hemmed roll Conn ed panelo •Exterior grade plywoo1J floors on 11ted jt>i&te •Galvanized ramp-type thres hold • White with green trim .•• 163 cu. ft. '119.95, 7x7-ft. La...,, Bnilrlln,r;,.._ ___ 9938 , _________________________________________________ , I IUENA PAn: TA 8-4-400, .521 .... 530 fl MONJ! Gt 3-3911 I.ONG w.ctt Hf S.0121 l'OMON4 ED 2·1145, NA 9--.5161, 'f'U 64>751 PICO WE ""'262 SOUTH CO.ut Pl.A2A .$40 J»J c•NoGA ,MK 3.co.066 1 GlENo>.tr 0t s-100,, a ... ,61 1 aYJmC &. soro AN w211 SANTA AHA l1 1.i:s11 ro•tANCE 542.1.51 1 I I COMPTON NE 6·2581, NE 2-5761 HOllYWOOO HO 9°59.C l Ou.HCE 437.2100 SANTA Pl Sl'tlNGS 94+8011 VJ.U!Y PO 3-8461, 984·2'm I COV!NA 966-061 1 fNGlfWOOOOR S.2.521 P>.s.t.D94A. 681-3211, l.51"'211 Sears SAHTAMOMICA EX 4'-6711 vaMOO.Pl 9°1911 ,________________________ _ ___________________ , "Sotisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back" ..,.. __ ,., Shop 6 Ni9ht1 Monday through Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. I • ! F • . • GOid • Even in Glows ith Memories en g -·/ FIRST LADY JOINS ASTRONAUTS' WIVES Mrs. Richard M.· Nixon and the Mmes. Michael Collins, Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. 'IMPRESSED AND TOUCHED .. .' J1:d9e and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Kalmbach PRESIDENT'S BROTHERS AND SISTERS-IN-LAW Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nixon, Mr. end Mrs. F. Donald Nixon By BEA ANDERSON •nd JO OLSON Of fllt Dtlly PUii Slaff That the Astrofete last night in the Century Plaza Hotel was a most Impressive and moving oc- casion is the unanimious feeling ofr::five Ha.tbor Area women. "I've never seen anr.hing that has impressed or touched me so much,' was the comment of Mrs. Thurmond Clarke of Corona de! Mar. Mrs. Dennis· E. Carpenter of Lido Isle de scribed it as the most exciting and exquisitely lovely function she has ever attended. Other su~rlatives added are "truly a state din- ner ... with all of its dignity and beauty it had marvelous warmth," said Mrs. Andy Devine of Har- bor Island, while Mrs. Charles S. Thomas of Corona del Mar said, "It was a most emotionally exciting evening and everything was on that key." "I've never seen a more beautiful evening," was the re- action of Mrs. Herbert W. Kalmbach of Dover Shores. In describing the "perfect beauty" of the set- ting, A1rs. Clarke said that the whole room looked like a shimmering bowl of gold. "The affair was beautifully done from the minute it started until it ended." NOTED COUSIN Judge and Mrs. Clarke attended the dinner \Vith his cousin and wife, Senator and ~1rs. Strom Thur- mond of Sou·lh Carolina and the Kalmbachs. "I think the entire audience was touched and moved when the astronauts spoke," she said. "Each one expressed him self so beautifully, humbly, simply and to the point. They couldn't help but touch the hearl and core of America. "I don't think there was a dry eye at the table when they finished," she said. She described all the gowns as "beautiful" and "Pat {Nixon) was most becoming in her lime green go\vn. I have never seen her look so radiant." The Clarkes sat with engineers from Houston \vhich made a very interesting table. Spotted by them were Sen. William Knowland, Mrs. Marie Ryan, Mrs. Nixon's sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Chandler, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan Chandler, William Randolph Hearst, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beaver ·of Fullerton and Dr. and Mrs. Arnold O. Beckman of Corona del Mar. "The dinner was delicious ... the evening mag- nificent ... and I felt privileged to be there," was Mrs. Clarke's summation. EXQUISITE GOWNS "The gow ns \Vere so exquisitely lovely that it was like an enormous fashion show ," commented Mrs. Carpenter who was happy that there was al· most a total void of pants dresses. i·r saw one and I thought it just wasn't in good taste ... I don't care what fa shion dictates. "The most stunning was the native dress worn by ambassadors, especially those from Africa ," she said. "The costumes really were more stunning than the gowns, because they were so different." She felt the ceremonies were "most touching ... the dinner elegant," and she said she saw more limousines last night than she did in Washington, O.C:. at the President's Inaugural. Befofe the dinner the Carpenters were invited to the 18th floor of the Century Plaza for cocktails with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Reed of Ross. Because of security regulations they could only take the elevator to the 17th floor, walk up the last flight and then were checked before being al· lowed on the floor. From this vantage point they could see thou- sands milling around the hotel. Mrs. Carpenter said that most looked like onlookers but the one dis- turbing element was seeing some wearing swas- tikas. After the Astrofete the Carpenters were guests of Gov, and Mrs. Dewey F. Bartlett of Oklahoma at the Beverly Hills Hotel. "The President's remarks \Vere just perfect and his pride was evident," Mrs. Thomas stated. . "Armstrong was very emotional when he spoke. What each of the astronauts said was well thought out. I don't see how they had the strength to do it after such a long day," she added. The Thomases sat with John Youn g, an astro- naut from the ApolJo 10 flight , and )Jis wife; Dr. George E. Mueller, deputy director of NASA, and his wife; Marguerite Paine, daughter of the NASA director, and Ambassador Al-Gboussein from Kuwait. ($11 A1trof1t1, Page T4) 'EMOTIONALLY EXCITING' Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Thomas 6men TllurW1y, AutWSf 14, IHI S ''" lJ RARE INVITATION Mr. and Mrs. Andy Devine 'EXQUISITELY LOVELY FUNCTION' Mr. and Mrs. Dennis E. Carpenter .. I ' • . . . . . . . . . . . Thursd~, AuQusl 14, 1969 --- PT Un it Notes FY Council Mra. Gerald Hl1 President COMING UP : Gent r al meetings will be conducted the first Wednesday of each month, and the president's round table meetings will take place at 9 a.m. the fourth Thursday ()f each month. ----·· - Fral'T) Page 13 • • .Astrofete They met many ambassadors they had known in \Vashington and many other old friends from the days when Thomas was Secretary of the Navy. ''It was an outstanding evening and everything was absolutely superb," Mrs. Thomas concluded. Mrs. Devine, wife of the noted television figure, said the eveiling was "gala and gorgeous." The Devlnes saw Sen. George Murphy \Yhen they first arrived in the beautiful room. Seated at their table were Ambassador Shimoda from Japan. who came from \Vashington, and his wife, who had just flown in from Japan; Brig. Gen. George "Abe" Lincoln, director of Safety and Preparedness for NASA and hi s wife; Astronaut Scott Carpenter and his \vile, and Robert Six, Continental Airlines execu· live. and his wife, Audrey l\<leadows. "Everything was executed as perfectly as the flight to the moon," Mrs. Devine commented. "The night 'vas electric and we were thrilled to be there. The dinner \Vas beautilully done and everyone 'vas beautifully gowned. "The mementos are out of th is \vorl d. Every- thinJ?: Vt•as so thoughtfully done," she stressed. "It 'vas an evening you just have to sit and think about. It, was just a 1narvelous evening. "\Ve saw many friends from the entertainment \\'Orld and they were collecting autographs from the noted personalities there. The tables were turned, and it \Vas just a lot of fun." she concluded. Mrs. Kalmbach agreed that it was a \Vonderful evening. The Kalmbachs sat \vith \Vayne Hoff1nan, chair- man of the board of FlyinJ?: Tiger Airlines, and his '"ife and Gov. and Mrs. Tom McCall or Oregon. They were privileged to meet Astronaut Collins, \Vho \vas introduced to them by President Nixon. Mrs. Kalmbach said she had never seen a group of people 'vho \Vere more elated over something. The patriotism of tile crowd was evident. she noted. Wedding In Fu ture During a f11mlly dinner par· ty in the ir Corona de! ~1ar home, • fo.1r. and Mrs. Ron J. Elleboudt disclosed the betrothal or their daua;hter, Chrlstine ?i-1arle Elleboudt, to John Charles Keith. The bride-elect , l'»ho graduated from ~1ater Dei J-ligh School and Orange Coast College, is a social science major at San Diego State Coll ege. Her fiance, the son or Dr. and to.1rs. Ji . Brooks Keith of San Bernardino, is a chemistry majur at San Diegn Stale "'here he is affiliated with Zeta Beta Tau rral.ernity. The couple plan to graduate in January or 1970. A wedding dale will be announced later. Hawa ii Calls the Match : It's Luau Time REPORTS: New procedures were outlined d u r i n g meetings of officers, chairmen and unit presidents of the Fountain Valley Elementary School Dis:trict during two workshops C-Onducted last month. ... Officers of SPC include the J.1mes. Gerald Hi1, president; W i 11 i am Kowaleski and J am es Ellena, vice presidents; Cay Mooring , treasurer; Vern Dart, co rresponding secretary : KeitR T a y I o r , recording secretary; Douglas Meyers, historian; Charles Lip o t, publlcity ; Richard Wilhelm, auditor; and Ronald Murphy, parli~mentarian. and Mike Brick, superintendent, ad· visor .•. Chairmen ratified include the Mmes. William Dunn, music boosters ; Joseph DeLacey, health and welfare; Walter Tate, safe. ty; Jerry Burton, laboratory aides ; John Schemp, library aides; Eugene Catherman. community resource, and Barnett McLaughlin, SPC workshop. Among their cherished souvenirs will be the enJ?:raved invitation bearing the presidential seal 'vhich allo\ved them to be a part of the unmatch- able evenini;::. Getting into the Island mood for Ne,vport Beach Tennis Club's J1 a\\Paiian 1',east Saturday at the club are (standing, left to right) Mrs. Bill Bassham, Paul Bernharl and J ohn Rusch. Also enjoying a pre· Horo scope Menu Tip : Cool Food Fills Bill Tonight FP.IDAY AUGUST 15 By SYDNEY O!UARR 1.tENU T I P : Empbasiu 1lmpliclty. Cool food, includlnc 1pecl1I, cold soup dish, would HU bill tonight. Definitely no ttmt for the ornale . People may be In 1 hurry to gel going; special meellng1, con· ferences or t b t a t e r ap. polnlm enls seem to take 1potllgbt away from long evening of dining. ARJ~ (March 21-April 19): You may have to apply self· discipline to finish important tasks. Desire is to break from rouline. This you will do by tonight. But first settle issues which demand attention. TAURUS (April 20-l\.1ay 20): Your budget could be upset. You want to try somethi ng new. You are in a hurry. You splurge . You do things today, buy things, 'vhich ordinarily would be considered out of reach. GEAtINI (~1 ay 21..June 20\: Domestic rou tine could be upset. Some of the co1nforts you desire may be a problem. Adjustment ; s nC!C'essary. Strive to"·ard goal of diplomacy. Show respect for fami ly members. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Not vdse to travel unless necessary. ~1eans don 't meander. Know '''hat vou want. where it is. Avoid Pro· crastination. Unless positive. wait and observe. Be true to your own feelings. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emotional stabllily becomes an almost economic necessity. Obtain hint from Cancer message. Budget time. money and emotions. Boils down to need for self-control. VIRGO tAug. 23-Sepl. 221 · You are requested lo make decision. Close relative con- fesses confusion. Throw off burden which is not rightly yJur own. YC>U can set fine e11>· ample. Accept challenge. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cL 22 ): Not so good for trying to keep secrets -applies especially to money matters. expenditures. Best to be fran'k from very beginning. This avoids possi· ble antagonism and confusion. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2I J: Friends tend to act in somewhat of an eccentric manner. Be perceptive. Don't offend w i t h embarrassi ng question!. What you want to know w i 11 be volunteered. Don't force . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2'2· Dec. 21 ): You get boost from one who is behind the scenes. Means aid comes from un ex· peeled source. Stand tall. Maintain faith in your special abilities . Express opinions. Promotion may be due. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Friend may have change of heart which affects y\lur Jong·tange plans. Rev is r details. Put logether pieces of puzzle. You are more capable than you might imagine. AQUAfUUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Tumultuous events could affect savings, investments. to.leans it may be necessary for you to tear down in order to rebuild. There are numerou~ options, ehoiecs. Be pcrce1>- 1ivc. PISCES (Feb. 19-to.1 arch 20 \: Change indicated where close relationship i s concerned. Revision or roles occurs. Dominant member becomes passive. Your task is to be understanding and patient. IF TODAY IS YOUR BlRTHDAV you have flair for drama. are attracted to law ; absolutely necessary for you to express yourself. Travel and increased social contacts are part of current scene. To """ ov! rnor, •boul YOU'I•!! ..... 1>1•011X1v. oroer 5Ydl>tV Om1•r'1 ~ HVf bookler. T~t Trulh Abo!<! •••rolovv. Send 50 <et1!1 lo °"''" !ll)Cklel, "'' c ... 1LY PILOl, •o• ~140. Grtnd C'Mrl l Slll!on, Ntw York, W.Y, lCJOH. view of correct luau costumes are (foreground, left to right) Mrs. Bernhart, Harry Babbitt, Bassham and Mrs. Dorothy Berney. Mai tai time for the ev- enl "'ill be 6:30 p.rn. Event Planned New Members Also attending the President's dinner \Vere \Valter F. Burke, president of ~1cDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co., and his \Vife. of Cameo Shores; Charles R. Able, chairman and chief executive of- ficer of McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co .. and Prospective members of the his wife, of Dover Shores, and F. Donald Nixon, Auxiliary of Hoag Memorial brother of the President, and his'wife, of Baycrest. Hospital, Presbyterian, will be More countians were J. Simon Fluor. indus'tri- guests of the auxiliary Thurs~ alist and prominent Orange County Republican, and .'"'""'"",,.""'.,.'""'""""'"'"-""'== d A g 28 t 10 · th his \Vife , of Santa Ana . .... .:,~ ,._ -r., ay, u . , a a.m. 1n e hospital conference center. Traveling from Minneapolis to attend 'vas Dr. The Tee Tattler Cut fre8h from TI•t..ural wheel&. ~~{f[k~ ~~@'~o~; SOUTH COAST PLAZA LOwlr CtrNH M1U SllSTOL •I ltn Olq1 ,..,.,, COSTA MIEIA J.O.•ttl !l!dltor'• , olt; A column ol women'• '°" 101! Korn will tPPMf •• ,~ Wl!I~ I" "'' CA IL Y ,.!LOl. lo rtHr1 tcoret tor !ht wrok, olt1u mtll ltwm lo P.O. Eft• lJ.60. l~ev m~1r ti. rK•i""" bV L.•0111 o•v -c11 .. •· 1111 Mm... Anyone interested in joining Jeannette Piccard, balloonist and one of the first G•rey, 11.obu 1 w. smirh, "' Lllur, 711 the auxlliary is invited to al· \vomen to fly,.the mother of Don Piccard of New· Cl•u a, the Mme.. 11.ov H1 11111,., I•; JlnllrtUJl"lf1T11T trtln w.1~rr sm1111, 11; P•"' Allt, 11; tend the meeting. _!P~O'.'.:r'..t ~B~e~a'.:c~h·:_ _______________ .!_:::::::::::::====='._ w;1111m L11rer. Ell••d P ltn. ,., c~.. Prospective members meel·1· C, Ifie Mmn. WIHi•m !lu•!ln1h1m, 14; k MonGI~ ) MIESA VEllDE L~ll• l1rr. !11rkor, 11: Poolt . Gto•;• ings ta e place lbe fourth WllOl!lord. 11, c11n c. tht Mm••· G. Thursday of each month at JO llN WHlllLI -A. f119;,1. H>t P•ul l(lrm1ft, 1'; J1c~ Elam, Gii Mmn lloN tt Muon. 11, 0,1 14,,.,,,, _••_•_•_· •-•-•-"-'"-·-'-· _•_«_o•_•·-'-'· ___ ,_.m_. _in_t_he_c_onf_ec_e_nc_e_ce_n_te_•1 lJ; Don OOU91••• II•• 01rt>v, ll; B F111h!. 11>1 Mm11. J1cii V•flurtll, :JI; Jotfflll !11nk1, Ji; ICtl!h Neil. JS; Jf"'U I K k, ll ; C flll h!, 1'111 Mmrl. IU<ll C1r1ln, ll1 tlllaG!rl Htridrlckt, l?; JI~ LU111, l't. llANCHO IAM JOAQUIM THll•• S LIMO MICI -Fll9M A, 1'he Mmn. H•rold S..roul, fll I. W. Sturtll. 5-1! Fl\thl •• t ... Mflwl•. Htr.., con1m. "' J•l'nll E.tntr&ori. How1r11 HC111i.nd, SJ; Flltl!I C, ll'le MmH . Frtnk Alklnl>Oll. S2; J, F. Cuti\, "' Jot Cllfk50tl, 11.t!pll Troutmfn, $1; Fllt~I C. Mrt. HtrlH!rl Mt rlln, '1 AUGUSl I -Lo .. Ntl. lhe M""'· Jt m•t A.. Retves, n; co111m, 13; Lunllor~ Jonf1, 1l. tll.VINI COAST lAOlll CAY -ClfH A. Miu CM Ott WlllTt, evtn; ln1 Mm.s. Gr"IJO Ll!ur. G. M. Holtttln.-1; Ntll Gtrev. ·2; Rollf•! Arnota. ·41 C+IM !I, lht Mm11. Dorothy Gr••· 2; W. A. Mir"'"· evtn. A*'' T. Skinner. Ml" Mtf'lltl>t M"uer. -2; Citu C. !ht Mmn. l!v1ro!I Morrlt, ); T. A. HuOIOI>, ·1; W. l . M"dowt, ·2; II.Gt" 5 Pool•, Aobtrt lllchollon. ·l : Cltu 0 , "" MmH. Ptul RYckoU. 4; Oon Lrnk, •Yen; Wlllltm !lorker. -1; C, M, Hum- m1I, -l, His a nd Her Watches New Designers have created man-tailored watches with an emphasis on techni cal marvels just for the ladies. Usually se lf .winding, often a chronograph complete with calendar, some of these sports models are showing up as the his and her watch. Styling is suc h that the watch can be strapped to a feminine or a masculine wrist \Vith equal at- lraclivcnc:;s, Dinner Draws Area 's Women Southland women art In· vited to an international fel lowship diMer spon80red by the Southern California division of the Salvation Army on Thursday, Aug . 21. The Lafayette Hotel In Long Beach will be the scene for the gather ing at 5 p.m. Speaker will be Vooetle Brlaht, eo- founder of Campus Crusade for Ch rist, an lnterdenomina. tional student movement. a • ·*·»·»·*·* CLEARANCE OF DESIGNER FASmONS STARTING AUGUST 14th ONE MARK-DOWN ONLY! ·t ·»·»·>~·»·»·*•* Hlllll, IKIRTI, PANH, TOPI & IWUTIU f Orffl1t11l/y $t i I• U0) NOW s10 to t35 SPECIAL NOW •so 10 •100 ·»·»·»·»·»·*•*•* 1un1, IPORTIWUR, COATI, DRUSIS, .AmR·S & OOWNI fOrft hMo/f'y ... 0 ,_ 1200) NOW •25 to •125 ·»·»·»·~·»·»·»·» Sl'ICIAL llUCTION OP COUTURI PAIHIONI ( Orf1/,,./ly ,. MOO 1 COME TO THE GROOVY SEMI-FINALS 2:00 P.M. SATURDAY, AUGUST 16 Music! Excitement! See our local teens compete for the Miss Teenage Southern California titl el Support your favorite! Hear the "Second Phase" bond. Dr Pepper will be served on the Mall. finals will be 2:00 p.m.-Saturdo'f, August 23 • Th omas C. Houghto n, D.D.S. NOW HALF·PRICE ·»·»·»·•·»·»·»·» FIESTA MEXICANA PREVIEW Friday, August 15, 12:00 noon WIN o trip for two to Mex ico via Mexicano Airlines with hotel for 6 nights Announce ~ The Opening of His Office for the Pr ectice of Dentistry for C hildren cl HUNTINGTON PROFESSIONAC CENTER, Suit• 210 18700 M1in St . (1trois from 5 Points} Huntington 811ch Ollica Hours By Appointment 847-2566 ,. AISORTID IUGANT ncmus ACCISIOlllll, JIWILllY, ICARVU NOW •5 t"fegtJJtC( ilt JasltioH ·»·»·•·»·»·»· NUIUU lllVlll FASHION ISLAllD HfW,Olf l tACM 644·2252 FASHION SQUAR E ct Balsa's Hotel Del Prado IN PERSO N-fiesta Musicians 'ick up your licket.1 lot Fo.1hio,, Squors Nightr ot LJ,,iw•rsol Studios fAu9. I' .16), po and wi" 'ockord·lell TV'.1, Hondos, M11nlz Stereo·Pok1 BULLOCK'S FASHION SQUARE SANTA ANA S1111J An• FrHWIJ •I Main , S1nl1 An• : I. 'I ! [ I ~ Ann's a Plumber's Friend DEAR ANN _ LANDERS: What have you &ot against plumbers? It seems that whenever you want to make a C{lm· parison you use plumbers as the dumbest segment of society. On the other band you seem to love psychlatrisb, I 'll bet if you iook a survey you'd find more nutty psychiatr1sts than nutty plumbers. When you call a plumber lo fix something be doesn't leave until It is fixed. But I have two cousins who have been golng ot a headshrinker for five years and they are no better off than when they started. In fact, one seems because a lot or kids are having this pro- blem lately. -HIGHLAND PARK DEAR ID: A lot of parents are having tbls problem lately, too. you do likewise, honey. DEAR ANN: I had guests for dinner last night. One af the women whom I thought was a good friend said in a loud voice, "This is delicious potato salad. Did you buy It yourself?" Everyone laughed.' She quickly said, "You know I meant Make not buy.11 Freud says people mean whal they say the first time. Do you agree? -ELMHURST worse. , Please 1ay something nice about plumbers, Ann. They work hard and the world couldn't get along without them - MARRIED TO ONE J'm ia favor of kids expressing opla.lon1 -even befott. they are teenagers, but I assume yoa know the difference between upre1sing an opinion ud bein& • smart.mouth kid. DEAR ONE: l did say something nice about plumbtn, and they made me an boaorary member of the Chicago Plumber1 Journeymen Union, Local 130. Now, aren't you ashamed'! As for the privileges of • teenager, I believe they should be in direct pro- portion to his ability lo h • a d I e responslblllty. The more rellable, in· duslrious and trustworthy be ls, the more privileges be should have. DEAR ELM: Some of Freud'• theorte1 bave been dl5credlted, but I'd 11y be w~s probably right in lhis Instance. (lf I bad a sample of that potato salad I could teJI you for sure.) DEAR ANN LANDERS: La5t week I became a member of that very special group called teenagers. Don't you think a person should ha\•e freedom of speecll when he leaves his baby days behind? I don't mean mouthing off, I mean ex· pressing opinions out in the open when he doesn't happen to agree with Ills parents. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband is a wonderful guy but he has a rather ro- tund shape. I want him to buy trousers large enough to go around his waist. My husband likes to wear bis trousers under his stomach. What is your preference? - MRS. M. P. Drinking may be "in" to the kids you run with -but it can put you "out" for keeps. You can cool It and stay popular. Read "Booze and You -For Teenagers Only." Send 35 cents in coin and a long, self·addressed, stamped envelope with your request. I feel a Jot older than I did a week ago when I was only a chil d of 12. What are the special privileges of a teenager? Please answer in your newspaper column DEAR ft.IRS. ft.1. P.: I'm sure your hos· band couldn't care less about my preference. Seeing as bow it Is his stomach I'm perfectly willing to let him ~·ear bis trousers any way that seems most comfortable to hlm. And I suggest Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of the DAILY PJLOT, enclosing a self.addr~, stamped envelope. TOASTING HAPPY YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Victor L. Wesley Party Honors Mesons On 50th Anniversary A champagne reception In the Lido Isle home of their daughter ands on ·in· I aw honored Mr. and 1'1rs. Victor L. Wesley of Costa Mesa on the occasion of their golden wedding. Mr. and 1'.trs. Allen T. Campbell were lhe hosts for the party attended by many friends and relatives, in- cluding the \Vesley's four grandchildren. Besides 1'1ark, Debbie and Matthew Campbell there is Linda Campbell, no\v a University of S o u l h e r n California sophomore a n d forme r National Ch a r it y League debutante in Newport Beach. It was al a USC dance, the Wesleys recalled, that they met more than 50 years ago. As they sipped champagne beside the terrace fountain, the couple reviewed some in- teresting highlights or a bygone day when the st reet car brought visitors to the beach area, when it took four or five hours lo drive from Pasadena to Newport, when the mud flats appeared at low tide where Lido Isle now is resplendent and when high tides would sometimes wash out the coast highway . Add that exlra test la your ale or beer. You will love this fine quality Englith pewter tankard with its "aee--through" ...,1as.-battam larg1~sfT1 lmp1rlal Plnrr a- full 20 or. capacity. Perfect ornament for den or desk, also as a plan11r. You will aurely want to buy t;ev1ral. REGULAR $9.95 c~rte Ae<wnts tnvl!tcl -ll1nk1..,.,k1rd, M10trc!Wlr11t Giii Wr1p NO Cl'l1rg1 -llrl6il lle;htry GEORGE MURRAY SLLVEll e CHINA e Clll:YITAL e FURNITURE l ri1tol Slr11t 11 51~ Oi190 F111 .. 1v " Sou!li Co11t Pla11 Phone &•~·2700 AN INVITATION ' TOA l Th~~~~~i~o~o: • • t Nature, the Animal Kingdom, 1 f which includes Man; the Plant Kingdom, which forms the basis for the science of Botany; 3.nd Rocks and Minerals, called the Mineral Kingdom, the study of which we know as Miner3logy. Now, avid rode and mineral collectors and Interior Decorators, you don't have to go to the ends of the· earth to find specimens you've longed for ••• Bullock's Santa Ana now has a collection to end all collections, assembled by Julio T anjeloff, the largest importer of gems and minerals in the United States ••• a man who with his wife devotes his life to increasing the public's appreciation of nature's creativity in the form of gemstones ••• of speciaJ interest will be drawers and drawers of smaJlerspecimens .•. among them chunks of ruby, amethyst, aquamarine and topaz .•• ma.ny as little as .SO ••• this display is a joint venture of Bullock's Santa Ana and Astro Minerals of New York ••. a selection of over $350,000 worth of gemstones is available for looking and learning and purchasing ••• now in THE GALLERIA• THIRD FLOOR -•. -·· ·----- ThursdaY, Aiagust 14, 1969 DAILY PILOT J5 Breakfast Kicks Off New Season ·Crutches No Drawb qcf< For Series It's hard to get to a ball come a1ong and join the fun. game if you're oo crutches or Sponsored by Lbe Easter 1n a whttl chair. Seal Rehabllllatlon Center lo: Griddles art healing for the A unique new' program call-Crippled Children and Adults gridiron! ed Handi·Tours aims to make In Orange, the tours aim to The HunUngton Beach Youth the outing and' many others transport groups lo Southland Athletic Association, sponsor like It possible for han-attractions they w o u I d r th Junl All Am . dlcapped children of Orange o e or • er1can-otherwise never be able to see. Football program, ls cooking County. up its first fund-raising event A group already ha! visited There is no fee involved. of the season between 6 a.m. Angels Sladium in Anaheim, Transportation ls provideJ. and 2· p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23, and the next trip will be to Sea by volunteer drivers -still in Lake Park. ·World in San Diego on Aug. 22. urgently needed -and by Pancakes, sausa~e, roJfee, Between 25 and 50 han· parents, or ln the Center's milk and orange jwce will be dicapped children are slgned van. aerVed for 75 cents with all the up for the program of recrea· Two butts are being .sought cooking being done by coaches Uonal and cultural enrich-for the program, for two for ·thi different teams. ment, and more are sought volunteer bus drlvers have the vehicles to be off tnd roll· lllg. The aupport of jndlvtduail ii being sough~ u well as that ..of busine!ses, clubs a n d organizations t b r o u g b o u t, Orange Co\lnty. Individual volunteers who will accompany tbe han· dicapped children are under the direction ot Mrs. Grace Armijo. Adult volunteers still are needed and those in· terested may contact her at the Center in Orange at 633. 7400. Future outings will Include Knoll's Berry Fann, Japanese Village and Deer Park and In charge of the first event throughout Orange County to come forward and need only of the sea.son la Mra. Jame111;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:,=:~:""~~~~~---------------------, Gath, ways and mean sll FIFTY NINTH Marineland. cnalrman, •nd assisting are Mrs. Robert Cox Jr. and Mrs. Harry Karsten. Approximately 1000 people attended last year's breakfast, according to Ralph Rutherford, president, and th ey are anticipating the same nwnber at this year's affair. Rings Right Bunches of rings on her fingers make a woman ready for any fall fa shion scene. Singular shapes and styling, a colorful mix of stones, the bright Jigbt of enameling all contribute to keeping rings right on fashion cue. TREMENDOUS SAYINGS NOW! GRANDS HALLl!!T·OAVIJ, Mall.WAS 112" HARDMAN. Wal11uf\ WAS Sl:!99 JANSSEN, W•lnut WAS lllft JACOI BROS, EbOl\V WAS S1 1ft NOW 11m NOW •11ft NOW 11"9 NOW t ftt 10 yr, WlfffOnty-BHck, O .... ln·HCM ff'ff Tuellf-COl'tllg9 PIANOS O~GANS--i WURLtTlER-F1$CHElt-KNAS• New tloor model~ ~~bsllntlally r• ~U(td -most every decor 1v1lllbl1, SAVE UP TO 20°/. Stt.ret Ma]or llt11'1ds REBUILT ORGANS SAYE UP TO ~0% of n-prlc• WallichsMusic City SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA MESA • 540-3165 I I • • . .. . •• • •• ,• • •• ••• ~: •'. :; . :: . . . .. •• ... •• '; ~·. :-; .. :~ . ·:. .-::. . . . ·-· .-.. • • :· ' • . • • • ' . DAILY PILOT Tltu~dq, Au1v1t 14, 1969 PRETTY MECHANIC K1thlotn Pihl Racing's No Drag - Service Given With a If you're a fellow, out on a dale with Kathleen Pe~ of Irvine, and your car breaks down, don't worry if you·~ not a mechanical genius. Kathleen most likely will climb out, lift up the hood, ex- aritlne the engine and proceed to 11wlltly repair the trouble. The pet 1 t e S.fOot 1-inch miss is a most unlikely person to have her head stuck under the hood of a car, but that is where It frequently is. Cypress Wedding Planned The engagement of Diane Bridgewater to Paul Jacob Ashby has been &Mounced by her parents. 1'1r, and Mrs. Fred J. Bridflewater of Lynwood. Her flana. Is lhe son of Mr. and ?ifrs. Paul F. Ashby of Costai lllesa. A graduate of Newport Harbor High School, he served four years in the Air Force and presently is com- pleting work toward a bachelor's degree in zoology at Ca.lifomia Stale College at Lo1111 Beach. The bride -elect was graduated from Dominguez High School and has aUended Compton Junior College. A weddin1 ln the Church of Our Fathers in Cypress wUl take place Sept. 13. Smile · Kathleen, a June graduate of Mission Viejo High School, where she received an award from the Industrial Arts Department for her work as a secretarial aide, has been working on cars and drag rac- ing since she was 12. Her home then was two blocks from an I n d l a n reservation l n Scottsdale, Ariz., and !he used thf wide · open spaces of the reservation for a drag strip and practiced there. Living in a neighborhood w~ere racing was a popular activity sparked Kathleen's in· terest, and her fathe r, Lloyd C. Pehl worked on cars and drove along wilh her. She was fonnerly a member or the Newport Beach Speed Association and used to race in the Ford Scholarship Races but has had lo curtail her ac- tivities since graduating from htgh school and going to work. Wednesday nights she's still a spectator at Orange County International Raceway though, and said she probably will be watching the rest or her life. Need your car's spark plugs changed? Its fan belt fixed or its tires changed ? Call Kathleen -she'll fix It -with a pretty smile. Nuts 'n Nibbles Attending meetings every Friday at JO a.m. are the women of Fountain Valley Nuts to Nibbles TOPS Club. Members have selected the Recreation Center in Hun- til}lton Beach for the meeting place. ORANGE COUNTY DAHLIA SOCIETY preMnt th1lr annual DAHLIA SHOW --fru l<llbe pu.blic..inJiupUngton Cen ter's air condlUoned 111aJJ ••• Fri. and Sat.,Au¥. 1S and 16 • . . drawings for beautiful dahlia arrangement& each hour ..• grand prize Palm Springs weekend for two . . . and the Sweet Allellnes will sing ... don't miss th is lovely flower abow ... this coming weekend et Huntington Ce nter, Beach and Edinger at the San Diego freeway. • SOUTH COAST PLAZA _..., ·-~- Suzanne Richey ecomes ·-Brl e Suzanne Richey and Robcrl Anton Gillelte, both of Corona del ldar, were married at sea abroad the Lunalllo \V h c n Judge Calvin P. Schmidt directed U1elr vow exchange. Owls Plan Hoot Along The Nighl Owls of Newport Beach are planning a sing along in their lloot 'n J~ollcr roost, or the Senior Citizens Recreation Center, on Sunday, Aug. 17. 'l'ne group has dubbed the gathering a "hoot along" and 1i1rs. George Stewert will ac. company at the piano. Her daughter, Mrs. Gloria Rush of Ont.ario will perform as soloist, and f.1rs. Ste\vert also \Ylll include classical piano selecUons on the pro- gram . Refreshments lvill be served by Mrs. Clarence Rains and her committee. who also are in charge of table decoralions. Plans for a Hawaiian party in September \\'ill be discuss- ed. llB •• e The bride, daughter 0£ ttr. and ti1rs. llerbert SouU1all Richey of Bay Village, Ohio, v.·orc a white crepe pantsuit for her nuptials and carried red roses, white pompons and baby's breath . 1'1iss E I e a n o r \Vood 1'JcFarlond of San Francisco attended as the maid of honor . She also wore a pantsuit. The bridegroom, son of !\frs. \Viley Vogel of Eugene, Ore . and the late itr. James Gill· ette asked Thomas Williams of Corona del i\far to be his best man. Allan P. Molho ol Newport Beach was an usher. A receplion followed in Irvine Coast Country Club, and special guest; attending were !\fr. and 1'.1rs. H. T. Ewig and f.lrs. F. 0. Richey, all of Lakewood, Ohio, who are grandparents of the bride. After traveling to Oregon on their wedding trip, t h e newlyweds v.·i!I retu rn ,to Corona de! f\Iar where they \\'ill establish their first home. The bride is a graduate of PC'nn I-fall Preparatory School, PMn~lqn~. Cente nar y College for \Vomen, New Jersey and studied at Chap- man College's World Campus Afloal. Her husband is a graduate of St. Franci:'; lligh School. Eugene and attended the Cniversity of Oregon. NEEDLEPOINT DESIGN COSTA MESA Phone : 540-7187 U1111et Ml !I .4.mrr!'ro"! WcolwoTih~1 u,. W•l•fleld'• R•,olwln1 Cho19e. lankAmerltard er Mouer Chort•· 14.6 cu. ft. Frost-Proof has a 3.56 cu. ft. Freezer. . • No fill. No spill. No forgetting to fill Ice trays. Frigidaire Ice Maker Is ~fully automat ic. (Easily connected to available water supply.) • • No stale ice. Dial amount you want to keep handy with Cube Lever Con· trol. lee Make r makes more as you use them. •Only 32" wide. Fits in same space as your present refrigerator. •Frost-Proof. You'll never defrost again. Frigida~e bothers to build in more help. - BEAT HIGH l?OOD COSTS FRIGIDAIRE 546 lb. SIZE UPRIGHT FOOD FREEZE R •More Room! 15.6 cu. ft. for the extra frae111r sp ace you wanf. • 5 Full-Width Shelves. l rafri~ g•rated for· f ast fr eezing. • 5 Roomy DOOi' Shelves. Keep froz•n foods a t you r f inger t ips. •Juice Can Holder. For 111si•r food-finding. JUST $228 88 Our 1t1ff of experienced technicl1n1 ~ plus 1 flfft of r1dio-di1p1tched service trucks is your assuranc• of prompt -expert att•ntlon to your •ppli1nce servic1 n1ed1. Since 1947 411E.17th St., Costa Mesa-646-1684 Doily 9 • 9, Sot, 9 • 6 -Closed Sundoy1 t :OO G lh IC -~l (IO) ""' DI.I•..,.. D Ill H-ollo! (C) l!Ol ·-.... (C) (!O) ....... II.Intl Ill rttUlll ltlk·rtd 1111111 stM 81Utfft, comHltn Mtrt S.~I. CIOl'Mdla11 Mtrt RlmelL u•..--•ICl._. .TY~ <•111111) 'u-llch· 1f11 c.nte, Ylvtc1 Uadltrs. fJ I ... 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(t) .... ..., (JO) D @ 00 1111 ,_ -ICl 11 Merit: "'LM i...tt..-(d11m1) •J7-.1tn111f1r Jo11ts, -.,h Cotten. D a2l Cil ID lMI '""" !Cl "!1\~s!>:':::. ~n ~ U:JOmQU11r Do Mir LoU Mtri. 111111 1114 11111 m ""6tfl nutre: "llist ll!d in Dall Hotgnp(1 ornc. b1l1d!n1 Ut111 " at1rrin1 Mitton ltrlL i nd Don b 1usptdtd of e1llullo11. ' (R) m ""~ <JOJ l!lll "" -(C) (10) '11•· l l1ntl Thut11 of lhl DNI E1ctrt." A 11COnd Mnlnc ol lll11tr1 by t~ll taltnteil comPtnJ of dttf It• tors lflrlo 11111k wittl tlltlr htM1. They ptrlonn 1 Klbukl dr1111t tN A~lon Chekow'• f1mo1111 "'6nOl°'u1, "'On !ht HtrMfutnm ol Ta1ct.t." Ill ...... 1 (C) (30) 1:30 II l9 (I) Ill! I"" ... t<l CIO) ·~Metter ol LM •114 0..111," '"~ aide Nnd1 [¥1 Wtiltfltl4 to llY1 II: 1 1lr1'1 n11d .. ct hall in ordtr to trt~ dewn tn lntpl llltrtlonllt. (ij • -· (C) (1()) ""' ('1"'1· fR!Ot~t 1:• D IMN: "'M• With • CIMk" (fiirror) '51-JoMph Cott .. , l1r· btrt Sttn'll)'tk. a C...•ltr 11ntt111 '""' (C) a-ttl UM• "Yllltflct'" (lllfll:llY> '47 -iim11111 o·s•, N•llCJ Ce1t111111. U:JO Cl.,._ , ..... .,..,.. (ln)'t- tt!Y) '54-M1r11M Ltllhtofl, Jol'ln Jai!tlll. .,,.. ,..... (1111.Dlcll) •1 -Jot11 YfooAury, Dlulltl fOWllJ. 1:11 m""" ,, ....... (d111111) '47 -.lolleftf S.ltft, Don Ctltlt. l:Ol 11 "'Tllll ... ., 11. ,...,... (drl• n11) '41-11111 Clolby, lnrrW k• ... •:ao •(Q ..,_ h'll .. , .... (,.. "'"*) 17-lllrD .... Gii Sqilt, Du Mlftllltllf, Jthn 8tm, Jlllll Mlllll. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS ~EWSPAPERS Outlity Pri"ti"t tl'ld D•p•l'ldt~lt S•rvic.t for mort th •" • qu1rter of • ctntury. Pli Ol l 'l~I N fl N •, 1111 Wllf IAUQA ILYD .. MIWPOIT IUCH -t4lo4111 STEVE ROPER $ST.' Sm!/-WE: CAJIT JIST SIT AAOONO 1'( WNT FOR THE JOKER 'I!> l(l()CI( US IYlF/ Lfl'S IWSlf .... ' JUDGE PARKER MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS PAPER, MISTER? .... I KNOW ... :<ER 60NNA ASK ME•"l'MAT'SA KIP DOIN' HAWKIN' NEWSPAPERS 1N11lE MIDDL.E 0'111E. DESERT?:.RIGHT? MUTT AND JEFF • IT'S RlDICULOUSTO WELL, KEEP THAT THING WHAT LL GORDO I DO W l"TH IT? "'~!IT! .1ME. , l!.i<tJl< r f'AVS rr !~ l'<lR w/ Ii I! I' rl - • - COME ON! ) ' ,:, I, 'I 111 oll 1 l U ·(, t>OOOL.EBUG I llAllC li~CIM,.. ~ ,, ...,_ ......... ' ' CC · + ./)1/1 J t • + • •• By Ferd Johnson By Tom K. Ryan ......... _ ..... __ By Al Smith By Gus Arriola TROUBLED TRIO -When the 99 year lease on the convent comes due a problem arises in the "The Landlonf Cometh" segment of "The Flying Nun" tonight at 7:30 on Channel 7. Sally Field, cenler above, stars with Marge Redmond, lE;lt and Made- laine Sherwood. TELEVISION VIEWS TV Captures Pride of U.S. By CYNTHIA LOWRY liOLLY\VOOD (AP )-Television cameras have been called X-ray machines capable of revealing the genuine and the phony. Through much1 of Wed- nesday they showed the healthy enthusiasm and pride of average Americans in the accomplish- men'ls of the Apollo 11 moon-landing pioneers. THE THREE networks, as usual pooling much of the camera work, followed ·the triumphant pro- gress of the astronauts as they traveled from coast to coast . The smilin~, wavin g heroes were the stars of the show, but it was the affection and response of the crowds who greeted them that made for hours of stirring viewing. Keeping the conversational ball rolling duri.ng motorcade travel and parades was the ma1or challenge for the commentators. Once the crowds 'vere described, the security precautions explained and the basic statistics explored, the job began to get tough. CBS' WATER CRONKITE shared his micro- phone with writer Jimmy Breslin durini the ~ew York parade and Breslin helped fill the time with a bright commentary on Manhattan landmarks - a sort of off.the-cuff guided tour. Frank McGee, NBC'& ancbonnan, had an assist from a curator from a New York City museum 'vith a store of off. beat his torical footnotes which lightened the audio portion. All networks, of course, recalled past ticker- tape receptions and occasionally inserted some old film clips. CHICAGO. which seemed to have gone \vlld 'vith enthusiasm. turned out in force and there 'vas little need for filler. The screen was filled with cheering hordes, welcome signs, even balloons and flocks of pigeons. The holiday spirit of the crowds came through the small screens with an impact that needed no description and was a more explicit statement of admiration than the wel l rounded sentiments ex- pressed during the formal ceremonies. Although there was no armchair tourism of Chicago. all net\vorks showed the Picas!io statue, Grant Park and some of the city's notable archi- tecture. AN OCCASIONAL closeup showed how genuine- ly moved were the three astronauts. By the end of the Chicago reception, they were beginning to show slight signs of fatigue from the long day -and still ahead was Los Angeles' \Velcome climaxed by a huge state dinner attended by President Nixon. The networks pre-empted programs freely to provide full coverage, and all three net\vorks did smooth, professional jobs of permitting the whole nation to share an unusual and moving event. Dennis the Menace ~ ... , I . ' \ I Ja OAILV PILOT s --. ...... -. -·--···-·--... . ·-· ~· ... --- LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Santa 'Ana · OVER TBE COUNTER Complete-New York S~k Lis.t Firm Triplesi-------------------""'1 ,r.;wY!i"~•mt:.'°':~,. Sale Fig ure NASO List ings for Wodnes d ey, Augus t 13, 1969 1!::1 ........ '"'"'::' •1-l.111 .... ..,....lier ... llMt •I • .... •-rttr t ~ ..._ ltASO. ....J1i,-. "ft l!i., IO Pnc.. .. _, ........ rtttll W -'*• Ml....,_, w _......, ::r ,:,.• Datatron, Inc. SanLa Ari~ Nl!w ..-01uc '""' iK "" t ,. SF,l" No 1f\.\ 2CI'-' •oc.1., "' ts 11 :~eb 'r10 ~ Ui! I~ D -1 :~~ 'htb ~U --· I r lh f"• I -'"-1(11io..1111 llld !ti ) Ill '3"'» M G!ln ,m ,,1~ =~~ 11 11\11 ~£!°J.~,tA it" " ,-14 exl:uo I annouu"'"" aa cs or e ._a .,... mtd -',.. '" Md ,1._ n• f:. ~kl c1 1 ·-Vi Jt'" Stow 1 ,_ -'").\1111: ~ ~ -\.'I .-,o,111;c11 )'W' ended JUM 30 or.::''N•I=•~-:-~ i.~ 'Y 1~ M~!:-Gt ll'""'~"-~:.. 'it '1'1 ff ~r7lS1~J.\I ~It f ~=t!.11Nf1P'~. \_ •lfon of kc:urlllH °'" NI.. tl'I ,,,,. Mpli Otl .... 3:1\lo $Miil~ 11• A!klrt~ 1.40 lj• "' I aect1.,,. w $2,179,277, three times the ~,·":~1v.1~ ... ~ g~~::. D ls~ '1"-~ :.111l~ 11\~ 'i··Vi tf;I~ .~ ll'~ ,,\~ ~~tli'.I" '"' ~ " \Ii=~ r~·.~.::r.' ... ·, ~~· "38 370 repQrted for fiscal ti-11ur '" ,~ E ?""'"' :t.i"o ~"' Mohw.11 " n l "I M•n ,,., :MYt Mtl\ol ,.1 ... "' .so •• • ·~-t11I~• lnlc• ~"' 5ft tlM 101,(o MOnrn Pk l&V. k Comp 3~~ •v. AQll!•r• ~ .t.i. J968. =~~1~!'::.: •• °l ~~:o l;~ ~'n ~"' s=: r 1r4 1t~ ~ 1~ J~ :i :.i· pi .il~ m ~ t' = ~ Bii ~n~~~ Nel profit r ost lo $203,872 ~~;uT!.""'1"" ~::.u ;ru;1~El 11• 1ltl. M~,c~(lu~ /D114 lk ~:l:ro A 2JYI ,,~ :11·~~-'r I ~ :"" 1r• ,,)! _ ". e~.?~:,,,J '~ '"YI bffn 1111r ie1 Nit~ 1 v. J\• Mve!ltr l I?~ S.1rle pl 11 17\) A btrl n ID tt\O '1\li ~I'° + \ F '° compared with $28,033 the c~4-ecl ·~..ir.tc11 or EkN\IC. It 'I N1rr" c 2s11o 2!" s.11 C:mp 'u" i-1'.IO "I'' 111 J·10 111 l'r il 'I"' 1, "!'~ tolO {bid) lnltr• F kvt \'< N11 B•11d ) ~. SMUYI 16 11 A ~$11~ 20 ff i• , 1 ;: lf +, u~ ',,I! ,!,42 prior year ~11• m••U•~ ~llrom 61.Q 1 N!IC•• Iii 1~ ,, .. Sevllfl u1 ._,.,,, ''"' Al1 .. c1 10ci ~ 1 F -· tlllllh tl'lf~9'h I ( <;y1 l!h l\'J N mn Cl ~\Ii 4\'f ~ NII f'J '6 A ~l\ld . ..0 41'-' 4lt'i ( = =~!! In Earnings per share equaled 01 .. ~· ll••"°r1r 1~:= ~I ~~. •? ,Vt H~11,,:r.: '1 ti S~l1r.ne1 '" 714> 1\4 AIJoallld r11 u 1~ ·~"' . ~ :!: ~ MkP'llO ... !1f d 5 002 1 •. 11 Wit lJ~ 1011 ~I!' '""'~ .... ,. 36 cents base on 70, Sf,~~ciown ;1•=. l':i.sca~, l'~ ~~ :1 1 ~ 1~~ ll~ s..u: i:1 fl ~ ;; 1• •/n ~ ..., "+ t!" itt • ~ averaRe number of shares W'°E111 2•'11 '"' ~::~r II:~ 51... ·ii\ a= r:Jt I~~ 1~~ l:-trsC.:C \'I \"' ~11 ,•d :~ ' ~ Siii -I'> 1r•,~:t. 1 a outstaDdlnff eompared with 8 .u.1 coro •;, 1f"' EM1t1 B ,...., 1l"" 11 111ow ~ ,.,, IOl("IY 1;~ 'ltt Al ur 1..0 1; ~n' t; ~ s.a'r, • ll • based AFA.Pr s 70\'t 22"" ~111wt•• u111 11•" tlol t i'> 111o flll R..ti ts •"• ~II"°!!-'' J 11~ v. "'+:ni. lolrJ 11 , ctntl per &hare on AVM ~ 12\l l)\.'i Eon Co<.• ,.,. "' NE .. Gf_ UV, 1 ... lei s.:..... ,..... .. lid --I'" \lo 4111 \(, +1 111u .n~ J 455 427 1.vera-number o! A<lftl r l1 ll Eaull f)ll ""' ll''< fllJ N•lr. ,. ''\'!; St111 HPd ?! ?l ~~~~NI~ ' Y.~ r~ t. = ~ 1:or. , •• !l.1. , o-/..(~ l• ~rlt Ttc 111'1 12\.\ NldlWI P ll ~~Tr-Cl -""' Al .l• U\ Ii" !"°' .. + ~ ii!"M 1hares outstanding in 1968 ~r, 1~ 2i i:\\ ,.-91 ... ~0 ~1a ll~ =~~ : :~ "~ lij• 1~ ,r,: 1;: ... ~Suii 1 iO 1\ SJto 8!'o -"' •C• 1 The ......... ent figures wert A1r«11 F r 1\4! F1M t-t. ~ ,.., 11~ 1" '"' 1•tio Fd '* '"'~,AC so _P. ..,.. ' 1~ -11i ~C1M: w ...... • Albfrl• ly\• 'I F1lrllcl T '" 7~ "'i'' NG 10 1ou ...... Ir.I 11• Al'lll~ ~..so ls60,' ·~,12v, ,!t '~.'-\~::::: l~f~.·. ~ subject to final audit. ~:fto ·~ y,"' 1~ ~::i~"'M, 1~""1~ "'ip1' Gn~! 1:~ 1!'"' l: ~ J'I< ~·!,!'!',, '\"• ,,~ i~ t1 _....,, " ' "" Atro 4'<i 4'" F1to JIE n 21 w P11lv 11-. tt'lli Taylor w "'\oll 16 ,.. » 4\o l• 1' -~ aarm,•~ ,~ Arthur l . Purc11lv, Oatatron Al'9 Pe11 ' '" ""' lkK' ~ -·~ w Ne•G ,,, 1..., 110111 14 '"' ~.-, .. ,,,, "'Im tsr. H .:.. 14 orciw1r LU president, said lhat the figures .-uie<i e.,. 1• .. '"' """" 1nw 11" ., "" Ill(; ,. .-i Ttxu AS 1 ' Z:::BB•r~ l 1;f '~ ~ YI.::+ v.1•:,rMOhinC°' compared to prev1ous1y ::..scc.o 1l""lt~~!l ~~ 1" ~~g:\: :~·, ~""1.l"tm~c~ ,:lh.;.v.::a~"'l1jg It~!..~ :r-=:,~t:.:~~1'2 J: rorecasl sales of $%I million !"1e1°G:~ ~.,, 2~v. ~~~na~.1 !~~ ~1. t'~1" ,~..,, t!1~ ~::~i:,· d: l~~ t;~ ~:;,1~ /o1 ll w,,: ?ti; ~ = ~ ~l:l.:vy 0\-": and eamln•S of 3Q cents per Al'll Ex,,.. 661.<o """ Food FP 1"' n;, g1i.r TP 11 .... II Tr~n•C I ~ .... HO A CJ\lln I'° l 'I°" :tHll 1114. 1~ Hiie I o Am Fu•n ~ .. O\(o Forst OU 7fP.. ,,..., ~~· MA ni.. ll~ Trncnr G II\~ 11 .-mcrwn 90 1 2 111 !J tl\lo +"' ...,H• 11fA' share A. Grett :16\lo 31 Fml Grnl JO J2 O~~Cll f 10 lrncnl o ,','• 2s0;~ A,C~, .. ,, o0 ~,, 1J\'r \lo jlV. + lAo lklYllUG In Am l"~rll 1• tr:. l'otochr ll• ,,, PE"C l<rl 12'!r 1'\oo Tr1nd In .. mC 2'2 '' '°" t ,_,, Co The Current figures Were fOr Am inMI It 20V. Frnkl Cl t'~ 10\'i Plbsl Br 36111 3114 Tr!(O Pel 30 Jiii> Am Ollllll 1 S 'l''I 12"-12\1. -\~ Brown,~t;o or Arn Me<ll 7•'• 1'1\o l'rnkln XI ~I Pie F~E J."'~ 3-1\o Trlo1lr l!V. \21,ii AOU1!VI 11111 11 11 1!\11 11'-._ &w11 ... ro Datatron only and do not Jn Al'l'I p," 171/o u F11lv•w 11'1 1v, P1kco Co •'M 1 Trot>ica llll~ JP, ADu•I o1 &41 11 IJ\~ 11v. 13.., .f \It lwn5hol 'Sii I Id I f ... SI GOb ~ ffi r.erln•I 1~ 16\1. Pineo! u n..:. T'(SQll Fd 16'11 UV. AmEIPw 1 SI n XI 'n\1 'nYo -~ r11nsWk 01<1 c ude any conso I a ion o AM G i>t lo 11 G11 Svc 11u 1' P~WY 01, '' 11\\ unn~c io 111,; Am E,., 1 , 1n~ ,,~ ,~ _ '°' ~S!Ef,1 :is, II d Am Tefy ll"-(\\ G Alrrll )>, Iii P1YI...,. P 1''0 ll\\ Uf\Arl Ti'! 21 ,, Afn Eap Ind II 21 16 .. 11 + 1M """ "' rectn Y a n n 0 U n Ce aC· Anht\11 t1 6J 64 G DtYICt 2'o 3'~ Pa~tllt t ih 10\11 Un Dollr 26 21~'1 AEKplnd wl 1 '' '6 76 ::::er1,,01 n qUISJUons Anktn c: 1~ 114 r. l(!"•uc •..:. s11. Pe:t0r1~s T 19'• ~· Un 11111m 31 3P.il AGtnlnt 50 1Sl 2H\ 21 t1\~ l'ltForo 110 Acquisition Completed A•C•I• ~ )•\• l<>M Git! Ell 10 11 P81'1 Ol•L 614 7V, Un Mc<Jol 1\11 t\11 AGnln Jlfl 80 S l'l"" J'2\\ :?7'"' -... \llQYt n6!1 Arcs IN! 16 II f'"')t~I I'~ I , Ps Er<1Tn ~ S..,, Un lttfO 1'~~ IS AmH011! 10 11 lJ" U .... 1H;, + \•Bunt lhmo 11.rden M lll"~ l~h G/lltn 11\~ 11'11 Pl G&W 2!'\i 16'h U~ 9k~cl 19V, 20 A Homt 1 «I 16 57~ 51 S7V. Flun~R 111/ • Arden Pl 37 «r r, nn • YI'• 3~ Ptnn "E l?t, 11 US Crwn m 6 Am Hosp tt NS 31'h lo!!; l7'11 +1 Burl Ind 40 A•~ MOP 1?'• n~ Glllttll "11'1> 11..,, P1111l Wa J'~ J'4 US En~tl 17\'J ltV, Amin¥•! 110 I l~ 11'lw "'~ + ~ eur~y 70 Arrow H "8\~ SCI "'••in "I 1111> •'Ii P••i nl ,",!: ,•2~ HS, ~·,\~r 41"'1: d 'h AmMFdy '° 116 lf'lf 11;r, lt\~ -\lo gurrQll• Ml .<..r¥~8 lt \t\IJ Qlobllyb 6 'ro trl~ H •• ••v 'L 3">"'1l7,,., .. Mt!Ch<!10 ,,, 41 "1 '6'• '1'1> 1hUnY 1.211 A1CC Bot 24 ,5 f:or'n • 111' 1 l"'i ~ l•olll )9i.,, •n<, UP P~nP 2r:, 2!V, AM<!!CIX wl 1 11 21 21 -\.'i B~lltr.Sh 10 Auto Stl 1'1. I'• Grallll Cn 16'• 51~, Phll:09 pf " 61 Utall SLd ''• 71'0 Am Moton 3t1 Pio I t _'It A~tmco 91, f'o f'Oraol\ Sc 5~ SI Ph!I S.Ub ''\'t 1' Ulll IM '1'1 19\11 AmN1!G11 1 40 :13•, :?7\lw llV• + y, ""•bbllt 71• n • Gr .. n Ml 11' .. !It, PllGIGl'I ll 1114 VII LD in\1\1 11 AmPnot Of• Sl 10'• ID 1014 1•bol Co iO B•lrd Al 11 11 f"•nll RE " 18'h Pie PO •'• 4"1 V•nc• S1 N VJ 22 olRttrC/f 419 SS 2tl4~ 1'S JC4\.I +•\io 'I Fl11tnl flll P1lnl ' 6\lt Grlnnll 109 lU Plnk•ln .Sl~I l:;(\>o VI~ Woo 21 ', nv, •m Rordl wl CJ 51:i.., (81 .. Sll:o + .\;. I llt>M l:tt BPun! wt •\It 6'• t';rov• Pr ><''"''I Porl• HI( 29 lO WMISW P 11 ,1 Am Sfit 1 I n:.,. :n'll n~ lmoRL 4M Benls!r C 10 10\.'/ Grw!I! In 10\'t 11VJ Prt GoH 1'\11161.'! W ll•lde 9\0 '"'Am Sltl1>60 t \11'1 11\li ll + l'I 1moSa 1 10 .,~rwd< 1~ 11 r..,,,d (~ A ~ I Pr"" Ana • j,., Warshw 10 11 A Smol! 1 'O l9S ~ 30 o ~ + l'I Cltd &rtw «r National Environment Corp B11!n P ""' IO\lt c.v10 Tee 2\t l !:_ubs, ~MH 2Ho 2t'lt Wllsll NG 11 ~ 11\t AmSoAlr 10 1,. '6\o ,2,, ,111o +n~ co~ Pac l:ie d I B•tlAH 11'1 13 <.ult lnl ~'• • • .-ub " 21 lSV, WHh AE 11 .. 1? AmSAtr tn 70 I 41 '2 "' (1n1IRd 118 Orange, announce comp e-Bffd'lm ~1111 :?7111 Gvrodn 10 12 P11bs NC 12\IJ nt' Witt Tr 16,,. ll•'. Al'l'I sta 1 16 ltl't :itv. JtV. _ "'C1p c Bdcsl . or VI llel~ hi• 1)'11 u "'•"' ["' '' ,,, ' Pyblth• 13 ... 14\o W~bb "'' 19'11 20~ AmS!O PU 75 ' Ill'" 111'4 1 131~ -v. C:1r1><11n 1 Cl tlon Of the BC{jUISll!on rg &ttm lrld 11 ll H•~ Va ' '"'° P~•tl>& 6 1 WelOtrn 11'1 11"1 Am SterU "8 23 2u .. 11\a 2m C1rll11t Ml D Ids _ ~ da ff Co lltl<oco• 10"" 11 H~l'>OYf s 2• r P lle11n•I 1h'h 21\.'.I Wtllt\9 M ll 2•Yi A Sligar I 60 '' 25,,. 7'I• lS\41 + ,._ C:1roPLI 1 d av o ......... u co • a Btr'I .... 3-1 37 HIYtll In l\lo l:W. P11rHv $1 17 ""' Well1'1. G !n\li 11 .... AS~o!A26S ' "''' .... v. 4414 + .\(, C:1rJ1Tdl I iO Wholes.I. m eat distributor flpu Ltb s.ov. 56\' 1><11h MV '~ l•lol :.0.'!.11_ C:P 6\lo 6~-w11a1 P 12\<o 13 Am o1 " 3 10 111 10 f1•rltrea • 1 &Ulu~ W 9 t"1 Hef'lted F 11\li l1\'a .-u,~nl 1• I~ W1ln NA 11l• 11<V. Am T T !"3 ~ SJV. Jl~ SJ Irr i>tJ1l wllh annua1 revenues of ap-111ro Soll 3• 31 Hm~v" U h 1~v, "•" ,ov,;, 1• 11 w11n N1rci 1 ,,,_ Amww111 56 10 11 ,, 1111 11" _ ,._ 1rrGn I n1 Blrldlr IV. 6l'I Holm EP !3 S1 1n1 C :tt\11 la\~ Wlln Pub It\~ l'OV. AWWSJ>f I 2S zlO ll"' 11\• UV.. + 1~ (IMtl'W ._ PrOltlffi&teJv $23 mtihon Blad< HI 33\, :U woov~r l~ "'"' R,aYch Co ltl IM W•n• Wh l ) ... 14'\ AW Ptel l 2S JISO llV• 17\o 17\lo -v, CC~~,, AO " ' ( Boll Ber 1011 11V. Houit Flt 3 l'~ IJ'm o :O 1S Wlnb1; 21\lo 21 •w, lo! 1 o ,, ... tl\\ 21"" 211• .... •ff -Terms Of the agreemeD tn· Boot111 C: 2•1• 21 i'<ur-Ml •Vi MV. ,•K~MEo PV, ~II> Wlnslw T l\11 ' Am Zinc f ~ '°"' l'O"' .f \; C1•! t 10 I ed d I sed "'. Flo• Cap ,. :Ill HUO pp 21 31 ... ht U lt"" WIK Pl 22''1 22V. Atnf!!ek IO 30 ll 71~ ,,.,. -Vo (t!frTr I 70 VO V an un !SC 0 COu-llrkwr G 10 11 Hv1 G•s U \• 11°"' llPI (•"Cl 3' lS Wrdlw E •'h ,i.;, Amltelnt IO 11 SCI •9lo n;r, _\lo CCI M1rodl d I r ~ notes ,_, l<r tlVI 7ll't .. ,,,1 P 21" tJ\'a ll:llly Slo 7'Yo l0t.; W11nO C 1S U AM" C • -II "' lS CCI M pll 2S 51 era ion o prom1so,,. • a~Vs.. 111 21 "~ ;:;~111 cp J'""' Jn~ RotO Ex 22v, 2111t Y•dn~ E •"-1\'o-AMP 1,::: " ·rr ... i. ,.:i! ••t• t !: Ctc0 Cp 1a cash and NATEC stock 8uckeY 1• II~ 11'111 Gts 13\• 2'"" AmP'!• Corp 121 3n, l1 11 .... -"i C:tl.tllt'HCP ' , BurnYP S 11111 11\lo 11'111 Nutl lt>,i, 711,,. Amsted 2 (J) I• ll )7\\ 311/:o _ "° Ctll" olA' JO V 1 r g Oav1dson-Cbudacoff S Bu.,,P• F 1•1.) 1Ji.. 1111111te I ' Am1e1 l2 11 1~, 16 1~ Cenco rns J o LEGAL NO'l'ICE t V Cll W Sv 2S'o 26~ lnlrt•d 6\j, 7l!o l<MCOl'ld I 90 20l 21'~ 2'"" 21\lo + 'lo Ctn!Fdf '10ll ""MlJ7 current managemen • 1rg cameo n ,, 1111 CDlll uv. 1tv;, AncnHoc~ 10 11 ~I'• 1oa11 4~-11 Ctn Hud 1' D d Joh Ch d lrand Clnoti M 7Q 7' Inell SY~ 1~~ II l<ncorPNSY 1 1 :n•, 12 n _,,,C:en ll!Lt 1 •All 1m av1 son, n U aro C•nr... t ·~~ 1n1rm 111 '"'° 111"\(, Ano C:laY 1 70 11 35\, l-o\'r 3-l~i _ % Cenl!IP5 1 2 •a11. 1,.. ci;11T11'1CATE OF BUS•NESS Clark Davidson will continue cap sow 1 1~:\li 1n1 ew"" ' J MUTUAL A1>0cn1Cp 20 ,, 7:r 21 2n, + ~ c:en1LaE1 • .o'''. •o Cll£OITOllS FlCTlllOUi l'lllM NAME ' f lb Cap ln!A t•• 10 In! M!ll 2(\.'j 'lVt ApeoOll I Of 14 J'2•o l211 31!1 C:tt\Ao\P 112 •"'''''' ·,, .. ,, 0, , .. , Tiit unoers!oned ooe1 her1br cert•IY to d irect the O""rations O e C111Te1> s>. ~"' 111• "lclr 1"• M''t ARA Svc 'N n JOG wt. 10G + 1~ cenl s 1 • ., "' " t"-(1rl1 Bl 6 6YI Inf iYI 2tilll 21\'t ArchOe~ 1 60 t u, (J~ •l\t -11<o Ctn! <I I 0 ST.\TI! 00 CA Ll l'OllNIA FOii 1nat t>e 1• CC>l!Cll>C!I"" 1 -oerv bwilnl•I company 8 CC 0 rd In g tO Carlr Go 11"1 19 Int S" of l '"" 11 1<r1rP11bSYC 1 (I 2~ JS V. 2l'A -'I. CenTtlUT M THE COUNTY 01' OllANG• 11 1n 1ndlv!du1I II I-IS WMtecep Ave....,. , ' ff D l':er>Tew 11'• 2~ lnl T1P1 N l::W. Aoua C~m 21 Ji>tl Ji>I• :161-> _ % Ctrro 160b "' ..... Jut Orlllft. C•lllornla Jlnd!'r Ille flrtl1lou1 NATEC's p resident . eory Ctn VP$ 21~ 211'11 Int~~· 'l!lllo,, FUNDS ArmeoS! 1 IO 1:16 27l• 21\lt 211'1 -v. Cert lftd to '~111, of All;CHtll.-LO BOSANKO l1rm ntme of JAYKAV ENTERPRISES Cl k J Cl\~rl 0 1n•, J1 jOl'lltl 23Y12Jl!t Arlen1DS 20 9 ~'"' 19111 291'1 Cessn~Alrl O 0 ••• ,.... 11'111 11'111 wld llrm 11 «Wn-.:1 OI ""'•!,;:::='='='=· ='=';::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;Jc"m ,'::•• ",', ","• ~ 5oUtFll 2~,;~ 25.,_ •rmr pf • 1s 2 62 62 62 -v, c, .. ,.su • '~ -l •<< M Cl\"""~' • J1tlll» •• .. Arm5!Ck IO l7 l8'1, '9\lt J1'4 -it Ila rn I~ NOTICE IS HEll;EBV GIVEN lo IM lo!IOWIM penon -....... n <V I Chu Ind 5\li ''" JICQun c: 11'~ n ArmCI< oil 71 160 60'4 "''" 60•t. -.0.:. (~lmPS l 20 erC'llllN'I ot t~ 1bovt n~mtd M<:l'Clenl PllCt OI ,...tloence 11 II lollows fO-WI! (Iles IJIU l' 11 Jtn'! Wit 10\l'i llV. ArmRUb I IO 31 J!I~ JI Jl'.lo _ ~-C~erltrNY 2 11111 111 Ptnon1 l'l•vlnG cl1lm, •o•ln11 lht John KritU$l. 14$ Wl'!Utc111 AYtnu1 PHARMACY 0.1 Br&I 11 7J J•m1b~ 1' 11;,/, l<ro Corp '° 1J 111, 11\\ 21 11 -1 ~~ C»1""Mn I IO t-1Td oecc6enl ire rtc1vlretl 10 !lit Orantt C:111fon1!1 t:»rl'I S lU 111 JltlY Fdl 6\!o 1 tNV , >> 5 U Arvin \nd 1 1 2ro. 1No 27'• Cllecktr MDI -··· ··-·--····•" ·-······ '" ~ o .... A•~vsl I 1'61' l'.11-1 I V. ~i. I( ol1•r 51 71 n IESTlN' 0 IOS ndl ~Id 0 I I 'XI t2 41 1' 4! ~1""" -• (hfmtT•n lb '"' "' •..-•= -· _,,... v• ICS c 1111 UA 2(\1\1 21 Kti151 pl 20 21 COMPolNEI MUI 10ll111Ah011 of1 l IS IS IS (lltmNV 160 ofll<• cl me (t.rk GI ll>f above tnlllltd .klhn K•o"u TOP r 1 , u P. ?•\t '~ l(alY~• 108 111 NEW VOllK Col Pl Proo • ll I 6J A!..i Brew -a ll HI', 10 111, + ,, Clltmwiv ~ courl or le P'tM"'I !Mm wllll Ille COUNTY OF LOS AtolGELES 1 II Clar-Mr :ny, "'" K1vsm r; 51~ -lhl to110 .. 1no OUP-Slock "If 21"' AIM! DG I 10 10) ~)·-, n •l 't _,.., c~~I V• l"' "--,.-~~-II••• lo Ille vn11trolg""" ., STATE OF CALIF~MIA l i'l»Y•-.... s ,,., T l~~ lt''" t1Hon1 woolltd bl Stlft;,I t"' t n ·--~ .. ,.. •• ' ··-,,. ,, •• + • c··· ., ••• 111;1.w' '0111~;; of MeOwtn & G•Hn l50 Oii A1111u1t 11 1'ff Mtcre mtc • Nof1rt1 Clll'll ""Mer 1'11 IV. Ktllet! 61~ ., .. lht Nttlor\ll Auoo; V1r P¥ 7 IO J 21 A1'1C'1)..E1 \ JO SI 2' -• 2'•o 1•~ _ ,: ciif~tira"' '7 ' (""""'"ft .-ve, O•f"9t C1llfornl1 Pwbtlc In tM lor !lkl County -5Talt, l':llnlor 0 R>.. 91• K~ll~,d ,.., • lit'&. ?.:'°':'-ot Stcu•lllH 11nv R_,n 2•, ",, -~ Atl(EI pt5 87 1 11111 100 100 :I 'II Ch1cE11t UI ' , • c-c, -'' <-·•• E 11v. lt\4 • .. r! Inc. •re ue! ., ~ ''' '''"" 2 .., '''" '''" 100,. 1,, '' M<< ,,-, -kn 11 ""' pll(t cf bullMll DI M ~1"' ,_,, • .., Jolll'I ••VSI NIWll cO.;fn t I:\~ 1·~ I(;;~ Fib '~"' llVt ~ or, ... "l.,~,,,\~ 1,•,•," 1' •'•"•' ,•, Alllll'c» plJ 15 i• SI~ SI'. Sii: -1:Z cnlN1s1PP ... C'I u-r1!~n!'ll In ••I .... 11~•1 ptrt•l11!1'1 In to mt lo be Tile Po!rOOll Whoff lllll'll II COllllll F 1SYt 11 Kt¥1 (vs 1S>' "> (';.~ Mvf' bffn ~ Hncoxk J.9• 163 ATlllCll 1>12 IO ti n 1, 11\0 n>o + ~l CMSP pl ct S tile ,,,.,, OI wkl oeudfnl wtlllln four wbacdbetl 11'1 !ht within 1n,lrumt11!, •not Corn<el :16 3' K!!Yll PC ~ >,;, told (bldl or bOUOlll Ohnltn 111.,S 20 95 Alll1 Cllem 1 '' 15'' W t mo + '-Chi Music I monlh• 1lltt Int 11 .. 1 oublk1tlon OI lhh ICkNIWiedoetl IO mt !!Ill he UKultd f!\f Corn Cir :i.. J<t' 1(11195 El 12 I (ll~ftl f We<lnl4¥ •Yll-Funos Allll Co<P 111 ~ l \• P., + ,,_ (hlP11tt1l ! nollu WfN Com Ac! I l lh Kirk Ca 10"4 11\lo 1111 AH ~Ui Ill ltfllll•l Aurort 1"(11 1 1~ ll>t 13illo (hi Ill Pit Oiied ... UOUll 11 1'6• WltlleH mY h•nd 11111 1111 Com ln!I •.\4 s• .. KlllP Vol ''"' ,,..., Abt•Clr> 2 3' ! UI 82 2G ll n 1• Aulillll!r .. 29S " n i. 11 +21.t ChRIP c1 UP Be'll'9 f Bowontto !OFFICIAL SEolll Com c;.,, IJ 14 KOl""t:P ','" 11\lo AdY!ifl t.. .15 us "8 '~ 10 }) AU!Ofl'I!» l'ld 190 u 1, 14\~ 14 .... -"'ClllllP CI NW '.-''''' _. ... _ Wiii ..o tt>f Linda •u. Dawns C"om Tt! lS\'t )6\,;, LM( O•T Ill ( Aflllllld 1 H I S u1 IC I 1 H I IQ •vc.o Co I 20 5"l l.I 2•..., 141t -Y, (hoc:ltFull 60 •• ... '""' ..... ut>I Com Hiii! 16\'f 17\'f L•nce In ''1:. """ Ahllrt • 11 ' n UI 1(2 s 1t ,1 Avco oil 20 40 S611o S6 S6 -...,, CP\rl1 Cit IQ Rov1 "'mtd dettden1 Notirt1 P 11: Com• A s ' L•nO• In 4 *" AIPl\1 Fd 111 1' J1 us H N lt 22 n AYMY Po l2 1 Sil> SI"' 51"' fnrom111 u MtOWEN .. GlllEE N Lo. Al'lfflfl, CounlY' Cm~ '"" IS 17 line Wd 11•\ 11\lo Ame.HI 5 111 'J2 UI 2 10 r.z \I n AVMI Inc -"° 113 14~ 1~ u tvomel ol l Ull E c"'-1" Av• M1 Commluloll Explrtt Cme Mlh 4\1; WI L•r!Ot'I 7111 I AM ·~a ! tl , (UI J , " • n AYN!! &f2 JO l n n n -llrYller 2 o ....... c:1NflrRll Feto 1,1'11 C 1 • T...; 11Vt l1\10Lol'I (Ol'l J" SlAAm (Nlr 0151110 (YJ 49• 5..0AWlllP Ito "156>.:>15! .... 15' +1 Cln'!GE !(Cl •• ' '''.' •••s<N l'rlllll .. Mlof'I, Atrr Con-Rocle 19\':o 31 ltlwr G ''Vt 71'11 AE1 10 f10 ~ Pol•r • 11 4 S7 AJltt 11 G1 7 1' UI\ 1' Cfn GE of ' w....-'"" CT S1r•ll 6 '" Le~lll Tn '11 11 .... Am Gf"lh 661 11, '"ltltb 171 )JI 11 Clt1Mlll 1...0. .-11 ... n11" fo>t" E•tcvl•I~ *" L-hlch ..... ,.,.. (Ofllrftl lli 9\~ ltwb llf 11 lt Am Inv I •1 I I Kn ck GI la n 1111 --ClnS11Ttl t olO Putilll.l>«I or 1111 1 Coe1t 0~•!¥ Pllet, ~"' 141<tt. C.illttnll• hy Tl.RRY GIANT, It Ph COl)tran •l·ii ~ Lil"' El 1• JS "'" Mui f tt 1j 1S Le•lna1 10 09 11 Ol &lllck W I M 1U lllt 121' r. -'' i1TFl11 1 IO All"Ull 14. 21. 21 1ro:r StslltmMr .. Tel U l ll 421"'21 c_.. L lJ 1, 1..0bllW a'llo '"' AmN Gift , °' ,. Lb 11;0(.fl l• n 1 OI BalrOIJT ..!_l lt. n . ~!V> """ + "" T F l'U SCI ' .. ' UlMt Publlllled Drl1'11 Co•1T DlllW Piiot h Id Crwfrd n 23~ Lon C<IY 6'11 1V, Anchor GrOUD L!b.,1¥ 6 Of '66 ll1ltGE l,,, 62 """ ~ Jl ll!H 5vc: 2 :CC..--------------Aut1vsl u, 21, l1 1~ k11Tombt'r • Art\f1clal sweetenl'l'5 5 Oll Crtsl Mil e~. 9"'L°" E!rn 17 11'11 CMll! l'1 1t'6Llle Stk ,,6 S20 9elG P•B•JO ~ i1 61 67 -f. l'tC:llW tnv :i.iti E \'6f lS11-4t not be take n wt th anUb10-CrOll Co 211•;. 30 LYncll c JI Jl\.'.I Grw111 1 1f J tf l le I nv 6 lo! 6 '5 BanoPunr '° "" l'llw 221\ 211\ -11~ 1rv1nv pf 82 • __ _:L~E==G~A~L~~N~QT"._'~IC:"'..,,-,,0-:1"---,,cr.Ai:-i;j{imCi,---I' Crutc11 ,. lt'I« 11•.r. M~ GE1 11') "'1 Inv I ')$ Ina 'u 611 B1n9P Pl 1 ' JJ\Jo 3J ll'-'< + \', cnyln o11 11 tlc:o; according to .Professor CYPrts c 10 11 M•rlc en 21•, 21\• l'"d i'"Y ';: 1p '~ Loom1i s1v1es eenk Tr 2 u 11 " se~ H cirv s1r1 •O '' "E'O LEGAL NOTICE John Wogn•" Un•"•-oty of oan1,1 '" 11 21 M• Rllv 10•1 11•,Ancx:1 1• ,•,, C•nao J7•ll74l8erb011 l lst" 11 SS!~5li '\-"•C:lir~E" 1 ,0 PU8LIC HE.\lt!NGS WILL " "";l----------------ll ~• ~,,,. Oanlv M 10 H Millkrl (7YJ .it'h A~Tron I Ceo11 11ll1! ll B6rd CA: 15 10 S2._ 511\ ~t -V. Clerk 011 .40 ~y THE COSTA MESA fl,lNN ING • P'-l42M 1'11chlgan College of Phar· DIYll Fd ll 1l:U. Mvml ol1 '\• s A~,r, H-h1r, 1 lj Mui u 51 u JI CleYC!llf 1 iO COMMISSION 1f llle Clly Hiii 11 Fi1' Cl!!ltTll"l(ATE 01" COllll"Oll•TION macy The SY.Ceteners lo\ler DIY Mir ltV,201/>Mo~vt lJ;')UV, F~~: • .: t4 ~:~~rnFd 1t:~1~:~ ClevEltll ?IM OrlYe Cosio /NM, C•llfor1111 ti ' XI o m FOii! TJIANS•CTION 01' a USINeSS J f th Decor In 11>.l> 12\!t M•n n M :J • :J>,lj S!<;ttk 6 6' 1 30 M•H Otll 11 16 n 15 Clora~ l.lto or it '°°" •t l'Olrotlblt Thl•e1ltet on the II. lSOrjlUOn rate O e Od enc '"" ''~ M Browr kl co s d J 9, M••l Tr 1' t7 16 :Iii Clu e • Ctuenl'te 90 Mon<11v Autus• 21 116• , .. ,u~.o,'o',,',','o~~T,•ooo,•o"•~"o'••T•ON antibiotic oe1111 AP ev. l'rio Md sri1~ ~~ .ll S1bson 141 1'8 Males •I'.,, •1stiaila c1ue11~ ,,,i ~ •_0,00•0 -, •ol..,wl-epollcet1on1 -" "' " Otltl~ (h (J "8 Maver ,.. Blllr Fd t 9S 10 91 M•tMrl 11 "8 11 d C CNA F n ~ " '" "' •.• <IDt• l>freby certify "'"' II Ii eQl'l(luCl!All I • • • Dtl C1nT 161~ llV. MtO~y 1'"' '~ ' 80f>dt1k 6 l6 l II McOon t 20 10 Oii cw• Pl Al JG 1 ll111M1 l"tll!IOll N• ll U-4t. tor Costa butlneu loclltd 11 '-'S Baker COIT• M l I I Ott lllr 21\11 n Medic H 11 19111 Boston St 'SI 10 39 MldA Mu 'l , H (0011 SI Gei M-· '"""I-Comml11lon 11 Ftir 1 anutrt on 1!1 a S<'rlOUS Dev Am 12 ll Medl•n 36 31 0-1~ 1 10 lt6M··"•Co•>•><>" ittSGs p!l lt ·-., , 1 Mew Calllor~I• under l!lt flctltlovt I rm h £ , , .. M , o•• ,,. "' "" 2 '' > -c 1 '22 Drlv• c11111 Mtu ce1 e• , •• ,~,••sTOMMoto1tS•ndlll•lwkl iiroblem v.-11h tcrnag<'rs, t e Dtowev "' •P•• ,.. "Bro10 s1" 2 J Moodv1 1321""' Seeks Bell oc" ~-IHICll'I lo rtlCll'IC 11r0Ptrly oetcrlbttl "' u h d Bulloxk 1' '1!116 31 Morion FVl'IOI .olg Pt! 1 !fl ~""" firm 11 com1111r.et1 of Ille fOll;wlt'lll co< poor, and many 1n I e m1 • !G Fd t os t 11 Grwth , " 10 t5 Co•a P Pl1 50 •~ loll 1S lh•11 11 '""" "M lllru :tt. l•ae• par1Tlofl. wno1e pt\ntlotl pl.Ice ol di I S ,. -o pl• foo l ll<o---·--.. -,------...::: an~dn 11t71' .M lncom , G1 , 39 rourn~ Al~ I ~~ 1;::'•1~1~~· 11~1 :it ~'"",.,,~• ""'1~~111 :i.:::..'°""~i.. inc, 1•s Bik1r toe e~la.;he 11~~Ji'.(.T 'f'Oods For ...,. ... ;w;-.ve:YyJ.ZJ.\ll..,...,.,.., :U ~~ : 1~ J ~ M[~•u~o : ~ ~ fj ~:~l'..,i1° 1 ~ ~ :%. ~! ~~'· ~:J ~1"1;; 51 (OSll Mttll. C1llf t2616 them 1he need for vitamins WE'VE GOT THE ~~~~nf:!:: ~in°J.10 '' M~·~ i~ t~ Pet1·olet1D1 ~:n 1~""'114~ S1116PIH• Drl .. ,, COSll Mt!I C11U WITNE5Sl!oha'ldlM1J3!hd•rolMIY, becomes apparent ANSWER•. B•l•n 11l'01)01Mu Ol'llln 10U111l Cott In 1>11$0 lrvm Al, Gtlllertl A~.!cultu'I lo 111 lf!lt • • • ~~!hSI .. ~ l ~ ~~: ~~ l~ n 1~ H ~:~ .!t'fb ~lnolt F1mllY lte'llMnlltl Kos11 l(~•lom Kin, tnc )-f('rnl!IS are not Til'CT"ssarily lncom 1111 1 S1 NEA Mut 10 ~ lD 41 Coiur.•t 1 ~ ,_ lf•i-Ptllll°" "" 111 u"'' for Cos•• ltoo.ri L w1111 SK TAB WILL ANSWER SH<I 2 1' JM ~·• WSK 10 "11 30 Christiana 0 11 Corp and Bell roluP1r1 i..., ~ •• Pl~~~\': C::.:'1"'r.111 '1 ~:·~ ~6~1\~Fo~AJ-~~~~~iA;, ~~d ':rseul~l~ro:e:~:o;~ or;y YOUR TELEPHONE • • • Chl~~ Gr~~ ~t U ~1 ~!l 1£";~, 1~s!!, '~ ~ Plhetroleum Co 1 has announced ~~5*, ~: Pff"mlt1kln •o re>DM Pr-rtv o~sc:riiw.: bt 0;. 111::.e 136",v:i"' L °' a~!n ~ D No~':r'v one great effort expended WAKE YOU UP Snr»d 1 ss 12 ,, s111n 10 3" 11 XI e s1gn1ng o an agreement in co....1s.o1 Pt oa ~~:11:"'f:c1°'1::0C~1:.,~1;';uE'*\:'~ Pubioc '" ano 1or "'° coun1v •"" s111e when l1fUn~ a \\C'lghty o~ ··• ~~~1 11 "19 1.S B~ !~ ~U pr1nc1ple whereby Chr1sl1ana ~:::::EEdar1~2 s•~t. c11111 Ml!'MI c1111 1com...-1¥ ruidfntl ~rein, ""'¥ commluloMd ind Ject Continued exertion, DELIVER YOUR E,®.," ,~ ]t ,; : Sir"',',"• ,•.~ •'s"' will acqu1re the assets of Bell cf!!!0",.211._1'° knawrt " • Hell~r Pt•k 'l lrot11 112 two 1wt:1•n PPn<>n•lf't a-are<! Robtrl L h h ls <I MESSAGES g h 6 :n I 11 .. t -~ .. M' "" t•mllv rt110..,1111 to 1 1nd 11. 1n111111-w1111 know~ tci,.... to bl! 1111 SKr.:11ry a11 however, w le pu un ue ••• .~~11 631 1t1 !~~T i .= :?l Petroleum Co subject to a 60-::;,1•~rn1 1 1 'Z";;:.1~ ... 11:·:~~:1 ... c1f1c •la" 10• :::,~=:;...., ::.'., e:..ec'::!" <:eoor'*.!~~ !%~1~ ~8;o;~~~~1~~Y a "\~:r~ TAKE 'YOUR ORDERS... ~:;:r:Bd 1:ro'I~ ~~rL w&f~ \ :i ,t1l day evaluation and appraisal ~:;:'~~c1" 1: 111« pr~ exten\IOll o• w"1"'1"11er ~"'" "'"""· inti •ckl'IDwltOll«I "' me nia Jlt uscle stra1ns occur ANO FILL MANY °C"~d'11~ ~dl•'•"•'"•N•"'•" _ "• ,",?~it of Bell's properties ,~,.',',\', •""s A"tl'lye t»twttn E lllft Slrttl IM lh1t wc:h coroorlllon t•t'C\!ltd ~ Wmt 11 t 6' " ·~ s ! If J d Ch lJ K"°• Place c1111e Mtu ce111, •• ~p. in w1""" Whereat 1 NYe Mrt,,nro Ml \\. hrn GbJects, c\cn hi?ht OTHER NEEDS ... ~~~~ , 5~ lS f: ~;:::: ~fa ~~'fl.~ . cone ude , ris l1ana WI ~:;:F~":I: J ~::0~1~v N:rw12,c1n C011ncll u,,.,.• :.~ ~:" .:~ 1:1~1~t~c~;;11-:;:~1~[r:i~·~~ ones, are raised improperly, wl1r;::k,.,9 ? :5 1.-si ~:w1~n1 l~ !i H ~ issue an und1sc\osed number ~""~'~l-!'h~ 7~ • 1-1 Exc1.ilnfl l"•rmll H• lE-12"'t w,111en • • • FOR AS LOW AS win co 1 It ,,",,l Moretti 11 2• 1614 of Christiana common shares c:'.:.twr 1 to •· c "" OF " 11 omo At U ''o 0 •• ()(naon 1 Jl '01 C0<>Pw pf( 50 fer Ex•lorer MDIII• Horn11 °•-•1 l FICtAL • For modrrn ser\.1Ce \\Ith nld. $14 50 omoe1 11 -011'1"1• 1 01 1 n and a new issue of Ser1es A ContAlrL 50 30'/1 NtwooM Blvd Cosll Mn• C1llt 06vla L SroWll f I I d t b • PER MO omci Bd •,/'s ',~ = loo Fd 1• jl IS IJ d B I bl f d Cont cin l 70 1~, 11trml,•lon to OP,,,1~ '" 1u•lll1rv No•arv Pub!!e C•lllornr, as 1 one cou1 t'S)'. ting ~.,," , !' , ,1 1o2. Fw• _, ,•, ~ '•'• •,•, an conver 1 e pre erre cont co"" :io ctl~1rltiw!IGl'I lol !or .... otcr 11omt1 In COi' P"ncl~•I Ottk1 In yoor 1>1 esc1 l11tlon!I to ..... ~.. ... -I Con! co 110 ''"'''~ wlln • otlOllne 1!tllo111n t C? Ortnoe CO\ln!v CALL US NOW FOR oncord lS JIS.ll 1o1~11 1SOl161M Su1res C!Co pfA2'° •• -< C £ 01110! In 1200 12 50 ppn~ 1 S2 121 C 1 1.., r011tC!'or-'1vloc•ttt1e1.,.,.,,Br $lol My omml"lon XP1''1 PARK LIDO PHARMA.EV • on•ij In •S7 4ttPtnn sa 791192 The announcement wa sr:,,,~~lft 11); ~l•efl, COii• M<!1o8 C1lll Mtrcl'I S ltll It I R d INFORMATION ANO oro LO 1• 9J 16 40 Pa Mui I oo I" d I b M F ( c: 1 0 I l so '1-e.(.,n ... Ptrmll ,.. l E Q .. t l'vbll,MO OrtnOI CO.JI 0111¥ Piiot 351 Ho•p I Cll A BROCHURE. nlY C•o ,,IS1l69phll• 1•831 25 ma e101nty y art1n enon,:~1011"' ~ 1or ltand•ll II: McC1rdl1 11'0 H1rbor Av<oYll u, 21 21 '"" September ' N1wport leach 642-1510 rown W 6 11 /2 ~ Pllarlm ftO t 12 J Ch I d I d c Sii 1 81...., cos!• M,11 c11H tor otrm1u1or1 106t 1sn '' .,._11 ~ '"w 111 11 Gl -Pllot n 11• r. rls Lana pres1 en , an ,:;1 T•I n ta11MtCl rontt1PrDIW'rlV torru!0tnll•t frff "9 wery TELEPHONE tVoh M •Jilt~l~p1.,. st 105110'1 R L Packer Bell president control 0111 I SI It 111 EGAL NOTICE -lib !RIMI'! Cll Inc l Pl-• ll Bl t• OI B II p I c C"D•I 11!• so 11uroom eUowlnt'211n •1011 • L ANSW .. ~1ew1t ljN1••lp11»ln~1111129l e etroeum o, accnwadlb 1.,. ti ot !Ind 1rt1 Cont un I oer ll01 I', -~~~=cc====cc=--=="'::; BUR"U ll• lr t2 IM P1let Tl 1l f.5 2l ll I h Id f Cook Unit so 10 fl l II "" p!QI pll"• •"ICl'ltd ll'ld.I NOT ICE 0 1< "tTl!NT ION TO ENOAOe U! ".!~ sr; ! ~~ ~ r, !:,',,,,',","" ",,',' ", N private y e company orm Cooper In 1 ([I mldt 1 o~rt OI lhli tPPlktllGl'I Gl'I pro-G/ G ' 543 2222 f 11 • n .-.,. d I 1 " ' nerlv k>ttl'td II 161 E. 1111'1 Slr111 IH THI ~~Ly.Ee::o~~C:OHOLI(. oomy us IS -~~ ,i,.1~11 ~~;~~·.; F11:.0l111068 e Jn 1922 IS an exp oration =r:~ 120 co,11 Mtw c1111 A·-uit n. Ifft "' OFFlCES TO SERVE 0rt'<lu1 11 SI s 19 Eoun io.11 11 os and production company .,., 1lh ,~•,,•,•, ,':! For lurTM• lnlormllll\fl Oii tne 1bovc v• ~ £!0!\&HowtrO Georci 1• Ol U lJ ~-•~ l'PPllc.alklnl. 1eltP~ w-.12u o• c11t 11 To WllOl't'I II MIY COl'ICo•n ALL OF ORANGE CO. t11n 10110 •,•,•,•, Grtn 1101u10 oil and gas propert 5 1es 1n South, c~,,;,w'"'••"•' -' •-·• -• SublKI Ill !HUii!« Df IM 1letn1r Ill-y K • d G rwtn 1' 11 •··-0 21 s 99 ,,. ::,,,,off~ o~ 7.1r.-l~~j,.:' c~"Mtt~ pl)e<I !or l'llllke It rwr1b¥ t 1Vfn .,. •• 1!11 our '" 0 uy 1~ ,i~~ ,l J~ ~f.Fii 1~ ~ 1: ~ Cuyama and anta Fe ~:w~n .. 50.n c1111ornr~ \IN:ltl"llttttO ..._ 10 •ell •lo:tl>ollc ~1oc11 u ll 1 4• vov•a 1 ~' l '1 Springs, Calif. southeastern C11•llOc1t so COST• ME$A PL..,NNINC. btvtrntt •I Ille prtml'"' cttsttlbed l$l;;:;;<;;;<;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;:>,t;i:;~l1bf'<1I lJ U" «I Rt11 T.ell • tJ Jt N T Cl'C Intl t 10 coMMtS5!0H 11111ow1 orlt 1\ IM '' u cte~e·~ 1' '' 11 ift ew Mexico and exes Crent 1 60tl lolAT£ READE CH..,lllMAN lf30.3'1'11CM1111AYl....,.,C0.11 Mt11 •"*******"***'•tl:lt•fl:ltlt•fl:fl:t••fl:fl:lt*llt***'*........... mra k 66 ll11tl!fn11'1 110 186 Cn:wnplC~ !IO h ~Hon !M ""1t¥ llfll/ll'in>,,.,, l••ll6:U CrouseHll!d I Pyblll~~ff~ ~ot .. ~~~,:·~:~y ·:~ :rr=:!· li= C~I~ l~I~~= YOUR p ROB LEM. :m~~lh ,1. a 1: fi ~'7'n¥F~~; li ~; 1\1 cC~11·d I e Set ~~E~:~~t· " IU'I I• Ifft UU-M 811 orltillll IPPll<ttlOl'I OI ... •kW>olk • n•• ~ ~' 11•1 1i~ H li8 c z II l ~ lwYtttM l!tens.t for lhtH artml1et" FYtfSI Ill 1•11 2' 0 Com St 106t1G•t F R T lk c""nz'•< IOllowl You w•nt to 1111 somt Item J~Dlor 7'1$ 'I ~ Olv 11 IO'll,.... 01· eno a (~Coro Cl LEGAL NOTICE New o...s.~ 11--h 1 db "::~ sv :gn11r, Stt eo1111 ,s, in ~uott1v ce ., •• 0 ••• ' •• U.'.'.o Anl'Oll!! Mtlrl1111 to orotnt 1111 1u11~nc' t at you no ongtr nff ut Ftd ~''" 10•, .! ,•,• ~. te1ee1"Al'll : ;~ 11'61 Randall R l\1cCardle will be ,, .. ,,,,',,"'•'•' 11 W(ll 11e_.. M1v ""' • wr111..::1 Prot111 tomeone el.. un UP for i'I! ~.;g 16 ;; 11 6, ~81 ~ ... cs ,. "' 16 31 h k f c , ., SCHOOL 011T111c:1 w1111 111v on1ce ot tne D.,,.r1mt111 o1 Iii , 2,u,.ns» Dein "''"•'•'• t e key note spea er or the ,~,,().~, 10 Noll« t"yfli.., ·~· Akol'>ollc ll1~··•1t COll!rol wllt " XI N 0 T 0 v E R $ 5 0 ,. 5 o~ • ~\ 1 N d A I r NOl 1CE 15 i'<ERESV GIVE N 11'11! ""' d•n of "" Clll• ~ pr°"°"" p.romlPI ~~I ·~ I " 11om1 ' " 10 ,, eva a s s 0 c I a l 0 n 0 ~~~11~';'."''l i Bo.iir a of Ed11<1!lon "' '"' Ntw_.,.,,.,, .. ,..,, 11r11 POttea. 11111,,. 1r1111nd1 ""t 1nc1u11 • u •" l<i 1nv 11 '1 11 .,. Realtor s annual convention in CYller H 1 20 un111~ Sthool Ol•"k'I ot o,.nee Cou~IY dinltl ~· oroYlclftl IW law Tiit •rtml1tt • ? ? ? ? ? ? ·~-'H •n Smlltl 11 t2! 915 (Y(I0111 1 IO c:110.,.,,1e win •ec11w Mtled ll!cl1 11P !a •r• -t l\Gw 11c.,.,e<1 tor 1n• s•I~ o1 , • • '"i' I s • 11 ~w 1"~"1 I 11 '<1 Reoo this September . CY1>ruiM 1 40 ' -•A 1 !'61 '"' ~ O • • !'I O Gth 10 U Sowt 1"¥ H 01 IS.Joi 11 oo • M on"'" 2 ""Oil'"' ut1u• 11co11o11c btvr""" '"" form o1 v1r111c1 1 n51k 1 '1 '3> ~•Frm r;1 •n ~ n McCardle !i s""ec h ts enl1tled, et •~• oltlc• ol 1110 lcno,1Ol•trlcl1lonmtvbe~11ntt11•om1~Yciltl~tot YOUR ANSWER i!Mulll t20t3•51~1~ sr '8S04t00 1'~ D 111 lol:•1t11 •• 11J7 P!1c~t14 Av•nue C.0111 ~ l>tPe•-• •, '\ N•I 1 31 1 aJ S!••Om•n Fv""• ' You Don t I la\ e to Gamble to D:~. c: : ,~, M•,.o t •ll!Gt"I• .of whl(~ llme ••ld bit!' l"•r.I'°" S P1.,Ymln ~ Sier 13' il!I () 1-1 Am Ind 10 61 lj .. .. ,11 1io ru1:>11c1y -""<I'"" •Nd !ar Pijb!!'h" O••no• c"'' c,11, Piiot, I l:l .co 7.ll F•duc 116 _., be a W1nn1ng Realtor 8:~ I: 11~ Auo10 v1suAL •uPPLIES Allflu•t '" '"' 151'4t You call THE DAIL y Pl LOT' a1k for i • j•;:> i' 11, '•so s1~~tn 11()1 •::. 'N Randall McCl!rdle Is R col O•YcoCp 1 u ..... No EQUIPMENT lld "' " 111 ,.~1 2001 N~1 1 r h DAI LY PILOT &!J'~PL 1 60 "" l)ld1 •r• •o bf 1" •(co<d•nc. "'"~ • Cl111tfled Advertislnn, and place 1 Oii '"' !', •'•''° c ... O• 1, ,.1 "s1 umn1s or t e L o10 , • (ontllflo!I\ IO'lf.T!'UCT!on~ Ind !>oKlllu!lortt • FOllft'j l ~ _,. 5TO<;k I~~ 13 ,, r1 Co ' ..i.1cn ''' now on fill tn T»t glll« vi' !hf I Fr4flk 111 G•~! l '0 $vp 1..0! 1., 1 )I D~lmerP 1 OI 1>urtnt11"' AO<!l'll ot 11\tl S<toool Doilrl<t F E PILOT %mc51 ll'.541110 ~u~'"'' ~~ t9• f &:ii:."'111t''D ~1'11o<:1~""111 ... ~ ...... Cosl• Mew ~irm nters v~ \\T~H'WA~· ::~p ~~ Mar ~et °'~~~""';'~ tltd'I DIOoler "'"''' wbM!! • btd -··I • , .... = .. r ;o 111r ~m!:a 111i : c "'ir.'", ~ 1111i.e term DI• (UllflN M c1111+.r\ ENNY it f 's ll'dt, 100 t1p 20lo ~ or 1 ftltl bond f'IW•I "' lfvt ""' ""'' 1 p R1r.: SK \j •• 10 '' •• 1 , s L l ~111 r I 18 tt'•I flf 11111 -~I OI "" bid m-nsw•ance ti ! G<'::''' IC ' 4 12-11 ;:::ot1 ri.~ ,, $s y11auo s "':: :t ~ .. ,"'* "fllt ordft OI ~ f'I~ ~ • ;;: Atrl ~ fj t l'f lowr Mft "'lv•ll !Edll I .0 ~~~~~~t ~ :"iZ;,'k,,.,~ ; PINCHER : ~Ad 1 1:1' Pr:: i~0 '~ 1i ~ In The "'lloWI"' -i.• 1 •" " 1Ymtiott llltd 1 E5~.::s: .. Dll"lc:t In ~ • ....,, DI l1llU"1 lo 1 ·-I I • ~rlll llld t "! Tllllor Fd U » 1711 11'11 •IOCll 11\ilktf ""°""' tll-f •Tit 2, A \Va\ker & ~ nc , rea . r..an11 1!1Jl' Twn<: (:t 1 7/ lfl "'" 0 IF! ... """" """ _., COii!•~! lflf .,.°""* GI v•rdll H lltl 25 T....C: Int 4,M s 09 SllH 119ur., lfl t.onoflkltL 0 1 ntn -CNCt: wm M ""1f111c1 o-111 C111 111 • estate Orm headquartered In •£ CLASSIFIED AD 1><1m111011 un' Mui • v 10 1J -...11a •••r1 0t ••tr11 D-olll\llllll aa 1s.:;,:! \ : ..,.. "" "'11 "'"' """'"' wm II!! Orange County hos opened i HFI • n ! t• u111fd • ,3 101 ff! l'Nll• •IVI •lodl' "'"'"'"'°'"• -Peci.""' I' • \' - • ·~1111 •·~• Dlllrla el OrtftM GTl'I I~ t :If Un tetl ¢11r>111 or Pl "" Ill' Tl'llt v11r 4t~lblt t D --E'"'°"" I l' ' 46 4«1"11 t U i.01 lf'Ock d11rlnt I .... ntlm11tt1, r111 tkll 1 ~ ~ "';::"' _,...,. ........ •tt-... ~1• w 'or , Walker & Lee lnsurance. Inc . i AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE 1•tior 1-u 'll I0¥'0t'f'I ,, ,_, 1 ,1 1roo arjlOlllll ~s.r,:, ,_, c1111..,. • 111 .- ,.,... .r i.r"'°""'' Cd! a.,, 1n*' 111t I wholly~wned, 1ndtpendent ~w~•v lf :f I u~1'i1111 ~~ ltf :_,.e:J';.~"''rttt:g:r1~"°"or ~ DI§!:°' ::I .,_ '"" "" 11'11 -Int ""'""' '"· doBN which will ,.....rate 3 2 2 • GO> J ~ ! ,..,. \'"' '" llt\'r 1todl .r1 or u111 Ill " T""' ...,..., l!"tM::1tlon II Ille N--1 :SUu.~I .,. ... _ LINES TI MES D 0 LL AR S • tdoe ' 1 ... V•l Lii ID 1 1' --Otc:l~rt<I or " lhh vur. " IC' :.O~ ~ ~ ~ 011•riet rtWM1 out of the eompany'a ad· • t r11a1 • l ls l...:Of" s 1• s~· tlll!'lulellYI' !nu. ""' div~• ~ _,., _,. rlifllf '-~ '"' or 1H llldl •1111 n111 i M•1111 1~ I 1 ' Sal ill 111 11n reer. _,11<1 thlt •«r dlYlcl oml!m ',.":: ... , " _...,.,, t«Nt-.._1 bid._"' m1n1stration buUd1ng at 1447 AND YOUR CREDIT 15 GOOD 1 sl ~J: ~~ I H~:,;~bl•P• ~~ :!z~':ttn;11111,~1o1!=':r~ ·~1\.. M11 • .... -...,,_H,., or IHftUltrllJ Ill Maochester Blvd,, Anjhe1m. ' ri ':~ 1: IS VllntO 1 '/f' l,"' ~ ·~ •Yltttnd,_ t-l"t•lblt ·~ f .... l~ ....... rflCek'tll. Frank R. Jtart. chalrman or D I A L N 0 w D I R E c T ! ::::: R'.,~ 11 ... I z;l~~:1..!lldP : n }f, :r-YICl17.-J":r e:!i:i::Ltr: =~ u·~ !c C11 .32 w "~'=SA ll~IFl(O tht board of Walker & Lee. 4 11: Fd1 , fri1~1I ~~o~i~ 1l !; 1~ ~ 'llU,'!_i~'l:, 0:~ r ~~YT< .. KHOCIL o11"1'•tet d Ge F 1111 2 6 7 8 It ~~ ,• t l~t1 wwi MY n ll u" ckl-~1""" •~-1!• f lvldtlftl '"''-I!• hllf ~~ ~ c=:;.. ~ C.HllM"l'll• .name orge 1 N 6 4 • S • l~!'r:M It! It."~· 01,, , .. 11~~11 d111r!b<lllGfl. •t-1!• r111111 ~•-WT!hollt :::;c,,: 1 •o "'*""'•• ,_.,,, ptesidentofthenewcompany ; 11s l5l1t ltl •iw~• •~d Tn 1tn=:'~1 1 --will'! .. ._r,'"J• »•e•n Ml-ri.f HUI owned and optrattd Ole f T.U "" Nd C.•11ty 140-1 2101 It ~= s~ I " 111 !I ~~I,.:;~ u ~~ .... II • d1~f.!l:i'~~~~~uet-.,.g; :"~! o,.: ,........ ...... '-"ft ~Pf Plitt Hill '-· A _. nv IMli: l .i I :i'f 1• nl •111 j 1' !•)1 ort•nlntl ulldff T!'I• &an1t.t11.iey A.d; ar nl',111 ot - 11 ~ 1.wf IWlur&DCt gene)', ........... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......................... ~unlosl n OJWl~COll O!' '"'w"'n"'""--W•rrl(!fteo!Mlnl.,., ,0r.neo. """"'"• Grouo Worfll Al l.Jf "'"' a.IOI ' I I I "'~' ft I llf1 ~IN,~t ~J "" t.r::tlf ~I T~.T 1.:f t11ttt ••• l11rT T lltH • Irr "'r •·'9 "'!f,T ~~ 4 In 'AT 1113-l11'tf pl' IM Ut i~1. ~~Ct Al '"I'"' " I•• O~!r 60 ._ 111t1n Pw u OWi l!ff llEl lP 1~ ,, '1' • ICIWIP l I 60 low1 1> v I )2 bc;o l4Gsp .JO ITE mp ~ I~ C!lfl IT$• PUlO J1ckinAl1 11 JK~AI '4 4(1 .. _.:It J1~11F 4"' Jllllfl 1111 .,. ;, I PllO IO Jtl'MniA .50 J1 ... 1 Lo l loo> ~ ~w~f11p("f JtlhnM111 IM John.Jhn IOI Jall<t!o ~·c w JonLoe111 110 J-L•u I U .10 ... u.1.. pt s .lort1ni11 1 lO J ot1111t 60 JOY Mii I 60 l<t l11r A1 1 Ktl1 .. .,u IS Ktl 1,151112 31 ''I' ~ e Kl •C oft SO ICtllC p1J JI 1(111 CPL I '2 KC SOii pl 1 K111 GE t 3' K1111"wL I 11 1C11v ne1 K1ul B d tol atwlhr •at IYllrlto 60 'I'" I" 1(1 IOlll 60 l<tlttv I )ll Ktnnmtt IG '!"neon 2 60 I( CllltKY 10 KFCI! Ot 10 Kv Ut I I ... Kerr M< so KtY• Con n 1 K dlleCo I 6$1 K mbCll< l:IO K "9•0St .O K 11~yNS IS I( ..... pll)w KLM A I IOll KOe11rlt111 t J!'.ot~ 1112 II ~~~· 1 lf IC t•oeSSt'd KrOfh t r K ocer 1 lib E tc on l tc G•1 I JO l•m1n S•n I l1n1lrY 1 20 l1nv A. !1 60 t:~.orr~ u ttlSCO DI I e11 D 1>1210 Lttse....,. 511b lHlhNor SO LH1on1 «I LthPCtm 60 tth VII lnd t~mn 1.J4o Leoni dS •O l r•t l"d Cao ti~·~~M~, lb Fro 2IO 'I F "'' 15 l McH L 'l""t" " L r n 1 fll l ~Ln plJ 2.5 C\oo My 1 ~ t 00 My I" loMv pl 21 no Tl/ I/> L nQJ.A 2 L no TVol$ L OM Coro t11:~ ! r,p, l on Cvol J LI on pl 82 l v n<11ln O I Loc~hdA I ?O LotWtTht 11 '-!~. LO"t Ctm 1 l -Gl l? lall Il l I JO Lor• Corp t:..L~1h1 :: L0Mn1ln to Lutw'lrol 60 t::f~ l :f Lulltns Sii 1 l v•Ynl llt LvkYt 1111 » ~--'P' ... ----·--·----.... Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stocks End Lower; T1·ading Moderate NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks finished tower to- day, although most groups bounced orr the floor in the flnaJ hour Trading was moderate Analysts noted that bargain hunters Jumped 1n at tile lower levels but there still appeared to be no great incentive to buy • New pressure on the Bntlsh pound coming on the heels of recent devaluallon of the franc the break 1n the fighting lull in Vietnam and economic uncertainties at home were among the ma1or bearish influences The UPI marketw1de 1nd1cator \Vas off 0 33 per cent on l 523 issues on the tape There \vere 769 de- chnes and 494 advances 1 he Dow Jones average of blue' chip 1ndus•nals showed a loss of 3 96 at 809 00 near the close Volume approximated 9 6 mtlllon shares up more than 2 null1on shares from Tue sday .. Among the most active issues were Amerada Hess 1n whi ch trading was halted at one point be- cause of an influx of orders Roan Selection Trust Benguet Natomas and Rad1ng & Bates An Amer ada spokesman said he know of no reason for the stock s beha vior Natomas and Reading & Bates are engaged tn offshore Indonesian od exploration J\1otors \vere 1n retreat much of the Most of the indu stry reported a slowdown August auto1noblle sales session In early ·- Stock' Exchange List 5w fl C:. llO lwr .. 11111 .o SvlltonC.o .60 Tttl 9rd Ml T1lt0n Nit I ,, It~ 11'4 l~'c." K""•1"f• ! ... , °"' .. I .c!Ynl 11.0• a\'~ t n ... (O Ttnfl9t 011 t1•1to n Ml l::S11 I: ::81~r'1 so ..... lllCl,b "§! "" r. '" G1 l h LG4t ',1xU I ... ... '°" '° ''""" itl2 ill r, .. ,,n p1 «I Tl'llokcl .io l !\Omlt! 1 t4 '"°"" 11'11:1 '° ThrlltvDr M l lN n ltt.i !"""'" .lO Tmk •I IM '"'" .. J6 J~~Pk'~ t r1n1 Co M Tr1~Un 1.11 Tr nWAlr Jiit 1rnWA • JJf 1 tr1nWF ttt 1r1~1mr '4lb Tr1n~ pU SO T 1n1cOt1 A Tr•ntU on T IV91Ht ... ~ rc-:,s ,-:o: Tt COi' oft.SO flnl ~l .. 0 TRW ncl TA.W ~ 4 $41 Tll W •U 40 l S( 1>11 6~ TSC Incl ... 10 Tucsn GE' •• Tw111 Ctn! 1 UAl hit 1 UAJICO 1 VG C~ 110 UM( 1nd h U~• (O ~O U~ LIO Alt Uni! NV 1'11 Un Cuna l U11C1r~dt 2 ~~0~~"'f70 '" 'I ''l ~ UnE of50 UnO IC1! 1 ~ UOC•I on.JO Un Pie Co 1 Unl011P1c1• > UnP~ D to "l°"'fl'I 1 "° Un oYI 10 Un roy1I ol • Ainerica11 Stoel{ Exchange List The Or1ng• CoHI • Most Compl1te PRINTING SERVICE Phone 642 -4321 l§ME%§61i!E ' ----..... . --·· ·---. '• ..... ·-----·--.. ,. .... .-~ - I_~ OlllY PILOT Thursday, AUQust 14, 1961J ;Man y '-3.S. Subs Have Multiple Warhe·ads·.1=~~~~~i~~ ::s:~J~1!~!:.~~= ! C111fon\Le, will rtal ... Mlllid bldt I.IP '9 NOTICI O" MIAIUNO 01' l'ITITIOM WASHINGTON (AP) ;Twenty~l of the nation'• subm&r!nes already h 1 v e ;m.i&siles capable of carrying ·three warheads each, Pen· ·lagoo '°"""' reporl , Witb 18 missiles aboard -each sub, this means two- 1 ~rds of the Polaris fleet [could attack an enem'y wilh • J,Sf4 warheads -that is more ~Uwt the t,054 land·based : Minuteman mi.s.siles. ; Key members of con-r tresaional coqtmittees h I V e ~bown about the multiheaded :.Uture of the Polaris A3 Cmi.uile for years and it has military circl'1. But aome critics of the Pen· tagon miiy choose now to use the A3 as an argument against the administration's proposal fer a new generation of weapons called MIRV multiple Jndivldually targeted re-entry vehicle!. Dr. John S. Foster Jr., the Pentagon's chief scientist, of. ficiaUy confirmed before a Congressional committee, that the A3 carries more than one bomb. He did not say how many. TEW CONTRAST Foster contrasted .. C. been a rat}Jer open secret in MRV multiple the A3's rHntry ~ • 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 lo 9 SATURDAY 9 lo 5:30 SUNDAY 10 lo 5:00 - EITU'IAllUllllT CEm Venus MEDICINE CABINET -.. . -:'\ 0 St•i~l111 1f••I c:1bi"•I i1 •-• ~ 1~ \iy Dur1d1•'-..--1~,f'~~.·~,9;=,;;='=··=· ';:;;·~:~ l O F,1+~''' top f \ li9tit.d c:ebi"''· ' 0 C <1n¥1ni111f el1etric1I outlet ind co1m•tic th1lYe1 loo. ' • l ____ _, 1088 DELTA FAUCET Your cholc1, 1i"9 l1 h1ndl1, 1wiv•l 11,o ul for !titc h1" or d1ort 1poul for beth. l•1h di99i"9 • wel 1nyd1y. ; 1299 ----~ ·~·· ·----· ---.~ FLUIDMASTER BALLCOCK 0 f ih low-boy or '''"d1rd unit, 0 St1inl1u 1l11l 1111if '"d1 toil•! 1q11•1I 111d dri p. 0 Corro1ion prpof, in1!111t 1hut off, •••Y in.+1ll•fion. 299 3-3V2•4 INCH ~Nylon Brushes -, O Come lo Jlim1'1 ind 91l th1 bru1h. 0 Or 91! 11Y•r1I ind do Ill• job 1i9ht. 0 Or for91I the wh.,11 1h;n9 ind i111t p1i"I th• town r11d. 77' ' u.. SAW HORSE BRACKETS 0 Hon1 $11111, jull 1noth11r 1•1mpl1 of 1t1bl• thin•in9. I A•1191\.l 0 l 11ck1ts h••• d1sl9111d for the wor••"· 0 U1• fot <•rp1nlry, uphot111,..,. or 111••in9 • quick pic:11ic: t1bl1. vehicles -with today's new MIRV by indicating the MRV system bas very 1 i t t I e guidance capability. MRV can hurl warheads in a pattern to one target; M1RV can send bombs to largest separated by hundreds ol miles. Footer 1aid the United Stat· es turned to development of the MRV system and other missile penetration aids such as dummy warheads early in this decade to counter poten- tial Soviet missile derenses. "Since the earlf 1960s when it became evident that the Soviets were developing ABM (antlbaJIJ.11tJc missile} technology and appearl!d to be fielding an ABM, we have deployed both types o f penetration aids on our opera~ tlonal missiles," he told the J1oust; Foreign Affa irs sub- committee on national securi~ ty policy andscien,lfie development. "Multiple re-entry vehicles are deployed on the existing Polaris .A3." NEW INTERCEPTOR Fosler said the United States received indications in' 1964 that the Soviets were deploying a powerful new missile interceptor, ca I I e d Galosh, around Moscow. He said it sppeared to tarry a multiple-megaton w a r h e a d and "raised the possibility that one defensive explosive burst could destroy" an In~ coming cluster ol A 3 warheads. Defending the newer MffiV concept, Foster declared : "We need a more reliable method of delivering our deception devices and our warh~ds. We need, essen- tially, lo be able to spread them out in space so that one Soviet defensive nuclear burst cannot desiroy is e v e r a 1 American warheads or a whole cloud of decoys." 3:00 1,m •• F,16t1. Alltlllll n. 1Kt, II the t'Ol PllO•ATI 0" WILL ANO POii F le Id It d lded "ul'CM$1ftot Dul, at Mkl ldlool Oillr!ct LITTERS TISTAMIENTAIV OS r aa was ec loc.itd ., 21111 Ftlrvt1w ll:DICI, COii• ''""' of ETHEL """VEltOIE MU ELLE•. lhat production ol MIRV nose MtM, C.Ht.mle, II ~l(h Hmt .. Id b~ l l!IO known •• ETHEL v. MUE,L~E.•,· CO••• f Air F wlll be 111tblkf\f .eMd eno1 l'ffd tw: Ill 11111 k,,_., 11 ETHEL MU L" • '"""' or or c e P11~ .. d c111d!~ F-.ci"" ~ s..t. DecNsH. Minuteman and Navy '· ,,.. ""'-" J-.. 1t71, •Ml Ul NOTICE 1$ HEllElY GIVEN T"'-I • llfftlll ol Ufllfonm fw Mal11i-/lal ...., Har,.., EGw1rd Muillltt' Plat fl!N ~" I Poseidon missiles would be C11S!Odl111 p,,_, "°' period s.~ 11et!tlon tor lll'OINll• o1 wm 1nc1 IOI" less provocative to the Sovlelt 1, "" '",_" J-:io. 1110. ...... nc• o1 L11t1r1 TK11men1tl"I' "' P1t1• All bldt 1,1 t. bl tn aec.ordaftU wit!\ lj.ontr, ral•,.nm to Wllld1 11 made t<>r than the more easily detected "" l&UtrvctlGrli •fld CIW!OIU!oM ar.cr ""~ o•rt1<11i.rs. trld 111111 tr. time .,,., production ol single missile ~'~:i1c11"'-. ttie no!tt:_ fl: ~ :C~:.S~~'.~ .. ~ ,!';;"'JO~ 111~ ::.! launchers. Pllrdl .. 1,.. """' of Mkl tct1oo1 dlllflct. court..-n of OeNrtmerit No. ' o1 wld Ea<ll llldcMr m111t 1ubmll wllll Ilk; 1'ltl • coutt, " 70CI Wnl Elolllll Strffl, In Ille SPLl'M'ING PAYLOAD u.tllft"'1 ctiU. (Mlllt<I cllfck. or bid-(llY of $anti AM, C1lllornl1. H Id th I "By li "-...... bond '"'* pay.bl• to Ille order ol' O•lld AUilUll 11, lffl. e sa a sp luug up r h 1 0r.._, ca.it J11nlor eon,,. D1$1rl(t w. E, ST JOHN, counl'I' Clerk. the payload of the Minutemao Botrd of Tni.1tM1 111 .ii _, not ~ Mllf"Wlti., Hvrwlt1 & ft•mw, and P I • I ... " flft .. r"C:ilfll (,..,) of 1M _,, bid II 4Jf • #!Id llrfff o ans boosters into • 1u.rant" ll\iot 1t1e bidder will ...,ter 1n111 "--" '''~"' c1M'9n>i• several MIRV's we neces !-"'* .,__ C0111rac.1 " 111e -i. "'-1= crui •n.to1 • ' sar ,WI~ 19 Mm In tn. 1v1nl ol f•ll11r1 to Alt11'""¥• for P .. lllo119r ly lose a substantial portion of enter 1n1o wch' ~1r1ct, I~• orocffell ot P11bllsllt4 0..1noe CN$I D•llv Piiot, the total megatoonage of our 111e CllKk wm 111 tori.r11G. or 1n tt1t c•M A1111u11 1J, u, )II, 1m 1505-.19 • al 1 bond, Ille full wm tlllreof Wlll bl deterrent nu.sslle forces and a forftt1ec1 '° .. kl octioo1 dhtrJct. LEGAL NOTICE substantial portion of the-'t..~fof~.;1,:1~1·~.~! ~":.:o'n-!:1-------------- nuclear power that can be ~"' Mt tor Ille _ .. lflll ltlel'"tol. NO'"' OF 1j~~ENTIOM TO d II -~ b ~ boost Th I llofrd ol' Trusltt1 resatvt$ I ht e Ve1~ y ea •• u er. orlvllefl• of rtlKtlno 1nr •ttd •II bld1 or ClllEATI! SECURITY IMTl.ReST to w1lv• •nY 1r,.911l••!lln or 1,... '*'· u11-.101 U.C.C.J tonntlnl" In •nY bid or In lhe blcldl"'. NOTICE 11 Mrtb~ olvefl to h Price, lltntu tnd Ql/tHl'I' bel"" _..u1I, C,...,ltor1 ol KASi'AR J. KINOSIAN and ~n« Wiii be •Iv'" to fP11 ira;tl/dt; CAROL KINOSIAN, o.bror1. whose ••OWn. ~KNrld, or producM lfl Ille bllllna• 116drHI II 1.t(I'! N~ Cetll!r $111• of C1llto•nl1. Drive, N-rl !lucll, COlllll'I' ol Or1nge, All m11trl111 o•OYldld ffi•-11 lhl1 bkl Stilt l)f C•t!lornl1, Ill.II • HCU•ll'I' 1 ... shill C!lfl'IPIY wlltl GoV9rnmenf Code Sec· ,.,.,,, !1 1boul 10 be crea!ed bV Oeblor llOll• '300-005 l1'1Clllslve. Ind or1nltd II> LAD DRUG co .. Sl<ll•Plf AND DON'T SLAM THE DOOR, JIM 51,nttl: NORMAN E. WATSON, P1rty, wllow bllllMn 1ddrtft 11 loll SKl'I' .. &Nnt o1 Tru1~ So<.oltl E11! S!rtet. AllM>tlm, Counl'I' of P'ublltM4 Ori"" Coast Dilly Plhll, Ori~. St11t ol C1trlo<"l1. A119111f 7, 1~. lfft H~t TM prOPtrlY In which the Security lnltrn! will be er'''" II, In o....,•11, ell m•r~ll•ndlse. flxturf'J ahd eoulp~t, ""'"'°_LcE,,,-G_AL-,,,~NCO~T-,IC'°'E""°"'7.0 I r11rnllur• ind 111rnllhl~o1 o1 Debtor CJ:JVI!':· ~ 1.., P>"OPer"iY•llllW Ioctl~ el 1"°2 NewPOrf 011' P'UILIC MI! A ft I NG Cen1..-Or., NeWPOrl Bt1tll, Counl'I' ol Rl!O.ARDINO f' ET IT 1 0 Jf FOR Orin~e. $lilt ot C1llklrnl1, Ind bl/1lnt11 TltANSl'l!ll 01' TERRITORY FROM known 111 NEWPORT CoE NT E It , SADDLEIACK JUNIOR COLLl!OE TO PHARMACY. OlltANOI! COAST JUNIOlll (OllEOI! The 1fornald iecurll'I' trans•cllon wl!I TO : Bo.lrd ot Educ11llon, Sldclleback ti. co"s11m,..~•ed..,,., or 11ftor the 1Slh d11Y Ju"lor ColllOi! Ol$lrlct ot Auvr.I, 196f, 1t 10:00 A.M. at Rlc ... rd TO: lloard ot Ed11C11ion, O••noe CNJI E. WY''· •osc w11.i.1re 81...d., Sulll ,u, Jun'°' Collwl Dltlr!ct Los AnO~e1, Cillk1r"I• 9000s In 11111111-'TO: All H<.IOlll. rHkllnw Ill ••Id $dl001 rntnll. Ol11Tlcfl $o lar 11 k"'Own to Ille SacurN P1r!Y, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ll>e ~II bll$lntu namH 11nd addres~ 1111!'d bV toY••nlno bo•nl• ol' Ille $1ddl1back Jvnl<* th1 ~for lor ll'le three vr11rs l1st put, Collto• Scllool 0!1trlct •nd Or11111e Coast 1r11: sarnt, klCKR..ATE Ad¥11rti111d 1p1d1l1 good thru A119 u1t 20, 1969 •nd H1ppv b irthd1y Tom Yo11n9 (our 9old•n h1ir, bl111 1y1d, Viking cu1lom1r who'• Ylry bi9 in th• bik1 d•p1rtm1nt.I ' 31x19 PREFINISHED PULLMAN UNIT I r 0 V•ry f1ncv d1•I w ith f ull width m1rbl11 lop, chtom1 f1ucel. 0 Compl1t1ly f i"hh•d, j111t g lide into pltc•. 0 S11 our di1pl1y, 1U color1 ind 1i111 1110 in 1loclt. l ~ ' t 8988 BLACK & DECKER CIRCULAR SAW r-· I~ I Th1 b11I p1ic1 vet"" 1" 111 1round 91n1r1I purpo11 11w, I HP motor. 1af1tv •pproY1d for both 7 V• i nd 6 '/i inch b l1d11. 2411 BUCK OFF •• scons COPE PLUS 0 Cov1ri li,000 Sq. ft., u11 o" 1ny lawn. 0 U11 •"Y time of the y11t wh111 "''did. D G iv•1 full f11d in9 •nd 'onlrol1 11wn in11ch, REG. 6.95 595 scons TURF BUILDER 0 U11 to f•rllli11 d icho"dr1 or 9r1u l•wnt 1nylim11 of y11r. D Prolon9•d f11din9 •••~Pl l1wn1 9r11n1r lon91 r, 0 Cl•1"" li9ht In w1i9ht, odor-lr1•, w11d-fr11. COVERS S,000 s9. FT. • 5•5 McLANE POWER EDGER [ TRIMMER I I • D M1d1 loc11ly rn b1111tlf11I Compton ~y th1 Fr•1w1v. O A pow11hou11 of 1ct!wil'f th1t'lt prob.bly outlt1t your ltwn. 0 Sh1rp 1d91r conv1rh In ••conch to trl1111111r. 7495 SILENT ALUMINUM SCREEN D~OR WITH PNEUMATIC CLOSER H•r1'1 th1 whol1 work1 f.,, 11111 th•n m1ny ,,11 j111! t,h1 door for. 0 Pop11l1r di•mond 9rill1 d11i911 l1 d11cor1tiY1 ind m•••• •ttr1cliYe •ddition to l"Y home. 0 IM1, I'd r1th•t h1v1 I mo1t •nd dr1wbrid9•.I 77 l 0-32 -36 INCH WIDTHS MEDITERRANEAN LITE ·'' • ' ' l lt'1 r••llv Engli1h b ut if too• m e 2 ye111 lo !11rn how to 1p1ll M.dit1rr1n1t11 '"d I'm not quitting 11ow. Choice of whil1, g tt•n, •mber, or r11by. I Ntkf I'll l11rn if Riv1r1 ht1 111 "i" or not.l 1288 M1k11 1ir1i9hl, curved, or irre9ul1r cuts i" •nv type pf m•+1ri1I. l ik11 wood, 1111!11, pl11lic, or c<1mpo1ilion bo1ri:l. 1499 Sow w ith thii ind in j111i II d1y1 you'll h1¥1 1 d11tli"9 blu1-gr11n l1wn. Or 1 sodden men if you l11Y1 th1 wtl1r r11nning O¥l lni9h!, 49~u. 20 INCH ROTARY ·MOWIR 0 "'" economy mowtr with q 1111ity f11f11r1t. ·D 3 HP 1n9int with r1eoil 1t1rl1r, h11vy d11ty fubul1r 1t11l h1ndl1 with r1mot1 confroh, 0 New 20 inth h11¥y d uty 14 91u'!• 1f111I ch11i1. llt.ty one, If vot.t move lo 1n 1p1rlment, vou c1n 1lw1y1 c:o"v1rl it lo 1 mini b i•1.I 88 J11nlor Coll•• School Df1trlct arid •ti DATEO: A1111u11 6, 1%9. Hnoni rHklh111 In Uh:! Khoo! dl1trlclS LAO DRUG CO. ll'ltt, PVrw"" lo Ed11e1lion Code 5.Kllon1 $oK1/t" P•r!Y 231'0, 1 oelllion rtc1U1tl1"9 lilt 8¥ Rkhlrd E. Mever Ir•,,.,.,. of Nrrltory, ,,_., 111rT!~1Ar/y Ifs Attorney llerelnal!er dncrlbed, from Ille Sad· Rlcll•" E, MtW11' dtlOKll. Ju"lor Colin• Scllool Db!rlct ol 1tJO Wllshl,. aou11v1r4 Ora119e Counlv to Ille 0!'11n11e Coall Jurilor <••lit 11' Coll-kllool Olll•lcl ol Or11111e County. Los A"teltt, C:1llfornl1 fOOIS 11 bttfl fllod In 111!1 0Hlc1 ..,. ,..,., uld PubllSMd or1nee Co11tr ~llv Piiot, Hfltion 11 •ltl"" trr 11 lt•11I twenl'f·U""' Aueusr 11, 1'6t l"""'t "'' (t.S~I of ~ ret1l1tered electors --------------re'1dl"9 lfl Ille lerr!t1lr¥ 1>roooted to Ill 1r1n1ftrf"ed r,, O••flG• Co11""'· LEGAL NOTICE ·- Thl1 oellll"" tor 1r11n1ltr ot terrltorYl---------·-----dtscrlbas Mid territory 11 folloW$: ... ,..Jlf Comment:lfll 11 ll'lt l+tll'lhtrty c.orner CERTl,tCATE OF aUSINESS of u ld lllock 91, tl>ence South <Ill FICTITIOUS NAME ~·-1'' ~" Wl!'St llSol.)11 llol\I Ille Tiie 1111C1er1l9Md ~ certily lie Is C!!ll-N<>r"'-~lv line ol ukl lllock IO the ouctino 1 bllllneu 11 1100 !leech 8tvo., cenler 11111 of M1cArlll11r eoutev11rd, Hu"tlno!on !l11(h, C•lilorn!1, IJflder lhl 100.00D'"' wl~, '' de1cr!bed In I deed llclllloUI llrm """' at THE II.EAL. to tt\I S!1!1 o1 Callfornll rtcorded In ESTATE MART Ind t!\11 ••ld firm It Book llM7, Pill• ID ot orne111 lllKO•d• co~ of t~ fclklwl"ll 1>er111n. wtim• of Mid Coun1Y1 tllence Sol/th II de9rers Mme In full 1nd pl1ee of re1lornc1 11 •• •r li" E1st 376.07 11!11 •lono ••Id loll0W1: cenll.'I" Jlnl 1111 Eno1neer1 Cet1!1H" Lint LfOn••d E. Lkhttr, 16n1 lltotll!'rt Ln., Station 231+07.07 1nd 1 POint In Ille M\lfll!notcn B•1c1>. Calif. boundary o1 Ille Newl>O<'f Mtu Unified Oiied Aue. 6, 19\\t, $dl001 Dl1trld 11 16opted bY" !ht L11«1ard E. Lichter Orano• CounlY Bctrd ol Ed11C1ll"" 11y s111e ol Calllornl1, o .. n9e CounlY: Rnol11llon N11mbef ...... Snot .... ber 1•, On AUii. I, 1969, ~ore ..,~ •• No .. ,.., 1f6jl; '"""'' Soutti lol ~rffl •?' S5" Pub!lc Jn •rid for Mid Stiff'. P<!:rson111r E•ll 3U.1' fffl 1lonv Mid boundll1Y to •-•f"ed leon1rd E. Lichter known te Ille be91Mf"9 ol' • Cllr\11 lllerelf> CCIII-me to be Ille Plr'IOl'I .. -"".... II c1ve Sol/llle•l't t..YI.., I redl1t1 ol JUbscrlbtd lo Ille wllll!n ln11r11mffll 11\d 11ff,OO ftlli !Mnc1 $ou!M11ler1Y 361.71 1clcncwltd91!'d lie ••«uled !ht same. fttt 1lono uld Cllr\lt and said boundary (OFFICIAL SEAL! thrcvoh 1n an11le ol' 11 dtorff1 lt' '6" Jean l. Jobs! to ~ Tru1 Pclnl ol' Btolnnlngr l!\ence Not11rv P11blk • Cllilornl1 ~llnul.., $oull>e11rer1Y 637.61 ltt!I Prlncip1J OHke In 11ont1 ukl curYe 111c1 11111 bound•rv O<an<H Coun!v "'"°""'!'! an 1n11le ol lO deortt1 »' .,. .. r My commiHIOtl Ei;plrr1 tllenc1 South 3' Ol9•ees SO' 25" E11t March ?. 1f1J J011.li ffft'1long 11ld bounOery; ttienct Publlstied Or1n111 Coa1t Dally Pilol, le1vl1111 11ld bound1ry Nor1h ?t d"llrH5 A111111st I, 1•, 21, 11, 1%9 1•.W.6t sr Jr' E11t ••t.01 feel to Ille be!ilnn1.., 1-------------- ot 1 cur\le conc•w wntrr1y lltYlno • LEGAL NOTICE rtdl11• of 200.00 t"'I: llltrlU Norlllerl'I, _____________ _ 16'11.N fell •k>rl'll Mid (Ul"Vt lf>rOllOh •n I •naft ol' 11 clellreH ,,. ?l"r :11ence f'·U3U Nor!h 17 clellre11 11' '6" Wnl 3S.11 feet MOTICE OF OISSOLUTIOH OF l'AJIT· to • PO!nl °" 1 n<:>~lllttgrnl c11rve con· Nl!RSMtf' A"IO DISCONTINUANCE. 01' cave Northoerl\I' havlnti 1 rtdlu1 ol 200.00 USE 01' FIRM NAME Iott, 1 rltdl1I lo •llld oolnl bean. Soulll Purwant to t!\e P'cvl•l1>111 ol Se.;llo" 17 dl9<ttl 16' •I" E11!; lllenn We•I••· U03,.5 ot !hoe Corooralion• Code Ind ol ly 1.07.,, IHI •loM Mkl cu"" th._h S.C:llOl'I 1 .. J.1 of lht Code ot Cl'/11 Ille betllntll,.. of 1 c.,.,,t cone:.,,.. Prc><:..tlire ot llle Stele f1I C1Fllornla. Soull\erlv h1vlnt1 • r1dl111 ol' •. NoTICE ts HERE!IY GIVEN lh1t Ille 11'«11 "'enc• Wfst .. 1¥ 1150.62 IHI BJPl\fl Pl•lntrsh1p CPml>Oled of: Jolln C1ro11 ..... "'kl c11rv1 thro119h •n lntlle ol 16 Jr. alld Jerry T, MQ11ln ller"totore ent•9· deo•ttl 28' SJ"; tl'llnce North ll td In buslrien under ~ ll•Jll n~mr cl drsltet• ?6' 11" Weit 1'6.U Ifft II> the Un lvttsil¥ GleSI Ind Mirror Corn11anv 111 T•ll9 Pol"' ol let1lnnll'!I. Ulli!S Forbtrl Ao.d, LIO!H'll Nlo<ttl. NOTICE !S FURTHER GIVEN tt..I. C•lltorni1 WIS dlnolved as of m1dniohl Pl/rWlnl to Ed11c1llon Code Stcflon ~3". JUIV 31, 11'69; ,.,., ll'H!reallrr Hid ll•m • public Mi•l11t1 °" 1ucll Pellllon to dl1conlinued the UH o! wld n1me; 1rld lrinder 1110 ltrrllorY Ills bffn set beto..-e that •Iler 11ld dls!IOIUl>on no perl()n had 1111 Counl'I' !loard ot Educellon ol Ille 8UlhO!'l!¥ to Incur obllt1llon1 for wr~ County ol Or11111e, et !ht l!OUr ot 2:00 lorrner !!rm. o'clock P.M, Oii !ht 7'th dlY ol A1111u1!, D11ed, July ll, 1'6t Ifft, In Ille eoard A"""' II IM offke of Unlverslry Gl1ss •rid ll'le O••nti• Cou"l'I' Deoartmtnl of Eduu· Mirror Cornpan_Y tlon 11CM C!vk: Ct<1ler Ori"" Wf$t, Slnt11 by: Jotin C•rol1M, Jr, Ana', C•lltornl•, 11 wh!cll time 1nd Place Publblled O••n<J• Co11t D1llv Pilo', al! perMJnl lnieresltd Jn ••Id prtlllotl to August 1, t•, 21. 18, 1f69 1"1·ff 1 .. n1ler t1rrllorY ma¥ be "'•rd. Oiied 11111 15111 dlV of July, 1'6t. RO!I Ell.T PETERSON, Ed.D. LEGAL NOTICE SUPtrlnltndenl P·l411S o""''"""I ol' Educ•Hon CEJITll'ICATE 01" I USI NESS. fly Robert ~ntiew, DH111tv l'ICTITIOUS NAME Publl1hed Ot1n1e Ccia1t Dilly Piiot, The onder.l~ned dClrs cerlih he 11 (0,... AU11111! J, U, 21, 1969 Ulo-M' ducllna 1 bu$lnl!'S$ 1! 783 Newto" Way, LEGAL NOTICE Cc1t1 ~a. CaUlornla, u"der lh! llc- !lllous tirm 111me ot W651' COAST FORKLIFT CO .• 1nd th1! llld firm 11 cornPC•..0 of the l<>llc'fl"!ne ""'°"• .,..hose IAlll 1'11 n1me in lull I nd place ol rnkMncl 11 Ill SllPl!llttO!ll COURT 01' THI. follow.; · ST.6.TE OF CALIFORNIA l'Oll Hiram H. Adams, 13111 Oorlsmltl'I THE COUNTY OF OlllANGE Circle, We1fmln11fr, Call!, 91t.ll Nt. A-4oUt7 Del" 1·3Mt NOTltE 01' JtEARtNG 0, PETITION Hfr11m M. Ad11m1 OF l'AOIATE OF JOIMT Will ANO ~t11te of Cllilornla, Ot•nll~ County: LEnEJU TESTAMENTARY °" July lO. 1919. t>-•~•e "''' • IJotary E1ta!e o1 SALUD ESPINOZA, Oece11fd. Pub!le In 1 n d tor said Sttte, perscna11v NOT ICE IS MERE8Y GIVEN Thal tP~at~ Hiram H. Adam' kllDwn to "'' ROSIE FLORES hes llled l'ler~ln a pell· le be !l'lt l>flt>On whose name 11 1ub1crlb-Uon tor Probate ot Join! Wiii 11...i lor td lo !lie wltllln lnitrument •r.d l1s11•nc1 of Let~rs Ttllamenlary lo Pell-1okncwled11..0 tie e•ecutl!'d llW Mmt. tlorltr, rftetl'Me lo whkh Is m•de tor COFFICl.t.L SEAL) furllltr 01rlltullrs, Ind ll>AI Ille time Ir.cl MAll.Y tr:. Hf.NAY place of l'lr1rit19 Ille same h1s bffn s~t Nott•¥ Public . C•lllo•nl1 for Au9u1! 19, 1ff9, 11 f:3CI A.M .• In l~f Prlncl1>tl ot!lce In courlrOCllTI of ~P1r!menl No. J cl said Orentie County court, •' 700 Wnl Eighth 5trnt, In tllt M~ cornmlulon E~Plre1 CITY ol Santi An11, C1lllornl1. Nov, 1•. itn Dlltd Alltl/$1 7, '"' Publi!Md Or•no• COil! D1ll'f ~1101. W. E. ST JOHN, JulJ J1 Ir.cl AUOlll l 1 H 21 lt•t l•lMt Cou!llY Clerk ' ' ' McOWl!M I OftlEM LEGAL NOTICE SH I . c111,m111 Aw. Ori""' C•lltornM Tit: 1110 4JJ·J19' '·1DS60 Att.l'MYI for 1'.tlt11Mr CERTIFIC ... TE OF &USIN15s' Put>llshtd Or1nge COid DlilY' Piiot, l'ICTITIOUS NAMI Allllltll t, t, 1', 1Nf 1'7'"'' TM 1111C1ersl11ned do certlty ..., ••• ~ I:::::::..:::..:::..:::..::::.------'-111/Cllnll I bllllrei1 1! 1m Park Aven11t. C01lt Mew, C11llornl1, under ll'te flc-llllovs lirm ntme ol PAll.K .I.VENUE LI· QUOll and !hit s.ld firm I$ <om1>os..O of LEGAL NOTICE IUl"l~IOft COURT Cl, TME !hf following P!lr..,ns, Wl'IOH name1 in fyll ITATI 0, CALIFORNIA '0111 t nd llllCH ot rnlOence Ire IS 1<)11oW1: N I Robert S. •nd Nin• May Jotin1on, 14 TMI COUNTY O' OlllA G Norlll Lnler Or .• Or1ngr, C1IUornl1. MO. A-P6J,_ NCITICI! Clll" Ml!AllllNG O' PETITION D1ted Jul'/ 21 , 19H. FOil P'lllOIATI! Oil' Wtll.. AND FO!ll 11.oberl 5. Johnson Ll!TTlal Tl!ITAMl!NTAlll~ Nini M1y JohMo" EsflJte fl CLIFFORD W. YEARGAN, 51111 ot Cllllornl1, Or11n11e Counl'I': Dlclated On JulY 11. 19\19, belo•e me, • Nolal"t N17T"1Cif: IS HE'AEBY GIVEN Thtt Public In and for s1ld Stale. per~all'I' iw....11 I y"""" he• tlltd herein • pe-ll>Pllred Robert 5. Jotl"51111 end Nin• ttftorl.fot ·...,.,. ol' wm l fld for lu1111Kt M•Y JchMon ~"°W" lo me IO be lh• ti ~ THl•mtnl•,.., ,., Pt111ionlr, Pll•IOllS wllose n•""' Ire 111b1erlbed ,,. ,.,.,_. .. Which i. mfdl for lt1""4rr !ht within !n1lrum111I Ind •c.knowl«lut'd 1wt1ailli"' etld tti.i tti• llmt end Pl•ce lhn e•ec11tfd tilt '"""'· fll .... ,.,,.. fhe UIN Ml been aet tor (OFFICIAL SEAL\ 1111wnbW '-1Ht 11 t ·JO 1.m I" ""' MAUll.ETTE SHAW ~::!'':\" fl °'"limlnf No. s"' ol' 11111 N1t1rw P11bllc-C~Hlofn!1 ;; , 1t JOO WIS! Elghltl Slrerl, In tM Prlncfpal Office '" ti ..,,,, AM, C1lttornl1. Or-• Couritv • Oet1Cf A119111t 12, ll'M. MY Comml1•lp'I E~P•rfl W E IT JOHN Countv Clerk March 1', 1f71 • ...._ & Ajfk-• Pub!l111ed Orenae Ci>&$! O•llY Pilot, A 9M "'1', July 2•, ll 1n<1 Auvust 1, 1', 1'6' 1J11-6t ~Cl'"""M I (nf) ..... 1111 LEGAL• NOTICE ......... "'" htt"'- hbfllhM °"'""' c-t 12. , .. :0. ,,.. 0.11Y .. 1..,.,1-------,.-... -,------ lJDf.ff NOTICI TO Cll:l:OITOlll LEGAL NOTICE SUl'EllllOA COUll.T OP TJtl STATE O" CALll'OllMIA l'OR THI COUNTY 01' OllANGE •Allt lm "II. A-6Jl51 SUP'lftlOlll COURT Oil' TMI 1!1lat! ot CL ... AENCE J . SMITH. ITATI Clf' CALl,OltNIA "0111 OecNsecl. TMI COUNTY OF ORANGE NOTICE IS MElllE!IY GIVEN l'O ll'le Me. MUH c!""fdilors ol the •bov' n~mN dec~tnt OTICI Of' NlAll:INO Oil' "'ITITIOH m•I •II PltMH11 hevlno c1Alm1 19111111 lhe 011' f'ft09ATI. OP JOINT WILL AND Mid ~l'dfnl Ire rt<l~lrf'd to fllt lhtm. L•TTlltS TISTAMINTAl:Y w!ltl Ille ntce1u..,. ~. In tilt ollitl Etlllt ol' JESUS ESPINOZA, 0Keesod. af IM clC!•k af""' 1b<M! enllllH court, Of NOTICE IS HERE!IY GIVEN Tlllll lo Prtwnl It!...,, will! 1M Mcn11r'I OSIE FLOR.ES ,..., llled llertlft a Mii-WClllChoetl, 11'1 Ille un!ll'ri!tned •I , .... Giiie• kiri '°' l'robelt of Jolnl Wiit •nd for ol PHIL JACOBSON, Arlorn1v. JtG Wtsl 111111\Ct of Ltlltr1 Tell1""'1t•rv lo Ptll· 51dt. Street. Lo, A"geles, C•!llornl• tOOlA '-• n!!ffenc:t lo .. 111ch 11 m-laf wh ich I\ lhe 1>!1c, ol bu1!nnt ot Ille """" 11rtlcui.rs, Ind lhfl t'Pll 11..,. '"" vnclllnlt.....:1 I" 'II "'''"'" pert1ln11111 " IM;I ot llflrlflll ""' ume he1 been HI "" Mlllr °' Mid dKftll'<ll, wlllllll flnt' Alll'llSI 1', lfft, 11 t :JCI A.M., In Ille inell!"' 1n1r lllf Hr" publl(.IUOfl ot 11111 rtroom ol °"''""""'' Jto. J ol' Mkl nollce. rt, 11 l'OO Wnl Ef11hll'I Slrttl, In t'Pll 011t<1 Autotll J, 1'61 !IY of mt1 Ana, C'lftornll . A981£ M. IMITH Deltd ...... ult '· lfft. HEAB6ftT APTHU• Mouse• W. E. ST JOHN, f1ta1lo•1 o1 '"" WIH of Ille COlllllY Cler-. 1tiow "-.ti OecftMnl EN & GREIN, PMIL JA(OISON 1't I . Ctu'""H A....,. Sii w ... t 61-l!rllt Or•""-C1lll. ln An111t1. C1nrwnl1 M lt 1'11: 171tl fU.11N Ttl• ftUI MA •·nil .. 11.,...n ler PrtlliclMr. Alhl..,1tf 1w l ltu+ltrs Publl!Md O!'ln.. Cont O•lly Pllol', Pullllt~ Or•M• Coat! Olll't' ''!tit A"""6t I, t, 1 .. lttf 111 ..... Alltllll 1, II, 11, ft, 1tff 1""'11 ---...---.... - Tflursd•r. Au;1Hl 14, 1969 DAILY PILOT JJ No-Hit Palmer Didn't Think He'd La ·st Oklahoman BALTIMORE (AP) -A yeat ago, Jim Palmer had somt nagging doubts about hJ.J future In baseball. Wednesday nlght, starting for only the seeood Ume after hls latest yo-yo trip to the disabled list, lhe Baltimore right-ban· der didn't think he 'd last nine innings. But ·the ZS.year-old hurler, who gets tremendous leverage from his long arms, held the Oakland Athletics in check with a blazing fast ball and burled a no-hitter as the Orioles won l-0. 'lbe superb effort added luster to the already remarkable comebao.k of a pitcher who lo 1966 became the youngest Disgruntled U.S. Spikers Rip British LONDON {AP) -1'1ost members (lf the U.S. track and field team were flying home today, carrying a letter of protest to President Nixon after a European t'our ~nctuated by dissension and some dis· 'aWointment. . 'A p.rty of 30 athletes Including two world champions -hurdler Willie Daven- port and 400-metera star Lee Evans - stayed behind for matches against Norway and Poland. Many of the athletes complained that they were tired, mentally and physically, after two weeks of travel and com· petition. Wednesday night the American men's team completed a 131-90 victory over Bri· tain In a tw<Mtay meet at London's White City. In the women's match Britain nip- ped the Americans 67-66. Earlier, as part of ~ Western Hemisphere squad, the Americans lost to Eu rope at Munich. At Augsburg, the U.S. men defeated West Germany but the American girls lost. Trouble blew up in Germany, where the athlete8 complained or po o r ac· commodations. When they arrived in Londan they formed a committee which drew up the Jetter to NI.Jon, listing what the ath1e~e! consider are essential changes which tshould be made in American Amateur Athletic Union policy. Al one stage the athletes threatened to pu11 out of the Britain vs. U.S. match. They cabled a copy of the letter to Nix· on to the While House in advance. LiUle official reaction came from AUU officials. Jesse Pardue, AAU president, merely said, "I don't know what.the kids want. and 1 don't think they do either." Unofficially, however, seveta.1 AAU aources indicated that when the aUtletes return home some of them could ~ in trouble for their outspoken and rebellious behavior. California hammer thrower George Frenn a member of the athletes' com· mittee', said he hoped a meeting planned for next month at South Lake Tahoe would "sort out some of the problems." The team haJ asked Nixon to send a represe~tive to that meeting to hear views. Frenn said several former top athletes and officials would also be invited, a1ong with all the present squad. Meanwhile. the remaining athletes. head for Oslo for the Aug. 20-21 con· frontation with Norway. Then they travel to Warsaw, for a meet again.st Poland. summ1rlts I" tfle 8rU1ln v1. U11lltd St11fl t rm I nd fltld mftt Wtdnudl Y ni9hl: o1Q11 meff!r hurdtes: 1, ll>lrwood, 8dll!n, "'·'· l, Minn, US. 511.0. J, Lff, US, 50.0. '· Todd, lrltaln, 50.7. ' ' ' w-11·1100 met1r1· 1 o.~11. us1 11.6. , e1, 8rll1ln, 1 .a. l, N1t1er."U~ 11.1. I, N1 I, 8rlt1ln, 11.•. Hlmmlf throw: 1. P1ynt. arn11n. no-1. 2, Freen, us. m-1. J, Hirt. us, 11»-•. '· Fr111r, ar1111n, ,,,.,._ Wll"11tll'I «Ill mtttn: 1, H1mmond, US, Sl.1. 2, BOol•d, 8rl!1/n, ».I. l, Slflrv, US, JI.I. 4, Slmp1or" 8rl!lln, Sl,6. Womfl'l'I Jhol j)l,j!: 1, Bedford, 8rll1ln, 50-1'~-2, Gn•im, us. "8-J\1. 3, s1ro11r, US, 11-J. 1, Qui(~. Brit• n. •1.ov •. 100 M'ttt1: 1, V1uqhn. US, 20.1. 1, 011r. 8rll1ln, 11.1. 3, schevrt'I". us. 21.1. 1, Y1rdltv. Brlllln. 21.1. "'I" /"'.,..p: 11 _811rr11I. US, 6'10~0. 2, Brow,,•·,",',·,• 71.fo. , 1lrl)l'OIMf, 8rlt1ln, U . 4 C1mlll>I , r In, .... J,000 mtlln; 1. T1yl0r, B•lltl", ll:1t.O CBrllllll record). 2, St-tr!, 8rll1l11, lJ:U.1. J, Llnd9r111, US, 11:16.1. I, Pt9'tonlllM, US, 14.:ll.(. 011~· 1, Vollmer us. 19'-2. 2. co11, us1 ltU. l, e . T1ncfl!'d, arlltln, 'lt·l. '· P. Ttn<:•KI. Br 11111, 1U-'· wonwn'I IOO "'''''" l, L~. Br1Uln, 2:DJ.t. t. p~, Br\ltlnl 2:06.1. J, $Mier. US, 2:06.l. '-lousit lnt, US. :Dl.J. Wllfllln's .00 ~t.,. rtlt y: 1, U11Hi!'d Stain fNtl!tr, O.vl1. G•,.1111!· FtrrtUll •I.I. 2, Brlltln cNen, Cobfl, Tr11111r, PHO, dlSQUll\ led. l-lum1,. l Hll\9, us, 2J..t. 2, Wtlltl'l'v, us. ,s. 1' '· J, Dlvlft, 6rl1tl11, 2S-0T\. I, L"wlll, Bril1l11, 2~ ... llll(lll Mtltl' SlffplKhlifj· l, J1ckS011, 8rl1tl11, 1:3l.O. J. lt.wns, 1r111111, 1:15 .• J. Re!Mv, us. 1:15.a. 1, P•k•. ui. t : n.o. Men'I I x 100 Metlrl lteltv: I, Unltttl "''"' )t.I, 2;•rJt1l11, •.1. '1¥-'J J1v1ll11: 1, Frl..irktl\ us. 112·4. 2, i~/r.%'; ilfi'1~19-1. J, P'kllt, 8ri11ll'I, ~1. 4, Wllli.tl'l1, = , ~ Mettr1 lttl1v· 1. U~lml Sltles I , I!! , llH""!r' Ev1n1i. l'GJ.1. 1. lrlt1ln Cl t~ , 8 INm, l'llrwood, Ob<lrtson) dli.- 111111!Ultd. w~ 8rNd J ump· 1. Whitt! us, 20-'V.. 2, WUif, Wllll,~ 20-7\~. 1. il•lf...ood, rlt1ln, l'G-1\0. 1, W1hon. S, , ....... °"1"111 Mlkh rn1111 M!'n -Ul'llted s11tft u 1, 8•>-hlln ff. w11m1n -Brlllln 17, United St111t "· ever to burl a World Serles shutout and then faded Into obscurity wlt.h a series ol. back and sho"uJder aJlments. Palmer didn't mention the nohltler on the Baltlmore bench, but white Baltimore batted in the eighth innJng he gave the choke sign In front o! hls teammates. Then he almost" choked In the ninth. After walking 11lugger Reggie Jackson for the third time, Palmer rttired Sal Dando on a liner to cente:r field and Dan- ny Cater hit into a force play. With the crowd of 16,826 giving en-- couragement with rhythmic applause, Palmer jumped ahead of Dick Green on two swinging strikes before walking him. Then Tom Reynolds walk.eel, load.Ing the. bases. The count went to 1-2 on Larry ltaney, a former Palmer batterymate, before he grounded sharply to shortstop Bollby Floyd for a game--e:nding force. "A nO-'hltter ls matter of luck,'' Palmer conceded. "The balls are hit iat somebody. I bad some good plays behind me, and ~e scored a lot of runt so I wias able to coast." Palmer said the choke sign -a hand wrapped around the neck -was a joke aimed at Oriole pitchers Dave McNally HUNG OUT TO' DRY -Detroit's Tom Tresh was a dead duck on lhls stolen base atttmpt Wednesday night in the flft.h inning against the California Angels. Shortstop·Jirn Fregosi handled catcher Bob Rogers' and fl1lke Cutllar -who were needled earller this season after losing no-hit birls -in lhe ninth inning, both on hits by Min· nesat.a's Cesar Tovar. "l felt a Jot of pressure in the ninth,'' Palmer said. "I was being pretty cartful. Ir I lost the no-hitter I didn't want it to be on a bad pitch." Palmer helped his own cause \vith a single aod double, driving in one run. A pitching chart showed Palmer made 142 pitches. He threw 18 curves and only one change-up. All the rest were fast balls, which catcher Ellie Hendricks &aid "were really hopping." He struck out eight and Issued three of his six walks in the ninlh. Aller wlnnln1 15 games in 1968, follow· ed by the world Series shutout, Palmer hurled only 120 bmlngs -most of them in the minor leagues. 1'When you have arm trouble , yoo con· st an Uy think about your fu ture," Pabncr said. "( never thought I was linished. 1'-1y most serious doubts were last August when J suffered nerve damage in my . back and the question was whether the nerve would regenerate." Ul"I Ttltlltetl throw and easily tagged out Tresh, but the Tigers \vent on to trim the Halos, 3-01 as DeMy MCLain won his lltth game. • Early Pick For Trophy NEW YORK (U PI) -Oklahoma's Steve Owe04, a workhorse hall'back In the 0, J. Simpson manner, could be the lad they'll have to beat in this year'i race for the Helsman Trophy .. Heisman voters nave elected a few quartl!rbacks In the past but they preft r runners over passers and Owens is some runner. Simpson, who grew about as famous as any college football player can get these days, carried the ball 355 times and scored 22 touchdowns during Southern ..California's·regula:r se~sor>-last year. wtli1e"O: J ,. was galloping toward the Heisman Trophy and a fortune Jh pro football, Owens was chu~ng up clouds or dust for the Soontts. ,He scored 21 touchdowns with an NCAA recani of 357 carries, two more than O.J. But he gained almost no fame Otlbide his own area until loo late In the season to make a run for the All-America team, let alone the Heisman derby. This year, it should be different in the glamor department. With 0 . J. and Purdue's Leroy Keyes departed , (he 6-2, 21S.-pound Owens starts with a clear edge on the othtr runners, and those hot shot quarterbacks returning for another year had better beware. Among top ball carriers coming back are Art Malone of Arizona State, Ron James ot New Mexico State, high.scoring Jim otis of Ohio State, Charlie Pittman of Penn State, J im Carter of Minnesota , John Riggins of Kansas and Bo Bowen 0£ Mississippi. Any or them as well as others unlisted can break out at any time but if·Owens has another good year for the Soontrs he can crack into the NCAA record· books with twv other marks to go w·itb his record 357 carries of last year: He needs 1,045 yards to breat the career rushing record of 3,388 completed last s~ason by Mercury Morrla of Wes.t Texas state. (Chvens rushed 1,536 last year.) He needs 19 touchdowns to set a ·na- tional three-year record of 52. The bOlder is Glenn Davil with 51 touchdowns at Army in 1944-46. 30 Wins No .t Important Let the Kids Pitch--McLain DETROIT (AP)-A benevolent Denny McLain says he'kwUHng to glve up his sliot for another 30-game year to improve chances !or a Detroit-pennant in 1970. "Why don't we . let the kids pitch in September? We've got to th ink about next year," said McLain who shut out tbe California Angels Wednesday night on three hits for a 3-0 victory. Today the Angels are in transit to Anaheim. It ·.vas his 18th ·of the season, making him the winningest.. pitcher in the major leagues. "I'd like to see Mike Kilkenny and Fred Scherman get some shots," said McLain \rho could start as · many as 12 games Be's Permaiae11t Major league-club owners have named Bowie J<uhn pennanent commissioner, of baseball with a seven-year contract. He has been fi lling the post on a one. year pro tern ·basis. before the e:nd of the season, workin& the customary every fourth day. Kilkenny and Scherman are promising rookies. McLain, who has lost six times, got alt the runs he needed in the fourth inning when Jim Northrup lofted h,is 14th borne run of the year into tbe right field upper deck. Angels pitcher Jim McGlothin, now 5· 12, had held the Tigers hitless until Northrup leaned an an inside ,fa!l ball Mt'Glodilin and Hoyt Wilhelm who entered the game ii:i the seventh, beld Detroit to just four hits. ''I've had trouble with my atm," said McGlothlin after the game. "This wa s the first time its really felt good I.bis year. LA Now Fourth "~ 1 ran· into the best here tonight," be aa>d. CALl,D•NIA DITAOIT 1a r 11 rM Alomer, :Ill 4 • 0 0 Tr•h. II V1111, rt l I 0 0 Norltlrup, d Jollnlront, el 4 e 1 D 1<11in., rl Fr911D1I, 11 I 0 I D C.11\, lb SPtnC1r, lit 4 0 0 I W.HorlDn, If lttl)OI, If I 0 1 I Ml!dllclt, 1t. ,.Rodri9Utt. Jll 4 0 0 0 Fr..,.tn, e Rodpu1, c l 0 2 0 l.8rown, 311 McGlolhlln, p 2 t I t Mcltln, p Morton, pll 1 o o o •ill t .. ...i • 0 I 1 I I 1 I l •• 0 2 0 0 0 J • • 0 3 1 1 0 l 1 I 0 2 0 • 0 l 0 0 1 wn1111m, " e o o o . Tottll .n I • .t.~ll Tll•ls ti o2 4··• ·· C•lllornlt 000 000 ooo -o Dttroll ooo 120 oox -i L06 -C•l!~rn11 7, Detrofl 1. ta -1t~n. McGlolM!n. Hit -Norlhrup tld. $ -I. 8rown. SF -Mcl.~ln. ll"H1t •1to1 so McGloltllln (L~U) 6 • l l l 3 Wiihelm 2 I I 0 I I M(Llk'I IW.11-6) t S D O 2 I Time -1:50. A11~flld1nc1 -1•, SDI. Alston Not Discouraged Despite Dodgers ' Woes LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wllile the Los Angeles Dodgers are on their way to Montreal, the St. Louls Cardinali ar~ simply on their way. The Cards took over second place: in the National League's Eastern Division with a 5-0 victory over the Dodgers Wednesday night behind the six-hit pitching of rookie Chuck Taylor, 5-1. The Dodgers. in the five-way Western Division race, slipped into a tie for fourth place with San Francisco. They are idle today. Yet despite a 5-4 home stand, Dodger fl.tanager Walt Alston is not discouraged. For one thing, first baseman Wes Parker has been taken off the disabled list and will be ready to play in Montreat Friday. He had been out for 21 days recovering Jrom an appendectomy. For another, Jimmy Lefebvre is back, and he won Tuesday's game with a three- run homer in the eighth inning. Willie Davis, the: victim of two beanings earlier in the season, is working on a 13- game hitting streak and Bill Sudakis equaled the longest hitting string of the year <ln the club Wednesday as he hit safely in his 14th straight game. Alston also won't have to worry about filling that botherSome fourth spot in the Dodger Slate Auo. 1!I Dodttrs 1t Monltttl A111. U 09dtolfl I t MonlrHI J P.m. l<FI f~) S P.m, l<FI (UOI starting rotation vacated by D o n Dryadale, who retired Monday. With a day off next Monday, the Dodgers can get by with a three-man rotation of Don Sulton, Claude Osteen and Bill Singer until Aug. 22. "Alan Foster only proved that the spot Is still up for grabs," said Alston. UPITt...,_ L-EE AND ,A FL EA -Lee Trevino, \vho's usually followed around lhe .. golf couise. by a IM&:g~ry, k(!Own ,as Lee's .Fleas, only had a "'one-fan-f61JoWing· after ·a pr&Cticeputti:rig rOUnd prior to the PGA tourney in Dayton. However, the fan is one of Trevino's biggest boosters -his eigbt·year~ld son, Ricky. Padres Pull Triple Play Foster, 3-1, allowed nine hits and four runs in 4 1/3 innings. But Taylor was mowing down the Dodger bats. Negro Stars Pressured To Boycott PGA Play DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -Civil righls deMOMtrators, threatenlng'to disrupt the-· 5l&t PGA golf championship, sought Wed- nesday to persliade Negro players to boy· cott the toornament. cessions of the Dayton Chamber oC Com- merce; sponsor Of the PGA tournament. including 3,000 free admiss ion ticiets to the tournamenl SAN· DIEGO ·(AP) -The San Diego Padres pulled off a triple play in the first innlng of Wedoesday nlgbt's '$-1 loss to the Chicago Cub!. Jt' Was the rlfth triple play in the ma· jors th1J season, third ln lhe National Leacue. toS ANGELES -Hanlhlttlng Oscar hShotgun" Albarado of Texas, who has woi:l 22 of his 26 fights by knockout, Is rev,Or,ed to di11pase of Thurman Durden, Los Angeles welterweight, in the:ir 10. round match at the Olympk: Auditorium IOnlglit. Coach George Allen of the Los Angeles Rams said Thursday ht wants to lake a "Jon& k>o'..:11 at runnlng back Mike Dennis, a lwo-ytar man 1n the Naliotial Football League. So the n·Miss~ppl star will replace Willie Ellison,in ~.starting. lineup btre Saturday night aa:ainst the Clevr:land Browns. AJlen also discl0$ed that rookie Larry Smith. a No. l drafl. choice. from Floride, will get into the,. 4Cllon In the second quarter as a ~g backr LOUISVILLE -.Jlm ltcnry, a 20-ytar· old Indiana Unlvtrslty student rrom Dallas, captured his flri;t outdoor th~­ meter diving champlohship Wtdnesda.y In the. finals of the 1969 Nat}onal AAU a\ffu!.· mlng and diving cham~lonshlp1 bl!H. - Cynthia Potter, of Houston, also an In- diana University student, successfully defended her title in the women'• one- meter springboard event. WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. -Wiesbaden, Gennany, bas become the second team to qualify for the Ljttle Le&g\M: World Serles here Tu~ay, throu4h Saturch1y. Th! team, macle up of dependants. of Amerlcan·s attachCd'lo the U.S. Alr Force base at Wiesbaden, defeated Brus.w:ls, Belgium, to win the Europe•n cham~ plonshipo. Wiesbaden Joins Nationalist Qtlna as the leoml• curnnlly' ·q\Jallfiid for the world " &effes. ST. LOUii LOI ANO•LIS •l'IKk, If ,.toocr, er O.v1llllo, rf T1trt, 1eo MtC..t'ftl", c -·· J1"rilt", ,. M.txvUI. II (,T1y11t, • 1111 r """ "'"rill .a11ow1111.1s ••• S lllM01•.1t 111 SOOtW.0.•111.tr •1 2 Sl l l1<111t;t,rf •10 .5 1 I I Sudllkll, Jll l O I • 1 I I Htlltr, ( .a I O I I I o LefttM'e. le-l I I J 0 2 2 Slrt1110rf, 2t1 2 O I 4110 F01tff',, 100 MOllll!', p O I O C.Ollftfl, Jiii I O I Mc81111, p .o O I G•l:lrlthon, llfl I O 1 Ltrnll. • I I t To111t • s \I .5 '1ot91i 10' • •' St. Lou!• 100 '10 100 -S Lot "'°"'" 000 000 001 -' 0 E -Htlltr. OP -St. Louk ). LO• -St. LOUii n, L•1 Anotlts •• ,, -S\llltkls. MlllWHI, MtC..tvtr. II -lrock t, Fll:lod, IP'M1t•1t1•10 C.Tl~ler (\lf,J.1) t ' I D I S 'D\i.f (U .. I ~1 /1 t 1 • i 2 MOl!lll' 1•2/.1 1 0 0 0 1 Mr-••fft I , .. l I 1 I , I ~r-fMh~ Mttli.Af.1:,(,, ~·lt~l.-A~1110.'...f4~ -.H})O, • ~ Elder .o[ Wasl,ington, D.C. disclos- ed that represe.nla.Uves of the protesting groups, had telephoned, uking that he refr•Jn (fom -playing in I sympathy gesture. "I told them t inteoqcd to play," Elder sakt. Elder finiehed third last week-end in the MUwaukee Open, won by Ken SUU of Tacoma, Wash. The vtltran Charlie Slrford, firllt Negro to play regular· on the tour, said hii had not been conta~ed yet but expected that he ~l!O )l'OUJd b( e'IJC<I. "tl lnttOO to pla.y," Sifford 111Jd.1 ... 1 • 'The demon!tratols '" 1Sklng 21 i:on- The groups, protesting in behalf of the nation's poor, warned tbat a ' mild demonstration would be staged at~ tM tournament site, the NCR Qoantry Qub. when 143 playeni let off In the first round today. Gary Player was one of the prime fav- orites. No one eve.r dlscount.s him. in any tournament but he Is r e 8 a r de d particularly formidable In th1a acl.loo ov.. er the &,91G-yerd, par 71 NCR. eoune where cun·barn!1 fairway•· put • ' Prep>!Um . •on . dtlvlha·; <1ccu1aey and · maMtve areen.s favor the darinc putt.er, I •• ;•. .• l J . ---·-·--........ ·-·· ---·---·~ ·-·-·. -\·---:-.-.... -...... ___ .. _______ _ . " ·---•• I ., '( • • H WlY PILOT Rebels' Talented Backfield Punch· ' Makes South Big Favorite Tonight LAGUNA ENTRY -Brian Bagley, one of !ou~ !onner Laguna Beach High School players on the South squad in the 10th annual Oran~e County All.Star prep football game will alternate with Westmin· ster High's Ron Shepherd at fullback for coach Tom Baldwin's forc- es. Kickoff is 8 o'clock tonight at Orange Coost College. Woods Has QB Haupert Adds Sparkle To MD Gridiron Future Oranl<' CO\lllty's finest h!gb school senior football players of last season wilt collide at Orange c:oast College tonight in the 10th annual Nortb-Soulh Game. KJckoff is scheduled for a p.m. The conleJt bene£1ts the Children's Hospital of Orange County. Head coach far the favored South learn is Tam Baldwin of Santa Ana Hilh, who has a U record going for b1m in high school all-star games. The North's mentor is 2:6(year~ld Dave Gibbs of Fullerton'11 Troy lli&h-He is the fint a -player of the game ta appear in tile classic as a coacb. Gibbs, a prep .standout at Buena Park, played 1n the 1960 came. One of I.he largest crowds in the history of the game is expected to be on hand to see if Baldwin's awes1ITT1e backfield can roU up the kind of score most railbirds are predicting. Baldwin will serve up Santa Ana's Isaac Curtis. a tailback with sprinter's speed, and wingback Darryl Berg, who 1 was the CIF's player of. the year latil &ea900 with Westminster. While Gibbs readily admits his d:femlve troops will be up q:alnat a P> tent group, he maintains his club can pl•)" the SouUt even-up or better. "We have a pretty good ball club. too;' you know," he aays. "JI our running game can sustain us on a Jew drives and complement Olll' passin& 1ame we ahould hive a good nl&ht." Both """°"' nport the two-and-a-hall weeks pracllce allobMllt is aufficlenl "We're ready lo pJay," 11y1 Gibbs. ''\Ve 've bad adequat<time." Reportii Baktwin : "We've had enough if not too much Ume already. Jt'1 toueb lor All-Star Lineups South LE-Don Htllon, Miter Del 185 LT-John McLal!iblln, Wutminster 2t5 LCr-Harvey SUprenant, Mater Dei 1&5 C-Randy }loward, Santa Ana 205 RG-Rocky Fletcher, Foothill 1115 RT-Pat McCaffree, Santa Ana 205 RE-Stu Aldrich, Newport Harbor 230 QB-Tony Bonwell, Huntington Beach 180 LH-Jsaac CUrtiB, Santa Ana 190 WB-Darryl Bug, Westmlnst..-t95 FS--Brtan Balley, Laguna Beach 185 North LE-Adrian Doi...,., El Dorldo LT-Carl Rihn, Anaheim LG-Craig UUcker, Garden Grove C -Ken Hlckeraoo, Loora RG-Plt Mlhooey, Anaheim RT-Scott Hodgins, -· RE-Rua Hemy, Magnolia QS--Nonn Kepner, Lowell l ·H-Steve Cblfelter, Troy RH-Xen Robin5on, Soncra FB--J'obn Brooklle-, Savanna 175 200 196 204 187 210 198 180 175 ,.. 200 k1d.t to hold their interest fn I CllDI In the mlddle of the summer." The Orege Coast area will be well repre.seoted on lhe South eleven. Tony Bonwell of Huntington Beach hu been designated as the team's ttarting quarterback and two other OJI City area players from Marina HlJh, Tony Vtll- Um1gli1 and Andy Vorooo, will both start at linebacker. Alternating at fullback will be Westminster's Ron S h e p h e r d and Laguna's Brian Bagley. Mater Del 's Harvey Suprenant will start at a fUarcl, JOOn l\fcLaughlln, Westmlnster, at tackle and Don Hellon, ~fater Del, al end with Stu Aldrich of Newport Harbor. Baldwin is high on hia quarterback. "J knew when we started that Bonwell y,·as a good quarterback, but 1 had no idea he was th.is good. Il's unbelievable, t think, that some four-year college d.ldo't pick him up." Bonwell's quarterback counterP4f'l tor the North is Norm Kepner of Lowell who. in addition to having an exceptlOl'!ll pass· ing arm, is also a threat with the run. Thlnp are looking up at Mater Del Hlah School v.·hete the Monarchs appear to be entering a varsity football season with an established quarterback at the helm, as Bob Wood.I begins his third MalOR as head coach. llaupert'1 ability to 1hart lhe offeo1h·e load take• Utt beat off of l\1ark Du.n•, the l\fonarcbs' neet halfbacll:, who appean lo MUI fastt r in a football uniform than in track to11. SAFE BY A MILE -Second baseman Gary Mack of Los Alamitos ea siliy scores as Ne,vport Harbor Dodger catcher Ron Martin can on1y \Vatch a bad thro\v bounce a\vay from him. Los Alamitos bombed the Dodgers, 11·3, Wednesday night to win buehall tournament tiUe. DAILY 1'1LOT 1'lltl'I n 1'tt D'Del!MQ Fullerton American Legion His teams have woo nine games in the past two campaigns and the major ~·'."' •,• "*****• ROGER CARLSON nason for the absence of the big winning aeuon has been the lack of a field general \hat for so long was the trademark of the Monarchs. Over the pasl few seasons ?lialer Dei was blessed wllh outs ta nding quarterbacks. including John Huarte, Pete Sanchez and Joe Wipnore. Hua rte gained fam e at Nolre Oamt . receiving the Heisman Trophy, symbolic of the best college player in the naUoo. ~later Dci started out last season still wiU)Out lhe quarterback it needed and proc~ed to lose three in a row. Then \Vood.s brought in his sophomore candidate -Bob Haupert -and ~1aler Dei made a turnabout, ,)Vinning five of ilS remaining six games. The only loss was to St. Paul. 16-7, in a brilliant battle at the latter's field. St. Pav! wen t on to claim a share of the CJF AAAA championship with El Rancho. Wood~ told the DAILY PILOT, ''This is the first year since I took over lhat it hasn 't been a case of looking for someone to take over the quarterbacking dutiell. "This time I've got him before we 1tArt." What's more, \\'oods v. ill apparently have lhings looking rosy for some time, considering Haupert is only a junior. T1te MourcU' 1111ged 1 c II e d "I e, ltnCTtr. UI not dluged, Wltll dJe 1am1 111~ •• last 'eason, Maler Del must wade tbrough non-learve 'Ml Suta A.1111 (Ayola, Lake.-ood and Lon1ll<acbWlbon. TM• comes tbe Ange.lua Lea••e. where ltoOll otben, St. Paul, Servile 11d 81.a.tp Amat are atv1ltln& the A-1onarcbs. T1at addl&iol tf a flrtt-rate quarterback maka tlte 8uCI ArtW.ted parecblal 1cltool • team tt be reckoad "·llb. His best In the 100 is IOl'llething like tO.l or 10.Z which hardly qualifies him as a standout However, on the gridiron he's been slighUy le3s than sensaUonal wh ile running out of the backlleld in his 80J)homore and junior seUOM. Woods will beg in his charies drilling Sept. 3 with early a.m. drills and an hour in the afternoon. \Voods, not one to over.i;tate what he thinks his team's chances are for an up. coming sea!Otl, states flatly, "\Ve're going to be better th.is year." >.mong other things that the ~ionarchs accomplished la.st year wu to thrash pir tent Bishop Amat, 36-7. Coupled with wins over Long Beach Wilson (32-25) and Servile (23-ZI), last year's contingent might well have betn an imJ)('rlant factor in the CIF elimina· lions if the second-place f..fonarchs could have managed a tie with St. Paul In the Angelus League, thus gaining entry into lhe playoffs. Best Catl1olic, LA Footballers Clash Tonigl1t The third annual Big Brothers All-Star football game, pitting recently graduated prep grldders from the 47 Los Angeles ci· ty high schools against the 36 Calholic schools in Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura, Santa Barbara and Rl veralde counties is on ·tap tonight at the Los Angeles .Coliseum. Game time is a p.m. All proceeds gu to the C1thollc Big Brothen. an org1nizatlon geared to assisting fatherleu boys throughout Southern CalifomiA. Last year'1 initial game ended in a 43- 20 win for the city. The first Big Brothers game did not In· elude LA players, but w11 an all.Catholic affair. The North won, 13-7. P..1arc Eagan, formerly of ~1ater Dti liigh School , i~ the only grklder represen· ting thl! Orange Coast area ln 'th e lilt. Steve Fate, from Servile 1U1h. 11 also llstod. All-Star Tilt Will Utilize 4 New Rules Four ma jor rules changes will be In ef· feet for ton I g ht' s Orange County prep football cla'lslc at Orange Coa11t College, one of which in..sures fans that they y,·on't see a tie. The California tie-breaker rule will take over should the fourth quarter end in a tie. The North and South captain!! \1·ouid meet at mid-field for a coin Olp after the game, with the wiMer having an option of starling a tie-breaker series on offense or defense. Each team will run four plays alternately starting from the 50 with the team advancing the furthest being declared the winner. A touchdown scortd in the series will count, but no conversion 1vill be allowed. Other rules adjustments: 1. Quarters will be 15 minutes instead of 12, encouraging all players to play. 2. The NCAA 's two-point conversion rule will be in effect. 3. The NCAA's pass Interference rule will be installed, awarding the offense a first down al the point of infraction. The norm al h.i1h school rule calls for a IS. yard penalty from the line of scrimmage. Match Race Set ~1atch race action pitting Sonny Nutler ol Santa !'l.1onica aga inst Lawndale's Don Hawley will be featured <luring Friday night's Class A tnQtorcycle races at County Fairgrounds Speedway in Costa l\1esa. The head-~head ~mpetition between the two top-rated riders is scheduled midway through the 20.race card planned (or the e\•ening. G1tl!s open at 6:30 p.m. and lhe first race is al a p.m. Admission is •Z.50 for adults, $1 for juniors and children under JO are admitted free. 12 Walks Prove Disastrous, 11-3 Los Alamitos Clubs Harbor By DAVE CEARLEY Of 1111 Dlllr l"lltl i111f Only a last inning rally saved the Harbor Dodgers from a shutout as lheir hopes lor the Fullerton Ame:rican Legion basebilll tourney title vanished in • hail of zeros, Wednesday night at Amerige Park. A total of 12 walks aided Los Alamitos as it bounced the Newport nine, 11-3, for the tournament title. The combined forcea of Bob Stafford, DtMy Bean and Steve Scboettler failed to stop the Loi Alamitos onslaught as the trio gave up nine hits in •ddlUon to the doien baseHn-balls. Los Alamitoa capped the g1me in, the sixth oo a three-run homer by Glenn Nygard. Newport tallied its only nins in the ninth on a 1ln1le by Al White, a fielder's How They Stand AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division " L Pct. BALTIMORE 81 35 .698 DETROIT 66 49 .574 BOSTON •t SS .526 WASH! NGTOJ'l 60 59 .504 NEW YORK "' 58 .500 CLEVELAND 49 70 .412 Weat Division l\t!NNESOTA 69 47 .595 OAKLAND 66 48 .Si8 SEA'M'LE .. 66 .. 421 KANSAS CITY 47 68 .4-09 CALIFORNIA .. 66 .393 CHICAGO 45 71 .311 WHlleM•''' ll.tM1111 MIMHll1' s, N1w v.n. I ~k::r s. ~Mil ~ 1r Ct I 1111 t Ktlllft ti~ ,~111\lnttell I l~ll'' J, l'O: lrrd,J • ....... 11 • T .. 1f'1 e1""9 GB 14~2 20 2211J 23 '13 \i 2 20 211i 23 24 Ntw YMc (00-..111111 WJ ti C~ICttt (Wyl\M •·ll, 111fM Onl• t•lllt ''~tflll .. l"rt111r'I e1,,,.. ri.1,.11 ,, 01~1·r11i· "It~' 11~ltNI 1\ fill ~rn ~~l\f t I!"] 4 1111~ 11 ~ :'wltQ I 1f~~f,' '''11 s: Mln,....11 11 Wtl~mhift: n M NATIONAL LEAGUE Eaat Dlvi1ln w L Pct. CHICAGO 73 43 .629 ST. LOUIS 85 31 .556 NE\V YORK 62 SJ .'4! PITI'SBURGH 59 "' ,513 PHILADEPHIA 45 u .398 MONTREAL 37 llO .311 West Olvltlff CINCrnNATI 83 47 ,573 ATLANTA 65 " .546 HOUSTON 83 53 .543 LOS ANGELES " 53 .539 SAN FRANCISCO 62 53 .539 SAN DIEGO 35 It .302 ...... ..,. .. .,.,,. ti~hMI t, ritw Yft t ti I~ 1it.t;.f~111CJ1·l' S ' !tf="·'~l/~ ....... ~ .. S.11 0 T_.._ GB a~; 91~ 13 27 38!) 211 3 s•:a 312 31 (l~fn .... M (Maltrln WI t i Mfl>ltMI 111 .. !rMll ~1Cl ntM · ~118dtll!'lllt (=111 •tl 11 All111lt (R ... 11-IJ, ly tlmtl I UIM ,rlrlltY'I ··- i;'" DJ::r: f' r.•:i YM: 111tM , Ltul I A It 11, 1119111 . ~" Allft!" ~ M:r,r~1l, I !1111 11 IHt 1, 11 ~=a\' Fric~r:lrr.·" ~' choice, a walk to Stafford, and a "irlple by Schoeltler. Pete Pijl drove in Schoettler with a single to right to provide the last gasp o£ the belated Newport rally. Pijl collected half of the Newport safeUet, also singling in the third. Los Alamitos look control of the contest from the outset, collecting a pair of runs on two hits in the first. It added. another two tallies in t h e second on a double, an error and four walkl. Only a spectac1,1lar over·the-1houlder catch by Los Alamitos ctnterfielder Tim Arias saved • triple In the aeventh, as Tom King poked a mammoth fly lo center witb Bob Leavy on firs!. Newport gained the finals of the tourney in nifty f~shion Sunday night when Schoettler and Stafford combined to pitch a no-hitter as the Dodgers walloped Anaheim, 10·1. But the title game was a different story. Los Alamitos had only drt1pped three games in 28 tries previously, flnbhing se. cond in ita division during the regular Legion stason. Newport. which never cou ld get th ings movinc during the season, finished with • 15-11 overall record. Htw,_, 01 L• A1tr111tt1 nn Mtrti11, c ~H....n, 111 Powtll, n t. ..... ,, u 11:.1119, rl Si.ffonll, 11-lf ei.nct1erot, If ...... , Sc,...ttl.r, , P!il. cl V1litf't, a Fetltr, :lib Wfl!t1, """ WUIOl'I, llfl ee•~. t TtH I• •• r JI rM ' ..... ,...~I. It • I I I Mid, )b l•tOWll....,,c l 1 I • N1111rcl, JI) J I • Gwlti!I, 1• 1 •oH ... ...,,u 1 I I Ari.1, cf 1 ltFn,cf t ' 2 11 .. 1. ,, • 21WUl,rl ' • • \..,.1, • , . . ' ' . ' .. • • • lll • I Tel1h SCHI ., ll'Plllll .. .. , ..... J 1 I I J • J J J , •• , f ' J • I 1 1 J • l J J , • • I I I • I 1 I I I I I I J I I • :i. " ' 10 . " . Olll 000 OOJ -J • l J:IO OOJ ttol-11 t t Los AllJmitos Entries ,.,. .,...,,.....,., ""' '" 1tff.-.4tlfl °'' Cltar & ll'1n. ll'lnl l'1olll ,,u 11',M. DWMt t11 111 ... 1""' 111- lllllMlll .. "" ·- l'llllT .... ,.. <IQO Yl"ll, , 1 Yffr •Ms 9fttl ,... In• &r6" I l"lul. """'" suoo. lllctttor (C.rdoi1I M911"8rwy G~IV (Hlrl) ,tflby', htlV 11(111111 LM OlndY ltr (A ... ca) Alamltol G&I (Riiey) Toutfl TMrt (Wrlllll!) ''"'°""" ILlllNml Strl'lllldort Rov J1ne 15"'111111 IVY't Wl-(WMW!ll ,. "' "' .. "' "' ,. "' ,. ,. tlCOH• llACI!. 130 y1rdS. J yt1r .tllt 1111 111 In Grt<le A Mi11111. l"u"'• Sllot. Mln T• "•CO (LIPhl ml V.-11*'1' luffcen (Htrll ""'""'"' °" Hy o~u11 ... CSl!lllfll l ur911fHIY Ros. (1(11111! '"' $1-r (CtrdOU) "t'ldy Wtldl (MorrlJ) llt111d ~ CMelrl Mr. S.lldy l1r ltodl;l11 .... Monti (It l tfllu.) "' '" "' "' '" "' "' ", "' '" THIRD ucr. S50 v1rd1. Milden i ,..., aids. Cl1lml"9. ""'" 1170CI. ci.11N,.. 1rlel 13000. Sll"'I" Diie CLiph1ml ......... ...,,... (llflltld1) lloytl Ftli. CC.AINI) Mlmle Mid 15'-l l oo loo llodl.i "' '" --Tvi..t Moon (Wlttlu") MOM'I' Mlll (Li.Nm) F,..tf 11r aw fHotrll JUIW\t' ~ftdlY (14 Cro111Y) S~!N'i •-t Wrlehll lh>I ltr llflle l~~I} SU•le l"oo ltockl'I c•kfMrdtl SIXTH llAC•. IOO y1rcll, 1ld1, Cl1lml11t. Pvr .. POOO. ••Ice tJOOO • Mll>l 0..tH lll'Ph&ml Tlny'1 T~ tC1rdoo.1:1J lftdl1n llliwlt Sun of NffK CH CrosbYI Lot..io. (APOdtal Klt,.,..'i e.i:. ($1-) No Mist (Smlltol l'1u1.1m •-t (.l.dt!•I Tritle .. , Tom (W1tt1111I Cl'lvbueo (1"1Hlo) '" '" "' "' '" "' "' t .,.., c11lm!111 "' '" ,. ,. "' '" "' '" ,. •• ••GHTH llACE. 110 ylrtll. ) vur o~ i nd ""'· Cl1lmlnt. l'u•M 11300. Clt!ml"ll price $1500. Cypreu Cll•m· ~· o1 commerce & T1n1l.-oct M(n'• Clull. I Tlte New Champ Tll11rsda)', August lC, 1%9 DAJLY r1Lor 23 OCIR Schedules Handicap Drag Program 011 Saturday ~tore than 100 drivers will compel• in the handicapper's championship at Orange: Coun- 1y International R a c e w a y Saturday for a purse of $1500. Grid Ducats Available Under this handicap system. The $1500 purse Is by far the a driver determines his own largest amount ever offered at OCIR for this type of drag elapsed time or perfonnance racing. Previously, the dial· handicaps and 1( bl! runs your-own h a n d i c a p com· qui cker than his declared han-petition bracket has only of. dicap he is dlsqu!Uied. fered $150 In prize mOney. This type of racing switche s Sbarlng the spotlight with the emphasis from horsepower lhe handicap races Saturday to driving ability , says will be injected funny can and raceway director Mike Jones. the ~/gas supercharged cars. To be successful a driver Time trials begin al I: 30 must be exceptionally quick on p.m. with lhe featurl! race!'! Saddleback College is now the starting line and very con-slated betwun I and 10:30 accepting applications f o r sistent. p.m, season tickets for its five-\,:;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;-:::~;;:~~::~;;;;;9 game home football schedule! this fall. ~ Season tickets !°' two non· DYNO ·MASTER lr#I , conference and three con-llAl1EI ~ .. ference games, wh;ch wm be TUNE-UPS TUNE ' UP played at Mission Viejo High • School, are priced at $5 and may be ordered through Jaak Schwartzbaugh, eoordinator of student activities. INCLUDE: llECJAl.ISTI 8 L.._r e "• 8 P•h1t1 e COM! ... _. e Set l'-1.. H Oy1111 e Sc111t9 Ch.cit l•11iri•11 S.,W.• e C11rt.11ret•r lc11lllHM• 111 fl1191 check I e" fi11•I fftl •11 dyft•111•-t«. II_,,, ltrrld tlllcl'ltrfh N-(W~hl •• "' "' !~O '" '" '" '" Rute111 ILl~ml Go Flos1l1 Go C•lntldll Lllllt Obit (Hlr1l Rupe Hendricks left) accepts the winners trophy from tourney chairman \Veb Hopkins after defeating Bill Livingston second from right) in Santa 1\na Country Club's 11th annual exclusive's tournament for players with 17 and up handicaps. Hendricks beat Livingston, 3 to 1. At right is club professional Gerald Hall. ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Gauchos' home schedule has them meeting Grossmont <Sept. 271 and Chaffey (Oct. 4) in non.conference games and Desert Conference games with Victor Valley (Oct. I 8 ) , Barstow (Nov . 81 and 1mperial Vallry (Nov . 15). NO TUNE·UP OVER 82$.00! S,...., Wtld'I (Htrll 11toclt9! e ....... , (K11111, Nlllfr't Gold'/ (5mll'lll ll'OUllTM llACI!. J5f v1rG1. ) ye1r t lcls tnl 19 In Grtilt A """'· P11t1t .. _ o.tllw'I lh•llUfSI {Wrl9f\IJ it.dl.H'I ICllSJ fWll•onl 4-oll1 •GO.et (Smlll'I) Llttll l"llMlll'I llrll\kley) IWI l"llof (W111oOnl Hitt~ (Ad.9!•1 Irish $oN (LlpN"'l •oc:tW Midi 1.--.a1 M.r. hfe l1r UllCll E0Nr (Mltsi.idl) "' '" ". "' ". "' "' "' '" "' l"ll"TH llAl'.I. l50 v.rds. t .ve1r ol<K. c 111 ... 1ns. 1'111'• S200Q. Cl11mlrit 1r!ce ltrred'1 Pride (C1rd<>11) "••ker'1 ltr11ae (Sml!hl Gtll&nl Vtk>r lH Cro1b•) Plitt M\Kllo (It ll1nk1) aunny 11r Le• (lllchlrds) "' "' •• "' "' '" MIHTM llAC•. 150 v1r61. J Yttr okb tnd \Ill In Grtdlt A PIUi . l"vn.1 $190CI. Peeler !lob Ill lltnkO El Goivlltn CWt lscnJ True C.n Fly CLll>Mml 811 ~1!1dldd¥ CltlltV D'4rcv K•v I lt~rtlll Altrvl1tk. fH1rll Velv~ ltockell {lo\clt9'!\Cllds) Do Wilch (Smllhl Mkk'1 Mcon !H. Cr1111bY) NG! Gvl!ty (M.llsudl) '" •• •• '" "' "' "' '" ·~ "' ................. _., •• ., .... l!l •• , •• i ....................... -.,,...,.,..,,,..,.,,..,,,,,,."'"'""~ Race Results w.._,..,., Au11.u . lff' Clur • 1'11t P llllT lllACll!. a v1rd1. Mt\dtf\ w1r olds. Cl1!ml111. l"Uf'l.t 111llO. si.rr. Gui,,..,.,.. !l"wtt!tl TJ,lill Jt.IO '·'° Crlm1o;n Sfrw•k /Smil!IJ i .20 s.oo ac.ld Mcon CW1tlOllJ J.oll Tl,..._11 fl., Str1!d!M-lloc. loo llocktl, Tllret '"" All, ll!ICl!et E-eu, MOtll1 M111. 11COND lllACI. olOI v1rd1. J Ytl• olch Incl U!' In Gracie I "lu1. Purw t l500. Joe I Less {Adair) O•rv1~ IO'f !Smith) Wt, Clwrub CW1bonl Tl--lll t/10 i.1e '·'° J.llO l•.olO '·'° ,_. $Cltlcl>l<I -APrl! lt•Q""1t, l t r!,.,,,Dl, !toy J1nt, MPclth MIDlt. NIGHTLY 00Ulll!-J·$11rr1 OUlrlt- 'tWI & +J11 I Lin. 1"11111 1)11.21. T"lllO lllACll! • .UO v1rd1. Mtlden J 'l .. r .Cdl llrM l" (l lif, "VrM 117'00. l lue lliPllw (Smitll) 11.oll S.ld J.M 297 Recorded ?itADISON, Wis. -Everett Chandler, 73, showed a lot or youngsters how it ought to be done in the regular singles event during the 7 9 • d a y American Bowling Congress tournament here. The veteran bowled the tournament's iecond highe st game, a 297, and his 734 singles series was good enough !or fourth place. He ea rned $9%5. In his big game he left the 2-4-5 pins standing on his final ball. --l uJetn 1 flt ll1nlt1l Fif"SI TG Go lL\J>l'lilM) T1me---lt Jf10 NP ICt•ld!u. lJ.l'O '20 ,. l"OUltTH ltACli. 150 Vil•d,. I v~•r old• 1nG u• In G••dl AA Minus. l"urw 52100. 6.to 4,'° J •O ..... '·'° l .lO Bir ,.... Joe (APOdK•I Flyj"• Calf (It ll1nk1) Dlt-11' Out Time (MGrrl1! Tl-11 flt! Scrtlm.d -O.nd1 l>'.00!111, Go!Tt 81r Too, Wllll Luck, l'1uum II••· l"l,TH llACli. l50 YilrdS. J Ytlr olds. Cl1im1"g· Pu•H $1100 Count Cll••n Cit ltnks) •.00 J.1111 J.llO S~klo 1'()114! (Wtl'sotll t . .i •.80 Jo Burres1 (W"'°urel J 60 Time-II lilt 5c•1h:hed--Our 0ec11:ot1, SIXTH •ACI. V1!1oel1 Sr. (&Jrst- 110 v•rds. J Ytl• GI01 I nd UP. c1.;m. 1n1. PurH nooo. ll lHv GMX11rt (Sn!llto) Mr. l<>l\ll Shi!! Cl<l"lil ''' Wtr 1111'1'1 CRk:111rd1) Tlme-47 l/11 i.to J . .a , ~ 11.20 J.ao '·" SUlte:N!l-PronlOtilO. Fu1cv wiuo ... , NidtJ 09' M.¥, MIH Wl/l'IPllM, Sll:VIENTH •ACll:. l50 ~1'111. J ve1r ol01 tlld VP in Grtdt M PluJ. l'ur1t 11300. c..av ICld rsm!lh\ '·"° J.00 l IO APIChti ... ,. ..... (llr!nltley) J.00 J l)O ~rt!iC Alf11r !Htr!) .... Tlme---11 1/10 Ho Kr1leht t . ll!IOHTH llACIE. J.it v1rcl1. J ~1r old• 1nd 1.111. Al\o>Or1nte1. Pun t tJOOO. lltill CMr9ef' fM9U11d1 ) l.iQ 4.00 l.20 Q.,incy A Go Go (WltlO") J.00 J.to .1.<1mlr1t llfd IK1"IJJ i.00 Tin--v Jfll 141 1cr1!Chff. NINTH ll,\Ct:, <!00 y1rlk l w1r olcl1 1na u• 1" Gra.,. A P111s. Pur1o1 .... lud l!'ye (lt ich.ilrdol M•d'*lf OilndY ClloM•m) E•~I fndltn ("a..0.Cc.tl Tlrne-20 f/10 1 . .0 l.40 1.ao J.IO 1 .cl ,. Scr1tcn~d-'-uci<v ll&rl Jl!t. Uncl1 [091r. Oebby'1 lt~QY11!. lloc~~t Mick. QUI NELLA -t·lvl I.ye• '-Mltlw1' 01lllly. 1"11111 11.:11. Old-ti1ne Runners Will Jog Five miles mighl be a sprint for someone of Ron Clark's caliber, but what does it do lo someone over 40? It's a cinch, contend several f'ntrants in the Fountain Valley KJwanis Club 5-mile run Sept. I. who swear they won't be huffing and puffing after completing the distance. Among them is 71·¥ear old Fred Grace from Loil Angeles who has run more than 15 marathons -a 26·mile, 285- yard distance -since he turn- ed 70. He considers even a 16- miler a sprint and promises to run even faster in the Kiwanis Cl ub event than he does in a marathon. Then there is Waller Frederick. 62, the head maintenance man for the Pico Rivera school district. He is a champion, having won three national titles for men over 60 at the National Masters Track and Field Championships held in July. He ran a s;,ift 19:27 three miles returning a day later, ht covered six miles in 40:07. Title Goes To Bartosh Frank Bartosh dominated men 's club action over the weekend at Costa !\1esa Golf and Country Club with his 77 taking low gross honors. Lead ing lO\'I net players were . Bill Zukauskas (8~ 15.70), J . W. Jackson (81·10· 71 ), Bud Jones (90-19·71). Jack Frazier (8.1·11-n). Jack Towle 173-6·72) and Earl Atkinson (88-16-72). Sally Thompson broke gross ~A~,.f,~ SWEEP LONG IRONS WITH FIRM LEFT-HANO GRIP 1 100 for the first time and parlayed it into a winning 91 · 23-63 (79) in a Poker Tourna- ment over the Mesa Cou rse Monday in women's club play. - I really believe that golfers who have trouble hitting long· iron shots-and tttere seem to be plenty in this fix-shoutd stress three simple points in their swings.· First, grip the club especially firm with your left hand (illustra- tion ,.1) on these shots. The left harid, 1nd th8 .Jett side,. must dominate. • • Second, k11p your head as still 11 possible as you swing. Focusin1 your 1tt1ntion on the bock of tho ball ·will htlp_ keep the held from moving. · Third,. sweep the ball away (illustration 13). Try to contact the ball 1t tht bottom of your swine 1rc, a s it flattens and the club is .movine pa rallel to the ·around. Score ill 1pit1 of tr•p.s, bunk1r1, rou1h i nd downhill 1!1s-wrt11 ti'!• help Arnold P•lmer cll1r1 you 1n l'l•t booklet, "Trouble Sllota:• A copy It yourt tor 20c 1lon1 with 1 1t1mped. tell· 1ddr1utd 111v1!0Dt tent to Arnold P•lrner, In c1r1 of tl'lll n1w111· ptp1r. • Hazel Webster finished se· cond at 80-13·67 (831 followed by Maxine Assmus' 97-20·77 (86) and Fran Lewis' 100-31.fi9 (881. Friday's play. a low gross· low net over the field affair, \vas captured by H a z e I Websler's 93 in the low gross category. Low net went to Rosemary Ski\lion's 104-25·79 and Jeane Creighton's 109·30·79. Marge Fit.zslmmons follow- ed with a 114-34-80 along with Betty Jo Sleva at 111).29-81, Martha Ciampa at 93-15-83 and Dorothy O'Leary'.o; 95-12-&. Costa Mesa Golf and Coun· try Club will be represented at the State open championships al Santa Maria by three players -Frank Purcell, Ted Oorius and John Mahoney. NllHT RACING NOW ----i, Mon. t/1111 S.t. l :4S - LOS ALAMITOS We.tt of Dl•rH11l•f1d on t<t111/1 For Top Sports Coverage Read The Daily Pilot WHEEL ALIGNMENT ,:>;~,~. TUNE-UP SPECIALISTS 145 EAST 17th STREET, COSTA MESA -642-5250 (Aero•• from lob'• Ilg loy) . Mon.-Sat. I t• I drioli B.F.GOOORICH SILVEATOWN RAOIAL 990 .,, .... TrMl•·ift . ... .... TH "'"' p- First price break 175Rt3 700-13 •1.95 $40,45 175R14 695-14 2.11 42.95 32.21 Save 25% off our 185R14 735·14 2.28 44.45 33.34 195R14 n5·14 2.48 47.25 36.44 regular trade-in price 195R15 775·15 2.51 47.25 35.44 With Purchase of Any Two Tires 205R14 825-14 2.73 51 .75 38.81 (Valu• 9.95) Bf& Radials-the 205R15 825·15 2.75 51.76 38.81 • 2t5R14 855-14 2.93 58.75 42.58 Ir• cFted "°"''• best of the belled 215R15 855-15 2.93 56.75 42.56 camber, fio9.J. 225R14 885-14 3.16 64.25 48.19 oJtd.....,, tires 225R15 885·15 3.18 64.25 48.19 235R15 915-15 3.32 • 6i.75 60.0I EASY BUOGETlBIMS WllH BRl's "CHOICE· CHARGE~ 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE BRAKE RELI NE •EXPERT WORKMANSHIP •QUALITY REPLACEMENT PARTS •SPECIAL LOW PRICES 50,000 MILE GUARANTEE only $6 more with our 'MSTP wheel stabilization specified by factory Guarantee COSTA MESA $ 9.5 FDR MOST CARS WESTMINSTER JONES TIRE SERVICE L. J. LITTLE'S Big 0 Tire 2049 HARBOR BLVD. I At Bay I Phone 540-4343 or 646-4421 7352 WESTMINSTER A.VE. Phone 893-557 2 DAILY 8 am-6 pm e Sat. 'til 5 pm DAILY 8 am • 7 pm e Sat. 'TII 5 pm ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS • B.EGoodrich /I • • I ' .i • DAn.Y I'll.OT Thum1y, August 14, 196~ WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? by Jock Aoltlooy Marlin fishing picked up a little during the fi~st ..:part of the week, and indications are that the bullfish .i.could bring quite a iew smiles t.o Newport Harbor ang· l lers this weekend. Peggy Hitchcock, of the Balboa Angling Clu.b'. re-i ports that two marlin and two broadb1ll were 0U1c1ally weighed in over the weekend. Ted ?\tastzger of Beverly Hills, fishing aboard the boat "Hustler" out or Newptn1, landed \\VO broadbill near the east end of San Clemente Island . The fish weighed' in at 312 and 352 pounds and \Vere taken on Jive mackerel. To date this season. Matzger has boated three broadbill over 300 po4nds. Bob Reid of Costa Mesa picked up a 148 314-pound marlin on the 14 mile bank also using live mackerel for bail. Mackerel should be the best bait for these big gami·fish this weeKend . All of th~ boats le~ving th .e jetty. art catching a few and putting them 1n the bait tank before they head out to sea. The mackerel are being caught {rom under the floating kelp patties, using "lucky jo~" type lu~es. Jo"ish down about 30-40 feet to pick up the Sparush and "greenback" mackerel. BAllOA ANGLING CLUB WINS TOURNAMENT The men•' division of the Balboa Angling Club took 1 overall toD honorl in the Pacific Anglers lnvit•tional ":'"Al!Mcore Tournament held last wHkend. Most of the ~9 boats entered in the tournamerit fished In the waters off S•n Diego, some 110.125 mllu from Newport. There we re 147 anglers In the conteat, and they c•utht a tdtal of 163 fish. The high boat for the tourna· ment was the "Ranger IV", tkippered by Jock Albright 1of Corona del Mar. ALBACORE STILL HIDING 1 Jerry ThOO.pson of Corona del Mar, sPent 1 a s t "veekend aboard his boat the "Pacific Clipper" at San Clemente Island. and reported seeing a large number of billfish, but no signs of albacore. The water temperature around the island \Vas near 70 degrees and in mid channel in the high 60s. U this ~am)ing trend continues, the chances for that inside albat'Ore run could be ruined. Ba8s Hit At Irvine And Ocean Russ Cleary, owner 11nd operator or Irvine Lake, reports that bass are hitting surlace plugs early in the morning and late in the even- ing. John Moore ot Santa Ana filled his stringer w i t h bronzebacks in the 3 to 5 poond class, and Cleary says that the Smithwick plugs are doing the trick. Catfish are producing some good action for those anglers fishing with cheese in the weeds. Fishermen using light line are losing a good number of big cats and regular! advise using at least 20-pound test line. Irvine Lake will close its gates for the 1969 season Sepl. 14, so local anglers have one month to get out and do some fresh water fishing at Orange County 's biggest lake. OFF SHORE ANGLING GOOD Operators of D a v e y ' s Locker, Art's Landing and San Clemente Sporttishlng report good catches of bonita, bass. barracuda and a f e w yellowtail and white sea bass. Action is taking place from the Santa Ana River jetty, down to just past the Jr1lddle kelp. In fact, local fishing has beeo so good, that most of the boats running out of Newport are forsaking the albacore for the fine oU shore fishing. All of the landings are run. ning all day boats, charter boats, half day boats and twi- light • evening specials. The boats are hauling good loads, but there is plenty of room and lots of fishing £ o r everyone. Call your favorite landing for their schedule a n d reservations. That twi·light special can sure beat the heat of the day. .... ____ _ :=-4-;.·.~·...--:::r:­- Special Duck Kil! Rejected Secretary or Interior. Walter Hickel, turned dowo lhe re· quest by the State Department ot Fish and Game and the U.S. Bureau or Spqrt Flshe~s and Wildlife for a depredation duck hunt In the artas of Tulare and Buena Vlst• Jakes. The recommendation came after more than 9,000 duck! died as a result of the botulism now present ln !he Jakes. Hickel !elt the killing of healthy ducks by hunters was no way to save the more than 250,000 birds which could possibly die from the disease. COULD YOU DD IT? -Bring to gaff an 18 lb. yel· Jowtail on 10 lb. test mono line, that is. John S. Tom- lin of Costa Mes a, turned the trick while fishing from the sportfisher Sea Horse out o! Davey's Lock· er in Newport Beach. Action took place at San Clemente Island. Hickel is right. but this does not solve the botulism prob· Je.m, nor does it give the con- servation mindea sportsmen of Southern , California a chance to insure themselves good duck hunting thia year. Fo1· lJ peo11ai11g Season Southland Trout Plant Hickel has instructed the federal bureau to help out in whalc\'er way it can, and he stated, "I feel confident, relic( can be brought to the situation short of killing additional birds through hunting." Dove Regulations Told LOS ANGELES-Big Rock The ducks are currently being herded off the infected waters by the two groups who recommended the hunt; but when the huge numbers of migrati ng ducks from the no rth start winging their way south, the task of keeping the ducks off the water will be almost impossible. Following are the basic regulations for California's 1969 dove hunting season, a 46- day split season that appUes statewide and opens Monday, Sept. I: Season dates -First hun- ling period Sept. 1-30, Second period Nov. 29 through Dec. 14. The target -Mourning doves, ringed turtle doves and Chinese spotted doves may be taken statewide. \Vhite-win&ed doves may be taken only in Imperial, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties. Mexican ground doves may not be taken. Bag and possession limit- Not more than 10 doves in the aui'taate of all species may be taken in any one day. On or after the .second day of each or the two split.sea.son periods a maximum of 20 doves in the aggregate of all species may be posawed. Creek, Bouquet Canyon Creek, brlnt "" W.!1 ,._. clovu ln!o c1111orn111 Crystal Lake , Jackson Lake, A-Ya, tiut -tv!!y lt1111 .... 1 wi...., San Gabriel River East and mu1r n m11n •!ttcht'd lo 11<1\ CID>• 11k-, In Arl1IH'l1. Th• •1r111 mutt bl \Vest Forks. lltcl1rtd 11 • c1Ulol''ll• POrl of itn1r1 RIVERSIDE Fu Imo r ll•llon lftll lht lrlM<>Orltr "1V11 l\IYI I - v1w11 Afl1on1 hllnllnt M«..... Lake. Hemet Lake. 0-11 I lt!llllY IN'lrt• h110 C•ll"""l• SAN BE"~ARDINO A :~"il'~u!~\~0:..1~"':'.'~~ ~~~ Q,', -r-blnh In mv _."11en m1v 1 1110 !Mt rowhead Lake, Big Bear 1t..~;:11i:, c;•:::;:~··:i~[;1 rn 1'9U• Lake, Deep Creek upper sec- POt1H11on, ,..... could 1.iu .,... POn •·• lion, Green Valley Lake, JO more movrnlnt doYtl In Ct lllornlt Wrong Target Legal shooting hours - From one-half hour before sunrise to sunset in the area being hunted. bu! ""mor1 whlll·WIP\91, Gregory Lake, Santa Ana i='r~.~:r ,WJr~n,,!/'11~,..,. A,1,....,1 River, Santa Ana River South Victim wearing a white cap Fo11ow1111 111 "'"' tut•llon1 w1111 •"" c11uorn11 In lht "'m' •tot••llfllc Fork. v.·as lying in some sageb nu;h, Wh!Cll CtlllOfl'I• clowt ll"nl•'1 ••• "OW 1rt1. A llvnl•r m•J l•kt •rid PCUl'!H h h' f t1011Cllnt """ OeNrtmem ot F1111 1nd not mort p1 • 1Jv1n •!*;I" mi n 111t VENTURA -~1ali1 i j a Shooter, age 18, s ot Im or a G...,.., w1111 1111 OFCi'.1 lftl-1 1a """" ,, .. 1.,1 b•t nmu pr1•c•llltd •or ""' k U bb'I t "'~-I less <tUn11am: -,,.,, 1n 1 -••llfllc '"'· s. "''" Creek, Reyes Cree , pper ra 1 a a w;,140Ci! o O-Wlw I• l!>e llcrltt ••••an -"'"' u '°" ""'"1 in "°"' A•lion• ind Se C eek than SO yards .., MOnd•Y? Why NI fin S1lu'111y. 11-t C1U10rnlt. 11nder PIO Clrtu1!•nu mtJ Spe f ::.....,, ..--------:===. • OIN• llunllnt Hason1? YOU Pl11tH mo•~ "'"" 7(1 "'""'"'""" --'------"'--=-"'~~~-~-=""----------....... ICM.I .. under i.cttr1I '""llllO>u dn~t1 •nd 2S wllllir-wl..,1 11 In II· ....._.. !tit cllvt -"II.On c1p'I -btlore S.~I. 1ret1!1 P<llMUlon llml! In !hi t 1. lo -n Ol'I I Sff\ltd•Y _,Ill r~ul" lftll<i Phlc 1rt1. Wllllnt until s .... 6. fl~1 dtYI .rter Q-Whtrt In Colllornl• tl\co,old I Ar11ona -M Ill ""'°" II.iii o.<;tO&I lllt dec1••1 dovn 1 brlnt In from IN)11\er Color..io RJv~r. Al 1111 rlsul!, ll•lt? Ctllfornll't !tdt llov9 "''"°" will -n A-At Citlforl'I• O.P•rlmtnl pl on Lt bor Div, Mon41y. 51111. 1. At•lcullurt ln•Pf'Cllon 1111lon1 11 o-wm ,..... t ••l•ln tl'MI Ht 1l'HI Wlnltrfllvtn. 81Ymt, Vkf•I J~nc11on, l'O•~lon limn IH'I d0w1? Tw1nl'f·Nl1>e Ptlmlo D11111tn. Ytrmo. A-In C1!ilornl1. w n d., no Btnltln ol TONI, fift$f0ftt 'Ibe albacore are still some 80 miles out of Point Lolna, and the first counts are not of bragging size. Some of the boats are hitting fish early, but the rest are just scratching out a fe\Y fish. With the warm \Yater coming in, Harbor area ang- 1ers could well be in for an exotic year of fishing. The big yellowtail and bluefin tuna. dolphin. yellowtail and marlin might fill in for the unpredictable albacore. Deep Sea Fish Report ~~~'\'ll~m1~Y ,!. '":in;.'; i.'J',' .:;:"",; Q-oll I ll11nr 1,. M•~lc1, -m1nv •11 .. , "'"' ~ d•Y " io.c;ll Of "'' two ~~~r~:r I lmPOrt ••om Mllllco lnlo h1lvff Of Ille 11HI .. ,_, If 'l'O\I ll•v1 A-U.$. retullllon1 prOh lbll tnY lluMtll 1WO or "IOfl '11YI •"Id ~Ive Mnon fr...., ,,.,.,...,;.. "O'\'> •n• compllett w!tll 1t11 df,llY nmll of 10 lor1l1n countrv. t ilht• by Jln9ll llllP· VACATION CAR SERVICE OFFER DEER HUNTERS FIND HEAT TOO MUCH Only 'two dHr were reported taken over the ,,.st wHk out of our IOcal mount•ins, aa the prea1ure from hunters ••• ••Y down. Ag•in, high temper•turet were re1pon1ible for the 1,ck of a .._good rac count .... Those hunt•;". ·who are titting ttilir llHr, report thet d•ybre•k •nd late evening are the be1t times •s the dMr •r• lffklnt sh•de early in tf\e morning end not mevlng at all 'til dutk. Tom Forbes, manager of Grant'• Surplus in Costa ~et•, and Chuck Ab•rta of Huntington Beach, spent , -the wffkend huhting deer near Paso Robles. They reported that even though a lot of doe we re spotted only one buck was seen. Tem~eratures rose to over 115 degrffs, and Forbes said, "It was \O hot that even the ground aquirrela we re not moving." I It 's going to take some cool days and nights to bring the dffr out, and from the l0oka of the weather . m.,, it might be a few weeks before thia current heat ! j .. ve ends. N iW~OllT (Arl'1 Llfttlln,) -lJT •~glerJ : HS b•rr•cud•. 30 bo!llto. 10 ~»· !Dl~t'f'1 Ltckt'I -190 .,,._ •le••: 111 b1rr1cua1, 'S6 ttonl10, l •l b•H, l yellow11il, H •ocll (ad. t 1111;. b\il, 1 lllKk ~I bl"· ll!AL IEACH -H 1nt1er.1 : 70 Ill•· r.wcll. 61 bonilO, 111 uncl blu. 16 N Utlul. l 1r11e, «6 .~ntler1; 2 ~,.,. M 1, J)ll botllto. $ Mnd !Nin. HUNTINGTON •l!ACH -!I I Mltrt: )0 bo!l!IO, H lllH, I N !lbul. $1rt<1, 111 •ntler.: n bo!llto, "' tlln, 1M b.,ro.c;udl . SAM CL•M•Hi"• -141 1<11\"1: 1,U6 botltto. tit tau, .QI t..rro.c;ud1, l lltllbl,lt, 10 y•ll-ttil, t whii. ... ~"· Rugged Slate TUCSON -Bob \Veber's first year as Arizona's head football coach may be an in· teresting one. The Wildcals take on lwo new teams this season in Houston and Syracuse , both powerhouse teams in re· cent seasons. Houston will be met here in a night game on Oct. 11 while the \Vildcats \'isit Syracuse Nov. 8. C.LOSED F-0 R • VACATION THRU AUGUST 16th OPEN AGAIN 9:00 A.M. AUGUST 18th b •d1. ur'ldtr vour C~tl orn!• llce~•e YOU mfn' or n• , • · •. '"0'1 1• ·n SANTA MONICA -104 1n1ler1; t20 m:yc~~?,.!.,.'~r:il"'o'lml~n~~:r,!~ 7$ Oovt1.~n t~• 1,~1rt10, .. ,11urln1,'"o ' •. ,,. _ -·•••· ' "'''""· o~e Clltnulf •·<• l><t nn n1 on \If>. • .. ""'' "" mou•n1M. wtirte·wlMttl, rlnttd 1\/1111 d•Y OXNAIU) -11• 1nti1'•1: l.11911 bin. 1nd Chlneot >Mll!td. ' 715 bonito. U ll1llbo.ol. Q-Afttr t lllvt llktn mv -n llmll 1m0;;.'1~~!~~~i.:~ .. ,~~'!,; l~"lt:1~1'" 1 SAN 01•GO CMwnlclJl1I ~ll'J_.SI of 6ovt l. m1r I •»111 1 l•l.,'ICI ln A-A Mo1lc1" ttron ...,,.,..11 •ncl • •n1te11: 10• 11111cor1. lfl Y.t llDwltll, I al>oolltll !llt7 detlt•lllon of enlN l rt •t.ul•KI 11 rtit blvl!'fin ....,.,, 63 blrr1cudl, 31 ~11. A-o. U,i . C'!1lom• (lfflce -•t rov r1-tn,1r ,.,.. boni10. Q.-.Mly I 19ke mv flovn 11 • fM U.5. PAaADllE COVE-.1St IMll'rt: Ml •ts11ur1n! lo bt coolttd tor l f\CI e1tm 0-Wll~tt In CflKornl• slltlUlft I ban. J btrrlC\Hll, .s l'lllibo.ot. 111 bO-bY ms 11'16 my 11artyf cleclert 11\e..,.,Wtl I brlnt In from Me•· n·1a A-Yn, It the _,, 1r1 l11111ed wlm lco. ' · 1 111nea Jt1!emen1 bt1rlnt v.i• ntlfti!, A-At U.S. cu11om1 1l1ll0111 11 51n Hl!aMOIA -11 lntlert: 14 und •dd•tu, h11nlTM tlttn•t numbe., "" Yikl•o, l'Ktlt. n1ci lco or Al•oOOn•s. blH, 71 bonllo. lot•I number I~ klflll f/// blrd.1 Incl f.:' or 11 1lrPorl POlnh or ,nuy wtllefl If>. LONG ••Aclt , •• ,,......, l'IK)-tO ::it,,~ :ir:.·," l~r ::.r:.~=· .. ,.~1~ '"'"' Llncllllrth ,ltkl In San Dlsvo I nd 1ntltn~ n blrrK\1111, n bt.11, IU wft'llll !!!!~C,•0~•1~-M•,,",",_!!11._Am'',~m'",.'M,,. llonlto. 1 ri.llbwl. aarfl!, 52 •ntlffo: con • . ····•• .• 1rn -· •v< , 111 llOn\lo, ' llllt. I fllllllv!. IPadfk 0-11 I lwnt In .l.rb-Ind 19kl I eb!1lned .r Inf of lt!ost $l•lloM pr 11 l.en"nel-lli int1eu: 1 ~llewt1ll, 52 = :;;jt;;" w11l\'~!!i..:'.t. ':.v..~.:.~~ G~'~n"C:!I Dt1,.rtmtnl of '1111 ind ll•rrlQICl1. 2 N llDu!, nt u llto lllu. ....:==c.c==-="'-"'-"'--"'---"=-"'=-------1 llll botlllCI. n rock cod. IPltrN\nt LlfMHnt>-21-1 1nt1t<1: nt b1rr1cva1, '11 b111. VJ botlilO. 2 'fl'tlOwU ll. 7 • ll•libul. SAN P IEO"O (nM! $1. Ltn4111tl-JO 1nfltn: µ b•trt(vct.. 390 ~•llco N u, UO t>onlla. INtrm't L11Wlnt>-14'1 I,,._ tl•ri: 6 vel!owt1ll, 10 N"1(lldl< _3'1 c111co ~u. 100 llonlto, Jl und ""' * llllibl.I!. MD""o IAY cv1r ... LiMllll)-106 i/>liltn: ) i lbleor't, 2 Y lmon. f !lt lJ· 1>111. 76 lln9 tod. 1,m rod cod. PORT MUIENl!MIE-llS t ntl1r" 1,U) u lico blu, '5S 110nl10. JO llotlltlllll. 11\ALIBU-'7 1no~fl: 726 calkl !Nin, 111 bonito, l l>alllNI. REDOND0-1'2 tn9~rs: 7 btrrt· CY~I. l.OlS callca blu, ).I.I bonito, ' hi!i1N1. Two 81rte1, 14 1ngle'1: !51 b1>1, 1l5 bonllo, .0 mltk~rtl, I hlh· but, ltl roc:ll (<>cl • OCIEANStO•-l5t tntle'1: 151 b1rrl· cuaa. 71' b1u, 1,11, ttonilo, 9 wt.ltt M!• b•U. U Yfllow11 ll, 29 h1llbl,lt, • Adt ,,,, /11.1111111 Pu .. '1COI Mla•l vour lawtlf•FooJ or Ll4uor S1or1. You did. You did, The Puuyc&l'is & cklithtlul new orancHw• aour that miaes ur &bout u quick aa .. cal Thia na"tiona prize winn1n4 Clfiftk ~ made with a s>adc:el of "lnatanl Puuycat MiS:" waler and EarlyTimt1. Have 10me fun wiih The l'liMyat. lt~ pll)'luL To1datclol 4·10U OL Puu1cat1la11 uand 4 paeketsof lnttant PuNycat Mia; a.tn4 S2.9S to : I A"LY TIMES l'UUYCAT CL.Assn P.O. IOX lft,MA,L!. rt..AIH, MINHUOTA SlJll • • • Let our lklH1d mechanics get your car ready for Vacation Driving! :;i; .j;· e _., . ,· . ' ' " REPA~K . ~ • OuTEtl>.fif!OttT...:. WljEELl'SEARINCJ. ALL@ SERVICES ONLY Most Ame rican cars. ,,,,, llffl, if ..... , Elrtr• ch•r111• for een with •Ir conditioning or tortlon b•r• 40%0ff •IM~.,.-=,:: st .. ..,.., .. f d .'cl" tall1•\ \P\UI I • World famous ffrt$fOnt . .. 500 .. 2nd$1 Tire Low A1 80 1.00·13 Tubectu lltcltw1ll wl'Mlin you IKly lft tire for t21. Ptu1 l1.I SI per tire F1d. I JtCISI tea. ' 11le1 iaa end 21ir11 off YQU1' ur. 0 All Sizes on Sele-BUY NOW/ FIRESTONE STORE 475 I. 11th St., Ceata Mesa 60·2444 -I to t Delly -Setvrdoy 1·5 • • , ,;.r·- - • Thursday, .Augusl 14, 1969 DA.ILY PILOT 5 • HATlONALCM:fCllA&.~TIOfit NOW PLAYING! Dooro Open 12:15 Show St1m 12:30 1rs N!W ! EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING Remember That Nazi? He's Red Now Foi~.!!!! 5111.Dt'P ,...,. ....... ~ ___ C_O_O_L_l_D_IY __ _ ACllS OJ Fltl l PAIUUN• lffll•IAATION A(]# CC»ITINl.IOUS PlafORNN«:ES •t POPul.Alt f't11Cl$ OIRCCT FROM ITS RESCRVtO SEAT ENGAGEMEIH! -ALSO COMIDY CO·HIT - A11dy Gi-lffltfl 1totrl11t hr • (GI "ANGEL IN MY POCK ET" Color mon1·r:11,n De1111 Joflft l 11d6y HtKk.W in Wolt Disney'• "THE LOVE BUG" J•rry Lewi1 Peter Lawford "HOO K, LINE ANO SINKER" J apanese Movies Every Tuesday Night " ............................ , ....... . i SPECI AL NOTICE TO OUR PATRONS : Now with A1;•demy ;..,..•rd wi11n•r W•ort• k•IU'l•4Y (llli$T $UPOltTING ACTOR lfft-"C001... HAND LVKE") THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN ARE BACK • --ALSO PLAYIN G -JAMES CA.AN in "SUIMAllNI l ·I" OPENS TOMORROW ! thru WED. ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER 800 WEST KATELLA AVE. By VERNON SC01T BOLL YWOOD (UPI) Helmut Dentine Jost World War II almo8t stngl .. handedly for l'.lazl G<nnany. He was the bandsome. black·balred SS sadist who sneaked around HollywOOd movies foiling the plans of . allied heroes. But eventually and inevitably, Dentine was cut down by a Hollywood pn>- file in a U.S. Army suit. On occasion Dantine played a Sympathetic Gennan soldier who was pressed into the service of his country against his better judgment. They knocked him orr any-how: · Those were the day when producers believed all storm troopers· looked like Danline or Otto Preminger. Dantine was1 the one with the hair. They took turns at being cowardly, venal, inhuman in· credibly bad marksmen and lousy lovers. J a p a n e s e members of the axis were em- bodied· in the person of Keye Luke who died for the Nippon Imperial army with the same regylarly as the two GermaM. Dantine, bis hair tinged with gray. laughs about his days as a Nazi villain. He is a native of Austria and has been an American citizen for 30 years. The years have Called to "Today the h~ro and "Now t am play1ng Russian diminish Oantlne's handsome. villain are ,Jess _£)early heavies," he 1aid. "That squa~t face: Hls jaw would ed," Oantlne concluded. " ut started 10 years ago, and t'm still invite a left book from a I must sa;, thole black at it again." World War It Gt. He b lean uniforms I used,to1wtar In the ills first Russian villaln was and his accent is less ~ war movie were-very \m- in "War and Peace." DanUne\[=oounctd~==lh:a:n:lt:oo::;ce::;w:as~.=~;;;P;:'=ess;:iv~e~."~~~~~=l will be seen again as a Soviet bad guy in an episode of next NOW SHOWING season's •'lfallm!!irk Hall of • ONI Wiii ONLY • Fame." MUST IND TUllDAT It is the first acting Dantine °'" AUClU ST 19 TO MAICl'·WAY has done in five years. 6!45 fOR ANOTHll 11• sHowr "I n:alized I was not getting '" 1. ...... to the top of my profession as ...... llMll..._ an actor," be said. "And l didn't want io be second rate ALL THE POWER , •• at anything. Al.L THE DRAMA ••• "A man can be a good 1N ONE busint.sSman or a top pr~ MAGNIFICENT fessional man, but in the arts FILM! you must excel or give il .up if you have any integrity and confidence in yourself." Dantine said he now con- centrates on business affairs, an investment company and banking interests. He acts only w h e n an interesting part comes along -and then as a diversion. "There is no t ontinulty to my acting tareer," he said. ';Over the years 1 deve1oped other tastes and interests that didn't limit me to acting and l still hink one should be real· istic about reaching lhe top." ' ' \ "llaVEV.U, AuCEl.TDllllS•1 Rl'VAN fLEIT :.:.. SMA • The pk lurn in IM• DO• m~y De con1ldtrect bV '°'"' lo be un-e o0~ull•blt tor Chlldr..,, and young people -and •OC111lrt 116•11n!il di•·• cre~!•on. · : •'CAiTLf: KEEi"" (II) "llUN ANGEi.. llUN" (It}• "THE CHAJJt. •MAH" "M•CKENNA'S GOLD" "SEVE N Gl!;LDEN MEN"• • "DEAT H OF A GUNFIGl'ITalt" • Laguna Playhouse's "TOKU.S" 7:00 & 11 :11 "SHOH Of FISHllMAN" ONCE ONLY AT 1:45 ' AL L WALT DISNEY SHOW : Contr•rv to adverrlslno <>•yon" <>11r c0<1!rol •nd •011e•rl119 ei. .. • e wMre, )'<>Ung pe<i.ple under 11 fnc! Ul w!I! no! bot Ml"'lt!eo:l lo P•el-• e flc Tlle11:er1 10 1ff the !Rl poc1ur•• listed Jn !hl1 Den. imlesi •c·: •c;amp11nlt<I by pgrenl or 4<11111 ouatal•n. • ................ ~ ..................... . Subscriptions Soar • . . . . Two Greot DI....,. Sliowt: Ste•e ft>rHt l ill M11my "RASCAL " plu~ Petltl' U$tlno• S111anne Pleshette "BLACKBEARDS GHOST" Ext lusi.,. Dri•,...I• lnqoplMllt lurt lontottt'r Petltl' Follr "CASTLE .KEEP" plw Jafflet Gotftil'r Woltll'r lrennoll "SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIFF" SEE ! SEE! SEf! The "'"'' e•citinq q1tl11rinq or ;nte1n1: tionelly eccleimed circut p1rlc.rm•r1 in the 9'J' ye er hi1lory cf the q•e •I••' 1how en e•r+h! Wilh A C~mp•nv 'oi 500 Performers •nd Animel1, ® ALL SEATS RESEl YfD SZ.OO·Sl .OO-S4.00°S 5.00 Sen• S1 011 Kids o .. d,.., 12 MON. • TUES •• WED. PERl'ORMANCliS Fri. ,.. . .. . .. 1:00 P.M. ~I. lt:JCI A.M., l :JCI J. 1:00 ,._M, Sun. . . . . . . . . . J:)I) &. 1:00 P.M • Mon. lh•ll w"'. l:'-5 .. 1:00 PM. TICKETS NOW°" SALE: SOUTHEltN 'C .. Llfl'. MUSIC, 6l1 Se. Mill 51.,-ALL MUTUAL AGliNClliS (l'llOne MA 1·1141 !tr 111• A•tncY llffnll roul-ALL WALLICHS MU51C CITY STOlll!S-8Ul'FUMS' In.ii HINS HAW STOltlf-AltAMl!IM CONVENTION CEllTlill, IOO Wut Klletle. "So..-tltlng ll11>J1tnl119 wntre~ ... we IMll. "Al!Oflllll Fllll Wt .ay .... ,, JNr lo lfle trliltsl tllOW H Nrlh, Incl 91 COll'lt It ""'·" • 0Jn S11IHY1n, LH A119tle1 Tlmet Season subscriptions for the new Laguna .Moulton Playhouse are selling at a record 'rate, Playhouse General Manager I r m a Nof~ger has announced. · "The players may fjnd lhemseJves in lhe unusual P;Osit!on of having to cut off subscription sales in order to re~rve an adequate number ·or seats for box office sales," Labor Da y Fete Slated · No 0<1e under lt wlU tie adm111ed vnleu i tcom. !'<'ni"' oy p.11ren1 or adull guerd iao. ...................................... ~.n~"'"". " ... _ · LU4-Lui PUT CASH IN YOUR POCKET • ' ~ Greqory P«k 0 1!1"or SHrif "MACKENNA'S GOLD" plw "S EVEN GOLDEN MEN" R"o"'-"dH for Adu!" '1" •:...... .'"! -• Z l lG 'FAMILY SHOWS! CON'TINUOUS DAILY. I P.M. ............. .a1p ............ . Dick Vin Dvk• ''CHlm CHITTY I.ANG I.I.Nii" plu1 -. --·-· .. - Grtll!D•Y Pee.II Ann Heywood "THE CHA IRMAN" plw SHA RON TATE "VALLEY OF THE DOLLS" RUN" ~lw "DEATH OF A GUNFIGHTER" No one und~• 11 will tw ad- mi!I"' unltn 1ccom11anil"d by 1W1ron! or 1dutr guardi1n. ''YOURS, MINE AND OURS" wilh Lvcillo 1111 BARGA INS GALORE EVERY F A'fHER'S DAUGHTER IS A VIRGIN! RATE D (R) ' ' OR IS SHE 7 YOU MUST SEE THE ORANGE COUNTY PREMIERE PRESENTATION ·Of GOODBYE, COLUMBUS A Fih11 frOM tM ..... , .. , PHILIP ROTH tfMt ........ .t the NOW I EST SILLfR "PORTNOY'S COMPLAI NT" TIMI MAGAllHI Ll,-1 MAO.UINS IATUltDAY AlVlliW Sell unwanted ltcm11 \\'Ith a DA.n.Y PILOT Oassified Ad. "Marvelou1 ... Brilliant ... 4 St.ars'' "THREE PENNY OPERA" LAST 7 l'IRl'S. DON'T M"S THll ORI AT MUllCALI 1m 111_,,.,, •""--CMta Moto •er Rtte,.,ttlMI 4ti-1XS presents N..90 HOOK•·~ SAT., AUG. 16-8:00 P.M. CAL STATE FUUBITON nacm "' ALL M usw.t P\AaS ICUISo ..... A0•.-.$1.N DOOi "ENOQOUSLY IBYE•ESTDIGI UNUSUAL, OFFBEAT ••• ll FJUI. FU ABOVE llVEBAGE FD.JI ABOUT WJUI! IT'S IN A NEW BAG!" ...,.",;oa.,....,wca<...,., -·-~--· -.:.,_!!.~• ..... ., .... _ ............ 00> .. . she said. To date. 1,800 seas on subscriptions have been sold -more Ulan '.ever before .- even though the season is still a month and a h<llf ·away. A goal of 2,000 ·subscriptions bas been set. The 350-seat L a g u n a . Moulton . Playhouse will open Sepl. 30 with the West Coast premiere of "I Never Sang for My Falher." by Robe r t Anderson. It will be directed by John · Ferzacca, resident artistic director . for t h e playhouse. The current and last prt> duction in the 45-year old theater at. 319 Ocean Ave. is •·Ladies' Night in a Turkish Balh." Bait T.anc:!!ll• v ... J•mn • .,.,.., W•lt.r lre1W1•• ,, "SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL SHERIFF" I••· Show St•rta 7 11.111. c ..... Set. -s.... ,,.. 2 , ••• Also .. --• -I . a:.. °'"°''&;m.m . , . -·---_,,_,,_..,. __ _ eu wn• '""11Di• 11110lt • _,,,. -rw·n . MATINEES DAILY Rich with Taught.er .•• bright' with the joy f life Wll1 .DISNEY PIDDUC)IOllS' 'S· ;;_FORREST•MUMY ..._., -TOU·EllaUllCllUTEI -0!-¥11T•-~CO-lllC. .,.._ -~,._._ -· STAllIN• STIVE JOllEST • llLL MUMT PLUS GHOST TO GHOST LAUGHS WITH lll·#llllTllJ • [ IHM/Tr! .. .,.,. . - ' Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve are "The April Fools" Tedroii:dor" 1!!10 AO-(.entrrf'ilmt~iooi. A Natoooal~l'id...es ltebw. HELD OYER! NOW TOGETHER FOR THE FIRST TIME EXCLUSIVELY I ·w1nn1nn-· f\UE G IT ·~ t ' , I .-.... T I • " I I . ~~ ... ~ .... 4 .. ·r--··;· • • . . .... .. 'That's Sonae Fish, Pop' Christopher Huninick of Brook.field. Wis., look s over teeth of the 32-pound , 10-ounce muskie caught by his''fclthe r, Lowell Huninick in Little St. Germaine Lake. Catch even impressed taciturn local fi sher- men in resort area. They allowed as how fi sh could be classified as a "whopper.'' Edsel Car , Not Gone, Not Cool E~onomy Forgotten illeasure of Prices Points One W ay-Vp TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - A WASHINGTON <UPI) -Six months after the new ad· remember the Edsel? "An ministration vowed to cool off Oldsomobile sucking a the overheated economy, tht lemon?" "The car built for government's measures of Harold SLiWen's inaugural?" prices point one way--0p. Ford Motor Co. fathered There were signs one month ago things might be easing a almost as many bad jokes as bit. But economic indicators cars during 1958-60, when it issued this month were up tumed loose 110,000 Edsels sharply once again. and a legend. modem American The Labor Department said the cosl of living increased by But since the expensive mistake went out of pr~ duction. the Edsel has become a ~lectors iten:t. fifty Edsel owners gaU1ered here recently to compare specimens, now worth $ZOO to $4,000 each. six tenths of I percent in June, double the rale of increase recorded one month earlier. If the June rate continued for a full year. it would hike prices up 7 .2 percent. The increase for 1968 was less than S per· cent. The Commerce Department's chief economist, William H. Chartene r , predicted last week the GNP would incre1tse 71,1i percent this year. He said about S per- cent of that would represent price inflation and only 21 ~ percent increased pro- ductivity. The cost-price squeeze hits hardest at retired per:sons and others on a fixed income. Waa:es are increasing about as fast as prices which adds to th e ·total inflation but softens the impact on the individual wage-earner. EARNINGS UP month ago that the personal incollle increase for April and May had been held to Jess than $4 billion, s o m e economi&t.s predicted inflation was coming to an end. But the department's latest report revised the April and May figures by boosting them more than $1 billion each. The $6 billion increase in June "'as in addition to the higher figure for the previous month. The figures showing con· tinued inflation are sure to be injected into the Senate debate over extension of the income tai: surcharge. But they can be used to argue ~ither side. Administration apokesmen argue the economic indicators prove the need for speedy ex· tension of the tax t o demonstrate that the nation is wilHng lo come to grip:s with ~oiuidary C-ontrols Urged WASHING TON (AP) - Hedge:.bopplng pllota running to llll'<Olicl from IOilth of the 'border are .,....,piing the United States to ~gbten Its traditiOft4llY la1. boun~ with Medco. The Federal Aviation Agen. cy has announced it plans finner restrictions on flights · between the two countries because of lncreaslng use of aircraft to escape detection at the Mexican border. The .main conce<'n, the FAA said in a notice of prOposed rules in the Federal Register, is that illegal atr traffic in- volving narcotics can create flight hazards, Low altitude radar and pursuit aircraft currently are used against violators, the FAA said, concluding that "any pilot committed to esca ping these devices may be expected to engage in ex- tremely dangerous f I i g h t techniques." - In order to escape detection at the border narcotics smug· glers operate from unprepared landing areas and in weather cond!Uons beyond their flying capabilities, the FAA said. Under the proposed regula· tions all pilots flying civil aircraft between Mei:lco and the United States would have' to file flight plans and radio position reports. Pilots lacking a t~way radio would have to land at the nearest designated airport of entry and file an ar _ ri val notice. Cu rrently, there are no flight plan or radio position reporting requirements. The new rule would provide identification for the aircraft and pilot, name the takeoff flown and give departure anti arrival times. and destination airports , routes and altitudes to be The FAA could suspend or revoke the pilot certificate of any violator. Or it could sus- pend the operating certificate of the owner or lessor whtn the airplane is owned or leas· ed by an airline, commercial operator. air travel club or air taxi operator. The Bureau of Customs reported that a percent of the marijuana ieized along the border during the first three quarters of the last fiscal year was involved in airplane cases. •·When you got something you can't even give away, you gotta lceep ii," said a philosof>hical Lloyd Proctor, who bought his 1959 model new. The cost-of-living index, which mea$ures the prices paid by average urban wage and clerical workers, was pushed up by a whopp ing '4.5 perceni boost in the C-Ost of meat, poultry and fish . Gross weekly earnings of the average worker increased to $115.06 in June, the Labor department said. After ad- justments for price increases. the average worker with three dependents still enjoyed an in- crease of six tenths of I per- cent in spending power in its problerru. ----------- COME AS SHOCK JuOf'. The Commerce departme nt said earlier that personal in· Opponents of the tax claim the figures prove the tax bas been a failure because in- flation is woqe now than il wu when the lax was first -enacted. TAKE IN A lllOl'IE THIS WEEK "One man's lemon I s another man's hobby," shrug- ged club presidenl J e a n Leonard. Everett Wirgau of Lansing, 1.ticlt, v.•ho owns four of them, stouUy proclaimed. "it's a beautiful car. it's different and it"s value increases every year. Sure, I get razzed a lot. But I feel as if I belong in it." On a seasonally adjusted an- nual basis, that increase would be 40.8 percent which might come as a shock even to har- ried housewives. come increa,sed $6 billion last ---------------------! Ty Triplett. 15, Grosse Pointe Fanns. ~1ich .. iron se- cond place in the best-con- dition competition with his 1958 black Citation, which he isn't old rnough to drive. ··tt 's like a brother to me," he said. The Gross National Product !GNP) which measures the total value of all goods and services, increased by $16.4 billion during the second quarter of this year. Price in- creases accounted for about two thirds of the advance. This means that the actual in· crease in the GNP was small. Department's chief economist, month, the largest increase since March. When Commerce reported a Na1ued Trustee Newport Beach attorney Dave Robertson has been named a trustee of Allegheny College inn or th west er n Pennsylvania. He is a 1941 graduate of the private col- lege. Unknown artists who have 1ong u.sed the debris washed ashor e on San Francis-co Bey mudflats to contsruc:t eve~thing from Don Quixote assaulting a wind- mill to a more contemporary helicopter, entered the space age recen tr with tJIJt rendelin{ o! the Apollo 11 moon la nd ing. An oil drum, dliflwood an other ftrm.s ol debris were used to construct lhe lunar landing vehicle and foan1 plaJtlc was u•ed to render the figure of astronaut Neil Armstrong making his first step on the moon. Criissword Pwzle ACROSS l Cant11t 5 1.rchatala- QiSt's find 'Shaded rrtrt1I 14 Glandi.111' diSflSf 15 Vtgtlablt oil product 16 Disgrace 17 Prohibition bevtf'IQtl: 2 words 19 European finch ZO Dt111i --21 Continent: Abbr. D In a state of IWlltntSS 24 Puts out of office 2 7 Makts ~ way of pt0lll l 'I FlamboY•nt 31 Fl11.tlon 35 A long ••1 17 P1rt of the head )t Unrtasoi•lt tnlhutl•s• 41 Pituitary oland stcrttlon It Woodtd ~4 Former monarttl 4~ G1itty 47 Sm•ll dtt1ctltd plect "5111111 d~vl 1 50 Hy mn ol pra i\t: 2 words 52 Calltd ,. "''"' •slrrmrd 56 Scantlrst 59 Canaan dt!ly 6! Stanlry or Grry-•4 Pttclpita-tlan amount 1!5 Bird with bt1utilul white plu111 1gr 6 7 Party· to 1 rtnlll 1gret1Hnl 7Q Crowdff clost togtth•r 71 The A.nlttw1 Sistff5, e.o. n Fivt or ,.,_ 71 Une ven 74"Fo1•ar dt d 75 London'• - G.allrry DOI• l Alrlc1n 2 Atcllc 01 Antartlc ' Not cluil· fitd 4 Mor• conc ist 5 P1ttol1 90Jf club • Chttr fer h tortadOf 1 A part lfo• 1nyth!n9 elst a Peuy 1ffktr Yrsterd1y 's l'uizle Solvtt1 : 'Q11druprd 10 Eltclric&J dtvlct 11 R1.1r1 I str1.1etut. l t Skip l ) For•trly Lallr's Crossing, Nev. l lBoston 5y111bols 2:% Offlciat tft a conttsl: Inform 11 U Stnslllvr ll'ltnlll perception 2• Ht1dli111r1 21 Pro-- 30 Choose )2 Gunther title: 2 wtrds JJ Gulf In ttlr Chln1 St• }.( lnfltUJlt'lt 35 Verlfftd statem•nl J• Dtslrt vef't stton1lr 81141•' )I D1n91tous situation 41 Oblivious 43 Fruit 46 Stn:int- scm"lttd woody htrt 41 Shallow vessrl 51 Elemrnt i'I 1111ny n•rn11 5~ Abs ortltd 55 Undrrgots C•llin COllOSion SJ Track ol diaco••f'J 51 Concise 5• Btntdic.tlrit monk li O Ont •ho grows old •1 Htw Yorktt Clfl00fli5t ,, Spi;itl tSI •• l tl1tr Iii Sto ra11• pla ce '' Consldnblt qu1ntlty I ~·.&.:-.:t;;:.:~!.!:.•.:••••••• • DAILY PILOT WANT ADS HOUSIS FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE 0-el lOOOG .... rol loot READ THIS • • • • Are you in lhi mar-ket for a new home, a home in a prime area very clore to Huntington Slate Beach; a home. you can customize whi.'~ lt is being built, a home de signed by outstanding archi· tects and constructed by Frank H. Ayres & Son ; a Company that bas been in business since 1905? IF YOU ARE e e e e Come to RANCHO LA CUESTA at Brookhurst and AUanta in Huntington Beach any day between 10 A.M. & 7 P .M. and select your home in our newly opened UNIT V. PRICED FROM $25,990 to $34,200 • 968·2929 or 968-1338 0.ner•I 1000 General 1000 PUTTING GREEN Risht outside your floOr + near by swimming pools I< 1huUle OOard courts. You can enjoy your spare time while living in this luxurious l bdnn 2 bath single story home -Unburdi!n yourself with this delUXe Upper Bay "\VAY OF" UFE" $36,500 Newport ol Victoria 646-1111 (1nytlm1) 3 bdrm. 'in the heart or Mesa Verde, Ready for immtdiate occupancy. Beautiful neighborhood, close to park. Low price Qf $33,750, ''i'·· -, .. 'T· h• I .• :-.1 \,r.,. ,,,1 .. , 546-5990 REDUCED $1000 Sharp l bdnn 2 bath Condo. Jn choice location across from pool le club house. Priced tor quick Ale. ... PERRON • _,., .. ..T • ..-o" :'1'1~. '42· 1771 Anytime Possession Pronto In park-like neighborhood. 3 bdnns, 1 % bath!, famlly room. fireplace. Walk to achools &. shopping. Lease/ option? Wt can try_ C'OL- LEGE PARK. JEAN SMITH Realtor 646-3255 400 E. 11th St., Costa Mtsa Shimmering W•terfell $23,500 Largr covered patio over- looking your own private park, v.'alerfall, & BBQ. Big Bedrooms, lull dining room. Sprinklers. 540-lT'lO. TARBELL 2955 Harbor OCEANFRONT l BR home on excellent bloach: $;;4,950. Geo'le Wllli•m•on RE.UJI'C>R 673-4350 Eves. 673-1564 $20,950 J ust reduced SIOOO. 3 BR, cptsld111~. large Jot. DAVIDSON RH!ty 5'16-5460 Eves. 54s.5142 MESA DEL MAR Nier 4 BR, corner lot "'ith ac~S8 for boat or trailer, 5~% FHA loan can ht! auumed. Con- venient for shopping, schoob rte, lfiJa,,,,_ 1.:0: TS ~WALLACE REALTORS 54<>-4141- <0.-Evoninpl SPLASHI SPLASHI Auume le 5" % FIU rxillt- lna loan • $182/mo wmnta includes everyttrln1. 3 BR • tam nn • 37' Blue Haven htd pool, W/w cdjJtaldrpa, blt-in kil Only $31,3011. P.W.C. }IG-5440 CHARGE your wam ad now. OLSON COUNTRY HOME 0% LOAN Loll of elbow room in this extra ordinarily large 4 bed- room family homt. Country kitchen with deluxe built-Ins. Hugr lot. Right in the city! 'fou can have horsrs too! The big 6% loan PBY! evtry. thing a t $166.50 n10. Don 't delay! Call today! 64.5--0303 NORTH MESA Sl/., % $125 MO. Coastal \Vaters, just minute11 away. Bright Md chetrfuJ l bedroom, family room, kitch- en 'vilh built-Ins. Quirt and serene. Priva1e swim and tennis club. All of this tor only $25,500! Assume FHA loan. No fee! Better be flst! Call~Ol NEWPORT BEACH ASSUME 5'/~ % Beat high interest! Lal'le cU&tom two bedroom home in Newport Hetghb. Plenty of light and chann, ~Y access. 1-ligh CI loan ol $20,600. and $162 mo. pays all! Room for pool, boat, camper. Only $26.900. Inter- ested? Cail now 645--0303 NEWPORT AR EA TAKE OVER 71/i % Fantastic $20.900 loan. No fees. One o( lS beautiful town homes in exclusive Newport Beach area. Total price $23.250. 2 extra large bedrooms, 2 baths, lireplace, built-ins + club houSe and super pool. Only 10% dn. HWTy! Call 645-0303 DUPLEXES AT THE BEACH Sand pebble's throw f.rom that \\'onderful sea. Two large bedrooms and 2 bar hs each. Large kitchen + de. luxe built-im. Sun drckll. Great loca tion? Good rents~ Only $38,500. Today's i>i;!st buy! Call now 64rMl303 FOREST E. OLSON Inc. Realtors 645-0303 at 'Harbor Center 2'.93 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 4 BEDROOM POOL $18,900 sounds unbtllevable doesn't it, but it's true and thia home is imma«Jlate through. out. With four lqe bed- rooms, two baths, forced air heat, double raraae, block wall Jenee, and short di5- 1ance lO beach full pri~ 18,900. did I sa.y·l8,900 1 ? ho\v can that be! You'd bet. ter &rt it caUSc It's t tu• ca.II 646-4494. -fa,-,--:.. H- ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 ~. 17th St., """'494 BEACH UVING AT ITS BEST this two bedroom 2 ba th home bu a den, 2 patios, an alriurn otf the masl'er bed- room, courtyard entry, torctd air beat, brick fire- place and much more. Seep to the aound of the surf lt'1 rieht at the beach. ~.500 ORANGE COUNTY'S , LARGEST 213 E. 17th St., MM4, HOUSES FOR SALE Gener ii 1000 . ACRE-UPPER BAY NEWPORT BEACH. Two bedroon11, l't bath plus a:uest room • offerina; coull- try atmosphere and a. home foe )'Ollr hotv. Owntr hU arehitrctural plans to re- model and tnlarge into a rambling ranch home. \V!'ly fight the crowds • Check this prope1·ty's numerous possi- bilities. Priced under sut·· ro unding homes at o n l y $n.ooo =-SHO\VN BY AP· POINTMENT. Evenings Call 548-~ LIDO'S FINEST $197,500 5 BR. + 6 Ba. + den + fam. rm. + 2 'vet bars. 5,000 sq. ft. or custom Jux. ury in comp. privacy on 3 lots. One of the \Vest's out. standin g residences. Joe Clarkson ...,..... Coldwell, Banker & Co. 550 Newport Center Dr. Nt\\-port Beach, C&lif. 133-0700 644-2430 You can live cheaper in thi!I Spanish modem DUPLEX. Cooled by ocean breezes just a tev1 steps to the South- land 's most beau1iful beach. Includes a hon1e-like 3 bdnn \vith fireplact, walk in clos- ets, sundecks, tile roof, ocean vie w + a spacious 2 bdrm, low maintainance, carpets, drapes, landscaping i nclud~. $43,500 OPEN SAT.-SUN. 1.5 210 9th Str1et Huntington Beach TERRY REALTY 536-1459 4 BEDROOM MESA VERDE Beautiful llC\\' cal'lX'ting. Lo- caled on QUIET cul.de-sac street Has a largr covered & encloaed FRONT PATIO, even room for boat or trail- er. Excellent v a I u e at S27,j()(). Call TlO\V as this popular plan wi ll $ell fa sf_ 546-9521 or 540-6631 !:J- SAVE ' with 5%% G.1: Newport \Yest l BR 2 BA home. 1,~ mi lo beach. Cpts, drps. All GE kit. Fenced, landscaped, sprinklers & patio. Freshly painted & 1\•tJI cared for. $28.700. Owner will carry 2nd. 220'll Capistrano Ln, HB. 540-9540 or 968-4132 NEWPORT HEIGHTS $19,500 home, Most gracious living room \Vith inviting fire- place. Excelle nt location. 54().1 no TARBELL 2955 Harbor -A-FRAME;A:auy- 3 BR. mod. bctH'h home, ~!rp~ In ocean' $7!J.5n0 CAYWOOD REAL TY 630S W. C'.nll.~t Hwy., N.H, • 541-1290 • -~A-C~O~IY PLAce- To come home to. Usect bri<'k fireplace. Knotty-pine kit, 3 .BR., lanai -plUll rm . for boat or trailer storage. $31 ,:IOO. Grah•m Realty 646-2414 Near Newport Post Offii·c Tops In College Pirk Assume 5~% loan. Sl78 mo pays all. J BR, 2 BA. t"am rm, sep dining rrn. 2 Jire- pla.ces. Immac! Jndscpg. i\lany extras. By CN'nt>r. View eves & wknds. 320 Bucknell Rd. CM. 549-1920 1r 3 BR 1'6. bath, bdwood floors. cpt1 I drps, frplc, double I a r as e, beautiful fenced yard. $24,5(1(1 * 3 BR 1% batM, carpets, drapes, lal'Ke ft~ ya r d_ Vacant · immett. posaesaion. S20,iiJO. Wells.McC•rdle, Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 548-7729 anytim~ * ?\1-1 lot with l BR home. A1kinr $24,750 • low dow n • owne r will carry. * 30,000 lq ft lot. 20130 s.w. Birch St, Asklrw $34,500. 1r 2 BR., 1"1 story, good con- dition, Askina s1s, 1S0. CAU. Glen Queen MO-ll51 Herlta.re Real Eetatr NEAR WettcliU Plaza. 4 BR. 11'4 ba, tam. rm ., cptd/drpd, Jncd, s h a ri e tree•. (fUitt street. msoo. ~-rd Ml 2-2222. ' . • IWlV I'll.Of 1•-m111;"111-ll!*--*"·"' 1111211111*~-·*,;·1 HOUSES F.OR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi • COiii Mou 1100 Cotti Mna 1100 HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSES FOl SALi M t N fAL~ ----------------~-"'"".;.;.,.;;_; __ ,_~-----~---1:.:.:..:;;;;:~""".:.:..;:;;;:;:.;~-11~·~·!·~·~·~""~ .. ~~·~··~·~:I J;t~~t.!.'!l!!'!'_~<!'~Hunllne!.n llNch 1400 HunllnttOft .... h l4R0 LlfUM ~.!_ ... _h __ _ Whlddy1 Wint? Whlddy1 Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL llORN SWAPPERS Spoc:l1I 1t1i. S Linea -5 tlmM -5 bucks llUll& -A1' #UtT INClUOe 1-w11tt """ """' "' '"°" ~ ,..... -"' 111 ,,.... J-YOl.lll "'*" •Hl tf ...,.._.,, ...... al'let .. .ch'trtltlft9,. t-HOTHINO FOii: IAL• -111:.IOES ONL YI PHONE 642°5671 To Pl1c• Your Tr•der'1 P1r1diM Ad 73' CRUISER, AIP, 2 depth finders, nlll'e 1200 ml. ~. cent survey -will consider prop., TD or smaller boat. Owner Cn4l m3400 20 Acres ranch. 3 !\fodem homes, 2 wells; f~ced. 1n.ining trac:k, huge barn, 14 atalla; FOR land, units or '!' $45,0CO Eq. 6T:>6259 29' STARLITE cn.ilalng HOME w/hdwd. Ors. on 5Joop. 10' beam. built '61 l20x.l50' lot w/many trees. headroom thruout, galley Join The Action WITH AN AGGRESSIVE YOUNG FIRM HERITAGE REAL ESTATE has 1 openln~ for ,a . top saJ~sman. Best commission split available. Stop by & see us or call Dave Myhre at ~ • 1151. Heritage Real E•tato, 2918 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. MOYE IN BEFORE SCHOOL ST ARTS New homea, ready to move In. 2 to 5 bed· room•, 2 to 3 balhs. ~ mile from beach. First payment up lo t!O days alter move In. VA/FHA Term1. F rom $22,990 The Beach (on Brookhurtt I mile Soulh of Ad1m1) 962 • 1353 -----~- Bo1uty at tho S.1ch I A muttt bdnn suite with cuatom ftrtplace, 1p1.ciou1 comer lot, lnsulaled thruout, luadout (&rpefuw • near all IChools le 1parkllnf beach. Priced rifht with FHA-VA terms. Paclflc 5hort1 Rt:alty ~ Ev~. MJ..17211 MAGNIFICENT Sumnwr llonfllo 2'1 °""' Y~W Joi;"'"" small, BALBOA ISLAND but lovd. Sl.000 Dowo, bol. ~ 3 BR, 2 BA. Aus at STD moo.lb. 12 ~). 311 NartJi kJ" 497-lCt'll '9'l'J210 front. BeauUM bndi i.o. lSO vWw, ]Ult c:om»lfted 3 U. water. 113-326 br. 211 bl, 300 .. ft -' BR. Furn. dUliili. -- -Beach liglltL 131. 111). .... ' bllal. be!>., .... 4 ... Owner, Mr. Lewia t11•> mac. 1100 ...SC. S.OW wWndl l""'":S. lll2 ....... only. 290 CaJoa. ..... 8ch. B E A UT I FU L 1 BR., CLEAN Bait. Bc&Cb Utdta. ~trcmt cuatqm tum. WW Sleepj J ID lO: fill' mummer $4500 DOWN oell on contract er be op. """""'""" ..n .,.._ Auume 5%% OJ IOAn. Ocan tlon. '°'2,!m ownei. 613-2Zl9 315 E. Ba.ltJo. Blvd •• Ballm 3 BR 2 bath home, hllrd-2 BR Balboa apt a.dJ Gene ril 1000 1110 Un lvtrslty P1rk 1237 wood floo~ urpr.ta, dN!)o Dan• Point 1730 beaches/pin-~ Mt;r. -.,.----,-,-,,---1 Gen•r•I 10001---------M•rlne Tran1f1rred t'I. lArge ~e abaded lot. Lookiftl For• Net 5.16-3911, '15-aDO Meta Verd• Corona del Mar -------.-BOSTON BOUND 5 BR • lam. rm. 2 COV pa. ~r~.·~t .. ~""!n ~;""" Return of 12 to 11% BAl.llOA J BR. -Hr. Couples Attention A"'hlt<ct m .. t ,.u hi• tge tioa, boauutult"" • plMt· MUTUAL REAL TY On Your lnvootmont? -l'IWm "•I J. !tome Jor teena.ae famUy. 4 bdnns, 3 baUul &: formal pining room. Walk to beach. Double a:araie. Excellent lo- cation. Huntington Harbour Spaclollfl 3 bdJTns 2 bath home. Perfm cond!Uon to move in. Located away lrom the !lllog. Heft it la -A wonderfully 4 BR I: family on OVER· ing, many txtr&I. Top lac. 142-1411 Anytime Well, you can do it on thll ~er 115-KlD. eomforta.ble two bedroom SIZED LOT. Modern Span. 6~% fin. lno loan cosl)l--=--==='=''==<""· I 8 wnits, 2 bdnna each. 6 1lft. BAOIELOR apt turn. OOI. home. It's bright aM '""~ uh otyle, 12x35' patio, .... $311,950. 2 BEDROOMS fumlohod, ' furniahod, Car· Aug. !!th """ -3rd. ful. Wood bumlng fireplact, play yard, Room for CAMP· DOUG JOY REAL TOR Completely ttd~rated & peted draped. Only 41n yean $50. per wk. 6'D-a80.. double detached aarage, Lo-ER, BOAT I: BUS, 3 yrs UJ..0504 . returblst\ed. ldNI for coup-old. Walkill& distance to :R~E~N"T"'A'°'L$=-----I eatM on a quiet close • in new. ASSUMABLE 5\1. 71 le rk f Ex ll t lo-&hopping l new Dana Point U fumlthld Ea.stak!e street. Hardwood loan@ $202/mo. pays evtr)'. Coron• d1I Mir 1250 ca;;,~ $23~ ce tn llarbor. Excellent flnanci.n&. Houtet n """· A ,.... find at ··"· thing. CALL ><O.ll.11 H•ri· R L Hod Rlt POINT REAL TY r-I -$22,250. ......, tage. Real Estate (open e~1) VIEW HOME ex. • 847-2a~s, y. 3tt.56 Coast Hwy, Dt.na Point vwnt:r• - OWNER TRANSFERRED -First Tim• Offtrld 1-~=~-="""~~-~==("'n"•>.-496.S323 ____ $225.. 3 BR.. 1" b&., dbl Prioed "' lmmodlate Ale The COMPIEI'E 00... ,.,.. SHOWPLACE RENTALS pr., pool. Cblldru • - at $27,950. Imm a cu I ate t&cul&r. 180 dea:ree view and 2 Story 4 BR, 2 ba, Palos Houtes Furnished Avail 911 Bkr. ~ home with 3 oversized iparkling pool Jn a sheltered Ve1'de stone frplc. Extru $135. 2 LGE. er duplQ. ao.- bdrms. 2 sparldin&: bath.'!, courtyard. 3 bedroonu, 2'ii galore Unique landaca.plll&' General 2000 ed pr, w/w. Aftll llll. JarKe family room, double baths, formal dining room Assu~e 5% % klllfl. . Broker 534--6980. &: walk-in head, all A-1; Will exchange for N.E. San trade '" • ,,...,.,, o;,., home, lot " M·L Just LI.Sled Fortin, Realtor 642.5000 Laguna exec's split;level raised hearth fireplace, cor-and family room, Quletc oe. BRASHEAR REAL TY EXECUTIVE home!I turn. " Dbl ncr lot & quiet cul-de-sac. cupancy available. A top val. 847.&531 536-2123 431-.3769 unfurn. U le 6 Br. From $165. l BR.. w/w, pa.lio. . Call S4S..S4:24 South Coast Uc at only $77.500. $300. Bkr. 645-0lll local. gar. &Side. Bacr. M5-01JJ R"l E•tale 67U550 ANXIOUS OWNER 1-loc=a=I. ==== home; 4 Br. 5 ba., Sauna, \VILL trade Hoyer bed I Ea 'd D I Huge rms. nr beach. Ocean bath patient lift ($500 val-Stsl e Up ex l'ie11:s. Val. $87,500. For ue) or antiques for piano. 2 lxlnns 1 bath -1 BR 1 bath. TD's or Comm. 494-4653. 546-9~ On one ot Coata Me.sa·a fin· est street!. APPROX. 10 acres Ocean WILL exchange $25,000 h N rt B h 1200 J t _,. _,. I f thl \-0 THE REAL ~ESTATERS Rent1l1 to Shir• 200.f 1 -•100 Costa Melli .. view prop, nr. dntn Lagu-eqty in land at Rancho L ewpo eac us ,.,,.,.u\,~ pr Ce 0 s 2 \'G, Proleuional men wish Val 11~ 000 ~d Cal'f . . ac enmyer 3 bdrm 2 hath, oom" homo 3nl to '"'" ttnl Fum. na, uc ""• .' ''" e 1 . where the acllon IS QUIET DOUBLE in Glen Mar area. $20,!M. • I ,•,' for bayfront home, Balboa for 16+ units. Need depre-"For A \Vise Buy" West Bay Ave. duplex. 3 Br. Submit down. townhse., 3 BR. 2'11 BA., FOR RENT or Lido. 675-08.13 aft 6. ciation owner.~. Box Re1ltor (OleSWOrfhy & (O. 2 ba. tower: 1-BR. l·ba. up. BY THE SEA Terry Realty 536-14St ~~Yd~~i~. :;:.· Irvine. Big Bear A-lrame cabin. 676, Tustin Lislings: Ne,vport Beach, per. CUstom built attractive Ow-ming 2 Br. + conv. den/--'.-=7'=-=oc---1 ~~=~---~- 4 bedroom tiom. 1n Mesa Verdr-, New lhq carpets. tllS/per month •••••• Birr. ~9521 or 54' "31 Crpts &: blt·ins, Swed. lrplc, Will trade l966 vw SEDAN C.Oronll del Mar & Colila t.tesa &«2·77il units, 3 car gar_ AU in a + fonnal din, rm.; alllc $19,850 MAroRE wmmn to share 2 Prestige atta, $14,(MX) eqb'. good condition, for clean CALL 646-3'11 KINGDOM FOR quiet neighborhood. $59,!Dl. space, 2 frpl.: walled ~ 4 Big Bedroomi Br, 2 &a apt w/sa.me, llr For local home, units, or 19&1 or better V\V BUS. Eves. 644·1655 BURR WHITE den, VIEW of ocean &: Jet· Comfort & quality, 2 baths. S.D. Frwy. Rec. tac. Avail ?? By ovnier 968-3a97. * * 494-4129 * * HORSES REALTOR ty, Steps to beach.w Assume Lovely kitchen. Built-ins.1 c.~,.:l.:,,"""""8=..;:;.:.. ___ ~ Lot, Li[e membership Club WOULD YOU -1 N ·-• Blvd NB loan at 6%:%. Sl08,500. Large landscaped yard NICE man or "MXn&n to San t.Ioritz, Lake G~ory, Have S70.tnJ eq. in 17 oldr.r rr you have said, "?wfy King· ~O e .. ""'' 642_2253 ~s. Walker Rlty. 675-5200 TARBELL 14246;1 share 3 bdr. home, UOO mo. I ?!'!!'!!'J""'!!!!'!"':!"!!~!"'!•I $2500. Want late model c.ar, units $1420/mo gross. Will. BELIEVE? dom 'A'Ould be a spot for my OCEAN VIEW 4 BR, 3 BA, 64:i.-3167 IMMED. POSS. 3 BR 2 ba camper, or lot in Northern take frtt & clear house, OCE F ON horses," Yearn not another MOVE IN NOWI fa m rm + 500 aq. ft. Huntington EMPLOYED lady will share home w/hu&e boa.m: niom. Calif, 847•2881 small units or TDs &: cash. AN R T day! % acre designed for Back Bzy ranch 1tyle, 3 sundeck. Guest rm & ba ad· Harbour 1405 home wilh aame, with or all elect. blt-lna. incl. W/W, Perron RtaJty 642-Im DUPLEX the complete maintenan~ al Bdnn1. w/family &. formal jacent to ear.age. Lr gl-:::::c=:=::::-:-===-close to IChools It ~ HAVE: NSU Dune buggy Glen t.1ar 2 slory corner Priced at $56,tnJ -choice your horses, Rustie fences dining; 2~§i balhs. Owner boat/carport. All :on <15' fC!e HUN~INGTON, HARBOR I °"wl=t=hou=t=me=al='=· ="'="'='°'=· =I ping", ch 11 d re n OK !~~;al~~ci~ ~~~c:a: in H.B. ACTUAL equity area -4900 block -2 BR. surround a 3-bedroom, 2· moving 10· No. Calif. k will simple lot. $74,900. 219 HERES a. l\ltie hld~·way Costa Mesa 2100 $255/mo. CAU. Jack Jhm. SM NEED West~ide C.M. plus baeh. • furnished • R-2 bath home with an added givr-immr-d. pos.\CS!I. $31.500 Larksp'"· CdM. 0 w n er . for !he tired executive. 3 mond SID-USl Her 1ta1 e •1ilboat, motorcycle, or 'l? lot 30·x~· .. -.•d family room for family liv· H I p · h' & A bd ~., d k I home with pool? -"" -owner .. ......, I inc in SIOC. 6r:>-075.I nn, """' oc on ma n 2 BR, gar, patio, tropica1 Real Estate 6-~1257 968-.5663 consider exchange for larg. ing. Home and oorral1 are 3900 E. CoHst Hwy, 675-'392 l --====~,--·I channel. A beauty e,t only aetU..., for adults, 1 blk to A7V"A"t"L-Se,,...p"t "'l,-!'""Bdr,,..,°'l'°"'Ba.-1 SHOPSMITH complete er unlt1 on ocean fl'ont -now vacant. Priced to &ell. --MUST SELLI $49.950 -EZ termli. -... equipment, jigsa1v, paint CABIN Cruiser 31', top for add. info, call today -$34,950. NEWPORT ISLAND Q\vner moved, no real!, oller R. D. Slates, Realty shop $11S. J.to S4M780, firpl. drpl, cptJ:, e t c· spray, n1HUng equip: also end. Sips 6, twin V-8's, ra. 64;>-0128 546-2313 2 BR, Newlywed Special! refused! Beaut. 4 Br., fam, 847-3519 Eves. ~5.58 GardeMr lncl. $225/mo. 5 strtni bass fiddle FOR dio phone, auto pilot, etc. * * * * Corner lot, close lo bay & rm .• din. rm., wet bar, white Newport Beach 2200 7&f6.4=c=17u,_,,.,..--,-,--.,.I auto or camper equity. Want vacant lot, TD's, or VACANT BEACH LOT owner says "Make YoUr own cpt'g. & drapes. Ask $65,500 S•nfl Ana 1620 QUIET, ---•11<1-• ipot right 3 BDRM., 2 ba., pool, fenced. 830-2825. • .. Valued Sll,000. 673-2431 Owner hai; prlttd below the lerms." f162·Cl Delancy Real E1t1t1 M!\:l = Children, pets OK. Anti 'l * * * * * market for fut tumover _ PROPERTIES WEST 2828 E, Coast Hwy, OOf BY Owner 1750 aq. fl. 3 BR f:r ~n;ro;t.~plms: Sept. 1. Rent or leue. tat I: 11~!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!!!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!!!11!!! I approx. a,,' block from -ean 1-'~""'~~~;=~~o. 1028 BaYRide, N.B. 675-4130 67l-3770 library. As11ume 6%. 1'17 SOI last. C.Ontact AM. 66-1575. -$16 500 PRICE AND OR: Bachelor suite $1 mo -oversized lot 35'X95' -zon-' OPEN Set & Sun. 442 LOVELY Shawnee, SA. 54G-9258 EASI'SIDE Home. ,.. .. _ 2 1800 BRICKS Incl all util. T2ID IV. Qoeon. -!HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE ed R-2. a steal at $25,000 · Riverside Dr. N.B. PrestiQ:e Broadmoor J.lonie _ $58.750 L-H'll front. Phone 637-21TI or Bedroom with linale p.rqe. i;.;.;:.;;.;;.::c;..c..,;,_c;.,. ____________ , priced at Only $22,COO * bet· f.fake llP the tnassi\•e patio! custom home. 4 BR Jge. Leu than a "". old. Beaut. t guna I s 1700 Adults only S150-CaJ1 Te.rry G I IOOOG I 1000 11 od Where in the world can you <I 1 r ___, ~· S38-3232. enera enera ter ca t ay! find a 3 bedroom, 2 baL"i rumpus rm., -eve . en\,-..... 4 Br., fam. nn., din, rm.: LAKE Forest iarden home DOVER Shore• b a Y ( r 0 n t McCa.rdle 54&-2313. 1_;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====;;;;1 CHILT ROBINETT home, NEAR THE BEACH yd., 2 lrplcs, blt*ln1. 21Ai baths & 2 trplcs. Adult J\.1any e.x~ plus ahadY home, 6 BR, 4 BA. large 2 BR.,~. patio. crpta., SHOPPING FOR A HOME 7 REAL TOR 64$.0121 with eleclric built-ins, excel-oversized gar orf alley. Pool oe~upied. Prof. Jndscp. patio &: yard'. 3 Bdr, 2 Ba patio, 70' private dock. drps., stow re.trig., tropk:al lent carpet. boat door 10 size lot. Crpt.s. drpa. 543-2986 Che1h lr1 Real E1tat1 plua tam. room. 837-8646 Avail Sept ltl, yrty lse, $10IXI setting for adult&. 1 Uk to Call, write or visit our office for your free back yard, and VACANT!! OWNER'S SACRIFICE • 67S.2503 • aft. g PM Owner tran1fer-mo. 2 l 3: 7 8 o-5 013 or shop Slt5.-n60. Mo. MMT!O copy of our "Homes For Living" magazine BEAUTIFUL BONITA LESS THAN $2,tnJ OOWN!! 4 or 5 BR. 2 mo. old Harbor Broadmoor red. 2U:785-6333 2 BDR Duplex, unturn, pr, -with pictures, prices and details of our QIOICESI' ol the CliOICE WE SELL A HOME Hills home.1LR,baDR, Fam. Harbor & OceanvielY custom LAKE Forest, on the lake. 11 yd, 35 or pkler, no dop. select listings in Newport Beach, Corona del EVERY 31 MINUTES RC withdfrp &: r. x'trBa. designed home, 4 bdnns. &autiful view. 2 bdr., 2 bi.., Lido Isle -2351 ><&-·~~"'°=~~~,---~! Mar and Costa Mesa. TRANSFERRING? Ask Secluded, private, on wide1t Walker & Lee ' ,_xin"'"'"~'"i_,,•"""',,,""'"""1;,.0'-.m7~-""..c.c_1_u_. ram!Jy room, fonnal dining 837-8646 att. • pm. Owner WATERFRONT HOME: $240 UiE. l + 2 "tam nn. 2 us for 1 ''Homes l'oi; Living" magazine from a:reenbelt site. Ever popular , : room. Beautifully appointed . trandc~. lrplca, Ctpts. drp5, bl:tna, no 3 Bdnn. 2 beth. 1lng~ iem. DELUXE Condo, many $72,500. can Kaye Neal at '--========"'I Avail. AUg, 15 by week or ts cul-d 546-3090. any part of the country. We have associate tastefully derorated by Vera 7100 Harbor mw. at Adams xtrns, 2 Br, 2 Ba pool 644-032:3. Laguna Beach 1705 month. 224 Via Lido Nord. pe • e-uc. offices throughout the U.S. RED CARPET Denis • upgraded aceeuor· 545-9491 s28,500, Xlnt tenns. A.g t. Donald tor. Bini&: Assoc. WE 4-0920 or BR 0-4547 REALTY, 2025 \V. Balboa Blvd., Newport it!s, loaded with amen!tles. 1 iiiiiijij0pe!l!ii!!ni'ti!il!!9iiP!iMiiii!iii !,;;°i.......,;T,;:i'ii'Nri'R;;;:i;'R;;--; 547.7041 PRICE REDUCED ========::I Newport Belch Beach 92660. (714) 675·6000; REDUCED '"' immodiate GOLD COAST CHARMING Baok Bay; 3 "' BLUFFS " *VIEW HOME* Bi l~_a_!~--2°'3""55 NEAR OCEAN 3200 sale. ln&pection & compar· I a 2 •-t d rg. r, .,., cpr &, rp1, Condo, end un it, 1 level, 3 BY OWNER CHARMING Cape Cod nr. THIS WON'T LAST i!JOn Invited at $39,900. Eve-OvPr 4,000 SQ. ft. or luxury bHns. Owner. S 2 7, 4 5 0 · BR, 2 BA, cw;tom crpts, PERFECT condition! Must So. Bay &: Fr-rry, Recently Availah•-now • 3 bed., 2 General 1000 General 1000 nings phone 644-0233 livin• with a panoramic 646-869S d .__ 2 1· h d d t·• < •· din ~ EXCLUSIVE WITH . 4 B d h r rps, ex .. cu, pa tos, an Y see interior to appreciate! ecora cu °'"• . rm,. balh, l paUoa, double a:ar· 1 Top Quality Duplex 2 BRs. hdwd noo~. trplcs. FA heat, bit-in kilchs, gar- ages between units, lg tncd yn:ls, quiet s~L $1.S,500. This won't las!! Call now! "l TRADE" Bob Olson Rl!r. 546-5580 NEWPORT HEIGHTS 5 BIG BEOROOMS NO DOWN GI Magnolia trees, flowers & shrubs. Srar pine • fruit trees -fire pit, 3 baths. elec Irie buill·illl, fam ily room, dining ron1. Ca.sh nttcied for closing co~ts. TARBELL 2955 H"bor 2414 Vista Del Oro Nr-1vport Beach 644-1133 $lf,500 DON'T give It away. pt Very cozy &. comfortable qui ck cash for it with • Huntington Harbour Daily Pilot want Ad! home, l\tost gracious living 64.2-5678 Bayfront room 1vith In inviting fire. ===----,-,-.,-· I This Is one of a 'ew prime place. Excellent location. PLACE your wi.nt ai:i where locations In all of Huntington 546-172() they a.re looking -DAILY Harbour -4 BR., fam. nn., cT;;A~R,;B;E:;L:;L=2=95:;S;:H:;•='bo=r"-'=P=!LOT=~cla='~"="='"="'=·""== dining nn., wet bar 1vith: I. ~ -A large bay view. 2. Natural i NO MATIER !WHAT IT IS • • • YOU CAN SELL WITH IT A DAILY PILOT WANT AD protection from prevailing winds on patio & dock are.a. 3. Sun on patio & dock all day. 4. No sunshine in the home, leave the drapes open tor aU day view. PJUA much much more. $125,000. Owner will exchange for income property or land. 646-7171 '-o THE REAL '"' ESTATERS ME SAVERDE- $23,950 !lard to nod al this low prlee in such a deslnable location. 3 Bedrooms, 2 M!parate baths. Built-In ran1e &: oven Sunny kitchen. 540-17l0. TARBELL 2955 H"bor Owner Needs Helpl Immediate posae1slon -bis 5 bdrm CarT'lage E11a1e11 (/\bout 2900 IQ It) wilh pool in top Me111. Verde location. Out or area owntr making double payment• -wtnll ofter, teaJ10nable or not! view. e rooms, Uge iv· BLUFFS elegant F plan, 3 to pool. $30,200 By owner. 3 BR, 2 BA, Jar&'e livln1 nn, frplc.. patio. Attractivt, qe, tir'l!place. Range, QV'ell, Ing room; formal circular Br, 3 Ba w!Ba,yVicw, wide 6'4-2219. fireplace, dinette, all elec-comfortable, fifth home. dishwuher, dispo1al. New dinine: room: garden kjtcben greenbelt. All uprraded. Lo CdM: "INVEST NEAR THE Irie Incl kitchen, Thermo Winter leue $325. 7$.9637 caf1)CU &. dnpea. Stepa to ;:J~=t:i~afi~J!~ lse, lo dn. $41,500. 644-4265 OCEAN. 3 Br. 3% ba., den, controls each room. Beamed eve. an. 6. pool, playground and ocean. Like new, Pr~ n4;:;,{X(I, OPEN House: Sat-Sun 1-5. 2 frpl, din rm. 3 Gar. Can ceiling lhru-out, wall to wall \\'aler paid, 4800 Rlwr, 522 El Modena, Newport build another home on loL carpets, drape:1, l&:e cor Jot, Huntington Buch 2400 Newport Beach, $345 lease john macnab (7141 642.t23S 901 Dover Drive, Suite ~O Newpo1t Beach 3 bd I J.car Some view, nr. beach &: shrubs, Good deal for G.I. with references. 1 pet OK Heights. r., poo, sho,,.. Bkr. 673-21'.llO". Owner movini to ranch. BEAUTin.JLLY turn 1 Br, Ph. 64U!M2 owner. gar. Brokers "·elcome. $150 per mo, spacious, air LGE. hill+ ..... lot. Perm. view Price $37.700. ~ MAKE OFFER amd; mobile home In B/I Newport Heights 1210 ol ocean & hills. Privacy. de1irable location within :-;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;=;;,;;;,; Realtor 673-3110 Write P.O. Box 914, Laguna lkl ••· I •-h TOWNllOUSE • -=========I Beach or call 494-4726 any-wa l1&" ~ta.nee o ur:ac ; WALK TO SCHOOLS -ti pool. Teacher/OwMr on 2 BR. 2 baths, bltns., trpk. 3 BR. 1; family rm , Large _L_id_o_h_l_• _____ l35_1 11-m-•-·----~--leave. Ava!I Sept. 7th. Can car'J)ets, dra~. $225 month, livin• nn., atone lrp\c. B I p • 1 VIEW HOME • • be seen by appt. Tenant ex-Bay & Beach Courtyard Pool •Y ront otent1e e e BY OWNER peeled to leue for at leut 1 Choice atta • St. Andrews Plans • ldeu _ Suggestions . Realty, Inc. "Forever View" New \Veils' Rd. available for 2 • bayfrontJ New 3 Bdrn1 Ii: Den. Beam yr. Refs req'd. Ca 11 901 Dover or., NB Suite l2t plan ready for Sept. deJiv. $28,000 to be constructed aoon! ! ceUlng1, outstandllli: VIEW. ~'='"=> ='=' .. ="'='=====I &la-2000 Eves. 548-6966 ery. 4 BR 31,ii ba, pOwder Owner/Bkr. 64&-2414 See -El1ie Ebeling All elec ki tchen. Rom.an Vacation R1nt1l1 2900 room, tam nn, w/bllr &: I~~~~~~~~~!!" R c GREER Realty bath. Must sell • $41,500 or SPAC. 4 Br. 3 ba. duplex, " frplc formal dining room, 1220 3.15.'i \r1a' Udo ' 673-9300 offer. OPEN SAT &: SUN DUPLEX with view, private; blk to beach. Avail, 1 yr. 19xJl' pool. Newport Shor11 --~=~=~--1 10 am • 4 pm 1•195 Skyline I S300 ~· mo ..... , :.:;::;.:;;o;..;..;;,_____ ANXIOUSl 1 Drive, or l!horie 830-282S. avall. weekly during Aug-ease, r-• ""'-Roy J. Ward Co. 3 BJl.7Ba. 235 Cedar Ow ,_ ti Sept. 2 Bdrms, fireplace, have refer., no peta. 'Ba 011. ) ner wan .. ac on on va· HANDYMAN'S •· t 0" -~ ycrest ice $24,950 \V/S8SOO down er cant 4 Br, &: 2 ba. home. garage. 2001\t Klnl'.1 Rd. ,...en ..._.........., 1430 Galaxy Dr. 6~1550 $25,950 w/$4,000 nt down to Xlnt value at asklfl& price or Speclnl! 4 Income units 120 5'3-2394 after 6 pm. CHARMING 3 Br., 2 ha. Like $19 995 ~ce inside call 673-1784 $59,500 yds. to beach. Patios, dackl new; cpts .. drpa., bllNl. nr. ' LIDO REALTY INC, w/ocean view. Nds. paint, Summer Renttlt 2910 beach. $250. Art-548-1290. No Down G.I. B1ycrest 1223 3400 Via Lido 673-8830 etc. Should gro11 S9,oo> an-. BAYSHORES MonL'i\y payments less than =~--~--~-1 nual. Pr. $69,600. Trade• 1 BEDROOM and bath with < BR y rent! Loads of chann, a 11 REPOSSESSION CHARMING 2 Bednn, beam considered. larp Jiving area, frplc. wet Unturn. S & · • ears modern kitchen spacio1111 IN celllni, street to street, xlnt t.flSSION REALTY fM-0731 bar A: outside patio. leese. living & dining rom. BAYCREST cond, room for e-xpan. 180 . . 1 p1 •-• 3 Overlooking China Cove. ''C'' THOMAS Realtor TARBELL 146 0604 $39,750. 213-m-aT7t view, JUS com e..-Available $150 v•eekly for l'l4 W. Coast }lwy 54&-5527 Large 4 bedrooms, 3 bath, =========! BR :1% BA, :DJ aq, rt. & 1 &'ra-0830 BY OWNER $23,900 all !M CUilom ltt.'CUI')' ap. Bilboa Island 1355 rundeck. Arch Beach Aucull P · • WATERFRONT l1e. 2 BR. 2 3 Bdrm., 2 ba., crptJ:., drpe., pointmenbl professionally l1elghta. $34,700. Owner, Mr. LUXURY, 1leep1 6 to I BA, frpl c, FA heat, elec kit, (tplc. 2 patiol. 6%% GI landscaped, Drive by 1907 212 Sapphire l.e.'A•is, (n4) 523-5013. lill 3 Bed -:i Balh 673-2223 patio NO pets or children. loan. 646-7034 Santiai;o, call owner for 3 Br, 2 Ba It den, 24 x 30 .. N;•n~··;;:·==========1809=:W:;·,:Ba::=lboa===="'=,.'=7899="'=.====::::=:=I BY OWNER: E x e c 11 11 v e appointment lo aee. n.exlble briclt paUo, exposed beam :::: home. 2 atones. 5 BR, 3 Ba, terms. Phone 642-2835, ceilings, completely remod. General 3000Generll 3000GeMral 3000 pool siu lot-fenced. Terms By owner $52,500. 675-0204 l-----:===========:::==~====------1 fl lb Dover Shor11 1227 I .. ••· 135,000. 54&-<7<0. s@~on~-°'r.trs· * UNIQUELY Huntington Booch 1400 • Costa Mesa 1100 Different "Old World'' C.On-2 BEDROOMS ALL 3 BR'•BY OWNER temport.r')', executive lux-z bath5, $17,950 full prie«. Solve a Simple Scrambled WOf'd'Pu=t. fot a Chvcklt 950 Victari1 $19,500 GI ury home. Unobl~ted Carpel.I, drapes, bullt·ins, 1903 Federal $21,IXKI fr% Bay le Mtn vu.most rmi;. wuher & dryer, Range OV· 4:12 Walnut $21,:00 6% 5000 1111 ft. 4 Br, 4\W ba + en, Shingle roof, IJ'8.pe stake 203 Susannah $26,500 5)( maids qtn, Ideal for en~ fence patio. Ju!lt repainted. Large takt over loans tainln&. Ealy m1lnt. lmmed Very clenn. Nice landlcap- &'1·5110 ••MS-.1059e• occupancy. FurnllhOO. lnt:. Walk to 1h0pplna. T===;.;;::::;;:.:=,:;:..= .... d $118,000. As~ume 6%% loan. B~VNJ~= k= na~ ~=;i-i.;;1632;i-.i;;;;N-;i.Bi;i;. ;;;~oi;;;n;;;!....;'·;;...,,..; I \!MMRP ~~1.o;~;-:.~ :a:.: rOfS318ijOwiif 1-=~=~==-• For Fast Service & E1pert Assistance DIAL 642-5678 DIRECT ,,... CiMrN °"""' Cl.LEGE REALTY llOO-. .. "' ... .i:K Investment Opportunity Eut&ide three. bedroom ir new separJle. income unit. Both units In top condition. Double carace, patlol, Ii loU of fruit tree•. Potential renl $315 per month, Showa an Income ol $100 Ptt mo. -a THERCAL '.", ESTATCRS ' ' 04s-11n • 548·231 NEED: M·1 build.ire. IOO to 1000 l<JU&r.I feet. Small <if· fl~ space pref, Wa:oihtble wall• • nOO'l"I. m. 3-phaa. ~a1ler6. trailer. 614" loon ean bo WHY PAY RENT? assumed, $24,950. &0-4111 Spic.lout custom 2°1tory ex-Yr. okl Spanish at)lle, b f'CUtlve home. IArre: lormal sume ntA loan. 3 BR., pt· BY OWNER $23,00J d I " 1~ •·n ho' ' BBQ, "--. AdJ, to _,. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. apt.a, drpl, in nr room. r ane "" "" owra a .... -• 2 ·•-· 6• ~ r1 with wet bar A nreplace. cxnnv, pool, $2fi,950 b:'n~· * ~703'4 "'.,. ... Sltti!W room w/lireplace. 3 CORBIN-MARTIN bdr, 3~ baths. Garden en. REALTORS 615-11162 BY OWNER: Ottn 3 Bdrm try. View of ba.f 6 moun-303ti E, Coe.It Hwy., CdM Ea 1 t 1 Ide. New ahaa talm. $S2,500, 646-2151 ,.,..u,... _.. ut , •, d ----Cool Pool -Vacant 123.llOO. S11H1685 3 BR houae, nearly new cptl Ii: drps, CorDtr lot. Avail. IOOl'I. Owner-A&tnt 549-4358 M111 Verde 1110 f B.DRM., 2 S.., crpta. drp1, clean. Altume lo. FHA. $2'1,850 owner ~13 l IPYSUS I I 1•· r . f ' ' ,I ' . • ' ! --·· f .. fl"f'J.,l otJl'l•I •) II RENTALS REAL ESTAT-REAL ESTATI SUSIN!SS a,,. Apto. Unlumlthod Gonoral G.r.r1I FINANCIAL r ·-u DMLV I'll.OT Tl!Ond.t:t, A""" 14, 1969 HM-Unlvmlohed Apt1. Fumlohed -"Aptt.=;;...;u..:.":.:.'•;;;•..:.•;;;l•;;;hod;;.:.- ·.-... -~-7., ' ANNOUNCEMENTS ind NOTICES ANNOUNCrMfNTS ond NOTICES ---------e .. t Bluff 5242 Rontol1 Want..t 5990 Industrial Rantol 609011uL °"""""'"",_ ~300 Found !Froo Adsl 6400 Ant10Uncomont1 6-410 * ·-I s.·-. . ... , INDUS'l'RIAL apace ln1..;.;:;...:::::.::.:.:.::;;;.:.=.:.:;:.:1:ro:::UN:-::D:-:Ca:'.'::"uco-:lci-::.,:-.... ..;....vlc':-"01 1 ,.1 .•. ~ RENTALS "~ATALS Newport Boach 4200 General 5000 Newport ... ch 3200 ! Nt"'POrt Beach '"PARK UDO'', like -· 2 COUNTRY CLUB VEN DOME e NEW OELUXE e -nta rv1ce * concrete ...... 3000 oq /L.7"1 Notiona l Pok·o.Golf R<dlanda !in. 3 Br. 2 ba •pt lot leue FREE TO LANDLORDS W. 171h, CM (tlJ) 434-al82 841 Your Own Boss CM . &t6-4M~ Mesa 't, Undetecfablo Mon's a.. 2 ea., ........ pool. 2 cu LIVING t pr. s=o. Sier. M&-0732. Lmcury prdcn apartments IMMACULATE APTS! ADULT 6: TAMIL Y Ir>ct. spac. mastr. r,;ullt. din Blue Beaorn 6G-Olll FOR Lease-New 2500 sq ft P11rt Time or Full Tim• rm. & dbl san.ae. auto. EXEC DESPERATE indU$l:rlal bide. 9c ft is39 Be :your own Ima~ run f'OUND aet oJ key1, vie. St. ===:-...,.._-.,......,,,.I CUs-llWlo halt'pi-from i NEW 3 BR family room. o.tferlne compltt• privacy, , beautltuJ landkaplns • uo. r eabana·pool-dub. S345/mo. partile:led ~lional racll- ' leue. Aa1.. ~ ltlrs in a counby club at· , Bly Shorn 3225 mosphe,.., Now Jeasin¥ in Nc11o·port Beach, I \VATERFRONT Near BBC, luxury 3 BR. 3 BA, wlth I 1ardtm:r, yrly Sept, 15 to 4 , yon. $650 mo. Re.,p. 1 adults. no pets. nf-&U..0074 1700 16th Street Furnished or unfurnished Model1 open no<>t1 to S pm 714: 00-8170 OAKWOOD or2U-'19!M856 GARDEN ' Unl-.lly Pork 3237 APARTMENTS I 1 BR -Mn, condo, leue. 2 WlNTER rental. Lee crpld 2 I C&f Pf'; <:'Pl$· ~· deck. Br, 2 Ba, blt·irts. closed • Poolpnvg1.$2ThForappt. p atio &: garage, 8J3..-0t63 aft 5. washer/dryer Avail Sepl. 3250 50'.XI" Neptune. Call 714: Coron• del Mar 629-1492 OCEAN " Catalina view. 3 l.SIN=~G~LE"'"~Y~ou-ng--A-d_ol_u~L-W<-· : Bedroona. dining room. W'Y garden apts v.ith coun- Ad ulta only. $431 month. try c:lub atmosphere and Call agent 6'2-8235 673-5653 complete privacy. SOUTH ·4 BOR duplex, 2~~ ba, BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine a blt~inl. dshwdir. 2200 sq n. 16th Newport Beac:h. Year lease. $300/mo. f>otG.7573 '7141 645-0050 2 BR House, em?Uent cond. MAGNIFICENT View, week Manied couples & no or yearly, aplit level, 2 .,_ •?r.n * 675-3291 bedrooms, rireplaee, garage, chfiw.,n . .,...., mo. 2001 ~ Kings Road, 548-2394 OOZY 2 Bednn cottage, frpl, alter 6 p.m .. ·11-311 blks to -=oio;~' =~== SECTIONS AVAD..ABLE CloM to shopping, Park • Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba * 2 Bedrooms • Swim Pool, PuVarecn * Frpl, Jndiv/lndcy fac'ls 1845 Anaheim Ave. COSTA r-.IESA 6'l2·2824 • RENT e door opener avail Pool '-4 Bedrm. , tenctd ya.rd, IR, Monrovia. CM. 673-all7 Your own bualneu, NATION-John the BapUst on B&ktr rce. area. Nt. Cs.UlOllc by S/27, 213-378-UGS AL POK-0-eou~ announces Strttt, C.M. StO-S'l59 Oiureh & school 1-Corona NICE 3 or 4 BR. 1 hou Lots 6100 available dlstrlbuh:lrshlPI In 1 ·s"M"A7u.""bla=ck;:-:!emale=.,......,dot!~.°"2 de! 1.!ar lllgh~ unfurn Prete ~P or tte · ----• ._ .... your are11.. Thia i. a fantu-flea coUan. Vle 21st & ~ e ONLY $2M. e . 67MJs9 r U({g, Reip. BARGAIN. 2 apt Iott: Costa Uc opportunity fot' uttlbrilt· ta Ana Ave., C.M. 5@-Qitio 865 Amigos Way, N.B. Mt111a. A 19 unit It a 55 unll. f(t mo~y-maklng potcnt1al YOUNG male Siamese cat. _, NEED 2 Bdrm. apt in Excel Joe. . ~-or with our EOIJ putting ma. Corona del Mar 5250 H1u·per Sch. atta by Sept. 1. 53&-0131. Anytizm. chine, \'.'e feel our product Pacesetter area, Laguna ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil iRe~·~-~~ble~, ~'45-~l~l~55~;~1 can produee more nlOlle)' I "N~Jgu~o_l.~•95-53_~14-·~~~~ 1 _ BUt.INE.SS Lady desires 1 Rtnchel 6150 per IOcatlon than the well. BlKE, vie. Ea!tbluU, Call ... .., bdnn unfurn apL To SllO. COUNTRY LIVING 45 min ~00\vn coin operated bowl. and Identify 644-lm. 3 Rooms Furniture o,. •rt• CaJI 642--0086 trom downt Santa ""-~ mg machine. Our company Found (Fr" Ads) 6400 $20 $25 & UP . own "''""0 will set up your bualneu for • . WIDOW deslroa small Jurn in beautiful college town of YoU in • proven nwUlOd of SMAU... slendtt kitten, aU Alonth-Ti>MOllth ~ntall ON TEN ACU:S apt, ocean view. Sept, Oct, La Sierra, nr Corona. Ap. suceeu. All you do is serv. I WIDE SELECI'JON 1 It 2 BR Furn & Unfurn Nov. (TI4} 54~1779 pro" 2 acres W/fabuloua 4 1,.6 de·'e-grey w g<ild eye11. Vic 21st&: ;;;;,,.,.,-=,-,,,,---~=I BD"'" ho · ...... "' ·~· \1/estminster Ave., C.M. Appliance1 &: TV'1 avail. Fireplace-s I priv. patio! I NEED 1 Bdr. house l'lt'ar HB n.1111, ~e, . swimming PUBUO...Y OWNED !">48-0l"79 No Securlly Deposit Pools. Tennls. Contnrl Bklst. w/fenoed ya r d. C.Ouple. pool, 2 irrigation wells, OOMPANY • HFRC FumJtul'I! Renla.la 900 Sea I...aM, O:IM 644-2611 847-9823 barn, corral, completely rr aceepted, you will Sharf' MOTHER 'S Helper. Laguna 511 \Y. 19th. 0.t 543--3481. !MacArthur nr. Coast Hwy) fenced. f'ulure potential in tM profits or one of the Beach area. SL25/hr. Hi ~1568~jlV~.21~"~c~ln~. ~Anhm~~,.,~~~~~1 ~!!!~!'!!!!'J\!'!!~!~ Rooms for Rtnt 5995 unlimited. Afusl see to ap. fastest growing, most ag. school girl OK. Own Sl'.15. 2 BR. Dclu"e studio MOD. 2 BR, blt-ins, R&O, I· I ________ ...;,.;.;.~I predate. Financing at 6% gres.sive companies of I t s I "'"""'=~Po=T1A=H7on.~.....,,..-'-C:::.:..:.._ dlsp, frpl, terrace, view ulil. PRIVATE' entry, men only, lntereal. A real bargain at type which has dlversilled CHIHUAl:IUA, female, brown :e~i!.l~i91~··st~ul~~fi $190 mo. ~2266 $45. mo. S4S-3696 after 4 S58,500. For Mle by owntt. into other ficldro wit h white collar with flea local. 2 BR llOllth of hiway, apts., pm. Call <TI4) 689-5.385 NO FRANO'IIsE. FEE! collar. Vic E. Bay, C.M. =~~=-~----t drps .• {rpl., garg. No child, FURN. room for rent w/pvt. Minimum investment of 646-2673 $135. 2 BR. 4-plex., stove, .... pe" Y•ly •·· n M mo BA. &: kitchen priv., Dana Aerti•ge 6'200 $4975 throUgh S9950. SI• '!ESE Cat, brown m••k· w/w, drptl. Children &. pet '"' ""'· • """'· •-· p S70 __ .,:_ _____ ;._;.;.I ~.-00\VN ~ -Avail 9/l. Aft. 7, 61>3111 t. rno. 496-9514. Lagun• n-och Lo . :.>J lfJ ! ings female. In Corona del 0.K. Avail. 9/l, 534-6980. ~ as'"g availabl !Th $140. 2 BR. 4·ple". W/w, RIO, enc.I'd. aat .• pool. Bkr. 534 ...... Cost• Mn• 5100 AVAIL Now, large 2 bdr. PRI. room. kit prlvl'gs Near 7 ACRES W/PERMIT proved credit. e w ap. Afar. 644-t529 apt. new crpts .• painted. bit· 21 &: Santa Ana.. Sl7. wk. TO KEEP HORSES AVERAGE EARN ING ro DARK glasses, small horn ins Sale or rent at $DI. 0'45-=~129<~_e_m~p~lo~yed:..;.;,...:.onl~Y·:.__1 Adjacent subdivision 0 n e TEN:r'IAL of fl,500.00 A rimmed prescription. Hun- Couple aver 45. 613-0lll. Jo'URN. room with bath, mile E. ot hwy, uW avail. MONTH! tlngton Beach 549--0275 1 BR so. of hiwa,y, lg. deck, private entrance. Man only, $35,000, % Cash, bal 1st trl15t WRITE US TODAY. Please ORANGE male, k It ten, new crpts, drps, some furn. $20/week. 646-1277 deer!. include name, addrC11s and w/Uea collar. Near Harbor bc~~~·~:.·675--4943 ·* NEW BAY FRONT 1,:0'=;.o==-'.::,:;-'::';:->,,-,::-I Winter rentals, 2 Br, 2 Ba 2 BDR. ww cpts, blt·ina, furn. Avail Sept 6. $225. mo. ' drps. gar. No pets. 227 19th St. 675-0236 CONSTRUCTION JUST COMPLETING $165 mo. 673-6904 · -MAKE OFFER I! telephone number. Full de-Shop. Centr. 54~5448. ==========!Guest Hom" 5998 Write or contact: George R . .scrlptive literarure will foJ. Balbff 5300 Kress, Box 914, Laguna 10\V. Lost '"'"'"' 2 BR, furn/unfum avail. After 9/15, so. o1 hiway. 314 Marprite. 213-431-11$. l & 2 BR apts. From SJJ5. to $175. No children or pell!. 1525 Placentia. Also avail. unfurn. e WINTER RENTALS e WINIFRED L. FOSS. Agt. • 6f2....3850 . WINTER. 2 BR $115 + Ulil. Can be &ten Sat Aug. 16th & 23rd. J.2.2 pm, 1019 \V. Ba,y Ave., NB. Avail Sept. 6. Harbor Heights Four 2 & 3 BR UNITS a.II with fireplaces, dishwashers & 2 baths, Rental ?.tanager - Afrs. 01.ristlensen 3117·A Cinnamon Ave. Costa Mes• Phone 546-1034 ---------PRIVATE room for &m-Beach. or phone 494-472.6 NATIONAL PO l\-0-GOLF' $170. NeW1!r 2 BR, 2 Ba, bulatory lady. Nice aur-' Bo 123 yearly. Laundry & garage. roundings, iood me a 11. ACREAGE ~or Sale, com-10:,., . Nr libra"-". 673-3986 eves. Costa ~1csa area Avail pletely engineered & im· S LoLlberty ·~ Sept. l. Call 548--4753. proved on Dan Diego Frwy. t. uis, Mi!souri 63132 ==========I Zoned M·l, Ol'lt' acre pa.reels 314423-1100 to 15 acres avail. Between ASK FOR MR. DENTON -----'---S"m-'-'-1 Crown Valley Parkway & El CANDY SUPPLY- STORAGE garages. fully Rancho Viejo, in Laguna ROUTE enclosed. Avail Sept. ht. Niguel. Call 10 A.~t to 12, 2 AFFILIATE $2:). mo ea. 548-2921. C.M. PM to 4. 499rl35S, Stan !No Selling Involved ) --Allen, brokers welcome. Excellent income for ft!w Hu ntinQton Beach 5400 Misc. R•ntals First Time Available Huntington S.1ch 3400 3 BR. 2 bath hoo.se with bullt·ins, fireplace Ii: double garage. Nev.'l,y painted .l new carpets. Wa l ki n& distance to school $225/mo. Rltr. 546-41fl. LARGE l BEDROOM I'"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'!!! One 2 BR, convert den, own- ers Villa , , , S300. One 3 + Den or 4 Bednn studio , •• S350. TIK'se are 1500-2000 sq ft Villas. Fireplace, crpts, drps, bit.ins, priv attach gar. age. Huntington Villas, 161TI. Malaga Lane, H.B. 842-BW (1.1 AM to 5 PM) Income Property 6000 HAVE approx 10 acres hours v.·eekly work (Days or -4 UNIT MONEY MAKER Ocean vlew property, 3 min eve~in.gs). Refilling ~ eol- W•1tmin1t•r 3612 $150 month. yearly •673--8088• 3 BDR. & den, cpts., drps., 2 BR. Apts. fw-n. or unfurn. fireplace, dshwshr. bit-Ins, To S200 yearly, &0ft water, 1prink1err;, patio, Anita, Jones Riiy. 673-6210 2 full baths. Refrig, washer _1 l BR xlnt Joe. Close to Bay & & dryer optional .• ....., mo. heach. Adults only. 67~7876 9321 Madison Ave. CaO betv•ee:n 6-10 PM weckday1. 1 ,1~1 ~00,.•~"'~·,,'=94-'--i-94~7:=1,.,---,­ All day weekends 892-74.50., l &: 2 BR turn & unfurn apts. 897-59fM. Pool. No children or pet8. 2405~' 16th St N.B. 646-4864. Sant• Ana Heights 3630 OCEANFRONT ~nter lse, 3 BR, famiJY;-·J175, 4807% VACANT 2 BR duplex, Sgl Seashore Drive. HARBOR GREENS BACHELOR unrum t r om suo. Also avail 1 . 2 & 3 1 •,~s=E=o=R=oo==M~C~a-r_p_e_t .-. Bdrm, lfealed pools, child drapes built-ins, 1 blk to 5 care center, adj to shopping. point stores. Owner, No pets. 642-2835 or Key at 7701 2100 Peterson Way Ellis, Apt. D $145. Costa Mesa 546-0370 NE}Y $145 up. 1-2.J Br, 2 Ba MARTINICj)UE htd • '"""' pcols .... rm. GARDEN APTS. ~ ~\'~""" Mrr ..._3137 Ex('('llent, park-like surround· ings for adull!I only. Bach, I, 2 & 3 BR. Aptl!i. from downtown Laguna. lecung money rrom coin o!)- SSSS. mo. income. lmmac. Value $150,000. Will trade erated d ispensers in Costa rond. nr. 0.C.C, & So. Coast for bayfronl home, Balbcla Mesa & surrounding area. PliU&.: Sell at 6.8 " gross. or Lido. 615--0833 aft 6. We est. roulC', IH and 1 es Submit small house on TD. name brand candy &. Call Fotir Star Realty ll ACRES, orange & avocado snacks) S1575. Cash rcquir. ~422 grove. So. Or. County. ...,, F 1 • t . · $136,00'.I on ca.sh de a 1 ..... or persona in f!rv1ew 4 NATI"'! NIFi'IES W/$Z5 000 do n N ts In Costa A-Iesa area, s ~ n d All 2 BR -Elec bltins. Lush on ' "ty ~ ~ ~r!ym yr. name, address & phone num. patios AND over 12% net 4~1B k 0 · ber to Multi-State Inc., 9057 return. Make mt' prov<! it! ro er, E. Imperial }iwy., Downey, Jo Hansen, Rltr. 646-8226 TAKE over 10 Acres no calif. 90'242 (213! 861-0BTI ===='====='°!down. S25 mo. Ranch site AFFILIATE Busin•ss Rental 6060 nr. huge lake. 894-4743 Agt. MANUFACTURER BALBOA ISLAND Mount. & °""" 6210 desires associate with man- agement or engineering 64-01 DOG, small long • haired blonde color, curled up tail, nea collar, ans. to Rikki. Vic CamC'O Shores. Cd:r.1 beach. approx 7 f 2 8 . RE\V ARD. 6"5-0432. DOC, small white, Spitz hw;ky Ilea collar n1aJe Vic. Eat anc ia .R E\VA R 0 5t6-334!. 11.fALE black mixed Spaniel dog, ans "Tulf)I" vi c Gothard & Warner, HB. Rew. 847-7417 L \OTES "''allet. Vic Center SI, Ci'.1-f or 3rd Ave., Laguna Beach, Fri 8/l. Valuable papers. Reward. 49'J.2369 aft. 6. GREY min. coc:kapoo "Crusher" Vic \Varner & Eclwart:ls, HB. 842-7670 or 847-1004 Sandy, Rev.·'d. 842-7670 tran11pattnt art1ficlal Udn. Comfortable, naturat.looldrw. 0l'l.Il&'.e Co. Hair Replace- ment Center, 433 N, Tultln. Oranre, (l) mo431 ~ ¥:• ..,..... 11 ~etery Lots 6418 4 LOTS in Blue Spruce Sec- llon, HR1'bor H.tl!it Memorial Park. 548-3075. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Job Wanted, Man 7000 YOUNG man !ollowlna f'lec· trlcaJ trade. P o 1 i I I o n wanted in industrial. rtsldenlial or n1arintl. Uaed to long houri & hard work. VERY dependable 548-8283. Job Wonted, Lady 7020 RELIABLE, e>i:perlenced mature lacb as Cashier, Ho1tess or Receptionist. Preler CM-NB area. Part or ruu Ume. 548-5633 EXPER. praetlcal n u r s e , cook dk!ts, live in, referenc· es. Box 102, Laguna Beach Dome•tic Help 7035 George Allen Byland Agency Employer Paya Fee 106-B E. 16th, SA 547--0395 Chinese Hve-in1. Cheerful Permanent. Experienced. Far East Agency 642-S703 ITT IABSCO MECHANICAL ASSEMBLER Prefer somC-OnP 1vi1h m('· chanlc:al assembly e • .,per· iCflCC'. GOOD BENr:FITS AND WORKING CONDITIONS Equal opportunity en1ployer 1-185 DALE Y.'AY COSfA l\fESA, CALIF. 92626 <714) fl45.8'l51 gar. You paint $140 mo, aii --========= ~ Lse option or aeU. 3 BR Cor ona d•I Mar 4250 house. Hdvrd fir. Fncd yd. Pool, nr shopping. Im Santa Ana, Apt. 113, • 646-5542 • NEW USO up. 1-2-3 BR. 11eated & sauna pools, rec rm. Heil & Algonquin. l.tgr. 816-3137 or 846-4144 2 DEDROOl\1. Crpts, drps, built-ins. No c:hldm, no pets. cau 968-5766 aft 4 p.m. To p location 3oO + sq tt, 4 yn ttmaining oo le"" .••••••••• , background to join expand. POSITION AVA" •0 LE SIAMESE ••t. ""'"·e-to ' ~~ ing manul'g. co. S7.500 in-.. ... ..... •" F · d BLACK & grey tiger cat w/while on tummy & legs. Must find 01vnt'r. r.1ission Viejo. 830-1755 Leue w/option or sell $22S LG. pvt bachelor, M>. of mo. Owner-Agt 54M358 hiway. Retrig, o n I y . TiiE SEVILLE 2 BR, 11, ba. W/garage, $150. Adults . crpl& • drps -Bit-Ins. t"enc- ed yd. 2619 Santa Ana Ave., 636-4120. ll,i;; ;:.: v~:.':. ~;e Box Rnch Hse & Acreage vestment. Salary S250 per freckles, f('male. Lost vie or aggr('SSJVe an wk + equal Share of profit. East Bluff. 644-4529 E.x:pcrie=m~~idential ~ lagun• Niguel 3707 OCEANSIDE H wy, 2 BR, 2 & 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, pvt patio, heated pool, newly derorated. 962-8994 • PRlME Retail Location • Store 17x40, xlnt. fl. & auto traffic. 1871 liarbor, C.1'-1. NEWBERRY SPRINGS Should return SZS.000 per MIN. Samoyed, Monday vie. All inquiries conf)denHal yr. For appointment call Mr. 910 Joann St.. CM. 54.8--0786 Contact, Wm . C. Ring 1 _o_"'..,"'="·'·~n~~~539-=""°~~·~-· 1 or 546-3.141 3 BR.·2 BA, btauUful view. flll"n, 1valk to shop&, adults Bltins, d.sh>1.·hr, crpts., drpa, onJy, no pets. 540-3864 trplc. 836-ST;iO or 542-121S 3950 B•lboe Condominium 4300 Country Club VIiie Lovely 2 Br. l !Ai Ba, crpts, drps, bit-ins, prl patios. $255. 83l9830. LGE Bachelor un it." Sharp. Cpts/drps. Nr. So. Coast Plaza, OCC. $125 incl l'f!frlg. YEARLY-1 &. 2 bdr furn & util. See at 913 Valencia apta, incl uW. '~ bloc:k to Apt. 2 aft. ;, PM wkdays & LARGE 2 BR unlurn apt. Crpt.a, drps, oven, range. Sl20. • 842-1544 Tustin """" PROFESSIONAL office WE DARE YOU "1;""'0",71m-,"ua~· -.-. -v-,,-_-o=..,.--,e &I to check 115 out, Nar~onwid,.. Cty ~'airgrounds, stable space, $155. mo. Must see lo Co, needs a distributor in area. Losl Sun. 541Hl8l.1 apprcc:iale. 1862 Placentia. 20 Miles East of Barstow on your area. 2 to 8 h-.· p •, y CITY OF LAKES 1'1AKE YOUR OWN LAKE CM Pho 642-8907 '°' ' WST Red Doberman. Vic · · ne · freeway. Elev. 2000 ft. Near week (days or eves) for high 1'1AR1NERS CENTER Lake Loreen. \Vonderful land earnings. No seUing, You ~Ionic .~ista & Elden, Ct.t REAL TORS best beach. No p e t 1 • a.II \\'kernls. 6'13-ll09 """"""""':-:=..,-,...,~-1 2 BDR., l ba .. crits., drp1., PENINSULA Point l Bednn bll-ins., s l n g I e gar., deluxe $135 yrly. l S 4 4 upstairs, $120. One c:hild -'='='"=m="=°'~·:;r.;.:;=1;358=== I OK . No pets. Ev e s : THE ASPENS Office & 11tore bldg, rent or for apricots, alfalfa, nut tree can keep prese:it job. S I£~ Rusty 548-47!3 Corona de! Mar 673-4400 J~ase. $75 to $120 per mo. growing, fish raising, horse required (secured). For in. \VlllTE fe1nale poodll', lost • 'A.L~ Apt .. Furnished 1"9 Riverside Ave. 646-2114 ranch, boating, etc: etc: terview in your area, send 8/10 HB. No ii:ien!; 6 BALBOA ISLAND • Lease name, and phone no. to: 1·hild1't"n "'ailing. 962-1434 General 4000 . 646-3432. 15652 William St Tu11Hn"s pl'l'.!stige address Adult living, no pets Shag carpets Total air conditioning Furnished & Unfurnished Gymnasiums & Saunas Apartments from nso For information ~ 2 Stores, together or aep. 40 Acres Ranch Land, im· Distributor Division, 590 N. 307 Marine Ave, 67J.8753 proved Wirn modern 2 BR Azusa, Covina, Calif. 91722 Personals 64-05 Belboa l1lend 43S5 $90. 1 BR. Trl-plex. Util. pd. BEAlITIFUL Upper duplex Avail 8/15. B r o ke r . Apt.VeryclosetoSt.Bay.4 534-6980. Br. 4 ba. $400 per mo. yrly. $US. l BR 4·Plt'X, gar . Small 1 =Sal=''=""="'=Rl=ty=·='='l>-6900=== pet considered. Avail. S/1. l · Bkr. ~-Suns•f Be•ch 4-455 $1.10. 1 BR.. Near shopping, Adults, avail now! Broker 645-0111 IOCAI. Cost• Mesa 4100 $30.00 wk. up e Day, week, month. O Stud}o I< Bach. Apta:, e Incl Uti11 I: Phone RI"\'. • Maki Servkt. TV avail • New Cafe & Bar 2376 Newport mvd. 541-9755 S t: mfER rent-Oceanlronl apl, 1·2 bdr., fireplace, patio. gar, Fully furn. $t40- Sl60/wk. 11th & S. Pacific, SB. LUXURY oceanfront apt. 2 Bdr., fireplace. patio, gar. Year lease. Starting Sept. S220. Util, pd. 17th & S. Pacific. SB. WINTER Rental, 4 BR & ,2 BR. All elec, dishv.·shr, disp, garage, lrpl. 120 Agate. 673-8918, 213-728-1065 2 BDRM, 1 ~; ba, bltns, util rm, gar, patio. NC'w crpts & drps. No pets. I mile OCC. Sl60 mo. 1st & la.st, S50 deposit. After 4, 968-'lm LUXURIOUS 2 BR, all elec., crpts, drps., GE kitch., pine trees. encl'd gar .• nr bw;. Sl•ID. Adults. 120 F.. 2tlth. "-1<TOWNHOUSE_*_ 2 BR, l ~t BA, crpts, 1Jt•ps, patio. Adults. Sl50. 13.f E. r-.1elody Lane. 6-12-6872. NO\Y Renting: New lg. 1 BR apts. cp1s, dms, bltlns, i;:-ar. Patios. Adul!11 O!Jly.. M~ 2110 Elden. 646-1762. OC'.LUXE 11pt. Spaciou s. Patio. S14D Isl & last adv. 548-2039/646-4760 SPACIOUS 2 Bon, cpls, drps, stove. 357 Viclol"la, Or see your broker ranch houS(', lge !iv . rm. •LIQUOR LICENSES* =160°'"~P~E~R'-"M~o-o~th~.-=Euo-t,.-,1=7th~I beamed criling, breakfasl Inter-County Transfe~ WANTED rm. kitchen, modern bath & * ORANGE COUNTY * St.,R~~~;.;=t ~~re. plumbing. Tank house en-"\VE WON'T BE UNDER. Overweight Ladies ===--,,,.--.=-,.,,-7. I dosing 1000 gal ~alv. stor-SOLD" Limited Quantity! For l'C'Sl'ur•ch V.'t'ight reduc-REAL ESTATE General OF'FICE or 1tol1!, 700 gq. It. age tan~ under 4j lbs Pl't'S· \Vinston (2131 m--4249 oollecl In~ pro1,'l'an1 to establish 24627 J)l'I Prado. Dana sure. With double gar, Con·l-,,.-~~-'-~~-'-=c:.:; I Point. Call 496-1513 crete septic tank. all elec:.. food To Go Business slatistie-for rapid perma- Rentals Wanted 5990 -==========I nent \\"eight loss, c.-onducted ----------~ 5 hp pump, 301 gal per niin Good profit record by qualified physical cul- • ATTENTION e Office Renfal 6070 at 80' depth. Improvements: * 615-3202 * turists. Applicants must be Fenced with 1" by 6' x 300 ft . . Owners in this area who may MODERN OFFICES redwood fence. 7 Miles East LAWN ~Ing &. edging, a minimum of 10 pounds have income property in FROM $65 PER :r.10NTH of school. $?6,(Q), J1' Cash, new equ1pt, new side ramp ove1'veight. hav e-trans- VlC. of L.A. AIRPORT: re-Air-cond., parking, central 1~ bal lst trust deed. Will ne-trlr, small route. 548--0-186 porlalion and not currcnt- sponsible couple & 6 yr, old cations. Secretarial service. goliate. Courtesy to broker. LAUNDROt.lAT. Successful, ly under Doctor'!'; cal'f!. All daughter (no pets), seek 2-3 230 E. l71h. CoAfa 11.iesa 847-6640 all 6 P !I.!. !l.1ost automated s e I f. inquiries co1npletely conli· Br. unturn. home (court, dC'ntiaL ggl. dw('JUng or llOme apts. '42·l485 ••••••••• scrvic:e. $fil00. G7fl....56Z2 ASK FOR 1o-fRS. THOfi.JAS oonsidredl, nr. school, ln PRIVATE offices w/bath, ESTABLISHED beauty salon nice llrl'a. Descrvin,g fam· crpts., drps & storage space Exchanges, R. E. 6230 in Cd!l.1. 6 chR irs. ne\vly ily will give best of c:arc, as in the Glendale Fed Savings decorated. 6~Yl20 own home, to your rental. Bldg., Corona del r.tar. $65 T\VQ..Unit Com me re ia 11-========== Can pay $125 or a bit more, nio. Call EV{!!yn J.lalbakken $55,00'.I Free & Clear · Sli,000 Money to Lo•n 6320 but pleue submit what you 675-5144 or 545-3165 Ann. Inc. Trade UP forl---'--------' 537.5412 e COUPLES e LGE. ba.ch. I: 1 BR, up.strs. Drpg., crpta., bltlns. No peU. 2885 Mendoza Or., ApL A O_r_1_n9~•-C_o_u_n_IYc.... __ 4600-'-'l,.-C=o'=·~-•-10_"'_· __ -.,.-.,.- 2 BR, garg, new crpt, stove, relrig, drps. 174 Monte Vista. have Area of Hawthon1e, I -~=-~~~---lllllter commercial or ls: &. 2nd loans for quick Office & riesk spac:e, -·• -'al L k r h Bo Lawnd&Je,ol".', husbande~ luuUSh• Or a e r onl cas. JTOW on your pl'I> '" Secrclarial service. Ployod by Western Airlines. home in Arrowhead. perty eq without disturbing e SINGLES e Tired of Bars, Mail & Hi Cost computer clubs: JOIN THE FUN! Tl·IE IN CRCl\VD - DIV. OF J.M.P. l\1eet otl1ers tYilh YOUR interests a~ our \veekly parties or st!Iect lhern incl\vldually & (GALS join FREE) Call Leah 1-9 p.m, 635-9320. WANTED-COUPLE SINGLE young adults, lux- MODERN FURN 2 BR ury garden apts. w/tull 2264 Maple by Wilson recreation faciliti('s I: rom· Pool. Sharp. mtns. Sl55. No plele privacy, South Bay pet.I, Kids over 16. C.ill Club Apts. m !' o , collect. 213 / 87~ Brook.hunt. Anaheim 1Il4) 1--CHAo::::.:T°'EA""'u"•"'•-PO""'um:==--1 m-<500 Lovely 2 Br. lum. apt. Pool. carport; adults. m pets Garden Grov• 4610 $150 Mo. plus uUliUl'll SINGLE Young Adults Lux· '==194~1 ~PO=M=O=N~•~· ~c_.~M~. =-1 ury garden apta with coun. NICE BACHELOR API'., try club atmosphere and frplc., palio. $100 mo. 26;,2-A complete privacy. SOUTii Orange: Ave. S 4 1-I 4 2 I , BA 'i CLUB API'S 13100 675-6663 CHAPMAN Ave., Glll'den LOVELY b\1 2 BR. 1% Ba. Grove rn4> 636-3030. Pool, pe.lio, adult~. $190. 2310 Santa Ana. MS-2933 1 wk. $90 t.10, utll pd. Comb. bednn, llv\nt rm., kitchen, bl.th.~ Tt.JRNISllED BACHELOR API'. COSTA ?o.tESA. L•gun• &each 4705 100 CLIFF ORIVE Two bedroon1 fumilhed All Deluxe Features Walking Distance to Beac:b $22.} -Yearly lease 494-2449 1--~·~'-"7'--33~4>~_•..,......,.....,oELUXE apt. 2 BR, 2 AU. Util pd, 1 bdr duplex, patios, fabulous view, '}, ckler adlt1, infant, pets OK block to beach. AvallRble nm. 2335 Elden, CM Sept. 2. Can be i1een Sft.t. ... m:Al.11TFULLY FURN morning, Aug. 16. 494-&I09 2 BR. buled pool, adults, no 2 BR duplex., tum A: unturn, Newport. Civic Center, (71 7 I Call locally: 642-3589, eves/ Realtor 41 646-414 your ow interest 1st TOs. 67~lffil weekends. BEACH IDIT AGE-NeWpOrt Also buyer.; for 2nd TD.s. Newport Beach 5200 ~ N __ E_W_,_P_O_R_T--8-o:.;a:.;o..:h. I RENTAL FINDERS \\'Rlertront 2 he.Ir. 2 ba, New :... l{JP(ISM+••mMIYUI luxury bldg. built -in11, ~,-= ... ~~ subtC!Ttlncan parking, boat 4?S w. 1ttk, Corte Mn., MS-4111 slips avail. Caribe Balboa NEED apt for couple & 3 310 Fernando St. children, moving f r om 673-3003 Kansas CHy, prell'r "''ithin "sP~A7c,,-,"'=w~2"°B~R.,-..,2'°"'B7A-. ~.1~ .. -1 v.·alklng distantt of Harbor kit, rrplc. enc g11r. Step~ to Vil'w Sc:OOol, CdM. Fl'om 3 bch. lse. S2.JO. Mo. 673-1990 to 6 mos. Write Box M 423 or S4~3l81 DAiiy Pilot. VIEW apt. 2 Bcdrms. split HELP! \Vill wmebody please level, l'.:legant carpeting, re n t 10 someone w i t h drapes. garage, fn~place. children ? 2 TeC"ns & o n l' Call aft 6 PM 548-2394 baby, Unfurn, 2 BR, bit-ins, ==~~~~==--t pool. Costa Mesa or BALBOA 8 1\ Y CLUB C)I• NC'<vport A p pr 0 " $150. quisite l Br apt. Furn or 548.J507 Eves aft 6:30. unf. Ll!ic. S400. 642-7633 ---".c=-"=7"=='---I ELECTRONIC salr.s engineer • YEARLY-$275. needs 1 bdr, film apt on New 3 Bed. 2 Bath,, 673-2223 the oceantronl, ycady. Onld~n OK Zl3 • sn-O-tM ext .f6.1 or PO 1S09 W. Balboa Box 6i5, Balboa. YEARLY -Avail now 4 BR. 2 BA, 117 3Jrd St, Apt 8. • 67:1-$36 • CARPETS, drapes, air con-t'N' land. Room to huild. Sattler blortgage Co. lnc. dlt1onlng, plenty ol parking. Assume 6.S% loan. Trade Serving Harbor Area 31 yrs. S70 & up. WeU.s-~fcCardle, for income property. Call 336 E. 17U. St. Rltrs. 54~7729. Four Star Realty. 835-4422 642-2l7l ~ *DIVORCED CHEERFUL A/C office 15 <t Mortgages T 0 's 6345 YES IT'S YOUR 20. Elevator, perking, top R. E. Wanted 6240 ---·· '--·-·---FAULT location. $65. 488-E. 17th, at 20°;. Ret. for 3 Yr1. Irvine Ave. 673-6574 $3,STI.43 2nd Trust Deed ~ For recorded message Iha.I will chance your life call SEE At 188 E. 171h SI., Cf\t. $$ MORE CASH $$ hind small !st on lot witl1 ORANGE co. 547-6661 Nat'I Bank. Plenty of park-l.a.gnna's rinesl ocean view. 24 hour recording ing, all util, included &42-$40 JX'r n1on!h inc:!. 9~ 3 t-==~--~----4210. Fnr Your 11ome Eqult.y yrs. 2'2'k Discount. WVE boating'!' Hale & hear. LARGE ExecuUve ofllce Absolutely no cost • • • 497·121.0 497-10'11 ty \Vido\\'Cr Yach I s ma , N.B. Also small offic:e from to you th~ Seller! $?5,00'.I 1st TD on ll.OOO sq. wishes lo meet afDucnt $4, mo Owner. 675-4644 t2 years ol paying more cash fl. brick commerc. bldg, on unalluched female. D<"JX'llo f O County property <lanl OK. To share smllll ex- 600 .to 1200 c::-Ft or ~~e R , lo11g-term lea5C'd land. pcn s es, boalin ... & -i· • 'l,..4U the 1>st • • • p bl $7'"..0 • I ., orrta.: c.r.1. &jti-:l130 Then call the Best aya t' ~r mo. inc' matrimony?'..' 1113) 432-3001. ' l0'1to. ~nlal 1nco1nf' $2,400 per mo. JO% Discount. LICENSED lndu1trlal Prep. 6080 BEYERL Y JACKSON BROKER 497-1210 Spiri\ual Readings, advice LOT size l()()l(l70' with of/ice $1,950 2nd TD at S20 f\lonth k 4Dxf0' slab \Vith itttl REALTY ~~cl~2?;, 1~:~:.i,a1l0~~et!;,:~ frame only • Kteal for truck-Beach. 20% d i , co u n t Ing litm. S.."6,000 • best of "47-4033 or S45-t14S 494-ll37. tema. Owner will «ITY bl t---------- TD. l~!!!!!!!!!\!'!'!'!"!'!'""~""""""'1$5,950 lST TD on ocean view Well .. McCardle, Rltrs. BUSINESS and lot, 8%, due 3 yelln. 10% 1810 Ne"'wrt Bl\'d., C.M. FINANCIAL discount. 497-1210 548-7129 anytime 1-497-1021 e\-enings) on all mat1en. 312 N. El Camino Real, Sar Clemente 492-9136, 496·W07 10 Al\1 • 10 Pl\! GRAND OPENING AUG. 11 MUR·RAY HEALTH SPA 2930 W. Coast Hwy, NtwPOrt Beach. 7 days a "''k. Trained ma.w:USC"· 6-t~ ptll. SIC + util. "1-0020. nr Vic H 111 0 • l'ltW t BDR.. partially fum. SllO. cpt&/drps, trp~ I• r • Westcliff 5230 uUI. pd. °""' 30 )'ttn. 49'7-105& -------- ELECTRONIC sales engineer needs 1 bdr, turn apt n the oceanfront. Yf'M· ly. f2l3l 870-TITI or PO Box 6Q. Blllboa.. ~~~~~~~~)!B!!u~I:,.· ~Op~portunlllH 6300 -= Money WantM 6350 Attractive Expert YOIJNG \\'OMAl'l danttr will teRch you all latest JJteps. Call Ardell 213: 591--45.18 1·10 PM 56--~ PANOftAMIC View, SND prf. 2 BR. 2 BA. rpt, l-"-,,...,9~R,....$120=,.-mo-n~t~~--1 ovtrlooklni Ali.8o Beach, 2 drp, lrplc, bltln.~. across bdr .• furn. AU ('ltct f'iflltUrT frm Coru'11, S22:1 " $200. 21lOB Oolta~Aw., adulta. no cbildrtn. l'IO pet&. Adult1. 642-0239, 166.!i ln·1~ SIJS/mo. Eve1.: 499-37S.\ EHi Blull 5242 !..ARCE J bdr. In f.()kx. MODERN l &r 2 BR .• ~aut. OOll!d pr, waler pd. octan view, util. inc. Adulll. $1ll. $41-ISli $l60-$225. ~ DELUXE all elec. 2 A 3 Br, f't1RN 1 BR APtl 6: StOOios' "=,-;:==~.,...,::-,---I 2\i Ba. clo~ aar. S300 up. •vall Stpt. lat. SUO A $12>. NICE 2 Bedrm.: 2 Ba .. )T. 132 Amlgo11 Way, N.B. Near t1l5 lldtn, Apt. I. round $175. Pauo. Sllh21.'19S. CdM Ill Sehl. rr;,..so.t, f'l!nt b Your Ad Ill our Cl&Sllfieds ! LC) YOUR AD JN nASSI· nmH 2 bdr .,t 1or Soineone "1111 bt ~ for t"'flo:n ! Someone will bl-~ fl OW ~ k>oking tor It. Dial &fl-5678 I 4 WOMEN in ml:'dical pro- fession net'd 3 to 4 BR, 2 W., lumished hou.M' by &pl. 10. Prefer beach. 84G-i120 or ~ aft S. 4 BDRMS or equiv in Newporl Bcac:h or Cd1'1 area. 1'12--M36, evts &. \Ykf'nd!I. e LANDLORDS e FR.EE RENTAt. SERVICE Broker 534"982 \Vhlfe elephants! DuM-&·llne lndu1trlal Rent•I 6090 PIZZA 1--~------1 -------·I WANT $23,(0).wlll pay up to For Lease 4200 Sq Ft 9% lltc:Ured by lst T.D, on Shop Bldg Nr Dntown AU pim. ~p for pizza Cosla MtM rt11ldenct. Costa Mesa. M •ny ld•al house. incl: oven, elect Plrasc caU Art GtovlnetH UMS. Contact owner, c:h!!t!ae (rinder, plo:a pam. REALTOR 673-7420 hot choc. machine, San.I· CE ENTS Mr. D lckarlOn. Serve lce-eream mRker (wa. ANNOUN M 642..ooM Day s 11.•r. opentted), Toutmll$ter and NOTICES 54&..5452 Eves. caf~ french-11')1!r, etc. 959' 00 NEED: M·l buUdlng, gl() 10 pmflt m11rgln, To!Al v 111ue Found IFrH Adi) M 1000 sq11are feet. Small of. S~. ~·111 1~11 1111 for $2500. FOUND! S1n.11\I blk &. brown Jlce> 11iace prtl. \Va.shable Call 925.WB or 658-1628 CoJ. m11le dog vlC' ~1tiadowl11rk wa11JJ " nooMI Z2Q, 3-pha.se. lccL Golf C.'11!., J.1.11. SU-3371 or MB-5623 alter 6. Whlte elephants! OttnN.~Urw R46-:'.01l. James Loyd Bullock plca.JW contacl YoU!' 11Uit('r l\l11Mon lhland JenM!n at 2101 Han-Ison St, Eve rett, WMh. ALa>HOLICS Anonymow; Phone 542·721? oa write to P.O. 8o)I 1223 Costll' l\leSB. '\'OUR 1llX'm Sl't to mmlc In· ch1d m1110;iclnn!I'. It. ~ing.-r, 2 discs SIM, Hank [>42-4477. • TWO BUSBOYS NEEDED Apply in person REUBEN'S COCO'S 1555 W. Adams Costa Mesa ENGINEERING -AIDE- $J15. to S?OO. per month One year experience as draftsman. on!' year college. engineering 1najor 11ub~ti· luted for experien=e H i g h School graduate, File appli- cation at City Hall, 8200 \Vestminster Ave .. \Vestn1in- sler, Calil .. by ... ugust 2Slh., 1969-5 pm . \Vrittcn exam by Scplembcr 6th, '969. (TI4J 893-4511 E"t. 200". SUPERVISOR Excellent opportun ity "''il!t a fast gro\viug oon.~111ner pro. duct c:ompany. Experienced in injection n1olding, f"X lrud- ing or v.·irc coating desired. Supervisory-e"pcrience pre. ferrecl , Orang., County area. Reply: Box A-1-&lt, The Daily Pilol. LUGGAGE SALESMEN Experienced pref•rred Excellent benefit~. ~~uu time. Apply In rw:mn, Personnel o!l!c:r . J. W. ROBINSON Fashion Island, N.B. Equal opportunity employer ruu.. Time man, 8-5, eom- b!Mlion shipping, rteelvlrtg & truck drlver, Jnd111trial Office Supply. 4360 Campwi Dr .. Newport &ach. RETIRED man, part-time yard work. 2549 Tustin Ave., CM . E.XPER. M!rvice station at. !endanl. Full time. 646-5558 2006 Harbor, C.M. Security Guards Newport area Call 637-3070 PART time BOOKKEF.PER. Af11tun: A t.xp'd. ~2. 5 days wk, 639-St11 IU.,.IRED man far pt-limr mR.lnteno.nee w I') r k al tawrn. CM 646°7101 Co1nnt"ll Chllrh·"n' !;h!'!('o; 11 Huntlnglon Centf'r. llB. Younir mnn, gart.t1n1c. 11omt' l!XP. pref'rl . R9l.9613. ( I SERVICli DIRECTORY " ( I When Yoo Want it done right ••• Coll one of the experts listed below!! SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY 81by1lttln11 ___ 6_ss_o G•rdenlng 6680 Land1c1pfng 6110 RELIABLE babysitter, my home, El Toro area. Also • sewing&a l teratlons. 830-2696 ANTHONY'S 644-4860 LOVING Child care, done in The Best. costs no more! • Llc'd landicape conrrac. tor; complete lndacpi: & aJliO Japanese gard"rt! 83o.3037 LANDSCAPING Yuccag for sale, call Juan Pantoja, my ho1ne. Vet y ex. Experienced Maintenance perlenced. htany refs, Budget Land."Caping 54&-3148 Graduate Ho11iculturist Paperh1n9 ing · Painting RESPONSIBLE n1othcr will AL'S Gardening & Lawn 6150 babysit your chlld, any h1a intt>nance, Commercial, PAit>.'TlNG Int & Ext Lowest hour. reas. 548-.5986. lndU8ttial & residential. contracted pri1..-es. Fully ins. BABYSITIING & com--,,,,,.,.,.•,,.;;64&-c-;3629"";*==~ Satisfaction guru. Freo est. panion, my hrunc. lunches, CLEAN-UP SPEClALISl'! ,'~'~°'-w_..., __ 67_3-_11£6 ___ ~ bist fenced yard. 548-5874 Mowing, edging, odd jobs. EXT/Int. pntg. Aver rm. $20 Reasonable. 548--6955 + good paint, neat work, EXPERIENCED Japanese ,1_oc""'re'°'t.O..~R;_o;:cy;,., _;84;_!_;·1358=.'-~ gan:lener. Reliable. 540-7373 PAINTING -papering, 10 Brick, Masonry, etc. 6560 for free estimate years in area. Reasonable BUILD, Ren1odel, repair. rates. Ca.ti 6<12--0427. Brick, block, concrete, JIM'S Gardening &. lawn -~o--c=-,_,~=- ca.i·pentry, no .)ob too small. maintenance. Res. & Com-CLARK & CLARK Lie. Contr. 962-6!M5 _m_ere-_ia-,L_,*~f>48..847~11=---CUm'OM PAINTING Builders 6570 Cut & Edge Lawn • 642-2936 • 11aintenance. Licensed PAINTING, Papering 16 )1'11. 548-4808/645-2310 aft 4 in Harbor area. Lie. & COMPLETE SERVICE *EXPERT JAPANESE bonded. Refs. furn. 642-2.156. e Remodelin~ -Rrsldential GARDENER SUBURBAN Painting/Dec • Commercial • industrial Jo'ree Estimate. 646-08.10 Expert Guaranteed Work Construcllon-design Assoc. Free est. No job too large 548-7596 JIM'S GARDENING & lawn II 494-3!90 1naintcnance. Res. & Com-or too sma • C1binetmaking 6580 _n_,,7re_·;_,c.L_*_c'o--'~::'::'::11::.· __ • ror better painting call J a panese Gardener experienced painters at DlITCH CABINET ?ollAKERS Expel', com pl yard service! I ~".,'""=0=17~a~f~le='='=P;.,m_,..==-- Rebuild, ITmod. kitch, bath Free est. 548.7958, 546-0724 p A p E R SPECIALISfS - etc. Free estimales. Cal's best for vinyls, flocks, 646-5219 or 645-1786 G I S • 2 foil, mllrals. 847-1659 eves . C1rpentering 6590 CARPENTRY MINOR REPAffiS. Na Job TIX' SmaU. Cabinet 1n gar- ages & other cabinets, ~5-8175, if no ans1ver leave msg at 646-2372. H. 0. Anderson CARPENTERING, room ad- ditions,· patio decks & covers. Quality, cus tom work. 6~f>.-0415 REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS CABINETS. Any size job 25 )'I'!I. exl)f!'r. 518-tiTI3 QUALITY Repairs -Alt<'ra· lions -New const. by hour or Contract. 64G-3442 REPAIR, Partitions Sn1all Remodel, etc. Nite or day, Reas! Call KEN 5~0-4679 Cement, Concrete 6600 * CONCRETE \Vork, bond- ed & lie. Patios/drvwys etc. Phillips C e m e fl t • ~ .. -~ .. • CONCRETE v.-or'k a t i l)'.pes. Pool dtcks & custom. Call ~8-1324 CEMENT WORK, oo job too sm11.ll, .reasonable. Free t'slim. H. Stullick. 54&-8615 ..!!!!.ra erv1ce1 668 HAULING, General, trees, hedges, topped, trimmed. removed. Big John. 642-4030 Pla stering. Repair 6880 e PATCH PLASTERING. All types. Free estimate. H __ •_u~lin~a,__ __ ~~0:;7.,::30 l=ca=u===54-0-6===="'============== Plumbing 6890 YARD/gar cleanup Ren1ove !recs, ivy, dirt: lractor backhOt', grade 962-8745 PLUMBING REPAIR CL No job too small EAN UP & lite moving 8 642-3l28 8 Tree & shrub removal ========= Reasonable. 549-1359 HAULING, cleanup, lots etc. Handyman anytime you call. * * 642-3398 * * TRASH HAULING reasonable • 645-2720 Housecleanlnq 6735 ·-'--...;...- \\'INDO\VS DIRTY? Johnny Dunn your local servire. Free est. 646-00Tl CARPETS, Windo1vs, firs, e!c. Rea or Comc"l. Xlnt work Reas! Refs. 5'18-4lll CARPETS, Windows, firs, etc. Res or Come'!. Xlnt work Reas~ Reb1. 541Hlll Bay & Beach Cleaning Serv Carpets, windows, floors, etc Res & Commc'I 646-1401 MAINT-res/comc'l. \vilKlows our specialty. Xlnt "-'Ork, rea s! Refs. 642·2202 R~_mod1I, Repeir, 6940 BUILD, Remodel, Repair Brick, block, co fl ere t e, crpntry, no job too small Lie. Contr. ' 962-6945 * IF you need remodeling. painting or repairs. Call Dick. 642-1797 Sewing 6960 25 YRS. exper Seamstress, alterations & repair, mens clothing specialty. 645-0731 a Dressmaking • Alterations Custom Designs * 64G-&W6 * Altuatfons-642·5845 Neat, accurate, 20 years exp, T_ILE, Cer•mlc 6974 Carpet Cl~.•--•-ln.,g'---6-6_25 Ironing 6755 * Verne, The Tile ~tan * Cust. work. Install & repairs. No job too small. Plaster patch. Leaking Ii ho we r repair. 847-1957/846-0206 CARPET & F'urn. cleaning; for l day ~rvice ~ quality work, call Sterling for e \VILL do ironing home, 15c a piece. •548-51o4* in my · Tree Service 6980 Televifion, Repair 6985 $4.98 HOUSE call on all color Thurtel.!y, August 14, 1969 D~ Y l'l~OT J9 Joas & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & IMPLOY~ JO'tS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & EM!.~!lY':'ENl JOliS' I MP LOYMINTlOI S i flilp[~\'- Htlp W•nttd, Mtn 7200 Holp Wontod, Mon 7200 Holp W•ntod Mtn 7200 Holp W•nltd Holp Wonltd Holp W•m.d - "" · Women 7400 Women 7400 WOftMlft ' 7 -----...-.-.. BECOME u .s . DIVERS ... A A major Or&tlge Co. frowth * .;J 1 SEARS Costa Mesa Announces !P.l:nlngt fo r EXPER IENCED -·-SEAT COVER INSTALLER -·-BRAKE MECHANIC -·-ALSO FOR FULL TIME SALESMAN !lard surface noor.coverina: and interior decoraUn&. --Excellent Earninp Plus e Profit sharing 8 Hospitalization • Group life ins, • Paid v1ca.tion 8 8 pa Id holidays • En'lployee discount . ·-Apply in Personnel Office Monday thru Saturday 10 At.f to 4 PM SEARS Roebuck & Co. SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 S. BRISTOL COSTA MESA Orm h11 im mediate career Exper~~d ' 'Jiil I .STORE MANAGER opr nlngs fo1· t~ folJowlna: P rod. Supervlaora Should have a min. ol 3 yn:. eKp. in a supervisory ca.- PtlClty. Q1. Au ur. I n1pector Mu.st have a min. ot 5 yrs. inspection exp. \vlth extcni- ive knowlecfie of aov't ron- tract1 rtqultemfnla. FamU. NCR PROOF OPERATOR AND PIX Ol'ERATOR TrtmClldous expansion pro1ram ofC('ra lmmedl· ate placement for ambl· tioUs men lookln1 for ad· vancement with one ol the natkln'a featest arow- in&' drua &. dlacount chafus. ~!!.c.~..:..i~1'.'"'1Z UNITED CALIFORNIA ieut 3,... colltaa manda· ~NK EARN WHll:.E YOU LEARN (l)ry. p,..,, Oper1ter1 $550 r.tONTH TO START Must have exp. on a rubber Rapid Increases • 5 day week • all pron1oli6ns · from wlthln the ranks. Merit, bonus Ir retire- ment plan. "'"· J a nitor Must have the ability to work with a min. Ot super- vision. W•rthouse men 2 yr11 exp. in w1rehouse pro- cedures req't. Apply in person, Pel'SQnntl Dept, 3323 W, Warner Santa • 30Z9 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, CaW. 546-21)33 • ACCOUNTING PAYROLL CLERK • Heavy payroll, accounts pay- able assistance. gen. typing, adding mach • calculator. Prtl'd. EDP payroll exp. Apply , J . C. PINNIY COMPANY P•thltn lol•n!I -Ntwl"rl ...... NEEDS PART TIME SALESLAIJIES HouHwlvn & Mothtn l Can you •P•re a few hours each qay •nd add I ·lo the lal]lily In c o 111 e at tile sarile tlme1 Schedules convenient for you, mornings, af. I ternoonsi evenings or combination, of au. Work In store under tile lineit of condJ UOllS and top supervi!lon. · APPLY IN PERSON l'ENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND 10 Aloi to 5 PM Monday tllru Frldoy All stµde nt positions filled. Equal opportunity employer Applicant must be at leaat' 21 years old, ener- getic, aaresalve le: cap. able of physical work. , College is helpful but not necessary. Must be hl&b school graduate. Ana . ' Equal opportunity employer MARSHALL * ·*. COMMUNICATIONS 3519 W. Warner, S.A. l !!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'j~!!!!!!!!!!!!!l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!I STOCK CLERK Shipping, recelvini, f i 11 ordeni, dallvery. No ('X- perlence necessary. $4.50. pel month to start. Five day e e • Holp Wonttd H•lp Wo-1 Wome n 7400 Women ~ Apply Frf. Aug. 15 9 A.VI tO 1 PM. week. Chance to advance. TH RI Fry Write qualifications, htl&hl snd weight to Box lt1·356, DRUG STORE The Daily Pilot. Experienced -HOSTESS- Apply In person 16141 Harbor Blvd. BOYS 10 .. 14 Founlaln Vailoy C&rrlu Rout'8 Open REUBEN E. LEE for 151 E. Cut t Hwy. ITT JABSCO TYl'IST ITT JABSCO SENIOR VERIFllR/ 7400 An equal opportunily Laauna Beach, So. Laguna N1wport Beach An Equal Opportunity employer DAILY PILOT 1 ..... iii.iiiii;O ... iiii.;;;;..,,.1 Employer ----"'=='----1~,.,.,=.,_:642~-02!~~--- Type 50 "-'Pm accurattly. Come dlctaphone experl· enL'e preferred. KEYPUNCH OPERATOlt -----ITT JABSCO SALES & mgml abilHy pl-time, Lifetime income. Ear- abilities unlimiteo agenciY , Equal opj)ortunity employer. Alpha numerical. Somt related clerical dttlils. J;\dvancement po$alble to control Cleric. ITT JABSCO MECHANICAL DRAFTSMAN Experienced in clos~ tol· erance draiting on small pump components and assemh!ies. Require 1 working knowledge or d<'· mensioning techniques as applled to castings and machining drawings. Shop experience desirable. Samples J1!!IUired. GOOD BENEFITS AND \VORKING CONDITIONS Equal Opportunity En1ployer 1485 OAL'E \VAY COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92626 (714) 545-8251 ITT IABSCO MILL & DRILL OPERATOR Must have some eX"per. GOOD BENEFITS AND WORKING CONDITIONS Equal opportunity employer 1485 DALE WAY COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92626 (714) 545-8251 ly reUnnnt. 842--8795 or CLEANER 96'-'859 1485 Dale Way Costa Mesa, Cal!f. 92626 ('714) 545-8251 DEBURR & HELPER Pl'f'.ler some factory ex· perience with hand tools. GOOD BENEFITS AND WORIGNG CONDITIONS Equal Opprtuni!y Employer 1485 DALE WAY COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92626 ITI4) 54f>.8251 ITT IABSCO TURRET LATHE -OPERATOR- TURRET LATHE OPERATOR/ SETUP GOOD BENEnTS AND WORKING CONDmONS Equal Opportunity Employer Help W1nted Women RN 7400 Ass't Director 11-7 Involvement in: • Nursina: & product re- search • Quest for quality nursing care • Progreuive patient csre program directtd by a. Total S Regtorative Team. Required for positions opening Jn large. extended care ho.spital. Ca ll ROYALE' 5<6-6450 INSTRUCTRESSES Quality Positions for Qua.lilied Applicants 488 E. 17th St., Suite 224 Costa Mesa 642-1470 1111$111 1 1 Houst!wive11 or others desir- ing additional or primary Income. BE YOUR O\VN BOSS Part lime or full time independent dealers. We train you for immediate Income and offer excellent advancement opportunities. 546-4871. 11111111 1 1 Fun Time HOUSEKEEPER Apply in person HOSTESS PART-TIME For Coco's in Costa Mesa !\.lust be over 18 Apply in person REUBEN'S COCO'S 1555 W. Ad•m• Coit• Met• ' SALE<: PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT COUNSELLOR Young, mature girb1 able to mf!et the public. l\.1ust bt> Huntington Beach tr you have the ability & attractive ,vith a good Convaleseent Hospital dl!tlli re to work with people figure. i....:"::192~D::ce:l•::w:.:"~' ~s00t.,c.H:::;:.B;:.. _1 in pleasant 11urroundtng1 & Apply In person have had sales or public Hol iday Heafth Spa EXECUTIVE contact experience we are SECRETARY looking for you. We will • Co!sta Mesa • train. Good management op. BEAUTIFUL Girl w/a:ood Needed for exciting, tempo. pt.y. Potential $8 ,00) to $10,. figure for mCM:leling. Great rary assignment. Good short. ooo. can t.1r. CUiium. Pay! 3 to 4 houn per week. hand and transcribing ma. COASTAL AGENCY No experience. Hobby -chin~ ikills needed. A member ol strictly for fun. Write box Western Glrl Inc. Snelling & SneUlne Inc. ?i-1869 Dally Pllot. ----'-540-032"-"'-"-5---l2790 Harbor Bl, C.M. 54o.oos5 Experjenced in sin11e needle General Office Experienced and overlock. Good piece TYPIST 14B5 DALE WAY work prices, steady -work. COSl'A ~1ESA. CALIF, S2b26 EDDY MOSS 14042 Locust Part time. Over 21, flexible TELLER (n4) 545-8251 St., Westminster; 534-8738 hours. Apply 8 to 4. Orange ---------ICOMBINATION. Sharp Bar Coast Plastics. 850 W. 18th, UNITED CALIFORNIA Malda & Go Go Dancers. Costa Mesa. BANK TREE FOREMAN Good benefits and workfna conditions. Equal opportunity employer. 1485 Dale Way Coata Mesa, Calli. 92627 (71-4) 54S-8251 R EC E P TJONIST-TY'PlSI' 1 for AdvertWng Age n c y . Interesting work for in-I teUlgent girl. Muat like VP- ing & be good at lt-'10 WPM. Dictsphoneex p e r ien te I helpful. Work in N~ newest otfic:ea in a buty, but congenial atmos ph1 re ' Salary $425 profit sharina. 1 Call Mlss Lawler, 673-.Nl.5. I I I TELLERS 1 lmm~ate openinp for Olt• J gotnr. penonable· lltil wba J ha~ a 1entral inttrelt ill \ banklng. For interview Ph: 540-2111. I Set Betty Bn1ce al m,ulx~c Ai'ency far Career Glria I '10 W. Cout Hwy .. N. B. 11, By appoblt 641-3939 Top wag" 13.00-13.50 to SECRET ARY start. Ph. for int. ~5-99&1 E ERIENCED 6 Monarch Bay Plaza TR A I N E ES Sassy La.ssy, 2901 Harbor, XP South Laguna Pl 1· lnJ ti old'-$667 lo $811 P•" month Permanent, 20 Hour, 5 day 499-l36l as tea, ec on m ..... C.t,.I. k ·t· ail ble Swing 1hUt. Mutt ~ depel'«t-w e e pos1 ion av a Eqiial opportunity <mplor<r WANTED, Mature woman to Newport Be&ch, hrs 10.12 _ able. Apply in perlen I to l~h~ri,.gh~t~"'~'~''=642-8!=~°"=== 1 JRONING wanted 15c • 20c Carpet Layln~ & Starch or delivery 50c extra. ~epair 6626 -".'='"~'='=-~=· ======- CARPET LAYING J anitoria l 6790 n1akes or drop it oil before cL=E"'"A"R"N-=roo=L,_--curr==E~R' I 10 AM & pick it up at 5 PM. GRINDING TRADE: Mar· All channel color antenna CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH sit in my home, CM, w/2 & 1:3 PM. Top salary: Write MTST Typist 4 p.m., 850 W. 18th St..1 school age children. Short Box P-'!Zl, Daily Pilot, $400 to s4so. Must be exper. _,Co=at=a_M_,_,._·_~---1 Requires two years super-hours, good pay. I am a NURSES for Newport Beach compan· NEED money? Like people? C.A. Page ~2-2070\V --A-L-LS-.-"W'--in-do-w-,-. _f:;l"°"'C.:..:• Drafting S1rvice 6637 carpets. Con1mercial & residential. Daily, weekly and/or r.10. 897-7350 including installation $39.95 ritd men preferred. Must be an1bitious, H.S. grad with Do you ha,·e a HI-FI or Stereo problem? Have any math bkqnd & b e visory eXperience in tree teacher. Trans. & refs. re-• RN-Relief duty, two days les. \Ve need 8 temporary le Build your own buaiDelJ trimming and/or related quired. 540-3668 per week. permanent position fill~. selling Vanda Be a u t y I area plus two years college LAGUNA Be h D • LVN R li f f hilt N 1 Counselor' Cosmetics. J1Q 1 BUILDING PLANS • Remodeling • Residential • Commercial • Industrial Construction-design As..o;oc. 548-T;>96 Floorfll 666S Car pet Vinyl Tile All styles ~."d colors Free est. Lie. con lr. 541).72G2 546-4478 GENE'S TREE SE R V : trees/shrubbery removed, trimmed, hauled a w a y 549-1359 t'. , Pl U mechanically inclined. Good qurs ons. ease ca us. 536-3377 \Vorking cood's &. fringe benefits. HARBOR TELEVISION DAILY GRINDING INC. SERVICE 1880 Whittier. rorner 19th 3822 Campull Dr., N.B. training ln a closely related W k M"' ct""" -0 ay -e e • our s 11 ewpor hrs nr ·1e4 al'IUniS field. Apply before Aug. or er, on ay. -w n per week. Laguna Blach Personnel Agency ., u uru e ; D& 15th., 1969 to Personnel Of· t,r ans port at o n . Ref Nursina: Home 833 DOVER DR., N.B. aae limit. 541)..1765. fice, City ot Newport Beach. 94-5364 494-8075 642·3870 549-2743 RECEPTIONIST 3300 Newport 'Blvd., New. RECEPT-TYPIST Exec Secty to $650 BEAUTY OPERATOR and Flia'ht de1k. Full tirnt, port Beach, Cali!. 92000. Min. SQwpm, $300/mo. Please Xl~t oppty, good co., s .a.I es Full or part . time. Must be Orange Co. Airport. Stnd ' ESTATE Mai11t Troe Serv 1714) 6~3. phone 838-3593 for appoint-oriented, make decisions. top stylist. Xlnt opportunity. replies to DAjJy PUot, ~ Removal & trimn1ings, free ,u,;•,,h,.,o,,1a,,t'"e"''Y;-.,,,.,,=-_,_6~99-0 SALESMEN ment. Call Diane, 546-5410. Call Miss Wanda, at l\.f I 11 M902. & Whitt;.,, Co.la M•.a DISPLAY MAN estimate, Call 541-0088. Experienced. Excellent hen. SECRETARY -2 man law Jason Best Prim's Model Beauty Shop, MAIDS, P•rt tlmt -full ' CZYKOSKI'S CUST. Uphoi. e.fits. Full time. Apply in In Our Gun Dopl · E I t A •• I BUSIEST marketplace Jn European Craftsmanship • 0H1ce. Xlnt working cond. ~mp oymen &:ency HB. 962-2666. time. Experience n ot , town. The DAILY PILOT 100'-' fin! 642-1454 person Mon. thru Frl. 10 to Fully experienced needed. lmmed. emp l oyme nt . 2120 So. f.1ai n, S.A. MR. Best One Hour necessary. Ken Niles VU1-, Qassified section. Save 1831 Nc\\rport Bl., C.M. 4 p.rr.., personnel dept. Full time. Apply: 96Z-S611. HOUSEKEEPER • BABY· Cleaners, Pacific Coast Marina Motel 1021 Bayalde 1 money, time & eUort, Look For Dally Pilot Want Ada J . W. ROBINSON GRANT'S REAL Estate Licensee. Good SITTER, 8 to 6 PM wk. dys. Hiway, & Iris. CdM. Al· Drive, Newport Beach. ~ G __ ,_,d_o_n_i_n;.g ____ 6_6_B_O I ~no~w~! !;;';;;;;;;;;~~~s;;;o.:,;;.s;;~D;;iiiati;;64ii~~5678;;.i;;;;;;;;;; SURPLUS commil.sion w/guan.ntee. % day Wed. Nurses home. tractive couner air\, full. Babysitter-Housekeeper FASHION ISLAND lT:>O NEWPORT BLVD. Very active rental agency 96l-9943. time. Sh l r t prewr, part· For teacher: lnla11t A 2 Y Ad h NE\VPORT BEACH d •-~ ti N ec d hil ALLEN BROS. our 5 Id B H ---------COSTA MESA nee s young woman to ....... BABYSITIER, mature, 'h me. () exp. n ., g . c dren 9 & 10. RB ..,._. GARDEN!;RS STUDENTS OU e ere, INSTRUCTORS SALES imm«llately, 645-0lll. day" vk. M'" "col I 0 working '°"d· Apply In 897-4918. • .• working way tbru colleg<. . T_h_ey_'re Looking For It! Malure, young adult, look· YELLOW PAGES WOMAN-bo""w;f,, Use Your Tow"""''· CM. Aft. 6, "''''"" M'-p;~m. MEDIC~ .J Exp. Lie. Reas. 646-42i13 _ 1 1 __ _, f 1 bl spare time to eun money. 549-3722 SALESWOMEN • RECEPTI IST -~~~ ng or gUVIJ ll ure, a e to Local telephone directory Win prizes, no age limit, no k J · Ill f sh! · I -------_ __ meet the public. Apply In Orange County area. N~ Ira-Ume limlt, WW train u MATURE house eeper, v-1n, For exc ng new a on Experienced a 646-3903 LJOBLS &LEMLPLOLYMLEN-T J-O-BS£l4-'W.U'lall peN1on. vel, aboveavef!'&eeemU111, Beauty Counselors. 347-0846 6 da own trans. $250. store In Sol .. Coast Plazbea. WANTED! Wom'an fer & EMPLOYM!NT JOBS & EMPLOYM!NT Holiday Health Spa full time work. Will train. 548-7364 NB. c.t.1. App icants must CHILD CAR£ light b1kpa H I W ted ~ 7200-e Co•t• "le .. e See Mr. Frenzel '7:30 AM TYPIST~ PJ>m & accurate. \VA!TRESS Apply In pet10n: thorougXlnhlytexpalacy'd ln&"co"dmmy to 5 d&.s., Uve 'out. ' __ ,..,: Holp W•nttcl. Men 7200 • e P an ' Men Help Wontod, Men 7200 ~=::,.;==-="=c..::.~~ s I tll ~ ''''' • --~ Thurs Aug. 14th or 8:3o AM ea• on a un uo:::C. Sea Shanty Restaurant, 630 · . • Be h 494--9lZ1after8 · SI LVERWOO YOUNG man for local jewel-catltornla Artists 3ll Min Apply In person ac pm. * EXPERIENCED * COOKS BUSBOYS DI SHWASHERS APPLY IN PERSON REUBEN E. LEE 151 E. Cout Hwy. New por t Be•ch MAINTENANCE MAN ·I· $498. to ~. per n1onrh OS, Fri. Aug. 15th 608 E. Broad· • a Lido Parle Dr. N.B. ALROE. !NC. HOu••.~·~ •• live Jn 2 I NEWPORT ry i;.tore. Sates k rela1ed way, Anaheim, St., Seal Beach. (213) '3~~... "' work. No experience ncces. --'.,.~="'-==---1 431~1321 Jor appt. FUU. time night counselor, EXPERIENCED a1111ist wilfl ntw barn b&b)'. ( EXP. Tailor filter. Perm. * DRIVERS * 2 t 9 PM Attra ti ood Pr posilion. fringe benefits, gd. IJT JABSCO saJli:kplJ Ew&LERS Equal opportunity employer ti~re. '4i.3&3o. c ve, g WAITRESS A:.·18r:,m~n:th. Start pay. Apply Mr, \Villiams, 45 2300 Harbor Blvd. No Experieftce ACCN"fS Rec. & billing gtrl iiousEKEEPER -for 2 L1VE-IN HOUS:::::;;:X...m,.R• "l t'ashion Igland. 644-2424 N 1 wanted. Exper. only, Ae-1 In. 11 A I I p ""'i=~ Cc1la Mesa, CJlif. ecessary. curate typist. Apply W. D. eldt1rly ladles, Ive. te "PP y n t rton Emtrald Bay, Lu. Bch. j SALESMEN • Established IMl'"LLER CHi:MIST BS .. de-. 3 to 5 Must have ctea.n C.ltt:om•· Schock C.O, 35Crl S. Gree~ work. 673-3284. SURF &. SIRLOIN $200/mo. fret rm. 6 btC. 11 territory lo be expanded. Iii ... ~~ .. C H 49Mlli2 t Salary + commission + car PROCESSOR yrs, exp In agriculture driving record, Awty ville St., Sanla Ana. F1nd 1t with a want ad! 5930 P ac. st. wy. 1 allow8 nC{!. Mr. ?iolichaels, c h em I ca I 11 , 1urfactaflts YELLOW CAB CO. JOBS & EMPLOYMl!NT JOIS & ~LOYfir° N•wport S.1ch WANTED: atbietlve a1rl tof.; li42-'7352 LABORATORY & p l.,l o t 186 E. 161.b SL Blu• Dolph In gaJts in local jewelry tkft. CARD Some experienct with plant wcrk. u .s. CiHzen. Costa Mesa Help WlnNd. Men nOOH•lp W1ntod, Men. 7200 Ro•l•uranl . Exper pref. But mt nta. I ENER, i n d u s t or hand tools And drill press-Resume box M 355 Dally Reaular pirt·tlme 4* u, comm·1. min 2 yrs exp, :dnt. es requimi. Pilol. Test Asembly Trnee 335S Via Lido .... _. ... ,.a. J -•--CaJI T "~ '-LIDO ISLAND ~ ..... tt, n.u-~ ewo:.1a-., -o,~j,,r. eves. t94-M27 ARCHrri:C'fUrtAL o ....,., oee paid, Xlnt oppty • e WAITRESSES Harbor ptv4 .•. CM. \~~~~Ng]i;~t~ DRAFTSMAN :c~0~.,ho~! p~eAl~·1: BOAT MFG. -Over 2s-SiCJU.'TAI\Y, Sallb6a t 6s~~00:;. l~p~~y o~r·pes.= Intermediate, 3 yrs. min. joba, Call Kent, 546-51110, • Finish Carpenters Ii I KI N I Barmaid/danctr. mf&r. SIH Itri "«;pm, ~ One year aardenin,I?', mainte· The Co!l"ge Coff!lC' Shop, Equal oppor1unity exp. ~ Jason Beit Employment Full or part.time. Costa ~ "':2 ~PPlf W.Diit~ ns.nee or genel'ftl l-epa ir ex· 562 \V. 19lh ~t .. Costa Me~•. employer Tom ~~nt~~~rA.I.A. AJ.cy. 2120 s. Main, S.A. • Clean•Up Boys ?ilesa ·• · reenv e, ""' ~ . e C I 1· I 2 VO' u •\VACEN mec•·-•-646-1301 ta Ana. • I .-~nene · omp (' ion o SERV. STA. Alls. All Shifts (714) 846-0GTI .,_,, ..... """ • Gr•111de B d "' CAL = eighth grade, valid Ca.llf. 1485 DALE \VAY lor units room only, two r Oft •rs PKACTI null& ~ driven liccn5(!. Oral boa.rd open. Appt: ~ \V. Cst COSTA r.lESA, CALIF. !12626 STUDENT, 1ierm 11art time tune up and rbake rnech., 1 C NEl:D loving l!dy to cart for tlderly pntl~ IMrw ~t and performance test Se~ ~•,,1wy'""'."N~·,,B,., . .,,"~s-.,.3_25~'---~ (7141 545-82f>l work, •mall mfg. plant, helper for lub & oll, 50-50 • -omb. Tool Man Mfoonr 6 lwhrulcs baFrlbY,, ~ ;! .. ~~ in C.M. arta, 5 di.YI Wk. •t tember 9 & 10, 1969. YOUNG MAN, pa1·1 time Jor chemical n1Wng & pack•g· guaranttt, we pay tulJ group 968--316t aft 6 ,,.., •-v ,..,UN T:l0-5. ~ mmm or aft (71~) 893-4511 ext 2"". rtneral restaurant work. _TOO_LM_A-~-R-0-,-Cl-••_•_A Ing. 893-'74M. l • bolltlay TOI' WAGliS p.m. 8 p.m. ! w "I be •-.:! .. ,.,voLc. « '· "xP'O SAL"SLADY n••r.o--•~~ •&• • SALESMEN, Shoea. 1-~1 & pt "ust over 16· 5~1686. Macbifll1t. exper in tooling PERSON to clean Ap~•· ;>.-~ s "'""" ,.... •1~ <;i Guar. comm. PM's ESTABLJSltEO Insurance • and prot.ot)'pe. Cape En;i· &/or houses. Submit Ap. TRAINEES. Full or "1'f Apply In Penon Men • W'lmf:na Oothinc woman wanted. Call Mt-1 umt n\en. Expcr. prt!rd. Leads avail, N.B. oUice. necrina & ManUfacturlrc, plication to P.O. Box 1110, t 1 me. CooJc.fountalfl<di.h * Sft,5383 * Ed'A Hqtbrau aUtr 2 p.JI\. - cuar. comm. P'M'i Cuetr oppt. 675-6383 27694 Camino Capistrano,. NeWf)(lrt Beach, 92663. In -HARB R y CHT BEAOTY. o-tor fUll time 6*-61)4 l Apply S33 E. 17th, Ct.f. JANITORIAL-part 11 m ~. Laguna Niguel. 831-1164. GR6UND~fAN, Sf\ddleback = ~·wy~"f M~Artti:: OU A s aqa.r wQ:A~m'rp. Gwc1r~ oEN+~ AaiaWlt. "Qidt,j BUSMAN. Top moMy. Ex· ~tan or couple. 2772 Ruta:en e f.1ACJ-IJNIS'I' ~xp on mill1 Colle.re. l n q u Ir t t.ir. NB. Bty. ShOp, 494-32M for 2 months. ExHfitftl*I ' porlencro preferred. Apply. Dr .. Ct.I. 6•!6--0381. , &. lathes. Protocype &. tool· Cher1uak ~7-9'700 or 4£6. SERV STA Ail'NDN'T, Part 15192 Golden West Circle SHAMPOO Olrl for m::lu1lve, Pftftintl. UMtit oft:: NEWPORT CROTTO APPRENTICE WELDER ing. 54Q..8'51 45..17. time, evet1. & wk. el'!f!a. W•i tml 1 ... , Calif &t111ty Salon. 3IXI Pa.cillc 4gs..1530. ' m1 \V. Co.t~I 1-l\\'Y for •mall machine ~hop. mr QUICKER YOU CALI., For 0.lb' PUot \Vant Adi App. In peraon bef. 5 PM. . n , .. ' • Coli.st llW)' 67)....182) nlE QUldCii YOU au: Newport Boach ** -494-8989 •* TIIE QUIOCER YOU SELL Dial &U-5678 for RESULTS 2248 J-larbor, CO.ta Mesa. White Elepb&tltlt THE QUI~ Y'0\1 s:E1J. 'i ~~---~~--~~~==-...:..:~ I I I . ' • j :t0 DAJl.Y l'llOT 111"""1, -•t 14, 196'1 M11Cklli01SI POR MERCHANDISE FOii MlliCHANDISI FDll MERCHANDISE 1'011 MEllCHANDISI FOii MEllCHANDISI POii , SALi AND TllADI SALE AND TRADE SALi AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE 1-...::..:::.:::.""'.;.;.._.;.;...;.;.."-.....;;._ __ ~~--~-~ SALE ANO TRACI SALE ANO TRADI FREE TO YOU MlllCHANDISI 1'011 MlllCHANDISI l'OJI SALE ANO TRAOI SALE ANO TIIADI 1--------1 ftwnftvre IOOI Furniture 8000 Fumltu,. IOOOFurn fture IOOO Furnltu,.. ..;..;;.;.;;.;.;.;;;.;;...~--'"'-~c.;.,;.;c..;_~--'-' IOOOFumltvro -Mlscetl•ftMVI 1600 h :'.'.:-------Mic ln•ry, etc. 1700 RAfifSTEffS.a(e and two PUBLIC NOTICE DKOIATOlt GETS CANCEUATION OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS Spanish & Medlternn11n Fomitvro All BRAND NEW f ·llf· M«lll•rrtl\Mn ltctroom 5111!1 In '«•n HOW ll ... M 111:19 l~.OG) · .. • · · ·· •• Gor....,_: Sl'lnlill Cu11om llullt ~· wit~ rNtc~lng lO.,.~ffl - chOit. af bHllll!ul t•brlu 111:..,. 111t.t$1 .......... HOW •ns.• i~lill Olnl"ll St•• . . .. . • -......... " Sit.Of Solid 0.k EMii T•ttle lnc:I C:ol!tt T1ttl1>t ....... , .. ,_ 111,eo Ti ll ~O!'tlor T•tt!ot '--mlll 1Rr9. 1~.tJ) ...... ·• HOW 111,1111 Sptnl1ll l~•nQl!IO Sw119 L1""11 tRl!!I. s.it.ts> , . · ·. "OW 11,.JI A detoralor dream house on display -3 moms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was reg. $1295.00 SACRIFICE • • • • • • $398 Cll:IDlf TAllMS ,t.VAIU.aLI CJllOIT CLl"AlllliO lMMlOIATllY mm FURNITURE 1844 Newport Blvd.11a:.11 .... 1 Costa Mesa only !my Night 'Tl t -Wod., Sot. & Swn. 'Tl 6 JOBS & ~MPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Jobs-Men, Wom. 7SOOJobs-Men, Wom. 7500 * J. C. PENNEY COi\1PANV fashion Island -Newport Beach HAS OPENINGS FOR * COOKS WAITRESSES BUSBOYS * \Vith some experience and willing to learn. Top working conditions & environ- ment. Competitive wages plus meals &: tips, and outstanding benefits including hospitalization and profit sharing. Apply in person 10 AM to 9 PM. Monday thru Saturday PENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND Equal Opportunity Employer All student positions are filled * ••••••••••••••••• * 3 ROOM GROUI' * COMl'Lm Llvint Room -a.droom -Dinette $297 Weekly Parments .. We Carry Our Own Contracts VAN'S Discount Furniture 417 W. 4th St., S•nt• Ana FrM Parking Open Dilly lo.I S•t 10-6 -547·2412 ••••••••••••••••• JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Jobs-Men, Wom. 7500 Outi;irlP Salr.11 FREE MEMBERSHIP! Cur't'l'ntly sell ing ta hou.se- wjves direct? Add us to your linf' ror extra commis.siM income. K~p in shape free. RepreS(!ntativea needed all over Orange County, ~·3368 or 842-11~1 Holiday Health Spa e Costa J\Iesa • Furniture IOCIO 20 PC. "MADRID" 3 Room Group }'ROM ?t10DEL HOMES Includes: Quilted aofa and chair -2 t'l'ld tables & cot. fee lfiWc -2 lamp' -dreu. er -mirror -headboard - quilted box 1pring & matt- re.ss -5 pc. dining room; table & 4 hi·back chairs. COMPARE AT $149.9.l . $399 Nn rlo\vn-P1111s only $16 mo. WELK'S WAREHOUSE L Ow ...... _,_. .... hll ... 11 W.. .-c. Must Vacate Now ........................ Our 6000 1q. ft, Store Stock m\)1-t bt sold Open to Public: F ir1t t ime 3 Rooms Fum. V1lu1 O..r $1000. Now $389. • S pc. 1uthtntlc Spanish lcim, Mt, e M •. 11.itt. tel sof• wlttt 56 Ira. 1n1tchln1 lev• ... t er d.lir e S pc. Spenfdt Dinent, tile: taflle Np e 3 M..vy Mff. ittrr•rtN• fMtchi"I tlbl•s, ttp ffraltlt .......,_ f• Flamlnf9 Dane .. O•ce I• • tlf11th1W ,,.,.., •f 1001 •titer I,._ P1111 M ••tr•,,.., .. eftef SI •ff••_., Slot 'tif'CIHne 91 llteN, wltll • C9Jt't 9f tflls -'. fO ~ ,,. .;;,'P:;' .J:"::;~~ .......... 11•.M .. r~ "" .,, n. ..., ........ •.tl r.i"; IN'rair~ It! !ff,. ... ,, ......... Uf.t4 M"" ~~~T ! fir ............ 11t.t:!I ........ • Of' "'"a. . ..... !~t:!I : .11~/11:\1~ ,.t5· ci:'~Ti:.":.:-..'I~ 1411111: ·Ell:"llS S1")Cf!E Cl'l.tillGE MAITl!lt CHAltGt &AHK ~ AMl!'illlCAll:O .tLL AC'cal"TE'O °"'" •·• ,jol)y -Slt. f.6, .... 10.5 548-- APPROVED FURNITURE FOR Sa.le-MOVlNG, 1Jau baby malts. All n1uat p cockWJ ta.bJe 30x60, chain, 30' YORK TOWABLE 6,000 topther. 541M.161,, 1/16. tw. box 1pr • .t: matt., pie-1 U> ey,ter swu. Se vet• t 1-fEALTHY happy kittena. twu, Cold Spot l'l!:fria., Ou.tr FORKUJT trucks. ~ too. Eat anyttiin, it: ttdMi, pl. and fernt. patio fotfUST SCU.! 63$.~1 att box tmd. Ne!d so~ aoceu. barbecue, ladies u. PETS •rMI [IVESTOCk bod1 to me. u s..21m 18 dothlnc. mltc., 96&-2844. LOVABLE fox t~r Medi Fish & Chips Cito 1~ aood born•. tw '"°" • u. 1tc Unusual female IUac-polilt cense, '°'1e1 children. RIX Slamese, 2 seal. s "'ka. 494-0081 t/14 2196 Harbor mvd. Quiet 11. a t t e e t i on a l • • SMALL couch, fir~ wood 4' Costa ~1~a 546-90Sl After 5. scrap '''ood, All You can SURPLUS Jactory d r • 11 "'--can-y. 1909 ••edera, Coet& labrlca • rom!WttJ. s 0 I d --.• 1125 Mesa. 8114 to the public &-4 ~1ond~ TOY poodle puppy.pick AKC FREE lo qualified home, thru Sal. 1820 Monrovia, cream female. Shots It altered male Ruuian l>lut 0.1. wol'!Md. Out or Ho~y cat. Rec. ahot:s, owner died. T AP£R..FLEX co n c a v e West, Golden Groovy $3)0, 549-1846. 1/14 water ski $40. 3 pr ladies u 544-2835. 2 LOV. l>fale Siamese mixed 8 Vogner ski pan~ $20 ea. BOXER puppies, AKC ~g. kittens. 3 l'DOll. one all blk. V~ water ak.i I l 5 . Champion blood 1 i n e _ & one orange. Ask for Cindy 1100 Pi1nos & Orpnt 644-1368 Con.sider a.ny reasonable of. ~537=-=""-·-•-,n_•_·~-~~~1 ELECT'RIC mov.-cr ~. Ey~ fer. 642-t386 HELP-moving in 5 days, lie~! stove ¥'0· ftefrigerator TEMBROKE Welsh Corrt. home Deeded Jor: Yl'oOOerful $la. 54&-7285 che.mpk>n aired. 5 males. 3 mom• cat • ~r 3 day aid ELECTRIC golf car, nttds femaJes. Prief'd according ki ttenJ. 642-0896. 1(14 pa.int, runs perfect S15. lo quality. 540-4928. NICE rat family. AllO, 30me 645--0295 eift 5. IRISH Setter pups. To good bachelors &: I w I n I er I • KIRBY Vacuum Cleaner hcnne only. AKC. Adorable! Cages I: H.H.G. provkled. with a t t a c h m • n t 1 &: Interes~! Call 546-7504 646-2388 Bf16 poUsber. Take over small LAB. retriever pup•· EXQUISITE kitten, p ar t ll30 pymts or Stl.10 cub. Credit AKC Champ ; Show/Field Sla.n1esc, fem. 1 wk 1 . Dept. 535-7289. stk. Easters Kennel 633-7340 615-0oln 8/15 ------SERV. STA. A1T. Exper. only. FIVE POINTS SHELL Ph: 842--3444 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Ana REFRIGERATOR SALE MOM & DAD STEEL desk, $40. \Val nut AKC COLLIE PUPPIES 2 KITI'ENS, male, l 01>('n Daily 9.9 Used Westinghouse ••• , $50 DO IT NOW1 , doub~ bed $50. Desk, glass For show or for love fe1nale, 3 mos. o I d . Sat. 9-6 Sun LI·6 Used Frigidaire:? dr •••• 163 \Vhile we have the ·g,'l'alesl top $&0 •. 673-9141 '-,,;:;;c~l";:75,!;;;=1~"'1~ . .,.,;.'"~2-580~-C:'=2'.:"':"' M~ 1/15 SAUCERMAN SCHOOL DON'T Givl! up! You •nay Used GE ... beautiful, 18 cu ¥election, the most rea&fln· GE refrigerator -freezer 13'AOORABLE teddy bear-A.KC DOG Hau~. klr med. sbe or School .. lnstruction 7600 Co. 1'~airground1, gr. 1-8 find it at America's largest, 11 . nc1v motor .......... $135 able rentals the bei>t teach-cu. ft. 2 end &: one coffee reg Samoyed 3 mo ?>lake lara:e doi, ~·ell constructed. \Vhere the Program most unusual unfinished J~o1point Rerrig, J2 cu ft 2 er. t'boose from Conn. \Vur-table, maple finish. \Vhite S. off;r. 548-9740, . 962·1659. 8/15. Fits the Child furniture store. Cor. Redhill month.! old "" ...... •• .$ll9 Jit:r,er, Knabe Fischer & drawer dresser, wlmlrror. . PRE'M'Y 10 wk. mall! Pl1PPY. \Villard ll Saucennan, & Santa Ana Fy;y, Tustin. l Several brand new.Washers, others, Spine~ & Consoles 3~11 hp. minibike. 549--0867 ADOR;ABLE mo.:ed PC>Odl_e n~s good home. Call aft. Ed D Dryers, Refrigerators & fro 1519 •-~-•-1 $lO eves. puppies, 8 weeks old S5. 5 ••• ,_ l /lS . · ml So. ot Ne\vport Fwy. TV's m . ncn..u;"j" rom 493-1910 • _,................, · 5404060 Enroll no1v Open 362 days per yr. monthly. GAS range $2.1 f\.1011·er sa1---.;,:,·-;c---,-...,.,-,-- Eves 548-1758 544-5410 at '69 close aut pt'iccs! Gould Music Comrur.ny Boy's Ao iirl's 26" bike 11;). AKC B••••t Pups ·--.~-.,;--,..---See at llENDERSON'S r-Trl-col 6 k 540 8S'38 Educational Vacation 5lh e Furniture e 1817 Harbor, C.J\t. 5't8-0l55 2045 N. !\fain SA ~7-0681 lll Orange 642-5666. or w s 15.5. · grnders • . . Sr Citizens Appliances e Color TV !Just oU SA Freeway) QUAIJTY kin& bl!d, quilted. AKC Poodle puppies, browo Chilcoat JO lesson typing AOK AUCTION DELUXE Acme kitchen unit, \Y U R L I T z E R Spinet Complete, unused 1105; &: black, 7 wks old. ITS I: °'··hi Tr·-• Le 173 Del \l'alnut, cl~ top, like ne1v ..,......, 644-49l6. MALE Germ. Shep/C.ollie gd. y.•atchdog, needs room to run. 495-5103 t/IG 4 FLUFFY iong-haired kit· lens. Calico &: h\.'O-COklred. Call A.M.; 4~2a2'7 8116 ·"" · hu SSOfl, 1122 Garden Grove Blvd. $285 Organ. Italian Provincial. worth _,.,. Mter 5 or wknds up. ·''~''~'~· ~C~"~'~· ="'8-=2859,.-,o---.,--I \Vestminster nr G.G. F1,vy. Renlalc~~:. ;450. 673-3663, Like new. $13Xl. Ca 11 847--0-106 l;Do;:ALMA;-;-;~T=r'-o'-N,-,mal"°"~•-l"o;-,7."'~· AUSI"RALIA N S he Pb er d \VESTMINSTER P1l!s.oyter-Tuf's &:. Thurs 1 PM·Sat 6:30 54>-6428. BALD\VIN Spinet p iano, J>U_PPY· AKC, champion sin. P•Pp~s. J month& okl. · p School _,, FRIGIDAIRE gas. d...,.r, lat• 17 968-2ll0 1an re· , open lo.,. Estale consgnmt. Repo. Ne1v •.J~ 4 YR OLD Fitzgerald console ACTOSOnlc. Stl!rling silver,l-'-'-·:;--;;i~;;;;,=;-;:---545--0&t7 B/16 l & 4 yr olds. Call now LEAVING slate. Beaut. 2 model, xln~7~~ '75· Piano. Xlnt cond & finish, "candle lia:ht" by To,,·le • BEAUTIFUL * VERY cute ~li Manx kittens, 962.4045, mo. old 8' sola &: Jove seal. $300. Pri Ply 675-1327 968-7109 She It i e Pups, AKC, 546-221)9 8116 ?i10NTESSOR I Teacher or. 6' coffee tbl, 2 end coni· HOTPOINT electric dryer, EXPERT piano tuning &: Healtb Spa membenihips, lminialW't' t.'Ollies), 968-58621 ==~~~---~~ fers music instr. begin'g all mocles; hide-a.bed, 8 pc. late mode l, xlnl. cond, $65. repair. 21 yrs. exp, Richard 12 monthl (over 200 visits) POODLE pups, toys, AKC, FREE fireplace v.'OOd for ~·oochvlnds. advc'd flute k Span. kingsize ~chm set , 847-SllS Jo,_ Morse 61f>...4012. for $99. Regularly $200. Miss a r a ngc-apricol, BeautiluJ hauling. 542--0632. 8116 oboe. 64~7 \Yill' sacrifitt: call l.'Ollect G. E. Rl!'frigerator w/cross \VANTED Lane, 54~1425. heavy coats. 8~2-1263 BLK. It. White Dutch bunnie Educational Vacation 51 h 213-4:U-4340 top freezer, Copperlone. $150 PINAOS & ORGANS HOOVER fL ark) vacuu1n LABRADOR Retriever, xlnt with Cfti!'. 548-9513. 8/16 gradcrA • . . Sr Citizens I 0ST"O~R~.-~c~ .. ~;-.,~1-~11";-, --.,,,.-, "'~'~"~";;'~'~•='~1 ;;G_P~M=. ,.---c,-*636-3620• & atlachment.s Sl5. neld & show. Bl'eckenridge TRANSPORTATION Chilcoat ID lesson typing sprng $JD, pole lamp $5, KELVINATOR, refrigerator, PIANO WANTED 646-6114. KP.nnels, CJ\1. Aft 6, 646-0880 Shel. Trial Lesson. 173 Del stereo 175. stool $2. 548--0358 s n1 a I I . x Int co n d. WESTINGHOUSE S Boats & Ylc:hts 9000 {2131 877-1035 Pvt Party pacemate SHELTIE pup (toy collie) Women 7400 Jobs--Men, Wom. 7500 l\lar, C.J\1. 5"1S-2S59. CONTEMPORARY lowline S50. 545-24116 ~=========I washer I dryer. Good con-AKC, 31; nto. Female. f'lelp W•nted I=;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;;;;;;; I J\.IONTESSOR I Teacher or. metal trundle beds & mat· 'o~·K"E""E"f'~E,--;&--,,M~•~m~·1;;t-d7o~"7b~I!' Radio 1200 dition 125. 646-fiTI4. •~8-6134• TRADE YOUR BOAT l~='-'-""'-:.:C----fers music instr, begin'g all tresses $50. 613-88.12. oven gas range. $40.00, 2;;a . 4 NE\V 4 ply 775.14 Tires, $20 AUSTRALIAN Silky Terrier fa5~;c=~Ttyp~~~v~~ e:<· :~1~~5~dvc'd flute &l;;R~E~D;-c-na~,~.-,~h,-~~,-d~,~,~,7h~a;~,-o: 1 Santa Isabel, C.M. C .. B. ~1~, Bu~d6oodtrans-each. Reirigerator S20. 1960 puppies. AKC, Rare! 1150-(~' :~t!:arg~;~d~orE~ce~~i~~ ENGINE LATHE overstuUed oak trirn. II'' CHEST I""" freezer hold! ceiver, _ c. anne ' an· Plymouth $50. 640-6945 $200. 4<u 16"". ..., h' , ....,ri!'nce in bkkpg . ......,'d, !or ., .J,,.. I•""• «~ o~= '"'" 5 ....-&>.1 l'l!n...... lslOl"", \, black to .. -·-.. SJTA'S MONTESSORI School h 6 .... ""~2 Z.10 pounds $45, -;':~"~ .. ~-~~~~-~~~·~·==ILJSi:0-000.iilliow>=jjj>;;<oi!J•i<CP<<Xii<illio;:cr;;:;;;:-, 6 girl office. Please phone -MACHINIST-rac · o.-•-00.1 • -. USED continuous-lilan1ent AKC poodle pups, 7 1,.11.5, bay. Call now for details. 67;)-Ja.)l. 2\.s to 6 year&. Enroll no\v I •o~fN~I~N~'G"°"roo,.,-m-,,~1~1~20~.~,~.~""'-c 613-8852 Hr'.f"> & Stiroo 1210 nylon carpet, 5culptw-ed 54H173 Ed Riddle Rltr. 646-1811 Ex-rienccd in cl""-lol-Jo• F"·'I "'"3700 o· ••t •=7 I'=========~ l;;,=-c;==-=-~~~-,,.. """ • ilJ • .....,... ' ,,., ~;J frame 15. • -----------1 pattern, beige. approx 55 SALES\\!Ori:IAN. Experience em.net', short run \\'Ork A • 1110 '67 GLASSPAR Cit at i a n. in ladies l'eady to 11-ear. "''ith ability to make set-MERCHANDISE FOR • 6424115 * nt1ques 1969 STEREO Console, dlx, yrds .. xlnt. cond. 962-4098. Horses 1130 Inl.loank>utboard. 120 hterc. O\lf'r 2:>. Apply !\.1on thru Fri ups. SALE AND TRADE Ll-.:AVING slate. Beaut. 2 Larry Mor"ln Antiques in beaut cabinet, complete BEDROOM sel, stove, misc BE AU TI FU L Ang.lcrarab Crui9U with J)O\ver jct le: 1• • APROPOS N 27 Id 8' & I • 11•/neiv g u a r a n t e e · 4 furniture lamps ~ I c , 6 1 1 --er trim. Full ---. ,,....,. o. , Furniture 8000 mo. o sola ove seat. Be there when the Van puUs Speaker sound S)'litem, 4 spd 540-56!4 • 545-7311 • · !_eld !.':...! d. ,;rails., Slx..!,. ....-......... To"'" l, Country, Orange. 9 Hour day . 45 hr. wk. 6' coffee tbl. 2 end com-in & take your pick! 14 English changer. 90lid state • wr 1,...,.,. or u , ,,.,... Ready lo enjoy. A 11 LIV£>.in Housekeeper. Aug. P rofit Sharing OVER -STOCKED modes; hide-a-bed, II pc. Pump orgaM, 2 dozen roll I.: diamond needle. Pay off 2 1iVIN beds, stttl frames 54S-5837. malntr:wice records. I 20-Sepl. l. Jor e J de r I y Span kings.ize bedrm. set. top Deskf>, IS China cabi· bal ot $19.10 or easy pymnts. $30 each. Comer table $15.l~G~E~NT=LE~~b,-t-,-,~.,~-1-..,.,.,h-o-n-,, 1 "•~·~"",,_'·-KI=&-4"'4__,,,--...,---~I genUenian. No. end LB J C C rt C MUST SELL! Will sacrifice; call collect netr., Austrian Armoires, Credit Dept. $?289 Cali 673-1226 needs ~rienced rider. GOOD 12' fibera:lua out· 494--06-13. • • a er Q, 213-433-4340. Bedroom suites, Bras& beds, CANOPY Crib, car bed, hi-Call Donna. after 4 pm. board hull w/dual ltvet· BABYSTTl'ER wanted. pt· Cl-TERRY\VOOD dining room Grandfat~r clocks. Vienna T•na Recorders 8220 chair, potty seat. Xlnt cond. 6#-0439. shift, cable, wheel, Xlnt 671 W. 17th St. Ne1v !I pc. c'Orncr 11.rrang. slit 45"x60" plus. 2 leaves l regulators, &. Much ~lore! r-540-mO l:===,,,--~,.-,,....,---:-1 "ship-to.shore" boat, tows time daya/ews. CDri:T. 50c Cost• M•l• choice or clrs. l'Cg. $230, 6 upholstered chairs. Tea See at: 238D or 2428 Newport SONY ~ 3 head 4 track BEAtrrlFTJL spirited 7 yr, easily. 1125. 673-6518 lhr. 675-3265, 61~171 afl. 6. 548-3421 now 1149.50. }leadbrds: earl &: marble lop !bl, Blvd., Costa J\1esa ;,.ig.7333 stereo taPe deck, e::ho sound p RES I 0 ENT landing, old Palomino. mare, $300. 38' STEPHENS S edan. TYPIST, lor commercial King!, 115, Qucen11 S12.50. Frent·h ProvlnclaJ SJOO. All C 0 LL EC T 0 RS. Shop-on S. Never used, in ship Orange County A I r Port' Tack also avail. 494-1491. Beaut. cond. May trade blueprint ~bop. Over 21. An equal opportw1ity Full $10.50, T1,·!ns 13.95. or l'f'p. &IU60l. specializing In do 11 s ' box n65, retails $200'.l. photo blow.up \Var re n' HORSES BOARDED -With do1111. Must sell . 846-9Sl8 Phone: 5'10.9373. employer Trundle gels (duo riscrl \VI percussion guns. &. niuch 9624955. 642-3103 Aft. 5 Pl\f fttd $40, without $20. TYPISTS, 25 yrs. or older, innt>r spr ing inau. i-eg. SIOO, Office Equipment 8011 more. \Ve have something VANITY $20. Play house $25. 54~3591 14' BOAT, MOTOR w/!trong background on now s79.50. Roll-a-way beds for everyone. H EL EN Camer.11 & Equip. 8300 BBQ SS. S~Hi Chair. GENTLE but spirited bone and trailer-. 548-7218 IBM electric. Perm posllon Opportu n "1ty' w I inn. spring matt. reg. TYPE\\IRITER. Adding 1'1ANNJNG ANTlQUES 2428 831-1571 or -49:>-4187 w/tack &: stall. Call Donna &o.t Cletning S.rvic:e w/mailing linn. 540.309:>. . • $59.50, now $39.50. F ull Sl. n1ach. calculator, Very Newport Blvd .. {RearJ CM. GRAPHIC ~x5 view eamera REDUCING table. ~·orks aftt!r 4 p.m. 644-0439 Da,y-wec.k·month. 6'12·00ti8 sleeper-sofa reg. $239.50. now reasonable. Xlnt c: on d . · \v/case tripod lens.es Xlnt BABYSITTER needed, 5-da~ Nntion,vidc Company branch-642-9251 . • ' . • like a Stauffer S50 6 YR Id ba Id' u '63-27' Ou-is, Sea Skill . $169.50, Ne\v beds: K i n g 892·2423 evrs. c:ond. 1150. 5'1;,-6167 613-zi4S · o Y ge mg, 11:en e \\'k. Full or 1i time. 2 ing into lowt!r Orange Coun-$99.50, Qu{!('ns, $89.50, Full FOR SALE: Antique Shop, s;;;;·>tii·;;;;-(;:Gocf;i;--i5i0iiil~,,.,,..,..,,.:~;;.:..,==::::-I plea!u~ horse. $300. TS, SS radio, tab.!!, latho. children. Lite housework. ly area nt!l'ds: \\'ARE· $49.50, T111ins $39.50, fully G S I 8022 large s1ock. Mmalt riown, par 1ng I BUTA NE Re (rigerator. 673-200'.! S1vim steps, F'ull cov. dinghy f\taturc ""'oman. 839-11a9 aft. HOUSEii-IEN !3), Forklift, guaran. n. sz. s.pl'eads S9.9.'i 1 --•-"~9~'--'~•-----baJ. t yr. Call 645-1970 or SURFBOARDS DOJ\1ETIC, tor camper. \V·sail .l l!ng. ~26 eves. 6 p.m. niakc up orders. load, un. SIESTA SLEEP SHOP, 19Z7 CO:\IBJNED GARA GE SALE 548-862J '67 PERFORMER 9'6' •$7a. 54S-la42• FREE TQ YOU 20 CABIN Cruiser, 80 hp ~IATURE \Voman for can· load, S3. hour. CUSTO:\IER l-larlxlr Blvd., Oil 6£.2760 & BACKYARD ART SALE : Paid $90, sell $30. 1610 r.terc. Trier, bait tank, teen. Hrs. 1D to 2 Pi\I. Call SERVICE REPS 12 '· good daily 1(}.9 Sat-Sun 1().6. COLLECTION, of combined Sewing M1chine1 1120 Misc. Wanted IO x J'.I STEEL & a I u m . many cxtru. ?.lake oiler. on phones, like peoplt' Sl30 I "=0-~=-.,=~~-•·-· · * Fri. 8 to 9 Aii-1 & after 10 J UST LIKE NE\Y ; Oval, \\/Or""', pa1n11ngs. art:\ & 7• ID" RICHARDS SjS WE PAY CASH Patio cover. Needs. ad· ~2928 A.! .,. ~11 I '"' M "'ee k. ORDER EDITOR· ,. ~ "1 I', 't ,· I " h ' 'Y' 1969 SINGER . tm t mo R. . .. Pl I .,.==-==~=== I • , J'UMIV 'ex ."""· rs. CLERK, Price orders, good parquet dining nn table .. •a ... 117 E. Bay, Balboa JUS en . LJOO iven1 . SCRAM LETS 1'1alley. !)-pis.I, Kardex 1119. 11,~k. (Thomasville/ \Vilh 3 lraves pholography, what have Zig.zag cab mod slightly 67a-St60 lolf 16th SL) 01. 8/15. • MATURE WOfl.tAN APE..'= Employmf'nt Ag'"''" &. 4 uphol. chairs, $200. Slate you, fine a:o>sort. of garage UM'd, Stylish "''al cab, Does SEL' "POOL TABLES" in • NOT Checks 4 FUZZY littlt killem, 7 I -• F" p C ilt>m:o1: 10-ti Sal/Sun. 5()9.29t!l h. ·ho h 0 ANSWERS For t!'lephone survey, our of· JSTJ Harboi· Blvd. 1 \.r block op. l'Olllru r, rov. om· rve1·y1 1ng \VII ut attac . ?ilis.cellaneous for salr col-For GOOD USED wks. old. Also \Y hi I e fice. J\1oming 5hift. Gd. pay So. or 191.h) Costa ~!cs.a. mCKle. $65. 2 Chintl, floral St., NB. Bit-in controls to overcast, unin. 1 TV Rooster. 881 Towne St. C~I Ph. Mrs. Pihl 646-n53, !1 :30 ~8-3~26 qu ilted liv room chairs $12:i 1 ,,,cc;:;;o-*~'-"-·-'-'",,...,-*..,,,.,_~ make bu!ton holes, sew onl==========·i Furniture, Stereo, . or 616-1218. 11.m.-3:30 pm daily pair. 5' Cocktail lablf' t'r. GIANT Garagf' Sale, f'ri & buttons, hf'm di'l!sses, mak!' 600 Hol15e)ipld,ltr.m~ of a.ny k1nd.I"'===---,.,-=-,.., C,\,\IPUS SECURITY Pro" Tho vlllo 18-9, "-I g· bl d. lo"oy ,11,,1,,, clc'. , Y•. Misce!ltneous I • 547-5722 • HEALTHY young cats. Right Island -Fussy -Beret - Homage -GASSES IT BABYSITTER for :? boys, 2 RD •· inas · ·1• ~ • ue-gm ivan, " · ., • -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~J---.~-ii~~iT,~l-J age for new home. I & 18 7 30 t 0 ' GUA (off whitr.l Sofa. loose back 11·a~hing niachinr. gas pa1·ls & sc1vicf' &"Uar. Pay • • WANTED ,,_,,··•Jy ,."lolf,·ge"I laby mos. mO!i. : a.m. o I inonths ea.ch year, JI .!;. ·i1 7 ~-b b · 5· 88 d 9 f s· 88 AUCTION ,.-tu " " A show-0ar: He thinks he electriries a p8J1Y, but he meJ'l'iy GASSE S rr. 7 •. 30 p.m. y0,,, loomo 0, 1 • . d p1 011•s, SI :l. '-"-'ntemp ta le umer unit & matching a. n & pym nts o a. * * 1 1 1 1 , h ., 1, gre( 11nu tra1ne lo 11•01·k FURNITURE ma e • PU_l~ " ml"•· ·~ .,,32 c•t I lan1p, blue S3:t. DE N hooJ. Crpts. g I a 5 s ware mo,, no intel'l!Sl charg~ or: l•m-'o. 2 o-••n•~ •·-•· " .,,...,..,,, '' wilh young pcop e. Retired F'URNITURE G I d · I · 2 F II p • $58 80 ... •u -,J •.J,.-10 HP Mere OB. c.'Omplell!. 1 11. .•.: TI?r.n so a, es1gner c othing .size S.l, U r1Ce • FRIDAY_ AUG. 15 TOP CASH IN 30 Minutes 64&-2388 8/16 PRIVATE Duty NURSES po ice O ll~l' prefrrred ch<1ir J ot!oman $15. Com-t'<>stun1t' je1vehy, books, S38a. Buyer get!! 17' C. needed. RN's, LVN 'R. All $2.86 [lCr hour. Apply l\lon. plctr. \Ving back prov print l'et.'Ords, lamps, lumber, r~or no oblig., free h t'I me 7:30 P .M. Quality turnitu.~. calor TV's TH.REE ugly \\'hite kittens Cruigrr & trailer fr@e. shills. Call any h o ur, 1hru Fr. lro1n 8 a111 lo '1:30 rocker 135, Maple floor niisc. 1227 i\'larian Ln, NB. demo. Call credit Atgr 'Iii 9 N~iV & USED FURNITURE ste.reos, ~pphances tools, nained Ralph black cuter &t:i--0295 aft s. 64Z..99'.». p.m .. at cla1111itlcd J)e1'SOnrK>I, lanip SID. Oval. 11•001. i;:rcen l-~ri, 5'1S-5916 Pii-1. If toU , call coll!!CI, Bedroom sets, Divans, Love office eq5Ji.JlJ2 ones, seven ~·ks. \Veane?, '16~'~C~AB=IN~C~ru~;.,-,.-40--hp-1 COOK-HOUSEKEEPER 1!!01 Ne"'l)Ol't Blvd., Colita lll't"R rug S20. ~9163 Nwpt GARAGE SALE . clesn dbl 213: 531-9694 !ICfllS, Dinetles, Spanish ready for new home!. l2;i7 elcc Johll.!O n, trailt.r I: bait "I I T li1f'sa. 645-1901 NI'!'"' Port Bel 1969 SINGER toucb-o-matic, Dining table & 4 chairs.1----------i Conway, C.M. 549-0532. lank. l800. gg1 AAt'n E cent, permanent. op Blvd .. Costa ,,1esa. 6().-0600 ·t bed headboard, nite stand!, ,. __ _._ Lam WE p•y MOR~ ~ p ..... Refs .......,uired 673-9141 SPANISH zig zag, button holes, sew1 Chesls, v.i11111""""s, ps, "" ~ '"'==-c---,--,.--c8~0~6' 1 ••• TROJ Cab ~-~· ·~... · Closing date Aug. 22d. dei.k. la nlps, Po r I ab 1 e b bl ' Pic tui'l!s. CoUee tables, Col. 1; . "' '-•-us, immac. BARMAID wanted. exp'd •.-.;;;;;;;--';;;-;;;;;;;-.;;;;;;-;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;-MEDITERRANEAN stereo, tennis racquel, on uttona. ind hems. or TV, Stereos, Mattresses, \VANT home for beautiful Inboard. SIS radia, h~ad. preferred. A pp I y the -MO-LD-MA-KER-S ~ A5 Shown in model home1>. Pll\nts & 111isc. The BluUs. $34,8& or $-1.16 mo. S26-66l6 2 Side by Side Refrigerator/ CASH younr neututtd ma I e rall!'y, covers. $2350 ar WA!Ll..ER, 1506 Ocean HB. 3 Rms af turn, ldln •m, !iv 644-2787 0 Maltese cat, with fenced Bade for trlr/boat. 64fr.2389 Music•I Inst. 1125 Freezers, \Vasher I.: ryer yard. Had sholll. Vecy af. HOUSEKEEPER. 1 l Ye -i n FD CONTOURS_ estab, 195:) rn1. & bedrml priced else-SING LE bed comp I et e . --------sets, Gas dryers, Stoves, fectionate. S4S-l!}3L 8115 '68 SEAGOING Hauseboat. For elderly couple. Mature \\'hen' al S8Si is yours today Larg~ gas heater. TV DRUMS: Fi\'e drum set with Pool !able & t.fUOI ri-10RE! ! 32' Steel hull. In-outboard. woman pref. 642-6fi61. Now in Orang!'! C.Ounly at only S39!1. E:t~y CrMit Service equip. on paintings. hii:h hal. Save 2/3 on new roMF. BRO\VSE AROUND For furniture, appliances, SPRINGER Spaniel, black & Slee~ 6. $9800. Call between Top !\.ten Required 546-3000 Terin~ Olher nii5C items·, lurn, pri""'. Pf',.,"''I 1-~gin-, WINDY'S AUCTION colored TV, pianos, argaM while female, 1 ~2 yrs., 1&9 p M (714)7n-12ol7 PBX, ansv.'t'rlng service ex-~U-.S-. -O-IV_E_R_S _..... Sant~ Ana Furniture !«."'" edger. 548-5672 or or ""ex ..... ;i~::___. '" d~m~~r and antiques. AKC, l!IJ)a)'ed. Needs loL.; of s '•"CR""~,,.~· t~C-~"~l~ll::.c.::...~~·--1 J>l'T p~f. Varied ihifts, HB ,... '"-~u D · ht .o ,,.,,,,. 8/15 . 1:r ness, 21' Luhr ·-a ·~ _1 • bl 'd 1 11 ·1~'6 W. 4th SL, San111 Ana 530-6725 96'9 Governor, C.M. \~·ho can't afford P.xpensivr 1 ay or nig love&: backyd. 5._.-.u iikilr, 100 ChriA Craft. }o'ull .... ~ ~ ,.ssen1 ers, exp 11 sn1a • 547_07~ e st>I. Youn; for l.IJO. Call 2or.;12 Ncwpo11 B vd . 631. "•-FREE BABYSl,,.ER. 2 children, 2 parts Assembly h!'lplul. Ap-ANTIQU~ fum, dishes, se1v. Behind Tony'.r Bldg i\iatl 's -..:v fishing equip. 5-18-1379. t.1UST SACRIFICE! Liv,·ng I h' 1 , f · Dan 11 494-4006 or Mike ' ' ' 1.--=-..,-= -· 1 VERY home ly mutt. Strict-GLASSP R II m m home Ply in ""NIOn Personnel ng mnc incs. o so mir:c. "--ta lite~" • 646.@68(; $ WE BUY $ I)' "" 0,,,.,.,, qog. Vocy A d;nghy •1-n·ng p.m. • p, ·• Y • "'" room "'I'\, "· ~·-,,0 ""I•. p ·-• · F Sa c -o~· ~""in 494-5934 """"' -..,, '"" .. ~ .. ,_.'" D<pl, 3323 W. \Varner, San-., '""""' ..... rlL-...,,. rl(ht r-. I 9·:i, lM ',,... ' OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 box cable! & doll Xlnl rela. 111 Antl, clolhing, art objects, misc Ohio Pl. off Indiana, C.\I. 1 r=E~N~D~E=R~~B-,-,-,-m-,-n frlendly and good Y.•ith chi!-· y. · \VJOOW, to Jive.in. Hie books. record~. '''· 505 dl'l!n 8JG.5612 8/14 co~. Sl90. 548--0420. _ Equal op....,rtun11y rn1 ployer GARAGE Sale. "'>ol table, amplifif'r. '69. Used onl y POOL TABLES $ FURNITURE $ · -house·kpg. Jl.iu1'1 d riv I! • •-Can1ation, Cdl\1. 673-9045 •-wl C I I --• & JUDY" I bl k SOIJTII COAST Ill ItEGISTERED p h y,;, a 1 swing set. misc. 1515 E. t ce. omp etc w st...,.... APPLIANCES " , ov. youne ac BRJSTO Reference:L ~ Therapist, lull timf'. ITAL. PROV. LIV. SET Cof. Ocean Blvd., Ba I b 0 a. covers. $450 ;..i~l503 1l " and l" slate Iopa, New Cocker/Spaniel mi'\:, gentle, L COND. MAIDS lluntin_gton Vallry fee tbl .. commodes & entry 61s.0596 1.v~o=x~A-m-p~l~lfi~,-,,~L~;,-,-,,.-w, covering, \\'ith or without Col or TV1-Pi1no1-S•1r10• loves children, am. breed, 6"4-0064 Hote.l/J\1otel __,.;cna C . 1- -1 H It-' plece \v/m1mr. 8' 1.rai\sit 1--,====--;-;==-S300 or ~I allrr. coin altAchmf'nU. In stock: 01, -SH •,.••,,H•M.,.INU .. TISll nds. gd. hln . \Vf(ncd. yd. 26 FT. Inboard, 11500. ""'""'" onva escan O!<p .., BIRDSEYE MAPLE 2 4x8'1, four '\ size. Priced "" .,,,,, ••93. 8/14 2 H i ........ Sll 613-9410 0-,02 N _. sofa, chair, dlnctle act. ....... ~ e67~1238e e "'I 'SJ I e o.>0'""9"t r&. 1 nee oven ... w. p n.x> e\\·man .. vc., • wu ,,.pc Bednn sci~ & many ~=~~~·~~~-.,,..-lo sell! Liquidatin"' vend in.. ;;J"t .., a 'l. Lo n. h ••7 t320 7500 FRY COOKS Tei> waie1. pennanent, hon- ttl, and 11o-ork1na condltM>ns In aru'a leadlng re11&uran t. Apply I am ta S pm tar in- terview al HS cu:z cr.~1 642--9949 aft. 6 p.m. . . B &1'2!"" ~ . .,. .. e. CtrrE KITTENS va1 . ng DC"ac . °" -. • O"' ~;... m111e. items. N . .; 1:1.,. CUlLD M20 girls ruitar, mute. Financini available.l ;o====--~~~-,-1 JOIN HAJR Ii: co .• thrro FORl\tAL fhni11i: rn1. set. 2414 College Drive, CM btautltul $ll0 new, only S4S ''.John" 00_2842 646-7201. FORKLIF1'S: Prict'd for weaned_&. ho u 1 •broken •-· ha. rull ,., 0 J\1ahog !bl, 6 c h r s:. , ,._ \v/c~. 962.-4955. ;;-;;o..-;:;-,.-;;-;·,..,.,....,,,.1 quick sale! CLARK '64 2500 543-4615 8/14 .... out ir ~ . .J s...,. pen-brcaklronl. Double bed, ..... uch, chairs, chesll!I l'o1 0 VIN G -1'1 U ST SELL lb. Lirt. T0\\?.10'J'OR LT 44, 6 YR. Mal• G •' m' n Ing Aus. l~t in Balboa Clplhes. Odd11 and Ends Mayl 1 r s 1 0 0 SEA Sc au I '1 desperately Island. C11U Sun. ?ilon, Tues. 54~111 G'R,\GE •-•,. Anl>·q·-& _P_;,_n_o_s_&_O_r~g_•_n_1 __ 1_13_0 11.g "'ai;ic ' 4000 lb. Lift , YALE 4000 lb. Shepherd. Good y.•atchdog need a !\.tArN 1111.il ror 22 Qu LITY " _,.., """ \Yhlrlpool dryer $6.i, maple llft 108-130 masl. CLARK F'ree la good home \\'/I" FOOT A L BATRO SS \Ved. 714: 67j..IZJO or CJn A King: bt'd. quilted. !lungs. l'o1ust stll. 9952 Bond HAl\rMOND • Sl1!1nway. Ya-corner cupboilrri S40, drop 600l lb. lilt 783 Ne1,·1on rd 95z..z;-~ 8/14 642.-6769 . olhrr days. 21J: 44!l-6967 Complct\", 11 n ll 5 e d Slo.i: Clrelt, l-tB. 003--1571 Maha . new I: lL~ planot leal miplc tablr $2.l, Olds \Vay, Cmta l\tel!ll.. &4 2-3393 ya · • _ =~===~--~- TELEPliONE SOL1C11'0R \\'Orlh S2JO. Aft ~ or wknds RUMMAGE SALE-of 111 makes. Best buys In chu'if'll'I. ·57 Borp-IJ'd $2:i. f'REE to good home -white 26' FOLKBOAT, am: !loop, 4 9 d ·1 l\1on r-E: 'ri 847-0406 S44-1Z4 CARPE:f' rabbits. 3 mas. Parents call tapslrake hull. depend . .e1 · •,m ...... ai.:,. bl "c'M· 1~~ Gui's Oub 181~ Anahieim So. C8llf. rf6ht he~. Ship. hl-'ttds. hl·kl pUe. All only 962-U62 8/l4 boat. 2 set.r dacron ,.111 • pre ....... pe,..,a e, 1 o uce NEJGl-fBORlfOOO G • r •CC! 616-TISI r-ri & Sat I0-4 SCHMlDT r.rustC CO., VINYL TILE, Lino I e. um. colors. F'l'tt est. Uc Contr. ' . ~ S2 hr. ;,i(}-8164 8..ilr. Slf'rillzrr, I 11 r n. t~=~~--~---l.90'1 N. Main, Asphalt Tile ~ Beautiful (.'Ol.. 546-441B. 2 BLACK adora.b&e puppies 11pinaker. M • k e. oft• r. S1llboots 9010 RESIDENT DIRECTOR ck>thrs, mlsc. 15461 Shasc:a HUGE CarAge Sale. Aug. 16 &nt" An. ors a nd patterns:. FTff . ' " *** 4i9T-1M9 *'*II' 646-0713 MANNING'S for boy5, Older man or Ln, HB. & l?.1'it4 Bayskle Dr. CdM'1 --F~ .. -n-c~h~l~,-,~C~l~o-,---t-estimates. Lie. Con tr . ~~Pn~r~~tu't~::BLUE parakeet. J yrs. old. AQUACAT 12' S ailtn1 COFFEE SHOP rouPlr. Sma ll pr i v at, l;;nE"o""o"-1v::.,,::-7139'°'.oo'.'°"''i:::-;c:,,· 1~F====A=--=.==1=0=2=-5 Tht lacto .... has ord.en!d clOfll! 54&-4418. l•n. c•• .,,,,. liu cage. 546-U71 C&ta1naran .It Inlier. Fast '4Cnt D Toro Rd school. 673--9410 $lwriherri CAsleni, like new urniturt uctton 'J __.,.,.,.. & t:asy to 11111! Ex. eond. c-~ d ' Kilb =====-~-=~,-::-I au t at 4 O'lnsole &: 2 Spinet V3 Of'f' on all biklni5 &-; COY· SCHOOL T he ta: I REf\INANTS OF G 1 r a II' e S600 61l l?~ Lt .. ...,.. \\'orl Lacuna flfANAGER tor 11 • 2 BR. $77.50. 642-8171· e Furniture e Pianos on a CO'll·plus bll.sl•. tr-ups_ Any sizt tap w/any ~ac r v.·an ° Sale. 646-3226 Bil~ -~·=~·C"Cc'-'~"-'~'~30:_ __ 1 S17·l0t4 furn., pool, apt 11. Oidr.r J>I!'"' TRUNDLE bM w/che!!ls, Appllencts e Color TV Never 11.g,ln piano b!lrrain-bottom $14 tui~ now buy toy train. Prel alder,,1,:.,,.:;,;;"-;:;:;',,,-,--,::::'i:':: LIDO 14, ex~lltnl WAITERS, W a It r a• 1 er, son pref. No eh!ldren or pel.11. 42" high Sfll. Con1our chl'11r AOK AUCTION h~ 1hese! f"lrat come. flrsl $9.80. 0 Anything Go!I, 2«'IO Any cond. S39-3U9. 4 htALE. 1 fe~ .. ~, persi~n condition. $600. 8'14boy. ~t. ~p·d.. Apply: 6t2·9S20 1111 5 PM. SXi. Ri&.4226 17Z2 G11.rt!f'n Grove B!i·d. ~efVf'd. \\!. Cit Hwy, N.B, Open Sun. NEED bricks one lo 1000, kittens. 5-t!J-49,j() 8na. * 67J-+t7• • 2121 E. CO.It Hwy. C d ~I. I =BA=B~Y~s=m=E=Ro-.,~,-,~1,-,~,"""H~n' 17 PIECE Rat!Hn 1;rt , bluf' I:. \\'eitminstPr nr, C.G, fnll)'. \VARO'S BALD\\'IN STUDIO I --,S~tOOl=~ea""•h_,.lo-,~,~,~,,~"~.,--1 rca90nabl)' priced. 644-4687 ONE lemtle tan & white rat. HOURLY Rl:NTALS CHURC RGA NIST-• 1:30-4. f\lon·frl. t..ocal 1.1·ca. g~n. ~ n10.,. old SJOO. Tlies '1 Thut~ 7 Pill·Sa! 6•30 1819 Newport, C.Ptt. 642-8484 P-111.J Mohilt. mntcst ot' DAD..Y 1-'D.DJ' WANT ADS Very lltnie. 642-1-424 S/JS • Rhode' 19'11 ., M0.22'l'I or MB-7%1! Call e\te.r 5Z4:'~ M7..SU& ._~_·,_,._1,_,.,,_,-"•-•m_1,_n_-~_N_•_w ,_o_A_IL_Y_P_IWT __ w_A_NT_•_o_s_,,. __ si_oo_F_o,_N_.,_,,_.,._~_ .. _;._,._.,_, __ s_n_rn_a_RESU __ L_T_s_1_ \VHITE r11.b. 5<1&-7613 11110 t'un Zone BoAt Co. Balboa l ' I ' , Thu"'11J, Autusl 14, 1969 DAILY PILOT 31 ™Nll'OllTATION tRANIPQRTATION TRANIPORTATION f RANSPORT,\TION TRANSPORTATIQH TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI T N It $4lll1Nll 9010 Morine -.,1;. 9031 ~cycl•• ' .... liiil!!l'fii! ,..;. 960t r•·•;,t,. 9600 Imported ,.,,,.. Met A!ll9i W1nttifl ' ,, Ulld C.n !!Ii ~ c .. -;; IJD014Nt.210 f.i:1""ki:.~~.J~: 'iT'SuiuKr-.t~i. -AUSTIN ~GI YOutSWAGbj i ""'•fTl_jlL\I eHmOlit ·&i's..oiiU" J:itabwg trilltr W/COYcr AC/DC. "li•vtr~ Ultd iia excell cond, oU lnJ, xtru, '" .. A. -Sq fl .,. .. Mort For '62 CHEV. BtJ .A.tr Wqoa. ~..., •fl<r • PM 814-2$<5. IJ3S. --&T.1-7'75 '67 AUS11N Cocoer s 1215 mv -· Back Sal• FottT.;'O. Sportt Can PIS, P/B, l!Jnt oood. 111111 • 1--J;.-nroi~ki;;.,.;;.r";p11;i;;j[--I-=:=;;:,======-'67 HONDA 160 Sctambl.r cc. suoo or bat oUtr. Dick. Green, makes mlahty nne Ml.I $525 &Go32d condillon. ·-Boot Sllp Mooring 9036 UU new. Full , .... , A dirt ,,..._ lU p.m. motodna •I 11'95. WIT ia. ~ : ::., PAID FOR DR NOT 1--· '====-=,.---I •8'U713• equip. $350. -i'A=u"'sn=N=·=H=E=A=LE=Y=I ~~.~~"\:' ~: :!!:•, B. J. SPORTSCAR ~=~ 501 • ; RHODl:ll 33, R .. Cy 1o ""'· SU-880L ' ~ CENTER •llU352• /0 , ~~~ S4IXXJ or ·~,~si;: ~~ S~te6 HW'l')' oi:~hl~'!! -only Hurry-~Hurry-Hurry Cotta 2:!~ Blvd~ ~m"~-~.u!.&IOft2990"""'. ?~ OYER ACTUAL SPJUTE. Small f • m 11 y p,m, $11951 UPC !i12. Callf. Sport. Q IMPORTS WANTED -........ _.. ~~!:i silk• new. DATSUN ~ .. ~. ~-Flm. L. ,.,d ~11 = ·:,~Au~v~°'·= FACTORY INVOICE 9' FOLD. UP Stow-boat, U Drive Sall or Power Auto Servi~• '63 MGB, hard 6 IGft top, '1• I' BDJ.. MAXEY TOYOl'A ~ s A L E comp!. w/u.Us & outboard & Parts BARWICK IMPORTS new tires, rodlo, wire wheels. ~,~ IL •·lBSBlacb. Btld>Pb.BIW.111.-6S !l. CAMINO b · k I 1195 •·•2 81•• Sklp .... ......i local sport fishing 9400 °" rac e • · '" · '""'· Har;;Q.ubes 646-9CXKI AUTHORIZED Very good cond. Mu.t ae1I. Xlnt cond $995 STAN 14lller Racln& Sabot I:: ., . AUSTIN Healey '59 engine DATSUN J\fake otter. 494-9808 Wiii Buy • IC-3<44 • dolly. l.ijle new, sail No. FAST 3.'i . Jeffr~es, fully loo-6. transmission &: rear '65 MGB blue, red int. WR •53 OJEVY, nw IQOd. $S0 OVllt 100 4268 $360 67>-0884. eqpd. J\1arhn chau"S, outrlg-end plus other parlll. Gd. bl •• -L e-111>1:. 'ST VW Ntw n-i.---v.tlo 1969 MODELS ger lea & reels for Sig ~an. auto trans, over-\\' s., 'IO,uuu m ., ........... , id. ' uai""'"" J-w Your Volkswagen or PortCbe or trade for t m.:i1n po&: albacore. (213) cond. Reas. 536-9636. head cam, disc brks, radio, cond . .(94..S828 pe,lnl New 1Unroot, RebU le pay top dollan Pald for 546-~ TO CHOOSE FROMI Power Crul"rs 9020 24' Gi..ASI'RON. 3 y r 1 • li.~ta"'ctJ!;.~~~!!11 tanks, etc. Sac $3. 750. ~ 841-1161. • Cruller, -and fiber 69!J.0903. . Triilers, Utility 9450 heattr, 28 ml per gal., after '69 ~tGB GT, Green w/blk ;.;f:m~ exhaust· or aol Call~· '59 IMPALA Sport c:oupe. V-;;toe~ l~~-hom~f:~~ 2.800 ml. Full fact v.·arranty. int. 5,0XI miles. Ptttect 8, auto, aood lhlpei $450. euctly 50% over our actual Bo•ts W•nted 9050 RECOUP the cost of mov-PL 510.l»-m.6. cond. Must .ell. 494--1428 '68 VW, auto stick, pertect WE PAY TOP 546--&.128. 711 16, ·11 41L F1"nc Avail cond. ~H, skt rack. JO.COi '"'========! f&ctQry involoe. W ed ing! Buy x ut1 ty 1-i '67 MGB/GT lfftn, black ml. $l800, Call lttn. Hoff. DOLLAR 1' a NO SA.LES EXPENSE •nt 1rll!er & Wp. WW .. or11i.. FULL PRICE $11SO inter. R/H, win whlL man 642.J070 bot 8-5 for l<'Od, cl•on used con. CHRYSLER e NO ADD-011 Qj,\RQf;S J}'J; ~~b~~rlki!S .!!..~· M ~Y.f.'E?': ~ lilimm!· $2350. 6«-2S87. '69 Vw "Bur''. ,;,..: Musi an~';.~~ 111.Y '87 CHRYSl:ER·~ -• =~~!' late model or new car for Triller T~ff1i 9425 Does not Incl, tax or Uc. P~j)RSCHE sell below book to someone 2060 Harbor Blvd • IMMEDuh DELlYERY 20· lo 22' inboonl fiborg!au ' ,_!!._ ,68 DATSUN ~lh T.L.C. Pbooe 536-4886 C.!>!. &G.anq Longpre, Pontiac m.a;51 -646-8297 !>ferbmd cam, dlr, disc bra· Xlnt eond. All xtru, nu pnt. '6!1 CAMPER. pop-top, AM· AY!tief!I 91l0 power attriihg, power bra· II I ~J ~:i1" ~ ~s:..~~'.~ lnil<f, lllJ! station ....... aulo trons, * '6i fSNVi~f +' ill' R'm' ' ·--vt~!!..!1~U.U11a1r. un·c--~.rs·~ 636-2500 Open to offer . ~'· Perteet condition. TW top. Must sell. 646-1234 FM, eus. paint, JD.OOO ri;f· .... -kes, radkl le" beater. Jmma. Id • 19600WElf.S29'cruiS<>r,slps. Mobile Homes 9200 Trucks YSOO i;~~~~~~5S9 -·~un:~·1tAe~~F:.,.; :1;:·~~· ~· ~~ f eulate.(UD'i~J7143~)· 0 smob1 e 6 I '68 FORD F-100 Blue 8 cyl, 3 ~-"""=,--,c-'-.,.,-=== .,_, '66 Y!J ~iiifjijijfiir•"' . ·b-a.~ ,nnf~~d. ~~~fi84~X· O\VNER will sell 50'xl0' 2 sp. 20,000 mi. Take over '6§ A!,!, A ~m:.Ja~Sp:: ..,., ~ let@~ Jft.~ ~!.~.~Qi!~ .. ••· M"" ATLAI l§d fflfJ£f _ -,. -. -~. ta Meu. CRUJSt>O~u· ~ 11rn alau, mo & 11·ailtr $550. 5'5-4518. • BR f u J I bath Atayflo.,.,•er-payment.Ii. Pay off $1974.21, r-.-rti.,~ -. -•M ~ it I I Pilgrim set on 30'x60' space ?.fobll Station. 101 N . I creo tapes, $1800 as lt. • • Sp-yl Boats 9030 . 4-4~1'78 ...-VW--mp.r-otg tlt"8. THUNDEKPIRD 20· ~ 11,~·. ~:~~~r~;~u~. ~~'PO~~ Harbor~ ~~~~~9:5· GRANGE COUNTY'S -========= ~.1~8 !!;:t~~· p or best comCl:IRYSLER -PL~OUTH1,,;;;::,,.'...;·:..,;,·--=-,;:;:,.1 Calhedra1 hull, 150 hp 38' awning, skirting, rock & "' NO. I ,68"~vw.:..,"1:;_:;~1: ,•-.67 VW llE&BBg~ ~~YD:i.~1 B~ · '66 0 Id tanks. be~ ss radio. 2 bat-patio fenced for privacy, CHEAP! 839-ISOO DATSUN DEALER TIRED or high illll bill&? Get Sedan/or trade for V\V Bus. Open Daily 'tll 10 p.m. wtth bik. ~au fop, lo M•~ J/O. 2-ID Gal bark Jnndscapillg, plants, Slight Fr e 1 g h 1 Damage ~· uiu lid: t:A" $46:1!0t ·~Uia11. ~ir°':-Coupe Gold teries, ~ tank, sips 4. J.i' alun1 ulillty shed, including 1955 FORD Panel, rcblt DOT DATSUN a real economy car -25 9!ra-2329 ml& nu whtlJ!Jll th'H A Newport · piooring. 'I'railer l'efrig. & range. S425Q. engine, new seat, extra pa11s 18835 Beacb Blvd. m.p. gallon: 1960 Renault. '66 VW. xlnt. cond. $1225 or r Rlvd, CONTINENTAL brk~. R/H, cUtom blk lthr w/EZ lift. $3500 + tax, r·un1iture available. Space $300/olfer. 5'18-2370 Huntlnetoo Beach Good, depend ab I e best oiler. 646-6245 or S! 642-0010 Int & bucket ¥•ts. Coritole 6TN168 · asiured in Uilis fully oc-'56 Che\'Y ~ ton PU. New MZ-7781 or 540-0U2 transportation car. $150. 673-3074. ~ '""" L SE '69 CONTINENTAL ~!ARK wlth tach, P/~ P/B, PIY/. lJ' HO~ oqtboard Sid cupied park '''ilh club Urer;, battery, points .It plugs. '6$: DATSUN Pu, 8,000 ~ Call after 4 p.m. I all day '65 VW KG t t ned ~ti,..: Y" lll fact alt. Miilt Me to ~-I. Lod ""'"I". •-H~ PIJ~ 9M1. ~ tii~· ! R.wvl .....M s~ui ~-L:i_i.-new. All extras. Sl , -,,Sa~t'-. :,•=Sun,,.,;·~"'=---'=-~ rxhaus~ $109Sco~h's7 u '6,8 ~le . Pe de Ville, PRIVATE PARTY believe! Privati Party Be1t ~ • "'w" "" tt • · I bbo' ·1<1ril · nm ,,,,.,. • ""'· ""'· · "~ " ' "!'!J ~ PP!t'. 11'9 mo. 84!-llltl otior. ggz.2!6Q ' • 11ere., custom trailer. Xlnt Jtn. P! '?! ¥ rs. . ...... '63 Cti;V)', Short bed, V-3, PMv Prty, l..an'y ~7290 '66 RENAULT Dsuphine, , '61~10 "¥8 station wag. cond. $2495. SfG-.2194 ef!). ""-""i l!e"OP.f DO ·-••'f95·* -----clean, red w I white vinyl 65 vw Squarebaek, blue, one ont,/ti i.ir, ps, $75 mo. CORVAIR '65 OLDS Dynatnic Hardtop. 1,cu=sro=M~ljiici<,..,".,..=.,-=3S2. "'"_ -Ov,.. .... ~,1 11!.f!I. 'ITT""" ,• n ~ n JD •. i,l7,J?J7 91 . 49&<781 jNGUSH FORQ top. 1675. Pho"' 54...... ....... porfttl I ha p •. '61 ·Bird •lr ''"' wind PIS. R/11. Auip. F .. L .ir. e~~c ~m1:1 ~ -'59 RENAULT Dauphine Xnll $lli0. 673-1379 •a.:. • • "' ' • 47,<Xll ml. ~ new. Good mahog. · See to ap. GREENLEAF PARK '31 FORD paMI, l'ilH, Rd. "'::' _ipo. ~ '64 CORVAIR -u.c $650 or tirr1, enaina f""" coot!. prec. s&piliee s 2 5 o o. _ body, many spares, set up RANGE COUNTY' cond ., r & b, 4 new tittl. 30 '65 VW, 1terro tapes, header 5.., Ttf C ST best otter, drafted must Clean imide out. White 130-1835. ln clear, clean, cooJ Costa for Chevy $100. 962-4955. GLIS P..tPG. $200. 968--4690 exhaust, &ood cond., $950 or ~A LEASING sell. 536-2221 or~. w/blue lnt. ~vate owner Mesa.. New 92 space adult I-=='="====== I OLUME EN be.st ofler. 64~. ~fl. "-t Hjpy, NB 645--2l82 1 "'=======;;: 14' GL.\S'l1WN, 45 hp, elec park. lifodels & Sales oU!ce 9510 FORD DEALER SUBARU ~ 1 · $1451>. 330 • BJ,y, CM . start, irlt',' misc equip, xlnt located at Park. Open 9 AM Jeeps SALES • SERVICE 1965 VW 1500 S square back. .. -_. COUGAR before 8 PM. . cond. A steill at $850. to 6 PM. I ·J'-E-EP'-1Jl5l.--55-M_od_•_l _M_ill_tary_ '69 MODELS ·59 SUBARU E t Cood $ll50. Us!(I 1;Jrt 9900 $200 LES~ THAN 545-1318 ACCENT 1'10BJLE "~" "'""2 Xct' • 497-183.5. Ask for DON e ;-~-N C-~F. '67 COUGAR 289; 4 speed; BLUE l!OOK O'IE SAL A-1 condition. _......,.., . Immediate delivery 3000 mi. $850. * 822~!J \V. O 69 V\V BUGS g ~ " ~ nd"ti · '1967 16' 6laslron, 50 h.p. H n ES LARGE SELECTION Balboa No. 7 NB e T\V ' , .vw • B E BA-KRUPT Ii""'-' co t on: new titta. Forced to raJ1e cub. Be 1 t Mercury. Xlnt cond. $1495. lT;iO Whittier Ave. C•mrYn 9520 Theodore & 12,000 ml. MOVING. :· . A ~SSESSJON $1495. 646-f764 oll. take '66 hid F •1: dbc Call 613-imo Costa Mesa 714 : 642-1350 r--$1795 ea. * * 494-3198 . ~'·r· NED YOU er 8 ~ 1 ...., ,_~,...,,..,,....~~---ROBINS FORD SUNBEAM " FORD ' o,, "' A l"I"· Prv """· 1~· .f18EijGLASS ski boat 1 BLK from Huntin&ton '65 VW Camper '63 VW bug, xlnt. cond. 549-2507. wtth ·75 fi.p. r;1erc motor. St11.te beach. 3 Bdrm., 2 bath $l 799 2000 Harbor Blvd. ,67 ALPINE Private owner. Clean, 2 new ''Q•~ t See Us'' .63 OLDS §ii 1-follday 4 dr. $850. ~. 546-0370. unfurn mobile home. Asking °?,ta Mesa 642-UIJO Roadster, 4 spd, dlr, wire tires. &U-8707. 1 t' fd '68 Ford Torino Fact ~ P/b, P/1, Fbrgls. ake oh' or trade wknds. &: aft. 5 wkdays. FIAT Speedo. Driven by llttle 'ole MUsr sEu..t 49-4-2457 • !j.l rnl ure Loans dlr, pwr disc brakes. one real buy $800. ~ '12 CllR~ Craft & trlr. $900), terms. 846-2674 ~ ' !!!l!!!!!i wheels. Like new. Zl,600 On '64 VW Xlnt. eond J.• · ~ '• O•M 390 high performance, 4 spd, xlnt cond ~ ·6: out. A for. SU.-1 7. 12x56' PACD.1AKER. 1 BR. Q~ ~ lady. Full pr $1499, Pymnts f· =•t' ~t,J Loa~s ditd owner, near new. WW take 'fi6 OLDS 442, c·on the nocr. ===?===== trlr., 9x20' screened porch. o * RAT * to fjt your budget. YPSUJ. --c. ... =vw=SUN="o""IA"L--15• 0 P'"'t 1'1•rs " older car In trade. WIL m Good cond. MUii sell! Best ft II lq Adlfll f 4flf.. BJ1' ~IOMd. ., ,,-s Call Bill 494-9m or 54.>0034 CMWER $1600 • O 1 Al _f,ral N1~ded LB. Call Ken 545-0634. offer. ~2129 ~ after. 4. ' For Th• e 548-8183• ••cpuse '57 Jo'Al.RLANE soo vs, P/S, •62 OLDS Super 118• Must ae11. ~l""l'n ID@ill .MAYFLOWER. Xlnt k.J , e Best Selection f8Y8fA 'GI YW, xltd. '58 YW S3t1J: We pal'f)' our a.n Binttlctt R/Jf. lf~W tt8Jftti ~; JBfft. ~-1395, Call ~t)'. 1 bdnn Adu It '\I' • Best Trade·ln Must r;ell both. 675-7932 '90 thef. C.Orvalr ...... $295 mlJ, tune.-up I: b&tt Fr. end $1395 aft 5 HUPQUARTERS FOR llOfDRHOMES OM 01$1\AT IR! lll M!W DDDQ "EXPLORER" sttf~~ •In ... ••fl· ............. ia .. -. ~.~lll'L Al~ llllp. II Jltll, n ,tltll, H felf, 1 YU.Ill JlllAllC. Illa .I'll i'"'llOVl l CftlDIT. 165 5 B[ACH Bl VD HIJNli'IL TON BlA CH jiii!i. F.v. -38 "'"'Ml Ext/ 66or 67 t """cPriAL . .,,IFORNIA ELMORE . UNRF ...., ••• ~ ·~ ~· .......... 1295 ,.bl, Sac !200. 2100 F<d""11==~=-·,,,-=-=o 1 """"""" 64 S , ..... pe • .,..., ... • · b~-ir .,._ St CM aft 5 '64 OLDS, R/H, pwr 1tra:. 1970 11A.RBOR BLVD 546-3375 · f'-11 ......... , _... • • • t1re1 l Mini Bikes 9275 COSTA lol.ESA MOTORS , . :§! f o : II "": ....... $.195 '67 FORD Falrlane 500 ~~eova~ ' .,. HONDA Mw.Tnl1 z;o, ............................. SPORT CARS TOYnJ• "' vw. !&;<4 !'4'!!'•-riM· ,!ii l'!>~t-T•Jfi.,., ... , I Exceuen1 ~11on. Brand . • '"""'"• II g ht • """"'· CAMPER ' " !'bl! f!lJ_,!J111:.~' ,ii p..Jro!,, , ..... .,.. "1[]µ .. -· l!e! ~ = ~ P!J>S ll<lla .... Dr. 1220 642-1842. s.1 .. -R•nt•I• 542.s801 ~II ielicU.. pl '11 ·•· v orvi s: -:I ~~"""o;.,';;:;;;,·:;,·; . '!¥-.•• !.. .. Iii''~ ~ $1299. Aulhorlmi Del!Jer '67 FIAT coJori · from 4tM Pit J.J.n •••••••••••• '64 c.onv p/a Motorcycles 9300 Eldorado • Four Wlndl 1-iness i1 thll '61 850 Toyota 1dealer. VOL:VO . , UDA Y '60 F01m Station Wagon. w/w, fine cond.' $650. d ..... .&. Radio, htattt , w b I t t ·• ~"~R. B:r;;f'B;KE caflf s';!.~~ ... ~-'jfil m~~t.N~co~~ ~M.ILll !Wt~--~'mi i:miit:=:;==: with purchHc ol '"Y E. Finl SL, Santa AJ\a. 15300 Beach B!m. Biii Deals AEro Ats jff? ~,OR BLVD. ~~ 8-2!79. . ' PL TMQuTH eampf'r ;h==:.package! f12-88Dl, \Vestminster Phone 894-3322 DEAN l WI 64 __ . . STA MESA ~.61~=Fo~RD=~Gal~oxl~•-.-N~,-.. 1-----'----I ·~ FIAT 124 Sports SplO,r. fTinlYIO IT™ an"TION CARS generator; two new tires. '64 PJlmouth ROBINS FORD .,..i oxl/blk inler. AM·PM l C!1 llQI 1966 Harbor, C.M. .....,.. R MOTORS Good tranoportatio"/•lcOnd Val "nt ¥Jll top only. Abarth fX-f •· 200 " 2000 Harbor Blvd. 8 · • ._ Be1t Deals Are At Sport C•rs 961 car . .n.dio/He•ter. $ or . ., d1r Costa Mesa 642-0010 lylust. 4 ,OOJ m1. -DEAN LEWIS. > -•UAR be1t otter. 642-Mell. V-o, auto, l one OMltt. firm. days: 549-t121. -'--------i i ~ J~• _.§OR BLVD. Take low payments. Fu I I ~= PORSC'HE !J'STA MESA 1966 FAIRLANE GT C.n-price 1899. oru 691-U!. can e '&7 TRIUMPH~ltJi 5rf.:?plPtJK, ~tp5l,_ 1cetiai, '63 FIAT l24 Sport Coupe. '6I tJl $Sl95 J41-llN •r 541-1511 vertlble One .owner 390 ~n 494-9773 or 545-0634 f>rtce it $850.' •. ,1, close~ lflt. J!tes, f1ta Chev, Like new. $2550. Pri"Ylte 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 • .•• FIJiiAJfPNCl AVAILABLE Auto. Showroom clean. Be1t ,.,.. 383· ROADR'~~~-8 T f". • . . G&fC or i:-qj'd truck. $275 Party.** 67a...8Ei62 BILL MAXEY 5 speed, rad10, ch rom1, ff b 1 1 w u'"'~• mi!lJ l!lO P~I !!!Jle l3;0. •·• "°' ''s. · whttb. almo•t new. #OO'lj 68 SJ'!!RTS-'"''"· U,700 °." over w 0 e' a '· .....,. 6 newQCyr GT tlrel, §fl ffi1n4A Mt tm. .. ~~ !~~~ R '69 • 912 • -cA795 mi., .qirJi.""';+Jvinyl top. Top Finance help ava.U. 646-8:1)6. air su,., $3200. 642-l.2li0 ••'• •"'1;; ----i!ENT;Jf.SRELL ' FERRA I .., 951 ro <tr ~~'" ITIOIYIOITIAI 5 speec!, radio, 1 owner! COJJdl · 4 232. 1 RD Fairia.ne 4 • 19i5 PLYMO'ma Fury lJ 9 '67 TR I U1'1PH BON· \VEEKENDS, \VE E KLY FERRARI . WIK "949 Sed. wfr·blrd mtr. Runs "•P . NEV!L!.E T·l.20-R. Bendix MONTHLY * SJ>.lBOO lfMOrf Jmpo<ll Ltd. pr. 18111 BEACH BLVD. '57 -Coupe -• $1195 IUICK ~ •. can all 5 pm. ~~ p7::'~~~ ,.;_'Jn._A~. poinlll. Showroom con d. ~rusr &ell. '59 Chev. truck tpa:_e County'• only auu.,r. Hunt. Beach 147--15" Best buy In town. JFK M3 $900. 6Ta-7467 and '63 camper. Ber;t oUer. fY<I dt'a.ler 3 mi N. of Coast Hwy. on Bch Best Deals Ar• At '68 SUZUKI 1211 Trail 2200 Gd. oond. 968-7tl63. $ALES.SERVICE-PAR'P~ DEAN LEWIS mi. Ex. cond. Goo U EIGHT 11. cab over pickup 3100 W. Coast Hwy. '65 TOYOTA Sta. \Va1 .. B'.ood dlrt/strret $250. 675-3i9-l aft campl'r $900. See at 1954 Newport Beach cond., rebuilt ene., $750. '65 kUIQJC Le Sabn! prlfe. e effer. Pvt. prly. 2 Door Loaded, V8, etc. Lie. IR.l>1949. Phone 642-6023 Dlr. PONTIAC '65 BONlllVILLE HT 5:30 Placentia, CM 61.2-9405 54G-lf64. 545-4588. . Authorized AIG t>ealtp * lo(,\Ny EXTRAS• One J;r, ki\\·e~t book 1966 Harbor, c.~I. 646-~ 6~ or ~80. '67 TRllTh1Pl I Bonnie, 650 '54 ?.IETRO camper van. cc, lot.11 chrome, ne\\' eng, 1 New engine &r. brakes. owner, Best ofl· over $975. Bunk~. 838-6594 'S7 PORSCHE ·12-·BlfJ(!K, fila ck, 1.A!Sabrc, 166 FORD Wagon, fully F'ull pwr, dlr, tact a.Ir eon. TRIUMPH Sunroof, coupe, jet blacJf. 4 Efr. hdtop, fnolor gd., nds. equpd w/a'Jr, P/S, P/B. ditloning, pwr~, law. JAGUAR -----·----1 JKF 343. SALE! mttffl~r $~ ca.~h. 548-4603. S2350. 642-MOO d a Y' · low mileage. 'Wit condition '62 TRIUMllH $1397 548-079'1 eves. In and out. Toti.I Price $1299. &16-4203 '68 J XKE Coo TR 3 be lf I b I 'SS Jlt.Jft!K \Vlldcal Convrrl. '65 FORD G lax! 500 390 V Will fl . ' 1y U! VBA . Camper Rent1l1 9522 aguar pe • ' aut u roni.e co or, Best Deals Art At l qwtl@r· Gogd shape. $1100. a e • • nc priv pr • MobllJ.Homes 9200Mobil• Homes 9200 ------Immaculate condition new tire1, $795. RGW 697. DEAN LEWIS 67=--7111111_ _ 8. 4 1pd traM. S900 or best 319. Vie,~. < -lO 766l1 I ~~~~~;:~~~~~~;:;~;=:~1 1 * EXPLORER * C•ll 615-6226 •fl 5 PM Ca!U. Spo'" Can, 901 E. .,.. "" _ oUor. w.M34 all 5. FOR Sale n 6 8 BON· If MARIOR "·•o·o-'li"·;' SALiS By w .. k o' .monlh.. Luxurl-'68 XKE, xlnl. oond. -Flnt, Sanla Ano. 542-8801 0 .. DILLAC '6.1 FAIR!.ANE, Xlnt cond, NEVILLE. 2 Dr. H. Top .. BA --Li Best oiler over $4100 '66 TR-4 1966 Ifarbor, C.M. &4S.93fP " good tires, new trans. ?« A. Cond. 15th mtle1, one Ous, Sleeps 4, Seu cofilil&--r Cl · Sal ed. Limited number. Call 15,00J miles. 675-(j37 Red with wire wheel1 el 1967 HONDA Sporta ear. bl\ll ,67 OAtJu..LJ.C f dgqr ~ V-3. 64.f.-OilO aft 5. driver all PQWtr, 968-214f. e,r,nof . e od •55 JAGUAR. XK140, Coli-$1595. Don't let lt ief awaf. cotlv!ftlbti, Red IH00161' de Ville' Ori · • ~n *62'fOM wagon. new para( 'll"l4JNif. Q Mini con\le't Qn Ail ~llflil MHlh.illie ·~~ ftoM J.E'[i ufti fillliM t.ALS vert. Cassie! Best oiler. Sl.B 4.51. C&ill. Sl>orts Can 14,000 miles. Fully equl9ped1, ~~ther ~111~1,;ne:t~' V-8. $375 or best otter. red w/whlte "top. UH, AR l&tMll'"ti Wiiii cifi.il iH11. 1ff.';. l3T-SIDI J;a-11 645-1900, Ltd, 542-38111 Perfect $1,300 642-6 0 J04decJ ;,bfru,.' Mu1i ~ OWl'ln' mur;t aell. $1500 . ..-----INCLUDING ~ '65 SPITFIRE Moml"ll" _ ., -111!"1 .i!ff sl 1 7S o 1959 FO RD, xJnL cond .. llStl. _548-055<.._,~·====--I •41LAWAY llT fAIRYIEW rusrtGE Dune BuggiH 9525 l(ARMANN GHIA B!"k ~•h _har<!top. A rel! A•l!llJI "" "l•i•lci li".ifi N1..,..;1 ~IYij., c .11. l'ri or bo!t oU.,. 402 e Ulh SI., CAU. LOMA IAY HAllOlt HOMmE •teal·~ 05'. 659, ~,. . ... ,~,," 'I -Jt. . !ld "' ..... ISMITAS COltNILL CILllRITY * L~ PAZ * • 8 O KG. V W , Q o o d ff IJ . j..I~. 9ffl. I : lii *6Rf'<:...w · ",~·..!!B'""!!: " _. SHll.4TDN MA.NOit FASHION MANOl SAHARA Buggy Builder!, ~3 \\',\Var. 'fransportatio~ Nee 4 s _rk;\,_ . AM._~ Oriafnll rU ~. VUJ J l)eor 1 ~o~ . fi. lllleilff -.vt. new en,: 425 BAKER ST., COSTA MESA ner, SA 546-404<>, days 9-7 l!lutch bearings. $ 3 b 0. 'CTR 3, Xlnt. eond. good condition, Rli\g @lJn'iltton, clean ~de I new top I: rear ,1, II.ck lost •f Herbor 811 l••r RENAULT DUNE BUGGY, f46--4013. Rblt trans, new lop. ¥ ~ eut, ~I Tak4!1 f!fiip '67 Mere Cot. Pk. Wp. JO brakes . 847-1988 ' CALL ,...,.,, 100.r $350. New top. uERCEDES BEN• ir.i • !l4ff5ll! WMll · •Ill hi .... ~., T\111 ,r1 · .. , -W't fllll. ~Iii F/ti f'iiillnW XlnL cood. l"'!:!~'l!l!~~~~~~~~~~~~==~838-~ffi~9;,< == "' .. .,..._ • l\'JP tin• ~IV prty. d r, P/W, pwr, ifali, iilif. cont, Bell <llf<r I" VOLKSWAGEN Yj\IZ 1$"1. a.ii BW 494-9m 1u1o door lock. AM/FM, • &.s..ju * 'I.ER.CEDES Benz '60, iif S. ew tlre1, xlnt cotld., rt4k>, [lllr cond. 548-7558 aft 6 lllO Merc<dn 190. Clqn. flew tires. S75G f i r m. • ~ ..... MG ill~ -llG Road1t1r 1.-i. febtt motor a:d. top, t\fu, f.onneau covttr1. 833--3500 or l,IJ.4422 ff•s Ueach house t.IJn•. i1*- jt!.1t teleclion ever! Ste tfit DAU..Y Pll..oT WANI' ADS! 64s-1441 or sq,0634. much ._. 12850. 83M448 T·BIJD REGRET parting with '6S '34 CHEVY, $450. Runs g~ 'il 'eAD Sediffj De VIile. Good '62 MERCURY Sta. Waron automatic V'IV bug, but will trade for 2 5 O c ti oopd. f495. ~Days; trans. just reblt. $490. Aft.1 ____ __. ___ _ present Y."Ork requires 4 dr. motorcycle. 675-2965 _J:vlf"lri&• flal l 6Th-2G99 4:30 333~ "B" Avocado, ,56 T-Br•n, .-... ...1. c:ond., Luggage rack k cover, pad--c M l\U • ...,_ ... ded steering wheel. "Ann" NI ' S AN VUle, all ex-· · portholes $161f or btat otr. 642-7m or &16-3129. Autos Wanted 97V'ff lrts, ke ~yv. Private par-'69 MARQUIS WAGON Before 3 P·f!l• ~mo: •57 VOLKS. Oean! $375. Co~ Wit PAY . . !>',._ 641·8603. Private Party 494-88&( after 8 p.m., ~ tact P. Powtrl, Sawdust CASH '!ff . CAPJ~C Coupe de '64 T-BlRD, oija!na l owott, Festiv&I, i..auna Beach. Vlfle. II ~wer, air, great MUSTANG ncenl tuneup, ~-ttrn, Eves. ~· 550. ~7828. hp had xlnt. care. $1350. I ~.i~ low '67 MUSTANG convt. nd Phone 831-7571 or 495-t717. '68 VW Bus, like new. 8500 for used can & trucks jua( ....,.9'-"'• mlle1, I hit t 4 pd al ' miles, all extraR. Ownen "'50, muat &ell! Orig. w w e op, . 6 ' c, 1966 T·BlRD, fill Po\V'tt• a1r lran1ferred. 642-7316 alt 6. call us for (fN nt1mate. <rtne;t.131-""4 Jn\.T. top, s1reru1g & brakes. corw1 Factory iape. Landau GROlH CHMOlfT q • 1 ri\t/Al\f rad.~o. eon 1o1 e. top,· new 1u;. 1i.' abocks. '68 vw Sedan. auto. 1o m1g, •HQIOLET wire wh1s. s rimt. nu new S2200 SU-20Mi perfect. , __ ... _1 M "ii $2,000. 644-2ltl ' 64U933 AJk iw .:xu.lfl anapr _ . '56 T-BIRD, cltan. SlDl 6 VW 'lk . 1S2U Beach Blvd. '~tEVft.C)LET, of. ilr, 691mtt1USTulaANG. Mag \\·hee.la. mqst sell, 11,vt~ town. , 7 .. '"new, one OWJl(!r. ll~n Beach I"' , .int C:Ond., air, --~-!~ .. ~Uon. Must 5t0-2822 $1450 radio, air ftnts. _Kl 9.J331 '21.... auto shill. ca I I IMMOl"l.UUll. ~'· 1,,63=1'"'·B"'lllD=-=-fulii":,,......-,~x"'1r1==-I 5411-1068 Wf PAY WH ~'""'Ill P 1965 MUSTANG v.g, 4 ,pa, Oeanl Lo "l"liel· 'Xllit: ~:o'f.r1g_~ •if" dltvv t409-4 1pd1 4U ~New brakes. mo. oond. u;so. IJM?BO· I"~ ... M.. FOR YOUR CAR "" •rd· Bue••••· co~"'1•. UJ.I • ..,.,-u.na f\l:H fitap. lmmac. Sl..3;i0 '61 MUS'fANG P /S P/B '67 V'IY 3 2 , D 0 0 ml. ~ Xlnt cond. Muil Sell! """"'"'" llZO. CONNELL ~EVECLE ,..,, fld Tp 1180ll * l'l5-2!!18 ... TEM~EST Cl&si.ni 2-<lr .. 673-3003 CHEVROLET ,..,~ r, ••I,. pis. fao/alr, '67 MUSTANG. I" ...,,.....,. v.g, -Ul& a 11r11, rib. 549-3031 Ext/66 or fi7 1'11000 ml, w w, Landau top. V-8, auto. $1795. Ca 11 $695. l3MlilM 1'10 HARIJOR BLVD. ,.,. Harbor Biro, IJl!CI'. !H:.-4140 All. pm. 53&-Tm. DIAL dlrfCI illiii. Ollrp OOrl'A MEIA Onlla ... ,. W.ISOll TllE 'QlJICKfl! \WO llXU:: DAILY PiLOf CJiJillll<I YOlif id, lltolli 9'1 bock ..., OAlLY Pll.OT WANT ADS! Dial 642-5618 for RESULTS THE QUICJ<ER YOU SELL teetlon NOW! 11.stu to tht phone rti.1 TEMPEST ------------~--~ I ' • • I ~ ' l • ' ' J I •• • . I• • M'AR•KET .. B·ASKET SPECIALS . DRIVE ·. 59¢ DETERGENT ., ... ,.,. SOLID .TOMATOES 15~ -ROUND . as~ SJ~AK IOHI IN Market , Basket WESTCUFF PLAZA iJ!OQt ])JS~ ........ Just • few short weeks until school sluts. Meh your selection now from our 4-12 Beck-To-School coneetiOn. -~ J/IJJ.tP1Y /J1J/tfV1Y 011i.otKl4' ... . ' . 1051 IRVlllE -NEWPORT BEACH 1 Day Drapery Service . 'S·sc Pll PANIL CUA.N A.ND FAN FOLD JQST., lll_STA.LLED • , • Brand "New· M1yt19 ·W~· Plus 4 G lo n I W11hors for Rugs ,ltanlc:1tt, etc. , MONTGlJMEIY c;:i.aners & Laundry 0,.. ¥1·• -. ' ....... Sot ....... ' ..... . . -• ''MYAD ,EC'-' HIGH POTENCY VITAMIN FORMULA WITH MINERALS 30'1 FREE WITH PURCHASE OF 100'1 AT 4.98 OPEN EVENING! 'TIL 10 P.M. A GREAT CAMERA ! BESELER TO PC ON SUPER D ONLY THE SUPER D HAS THE SUPER • SYSTEM The . BESELER TOPCON'S Exclusive Meter-In-The-Mirror Measures Exactlv What The Lens Sees -With Any LenS Any Filter -Any Accessory! SEE ·IT TODAY AT.•-• BAKER'S I WESTCLIFF CAMEUS I 549.4935 WESTCLIFF PLAZA lnckC>rj'-FUD11 .of Ohio MUSTARD With t lb. ~f World Famous EEEtS'l'ICit From lf.., ..... ot OhiG ~ct.U'7 .t•!!"· WESTCLIFf PLAZA. NEWl'C>RT llAt:H 41 TOWN & COUNTRY OU.N•I ? --' •one-ettop' shopping ~t its finest! OPEN THURSDA~' & ·MONDAY ·EVEt-!ll':!l?S , ... PATIO CANDLES Regular 59¢ 39¢ RION HARDWARE : 642-11 J ',3 WESTCllFF :Pi:AZA.·-·NEWPORT cllA.CK . ""jj®f~<l<I HAIRDOS TAKE OFF FOR FARAWAY PLACES IN A HAIR STYLE THAT'S AS DRIP· DRY AS YOUR WARDROBE! CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TODAY. lrll®Wl©mm . offA~~-STYl~~ . PHONE:NoW'.54M460 - ' • • • • .. • .1.,/ ~.' •· . . . . . ' . ~~ • Complete Shoe, LINJgage and Hand Bag Repair COBBLERS BENCH 5 CONYINllNT SHOPS e CORONA DIL MAI -1411 I. c..at Hl .. ny ~ e NlWPOaT HACH ;,.;.. J4SJ1Y5. ..... 1 ' · e ·.74 FASHION ISLiN,''"-<M...;.rt' .... e WISTCUff PLUA~1IOI,.,_. . ..._,_~.._.. • laM-·· ........ : lil..t.I . . ' . ' ' ,, .. : " ' . ' " Christmas Card Albums Box Cards 20%oFF 50%oFF PAPER UNLIMITED WESTCLIFF 'PLAZA. -541,7'21 (l•t of ll(entet •a.ntl I . ' • • MEN'S FORMAL WEAR SPECIALISTS darrell's dearick TUX SHOP SALES -DELUXE RENTALS WESTCLIFF PLAZA _l 130 ; Irvine la Habra · . 'Newport··l••ch ~91-0735 . . . """""' Optometrist Or. Lou Roy Eld•r • CONT ACT LENSES • REFRACTING • EYE WEAR STYLING • PRESCRIBING • WESTCLIFF PLAz.A 1124 IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH 642.()720 ·' ' ' ~, • .. .. .