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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-07-28 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa MesaI 17 --- • . ( -~ . , --~·- • -. .. • • • ----. • • ~ • v . I • -• -Daught~r .. Fr~d ' I '\• Saddle&Oela (o Cha·llenge .. ea Power Bl Qc Vote) Move · .. , . By RUDI NJEl>iBtdt .................. ' S.IP, Beach 1' 1 town divided today with both the city man·•aer--anc1 'City atti>mey lookllji !or new Job•. Both were ftred by 3-'.2 yote of ~· ,city council during a flve-Kour 11esston In lhe McGaugh School audit.QriUm where cld fI'lendShlps were tb.rn 1 asu'nder, tempers fla.ted and heads rolled. 'lbe flrM1 of Lee Risner, chief ex- ecutive of the city for the past four and a hair years, and that or City Attorney James Garnes was ac- complished by a new coupcll ,power bloc composed of Mayor· Morton Baum . a~ Councilmen Thomas Hogard and Conway Fuhrman. Dlsseriling votes were cast by Councilmen Lloyd Gummere and Harold Holden. While the council deliberated In a 50- minute executive session, ar1 audience of 500 simmered in the auditorium with rivaling factions occasionally brt!aking the tension by trading insults. Suddenly Risner slrode th.rough the hall and it reSounded ·with a miii:ture of cheers and boos. Ve «;almly walked up to a table 8.n~ got his papers. "Those --· -canned him," exclaimed Lester Marshall, a Risner supporter, after exchanging a few words with him. City Attorney James Carnes appeared shortly thereafter and told Risner, "I tnade them fire me too, Lee." ' 'Risner was publicly accused ot neg\~­ ting to file fiscal reports, neglecUng city affairs to pursue private business and of not keeping the city CQUncll advised by "concealing, dist.Orting and misrepresenting information.'' There were no charges directed publicly at City AttOnttY Carnes. Since the majority of lhe council Is new and could not technically fire Risner, they fir'M approv.ed by 3-2 vOte 1 ~ay. suspension. The dismissal takes officially then. . Al the same tline, the council appQinted Dennis Courtemarche as interim city manager and Jim, Bent.son as city at· tornex., also by, 3 -2 vote .1 Risne.r, who said he would go to his offJce ~oqay to pick up a few belongings, commented, "These (accusations) are completely withoilt foundatio.1 . How can two councilmen judge after having been in office only two months?" Earlier, Councilman Holden ~dec;lared the move to oust Risner as illegal, since, 'he said, the. action Was ortgln11\y !Set FIRINGS, Pqt I) . . QUEEN SHOR T SHORT QUEEN SAN JOSE (API -Melodie Ann Short. at S.foot-1 the shortest con· teiitant ln tlM Miu S&llta. Clara County beauty pageant,, will relgn over the county fair here Aug. 14-23. Miss Short, 18, won the Utle over nine other finall1ti Saturday night and roctlvod 1 140 0 ochol1nlli&., " . . ) . ' .. r,' .r t • ~ • ·e·ac· -, ' '' • Wat:it? It's a Marmoset. mQnkey! that's what . lt lives at the Sunken Gardens in ·st. Petei:.sburg,. Fla. What it's name? .\Vl\y, '1Watzit." That's what. Marmosets have soft. den se fur. tufted ears and long tail s. They come from the tropical forests of Central and South America. The \vord ''marmos~t"o"Comes from•the Old French.:lt means "grcJtesque figure.'• ' · · • ' .. • C·ollege Will Cha llenge ,· . . . Cou ~t · Long ·ff air Ruling . : By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL ot 1t1t ~IY l'llfl lt•U Saddlcback College Trustees MOnday unanimously agreed to appeal a U.S. ·o istrict cOurt decilion ruUhg t.hal11jalr regu!atlON at colfeee were un· consUtutiooal" \.... : The approval came..'aller the board met ln mq.JUve lelllon for inore thin 1n hour. ll'ollowin( !lie motion to eppeal and Jta let.'Ood. trustee MichaeJ -dOlllns rutllned lhe board'• Jlosillon. "The fundamental issue here 111 who wUI make rules and regulations for th e day-to-day al.fairs of the ~liege. It can only be et ercised by the local governing board," hi! Mid. ' Colli.nA said that 1'lhe right and obllga· Uon and responsibility to operate the aystrun of edtlcatkln Is a ttate function, given to the local boards." Juda~ Harry Pregerson ruled this l!\Onlh that the college ban on lon1 ' hair was unconstitutional. Student!, aided· by the American Civil Liberties Union, had_ taken• lhe }flatter to court t.o setUe the continuing hassle. Collins said, ."We must be .responsible .lo the voters to protect our prero~ative. That "erogative haa.1 been infringed by this ·decision.", Jphn Ppwell, de~ty county counsel, told a "*pqrler lhtl In ~peallni the decision, the board will use an earller decision , handed dbWlf ·11> the college In mld·April , py !he 91h Circuit U.S. Court o! Appeals.- The ruling overturned two· dl1trlc( court. preliminary Injunctions against against the Saddleback long hair repJa. tion, stating "Ule (district) court Is prCtiuming to interfere with the day-to. doy · operatlon or ihe publ(c ochool l)''tem." · The decision Al,O noted that the Supreme Court, In two eases, tt.ated (Set llAIR, Pip II --- • • ) , • • ' • ' • . I • IUESDAY AFTERNOON 'JU lY 28, ]970,, VO&,.~ HO. 1rN.t SICTIOMI, ti •Al lS ' . I I 3 Kidµapers _ ._~el.~· Peace · Pinn " . . Ma.y. co~"t~"-After· :Me.sa :Ru~ l 1i • • .. ~~ .,..__ I • £ -...-.lo -ll .., 10 _ -, ~~"1'"~ ~.:IJin' • I ~y 4~B.JI. VlNQL • : ; ~ _,..;i 11111 .-,....,. .. ·• -. V ' ' ' : oe .. ...,,,,... f'!""' "'" emild th& 11n111• • I ' ' • ) ,JERUSAL!J1\f ,(AP) -lndicali\N ore · mount.tna: that Jarael'1 aovenwneat ,w.il.I· aaree ,relucta9t1f •i:td,. •witp .cmidJ~OOs. to ~e fO..day eeue.fire proposed, bY, the United States to get ·Middle Eest · pea\:e. talk.! liridef way aiatn.' Biit Joell pr~· reparta "!said ·Defenee t Minilter· Moshe · Dayan , ts· considering r.etifnlng if the· c•blnel accepts Ute , A,mertca n Rroposa l ' , , I . ' . . A Detense .Minblry spokesman termed · the report!· ''rumors," but ht-admitted,' •'Dayan ' ls not enthusiasUc · about the u.s.rproposa)," f I · The reporb sald Dayan had exp'rehed mlsgiv4ngs because 'the U.S. plan rpe1ks ' of Israeli withdrawal from the Arab' lands captured in the 19117 war. D1y8n be~eves that Israel's security depends on iCs retaining the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights taken from Syria. and a coastal strip. along the Sinai desert to the St.rail of Tlran, the key to larael'a southern wat!U' route to East Africa iind Asia. ' Premier Goldi Meir and her ·cabinet salteduled another meeting today to discuss their reply to the propoeal. There ' Is a possibility she will reply to Washl'tlgton Wednesday night In a speech to the Knesset, the Israeli p8rllament. · · Deputy Premier Ylgal Allon went ort record Monday nleht in favor of Ac- ceptance, Israel's first ranking minister to do llO publicly. "Evm if there 4re dllferenc~s· of opJ. nlonlbetween the U.S. and IsrAel," Appon told a group of high 'aehool newspaper editor•. "when the 1ovemment of the. United Slates takes auch .an initiative, It aPJ!ears to me that. We should accep~ It, evetrtt We· ar~ r/Ot conlplet!l)' aatfsfled with all the details.·~ · · AflOl1's • stand. was ·co n11 Ider e d '. 15,ee MIDEAST, Pa1e ti B~ach Se,e ki~g City J!o n.ors · Huntlngton Beach has betn nam· ' ed ' one or th'e 22 finalist& tn .the All-America Cities A w a rd s CompetlUon. Tile All·Amerlca City Award la bestowed by the National Municipal. 1 ~cin1 ,D>.n,Uea .a11~1n ,t1:M,; ·) 'r·•:i-·"" 1' • ,· • ioedljne; 1, mlnl·•kirled molber,~lng r ~1 ~ ~ wli "'~lilnlly ~ (l.~._irl ra'1~ Mondax •ihet '~. ,f'Fora 1~r-1 qot r~ ....... ;idnllJi•Uf~ll\~M .... oMcqolly whit, lo' e>J>O<I ~ ._,..._ ll•al helpe(I pOllce ~ .... ~ '-lbtm. lijd' 1,.. beaullfu!ly" oaid1 Sg!. !lfcllriclo.' Ji d .:..... ..J'~ · "' • "Talk about alliloos moments •• :. aJl1 er' 1r.o·:-r • ' ' t • we I cduJd do WU I bite •ow' na1fl,". Jle , ~ J trJo 1 yt ConneCUcut JQen · who , . r!portidfy dr..-Ve oul \o fin\l _the ~·'. c,;,ntjnt19d, : ! t I ' • , If~!!\'" ·end l)eo blfsl!and 1w~re,~1pturi<! · ~iieriJdeteetJ'.~·wet.·~ to min ~-dlurmed witholjl Ji\C\delil1by lawmen, lj!e ~uii '"'1' 'otbei ollleers -. N-liaffnll\l Jo,dieni v;a hidden fiiicr..,i-. , uone.f.·•I key . i>otnts : ...rt.y to . 1w111 · InvestJptor• .had ft9Utln1. JM.it "praile1 the climax.· : ' · · · ror >IJbQin-!Jalred Mrs. Yvonne :P,arker,: 'Outi{lg lpis I period.; ,dr .. Md .. ~. 40, wPQ f~ka ¥r a · !roublellhooting ,, Pe>1on ,w~re retwii~· . ,, , ~ , i-. . manaa:er for • chain ; Of , PhQenix . r Sgt., M~rkle !llid the allepd k~pap reslluran!f: ' · . , • , _ >yanJejl: i,tn. Pfll!.~ ~.SI~, to • ..., "She was beautiful. .Just •beautiful, .. 1 company them· but lhe tallted ·~ .. iatQ. sald Det«:tlve Sgt. Cliff Mcl!ride. "She t,akinr ljle key1 to-h!f cu .. act aJkiori1!i pulled it off wlll!oul a hllch ." · ljlem to 1'av• 10paralely., • · f ·" ·; •Mrs. Parker e9COrled ·her daughter · : The men were • instructed ·to~u61otti Stacy, 22, away 1from •the 1 Costa' Mesa the trunk. wbere 'tbey woUld .findl t 1•' ap8rtment she shares with her huWnd.1 in cash, ·as denlanded .• ' . Mark C. ·Peyton , ·22, at · 2000 Wallace . Detective NO.rm Kutch ,.atchel aSU. A~~ii~ S:e~~:~.~..'M two accuar.d kid~ two women reached ·.arety and' cUplbed •-1 lenct!l<i corirronl a polrol:lbO...,.... napers together and a third was ap-· as Uiey left the apartment cOmplG. • : prehendetl 1epatately, freeing Peyton. "He Jot t.ht other. two ina l ilflhbid' Com~aints char.ging the Connecticut! th g l bl d d f "-hind" -*Id/ men with kidnap and grand Uieft will e re~ · g · u e rom .If" • • .... he 80Ught today from lhe Orang! couniy! Sgt. lfcBrkle, e"lllalJ\lni thott P~ District :Att.omey'i ·office, according , to is six f~t ~u·a.nd, wel~~;JrS'pqu~l :,.. • Detective Capt: liob m .. n: . . Ofllctra who had ·btleri-wlllhit·..ari.rt They we(e 1dentltle<l.as: . converged onto, the scene_~ ~ ~ -Jam~s .M. r.tCSbane, ta, 1 Stratford,· heli~r •WeP.t;,in lo.Ve·i'.h,ait"ili-COnn bartend rumlriating·tht area WIUl .Ila 1e~ ~, ' :-0:,nald E.er~on Remoortere, II, a: Subsequent• · investijatiOn ' · *'"' t I" · i · · discovery of a small amount' of qarl:-Straborif cOutputer programer. · ' jO.iria 1if the -vicllffil•"•ip.rtme~ ....:.1rarlk'W, Pipclii, 28, a Brldgeport1 Peyton WaJfarrfJIKedon that•cbarge.'. l 1• lo borer, ' · · · ' · He told poliCe»lie 1*( · -= . Capt. G~n sa'id the couple were kid 'tP by· his· captor ~ltuitnr-th.t' fw~ na.,.d ,from . a ' party . pod '°'"°where J!Or~ ,, ... ~-•-•· .•• u ~ • In "ii.aguna' Beach' and told. they had rio ...., ~~·~-.... wrs·-'u.J 41 ltourS to come up with $1\500. 1or flVidence of 'a'aerious beating. · I (ace unstated" consequtnces . : A.Series of 'c'alls to relatives in eon.· nect1cut and then to Mr1.1 ·Peyton's' tnother Jed the attractive mother of" five '01'*'-childfen ·to 11rriVJ in Costa Id••• )ale Mi!nday .afternoon. . · .. She· drove a.II ·th~ wiy over from Phoenix. ind then when we I.tied Jo put. her Up .tor , the night ,she said •he had'. to . gel bock," .explained Sgt, McBrlae: one of the .raiding teamv . A microphorie hidden in 'her' clothing~ Mrs. Parker went to the Wallace Ave11ue address to1 find her daughter and IOfl·I~ 'u•"· btt!·. Qiey weren,'1,J!'tsent' 1t 1)1•1, me. Police .. w &he began ginge'1Y. pumping one or ther"' •ttlet'd •kktn1~1 1bout whether "they were · arined, with wba( . " l 'L& : W••tller: I . ' ' It'll reach '61 ·~· lillerlnc lhrough the ~~I •liijO·ixi Wed· nesday Of,UP .tO q lf.Y.CiUi're l}lrtber Inland. Low cloud1 wW ·prevaU ·in tho nllfll '.and iilorblnii llOw't. , • 1 • ' • • •• 1 ~ • • INSIDE TODAY , LcagMc jQf ~notable improvements. ln community living broqht •boot by· "citizen action." A spotesman ror 111e 1eegue IOid lhlt lhlJ yeor'o :Ch_o_lera t'pidemic . finalists !Ir-occompllihm<nlo "'1 . Tim Know~ • ~he aB-1/<ar·old graduate stlide:nt who rum t~ federaUu 'juJl(lcd Educationai Opporl••llY Progr4m, •I .. U(: I rmn~. 801/1 . minotitu, •t*knti -trouble a1ttl11Q into col· 1 lege becau.te th111, are , o-ttbPiQ poor, ,qdyice' /tom high •e~ool l ... fn -.reas of IOClll~afid race ·ftta. ·s j nOllf. and In community d~volop-. prea()s Jn ava. ~ent. T~e only other California 'city JAKARTA, Indonesia • luPll -A named as a finallat Waa Mountain Cholera epidemic that his kl11ed at least View. The It winners of the All· J 119 per.:1111 in Welt Java hl1 1prua Amerli:a City Awards wlU be ao-lo cities ' alorig lhe ~ .,...i ol nounced early in 1971. tbe lndon1sl1 lsland, public health o~ · Tht tln1U1t. were announced by flciall aaJd Mooctay. They Nld vac- Wllllam W. Scranton, prtaldent of cinaUon prosrams had been aterted in tl)e Na:llona1 Mtinicipal League and .the newly 1Uected anta and warninp former aovernor of Pennsylvania. iuued I aaabiat drinklnc water lhel bG: 1....,..::.,;;;....;,,.:.::.,:;,:.,:..,;,;;,:..;;.;;:;~J-~~~l~bee~n~~~lled!!!!!_~or~:!!l!ll._--~~-1.....;:...~~~~-.~~~. coun.stlor&. Page 8. . . Ctl~I• I . Mf..,. 1•1t ' ,...,. .. .,,1 ,.,..,...., .. , c .. ..-ft¥ M•tltllll ....._ I Ctlllln 11 Or ....... ,,. t ":ti'fflff'f l• ' .,,.. ""'* ' . .. :.~~~ . ' ·s.em, •• _.... , ... , I ., ...... _.. ...... u ftlMINI ..... " T....... 'I •• ..., ... 11,11111 ... ,,. .,.....,_ •1 ' ,...... + 1•11 ......... fl --... 14) """' .,.... ,. AM~ It ....... "-l).14 =:. : ........ .. • I DAD. V PILOT s TutSdiY, Ju~ 28, 1970 President Nixon shows Monday nip! dinner guesl.t grounds of Western White House m San Clemente. Senator George Murphy (left), Governor end Mrs. Ronald Reagan were invited to break bread ;md to make a litUe political hay, Mrs. Murphy, wbo'is an invalid, did not atlelld. l'rom Page J MIDEAST .•• partlcularf1 olgnlJ1<111t becwe be la am-it the cablllet'a foreign aHalrs and """"'ty committee, al<>ng lrith Mrs. Meir, Defense Minister Moshe Dayan and For<ign Mlnlster Abba Eben. The commW.ee formulates Israel's foreign policy. Sources close to the government said a majority of the cabinet now is ready lo llCcepl the U.S. proposal lrith some J'el(l'Yatlons. EIYlll and Jordan, the otbeT two prtn. c1poli; alreaey have accepted the plan. Syria and Iraq, whose endorsements were not requested by U.S. Secretary of S\lte William P. Rogers, have con- clelnnod I~ end ~ guerrilla oriar4ntkml have Vowed to conUnue llPtinr In ~ ol any cea,..ftre" In Ila acceplance Jordan repon.dty said It """1d not force the cmunandol lo comply. '!be -.a1 commltt.e ol the Palest!· nlan 8'lllllncl Movement In Amman announced that II la ,.ndlng envoys lo the oth"' Anb cspllals lo explain the 111errlllu' oppoolflon lo the U.S. pro- posal. llrael'1 reluctance .terns from f ea 'r that Egypt, freed from the har8"111ent and turltillance ol the Israeli air force by a cease.fire period, would lltrtngthen !ti ground defenses along the Suez Canal u well as move its Soviet anUalrcraft ml.§Ues up to the waterway. Ttlerefore, I.be Israelis are expected to saY they will Joln in a new eease--fire only if they get guarantees that the Egyptians cannot eaplolt the fnlce period in that maMer. 'Ibere have been suggestions for a United Nations observation force to guard ·against any of the antagonists using the lull of bolster 11.t front.Jine ' poeiUons. But the Jsraella: h a v e had no faith tn U.N. efrecttveness since Secretary-General U Thant withdrew the peacekeeping '""" f,.m Slanl in 1967 at Egypt'• demand, an action which peocelrteplng force from Sinai In 1967 war. The Israelis also doubt the ef. fectiveness of a cease-fire because of the rejec\lon by the Paleotinlan II''" rillu. . The U.S. plan ,calls for resumption or pt.ace ta1ks using U.N. envoy Gwmar Jarring as the intermediary. DAILY PILOT ...,_ .. _. H1..ri ... 11 .._. Let•• '"'' ,. ...... r11e.y C--M... S... Cl••fllt9 OltANOE COAST PUILISH1NG COMll'AN't Rob..t N. Woff PrttldMf and l"ufllW.. Joclt R. C11fl•'I Vl<O '°"'i-' .... 0-•I Monitt' lk1rritt KooYil e: .. l!OI' 1\orri11 A. M11tJ11hl .. , MIMl!inl lf.Ol!Of Ricli1..4 P. Nell ..,.. ~ c-4r 1:•1.., Of&• QIM M-1 *» W<1I llY ltr""' .. ..,.,., a.Kiil ft11 W-1 .... , ....,....,.. ueuno 1..0.1 m ,.,"' A-""""""91tr htd\I Ul1S I•~ ..... l!Mi .. .. ._ (ll!Mnle: • NOl'11'1 El "''""° lt .. I SenateFreeway Hearing Postponed in Sacramento By THOMAS FORTUNE Of IM Dll~ P/llt 51ttf SACRAMENTO -A Senate Transportation Committee hearing on a bill to delete Pacific Coast FreeWl!iY tbn>ugh Newport Beach and psrt of Huntington Beach was postponed Monday and tentattvely reochedUled for 2 p.m. Monday. l'ro111 P.,,e J HAIR ... that where 'school offlclall 11 are lhown to have formally acted, the COW1I abould interfere only with great caution." While vacaling the preliminary ln- JWlCtiona, the ruling ordered the hair issue returned to the district court for farther proceedinp. '!be decision, declar- ing the long hair regulation un· COOIUtttJonal, wu banded down July 17. "The court holds that the right to determine one's own hair length is a fundamental freedom lmpllcit in the concept ol ordered liberty and protected against state infrJngement by the due process1 claUJe or the Fourteenth flmend- meM," the ruling stated. It also noted that no evidence was entered by the Saddleback Co11e$e Administration to !how "that the length or style of the plaintiffs' hair baa creeted or would likely create an unreasonable risk of harm to the educational pro- cess ••• " The decision rlated that in addiUon to violaUng the due process clause, the regulation violated the equal pr«ec:Uon clause of the 14th Amendment. The clause prohibits arbitrary and lr· rational classiflcaUons. Powell &aid the noUoe of appeal witt'i the 9th Circuit U.S. Court o! Appeals will have to be filed wlthin 30 days of July 17,, and that he will ask for the Court of A~peal to ezpedlte the case. However, until the appellate decision is rendered. the long-hair ruling will remain unconstitutionaJ. 1'We do11't think there ls a basic CollBliLUtlonal rig~t involved, and we are dealing with righU that are not fuDo damental, 11 Powell said about the issue. Powell noted that of our recent hair appeals lo the U.S. Courts ·or Appeal, two have favored regulations, and two have declared them unconstitutional. The Supreme Court on three occasions has . declined to hear appeals concerning hair issues. Patricia Herzog, att.omey who represented the plaintiffs In the case, said that she was not surprised to bear the board's decision to appeal. "The basic iS!Ue atlll remains. Students are persons under the Constitution and have certain liberties that are p~ t.ected.'' the att.orney said. John Wayne's Brother Dead All committee hearings were called off when the Senate decided to cogynue meeting as a whole into the afternoon on Governor Reagan's $1 billion tax reform program. ,( final vote on las reform was eipect.ed late today which would clear ~the way for resumption of committee hearings on Wednesday. About ~ persons from the Orange Coast Including ctty officials from Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach had flown to Sacramento {or the freeway bearing Monday. · Perhaps the most dlsappolnted was Cosla Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson who had to canceJ as master of ceremonies for a Monday retirement luncheon honor· Ing fOrTDer Costa Mesa City Manager Art McKenzie. Roun1Mrip ah'plane far es !or all the persons who flew to Sacramento to testily on the freeway bill probably totaJ. ed more than $1,000. Most said they would make the trip again Wednesday or whenever the bill comes up. Paul Gruber, fonner Newport Beach mayor who now is vice chairman of Harbor Area Freeway Fighters, sald, "We've been fighting this seven years. We're not going to give up now." Assemblyman Robert Badham (R- Newport Beach), who authored the freeway deletion bill, obServed that l<The Senate is involved in an emotional battle and there is no telling how long it will take." The Reagan tax package b designed to shift up to $1 billion from local property taxes to &tale sales, income and business-oriented ta1 es. It already has been approved by the Assembly. Jury Forgery Charge Sought Fonnal charges of forgery will be sought through the Orange County G<and Jury Wednesday against a Utah man who allegedly launched an lnternalonal bad<heck spree from a San Clemente bank early last May. Darrell Graff Hafen, 44, had been scheduled for arraignment on felony charges Monday morning in South Orange County Municipal Court, but the action was caUed off after District At- torney's aides decided for the Grand Jury procedure . If the panel returns an Indictment, Hafen will face trial on charges that he passed thousands or dollars in worthless d>ecks in San Clemente, then moved on to allegedly do the same in Latln America, Europe and the United States. Damage $10,000 In Fullerton Fire GLENDALE (UPI) -Funeral services wlll be private, for Robert Emmett Mor· rison, 58, brother of Newport Beach resident John Wayne, the family said Monday. . :""'.. A fire or unknown orlgi1 swept through MorrlJon, a motion picture production 8 Fullerton home Monday nJgbt destroy- exocutJve, died ~&tut-day of cancer. Llke ing I.he family car and infiiCUng damage his more famous brother John. he played esUmaltd at $10,000. football at the Unlverslty of Southern Firemen were able to contain the main Clllfornia and was a member of the blaze to the ga rage and prevent it iprcading to nei ghboring property. No one was hurt in ihe outbreak at 1225 ?1-tlrador Drive. 1982 national championship team. Officers are today investljatiq the ~Family' Story Told_1 · .Defense Objects to .lf.asabian Testim.On).: -; asked ""1· Kaaablan U Manson's grou'p teatlmony 1llltll alter the noon receu collllclered ttaelf a famllY. Monday because abe' dldn~ want to wear LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Lindl'1!asa· blan told the jury In the Sharoa Tate murders Monday &he Joined CbarlOI Manson's !1famlly" alter "be felt my legs ud aaid I was okay." "Wt lived tocether · aa a family would, a matemliJ< aml>ct. She pve birth wb1Ja live together," she replied. "Like a ia Jail ud had no other clotbfs. mother and i,t11er and children. We Her attomoys ~t •n aide I!) ·s.u Mrs:. Kuabian, 21, ·the proaecutioa's only purported eyewitness, sat compcsed, her hands folded primly in her lap, as she related how she met Manson and his followers the month before the were all one.,,-Fifth Avenue in Beverly Hills to bUy "Was Charlie the head!" her a frock, and she appear<d millJDg "Yes, he was." t th afte • · ' a e rnoon seSSlon m a or1ght "How m&ny were in the family," red and blue peasant style dress with Bugliosi ~ked. red rickrack trim. Tate-La Bianca slayings. "Maybe 20 stayed there all the time. Her husband, Robert, who sat outside · MoaUy girla," Mn. Kasabian s&id. the C9.w1room during her testlmoly, aald She has been prolllised immunity in exchange for her testimoay qailst Manson and his three female codefen- dants, Leslie Van Houton, Patrkia Krenwlnkei and Susan Atklna. She told of camping trlpa wbea Mauoa he •e witb bu befcre she wu take• ordered the glrla to aet up walkle-talkit ·.to C<iliit. systems and they lived In the woods. < · "Sbe said she felt like she waa going Mrs. Kauhlan delayed beglnnlng her ' to the dmtls~" be said. Defense attorneys objected to virtually every questioa asked the tiay blonde, cJaimhtg the questions were irrelevant and that she was an incompetent wttnes1 because she had taken I.SD 300 times. Marlne's Wife Vletlnl: In contrast to the women d~fendants. who giggled and mugged at M&190a, Mrs. Kasabian appeared serene, walUng patiently until ·Superior Court Judge Charles Older ruled on each objection before answ~ ·in a aoft, confident Police Find Few Leads voice, The pigtailed young woman said she met Kathry11 Share, klown as "Gypsy," In Sa~ Clemente Killing on July •. 1969. "She told me there was a beauUful man we'd .all ~ wa.iling for, and that he'd been in Jall for a number ct yell'B," she said. Her remark about Manson'• prior prison record was ordered stricken. . · She said she met Manson the following day, in a cave at the Spahn movie ranch, where he was rebuilding a dune buggy. "He asked me why I had come, and I said my husband had rejected me and that Gypsy told me I wu welcome here/' she said, "Did Mr. Manson do anything?'' Depu- ty District Atlomey Vlncen/ Bugliost asked. · "He felt my legs, my calves too, and seemed to think I was okay," ah• giggled. Over the heated objecUo1s of Mauon's lawyer, Irving Kanarek, the prosecuuon LTV to Market Braniff Shares? DALLAS (UPI) -Financially troubled Llng-Temco-Vought, Inc., Aid Monday it may aell lta Interest In BranlU lntema- Uonal Airways. Jt mentioned a price ol $1110 mllllon. But 1. TV emphaol...t the "hllblY prellmbwy'' nature of present negoUa~ tlon1. The omclal company statement read: .. "In respon1< to lnqulrlea relating lo reported negotiations on the poulbla aaJe o! Its 56 percont infmlt In BranlU Airways, Llng·Temco-Vougbt, Inc., Aid today ·that It ia conducting hlgbly preliminary negotiations in lflvera1 areu that could teed lo dtapoeltloa of Ill lnfmlt In the airline. hom Page J FIRINGS ••• By JOHN VALTERZA 'lbe police investigator. working the sUll-active beating and stabbing murder of San CJemente resident Mrs. Connie Johnson has returned from her home state this week with few fresh leads. ~ve Leonard Goodwin ~d his !rip lo Minnesota p1'lduced little new evidence in the baffling June 16 slaying In the housewife's small apartment near the municipal pier area. 1 In recent weeks Goodwin and other detectives have held repeated con- ferences lrith Marine Lance Cpl. Mark Johnson, 19, the dead wutnan11 husband, to retrace stepe taken in earlier talks. But thaJ. loo, has yielded little, detec- tives have said. One 'man had ·been arrested July 3 in the kUllng, but after a weekend In custody coinciding with intensive ·in· vestigaUon, Frankie Wayne Melino, 19, WU aet free wUbout charges. Ht; allO, ls a Marine. • Since then the Investigators have doulll· ed. back to retrace every possible upect of the case. 'lbe investigation even reached into the realm of the bizarre asserted 1atanlc ritual death . <lf Mission Viejo teacher Mn. FlorJnce Nancy Brown and the Ill dl1fters facing 1r1a1 Jn lier butdlerlng deeth.' ,. • . But after a day ol Interviews with arrestees In the Brown 111!1rder, San Clemente police csme up lrith nothing linking the two ca.sea except for the otyle o! linire used lo Inflict wounds on both women. The weipon, a common blade known as a K-bar combat knife, allegedly was used In each kllllng. Two other key links in the chain of evidence are still missing - a pair of tennis shoes which could have made a print !oond In the kiichen sink in t~ slain woman's apartment and Mrs. Johnson's wallet tnlsalng from the scene when pollce arrived, brought up on the July 20 council session 'Ibe husband discovered his young without having been placed legally on wife's bodS' spr1wled on the bed as the agenda. he returned from guard duty at the "It's unethical to aay Ute least." said Marine Helicopter Facility in Santa Ana. Holden, alleging that Baum, Hogard and Mn. Jobn90ft had been dead about Fuhrman had met among themselves M hours, police said. to decide the outcome."1bere'1 a coward-Her home had some signs of entry, Jy conspiracy under&ot." be added. but that aspect has never been con· Immediately before tbe council reUred flrrned. Into executive aetslon, Paul Boi.avert, 'Ille window above the sink was open. Baum'a fQtmer campaign manager, Jnr Out.side, beneath it, sat a metal folding plored them to fire R.lsner 6ecause he chair. hours when Mrs . Johnson was'b eaten with a bar stool and stabbed repeatedly in th& neck, chest and abdomen. State Shoreline Control Stalls ln Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) -A blll putting development of California's 1:100 Jnile shordine under state control stalled 31-31 today on an early Assembly roll call. The roll was left open until afternoon on· the bill, which requires 41 vote.s in the 81).seat house. 'Ille Assembly turned down a series of six amendments to appropriate $750,000 in state money for the proposed shoreline commission, to set up an in- dependent staff for the commission and lo put more cqnservationists on the state board and five regional boards. The bill, which has been critici:.ed for giving too much control to city and county officials, was attacked on the ~mbly floor by conservatives for giving "unbelievable powers" to the new state agency. "This measure abrogates property rights," said Assemblyman John Stull (R·Leucadla). "People 'fho would ' like' lo develop coasftlne prnperty ~ve onJY' the right to pay taxes on it." Assemblyman Pete Wilson (&San Diego), author of the mbasure, said coastline development is proceeding "at such a pace, is we don't act Otis se6Slon . . . there will be the Joss of u n t o I d thousands of acres." 'Ibe bill would limit for six months: all coastline developments involvine dredging, reduction or public access to the shore, "subsi,antlal development" or reduction of shoreline view from the' neare.st road. Detailed development criteria for a 1,000-yard strip along the coast woold be prepared by the statewide board and put into effect by the regional boanb during the six-month start-up period. : Wilson said he cut a $600,000 ap. propriation from the bill because "there• isn't any money to do it 'the way )'OU' want to do it." ' "Increased beach access this is for !he people who dirty the beach," sa• Assemblyman R ob e rt Bad.ham (ft. Newport Beach). "You should see the.· beaches of Southern California Monday morning after all the conservationls,ll of the inland come to. . .litter our beache!.'\ allegedly solicited uniformed policemen Repeated contacts with neighbors has to paint signs and circulate petitions revealed little information on unusua1 and handbills in bis support. noises or clrcUmstances in the predawn piiiiii-=-=~-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=;' It's The Second Big Week of our •••• GRAND OPENING SALE! T We are pleased to announce the opening of our second store in Tustin. We have purchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new name will be "Alden's Red Hill • Carpets & Draperies." , e IN COSTA MESA .• CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentla Ave. Phone 646 4131 In conjunction with the open··. ing of our Tustin store, we have several spec i a Is in our Costa " ,. Mesa store. Please come in and ' see us. e IN TUSTIN e ' . ,, ... ALDEN'S "- RED HILL . . ' CARPETS e DRAPES:,:::: , 18374· E. Irvin• ·~1+1 • Phone 831-33-44 1 ., t· •n •11 " c .-~~~~~~~~-''--~-"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-;,,, ~ VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. .. ' .... ' Thia was the aecond death in tht family this year. The molhu, Mary Preen, dled in March. cause ol lho blue. ... ___________________________________ ~ f I I l • _.J_:,_ ~ -~ + . .t --•-• • --_L 11: 1' ' j I I I > I • , . . Bu.ntingt1:tn B·ea eli -ED IT·IO·N Today'• Fbaal • N.Y. St.oeks • J l : . . ' VO~. 63, NO. ) 79, 2 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES· I ORANGE COUNTY, CA'LIFORNIA ' t ' -.~ , - • JUESDAY, ~UL Y 21, '1970 • rEN CEl\US -· " OAtLY l"ILOt llltt ....... . RISNER (CENTER) SETTLES NEXT TO COl)NCILMAN HOLDEN !LEFT) AS MEETING . STARTS .In S..I Be1ch, On Your M1rk1 Get Sit, Get Fired, Quit, Rt1ign , or G,t Rec1llec:I Beach Seeking City Honors. 11. '. ' 1'4 c • .,. " Hilntinglon BeaCh hiit>Oeri oim. '. td ·one of the 22 finalist! in· tJit All·Amerlca Cities A. w a r d 1 Competition . . . · . ~e All-America City Award' fs bestowed by the National Municipal ~gue for notable impr~vements in community living brought about by "Citizeo ~action." A spokesman for the league said that this yelr'a finalists stressed accomplishments in Areas of social and race rela· (ions, and 1n comtnunity develop- ment. The only other California city nained as a finalist was Mountain View. The 11 winners of the Ali- America City Awards will be an- ounced early in 1971 . 1""-"i!iii:le flfftifilft5 ftte. &nnO\lnced by Will iam W. Scranton, president .of the National Municipal Le;ague and rormer gover~or of Pennsylvania. State. Shoreline Control Stalls In Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill putting 'development of California's ·1,1oo ~mne shoreline under state control stalled 31-31 today on an early Assembly roll call. The roll was left open unUl afternoon on the bill, which requires 41 Votes ln the SO-Seat house. SenateFreeway; Hearing I . • Postpi>li~d Di sa~I'ali1en1lo ' • ' f I ' • ' ' ~ ' By THOMAS FORTUNE Of lllt 0.llJ ... ltt lllff SACRAMENTO A s ,enate Tran.sportat.ion Committee heiring on a bill to delete Pacific Coast . Freeway through Newport Beach and part of Huntington Beach was postponed Monday and tentatively rescheduled for 2 p.m. Monday. All committee hearings were called off when the Senate deci~ed to continue meeting aa . a· whole into the .. ftemoon on Governor Reagan's Sl billion tar reform prognmi. A final vote on tax refonn was expected late today which would clear the way for resumption of committee hearings on Wednesday, About 20 persons from the Orange Coast including city officials from Newport Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach had flown to Sacramento for the freeway hearing Monday. Perhaps the most disa ppointed ·was Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson who had to cancel as master of ceremonies for a Monday retirement luncheon honor· Ing fortner Costa Mesa City Manager Art McKenzie. Round-trip airplane fares for all the persons who flew to Sacramento to te!lflfy on' the freeway bill probibly total- ed more than $1 ,000. Most said they vrould make the trip again Wednesday or. Whenever the bill comes up. Paul Gruber, former Newport Beach mayor who now ~ is vice chairman of Harbor Area Freeway ·Fighters;_ saJd, "We1v~ ~n llghUn,a this seven years. We're.not going to give up now." Assemblym'an • Re>bert Badham (R· Newport Beach ), who authored the freeway deletion bill, observed that "The Senate is involved ln an emotional battle and there Js no telling bow Jong it will take." The Reagan tax package is dealgned to shift up to $1 bllllon from local property taxfs to al.ate sales, income and business-orjented taxes. It already ha!I been approved by the Msembly. "The important : thing is to preserve these lovely town~ -and thia applies also to Malibu, Santa Monica, Santa Barbara -the towns have th'e right to be saved and they should support each other. Laguna Beach. aurely ha!· more in common with Newport Beach · than it has with the Division of Highwaya.'' Dilley said he agreed that removal or the Newport segment of the freeway would not jeoplrdir.e Laguna's position. QUEEN SHORT SHORT QUEEN SAN JOSE (AP) -Melodie Ann Short, at 5-foot-1 the shortest COl'll· • testant Jn the Miss Santa Clara County bel.uty' pageant, will relgn over the county fair here Aug. 1~23. . Miss Shod, 18, won the title over nine other .finalists Saturday night ,and received a ~ t 4.0 0 achol.arship. ••••• 1c1a s Power Bloc Ousts Manager, AttorneY.. • • • By RVDI NIEDZIELllU .... °"" ~Ult ltatf - Seal Belcb is a town ~vlded today with both I.he city manager and city attorney looking for new jobs. Both were fired by 3-2 vote of the city council during a five-hour session in the McGaugh School auditorium where old friendships were torn asunder, tempers flared and heads rolled. The firing or Lee Risner, chief ex· ecutive of the city for the past four and a half years, and that of City Attorney James· Carnes wa s ac- complished by a new council power bloc composed of Mayor Morton Baum and Councilmen Thomas Hogard and Conway Fiihrman. l,)Jsaenting votes were cast by Councilmen Lloyd Gumtnere and Harold Holden. While the council deliberated In a It). minute executive-session, a.n audience of 500 simmered in the auditorium with rivaling factions occasionally b~akina the tension by trading insults. Suddenly Risner strode through the hall and U resounded with a mixture of cheers and boos. He calmly walked up to a table and got his papers. ''Those • - -canned him." exclaimed Lester Marshall , a Risner supporter, after exchanging a' few words with him. City Attorney James Came5 appeared shortly thereafter and told Risner, "I made them fire me too, Let." Rillner was publicly accused ol neglec- ting to file fiscal reports, neglecting city affairs to pursue private business and or not keeping the city council advised by "concealing, distorting and misrepresenting information." T h ere "ere no charges . directed publicly at Ci\y At(Drney.~rnes. c., , f • . : 81ft00 ttil! lm4Jorj\y of """ ~•II Is new and cauld not te&.hnically lire-Ris"'r, ~ first approved by 3..2 vote a 60:day suspe,iislon. Th~ dlsmj3Sal takes o!fiplally ijlen. , At the same time, the council appaJnted Pennis Co1ti!emarche &11 interim city manaier and Jim BenlMn as city at· torney. also by 3 · 2 vote. Risner, who aaid he would go to his office today to pick up a few belongings, commented, "These (accusaUons) are completely without foundlition. How can tw,o councilmen· judge after having been in office only two months ?" Ear~r. Councilman Holden declared the move to oust Risner as illegal, since, he said, the action was originally brought up on the July 20 cpuncil session without having been placed legally on the a1enda . "tt'S unethical to say the least," said Holden. alleging th.at Baum, Hogard and Fuhrman had met among themselves to decide the outCTlme."There's a coward- ly CTlnspiracy underfoot." he added . Immediately before the council retired into executive session. Pau l Boisvert, Baum's former campaign manager, im- plored them to fire Risner because he allegedly solicited uniformed policemen to paint signs and circulate petitions and handbills in his support. "The policemen are placing themselves above the law ," said Boisvert, charging that police pressure prompted some merchants to put up "Save Our City Manager" signs. "There are few who could not feel the implied force of the law behind them." As uniformed policemen stood by, numerous persons took the podium in support or the city manager after oral conununicatlons were opened · again fol· lowing the disposition of some routine agenda items. Only two or three aupported the m11:yor and the other COUflCilmen. Said Tom Brady, a retifed stockbrqker, "It just boils down to the que!tlon of who's ~the communlty,.theJ:ity.mlnqer Of" the city colincU. I would · augeat If Mr. Risner wants to nm It, he should have stepped down from his Job and done it" Councltman Fuhrman, believed bY ~ Risner fora!s to be the instlgator of a city ·hall purge which . may e1tt:nd to Ptllice Chief Lee Case and Fire Chief R. E. Adams, was seryed with a recall petition. Recall proceedings are also expected to be started against Baum and Hotard, who were elected June 2. Afterward; Marshall l°iid.in the lobby; "We'~ 1oing to atart •& toon as we collect aome money.~ · "" Mayor Baum and the Othen sat lljen~ occasionally amlllng, p they were reprbmnded, accuaed of collusion and oceasiona)ly insulted by the cro~d. •· "I've never seen a . ~tier · ~pte before, but now I have," shouted an uriidentUied mah., Baum , a Jew, ~alm)y replied,, 11li you knew that I had escaped frotn the o~ens ol Germany by the skin of my ~th, you wouldn't say that." "It would appear the Seal Beach pur .. !15 now comple te," added Sol Mill.st~, whose wife Marilyn ran in ~.last (See FIRINGS, P11e I) I Favors lltilitg Taz Apartment Association .· ~Objects to $6 Increase By ALAN D!RKIN Of tl'lt O.llY "11•1 Sltff The Huntington Beach city council, apparently moving toward a $6 tax on all apartments in the city, 'today ran into opposition from the Orange County Dayan May Quit If Israelis OK' U.S.: Peace ·Plan JERUSALEM (AP) -Indicatlon1 ate mounting that lsra'el's: governmeiit wlll agree reluctanUy an~ with condJUons to the oo.day cease-fire proposed . by the United St.ates to get Middle ~t peace talks under way again. But Jocal press reports aald Defense Minister Moshe Dayan is ccr1slderlhg reslgnlnf if the cabinet accepts the American proposal. A De!eme Ministry apokesman termed the reports "rumors," but he adrriltted, "Dayan is .not enthusiastic about the U.S. pfoposal." · The reports aaid Dayan had expressed misgivln·gs because the U.S. phtli apeaks of Israeli withdrawal from the Arab lands captured in the 1967 war. Dayan Oelieves that Israel's security depends on j ts retaining the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights taken from Syria, and a coastal strip along the Sinai desert to the Strait of Tlran, the key to Israel's soulhern water route to East Africa and AJia. Premier Golda Meir and her cabinet acheduled another meeting today to discuss their reply to the proposal. There Is a possibility she will reply to Washlngton Wednesday night In a speech to the Knesset, the Israeli parliament. Deputy Premier Yigil Allon went· on record Monday night in favor of ac·. etptance; Jarael's first ranking minister to do so publicly. "Even If there are di(ferences of ~Pl· nion •between the U.S. and Israel," Appon told a. ifOUP of high. school newspaper editors, ",when the government of the United &tates takes such .ao initiative, it appears to me that we lhould accept U,. even if we are not completely saystied with all the details." Aparbnent House Association. "Why should the apartment resident pay tor a new city ball?" asked Allen Banick, president of· tbe 2,l~member association. -. "The younger group of apartment dwellers 'Will probably move out P.f the city before it i! built and the older, retired couples probably won't be able to enjoy tJie use of It either." .Banick was res(>Ofldin& to a p~ d1~ussed at a study ~a&kln. last ~ on ways to finance new· facilities • in Hi+ntil}pon. . Beach,. inclQ.dinJil the civic cetjte, ccrmplex, library and fire Stations. 1 ..\,t t'W ses:iJon ·the council seemed nNt _ agfeem'1it on a • 3 percent 'lax ob all utilities, a so percent hike io the. ~r~sept bwiness levy, ,wi~er ap- pllcat1on of the lr~sh fee and· ~ jump in the tax on apartments tO finauce the Improvements. • . · T!ie present scale on the 18i'6o apartments ).n HunUn~ Be a\ h aver,.,es at SI, but a jwnp tc $8 w:u augge;sted. The city ata.ff is worijbg oo .the ney ,ormula . and will preafnt copies of thi figures at the Aug. I council meeting. ·''We are against It;" Banick said ithis morning. "We are ·against the PreMnt tee :_because we receive no additkl\at \ serv1c·es." · Banifk said that the ipartment · resi- dent will end up paying the increase. "The $6 averages at 50 cents a month . but the rentals will probably go up $1 a: month," he added. About 300 members of the Apartmeh.t House Association live in Huntington Beach: Banick said he' would forWlrd the members' objections to the city. "The apartm~t dweller pays his pn;. perty taxes .at the same rate that a homeowner does and the resident pay1 It lndir'ectly, probably 1!0 lo 140 a month," the association president went on. "The apartment dweller is not a second class citizen. In Orange County there are 270,000 apartment resident.I and about M percent of them,are professional or seml-proleuJortal peOple. ,,. Banick said that he consi<lered the utility tax f1lrer. "That wlll affect the user." he added. Orang~ Coat The .Assembly tu"1ed down a series of six amendment& to appropriate t750.000 in state money for the proposed Shoreline commission, to set up an In- dependent staff for the commission and -to put more conser-vationist.s ·on.the 1t8te ~board and five regional boards. rle bill, which has been criticized for giving too much eontrol to city and county officials, was attacked on the Assembly floor .by conservatives for giving "unbelievable powers" to the new alate agency. Hair •Issue · at New Lengths Allon'• .atand was c-o n 1 id ere d partlcul&rly significant !>ecause he is a member of the cabinet's foreign affairs and &eCUrity committee, along with Mrs .. Meir, Defense Minlster Moshe Dayan and Foreign Minister Abba Eban. The committee formulates Israel's fOreign policy. We•Cller It 'll reach II! degrees lllter1n1 through ' the coastal haze on Wed· nesday or up to·az U you're·furUter lriland. ·Low clouds will previll in the night and mo'rnlng boura .. "'tills measure <1brogates property rights," said Assem'1ilyman John Stull (R-Leueadla). "P~li>.-who would like · to develop coasUln~ prpperty1 have . only the right to pay taxe~ on It.;· Assemblyman Pete Wilson (R-S an Diego), author of .~.~be . liieuure, 'sald coaatline developt'nent is' p1roceecllng "at such a pace, is we don't act this se!Sion .•. there will be th~ loM of u n to I d thot!sands of acres.'' The bill would limit tor' alt months all coastline developments involving dredging, reductloo or public 1access to the shOre, "sub:1tantial development'' or reduction or shorelille vJew lrom the nearest road. Otlalled development criteria for a 1.000-yard strip aloog the coast would be prepared by the statewidf! board and put tnto effect by the regional boards durlna the 1il·!"onth •tlJ'touJ> period. I By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL had taken the matter to court to 1etUe Of 111e o.11Y ,.._. ,,.,. the continuing hassle. Sa.ddleback College Trustee• Mo~ay Go'lini pid, "We~mus~ be responsible unanllnously agreed to appeal 1 U.S. __ , I)istrlct Court decjsion ruling that •bair to• the vo~rs to PnKCCt our prero1at1ve. regulations at the coUep wert1 \ 1\!fl 1 Th;i.t preroga,yve h•s . ~n infr\nged by cob.slttuti6n11. . ; .~ d'fl1ipn. . The approvli came 111or the .:..!It· . J9hn1 Powell, deputy c!<inty eoun.sel, met Jn extc1.1tive aesslon for more 4h\1r . tola_ a .reporter that In appeelloi the an hour roilowlng the motion to1 appe•l· d,CQSl,on, .the ~rd will use an earlier and it.s • leCOSKI. truatee Micbatl COIUu ·. ~ecislon :ha.nded down to tbe colle~e outlined the board'• position. tn mld·Aprfl, by the 9th Clrcult It. : "The fundamtntal Issue here Is who COOfl of Appeals. : ' will make rules ~d regulations for the The ru~ng overturned two, dl1tr1Ct day·lo-day affairs of the college. It can .court preliminary· Injunctions aaal:alt only be exercised by the local gove?ninil agatnlt ·the Saddleback long hair recu1t· • board " he aald tlon, st1ting "the (district) court . b Collins SAld that "the· right and obUga· presuming t~ interfere ~ith the dly·t.o- tion and responsibility to operate the day operation of tht public lchool ay&t!m of education is a state flJncllon, system." ! given to the local boards." The decision also noted that tht Judge Harry Pregerson ruled this Supreme Court, in two cases, stated month that the college ban on long that where achool officials "at'I ahown hair was unconsU tutional. Student.I, aided to have formally acted , the courts 1boukl by the American Olvll Llbertlu Union, Interfere only with sreat·cauuon." ~ I • I/ While: vacatin1 the prelimlnary In· junction•, the ruling ordertd the haJr. issue returned to the · district court for f~r proceedings,, The decision, decl•r· Jna the long hair regulaUon . un· consUtutlo~, was b~ down JuJy 17,' I • "The· court holds that the tight lo determine. one's own hair · length 11 1 fundame~tll freedom implk:lt • In ihe concept ol •rd•red qberty and proteQed . asainst state hlfrtna~mt;t1.t' by ~the ,due1 ,proce,. clallll ol the Fourte<ntb Amend- tmM~" ~·llated. 1, It 6 tblt "° 'eviclence •as IOlltmd by ' Saddtellack .COiiege 1Adm!nl1tratlon to •hot\' "U!at' the lenl'b or style of the plainUffa' halr.llU cruted or wOl,lld likely create an unr~aonable rLsk oCf ~arm to 'the educaU¥ pr(). ·cess .• ·• · Tht "41cclsl'on 1tated that In, addition to viola Una:. the due process claus,,' the 1 regulation •lolattd the equli proloction• "1alll0 of !lia.ltth Amendme!IL' ' Sources close to the government 1tld a majority of the cabinet ·now is· ready to accept the U.S. proposal with . 19me· reservations. Egypt and Jordan, the other two prin- cipals, already have accepted th.e plln. Syril and Iraq; whose endorsements were not requested by . U.S. Secretary ol State William P .:Rogers; hi.Ve ·con. demn!d 14 and the Palest!Dlan guertllla OrganilatlOns · Jlave •vOwed . to 'COriUii\le fightlrc in lpite cf any. cease-flre1 Jn · Ila a&:ejrton<ie ·Jordan · repori.dly U:id , It would not forc-e the cornmandoa rto , aSmpiy. · . ' The central committee of tbe Palestl .. • nian.I ReJi9tance. Movement ln Amman 1 · announced lhati I~ Is sendlng envoys to ~the _other :Arab• capital&· to explain the guerdllas'' oppollllon to the U.S. pr .. J:M)U.l. ! • • ' t ~hraeJ'A. reluctance stems 'fronJ• f ea r · lSet MIDEAST,_~..., ll 1 I ' . ' , INSIDE TODAY , . . Tim Knowte1, the 26·ytar-old oraduatt student who run.s the federally Jundtd Educaticinai Oppor~unitt1 Program. ot UC 17\Hnt. sq.ys mlnorltu tt.ud«nU hoot trouble oettind into cm. lege because th1u art Oftti»O.-~ '~qor ~·'frOril .high'.'••~ I toun1eto;,, · P091 8. · ' 1 I + , _________ ....... ___ ------~-------------·-----------~ ------------~ -~------------~ --·-----.... ----___,; _....___,___ ____ ~ ---·-------~ --=-----• • .J DAll.V PllOT " I ' ,· S'lte'D Be in Stitches ' . . . ' It's aummer time, but the sewing isn't so easy, as .. Dciliila Emn, 12, is finding in summer class at SIJrinlt View School in Huntington Bouch. Donna, who 41ready has completed a garmept in the class, still finds threading the needle a tricky task. Donna is one of 402 girls in the Ocean View School District taking the summer sewing class. Linda K(lSabian Relates Cult Jnitiatwn Rites LOO ANGELES (AP) -Green-eyed Linda Kasabian testified today that Charles M. Manson told the young women lrt his hippie-style "family" to mike love to men he wanted to recruit for bis nomadic clan. The petite, sandy·haited prosecution star witnea in the Sharon Tate murder trial al8o said the •baggy-haired cult leader had sexual intercourse with he'r in a cave and "told me I had a father bang-up." Mrs. Kuablan WU asked 1f MIWIOn .f'rOtn Page I FIRINGS ••• cxmcU election. "Mr.'Meyor, you haven't hem! lbe last ol It from m," be said-.' Tmy Bartoo. a membec of tlie plan· nin( commbslon resigned publicly, lllllinC. ''I am ashamed to be an official member Of the city. I am ashamed to have Morton Baum aJ my mayor. Ht ·fl!" the others have succeeded in Jess Uian a month to push this city to~ brinl: Of chaos and disaster." · Petitions supporting Risner were tum· ed tn by nearly all city employes, the department beads of the city, the board of directors of the Surfside colony, the College Park Homeowners Association, the Civil Service Board and what was dalmed t.o be about S,600 citizens. 0 Mr, Risner hu more backing and you've got more trouble than you can handle in the next sii: months," Mrs. Margaret Klein, a resident of the city, - Ch ina Readies Death Laws for Hij acker s TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) -The government of Nationalist China is preparing legislation to make airline hi· jacking an offense punishable by death, Mlnlatry of Communications sot.JrCeS said Monday. The bill is subject to approval by the legislatUl<. • DAILY PILOT ()UMG£ CO.Ur f'U&Lli H1HG COMPANY Rob1it N. W11d pr,..;d.,_I ~ Pu0to1htl' J•ck R, Curley Vke Prnld.nl end (o•~Ql'•I M4ntger Tho1111J K11vil ..... llto1111t A. Murphi111 Mtflitltll Eooror Al111 Oir\i11 W•I Olllllll Collroly E~l!or . i'lb1tt w. ,.,,, .\llOtltM Edl!Or HlflltfllffM 9"U Office l 7175 11.ch aou11v1rd M11ll119 Aditefu P.0, lo• 7t0, tl,41 .,,.., Off1- .......... a.'.1cl!: U2 F-•I AYIO'IUf, eo... ,._.,.,,.., a. Wat ... ., Slffff .,...,..,.. eftd\: nu W•t BtlbtJ Boulcvtt'd 1111 Citn.!lt; * ~Ol111 El C:tl!'lll!O Rtfl I told the girls to do anything with male visitors to the Spahn ranch where the "family" lived for a time just north of Los Angeles. , "Yes. He told us to make love to them and try to get them to join the family, and if they wouldn't join the family, not to give them any more attention," she replied. Over vehement defense objectiorus, Mrs. Kasabian also described an incident in which "everybody made love to everybody.*' Sbe said Manson ~gan It by forcing himsell upon a shy, withdrawn girl about 16 years old as about 20 of the "family" looked on. "Charlie took her clothes off and started making Jove to her. She was rejecting him. • .At one point, she bit him on the •shoulder and be hit her in the face." Deputy Dist. Atty. Vincent Bulliosl 8'ked Mrs. Kasabian what happened after that. "Then Charlie told Bobby BeausoUe1 anot.ber clan member and everybody to start touching her and making Jove to her and everyone did." Q: What followed thereafter? A: Everybody made love to everybody. Mrs. Kasahian sald that the girls in the Manson "family" referred to themselves as "witches." "Charlie called all the girl! witches," she added. Mrs. Kasablan took the stand for the second day in the trial of Manson and three young women for the slayings of actress Sharon Tate and six others last August. On Monday she told of her ftrst meeting_ with Manson when "he felt my legs and seemed to think they were okay." Deputy Dist. Atty. Vincent Bugllost asked what happened the ne:rt day. Mrs. Kasabian said Manson came to a cave where she bad slept behind the Spahn ranch. "He made Jove to me and we had a slight conversation," she said. Manson's attorney jumped to his feet and objected that the testimony 1'Jm: pugns the morality of Mr. Man.son." 'The judge overruled the objection. Q. Wbat conversation did you have with Mr. Manson when you were making love about that time? A. I don't recall the complete con· versalion but he told me that I had a father hang.up. Q. Was this after you had sexual Intercourse? A. No, it was befOre. Q, Were you impressed when be said, this, that you had a father hang-up? A. Yes. BecaUM nobody ever said that to me and I did have a father hang.up. I hated my stepfather. Mrs. Kasabian then began describing one of the many camping expedJtion5 upon which Manson led his nomadic "family." She told how they camouflaged their campsites to avoid being spotted by helicoptenr. On Monday she teslifled that she first heard of Mamon and his clan from a girl who told her of "a beautiful ma.n that we'd all been waiting for." Her testimony was interrupted repeated· ly by defense objections. Construction Strike Enters Second Day GRANADA, Spain (UPI) -A renewed walkoot by 12,000 construction worker• entered its second day today amtd hopes of a quick solution. Union leaders met Jate Monday with represtntatives of the striking workers to iron out an agreement. They promised no workers would be dismissed and salaries for tlme Iott would be paid provided work was reswned today. Government spokesmen prtdlcted the8e new C0""8llON would bring • speedy end to the deadlock. Beach Girl Home After Tragic Death of Fiance Connie Jo Pfister, a 20-year-old model and beauty queen, has returned to her Huntington Beach home grieving over the.death of her fiance, a wealthy Kansas Industrialist. Her fiance John Dav Id Austin, 27, vice president and a director of Air Midwest and managing partner of the Adair Oil Company, died in Wichlta last week while Miss Pfister was at- tending a bridal shower. Mr. Austin died while he WU shoWing young relatives how he could swim underwater In his mother's pool. Witnesses told police that he swam the length and breadth of the pool three times and then sank to the bottom ·..., he tried. to surface. An autopsy tater showed he suffered a heart auack. "I was attending a bridal shower at the country club at the time, u Miss Pfiater said at ber borne at 5421 Eldorado Drive, HWltington Bee.ch, Monday. The couple planned to marry Sept. 12 and live In Wichita. Jaymie Boyd, thJs year's Miss Huntington Beach, was to have been a bridesmaid. Miss Pfister, who held the Huntington Beach t!Ue in 1969, met Mr. Austin at an aviation trade show in Anaheim last December. She was a hostess for an aircraft firm . Mr. Austin, a business graduate of the University of Oklahoma, was a founder of Air Midwest and an official of the Kansas Independent Oil and Grus Association. He wrus also a director of the Wichita· based American Fidelity Inc., the A&J Building Corporation and G re ate r Downtown Wichita, Inc. LTV to Market Braniff Shares ? DALLAS (UPl) -Financially troubled Ling· Temco-Vought, Inc., said Monday it may sell its Interest in Braniff Interns· tional Airways. It mentioned a price of $150 million. But LTV emphasi7.ed the "highly preliminary" nature of present negotia- tions. The official company statement read: "In response to inquiries relating to reported negotiations on the possible sale of its 56 percent interest in Braniff Airways, Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc .• said today that it is conducting highly preliminary negotiations in several areas that could · lead to disposition of its interest in the airllne. Junior Guards Set Comp etition J unior lifeguards from Huntington Beach, San Clemente and Santa Cruz will do bait.le in sand and sea at Hun· tington Beach Wednesday. The youngsters will be competing ln the Junior Lifeguard ChamponshJps from 9 a.m. to noon near the Huntington Beach lifeguard headquarters. Program director Doug D'Amall of the Huntington B e a ch Lifeguards said that teams will be divided according to age. The 0 A" team will be composed of boys 13 and younger and the "B" team of 9 to lJ..year-olds. -· Singer Cilia Black Gives Birth to Son LONDON (UPI) -Singer Cilla Blacic gave birth Sunday night to a boy weighing 8 pounds, 12 ounces, the first child for her and• husband Bob Willis. Willis, her former manager. said bot.h mother and 1011 ...,.. dointl well. l(idnap Susp.ects Helo Coo l Mom Helps Police Capture Trio By ARTllllll R. VINSEL °' ... ,... .. .,, Racing 338, miles against an I p. m. lleadli.De, ,a mtnkldrted mother carrying tt,500 ln fansom Monday met \lvee kidnap suspects in Costa Mesa and coolly helped police capture them and free her daughter Wlharmed. The trio of Connecticut men who r eportedly drove out to find the young woman and her husband were captured and disarmed without incident by lawmen listening to them via hidden microphone. Investigators had nothing but praise (or auburn-haired Mrs. Yvonne Parker. 40, who works as a troubleshooting manager for a chain Of Phoenix restaurants. "She WU beauUful. Just beauUful," said Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride. "She pulled it oil without a hitch." Mrs. Park~ eacorted her daughter Stacy, 22, away from the c.osta Mesa apartment she shares wl"1 her husband, Mark C. Peyton, 22, at · 2020 Wallace Ave., to set the stage. PoUce then captured two accused kid-: napers together and a third was ap- prehended ,.parately, 1,..ing Peyton. Complaints charging the Connecticut men with kidnap and grand thelt Will be sought today from the Orange County District Attorney's office, acc<>rding to Detective Capt. Bob Green. 1'1ey were identified as: -James M. MeShane, 13, a Stratton!, Conn., bartender. -Donald E. Von Remoortere, 24, a Stratford computer pr0gram<r. -Frank W. Plpcin, 11, a Brldg~ laborer. Capt. Green said the Couple were kid- naped froct a party ped aomewbere in Laguna Beach .. d told they bad 48 hours to come up with $1,500 or face unstated consequences. A series of cplls to relatives In Con- necticut and then to Mrs. Peyt.on's mother led the attractive mother of five other children to arrive in Costa Mesa late Monday aftemoon. "She drove all the way over from Phoenix and then when we tried to put her up for the nighi she said she had to get back," eiplai.ned Sgt. McBride, one of the raiding team. .A microphone hidden in her clothing, Mrs. Parker went to the Wallace Avenue addres.s to find ~er daughter and son.i.Jl. law, but they weren 't present at that time. Police said she began gingerly pumptng one of the alleged kidnapers about whether they were armed, with what type weapons and who among them carried the guns. Onfy one pistol wls subsequenUy found. "For a mother -not even knowing what to expect -she pulled II-.U beautifully'' said Sgl McBride. "Talk about anxious moments .•. all we could do was bite our nails," he continued. John Wayne's Brother Dead GLENDALE (UPI) -Funeral services will ~ private for Robert Emmett Mor- rison, 58, brother of Newport Beach resident John Wayne, the family said Monday. Morrison, a motion picture production executive, died Saturday of cancer. Like his more famous brother John, he played football at the University of Southern California and was a member of the 1932 national championship team. This was the second death in the family this year. The mother, Mary Preen, died in March. Several detective.a Were polled to mate the capture and other officers were 1ta .. ttoned at key polnta nearby to await the climax. During this period, Mr. and Mrs. Peyton were returned. Sgt. McBride said the alleged lddnapers wanted Mrs. Parker and Stacy to ac- company them but she talked them into laking the keys to her car and allowing them to leave separately. The men were instructed to unJock the lrunk, where they would find fl,500 in cash, as demanded. Detective Norm Kutch watched as the two women reached safety and climbed a fence to confront a pair of the suspects u they left the apartmoot complex. 0 He got the other two and I grabbed the great big dude 'from behind/' aald Sgt. McBride, explaining . that Papcin b .slx feet tall ilnd weighs 2!5 poundl. O'Jicen: wbo bad been waiting nearby converged onto the scene and a police helicopter swept in o v er h e a d • ii· luminltJng the area with its searchlight. Subtequent investigation led t o discovery of a small amount of ·mari- \uana in the victima' 1partment and Peyton wu arrested on that charge. He told police . he had been roughed up. by . his captor during the two-day period, but Investigators said he showed no evidence of a serious beatin£. Marlne's Wife Victim Police Find Few Leads In San Clemente Killing By JOHN VALTERZA Of ,,.. Dlllt ....... "'" The police investigator · worklng the stl.IJ.acUve. beating and stabbing murder of San Clemente resident Mri: Connie Jolmaon has returned fr<im ber home lllale this week wlth few ir.sh leads. Detective Leonard Goodwin said his trip to Minnesota produced litUe new evidence in the baffling June 16 slaytng in the housewife'• small apartment near the municipal pier area . In receot weeks Goodwin and other detectives have held repeated con· feren<ts with Marine Lance Cpl. Mark Johnson, 19, the dead woman's husband, to retrace steps taken in earlier talb. But that, too, has yielded Uttle, detec- tives have aaid. One man had been arrested July 3 Fro,.. Page I MIDEAST •.. that Egypt, freed from the harassment and surveillance of the Israeli air force by a cease-fire period, would strengthen its ground defen!es along the Suez Canal as well as move its Soviet antiaircraft missiles up to the waterway. Therefore, the Israelis are expected to say they will . join in a neW' cease-fire only if Ibey get guarantees that the Egyptians canrklt exploit the truce period .iq that manner. 'There have been suggestions for a United Nations ob.servation force to guard against any of the antagonists using the lull of bolster !ts front·line positions. But the Israelis h a v e had no faith in U.N. effectiveness since Secretary-General U 'Thant withdrew the peacekeeping force from Siani· in 1967 at Egypt's demand, an action which peacekeeplng force from Sinai in 1967 war. The Israelis also doubt the ef- fectiveness of a cea.!ire · beca45t of the rejection by the Paleslliuan guer· rillas. The U.S. plan calls for resumption of peace talks using U.N. envoy Gunnar Jarring as the iDtennediary. Newspaper Head Di es NEW YORK (AP} -Helen Rogers Reid, fonner publisher of the New York Herald Tribune, died Monday at 87. Mrs. Reid became president and pub.lisher of the newspaper upon the death of her husband, Ogden, in 1947. Sbe retired as board chairman in 1955, remaining as a board member. In the ~~,i?"t after • weekend In custody co~ with Intensive fn· vesUgation, Rhniie Wayne Mellino, 19, was set free withbut charges. He, also, is a Marine. · ' · Since then the investigators have doubl· ed. back to retrace every possible upeet of the case. 'l1lt inveStlgation even reached ·tnto the realm of the bizarre asserted satanic ritual death of Mission Viejo teacher Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown and t··~ six drifters facing trial Jn her butchering death. But after a day of Interviews with arrestees in the Brown murder, San Clemente Police came up with nothing linking ·the two cases except for the style of lmHe used· to inl1Jct wounds on both women. The weapm, a common blade known as a K·bar combat knife, allegedly was usea in each killing. Two other key links in the chain of evidence are still nlis&rlg -a pair of tennis shoes which could have made a print found In the kitchen sink in the slain woman's apartment and Mrs. Johnson's wallet missing from the scene when police arrived. The husband discovered his young wife's body sprawled on the bed as he returned from guard duty at the Marine Helicupter Facility in Santa Ana. Mrs. Johnson had been dead about 24 hours, police said. Her borne had some signs of entry, but that aspect has never been con· finned. The window above the sink was open. Oulside, beneath jt, sat a metal folding chair. Repeated cmtacts with neighbors has revealed little information on unusual noises or circumstances in the predawn hours when Mrs. Johnson was b e ate n with a bar stool and stabbed repeatedly in the neck, chest and abdomen. Peace Plan Brings Hope in Dock Strike LONDON (AP) -A five-point peace plan brought hope Monday night for a settlement in the 13-day-old dock strike I.hat has crippled Britain's imports and exports. The plan, from a government·appointed board of inquiry, turned down the main wage demands by the 47 ,000 striking dockers but it recomme nded im· provements in overtime, vacation and "modernization" payments, which could hold substantial appeal for I.he str:ikers. It's The Second Big Week of our •••• GRAND .OPENING SALE! We are pleased to announce the open ing of our second store in Tustin. We have purchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new nam e wil l be 11 Alden 's Red Hill Ca rpets & Dra pe ries." e IN COSTA MESA e ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia A\'a.. Phono 646-4138 In conjunction with the open- ing of ou r Tustin store, we"have severa l spec i a Is in our Costa Mesa sto re. Please come in and see us. e IN TUSTIN e ALDEN'S RED HIU CARPETS e DRAPES 18374 E. Irvin• Phono 83~344 VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. I " I JI I . 1 I I 'I -------·---------·-·--------------------------:-----------~------=----:-............ ..., • , '\ TuuO.,, July 28, 1970 H DAILY '1l~• :f • to Face Press Thursday PRESiDENT NIXON SHOWS DINNER GUESTS GROUNDS OF WESTERN WHiTE .Jo!OUSE Senator Murphy and the Re•gans Visit S•n Clemente to B,...k Bre.d and Maka Some Political Hay Feathered Friends ·F ·un . Falconry Fan Fond of Sport, But Fears Fad Approaclt By TERRY COVILLE Of 1111 OlllY ,lltt St•ff Donald Brent Carnes, Ill, likes his feathered friends best. Hawks and falCOlls to be specific. . The 21-year-old Fountain Valley resi- dent trains, hunts, feeds and cuddles them. He's rather fond of the !pOrl of falconry , but 1doesn 't invite otbers to ta.ke""it up. .. I care for my birds .. It .1fafql!TY became a fad these birds wouli:!. be wiped out. Nine out of every te~s captured by a human die by ~at ~1uman. Those are poor odds for the birds ... But his phone 11umber, M2-8314, is open to anyone who has a bird or prey and wants htformation op how to train and care for it. "It takes a lot· or time and c;are. I spend 10 hours a day with my three birds," he said. . . Personal contact is the key to tra1n1ng birds by Don's philosophy. . . "You start with a captured bird. Birds taken from the nest can't be used. They haven 't learned how to kill _from their parents. and it's not heredita~. Jf a bird lhat didn't know how to kil l eve r escaped captivity it would die . "It takes a week or more of simpl~· feeding the bird to build trust. ~ive him tidbits, chunks of meat . "Then start to carry the bird 0111 your fisl several hours a day._ Always ap- proach it with rood . A bird t~at wtll sit on your fist without hoppmg off is properly manned. "Once the bird is manned you start bringing it to your fist. Sta~d a foot away arid whi stle. Always whistle when you reed ii. Getting the bird to hop off the perch and on to your fist is the hardest part. ''Gradually stand farther from the perch. When you fly the bird keep a line on him. I use a 40-50 pound test fiShing line and a fishing pole. , _ "When the bird will return com1stently at your first whistle. he's tral11~. ~en weigh him and keep track of his Oy1ng weight. If he gets heavy don't Oy him, he's eating too moch. You only get your bird back out of hunger." Once lhe bird 's flying skill Is set, the hunting part starts, Carnes explained. "Buy live birds or animals, hold them In one hand . your bird iPI the other, 1hen toss the game out fGr the bird to catch. You can ·train a hawk or falcon to ·hunt specific game." Carnes has three birds, two hawks ~nd a falcon, while his 16-ycar-old brother Dana has two hawks 11nd their younger ~ister, Becky, has a young Great }lorn Owl. "We have three types of birds, besides the owl. A Lugger (falcon). two Red Tail Hawks and two Coopers' Hawks.·~ Don compared the Cooper's Hawk to a JOO-yard sprinter, fast over a short distance. The Red Tall Hawk , he said, iS like a piper cub plane ; it's good for a long distance, but not very fast. Red Tails are actually classified as buuards, and spend most of their lime sos:ring, &earthing for dead or wounded game. "The Coopers' Hawk is like a jet -fa st for a Ions distance." The Red Tail Hawk eats small mam- mals, snakes and rodenls. It's not Jast enough to catch bird$, Carnes ex plained. The other hawk eat!I birds or small animals, while the falcon sUck& mostly with bird! and an occasional roden t. ''I fly my birds every day. That's \\'hen they feed ," Carnes sa id. "There '!! plenty of &Sime, rabbltl and such, around DAILY PILOT Sl•ff Pllcti. 'BIRDS OF PREY LOOK FIERCE, BUT THEY'RE QUITE DELICATE ' Fountain Valley Falconer Carnes· and Red Tail Hawk Fountaht Valley and Hu11Ungton Beach." Don and Dana bolh have falconry licenses - a requirement -issued by the California Department of Fish and Game . A hunting lice~. with the same regulations as applied to the mu with a rifle, is required to use the birds for hunting. "Some people think H's cruel,'' said Don, "but I think it's fairer than Jookjng through a high powered scope and drop- ping an animal several hundred yards away. "With falconry your pr ey ahvays has · a chance to get away. The strong ones \Yill. And if these birds were on their own, they'd eat parl of their prey <.nd leave the resl lo "'Ol. We make sure every part of the dead gime is eaten." Hawks and falcons may look viciou.s but they can prove to be quite delicate animals. "They're sick a Jot and you have le> take good care of them. They have to be wormed every six months." The owl -only type of owl a11owed to be captured by law -was found as a baby, its mother dead from some unknown bunter's rine. "My sister is training the owl herself. He's not a hunter." "I like animals. I like training these birds to perform to their best, but it's expensive and time consuming," Don ended, as he went over to chuck a Red Tall Hawk under its chin -er, beak. Bikinis Winning in Spain MADRID (AP) -This may be the year Spanish women (inally win their bikini war. •Well, alluost. It's not that thel'f: i1 any law against the scanty swimsuits.· but a segment of Spaniah sotjety looks down on the jdea. There alao are swimming areas where bathers are ~gregated by sex and bikinis or any two-pltce suits are flatly prohibited. ··1 would say bikini sales are up at least 70 percent this year," says Juan Andujar. manager of a small store of! the Puerta del Sol. His customers hardly Rte the type to · haunt Madrid's chit shops looking for European fa11hlons. He has tenni t1 !ihnes in his display window. He al:MJ has 1wlmsults1 although not bikinis, Jn the window. He displays 1 daringly cut, single-piece suit. This ob- viously is to satisfy . the rules of establishments that prohibit two-piece suits. It also alerts potential customers that there is something a bit more swinging inside. Pt1ost of his bikini customers are young single women, but a few married women also are buying this year. Why the bikini upsurge~ ''Be:caµse the censorship Is oVcr,'' 1111ys Andujar. He is referring to a widely publicized court ruling earlier this yenr thal said bikinis and two-piecers are not Immoral at swimming areas whero they arc the custom. ,, By RICllAllD P. NAIL Of .......... ~ President Nlion will lace the preas ln Los Ancelt.s 'Mlursday at a p,m. (PDT) In a live conrerenCe carried on all networks. The conferenc~. 1 part of Mr. Nixon's continuing emphasis Qn conducUng the Pre:iidency lh ··I.he West some of the time, will allow people in the West an opportunity to see the Chief Executtve questi0t1ed durlns prime eVening time. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the conference will be alon& the lines of those held in the East Room of the White House. in Washington. It will be Mr. Nixon's third lhis year, two of whlch were televised. The last was July 20. Ziesler said the President would begin Immediately with questions from the press and is not expected to make an opening statement. The conference will prObably be held at the Century ·Plaia Hotel. BreakinB ln on a busy work schedule Monday, the President held a dlrmer party at his Sil.n Clemente home for California's two leading Republican can- didat'es, Gov. Reagan and Sen . George Murphy. The President and Mrs. Nixon posed for pictures with ReagJ'n, his wife and Murphy at the Spanish-style villa. The President met them in his fringe-top soil cart and drove them to hi! villa where they were greeted by the first lady. Bol.h Reasan and Murphy are pointing for November re-election. The P.resident posed with them for pictures and then invited photosrapbers to his patio. He then led them tD a point where the ocean served as a background. He invited newsmen to go swimming in the ocean. The surf was up and he offered them the use of his surf board -a gift -that he said has never been used. The President met with top advisors this morning at the Western White House for prellmlriary discussions on the next defense budget. Mr. Nixon plans tc> send the Pentagon spending blueprint to Congress in January. Assisting him today were George P. Shultz, director of the office of management and budget; Caspar Weinberger, deputy director: John Ehrlichman. executive director of the new domestic council ; and Henry A. Kissinger, assistant for national security affairs. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird met with the Preiident Monday in San Clemente to discuss P e n t a go n reorganization proposals. He then return- ed to Washington. Laird told newsmen while here that the annual cost of fighting the Vietnam war has been cut in half since Mr.. Nixon took office,' down from a peak of f29 billion annually tG about $14.5 billion. He did not spell out the cuts. Some 150 recommendatfons from a blue ribbon task force on defense depa_rt- Cereal Makers Def end Products Against Study WASHlNGTON (AP) -Cereal makers have defended their breakfast foods as nutritious and wholesome in the face or Senate testtrnony of a nutrition expert who said most cereals contribute little to good health. Most leading dry cereal makers defended their products against the ac- cusations of Robert B. Choate, 40, a Washington based citizen-lobbyist. Some major producers indicated he didn 't know what he was talking about. Choate appeared before the Senate consumer subcommittee anned with results of a study he made that showed 40 out of 60 types of cereals · lacked enough nutritional value to rate u half a complete meal. A spokesman for Kellogg Co. said "leading nutrition authorities In the na- tion just do not agree with Mr. Choate.'' Dr. John J. Hopper, Kellogg's director of research said "civil engineer CllOate's theories and so-called formula might be meaningful or applicable if you are diggi ng a mine shaft, but they are com· pletely valueless as a yanfstick for mea suring. the nutritional values of any type food -not just cereal." · Choate, a former conJultant to the White House, Department of Health, Education and Welf8re and several con- gressional committees, said his ranking of the 60 cereals oversimplified the in- teraction of nutrien ts. But ''It does portray what cenal companies are boasting about on their own boxes." General Foods, makers of Post cereals, said Clioate's study and testimony in- cluded "a great many technical errors/' one of which It said was the con- demnaUon of pre.!lweetened cereals on the grounds they may lead to the con- 1umption of too much sugar. "In our opinion, exactly the oppoaite Js true," the com piny S a i d - "Pre.sweetened cereala provide a measure of control over sugar intake that b not present when the young consumer sweetens his own." Nabisco, maker of the bottom-ranked ce real, Shredded Wheat, defended 11.s product as "an excellent source of nutri- tion," which is recognized as such by "experts in the neld, the medical pro. fess Ion and dlelicians." 1he cereal makers wlll get their chance lo rebul OlOat's testimony Aug. 4, 1ubcommittee aides 1ald. men.t rt0rg1nliation are to bti made public Wednesday In Wuhlnglon. J.aird said the Pentagon, henctlorth, will contract for planes .and other we&DaDI 111\tml Qn I 11ny btfort ')'OU IMly' ~ buls lo avoid long term com· mltmerdll to ac;cept delivery or hems !bat nist only on lhe dr1wtn1 boards. ' . UNDERSECRETARY PACKARD TALKS Al!OUT KOREA With Defense Secretary Laird et Weste.rn ~lte HouH " Fly Now, Par Later V.S. Warplane Policy Change Vowed by Laird By JOHN VALTERZA Ot l1'HI D•llY PU.II 51•11 The government will fly expensiye warPIBnes, tE;St th~m, lhen dee~ whether It wants to buy them, Secretary of ·Defense Melvin Laird vowed in San Clemente Monday. SpeakinS on the .Fitzhugh R~J?Ort ~d­ vocatlng sweeping Changes in his depart- ment, the secrelary said the plan - to eliininate long-tenn commitments for expensive '\reapons systems -would eliminate the huge financial losses such as tho~e incurred in the C1lstly TFX and C5A warplanes. ''I call It fly before yoU buy,'.' he· told the White }louse press in a Wed· nesday· afternoon briefing. Fresh froin a conference with Pr(!sl- dent NtxOn, Laird said ·the' soaring 'costs of the nati.on's Pefense was the :riain poin't of concern . That same concern over: soaring costs for manpower and materiel will occupy President Nixon through . t~ay. as he and his top budget aides co~l!nue to examine the defense spending picture. Secrela'ry Laird, who left for Washington, D.C .• immediately after his appearance In San Clemente Monday, said that the Fly-before-you-buy sug- gestion by lhe blue-ribbon panel l'alrcady is being implemented." It means, he added, that Instead or committing itselr to a six or seven-year procurement contract on extre':llely ex- pensive weaponry, the Defense Depart- ment wlll actually test the articles first, then decide on their worth after long evaluation. He added, however. that the plan would only apply to future contracts, not those alrea<:y committed -including the two planes already mentioned, whose costs have soared by millions of dollars over origi~al projections. "This new plan gives us some milestones along the way so that we can review. cancel . increase or decrease our budget on speci ric items, instead of commilling ourselves for a specific period." The lengthy report . termed a "sweep. Ing change" In the structure of the coun- try1s detense agencies , wa.s compiled by a blue ribbon panel headed by Gilbert Fltihugh. chair.nan or the board of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. It was released by the White House staff late Monday. Besides the procurement aspects, It calls for sweeping changes in the ad- ministraUve structure nf the Pentagon. It wa9 the first such change in that structure since 1m. and much of the new suggestions could be implemented without the official sanctk>n of Congress, Laird said. Moving on to the troubled defense segment Of the federal )budge ts the secretary pointed out huge fl~cal pro- blems In financing an all -volunteer anny as suggested by the Pre.~ldent. q ylnt:t that costs for manpower in the Armed Forces hnve. doubled in recent year11, whtrtas the total of men Involved ha!! remained the sr.ne. "A tremendous amount or money will be needed," Laird explolncd, "and I~ would run Into several billion dollars. Getting that much from Congreu in suoh .a ihort. Um!. will be difficult, ln- .:;Cfeed." ... J The ·government 0COil for 'a force · of 2.i m.il!iOn men In serv)ce ha!! Soared !roin $J4 billi~n,' in 19ss to··,~ lill¥on this fiscal year. . · • · . 1 Queried on· troop ' withdr.awaJS• from the' ltepublic or Korea, 'Laii'd" iNiie the podium to Undersecretary of ·Det~&i David Packard, who said the withdrawal• frcr.n. South Korea will have to be' ae- c;ompanied by a pouring-hi of . new weapons and other equipment in . the troops' wake. · · ' · Packard, fresh from conference:t with Korean Tepresentatlves in HawaH, would Rot si)ecify 'how many lroops. would be withdrawn, or when the pulJout ·would start· Laird thea answered questions bh lhe latest American peace proposals' for the Middle East and lheir TelaUonship 1wlth recent requests for military aid by Israel. "There have been some very important new developments in the past few days (a partial acceptance by the Arab faC'· lions and ·predicted Israeli concurrence with the peace plan) and we're watching it all.very closely," Laird said. "[ can a~ure }'11u we're watchins the balance very c}osely." He said he would re.serve comment on the Soviet buildup in Egyj>t, bul he believed the latest Indications from the area to be "rather hopeful." On relative missile· strength between lhe U.S. and the Soviets, the secretary conceded that the USSR exeeeds or na- tion in total mis5iles and will surpass our ftlrce of Pola~1 mfasltes launched by submarine, by im "The only offsetting factor we have now is our bomber force, but by 1974 our y1>ungest B-52 will be 14 year1 okt and our oldest plane will be IO year1 old," he said. Marine Armory Theft Probed CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -The F~I Says Jt is still inveatlgatlng tht t~ft of t t weapons last Friday froin.a Mnii.e Corps armory locate<l near the Weate,m White House. . A Marine Corps 1pokesf'llln Aid several men dressed,. in.. Marine uniforms sneaked past two guarda out.side the armory in the Camp Margarita am of the base and entered the bulkll"I after knocking' a third sentry un- conscious. ' He said the ralden took nine Mtt automatic rifles., or>e .4S callber pbtol and an M70 grenade ~luncher rrom thl \\'eapons depot located about 11 miles from Prtsident Nlxon11 San Ciemente home. The 45,(l(IG.mat\ bese 'VI! Stlltd throughout the weekend but •• March of bulldlngs and vehicles has failed le> turn up the weapons or any auspecla, an FB! spokesman said. . · -----------------·----------- • , .. Tutsd'1, Julr 28, 1970 N~ Offensive Red Forces Seize Cambodian Ship ~ ., .. Dlllr ~-llltll Weltor Grimwood of Colchester, Enelalld bought an old post office truck at an auction ~ wa~ sur- pri•od to find a mailbag with 60 letters _inside. He notified postal authorities who said: 'We are per- turbed by this because we can't ex - plain bow it happened. The Jetters have now been delivered wttb an apology." • Chefs from 11 nations served up a sumptuous banquet recenUy for llS l(ueell al the Czechoslovak PavillClll to Expo '70. The four-hour meal •hlcluded caviar and suckling pig ·from the Soviet Un ion, stuffed quail from the United Slates, cold salmon from Britain, Canadian stuffed \rout, Belgian veal kidney, a w~g cako from Czechosio-vU!a' and a special cheese from Frallce. Glenn Trouy Kdtcltc, 11 months old, 1ho10S Jaoto to btat the heat and the cro!.1Cf1 at the beach in her grand· motfter'• wa.th tub in North Kings- town. R.I. Tractt1 U from West War· toick. • Parking meteri bl Madera, Calif. nevu collected enougli coiTll to JXJI/ for them.selves Ill thil farmiflfl community but Mondal/ the city announced ft had made a profit on them any. way. The 400 meters, ripped out ttDo 11ear1 ago were sold a.t nqt;Jlu' a or souwnirs and fhe 'flll 1talized $2,205. • . SAIGON (UPI) -Combloed Com· munlst forcts have bqun a major new offensive on the Kirirom Plateau ln a move to aeiie Cambodla'a ooly am-1 mWliUool 'fad«y, milllary IOllJ'C<S rtportecl loday in Phoom Ptnh. In Olber Cambodiu actm they Jm· buabed a refugee sblp, captwod the govemmeat'a only cement plant. and 'brought in guns and rein!~ls ID Anglrar Wat. UPI COrrespondent K"'*'th J. Brad- dicl:, with Cambodian government lroops near Kirirom, said 3,600• Communists made 1'P of North Vlelaameae, Viet Cong, Khmer Roure, and Pathet Loo, bad begun the offensrve to aelze control of the strategic platwa and Highway 4 Phnom'"Puh'a lifelioe to tbe aeL 'Braddlck said a Clmbodlan battalion commander, MJij. Som Ssolh, was •hot to death Monday near the <llaltt D'Elat, former summer home o! Prince Norodont Sihaoo-Jk, at the start of the offetslve. Three governmeol ballali0113 plilled back from tbe area to await Telnforoements. UPI correspoadent Robert Kaylor reported from Phnom Penh the Com· munists bad reinforced their troops around the historic temiile ruin.s of Angkor Wat and brought in either ar- tillery or antiaircralt weapons. The North Vietnameae 'Also were reported recruiting local Cambodian IOldiers. Kaylor said civilians who moved Into the temple area for safety were makiJl g uniforms for the recruits and deserters from the Camlwxli1n Army, He said the Communists told civilians ia the area the' site was being irepartd for the return of Prince Sihanouk, but lllled !ntelligence officers called this a pro- paganda statement aimed at the Cam· bodian peasants. The sharpest clash 11 Vietnam saw CommunJst ambushers ldll f o u r Americans and wound eight M.onday in trappiog a patrol of the U.S. 196th Llg)lt Infantry Brigade 70 miles Southwest of Da Nang. No guerrilla casualties wert reported. Military spokesmen said Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops in Cam- bodia opened up with utilank rockets and machine guns on a South Vietnamese Negro Resigns Cleveland Post As Top Lawman CLEVELAND (UPI) -Alt<r only lsr months on the job, former Air Force Lt. Gen. Benjamin 0. Davis Jr. resigned Monday as Cleveland'.s top police of!lcer, charging Mayor earl B. Stokes and mem- bers or rus administration "continued to provide support and comfort to the enemies of law enforeement." Aftthony Dnta11i of West Pater-Davis, 57, who until his retirement son, N .J. was fined $125 recently last January was the highest ranking fo~ v?-olatin~ zorung ord~ances by Negro in the armed service.s, refused building a pig~ coop without per-to elaborate on the charge saying be mluian. His neighbor, J-ph Bu· . . • be ello, filed the c 0 m p I a i n I • had discussed It with Mayor SIDke3, ••~ey do all their taxiing and have ; also a Negro. . , . their flight pattern right over my ~t?kes nam~ Davis assl~tant, Col. pool/' Barbage11o said. "Jt's a \\'.illiam H~ckson. as acting safety lousy situation. Pigeons sure aren't director. until a replacement can be found th I anest bird . th orid .. for Davis. e c e s In e w · Davis, in .a news conference attended e by Mayor Stokes and Police Chief. Lewis Inadequacies in the new $8.~ mil· lion headquarters building for the Washington State Highway Depart- ment showed up recently when a planning group attempted to show slides with a projector. OnJy one electrical outlet was found in the commission chambers and that plug was behind an electricaJ waJ I clock. The clock was turned oU !or the presentation. Qiffey, stressed the point that the enemies he rererred to were not violators of the law. Neither he nor the m a y o r would elaborate. "We have discussed the phrasing of that statement at Jengih with the mayor," said Davis, "but I am not going to tell anyone else what I mean." Davis also stated that the Stokes ad- ministration would not support the pr~ grams he had recommended. Navy LST carryJng 600 rtfu1ees down the Metona: River toward borne. Twenty of the refugees and four o( the ship's crewmen were reported wound- ed In the ambush 23 miles downriver from Phnom Peah, where the South Vietnamese had been kept ia cam~ since after the omter of Prince Norodom Sihanouk wt March 18. Two Officers Freed in Viet Slaying Probe WASHINGTON (UPI) -Th< Aimy dismissed charges today against two men involved in an alleged cover-up of the My Lai incident but ordered pre-trial Investigations for seven others, including Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster. Fourteen were originally charged in connection with allegations or a cover-up of the 1968 Vietnam incident slayings or South Vietnamese civilians but charges have now been dropped against seven. Those exonerated ,today were Col. Robert B. Luper of Federal, Ark .. and Capt. Kenneth W. Boatman of Ralston, Neb. The Army said an "evaluation of the evidence" showed that "no further proceedinp were warranted." In addition Co Koster, whc> was the superintendent at West Point when the charges were filed in Mardi, those facing further investigation are Col. Oran K. Henderson. LL Col. David C. Gavin, Lt. Col. William D. Guinn, Maj. Charles C. Calhoun, Maj. Frederic W. Walke and Capt. Dennis H. Johnson. The pre-trial investigation is similar to a grand jury proceeding, and determines whether or not a court martial trial will be held. The Army said all of the Investigative hearings will be closed sessions. Luper was commanding a battalion of artillery and Boatman Was an artillery forward observer at the time of the alleged massacre. Koster, who lists West Liberty, Towa, as his home, was in command of the Americal Division at the time of the alleged slayings. Finn President Returns Home After U.S. Trip NEW YORK (UPI) -President Urho Kekkonen wound up llis five-day state visit to the United States and headed home Monday, taking with him President Nixon's reassurance of conUnuing Fln- nish·U.S. friendship, but not the definite commitment of support for the planned European security conference he llad sought. Kekkonen, who last visited New York ln 1961, told a midday 1uncbeon with David Rockefeller, president of the Chase Manhattan Bank : "Much has happened during these past nine years, but. as we were able to establish during my discussions with my host, President Nixon, and with the secretary of state, Mr. (William P.) Rogers, nothing has happened which would have burdened the fundamentals or the friendly relations which have always existed between Finland and this great country. "During my discussions In Washington. we were able to agree that there are no grievances, no conflicts of interest between our two countries. 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Disappointed Rock Fans Battle Chicago Police CHICAGO (AP) -Thousands of angry :youths stormed a stage in Grant Park Monday after the featured performer& at a free rock concert failed to appear Russian Accord On Arms 1.imits Believed Near LONDON (UPI) -Russia Is inching slowly and cautiously toward agreement with the United States oo a freeze of olfensive and defensive missiles. 'Ibe Kremlin expects a declaration or intent lo emerge Crom negotiations in Vienna, aulhoritaUve C om m u n is t dipkmtatic sources said Monday. The Russians foresee -broadly in accord with the Americans -an agree- ment freezing land-based Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles and sea-fired rockets, as well as a limitation of anti-missile defenses in the first stage of a wider strategic arms limitation concept, the sources said . But Ole current session of the Strategic Arms LimltaUon Talks (SALT) in Vienna is not likely to produce a firm accord yet. It is expected. to end with a declara- tion of intent of the two superpowers to work out a rocket freeze accord, possibly by next year. The ~s said the talks are going, well and progress is being made. with both superpowers evidently intent oo halting the dange rous nuclear arms race. Financial C'OflsideraUons are playing . at least as great a part on the skie of the Ru-Wans as on that of the United Stales in the current effort to put limit! on the:ir rocket development programs. Italian Premier Forming Regime ROME (UPI ) -Premier-designate Emilio Colombo began the delicate task of welding together a new national government 11-1or\day. The stock market reacted wlUt a spurt upwards . The 5G-year-0Jd OtrisUan Democrat, an eight-Ume treasury minister credited "'1th keeping the Italian economic: "miracle" going, met with his own party Jeaders first . But his list of appointments made It clear be will try to revive the foUJ'i)AJ'· ty coalition whfch r,n 22 days ago amid signs of deep Ideological and peraonal differences . News of Colombo's appointment lo try to end the latest government crl.s is wa.s greeted by tnvestors with relief. The stock market r~ected business ton· fidcnee In Colombo by moving up In ae~sa-tho-boarcl deallna:s. I and the IeaUval tunoed lnlo a bloody brick-tossing ballle with JlO[lce. An esUmated 2,000 of the 50,000 )'Ouths galhered Jn the park fought with. police and later rampaged through the down- town area smashing ears and sto£e dis· play window! Several automobiles were set ablaze. There were l" persons arrested. More than 100 pet90lla, includfne 24 policemen, were injured. Three youths were shot aad wounded. Police said It was not defes'mlned if the gtmahot victims were hit by policemen's bullets. The melee begu lhortly after the 4 p.m. starting time armounctd for a rock group called Sly and the Family Stone. The performers did nol appear on stage, and unhappy youths waJUng in the muggy, Slklegree heat, pelted. the stage with stones and bottles. "This is the fourth rock concert I've been to alld it's the fourth time they haven't come on stage," said Helen Lozowsky, 18. Another teenager, Sheri Meltz.er, 18, said: "Sly Is chicken. He's afraid to come on stage whenever the crowd gets too big. That cat don't know where his head is." The concert was sponsored by the ChicagG Park District to provide an apportunity for Sly and the Family Sto1e, which canceled several eoncerb ht Chicago recently, to appear and please the disappointed youths. Neither the rock group nor Part: District officials were available today for comment on Monday's riot A Park District spokesman said, however that the status: of future rock concuts plamed for Grant Park will be disrussed by ofricia1s. The batUe betwee.1 police and youths started when patrolmen tried to eject young people who stormed the stq:e. Some youths threw missiles at t~ in· truders on the sLage and a Pohceman was struck. Squads of police conver1ed on Grant Park and authorities ordered the concert canceled and the field cleared . * * * Ri.Oters Routed In Asbury Park ASBURY PARK, N,J. (UPI) -Pollce firing abotp1 blUts Iolo the air •arly loday dlsperoed • c:rnwd of llOlllO !O young biacts wllo bad bt<n throwing rocks at puslng c:an. Police reported 10 perBOnS were ar· rested and not one was seriously injured. Most arruls involved di>Orderiy conduct charges . Deputy Police Chle.f Thomas Flanagan said moat of lbose am:sted were about 15 yean old. A fire broke out In • cabinet sales 01.1t\et in the area. "We woukl term h suspicious untll we can call It othcrwlse," Flan11an aaid. l 300 Evacuated As Deadly Gas Released in Fire INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. {UPI) -Yellow. green chlorllie gas churned through ·a 10 block residential and industrial area Monday night after fire broke out at the Mldstate Chemical and Supply Co. warehouse. At least 300 residents were evacuated, but they were allowed to return to their homes five hours later. Eleven firemen and four civilians were hospitalized at Marion~Qiunty General Hospital. One fireman, Ronald Gammon , wa.s in critical condition with back, neck and leg injuries suffered when he fell through the roof of the burning warehouse . More than 8 dozen othe r persons were treated for smoke and gas inhalation. James Roberts. co-owner or the warehouse , said 150 canisters were spill- ing out the gas and firemen would have to seal them. None of the other chemicals in storage was dangerous. he said. But officials warned residents return- ing to their homes to ventialte them as much as possible and not. to use air oondilionlng systems Monday night. No Foundation To Auto Hazard? TORONTO (UPI) -Markeling, the Canadian advertising weekly, has turn- td up a survey which alleged that women's girdles are an auto ufeti har.ard. The study said the well-encased lady driver tends to squirm, dlstractlng at • tentlon from her driving, and fights back against the garter pull -pushlnr down with her accelerator foot. A leading girdle manufacturer denied the claim. "There is no ronndalion for thest 1t1tement.s." be said. • -----------·--------- I 11 I I 11 I! ., . ' • Fo11i11ai .•I .¥a Ted•y'1 Fbal· " ! : VOL 63, N0 •. 179, ·2 SECTIONS , 28 PAGES•·· . :· ORANGE COUNTY,'CA~IFORNIA • JUESOAY, JULY 28, '1970 fEN CENTS • .· ! . ' . r:-: ' • . ! ' . • t • '" • ~. !'.J • .•. : !l 1 j;,,•.: --~--,. ' ·, .. .. o .a··:. ~.o. .. ~~:Ct' ''-./I 1 ' ~ I j -, • I • ' ) ' ' I I • ' • ' fll. ' !DAILY ~ILOT Slltff IJMlll RISNER (CENTER) SETTLES NEXT Tp .CQUNCILMAN HOLDEN (lE~Tl AS MEETll'jG STARTS In S.•I BMch, On Your M•rk, Get Set, Get f ired, Quit, R11lgn,.or ~t'.1'K:flled. · ' City ,H91,i~r$, Huntington Beacli .hU beeii nam• ed one of ·\he ;i ,i!\au.ts In the .(ll~Amtrica Cities A w a rd I Co,ll)peti~ioo. . . . . The All-America .City Award is bestowed by the National Municipal League for notable improvements In. COJTIJ'"UOity living br~ght •b?Ul by "citizen action." A spokesman for the. league said that this ye'ai"s finalists stressed accOmplis.hments · in areas of social and' race rela- tions, 'and in community develop- ment. The only other California city named as a finllm was Mountain Vlf:w. The 11 winners of the Ali· . America ·city Awards ·•ill .be-an· nounced early in 197f. · The finalists w~r!? ann~nced ·bY Will iam w. Scran~on. pre;tdent of the National Municipal' L:eaR'Ue and fonner governor of ~nnsylvania. State Shoreline Control Stalls ln Assembl y SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill putting development of ca'!ifomia'!"l.JOIY mile shOreline under slaU: "COOIJ'ol stalled ·31-31 today on an early Assembly roll ca·u. The roll was left open until artemoon on the bill, which requires 41 vOteS il\fthe 8Q..seat house. The Assembly tuii!ed ·d~wp a. 8ir'!es. or slx amendment.s to appropriate $~50.000 in state ,m°'.'ey for lbe prOJ>Ofied shOreline commission,· lo :set up. an in-· dependent staff for the commission and ' to ,put more cO~servaUon~ on the stale board and five regional boards. The 1 bill, which has been criticized for giving too much contrnl to city and county ofricials. was attacked on . the Assembl y floor by conservatives for giving "unbelievable powers'' to the new state qency. 1'This measure abrogate.s .property rights," said AMemblyman 'John Stull (J\.Le.ucadia). "Poople wilo woufd Oke- to develop coutlinf: pf(lptrty have only the right tb J><I)' taxCS On it." • Assemblyman J>ete Wilson (R.San Diego), autho'r of the measure, said eo1stlin,e develqpment is Jroceeding "at such a pact, Js we don 't act this Mll'ISlon . • • there will be the lpss of u n to I d thousands of acres." The bill would limil for six mont.h11 all coastline developments involving dredging, reduction of public access lo the shore, •':.ubstanliar'-development" or reduction or shore.line view" trosn the nearr.st road. Detailed devtJ~ent criteria for 11 1.000-yard al rip arong the coast would bf! prepared by the statewide board and put Into efftct by the regional board1 dutJnc Ille oht·-th 111rWp period. Senate,Freeway,·~e~, _, Pos~ip~ned ·iii ·S~.Jtiifu~nl6 .; . . ' By THOMAS ' POllTVN!: ot ............... ttlfl ~CRAMENTO -• ' A Se n·a t-~ Tran~portaUon C.OmmJtl.et hearing on•• bill .·to delete PaCi.i:ic. Coast Freeway through Newport Beach and part of Huntington BeaCh was Postpon.ed Monday and tentatively rescheduied for 2 p.m, Monda)'. " An commit{fe hearirigs were called off .when the Senate decided to continue meeting as a whole into · the · afternoon en Governor ' Rtagan'i ·$1 billion tax• reform program .. A fiiiAI · vbte: on taX' reform was exPectert late today which would rele~r.. the -"w;a~ for resumption of committee hearings on Wednesday. - . About 20-person$ frpm the· Oran~e COast including ·city ·officials from Newpert Beach, Huntingto n Beach. Costa Mesa and La,iuna Beacn had flcrwn to sa'cram~\o for' tht ·freeway hear~g- Monday.' ' · ' · . . ' Perhaps lhe mosl disa ppointed was Costa Mesa· Mayor Robert Wilson who hai:I to cancel ·aS ma11ler of ceremonies for a Monday rtlirem~nt luncheQn honor- ing former Costa Mer;a City Manager Ar1 McKenlie. R.ound-trlp airplane fares for all the persons who flew to Sacramento lo lcstify on the frei!way bill prbtiably total- ed more than $1,000: Most said they .WQuld make the trtp again Yfedilesday or whenever the bill comes up. ' Paul Gruber, fonher Newp(lrt ' Beach rpayor 0 Who ' noW: is vtce chainhan· lJf· Harbor Area Freeway• Fighters, .SJid, By FREDERICK SCHOEME!ll. ' Of rite 0.111 "'"" Stiff Saddleback COilege Trusteea Monday unanlmously agreed to appeal a' U.S. District Court ded!ion ruling that hair regullUons at the college were 'Un· constitutional. . The a~val came trier the board ' met in ~tive aellion for more than ' an hour. FOilowing the moli8n to appeal and ill second, trustee Michael Collin& ooliined the boanl'• po11Uon. "The fundamental issue here Is who will make rules and regulations roe the day-to-day affairs or the college. It can only be exercised by the local governing boa<d." .,. uid. Collins said that "the right and obli~a­ 'U6n and responsibility to' operite lhe !)'Mem of education la a state function, giv.n to the local bolrjl>." Jodge Harry Prqc-.rJOn ruled lhls month • that the coUeae ban on long hair was unCOMtitullonal. Students, aided by Ille Ammcan•CMI Liberties Union, "We'Ve been fightinf -this seven years. We're not loioc·k> aive up now." Awmblyrt11111 :Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach), who authored the freeway deletion bill, observed lhat "The Senate ill involved _ in_ an·emotional •battle and there ii no telling how long It \.\•ill lake." The Reagan tax package la designed to shift up to Sl billion from local property . taxes to slate sales, inco.me and 'business:orien.f.ed ·taxes. It al r.eady has been approved by the Assembly. "The lmportanf thlng is to. Preserve theae ·lovely towns -.and this applies also to Malibu, Santa Monica, Santa ~arbara -the towns haye t~e right lo be saved and . they should support each other .1 Laguna Beach surely has more in ·common with Newport Beach than it ha~ with the Division of Highways.'' . . Dilley said he agreed . that removal of the Newport segment or the freeway would not jeopardize Laiuna's position. QUEEN SHORT SHORT QUEEN SAN .JOSE' (AP) -Melodie Ann ShDrt. at S.foot-J the shortest con- testant In Utt Miss Sula Clara Co'unty beauty pageant, will reign over the county fair here Aug. • 14·23. . . · Miss Short. 18, won ·the tille over nine olher. finalists SatW'day · .ni@:ht . a'!d ' r.e«i.Ved a · t ~· O 0 scholarship. . . ' ' had taken the m3tter lo court to setUe the conUnuing hassle . .,. Colllns .said, "We must be responsible to the vm.ers to protect our prtrogatlve. Tl)al preroga~ive has. ~n lnfr,inged by lhis decisjon." 'JohA ,Powell, depl.lly county ~I. told a reporter that in appulinc the decis ion, the. board will use an earlier deClslon ' handed down to· 'the 'college In rilld-April,1 by' Uie 9th 'Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals • T.he. 'ru.llng overturned two district court · preliminary injunctions against 1'gainsl the Saddleback long hair regula- tiRtl.,. 1taUQC _"the (district) ...,COIJ.rt.. ls 'prt1umlng lo lnterfere with the day-l(>-- day operaUon of the · public IChool 1yslem." ' The decision also noted tbal the Supreme Court, in two e&IM!I, .iat.ed that whare liCbool officl1!ils •1.,.,.~own to have formally acted, the cqtirll lbould lntufere only wllb srut <••• ~ ;· • • ire . ')r Power B-loc Owts Manager, Attorney_ By RUDI NIEDZIEUIU Of rite Olfl1 ......... Sea1 Beach is a town divided today with both the city manaaer and city · attorney looking for new jobl. Both were fired by 3-2 vote ol the city council dur\ng a five-hour sess.J.on in the McGaugb'School audttoriumwtiere old friendships were torn asunder, tempers Oared and head.s roll~. The firing of Lee Ripr, chief ez. eCutive of the city for the past four and a half years, and thal of City Attorney James Carnes was .JC- complished b~ a new council power Mic: composed. of Mayor Morton Baum l'Dil Councilmen Thomas Hogard and ~ Fuhrman. Dissenting votes• were llllt by Councilmen Lloyd Gummere ·lftll Harold Holden. While the council deliberated in a • minute executive session, an audimft ef. 500 simmered in the auditorium.~ rivaling, factions occasionally breMIDI the tension by·trading !mull!. 1 · Suddenly Risner strode ·tbl"oUlh' ·the hall and It resou,,ded with · ai minure or cheers and boos. He cal mly walked up, to a table. and got his papi!:rs. , · ' "Those · ~ .. cann~d him ," uclalm~ Lester Marshall. a Risner supporter; alter exChanl}ng a few words With him. City At&.omey James Carries· appeared lhortly 'thereafter and tokl ' ~_, 1•1 made them ftre mt too; Lee." l\ianer wu Jlllbllcly.-ol ',,.gkc-til!ll . to file lillcal nopatlll, ~ city afiain to -1!lfl--aft!i of, f'Of, ~ 1 the city ·cou-ncU od•ioedJ•by-•:q~li1!(. di8ortln1 ~ .. d .._..u., JnlO!TT\OU....'1' • T h·e-r-e -,po-,.,._,djrtcle\1 ~1Y. •I "'1 A~y,~,. ··&·-:''" : · .since the· majority or ,the . council ·Is new and could not technically fire Risner, they first approved by 3-2 vote a 8().day suspension. The dismissal takes officially then: · ' Al the.same.tif?le, the council appainted Dennis Couz:iemarche as interim city manage r and Jim Bentson as city ·at- torney, also.by 3 -2 vote. Ri~er, who said he would go to . his office today to pick up a few belongings, commented, "These (accusations) "are completely· without foundation , How can two,councilmen judge after having been in office only two months?" · . Earlier, Councilman Holden declared the moye to · oust Ris ner as illeJal, since. he said, the action was originally brought up on the July 20 council session without having been placed legally on the agenda. , "lt's unethical to say the least," said Holden, alleging thi t Baum, Hogard and •rman had met among themselves 15 decide the outcome."There's a coward· • ly conspiracy underfoot," he added . Immediately before the council retired into executive 11ession, Paul Boisvert, Baum's former campaign manager, im- plored them to fire Risner because he .allegedly solicited unifonned policemen to paint signs and circulate petitions and handbills in his support. "The policemen are placing themselves above the Jaw," said Boisvert, charging that police pressure prompted some merchants to put up "Save Our City Manager" signs. "There are few who could not feel the implied force of the law behind them." As unifonned policemen stood by, numerous persons took the podium in su pport of the city manager after oral communications were opened again fol- lowing the disposition of some routine agenda ite mii. Only two or three su pported the mayor and tbe other councilmen. Sald Tom Brady, a retired stockbroker , "It just boils down to the question of who 's while vacating the pr:ellmlnai'y In- junctions, the ruling ordered the hair issue returned' to the district .court for fu"rther proceedings. The decision, d~lar· ing the long hllr regulation un- conslitutio~al, was handed down July 17. "The court holds that the right tt. determine one's own hair length ii a fundamental freedom · implicit in. the concept or· ordered liberty and ·protected against state ip:fringement by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amend- ment," the ruling staled. It also noted that no evidence W&!I entered ' by the Saddleback • College Adroinlstrallon lo ahaw "that tbt lepgth I </< •IYli of Ul< plalnUff1' ha~ hat Q'Uled or would likely create an unreasonable risk of harm to the educational pro-cca ... " , Tbe decl.sk>n stattd that ln addiUon to violetJng the due process clause, lhe reg61aUon violated the equol protection 1 claale o). tbo. ~lb Ameodmtnl. " J '1IMll1I tbt communltY,-lbe city m1nqer or Ille city council. I would ""li"t if Mr. RllDer wants to run it, he should have 1tePP.!d down from hls job and done It." . Councilman Fuhrman. belleved l)y pro,. Risner forces to be the instiaator of ·a city ·hill purse which: may ei:tend · to · Police ,Chief 4< Citse and Eire Chiel R. E .• ~, w~ !ieJ'.Ved with ,a recall petition. ' L Recall-proceedings are· also expected to be atarted againn Baum and Hogard, who were elected: June 2. . All<rnrd, Jo{lnhall .. td In the lobby; 0 we·11 Finl to ll&rt u aoon u we collect some money ." Mayor Baum and th( otbtn'Nt aiJertt, occaslonaJly amlUng, u they were reprimanded, accuaed ol collusion alid OCC0$10lll'llY lnsµlted by th• c....,.d, • "I'Ve never seen a Hitler operate before, f>ut i>ow I have'," ihOuted ID unl<leotlfied ~n. . Baum, a Jew, calmly replied, 11If you knew that I had e9Clped from the ovens of ~rmany by ti\&-akin of my, ·t.eiib, you wouldn't say that." "It would appear the Seal Beach purse ls now comR!e~t" a~. Sol }fillnebl, whose wile ·"Marilyn r an in the lait" (Bee FIRINGS, Plp'J) ·, .. F•.,...• Vtllltrt Tm: I .Ap~ment Asso.cjatiop,\ . . .. Objects to $6 lncr~a~e .':'.. ·By "ALAN OIHIUN Of IM Dlllr '"" Stiff · The Htlntlhgton Beach city councll, a~ui moving toward a $& tu: qn all aportmenll. In the city,· toda,y '"I into· oppotltlOn· fnlm the orance County Davan .. Ma:v. Quit .. tri .. I t ....... ,1 it-:•· , 1·~·;! lf. Israelis OK . . · ' U.S. Peace Plan JERUSAtEM (AP! -lndicaUOllll "'' mounting that Israel's government Will agree reluctantly al)d. with conditions to thP. INklay cease-fire' proposed . by the United States to gel Middle E~st peace talks under way again. But loc:at · press reports u ld Defense Minister Mos he Da yan ' Is e1onsiderlng resigning if lhe· Cabi.Qet accept! the American proposal. A Defense Ministry spoke5man termed the reports "rumo~," but he admittect, "Daya n .is . not enthusiastic about the U.S. Proposal." ' The reports said Da yan had expressed misgivings because the U.S. plan speaks of Israeli withdrawal from the Arab lands captured in the 1967 war. Daya n believes that Israel's security depends on it.s retaining the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights taken from Syria, and a coastal strip along the Sinai desert to the Strait of Tlran, the key to Israel's southern water route to East ACrica and .Asia . Premier Golda Meir and her cabinet scheduled anot her meeting today to discuss their reply to the prnpoe:al. There is a possibility she will reply to Washington Wednesday night In a speech to the Knesset, the Israeli parllament. • neputy Prender Yigal Allon went on record Monday night in favor ol ac- ceptance, Israel's first ranking ministtr l.o do !IO publicly. · "Even If there are differences oJ opi- nion between the U.S. and.Israel,'' APPon told a group of high school newspaper editors, "when the govtrnment of the United States · takes such an ln.I Uative, It appears to me that we should acCept it, even if we are not completely 1atlsfled with all the details." AUon's stand was consJ dered particularly significant !>ecawe he II ·a member of. the cabinet's foreign affairs aod;securl~y·comrnitlee, along with Mrs. Meir, Defense Minis ter Moshe Dayan .and Foreign Minister Abba Eban .. 'the commlttt"e formulates Jsrael'1. foreiin Polley. ' Sources close to the government u ld a majority or the cabinet· now ii rtady to accept the U.S. proposal with aome reservations. Egypt and Jordan, the other two prin- cipals, already have accepted lhe plan. Syria and Iraq, whose endorsements ~e not requested by ,U.S. Secret.ar,y of 'State William P. Rogeri. hsve COO· demned it, 8Tld the Palestinian guerrlll11 organizations have vOwed, 'to continue fighting In spite or any cease-fire. In Its acttplan<:e Jordan reportedly said It would not force the commandos· to comply •• The central committee ol the PalesU- nim Resistance Movement in Amman announced that It b aendinl en voys .to the other Arab caplt.al:s to e.xplaln the guerrlllas1 opposition to the U.S. pro- posal. la rael '1 reluctance atema. lrom fear tSee MID~, Pace l). , -' Apartment" Hot11e AJaoci.ltJon, '· ' "Why •llhoUJd the" •P"-·- pay tbr • ·-cl\y boll!" -: .\Doll Banic~. ·Preai!!ent of the i,- uoociatlon. ' . "The younger group or apartment dwell~ :wrn probfibly move out of. the city before it i1 built and the 'oldet. reur~ coup_lu ~ably won't be ab'9 to enjOy the u1e ot It .tber." • ' .Banick was 1'9~1 to; ~ d1acuued at a study sielfion lut week on ways to 'finance new facilities ia Huntington ll<ech, lncludlrur the civic ~tfr complex, library irid fLre stlUom. At ·the .session the council seemed near aif~ment on a 3 percent · tax on all utHities-, a 50 percent hike ·in the present business levy. wider ·ap. plicatiOn of the trash fee and ·a jump l!'I the. tax on · aparOnents to ·finance the improvements. ' '\'h• present , sc'!le on , the JD,000 apa~ts In Huntington Be a·c h •verafes at $1, but a jump to M wu iuuested. The. clly staff is woritnc on the new formula and will preaent copi~ of 'the figures at the Aug. 3 council meetiflg. . "We are against it," ·Banick aaid'thl! morning. "We ate against the preMnb fee · because we -receive no 'l(i'<1ftbJAI services." Banick said that the apartment res!· dent will end up · paying the lhcrease. "The $6 averages at SO cents a ·month, but the rentals will probably go up SI a month," he added. About 300 members of the Apartment House Association live in Huntington Beach. Shnick said he would forwi.rd the members' otijections to the city. "The apartment dweller pays hia pro- perty Wes at the aame rite that. a homeowner does and the resident pays It Indirectly, probably l.10 1o f40 a month," the association president went on. "The apartment dwelltt la not a second class citizen. In Orange County there are 270,000 apartment realdenta and about 68 percent of them are professional or semi-profeistonal peop1e." ' Banick &aid that he considered the uUlity tax fairer. ''That will affect thi user," he added. Oruge ·eout Weatlter lt'll re~ch 68 degret!s fllterlni through the coastal haze oh Wed· nesday or up lb 82 il·yoo're further litlanil. U.w clouds· will prevlll "In the nlghi and morning hours. INSIDE TODA:Y I Tim Knowle1. the 26·year-ol.d graduate student who "'"" .th11 federally funded Educational Opportunity Program at 'UC Irvine, say1 minortiu 1tude'nt1 hove trouble getting into cot· ltge beaauat they art gctti?tg poor advice from high 1chool counaetor1. Page I. ' ClltMnthl J M1¥11t , , . , .. ,. I :r "" ' , ' I,,..,.. ,_.. " t . ..,. ......... ..,.. J ' ,. .,_. c...,.~ • C,_. 11 . t~MI """ 11 DMa ""'"' • • ._,. , .. 1, ''""""-............ !toll ............... ''t~ 11 . ....,,....,... , .. ,, """"" , .. ,, ·--1 .. 11 ......... • _,...... 14 Wtllllt Wltll If .Allll 1l1•rs II ..,.._,, ,._.. 1J..1f lllM!h!C • ' Wwlll ..... .., -· . ,. '.i • J Qh,y PtlOT H . . ll'.1 ,l\Pl11ft8r time, but the sewing isn't so easy, as DoMa Em8io 12, la flndJng In summer class at Spiring · YIW Scbool In HunUngton ·Beach. Donna, .mo .alreadY "8s ccmpleted a garment in the cla.ss, •WI finds threading the needle a tricky task. Donna ls one of 402 girls 1n· the Ocean View School District taking the summer sewing class. • Linda Kasabian Relates Cult I nitiatwn Rites LOS. ANGELEs (AP) -Green-eyed IJnda Kasablan t...tmed lDday that Oiarles M. MllllOn told the young women in his bfpplHtyle "family" to make Jove to men be wanted to recruit for his nomadlc clan. The petite, Wldy·halrod prooeculion liar wt-In the Sharon Tale murder trial allo aald the lbaUY·halred cult ~ bad aelUll lnleromlrae with her in a cave and "told me I bad a father bang<ip." Mrs. Kuablan wu asked U Manson Jl1"9llt Page 1 FIRINGS ••• COQDCU eledioo. ''Mr. Mayoc, you haven'• lard the Jut r:l it from us," be aald. Terry Barton, a member of the plan· Ding COllllllillion mlgned publicly, etating, "I am ashamed to be an·officlal member or the city. J am ashamed to have Morton Baum as my mayor. He and tbe others have succeeded in Jess than a month to push this city io the brink of chaos and disaster.'' PeUUom aupportlng Risner were tum· ed in by nearly all city employes, the department heads of the city, the board of directors of the Surfside colany, the C.Ollege Park Homeowners AssodaUon, the Civil Service Board and what was c:Wmed to be about 3,800 citizens. "Mr. Rimer bu more backing and you've got more trouble than you can handle in the next six months," Mr!. Margaret Klein, a resident of. the city, ,..,_ China Readies Death Laws for Hijackers I TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) -The aovemment of NaUonallst China is preparing legislation to make airline hi. jacking an offense punishable by death, Mtnlltry of CommunlcaUons sources 11~.: Monday. The bill is subject to approval b7 the !egillature. ~· &AILY PILOT OllANG~ CO.UT l"UaLlitlll(G COM,..AN'r ~obert N. 'Wtotf ~I .no! r>vo"'""" Jtck l. Cwtlty Vlcit PTftkMnl Md ""'""""•I MMliRtr '""' lh•111 H A. M wrp~i"e #WllAI ~·­Ali" Dirki" W.t o. ... QMl!y Ell!lor . AIDort W. l1lt1 .-.-i.1, Editor M.etl"'" ...... Office 17175 ••• ,. 10111, .... ,.,. M•lll111 Jwt,.,.,., •.o. hw 790, t2•4t OtW Off'- L....-~~ m l'or"t llw-, c.i. *'-9: D> '#c:il ltY SlrtoM ,.....,.,., '4ecfl1 #II W.t .. !WI IOll!fn~ hi (IMlllflft1 -Nerti! !I Ctf'llM l"I ' !Did the girls ID d\> anything with male visitors to the Spahn ranch where the "family" lived for a lime just north of Los Angeles. "Y e.s. He told us to make Jove to them and try to get them to join the family, and if they wouldn't join the family, not to give them any more attention," she replied. Over vehement defense objections, Mrs. Kasabian also described an incident in which .. everybody made love to everybody." She said Manson began It by forcing himself upon a shy, withdrawn girl about 16 years old as about 20 of the "family" looked on. uaiarne took her clothes off and started making love to her. She was rejecting him. • .At one point, she bit him on tlie lhoulder and be hit her in the face." Deputy Dist. Ally. Vincent B11&li01I ·asked Mrs. Kasabian what hlppened after that. "Then Charlie told Bobby Beausolie1 another clan member and everybody to start touching her and making Jove to her and everyone did." Q: What followed thereafter? A : Everybody made loTe to everybody. Mrs. Kasabian 11ald OW the glrll in the Man.son "family" referred to . themselves u tiwitches." "Charlie called all the girls witches," she added. Mrs. Kasablan took the stand for the second day in the trial of Manson and three young women for the slayings of actres,, Sharon Tate and six others last August. On Monday she told of her first meeting with Manson when "be felt my legs and seemed to think they were okay." . Deputy Disl Atty. Vincent Bugliosl asked what happened the nert day. Mrs. Kasabian said Manson came to a cave where !!he bad olept behind the Spahn ranch. · "He made love lo me and we had a slight conversation," she said. Manson's attorney jumped to his feet and objected that the testimony "im- pugns the morality of Mr. Manson." The judge overruled the objection. Q. What conversation dJd you have with Mr. Manson when you were making love about that time? A. I don't recall the complete con· versation but be told me that I had a father hang-up. Q. Was this after you bad serual intercourse? A. No, it WU before. Q. Were you impressed when be nld, this, that you had a father hang-up? A. Yes. Because nobody ever said that to me and I dJd have a father bang-up. I hated my stepfather. Mr:s. Kasablan then began describing one of the many camping etpeditlons upon which Manson led his nomadic "famUy." She told how they camouflaged their campsites to avoid belng spotted by helicopters. On Monday she tesUfied that she first heard of Ptfanson and his clan from a girl who told her or "a beautiful man that we'd all been waltlng for." Her testimony was interrupted repeated- ly by defense objections. Cons truction Strike Enters Second Day GRANADA, Spain (UPI) -A renewed walkoot by 12,000 construction workers entered its second day today amld hopes or a quick solution. Union leaders met late Ptfonday with rqiresentatlvet of the striking workers lQ lton out an agreement. They proml..sed no workers would be dismissed and salaries for time Joet would be paid provided work was resumfd today. Government apokcsmen predicted these new concessions would bring a spttdy end ID the dtacllocl<. ,, I Beach Girl Home After Tragic Death of Fiance CoMle Jo Pfister, a 2G-year-old model and beauty queen, bas returned to her Huntington Beach hoine grieving over the death of her fianct, a wealthy Kanaas industrialist. · Her fiance John Dav l d Austin, 27, vice president and a director of Air Midwest and managing partner of the Adair Oil ·company, died in Wichita laat week while Miss Pfister was at- tending a bridal shower. Mr. Austln died while he was showing young relaUves how be could swim underwater in his mother's pool. Witnesses told Police that be swam the lensth and brudtl>•f the pool three llmea and then sank to the bottom as he tried to surface. An aut.opgy later showed be suffered a heart attack. "I waa attending a bridal shower at the country club at the time," MW Pfistu said at her home at 5421 Eldorado Drive, Huntington Beach, Monday. The couple planned to marry Sept. 12 and live In Wichita. J aymie Boyd, thls year's Miss Huntington Beach, wu to have been a bridesmaid. Miss Pfister, who held the Huntington Beach tltle In 1989, met Mr. Austin at an aviation trade show In Anaheim last December. She was a hostess for an aircraft flnn. Mr. Austin, a business graduate of the University of Oklahoma, was a founder of Air Midwest and an official of the Kansas Independent OU and Gas Aasociallon. He W8.!1 also a director of the Wichita- based American Fidelity Inc./the A&J Building Corporation and G r e ate r Downtown Wichita, Inc. LTV to Market Braniff Shares? DALLAS (UPI) -Financially troubled Llng·Temco-Vought, Inc., said Monday it may sell Jts Interest in Braniff lntema- llonal Airways. It mentioned a price of $150 million. But LTV emphasized the "highly preliminary" nature of present negotia- tions. The official company 1tatement read : "In response to inquirieJ relating to reported negotiations on the passible sale of its 56 percent interest in BraniU AJrways, Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., said today that it is conducting highly preliminary negotiations in several areas that could lead ID dispcloltlon of Ji. Interest in the airlin<. Junior Guards Set Competition Junior lifeguards from Huntington Beach, San Clemente and Santa Cruz will do batUe in sand and sea at Hun- tington Beach Wednesday. The youngsters will be competing In the Junior Ufeguard Cbampopships from 9 a.m. to noon near the HLIZ'ltlngton Beach lifeguard headqua.rten. Program director Doug D'Amall of the HunUngton B e 3 c b Lifeguards 11ld that teams wlll be divided according to age. The i'A" team will be composed of boys 13 and younger and the "8" team of 9 to 12-year-olds. Singer Cilla Black Gives Birth to Son ' LONDON (UPI) -Singer Cilia Black gave birth Sunday night to a boy welghlng 8 pounds, 12 ounce.,, the first chJld for h~r •nd husb&nd Bob Willi s. Wllllt1, her fonner man•ger, 1ald both mother and ton were dGlol weU. 1, Kidnap Suspe~ts Held Cool Mom .He,lps Po~ice Capture Trio \ BJ All'l'llUll 11. VINSEL Of ....... ""' ,,.., Racing l38 miles against an 8 p.m. lteadllne, a mlni·stJrted ~tber carrying ,1,500 in ransom Monday mtt three kidnap suspects in Costa Mesa and eoolly helped police capture them and free h« daughter unbanned. nae trlo of Connecticut men who ~ drove out to, find the )'OWll woman and her husbanll were captured. and dlaanned without Incident by !awm"' liltenlng to them via hidden mtcropboae. Investlgat.ors had nothing but praise for auburn-haired Mrs. Yvonne Parker, 40, who works as a troubleshooting manager f0< a chain <t Phoenix restaurants. "She was beautiful. Just beautlful,"' said Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride. -isbe pulled It off wilbollt • hlldl.'' Mrt1. Parker escorted ber .cfau&hter Stacy, 22, away from the co.ta Mesa apartment she shares with her husband, Muk C. P~yton; 22, at IOIO• Wlllact Ave., to set the stage. Police then captured two accuaed kJd. napers together and a third wu a~ prehended aeparately, lreelng Peyton. COmplalnls charging the Coonecticut men with kidna p and grand theft wtli be sought today from the Orange County Dlstrict Attorney's office, ace<rding to Detective Capt. Bob Green. Tbey were tdentifled as: -James M. McShane, 23, a StraUord, Conn., bartender. -Donald E. Von Remooriere, if, a Stratford computer programer. -Frank W. Papcln, 21, ... ~ laborer. Capt. Green •kt the couple were kld- naped from a party pod tomewliere in Loguna Beach and told they bad 48 houri to come up with $1,500 or f&Cfl unstated consequences. A aeries of calls to relativet ln Con- necllcut and then to Mr1. Peyton's mother Jed the attractive mother of five other children to arrive in Costa Mesa late Monday afternoon, "She drove all the way over from Phoenix and then when we tried to put her up for the n1ght she !aid she had to get back," explained Sgt. McBride, one of the raiding team. A microphone hidden in her clothing, Mrs. Parker went to the Wallace Avenue addreu to find her daughter and son-in- Jaw, but they weren't present at that time. Police said she began gingerly ptanping one of the alleged kidnapers aboot whether they were anned, with what type weapons and wt» among them carried the guns. On1y one pistol was subsequently found. "P'or a mother -nat even knowing what to eipect -she pulled jt off beautifully'' said Sgt. McBride. "Talk about anxious moments ... all we could do wu bite our nails," be conUnued. John Wayne's Brother Dead GLENDALE (UPI) -Funerol services will be private for Robert EmmeU Mor- rison, SB, brother of Newport Beach resident John Wayne, the family said Monday. Morrison, a motion picture production executive, died Saturday of cancer. Like his more famous brother John, be played football at the University of Southern California and W8.!1 a member of the 1932 national championship team. rtiis was the second death jn the family this year. The mother, Mary Preen, died in March. I Sevenl detecUvu wwa polled to make the capture and other offkers Wtte at.a~ Uoned at key poblll nearby ID awllt the cllmu. During this period, Mr. and Mn. Peyton weiJ r<turned. Sgt. McBride said the a!le1ed lddnapers wanted Mrs. Parker and Stacy to ~ company them but sbe taltld them into taking the keys to h« car am allowing them to leave separately. • 11le men were instructed to unlock the trunk, when! they wollld find Jl,500 in cash, .. demanded. Detective Norm Kutch waicbed u the two women reached safety and climbed a fence to confront a pair of the suspec::ts . N they left the apartment complex. "lie got the other two and I grabbed the great big dude from behind," u..id Sgt. McBride, nplainlng that Papcin Is s1z feet tall aod weighs 235 pounds. O!li¢1'11 who had been waiting nearby converged onto the scene and a police helicopter swept in o v e r h e a d , U- ltutUnating the area with Us searchupt. S~uent · investigation Jed to diacovery of a small amounf· ol marl- juana bt ~ Victims' apartment and Peyton wu arnlted on that chart:e. lie !Did police he bad been r<lllgbed up bJ, 1>11. c.o[llor during th• tw<><!ay period, but lnvest13aton said he ahowed no evidlDCe of a serious beatiJJi. Marlne's Wife Victim· Police Find Few Leads ' In San Clemente Killing BJ JOHN V.ILTEllZA Of .. _,, '"" ..., 'Ille pol1ce invealJi-~ the stiikct!ve beating and lllbbilc -er of San Clemente -~ COOnie Jolmlon baa ..turned frmi ber bomt &tale thls week with few fretli leads. Oetedive Leonard Goodwin 111d his trip ID -produced Utile new evidenc< In the baffling June 14 slaying in the housewife'• small apartment near the municipal pier area. In recent wee.ks Goodwin and other detectives have held repeated con· ferences with Marine Lance Cpl. Mark Johnson, 19, the dead woman's huaband, to retrace steps taken in earlier talta. IM that, too, baa yletded little, detec- tives have said. One man had been muted July 2 l'rom Page 1 MIDEAST ••. that Egypt, freed from the harassment and surveillance of the Israeli air force by a cease-fire period, would strengthen its ground defenses along the Suez Canal u well u move its Soviet antiaircraft missiles up to the waterway. Therefore, the Israelis are expected to say they will join in a new cease-fire only if '\hey get guarantees that the Egyptians cannot aploit the truce period ln that manner. There have been suggestions for a United Nati«is obaervaUon force to guard against any of the antagonists using the lull of bolster its front-line pasltlons. But the Israelis h a v e had no faith in U.N. eUecUve ness since Secretary-General U Thsnt withdrew the peacekeeping force from Slanl in 1967 at Egypt's demand, an action which peacekeeping force from SinaJ in 1967 war. The Israelis also doubt the er· fectiveness of a cease-fire because of the rejection by the PalesUnian guer- rillas. The U.S: plan. calls for resumption of peace taJQ using U.N. envoy Gunnar Jarring as the intermediary. Newspaper Head Di es NEW YORK (AP} -Helen Rogers Reld, fonner publisher of the New York· Herak:I Tribune, died Monday at 87. Mrs. Reid became president and p.ibl.lsher of the newspaper upon the death of her husband, Ogden, in lM7. She retired as board chairman in 1955, remaining as a board member. In the killing, but after a "°"Und In CUllody coinciding -lnt.nllve In· veatigation, Frankie Wayne Melino, 19, wu let free without charps. He, also, is a ·Marine. Since then the lnvutiptors have doubl· ed back t.o retrace every poulble upect of the case. The ln...Ugatlon even reached Int. the rW!n ol the bl&a!Te uaerted satanic ritual death of M!Ssion Viejo teacher Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown and t"e slz clriften facing trial In her butchering death. But after a day of interviews with arrestees in the Brown murder, San Clemente police came up with nothing ;linking the two cues except for the style of ·knHe used to lnfiict wounds on both women. 'Ibe weapon, a common blade known as a K·bar ·combat kn.He, alJegedly was used in each killing. Two other key links in the chain of evidence are still missing -a pair of tennis· shoes which could have made a print found in the kitchen sink in the slain woman's apartment and Mrs. Johnson 's wallet missing from the scene when police arrived. The husband discovered bis )'OU.Dg · wife's body sprawled on the bed as he returned from guard duty at the Marine Helicopter Facility in Santa Ana. Mrs. Johnson bad been dead about 24 hours, police said. Her borne had some signs of entry1 but that aspect has never been con- firmed. The window above the sink was open. Outside, beneath it, sat a metal folding chair. Repeated contacts with neighbors has,. revealed little informaUon on unusual noises or circumstances in the predawn hours when Mrs. Johnson was b ea t e n with a bar stool and stabbed repeatedly in the neck, chest and abdomen. Peace Plan Brings Hope in Dock Strike LONDON (AP) -A five-point peace· ptan brool[bt bope Monday night for a setUement in the ls.day-old dock strike , thal has crippled Britain's imports and exports. The plan, from a government-appoin~ boa rd of inquiry, turned down the main ' wage demands by the 47,000 striking . dockers but it recomme'nded im- provements in overtime, vacatioo and "modernization" payments, whlch could hold substantial appeal for the strikers. II'• The Second 119 Week of our •••• GRAND OPENING SALE! We are pleased to announce the opening of our second store in Tustin. We have purchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new name will be "Alden's Red Hill Ca rpets & Draper ies." In conjunction with the open- ing of our Tustin store, we have several spec i a Is in our Costa Mesa store. Please come in and see us . " e IN COSTA MESA e ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntl1 Ave. Phono 646-4131 e IN TVmN e ALDEN'S RED HIU CARPETS e DRAPES 11374 E. l,..,lno Phono 1314344 VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. I I -- Ne VO~. 63, NO, '179, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • Ir or an • . . ,. :TUESOAY, :JU~Y 28, '.1,70 • -. -·---1'.Y. su.eu-:;:· -' ' . .l..:. ·---- l I .; '.-• . .. .,_I"' --··..J-... Newport Officials Level Barrage By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of·• Deltr' ""' lttff Newport Beach city stall members Mon,day night released . a barrage oI cr!Uc!sm "ainst the interim ~pbrt rectntly 'issued in the county'• air 'transportaUon•masterplan. 1'lso expressing great dissaµsfacUon with the atudy, city council members "strqly r~end~" they .be 1iw.n a voice in the county supervisors' declsJon on the status, of airport aervlce. In their resolution, councilmen ad- diliooall:,t ~sked ·that supervisors hear fmn all\eitles affected by the airport before they take action oo the report termed by one . angry ~er "nothing mote than an 1,nn chair study." City staffers mlnced~ no words in presenting their opinim ol, the report whlch was given to superv~s on July 21 by the Ralph M. Parsons Co. Under the tenns of the county's $140,000 contract with lhe: consultipg firm, the recently released interim report presents supervisors with a · set of alternatives to restrict, expand or main- tain the current level of service al the facility. The county board memben; have unlil Aug. 21 to decide upoo an alternative thac consultants will study for im- Newport Council Raps Lack of Land Use Panel The failure oC county supervisors lo appoint an airport lands use commiaslcn drew heavy fire Monday from Newport Beach city councilmen. They are aeeklng 1ction on the issue. Councllman Lindsley Parsons brought the matter before the council during a discussion or the airport masterplan &tudy. , "lt'J obvious the county has very liUle regard for the cities," he commented. "lbe airport lands use commis!lion is 1.good example of tt." C.OUncil members unanimou!ly. pa.!lsed a . reiioJullon :which uks· the attorney Dayan Mat ;Qbit If Israelis OK ' U.S. Peace Plan JERUSALEM (AP) -Ipdicalians are mounUng that Israel's government will agree tt\uctanUy and with conditiont to the 90-day cease-fire proposed bY the United St.ates to get Middle East peace talk! under way again. But local press reports said Defense Minister Moshe Dayan is ·Considering resigning if the cabinet accepts the .American proposal. · A Defense Minislry spokesman termed the repot1! "rumors," but he admitted, "'Dayan is not enthusiastic about the U.S. proposal." The reports said Dayan had expressed mi.!givings because the U.S. plan &peaks oC Israeli withdrawal from the Arab lands captured in the 1967 war. Dayan believes that Israel's security depends on its retaining the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights taken from Syria, and a coastal strip along the Sinai desert to the Strait of Tiran, the key to Israel's 10Uthern water rou\t to East Africa 11Ki Mia. general for a legal opinion on the &f.atus of an aiJport lands use commlssion in the county. City Attorney Tully Seymour said the stat.e . Legislature passed a law a few years ago providing for the creation of an airport lands commission In coun- ties with county-controlled airports. Under the stale statute, the c:om- misOOn must be reqUest.ed by the cities in the county and·· is made up ol. the manager of the airport and mayors representing the \'.=ltiea. ••'J'be law providN: "that .one of Jie dtyfeJJMmlatives be from a 9'Y c:loaest to . th~ airport. In out cue that C()Uld be either Costa Mesa or Newport," Seymour said. The commission would act in an ad- visory capacity to advise supervisors on plaMing of lands surrounding the airport, as opposed to the airport com- mission which advises supervisor's on the operations and management of the airport itself. Seymour said the Orange County Division of the League of Cities requested formation of an airport lands commi.&sion "one or two years ago," but supervisors have ·taken no ac:Liol'l. · "At one point tbey did draft an ordinance which would lump the two coinmissioos together, but it did ·not fulfill the membership requirement.s set out in the stale Jaw and was ne ver passed." Seymour explairied. The Newport resolution, the attorney said, will ask Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-Newpcrt Beach) to request the state attorne general to give the city a legal opinion on the matter. "The purpose of this is to remind the board of their duy and to draw attention to their failure to act on the matter. "The board doesn't really have any discretion tn the matter because ifs a &late mandate," Seymour said. plementation. A brief critique ol the P"'°"' ttudy submitted to cotmcilmen by city atlff said "the actu al ·repon is a literary d\,&aster. It con~a)ns a substantial number " of miscalculations, typographical and grammatical errors,· u n w a r r 1 n t e d as.sump lions and it is· pporly organized. "The sheer bulk of the document de.fies easy comprehensioo," the staff report stated, noting the Parsons 1tt.;Uy la 25.1 pages long "and weighs three and one- quarter pounds."· Phil Bettencourt, 1dministrative usis- t.ant to the city manager, said after the . meeting that some. parts ·of the Parsons report were extremely vague while .other partloM were studied down to the most minute detaU~ "It's oot the standard palicy · to make this kind of critical comment in a staff report,'' he said, "but the quality of the Parsons report ls so poor in places, we felt it wa& warranted." Bettencourt told councilmen l h at Wilsey and Ham, the airport consulting firm hired by Newport Beach, would have a de.tailed critique of the Parsons re.port ready for 1bem before the 1upe.rviSors' Aug. 21 dt&dllne. City councilmen also displayed their displeasure with . the ParlOnl report. When told the supervisora would have to make a decision by Au(. 21 or pa) a $200 per day penalty fee because the Parsons staff could not be kept on a stand by basis, Councilman Milan Dostal retorted : "I've read portions of the Parsons report, and as fa r as I'm concerned, they can stand by for a Jong Ume." Mayor Ed Hirth appointed him.elf, !logia( and' CounctmM Carl Kyn\la to , Mh'e' od r•·1lrit!lf'-emmltiee..ft:«a'1 airport comtnitte. Clint ·Hoo, chairman of the chamber'• 1lrpott ~ told councilmen• his gn>l!P War interestld in meeting with the th~e council ~ben because "it's our . viewpoint that the airport Is the city's greatest problem, and we want to make an intelligent decision on this issue that's going to be listened to." Daniel Emory, chairman ol the Upper Bay re sidents' noise abatement com- mittee, also appeared before councilmen to express his dissatisfaction with the report. "The consultant has never been out here," he charged. '11'1:tert was not one measurement taken at the aiTJ)Ol't and not one homeowner in Newport Buch was interviewed . "The only survey that was done was of officials ol the Irvine Industrial Trac:L These are obviously decisions that were made from an arm chair In El Segundo," he said. In passing the resclulion calling for the input cf informaticn and cpinion from cities, Councilman Liruley P.araons warned councilmen that other air facilities in the county could also cause problems for the city. "Whiie we're e11pe11d.ing so much time and effort on the county arport, let's not forget El Toro. Those jets are ju&l as menacing to thl': eastern 1lde cf the city as the commercial jell are," he said. ·-.... ,,_.\\4>'<J -}'' J, "\i / ,....,. .... ;;', •l/f• i i • 6-iq:: ,h ,s;• •. ,~-1< 0 i I 11 I '-\ ... , .. ,. -''~ ! ,, . . . ' . . . , . ' . . ' -. -;\ A .. ~Uaer. :Fi~%1e. · · Freeway He~iilg Off, . . \CJ . Despite "Large c;owd · By THOMAS. FORTUNE Of ttle o.f" ,,.., lltff . . S~CRAMENlfO - A S e n a l e Trans~Uon. Committee. .hearing on .a bill to delete . Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport ·Beach and part of HunUngton •Beach was postponed· Monday and; ttntatively rescheduled for 3 p.m. Mondayi. - All' committee hearings were called off when the Senate decided 1.o continue meeting as 1 whole Into the aftunoon on doVernor Reagan's $1 billion tax reform progra'm .. A final vote on lax reform was expected late today which would clear the way for resumption of committee hearings nn Wednesday. About . 20 pcrson5 frOJTI . the Orange Cea St : including .' city officials· fNim New.J¥1rt seaCh; tfuntington Beach, CO!ta M~sa and• Laguna Beadi . had flown to · Sacramento for the · freeway. heartnJ Monday., Perha~ the ' most disappointed was Cc!Sta Me&a Mayor Robert WllsOo who had to c'ancel as ma~'ter or ceremonies for a MohdAy retirement luncheon honor· ing fornier Costa Mesa City Manager Art McKenzie. Round·lrlp airplane rares for all the pefsons who new to Sacramento to testily en the freeway bill probably total· ed more than $1 ,000. Most &aid they would make the trip again Wed.ne!day or whenever the bill comes up. Paul Gruber. forme r Newport Beach nlayor who now Is vice chairman ~f Harbor Area Freeway Fighters~ said, "We 've been fighting this seven year,. We're not g~ing to give ·up now." * * * WOMAN BLOWS WHISTLE ON BOY A 7,_year.old Newport ~ach wp~ ·blew into a teenaged boy'1 ear Monday, but he lsri 't likely to f6Uow hfr ariywliere. The irate senior citizen · told -Pf)lice"tlhe didn't like Lhe IUlsty commeata be. 1'11 making over the wires, ao after his sec· . end or third cail ihe blew a police wblltle into the receiver. Buildin;g Site ·Tools Plundered Bu~glars raided a Newport Be.adi blah· rise building construction site and cleantd out tools and equipment worth more-than · $3,)00, ci:lmpany spokesmen reported to police Monday. Pali! Matt, superintendent for" C. t. . P~k'.Contrac:tor1, Los An1eles,.aa.ld-;the , front dpqr of ~e ~truFture at.6001NewRort Center Drive was pried to gain tntr)t. Two Seal Beach Officials ·Fired · Lag~a Citizen ·Group Supports . . · Using 'bolt cutters· taken from inlide, the tooters ' broke into a •number Of· cabi- nets and tool c:he!ts, taking a number of drills and power saws, 17 of the tatter. · The buifding uoder construction at--th.t location is the 18-ltory UrUcm Bink Build· lng whicb will be finJlbed, in 1m, ·built, ow~ed and managed : by . the Irvine Com· pany. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1111 CHlllY ,Ott lt•H stat Beach ls a town divided today "with both ·the city rnana.ger and city at.Jamey looking for new jobs. Both were fired by ~2 vole of the city council durina a fiVe-hour R51iion In lhe McGaugh'School auditorlum where old friendships were torn asunder , tempers Oared and heads rolled. n.e firhig of Lee Risner, chief ex- ecUtive of the city for the past four arid a half years. and that of City Attorney James Carnes w a s ac- complished by a new council power bloc: composed of Mayor Morton Baum and Councilmen Thomas Ho11rd and Conway Fuhrman. Dissenting votes were c111st by· Cotmc:ilmen Lloyd · Gummere and H1rold H'olden. While· the C'OUncil deliberated in a SO. minute executive session, an audience of 500 simlnertd In the 'auditortu'm with Hvallng fac:Uons occasionally bl'!:aldne the-tension by trading insults. Suddenly Risner strode through the hall aOO It tt!sounded with a . mixture of chem and boos. He calmly wllked up to a table and got his papers. "1'ho9e • -~ canned him," ucliimed Inter Marshall , a Risner supporter, alter exchanging a th words wifh hlm. City Attorney James carnes appeared aho(tly Lhereafte.r and toJd Risner, "( made them fire me too, Lee." Rbner_was publicly aCCURd ol neglec· \ln1 to file flscal reporta. ne1lectin1 ' city aUairs to pursue prlvat.e business and of not keeping the city council adrised by "concealing. distort.big and misrepresenting Information.''. There were no charges directed publicly at City Attorney Carnes. · Since the majority of the C01.mcil ls new and could not technically fire Risner, they first approved by 3-2 vote a 60-day suspension. The dismissal takes officially then. At the same time, the council appointed Dennis Courternarche a3 Interim city manager llld Jim Bentson as city at· torney, also by 3 -2 vole. Risner, who said he would go to his office today to pick up a few be.longings, commented, ''These (accusations ) are completely without foundation . How can two councilmen judre after having been in ollic:t only two months?" Earlier, Councilman Holden ~la red the move to oost RiJOer 11 illegal, since, he aald, the action was oriainally brought up on the..July 20 council 3e8sion without havlnt: been placed legally on the a(enda. "It's unethical to.sly the )east," aaJd Holden, 1J1e1!n1 that Baum, Hoaard and Fuhrman had ·met among themselves to decide the outcome. "Thtte's a coward- ly conspiracy underfoot," ht added. Immediaflty belore lhe council rttired. Into e.xeaitive seaslon, Paul Boisvert, Baum·, former camJ)llp mana,er, im· plored them to fire Risner because he allegedly tollclt.ed uniformed policemen to paint •iins and clrculata peUtion1 and handbills In his support. "The policemen are placing themselves 11bove the law ," said Boi1vert. c:haretng that pollce pressure prompted some merchl'l'lts to put up "Save Our CJty Manager" siil;ns. "'nlel'e are few who could not feel · the implied forct of the law behind them.". . As uniformed policemen stOod by, numerous persons took the podium in suPPort o( the city manager after cral communications were o~ned a3aln fol- lowing lhe disposition or some routine agenda ii.ems. Only two or lhre.e suppotted the mayor and the other councilme n. Said Tom Brady, a retired stock~roker, "ll just boils down to the question of who'• ~nnlng the community, the city manager er the city council . I would auqest if Mr. Rlsner wanu to nm it; he shflllld have stepped down' from his job and · done It." Councilman Fuhrman, believed by pro- Rl1ner forces to be I.he baUgator of a city hall purge wlllch may at.end to Police Ch1ef Lee Case and Fire Chief t R. E. Adams, was aerved wlth a recall peUtlon. · Recall proceedings are also expected to ht •tarted against Baum mid Hog1rd, who were elected June. 2. Aft.erward, Marshall said In Uie lobby, "We're going to start. as soon 11 we collect some money." occ:asi<mally !Mulled by the croWd. "f~e ntv'er a~en ·a· Hitler op;erate before, but now I ·have," a~ute.d i.n unidef!tlfied ·man. Ba'um .. a Jtw, calmfy replied, 1·u yOu Ju!eW 1!Ja,t 1-~ad esC11ped from ~e ~n1 of Gertnany 'by th.e skin Of my tetth, you wou)dp't. s~y ,lha.l. ',' "lt would appear.the Se•I Beach. purge ls 1 now cOmplete, '.' added Sot Millstein, whps~ wile Marily n ran . tri · the Ja'st , -·. . \ ' . . council el!'Ction. ~'"fr. Mayor, you h_.-ven't he~rd ~ 'last · o(' it 'frOin us;" ~ uid, · r ' Terty . Barton; a member .of lbt plaft.. ,, ' . . \ . "''II . CQ!n~Mt<in ··!"igned J>JtiUcli', ala.ling, "1 am asbMJ~d ,l!> be' an' of~iclal mtm&er 'of ·t~e city,,·~ :•m ~ 1;5ham~d to ,have Mortgn Bauri11 JIS my ... niayOr. He • and , th~ ·oJbers ,h~y'· Jucceede4 in lea th<p<,a month~to J>J!h 'lhls, CJty to lhe liHnl of ChiOs and dl1a1tU:" feU~·rPPortinc Rls~r: "'e~e_ .tvm-••Uo•by neaHr .u .ctly emP!OfM, the dril=t beJdt or the city, the board. o1;; · · f 'ofilit Sii?filde ·cot ' w-• , COIOll)I< 'I" ColJtkt", Park Homeowners Aisoclalioo, I.ht ·Qvil SerVice Board .. nd whit wis cl•il!IO\l IAI .be ·~ 3.100 dtlieJ1!. • "Mr . .Rtder h'as •more --J>acking ·and YP'!'v(go\)nore \rouble 11\0n' )'Oli. ,can haD(le in Jilt nerl 1lr mon~1," ,Mn. Mayor Baum and the other1 1al 11lent1 occa1lonally smiling, as they were reprimanded, accu.ted ol collUl.lori and • : .. ;JSlein~·a_r~dent Cl(_ ,the city, . ... • 'l. ' )J ,;!. •• :Freeway Bill ' . ' Alone among local civic: orgauliatJon.s, the Laguna Beach Town Planning Asso- ciation 1po~ out this week In ~ypport or A... .. mblyrnan R.bert Badbam:a · blll to eillnfna(e the Newport Beach Rgment Of the ~Coastal Freeway. While i City Manager. James Wheaton and representatives oJ Costa Mesa, Jiun. . Unpo,n. aeatti .. F~untain . Valley : and. tbe o counfy of· · Ofange were journeying to . ) ' . ' Sacrauiento·to oppo~·ttie_ b.W,.the CfP 1 A addre$1e.d a le\ter endorsing it to ,the · Seruite~ Traru:pOrtaµ~n ~ttee., , The-Jetter, aigned l>y CTPA. presldent 1 Joy . DiCkerson, 1t.ites that the CTP'A "st~dJ. f!rmly, f0r prfl~rving1 the · lh- . tegrity of totr~"· and · lhert:!ore l)'m- . pathl~ wl!h0 ljewlxirt Beach .In/ Li& fliht against the blse<:tilg .freeway route, .Amplil/'lng lbe . CTPA,. &land, .Mr&. :rni:kerson :11t~, ":\flint W. tell. Uk• going &1o111 ,apujst" the bip,, but .• l>y tbe:.tlini we. filiilheil :dltCuiatnc 'tt we r~ w.e ietllY, coul~ 119\ tab,tbiJ Potitlon · If in roct the 1 reaJJy Important lhJ.ac )' pmervlng the inleti!Y or each town: uwe decided we bad to stand for whal we felt was rlgbl, that la, U\lll Newport Beach has u much n,tt \0 try lo l.ve lloell •• Laguna lle.lch • had d~g ~ long fight to block Ibo ' blleclbl& tnoway •. " Oruge Weadler It'll relic:h 61 , decrees, !llterlng1 through the coastil haze· on 'Wed· nesi:lay or UP' to &2 ff )"OU'rf: further inland., I.Ow clouds •Ill prevlil\ in ~. the nlgbt and morning houra. ' ·INSWE 'TGD~Y. · Tifn KMwle1, 1ht 2s.t}tar-of4 graduate st!UUnt who ru7ll the I federally fUnd•d £ducolionol Opportunity Program. at UC • Jroint, 1aM1 mtnorit11 at""""t.,J .haV•· troubl.t getting, into· eo£. lcoe beca use tht11 are gettiflg' poor advice from high 1~Mol co&in.stlor1. Pao•. B.~ • _ ~ , .. , ' 1 • ' ' ' ,. • ' .. ,._ ... '=' ... C~!!'t .. Uf • l • ,,_.. • C--MoN Iii ...... ..._. I CMte\ IS or..,. C-., I c,__. '' ,,,.... ,._ " =~~" : =-....... ::: Ntwttll' ... 'T......... 'II ....... ~ 1•1• a:: .... (lllMM'f , .. ,1 w • ...,..... 1 ~ .... .. .. ~ , . .__.. ..... .. ,,.,.!... • WWtll -.. -· . ·'--------.J N Upper Bay Trial Hears ,. . t3nd Study , A Department of Fish and Ga .... repolt wbkh _,,t& tl>al the Upper Bay'l ecoloCY will be disrupted if the Irvine Compeny ls allowed to develop the euar -introduced today Into the Superio< Court trial. Altomey Pbllllp Deny brought the docllmellt lnlo qoest!onlng of Harbor Mtct Engineer Jamea Ballinger. He ~ Ballinger to clarify his statement Mmday that the l>Dd exchange would allow development of an ecological plan If the swap goea through. Berry asked the engineer if the report'• ._.Jn•ion that the t.rade would have "!• nochlog delet.erloUs effects on the ecolc'I)' al the Upper Bay" lnDuen<ed ·'111 thinking. Ballloier qnldly deoled that It hail. """ "" ~ lo -al Ille report that 1*f him to believe, he lald, thil Irvine developpeot -llOt spell the md a1· proomtJy ulltln& ecolol!cal ...,. -In Upper Bay w1tera. Tllal development wtll take place JI Suptrlcr Court Judp ClauCle N. Owena and wllai is upeclod to be I aeries al .,.,.U.t.e court judges rule that the tndini al 1$7 ..,.... al oowrty awned tidelinc!s I« 4$0 1<1'<11 of !nine "'""~ upi...!s II lawful and ....Ututicllal. Berry r.,_m. a Newport -· group -d>alleoe<I the -on bolli grounds. "°" he !urlber al1-that caodltlolll lmpoeed ... the --the lllt.e al Cal!fomla deeded them to °""I• O>unty pm-en! their tr-er to a private oorpcr1tloo. 1be Irvine Co. delenda the trade and argues that !ts 1mp1 ..... tau.o wtll edMlnce public flcllltin: in the area In terms ol expmled boating and more part.and ...... -.,..., 1be company elates thll Upper Bay ecology wtll nol be dlmaged bf oudJ developmenl Berry qaln argued Mooday that the !nine Co. omltted nearly 1,000 lee! al publlcly owned w a t e r fnmtage from Its calculations when tta representative• appeared before the lllt.e agency, Thal hootage Includes, he said, North ~ Beed> and Back Bay Drive, the 2Znd Avenue Beach and tbe skiing area, be llld. . Judge Owens has ordered B«ry to .,...iuce evidence ol fraud before he again argues that allegatlon In the courtroom. Attorney Duffern Helsing, who represents county auditor Vic Heim. -to be -with that parllcular alkgatloo. Coast Swimathon May Be Drowning With No Support The awimathon may be drowning for Jack of support. 1be awimmen taking part ln the Ubour-a-Oay event are trying to raise '87,500, one fourth of the cost of a $350,000 Olymplc-!llze awimming pool at Newport Harbor Hlgh Schoo~ for the communitieJ of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. So far, they have stroked a total of 272,400 yards at the Newport Beach Swim Club, but they have only raised $850. Their hopes for pledges of IDc a yard from the community have come to •leas than one cent a yard. Moat of the swimmers are from local bigb sehool swim teams, but there are many who are not old enough to make a team such as siJ:-month--Old Jayme Dean, wbo set a record Saturday for babies by swimming 25 yards, unaided, in 1:05:2. Tu-deductible donaUons for the pool may be sent to the Olympic Pool Foun- daUon, Box IKlO, Costa Mesa. \ DAILY PILOT C•ANGE COUT l"\ISLllHING COMl'ANY flobort N. w,94 ,.,.,.""" ""' l'ulllls .. Josl: •. c11,l•v Vlcll f'l't11Mi11t oM ~I MIMtw lkfa., x,,...;1 t:dJW. l ho111•• A. M11rphl11t ""°""'llW t:llllw """''' Fort11110 NC'WfJOl'f Seodl CllJ Edl'91" ....,... ..... Offke t t l I Weit l •IM• lowlo•or4 M.m., ""4tMH P.O. In 1171, t2••1 --COIM .._I D W..1 &It SINIT ...._.._,.1ZD'-IA...,.,.. tl\llltlfltMlfl kK!lt 1111' SOKl'I Sollll¥anl &ell ~ a. Nonfl El ~ 11.•I I • DAILY P ILOT Siert l'M• Preparing for Stor11i Workmen Install new storm drain pipe on Irvine Avenue between !~th and 16th Streets In Newport Beach. Project near Newport Har- bor High School. is pert of $120,000 worth of drainage and street im- provements being made in the a rea . Earlier, pipeline was put down on Westclift Drive between Irvine Avenue and Dover Drive. Linda Kasabian Relates Cult Initiation Rites LOS ANGELES (AP) -Greei><yed Linda Kasabian testified today that Charles M. Manson told the young women in his hippie-style "family" to make love to men be wanted to recruit for hls nomadic clan. The petite, sandy-halred prosecution star witneM in the Sharon Tate murder lrlal also said the shaggy·halred cult leader bad sexual iotel'C{lurse with her in a cave and "told me I bad a father bang-up." Mrs. Kasablan was asked if Manson told the girls to do anything with male visitors to the Spahn ranch where the "family" lived for a Ume just north of Los Angeles. "Yes. He told us to make love to them and try to get them to join the family, and if they wouJdo't join the family, not to give them any more attention," she replied. Over vehement defense objections, Mrs. Kasabian also described an Incident jn which "everybody made love to everybody." She said Manson began it by forcing him.sell upon a shy, withdrawn girl about Board Post Goes To Mrs. Stewart Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart has been elect- ed chairman of the Newport Beach Li- brary Board of Trustees for 1970-71. The post was previously held by Mrs. Hancock Banning Ill. Dorothea Sheely, city librarian was elected secretary of the board, a posiUon held during the previoulll year by Oharles Sword. There are five members of the board and Mrs. Sheely. They act In an advi30ry capacity to the three branches of the cily library. Bay Ouh Tower Appeal Date Set The appeal on the denial of the permit for the Balboa Bay Club tower will be heard before the Newport Beach City Cou ncil Aug. 2(. The appeal is being sought by Bay Club officials after a use variance permit for the 182-foot apartment bullding was unanimously denied earlier OU.. month by planning commissioners. T!ie denial was made on grounds the vanance would not be in the best inter- est of the rts:.idents of the area. Maxie Baughan Stays On Rams Grid Squad FULLERTON (AP) -Tlie Los Angelts Rams' defensive unit got a pawerfUI boolt Tuesday when veteran linebacker Maxie Baughan rtnounced hi1 reUrtment. The JO.year Natio111I Football League 11tar made the disclosure rrom his home tn Atlanta 11nd was duti shortly in the regulars' unofficial t.ra.ln1na camp ln Lon& Beach. • JS years old as about 20 of the "family'' looked on. "Charlie took her Clothes off and started making Jove to her. She was rejecting him. . .At one point, she bit him .on the shoulder and he hit her in the face ." Deputy Dist. Atty. Vincent Bugliosi asked Mn. Kasabian what happened after that. "Then Charlie told Bobby Beausoliel another clan member and everybody to start touching her and mating Jove to her and everyone did." Q: What followed thereafter? A: Everybody made love to everybody. Mrs. Kasabian said tlut:t the girls in the Manson "family" referred to themselves as "witches." "Charlie called all the girls witches," she added. Mn. Kasabian took the stand for the second day in the trial of Manson and three young women for the slayings of actress Sharon Tate and sil others 'last August. On fi.fonday she told of her first meeting with Manson when "he fel t my legs and seemed to think they were okay." Deputy Dist. Atty. Vincent Bugliosl asked what happened the next day. Mrs. Kasabian said Manson came to a cave where she had slept behind the Spahn ranch. "He made love to me and we had a slight conversation," she said. Manson's attorney jumped to his feet and objected that the testimony "im· pug:ns the morality of Mr. Manson." The judge overruled the objection. Q. What conversation did you have with Mr. Manson when you were mating love about that time? A. l don't recall the complete con- versation but he told me that I had a father bang-up. Q. Was this after you had sexual tntel'C{lurse'! A. No, it was before. Q. Were you impressed when he said, this, that you had a father hang-up? A. Yes. Because nobody ever said that to me and 1 did have a father hang-up. I hated my stepfather. fl.trs. Kasabian ltltn began describing one of the many camping expeditions upon which Man.son led his nomadic "family." She told how they camounaged their campsites to avoid being spotted by helicopters. On Monday she testified that she rlrst heard of Manson and his clan from a girl who told her of "a beautiful man that we'd all been waiting for." Her testimony was interrupted repeated- ly by defense objections. Costa Mesa Man Staggers Into Jail A 40-year.old Costa Mesa man dJdn't ha ve far to go Monday night when he wa s arrested on suspicion or being drunk In 1 public place. Newport Be11ch Police Officer Ed Cl- barelll idvlsed the man he was under i rrest after seelng hlm stagger In via .JM rear door of Police heRdqulrten at W 32nd St. Cibarelll tool: him down the hall io the tank. 'Kidnap Susp~_ct3 Held Cool Mom Helps Police Capture Trio 87 ARTBUR R. VINSEL Of ... DllllJ '*' 51.tf Racing 338 miles against an B p.m. deattllne, a nW'l,1-ikirted mother can-ying Jl,500 in ransom Monday met three kidnap suspects in Costa Mesa and coolly helped police capture them and free her daughter unbanned. 'Mle trio of Connecticut rpen who reportedly drove out to find the young woman and her husband were captured and disarmed without incident by lawmen listenhig to them via bidden microphone. Investigators had nothing but praise for auburn-haired Mrs. Yvonne Parker, 40, who works as a troubleshooting manager for a chain Of Phclf!nii: restaurants. "She was beauUful. Ju.st beautiful,'' said Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride. "Sbe pulled it off without a hitch." Mrs. Parker escorted her daughter Stacy, 22, away from the Costa Mesa apartment she shares with her husband, Mark C. Peyton, 22, at· 2020 Wallace Ave., to set the stage. Police then captured two accused kid· napers tcgether and a third was air prehended separately, freeing Peytoo. Complaints charging the Connecticut men with kidnap and grand theft will be sought today from the Orange County District Attorney's office, accqrdlng to Detective Capt. Bob Green. 'Illey were identified as: -James M. McShane, 23, a StraUord, Conn., bartender. -Donald E. Von Remoortere, 24, a Stratford computer prograrner. -Frank W. Papcin, 28, a Bridgeport laborer. Capt.. Green said the couple were kid- naped from a party pad somewhere in Lagu.na Beach and told they had 48 hourS to come up with $1,500 or faee unstated consequences, A series of calls to relatives in Con- nectkut and then to Mrs.. Peyton's mother led the attractive mother of five other children to arrive in Costa Mesa late Monday afternoon. "She drove all the way over from Phoenix and then when we tried to put her up for the night she aaid she had to get back," explained SgL McBride, one of the raiding team. A microphone hidden in her clothing, h.trs. Pirker went to the Wallace Avenue address to find her daughter and 90n-in· law, but they weren't present at that time. Police said she began gingerly pumping one of the alleged kidnapen about whether they-were armed, with what type weapons and who among them carried the guns. Only one pistol WIS tubsequenUy found. °For a mother -not even knowing what to expect -she pulled it off beautifully" said Sgt. McBride. "Tallr abUUt anxiOIJ! moments ... all we could do was bile our nails," he conUnued. Several detectives were poised to make the capture and other officen were sta- tioned at key points nearby to await the climax. Indian Dancers Set Coast Show Dancers of the Apache, Pima, Navajo and Papago Indian tribes will perform at Fashion Island Wednesday at 11 a.m., 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. in slage court on the center mall. The boys and girls, from the St. John's Indian School in Laveen, Ariz., have ap- peared in many parts of the U.S. and have toured Europe with performanets in Denmark, Germany, Holland, Austria and Italy. The free performances will be present· ed by the merchants of Fashion Island. . During this perli>d, Mr. and Mro. Peyton were returned. Sgt. McBride said the aUeged kidllapero wanted Mrs. Parker and stacy to ac- comMJlY them but she talked them Into ta.kin( the lreya to her car and allowing them to leave separately. Tbe men were instructed to unlock the trunk, where they would find $1,500 In cash, as demanded. Detective Nonn Kutch watched aa the two women reached safety and cllmbed a fence to confront a pair of the auspects as they left the apartment complex.. "He got the other two and I gr1bbed the ll'••t big dude from behlnd," 8'id Sgt. McBride, upilJnlng that Papcln is stJ: feet tall and wellhs 235 pounds. Officers who had been wllting nearby converged onto tbe scene 'and a police helicopter swept in o v e r h e a d , U. luminaUng the area with its searchlight. Subsequent investigation led to discovery ot a smlll amount of mari- juana in the victims' apartment and Peyton wu arr.at.ed on thal char1e. He told police be had been roughed up by his captor durlni tht two-day period, but invt1tlplon Kid he showed no evidence of a 'serious beatmg. . . PT&T _4dmits Employes Block Newport Traffic Pacific Telephone today acknowledged its employes are creaUng a traffic pro- blem for residents of Harbor View Homes on Ford Road just off MacArthur Boulevard. ,.... Expansion of a Pacific Telephone operations facility on Ford Road has temporarily closed a parting lot and employes are using the street for day· long parking of their cars. And residents of the new subdivision are complaining of huards and in- convenience. "We're aware oC the situation and have obtained pennission for our people to park on other lots nearby," said Paclftc Telephone'• Streeter King today. "Unfortl.Ulately," he said, 11one of the lots is a little distance away and the other is dirt field. 'Mle employe1 are somewhat reltrlcant to use them." Ford Road In front of the telephone facility is both narrow and curving. The operaUon controls and maintains oper• tlons for Pacific Telephone's SM-ex· change. King said the construction program will keep the lot clO&ed until January, but that efforts will be made to induce employes to uUlize off-street parking facWUes. Mesa Sweet 17 City,, Retiring Leader Honored Leaders from Costa Mesa and sur- rmmding communities came or sent their regards Monday as the city celebrated its 17th anniversary and one of its first employes marked his retirement. Hund.reds of people turned out for the luncheon honoring Arthur R . McKenzie, who is retiring as city manager. , State Controller Houston I. Flournoy was the featured speaker during the luncheon at the Costa Mesa Goll and Coontry Club. He said leadershi.~such as that shown by McKeru:ie, who began his local career as police chiEf, bas put Costa Mesa on a hellthy fiscal basis. "Unfortunately, not all your sister cities and agencies have been endowed with it," he remarked. Telegrams and other expressklns of good will, includlng one from Los Angeles Police Chief F..<hfard Davis, arrived dur- ing the luncheon honoring McKenz1e, a onetime LAPD detectiv~ sergeant. Fonner mayors, city officials and policemen were in the audience for the chamber of commerce-sponsored affair. Police Chlef Roger Neth, who suc- ceeded McKenzie, said during his years as Costa Mesa's top cop the superchief -as be became known after his pro- motion -taught him a lot about being a good lawman. "His ability to find what was best for the men on the force and the com- munity earned him the respect of all citizens," said Chief Neth. "Art McKenzie has grown with the city," said Vk:e Mayor Willard T, Jordan, noting that he overcame a polio handicap before joining the city staff 17 years ago. Fonner Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley said McKenzie, who was perennial Orange County director of the March of Dimes before suffering the cerebral hemorrhage that sidelined him, won't want for W<C"k in hi! retirement ' He said 17 charitable organizations have offered McKeniie jobs in manage-- ment and administration. "And I've got a }ob lined up for him in a year and a half although the pay is lousy," quipped Pinkley. Mrs. Lura McKenzie and the couple~• son Marie were present for the luncheon. which was attended by Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth and Mrs. Goldie TeWlnkle, widow of Costa Mesa's fi.(5'1. mayor. . Santa Ana Police . Otief Edward •• J. Allen and Hemet Police Chief ~ Pollom, who was a lieutenant under McKenzie on tfle local force, were also there . A commemorative plaque w a 1 presented to McKenzie by Chamber r6f Commerce President Gordon Martlft, then be received a standing ovation antt was moved nearly to tears. Mrs. Mary Alice Wilson, wife of Mayor Wilson, gave a bouquet of red roses to Mrs. McKenzie. "Art. would you care to 1 a y anything?," asked. Martin. "Just thank you," McKenzie replied. ~ Flournoy, a former assemblyman from Claremont, where he taught political science and government, said durbtg his speech that tax reform is badly . needed in California. The state's top fi!Cal officer. who lits as a member of 27 various governmental agencies, warned that critical matters such as federal, state and local revenue-- sharing plans must come soon. , "During the four to five years im.· mediately ahead," he ex.plained. . "Govermnent at au levels mu!lt economiu," be added. "Programs mud be ~:a:amined and lower priority pro- grams must be dropped." It'• The Second Big Week of our •••• GRAND OPENING SALE! We are pleased to announce the open ing of our second store in Tustin . We have purchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new nam e.will be "Alden 's Red Hill Ca rpets & Draperies." e IN COSTA MESA • ALDEN'S CARPETS • tiAPES 1663 Pl1centl1 AYL Phone 646-4131 In conjunct ion with the open-· ing of our Tusti n store, we have several spec i a Is in ou r Costa Mesa store. Please come in and " see us. . ' •IN TUS'ON e ... ALDEN'S · RED HILL CARPETS e DRAPES 11374 E. Irvine Pt.one 131-3344 VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. ' ., • . ~ • ' I' ' I ,; i • ' • voe. 63, NO. ·11.9 .. l,S~JONS, 28,PAGES ' • .e·sa ' , . ' o rlANse eoONTY. cAaFORN1..: .. ).' s • • r ' • na •• . -.-. . ' .. - • TIN.CENTS . ' .. • • • --· . , . . , . ·~- C~Ji}l Mom ~ts -.'T.r:r;ip :f~r· PQlic~men · . ~ ~ •*"' t . , ' . ' . . . " .... ... . 1 DAILY PILOT Steff ....... RETIRING CITY MANAGER McKENZIE, WIFE LURA, GREET WELL WISHERS AT LUNCHEON Coola MoNns Tum Out to· Ha ll Thtir 'Suporch lof' 01 Ho Hood1 Dow" Rood to Rocovory from Stroke ' , II)' ~II. It .VINSEL •. 0( .. ~.~... ..... • • • Raclni' 338 mlleS agalnJI ' an 1· p.m" deadllnt~ a lnlnl-sklrted mother canylnc Sl ,500 in rlll90m Monday met three kidnap suspecla in Costa Mesa and coolly helped police capture them and free her daughter unharmed. ' · ·. The trio of ConoecUcut men who reportedly drove out to find the young· woman and her husblnd were captured' an<f disarmed wilh;out incident by lawmen l!Jten!ng to them yla hidden microphone. Invesll&ators had nOthing bl)~ praise for auburD-hairtd Mn. YvonQe ParkerJ.. 40; who worb u a troubleshootinl .manager for a chafn of Phoenix. restaurlf'!ts. .. "She was beautify!. JUll !>e~uUluI;" said llolectlve Sil. CW! Md!rlde. '.'~. (l!llled It of! wilhouf • bitch... . Mrs. Pilrker eacorted her dluabttt Stacy, 22, ·away from the c.osta Meaa .. a_p..rtment a.be share,, with her husband, Mark C. Peyton, Z2, at 2020 Wallace Aye., to aet the 1ta,e. . ' Police then .captured two accused ~~ n_apers together and a third was .•P' prehended separately, freeing Peyton. Complaints charging the ConnecUcut mtn with kidnap and grand theft will be ·90ugbt today from the Orange COunty District Attorney'• office, 4ccordlng to DetecUve Capt. Bob Green. , 'l'bey were identllied a1: -Jarhes M. Mcshane, 13, a Stratford, C.onn., bartender. -Donald E. Von Remoortere, 24, a Stratford C001puter programer. M K • H d b M -Frank W, P•P!'ln, II, a Brldaeporl c . en_z1e : . o~o.r~ . ·. y . . esa ... ~~·= :~-icoupl-.:t; • f I, , , . , • •l • ,. • . , .... ., ; 4i ~l=~P !f t.r.; er ,., H ' D' " T -• • '.J C' ' J 7 h B ' hda face unsiat ·"""""utnces. -etµ-eme~t inner · LtUUuB ity s t irt y .~1:-a~-; \11:;:~~ ,. t mother ltlf th!! I attractive JllOtber. 61 Leaden from Costa Mesa . and · sur· ceeded McKenzie, said during bis years Mayor Ed Hirth and Mrs. , Goldi~ flvt Othtr ·ehildren to artJv8 in Ciit&i fOWldln& cqmmwtities came or seii.t their as Costa Mesa's .top cop the superchief Te Winkle, widow of Costa Mesa's first ~esa.J1te ~ond•Y Jftemoon. regards Monday as lhe city celebrated -as he became known after his pro-mayor. "She drove all the way over from Its 17th anniversary and one of lls first motion -taught, him a lot about being Santa Ana Police Chief Edwai-d J. Phoenix 4nd tben 'when wt tried t.o . employes nlarked hi! retirement. a good lawman. Allen · and Hemet . Police Chief Dean put her up 'tor the Jntcht. 1be said ·she Hundreds oC people turned out for "His ability to find what was best Pollom, who was a lieutenant under ha~ to get bact.:• uplained Sgt. the luncheon honoring Arthur R . for the men on the force and lhe com-McKenzie on the local force, were aISo McBride, one of the raJdJni team. ' ho · et" · 't munity earned him the respect of all there: A mlcrophOrie Hidden In htr C~, McKenzie, w is r inng 81 ci Y Mrs. Parter wen. t to the Willace AW!ftu• citizens," said Chief Neth . A ti "'· manager. commemora ve .,...que was addrea to· find her daughter and· m-in- State Controller Houston 'I. Flournoy "Art McKenzie has grown with the pre!ellted ' to McKenzie by Chamber of law, but they weren't present it that was the featured speaker during the city," said Vice Mi.yor Willard T. Jordan, r.ommerce President Gordon Martin, time. hmcheon at the Costa Mea.a Golt and noting that he overeame a polio handicap then he received a standing ovation and Police said lhe beglll gingerly pu!ftplng Country· Club. before joining the city staff 17 years was moved nearly to tears. one of the aUepd kklnapers i bout He said leadership such as that shown ago. Mrs. Mary Alice Wilson, wife of Mayor whether they were irmed, with what t;y McKenzie, wbo.Jlegan his loca.I caretr Fonner Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley .said Wilson, gave a bouquet _of red roses type weapons and who amon1 them as police chief, has put Costa Mesa McKenzie, Who was pereMial Orange 10 Mrs. McKenzie. cirried the guns. on a healthy fiscal basis. County director of the March of Dimes "Art, woufd you care to 1 a y Only one pjstol was subsequently found. "Unfortunately, not all your sister · before suffering the cerebral hemorrt\age 111~1th!ng?," asked Martin. "For a mother -not even knowing cities and agencies have been endowed that sidelined him, won 't want for work "Just than k you," McKenzie replied. what to expect -she pulled it off with H," he remarked. . in his retirement. Flournoy. a forme r assemblyman from beautifully" said Sgt. McBride. Telegrams and other expressi~s of He' said ·-17 charitable crgani.ialions Claremont, where he taught. political "Ta1k abUUt anxfo11s moment! ... all good will, Including one from Los Angeles have offered McKenzie jobs in manage· :iicieoce and governmeni, said during hi! we could do was bite our nails," he Pctice Chief Edward Davis, arrived dur-ment and administration. speech that tax reform Is badly needed continued. ' hig the luncheon honoring McKenzie, "And I've got a ·job lined up for in California. Several det.ectlvea; were po)sed to make a onetime LAPD detective sergeant. him in a year and a half although The state's top fiscal cfficer. who ails the capture and other oUicers were lta· Fonner mayors, city officials and the pay is lousy," qul'pped Plnkley. as a member of 'Cl various governmental tloned at key poinla nearby to await policemen were in the audience. for· the MJ;s. Lura McKenzie and the couple's agencies, warned that critical matters the climu. chamber of commerce-sponaored affair. son Mark were present for the luncheon, such as federal, state and local revenue-During this period, Mr. and Mrs. Pol.ice Chief Roger Neth, wbo suc· which was ·attended.by Newport Beach (Set HONORED, Pagel) Peyton were returned . . Seal Beach Officials Fired ' By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 JM O.llr 1'1191 \riff Stal Beach is a town divided today with both the city manal(er and (:ily attorney looking for new jobs. Both were fired' by :J.-2 vote of the cily counci l auring a fi ve-hour session in tbe McGaugh School auditorium where old friendsh ips were lorn asunder, tempers· flar ed and heads rolled. The fir Mg ol Lee Risner, chli£ ex- ecuUve of the city for the pest four and a half yea rs, and that of City Attorney James Carnes w a 1 ac- complished by a new council power bloc composed of Mayor ,Morton Baum and CouocUmtn Thomas Ho1ard and Conw1y Fuhrman. DtsscnUng votes were · ca1t · by Councilmen Lloyd · Gummere and Harold Holtlen, • · · 1 Whlie the cooncn· deliberated In • !0- . . cit)' Aff&j)'s'. to pursue pri\rale busin<!u ana cf not keepiq the city council adv~ by "co,icealin1. distorting' and mlsi'epresenUng lnfonnatlon." T h er e were no charges dir&:ted publicly at City Attorney Carnes. Since· the majority of the COllTlCil is new and could not techn lcally fire Ri.!iner, they first approv,ed by 3-2 vote a 61).day suspension. The dismlssal takes officially then. At the same time, the council appointed Dennis Courtemarche 83 Interim cily manager and Jim Bentson as city at- torney, also by 3 • 2 vote. Risner, who sald he would go lo his office \Oday to pick up a few belongings, commented, "These (accusations ) are cOmpletely without foundaUon.~How can IW01 cooncllmen jllll .. afW bavin( been Jn ofli<e only ""' ,. . • 'Earlier, · ·llolden declaled a"1 handbilb In bls'support. occuionally lnJulted by the crowd. • "The policemen are placing themselve1 "I've never &een a Hiller operate above the l~w." .said· Boisvert, charging befort, but no'I( I have," shouted. an thtlt police pressure· prqmpted some unidentified man. · · mercha"nls 1.o .put up "Save Our City Manager" signs. "There are few Who · Baum, a Jew, calinly replied, "U you , could not feel the implied force ol knew ·lilat I had escaped .from ·the ovena the law behind them." · · · of Germany by the skin of my teeth, As uniformed policemen stood by, you wouldn 't say that." numerous persons took the podium ln support of the city •manager after oral "It would appear the Seal Beach J>W',. communications were opened again fol-. is now complete," added Sol Mill1teiD, lowing the disposition of some routine whose wlfe Marilyn ran in the list agenda items. council election. "Mr. Mayor, you ~aven't Only two or three supported the mayor • and the other councilmen. Said Tom beard the la1t of it from , us,,, fie Bralty, a retired ·stockbroker,. 11It just aa1d. . boils down to the question of who's Terry Barton, a member of ·t.be pJ.an.. 'Wllling the community,, the city m,anager nJng commission resiped 'publicly,· Qr , the ctty cdmc:U. I would suuest statlq:. "I -I.ID ubamed tb be an otnait ,if Mr. ~i~ner want.s1to i:w it,~ shou.ld member of the clly. '1 am uhamed Jha\!e stepped doWri. from his Job ' and ... • • Sst. llCllrldt Al4 the lllepd tldnapera Sgt. M<l!rlde; explalnlni 11111 Papcln '!~ltd !fn. ,~llk'I ~ lll8<Y \<>· ac-. iJ six feet.ta!\ 111<( weilhs 23$ pqaodl. company,dteri:i but lhe·tllked -Ulem Into O!ficers who bad been watuns nearby taiini .&he. Oya to:~ car. and allowing co11ver1ea on~ the Me and a police tber)'l' to leave ~parately. . helicopter swept in overhead. U. The men were lnstructed to unlock Juminating the area with Its searchlight. the trunk, whete they wouid ftnd $t,5oo · SubseqUent invesUiation led · t o Jn cub, u demanded. • • ... ; • discovery ,of 1· small amount of marl· Deteetlve Noim Ku;tch wale.bed as:the Juana in the vicUms' apartment aDd two· women reached ufefy and cUinbed Peyton was arrested on that charge. a fenci to confront a pali of lhl-sll!pects · He told police he had been roughed as they left tbe 1partmenl complex. up by his-captor during th.-:::r "He Sot tbe otbtr two ancl. I &r•btied · period, but investigators Nld he the great bll dude .from. behind," • .Aid no evidence of a wlous b!i!!ni. Anetlfer Ji'l:i:ile .Freeway ·Hearing Off,. . . ' l)espite 'Large Crowd By THOMAS FORTUNE Of "" o.ur ~let "'" SACRAMENTO A ~ e n a t e Transpo~Uon Committee .heatin1 . on a bill to delete Pacific Coast Freeway throilgh Newport Beach and part· of Hunllngton Beach waa·pootpooed Monday and l.tdtatively reacheduled for 1 p.m. Mooday. All oommlttee hearlnp were called off when t:hl Smale decided tO continue ~tine'.•! a· whole Into the ~· llCI ~ 11ta1111 's It lillllJlp tu . e .i~iJ2'tl: ~t= .._ ::. .. c;; ... ._,ptlOO o1 ClllMlltteo ~-·w~. ·Alljot a ~ iM tlli 0....,. q,&I! · 1nc11Jd1ng clt7 · ofllel&IJ · from Neirllort B<ach, Hunllnsto'n 1le1eb, ·eorta Me11. and, Laauna Beach had nown · to sl.cramento for the· freiw•y 'tte&rlng lljonday. · Dayan May Qtiit If Israelis. OK U.S. Peace Plan • JERUSALEM (AP ) -Indication> are 1901,1nlin& ,that. Israel's, _govern,ment will agree reluctantly and with condltionJ to the to-day ceue-fire prqposed by the · United States to get ' Middle East peace talb under way again. But local press reports 1ald Defense Minister Moshe Dayan ls considerin1 resigning if the cabinet accepta the American proposal. · ·A Defense Ministry spoke!man termed the reports "rumors," but he admitted, ''Dayan is not enthusiastic about the U.S. propo1al." The reports uid Dayan had eJ;pres1ed misgiviQ&a because the U.S •. plan rpeaka ol. lilra!li ·wllbdrawal from the. Ar1b landa caplJired In the 1117 war. Da)'an believes that Israel's security depends on its retaining the Gw. Strip, the Golan Heit)ita taken from Syria. _and a coutal · strip ,alOrJi· the Sloil_ daerl to ~~ail of Tlran, the key to bra~I'• southern water route 10 Eut , Mn~ and A.sia. . Premier Golda , Meir---.od .her . cab~t scheduled · another . mleti111 tollay to iU:scuss thf:ir 'reply tO .the p[opog_al. There ii' a posstb!Uiy she •wm · ,.ply' to ~oihl!lll<iit Wedn.,day nliht In I 1piech to Lbi 'Kne~t1 the Isriell parliament. Council Getting To,us'IJ.·o ~·Trucks . ·A ¢-tough poltey · aa•lnot· lf\lclrera baulln( 'dirt ·and 1rsvel through • Colla -to coiiotructloo llts'ia' aboul to . M impoled, making flllurs .to clean . up tbo. -111111 debrll ' mlldemeaa>r , Perhaps the moat. disappointed wu Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wllaon Who had to cancel as master of ceremonlea for a Monday retirement< luncheori bcinbr- ing ·former Costa Mesi City MIDI&_. Art ~cKenzie. . 1 Round·trip airplane tares for an th• persona who flew to Sacramento to testily on the freeway bill probably total· ed more than ,1,000. Most uld the:1 would make the trip again w~ or whenever the bW comes up, Paul Gruber, former Newport Beadri .. • mayor who ·Dow is vice cbllnnan •...: Harbor ,Yea ,_ Fl&ltton. sell,. '"IV.e've .baen ~Unc· tblt -,..n. We'to;!!! 10fzil to g1,.._ '!2 now." . , ' .I Assemblyman Robert' Baifbaai • (ff..' "' ~'Beach), wl!O autborid 'the fzOeWa1. delellon bill, ol!eerved; that "'l'\le Senate ls involved ln an emotional. bltt1e ~ · there Ja: no· .telling hqw Joni it WJll take." ' ' ' .'J'b«~'i~ tar package . It clealiJled to lllfft . up to · SI billion from ,IOcal p/oP't;IY· tmo to stai. s,l!s; ·Jncomo and bUalileeHr!Oh~ ·taxes. It already bas been.approved by the Au<mbly. • 'iThe · iqi portant thing ii to prqerve theae lovely towns -and . thi5 aPIJilu alao to 'Malitiu, Santa' Monica,. Ballta Barbara -the l<rwlll have the' ifcht to . M sa...r and they should support each other. Laguna Beach llW'Oly hu more in common. with N~rt Belch tJian it has with the · Division of Highways." · Dilley said he agreed illlt removal ol the Newport segment or the freeway would not jeoi>ardize Laguna's poslUon, Damage $10,000 In Fullerton Fire . . A fire of unknowi> origlJt "!•pl tbroup a .Fullertmr home MoOO.y nlillt' destroy• Ing the family car and WUct!nc dam'ap esUmated at $10,000. · • • Firemen were able to conta.In· the main blaze to tbe garage and prevent it apreadiJig to nelghborJni property. No one was hurt in the outbreak at )JZ5 Miraclor Drive. Offictrs are today invesUaaU., , the cause of the blaze. . .. «:out We•tller It'll reach 68 degrees lllterln1 thtotJih . the Coutal hue orl1 Wed· nesday or up. tO 821if you're further ln\an<f. Low clouds will prevail !JI the night and moml111 boun. . ' •INSmE TODAY Tim Know~s; th1 26-~or.old the move eull .t a1 Ultgal, !ince, he aald, the •aa orll!oally mlnute executive ltali.OA. '1 an' audience : ~ of loo slmmered ln the auditorium with done iL " to . have 'Mf!o" Bomn u my mayor. Couricllman l;ulirman, believed by pro-He and tbe 'cithm bave IUC-1e( Ill . crime. . l 'Tiie c..t. Meea. City Council )tu Unan· l!nouoly opprQft<f aq1.ame°""'"t tt the· cit1'1 111>1}Utter CJl'd..,..., aayq It -Id lie• ollacllvt'lilllllod CJI <'Olllr!>L • "I tblol< ~·1 --we'ft nsoded for a lo"''11m>." -•ed' CcJuncllmwJ groduate-student t.oho run. the fedtrollv 1•1""<1 Educattcma! Oppomnitv . Pr-at. UC lrpine, taus rn-tnoritu st1'dc'rtu have trouble pctti"g · into col- lege Oecau.&e: 'thew are gcttino poo r advice from hjQ11. •choo4 eoun.st!ora. Paoe B. ~ ;,·-rlullbtfl 1attlons occa11onally bruklnl ' · · ' · tltf.ltrision by trading tnsult.J. -• ~ Suddenly . Risner llrode th.Wgh the hall and it resounded wUli a miJ:ture of cheers and boos. He calmly walked up to a table and got his paper1. "tllose •• -canned him," exclaimed Lester Marshall, a Risner supporter, after exchanging a few words with him. City Attorney James Canies appeared ahortly thereafter and told . Risner, "l made them fire me too, Lee." Risner was publicly accused or nealec- tin1 to fil1 filcll reportl, nealecUna I • • bn/Ugl>I up Oii Ille j! ~ ....ion wiihout havln( 11eoo-;llCod legally on the agenda. "It's unethical lo say lhe least," aaid Holden, alleging that Baum, Hogard and Fuhrman had met amona tbemtelves to-decide the outcome. '~'i'a coWard-- Jy cons piracy underfoot," he added. lmmediately befor .. the council reured into e.xecuUve se~n. Paul Boisvert. Baum's former campaign manager, im- plored them to fire Risner because he allegedly aoliclted uniformed policemen to paint '1illl od circulli. polltlool Risner Jotces .\o_J>e the. ~tlgalor of ' Ilsa 1hlo a moeth to (111111 Ibis city a city hall purge=wbich may extend to the brink ol'"'?hao1 Ud diNlter:" to Police Chief Lee Case and i=ire Chitf i'• :,....~~ iu-t"1ww. U'J- R. .E. Adams, wal aerv.d ~ i · re<aU' Iii 19 111 ~·lf •IJ .• ~. tile · pel1t10n. alleldl Gl·th!! dlj, the bol!ll . Heall ~np are ar.o '~' Gf "''llW'lurlllrlo """"3>, .Ibo · lo bi at.iiled. i!iaiNl"Baum and ~· • ' ark n....,.,.,.. ~lolt.. who \rere electecWune 2. • the CivJI Service Board and ·•h•t wu terward, Manl>ail said In file lobby, clalmed'to b< oboul 1 •• cIUae111. · · "We're going to start as IOOn IS' we "Mr. RJM, ht1 mort ~kin& anil . collect some money." you've -.it aiqr, .. trouble than,.xou can Mayor ea·um and' the~others sat IJ1ent, haDdle .Ii lht nest six l'n09dti." Mta. occasionally 1mfnng, as tbey ·were Mar1aiji• ,~ 1 fetldent ·Cit U. cit)',· reprimanded, tcel,&ltd ol collu.siop. and 1w.arned;. .. i WllD111tH.: St. '<lair. ' I . , .CllJ Au.mo, Roy Jift ·aakf the mlad& ' meanor criminal status, which Could Im• poae a llx-pt011th jilt ·term and l$OO fint, ii not tlto Intended -· G~)IJ!I lilt\ m"' left by \onc·i)ful truckers servtna Oranie Coatt conatn.ic- tion· IJtu cleaned ' up. 11 the speclfic potnl.tbe city ii tryllli to:1ccompllib, 1 • ' . . c""'""' ' ..... . -,.," ~"'"'' ,,....., ... " ~·r ..,. .......,. ..... ~ =.,. ~ ~= =-~:." ~,i °"""...... • ...... 1 .. ,, .. _ _. I ltllll ...... , .. 11 ..... ,, ........ " ,...., ..... .,. r 1•1t ,._..,. "'" '"'-1•11 • ..., • ...,..... 14 W!lltl ..... • • ,, •11111 Ltllftn 1• .............. ,.,. ....... . ..,.. ,..... .. -. ----- (. DAUoY Pll.01' ...... tJ LM Perw. ..IOMN G.~ISSMAN, 9, PEDALS oOwN ONIE 0ir NEW ,;STREETS' AT MOTOR COACH GATHERING ·, y_. .... .,.i Family Travalad ,p,_ llllllwpolla to Homa ..,.Whaala Convanllon at Falrvrounds UppeF Bay Ecology. Study . ' Presented in Court Trial A Depariment ol Fish and Game report whfi:h -nil · that tila Upper Bay's eco1ogy. will ,be dlarupted ii tbe !rvme Company Is .uo-1 to deYelop·tbe ...., WU Introduced .foda1 Into tile Superior CoW1. trlal. . l Attorney Pbilllp Deny brought the document Into · questioning of Harbor District E~ James Balllngv. lie asked Ballinger to 'clarify his statement Monday that the land e1change. would allow development of an ecological plan ii tile swap goes through. Betry wed the engineer Utile noport'• coochullon that the trade would have "far reaching deleterioua effects on tile eoo1ogy of the Upper Ba7'' fnfiuenced his thinking. Ballinger .qulclily denied tilat It bad. And be pointed lo -of Ille report John Wayne's Brother Dead I \ ' ' ~ .' ' ' GLENO.u.E (UPI) -Funeral aervices will be prlvale !Or Robert Eminett Mor· riaon, II, brother of Newport Beach nsi&ml' John W1,y111!, tile family uld Manclay. Mom-, • mollon picture productloa ei:ecuUvt, ~ SAturday of cancer. I.lb his more famous brother Jolin. he played football at the University of Soutbere cantomia and wu a member of · the 1932 naltonal championship toam. 1bia was the lltCOod death in the family this year. The mother, Mary Pi.en, dled In March. Colilltruction Strike Enter s Second Day GRANADA, Spain (UPI) -A renewed walkout by 12,000 construction workers entered its second day today amid hopes of a quick soluUon. t1>at .Jed hlDI to .11eu ..... he Aid. 111a1 lrvllle devtlopment need nol .u the end ol pr<senUy exlstlng eeololkol ,... dltlcml In Upper Bay wa""-, ; 'Illa! d.......,em will lib pllCe ii Superior Court Judge Claude N. OWens and wbal ii expected to he a 1trfes of appellate court judges rule ib8t ·the tradlng ol 157 ..., of ClOlllllf owned tldellods for 450 ams of Irvine company uplands ii lawful and oonrtitutlonal. Berry repreeeot.s a Newport homeownen• group which cha11enges the trade on both grounds. And he further alleges tilat conditions Imposed on the lidelandl when tile otate ol Call!Drnia deeded them to orange County prevent their. transfer to a,private corporation. 'Ille lrvlne Co. defends tile trade and argues that tts lmplementaUoo will erilance public faclHti.es in the atea in tenns of erpanded boating and more part and recreatim areas. 'llte oompany slates that Upper Bay ecolosY will DOI be damaged by we:!> development. Berry again argued MondAy tilat the Irvine Co. ~ near!~ 6,000 feet ol l"">JlclY o...e.I w a t e r froftlaae from 1t.s calculaUOns when Its representaUves ~ before the elote agency. That fl'Olllage lodude1, he aajd, Nctth Siar Bead! and Baclt Bay Drive, the lfnd A venue Beach and the lklJng area, he said. ' Judge OWena has ordered Berry to Jl'O(luce 'evidence of fraud before he again argues that allegation in the courtroom. Attorney Duffem Helsing, who represents county auditor Vic Heim, refuoes to he UIOclated will> tilal partlcular allegatloo. Indian Dancers Set Coast Show Dancers Of the Apache, Pima, Navajo and Papago Indian tri1?e5 will perform at Fashion 1aland Wednesday at 11 a.m., 2 p.m. and 4. p.m. in stage court on tbe center mall. The boys and girls, from the St. John's Indian School in Laveen, Artz., have ap- peared in manY parta of tile U.S. and have toured Europe with performances in Denmark, Germaoy, H.ol.land, Austria and Italy. 'nle free performances will be present- ed by the merchants of Fu:bioo lslaDd. Motor Coaches Get Official State Welcome 'Ille Family Motor Coach convention wu officially welcomed to California Monday evening, bllt DOt the official hosL Governor Ronald Reagan WU unable to attend as scheduled, and he was repre. ~led by l\lelvin G. Edwarda, a member of tile Calllornia State Tourl!m Commi5-slon. . After apologizing for the cool, "Mlchl-1.,. weather," of the evening, Edwards welcomed the 2,000 COh.YenUonen to C.1-- ifomia and said he hoped they woold "stay in the at.ate longer than the three days of the convention." The national convention being held at the ·0ranae County fairgraunds has •• tracted almost !00 motor coaches and their owners from all parts ot the coun- try. Display of equipment at tile fairgrounds today and Wednesday will he open from 2 p.m. to I p.m. Admission pri(e ii $1.50 per person. LTV to Market Braniff Shares? tl.u.i+8 (l/P,I\' -Financl,l!ly,f,roubjed Llog-Tliiilco-VoUght, lac., said Monday jt may .U its interest in Braniff Interna- tional Airtrays. It mentioned a price of $150 million. But LTV emphuiled tile "highly preliminary'' natyre of present negotia- tions. The official company statement read: "In responaa to Inquiries nlaling to reported negotiations on the possible sale of its 56 percent Interest in Braniff Airways, Llng-Temc:.>Voughl, Inc., uld today tilat ii ls conducting highly preliminary negotiations in severa1 areu tilat could lead to dispollUon of Its lniu..t In the airline. Maxie Ba ughan Stays On Rams Grid Squad FULLERTON CAP) -The Los Angeles Rams' defensive unit got a powerful boost Tuesday when veteran linebacker Malle Baugh.an renounced his retirement. The 10.year Natlona1 Football League star made the disclosure from his home in Atlanta and was due shortly in the regulars' unofficial training camp in Long Beach. Union leaders met late Monday wilh representatives of the striking workers to iron out an agreement. 'Ibey prombed no worken would be dlsmissed and salaries for time lost would be paid prpvided work was resumed today. GovUnment spoke!Jlllen predicted these new concessions would bring a speedy end to the deadlock. Police Find Few Leads \ DAILY PILOT OIU.HOl" COAST ,U.L.ISHING COMl"AN'f ltobert N. W••d PtalGMI lll'll Pllblllhtf' Jee\ l . C1rlev V1CS Pfnldtnl encl ~., ""'~ Tlio111•• Keevil t:•li.r Tt.0111 11 A. 1ro1.,,1i;ft• M-.1"1 t:llllw c.... 111 ... Offtc• JJO Weit l1y Slr11I M,111111 Ad''•'" r.o. ••• 11,0, t 2616 "" --,._., t.dl1 m1 w.1 a.11101 ........,.. ~ 9Mdl: m ...,_, ..,_ ~u.lllnt*' lttdll 11'71 kJdl .......... &tfl ~ ., ~ II (llftllll flMI In San Clemente Killing By JOHN VALTEllZA Of 1M Dell'I' Plllt lftff The police Investigator '"''king tile sUll-active beating and stabbing murder of San Clemente resJdent. Mrs. Connie Johnson has returned from her home state this week with few fresh leads. Detective Leonard Goodwin said his trip to Minnesota. produced little n,ew evidence in the baffling June 16 slaymg in the housewife's small apartment near the municipal pier are.a. Jn recen t weeks .Goodwin and other detecllves have held repeated con· ferences will> Marine Lance Cpl. Mark Johnson. 19, the dead woman'• husband, to retrace steps taken in earlier talk1 . But that, too, bu yielded little, detec- tives have sald. One man had been arrested July S In the killing, but after a weekend in cu.nody coinciding with intensive ln- ''esUgaUon, Frankie Wayne Mellino, 19. w~s set free without charges. He, also, b a Marine. Since then the investigators have doubt· ed back to rttrace every posalble aspect of the cue. The Investigation even reached into the realm of the bizarre auerted utanic ritual death of Mission Viejo teacher Mrt. Florence Nancy Brown and the sir drifters raclng trial in btr butcherlna death. I • But after a day of interviews with arrestees in the Brown murder, San Clemente police came up with nothing linking the two cases except for the style of knife used to inflict wounds on both women. n.e we.a.pea, a cornmoo blade known as a K-bar combat knife, allegedly was wed In each killing. Two olller key links in the chain of evidence are still missing -a pair of tennis shoes which could have made a print found in the kitchen sink in the ala.in woman's apartment and Mrs. Jolmaon'• wallel milslni fnlm tile acene when pollce arrived. The husband dl.scoVered his young wife's body sprawled on the bed 11 he returned frilm guard duly at the Marine Helicopter Facility In Santa Ana. ~lrs. Johnson had been dead about J 24 hours, police said. Her lfome had aome ltlJ'll of t11try, 1 but that aspect has: never been con- firmed . The. wlndow above the sink was open. Outside, benealh It, sat a metal folding 1 chair. Rcptated contacts will> nelghl>on bas reve aled UtUe infonnatlon on unusual nollts or circumNnctt In the pttdawn hours when Mn. Johnson .,.as b e at e n wllh a bar stool and stabbed repeatedly in the neck, chest and abdomen. , CU.It , 'INt.iittion', Toi~ .. . ' Linda Kasa~ian R-e lates Life i -,,, 'Fll!f'ily' \ . . ' . ' I.Di ANGiia (AP) -G~ Tbe Judi• overruled Ille objection. llan&·up. I bated my atopfather. Linda K'.Mlaa tMtllled today l6ac Q. What c:onverullmr dld you have "Mn, Ka.abian then began describing ""••Its M M told the young womon , '!ill> Mr. MINOn wllaityou w.re making , one of the many camping ell>Odltions ·..,...... · anaon ' Jove about that time? upon which Manson led hi,s nomadic ln-.l\IJ l!JppiH\Yle "famll,y" to make A. I don't rocall the compltte cq<>-"(amily.' i loft to men 'he wanted to rocru1{ for veraation but be told me tilat I bad Slit told hOw ·they camouflaged their hiJ nomadlc clan. • I a fatber bang:up• can>pst,.;. to avoid being ai>olted by The tlte sandy-haired prosecution -Q. Wu thia after you bad sexual helicopters. . pe ' intercourse? On Monday she tesutied &hat she first star witness in the Sharon Tate murder A. No, it was before. heard' of Manson and , h1I clan from kial also sald the ahaggy-halred cult Q. Were you impressed when he saJd, a girl who told her of "a benUfuJ leader had sexual Intercourse with her thia, that you had a father hang-up? man tbat we'd all been w~ ·for." in a cave and "told me I bad a father A. Yes. BecallSe nobody ever said J:Jef tesUmonY wu tmerruptecf repeat.ed-tilal to me and I dld have a fatiler i;. by defense _objections. bang·Up." Mn. Kaaablan was asked if Manson told the girt. to do anything with ma1e visiton to the spam ranch where the "family" lived for a time just north of Los Angeles. "Yes. He tbld us to make love to tileni and try to 4et tilem to Join tile famll,y, and if lhey wouldn't join . tile - tamuy, not to g!va them any ljlOre attention, n she replied. Over vehement defense objectlonl, Mn. Kasal>ian olao described an ~t in which ••everybody made love io everybody." Sbe aald, Man.son began It by forcing hlmaett upcin a ohy, withdrawn girl about 16 years old as about • of the "family" looked on. "Charlie took her clothes oU and started making love to her. She waa re.)ecting him. • .At one point, she bit him on the ahoulder and be bit her in the face." Deputy Dl!I. Atty. Vincent Bugliosl asked Mrs. Ka.al>ian what ha~ after that. - "Then Charlie told Bobby Beausoliel another clan member and everybody to start touchlng'her ind making love to her and every<me ~d.'' · Q: Whal f!>lloll'ed therufttl'? A: Evtrybody made.Jove to everybociy. Mn. K•UbJM, II.Id tbAt the girls in the Mamon "flmily" referred to the!Qlelvu u "~· '' "Olaille called all tba·gtrla witcbei, 'abt added. Mis. Kasal>lan toOi. 'tile stand !Or the second dat In tile , trial 'of Mwon and thrae YOIJllC women for the 11ayings of actNa Sharon Tate a.n<J siz. others iait August. { . On Monday ·~ told of ber first me<tJnf will> Mamon when "be fell my legs and teemed to think they were okay." De!IUly Dist. Atty. Vincent Bug!iosl asked what bapptned. the next $y. Mrs. Kasablan II.id Manson came to a cave wheno sbe bad slept l>ehlnd the Spabn ranch. ' ''He made love to ' me and we had a ,llf&tll, c:onverution,'' ahe said. .MllD""I'' ~ttoiney Jumptd to l\IJ feet a'riit objected tbat the testimony , "Im· pugns the morality of Mr. Manson." Jury Forgery Charge Sought Fonnal charges ~ !org...y will be sougllt lhrougll tile Orange COunly Grand Jury Wednesday against a Utah man whO allegedly launched an inlm!Jltonal bad-dlftl spree from a Sao Clemente bank early last May. Darrell Graff Hafen, 44, had been scheduled for arraipment on felony charg~Monday ·morning in South Orange County Munici pal Court, but the acUon was called off alter District At· tofney's aides decided for the Grand Jury irocedure. u the panel returns an indictment, Hafen will face trial on charges that he passed thousands of dollars in worthless checks in San Clemente, then moved on to allegedly do the same io La.Un America, Europe and the United States. \ •• College Will Challenge Co.urt iong ~air Ruling ~ ' . t ! • • " BJ FllEDEIUClt ·llCllODIJ!R!, Jodie Jlarry Pre-ruled this ........ ~ --moalh· tbli the college ban '"' long Saddleback College !l'rulteft Monday hair wu-tuUooal. Studenll, aided peal by' the American Civll Llberttes Unioa; unanlmoualy ~ to ap a U.S. bad 'tueii the matter to eot!r1 to oeWe Dlstricl Court declalon ruling tbat hair the c:ot11nulng hassle. regulations at the college were un. CoWps saJd, "We mult be responsible constituUonaJ. to the voters to protect our pttropUve. 'lbe approval caqie after the board That prerogatlve has been lnfrinced by met in ei:ecutive seaion for more than lb.is decisioo." · an hour. following the motion to appeal John Powell, deputy county oowm:J, and ila second, trustee Mlcbael Collin! told a repo!1er tilat ID appealln( tbe outlined the board's posiUon. decision, the board will me an .artier "Tbe fundamental Issue here is whO declllon banded down to the college will make nilea and nogulations for the In mid-April, by the Ith Circuit U.S. day-tooay a!falra of the college. II can Cour\ o1 Appeals. only he uerdsed by tile local govemlng The , ruling overturned two dlalrlcl l>oanl," be said. court preliminary injunctions .. - Collins uld tilat "tile right and obllga-agalnal tile Saddlel>ack long hair r<gllla· tion and respomlblllty to operate tile tlon. stating "the (diltrlct) court la system of education ill a atat.e function, preiuming to interfere with the dar-to- g!ven to the toca1 1>oan1s." day oponlion of the public aCbool Planners Okay Zone Oianges On Aparbnent A r.one ~e and exception permit to allow yard aetbeclt variations for a~. tOlklnit apartment complex were recommended for approval Monday by the Costa Mes.a Planning Commission. The project is to be built at 140 W. Wilson St., by developers L. C. Miller and L~ B. Fredericks pnder high rise standards and conditional pe.nnit JIOlicy 11Jldelin.,. . Cwmltly zoned for duplex use, the land "'Ding will be cl>~ed to multiple llOisity'lr A second 1.0ne excepllon permit was given the same stamp of approval, open- ing the way .for Michael D. Kay, of 400 N. Newport· Btvd., to build an office structure at 1648-52 Newport Blvd., with ollghtly nduced parking. Paul G. Shaver, of '°1 Vista Baya, also received a favorable recom· mendation for a zone exception permit allowing foor units In addition to one existing bllilding at 2515 Elden Ave., in a duplex mne. Costa Mesa Man Staggers Into Jail A 40-yeaN>ld Costa Mesa man didn't have fat to go Monday night when he was arrested on suspicion of being drunk in a public place. Newport Beach Police Officer Ed Ci- barelli advised the man he was under arrest alter seeing him stagger in via the rear door of police headquarters at 425 32nd St. Cibarelll took him down the hall to the tank. system.". . . The decialon o1ao noted 11>a1 the Supreme Court, in two cues, ltat.d that wbere· ICbool officlalll 0 are shown to have fonnill,y acted, the courts should interfere only with great cauUon." While Yacaling the preliminary ln- junctlons; 'tile ruling ordere<l the hair issue returned to the district court for further proceedinp. The decision, declar- ing the long hair regulation un- constitutional, was handed down July 17. • "The court holds that the right to detennine one's own hair length ls a fundamental freedom implicit in .;the concept of ordered liberty and protected against state Infringement by the due process clause of the Fourteenlb Amend- ment," tbe ruling stated. Jt a1so noted that no evidence was entered by the Saddleback College Administration to show "that the length or style of the plainti.ffa' hair bas created or would likely create an unreasonable risk of harm to the educational pro- " cess.,. The decision stated that in additioq. tcJ violating the due process clause, the regulaUon violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. From Page I HONORED •.. sharing plans must come soon. "During the four to five ye.ars Im· _mediately ahead," he explained,. "Government at all levels must economize," he added. "Programs mu.st be ~xamined and lower priority pr°'" grams must be dropped." "Californians currently pay the highest property taxes in the nation -this burden on property must be both rflluced and equalized," he continued. Flournoy also said Costa Mesa's riscal stability durinR its growth from 18,000 to 73,000 pers(lns during 17 yearJ is solid evidence of good management. It's The Second Big Week of our •••• GRAND OPENING SALE! / We are pleased to announce In conjunction with the open- ing of our Tustin store, we have several spec i a Is in ou r Costa Mesa store. Please come in and the open ing of our second store in Tust in. We · have purchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new name will be "Alden 's Red Hill Carpets & Draperies." ' -e IN COSTA ·M£SA • ALD.EN'S .CARPETS e .DRAPES 1663 Pl1c9ntla Av•. Phont 646-4t31 see us. e· IN TUSTIN• ALDEN'S RED HILL CARPETS e DRAPES 11374 E. lrvlna Phont t3W344 VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. . • ... ' ' ( • • I I • • J I t • l l I .. • .. Today'• Flnal . J • • • • N.Y. Steek.1 voe. ~l. N0.-"179, 2 SECTIOlilS, 28 PAGES ·O~NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .TUESDAY, JU~Y 28, '1970 :TEN CENTS .. . .. -· No New ·C.lues • Ill Clemente ·Murd·er . . . By JOHN Vil.TERZA Of"'-~ f'lllt ll9ff The police investigator working the ltill-1ctive beating and stabbing murder of San Clemente resident Mrs. Connie Johnson has returned from her home 1tat.e this week with f.ew fresh te_ads. Detective/ Leonard Goodwin said his trip to Minne9ota produced little new ev\denee in the baffling June 16 slayina: in the housewife'• small 1partment near Free.wag lfu•le the munlclpal pier aria. In...recent weeks «iqodwin. and other det«Uve.s have btld repeated con- ferences with Marine Lance Cpl. Mark Johnson, 11, the dead woman's husband, t.o retrace steps taken in earlier talks. But. that, too, has yielded little, detec- tives have said. · One man ha4 been arrtsle;d July 3 in the killing, bUt after a ·weekend in custody coincidinJ with intensive in- Re-routing Bill Hearing Delayed By THOMAS FORTUNE ot tlll Dell»' ..... , ~ SACRAMENTO A S e n a t t Transportation Committee bearing on a bW to delete Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach and part of Huntington Beach was p»tponed Monday and tentatively rescheduled for 2 p.m. Monday. All committee hearings were called oil when the Sen1te decided to continue meeting as a whole into the afternoon on Goveroor ·{teagan's Sl billion lax · reform program. A fin al vote on tax reform was expected late today which would clear the way for resump,tlo n or committee hearings pn Wednesday. About 20 persons fnm the Orange Coast including city officials from Newpart Beach.,.HlPJtin&~n Be~i:h, Costa Mes)-and Laruna Beach had fJOWft to Sacramento for the freeway hearing Monday. Perhapo the most diappoint..i was Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson who had to cancel as muter of ceremonies for a Monday retirement luncheon honor· Jng former Costa Me5a City Manager Art McKenzie. Round-trip airplane fa!'P.I for all the persons who flew to Sacramento to testily on the freeway bill ~bly total· Jury Forgery Charge Sought ed more than $1,000. Most said they would make the trip again Wednesday or whenever the bill comes up. Paul Gruber, former Newport Beach mayor who now is vice chairman of Harbor Ar.ea Freeway Fighters, said, "We've been fighting thil seYim years. We're not goin& to give up now." Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach ), who authored the freeway deletion bill,· observed that "The Senate is involved in 8JI emotional blltUe and there is · no telling bow long it will take .'' The Reagan tax package is designed to shi!t up lo $1 billion from local property taxe.1 to state u.1~11. il}Come and business-oriented ta~es. It already has been approved by·tbe Assembly. * * * Laguna-l)i-ViC i • . ' Group "Backs Freeway Bill ··we decided· we "bad to sland for Town Piannina: Aslociation spoke out this week in support of Assemblyman Robert Badham 's bill to eliminate the Newport Beach serment of the Coastal Freeway. While City Manager. James Wheaton and representatives of CoSta Mesa, Hun- tington Beach,' Fouutatn 'Valley and the county Of Orange were journeying to Sacramento to oppose the biU, the CTPA Fonnal charges of forgery will be addressed a letter endorsing 'it to . the Seitate TraruportaUon Comi'nittee. sought th.rough the Orange County Grand 'f1le letter, iiigned by CTPA president J ury Wednesday against a Utah man Joy Dickerson, states that the. CTPA y.iho aUegedly launched an internalonal "stands finnly for preserving the in- had<heck spree from a San Clemente tegrity of towns" and therefore sym- banll: early last May. pathizes with Newport Beach in it! fight against the bisecting freeway route. Darrell Graff Hafen, 44, had been Amplifying the CTPA stand, 1.1rs. scheduled for arraignment on felony Dickerson 1aid, "At first we felt like cha rges Monday morning In South ' going along against the bill, but by Orange County-Mllnlclpal Court. but the the time we finished· discuss~ng it .. we action was called off after District At-!elt. we really could not take this pos1t~on tomey's aides decided for the Grand 1( m fact the really important ttting J procedure is preserving the integrity of each town . UY the panel. returns an indictment, "We decided we ~ to s~ o(r Hafen will fa ce tri al 011 charges that what we felt was nght, that 1~, that he passed thousands of. dollars in Newport Beach bu u much right to worthleS& checks in San Clemente then try to gave Itself as Laguna Beach moved on to aliege<lly do the ,' same h~d d.uring the lo,~g tight to block the In Latin America Europe and the United bisecting freeway. States ' The CTP A president added that board · members did not feel there was any (See FREEWAY, Pa&e %) • Orange Coast Busy Crossing Weather To Get Signal? It 'II reach 68 degrees filtering through the coastal haze on Wed- nesday or up to 82 if you're further inland. Low clouds \~lill prevail in the night and morning hours. INSIDE TOD~Y Tim Knowles, the 26-yeor-oLd graduate studf!11t wh.o rum tlie fede rally funded Educational Opportunity Pragrom ot UC Irvine, soys minoritu .st~t.• have trouble getting into col· Lege bect11ue theu are getting poor adtnce from high schoot counselors. Pa@l I. C•Ufenll• .,r' Mrtltt l .. lf Clltdl:lllt U• J 11\vtllfll ~lllMI• If Cl1Hlfl.. i.-1' N1lllft-4 NtW$ f Ctmlcl 11 Or.nff C-IY I c............. "iJ .,M.I .....,. ,, DHf!I Nflkll I a,.rtt l .. 11 D!WWC" .. Siold! ......, 1•11 ~fl .. rlel ...... f Tlllnl,._ II R.w.rt•"""""' ! .. It Tt!Mttr\ , .... ,,._. 1•11 W•IMI 4 ~ 14 Wlll'9 ..... If Allll UM" 11 WffMll'• """ lJ.lt Mllllll, ' w.w ,._ ... _.,,. . Laguna Beach probably will get a 11111.ffic signal on Broadway to control the tricky crossing from Beach Street llp the hill to Cliff Drive, Joseph Sweany, director of public works , told planning commissioners Monday, State engineers, said Sweany, now ap- pear to be convinced that U:M volume of traffic in the area warrants 1 signal. The traffic signal at Cleo Street and South Coast Hi1hway, be added, 11 scheduled to be Installed In December. Asked if the slate would , not be In- terested In a complete program ol aignaliiation for the community, Swuny eoo1mented, "For the past 10 years, a schism has existed between the city and the Divisk>n of Highways. 1'he.y say. 'Take of( the parking and wt will • do a complete job .ol-&ignali.tlUon, with tum pocket. and so forth,' but the city hu always refused to remove the park· I.Di·" Tb< mull, he concluded, has boert pltcemtal lnstallaUon of aignala and rtmoval o( neceUltJ parkln1 apacu u the need &r'OH. . ' . vest11auo'n, F rankle. Wayne Melllqo. 19, wu set.. free wil:bout charge.a. He, I.ho, ls a Marine. Since then the lnvestigators have doubl- ed back to rttrace every possible aspect of the case. The investigaliQn even reached into the realm of the blza~e asserted satailic ritual death of !vlisslon Viejo teacher Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown and the six drifters (1clng trial in her butchering deith. · ' ' · But after a ·day of . interviews with amstees.' in · the Bi:own mµrder, ~ Clemente police came up with nothing linking the two cases except for the style of knife used to inflict wounds on both women. The weapon,' a common1 blade knoWit as a K·bar combat knUe, allegedly was used in each killing. Two ,other key links in the chain of I • ' . ,._ evidence ·are· still missing a pllr of ten'nia shOea whlCh· could bave made a print toun<t in the \kitchen · dbk Jn· the ala1n woman's apartment aM Mrs. Jobmon's wallet missing from the scene when police arrived , The husband discovered his yoWlg wife's body sprawled OI) ~ bed as be returned fi:om &Ul\fd ~uty a! !}le Marine Helicopter Facility 1n Santa Ana. Mr1. Jobmon hid been dead about M houri, police uid. . . . . · Her ' hOrrie bad 'tome signs of .entry. liut that upect hu never been ccn-tinned._ . l • The Window above the 1lnk wu open. Oul!kle, beneath It, aat a metaJ foldln& chair. Repeated contacts with neighbors baa revealed JitUe infor.mation on unusual noises or circumstancee~ln ·lhe predawa hours wben Mn. J~ was b e a te 8 with a bar stool and 1ti.bbed. repeat.dl1 in the neck, cheat aDd abdomen. ' Peace P:lnn MayCosi Dayan Job ' JERUSALEM (AP) -Indicatldio are mounUng that Israel's aoverruµ~ will agree reluctanUy and' With condlftonl to the IMkiay cease-fire proposed . bt the United St.ates to get Middle Ea.st peace talks under way again. But· local press repon.s said Defense · Mlnilter ~1o.she Dayan is coosldering r~ i! the. cabinet accePta the American proposal. . , A Delen!< Ministry 1poi"DIA!I tenntd the rePorts "rumon," buf be admitted, "Dayan Is not enthusiastic about the U.S. proposal." · The reports aald Dayan had exji~ued misgivings because Ult U.S. plan .apeaks of laraeli withdrawal from · the Arab lands capturtd In the 1fltl 'war. Dayan believes that Israef'& 'security' depends on· lta retal,nlng the . Gaza St.rip,, ute Golan Heights' take'n from Syria, ud- a coostf] strip aiiiM. tjlo . tllilil -.ri lo tbe ~tralt ai·'!ir>ii~\i; k01 IO'Jinef'• -·water•route te ·Eoil Alrica - •nirl ~.-i... :,;I . · t ""<-·· "" "'."f='~'·'"'k:·-~·1 • r· · Prtmler. Gelcla .no!· i;-. cabIDel, , ~· scbedlllod · ailothel-· ~~'.i&t., to' ' . . . ' . . . . PRes1ii.eN1-NtxoN sH<iws 01NllER -iluEs;rs 01-1'ouNos . of w1s-T.:RN -~'ftl1T,ii'\ipJ$i' "'"'. Senato• Murphy oncl the Roagans Visit San Clomonto to BrHk .l•~ad _arill .M,ko SOmo P,olltlcar Hay Capo Councilm~ Repeal Bu8iness Li~ense. R~1.lirig . ·By·PAMELA1 HALLAN Of f!li1o.lfrl ll>J.ltt ., • ., San Juan Capistrano city councilmen voted unanJmOJJsly to . repeal · a new ' busi{le~ liceiue ordinance Monday · in the lace of cl'tticism from · area busiM~me.n. Ttie new 9rdinance h{ld raised the base fees · for nearly evU). txpe of business and ·had required retail,. wholesale and maaufacturing concerns to pay 25 >eenls per $1,000 of their gross receipts over $.10,000 In addition to a base fee . An old ordinance was reirul:tated unW January, giving the city time to review objections to the new ordinance. M~yor Tony Forster scolded the city's. merchants, who packed the council chambers, for not coming forward in May when the ordinaoce was being discussed. · He agreed . ~oWever, that· the council may have overloo,ked certain . points wh.jch were -deem~d ,objectionable by t~ business com!llunity. · One of the!e' po intJ Wb8 the 'notification that the clly' clerk and treasurer had the .right to audit their bQoks. ' ' " . . Nixo:n Faces News . M,edia :Network-wide Thursday · By RICHARD P. NALi> Of "" Dlll'f .. , ... ll•ff Ptesldent Nixon will face the preu in , Lios."' Angeles 'Itlul'Sday 'at 8 p.m'. tPDT) ·m a live confere nce carried on · all networks. The conference, part of Mr. Nixon'S conUnwing emphasis on conducting the Presidency in ·the West , tome of the time, , will . allow people . In the W~ .an opportunity to see the ·Chlef Executive questioned during prime: evening Ume:. , Pres,, Secretary Ronald Zieg~~r. aal~ lhe conference ·will be along the Jines ol those , held in the .East Room , qf the White iHOtJ.&& in Washlngtcn. It will be Mr. Nixon 's third this yur, two of which were televised . The last was July 20. Ziegler said the Presjdent would begin Immediately with questions from the pre.as and is not expected to make tn opening · statement. The conluence wUl probably be held at the Century Plaza Hotel Breaking In on a busy work schedule Monday, the . President held a dimer party at his San Clemente. home for Californla's two leading Republican.can- dldates, Gov. Reagan md Sen. Geor1e Murphy. · The President and Mr1. Nilon posed for pictures wiUi Reagan, his wife and Murphy at the Spanish-style villa. The President met them In hls fringe-top golf cart and drove them 'to his ·villa where they were greeted by the first lady. ' Both. Reagan and ~urphy ar,e pointing for November re-elecUori. The President posed wl_th them for pictures ~d then 'invited photographers to his 'patio. ·H~ lllfn ' led them to a' poJnt where . the •ocean served 'as a background.. · ' He invited 'newsmen to go swimrillng ln the • ocean. The iurf was· up and he · offered them the use of his surf board - a gift -that he ·laid has .never been: used. The Presiclent. met wlth top. advlson · thls mornirig at' the We!te'm White House for ,Prt.lirn1pary dlscwslon1 on the ~xt defense bu~ge~. . · Mr. Niion plans to send the P~ntagop spending blueprint to Congress . in ,Januiµy. ASl!s,ting 'him . tod,s:y . were George P. ShWti, dlreF.tor of. the office 15'e NIXON , Pace I) ' ' " iitsaioo th<u"repfy'lo the pnipooat._ Tllelt ts -~ pqs.slblllly she. will ,ep1y to WashlnfloQ Wedfl!r.t•Y nip! In a sjieel:h ta qie. KJleuet, the I,htlrpaf.liament. . /)o!puty. Pr emli,r ,Yt*•t ,Alton ,went on reco'rd Moi>daf nJght in tlvor '!I ae. ceptance, Isr'ael'1 first rahkin& mibJJter io do IO publicly._ ' ' : "Even if there are dij'ferences .of opt. nlon between the U.S. and Israel," Appcin told a group of hlgh .ICbool ,~ lfi!ditors. "when the. I J?Vernment · ol tJM! United SUites takes ' such 'an li\JtiaUve, it' a)>pears tO me that we sboUJd •CCept it, even if we are not completely aattafied Willi all the detalls." All.on 's stand was conaidered parllcularly ~gnlficant becaUJe . be Is a meriiber of Un! cabinet's foretsn affalri and securitf committee, along with Mn. Meir, Defe111e Minister Moshe Dayan and Fo,.iill Mintmr Mlba Ebon. ni, comrtµttee formu11tes · Inel'a forelcfl policy. Sources close to the government said • majority of the cabinet, now Is rudy to a.ccept the U.S. proP.:)sal · wi1h 10me reservations. · · 1 Egypt and J.ordan, ijle other two ~rfn­ cipals,, already have ac.ctptid Hie ptin. Sylia and lrB<t: whose ~ were not requested by U.S. S:ecretaJj of State William P. Roeers, have con- demned it, and the Palestinian suerrfila organizations. have vowed to continue fighting in 1pite ol any cease-nre. In 118 acceptance Jordan reportedly said it 1 would not force 41e ~ to comply., , The central Commlttet of the Palettl- nlan Resi.ttance Movement ·in Amman a.nriounced' that .it is' ltndirig envOys 'to the olher ·Arab capitals to explain th• guerrllla1' oppot.ltion to the U.S. pro-posal. "the city is not 111 the au'diting busii:iess," ·sal~ tpe_ mayor. "The city clerk and treasurer won't be poking their no'ses lnlo your books." · Women Qikini , War1 Some businessmen had considered this 1 an invasi9n or privacy, . MADRID (AP) -This mayJ be the swlngifig inside. Qld protµb itiona still stand else\'hefe. Other objections were outlined by Bill year Spanish women finally win their Most ol hia bikini customers au )'Ol.ll\I The Sin Miluet lwimmiiq: ' poOis~ Yates, car dealer; Duane Hallan, camera "blfinl war. Well, alm01t. sinJ1e women, but a few married women Maarld, opertt~ by, a . Catbollc loci • store owner and Bruce Winton, ceramics It's not that there is any llw ag&Jpit also ·are buying this year. • ' aegrqates single women from marr manufacturer and president of the clwit-the scanty 'awlmsults, but 1 segme11t Why the bikini Uplllrge!' couples. Two-piece aults are pennUted her of Commerce. of Spanish 0 10Ciety looks do.wn on ·the "Because the Censorship la ovtr/' 11ys in the women-only pool but not in tht These included the fact. that no celling idea. There also a're swimming areh Andujar. He Is referrina to .•a .wktei, J pool with mei,: and women. had ~n Mt on business license fees, where bathers are aegre11ted by sex publiCized court iuUng earlier) tbil ~ear t In Zaracou in nortbeaat Spain, a lf!!P that the levy oo gross volume was. and' bikinis or any two-piece suits are that said· bikl:rilS''· aid' twO"p{teer1 are 1 of:-· more ~ tian ·50 ·women" "rectQIJy disc[im!natory because It failed to coo-~~Ix, ~qhibited .. ' . , , . · ' . 'ROt lm..,_.ril at . .Wldurlin'f"ftll Wbtte dlapfaftd',i1'Ktl1 .tbelt) 1~· ,fild ; tJtlrr ' . -,. .-•. 1ider the merchant's net proUt margin. J woµld ,1ay .bililftl .1alea art up at 'the:y'ate the 1cua't9n11 ''t ' .. ' · lJJ by·~~•IPW..,... ndft1proo- and that lhe ordinance would be detrimen· 1 lea#t 70 percent this year," u:y~ ,Juan Not evet;'one .iii acilrrylng'hjto a bl,iitlt, h~tinJ,..b~ <at.' their aeinlated ..,1. _. ;; tal in attrlCU.ng new bu&lnesa to Ute • .A~ja.r. man,ger of a ,amall J~e, ~.ff but two-pid'i ~~f10UH'lfiln(-1aa ·nt'Vtr Police. .kept , buda oft aOd' tbl Jicfiea ~ •: area . 1 ' Uw)~ ~I Sol. Hit c:u.stodien naraJY · befvfe. ' 1 • • ' ,. • • won ·ouL · -: Couftcitman J im-Thorpe "'"'sled Ilia! art the lype 'to haunt Modild's i:llic ' "f waich',lhe lorolgn<r11n. bikini• •rid Th• 61f!uenltal Madrid nowljloper ABG Jn the next few months a committee ~· looking ror t;uropean ~Iona. lie 1 J don't see 1wHy i ca.n't. haYt1 one,:• noted'~trle1Kt'toward bikini• and Cll'M of businessmen and city 1laf( ,lhould ha1 tennis shoes.in hls dlaplaY..wl,ndow. , r 1~y1,t 17 year'..old,bfonde. , , . up With 'reflectJon : 1'Thert ts .a Spanish draft a new ordinance. At t.he fsame ije also hu 1Wlm1ulls, ilthOugb not Foreighera t.n,blk.lnls, eapec'la'lly way~ name the blklftl+ but there ls ·time llley &hoold determine what a bikinis, in Ille window. He dlaplays 1 Sweden's blOOdO!, atar!ted Spain more np Spanfsli way lo put ti on.· The a•erlge bulineu icense Js auppoatd Ill do, daringly cut, aiqle-pie<e 'I'll. Tbla.ob-. lllan 10 years"'° when !hey flr~·bqan Spentab woman la ttylll(-bard to llod wh<lller or no1 It repr.senta 1 IU on vlouaty Is .lo. satisfy the', rules of 'aPfl'arlJI& on the beachl'S. The l<lurtst l\>11' way. U Ille dou, Ille. -..ut4 r<lcjl a tu (Ille city alrtady ,...;.,.one-cent OJ!ablislun .. 1a lll•t ,,....-bit """'"""" . ~bu ,been, lom..it>J ""l' Y<V 1 t"" Ubel-allon ot her body, a -oc all 11IH tax") and whether .. er not auJta, 'It,~'!" a!,er\l ,pcl\ollllal ~ 1fnco -od oo have the 'blk!llfa. They burdu 1hat bu bnn tUoloi lier for they are 111tru! and collectable. lbat U.1 _Ji ...,ethlio& •. ~ ·llldfl are conunonplace now on,tba IOUUI couL centuries." · · • ! ,• • • ·' ;x-.1 -• 1 .. J DAILY PILOT SC • Laguna to Get Health ·service Funds? ., ....... 1Dllllll1Cll ... °"" .......... A -.moa111 ·survey ol Laguna -'I boallll needs may rtsull In ~ ol a pennaoenl, county- -ocmmunlty heaHb service, ..,. Oordbrc lo Dr. Wllllalll RoutL leader ol a ~atric team now lnlUalin( Ille survey. 'Ibo ft-loam WH a3'lped lo locua lll -tlon aa the Lacuna -for tile ..,,,_ aller Ille clly -adapted ....... lion roqu..ilng dl-anent of a ""1111)' heallll facility In lbe Art Colooy. -lo a JS.ye&Nlld psydllalrllt wl>o ,_ ,.-iy apen1 two yeara In W-.i<>a D.C. with Iha U.S. Public -ll<rv!ce,aotsoedlo1heNatlonol ImlHule of McaW Healtb'a dlvllloo of -bealth oervlco prosrams. A Soolb County l<am, quartued fer now at the high school, wW survey the area from Costa Mesa to San Clemente after completln1 ttl Laguna study. It is ooe of three teams now operallng in Orange C.ounty under the Community Mental Health Services pr~ gram. Other teams are working in the Fullttton and Santa Ana areas, with two more due to be set up in Anaheim and Westminster. 1bek' studies are the first step in decentralizaUm of health services from the county to the cunmunity level Initial work of the survey team will be to ldorview local cilluna and t'i!'piewutatives ol lPterested agendea to Cool Mother Sets T1·ap; 3 Nabbed As Kidnapers By ARTHUR R. VINllEL ot t119 DlfYJ Pllllt Sleff Racin( 131 miles qalnlL ao I p.m. lieadline, a minktirted mother carrytng Jl,500 in raNOm Monday met three kidnap wspecta In Costa Me .. and coolly helped polke capture lhem and lne her daUl!ller unharmed. 'nle trio ol Connedlcut men wbo ~y dr•ve out to find the young woman aod her bUJbml ...,. capturtd aod clllarmed without Incident by lawmen lillenln( to lhem vla bidden mlcropbone. Inveotlptors bad nothing but prabe for auburn-hatred Mn. Yvonne Parter, '° who works u a troubleshooting ~ for a cbaln ol Phoenix reateurants. "She was beautiful. Just beauUfU1," aald DetecllV• Sgt. Clllf McBride. "Sbe pulled JI olf wllhOlll a hllcl>.'' Mrs. Parker escorted her daughter Stacy, 22. away from . the Costa Mesa apartpienl obe abaru with her busband, Mart c. Peyton, 22, II 2020 Wallaca Ave., to set the stage. PolicO then captured two aCCll!ed kid- napers together and a third was ap-P"heoded oeparately, lnelng Peyton. Complalnta cbarglng lhe Conoectlcut men with kidnap aod grand theft will be "°""'' today from the Orange County 011tr1ct Attomey'1 olflce, acconllng to DM<div• Capt. Bob Green. 'llley ...,. tdentlfltd as: ..Jameo M. McShaoe, .IS, a Slrallord, O>nn •• bartender. -Donald E. Vea Remoortert, 24, a Slratlord COlllpu!B prosramer. -Frank W. P1pcto, 21, a Bridgeport laborer. Capt. Green aald lhe couple were kld- naped ffOJ1I a party pod aomewhere in Laguna Beach and told they bad 41 hours to come up with · $1,500 or face unstated consequences. A series of calls to relaUves in Con· necticut and then to Mrs. Peyton's mother led the attractive mother of five other cblldrtn to anive iD Costa Mesa late Monday afternoon. "Sbe drove all the way over from Pboen1x and then wl>en we lried to pul her up for lhe night lbe aald she had to pt beet," ezplalned Sgt. Mcllrlde, ooe o1 lbe raiding tum. >. ~ blddeo to her clothing, Mn. Parker went to the Wallace Avenue addreaa to find her dauglller aod .... m. law, but Ibey ...,.., present al that time. Police aald abe began gingerly pmnplng one ol lbe alleged -apen about whether the)' were armed, with wbaL type --and w1>o among lhem canild lbe ..... Only one pistol wu oubaequenUy found. "For a mother -not even lmowtol wbal to apect -abe pulled It oH beaU!ifully'' said Sgt. McBride. ''Tllk about anxfoo.s momenll •.• all we could do wu bite our nalll," he continued. Several detectives were poi.led to make tbe capture and other ofllcen ...,. ala· lloned 11 key point.. nearby to await the cllmu. Ilurlng thla period, Mr. and Mr1. Peyton we\'e returned. Sgt. McBdde said lbe allegld tldnapers wanted Mrs. Parker and Stacy to ac· company them but abe talted them Into taking lhe bya to her car and allowin( them to leave aeparately. The men were instructed to unloct lhe -· where they would find 11~ In cash, as demanded . Detective Norm Kutch watched ,. the two ...,,,,.,, reached safety and climbed a fence to coolroot a pelr ol lhe llUlpecla u llley left tbe aportment complu. "He p lbe oilier two IDd I grabbed fbe great big dude from behind.'' aJd Sgt. McBride, erplalnlng that Papcln is sir feet tall and weighs 235 pounds. Officers who bad been waiting nearby converged onto the scene and a police helicopter swept in o. v er head. U· Juminating the area with its searchlight. Subsequent tnvesUgation led t o discovery of a small amount of mari- juana ill the victims' apartment and Peyton was arrested on that charge. He told police be had been roughed up by his captor during the twe>-day period, but lnvestigaton said he showed no evidence of a serious beatlng. Laguna's New Head Guard Made 'Big Splash' 1st Day Granville "Skip" Conner made a big aplash on his first dfly as acUng chief lifeaua<d for Laguna Beach. Cooner wu appolnted late Friday afternoon and Saturday morning he was paradwtin( toto the ocean from 13,000 DAILY PILOT M..,.rt .._. H•lfwtlw .._. L4pM a..dl .. m.1. ,..., C.... M.. S.CS1 lltli ~ COAST P\llLllH1HO CtJIUIMV ft•Mtt N. W,M "'''"'' 11111 '""' ...... J••" •. c • ..r • ., Via p,_.!O..,t .,.. Gtnw11 Mwleptr Tho,..11 K••~il IElllW Th111111 A. Mur~hi" Mlllt91nf flltor •lclttr4 P. Ni ll lfvlh OrtlllM c-i, (01!0!' Offlcft C:..1• M-1 m Welt •• , Sll'Mt N....,1 ltactu Jtll w..1 ,,.,, lwlfVMI ~ e..c111 m ,._, .-.- t4fll'lf"'9Mn 9Mcfl1 O•,. kl~ INl"'..i ..... c;llfnMlt: .... .,. •• c.m• 11 .. 1 , feet as part o! an annual life111ard demonstration. Whether COnner, a veteran of 12 years in lifeguarding, or someone else will fill the post pennaoenlly remains to be seen. George Fowler, city recreaUon director and a1'o bead ol lifeguarding, said that lhe city Ls sending out job announcements for the position to other lifeguard departmenls. He said the deadlnle for filing ap- plications ls Sept. I. Appllcaijons will be screened, said Fowler, and the top applicants interviewed by an oral board. Conner prmunably would be among lhese. Fowler said the city hopes to have the new position filled permanently by Oct. 1. The salary range Is $908 to $1,088 monthly. City councilmen created the !ull-Wne post to upgrade the department recently after beating recommendaUons from veteran lifeguard supervisors. The chief guard position had been a summer post held for nine years by educator Thomas L. Dugger. Llleguards have also asked councilmen to separate the lifeguards from the jurisdiction or the recreation departrntnt where it was placed by City Mana·ger James D. Wheaton. The guards m&.lntaln that a n autonomous department wou1d operate more. efficiently. Llfeguards tn Llguna Beach in the past have been under the police department, fire department and have been a aeparate department. Wheaton, who resigned effective Au;. 22 to take aDOt.ber poslUon, maintains that the department can bcneHt from Fowler's admlnistratlvt capablllUes. Ire haa said polntedly that ii where Jlfcguards will rem1tn while he remelns here. ln his Jetter of resignallon thl! month, Dugger recommended that lifeguarding be separated trom the recr~aUon depart· ment when a full time chief lifeguard was employed. eotabll>b oommunli;, needs &lllf deolm for Mun llollll -... ' "Wa need to talll to peoj;le tn -lhe comlllllnlty to find out about lhe P'°' blems that elist and what they wouJd like to see happen to solve them," said Routt. "The service, whatever It is, must be .designed to fit the needs and desires of the people, not be something that is dumped on them because it worked elsewhere." The eventual faclllty, he· added, could be spomortd by the bro1•M>ased group in the community, such as, for eurnple, the Coordinating Council. Although the survey team will not. be available during the research period for direct.service tn!atme.nt or patients, it wUl serve as a "pre-petition screening • Saddleback Votes Appeal' Of Hair Rule By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL OI' .. o.iir , .. Slaff Saddlebact COiiege Trustees Monday unanlmously agreed to appeal a U.S. District Court decision ruling that hair regulatlons at the college were un· c:onotl-1. The approval came after the board met iD executive session for more than an bour. Following the motion to appeal and !ta IOCOnd, trustee Micbael Collins outlined lhe board's poslUon. ''Tbe fundamental issue -ill wbo will mate rules and regulations for the dsy·to-day affalra of the college. It can only be exercised by the local governing board," he said. Colllna said that "the right and obllga- llon and responsibility to operate the sylltem of education is a state function, e lven to the local boards." Judge Harry Pregersen ruled thl• month that lhe college ban on long hair WU unconstitutional. Students, aided by lhe .American Civil Liberties Union, had taken the matter to court to setUe lhe continuing basale. Colllns said, "We muat be responsible to the voters to protect our prerogative. That prerogaUve has been infringed by this decislon." Jobn Powell, deputy county counael, told a reporter' that In appealin( tbe decision, the board will use an earlier decision handed down to lhe college In mid-April, by the "11th Circuit U.S. Court ol Appeals. Tile rultog over1urned two district court prelimlnary lnjunctlolll against against Ille Saddleback long hair regula. tion, stating "the (district) court Is presuming io interfere wilh the day-to- day operaUon of the publlc school system." The decision also noted that the Supreme Cou rt, in two cases, stated that where school officials "are shown to have formally acted, t.be courts should Interfere only with great caution." While vacating the preliminary in- junctions, the ruling ordered the hair issue returned to lhe district court for further proceedings. The decision, declar· Ing the long hair regulation un· constitutional, was handed down July 17. ''The court holds that the right to detennine one's own hair length is a fundamental freedom implicit in the concept of ordered liberty and protected against state infringement by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amend· ment," lhe ruling stated. lt also noted that no evidence was entered by the Saddleback College Administration to show "that the length or style of the plaintiffs' hair has created or would likely create an unreasonable risk of harm to the educational pro- cess ..• " The decision stated· that in addition to violating the due process clause, the regulation violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. From Page I FREEWAY ... gr<at likelihood the adopted Inland freeway route behind Laguna would be moved back to the coast, as some have suggested, or that removal o( lhe Newport segment would result in can- cellation of the whole route. "Frankly," she added, "we don't feel it would be such a great loss tf they did cancel out the freeway. In that case we would propose extending the laterals proposed for Boat Canyon, Aliso Canyon and other spots all the way back to the San Diego Freeway." The eventual solution, said Mrs. Dickerson, must be to find other means of mus transportation than cars. · "We bave reached a grave alr pollution problem because of cars and this ls now 1 recogniitd fad We frankly don't f~I that adding to the Creeway chain Q: the aiuwer. We've got to find some way to cut down the flow of can, and creatlng more roads is oot the way." CTPA board member Jamu Dilley, longtime bittier of the 1utomobile, agrted. "The: trteway establishment h a s bealme a tyranny ln this state," he said, ''and Jt's at opposite poles to the ~nHrVatJonlsts and envtronme ntall!ls. "In thls case, the principle of town ln· tegrity is transcendant. Laguna Beach has battled for Its Integrity and now Newport Beach Is batUing and ·ahould be 1upported. l ·~ .. ,. ' tum" to evlluale cu. that ba'9 - ....,....,. for "'1<1Utric: treatment or cornm:ltmept to tnaitutions. Such evalua· tion at the community level now ii required by state law before steps are taken to provide treatment o r hospitalization. Pre-petition screening now ts belng carried out by the other two teams working in the county, but will be taken over by the Laguna team, for cases in Its area, within the next couple of weeks, Routt said. A native of Te.1as, Routt completed his medical studies at the University of Texu Medical Branch in Galveston and hJs psychiatric speciality at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka. In part time private pracUce over the past four .. ,..,., be ... -maloly With -young people to lhe It to IS age group. • The five posKIOOI budgeted bl the county for lhe l.aluna team, olf clally tiUed Soulh Orange C.ounty Community Mental Heallh Services, are thoee or a psychiatrist, Dr. Routt, a clinical psychologist, a psychiatric social worker, a psychiatric nurse and a social worker. Of these only the nurse, Lynn Oaukus of. Newport Beach, has at present joined Routt at the team's , summer head- quarten In the Laguna S.acb High ScbQol caleterl1. Joining the official five-member team will be a part time consultant specializing in work with the courts and youth, an architect and business administrator and .. >Utbropologial. Linda Kasabian Relates Family Initiation Rite LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Linda Kasa- bian told the jury in the Sharon Tate murders Monday she joined Charles Man!OO'S "family" after "be felt my legs ud saJd I was okay.'' Mn:. Kasablan, 21, the prosecutio1's only purported eyewitness, sat composed, her hand! folded irln>IY to her lap, as she related bow ahe met Manson aod his followers the month before the Tale-La Blanca slayings. She bu been promised Immunity In exchange for her lestimoay agaWt Mamon and his thrte female codefen- dants, Leslie Van Houton, Patricia K=wlntel and Susan Atkins. Defen1e attorneys objected to virtually every queslioll asked the lily blonde, claiming the questions were irrelevant and that she wu an incompetent witness becauae lbe bad lalren um 300 limes. In contrut to the women defendants:, wbo giggled and mugged al Musoa, Mn:. Kasabian appeared serene, waiting patiently until Superior Court Judge Charlea Older rulld on each objection before answering iD a JOU, confident voice. 1be pigtailed young woman said she met Kathry1 Share, Down as "Gypsy," OD July 4, 1!189, "Sbe told me there was a beautiful man we'd all been waiting for, and that he'd been in jail for a number Frot1a Page I NIXON ••• ol management and budget; Caspar Weinberger, deputy director; J ohn Ehrllchman, executive director of the new domestic council; and Henry A. Kissinger, assistant for national security affairs. Defense SecretaJy Melvin Laird met with the President Monday in San Clemente to discuss P e n t a g o n reorganization proposals. He then return- ed to Washington. Laird told newsmen while here that the aMual cost of fighUng the Vietnam war has been cut in half since Mr, Nixon took office, down from a peak of $29 billion annually to about $14.5 billion. He did not spell out the cuts. Some 150 recommendations from a blue ribbon task force on defense depart. ment reorganization are to be made public Wednesday in Washington. Laird said the Pentagon, henceforth, will contract for planes and other weapons systems on a "fly before you buy" basis to avoid long term com- mitments to accept delivery of items that exist only on the drawing boards. of years," she said. Her remark about Manson's prior prison record waa ordered stricken. She said she met MaMOO the following day, in a cave at the Spahn movie ranch, where he was rebuilding a dune buggy. "He asked me Wily I had come, and I said my husband had rejected me and that Gypsy told me I was welcome here," she said. "Did Mr. Manson do anyUtlng?" Depu· ty District Attorney Vincent Bugliosl asked. "He felt my legs, my calves too, and seemed to think I was okay,'' she giggled, I Over the heated objecUon.s of Mawson's lawyer, Irving Kanarek , the prosecution asked Mrs. Kasabian U Manson's group considered it.sell a family, "We lived together as a family would live together," she replied. "Like a mother and father and children. \\'e were all one." •· "Was Charlie the head?" "Yes, he was." "How many were in the family," Bugliosi asked. "Maybe 20 stayed there all the time. MosUy girls," Mrs. Kasablan said. She told of camping trips when Ma"t')ll ordered the girls to set up walkie-talkie systems and they lived in the woods. Mrs. Kasab.lan dela)led beginning her testimony unW after the noc:n reeeas Monday because she dJdn't want to wear a maternity smock. She gave blrlh while b1 jail ud had no other clothes. Her a~s sent an aide to Saks Fifth Avenue in Beverly Hills to buy her a frock , and she appeared smiling at the afternoon session In a oright red and blue peasint style dress with red rickrack trim. Her husband, Robert, who sat outside the courtroom during her tesUmo"y, said he spoke wilh her before she was take• to court. QUEEN SHORT SHORT QUEEN SAN JOSE (AP) -Melodie Ann Short, at ~foot·l the $hortest con- testant in the Miss Sawta Clara O:nmty beauty pageant, will reign over the county fair here Aug. 14-23. Miss Short, 18, won the title over nine other finalists Saturday night and received a $ 4 O O scholarship. 0Alt."I' PILOT St.ff hti. LOOKS AT MENTAL HEAL TH W•shington Psychl•trlst Routt Coast Control Bill Stalled In Assemblv " SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill pultingf develqpment of Califomla'1 1,100 mil&~ shorellne under state control stalled 31-31. today on an early Assembly roll calJ.. 1 The roll was left open unUI aftemoon1 on the bill, which requires 41 votes, in the SO.seat house. • The Assembly turned down a series of six amendments to appropriate $750,00l in state money for the proposed shoreline commission, to set up an in- dependent staff for the commission and to put more conservatiomsts on the state board and five regional boards. The bill, which has been criticized for giving too much control to city and county officials, was attacked on the ·Assembly floor by conservatives for giving "unbelievable powers" to the new s\ate agency. "This measure abrogates property rights," said Assemblyman John Stull (R-Leucadia). "People who would like to develop coastline property have only the right to pay taJ:es on it." Assemblyman Pete Wilson (ft.Sarl. Diego), author of the measure, said coastline development is proceeding "at such a pace, is we don't act this session . .. there will be the lOM of u n t o I d thousands or-.i.cres." The bill would limit for sil months all coastline developments involving dredging, reduction of public access to the shore, "substantial development" or reduction of shoreline view from the nearest road. Detailed development criteria for a 1,000-yard strip a.:oog the coast would be prepared by the statewide board and put Into effect by the regional boards during the six-month start-up period, Wilson said he cut a $600,000 ap. propriation from bie bill because "there isn't any money to do It the way you want to do it." "Increased beach access, this ls fof the people who dirty ~e beach," said Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach). "You should see the beaches of Southern California Monday morning after all the conservationists of the inland come to. • .litter our beaches." China Readies Death Laws for Hijackers TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) -'I1w government of Nationalist China ls preparing legislation to make airline h). jacking an offense punishable by death, Ministry of Communications sources said Monday. The bill is subject to approval by the legislature. It'• The Second Big Week of our •••• GRAND OPENING SALE! We ore pleased to announce the opening of our second store in Tustin. We have purchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new name will be "Alden's Red Hill Carpets & Draperies." e IN COSTA MESA e ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Pl1centl1 Ave. Phono -• In conjunction with the open- ing of our Tustin store, we have several s.p e c i a Is .in our Costa Mesa store. Please come in and see us. e IN TUSTIN e ALDEN'S RED HILL CARPETS e DRAPES 18374 E. Irvine Phono 831-3344 VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. .. ' ! I I I I • d u " h ' • ' • I Tl bli tit Ht ar. M oO m• on ,., rd "" of Co N< Mt Sa Ilic I Co h~ for In! Ar I pe1 tes J -( I "" Jw ·"" ba• ba> [ l!iCh ChE Or act lor Jw l H• he ""' mo In I Sia ----------I 1 - Lag1111a Be~e~ Teday'1 Final . EDITIOl!I ' . v.bC. 63, NO. ·179, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ' ; ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • ' I . ·TUESDAY, JULf·2a, '19!0 TEN CEN[s ' . ·: Tram Service · Closed at ·Arts Festi·val· 'The Festival ol Arts suffered a severe !e\back Tuesday when the city closed down it1 transportation system because the small ten-cent lrams do not meet atate vehicle code requirements. The trams are used beeause there 111 not adequate parking near the festival groun(ls. They carry thousands of persons who have parked elsewhere to see the grounds exhibit& and the nighUy Pageant d. the Ma.atera. Freewa11 Ha••le " Police said today that the two main vlolatiom thlt fore~ them to cloee down th• operation are . the facts that the trams have no windshields and no park· ing brakes. A police spokesman said the violations have been brous;ht to the attention oC the owner of ~ V~ce Tram Co,, which,' contracts with the festival to furrilsh ilie service. · This ls the aeveath aeuoo ' that the tram system baa been llJOCI Ill Loguna Re-routing Bill Hearing Del~yed By THOMAS FORTUNE Of th ~llY 1"1191 lleff SACRAMENTO A S e n a t t 'ri-U.opor1auon Committee hearing on a bill to delete Pacific C:Oast Freeway through Newport Beach and part of Huntington Beach was postponed Monday and tentalively rescheduled for 2 p.m. Monday, All committee hearings were called oU when the Senate decided to continue meeting as a whole into the afternoon on Governor Reagan's $1 billion tax ttform program. A final vote on t.ai: refonn was e:rpected late today whlc.b. Woo.id clear the way for resumption of committee hearings on Wednesday. About 20 persons from the Orange Q:>ast, in~1,1d.i.ng city officials from Newport Be.ch, Himtlngton Beach, Colla Mesa and Laguna Beach had flown ~ 6acramento for the freeway ht&ring Monday. Perhaps the most disaPPointed was Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson who had to cancel as master ol ceremonies for a Monday retirement luncheon honor- ing former Costi Mesa City Manager Art McKenzie. Round·trip airplane fares for all the persons who flew to Sacramento to testify on tbe freeway ?ill probably total- Jury Forgery Charge Sought Fonnal charges of forguy will be oought 11\rough the Orange Counly Grand Jury Wednesday against a Utah man ,who allegedly launched an 1.nternatonal bad-check spree from a San Clemente bank early last May. Darrell Graff Hafen, 44, had been scheduled for arraignment on felony charges Monday morning in South Orange County Municipal Court. but the action was called off after District At- torney's aides decided for the Grand Jury procedure. If the panel returns an Indictment, Hafen will face trial on charges that he passed thousands of dollara in worthless checks in San Clemente, then moved on to allegedly do the u.me In Latin America, ElU'Ope and the United States. ed more U... 41,000. Mosl said Ibey would make the trip again Wedneaday or wbeneve.r the bill corltes up, Paul Gruber, ·former Newport Beach mayor wbo now is , vice chairman of Harbor Area Freeway Fighters, said, "We've · been fighl.ing this seven years. We're not going to give up now." Assemblyman Robert Badham (R- Newport Beach), who authored the freeway deletion bill, observed that "The Senate is involved in an emotional battle and there is no telling how long it will take.•• · The Reagao tu package is designed to shift up lo $1 billion from: local property taxes to state aale!. tncome and business-oriented tares. It already has been approved by lhe .l.s,.,.bly. . * }:( * La~,,re- Group Backs Freeway Bill •·w~-d;id~ .... .,;e .. b~d· to stand for Town Planninl: Auoclation spoke out this week in 1upport of Aa.semblyman Robert Badham 's bill to eliminate the NeWJ)Ort Beach Se"Kment of the Coastal Freeway. While . City ,Manager James Wheaton and representatives of Coata Mesa, Hun- tington Beach, Fountain Vallt:y and the county o1 Orange were journeying to S~cramento to oppose the bill, the Cl'PA addressed a letter endorsing It to the Senate Transportation Committee. The letter, iigned by CTPA president Joy Dickerson, states that lhe CTPA "stands firmly for preserving the in- tegrity of towns" and therefore sym- pathizes with Newport Beach In Its fight against the bisecting freeway route. Amplifying the CTPA stand, Mrs. Dickerson said, "At first we felt like going along agalnSt the bill, but by the time we 1inlshed discussing it we felt we really could not take this position if in fact the really import.Int thing is preserving the integrity of e.ach town . "We decided we had to stand ofr what we felt was right, that is, that Newport Beach has as much rlghl to try to save itself as Laguna Beach had during the Jong fighl to block the bisecting freeway ." The CJ'PA ·president added that board members did not feel thtrt was any (See FREEWAY, Pa&e I) Be~ to carry the multitudes to the festival: Cancellation of the service is expected" to hurt festival attendance everttually. · William D. Martin. president of the festival board, said, "It has been brought to the festival's attention by the. city that the Venice trams do not meet all the requiremeots of the vehicle code and unUl that situation lJ r.emedled they wlll, iegttllably, DOI be operal!ill." Festival offk:ials haVe put signs on the. Uttle benches served by their trams . so that ~le will not wall for ~ 1 tJ1at do not ,come. Festival .officials C®ld.i not predict the elfectf of the cancellation oo grounds attendaftt'e. Martin and ottier festival offjdals plan to meet this aft.emoon with management of the tram corn pa~ ·to aee If some solution could be fouDd to reinstlte the service. 'l1le larger Y<bicle called The "Can- nonball Eipress" which charges 25 ceotl .p<i \:al;rl.es ~gers"" Coos! ~li!'way . ~as also temporarily halted because the drivers do not have class · two drivers lkenses. Mrs. Helen Keeley, festival director and c.b.airman of the tram committee, said the income from trill\ fa~es in. 1969 was $1C,27t'l.rSbe. aald P ,Of9 o( •this was from lhe C.""!!'balf .ZI .cent fares and the fest WAI .!from the lkent tans . . . ' ' . PREsn:i~NT Nl)CON SHOVJS DINNER 00Gl,IUTS i;R6uND$ 0 0F WEST~RN WHrr'l''ii~us'e'" .... S.••tor Mu rphy-and' the RN1.1n1 Visit Sin Clemente tO lr1ak Br9•d and Mike Sotne Polltrcll H1y . .. '· ' Capo ·Councilmen· Repeal . Business License Ru~ing By PA~LA ·HALLAN Of llM Diii¥" P'llft Stiff ~ -Juan Capistrano city councilmen voted unanimou.sly to r~al 1a new busln(!ss license ordinance Mooday· in the face of criticism from · area businessmen. The new oi:dinance had raised the base fees for nearly every type of" business and had •required •retail, wholesale and manllfacturing concerns to pay ZS cents per $1,000 of their &rOl!IS receipts over $30,000 in addition to a base fee. An old ordinance was reinstated until January, 1iving the city time to review objectl.OOJ to the new ordinan6e. MaY« Tony Fortter 8COlded'tbe clty's merchant.I, Who packed the council chambers, for not coming forward in May when the ordinance was being d1'c"'8ed. . ' . ' Nixon .Faces News .Media • N e'twork-wide Thursday By RICHARD P. NALL· Of ttll Dell¥" it1Mt Sllff Pre!ident Nixon wilr face the pre.n In Los Angeles Thursday at · 8 p.m. (PDT) 1tn · a live -conference carried on all networks. The •coofe.rence, part of Mr. Nixon's continuing· emphasis on conducting the , Presidency in the West some of the time, will . allow · people in the West an oppor:tunl~ ,to see the Chief Executive. que~ioned" during prime evening time. Press Secretary Ronald Zieglet said. the conference will be along the lines of those held ln the East Room of· the Whitl! House in Washington. It will be Mr. Nixon'• third this year, two of which were televised. The last was July 20. Ziegler aaid the President_ would begin immediately with questions from the press and is not expected to make l'ri opening statement. The conference wlll proi;,ably. be held at ~ Century Plaza Hotel. di dates, Gov. Rea1an and Sen. Geor1e Murph)'.' , The ·President and Mrs. Nixon Posed for pictures with Reagan, bis wife and Murphy .at the Spanish-style villa. The President mei . them in · his fringe-top golf cart and drove them lo his villa where they wer'e greeted by the first lady.' . BQth Reag:an aqd MJJ.rp¥y are pointing for November rWlecflon. The President posed with them for plctUrea and then invited photOgraphers ·to hls 1 Patio. He . then led ' them to · a 'point where tbe ocean served is a background. · He invited newsmen to go awimming fn the Ocean. 'The surf was up and he offered them the use of · Ills aurf board -a glfl -Iba! he nld bas never been Used. · · nit President, met with lpp ·advilorl ihii morning. al !be Western Wl\Jte llOule. (or preliminMy diicu4sioM on ·the nut defenae ·b"u4iet.. · ' to ride tbe ~ Uttie tz:ams. In 111111, "abe said, !loo• IOllJ fam paid . . I ' . came , to $.12,419. · · • . Police ' sala the matter had been , broupt to their attentlon in the form of co~lainll, however -they decllniCI to ldtnlify the complaining pa.rUes. Ttie 1ltu1tion was difficult for the featrval because there is only limited ~ near !be arowida and· !bl& .filla ~ every day . Peace Plan May Cost Dayan Job .. ~ JERUSALEM (AP) -iodicaUO.. .,- mQunUni that Israel's · eovernment . will a1ree reluetantJy and with condltionl to the 9lkfay ce.....tire propooed .by the United States lo get Middle Eut peace talks under way again. But local press reports said Defense Minister Moshe Dayan la coosidering resllruni if the cabinet accepts the ArileriW proposal. A Defense Ministry spokesman tergied the repoiu "rumors,'' but he admitted, "Dayan is not enthusiastic about the u .s.:proposal." 1'e reports said Dayan had exPreued misgivings because the U.S. plan ape~ of Israeli withdrawal from the Ara)) Jan<h captured in the 1917 ~ar. Dayan believes that .i,rael's iecurlty.: dePencis on lb retalniri1 . ~ . Gaza Str_tp. the Golan Hei&hta :~ 'lrpoi Sl")I. and a coastal strip. alonr me-Slnit.I ~ to the-Strait 0£ Tlral\,-tbe key to lli'lel'• .OUtbem water f9Ule to Eut Africa and .Mia. . ·• . , • Pieriuer Golda Meir. and her .cabinet· scheduled ·another meeUng today to discuss their rejlly fo the prOpo1al. There . Is · ·a . possibility sbe wiU reply to Washington Wednesday night In a,.peecb to the Knesset, the Isra~ll parllanient. ·Deputy Premier Yi1aJ All9n went ·OD record Monday n11ht in favor Gf, ac- ceptance, Iarael's first rll}k1n1 IllinJI~ to do so publicly. •· "E11en il there are differences 'of oPf· nlon between the U.S. and Isr,el," ,ApP,on told a group of bJRfl IChoq~ ntw8"pet editors, "when the covernrnent, of the United ·States takes such an Initiative, 1t appe.afs to me that we s~ld 'accept it, even if we are not completely aatiafled wllb •V lhe details." Allon'• ·•land waa considered particularly significant because he ii a member of the cabinet's foreign affairs and security committee, along with Mrs. Meir, Defense Minister Moshe Dayan and Foreisn Minister Abba Eban. The committee formulates Israel'• fortlcn policy. Sources close to the 1ovemmet'lt aald a majority of the cabinet now is ready to accept the U.S. proposal wilh iOme . reserv a lions. Egypt and Jordan, the other t,.,O~prio­ cipals, already bave accepted the pla.b. Syria and Iraq, whose endor1emenll wt:re not requested by ·u.s. Secretary of St.ate William P. Rogers, have CODo demned it, and the Pale.st1nlan iutrrll'8- organizationa have vowed to conlimil l!'gbting in 1plle ol -.ny cea,..flrt. !JI its acceptance Jordan repOrtedl"y ta1d JI would · DOI force Ibo """""""'* ~ ·comply. . I He agreed, however, that the council may have. overlooked certain points which were.deemed objecuonatile by the ' business community. · One <i ·these· Points wk1 the notificiition that the city clerk ' and treasurer had the right to audit their books". Breaking in on a busy work schedule Monday, t~ President held a dimer party at his San Clemente home for California's two leading Republican can- · Mr .. Nixon plans to send the P~tagon spending blueprint to Co~ in January. Auisting him · tosl•Y we.re Geor1e P. Sbulli:, director of the office 'Ibe central committee of tht Paled:· nlan Resistance Movement in Amman announced that It ls send.ins envoys to the other Arab capitals to. eiplaln the suerrilla1' oppoaltlon to the U.S. pro- posal. · • r We•ther It'll reach 68 degrees filtering through the coasla.I haze on Wed· nesday or up to 82 if you're further inland . .Low clouds will prevail in tbe night and morning hours, INSmE 'l'ODA-Y. Tim Knowlt1, tht 26·yeor.old graduat.t student who run1 the federallw funded Educatiof'llll Opportunity Prog,.om at UC Irvine, sa11s minoritu studt'nt.c have trouble getting into col- lege becawe they ore getting poor advice f rom h1gh school counaelors. Page 8. """"' 1 .. u .,...., .... It .............. I Ottfl'H C-IJ I IYl'lll ~ 11 btftt ... ,, ~=.: ... 1•:1 TllMMn , .. ,, .. ,. . Wllfle. ... ,, ._ .. '""' ,,.,, WtOll N-M Busy Crossing To Get Signal? Laguna Beach probably will get a traffic signal on Broadway to control the tricky crossing from Beach Street up the hill to CUff Drive, Joseph Sweany, director of public works, told plannina: commissioners Monday. State engineers, uid Sweany, now a~ pear to be convinced that tht: volume of traffic in the area, Warrants 1 ltlftl].. The lralli<: 111!1&1 al Cito llreel · and 6oulb Coos! Highway he added, ii ocheduled to ha fnsta~ lo Dember. Ask~ if U. state would not be in• tert:i'ted in a complete program of signalization for tht commlll\lty. Sweany commented, "P'or the past 10 years1 a schitm h11 e:ritted belwttn the ~Uy and the Division of Hl&bways. lltey 1ay, 'Take off tbt ~king 11\6 wt trill do a complete job of aignalli:•Uon. with tum pockets and ao forth,' but the dty has always refUled to rtmove the park· Ing." Ttit resuJ~ he concluded, has been piecemeal installation or 11gnals and removal of nectllll'J p_arkinl apact1 .. the need U'Olt. • '" "The city Is not in · the auditing business," said the mayor. "The city clerk and · treasurer won't be poking their noses Into your books." Wo1nen &me businessmen had conaidered, this an Inv~ of privacy. MADRID CAP) -Thls may be the Other objedJons were outlined by Bill year Spaaish women finally wln their Yates, car dealer; DUane Hallan, camera bikini war. Well, almOl!lt. atore owner and Bruee Winton, ceramic• It's not that there 11 any law again.It manufacturer and president of the Cham· the scanty swlmsuit.s,, but. t aegment ber oC Commerce. of Spani,ih . society looks down , on ~ These included the fact that no ceiling idea. There. also are swlmmln& areas had been ta on bwlness llcense fees, wher~ bathers are , segregatea by sex that the levy on groa volume was and bikinls, or any tw~plece suit.I. are discriminatory because 1\ failed to con-flatly prphiblted. · sider the merchaot'1 neL prnfit margin, "I woold uy bikini ules are ,UP. at and that the ordinance would be dc:_trlmen-' leut 70 percent lhli )'ear:" aays JUan tal . In attracting new bUsiness to the 'Andujar1 ~ater of a small1 store off area. !)le Pufrta deJ 6ol. Ht& -Cllllomen hardly Councilman Jim Thorpe augge.!led tllat are the !ypa to haunt Madrid's .chic in the nest few months a committee. 1 shopl lookicl& for European fuhlOn1. ·Hi of blWneNmen and city at.aU-1hould ~bu tenni1 lhoe11' his d.isp~lay window. draft a new ordinance. At the 1ame He allO Cu nrlnu:ults, although not Um• they should determine whal a bikJnls, Ill ihe window. He dllpt•ys a business lcense Is suppoled lo do, daringly "'11, *1n«Je-piece llUit. Thia ob- whelbtr or DOI II reprut11ll a laa on vlou!fy la_ lo . 'latilfy Ibo rules ol a tax (the city already receives one~nt utablishmenll that prohibit two-plect ol all sales taxes) and whether or not .Wtt. It alao alerts pcitential cuatomers lbsy are useful and cofledable. , , lbal !here II ~methiq . a bll more J (lee NIXON, Pa1e %) . Win Bikini War , nvinglng · inside.· Most of ~ bikini customer•· •re )'Ct!Jft& linCle women, bdt a few murled women alio are h\JYJng lhl1 year. . ' · Why the btkinl uP,surge? . "Because tt:ie ctnaonhli> ii o'vu," 11yi AnduJ-'ir-He ls , r:eferrlng to ·a· Wid~ly publicized ,coUrt. rulif,g elrlle; thllr )'tat Iba! a;i~. ~lkinl• ansf .lw<>piecef', ""! not itnJPOral at 11'imm1n1 areaa wbete ' ~ ' Ibey are !be .cu1tom. • . ·· . 1 ~ Not ev.,Yone'ls' ICllJT)')ng fu~ a blk1n11 bu! ·tll'<>i>le<tl• ore floiltlsblng aa nevu before. ' · , "l waf<b the foreign"" In blkinil and J don't ·see why 1 ean't hive one," 1ay1 a 1~ year-okl bio.de. . : Fortlgnera in bll(lnla, ea p e c l·a lf y Sweden's blondes, startled Spain more lhan JO years aco wbM lhe,y flnl' began appearlnf on lhe beach<a. The · tourlll influx ha.s been lncteuing every year $intt -ud to•have'.lh6 •blkifd1. Tbty are commonplace now on the aouUYcout Old problbllionl aUll •land -=.hen· 111• , Sill Mlautl IWimmlng Ill Madrid, aperated by a. Calbollc oodely, aegre1ates 1in1lPo women from married couples .. ~o-plece""ti.iitl are permlttfd In !be women-only pool hlll DOI la !lit pool with men·aM women. 1 In Zaragoza In norlheut Spain, a g?0\11 of ~ nicn 'than 50 women ' recenl'.Jy dll)>lsyed bnlh lbelr bod!e• and their ire• by dernOnstraUJtg •&ainlt TUia. ~ bl6!Ungolldnf; at lheir•l"Pted·]IOfl ~ Pollce •kepi ·hand> off 'W · • ..... '· _,.,L '' '• \Jt ~< won -, , ., , " " ..:_:.;_ , , ~ ~ irillU<:DUll lfaanc "!"l",..per • noted, the !rend toward blkldf1 and ...,. up with reflecUon : '"M\ere111 i S~ 'WV to name !ht bikini, hlll lbeno It n0: Spanlah way to put It on. Thi IYll'lp 'Sp0ol1b woman ii lryinf bard lo ~ lhl1 way. If the -· the -kl rU:h Utt liber1Uoo of her bodY, 1 betulillll bunion Iba! has been 1-aslnf lier ·for cenlurlei. •• ; '• ' ... -----.. ---- J 'OAILV I'll.OT SC • Laguna to Get Health Service Funds? "UllUll kll!!IP]I CM .. IMllf P ... lltff A. -..,-1U1Vey ol Laauna Beldl'a hta1th needs may result in .. '4'1IDqODI al a permanent, county. '-dlld· eomrnunLty health service, ac- ooNlllC to Dr. Wlilllm R<luU. leader al i. Pl)d>lolrlc team now inlUatlng Ille ... .,. 'I'hl five.member teain was assigned to ,..,. Ila alleolloa oa the Laguna ..... l<ll' tile ......... allu the dty ....... ,llloptO!I a molutlon HqUesling -of a County health facility In the Art Colony. -ls • SS.yUMid psydllatriJI who -· .-llY apen! two yeon In w-...n D.C. with the U.S. Public Hta11b S«v1oe, assigned to the Natlooal -· al --·· ......... al ----..... A Soolh CoUDl;f team, quartered for now at' the high ochool; will survey the area from Costa Mesa to Sar\.,. Clemeote after eompletlng Its Laauna study. It is one of three teams now operating in Orange County under the Community Mental Heallh Services pro- iram. Other teams are working in the Fullerton and Santa Ana areu, with two more due to be set up in Anahe.lm and Weslmlnster . Their studies are the fll1t step In decentralization of health services from Ibo county lo the commuolty level. Inttial work of the IUl'Vey team will be to tnt.rvlew local dtizens and represmtattves of interested agencies to Cool Mother Sets T1·ap; 3 Nabbed As Kidnapers By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1M Dlillr f'\11t Jmf Racing 338 miles against ao I p.m. itadllne, a mlnkklrted mother canying 11,500 In ranaom Monday met three kidnap ~ in Costa Mesa and coolly hel ped pollc•i eapture them and free her d111ilfller unharmed. 'lbe trio of Coonecilcut men who reportedly drtve out to find the young woman and her husband were captured and dllarmed without Incident by lawmen li91rnlng to them via hidden microphone. Jnvestlgaton had nalhlng but praise for aubQrn.halred Mrs. Yvonne ParW, o!O, who works as a troubledlooting -for a chain of Phoenix restaurants. . ,, "She was beaot.lful. Just beautiful, said Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride. "Sbe pilled It off wlihout a hitch." Mrs. Parker escorted her daugbttt Stacy, 22, away from the Costa Mesa apartment she shares with her husband, Mark C. Peyton, 22, at 2020 Wallace Ave., to set the stage. Police lbeft captured two accused kld- napen to1etber and a third was 1p- pribended ;ep-.raWy • freeing Peytm. Cocn!>lalnta charg1ng Ille Connecticut men with kidnap and grand theft will be IOllll>1 today from the Orange Comity D11tr1ct At1orney'1 office, KCCnling to Detocllve Capt. Bob Green. . '11ley were identlDed u : -James M. McSbane, 23, a Stratford, O:mil:., bartender. -Donald E. Von Remoortere, M, a stntford computer prosramer. -Frank W. Papcln, 28, I Bridgeport labottr. Capt. Green aid the couple were kid- naped from a party pod somewhere in Laguna Beach and told they had • hours to come up with $1,500 or fict unstated consequences. A terles of ·calls to relatives tn eon. necticut and then to Mn. Peyton's mother led the attractive mother of five other children to arrive In Costa MM& late Monday afternoon. "She drove all the way over from l'lloenl< and theo when we tried lo put her up for the ntgbt ahe uld ahe had to get back," explained Sf!. Mcllridt, ooe of the raiding loam. A micropbooe bidden In her clothing, Mrs. Parter went to the Wallac;e Avenue address to fmd ber da\Jl)lter and ..,.Jn. law, but they weren't praent at that lime. Pollee aald abe began gingerly pumping ooe ~ Ille alleged ~ about whetller Ibey were armed, with what type _.. ad who among them carried the g1111. Only ""' plllol wu auboequenUy found. "For a mother -not even knowing what to ezpecl -ahe pulled It oU beautifully'' aald Sgt. McBride. "Tait about anxious moments •• , 11! we could do was bite our nafll,11 he continued. Several detectlve.! were poised to make the capture and other officm wtte sta- tioned at key points riearby to await the climu. During this period, Mr. and Mrs. Peyton were returned. Sgt. McBride aald Ille alleged kldoapen wanted Mrs. Parker and Stacy ID ac- company them but ahe Wted them Into taking the keys to her car and allowing lllem to leave seporaWy, The men ...,.e lnslruded to unlock the trunl:, where Ibey would find $1.51111 in cash, as denanded. ' Detedlve Norm JCutdl wllcbed.u the two women reached Hfety and climbed a fence to confront a pair al the IUSpecll as they left the apartment complex. "He got the oilier two and I grabbed the great big dude from behind," said Sgt. McBride, uplalnlng that Papcln is slx feet tall and weighs 235 pounds. Officers who had been waiting nearby converged onto the scene and a police helicopter swept in o v e r he a d , ii· luminating the area with its searchlight. Subsequent investigation Jed t o discovery of a small amount of mari· juana in the victlml' apartment and Peyton was arrested on that charge. He told police he had been roughed up by his captor during the two-day period, but lnvesllptora uld he showed no evidence of a 9el'iow: beaUng. Laguna's New Head Guard Made 'Big Splash' 1st Day Granville t'Skip" Conner made a big. """° <o his flnt day ., acUng chief llfeguord for Laguna Beach. ~ was appointed late Friday ari.rnoon and ~ mcrnlng he was poraclmtlng Into the oceao from JS,000 DAILY PILOT M..,.. lwdi Hllltl..,_ .... a..,........ ... ...... ,.., C.. .._. S. Chai ... OIWtGI to.UT fl!J•LtsMIHO (.QMl'AH't ••Hrf N. W1M l'fulOlflt .-l'lltl""9r J1,l l. C11rf1y Viet 1'n11-.t ..,,.. 0-11 Mll\eft'I' Tllo"''' Keevi l EGl!of' Tho"''' A. M111phift1 Mwwtlril ldl!M ltl,h1r4 I'. Ntll 19u!ll er... C-1r Editor Offlc" C..Si. """"'! QI Wtil &tr''""' 111..,...r .. _. 2211 W.f ••1111• 9'111'vll'll L ....... ~1tnF-IA­JNMt""°" •..ct11 11US •-'I •wi.v.111 ..... QMwlm al Nwlfl II C..,.lolt 11"1 _A. feet as part or an· aMual lifeguard demonstration. · · Whether O>nner, a veteran oC 11 years In li!eguarding, or someone else will fill the post permllle!IUy rmalna to be seen. George Fowler, city recreaUoo director ad also ~d. of llf<'1'1rding, said that the city Is sending out job IMl!uncern""" for the position to other lifeguard departments. . He said the clOadlnle for filing ap- plications Is Sept. I. Applications will be acreened, said Fowler, and the top applicants Interviewed by an oral boerd. Conner presumably would be among these. Fowler said the city hopes to have the new pos!Uon filled permanently by Oct. I. The salary range 11 $90ll to $1,088 monthly, City councilmen created the full~me posl to upgrade the department rectnUy after hearing recommendations lrom veteran Ufeguaril supervisors. '!be chief guard position had been a 111mmer post held ror nine years by educator Thomas L. Dugger. Lifeguards have also asked counclJmen to separate the llf<'1'1rds from the jurisdiction of the recreaUon deputmtnt where it was placed by City Manager James D. Wheatoo. Tbe guanls malnlaill Iba! a n autooomous department wt1Uld operate mor< efficiently. Ll!eguonls, In Laguna Beach in the past have betn under the police department, fire deportment and have beeo a oeparate department. Wheaton, who resigned effective Aug. 22 to take anolhtr pos!Uon, maintains that the department can benent from Fowler's admtnillrative capablllUes. He has said pointedly that· it where lifquards will remeln while he rem11lns here. In his letter of resignaUon thla month, Dugger recommended that IUeguardlng be 111per1ted from the recreation depart- ment when a full time chill l~eguanl WU employed. lllabllob .,..mllllli;, l*da ad dellrel lot -hollill --"We need to \alt lo poople In the commurllty to find out about the _p~ blems that exist and what they would llke to see happen to solve them," said ~tt. "The service, whatever It is, must be designed to fit the needs and desires of the people, not be something that is dumped on them because it worked elsewhere." 11ie eventual facillty, he added , could be sponsored by the broad-based group in the COQl;MUnity, 1uch as, for example, the Coordinating Council. Although the wrvey team will not be available during the research period far direct-service treatment of paUenta, It will serve as a "pre-petition stteening Saddleback Votes Appeal Of Hair Rule By FREDERICK SCBOEMEBL Of ... o.llr "" ..... Saddleback College Trustees Monday unanlmoully agroecl to appeal a U.S. Diltricl Court decision ruling that hair regulations et the college were un- coostiWllonal. The approval came after the boant met tn executive 1ession for more than ao hour. Following the motion to appeal and Its second, trustee Micbalf Collini outlined the board's pos!Uon. · . . "The fundamental Issue here Is who will make rules ad regulations far the day-b>day affain of the college. It can ooly be exercised by the local gnvernlni board," he said. Collins said that "the right and obliga- tion ·and responalbllil;f to operate the l}'ltem of education is a state function, given to the local board!. 11 Judge Harry Pregerson ruled this month that the college ban on Jong hair was unconstitutional. Students, aided by the American Civil Liberties Union. had taken the matt.r to court to llettle the co'""1ulng haslle. Collins uld, "We mUBI be rtJpollllble to the voters to prot<c:t oar pmopUve. That prerogative bas been Infringed by this decision.'' John Powell, deputy COUDly "°"""''• told a repo!1er that In appealing the decision, the board will uae en earlier • dedslon banded down to the coDese In mid-April, by the 9th Circuit U .s. Court of Appt!lls. The ruling ' overturned tw<i dlslrlct court preliminary lnjunctlnna aglinBI against the Saddleback long hair regula- tion, staUng "the (district) court Is presuming to interfere with the day-ttr day operaUon of the public school system." The decision also noted that the Supreme Court, in two cases, staled that where school officials "are shown to have formally acted, the courts should interfere only with great caulion." While vacating the preliminary in- junctions, the ruling ordered the hair issue returned to the district court for f\lrtber proceedlnp. Tbe decision, declar· lfli the long hair regulation un- constitutional, was handed down July 17. "The court holds that the right to determine one's own hair length is a fundamental freedom implicit in the coocept: of ordered liberty and protected agaln!t state infringement by the due process clause of the Folll'teenth Amend· ment," the ruling stated. It also noted that no evidence was entered by the Saddleback College Administration to show 11that the length or style of the plaintiffs' hair has created or would likely create an unreasonable risk of harm to the educational pro- cess .•. " The decision stated that in addition to vlolaling the due process clause, the regulation violated the equal protection clause of the lfth Amendment. .From POfle I FREEWAY ••• great likelihood the adopted Inland freeway route behind Laguna would be moved back to the coast. u some have auggested, or that removaJ of the Newport segment would result in can- cellation of the whole route. "Frankly," she added, "we don't feel It would be such a great lou If they did cancel out the freeway. In that case we would pro)>O!le exttnding the laterals proposed for Boat Canyon, Aliso Canyon and other spots all the way back to the San Diego Freeway." The eventual solution, said Mrs. Dickerson, must be to fmd other means of mus tr&Jl!J)OrtaUon than cars. "We have ~ched a arave air polluUon problem beceuae of cart and this ls now a recognized fact. We frankly don't feel that adding to the freeway chain ts the answer. We've got to find some way to cut down tbe flow of can, and cretting more roads b not the way." CTPA board member J1Jnes Dilley, lonatJme bittier of the automobUe, agtted. '111\e freewiy t.stabll.sbment has become a tyranny tn this state," he said, "and It's at opposite poles to the conaervatlonlsta and environmentalists. "In this case, the principle of town in· tegrity Is transctndant. Laguna Beacb bu batUed for !ls lntegrtly and now Newport Beach ls ballllng and should be supported. team" to evaluate cuu that blw bllla. IUQtlled for ~trtc treatment or commitment to inltltuUOM. Such evalua- tion at the commun1t level now 11 required by state law steps are taken to provide t o r hospitalization. Pre-petition screening now i being carried out by the other two teams working in the county, but will be taken over by lhe Laguna team, for cases in its area, within the nut couple " weeks, RooU said. A native of Texas, Routt completed his medical studies at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston and his psychiatric llpeciality at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka. In part time private practice over the past four j ... • • • ,,...., ho bu dtall lilalnly. 'l!illi - YOUJ11 people In Ille II tq 25 age groop. The five J>O'HlOu budgeled by the county for the LagUna team, officially tiUed South Orange County Comn\uqity Mental Heallh Services, are <bole of a psychiatrist, Dr. Routt. a cllnlcal psychplogist, a psychiatric social worker, a psychiatric nurse and a social worker. Of these only the nurse, Lynn Daukus of Newport Beach, has at present joined Routt at the team'• aummer head· quarters In the Laguna · Beach !UiJi School ea!eteria. Joining the official five-member team will be a part time consultant speclaliilng in work with the courts and youth, an architect and buslnes!! administrator and an '"'11ropologbt. · Linda Kasabian .Relates Family Initiation Rite LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Linda Kasa· bian told the jury in the Sharon Tate murders Monday she joined Charles Manson's "family" after "he felt my legs ud &aid I was okay." Mrs. Kasablan, 21, the prosecutioa's only purported eyewllness, SBt composed, her hands folded primly in her lap, as she rtlated bow she met Mamon and his followers the mouth before the Tate-La Blanca slaying.!. She bas been prnmlaed Immunity In excb&np for her testlmoay agalul Mamon and hll three female eodefeo· dantl, Lel1Je Ven Routon, Patricia K""!wlnkel and Susan Atkins. DOI-attorney• objected lo virtually every quealloo uked Ille tlay blonde, clalmJng the questions were irrelevant and that ahe wu an incompetent witness becallle abe bad taken LSD 31111 limes. In contrast to the women defendants, who giggled and mugged at Musoa, Mrs. Kuablan appeared serene, waiUng paUently unto Superior C.ourt Judge Charles Older ruled on each objection before answering In a soft, con!ident voice. '1l1o pigtailed YOUlll woman aald abe met Katbry. Share, Down u "Gypsy," on July 4, 1969. "Slie told me there wu a bealltiful man we'd all been waiting for, and that he'd been In jall for a mnnber •• .Fro111 POfle l NIXON .•• of management and budget; Caspar Weinberger, deputy director; J ohn Ehrllchman, e:s:ecutive director of the new domestic council; and Henry A. Kissinger, assistant for national security affairs. De.ftnse Secretary Melvin Laird met with the President Monday in San Clemente to discuss P e n t a g o n reorganizaUon proposals. He then return. ed to Washington. Laird lold newsmen while here lhat the annual cost of fighting the Vietnam war bu been cut in half s1nce Mr. Nixon took office, down from a peak of $29 billion annually to about $14.5 billion. He did not spell out the cuts. Some 150 recommendations from a blue ribbon task force on defense depart- ment reorganlzatlon are to be made public Wednesday In Washington. Laird said the Pentagon, henceforth , will conlract for planes and other weapons systems on a "fly before you buy" basis to avoid long term com· mltmenta to ·accept delivery of items that exist only on the drawing boards. of years," she said. Her remark about Manson's prior prison record was ordered stricken. She said she met Manson the following day, in a cave at the Spahn movie ranch, where he was rebuilding a dune buggy. . "He asked me Why I bad come, and 1 said my husband had rejected me and that Gypsy told me I was welcome here," she said, "Did Mr. Manson do anything?" Depu- ty District Attorney Vincent Bugli°'i asked. "He felt my lep, w ealves too, and seemed to think I waa okay," she giggled. - Over the heated objections of fdaison's lawyer, Irving Kanarek, the proseCutlon asked Mrs. Kasabtan lf Manso n's group considered ltseU a family. "We lived together as a family would live together,'1 she replied. "Like a mother and father and children. We were all one." "Was Charlie the head?" "Yes, he was." "How many were in the family ," Bugllosl asked. "Maybe 20 stayed there all ·the Ume. MosUy girls," Mn. Kuabian aaid. · Sh& told of camping trlps .. whea Moron ordered the girls to set up w~e-talkie system1 and lhey lived in the \l'PQds. """ 'KMabian ~ be8*iinc·lher teatUnon1 unUl after the n6oD rlce!s Monday because she didn't want to wear a maternity smock. She gave biflh while i.ft jail aad had no other clothes. Her attorneys sent an aide to Saks Fillh Avenue in Beverly Hills to buy her a frock, and she1 appeared _J mlUng at the .afternoon st¥ion in a :-oright red and blue. peasant style dress with red rickrack trim. Her husband, Robert, who sat outside the courtroom-during her teat.imoay, said he spoke with her before she was takea lo court. QUEEN SHORT SHORT QUEEN SAN JOSE (AP) -Melodie Ann Short, at ~foot-1 the shortest con- testant in the Mlss Sota Clara County beauty pageant, will reign over the county fair here Aug. 14-23. Miss Short, 18, won the title over nine other finalists Saturday night and received a $ 4 O O scholarship. DAflY l'ILOT 5teff.....,. LOOKS AT MENTAL HEAL TH W•1hington P1ychl•trlst Routt Coast Control Bill Stalled In Assemblv ol SACRAMENTO (AP ) - A bill putting development of California's 1,100 mile shoreline under state control stalled 31-31 today on an early Assembly roll call. The roll was left open until afternoon on the bill, which requires 41 votes in the 80-seat house. The Assembly turned down a series of six amendments to appropriate $750,000 in state money for the proposed shoreline commission, to set up an in- dependent staff for the comnlfssion and to put more conservationists on the stale board and five regional boards, 'I'he bill, which bas been criticized for giving too much control to city and county officials, was attacked on the Assembly floor by conservatives for giving "unbelievable powers" to the new state agency. "This measure abrogates property rights," said Assemblyman John Stull (R·Leucadia ). "People who would like to develop coastline property have only the right to pay taxes on it." Assemblyman Pete Wilson (ft.San Diego), author of the measure, said coastline development is proceeding .. at such a pace, is we don't act th.is session ... there will be the loss of u n t o I d thousands of acres." The bill would limit for six months all coasUine developments involving dredgµlg, reduction of public access to the shore, "substantial development" or reduction of shoreline view from the nearest road. Detailed development criteria for a 1,000-yard strip <bong the coast would be prepared by the statewide board and put into effect by the regional boards during the six-month start-up pe riod. Wilson said he cut a $600,000 ap- propriation from the bill because "there isn't any money to do it the way you want to do it." "Increased beach access. this Is for the people who dirty the beach," said Assemblyman R ob e r t Badham (ff.. Newport Beach). "You should see the beaches of Southern California Monday morning after all the conservationists of the inland come to. • .litter our beaches." China Readies Death La ws for Hij acker s TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) -The government of Nationalist China is preparing legislation to make airline hi· jacking an offense punishable by death Ministry of Communications sources said Monday. The bill is subject to approval by the legislature. It'• The Second Big Week of our •••• GRAND OPENING SALE! We are pleased to announce the opening of our second store in Tustin. We have pu rchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new name will be "Alden 's Red Hill Carpets & Draperies." e IN COSTA MESA • CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Pl1cenll1 Ave. Phon1 646--1831 In conjunction with the open- ing of our Tustin store, we have several spec i a Is in our Costa Mesa store. Please come in and see us. •IN TVmN e ALDEN'S RED HILL CARPETS e DRAPES 18374 E. lrvlno Phon1 838-3344 VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA S.TORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. " c ( 1 I ( l c r I ' ( • 1 l r • ' ( I I ' I 0 • c • • • r b ~ 0 t I • • .. L DAILY Pll~f :J ·Laird's Warplane Policy: fly Now, Pay Later By JORN VALTl!:UA OI .. a.I"' "'Mtt tttiff The 1Qvemment wlll fly eipensiVe warplanes.-test them, lhen decide whether it wants to buy them,,Secretlry ol Defense Melvin Laird vowed in San · Clemente Monday. Speaking on the Fitzhugh Report ad- vocating sweeping changes in his de~rl· P}ent, the secretary said the plan - IQ eliminate long-fenn com@itrnents for pnsive weapons syStems -would tPm.tnate the huge financial k>sses such • those incurred in the cosUy TFX p C5A warplanes. 'It "l call it ny before you buy," be lOld the White House press in a. Wed· nesday afternoon briefing. Fresh from a confuence with Presi· dent Nixon, Laird said the soaring costs or the nation's defense was the main point of concern. Thal same concern over soaring costs for manpower and materiel will occu_py President Nixon through today as he Down ·the Mission Trail Tax Reduction Won't Be Felt SADDl.EBACK VALLEY -A :!ken! tax reduction has be"en adopted by direc· tors of the Moulton-Niguel Water District, but the district's residents probably won'& nolice. Board president 1var 0. Hanson s a Id Increased assessed valuation will eat up the lax reduction in most cases. The district has adopted a $2,803,486 budget for the coming year and approved a recommendation to begin building reserves to pay fo r $8 million in sewer bonds in the next few years. e .Job Sttu k e . Closed MISSION VIFJO -The employment service for Mission Viejo teenagers will be closed during August. \ The Youth Employ:nent Service ocated at Mission Viejo High SchoOI UJ asking those who would like to employ teenager& to contact them t>efore Aug. 1. . Requests may be made in per90n at lhe office from 10 a.m. to l p.m~ or by calling 830-2830. The office, which places teeQs ·i'i\ full time, part time and one time only jobs, will reopen in September. ·' • Teen s Slate Films . .. CAPISTRANO HIGHLANDS -Looking for itJexpensive entertainment? The Teen Association of the Capistrano Highlands Ho:neowners' Association is sponsoring films Aug. I and Aug. 8. The first will be "The G r e a t Locomotive" and the second will be Disney's "Emil and the Detectives." . Both will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Valencia School multipurpose room. Admission is 2S cents for children and 50 cents for adults. e Cote Sets· Dinner SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Tickets are now on sale for the annual dinner dance sponsored by the San Juan CapistraJ')o Chamber of Commerce. The event is scheduled at 7 p.m. Friday In the new patio at El Adobe Restaurant. Tickets are available by calling Mrs. Virginia John at 493-4986 for reservations. The evening or dining and dancing will be S6 per person. The program will center around city government with city officials being in· traduced by Mayor Tony Forster. e YR• Plan Part 11 SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Sad· dleback Valley Young Republicans will nost a "Cocktail Caper" Frklay at lhe Mission Vtejo Inn. Tickets are $2.50 for the fund raising event and will include dancing, hors d'oeuvres and a no-host bar. Tk:kets for the I p.m. event can be obtained by writing to the organiuUon, Box 124, El Toro, 92630 or at the door. Ma rine Armory Theft Probed CAMP PENDLETON IAP I -The FBI says it is still investigaling the theft of 11 weapons last Friday from a Marine Corps armory located near the Western White Hoose. A ,_1arine Coros sookesman said &everal men dressed In Marine unifonns :.~.::iKed past tv .. o guards outside the armory in the Camp Margarita area of the b1se and entered the bulleting after knocklng a third sentry un- cOnsck>us. Jte said the raiders took nine Ml& automatic rifles, one .45 caJiber pistol and an M70 grtnade launcher rrom the ~-eapons depot located about 12 milei rrom President Nii:on's San Clemente home. • 'The 45,000-man ba~ was seal~ tbrougboUt the weekend 'but a .earth or build ings and vehicles Ms failed to l~m up the weapons or any 11uspect.s, an FBI spokesman said: and hil top budpl aides continue to ·xaimne Ule c1e1 .... sJltlldinl pictur.. Socretary Laird, who 1e11 lo r -Washington, D.C., tmmediltely 1fter his appearance. iD San Clemente Mooday, said that th! ~y-bolore-you·b\I)' ~· gestion by lh'e blue:-ribbon panel "'alrea~y is being implemented." It means, he added, that instead Of committing Itself to a siX or seven-year procurement contract oo exlrt':'nely ex· pensive weaponry, the Defense ,OeparL- ment will.actually teat the articles !irtt, then decide on their worth after long evaluation. He added, boweyer, that the plan would only apply to ruture cont.racts, not tho• already committed -includin.c the lwo planes already meotJoned, whose costs have soared by mllliona ol dollars over original projections. ''This ne}! plan gives us so1ne milestones llong the way so that we can ~view, cancel, increase or decrease our budget on specific items, instead ,. of . commitUni ourselves f'or a specific perk>d." The lengthy report, .termed a "sweep. thg change'' in the strocture of the COO· ntr)''s · defense agencies, was compiled by a blue ribbon panel headed by Gilbert Flu.hugh. chair:nan of the board of the Metropolitan Life lnsurance Company. It was released by the White 11ouse 'staff late Monday. · Besides the procurement aspects, it cit.lls for sweeping changes In the ad- ministrative structure of the Pentagon. It was the first such change in that structure since 1958, and much of the new suggestions could be implemented without 'the official sancUon of Congress, Laird sakt. Moving on to the troubled defense • segment o( J)e rederal budgets the secretary pointed out huge fiscal pro- blems in financing an all-volunt~r anny as suggested by the President, saying that ~ti> for m@f!Ower in the Armed Forces have doubled in recent years, DAIL 'I l'ILDT Sttff l'M .. 'BIRDS:OF PREY LOOK FIERCE , BUT THEY'RE QUITE DELICATE' • Fountain V1lley Falconer Carne1 and Red Tail H•wk Falt!ons Ar~ Fun Hawk Master Has Unique Hobb y By TERRY COVILLE Of ... O.ltr l'iltt lll ft Donald Brent Carnes, Ill, like.s his feathered friends best. · ), Hawks and falco11s to be specific. The 2l·year-old Fountain Valley resi· dent trai11s, hunts, feeds and cuddles them. He's rather fond of the sport of falconry , but doesn"l invite others lo take it up. "I care for my birds. If falconry became a fad these bird!i would be wiped out. Nine out of every ten birds captllred by a human die by that human. Those are poor odds for the birds." &ut his phone 11umber, 842-&114, ls open to anyone who has a bird of prey and wants iRformation on how to train and care. for il. "It takes a lot ol time and care. I spend 10 hours a f<lay with my three birds," he said. Personal contact is the key to training birds by Don 's ph.ilosophy. "You start with a captured bird. Birds taken from the nest can't be used. Tbey haven't learned how to kill from their parem, and it's not hereditary. If a bird that didn't koow how to kill ever escaped captivity it would <Lie. . "lt takes a week or mclre of simply feeding the bird to build tnlJI. Give him W:bits, chunks of meat. "Then start to carry the bird o• your fist several hours a day. Always a.p· proach it ~itb food . A bird that will sit on your fist without hopping off is properly manned. · "Once the bird is manned you start bringing it to your fist. Sland a foot away afld whistle. Always whistle when you feed it. Getting the bird lo hop off the perch and on to .yc5ur fist Is the hardest part. "Gradually ~ staJld farther from the perch. When you Al:. Ule bird keep a line on him. I use I ~ poui\d test lishin( line and ,a liShlfll Pol!o·• ''When 1be bird wlU return consistently at yollr first whistle, he's trained: Then weigh ~m l~ ~eep tr&ek of his flying weigbL U he getJ heavy do1\'I Ry him, he's eating too much, You only get your bird·back out of hunger ," Once the bird's Oying skill Is set, lhe hunting part st.arts, Carnes ei:plaioed. ''Buy live birds or animals, hold them In one hand, your bird 1" the other, then toss the game out for the bird lo catch. You can traiR a h11wk or falcon to hunt specific game." Carnes has three birds, two hawKt and • falcon, while his ts.year-old ~other - Dana has two hawks and their younger sister, Becky, has a young Great Horn Owl. "We have three types of birds, besides the owl. A Luggar (falco11 ). two Red Tail Hawks and two Coopers' Hawks." Don compared the Cooper's Hawk to a HX~yard sprinter, fast over a short distance. The Red Tail Hawk, he said, is like a piper cub pla»e; it's good for a long distance, but not very fast. Red Tails are actually classified as buu.ards, and spend most of their time soaring, searching for dead or wounded game. "The Coopers' Hawk is like a · jct -rast for a long distance." 'J'he Red Tail Hawk eats small mam· rnals, snakes and rodents. 1t's not fast enough lo catch birds, Carnes explained . The other hawk eats birds or small animals, while the falcon sticks mostly with birds and an occasional rodent. "l fly my birds every day. That's when they feed ," Carnes said. "There·s pJeni, of eame, rabbits and suc h, around Fountai• Valley and Huntington Beach." Don · and Dana both have falconry licenses -a requirement -Issued by the California Department of FiSh and Game. A hunting license, with the same regu lations as applied to the mu \lo'ith a .rifle, is required to use the birds for hunUrrg. "Some peopl~ think it's cruel," said Don , "but I thin}; it's fairer than looking through a high PfWered scope and drop- ping an animal several hundred yards away. "Wlth (alconry your prey al•.vays has a chance to get away. The slro.ng ones will. Apd if these Birds \Vere on their own, th9'd eat part of their prey <.nd !Cave the rest to '"Ol. We mMke sure every part of the dead game is eaten." Hawks and falNis may look viciowi but they can prove to be quite delicate •nlmals. · "They 're sick a lot and you have tO take good care of them. The)' have to be .wormed ~vtry stx months." The owl -only type or owl allowed to be captured by law -was found as a baby, its mother dead from some unknown hunter 's rifle. "~fy sister is training the owl herself. He's 1IOt a hunter." "I like animals. I like training these birds to perform to their best, but It's expensive and time consumlng1" Don ended, as he werit...-over to chuck a Red Tail Hawk under its chin -er, bCalt. whereas 0 the total of men involved has remained the w.ne. "A tremen<toui amount of money will be needed,'' Lalrd explained, "and it would run into several bUUon dolltrs. Getting that much from Cmgtse in such a short time }Vill be difficult, In· deed." The government cost for a force or 2.7 million men In M:rvice bas soared from $14. billion in 1965 to pg bllllon this fiscal year. Queried on troop withdrawals from the Republic of Korea , Laird gave the podium to Undersecretary of Defense David Packard, who said the withdrawals frcr.n South Korea will have to be ac'· companied by a pouring-in of new weapons and otber equipment '8 the troops' wake. Packard, fresh from conferences with Korean reprt5'ntatives in Hawaii, would not specify how many troops wobld be withdrawn, or when the pullout wouJd st.art. Laird then answered question.s on the latest Anierkan pe:ace propoga,Js for the Middle E81t and their relationship' with recent requests (or mllitary aid by Jarael. "There have been some very important new developm ents in the past few days (a partial acceptance by the Arab fac· lions and predicted Israeli concurrence with the peace plan) and we're watching it all very closely." Laird said. "I ~an . assure you we're watch{ng the balance very clo11ely." · H~ said he would reserve comme{tt on the Soviet buildup in Egypt but he 'bellevtd the latest Indications 'from the area lb be "rather hopeful." On relative missile strength between ~ u.s.".and the Soviets, the secretary conceded that the USSR exceeds or na. tior\ in tot.al missiles and will surpass our forc.e of Polaris missiles launched by submarine by 1794. "The only offseUing factor we have now is . our bomber force, but by 1974 our youngest B-S2 will be 14 years old and our oldest plane will be 20 years old,'' he said. Developer Keeps Tabs On Dana Marina Project ··-CUTTING ARMS COSTS Defen1• Dep.rtment'a Laird Key Positions On Relations Group Filled . By BARBARA KRIE BICH Of tlle D&!tr l'llet Sl•ff Beverly Hills developer Herman Rap. paport Is a devotee of fishing, sailing and eating, in approximately that order. He's also a firm believer in the preservation and development of natural recreational resources so the nation's •kfroc.keting populaUon won't build and pave itself out of a place to relax and enjoy it.s leisure time. For these reasons, Rappaport's new 1'baby," a 4~acn '&ncession at the new Dana Point Marina, is his clear favorite among some 40 construction projecls undertaken during the past six months by his North American Building Technology, Inc. (NAST). From a weekend retreat at Laguna's Surf and Sand, Rappaport drives down to Dana Point, bumps over an acrt: or so of dirt to a promontory jutting into the east basin of the new small boat harbor. Two sailboats and a lone sunbalher already are testing the rtcreational facility. "Right along there at the edge of the water," says Rappaport with a gesture, "will be the big dinner restauranl and cocktail bar, with meeting rooms for conferences. Along the side there will be the sportsflshing landing, with a tackle shop at one end and a coffee shop at the o~r. 90 fisherman will have a more informal place lo eat." Between U1e two developments, he ex- plains, will be "lots or llttle specialty shop.s and services -like Fisherman's Wharf -it will be beautiful!" NABT, of w.hich Rappaport ls presi· dent, was one of seven·successful bidders for the commercial concession1 that will bring the Dana Point Marina to life. The Army Corps ol Engineers has now completed Its job of creating the huge boat harbor out of a stretch of open ocean off the shore of the small coastal community. Other concessioll! awarded by the county Board of Supervisors will provide 1 large motel, an additional restaurant. parking, a boat launching ramp and a fuel dock lo serve boats. Under Its 30-year ground lease, Rap. papori'a rlnn wlll develap and own the $1 ~ million sportsfishing and restaurant improvements. The plan is to run ap- proximately six charter boats and to provide docking space for private boats which may stop by the Marina . Construction will start in September, with the coffu shop, bail and tackle shop and sportsHshing facility scheduled for completion by May 1, 1971 . The dinner restaurant will open not more than a year later, and the specialty shops a year afl.t:r that. "That's our contract with the county,'' says Rappaport. "But our site plans already have been approved by the P.larr ning Commission and working draWU1gs are under way, so it probably won't t.alte that long.'' Praising the work of the Army Engineers, he siid, "There's nothing to do but step in and at.art buiidin« - It's a perfect job of site preparation." The developer also had kind words for the county Planning Commission. "This is our firm'1 flr1t venture into Festival Art Selling Rapidly Sales of art works from the Festival are running to "almost 100 a day ," a FesUvJI spokesman said today. The rJgure ls baaed on the number of sales slips shown at the gate by persons leaving the 1rounds with pain- tings and other purchases. The Festival does not keep track of lhe numbers ol sales by Individual artists, or their dollar value, but does require each visitor leaving the grounds with an art work to exhibit a Dlea slip aa proof that it has been purchased. One of the blgge!l single sales to date was a $1,400 painting, according to Festival publlcl•t Sally Rteve, hill there have been many in the $300 to SSOO bracket, along with scores of '1under $100" sales. • leisure-time development and I was lm· pressed to see that the planning people in this county, at least, are aware of Uie· v!tal need to plan ahead for the preservation of natural recreational areas," he said. "I'm a firm believer In free enterprise but we are seriously endangering future gener,tions by paving and building over the land instead ol carefully planning for open space." As. an appiointee to the fed eral Urban Transportation Advisory Council, Rap. paport i.!I concerned with the problem of moving people from one, point to another wlhtoul obliterating t b e landscape entirely, A scientist by training, and industrial chemist by profession, he made his way into lhe development field via the Rap. paport Construction Company, which was merged last year into N.orth American Building Technology Inc. A unique "package '' operation, NABT , coordinates all phases of development, from real estate, through architecture, construction and operation. The corporation, headquartered in Beverly Hills, has offices in New York, Miami Beach, Chicago, Houston, New Jersey and Las Vegas. At last count it was operating 40 projects in 12 dil· ferenl atate1, includinc r e s i d e n t i a I developments, cOmmerclal o r f I c e bl..iildings, shopping centers and a score of restaurants, including chain franchise outlets. But il's clear to see that the boss' heart is firmly lodged in Dana Point. "And it's such an easy run down on the freeway from home," he 8dds, Easier, at least, than the fishing trip he undertook a couple or weekends ago, when a friend in Miami mentioned during a phone conference that the marlin were striking. "I was on the plane that night," says Rappaport. "Didn't get any marlin though , . , but I did land a dolphin , . , took 55 minutes . , . now let me tell you about a fishing t.rip we'" hid out of Newport once ... " Student of A rt Key positions have been filled Jn organization of the Laguna Beich Human Relations Committee -ducribed by its originator, Councihnan CharKon. Boyd, as an outlet for solving "people pro- blems." Elect.d to the board from Ule physical health subcommittee was Mike Haas, instructor at Thurston Intermediate School. Dr. Allan Barnes, a Newport Beach psychiatrist will represent the behavioral subcommittee. Ernie Quigley. member of the Laguna Beach Jaycees will head lhe ald-te>-tbe·nffdy .•u~ committee. The justice subcgmmlttee will be under the leadership of Rev. Don Baird of Ule Lquna Beach Presbyterian Church. Fran Englehart wlll serve aa se'crttary to· the group and Peg Smith as scheduler for study sessions and other important civic meetings. A treasurer is yet to be announced. Boyd will serve as the chairman of the board and report the findings of the committee to the City Courlcil. The board will meet at 10 a.m. Sa.tur. day in the city council chambers to draw up a constitution and by-laws. The public is invited to attend. 'The city council· wlll then be .asked lo approve the human relations committee 'tructurt at Its regular meeting Alig. 5. Ex -Puhlishe1· Dies. -;w· · NEW YORK . (UPI) -Mr" ~len Rogers Reid, former publisher of the New York Herald-Tribune, died Mond1y of arteriosclerosis at her Fifth Avenue home. She was rt. Mrs. Reid, widow of Odgen Reid, publiSher and' pmfOent of the oow defunct newspaper, toolti aver the paper on her hmband's death· in . 1947. She retired in 1957. · ' ' Lisa Lloyd, 8, San Juan Capistrano, studies cl~y sculpture ol owl by Ollie Fisher, one of artists and artisans currenlly exhibiting at La- guna Beech Fine Arts Association's Art·a-Fair, one of three art fes-- tlvals being conducted In Laguna. Art-a-Fair runs lhrough Aug. 30 ot its N. Coest Highway locallon. Sawduit Festival and Festival of Arts are holding tor!h in Laguna Canyon-also throu1h Aug. 30. ,, • I I 'f DAil V PILOT Weli.r Grlrowood of Colchester, ~ bought an old post office truck at an auction and was sur· r.r!sed •1o find a mailbag with 60 -. !nlide. He notified postal authorities-who said: 1'We are per- turbed. by this because we can't ex· JJlaln how it happened. The letters · have now been delivered with an apology.11 • Chefi .from 11 nations served up· a· sumptuous banquet recently for 63 guests at the Czechoslovak Pavilion to Expo '70. The four-hour meal included caviar and suckling pig from the Soviet Union , stuffed quail from the United States, cold salmon from Britain, Canadian &lulled trout, Belgian veal kidney, a wedding cake from Czechoslo· vakia and a special cheese from France. • Glenn Tfaut1 Kettelle, J 7 month! old', abotDI how to btat the Mat and the cro&ad.t at tht beach in hu gn:ind- mothn's wcish tub in. North. Kings· town, R.I. Tracey is from Weit War· wick. • • Parking meters in Madero, Calif. 1u:ver coUtcted enougl~ coini to pay for thtmselves in tlW farming community but Monday tht: eit11 annoU"nced it had madt a profit on them any- way. Tht 400 meters, ripped out two 11r:ars ago were sold ar noveltUs or souvenirs and the city tl!oZized $2,205. • Anthony Desta11i o! West Pater- so11i N.J. was fined $125 recently ror violating zoning ordinances by building a pigeon coop without per- mission. His neighbor, Joseph Ber• begello, filed the c o m p 1 a i n t • "They do all Uieir taxiing and have their flight paUern right over my p00l," Barbagello said. "It's a lousy situation. Pigeons sure aren't the cleanest birds in the world." • Inadequacies in the new $8.2 mil- lion headquarters building for the Washington State Highway Depart- ment showed up recenUy when a planning group attempted to show slides with a projector. Only one electrical ouUet was found in the commission chambers and that plug was behind an e!ecbical wall clock. The clock was turned off !or the presentation. TutsdlJ, Ju~ 28. 1970 New· otfeta1ive • Red Forces Seize Cambodi~n Ship • SAIGON (UPI) -Combioed Com· munist forces have begun a major new olfeos.ive on the Kirirom Plateau in A move to seize Cambodia 's only am- munitions factory. military sources reported loclay in Phnom P<nh. In other Cambodiu action tbey am- bushed a l"dugee ship, captured the govemmeat's only cement plant, and brought in guns and reinforcement,, to Angkor Wat. UPI O:irrespondent Keruteth J. Brad· dick with Cambodian govunment troops nt.M Kirlrom, said 3,600 Communists made up of North Viellamese, Viet Cong, Khmer Rouge and Palhet J,ao, had begun the offensive to seize conlrol of the strategic plateau and Highway 4, Phnom Peih's lifeline to the sea. Braddick saJd a Cambodian battalion commander, Maj. ·Som Saoth, was shot to death Monday near the Chalet D'Elat, fonner summer home of Prince Norodon1 Sihanouk, at the start or the 0£fe11sive. Three government battalions pulled back from the area to await reinforcements. UPl correspoldent Robert Kaylor reported from Phnom Penh the Com- munists had reinlorc<d their troops around the historic temple ruins of Angkor Wat and brought In either ar- tillery or antiaJrcraft weaporu. The North Vietnamese also were reported recruiting local Cambodian soldiers. Kaylor said civilians who moved into the temple area for safety were maki•g Uniforms for the reauits and deserters from the Cambodian Army. He said the Conununists told civilians iA the area the site was being prepared for the return of Prince Sihanouk, but allied intelligence offers called this a pro- paganda statement aimed at the Cam- bodian peasants. The .sharpest clash 11 Vietnam saw Communist ambushers kill f o u r Americans aJtd wound eight Monday in trapping a patrol o1 the u.~. l96t h Llght Infantry Brigade 70 miles Southwest of Da Nang. No guenilla casualties were reported. Military spokesmen said Viet Cong and North Vietnam.,. troops in Cam- bodia opened 'up with u titank rockets and machine ps 01 1 South Vietnamese Negro Resigns Cleveland Post As Top Lawman CLEVELAND (UPI) -After only 1'• monlhs on the job, former Air Force Lt. Gen. Benjamin. 0. Davi! Jr. resigned fdonday as Cleveland's top police officer 1 charging Mayor Carl B. Stokes and mem· bers of his administration ''continued to provide support ai;id comfort to the enemies of law enforcement." Davis, 57, who until his retirement last January was the highest rank.lag Negro In the armed ser:vm. refused to elaborate en the charge, saying he had discussed it with Mayor Stokes, also a Negro. Stow namec1 Davis' mstant, eo1. William Hendrickson, as acting aafety director untlJ 1 replacement can be found for Davis. Davis, in a news conference at.tended by Mayor Stokes and Police ChJef Lewis Coffey, stressed the polnl that the enemies he referred to were not violators or the law. Neither he nor the m a y or would elaborate. "We have discussed tho phruing of that statemtnt at Jenrlh with . the mayor," said Davis, 11but I am not going to tell anyone else what I nlean." Davis also stated that the stokes ad· ministration would not support the pro- if&ms he bad recommended. Navy LST carrying 600 refugees down the Mekong River toward home. Twenty of the refugees and four of lhe ship's crewmen were reported wound- ed in the ambush 23 miles d0Yr11river from Phnom Peah, where the South Vietnamese had been kept ii camps since after the ouster ol Prince Norodom Sihanouk Iut March 18. Two Officers Freed in Viet Slaying Probe WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Army dismissed charges today against two men Involved in an alleged cover-up of the My Lal incideat but ordered p,re..trial investigations for seven others, including Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster. Fourteen were originally charged in connection with allegations of a cover-up Of the 1968 Vietnam incident sJayings of South Vietnamese civilians but charges have now been dropped against seven. Those exonerated today were Col. Robert B. Luper of Federal, Ark., and Capt. Kennetlt W. Boatman of Ralston, Neb. The Anny said an "evaluation of the evidence" showed that "no furJ,her proceedings were warranted ." In addition to Koster, who was the superintendent at West Point when the charge! were filed in March, those facing furthe r lavestlgaUon are Col. Oran K. Henderson, Lt. Col. David C. Gavin, Lt. Col. William D. Guinn, Maj. Charles C. Calhoun, Maj. Frederic W. Watke and Capt. Dennis H. Johnson. The pre-trial investigation Is similar to a grand jury proceeding, and delermiDes whether or not a court ma'rtial trial will be held. The Army said all of the investigative hearings will be closed sessions. Luper was commanding a battalion of artJllery and Boatman was an artillery forward observer at the time of the alleged ma"88Cl't. Koster, who lists West Liberty, Iowa, as his home, was in command of the Americal Division at the time of the •lle(ed llayinp. Finn President Returns Home After U.S. Trip NEW YORK (UPI) -President Urho Kekkonen wound up his five.day state visit to the United St.ates and headed home Monday, taking wilh him President Nixon's reassuraace of continuing Fin- nillt-U .S. lrlendsbip, bot not the definite commJtlpent of suppcrt for the planned European security conference he had IOUgb~ Kekkonen, who last visited New York in 1961, told a midday luncheon with David Rockefeller, president of the Chase Manhattan Bank: "Much has happened during these past nine years, but, as we were. able to establi sh during my discussions with my host, President Nixon, and with the secretary of state, Mr. (William P.) Roger s, nothing has happened which would have burdened the fundamentals of the friend ly relalion9 which have always existed between Fin1and and thiS great country. "During my discussions Jn Washington, we were able to agree that there are no grievances, no conflicts of interest between our two countries. 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Rock concert gathermg turned violent at Grant Park. Boy (bottom photo) grimaces with pain from bullet wound in the back during the dis· turbances. Disappointed Rock Fans Battle Chicago Police . CHICAGO (AP) -Thousands of angry youlhs stonned a stage in Grant Park Monday after the featured performers at a free rock concert failed to appear Russian Accord On Arms I.imits Believed Near , LONDON (UPI) -Russia is inching slowly and cautiously toward agreement with the United St.ates on a freeze of offensive and defensive missiles. The Knmlin expects a declaration or intent to emerge from negotiations in Vienna, authoritative Com m u n i s t diplo{natic sources said Mooday. The RussiaM foresee -broadly in accord with the Americans -an agree· ment freezing land-based Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles and sea-fired rockets, as well as a limitation of anti-missile defenses in the first stage or a wider strategic arms limitation concept, the sourc" said. But the current session of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) in Vienna ·i5 not likely to produce a firm accord yet. It is expected to end with a declara- tion of intent of the two superpowers to work out a rocket freeze accord, possibly by next year. 1be sources said the talks are going, well and progress Js being made. with both superpowers evidently intent po halting the dangerous nuclear am\!' race. Financial tormderaUons are playing at least as great a part on the side of the Russians as on ttiat of the United SI.ties In the current effort to put limita on Uleir rocket development programs.. Italian Premiel' FoI"min g Regime R0~1E (UPI) -Premier-designate Emilio Colombo began the delicate task of welding together a new national government Monday. The stock market reacted with a spll't upwards. The 50-year-okl Christian Democrat, an eighUime trta.sury minister credited with keeping the ltaltan economlc: "miracle" going, met with his own party leaders first. But his list or appolntments made it clear he wlll try to revive the rour.p1r. ty coalition which fell 22 days ago amid signs of detp Ideological and personal dUrerences . News of Colombo's appointment to try to end the latest government crisis was greeted by Investors with relief. 'I'M: stock market renccted buslrtcss con- fklence in Colombo by moving up in acro53-<he-~ dcalln,s. ' and the resuval lunled into a bloody brick-tossing battle with police. • An estimated 2,000 of the 50,000 youtru gathered in the park fought with police and later rampaged through the down- town are a smashing cars and store dis- play windows Several automobiles were set ablaze. ' There were 148 persons arrested. More than 100 perJOns, including 24 policemen, were injured. Three youths were shot a.ad wounded • Police saJd It wlll not determined if the gunshot victims were hit by policemen's bulleU. The melee begu shortly after the 4 p.m. starting time a.Mounced for a rock group called Sly and the Family Stone. The performers dkl not appear on st.age, and tmhappy youths walling in the muggy, 90-degree heat, pelted the stage with stones and bottles. "This is the fourth rock concert l've been lo and it's the fourth time they haven't come on stage," said Helen Lozowsky, 18. Another teenager, Sheri M'1l2er. 18, said : "Sly Is chicken. He's afraid to come on stage whenever the crowd gets too big. That cat don 't know where his head is." The concert was spo1tsored by the Chicago Park District to provide an apportunity ror Sly and the Family Sto11e. which canceled several concerts in Chicago recently, to appear and please the disappointed youths. Neither the rock group nor Park District officials were available today for comment on Monday's riot. A Park District spokesman aa.ld, however that the status of future rock concerts plaMed for Grant Park will be dlscus!ed by officials. The battle betweea police and youths , started when patrolmen 1rled to eject young people who atonned the stage. Some youths threw mis,,lles at those in- truden on the st.age and a pallceman was .struck. Squads of police converged on Grant Park and authorltJes ordered the concerl canceled and the field cleared. {;:{ {;:{ {;:{ Rioters Routecl I In Asbury Park ASBURY PARK, N.1. (UPI) -Police (iring s11of«1m bluls ln!o the air early today dllperaed e crwd of -e IO young b111<:u 1'ho bad been throwing rocks at paain& cars. Pollet reported JO pe:rtor11 were. ar. rested and not one was 9triousty Injured. f\toat arrests Involved dlJOrderly conduct charges. Deputy Police. Chief Thom as Flanagan said most of t.ho&e arrested were. about 15 yean old. A fire broke out In a cabinet sales outlet In the area. "We would term It suspte1ous until we can call It otherwile," Flanacan said. ' 300 Evacuated As Deadly Gas Released in Fire INDIANAPOLIS. Ind . (UPI) -Yeilow- green chlorine gas churned through a 10 block residential and industrial area Monday night after fire broke out at the Midstate Chemical and Supply Co. warehouse. At least 300 re.sidents were evacuated, but they were allowed to return to their homes five hours later. Eleven firemen and four civilians were hospitalized at Marion County Ge:neral Hospital. One fireman, Ronald Gammon, was in critical condition with back, neck and leg injuries suffered when he fell through the roof of the burning warehouse. More than a dozen other persons were treated for smoke and gas inhalation. James .Roberts, co-owner of tht warehouse, said 150 canisters were spill- ing out the gas and firemen would have to seal them. None of the other chemicals in storage was dangeroll5, he said. Dul officials warned residents return- ing to their homes to ventialtc them as moch as possible and not to use air conditioning systems Monday night. No Foundation To Auto Hazard?. TORONro (UPIJ -Marketing, q>o Canadian adYtrUsin& Wffkly, has turn- ed. up a survey which ailegtd that women's girdles are an auto safe!.¥ hazard. Tht study said the well-e.'ICa.sed lady driver tends to squirm, distracting at.. tentlon from her driving, and fi11ht! back age inst the garter pull -pushing down with her accelerator foot. A leading g1rdll' manufacturer denied lhe claim. '·There Ls no foundation for these !flatements," be said. I , ( , t I I I I I I T I t r • l11esday, July 28, 1970 s • 0.tJLV PJLOf :; Laird's .Warplane Policy: Fly Now, Pay Later By JORN VALTERZA .... Dellr ,.... st.ti The puamtnt wUI fly eipenslve "~· test them. then decide whether It wants to buy them, Secretary ol lldeaae ll!'lvln Laird vowed In Sin Clemente Monday. Speaking on the fitzhugh Report ad· vocaUnr aweeplng changes in Q.is depart· ment, the secretary said fue· plan - to eliminate long-tum commitments for expensive weapons systems -would eliminate the huge financial losses such as those incurred in the costly TFX and C5A warplanes. "1 call it fly before you buy,'' he told tbe While House press in a Wed- neaday afternoon briefing. Fresh from a conference with Presi- dent Nixon, Laird said tbe soaring costs or the nation's defense was the main point oC concern. That same concern over soaring costs for manpawer and materiel will occupy President Nixon through today as he Down the Mission ·Trail Tax Reduction Won't Be.Felt SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A 28<ont tu reduction has been adopted by direc- torso! tbe Moulton-Niguel Water District, but the district's residents probably won 't notice. Board president Ivar 0 . Hanson s a 1 d increased assessed valuation will eat up lbe tax reduction in most cases. The distt.ict has adopted a $2,803,486 budget for lhe coming year and approved a recommendation to begin building reserves to pay for $8 milHon in sewer bonda in the next few years. ·• lofJ ·serclce Closed MISSION VIEJO -The employment service for Mission Viejo teenagers wtll be closed during August. 1be Youth EmploY;nent Service b:ated al Miuion Viejo High School 1' askllig tboH wbo .would like to employ teenagers .. to contact them before Aug. 1. • Requiests may be made in perm at the officf:· from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. or by eallli>g 113G-2DO. The office, which places teens \'\full time, part time and one time. only JObS, will reopen in September. e Tuu Slate Fiims CAPIS'mANO HIGHLANDS -Looking for inespenlive entertainment? Tbe Teen Association oC th& Capistram Highlandl Ha:neowners' Association is ipOlllOl'ing films Aug. 1 and Aug. 8. The first will be "The G r e a \ Locomotlve" and the second will be Disney's "Emil and the Detectives." .. Both will be shown at 7:30. p.m. in the Valencia School multipurpose room. Admission is 25 cents for children and 50 cents for adulls. e Cof(; Sets Dinner SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Tickets art now on sale for the annual dinner dance sponsored by tbe San Juan c.tpistrano Chamber of Commerce. · The event is schfduled at 7 p.m. Friday in the new patio at El Adobe Reataurant. 1Tickets are available by calling t-.1rs. Virginia John at 493-4986 for reservations. 'lbe evening of dining and dancing will '* $8 per person. ·The program will center around city eovernment with city officials being in· ti'oduced by Mayor Tony Forster. ' e Vfts Plan Part11 . 1SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Sad- c;fteback .v alley Young Republicans will n5st a "Cocktail Caper" Friday al the M1asion Viejo Inn. ITic.k!ts are $2.50 for the fund raising eVtnt and will include dancing. hors cC.oeuvres and a n<H>ost bar. :"rickets for the a p.;n. event can be o6lamect by writing to the organii.alion, BOs: 124, El Toro, 92630 or at the door. l I New Club Slates , Charter Soiree ' 'I'he netr Exchange Club or Crown ale will celebrate ila: charter at 111 r Ni&bt Party Aug. 1, at the ltffs Country Club, San Clemente. Ttle Crown ValleyClub is spon!Ored by +. Excbang~ Club-<1! San Clemen1'. ~\D" Croi1e"tte has been electl'd l>ftSldent of the new club, with C. Grant SfnpkinJ, vtct president; Larry Gwynne, llCl'etary, and David Palagyl, tre~rer. iMember• or the board of directors •~ Or. Harold Hector. John Schmidt. Robert Honnette , C. Lydon, H. Lippincott, Fted 6ptrbeck and Thurston BUIS. IJ1MI Crown Valley club will meet riJularly at 12: IS p.m. Wednesday~ in Btdrf1 Restaurant. Avery Parkway and t& San Dic~o Freeway. Exchange rimtiers who have moved to the area a,..i!lijted to attend, Crols<lte aald. and h1s top budget aides conUnue to examine the defense spending picture. Secretary Laird, who left for Washingto•, D.C., lmmedlatelf alO't"his appe8ran<.-e in San Clemente Mooday, said that the Fly~before-you~bl.iy sug· geStiOODy ffie blue-ribbon panel ~'ilready is being implemented." It means, he added, that instead or- committing itself to a six or seven-year procurement contract on extre:nely ex· peruJive weaponry, the Defense Depart· ment will actually test me articles finl 4 then decide on their wor~ ,after long evaluation. · He.added, however, ttlat lhe plan would only apply to future contracts, not those already conuniUed -including the lwn planes already mentioned, whose costs have soared by mill!~ of dollars over original projections. "This new plan gives us some milestones along the way so that we can review. cancel, increase or decrease our budget on specific items, msteaa o! committing ourselves for a specilic period ." The lengthy report, termed. a ''sweep. Ing ch~e·• ln the structure of the cou- ntry's defense agencies, was compiled by 1 blue ribbon panel headed by Gilbert. Fitzhugh, chair.nan of -the board of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Jt was· released by-the White House stall late Monday. Besides the procurement aspects, It calls for sweeping changes in the ad· ministraUve structure of the Pentagon. It was the first such change in that structure since 1958, and much of the new suggestions could be implemenled without ~ official sanction of Congress, Laird said. Moving on to the troubled defense segment or the federal budgets the secretary pointed out huge fiscal pro- blems in financing an all-volunteer anny as suggested by the President, saying that costs for manpower in the Armed Forces have dotibled fu recent years. DAILY ,.ILO T SI.ti' !"Mii 'BIRDS OF PREY LOOK FIERCE, BUT THEY'RE QUITE DELICATE' Fountai~ Valley Falconer Carnes ind Red Tail Hawk Fal~ons Are Fun Haivk Master Has Unique Hobby By TERRY COVILLE Of the 01llJ l'i11! 511ff Donald Brent Carnes, Ill, likes his feathered friends besl. Ha~ks and ralco11s Lo be specific. The 21-year-old Fountain Valley rcsi· dent trai11.s, hunts, feeds and cuddles tl'lem. He's rather fond of the sport <>f fa\ronry. but doesn't invite others to take it up. "I care f<>r my birds. If falconry became a fad these birds would be wiped out. Nine out or every Len birds captured by a human die by that human, Those are poor odds for the birds.'' But his phone number, 842-8314. is open lo anyone who has a bird of prey and wants i1dormation on how to train and care for it. "It takes a !Gt or time and care. I spend 10 hours a day with my three birds," he ~isl. Personal contact is the key to training birds by Don's philosophy. ''You start with a captured bird. Birds taken from the ne st can't be used. They haven't learned how to kill from their pare•ts. and it's not hereditary. If a bird that didn't know how to kill 1!ver escaped captivity it would die. ··it takes a week or more or simply feeding the bird to build trust. Give him tidbits, chunks or meat. ''Then start to carry the bird Olli your fist several hours a day. Always ap· proach it with food . A bird that will sit on your fist without hopping off is properly manned. "Once the bird is manned you start bringing il lo your fist. Stand a root away aRd whistle. Always whistle when yoo feed ii. Getting the bird I<> hop oU the pcreh and on te your fist is the hardest part. \ "Gradually stand farther rrom the perch. When you fly ·the bird keep a line on him. J use a 40-50 pound test fishing line and a fishing pole. "When ~ bir~ will return consistently at your first whistle, he's trai11ed. Then weigh him and keep track or his flying weight. If he gets heavy dol'l't fly him he's eating too much. You only gel your bird back out or hunger." Once the bird's flying skill is ~I the hunting part starts, Carnes explained'. "Buy live birds or animals, hold them In one hand. your bird in the ·other, then toss the game out for the blrd lo catch. You can train a hawk or falcon lo hunt specific game." Ca rnes has three birds, two hawks and a falcon, while his 1&-)tear-old btolhcr Dana has lwo hawk s and their younger sister, Becky, has a yoong Great Horn Owl. "We have three lypes of birds. besides !he ow l. A Luggar {falco1t ). lwo Red Tail Hawks and, two Coopers' Hawks." Don c;.ompared the Cooper's Hawk to B JOO-yard sprinter, fast over a short distance. The Red Tail Hawk . he said, is like a piper cub plane: ifs good for a long distance, but not very fast. Red Tails are acWally classified as buuards, and spend most of their lime soaring, searching for dead or wounded game. "The Coopers' Hawk is like a jet -fast for a long distance." The Red 'l'ail liawk eats small mam- 1nals. snakes and rodents. It's not fast enough to catch birds, Carnes e:<plah1ed. The other hawk -:ats birds or small animals, while the falron sticks mostly with birds and an octasional rodent. "l fly my birds every day. That's y,•hen they feed." Ca rnes said. "There's plenty of game, rabbits and such, around Fountai11t Valley and Hu11lington Beach," Don and Dana both have ·ralconry licenses -a req:ilfement -issued by Lhe California Department of Fish and Ga me . A hunting license, wilh the same regulations as applied to the mu with a rine. is req uired lo use the birds for hunting. "Some people think it's cruel." said Don, ''bul I think it's fairer than looking through a high powered· scQPC and drop.. ping an animal several hundred yards away. "With falconry your prey' always has a t'hance to get away. The strong o~s will. And i( these birds were 011. their own, they'd eat ~t ~of their prey and leave the rest to rot. We make sure every part of the dead game is eaten." Hawks and falcOrul may ,Jook vicious but they can prove to be Qµite delicate animals. 1 "They're sick a lot and yoll have lo take good.. cart; of them. They have lo be v..11rmed every six months." The owl -only type of Cl'.Wl allowed to be captured by Jaw -was found as a blby, Its mother dead from 10me unknown hwiter's rlfle. "My sister is training the owl ber1eU. He's "ot. a hunter." ••t llke animals. 1 like training these birds to perform to their best, but lt"I expensive and time consuming," Don ended, il.s he wen~ over to chuck n Red Tall Hawk under Its chin -er, beak. whereas the &otll of men lnvolvtd ti'a1 remained the sr.ne. ' "A tremendou.. amount of money will be needed," Laird uplalned, "and it ~t!c ~tha!~~=-~~~ such a shdrt time will be difflCDlt, In-deed.'' . • 'I'M-<government cost for a force of 2.7 mUlion men in service has soared ll'Ol1l' !If blijton 1n·1i15 to flll 'billion 1111' 11.!cal year. Qiieried on troop ·wtlhdr1wals from the &public Of K0tta, Laird gave the podium lb ·Undersecretary of DeftnJe David Packard, wtw:i·sakl the withdrawals from South Korea will have· to be ac- companied by a pouring-in of new weapons and other equipment in the troops' wake. Packard, fresh from conferences . wjth Korean repiesentatlves tn Hlwail,.wOuld not specify how many troops would . be withdrawn, or when the pullout would start. Wrd tll<n ...... red qutiliona .. -ilie tat11t tArrferlcan peace proposals for the 'MlddJc Eakt &nd 'thelr rtlaUon.sf\lp'wllh ,recent requests for military aid by lsrael. ''There have been some very important new developm'ents in the._ past few_ days (a, porlial acceptance by the Arab !ac- t¥Jos and predicted Israeli concurrence with the peace plan) and we're watching it all very closely," Laird said. · "I can assure you we're watching the l)alance very closely." H~ said he would reserve oomment on ' the Sov~t bl.iildup In Egypt, but he beUeved the latest indications from the area to be "rather t19peful." On relative missile strength between the U.S. and the Soviets, the·~ conceded thal ~ USSR exceeds .or na· tlon in total missiles aod will surpass our force of Polaris missiles launched by submarine by 1794 . . "The .... only oCfsetting factor we have oow is our bomber for«, but by .1974 our youna:est B-52 will be 14 years old .(nd Ol![_ old~ .,plane wUl be 20 yean old," he said. Developer Keeps Tabs On Dana Marina Project AP ""'9 CUTTING ARMS COSTS Defense D'epartment'• La ird- Police Seek Aid For Safe Summe1· On City ~ti.·~ts . By BARBARA KRJEBICH ot ... 0.lfr ,.lilt l tefl' Beverly Hills developer Herman Rap- paport is a devotee ot nsmng, sailing and eating, in approximately that order. He's also a finn believer in the preservation and development ol natural recreational resources so the nation's skyrocketing populaUoo won't build i nd pave itself out or a place to felas and enjoy its leisure time. For these reasons, Rappaport's new "baby," a 4""'acre concessioo at the new Dana Point Marina, is his clear favorite among JOD'le 40 eonstrnction projects undertaken during the pa.st six months by his North American Building Technology, Ille. (NABT). From a weekend retreat' at Laguna's Swi and Sarni, .Rappaport drives down to Dana Point., bumps over an acre or so of dirt to a prori'iootory jutting mto the east basin of the new small boat harOOr. Two sailboats and a Jone SW)bather already are testing the recreational facility. "IUgbt along t.here at the edge of the water," says Rappaport. with a gesture. "will be the big dinner restaurant and cocktail bar, with meeting rooms for cmftrtnces. Along the side there will be the spotbfishing landing, with a tackle sh<>p at one end and a coffee shop at.the other, sO fisherman will have · • more informal plact to eat." Between the two developments, he ex- plains, will be "Jot,, of 'little specialty shops and aervices -like Fisherman's Wharf...;.. it will be beautiful!" NABT, ol which RaP!lGporl is presl· denl. was one ol seven successful bidders for the commercial concessklos that will bring the Dana Poillt Marina to life. The Army Corps of Engineers has now Completed its job of creating the huge boat harbor out or a stretch ot open ocean off the More of the small coastal community. Other eoocessions awarded by the county Board of Supervisors will provide a large motel, an addiUonal restaurant. parking, a boat launclling ramp and a fuel dock to serve boats. Under its ~year ground lease, Rap. paport's finn wlll develop and own the $1',i million sportsfishing and restaurant im~ements. The plan Is to run ap. proximately six charter ~ts and to provide docking spaoe for pnvate boats whidl may stop by the Marina, Construcll"" will start in September, with U\e coffee shop, bait and tackle shoji and sportsllahlng ladllty scheduled. for completion by May ·I, 1971. '11le dinner restaurant will open not more than a year later, and the specialty shops a year after that. "That's our contract with the county," says Rappaport. "But our site plans already have be-en approved by the Plan- ning Commission and working drawings are under way, so it probably won't take that Jorig." Praising the work <>f the Anny Engineers, he sald, "lbere's nothing to do but step in and start building - it's a perfect. .)ob of site preparation." The developer also had kind words_ !or the county Planning Commillion. "This is our firm's first venture into Capo Trustees Approve Intern 'teaching Plan Trustees ol tho Cap~lr.lno Uni!i<d School Dbtrict have approved plans for a pilot intern teacher program in cooperation witl\.. UC Irvine. The intern tt~r wlll have had rou~ years of college and prac:Uce teaching plus ·a number of graduate unit!. The lnt.ern will be pak!. $6,000 a year, fl,409 less than the first step on the regular salary schedule. Personnel director, Dr. John Cralll, district personnel-· explained thot the int.em will be u qualllled as a flr1t year teacher recruited from out or state who usually ltarll at f7.400 .. Crain 18.id the program will give the district an unuiUal opportunity to eveluate and train 1 California teacher who will have a full class load, like any other be&innin& teacher. ' leisure-time development and 1 was Im- pressed to see lhat the planning people in this county, at least, are aware of the vital oeed to plan ahead for the preservation of natural recreational areas,'' he said. "I'm a £inn believer in free enterprise but we are seriously endangering futu re generations by paving and building over the land ~lead of careflllly pl anning for open space." As an appointee to lhe federal Urban Transportation Advisory Council, RaJ>- paport is concerned with the problem of moving people from one point to another wihlout obliterating th e landscape entirely. A scientist by training, and Industrial chemist by profess.ion, he made his way into. the development field via the RBJ>- papart Construction Company, whkh was merged last year into North .American Building Technology Inc. A uniq ue "package" operation, NABT coordinates ~II phases of development, from real estate, through archilecture, construcUon and operatiOn. The corporation , headquartered In Beverly Hills, has offices in New York, Miami Beach, Chicago, Houston, New Jersey and Las Vegas. At last count it was operating 40 projects in 12 dU· re.rent sµtes, inCluding reside n fl a I developmenls, commercial of ( l ce lSuildings, shopping centers and a score of restaw-ants, including chain franchise oulletJ. But it's clear to see that the boss' heart is f1m1Jy lodged in Dana Point. "And Jt's such an easy run down on the freeway from home," he adds. Easier,· at least, than the tisfilng ti'ip he undertook a couple of 1'.reekends ago, when a friend in Miami mentioned during a phone conference that the marlin were striking. "I was on the plane th al night," says Rappaport. "Didn't get any marlin though • . . but I did land a dolphin • . . took 55 minutes • . . noW le~ me tell you about a fishing trip we had out oC Newport once .•. " Student of A r t ' -With~ summer In full .gear in ~ Clemente and youths b~~ the huDlftds out on the streets on their !*:YC:les. police officials today reininded ·~t; and children to review tome &askl cycle safety rules to avoid potepUIUy fiial mlshapi A 24-page manual, cartoon 'illustrated al).d geared for child ren, Is available free at lbe. main poli~ desk. In it are dozens of easily understood rules which could save a child's life. Some o( them include: -Ride the cycle on the rlght·hand side of the road (parallel to the flow of traffic) as near as safely possible to the cu~ · -Do not ride with a ·passenger on. the bicycle. -Lock the bike when it is not in use in public. -Pedal on an unswerving, steady course , instead of weaving from 1lde to side. -Hitching rides on the side or rear of ot her moving vehicles is the seet>nd. highest cause or cycle deaths. -Night , riding should ohly be <lone with adequate lights and reflecton on the cycle. -Ride out of alleyways and dri~eways only after slowing-dQwn and checking traffic and pedestrians. -Obey boulevard St.ops, traffic signalJ and other traffic-control signs and signals. -Elccess speed and horseplay, with fellow cycllsti should be ·avoided. . -Routine maintenance of the cycle and checks of brake_; pedals, lighUI and moving parts can pn!venl accidents. The booklet, which is distributed under !he auspices ot'"do:iens of city bu.slnesies and community service groups, also in- cludes standard warnings tn children about strangers, matches, s t r a n g e chemicals and even skateb9artl safety. Usa Lloyd, 6, San Juan Capistrano, studies clay sculpture of owl by Ollie Fisher, one ·of artists and art.Jsans currently exhibiting at La-- guns Beach Fine Arts Association's Art·a·Fair, one oi lhree art fe,s.. livals being conducted In Laguna. Art·a·Fair runs through Aug. 30 at its N. Clljl•l Highway locallon . Sawdust Festival and Festival or Aris are holdlbg forth in Laguna Canyon-also through Aug. so. ~· ), / Wellw Grimwood of. Colchester. England bought an old post office truck at an auction and was sur· r.riled to find a mailbag with 60 eUer• ID&ide. He notified postal ulllorill• who aid: "We are per· turlle4 )>y this becawe we can't es· Dlaln how it happened. Tbe letters hive now been delivered with an _apolo&y .''-• Chefs from II nations served up a swnptuous banquet 'recently for 63 guest& at the Czecboslovak Pavilion-to Expo.'70 .. The fa.ur·ltour meal included caviar and suckling pig from the Soviet Union. stuffed quail from the .United States, cold silmon from Britain, Canadian stuffed trout, Belgian veal kidney, a wedding cake from Czechoslo- volda ud a IJ>"Cial cheese from France. Glenn Tr~y Kettelle, 11 month& old, .ihow.1 how to beat tlle Mat and tht crOtD<b ·at the beach in htr grand· motMr'• wash tub tn North ·Kings· town. R.I. TrattJI is ff'om Wtst War· IDftt. • Parking 171eter1 t'~ Mlldf~. Calif. Motr co~ct.ed eno~I& coins to paJI fOT thtmielve.1 1n thi.s faf'Trl iftQ , community but Mondatl the cit11 annoU'RCtd it had modt'...a profit on them any- way. Tht 400 meters, ri~d out two t1tar1 ago totrt sold a.r novtliits or 1out.1tnir1 and &Ju citu realized 12,205, • Antllony Duteui of West Pall!r- son N.J. was fined $125 recently for ' violating ~g ordinances by building a pigeon coop without per· miision. His neighbor, Joseph Bar· u .. llo, !iled tl~complaint. -·They do all their taxiing and have their Qigbt pattern right over my pool," Barbagell.o said. "It's a Iowy situation. Pigeons sure aren't thB cleanest birds in the world." • Inadequacies in the new $8.2 mil· Uon headquarters building for the Washington State Highway Depart· ment ahawed up recently when a planning group attempted to show slides with a projeclor. Only one electrical outlet was found in the commission chambers and that plUI was behind an electrical wall clock. Th• clock was turned off for the p111entation. Tuttdu, Jo~ 21, 1'70 Red Forces Seize Cambodian Ship·· SAIGON (UPI) -Coo>bloed COm· muoilt forces bave 1:1tcun • major new ofttorive on. the K1riram Plateau 1n a moYe to te1ze · Cambodia'• ooly am· munitlons fad«y, military aourees r-'"<I today In Phnom Penh. In olhor Oan>bodlu action tbey llD· bulhed a refuree ship, captured the govemmeal'• oaly cement plan~ and -..,i In ,..,. and reinforcements lo An&kor· Wal . UPI ·Co1Te1pdldent Keneeth J. Brad· dick, with Cambodian 1ovornment troops nea.r Kirirom, sakt s,eoo Communist• made up of North Vletaamese, Vie< Qmg, Khmer Rouge and Patbet J.ao, had begun the of!enaive to seize control of the JStrategic plateau and Highway 4, Phnom Peab's lilellne to the sea. Braddict aald a Cambodian battallm commander, Maj. Som Saoth, was lbot to death Monday near the Chalet D'Et.at, former summer home of Prince Norodon1 Sihanouk. at the start of the orfeuive. Three govmunent batlalionl pulled bocl< from the area to await rtJnforcements. UPI correspoJlldent Robert Kaylor reported from Phnom Penh tbe Com· munlltl had relnlorced their troopo around the · hlltorlc temple ruins of Angkor Wat and broog)lt In tither ar· tillery or antiaircraft wupom. The North Vidnamele allo were reported ffJCruiting local Cambodian soldiers. Kaylor said clvlllans who moved into the temple area ror Jl!ety were makl1g uniforms for the recNt. an4 4ele.rter1 from the Cambodian Anny. He said the Communists told civilians ill the area the alte wu being pnpared for the return of Prince Sihanouk, bolt lilied 1nte1111ence olflcers called this a pro- paganda statement aimed al lhe Cam- bodian peuanu. 1be sharpest clash la Vietnam· 11w O:immuniat ambulhers kill · f o u r Americans Ud wound eight Mondsy In trapping a patrol ol the U.S. Illlth Lllhl Infantry Brigade 70 miJel Southwest of Da Nang. No guerrilla cuualtin were reported. Military apotumen said Viet Con1 and North Vlelnl!ntM troopo in C11111- bod~ opened up with Utitank rocket. and machine illl• 01 1 SouUt Vietnameae Negro Resigns ·Cleveland Post As Top Lawman CLEVJµ.AND (UPI) -AftB only In months on tht job, former Air Force Lt. Gen. Benjamin O. Davis Jr. rell&ned Monday 11 Cleveland's toP. police offlcrer, chariinl Mayor Carl B. Slokes and mem· be11 ol hil adminllltation "conUnued to provide support and romfort to the enemies of law enforcement." Davis, 57. who ontll biJ retirement 1ast January was the hichett ranking Negro in the armed servM:ts, refused to elaborate on the charge, saying he had discuued H with Mayor Stokes, alao a Negro. Siok,. named Davil' usl!Unt, Col. William Hendrickson, u acting 1afety director untU 1 replacemm' can be found for Davit. Davis, in 1 news conference a4tended by Mayor Stokes and Police Chief Ltwil COffey, iilre....t the point that the enemies he referred to were not vtolstors of the law. Neither he nor tht mayor would elaborate. "We have dilculad the phruing of that ltate.ment at lenath with the mayor," sa1d Davis, "but I am not 1olng to tell anyone else what l maan." Davis abo IUted that the stokH ad· mlni1t.raUon would not support the pro-arams he bad recommended, Navy I.ST careylog IOO re!1111ees down Ute Metonc River tow~ borne. Twenty of the refugees and four of the slap'• crewmen were reported WOLUXI· ed in the ambuah 23 milts downriver from Phnom Ptah, where the South Vietnamese had been kept ia camps since after the ouattr of Prince Norodum Sihanouk laol March 18. Two Officers Freed in Viet Slaying.Probe WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Army dllmilsed charge.a today 1gainlt two men involved in an alleged cover-up of the My Lal incident but ordered pre-trial investigaUons for seven othert:, Including Maj . Gen. Sapiuel W. ~. Fourteen were originally charged in connection with allegatlons of a cover-up of the 1918 Vietnam incidtnt slayinp of South Vletnameae clvilllns but charges have now been dropped against seven. Thole e1onerated today were Col. :Robert B. Luper of Federal, Ark., and Capt. Kenneth W. Boatman of Ralston, Neb. 1be Army said an ••evaluation of the evidence" 1howed that "no further proceeding• were warranted.'' Jn addition to Koster, who w,as the aupertntendent at West Point when· the charges were filed in March, iliole facing further inve!UgaUon. are Col. Oran K. Henderson, U. Col. David C. Gavin, U. Cd. WIUlam D. Guinn, Maj. Charles C. Calhoun, Maj. Frtderlc W. Walke and capt. llennla H. Johnson. 'lbe pre-trial invesUgatlon is similar to a &rand jury proce<dlng, and dettrrninel whether or not a court martial trial will be held. The Army said all of the Investigative hearln&• will be closed sess!01U. Luper wu commanding a battalion of art.Ulery and Boatman was an artillery forward observer at ~ time of the alleged musacre. KooleT, who lilts West Liberty, Iowa. as bia home, was in conunaod of the Americ&l Divllllon 11 tbe thne ol the alle(ed 1layinga.. Finn President Returns Home After U.S. Trip NEW YORK (UPI) -Prffident Urho Kektonen ~ up hit five-day atate visit to the United States and headed home Monday, tatl.n1 wlth him President Nixon's reassurance ol continuing Fin- nlah·U.S. lrlendlhlp, bolt not the definite commitment or support for the planned European aecurlty conference he had ...,..g111. Ketkooen, ·who last visited New York In lMJ told I midday luncheon with David Roc;'t:efeller, presJdent of the Chase M1nflattan Bank: "Much haa happened during these past nioe years, but, as we were able to estabU!b during my dilcuslioos with my host, President Niton, and with the secretary of state, Mr. (William P.) Ros•rs, nothing hu happened which would have burdened the fundamentals of lhe friendly relations which have alway• es.lated between Finland and this ireat country. "During my discussims In Washlngton , we were able to agree that there are no grievancu, no confllcta of Interest between our two countries. The isrues we discussed were both economic and political." Most of Nation Sticky Hot, Muggy Weather Continues Despite Showers c.i1ter1&1• Sii.JM -• _11., f1Jr ..,., '" a.itll!trll ttlllofnll •• ,.... Mr "" 11...,.1 OlllP!f .,.. Mtl'I' '"'°""!"' hrw c llllcll 11111 lotll fM IOI tollll1I •tllt, Not ~ 11mw1lllr• <MnH w•• ,_,..,, L .. A•'-~ vldfllt'f u..ntncft:I ""'" .,., _. ... ~ """ ,......,. 1-1..... 11¥ "*"' ·-· celllll!llO!t wlltl Hmt ~ Ill ,_Nl'tt\lt't. ,, .. •klM llltll ttHr -• IL ._,. I ... , .. ._ ............. -•!mum. Lew ll!lllllt ... SOUTHaflM CALl,OftNlo\ -Me•llY ftlr nir.11111'1 ....,_... llvl nlf!lt •1141 Mr!"!' mllfft!M ... tllulh •1111 ttt l lont 1N .. tt, Litt• chtOI .. 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'*"""' l'ltlftt, lf'lll lltt Ill .. leulllW.-11, IWf'I l!'IOl'lllllf ._.,.,11!;rt1 rll!Mll ,,_ " ., fltl"''"· ,,,, •. , .. ,. ., ·1~ llW HHlllt. CaMI, ~----- Teape,..twrn ...... 1. ... l'rK. Albllil_..,.. n " A1'1:1'!ttt" • ~ Atllnlt " " ·" l•k•rillllll " " l l""•rt.k • " ... ., .. ..... • " ·" CPllU .. • " CIOlocl-tt • " .. c .. v•l•ftll " " ..... • .. . .. Dtl .. 11 .. " IEurW.1 •• .. ForlW1rlll .. " ·-'" .. Hll~ • " ·" Heo\llj~lu • " HOlll~ .. • ·" ....... ,tiff .. " l tt YMI• "' " L11 A-lt11 " .. M .. lfll ... Cll " .. Mltwevll; .. .. • ·'' Ml~lll M .. ... NIW Oriti/II " " NIW YMI. " .. Oltl•lld .. .. °"""' • • •• ........... " " l'llllllfth11\l1 -" ·-· ... .. ,.,,ti.,,-'! • " ..... 11 ..... .. " .. II .. 111111 ~ " ·-• • kt•l lMll .. .. ~ SI. l.Nt .. " .u St ll Lek• Cll'y " •• .. .... oi-" " t111 iJltllCl'4:• " " .&tritto lkrkr• " " S..1111 " .. ·" Slllll111t .. ~ 1ht rll'lll ... n ··-t " n , VIOLENCE IN CHICAGO -Unmarked police ca• is tipped over by youlhs ((Dp photo ) and th~n bursts into-tlames. Rock concert gathering turned violent at Grant Park. Boy (bottom photo) grimaces with pain !rom bullet wound in the back during the dis· turbances. Disappointed Rock Fans Battle· Chicago Police CHICAGO !AP) -Thoussnds of angry youths :itonned a 1tage in Grant Park Monday after the featured perfonner:i al a free rock concert failed to appear Russian Accord On Arms Limits Believed Near LONDON (UPI) -Russia is lnthing slowly and cautiously toward agreement with the United States on a freeze or offensive and defensive missiles. The Kremlin expects a declaration of intent IG emerge from negotiations in Vienna, autboritaUve C o m m u n i s t diplomatic sourees said Monday. The Russians foresee -broadly in accord with the Americans -an agree· ment freezing land-based Intercontinental Ballistic MiS1il6 and sea-fired rocket.s, as \\'ell as a limitation of anti·misslle defenses in the first sLBge of a wider strategic anns limitaUon concept, the sources said. But the current sessioo of the Strategic Arms Umltatlon Talks (SALT) in Vienna is oot likely to produce a firm accord yet. It is expected to end with a declara- tion of intent of the two superpowers to work out a rocket freeze accord, possibly by next year. The sources said the talks are golng. well and pr<>1res3 is being made, with both superpowers evidently intent on halting the dangerous nuclear anns race. Financial considerations are playing al least a:i great a part on the side · of the Russians as on that of the United States in the current effort to put limit! oo their rocket development programs. Italian Premier ' Forming Regime ROME (UPI) -Premier~esignate Emilio Colunbo began the delicate task of welding together a new notional government Monday. 'Ibe stock marke~ reacted with a spurt upwards. The 50-year-old OU'istian Ot!1nocrat, an eight·lime treasury mlnisler credited with keeping the Italian ttonomic "miracle" aoing, mel with his own party leaders first. But his Usl of appointments 1nadc it clear he wlll try lo revive the four-par. ty coalition which fell 12 days ago am~ silns of deep ideological and personal dUferences. News of Colombo's appointment to try to end the latest government crisis was areetcd by lnveators with relief. The stock market. r"1tt:ted buslnes' ~n­ fidence tn Colombo by moving up in acrou-th&-~ dtallngs. and the festival Jtlnted lnto a bloody briCk·tosslng batUe with police. An estimated 2,000 of the 50,000 youths gathered in the park fought with police and later rampaged through the down· town area smashing cars and store dis· play windows Several automobiles were scl ablaze. There were 148 persons arrested. More than 100 per90ns, including 24 policemen, were injured. Three youths were shot and wounded . Police said It was nol determined if lhe gunshot victims were hit by policemen's bullets. The melee bega111 shortly after the 4 p.m. starting time aruiounced for a. rock group called Sly and the Family Stone. The performers did not appear on stage, and unhappy youths waiting in the muggy, ~egree heat, pelted lhc stage with stones and bottles. "'Mlis Is the fourth rock concert l've been to and it's the fourth time they haven't come on stage,'' said Helen Lozowsky, 18. Another teenager, Sheri Meltzer, 18, said: "Sly is chicke n. He's a!rald to come on stage whenever the crowd gets too big.· That cat don 't know where his head is." The concert was spoRSOred by the Chicago Park District to provide an apportunity for Sly and the Family Stoae. which canceled several concerts in Chicago rece ntly, to appear and please the disa ppointed youths. Neither the rock group nor Park District officials were available today for comment on Monday's riot. A Park District spokesman said. howevtr lhat the !talus of future' rock concerts platmed for Grant Park will be discussed by officials. The battle betwee• police and youth! started when patrolmen tried to eject young people who stonned the sta~. Some youths threw missiles at those in- truders on the stage and a policeman was struck. Squads or police conver11:ed on Grant Jlark and authorities ordered the concert canceled and the field cleared. *· * * Rioters Routed ln Asbury Park ASBURY PAAA, N.J. (UPI) -Police firing shotgun blasts: into the air early 1oday dispersed a crowd of some 60 young blacks who htd been throwing rocks at passing can. Police reported 10 per10ns were ar- rested and not one was ,erlo~sly injurtd. P.tost arrests involved dlaorderly conduct chara:es. Peputy PoUct Chier Thomas Flan11~an said most or thole 1rrested were about 1~ yean old. A fire bi"Oke out In a cabinet salf'll outlet ill... thcl area. 0 We would term il susplcklu~ untll v.·e can csn it olherw~" Flanagan iald. 300 Evacuated As Deadly Gas Released' in Fire INDIANAPOLIS, lnd . (UPI) -Yellow. green chlorine gas churned through ·a 10 block residential and industrial a~a Monday night after fire broke out &t the Ji.iidstate Chen1ical and Supply Cb. warehouse. At least 300 residents wert evacuated. but they wert allowed to return to thei! homes five hours later. E even firemen and four civilians were hospitalized at. Marion County Gellf!l;fl Hospital. One fireman, Ronald Camm"1, was in critical condition with back, neck and leg injuries suffered when he fell through the roof of the burninc warehouse. • More than a dozen other persons were treated for smoke and gas Inhalation. James Roberts. co-owner of th• warehouse, said 150 canisters were spill.i ing out the gas and firemen would hav•' to seal them . None of the other cbtmlc.a.ls1 in !torage was dangeroos. he said. 1 But officials warned residents return. Ing to their homes to ventlalte them' as much as possible and not to ust air condltionina 1ystems Monday night. No F oundatwn · ' To Auto Hazard?: • • TORONTO (UPI) -Morketlng, .lh• Canadian advertising wtckly, ha. turn-I ed 11p a sur~ey which alleged thit 1 ,.,.omen's girdles are an auto saletf • haurd. The study said lhe well-e'!lCUed lady 1 driver ltnds to squlnn, distracting at.-1 \entlon from htr dtlVlng, and flchtJ I back against 1he garter pull -pusbh\fl down with her acceleralor foot. · A leading girdle manufacturer denied r the clAim. '·There is nO founchttlon for lhcst sj.ltemenls," he said. ..... .__ .... .,,. ... _..._.._, ..... == .. --~~-.... ~ ..... -. DAIL y PllDT I Segregated Schools Eliminated Portuguese Mourn Ex-chief Salazar . WASlllNGTON (UPI) -A~ lomey U-al John N. MJldlell predlcttd IOdly tl>at vlrtually all dual 1 c b o o I :systems 11111 In exbtence In Ille lloulh will be elimlnltod this fall, and fottuw no major s>n>bl<ms In accompllshiu1 It. Asked in an interview about a stalemtnt. by J err I 1 Leonard, the Jllltice Department '1 CMI R I 1 b II <hie!, tl>at 115 percenl al dual, 1}'SWns would be '°""'""" to Wlilary sylleml, he replied, UPIT ........ LISBON (UPI) -Tiit bed)' of former pmnler Antonio de Oliveira Saluar was borne ~ . day from lhe oatlonll palace lo St. Jeronimo Monamry. before thouaanda al silent Poriquelo • The colfl1" wrapped In lbe· naUonal flaa, WIS canied m . tho llhoulden al elpt litllltary policemen from tbe 1J1M1 al Sao Benllo Palace where be lived !or 31 yeor> lo a wallln( thatl-coknd •rmy· truct coo- verl!d into a heartt. 'llloullndt al --watched quleily from lhe llQUIH 11111 every -and terr•c• ~ 1be JIOOI' nei,pborboodl in tbe ll"N u the tnick .......... from lhe ......... • 'That will likely be attalJll>d· and~~· Doet be ror.... any -a to federalize riatJonal &uardlmen or 'we federal ~ In 1arp a\iml>c<J. to protect 3Chool dttldren, u Was -In lbe lat• ltso. and Uri!' llllOI? New York View Pr<mler Man:ello Clel.Qo. -npb<ced the l l·yell'<lld Saluar In 1M8, led the tn- tourap of mourne.n:. Ht WU followed by mlnbtu1 -Jn frock coots and llrlped pant.I. The Broadway play 110n a Clear Day You Can See Forever" may be true, but tl!ls'yjew: from_lhe oblletvatlon d.eck-of the Empire State Buildil>g proves that on a smoggy day you can't see very much of anything. Tourists visiting the famed lookout spot were disappointed as smog continued to blBllket lhe city. More of the same is due acconUng to the weather forecasts. Tbroucbout · lhe capllll, a• estimated to perctnl al tho male pedeltri&n1 OD the ftnet' wore blact ties. Black me.es domJn•ted women'• war for the day. "I don't contemplate anyt1daf like Chat will be nece11-ary,1 ' Mltchell answered. "Wt feel that the people In lbe -will alllde by their ..-and ""'" ordll'I to d•• !frq:lte ... Nixon to Receive ABA Nurse Home Medicaid Flaw Found SplkH!elmelod l'!llce I n blue unllonns preceded the coffin with dnJma dnpld In blaclc beatlo( lhe -..u al a luneral mardl. • • -Mid: .,,,. ,,..,, we bsve a more ut:emtvt Word on Court Choices ,,. the _....,,... palled. !here was complelo llllace In -al-distzict. that WASHINGTON CAP) -The will be de1egre11t1n1 for the Nixoo administration b a s fast Ume. The executive reversed 'ill poUcy and agreed branch ii .Wdying their re-to submit the names <lf poten-qulremtnts 'for asslatanoe... 'al S r-. He aald a llnal .1-i.:oo bad II upreme """"rt nominees ,_.,...... to the American Bar Associa· not ytt been made on the tion for an investigation of number of federal officials, their quallflcations • .inducting lawyers, who would--------- be ... t Into Ille South for tbO 111111 al the new achoo! tenn. -,_..;In-· areas abortly after m Id· Aucust. Seo. Slrorn Thurmond, CR· S.C.), recenUy crlticl1ed Pnoldent Nlxai and the ad- minbtrat\on for their polldes toward tbe South, saying the -were endangertn1 Nb<- an'1 rMlecUon pro9p!ds Jn 1972. 'llnrmond alao attad<ed w!llt he de>cribed 11 Juatlce DepaAment pllDI lo lend "carpethluen" tnto th • Sou!ll. Nb<m suboequently said be bod no lntenllon ot.aendln( ·~ 1qllld1" Into Soulhem states lo enlorct dtRpt:Jatlm. Cl,othing At Issue In Trial ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -Women'• clothlnc, which CDUld link John N o r m a n Colllol to die unoolved kllllnls ol. aevtnl youna tmnen, may aporX a local bottle today al the youth'• trial for murder. 1be B-year--0ld Collins is charled with murdering Kar. en Sue Heineman, II, an East· em Mlchlsan Unlveralty fresh- man from Grand Rapids. The l!lrl't battered body Wll found July 28, 196t-four days after 1be disappeared. No comectlon widl six UD10lved 1l•yings of young women in the Ann Afbor.. Yp1UanU. are• during a two year period cropped up at OoJUna' trial until Monday, when hJs lawyers objected to testirnoQy they p r • d I c t a former roommate ol tht defmdant will give. A nilln( on whether that loltlm..,y by Arnold Dav!J will bo permlUed l• upeclld today. Ntil Fink, the junior ....-al the two-man •doftme team. uld the pro- -wants lo queatlon Devil ........ al •l<>tlllnl be~ llW Collini lake ·rr.m the trunk al hil car. HOSPITALIZED Julie Eisenhower Julie Kept In :U:ospital WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Nixon's daughter, Julie Eisenhower, underwent tests at C-eorgetown Universl~ ty hospital today for a dtronic infection in her urinary tract. She will he kept In lhe ho<pital until Wednesday. Mn. Comle Stuart. stall director to Mrs. Nixon, said Dr. Walter Tkach, the President's physician, decided to prolong Mrs. Eisenhower's stay in the hospital "as a precaution against infection or lrrltati-On resulting frnm the tests she underwent this morning to detennine the cause of a chronic infection of the urinary tract." The president's 22-year-<1ld daughter enlered the hospital Monday afternoon. "The tests hive been completetll and Julie Is restlnc quite comfortably," Tkacll reported. Her hlllband, David Eisen. bower planned to visit Julie some time during the day. President and Mrs. Nixon, now at the Western White Houte in San Clemente, have been in touch with lheir dauctiter. , Choose One of the Many · ··Coast & Southern Federal OfflCBS to Serve You: • • 11M1 OfflC~ ... & Hit. LOI AnotlM• '2$1381 -ll-PLACl:la3Wllllllre IMl. L.A. ... 1216 l..A. CMCWIA Ind A Braldwty • 121-1102 HUNIM'lall met HW1ttngtonCtnt1r • 11141-1041 , ~UllTANMLOMIDVUAOINCY: ~1IOIM.Mllll lL• (tM) w.-1 · IMTA-711-relMl.•-41 1M"*-:1!1t11l,_•U1-1 ___ ...,,.. Ctr.•33142111 •M011AM'..CfTY1M11VMNuJl~•--1111 TAllUJtAt1m1 Vtntura lauRnf •MMl1' 'i..e-W'lL.-•417-7411 The new system, proposed by top ABA officials and air proved by Atty. Gen. John WASHINGTON (AP) - N. Mitchell, gives the oraaniz. Govenvnent auditor1 hl\'t ed bar • chance to advise found that nursing homes in the administration against Call!omia were paid b· y naming a man found unfit proles:slonally for the high medlcald for care of patients bench. afttr their de a th s or Two Suspects Amllgned In 'Cannibal' Murder However, Lawrence E . discharge. LIVINGSTON, Moat. (UPI) Baker •ppe•red ln court Walsh. chairman of the ABA'a In other caw, nurslB1 -Two men, ooe -claimed without 001111KI. Tlial Judi< slandl g ·"-the ... •-of Jack Shumrom ad" l 1 e d n comrru~--on homes have been paid twice. to h!ve eaten ius u11:art B·•er of bis '-·'~· federal judiciary and a hJ ictl al--' -....... vigorous proponent or the under the medicare a n d s v. m, were arr r;•,.... Baker then tokt the he change, aald this would not medlcaid progr•ms, for the Monday on murder char,ea. •· did not Mve fUnd& wMh wbtch give the association "a veto aame nursing care. Tba pair, Stuley Dtan to hire COQnlll, and nquuted power." But the blame In moot cam Baker :a and u-Allen tho oourt appolnl .him ID •~ I ced .. _ • • ._., ·-His -·~ bu Outlining the plan at a news was Pa on WJC system not Stroup. 20, both of Sberldln, ::="~~·-;;.n .... ~1 conference P.1:onday at the the nunlng homes. Wyo., are charged 1n con-~! .. 1-.....1. J ustk:e Department, Walsh The General Accounting Of. .. vuww:.u said Mitchell would not be fice, in a report to Congress, necUon wUh the death earlltr Stroup wu ttpreeen\ed at bound by the AB A in· blamed weatnes.Ks in pro-this month of weUare worker court by Bllllnp, Mont., at. veslj11ation in making a final cedurt1 and practices for ap. James Schlol.er, 22, of Round-torneJ M. J. Whalen. Whalen recommendation to Preti.dent proving and paying for nunlng up, MonL uked the court to coatbu Nixon. home care under the medlcaid Schlouer'• tono wu found Stroup'• arnlp.mlM to stTt program In Ca!Uomla. In tho Yellow"""" River July him bioo't Ume lo tludr tbe Still, the ABA's role In pick-The.audllon oooducted their 11 '-a fllbenne. 1t •'8 ... beloro In'-'-.• plea. ing people for the high court u1 . -... obvloualy will be larier. Said survey in Alameda, Lo 1 mlallng Its head, .an:ns, lep Stroup's arraSCmnent hu Walsh of Mitchell: • 1 H e Angeles, Fresno and Santa and heart. been conttnued uriU AQI. f. doesn't want to be told some-Clara eountles, examining JSO Baker and Stroup were later Both BU• and ~ re-. · ood u L-•-• 1 caoes tn 10 llltl!BI homes . picked up In Callfcrnll lallow· JDlln tn ClllUld1 wttltoul boad. :_ .~5 g ue .i.s, m act, In 22 d tbe 280 cues, claims inc a tr.me acckSeal ftlJ wm paid for periods after ...,.. drl•lnl -a ear. Mitchell, In a loiter to Walsh a recipient bad dled or been BUer Nld he bad - and ABA pre~dent Bernard ••~--ed from ~-·~·~ ~-~ -• ~ •-Who C.m1 G. Segal, Aki the clwl-wlll ~-g •~ nunln& ~ t -· ---·-home and stroup lie flNll from bb N. etht ...,.,.,... Ill tM we,U ttl'el e"4ft .,.., ••IRMV• elty h•• yew '-i ..... lty 4tlfy .... ,,,., 4..., lft +ht DAILY PILOT. enable him to take into con· In iJ cues, nunl.ng herpes flnaera. sideraUon "the profeulonal wer I·" du 11. ,_ ......,~ •aid e-•er told judgment of , a candidate'• e reet ving p ~a... vu""1111• .,,.. fellow lawyers.'' paymenta under the mecUcart them: "I ·haw a prob1em. •nd medJcaJd procrams. I •m • eaMibal" The administration has not .=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; consulted the ABA before II making its nominations for the high court, tbouK)I tt hi• aought ABA assistance on other federal judgeatups. Two of its four Supreme Court nominations, C h I e f JuatJce Warren E. Burger and As3ociate Justice Harry A. Blackmun, won easy Senate confirmation. But the two others, Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. and G. 'Har· rold Carswell, were rejeded. Uruguay Group Kidnaps Judge M 0 NTEVlDEO, Uru,uay (UP I) -Three men tldnaped a Uruguayan judge early t1> day, leading him in pajamas from his home and driving hlm cif in an automobile park· ed outside. A police IPC)keunan ~ lilied the Jude• 11 Daniel Pereyra ManelH. He Ilk! the lti<napen apparently were Tupatnaro11, a group of leftistt who have carried out a kinl serlea of. terrorist ads in Unipay and have staaed two prevloua polttical kldnaplnp. HELP UI BUILD THI NIW 50 MmR OLYMPIC POOL ''SWIMATHON'' NEWPORT llACH RNNIS & SWIM CLUIS Swum to Dales 211,600 yanls. c•a ..... , Amount atlll to be ralsotl $12,600 Who WIU Come In First • • • The Swimmers Or The Community 7 WE NEED YOUR DONATION OR PLEDC.E -NOW! Deta1ch and Mall To: Olympia Pool -lox 100, C"la Ma11 92627 N•me •••••• , ••••.••.•••••••••.. , •••• , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Addreu •• , ••••••••...•••• , • , •• , , ••••••••• , , , • , ••••• , ••••• , , •••• Amount EncloMd ....... , .• , •• , ••.•.••.••••• ! ••••••••••••••••••• • SVPPORT l'OVR YOVTB Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation .•• Just Join Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: .a. __ , ___ ,, . Oub .-- on lbe .,....S -mlcbt lolpalr bb .-very. Government mln1lters oe- wlonal1y vlJlled him for ...,. ferences and for brieflnp on offJclal developments. At your I • service-. • another new HFC office in .. Huntington Beach GRANTS PlAZA SHOPPING CENTER 19887 Brookhurst St PHONE: 962-6633 Need up to $5000? When you need money to pey bills, buy 1 better c1r or meet other Important money needs, you may arrange for It In your own hometown office of HFC,Household Flnence. The HFC manager will explain everything you netd to know about your IOlln. Whit'• more, he'll tell you whit your I011n win cost; In dollarw 1nd cents, before you borTOWI And 11 Household, there's 1 convel1Mnt repiyment plan for every budaeL Elcl! ~. more thin 2~ million people trust their money needs to HOUSlhold Finance. Why don't you1 Stop In, can ar apply by 1111n to HFC's ntWtst office today. HOU81HO FINAN~E~ • • • I · •AD·Y PILOT EDITORIAL .PA.GE , ' More Tax-~or Less? ~ ftW\Y U not' lllOll p,.....ty ta1peyer1, the an• 111Ui1 ,111'11'"1' lllY•lerY l!"""vea a cast Qf cbaroctera call-ed "u1111e4 v.iae,0 ,..11tAx rate increaae" and "tax J.teal"' Lui Friday the curtain went up on this &Mu&! drama when tbe Boan! of Supervlaort wearily ad:,Od a Uft.ll ..badlot 11 percent' hf&her Ulan Ille 1 70 t.ldseJ. but With a poulble kcnt reductjon in the county tax nte. Earlier it -=~ the \U rate would go up 6 to 9 cents. So, aupe . , Ille n•w• ii eood· ,Sul things far most taxpayen may not be at all as Ille rates mate them appear or sound. • Tbll la became County Aa-aor Andrew Hlnabaw i.e.-asausmanlB an avera1a of 17.6 pefCent. So lnl...i of beinl a.bl• to clleer for • 1mlilf reduc- tion In hla properly lax rate, the 'average homeo..,.ner likely will find himself groaning over a 1ubltantlal lit·' crease In total dollars pain. In Ille final analy11J, only the figure at ihe bottom of Ille tax blll -the toial amount owed -wben com- pertd to last year's blll, will tell tbe atoo> whether homeowner1 and bu1lnesses .wlll have a s&vtng or .a hliJier tu from a lower !al" rate coupled with higher aa1111ed values. ' · Tht que1tlon1 plaguln& the Boar~ of Supervisors can be elated this way: -Given a 1ubstantial increase in the tax base throa&h higher aase11ment1, and therefore a subetanUaJ incr .... in tax income, should all of. the "extra" money bt 1lvin bll<:k to taxpayen throQgb a reduction In Ibo w nte1 -Or II It more prudent to !nv .. t at 1 .. st some of .Iba money In beach .and park aoquilltion, flood co~! pJUjeCIB and o,ther Jone-term needi to beatl conttnuing lnllaUon1 . -Or ara Ille lmmedlale demanch for aervlces to more and more -I•, plus the inllation factor, such that Ille tot.I Increase ahoulcl be retained and uetd for lmmecllaia operating needs! The supervisors b•"! approved a '212,~7f.8 county general fund spend.Ing proaram. That la a 11sure soma '9.9 million hi gher !ban tbe f202.4 million bud1et aul>- mltted by County Admlnl strati ve Officer Robert Thomas in June. · Moat of the lncreue came from a combination of a ~ million · salary booSt eiveo county employa1 earlier In the spring and !ocre.asad wellare costa 1temmtna from rlsmg unemployment and an over-all economic 1lack-0U. Orl&inally facing a budget dellclt, the 1..ervioora cut some f4.2 million from the capital p1'9locta bud1et. Thia means delayln~ construction proarams and Jallll 1 acqul1itions, -which in tum usually means hlaber COltl tor the aame projects a few years later. The complex balancing act of hi1her asiessad valun Versus rate, and current needs veraus lon1·rance ·needs boils down to the supervisors' best eatlmele of wbat tWe taxpayer can bee<-when he geta his flratJoot at bl& new tax bill come mid-October. · Soon: 'Community Colleges' ' ' Calitomia's 9'2--".Junior Colleges" have been labor· Jng under a misnomer for some years. The. "junior" designation seemed to imply that they were to be simply shorter or inferior verslona of four year colleges. The. fact is they have evolved as a totally dlUerent type of institution. 111ey are designed to provide unique educational service to a specific area or community, by providing a tecbnlcal education unavaUable at moat four.year colleges, and by making the first two years of Uberal arts college courses more read.Uy available to more people. Ninety days alter the state leg islature adjourns, California's two-year colleges will be known 11 Com- munity Colleges. The change Is appropriate. "Junior" crew up long •10; . ' \ r ""' ..... -~ ..:x;,.,~ GENERATION ~AP . . ' ' . Justice Must Be Made Fast And Certain Dear Gloomy Gus:· f,eut Vnder•tood of Pre•i~t'• Motivation• 111 j. IDGil' llOO'(Ja, -r--'f r.7M1'11 •• ''!hen II -•/ I " e '~ """' -,.~to-kl -__ ,.... ~---·­ " llrum crheh\•LI ,, It .. that bus -In """1 m1tropolttan •uas mult 1tways ha" the exacl fart becauee bwr driven cannot carry money to make chlnle, wllhout belnc n>bbecl1 fl It rtahl thet ~ In _. dUes JJIUll buy &uol~ In 111110W1ts f« which they have euot ,_,.,., or ue credit etrdl, to hop atallaa attendants -behlnl held up "' lllop! II II right thel clewntown men:hlnll la IOIDe .areaa lbould lose -..-.. al!!I 11<Th•J11 their builNDe1, boceUll citizens are afrU:l to -e Into crlmWilesi.d llnell! lllT UI F.~ n. Are we, u a frat mclety uilder lhe rule of law, llh•P' tmc «It own dfatlny, or 1rt we bdna .u.tiod and beud In by -who defy bat Jaw and lui'e no reaped for the rl'8s of otben? ,,,. trulh cl the matt<r la thet more and men ol our naUon'1 total energy and tllort II needed to pnot.ct people qalut crime. For inltance, more theft. r.wv•ldon devict• are belnt ln1taHed n MW automobiles. More homes ar1 bllDI equipped with blger and more <Onlpla -lockJ. Banu are taking actJ<m lo nduee lhe amount cl cub eJPOMCI 1o bank robben. In tome cities, police patrol ICbool corridors and ~ to teep troublemakers from a~ ei.-and a1aaulttn1 -· 'lllo Ult ,... on and on. 'llJC AllE A1TEMPTING, In effect, te erect a ~ve barrier between ~ and tbe crlm.lnal. However, As people loot out tnto this "i&ck" world (hippies, antl-estab- llllln>ent demonatratlon1 narco-tics, etc.), let them rea)iae that they are ablo "sick" u they ' do not believe in Mickey Mouse, Spiro T. "&new and peenut butler and jelly, sandwiches. . -K. K. ,.... --;....,. ,_.,~ ... 11,............ ., ... ........................ .,. ...... 1lillory Ulft/ bact' to Blblkal --'I! 11111 hip walls ii such do not neceiiari!Y proYide oanciuary, II wt are to find relief from · crime, we ba¥t lo lhon up our lepl wills. lo pre- vent la•bl'e!I~• from slipping l>l'Ci ~ ~ tluoup loo!>l>ol .. lo prey .. the pabllc: and lhan Iildl behind l•pl ..... !lone lo avoid just and ad,equate J>Ul)llh- ment. H we are to ~t4ln ~ splralint crime rate and brln& a -hlch<r-de.,.e of oecurlly back to !tie li,...bldlnl citliens, then we must make justice Nill and certalp, IN SPITE OP what some court& and legal theoristl may proclaim, justice Is all-lncluaive-lt means jUlllce for the victim• and tbe public aa well as f'or th< accueed. Soon, we wW have to ltop 11antin1 concesa;ions to marauding criminals and stop reshaplnc our lives to conditions thrust upon us by exoeuive crime. 1 am tully convinced that one ot the mo~t effecUve moves we could make to combat crime in the 1970'1 ""ould be t.o speed up and improve our judicial processes IO that the time element between a criminal violaUon and Its dlspoeltion Jn court is &harply reduced. TR!: OLD TRUJ8M notwtlhltsndini, it would appear that not all crlm.inab and thelr attorneys today believe that "juaUce delayed" is "just ice dented." Let us atop reacting atm1mly to the presalng demands of the lawless. Ra ther let us atart 1pplyin1 the leral remedies and safeguards of the law which is meant to penalize -who . bl'eak 14 not tbote who abide by I~ 'You Can't Save a Cent' "'°"" II !Mp1 NobedY .,.Dy und•ntanda how anyone mak.ln& 1Ubltantlally leu than hlmself can 1et •lmC tbea days: my dinner partner ncmtt1 .-ired me aotemnly that th< annutl lnl<nll on '4 mllliOn waa the atlfolutl mlnlmum needed to IOI by ~tl1 ·theae dl)'I, "and then 10U cant save .a cenL" • • • Wt equate usuftt" wllh "badhi11," udl01NCMNl-tiJ' acqujt ...... 1v .. " mr: but l"llllC ,..,i. are looilnl Ii .. today and ~ Voltalro'o ....... :ff£¥.. .,., 1DU II plU1 cl 1111 lhe .,.,, he illde't do.. • • • '1111 -""""'°" form of suicide ... .,.. bltn tw violent means, but "°I l•llY -by slowiJ Winklnc wllhin ..... ., .!Mt. lhe lunctlonl ,..,. ,.,. .. tab con'""' Gf tbe )lll'IONUty ~ thirii: r.-• . . 0 f "" wUh teolo1lc1I llmt, min ts• -I Ol\O )'91"' old; """'paffd t.Wonomtc&I Ume. w:.:;,e JU5t a tbol••Ub el I r.... qo; and yet our predlcment. ls 1uch that our survival depends upon · our bloaom· in& into maturity before we have left the playpen. • • • Humlllty, llie honesty, dilapp"n 11 the flrat tract of consclouant11 ol ltaelf. • • • The big.game hunter would lmpreu me u 1 courageoua fltw't only lf he !Int teughl • lion how lo lhool • run 1n stlf-defenst. • • • A censor is somebody who be:Uevt1 that the proper study of mankind ii lmproprlely. • • • If you have the feellna, but not lhe fscll, about lb< perils In our population espansion, write to your senator for a copy of the Reu u Committee report, "Eflttta oi Population Growth on Natural Rtaourea and Envlrtnrnfnt," wlllcll conli1ts ol heartnp held Iut fall btfore the Stnat& 1~mmltl~ on Coolervalloll and Natur,.,........L Nixon Seeks to Satisfy a Majority WASHINGTON -·President Nixon, tl 11 charged, !1 anU-Negro. A~dln& !<> other judg:menta he is also anti-labor, anUlarmer, antl.Jewl1h, anti -youth, and, ' behold enU.SOUlh. ' What does all tblJ nonsense mean! It meana, in tta aimplest form; that NllOn is purauJng 1 ealcul•ted policy d. 11Usfylng • majority rather Ulan 1 collection or coali· ~on ol mJnorm ... 11llt ·i1 the leaet under1lood of the central motlvaUon1 ol lhe Nixon ad- mlnlltralion, ad, cl· eoune, tt , 11 . the hardest ' lo e:rplaln to rrilnorities• who consider thlt their cauae takes primacy over 111 others. A' few months ·qo NiJon told a vl1itor that ttie record of UN! Jut eleetlon ahows that n0 minority can oome 19 him and demao<! action .o• th<ir apeelll ,caua beeaUIO they lup[lOl1ed bim for pn!SI· dt!I~ • . WHITNEY M. YOVNG, J'Jt,., IXICUUVe dlrtctor of the National Urban League, 11 ... o1 -0ie 1ew w11o sr•iped lh• Jdea that Nlxtlo is re.china for a '1!• jorlty !"'11<1· To Youor this 11 merely . politics. Olhen ml&hl Judge lt lo be an attempt to fmd a rational and moderate racial pollcy recognizing the real condition that ncial ldjustment In the fully ICX!ill, u dlslln,gu.lahed from the. lq:al, senae may be IOinethiil&. for tbt next' century. A klt•)JOll<1dlo& ~·tor Strom I 'l'Mf. mond, lttmbllng Wltb anaer, aee·1· the Soul!' traduced by Nlxon'1 II r·m dete/mlnltlon lo de .. grecate lhe IChoola In the South In lhe IUll legal ..,,.., Here we , have another mi nor l t y 111111tllfled •. 'J'llurmond w~ the charge of a'nti·N"egro ]rDp!emented 10 far 11 the ·schools of the Sol.th are concerned, but Nltoo wlll not uUlfy tbl1 minority view because the majority policy of the Ull)ted Slate• r<qulm I h e dei<1fe1eU.n by race of public <IChoOll m every section of the ~{ •. A FORGOTTEN MINORtr'Y is noW beginning to grumble. One or'the•naliOll'• leading fann leaders is sayln1 that Nb:on it anU.fanner. He doesn't c.are about .fannen. He.doesn't wiah to to bothered by lbe farm problem. He bu puohed the problem off on a non-activist Secret.irY. of Arsrlculture, c I If I or d Hanfu;l, . with every hope that nothing will be done. What problbly bothers Nt1on most ti. that too much hu alrea<ly been don• for pie ranner and billions of dollars in sul>sklles are flowing out each year in tribute to out-Of~ate 1oal1 and ob- jectives which have little remainin& economic or llOdal fultifkaUon . Nlton will nOt buten Jn oupplyln1 Tir1el with U.S. alrcrllt to tangle with the Russian-manned mlulle complt1 ln the Suez area. Out of th1a caution creeps the old suspicion which-Nilon has not been able to overcome in 20 year1 trying that be 11 in some maMer 1DU.Jewish en4 to be psycllologlcally equated with Jewllh repre11ion, if not Hltlerlsm. HOW IT COULD be sa id th.at Nixon 11 anU·labor escape! reason. But It 11 being zaid by labor leaders whose demands ·for wage increases have been ll'UllY enhanced by Nilon'1 refusal to liitervtne "tn labor disputes or establish wag&11rict guidelines and restraints. One reason Nil:on ii anti-labor Is that he bu backed the Phlladtlphil Plan for increateti Negro empklyment bitterly op. poled by the bulldinl trade1 unions. In tu cUt Nixon is pro-Ne(l'tl and anU-labor, whlch serves to illustrate wbait happens wheo two minorities & o unfllt4tfled tOr cqnfllctin& reason•. Alienated youth )s the most dlsaaUsired mtnorily of all. The young are permitted to rampace through Washington, break bank windaws, damage d)e l>Ubllcly-own- ed park,•. tbfow rock• and bottla at the President's car in his inaugural parade. Nil:on ia anti.youth because he won't capitulate to no one knows what demands froln a fringe of fake revul u. tiontsts who represent a small fraction of .youthful opinion. Heroin is a greater ithreat to the youth of the ctlies1 th• dealh staUstics show, thin the Vietnam war, but who bu time to demOD1trate agalnst heroin! CAN A Pll.!'3IDENT survive the' IC· cumulated pre11ure1 of dl1.1atlsfled mlnorities? Thia is the primary pOuucat te1t of the Nixon adminlstration, and the reason the President hlmself thinks that the one term question b ~ discussing. That tfependJ to a very large degree on whether or not there is any real majority sense In the country rising above s~al interests and lmpauloned causes .. The opinion polls suggest there may be such a majority sense. U ao, lhe trend is runnini contrary lo recent political blatory. Grape Boycott Based on Fals:ehoods To the Editor: Rev. Daniel Lyona , S. J., and another sociologist (Rev. Cletq Healy, S. J., Milwaukee, Wi1.)1 recenPY concluded a ract-flndlng visit to Coachella valley, Bakersfield and Delano. They talked with workers, growera, clergymen and others familiar with the Cesar Chave& 1truggle. Basic mlsconcepUou may be remedied by these facts Rev. L)'1)1\1 found : -Grape-pickers are not oppressed. They are the highest paid agricultural workers in the nation. -cuAvEi 'HAS FAll.lm 10 miserably in· getting· Ul& workm btbind bUn that he ha.a hired plcketa who are not "-'Orkers. Jfe" lnductd 'hippies; SOS memben-and other characters from the Berkeley cam· pus to picket ranches . Then these plcketa were Interviewed 11 ii they were W<1rker1 01 atrike. -Chavez said nobody should eat grapes because of poisonous pesUcldes used, but that he'd Jgnore this II growe r• signed union contract1 ( C a 11 f o r 1 i • Department of Airiculture p r o y ed Chavez's charge• untroe). -Chavez threatens w<>rkers with 1RS haraument unlw they join. sun they refuse (even at rlsk of losln& their jobs). So Chavez import.I Mexicaa na· lionals to replace them. Those who join are aeeased ao much wllon duts, fees, etc., that they have less take-home pay •• Geer•e---. Dear George: My boy friend's lather beqht him a new 1porta: car and It la brea king up our romanct. In the fln t place, I can't cuddle up be- c•u• of that lilly ann rest in the middle and, In the 1eCOnd place, lt'a cot IO n\aQ1 •cctllOriU thlt every Ume he, lea°" owr to kiu me the windows start solna up and down, or aometbtnc .. _ Ctn ypu help me1 BRUISED FEELINGS Dear Bruised: Tell yoor boy frl!Jld lo 1l•e hit psrtnts the k<:Y to the oporu <Ir and you two stay hOrne and watch TV or 10mt<hl11'" lllttrl ,._ ,. .... ,,. wti-. Nortl'lfll!Y wrll'll"I 11'1Dultl Cllll'l'IJ tttelr ""-" In M -CS. Ir ""-The r1'l'lt te ~ lttttra to flt -.ce or 11!mlo .._,. ll•t bi ,......,.,._ All lttt1ri inutl IM"'* .... n1tvre lf!f "''Ill"' Nollru.. but .._,,... fMJ "'be wttMeltl M ""'"''' M 11/ffltltftl rMllf! le ~I Poetry win llGI lie ,wll....._ than before. -THE DIPLOYEM who ~med a.union contract usually did ID beclutt the boycott made It impoalble for them tv .. n thelqraduct. So they lace flnlD · . .cial ruin. -After the employers alp the con- tract, Chavu tella the wonen they'll be fired in one to three dojl U they doa 't 1lp a union card. Tho1t who woa't sign leave. Then you hear that the worker• voted 'JO.I to join Chava's union. · -The union contract clwlaed no work· lna condlUooa. The worker now, pts II.II per hour plus OOllll11Jsaiena )Utead of the previous 11 .71 an hour. Olav.a rejected GoverDOr .Reac••'• of· fer to set up 1teret ballot elections for grape worttn -to vote for or •aalnst Chavt1'1 union, and to pict the union lbey wanled U Ibey d.,lred a unk>n. a.vu hun't come "to help tht poor worken." He wan ta them la bon- dage to hlmltlf, fw h1a own ciorlflc&tlol and benollt. ONE LONG.RANG! oolutlon la !"""" teatal1llon deslcned lo pnote<I the In- terests of lhe..:..._worken. 1Nwtr1 and con 1 u m e r 1 • Sen. Geo.rte M'mphy'1 Consumer ind AsriculhD'al Food ~ Uon Act la be!°"' the U.S. Sepato. Moat of 111 ,.. throoch .-1 demqoauert aod support ,..pooalllle ... tlon on<e all the facts are kna!!•· Unfortu11ately aome well·meanina. ht uninformed lndtvtduall .are mlalecL .by Chavea'a fa1'e appeal that he'• "helpinf, the poor worbr." • Evtn a tiny mlnorllJ of lhe "'*" urre 111 lo llOycou l"•Jlll <and f...,. lbe -~ .... Cllaffl). 1'11 aerment of the clero. should avoid repreaenUnt the church on aoclo-polltical Wue1 01 which they have insufficient infonnaUon. LEONARD WRIGHT 'l'fle Bortellou Case To the Editor , n ii w,llh pleaaure and reUtf that my husband llKI I and my &ood friends and ne.i&hbor1 who read your paper ~ tbat now you are actording our line Dr. Ebbe Hsrtellul the dlpllled treatmellt that he haa deserved. We were·very indignant over the flam. boyllit "yellow joumallam way" In which you ,..Yle ·op your 1U1piclon1 regarding this m111 who 'haa served the commualty and 'Ills pattents falthfully for year1. Wt hopt tlw.t you will contmue to treat him and othen who are not proven auJlty wtth·1he coulderatlon thet you would wtJh U )'OU were actuted. He ii a pod min and we are pl'tlUd to !mow him. HANSON PllTHUFF LOUISE PUTHUFF The nttOI, rc110rt in queition toa.1 not o 1tatemenr of "our 1uspicion1." It WOI o: rovtfnc report of an acewa- tion filed ~II &ht 1tate Board of Ne~ tau 1'mmtMr1, Depamn,,1c oJ Pro- feutQMI and Vocotimi.al Standard&. Th• r1por& 01'0 'ncJudtd charpt1 in anotMr cost fftuolvinQ arson and ot· Urnptcd tn.iurilrtel frGtUJ aooiru& Dr. llOfl•HWI. far fro'A bflng "/la"" bol'O"t" in Ult' "reUoao jourMlifm. wq," tM o/fidol c~rocs UJtrt pre· ,,.ltd, I• 1010 k•v. JudOm,.t of Oie occuitd 1Muld. of toilrte, be ttstfO" f<I ••nil "' 1141 hod ~Is <fov In. cowtl ., Edit>T f1UCrt1eCer N..U Delp . To lhe Editor' I am. preparlns a report on lhe Orange County Cltru1 Strike of 11311 and n~ be!p Ill lacatlna Mwtpllpet 1rtlcle1, lel· Mrs:, rte0llections1 etc., whlcb would help ...... ~ t thll lncldent. Would anyo1t knowing of such ln- formitlon please contact l.<luis Reccow, hist<ry instructor, Orange Coast Colleg11 2701 F.airview Road, Coata Mesa, California 92626. U>UIS RECCOW Worthwhile Csuse • To the Editor : t Speakfng of good newa -where do you usually find it in the DAlL Y PIL<Jr? Where else but hiddel in the 1nd seclfon, page 20. Friday, July 17th'• Wut had an article in· such a spol Four college men have formed the "Ecology Action )Jeague." They are l))ending this aurnmer colleclllt old newspapera to recycle U!9 wuted ptper. Tht money certainly 11 not great -Ill ]>el' ton and they j>ICt up and haul from all over tbe Oran~ Coast area. IT SEEMS TO ME that this la , a worthwhile cause that should be,herakled on the front pare ill•l•od of lhe aruci. that wa, there about a drqnken tetna,atr crashing· through the 1treelf. · When are ... aoing lo at•• the IOod kid1 a • chance 1Jld play down thll hoodlums!! (MRS.) KARLEEN D. MONRQt " ' ' I< c • a • • b A • a l• I u c I d • f• d t ti d • a I ~ ·• • fi , ( ti • • h n ~ ' .... 1 I h • ,, • I • I , a " 1 1 ' ' , ' I ~ I r ,I •• " ( ·' " • • ~ t .1 1 J ( i ( • ) i ...... -.. ·- T-, Ju~ 28, 1970 oAJLY mor r . . , .. --~sseiiilily ·· C~EC,~G ,0 1,(SBaby U -Death Bill ' ( r SACRAMENTO (UPI) -'· 't ~~":mb!;u M!~:.~ a~ Coin Laund1~ies . t \ 1nurdtf t~ kill an unborn baby. ' -· The measure . by Really Cheaper . .. ASSElm&lym.an W. Craig Biddle {!t'Riverslde) was'senrto the Calami\y Jane. ,Even· Marilyn Senate on a Vote of 41·20, ~tonroe: for cryl:oi1ouUoud. the minimum needed for Jl'l"•~e. TODAY THE MAJORl'O' o! ARE YOU OLD tnollgh to ·;~blyman Leo Ryi.n (~ remember Fmisl Italy's . Jn-Bilrib>samer Jl<Qlested that •.• YOU DON'T KIAH, much . yQioo ol EUWopia in the under .the bill • 1e would be about it, but thousands of ~ WOs T A pitiful war; that. And • Jounce drlnkm order their a.ckt.ails on the rocks. That wun't the cue 20 yeara ago 11ot1venlr hand guns are being ·· arf:n't.they ,all? At ~y rate, I "a11 rI&:ht lo take a life" if shipped back to the St:atu it comei to mind: l:iKause 11 "it doesn•1 breathe a~ we by the boys ln Vietnam ..• hur a radio do.Jrnstair s :ean't'see It." . ..- AM-TOLD~RE are more .::pl•ying "The-St. Louis:Blues.:. I Biddle , ... mtRXtuced the bill spiritualist.s In Moi"' than ill' 'Ibo~ was tile oll: in respoi,ae.to a stale "f"'me all the other stfites • put hymn or tbo8e · ~ ; r:. .,,11,.,, ' together ••. IF YO\J MAKE Bombe1 fell all OVfA: .. 1 ~. ~~~l ·~w that a fet~s could •1• ooo a year ijr .yqyi>tilwk· a00··1he illelll Iii here . ·Dot .i... 1W1idered a 'luman Ing time " ~'al!liiot .p ~··llleJle. and ...,s ~. · . ~;,··under lb< 1eei defini· cents a minute : , .-ANl;IJ'!llD.~ And~lack men ln .tbeir-<-U0tn of murder~- 1 .MENTION 100 hens Will -seiittered ski~m lines .~.UIJ,l; ' Ol'e .b'ht 'dt:fines .. i f~tus as drink fivt gallons or water m~ the ':!11,151~ .. --some a human being · •·at con- •day!. am1~~._the.4iut~ery.~ven san.g ception," Biddle said, '"rh.e • ,., the curk>us lyrics, St. Lotus • , . . 'i Mrb1WOMAN WHO ~s woman with all her d.iamood s~a~ a aborlJOfl. .aws allow fewer''tblh fiVe loads of laun· rings ..... • · \ ~abortions up to fhe ·~fth Week · dry •.week mllht find this •, : . " t '"''1 pregnancy. '• · """""hie. II .. cheaper to ·CllSTOMl!!tSl!RVICE -Q. Biddle's bill would bring the band IUdt washing in one ot "What usU-' the·· most juice ~illing of a fetus· under the Two Senators .~hpge Votes -JY z * I \ t ..._ -•. •. ' • Reagan f!ealtk 'Super.agency;-Alive SACRAMENTO (AP) - Gov. Reagan's plan ror a hea!lb silileroa~ remained alive in the leglslldure today after .:he personallf persuaded tw<l: publicans to chang& their votes agaln!t It. Serwte. Democrats· fell two vote:_s· short, .19-18, in their move. to kill the health plan and Reagan\s ,proposal for a Department ol Consumer AI. :Democrat's raira Monday .. 1 · · Tbe plam will go Into effect ,...ax Ref or.m .. 1 ... the ,,g1~.1u .. acts at 1 any time during this session lo reject ·them. Pl N, d One proposal is to merge an· IXe heallh-relaled departments - ~ such as mental hygiene and SACRAMENTO CAP) health . care i;ervice~ -~to Gov. Reagan's forces pushed -OJ!e big agency with 22,000 employes. today for a showdown Senate The other is to convert the vote on his-$1 bil~on ; \ax controversial [)eparlment of reform plan aner crushing-the"-Professional and Vocationa l · major Democratic eflort _ to Standards lnlo a Consumer overflaul 1['' ~ -.. Arratrscnepartmen,. The progralJl 'S s pon s or , R e p u blican · Assemblyman William T. Bagley, predicted that by the. end ol the week_ the two-bill pl an "will have a nice big rtbbon a.round lt and it will be !dw." At 9ne' _point, Seq. Alfred Song (D-Monte.rey Park) had e-nough votes for his motion to kill the two Reagan plans· on a vote of 21-15. Democrats had three GOP votes. ·but before the final vote could be called. Republican Sen. Howard Way of Exeter, ... holding the roll call open Coombs said he cbanged th41' political maoeuverings lo. through the lunch period. ~ he wu an..,.U b~: volved, '11\e · tri~ Republicans we~ 1 -"":;jjiii;iiiiiiijljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiliiiliiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiij;~ caned~:mwn to Reagan's or-I fice. Attic they rtlumed, two lllDAL n91STWY ACCISSOllU of them changed tbelr votes · -from Voting for Song's mo- tion to voting against. Thiy were Milton Marks or · San Francisco and William Coombs ol Rialto. sen. Lewis F. Sherman ol Berteley sta,yed on the Democrats' side. r~1~r0t1 •• i_111PDl"t3 • ~r;-.=e uqo E.eo tJt:\tll>iJ., ·c;,,~. 4eJ Mar Doll~ 9 ,30 "'Solo tet; .,73'271/~ . ~\"*ti' ·~ ~s , I aJ~ ~.M·~·' c.._ Eqv•Hy 10111., 'llC•I tn: Co.II ... 9l1cU, Sl!h1a,p,. ••••• l'01m1I•, sw11fli1."11'9i ' H1nd-l<n1t.svh1. , ~)' appo_lnlmenl ONL Vbetween 9:30 AM l 8:30 PM . · I I t > (on !fr1I dlJ plNtt c1ll I EfOR£ 1 I!.~.) Ask for Mr. Larry, July 29 & ·30· only Sheraton· Beach Inn,' 21112 · Pacific Coast Highway . (714) 5?,6-\421 •. thole cOln laundries than to ,..l." a: wiJ>doW air conditioner do tllO dirty c!Qlhes ii\ a~ ·qr an elec~ raiiiie?" A. 11\at autom~c washer and drye.t '· ai,r coodJUO~r,:ln ~act, it uses It bQJne. Or so rtpOrb the more electricity JD lhe hot Department of Agriculture. J'l10flths than .the stove uses state's murder •and manslaughter laws. Senate Democrats, bitter at fuo'ved a ''call of tbe house," losing their own program afterir~"'ii--------i;;li-;;;;i;;;..ii;;;;i;;iiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiiiiiiii;iiiii;iiiiiiiiii;i~~~;;;;~:,;;;~~~;i;~iiiiiiiiii;, protracted debate Monda}', 18: 21, still hoped to tik>c~ the Reagan package. They said no . plan JI.I. .ill was better _ Ula.n the RepublicaYl governot's. • OPllN-QllESr!ON -Where 1J the Bible does ii slat. I!lan ·~ ~ V.:ill go to Heaven?, WOMEN -11','1 pec~ity ol ~ thal _,.n ~ ... famouf:'.j'OI' their sins, mostly. Toh ~nebeL Or Cleopatra. or Lucreiia Borgia. Norte of thcM old girls were really u badt-as the h.btorlans made tfietrt "eut to be. But the ·tu.t..n.ns. who ar:e mostly men, evidently find aomething lf~ about girls ·Solle wfonc. M a r i;-e '>,ntoinette. all year ... Q. "What's the ·longest anybody has ever gone wit.bout sleep on pulllOSe?" A. Just 11 daxs. 18 hours, !IS inlnults. A is-yOar,ald lady . named Mrs. Bertha Van Der Merwe of Capetown, South Africa, did it a couple of years ago. · · Your question.! ilnd C01n· ments are welcomed and· will be used in Checking Up wherever' pos.tibt~. Please address your le&ters to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box ·1s1s, Newport Beach, 92660. Aid Cut Reversal Explanation R'apped However abortions which are legal under present law would remain legal. The kill- ing or aietus with the·ronsent of the mother would not be classilied u murder, but would' . .be subject ·to · i bortion laws. "Simply to take a life ))ecause you can't see it and it ·s~ inconven ient to someone opens ·up somt very in:· teresting questions," Ryan said . "If it 's convenient to the mother we may take that clUld's·li fe." ~e . added the legislat~e sho'uld Instead investigate "the entire ·question of what con· stitutes a human life." Reagan needed at leas\ -aeven nemoCi-atic vottis' to-get· one part of the two-prong p~ gram througl\ the Uf>Rer hQUse. His preM office already bad a victory statement 'prepared, anticipating Senate approval. Tax reform has been the major legislative goal eluding .Reagan the past three years. Victory this year would be counted as a major boost to his re-electon campaign. · .~' . ~ ·LOAD YOUR CAMERA .WITH COLOR FILM '<tnSACRAMEN'J'O. ~(Afl) -., fulltime in-.home 'care were , ' ' . . .. ' . . ' ~ Of a 10Cial w<l'kera · 1n the first · cateaory to be \inion 11y Gov. 'Reagan in•d~ cut.'; AND BRING IT TO fl1le accuaUons publicly when Anderson said Re 1 g a n "didn't realize' lhat all the · .. i llhe,el~~:onw~~t~n ~.: paraplegics wool,d go arou~ 'FA('.HION · ISLAND .. lOMORRO_W on television and say, 'WJthoUl J M the aged, bliqd and dill bl-'my · attendant I • can't live.• ' ...i. . . ' . . 1' Robert Andersoo, or1aniilng !J..,, eoordinator klr tbt Social Services Union, sakl at a news pnerence Monday th 1 t !Jleqan had accused social ~oden of sabotaging his ef- lfortl bJ telling "helpless ~ W " that essenUal .!lervices wootd be ended. -~.,Al a matter of fact, weUart workers did t e 11 'heiplm shuUns' that they would lose attendant care became that's what the p41J'DOl" ordered," ¥derson ~d. ' . '-He· added that "Re&aan'• attendant care cut 1truc~ the niolt helpless pel'IOllr recetv~ ,in& attendant care.1bose aged ,""1 dllabled ponollll who ha~ "Unruh Raps Oil Lobbies · :In Defeat ~~CRAMENTO (AP) -·~blyman Jess U .n r u h ~X'. the state Lands Coln· ~ will begin granting #ftbore oil drilling leaaes. as u the November election ver. Unruh, the Democratic can- didate for governor against aepubUcan Gov. Re 11an 1 <Wlllned oil lobbylsll for defeat d ihil bill to ban oil •jllln& •\t'e Santa Barbara Channel. The Asaembly on a 40-20 'YJ9 .refused Monday. t o ~der Unruh's bill, whJCh wa·1 defeated last Wednesday .U.tt.• 40-20 vote, one short ora majority. u n r uh was ablenl.. ! . i; : ' .. \ HOME . I DELIYERY '.: OrW,,,..... ; ""-·'a II•·'" r, Delivery ""'"' . 1 p.m. 673-3510 . .J cOASr SUPER MARl'E:(" J141 L.C-l "°'•-IM.. .. , ..... • .- ,. . .. . • . ' AUTHENTIC INDIAN DANCERS ON· THE MALL WEONESDA Y 3 l!'erfomMnCfl -'-l 1 AM, 2 1111d 4 PM Full-blooded Arlzon~ Indians of lhe A~che, Pima, Na· vajo, and Papago tribes will pefform:on tbe.tnall at Fash· ion Island ~omorrow at 11 AM. 2 and 4 PM. These datic- ers,.fn full costume, have appeared in many parts o( the country and have toured Europe three'.. times., They will be malting !his one stop onl )'1tt Fashion Island 1or your entertatnmenl Be sure to see tbem and' be sure!to bring your camera. . . . .-.. .. _FASHl_U, ISLAN·D NEWPOltT CENTER P1clfJc Coatt Hl9hw1y · lttwMn Jambor• and MecArthur .. . ' . r NOW 3 WAYS TO BUY AT GENERAL ~ j ~ ~ _; ~ GENERAt\S·t2 DAY n , · lllliiliilllllT•~E p 3~_UWU@~[(- ·-. D' ..... . . . . . t ,.., ' •• r.'. Alt ·:·" :·~~kN· SIZZLER VAl.UE JATO• SUPER 100 GOLF BALLS '·"" '133 ,ACK ONLY rLUS flll IOI IOlfll'S IUIDI DoirllOOI f~t"H ttwt1' (~1rt l114 ,. (tftltr! 1111~ i.,..., .. ,,..,,ft l Ito 111u l111w111 ft llM' l •'"•! 1 :S·blll pick ptf cv1to,.,.r .. r ·' • .. ~TI~~ ~w.rn· E GlASS·BELT:TIRES Sava , from -• , .. : . 512.61 to~·-s1e.ta on ,each and every 70-SerJes tire. Savings pff our fJSW .everyday . selling p,r{ce .wh~Ch includes ~~.e re~nt price increa·s~l. ft1'de'ral Excise· Fax is $2.4~'to $3 .05 depending on size-•. • ; 1 • . Exlr(I; wide 70-Ser le!i 'tire ... glass-belt, ~lyeste; cord: 2&% oh prjce a)so applles to sllm whltiiwalls and· twin·slripe JUmbo 780 (the new car tire). • -· " ·· · ' ,l~ ' ' . tllll CllfCI •• ,., ..... -::r: •. -'"' tbru., '""• -....,, ... tllll ...... • SUMM!R llZZLl!R SAlE ENDS AUGUST. 'Wt lff!I llOMf l~f lf6tf.-(llllt -lw llltltft ftlhtry 11 ""' HnrtlJQ ,_H:I• I ~·\ ,; , IENEllAI. TlllE ' 0 ACllOU TOWll TO GIT-..----·- ' , ' I i I DAILY I'll.OT For. The ,,, ........ """' .... -,... CWt-M """' .., ..... ...,... , .. ., ............. ...... 125-7777 E!faallty In a Trailer EOP Confronts Minority Problems at Irvine Record Meetings 111 PATRICK BOYLE ............ ,..,, 44 pe.retnt black, 34. percent reason.'' he says. "is that "Where I went to highl_J-~-tld:ha~v:e~bem~~tapped~~and~~~~~~~~~~~ diiCano, 10 percenf Asian and man)r-nilnorily students are school in Santa Ana," he says developed before they aot IRVINE _ Jn a rented, SS. ~;~r"'-. whites and other not given high school guidance "There is a 33 percent minori-here." foot trailer •. UC Irvine, ....... .., _,., toward coll* preparatory ty enrollment. In dle past five almolt. • far my from the 1"Mley are not primarily courses. years, there probably baVen't from Orange County for a "In many j~tances. they been la black or chicano ~ .. 1,,,.,.'"=Y Cl\!~~·· campus administration number of reasons,'' he says. are told to take wood shop students in chemistry class~ C:=~ zur. ~t !::. Hi911 ... ·•r, buildinf u pollible, Tim "First of all, UCI does not and crafts instead of algebra there." C.::.-;_ c~'::' !,':: ':ti~ Knowles, a .. yea.r.old black, ofter a curriculum that many and chemistry. There seems "This problem is not just ...... "· c......,, """1*", u -· admlni:sten tbe F.ducttion n.... of them would be in~rtsted to be an assumption ·on the isolated to Orange County," °"'' !!cl~ Clllll. cu.. ""'Y-• ..._ __ • bus. j rt f h. h ,.~ I h add "I know J --,.... ...,.11t, 2'4..1 ..,, ... •1\<1t,, B, B th ponunity Procnm.. 1n. J 1K:1~ lS no tness ma or, pa o some 1g s..:1100 e s. v1 cases c~.~~':te~~llbo,~= 10 ro ers 'Ibe feder•nu _ funded nm.. no journalism major, no nurs-gukfaoce counselors that these in Los Angeles wtere black CWMY Fel,.,_. eesre A'· ... •· -e ... , r y ing major and no physical students will not advance, so students have to take a pus co'~"'U Mir l.""'11111 etu1. vm1 G F th aram b desiped io help education major. they are not givl'TI the tools to another school µ, take ~~'• li:l~':~. Hllthwir, ive ft ers minority studenb gtt a college "Stodems come here or to to make the advancement." calculus because it is not even tt~ J-:= 'S.1:;,"~ ctY~,C'tn1 .. educatioo, but it was not until any other school for what that As an example, he said that offered in their school." · G~ eoun.· Orlw. c.s11 u.e~•· school can do for them. If only two of the 87 freshmen "The students that we admit ~~1tle:· k1we1111 c111b, '"'' M..., New Outlook the fall 'Of lMt that Jt was they see that UCI is weak being admitted under the pro--to the program have the =., ~!.C!.'T. ~:;. :~:,,.~ run by a m In or ft Y ad· in their field or tbat they gram this fall have tak~n potential to succeed," he says. "r~~J,--r.,~~';:t, c,_,,,':t"1 H1911"' 2 , 1 •,,· TUSTIN-Dtvon:ed IM2i ltill minlstrator. don't even offer it, they won't physics and "not 10 of them "We are not the first· ones 01<1 • ..., H11nttnt1M • : A ......... J Santa Ana •-a"-~~. have taken any malhematics to 0-that potenti"1 It has ~.:...1w1 lllKl't "'"" L'-?.Yt· attempttnc tO rellte to their u1-~ .... v~-1. . -~-·~·s~~~-_:~anot".""'."he:'.':,• .~d..'.'.e..'.'.e!p'.'.e~r_be~y'."oo"'d'.:se:"'co~nd~'fO"e:'ar'..."'al!!!''.'.b".:ra'.:.'_' _al"'.:w-<>:ay~·,-"be:"'en:".......'.ther'.'.'.:e'._"'_'a:'.'.nd'.".__·_'.it'.'::=+================= aa~nt!~~-£."'tf~? cblldrtD tVQ tboqh. .c .... ~ n&ftffln:S IS DOWI· a:d!•llff c1ub ., 1rv1,,. ,,,~.,,.11 1e1 ~1-for. a·muter•s de-....... ~ 11111. ..:..,..,.,. separated from. tbem, are -..--. .---ao1m"C~N...,.,.-t·•i1•, 1 ..... 1119 L·in( __ ..,. by Blf Brothers. ~ ill "'*'1t per 1 on a e 1 ad· r¥ Club, •1 I E. , .. _. 1,111;: __ .... -t-La.. •t•-MM.. J #ff'!;~• ~·~ of Oranp County for an ex-lllllllll..-a-and counaeling. Mese v~ru· c.u~trY cw-. perimental __ to in-uRipt now, UCI bu a 5.1 T.._lif'J:.:=•t1~3: ~f:-. KIMI l•lll• ,.._._., • · Tfttwr1~1. W••ffl'llMtll', • p.n1. Clede "father effec:tivenes1." percent nunordy enrollment," a-lltv "" ,,.. ,,_,illll .,., L.. B ,._ !al t:-"'""*' o1 •• ,w ~ HU'Gld ()akl1nctt'r, a ataff ""' 11)'1. •• Y uc 1 of 1'14, 1ri.1 $Int;,. In Arner1(1, C•I• I pl ha -°''~-c"'''" ''"' s~1 member at BIJ BnlChers, call! an to ve a 10 percent "" Nolrl uam1, C11t1 MtN. u.. &aM d .. -••• u-~~ UC pro,-.~ -AllW&a.-... minority tm'Ollment, II L,l"W;M. IMMMl Ne. llSI, 4!S 1;111 F ~---• .!;; ~~:, ~.;.•:g,~1u11o. Vln1•• •~• ••--a-... •· But he doesn't want t.o have •~n. nt ,,.,,,,,,.., ••*• 11•1n1t, 1:» Oaklander wantl to meet to stick to a quota just for .-.::.. CMtt l 'MI l 'ritll INN UCl11, with diYWCed fathers to iJt.o T""'11 sPllr.'\. "1 w. H1111m.... vesUpte ways to , iocrudle the. like of the q u o t a , ~~It!:; uw ,.,., their abllltr to dell.~ .. _. l!>al alnys brings 'IT"m"'. ••••• ,711 • .. Citiit• Me• Witb their 'cbllifru and t• In. people ..mo shouldn't be OIJl'~,!~T=--1:;:, 8,"l! lllfal>Jllb I pllol JnJeCt, lo ii.en.'' 'JllW. ~~ { ~~·~ -J:lr.1:!:..•" l.11·~ or of· But Knowles 1111)'1 he bes '= = . . II'-":" I bonl ·-......... --·-·· :!..~ -<•" ~__.ally , _..,! aro w--......-· •""' '""· "1111""'i... divor~ _ ::!". al 1_...... Re bu been in the trailer ..!--&t11111s1 c111b, Kffll'~ ·--~ ~~~ .. d (=··ably-ai·' all year, and he has seen T•..._ """-•rit· w111m1n11er. 12 ...... lu.n:' ~111 ,..__ JIO plans In writing to move c.it':t::•C:."J l::: e,:: /!.::. ed I to IG) wbD se tryin I . Im «nee ,ellewbere. riJ111"::'-VJ,llw .. .,_ Clult.. f.'r•• to maintaia rtiatioftlldP, with "Nnt fall," be says, "I ~1,12:;.9:.:!' ..... ~ their eblldrm. ••••• 9 • r wm have three . admin1.stra-w..~ ~.'may be kn,,_ counsel""' and three Dbsoltltletu Olklandtr • .....,. 111ai ·;... -1n this trailer, and lather ii lll!ll]ly Ibo .,_ -'·~ start on Oct. 01 Mll~·-e quantity 1n 111t "'..,... ·1111110-1• .... """'"" to a tent . • • ·~ In tfw middle of lht campus • ....,.. ...., •l' tion for eouMelon and .octal "To me, this trailer ii tbe "':?I"~·-~··"~;;~: "" """ ::-~:·~-.: tp\tome <i 'They don't need ' -~'"-nralJ' ,_ Ibo ,_," bt ariydllnc any better.' and I !$ II. ""· ; , have jult abcxlt bad it," be -,. adds. , ~~· '·~·-· Tbt GoJy ,_. ~ AccGrdlng to t11e· office ol w ~\ • r~I!'. in contact with t·a th• r I• the vice-cbinoellor of •lltudent V..., .:..n. M. '::. l..r.1.~. ,._ Oat 1 and er nqUI. are affairs he won't have to move -...., •·"' "'"' o. aulborltartan OOOI ~ lhe to :_t · "-I 11 H ;_ Mlllll'. ......._,..,. ..... -WllllllM ~I~-•"'-' ~ .... -•~wu 1n URI a • e iii .::::."~·r.-.:S~ Lf' . ~:~ dd;;;-:. -~to,···ve new «fices on ~s-' 'Z.""::l......... tiall cl lbi...,... ~ 1lio • .., Jloor " the .... :.=1~ M, .... --A. and' the ~!tat ,.....,.."'1Ddinc. U IOOO , •f:l· c..,.... 11t11 .... M1c:11M1 tii'Pl'Obittoa · .. • Cht, elefttora an imtall~. ..r.J.. ........... M. . ...... ,,.,,., ~.--th.al• "iaYlilM.ttty ft KnoWlta ..,. be is tind •. ~ ::.-::= .. ,,,__ , •. " btvln& pqle an: why r~!"~ f:../' . -~· OdllDd ~ ...,., clivorCld there tft. not more minOrity ~ · falbin ''¥ft I "'*"'"nblo - • .l!!.'!!l ~' ......m.t1111e1r 111e,-.. -"""'<not• COuoty ~~·· • and _, -•• In ........... porilcularl)' ~~ti'!.! ~ dill-·-prior. ...,.. Cblc-1tudenta. ~..... -i::-... . riqoo,. parttculaily •• ,.. -dloc to .. Orante ...... 'B· llW.. . -lht)' _ .. 1, b Caullly Planalnf ~ ·-L '"' J'::! -JllOdieo!l1, In W&yl never U-18 -an I pe<c:elt t:..z:::~' re-.:: • l1lllJ llllllactory lo -.. minority --In tile = AY• • , J 9dlll ~ ' OlkJander believes thil ~ county, f,$ percent of which Mt'tr· 1M1 UIY-.. tun be im,..oved. 'Jbe are Mu:icaft.America and oc't~ .._ etNh'11 .,.,. •1tn11 ~ ks 1.5 pereent of wbich are blU ~~ ""' .. •-"'" men ... would '"lbere will be l3J EOP Mli9. -'iJ,i;it. ~ n cr .. ,1,. form ID llHnalt FOUP whlcb ltudmts tN'Olled at UC Irvine ~-~~~ \.utUlt ...C 01111 llY wouJd meet to tzplare the thl f-" " v~1--0'iiti1. T'*"" V, •11111 1"f1111d1 J..___ pomlbi}Wel ~· the projKt S ai, IYWW~ 18)'1. Eflrl•~· MM9 M•rffll ""' .......... For information, all ou: ·"lbey brelt down to about l ... , ........... tiJ!&re,~~n Clllr Inf Ullff Alln landtr At Mf.77U "'""· • ""' ·: Jlhn J,J =-=--1. J~ •.:,, :n~. Hiii, MidMI Wlll191n ...... tt.re Child Support Meeting Set Ca~~_. CMll ~9ult.-c.:F. w.,,.....,, •"' ~:-... ~-;::.-::.. ,...,. Dt!Tllllt MWliMo Mn 9nCI C1rl •· ~r:ir.r J'w4:"'M=• :.:' ttWtrt o.v': CM"'"" J. •nit MnM" Ii. Ctrm. MllMll •f!lt J-l~H­Men,.., Jlldllfrl k9Y ...... -u-5:~ •-tr I. e!MI fW W. i.n A. encl 0.111111 1r11n Ml , ,_,. J-1M WI Ill' 11,,. CMlll .. l'lllrkl• LHIM _,.. lllldMirlf •· .. ,.,,.. CMrl• I , Jr, 111111 LI"""' I(. 81,_, N I~ lflill Jldllnl SdMltlz. "· tr 'Ir" A. Giit. Nl1• ..... Ill 1111 l. Ohv.t, , ldll Mn end flMll'I -· Tvt.....-. ....,_I' ..... l'niflr'e A ~~ Cl,.._ .,_ llfllt L_,_ °"9111,_, Gmtlllll •· Ml .__,... I . ~ """" O.rtrM """ •ltl'll Mk~ Nll'ltY """ •ftill Jlttn M9n111 .J:ir1". "*'-' .. L.. ellll MkMtil w. Hrdl, INl'de 1."Y'• 11111 •-N Jill AllBUCKLZ a ION __ ......., m & 17111 11., c.11 -··-• BALTZ MOtmlAlllD c.r.. ... "'"' Oil -eoo1a -aa NII& • 1111.L llllOAD'll'AY -,UY llt~ci.11- • McOORMICll LAGUNA BIUCll MOlmlAllY 1111 i a ca,. 11. - Head Start To Get 400 Coµnty Kids ANAHEIM -'!be rftlllar 51lCllllh!y meeling of I h e A.9locWlon for Cb i 1 d re n Deprived " Support will be ll<ld tonl&l<I at 7:30 p.m. SANTA ANA _ AlnlOll 400 '!be meelinC will again be htlcl al tile YMCA Buildin(, Oranp C •" n t Y prMCbool 1515 W. Notlb Street, chilclren will take part In the ~. H"d start prorram this fall. '!be N•~ <i 1 h I s 'lbe proeram is _.i by ~~ the Commmity Adlcra Oouncil ... -is "' briR{I aboot (CAC), and fUodtd by tho -enlcrrmnent of. child federal aovemment. IUPPOR lawa. Anyone in· Under the procram, dU.ldn:n tereated In tll:it problem js from mincrril)' .... Pl art hwitod to -- Sivert a "pre.cbool education" ADV••Tll•M•NT .. lhat -11w, "'"" the Wh D !lltl Jrldt, 1111)' are uuchl"'!> y 0 wMllolhtrd>lldnlllntholr .,.......,_ ' Employ-11 available In y R d .... ....,am ,,. i..c11en, OU ea -.-.andeusto-dl-. Prelorence ii flvtn to s ~ •Jlllll<lllll So SI I , :i.u:i::u...:..,~ . ow y • An1one 1ntllretttd in as>' A riottd publiaher ln Chlcqo re. plJinc for pollitlons lhould partz there is a simple technique coMact the CAC at 135-D3t. of. npid lftding which should enablt you to increUe your read. Ina 1peed and yet retain much m<n. M09t people do not realize how. rnuch they couJd increue their pltaaure, IU<.UllS and in- come by read.in& taatu and more accun.ttly • • P.tanl VIS'll' MDQIW. PAllri c..,, •• ..., l'.:::::::~~~~~==~1 Accordlnc to thit publisher, maey people, regardless of their fM1wtlt1111•fJ pntent reading skill, can use ""-:.=:::. .... • ,,_FAMILY COLONIAL rtlNIWL -?lllloloaAft. Wet1e' t1r ·-• SlltWltll MOll'IVAIY LlpH-...... luQem' C! ..... • IMmlS' MOll'IUAllY ll1Malolt. -dnat<>.... ~ -.. SMOKERS Special Notice th.ii llrnple technique to improve their readlnc ability to • remark- able dearte, Whether reading lt!Orie' boob, technical malter, It beeomell po111ible to read Jtel). l9ftCtS at a &lance and entire nie Nlft.11•1 A11tl '"'•lint C•un· Pt.Pt in .-conda: with thla •" ......... 1 •• ...,, ,.. , .. , metbod. .,.. .. ,,. wJftil• ••11 .'•" wllh•ut To acquaint the-readen ot ,,., .. lriyjttMtlt, •r will p•w•r. this ntWlpQl!r with the easy· If .,.. .,;H +. .,,,.k th• h11lit It-follow Nie& for developin& ..... t.111•t, l.t Vt •ll•w 'P• ll•w n.pid readlns lkl.11. the com· •••Y •M ~1.,1. It e.111 ... -pany hu printed full details of C.M e11r effl" 11e•,.,t yeu f1r lb! lntett1tlna 1eJ1,tralntn1 method ft.. c"911lt•tt•11. D• it 11••, thit In a new booklet "ltow to Read •••" J•"* ,..w llfe, Jo"ettt:r and ltetal~ ~Ion:," mailed ...., .... . H ........ • .._11 fttt. No obll1atlon •. Send your IU lll•IUI name, 1ddr.u , •nd zip code to: , Fltldint, 135 IMvenrey, L>ept. 300- .. ~.....:.tw.M ~~· IOl14, A postcard SEE THIS NEW GENERAL: ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER BUILT-IN WET BAR -NOW AT DUNLAPS - COME IN!! I SEE IT! -TRY IT YOURSElf.! Automatically Serves Y aur Choice Of f01' chll19' w•t•r, pr••1 y•ur 9111• •t•h11t th• rvblter-cu1h· io"•' "wtt•r" cr111ll•. fft•l••1• •h•" Y••.' h1v• th• w•t•r .,.. ••nt. Sit 1 .... , it "le• cub.1." Pre11 cr1dl•; ic1 cr.ib•s tvinlil• out u11til yo11 r•I•••• the cr•dle, Fill • 91111, pitch•r or ic• bvck1t, M•r• l•v•I to "c.ru1h.d ic•," tho• pu1h the ic.• cr111fle. Cruth· e4 ic• will "• ~li•p•n••llf u~til cr•tll• it r•I••••'· •• ' . CHILLED WATER -ICE CUBES -CRUSHED ICE COMPLnl !illtYICI Dlf'T. FAST QUAL(TJ SllYICI FOlt J) TIAlS NO DELAY • • REFRESHMENTS e SOFT DRIN·KS FOR KIDDIES TH£ ' PHONE . ~· 548-7788 . c I t I • l ' I t ' • • j • • ~ t ~ t ~ g ) • n g L r • .. • d ti /1 p n a • ~ " u !> ,, " h. ti vi " tt .,. ., it IJ: ii fl! .• • . .. .. .. . .. ~ ~ l Girls Join Army, But Stay Girl~ .I • ,. iT--•• or. -•• ~--. .,._ - I . . ' Red China Takes Aini On Coast? • • Tutsd1y, Jvly 28, 1t70 DAILY PILOT t LEGAL NOTICE !fGAL NOTICE I ' j I I I :f9 DAILV PILOT • s T"'4q, Jutr 28. 1970 f oar Jtfonew's Worth Bonds Inc1·ease Sa,ings B1 SYLVIA PORTER 1f you invest your mont)' at I perct11t interest and let the interest acc:umulate in your _De$legg, you 'll double your money-lo about lt Yeats. lf you Invest it at I percent and you don't Jpend the In- terest.. your nestegg w\11 dou- ble in abol.lt 12 years. 1r yo11 invest il at 7 perttnt, It will double in about 14 years. Obviously, at these Interest rates. high-grade, /lxed-in- come MvestmeM -in the obligations °' the u .. S. Treasury, Federal Agencies, our states and cities, U.S. cor- porations -take on the characteristics of "growth" securities. A n \ovestment which doubles In 11 years is growing by lltl)' definition. "t the same time, this type of in'vestment retatns the ad- vantages ol il! fixed . annual rellll'tl aod offers superior pro- tection against • d v e r s e economic conditions. And you can gel these fixed annual retur ns in the bond iind money markets ol the United St.ates today. Assume for I.he moment that the historic great bear market for bonds has ended and that the turnaround since prices hit bottom in mid.June is solid. Assuume interest rates already have passed their ' peals for our lifetimes. Nevertheless, you can ~till earn up to 9 percent on purchases of top quality cor- poration bonds bearing world· respected names. You can cam 6~·7 percent on high quaUty, long-term, tax-exempt municipal issues (equal to around 14 perrent to you if you'Jl in the 50 percent tax bracket). You can earn 7 to 814 percent on 1.0.U. 's of the u .S. Treasury and Federal Agenci~. depending on the maturity of the l.O.U. you choose. And you can count on these extraordinarily hlgh r a t e s every year until your l.O.U:s come due or until the issuer tails them in undtr a call provision which is written into your original conLract. Let me be: even more specific: 11) At a !I percent return c n higb·i.rade corporation Tax Exempt Companies Must File Several thousand organiza· lions which presently enjoy California income tax exempt status are in danger of losing this privilege unless they take prompt action to Hie the pro- per reports, said Marlin Huff, Executive Officer of lhe Franchise Tax Board. As a result of legislation enacted in 1969, all organiza· ti~ which have been granted exemption from the Califomia franchise or corporation in· <:ome tax are required to file an information report with the department this year. Failure to file a report rould result In penally assessments and the loss of the tax exempt status, Huff said. The reporting requ1re1rients ~pply to chur~hes. chari~able or ga ni z a 11ons. bus1n~s \.-...agues, social and recreation organizations and other non· profit groups grunted tax ex· emptiOn under Section Zl701 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. In order to assist exempt organizations in satisfying the requirements of the 1969 legislation tbe Franchi!ll!: Tax Board in March of this year mailed a questionalre rorm to some 70,000 e x e m p t organizations. 1..e.u than 50 percent or the organizations have responded to the ques- tlonneire to date. Reiponsc to the questionnaire Is man- datory in order to en~ble the department to mail the ap-- propriate report fonn to the organization. lndivldu als who are members of, or havt con- ntttions 'flth. oin exempt organization arf' urged to ascertain w h e t h e r the organization has receivl!Q. completed and r<Wrned • qutlUoonaire to the depart· mflnL If not, the organiz.aUon 11 ur10d to ol>Uln the que .. UonDllre form , complete it and mall to the Franchise Tax Boatd 11 toon as possible. The quesUomWre form (FIB 1070) can be obtAlntd <rom any o1 the olfi<tl of the FrendliJt Tu 8oll'd °' by wriUn& lo Ille ,_ Tax Board, 1'25 p S t r .. I , Sa<ramatlo, C.IUontla lilt~ QueslJonl ,.....a .. the ques- llonnaire or Ille 1• loaW•- Uon wbould be dlreclod to lb< same~. • • , bond$, you are cbllllenglnc the looc·term crowth record for common stocks. According to the ramous study by the Ctaltf for R~reb in Securi· ty il!ric.tt. in Obicj!;g~ an in- vestment ln a random cross- secllon of stocks on the New YQrk Stock Exchange. over 1 40-year period would have in· crieased In value to 1 dtgret giving . you an average: rate of return equal to !I., percent a year, compounded annually. Last month. A.,-;lted bonds were beloe widely q!fered at 9.3 percent (norKOmpounded). (2) Jn any 1.0.U. returning you a pertenl, you're doubling your money in a bit more lhan a decade, and, at the "businessman's risk'' rales, )"OU're really moving ahead. There'a no doubt that as int~rest rates have splr~I~ upward;bo(h soPJili;ticated in- vestors and supposedly naive little fellows have been shl.f· ling vast .sUms ioto the bond markets. Individuals a r e estimated to have directly In- vested ~ billion in fixed·in- New Vice Presidents .John C. Abell (left) and James M. Cobb have been named as vice presidents of Harbor Investment Company. Abell bas been with Harbor Investment for seventeen years and will be senior real estate consultant as well as vice-president for investment properties. Cobb has been with the company for eleven years and will serve as vic~president and general sales manager of the Newport Beach firm. ...... _ . • I OVER THE COUNTER CoQtplete-New _ Yi>rk Stock List r • ~ •• "" ... "' "" t: "' w ,. '" t!I t:f ~i t:t: "' t~ '" tiE " " ~.~ " " U• "' ~1/g t: L L L ,. '"' ~'1' ' L L , .. t$ '"' "" '"' '"" "' "' '" f ----' --- • July 1970 DAJLY PILOT Monllay's Closing Prices-COmplete New Yorli Stocli Excliange List American Stock Exchange List \; I 1' II • • Sllfl Hit iJK11.I Hllll 1..ow (loll Cllt. '! ... "" 1)14 -'4 •• .. "4-~ ' ' • . ... n "" ·:.. ,. -~ " •• ... + ' " .. 14 -"-" .. •• .i\lo-1.lo • n1.-... n._-v. I ,. ... ~ ..... Disabled Man Runs Business Y.'lCHIT A, Kan. (AP) - Don "Taco Pete" Peters never went to high school and at Uie age .of 37 it so crippled by multiple sclerosis that he can move head. nolhing but his He might itrikf! you as an unlikely prospect for success in lhe business wor1d, but his motto is 1 "A guy can do anything he sets his mind to do" -and in bis case. it works. Peters dropped out of"school after the eighth grade, spent some time jn the Army and later w~nt to work in the construction industry. By 1960 he bad developed advanced symptoms or multiple sclerosis - a hardening of the tissues -and became totally disabled in 1965 at the age or 32. But wilh the help « bis famlly aod friends he bas developed • chain or 13 restaurants called ' 'T a' c o Pete." The remurants are In Wi c hita, Dodge City, Pittsburgh and Arkansas Cily, Kan., and Tulsa, Okla. Peters opened the first Jn 1967 with an investment of only $10,000. "We saved a lot of mooey,'' be explains, "by doing everything ourselves - designing our own places, building and renovating equip- ment, even making up our own insignia and brocbures." Peters depends on his wife, Marge, and friends to write down or sketch his Ideas, tO try out his new recipes, and even to bathe, dress, dlave and feed him. Drug Finn Relocates To Newport Shareholden ol Newport P ha r m aceuticals lnt.erna- tlonal , rnc. have approved relocatiqn of corporate heado quarters to Newport Beach from Ss.lt Lake. City, Utah, , a forward split of common stock on a t~.ror~ basis and a qualified stock option pln.n for th firm's key person.. nel. Tht! company· alao an-- nounced It has reached agreements ln principle with several major fore I g n p h a rmaceutica l companles and reported on tut mutts or Ol'fe ()( Its dru11, fsoprinooine (NPUS). T ' , I ) 1 ) r lJ DAILV PILOT TutMi!Y, July 28, 1970 • • • • ·-'. • • :1 ' '. ' _. I 9 ' ' ' • • • • :,~' f ' ti .. ;. . . .. ' . '' ... a-switching m hm a major competitive premi•· line . . to Chevron . F·310~ - • Hydrocarbon emiss~ns Garbon monoxide emissions A significant test involving 1964·1969 vehicles of two major makes reveals further new proof-Chevron gas- oline with F-310 significantly reduces hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions from dirty engines. Results showed an average reduction in hydrocar· bon emissions of 12.4 %. Carbon monoxide emissions were reduced an average of 27.5 %. Fifty cars and 3 tiucks were selected by officials of the Orange County,-Calif., Department of Transporta- tion from its county fleet of over 1,000 cars and trucks, t.o represent a cross-section of high and low mileage vehicles of various model years-all well-maintained and previously using a major brand premium grade competitive gasoline. "llesiattnd n-.d.amark for l\ll.7b11.~• Amill• Guoline Additi'l'~. ' ' ' , 0 All cars were swit.ched frqm the competitive gaso-. line t.o Chevron with F-310 as t!J.ey:were, :with no adjustments to the engines, carburetors or emission control devices. The test was conducted between March and July, 1970, by Scott Reseiirch Laboratories, an independent research ~boratory, with the cooperation of Orange County. E;xhaust emission measurements were made on each of the 53 test vehicles befm:e the chang&over to Chevron Supr~me with F-310, and again after approximat.ely 2,,boo miles of routine· driviJ.ig. · The results .of .fihiS l!cientifically conducted test are highly significant-further dramatic proof that Chev- .ron With F-310 reduces ro:hanst emissiom of unburned ' ' ' 0 hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide. Other tests are now in progress as part of a continu· ing series t.o demonstrate the contribution of Chevron with F-310 t.owardcleaner air. • F-310 11110 keeps clean eng ines clean. F-310 Polybutene Aniine Gasoline Additive was deveJ. oped to red\lce exhaust emissions from dirty engines. The degree of improvement, of course, depends on the condition of the car. ~n a new car or a car with a clean engine, F-310 will keep the clean engine clean-keep t.otal exhaust eniissions at a minimum. That, too, is a genuine contribution to cleaner air. ' " Chevron with F~IO.There itlr(tacar on the road that shouldn't be using it. Chevron • rn1a • I • ., .. \I ... .... -~- I I I I I I I I l I I ' I I I I I ' I I I l I I ' ' I ' ' I I I • I • : I I • l·S PARIS POKING FUN?.- . 11~ " // I ' • ---~-·-~-~-- . •( ' 1' , I ' • : I I. ' , . Parisian designer Pierre · Balmain said the midi shape proposed lest season marks " the return of the straight, elegant long look as depicted iii the artist 's sketch of e ...__,coat from his winter collection. ~men . ,_u ' ,. Couture Empire's Rise, Fall? Americans Strike Out Midi By MARIAN CHRISTY PARIS -French fashion may not survive. Designers wOO last. s e a 1 o n brought about the demise o( the mini by. touting out nothing but the ugliest of midis just don't realize how much worldwide ~ position there is to the look ,- and subsequently to them . The stumbling bfock Par Is designers fa~ now is the fact that despite their senx of in- ternatlolltlbm, they will not accept the .fact that contemporary women slmply "won't be dtctated to like a bundl of unthinking lheep. French designers with magic names -Dior, Yvea Saint burent. Glvoochy -otlll think they can lilue iron-clad 1.-edicts and womm will Jtm>p on th • I r bandnpas without question . Actually, French designers hive put their collective head11 on the guillotine. LAST REVOLUTION The last falbion revolution the.y instituted was back in lt41 when atristian Dior, JllOW dead but then at the peak ol his career, lowered the hemline with the N... Look -and women everywhere cleaned out their clO!let.s and started all over again. Since then there have been no major a~d fashion revolutions. Slowly but 1t.1rely women around the workt have taken an in- dependent viewpoint. and if they don't like 10methin1 they simply won't wear It. or p>Url'. this hurts where tt count.! the most -at lhe cash ~gi!ter. What a lot of pfJOple don't un- derstand .11bout haute routure Is that il '1 not only for the privileged rew who can afford It. Paris style is big bwiines11. It rakes in an annual Vflltnne of $5 million -and this is nothing to sneeze at. But, and here's the poinl, the bulk of this giant sale ls m.11de lo top.drawer American manufac· turera who come here to ~ col- lection.s and then buy specific clothes to copy line for line. Th.ls business transaction im 't conducted mi frivolous gro\inds. No Ameriiln manufacturer in his right mind is going to mass-pre>- duce clothes that cbvtously rub against the grain of acceptance in the United States. After all, UU.,, is the first step on tbe road "' bankruptcy. French designers, by stubbornly coming out with the midi look, which already has been resisted in the United States, are takln1 a big chance on both their rcputa. lions and economic future. Whether or not they 'll s~ fail Jle- mairu to be teen. STUBBORN DESIGNERll 'ttle point is, however, that ltu~ bom Paris designers will not admit · that there is a hemline crbis in the United States and they ha ve fQrmldable hurdles to jump. Strong female objections have ·to be overcome. First and foremost, mOlt women look upon the midi as a fashk>n that instantly ages. Complaints come in loud and clu.r that the designers are revisitinc the hOme\y 40s and why trace unillradJve fashion steps? Fashionables also look upon the midi as inhibiting. Today a woman Is on the go, constantly moving, zooming from house and job to ~n and games. I1le last thing abe needs ts superfluous material f I o P. p I n I around her mid·leg. It impedes her speed and is not her style. ' . The third most poten( anti-midi argument ii that it f o r c e • obsolescence on women who want lo be free to make their own decisions about when to discard clothes. Paris desiiners haven't shown any understanding of the fact that in the United States, particularly, !here ii a growing feeling about the "emancipated" woman who lhinks for herself, doe.m't ·follow !asltk>n blindly and certainly will riot be led around like a dog on l leash. BAD TIMING On top of everything there' 1 an ?COnomic recession going on and this is the worst possible time to initiate a change. These are not the only things which are making the French haute cooture show •Ip of crumbling. Coco Chanel, ()fie ot the most famous deisgnm in die' Fl'tDCb area, was rt'pOrted going out of business last year. What saved CllaneJ Is the Broadway musical based on her life and called ••eoco," in which Katbartne ·Hep- ' bum plays the lead. The designer, now 85, ma~ a pile of money on thia theatrk:al de•l -and rumor Is that she poured it into the 11gging saloo. Yves Sainl Laurent, the young dmigne.r who is hlppie oriented .. Is showing more and more collections that Jook u If they belong in the boutique rather than a snobby salon. . lf Paris f1Mlion doetn't buckle under the strain of lhU.,1, it mla:ht end up wllh 1 new face. ' But WOO~ Laughing ·· At Styles - , PhilipP. Venet ·ofhrs this en.- ••f'."bt• .featuring a long lac~et ancl 'half..cilf wld~ pants ·In fi'rown l••ther, •mbrolderM with l90pard fur. 1 · ' -1'1 Do11 Is the weddlnt .:,n · preMnted .• t Jta' PatoU'• showlns. The -•'.I• m.ade of "br•nehlnl'' fabrl~ with whit•' ziberlJne. <. Unl~Mx ft1hlon1 offlciel!Y trrlve on the:heut• C9U- turo ...,.. •• do .... r Esltrol ,...._,, idontlcoll,, . . .. \ .. I I I Brown . suede coat jabov~ is bordered with brown astrakan and studded with baroque flower patterns in the same African astrekan. High fur hat and embroidered Brande· bourgs embellish outfit, created for Dior by Frederic Castet. Pierre Cardin~hows 1 +Weed coat c:ut in lar9e straps. shut by • huge button and worrt with· self , .., : .. ~. '!, .. fabric trousers • striped P'orvvloMtylocl ind dlstoff moclots. . woolen ctpe1 'for '!'•le ' I'!!"----~--~---~-----------~~....,.-------------------·--~--- JI D.\ILY PILOT • ; ' • . OJllT ........ ' • ' • NoW-f amous Teacher Lauded ' DEAR ANN LANDERS : The letltr fro"rn "Ug1y Ducklln&". lnapired me to write. Al a grade &ebooler I was overweight and hid a mlllion freckles. Homely would have-been a tlnd desaip. ANN LANDERS lion. Lli.c "Ugly ~. ", I too; had ' a utnt of a teachu. She sensed I was miserable and asked me to atay after school so we muld talk. She told me to stop thiMlllg of freclde11 u dlsnguring because m¥y people con. sldf!red them wholesome, if not downright attracU.ve. She encouraged me to lose t weight. Al for the boys who made cruel remarkl, she said they were just trying to get my attention. "Smile and be 1 pleasant," she advised. ''Soon they'll be smlllng back." I took her advice and I will never be able to repay her. She changed my ,. life. The teacher's name was Mis! Thelma Ryan. Today she ls knowu u Mrs. Richard Nil.on. ; -C. L OF WHITI'ER .. DEAR C.L .. : Many thanks for a beartwarmlnr letter. It wu lood ot )'OD '° share your atory. ilEAR ANN LANDERS : I 'live in Monterey and like Pericles Of old, I must defend my city when it ls attacked from wlthln. I refer to the woman who signed her letter, "It Happened in Monterey." A more appropr i ate signature would have been, "It DIDN'T Happen ill Monterey.'' She described her marriage as "very satisfactory -without sex." She and her b~ enjoy gin rummy and TV. Lest your readers think everyone in Monterey lives like that, Jet me assure yoo that Monterey is the Peyton Place of .\merica -the Love Mecca of the Universe. A peraonal poll of our country club crowd revealed 8 out of 10 couples don't own a deck of cards and watch little or IO TV. The weather is glorious ' El Toro Chapel Scene for Rite ' and conducive to love making, boUt In. doors and out. So, please, Ann; print the truth about Monterey and help restore its good name. -EROS WHO WANTS EQUAL TIME DEAR EROS: Here's your equal time and now a word from ytur 1poasor1 lbe views repreaeated In the above lttltr are not necessarily thole of )'OUr newspaper, tbt Monterey Chamber of Commerce or dais ctbu:nn.11t. Do you feel ill at ease .•. out of It? ts everybody having a good time but you? Write for Ann Landers' booklet, "The Key to Popularity," enclosing wtth ywr request 35 cent.I in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope In care of the DAILY PILOT. • s NOW OPEN .H Mr. and Mrs. Irving R. 54 e Johnson oC Irvine and Mr. . and Mrs. James Nidlter of · Costumed 'Cocos'' Muse /or, Camera , Lynn Carol Johnson became the bride of Edmund James Nichter in an afternoon ceremony performed by the Rev. Joseph Sar1oris and Chaplain Albert R. Treibel in the Bue Chapel at El Toro. ~?d~y w;, :ec1~ .FASIUON ISLAND iB Rehearsing and undergoing coolume fittings •for the lead in the Broadway hit musical, "Coco" is (left) French actress Danielle Darrieux. Katharine. Hep- burn (right) haJ been the lead •Ince the allow O!>en- ~.ed, parlraying the famous fashion designer Gabrielle (Coco) Chanel. Both actresses wear one of many Cecil Beaton designed costwries worn in show. Parenls of the couple are attended by her slsler, Miss e featuring FLORSHEIM s .Karen Anne Johnson as maid for Men and Women of booor. Bridesmaids included the e COMPLETE CHILDREN'S DEPT. , ' bridegroom's sister, Ml aa featuring STRIDE RITE Mary Nichter, the bride's • coosin, Miss lJDcla PielemeleT", ...., _____ SH0ES Miss Paula Harper and Miss - Nanci Clifton. Your_ Horoscope Tomorrow w~~~~~~~;~~lfiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiim;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i'iiiiij . • • Aquarius: Arrogance Shunned WEDNESDAY ' • • J.ULY 29 BJ SYDNEY OMARR ARD!ll (March 21 • April .It)' You complete lmponant ' proJecti. Don't tolerate lack 'of qUaltty. Give your belt - • tn;I.t .. receiving excellence • In re1am: One wbo bad much to do with ~ pa<! could remppear. 1 TAURUS (April JO.May 20)' • J You bave ctwnee to move : -~.to ezpreol ldeu. Take ,...._ Put 1-lo wuk. Be ~e. Veraotlle approadt tidlltv• ·re11.11ts. Have heart· August Brunch Changes Pace For New ~t A champagne brunch and "fahlm ,._ wlll be a chan«• <A pace foe members of SMi- dlebact Valley Newcomers Club .. they gSher in the Newporter Inn ,on Wednesday, Aug. 12, at 10:30 a.m. • to-Oeart talk with relative, neighbor. 1 GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Money situation improves. You are able to rise above petty details. Unorthodox re- quest is highlighted. Cycle is readling • peak. G«loral in· dk:atiom point to gain. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Strive to· brighten sur· roundinp. Fine for purchase "' lipparel. Be oomdous "' color, l!Oljlld. C)'cle Is high; new l&Olf ~ve endeavors .... ~Go all out -nothing tmllW'ay. ' Ll!O (July 23-Aug. 22): Fine .for group,. cjub activities: Do · your best1 to aid one who is lncapecitated. '!be more you give now, ttie more ·YOU will receive. B e · considerate. Remember those who are less f-. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Good lunat -coincides with friendly adVice piillfored by one who llUly aclnlim you. Be receptive to -.i,nestiona that klvolve change, travel. Dyn.amic experience ls up- coming. .• . LIBRA (Sept. 2Wct. 22): Accent on achievement, career, standing · In com· munity. Put forth pn;iposa1a in wriUng to oae in autlkrity. You might be amazed al favorable resporu;e. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Much tnat seemed distant is now within reach. Your only UmilaUore art fears, doubts. Key is to perceive, to detect trends. Fav o rable for publillhll1g, tr a v e I 1ng1 ad· vertlsin(. SAGm.uutis . (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): You may be ln- 1roduoed lo·unusual altiletlon. Key 'ii 'to remember com- rnitmmtl. 1Maintairu ·1 e If· eaeo( What appears fuclnlting may be a mere flub-in-pan. Act ~in£ly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Pursue legal advaotqes. Doo'l be shy about piling partnenilips, public relations. ' Wider appeal for product, services is indicllted. AQUARIUS (Jn 20-Feb. 18): Employment matt.era are accented. Find better ways to relate to co-worker s , &ISOciates. New ~ ap-. ·-· pears necessar.y. '1lAlle are en- vious. Be independent without being arrogant. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)' Creative endeavors dominate. You get rid of m~ ,nd !ape. There Is II< ... freedom of tbought, action; RelaUODB with opposite sex afe ~lfied . 'lnlat tm:b ln' tpeClal ~·-Uon. ' '1 ~ Te fl.. _, -....r W.,..tt ... .. ,,,,,,,, ........ ,.... Ol!latT'I JI ..... lllleli:lel, "'Tiit Trvltt A-..t ~." SllMI ~h ..,,. A c811b t. °"'*" ......,.., ,,. DAILY "ILOT, .... JIM, ..... ~ SI .. t• N .. Yn H.Y. 1•11. MRS. E. J. NICHTER Anoholm H«no Serving as best man for his brother wa,, 'lbomas H. Nichter, Uaben included Ger· ry ·Vanaman, Maurice Moonig, Bob Hardin and the bride's brother, Craig Johnson. The bride, a gradua.te of Newport Harllor High School, aUended UC! and Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo. A graduate of Servite Hi'1 Sdlool, the bridegroom at· tended ·the Universlty of C8.lifrunia in Santa Barbara and served two years with the U.S. Army. The Nkhters will reside 1n Anaheim. Mental He~lth Care Crippled by Shortage SAN FRANCISCO CUP!) - A shortage of trained health eiperu is crippling th e delivery of efreotlve care for mental disease, reports a goup of psychlatrists. "Children have it particular· ly tough," said Dr. Irving Evening Rites Link Philips of lhe University of California's Langley Porter lnsUtute. ."There are about 1.4 mlllion children who need psychiatric care, but lea than 500,000 are getting it. "Less than 10 percent of the mentally retarded who could benefit from help are getting that help." "1bere are vacancies for trained psychiatrists all over the country but we just can't fill them," said Dr. L. Douglas HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! :JUMP THE FENCE CUMB THE WALL! WE'~E GOT THE GREATEST 11ARGAINS OF ITHEMI ALL! LAST CALL! WESTCLIFF PLAZA STORE ONLY 17th & IRVINE . NEWPORT BEACH Price <l brunch iJ $U5 which includea, a fashion show by Nelfy's of Puerto Vallarta Md a free gift for thooe at-. tending.' 1 Soroptimists Zieglers Lenkowski of Western Reserve I~~~~~~~~~~~ University in Cleveland. Ii= Persm interested In at· ay call Mn. Quentin 830-3828 for reserv•· lions. Soroptimlot Club of HUn· tinglon Beach g~ at 12:15 p.m. the second and fourth · Tuesdays in "Francois reetauranl Georgetown Manor 2101 NI 'tUmN AVE. ':;' :_ SANTA ANA -----~PHOHEIS3U4 ~ "We · must step up the capacity of the m e d I c a l Dressed in her moeber's schools.'" wedding gOYln, Tekla Bear "In my mind, tbe situaUon became the bride of William . is going to get worse before L. Zlef;ler of La Crescent&. it gets better," said Dr. Alex· The evening ceremony took ander Simon, head of Langley place In La Creacenta Baptist Porter. Church. "There are three areas of Parenta: cl tne bride are serious social need -the ag. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Bear ed, mentally ill and alcoholism ci Corona del Mar. and drug abuse," be said. The new Mrs. Ziegler is "Once alcoholism and drog a graduate of Corona del Mar abuse are defined .., health High School. problems and not crimes, the Her husband, the son of Mr. need !Ur be hetith hemanpower and Mrs. Leland D. Ziegler may" overw lmlng." of La Crescenta, is a graduate of La Crescenta Valley High School. Following a Hawaiian honeymoon, the couple mid.es in Montrose. Coiffure Cost Low Pantries Provide Groceries ~ new butler's pantry is Just like hamc. a ll!lall croc«Y store 1n your own home. Pleasure Dou'b/ed ·, A ..,, human bait wig has Unlike grandmother'• pan. the w-UllJ and low cost try this one only r<qu1res an The first annulil picnic of th~ 5eddleback Mother of ~Uc •llretcb wlp plus area In the l:itcllen 34 inches of '!Wins Club in Crown Valley Highlands was the texture and 't Y l l n R bi,ti. 2l inches deep ai>d ;a •• versaUUIJ ol real hair. or 311 •-~-~· t -•de double the plealhlre for all those c;oncerned. Be-~~ wrue 0 , .... si des swimming, a picnic lunch and games, twins A cbemlcal process treat· up to 56 cubk: feet « shelf '° SANTA AMA: s. ..,. ""· h .....,_. Pwy ... ,,,. 1tNr1t Jn five categories received trophies. Showing off ment ad<b wash.and-wear pro-storage space. ....... ,._,. A•l ,.,... ..,. "'"' .... 1M '"-' "itlllfll Aw.. their "look alike" trQpby in the girls' division are pertles to the wig. You style There are ftl\7tl inside __ ...., _ _..., __ .. ,_.... (left to right) Kelly ·aitd Kaesy Kingston and mother ii in J110<e than 100 different •ad>-· Behind the swiig- --,.__ • ~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~M~r~s~. ~P~at~K~m~· ~g~sto~•~·=;:; "'ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:i;;;;;;;;;;;w;;;a;;;y;;;s ;;;;;;by;;;;;;;;;bnl!ilin;;;;;;;;;;;;g;;;, ;;;;;;t;;;h;;;e;;;;;;ou;;;l;;;she;;;;;;l;;;ves;;;;;;tn;;;side;;;' ;;;,;;;the;;;;;;r;;;e _.,. t ~ P manufacturer uys. five adjustable she.Ives. -- TOTS LEARN TO SWIM I AT YOUR ORANGI COAST YMCA 64,.9990· THE l.f~FINITY RING Our exclusi.S"~Going ToQether" rings say,it with feeling . Don't just tell her how much you care. Put tt In diamonds for infinity. $25. °""" Accoul'ltl hW'lltf Amt,lean ~tu 9tf'll(Afl'llriUrd & ,,,,.,,., '""''"' T .. SLAViCK'S Jewtlen filnct 191? 18 FASHION ISLAN D NEWPORT BEACH -644-1180 o,.. .. ,,...., .n t ilt , 1. " I ., ' I I • I I I ' • l I I I I· 1: • -- DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS YA SAY 'tWVE ll!ZN l'OlllEREll Wl1111lllS o:>Wrml :!. w~,ae.. ~VAAN'<FNN? MUTT AND JEFF P~IN JANE MOSl"Cl!' M\'WAl<IN!3 .ill)(JllS. I DAIL y CROSSWORD :::; .. A. POWER I ACROSS ,.,_. Yestttday's Pazzl• Solved: l (aptlft' Sl Uttrred blasphtmy s Cocnl>O$mt 52 Goblins 10 llltrriment S6 Oormiu I 14 Uodt-fdoair 00 D11sll ' lS-o.orit 61 Rt-latiag to lt. Opti.ustk. apo~xy 11 ... M Al\91@f''S --··---~ M'CfSSity -lot at~ bS Somerstt 3 words •augha111 ~In. dlaract@I' ,..,. ........ 64 Wf-cuttfltg [)e'prN• o( ... we:apons "1 One " 7/2B/7tl ~ ''"" fained flldj.o I "'""" .... 11-l'g~d .......... '-""' . "'""' """""""" 12 A.-g• Hotacr Big CQO(.lfQ -. .. , ,,,.,. f.,t@e"'Yt ..... 6' TiN of day slave 2 words 4 Ork'nt: ll Facbof ti Utter~: ( !•°'°5 DOWll ....... 2 words "' .... 18 --lbt' Rtd 46 Exqulsftt n-· l Glli'ltt.g d 22 Sick -48 Cacrsed a =.:. uossed bW"I ~rs on bell j;o 2 £.Indian 2~ All right: ...... .... """'" Informal _, Fhlil1 •·-.,, .... °' J-amt 25 l !tSClt 52 Grand5ol r '"' rslatt-"""' 'llll'enthf$ of Ha .. ,. ........ , ...... 27 Sitakt 9 Scltelllt MG#lffl"t ,._.,. 28 Highly S4 Kild Of 41-· S Aote-d displeasotd """" ' -i·"" 2IJ Quo~d ~--... ' ...... 31 Chwch S7G~ 4t'S...er. Fr. 7 Neqrito Sfcikln "'"' 4J.Di.•r • •ot good ··-J2 Din 58 flll'()f>eln 46 Khld of Not bid 33 Equint ~ts idtnt ..... , kind of le Allol'nty 59 tas urt 45 B""h iAter-··-: .... , 41 &ossii>f(f: •iSSIOfl 2 words 6l P~m s• ... lORio-Jff Piid out 6) F.asleMT . ,, -,~, • ' I' I' , . ·110 " " " ! •" c:·, ,, I -,, I I " I I I -~21 --:: I -il • ~H " ,, 1.5 ·1·· '" I " ~.I" I I ~ " " --t:~<J~ ~t " 36 I ,. ' -[!i: -.. " " ~ ·~1 " .. •• • " ' " ft " .· 56 ;j' .. I •" I " " -,(.\ " " .. I I ., " .. £-r - h . PERKINS MISS PEACH ~ J I ! • .STEVE ROPER PEANUTS ' .t ~~J . -- r By Tom K. Ryan AN?1lltYSA'{ 'IOU'lu: Nor tilBa 'PRIZE MAIERIAJ,l U'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS Yu? I o By Al Smith By Frank Baginski MUSEUM OELIVERY . •dJll' -• fj ..... = f. ~ THE TNINl IS••r WOIJPN'r WANT~ ~us...,.o wNO'p llAVE l10IU -11£-PUlP IF••'" ... GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS MEii. ~ \ll»iTTO ~ Pl.~11 BAI.I.~ i By ;John Milft r.*,.''• \(M ly Saundm and °""°'41 II ~ (., [ KNEW nos STICK Wi'S GOOP ftil $0ME.Tll1N' 8Slt>E$ kEEPIN' ME FiOM! FAU.U( ON MY FA.Ce! By Charles M. Schull ,.. • Tllfsday, J11ly 28, 1 qJO lHl SllANGi WOtlD M MR.MUM DAILY PILOT JJ By Al Capp By Ferd Johnlotl By ROCJ91' Bollen I ll '~ ii DENNIS THE MENACE . • I ------~-·-------·-. ~ ... Jf DAILY 1'11.0T -Tu...i.r, July 28, 1970 S " t,-• T~" • "l • . ! t S•erbe~g~s IJp~ and;'. .. J)b .;: :nS ,,,. .;. ~'1 Under .ftupp !l 'f · . , , t ' I 1 When the BJrOn rt!IU, a no tel.· '{ ngtoo ""Beach) i::age artist who Is 11nd aai4, because I'm from tenter tince A~riica.P.oJl_..~ lqt.cn thrmg o( 12,000 rtverenUy goe1 gunning for a starting center'a berth C.lifornia : 'The West b settled now Dln Jase! has 1"'Nu1ted .... ~· !" ' ~ .. ••• there are no mort cowboys and But he'1 got plenty or competition lllent, waiting to see what words on Rupp's 1910-71 WUdca~ produ~tion. Indians 50 we don't need any of fl'(l{Jl 7-a Tom PaYne and g..11 Jim ol wiadorn Adolph Rupp wilt o(ftt , The olher side or the picture pro-that ('referring to the sideburns).'" ,1Mdrews. "I think I can :nake it to hll Univeralty of Kentucky basket-vides a· dr·abber Vista, as Soderberg Soderberg has had hb problems lf 'the).i' just gl)'e me a fair chance tJ,,ill team. tells it. · ~ proVe myseli," Soderberg states. Tbe wail Is brief. "He (Rupp) nins his ship bis way 'f'l'hat's the biggest problem back 0 0amn It Pritt~." he hollers. and you heller conrorm tr you want there _. they (coache1) really don't Then tM crowd takes its cue and to stay'. He ' doesn't give a lot of = --.--j==· k;rtow rne like they do the guy-s from RMI wnd. hldividuat attention as far as actual WHl·I ·E that, area. who they've watched When you 1et up in the morning coaching goes. I through high school. and step outside, the first thlog Y.oU ' ''Maybe one ol the assistants will . W ~SH "ti.1y mistake was going where I notice is the aroma of tobacco ill inention a flaw but mostly it's up j• .II wasn't known -the guys bllck there the air, to the individual to work on' his oWn,'1 , • m -==-don't have to prove anything, that's An4 if you are a member . Ol the the ~ye8r--01d .ace reveals. · lhelr advantage over me. Baron's tea:n, you enjoy a special '"Ooe time coach Rupp took me eLlfllfll wMIT'• •·1t was tough sitting on the bench pttllige -you're put on a pedestal aside wheil hei saw me shootinJ One-· so mu~ last year (he affraged less . and looked up to by the tt!l. of handed and showed me how l6 shoot than two minutes. playipg t1me per your UK mates and most Of the his way. Other guys on the team -he quit the team' Once la!t season gamel-I pllyecf regu13.rly 1or rthrff 200,000 townspeople. asked :ne later how I rated that because he didn't thj.\U tie.was playin1 year! ol ltigh ichocil and"rVy1fres~ 'lbal'• the more glamorous part kind Qf special attention. ' as much as h~ sh~ld:' However, re ,year, at Kentucky. ! , I .:'{ of the picture painted by 6-10 Mark "And ooce when I was wearing went back ... to11ve 1H anofJl~.1hOt::J r.ait I guess they -were' con:- Soderbet11 former Marina High (Hun· sideburns he called me into hls office Now ht'• hapeful .jl.. i:tartinf .a~ ~tiaUna: orl JSJel maJcinr All- Amerlw\, B<for< lllty'd pull him lhty'd check hi ee.t how many potnb he had. "I'm not the only guy back there who's urtlappy. Randy Knowles; a 6-8 high school All-American from Covington, Ky., has already gotten a release from Kfntucky to go to Marshall University . "One of the biggest problems between players and roaches is lack of communication. You just never know how you stand in their plans. "Somell:nes you act the feelin1 they think they're doing you a favor by just letting you be there. "Coach Rupp has been there so long M isn 't impressed any longer by any one group of players !IO you have to ~ke you r chances and let him know , )'Cit want to husUe and , play." Soderberg uys the atmosphere in Le1ington during basketball season Is fanliftic. "Townspeople talk abou t basketbal~ all the time.--Our home games are always aold out -the governor comes, too. But the crowds ha ve class in showing their en. thusiasm. "Yoo tla ve to realize those people have heard Kentucky basketball since they were little kids. Then one day they are lucky enough to see a 1ame. Then if they can see one of th.e players close up ... well, that's really a bill thing to them." Although there's been some lalk that Soderberg may not go back for anoLher cruise on the Baron'a ship, he says his Ptans are to return. Perhaps a cheerleader nz:ned Cyb Barnstable (daughter of a fonner UK captain)· has something to do with that decision. Or perhaps it's just that Soderberg is enough of a competitor to stick ll out. . ' , I •"• ' r.. .................. ~ ...... ~, ....... ..,.,..,.,,. ............... ~ .. ~ ........ ...., .... .., ........ m::i ........ ....,""" ....... "'P='. :.-·~.:.· - Bunn1ng Still I Feeling Hostile, Duels Dodgers _ PHl!.ADELPIIlA (AP) -lo any spor~ )'OU don't want to give the other guy added incentive, bot rthe Los Angeles. Dodsen are up a1ainst just that . when they face Jim Bunning tonight. . The Dodgen:, pelted by t h e Philadelphia Phillles Monday night, J().l, send Joe Moeller, 4-4, to the mound agaiast the 31-year-old Phillie right· hander with an 8-t record. Bunning is an ex·Dodger, _and he was tPiappy last fall wl\en the Dodgers ca.At him o{f after he compiled a 3-1 record in seven weeks with the team. '"We didn 't part friends," he !laid. "1 feel like I want to show the Dodge~ 4;)0. '·"'· .I •.m. J ...... ....... 1\:11 ...... managemtnl that I sWI have a lltUe oa the ball." 11 that aUitude isn't e.augh. consider that Bunhing could jOin the legeridary Cy Yoong In the record books if he triumphs. Young was the only pitcher to win at leut 100 1ame1 ln botb major Jreacuea. But Bunniq, wiru1er of 118. American League games, hu t9 triumphs in the 1enior circuit. Home runs by Tony Taylor, Der on Johnm and Larry Hisle pcweircd the . Phillies over the Dodgers Monda y night and sent left.-huder Claude Osteen .to . his eighth defeat. .' Osttta, who has railed in five attempt~'· to gain vlcOOry No. 12, was shelled for 10 hits and six runs in five innings as Los Angeles fell fo r the third time in four game s on the road trip. Woodie Fryman, 7..fi. picked up the victory although he left the game ht the sixth. Dick Selma llihul out the Dodgers on one hit the rest of the way. We.s Parker's ninth homer. • two-run ihot in the sixth, was the big_ blow for Los Angeles. · The Phlls and DodgerA have splil IG meetings but the defeat was 'the fir~l for Los Angelea thla season at Connie Mack Stadium. LOI ANGll.11 l'HILAOILl'MtA ••rllrtil '•• r ~rtll WHl1, u • a 0 0 T Tl ylor, 2' .S J 1 2 Mot1,!I •2 20H~rman,n •Sl11 W.1'1rllitr, lb .I 1 2 J MOf\tY. lti : ~ ~ ~ K..co. rf • o o O O,J.,.,nson. 1• Gr1blrti'wlu,Jli • O 1 1 81"D""'t, tt 3 0 2 J s1rtm0rt, 1b l o o o 1t ,$1on1. I! ' • 2 l o ,._,II OOOOH!1l1,d 5122 Sudakb,,.. o o o a Mlty1n, r J 1 O I llluutn. ~t J O O o Fry....,.n, ' I t l I : (r1wtord,'111001!91~,, 100 0 TorDOrg, ~ 2 I t I H1li.r, r I 0 I 0 °'~ " 2 ••• L"*""• Ho 1 O I 0 T,._11 32 l I J L• _...,.._ ........ ,pl'! .. 17 101JIO 100 lltlt --4 -1• 04X -10 . Rookies Suffer Charge~s' Axe With a wtioleaale chop, the San Diego Cblriirs' guillotine. cut into the squ1d1s rookie roster over the weekend at the <J\lrltn' UC Irvine training camp. A to\111 pf 15 first-year ~pe.cts was ~ on waivers, three of lhem draft dlolcel. nae trio ot draftees rele•sed lnchfd~ aetenaive end Tyrone Caldwell ( 14lh, South Carolina Stile:), running b •ck Gene Chlkla (ISth, Texas-El Paso) and auartt.pla<ekld<« Da'ld Sanks (17lh, iAuintlle). ' • lWT1 lf'llOkl. 1 toeeer style kicker ·(wtlll either !oot) from LA Vall~y Collole lloa, been lddod to Ille oquad • NOide d.11•.-nl.1.1 a result ol. a SJ>':Ciil draft. Mil eddlUon )eavu 28 yearhn1s _......,.far<.penn.ont11l berths on Ill< a..&<n· Sixth draft pkk Biiiy Parks, a wide Netiver from Cll State (Long Beach) • w1lk~ out of camp last week .0 peraona1 problems, was slated to return to team workout.. at UCI today. !Ind ..,.di Cllorlle Waller thln<i lhe Jurqp roctits are getting on the striking P*ant will• prove very beneficial to Ille Jlrl\1'...-PllY"'•· -• W.llti' says, ••O)e co nc en tr 11 led coechinl the rootit11 are receiving Is r! to coll -· 0( ror&!J!.11. '}!'"IN tlJelt jobl." I .. Yankees Like "N~Y of ·old: . . . . ' ~apitalize on Foe's Errors ' By ROGER CARLSON OI 1M Diiiy 1'1111 Sllfl . . ' .l)uring lht last segment or glory years for the . .New York Yankees, the lMS.1964 era ~ produced 14 American• League titles, the one -Steady intangible i'n· gredient that characterized · the AL ppwethoul)e was the Yanks' ability to .capitalize on opponents' mist'akes. A mental lapse, a missed signal ·or -some other seemingly small error ·would snowbalf Md before it cou ld be rectified. the Yanks would h'ave another victory in hand : · , Monday night the Goth1uTI City ln· ·vaders dealt lhe California Angels a S.2 defeat, dro~ing fhe host! six run games behind A:nerican League ·'west leader Minneso~ .. And it was.,a schoolboy trick that 'tucned the tide in New York 's facto'r' ..:... aTid ·.once the Yanks earned that advantage -ii was all over. The Angels try alitain tonighl against the Yanks with Greg G:u:re~t '4-1) scheduled to hurl for California wh ile New York manager Ralph Houk has named ex-Giant Mike McCormick for &tarting moun<91uties. . 'Mond.11y'1 crippler came.· in lhe bottom of the ntpth fz'ame when Gallfornia had. put a pair of runners on base ln a .2-2 stalemates before 9,097 :it 11* Big .\. It was here that former Dodger Gehe ' . ' ' Michael raced over rrom short.stop to tag out pinchrunner Jarvis Tatum with the hidden ball trick. The stunner left the Angeh with a runner oo first with one out anc:f they promptly went down in order. Manager I;.efty Phillips of ).!:'le dt:poS;ed California crew, looking &a:newhat like a person slugged in the stomach foUowing the defeat, was disgusted with his· team's nirfth,inning showing. "You golla locate the . ball before you gel off base. Until he (the pitcher) gel! up on that rubber, you can't do anythilig anyway. "You know we 're going lo bunt with runners on first and second and no ouLs. Everyone in t~ park kriOws that," grumbled Phillips. The Angels field boss equivocated to a ce.rtain extent on his displea~e with baserunner Tatum. Tatum was running for Jim Spencer, who led the Halos' hitting attack with a pair of safeti6 oH of winn ing chucker Mel Stottlemyer (10-9), • ''I've never seen ii• (the bidden ball tr1ckJ in the American League al)d I can 't recall the last time I've ever 'seen it in the major leagues. '. "But you can't make mistakes. If you do you're going to gtt beat," sumrited up Phillip~. · It was, however, the second time this &eason and the rourth successful sandlot maneuver over the Jut two campaigru for the Yankees. The Yanks .sewed up the verdict ln the top of the loth. Inning when theY comb ined four consecutive walks and an infield out after a one.out single . celinquish.ecl by losing pitcher Rudy May. The hard·luck May had pitd1ed out of three jams earlier in the game but lady luck slapped him in the face a'gain -this time when three r.elief pitchers failed to locale the plate, forcing in the winning pair or markers with. free pas$es. NIW YOlllC CALll'OltNIA •llrllrtol .. rlllrM Cl•kt. 7b J 1 I 1 Alom1r, 1b • 1 0 O M......an,c •1211111f191,rf 4011 WMlt,11 JIOIFretOll,u tl l l titer, rf • l 1 2 O "·"""""• If • I 1 I J.£0!1, 1b • 0 1 I 5,.,..;itr, lb • I 2 I Murc1r, ct o O O I J,T1111m. rt O I 0 O Htn1111. lb • 0 I ' M<Mullltl. lb J 0 0 • IC..,...V, lb 0 I 0 I J.,,.,.tone, d • 0 l 0 W-1, cl J I 0 I AlCIMI, c 4 I I I Mkll.ttl,u JIOll.M1y,. JOIO SI0411tmyrt, ' 2 I D 0 T .M11r,..y, P 0 I 0 I tloy!..1 0000 E,FW\er, p 0 0 0 0 vou.p11 1 00 0 Tot•l1 J2 5 1 S Toi.11 lS 2 5 t Ntw Y-002 OOI 000 J -S (111'1.,.,,le 000 002 000 0 -' E -Mkn••I. OP -(1!Horni.I l t.0 8 -N~w Y&rli t, C•lll<or"lt t . 211 -Htnltft, J. Elllt. S - Stot!l41myt1, Mlcr...I. MtMutleft. IP M It lit. II JO sionltmv•t 1w,1 .. t f 10 5 2 1 2 • 1t.M1y {L,)-1) t·l/J 1 • 1 • T M11<"'V '0 0 I 1 D OoVlt 001020 E.l'"ll~1r Ill 0 0 O 0 l P(I -Alt .,_, Time -2:$1. Alltndtnt• -t,Of7, FARMED OUT -Andy r,les~ersmith was sl~ning autographs of admiring Ahgels fans Sund ay at th e · Bi51: A. Tod.ay he's a member ,'of the Hawaii Island·· OAtLY .. JLOT' l'lllNI Wr lllklllf'll KMlllll' ers a!ter bein,I{ optioned out Monday. The former \Vestern High (Anaheim) pitcher has been plagued by rib cage injuries. WATCHING HIS WEIGHT IS) -Mark Soderber~. former Marina High basketball tilar, works on a weight training pro-- g'ram at UC Irvine this sumrner as he girds for his junior yea r and hopefully a startina: berth on the University of Kentucky hoop squad. Sports ID Brief $1,004 Double Payoff; No Cha.nge in Grid Row LOS ALAMITOS -For the second night in a row aod the thin:! tt.ne du.ring the meeting, a huge payoff resulted in the nfghtly double at Lo! Alamitos. Afte r Satun:lay night's double returned $948.60, longshol bettors were given another thrill Monday evening when the double paid $1 ,004.4(), fourth largest in the history of the track. Earlier in the meeting was the highest double payoff in track history - $1 ,199.:W. • PHILADELPHIA -The National Fool· ball League exhibition seaaon is only 11 days away and there Is nn sign that either the club owners or the Players A&sociation Is ready to give in the st.tlemated pension dispute. The owners' negotiating committee and the aMOCiation represcnt&live.s met under the watchful eye of federal mediators four hours Monday. lf there was any proR:ress it wasn 't evident on the grim faces ol the parUclpants. • AIR FORCE ACADEMY, C.Olo. -Th• U.S. Olympic Committee selected 12 col· Iese and ~mateur bisketball players Sun· day to represenl the United Slates in a 12-ga:ne European l01Jr scheduled for August. The tour will include two games each In Finland and Poland and an eight game series throughout Ru:55ia. Those selected include Cyr!J Baptiste or Creighton University, Neb., and Steve Erickson of Oregon State University, both 6-feet-JG-inches for center ; Paul Westphal of USC, Louis Nelson of the University of Washington, -lirt Williams of the U.S. Army, and Jim Brown of Dartmouth, for guards. Selected as forwards were Tom Mcftfillen and Dennis Wuycik, both of North Carolina University, Chuck. Terry of Long Beatil City College, Calif.. Bob Nash of the University of Hawaii. Joby Wright ()f Indiana Unlversi· ty , and Julius Erving of the Uni versity of Massachusetts. • Despite the player strike and owner lockout, the Los Angel es Rams are ship. ing up -40 rookies under head coach George Allen and more than 4() veterans in Long Beach under Ule tutelage of "coach" Roman Gabriel. L.om;bar,di Coaching Future in Doubt With the first preseason game against Cleveland less than two weeks away ()n Aug. 7, Gabriel continued leading practice sessions Monday for Ram veterans al Cal State (Long Beach). "We don't ha ve that much ti~ left before the first game," the vtleran quarterback said Monday as he o~ered the players to return for another prlct.ice in the afternoon. "We're on two-a~ay now." WASHJ,NGTON \UPI ) -Washi!ll(tln Redskiris coach Vin~ Lombardi un- derwent )lis. =teCOMd opera!ion in a month Monday. Whtthe:r h.e. would be able lo reJUme autle:s as coach this year re· maincd in doubt. . Lombardi, 57, reentered~ qeorget.own Universli1 Hospttal I withobt A<tYance notice 1Monday. He .was operated on b14-tOC nature of the new su rgery .. w11s nOt dfselo~. Doctor~ repbrted he '•s "tt:stlng comfortably." A team-of-surgeons rtmQved two feet, of Lombardi's Colon June 27 after difCO\o'try' ol what they de.,cribed •• a l'lteminsly benign twnor Jn the 1b-·domlnal .,.1. ' ~ l ...ll __ )..<iml>.ardl, • builder of champiONhlp dynasties at Gree.n Bay be!ore comlng to 0 lhe ·Redskins lftst season, had been recuperating st home from the earlier two.hour and !&.minute operation. LombMdi attended a ~ c r I m m a g e bttw~n Ult rook,~s of the Redskins and lhe Balti more Colts th Baltimore Sunday but has done no ct\IChlng since surgery. As etecutlve v\ce.prt~idenl of the Redskins, he al so Attended a meeting pf the Natio.nal , Football Leaaut owners · in New York last week to discuss the de.adlocked labor dispute with the NFL Player~ Association . While Jncap"f td, he n•m•d -1u1 .. tint Rill Austin 1.s ''interlm coach" of the Redskins arte.r the team's rookies reported to tralnin~ camp at Carlisle, Pa., earller this month. l!otA·ever. he daclared hi3 int ention of belnjl on hnnd at CartlJ;le whcnt'Vtr the con1r11ct dl ~pute With the players was sell l d and the veterans reported. Club prci;ldc.nt 1'.:d'A'ard B e n n e t t W11li11m3 notified I c a m offlcfa.~ in Carli sle Monday that 1.onlbard i had reentered the ho1JPl l11l but according t.o a club spokesman gave no other det41ls or pas.sible compllcatlons or treatment. After the exploratory surgery in June, Lombardi's team of 1ur1&"1nR 11ld they believed lh"i tumor lh<y found wu benign or norunallpenf. Re!!iults ol m o r e ex- tenslvt labOratory tesb wen never an- nounced. Lombardi left the hospital July 13 and has been at home with his wife, Marie. On one or two occasion! he ha! appeared In local res\llurants •l lunchtime but has not attempted to take up active coaching duties aaaln. He watched the BalUmore rookie game from lilt press box and told newsmen he was "much better, thanks." However newsmen said he showed • loss or wel1ht and l!Qmc tiredness. After the Redskin rookies !Ost, Lom- bardi took an elev1tor to the buement locker room and talked lo the 1qu1d brlel1jr. • BRIDGETON. N.J. -Leon "Goo11e" Goslin. a member or baM:halrs Hall of ,.~.11me. was in fair condition Io day following removal of his larynx at Bridgeton Hospital f\,onday . Goslin , 69, enltred the hospital Jul.r I . C'fO~lin, A outrlelder, wA!I named to the Hell of Fame in 1968. He began his bif league career with t h e Washington Senators in 1921 and he al• played with the St. Louis Browns and Detroit Tigers. Goslin wound up his career In tllf! majors wiLh the 8'natorii In H131 11nd ;tomplled a .316 lifetime batting averace. ,1, ' JIB League Killian, Baird Top Final Cage Stats Final DAILY PILOT statistics of the Huntln&ton Beam s u m m e r ba.sketball league reveal Marina High's KJpp Baird and (hrona del Mar's Don Killian as the in- divklual scoring leaders. Baird, who led bis Viking mates to an 11~ season en route to the league title, was the total points leader with 206 counters in 11 games, good tor an 18.7 average. Hls average was second only to Killian, who blistered the nets for a 20.3 average in FV Cagers In 55-44 Triumph Fountain VaUey rolled to its 10th Orange Lelgue summer basketball victory Monday night, downing Troy, 5>44 at Orange High. Costa Mesa woo its scbedul· r:d game by forfeit from Pacifica. Dave l:.ynch and l. e n Shibata paced a come-from- behind Fountain VaJley vic- tory. The Barons got off to a slow start, trailing Troy, lZ..10, alter the first quarter, and after scoring only five points in Ule second eight minutes, fell behind 20-15 at the halftime break. But with Lynch and Shibata guiding the fast break attack plus a press that became ef- fective in the third quarter. Fountain Valley took a 33-30 margin al the eod of the third period. • \Coach Dave Brown's team continued it! hoWbooling pace In the final stanza, outscoring: Ttoy 21-14. Lynch finished _ with 14 points to claim high-point honors for the game. Shibata followed with II . The victory pu.t the Barons Into a first' place t.le with Qrallge. Both have 10-3 rnaf'b. Fountain Valley coocludes the Orange summer loop state Wednesday night, f a c i n g Pacifica at 5:45. Costa Mesa ends its Orange summer slate a g a I n s t Anaheim in a 9 o'clock outing. l'OUNT41M VALLE'!' UJI h II M'- J • 1 ' $ l I 11 l •• 1 l l l 1 l l • 1 1 0 1 ' J • • l• , 0 , ' 21 ' J JS ·~· Shlt.11• Krlt11NI .. .,._ .. ~ W•lktl" L~llCI> llovl• Tol•I• TltOV I~) h ft "' i, "!ltn J011D L~IO. 1001 C11Mr 2014 Plilel 4011 LlnMnle!cler ? : g 1 WolfmtlY..-~lbll 101• Htl""ll" 210 4 Kln9dom 1 O I 1 T011l1 11 2 J <l'4 M-" O\llrlWI Founltln VtlleY 10 l 11 21~J TrOY 12 I M l~ Deep Sea · Fish Report Nl!WPOlllT CArl'I 1.111411 .. 1 -"' 11111ltol t llblCOl'f• 1' blrr•tllCll, 1 ,U llorllto, 1Q blU, 2 fltllbul, I bhJe f111 turwi. (01,,.,.•1 Lodi•! -1u -!era: u J blrr1c11C11, U bonito, "'1 Nu, 1 u lmon. lU rod! tocl. 11 llallbl/T, 1 Hrit cal. SAM CLIMEMTll -Uf •ritl'"' S71 blu , l wllllt M'I 111115, JU bof!lto, 11 blrrlt(llCl1, 2 llallbul, 71 mm,ret b LONO • CM l"KUk S..ntitlll ... I -lllf •ntltr1; 50 blrra<ud•, m c1llco bit•• SOii blue blu, 4) r11<:k ,.cod. 1 llatlbvt, (,...,.._Ill L•IMll"91 -1JS •"11111"11 I 1lblt ore, 114 btr· ' rt('Udt, 1,10) t•llco bits. 1 bonllD, 102 rock cod, 1 llallbul. 1«> blu . 11timen1 ,.1.,, -n '"'""1 1311 bfi:~AL •EACH -10 eritlrr1r 1,11S blu . 41 btrrlCVd1, 17S rock cod, 11 ll•llbul. l51rse -nt 1ritltr11 lll 11111. lt t19rt.aidt. 11 twillbllt. •t!'OONOO -110 .,,.1on; '11 bt••• t M llllUI. JU blllt bin. Sttot -11 • .,.1en1 1t 1'16Jlbl.JI, n mKktrtl, ' •73 roc:t cod. SAN ,.ED•O (ftfloll $1. °"""'' l•i -11 -ler11 JO a lkO blu, 1 llanKUll9. ll'O blue Mn. n rect • cad. :ro mK'lttr... 1"'-'1 '-•"""'' -tt •f!llltf'IJ ~ btlrrlClldl, t7 ulko ' blH, J01 Nlld btl1. 2 wtltlt IN • blt1. lt roct cod. ?..O bklt blllt. MDllllD •Al' IV11'1'1 LIM'ln1 -n •ritler1; I u lmof!, 11 tll!ll cod, 1,2'1 nick «Id. Ill• SI-I -Ml .,,.ie, .. 11 llflf cod. 1.1 .. roU cod. 10 games. Fountain Valley's D a v 1 Lynch bad the Individual high game 9COl'e for Orqe Coast area teams with a 34-point output in bis final outing agalmt FAfi!on. The Banm fmisbed Jn a tie for secon:I place with Hun· Ungt.on Bead>. with an 1-3 mark. 1be only oeber atta player to score in the 30s in any siogJe 1ame waa Killian, who tailled 30 In a winning effort against La Quinta early In cimlit play. NUMTINOTON llACN Ll!A•UI COJtONA DllL MA• fWI I fl ti ....... II 6f IS 21J :M.J 11 .W 24 U2 1.1 II 11 12 .W 4.f 1011U41 •.I ,, 14 10 31 3.t II • • 11 1.t t I I I( 1.5 ,.,101., 5 • I t 1.1 41 571.7 EOIS0ff2 ts.II o I 3.0 '"""'"'' 11 7l .56 11" 17 1 11 lt .S lU l•.t II 3' 11 M t.I llQlltS l.I J21116Jt.J 101116$,.!l II 17 7 41 •S.7 11SJ1!1.S • 2 I J 1.J 1 11 11.5 V LLl!Y l•JI I II ft 11t ...... u n .:i 111 u.t 11 53 SI I 10.1 11 lS • • 1.1 6 ti 11 •1 1A •22•»•.1 ' 1• 11 "' J.1 1 116 ... ,., I 11 ' 40 J.lt S•l 21•.1 2•1IOJ.O IJ0,6.G I t I ' •.O 1 1 I J 1.1 1012 2.1 l!ACl>I fNI .. .. " . . .... 11 1' • 21JO 11.1 11 " ,, ,,. 11.J ' 2J 4 ,~ 11.4 • ..0 22 1112 11.7 112l•7'11A 113'1fflS2 10 21 n n 1.1 1 101ow1.s S•f 2142 J 4 2111.0 MA•INA 111.a) ... " ........ ••lrd 11 fO 2• 20I 11.r Mlll1r 10 31 26 II I.I 111111 10 l!i 16 .. I.I S.rlder• 11 2' 11 n '·' aoa.o.n 11 '1 lS y~ J.I w._,. 11 20 lt » •.s Mt.Giii,_ I 11 f 4$ S.• Thurm 10 11 I « '·' lltwlldl t 11 s •I• •.S LK' 10 1 1 II l.J WllSTMINST@lt 0·111 ... fl "' ...... I )0 30 tlO U.e 11301,n12 1112 1nu 11 26 11 " "-6 11 11 27 54 S.4 ' 17 17 Jl f,6 II lJ 20 50 S.I '"l"j·' 1 s 21 •• "!~' ... J .~ f l~ J·.i J~2llt:! • Sea Kings ' Down Tar Poloists Corona del Mar took over sole JIOiSt!SSion of first place in the Costa Mesa Recreation Dept. AAA summer water polo league J\.1ooday night wit h a 5-3 victory over Newport Harbor in the Orange Coast College pool. Both teams came iato the game with f..O records. Kurt Knunpholz led the Corona victory wilh three goals while Jim Smith had a pair for Newport. In other AAA league .action Monday night, L a k e wo o d downed Estancia, lN; Sunny Hills ~ged Garden Grove, 9-8 ; and Costa Mesa whipped Leng Beach Wilson, 14-ti. Ron Mislolek paced the Costa Mesa victory with si x goal! whlle teammate · Mike Beal tossed in four. 1be win ran the Mustang!' record to ..,.J and put them into a second place tie with Newport. In the Estancia loss, Dan Kent had two o( the three Eagle goals. Meanwhile, in AA play, San- tiago kOOcked off Buena Park. S-5 in a battle of undefeated league leaders: Fount a I ti Valley tripped Corona de.I Mar, JU; and Troy topped Westminster. M. ln the Fwntain Valley win, Dino Mariethal tossed in nve goals to spearhead hLs tam's attack. Troy, down M entering lhe final quarter, out1cored We!ltmlnster, 5-0, to get Its first victory in four ouUng1. Westminster is now 04. 1 TIM14IY, Julr 2&, 1'70 DAILV PILOT Jf. ' Mustang~, N~wport · ! ().own Tourn-ey Foes · Costa M.. and NewpOrt Hut>or ldnnced Into the 1t· """' round ol the -·· br1t:MI ol the M .... Newport aumnMr buketball toorn1- ment ~ nl&bt as each team pQlled I vlctocy It FA!ancll 111"1. Costa Mt11 took advanlage of 1 foun-polnt second quarter by PICUlc1 to down the Mlrinen, 5M7. N 1w port Harbor overcame a JO.point first -deficit .. trip Loa ~,.17-67. In. tOnlPt'a Kt.Ion, Costa Mesa will fact EUncia at 7,15 In one qultlet'flnll Utt while Newport and Mat.tr Dei will cJW at l :SO. Estancia and Mater Del drew firll round byu. Wednetdly ' night, P1elfica will meet the Mater Oei· Newport loser at 7:15 and Los AmigOI will face the !'slancia- Costa Mesa"loler 1t 1,!0. Action will continue ne,t Monday IJ1<I 'lllesday (Aug. °H) with the championship 1ame aet for Wedne.sday, Aug. I II 7,15. Foothill Nabs Title Tritons Finish In Mond1y lllght's c..ta Mua-PaclfJe1 contts~; the winners trailed 20-14 at the tnd of the first eight minutes of play, but Pacifica hit a cold streak In the second quarter and Mesa rolled to a SI-14 halftime iead. • The Mustangs malotal.ned control of the game tbe rest of the way. Leading the Costa Mesa •l· tack WU Scott Friestad with 18 polnta, Including lt from the field. Doug MacLean was the only other MUJlaog In dou· ble nsures (Ill. Meanwhile in the Newport vlctory, Taras Young con· tinued hl8 hot summer pace. collecting 25 points on 11 field goals and three free throws. SECONO YELLOWTAIL -Sixteen-year-old 'Warren Snyder of El Toro uhi· bits tho 12-Ib. yellowlail which he landed Tuosday morning on a half-day boat off the barn. It was !lie second yellow of the 1euoo for ao angler llyinJ bi• luck out ol San Clem .. le sporlfisbing. · Third in Tour11ey By BOii RO'l1I Of .. Dlllr ..... lflfl San Clemente copped third place In the FooWII lll&h SCbool 1 u m m e r buteU>all league, defeatinc the Sai;itlago Cavaliers. 57-42. took 1 tremendous comeback. on the port « the Knights. Behind the nobouoding Ind defensive play ol.. center Paul Zyskowski, the Tillers secured a 7M5 advantage with 0:46 repialninf. It was the fourth straight Mesa-Newport Lea~e ouW,g that Young had hit over ~ polnta. Youn1 has sccrtd 28. 20, 21 and 25 In the last four games. Bill Jones was the· only other Newport player In twin Ugures with 10. c••• MeJt un Alamitos Racing Results LOS ALAMITOS aaSULTI MMM-,, hlY 27, 1'11 CIMr • '•" l'lltlT iltACS. JSQ 1'•f'il1. Mt ldtll I YNr old1. ClllmllW, "'"If 1111111. SI.,.• T~I Vl>t f"-J M.211 111.IO I.• "n"'t Cgntrol (Ll~rnl l . .O '·• Tl..,. T• fir• !Adair) 2.• Tlnlt; .1•sn 1. ....... ''" -Mlltlt crwo .. tr, Sl•rr• l•ntle, Trr.llY DMldY, Ct Ot Vlrio Dirt, Dick"' Irr kr, Bit O' .. ,, f'uellltt. Scr1lt hed -Miid 111 Y-E)'9, l'lr ltOY•I. Lii Orbit, J-Clll1 llr. llCOfilO RAC•. CIO Yl rdl, 1 YMr ltldl 1nd uo. Cllfrl'llllt. P-t lO. Fllfhl lOf (Adllrl fl .ID 7.IO I.JI T-'•dt a,, (Wlllllfll 1.20 '·" Doublt H•.t'f ( ... r01119) 4.61 TlrM: .2MflO. Al10 r111 -Mklu•Hn, ltot1 Dao, •wt11fllll't' 1 Jt'oH, Str•-•• llobol TrMW<t. Goldlt WllCll. A_.. •lrttl- '°'• ScT•cl!lld ~&.fill Dll'MIY •••• '"'"' ~·t~ ~tt •'19t_. _u,..,i. ,., .. NIMfT\"'I' OOUILI!, t ·,,..,. 'r1- YM a '· P:V .... 1n, 1'1N lllH.41. TMl•O t.\CI. "° y1rd1, MlllOM I '"' .... ,..,, ... ""'· Kowlllt IL.litlla111) Tu SW !Smllfl> 11 SOI"• !Od (Kon11) Tlmt: .1.1/10. 1.• IA 1.JID ...... 1.111 •.~ AllO ,.., -Mb• Tiny W1lcll. KIY'I SP11r, WM ww. Tom'• lld, lold S!Ollr, Miii Go •Id, llold lrlll!. Scl'llkf*i -Ollr , .... , Glrl, o (;mtl, Toktt1'1 Chick. l'OU•TM aAC•. t19 YltVf. 1 ~tll' oJth 11111 Up. Cl1lmlne, l"urtl Ila. Tito Dtrdy (lOftlOl'lt l• 12...0 ,_.., SJI Ju11t11I• (K1nl1I '·" 1.• lu""''' W•rrtllr (l5111ksl )Al llrTM: .4641/10. ""'° r1n-ltw11Mt"1t.,, w111111,.. Nevr. J.\_r. ~ Shol, Golden ,.llMJo. ,.lf'tt. c._1tor. ~ Scr1tc~l•r Ev•"-ltlft McC•l'• JHll'I WI", MIHll Fltp. . . •1,TM UCI. u0 y1r•1. 2 ""' oldl. c11\mlnt. l"llrM 91100. Wlltll !Ioctl." (Slr•UH) 10.JI 4A J ... Cotmlt IAPDdf>Ul , 3.• I.GI t.""•'1 Mlftc tHt rdll'llll .. •.OI Tlt'rMI: .lt-7/lf. ,. ' AIM (•fl -Oklt •1t Sfl(•t· R1t11 lt•u. ChurrllM. Cl•"""'• l'lldl:•, Jl1nld Tin,, "'°"II' ~ ,.,~ un Shlrbl,, ' " krtldlolll -l.ltlllll\llll •If. Ml• Unl!Jl!Jort, rtldtlll' Nwtll, Oft Tldt.._ SIXTH llACL l10 Y•l'd•. ,,,..., _. 1nd ...... CJlltr!llll. ""'*-IT90. W1r 0.. l"o¥wfY (Kll11ll) 4 .• I.• t.• J•l'I S1111 (W,11111) I.• J.OI l'l1111v H01te11 (Str•1111I s.• T1"'41: .•1 Fill!. AIM rtll -ThfH l'OI'" .t.n, Sii lu M11, Ll111t MIH lk>•, Clli.f 111'1 .... , Lll"I l~t l 'ft. kr•tthld -0.... S..-lt!t, l1r Dtw. 1'1nc' Wiiiow. lllulH ll. /'ti K<•ldlt'I. JIVl!NTM llACI. 5't v1rd1. J ve•r oldl •NI UP. All-•nc:h. """' tfOCIO. Mktwll' Mlllltl CLlph1ml lt.611 JM L• MollM (A~ctl 4• I .• Glad L1411 {Acllllr) JJI TllM! .211 Fiii. At11 r111 -Quid!, M0111h, ....., n. L11~1. Go Ctlfd'I Goo. Scr1fched -Wlltrrd s--. • ..,.., Tl1111et, Mr. 81r'Mlt, Df"lll. llONTM •A.Cl. «>II Y1rM. i Yllf old1 lfld 1111. Alltw•nc:et· ,.urH 124111. lllonlh' rtockl'lte t••'*', s.tO i.• 2...0 1(1 ... ltocklt (Sfl'llltl) f.111 4 ... lllt!'flrodltt CDr..,..rl J.1' Time: »-l.110. AIM ''" -llo!llC:t.IM iltltt. V•lllftl ,.rll'ltl, Lint l't1Mr, Mr. Llttlt Olck, Gt L.lmb. Hill> ~. lteM Cl'lerll ••r, .. " 9f .. Frl•I" I I 0 II MltLeen f 1 I 11 Mowt 11S1 Los Almnltos Y11111W 11 12 M1dlloloelle ) I ( 1 llliftn 1 t 1 t SlmJIMll I 0 I ~· Sw.tlltnd 2 I 4 S Racing Entries Mooday nllht Foothill, the regular-aeuon champ, won the tournament tollon by edl· ing the Tustin. Tillera, 71·70. The Tritons of. San Clemente outscored their opponent, in every quarter to 1ain a con- vlncin& win over the team wbk:b they tied with for third During the final -the Knights'· full-court preSI look its toll and Rob ·Tuvell hit the winning bucket when he put throuah a zo.footer with 11 aeconm left. Hors! 1'0 ' 0-1 l OI• T.t1!• . 15 I 14 9' t ftrt I~ •u•rltn Cm.ti Mtw u 17 n I~ P'tcklu 11 • II 11....iJ LOS ALAMITOS •NTltlll '01t \ll'IDNISOA'I', JULT it, lt11 -Wit N T CL•Alll & ,AIT, ,IJtlT l'OST 71• ,.,M, NIGINTLT DOU•LI Olll I~ a in.I •o1.c•s. IXACT,t, OH IUNtM ttACll ,lltlT •ACI. lSO yt rt s, M11dtn 2 , .. , 01111 br ... 111 C•t!I, Clllmlno. ,.urwo 11100. O.lmlno price U5Gll. C~kkl V•llrltl11t CLJpM111J "' "' "' "' "' '" '" ,. Tri•"'• 8119 {Wiisen) Dtck Till ltw..,,_rl T""" II'•-CAdllr) Tn•" ,_ (Adllrl ._nit. TOl'l't 011111 IPl'lllY ,_ IW•henl V•ln Rt0trds CY111t1 I "•rr'1 P'llCflol CW.1111 Ofl Oedd~ lP'""'I I'll a TNt (Wrlllltl "' '" '" '" '" "' '" '" "' "' "' "' '0U•TM lllACI. a y1nt11. , ~r ~ •IW ""· Cl•lll'llllf. ""'" 11100. Cl91rnlnl "1cl .... c111Nr111to smos !P'•rierl s,., C.ldl« 1••111<1) Ul'I Gt St l'l'I ICr.tlWI lodctl Mllllc CW11ten1 Sir •lltllt,.11 (WHHlll V1ll9y •\lffOiill {(efdoU) Wiiiow Gold f.....,lrl J11Mll 11111i.. Ir• tH1rn SIN'lfl!lfl' Miii (w.110 Hr ll-1 CL"*'11\l ". "' •H "' "' "' •H "' "' "' l'\l'TN IA.CL D1i ¥1"'1. I Y .. f olll1. Cllllml"1. ,._ 11IOll. Cltlmll'4 ,.m, &350f. 8r•rlll Cito tU......,1111 •• .,._., •Ir Soy fWH-1 L1nt'1 .. , LMy CAdllrl TrvlY .. Gt11ll (Smlllll 0.1<1 ••r Stir !il'tr...,1 ltNrlf> ~ti tC1nlou ) WM Wop Cro1by) .....nt c.t'boll ( .. ,... H..-.c11mdll JI/dpt !WtU1! a.v W•r Clllc (WMci!IO llXTM lllACI. ua Jlttll, ll old1. Allo'Mncn. ,.IKH usoo. lltll• 51MpY (C•rdal.•) CO. SIWIOPI< t~I Gil Ultt Jet IP•r...,I Sty Yft !Wrlgtln Fltlll'f Flnhll CWtllenl ... lk!ft Anot4 tWllHlll NlllYI Mul'IUal lllll~loll T-111 IAJGHal 9olll 0.iell ILlpllll'li Sir ••b N' 1111 CMIJ.rJ '" "' "' "' "' "' •• •H "' •H ., .. , "' "' "' "' "' '" •H "' '" "' plaet ciurlng the "''"'"" nJne. game schedule. Jumping out to 1n f..O ,lead before the Cavaliers tallied a fr<e throw with 4,14 Jell in tht opening It.ant.a, coach John Baker'• 1quad never allowed SanUaao to ret any closer than live points. Center Steve Kalota llld guard Crai1 Anderson paced the Triton scoring attack for the 1ame with 15 and. 14 points, but Brad Mt'Caslin w111s the Instigator' when S a n Clemente built 1tt early ad· vantage. The rangy forward acored sir of his team's first eight points and gra,bbed aevera.1 re- bound.a over the Cavaliers, who were handicapped by their relative lack of height. S...CllMMi. 1171 • • MCC1t lln ' ' l!lllroor ' • Kllol• • • -• • Andll"tllll • • L11111 ' ' Teti It " ' ltll!llM ••• .. • Oi11 • • Hllborl ' • Hlllt• • • ,... ' • l'l...,r , • Hull • ' .... • • EY•lll • • Ttltll " • '""'.., ........... 1111Ct-t. " " ,. ... -" " " " " ' " ' • • " • • • " • ' " " " " ' " • ' • • ' , • • • ' • • ' • " d 12 -~7 10-Q N-1 HllW 011 8Klltit cu ... ~II.I/Hf" ... ,_ ··-....... , ..... Yw~ G~"IOll Tol•I• ··-~;::. C1ri.t" lecn•• Ntleflll G1•clll lr•mbll• ""'" '"" ' "·" "' "' I t 2 , I I • •1 1 I I I t • • 1 I J 0 • 10 4 0 ' I I I J 2 . . . ·• 11J 12$ J 1 ' .• J01\l fJ L• Al'!ll .. IJ'I .. fl ,,. '" ' ' I ' • • J • • i I I• I ' • • , 4 , ' 1 • • 2 , , . . I I 1 ll 1 ' J 20 11 2' 11 JI "-"''~ ""'-:' t"''"'" 10 1• 17 JJ.-41 Lo1 Mlltol 20 t 11 1)-..11 Dial-your-own · Racing Tops Saturday Menu 111 ............ With McCulin and Kalota ,., clearing th• olfenstv• a o d ::; defemive bolrds, the Tritons 114 COllld aft'ard to relem their The 4th aMual f l,$00 cham-Bu< llO percent of the 1170 pioDlhip fOf ~leap racers tntries are !run Orange Olun· will be bUI Saturdly at ty 10 there 11 In ercellent CJnnce County Jntemational chance for • county drivet l'.!11 Llllt Lll(l(r (5171111'1) 111 Jlltlflf (Wiit-i 1111 Lt ulrt Gt MM Clmlt!IJ :~ SlfttY ow.it cc ........ 1 •» '" •M '" Golden West Wins Cage Title, 81~ 79 With Jim Ander so n domiha\illK the ICOrin( at.I the -·· Golden Wort College rolled co ils aevecth stniP.I win in lbe Rio -swnmer biilbtblll lea1ue M<May Digbt, clipping Rio Hondo, 11·'19, oo the losen:' court. The victory ~llnched lhe c.ircu,it crown for co.ch Dick Stricldin'1 Rustle('I. Golden west (7.(1) baa a three-iarne lead witb one conteai re- mainlnc. Anderson. who prepped " Rancho Aiamito< !llfh, """" in st points (II ' In the finl h1H) aod alto Unlnoted the boards, geltlng 21 retiow1dl. Golden West held ., decisive lead ah the way Until Rio Hondo began a su rae tn the fiDll minutes ol pl.ay. But key bntets ~y the w -Gree Kyle and c b r I s ..,,.._,.,, -Ille J\Ult!on In Ille lead. • '"""'-' ... 1he '"'"' other Golden lVeot player In double figures (II). Golden West is (.0.# •ktlt until Wednesday, Au1. 5 .tien it faces Cerritos 1n the ltlpe flnali at i1:30. aull'da ind 'ttt up numerous fast .break ailoru. Dive Dl111 WN the mJjor offensfve tbrelt for t ht Cavaliers, as he tJed Kalota and Anderson for the hilh mark in ~ gOlla with sir. 11t ·SanUago made one nm .at the Tlitonl late . in tf>6 first period, but a mini of Iii quick points put the Cavaliers in a position where they tra.il· eel by 10, 1 lead which San Clemente held at the in· term.Wion. RIOewey. to make the w1rmer•1 clrde. Qua'Ufytn1, bJiins at i a.m. World champion S t t v • with final8 slated to 1et uni:lcr ~ Carbone (Oowrtey) woo Satur .. way ·at 7 p·.m. day n i g h t ' s Profe86ional A total ol 1• dial-your-own Dragster Olamplomnip before bandk:ap driven are IChedul· an overflow thron& of 18,009 ed to drivt a vlriety ot stock at OCIR. and modified Vltllcle! lo this He deleated Tony Nancy yew's HancHcapper'1 Otam-(Sherman Oaks) In the final, piondlip. 6.81 sec-199.11 mph to a red o·t a I~ y o u r :. ow n racing lightirig perfdnnance of f.58 empbuises driver 1b1 11 t y sec-119.20 mph by Nancy. more than -·power with•1iii ___ ;;i;;;; ___ ;;;;;;; a dri~r able to determine INDEPENDENCE his own elapeed timt or ITAltT SMALL A.HD ••ow MIHTM. IACI. 1M ~•rft. I Y .. r 01111 •I'll l;p, Clllmlf'lll . """• QDOI. Clllmhll !llf"lol SUOO. Slowing down the action in the thild qulrter, the Tritons lldded three points to their advantage. The period waa Andenoa'1 lnOlt productive, as he pmered ellht paints. performance handicap. MD s•LLIM9-t,.All TUA~ 'Ibe main d i ff e rt n c e A koc••'"" 11r1t111 111twt 11 "°"" " ·~·,.n --~•·• drive-..., rrMtt -,..,i.-111. w, 11tto1 UCll.W \"V ..... ..-.... •<J •ll'lbltlow, -lflllllul lr\d1¥1d"'~ Tljllfll .. , (,.ll"ntrl ,.!Ytfll Cox CLlphl1t1) Olllbfl Doll IMfirl) Jflf•r• !Wit.II Lallftdllr ICl'Wllyl u..nct.r ICrllOVI v.n OltltJ , ..... ,,, ~ ,T'""*""ll ICMdl.laJ Gotlt •1r TOI tW1tHlll CINI hY _.., (lllllffl) °"*IY.., J~ IW.111). ... _ DMlcm.t IC•IWNll .. "'-l•r 'lll•lt fC,..brl 11111..,, c111,.. ,,1MMr1 Mklw•v Mllllt (l,J,1111!'1) "' "' "' '" "' '" "' "' "' "' "' San CJemente 6alanced its acoring over the final eight minutes, buildtnc a lead as lar1e at 19 pointl before let. 111 ting up and settling for a 1~ 51..ft win. "' ,,, .. Foothlll'a win over Tu$Un ls dialed-in to the ltartine 11ts1rou1 of 1111 lllcome '° rntodt system with the slower car ;::;~1:;' .. ~1 YOhl1911 ~II" •••Hk receivin& the areen light first. ~ .,. lllndltd '" • llw """"' • If a driver runs quicker than ;::.k " rovr '"'' '/.,,. 1....., v-- his rqtsterecl handicap, he i.s If' 10V •r• 11nc•••· 11 eood tMrKter by iri of ""' we11t '~Ir• c1111 11\COme, •rod disqualified v ue a e.n l1t1m.dl1t11v lnYtit • ·mod«111 .._~., -·t •-I of '"" l1111 ... 11tnd 1rod ·1~ 11J'C'-""' ' '(VrWd), e.tll iof' H'-1 lflttrYltw, Lut yur's winner WU Cf(IKt M,. All•ll. (213) ST 7.at71 OI Chuck Howar4 of. San Diego.,.,-_,._ ... __ "'•"-"•"•'•'·'".'.·-•· ... ' Major League Standings DEAN LEWIS NATIONAL LEAGUE Eatlllhhlol " L Pel. Pitt1bur1h SS 4.1 .550 New Yofk 53 4,1 .541 Chicafo 50 •• .511 l'hilod<lphia II II .474 St 'LtMi c 17 .424 Mcritreal , • 42 57 .124 ~ ,• . ' ""' DMll .. =.1 • 70 II .18.! .. 12 .571 Atlanta 41 51 .415 San Francisco 41 St .474 -~ 54 .<SS San. Dleao IO It .311 GB I • 7~{1 12 ~j 121•1 I.I\\ 21 22 21 30 AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore Detroit New York Booloo Cleveland Wall!inglon Mlonnola Aapla Oltl1J1<1 KaoRI City Milwaukee Chlcqo -Dlvllloo " L u 31 SS 13 S2 41 so 17 17 S2 IS 53 Weit OlvJ1I01 61 33 SI 4% 54 44 3& ll 3& 13 15 57 Pel. .no .Sil .531 .515 .17S .ISi .149 .SIO .!151 .:Ill .:Ill .Ill GB • t 10), 11\\ II • • 21~· 2111 !O AU.UST UICIAU SPIC JAL 1910 TOYOTA WAGON =-~ $1117 . Kona Field Reduced to 16 MIMIW'• ..... , MllllllMfl I. .. ltlmort I Nl!f'Ytrtt. ...... Z °'"' ....... ......,..,. . .,....., .. ._ ~ VOLVO A four·game block July 27 cut the number or bowlers for the rmals • ol the West (;Qasl Match Game EUmina- 1 Uana to 16 at Costa Mesa's Kona LantS. The finals ire set for Mon· ' doy night 11 the same site. Walt Block (Car s on ) ~ame lhe new Elims leader for the first time in seven weeks 1111 he fired an 825 t.o ru n, his 36--gamt total to 7~409 11nd a 50-ptn mar1in ovf!r se. cond-ranked Doug' John s on (Long Beach l. ~~r JOOilson came wiUlln one (• session of equaling the con· secutlve-•eeks-Jeading record of seven, held by Riverside'a Al Charlton. Charilon Jtormed from l2nd place wWI an 1117-block to land in loth and qu&llfy for the fhla~ f0< the fifth straight year. He's · also building up another record, having piled up II c.onsecutJve weekJ In the eliminations with tour nights yet to be ad d e d to the finals. Jn thlrd and fouflh plaet are Santa Susana's J a y RobinsOD (1 , 111 ) and Anahelm'1 Don Nordstrom (7.24t). In addlUon lo Cbarlloo, the other man OUUlde « the ~ Jt at the out.aet of Monday a scramble -Clyde IAcher (Dana Point) -lllOftd lhlm 11th lo tlth. Glen Nevins (Loo Alamllot) rolled a 2Se clutch 1ame In his final test to salvage a top ecM.k>u spot for him aner I poor lltart. Only two first-yeM men qualified (or0fonday'1 fin1I1 and bolh are southp1w1. Farrl•l Hinkle (Loa Angeles I and Gary Mldllon (S'" BU111rdino) picked up the fffth and atventh opol!. Nick Sllgallo (co.ta MIA) and Tony Grlnceri (Ontario) were dropped from the lop 11. T .. If I, Wiit lllO, C.r-1 .... J, Dlvt ~ ~ llH(tl J.»t J, Jrr ill_.,._, lenll av..... ,,,.. ._ Doll NDl'dtlf'll'll. A/llflllf'I 7J''1 '· ... """ Hli!I( ... I.A ,_., l, lfrM ""1111, Tlll!llO • ,,ltl 1. ~~-hn .. r111"1ll1111,111 I. Jtiwllllt LMM"11. ~ 1.1. •• ...., ---~ .. """. .... f;lfit II. Al Cl!W'lttlk lll'!Wr:ildt 7,111 Oihtf'•i lltl Nldt i11ttll9 f(111!1 Metal 7MI; lltl •• ,.,..,. llMll- 1111• ... ""' , ... ,. I "* ..,_,. U•llM Ml 11 OMi.nf lo.IMfl l•ttl, H.-. Yertc (McCINltfdl .,I ti Nlllft 10.,.. ,tit .. ,,, 1111111 Wlllllnf!M IN111n111 •I) tt Mll•tlllt• '°"""'" Int J.11. "41ht K•llM• CllV cor .. 11 WI ti CIW.lt (Nlllll'I IN), 1111hl Ml-I• (Kitt t-1) •t Cl1w11...-IMt.,.....1' , ... , 111111t o:.c;;IO (H9rlt11 '°Ul fl llHlll'llrt !Cutlltf' l~ ....... DEAN LEWIS 1966 HAUOI ILYD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Unla, '""'· & ~ Shop _.,,.,, °'*" Until I ''"" Mon<l•Y. /jlgbll t I ' . Orl@I• Counl7'• lariest and Moot Modern Toyota and VOi~ Dealer I • 1'70 DEMO $2699 142 1 ~r .. r•4I•, •••'''· 4·tp1M. IS.,. ••7401 1 7 TOYOTA COltONA ~In. !11411IO, Hffttr, "-'*'•tllt lrtlll. ~YI\¥ ll7J - $1095 • 18 OlllY PILOT TUESDAY TutsdU, J11l1 28; 1970 e DMrm Co•rt (C) (30) GJ Te Ttll tH Trvtll (C) (30) (>0) f'llll ,..,_, 1111•-" tC) (lO) 8) Clilldtit A..._~ (C) (30) a:os m ttit ~ .. ...,... (OO> ~ .. 11 @ @ ir.l""' (<) (30) (~) l I • ..I'll B• YoUrt." Two of Julil's llo~· -•8 If&"-fC) (to) Jerry Dunphy. l1itndl 11111 [1!1 J. W1qldof11 tOrll· · 8 e .... ..,..,._ (C) (30) J pt!• for her 1illlt wtlln Ctr., ii "... .,. 8CH Y• l• Dis? (C) {30) out of low11 with ftllll¥• ltll Ct111t, Row Marlt and Mor11 Cl DIM-lllH SllelW (C) 30) Boll ~ Amtimm 111•st. I R1msan b 'l)Otl!sJ!lff. 8 tii O'Qed; Mowlt: ~Al1•'1 O @Cl)fDAIC Melllie If Ille •• (rom11iet) '49-S1Mnc1r TrtcJ,I i"'"Mt:: ~---Jwlcll" (10 (com· .. KathtMt He....,•m, Ju"" Hollid1y. ldY) '70-Pltrict Mlallt, M•rtJ N,. ""w w1 I len, Connie StMnt, Hel'Mrt lol'll. : lom' £nil, D1vid W1yne, Jean A con 1111n tiits to outanuirt 1 ~•ttn. A couple &M1e1 a hlrmDll· croo•ed miltloniirt. Ma 'ril•ni•t• 11ntil fhoey lllart the\ m hrid fr..t SP. (CJ (90) Sine· ;. a.iJM oourtroo111 -1$ prv$tt11to1 1 er Fr1nk Si111tte •·· ...,... TeddJ Kolltk of Jt11"""11t, COl'!lldill• •llCI 4.ttnM 1ttornry. Jacki• Vtm!NI, sine• Din• v11try, 0 f ,,.., (30) authol' Sttf)htn Wb:lncr.., of "Rults e Tiit ~ (t) (30) !or CMot" Nd Jot111 Wtitl. 111111'1 •• Tn* (C)' (60) f1shian dnl111tr Ind •~hor of '1111 @Cl) Alt &uiq Mlwl (C) (30} Value of /llothln1'." ' 0) W T• ..._., (C) {60) ' •wur• ,.,.. (C) (JO) "Desert Jt11y Lewis, Klttn \11ltntine, Cb11· Dtttdi'fa... Six younple11 from 111 Callu, Blun lmap flllll. JerllSlltm lakt 1n arcllMOlaP:1I fD Tiii er... ,._ (C) (30) t1ip into lllt wilderness of .ludMI ''fl11re lavlel.'' A 11\Wy ef Ill• ,It dil "' widence of a •111 wtio, famout campoa•·c:ondllcior. In t111 timt of MOMS. dttnttd the (JO) fillllr F•ilJ (30) hraelltes on t~lr way to Can11n. G> LI C:........,, (SO) • ~(j)CIS Ntn (C) (30) t :DOlllD OO IDUCT_..,Mwic ' : (JO) Olh'Mcl U11ll•ltM (C) ([) NUii" (R) (CO!Midy) ·~ PattJ Duk, Jim tl1U, Jane Grw, , ':' C!) hlllle 1la bpmfll.I (30) W1rrlft 8trlinpr, BillJ Dt Wellt. A ~ GD Cllllpi11 Gour11111t (C) (30) t5-11ar"41ld 11" tifldl w~1tt11etk l:LS (JO) lfakllt (C) prowess 1 c.ompllutiall Ill Mr ,.,. son1I life. t.:• a IMC N ..... iCI (C) (60) a Dtrt ,,. I'.!) ""' • Vlrsi•\a ,, ...... ShoW (C) (60) Hu:=:'l'ltf.V:oNncitl~{.,.lllOlll, Gulllb tentatively sclledultd art f11n .Jlffries, BllddJ Mitt •M. Artie Shaw, John G1ry, Rebecc1 Belland ind SOtlftlf'l'lllt, and llkh Wiiia. James frtneiscus, John Uttlt. Chlmbw aa• Pet• 1'1stern1k.. ,a>•nf_... (CJ 160) (R) "Mon· Unit,,., CllM (C) (30) fe1ey J•u fatiwll No. 4.~ m lllf fevorit. Martitn (30} -... (30) OlltrllCl Ulltlmltld (C) (fl) rn,.,,., ...... (60> m,.... <GO> 0 (j) Hlllltl1Y·lri11klt7 (C) (30) t:lS (30) StllcW fll• (Cl fD I.ft fw tllt 711 (C) (30) !:JO 1J 9 (I) DI hwnW lllld L J. -(I) n. 11• ...,.. t30l <Cl T30l Joatr Gontnat DriM· 'OI II Wlltr ltttictl I silf'Y•.,.t built ' (30) ,...,. 111 Lithic (30) It hoLllld to thl 1xecutiwl fl'lllllloll i nd cm Notkin J4 (Cl (60) immtdilltlJ "'•• to milt J. J.'1 m IUlllll Dmtt lttPOrt (C) (30) tfforta to keep "" 1nl1111I. CID s.111 1tou '' Li•• (lO) G 111,.... (C) (30J EB ..... (C) (30) (JO) ....... (CJ 7:00 IJ CIS EM11itt1 NIWI (C) (30) CIJ llllliel 1 [llnffa (C) (3<1) G Mii's MJ Li11t? (C) (30)~· 1:4S (JO),._., Dat (C) GI""""' (30) l~DOfl ll!J(JlCIS - -t<I Qt hit 1M Cid (C) (.)I)) (Ml) ''Voic::M f19111 thl RLlldtn Un-~ Cl) ltlldid (C) (30) dtl'lfOlllld." Thftt R-.11 lftltlltc· . lutlt o.aibt tlMI 11~·tl ils-fD lop f• HMllll (:JO) Spinal unt In the Soriet Union. llrltchill( to rtliewe PftSSUre on 0 m Nin (C) (60) t111 verteb111 is stiown. fJ Im (I) Q) ._. 1fllllr, M.O. IBCIJT• • C.•r,11n• (C) ,,«)~(Jof1R> .,... ... 1 F•I (JO) C11ri1t Ult lhilll WM (C) (30) Jocklf." Jocitf °""' o.ltllfMr IUI· Cl bludl ii tht S• (C) (30)" fen 1 eotllPM beaUll of bi• dupe1at11 ltttl!lllb ID '°" MllM Eli> •I•• •rt. MIN {55) for 111 irllportd 11C1. Micllffl EDn.t llrl (C) (30) 811rftl.1 .. Stratbir llltlll 1U11t. ):!Oflll!J(IJ CIS I--(C) 01 ... (<) (60) .... lilt WllM H'a OWw" (R) 81 ....... , la (60) (__,) '.60.-Etnlt Kovaci. Dick =11111'1 (C) (60) (II) "A J1Mn. ODii lnotts, MllP Mom itl With Mtlt If. Hlllch· • .. .I • " - . ins,• dllil'llM If tM FIN ltl' tit IJOUll a U I en I Rt!Mtlllk. Inc. forFUt# island In 1111 hclfit:. &tTm Yw. Di6lll (30) IJ9(l)llllJ ....... -1111 ..... -(60) (C) (30) (R} "Pleue Dorl1 Givt lO:• e 111 ...... (XI) Mr Jt&nllit No More Wint." Jun-' ni• UKI lllr matit: lo prod11tt 111 ll:008DfJIBeCD•• <C> 1nc:i1nt bottle of win• thtl CIUMI :t • OM -..,... troublt tor 111 conc11ntd. · , G Call If .. W. (C) Dllhwlt C1•e (C) (30) Tt•m mW. C. fitW5 flll fettiul: .. J. B p I "liMr SM. I l9d:ll' M bttl tn1m 11 111 1m • rown, ame 1 .,... (-) '<l-W c o Id Ro,.,,. Yitlcenl Pnet, P1I Henry, · · di S. 8UfPSI Nlfldith. stefanli PDwtfl. Gloria J11n, lion Crrol. o lHI mm., .. Sq ... CC> too) ID ... s.111. •said CC> (R) "Thi"Dtidly Sin." Tht life of 1 G.J Cll fa (J)QI (() "'9t (C) younr postul1n1 nun 11 in d1n111 ttl Ow '111: "'Th• eo.tu1111 0. ~u. 1111 wltnH&td • SJlldicll• 1 1i1n•." Dof11ttir Wini tvttb. sll)'ln(. DMMIM $ Mwit: (C) '1M l'llou· ll:lS~ (l)CI ... }7: "lrMIUtl 9' tti1 u!ld ......... (comedy) ':i7-Goldtn Condor. DNn Martin, Ev• B1rtok, Anni Ml· 11:30. QI(()"'" lfitfll (C) ri1 Albtr1Mtti. A rich )IOU'lll Mitri· 19 9 (I) m ,._, C.. (C) tin lrrivts In Rome to buy I tloltl l• rtl'li111t (tolftr). ha Z.. G1bor i nd st1y 1round promoti11,1 mlf· Htltn Rtddy (llnreil E11l111 Slritch ri11u for thfte be1utllul sW:ers -(1ctr1ss-s!nt1r) and Al111 Kln1 so lhtt ht may m1rry the fourth. 1u1st. CD ltd., ttn111111111cas CC> 1301 8 l!Mit! ...,.._ ...i,• (•fll· ID Utw!U Cirtrt1 PrMitrt (C) ' 1n1) '40-ltidltcd Dix. (b) Bill eu1rud 1Jld tlobl Kett, "° 0 Q) Dkt CMt1: (C) host prosram f1aturin1 tht lOOUt ., Annivt1Ury Cdition of tltt Rlnt:Unt D Tiltltr! t: ~ allf LIM Bros. tnd Barnum & Bailt)' CllWI. w•m•.) 62-«eir D11(lta, Ja111t fin Tiit T11 TUI Cmr u, (60) ~eoJ-• ...... ·'H~ll of K1ntucq." A 1927 Rln Ti -: , ... , Ill ttil ........ Tin silent lilm in which fie snel tha (~ram•) ~1ul Munl, ~II LOI· lltt0in1, 1outs th• villai~, •nd be-11n1. , lritnds Ille boy. 1:00 B Mtwlt: '1111 CtM ""-ti111• (31) Wldld rHi (C") (30) (COftlld~) '50-J•dl Cl..n, Liia ti) htll• • MM (JO) Albrl&ht. IJ,0-(C) 1:ss m c.i.-. • s.p• m w.rit: "Dttl J.,. Q.aiiea•" 1:00 D i:iJ (iJ m ...... ., .. (C) (ctmtdy) '45--William 8-lit, (10) lR) "JtOUIHIJ But the Truth." J:l5 . C..•llllity l•lllll• IMn1 -Dtbblt ... '*11 • IKll rnsi11 , .. , e1l1111111 ret1rs to .11111 1nd sht Pfi· Z!m.m Ail-Nlltlt ~"Mr. P1!Titl and 1111cles hiin 10 pll)' the truth 11mt. irr: Trtill," "Nl•lr With 1 stra1111r~ De1n Mt"in •PPMR. and '1111111t Bid Gill.~ l W I D ~. l ":! C t 1 DAYTIME MOVIES l:GO • ....,, ffNI "*"'" (Cl:lllllfJ) '52:-8111 luto1i. Ch1rllt1. m "'ln'*"" <aillll4J> ·53-filitll P•lrkk. Roland CUl'nr, Kar W1W1, Noll Pulttll, Glynis Johns. Ttrtnct Morrin. Thttt ttoria bJ w. Som•r· wt M1111h1m. i:oo D (C) '"lldlt1tr i. ,.,.. (ctilMlb) '6l -l1n1 fyfl'll!', lff "'"· m "Mellifl1 , .......... 1ct!MdY) '.t7-stw Crwitt, Gltnd• f1""1I. 4:JO • .,... c..., " la .... , ... •entu1r) '46-Elz11Mtt1 l•'*· Tom Drekt. For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PIWT ,, I Hol,ywooil Bowl ,. , · Soviet Pianist 'Fttultless By TOM BARLEY OI 1M Ollly f'lltl 1"11 Soviet Pianist V l a d i m l r Asbkenuy is a famillar and popular · figure on o u r American concert circuit and hts most recent Hollywood Bowl appearance would ·~ pear to indicate that thil is · a happy state ol circumstances tbat will lon& prevail. His choice on tbia occasion was Sergei Rachmanlnoffs u(.. terly romantic and · deeply moving Concerto No. 2 and he left us under no illUsions as to the effect of this gloriow work in the hands of an im- passioned. pianist capable of e1.ploring to the · lull the sensitivity' and blttersweet path03 in tbis remarkable score. Inge Play Returning As Musical By JACK CAYn U,.1 Dr•-UW NEW YORK (UPI) lt is to be hoped that the coming season will restore playwright William I n g e ' s enchantment with the Broadway theater through the production of ''Cherry,'' musical version of his hit play, "Bus -Stop," of which ht is c~librettist. Never a prolific contributor, although a steady one, after he first came onto the 3Cftlt triumphantly witb ' ' C om e Back, Little Shetia '' in 1950, Inge had it good for almost a decade. "Picnic" brou&ht him the New Yort Drama CrtUcs' Cir- cle and Pulitzfr awards. The ensuing ''Bus Stop" and "1be Dark al !he Top ol the Slaits" were bits. 1be 19$MC period btoughl . U... falluns -"A Loss of Roses," "Natural Af- fection" and "Where's Dad- dy!" The 11$t two deserved much better than they got, especially from the critics. A sensiUve, introverttd man, Inge seemed to shy away from the stage after "Where's Daddy?" He settled down in Los An1tles, which is about as far from Broadway as you can get within con· tinental Umib, for some Leaching and writing. From that period bas come the "Cherry" libretto -the show was scbe<lultd for last season but certain things didn't jell at the right time -and the just-published novel, "Good Luck, Miss W y c k off" (Atlantic-Little, Brown), his first such work. He has written short stories In the past. ' ' ' It Is not enough I o. be savoring e\'ll'Y, noi. ~ · Iha! M led ·the Lot Angeles techrucally fauJU... wllh~tbe flllll brllll .. 1 stansa, II wu, Pbllharmcllllc Orcbel1ra to a Rachmaninoff; he demanded that , YOUDI lady· •al d, triumphant rend 1 t lo n of much more than that and bis aomethlna abe wUl remember T s c h a l k o wsky's Second work got it in the form of for ·e.ver: Symphony. With Ashktnazy, an A!hkenazy rendiUOn that Bui hi.I 1~ movement, Previn was the ldeaJ mediator, es:trltted every ounce of feeJ.. a:klrklUaly ICOl'4 , ad a g l 0 alowing the pace here, Wal-in& from this jewel of tbe ~. was 00 !ell im-chin& his soloist carefully Rachmanlno(f repertoire. macu1ate Mid called, lo our there and in general perfonn· AU too often, the final PM>ve-opinion, for that u.me bwplred ing a superb piece o f ment of the work dran the degree of 1tna1Uvlty aod a te"1eralship. plaudits and equally often it tecbnical muttry that posed He was otr his self-imposed is tht,one Jeetion of the work no problems, f<r tblJ tuperb leash in the Tschaikowsky and that a concfi't' au die n c e Rusllan. Jt wu a performance be demanded and got a strong particularly ·remembers. Tbal thoroagbly In bepln1 with and fluent perfonnanc< from is wry understandable and what ii, this year, a splendidly an ordlestra that seems to we do not wilh to decry a high atandard of exre»enc:e bt carrying all. before it in movement that must b e . at the 'Bowl. . • ~,. this remarkable s u m m e r clllsjlled u JIOlllbly one of , -n..1 llaDdald Is \ i.tJt, · seaaon, It has been a long the most impauioned • pWntalnld IDil Indeed• . time ·~ we have bad such queocea JIO r-.1, • ·-by the pr-ol comlslejicy . from !he Los Alhbnuy bad al Jeul ..,. -ADdn Pltrin, ' A!lleles ·P~nlc and ~· member ol hit delltlltod au-lie',;., al hit llrlfllant beol can only conchide tlull Prevm, '"-Joo\ ID -and ·' ........ ID tbll -am ancr· fnlh from a London th_al bas · -.-,..,.... reluctanUy allowed him to ~ .have a holiday, is just what Demise of 'Hillbillies' , tbe doctor ordered. Not Worrying Ebsen By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) Those devil demographics are threatening a number of long· run television series, and even Hillbillies" ls c on s Id r e d wlnerable. Buddy Ebsen im't worried. "I doubt very much lhll the demogrtphen wlll shoot us down," says the patriarch ol the Clampett clan, a Newport Beach resident. "Bul even if they do, ,I wouldn't !Tet over it. I've got a couple ol ether strinp on my bow." Demographics is a trade tenn for the compoaitlon of tflevision audiencn. UnUI a season or two ago, numbers meant everything; the lhow11 with the bi&'best ra t i n g s survived. Now, advtrt.ilera appear more concerned with the qualify of alJdlences pa>ticularly whether shows II· tract !he IS.SO "I' crouJ> tlult buys producia. Hence the disappearance from c~ of "Petticoat JunctiOn," Red Skelton anct Jackie Gleuon, shows with big audiences but not tbe ritibt kind. "Beverly Hillbillies" miaht conctivably be in jeopardy for the same reason. £ b 1 e n doesn't think so. He believes Lhe show's audience is eo vast and loyal that It could survive for 'years to come. He aiio .takes a phlloeophical aliltude toward critics . who classify HBf:verly Hillbllliel" as the ultimate in lowbrow television entertainment "My answer to that ls a comment in the Saturday Review that I have mounted on a plaque in my dressing room. It says that 'Beverly Hillbillies' is a show that com- bines social comment with a up the1ves of books to read while I'm not wortlnc, I wrilt songs with Zeke Manners, who was a member ol the original Beverly Hlllblllle. music act. I take my daughlers to horse shows, I ride a dune buggy with my l<ln, J body turf." 'Once More' Tryouts Set At Beach * * * Auditions Announced For 'Candle' Nielsen rating," Ebsen said. The Westminster Com- " As for myself, I've never 'munity Theater' will hold lried to analyze the show. I J·ust fead the scrints, do them read1nts for Us opening play ... of the stason, Jotm Van and am happy that they're . Druten's "Bell, Book and Ca~ accepted. I've never looked die," on Sunday and Monday more than a year ahead," eveninp of next weiek. Ebsen and his f ~ 11 o w Director Glen Eckenroth ~ Clampett& have already com-pleted sev.erat shows for their nounced that a cast of four men and two women is re-ninth season. Now they have quired for the comedy, which ·gone thelr separate ways for tells of a family dabbling .in the summer layoff. wtlchcraft. "We've a very close ffOUP Auditions are scheduled for during the seMOn, sharing Sunday at 5 p.m. and Monday each other's problems, laughs 1 7 30 t h a: p.m.ate ftl .... P'flf .... ICll fUIE1l 1H Mllfl. lln .,,,.,, 1:l0il.t:311 WIMANC<llO!I PM/rri11.1.1or 1'1. 1116 SIMI< l'l\lt<TS IV lZ. Z, 4, I, I, 11 l'fll ICCHNICOl.Oll ~ RICHARD BURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD IN"Tm HAL WAI.US !'JOOlCTION t}.q11tef. tfr, n'o~ Derf 1-..:t•~O "2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY' "IMPOSSIBLE YEARS" e STARTS WED, e ... _,...,. llff L'ICTllll IO ACADDIY AWARD -- RICHARD BuitroN GENEVIEVE BUJOLD tfr, ?t..:f 1'qf .. QUEENIE '\ • I ~ By Phil lnlerlandl "YOU wonder what I'm doing here-I wonder what l 'm doing here!" E:r:cJusitoe Ofange Co11n'1 Engageme,,1 Special New 'Popular Prices MO RESERVED.SEATS IJ!lia!I ee!J 2M Children only 1" !New "DOLLY" Showtimes MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 7P.M.& lOP.M. 'SATllROA'f 00 SUNDA'f, t,.f, 7 & JG P.M. jm.;J~ "BELLO DOLLY!"® TOPAZ "" , .. ,,_ .. T_ Fiii"souTH coasT Cf~RAL PLAZA THEATRE CORPOR.1.llQH 5an Ditto Frttway at Bri,tol • 546·2711 CONTINUOUS DAI LY AT 1 :JO P.M. "Picnic" already has been through the musical phase, bul Inte had no hand in that Oop, "Hot September." It closed after three weeks during its pre-Broadway tryout in Boston in the fall of 1965 despite the fact that many ,of the stage's elite were involved tn various phases of the venture. and •rows," he remarked. Westminster PTA building on "But we only see each other Hoover Street just south of for six months. When the Westminlter Avenue. season ls over, I like to ~o 'lBf:ll, Book and Candle" will my own way. open early in September for "I fmd plenty to do. I spend a lhrte-wetkend run at Finley time with the family, l sail School, Trask and Edwards my boat, I read -I store Avenues, in Westminster. ru:HIUCOL~ Gl5~11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -Also -In Color- C\o SAN oft> CLEMENTE GI" INN "'!l ADEQUATE 'FACILITIES AVAILABLE FOR EVERYONE Dinner Reservations Accepted Direct from the MINT ••• f11 ... ve,.., l\'et>•d• GAINES STEELE &' THE STEREOS NOW APPIARlNO NIGHTLY EXCEPT SUNDAY rn11 SILlllS ''THE MAGIC CHRISTIAN" t....i·•• ----I lllllll IMRSm9ii -......... io.-ctlt. . , .. , __ _ TECHNICOLOR• -0 1 ACADIMY AWAlDI WINNR '"IT'S TOUGH TO BE A BIRD"' . -A--l "'IWtlS •AMILY lOltMION" coNnflUOUI DAflY .. 0 P.M. (( \'l"••"'f ~ THFITn ~ 613·6260 2905 Easr Coast Hwy, Corona del Mar ENDS TONIGHT "TWO MULES FOR SISTER SARA" "SKULLOUGGERY" -Starts Wednesday- ·111E HAW,.llANSj • j Tl£IRDI PJ(OK;IQ CCIF.IKf ,,;_ ,. . CHARLTON HESTON 'ITIJE HAWAIIANS" I I ·A WALTER Mlm PR!JOIXllON • 1 n . " # ifERAlDINE r.HAPUN. JOHN PHILLIP LAW, MAl©,Ji~ j.11.ECMoCOWEN.-... ----·-•u · I .............. JMlSlll.>Ut• ....... Wlt.l(SllilRG)I O...•TOll lllE lll!llSlll'WI~ "·(!IBO IDllilArhslr . T --- I ! ' I I I • I • ' I I I I ' ' • I I I • I I • I • • ' t I I • ' ' Tr,ieky Trio • Dick Shawn, Ernie Kovacs and Jack Warden play three enterprising military men building a hotel on a forgoten but promising P.acific. island in .iwake Me When It's Over" tonlght;at 7:30 on the CBS Tuesday N~g_ht Movies on Ch·annel 2. THE DEADLIEST MAN ALIVE-TA.ICES DN A WHOLE AllMY • niNT EASl'WOOD ~ S-~'!i-..'.I 0 SHIRl.EY~ ~Ii , ,,y.1a '' • • •1 ,,, ;£1~,11 ;£1+' •'d 2nd BIG WEEK-MATINEES DAILY ·Belafonte's Back M0rkes First Picture in. 10 Years By VERNON SC01T HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Harry Belafonte, balladeer and civil rights worker, is returnhlg to movies. afl'er a decade's absence, with his sense of humor showing. "I stayed away from pic-- tures for 10 years because I felt slrongly about the kind of fibn I wanted to do," said handsome Harry. "I didn't see too many peo- ple upset because of my decisions." The black troubador threw back his head and laughed. He was amused by the fact th.at the movie industry could st'rugcle along without him. "Because my living didn't depend on pictures I decided ' to call may own shots. Tb(: last thing r did was 'Odds Against Tomorrow.' That was in 1960," he said. "I waited for a scri~t or a story to really turn me on. I felt for the first time there was an enormous poten- tial for me in cinema. But the conditions had to be right. J wanted something I could feel passiooate about: life, people, places. thinS:s." Evidently lhe. elements fell into place in Belafonte's mind when he read Bernard Malamud's "The An g e I Levine." --' ON SCREEN AGAll! H•rry Btl•fonte "Sure , I liked it,'• the singer said. "I couldn 't battle the movie business alone, so 1 wenl into the civil rights movement. the youth move- ment and the peace· move- ment. ··After 10 years of in· volvtment I returned I o Hollywood to find the movie business changed. Its baS;e has broadened . Now I'm talking to men with new ears." Among the men who listened FCC Rate Adjustme11t .Soaks Broadcasters WASHINGTON (A,P) -The fee pegged to advertising rates. The new rates take effect. Aug. 1. Some highlights in- clude : to Bel ·afonte was Czechos lovakia's Jan Kadar with whom Harry discussed the script for rour months in ·New York. Eventually Kadar directed the film which co-stars Zero Mostel, Ida Kaminska. Milo O'Shea and Gloria Foster. Belalonte is proud of the diversity ol racial and ethnic background of lhe cast and crew. "We·re just releasing the film," the singer said. "And almost every woman who sees it breaks into tears . So do some of the men." Belafonte's image undergoes a dramatic change in his new picture. He portrays a hoodlum who dies and returns to earth to · tum a good deed before being allowed to enter heaven, It is a Belafonte unseen in mo.vies or t.elevision previous- ly. His role taps new and deep channels of talent. PM!ased with the picture and himself, Belafonte will make another movie later this year, ~tarring with Sidney Poitier m a comedy western. "Buck and the Preacher." From the sound o l Belafonte's ouOine of Ule plot it has the ring af a black "Butch c~~ and the SI.in- dance Kidj Moiseyev Now Bette1· Than Ever NEW YORK (AP) -Some entertainers are better in memory than when they're seen again. But not the Moiseyev Dance Company. t~sday, July 28, Jq7o DAILY PILOT Jf ---------------- ~1nm"'-•• MARVIN f'boOJ> 5ERG DIRECT FROM ITS EXCLUSIVE RESERVED-SEAT ENGAGEMENT. .. CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES AT POPUlAR· PRICES! "A Big Musical Hit- In The Winner's Corner!" -ARC"°flt WJHSTOH. H-Yttll Poot "Hilarious And Entertaining. In The Stream Of 'Sound Of Music'!" "A Big Bawdy Rip-Roaring Musica l! Howljngly Funny! See It!" -WAHOA HALt. N r o.ii, "'-· Premiere Orange CQunty Engagement RATED Gp • .__.rrs FOR ALMOST EVERYBODY MAT.NEES DAILY PNVMOLlr H P!Cl~ Pl'IES£NTS. '--· c; F e d e r a I Communications Commission has boosl.ed its fee schedule and imposed new charges to broadcasters in an eflort to raise sufficient funds to pay for operation or tha agency. 8 r o a d c a s l construction permits -Fees are required separately upon filing an ap- plication and upon its grant. The Moiseyev. again on tourj~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~ij i'n Ule United States, is better·[j in actuality than the Moiseyev . . , SAIDI-. ' .... ilDIY.' COUJR 8Y MOWLAB":"· l!!I• ' 4th RECORD WEEK -2nd TOP l'llT <' AN~ONY QUINN INGRID l!!RGMAN The combination was ex1 pected to mean an average 400 percent increase in federal licensing costs for broadcasters and others using F C C: services. ' -.-™ new fee sdieelule, under. .current · conditions, w o u I d 'bring in some $25.5 million a year, the FCC said Thurs- day, fully matching the a gen· cy's budget. Included for the first time is an aMual license fee on cable-TV aperations, flied at 30 cents per subscriber. I ,. Broadcasters face sharp in- cTenes f o r constructiOn perm.its and liceMe transfen;, as well as an annual license Filing fees for VHF stations range from $1,000 to $5,000 : UHF $500 to $2,500; AM from; $25; 250-watt daytime to $1,000 unlimited SD-kilowatt ; and FM 1100 to $200. Grant fees range for VHF frcm $9,000 to $45,000: UHF 14,500 to $22,500: AM 1225 to 19.000: and FM !900 to $!,BOO. Subscription TV applications .fGf authorization require a $1 ,000. Broad c ast license assignments or transf~rs of control-filing charge of $1,000; upon consummation of the deal, two percent of the '•consi deration" in the transaction. remembered from its last visit lo America in 196!>. And it's entire family en· tertainment. The truth isn·t stretched in saying that the company's program ol 14 dances in a litlle over two hours is cap- tivating all the way through. It is well-paced, brightened occasionally by humor, which never is too broad. And the dances have gi:eat variety. For example, a playful dance, in which a young man can't choose among girls and finally is left with none, iS followed by a 7th century 'martial Adzharia·n dance. which is followed by a delicate group folk dance. ...................... •••••••••••••••••••••••• Three dances new to the program since 1965 are a tarantella from Sicily. a stom- ping dance af Argent ine herdsmen. which the audience loved, and "Dance of the Buf· foons." This is lull of tumbling a·nd acrobatic tricks and is set I o Rlmsky-Korsakov music. PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! HELD OVER! "THE MIND BLOWER OF All TIME!" Qu ... ,.,; .. SHOWING NOW! Familiar items are the Russian bent knee dancing which looks impossible no matter how often you see it, the hilarious "Two. Boys in a Fight" dance and the Ukrainian national dance, ''Gopak," with its brealhtak· ing high jumps, danced as a finale. The Moiseyev is the sla '.,academic ensemble of popular \'lance of the Soviet Union, which means that choroographed story dances like those in "Pictures of the . Past'1 are included in lhe repertory, along wilh folk dan- ces from various regions and Direct from Its Sensational • Reserved Seat Enc;ia9~mtnt NOW! AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS At Popul•r Prices "The epic ""''""' war movie that ti;liwootl has always wanted to make, but ""'' had llre 1uts to do bolore~ ........ ,_ EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT i •DWANDS ~ ·~t·r.;li H•ATR• I 11.lnot o1 •D>.MS. COST• Mt'M, l'!tOM $~ .. JlnJ --...... -........... -...... -. ' GRAND OPENING OF THE ALL NEW ELEGANT & llAUTIFUL CINEMA WEST #2 even dance!· of other coun-CALL 5 6-3 o tries, like the new ones Jrom l!!!!,!!!!!!!4!!1!!2 ~icily and Argen tina. After three weeks at the Jrl[WPOllT BCACH • OR.3-8350 ............. ' > •c. -r • noise Meti-oPolit.a n Opera House in New ·York, with Uie same pro- gram eaqi ntgpt, t~e company will danu in San Francisco, Sacramel'lta, San Diego, Los Angeles,.Pprtland, Settle, Van- ooover. dhicago, and St. Loois. c · free • music For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT ~-. • Z0 D,\ILY PJ~O! *** 540-1151 ' open evening• * * * ·-------------------------------- '1""411, J"1J 28, 1970 . . • Now is the time to find th•t home ne1r school for yPUr fmny. ··To mok• your· job etsier! your lt1ding rHI .. tel• broke" ~ffer yoy fhis speciol Stl1clion of .ftp• family homos, uch Joe.~ t1Hr achool1. M~ M. FOREST E. OLSON LA BORDE Call 645-0303, INC. REALTORS 64610555 LEASE- tEASE OPTION 4 & fomily LIQUID:~gN SALE R"' Club Pool AND SALi! .. SPARKUNG C".lean..,4 nilly bedrooml. Cedar _floor clo- LI QUI DAT J Cftt sets. Adjustable-wallt to· FINER LIVING IN UNIVERSITY PARK AND TURTLE ROCK f:jll 11 ,\ Ill 1111 1!1111\ l\l. IEST BUYS 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-1640 IRVINE TIRRACE OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 Lwcurious 2 bedroom & din. , lng room home, Owner a:pent $60.000 • now tranllel'ftd • price $49,500! ' 847-8507 SELLING The Beautiful Walker ,& Lee · Re•tf.n ' 7612 •dl...-r 540-St41 tlJ.4455 Live! • •· ~. G.~,m U~versity Park St48. /M hys Q A Perfectly ' You :... .;.um, ,.;,Ject to Way to Lril:. Three Bdrm&, two bath fit Y.OlJr needs. Clo&e7" to "HOMES FOR RENT" ..-.... """" ,,,,. w1ih ~hu"0~0~ ·~~ "'""' BIB n .. ,, .... Dining Rm. w;'" -LIVE IN ~~~~f"lll~ =I~ Custom ·. 1/2 Acre A p I an n. d oommun;ty, Go Skinny Dip~n· POOL YOUR HOME?. ' 6% GI; roan• thb slw-p ~ ' .. Plapned. C' -;,; -._ "'lh custom 'Dlllfilll1J av0(1liio 1 Ii a & c:arpeta, • draJ>tl!, moderil. 'ktep..saver kitchen .c;>n •fl. qvenJze 68 x IM lot. $23,000 ,ruu. Near Schools 'Sparkling 3 Bedroom & huge faml.ly riii, riew shag Carpl'tl!, drapes, bltins1 fr· plc. Neat & clean, now va- fant for your inspection. $250. mo. _ Call 540-1151 rm. Yo"lth ftreplace, fully Es.__ where we have aere11 & SOUTH OF 'HIWAY Ind carpeted &: rt_ra~ 'home. -.:~·--acret· of green park areu. oors PLUS One . bdrm. epert. A nJfty two-stotr. Tudor swimming pools, ~e~ Corona del .Mar e FrH Apprai1•l1 ment with B/J Kit, larp cwtom large family home courts, miles of windin~ ··1 11 you want a pool • you rear Living rtn. with fire-£l]~~lty half acre. 4 huge tralla, -~ 181 hole ~ .. Immaculate 2 bdrm, It din, must see this home! Beau-e •• y uw-ma, bltln bunks, family course .... opp ng center IUl\I u rt. Experience pJa~. Three car ~~.•ge . l'OOrn, 2 cheery fireplaces. in the Immediate future, room home: trplc., brkf!t. ti~uUy unique Indoor swi~· all se!"Vkes and utilities tn Bfast nook. Spece for huge ANOTHER NEW ELEMEN-oook with bullt·in bJotb. See nun&: pool • heat.eel,: and fil· E • 431•3769 garage. Front IJlihcaped POOi or untta. R-2. A buy TARY AND HIGH this• $44.7SO tered and very private. The vet. e We Buy Equltl11 The qualified, friendly PRICE. Hurry, Jt may al· ready be 1one! sales personnel at TAKE OVER 2 I STORY ·PODL PAD • Red Hill Realty Offer you personalized, including ~era Separ-for now A: future. C&ll SCHOOL. At the present · · home ltse.lf i1 in better Eves: 642-0417 a rely Jenced rear yard•. lb ~ :'JOnw~f ~a;:,e 5 aBK~~ than model home condition competent assistance in Tropical poo~ area with en- c111ed near CM Parit and available -perhaps the BIB with 3 klng-1lze bedrooms, closed lanai for pri~cy. 2 La~e bedroonis, 2 baths. Downtown. EASY TO RENT Gia RIGHT ONE FOR YOU! 2 tiled baths professional· •• finding the right borne Huge 4 bedroom. 2 beth new shag can>ets. oversized -EASY.TOBUY.CM.l;'TO-• morous ly landsca~ and mani· Ir w\th "SEPARA,TE family 20x20 bonus room, It dble DAY FOR DETAll..S. 1 .. Shof:-llffs cu-• front'-a-nd -, _,... WALK TO BEACH forn1nu & your family. room for entertalning,·!Aa· Bonus Room garagt', $235 mo incl gar-· -DRAMATIC '""' '"0 J~ Wi. ' "" slime subjeci, to G"-IUV· dener .......... Call 540-1151 ALMOST t/3 ACRE 180° Ocean View TWO HOUSES Assume existing VA loan. 4 Bed l '4 bath ,.., ~ "J ernment-loan a/id" .. ONLY TIRtD or c RA ~f'P'E o Charm.Jn 0 t Bi C . Annual per~ntage rate of rm, s, se~ $5,000 total dow,n. -APARTMENTS'!' The child· Ionia! lngCo~ne: dely~ti: 3 Bdrm .. 2 bath In lmm.ac. Corona del Mar 6%. Total monthly pay-rate family room. Prestige CORONA DEL. MAR ~ will enjoy tbe huge play Spacious llvlnc room, but· cond. ~autifully ~d~ ment $196 lncludlne tues. area Sub m It terms. BUH.BERS 2100 Sq. Ft. 'Ii)(' BIG ONE, 3 Bedroom, 2 1tlory. large family/game room, dining rm. decorator clll'J)('ts and drape!!, OOSe to ~chools & .shopping_ $280 mo ............. -cau 540·1151 Lease-Option ·l'llrchase East.side, Costa Mesa, near sct'lools, 3 largl' bedrooms, oversized family nn, cov· t'red IJBtio, bltins I: frplc. Quiet, friendly nl'i1thbor- hood. Full price $29,950 or leas!? option. For details ....................... Call 540-1151 yd. prorected by sturdy blk. ler'• pantrr, powder room =cedo=~ j~t $Jo~~] So. of Hwy. near Begonia Hurr)'. can today $38,500. wall• wltile you BAR s.QUE an<t ruest bedroom down-Parl<. Froot "°""' 3 bdrm.. HIGH SCHOOL ' • . , , . sta.lrs. Thrtt huge bed-unfiU-n., plus complotely ' CLQ.SEQUJS m )'OW' 13 x21 walled lanai. rooms .l sundeck up. Pa· Your wife will appreciate tios, be.loonies, BBQ. Land-WHAT A BUY turn. 2 bdrm. house. Approx. $24 7.50 Harbi>r .View Homes -:or her peaceful, well-kept, scaped. Make offer now. lmately.1% Jots. $49.750, 1 od 3M · thl kend •nt quiet neighborhood, New cail 645-0303 , •• , Cal'ID.J'l M el ove m • wee I"::" o Thill is the lowest priced 3 1 ~~ ,.. • ' ' these breathtaking 1-arid~- nylon carpeti~ in moll'! bdrm., 2'iii bath plan avail-COS!a Mesa Ch POOI-4 Bedrm, 1" U11ths. BR. 2 BRths plus family story La Linda showploetis rms. OmVftlierrt cook cen-able in beautiful Unlwrs1-BIB armer J-4000 down. pymntll approx ' with 4 and 5 bedroomi, 2 . 1t!'I' with adjoining, dining Baycrest ty Park -only $28,500 $200 month. walk to room. WALK to S"'·1m and 3 baths, beamed cell·· rm., 1WO batba. $2,150 4 & Falll. & Poot with very good terms avail. 3 Bedroom T1 2 Bath ~~:1, cloi;~ ~o beach, Club. /\ Real Beauty! ~~:rat~~1X~';x..pe"!-'~~ INrnAJ.. FRA INVE:;,· Shake roof beauty. Terrllo· QU possession. :u,1 5(.0 1 paneling, and much more. MENT """""...,, reoL .. entry . .alsod """'"' fipl In LARGE FAMILY? BAYCREST ·s23· ,500 r -· . s .. to""""" $29.000 for our best value! Family room. Formal din-• •• THREE UNI rs ~:.~~~·:...:~~Then .. ,,,.,,. tho home ls BeautiM """ • B<lrm•. NO DOWN VA 2 STORY • ' MISSION VIDO $3,500 PR.ICE Newport Harbor. Call for You! 5 Bdrms. pha Formal dining room. Pool· ... , Walker .& lee ~EDUCTION 645-0303 family rm., 2% ba., crirner sized yard. Only $57,SO(I, '~ HIGH SC DO ONE !l Bdnn unit· 1 bdrm. location • only % blk. to At this price you can't go Prem1'er Home l .. H L ' R • I pool A: tennis cl.II. GOOD It •-· d bl •• tort unit. bachelor cottage, Dou-3600 Sq Ft VALUE at $35,950 with an wrong. ,,... a ou e ga· . . ' • ble garage. Latp laundry • • ASSUMABLE LOW IN· BIB rage, terrific covered patio, 4 Bedroom, 2 baths,' l ie ~.500. G.1 .• <\.J)er~i§al 1·790 ~arbor Blvd. rm. Near 9Chools and shop-Mansion YA TEREST LOAN available! yards .art. heauU!ul. 3 bed· aeparate famil)' room, Cl~ on (bis lovel.Y 5 BE~ / at A.dam• pi.na. A bargain st only Spacious trl·lev;l mansion. roonll, 2 baths. Best )'et, kitchen, large master~.;,~ b th ·h\. S4So0465 . "\_. 545-M91 $33.~ ~ 1 51&. bdrrns. FORMAL DfN-al~ ter:n;is available. VA· room. Approx 2000 •q. ft. •)'vvM S a ome. Open •tH't, .M. TREES & SPACE IN ROOM. u,.1a1 ... ,;u1n1 AIR·CONDITIDNED . NEAR BEACH FHA. ·You can qualify ~ Atdum fron; '"'"· quid r:•Ued in the hll)s .of • room. Huge rumpus room. own thia house • $23,500. tree!, pric*d fbr quick •· ' : -: . ;.. ·'* » Wooded U'IO'xUS' lot, C4:1:y 3 2 cheery fireplaces. Inc.er-. Corona del Mir DON'T WAIT! GI guna Hills per· , .. ~ -bd 2 bath d" . oom. SUNOECK, All thi.s Be sure to see-thJS :0.1· u.lr. or FHA termL Of· ' DOCTOR t'IY$ SELL bUi~bi kit~ ~~ng~'. ~ terma. cat! now ~~~lfe~co~~e:u~ly8:; Quality dtiple:r. 2 Bdnns. 2 fi ce: 847-8507. Eves call ffCt setting for farilily M UHOM£S fOR SALE'~ Jut~ eov.edpatio and 4th bdrm.). 2'Ai Ba., family batha plua 2 bdtm. one bath 714 : 4iJl-3759 living. Bea.utlful 4 bedroom home double~. Priced to sell t'f\I· w/wet bar. CHOICE unit. Inoomt $8,000 yearly, \Vlth $23,000 worth o( im· -No FlnallCI proOlema•" Spanish' Splendor greenbelt Joe. Priced rii ht Onl 157 ~ prOyements lhclUdtng de· . • • at $36,950 with good tennl. y .~. UNIVERSITY luxe 18 x 30 pool w:1ih Ja-~ CORONA DEL MAR Pool & <111Jcuul 3 Bedrooms • 2 BathS cuzu;tnany many l•atu,.... Top location In Costa 1'vo Bdnn. & Dining rm. ~ ALL ,this and NEA.ft the Me,.. Full P'I" '$19,750. 3 home wl"' '''"' Dbl ..... ""°"""' mun hou..e In SEARCHING BIB ~ I ii lll~H SCHOOL Beach. Uuge V.A. Loan' BcdrrT\ 2 bath dble garage · estate area of Back Bay. $700 I !al I • l'a: I•.!. Jllfl Subject ito 6%. % annual Rxer UP,per bllins &. dlJih~asher, n~ ege (stresled IOf' 2 story) Atrium entry ... :IOl'Je<?U• . 0 D move 1n :am ... : . pen:entage rate which can paint & clean up. Now va-on paved alley. Ve-ry charm-bedrooma. Formal dining. For the ~m&.11 family who _ ........ ,, Beautifully decorated 5 be as•umed b)' anyone.~ cant. For details • ~ -Good neighborhood. Fam~ room. wtt bar. 1 yr dellire .a SJ>1nish flair to $23 '950 CALL -' ................. ·-···· CaJI $f0-1151 ONLY Sl.1.IXXI. 0rallld. 1~gstone1 w1"""h·o,. water:-their home. Spotleu 2 bcl· DON'T WAIT 1 BEDROOM, 2Vi: baU1, . ""' poo t 1cuzz1. rm. & den. dbl. fireplace, ·'• CINDERELLA HOME"' °i;"maUc furniture avail· .,,,et bar. AIL TilL ROOF For a "better buy in Broad-Pick up the phone and call ,II, INVESTORS I.I. , plus family room home. COSTA MESA EASTS I OE • I • -Three Bdrm A Den PLUS a le. Jwit l15ted. ca I I and many extra&. can be -" 5 Bdrm •· . rlcht now. This home has lfake prop' erty subi'ect . • 645-0303 YOURS for the just re-mooi· • 1·• inma: everything you want • 3 Trff Uned "'";..,rm.'".".'.""""'"' Dbl. duoed P''" of $31,950. room Mann. voew• NOW'""' bed,;,,,,,, 2 batha MEDICAL BLD'G. 1 to 6'1.1 % loan. Only gar. o bat11l1, Bil ldL w / •ui 1So ( d ced 7'000 by double garage, completelr.' . . eating area. FI A heat and 01 1 01 • .....,, re u S • &...n--• y•ard., shake roo, $35,900. Immediate ~ Quiet (;ul-de-118c 1n Mesa Fireplace H/W floors car· ' .e e tra I rnd 1 "' .... -.:u ' Verde. Sp&rkling home peted an'd c 0 m P 1ele 1 Y C t 4 & fo YOU OWN THE LANO ns e owner)! wall to wall carpets, g~ 2 Suites + .'deluxe apVt~ ~pancy. $21 ,700 ,PULL PRICE for "4· wllh 3 spaclou.~ bedrooms, .. _........ . US Oftl m. • Costa Mesa area. If )'OU re ment. Ample parking front "bedrooin home with a V .A. 2 baths, large family room, w•!'C'o'· Assume existing VA LOVELY MEXICAN TIL.E a vet and can have $700 Loan with payments -of; covered patin. play yard. 1oe.n or owner wilJ sell under entry 4 spacioull bdrms On this Olll"! 4 BR .. :z~ BIB "'ith.ln J months, you can&: rear. Possible to pur-$141.00. Where elle but at fantastic ~andscaplng, nre-new f1iA·VA Termll". Nee.r "N<>-~are" noor in famuY bath11. 2 Frplcs: Prime , lot own lh\1 home. call today. chase adjoining 90x120 C-1 IMMICUlATE WALKER• LEE could )'Ou plat..-e. blt1ns, shag crpts •. Hnrbor Shopping center and room I' dream kitchen location and priced at Just It won't luL vacant lot. Close to two H get auch. A BUY1 Call 111 new ?3int .. It 's got every· 0 .C.C. ONLY ;:!ll,500. Walk In cll)Set. Aut~ $35.930 lNCLUDlNG THE major hospltalll. Widow 1 !or appointment. i• th\nJ!. Pru.·rd at only Sprinklers. Near mott ex· LANO. nttds quick sale! Submit 3 Bdrms., 2 baths plus $30.500. For details CLOSE IN perulve homes Call IRVINE 11 TERRACE terms! 1 _ .................. C•ll '>40-1151 Shacp '°"' hd,m. two bath, 645-0303 • family rm. .Great "$2 726 00 TOTAL Eastlllde Clif home. Largr 2-STORY Completely remodeled and Greenbelt location. Less ' ' Li fam. Rm. 'spacious kit. redecoraled. 3 Bdrms. plus DOWff N 1' ;;:~i. ':;::~f::.\ ~'::i;,~h;.k,'. Wllllamsbur9 3 B<lrm•.,,& r.m .. rm .. 21> makl '• room. Chok• Joca. HAlECREST JEWEL SPECIAL yard maintenance than ·PAYME T" • No Down To Vets •ie. professionally land· Colonial baths. Move-In cond. tlononGalatea.Only$79,500 a townhouse! Only 'i scaped Alll'y access for New on the market and $26 700 3 la..a. · 1. Costa ?.Iesa back bey are~ .. 1 Nef"d 5 Bl.'drooms & ram· ooat Or trailer Excellent Early Virginia architecturt r.rtced at only $30,9MI with , """aom, . ' ATTENTION $33,950 . . . THIS lS Subject to a V,A. ~ U)'J See this great home al Tl'nns. ACT NOW" liot M with 18th Century charm. ow down payment! .... -I I a MUST SEE' witfl 6"% annual percent- $32,750. Excellent neigh-LA BORDE, RLTR. 646-°'555 s bdrms. Huge walk-in clo· BIB 2 baths. Take over GIVEN GI BlJY. ERS. cl--. age rate. Total paymen~. borhood, near schools, full Eves; 642-7438 .sets. FORA-fAJ.. DINING ~ $182.00 • WHY RENT'!' 3 carpels & drapes, bltins R 0 0 t-1. Family room TURTLE ROCK g C'Ollts only!!! We will HUGE bedrooms. "HARD-., 5\one frplc & shake root'. HARBOR LIGHTS breakfasl bar &: nook: ll't your certHlcate of eli-FULL Of CHARM WOOD"' noon, EXTRA'' °';~er moving easL Hur· Pluz the 11erene vif!\\.• 01 sail H1 ~n~craft.l.'d Iron l?Uches. 6% Loan ilbUlty and qualification~ HUGE LOT with numerous· ry ............. _,""can 540-U51 boats "ill · nd 1 9 "orkshop. On quiet cu.I-\Ve're l'xclled about thi11 CAMEO HIGHLANDS '"' TOWERING TREES. ng m a out o de-~ac. Clost'" to "YMCA" 11 . , . at no cost to yoU!! L' · 't I •t colorful Newport Say ~ Call 645-0303 . new &ting . 4. Bdrms. & •, A fiOlne at thla price In 1ve In I . • ove I Home & Income Beautiful 3 Bedrm home, •ip,_can1ing hardwood floors & :zi,, cAr garage. Lart::l', ca.sy to rent 2 Bedrm w11h hani.,.,·ood floors l sing/P gar. fo"'ull prlc<' on this out-11tan<hng properly i5 on ly $35,950. VAC'll nt !or your inSIJl'Ction todRy. -·-··"······""""' Call 540-1151 * * * l.1vtng Rm form 1 ·•. . fam, rm. + sep. din. rm. Corona del Mar Coata MHA Is hard to find I k th d d " . ". mmg Choice corner Joe. • across but here It ts and it's nJCf'. • • • OC e oor an nn. large Fam.·Bilhard nn. from park, pools & tennis Channina ttone rntrY & traf. It has wall to wall carpet. leave it ,vhile on that with wet bar. Beautiful B/I Newport Hei9hts courU. ThiA l yr. old home flew plus imprt? · all built-In kitchen hard' MEMBERS OF Kil. overlooking protecteod ls nicely Improved & in im· · ay lllllVe use wood Doors double iarage. WEST long vacation' Cozy 2 Delightfully decorated ·~ brick patio with fish pond l/4 Acre Estate mac. cond. REAL VALUE Is of brick & wrought Iron, forced a.Ir heat. c;orner 1oi: ORANGE COUNTY & · bedroOm, spacious famlfy 1 and loads of 1.ro.......,1 n . Curving driveway leads t ottered here at just $40,950 labels thls'4 bdrm & dining boat or trailer access. as-HUNTINGTON bedroom, 2 bath home rooi;n. :zin baths, Ultra con-l"'"""' ow 1 t h 0 INCLUDING THE LAND t · aumt low intetftlt loan BEACH/FOUNTAIN ven1ent family location on en. Thref" Bdrm, 21,1 bath ~:;; :T,~::; ofse. Orfn Xlnt terms avail. . room. home as "CUstom $l90 total monthly pay: VALL for only $28,000. quiet street near Park ud..,. • hugf' nuu_ter Bdrm l!ui1e room. brt'akt:St ~~ u1! Built". JUlll S59,500. ment. Don't wait to see it. OF REEYABOOARD ·~~·" Sff the pat!o complrte w1th Roman tub. baths, v.'ood noor, Vi,w of LT RS ~· ..., ..... tntry! You ·will GRrRgl' on Riiey + ackli-Nt'Wport Bey. " acrt> of "LaSALLE" CENTRAL AIR COHO. like this at j1111t $35,9SO Uonal boll.I or 1i:aner storage beautiful garden. Call now. BIB Tt\ke.fri!~i~:n!f!j·,.i spaCf', Top ne'...._-... ........ 645-0.103 • lu. ....................... i.~ the name of this floor 3 Bdrms 2" baths 1op quality· lop value. Only pl!l.n. 4 Bedrootnll, 21,; 4 '• 7 " ' • ' .,.,,., ITl.500. Pac---. Baths. 14<c. l•mlly rm. w / just the right siu !or BALBOA ,P£Nlllt'llLI•'.' ... _,,,... private courtyard. "Tlnkl-COSTA MESA rn.;>.UL1t 111 PAINTER UPPER Bed Ing" fountain In entry EASTBLUFF \ I your family. Shag car-' • .' Va cant lath • plaster, room courtyard. 2·SI.)', Jiv. m1. m 11' ' peting and LOTS of ex-Entertainment Estate onc.-3 . thn•e hdnn. hom•. Lu" "'--lace r.,,io. In llv. rm. & m"'· 5 Bedroom• PIUJ huge lamily CHEAPIE , ,•\~~ j .,.'" lot>! 47 PARTY R001•I lot. ll'ood nrlghborhood. ' "-1" bdrm. 2500 liq. ft.. of good room home 3 Car gar a~ 1-. 1 111 • tr as! $32 500. w I th gigantic circular Oul ot town oWlll"r u,f1 ONE OF THE 1.IANY lt1AS· living! Primr 1oc. on gree.n-" . .. ' ' FIREPLACE plus souwO-SEU.. ~ SELL • SEU.. A TER TOUCHES in this two be:lt. $39,500 Price ncludti l.uzk Bu.lit • Immaculate For 122,950 you set a doll proof POOL ROOM! 5 ~,... barpln 11 only S21.9SO. story PAC'ESE'ITER. Slate a "Forever" view, condilio11! $54,500. houllf! loaded V(IUI extras rooms, 6 baths, 4 car p- l.ow On. crinvenlioMI _ entcy. 4 llU'IC' bedrooms. like d'1uxe wall to v•al.1 BRING THE KIDS rqe, bftullful ltallan Tile_ FHA . VA Tl'rmg, <We ma)' FORMAL DlNTNG ROOJ.f. shag c1rpeting throuRhout, Offlc • • .. 7-1507 '°"•-rt>,ard, p!J 0Prl0ood, m way' n t ufl?" even do some pain Ung for Gourmet kitchen. land· I I brand new tJled kJtchen e • -"'' i\ ynu.1 M. M. LA BORDE,""""' ••rden. Room '" WE HAVE OTHERS II BIB •nd bath, 3 bedrooms. p,.;. E 642 ~zr The In-Laws, Aunts and $119,000. RJ..TR. 64~ t.Vea: S46-~). Just listed. Call fJSt. •• •• v1te beck yard complete J vet: ....., Uncles ••• easy liv· ·1 UNIVERSITY PARK 4579 5-0303 1o>.·lth patio. Low, low down E ,.1 •769 payment. You owe It to • "°" •• ~ · be · h" W$[ QPTIQNI Known For Service HOME FOR RENT yourself to see thil one. E mg can • yours int IS , "'"'' new the"' hd•m. "" Easy To Fix BOB PffilT, Realtor IRVINE (41 TERRACE ... , 961-117, very special 4 bedroom, , 2911 Brl1tol 51 . 540-1151 --1,.,. Herltqe ·-- Ing ltnl. Dining Rm, plus 21 .t.. F're1hly decorated 3 ~ 20x29' fam /rm. '"·Ith fire· Ntteh your creative touch. Day It nlaht octan A ha)' '6t52 BEACH BLVD. ~ bath townhouse, room. 2 be.th home '#}' plaa-, Fully carpeted and Quallty home In nice area. "SINCE 1946" vi41W'I 3 Bedroom. plua den neat' the tennt's co•·_. .. cr:llutt family •rea. . drerll?d. Bit Electric Jat. f'ront r,110. 3 huJZe bed· f'a \ly Only \U l4 to t.U achool1 •nd shop Dbl . garage, utllity room, rooms. amily room. Lar~t D•y• 133-G101 Nt. .. tt A: m ·room. 4 )"W"I HUNTINGTON BEACH and pool ~ 500 $2'0 per month. ,.,o.=. fcnl't'd In yard. f\t. lot. LA· Cl'Wtt'ed ~ar patio. BB , T' old. $81,'JOO. t • • ' • \u-t.i:a Borde 64~ -548-3265 Oramatlc fll'f!pJace. mi t 18021 Culver Drlvo ' -bftS. call now! ~-0.103. -1 M. M. LA BORDE FOREST E. OLSON 646-4555 REALTORS Unlver1ity Park, Irvine \Ve apcclallzt tn Unlvt!rllty Park a Tu.rile Rock Proptrtftt f:j 111\ ,\ Ill II II HI Ill\ I" 14111. CNot H.ry. C-eclof Mor '1s.a9 2629 HAltlOlt IL VO. S441HO OPEN IVIS TILL 1,30 Walker & lee - .. l 2043 WMtcllff Dr l , · ·,.._m1 -~ 0pon 'tll t:• P.M. \ I G • Tl $' II< ~ & to Bo .. " h• .. tr. ~ "' lo lo de . KJ A i 11 M~ tm ... • ha ldt "' I Ha\ ""' "" Spi "" Mc llv >li Pr mt w 2700 .... "" Hii led '"' .m mo "" "" PJ Bt'1 hllJ ""' "'' '"" ~ • -· • TA' ·• ... ti \Va~ '" 174 lro1 ""' ~ 11~ -- t.jJ "'' Clu hy Le c;, ~. ·~ ' • .. HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'OR SALi HOUSES l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SAL:E HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'OR SALE · oen.r.i 1000 o. .... i lOOI cio...;..1 " . .»READ THIS ·!•· 0-rol '1000 'Goner•! ' ·1000 0--;;;;;;,'•;;;1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.l;OOO;;;j~G~on~e~r~•l~;-~~1000 G-r•I I i 1;;;-:;.;;;;.·===1.;;;;;;====1-;--COSTA MESA ======;;.I Jlnk ..96;t · '' . VA 4 BIG B£DROOMS '19 ,000 For 122~.tt~P!~ . doll ~~:!~F:~NJ.~ .. • PRESTIGE WATERFRO~ H.9"4E . . ,Specious oomor -·with 3 ......... home In Coo!a ..... , ...... withextrullJr. ~:"ii.':""'- Newly listed -·perfect·for the fam.i.l,T.-who 4 BR/ NO Da fam:ily nn., ..U bldna ·lncl Mesa located on nice trff. deluxe wall to wall aha8" in Excll.lllve Cameo.,.__ wanta a spacious waterlront home. I Extra 1.-: dithwasher and 1r1 SPARK· lined~. Home bat huge carpeting thrquahdot, brand With atepo down t'o""'~ dr "d · v .. LINOLY IMMACULATE•• nev.itiledkitchenandb&tb, ~ ._ ___ l.1 If you 1r• in th• merket for 1 new home, ••• these outst1nding cus- tomized, homes, built by Frink H. Ayres & Son loceted in 1 prime er••t very close fC? Huntin9ton Sti1t1 Beech. The hom•s •r• priced from f2:6, 990 to $4 I, 900 end v1ry ln •si11-from J tO 7 b1drooms, 1400 sq. ft. to 1000 sq. ft., 2 •nd 3 cir 91r191s, 2 to 4 b1th1, with sh1k1 or Mission tile roof, fir•pi.casi '""· d9t'9round utilities, conc'r1t1 ~riv•· ways, 111 buUt-ins ind basic c1r- pttin9. There is VA, FHA end Con• v1ntion1I fin1ncing 1v1it.bl1. lge. BR., 4 Ba.,&: . rm. Lge. liv. rm. -en; Mesa er' de' .. ,.... ""' ... chlldttn. With 3 ~--·. -~-.. ~~ private ............. ., .. """"" 3 t ti I -~ d ··• •-G,.ot i""'"'ap;ng w Ith down t 00 -~·~ ~··· -.-S •-•----I ,_,,_ car garage. au • pa o gcu·uen; ~ q; sprinkler l;)'Btem and its~ all ~tive :~t •in 1; yard complete with palio. ~. -um dock. Because or •-. ---~ ~h ..u .. uro v•vu Low, low down ...,vmenL Formal view dlninr roorz-1 -.~.~ .. u ... ~ to~ t • ~ months. thls is the! best In-rv··· lJ·.i-•--n~ · 1 •J will t>ay the polnts Jor )'OU ROOF. u 'ted access for You OWfl It to ~ to •"'6 room, ....,...., room For information on all ot.s • homes t vtttment ~·u eVft' make. &et: this one. Pool I: 3 car prqe · CALL: BILL GRUNDY, RIAL TOR o use your VA loan. Thia BOAT, TRAILER, OR Prove It to yourself now! A beauti:f'Ul home in 833 Dover Cr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 ~ ~ 1::~.!.~~ ~t:,si.o1~~ ~~ ': Call ., ......... :·:· • · A taru;::fmlocatkm shopping dosie by. No down VA terms. Gener•! ' 1000 paymont fimmcing i• ve,,, 2629 H •RBOR BLVD. , MAR90 rare in Meu Verde, so •• CO .. ~TS ~ •'BIG 5" NEWPOR.T BedtOOms, that is! HUGE master suite wilh romantk: "'"" ooli -right ... ,,, Nichols"lleal Estate 546 1640 NicQols Real Estate · 'R~!t~~~~ OPE: •• ~~~ss!~LEL 1'30 leltdlo La Cuesta ~Y'" Hf'"" Sl11c.• ~905 Models at llroold1unl r. AtlooN1 Hoatlogroohacll 714: 968-2929 714: 968-1338 HEl~HTS """""' bakony. 28' l>rnil.Y "MOUNTA·IN mTERTAINMENT CEN· TER, ma.ss.ive bee.med CA· RUSTIC" THEDRoAL oeili••<-3 dcluxe 546-9521 Just listed and our exdualve-baths and famous 9-ARDEN •· ·-~-m1 ..__ KITCHEN .-Prt.vate dub,' ""!'!!'~!!!!!!!l'!!!!"'!!!!!!!!!l...,,,. v! 3-1XU1vu 2i.i:-ue:th well lakes, and ridinr trails, and I"' PAINTER UPPER • built and tastefuly destp YOU own the land. vacant ed with PEGGED H.\RI>-Vacant lath &-plaster, thrtt and renA.. to enjoy at hdnn bom• ' --I t WOOD !loon, OPEN-BEAM ......, · • -...5c o' ceilings, e.nd tots ot Ult 'of $42,SOO! good neighbor hood. OUt of ---546-4141-546-t5u $14.1 P/M PAYS ALL (Open Evenl~s), 1 •.F!!!'l!O~R"!S"!A"!L"!E~B~Y!"O~W~N!E~·R You can assume 1Ubjeet to SELLING?? CALL US FOR AN APPRAISAL OF YOUR PROPERTY Commen:lal, Industrial or ResidMitial. 6% GI loan this sharp 3 3 Bedroom how;e: Very large bedroom home with custom fenced yard, perfect for chll. avocado shag carpets, dttn and pets. Paneled !iv. dr1tpes, modern st~saver lng room. House just fresh. kitchen on an oversize 68 x ly patrited. Will ll!ll VA or FHA $21 .• lm lot. S23,£ro FUlL cAt.L '~VENINGS =Ebe=· it may ti· 'Rfflton' ''Our 25th Y11r • In th• Harbor A,...,..· 673-4400 -==--=-·- LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.-320 .LIOO NORD NOW REDUCED TO $150,00o-Xlnt Terms 11 :00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. . AND r~ENDS Walker & Lee NATURAL wooos. STAIN· .Walker & Lee '""" ...,,., .. ,.. Sll.L • ED GLASS door, TWO won· S~. A. bargain at NO OIARG!: derful fireplaces, separate !IH3 Westcliff or. only $21,950. Low Dn. con-Eastside TrJ.plex Realtors 6 Beautiful unfta. I car P· rage1 & utility room, with 80 ft. trontlna' on ~nt "'""""'""' boaoh, Units .,. newly fumiahed. dining room and a "DOWN· 646-m.l ventionaJ ·FHA -VA Terf1!s. Wells-McCardle, Rltrs. N~ carpets, bltins, garages, 7682 Edln&"U 'HOME" COUNTRY KIT· Open 'til 9:00 PM (We may e~ do some 1810 Newport mvd., C.M. xlnt cond. Jncorfte $425 mo. 540-5140 842-4455 QQN complete wltb break----painting for youl. s.t8-'m9 l{yea. 6'4.a684 ASl!lume new VA k>an of 1000 I Ge .. r • • I fa.st nook, load& of CUI> Your -local SUper-Market. • M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. Reliable ~rtioe Since 1943 , $35,lm .. 1%%. Prioe $42.500 THE SUN NEVER SETS on \ 1000 boarda! PAT!~ to suit yoUr I ~D;;lol~6':;2-0678~~·,;clwle;;;;~tt.~,_.:;""""65;;;::~:::::=~E;;;"'~"=-:;;:;'.:19~~~~~~~!!!!!!'" Prine, only. ()o.mer 546-1159. DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! Bill Grundy, RuffW 833 Dowr Dr., N.B. ~ I----~-,~--mood, one bright Ii sunny I· TEXAS SIZE LoT I ;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;.!-one "'8dy and c:oolod by $147 l'ER MONTH EASTSIDE :;"i'j~!';~'~ 'Yro~ . 11~:,.;":'.;.:;, t" ....!'. SPEc·1 •L SCHC 0011.S. S36.f'l0· th "'t.· pnwa1· .. , ':.!:...": ·.w1thd ... w.,a11. . A 0 eSWOr Y ..... ,...... 3 Bcdrtn, 2 bath home with Built-in chttry kitchen. Big beam ceilings & modern ex. patio! Get this -almost V3 terior. Huee play yard and & I Co. acre with fruit trees and owner wiU sell no down to REAL 'roR huge vegetable garrlen Veterans! N~ Beach Office ""'' !or ha""'" °""'' $26,850 lll'lli ... ,...,, Drive transferred It leaving this ,,.,., ..,..,,.. wedc, move In now and as-(Open Ev•s. 1 til 1:30)liiiiiiiiiliiiii0iiii'~iiiiiiiiiiii-. sume Ibis ireat 6% f'H/'t I0811 with ohly ~ dpWdl {er maybe 11'51?"). Reap. don't weep! CalJ now! Ne::•>rl JUST LISTED KATELLA ~LTY Adams W. ol Btookhunt • Sli-9832 • 9(8.1101 . . (•nytimo) •' o ,. MODERN MANSION ,.~''". '•:r . For entertaining, High cell. ings, richly paneled den, 1800 SQ. FT. ·MESA '.VERDE CLASSIC marble ti.replace & ~try Drive-By hall Wet bar Garden kitch-Sel homes available In en ·with b~ast room. 'thla area, located close to 11.54 Boll .Vl•t• Circle Huge master suite & dress-par ' schools & library, M~ Verde family bome, Ing room. Panoramic View. ~ haa near new carpet, toftring trees, quiet cul-de· $14S,OOO. hur, ,muter bedroom & sac &: delightful · neighbonl: ~ul large living room 4 Bedrm Door plan with 3 )'OU tee the back baths, formal dining, Island the tf!ea. will make kitchen & panelled family Realty CompalJY . ' think you're ii), the Red. rm. Fil'lt time open, $42,950. 675-3210 642-iftS Owner will lielp fin. •)t!csCi\ 'r~~· ')\cnt't\1 -:::::=:=:=r=Zll:::ISC! , n1y 10% down. Don't ii * llff!Jw lhla home -It's ' 546-5990 OLE' VIEW EASTBLUFF ! Bdnn. 2 bath: clw'ntlng home with character. ~ t.aionally """"'ped • decorated; sweeplna: view from Jiving room le hzmal din. nn. Let us ahow you '""· 141""'· ~bb' JOUJ'JI at $.14.950. NiChols Real Estate .\ 546-9ll1 •I , ~1.,oL~ Have rluta after fiesta on beautiful Spanish patio sur. roundirig gorgeous pool. Sp&niah 4 bedroom, court yard, etc. "Red Tile Roor· Modem kitchen, 1tep.down living room. SEE 'JQOAY • Manana may be too late. Priced many PelO!I below market at $35,900. CALL! CT I mifteer:A =~ ~~E:;, 8J3.G700 644-24t1! -123.000 -h of Im· l!Z=:i:::lml:l=:iEI proven1enta includint:: de- ' LEASEI luxel.8x30poolwithJacuz· Lov!i). 3 BR, 2 bath home in zi • many many feature&. Walker J Lee Realtors nice area of Colta ~sa.. AlJL th1a •and NEAR the , 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams One year lease available _ Beach. HlJge V.A. Loan 1st &. tut months ~nt in SUbject to 6" % Gnual per- 180• VIEW advance. $250. per month. centa.ge rate which can be Fr:om highest point in Corona urumed by an;yone. CAIL • ~~i'~ . .E{iE~ . ~ml~ll. Wal.kf~ Lee rm.& one. of 2 bednns. Well maintained home with ~ 1093 Baker, C.'-1. 546-M40 ~ ~~vd; .. ~t9AdamPM s care.tree yard. Ideal tor I .,..,niil~mi~f'"'~l . .::~:;::,~u:;:~"O:::~:.!.:;:~ I ,0,,.,, wiUrini privao>. L 1 · 7 BEDROOMS $57 :m 2 FAMILY rooms. 3 baths. llrT[ BARRETJ RI.TY. M•tt. ~"· :"'''-"'" r.L I J,. Sep. children 1 wing • all ~ ' the extras. Beaut. secluded ., • 642 5200 countrY settinc In Newport lmmaculale 3 bedroom hol)'\' b , • Be•oh· Jd•oi, ru•kOm l'<me " ...... , ,painted insi';: 0 lor large family. Call for out. New carpetg .l dni 1, :" $29,95 •PP't. nic:e !onilly room 6 i ·'With ffi L01n PYRAMID EXCHANGORS lotwithrearacceu.ntA:or Re/atitul f.amlly bo!M. mtl')' 545.J6S2 VA tenna avail. CUI h.U, <bdrm• .. huge family MODEL HOME 540-8421. room, dining room, plush Avail now • this spacious 4 sha1 carpetin~. quality bUUt· Br, 3 Ba home. Fam rm, lns.i'Pnrk-Uke )'an1. sprlnk• lge din & nv are~ w/v~w. I~. 6% % annual rate loal'I Lee atrium, view kit, comp) \11 ilh (1,,,[ a&sumable. 540-l't.» cp:d, drpd, waJ!papered, 1 ::'We sell a home Jendscaped. $106.00J. Roy J . P .Very 27 m1nut11~' want Realtor, 1430 Galaxy l'OR THE r ~ OS TARBELL 2955 H•rber Dr. 646-1550 (Open Daily). You1D understand when 10'I • ..,_, Open till 9 PM tee the large bird e~a.ry lp-Qqkf SANTA ANA CANYON cludol with thll beo~Utui l/'COME UNITS-5 ACRES A HO~ Beaut. bU' bdrm. E. Side hOme. NEWPORT custom r&DCh. pool, tum. Exception..lly 1u1e livtnc \\laterfront triplex with Doat gue1t hOUlle. hnmed. poue&-Rm. with rll"'f1119C!e-. 9tpe.r.. for bolt • nice patio • only Uon. win consider eXCbaace ate din, R.rn. alidin;: Ila• 114.'100. FOW'i>iex, just"""' MAIN REAL TY doon to wp patio. ChHr> from gttat bay t ocean Reettors 547.....,., Bil Elec:t.~t. wtth diah- ~. $62.!!0D. ·washer. N R CATHOLIC 'tr llACK llAY O!URCH AND PARO<>!· •a~ 1::~. :.u:.R~I~, 1b%. ~ ~ ~:r::;. ~,B 11U1111 644-2A30 • d•n °"'" io I&• '"" pa· M. M. LA IORDE, Rltr. 1;z::Z;;::z1c:::1 I tiO. Deluxe kltch. w/pantr)'. &IJ.(fJ6.; Evea: 646-4579 I• SlOne fl'J>lo. llG l'AMILY HOME DUPLEX roR.TIN 00. -DOVER SHORES ~.11-th e1oh. DUPLEX · * ,o\'23 Ga'°"" o.. * l'lear Cmita Mna Parle • 0-to CIC.'Uln, ~ 3 nr. fl; Open Dally 1-6 * ~u~~N~~Sl~wn 2 bat.hi; h's>b .. 'disln¥uh-N~ twt>story 6 Br. 5 bt. L h ti ttor-~rt, $$4~. Fan"I. nn., din. nn .... 2 hJcl_. ec~"'Y*r. ea .. Gffr;IWilll•iJ"IMri-14f. Jot. Private beech. Call~ or~ Realtor "f'n.nk Jlme• Realtor • """ •7M350 r.U.1164 evH. 6'Ml8ll !<\'*'! ' THE REAL ESTATERS LET~S GET PERSONAL . ' -' I LIDO TOP VALUEI A Channing 4 Bedroom home v.•ith an extra large family room, separate dining Area and lushly landscaped prden .. , all on a 4:i foot, 11treet· to-1treet Jot. Shown anytime. $64,500 full price. - See Today! Phone 646· 7171 • SHEER CRAFTSMANSHIP DlsP1iYed in the remodeling of this attractive Cliff Dr. home. 3 bedrooms, family room and Jara;e living room. A real deUght home. $49,900. TO VIEW--646·7ln NEAR COLLEGE PARK 3 &ti.room, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, Built·in Appli. ance1, Bloclc wa11ed yard FHA/VA rtRMS! Ii'1 Sharp! cau Now. 546-2313 LEASE OPTION thl1 lu~rious 3 tied.room, 3 be.th, double fire· place home in Ne;wport Beach. 2000 square feet. All bullt·in Kitchen, newly painted euy·malnt~ nance on yard. Must see to appreciate. $37,950. 546-2313 MESA VERDE · Vacant, r ca.dY. to move in. Qn an extra wide Jot with room for l:ioat or trailer. 4 kdroom1 - 1 . ' 1tory w!th heavy ahake root In excellent location near 2 ·aolf coul"S6. $35,950. To lnapect.-646·7171 . ''The Client laas the right to know everything about the transaction before he acts'' • • • WE ' WANT TO SERV~ rou. . " .••. We like for tho people we Clo business with ,to have tho feeling they are buying • little bit of us when they buy • homo or investment property through THE REAL ESTATERS. Wo are delerminod to instill frillt i~ our clients by prov; ing wa ore trustworthy." Just Cll~<!lnY one of our • offices ••• we'll explain. ~ANT A WORKSHOP? Plus A dandy home, on Costa Meu.'1 Ea11Jlde.- 3 Bdnn1., 2 baths on an extra large lot.-l{jtchen with rbuilt·lt\I and dishwuher only $25,500 - PhoM 646·7171 Lowest Prictcl In MESA DEL MAR 3 bedroom, 2 bllth, lara:e brick fireplace, Gas built-ins, Shingle roof, Double ear garsge. Walk to all schools and large park. FHA or VA terma. Call 546-2313. f27,500. EASTBLUFF BARGAIN Be1t value In Eastbluff at· only $37,M>O -Corner Jot. 3 Bdrms., 2 baths -Family room Island cook center -O\fner will help finance -673-BMO, • INVESTMENTS • 5 UNITS on spacious ~ acre neer S.A. Country Club -2 3 Bdnna, 3 bathl and 3 2 Bdrm•. - $765 per month Income. $69,500 -Owner will trade tor smllll home -or will help finance. 646-71TI · 4-PLEX Excellent units 5 )Tl. old. New carpet - Bil e~tric sppllances, 3 bedrooms - 2 bdrms -out of town owner will trade - $59,500 -Phone 646· 7~ n CORONA DEL MAR· DUPLEX j • Both unill are apaclou1 3 bedrooms with 2'h baths LOCATED on one. of Corona del Mar'11 nicest tree lined atreets. Phone 673~ MANY, MANY MORE ~ . , PANORAMIC VIEW! 0cHn·C•l•lln•·Clty Lithl1 $37.950-10% down. You own the land! Very de· llp:hUul 4 bedroom and formal dining room. Beau- tiful easy care yard. PRICED FOR QUICK SAL.El 646-7171 FOR THE FAMILY ON ITS WAY UP A large 2400 sq. ft. family home with 4 btdroomt, 3 bath!, family room, formal dining, three car garage, large patio. Only steps. to CQmmunlty pool, tennil oourts and park. Only $42,950. call 673-8550 TRI· LEVEL Up on the hlll In beautiful MESA VERDE. Some view ot Ocean & Huntington Beach. I Bedrooms, 38aths, Separate Family Room, Formal Dining Room A Breakfut Area off l{jtchen. Court )'ard extra. Home in excellent condition. Call for Showing , , •• , 546·2313 WHY RENT? fl.fove In thl1 3 Bedroom\ Family Room home fot" $155/month. includes taxes, prlnclpal, tnternt snd IN1urance. Fenced In w:lth fruit trees I: all the privacy of California Uvfng. Phone 546-2313. VIEW HOME -JUST REDUCEO Beeutlfully kept view home with ''C&llfomla Prl· vacy'• that shows like a model home. 4 bedrooms &. dining room with a dream kitchen that opens on to a private pe.Uo. 'Room for a pool table. Only $47,SOO. Phone 673-8550 LARGE POOL WELL-NIGH COMPLETED Attractive east aide C.M. home on lovely eul-de- ec atreet-2 bdrm 4 dlnlng room -lfl.!'ge yard -excellent terms -10% down, on1y '33,950. THE REAL ESTATERS Serving l Newport Beach • Costa Mesa • Corona del Mor • Huntington Beach 4 Convenient Locations Near You NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 646-7171 COSTA MESA 2790 Her'-l tVd. 546-2l ll CORONA DEL MAR ll2 Morg-it• 67l.esso INVESTMENTS 27M Horbo. Blvd., Suite 20 I Coot• M.,e · 546-2316 . r 'EXPER/.EN.GE ELIMINATES EXPERIMENT. .. .. .... ..... .. . ' . ---------------I • Twtdly, Ju!1 28, 19W DAllY •ILOT l'OR. II l'OR. SALE HO ES FOR SALE • HOuses FOR s~ J Hous1s FOR SALE Huntl"tloft looch 1400 Huntl....... a.odl 1.00 ltlNTALS R!NTALS RINTALS RINTALS ---_.. -_.. ~-,.._,.rt ~·· 1211 ---. l'umlahod H-Unfvml"*' Aptt. l'umbhed All!t-Furnlahod * TAYLOR C-ry Clull D<ln'· ~N~= ~~ L-. a..ci. 2705 N•wport He!@f.'11 nit _.. -L•!'!!'.'! a.ach •705 LOOK ROOM GALORE ~-,"jjj\~.. $MO 2 BR Older home. New pall( ~!AIL 1 BR. utll pd, ..;, I> !'oot luaJ •d4ed ~ Ull. lJtn at nite. .Pre•ttplui l plu famllJ room with 2\i OIU , Dr. l BR., 2 Bl., I VALUE PACKED! .. ,.. ......, .. a11n<t1,. :.Jan....-rm. c...rt yard ~ ndui:dan maket Mt vP for t'Jlterta.iniq. patio. VacPt. $58,9Clt An. dD t'OOm!1 Wtstd11f bc>oM Acr'ota b'om a la.lrway of mu. tor oUl!r. HU&e 4 Bedrm, Formal din. I 1 BR •i>t S125 In 4 O\ll DolWOI wtW, ""' "'llrolll $38.50 Wk. pallo, 2 ... , to ba<b. 114' LOTS OF STYLE '"" • wnlly ""· 2 .......... P.rm.,,..l ReopGNlbla "°"" • ......... -""'· ~ $1§/rno ""'""' SI"' mo. 197-ll.l.1 '"" PLUS A POOL '" '4e ,.,,,,.r lot.132.950. Adulll. 11er .. _..,'111 utll. Reopom. -or lie Apll cOmp!el< maid RENTALS LEADERSHIP Ml-4466 WJIITE w • Panoramic mnl retired cpl. No child, •rvlce hou.ewatt1 'linens A ti. U f lthed w/f bdrm Ii 3 bl. a 11\&ly Mt>a Vttde O>untry OIJb. WANTED Ge: • load or thHe extras-Eves: 961 "°° View. ExctauSive leCtiolL a. no doe•· RtU:r. $ 21 0 · al.I utU.1 htated pcio1,' ' p " urn l?rl& Mated Ir tU~ pool, l ~~~~..,,~~""~i Br, 2 Bil . u.ivacy. 1 yr 492-a)37 VILLAGE INN Gen•ral 5000 j,belt buy''. Owner Pttinc anxioua IJJr 3 BR Homt in Newport Soe thh today. i·t9,!GO dea.L Vacant. lfela:ht. under $.15,00CJ \Vant. 25 h. tutn"'1I room with wet BY OWNER: f J..BR unha ",. bar, pool l&blt A all equip. + ta: f BR home, 2 yl'i lea!lt. $350. -t9'--U2T Unlv•r1Jty Park 3137 t..aa:una acach ~H·M36 NE\V 1 2 3 Bedrml All rnent. 4 mute-r size: bed-old . CI o 1 c to a 11. Summer R•nt111 2910 BALBOA INN blt1t1 ~ptJdn,, pr. N~ So (Open Eveninp) e< by ready bu.)ttr. A REAL CLASSIC! ~Nf.lllO rootnf. wau 10 wan carpet. $63,500/belt. Yrly Inc ir&XJ. 2 Bdrml. 1-bath S280 Balboa IT5-IT40 Coalt Plua s •oMl ttJ, tni: tttruout plus cuatomiud 11212 Aah, M1-8691 after LAGUNA &!A.CH 3 BR. 2 Batht S325 56-2321 NEW wa.turrt I bdrm bomt: _..._._.. (IO f:xduGve lJnda Ide. LIV· • E RfALTY inC ll fun ltieft. $151,D. ~•Mufi.ca& dn,peo .. fireplace 6' ~Ip. 5:30 CONDOMINIUM . 3 BR. 2'" Ball111 .$32S Ju•t for Sl~e Adults -~~-,,,-.,.-.,-..,,---..,. mcnt. All eleetrlc built.In 4 BR. e.or.io. Sale or lse. Lovely Bl~ Lagoon Villa, 2 3 BR. 2 be., lam. tm $375 SOAUPTAHRTBAMENCTLSU8 :I c:.··d~'!e.~ b~~:~ ~ 80 Linda .... °""'dally. • plug refrigerator. Submit By owner. Dec bllnt. BR, 2 M completely furn. 5 BR, 7~ be.. ~ w shp $135. M'l-9608 $5Cm down lo a S% per Refr'la. Poo11. Clbh.se. FH.4. i•hed, 1.intnl, di•he•, etc. e RED Hll.L REALTY N•wport le•ch '10ur aftl Y •ar'' WESLEY N. $5,000 DOWN Coot• -1100 VIEW cent VA kl&n, $38,500 or e&11 appr. Avail Alli U. 4Q-341B Wuber/dryer. Avail Au£: J.5. Univ. Park Center, Irvine 880 lrvlnr Ave. Costa M.1a 5100 I '°'=;.:.;.='---.;.;.;; !Could be 4 1&.rge bedrrnl .. be pW'Chutd VA wilh no Sept 5. 499.-715! AM or Call Aeytimf: m-OD> I Irvine a~ 16th) money down. ~•!'!,!_~ Hfts. 1630 831-0191 art}1ime. FOR rtntal• in Universi!y (7141 645-0550 FLOOR PLAN now 3: 3 ........ ,,,,,,.,. "HAS kitchen, G re a t ~! Realtors Move in Srpt. l. $48,500 TAYLOR CO. POOL HOME Lido IBayfront-2 Pools Park le Turtle Rock, call: H.OUDAY PLAZA Kltchenettte .Wit'• 11. rooms BOB PETI'IT. ReaJlm' DELUXE, apac:k:w t 'Bdrm, FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. NEWPORT <Dn'DI EVERYTHING" uni""'"' RealtY ..,...,0 3 Bednn, hwd noon, 16 x 34 Anthony pool. aJl Oil larae 65' x us· lot, Priced at the GI appraiMI. $25,SOO. Veta DO dn: FHA lo dn, by day, 'fti!:k or month. ''Since 1946.. Furn apt. S135. Plus util. LIDO SHOR£S HOTEL Days 83.1-0101 Nlght• Heated pool .. \mple park. 7111 SU J'*IUllli Hilll Road FORMAL dining room SEJI· D>l E, Cout Hwy., CdM ....... 10 ARATE family room: tarp BEAUTIFUL home in Nwpt Rt.AL~ATE IIUNTlNGTON BEA(]{ ore. tff.5313 431).7511 Open 1 day• -1:30 to 8:30 611 Lido Parle OrNB 673-8800 ing. No c:hlJcirtn • no pets, 1965 Pomona, C.M. 2 & 3 BR'a Privtte ~tio. p)QI • lndiv. laundry tac. 4 Bedroom 2 lath delwi;e ldtcben wkh brtak· Hgts • 3 br, 2 ba, Ir ram fut at'fll, formal. living rm w/bl( trplc. &4U9T2 room. mas sive FtRE· -_.. _ .. PLACE, imp'essive entry Dover Shores hall, 4 bi( bedrooms, 2 . 1227 """"-Vl£>.Nr Md ••IY * OLD WORLD * . $25 958 lo own at 534,950! Exclusive Dover Shott• bay W lk & l & mt. view home, UniqUe & ....... ~ ' •ud<d ,.. a er ee •""''''" • .,.... Built '"' ~ on RC cu e-bcaUt)' -': conventenee". 4~ 81.C4-llreet IN N 0 R !!' H 2043 WectcllfC Dr. ba 4 car gar hi ceil'p le COSTA MESA, $16,000 loan 646-ml ~Y e xt; a fe1ture1. at 5~ 1Xi for &n)'OJle. Pay. Open 'til 9:00 PM •169 000 Sf.8-7249 _,. 1111 mo, lot •Yer>· .:•=·=·=---- _, FHA R•Hlo (()pM Evta. 'til 1:30) Attractive l and !amlly nn. University Park 1237 •t f1JrvMlw 646-Ull Newparl wlih boat ••!ranee. good NEEDS BUYER NOW Sl,4 % FHA w.n to UIUJ'l')e, d • walJc to slatttl et".boob Only 2 BR. townhouse. Low own. S25 959 or otttr • Lall caJI -MUST SEU.! ' Open Eve~ Submit all oUen. $25,100. Call: Pat:ric:k Wood M5-2300 &!Jll.SllO e Bill Hov..,, Rltr. Canytlmel -or-= E. °""L CdM 673-3211 t-11111!~-.... !!!m ... m!'I -~ YOU .... ""' !and. Swu>1 1 Costa Mna 1~~~~~~~~~1 3 Br., din. or fam. rm. Charmer 1~0R SALE BY OWNER Encl."'""'"' ""·view l<>L 3 Bedroom houae v· larp Nr. rec. center. Many ex· a a.droorn .-fencedyard,~~cbiJ.. tnJ! $.19,500. ad. tnm 2 both $21,5IO dttn Md ..... Pone!OO 11v.,_833-<nn::::_::::.._Ai1..::.. ___ _ NO DOWN VA in& room. House just fresh.• ---------At this price you can't go ed ill u v 1- WTO!lg', It hu a double 1ar-Jy paint • W lie A or Back B•y 1240 •a-•· __ ,. . 1'11A. $21,500. .... -··" rovQ~ paoo, CALL EVENINGS DOGS OR HORSE )'attla are beautiful, 3 bed. OR WEEKENDS Assume S20,000, 6%% loan, rooms, 2 baths. But yet all 1 Full terms av4ilable. VA,JHA. 67U561 payable Sl'll PIT. You ca.n qU&liJy to own thia HOME + price $28,500. Submit or1 down payment. bou" • $23.500. DON'T INCOME ""'2 R!venklo D•'- WAlT! . E on Orchard off of Santa Retlrlna owner will. sell 7 BR, Ana, then turn 1st titl'ee:I 2 BA • mllll furniture, Now Tight A&e:nt 875-1657 !Ill Y 6600 FT. TO TIIE BEACH 1nd you'll also a:et 4 Bedmis, 2 baths, formtll din., w/w c:aJ1)e:t1, drpll and mueh """'' T•ke ov•r this high balance 61f4•/. VA lo•n nowll Ju11t listed-so be quick Full pri« '34 .000. • COATS WAtlACE lEALTOllS 9551 H1milton Av•. Huntlneton Bt•ch M2-4454 W•lk to IM a.och Neat I. clean 3 • F\fD car# ner home with shake root, boat gate, outside 6ho\\'et, etc., in lovely Newport 'West home. Owner moving out of area. Anxious. $37,500 . Open Evenings ~ 541-!1110 ICi£'.!1i5 BRING $$ .. SAVE $$ FULLER REALTY -1• $250 UTIL pd, 3 BR, R/0 firpl, w/w, Avail now. Broker 534-6980 1705 ' TRIPLEX 2 l·Bedrooma I I 2-bedroorn. Walldng dlltllnce to town -': ....... """""· .AO tan REAL ESTATE Corona d•I Mar 3250 --------WEEKLY R.entak. 1-2 Br. From $100. Near Beach 11. Bay! (1) 68U'J47, wknd& m.am. ~-Mo., ... "f!· t!ue1 ;_ 2 -~ ........ e, re •16, .. ,, c. ,.. y .... -.. LITILE Isle, Cute 1 BR, & trr. On Marruerhe, N, $125 wit, alpg 4. "l:rly l of Hwy. Avail 811 -owner. pel'IOn or cpl $165 1no, 646-2670 aJt 3:00 pm G'lS-7118 LEASE; Irvine Terrace, 2 LIDO, LINDA Isle, Bayside BR, den, 2% ba, bltns, $300 Dr. 11. Penin waterfronts. mo. Avail 8/1. 613-5193 OU-water Lido homes. eves/wknd•. BUI Grundy Rltr. 642--46tl1 ~~~-----~ 2 Br. Comer duplex, $1J5 BEACON Bay · Modern 2 mo. Furn or wtfum. So. ot Br. apt. Frplc, lrg sundeck. Hwy. 615-3190, 6'7~'788 Priv. heh. $2'l5. I 213) ... ~. (714) 6'13-5094 ./ BALBOA ISLAND. Attrac. Huntington Beech 3400 1 Br. apt, 11lps 4.. Avail 2 BR 2 hm Condo. 1 ml AU&. Call 67l-ll03 ~ to bc.h. Cpt/<lrp, tp.I, bltn1. 1190 G\enneyre St. DIX furn Garden Cottage, 21,, car gar. l Pools, 49-t-9473 54!}-0316 4 bJlui from bc:h. Pvt patio, Jac:wrl, auna, tennis ct. $100 wkly w/utii. 499-4301 Call Owc:k. 826--010 J.5 M-e HANDYMAN SPECIAL e ./ ON the: water, Balboa Ist. F, 5:30 I: wlcnds, 962--4522 •.UNIT apt .• ~yd·~ of w/ pieT. Sips a. Alli: 1·15, LUXURJ.OUS z.atory, 4 bt, W)'. approx . ......, •. uum $500. 615-6737 2 ba, formal dlnin&; nn, beach. Grossed $9,000 la1t all modern conven. Walk yr, !'Ids. paint &; cleanup UDO I&le Apia • stps 6, "J:G LL 100' Irom beach, $3X1 wk. to bch A: sc:bools. S350 mo. ot inter. Price ~.:iOO WI 2 .. ~ . 67., .,.... 962-9100 TRADE wa. mm. ...-..-~~~~~-,.-~...,- MISSION REALTY 494--0T.n AVAii. now thrU Stpt. BBQ 4 BR, 7 ba, cloee to bellch, * OPEN HOUSE * under trees. Sleeps 3 or all bltns incl. ret, paUo, ••, Daily Port8fina 1 .__,.... 4. CdM. 6~187 fncd yard, grdnr • wa~r .....,... -........ RENT AL pd. $285 mo. 5.:l&-827l Homes & Building Sites !to' 4 BDRM, 7 Ba. Close 1o Up Nye9 Pl. oft Cooi;t Hwy. HouMI Unfurnished beach & schOolS. Avail Aug. Victoria Beach Area o~;-~1-3000 1. S275 mo. 968-41.5.1 PLACE REALTY 49f..9'1ot 2969 So. Cout Hiwa,y -------1 HUNTINGTON HARBOUR 2 Bednns tots/pets OK $105 4 BR, 3 BA lease • or opt * $33,500 * 3 ~ util pd tots OK $150 841-8!61 Bkr. 893-052 Walk to Beach. Xlnt term11 2 Bedrm tum tots/pets $150 PLACE REALTY 494-9704 7 Bednm C.o&la Mesa $135 L•guna h•ch 3705 ~=~-= Costa M.sa 4100 ----.. ----* SUNNY * * ACRES * * Motel-Apts. * Studio & I B.drooms Neu 0raJWe Co. Airport & UCI. Adults only. 20122 Santa Ana Ave. tt!rr, Mn. Joachim, Apt 3-A ,S,_ M ERRIMAC .A_w oo o s LO'I/ RATES New 1:2 Bil, 2 BA., tum Day, Weck or Month or unturn, alr-cond, 1elf clean oven, beam cellln&, • Color TV Air Cond. dshwr, prlv gar, elevatort, • Pool &. Phone Serv incl theral>)I + swim pool1, • 1t1a1d Service avail BBQ's, aaunas, clubhouse. l Signal So. of O.C. Adulta. From $140. J utt FaiJ'll'(lundti: Eut ot :l600 Harbor near 2376 N BJ d Na~rs Cadillac at .(25 ewpot1 v · J.lerrimac Way. 545-6300 548-97>5 BAY MEADOW AP'I'S STUDIO apt. over garage. Ne1v exciting I BR, 140, K I I c henette w/disposal, 7 R dressing rm, sho\\·er & tub. B • nss. Beanl «illnp. Beamed ceilln&, crpt, lrplc, \\'ood pan'lg, shac Ctlll&:. Rlvk!ra Hide-a·Bed, dishes, priv. patio, &Orne w/trplca I Pool, sand volley ball Cl1, no lnena. Immaculate. $125. bl"~ $M cleaninz d I." po s 1 t. rec ""fi·. pool tabler. put. Responsiblt adults only. ting green, Adulta, no peta, 548-f093, 1187 Orange Ave. ~ W. Ba.y, Open Jlouae MOTEL·APTS U.7pm daily, '40-0073. SJ'i wk le up, Kita, htd pool, DELUXE 1 Ir 2 Br. Blt11 · --• •-•-b stv le dshwhr, pool, encl IW'-.. ....... , queen ~. P all W pd From serv. Qaily &: Wkly rates. ~7o. Chi~dnt w'e1come. ml N~ Blvd. at 2.lsL • &b.26U * 2U W. Wilson-no, 5. 548-14Ct5 8-Amerieard Master Charge: AVAIL Aug. l Will show $170 now. Furn. Studios $115. 3 Br., l~ Ba, patio, bit-Ins, Alao 1 BR apt. N 0 crpts, drps. Alk about our chldm/no peta. See Mgr, di»count pl&n. 880 Cente:r Apt 6, 2135 Elden, CM St. 64H340. 1135/mo, Di>< mob. horn<. HARBOR GREENS Compl. furn, hid I pool. GARDEN &: STUDIO APTS Adulta, No pels. 4 Seasons Bach.1, 2, 3 BR's, from $UO. med u pfl home for aged, ' ' Wol'lderlu! polential $30,000; 1--------- Wj HARBOR BLVD. so.ooo ""· 646-8115 • Ei.•tbluff 1242 ASSUMABLE 5o/•'.4 LOAN $154. per mo pays everything. Beautiful 3 Bednn w/large kit, dining area. Crpts, drPi thnaout I< freshly painted, Only 171,850. call 847-8S3L 2969 So. C.out Hlway 2 BR, 2 1tory tots/pets $125 STAR * LET S.47-0063 3 BR, 1 ~ BA, fabuloti• ~tob. Est 2359 Newport Bl. 2100 Pe tenon W13, C.M. coastal, ocean views. trees. 543-6332. 546-0370 1707 546 1140 -="'----- OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 o~. ~L~S,pa~~l~e ~'::; * NEW LISTING * l<oii0ii0ii0ii0ii0iiiii0ii0il yd, fncd. Will finance r~I Beaut. J Br. '1 l.amily rm. ......... e Park Estate ""'"'· 1fil9 Lindon Pl .. CM . Pert cood. M...,. ...... , L1gun• Nlgwl LAST WEEK BY OWNER J BR, 2 ha, on cul-de-sac, Lge te1T. lot. Nr school, No child/do(. m :; mo. yrly * SUS CASITAS OUIET adul1 epl. only, 2 br, Wtlllil5 f>48-94.19 Spacious nns. Cov, patio w/ Lake $2"1',900. 49&-4284. RINTAL FINDERS FrH Ti l•ndlorcls 6'~111 4JIW.1ttl,C-• M- leas. Avail. approx. Aug. FUrn, l BR. Apia, Ar\ult1 no pets, drpr, crpts, dshwhr 15. 494--l'r.5 only, no pela, 21JO Newport le htd/pooJ. $125. 2295 Paci. N.7.,,~c=E~v"'i.-w-..,<B=R.-cl.,,,-.-...... --1 Blvd., C.M .• 642-9296. fie Ave., C.M. 548-i8'1I of ~-p 1· ~-k dbl EAST-cicle Studio Apt: 2 br, &17-4429 See this b1-comer lot home BY owner, 3 Br. 1% ba. tam. waterlaU. Profns. deccftl· 16 ed A: Jandacaped. You will REAi FSf ATE MARI 1740 ,....,.,e. a J-O, """ , gar., bit-ins, Waler I: prde:ner 1'' ba, crpts, drpc, hltins, •DELUXE 1 l 2 BR Garden Dana Point paid. $285 mo. 642-4032 refrig, pool. No p e Is , Apia. Blt·ins, priv, p&tio, • BR 3 b fpl dbl 646-Ei610 heated pool, frplc. Adulta. with pool 11. separate game rm., fpl ., bltm, din. rm. \()lie this!! room, 3 Bedrms + dining S29,500. 546-6059. MORGAN REAL TY rrn completely redecorated 67' ,.., modo! "°""· vo,,.nl Md Mou Verde 1110 '7U642 ~ OPEN 'Tl L SOLD Oa.uk 4 bl', 2 be beauly at 1118'1 Wild Rose Lane. So. of Warner, W. of Springdale. Apflraised at S29,250 & load- ed w/quallty • C'rptl, drpc, lndscpng &. decor. SUbmit your own term11. Real El· tale By Mc Vay, 545-04all. NEW HOMES ~ $30,900 3 Bedrm, z be.th; 1570 &q. tt. M -2 BR. i;ep. gar, fncd yrd, patio. Avail 8/1. Fami- ly welcome. Activt, Bkr. . a. , . gur; cpl&, drps, bltnli. $375 Lie. MERRIMAC "'00DS oew S145 n10, 546-5163 A.gt. 4~2238, 49S-3403 IL1XUry 1·2 BR, air-<end. 425 NEWLY DECORATED i --. ready lo move inlo. QWck[.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/BLUFFS: Condo 3 br, 2-lli possession. 10% Down or RAN•blilC ffame ba, Split level, chOicert FflA·VA terms. $34,950, •r-greenbelt, p&,500. By owner Soni<' ocean view, nr new Yacht Harbor. Small loll. See at 34001 Aurelio Dr. BUILDER 642--t905 $130 -2 BR, fncd yrd, RIO, avail 8/L Child &: pet ~!come. Active, B k r • Merrimac Way. a4~ See 2 br & gar1 wtr pd 63&-WO San Cl•m•nl• 3710 clus 5100 Cr '176 Placerrtia·D S125 _ -=-'---'-~ 2 BR. Furn. Pool. pts. 7566 Oran&e • D Sll5 FHA LOAN 2 ON A LOT! Open for lnspactlon , ::••::.• .::'.,.=------SAT & SUN 11 to 5 Lara:e f Bcdrm • family .r· 2526 C•rn-1•, C.M. formal dining • great poo11----d-l_M ____ 12_50~ -• home. Immediate occu. Coron• • ar . CO~TS pancy, Owner will take low *OPEN DAILY 1.5 * • ~ payment or lease op. 4515 Roxbury Rd. WALLACE n. • Cameo Shor•• z BedroOn'I tK>rne 4--studio REALTOR$ lean Snnth Realtor Tired of the ronve•tlonal? m>lal. Walk \O beO<h. -546-4141-' Then see this beaut. contem-Only $.23.~. $2390 Down. · (Op.;n Evenin91) 646-3155 porary 3 BR .. conv. den CousUine Real Eat.all' ~==~ ._ ho me! MAGNIFICENT 536-3771 * ~1366 ii ~ VIEW + secluded Ir privale ClaM l?iil also new lriplex $66,500 1-'anlaslic Bara&inl Cuatm Cl'lller patio 3 1kl 3 Ba + gursl rn1 w/kllehn. Level IOI. Boal 1pce. 496-337'1 RENTALS House1 Furni1hH R•ntals io Shere 2005 -4 BR, 2 ba. house $225 mo. 19012 SlingraJ H . B c h . 613-6518 or &IU874. Costa Mesa 3100 QUIET adult couplt or)ly, 2 Br. no pets, rlrps, crp'ts, dshwhr, htd pool. $125. ml Pacific Ave. ~8 or 64Hl29 5 BR, 2 Ba home, marr11fi- cent ocean $215 mo. 601 Calle Real. 54()...1810 SLPS 5 • studenta ok. Avail Aug S.16, 23-JO & Au& JO/Sept 6. m. 613-8026 $225. ~10 .• 2 br., nr bc:h, frplc cpta, drpa, 1tove/n!L Sitt!· ing Realty 4~ RENTALS Apts. Fumlshecl Kid1 ok. $15.5 + dep, l9'J8 2 BR ru 1y d Cr t ,u .new ec. p, MapJe, Apt. I. 548-2808. drps. Encl patio1, Spac. ./ BACHELOR apt, Fur TI. grnds. Adulta only. $140 nlO. Drps, new w/w cpls, pool, 7283 Fountain Way E. pvt. ha.I. 557-Qi82 (Harbor, turn W. on Wilson) UTIL pd-Ne w crpts, drps, ALMOsr new 2 Bedrm, 2 pvt yant, gar. Married cpl BA 1pt w/trplc. si85 mo. or singl. $135. M&-6162 e::~te ~~ts·,~ BACH. Unit off garage, ba. 546-414.l ,,,_ __ ..., .._ no kit .. retrig, uU. pd. $60 n10. 6+6-214!1 SPACIOUS l BR, 7 bath, ~--~-----I E. 18th St Adulta, pvt yard, OWNERS family raised and pool & patio. Priced below Pride Of Ownershi p l Bedrm hOme, Ill' baths, &0ne • need smaller home. market, $76,SOO. hnl.·d n-.. .,,,, ....... Pool home, $2"1',950, 5!).i.~-~ as- R00;'11~1ATE wanted; l bclr house $88 mo. 1 blk to bch. 4827 River Avr., NB. 2 BR. Gar. Patio, crpta, drps, 1lovt', refri~. Quiet tropical ti:etling for adUltl onty. 1 blk to sbopt, $150 tn $1&1. 646-4430 or ~ LG, 1 br, furn, grg, water 1175 ~ d ---------1 pd. S130 mo Quiet Area. garage, • ... ,,ta., flMI· 5.f.S-1511 546-J'n6 or 540-4431 0.ner•I -, "• .. · "::.."",' Beautiful 4 bedroom 2 slo"" D L R I Est•t• frplc, fol'ced air '"'a •3 e ancy ea l!llmable FHA loan. \\'ill sell $26,500. Assumable fliA in &Orgeot11 condition. 2828 E. Coast Hwy., CdM Jo"HA or VA terms, 3 Bed-Share 3 bedroom Mme. loan m ,200, <5%~ int.) Form~ dining, + family 67J.3770 rooms, e:lec bllin kit., A Cor»truction man. S65 mo. payable .$151. per mo, lncl and kitchene~e. ~et .bar 4607 WAYNE must to see! • 624"7551 • S110 ATTRAC furn/uni. 3 RENT FURNITUIE omECT TO YOU Prine:, int, taxes, lrui. • ~red Jllltio \\'Ith ~-~· Spuciou' :i Br. + lge. glassed I' Jo"t::MALE or male, U-25, to BR 2 ba lnhse. Balcony, 2-1 Hr. Delivery Wtlls-McCardl•, Rltrs. Call 545-8474. South l..\RlDt lanai. In beaut. Cameo share ocean view 4 br hse. patio, pool. Avail 8/1. 100% PURCHASE OPTION JIU> Ncwpo11 Blvd., C.M. Reallon. Highlands. :! Ba.. (•pts., 162-4471 ( ~..::) 546-1103 $85 nw. 494-1655 968-2G47 Complete l BR Apt ., 548-;'~==E~'"';'·~";...,..;~1::~:;~~~~~~~~~=:1 drapes, Cheerful kllch. w/ FE~tALE 21).30 lu share 4 2 BR. hse. Crpt & drapes. Low u $22 per mo. bltns. lmn1ed. poase11. "GOOD BUYS" L r --.a _, ""~Q 30 o M' · C t buil 4 bedrm f br hon1e $90. g. e"'·"'' Yiu. .....,., G. ay 1n1m11m CORONA DEL MAR u• nm r, . · am. $41,500. REPOSSESSION! 545-5911 Orange Ave. $175 mo. WIDE VARIETY ily room, 2 bia: tir>eplaces. MORGAN REAL TV < BR i BA Bl•--... Cu1tom Furnit ur• Briaht & ahlny Lusk home. Thia beautiful home over-67).6641 675-6459 3 to 5 Bedroom1I EMPLOYED lady to share ' • u~. cp,., 3 Bdrma., fam. rm., pool-looks the 11th fairway ofl """'""'-'""iiii'""iiii~~ jNewly pai.nled. Carpeted I rny home. All prlv1. Own drpa:, dishwshe:r. Sehl, shop-Rent el alu yard, Landscaped, with Mesa Verde Golf eourse.l lJNEXCELLED VIEW rcnced. rm,,_ bath. s10 rno. 548-0027 pln1, fJ'Wy_ S290mo. 531-9563 511 \V. 19th, CM. 548·3481 aprinklen. Buy now, move 6%. assumable ~oan. 3036 ol l-larbor & ocean. Attr. HAFFOAL REAL TY -~ 1568 W Lincoln, Anhm 7'14-2800 in belorc school starts, :rava Rd. 540-4095. $62,900. •Plit level home: on R-S, 5100 141-4405 Newport B•1ch 3200 REMARKABLY "'"" 1-=:=:z==-== Newport Be•c:h 210:. UNBELIEVABLY • · -oq, !'· lot. ld"I !or ' ApL 1 • ----** VACANT ** EXTRAORDINARILY [ft, Q,l!,j/@·@f!I !\!:::;: N•wport Beach 1200 uni!•. $2'25,000. %it1 Oce111 VI" DUPLEX WATERFRONT -J Br & E Bluff. S3lS. 3 BR. Pool BEAUTIFUL 111'1, d.t• d Blvd., CdM, By appt only. den, 2 Ba, frpl , Wlhr/dry, Clevldtnce Realtor V I D'I G ~-A~ • 0 ~1430 8.ALCONV BAY VIEW Bill Grundy, Re•ltor 3'Kl 8th Streei dstiwhr. fncd yrd. Winter. 6Th-filK4 • a ••r• e.--""''s l:ai.ez=7=00=======tln Newport's beautiful mutts 833 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620 NE\Y SPANISH -:.z~ blocks 3513 Finlty, N.B. Putting gTMn, waterfall I: communily, Split level, 3 br,j.,""!"!"'~!l\!l'~'!!!~~ lo Ocean. Llve in 3 Bdrm· 3 BR, fam . nn. bltins, 2% ~tream, flowers everywhere, 2~ ba custom homr. Pool. 328 POPPY A VENUE Rent 2 Bdnn. $46,500. ---------ba. Lg. liv'ng rm. & le~ ~i' pool, rec. room, billiards. Delux• Duplexes weu landscaped, green bell Channing 2 br, view homf.". 11iE LINDBORG CO. Lido l1le 2351 yd. Nice area. SJOO per/mo. llBQ's, Sauna, fllm.-unturn, Completed b)' St-pt. 1. localion. Walk 10 schools, Like new, close lo beach. 5.16-2579 l..elllt". 54fH42l 1 & 2 Br. alac> SlniJes from c.orooo. del Mar. So. ol Jfwy. churchs, shops, a: proposed owner 675-3478 I •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ !HOUSE wanted to rent or 4 BR. 2% Ba., bltns. Steps ~S. See ttr XDJ Panon1 Crpu, dfl>I, lf:lf cleantna marina. Below market at BUYER with Cash wanta • 3 BDRM hie Jor aale, lease leue on Lldo l•le lrom lat to ocean. $350. Lease 6W, 6U-8870. Between Har- CJ'lo'len&, din mu, \\'Ilk in $40,500, Owner 644-2873 alter view honie. In Corona dcl w/optlon or renl, Pacific September. 675-00'S4 Caywood ftelllty 548-1290 bot l Newprt. 2 B1k N.19th do&cta. Grtat neighbor--5 pm, Mar. 3 er, 1 litory. liB-8916 Sands. New &hag nig, """"=======...::~:::::..:;:::;:!.,_.;:::.:;.::::.:=:::::=='::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:; hood? walk to beac:h. ~ • red e:corading. Tremend'1 Gen•r•I 2000 G•nerel 1000 Gener el 2000 now Ir pk:k own co!Drt. DELUXE spacious 3 BR & 71''---------: valUe at $195000. P h : ~'T!e:r/Ab<ent 644-0336. BR four. plexes. Excellen1.1,B;•;l;boe;;;;;p.;;..,;;;l;;n•;;•;;l~•;;1;l00;;1 53M.131 or !213) 254-1761. l•"!"'""""'""'!"!""!:l\"~~I OWner occupied and 1axl• 8341 Munster Dr, ll.B. Assume 6% FtlA &helter propert)', s9.710 in. w. B•y W•terfrent BY OWNER: 3 br. 2 ha. come, $15,000, 115,IXX) Ooi•in. BeautHul, newly rec:tec. 4 BR crpt. drapes • landsc1ped. Wettsidf! 4 SR .. den • 2 ba., PERRON '4t.-1771 + bonus room., P•tlod~ck,. Allllme Jo lnterei;t Io an, I car pr Ut 000 at U)8 . bench-pier I shp. $.1'75,000. SSl,000. 968-651I per mo, thi.~. Includes R~:~:AA~t~CLux V~t;r: ~Ill Grundy, Realtor BY OWNER: Lg. c br, 21,Y •r:"::~'l:-~d'.::: P .J.T.J. 2 Ba. Boet dock. SlOM dn. 83: Dover Dr., N.Q. 641-4620 bll, sep. fam. rm &: dining I f f Ni word&. CMt• MH• lawstmlf't or trade tor HaWllil PJ'OI>· rrn. Xlnt col\d. $44,500. fN( 10 °""' our limp I BE~:~~~LI ,'::,~~s~,., .• , 2 Lid, l•I• 1'51 1•""""38""'" 1 """"""""""'" 1 Q j~ j 1 j~ j ' sR ...... ''"'· "'" ..... ........ ., 0w"'" 2012 LARGE HOME Already Appraised · than l yr old: fine \Ve11. Galaxy Dr. or 204 Kings S©~~lA-~t.~s· The Puule with the !uilf·ln Chuckle B~A~CH=E=LO=R-APT=~,-G~.,,~u .. -12 BR. amoqg pinea on cul-de- men prefenl. Utilities pd. sac. Crpts, drps, GE kilch. encl gar, nr bus. $145. SllD/mo. aft. 6 p.m. 647-3234 Adults Mgr. at 124 E. ~ 2 BR. upstairs. Bltns, crpls, drp.s. No pea. 568 W. Wllaon A N•w W•y To liv• st. S45--0760 Newport Be•ch 4100 in N•wport B•ach • SPAC. 2 & 3 Bl\'•· Crpt&. OAKWOOD GARDEN D'I'•· Pool. 2214 Cdl'I• APARTMENTS Ave., Apt 7· 646--0627 On 16th Street btwn 2 BR. Crpts, drps, pool_ Kida Irvine ahd Dover Dr. ok. $140 + dep, 1998 Maple, (7141 642-1170 Apl 1. S<S-2818 ~~~~~-~~-\ BA YCLIFF MOTEL 2 BR •••• "'"'· ..... drJ>•. Clean. Inquire 1552 "A" * LOW WEEKLY RATES '* Coriander. 546-5268. Kitchen, TV'•, maid service:, l --'-7'"7""-""-"'"--Jleated Pool. Lrg l Br. Unf\lrn. 646-l265 998 E1 Camino Dr .. C.M. • 546-0Gl • 7 BR UPPER-walk to bch, $1:,0...2 BR, 2 BA. Sunbon $250 Incl util, Yriy avail I c .. , 911 'llU'lr.-7043. 2 13. iv rm. rpts, drpa, Ulll"IS. 447-9443 No pets. 1251-D Baker SI. -==--:,=-:-:.,-:::-c"han="--"' 12 BR. Crpts. bltns. Pool. I BR, um apt. on . "''' No children, no pets. JW. fl'Ont. Yeat1y by owner. 325 E. 17th Pl. 646--6895.. STh-02:3.1 • LRG 2 A 3 BR, .j Baths. ./ OCEANFRONT 2 Br. fum. Frplc, bllns, cpta, drps, encl upper. G&J'aiC. Y e a r I y 1· ~1034 leue. $250 mo. 642-3443 gar., pa 10 . ....,.. 2 br, unfurn-$130/mo Infant • WINTER RENTALS e o K J s c. . . no pelr. Olntl t. M, Rent NOW for Stpt.! ~9-3431 Abbey Realty &12:.3850 2 BR. Unlurn. $125. Or pa.1'\Jy * 1 BR. S1S5 yrly. utll pd. furn. No pell. \Valer paid. Adultt. On p e n I o • u I a . • 891-4885 S'ffi.4533 Sharp 1 BR, doge to 0CC 4250 2 BR, f'rpl, Balcony, 322 Heliotrope. Sumrner n.1e $150 week. avail sept l , JXl5 monthly. 6l5-3645 & UC!, Slll. Ref• required. *'*Call ~ •• 2 BR. crpts, drp1, bltrw. new. ly redecorated. AdUltt, $lSQ. 54(}... 7567. 548-Sm -'~1 . Exlltlrc V A. Place. Mf>...i9!M 5 Btdrm., family rn1., ):lt11 .._.,T,.A...,N,_Lr-A~-11 ·Ji mua er a!"a· ' 1treet to strte:I .S tt. lot. at $26 000 r • Joan! Asking $&1,000. f Br, pool" ~lil·llke 8)' app'l only. I I r I I Huntl!!*' INch 4400 ~"°" new, Fn UUe. Fam, nn, S97 COO Rttd;y to go to any Cl al · -· -I I BR $1U • 2 BR $150 2 BR, v»/w cpt1, drpc, blln RIO, spiral 1trc:se. rrp!c. 145 E. 18th, $7-6682 UNn.JRN 2 BR apl, Pvt patio, 642-1953, 3'l6 E. 18th Si. CotaNrJ~ gd loan. nr. achl&, ghop Ow'ner may hde down tnr 3 no mOOPy down. Grt•t rNr ~-.-... -.-..,,-11 ! FUml&bed -over Io o kl n a 171·~ 548-82tl. Bdnn. home In Temces, yard \l·lth patio and trufl A S A L I _ ~rtenct.r, did 1 apend beaut. a~n ptiUO A hid OOVJ:.rt Shorel • Ow-ner 5 Cd~t with oo:nn \<iew tttes. Jlugt' lnmll,y room. I I I 1• $100 in t.a last nightr pool. Adults. 103S 12th St. $24,000 br, bay vu, Imm.~-reas, LIDO REALTY INC. Ownl·r \Vinti aetbl • Jtty. l -y did • ta~l'ON trom U)<e. Park) 4 Bdrm. 2 ba. sd tenna.1112 Anti&Ua Way. !377 Via Lido 67S-l300 lna: tor Canada, .-,,.-,.,.,,-,...,,...,,.-..., ~'nr' ~.I thought I 5.16-'DOQ, aw-.. ...,.,., Prlme !143-W BAYFRONT TRIPLEX COATS Q U I L D I I had-~• 7-28 l.:;:;.DR.,=.ooo.w-a""hl-1...,CA'l"'="'"""=· ll'ft Dream ..U bu.ilt,.ln ELEG! ~Jl'"M· 2G:D3 b1q Lklo lilt 3 Bdnn, S bdnn • n,.,.--,-.,-..,.,:-r-1 A c..,.i.i. tf'l9 cJWckt. ---.J tfflm po!M, ftlk to beach. II " ••-•&• arta r " I I I I I I j • V •-1140 ldtdw!_l!r dlnl_na room, entr)I .,· 171 MO &0.-558:1 ' & 1-bdrm. 3 i;8r K""'81!· WALLACE by filling fn the ll!Wng words Adults, no pell. mo. Jial!. 1'1M tinll on markd. owner. 1 • • lUithl on lhe br.ach. Sl15,oo>. . you devalop lrtn llep No. 3 below. TradeWlnds Reill)' 841~,l ~lT*I BLUh"TS E·Plan. G re a 1 Brochu~ 011 Request REAL TORS • PRINT M.MIEllC> rnE£ Utll. Furn I BR apt. TARBELL HJS Harbor water vlew, l Br, b.m. nn . Howerd L•waon Jr. , 9551 Hemllton Ave, l ESE s Pool. \Valk to beach. St::O • Prlv, )'d, Xtn.•. '4MS61. • R••ltor 67MS62 Hvntlnt1ton ltach ···· up. M64f1' • ..... 7282 '.:! rind ~.:!,.~ NO mallet -ntt It 11:, vou --°'43"•"'1o"'1.s:~:>:1'°',~500~--'·---"•2MJ.l""'!P __ _. 1 • UNSC"~~! lETTfts TO LOE 2 Id', 1 ba, studio in P!lot~a.s ..-J ;'iUn'uw:~~ = "~f",! r9'.!:S ""-1i.iun1.,. ?J•.t.1NES1 . __ S_C_lA_M-_LITS __ IA_N_l_Wl_l_IN __ C_LA_SS_IFl_C_9'_TI_O_N_l_0_0_0_1 ·~;-:k~.·1 '!"'b. Ad\tlu. .... ....._ ~ t.__ s--. - 1 BR. Duph?11:. SllG. Stovt, re[ria. crpts, pr. Matutt adult•. W.,1Mle, ~ * LRC I BR. CrJolo. drp.i. 110W h!rrig: Adults, DD ptts. Sl20. 54S-405! art 4 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD i.. I . • 2 • l • l l • • E p F • • • 3 I • I c • l l f " (, ~ ( l N I ' H • l H 11 I I • ;;: • ' ' 2 I I N I ' 2 I ~ N I i - . -----------~--~ ----------~----.---- • RBNTALS AplL Unfvmllhld Newport lllMch aoo -PARK N!:WPOR'f' • tan .... Uva ovnq lhe ...... '1 pool.I, '1 taM1a cti. fr.ii.GOO Spa,,_ Sl15 to - Bach. 1 or 2 Br. AllO 1 .ey -Elle, kl~ prl pal. or bat SUbtm pries, opt maid ter, cpb, drplt. Just N. ot Fl.ahlon Ill a l Jamboree It Sari Jo.qutn HUii Rd. 644-IDI fo.r Mu- ina lnlo. ~ mAMIOOSWAY RENTALS RENTALS Apt1, Unfurnl1htd Aptt. Unfumllh..t HU11tl""°" llaach 5400Hunllngton lllMch l40ll THE HIGHLANDER "Scottish Treat" 16161 Parkside Ln. Mgr. M1-196t San Diego Frwy to Beach Blvd. 4 blk1 SQ. to Holt, w. on Holt 1 blk. T"ldl!, J,ly 18, 1970 DAILY PILOT :3 ...................... IJ!ll ...... !"l" ... ~IREALESTATE ANNOUNCEMENTS ANllou~-~=eN=rs~-,s=e=R-v-1c=e-D=t~R~ECTI5RY lit * * * * * GoMral and NOTICES and NOTICES ,,i.., Whodcly• W•nt? Wh•ddy• Got? Sl'ECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spacial R•le S Linet -S times -S buck1 ------------'---''----...::.;;.;o.=.;..;..=;__---i B•by1lttln9 6.SlO ~ .. -=ii~~~62GO~ lii-iiiiiiiiii-iiiii~"~iiiii'4~1~0~Announc.......iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii";i;;;;iiiii'4~1~· MATUR E WOMEN-GOV~ 1f,ad. $S au with own cu "'"'· Wfllt: Land-· WANTED PROFITABLE wou 11.85 Art011.ilt&d Avt, San. lb bomt ot ~ Undo 92-tlO P•nnt1 5..!;.. ~:..~~ •. ~ OVERWEIGHT LADIES e.."'":.':~ ~ TakO over Jo dn $20 mo. 891-3118. Mount•ln & Desert '2.10 CRESTLINE-new mountain C!\ISt bit home, 2 Br, 2 Ba; fl'pl, W/W Cfll'tll, blitn RJO, ceramk: tile. Nr. lae. $21.000. Bier. 546-9'155 For weight reducing program to establish statistics !or rapid permanent weight loss, conducted by qualihed physical culturisls. Must be a minimum of 20 1 pounds over- weight. have transport&tion and not cu.r-- renUy under doctor's care. -0-ll lnqulries com- plete!Y. contidenUal. ASK FOR MISS POWELL -S37.S412 C•rponterlng '590 --'----·I CARPENTRY M1NOR REPAIRS. No » TCll'I Small. Cahlmt 1a Pl' .,.. 6 • t ai • r caDtlWu.I 56&1.~ • llO .....,. ..... -ot-ILO. ._ 00ii>E11TER==-,""R"'•-m-o""d'"e.,..l, "Modern Spams' b" 11:u1..11 -Ao M1.11r 1NcL1.10• · 1-WIMll JW .. IN l't ~ ~~ ¥911 wa..t .. lrNe. 1,•t t P•rka"-Ln ~Yo1.1• ..-.. .. ,.,, .-.u. ._. •• et N•ffflllotl. 2 c!!;,,; ~.u..Wll!i... "'"':i lA QUINTA HERMOSA dol.lble ca~•. JZ!O to $3lO.. _ 1 .-'44-l''L ~ _ 1 .R_._E_._E_x_ch_•no~~·-'--6230-l '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~.111111 ·~~~~~,~~~·. eeNomr!t~ Magnificent OCEAN BUSINESS and -:: • ..-.... ~ ,..., ._ ~wcw-w 6 .._ • ...... OTMIM8 11011: U.1,,1-TltAOEI OHLYI Mgr. 147-5441 To Pl•ce Your Tr•der'a P•r•dise Ad VIEW Land FINANCIAL Found tFree Adsl MDO mW.L f'rff e1tlm1t r, LRG, cheery 2 Br, 2 Ba. dclWC4t lPl. UJllt.aln W/ frplc, ,bllnl It SO' bl.loony overiq Lldo lale A ocun. 3 car pr. $275 mo. Sorry, no child. or Jlil'fl. r . KU.· aard, Realtor. Ml ).fl22, FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN PHONE '42-5678 Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court· 10-1·x120· Laguna Beach w/ 8 -1 -r v-'.'""'c-',....,.'-='-0,..:.:Cufield:.__:._.;.;,;:i,=530.~-=--~---·I sln'et in1plU\'ements Wider UI Mal \\l:IJ::r!Ulia Hrt.'a • puPS»rs _ QU~ Woodcnft. -1 yards, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & foun-1si acrts La.Ice Co., Ore., ti $8000 free A clear _ ex4 GITT & COUNTRY STORE v.·ay. Adj. 25' Jot selling Qpportu'!!tits 6300 s ..,l~k~ ult! blk & white ::el :ra:n ~-· TERRIFIC LOCATION ! Mbo\'f' $8.00J. Askirlg $25,000. AAA ----~--1.C. ""'"" .,._0 u•-~ - alns. "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" = "'f~i<'."".!.'i,°~ l BR'o-From $150 2 BR's-From $170.$175 &b. 49f.'l260 M,IXX> equity for Track-l"Q. lor clear auto or ~ nC' ..._..__ _..._.. comparable or \l'hut ha"e '! Bkr. 491.121o, 497-1821 tvet CANOY SUPPLY CO;..TAL·r h·ri..' fouod by --R£M==oo"°"•'.l~J=N"·c;--'-~··· .. ~ .. c~o.. ROUTE C(L\l J"ll). Call to Ldenti"'. ' * 2 BR. J BA (2 atory). Rltns, prlv, patio A bi.l'-"OOY· Hoq hosp. area. 1185 mo. Appl ...... 4241 Hilaria Way, N.B. MG-0093 All util. incl. Fum &. Unfvrn. 1--------,._ .-.~v &1'.\.-0.'\.lO ~ RE:P~ l..ge 4 BR, 3 ba Do\•er Shor-R. E. Wanted '240 (NO SELLING tNVOLVt:D) Apt. Mainluute ~":.Sil!."~ Be•ch 5400 S.nte An• 5620 *·IA YFRONT * ON BEACH! LUXURY APTS. St•rf. e l BDRMS FROM flOO ..!!!!...•t $275. * '42·2202 e 2 BR 11> BA FROM $210 ·e 2 BR 2 BA FROM $200 IRVINE 5231 e 3 BR 2 BA FROM $3'0 NOW LEASING! New, ltmlly ind adult units with total recreation club and pre-gchool 1, 2 • 3 bdnns from $~. Nr. aho~ plng, KOlf, schools. Juat &OUth of San D~ Fvry, on Culver Dr., Irvine. ~. PARK WIST A,ARTMENTS Owned a.nd Muqed by The lnrlne Company Carpel><in-""wuher heated pool-«auna-tennis rec room-ocean Yiew1 patioH.mple par.kinr. Seeurity euard•· ruRN. al80 Avail. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC nl OCEAN AVE., H.B. <n-4> 536-1487 01c. open 10 am-6 ~ Daib' lilanaged by WILL1AM WALTERS CO. EHi llull 5242 NOW RENTING $150 • LRG 2 BR. Studio Apt. (Triplex). Fantll.y size Jdtch. w/bllns, crpta, drps, frplc., encl pr. 1 or 2 children ok. (Nr tcbll) No pet&. :WO S. Center St., S.A. Nr Warner, 557"6502 5705 * NORTH END * One of those rare lovely 1 BR apts, 1 bk>cll: ahoppiJ'\I, beaches, private, enclo!ted patio. $175. m-t23T or 49M488 2 BR, Ocean view, 1 blk to bch., sh&&: crpts. $185. 491-8188 REAL fSTATE GeMr•' l990 PRESTIGE LOCATION BRAND NEW 00 YOU NEED A HOUSE for teuti, delux• 1888 sq. ft. SCTTER !! Jo~or the month 4 BR, 214 BA apt. Frplc, l & 2 BEDROOMS of Aug. while on your vac. drapei, crpta, wet bar, prl FROM ONLY $1S5 Responslblr o lder cpl. balcocies, dbl gar< off kitchen Large lloor plans 548-2ll7. dllhwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Conv Spacious park like grnds BUS. man needs 24 Br hse to ahop'g schl• &: recreation. Complete rec facilities or apt, bch area. Pref. uo- From $315 mo/up Models open lt>-7 daily furn. yrly. 642.9278 835 Ami<H\111 Way, NB VILLA '.YARNER •·· -W 1 Ed -~ J SINGLE Doctor needs fum t.flft', next door 865 Amigos. """" arner al w ... us .. Manag@d by ITI4) 84Ul609 apt or hse on heh by Aua:. WILLI.AM WALTERS co. , Mnge'd by Wm Walters Co. 15. Will pay to $300. 644-2925 e NEW DELUXE e NEAR Huntittpln Harbour EMPLOYED mother w/sm. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. New Triplexes. Quiet area. child. 1-2 br. unturn. apt. ler · di Lrg 1 BR's. Dishwasher. 540-4005 aft. 5:00 Inc.I spac. mu s1..ute, n ••u... Pol ok. 1213) ·~ ~-1 "'~0:-~-'=-"""7""".'.'.'.= dbl lo door .,...., .....-~ 4-6 BR by Sept 1, yearly, rm I: prage, au or CTI-t) MS-3559 opener avail. Pool le Rec. 1 ~--~~~~-~ nr schoob:, up to $450 mo. are1t. OCEANFRONT, view, Box lif-1091 Daily Pilot e FROM $265 e sundeck, bei.. Newer spac e LANDLORDS e 865 Amip Way, NB dlx 2 Br. bltns, crpts, drpa, FREE RENTAL SERVICE Manaeed by lndry. Nr sbops & pier. $1'Q Broker ~ WD.LIAM WALTERS CX>. yr round. Adults, baby ok. l250 536-2131 ELDERLY lady wantl furn. downtown 11.B. Apt. Can ADULTS only • 2. br, crpll, Pl.)' S90 mo. max. 536-4.m drps stove, refng. & gar. i 140 'mo. 536-3750, 1401 Olive, -Apt. E. Rooms for Rent -sns 2'"' Ac, rstate lot, under- cround utit., Gavillan Hills, nr. Riverside. Lake Mat. thews vH, Trade for inc., trades, etc. Bkr. 547-6469 2.000+ Ac o1 11.fagnir. Utah land. Nr. Zion Nat. Pk. Wtr, trees, road, nr. I a k e, $350,000 etI. For trades: inc, or !? Bier. 547-6469. % Acre TusUn. Cul-de-sac, trtt111 hol'St's, private street. Tradft for listed securities. Owner, after 7 Pllf, 644-6421 Will trade equity in 4 br home ln Huntington Btach for traYel trailer or truck &. camper. • 962-9651 Mt. Chalet, CrellU~ • St. r-.toritz. Fabulous vw Lake Greiory. $35,0iXI. Trd eq, UIM for prop. N.B., Cd.M. (TI4) 64.ZJ.139, 52>8886. 10 ar 3l A close to big Jake a: river. Fishing, hunUng, campillg. Nr Winemucca, Nev. Trade ear, camper,, property in Hawaii or ? 54~2333 Residential lot • Weslcliff, NB. F"/C. $30,00) vllue. Trd Jor: land, boat. airplane, car or ? . \Vrite Daily Pilot Box M-1008. IZ~i IC. near RAJl.'CHO CAUF. S5ClX> equity + J.tm .ti 10CX1 trust deed: W anl: Sa4 Lake City prop- erty. Traris. Agt. 646-0732. 3) ae. 5 yr old Riverside, Orange Cl"DYe; manage- ment free. $5,650 ac. $76,IXX> eq. For: home, income, land. 494-29:E. '67 Ford Country Sedan: V-8, p/a, 'alr, r/h. Trade fur camptr or transpor11- tion cw. I 10 = -d -Plan one ••••···· $975.00 PUPPY \\/nf"a l'Ollar found H.aJ ~ Doo et.5301 " . )()me, "2•-"AI: ',,. c CASI \ BUYER ·-·•-R •, P'-• n~~ 00 II I .,_ ...... ,.., -v ""n ••VO •••••• ~. \'I{', anll l(ln & Pomona. ,.., .,.~ .. •.•rn w.i... ...... u- equtty for dupl~x, ,L'Onuv or R-4 2 actt• ar more, Orange Plan three •.••.• $32Xl.OO [-;C;;.,"l.;;6"1t;.;;:H:.,' ="=====:c 1 -:=.,•• ··-~.· ....::-,.•L am. hOnic~ lbu bot area. County, S&n Diego, Long Cash Required. Excellent in. .............. ,.....,. rm: * M0-29'JI * 6€'1lcll lll'ff. Bryda Inc.. come for a few noun W«'k· Lost 6401 Small or bif. ~?aU , 8 Room, 2700 ~Q. rt. hcnne, R.E. Broker. 1714) S.~3868 lywork. (Days1tEvt-n1ntsl. FF . CARPENTRY: Cablnet1, BacK Bay, 4 Br. 3~~ Ba .. or \11~1 6'r.>-8555 e"es and Refilling and coUccting rrom ,~JAL~ S1a111<'~c kit:, 4 Room AddJtions, Patkll. gs! apt , pool. \Y11nt duJlll.!x v.·k ends. t.'Oin operaled dlspeMerS ;11 nio. l3e1Kl' \\/brn 01ark111gs.. Ariysize-job. Mike &a-.2!111 CdM JI t t '1•nt. p;111·s dC'Cl1111ed. Vic: ' or sn1a l'r 10l11<'. BUSINESS •nd Nev.·port Beach and !'Ul'· Bu!bt~i. IOO b!k, Ck'<'anlront REPAIRS • ALTERAnONS Leon Vibert Rl1r. 54s.-0588 FINANCIAL roondillg area. \Ye estab. Dr. ?/Zt Ph. 673-1733 or * CABINETS. All.)' 11-job Launclramat 4 26 washers, lish roule. (Handles na111C! Ui.st ,'!. ~·ounc.I J)\•pl. Po.Uce ~yrs exper. 5o&&ffU 10 dry, Lake\\'OOd SS.<01. Business brand candy and snacks.) Station. RE\Vi\ltD? GEN. Repair, add. cab. Trade for rar, boat,. TD'1, Opportunities '300 1-'ot pel"50nal intrrvlc\v In - property out of area. Newport Beach area, st'nd W ST: 1'1c. &'t,;ur1111.. CdM; Formica, Jlllftl!:litW: marllle. ~ name, address and phone Poodle S-.'nlll~·. f t' ma I e, Anythinc! Dick. 61)..4tU AND number to MULTl·STATE bt•ig1• s. bt'\\'U Poodle/Scot. LovelY high deiert honlt', fi DISTRIBlITING. INC. 1681 lk', fr111al(·. 11•1scar on un-Ctment. Cone ......... acres, $30.001 value. Ex· SUDDENLY Broa~, Anaheim, Calif., drrs1df'. Katt\Y. 673-~; change for your propert)' 92802 cn4> 'l"f8.5060. 675418G. CONCRa'E. AU ~PH· hff NeWport. Laguna aN'&. R£ IN est ·S.wbw1 btRldnl. baul-49-14746 or 499-1331 YOU' Af:lil4te SlA:"-tESE cat lc.ross blue-q. I: lklpk)adlfW, lfn1oe point & Sl'al. vc•mtJ male. A tuell~. ~ Bob. By Owner JIB Units. Low BUSINESS Lost In the vie. near Shan. \h,..,tl., t..t. intettSt assumable loan. * READ THIS 11011 & Colll'ge C. M. ;,,,..,.,.., """.""'him""",.: Will sell 01' trarle for 32 to UllllNG Rew~I Day 5-1.7-9507 eve ~,~ H ........ s···1-.. •.:.... _... ftUU\ Give me ~a hour of )'OW' lilTlt' --.,.. lWI \:a ~ 38 fl. Sall,"':,"!·"9 GOOD MOllEY and I'll prov• to you"' Y'"" ;'""';::;'::08::,. -----ih"'=rl!Tkn'ii~l'-;...fiVl,to-;CON· ;.;;;;;~;;;;~;;;; * !Jol<MMo * bao.nkerthis1$1hebestmoney \VIUTB fe1nale whiPtflt, ~,_vtl ~·.£.< WUI trade lr(,! ~ Br, 2 Ba l ltecession Proof) maker in the US. Prove me looks like small Ct-e~. · v \\'AlJCS.pATJO hon1e in San Clemente: wrong and I'll pa)' you $100 Vic Balboa Blvd A SM9' CAU. DON, &Q-8514 magnificent ocean view. \Ve're proud to, talk cash for your ~ hour. Min. SI. f)J0-8J08 after !'PM, ~ CONCREn: FOR· Income property CM about our bus\ne<is. It s fas-Heartbroken! PAlt'lt)s.-DRJVES-ETC. · ·Call cinaUng. Dynan1ic. Apveals imum investment req'd $2750 ,. or N"'PI Bch. area. to the i;mall investor. No cash or $850 down w/good LOST.Cennan Shepherd pup. ~ eatimate, 67>6518. 540-lll!O. cxPt>rlcnre n<'e<'ssary. \Vlth c!'tOtllt. Scx:ured by 19'10 car py, 5 1110. Vic Slater i * CONCRE.'TE work: patlot, 8 UNITS Inglewood plus very little 1n~ncy ~c or sr e to be used in our rental sys. QuPr~. H.B. Rew ai'd . drvways, etc. L teen se d , . can achiev1· financial satlS· n-· US S.12-&'138 hllli ~ m .,~ clear ron1merc. uicome, for faction _ quickly or mod· tern. ocRI pl'(ij;'.ra1n 1n P ps ..,.,ment. .,_ land, house or beach prop. eralely. lt•s yours to decide. for Investment clubs with 5 SM whl male poodle, vie r-.tORE Concrete patio for erty, Equity $103.tnl. to $100 li1 capital. Call n4: O.Jboa Isl nr. 1o·erry land'g. leu money. Artillic settina:, Ow 67., 6259 Ours Is a vending ma· 835-Z>oll 10 to 6 daily. Ow111·r anxious. Rew. Lie. call Max at &#-0687 ncr ·>-chine pro~ram. The best. 6'J$!.239S 1.;;-=· :=;;..,;:=:===='I \\'ill 1 ra d e Gulbransen \VC! t>stabl~h ,route loca· VERY well known restaurant I' •pine! piano for older car Un11s. Pi:ov1dc f1n~t llne .nf -92 scah;, tJCt•r anti \VllX'. ------"6;05j:;C;on;;t:;r;•;•"';;;';';;;;;;;;;;i64;;;20;j . . · snack items. \\'e train, SU 500 6'1&-538.1 p 6405 Mu.st be m gd runn1n11: cond. counsr1 ~uide, hold your · · · 1rsonals Ii: have gd !ires. hand ~nl•l you're firmly WORR IF.D ABOUT 630S Business Wanted Call &46-5381 enlrl'nched. No experience . . 11('(.'("ssary. Just honesty, in-1 --------- Prtme 3 Store oorrunercaal, tegrily, wWingneu to Ila-BUY or Lee.se s ma 11 0.1. Owner Ori!gOfl 6ound • ten, 1vork 1.nd give good bw;lness. Motel. n1oh1 I e trade for vac land, wiU car· st'rvicc. honle park, retail lrancb15('. ry 1st TD, Call 508424. You ~ a <'ar and at Couple will Invest lG-60 r-.1 . Sooth Coll.st Reill Estate leasl 5600 for minimum in-Box No. P1071. Daily Pilot CONTRACTORS GENERAL CO. R.l:.ll~E1\1ENT? Addi&n.Re~lJ!C It you don t want to live ll.etidentlal-Col'Qmf\~ with y o 11 r children or e 5Jl.869'J e · relallveH, he.re's a cha.rp Licensed . Bonded to do something about ii. Our oon-prolit organization,l""•"'THE'"''"'REM'"'"'o"'D"'ELERS'"'-"•"'i Gift and country store, veir;tment strictly for equip- ""eat JCM.·ation Trade for n1cnt and inventory. No fM ..,. · ,. or ('Xtra of any ltlnd re- for O\'t'r 80 yn;, has made f'ree la 100% f;w~~i~-Qpporfunlties 6310 retiremcnl dreams come es -.....,..,....., Investment true for lhouliands. If you Kitchens garages 4 carports bus camper or ·.. ciull'ed. Be ambltloUi and &16-5.\113 \\'llllng to expand. or 548-3006 have 15 yn be lore you plan Complete Re model In r. 40 ACRES (ZONED MOBlLJo: to retire, you need not wor-Quall\)' Contractors. Mi. ti. WANT Manager for 6 units, , r Huntington Beach. W i I I reduce rent on 2 hr apt. ON TEN ACRES from $120 to $70 mo. 213: * OLDER Woman Only! Pvt. * studio br, w/ba. New. Newport Heights. $78/mo. ------ REAL ESTATE G1n1r•I * * * Vigorous 4-billion plus HOr-.1El Dbl. st. frontage. ry. Senti ru1me, address &1,.::3660:::..=~-~~-­* rf'Ccsslon 1>root business. Next lo $:'() million IX•vcl! J)bont number to P.O. Box MY WAY, quality home Cash sales. No credit risks. Sac $l!W per/ac. Terna! 10332. Santa Ana, 9210! for repair. W&lls, celli1lg, floon Works for you dAfu and fi88.2!XXI. Ext. 9 ct11y or eV('S. inforn111tlon .etc. Wo job too ama!J. REAL ESTATE nl,;:ht -evf'n whi e you ----L'ULLY LICEN "'"' 543-J.494 64&<817 l • 2 BR. Furn 1: u~ 65l-J411 Fireplaces / priv. patios /I~=--..... -==-=-·=-· NICE room for working man Pooll.Tennls.Contnt'IB!dtt,. 2 BR, newly painted, reuig., • V.'ilh or without cooking 100 Sea Lano, CdM ~21ill bltins, encl gar. $160. mo. prlv. E: Costa Me 1 a, incl uW. Adulti, no pell!. 642--0326 !MacArthur nr. Cofat Hwy) Tradewinds Realty 847-8511 NICE room for older 1 BR. newly deoor, nr. Chine BEACHBLUFF APTS employed man • pvt bath, c.ove. Adlfll. '160. 309 New 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool. showf!r, pvt. entrance, Fernleaf, 673-3177, 67;).-0629 Dsbwhr, patK>I. 8231 Ellis. 64G-53IO NE\V 2 Br, :i: Ba, S of Hwy. 842-8471 or 847-395'1 ROOM. Pvt. hnme. Kitchen Bltns, frpk:, patio, beam 1 BR. Near Ocean. Patio. priv. ComtrucHon man. $65 ceil, cpb, dps. $775. 54&-7983 Adul ls. mo. 642-7151 HUGE older 1 BR. Best LINDBORG CO. 536-2519 slee1>. Q u 1 ck turnover. *" s.....,"' 1~==,;,·~....,--;:---::c:-I _c0:;.a;,;•;,;•c:•,;;•:._l _____ 10r1xlnal inve6l!nent can be ~n1r f9.Lun 6320 ncnowned 1-llr>elu Spiritualist ,.WDITIONS. L. T. con- Olll R I ••it "'turned ln »l\Ort time. Advice on all matten. ·,~ction, slnale or .2 a1ory. - Busln•_s• f'.'toptrty 6050 c• ent• -1st TD Loan t.nve. Marriage, Buail'IC!U Plans. estimates" ~ts. -------- -RequirC!S only 6 to 8 8 1511 OWNER aeiling, lease or OFFICE SPACE hours per week of serious Readlf\&'t given 7 days a .:.,:;47,.:-:;=_~~~~-I trade busine'5 corner San 1ttefltlon. Uke getting re-8% INTER.ESI' Wec!k, 9 AM·9 Pl\.1 213 N. EJ Additions * Remodellfl&' Clemente lOOX!IO: Two bldp in tittment pay, annuity or 2 d TD L Camino Real, San Ff'ed H. Gerwick, Lie. 48x45 1 3ba0, ample park· HUNTINGTON peosion -only better! n oan Clemente, 492-9136,,942-0076 673-6041 * 56-2170 tng (Town needs Sea·f~ood . HARBOUR: Ir you're 1erlom, sincere, •MASSAGE &' SAUf"A Re5taurant) Across from 3 au11es available m Hunt. let's talk. Letter preferred. Terms based on equity. GRAND OPENING. 1...oYtly Carpet CJe•nlng • 6625 state Park&: Summer White ington Harbour. Boardwalk giving name., addrt'ss, '42·2171 545-0611 girls. EXPERT lttASSAGE. HOU&e. $20,DOO equity. '114: center. 27'0 sq. fl., 500 111. ft., P1hono n,umber, ~~ aullyfff. Strvina Harbor area 21 yn. Ask about our Las Vegas 14&-9341 600 sq, ft. c.au Ron Bartlett cent re erences ... ver · Sattler Mortgage Co. vacations. 10 AJ\,f to 2 A.\f. 213/59?-1361 e TI4/846-1361. \Vrjte to: 336 E. 11th Street 'I' DAYS. 2930 W. Coost Hwy, -~ p .··¥ Huntington Harbour Corp. UIMf'f Newport Beach 54$.3608. CARPET •$15 PER Week -up area, crpts, drps, stove It LARGE 2 br al be~ts. w/kitchen. $35 per \Veek-up .J't!fri&"· $180 mo. 673-69().1 drp.s, bi~~· 15!h St. /,pts. r-.10TEL. 5'18-9755 COSTA f.1esa: 600 sq. ft. Huntinsiton Beac.!'~ office, 600 sq. It. store. sro 6060 Business Rental <12'11 \Yarner Ave., 11 .B. Industries, l11c. Tru1t Deeds 6345 Slngle-\Vldowed-Divorcerl STEAM CLEANED F ;nest PresHge Loe. 119.; Emph'o Cooirnl, * MEN-WOMEN REASONABLE RATES Motels. Tr•ller 11 ~-* o $185 mo. Spacioo& 2 Br. 1% Santa An• 5620 Courts 5"7 sq. . S•"'l'· wner bil. Alao 2 BR. Duplex I I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; --'--'--------'-64'-~'-2'-1;,30'=~==~- Irvine Complex Dept. 5.l65A 1 $1200 2nd TO needed. \YIU lhe Al5o carpet lnstallatioO Pt'rsonalized service 10 flJ Dallas, Texas 75247. pa.y 10% amortise in 3 yrs. Everyone's looking for 646--5971 ''1~"'11l!!l!l[!!!!!J!!l!!l!!!!I[!!!!,. 8 unit deluxe apt bhtg, right one. We haVC! a way-sol-"""==""'===--1 your net.'Cis. Your O\\'n 0U1oe-1 · oompl ll!ed. Call 6~1260 caJI 111 le begin to lJVEI OWNERS SPECIAL Blk to heh, Adul!s only, I• I WEEKLY Rates. SEA gfuru;.OtTICE m pets. 536-8887 VILLA MARSEILLES LARK 1\-lOTEL. 2301 Newport Bch. 82.'i sq ft sec·y to answf'r your phone. *CANOY SUPPLY or rei. &7:>-5535 547.6667 500 sq. ft. pj. Dlamand F'ut\ i;ec'y services avail. ROUTE* 24 llr ReC!ording Carpet CJea.nen. 187 21-t ATI'RAC. 2 BR. $13j or $1.\!l. BRANO NEW Newport Blvd, c~~ * Ervin 615-1601 * All extras. Pool. Kicls/1)(!1s. SPACIOUS Jdc<il for n1fg. reps, indi vhl. <PART OR F'ULL TIP.IE) ANNOUNCEMENTS · St., COJ1ta Mesa, 64S-1317. I ""6373 V!'RY lllGI ' CO Ind NOTICES AL COllOLlCS Aoonymous ua.: bus. n1en, s sm. ,,..,.. . ~ . ~ IN ME Phone 512-7217 or WTlte to REMARC Servicea. 3 rooms ok. 17431.C Keelson Ln. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts, 847~. 847-7446 Adult Living ' R II BA · 1 Furn. A Unfurn. B , l , pa!to, poo . $165 mo. ~!ORA KAI Apts. Dishwasher. color ooordinal· East of Beach Blvd, 1,1 blk eel appliances • plush shag off Ga~eld carpet • choice of 2 color NE\V 1 Br-blk to bell<'h. Sil>. schemes • 2 baths • stall showers • mln'ored ward· ?riv patio • QUI ET! Gar. robe doors • Indirect light. Single adlls, couple. :m2-A 14th. 536-1319, fi73.17S.I Ing ln kitchen 4 breakfast bar • huge private fenoed 2 BR. Cpts, drpl;. Garage. patio • pluah ]VJUscaping • WaJking distance lo be11ch. brick Bat-8-Q's . iarae heal· Adults, no peta. 67;;.-0U6 ed pooh & lanai. j-t.OVELY NEW APTS 3101 So. Brlllol St. Near Oeean &. park, l & 2 (\i Mt. N. of So. Coel't Plua) BR'•. 4?; Uth SI. g.t7.3957 S•nt• An• I & 2 BR. New. Fllllc, Near PHONE: 557..a200 ocean. Patio. Adults . [ ,.,!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!"'!'~!!!!!~ LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 Dia; 64~78 for RESULTS 6000 lncom• Property ~-- CUSTOM 6 uni1s 4 prime Joe. Owners 4 Br, den, J Ba + 5 lrg i;tudlos; fplcs, patios. Net Sl!JB,500. Owner 6T;,.-5033. *NEW 6 UNIT* By Builder. NP.ar ocean, l!.B. AIM>, new 8 unit &; 4 Unit. • 847-3957 J Units, income $395 mo, $35.SOD. Owner-Agent • 543.2411i * TIRED of lliat old f'Urnlture? It's really not that hard to replace. Just wat~h the furniture & miscellaneous colull\J\I in the Cla.uitied Section. • NEWPORT Btjch dr luxe of· •·rHEE OONUS ROUTE P.O. Box l233 Costa 1.1eta. $21.50. Full) iuarantefi'I. rices. Air.rend . Hid. Priv. PLAN" Found (Fret Ads) 6400 Credit cards OK. 847--6688. Deluxe 1-Rm. oU ice ba. 2400 \V. Coast Uwy. Now available in Orange BLACKISH miniature Poo-STEAM je,t carpet cleanlna. Nr. Orange County Airport 2 or 3 R~1 ~uile in Irvine County, All loculions are di ma1 Wht Announcements 6410 By Qarjcare, natlon-'1f'idt &. Irvine Io du st r i a I Ind. Complx. $&:> furn, $100 con1n1crcia1 or lac1ory furn-ct!'.1. H!:a a:~vt;t ::i RESU MES Scripts--: aervl.pe. Free est. 642-4055 Complex. Carpet. drapes, unf. ~46-908.i IK>I 12-S PM \siled by us. Qual1fled person eating. Vic: Santa Ana .,.... Cl 10 music. air-<:<>ndilioning 1c; v•ill becorne dlstribu!or for Reports F..ditlng • Writing CARP.c.1 e&nlng. YT'll our candy (Neatle11 P!ant. li'rwy. l-213: 656-3700 • Rewritinii' 1'"a11t Accurate e:J(ptr, llc'd, bonded, Free ;,.nilorial service. 112."i i\lo. lndu1tr1'a l FOUND >< U bl k bl HI Call ''°l"' I" ers, Toot.lie Rolli, 1.lilk : OI Y ac , male Servlee. Re a son a e . · r vu-..,.., BOB PETTIT, Realtor Property 6080 Duds, etc.). You must have dog, brown face. White spot 646-5445 • 833--0101 • ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;./ on tail . Breed unknown. HILLGREN SQUARE ·2 lo 8 hMJ. per week spare F:ea collar. At Anlmal Annual Flea Market C•rpet l•ylng & .LOTS lime lrlays or eves.I. Santa Ana YWCA Re,.lr "26 1900 sq fl Deluxe Offices (2' $17,~ c111·h on Produc. $1150 lo Sl!BO Shelter, N.B. 1411 No. Broadway Avail. for immed. lease in lion Pla~. 74 x 135 each. CASll REQUIRED FOUND: White kitty approx. Anllquei, books, jewelry, l STILL have the Best deal one of cilics busiest shop.. Will conskier lrade. For more information \\Tile: 5 mot.: Vic, Corvo & Pit· dolls coins collcctablCll in town ln Carpet.UnoJeum. ping C!enters. \Yill divide. ..ROUTE DEPARTMENT # calm, Costa M~ Cl\1eso. BARGAINS! Snack.ea.;, Til1CA· Page. &p-2110 Air-cond., music, paneling, BUJLDING 23,'" P.O. Box 1739. Covl1,1a, Verde are1). M!}-1212 e\lt's. July 29 • 31, Noon-9 PM CARM:I' LAYER HAS crpts. flrps , Max, park·g & 3000 10 7000 Ill. ft . for IC!aat", Calif. 91722. Include? phone FOUND -Black & \l'hitC! SERVICE DIRECTORY CARPET!, Fant.lstic S.v· maint. 770 E. 11th St., C.til . lOc ft. nl"I. or call oollect (2U) female puppy, 3-4 mos. Vic. lllg11. Ca.II &1Wl64 ?11r Bram 213: 651 -2700 collect 33s.5433. Magnall& & Garfield, i•.v. I ----------1-....:.------- CORONA DEL MAR \Vill build 10 suit, l acre on COIN LAUNDRlF.S ~ 81byilttlng 655G l·E-l-oc-l-rl_c_a_l ____ 66tl1_ Dlx. office space. 2 Rms. Placentia. FRIGIDAIRE FOUND, female half-terrier BABYSl'M'ING-mature teen--.--~·-·------ Crnd fir. Priv bath. New Wells·McCardlt, Rltr1. JET-ACTION A half Chihuahua (?I· Lllc e11:l'r tralnC!d & exp·d. avail ELECTRICIAN. Sm1U jobs, crpt. Park·g. Util pd. $135 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Costa Mesa chnlce toc-$1000 tan. Vic: F.V., Stardu1tvlc. lor full unlll COiiege opet111. malnlenance & repai r s. mo. OwnC'.r. 6'73-675'1 ~8-Tm E'vt'a. 6d4..o684 PC!• mo nt•I. P.11nimum ~67 (Wiii live tn). fi'13-6667 54&-.M03 (D>iEE'S5iKKSSPP~A~C5'EE-f ·~!ioi~~~!l!!!!!!'f 11o.ooodoWll paym'"" ALL blk klUen, 10 wko. DABYSITIING In""' home ~c=o~N=T=R~A=c=T=OR~-L=1=c~.D~1 I 60ls, Santa A"-, Alpha Be ta major Found lil Vic: Haven Pl . · tnnt to s Yl'I Dl)' eves * "2 2192 * 305 No. El Cimino Reil Commtrcl• shopping «nler. Dig volume N. 9ch, Ask lor Raody. ~ wlu'lds. Nr 'vtctofia j .::::Z'=-=·===!::=;I Son 4~.~;nte ~ RC!I~. San c~;. laundry. $39,000. Reasonable 54M019 or 548-3484 . Jl arbc'lr C.i\t. 645--1473 Floors "'5 2 Stores Ir 3 apl1 Low down terms. KEYS Found on beach vie. COLLEGE student, daytime -DESK SPACE . !2 Waahen/8 °"""· ...,.i llland 6 Balboa. lnqul"' babyslll\..,. Lice"""' sw;m-CARPET VINYL TILE 17875 Be.ch Blvd. 14~ Ret. Balboa Blvd. Lea&. toc•Uon, $8,co:> F/P. Small at front counter, D&1ly ming 1nt1·r. Prefer beich UC CONTR. FREE EST. down Pl.)'lnt.nl Pilot. 2211 Balboa, N.B. irea. Own car. 5&8--1489 * 5t0-7262 * h ed for Z5 yrs. $96,000. COIN-0-MATIC Huntington 8~c Ref.looomicl Corp. '1;"1"1\tlPMENT, INC. BEAUTIFUL male Siamese BABYSITTING My home F It R ~-I &U-On, Ext 276 Commercial Bkr. m.6'100 -cat found Ptninlula Point. eo.ta Mesa ana Day or ·um Ur9 Unn "9 -===-"="""';-;:--15 Store• lllO,OOO. -w. -~-'sz;.~7133~==--613-3969 """'· Fe!ICOd )'d. ·641-5299. ~ Roflnllhlnv '671 DESK SPACE 191h St Belbel T....,. °"" FRANCHISE SIAMESE klu .. M"' v .... CHILD Cant my home. any >VRNO'URE Sbipphw A 222 Forest Avenus , .;,"",,.,.· 54~8-"'1768~Aa1,,=.-·-' ,,.---I VIVIANI WOODA'tD area. P~ue call age. J.teu. del Mar an!a, nit1nllhlna. L•gune Beech 1 • 514 w. Hamilton,~ acre, COSMETICS •11 9-3;.iOJ \Yalk SonQra &hi.. Soi~ 11 642·1S'B * near ll1rbor Blvd. $3\,800 A SUBSIDIARY OF FOUND • Rellck>ua i1em In ffi1LD Care days, evet le tM-9666 WUI •uhordlnate. 548-Tm O£NER.AL FOODS Newport Pitr 1 ad I e I wknds. •Near Paul.arir.o •i '.0::-~-:-·-:-1 -----:-:-1 LIDO BAYFRONT No trancttile fee. $,1K10 mW. tt1troom.&1~2861 1fltr ·l:JO Drlstlll. S46-50211 . -•~"I._;__...:;::::\ bE:SK SPACE -L0-1-,------,-l-DO mum ~vitary. Complete 2 U'IT!.E Black PvodJCI, ONE to .f yrs. Wkly S'llJ, JAPANESE Gatd1nlar $45 --------·I tra\ntna and continual gul. VU:. \V11T1tr • Ma.A:notla, ~IY home. Fenctd yard, hOt StrYlce, Not! work. Cleanup 875-8230 * $5,500 * dance at no COii. Clll collect J"ountiln Valley. 8Gfl6G4 lunche1. M~ )Id. malnt. 961-ml ===~-""'-=-I Vlew,LevtJ lota • EZ Terms Jean Van Sickle (313) BUSJUT 1ACe 1 wtl.L can ror l ch fl~ my EXPERIENCED l•QIUWlll UPSTAIRS front-light. 900 sq PLACE R!!Al,TY .f!M·9704 'l'n.\110. lown. -· muDA•l•LIJ!Y PIL~ home ,l'Vl'•· for \Vorkln~ 0 a rde net'. Com n let e ft, 2 pvt rtstrm1, pvt park-, ,.. vi ,.._ 1 • Ing lol. cnnvenlcnt to OOnlc, 2009 So. Cc.mil lllwa,y PLANNING to move? You 'll Qaulfled ll~tlon. s av 0 mother. Cull 1112--9793 ;Jel'\I cc, f'n:!it est, S.16--0724. Poat Office. 6'13-4m 'e...,.LA7G",UN=7A"'v"1"E1"v"'1"JlT=-::-• find an 1unatlna number of money, Un\e k e.IJnrt hy \VJl.J.. hab.y1.tt, •'l\Y l\(l~ GEN'L Cle11n U~. tw.e .erv, Quick CUh Sale $8850 homc1 tn today'• ClmWed 1hopplng trom )'Olli" vlrlnlty o( Eclw11f'1 ls Ii \\l'«t kill. roio.tlll, 1prlnklrt PfLOT WAN1' ADS! &U-5618 ___ ~_,.._9_,_•s ___ .Ad•. c~ them now. -lnll~C;...l!;;._atr. __ _,tl'---1'::rtlnittr. ILU. 3~ • repaired. 646-.S&U "' 6070 Office Rent•I --~~----------~--~--~---~--~-~------------~----- I f 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS (Any Item .,riced $50 Or Le~s) · Pin~h Y 001·seli A Pile Of Pennies (01· Even Dollars) ' Penny Pinchers Pile Up Profits · Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 North County, 540·1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS ' • . ~ ' -·------~~-·~~"··------------------------ ' I l I J l i -• J ( - A 1H I I f ' I • ~ ~ -T I I ! . c I • y I ( " '.I'. . .. -t '· . w ! c j ' I B ' j • • ' • • - I J • J s • ~ I • ' . I -I ' ' I i . -----------~~----- LA·WN Ii Garden Care, be1'utlflc1llon, weedlrll .Ii cleanup by collece fiudtnti. ~as. MJo.7363. Callna Brol. ~L'S Landacaptne. Tree removal. Yant remodeUn1. Trash hanlinir. lot cleanup. R£pilr spmkln. 67S-J1flf JAPANESE Gude.Mr Mo. Rate, Gen'l Clean-Up. Ex- pe:r. Reas. l,i-ee eat . 642.-2239.' LANDSCAPING, &anlenlrll', · pninin&, trlmmir11' and rr:rov•tina. Call aftu 5 p,m. 548-03>9'. GA RDENIN G; Land cleanups, Sprnkr IJYI, roto- eement work.~ Yancey ~ CLEAN UP SPECIAIJSr New fence i-repair. O<l!I joha. Reas. M&-6955 Complete Y•rtl C1rel JIM 5f0.4IJT Generel S.rvlce1 '612 Wall Cleaning By Machine Fut, low roal, driplep Free Est. B l B QUIK KLEEN * 962-5404 * APT CLEANING • PaintinJ' -Rug Shampooln1 Ir. Lite Repa i r1. REMARC SERVICES, 847..f.688 LEARN THE :ART! SAILING w1th SOUTH COAST YACHTS Tutoring on •n "lsl1nder" or one of the new 1'0'01y1.'1 6 hours or more on t~• w1ter -Instruction in basics -Racing techniques. 1100 W. COAST HWY., N.I . / HpM>; ll>pal" l LI re l"!!!!ll••···--------· M•lnfenance. Balboa Wand. If CaJI Geora:e. 675-8198 FENCING, repaln, paintinJ', ;:enera.I maint. ·646-1809 Ed's Cleanina: Service Carpet. -Upholstery -Wln-- dow1 • Floor CarT. 545-04!7 H•uli"il T.N'T, Lawn Ser vice. Garap clean-UPI, haulina ~ light mov!n&. MS-5863, "31-31'9 HAULINlr S10 A LOAD Clean up. Tree Serv. Gen. Pruning 646-2528, 543-8).U MOVING, Garq:e clean-up ~ lite haulin1. Reasol'll.ble. Free e1timale1. 66.-1602. YARD I Gar. Oe.anup. Remove trees, Ivy, truh. Grade, backhoe, 962-8745. HAULING* FREE EST SAUCERMAN SCHOOL ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS 88 FAIR DRIVE • COSTA MESA Grades 1 throu&h 9 Small group and individualized teaching lo meet the realistic needs of youngsters. Abilities will be challenged by good teach- ing and 1 variety of educational materials so tpat more effective ItarniDJ will result MOTIVATION Operates only from within a person -not from the ouu ide. Good leach111& can •lim· ulate motivation within a younester by building on successful learnin' experiences. Nothing succeeds like success . GLAD TIME . PRE.SCHOOL 1 Jth & Menrovla Str .. ts Newport a..ch (HMt Hotplt•I Are•) GLAD TIDINGS PRE-SCHOOL -ELEMENTARY ,, Special Summer Educational & Recreational Program Llmit to 12 students per class Kindergarten thru 4th Uc..-Pre-ScllMI Wittl 9..uf'W Twllen I: IN,..., SPECIAL RA TES FOR FIRST 25 PRE·SCHOOlERS WHO REGISTER!! 846-6620 or 546-7866 RADIO NEEDS ANNOUNCERS In broadcasting, only ability counts. Age or education is no barrier, once you have ac· quired the training that can bring you f,.me, happiness, and big money. AL.SO FCC lat Phona u.,. ... 6 Week CourH Reaulta Guaranteed THE INSTITUTI OF BROADCAST ARTS 1681 W. Broadwa¥; Anahdm ofi/a Za/i ' .. Ballt Center Ofiicw School of the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Now Accopllnt 11.,totrotlon i.ri *Beginner *Adults Summer Sassl6n, Victor Metene Llmlted Regi•tration lot· Advanced Classea 494-7271 1863 So. Coast Hwy., La9una IMch ee~@~eat~ Anna's ~re • Sdiool-ht Gracie ANNOUNCES f•cllltl11 for lnlorgad lnrellment , Re&isler your litUe ones for: • A full (fun) L .. rnlng Pr.,rem • Mutlc e Art • Dancln1 AIUE l DA~ CAREERS For Mlli m Wal.en . •Trawl Atont e 11 ... rvatlena . . • Ticket S.lu • AJr ·fNltht·Corp . ' • Communication• • Operatlen• Aeent D•y ahd nl9ht cla11u AIRLINE SCHOOLS 'PACiFiC Santa Ana J4S.4SM 610 l•1t 17th Stl'Mt Accredited: National Auoclalion Trade & Technical Schools Approved for Veterans Eli&lble in•tltution under the Federally IJl. oured Student Loan ?rogram MEN Enroll NOW for Aug. 3rd Classes in tt MEDICAL & DENTAL ASSISTANTS ' MORNING-AfTERNOON-lVININO For July 20th Cl•IMI for tt MEDICAL SEC"OARllS ttlNH~L4TION THERAPY I Ask tor Butch 'Vb!n you train with us. you lum by llllni top professional eqli.lp. ment. You are taught hr qualifled working air personalities and you are heard on a l~•dlng Orange Coun· ty Radio Station. e CrMtlve Activities. IHS Newport llvd. 714/US.2'22 ' 548-~ or 548-3240 TRASH I: garage clean-up. f.fJ>n. thru Sun, $10 a load. WHIRi .1'HE PROGRAM FITS THE CHILD! • H•t lunchu & Snack• • Ate• 2' threuth ht 1re• Free Estimate. 5'8-0031 ttousecleanfng 673.5 Housecleanin9? WE'RE THE EXPERTS I Willard H. Saucerman, Ed. D. Ttleph ... J4M06t SchNI 541751 .(o ... ) ENROLL NOW FOR FALL fer frM AudltJefl Phone 7724IOI Student Loanl Placement Aaalstance ~do)·~ CALIFORNIA '. ,.\ PllOFESSIONAL at..• ... ~C\e.-d ~ lbHIU'THEWC•l• scKoo1 W/IJJ/{)I ~ • zy 'VflP~. OF MIDICAL,& DINTAL l'WONNIL 2110 Thurln Ave., Co1t1 Mou l'h: 646-1444 RE St DENTIA L, com· merci111l , garare It property clean-up. 894-6103 Janitorial Service Rt:s. &: Con1mc'L 64l-6824 fl'.9nlng * IRONING* :P.ly Home., $1 Hr. 6755 Pick Up I: ~iv. 545-1641 Janitorial 6790 wORKER.s Available: Any kind or ~-ork, anytime. Cleaning, lawn v.rork, etc. EHlcient, re.llable. $2.50 hr. Ask for John or Nicholas 6'6-0075. SPARKLE Janitorial &: Win- dow cleanin& Serv. Win- Schools and This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. For furthet Information raga,ding the D•ily Pilot Schools and ln1tructi on Directory CALL 642·5678 , EXT. 325 NEWPORT· MESA PRE-SCHOOL 140 l 22nd ST., COSTA MESA 645-2323 Total Child Dev1lopm1nt Kinderearten Readiness Arts & Crafts Music & Rh,vthm Physical Fitness Phonics Color' & Numbers Educational Field Trips Hot Lunches Basic Bible Stories FREE 1, WEEKS TUITION Ir CHILD .C A RE FOR NEW STUDENTS • • • Enjoy success In life thrqh Modem Cosmetotou COIJ,EGE of BEAUTY oilers only the most advanced, updated Courses and TechD;iques. Your skills will be only as good II the tralnin& yo u have been &iven. New Clal1e1 Start Each Tunclay R~lster NOW '46·2919 I ffS Newport II~., Cooll MolO 2117 S. lrlml, S1nta Ane OOws. resld .. com96cl~ '!!t.i ~-------=;,;..;.;.c.;;_..;,..;..;...,;..;,..;... J_elt W•nted, Min " WANTED! ONE SMlLE·A-WHILE DAY CAMPER FOil HAVING TOO MUCH FUN Where: 14582 Web Boulevard Wh,y: Swim ScbOol e .Sport. e Craib Cookouts e Trips e Overnl&btl Who: Boyf A Girls 4-14 Rep.rdlea;. of school placement When : Your Choice ; By O.,V, \Veek, 1tfonlh or Wholt Summer. · No M'lnlm,um Sign-Up Requir,d fOR RIWARD & INFORMATION lf4.2ll~ -CALL -530-3133 cleanup. Free eit. .-vu•• Palntint1, P1 intln9, Tiie, Ceramk: 6974 7020 ,... p h • ,,.. ,~. CAPTAIN . AHi. Mgr. Land1capin1 6110 Pa~lftl --aper anging --,_ • Discount Tile Centu e Licensed • Radar -Loran, EXP. Bank teUtr wintl part Waltrtlt "":•· ~~'t; ** MOBILE ifdME oWNERs-L NT INT. I: Ext, Pal~Urur. Local ROOM Additiona, praaes. 21'.12.l So. Main, S.A. 546.J.617 30 Years exp, sail or power, time/Full time position. Lovely rutaurant needs ex· 'e:ofid·Rock will hold your METICULOUS PAI • n1'1, llc'd, Ins., ht est. nmodtl. (A]west Price In All types oJ Ula • wall, floor, Prof~ Sport Fisblnc CUhler or ofJk:e work. Lite per. waitreu to· lttp in and (ravel ti;ht . For Info. BLUE CHIP ~AMPS. JNS. Call Ohuck, 64S-0809. town. Uc. c ontractor . patio, entry ways, b9.lh I Guide Mexican I: Central lyplns. ftl-tln run front end of ·cotlet .54-7:165 or Ml-5240 Ask for crew C()J, 1tude.nt1, lnt-ext RETIRED Painter: l6 yn 642-2983 shower. Expert iflltailatlon American waters -ailtO MATURE op houlekeeper, •hop. Siar!: $2.50 per hr. llutch lloURI. Exp. Docks. 67>5ll2 e.xpf!r. Neat &: honest. Non flBERGLASS 1howe.r1 6: or free instructions for do ltcenl@d multi.enc. commer-com.,.nion, IOl'ne nurllnJ:. Ollil ·Sally Hat1.· S4G«l5.5. rn:E JOB You Want At The Qrinker. Call ~l. pullmans, 536-1915 ask for It yoonellen. Completa llne clal pilot, land I: sea. Ad· Will live in or out, 4!1W475 COASTAL AGENCY MAIO SERVICE 6115 Price Yo~'rt Wlllina To PROFESSJONftL, 30 yn exp. llcrb of acce110rie.s I: tooli tor mln1stntlve experience. . 2700 Harbor 81. CM C AND s Maid .serva Pay, Special prk:t1 on apts. paperhancine .&: palntJna', GEN'L l'lmodeiina I: malnt installation. But of refennca. Write , Other. tH.(rftt jobt 4vail. P..t,kltntW &: apartmuits. Stew, 548-&549 from Ena:land. fl6S..7t61 No , job too • m all. CERAMJC tile cualom Md. Box M 1080, Deily Pilot. JelM Men, Wem. 7100 Ats't Account•nt Ph &t2-987l or Mi-9117' TWO UCLA. 1tudlnts netd Lie d/lnMmd, 675-8183, Fee eitimati. TrM1urer/ContreUer NI04• Mo.1 $3.SS por hr. 12 mann9tded MW Perm. I temp, empJoyment. Dclivery ctrh~n. Ofdtr dept, with stereo.1V Co. Mu.t he neat I: a&Jl114'!V.. and over , 19, Compan)' wW train. Mr. Ruff 956-lm. ARI YOU ' · "'°"'" Exp'd bouu PIHlerlnt, Patch, <8f.n44 or 49U.m Part•Tlmo Y""" man IO.,..., htad IEAU1111UL7? P•lnllng, polllleB Flff •It. K., R•l'!'lr -S.wt"I' SMO CPA, _. • ...._.,.., 0· bflfffe,S •oct. ol N.B. flnn. Fonillior· It's Ill In lht I>' ol !be .... p h I USO ~74. ---------I ald.U., broad uperluc:e ta ii.)' w/~ reports hokier "** Ute TY _.. •por •nt "I No Wutl"' *,Jt~/:::~.::.G QUALITY )'OU'Vt otw•r• TrM hrvlco -ftnonclol ond --tJJllimite~ htlplUI. ml.~ wald> ond U""" INTERJOR/Ex l<rlM, '""· l *WALLPAPER 'Jr .,._ wanttd. O..Umakinr -"'-'"'---'-'-"--...;;.;.;.; fields, ...,c.lltt In ....r. ,,. aneJlCV ~wiirt fttl ,...,. u PNtlY u Br-. apt. Labor A matuial When )'O'J caU "Mac ___ c.u ______ 1 a.lluaUorw. Key Say. 1763 BOB'S TREE SURGERY tale devtlo~mtnt, SeMcu D a ~ tOmtol .._ ,.._, .n ua. $51. MS-1546 sg..~1;:'";..._,....,.........,.:64M032=;= I:::--::-;------;::::: I On.nae Ave., c.M. 645-1292. ls back ottutna: the .. me avalla~ In L.A. and OratWt' PerMnne Aeenc:V CALI, CASTING CO. P41NTING " ...... try .. HOUSES. doclu. boah, Plum~lng -""""'~"""' St<mtrttll Fint QuolllY -Service. Cou•IY ...... Coll~ TllSH HOPKINS m Devor Dr., NI . aij small repairs. Free a nyth l n1-ev11rythina Reaon.bleRate1 * Sf0.3'798 ·'llr 481 E. lfth, at In1tw, CM '4t·Jl70 1 ",v~-~~-lt'• ~~ ... ,. ~,._1e1. MG-3645 rauonablyPtlnted.Forfrn 24 HR PLUMBING l,ynn Scheid s.&-5887 TREES, Hedic1, trim, cut. •-LW ..__.., '4i.tm ~u:ro mechWc. Ua~t. for a -C: .. ~'::!. 6oo--.. •00 1., TV·~ .. TR.M>E. PainliQI" by 11cen1-cstimale '*"8752. • REMODi:LLING -"--....;;;=:_.:.=:::....-1 ,1utnpe removed, hauled . 30 W lftlftl, 7020 ·~~"!!'~IP"'~ AAA prap, penn. XLNT ~i·:, 1;.~m to SUS fd contractor for lnlck. PAINTING .. Ext·lnt. 11 »1·11644 Tll C Jc )In. exp. rully Inf. ~ em•n Aocounth'I Mechlne Nlacy. Runt'• Taxaco .... r ctay, No fto h.,.. ._, ftlf1l, o.r T 642--4559 Yf'I· exper. Int. Lie. Fret PLt,JMlll'NG REPAIR. t , er1m '974 DON'S TREE ERVICE All WlU. do typlJ'll my home Operater !trvtct, 1404 tt Cotst .,.. * F01\ Off C>"UA vo(i Supply The Paint. 3 e1t. ACCOUlt, C• 11l1'1 Cs . No job too 1mall * Verne, The 11.le ).fan * Qopu, Lile A lt11. l'ne or )'OW' ottk:t tor ttl'l\pcl"ll')' Bllm>Ull'll E1416. CaU AM, Hlshwi)r, lAI· 8 c b' AµDMCtl * Br, t.lv Rm A J.:;llchen s.g..s.n;. • &U-.11..28 • Cuil. won:. lnatall A ftJ'aln, E1tlmttt1. 64a.&514. work, call 9IM095 ~mo, Wntc:IW Ptnonntl .;4.;.;9'-3000..;;,;;"------CALL (tt4) ._ Painttd, $50. Call 5.i1·1638 * .. APIRHANGIR * w_" A"'TE=R....,,HH-,-le-n-, ""d1"'1.,..--,.·.I No ;lob too aml. Pl1ster pa. TREES I: ahruU: pruned, DAY worbr. Honest, depen--Aa~ncy, ~ Wtttdllt l1Ul QUICKER. YOU CALL, 10 AM to I PM * PAPIRHANOING Recosnlnd AuthOrity, Prior 1tc. $7.00 per h.r. tio. lAaklns 1hower repair, shaped, rtmoVfl Cit nplat1t. d1blt1 ntat~ Call Sll..(1513 ~Dri~"i-'~N,,,.B,,_.=~-= ~ PAINTING. 1 968-2435 lnatn1ctor, 64&-2-449 MJ.2755 or 6424!08 8'7·19S7/846-0a l 2rJ )'Tl loe. 838-U aft 6. or 541·1¥3 JOBS TOOAYI Out noo ' THE QUICKI:ll YOU SELL PILOT WAllT ADI 6IMl7I ' \ ·----------------~---' IJAILV PILOT '""""' Jllfl 28, 1970 :KiiS A EMPLOYMENT JOiSI EMPtoYillNT JOiS·A IMl'\.OYMlll! JOU A IMPLOYMIHT JOIS 6 EMPLOYMINT MlllCHANDISE FOR MEllCH4NDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR Joh Mon, w-. 7100 Jobo -· w-7100 Jobo Mon, w-7100 J!bl Mon, W-. 7100 Jobi M«;. Worn. 7100 SALi AND TRADE S~LE AND TRADE SALi AND TRADE iiABYsiTn:a .:;.;;;:--, CAR WASH IWRSl'YLIST • "'""""""t . SERVICE St>tlon Sim. .. Fumltv.. IOOO Antlqwt 1110 MISnll-· - FREE TO YOU . ~UIO!Wplckupm¥av~O: 'i!~ ~=1.T5::; wtJ11:r:0~· Top PRECISION lhi!tt metal 1J ~~ ~ t~°:'vi' Bargain Hunters! NINE antlquo ~worklng ,, __ • pay. steel tabrieaUon coml>f.m' e .. ...,., • Li · t N ...... ._._ plan.es. 111.ree sl.&inl!d a:lau f'tL ~aft 7PM. tiona Oranee Co. 2960 tfU. HEAD LAMINATOR In U. Pl"OC'lll of~ C.M. VJ.Jli room~ • a ... ....,... Windon All tn aood con-• FREE to good hofnto. 2 ' mo1. ~d. 1 wht tons hair, l um 3 8 wks old, 2 tan 1-caUco will dell..w. Btwn 3-5 pm call GlMCTf, It no &Ill. Call 839-ISM 7/30 MALE Shepherd, 1 \I ..... BU! A lawn. Cd, w/people, All lhots, NEEDS LA R 0 E YARD! aft. 6:00 p,m. 642.-6313 7/30 Babyj.lt a ldclc in OW' homf!. hor mvd .• Coe:ta Mt.A. and ~ tlber&l• bas immediate openincl ""' SUPERVISOR. LVN or RN, :::;.. ';,tchita":e. ~lu-r.! diijon. C&U. m-4f93 after Nr. BuWrd & 8AMUlg Ctnlrtl S.rvl<t Ttdt ~ A""" ll$ Court, .xperlen«d ......... t 3 to 11:30 lhlll. Parle Lido lO' Noug, "°"' $1:i ~a. Ul;S~Pltli>'i;,;;;=-,,,--=-· 862-S!NI WIU train mature woman to Sin Otmente. Convalucent Center. ~: metal atral&htbeck cbal:nl, • ORIENTAL Ruaa. Royal -. """'"' t. distributo equip. HOMEWORKERS WANTED ASSISTANT ~-12.lill ea. Occ. Nq, chain Kirmoo. U>al • flsU; olJo **TELLER ment. s.u ohllt, Penonnd (Envelope Addre"""'l· FOl\IMAN Tel<phone -Sol~ 17.lt>llO ea. Asoorted ""° ....ne.. Call 17~ Mature pen:ion wttn book· Pept.,Hoa,g HO$plta.1.,NB. 1Wab ltamped. aelt-&d a.rity"appeal.Pafdweetcly. draperies $$1: u,p Marble S.WI ... __ ----• ~ and/or ca.'!hitt bk-CARPENTERS & Cement dre11ed envelope. WELDING LEADMAN Apply: 325 N. BroadW&,)', top cof!ef! table w/inatchlng -'!.....~hlnn 1120 • • ernd-Mmt ~ 40-50 wpm. Finlshen wanted. LANGDON WORLD Rm. flO, Santa Ano.. lamp table; -lllplll bl.fi W/ 1970 . Slzl&tt toucb-o-tnat1c 9n•2312 <Piease call 9Q..Sf6L Call 96U945 TRADEM P.O. Box 11~ LAYOUT MECHANIC TELEPHONE OPERATOR intercom O)'ltCm J:kl. Artit I.Ir-zag, beaut. walnut co~ ~ Be11.ut male pure-Ind am BARMAID, ....,, gal, no * CHEF + (Second) A21. Redondo Beocb, Calil. 1-ll pm S.t A Sun decora"" planta ll0-Sl5. Col. ..... ...m ·but ... boJet. m.ed-red doxlo 2""' '°""' CI05b,Une, ~ ~. Day or rutL' 1nfE 902'1I Job security • advancement 228 F(ftd, teau-8etcb or TV anbmna•t21J; Niagara OYel'CUIJ •&ms. b I i nd l2XZ Tr. anUque white bl-lo children. All shots, Need ad nib' llh1ft. abo pt-time, no ALLEY WEST 21.0S Wed Homft Economist p:>tlmtial, Send resume or T $875 Rtla.xtlkor chalt $250, On hemi. detScna Ir etc. Gem. carpet, ClOft $400, llt'll ~ lvnne w/fencecf yd. 1-83U116& exp nee, wiU train. The Ooea.nfrOnt. N.B. 615-1U4 to $22,000 appUcation to Box M 103S, ca;r r.r.JAGm De aaJe MQD,, July :rr, lD am. 144 cub er amall pymts. $75. 3 Pr, beiut. cuat. made l.1M493 Place, uio w. Balboa Blvd, Dt'1l'ee required: and 10 )'fl. Daily Pilot. Acccunting U ~ 4 pm. Huntington Beach 545-8118. antique white &: co Id I 'N""""m=-,-....,....,l..,..at"°bo-mo-~l~oel N.B. 615-SJ.n Cl£AllNG exp. in 1ood line, call W. temial 1~ :~ Convaleaeent HOfPlt.il, 18192 drapes. Ytty full, COil $1500, mo old nialo c.at blk le wht ** BARMAID, Bikini, full raine, Westcliff ~nJOmel. Co PQY• tee Waotee Jobi) Dela.ware, R:B. Mui slcal ~.~.I~· Ladies 1.25 also mother Siamese female: or pt. time. Tup pay. Apply: GIRL Agenc:t, aof3 We!tclill Dr., d U A IJFIED SALESMAN ca.it Ann &i.2TlU: Westc1 ttt 20 PC ~MAORI D'' nstrumentt 1125 j'" ~ti.ire diamond ring Ir mixed ~ SJame1e klttl!M 5aMY L&My, 2001 Harbor N.8. M>mo. · ::2'"3 ~ ~i s!m~ Penonnel ~. 204.'l i ROOM GROUP FENDER BASS AMPIJFlER ~nling,~ co!~ld$1300~~ Before 4 S46-3566, ~ BIYd, C.M. Off" HOUSF.KEEPm • ba~t;. .Uml with a rapidly &?OW• Westditt Drtve, l'l.8. FROM MODEL HOMES DELUXE RICKENBAOIER for $400. rzia1 4J2..6130 ~s (ie~t,= $2.::'Per Hour :e ~~ ;i!i ~ q Ge.rden Center le * WAITRESS· Coffee Shop, ~i ~~ ;*cott! BASS GU?rAR MOVING SALE ~~': •c=~~ot = Room.686W.19th.C.M. Mon & Fri Ev11. on!", Sept thrll J une. Must land1eape Development :'!.!: .. *MCook~_Appll703Y table:2Jamps,dreuer,miri. *6'15-640t * EVCt')'thirig goes,:: ft. coucb "-v• tell ... •trand ..... We 962~71 " Corp, in 0 r an g e Co. ,...... .~.. ea ~. ror headboard quilted box and matching love seat • ,... .... -. BEAUTY-~-~·~~ or have owtt 1ralll. 962--'ll03 Tedmical exper, pref., but Supenor, C.M. ~ Ar matt.a 5 pc Pianos & Or91n1 1130 mabed gold velvet chair, are well behaved le lonely part • ~ lltt, COCKTAIL WAITRESS after 2Pm not mandatory. Xlnt pay * WArI'RES;S * Over 21.. dining room:, table 6' hS-SAVE NOW coffee table and 2 matching 1-3 )'tl. su.o81S or 836-4493 C.M. ~ wanted Dana Villa CoclctaD HSKPRS Emplyr pays tee with t'Ol'JI benefits k opp ft¥' lundl 8hift. Costa. Mesa back chain. DURING SUMMER end tables • dinette set and PETE & Gladys need a BEAUTY operator w 1th Loung Dana Po" 496-5727 George Allen Byland Apn. tor advancement into mgmt. Oluntry Oub, 1701 Golf COMPARE AT $749.95 CLEARANCE SALE six chain .. washer, dryer, home. 9 mp old dogs, iba&· follow~. also 1 lot mana&'· e, int cy 106-B E. 16th. S.A. Contact Mr. Wall <ntJ Course Rd, C.M. e.-W refrigerator; 1V • 2 beauti. gy type, brother A list.el'. ;...., Mesa Verde Write Box COFFEE SHOP WAITRESS 51 .. ~.,..,,.,.. •• .,., e have trade-ins repos fu1 ~ -·-~"~ """"" ......... --· • 7-0300. . Vt.r'<>UQV W~S. exp'd. Apply, No down Pmta. 0n11 $16 mo rent returns: It ~ rnooeb ~U table lamps. Lot• LIJV<: .._,....,,"'" ....... wau. ..... M·1034. Daily Pilot. 2m W. e~nced. Over 25, 4 to 12 * HOUSEKEEPER • Age. PORTER 1262 Paliaades Rd., S.A. WELK'S WAREHOUSE ot every model Hammond of ~aceUaneous household <top. 968-3118 '1130 Balbo& Blvd, Newpor t &hift. SHERATON BEACH 20-45 expettnced. mut be-Foiqueli1jyb8.kery, Gen· *THE DERBY* 6IXI W. 4-lh Sl, Santa Ana Organ, Buy now. rtteive items, 54().7772. Help-Pleue-Owner11 Moved Beach. INN, 21112 Pacific Coast xlnt.' Top l&laiy. M6--0108 enl dean·up, AIJply hi. WANTED: SKIPPER, tor 75' extra discount. . left me behind, I'm a love. BELLMEN Hwy, Hunt. Bch. or M&-l.fi66 pel'tlDb tu Mr. Anden:in. motor a.iler, Full time, OVER STOCKID + HAMMOND . , • , • abl~ male dog very friendly SHERATON .BEACH IN~ 11 <X>u.EGE girls & bi«hl HOI'EL CASHIER, lemale. Phone l ·713 585-0131 L,A. MUST SELL 1n CORONA DEL MAR , , . need gd home w/tence yd. now accepting applications grads, fult, p/time. Avg. NCR 4200 exper euentiaJ Snack Shop Bakery Ask for Yacht Information. 'l"wins $4?.95, Fulls $59.95, 2854 E, Coast Hwy, 67J.8930 cs:J4.<4c;..;-,,98c._ _____ _ for the position ot bellmen. $3 hr. No exper necess. For THE NEWPORTER INN. 3"4i E. a.st Hwy. WAREHOUSE MAN Qu:ellll.S89.95, Kings $1.19.95, Open Mon 1: Fri eves, · · · 4H Club, Future Farmers Must be over 21. Apply in aJ>Pt. Call Mn. Muller, PH• (TI4) 644-1700 ' c.orui. del Mar Twin su.e Headboards fl 95 or Boys Club, registered pel'SOll, 21ll2 Paclfie Coast $t6-5Tl0. JNSU.RANCE ~--·-•ty •• , .. _ It )'OU have exper. in ofc. Trundl •M9S · • Walnut Spinet Plano •. : N Ze-'--.. __ .. how and H Bch -..-IUU ~ ..-RECEPTIONIST 60...,ly ---.... co needs e Sets fllOJ· , Sleep. M""'"' ''" ~-ion · ~ b ew l:Ulll"' o:u " Hwy., unt. • ** COOKS. Experienced cy, Qirona del Mar. EX~ Front otrloe ............... .-, t1n1"7 to~=~-dliw'"" el' SoLu $169.f!iA Up, Studio d;J .".11..~· ...., .. ll'IC uo:nc • hreedi~ doe and i babies. BOOKKEEPER F /C wheel man** DISHW~ PERIENCED, 20-30 hn per Ught ~~ie d:-et . ;;;:: Start .. ~ OJuches $89.95. "•""yr wam.nty. ~o type oouch $10, tonn1ca 545-4522 7128 $100 Up, Stable est.ab. New. ER. Experienced, Apply. wk. Reply p.o. Box ~No. typing can Lor a in e WYJ~ ~ sally Hart SI ESTA SLE£1" SHOP H~~ND ~RGA~ table 2~chain $10, ~" Bar-MALE Cocka-pOo 6 moa.. old port Beach Co, Very pleas-BLUE DOLPHIN 8, CdM 645-2Tio. West.dill Peraonnei 540-6ffi6. 1927 Harbor mvd., CM 1 onl,)', ..,00 inc ben .. 1o del., beque no, hand lawn mower very gd with cllildren. Wht 8:°tworkingoond. Topbene. 3.155 V1a Lido, N.B. INVENTORY !Agency, 2043 WestclJ!f COASTAL AGENCY 645-2760 & ..,,...:_"'0 1y", ....... sprinkler S20, men's w/gray marking11. fits fleavy constr exper --...._ "-~ Bl, CM •u155 Cit, Hwy, Dana PL .-••° Florshelm shoes 10~ill like 540-3435 7/YJ • . · · COOK, BROILER SAt.n'E CONTROL ANALYST Drive, N.B. .:1,,., nai....,,.-.n Gould Mu1ic Co. $10 TV ~ga~b~t~·=j See Chet, BEN BROWN'S C.alcu'.alDraraddingmachine RELIABLE &itter to oome Other fee free jobs avail. 496-4562 Since 19ll ~~ his' and i::'~~J~g Part Schnauzer, part terrier Agency 2J> °w: warner 31106 S. Cloe.It flwy, experienc.9, ?ifust ba lamiL. in fie 2 chldrn. El Toro WOMEN lite delivery work SCRAM LETS 2045 No. M1ln, S.A. bands $25 each. 548-0027 & part ! ? Male dog a~t_! Sulto it, Sonia Ana. • South LAguna w witb Jnvenblry & produc. area, 5 day wk. 131.-M"" ,.; .. own car. Apply; , • * 547-8611 * * AUCTION * rno'• old, Very lovable - *COOK* Experienced, full tton control procedures. aft. 5:30 825 N. Broadway, Rm tlO, p gentle. 836-4498 5J0.1536 BOOKKEEPER· time. Perie' L i do eon-.wttytoread~workRESTAURANT·Nowt&klna Santa.Ana. ANSWERS ~::s FineFumiture DACHSHUND terrier,' SECT'Y. valescent Uospibl. ~ with data ~ re-appUcatlom fnr waitresses, , •Yamaha Piano& Organa &: Appliances spayed fem, very gentle a: Cltl f'ridaY tor Real Estate CON STR UCTI 0 N ac-~~cal 1~n'°: hosteaes, I.-~i!lrwa.sben;, School1-ln1tructlon 7600 Uition -Natal -Alias -• Thomu Organs Auctions Fri$y 7:30 pm affect. wants good home, "-?< Lo<&I, lull eountant, exper. Cllmrn'I etudod. 'O>ni:, ;,.~1 :=,. ~':'/. ~:."'r.!!'1 ...,5 YOUR MOVE Liquid _ LOST TT e IDmbAll Pianos Windy's Auction Barn 494-<992 · 7/31J dWge-with Home Office medical. Salary, age open. Office ' · 11 "Bartender did I spend e Kohler A Campbell 21751,S Newport, CM 646-8686 BEAUTIFUL Calico long-&&!~. Reports, AIR • li.B. * 551-1300 * ' See Sett)!: Bruce at ~in here iast night?" COAST MUSIC BehiM Tony's Bldg. Mat'!. haired &payed female cat ~--·~~~me DENTALroceptlom.t.exper L.M.CoxMft.Co, m l INDUSTRY CAREERS ''Ye .. yaudid." NEWPORT&HARBOR LADIES dJamond din ner ~~"~L1· born<. Hod •bo,,•28~ • expemes, ~-~ or nece&IU')', .tart Sept 8, 1 ••• E W S .a. ''Thank God, I thought 1 Costa Mesa * 642-3851 ring, aet with 1 u karat ~ ~ . .,_ No ..... -a1 ,.,, __ ....... _. • arner, ,,... • ;it, 1-~~------"'t""'<"'wn .... '6. -.z•u .. , '""""• v1.>-V'llN • ~1551 ~j Xl!C had LOST IT." Open lQ..6 l'ri 10.9 Sun 12-5 center diamond, 2 diamonds ADORABLE 2 mo. old train- i')AJJ time. SAlal> '.'Advance-DENTAL ........,,t, ]3-25, ' AIRLINE & JRAYll WURLITZER el"tric Organ -%. karat on each •Ide, ed, pt Abypt P"'ian female ""p1 nt KOOd. Major health mostly chair with some desk Equal opportunity employer ~ for CaJftl' Girlll Office Furnltu,.. 8010 mod 2 ' Brilliant cut Sacrifice' Rep-kitten, had shots, darling an, & lab Newport Beach. 410 W Cout H NB el 4600, full key ly ID Box P360 Daily Pilot personality. 962--2029 'i'/28 Coldwell, Banker & Co. ~ LADY over 40 r•fin e d By app;,int. wy,.~ e OPERATIONS AGENT Refin'd 34x60 woOd desks, ~1,.d 'wat2Snut"":/ cllocavkie~ SINGLE whee; trailer ,,,,;, FOUND a silver.grey pood~ Newport Beacb 833-0700 w/personality, exp'd in e TICKET SALES $69.50 e Refin'd wood ann .... .. o:u 'f"" DESK CLERK. all shift. Ap-Sales, ~e background in rotary chairs, $29.50 • We GOVer. lncludes . external Port .. TV S20. Se w i n g vie: Harbor s h o Pp i n g ply 9-6 PM, Mon thnl Sal decorating. Knowledge of SALESLADY wanted, Ex.per •RESERVATIONS have the largest selection Leslie speilir: otat $33X> mactunt;_ no & _$20. Bikes ~~ C.r.f. morn. o7n11~ SHERATON BEACH INN Bookkpg I: typing, No only, Lillian's, So. Cout e AIR FREIGHT.CARGO of used otfi<'Al' furn in this new • sacriliOI! at $600. ~ ~.~.' ... Cupetmg, priced "° 2llJ2 Pacific Cout Hwy, mioking, Steady position Plaza. C.M. e COMMUNICATIONS area. S42-l962 •>i;I"•· ....... ny Am, couch $20. BEAUTIFUL matched pair of blk kittens, all &bots, well disciplined. All YoU need is love. ;,js--0813 7128 Hunt Bc:h. 536·-1421 w/ one of the finest Sl'LESLADY for dreas shop. e TRAVEL AGENT Mc Mahan. Desk 117 E. 18th, C.M. DRUMMER ---•-• f I deeora..i-studioe: in Nwpt ....,,... time Mature A-ly JllOO N·"-~ Blvd MOVING, must sell! Dinett• night&over 2~ or ~i ~salary "future. fu~gr. at022l ~A~ •• Afrline Schools Pacific ~ • HAMMOND, Stein.way, Yam-set work benches bookcase~ Call 646-3632 I PGilot1ve ...,,r_:_'BM·'_ .. ,!rlte Daily Balboa ISi, 610 E. 17th, Senta Ana MUSf L>'qu>'d~-.• n-m-•~e aha. New &-usl!d pianmt oJ twin beds, like i-iew boy'~ .lJU"' wu• c.Ar"C'c.•• 54U596 "'~ ...., l""'' most makes, Best buys In bic)'Cle. Lots of other items EDITOR TRAINEE ~EN-Top opportuniqi or Separate! Also cdpier So. Calif. a t Schmidt Music 646-2896, 253 Rose Ln, CM ' LANDSCAPE WORKERS A: w/growing Carpel A: b' 21= H hor Bl d ,_ N · 4 BLACK & White fluft,Y kiNeni, hsebrkn. 2 mn's. 414 Carnation, CdM. ~ aft S &: wknds. 7/3tJ Nowr,rt Jotrnalism ltudent preferred _........... (inbher w........ Th t i I 7900 mac uie. "" ar v ' ....... lll07 ·Main, Santa J-na 15'x-42" Dough 0 -y Sun1·,- p a... to worll: after school for ....... ,...,,. ..,....., ~. __ p:_,iy ~aler. Call Bob, ti r Cl CM ,...., "'' ersonne ,..ency 546-253.5 ..., 1'1111"'•••• I =========:i •'"""""":~~~iiiiiiii ... 1 pool, w/atainless steel fiJ. 6 ADORABLE 1 wk. old kit· W Dovtt Dr., NB 6portsmen'1Putiication. We ACTING I· !er. access. $150, 54~1 tens. Assorted colol'sr. '42'3170 pOOl.isb newspapers tOl' LVN, relief week ends, 7 Salet Do you want ID be a full time Garage Sale 8022 ORGANS aft. 4. 548-4950. 2207-A State Ave. .. ~-~-!!!~-.~-EU~-~~.-~E-;N-~·~;~-!!!-~-d ::::oi ~:; :;~~:~: Dea'd End'. working professional! Do Newport Shores until 1.iii. Di1c~untl ST'"c EN=rto"'ReTY=P"E,.-.~,-.-,~h~,-•• -; I CM. 7131. f'ntbusiast&, You molt be a 6tUIOf4. )'OU have the aelf discipline 432-6nd Sl 6Q.3l23 House· WARD'S BALDWIN SI'UDTO ou porter Model. New. 2 CALICO kitterv;, 1 black good b'Pili. You molt lw-ve MAIDS-.Fult time, 25 or Mo T l 7 to subject )'Oursell to a rJg. hold toys misc Eafty Amer 1819 N t, C M 6tU484 Other access. 842-3028 Alt. W.bhy male Ir; 1 gray A: written either !Dr """'"' over, Apply 16&1 Ne··--RIV DD OW. id Brili:&h. tralnin~. course & dbl 1 bed' $'I'S Moo dropleaf ewpor · • -5';;30"°=~,,.---~~ white female. Box tr&in1d., ,,~ .. ,,...., ,,., the artietie humiJHy to ac. 8 •= o•~' M FENDER n--· · <=An7 / achool paper or for C'IUbiide Blvd., CM. Phonl!' 642--9873 cept lnor I tit th sea.ta _. ...,.._ urn. e.x, BALDWIN organ model 47. O<US amplifier .,...,... 00 7 ~· ....... · · ..,. ... _ Bored? m ro es un e Haw Mod · · · deluxe Rickenbaeber bus P..,..M"ltion. ~ou GlQ6t ""' MAN To assist mgr Of local • lrainlng period ;, complete? • · hke ne..Y, F'r. Provi11C1al, guitir * DIRT * prepared to thow &amples applilnol nft.1 N•t ap-U so THE LONOON LA· Lido Isle Garq:e Sale cherry wood, $1995. 6-44-42TI * 67_ * 5 cu: yds. * Cl( >'O'r work. Knowtedp C( pearanoe. a.:m Mr. Thell 1tep up to the growth GUNA Ac T -"l Rs WORK-204 Via Antibl!1, Lanz PlANO, "todem Spinet $325. -_5-64-04 "* "* 646-0450 * 118~ bdpt.d.. Phooe Mr. Wright S-10 am only. country wber. u,. money SHOP mlgbt be •ble ID help dresses, blouses, slacks, No tax. Delivered po66ibly. NICE refrig-freezer $ 1 5 • Tl~ ltok:omb, &C-4148. MATURE WOMEN road and exclmment never )'OU. No previous experie~ etc. Sizes 8, _9 & 10. Many CdM, 615-0023. :~• 1~· ~ ~f &: 0~ld 2 HEALTHY young male Costa Mesa BUSBOY EXPERIENCED SHIP. with own car tnd. You tel your own pace necessary, m ~ bam~. other goocbes. 673-3948 BALDWIN Spinet pi an 0 .. 64fr2'75l · • t. .OO parakeets l .blue, 1 green., Apply in Pen!on M'"!i,;"'1'ENTE pA••~• IR'. PRl;>FITABLE WORK ,_your own goals, This re. Members oonlf this exclU&ve DECORATOR Moving. furn. Like new. Sacrifice $600. COMPLE'I't kit h ~343.'"or without cag7/t; 1555 W, ADAMS M'AJ'UNE MECi-iA"NiCS: JD home of parents spected land corporation group will. Y ,be accepted clothes, pictures, interesting Priv. party. 642-0&n boards Birc c en cup-~=~'~-~-~-"'.-=! 1 li,..;;;iCOSTiiOiiiAi;iiMiiESAiiiiiiiiiliil !Apply Jn ~ LI do Parents . will ihow bow you may ~=-~swa~thaclotlry dP'r>OIDnal junk. 128 Via Mentone, Lido PRIVATE PART.Y loweri\"'. 5ink ~. ~=~& SIAMESE cal, altere_d male. Night thne-oYEt 18 11 .,...._.. Babyslttlnn Agy reach them witb u liWe "'"''' ... le 1rec r, 1 1 6..., <=<=Ac wants to buy piano "'0 """" 11 _ • very atfec:t., would lift good_ Shipyard 900 Lido Park • effort as possible. Call 49H4M for appt. s • IJ""iWIU for Cash 213: 461-1423 J-t<>""VJ"'-' a ~ home. 494-8992 f/!W) Drive, Newport Bc:h. * 8f2.553T * TJ •tart, you will receive ex. MERCHANDISE FOR GARAGE Sale • We h ave 4 x 8 REGULATION pool Check Here with the Job Kings! *°"' 2 Olll<t1 Covor* All Of Ortngt County MANY OPENINGS IN ALL AREAS ""OFl'ICE "" l'ACTORY (Melt t.. l'tmalal APEX Employment Agency •THE USYWAY (Ilk U1 why) 1873 HAUOR ILVD. (\I block So. of 19th) COSTA MESA EXPER. production llWD-MECHANICAL tensive N.le1 training, And SALE AND TRADE everything. 901 Celtil Place, Television l20S table ~mplete with all ac-&tre•. App).y '115 S, Cout Experienced with hand I: you'll be be.deed by a power. (EastbluffJ N.B. Sat & Sun cessones. Xlnt cond. $350. flwy, 12-5 Tues-Fri, Reh. power toola, Capable of ful lead producing advertls. Furniture 8000 25th & 26th. 644-0437 SACRIFICE brand new blk 646-3629 before 4 PM, Experienced PANTRY accurate work, S49-U77, Ing program -plus: GARAGE sale-All week from & wht 19" por1. RCA TV 2 CRAGAR S.S. crome WOMAN wanted, Spapetti TOPATRON, INC. .+ Draw Plan Availahle 17 PC. KING SIZE 5 pm 112 Amethy&t. Balboa W/stand. Must see to ap-reverse mags; to f it Bendtt. 6J>4 W. c.out Hwy, MEDICAL Transcriber • + Vlork Close ID Home BEDROOM Island. 673-675l prec. $100. 675-8.117 Chrysler product, l mo old. N.B. Ph: 645--0651 pathology exper pref. Days,, :+ Car Plan Available Large 9 dra~er dresser, mlr-GARAGE SALE!! NEW & USED TVs $75. Aft. 5:00 8'12-7943 EXPER'D. lJJnch Waitress. full ttme, Personnel Dept., .+ _Be an associ•te of H, W. ~r, 2 bedside 1tands, King Washer, dryer, bunk beds For &alelrenl KING•SIZE BED - "" •-m, 5 do~ a -~ Pb•, Hoeg Hogpital, NB Dwight, respec:t2d Calif. size headboard, frame, quilt. etc. l"""" Sti""""'" H.Bch. Complete. Good condition. ...,...,.. -JW wa. RE Broke ed ttre lheets blank ....,,.. .......... Dunlap's. 1815 Newport, CM. 839-W!S bef 10 em. MOTEL Desk Clerk (Male) !+· Gro~p Heafth fnsunlnce eta i:c 58 ' • "GARAGE sale1 DOOl'I, 548-7788 • 64z.67l8 EXP ERIENCED auto :,~:n::~r~h~~p~&,~~ -$25.00Jmajor medical, 'C~lce of Spanh!h hardware, tools, An~: 19" ZENITH TV w/ remote 1i:epa~r:.· "'.!:'::rs Oi~' mechanic with own tool1. 1067 The DaUy Pilot, C.M. life and accident. ar Modem Style Misc:. 8408 Via Oporto, · · control, must sell $40. Call 6 • · Busy shop. 1747 Anaheim + UnlimitedCompanyFin. ALL FOR $249 BUFFET, vacuum cleaner, 5.57-9423. '13-5044 Ave, C.M. MOTEL MAIDS ancing on All Sales. No down pmts. only $9 mo. table & chairs It baby PORTABLE Stereo. xiOt FAT & UGLY777 wanted for new 133 unit + Bonus Incentive Pla n WELK'S WAREHOUSE items. Misc. 673-6625 Tape Recorders 1220 cond. Be&t Offer. It yoo are, we probably can't use )'Oil. CALIF. CASTING CO. II continuing its &earch in Orange Co. hit a varlet;y Cit types, tor work in mag, mo. delin11:, TV •OOmml'1, A-ind,. films. Great pay, pt. Ume. We are client paid, no tee. Not a 1choot FREE TV SCREEN TEST PH: t'll•l 8.15.8282 lOAM to6PM motel in Costa Mesa. Apply Ste -C .,._9768 in writing 1 tatin1 ex-p up now all: 600 W. 4th Sl, Santa Ana LLE SA eek pho MR. CHURCHILL Daily 9--9 Sat 9-6 Sun ll-6 II llOO WO _ N K tape <I -new 8 FT. brown sofa $40. perience, ne number & (7141 13'3'133 App anctl $125. Reverb amp, $15 or Refrigerator $20. Chest of ~~~ =~:.~it Sal~• ~ ~MODEL 8XI i<snmore auto best ofter. &f6..8094 drawers $12. 642--7410 so. App!iOAnm will be ed-GDIUJ•s SURPLUS FACTORY wuber $60. Al"' GE .... Sporting Good• ISllO WESfINGHOUSE w .. her & vi&ed where to come fol' Mn washer $41}, Both Xlnt cond. dryer. Xnlt cond. $250 Ph. tnteMew. Woril: will begjn OPEN TO PUBLIC 847-&US, MS-861~ 2 NEW 1ur(board1 • 7'8" 646-4219 aft. 3:00 about Aug. 4. Write Bm Now Interviewing 2 & 'l'lO''. Fa.st, all around MUNTZ 4 .l 8 cal" stereo, M1DJ2 Daily Pilot next Wffkl MJ\YTAG Washers -$50, $65. shapes, $6S. 642--2909 $80. 6 V·l2 V converter $15. • MOT.EL MAID • SALESMEN Wholesale/Below s?S. $90. All rebuilt & REM "' gauge pump 3" 67!>-3348 evea. LAGUNA REEF MOTE[; Tables, $9 up; Wall 11heivet guaranteed. Can de I' Magnum, Xll'lt eond, $80. Norcold bar refrlgerater $35 Full Tl $5 up; Sofas $99 up, 531.-"637• w 3(8)6 S, Cout Hwy. me PlllLCO auto washer I: Pen-548-8576 aft 5pm eslbend electric K·Bob $15 Laguna Beach 499-m Experienced pt'ffem:!d' Good 432 62nd, NB 642-3123 but not necelWIJ')'. Many G1lltrl1 Furniture crest elec. dryer. F NURSES; Supervisor, LVN compeny benefits. A....iy 2013 Placentia cooct. Both for $65. 847-1115, Ml1call1neou1 l600 AMJLY me: m b er 1 ht p AKC orange ll wht. Brittany SPaniel 4 mo1 old. Female. 846-9611 !/~ f''EMALE Au 1tralian shepherd 9 wks old. I~ children. S3tH048 1130 3 ADORABLE 6 wks old fluffy bl. & whitt kittens. 543--0813 , 128 PRETfY while/gold m!Ue killen. Very qU·ltt. 646-0623 'l'l8 FREE puppy to good hqme, wat c h dog male. 646--0948 71~ h1ALE AlRDALE dog, l )T, AKC. Good with children. -494-5383 7 /28 2 male yng parakeet..-far rood home. l grn A: 1 blue. 540-3435 6 mo old puppy 11m mtxej:I bt'l?'ed shor1 hair if1 w/ctiild." ~n 646-4042 1 ~ A loveable AKC Baqett lfound·2% yr old w/c:toe house 952.0400 • ~ Blk & Wht Te1Tier.Spaniel mo, ;.II shots, trained. Leav· in g area. 8.13-2664 1'UJ.. t1r PART 11-ME. or RN, 11·7:30 shit!. Park . only ~· ,.2 7130 54&-86i.I. Balboa Bay Club. EARN UP TO $5 PER HR. Lido Convalel!Cent Cenler. m person between -• NEAT snJFF' 6i.H5.11 FULLER BRUSH CO. Ph: 642--8044 2 and 6 P.M. Ask for ~ USED appUances 4 TVs Anyway, it'll do:' D,·,---d M'nLE HUTCH 1-rare white siamese Oll &l 546-5745. Mike: Gnmt, FURNITURE re1urne<1 from All gUaranteed. Dunlap's, Dre SIO dCK bl bed $5 ""......,, ~ part burmese &: pedlJree NEWSBOYS disp1~·-sludle• model bom· 1815 Ne..mrt, CM 548-7788 !IM'"r. ; 1 e ' ; Good rondilion 6'12--6124 persian male cats 897.,'".-GAL FRIDAY ""J .... retrige.rator. SlO: bedside after 5 PM . ;....,., for PLEASE A,P,J~Y es, decorator.1 cancellation. STOVE · & fr f g Id a ire table & lamp, S5; floor ' Kittens.Domeamese Ioi'ie,,hair ~yplng, No S.H. Ce.II DAlLY PILOT lT~ Newport Blvd., CM SJlllllish & MedlletTanean refrigerator, Good cond, lamp, $2; weight !ct, $2.50; M h'j-E &: short aJI colors, Sf8..0813 t, 64.'>-mO, W~ltr:ll!f Need New C.nien ffn' SM. office wants girl R 0 FURNITURE both $75. 646-.1 t!J8 Vending machl'tle (!)SS. ac nery, tc. 1700 l'VI' 836-4-4.9.1 ,., PcrWimel /\ge(Jey, 21»3 FOUNTAIN VALLEY \\'/pleasant phone voice i 1844 Ntwpo~t Bl., C.M. HCYrPOt·~ el-•-er likl' Other assorted goodiee:' WOODWORKING -Westclitt Dri~ N.8. Agff 10-14 out-going peorsonality. Lite every n1te 'Ill 9 i.~' ""'. •;. • CllEAPl' FEl\lALE puppy, 7 wb. GENERAL HELPtt 64:J-4321 type, M0-9681 \V~ .• Sat. & Sun. '111 6 W881new, $~~ ~~rl~ auto !l3TI U!chfletd Or, }18 See & make off~. 1618 Ohms White v>'ith bm ear A hm Full • 9 ---;-K!r, .,.,,. """"'°°"" 962.7961 \Vay, C.Jl,1. &l:i-0991. eye. ~ i130 31 <>[ apa~xpafl~:i"!ge Ji.i:. N~=n:~,DE~u.ll Alft "'1 mil•I'·. SECRETARY (I) KJNC.S'fZE bed, :I metal NORGE uprt l~eier S.t5· FULL aile bed, oomplete, FREE TO YOU 1-"'REE beautiful kitten&+ to ....., ·oe to• hed frames,' 2 matching db cf $6.~ 1 ! hO Pl $.1.85 ptr hr, 4i M0'1 rnsi· Penonnel Dept.. Ho• g VICE • PRESIDENT etutted-hloo floral chairs a Norge-reJ/tnr, I, r, :. \1.-a·lnut hrlbrd , klOtboa.rd, ov ng me. eaM l can dency req'd, Hospital, NS. PART Tl pc. living rm. curved ~e-Good ninni~ cond. 548-529a box e:prlng:I. 6" fOllm mat-BLACK l''~mal 002-2359 q,~ MR CURR 006-2870 Of'TERlNG xlnt acoommo-y,•eekly. ~E, apflp~b·l ~Mhnt. Uonal; bone In color A: 12' KENMORE washer. 3 )Tl. frt51 A: COVC'.I', 5eftn beat, . e puppy l FAN Pa.Im .. :l' high,''bu G dati · ,..,ura Ul e, UI Jong. 673-60.12 Excellent condition $ill). like ni~w $75. Thon\al ori&n mo l[I. old. Shott11 . rlig Ir haul. 1012 w:'Uth l IRL Offiet. Dependable ona &. 11mall 1111.lary tn tuke shorthand 100 wpm, Will del' 0,.,3.,,. .,.,5. 34e ~.,an. 6 M2-.'l5•1 i/30 St., c.M. 64" • .,. · • exp. won1an, prefer 35 yMI COllC'.!ge 1luden1 In exchllngc Jiko varlety and fiino.-1, I F"r DTV AN $15. fo.fatching ;:,:,::.,,.::;::,'ve;;:;r·c.~::;..;;';-",_,--~ ~ &: over. G.O. w/bklrp &: for light hous!'hold <lutie1, type fiO wpm or betttr, "Mu~ arm chairs $'20 fft:h and COPPERTONE Retrlg, 2 lfr. ti!ATERNTTY clothes. like f\fOMAfY cat k 2 kill~n&. FREE klltel'll-~ dlspatdllng. Able to work 61S-OJIO or !)4~TI97 company benallts such as olloman S7.50. ALL JN 1op ~zer 17 c:u. tL xlnt. new u 10-12. very rta11on. 1 fem &. 1 ma1e. Real cute. ' 7i30 wttboul direc:hon. 8:00 am Pintry Man or Woman, palrl vacation!!. alck Ir.ave, GOOD co No J TI o N. cond. $90. SJ6.9964 all. 6 Baby car bed/cradle eombo ~7586 1130 9 WK Old Cocker niix Idiots • 5:00 pm. Ciood salary. t d 1 Good paid met'liral •nd 1,.1, fn•ur. &42-233t airer Spin '8· xtnt cond. 64!'>-lml P.fOVTNG to Jllinola musl 548-7561 -t-CaJI fnr appointment sea y(lmp, PllY. Ap. I •K .. , k •-6'J..8390. wee~ only. . ply 1he Chef, Hotel J..aguna, fUK't, credit unlnn, tk'. Stnd 8' SOFA, never used, UUilted Antiques 1111 STE AMER In.ink $8. eave "'"'•'! e bl · male ~1 SIA1o1ESE cal~ IUld their 425 So. Coast Jlwy, L.B. re11nme r./n DA ILY Plt.OT, fioral, &00tchgnard!d $125; Dighwuhe:r $20. Obest of kltlen. ~I 7130 killc:ns all any 645-01311/21 JfATR &bfitl ::: 9'mt PLEASANT klephone v.-ork Bnx# 1013, C:O.ta Mesa, Matchtna Joveaeat $75, 1!ntwmt $12,50. R.eta-1 Air KM'fENS: Or-ongr black 3 h'TITENS mixed tireel:T all following pmfc · Bully 1 !fl •• 1 ho C&lif. 02626. m-&3S1 SALE cooler SlO. 117 I!:. 18th. CM " \Vhite and; _:.., smitll colors. '"·"' _,_,,..., ,. 11-shop, Contt111a Hair nouro . c..'"""lllfl'+ nu~ kll &U-l ·~·# .,...,.....,.... '° I.., • .,...,,....,.., .... , I Fubionl. 6'TS-3J8j; l'af'I. time, morn. or evell. SF.cR.ETARY • bnokkf!eper, CHROME high chair, crkktt Back Door Imports 12 STRING Acou11ic Guilar. ll!ns. 136 1/30 ,,. ~10 Old Maltesp. illith•n. Saw 1'l'll' car _ it'• noc. 1..:.==:::._:::.==---5ot2--3176 for appoint 9 am C.M., small oUloe, ln-dlllil", 2 liv'ing rm. cllllln, Ulf'! Ynur &nkAmc:licard Gd. cood. $50. S PlJPPID>, 'ii Dachshund. hol1~broken. ~~°fttf'r!28 ·wt hit r.l(h h' l'O'lf J1'S Bead! booM ti.me, Big-• 12 noon. S.A. ternatk>nal flnn, crtalive, typcwritf!I'. 91J8..654l 1196 Harbor Blvd. CM 536-lJlS ~ 7130 FREE baby mlC9. phom A caU Dt11y Plld. attt aleelion. f\'ttf SH tht congenial envtroruntnL Xlnt TUm lhOlle Whtie: Elepttantt 642·7576 MAYTAG washer, \lied-'43J 2 FEMALE baby mice, 1 6-12-l154 Q Q 7ng Oauiflf!d &f2-!6'11 ctwp DAILY Pit.al' Oaultied DAILY Pll.oT WANT AD. salary • 1toclt. C&ll Olde Into cagh U\N a Daib' PUOl Park In Rear or Ml\kt oUcr. Couch I blk, 1 rru.y. 6+&--2169 7/30 WEANED &bJ' r: t )'OW'" ad .. t«'I~! tect.im mWI Dia.I I0--56TI A dla.rgt ft. Nw, 548-25l6 Dime-a•llno adlf chair · fl!ake offt.T. 64&-'JM~ FREE Kiltlllll. 96Ut86 7/30 ~ 1 11 7,;o I 1 , • T . • l ----~ ·-------------------~-----------="""::::-•:.__•:.:_· --""' . , -De 1'00 l ob Ci< 'al GE I II\ Bl .. jiE Ct I ~ * m :-' 'Adi ' . iAK '6 • ' er Mn 'lul Ct ,_ SK' nu "' SH Ad "' SCI . .., "' • - 1ffii' \ let ty, ·--I ~ ""' .tn )~ ~" "' I >Xl '1 -NE' I -SJ.0 -.. . ,.. ,,.-OJV , 'A1 ... .Ch '"' I fil -lo• l - 'U.. .~ I '~ '"" '. -. S.I -* ' • ' * ' • ! ' •i * ' I ----~ ------------· ~-----·· ·-·--o-~,--,-----:,,.---~--.. "'"'"'""--0 --. -.. . - PITS ,,,.f LIVISTOCk TRANSPORTATION TR.t:NsPORTATloN TRANSPORTATION T11tsda(, J11ly 28, 1970 DAILY PILOT 2 ' r. TRANSPORTATION TRA NSPCRTl .TION ) Poli, Gonorol -Slllboet1 9010 Mobllo Hom11 flOO Troller, Trovol MU ~~ 9520 lmpo l1od c;,., "" P«idle• from $15 ·SM B~\JT. '68 ' Formula AT' 20' SELl'-eontalned Al Jo Stam<• kltttlll • 110 100 hp Men:, Make otter. THE MEADOWS &!-6. llt9S MT-3851 or 547-9591 TU• vw but or bus, put ~ tnade $73--0598. (Irvine) 14' USED tnvfl trailer $t7S , !lop Ull 12' FIBER~ SNOW. ~WI I 'ooBERMAN male • I yr old, BIRD Goo d conditbl. Rnervationt are now 1>etncl -===""'===== • ob •chool. cd" "blbod line, S3)il\ Call ~ ta.ken in Oftnre County'• T_rvc __ kl _____ tsOO_ Good cuan,1 dor. 557--8790 Fiberllus 1: C'i<-leoat finest & moat ODJn.Plet$ park , alt. 5. "*111 RePlin * * at 14851 Je~ry Road (Sur- 1 GERMAN Shepherd pupA 1 Frff Ea:tlmatea 548-1752 rounded by Orange Groves) -·' :~ SNIPE-wood hull II la lnrlne. For information, ~ male U>. 1 lemue .....-. • • a • • call 89.1.S'll'.l s:u.asn Black 'a: whilf:, no papen, vun. deck, tr!!', all ln xlnt S3l-8105 • u: 646--9762 shape $300. 645-1355 . BEAGLE Puppies • AKC • Kite, lmm•culate cond !!!!!!!!""!:S~P'!A"!C!!E!'!S!"·""__. Champ. bJoodline • shots. $'750 * * 675-6912 Available in Huntington $50. 963-4547 • HOBIE Cat w/traller, Beach I: Costa Mea'1 n1e. ; * IRISH-Setter fem. 14 near ~. With extras. est ,,.rks, . * rn.2279 * MOBILE HOMES I mo'1, AKC. $125. 'I -~=Ca~ll=548-=589.'l==-· I Power CrulMrt AKC DOXIE PUPS 9020 1970 TRUCKS TRA.Yp.ALLS SCOUTS 1009 Fk!sta CamJ>l'I' St» 3 Motorcycle traiJer $.l.25 -t><G-6906 '64 VW bus C&mPtl'New eng, tltts, lNlttery. Xhtt cond. 6"-%WI, 540--9892 M r . Gamble '66 V\V Camper. Reblt inotor &: very cleu. $1900 or make ofr. 645-1S4S '64 Chevy ~ ton Xlnt cond.. new eng, cue st/palnt, Many Xtl'a9 $895. 536-8492 1968 8' Wfftways Camper l'lllO • 646-!U'Tl • 9525 D .... ....a1~ ~---DUNE BUGGY FIAT ......,.,,..,.. lMINK • ''FIAT' ID ''FR IOONDER" Ill ~O llACH CHwy. Jt l NIW ·USID-SQV. """"'"""' I 19 70 FIAT UI Spyder Convt eq ul . 3 m()S old. p'd . moo -• MB-1936 JAGUAR -JAGUAR Fully finn, Adorable 6 wk1 red a, brn %6' OWENS Cruiser, set up 4 male i-to. 897:7279. • for diving/sport fiahbic. • Swim step, depth rec & America'a ti.nest, available ir. every si?e Ir price range, JOMICRA, INC. 19261 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 536-6511 2 BR. unfum 10x55 dbl .. ex- pando. $6950 • Sp No. 86. 21462 Coalt Hwy, RB. Key at Sp. 324 aft. 3:00 pm. BARGAIN: EJCcl. Lido Park AVAILABLE NOW IMMEDIATE DEIJVERY Test Drive One ~ At CHASSIES Yeara l~ thN 1968 avail-HEA DQUARTERS 'AKC GERMAN SHEPHERDS indicator, S/S, ~It blk, full '6 wbchamplon 11red, East. covi;, lots ot· extra equip. em bitch. lhota. $75, 6'l5-m7 Jteplaeement cost o/'9000, ' MIN. Poodles, AKC, black $3150 CASH. 962-4981 ·rurry, loveable, 3 mos. 24. IT CABIN Cruiser, 185 ' Che.mp blood, $50. 5f.9-08ff hp lrg, ,Oiryeler Marine. SKYE Terrier pupa AKC. Just painted th r uou t . fluffy blk tipped, ailver1 & Perfect shape all around. cream•. 54S..2547 wru. SACFtAnCE ~ .SHERRY'S Poodles, Adorable, Apricot toy pups $50. All color •tudt. 546-2848 SCHNAUZERS, miniature AKC, 1uper p apers. Reuonable. Phone 962-8904 e LAB. PUPPIES AKC 5 wkl & with ahots. 546-9556 COCKAPOO PUPPIF.s $15 ea. "8-1195 Call aft. 7:30 p.m. 493-:1196. SACRIFICE tor Quick Sale! 25' Battle. cruiser, twin ::.1 ;J.k Owner/64G-37M, WANTED: 10' Glaapar w /Shp motor. Call 673-0023 Spo~Skl Bo111 903D 16' RUNABOUT • alO HP Chevy motor. Para1o n , hydraulic trans. Trlr. Slip ,. Gtu;.\T Dan. AKC faun va1I o-uo =-lJ ~·•• I ~ $bo ..,,.IL a ' __.. ~, I '""'-• W-. W .. _.-S.:S765 cy.962-4633 I ~"""'~~~~~~ 12' MINI-SPORT: 40 hp Hor••• Evintude w/trailer, dee. " 1UO rtart. si.m. Mt. 5 ; o o 968-6057 f YR, old. Reg. quarter 16' DONZI 225 h 1/0 ·hone gelding. Western .' P • -·~ + tack u 96 ..... a~. trailer & xtras. Very ·""""~· • "" • 4J,,), ·'--and last ~1660 -832-6327 ...... v • : 2 HORSE.S: 1 Pinto gelding 14' GLASSPAR ski boat, 35 Cit) 1 Roan. $XlO. HP Evinrude-elec starter, ~ <-xmt cond. !lfiS-1:" & trailer. '575· 962-409l 1 NEW Western lbow addle. BHt Tralltr• 9032 1100 673-0629 .-.U,LIFORNIA LIVING HEAVY duty tandem winch and brakea. new. 592-1660 ""th Like '!luroerl11 1910 Morino Equip. ·--~------- Kustom Motors able. ' The oJey authorized JAGUAR r 1o the entire Harbor '68 Futback lliOO fuel inject-dealt> ed engine CWQD300) S699 Area. Trailer cab, 2 br., din., Harbcb' Area's only authorlz. S1500. 613-3Slfi • ed tntemationaJ H&l'VHter BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 837-49J0/493-4511/499-226l 32853 Valle Road San J uan caplstraoo · Dealer. Motor Homes • 9215 845 Baker c.M 54()..5915 ccm-TEZ '65. immac, Only (~ext to' f.,~t Llquon) '64 VW Chus\s, complett front-el'ld w/~s. steer- ing, maater cylinder, pedals & cables. $100 or beat otter. 64S-4fi65 aft. 6 Jl,000 mi's. New jumbo BRAND .NIW ~,air. ,.,... kept. 1970 G.M.C. ~ TON Mini Blko1 9275 CAMPER TRUCK '69 MEYER'S 1.Ianx Dune BUUY, custom built by .. ------Bonanza S HP MW bib XJnt cond, $125 * M&-5919 * Motorcycles f300 n.n.l'VVI lMINK HONDA .. "FRIEDLANDER'i , .. laAat CNWY· •I 350 V8 • ~ t Meyer"• factory • not a kit , ~ ·~. power 1 eer. . Call lng, custom mouldln,p, heat. • LOADED. $1695 tirm. HD hoc .. _ 491-17118 anytime. er, ' • I """• H.D.1-=:.:.:.::::,.;=o==-~~~ sprinp dual milron step '10 MEYERS -Street legal, bumpef. '75Qx16 split rim '65 trans, reblt eng, on or tube type tires, •164.115, oU road use. $1095. 64>1355 $2499 AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Service, Patti lmmed1at• Delivery All Modell t1l'lllPL1rt 1\111~n1rt •:, SlOO W. Out Hwy., N.B. -540-11&1 ~ulllorhecl MG Dealer DATSUN Complett.: SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK IN c OSTA MESA 234 E. 11th Street 548-1'765 T HIS IS NOT A DEALER owner will 11&crlflC'e Jaguar 2+ l for quick Private 1970 sale, than Uke new with lesa 5,000 miles &: factwy warran ty. Has auto. trans- on, power stri, short missi wave lea the whee factory lake AM-FM radio, fUl1 r, c h rome wire 11, w/s/w radial tires, air conditionlog_ Will trade. Call 644-1494. Jagu•r 3.85 A transmission, power 19'5 Sedan. •te& AMFM whee ulate ill&', power brakes, air, radio, chrome wire b, radial tires, immac- , Lie. ZXU 797, $2399 CH ICK IVERSON vw 3031 Ext. 66 or 67 0 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA Roadster. R/H, mech. cond. Nu pa.int. 968-2393, 547-8820 1 ATIVE SUMMER. Exp, marine equipment Radiol, Mii IATIUM --Recreat'n Vohlcl11 9515 '62 XKE Xlnt 1151111. 1966 3.8 JAGUAR SEDAN atick. $2,000 • 642-<878 TRANSPORTATION Imported Ca't -PORSCHE '65 PORSCHE Coupe, New engine. Must lft to •ppreela~. PGX21'9. $34'9 CHICK IVERSON vw 5f9..W1 Ell 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '63 PORSCHE ·s· coupe, A(ean Blue finish. AM/FI\l. (JGF.: 978) BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN =3 Val.le Road san Juan Capistrano 837-4800/493-451l/$2261 '66 Porsche 912 3 TO QIOOSll' FROM Priced from $34'9 WDZ-926 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-30.'ll. Exl 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSI'A MESA '62-Ponche S Coupe, Absolutely concoune condition. uc. SSNon. $2699 CHICK _IVERSON vw 549.3031 Ext. 65 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CQSTA~ $4000 tor ... -912. Xlnt CObd., lo mi. Europe&ll purchased without dealer. Save to you! lm--2ffl '60 PORSCHE, xlnt cond. Best offer. Call 541-95.18 'fi9 PORSCHE 912. 4 spd, · 15,000 mi, stereo. Uke new. $5150. 496-1408 ROLLS ROYCE -· ROLLS Royce 1949 Silver \Vr&ith Hooper· aluminum body sedan. BUI: paint, burl walnut interior, t&D leather upbola.. Superb coOO! $$995. 6~1810 SUNll!AM --- '62 ALPINE • 2 topa, eood tire!, $2SO. 675-7216 aft 7:30; 544).7740 ex. 42 daya. GIVE YOUR OlILD A CRE-LARGES?' dtacountl on all • ·1eachers, otr. Arts A: Crafts. mmpasMIS, depth' so~en, . ;~in """"· .... 5-8. pain .. , etc, "·-tor, "Leader In The l>!acll Qdeo" 1--======== ___ T_O_Y_O_T_A...., __ I I .r. RANSPORTATION l:.'!. az' :::!;.,. ShoJ»<, WIMcCullough '""· & •tart-ZIMMERMAN MERCEDES BEN~ '68 TOYOTA GO-KART 2430 w. Cout Hwy., N, Bcb. =:=.~;===::;:;==I er, Mak on 2845 HARBOR BLVD. Auto. R.H., white walls. Boats & Y•chtt tOOO INBOARD tpnsmission 1 to e er 540-6410 CVHH319) J1495. ,_ I ' 1 velvet drive. Prop 1, Aft. 6;00 839-6513 , CAPTAIN -•-250 Sidewiodu, Street ..,i~-----DOT DATSUN BILL YATES Mercury, cables, conu-....., Di~ ""-9 000 lle •---------1 Ucensed Rad Lo · dshleld tanks ti •., ........, new! • m , .~ TRANSPu1111 ATluN TRAN$PORTATION -lmpor!od A-HOO lmpor!od Autos 9600 VOLKSWAGEN '6' VW SEDAN ' Radio ' Slwoot (YPIJ.r.13>. '61 VW Sunroof $1697 Uc NUJ' S15 $599 CHICK IVERSON Harbour V.W •. vw 549-30.31 Ext. 66 or 6T 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSI'A MESA '68 VW Pickup Hard to f1nd. model! VUH 126 $1899 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA MESA '63 VW BUG Red beauty, Excellent (.'Ol)di.. lion. New valve job, small down will &, Pvt. pty, dlr. Call Phil a.It 10 AM M0-3100 or 494-1029. '65 GHIA. 54,000 miles.· Good condltlori. MAKE OFFER! 613-6741 or 542-1161 1969 SQUARE Bk. Auto. Rad.lo. Lu&-rack. Ork blue. ~ew tires. $1895; 64>-2076 '68 VW BUS 7 pass. Jut like brand new #3000, $2595. CHICK IVERSON vw 549.3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '63 VW Bua. CUatom Jnt, extras! 2,500 mi. on reblt .... 11000/otru. C al I 548-3911 '64 vw Convertible Orange with brand new pa1a- ley top A: brand new tniine. Lie, OYJ'f.i9' CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 88 or 67 lB'lO HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '64 VW ch&HJs, complete tront-e1ld w/brakes, 1teel' ing, m,uter cylinder, pedals &-cable1. $100 or best otter. 646-4665 att. e '66. VW FASTBACK Radio(~). 18711 BEAQI BL. M2443S HVNT!NCTON BEAQ{ '60 VW. Newl,y ~tered seat.a. Matc:hinl be~r to bo in&tallod. -A tranlmJal;ion in ve:r:y eood condition. New titta $425. '1'14-Zl55 '68 VW Bue. Beige,. AM-FM. New tlreg, Swin&«tt re11.r windows. Like new. $1395. John 8J3..1408 . '65 VW SEDAN Radlo, _.., crnc 4Ci) $987 Harbour V~W. 18711 BEAQI Bl. - HUNTINGTON BEAal '64 vw RADIO, white side w.ita. beater, muat see to ap- predate, 162(). Harbo r America.n 196& Harbor BlYd. 646-0261 VW '68 Bug • radio, cteoo. low mileage. 11495. 968-1!05 VOU<SWAGEN '63 VW Bug MECHANIC gpEQAL; J.Je.OKC412 $299 CHICK IVERSON vw 5G303l Ext. 96 or f1 IS7ll HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MPA WANTED I'll .., ... dolla" tor -VOLKSWAGEN todly, Call and uk for Ron Pincbot 563031 Ext. fl6..67, 673-0900, '67 vw. Lt mue. Radio. Xlnt cond. Sl,200, C&ll tft 6 p,tn, •89 SQUAREBACK, 17,000 mt, bel,ie, radio. WIUTl.Dfll $1188 .:oo~::,' rlh. Interior, exterior .i eng, AU ill top H b V W cond. Must 1tt: to ~ a r our • • 1.;;P;;"'::; .. "::;11395==. 6::::73-::::::251::::::• ""i "'Ye•-. -~. l'&l>, ~tntments", etc .• ; • .,:;~ ' left on watranlyl Mov;,,g,i;C;::•;:;m"po=":.....--....;',;;;520;,; OPENANODAl~Y VOLKSWAGEN l , ::.._...=:.._~,P· :::::_or.!!~; "111 .,..,,,...,,.. Must Sell. 774-2155. 1 · •0~~ ·~· ·--• SUNOAYS 32852 Valle Road VOLVO \ Guido Mexican 6 Central Boat Sllp Mooring 9036 !JKE new '69 Hodaka Ace 18835 Bea.cl> Bl d. San Juan Copbtrano 18711 BEAQ{ Bl. -1----""· ---- ':American waters , • also 100 &: Kawuaki 90. Both H llilKt Be vch 8374800/493--4511/499-2261 HUNTINGTON BEAQI • ~ i 1Joensedmulti-eng,commer. SIDE TIE for approx. 36' street&: dirt equip'd, .:1mi ·o°:~~ '67MERCEDES2304dr,air, ---------- •. l!al pllo~ land" .... Ad-boat, N"'l"rt Beach. Call Hodaka $400, Kawuaki $300 auto/trano. X!ot co nd. jTlniVIOITIAI THINI 1trativ• experi•nce.1 "536--i_7~•3---~ Call £73-252'1 '66 1600 ROADSTER $2500. 837-9542. !ZU '67 vw ~ 'YOLVA'.' . ~St of references_ Write WANT TO BUY: Moorilv '70 KAWASAKI 90 OPEN ROAD '63 MERCEDES 220-s, steel 1970 T0v"TA WAGON S 0:.-·k VI Box M 1060, Daily Pilot or mt. trimaran 11lip. GOOD CONDITION Muu.tfactui;ers ol America'• Silver finish w/black vinyl grey/red lthr. Good concl/ ll2~ qUGN.,.n;. • , ,1 Ii' DOUBLE ender-<liesel 1 ==~-"":..:....c"-o"~_.,,,,..,. $250 -~5oUer. fi~st Luxur.Y Reae.ation interior 4 speed. Dir., CRUC exlras. $1850, 6'75--M77 1'~THER ~J)l:.Js Sunroof ''FRIEDLANDER"• .tlWi.ne, outriggers, 11 e w NEW slipa avail for 32' to Vehicles. 851) will take trade or fin-I========:::. AT BIG SAVINGS A?tt!FM radio, tape deck, air • ·radio, Newport moorinr. 38' Ir 70' powf't or sail. '68 BSA 441 Victory. Xlnt • ance private party call METRO cond,' 10,000 miles on new ; ·$2750. 642--3407 * 6'f3..ti606 * cond, Also cycle trlt, like •New Camperg 54&-4052 or 494-9773. DEAN LEWIS factory enalne. Lie. UEP464 2 dr. O.mo. 1 *1;' HOUSE-BOAT: Fully new. Drafted-Must sel I! from METRO VAN 1966 Harbor, C.H. 646-9303 $1695. * $2750 * i ·IQu!p. for live-a-board. Sell Boat Services 9037 6'15-30n $995 ENGUSH FORD 1953 %-T builtin camper. 9 otber square b•ckt ·,.,. iucit OfW't, M ·; .., tr&de. 6J&-4ll43 or Flbe,.... "' Gel t 1'69 BONNEVILLE •Luge Selectioo ot J ;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Sto..,, •ink. ke box, BILL MAXEY lo choOlo fr~m. NIW.USIO.SllV. • ~5t8-243f **a n .... ~1 .... ** coa. Xlnt cond, $000. New an_d_u."" __ camper1 ALL NEW ENGL!Sll carpeting, pancUing, bed. CHICK IVERSON -----.-- 'II' SllRFING OUTRIGGER. Free E,,.,;;;;;:-· 540.1752 ,.._,.,, OPEN ROAD FORDSDRASTNOW!CALL!N SJOCK X!nt "';';.,_ * . . ITIOIYIOITIAJ vw ~VOLVO 1 Oistom built by Phil '69 KAWASAKI 250 c c 131 80. HARBOR BLVD. .., • ---· wards. SXMJ, Needa: work. Boat Rtntals 9038 sidewinder, lots of chrome. SANTA ANA ....... .,. REDUCED _£ ___ · ----·-lQll BEACH BLVD. SU.3031 Ext. 66 or fl 19_ DEMO after 6:00 pm. 675--0430 , _________ Xlnt cond . 842-8687 (5 miles 50. ol o;i~, TO CLEAR MG Hunt, Beach 1474551 l970 'HARBOR BLVD. ''142'' 111 $16tt .~·SEARS fbr&ls boat· NEW alips avail for 32' to **YAMAHA 100 ** (1lf) Ut""50 e Ul·IUO LARGE SELECTION . _ l mtN.ofQ:mtHwy,an Bcll , C05"l'A MESA I ,peed,'ra"dl"o·~··~.:_•-. # motor trlr 45 hp fulJy 32' & 70' power or sail. 100 OOSE FROM .: -· -----.-:.. 67 VW Seda Su • _.....,. 'iQuipt'. 1800.1-11~ •673-66116• 67~1776 '69 Chevy 1/1-Ton TO ~hoodoro ------HINK .. '68 TOYOTA CORONA map, new ~~. b:!; ~·~",iru·s':c=~ P4NOE, lin new, a 11 Boat Charter 9039 '66 HONDA 305 S bored to With camper, low mileage. ROBINS FORD s 1 shocks, battery. 1500 eng. . ~rglass, Cost $350 Mu.st I---------350. New top ~nc1. $400. Autcuna.tic, power steering, ''MG" Sedan, dlr, automatic low w/velve job. $1200. 675--5-136 DEAN, LEWIS .~µ $240. 64)..8584 Z7' TROJAN Oy bridp &t2-7720 after 5 p.m. atr cond. Dlr. Will take Costa ~~bor 81~0 miles, radio, heater. lWXT-1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 cruiser-loaded-sips 6 $85 day '70 Norton 750 Commando car ln trade or finance pri-1 '!~~~~!!"'~~!!'I Sii 087) Take older car for down '68 vw SEDAN '65 . v'oLVO 544 S•llbCNts 9010 $450. wk. 646-0000 Dunstall equipped, $1400 vale party, Call 546-4052 or I : '''FRIEDLANDER'' =~I l~l:~v~~i.;.._Cal! Phil S"-~ WH-·~. Sedon, 4. gpeed. All -1..-1-~1 1---='------32' 1967 CHRIS CRArr o' Be•! oil". 54}-0577 494-9773. FERRARI -~·-• --~·-* N<w eata11,,. '" .,..;1"-1WIN SCREW. 1970 KAWASAKI "'° " New '70 Datsun NEW MIDGET $1995 '67 Corona cruw 6l7). Tal!e •mall bl I tra t bl k I ·~ '"" ... ••34 FERRARI $1475 down. will lln. Pvt I'\¥. dJr a_ e w re c a c ee .....,......,.. or ..._~ street scrambler. 1500 mi. 1600 OHC, Pickup V{ith camp. 111• 11ACK CMWY. •1 Cali PDU alt 10 am 494-l .from $2.595. ----S550. 673-6294 er. Sa1e price $2099 dlr. Newport Import.I Ltd. Or-MIW-USID·SERV. Red. Fully factory equipped. 54Q...nOO *New Koralle 12' famUy Boat Stqrage 9048 YAMAHA 1962 runs well. C• 61798) WW take car in IJ'lge Count)l'I «ll.Y author-~ (VLK927) Will take car In H v w 1-o'---·-----1 sailing sloop, main & jib. -~ Will "----· rl ,_ ized dealer. ~ trade or finance private par. arbour LATE '69 Mdd~l 142. 4 sPMd ttAu away price only $514 SAILBOAT OWNERS ::.::2 Fairhill Dr. N.B. =: Call"'~ va; SALES~SERVICE-PARTS MG ty, Call tor appoin,tment, • • Factory air. Exctillent care complete. Launching ol dry storage. 494-9TI3 3100 W. Coast Hwr. Sales, Servic.J, Parts st6-4052 ot' 494-9773. $2400. ~2994 * &!boa~. 26, Aquari.Us 2l ~ Newport Blvd., NB '64 Triumph Chopper 1 --~·~~~---Newport Beach Immediate Delivery, '69 Toyota Corolla Wagon 18nt BEACH BL. 842-4435 - *Hobie cats colon . Imm. 673-6606 fiTJ-7984 M-ETRO VAN °!2~~0~ Ferraris:~ AU Models luggaa:e rack, 3 new tires, HUNTING'OON BEACll. Sport Cars 9610 Del. ,68 HONDA 450 _ Xlnt cond, 195.1, %-T builtin camper. Xlnt eoonomy car, alt 5, 1:::;=...:.;:,;.;; ____ ..;1 -cAP'N EDS --------Must sell due In ·financial S1ove,_ sink. I~ box, =6'=>39=1=7=====1 1ijjwvw•m~1---=JAG_U_A_R __ .I 2100 W. Cs!. Hwy. NB 645-2244 Alccrtft 9100 problem•. Call 546--0580 =:::;~d .panellmg, bed. FIAT I NEW VW IUG SAl!.llOAT -Rhodes clus NEED Lic'd Pilot. male or 1969-125 PENTON * 545-7245 * -;;;~· ---·--VOLKSWAGEN $55 89 nth l'.fo, ~ xlnt buy (bani!: pre1i-fem. to act .. satety pilot \.o pipe, custom paint, price '66 vw Camper '2,000 ml'•· w ...,,,...., . . . pr. ma _i:l.,int Joel Craib stride) for 1FR student. 543-0438 $425. aft 5 548-3840. new reblt e""'. New tires 3.\00 W. Coast H•'Y • N.E •. -Coinpua:, wind & knot, 1_an_,yt_l_m_•·------* 1970 YAMAHA ENDURO A: paint. All ~ping equip, ggrll;WJ:'2 ~ortud MG ~:764 '68 VW SEQAN $147,71 down" lnclucl11 _nJJ____ty, we. dac:ron saUs. 175 c.c. l.Clts of Xtra1. + attachable tent. $2400. ~ .. ~~=~~=~--I Auto., rMck INft &. radio. tax a Lie. l""1 cuh. Owner F. M bll H -I 6 "" ""92 Call da 0••58Js '59 MGA VW LEASING BrolllOn, Benton,, Calif. o e ot'l'IJI 'I'•-ph. al · _,........., ys G.)0-fXDC-GlL). AT ''8 XKE CONCOURSE CONDITION! Low lpw miles, Just like brand new, Phone me at home &u.-1538 or at work 540-5630. Alk tor. "Peter tht Greek" Boat at alip No. 2"1 Fl•ltz '68 FORD F-100 p~kup • auto sport ltd Co,.ortlble, 3 l!><Od, dlr, CHICK IVERSON ~ San Pedro. Or•na• County'• Auto Service ma.g wheels, V8, overdrive., 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. clean car. COXY819J WW $1576 VW ~tlguea, Cl•tilc1 M15 O,\l. 25 -Bright, shiny It L•r91st Selection & Parts 9400 clean. Jl'lSO. 714: 546-8120; 537-7'177 893-7568 take car in trade or finance .. OIEVY 1927 COUPE ~ equipped for racing & Of Fumlthfd 644--2169 eve1. private party. Call 546-4052 1970 HARBOR BLVD. cruising. Hard annodlzed Mob lie Hem•• '64 vw Chu Ill, complete 8' FULL cab.(IVer camper, ••• ,.,.... _orcc-:•94-=97=73--. =--.,,--1 Harbour v.w.1---co"-o,~~·.~vwMESA=--' __ 842--08="R"~'-N"!_i:oo'--=-'"-mait" & boom. RDF. a/s front~nd W/brakes, steer-fact, di&contlnued mod~!. '67 FIAT tedan, a:ood <X!;M, 1953 MC-TD. New eng. tirei, llV.l 1_ radlo, Dinette model. 1969 Homes from lh44' to 361(65' in&:. master cylinder, pedal• Complete. $895. 869 Wut New tfre1. Bargain at $800! top, aide curtai111 k Jnterklc-. New paint A: clean $600. I I e e. t ch amp ton & & cables. SlOO or best otter. 18th St.. Co5ta Mesa. * 962-976! * OLEAN. $1300 or beat offer. tm1 BEACH BL. 842-+US , ~=~~!14&-~1,.61~•=-~-. Autos W•.nted '711 Govimor's Cup w inner -,• 66~46-4665'.::'!!~af~t:_,'. ·~~---1 i:=:=:=;:=;.;:::;;"::::':7======:;::;= " $6~ 6ff.-5138. Cli9•1~1~0~:r~:~~1 foRo 6 cyl.1 engine' Wfth11Cl~a~m~pe;ir~siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9~520~C~oiim~peiiii"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9ii52iDiil l := ~Q ·re~~ HUNTING'lt>N BEAQI ~:II!~~ ':e~~ii WI PAY TOP *M' ISLANDER .Aux. HD, 531-8571 trans. compelely rebuilt. * VERY SHARP ** Frank at 642-9249 CASH pllty. curtains, cushions, 2,000 miles. Best nfier lake• sOOS 4M·m48 Large Selection * '67 BUG·. . ,.....I, lull aw, pulpCi, bilge Chopman ="=ll-5380=~~~--"A COMPLETE SELECTION Of VW C PUmp, ilpa -4. REDUCED Mobile Homes REBUILT l952-5.1 Chevy G Glnperl1 Xlnt cond, new brakea. Must llOO to $3695. SHp ...... l~ N•Sa~;1":'· S.A, cyl. molol', w/auro t""'· OF CAMPERS AT MGB Vans, Kombls, .;, .. :.;"=llliO~·o:Mcc>-_;'189~l ~~1 tor -..... -'"" Mu•t .aell. 897-0lll Ext 5022. starte,. 140. or beol otter. TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES" B N & U ... '63 VW Bus, Cu•tom Int. c.U Us tor -8llllnllo. '· wkdya. 123.l! Bear.h Blvd., G.G. 540-0038 '65 MGB Roadster UHi, ew .... extru 2,500 ml. In rblt '""· GROTH CHEVRO_ L£T 18' ·SNIPE ftblga o/plywood. 530-2930 • "n1"SM=ANTLIN=="G"''"'S9;--;:Ponche="'" Like New! owned by little Immediate O.Uvery $1000 oHer, call 548-39t1 Trailer, covu. f'lne cood, I "'!!'R'!'llV'!'lE~R!"'lS:!:P:!:E!'!C~I A~LS!""' Coo""tible. Paru avail. : *~.fifLJliSoP : ~~Elf[;,"cf~~NS old ochool teacher l\'t>m La-CH,CK IVERSON '65 VW -Xlnt mech, cond, Ask for Sol" ~ Make oficr. 673--1191 or 847-836~ or 83}.1965 e HARVEST a ANGELUS~VANS a~na Beach, Bl&ck lcalhu vw Body needa ·tome work. 182l1 Beach Blyd 'l37~ New U' wide hOmca:, slightly --==~,,,.,,,--e KlNC OF 11IE ROAD e DLX. CA,,lPER interior. Tonooau cover, $600. 813-2003 Hanoi--... .. •1ch damaged.Perfec~forthedo. 327 F.l.Head1 e DJ's SHELLS · wir'1 h I 11 t 549-3031Ext 66or87 '69VW'""""" nd Pr1 d ... ,.,..,, Kt 14' BANSHEE· 1 ~' -• I -·•t 0 I I l U. New Ne·-r u-~ p KING w ee I, exce en con-1970 H • "BO.R BLVD. • •"""" oo , ce o•7 -• •-, ~·· 'at l·)'Ol.h-..:& er , r Ina se • ..'< "'°" • DlSCOVERER • CAM <lltion. Take small d(IWfl llSlo ·~ guide: IAI• $1600. en -"" -'TOO -Include• all. Ina price $600).$700). Reduc. SUE. ~19 e CHASSIS MOUNTS CAMPERS will fin, Pvt. Ply. dlr. Call COSTA MESA M>n>l • WE PAY CASH 897 "' 7897 etl for dearanct $4000-SSOOO. • VW pans. tram axles, 6 $875 Jim a(t UI AM 494-7503 ot ''5 VW $195 '60 VW But llM E FOR BAY HARBOR """'....... '' NEW 541>3100. * 673'42311 • '400. 615-7496 FOR YOUR CAI 1429 Bsl<cr St., 0owta M... 612--0Hl ,ULL CAIOVU CAMP IRI 1969 MGB-OT B R G "' H Just South of Harbor and San '"ou . • ' · · VW Bua, '62 reblt tna. Wi~e •f1S VW. 55;000 m1'1, Xlnt ,.lllCK CAS 1111 ·~9170 --------"' A>l/F'M, wire wheell, Im· "'"• alnt cood. Muat &all ~""-· ·-or a... t olltt, Diego Frwy, I ~ T II T I M•• SALES ma-·lah! o--•·11 ot ~ ,._ THROUGH A " " rov• u EMPIRE CAJf£R "" · ~-'" ~ · $600. M&-o619 * 644"1129 * J.Sl,3.'al 1-$1,650 .... '-"'='-' ~="--,;_;;;:; . fer. 545-4~ atter T pm, DAILY PILOT H 2,300, 1-12,31111 ''8 NtMROD Deluxe, llps So. Col. Olscount Contor Natural "°"' SWAPPER! 2 w/cabana•, 2 w/awninp. 6, stv, lctbcm, din tbl. $600. • 139 1772 TllE QUICKER YOU SEµ. Try "Trad«r'I Paradl8'" WANT AD Priv. party. 616-2&t 5411-fil6 111> N. Horbor, I .... • • THE QUIOO'R YOU CALL, In Pilot qoDlfied. ~ -----~~ 1- CONNILL '69 vw . Funy equipped, CHIVIOLIT must Mii. Da)'t : '114 : 2828 Harbor BMl &lf..2512: eve1: 213: 43t.4367 Colt& MtM •JDt !---""=-'=;;...:;==-- .. I I I I I ' l ' ~ ' ,, l ' ! • I I, • • n - \ I I ' . I l • ' U DAILY PILOT , ll A SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I , TllANIPORTATION TllANIPO•TA'lllON T~ANIPOllTATION Au!oo w.-'1eO u_...i __ c_._,_, ____ 9900_ Uaod Cort 9900U ;..:H<l;,;;...;;C;:;••..:•;,_ __ .;.Mot.:.::: Uaod Cert • 9900 Uaod Ciro TIJP llOUAI ' CADILLAC CHEVROLET DODGE FORD -~ ~~~~-!-~~~-MUSTANG PONllAC for * For lmmecU1te S.lo * ,,, Mtllbu SS 396 '63 DODGE D-'1 GT, Ur - VB, 4 speed, butket ttats., Hdtp. Xlnt cond. Be•t ottu. "Sl ,OltD CLEAN USED CARS ... Geo<ie ""' THEODORE 195' CADILLAC PARTS Alr conditioner 'I'ralllmiuion Chrome ..-.'beets. <v.iJB 586> :=·==*=~=='m==*=== I Pjclcl<p (J1'®), $1645, . • ; • '6' MUSTANG 6 cyl. 1tk:k tSUT-336) '62 PONTIAC WAGON ll.DJ.2171 IOllNS FORD 8' .... BILL YATES FALCON 5295 ,,,~ BILL .YATES VOLKSWAGEN $495 BILL YA'tES VOLKSWAGEN --BIYd. O>lta MHA : 6'2'X>IO """""' Radiator vo~~:A,!~N 1:,_sr~~oi::.':.".a.;:"' BILL YATES ... '"" Coploh'aoo m.ol36 VOL"SWAGEN Front •nd Rear' &mpen: WE PAY TOP DOIJ.AR FOR TOP USED CARS Radk> Dashboard Equipment 837~R00/4~511/4$9-2261 ~ FALCON Futura·, 'aoed " . . :ri )'OU!' car la extra dwt. * MAKE OFFER * 1212 South Rou St. '67 Mal1'bu oond. v•. R/H, ......... . auto tn.nl. 846-47'1 B1;1c;ket seat. automatic, Dlr., J =========:. 32852 V'-1Je Road ' ~Valle Road ~Valle Road San Juan-Capistrano 1137-<800/.....u/<!9-"'1 -"'--8.AUER BUJCK ZM E. l'nb St. Santa Ana S:tl-3120 After 5 .p.m. ..,. . .,. 11.een•r. ""' """'· FORD One owner <TPF 681) will ---------t&ke trade or finance pri-FORD 6 cyl. eneinf: with vale party, Call St&.4052 or trans. completely rebuilt, San Juan Capistrano BJT.-/49l-i51l/498-2281 s.t Juan Capllb'llnn 1371-/4'!"511/<!9-2261, Cmta Mea 541-7765 '66 FOB WICllERD •, 'i7 .'MllStAllG. '67 Le Mans · WE PAY TOP DOLLAR '65 CALAIS Coupe, bUt lan- dau top Forest green. Fact. &uto air. all pwr. cruise control. Mini co ndition. $1995. 842-1962 4!14-9773. 2,000 miles. Best oUer ' ' ' 6 cyl Automatic. (2 dr 2681 . Automatk, air rood,,. po11,·er Bucket ll!all automatic, pow. er 1teerinr, alr cond. Dlr. ( •28&·4'79i Will take trade OT finam;e ptttvate party caiJ 546-4p52 or 494-9773. For clean, used can ,57 CHEVY takes. 54S-5.WI ~~\IA~ car In trade or ·stee'rini. lVFU 2981 Will fi~ Pr t vale party. take Car In tra~ or finance JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN ~'ERCURY 2628 Harbor mvd., C.M. < dr., w""°"' ''5 PORD LTD MUST SELL SACRIF,ICE $175 or belt offer a.ft 6:00. • dr. HT. Auto. & ys~ pow_er S46-4052 pr 494-~. private party. 546-4052 'or '611 '•ICM,. white 494·9"3. IMP,ORTS WANTED °"""" Countieo TOP$ BUYER BILL MAXEY 'IOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. 839-6573 1lffrln1 (OKV-665), Jo'lav"l"s '65 Bl1:1ck Cad (bn. vPrt. Ntw tire.a. full leather, CHEV l $175, : ~ 673-2567'1---'------'* '60 PONTIAC * It run1 $85. H. Beach. Pb. 847-8555 CASH yellow 70 vw bug call Cheryl 114: 619--1492 aft 6 PM New C1r1 9800 Attention G.1.'s Thlnklne of buying an auto- lots of gooi:fics. only Sl95Cl. '5:? ~ Y. 6 cy' S 1Jpd .'~ , tn111. New· tires, .buc.ket $795 BILL YATES Call MS-l o;r, 11H.ts. Good transportation '61 CAD. 'Bedan DeVill.e. $100 fl1'111. 544-3417 Clean! Nr. new tires, ~ng~ i:"='="'=='==== I good cond. FuJI pwr., A/C. Orig. Own. 673-4969 ; 67!>-2101 * '66 CAD. C.O.V. * Lo ml &. clean. By OWNER 644--0575 CAMARO · CHRYSLER VOLKSWAGEN '69 CHRYSLER Newport, 2 dr, air. $2DI. 32852 Valle ~ 811-5901 San Jua n Capl1tl'IU)t) '62 NEW Yorker •Wag, R&H, , 8.17-4800 /493-4511/499-2261 a.Ir cond., full pwr. 1 Owner. '63 FORD GALAXIE 500 $400. CAil 494--61122 Auto, air cond. Xlnl . cond . 1291 mo -Unance. Pal UN COLN OLDSMOBILE -----·EXCEPTIONAL .BUY '67 cun.>.ss · Su preme . 1966 Unccln • Original own. &lnW Blue'· Book. &11 tr, leavln11: U.S. Xlnt cond. CMd~ Loa~. An x I o U I ! $%QI. 714-833-2497 or see at1.:.S40-M8l::.::=:_· ____ _ "" RP¥." Rd., Irv'""· '66 Cutlass 'MCO·NTINEN·TAL, 1 · . owntr, movlng e89t, xl.nt F~ll 1 po~r p1u1 air cond,, cond air lull pv1r. 497-162'1 vtnyl top. Dir. (TRF 306) ' ' Wi.IJ:take car in trade or fjn,i anae prlval,e party, 546-4052 MERCURY 0' •94·9771 . aq. 6:.oo ·67J.7t90 1969 CTO Convert. Au to. PJ~. Pl disc brks.' Great cond. Low pritt. ~ •82 TEl\ft>EST Sia. ·Wagon. ExceptionallY clean! · #.Ir, . ra111<. $250. 644-m88. '64 , .PONTIAC Grand Prix. pfl, p/b, lo m t°5, 1 OW~(. xlnt. $995. MS-3456. 642-737~ '6'1" GTO Convert., R/H, cream O>lor. Pvt pt)', $1500. 837-8726 mobile after returnin11: from ---·------oven;eu! Wt at Barwick 1968 CAMARO HT1 cyl, 3 Imports would like to extend spd, 11\k 1hft. Ori&inl owner. our heartie1t COf1it9.tulatlolll 3 4 , D 0 O m I • i l 5 5 ft • for a job well done, Let l1I 714-833-249'1 or see at 4752 help select yout new car or Roy'::'e Rd., Irvine. ___ c_o_M_ET ___ 1 ... FAJRLANE ....,, """"· g cyt. 1!ick. 52,000 mi's, $395. 646-2896, 25.1 Rost Ln. C.M. ~ 5571981 . T .. IRD . ·, , '67 C42 OLDS. Low ·mileage . '67 Montclair ~';"""~"'~O:"~ used automobile, Call (or ap. -~-~--.--- '62 Sl'A WAG, ad body & new lire•. $250, 9' Pl~'t'IOd boat, gd cond. $45. 548-7147 .. ,.1",~."'· ,.....,,, or CHEVR_O,LET I---------~ CORVAIR l""'aod.;.c.-'C-•_rs __ .1.1 •• _9900_ '59 Chovy El Cimino 1!16.~ Monu.. Automatic. l owner. Flral class &hape. 67>1908 ~REDrt A PROBLEM? NEED A CAR? Call M11.nager ..... 66 CREDIT . PROBLEMS? We Carry Contr•cta Cars From $99 Ur. Blue Chip Auto Sa•• 2.145 Harbor Blvd., C.M, '42·9700 * 540-4392 BUIC::K '62 ELECTRA 225. L\"11 blue w/ beige vinyl top, New tires, new paint, new uphol. Rebuilt eng. $600. Must set to .11.pprec.iate! 842-1962 '66 RIVIERA. air cond, aletto. mq wheels, Sharp! 642-8286 8:30 to 5:30 6 dicya '62 BUICK Special Skylarlr. mnwrtibte, good condition, $275. -- CADILLAC '68 COUPE de Ville. All power. atereo, air cMd. El Dorado interior, low miles, 1 owner, $3150 or beat ofter. ..... 1911 '70 COUPE de VILLE , ~aut, bayberry, leather, vinyl top, air, strtto/radio. ?-.tany Xtru. Pvt. pty, $6100. 541--50.59 $6,S BILL YATES . VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837 4*X>/493..(.illf 499.2261 '67 CHEVY 4 door aedan, Auto, R.H., Pwr steerins. (ZSC 437) $1045 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 328!17 Valle RoAd San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/493-45W 499·2261 '65 CHEVY Impala Super Spart Convt., 32T. Bucket seats, p/1, xlnt cond. 1 owner car. $1295. A»-3309- ''4 CORVAIR MONZA Rtuonable * 642.3Di CORVETTE '66 CORVETTE Convertible, 4 epe@d, air cnnrl., power 1teerlng, white w/hlue intrrior. Beaullful in 11nd out: Must At't! l..o!ldt'd wilh all the roodit'I, (ZDU- 26.1 1. ,.._ BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32R.'i2 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano R.17-41Kl0/ 4!1l-451 l/ 49!}.~t '64 VETTE -New 327. 4 ape!, AM/Jo'M, Michelini;, m11gs, 2 101>9. Sl~. 494'W3 '63 CORVETI'E hrdtop conv. rt-bit eng, new tires, $1600 ~bit olr, ~7965 MIUT ARY ~ being tn.naf. I"'-------- '61 Chevy lmpala. $450/ beat oUer. XJnt cc 11 d , 646-"96 '65 lMPALA Stn Wgn, p.s., p,b., Jae alr, lugpge rack, new paJ.nt, 1 owntt. $UOO or ~•t oiler. 838-6138 '57 Chevy Sin Wen VI. auto tram $15(1 firm • • 545-0577 ·70 EL CAMINO. 007 eng. Mia! 1reen. R/H. Tinted 1la.u. Di1e brake1. 540--6253 DODGE '67 DODGE Charier taatback, Loaded. Air<oDd., 440 mq, pwr. windows, 1tteT, dilc brks. Lo. mile . Xlnt rond. MS-3985 AM 7 PM '68 OIARGER. R.J. ta~ deck, p.1., p.b.. bl.lckf!l I 5!'1111. far 11 lr, xlnt cnnd. T.O.P. Call S48-8576 aft 5 pm UaodCort 9900Utod Cert 9900 OUR SALESMEN ARE ON THE BALL! ~~ rf,~ THEY HAVE TO BE i WE 'VE GOTT.HE FINEST SELECTION OF BMW'S IN ORANGE COUNTYI Stop In and '" the complet9 line of BMW1a. All colors, modela, reffy for immKlate delivery. '68 vw $ ,69 vw $1595 ......... ""'· ......... , 1595 A11tom1tfc ttl1l 1fli~. ' 1111,, litt11 "''· A·I r1JI•, h.1t1r, leeb 1MI ;j , .. ,,... IWTllO••I Jri•tt Ii•• t f11tory f111h ------------- '''· (SE•Hil . '65 PORSCHI $2995 l r11Ml1111w 1n9t~1 rot • • mil1 cill HI •1Jio, h11t1r, 1-1cul1!1 thro1191!out , .. Whit• h1111ty! 100111 . '69 vw ' , ............... ,.11, fi·• "''' 11•• r1llllt l tlr11. Thlt aiu1 It ftchtry 1MI $AVE 11rtctiil tt I•• yo11 wo11'! ~tlliwt It! 14142 1. '57 vw 11:1 .. up.M11 111w '"th" with t I 00 % t111 r111l1t 011 p1rh 111tl l1bor, for •.OOO 111U1, or • ll'I011lh1, M19 whtt ll, wide '"'''· ll1rftcl 110o11dUle11! tNHE •16) loe Berlottl'• .wa. ...... -·-T&M MOTORS IOll GARDEN GROVE BLVD. ML.II O,.N SUNDAY rAITI. lllWICI TVU.. THUU. TILL l :Of I \It ... I. .t .._., lf.1·1111 , Full power plu1 air cond., . ~1. Dir., vinyl top clean as youol--'--'------'57 T-BIRD, A: '60 Fotd wlll find CVQD049). Will takel -~-------Starllner $1 800/both. Good c~r In trade or finance prl. PLYMOUTH Cond. 526-2514 or 546-2018 '64 Jo'ORD Econ. \.'11n, reblt eng, 11uro trans, nl'w brakes, &550. 546.-7496 all 9pm .vile eaHY. 546-t052 or·l __ .:_ _______ 1.==...::::c::::.;.,.=...=-==- 4!H-!rm. . · '69 J\OAD Runner. XLNT 1--....:-------"°""· Many "'""'" Cub VALIANT .m1 on/y.·66-9737. · e 1967 FORD Cu1tom 4 dr. air cond. Make of J er . 1--------- 64i..1450 or 5-48-4326 '62 FORD ·55 , P(YMOU·TK ·Gd 'r.6 VALI.4J'IT, Xhll cond, -.66-M-USf_A_N_G-.-,-;g-oaJ---11-.,.-I tramportat~, $50. 875-1791 $750. Mu1t sel1 ••• leavini rt!d, auto. lnN~ 28,300 mi.l-=',."=",.'"'=·=·;,:·=====-='°='=p='=''"=Co=""'=·:;:67>-=194=8::; MUSTANG Convertible. 1utomaric, P.,IJ, power 1teerin.c U<PJ-T78 i: $695 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN ~1: belie•e . Sl s5o '1.Uiiitodiiiiiiiicii1ii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiii9900iiiiiiiiUiitodiiiiiiic.ii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '68 CONVERT agua blue.II ~. Only 24,000 mi's, MUsr SEU.. ~1301 '67 MUST ANG OonVttt, 1ttck 1hlf1, xlrit cond: Otii owner Sl,225. 494~2900 ' 32&'>2 Valle Road San Juan Capilln.m 137-4~/493-45ll/4$.2261 • * 1967 MUSTANG 239 4 1pd, Xlnt oond. $13!i0. 54().5923 u...ic ... '900 Usec:I Ca rs SALE OF OUTSTANDING ' ' LAT£· MODEL POlfTIACS 1969 GTO l1die, h11ltr, ptwer 1tt1ri111, f1ci.,., 1lr conllliti•ntd I tvrbe hvlllr1m1ti1. I YPU· 104), 52995 1969 FIREBIRD lt1ullful ¥t1d••• t•••ll A vl11yl l11ltritr, •ul o, ···~•"'iu itn a pow1r tlt1ri11t, CX RS·t•41, $2795 1969 GTO 2 Doer h1rdtop, l1dl•, h1•l•r, 11•w1r 1l11•i11t, pow1r ditc br1•11 I 4·111telll tr1n1. 12.000 ..,;1,, I b1l1 ~c1 •f f1c tory w1rr1"ty, I 1714-AF-XI $2895 1969 GTO 1 Door h1rdlop, l1dle, h11t1r, pew1r 1l11ri"t· f1clory 1lr, 111w Ci r w1rr111ly, s, ••• u ... , 11d. 11 .000 ... a, •. 11 0•0•11 $3295 1968 VENTURA 2 Doer lriatdlep. Ftclo,., 1ir, pewer w/11• dew1, r1•1lle, h11 l1•, pow1r 1l•••il1t I l:i•••••· A l:i•t11li111I 1qv1 111c. 11t witlri f1,torv wen enfy. I 1041771 $2695 1969 BONNEVILLE 1 Door h1rdtop. ~•pr1110 l:irci•fl' wlth full pow1r I lil1c~ .,;~yl to11. Co..,peny I XM• uli.,1 11~ •Ith S,000 ,,.;1,,. 1107111 ) $3495 1970 LE MANS 2 Doer Ip.er+ h1rdto11 . F1cto,., •Ir, "lee .. "lnyl top •"'•• • 1p1rkling iwcirv. Nill Wi t· r1nly, ••••· c•r with l ,100 ..,;,11122•11, $3677 1970 GT01 Chot11• f•el'll TWO, ~•cl, t ir l vl11yl lo!J. 11 21 -7611 $3995 1970 GRAND PRIX Stereo rtllll•, "inyl ltJI'. ,owtr willodew1 I only 4.000 'rili. '"' thh 1ic1ptl•111I '''• I0•7·1EOI $4895 1961 BONN iVILLE Coupe with 1perklln9 tol.t 1~+1 rlo1 1nil ff11lchi119 .,;~yl l11ierior, 1ir' 1on4Ufltnl•t· t111ho hyiir1 ... 1tic, I ''w1r. IWXC..,211 52795 1969 GRAND PRIX s,.,;,1 lilly• ''''"' with 9111111~• l.;leclt l1elher interior. Shew cir ori9in1lly 1111· Int for $6,100. AM.FM 1+1r1•, ,,u.,,. wh1el1, power wi11.l1w1, 1tc, l1l1nc1 Mfr. we rrt11ly I 111ld new l:iv u1. tzov.1101 $4295 1969 FIREBIRD c.,..,,,,, leeut, M1t1ll1r ltd/llec• 1•11 I l11!1rlor. •Sold 11ew her1 , 110 V•I , 111 cent!., 11ow1r 1!11rl119, lu rO. llvllr111111tlc. CZlH·OJJI $2995 -1 ~ ;-~ZLs cARVE R ~ .; ROYCE · 2925 HARBOR BOULE VARD, COSTA MESA 546·4'4-4.f "SPECIALIZING IN QUALITY'' '70 RIVIERA F•ll pewtr • ftct•rv 1lr. 12•111 MANUFACTUlEi\S' CAl IUS H>l 54795 . PLll. 111011 TO CHOOll PlOM AT SIMILAI l&WIN61 PRESTIGE CARS AT SENSIBLE PRICES 1969 FORD TORINO SQUIRE WAGON 1n9lftt, 1utom1tic '''"'"'in len, r1tlio, h1•!1•, powtr 1!11rint ,.114 di1c l:ir•~11, powt r wi11dow, pow1r t1il91lt wi11dow, f1110lo ry ,;, co11ditlo~i"t • 1 wey f1;I t•I•. Jud 14,J ll Mi111, lov1ly "'''tlow 1r11n will> tim11l1i1tl wciolll tr1i11 p1n1lint plu 1 c11nlr11li11t 111 .,j11yl l11t.ri o1. F11iciry Wl llf flty .... u •• 1 •• IZE D744 l, $3395 • 1969 MERCURY MARQUIS f PASSENGER STATION WAGON l hl1 '"' i1 1ll1•l11tely l11d1d lncludi"t full pow1r,' f1ctflry 1lr, pow1r door lotl1. AM ·fM 1ttr10 r1lllio, lutt•t• ••c•. tilt 1!1trirHJ wl>ttl, cu1to111 .,;11yl inl1fio•, 1i .... woolll t rt hl p111tli119, tic. 1lc . lfl161C•OS•ll) -$4295 1969 cofnNENTAL 1 door ~1rtltop. •old t ll'l•rier With d11• ¥111yl lep e11d' "''tchlnt cu1to111 lntt 1io1. fiet full pow•r 1111111ptt1111! plut f1 ct1rv 11r c1111dilio11i11t, poll(tr tloer loc~1. AM-FM < r1dle 111d h11 tnly 11,413 "''Y c1r1fu Uv lllri.,•11 ... a,..,• IYWT 11•1 \ $5195 • 1967 RIVIERA Ci ra ihi1 11lc1 ••• .,,,., h1rlll I• fi11d tod1v. Lt•lil1d in. clullli11t f11ll pew1r tq11ipm1nt, f••lorv 1ir cenditionin9; 1•no..,•ii1 r1dio, mint t r1111 •ritrior with ltl11k vl11yl lojt tiM ~ftcli!11t lil•ck .. lnyl l:i11c••t 111t l11t1rlor. De11'I l•I ffril1 •"• ttt 1w•y. IUOE16•1. $2995 • 1967 CONTINENTAL 2 llle1r h1rlllto,. You'll l11lf h1w1 ti! 111 thl1 •••ft ••~'t lttlit •• it. Full li'•w•• •1tulpJl'l111t lnclUtll11t tl,clric h1tlll 11tt 1nlll ''lfll11l11t p111•11t•r 11•i, •11t.F111~lc 1lr cof141, ilt11l119, t+•,•• t1pt 1y1t.m, ,ew1r lllotr ltckt 1n4 1111 • lttU1w1bl1 low milttt•• J111t 14,IOJ 1111111. IYWS•IJ) " $3195 • UICK In STA MESA ........ -- i . rRANSPORTATION Johnson &: Son LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • MARK 111 e MERCURY e COUGAR 'BlG SELECTION BIG SAVINGS aN STA'JION WAGONS· · NEW MONTEGO STATION WAGON MONTEGO MX VJLL'AGER 1_1·1.4v v.11119j111, Ew1p~r1ti•1 .E1t1init " Co111r1I, s,. ltcf Shift Tr1~t1,.h1iti11,, Courlt1y Li9hl -..ou,, WSW .&~71114 l ir,ft, Pow1r Ri,,, Window, l1199191 Cir• fltr -W/.f.lr Dtfhr, Third St1t, l111 f1cln9, llo- er Sl111i'ht, Air Conditi~n.r, AM lt1dio, Ti11ted Gl 111 ...:. Co11111l1ta, 011. St•I 6 fRT Should•r l1lh, 11• mot1 CTL ltft H1nlll Mirror: Dtl11•• Wh,,t c,.,,,.._ Tr1 ilt r Towint P1c••t•· #OHllMSll627 1970 MERCURY MONTEGO 2 DR. HARDTOP FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT . INCLUDING: ' . ' ' AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, · POWllt 'STEERING, TINTED GLASS, AM RADIO. , #OHDILS915:M. '67 COUGAR 52275 . • • I Ault. lrtn1., f1c:forv t !r condlt1onint. power 1lttri11t1 pow•r hr••••, r1llli11, lit1t1r. (UTK 7Jl) '66 MUSTANG C•111i'•· Ault. 111111., f1c:t1rv 1ir ccuwlitieni11t . ptwtr 1l1tri119, pow1t Ii•••••, r1dio, lit1t1r. ISTV4471 '68 COUGAR Aw+•. fr t111., f1cto,., 1ir corwlitio11l11t . powtr 11Nti11f, power l:ir1k1t, r1dit , li1 1t1r, winyl roof. IXEU 791 ~ '67 l\llERCURY Cyclon1 &f 2 Dr. H.1'. lot~td. ' '66 FORD Country Sedan $167S t P111 .. 1Ylt. tr1n1 .. •&H1 ,;, colld,, rotf rcill1, lTOE 717 ) '6B TOYOTA 'Coron• t•OO. 4 ~li'tld, •1dio, f111tt r. lf ,tQJ·Miln 11••• ntw G1tt1 'tir11, lik1 n1wl (W)(E ••ol ' '48 COUGAR Ault, tr1111., 11ewtr 1!11r;n9 , mil1t. !XEU ••l ) ''68 CONTINENTAL Coup1. F1ctory 1ir ct11ditio11int. full power, lit1uti condilit~. l lEK 1•5) '70 FORD Maverick A.T., 14.000 mll11, Rtdlo '•nd M11ler. '66 MERCURY Parlilane $1' 4 Door H1rdtop. f•clory t lr 'o~iti111l 11ti full •• r1tlie, li•1l11. l1111tif11I conlllitit", ISIM D6•1 '67 FORD Country Sedan $18 . Ault. tr1n1., RI~. pewot ... 1ri11 t . •i; ceiwlitio111 roof r1ll1. IV~T 44''1 I '6 7 OPEL Rallyt IWDEOll l '66 BUICK Skylark $1 S :t Dotr H1rlllt1p, eut•. tr1n1., •&H, p•••f' iltt' '65 CHEVROLET Impala 51 4 D•tr H.T, Awlt.' t.1~1 ~ f1c•o rv ,;, celMllltici11 pow1r 1l11ri"t • •111110, h11t1r. fllDI JOJ) • ' • 1 Ntw h tM ... ThN fa,. r ..... ..,. u..1 ..... .,, hfftct Johnson & So LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 1 MAR K Ill e MERCURY e COU&;, I :t6:t6 HAllOl IOUUYAID. COtlA MU~' 540.561 0 •I 1 Miio -of ...... Di.,.._ 7 • San C_le1nenie Today'• Fl-1 . • Ca isirano EDIT-I O N • ' . VOt 63, NO. 179, 2 SecTIONS, 28 P~6JS. ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFPRNIA JUESDAY, JULY 28, '1970 TEN CENTS .No New Clues • Ill Clemente Murder By JOHN VALTERZA Of t111 o.1tY PW JMrt ni. police inVOlll&•tor working tho aUU-acUve beatinc and atabbln1 murder o1 San Cl<meqte r.aldent Mn. Connie Johnson has returned from her home state this week with few fresh leads. Detective Leonard Goodwin said his trip to Minnesota prnductd litUe new evklence in the baffling June II s1aylng in the. housewife'• mWL.1.plrtment DW' Frf!ewa11 Hassle ' tbt municipal pier area. In receat wee.u Goodwrin and otbu detectives have held repeated con- ferences with Marine Lance Cpl. Mark Johnson. tt, the dead woman's husband, to retract steps taken in earlier talks. Bul that , too, bu yielded lltUe, detec· tiYff have said. . One man had been arrested July s ln the killing, bot after a weekend In cuatDdy coin<:iding with inl<nalvt -in· Re-routing Bill Hearing Delayed By THOMAS FOllTUNE OI fllt o.ltr' Plllt lllff SACRAMENTO A S t D I l t Tranaportatlon Committee hearing on a bill to delete Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach and part of Huntington Beach was postponed Monday and tentatively rescheduled for 2 p.m. Moriday. ·All committff hearings were called off when the Senate decided to continue meeting as a whoie into tht afternoon on Goveroor Reagan's $1 billion tax reform program. A final vote on tax · refonn was expected late today which wou1d clear the way for resumpt.ion of committee hearings on Wednesday. About 20 persons from the Oran&e Cnast includini eity oHicipils 1rom NewPori Beach, fluntingloR Beac:;h, Colt.a Mesa and Lasuna Betoh )lie( !Ion to ,Sa.cramentl) for the ,freeway hearinl Mondo)'. - P<rh11>1 U.. moo! <iillPP>il\ted WU Costa Meaa Mayor Robert WllJon who had to cancel as master .of cer:emonle1 fo'r a.Monday retirement luncheon honor· lng fonner Costa Meaa City Manager Art McKenzie. Round·trlp airplane fares for all the peraonl who new to Sacramento to testify on the freeway bill probably tot.al· Ji!..ry Forgery -. -- Charge Sought Fonnal charges ol foraery will be MUjht through the Orange County Grand Jury Wednesday against a Utah man 'tho allegedly launched an internatonal bad-check spree from a San Clemente bank early last May. Darrell Graff Hafen, 44, had been scheduled for arraignment on felony charges Monday morning in South Orange County Municipal Court, but the aCtion was called o!f after District At· torney's aides decided for the Grand Jury procedure. .If the panel retumJ an indictment, Hafen wlll fa ce trial on charges that he paeed thousands of dolim In worthleu checks in San Clemente, then milved on to allegedly do the same in11.aUn America, Europe and lhe United States. " "'e•tlter lt'll reach 68 degree• filtering through lhe coa.stal hate on Wed· nesday or up t.o IZ 'If you're further Inland. Low clouds will prevail in the night and morning hours. INSIDE TOD~Y Tim Knowlts, t1it M-~ear-old grod~te 1tudtnt who ru1U ti!.~ federollv funded EdvcatiottoJ Opportunftv Program at UC Irvine, 1at11 minorit~ 1tudnt1 havt troti:blt gelling into col· ltgt becaaue thtll ore petting' poor advice from ltiph 1chool counstlor1. Poge 8. Ctl!..,..11 ' -, .... ClllUMI U• ' --" ....... ..w "., ......... • ...... " _._ • ·-" JrM• ,,.,..,, " ="""" • ,_ '"" -• i:.::""' ... ;, 111.W ,. ... • lMlf'f*lll_. ll·l t Tllt•leA ,.,. ·-1•11 ·-• -" _.w ... .. Allll; Ullftrt " w.-·· ,.... 1).14 M•mi.• • -·-.. -• ed -• Ulan !t,000. Most said they would make the trip, again Wednesday or wbeneve~ the bill come1 up. Paul Gruber, former Newport Beach mayor who now is vice chairman of Harbor Area Freeway Flghter1, said, "We 've been fighting this seven years. We're not going to give up now ." Assemblyman Robert Badham (R- Newport ·Beach), who authored the freeway deleUon bill, observed that "The Senate ii involved in an emoUonal battle and there is no telllng how lon1 it will take." The Reagan tax package Is desigited to shift up to SI billion from local property taxes to state ulea, lnco'me and busineu-oriented taxes. It already has been approved by tho Aaembly. * * * _Lag~~ ·ctv ic . ' Group 8dcks - Freewa y B·ill "We d~ide<f we ~had to . stand for Town Ptannini Association 1poke out this week In s:upport of ASMmblyman Robert Badham's bill to eUminate the Newport Beich sesment of the Coutal Freeway. While City Manager James Wheaton and representatives of Costa Mesa, Hun. tingtop Beach, Fountain Valley and the county oI Orange were journeying to Sacramt:"nl.O to oppose the bill, the CTPA addressed a letter endorsin& it to the Senate Transportation Committee. The letter, aigned by CTPA pruident Joy Dickerson, state• that the CTPA "standJ firmly for preserving the in· tegrity of towns" and therefore sym- pathizes with Newport Beach in. Its fight agains1 the bisectl.rlg freeway route. Amplifying the CTPA atand, Mn. Dickerson said, "At firlt we felt like &c;ting along agalqst the bill, but by the time we finished dl1cuasln1J' It we felt we really could not take thlt position if in fact the reaUy irilportant thing i11 preserving the Integrity of each town. "We decided wt Md to1 st.and ofr what we felt wu rl1ht, that 11, that Newport Beach has u much right to try to uve it.self u Laguna Beach had during the long flcht to block tho bisecting freeway ." '"he Cl'PA president added that board 1bers did not feel there wu any lSee FREEWAY, Pare.I) Busy Crol'Sing To Get Signal? Laguna Beach probably will get a traffic 1lgnal on Broadway to control the tricky croa1in& from Beach Street up the hill to Cliff Drive. Joseph Sweany, director of public works, told planning commluioner1 Monday. State engineers, aald Sweany, now ap- pear to be convinced that the volume ol traffic in the area 11'&rranll a 1ianal. The traffic 1tinal •t Qeo Street and South Coast Htahway, he added, iJ ocheduled to be lnttalled In December. As~ K tho 1talo ·wou1c1 not be -in. Welted l.n a compietl protram of llgna.lllatioa for the community, Sweany commented. ••ror the past 10 ye1ra, a ICbJ.Jm hat existed between the clty 1od the DivWon of Highways. They uy, 'Take off the parkins and we will do a complete job ol ol«nallulion, with tum pochiJ,1nd 10 for111,' bul tho. Ctif has alw1)'1 rttuled to remove the pairlt- fna." The result, he conclutled. haM been plectmtal lnltatlation of tlpal! and removal of nectlllt')' parkln1 1p&ce1 .. the need atoll. ' vestilation, Fr~e· Wayne Mellino, lt, wu set free without ch&ra:es. He, also, is a Marine. Since then the lnvaltaators have doub~ ed bock lo .. tnce every posaible upecl of the case. The lnvestigaUon even reached into the realm ot the bliarre u.serted satanic ritual death of Mi.saloo Viejo teacher Mrs. Fklrence Nancy Brown and the aix drillers facing trial In her butchering death. But alter a day ot interviews with arrestees 1 in the Brown murder. San Clemente police came up with nolhing lln-lng the two cases except for the style of knife used to inflict wounds ' on both women. , The weapon, a common blade known as a K·bar combat knlle, alle1edly wu U3ed in each killing. • Two other key links · in the chain ot evldepce ~ 11111 missing -a pair of teimit aboes which cOutd have made a lfinL fouftd in U>e kitchen sink .. in 'the alaln woman's apartment and Mrs. Jobnaon1s wallet missln& from the acme when police arrived. The.--husband diacovered hl& young wile's body 1prawled on the bed •s he returned from guard ,duty at the Mar~ Hefieopter Facility in ~ta Ana. Mrs. Johnson had been dead abodt . 14 houn,.p0llce said. ' ,. ' 1 ' I I f f' ! , 1•.·~ DAl\,T PllOT ..... ,..... . PRESIDENT> NIXON' SHOWS DINN ER 9 UE5TS, GRDUNDS DF WI STIR.N ,WHl:r.E :lilOIJS I ' S.noto. Murphy •and th• RH11n1 Viti! hn Clomonto to ll'Uk Broad· and· Mok•· Soma Pol ltlul Hoy Capo Counciln1ien Repeal Business License Ruling . By p AMELA HAuAN CM tile O.ltr ,,_, Ili ff Sf.a Ju.an Capistrano city councilmen voted unanimously to repeal a new busineu license ordinance Monday in the face of criticism from area bu~nessm!fl. The new.ordinance had raised the ba!e fees for nearly every t}ipe of buslnus and had required retai~. wholesale and manufacturing concerns to pay 25 cents per $1,000 of their lt'06S receipta over $30,000 in addition to a base ree. An old ordinance was reinstated untll January, giving the city time lo review objeclkinl 10 the new ordinance. Mayor T.ony Forller scolded the city's ~ta, who packed ~ . council chambers. for not coming forward Jn May when the ordinance was being dilc1Jlled.· .•. He 11reed, .however, that the council may. have oyerlooked certain · points w)Lldl·were deemed ot-~ttonable.by the buainep COJ]lfl\unily •. One pl these polpts WkS U\f: nqtlficatlon that lhe city clerk and treasurer had the ri&ht to •udit the.11 boob. " Nixon Faces 'Neivs Media ·Ne.twork-wide Thursday By RICHARD P. NALL 01 1111 O.llY "11•1 Si.ff President Nixon will face the press In Loa . Angeles Thursday at IJ . p.iTI. (PDT) in a live conference carried on all networks. The conference, part of Mr. Nixon's contll'lulng emphasis on conducting the Presidency in' the West some of the time, will allOw people in the West an opportulilty·to see the Chief Executive questioned during prime evening time. Press ~retary Ronald Ziegler said the cilnference will be · along the lines of · those held In the • East Room 'of the Whlte HCJ1J5e in Washlhglon. It will be Mr. Nixon's third this year, two of which were televised. The last was July 20. Ziegler laid the Prtlident would begin Immediately with quesUons from t,he pres.1 and Is not expec~ to make •n ope~ing itatement. The conference will probably be held at the Century Plau Hotel. . . Brelklng. in on a busy work achtd~le Monday, the President held a dinner part)' at his San Clemente home for Cailfomla '1 two leadin1 Republican c~ dldates, Gov. Reagan and Sen.· Geor1e Murplly. The President and ' Mrs. Nixon po!ed for pictures with Rea11Y1. his wife and Murphy al the Spanlsh-sty!e vllla. The President met them In liia fringe-top golf cart and . drove them to his villa where they · were gree\ed by the fint lady. Both Reagan .and ;Murphy are P,Olnilng for November re-election,. The Presldept posed with them for plclure.s and then , Invited photographers to his patio. He then 'led them to a 'point where the 1 'ocean served a! a background. . . He lqvlted newsm~n. to go iwlmmlrig In the . ocean. The s~rf wa' up . aod he ·onered them ~e use of his 1urf , board -. a &lit -that be sald . ha• · never been used.' 1 . . The Prtsidept met w.ilh top -advtso'n lbli mol1rln& at the Western· White House , for1 ~11\~ry di1Cµuloq1 on tbe nut . def-btfdi"· . ; Mr. Nlxon· plans· to aend the Ptniqon spending blueprint to Q)ngreu ,in · JlhlMO")'. Auistlag him· todly were Georse P. Shultz, director of the; outce · !floe NIXON, Pap II • . Her ~ bad '°II\' .gj ... ol .uy' but that-.. poet ·has ll'V<I' been C:OO- flrm«i. ' TM 11'ihdow·above· the link waa open. Oul>ide. benoath I~ "' a metal fcldJa& chair. RepN!ed cool.acts witl1 n•l&hbcn hu revealed little · information on unusual noises or Clrcwnstlnces in the predawn hours: when Mn. Johnaon was b e at t n with a bar -I llld ·ailbbed ftpe&tadiy In tho neck, cltoat llld abdomen. Peace Plan MayC,ost· Dayan ·Job ' • . ! JERUSALEM (AP) -llldlcatlclll . .,. lllOWltina that Isrl(d'1 lov....,..,. will agree ttfuctanUy · llld · with .,..illlonl lo the llG<lay ...... 11re Pioiioaaa ·by the United States to get Mid8le '!Ast peace talks under way again. But local press reports said Defense . ?,!lnil.W Moshe Dayan Is c~siderlng rea6snlDC il .the calllnet ac:cepll the 1A;ntrlcan propou.I.. A DOfense Ministry ,P.k.Sman lernle.t 'the reports "runlon," but he ~lted, "Day1n Is not' tnthuslJ.,sUc abiout the v.s. proposal." · , ni. .. ports Aid Dayan had ~ miJgivings· becaUSf the U.S .. pli. •peaks of Iaraeli withdrawal fs'oni the ~ab Wtds cJptured. l.n ~ lll7 :w,ar.1~ayan bell•V<B tbal) llrHI'• secuiity d<i\<l>dl on It> rell!IW \ho Gua ~tllp, tho Golan H•l&htl II~ frwa Yrt.a. -1 a c:Outal •tr\P , aJonr 'the ,Sinai. -.rt io tho sua11..i Tlnn.-lbe ar IO Intl'• MIJtbern ..... , rollio .. JJ:ul ~ ~·Afla-. ' . ' . Premier Golda Meir aiid b<r tob1aet llcheduled ~ llM!'i!q . iodaY • to diaCUJ.S their replj lo th• ~. 1ber. Ia · a pouiblllty lhe will reply te W1shin1ton Wednesday l!!llJI In:a ·~ to 1the Knesset, tbe ;lsra.U parllime1t., · Deputy Premlet: Yl11l1 Alloni went .Oii record Monday · nJ1bt in 'favor <o( ~ .ceptance, Israel1s•f1rst r.anklq ~ .. do .. P"hilcly. . 'IEvrn 1I there are differences of • nioB between the U.S. aod Israel," ;Appan told a lrollP of hilh otllool ,,.._ editcn, "when the aovernment. of .the United . States I.ates such . an lpJUaUve, It appears to me that we lhould accept it, even if we are not completely aatbfted with all the detaill." Allan's •land iwaa con a J de rt d parllcuiJrly sianilitant b<cauae ,he Is a member oC the cabinet's forel1n affair• and security committee, alon1 with Mn. Meir, Def..,. MlpJster 'Mool>e Da11J1 and Fdr<lp Mioisler. Ahbo Eban. 11>o comlnitlee' formulates l•ael'a fort11n policy. .Sourcea close to tile 1ovemment 11\d a rfiajorlty Of the 'cabinet ' nOw ls ·ri'ady l.O 11ccept .th& lJ,S" propoial ·with ant reservatio~. ·Egypt and Jordan, the other. two prtn- clpab,. alr,.dy have 1«1placi tha plan. Syria and , Iraq, whqol eiidor= ' w.ie ·not ' iequested ·by U.S. Secreta o( Slate William P 1 Jtoce(s, have con. demned it, and the Paleitlnlan prtlll1 organlzallons hav• V.....S: lo contlnuo fighting in apite of any cease-rtre.1 In lts acceptance Jordan report.dly iald it' woukt not force the conu1•Mb1 to comply: . r I I · • The ctntral committee oi the Jaliltl~ nlan • Resistance M<lvement.. in . .Am.man announced' that Jt ii Mndiq eftVG)' to the othet Arab capitals '\o e1plain the guerrillas' oppcislllon lo tho ,U.S • .,.. posal. . ,-- • "The city ls not In the · auditing ~ · · ! · 1 • ' busines.s, .. aakt the mayor. "The city W a·_ w· •... n·k· ·• w· clerk inct ' ,,. ...... r:won't be .pokl•• .. OIDe . . . . ·10.. I IOI · ·. a., their noses Into your books." Some businessmen hid considered this ' ~ · .: • · '\ ' ' ' ~ · an 'fiiva!k>n ·oe 'privacy, MADRID (AP) .:._ This maY be ihe twingil'lg lnslde. · :Okt prOrubition1 1UU itand1 ellew~ 01.her objections were oul!ined by Bill yaar · Spanish women finally 'wln thtir Most of .his bikini customers are ypung The San , Mifut.l IWimmlnC poolJi ln Yate9, e1r dealer: Duane Ha11811, camera bikini wav Wellt almost. • 1 lingle W6men, but a rew married wOll\en Madrid, operated by a, Catholic. aoc\1'1· afore owner and Bruce Winton, ceramics tt'a not t1'at there Is any 'law a111!11l · a.I~ are Duylng this y·ear.' ' segre1ates 1ln1le women from marrltd manufacturer and president of the Cham· the scanly awimsu!ts, but a aefment Why the lklul upsurge? · couples. Two-piece aulta 11re permitted ber tlf• Commerce. of Spanlsh society looks do"{n on the · "pecaUse t11e·censorsh.lp Is oyer," 1iy1 1 ln the women-cnly pool but not la ~ '"'tli included the fact that no celling ldea . There also are twlmmin& areat Andujar. He Js. referrln1 to a wld~ly pool wilb me• and women. had been let on b4J1iness license fees, where bathera are lelrfpted by llf:X publlclied court ruling earlier thia y(&r Jn ZU'40U ln nortbeut S~1 a ~p that-the levy on gross volume wa1 and bikini~ or any tw~piece suita 1are. that --lid blk1nls altd two-pl~ ire Or more than IO ·women ' nc.tl.1 dbcrinUnatory .b<caUJ> it failed to con-nally prohibited. oot ilnlnorai II 1wimlnlnl ar<U whore 41Jpia~ both tllrir bodJa l1l<i '*' aider the merohanCs net profit marcln, ''l would aay bikini aales are up at they are tl)e custom. . j 1tt: by deinonatratiq 1pinlt ndf. ~ and that ttie ordinance wpuld be detrimen· least 'ro percent thit year,'' aay1 Juan Not evtryone ii scurryin1 into a bikini, hibilinc Wkinis at I.heir aeancatect ~L tal m attractin& new butinen to the Andujar. manaaer or 1 1maU stort of[ tiot two-pj~rs ·are floorilhlni: as never Polide · kept bandl ott ·Ind · the lajdlll are1... the Puerll del Sob WI CU1ton'lfl'a hardly bef0re.1 • , • • won qut. 1 , ' · .• 1 Councilman Jim Thi>rpe suuut<d tblt are the typo to hlWll Macl~ld'a cllic , "I. walch IJ1' ,foreign<n lq bikini• and The 1!'fl1lallllal ll&<!r\d "'11i'P.llp<r UC In the oext few montha a commlltee · ·liiopl iooklAI 'for European1uhiON. lie . I ,don 't aae .'l)ly I ... n•t boYO ooc,'' not'4 Iba \riftd1to'ai'd ~and dimt of l>ullneNmen and <>ity ataff l'hoil id haa tednlU!fou In his dlapl., window.' 11y1 a,17 y<IU'Oid biQflde. , • up with .,.nee~: ''Tiit" iJ a ~,- o<lnfl p ·pew •I'll~· At th< aat\le ' HO ; al.lo h11 1wlmsuU., altbou&h not Foret...,.. In blklnlt, "p e e>l a 11 y I 'tl'lf ~ ...., tho blklal, but q-iJI ti.mt they thould determine what a blkihla, In the wlhdow. He tttlpll)'1• a Sweden 's blondes, 1tartled Spain rncire "° Sptnlsh WI)' to puf U.00. Thi•..,-:• bu.sines. lcense is aupposed to do.1 dar1ng1y. cut, al nale-piece luit.,Tl\ts ob-. than, JO years aao when they Hilt began Spani1b woman 1il lr)'inC hard io fiDll whether or not it ree_resenta • tax on vlou1ly Is to nUaly• the rulea 'or 1ppearlng on the beachea. Thi tourist ! this 'fay. tf lhe'does, abe would rtlah a tax (the city already rtcefves ooe-cent e1tabU1hmcnt1 that prohlblt. tWo-piece Jnflux has bM:n lricrtasing t,Yt/Y yiar <he. Ubc1Uon of hec bod)'1 1 11 biN~ ot. 1\J sales ta1e1) and whether or not 1ult1. •It 11ao aler:tt. 'potentl1t .customtr1 ainct -a..ct '° hive 1the blkJ•l1. Tbty burdeft thl~ ,baa '.been ~ Jia: rw ... Uley are iaeful and co!l .... bl... that there iJ 10melhla1 a bll ,Jlliro 111 commonplace now ... tile--~· CllllW'lea." t 1 I ~ ·--, 2 o.ut. y ,ILOT SC Laguna to Get flealth Service Funds? ., MMAli pmaa Of .. Oflfy "'"' ,,.., A tbree-IDClDU:I sirvty of Uguna Beac!l•a beaJth needs may result in e11•nttment ol, a permanent, county- fln.tiiiS. ccimmWUty health service, ac- ~ to Dr. William Routt, leader ol a pOydltatrlc team now Initiating Ille_..,, Tbe five-mtmber team was 1sSgned to loc:us Ila -on on the Laguna ...._ for the ·mmmtr after the citr coundl. adcl!ll<d a raolutton nquutlnc ~ ol a county heallb facility in Ibo Art Colony. -·Is a IS-year-old psydilatrist who • nceatl1 spent two yean in W..iifuaton D.C. with the U.S. Public -s.r.1oe. .Ullpd to the National . '" D11111u1e "' Meolll u,.1111's c11v111oo at mealll beall1I -_ ..... A 5<>ulb COU.lf leam, quu10nd for now at tM high school, w1ll survey the area from Cost.a Mesa to San Clemente alter completing 11.8 Laauna study. It b one of three teams now operating In Orange County .under the Commwtlty Mental Health Services p~ gram. other teams are working in the Fullerton and Santa Ana areas, with two more due to be set up ID Anaheim and Westmlnster. ' Their studies are the fint step io decentralizaUon of health services from the county to the community level. Initial work of the survey team will be to 1nlervlew local dllz<lll and ...,....atalives ol tnweoted agencies to COOi . Mother Sets T1·ap; 3 Nabbed As Kidnapers 87 AllTllVR R. VINSEL Of ftlf DlllY Pllll II_,, Racing 331 milu ag.Wt an I p.m. ieadlille, a mJnl.aJdrtod mother C8lTflng $1,500 tn r8D90m Monday met three kidnap suspects in Costa Mesa and coolly belpod polico capture them and free be< d...,.., unharmed. 11le trio of COnnectlcut men who report«Uy dreve out to find the young woman and her husband were captured and dlaarmed without Incident by lawmen llllenlng to them via hidden microphone. IovllUgatort bad nothing but pralae for aubun>haired Mn. YvODDI Parker. 40 who worU u a troubleshooting meapr for • cbain of PboenlX restaurants. .. She was beauUfut Just beautiful," aald Detective Sgt. Cliff McBride. ''She pulled 1t off without a bitch." Mn. Parker e9COried her daughter Stacy, 22, away from tbe Costa Mesa apa11ment she sbanB with ber husband, l\IJrt C. Peyton, 11, at 202ll Wallace Ave., to set the stage. Police then captured two accused tid- napers togtther and a third was a~ preJ>ended aeparaWy, freeJng Peytm. eomp1a1n1a charging the ConneetJcut men with kldlllp and grand tbett will be IOlll)1t today from the Orange County Dbtr1c1 Attorney'• office, acconllng to os.ctlve (:apt. Bob ~. '!liey .... ldenllfled .. : -James M. McSbane, 23, a StraUord, Coml., blrtender. -Donald E. Von _.,., 24, a Slrltforcl .... puter programer. -FrlDI< w. Papcln, 21, • Bridgeport labon<. CaPt Grem aatd the couple were kld· naped from a party ped ...,,ew11e,. in Laguna Beach and told they bad 41 hours to come up with· ,1,500 or face unstated consequences. A aeries of calla to relatives In Con- necticut and then to Mrs. Peyton's mother led the attractive mother of five other children to arrive in Costa Meaa late Monday afternoon. "She drove all the way over from Phoen1I: and then when we tried to put ber up for the n1«iJ>1 sbe aald ihe bid to pt bock," expla1ned Sgt. McBride, one ol tile raiding twn. A mlcropbobe hidden in her cinthlng, Mn. Parter wesit to the Wallace Avenue .-to f1llcl her datJl)lter ond ~ Jaw, but they weren't pment at that time. Polioe aa1d llbe began gingerly pumping one ol Ibo alleged llldnapers about whether they were anned. with what typ8 weapons and who among them carried the gum. Only one plalol waa subs<quenUy found. 11For a mother -nOt even knowing what to apect -sbe pulled tt oU beautlfully" aald Sgt. McBride. "Tilt about lll11oul momenta ••• all we could do was bite our nails," be conUnued. Several detectives we're poised to make the capture and other oftk:er1 were lta· tioned at key pointl nearby to await the cllmu. During th1I period, Mr. and Mrs. Peyton were returned. Sgt. McBride aa1d the llleged llldnapers wanted Mrs. Parktr and Stacy to ac- company them but she lalked them into taking the ke)'1 to her car and lllowlng them to Jtave aeparately. 'lbe men we.re Wtructed to unlock the tnml:, where they would find 11,IOO In cash, u denuded. Delecllve Norm Kutdl watdlod aa the two women reached safety and climbed a fence to coofnmt a paJr of the ...,pecta as Ibey left the aportment comp!Ol. "lie &<>I the other two end I arabbed tbe great btg dud• from behind," aald Sgt. Mclirlde, exp)a1n1ng thet Papcln is six feet tall and weighs 235 pounds. Officers who bad been waiting nearby converged onto the scene and a police helicopter awept in overhead, il· luminaUng the area with its searchlight. Subsequent investigation led to discovery ot a small amoUDt of mari· juana in the victims' apartment aod Peyton was arrested on that charge. He told police he had been roughed up by his captor during the two-day period, but Investigators aald he showed no tvidence of a serious beating. Laguna's New Head Guard Made 'Big Splash' 1st Day G('&ll'Vllle "Skip" Conner made a bii sp1aab on bis flrlll day as acting chief !Heguard fc< Laguna Beach. doiJn<r was appointed lat. Friday ~and~ m<rnfng be .... paradluUng into the ocean from U,000 DAILY PILOT ..,... .... " ............. LAtnll ...... ,....... ,.., c.... .. _ S-Cl1 .... OUJtl>8 COAST PVaL.llMIHO c:cMPAMY J:e\ett N. WeN ~rulilll'lt eM1 Mllltlw J eeli L e,,ie;y V1ce ,,.,IHlll.,.. GMtnl,......, lli•111•• ic:.,.,n Etll""' nelfl•• A. M•rp\h1e MtMt"-Efltor •11.li1N p, Ni l tovl\ °"""" c-1r '"* oHt ... Clll1 Mn11 JJt we.I .. ., &trwl ..,_, INCll: tfl1 w.t .. ._ ._....,, l.lltWN a.cti1 m "'-' •-~ ._..= UIJJS-11 ............ .... (lllrlllllel -HerWI S:I ~ II .. feet as part of an annual lUeguard demonstration. Whether Conner, a veteran of 12 years ln li!eguardlng, or someone else will nu the post pennanently remain! to be seeJL George Fowler, city recreation dlreclor and also head of lifeguarding, said that the clty bi sending out job announcements: for the J>05ition to other lifeguard departments. He said the deadlnle for flllng ap- plications ls Sept. l, Applications will be tcreened, said Fowler, and the top applicants interviewed by an oral board. Conner preltlmably would be among theae. Fowler said the clty hopes to have the new p>a:IUon filled pennanently by Oct. 1. The salary range Is '908 to •t.088 monthly. City councilmen created the full-time po8t to upgrade the department recenUy after bearing recommendations from veteran Ufeguard supmrtsors. The chier guard position had been a summer post held for nine ye11rs by educator Thomas L. Dugger. Lifeguards havt also asked councllmen to aepe;ratf!: the lifeguards from the jurisdiction of tbe recreaUon department 'fhtre It wq placed by City Manager James D. Wheaton. ne auants maintain that 8 n autonomous department would operate mon; tffldently. LUtguards In Laguna Beacb in the past have been under the police depertmen~ fir< depertment and ha'Vtl betn 1 teparate department. Wheaton, who resigned effective Aug, 22 t.o take another. position, maintains that the department can benefit from Fowle-'1 admlnlstratJve capablllUea. He has said \j'lntedly that Is where lifegu1rtlt wt I remain while he remains bm. In hit letter of resignation this month, Dugger r<eommended that lifeguarding be separated from lhe recre1Uon dl!:part- ment when a full time chief lifeguard WU emplQ)'ed. • est•Nllt! cwnm1mtty oeedt and dtl!rel tor f\lturw blallb -''We need to talk to people In the commu!llty to find out about the pro- blems that Wt and what they would like to aee happen to solve them," laid Routt. "The service, whatever it is, mu.st be designed to, fit the needs ~nd desires of the people, not be something that is dumped on them because it worked elsewhere." '11!.e eventual faclllty, be added, cou1d be •pomored by the broad-based group in the community, such Ui ror ex.ample, the Coordinating Councll. Although the survey team will not be available during the research period for dlrect·service treatment of patients, it wW aerve as a "pre-petition ICfeeniilg Saddleback Votes Appeal Of Hair Rule By FRF.DERICK SCHOEMEllL Of HM Oii,_, ..... llaff Saddleback College Trustees Monday unanimously agreed to appeal a U.S. Diltrlct Court decl!lon ruling that hair reeuJaUooa at the college were UD· comtltutlonal. 'lbe 1pproval came after the board met 1n exeeutivt session for more than an hour. Following the motion to appeal and It• second, trustee MJchael C.Ollim outlined the board's posiUon. 0 Tbe fundamental issue here la who will make rules and regul1tiona for the day-to-day affairs of the college. It c&n only be exercised by the local a:overnlng board," be said. Colllns uid thal "the right and obliga- tion and responsibility to operat. the system of education ii' 1 state function, given to the local boards." Judge lfMTY Pregerson ruled this month that the college ban on long hair wu unconstitutional. Students, aided by the American Civil !Jbertlea Union, had taken tbe matter lo court to ..ttle tbe contlnuJnc ba!sle. C.Olllni 1aJd, "We must be responsible to the voters to protect our prerogailvt. niat prerogaUve bu been lnCrlnged by this decision." John Powell, deputy county counsel, told a reporter that in appealing the decialon, the board wlll uae an earlier ~ecislon handed down to the college tit n\ld·AJ>ril, by the ttb Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. • Tbe ru11ng overturned two district court prellmlnary injunctions against against the Saddlebaclt long hair regul•· tioo, stating "the (district) court b presuming to interfere with the day-~ day operation of the public school system." The decision also noted that the Supreme Court, in two cases, stated that where school officials "are shown to have formally aded, tbe courts should inttrfere only with great caution." WNle vacating the preliminary in. junctions, the ruling ordered the hair issue returned to the district court for further proceedings. The dectsion, declar- ing the long hair regulation un· constitutional, was banded down July 17. "The court holds that the right to determine one's own hair length is a fundamental freed om implicit in the co~pt of ordered liberty and protected agafnst state infringement by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amend· ment," the ruli ng stated. It also noted that no evidence was entered by the Saddleback College Administration to show "that the length er sty1e of the plaintiffs' hair has created or would likely create an unreasonable risk of hann to the educational pro- cess ... " The decision stated that in addition to violaUng the due pl"Ore!s clause, the regulation violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment . Ft-om Page I FREEWAY ... great likelihood the adopted inland freew1y route: behind Laguna would be moved back to the coast, 84 some have suggested, or thal rem.Qval of the Newport segment would result in can· cellation of the whole route. "Frankly," she added, "we don't feel it would be such a great 11»11 if they did cancel out the freeway. In that case we would propose txtending the laterals proposed for Boat Canyon, Aliso Canyon and other spots all the way back to the San Diego Freeway." The eventual solution, said ?ttrs, Dickerson, must be to find other means of mass tran.sportaUon than cars. ••we have reached a grave air pollution problem because of cars and this is now a recognlied fact. We frankly don't feel that addlng to the frteway chain Is the answer. We 've got to find some way to cut down the now of cars, and creating more roads la not the way." CI'PA board member Jamts DUiey, longtJme battler of the 11ut.omoblle, agreed. "The freeway establlshment ha s become 1 tyranny In thb atilt," be said, "and It's 1t opposite poleK t.o Ott conserv1tlonlsta and environmentalists. "In this case, the principle or town in· tegrtty Is transcendant. Laguna Beach has battlf!:d for lta lnttgrity and now Newport Beach ll baltll11& and should be supported. • team'1 to eva1ua&e CUM tbat have been ~ lat poyc!Witrlc treatment or c:ommJtment lo lnltllutlona. Such evalua- tion at the community level now b: required by state law before steps are taken to p10vkle trt~tmeat o r hospitalization. Pre.petition screening oow ts being carried out by the other two teams working in the county, but will be taken over by the Laguna team, for cases In Us area. within the Dert couple ol weeks, Routt said. .A native of Texas, Routt COl'Qpleted his medical studies at the University of Te1.as Medical Branch in Galveston and hJs psychiatric speciality at the Mennlnger Foundation in Topeka. In part time private practice over the past four ,...., be bu -ma1aly wllh lrDubled YOl!llg people in tbe H to IS age group. The five positions budgeted by the county for tbe Laguna te.m, olllclally UUed South Orange County Community Menlal Health Services, are U1oae ol a psychiatrist, Dr. Routt, a cllnlcal psychologist, a psychtatrtc !Ocial worker, a psychiatric nune and a social worker. or theee only the nurse, Lynn Daukus Of Newport Beach, has at present joined Routt at the team's summer head- quarteni in the Laguna Beacp High School ealeterla. Joining the official Civ&.member team will be a part time consultant specializinc in work wiUt the courts and youth, an arcbltect and business admin1strator and .. llllhropologbt. Linda Kasabian Relates Family Initiation Rite LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Linda J<aaa. blan told tbe jury in tbe Sharon Tate murders Monday she joined Charles Manaon'1 "family" after "he felt my legs ud said I was okay," Mrs. Kuabian, 21, the pros'.ecuUoft's only purported eyewitness, sat composed, her hands folded primly in her lap, as she related how she met Manson and his followers the mooth before the Tate.La Blanca alaylngs. She hu been promised immunity in exchange for her testimotly agaiJ.st Manion and his three female codefen· dants. Leslie Van Hbut.On, Patricia K=wlnkel and Suaan Atldm. Defense attorneys objected to virtually every questioa uked the tily blonde, clalmlng the question.II wtte iJT$vant and that she wu an lDcompetent witness because she had taken LSD 300 times. In contrut to the women defendants, who giggled and mugged at Maasoa, Mrs. Ka.sabian appeared 11erene, walling patiently until Superior Qiurt Judge Charles Older ruled on each objection before answering In a soft, confident voice. The pigtailed young woman said she met Kathryl Share, Down u .. Gypsy," OD July 4, 1969. "She told me there wa.s a beautiful man we'd a)l been waiting fOT, and that he'd been ln jail for a number From Page I NIXON ..• of management and budget; Caspar Weinberger, deputy director; John Ehrlichman. executive director of the new domestic council; and Henry A. Ki~inger, assistant for national security affairs. Defense Secretary Melvin Laird met with the President Monday in San Clemente to discuss P e n t a g o n reorganiiation proposals. He then return· ed to W8'hlngton. Laird told newsmen while here that the annual cost of fighting the Vietnam war has been cut in half since Mr. Nixon took office, down £rom a peak of $29 blWon annually to about $14.5 billion. He did not spell out the cuts. Some 150 recommendations from a blue ribbon task force on defense depart.. ment reorganization are to be made public Wednesday in Washington. Laird said the Pentagon, henceforth, will contract for planes and other weapons systems on a "fly before you buy" basis to avoid long tenn com· mitments to accept delivery of ittms that exist only on the drawing boards. of yem," she said. l_{er r~1rk about MB.lll0n'1 prior pnson record was ordered stricken. She said she met Manson the tolloWing day, in a cave at the Spahn movie ranch, where he was rebuilding a dune buggy. ''He asked me wny I had come, and I said my husband had rejected me and that Gypsy told me I was welcome here," she said. "Did Mr. Manson do anything?" Depu· . ty District Attorney V.incent Buglloil asked. "He felt my legs, my calves too, and seemed to think I was okay," sh'e giggled. OVer the heated objections of Maason's lawyer, Irving Kanarek, the prosecution asked Mra. Kasabian U Manson's group considered Itself a family. "We lived to1ether as a family would live together," she replied. "Like a mother and father and children. We were all one." "Was Charlie the head?" "Yes, he was." "How ·many were In the family," Buglloal asked. "Maybe 20 stayed' there· all the fime. MoaUy girls," Mrs. Kasabian said. She told of camping trips wbe. Maaoon ordered the girls to set up walkie-talkie systems and they lived in the woods. Mrs. }\asablan delayed beginning her testimony unUl after the· noon recess Monday because she didn't want to wenr a maternity smock. She gave birlh while iJt jail altd had no other clothes. Her attorneys ·Bent an aide to S:iks Flflh Avenue in Beverly Hills to buy her a frock, and she appeared smiling at the afternoon session in a oright red and blue peasant style dress wllh red rickrack trim. Her husband, Robert, who sat outside the courtroom dW"ing her tesUmo1y, said he spoke with her before she was take• to court QUEEN SHORT SHORT QUEEN SAN JOSE (AP) -Melodie Ann Short, at 5--foot·l the shortest con- testant In the Miss Suta Clara County beauty pageant, will reign over the county fair here Aug. 14-23. Mlss Short, 18, won the UUe over nine other finalists Saturday night and received · a '4 00 scholarship. DAILY ,.tLOT lt1N Pll91t LOOKS AT MEN TAL HEALTH W•1hlngton P1ychl1tri1t Routt Coast Control Bill Stalled In Assemblv ., SACRAMENTO !AP) -A bill putting; development or CaWornia's 1,100 mile; sboreUne under state conlrol stalled 31-31 today on an early Assembly roll call. The roll was left open until afternoon on the bill, which requires 41 voles. in the 80-seaL house. 'lbe Assembly turned down a series of six amendments to appropriate $750,000 in state money for the proposed shorellne commission, to set up an in· dependent staff for the commission and to put more conservationists on the state board and five regional boards. The blll , which has been critlcl7.ed for giving too much contrnl to city and county officials, was attacked on the Assembly floor by conservatives for givin g "unbelievable powers" to the new state agency. "This measure abrogates property rights," said Assemblyman John Stull (R-Leucad.ia ). "People who would like to develop coasUine property have only the right to pay taxes on it." Assemblyman Pete Wilson (R-San Diego), author or the measure, said coastline development is proceeding "at such a pace, is we don't act this session • .. there will be the loss .of u n to I d thousands of acres." 1be bill would limit tor six months all coastline dev elopments involving dredging, reduction of public access to the shore, "substantial development" or reduction of shoreline view from the nearest road. Detailed development criteria for a l ,(IOO..yard strip along the coast would be prepared by the s1atewide board and put into effect by the regional boarda during the six-month start-up period. WilSOn said he cut a $600,000 a~ propriation from the btll because "there Isn't any money to do it the way you want to do it." .. "Increased beach access, this is for the people who dirty the beach," said Assemblyman Robert Badham (IV Newport Beach). "You should see the beaches of Southern California Monday morning after all the conservationists of the inland come to. • .litter our beaches." China Readies Death La ws for Hij ackers TAIPEI, Formosa (UPI) -TM government of Nationalist China is preparing legislation to make airline ru.. jacking an offense punishable by death, Ministry of Comrnwticalions sources said Monday. The bill is subject to approval by the legislature. It's The Second 119 Week of our •••• GRAND OPENING SALE! We ore pleased to announce th e opening of our second store in Tustin. We ho ve purchased "Red Hill Carpets" and the new name will be "Alden 's Red Hill Carpets & Draperies." e IN COSTA M£SA e ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES · 1663 Pl1ctntlt Av•. Phona 646-4838 In conjunction with the open- ing of our Tustin store, we have several spec i a Is in our Costa Mesa store. Please come in a nd see us. e IN TUSTIN e ALDEN'S . RED HILL CARPETS e DRAPES 18374 E. Irvine Phone 831-3J44 VISIT OUR ENLARGED REMNANT ROOM AT OUR COSTA MESA STORE. HUNDREDS OF REMNANTS AND ROLL ENDS. ' • T Girls Join Army, B11t Stay Girls PHNOM PENH (UPI) - Cambodia's duskily beautiful women have shrugged of( tradition, but not their long black hair, glittering earrings and owl sunglasses, to join their men on the battlefieJd, 11lt first women recruits who answered the call to arms have ended two weeks of training and are being assimilated into the previously aJl-maJe anny. 'lbe girls -thei r ages rang- ing from 16 to 20 years - are not only filling rear unit jobs as truck drivers, nurses and in communications but are going tG the frontline as paratroopers and members of the elite American-trained Mobile stJ:ike (MIKEfforces. The women's an;ny was tbe brain child oC Madame Nou Neau. a middle-aged con- gresswoman in the National Assembly who joined lhe ann- ed forces with the rank of major last March. Her jungle-- green uniform has bee n tailored to her trim figure. Her aim, she said, is a force of 2,500 women who "feel there is honor in defen- ding their country on the bat- tlefield." The girls, mostly studen~ from Phnom Penh a n d peasants from tbe provinces, muster each morning at dawn at ttie capital's two sports stadiums. Under the watchful eye ol Maj. Damdin Duch, director ol instruction, they Jearn all the basics of combat including how to fire weapons varying from sidearms to h e a v y machioeguns, and how to fight hand-to-l!and. Maj. Duch, 43, and son ol Uie govenror of Kratie pro- \lince about 100 m 11 e s northeast of Phnom Penh on the border with South Viet- nam, was pulled froln his job as instructor at the nation's war college to begin training the first batch of 607 recruits. Drawing on his experience as a father helped him overcome 'Nhat he said were the "special problems" of training women. "For men you can bark a rommand," he said. "With women you have to speak nicely • • • urge them ta do things ••• Jet them feel that they still are women. We soon found we could not get anywhere by pushing them. "The result has been that the girls are better soldiers than the men." Maj. Duch said most ol the girls enlisted against the wishes of their parents, but the "dropout'' rate had been ei:tremely small. Although by tradition the role o( the Cambodian woman has been to be a hoosewife and look after the needs of her man, Duch said the young recruits showed a lot of fire. "We asked how many wanted to volunteer for the MIKE forces," he said. "Out of the 600, 90 volunteered im· mediately. They are sure that whatever men can do they can do, and better." The girls get the same pay as their male counterparts, but some allowances are made for the fairer sex. 1be women get separate biUets. they are allowed to keep their hair Jong, wear earriog.s and mod- type sunglasses / ·-' --. ,-.. 1 Young Faces Ainidst Old War Red China LEGAL NOTICE Takes Aini ·on Coast? LEGAL NOTICE . LEGAL NOTICE ) DAILY PILOT 9 LEGAL NO'nCll: NOTIC• TO Ca•01TOa' IU,•a10a COUaT 0, TM• STATI 01' CALll'OaNIA l'Oa THI; COUNTY OI' OU. ... I ....... E1!1!1t ol OEAN G. LUCAS •kit Dl!AN GILLIS LUCAS 1k1 Ol!AN LUCA§, 0.CH.Nd. NOTICE IS Hl!ll:EIY GIVEN i. 1119 •Al U» LleAL ,.OTICI crMllof'I ol !hit llllOYI ntmtd ~I NOTICI TO c•101T011s i.twPOIT-MIU. UIOl'llD ""-' •II HrM>nt 111 ... 1 .... cl•lmt -l111t SUl'l!lllotl COUIT 110• TH I! jCMOOL ct1n11CT lh• Mid ff«dtnl •r• t9Cl\llr9CI hi fl» I TATI! 01' CALll'otlNIA ll'O• .....,. HMllllt .... ll'lltm, wl!h IM ~ ... ,., \'OUCl'lel'I, ... THI: COUNTY 0,. OlllAHOI NOTlC! 11 Hl!llll!IY 01VEN lhll tto. ofllcit of 11\t c"'11 ol 11\t •bovl Hit, A-4fft2 1M kt"4 o1 EMlllfl'I of t1!1 N-rt-1ntl!ltd COl.lrl, 11r lo 11>1'1Hnl 11\tm, Wiii' El!tl@ <1f DAVIO JAMES OOlllNS, ,..,_ Ufllflld SC:heol Dlttrfd o1 Or1nte tM lllUUlfY YWCf\ltrt, 10 IM - AKA DAYtD 00981NS, AKA DAVIO Cll(llty, (allr.rnlf, Wlll rt«lvt ... rH ArtltM'CI 1t !he fffl« (If lier AthltMYI• J, 00881NS. Dtc••1t'CI Illa .... "' t .Dt ,.M, "" .... lllh H11rwlll. H11rwlll Incl lltf'ller. "" • NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN lo 'tit A °f ff AYfwt lt10, 1t 1M '"l<t ff 22nd Street, HtwPOrl l .. ch, C111toml• clftll<lr1 Of Ille I~ lllft'IH dtcMtlll MIG Sdlool D111'1ct, l«1IM 11 MOO t2Ul. whld'I 11 11\t tlKt of Mine'!• lh•I Ill lltfSOl'll l'llVlne cl1lT1 11111111 Cliff .OtlYfl, H-1 8ff(tl, CtllfMnl•, of tllf uncleral1rlfll Ill 111 !Nth~ ttr- 1119 111d dtcedtnl •rt .-.Wli'td to flit 11 wlllcll t!mit 111.t bid• Wlll i. tubllc!Y t1J111n1 111 !he est•!• Of 111.t dKtd9r'lt, them, wl!h lhe n«tHtfY Y011Cller1. In -nfd tr.d rt1d f11r; wllh!n tour IMl'lffll tfltr !he tfMll fl\lbll<•· !ht <1f!lct 11f lllt clf'l1t 11! tl\lt 1bov9 Dl!iLIVEllY 01' FOOO CAlllTS lion ol lhla no!ICI enllli«i CO\lrl, or to ort'9nl tti.m, WI!!\ Alt bldl ert i. " 111 O«On:ltJ'ICe 0.ltd J\111' 14, 1110. !he nece11arv Y<111~ert, to the 1111-with C11ndlll<lf!t, lnsffuc:llon1, o n d N1d!1 l'Cllff Luc:11, der1lo"ed II lhf llW afllce1 of MeOWEN SPecUIClllCM Wlllch •rt "'°"" on 1111! Adml11ltlt1lrht .. GREl!N. S!O E, Ch1pm1n AVl!lue, 111 lhlt ofllet Of flll flllrtllllll'IO Alfnl of 111o tlttfe If the Or1119e, C1lllor"11, wMch 11 lht PllCI of ltld SChoOl Olalrld. llS7 P1Ktnll1 •hove ... mid dK91fetll of b\11!11K1 of IM undt~ltned Ill •II AYtfllH, Cost• Melt. Ct1ltor11J1. "1>111wm. HIMWITI • ••Mii m1!!1r1 ~rttlnlnv fl> rtle f1!1I• ol E•<h blcld•t F!\\111 1ubmll • bid "'"11! UI • atllf Str'9t u ld oeceoent, WUl'lln l<111r m<lfllflt tt!er In 1119 f<Jrm of 1 cffllfltd 11r u ll'ller't • ..,.,, •IHfll, C•llft111141 '266) the llrat Pub!lullon <II th!1 nollce. theck 11r 1 bid b<lfld ec1u1I I• tlw Ttl, 1n11 •l'Mtll D•ltd July u . 1170 ..., nnt U~l of 11\t 1rnount Gf' "" AttfrMY• ,.,. Atml11lslr1tr111: llEVERL y JUNE DOlllllNS bill. rnK• NYlble !(I "" order ol 1'11bll1htd Or•-C011I D•!IY Piiot. ExK1tlrlx of the Wltl of rt11 NniHrf.Mfll Unllltd Stllclol Ol1lr'kl. July 21, 21 11'111 A111111I '· II, lt10 l:W-71 '"'"•!»lie 111med decedenl A tPrtormal'!(t llolld m•v be rei1ulr~l-------------- Slt:lllE•A M. Gll•lt:N It ft'>I lllK.,.tlon Of It.. Dlllrkt. In McOWI!• & O•tl• 1h• IY'tnl ot 111111,. to enlt• 11110 well SM E. Ch1-111 Afflllllt c11ntr1ct, mt 1rocttdll of fht (heck wUI tie C-------------- Or1"", C1tlfe,.l1 l<1Metltd, or I" CIP ot 1 bon1h the T-1'7*1 T•""-'' 0141 6'1-lltt lull •um th•reDI wll t ~ h>rlelled to NOT1Clt: TO CalDITO•t AltetMYI tor E•Kulrb Mid Schoel Oltlrl<I <If Orlnt• (Olll'llY. SUll!•IO• C01J•T OP THlf Publl•hell Ora1111t Coesl 0~11¥ l llol, No blll<ler mtY wUhlltiw his bid lM STAT& 01' CALIJ'Oa•IA J'O• July 11 and Aututt '· II. lt, 1'10 lll .. 10 1 "'loll of tcirtv..rlv1 C'!) 111¥1 1!!9r THI! COl.i'fllTY OJ' OaANCJI -----• !Flt dllt H I !Or the OPtn111t lhe•P.ll'f. .. •• ~ LEGAL NOTICE The llNrd 11 Educ1ll<lfl ti the NtW· f lltt. of JAMii WILLIAM M-«'.Alll!, O<Jrt-M .. I Unified kt!MI Olltrld , .. 1k1 JAMES WILLIAM McCAIE, 1119 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE 01 OISSOLUTIO• ••rYtt 11\ti rllhl .. r.Jtd •nv or •II J. w. MlcCAlE, DtCflted. OF IAl.TN••SHll' bkh, Ind l'IOI necfflfrll'f eccttil "" NOTIC" IS HE•EIY GIVEN hi "'' 10\JllUI llld, 1nd 111 w•lv1 1nY lnlotm1lllY c.Wltllrs of lllf ebov• "'"'" deude.11 Public nOllce 11 htrPl>Y •IYen 1111! et lrrftllitrllY In l fl\t bid rectlvfd, ltltl 111 .,.,_ lla't'J,,. Clllnlt ...,,,.., Gettld C. Her1•Wv, lfld R<lborl J. l.1cld, Dllld Jutv 21, IOI lht ttld dfetOtl'lt lrt rMulrld te lllit fleret<1l<1re d<llrtll b"'lrM!tl Undfl" !hit lie· HEWPOlllT-MEIA UHl,l!D them. wJlh ltlt MOJllf\' YO!Khtrt, 1111°"' llrm Nme Ind llY11 of SCHOOL OISTllllCT !11 1M of1lct ot t11e cfltrk tf lllt PROGRESSIVE MAI NTENANCE, I I llochttltr Street Cltv ol CO:<lt Me•a <1f Ori/Ill '""""' C1U1<1[nl1 tllow IHlll!lfd co;irt, or to ortlflll'I ltltm, C ' t 0 • >I I t c· ''' I ' llv Dorothy HI,..,... Fl~r wllh !ht Metstaf"Y -"trs, to the <lllll Y 0 rnttt, • t 0 1 orn 1• Purch111t11 A9fftt undel"lftntd 11 lhe offl« of MKCA91!, did <1n '"'° 21th div of J11!'t', lf111, 6~110 GEORGE FRITZ &. BELGl!R AlfOl'MY bv m1111t11 eon111nt, dltsolve !he 11ld o ••'·I L • ' ' Pt•tnfll"lh!P •nd t&nnlllllt !heir re!tl!oni "ubllthed Otlllllf, C<11•t •fl'f "' • II 1w, lllnt Crtnlhlw l OUlevtlll'. Tor· 11 p~rl.,.r& tlltlrtln. JulV ,. tl'ld AlltUll J, 1'70 l:JU.70 ffllCI, C1Uf<1r11l1 '°'°'4. Wlltdl II f!l• S1ld b;/1hitH 1., in. fulure win be 11l1c1 DI blllllllU 11r 1111 u•,..lfllld •'I conducted bv Robert J. Ltdd, who LEGAL NOTICE Ill INtft,.. •rlll11!nt hi "'-"'"' will PIV t"ll dhChlrte all lltbUltltt of Mid ffclllMI, wflllln four monlttl 1nd dtbl1 ol ll'llt !!rm incl rtcelve P4Jrll 1ll1r fM tlrst PUbtlctllon of lhlt llll!lc'9. 111 m...,1e1 01v1bJe lo lht 11'rn. CIRTll'ICATll: OP IUllNlll 0111111 Jul't' 11, 1'1'11. F"rllllr notlu Is hereby t lwfl thal PICTITIOUS HAMii: WILLIAM J. MlcCAIE, !he uno)eflllned Wiii ""' be rtlPOll!llble, Tl'llt Ul'de•lltntd doel Ctfllfv hi It Admlnlalrttor fri>m lhl1 div Ol'I for •nv <llllltlll0!!$ CGndllttlna 1 buitnet1 et UOO Wetl Of 1111 "1111 Of Ille lncurr~ by Cert Id C. Men1ley '"' hb Co>t•I Hllhwl't' HewHrl a 11 ch , lboW Ote:M"". own lllfl'lf "' lrl lhf ,,...., of 1111 CtllfClml1 1111dfftt.. llctllloin firm 111me M1cCAlll, •IO••I, 1'11Tl Hrm. of Ne:w1011T GRAPH ICS 1nd !1'111 Mid a 81LOIR Do1,TEO AT Co1t1 Mela, Cl llf<1r1'11. llrm It coni-" ot t1!1 loll-IM ... , .. ,., Ill_, C,_.... a.lt¥t1'41 The Vietnam \va r seems to embrace Vietnamese of all ages. Young girl (upper left) carries smaller child Indian style and casts a shy glance at pho- tographer. Her shyness contrasts sharply with cigareUe-smoking youth at right. One youth (lower left) totes gun while another-with dog tags around his neck~ats candy. They are among th e nearly 2,000 Montagnard villagers who li ve at a Special Forces camp near Pleiku in Vietnam. this l1!h !!av of Julv, H70. whol• 111..., 1~ lull i nd ltlK.11 of T•t•11C1t. C•lltwllll,... R<)berl J. Lldd • T1h UllJ 1U-4m Publish~ Or1~e Ce>tsl Dl"f• .. llol 'tlllltnc:I II 11 lol!OWI. ...,..,,..,. ftr ..... llllllT•tw ,. ..• ' ' DWl't'M G. U ntbr•k• AKA J1r..... p ... • Jul~ • 1910 13&+10 l-llr1k1, lOln C:llfl Ori.-., HUfllllltlofl •,..Hilled ,_ Co>til D111Y Plkll, LEGAL NOTICE ee•ch, C1Uf1M"nl1. JulY 21, lt l lld Autvtt 4. n, lt7D J))l.111 Dlltd July 10, ltlO. •·•Jt Dw1vn1 G. LOMtl,.11.t LEGAL NOTICE CElllTIPICATll! 01' 8USINISS. AKA J•rrv l.on1br1k1 PICTITIOU$ •AMI Sit!• ol C1ltfor11I•, Ol'•noit c-tv: NOTIC:I TO Cl•OITOIJ Tht \lndtrtltned d<le• certify" ht II On JulY 10, ,,,., before mlt. I Hol•rv IUPlllO• COU•T OP THI Conduet!r111 I bu1fn151 11 3111 W. Co>ttl 'ubtlC In Ind lor Mid S11t., Hl"IOIMflY ITAT• till CAl.ll'O•NIA 1'0• Hlt~WIY, Sullt $1, NewPOrl lt•ch llPf!lrK DWIYlll G. L0111tbr1kt AKA THI eoU•TY 0,. OU.Mel !0.-1n11 I. Rl.,.r1klf COl.llllffll C1Utornl1, Jerrv LOl'll~flkl kllOWtl hi mt Ill bl NI ... .....,. und•• Ille flcll!l<1111 firm ntmt ol WOOO. !ht Hf1<1n wllo11 111mt I• 111btcrlbed Ell1t1 cit MAlllY 1. 0.WOLI', 1tll lERGHl!.'Ell 1. CDMPAHY. ind !hi! lo !hf wllhln lrulrumtnl Ind lcli11C1W111111>· kMWn It MAlllY fLE• DtWOLF, ooc .... .,,rd llrm It C<JmPOtf!I <1f !ht 11111owlnt I'd ~· txecullll lilt 11m1. fd. oerton, wh<>tt ntm• In full tnd ollct (OFFICIAL SEAL! NOTICI! IS HElllEIY OIV!H 111 M'I• OI rHldenct 11 I I l<1llow1: R&b• H. C•Mlll cttdll<lrt °' lhf •bow 1111\'1111 dKtdtnf 'Samaritan' Gets Record $84,950 FRESNO (AP) ~ Augustine saldana, injured in a domestic squabble three years ago, will receive $84,950 from ttie state within the next month, says Assemblyman George N . Zeoovidl, (D-FresnoJ. It is the highest Good Samaritan payment awarded in California , ever Saldana, 24, who lives here with his wife and two children. was shot by William Stokes in 1967 after Stokes aimed a gun at his estranged wife. Saldana atlem pted to dissuade Stokes from shooting her but the woman was killed. Stokes ultimately p I e a d e d guilty to s econ d -degree murder and was sentenced to prison. The woonds left Saldana wilh paralysis of his left side, speech and mental im- pairments. Zenovich said the award was bein~ made under lhe act designed to reward persons who are injured trying to help others. When Saldana 'first filed a claim in 1968 he asked for $150,000. The amount was reduced after several llear· ings. Zenovich said U'lf: payment ls included in the 1970-71 atate budget apptoved by Gov. Reagan. John P. Sheehan, member BIBLE THOUGHTS THI LOlD'S SUPPll: J1tu1 pr11viC1td thit lord's 1upptr 10 tl11t Chrillilfli, by 111 ovt,. 1ct, 111i9ht REMEMIER hit d1t1tl1, Lk. 22:17. Tld1 tuppitr w11 pr1vid1td bit• c1u11 God know• m111 111d 11nd1ut1nd1 hi1 1pifit11•I "'"'· Hit •n•w th1t min NEEDS • frequ•ntly r1p1tttff 1111111ori•I fttll, l11t h1 for91tt th• ••ctific• "lh•t Chri1t m1d1. Tli!1 it co111p1r1bl1 fe th1 111od, u11d1r Me11t1' L1w, .f11r '" o~ r1p11tocl mtmori•I ll1y, fhit S1bb.th, whi~h ;, REMEM- I ERED •nc1 11ch wittk. It epp11ra tt11t m111 NEEDS, ••ch '"d ••try "'••k, • m1!1t1!1I rtmirHlitr 111 9r1t1t S'fRITUAL lr11tlu, l11t ho f11r91t. W. he¥1 th, APOSTOLIC t•1111pl• ef t•rlv C hri1ti1n1 REMEM · IERING Chritl's d1t1th In the L.Clrd't S11r p•t ON THE FIRST O,.t,V OF THE WEEK. Su11dey. f,.t,tl• 20:7 • Th1v 11111 r19ul1rly t •ch Su~d•y, fCcir, 16rl. 2, H1b. I01J5, 261. Chri1fi1111, t11d1y, 1hould ••kit tk1 Lord '1 Supp1r lACH Su11de ~, th111 rt1111mD1ri119 tk•1r L.Clnl •t lr•quitntly 11 9od ht1 i11dit•l•d th1y 1ho11ld fer th•ir 1piritu1I w•lf•1t. Scimit, todey, I•~• lhit L11r4 't Supp1r dilly, elhtra .w•1•rv. rnenthly, i11u1rt•rlY 11r Y••rlyt Ar• th1111t whe d1tvl1t1 frcim -od11 p1H1tr11 w lt•r lh•" Ged 1 Do thty k"ow 1111n end hi1 nittd b1lt1t tk111 Ged •111wt thttt1 "U h 11ef in m•11 th•I w1lktlh to Clr•cl hh tl1p1," Jitr, 10l2J, "lh111 it • w1y whleh '''"'''h ri9kt ""t• • me11, b11t th1 it"d th1r1of ttt lh• ""''' cif d1etli," fir. 14:12. • cbME, w1111h;, Ged wltk v1, 11 !h, lllLE diritch, in thi1 1111tlff e~-th• L.Clrd'• S uppitr. Church cif Chrl1t, 217 W, W ll1on St., Cetl1 M1t1t, CtUf, t2•27. of the Board of Control, said in commenting on the case thal Saldana should be con- sidered a hero. "Most people ," "would not ha ve themselves," he said , in volved Women Now Work Tables In Las Vegas k••I o. a.itr9ftltltr, 171.?2 EdOtw•tu Noll'V Publlc·Cl111or11l1 111111 t11 lf11.0nl h1w1"' cJ1lln1 •HlMf Line. Hunllnlton Htrbour Ct!U "'" Prlr11:lotl Ofllct 111 thf 111d dKtdlrlt 1rt rtll"lrld Jo Ill• Oiled J I " lf10 ' . or11111• C1111n1Y If!....... with llllt M(llllfY YOUdltts. In u Y • My Commlulon Extlrt1 1'tte llflic. crt fl\lt ct1r1< of the 1tltY1t K1rl 0 . Blr1hHr StPI 1' 1173 1111.. < I St1!t 111 Ctllforn!1, Ortnt• C<111n1y: Pub!ithtd. O;ln°' C011t 01111' PllDI. ~ tiec=~!'.... M ...:ci:~:<I ~ w: On July 11. 1t1Q, btl<1re me, I Noli N Jul'( 1' 21 :It Ind Alllllll ' lt7t 1271·1'11 CIHtl•'"' " "" ... , ....... _ A<••-•••· Public In tnd t11r 11ld §lilt, Hrtll!lallv ' ' ' "''....,. -.,... '"" IPHl•ed K1rl 0 . le"ll'lter known IO Elltr, ••••nttr, MYlts a. lmlrtl, • me 111 be Ille per.on wllott ~•mt LEGAL NOTICE Prottul-1 CorW1!1<1n, 1501 Wnkfltf 11 t11t.Krlbtll 111 lht within ln1!r11m1nll--------------l°'lv1, fl.0 l<IX 1#8, Ntwll<lrt ltldt. Ind ICkflOwltdted ht t•Kut<!'d lht 11mt. CfUf0t11l• t'lU3, Which 11 "" tllc• ISEALf llAlll ut1 of butlnHI ol th• ullderal11*f 111 111 LuDEo1,N PAVNE NOTICI TO CllllOITOlll1 rn1tt1rJ. 11trl1l11h1t IO !ht .. 11te <JI My C11mm1.,1on E•Plff• SU,lllllOR COURT o,. THI: Mkl decedent, within h>lll" ~ eft.r April it, 1'11 ITATI o,. CALll'O•HIA ,.Oa IM fl,..I Pllbilc1llor! of lhl1 llllllelt. T·S'1'9 c TY 011 OJlAHelf Olltd JulY 17, 1t70 Publl1hed Or111te C<1ttl DtllY Piiot, THI: Ol.lfll HIEW,.OaT NATIONAL IANK July'' 'nd A1111u.i 4, 1t, 11, 1'10 1311·10 of ~·,,.·.·!'!" G ""•ts 8y: P1ffl<l1 F111ltr, E1tt11 ,.. ~s · ~.. ' Tr111t Adml11l1Tntl011 Offlc1r, Dect1MCI. NOTICE IS HElll!8Y GIVEN 19 tlle Adml11l1tr1hlr of ll'lf Etlll'" LEGAL NOTICE crlld11G11 If th• 1tlov1t 111rftld decedent •I '"-1bo.-. n•med dec..i.nt fl·lllN2 lflll .u "·-· lllVI"" cllllM ... 1n11 '"·'•· IAlllAHO•lll. CllllT1,.ICAT• OP IUSINISS Ille 11ld dtc..:11111 1r1 .... 111~ .. te "," :v,a~~·~':;.,.,, ... ft, l'ICTITIOUS HAMI! If!..,.., with trit llllQlflrY v.....,,1r:r..!n tll'I W..tcllff OtlV9 TM 11ndtflltned dot• certify "' It "" l!lfltt " "'* tler'k fflf lilt • I ,, 0 .. 1'"' C<Jnductl11m • bu1lllfl1 it uon PtullM ..,1111t11 COi/ti, ., t11 lll"••tnt "*"• With ...:..;.... .... h c111fW1111 ~ Ltflt. Hun11no1<1n lleicto. c1t11 .... nli, under l~e ntcltll fY YOl.IChtrt, 19 "'-"": T"I (JUI ,..:1J111 1111 Ucll!lllUt firm 111me (If THE COM-dtral1n«t 11 ll'llt <1ttlc1 ti hl• fff9Mt't', Altlr!lltvt fir A'fl'llftllfflllr ..... N'I' Incl !her ••Id 11rm It Comlloted PETE• c. TOlllNAY, 1500 Ad•mt AVll'IW. flullltthtd Or•nt• Co>t•I OlllY P!llU, <JI lhf l<1llOWlnt1 l'tf!l<ln, wllo1e "'1m1 SUl!t 206, C11>1l1 Mtll, Ct1ltcw111f '2426, JUIY fl, 21 I ncl A\1111111 _., 11, IJ10 IJ».711 In tun 1nd Pl•t• ot relldeni:t 11 11 wll!ch It lilt 111ct of 111111PMIM of tht.J ~:::..::;.c.=.=:cc:;:.:c._.;_.;____.c __ _ LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) -~nows: unc1tri11n.i:i 111 ell m11t111 Hfltr111111t LEGAL .. -CE A b ··~-Robe•t J. Stlflflt, 1to21 Pt~lhM Line. lo '"' ""'' of 111d dec;M!lnl. Wllhlfl nv•• pert runette w1"' v,:on a H"n11111,Clll B••ch. cir. 1our mo111~, •lltr IM ""' lllbllai!IOfl,1-------~=-----ruP .... that women should be 011e-o Ju11 2s. 1'10. 01 thlt no11e1. H•. ,..,w.. '"IY 111.obtrl J. S.lflM D1lfd Julv 2, 1t70, IAR MU allowed to work at this town's Sl•I• of Ct lllornl1, °''"'e C<111nty; J(lhfl L•U•I• Cl•TIPICl.TI OP COllllOll.TION l'OR card and dice tables said °"' Julv 1J 1t10 ti.for• mt. • No11"' Mml111t1r111r i:J: E1t1tt TlllA••Ac::gr,T~:u~u~::i• u•D1111 Publlc Jn 1nd IOr 'Mid Stilt, lltfllOnlllt~ ,.ITIR ~ "roi':ry 9KM1nl !'--Thursday her motive was 10H1rec1 Robert J, k~lne ~110wn to ,.., -·-~-•--,,. Tl'llt Ufldtr111n1111 Cor11C1r1""' •• mt .., lie lh1 "''°n '1'1'1<16• 111mt -• • lltrtllY ctrt!IY 11111 It I• cond!Klklt Simply 10 enjoy the Same ii tllbtc•ll)td to Ille within ln1lrlllnl!nl COlll MMt, Celt, fMM t c•ttrlflt llu1fneH 11 21i TOl'tllltf · his d th 'is""eAKLkln6wtedotcll h• 1•ec;11ted lllf 11mit. ,",'-' -.. -"""'"' t111Ulev1rll. •ffondo 811c11. C11i!on\l1 Ind rig as man an e ,.,. e. "'"°"· 1.11111t1"'. c1111tt111e '""""'' same pay. e1rbt1• J Ftrt11""' PullUll'ltd O"'""' C0111I 0.llY 111111, tto. llcllttou• 11rm "'"" of crut c1ttr1,,. N<Jl•rv P~bllc July 1, U, 21, 21, lt1t 12$1·1'11 Ind 11111 Hid firm II COll'!MMll " Unlike the rest of this s11re of c11111rn11 1t1t ,.11owl111t cor...,1111111, Wl'loM •rlfl(l••I bl• "'"( • --V h Prlnd01I 0t1!c• 111 LEGAL ,,.,, ol llllllntn It 11 tollOWt: gam Ing ~ e. i..a.:i egas as Or1no1t Cwnlf MormfCI Ent~rorl ... , Inc .. J;i(IO f , Tr.....,, had a men-ooly policy in man. Mr comm1111on Ex,1•11 APMll'llttm. c1tlf0tnl1. ning the tables. Publl•~· ~;,,!!~ '"" 011rv P11o1. ,:: ~&01TOl1 Ji:;~gs 111 Nnd thlt 21t11 .. ., " Arden Johnson, 32, diVOf'"""' J~ly 21 Ind A119111! '·II . II, 1t7t 131).10 SUI' 1011 COUIT .,, THf MONOTO ENTE•PllSI.$, INC. ~~ IT ti" CAl,tl'Ol•t~ f'Olll. i!,0tr11t M. WhlllNfl with two children, said after LEGAL NOTICE TH collfltn DI" ou.,.•1 ,.,11141.,.1 the decision by the state labor Etlet. ~o~Hv""r. St+OlMAt<E. WAllll J. NIWhtrt P·*'' Jecr1t1ry commissioner: ''I can deal IS c1111'1PICAT• °" IUSl"ISS •k• DOllOTNY SHOIMAKI", • : : ITAlli Oi< CALIFOll:H1A JI st h PtC:TITIOUI NAMI gg:g:;:~~ 'C'LMo l~Jr.~~! ••kt COUNTY 0, OR ANO I I II we as mo men, so w y Th• 11fldltl"lltllt'CI 00.1 c1rtl1Y lh• I• Mllll. WAA••H H, SHOIMA,l(f,1 Mllll. o" lhll ~Jfh dll' of JUM. 1•10.....,.,. l:lhouJdn'I I have the same ~ondudl'"' • llllllMSI •t SOI) HIWllOtl w H SHOIMAIC!" ...... ""' Mlltlfl M. Cohtn. • Holtry Pvltlle ~--to make m-ey for cent•• Of"., St•. *· N•-rt llfftfl, NoTice IS .. 111:'11v o1viH to lilt '" •1111 "' .. 1• C111111Y '"' st .... "''"''""'" "" C1!lloml1, ufldtr rtlf lklltl<uJt firm "'"'« Cl1dll0t1: " ,,;.r *"' "-"'" ......,t "''~lflt 11Mr1t11. klY «1mmlft•ltl'IH e,_. myself and my children?" ol BAUGHMAN EXECUTIVE •nd lhlf 11111 111 Hl'IOnt l\IVlflll tl•lmt llllMI ''""'"· ,.rton•llY •PHI"" ..... , .. , M. 11111 llrlfl II UlrrlPOMG .. 1111 l(lf19w!M 1111 Aid df<toftflf .,. rMUll'ld .. Ill• Wflll!Mil IM Allfl J , Nl'#Mrt .,. .. She now works at a small oHton. """'°"' 111rn• 111 full •nd 11>1te1 lhtfll with thf """"'Y ¥1'11Ciherl 1,. 11 "" 1t 11t 111t ''"ldllll •IMI tecrtlf""' ol r11ldPrM;t 11 •• toUOWt : ' ..,· ol fllt c1r11r1tl011 11111 tlecutM the club outside of town, making w.,.., c . 81111111m•11• "" VtllH• Ill• ot11c1 ., fhe crtrtt et lht • • wllhlfl '""'r11"""' Ofl 11o111" ., "" '*" I ch Ln. G11111 Me5e Ct!llornl1. I lllllllM etllrl, ot to '~ l!IMI, wllh "''""" llltrtln Mmlll, •fld tdlrlowtelt• ne~r y as mu as the $30 0,1t.; July ,,, i'1ci. 1111 . 11ece1Mrr _,,.,., i. ""' ""' .., " m• ""' "1Cll cerwtflofl "*""" daily ()( a Las v-as dealer. M•,., c. ••vt1hm•11 dlts1•'*' " cte Ytllft" ,,._ • tt.. .,~ B th d·ir ~. 1 1 St•t• of c11110r1111, Ot..,.t COi.iniy: Htwl, iis Wttl lhJN Strttt, i.1111 w1TNt:"ss my llllHf 111d tfllc11t .... ut (' l erence IS n t ps. °" J\llY ,,, 1t10, Mfor• "''' • Nollrt AM, C1llltl'l'fl1 t'l7Cl1; Whldl II "" 11>11.:t IOll'PICIAL SlAL) hi h II bl! 1 nc1 • , '' • '" of t1111l11tte et lht llfldtr1Jallffl lrt 111 Mtt1!11 M. c~' Th< g· ro ers in the plush Pu t 11 8 ' "0 • • ~"011• """"'' 11trt11rt11111 1e Ill• "''" crt ..,,_ P·., 111-. tl>llt•r!llCI M11"J C. ltuthf'llf" k-111 "' ·1 <• " -· casinos ht.re add a~·t HM to ""' "' tHr 1111 ""'°"' ""'°"' 111m1 11 tcltftt, with 11 IOI.Ir "*'1111 • , °''"" CWlltY UUl.I '"""' "" lfrtl Plllllkttlo!t fflf !I'll• Ml'IU. MY ClrflmlHIOll fuFru week.Jy to a dealer's income. ~'"'·~~~~~ !i: .~:~r1c11~ffll::'. 011..i Jllf't' to, 1•10 Mtrdl '· i.n Casino men ' are n 0 I (Ol'1'1C.IAL SliALI .,IOHN 1(11,.1.Y tHOIJMl(f UU N, ll'Otf'w•r, k lto lit. EllOWI• flt ""wm of S•11•• ""' Ctllf d llgh ed S "d bl k" k J<1'811 £. OtYlt !ht llloYo tlllfltd fttldonl s••-w' I .:.,WM e t , ii Ol1f! 8C JRC Hol•tY Jllo!Oflc • C1Utornl1 YOU••• fl•lll•ll a NIWJ COMIN, """ .... d .. 1-· l rll't(lptt 0H1(t In ., ........ Tiii,., lllntlf AfTOINIYS AT LAW "' • 0•11'111 C<llllllY ltilltt AU, C ....... ""1 1111 Nttlll .,.....,, , ..... 211 "They don't develop lhc MY <amm1n 10fl e-~111r" T.t'"""-• '"'•MT.mt 11111 A ... c11Htr1M nm Junt ;1, ltl( ""'""'' f1W ....... T1h &»•UM s11mc rapport Wllh a high Putin111tc1 °''"'' Cqati 0111~ ,11o1. ,ubllt!ltf Or•11tt c..11 Dtl!Y Poot. Plltiltt!ltd Or••• , ... , 0.11¥ 11w. roller, The. house would burt." Jut, n ,...., A1191111 J, 11. 19, 1t10 1u4'111 Jurt 14, 21, 21 '"' A11t1111 4, ''" 131-1'0 Jurt u, ,., ,., "".w.w1 ... ,,. ,,...>' 11 . Jf• ~l<!LY flU)l S T......,, .i..11 2t 1910 Y ou1• Mo••eH'S lforth Bonds lnct"eas~ Savings 111 SYLVIA !'ORTEii tr you Invest your money at I percent interest and le.t the lttterut accumulate In JOI.If nestegg, you'll double your money ln about 11 Years. U l'O'l invest it •t 8 percent oad yw don't spend the ln- torest, Y<>llf ... tegg will - ble in tibout 12 years. If you lnvest 11 al 7 percent, lt will double ln about 14 year!I, Obviously, at these interest rates, high-grade, fixed-in· come tnvestpieM -In the obliptioos or the u. s. Treasury, Federal Agencies, our states and cities., U.S. cor· poratfOn! -take on the characteristics of "growth1' securities. A n investment which doubles in 11 yws ls growing by any definition. At the Nme time, this type of in\lest.ment retains the ad· vantages oC it.s fi1ed annual return· aod offers superior pro. tecUon against a d v e r s e economic conditions. And you can grt these fixed annual returns in the bond and money markets o! Uie United States today. Assume for the moment that the historic great bear market for bonds has ended and that the turnaround stnce prices hit bottom in mid.June is solid. AssU1Jme · est rate,, already have P ed their peaks ror cur lifeti s. Ntverthtless, you still earn up to 9 perce t on purohases of tap "qualit , cor • poration bonAs beating w rid-- respected names, You can earn 6%-7 percent on high quality, long-tenn, tax-exempt QlUniclpal issues (equal to around 14 percent to you if you'rt in the 50 percent tax ·bracket), You can earn 1 to av. percent on 1.0.U.'s of the U.S. Treasury and Federal Agencies, depending on the maturity of the 1.0.U. yoo choose. And you can count on these txtraordinarily high r a t e s every year until your 1.0.U. 's come due or tmtil the issuer calls them in under a call provision which UI written into your original COl'ltract. Let me be even more .gpecific : •(I) At a 9 percent return on high-grade corporation \ Tax Exempt Companies Must File Several thousand Mganiza· tions which presently enjoy California income lax exempt status are in danger or losing Uris privilege unless they take prompt action to file lhe pro- per reports, said.Martin Huff, Executive Officer of the Franchise Tax Board. As a result of legislation enacted in 1969, all organiza· tions which have been granted exemption from the California franchise or corporation in· come tax are required to file an information report with the department this year. Failure to file a report could result In penalty assessments and the loss or the tax exempt status, Jtuff said. The reporting requirements apply to churches. charitable or g a n i t a t ions, business leagues. social and recreation organizations and other non· profit groups granted tax ex· emption under"'Section 23701 of the Revenue and Taxation Cod•. In order to assist txempl organizations in satisfying the requirements of the 1969 legislation the Franchise Tax Board in Marob of this year mailed a questionairC': form to some 70,000 e x e m p t organizations. Les.' than SO percent of the organizations ha~e responded to the qucs· tionnaite to .date. Response to the questtonnaire is man-- datory tn order to enable the department to mail the ap-- propriate: report form to the organization . 1 nd i vi du a 1 s who art members of, or have con· nections with, an exempt organization are urged to atcertain w h e l h e r tht organization hag received. completed and returned a questlonnaire to the depart· mtnt. ti not, the organliation is urged to obtain the ques. tionnairt form, complete It and mall to tfle Franclllse T11 Boerd as soon as possible. 'nle questionnaire form (FOB 1070) con be obt31ned from ant ol the offictS of Lile Fr1nchise. Taz Board or by writin& to the Franchise Tax BGard, t02S P S Ir " I , S11etament4, C.l~nmla 95114. Qu01U0111 rocar<11ng tlu! que>- unnnalr<. or tho tll6i IOj!lrl1· Uoo wtlou1d be dirocled to the Amt tddMS. bond.$, you art cp&Uenglng the long·lcrm growth record for common stockS. According 10 the famous study by the Ctnttr for Research 1.n securi- ty Prices in Chicago, an lir vestmenL in a random cross· section ot stocks on lbe New York Stock Exchanp over a 40-year period would have ln-- crea.sed In value to a degree givhlg you an aver11ige rate of return equal to 9.3 percent .a year, compounded l!lDually. Last month, A..rated bonds were belbg widely offered at 9.3 percenl (nol><Ompounded l. (2) In any 1.0.U. returning you 8 percent, you're doubling your money in a bit more than a decade, and, at the ~·businessman's risk" rates, you're really movin& ahead. There's no doubt that as interest rates have apiraled upward , both sophisticated ln· vestora and '1lf>PC!ledly naive little fellows have been shif· ting vast b'Ums into the bond markets. IndlYlduals a r e estimated to have.directly in· veS!ed '25 billion in fixed-in· New Vice Presidents John C. Abell (left) and James M. Cobb have been tiamed as vice presidents of Harbor Investment Company. AbeU bas been with Harbor Investment !or seventeen years and will be senior reaJ estate consultant as well as vice-president for investment properties. Cobb has been with the company for eleven years and will serve as vice-president and general sales manager oC the Newport Beach firm. ing a sound dttision when he was interrupted by a listener, "Don't you attempt lo judge a company's in v e stm en t merits by reviewing its list of directors?" the listener ask· 00. "Never," the investor snorted . "They don't mean a thing. Maybe Pd look at how many shares they owned becau!re then I'd know something about their com· mitmcnt. But never just !he list or names. They're only ' window dressing." To him, boards too often are meaningless. He. at least. has made up h.is mind. but 1nillions of other investors to- day are growing more con· fu sed about the function and responsibilities of directors. You can look for a lot more discussion of Lhls touchy sub- ject, especially in Wal:ll.ington, but that doesn't insure any action, In vestors have wondered llnd worried for years and still the matter is cloudy, The latest reason r o r reopening tile dlSC\1$ion Is" the Penn Cenlral Transportation debacle, a $2.8· billion Cf\· 1erprise nmw being reorganit· ed under the bankruptcy laws. Some directors of that cor· porallon. all highly respected In business circles. revealed they knew little about th e precarious financial position of the railroad untl~ in effl'Cl, there w:is little to do but resign, Nevertheless, tht board of any c orporation is tkleoreUcally where all the pawer reposes. It can delegate this power and autl\ority to management. but unles., the rules have changed. it Is ac· countable to stoekholde.rs for that management. This re$ponsibility h 1 s , Mwever, become less clear in many instances. -In some rorporallons 1hf. board 's function is liUle. more Lhan cr:,.,~monial. Members al· tend Tneeu n,s merely_ ta sane· Uoo lht agenda placed before them by managr.ment .. r OVER THE COUNTER Complete-N~w Yori{ Stock List ., ltlarke t ·Symbols • • . ··---.. Tllfld11, Juli 29, 1970 SC '" DAILV PILOT JJ. Students Win Honors Six Orange Coast students have been named to the Dean'• liat at Claremont Men'• College for academic achlevement, during t h e Spring semetter. They are IJ!'.ll>ng 3 7 5 students -49 pucent of the student body -who attained a "B'' averaae. or better for the semester. The students are : Corona del Mar -Richard Kiss, aopbomore, son of Mr. and Mn. St.phen Kiss, 2712 Llghthoq .. Lane. Huntington B e a c h Stephen Keith, junior. son of Mr. and Mn. Jo9eph I. Keith, G04l Cortez Drive. La.,... lkacb John Chamberlin,__ lreshman, son of Mn. Vlrg!nla 'B. Chamberlin, 521 Center St.; WI I Ila m HltcbcoCk, fOphomore, son or Mr. J()bn R. Hitchcock, 1115 Emerald Bay; Robert K. Kawtiatanl, sophomore, son or Mr. aod Mrs. Takashl Kawaratani, 5S7 M o u n t a I n Road . Mlstloo Viejo -Royal Thomas Guernsey, III, June graduate. son of Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Guernsey, 26831 Via Grande. Jeweler Heads Albert H. Weinert, Jr., owner of Weinert.Clark Fine Jewels, has been elected presi· dent of the Fashion l sland Merchants' A!sociation. Weinert will complete the term of Ralph L. McDonald, manager of The Broadway who was lran1f~ to that company's Topanga P I a z a branch in Los Angeles. Coed Honored TURN ON TV WEE~ i••P• ¥911 t.""4 to wktf'1 htppt1111t lithT"°" h , ..... -,.,,., s ..... ,.,,., '" ... DAJLY PILOT. \ -_....... ,, "''' .. .. . ,,..._ ~ ............. I .. • JJ OAILY PILOT Tllfldlf, July 28, 1'1711 ) ' • , , -. ~ i . . •• I . . .. ~and sWHchinU them from a major competitive Pfemium oline to Chevron with F·31D*- Hydrocarbon emissions carbon monoxide emissions A significant test involving 1964-1969 vehicles of two major makes reveals further new proof-Chevron gas· oline with F -310 significantly-reduces hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emis.5ions from dirty engines. Results showed an auera e reduction in h drocar· hon emissions of 12.4%. arbon monoxi e emissions were reduced an average of 27.5%. Fifty cars and 3 trucks were selected by officials of the Orange County, Calif., Department of Transporta- tion from its county fleet of over 1,000 cars and trucks, to represent a cross-section of high and low mileage vehicles of various model years:....all well-maintained and previously using a major brand premium grade competitive gasoline. · ~ Tnde1U1k for Polrbutat• Am.bi.1 Ouol!M AdditiTe. 0 All cars were switched from the competitive gaso-. line to Chevron with F-310 as they were, with no adjustments to the engines, carburetors or emission control devices. The test was conducted between March and July, 1970, by Scott Research Laboratories, an independent research laboratory, with the cooperation of Orange County. Exhaust emis.<rion measmements were made on each of the 53 test vehicles before the change-over to Chevron Supreme with F-310, and again after approximately 2,000 miles of routine drivjng. The results of this scientifically conducted tmt are highly significant-further dramatic proof that Chev- ron with F -310 1'¢uces exhaust emis&ons of unburned 0 hydrocarbom and carbon monoxide. Other testB are now in progress as part of a continu- ing series to demonstrate the contribution of Chevron with F-310 toward cleaner air. F-310 also keeps clean engines clean. F-310 Polybutene Amine Gasoline Additive was devel· oped t.o reduce albaust emillsions from dirty engines. The degree of improvement, of course, depends on the 1 condition of the car. In a new car or a car with a clean engine, F-310 will keep the clean engine clean-keep total exhaust emissions at a minimum. That, too, is a genuine contribution to cleaner air. •• 4 + • -. Chevron~ F-alO.There ian't .. a car on the road that shouldn't be using it. Chevron . ' • I ' ·1 -~- D 1 7 J ~ me. AirJ ,, AUii f:list rect Li S1 A l.J the out hi• eye: Goci fell L pig I spa !he AU! Tal ~ Bl thn sho te!1 the fret ~ te~ ,!ii\8, gro ~ ear me disi an Ma gir" E w~ she cll1 telc Ma 1ig , sir yo1 Kr- loo th< ' Wt tri for wh wh to! I Kr an • ba