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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-08-13 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa·. I r 17 ( . 4' . . . ~ av.is~- . . • San Clenaente Ofli~ers ·: . . Irvine Russ Chief, Nixon $et • For Sum1nit LONDON CUPn -Soviet Pre*1.ier Alexei· N. Kosygin plans to meet ~~esi· dent Nixon and ~ther Western I era in 'New York early In October, hus rnakiJ\g a summif conference vlrt Uy ce~ East E~n diplomab id today. I The occasion will be the U.N.'l~th anniversary meetinC_ in New ·York Which world leaders will ~Jtend. ' · K91ygin apparentlY, would prefer a Big ~ur wwer summit with NixonJ and the prein\ers o( Fr~ and Brit'1n to a bilateral conferenc4 with the American chief executive. , t The diplomata Indicated that ·behind this preferen~ lies the Kremlin's ap- parent desire to avoid charges of a,n alleged "ganging up" qf the superpowers by ranging the Soviet Union publicly on the side of the United States. The special U.N. meeting is scheduled for October 19-24. Diplomatic feelers were expected to be put out shorUy. Some soundings ap- parently are already under way for the type of the projected 1ummft and its &cope. British Prime Minister Edward Heath announced some time ago that he will go to New York. He also was expected to meet with Nixon on the occasion. ' There Is some doubt however about French President Georges Pompidou, who is not known to ha.ve expressed great enthusiasm for another visit :to New York after his disturbJng experience during his recent trip there. But ap- parentJy no Una l decision has yet been (See SUMMIT, Page t) Cleric's Flag Still Flying WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -The Re~. Maurice Hall, pastor of 1 the Dell- rose Church or Christ. has flown the na1 24-hours • day in front or his home since his son, William, 1 was killed in Vietnam two years ago. One night last week the flag was taken from its stand and a note was left saying, ';Take the .flag aown at night. If you don 't your head will be beaten in." H~ll replaced the flag aod the next night it was taken down·agalri. This lime rocks were left. The following night, lhe pa.tcr left the flag flying, accompanied by a note explaining why. Aboul midnight, he 1ald, two "hippie types" knocked on the door and apologized. "They 19ktm for ~·iveness." the Rev. Mr. Hall said. ' • • TMURSO>:Y.:AF.TERNOOf'f.'AUGUSt )l',''.19,10' • • _.I VOl...tA~tn,14.a•CTM*t.. 4' PU•S . ' ' .. ., Supports oc Airport '. . . • Sur.l!~llO.l u . Al-t . .••. . ''k •.•• !J I., p "~. · ·~Qe .J e , , , , l' I "1 I • ' • , • , : , . ' j " . -· Curbs Ranch Firm Supports ,; ~···~· ,., ,.,, ·· l~t t:i:miiS :'i DavJ1 Stoffer of Laguna Beach may have ridden the wave of the day Wedn'esday when he bounced down the fast of this wall at the Rock Pile on the north end of Laguna. Lifeguards report surf is up generally aJong".the Orange Coast. It has been building in most spots for the past D.t.tLY P'ILOT P'Mt. k LM P'•~IMI two days. At popular surfing spots such as the Rock Pile, sets of waves rangink in size from four to seven feet were reported today, with oc· casiona1 "biggies" like this one. A11;gry Citiz~n Attacks Officers, Suffer~s Seizute Angela Davis Still Sought For . Questioning on Guns Pedro Woman Beaten in Car; Thrown on Road By JOHN Vl\LTE)IZA Of ni. DMIW• P'Lltl ltilff A nUddle-aged man , angry over police "izure o/-hls a"edlt card, took his nghL to &ln Cltmen&e police headquarters Wedl!ooday, 1U.gedly tried to run down Ove o!p-with his' car, then IUUered a ntar.f.a{111 hN.rt attack, in hll jail cell. The bif.arre a__equence of eventa, police uld, •started in midlfternoon al the San 'Clemente lntt.. fteie, the 1uspect. MU:bael Colin, .65, ba'd been a guesl !or !'<yo dayo. • PoUce aald Colin. who told them he had juat. aold hlJ San Clemente property, attempted to use a credit, card which had been reported 1tolen months before. • SAN RAFAEL (UPil-¥Jela Davis, tbt militant l;Jlack former UQ.A fApilt~ member, has not been hoard-lronj· "Ci! she was ident!Ued as the put~f Of two guns u&ed in a courtroom kidnapln& • which left four dead. 1 Both Marin Collnly authorities ~d lhe Calirornla altorney general!s ott!Ce want to talk to her about the weapons, ~t 1 .0 "chaf'ges have been· filtd. ' t •' A 23-year-old San Pedro woman, Angela OJvls purdlased several guns, brought blto the Laguna Beach poUCe same of 1Wfiic~ ~re used in . the corn-si.,Uon a\ ,1:20 , a.m. tqdlty by two·· mission ·~ the crime in Marin Co\lnty + motorists who 1topped to help her -after Jn I.he killing of Judge H a, I e y , • • !he was thrown frot11 a caf, told 119llce Richardson told newmen. she had been beaten· by a ipan wbo offered her a ride. ' Rlchmtson said he e;ollected the In· 'l'bt worTian saltl lier • a~alliint, 1fter rormaUOn lllrougb his Office a.s a state sWallowlng "three red ptl11," tore her .enator and hit membership. on -the clothes and struck her te.Y,M-~ times Sena'-' Subalmmtttet on -UnamericM . in Uu! face With ', his fllta, 'then.' thl'eV( ' 'ActivlUes. · her out on'~tfe rOadWa)r wheri she1re~l'1ed "t hive multlpJe1soun:e1•of lnfomi.a tlon his atte~pts to n;Kile3t ~r 8'XU•lly. 1 on 1Ul:iVetSive act.lvltiee In this .state that En r~te , lo visit a f:rlen~. In . Orange, other pecJt>\e aren't privy to," said the she ' ha'd bOarded' the wrOng bus and former: Oallh>rnla cootdlnator for the wqund .u~ •Jn. ~untlnglelf,.J\each,. the · Jo~n Bird! 8"'1ety.• , woman said: She had ~ \'al!lqg two · Hie ·st.aff released. the tnfomu.tlon ito ~ lor anolher ·1hl.ls w~en the man The Irvine Company . today fotm.tnr threw ltt support with tbose opplOOd to expansion of e.11116 County Mrporl. Jn a prepared statement, William R. Ma.soo, Irvine prmdent, voiced agree. ment with a statement DUlde earlier thJs week by County Supervisor ·wllliam Phllllps saying, "the existing _airport neither should nor could be expanded." The Irvine announcement came only hoUrs before the · Cooniy Atrport Com. mission was scheduled . to meet to formally recommend against expansion. It follows by three days a formal resolution by the city of' Newport Beach strongly opposing expansion. In his statement this morning, Mason said PhiJlipS' remarks are "in accord with our long-held positiOn that increased jet air traffic from the Orange County Airport is not compatible with a livable environment." The Airport Commission and subse- quently tbe County Board 'of Supervlsort must act on a controver&ial consu1tant'1 recqmmendation that the Orange Cowty Airport expand its facilities to ac- commo<tate additional commercial jet flights. Mason said the Irvine Company's, pro- posed master plan for the airport viclnJ.. ty, where the company Is the prlnclpal landowner, does not anticipate iotenalfi.. cation of use Of the sirpart. "We have proposed no major com-- merclal developments, whole IUC(eQ would obviously depend on Increased jet commercial traffic," he said. He said, '"It is for this rea10n ttiat w~ remain vigorously opposed to Azimuth Equities' plan to cnstruct ·a commetrlal development with one mllUort square feet (See IRVINE, Pago I) Oraage .\featliel' Filtered sunshine I• the word far Friday' alon'g the Otinge Cdltt With !OW CJOUdS I providing tJle nl• tralion and lowering the tempera .. :·ture to about 73 l~lly and as further ioland. . ~SIDE TODA\' • • •• Colin allegedly became hostile during a dJscussion with two detectives and vowed to cbarae them with thert of his credit card. The officers seized the card at the company's reques\ pending . District Attorney Bruce B lea said Wednesday officials want Miss Davis, a Communist, to eicplain how the guna which she 'bought In 1968 and 1989 reach- ed Johathan Jackson, ldlled laat wee« along with a judge and two San Quenµn convicts during a eourtn:lom escape a't.. tempt Authorltles also w a n t to talk to Franklin Delano Alexander, a Black Panther caetaln in Los 1 Angeles. One of the: ·two guns -a .38 Browning au,tomaUc pistol purchased In January, tMa, by Miss Davis -was found In his 1par\,n\ent Jvne 28, 1968, durtnc a the new1 lmed:la .'Tuudly ot1 ._ ncmJt-• drove1up and offere;d,~er a rid•, )"hlch · \!1lmtable bu~."llie ·1n1om-•report • ~ •cCi!P;t,cl . . . . , : • !triked Miis Divis to •lhe · pQrclllle .of They W,Ollt first 'to'.Ansholm lo change I, Priaon1fiuardl 'run a conata.ne! ri<k 'of ~!"'I At~ ~ . l~rlr' 1 acUoM co"trlbute to 'incrte11fd ' in•ealigatiQn. .. M 't • From the ha!'le -•t ·the i/1•, Colln •ll<medJY went to South jCoist O>mmuolty lloo~i!tl In South Caguna where 1 disturbance alle&edly took p ace over treatment for lhe mM't be.art Condition. Aides there were quoted by police as overhearing C:Olln'a promiaes to pave 'W "WbOle · department ~rTJ!Sted," ShorOy •Iler that Colln •ppeored •I IS.. ASSAIJLT, P11t I) two weaj)on.1·1n '1988 and 1th. • cari, beca:Gte V. man wu havin& car _ I ' ' ' ' • trouble. 'l!jln, !Qtload o! takl111 ,her lo Pair Win Primary ' ' . robbe,.Y in\<estiS•Llon . It waa Jalor ,. I 11 ART F O·R D, E:on(l. (UPI)' - turned to him under court order. 1Gu\)e.J'l1!.ol11l candidate Tbomu ' J. ' Meanwhile, In Sacramento, Sen. H. Mi:WU and Senatorial aspirant Lowell L. Richaro..m disclosed ht wu,r-1-P .• 'Wlecter Jr. '.ea~ly . defeo!od . their ' hie tor tracing two of the alleged San opponen~ Wednelday in the first Ralael shooLOut weapon& tolMJU O.vlo! ll<Pllbll"n Pflmlf,Y In Co!lnecUcut'1 "The lnfonnaUoo we -..la,Vt-it UNiit .. • hlatocy. 1 r lhe but ·dliot. 11 promised;-the drl~r · headed IOI\ Lol\lll& Beach. · Tho!"~ 11 ~·,.01&iiranl-fl)r col· ' fee, lb• · toili\ed 'i!>d,' )he. 'tn1h bought ' "~me redi pill•," three ol whfdl he siyallowed. He theri drove out lAguna C1nyon Rq~ w~re the aseault •ttempt waa rnlde. The \fOmaJ1 aatd she had asked '" (lfOo 'BEATEN, Pop I) !>!'ii•• ''"''·~· P•gf 1. · · ' ·=-I I I 11: MAllllfl!Z • ' ... -.,.. n.n Mt11 hi hrf!R 1t.I Cit ,_ II MtWIM tt.lt CllMllllW U11 ' Mufllll !'_.. • I'"'"*"" . ~.... Iii•~ .,.,.. •• c.itlld ' " 1 " or-.. ~ 111 c~ • ...,..,...... " DM• 'JM""" )2 ll'll'H° 1 n.t1' OltlHtl1 '' lite~ ,,,....... lfol\ ... ~Ill Pt.. ·' flltYltlllil 11 l11twttllNMl!t , .. ,, ~ ... ,. ........ ...., ...,..,..., . ........ " ............... , .. ,, Aitt ~ IJ Wff'N ...... .... :.r 'I ... '· -~ I I 2 OAll.V PILOT S Harassment 1 __ '----=-Pr-otested By Manson .. Lal ANGl!:LES (UPI) -Hipple cult -awi.. MaNon, his liikt i.a ...... his klll hair """"1!bM, ~ brlel!!' on a. -at Ille Tate.f..tilliua -trial todaJ lo ims -he ... _ -~-by his Jallln. Dtf--INlnC Kanarek hod -dlll a. ""'" onler -· deputies from barusini; tbe alondet def"'4ant. Witb the jury excluded. Manson WU in the witness chair about 10 minutes. bis bands folded att<:IU his chest. But be never actually was questioned because s:rosecutioo and dtleme altomeys used the time to argue minor points and Supericr Court Judg• Chari" H. Older mntinwd the~ for one wtH. -daimod deputies !arood him t. oompletely disrobe several timos tadl • day then conduct what jail inmates ~ • ·..-m tear<h"·of his body -filla'nlgation with tbe Jll'Y pn:oent then rsuned for star witness Linda JWablan, Who WU l!ked by the def .... W.m-lay bow she !dt about Manion and the three young wo:nen charged with him in the Tate murden. She said 1be felt "compassion" for them and wished they wouJd "get up here and do what I am doing -td1 the truth_ - Her inlemlgator was Ronald Bugjles. a roly poly man with a red beard who is tryinc his lint <rlmlnal c&le. He resembles actor Burl Iva. "What wu the power of Chm'lie'?'" Bugbes ulool. That ...t Mamca's au.tney, Ko!wU. t. his Itel "1bert ia no power of Charlie," Kanarok about..t. Manson. tiny in his blue defllmliJoa clo!hes, turned .. Kanarek and lli : "Wa\ch your mouth." Mrs. Kasabian a!Jo admitted th&t she 1t.ole $5,000 l from a friend and toot it witb ber lo the Spahn Ranch wben she joined tbe blpple cult led by Manson. Her admission of tteallng tbe money from Olarles Melton, a friend with whom sbt and her hust>Jnd, Robert, lived before ahe joined the "Manson Family," was the l1I06I damaglng challenge ID ber story of wby the joined the group. In the attemooo session, Hughes mn- tlnued hil a"(llS a.amination and laUJlCb. ed a series of astonishing questions. "Did you think Ola.ties Mamon wu the devil?" .. He is a devilish man," she replied. '"lbe devil in the body of a man?" "'Yes." At the point when Hughes wa.a in- temipt;d by KoJwU. tbe lawyer JU!! repe.ated his quostloo: "What was the power o( QW'lie?'' "I just wanted to do everythirlg and anything for him.'' "'Wiiy was that?" '"'Because I loved him. He made me fttl 1ood. He wu jui:t beauWUJ." From Pqe I IRVINE .•. o( office apace In the heart of the l~ine Indurulal Com pies." . Spuklna on tbe airport Tuesday, SUperviaor Pbilllps had aaid t ha t tedu1ica1 rep>rta on noisl impact levels in Newpon. Beach had convinced him tha the airport bad reached ill mu- imum. expansion. He called for a countywlde bond issue election to finance conJtructlon of a ae- cmd 1irport in the county. Mason a.a.Id he ii "at the moment, leta than enthuslaatic about the second al,,,..-t proposal. . 4'1be county alread y has two ma1or airport.a -County Airport and El Toro -and aeveral smaller faclllties. 1 do not know where another major airport cauld possibly be located in the county wlU'lout 1t irreparably damaglna: the es· i.&Ung environment," he said. ''1bere ill certainly no room for one en lrvine land," he said. DAILY PILOT ....,.,. ,_Iii H ....... •• a..i &..1-... ,. ,. •• ,... w ...... C-. Mc.. S-Ci-nte OllAlfOI c;o.t.IT ~ILISlllNG C:Oliol~.\lt'I' l•Mrl N. W.e4 "ru""" ..,. ~l'tln-J tt~ •. CM•l•y ~ Vkc "~' •"" Gt-tl M........ • 11i ...... ic •• ~;1 111i.,- Re•d11 to Dt1!"P Nerve Ga~ Cargo I:oaded on Ship 'SOtm!RORT, N.C. (U PI) -An old llbtrty lhtp took aboard a deadly carao of nerve gas today irld officials aaid as quickly as the vessel is ready for sea. the port of Wilmington and ship channela In the ~wer Cape Fear River will be closed. Clearll'le weather speeded the loadlna: of the vessel, and rear Adm. E. A. Allen Jr., Commander of the Fifth Coast Guan! Dlstrlc~ laued .,, order declaring the area 1 "security mne ,"' closed to shipping Friday through Monday, Aug. J4-17. The nerve gas Is conL.ailted in old rocket.. which the Army plans to dump in the AUanlic, pmvlding the federil courts do not 1ntervene. A hW'!na on the matter was scheduled today before Federal Judge June L. Green in 'l'(aablqtan . $en.' r Emest F. Hollings , (0.S.C.), dl&lged in a preptred Sen1te speech {tiday that the Army was guilty of 1f08S neglect and "shocking and careless" pro- cedures In planning to dump the 1as In the ocean. He said the operation "flouts the aimple.st rules or common sense, igoores aignificant scientific evidence on the potenUally harmful eUectJ. of this sea dump, and in io· dolnc takes unnecessary ri.ska with the ocean's fttture -hence our future." deadly car10 Wedneaday aboard the rul1th11 liberty ship Le Baron Ru1sell Brigg•. which will be scuttled as .a "coffin" for the rockets. The rockets arrived at the Army's ocean termlnaJ at Sunny Point late Tuea- dJ y nliht and early Wedne9day morning aboard two trainl from Army arsenals at AMis:ton, Ala ., and Richmond, Ky. The Army aaid the aerve a:as was begin- ning to leak from some of the rocket.. in storage and mual be disposed of soon. The longshoremen were given gas masks and a bell-kit containin& sevtral syringes full of Atropine, an antidote for the gas. Half a dor.e11 cages or rabbit& were scattered nur the dock.! --as "mo,Utors," meaning their deaths would signaJ a g.as lukaae. Authorities said the tedious job of llhif- ting the concrete vaulll containing the rockets from the trains to the •hip would take until late Friday, at least. Attorney F.c:lward Lee Roger! of East Setauket, N.Y., represenUng the en~ vlronmental defense fund, had asked for an immediate hearln1 oa his motion for a restralnin& order becauae "once shipping begins ll wlll be impGUlble for the cowtl to srant us relief." Russ SAMs Vw lating . T ruce Pact? JERUSALEM (UPI) -Israel accused E(Ypt today of violatJng the Middle East ceue.flrt by moving Soviet an. tiairetaft missiles closer lo the Sues Suez Canal ''the first night" or the ~ase-fire which went into effect at J respo nsible for enforcing the demand. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan stated Israel's position in an address to Lhe Israeli Knesset (parllament) in which he said Soviet built SA.Ml and SAM2 rockelai were moved up toward.! the Suez Canal "the first lght" of the cease-fire which went into effect atJ p.m. PDT last Friday. He said there were other missile movements "af. terwards." "Thl.!I is something of m 1111 a r y 111Cnificance and not marginal shooting incidents," Dayan said a short time after Uraeli dJplomaUc sources reported that the missile movements may force the government to review it! acceptance of lhe truce. Arab-Israeli peace talks undet U.N. au.spices were threatened. There have been hopes the negotiations could begin early next week . (In Washington, the State Department had no immediate reaction to Dayan's speech, A spokesman said the United States was investigating reports that 30 trucks had moved missile equipment in Egypt toward! the canal in lhe first four houn of the cease-fire. GAILY "li..oT Slall_l'.tltft OFF ICER ROBERT REMILLARD SHOWS. OFF ~EW CYCLE In FOUl)taln V•lley, P•trolll nt With • Foreign F~vor Gov. Claude Kirk of florida and the envlri>arne11tal dereme fund contend there are "many unanswered questions" u to the effect 'be dumping will produce on the environment along the Southeast Coast, particularly Florida. Kenly Weblter, Deputy Gener a I Counsel of the ArTf13, 1aid there would be ample time for the hearing before the ship leaves port. (There was speculation in Washington thtt Israel will now hold up a formal ans:wer to Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring, the U.N. Middle Elllt peace mediator, during the lnvestigatlon of the reported viola· tion.) From Page I Silent Starter The 14,500 deteriorating rock.eta, en· cased In 418 -cooc:rete -and •. steel vaultJ, are k> be buried J~ 11,000-root deep ASSAULT ••• "When we learned of the violation we turned to the United States and informed it of the facts of the violation and demanded the situation be restored and the SAM batteries be returned to their previous positions.'' Dayan said. water and Col, Jack Os.ick, an Army police headquarters in San Clemente, chemical expert, says the sail water where he first asked vi.s!Ung hlahway will make Lhe gas "innocuous." Salt patrolmen to arrest the two detectivu. water dilutes the gas, capable of killing Office.rs said Colin then walked to a human within minutes, into harmless the front de1k 1houtin,g insult& as he Valle y Lawmen Get Italian Cycles · "This is the stage we are now in -discussions between us and the United States government on the basis of our demands to return the batteries to their previous sitea." By TERllY COVILLE ot ,... DallJ """ llaff The photographer asked Officer Remillard to mount the 700-pound, 750cc Moto Guni cycJe for a few pictures. Fountain Valley's new motorcycle of· fictr climbed on the big ma chine and swiftly Wted the kick.stand with his left fool. "Okay. now give me one of those actioo shot! starting the bike. You know, lift up am then push I.hat starter down,'' aald the man with the camera. lbe.re was a quick whir and the m.adline was jlWTing ll.ke .a yougg moun. lain Uon. OftJcer Robert Remillard hadn 't moved. "What happened. I missed that.'' uid fl>< confused pbotagrapller. "No. It'• an electric start.er. This bul· ton on the haod.le," replied Remillard . A new age has dawned for police motorcycles, especially In Fountain Valley which just boughi its f!rst two machines two weeks ago. The city has shifted to the new Italian bikes, lighter than the standard 1.000 pound Harley·Davidaona used by most police departmmu. Moto Cunis aren't brand new in the police scene, but their popu]arity i& grow· Ing, particula_rly in newer po Ii c e departments Just starting· motorcycle patrols. The Fountain Valley Police Department is one. ''It's a light bllu compared lo the others. Easier to hand:e," Remillard e1- plained. He came to I.he Fountain Valley force two weeks ago from the Laguna Beach Department. where he also rode Mota Guu.l b Ike 1. Newport police recenUy have switched to the Italian bikes. Total cost lo outfit Fountain Valley with a motorcycle patrol was about $6,200, which paid for two bikes. two radio set.ups and miscellaneous equip- ment. "They·re a lol cheaper than patrol acids, the Army uld. went ... ran to his car parked outside cars and more effective for tralfic con· ho the front door, lben attempted to run , 'd p " Chief ch I Sixty longshoremen, given 16 urs trol." sa1 ouce a r e s ho h ndl down a policeman in a black and while Jl.tlchaelis . , Of special instruction on w t.o a e v·"· illl lo · t tbe r~ell, bepn loadin& lhe potealially. unit. FoUOllin -Y w emp ?.; it& wo By then, three more officers were bikes primarily during the day. One emerging from the office door. from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., the other from F rom Page l Colin wheeled hll car and aped toward noon to 8 p.m. . them, screeching to a falt a few feet Motorcycle patrols st.art official duty SUMMIT from the officers and the doorway, ac-Monday with Officen Remillard and Vic-• , • cording to tbe police account. tor Deutsch mounted on the new cycles. Some of the features on the bikes After a atruggle in the car office.rs taken 1n Paris. subdued the man and booked htm . -besides an electric starter -are Porppldou ls to pay an official visit A short time Jata Colin wu booked an rlectrlc siren which 'reaches full to the Soviet Union in the firat hall aod. placed 1n 1 cell, where be suddenly volume even while the! bik' ii at a \ of Odober which may detenniM his complained of avere chest paina. atandltlll. ligtUr radio tmib:, .and ~racfio fUrtber movet. An ambulance, summoned btfGrt the mikea built into the helmeL lf a four-po1fer summit proved Im-attack, arrived and took the M-year-old The bikes ahould be good )If a~t praQk:.al, a face-to-face meeting between Santa Monica resident to Oranre Cowlty 40,000 miles Gt lwo-and-a-ha1Lyun eieb, Kosygin and Nixon appeared Medical Cenler whe,e he wu placed Chief MJchaeUs ti\d. A patrol cir travels "Ml"-b1e," the aourcei said. under Intenaive cart after aufferina: a about 50,000 mtles before wearing out, TbeY .aid there Is "a Jot to dllcuss'' heart sellure. · but generally does it 1n 1 year· and Ia teat International developments Police thll morning aaid they were Remillard passed on a few Ups about more thin warrant.an exchanae of views seeking a complaint char1ln& five counta being a motorcycle officer. of the b~ett level. of assault with a deadly weapon (hls "Always dismount OD the ri&hl lide By then the Strateaic Arms Limitation car}, and court action would be scheduled Diplomatic sources in Jerusalem said lsrae.J may review itg acceptance of the three-month cease-fire which started last Friday and hold up announcement of it.s representative to peace talks with Arab officials under U.N. auspices. Israeli political sources sa id the situa· tion was causing a new crisis in Premier Golda Meir's cabinet with some mem· bers, including Da yan, regarding it as a breach of the truce and others including Foreign Minister Abba S. Eban, advising pa tie net. The ~ase-fire terms, agreed lo by Egypt and Israel. said ~~r side would strengthen mllitary posttions along the Suei: Canal for three months. Mexico Divo rce Law Would Hurt Economy of the bike. It keeps you out of the Talks !SALT) between Russia and once the man bu aufficlenUy recovered. lane of traffic, and II the person you America will hive reached their first A Polite lleutenant and two p1ltohnen JUAREZ, Mexico <AP) -President &topped plans to shoot you, he must conclusions, amt the Middle East peace who natTQwly escaped being hit at high Gustavo Diaz Ordaz ' plan to ouUaw tum clear around to do it. probe will have advanced sufficiently speed, llald the nun barely mlJled them quickie divorces in Mexico wold cost "You also have to be more alert. to project tbe chances of an exteruion in his second pass with the cn. Uleir border city $3.% million a year, You're looking for traffic violators, but or termlnaUon of the present cease-fire, The p1lrol car In the first alle&ed says the man in charge of the municipal have to be careful the lraific doesn 't the sourcea aald. assault wu not touched. , fina~s. get you. The Far Eest scene. including above "He juat hopped In his car and noored The loss in Wes alone would reach .. Practice slow turns," he added . all the Vietnam war, a15o were eipect.ed it. After be missed the patrol unit we $1.4 million to $1.6 milli on annually, "They're important in the handling of to come under review, altmu.&h the thought he would make another shot Ianalio Duarte, the lax ct1llector, said. the bike." Russians lately have shied away from at it," one ofllett uaerted, "but he The rest would be living expenses for Remillard alJO explained why. officera any peace initiative for apparent lack jwt spun around and huded for us, divorce setkers ln this city across the often ride down the white line or the GI sufficient influence Jn Hanoi. wtead." RJo Grande from El Paso, Tex. shoulder of the stretL "Cars splatter o;;:;;:;:;:;:~;:;:~~;:;;;:================================, their grem Jn the center « the ltaffk: Ir lane. It gefs pretty slick there." The Mow Guzii wtll easily d<> 90, and reportedly can reach 110 miles-per· hour, but Remillard aald he doesn't like to go that fast . He also admitted that officers like to ride police. bikn for much the same reasons as civilians have taken to motorcycles. "ll's fun and I love the freedom." Special Safe EXCITING PARTY SETS 'Saloon s,' 'Bars' Now 01( by STON E and PHILLIPS In State After 35 Years 5 Pieces Reg . $575.00 Special to tbe DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Banned for 35 years In California, except 011 the swinging doors of Hollywood welltem mov ie sets, Woon ls now a legal name for a cocktail lounge or tavern. Gov, Ronald Reagan algned it blU authorlting 11uch a title, along with bar or barroom, Wednesday in a modest cuemony at the Capitol here. "'Now I won·l be able to get Jnto one by mistake," lllllid the governor, who chanced into a few saloons during his career a.1 a cowboy on the silver setten. He was UJually hunting the \IUl1in 111!1.ead of • snort. The banning of the three word! came In 1935 u an lnt.e.restlng method of amiaging the stinging W\Se of defeat for lhG8e who had endorsed and sup- ported tbe prohibition <t ltquor itself. S.loon. bar ind barroom, the theory v.·ent., hid come. to represent sleaxy )olnta with swinging doors ind 1 swinging cllentele that oft.en U'Ufll at each other over money or the favors o( looee v.-omen. Speakcules. honkytonkJ, gambling, prosUtulion and bootl~g1ln1 wtre all associated with le!I lnnocunu1 terms than tavern or cocktail IGung~. • Assemblyman John T. Knox (J).Rlch· mood), Introduced Ult novel lc11Jlallon recently at the suggestioo or Don Bradley. The latter mana ged Gov, Edmund G. ''Pat" Brown's unsucceyful 19&8 bid for re-election. From Page J BEATEN .•. lo be let out or the car because he "'as driving erratically after tak:lna the pills. Afr.er dumping her in tbe road, the man drove of! down a dirt side road, she uid. Two passinc motorist& &topped when she hailed them. tritd wiauc- cessfully to catch up with he:r assall1nt. then took her to the police. 1tatlon. She was given first atd for brui.les NOW on her fore.head and Up and 1lso had You /cvorite fnterior Mrlontr wfU bt ham to 4.Slltt tfO" ••• chipped teeth , polict said. f u R lTtJ RE The woman aaid all the clothing lhe H J GARRETT N ~·as raklng on her trip was lefl in ~;t:fn~~·~\t, van, along wltb her pun• , 1 1 Cosio Mesa polict "'" requt1ttd lo 2215 HARBOR ILVD. survey the canyon arta by helicopter ond ptlot Jlm wal"er and obstrver PRO,ESSIONAL -TRY OUa HVOLVI NG CHI.RGI-COSTA MESA , CALIF. Frank Uphom "''" dispatched, bul fore-INTERIOR DESIGNERS Opeo M ... T11u11. l l'ri. hn. 646-027' tdto~vcupthehuntdue tofoa. "-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I • 7 I ) 7 • : Buntin ton Beaeh voi:. 63, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1970 • • •• 1xon, OS .Ill umm1. ' James Farquhar Dies Pioneer Huntingto11 Editor Succumbs at 80 James Farquhar, pioneer newspaper publisher in Huntington Beach. died in his sleep at his home at 33.1 Crest Ave. Wednesday night. He was found dead at 9:30 this morning. Mr. Farquhar was 80. As publisher or the weekly Huntington Beach News since September, 1927, and a past president of the Huntington Beach Rotary Club. he was one of the city's major penonallties. Every Vw·eek, he. wrote a co1umn titled "Oil" in the paper in which he. often reminisced about pfrsonalities bolh in and out of Huntington Beach. Mr. Farquhar e:1celled In the old style of personal journalism which he ste.rted as a youngster back in his borne town of Ida Grove, Iowa. He is survived by two sons, George S. of Huntington Beach, ahd Willoughby of Anaheim. George Farquhar is managing editor of the Huntington Beach News. Services' are pendlnJ at Smith's Mortuary, Huntington Beach. Mr. Farquhar was born March 12, 1890, at Ida Grove. He was educated at the U.nivenity or Chici:go and Y(ent abroad in 1909 to write a series of trivel articles. He was a reporter on the Chicago Ex· aminer and wrote many stories on stage stars or the day. He later was classified advertising manager of the Chicago HetJld and, in 1917, was cti.ssmed ad- vertising manager for the ~ttle Post Jni.lligencer. \ He originated an advertising feature called the Representative Bureai,i of DAILY PILOT Sl•ff P11ti. DEAD AT IO James Farquhar Business tmns in the Chicago area and aJso established a movie dlreclory. H.e .was a founder of the 11 Club of Oticai:o and co-founder of the famed Gattie Club of Artists, Writers and Musi· Ex-Convict to Answer Wife Shodting Charges Police said today they will seek assault with intent lo commit murder char,e& against an ex-convict held in connection with the sniper-shooting or his Huntmaton Beach wife. Elmo Williams, 45, of Santa Ana was scheduled to appear la West Oraage County Municipal Court thi"a afternoon to answer charges that he gunned down his wife, Madeleine, on the porch of her house near midnight Tuesday. An ex-convict, just released from 10 years of prison, Williams WR! arrested al a Santa Ana motel about four and a hall hours after the alleged att.ac~. His 3ft.year-old wife, shot oitee ta the left chest, is recovering today at Hun· Ungton lntercommunlty Hospital ~.here 11he is reported in satisfactory c0ndit1on. Mrs. Williams, a resident or 16868 Boise O\ica Road , told officers she had Surfboard Hits Lakewood Girl At Huntington just come home from work when she saw a muule flash coming from one of the bushel surrounding her house. She wa11 felled OD the porch. General Motors Pays Off Na der NEW YORK (AP) -General Motors Corp. has agreed to pay consumer ad- vocate Ralph Nader $425,000. In his in- vasion of privacy case, his attorneys announced today. Nader sued the nallon's largesl auto manufacturer four years ago for some $2 million to compensate for what he claimed was "harassment a n d In- timidation" and invasion of his privacy. The case, which the attorneys said was settled out of court, stemmed rrom Nadar's attack in 1966 on the failure of auto manutactureni, including General Motors. to dflllgn safe can. .. General ftlotors, Nader's suit con· tended, had hired a private lnvestJ&aUon agency, Vincent Gillen Aaociates, Inc., to inquire l!lto th eliwyer'1 private Ufe. cians. As a boy be printed his first newspaper at the age of nine and called It the "Drama Era." He purchased a hall-iJiterest in an towa weekly in 1916 and added a paper a year until seven papen were acquired, Jn. eluding two dailies, 'I1le Iowa City _.,,. Republican and the c.dar Rapids Republicu. 'Ibey all operated under the trade name Farquhar Publ1';:ationa. He founded the newspaper columns "At the Sign oC the Seven Seers," ahd "Hell Bo:1." For muy years, be was a Republlcan county chairman in Iowa. Mr. Farquhar purchased the Huntington Beach News Sept. J, 1927, and published it up to hls death. He was a member of the board ot directors of the Chamber of Commerce in Huntington Beach for Jnany years. City Councilman Ted Bartlett, Who came to town the same year aa Mr. Far· quhar, said his long-time friend was "always a solid citizen, pluggilg away for what he thought wu best." Today, another long-time friend, J. Sherman, Denny, a former general manager of the Huntington Beach Com- ppy, was to have taken Mr-Farquhar to a surprise hmcbeqn · at Knott'• Berry Farm with anothe<.frl'!!!f, Wajler Knott. Mr. Farquhar""'.~~~ tnlpble • .bll.liral.~•-tCarrW in 1951\i. ... -' €barges Dropped Against W o:rnan In Fraud Case A Huntington Beach woman charged with complicity in the disappearance of $18,000 rrom a COsta Mesa aerospace plant walked out of court today, freed ol all charges. Charges agalnst Mn. Ethel R. Schlock· er, 28, of 8402 Danb\lry Circle. were dropped in Harbor Judidal Di.strict Coort. The Woman was arrested JuJy 17 along with a former controller at Master Specialities Company, IMO Monrovia Ave., on charges of embeuling the funds. Mrs. Schlocker W<UJ a supervi.sor In charge of disbursements for the plant. Charges still stand against Carl M. Koster, 40. of 2921 Catalpa St., Newport Beach, who remains free on $12,500 ball. Koster, who had quit and been hired by a Los Angeles firm as controller, is currently awajUng hll own preliminary hearing. Company investigators went to Costa Mesa police after auditing the books and discovering $18,000 unaccounted for over a period er three yean. Speclallia Company, IMO Monrovia Tbey allege that cbecks made ,out tO to various lnd.ivtdu1ls in denominations from a few dollan lo several thou.Sand -were diverted and cubed. 1r '·i • ~· ' " '.~ I ' • ' · j 1D4"-Yl "tci':"M .-"Ol'FlCltl ROBERT. ,REMILUARD SHOWS. OFF1 N£W..CY(l.E .In F ...... 1ln-V1lley/F1t,.,lllne With • For•l1t1 .l'l1wr- Silent Starter Valley Lawmen Get · ltali(Jn Cycles .Bf TERR'( COVULE °' ... a.ny '"" ""' · The p.h o t,o gr a p be r &Ued-offlcer Rem.Ward to mount the 70o!pound, 7SOec · Molo Guzzi cycle for i few pictures. ' Fountain VaUey's new motorcycle or- flcer climbed 'on the big machine and swiftly lifted &ie kicksta'nd" Wi'th his left foot. . "Okay now giv,i me one of those . action shots starting the bike~ You know, lift up ind then push that" starter down,"· said the man with the camera. Thei-e was 'a· quick Wblr :and "lhe• machine was purring Uke a young moun- t&Jn U"on. Officer Robert Remillard hadn 't moved. "What happened: I missed that," said the confused photographer. "No. It's an electric starter1 Thia .but· ton on the handle," replied Remillard. A new age has dawned for police motorcycles, especlalty 1n F.ounfain · Valley which ju.st bought its first two machines tWo 'Weeks ago. The cil.y bas· lhlfted to the new Italian· blk~. lipttr than the atandard 1,000 pound Harley-Davtdaon1 used by most police departments. . Moto Guzi.ls aren't brand new in the pollce·1eene1 but their popularity la grow- ing, particularly in oewer · p o 11 c e departments just s~rtlng motorcy_cle patrols~ The Fountain Valley Police Department ls one. ·"It's a light bike compared· to the others. Easter to handle," Remillard ex~ plained . He came to the ~ountaln Valley force two weeks ago from the Laguna Beach Department, where be also rode Moto Guzzi b I k e s. Newport police recently have switched to the Italian blke.s. Total cost to outfit Fountain Valley with a motorcycle patrol was about $6,200, which paid foi: two bikes, two radio set-ups and miscellaneous equip- ment. • 11'nley're a lot cheaper lhan patrol cars ancf1 more effective. for traffic con- trpl.'' nid Police ChJel Cb 'a r I e 1 Mlchaelis. ·Fountain Valley wW employ Ila· two bikes. prln\arilf during tho day. One from 7 a:m. to 3 .p.m., the other. from A young Lakewood girl nearly drowned off Huntington Beach Wed111eaday af· ternoon when she was struck in the throat by a loose surfboard . Terrie Hart . 14, was listed in guarded condition this morning in the intensive care ward of Huntington Intercommwdty Hospital. Motorcycle P Ian Tabled noon to a p.m. . Motorcycle. pelrola start official duly Monday with Ofllcon-Remillard and Vic- tor Deulldl moun~ an the Diw cyclee. • Some df the .featl.lfta on U>e bikes -beaklea an electric. 1~rter -. are, an electric siren . which readies full volume even . while the bike la at a standstill, lighter radio unltl, and radio Miss Harl was pulled oul of the surf a mile ind one·half north oC the pier by Ufeguard Keith Vogeri, who ad· mlnl!lered artificJal respiration until an ambulanct arrived. She was rushed lo the hospital where an einergency tracheotomy was perform- ed and internal bleeding stopped. ctty lifegt1ards said the glrl had bee• swimming with a friend when a wayward IW'fbolrd new at them. The frleftd duck· ed but Mlsa Hart didn't, lifeguards aald. The accident occurred about .1 p.m. Divorce Law Rapped JUAREZ, Mexico r AP) -President Cuatavo Diaz Ordaz' plan lo outlaw quickie divortts In Mexico would COit their borller c:ty 53.2 mllliOn a year, says the man In charge of the municipal lln1110e1. , Huntington BeachDirt Riding Dilemma Delayed ' i ' By RUDI NlEDZJEUiKI Of IM Dttlr Pli.t Sl.tt M9torcyclista In the Huntington se-ach lrea may have to wait another month for ~ oolutio1 to their dirt riding dll•m· ma. 1 Recroatlon and parb jXlnunllalooen who were ta· mike a Ticommendation on a eye"· track Wednesday ni&hl were stymied. by lack of a quarum. A recommendation by Recreatim and ParkJ Director Norm Worthy to convert an o~D field into • rldtac area was tab! Ullf.ll ·the CO!nmlMlon'• • meetblg nest · th. The tapt St.reel and Pecan Avenue area, Worttiy expl.ained, could be bar· rlcaded o1r by the cily and 1 mtle-long cour1e laJd out, w:lualvely ror mlnlblke .... Usaae would be limited Crom one lo two daf• 111\Ually. Another propoul, which would have upaaded the exlaU113 Huntingto1 Cycle Park a private race facUlty near Gothard most of wllom do not possess drlver'• mikes built. Into. the helm,l.. . Street and Talbert Avenue for family licenses -would have no way to get ' The .bJkes ahoukJ be i9o:d for · about of(road riding was shelved since the there 40,000 mllet or two-and-a-half years ~ach, lease on the field Is scheduled to run Ht ·~· ested the HuoUngton Cycle' cth~ Michaelis,~!~. A pafrol qr travelt l · ~ t p-~ . li"" •• e•:c""~and. bulldi"•. about 50.000 miles before )'l~i!'l .out,; ou 1n auuu a year. ... ~T. ue ,. ~ ,.. d ... but generally doea It 1n a year. 'The lessor isn't sure he will renew acquired Where i.ids coul store Remtllacd paued on .a•few·llps about it and that might put u.s on shaky theft tnlniblkes and check· them· outi being a tl}Otorcicle offtcer: •1 , .. \ grouod."' Worthy aaid. bdl>te r!dlng. · · ' · "Alwan ~I 001. tl)e'Jlib~ .. lkle Jim Buchanu. spealrer for a lfOlll> · Tbot proposal was cha11eng<d .by>Mn.. of the btl\e, lt' ~ )'OU _OUt .ol tbe ol motorcyclists in the audience."!.'_~ , =li!W:.:'°~'t.~='. la!>i iol·lral(lc. ud U·tho. peno11<~ the city to shy away from lta oD ,..., : llacllll Ir ·•-•· "unbearable." She ato)lpod plan1 ·to"-,OU; 11o miJJI project "becoU>e It would dOUhla t1iO 1 ~·Ill '40..'"iPature peUUoo> to -6Jrn clil1'111bundltddol. , · • accident rate.'' port., ber ~rae , -• 1 r "Yotr abo \have to bl men alert.: "'They"d be runnlng on pav"""'1." 1 Tho ..,.. objection ,.., ai.o raJaed You"" lookln1 'for'tra!Oc vlolator1, bul laid Buchanan, explaining to ~ bf Otto Hallor whq, • anMd wUb a • Have to be arel\JI tho trafllc clooon"t mlS8loners that mlnlblke rideh .ioa1d , lkllnllure peutloo, prolellld . •Plrl-: a~t you. . ". . . . rather nl• on dirt. ~ ment '11Wellen Wtrt botherid by nolle · MPr•ctJce llO"f tl.trtl!", .he ldded . """I honestly reel not enough bu Ileen Ind~ Into tbe ell!llblC bolln. ' 1 : "Thoy'ri 1mpori...1 In. lhl. hlndlll!ti 'ol done. There ls a great i'teed !-« a ·. 'lbt 1 rtaelti9n dtplrtrneQt and the M.ltt."' , · ' , 1 J • '· • pel"lllllnent type ol riding fadlltj," he I ~lalabl•~-'"!rklnl tocrilet . 1 .Rtrillllard aloO erpld1od w~; ~Jff¢tn charged. t l!I oot6jlsb a, 1iclln( are1 lll)Ce -.. often ride down tlle wblte lino or the Rober\ Owen, another mol.ore)'tlln 1 twcertct ofdtn1nce "Jrtually ellmlnattcl shoulder of the 1treet. "Cars splatter claimed the oil field project ''couldn't off-road ridllll wtthln the. HunUngton their a:rtiase ln the center of the traffic poulhllt work" 1lnce the mlnlblkm -Beach clljl llmtla. lane. It &•la pretty allck there."' • .. . J Teday'a ft•al .. Y. Ste±•-- TEN CENTS e Russ Chief To Attend U.N. Meet LONDON (UPI) -Soviet Pmnler Alexei N .. Koeygln plalls to meet Prell- clent Nixon and other Western lelderw in ]iew York early In October, tbaa making a summil coolOHllC' vtrtuallJ certain. East European dlplomall aald today. The occasion will be the U.N. 25111 anniversary meeJtng tn New York wlllcb world leaders will attend. Kosygin apparenUy 1:oukl prefer a Big Four power summit with Nb:ao aDd the premiers ol France and Britain ta a bilateral conference with the American chief exeeutive. The diplomata Indicated that behind this preference lies the Kremlin's ap. parent desire to avoid charges of an alleged "ganging: up" of the superpowera by ranging the Soviet Union publlclJ on the side ol the United states. The special U.N. meetinK Is ocbedulod for October 19-24. • Diplomatic feelers were eipected to be put out ~y. Some llOUodlnp ap- parenUy are already under way for the type· of the projected aumm!t and Ila scope. • British Prtn1e Mlnlster Edward lloatb -..... -qo ~tJte will go to New Yort. Ile a1io -~ to meet' with Nian on die occasion. 'l1lere is tome doobt bowevtr •boat French Prealdent · Georges Pompldod, who ill not known to have upreMM great enthu!iaam for another vt.s.lt .. New York al,... bla ·cllsturi>lng e.perleneo during bla '"""t lr!p there. But ap- parent1y no final decision hu yet belll taken in Parla. Pompidou ii to pay an ofrlclal vii.It ti> tbe Soviet Unloo tn .Ibo fl(at ball of October which may determine hill further moves. H a four-power summit proved im- pracUcal, a face-to-face meeting between Kosygin and Nb::on a p p e a r e d ''inevitable," the IOW'Ce:I said. Ther. said there ii "a lot to dilcml" and test international devel-11 · more than warrant an uchange of views of the bighest level. By then the Strai.gtc Arms Llmllatloo Talks (SALT) belween Ruasta and America will have reached their first conclusions, and the Middle East peaoe probe will . have advanced auUideollJ to project the chances of an extenaioq or termination of the present cease-fire, the sources said. The Far East scenef lnclwflng above all the Vietnam war, also were expecteif to come under review, aJthough the Russians lately have shied away froi:n any peace initiative for apparent lack of sufficient inOuence in Hanoi. Pair Win Primary HARTFORD, Coon. (UPI) Gubenlatorial candidate Thomas J. MesklU and Senatorial aspirant Lowell P. Wlecker Jr. ea$1.ly defeated their oppooentJ Wedneaday in the !lrlt Republican prlmll)' In Coonectlcut ., history. Orange Weadler Filtered aunahlne ls the word for Friday along the Orange Coast with low clOU<la provldJnr tho Ul- traUon and lowering •the temper1. .. tuo;e to about ' n locally and Ill ~~=~:·~D~Y ··~h· : ';tlaon guonll run a coilcf41tl ~ of ,,..,,, . attaclu and Ullir ob1'i"' conlribul• lo in<fC41«l :priion 1.,.,1o •• P<1111 7. 1 Rock Pile ROC!ket :nave Staller of Laguna Beach may have ridden the wave ol the day 'Wednesda7 when he bounced down the face of this wall at the Roell: l'ile on the north end ol Laguna. Lifeguards report surf is up generally .aloni the Orange Coast. It has been building In moo! spot& for the past • two daya. At popular surfing spots liu ch as the Rock Pile. sets of .waves nnginf in size from four to aeve.o feet were reported today, with OC· ca.slonal ubiuies" like this one. Pronaote Tourima Chaml,~r W eigh.s Future 'Projects1 • • A commercial heliport In Huntington Unldog Ruotlnaton Beach to Los Allgelu Beach? Undersea 11arden1? Or hydrofoil and Ol'atJ&e County airportl' and ·the · NewpJrter Inn hel)eopter ptd. • tripe; from the city peir to Catalina! Parklng space and a 200 by 400 foot These are some of the ideas the ires tor the pad wool~ be required. touriSm Qmuruttee or the Chtmbtr o! Evans thought t.hue q:Ught be room. Commerce ii working on. Committee for 1 pad behind the Sheraton Beach. chairman Lou Evans repOrled on Ute Inn. · ' j liroPosals at a meetin( Wednelday at ~ "The service would run frOm the the Sheraton Beach IM. I Newporte:r. to the Sheraton and Los He aaJd that the committee wu •W-\ Angeles." EvanJ sa.Jd. . dying the ftulbWty ol an air service Chamber manager Ralph Kiser poinltd Planners OK Car Wash- WithPumps out that the craft would move up the coasl over the octan so there would ht minimal noise disturbance. Kiser also reporled that chamber members were planning visils to the undersea gardens in Sanla Barbara tq see whether a similar attraction could be located in Huntington Beach. · The chamber is alao sponsoring a hydrofoil trip to Catalina from the municipal pier Aug, 28 lo detennlne whether a regular service wou ld be pr~ filable . Pedro Woman Beaten in Car, Thrown on Road Angela Davis Still Sought Fo~ Questioning on ~Guns Valley Hunting Sound Measures To Curb Noise Pla.nnlna Commissioners gave Jerry Shea the go-ahead Wednesday nlgbt to build a car wash similar to the facility his company, Beacon Bay Enterpritee, is building at Fuhlon Ialand, a Newport Beach shopping center. "Many people have called our pr~ lotype in Fubion Island the moat beauWul car wuh in Amttlea." Shea told commissiooera. Qimmlssioner Thomas Morrison, an architect by trade, echoed She.l's words, sayin1 he had aeen the car wash and was impressed. -{:{ * * Beach Downtown Property Owners To Meet Deadline IA :J-yur-<lld San Pedn> woman, bcou(ht 111to the Laauna Belch poli« .-. a t 1 :JO a.m. today by two molorists who slapped to help her altu Ue WU fhrvn from I CM, told poliot lbe had been beat<n by a IDlll who oller,d her a ride. The woman 11id bu assailant, aftu ~ ''three red pills," tore her dcllbes and rtruclc ber ,...ral tlm<s .ln:1 tbe face wUh blJ fist&, tben threw w out 00 the road ... y wlleo ... resimd bll attempta to molest her squally. En route to visit a friend lo Orange, lbie bad boarded the wroag bus and willd up in Hrmtinatoo Beach, the ~ said. Sbe had been walling two hlirl for another bus when the man dJWe up and offered her a ride, which accepted. went Brit to Anaheim to change , becau"' the man was having car '!bell, lnslud ol taiin& her .. bus depot, as promised, the driver bltdled for WU-~ f 'Ibey stopped -.i a,restauraol !or ror- lot. Ille relaled and the man jlougbt "IOIDe ..ci JlillJ, • ~ ol .whlib be nf"ow~ drove out Laguna Canyon ~ ~ the assault attempt WU mide. 'lbe woman aid ft had asked to! be let out ol the car because he wu driving erraticaDy after taking the ,m.. After dumping her in the road, tlle JD'8 drove off down • dirt side road, ,.. said. Two paasing motDrists stopped when lhe hailed them, tried unsuc· cessfully lo catch up with her assailant, then toot htt to Lhe police 1:t.1U«i. She wu give.a first aid for bruises m -her forehead and lip and also hid chipped teeth, police nld. 1be woman u.id all the clothing she wu taking on her trip was left in her usalllnt'1 van, along with her purse allltainlng fl$. Costa Mesa poUce were requested to ml'fty the canyon area by helicopter and pilot Jim Wagner and observer 7'r'ank Upham were dispalchtd, but forc- ed 1o pve up the hunt due to foe. P.O. Supervisor Killed by Sniper ta; ANGELES (UPI) -A supervisor at the TenninaJ Annex Poat Office was shot to death early today as he left tbe bcilily. DAILY PILOT OU.NG£ CO.UT "\Jlt.l•HIMG C0M"AN'I' a11bt ri N. Wttd P'r9w...1 .... '""""'""' J,ck Jt. Cv•l•v l'•i .. , 1~'"''' A. Mvtphift• M t,..tltoll E11"'1' Al•ft Ol•klft Wei O•.,,.. c.intr l!d11or • Alli.rt W .. 11111 llUMc .... 11111;10' H•tttl ......... a. OH ic• 17175 htch l11vl1w1rd M1ill•1 Aild•1n1 P.O. 111~ 1•0, 926~· ............. l...,. a.Kttr m F-1 A-, C.N M_, .U0 Wt;JI hy ltrut ~ -...cflt ,,,, Well ltlloel 1 ... 1 ....... 1M C""*"91 -Nllrll\ ll~C:.l'lllnt llHI SAN RAl'AEL (UPI}-Anpla Daru, tbe millUnt black former UCLA faculty m~. bu not be<si beard !>:om alnce ....... JdenU!led .. lbe pircbuer ol two 1!11111 UIOd lo a courtroom ldcloaplng which lell iaw" dead. Both Muln County aulborlllts and the California 1ttamey general'• office want to talk to her a6otit the wupooa:, but no cbarps hlVe been rued. District Attorney Bruce BaJeS 1ald Wednesday ollidals want Mill D1vb, a Communlll, "' nplato bow the 111111 wbicb llhe boliabt in 1113 and lllllll read> ed Jmathln Jacboo, ldlled tut week aJoog with • JOOie and two San QoeaUn convicts durklc, • courtroom ac1pe at.. tempt_· AutborWes allo w a n t to t.Jk to Man Kills Self , Frankllo Delano Aleuoder, a Blaclc Panther captain in Loa Angeles. One of tbe two gtms -a .38 Browning automatic plJ!ol~ purdwed lo January, Ulll, by Mill 'Daria -••• fouod in hll apartment J111e 21, 1113, duzinC a TObbery loveatJptioG. It wu later re- turned to him under court order. Munwblle, 1n sacramento, Sen. H. L. JUchardloll dilclosed be was responri- ble for trac:Ina ·two of the alleged San ·Rafael sl¥>otoat weapons to Miss Davis. ''The information we have ls that Angela D•v!a purclwed eeveral guns, some-or which were uaed fn the com· mlaloo ol the crime lo Marin COOnty In the ldillng of Juqe H a f e y , " Rkhardaon told newmen. RlcbanlJon nld be collected the IJ>- (onnatJon 1brou.gb hiJ office u a state Mnator and bit membership on the Senate Subcommittee on Unammca.n Activities. Fount.a.in Valley 1s looking for some sound measures to curb irritatini noises in the city . But nobody knows quite how to do it. Clinton Sherrod, the city's planning director, told planning commi.ssioners WedneMay night about various methods or measuring 50Unds and determining if they are e1.cessive. "We'd like a noise abatement ordinance," he su1gestf!d. "But the city attorney tells me It will be quite a task, so I think we should consider it for awhile before making a final ordinance.'' The method Sherrod presented was a measurement of the ambient ool.se- le vel -normal noise level -of an area, then setting a limit of Lhe number of decibels about that average level any noise producing object could go. "I think noise abatement is a problem we're going to have in the ~lty, especially in the industrial area. And no~ com- plaint3 ·are the tiardest to resolve, but it lll eu1tt If you hive some standards," Sherrod said. It did, however, come with a few strlnas attached, including sis. 1u pump&. "You couldn't do without the gas pumpa, could you?" J1me1 Dick, com· miuion chairman, asked. "Certainly not," Shea replied. He h~d been asked the wne quesUon for a stte in HunUngton Beach three months ago, gave the 1ame reply, and was tu med down by the city council. "At ltalt this will give three or our city councilmen a chance to use five credit cards at one intersection," Commluioner Carroll Mohr quipped, referring to the possibility of five gas stations on an in· terseceion, and the recent controversy over council approval for four stations on another intersection. Shea 's station was a ppr o v ed unanimously by the planners. It will be built on the north side of Ellis Avenue, 210 feet east of Brookhurst Street. Chamber or Commeree members were told Wednesday that the Downtown Property Owners Association w i 1 I "probably" meet the Sept. 1 city·impo.sed deadline to form a limited partnership to redevelop downtown H u n t I n g t o n Beach. RObert Terry, presldent of the associa· tlon. aaid at a meeting at the Sheraton Beach Inn that the property owners: cannot commit themselves lo a developer unUI a partnership is formed. Owners of SO percent of the property in a five-block area downtown from Sixth to First streets have signed options to lease or sell the land . The city wants these options lo be committed to a legal entity. Terry said that by Jan. 1, 95 percent of the property should be signed up. "We'll know something by then." be added. The area concerned is earmarked in the city's Top of the Pier plan for a huge parking lot. The city is holding orr condemnation proceed~s against the property owners to see if private en- terprise can redevelop the area. Mter Shooging ~ , . At Ex:girlfriend ·~ ._. "t!l'MWe IOUl'Ctl ol information on lllibTenl•e aictlvtll• lo lbls llale that other ~ area~. to.~ Ult! f.._'~ •vui.-•lor for ' John lliiCh So<fe!Y. -· ,. He told commissionen he had operated a noise meter in Lompoc, but admitted using it "more for bluff than as a scientific Instrument.'' Commlssk>ners agreed the city needs a car wash. and reluctantly agreed to the gas pumps as an ex,tr~. Two gas .stations Curre'nlly exist al the Ellis-Brookhurst intersection, whUe the other two comers art vacant. Ten')' said that he was not impressed with an alternative plan put forward by the ~ity to block off Main Street and create a Disneyland-style mall. ' A man wh&· had been sought for the attempted murder Of hls form e r girllriend shot himself tQ death Wed· nesday while being pursued by a police officer. Investigator& said William H. Eakr1dge, 43, or 223411 w. Ind St., Sanla Ana, was spotted by Offlcer Ferrel Buckels driving his ctr at McFadden and Grand avenues. Buciels pursued the wanted ma11 ~Ith red light and siren for several bklcks until Eskridge slopped on McFadden at the onramp to the Newport Freew1y. As the shot . gun armed olfleer ap. proacbed the vehicle he heard a shot and aaw the driver alump over the steering wheel . Pollet said Eskridge used a revolver to shoot himself in the stomach . He died 11hortly after arrival at Tustin Community Hosplt.al. Earlier Wednesday Eskrid ge had visited the Blue Room beer bar at 1212 S. Bristol St., and fired a shot al barmaid Gea• Copping, 43 , his fbrmer girllriend. She was not b1jured. Mental Patients Beating Victims NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPf) -The severely beaten bodies of two mentally retarded glrls were found Wedne!day night in a New Haven park. The vict.lms were Identified as Donna Scbllther, 15, aod Sandra Hedlar, 23, both residenLs of tht New Haven Reg1onal Center. Police said tbe bodies were found al about 11 p.m. face down In pools of blood in West Rock Park . Both girl• had been beaten about the face and head, police said. 'The)' had been the object of an in· tensive se.arch since late Wednesday afternoon when a third resident of the center, William White, 20, wu found badly beaten in anotbtr secUon of the perk. Whlte was rtporled 1n 11erious condition al SI. Rapbael'a Hospllal with bead loJurlu. 85 GI Deaths In Week's Fight SAIGON (UPIJ -The U.S. Command reported today that 85 A m e r I c 1· n 1m1icemen were killed In the Vietnam war last week: -the bighelt weekly toll since June. A total of 7R> Americane were wound· ed, also the bl(hest tolal 1lnce the we<k ending Jtme %7, when 104 wtre killed and 80l wounded aJ U.S. grOUlld troopa '""1und up operatJons tn CAmbodJa. Despite the upward sw1ng, last wetk w&& the sixth con1ecuUve week In which U.S. war dead totaled less than 100. 1111 staff released the lnlormJti90 to the news media Tueaday on , a D0111t- trlbulable basis. The in,.W,.OC. report linked ~ Daru to the purdw• or two we1pons In 11188 and 190. Surfing f.ontest In Huntington Goes Back on TV The commission accepted the report on noi.se abalemenl and asked Sherrod to work *Ith City Attorney Thomas Woodruff on a noise a bat ement nrdinanCtJ. No Ume Jim.it WM set on the project. Income Rebounds WASHINGTON (AP) -Personal in- come rebounded in July UI a $3.6-billion gain, the Commerce 0 e p a r t m e n t Surfers competing in the annuaJ United reported today. Income for the month States Surfboard Contest in Huntington was at a seasonally adjusted aMual Buch will be "on the tube" again after rate of $801 .1 billion. The month's gain one year's absence from television. compared with a decline of $1.5 billion Valley Bobbysox Win First Game Fountaln Valley 's bobbysox aU.st.ar team won Ha first 1ame Wednesd1y night in the state tournament in Buena Park. drubbing San Diego 13-5. The girls play again at 6 o'clock tonight against Navajo, an entry from San Diego County. The state double elimination tournament winds up Saturday. The Fountain Valley team will play every night until It wins the title or suffers two lows. "We thought lt was a real dud." he said. "It may have worked seven or eight years ago but now the land is too valuable." lluntington Mailmen Set 'Cleauup Week' Hwttineton Beach Postal authoril.iea are breaking out the paint brushes: and wanning up the mops in preparation for "Cleanup Week" in the post offict. "We plan to paint our collection bo1.es, some vehicles and generally clean up and clean out cur buildings," Postmaster P~e DiFabio said. The show, according to City Recreation i11 June and Parks Director Norm Worthy, will 1-~=========:;::::::::=======================:::~ be filmed by the Oianoel 9 (KHJJ crew under the guidance or surfing im- presario Neill CrQ6S. It will be televised in the Southern California, New York and Bo.!lon areas and then syndicated and dilltribuled lo other · U.S. and foreign ciUea, Worthy aaid. Under the terms of the proposal, the city would receive the first $10,000 groas from the syndication while Cr<m would split with them any further Income. Worthy estimated a possible income ranging from $10,000 to $50,IMXI from the syndication. depending on the quality of the aurf and the distribution of the film. The contest had been televised yearly by the ABC network which unapec:tedly withdrew Ill coverage tut year. This year, the surf show ia scheduled for Sept.. 18 to 20. Youths To Walk Alo11g the Beach -2,000 Miles Two young conservationists are going for a walk along the beach -a 2,00>-mile j1unl from La Joli.I to British Columbia. Noting thal automobiles are the targen contributors to the "pollrtion mess," Roger G. English, lll, said he and bis cousin, Valerie Mayers. 17, plan to en- courage people they meet along the way to do more walklng and lea drtvtn1. "Maybe by our example," he &aid as be left La Jolla Wednesday, "We can make people feel a little guilty •bout driving everywhere. 1bert are a lot of places you can wa lk to or ride I bicycle. II · 'nley said they plan to wallc between -tO 1nd 30 mlla a day and tD nourish lbe.,,.lvee on citied frull and olher health roods •l«ed in lbelr packl. "We plan to follow the beach whenever poulble," said Engllsh as he and Valttle hoisted the ir PflCkl on thtlr backs and &et off for points north. Special Sale EXCITING PARTY SETS by STONE and PHILLIPS 5 Pieces Reg . $575.00 NOW You fatmite Interior derigner tciU be ham to ossl1t uau . , • H.J.GAR~ETT fURNl"fURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS • -TRY OUl HYOLYING CH"lGE- Opat1 11 ... Tltun. & Fri. ''"' 2211 HARBOR IL VO. COSTA MESA . CALIF. 6'46.027r 11 -~~~ ................ ~-~ ....... .,..._,, .... ..., ..................................... ,,.. ... "~~ - DAILY ,II.OT Sltft l'Mfll The Artist at Work Mmes. Henry Meier of Carlsbad, F .A. Landee of Midland, Mich ., and Virginia Adams of Sterling, Mich. (from Jen) watch Laguna craftsman Jacobus Baas fashion jewelry at his booth on the s'&wdust Festival grounds in Laguna Canyon. Baas is one of 150 exhibitors at this year's Sawdust Festival. where infonnal atmosphere has proved a popular drawing card for both local folks and tourists. Youth Co1ivicted Of Slayi'!-g; Jury Weighs His Fate A Superior Court jury which found a Wesbninster man guilty of the killing 0£ a market clerk filed back into the courtroom or Judge Kenneth Williams today to decide if Robert Woodrow Clements should die 'in the gas chamber for the slay!J1g. Clements, 18, of 14811 Alcester St., was found guilty or murder and armed robbery late Wednesday after a 10-hour deliberation by the panel. He is one of three men who allegedly shot and killed assistant manager James W, Oates, S7, of Garden Grove, during the holdup last Feb. 13 of the Tic Toe market, 9457 Heil St., Fountain Valley. Clements. Jerry Lee Johnson, 18, of 14471 Titus St., Westminster, and Herman W. Grant, 23, of Santa Ana, were cap- tured in Garden Grove following a spec- tacular gun battle with police in an ora1tge grove that was witnessed by hundreds of nearby homeowners. Grant and Johnson have succet!fully appealed for sepa'rate trials before Judge Williams. lt is expected that those trials will immedi3tely follow dispositlo1 of the Clements case. Prosecutors in the Clements' lrial have indicated that they will settle for a life sentence for the we.stmin.sler man. U.S. to Finance Thai Troop Move BANGKOK (UPI) -Prime Minister 'fbanom Kittikachom said today the United States has agreed to help finance a Thai troop ~mmitment tG Cambodia. A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy declined to comment on Thanom's state- ment Thaoom, speaking to newsmen after the morning session of. the house of representatives, said, "We have reached an agreement that the United States will help finance Thai troops to be sent to Cambodia. We also have reached an agreement that the CambOOiB\l soldiers undergoing military training iii Thailand .will also be financed by the Un ited States." The Prime Minister said the agreement' was reached after a series of meetings attended by high-level Thai a n d American officials. Thanom declined to reveal further 1 details of the agreement. King lo Visit Egypt CAIRO (UPI) -King 1lussei1 of Jordan wiU visit Egypt Aug. 20 and hold talks with President Gamal Abdel Nasser about the latest development h' the Middle East crisis, Middle Eut New5 Agency reparted today. •saloo Israel Says Egypt Moving Soviet Missiles to Canal JERUSALEM (UPI) -Israel accused Egypt today of violating the Middle East cease-fire by moving Soviet an- tiaircraft missiles closer tG the Suez Suez Canal "the first night" of the ceas~Cire which went intG effect at 3 responsible for enforcing the demand. Defense Minister Moshe. Dayan stated Israel's position in an address to the Israeli Knesset (parliament) in which be said Soviet built SAM3 and SAM2 rockets were moved up towards the Suei Canal "the first lght" of the cease-fire which went into effect at.3 p.m. PDT last Friday. He said there were other missile movements "af- terwards." "'lllis is something or m I I i t a r y significance and not marginal shooting incidents," Dayan said a short time after Israeli diplomatic sources reported thal the missile movements may force the government to review its acceptance or the truce. Arab-Israeli peace talks under U.N. auspices were threatened. There have been. hopes the aegciUations could begin early next week. (In Washington, the State Department qad po impl~te ~~D .iO Dayan's speech. A sp0kesrl1jlll sala the U11ited States was investigaUng reports t,hat 30 trucks had moved missile equipment in Egypt towards the canal in the first four houn of the cease-fire. (There was speculation in Washington that Israel wW now hold up a formal answer to Dr. Gunnar V. Jarring, the U.N. Middle East peace mediator. during the investigation of the reported viola· tion.) "When we learned of the violation we turned to the United States and informed it of the facts of the violation and demanded the situation he restored and the SAM batterie!I be returned to their previous positions,'' Dayan !aid. "This is the stage we are now in -discussions between us and the 1.fnited States government on the basis or our demands to return the batteries to their previous sites.'' Diplomatic sources in Jerusalem said Tsrael may review its acce-ptance of the · three-month cease-fir!! which sµrted last Friday and hold up announcement of its representative to peace ta1Ja with Arab officials under U.N. auspices. Israeli political sources said the situa· tion wu causing a new crisis in Premier Golda Meir's cabinet With SOtrle mem· bers, including Dayan, regarding it as a breach of the truce and others including: Forefgn Minister Abba S. Eban , advising patience. · The cease-fitt terms, agreed lo by Egypt and Jsrael, said neither side would stnngthen mill!arJI posiliorul along the Suei Canal for three month!. Deadly Nerve . Gas Put Aboard Ship for Durnp SOUTHPORT, N.C. (UPI) -An old liherty !hip took aboard a deadly cargo of 11erve gas today aad officials said as quickly as the vessel is ready for sea, the port of Wilmington and ship channels in the lower Cape Fear ruver will be closed. Clearing weather speeded the loading of the vessel, and rear Adm. E. A. Allen Jr., Commander of the Fifth Coast Guard District, issued an order declaring the area a "security zone," closed tG shipping Friday through Monday, Aug. 14-17. The nerve gas Is contained in old rockets which the Army plans to dump in the AUantic, providing the federal courts do not intervene. A hearing on the matter was scheduled today before Federal Judge June L. Green in Washington. Sen. Ernest F. Hollings (0.S.C.), charged in a prepared Senate speech today that 1he Arn!y wa! guilty of groa neglect and "shocking and careless" prc>- cedures in planning to dump the gas tn the ocean. He said the operation. "flout.! the simplest rules of common sense, lgnores significant scientific evidence on the potentially harmful effects of this sea dump, and in so doing takes uMecessary risks with the ocean's future -hence our future." Gov. Claude Kirk of Florida .and the enviroJ11.me11lal defense fWld contend there are "many unanswered questions" as to the effect the dumping will produce on the environment along the Southeast Coast, particularly Florida. The 14.500 deteriorating rockets, en· cased in 418. concrete. and. steel vaults, are to be buried i• 16,000·foot deep water and Col. Jack Osick, an Army chemical expert, saya the salt water will make the gas "innocuous." Salt water dilutes the gas, capable of killing a human within minutes, into harmless acidll:, the Anny said. Silty Jongsborernen, given 16 hours Of special instruction on how to bindle the rockets, began loading the potentially· deadly cargo Wednesday aboard the rusth1g Uberty ship Le Baron RuSsell Briggs, which will be scuttled as a .. coffin" for the rockets. s~ Legal Again Barroom Bill Oka s Name in State After35 Years Spec tat lo the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Banned !or 35 y .. ra in California, except ori the swinging doors of Hollywood western movJe let&, saloon is now a legal name for a "COCkt&il lounge or tavern. Gov. Rooald Reagan signed a bill authorizing such a title. along with bar or barroom. Wednesday jn a modest ceremony at the Clpitol here. "Now I won't be able to get into one by mistake." said the governor, wbo chanced into a few saloon." during his career as a cowboy on the ~ver screen. He wns usually hunting the vlltain instead of a snort. The banning ol tilt three words came In 1935 as an interesting method of wuaaina tile stlngln& ...se ol defeat lor those who had endoraed and sup- $ the problbltlon of liquor itself. oon, bar and barroom, the theory hadf come to repri!sent sleazy joints with" swlngffig Clooit al\d a swinging clieotele thllt often swung at each other over money or the favors of loose women. Speakeasies, hookytooks, gambling, proaUtulton and bootlegging were all associated with lesa innocuous terms than tavern or cocktail lounge. Assemblyman John T. Knox (0.Ric:h- rnond), introduced the novtJ Jegblatl90 rectntly at · the suggestion of Don Bradley. The Jatt<r managed Gov. Edmund G. .. Pat" Brown's unsuccturul 19" bid for ~led.Ion. "'Wouldn't )'Oii like lo be !mown IS the man who brought the aaloon Nck to California?," Bradley wrote the legislator. "It would certainly place your name among the immorta.lJ ... For those interested, a 1aloon has been characterized variously. "Back Oten. a saloon was blown as a place for perpendicular drinking," observ~ Assemblyman Knot, who failed to add that some perpendicular patrons finally got horizontal. The committee that wrote the leglsla.· Uoo against bar, barroom Rnd saloon in 1935 included one teetotaler, Sen. Andrew R. Scbottky, Kno1 recalled . He nid be knew of two who tlpp)ed. no mailer what )'Oii callect the prem1'a, ''I guesit they all did,'' ht added. Sen. SCbottky himself wrote • definition <1f saloon when the original legfalat.lol) signed out of existence Wedneaday wu drafted. "WS-ANGEtES{UPIJ-=1!1Plile iiUlt leader Charla -· hta ah!rt tall oot and bis 1oog hair uncombed, appeared brteny on the atand at the Tate-LI.Blanca murder lrial today to prdlest what he claimed W8' miatrealment by bit jallera. Defense counsel lrvlng Kanarek bad moved that the court order aherUrs deputies rrom harusing the ..alendtt defendant. With the jury ududed, Manaon WU 'n the witness chair about 10 minutes, lita bands folded ..,.... hla chest. But he never adually wu questioned because ptoSecuUon and defense attorneys used the time lo argue minor polnta and Superior Courl Judgt Charles H. Older continued the proceedings for one week. Manson claimed depqUes forced him to completely disrobe aeveral timel each day then conduct what Jail Inmates tmn a "skin search" o(MI body cavities.. Interrogation wtth the jury present then resumed for star witness lJnda Kasabian, who was asked by the defeMe Wednesday how she felt about Ma.Mon and the three young women charged with him In the Tate murders. She said she felt "compassion" for them and wished they would "get up here and do what 1 am doing -tell the truth ." Her interrogator wu Ronald Hughe!, a roly poly man with a red beard who is trying his first criminal cue. He resembles actor Burl Ives. "What was the power of Charlie?" Hughff asked. Thal sent Manson's attorney, Kanarek, to his feet. "There is no power of Charlie," Kanarek shouted. H DAILY '!LOT 'I Stand· , ll'n'. Kiiiiblii1 ilio iifuilttid t t'.ilie----.r.-iliNi Mfiii~ tllole 16,000 from a friend IJld loclk "Did yqo tblnt -- it with her lo the 5\1ahn Ranch when the dev!lf" alto joined the blpplt cult ted by MalllOll. ''lie JO a.dovlltab man," w ropUed, Her admlailon of •"•ling the money "'lbe dtvtl In Ille bod1 al a maof" from Charla Melt.on, a friend with whom "Yes." ahe and her hw!band. Robert, lived before At the point when HU&IJa ,... ID- abe joined the "'Ma"'°n Family," was temlpted by Kanarek, the luyfr Jiii the most damoglng challenge lo her repealed bJO queatloo: 1tory ol why ohe joined the group. '•Whal -the.,..,. ol Cllllrtlo!" Jn the al...,_ leUlon, Hughes c:on-"I jolt wanted 14 do .. eryt!da( &ltd tlnued his CR* uamlnalton aud tauncl> all)'1hlnf !or blm." Disneyland Aides Brace For Major Labor Troup Disneyland OfficlaJJ were braced for a possible major labor walkout this morning, but the strike which could have closed part or all of the park failed to materialize. The latest threat to the Magic Klng<lom came Wednesday night when the 0range County Central Labor Council, Af'l,CIO, voted to sanction and support the American Guild of Variety Artiats (AGVA) strike under way at Disneyland. The AGVA strike, which began lasl Saturday, invoJves only about 1S to 125 of Disneyland's 6,000 empk>yea. Ina ~ In the walkout and put ellbl more on ootlce. , ' Management lnlJ.sted that the orlglnaJ strike by the AGVA membera vlolal<d the r»str:lte clause in the current ci:& tract. Painy Singletoo, former -..., alflj president ol AGV A. aald i!I an olllctal statement to the union, .. Tbil ii 1 legal •bike and hu been sinee its inceplicol; Today you have supported the ~ of our union and we would appreciate ,..Ing visual evidence ol your wpport in our picket lines." : The AG VA strike. over waa:es and conditions; involves most of the part's entertainers. A union apokesman dtlrpd that the ent<rlainers are poorly paid, with some receiving as llWe u fl.11 an boor. Manson, Uny in his blue denim prison clothes, turned to Kanarek and aaid: "Watch your mouth." Although the Labor Council voted to support AGVA. Disneyland officiala reported that ''There is no spreading of the strike this morning. Everybody is on the job, with the exception of the striklng .AGVA members." Approval for the AGVA strike by the Labor Council came shortly after Disneyland fired 2' entertaJners for tak· Contrad negotiations between AGV i ' and the management ol Dillleytand' resumed today. • av1ngs • • • • • • • AND LOAN ASSOCIATION FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX I for maintaining a $50022 balance in any of our high rate accounts -take your choice. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN.YEARS 179\ 150\ $100,000! ONE 6.18\ 6.00\ 5,000! TWO 5.92\ 5.75\ 1,000! ONE 5.39\ 5.25\ 500! %th 5.13\ 5.00\ ONE DAY ANIMPORTANTEXTRA Your money earns interest from the dayyou deposit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day. . . ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE FREE 1. Traveler's Checks 3. Tickets to Sports and 2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Tlcketron) 4. Many other FREE Services OPEN NIGHTand DAY ' Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:9Q P;M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA -BR11TOL llTREET • COSTA MESA, CALIFORlllA • PHONE 54Moetl • 1 • ' ' • • '' ,, ' ! ., ._ ' . . ' " l • I l ~(,.--------------------------·----- ------- - - ------ 4 WLY tn.OT ,,......,, Aoitont u. 1'10 North Viet ,. .-4-Chi_tf Hea_ils ~--°""~--An armed bandit took S31 in cash from Denver rmtRerine shop own-- er A.I..., Yriin. but ltlt behind a cassette tape recorder. saying: •'Keep the tape recorder; maybe it will make us even ." Police call- ed 1-0 Ille scene opened Ille r<>Conl- er and found two $20 bills tucked inside. • A mao prestige nrtounmt it tchtduled to open tte~ wttk on tht 95th floor oj the Jokrl Hem· cock Centn in Chicago. The location added an unusual prob- lem to thost nonnaUt1 auocia:ttd with such ventures. Wines, the aperts explain, wiU hi.Ive t.o be s"9'"td at ground leVtl because the .stoaJI oj the buildi'rtg in th«' wind would ruin fine vint.o.ge.s. • Mexico City motocycle police U . Luis Gor&llei: never bothered: to turn in bis uniform. -.. helmet. badge and revolver when be was fired from tbe force two weeks aco for CQ!Jtinued absence. Police de- tectives who caught him fininl a motorist Tuesday, afternoon· found out why. G<mzalez, who purchased bis own motorcycle, bad gone into business for himself. They found MO U.S. in rumpled bills In his pockets, believed to be the day's receipts. Police charged Gonzalez willl the usmpation of a ~ man's functions. • Ramsgate. EnRland romputlnR center employe Jimmy S.rrt:tt lit his pipe Tuesday and sent firemen from neigbborin~ communities racint to their trucks. A firm spokesman said Barrett's match had accidentally set off a new sen- sitive electronic Ure alann. "At least we know the a1~ "'orks," Ille spokesmanwd. "Blit we mq have to ban smoking near iJ." . . ' Police cars tourt-d Linton, England Tueadat1 alnti»Q' 1'~ti· denU t.o the eaCOJ)e of a bea1' from a local zoo. Actualtv it waa more of an appeal than a: 1DCTft· ing. The bear is a cuddlJI, 3· month-old cub cmiwtring to tht" name Mischa. • Mrs. J0.tn Hawkins of Farnham, England flies a red DaR from her clothesline when her big tom cat Maxi ls out on the prowl. Neigh· hors have complained Illa! Ille cat. which wei~hs 24 pounds. has at· tacked llleir pets. • Morning afler morning. preciae- Jy at 6:30. Ille wall o( an ambulance siren split the sleepy quiet of a Miami interstate extiressway e:zit ramp. Mrs. R. L. Fleming, whose home faces the ramp, became SU· spicious of the regularity of the emergency calls and telephoned the ambulance company. "The ambulance company told me that a night shift ambulance driver who lived a few blocks away from me would sound h.is siren so his wife would know he was coming borne and put the e~gs on," she said. The siren doesn't sound QUite so fre- quently anymore. For Paris PARIS (UPI) -North Vtetn1ra a .. nounced todOy lhal Its clllef nq0t11tor at Ibo Paril taJY. Xu .. 'lblly, Is rc1uP> In( !ram Hanoi to <ad a lhree-mooth boycott ol "the deadlocked I'<'"" <on· """1<:<. 1bt ~ on ~·s ~turn came at tbe end d the 79tb teSSion of the talks, a meeting in which no procress was reported. Ambassador OIYid K. E. Bru<:e. ap- peari.,g for the -time In his role as alief U.S. Negotiator, called for re- "'1ine lalb. The bead ol the North Vietnamese delegation, Nguyen Minh Vy, said there wei:e no "positive results" from the meeting. But 1bt uoouncement o( 'tliuy'i return WIS teen 11 signilicant. U.S. officials have Wei that hll return was an im- portaat indlatar ol North Vietnam's nqotlatlng inlentiom. "We have ~ived news tbal minister of stale Xuan 1'.buJ will aooo bt back. in PW." NgtzyeQ Thanh Le, the, spotesmn for North Viebwn'1 delega- tion, said at a news conference. Le was answering a newsman's quest.ion as to when 'Thuy was returning. Le did not give a precise date for 'lbuy's return. 'Ibe announcement bad been expected following tbe appointment ol Bruce to 9Ucceed Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. Lodge resigned lul Novem- ber. More Bruoe'a appointment, the U.S. delegation was headed by Philip C. Habib u acting chief. Thuy walked out In May lo p!'Ot<sl Nixon's failure to appoint a new Ammcan delegation clliel. During the meeting, which luted 31/• hours, Bruce told the communisll he did not accept "Posing your demands as preoondi1ionl which we must aceepl if these disculslODS are to lead ~· a<cordlng lo U.S. spokesm<n. Bruce called for ''practical''· diacussions of the issUes "In a genuinely conciliatory• '1Jn0$phere'' and said the U.S. continued "to await some sign you are rady to cooperate in thia manner." Vy, lftu calJin& for tile !alb lo be -adjOuined for rClle week "To give ·the Arnltrk:an delepte more tlmt -for reflec.. -tioo,'' told~. "I regret to inform you that.the new American chief delegate merety stated welkknown words of the Nixm Admlrila1raUon. I have the feeling . the dlaCunlons are far frun being ravcnble to positive rtsulta ... ' Uruguay Dragnet Search Started MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI) -Al leut '15 persons have been jailed by a 10,DOO-man dragnet searching for two lddnlped diplomats threatened with death by lefhring terrorists, police sources said today. The virtual door-to-door hunt. backed by a Uruguayan government suspension of constitutional rights allowing poUce to arrest at will. brings the total of ''pc>lltical" prisoners in Uruguay to an estimated 225. Terrorist! who call t h e m s e I v e: s Tupemaros have demaoded release of all of Uruguay's political prisoners in exchange for I.be two hostages, U.S. farm expert Claude L. Fly. 65, of Fort Collins, Colo., and Brazilian Consul Aloysio Dias Gomide, 4 I. A Tupamaro threat to kill the hos~ages if police draw too close did not deler the search by 10,000 police and soldiers. Letters from the victims to their wives indicated Wednesday that they we:re still alive. AnoUle:r kidnap victim, U.S. police ad- viser Dan A. M..itrione, of Richmond loci., was found shot to deatb early Monday. 'Spiro A9nude' Susan Peckinpaugh of Santa Monica jumps out of the water willl the latest of Ille Spiro Ag· new merchandise, a T shirt de- picting a nude vice president witb his foot in his mouth and the name "Spiro Agnude'' un· demeetb. ABM ·Foes Claim Formula Found • For Victory Push WASHINGTON (AP) -Foes of Pres.f. ~t Nixon 's Safeguard antiballistic missile system, claiming they may h•ve found the formula for victory ia the ashes of two Senele defeats, will mount a final drf've "next week to restrict ex- pansion of the system. But .,_Safegtiard s~rten. w ho rriastmniMed the defeat of a bid to carve S322 million and two ABM sites from the program, aaid they have the votes to wtthstald any challenge. The third effort will come on an amendment by Sen. Edward Brooke, (R- Mass.) to block construction of two ad- ditional ABM !it.es. The funds instead woukl be spent to improve the two existing sites . Brooke said he would call his amend· ment up for a vote next Wednesday. "I think the oppositlon to ABM has hit ils peak and that we ca• now move on to other things," said Sen. John Stennis ( 0-Miss.) floor manager of the bill that includes expamion of Safeguard lo two new sites . The Senate rejected Wednesday by a 62--31 margin a bkl by Sen. Harold Hughes (0-lowa) to kill all Safeguard expansion funds ucept those f or rtsearch eftd developmelll. Then, by a far-slimmer 52-47 margin, it ended a drive to cut $322 million from the President's sareguard budget and restrict the system to the two sites approved laal year. The amendment was sponsored by Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R·Ky.) and PhiUp A. Hart (!).Mich.). Brooke's proposal would allow funds now earmarked for geographi cal ex. pansion of the system to sites in Missouri and Wyoming to be used to improve sites already authorized in Montana and North Dakota. Mostly Sunny Nation • Ill U.S. Hotspot for Second Day in Ro1v is Las Vegas-108 M..., """'91111 ......... Lllflt .,..l1blt wlndt """' tM l'l'ION!lf'lt '*'" ~ loll wt1let1¥ • 11 II llnolt It! 11te~ f!Odty .... TMlndrr. Mi.h ....., '1, Cialttl ~ ,..... ll'wn .. .. 1t. lnMftll fMI_.,,_.. ,.,,.. fPM .,,. .. w...,~, • ..,. ,., .. '"' '.. • J;tl. ""· .. 1 P\1'11 llkll'I .•• ._ .... t rOO 1.11'1, •.I -..nc IOw • •• 11•.1.in. ,,, .... """" 1t .. l .lft. '·' ~ tu ... &.It •.'"· St11 7,411·'"· MOofl ., ... f. It•·'"· v.s. s--"' Tlltl't WW. flttl' llllttlllM 1111 1fflnn ,.,,,_."""' WMt "*' of '"' -tlOfl ,..,, Pr.Cl,ltlllllfl It. C«lflMill N fwe -··· n.w. ........ .,. ...... .,_. -tlYl?'f ~ tht ~ Alllfttl4; 11tlt .. Thtlllhn11tw1tt ...,...... t<11""'1C -..U· ... ,... "odr.'-.,.., '4111n1M1 """ ,..1n1, •• ~1"'•" et .i11« ,,.. -"""'· TM 11-!NI llM ~ Ntw aMi.NI Wit -IM _,,.,.... Mll'IM .iirr • ""' ~,,.....,. •tt111•n '1'tflf Norttlwll Mfllne, T .... klltrw:! POl'lloii1 Ill !he St11111!.,...,I («ll!f"lllM ""'· OeH'rlt l'ltd ...... r-.. li.t •I nltlll, l lYtro•, C•lll, hH • ft 11<!11,... r.,.dlnf llllrlM Ute Htl~ ~ IM llour1. 'tM 11o1tliji)') ~"°UOI Widntfdf¥' ffM' 1M~d•Y•n•"""'w11L11 \/"'" Nf'I., 11 IOI. TM 01Pernr1ttt low I T.,..peNt11re• M!llll l.w Prte. ·--" .. A.lld'lortM u " Alllnll " " llMtnlltld "' n 11'-"'•f'ck " " llolt• ,. " l!iGll<!n " .. Clllt•~ " " Cir..:; Inn•!! .. .. Cll!~l•NI " " ~ ....... " ~ t1~1ro!I .. .. E11rt111 " " Fort W6rt1\ " " •m~ , . .. "4111 ... .. " H61>o!v!O ...... ... " k•-(lfv • .. l.11 \l"h '" " ..,._ .. n ~l1ml IMCfl .. " ,,..,,'* .. .. " Ml rww-"l " " Nll'# Grl•nt " ,. N-Y0!1t " .. O.k!11M1 .. " ...... " .. ..... lttbltl "' .. "'lltftlll'lll .. " "'""""""' .. " ,.,_,. , .. " ...,, ... " .. lllCI Ill/ff "' .. ... "' .. ""'"""" • " St. t.euls N .. $A11 lll!t Cltt .. " S..n D~ .. .. .knit 11 ......... " " Stnll ltl'bt.r • .. " S.•lllt " " lll'lk•""' .. .. '""""•! •• .. Wtll!I,...,.,. " " .B52s Pound N: Viets SAIGON (UP!) -American Wllf1>1lnH Jed by wavea of BU Stratofortrealtl dropped hundreds ol tons of bombl on jUJ!8lts ll'OWld fire bue O'ReUly todlf In 1 INllalned tllorl In Ult a fiv...tay siege lbal has cost the tile of its Soulb Vietnamele commander.' Soulb Vletnameoo headquart..-a said 91 eommiinlst aotdlen hav. beeo kilted -• fliUte c:onlirmOd by body count -In a<llon around O'RoUly since la!t SUOday. Field commanders estimate anolller JOO slaln by allled air strikes and ortillery barrqes. South Vietnamese losses at O'Reilly w<n placed al nine ldlled and 4t wound- ed. The dead Included the base com... mand~. Maj. Nguyen Van Van. He died today of wounds suffered in a Communist mortar attack. 852 a"e\\-"I drop~ nearly 500 tons of bombs on North Vietnamese posjtk>ns around O'Reilly, teaming up with mtaller jeb whlch raked tht jungles with rockets and machine gun fire. One flight ac- cidentally bombed South Vietnamese linM. , f\.filitary spokesmen said U.S. F4 Phan- ACROB AT THIEVES 'LIKE IN MOVIES' NEW YORK (UPI) -A gang of acrobatic burglars who swung on ropes from building to building duri"ng a SI million series of jewel thefts was stopped in the act Wednesday night by police using an electronic devi_ce developed for night fighl.ing in Vietnam. .Police captured one man and recovered $240,000 wotth of rings stolen from the offices of the Botell Ring Co., Inc. on lower Broadway. They cocdoned off a aquare block. around the building ln an uosuccesdul attempt to trap four other men who fled. "The1 were fantastic , real pr~ fessiooals, like something out of the movies," said Sgt. Thomas Connolly of the police Safe and Loft Squad. Flrul• Olto"'ltl 4 rtr lrtn 11 1 n••• 5 H 8111,01& "'"'113' l.l.T. • .... .... •• ... -BUICK, OLDS, CHRYSLER, PONTIAC ~~~~~~20!! OIAMPION :.."'.."' AUGllENT 2 MOH910MATIC . n~28!1 Costa MIN Firestone S~o,.. I 475 E. 17th 5t. -646-2444 HOURS: Me•.· ht_ I e.M. te 1 p.111, -s.t .. I e.!ft. to S· I'·"" • • tom jell 1cddentally bombed 1 Soulb qaln today u JI bu nurly tvecy, 'clay Vletna"*9• unit opentlng llx mn .. eut for o, ""k. • ol the mouotalntop -· ldllln( one Tllo blue Is r'll'ril!d 1urroundl!d by IOlditl' 11111 wouodini It olben Wed-• up to 2,000 North ·v1e11uunae , wbO neaday. • mllltary ...,... ~Y are trying to ael11 The U.S. ~ .. Id lbe accident die 11\slallallon in a compolgn lo rid was under IJIVostlgal1on. , 0.. area of alllei! . nitln.! for lbeUIJIC The cpmmand allo ft!>Cll'led the loN Communlll aupply riluies from La!e 111to of a UHIH Huey helicopter over• the Soulb Vietnam. Laotian sou'U!!h! paabandlo w~. • Fitld reporCa also oak! lour U.S. 11 was the l9lb ·u.~ 1i...a11 lo<t ovtt Marines were killed and 18 "'.l)llllded Laos aince March 10 wbea aucb louu, Wednt.sday when a leatherneck unit were first reported. one of the crewmen ,. operating below D~ Nang set orf a was killed. . 16Smm sbeU rilled as a booby trap. The BS2s Dew · five raids Wednesday lt occurred 19 n'llles aout&soutttwest of night and today over jungles three to ~Da Nang. four miles $0Uthwut of O'Reilly. The North Vietnamese around the O'Reilly base, 26 miles We3t of Hue and 12 base shot down a U.S. Army observation miles east of Laos. came under North helicopter Wednesday, killing one of ill Vietnamese artillery and mortar attack crewmen. * * * Returning Viet Refugees Leave Cambodia PHNOM PENH, Cambodia fUP IJ - The last of more than 200,000 Vietnamese refugees in Cambodia left for South Vietnam today • The: dirty gray South Vietnamese lan- ding ship Nha Trang slowly steamed from its Me.kO!l& River mooring carrying 2,000 Vietnamese in its holds and on decks. Gaily-<:olored larpiulins p r o t e c t e d children al their mothers' breast wtUle dogs barked. The old, their toothless mouths bright red from a lifetime of chewing betel nut, hunkered down and stared stralgbl ahead. So.me of the children bore festering sores on faces and bodies. Bundles containing the material gains of generations V!ere piled on the wharf. Next to them Cambodian soldiers gaily put up bunting on a newly erected wooden stand for official ceremonies marking the end of the repatriation. Fits Many CAIARO, COUGAR, FAIRlAIE 4PLY 1570 IYLOI CORD · 1%1."" 7 .S.S.1' t.:-s.• IUCKWAU. F1MIM ...... Thts •• Pits Most . DODGE, CHEl., IERC., POmac . °"'"'"" ·~ Fl ..... ~ass 4 Ply 11ri1t GM . ~· Huntington Beach Flreston• Store 16171 B•ach Blvd. -147-4091 HOUllS: Me•.· fri .. I e.111, te I jt.111. -Set., I ..., .. I p,M, I The repatrlalion of more -than one-third of Can\boclla's Vieblamese population was completed by r;&e deadline of Aug. 15. Linh Trang, a beautiful IS.year-old girl, looked back with tears sparkling in her deep black eyes. She is one of two daughters being sent to Soulh Vietnam. with her widowed mother. She was born in cambodia, like ller mother and many other Vietnamese. Never has she seen Vietnam, the country authorities now tell her is home. "We do not know where we are going," she said. "I go without hope .•• I don't know what will happen. ·I do not know what to expect." Most of the refugees left Camb¢i.a on South Vietnamese naval flolillas that took two days to wind the 50 miles down the Mekong to the border. Others went in sampans and wooden barges. ""-FORD, CHEV., PLYMOUTH Fl"""' 1675 ···•"' ,..U.ll ...... 11 r.,Jl.lt .~ .. .... Cotta Meu-J1rry Hall 1762 N1wport Blvd. -646-5019 HOURS1 I•·•· te 1:30 I'·"'· -Set., I e ,1111. ,. S p.111. I h • • ' Fo1~••ia\i11 Valley -VOL 63, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1970 . . " 1xon, ·.OS James F~rquhar Dies .. Pioneer Huntin gton Editor Suc cumbs at 80 James Farquhar, pioneer newspaper publi!ber in Huntington Beach, died in his 1leep at his home at 333 Crest Ave. W.ednesday night. He was found dead at 9:30 lb.is morning. Mr. Farquhar was 80. As publisher of the weekly HUflilngtoo Beach News since September, 1927, and a past president of the Huntington Beach Rotary Club, he was one of the city's major personalities. Every week, he wrote a column Utled "Oil" in the paper in which he often reminisced about personalities both in and out of Huntington Beach. Mr. Farquhar e.1.celled in the old styl~ of personal journalism which be started as a yOWlgster back in his home town of Ida Grove, Iowa. He is survived by two sons, George S. of Huntington Beach, and Willoughby of Anaheim. George Farquhar is managing editor of the Huntington Beach News. Services are pending at Smith's Mortuary, Huntington Beach. Mr. Farquhar was born March 12, 1890, at Ida Grove. He was educated al t.he University of Chic<::go and went abroad in 1909 to write a serles Of travel articles. He was a reporter on the Chicago Ex- aminer and wrote many stories on stage stars of the day. He later was classified adverUsing manager of the Chicago HeraJjl ,~ in 1917, was classified ad> v~-~ manager for the SeatUe Post Inte~. -· ~ ~t,.::~•e:.:15~ reaw::e cali.d ~ •. or ' DAILY '°ILOT, SUff '°"'" DEAD.AT IO J•m•• F•rquh•r Business.firml in the· Qllcigo, area and .i:so·eatabliabed a movie ~.1 lfe 'Wu a 'fouhderi at 1tlie JI Club of Chicago ud co-founder of the famed -Girlie Club-o&Arlliti, 'WI'ilerJ aDd Mllli" Ex-CQnvict to Answer Wife Shooting Charges Ponce said today they will seek assault with lbtent to commit murdel' char1es agairuit an ex-convict held .in conned.ion with ·the smiper-sbootin& .of b1J }fUnt._lngton Beach wife. -- Elmo Williams, 45, of Sarita· Ana waii scheduled.· to appear i11 West Ora11ge County Municipal Court this afternoon to answer charges that he gwmed down his wife, Madeleine, on the parch of her house near midnight Tuesday. An ex-convict, just released from 10 years of prison, Williams was arrested at a Santa Ana motel about four and a half hours after the alleged a~tac~. His 35-year-old wife, shot 011ce 111. the left chest is recovering today at Hun- tington t~tercommunity HDspital ~~re she is reported in saUsfactory concbtion. Mrs W'Llliams, a resident of 1M66 Bolsa ·Chica Road, told officer's she had Surfboard Hits Lakewood Girl At Huntington just come home from 'ff()rk when ft saw a mur.zle .flash coming frorn j'ODe' of the bushes IW'TOllllding. her bo\lae, Sh4! was felled on the.porch. General Motors Pays Off Nader NEW YORK (AP) -General Motors Corp. ha! agreed to pay consumer ad· vocate Ralph Nader $425,oOo, in his in· vaS!on of privacy case, his attorneys announced today, Nader sued the. nation'a largest auto manufacturer four years ago for some $2 million to compensate for what he claimed was "haraS9ment a n d in· timidatiOn" and invasion of his privacy. 'lbe case, which the attorneys said was setUed out of court, stemmed from Nadar's attack in 1966 on the failure of aµto manufacturers ... including General' Motors, to design aafe can. General Motors, Nader's suJt. con- tended, had hired a private-investlgltlOn agency, Vincent Gillen Assoelatu, Inc., to inquire into th elaWyer't prJVaft; life, ciaos. As a boy he printed his first newspaper at the age of nine and called it the "Drama Era." He purchased a half·iltterest in an lowa weekly in 1916 and added a paper a year until seven papers were aCquired, in- cluding two dallies, The loWa City Republlcan and the Cedar Rapids RepubliCu. They all operated under tht trade name Farquhar Publlcetions. He founded the newspaper columns "At tile Sign Of the Seven Seers," and "Hell Bot." For many years, he was a Republican county chairman in Iowa. Mr. Farquhar purchased the Hun~gtm Beach News Sept. l, 1927, and published It up to biJ death. He was a member of the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce in HunUngton Beach for many years. · City Councilman Ted Bartlett, who came to town the same year as Mr. Far- quhar, said his }opg-Ume frleod was "always a solid citizen, pluggilg away for what he thought was best." Todaf, ,another long-time friend, J. Sherman, Denpy,, .a ' forqier g~aJ , manaa~ of the. Hun\iQtllll. Beac~ Corn- puy, wls.to have ~triMr .. F~ah.tr.t.o · a surprbe luncheon at' Xnott'I' JSerry , filrm with Ull~~. WlilferJlnoll< , 'Mr. FarquJ¥ 'liii':'thlstolJ •!.~' troul>le, bil flrsLmljor-atlfd:~ .... . l • • . -;~-.~ Charges. Dropped Against W Qman In Fraud Ca'.se A Huntington Beach woman charged with complicity ~ tht · disappearuce of 11&,000 lrom a CoSta Mesa aerospace plant walked out of """"' today, freed of all charges. Charges againstMrs. Ethel R. Schlock~ er, 26, of 8402 Danbury Circle, were dropped in Ra.rtm-Judicial District Court. The woman was arrested July 17 along with a fonner controller at Master Specialities Company, 1640 MonrOvia Ave., on charges of embezzling the funds. Mrs. Schlocker was a supervisor in charge of disbursements: for the plant. Charges still stand against Carl M. Koster, 40, of 2921 Catalpa St., Newport Beach, who remains free on $12,500 bail. Koster. who bad quit and been hired by a Lo5 Angeles firm as controller, is currently awaiting his own preliminary hearing. Company investigators went to Costa Mesa police after audlting the books and discovering 118,000 unaccounted for over a period of three years. Specialtle1 Company, 1540 Monrovia Tbe:y allege that checka made out to to various indlviduals in denominations from a few dollan to severaJ thousand -were diverted and ca.shed. • . . • OFFi c~~ iio~~~li; R~111iu;..iw.~sttb~.ci,i~"il-"#.~Lr .·. · .In, F'ountliin.V•lloy,. Patrelli nt With ·o·,fCH'ol..,,fi.vor: --: · . . . .. . .. ' ' . Vcilley Ldw lflen Get Italian Cy<;les ~~ . By TEl\RY. COyn.LI!: Of N 0.UJ l'lflt tMrr The pbot.ogr•pb'e·r as~~ OUloer J\emiUard ro mount tjlti 100:p0und, 75bcc Mo~ Guzzi cycle for a f!w pictures. Fountain Vall'ey's new motorcycle of· fleer climbed 'on the' big rna~~ine and swiftly lifted the klckstahd With his left foot. "Okay, now giv~ me one of thOBe . action shots starting the bllte. You know, lift up and then push t.hat ·starter down," 1 aaid the man with the camera. • There was ·a . quick· whir • and · the ' machine was purring like a young ~un-: tain lion. Officer Robert Reminard'hadn 't moved. "What happened: 1 missed that," aaid the confused photographer. "No. It's an electric starter. 'Mlia but· ton on the handJe," repli~ Remillard. A new age baa dawned for police · motorcycles, especially . ih Fountain • Valley which just bought its first two machines two week! igb. · The city has llhlfted'to the new Italian bikes, lighter than the standard 1,000 · " pound Harley-DaVi4sons used .. by ,mO!t poi tee· depvtmenu.. · · . Moto>~Guzzis aren't brand new. in''tbe police'SCelM!,1but their popularity ls aro• idg, •particularly in newer ·1101ll'ce depar~enb jnst starting motorc)'tle · patrols.. IJ'he Foontain V.alley . Poli~ Department is one. '"ll's •a' light bike compared · to the others: Easier to handle,"'Remlllartl ex-· plained. He•caine to the. Foulltain Valley force two Weeks ago from ibe• Laguna Beach Dep.artm(!nt,. where' he :also· rode Moto Guu.i b i k e s. Newport Police recently have switched to the Italian bikes. .. · Total cost to ouUit Fountain Valley with a motorcycle patrol was about $6,200, which paid fOr , two bikes, two radio set-up$ and mlsceilaneous equtp. ment. "They're a I~· cbe-.P,er th8c Patrol cars and tmor~ eff!ctJ~ for traffJc con-· trol,'' said' POllct 1 Chief· c h a r I e's Michaelis. · • . ·FouritaJn. Valley -'lim ·employ ti; 'two bikes . primarily durh)i 1 th~· d~y. One ' Crom 7 a.m. to l p.m.; 'Ule •otber ·trQm A young Lakewood girl nearly drowned off Huntington Beach WedJ!lesday af- ternoon when she w1s struck in the throat by a loose surfboard. Terrie Hart, 14, wu listed in guarded condition this morning in the intensivt care ward of HWltington lntercommunlty Hospital. Motorcycle P Ian Tabled noon to 8 p.m. . · . 'MOtorcycle patroll itart1 offkiial .dQty Mondloy w1th:Olf1cen ·IWi!Ulard alid vie: tor Deutlcltmounttd :oo 1be 'new' c~let: :Some -of the featurea ·on 'the bikt. -besides an electric .atarter -.ate Miss Hart was pulled out of t.he lllf'f • mile aoo ooe·half north of the pier by Lifeguard Keith Vogen, who ad- ministered artificial respiration until an ambulance arrived. She was rushed to the hospital where AA emergmcy tracheotomy was perform- ed and lnlemal bleeding stopped. City lifeguards said the girl had "- swimming with a friend when a wayward surfboard flew at them. The friend duck- ed but Miss Harl didn't, lifeguards Aid. 1be accident occurred ebout 3 p.m. Divorce Law Rapped JUAREZ. Mexico (AP) -Prtlfdent iGuatavo Diaz Ordaz' plan to outlaw quickie dlv<rctt in Mulco would cost their bortter c:r..y $3:2 mnuon a year, ,.Y' the man In charge of the municipal nnance1. • Huntingron BeachDirt Riding Dilemma Delayed By RUDI ~Kl Park a private rac. !aclllty near Gothard or,... OINr hit•• Street and Talbert Avenue for family Motorcycli9ls In lhe lktntington Beach offroad riding was shelved since the area may have to wait .another month lease on the field is scheduled to run for a eoh1tioa to their 41rt ridiag dilem-out in about a year. ma. 'The lessor isn't sure he will renew RecruUon and parks commlssioner11 it aod that might put il:1 oo shaky wbO were to~ make a r!CobmiindaUon ground," Worthy saJd. on a cycle. track Wedne.Bday night were Jim Buchana11, speaker for a group stymied by lack of a quorum. of motorcyclists In the audience, urged A recommendation by Recreation and the city to shy away from Its oil !i<ld Parks Direc!IJr Norm Worthy to coavert projoct "becat11< it would double the an old oil field into 1 riding area was accident ra~." tabl.S unUI the· commluSotl'a ·mf4til\I .. They'd be runninc on pevement/' neJt month. ,_ ,, , ..., said, Swrhh•n. explaining to oom- The, llih $treet •ijd ,_ A """'~..,.. thet minibike ridera would area, Wortht eipWned~ Cobkt ~ 8'J'I. raihier run on dlrt. rk:~ oil by lbtl,clty and W11119'~ "1·-boooatly !eel nol enough bas lie<n course llJd oat, uclultvel)"'for'lllinibike done. There ii a sreat need for a ""· perman~t type of rliflni faafllty," he Uaaige would be limited from .ooe to charged. -iwo day• ioil.lally. Robert Owen, another motOrcy~lat Another proposal, which would have claimed the oil !!<Id projeci "couldn't expaaded the elisting Hunlinatoo Cycl• poaeibl)o work" alnce ·Ibo mlnlbtker> - ·' most of wOOm do not possess driver's · licenses· -would have no way to aet there. 1 He IUQesled the Huntington Cycle • Park faciUty be expanded and a bufl4lng . acquired. wbe": the kids could Blore their minibikes and check · them ,Out • befQ" rldlni.l· . .' . • . Tha~ proppsar· waa cballeoged by, Mra. · J.oab -JobnsOn who · told eommis:slonm • !bar Ille ·noile •and 'dust from the OxUting. flclllty, Is • alrtady ·"Wlbeartble:"'-Slii 1 ~ 1n·1 j(j.ellnaillr• petition lo>abp-: port h!!r , charge. . , ~ . J ' . Tbt same objection was itlO \ra.tltd . by. otto Haller,. wbD, armed with a. · 50-tfgnatuno petition, prttest<!I apen., merit dWellers were bothered' by·nobi~ and dust lnto•tbe eveni~·hoprt.1 . 1 • • • · The. recreaUoo department , •rod motorcyellata·bave been orod<ldg i.ptberl to atatillab a riding aru ofnce mi emeraency ordi11111C< vtrtually ellintoaled · off.,...d riitin1 wltbin tho HllotlngtM Beach city lfmlts.. • • . .. . an · etectnc aire·n -wlilch teictib' tun volume eVin •wtille-the bike '8 ·at a · stand!tilll lilbter 'radio unita, and' radio mikes built into tbe· beldlet. The bikes' ahoold be 1 goiod for 'about : 46,000 miles: or two-.and·•·h•lf years each, Chief,. Michaelis aaid..A patrtil Car 1rivels about 50,00o mllea bdore wear:in,g Out, : but generally does I~ ln a year. Remlllard palSed on a few 11ps about ~Ing a moWC>"C~. ofbC~i" · ; "'\ ' • ' 1 ..Alweys1 dismoWlt on .the .. rJCht'<aMe • of the ,.bike. I' keepa .. you -01d ,of the · Ian~ of ·1n1r1c., •e<I )I lhe~p;ryon ,)'Ou . '\OP~-to •!>bot-you, lit_ )1l"'! «int clear &roUnd'tO-do jt~ i • r "'. ''VOii iilO b.Wj lo ·be in6reJ olen. ' Yoo're !Ooking•tol .tralfit vji>llllor1, but · hove .to he carefUI -ill.-1ra1nc "'°"il't g~tyou. . , ... 1 •. · ··"PraCijce 'stow t\irns,h ht! adde<{. ''l'bey'ro · infp0rtan1 \n Uie' ibondllng' of • lhebti:e'." '· • ·,:' · • ' • Romllloril alllo expltil5ed why· of~'l". ol,l<n ride. doiri> the wlllte I"!• \>r the -ldtt ol :the slrtet. ••c.n 'or.latter their . grease In ~ '-"Iller IJI the traffic' lane. It &its preily 1botd!10/t,!'> : I · · • (· e Russ Chief To ·Attend . U.N. Meet LONDON (UPI) -Soviet Praniet AJnei N .. Kosygin plarl:s to meet ~ dent Nixon and other Wettern leaden: in New York early in October, thuf ~ • '1lDllnlt --virtoa111 certaio, East E-~ts aaid l<\day. .. The -ww' bl !lie UoN. 2llh anniversary meeting In New Yort wblcti world· leaden 1fill attend. Kosygin apparenUy would prt:fer 1 Bi&'. Foor power·· .,,,__;t 'th · ................. wt . N'.r.mn and the premim of France and Britain to a bilateral conference with the AmericaQ chief exeai.Uve.. The diplomats indicated that behind' thJs prt:fmnee lies the Kremlin's ap. parent desire to avoid charges ol an alleged "ganging up" of the superpowen by r&l)ging the Soviet Union publicly on the aide of the United Stat... The ~ U.N. . -ia for October I~. meeting ~ Diplomatic feelers were e:r:peded ta be put out shortly. ~ """"'inp ~ p&renUyare~......_. · -r type. of the projOaed....,.. :n,,. ~lho scope. . ' "!"!"* ""' Ill -~""'*'~ B.atit ._ -time ago tbat't>e 1itll go to New v ... k. He alao wu eipected to ~ with Ni-. Oil the ilceuJon. • 1'llm. ls oome doubt ho"°"' abiJu1 French Prealdent Goqes • Pbmpidou, wbg ii not ;known to have ~ greet ,09thaatum f... another' vlsH to New York after his disturbing OxperJenco durl/lg bis. recent '.lrlp there. But ap. parenl!y 00 final declslon bas r.et beell -~.lll_Patti:.' I •.•. 'I . i'O.\liJ>idou. is to-pey ·an . olll&r 'VIII!·' 16 the Soviet uru... u. the , firit lialf' of ~ wbieh may ·clttermine 'tiII • lurtber .. moves: , · '.U a tolar-power· ~t ~ fm. practJcal, a fa~to-face.rmetmg betWeen ~tabl ~ .. Nil:M . appeare d e, we. sources aaid. .They aaid there ls ... lol•to • ...._. and latest inte:matJonal 1 deV~ more than WMTant in excbance·of ......,?. , of the highest level. . . .,:-;1':'. ~ .By then the Strategic Arms Llmila~ · Talks (SALT) between RuSsia · ,;,, ' Amerl~ will ·have rea'cbed 1heir fiiTst cooclusJOOS, and the MJddle' East Reace Probe . will have advanced llifficteirtly '. to proJect the chances of an extension · or termination of.the present ceaae-fjre. the sources ·said The Far Easi scene, including' aoo'.ve all the Vjetnam· war, also were exPecled to C?me under review, although the Russ_1ans lat~ly have shied away from any peace lnitiiUve tor apparent Ja~ of sufficient inOuence in Hanoi. Pair Win Primary HARTFORD, Coon. (UPI) - Gubernalorlai caDC!i<flite Tbomaa o J, Meskill and Senatorial aspirant Low~ ~· W1ecker · Jr. wily defeated tbei~ oppootnts Wednesday in the ~first Republlcan primary in CoimeCtkut'i hiatory. . Oruge Weatllel' , I ' l Flliered sunshine ls ~ word for Friday aloni the Orqe t.ui YAth low 'clouds provldJna the ffJ. lr&Uon' arid' IOwerihg the (eui~ .. ture to about '12 IDCally and a further Inland. INSIDE TODAY ( _,....,,,...._..,,..--------------------------------~ ~ ... I l Rock Pile Rocket ' Dave SU>ffer of LlJuna Beach may have ridden the wave of the day _Wednesday "'hen he bounced down the face of this wall at the~Rock Pile on the north end of Laguna. Lifeguards report surf is up generally &long the Oranee Coast. It has been building In most •pots for the p81t two days. At popular surfing spots such as the Roc)t: Pile, sets of :waves ranging in size from four to seven feet were reported toda y, with oc~ castonal "biggies11 like this one. Pronaote Tourism Chamber Weighs A commercial heliport In Hunltrqton Besch? Undersea gardens'! Or hydrofoil trips from the city peir to Catalina'! These are IOITle of the kleas the t~ism commUtee of the Chamber of ComJJ'lerce ii working on. Committee chairman Lou Evans reported on the proposala at a meeting Wednelday at the Sboraton Beach Inn . lie aaid th.It tbe commitktl WU fttt- dying the feasibility of aa air service Planners OK Car Wash- WithPumps linklnl Huntington ~·c~ to Los Angel" and Oranae County airport.! and the Newporter Inn helicopter pad . Parking space and a 200 by fOO fool area for the pad would be required. Evans thought there mlgh~ be room for a pad behind the Sher•ton Beach Inn. '"Ibe service would run from the Newp:Jrter, to the Sheraton and Los Angeles.'' Evans said . Chamber manager Ralph Ki~r pointed out that the craft would move up the coast over the ocean so there would be minimal noise disturbance. Kiser also reported that ch•mber members were planning visits to the undersea gardens in Santa Barbara to see whether• similar atlraction could be located in Huntington Beach. The chamber ls al.so sponsorin1 I hydrofoil trip to Cat.alina from the munic ipal pier Aug. 28 to detennine whether a regular service would be prcr Citable . Pedro Woman Beaten in Car, Thrown on Road Angela Davis Still Sought For Questioning on Guns Valley Hunting Sound Measures To Curb Noise Planning Conwnissloners gave Jerry Shea the go-ahead Wednesday nlatit to build a car wash slmUar to the facility his company, Beacon Bay Enterpriaes, is building at Fuhlon Island, a Newport Beach shopping center. "Many people have called our pro- totype in P'.a$ion Island the moat beaulflul car wash in Ameri<:a," Shea told commissioners. CommissiOD« Thomas Morrboo, an archltect by trade, echoed SM.a's words, saying he had seen the car wuh and was * * * Beach Downtown Property Owners ' To Meet Deadline ·A 23-yur-old San Pedro woman, l\rwPt irlto lht Lal(UDll Seidl poll<e atmon a 1 1:20 un. today by two motorist& who slopped to help her aftu &be was thrown !ram a car, told police lhe had been bel~ by a nwi who affered her a ride. 1be woman said her assailant, after sja_nowing "three red pills ," lore. her clptl:les and struck her several times ift the race wi.tb his fista, then tlnw her out on the roadway w.hen she resisted hil attempb to molest her sexually. En route to visit 1 friend in Orange, sbe .bad boarded the wrong bus and wOund up in Huntington Buch, I the wOman said. She had been waiting two ""'5 for .nother bu.! when the man dtDvt up and offered her a ride, wh1cb olie accepted. well! first to Anabelm to cblnge because the man wu having car !&. 1bon, ln!tead of UkiD& her to bul dep>t, u promised, the driver beaded for Lquoa -, ' 'lb<y ~ 11 a-~ cor. f"" ohe ~~and !1' -~I l "Pae rtd~ 'tiiil of1wtncll ht< wallowed. Ht then d(ove out Laguna Canyon Jtoad where the usau1t attempt war made. The woman Aid lile had asl<od to be let out of the car becluse he WU driving erratically aftu laking the pill5. After dumping her in the road, the man drove off down a di.rt 1lde toad, ahe Aid. Two paaiing.motorlsts stopped when abe balled tMm. tried unsuc- cesdulJy to catch up wllh her usallant. Uttn took her to the police station. Sbt wu given fint aid for bruiae.! on bu forehead and lip and al!o had chipped teeth, pollce Aid. 'lbt. woman said all the clothing she wu ta.kin& on her trip was left in her usallant'1 van, along with her purse cmblning $75. CO.ta Mesa police were requested to uvey the e1nyon aru by helicopter aM. pilot Jim Wagou and observer P'rlllk Upham wer. dispatched, bul forc- ed to live up the hunt due to foe. P.O. Supervisor Killed by Sniper l.()S ANGELES (UP!) -A supervisor 1t the Terminal Anna Post OOJoe was 5hot to death early today rui he left the facility. . DAILY PILOT ~Gs: COAIT PoU11.1•H•NG cOM• .. NY l•i..1t N. W•.4 ~ ............ ..,.. J eck ._ Curley Yke ~ .... ..-..... 1 111 ....... Tli•11111 K11•il Ether 1\t11111 A . M11rplli ~1 ~'"""" l"•-Al111 Oir.i11 Wot°''"" C-!y l:lflltr • Al!.trt W. 11111 ~t.ft!W HiWl ... I• a..• Office 1111' h1cli loul1•1rd M1lll111 Add•••i: P.O. 10111: 790, 926~$ -·-u ...... ~:Sl2F••fA-. C.I• M ... , nt WDt ... """' ,,........, '"'11: ml .,.., .... 1 a.i.wrC a.11 (.,,.,le: lQJ ..... $ 1J c.n.IM JIMI • ' SAN RAFAEL (UPn-Angtla Dav!J, the mllitani black former UCLA faculty mtmber, bu not boen heard from aiDce she -ldentlfled .. the Jlll!d-r (I( two guns uaed In • courtroom lddnaJ>lnl whldi left foor dead. Both Marin County authorities and the Californla attorney general's office want to talk to her about the we.pons, but no charges ha ve been filed. District Attomt')' Bnice Bales aald Wedlitsday otticJalJ want Mia Davis, a ConuQunilt, to explain bow the lllll' wblch a bougllt in 1161 and 11&9 ruch- ed Jcmtblo Jacbon. kllled lut w..it along will! a judp and two Su Quentin -durlnc a c:ourlnlom eacapo al· tempt. Alltboritlel allo w a a t lo talk to ·Man Kills . Self ,Shoe;ing At ~-girlfriend A mu who hid been sousht for the attempted murder of hi!: f o r m e r girlfriend shot him8elf to death Wed· nesday while being pursued by a police officer. Investigators said William H. Eskridge, 43, of 223flh: W. 2nd St., Sanla Ana, was spotted by Officer Ferrel Buckel! driving his car at McFadden and Grand avenues. Buckels pursued the wanted nu.11 with red light and siren for several b1ocks until Eskridge stopped on McFadden at the onramp to the Newport Freeway. As the shot • gun armed officer ·~ proacbed the vehicle he heard a shot aod saw the driver slump over the stetring wheel. Police said Eskridge used a rtvolver to shoot himself in the stomach. He died shortly art.er arrival at Tustin Community Hospital. Earlier Wednesday Eskridge had visited the Blue Room beer bar at 1211 S,. Bristol St., and fired a shot 1t barmaid Gean Copping, 43, his former girlfriend. She was not iljured. Mental Patients Beating Victims NEW HAVEN, Conn. (U PI) -The severely beaten bodies (If two mentally retarded girls were found Wednesday night in a New Haven park. The vk:tims were identified as Donna Schlilher, JS, and Sandra Medlar, S3, both residents of the New Haven Regional Center. Police Aid the bodies wert round at about 11 p.m. face down ln pools of blood in Weit .Rock Park. Both g~lt had been beaten about the face and head, police said. They bad been the abject of an in- tensive aearcb since late Wedne9day afternoon when 1 third resldent of the center, William White, 20. was round badly beaten in another section of the park. White was reported in serious coodltion at SL Rapbae!'a Hospital will! head Injuries. 85 GI Deaths In Week's Fight SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. <Jommand reported today that ~ A m e r I c 1 n Mrvicemen were killed ln the Vietnam war Wt week -Ille bigbell ,...kly toll aince June. A total of 760 America!'ll were wound- ed alto the hi&hest total alnce the w .. k end~ June fl, when 104 were ldUed and IOI wounded u u.s. aroond 1roops wound up operations In Cambodia. Despite the upwird awlng, last week w11 the a!slh CONtJCUtive week In which U.S. war dead totaled less Ill•• 100. Franklin Delano Alexander, a Black Panther captain In Lot An(eles. One of the two guns -a .38 Browning automatic: pistol pircha.sed In January, 1968. by Miu Davis -wu found in his apartment June 28, 1918, during a robbery investigation. It was later re- turned to him under court order. Meanwhile, in Sacramento, Sen. H. L. Richardaon diaclosed be was responsi· ble for tracing two of the 1lleaed San Rafael abootout weapons to Mi&s Davis. "11le infonnation we have is that Angela Davis purchased several guns, aome of which were \IMd iA the com- mluioo of the crime in Marin County 1n the tllllng of Judge H a I e y , ' ' lllchanltoD told .....,,,..,. RldlardJon Aid he c:olltded Ille in· formation through bis office as a state aenator IDd his membenhip co the Senate Subcommittee on Unamertcan · Activities. "I ha,. multiple --of ID!onn•tioo .., .W.=ve acttvttU. in 'thla atafe tha$ oilier ?le -1 pij>y to," said aµ f allfdjjjjl ~ for flit John Birch SocleJy. His lt.aff released the information to tbe news media Tuesday on a noaat· tributable ba!ls. The intelligence report linied M.Lss Davis to the purchase of -We&potll in 1168 and 1969. Surfing Contest In Huntington Goes Back on TV Surfers comptting in the annual United Slates Surfboard-cootest in HunUngtoo Beach will be "on tbe tube" again after one year's absence from television. The show, aocording to City Recreation and Parks; Director Norm Worthy, will be filmed by the Channel 9 (KHJ) aew under the guidance of surfing im- presario Neill Cross. lt will be televised in the Southern California, New York and Boston areas and then :syndicated and distributed to other U.S. and foreign citle.s, Worthy said. Under the terms of the propMa), the city would receive the first $10,000 gross from the syndication while CroM would spilt with them any further income. Worthy estimated a possible income ranging from $10,000 to $50.000 from the syndication, depending on the quality of tbe IWi and the distribution of the film . The contest had been televised yearly by the ABC ne-k which uaexpectedly withdrew Its coverage Jut year. This year, the surf show is scheduled for Sepl 18 to 20. Youths To Walk Along the Beach -2,000 Miles Two young conservationists are going for a walk along the beach -a 2,000-mlle jaunt from La Jolla to British Columbl1. Noting that automobJJe.s are the largest contributors to the "pollrtion mes.s." Roger G. English, 20, said be and hill cousin. Valerie Mlyt!rl. 17. plAD to en· courage people they meet along the way to do "'°"' walking and less dJ1ying. "Maybe by our example;• he said aa he left La Jolla Wednesday. "We can make people feel a little guilty about driving everywhere. There are a lot of pl1ct1 )'OU c1n walk to « ride a bicycle." They aeld they plan to walk between 20 and 30 mllet a day and to nourish themaelves on dried fruit and Olher health foods atOhd In their packs. "We plan to follow the ~ch whenever poulble," said English as he and Valerie hoisted their pacU ()fl their backs and 1et off for points north. ' Fountain Valley Js lookin1 far 30me sound measures to curb irritating noises in the city. But nobody knows quite how to do it. Clinton Sherrod, the city's planning director, told planning commissioners Wednesday night about various methods of measuring .sounds and determining iJ' they are excessive. "We'd like a noise abatement ordinance,•· he suggested. "But the city attorney tells me It wlll be quite a task. so I think we ahould consider it ror awhile before making a final ordinance." The method Sherrod presented was a mea!W'ement of the ambient noise level -nonnal noise level -of an area, then setting a limit of the number of decibels about that average level any ooise producing object could go. "I think noise abatement is a problem we're going to have in the city, especially in the iodu.slrial aru. And nolse C'Cm· plaints are the hardest to resolve, but it Is ~er U you have aome standards," Sherrod said. He told comml!sioneh he had operated a noise meter in Lompoc, but admitted usiag it "more for bluff than as a scientific instrument." The commission accepted the report (In noise abatement and asked Sherrod to W(lrk with City Attorney Thomas Woodruff (In a noise a b a t ement ordinance. No thne limit was set on the project. Income Rebounds WASHINGTON (AP) -Personal l.n- came rebounded in July to a $3.6-billion gain, the Commerce Depart m 'en t reported today. Income for the month was at a seasonally adjusted a1U1ual rate (If $801.11 billion . The month's gain compared with a decline of $1.5 billion in June imp......t. • It did, however, come with a few stri.ng.s attlcbed, including six gas pumps. "You couldn't do without the 1as pump!, could you?" James Dick, com· mi&alon chairman, uked. "Certainly not,'' Shea replied. He h~d been asked Uie same question for a sue in Huntington Beach three months ago, gave the same reply, and was turned down by the city council. "At least this will give three or our City councilmen a chance lo use five credit cards at one intersection." Commissioner Carroll Mohr quipped, referring to the posslbillty of five gas stations (In an In· terseoeion, and the recent controversy over council approval for four stations on another intersectioo. Shea's station was appr ov ed unanimously by tbe planners. tt wUl be built on the north side of Ellis Avenue, 210 ftet east of Brookhurst Street. Commissioners agreed the city needs a car wash. and reluctanUy agreed to the 1as J)tUTIP•1a1 an extra . Two ga.s·statlons currently exist at the Ellis-Brookhurst intersection , while lhe other two comers are vacant. Valley Bobbysox Win First Game Fountain Valley's bobbysox all-star team won Its first game Wednesday night ln the state tourniment In Buena Park. drubbing San Diego 13-5. The girls play again at 6 o'clock tonight against Navajo, an entry from San Diego County. 'I1'1e state double elimination tournament winds up Saturday. The Fountain Valley team will play every night unW it wins the tiUe or suffers two losses. Chamber (If Commerce members were told Wednesday that tbe Downtown Property Owners Association w i 1 I "probably" meet the Sepl 1 city-Imposed deadline to form a limited partnership to redevelop downtown Hu n t l n g to n Beach. Robert Terry, president of the a!SOCia- tion, said at a meeting at the Sheraton Beach Inn that the property owners cannot commit themselves to a developer until a partnership is formed. Owners of 50 percent of the property in a five-block are;i; downtown from Sixth to First streets have signed options to lease or sell the land. The city want.! these options to be committed to a legal entity. Terry said that by Jan. I, 95 percent of the property should be signed up. ';We'll know something by then," he added. The area concerned is earmarked In the city's Top of the Pie r plan for a huge parking lot. The city ts holding off condemnation proceedings agalMt the property owners to see if private en. terprise can redevelop tht area. Terry said that he was not impres.ed with an alternative pl~n put forward by the city to block off Main street and create a Disneyland-style mall. "We thought It was a real dud," he said. "It may have worked seven or eight years ago but now the land is too valuable." Huntington Mailmen Set 'Cleanup Week' Huntington Beach Postal authorities are breaking out the paint brushes and warming up the mops in prepar1tion for "Cleanup Week " in the post office. "We plan to paint our collection bo1e1, some vehicles and generally clean up and clean out our buildings," P()ltmast.er Pete Difabio said. ,S,eciaf Sale EXCITING PARTY SETS by STONE and PHILLIPS 5 Pieces Reg . $575.00 NOW You fat10rit.t ht.Urlor d•tlgur toill bt h4m to OJJfst vcu ••• H.J.GAR~ETf fURNITURE PROFESSIONAL IN!lRIOR DES IGNERS -nY oua HVOLYIN~ CHAl~l­o,.. Moa., DWL l Fri. l vtt. { ll 15 HAR!OR !LVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-027' 7 7 .. ---- • •• -. Ne ' VOL. 63, NO. '193, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·-THUR$tl'AY, AUGUST '13, 'f970 TEN CENTS Irvine Throws Support to Anti-airport camp The Irvine Con\pony today formally threw lu aupporl with those opposed to expan.sk>n of Orange County Airport. . In a prepared statement, William R. Mean, Irvine preaklent, voiced agree. ment with a 1t1tement maQe earlier this week by County Supervbor William Phillipa saying, "the exl.sting airport neither should nor could be e1pe.nded." 'Ille Irvine announcement came only hours before the County Airport Com- • mlsskm w11 acheduled to meet to formally recommtnd q:atnat e:s:pana1on. 11 follows by ·three days a formal resoluUon by the;clly of Newport Beach stroncly oppostna1 expansion. In his stai..,..1 this IDOfllil1i. Muon said Phillips' rtmarb are "in accord with our loog-belil pallUon-that Increased jet a!r traffic fnml ·the Or.,p County Airport ~ not compaUble with a livable environment.'' 'Ille Airport Copnnlsalon and subse- quently lhe County Board of Supervisors must act On a controverslal consu.1tanl's recommendatiorr that the Oran.ge County Airport upand lu faclllUes to ac- commodate additional commercial jet fiigbts. Mason said the Irvine Company's pro- posed master plan fpr the airport vtclni· ty, where the company is the P'inclpal tandowner, does not~ anticipate intenalfi- • cation of ua of the airport. "We have propoMd no major con>- merclal developments, whole success would obviously depend on increased jet commercial traffic," he said. He said, "IL is fOr this 1'U50D that we remain vl&orowdy oppoeed to Azimuth . Equities' plan to cnstruct a commercial development with one mllllon square feet of office 1pace in the heart of the Irvine Industrial Complex.'' ... Ix.on, OS Ill umm1· Said Inaccurate Air Group ~aps Jetport Report By PETER KRIEG OI .. O.ltr l"lltf Steff Cootmding that its own studies have found the ParJOnS report inaccurate, the Orange County Airport Flsed Ba3e Operators A.ssociation tooay joined the clamor to ban e:a:pansion of the air f.acili- 11· Tilt OCAFBOA recommended rejectioo of the COMUltanU' ttporl, propared in conjW'.!cilon wUJ;l an overall study of coun· Vpper Bay Testimony Winding Vp By TOM BARLEY OI f'-Deitf' l'Uet Sl•ff The Upper Newport Bay land swap trial moved into what may be HI !inal hours today with testimony of a 1tate Lands Commission official who wa.s respon!ible for much of the data placed befOre the agency when It considered the land u:change. Commission attorney Virgil K. Butler defended actiona of his staff in compiling material that led to the Commission'• en- dorsement of the exchange of 1S7 acres of county owned tidelands for 400 aa'1!3 of Irvine Company uplands. And the agency official rejected under close questioning by homeowner's at· torney Phillip Berry, any suggestion that his own wording of the calendar minutes which were submltted to th ~ssion tn November, 1967, would have led to the group's misunderstanding of the true con- ditions of public ownership and access in the Upper Bay. Berry aCCUHI the Irvine Company of deliberately understating the extent of sl¥>reline WldS-public ownership in tbe Back Bay. \ ty aviation, and also urged that the level of jet. air carrier service "be held to ap. pro:a:imately it3 current level, with a muimum of 30 air carrier j e t departW'C! ... At the same time, a longtime foe of airport e>pansion blasted ' proposal by County Supervl!or WU!Wd Phillips who sugg~ a COlllllY·"'l•ileter~um oe the Issue. Daniel Emory, chalnnan of.. the N<w· Port ~ Airport, N'qjao ~bit. met cC =. lald if~ to .be a. r.lmnduip, It shoq!d deal; airedly with • bood,lslue to finance upanslon ol the Orange Co!Jnty Airport. Phillips had suggested a county-wide vote oo a bond issue for a MCOnd airport, and lndlrclly urged pau&ge of It by saytog tht>-pr<aent facility. 1hould not be e:a:panded. He dJd, however, saj that If the referendum for tilt second airport is defeated, "then we will, Cll!Cfl again, be faced with lhe question of the magnitude of operations • . • at Orange County Airport.. Emory hit hard at thit .reasoning. He said it was ''lite puttln1 the. cart before the horse." The Fi.zed Base. ()pl!rators Associa· tion's statement made no d i re c t reference to the Phillips proposal, but dealt almost totally With recent in· formation gathered, including t h e Parsons rtport. It did suggest the need for the county to designate a •'reliever strip" for stu- dent training and the acquisition of an additional general aviatfon facility. The group urged action be lniUatl!d for joint use of El Toro as • regional airport or acquis.iUon of an alternate south coun· ty site. Richard' T. Brown, president of the Operators AssociaUon, said his group's findings and recommendations have been forwarded by letter to Howard Lathrop, chairman of the County Airport Com- miss.ion. The commission ll ICheduled to act on the c:onsultant'1 recolnmft>daliolls today and Is e~ to 'reject Chem In lu nport lo the Board al S.pervlsors, whlcb (See AIRPOllT, Pa .. I) I " 1 . , , . . ' •• •. • DA.llN,,,~~~~~lt~·~ ONE 'NEWPOR'I' TRAFFIC ·PROBLEM : WESTllOtlND DN •COAST HfGHVt'AYJ'WEDNESDA'Y't'-4T"4l15 -P.M." Bumper 1o llumpor Into tM s.ti"'9' Sun Botw-Jombtr.O Rood. or\d lloy slde' Dr vf · Ch~rges . Dropped Ag ainst Woman In Fraud Case A Huntington Beach woman charged with complicity In the disappearance of $18,000 from a Costa Mesa aerospace plant walked out of court today, freed of all charges. Charges against Mrs. Ethel R. Schlock- er, 26, of 8402 Danbury Circle. were dropped in Harbor Judicial District Court. The woman was arrested July 17 along with a fonner controller at Ma!ter Specialities Company, 1640 Monrovia Ave., Oil charges of embeuling the funqs. Mrs. Schlocker wu 1 supervisor in chill< of dlsbunements for the planl Oiarces · aUll stand against Carl M. Kqoter, AO, of 2921 CIWpa St .• Newport Seacb,-wbo.romalm Im on· 112,!00 ball. ' ' ' . -: ' . 1 Irvine Company Pledges Help in TraffiC Crisis A promi:.e·of "full cdoperation" with the city of Newport Beach in solving it!I pending critical traffic problems was i~ued today by the Irvine Company -regardless of the future o[ the PacUic Coast Freeeay. · · The company pledged to help in the · planning and development of a transportation system ·to hand.It! the com- mtmlty's "Increasingly critical trafrlc Reed!." Gilbert W. Fer~n. vice president' of corporate communications, sald the pledge is made n1ardless of -the 'fate' 6f the C9tJlrilverilal bill ' to · ellmlnate the new P1cifJC Co&.1t Freeway Uirou.gh Newport. . The bill, sponsored by Assembayman Robert E. Badlwn (R·Newport Beach), is schedul~ for hearing before the Senate TransportaUon QnnniltR.e Men. day after• a• series of poatponeinents. The me?sure bas already pissed tJ:>e Assembly. . Strong popular sul)Wrt · has bef:n gather'ed for 0,. bW bUI P!'O~ for passage in the Senate are still un1u)own. In his statement, Ferguson · cited remarks made at the NeWport Beaeh City Council HUna: earlier this week ~at the city 1bu at leiat /'i moral (elpOnalbllily" to'btlp~ a IOiutioo· i. ·the traffic ~em .that. woula be Created If the freewly 'bW la ~ued. And be cJIJJns 00 behall of a group Of Newport Buch bom-ners that the land swap is unconstitutional and unlawful and violates the public trust created when tht state of California deeded the wet landl to Orange County 40 yean ago. BuUer's comments followed testimony by area residents and conservationists in which the land swap was condemned u fatal to the ecology of the bay. Full-time Joh Studied · He . &aid bi1 fum'"1 planners IJld •"ilneers "will 111ist the City In any, way they can. "Whatever happens to Assemblyman Badkam'1 bill in Sacramento," Fergu90ft said, "Newport'• trarnc problems will (See PLEDGES, Pa1e I) Dr. Donald Bright of cal State Fullerton warned from the witness !\and that lmplementatlon of the land Pap would be "disastrous" for both u1'!o up- per and lower bays with widespread de!truction of Irreplaceable marine and wlldille unique to the area .... He urged shelving of the land swap issue to enable bioloilsts and marine enifneen to make intensive studies ot the impocl of Irvine Company d<ve!op. merit plans "before any irrevocable declajon1 are made." Bright tesUfled that mon! than U.llOO Orange County student.I of jlllllor high and high school level vbit the Upper Bay every year to study marine and wildlife and take l&Dlples back to their clusrooµi for further analysll. Bright's testimony WIS supported b7 Dr. Charles R. Greenlnt ot the Friends or Ne'NpOM Bay organtiatton ind author-lec- turer Wesley Marx of Newport Beach. Both men warned that development of the area under lines suggested · by the Irvine Company would mean con- alder1ble destruction ol marine and wildlife. ·' League of Cities to Research Mayor's Position J ewel Heist Nets $8;000 .· · The Orange County Leaaue of CiUe,, to- . nilhl ls expected to form a special com- m[ttee to consider a proposal by Newport Beacb M1yor Ed Hirth that would e•· panel the poo!Uon ol mayor In all of Cal- ifomia'1 medl11m and small..ci.ze cities. 'lb< Clty of HunUngton Buch Is the ooly Orang• Coast community consldu- in1 such I ,...ibllily seriously II the f>l''"'nt Umo. In ouUinlll( bis ~I. M1yor Hirth stressed that he doie1 not feel the mayors sboula lie gi ... any lddlUcml authority, lllCI that the caux:ll.cJty manqer rel•· Uonships should not be aller<d. Hoft\/er, he feels the need for 1 fuJl. Unie llllJ<Jli Is rapidly confrontlnl vlrt11- 1Jly every eity In the stale. He u id proposed and pending 1tat.e leglslaUon la forcing it on them. He poluted to widespread legislaUon that would create a variety of regional aut.borlUes In numerous areuJ Including transportation, air polluUon, bOlldina re&· ulat.ions, Ole co•.rl.Une, and more. "The dtJes will need tomeone on lhese ... interim governments the state may essary to adopt the change. form," lhe mayor 11aid. Charter cities, he upl.!Jned. would bave "U there are-no elected o(flclals avail-able, lhe lleils will be filled by state ap-to amend their charters. General law pointees. And we wlU have rovernment cities may have lo seek state legislation. Police are seeking sllBpecla todly In by appointment." Mayor Hirth said be fully expected the Wednesday burglary of l&.1100 la He said if the matter Is discuased in there would ~ oppositioo to lhe ·propo,nl cash and jeWeiry from a Newport Beith detail at the league meeting tonight in In IOOle quarters . home. Orange, be wifl urge lbe group "to thlnk · "'fl wOO!d cOst matt," ht said, "ixll t ' Burglan lpPllODll}' emol'd tbt• 1'olne 1bout construcll.. """'" rrom oor feel ~. Wiii be worth it to keop local coo-of Johri B. Cll>ijJf, IZl\I I.Ith SI-. ~Y standpoint, ao we dont' lose local con-trols. . • prying a acreen out of a do\fll.Aain lrol." · Ma1'JI' Hirth had Ont lndicatod his In-window and forcq tbt Window .,,... • He said the salaries of the mayors t.erut la sufh a plan nro weeks . ~o in ~ tok1 ~ b.LI' wV. 'iock- should· be Incre.,ed to be col!lll10DIW'al · , f on tlie p~ .of ~untlngtod eel· II'" -Whe\l tljle wot1I ool '•t with the •d<Jfllonal mpoo~bfllUes. .to-tea full-~ lllO)'Cr, but 1:311p.m. andhe~jbeboirpry •MayorHirthiaidhehadnolnteresl i !;'-manager. '"' · 1.-' be •· rr1·~ t .~ J b bi U ~-t ... . •~· Meaa M-Ro"" at ·>N .p.m. _w o -a .·-a _ • o ' mse • '"'"ever. " Yliad ~~ ·lb M:l.-~':' ~" apartQlenl ' '' , . e pld~a number ol problem• Ind •s--no'""' e .,. ~. 1 . Included ln r the m"91lng ,~ •II :a sorted algnlllcaot details would have to ls,,jllready • fat•time j wit out 2.33 carat 10lltalre, d!•moftd rlnc worth be .1lu~led at length If the propooal Is 11J1iy." · well recelvtd and serious consideration He u.td ht putt In 40 hobta a week at an estimated $6,000. Alto listed u mlat- aJv,en to It. t being mayor. tng are lhm r1npv twa witches-, two A!"!>llC tbeJe, .he aald, In addlt\qn to . f Loguno . Mayor R1cl1ard !IO!<!b<ra H· pearl necklaces. a flOld charm ·br1C<1iet, 11~Mci salaries, would be me!hod of se. · pressed reaervaUons, Pointing oui he two pair or earrln&IJ $220 in cash and leallon of the mayor, length of le.rm and ~· did not fetl his ell)''• 1ize warr11nted tbt an undetennli;:ied · amount of ,CQSlumt 1tlllal procld....,, legal procedures nee. •"l"nded job. ' )<welry. . ' •• ,,. 1 " .. Russ Chief To Attend U.N~ Meet · . . LONDON (UPI) SoYlel Pltmler AJeUf N. Kaeyg!n plans lo meet i'nll' denl Nlloo and other Western leaded in .Ntw York early in O::tober, tbal makln& I summit -...... virtull7 certain, ~ Euiopean diplomats aald lnday. . The ocxUioa will be 1be U.N. 21th ._......,. ineelinl lb N<w York wbidl -'II ·~ Wl11 plleld. ' K<iifl;n --"1 ~ ""' .. f Bil Four ·fOW" -w!Ch Nbiin and Ille ......... ol ,.,._ ... ..,_ .... ·-•-.e-~ .....,. •.am.,. . _,. : n..· d!plcnlAli lndleaied ·.,,. ... ~ lhli ,l!ftl ....... "" Ille ::::.! ~ delire to . IYDld ~ ol ilJepd "Poein& op~°c>l ~' . . by rongJng lbe Soviet 1/-pulllfdf- On 1be aide of Che Udll.ld Stalel. . The spedal tltN. meetlnll fs ICbeduJO( , .... Ocbiber lf.Jt. . DlplomaUc f.,,W. , ;,.,. eJpeCled .lo "" 11"1 out sbortly. Sooie aoundJnp '•!" pmo!Jy 1111! almey under Wlf ·!cir .lbe typo of tile projocl.lcf m'IJ'ri!li and Its IOOpe •• Brililb Prime Minister Ec{ward He.Ith ~ """° t1n>O ago l!lat be will ,. to New YorL Iii .all<> YU,especled to. with lfuob dn'lbe _..., Tl>ert Is ~ . doubt hnw-ahoul Pttiident Gear ,,_.~..._ . . lei ... ._.....--. oot known to have e1p1 red great entbuslum for another vtstt to New York after bis dlslufblng...,.,.,.,. during his recent trip there. Bui If> par..,11}' no fioal decllion bu Yet been taUn In Paris. Pompldou la to pay an offictal vfsll to lbe Soviet Union In tlie Uni halt of Odober which may determine his furtlier moves. . If • four-power sUIDIJ\lt proved fm- practJcal,.a face-to-face meellng between, K""Ylin and Nuon I p p .. I r • d ••tnevitable, '' lbe IOW'cee aald. 'Ibey ' s8.id there ls "a lot to di!cuss" and latest lnlmlaUonal developments' more than wamnt an acha.np of views or the blgheot levef. · • By then lbe Slralillc ~ lJmltatlon Talks (SAL TY between Russi.I' and America will' hive readied tbelt >Brit eooclus'-, and the. Mfdclle Eat ,..!'!' pn>l>e will hive adnnoed · llU!li<lcnlljl to project the cblneee ol an ..t..Joo or tmillnatlOo of lbe .,,_i -.or., the IOUl'eel said. ' ' >. . • ' - -------------- ------:c--::--:-----------...,,,,...,,.=..,=----::-..,...,...,,..,=-:-.,...,--, . • 'Near Palm Springs 'Convenient Swpgap' ~· ' 1 - ~:Air~ortsilld · R¥ ___ · ed __ --·-Bay . Club· Buys • ' Desert Facility ' • c.m.111 •convenient s!Opgop," the pmidut of lhe Newport H.-Costa Mosa Board ol 11 .. 11ora Jw sharply at· tacbd the city Of ·Newport fM com- milsioob1& the WU..y and II.am airport -~SUldy. ' OllileJ F. Cole.-b)', writing In this ..etk's issue of the realty board's bulletin. "ScutUebutt," · was also highly crilleal ol moolts .pent~ Orange Coun-ty fW the even more expensl .. Ralph M. Pancms aviation study. CelOrwnrtl>y allepd the studles were made to delay ''the. nect~lly oC decisSon on coOt.roversial matters until apathy· create a •sate'-·climate of un-· .,,,,,_ •. "Should not our hi&hly educated, highly tra~. hiahly· psld admlniltr1ton and . ' =i;n Ooodtlct tlielr=e· I 111-llloM," eoi-orth' He lllld he lett' aclmln 11rator1 and leeillaton should "make thtir own studles, form their own opitdoos baaed on their own knowledge, commoi{ seeae and admlablraUve judgment, """'piing lhe !Uponstblllty as adminblrltive officers should dO, for their own actions and rdcOrtuntndaUons. .. Al 1ll!Ol.Dld opinion is sWJ unsound even U we p&id $100,000 for It." be &aid. "and aren't we tempted to uae it ~use we did pay so much and we must justify the eipenditure?" 1lle Parson; report cost the county IH0,000. The Wilsey and Ham awdy will cost Newport Beach Ml,000. DIJIJ1bulion ol Ille realty board's M'nleller ~ -·srumbles IM lll'#lllfl Iliad ~1y· <'OOlllC!llnen Monday nltht. One councilman Polnltd out later that it was the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce that had urged spendin& the money for the Wilsey and Ham report. Responding lo the attack, Newport Mayor Ed Hirth called lhe Wilsey and Ham report "very worU:iwhlle." Hirth said the city felt it wu "highly important to have the tochnical in· formation not avlilable In our own staff -to answer some ol the technical detail raised In the Parsons report. "I don't believe the consultant's report changed anyone's opinion," be 11ld, "but tt did give us the much«eded technical information." Fro• P09e J AIRPORT~ .. .Is the final authority. Brown ouUined biJ association's fin- dings' . Roa~ing Mesa Driver .Triggers Chain Crash "1be Parsons repdrt was found to be tecbnfcaUy inacctirate In a substantial PorUOO of Its dats. ·•Cooclusi:ons drawn from this data are 1hert!Ore subject to question, if not outright dismissal. "EVen assuming a merit, which we cannot ascribe, to the technical phase of ~the report. it topUy misses the philosOphy ~ which the airport does not, or 1lnd<r which It abould In the future, opuat.e. . ' "Consideration has only been given to lpublie air carriers which provide service to the community. No merit is given the ~service and economic advantage ol business and private aircraft which carry tu.Uy one-half of all of the nation's passenger air miln and, or course, lbe Vast majority of all type aircraft houri llown. "Only one option in the report does not reduce or totally eliminate the initial teason for Orange County Airport's ex- istence. That reason is a facility primari· l.r for business and private aircraft." i It Js apected that the Operators Alsociation 1tatement reached t h e Airport Commission thia l!IOl'nlng, prior *> its meeting. A Newport Beach Dlll1\af)'fnlD who told police he was watchlna the wrong traffic lill!tt sailed l'"° a Costa Mesa in~'!Ciion Wednesday nl&h~ causing a slx~-ar collision. Nobody was injured, but the damage was high. Barry D. McLean, 32, of 33& Catalina Drive, was eastbound on Fair · Drive at Newport Boulevard at 6:15 p.m., when he allegedly took tile -· sipal JOO yards ahead in nottbbound lanes tor his own. He ttill, however, ·had to cross the soUthbomicl ta... of Newport Boulevord lint, Police-Aid. !.'Ke blC-ooe car and then went crazy all °"' the road," Aid Mn. Aini E. Blabee, %7, of 289 E. 16th st., Coal& Me&&. one of the five other rn«otl.N inVolved. "! bad my 74-yeor-old father in the front with me.0 Mra. Blabee added. Po1Jct. .uid McLean's Car Went spinning out of control after nmming one driven by · Suan lo!eKlmley, 11, ol llO'I Goldenwest Ave., Santa Ana. ~ Emory's criticisms of the Phillips pro-3 C W P<><ai probably reached him at the same ounty omen lime. >In further delail, Emory said, "The T D , , ps proposal suggests that the voters C' UTttcf,Till/.P. d d~ ':'.~ ......... ou\d ilp;ll!, 1 , r Di ... "ll~;:;-_hei:.. 1ir.4ir Corit.P.st .. l'llea that the co1iO!Y will_ be 'I"""' to ..., " ., Ti' Orange O:tunll' :Alrpdtt. 1ift other ..,. • - " Emory said "H U,. vol61 Three Orange Cout women wtll be ' ' partlclpstlni Ill a lwo4ay air mce fn>m e not to enter t,be ~et ag~ then the Santa MooJca ;to hid~ Ore .• tv wll! ignore the wi>hes ol the efec-wli!Cb starts Friday. • • and will enter the J<t.l'ie anyway -Thon Grif/Jth of Coeta Mesa will co-at,~ "'1:i ~~b_I• }~d "?.~hill" 1 pilot for Von Nuys pilot Ellen ')'rlndle. eanw e, 11'1;: _.. • ps pro. Shirley Tanner and Cbrts Hoffman, both poses that-the number ol lllghts he doubl: o! Newport . Beach, ... entered In Mias ed, which mates the question of ex· Tanner's ctta.bria. · panaion academic. . Mrs. Griffith, an experienced air racer, "A> bu been the...., !or the past 10 baa.served as -director and W..tern yesn, ~ l'blDlps bu the cart Representstive, for the P-1er Puti before ~e bcne, Emory declared. Derby, the Jn9St prestig\ous evtnt of He pomt.ed out that Jt was the county women's air racing. wpervisors, "not the people of Newport Miss Tanner, a school teacher and Beach or Tustin, wbo decided that the licensed Real Estate llllesman, bolds a future of the airport bad to be detennin-commercial pllqt'a rating. Her nav(&ator. ed before deciding a second jetport is Miss Hoffman, ts an escrow officer at a needed. local bank and holds a private pilot's "And they d1rtd.ed the Ralph M. license, Panons company to proceed on that The Santa Monica to Independence basis" In its study of the future of avia· race is run like the Powder Puff Derby. tion in the county. The 35 planes have two days to cover the Emory then offered his referendum distance and the winner is selected on the proposal. ba'sis of the best handicapped time. "If the superviaors wish to hear from the voters they ahould move Immediately t.o place a bond mue on the November ballot to finance any further ei:pansion of Orange County Airport," Emory sajd. "If that ~ issl\• fail!, they should free2e the atrpart at the present level of service and get going with the develop- mtr1t of a jet-capable airport at a loca- tion where Community blight can be avoided." • DAILY PILOT OitAN<K COASf l'Uli.ISHtMt) COM"ANY ~·Mn. N. w •• 4 ,....,......, ..w 1""'1W.- J1ck R. Cu•l•y Vkll ,.,...... .M 0.W•I MaMltW ThoMCJ K••vil ~dl .. r ThoMts A. Mwr,.hi~• M_,lflf f~ltw N ........... -offke 2211 W1•t l11he ,lool•'•" Mctliflf AMN4fil P.O. a.,. 1171, t2&6J ..__ °"' .,,.., .............. ....,_. -.cti: m "-' ._ ~ 9'lcl\1 uvs ..... ~ ... ~-Ntrtllll~·- From Page J PLEDGES ... intensify until some kind of lota1 system is developed. "This system should consist of au levels of roadways, including Joe.al streets, county arterials and a coastal area freeway, somewhere," he said. "It ls a network that requires a areat deal of advance planning," he said. Fergu!on added thal the leadership in developing and implemenung the plans rests wtth NewpOrt ctflcials, "a burden tlley acknvwledged Monday night." "It is a tremendous resporuiibllity and one that mu.st be met before the com- munity is overwhelmed by the hundreds of thouS31lds of automobiles that are already descending on its streets, '1 ht said. "We are confident councilmen will do everything possible to expedite a solution. The Irvine Company will make all of its data available to them and auist them. in every way ~slble. "We pledge our fulle st cooper1Uon, no matter what happens to the Badbam legislat.ion," be Aid. Thief Makes Off With Clothing Up, up and 1wsy -t her l90 unllonm, but they went without her. TWA stewardeu Andrea UUganl. 33,' of 11$ '2nd SL, Newport Beach reported Wednesday that two of her unffonns and a c:oupte of pieces of lingerie were llfltd oil her clothesline where they bad been hU!ll to dry. Apps,..Uy the thief wun't satisfied With Mist Utlgard't clothe. and crossed the altey where aix bik:inJa wer. tlken oft the line •t the home or Sylvia Bobertl, 41, of 125 c-d SL ) The careentna: vehicles then coooected with cars driven by Joseph F. Nowak Jr .• 32, cf 1017 Boxwood Ave., Fullerton; Donna L. Clow, 28, of 15370 Swallow Lane, Westminster: Mrs. Bisbee, and &ger J. Delomic, 26, of 1904 Raymond Ave., Cosla Mesa. Pedro Woman Beaten in Car, Thrown on Road A 2.3-year-old San Pedro woman, brought into the Lal!IJl• Beach Pollce atation a t 1 :20 , .a.m. today by two motorists W'ho stopped to help her aft.er she was thrown from a car, told police 1be had been beaten by a man who offered her a ride. The woman a.aid her assailant, aft.er awallowing "three red pill!,'' tore her clothes and struck her several timea in the fact with his fist.a, then threw her out on the roadway when she reaisttd bia attempts to molest her aexually. 1.Ba, ...... V ' vt~t I lrillif•in Oran;., .~ • ..,,--l she hid boarded '"' "'1>lli' bu! and "1'U>cl. up =i l!antillgton Beach, tile: _.,,.said. $6( ba.t'"been<'waiUng :t)io\ hours for .another bus when the rlifn drove .up ~d ottered her a ride, wblcb alie accepted. 'niey went .first to Anaheim to chan1e cars, because the man was having car trouble. Then, in11tead of taking her to the bll! depot, as promised, the driver ' headed for Laguna Beach. They stopped at a restaurant for cof- fee, she relat.ed and the man bought "some red pills," three of which be swallowed. , He then drove out Laguna Canyon Road where the assault attempt was made. The woman said she had asked ·to be Jet out of the car because he was driving erratically after ta.king the pilb. Cement Mixer, Cycles Offered At Police Sale Three dozen bicycle.!, a cement mixer, a large supply of cocoa butter and suntan oil and a police motorcycle are among the items to be sold at the Newport Beach police auction Saturday. Sgt. Donald Picker said a minimum bid of $600 will be required on the 1968 model Harley-Davidson motorcycle, tnd ~ on the cement miler. The suntan oil and cocoa butler were among Items recovered aa evidence. in a burglary case. "It's an brand new and nevet been opened," he said. More than 175 unclaimed ite111! will be sold to the highest bidder during the auc- tion which will be held at the city cor- poration yard. S92 Superior Ave., at 10 a.m. A complete Inventory of Items ls available in the records section at the polict department. Newport Crash Injures Woman A Long Beach woman suffered a broken collar bone this morning when the car &he wu driving collided with an out«<ODtrol auto on 1 curve on Weat C..st Higlt'l'•Y In Newpori Beach. Patrolman ROOert Parker said Keith DuFault, 18, of S39 Walnut St. was travel-in& west bound approximately one- quarter of a mile weat of Superior Ave.t1ue when he lo.st control of hla car. sktddJng act"OM the double yellow Jine, and eolllding with the car driven by Judlth Mltchtµ. 17, ol Long Beach. Parker u.Jd there was no apparent reason for the crash but indicated DuFault uld he had been having trouble with grabbing brakes. MIM Mll<hell wso treated snd released from Hoag Memorial H05pilll. DuFault cuffered a cut lip In the mishap. • ' OAtL Y l"ILOT St•ff ,,. .. DEAD ·AT IO Jamu Farquhar J a.rnes Farquhar, Beach Pioneer, Succumbs at 80 James Farquhar, pioneer newspaper publisher in Huntington Beach, died in his sleep at his home at 33.1 Crest Ave. Wednesday night. He was found dead at 9: 30 this morning. Mr. Farquhar was 80. As publisher of the weekly Huntington Beach News since Seplember, 1927, and a past president of the Huntington Beach Rotary Club. he was one of the city's major personalities. Every week, he wrote a column titled "OU!' in the paper in which be often reminisced about personalities both in and out of Huntington .Beach. Mr. Farquhar excelled in the old style of personal journalism whJcb he started ~ a youngster back in his home town of Ida Grove·, Iowa. He is survived by two sons, George S. of Huntington Beach, and Willoughby of Anaheim. George Farquhar is managing editor of the Hunlington Beach News. Services are pending at Smith's Mortµary, Huntington Beach. Mr. Farquhar was born March 12, 1890, at Ida Grove. He was educaled at the University of Chicago and went abroad in 1909 to write a series of travel articles. He was a reporter on the Chicago Ex- aminer and wrote many stories on stage at.an: of the day. He later was classified advertising manager of the Otlcago Herald and, in 1917. was classified ad· vertising manager for the Seattle Post Jntelligencer. . · ~e orfgjnated an advertising feature called the Representative Bureau of Busines,, rmns in lbe Chicago area and 'also established a movie directory. ,, He was a foqnder of the 31 Cl~b \)f Chicago and co!fOWlder of the famed · Garlic Club ot Artists, Writers and Musi· clans. As a boy he printed his firat oewspape.r at the age of nine and called it the "Drama En.." He purchased a haU-h1terest in an Iowa weekly in 1916 and added a paper a year until seven papers were acqulrtd. In- cluding two dailies, The Iowa City Republican and the Cedar Rapids Republican. They all operated under the trade name Farquhar Publications. He founded the newspaper columns'' At the Sign of the Seven Seers," and ','Hell Box." For malty years, he was a Republican county chairman in Iowa. Mr. Farquhar purchased the H11ntington Beach News Sept. 1, 1927, and published It up to his death. The Balboa Bay Club aUbsldlary. Balboa. Bay Desert Club, has purchased a major int~t in the Indian Well Coun- try Club near Palm Springs, company officials announced today. In a re11teO move, V'4J' subsidiary also disclosed it wlJ.t join wtth a development company ~ constnld. a mulU-m.lllion dollar condOminium projf!('t adjacent to the ChllJllpianship golf.1acility. Tenns 0£ the acquisition wtre not dis· closed and a Balboa Bay Club spokes· man said the slr.e and flOtential cost of the master-planned boUsing comp1ei: have not yet been finallied. · The condomlniwn development, to be called Balboa Bay Des.ert Village, will be built adjacent to Indian Wells east- erly of Country Club Drive. Desert Village will be a secluded, pri· vatt commu!tlty offerini ,cqo\pfete • curity and easy acce:s11 to the golf course and other plarined recreational facllitles, club officials said . The new project, to be developed jointly with the Sandpipe~ DevelopQ'lent Cclmpany, ls expcted to cover·mor-e than 100 acres -0f property in the Indian Wells area , a company-spokesman said. Like the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach, Ule De11ert Village will be a mem- bership facility. A variety of combina- tion memberships to the Desert Village and Indian Wells facilities will be available. Announcement of the agreement to buy into Indian Wells was made joinUy by Richard S. Stevens, president or BBOC: Victor J. LoBue, president of Indian Wells and John Curci, secretary-treas. urer of JWCC. Angela Davis Still Sought For Questioning on Guns SAN RAFAEL (UPl )-Angela Davis, the militant black former UCLA faculty member, has not betn heard from since she was identified as the purchaser oC two guns used in a courtroom kidnaping which left four dead. Both Marin County authorities and the California attorney ge~ral's office want lo Lalk to her about the weapons, but no charges have been filed. District Attorney Bruce Bales said Wednesday offiCials want Miss Divis, a Communist, to explain how the guns which she bought in 1968 and 1969 reach· Parsons Firm Agrees to Waive Penalty Clause Orange County won't be pepalized S250 a day for not making a decision on alter· natives to use the Orange County Airport presented in a recent Parsons and Com· pany report. Co}lnty Aviation Di.rector Robert Bres- nahan told s~pervisora Wednesday that lhe 'Parsons firm had agreed to waive the penalty and to proceed with the other phases of the $l40,000 air transportation study. The unusual penalty clause was written into the contract, Bresnahan .said to keep the study roUing toward definite c011clu- sions within a six month period. Te penalty waiver, which is to be veri- The. penalty waiver, which is to be veri- fied in writing, frees Parsons to proceed include the PQMible use of military air facilities in th·~, county for commercial traffic and recimmendatlons or sites for a new general 8.viation airport, a metro- port and an air park. The county now boasts only three other airports in addition to the county facility. They are Fuller.ton Airport which is al· ready overcrowded and the small general aviation fields at Meadowlark in Hunting- ton Beach and the Capistrano Airport. ed Johathan Jackson , killed last week along with a judge and two San Quentin convicts during a courtroom escape at- tempt Autllorilles also w a n t to talk to Franklin Delano Alexander , a Black Panther captain in Los Angeles. One of the two guns -a .38 Browning automatic pistol purchased in January, 1968, by Miss Davis -was found in his apartment June 28, 1968, during a robbery investigation. It was later re- turned to him under court order. Meanwhile, in Sacramento, Sen. H. L. Richardson disclosed he was responsi- ble for tracing two of the alleged San Rafael shootout weapons lo Miss Davis. "The information we ha ve is that Angela Davis purchased several guns, some of which were used in the com· mission of the crime in Marin County in the killing of Judge Ha I e y , ' ' Richardson told newsmen. Richardson said he collected lhe in· formation through his office as a state senator and his membership nn the Senat e Subcommittee on Unamerican Activities. Tru:ee Appointed To City Groups The appointments of three persons to l"'o different city commissions has been approved by the._ Newport Beach City Council. James R. Gage of 67 Beacon Bay was named to the Library Board of Trustees succeeding Roger W. Hardacre, whose term expired June 30. Appointed to the city Arts Committee were Mrs. Harold J Phillips of 113 Via Yella, and Mrs. Francis L. Smith Jr. of 2039 Santiago Drive. They succeed Mrs. Dorothy M. Barry and Mrs. Penny McManigal, whose terms also expired June 30. All three new appointments are for four years. Special Safe EXCITING PARTY SETS by STONE and PHILLIPS 5 Pieces Reg. $575.00 NOW You favorite in terior dt.rfQntr tDin bfl happ11 to casist vou , •• H.J.GARRETf fURNlllJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS \ -TaT OUR REYOLVINa CHARat- Op'" M .... T1IWL & "1. ba. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6.C6-021r 7 I l~I I 7 I • ' . -Cosia Mesa • . oJ... • ... • VOL 63, NO. 193, :.i SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JHURSDAY, Alf&UST 'l'3, 1970 Irvine 'Fhrows Support ·to Anti.-aii-pOrt Camp The Irvine Company today formally threw its support with those opposed to expansion of Orange County Airport. In a prepared statement, WUliam R. Mason, Irvine president, ·voiced agree- ment with a statement made earlier th.is week by County Supervisor William PbWips saying, "'the Histing airport neither should nor could be eipanded." 1be lrvine announttment came only hours before ~ Count)' Airport Com· • m1sS1on waa scheduled lo meet to f°"'ally ,recomQ)end against e1panslon. It follows by three days a formal re;!uuon by the city of Newport B~ch stro~gly opposing expansion. In his statement this morning, Mason said Philli~' remarks are "irl a~rd with pur long-held position ~Ill Jncreased jet air traffic from the Qrmge County AlrpOrt is not compatible with a livable envir~mnent." The Airport Commission and su~ quently the Cotinty Board of Supervisor1 must act on , a controversial consultant's recommendation that the Orang~ County Airport ezpand Its facHiilea to ac- commodate additiooal commercial jet flights. . Mason said tbe Irvine Company's pro- posed master plan for .the airport•victnJ. ty, where the compaey 'ls•the,piinctpal landowner, dOes not anticipate iDtensifi.. caUon of uu. Of the a.lrport. "We have proposed no ~ajor com-- merclaJ deveiopment!, whose !llctft! would obviously depend on increased jet commercial traffic," he said. He said, ''It is for th.is reason that we remain vigol'OU.9Jy ropposed 10 AJimuth Equities' plan to cnstruct a cammertjal development with·ooe million square feet of ofHce space In the heart -0r the Irvine lndu!lrial Complex." Speaking on the al>port Tuesday, Supel'Vl1<>r 'PhWlpo' ·had , Aid . lb~ I technical ~ports .., . nolae bnpact lev.ls in Newport Beach had convinced him Iha the alrport had ttached !Is mu- imi.pn. expartslon. .. • He calJ<fotl;a ~~trofdlo'bond, -etectJOD. to fiftaftoe cominiction of 1 a/ ae- cood' alrport-in the county. Mason Mid be is "at the DlQment, , ' ..• 1xon, OS ............·umm1 ' . I• Said Inaccurate Air Group Raps Jetport Report By PETER KRIEG Of 1M .,_llJ Plltt 11.rf Contending that it.,, own studies have found the Parsons report inaceurate. the Orange County Airport Fixed Base Operators .wociation today joined the Costa MesfL Choke Victim Services sJt Funeral services are pending today for a Co8ta Mesa woman who apparently choked to death on a piece of meat Tues- day nigbt while dining oUL Mrs. Alma L. Boals, 38, of 2080 Newport Blvd., was pronounced dead Wednesday at 12:23 a.m. at Hoag Memorial Hospital after the incidenL A spokesman for Baltz: Mortuaey said the woman's. family bl traveling fr6m the East to make arrangement.,, and won't arrive unW early next week. The victim was eating at El Pescador, 401 E. 17th St., with a companion Who managed to remove part of the obstruc· tion and attempt mouth· to-mo uth resuscitation after :she began choking. Covina Boy Hurt In Freak Mishap A Covina boy, riding in the bed of a pickup truck, was injured wedn~y night in a freak Coota Mesa trattic accident that apparenU y bounced him into the air. Allan Courtney, 15, landed in the mid· dle of Sunflower Avenue at Harbor Boulevard, sufferil'!g multiple abrasions and other injuries. He was listed in good condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Walter E. Lewis. Jr., 47, or 330 E. Balboa Boulevard., Newport Beacfi, told J>OUce he was crossing" railroad tracks at the interesectlon at 8 p.m. whe.n the boy fl ew out of the truck. Officer Dick DeFrancisco was at a Joss to explain the accident, saying the tracks are flush with the pavement at that point and the bump would be negligi· ble. General Motors Pays Off Nader NEW YORK (AP) -General Motors corp. bas agreed to pay consumer acf. vocalo Ralph Nader 1<25,0lltl, In his In- vasion of privacy case, hiJ attorneys announced today. Nader sued the natton's largest auto manufacturer four years ago for some ti million to compensate for what he claimed was "harassment and in· Umidation" and invasion of b1s prtvacy. The case, which the altorne:ys llkl WJS seUled out ol court, :stemmed lrom Ntdar's attack in 1966 on the failure of auto manUfac::turers, inc::ludlng General Motors , to design sale can. General Motors, Na®r's suit con- tended, had hired a private investigation 1gency. Vincent Giilen Associates, Inc., lo inquire Into the l1wyer'1 private Jife. clamOI' to ban expansion of the air [aci:i ty. The OCAFBOA recommended rejection of the consWtants' report, prepared in conjunction with an overall study of coun- ty aviatiOn, and also urged that the level of jet air carrier service "be held to a~ proximately its current level, With a maximum of 30 air carrier j e t ~es." . ·Al tJtO lime IJine, i !Oo'g\lmo loo 'of a)rpqrt expanoion blasted a proposal· by County· Supeai!Or )l'ilJjam Philli'" who .Ugg<!lled a Otiuoi,fJride miir!itti; i>n ibe Issue. f PanieJ Emory, chairman oJ the New· port Beacl>l>ased Airport Noise Abate- ment C.Ommittee, saJd if there ls to be a referendum, it shoqld deal directly with a bond issue to finance eipansion of the Orange County Airport. Phillips bad suggested a county.wide vote on a bond Issue for a second airport, and indirectly urged passage of It by saying the present facility should not be expanded. He did, however, say that if the referendwn for the second airport i.! defeated, "then we will, once again, be faced with the question of the magnitude of . operations • • • at Orange County Airport.'' Emory hit hard at this reasoning. He said it was "lik~ putting the cart before the horse." The Fixed Base Operators Assoc ia· tion's statement made no dire c t reference to the Phillips proposal, but dealt almost totally with recent in· formation gathered, including t h e Parsons report. It did suggest ~ need for the county to designate a "reliever strip" for stu· dent training and the acquisition of ·an additional genera1 aviation facility. The group urged action be initiat.ed for joint use of El Toro as a regional airport or acquisition of an alternate south coun- ty site. Richard T. Brown, preside'llt of the Operators A.ssoci·i~· said his · group's findings and reco_mmeOda&ns have beeq forwarded bi lette'r to Howard Lath~op, chairman o \he County Alrpor( COm· mission. The commlsaion Is ~uled to •i~ on the consultant's tecodnriendaUons tO<lay and Is ei~eCI •to rejeCt them iii lls report to the' Boird of~Sqpervisors, which (SO. AlllJ>ORT, Pap I) Cleric's Flag • Still Flyi'ng· WICllITA, Kan. (AP) -The Rov. Maurice Hall, pa1tor of the Dell· roet Church of Christ, has flown the flq u-hours a day In front of bil home since his aon, William, wu kiDed in Vietnam t'W1> year~ ago. One ni&bt tut week the fiag was taken fmn its It.and and a note was left Nying, "Take the flag down at night U you don't your bead will be bbtm ln.11 Hall replaced the flag and the -nilhl It WU taken c1o ... again. Th1J time rocl:s were lefL The follOiiing night, llie pastor !ell the Oag flying, accompanied by a note explaining why. Aboot midnight, he sald, two "hippie lypn" knocked on the door and apologlud. •1ntey a&ked !or forglvene u, '1 the Rev. Mr. Hall said. " ' D.t.11. Y P;l.Oyi.hifl) ...._ COSTA MESA BROTH,ERS QANA lll;f;T}'AND DALE• ROBERT$,COTTON 'TO 'WDY" .. · · ', .'. · · . All Kids Wlll Got Somo ·f .. , •I C!><I• Mota, All Sfttts ffosf,lv•I S,undoy . . , Charges Dropped Against Woman In Fraud Case A Huntington Beach woman charged with compllcity in the disappearance of $18,000 from a Costa Mesa aer05pace plant walked out of cOOrt t¢ay, freed of all charges. Charges against Mrs. Ethel R. Schlock. er, 26, of 8401 Danbury Cire1e, were dropped in Harbor Judicial District Coul(L -' The woman was arrested July 17 along with a fonner controller at Ma!ter Spe(iall~s Company, 1640 Monnwia Ave., on charges o( embenllng the fwXIB. Mn. Schlocker was a supervisor in charge of disbunement.,, for the plant. Charge,I! still st.and aga!NI Carl M. Koster, 40, of 2921 Catalpa St., Newport Beach, who remains free on $12,500 bail. Koster, who bad q.Ut and bee~n hired by a Lm Angeles fir.m as controller. is currenUy awaiting bia own preliminary hearing. Company investigaton Went to Costa Mesa police after auditing the boob: and discovering $11,000 unaccounted ror over a period o( three years. Specialties Company, 184a Monrovia They ~liege tha t checks made out to to various individuals in denominatlon.5 from a few dollars to sev,ral tbous&nd. -were diverted and cashed. Burgl.ary Target Was Occupied .>. df·f.W'Old,hoy wandering by • ~ M... ..rvict station W-y night wondered w'bat was lntide a camper lnlcl< ptrked there and broke In · to find out. • What was Wide was the owner, Da.vld Stewart , 38, a mechanic who sleeps right there on the lot al 2S83 Harbor BIV<f .. •nd !Ill_ bgy screamed when h& foancl ool 'I .He Is In Oranie Coonly J....U~ llllll today, charged with burglary •. ' • Mesa Fli~g ·set All States Festival Features Fun Fun, food , music and festivities of all kinds are set for Sunday, when the All States FestiVal <!peru! In Costa Mesa Park with a record o-owd anticipated. Formerly known as the Old-Tlmer New.Timer Picnic. the scope ~ being e1· pal)ded alollg with a new name. The event kicks off the city's ·Sixth An- nual CUitural Arts Week, which will jn.. elude a variety of ~&JDS and presen- tations during tbfi fUbsequen~ ~en days. Regisllation begins Sunday -at 11 a.m., with prizes to be given to the oldest and youngeat.present, plus newest an~ longeSt city residents, largest family and olhen. Visitors may allo re'iister at the Califbrnia Federal Saving Md'Loan boo!h to win f~ helicopter rides, while children will get free cotton candy there. Pony· rldes and 1 ferris wheel will be available, too. The festival is sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce, Jaycees and city RecreaUon Qwart:ment, with belP, from a variety of ctu~ and agencies. A spaghetti dinner al ll for adulls and 75 cent. for children will be SttVed begin· ning at 12:30 p,m., accOrding' to Festival Chalnnan Hilda MCCarlq~. Besides spagltetU, bet dbgs, Jried chicken, corn -on the cob, watermelon, 'J>ie and cake and other goodies will be available at· the old-faihJoned'Sunday get- togelh<f. Mayor Robert M., lVllJon wlll •a\ld'ress the Picnicker• at 12:15 p.m.~ wiille--arnong other attri:Clloila ..W be a i.Jej6tiile hookup 'pi0vtdln1'aic1tance to .aii~ and relstlves anywhere.In America. , The ~ Is provided w flje CalUornla Mr . Nallona Guard'O' m;iDd Radio Relay Sqiladion atal!Oned lit £oola Mesa, plua Pacme Telt1>hon< Compony. A complet. lchedule for the day follows: 12:30 p.m. SlnglJJi Dollies Jamboree Band. t :30 p,m, U.S. Alt F0rce Pr'9etltation. 2:00 p.m. J)a;,y Dtnc:ors :and Marlschf S.nd 2:50 p.m. Prize Drawln&. (Sff £ESTIVAL, hJe I) Suspect in Mesa Murder ' Pleads lnnooent. in· C~tirt • r ~ ; f.'r Oiorpd wtOt lhliOllnl! .his wife to det!lh and woundlnc' a. male friend.,~ Costa Mesi 1 man pie~ inoocm to bOth oounts1 tod1y at b1a arrlngement Ruben Corratl{, 37, !Of 233.. fairway Pl'ace, 1wa1 ordered b~d in continued custody "vlthotlt bail a'fi/l scheduled :to retum,1" Harbor ~£!11rlct Court AulfSUp 'pn!Jmi""'1~•111· lto'wu umted All&;.~. one !IOur ~-:-Sylvia '<!oiti!tl, iii, waa abot tfrlce With a .25 caliber aut<.matfc pistol. Sitt WU scheduled to see police that ' ,. momlni about 11Jnlq alt..llllUl\ •aid batltry c0mplalnl agotnstiller •ail.and, who had allegedly slapped her •round the night before. Corrales was arrested -tis Newport •lloach, •ho;11y aller 8Wll'llmlll1 poOI con· • lrlletor ·Torit Newhard, .11,' /JI .tim· Stnta --'Maria St., Ji:Ountaln Valle)',' wal· shot 1n the ttomacb. .1 He °"'' admitted to HunUngton mtel'C<>mmunlly Hospital for aurpty arid ls recuperaUn1 •. ---- ' . ' ' \ less than enlhu1tastlc about the _.i· airport propoaal, • "The COlmfy alr~dy bas tw0 nia~ airports -Coonty Airport and El Toro -and several 1maller facilities. I do not know where another major alrpcl ""'1d pooslbly be li>cated' in the COUDIJ without ii Irreparably damaglna the u· isling environment:• be~tald. 1 "There is eertalnly no .room fOr oM on lrvlne land," be aald. e. Russ Chief. To Attend U.N. Meet · ' LONDON (UPI) -Soviet Premlei Aleiei N. Kosygin plans 1o meet 'Pre!Jo. -dent Nixon and other Western leaderC in New York early in October, tbua making a sUmmit coDference virtually CU'tain, East European diplomata Aid· '?daY. The occasion will be the U.N. 25tll anniv<rJaey meeting In New York wtllcb world leadeia wlll altald. x.o1&1n •Pl"!"!!lly W1lt!id m ' BIC Four powu aummit . wlth Nm. d the premlen o1 Fraoee and 'J!rllain to a bilateral CO!tfer..C. wllh ·lb8 Ainerlcaa chief execuµve., , , · '1 · '.l'ltf,;ep1"""11. !Ddlcat-d, aw ~ llllt ,,.... .. a. .. n1a Iha ~·· al>' ~ deslrt to •Vold '~ .. of ... illeled "gangiQ& ap'" of tbe0 1\1perpowtrl by fBPiing the SOvlet. Union publlcl,y dn the aide of the United stalea, The spe<:lal' U.N. meeting 'il acheduled for October 19-24. · , DIPl.omat!C. feelers were ~ .fo tie put out .abortJy. Some ~ ap- patehtly are alread)i und<r waf,for Ibo type . of the projected summil and ill acope. . British Prime Mjnlater Edward Htolb •nnbllnced !omt lfDie i110 tlial be wQI go to New York. lie alAO waa exi>6cted to·meet with Nlion oh the occuion. · There is some doubt boweva,. iboul French President Georges PoippidOu who is not known to have Qi,r!IJed' great enthusiasm (or another vlflt , to New York after his distUrbing uperleDei during hts recent trip there. But. •P:· parenUy no fin.al decision baa fet. been taken in Paris. · Pompldou Is to PIY an olllcld visit. to the Soviet Union In the lint ·hall of October which may detennlno hill, further moves. , If a four:POwer summil proved tq;a.. pracUcal, a face-to-face meeting between Kosygin and Nb:on a p p e I: r e d "inevitable," lhe sources saJd. They said there is "a lot to dilcuu'' and latest international developments more than warrant an exchange of vieWJ of the highest level. By then the Slratoglc Arms Limitation Talia (SALT) bet_,, Russia and America will have reached their first conclust00>, and the Middle Ea!! peace probe will have adv.need aufflclently to project the chances of an -., or termination of the present CNM-~ · the SOU1'eeJ said. Oruge Filtered sunshine Is the word fot FrJday along the Orange Coast with low clouds. providing th .. fil. trat.ion and' lowering lbe tempera.. lure to •boot 72 locally and 1$ !Urlher Inland. • INSWE TODA.'\' Prifon gila1'd$ run a conit.i &k of htar.t attackl and tli.rir ricttom cqntrib'"£• to i1tertond . prilon temion, Page' 7 .. -- • I -·--.. -- · "IL-_om_Y_P1_L_l1T" ____ c _____ .,_wu.,_._A_11111.Jt 1•. 't"i · ,. 'Convenient St:opgap' ' Airport Stud Ra-:-ed . . . . . . ·c.mnc U a "convenient stopgap," the pttaident of Ute Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Board of Realtors has sharply al· tacked the city of Newport for ~m­mlllll"'1"C Ille Wilsey and Ham airport tmpoct study. Oiarles F. Coleswortlly, wrlUng In thls week'• issue of the realty board's blllletln, "Scuttlebut~" wu alao highly CriUcal of moniea spent by Orange Coun· ty fer the even more ~ive Ralph M: Panom aviation atudy. Ooletworthy alleged the studies were m1de &o delay "the nettMlty of decmml on controvenial matters untiJ •Pithy creates a •sife· clim ate of un· conoem. "Should oot our hJib!Y educated, highly tralned, hlchly pole! ldminiltrators and * * * 11 .... r .. e I AIRPORT •.. 15 the final authority. Brown outlioed hia a1soclatiorfs fin· dings : "~ Parsons report was found to be tecbnlCaUy ln1ccur1te in a substantial ponlo1n>f lta data. · ''Caoausloos drawn from this dala are tbertfore subject to questlon, if not ~tright di.smlssal. t "Even ISIUmlng a merit, which we ll&llDCJt ascribe, to the technical pba.se of ~ report. jt totally misses the Jhiloooliliy· under -which the airport does not, or under which it should in the flture, operaie. . "Conslderation has only been given to public air carriers which provide service w the communil;J. No merit is given the aervice and ecooomlc advantaa:e o[ business and private aircraft which carry fully one-hatf of all of the nallon's P,1ssenger air miles arx:I, of course, the vut majority of all type aircran hours !{own. 1 .. 0nly one opUon In the report does not rfduce or tot.ally eliminate the initial ffUOD for Oranie County Airport's tJ· ~· 'rhll reason is 1 facility primari· lt !or bu-and private aircrall" ~I la eZpecled thal the Operators Atloclatlon statement reached th e Airport CommiasJ.on this morning, prior lecJal>ton cooducl .'.tbolr ow -i... vestJialiona," (;oleiwonl1y l\JIPlfld. Re said he felt admlnbtraton and legl!lators should "make their own studies, form their cwn opinions based on their own knowledge, common sense and admfnistraUve judgment, accepting the responsibility as admlni!Lratlve officers should do, for their own actions and recommend ations. 0 An UftJOWld opinion is strn unsound even if we pa.id •100,000 for It." he said, "and aren't we tempted to use it because we did pay so much and we must justify the expenditure?" The Parsons report cost the county $140,000. The \\'llsey and Ham study will cost Newport Beach $41,000. DiBUi.buUon of the realty board's Minllltor ~,..., n-srumblel ha . .Newport Be1cll " clly COW>Cilmen Monday night. One councilman Pointed out later that il was lbe Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce that had urged spending the money for the Wiisey and Ham report. Responding to the attack, Newport Mayor Ed Hinh called the Wilsey and Ham report "very worthwhile." Hirth said the city felt it was "highly Important to have the technical In- formation not available in our GWn staff -to 8'1'1swer some of the technical detail raised in the Parsons report. "l don't believe the coosultant's report chanaed anyone's opinion," he said, "but it did give us the much·needed t.ecllnical information." Roaming Mesa Driver Triggers Chain Crash A Newport Beach nurseryman who told police he wu wat.dting the wrong traffic light sailed Ullo a Costa Mesa inta-aectioo Wednesday night, causing a siz-car collision. Nobody was injured, but the damage was hlgh. Barry D. McLean, 3;2, of 336 Catalina Drive, was eastbound on · Fair Drive at Newport Boulevard at 6:15 p.m., when he allegedly took the green signal 100 'i ants &bead in northbound Janes for his own.· He stiD, however, had. to cross the south"boaOO lanis of Newport Boulevard first. police said. "lf.e hit ono car and then •<Ill cruy all over the road," said Mrs. Aina E. Bilbee, 27, of 1.89 E. 16th St., Costa Mesa, one of the five other motorist& involved. "I had my 74-year~kl father in lhe front with me,'' Mrs. Bisbee: added. Police said McLean's car went spinning out of control after ramming one driven by Susan ~tcKinney, 16, or 1907 Goldenwest Ave., Santa Ana. The careening vehicles then connected with cars driven by Joseph F. Nowak Jr., 32, of J017 BoIWood Ave., Fullerton ; Donna L. Clow, 2.8, of 15.nO Swallow Lane, Westminster; Mrs. Bisbee, and Rog: er J. De.lorme, 26, of 1904 Raymond Ave., CoSta Mesa. League of Cities to Study ' Plan for Full-time Mayor 'f Ill meettnc. ··~ The Orange county League of Cities to.. detail at the league meeting tonlght in Emory's crlUclsm5 of the Phillips pr1>-night is expected to form a ipeclal com-Orange, he will urge the group "to think · probably reached him at the same mittee to consider a nmnnul by Newport •bout constructive answers from our e. r-~..--standpoi.Dt. so we dont' lose Joc1l COD· further det.aU, Emory s.ald, "The Beach Mayor Ed Birth that would u. trol." ps propos1l 1UUesta that the votera pand the .position of mayor in all of. Cal· He said the salaries of the mayon .,..,,d.,=.,"'rt_ '!,btlbet ~t'°"1d bt ~, [~1i~~"';}.1Jct"':1t~~l:"u.t ~Id~ ~~I "'te.~'Tuu':'.'U. "lf tbe1t aDIWt!I" 11 neaaUve then he lm· Mly Orange Coast community consider· Mayor lDrth said he Dad no lntereiit in p1IM that the cmnty wtll be ton:ied to-es.· -:.· . .. sueh a job, bimtelf, however. ~ Qrance COunty Airport. In other fng such. 8 poulbllity ~rlously at the He said a number of problems and 4 5 " Emory aa.Jd, "ii the voten PNlSellt timJ. , ~ sorted algnllicant detl.ils would. hive to ool IA> enter the Jel ge. th•.lk...-~quUlnlJ!j hla pl'Ofloeal. M r ijltth, ibt IWdied at !'"8th M the propasal ;, y wlllignore the ~l:lf tb~ ~ that he does not feel the mt)ror1 we received Ina selious consideration *8 and Wu! enter the jet_ aie· anyway -· -should be gtven any addJtJonaJ authority, alven to It. at tbe wont possible locaUOir." · Jnd that the councll~Uy manager rel•· Among these, he aaid, lo addition to '1Meanwblle " he uld ":Pblllipa Pro-tion.srups should not be altered. specific salaries, would be method of 5e. poaes that the 1aumber of filghta be doubl-However, ·he feels the need for 1 full· lectlon of the mayor, lenith ol term and ed, which makes the· question of e.t· time mayor la rapidly confronting virtu-actual procedures, legal procedures nee. ~ academic ally every city in the st.ate. essary to adopt the change. Al bu bet.n the case for the past 10 He sald propo~ed . and pending sUlte Charter cities, be erplained, would have o.-•·-'"""~ h th cart legislation b forcmg it on them . th . h Ge 1 1 years, ...... ,_. ·~. ~ ...... ...., as e He pointed to wideiipread legislation to amend eit c arters. nera aw before tbe horse, E_mory declared. • that would create a variety at' regional clUes may have to seek state le(J1Iatlon. He P:Ointed .. oot that It was the county authorities in numerous areas, Including Mayor Hirth said he fully ezpected 1upervl.90f'J, not the people of Newport transportation, l.ir pollution, building rea-there would be opposltion to the proposal Beach or 'l\lst1n, wbo ~~ that the ulations, the coutline, and more. in some quarters. future of the airport bad to be detennin-''The cities wUI need someone on these ''It would cost more," he !aid, "but I ed before deddinC a aecond jetport is interim governments the state may feel it will be worth it to keep local con· needed. form,'' the mayor said. trols." "'And they dlrected tlle Ralph M. "If there are no elected officials avail.:-f.1ayor Hirth had first indicated his in- Panons company-to ~ on ·thal able, the seats will be filled by stale ap. terest in such a plan two weeks ago in hula" in its study of the future of avia· pointees. And we will have government commenting on the plans of Huntington tion in the county. by appointment." Beach to create a full-time mayor, but Emery then offered hll referendum He said if the matter is discussed in slHI keep a city manager. proposal. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~'----'-~--=-~~~~ "U the supervbors wish to hear from the voters they should move immediately to place a bond issUe on· the November ballot to finance any further e1panslon of Orange County' Airport," EJI1ory aajd. "If that bond issue fails , they ahould freeze the airport at the present level of eervlee and get golng with the develop- me11t of a jet-capable airport at 8 loca- t,km where community blight can be avoided ." DAILY PILOT C)AAMOE COAll PUILl~lllG COM•AMY l•krl H. WtM n-,..,., K11•ll Th1"'11 A. MYr,hift t M-..... Elrtw c;: .... ...._ OHkt JJO Yf11t lty Slr11t M1 IU11f NfJ,.•tt P.O. I•• l&lO, •2616 --,........,, -.ell! 1211 WMf .. llM1 ....,,,..,,_ L...-. -..ctii m l'-t •-,,.. Miii!""'*' 9Md11 tl'OS .....,,, 1:1111..,t"ll .... ~f -*'""' ,, (»R>IPl9 ... , ltle•a Hoboes Noel Smith , 12, take• a swig from jua (il's only .• soft drink) as fellow hoboes, Theresa Moiso, 6 (cen ter), and Brian Kammeneil, 6, walt their turn. Trio took first three places in "Hobo Day" dress contest at Costa Mesa's Corsica Park. Theresa , 3220 Delaware Place, was first place winner. Noel. 1638 Baker St., was second, and Brian, -1586 Minorc..-Dli'"'· took third. I ) DAILY ,11..0T lltlr,..... DEAD AT IO J1me1 F1rquh1r J arnes Farquhar, Beach Pioneer, Succumbs at 80 James Farquhar, pioneer newspaper publisher in Huntington Beach, died in his l!lleep at hi.s home at 333 Crest Ave. Wednesday night. He was found dead at 9:30 this morning. ~tr. Farquhar was 80. As publisher of the weekly Huntington Beach News since September, 1927, and a past president or the Huntington Beach Rotary Club, he was one of the city's major personalities. Every week, he wrote a column titled "Oil" in the paper Jn which he often reminisced about personall.ues both in and out of Huntington Beach. Mr. Farquhar excelled In the old style of penonal joumallsm whJch be started u a younpte.r back in his home town of Ida Grove, Iowa. He is IW'Vived by two sons, George S. of Huntington Beach, and Willoughby of Anaheim. George Farquhar is managing editor of the Huntington Beach News. Servlces are pending at Smith's Mortuary, Huntington Beach. 3 County Women To Participate In Air Cont,est Three Orana:e Cout women wUl bt participating in a two-day air race from Santa Monica to Independencr, ~., which star1I Friday. Thon GrUflth of Costa ~a ~ !:0- pUot for Van Nuys pl.lot Ellen ·Trli:i~e. Shirley Tanner and Chris Hoffman, both of Newport Beach, are entered lh Ml!s Tanner's Citabria. Mrs. Griffith, an experienced air racer, has served as route director and Western RepruentaUve for the Powder Puff Derby, the m011t prestigious event of women's air racing. Mias TaMer, a school teacher and licensed Real Estate salesman, holds a commercial pilot's rating. Her navigator, Miss Hoffman, is an escrow oUicer at a local bank and hol~ a private pilot's license. 'l'he Santa Monica to Independence race is run like the Powder Puff Derby. The 35 planes have two days to cover the distance and the winner is selected on the basis of the best handicapped time. • • • Angela Sought ----. , ' For Questio.ning SAN RAFAEL (UP l)-Angela Davb, the militant black former UCLA faculty member , has not been he;i:rd from since $he was identified as the purchaser of two guns used in a courtroo m ktdnaping which left !our de.ad. Both Marin County authorities and ~ CallfornJa 11ttomey genera.l's oUlce waot to talk to her about the weapans, b(it no charges have been filed . District Attorney Bruce BaJes said Wednesday off1clab want Mias Davis, a C-Ommunlst, to explain how the guns which ehe bouaht in 11168 and 1969 reach- ed Johathll'I Jackson, killed last wetk alon1 with ~ judge and two San Queotln convict3 during a courtroom e1eape It· "tempt. Authorities also w 1 n t to talk to Frll'lklln Delano Alezander, a Black Panther captain fn Lo! Angeles. One of the two guns - a .38 Browning automatic pistol purchased in January, 1968, by Miss Davis -was found in his apartment J une 28, 1968, during a robbery investigation. It was later re- turned to him under cou rt order. Meanwhile,1 Jt1 Sacramento, Se_n. H. L. Richardson atsclosed he was responsi- ble for tracing two of the alleged San Rafael shootout weapons to Miss Davi!. "The information we have is that Angela Davis purchased several guns, some o( which were used in the com· mission of the crime in Marin County in the killing of Judge H a I e y , ' ' Richardson told newmlen. Richardson said he collected the in· formation through hi! office as a state senator and his membership on the Senate Subcommittee on Unamerican Activities. "I have multiple &OUrces of infonnation on subversive sctlvlties In this state that Planners Delay Azimuth Rezo11e Consideration of a rezone of the much· debated SO.acre parcel at Campus Drive and MacArthur Boulevard was delayed for one week Wednesday by the county planning commiaioners. The petition was presented by Atlmuth Equities of Newport Beach and the Mc· Donnell Douglll Corporation. Azimuth proposes to purchase the airport~rieoted property from McDoMell Douglas and develop It into a hotel.commucial com- ple1. Azimuth recently. dropped plans to try tog~ 50 acre1_ann''~ KJ.J~ewpor~ Bealfb and has taken lhe pla11nmg commiJslon route, to acru eve the re20ne necessary to the firm's planned development. Commissioners Wednesday delayed coo- sideratJon upon the recommendation of the planning staff whlch wants more Lime to study the various facets of the project . From ·Pagel FESTIVAL .. 3:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 4.:30 p.m. 5:00 p.m. Singoul Young Generation. Young Adult Modern Sounds F~tival. Prize Drawing. Awards for Various Categories Announced. Television Set Drawing. othet people Jl'en't prlvy 10," sa.'td. the former California coordinator for the John B~cb .l;oclety. Hia staff released the Information to thfi news media Tuesday on a nonit.- tributable basis. Tbe intelligence repnrt linked Mils Davis to lhe purchase ol ~ weapons In 1961 and ~969. Upper Bay Testimony Winding Up By TOM BARLEY 01 t111 Diii' 1'119! S1111 The Upper Newport Bay land swap trial moved into what may be its final hours today with testimony of a state Lands CommWion officia l who was responsible for much of the data placed before the agency when it ronsldered the land exchange. Commission attorney Virgil K. Butler defended actions of his staff in compiling malerial that led to the Commission's en· dorsement of the exchange of !:>7 acres of rounty owned tidelands for 4.50 acres of Irvine Company uplands. And the agency official rejected under cJ03e questioning by home.owner's at- torney Phillip Berry, any suggestion tha t his own wording of the calendar minutes which were submitted to th ecommissio n in November, 1967, would have led to the group's misunderstanding of the true con· dltlons of public ownership and access in the Upper Bay. Berry accuses the lrvine Company of deliberately understating the extent of shoreline under public ownership in the Back Bay. And he claims on behalf of a group of Newport Beach homeowners that the land swap is unconstitutional and unlawful and violates the public trust created when the state of CalifOrnia deeded the wet lands to Orange County 40 years ago. Butler's comments followed testimony by area residents and conservationista in which the land swap was condemned u fatal to the ecology of the bay. Dr. Donald Bright of Cal Sta!,e Fullerton warned from the witness stand that implementation of the land swap would be "disastrous" for both the up- per and lower bays with widespread destruction of irreplaceable marine and wildlife unique to the area. • He urged shelving of the land swap issue to enable biologists and marine engineers to make intensive studies of the impact of Irvine Company develop- ment plans "before any irrevocable decisions are made." Brlgh t testified that more than 12.000 Orange f.ounty students of junior high and highlschool level visit the Upper Bay every year to study marine and wildlife and take samples back to their classroom for further analysis. Bright's testimony was supported by Dr. Otarle$ R. Greening of t.he Friends ol Newport Bay org.anlution and author·lec- turer Wesley Marx of Newport Beach. Both men warned that development of the area under lines suggested by the Irvine Company would mean con· siderable destruction of marine and wildlife. Special Safe EXCITING PARTY SETS " by STONE and PHILLIPS 5 Pieces Reg. $575.00 NOW • You favorlt. Interior d11lon.1r wtU bf: Mm to a.s:tf.tf "°u ..• H.J.GARRETT fURNITURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR D!'. ~NERS -TRY OUI HYOLYING CHAIGl- 01Nft MDft .. nturs. I Fri. lwtL 22 15 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6i6-027r I r .. • • • Saddlebaek ' -1 ' VOi!. 63, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 46 P~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CA LIFORNIA ' ' ', ' JHURSD);y, ~UGUST 13, 1970 ' • TEN 'CENJS • ' ' • • I 1xon, OS Ill • . ' Irate Man I n Rum pus At Station By JOHN VAL TEjlZA Of•tlle o.llr 1'1111 lttft A middle-a1ed man, angry over police seilure of bis credit card, took bis fight to San Clemente police headquarlerl Wednuday, allegedly tried to run. down five officers with his car, then suffered a near-talal heart attack in bis jail cell. The bizarre sequence of events, police said, started 1n midafternoon at the San Clemente Inn where the suspect, Michael Colin, 55, had been a guest for two days. Police said Colin, who told them he had JUs't sold his San Clemente property, attempted to use a credit can:! which had been reported stolen month! before. Colin allegedly became hostile during a discussion with two detectives and vowed to charge them with lhelt of his credit card. The officers seized the card at the company's request pending investigation. From the haasle at the inn, Colin allegedly went to South Coast Community Hospital Jn South Lagbna where a disturl>ance llltiedly '?flk place pv.r treltment for the m:J.n•s Heart coodlUon. Aides there were quOted by police as overbearing Colin's promi!es to hive the "wbo1e de~ent arrested." Shorily after lhlil Colin appe.ared at police headquartmi in San Clemente, where be firat asked visiting highway patrolmen to arrest the two detectives. Officers said Colin then wailced to the front &sk shouting insUltB as he went ... ran to his car .Parked outside the front door, then attempted to run down a pollcenum Jn a black and white uniL By then, three more officers were emerging from the office door. Colln wboeled his car ad sped toward them, 1<neebing to a talt a ft'# ·feet from the officers and the doorway, ac- cording lo the police accaunt. After a struggle in tJie car otflcen subdued the man and booked him. A short time later Colin was booked and placed in a ceU, whire he suddenly complained of severe chest paiM. An ambulance, sumNed before the attack, arrived and took the SS.year-old Santa Monica resident to Orange County Medical Center where he was placed under Intensive care after suUcring a heart seizure. Police this morning said they were geeking a complaint charging five coun!-5 or assault with a deadly weapon (bis car), and court action would be scheduled once the man has sufficiently recovered. A police lieutenant and two patrolmen who narrowly escaped being hit at high speed, said the man barely missed them in hi.s second pass with lbe car. The patrol car in 'the first alleged assault was not touched. "He just bopped in his car and Doored It. After he miased the patrol unit ·11e thought he would make, another shot at it," one officer asserted, "but he jU&t spun around and beaded for us, inSttad." Laguna Bus Line Now Beginning To Make Money Tbe ,t.asuna Beach bus line, naw under I.he. auspices of City Hal~ It showing 1ig111 of flnanclal Im provement, clty manager James D. Wheat(J(l said UliJ morning . RJ{errila& to a "cash report" of the bust lint, the city wound up with a deftclt o( Sl5r5.U for the month of July. 1be line was lotlng much more, and was near bankruptcy, wben the city purchased II In June. The city n!pair<d the bules an~ hind an add.1Uon1l driver to better serve the comm(m.Jty.Wheaton reported. Wheaton said It ls likely the buses will be "&oing tnto U>e. 1'11ck" later thiJ summer, now that lhe FeSUval trams have been replaced by city bus aervlce.' Total ' Income brought In to the llne In July was St.zss.00. Total expedlturet lncludinf payroll l!'ld operatlonal C08tl was $1 ,420.47. Expenditures not Included In the report were the depreclalOn of the buses and retirement contributions , IOI' lht employeei, Wheatoo nOted. l Rock Pile Rocket Ru ss Chief To Attend . U.N. Meet . . , LONDON (UPil -Sovi.t Premier Alexei .N. Koa111n plans lo meol l'reol· dent Nixon and other Wiiiem luderl in New York early "in October, thus making a swnmit copleni>C• .¥lrt11111y, cerlaln, East European dlplomata llld today. The occasion will be the U .N. 25th anniversary meeting in New Y art wllk:b world l~ders. will at~ Kosygin apparenUy. would prefer a Bil Four power summit "!Ith Nlzon and the prOmlera of France and Brllaln lo a bil~teral conference with. the American chief ~ecuUve. , , The diplomats indicated that behind thiJ pr.terence lies the Kremlin's ap. parent desire to avoid charges Of an alleged "ganging 4P" of the 1~perpower1 by 1ang1ng 'the Soviet. vn1on publl~ Dave Stoffer of Laguna Beach may have ridden the wave .of the dayi 1.:i~ days. At.popJar, surfing spots such as, the Rook Plle,sets pf waves on~ aide of the !Jnltecl Sia~. · Wednesday when he bounced down the face of.this wall at the Rock TflDJiJ?.g in 'Ii¥ from Lfpu:r to seven feet ·were reported todly, with ·oc!. The spedaf.U.N. ~ii ICbeduled Pile on the north end o! Laguna. Lifeguards report surl,ii up gep.erally~ casionali"bi&&ies" like tbis•one~ · ' for pctober lt-24. : along lhe•Orarige Coast. It bas been building .in most spots for 'tbe'past . ·.. I ' ' l • •• I DipJomaUc-feelen -were apecte4 to •:, 1 1 I r bepul"'••·'--1 ID---~ ' I I < • , \.' 1_, • ~q , !) , ; J • )' ,J: cf .!'P • V lf! uu. --iowJ. ~ •-•·"" ' ' • •I :. k 1 t•v 11 ~ 'l ~I • • ;I • • • l' • ~ , ~ '-'''i" 'f'\ ( lY ' panigtly 8l'f alrudJ 1JDdlr .. , • thp Sari Clemente Studies Softer Pa rking Laws A spftened version of a proposed ordinance covering parking or campers, trailers, boats and the like on prlvale San Clemente lots pas,,ed scrutiny of plannJng commissioners aaJ critics Wednesday. The proposed 6>de, assailed · by aome tor several weekJ as a discriminatory regulation covering where the vehicles a>Uld be parked, now will go before city councilmen for more consideration. The changes approved by com- 11lissioners Wednesday deleted a ban on parkint or the vehicles between the street edge and the front.yard setback or a residential lot. Jt meahs that the code now proposed to allow any vehicle conforming as a pa.s;senger vehicle C{l;n be parked in a homeowner's dtiveway so long as it doesn't protrude into the street. The code originally banned t h e driveway parking if a machine jutted past the front yard setback line. A total of 50 S&:n Clei:nenteans signed petitions supporting the complete original ordinance1 but some critics blasted the code. Otie} of\ its leading foes was Mrs. Fern Dicksbn, president of a local rockhound club, who had termed the idea a "snob- bish, unAmerican" idea. She a!so complained that her family. camper -lief on!7 means of tr'1'Sporta... lioo• --~ have been allowed I" hOr own ~veway bad the ordlnan" been pasaed. . Tbe cod< ·sUIJ ~ that vehlclea not desi~ted u P':P""i« vehicles by the vehicle aide ....t adhere lo stringent parking and lllorqe ,..Wallons, II also •alala that oo dlaabled or unlicensed campers, buses, boat. or the (See CAMPERS, Pa1e;11 Lagnn. a ConnciJnlen LO(.k:-' Pedlb :WfinWii:' ~-TU:::::~.;::,: . ·"' B' ~ '·~· N.. , a_..i m ~·~11111 , . , . ~~ ua ~' . r~~-..'=' . For Cycle Rid~·Areas Thtolbn·;1iil~: ~!::-'in~·,= By BARBARA llRE!BICH CH IM OlllY ...... ttafl' Motorcycles are 00181, can creater a fire bazant in dry brush areas· · • abd make ugly scars on the hillaidea, t.pa Beach city councilmen agreed V(ed- neaday uiihl, but still · they provlile -• lot of harmless fun for a lot of· young. people and it would be nice ·ll the city could find some safe plaoe for. them to ride. This seemed to . be the consensus o(· the COlmCil as it reviewed a proposed ordina nce that woold ban ridlni or ·•vehicles propelled by Internal com- bustion engines" on private property within the city without written consent of the property owner. It also wouJd ban such riding within 300 feet or the boundaries ol residential properly, except for ingress and egress and beyond that area if the resulting noise was suf[lcient. to bring complaints from adjacent residents. The proposed ordinance Is similar to one recently adopted by the Board of Supervisors to control cycle riders in county teh-itory. The coUnly fire mmbal bas BIBO sup- ported such legisla.Uoo because of btush fires starud by cycle riders and the ordinance contains a reqlllrement thal cycles be equipped with a spark-arr~ approved by the V.S. Fomtry Service ,and state-approved muffler. , . 1 Councilmen aareed that the ordinance should· follow t66 county legllialloq In specifying the vehicles covt.red to lb$de motorcycles, trail bikes. motor 1COOter1, mlniblkea, dune •buggiel, Jeepa, or other motor driven vtblctes. Councllman Chartton Boyd tool<. note or the lad t!Uit -people derive gr<al enjoyment fnilll"cycle>l'lcllng and felt the eily sllolud ,make "'! .. ort ; fo,ftn<t,a pl~ when! Jt ooujd be 'perm!~ led With ,safety. . Councilman Edward , Lorr Aid this woutd \!e a gOOd -Idea, eM>ecJaUy for oilnlb~,1 whi'jl). are' b~ from the ~,by lhO, state Vehlclf Coe!• bu\ wtilc:b man,y' parenta give· to ' IO.and 1J. year old.s.. ''The •J>Jirtpts wO\ild have to . tr~ . them to a rldln& area," L0rr COllllll""J«i: ' . Boyd said It would be a good way to aet . parent& lnvol,vtfi in their youngste~· aetlvltles, "sOrt of like .Little Leagu~.'' . · It wa.s qreed that• finding, a .Wtable area Ip Laiuna would· be difficult, ·•lnc.e most adjol~ open land is under county jurisdiction~ t · · City Manager James. D. Wheiaton noted that in San· Clemente 700 acres of land owned by Brl&ham Youna University had been approved for• bike riding, permitting the city to p&:OOeed with more a~t. leg~\aUon to cqritrol ridin1 in built-up areas. . Couocllman Peter Ostrander noted that the San· Clemente riding area already Is "terribly ovircrowd,ed.'' · , He llU&&elted .. the ordina~ could"l:!e mocflfl>d to Jl"'1llll , IB11do~" wllJlng to admit .rklers to poll ·such: permi4Jjqg. o .. the ~nd. tnsle;ld·of hav~ Io provide wrlllen , ~....,,! for e~ ~de. Th<te -ar~ Io bo . no . otijecllDn-lo this cqwe. . ·' . Lorr &Uggeated !hat Great takes ProP' ertles ml,ght consider permitting l riding area., In 1ta IOk~ Ir~ adj•ctat lo """'"" ta""" RoaC!' aikL El Torp Road. Wheaton ,gjd this would be .an taeal JocaUoa. 'Ile only •rt• witJiln ' the 'City he could think of off-hand, he lllid, (Ste CYCLES, J!ap II . ' . A is.y~ar-old S~n' Pedro,:~. great enthulaam fer. ucJ. ,'Ylllt .to broogllt l!llo• the Llpma Boachi pollce New Yor~ '!lier bla,cllllll/bU,.,-lerid • during his ncent ttlR. .lb<re. ~ •Po itaUon a t · UIO a.m. lddiy ·•y two !>"""tly no Dhal' decfllixi' IW ~ lleill motorlits 'wbo slo~~ !"IP her ·~ lalien In Pan..· , , she was thrown ~om, a.1cear,. .told pO~ Pompidou is to pay an oaici!f •W& !he 'had •boen •beal<11•;by •,mall .1'11<> lo the Soviet \Inion In the llril'llalt off~d Def!• nett. , , • . · , of October which may deten:Da 1111 . nle.'~man said ber ,1asi~t.:1Jte~ ~ :;.e;;,.. .Drurutr-~1tza, ~allpwing , "'tbree rite! 1 'Ol~s~" 10re ·bu; practical, a face-to-faci meeUnc between Cloll!OI· ud ~· ber , .. vera1 .lhnes KOl)'g\n . and 11,lxoG • p p .... •-" In the· face · with bis fl111, then ,thrw "lnevi!8\>I'," Ille --' '!'.· her.out .on the .roadway~ she fe!tsta TbeY said there ii 0 • lot to 'AilCast" ' · · I · · and taie.t lnlenJallnnal rt...toploeota f~ 'llempb to,moleJ ber,"F:ally •. ' , more u.,n warrant an excl!iinae,Qt- En .roult lo vts\t a fr\enil·ln.Or._ bf the highest level.' ~ . ohe had 'boarded Ille-WfOlll bus •and By th0!).11\o Stralqfc ~ Umltation, wOWld up In HunljDgtOll Beach, ·the Talks (SALT) bdween Ruuia: and . woman· said: She bad been w~ two Am~ ~ bav~; reachect , ~ .( qrs · hburs · fOr another bua When 'the mara conchisibris, and thf: Middle EUt ~· 1• drove up and offered ))er a ride,: whitjl probe .wlll have advJDced ~ she accepled. to project the chances, of an et'teDitoD ,. . Theywent fir>! lo Anilielm lo change or le!mh)aUon ol the·prmnl bae.nr., ·cars, because the man was baVlrig car the s&urces s&ld. ' · lrqubl~. Tben,. Instead of takllll' her 'lb The Far ~ aceae, lncludlnt abova .. tfte bl.la 'depot, as promlSed, the dltver all the Vietnam war, a1ao were UR1Cfe4 ,headt\d for Laguna Beach. to ~e under . review, aJthouali the TheY stdpped Bt a res'tlurant for cot-Rhuians Jately. have abled1 ~wij from . fee,,· she .related and. the man b9uiht any peace ,ln1UaUve for •PP.arent lac:k ."some. r,ed ptU.," 11>1 .. • of. wlild! he o1 •ufflcJeDI lnlluence In llanciL · SW~'fed. . , , . lie: ll)en . ~v', oot Lliwta ~ p • · w• p • · Road w,bere ihe llllull attempt .... • air " m. runary made. The woman Aid Me had· asked lo be l<!i. oiii,o(·lhe .,., 'becalUO be .... drlvliic enillcilly aftit laking the Pills .t . -•··· . . ' . ' After' dwnplng 1 her In tbe li>ad, 'u/e man drove off down a dirt side ·rtN, ahe .aald . 'l'Wo·PU.ih'c--'"'' . .., HART.FORD, Conn. (UPI)-' Gu~lorlal candldlte Tll6mai g, MeikJU,lnd 'Selllilorlal afllllr'1!1 ~D ' P. "Wltcier ,fr'. ...uy' de!Uted -pitiJr optiooent.', Wednesday. In ,the , flrll .ftepiibllcln primary In Camac:tlcufo hialory, ·-· :w1ien ahe"heiltd u..;;.7'""111.id : ""'8fully lo'catl:h Up',wllh1'ber<aMal!UI, then 'tool< her to the palk:e ·11auon. ·Sbe1 was fiven fll'lt aid ·far· •hnilles ·oo'her lon!ltead''alld> np!a1><Pii,q,~ t ' B M. . .. ' . M . 1 ~.cblpped!t6eth, Pill~ hid.~ I t f ' l ·.Law ars 1 ,1nors 1n .· · ·ote ·: ~;:=.:~~~~~l~~i~ I. ·contalnfii&~. , .. t .t · l ! · r7 ' • · . · <l>sta MW :police' were: re<rQeited fo No O~ Allowed Without Adu,t· Chq~on~ in ·Lagu~j;i :::::iv1·~~~~~~~;:~.he.:,.ry: , 1 , , , , • Frank Upham were cllsPttchtd, but roni- ' • , ' 1 • 'ectlo kite up.Whlnt ...,.,. q . • · 1 An ordlnmce resuictinl occupancy or Lorr, who had requested reYlval ofj the lalfd Oltier ~ ·that ~' &i>es ' ln . · ! 1 ,' .. . , : ; ; · ' hotel motel and apartment house rooms ordinance, llJc:I tt wa1. aimed ~' • ~~ 1 • '1 • ~ ~·' • 'r,_," ~ ,., ·., L:. / • by unchaperoned minors In Laguna controlllng un111pervil<d 'mtnon al '. '.!U.~ell t11~10:S~=<:'· . M'~x,ico 'Dill. Olee· L&W-' Beach appeared headed lor pamge b'"• din fo,.,.~ Mal(,' • , liid followlo& a Ctty Cnunoll study oe,.ion cur .,,. ov~ ': l.. '"·1~1"-~, ed1N''.'~.• ....,. 1...1'..l"lf' •-'...,Ll l1'' ' Wedneada• _,.... lie ctted many police -'II! ""1<h • be....._ It' i'W o· · ~ "'Owu.• url r.AlOttonrv , ,._ b -· I>-I ' ''"""~ ..;.;,._\ -,-J 1be ordinance, one or several ta led unchaperoned jumillel hid fo~nd , ~~1 butr1~ &n'IRemprr'.r~~ ~., , •• , · • •• · bY. the council after their. preaentatlon themselves in lrOllble.after•""'l!ni ....,. YolJllPlm! , · " •. , 4v~ .Miilco ( • -~· B11urgency mu-. In Jwie, .,., back In the ctty, lncludlngoneln ltillcli ptlloe • Hobb lllU"•ltd •.tfi. dly ~be •Gll8Iavo D161:0rdu' 'plan lo oiitl•W: !or comidenllon u a ,,..1ar ordlnmu:e. • found a 15-year-old girl• In a hol.I ,..,... ,. taking off1 the respo~it(ilea· o/ ·qulclllil >..Ufottti Iilllulco w1>1i1• q,,t· It would bar oecupancy of a hot>! with roor men. · I ~· ' >1w.lr · 11ont .. ··ctty f,1,) mOllo;t a •,.at, or 'mot.I '"°m by anr perlOll under Mayor Rlctlard Goldbetl ~1bli l ):loi.-·Uwt Ilia )O'o'c~ ~ ~1U..•·lll~ol8__, l~unlm acc6mPlllkd by a parent, guar. earlier comment !hat marrl~ ./rjtlCh .la alto -fW Ibo • !lnancts. . • . ' l=.r . dlan or aulliOttzed &dull,' and occupancy and ttrvlcemeo should bl' tllci1ll!i<f of~poilplt/ ~ldbet,c 'l'Jl!leil ~· • ,,,.. ••• lu.O ...... --a ... by mo,. than five persons undrr the thorullng. , '.,~, '• -~; ,Ji'.-~~O.l!li~~-'r;~~;:1'1 'lil 'fl,t ,~'1 ·, age of 21, unless accomJ>Anled by •n David Munro, commtf19'1&: ~, ~. Jted¥ ; .i:l+ ~· , adult. audience, >1ld 11111 ~ l 'J' .jdVefllle·o In Jln\edoi wltll ~ •-;;} t. ln response to a query from COUO-dilCrlmlnatory tnforcemtnt IS 1'tll IJ , that m&n1 'jUYtn(le runatr.Y. lre ~ ' ~ . It cilman Roy Holm, Counclbnan tdward "announcing to aervlcellltll at El Toro (Ste B~ ,... I) · Rio Grandt El hid, Td. • • . . , l t• , f t • I I , ,Flltered '111J11blne la the ""11.for • Friday akq. !be .or..,., Ceoal . with low cloucla providlllJ the ~ I lrallon and lowerln( the lewpw.. · 1.... lo •bol!I 7'I Pocall1 ud • ' furthet lolaod. • . ..... -= .. • 2 DAILY PILOT SC Harassment By Manson LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hipple cult luder Cbarlea Manson, bia shirt IAll out and his long hair uncombed, appeared briefly on the stand at t.be Tate-LaBianca murder trial today to protest what he claimed was mi!treatment by his jailen. Defense counsel Irvlna Kanarek had moved t..bat the court order sherilrs deputlts from blrassing tbe slender defendant. With the jury excluded. Manson was in the witness chair about 10 minutes, his hands folded across his chest. But be never actually was questioned because prosecut.ion and defense attorneys used the time to argue minor polntl and Superior C-ourt Judie Charles H. Older continued the proceedings for one week. Manson claJmed deputies forced him to completely disrobe JltVeral times eac.h day then conduct what Jill lnmatea term a "skin se.arcb" of hia body cavities. DAll..Y PILOT Ill",~ InterrogaUon with the jury present then resumed for star witness Llnda Kasabian, wbo was uk:ed by tbe defense Wednesday how lhe felt about Manson and the three young women charged with him in the Tate murders. She said she felt "compuslon" for them and wtahed they would "get up here and do what l am doing -tell the truth.,, FELLOW OFFICER DON ANDERSON CONFERS WITH INJURED CONNIE ATKINSON -S.n Cl•m..,te Policeman lnlur•s Arm Lifting Scoot•r Off of Met•r M•ld Aft•r Cr•sh Her interrogator wu Ronald Hucties. a roly poly man with a red beard who Is trying his fin! criminal ..... He resembles actor Burl Ives. From Page 1 Vehicle Hits HOTEL ROOM LAW .•. Patrol Scooter; "Whal was lbe power of Charlie?" Hughes asked. In Laguna Beach m~tels where they ' That .sent Manson's attorney, Kanarek, have been p!rm,IUed to realatet by to his feet. owners who don't'' bother· to u k: for "There ii no power of Charlie,'' idenUfJcatlon. ' Kanarek shouted. Though most hotel operators e:rercl!fl Manaon, tiny in hla blue denim prison controte:, the otncers iakt, m a n y clothes, lurned lo 1'anarek and said: youoa"8J:• do 1et IJ>to trou~ Iller they "Watch your mouth." are ~ted to move into Ieu · Mrs. Kaaabian also admitted that she scruputouJ 'estibll.ahmenti. stole $5.000 from a friend and took Surf and Sand owner Merrill Johnaon it with her to the Spahn Ranch when aid he feli the din Id be abe 1'oined the hippie cult led by Man.son. 8 , · or ance wou "a good, tool for legtUm1te buslneale1 Her admission of atealing Ole money to use." from Charles Melt.on, • friend with whom He Said most of the hotel and motel she and her buaband, Robert, lived before operators in town exercise their own abe joined the "Manson Family," wu controls~ but added. "It ii surprising the most damaging challenge to her the number of parents who will call 1tory of why lhe joined the group. and make a reservaUon, then send their ln the afternoon session, Hughe! con-youngsters down alone or in groups. tinu&d hia aoss uaminaUon and launch-Then we have to disappoint the ed o aeries o1 ulonlsblng q ... tloos. ~. by telling tber.ae can't "Did you think Charles Manson WU ts~~· ·~ [n WfthDUI a , 'J1te lbe devil?" ~ oould clean 1!P a ad attuaUon "He is a devilish man." she replied. .aqd it wouldn 't be a burden on the ''Tbe devil in the body of a man?" hotels." operator does not heed our warnin1, he then could be cited uoder the Off• J • d or<1ln111<t. rt would be up 1o the eourt leer n ]Ure to decide if a pattern of violation e:r-San bted." Clemente parking off teer Connle LA:lrr nld that 50 Jong u ptrllOnJ AWMon suffered a palnful leg injury, urider 21 are considered minor• llDder cuta, brul!ea and shock Wednesday in the Jaw "It Js Incumbent upon uf-to ..... a C?sh which left her trapped for a ilee that Jf, IS and 16-ye11.-oldl don't ' ~~·in her smaU patrol scooter. 1et hlto trouble here; or l it lhllused ~ collision between the parking by older people." . ' • meter buggy and a large luxury car Munro ~ugg~sted that. "there were coon-occurred at about 1:30 p.m. at 305 N. ty agencies 1f morals are the problem . and the police if it is crime." El Camino ~cal. Holm concluded the discussion by Mrs. Atkinson, who started as San sayln1 he would like to find BOme Clemente's meter maid a few months altematlve to such an ordinance, bul ago wu northbound on the busy roadway "I do feel there are some tbou1htle5I w~ the scooter collided with the late-adillt landlords who are wing the ki<b. and one good thing about the ordinara model Cadillac driven by Robert C. ;it' ~that it z.aps the landlord and not Rochelle, 30, of 120~ Coral Ave., Balboa the naive ldd wbo just got here from Island. the M!dwe..st." The Impact sent the 5COOter flying ~i"~; poEi ~ di.<." ·~\'l!'r#;;.r.,.:.~~-~ ifHE'f terrupted by 1'aDaM, tbt l•WJ!t jwt of the Ooitl 1operltor~'f~it,~· : strict · . and it flipped and skidded on &be pave- ment. Mrs. Atkinson, wearing a seatbelt. was given first aid aft.er fellow o!ficers lifted the scooter upright. repeated his queatloll: code of business etnics • .bul the ordinance CYCLES "What wiu the power of Charlie?" would be 1 good control for tboae who • • • "I just wanted to do everything ud do not. anything for hlm.'1 Boy4 wanted to know how the l11w "Why was that?" would be en!orced. "Because 1 loved him. He made me The. basil would be the aame as en- feel good, He wu just beautlful." forcement "O! alcohol lawabLorr said, by "Art you still In love wltb Mr. requirilli identification, uL the main Manson?" purpose would be to give the operators "Yu." a tool for sell·pollclng. Orma McLean Services Slated Long time Laguna Beach rtsident Orma B. Mete.an died ln North Hollywood Sundioy. "It would serve lo per1t1ade l h e cperator to conduct his hotel 1n 1 manl'ler consistent with , the ordinance " saJd Wheaton. "SOme of them have \otd me if they bad an ordinance behind them It would give them Uie courage to tum people aWay, a legal basil for 11Jcb action." \\'heaton said he would predict "no more than a couple of citations in IO years" under the ordinance .' ll would be used more for "persuasion," he aaid. would be the acreage at Top of the World owned by Chinese for Christ. Another area now used by riders, .he added, Is the hilly land near Thurston School, but there have been complalnta: about riding In both thes• locations. Lorr pointed out that w:Ith the county and many neighboring communities adopting ordinances banning the blkes1 Laaun• should act promptly to avoid becoming the target of "an Invasion ~r motorcycles, dune buggies and Jeep!" displaced from other areas. Patrolman Don Anderson suffered a pulled tendon in his forearm during the rescue. Mrs. Alkinaon was treated at the Camp Pendleton base hospital. Police uid abe would probably return to light duty gome time next week. Roc,helle told highway patrolmen that his visibility wu impaired by a parked camper as he pulled out of a parting lot for a left tum into traffic on El Camino. His car, which clipped the side of the scooter with its right front fender. smtalned moderate damage. Rochelle was not injured in the mishap. The tc00ler crash was tbe third on record for the city vehicle fleel The battered white buggy was beavUy damag· ed. • Readg to Dump Nerve Ga~ Cargo Loaded on Ship SOUTHPORT. N.C. (UPIJ -An old liberty ship t0ok aboard 1 deadly cargo of •erve gas today and oUicials said as qu.ickly •• the vessel ill ready for sea, the port ol Wilmington and ship chaMels in the lower Cape Fear River will be cloled. Clearlnj: weather speeded the loading of the vessel, and rear Adm. E. A. Allen Jr., Commander or the Fifth Coast Guard District, issued an order declaring the area a "security zone ," closed to shipping Friday through Monday. Aug. 14·17. The nerve gas Is cont1h1ed in old rockets which the Army plans to dump in the AtlantJc, providing the federal courts do not lnttrvene. A hearing on the matter wu scheduled today before Federal Judae June L. Green in Wublngton. Sen. Ernest F . Hollings (D-S.C.), charged in a prepared Senate speech today that the Army was aullty of aross neglect and "ahocklng and careless" pro- cedures in plannln1 to dump the gas in the ocun. He said the oper1Uon "floub tbe simplest rules of common senae, Janores slgnlllcant aclentlfk evidence on the potenUally hannful effects of this sea dump, and In so doing takes unneceuary risks w:ltb the ocean'• future -hence our future." Gov. Claude Kirk of Florida and the envlroAme11tal deferae fWld contend there are "many unanswered quutlons'' as to the effect the dwnptn1 will produce on the environment alon g the Southeast Cout, parUcululy Florida. The 14,500 deteriorating rockets, en- cased in 411. concrete. and • stetl vaults. are to be burled iJ 11,000·foot deep water .lnd Col. Jack Osick, an Army chemicsl expert, says the sail water will make the gas "innocuous." Salt water dilutes the gas. capable or killing a human withln minutes, int.o harmless acids, the Army sa id . Sixty longshoremen, given 16 kours of special lnJtructloo on how to handle the rockets, began loading the potentially~ deadly carao Wednesday aboard the rustiJlg liberty ship Le Baron Russell Briggs, which will be scuttled as a ·'corfin " for the rockets. The roc kets arrived al lhe Army 's ocean terminal at Sunny Point late Tues- day night and early Wednesday morning aboard two trains from Army arsenals at AM iston. Ala., and Richmond. Ky. The Army said the nerve gas was begin- ning to leak from some of the roc ket! in st.orage and must be disposed of soon. The lfongsboremen were given gall masks and a belt-kit containing several syringes full of Atropine, an antidote for the gas. Half a dozen cages of rabbits were scattered near the docks as "monit.ors," meaning their deaths would sigilal a gas leakage. Authorities said the tedious job of shif. ting the concrete vaulls containing the rockets from the trains to the ship would take until late Friday, al least. Attorney Edward Lee Rogers of East Setauket, N. Y., representing the en- vironmental defense fund, had asked for an immediate hearing ol!I his motion for a restraining order because "once shipping begins it will be impossible for the courts lo grant us relier." Kenly Webster, Deputy G en e r a I Counsel of the Army. said there. would be ample time for the hearing before the ship leaves port. 'Saloons,' 'Bars' Now 01\. In State After 35 Years Special to the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Banned for 35 years in California, except on the swinging doors of Hollywood western movie set..!, saloon is now • legal name for a cocktail lounge or tavern. Gov. IUlnald Reagan signed a b!U authorizing such a title, along with bar or barroom, Wednesday in a modest ceremony at the Cllpltol here. "Now I won't be able to get into one by mistake," said the governor, who chanced Into a few saloons during bis career as a cowboy on the silver screen. He was usually huntin1 the villain instead of a snort. The baMing of the three words came in 1135 as an inlere11ting method of assuaging the stinging sense of defeat for those who bad endorsed and sup- ported the prohibition ol Uquor lt•elf. Sa.loon, bar and barroom, the theory went, had come to represent sleazy joints with swinging doors and a swinging clienteJe th.al often swung at each other over mooey or the favors of loose women. Speakeasies, honkytonk.1 , gambling, prostitution and bootlegging were all associated with less lnnocuous terms than tavern or cocktail lounge. Assemblyman John T. Knox {D-Rich- mond), introduced the novel legislation recently at the suggestion of Don Bradley. The latter managed Gov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown's unsuccessful 1966 bid for re-election. "Wouldn't you like lo be known 111 the man who brought the saloon back to California?," Bradley wrote the legislator. "It would certainly place your name among the immortals."· For those interested, a salooa has been characterized variausly. "Back then, a saloon was known as a place for perpendicular drinking,•• observed Assemblyman Knox. who failed to add tbat some perpendicular patrons finally got horizontal. The committee that wrote lhe Jegisla· lion against bar, barroom and saloon in 1935 included one teetotaler, Sen. Andrew R. Schottky, Knox recalled. He said he knew of two who tippled, no matter what you called the premUcs. "I guess they all did," he added. Sen. Schottky himself wrote a definition of saloon wben the original legislation signed out of eliatence Wednesday was drafted. Mrs. Mc.Lean first came to Laguna Beach in the 1S20s and built one of the first wffkend cottages on Sumet Terrace. Following her retirement from the Title lnstuanoe and Trw:t C.orporatton. she and her husband moved to lAguna permanenUy. Mra. McLean moved to North Hollywood following h<r husband's death In 1165: Mrs. MclM.n ii 1urvivtd by a rilece Mrs. Ruth Noruk; lhree ne:phews, James, Paul. and Jack Allen; eight grand-nieces and nephews. and lS great.grand nieces and nephews. Holm doubted the practicality of en- forcement in the event one authorlud person should register. then bring in friends later, without the knowledge of the operator. Goldberg said he felt the law didn't go far enough and thought a fine should be provided. W~ton noted thet violaUon of the ordinance Would constitute· a legal misde- meanor. which does carry a possible Councilman IUly Holm nld he had "mixed feelings" about the ordinance. •'Besides the noise and fire hazard, t penonally hate to see the hillsides scar- red up," 1aid Holm, "but I feel a lot of young people are havlng a lot of run with this so I would support the Idea of looking for a riding area, but I just don't know where." Boyd suggested th at interested groups and parents might set up a club ar- rangement for minibike and trail bike riders with the asalstan<:i! of the recrea· lion director. Wheaton agreed that since the Recrea- Uon Department already has set up clubs for goUers, 1urfen and others. it should be possible to establish such a club for bike riders and then look for• plaoe for them to operate. Special Sale DAILY PILOT N..,... t..U '-I• ..... di c ...... ... Oll:AHGIE CO..IT ~llllH1NC: t:clMAANY ll~~•ri N, Wet<I ,.cuicUftT tl'ld Pl>Dlltht'f" J••• l . Coirley \tkt l"f t1'111tflT •ncl ~ti M~ lht"'•' Ktt•il E•llO<" Tho"''' A. Murphf11• Mtflltlfll f1fllor llch1r4 P, '4111 it\1111 °"' .... c:...iM'( ldlNor """• C.19 "'-t ut Woi lrt' S'"'9t N....,.1 hfcfli 111'11 Wetl .. ._, 80\lf......,,. ~ ~' m '""-' ,.._ """11~ ._,., 11171 lftclt ..,~ ... ~ lla ...,,,. " t.mi.w lt~I fine or jail sentence. "In the case or consistent vlol1Uon,'' he said, "tr the police keep pickln1 up youngsters who say they are living at 1 certain hotel or motel and the F l'Om Pqe J CAMPERS ••. llke could be parked ln the driveway. Rrovi.sionl enforcinl shielding o f storage ,areas on rear portions of pre> perty alBO remain. in the. amended code. In other action Wednesday co~ qUssloners delayed a. requtat for a con- dlllonal we permll IO operate a forel&n car 11.les and repilr lot at 924 N. El Camino Real . Applicant Franclsco Sanchez amended his bid fer the permit by adding aulo repajr and auvlce -a f1ctor wblch wu not included tn the legal an- nouncement of Wedneoday'a public bear· Ing. • As soon u the annoupcement (and the addition ) .,. rudverfued, the bur· ing will rtlume. P.O, Supervisor Killed by Sniper LOS • ANGELES (uPl) -A tupervl'°' at the Termlnll Anno POil OiUce was lhot 1o ,..th early lodly u ho left the facility. Pollce said Harry Sendfow, 12, was &bol three Umu H he rtn from hil auanan\. An all polntl bulletin wu lulled for Alfred Kellum of Lo> Angelu, who police ,.Id apparenUy laid In wall out.aide the faclllty 1or Se.ndrow. l• It was generally agreed that the ordinance would be acceptable, with the lll'lderstanding that the city-explore the possibility of finding a safe ridinl area. Surfing Contest In Huntington Goes Back on TV Surfers competing 1n the ·annual United Statei SUrfbolrd Contest In Huntington Beach will be "on the tube" again after one year's absence from television. The show, according to City Recreation and Parks Director Norm Worthy, will be !Urned bf the Channel 9 (KHJ) aew under the guidance of surfing lm· presario Neill Crw. It will be televbed in the Southern CalUomia, New York and Boston areu and then l}'lldicattd and distributed lo other U.S. and forelin dUu, Worthy nld. Under the terma of the propou.l, the city would recolve the !Int 110,000 ll'OOI from the syndication while <:toll would split wltb them 11ny rurther lnoome. Worthy utlrnated a pos11ble Income ranging from 110,000 lo $50.000 from Ille ayndlcatloll. dependln& on the quality of tl>e 1urt and 'the dlltrlbuUon or th• film. The contest had been televlMd yearly by the ABC .. twork whk:h unupectedly withdrew Ill coverage lut year. Thi• yeir, the surf !how la acheduled for Sept. II lo 20. EXCITING PARTY SETS by STONE and PH ILLIPS 5 Pieces Reg . $575 .00 NOW You fa.vorltt lntlrior dcllgn.tr IOUl be Mpp~ to o.ssl1t 11ou ••• H.J.GARRETf fURNITURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DtS!GNERS -TlY oua llVOLVINCJ CH41GE- Opn MOft., Titurs. & Frf. l'f'tt. 2215 HARBOR Bl VO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6<46-027' I I I' I I I I ~ ' I ' I i I' I ......---;-s _,., • ¥ --~ ~·---- ' Lagq~a Beaeh- -EDITION VO~. 63, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES I • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA · . • • • ID 1xon, OS ' '· Irate Man In .Rumpus At Station By JOHN VALTERZA ~ tff Oill'I' ,119' Staff A middle-aged man, angry over police seizure of bis credit card, took bls fight t.o San Clemente police beadql,\ilJ'ters Wednesday, allegedly tried to run down five officers with his car, then suffered a near-fatal heart attack in hls jail cell. The bizarre sequence of events, Police said, started in mldafternoon at the San Clemente Inn where the suspect, Michael Colin, 55, had been a gUest for two days. Police said Colin, who told them he had just sold his San Clemente property, attempted to use a credit card which had been reported stolen months before. Colin allegedly became hostile during a discussion with two detectives and vowed to charge tbem with theft of his credit card. The officers seized the card at the company's request pending investigation. From the hassle at the iM, Colin allegedly went to South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna where a disturbance allegEfily took place over treatment for tbe man's heart condiUon. A1del l.11er~ wer~ quoted by pOlice as overbearing Colin's promise3 to have the "whole department arrested." Shortly after .'ha~ Colin appeared at poUce headquarltra in San Clement., where be: tint asked vlsitlng· blghway patrolmen to atTest the two detectives. Officer• said Colin then walked to the front desk shouting insults as be went ••. ran to his car parked outside · the front door, then attempted to run down a policeman in a black and white unil By then. three more officers were emerging from the office door. Colin wheeled bis car and sped low&fd them, screeching to a falt a few feet from the oUieti"S and the doorway, ac- cording to the police account. After a struggle in the car officers rtibdued the man and booked him. A short tidle later Colin was booked and placed in a cell, where b.e suddenly complained of severe chest pams. An ambulance, summoned before the attack, arrived and took the 55-year,--0ld Santa Monica resident to Orange County Medical Center where he was placed under Intensive care after suffering a he.art seizure: Police this morning said they were seeking a complaint charging five coun!-5 of assauJt with a deadly weapon (hlS car), and court action would be scheduled once the man has sufficiently recovered. A police lieutenant and two patrolmen who narrowly escaped being hit at high speed, said the man barely missed them in hi.a second pass with the car. The patrol car in the first alleged assault was not touched. "He just bopped in his car and Doored tt. After be missed the patrol unit we thoultht he would make another shot at j[" one officer asserted, "bat he just ~pun around and beaded for us, instead." Laguna Bus Lille Now Beginning To Make Money The Laguna Beach bus line,. now uf!der t.he auspices of City Hall, 1s showing ilgn11 of financial improvement, city manager James O. Wheaton 11afd thia: morning. • Referring to a "cash report" of the bus line, the city wound up with a deficit of $155'.U for tbe month of Ju1y. 'l1le line was }Oiling much more, and "as near bankruptcy. when the dty purchased It ln June. Tht city repaired lb< buses and hired an 1dd.itional driver to better serve \be community,Wheaton reported. Wheaton said it is likely the buses will be "golng Into the black"' later this summer, now that the Fe11tival trams have been replaced by city bus 1ervlce. Total income brought In to the line In July was $1,265.0S. Total expeditures Including payroll St'ld operational cost! was $1,420.47. Expenditures not included In the report were tht depreclaton of the buses and retirement contributions ror tht employees, Wheaton noWd. N.ILY P'U.OT ...... .., lM ,. ..... Rock Pile Rocket ' . ' Da:v.e StoJfer of Lagwia Beach may have ridden the WQVe qf .the; day , Wednesday when he bounced down the face of this wall at the• Rock Pile on the north end of Laguna. Lifeguards r~port s~rf is up eenerii.Hy · along the· Orange Coast. It has been building in most spof& for~the ~ast tWo:,days. At P<>Pular.surfing spots·such·es the RoCk Pile;,sets· of.waves rallilng !h sit~ from foiu to seven feet. w'ere reported today,, wi\11 OC· c~s'fbnaI;1'bic&ies" like· thj.s ·one. . . •, .. · , . . · . ' ' '' . ' ·. . ... I • ' ) • • ' i I . ! ' i I '. • ' • • . • • • 1 • • .. ; ·~ ., "1 ' 4 11 ' ' . . . ' . ~ \'' ' .. . Laguna Cotilt ·~ \•~.' 'elitnnk ·1 "P.e~ .W;I~~ .'.~· . ~ . . · •• 1 • • r · B~i.iiin1~7~W;· ;· San Clemente Studie1 Softer For Cycle Ridfug l1·eas Thr1mn on lfdad . . ' Pcitking Laws A softened version or a proposed ordinance covering parking of campers, By BARBARA. KltEIBICH · to find a. place, wbtte it could ~ 'permit- ail boats and th 11 .. _ • or lflff o.qrH!lt IMff ted with safety. tr ers.-e mu: on private Motorcycles are ..,.,i .. y, can -·•· a Jd th! S a l I Is --~ ti f ·---~ Councilman ~ ..... rd 'lx>rr sa · 1 an emen e o pa~ scru ny o f\re-hazard 'in dry brush areaa . and ~ .. .. plarining' commissioners and critics make ugly """rs on the b!llsi'des, Laguna would be a good ideat ~laJ)y for ........ minibikes, which are banned , from the Wednesday. Beach city councilmen agreed Wed-streets' by the State Vehicle COde but The' proposed code, assailed by some nesday night, but still they provide a which many p,arenb give to '10..an.d tz. for several weeks as a discriminatory Jot of hatmlesS fun for a , lot of . young year old!!. "1'Jbe parents wobld have regulation' covetjng where the vehicles people and it would be nice if the to transport them to i fid!ng area," could be parked. now w'lll go before city could flnd !\Orne safe place for i..orr·cornmented. city COW\Cilmen for more consideration. tbem to ride. · Boyd said it wou!d ·1'· a good way The changes approved by com· This seemed to be the consensus Of to , cet. ,parenll lnvOlved in their missioners Wednesday deleted a ban oo the council as it reviewed a proposed young8ters' attl~ltles, "&ctt, 'o( llkt Little par)ting of the vehicles between the street ordinance that would ban riding Of League.,. edge and the front-yud setback of a "vehicles propelled by .lntemal ctn'n· It was qreed tbat fmWni ·a suitable residenUal Jot. bustion engines" on P,l'ivate property area in '. ·• ·-.. na .would be difficult. slnce It means that the code now pro""c....1 witl:lin the city without written consent ~ """"' of the property owner most. adl'"~"1"" open lanc1 is under county tG allow any vehicle conforming as: a · ~ ...... h'cl be .. _.. · It also would ban such riding within jurlsdict oh. , · passenger ve I e can parM."U tn a 300 feet of the boundaries of residential City Manager Jamea O. Wheaton noted homeowner's driveway so long as it r · d that In San "'emer!.te 700 acres of land doesn't protrude into the street. property, except or mgress ;:-.? egress ..,. The code originally banned the and beyond that area if the resulting owned by B~ Young University driveway parking. if a machine i'utted . noise was sufficient to bring complaints had been approved for blke ridins, from adjacent residents. permitting the city to proceed with more past the front yard setback line. The proposed ordinanti! is similar to stringent legislation to control 'riding in A total of 50 San Clementeans signed one recently adopted by the Board of built-up areas. petitions supporting the complete original Supervisors to control cycle riders · in Councilman Peter Ostrander noted that ordinanei!, but some critics blasted the county terTitory. the San Clemente riding area alreai:l.y· code. The county fire marshal has al.so sup-i! "terribly overcrowded." One of its leading foes was Mrs. Fern ported such legislation because of brush He Suggested the ordinance could be Dickson, president of a local rockhound fires started by cyclfi riders and the m~lfJed to Permit ' landowners willµig club, who had termed the idea a "snob-ordlnanei! contains a. requirement that to admit riders to poSt such permission bisb, unAmerican " idea. cycles be equipped with a Bp¥k atT~ on. the land, instead of having io proVide She also complained that her family approved by the U.S. Forestry strvice ,mttep con.sent for each ride. There camper -her only.means of transpOrta· and state-appf9ved muffler. I 1,1.ppe4fed ' to .~ ,no ol;>jection to this. tion .-wouldn't have been ~!Owed in • Councllmen agj-eed 'that the ordlnahce Chapge. . · · 1 her own driveway bad the ordinan<e sboold follow tile coonty legtslatli>n1 In torr ·1uggest!d that Great U.kea Prop. been passed, ·~ !pecifyiog the vehlel!s covered to triclude ert.lta might comider permitting a rUilng The code sUll ,pi'oviCles ,that ·vehicles ~ mQtoreyCJe, trail blkes,_motor sccioten. area In U. 500-acre triangle adjacent not desli!J13ted u paasenger vehicles by minibikes, 3une bUggles, J,.ps, or other lo Liaooa €apYon Road ind El Tor~ the vehicle ctlde mwit adhere to stringent tDQtor driven vehiCJes, Road. ..; · parlting and storage regulatkma. CoUncitlman Charlton Boyd · ~ note Wheaton said this would be an ideal It also states that. oo disabled or of the fact that many :Poot>.!• derive locat!Oll:' n.. only area wtthln lb< city unlicemed campers, bU&eS, boat! or the great enjoyment· from eyde·, ridlni. and ~ CX>ldd think of off-hand, he said, (See CAMPERS, Page I) felt the city sbolud malu! on •eflort (See CYCLES, Pa1e ll ' ~ I Law B-ars · Minofs in Mo.tel · " . · ·No One . AJlowed · With()ut Adult ·C,~peione . in. laguna; ;~• t ' ' • I ' ' ' An ordiriance. restric:ttna: ocCupancy of Lorr, who had tequeated revfval of ithe and 'othir ·bases' that 11\Yihbig 'goes · in hotel: :motet and apartment house rooms ordinance said it wu ahned more at 1 llapl'.11' '. 1 ' • • • • '' by uncbaperoned minors In Laguna controlling unsupervised mtnora thad at > • Ile cjutlllol)t<I tile advllab!lity ol tiyb;g· Beach -red hesaed for pwege 'lta&lale·-·" llokm, olid 'said' following a City Council study session curbing overcrowding. ·' ... woWd f>e r.:garded u "punJ~ve.~'. Wedneaday nighL He cited many pallce cases ln wtµch ~ -• aalcf t( 1wia ~ tiy~ DQ · meatw The ordinance, one of seve.ral tabled unchaperoned ~'Jes bad f o UJD d •, i ' tidt~r an attempt-to pri>tect' by the council after their pr~ta4on themselves in troubj&.ltter renting roctm• ~!?;~,,, · as arzenci measures in June, ·was back In lb< city, Including one hi whlcb police I .liotm ~t.d Ille city mlpt t. for consld«ation u a regular ordinance. found a 15-year-old girl In a bot~ J OOUng , er i Ibo' mpono!bllltl01 of lt would blr occupancy .of a hotel with fou r men. ~ IMiJ,e*1 iJ; ~ , _... ~ ' ' or motel room by any ~ under Mayor Richard Goldberg r1pe1~ hls .1Not · ~ tti1•;tM.10 o'~k curfew, UI unless eccompanfed by a· parent, guar-earlier comment that married let ~ Whlch 1'o tGteftd&I for thi prqtedloft' dian or authorized adult, arkl occupancy and servicemen should be excluded .trom,'.' of y ~·1 Ooldbera repJled.. , by more than five person• under the the ruling. He read ~•ts on l the ordlft1~ age or 21, unlcaa accompanied by an David Munro, commffltliig f~m ti* Jrom PGllCf ~t Ktnne)ll Huci ind adult audience, said Ibis would ~1 m ·P If; Juv .. orrlcer Aki JlmM'wtio agnfcf ,In response to a query from coun· discriminatory enforcement .•• ~11 ',l' that filanyijuvenlle.·run_1wly1 art ·round cilmon Roy Holm, Councilman Edward "announclni lo ""'Icemen at· !:I T (8" ff(IJ'EL, hp ·I)· · / ,/( ) .... A !$-~ear-old SOn 'PWo' 'winnan, brollgbt hllo . lb< Laguna B~Cb · polkle stat.ion at 1 :20 a.m. today by two tilotoMsl! who stoppl!d to h1;lP Mr after she was thfo'Wn from a c•r, told' police Ge had bel!!D beaten by a man · who offered her a ride. · The woman said her assallant, Alter swillowing "three ·red plll!,''1 tore her ' ! •. ' <;lothes . and struck })er several times Jn the ·face ·with bis .fi~,: then threw her out on tht roadway when she tUist.ed ti!! Attempts 'to mol!st'her se:ruillj. ' Eri route, to visit l fi;iend lit ,Or&nge, she bad boarded the . wrong bus and wOijnd up ln Huntington Beach, the woman said. She had bet;n walling twG hours for another bua when the . man <Jrove up and oflered her a ride, ·which she accepted. They went first to Anaheim to change cars, because the man was having car troub!e. Then, instea~ ?f taking her to the bus depot, 11 promtsed, the driver headed for Laguna Beach. They stopped ·at a restaurant for cof· f.ee, &he related and the m~ bou&ht '.'aome red · pl!lJ," three · of . Which l)e ~wallowed. · He then drove out Laguna Canyon Road wbe.re the assault attemPt Wis made .. The. woman said the bad asked tG be le1"' out ,of ·~e , car because he was driving ·erraUclilly after Inking the pU!s. , . . Alter •dumping.•bu. la. the road,' the man drove off down ·a dirt side road, she raid• Two p&S&lilg mol9rl5ts. llopp<d 'When she hailed them,. tried WISUC- cesiflllly"10 cat<:h•up with her.asoallan~ !hen •took . her lo the pollca litallon. She ·1 wu given first aid for· )l'U1*s on her ·forehead and ' Up aiid· allo bad cbippeli leelh, polloe said. . The. Woman said· all the clothing 1be was taking on her trip was-left in het a~ailant'a van, along.with her purse cont.aining.$75, I .. 1 Cdlta · Meal police were itequested to 1ur,vey Ute canyon ma · bY b'e.lkopter ind :pilot .~Im. Wagner. ""1 observer Ftank Upham were dispatched, but forc- Odr ta ,ivoup·the·llunt·dile lo fl(. · · . .:...: ; I ,' _.!-,. ,:.:. • ~ • t . I • Mexieo Divol'ce Law • . ) r • • Would Hurt'Eeonomy JUAllEZ, MextCo (~) ~ Pruldent Gualnvo Dlu Ordaz' plan lo ouUiw qW&te -dJvOrctJI t. 'Mexloo Wold c0et their hol'iler ' city IU inlllkln • ytaf; ,.,.. lb< man In Clbarp ofolht 111anlclpel flnancea. . • ' I · 'nle·li>I• hi tans ala · w.Uld roach 1u."riilliiqt! i.. 1t:1· m1m0n• ann!'iDY1 , I11111Uo Dtiirtfi•the I#, cll\l!C.~ .. iald: ''11\e "i\ .~'be .!Wing ·~· for di-... airs In lhla ~It)' · ·~ · llJo Grandt from· EI'~ ... ~ Tq. • .. •• j TEN COOS Ru·ss Chief To Attend U.N~Meet LONDON (U)'!) -Soviet Premier AlexeJ N. Kosygin plans to meet Pre!.1- dent Nixon and other Weatern leaders in New York early in October, thus making, a summ!t conf~nce virtually certain, East European diplomats ul4 today. The occasion will ~ the U.N. 25th annlvmary meeting in New Yott ·which world leaders will attend. ' . Ko:i:ygin apparently· would prefer • Big ~our power sumrrtlt · with Nixon ·and the premiers of France and Britain to a bilateral conference with the American chlef executive. The diplomats ind.icat,ed that behind th.is preference li~ the Kremlin'a ~ parent desire to avoid charges of an alleged "ganging up" of the superpowert by rJ,Dglng the Soviet , Union publicly '!fl the~ side of the \Jnlted Stale.!. The special U.N. meeting ii lclleduled fj)r 9cl0ber 19:-U. Diplomatic feelera were apected to bt put. out aboilUy. SOme sound.in~ 11~ par•n\ly are .already 1under1way fir 'th! ~ ~f ~ p~jected -.nJt ~ 11' Brillsh Prime }!In-Edwarli llealh •nnoun«<! l()llle time ag~, that be will go lo'tll:lll York. Jtt also was expected tO li>eM >l)lh l!l>on iii\ UJ.oceulon. -n..,. ls ..._• .laoJ,t hO-about "reilcl\ ~nt ~C-· ' " . '-'-"""'g" Pompidou, wbO la not ""'""' 'lo ha~ tit>nUed ire.at enthuslasm for another vJalt to New York after his disturbing eiperlenco dur!ni bis f1!C'lll trip !here. But ap- peunUy no flDaJ declaion bu 'yet been taken In Paris. Pompidou ls to pay an official vii:it to the Soviet uruon in the first hall of. October whlcb may determine his further moves. If a four.power summit proved Im· practical, a face-~face meeting between Kosygin and Ni.ton a p p e a re d "inevitable," the sourcea said. They said there iS ''a lot to discuss,. and . latest international developmenta more than warrant an exchange of views of the highest level. By then the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) between RllBSia and America will have reached their first conclusions, and the Middle East peace probe will have advanced IUflidenUy to project the chanc~ of an extension or termination of the present cease-tire the sources said. . ' The Far East scene, including above all the Vietnam war, also were expected to come under review,. although the Russians lately have shied away from any peace initiative for apparent Jack of aufficlent influence in Hanoi. . Pair Win Primary HAR TF 0 RD, ColUI. (UPI] Gubernatorial candidate Thomaa J. Meskill 'ai)d Senatorial •IPtrll!lt Lciwell P. 'Wlecker Jr. easily · de£eated their opponents Wednesday in the 'first Republican primary In Connecticut'• history. Orange We•dler Filter«! •UllS!tlno ls !he word for Fitday aloni , the Orange ·Caul with low cloud& providing the ffl. tration and lowering the temperi· ture to about> 72 locally and 8$ further inland. l Z DAJLV PILOT SC Harassment Protested By Manson LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Hippie cult leader Charles Manson, hil shirt tail out and his long hair uncombed, appeared briefly on the stand at the Tate-La.Bianca murder trial today to prof.est what he claimed was mistreatment by his jailers. Defense counael Irving Kanarek had moved that the court order sherifrs dep!.lije:s !rom harassing the slenQer defeidani. With the jury excluded, Manson was in the witness chair about 10 minutes, his hands folded across his chest. But he never actually was questioned because prosecution a:nd defense attorneys aaed the lime to argue minor pointl and Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older continued the proceedings for one week. Manson claimed deputies forced him to completely disrobe several times each day then conduct what jail inmates tenn a "skffi search" of hi! body cavities. • DAILY .. IF.OT lttff l"tlt?f Intem:igaUon with the jury present then resumed for star witness Linda Kasabian, -who was asked by the defense Wednesday how she felt about Manson and the three young women charged with him in the Tate murders. She said !he felt "compauion" for them and wished they would "get up here and do what I am doing -te.11 FELLOW OFFICER DON ANDERSON CONFERS WITH INJURED CONNIE ATKINSON San Clamtnte Policeman lniure1 Arm Lifting Scoottr Off of Mettr Mild After Cra1h the truth." From Page J Vehicle Hits Her interrogator was Ronald Hughes. a roly poly man with a red beard who is trying his first criminal case. HOTEL ROO' M LAW. He resembles act..-Burl Ives. • , , "What was the power of Charlie?" -! . "": .. Patrol . Scooter; Hughes as~. in Laguna Beech motels where they l 1bat sent Manson's attorney, Kanarek, have been perinitted t to ngi!ter by1 to his feet. ()WOO'I who don'~.jbolber to ask to( "There is no power of Charlie,'" identilicaUon. '· • Kanarek shouted. Tbouah most hotel cperators eierclse Manson, tiny in his blue denim prison controla, ~ officers said, m a n y clothes. turned ID Kanarek and said' youngsters dO get· into trouble after they "Watch your mouth." are perinltted to move ·~,into ·leu Mrs. Kasabian also admitted. that she scrupulous establishments. , stole $5,000 from a friend and took Surf an<! Sand owner Merrill Johnson it with her to the Spahn Ranch when said ~e ·felt the ordinance .would be she: joined the hippie cult led by Manson. "a good tool for legitimate businesses Her admission of stealing the money to use." • from Charles Melton, a friend with whom He said most of the hotel and motel she and her husband, Robert, lived before operators in town exercise their own she joioed the "Manaon Family." waa oontrols, but added, "It is aurprL!ling the. most damaging challenge to her the. nwnber of parents who will call story of why she joined the group. and make a reservation, then send their In the afternoon session, Hughes con-youngsters down alone or in gtoups. Unued bis cross examination and launch~ 'J'.hen .we have .to disappoint the ed a series of astoniabing questions. youngsters by telling them we can't "l);d you think Owles Manson was take them in without a parent. The the devil?" ~:W.ild1:14a& b "He is a devilish man," she replied. 'and 'It -~dft't'"'f;e •?/ :~:!;~1:h~ "'The devil in the body of a man!" hotels." . "Yes." Former Chamber ot Commerce presi· At the point:.flHogbes'. .... 1n-~ d "* ~ ·t.ai:E' said ~ ".eer~t temipted by ~ I.I!' ley.r Jus~ ot;~ hil<J::., · , fiiu~w .~,l!ilft repeated his qu · I · ca& Of lltl!lneb' cs, but tllt cmunance "What waS the power of Charlie?" would be a good control for those who "I just wanted to do everythi.oi and do not. anything for him." Boyd wanted to know how tbe Jaw "Why was that?'' would be enforced. · "Because 1 loved him. He made me The basis would be the same as en.- feel good. He was just beautiful." forcement of alcohol laws, Lorr said, by "Are you still in love witb Mr. requiring identification, but the main Manson?" purpose would be to give the operators "Yes." a tool for ~elf-policing. I "It would serve to persuade the operator to conduct his hotel in a manner 0 M I.ea consistent : with the ordinance," ·&aid rm.a C fi Wheaton. "Some of them have told me Services Slated Long time Laguna Beach resident Orma B. McLean died in North H9Ilywood Sunday. if they had an ordinance behind them It would give them the courage to tum people away. a legal basis for ruch action." Wheaton said he would predict "no more than a couple of citations in 10 9ears" under the ordinance.' Tt would be used more for "persuasion," he said. operator dOt.J not heed our warning, he theo could be cited under the • Off• J • d ordlnanco. 1t would 11e up to the Cour! • . leer n ]Ure to decide if a pattern of violation e.1· .. isled." ,San Clemente parking officer Connie Lorr said that '° ]Ql>g as per- under 21 are conildered .minois under. the Jaw "jt is j.ncumbent upon us .. W see that 14., 15 ,and t&-ye4f-olds d6n't get into trouble here, of get misused by elder people." Munro suggested that "there were coon· ty agencies if morals are the problem and the police i! it is crime." Holm concluded the discussion by aaylng he would like to find some alternati ve to such in crd1nance, but "I do feel there are some thoughtless adult landlords wllo are using the kids, and one good thing about the ordinance is that it zaps the landlord and not the naive kid who just got here fJ'COl. •Ute Midwest." ~· ·Fro.m Pf', l CY tts .. :·· would be the acreage at Top of the World owned by Chinese fer Christ. Another area now used by riders, he added, is the hilly land near Thurston School, but there have been complaints· abou~ riding in both these locations. Lorr painted out that with the county and many neighboring commLl"llitles adopting ordinances banning the bikes, Laguna should act promptly to avoid becoming the target of "an invasion of motorcycles, dune buggies and JeePs" displaced from other areas. Atldnfon suffered a painful leg Injury. Cuts, bruises and shock Wednesday In -a q;.ylj" which lelt her trapped for a ~.t.mie in,ber small patrol scooter. ~ collision between the parking meter buggy and a large luxury car occurred at about 1:30 p.m. at 305 N. El Camino Real. Mrs. Atkinson, who started as San Clemente's meter maid a few months ago, was northbound on the busy roadway when the scooter collided with 'the late. model Cadillac driven by Robert C. Rochelle, 30, of 120\fz C.Oral Ave., Balboa hian~. nie~ 1mpact sent the scooter flying and lt flipped and skidded on the pave· ment. Mrs . Atkinson, wearing a seatbelt, I wu given first !lld after felltiw offl.C:ers li!tei:f the scooter upright. Patrolman Don Anderson suffered a pulled tendon in his foreann during the rescue. Mrs . Atkinson was treated at the Camp Pendleton base hospital. Police said she would probably return to llght duty some time next week. Rochell~ tqld highway patrolmen that his visibility was impaired by a. parked camper as he pulled out of a parking lot for a left turn into traffic on El Camino. His car, which clipped the side of the scooter with its right front fender, sustained moderate damage. Rochelle was not injured in the mishap. The scooter crash wa.s the third on record for the city vehicle fleet. The battered white buggy was heavily damag· ed. Re ady to Dump Nerve G·as Cargo ' Loaded on· Ship SOUTHPORT, N.C. (UPIJ -An old liberty ship took aboard a deadly cargo of 1erve gas today and officials said as quickly a1 the vessel is ready for sea, the. port cf Wilmington and ship channels in the lower Cape Fear River will be closed. Clearing weather speeded the loading of the vessel, and rear Adm. E. A. Allen Jr., Conunander of the Fifth Coast Guard District, issued an order declaring the area a "security wne," closed to shlpping Friday through Monday, Aug. 14·17. The nerve gas is c<>ntained in old rockel.a which the Army plans to dump in the Atlantic, providing the federal courta do not intervene. A hearing on the matter was scheduled today before Federal Judge June L. Green ln Washington. Sen. Ernest F. Hollings (D-S.C.). charged In a prepared Segate speech today that the Army was guilty of gross neglect and "shocking and careleu" pro- cedures in piaoning to dump the gas in the ocean. He said the operation "flouts the simplest rules of common sense, ignores significant scientific evidence en the potentially harmful effects of this sea dump, and in ~ doing take! UMecessary risks with the ocean's future -hence our future." Gov. Claude Kirk of Flcrida and the enviroJUne11tal defense fund cont.end there are "many Unanswered quest.ions" as to the efiecl the dumping will produce on the environ~ent along the Scutheast <:oast, particularly Florida. The 14,500 deteriorating rocket!, en. cased in 418 • concrete • and • steel vault!, are to be burled ii 16,000.foot deep water and Col. Jack Oslck, an Army chemical expert, says the salt water will make the gas "innocuous." Salt water dilutes the gas. capable of killing a human within minutes, into harmless acids, the Army said . Sixty longshoremen, given 16 hours of special instruction on how to handle the rockets, began loading the potentially· deadly cargo Wednesday aboard the rusting liberty ship Le Baron Russell Briggs, which will be scuttled as a "coUin" for the rockets. The rockets arrived at lhe Army's ocean terminal at Sunny Point late Tues-- day night and early Wednesday morning aboard two trains from Army arsenals at Anniston, Ala., and Richmond, Ky. The Army said the 11erve gas was begin· ning to leak from some of the rockets in storage and must be disposed of soon. The longshoremen we.re given gas masks and a belt-kit containing several syringes full of Atropine, an antidote for the gas. Half a doze111 cages of rabbits were scattered near the docks as "monitors," meaning their deaths would signal a gas leakage. Authorities said the tedious job of shif. ting the concrete vaults containing the rockets from the trains to the sh.ip would take until late Friday, at least. Attorney Edward Lee Rogers of East Setauket, N.Y., representing the en· vironmental defense fund , had asked for an immediate hearing on his motion for a restraining order because "once shipping begins it will be impossible for the court.! to grant us relief.'' Kenly Webster, Deputy G e n e r a 1 Counsel of the Army, said there would be ample time for the hearing before the ship leaves port. 'Saloons,' 'Bars' Now OK In State After 35 Year s Special to the DAILY PILOT SACRAMENTO -Banned for 35 years in California, except on the swinging doors of Hollywood wesw;m movie set;s, saloon is now a legal name for a cocktail lounge or tavern. Gov. Ronald Reagan sigoed a blll aUthorizint· 9\lch 'a tlfle; Tung' with bar or barroom, Wednesday in a modest ceremony at f.he Capitol here. "Now 1 won't be able to get into one by mistake," said the governor, who chanced into a few saloons during · his career as a cowboy on the silver screen. He was usually hWlting the villain instead of a snort. The banning of the three words came in 1935 as an inferestlng method tif assuaging the stinging sense of defeat for those who had endorsed and !iU(r" ported the prohibition of liquor itself. Saloon, bar and barroom, the theory went, had come to represent sleazy joints with swinging doors and a swinging clientele that often swung at each other over money or the favors Of loose women. Speakeasies, honkytonks. gambling. prosUtution and bootlegging were all associated with less innocuous tenns than tavern or cocktail lounge. Assemblyman John T. Knox {0.Rich· mondl, introduced the novel legislation recently at the suggestion of Don Bradley. The latter managed Gov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown's unsuccessful 1966 bid for re.election. '4Would!J't you like to be known .11s the lnan who brought the saloon back to Ca!ilOmia~," Bradley wrote the legislator. "It would certainly place your name among the immortals." For those interested. a saloon has been characterized variously. "Back then, a saloon was known as a place for perpendicular drinking.'' observed Assemblyman Knox, who failed to add that some perpendicular patrons finally got horizontal. · The committee that wrote Ole legisla· ti on against bar, barroom and saloon in 193a included one teetotaler, Sen. Andrew R. Schottky, Knox recalled. _He said he knew of two who tippled, no matter what you called the premises, "1 guess they all did," he added. Sen. Schottky himself wrote a de£iniUon of :saloon when the original legislation signed out of existence Wednesday was drafted. Mrs. McLean first came to Laguna Beach In the 1920s and built one of the first weekend cottages on Sunset Terrace. Following her retirement from the Tille Insurance and Trusl Corporation, she and her husband moved to Laguna permanently. Mrs. McLean moved to North Hollywood following her husband's death in 1965. Mrs. McLean ls survived by a niece Mrs. Ruth Noruk ; three nephews, James. Paul, and Jack Allen; elght grand-nieces and nephews, and 13 great-grand nieces and nephews. Holm doubted the practicality of en. forcement in the event one authorized person should register. then bring in friends later, without the knowledge of the operator. Goldberg said he felt the law didn't go far enough and "thought a fine should be provided. Wheaton uoted that '(lolaUon of the ordinance would constitute a legal misde- meanor, which does carry a possible Councilman Roy Holm said he had' "mixed feelings" about the ordinance. "Besides the noise and fire ha~ard,_l personally hate ta see the hillsides scar. red up," said Holm, "but 1 feel a lot ()f young people are having a lot of fun wilh this so I would support the idea of looking for a riding arta, but 1 just don'i know where." Boyd suggested that interested groups and parents might set up a club ar· rangement for minibike and trail bike riders with the assistance of the recrea· tion director. Wheaton agreed that since the Recrea... Hon Department already has set up clubs for golfers, surfers and others, it should be possible to establish such a club for bike riders and then look for a place for them to operate. Special Safe DAILY PILOT H.-ffllftM IHdl ........ , .. ...,. s. cr.r 111tw Oll •NGl COAST PUtllSHIHG CQMl'ANY lo\l•rf M. Wo14 1'1'11klffll •<.d Publltl>tr J•clr It. Curl•v Vitt P,..1:0 .. u •nd t-r•I M1_,r ,,.,.,,,.., l(,,,.;1 E•ltor Tl11»M•1 A, Murphiftl ,,......,1111 ltl!er lit.•1t4 r. Nill S.Ulh ~ C-IJ' l<dlW -... D\I• MtM: .'30 W('1 hY $1!'w! H...,.,I 8ud>: 2211 Wnl a.111n 8clvlwto,_. i........ llMtfli: m ~ •-H1111111t• 84Kll1 11171 Bndl ....,...,..,,. 1111 """"',., ~ H«tll fl c-i... .... Une or jail sentence. "In the case of consistent violation," he said, ''if the police keep picking up youngsters who say they are living at a certain hotel or motel and the From Page 1 CAMPERS .•. like cmi1d be parked in the driveway. Provi.!Jions enforcing shielding o f storage areas on rear -portions of pro- perty also remain in the amended code. In ct.her ac~on Wednesday com- missioners delayed a request for a coo- ditional use pemllt to operate a foreign car sales and repair lot at 924 N. El Camino ReaJ. Applican~ Franclsoo._ Sanchez amended his bid for the permit by adding auto repair and service -• factor which was not included in the legal an- nouncement of Wednetday's public hear-- Ing. As soon aa the announcement (and the addltlon) are readvertlsed, the hear· Ing will resume. P.O. Supervisor Killed by Sniper LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A svperviaor el Ille Tmnlnal Annex Poot Ofll<le wu lhot to death early today as ht left th< iaeillty. Police said HarTy Sendrow, $2, Was abot thrte times u he ran from tus ....Uant. An all polniS ·bulllllln was laaued for Alfred Kellum of Loo Angeiu, who police aald appmnUy laid In wait outalde tbe facilll1 lor Sendrow. It was generally agreed that the ordinance would be acceptable, with the' understanding that the city explore the JX>SSibillty of finding a safe riding area. Surfing Contest In Huntington Goes Back on TV Surfers competing in•tbe annual Ul}ited States Sw-rboard ContMt Jn H~ton Beach will be 1'on the tube'' agafil ifttr one year's absence from televl.sion. The show, according to City Recreation and Parks Director Norm Worthy, will be filmed by the aumnei 9 (KHJ) crew under the guidance of surfing im· presario Neill Cross. It will be televised in the Southern California, New York and Boston areas and then &yndicated and dl!tributed to other U.S. and foreign cities. Wortlcy said. Under the tenns of the propouJ, the city would rec<lva the firet 110,000 grosa from the syndication while Cr088 wculd · spilt with them any furt.btt income. Worthy e.sUma.ted a possible Income ranging rrom 110,000 to ll0.000 from the l)'lldication. dependlni oo the quality or the aurf and the diatributloo of \be film . The contest had been televiaed yearly by the AOO network which uneq>eetediy withdrew Its coverage hut year. Thla year. the autf show ll 1theduled for SepL 18 to 21l. EXCITING PARTY SETS by STONE and PHILLIPS 5 Pieces Reg . $575 .00 NOW You fnvorllt interior dtdgntr tDIII be Mm to C.Stl$f ~ ••• H.J .GARRETf fURNlllJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS \ -TRY OUI HVOLVlNG CHAAGl- Oi-M ..... 'lllun. • Fri. Ens. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646.02·7r I I' --------------------------------------------------~-,--- Sewage Study Starte,d Laguna ·Repairs Old Plant, Seeks Alternate· By RICHARD P. NALL 01 IH D1lh' '11•1 $1t&f Will Laguna Beach abandon lts o~ete and overloaded sewer plant and make an agreement for the Irvine C.ompany to process the municipal waste? It's a possibility. But. said City Manager James 0. Whealon, so is a mulU·million dollar plant to serve Laguna a possibility. Tbe city is currently trying to patch up its old plant until a new sewage disposal system -by whichever method -is put into effect. Wheaton said the city has been t.rylng to accumulate funds over a three-year period to handle the replacement necessilies. This effort was sabotaged recenUy when an old clarifier gave up the ghost. Replacement and related work will cost $90,000. If the federal govemmeot picks up one-third, said Wheaton. the re- maining $60,000 is still probably going lo push the tax rate up 10 cents. The council had hoped to bold the line on jt. There isn't time to put together a bond issue for a new plant Wheaton said there isn't sufficient infonnation yel on which to base it. IRVINE AGREEMENT Also, he sajd, "We're working with the Irvine Company on the potential or joining them at the Crystal Cove outfall or wherever they place it. We Would lhen abandon the old plant." If the city did join the Irvine Company. i;aid \Vheaton, it would entail building a major pump station to push the Rwage up-coast. Wheaton said: "[assume this would be less expensive than building our own planL But we're in the J>05ition now of having to keep the old system going foud M five ye81"8. It would take at lea.st three years if the decision wete made today. "We have been holding this together with bailing wire and the bailing wire is failing. It's a real dollar problem for the city." Another major dollar problem, he feels, is going to be beefing up the in-city traffic capability w i t h healUty new arterials. Not only is tbe traffic clog a headache but the city promised to remedy it while seeking a bypass freeway rather than one bisecting Laguna Beach. COST IN MIU.IONS Wheaton hasn 't even rough estimates yet on what this would cost but he knows it wouJd run into the millions. He views sewage and arrtaial rOads as the city's biggest future financial headciche. :, Other improv~ments that ~t come fnclude new equipment for the finance department where the second hand Editor's Note: Laguna Beach Cit11 Ma1wger Jam.ts D. \Vheaton discus· ses need& for major municipal im· provements in this final .segment of a three·part serie1 on hi& triews of the Art Colony. Wheaton. leaves this month to become city manager of Corona. machinery has aboul reached peak capacity. "We:~e going to have to have study en data processing to assist with cur mechanical problems,'' Wheaton said. "Mechanically we 're reaching capacity. Our present equipment was bought se- cond hand in 1964." The city manager said the fire depart- ment is in good shape. It would probably have to eipand to hand1e future an· ne.iation, he said, but it would not be a financial shock like the one in which the department was increased from 12 men to 28 and two substations' were added. The recreation departmenl "is pretty well setup" said the city manager but there is need for a cotnmunity center building to serve all age groups. Most of the Laguna problems that Wheaton is familiar: wiUi will become the province cf a new city manager. He is becoming cily manager of Corona. NEW PROBLEMS And although he likes problem solving, Wheaton doesn't seem to mind leaving the Old problems for a new set. He smiles a lot these days, since filing his resignation. Speaking of Corona, he said, •"Jbere are five people on that council, four men and a woman. They work together and they believe in the council-manager fonn of government. "They want me to manage the city and that's right up my alley, Sure they've got problems, growth. rezoning, the airport but the people en the ccuncil are going to pull together to do the right thing -six of us." He said this is a bit different than the current trend in Laguna. There is also a current trend among many professional city managers that Wheaton disagrees with. He feels it is i: move toward a power grab. He said, ''The city manager group philosophically is changing. They are Jeanlng more toward 'it's the mayor and me running tbing.s' rather than the council. "l find it very antagonistic to the c:ity managet-couneil form of govern~ menk 111• mtn18tnl .are atepping, into the pclitical..social void along with the mayor. Art Festival Paperback Pondered by DirectQrs Festival of Arts directors are pon- dering the possibilitf of publishing a paperback book on the history of the Festival. The propooal was made by director Paul Griem. He said a "lavishly il- lustrated" book chronicling the Festival from its earliest days, probably could sell for $1.95. It would cost about $25,000 to produce such a book, Griem said. and the return could be as much as $50,000 in the first two or three years. with mcst sales right on the Feslival grounds. Noting that many Festival oldtimers are leaving the scene, Griem said the work should be started "before our sources all disappear." Bowl.er at Work Mayor Richard Goldberg, ex officio member ol the FesUval board, warned against too much optimism on profit from book sales, citing losses on a volume titled '"Ibe Lure cf Laguna,'' sponsortd by the chamber of commerce. Goldberg said be didn't want to sound discouraging, but bad doubts about the money-making posslbillUes of such a ven- ture. , Griem noted that a Festival book would have a "built·in" buying public in the thousands of persons who visit the grounds each season. It was agreed that he should look in to the matter further and report back to the board at the September or October meeting. • JO<I Co<tamagna, a member of the Greens Committ .. of the Laguna Beach Lawn Bowlers Club, washes down sidewalk near new Jawn bowl .. er~ clubhouse at Heisler Park. Facili!Y, de~gne<l tf> preserve view from Ch ff Drive homes, is. nearing completion. It includes dub room, kif.ch· eneUe, locker room, patio and spectator seaUn1. f' "I can't agree with the manager aJign. ing himself with the mayor in political leadership of the community." LET COUNCIL DECIDE Social activism Is not the role of a city manager, Wheaton ~lleves. He be.lieves the manager makes recom· mendatlons and Jets the COWlCU decide. ··1f I'm oot asked for 11 recom- mendation," he said. •·1•m not going to sulk in the comer." Asked about Laguna's highly touted potpourri of talented people., th e departing city manager agreed I.here is talent here. - "We probably do have a higher ratio of college graduates than the norm but the willingness to get inwlved certainly hasn't shown Itself in a plethora of applicants waiting In line to become planning commissioners or assist the City Council. "In the eight years that I've been here, oo mayor has ever had an easy time filling a spot on lhe planning com- mission. "There are talented people that could lend their talents but th.::y don't come forward. Maybe they're waiting to be asked." Is Wheaton going to miss Laguna? ··sure I'm going to miss the beach scene. 1·m a beach boy. I grew up in Hermosa Beach. I used to be a regular al the Emerald Bay volleyball doubles, ''I've got a lot of good friends in Laguna that I'm going to miss." Wheaton said a lot of friends have told him they're sorry be's leaving. He said his emest response has been, "I'm glad that you're sorry." Laguna School To Be Lauded -Jn Publication The iimovaUve education and sound money management at Laguna's Tep or the World Elementary School will be lauded ii the January, 1971 of Instruc- tor Magazine, which serves 700,000 school teachers and educators, it was announced today. The tchool will be honored al one ol eight "Newsworthy Schools" for 1970.. 71 by the publication. Top of the World was selected from several htmdred schools as.one of the eight winAl'r!. ~ PNta of the Jf!uary jssue will be deVoted to full coverage ot the acbool in tat and photographs. Officials at lhe publicaUon said that Top of. the World was chosen becauae it has "achieved indJTiduallzed instruction by using leaderless teams, ~ kinds of student·groupa, and guidance through environmental cues • • • at the lowest cost per pupil In the Lagwta Beach Unified School Distrlcl" Albert B. Haven, principal tf the school, along withthe faculty will also reeeive a plaque for their elforts from the magazine. U.S. to Finanee Thai Troop Move BANGKOK (UPI) -Prime Minister 1banom Kittikachom said today the United States has agreed to help finance a Thai troop commitment to Cambodia. A spokesman for ~ U.S. Embassy declined to comment on Thanom·.!l state. ment Thanom, speaking to newsmen after the morning session of the house of representatives, said, "We have reached an agreement that the United States will help finance Thai troops to be sent to Cambodia. We also have reached an agreement that the Cambodian soldiers undergolng mllit.ary tralnJng In '111ailand will alao be financed by the United States." 'lbe Prime Mlnlster said the agreement •u reached after a series cf meetings 1ttended by high-level Tbai a n d American officials:. Thanom declined to reveal fw1her details ct the agreement. King to Visit Egypt CAIRO (UPI) -King HUBSell of Jordan wlll visit Egypt· Aug. 20 and hold talks with President Gama! Abdel Nasser about the latest development ht the Mkldle East crisis. Middle East News Agency re parted today. Lagunan' s Owl Flies the Coop Laguna Bt&eh poUce are keeping an eye out for an owl, reported missing by householder Frances Blackman of 910 Skyline Drive. The ml'8lng bird, made ol gray cement, with clear crystal eye11, had vanished from Ila spot In her garden wtlen Me returned from 1 short trlp1 Mn. Blackman laid poUce. In addlUon to betns: decoraUve, the owl ii worth $80, 1he added. ) OAllY PILOT The Artist at Work Mmes. Henry Meier of Carlsbad. F.A. Landee of Midland, Mich., and Virginia Adams of Sterling, Mich. (from lett) watch Laguna craftsman Jacobus Baas fashion jewelry at his booth on the Sawdust Festival grounds in Laguna C·anyon. Baas is one of 150 exhibitors at this year's Sawdus~ Festiv111J1 where informal atmosphere has proved a popular drawing card for both local folks and tourists. Disneyland Braces for Labor Walkout Disneyland officials were braced for a possible . major labor walkout this morning, but the strike which could have closed part or all of the park failed to materialize. The latest threat to the Magic Kingdom came Wednesday night. when the Orange County Central Labor Cooncil. AFL-CIO, voted to sanction and support the American Guild of Variety Artlsta (AGVA) strike under way at Disneyland. The AGVA strike, which began last Saturday, involves only about 75 to 125 of· Disneyland's 6,000 employet. Alt.hough the Laber Council voted to support AGVA. Disneyland officials reported that '"Ibere is oo spreadlng af the strike this moming. Everybody is on the job, with the exception or the striking AGVA members." Approval for the AGVA strike by the Labor Council came shortly after Disneyland fired 26 entertainers for tak· ing part in the walkout and put eight· more on notice. Management Insisted that the original strike by the AGVA members Yiolated the nc-strlke clause in the current con· tract. acific • av1ngs • • • • • • • • • • AND LOAN ASSOCIATION for maintaining a $50022 balance in any of our high rate accounts -take your choice. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUALRAtE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS l50\ $100,000IDi ONE 6.00\ 5,000IDi TWO 5.75\ 1,000IDi ONE 5.25\ 5002!! %th 5.00\ lIDl ONE DAY Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day. ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE -\ FRTIEkEt s d • ';~11111' 1. Traveler's Checks 3. c ets o ports an . ~ . ~ 11\\~; 2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Ticketron) ~ 4. Many other FREE Services OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STME1' • COSTA llDA, CAIJFORNIA • PHONE 54MON ' 1-, ~ U, 197' An anned bandit took '31 ln cash from Denvu magazine 1boP own- er AaNn Yenkln. but left behind a cassette tape nconler. saying: •<Keep the tape recorder: maybe it will make us even.'' Police call· ed to !be scene opened the record- er and foUDd two Pl billJ tucked inside.. • A mw prestige restau.ro.nt U 1t:htdtded to optn 7t.t%t week 01l tht 95th floor of the Jo1m Han- cock Ctnttr in Chicaoo. Tht Ioco:tfon oddtd an unusuol prob- lem to tJ1ose normallll rusociated with such ventures. Wines, the uperts explain. wi U have to be aiortd oe ground level bt"caw-e tM 'IWllJI of the buildtnQ in the wind would ruin fint: vintoge.r. • Mexico City molocycle police Lt. Luis Gonuln neveT bothered to turn in bis uniform. boots, hehnet, badge and revolver when be was fired from the force two weeks ago. for continlled. absence. Police dea t.ectives who caught him fininl! a motorist Tuesday afternoon~ found out why. Gonzalez, who purchased. his own motorcycle, had i one into business for himself. They found $40 U.S. in rumpled bills in his packets, believed to be the day's receipts. Police charged Gonzalez with the usurpation of a police- man's functions. • RamsRate, EnRland computin~ center .employe Jimmy B•rrett lit his pipe Tuesday and sent firemen from neighboring communities raclnir to -their trucks. A finn spokesman said Barrett's match had accidentally set off a new sen- sitive electronic fire alarm. "At least we know the aJarm works," the spokesman said. "But.we may have to ban mwking near it." Poli.ct ca rs toured lint.on, England Tue sda y alerting resi· dents to the e1COPt of a btar from a local zoo. Actuall11 it was more of a1t apptat than a toom- ing. The be ar is a cuddly, J. month-old cub anawtring to the name Misc.ha. • Mrs. Joa n H•wkln1 of Farnham, EnRlan<I flies a red flaR from her clothesline when her big tom cat Mui is out on the prowl. Neigh· hon have complained that the cat, which weighs 24 pounds. has at· tacked their pets. • Morning after mornin~. l)recise- Jy at 6:30. the wall of an ambulance siren split the sleepy Quiet of a Miami interstate expressway exit ramp. Mr•. R. L. Fleming, whose home faces the ramp, became su- spicious of the rea:ularity of the emergency caUs and telephoned the ambulance company. "The ambulance company told me· that a ni~ht shift ambulance driver who lived a few blocks away from me would sound 1li5 liiren so his wile would know he was comin~ home a.nd put the eggs on." she said. The siren doesn't sound quite so fre.. quently anymore. North Viet Clllef Heads For Paris PARIS (UPI) -Nol1h Vietnam an- llOWICed today thlt Its cl\lel nq;IU.tor at the Parta talks, Xuan '!buy, ta mum. inc from Hanoi to end a ~mooth boycott of the -pt.ICI ..... !.....,... tbe anoouocemem on 'Jbuy'1 rttw'n came at the end of the !9tb - ;. the tallui, a me<tiq In which llO procreu was reported. Ambuaador David K. E. Bruce, ap- pearlng for the .......i time In b!J role 11 Oliel U.S. Neiotlator, called for , .. nuine talks. The head of the North Vietnamese delegation, Nguyen Minh Vy, said there were no "poslUve result.II" from tbe meeting. But the announcement oC 'Ibuy'1 nlurn wu aeei as 1lp.lficant. U.S. officials have said that hlJ return was an lm8 portant indicator « North Vietnam'• negotiating intenUons. "We have received news that minister of state Xuan 1buy will soon be back in Paris," Nguyf'.l Thanh Le, the spokesman for North Vietnam's de1ega· lion, said at a news conference. Le was answering a oewsman's questioo as to when Thuy was returning. Le did ool 1lve f precise date for Thuy's return. '[be announcement had been expected folJowin& lhe appointment of Bruce to '1JCCeed Ambu.sador Henry ca.bot Lodge. Lodge resigned last Novem- ber. Before Bruce's appointment, the. U.S. delegation WU beaded by Philip c. Habib as aclini chief. '!buy walked out in May to protest Nixon's failure to appoint a new American deleptloo chief. During the meeting, which lasted 314 hours, Bruce told the communists he did not accept "Posing your demands as preconditions wblch we must accept if these discusalons are to lead anywhere," accord)ng to U.S. spokesmen. Bruce called for 1 'pract lcal'' dlscursions or the laSucs "ln a genuinely aonclllatory atmosphere" and said the U.S. continued "to await some sign you are ready to cooperate in this manner." Vy, alter call!n( for the taUu to be adjourned for cne ,..ea "To give the American delegate mo.re Ume for reflec· lion," told newsmen, "I n!1Tet to inform you that'the new American chief delegate merely stated well-known words of the Nixon AdminUtraUon. I have the feellne the diac::uul.ona are far from being f1vorable to posiUve ....Wta." Uruguay Dragnet Search Started MONTEVUJEO, Uruguay (UPI) -At least 75 persona have been jailed by a 10,000.man dragnet searching for two kidl'Japed diplomats threatened with death by leftwing terrorisUI, police source11 said today . The virtual door-to-door hunt, backed by a Uruguayan government 1uspen1ion of constltuUonal rights allowing police to arrest at will, brings the total of "political" prisontrs in Uruguay to an esllma.1ed 2%& . Terrorists who call t h e m s e I v e s Tupamaros have demanded rt.lease of all af Uruguay 's political prisoners in exchange for the two hostages, U.S. farm expert Claude L. Fly, 65, of Fort Collins, Colo., and Brazilian Consul Aloysio Dias Gomide, 41. A Tupamaro threat to kJ\I the hostages if police draw too close did not deter the search by 10,000 police and soldiers. Letters from I.he victims to their wives indicated Wednesday that they were still alive. Another kidnap victim, U.S. police ad· viser Dan A. MJtrlone, of Richmood Ind., was found ahot to death early Monday. Mostly Sunny • Ill 'Spiro Agnude' Susan Peckinpaugh of Santa Monica jumps out of the water with the latest of the Spiro Ag· new merchandise, a T shirt de-- p~ling a nude vice president with bis foot in bis mouth and the name ••spiro Agnude'' un· dernea1b. ABM Foes Claim Formula Found For Victory Push WASHINGTON (AP ) -Foes of Pre&i· dent Nilon 's Safeguard an ti ballistic missile system, claiming they may have found the formula for victory i" the ashes of two Senate defeats, will mount a final drive next week to reslrict ex- pansion of the system. But $afeguard tupporteH , wh o masterminded the defeat of a bid to carve $322 milllon and two ABM sites from the program, said they ha ve the votes to wlthst.1u1d any challenge. The third effort will come on an amendment by Sen. Edward Brooke, (ft... Mass.) to block construction of two ad- ditional ABM &it.es. The funds instead would be spent to improve the two existing sites . Brooke said he would call his amend- ment up for a vote next Wednesd ay . "I think the opposition to ABM hu hit Its peak and that we cart now move on to other things," said Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.) floor manager of the bil l thal includes upansion of Safeguard to two new sites. The Senate rejected Wednesday by a 82-32 margin a bid by Sen. Harold Hughes ([).low•) to kill all Safeguard expansion funds ei:cept those f or re5earch a.nd development. Then , by a far·allmmer $2-47 margin, ll ended 11 drive .to cut $322 million from the President'• Safeguard budget and restrict the system to the two sites approved last year. The amendment wa11 sponsored by Sen. John Sherman Cooper CR-Ky.) and Philip A. Harl (D-M ic h.l. Brooke's proposal would allow fund1 now earmarked lot geographical ex. p.11nsion of the system to sites in Missouri and Wyomi111 to be used to improve 1ltes already authorized in Montana and North Dakota. Nation , U.S. Hots pot for Second Day in Row is Las Vegas -108 c ...... Ht" M1M1M .. ,. UtM 11•1.et. ~ 111• ... ,....,..,. """"'~ Int -""" ... , ....... llt ,,,.,_ filM•.,,.. ~. Miii! toder ''· c...1111 i.m-•111,. ,...,. mm t.i .. I&. l....._. ..._llllnt , ..... "°'" ...... w ..... ...,..,.""' .,, 'l'-peret1,re• -~-.,. AllChOI'• .. At1111I• lllk1rdl11d lff,,,,.rck l ol1t RollO!I Cl!lc1vo Cl1W;!n111H Clev1il111d ·~­°"'~' Euret.1 ~"" WllMll ·-H.itnt ....... ...... ICt MI'\ C:llV L11 Vftt\ .lw ... _ ... Ml.,.., I~ Mtiwtlllt; .. ,,.., ......... , New °"'-"' -· ... O.•taN ...... , ... ~ .... ,, __ .,_ -....... ht! l lwtl' ... '-«•-le ... l.Ollll l ilt t.•-· (111' Sin 0'"'8 Stlllt lltrtHr1 ''"'' flllk•• &-1111, ,_,flt Tlltl'll'llltoo W1i.l\llll"Ofl HI"' L-,ft(, 'l 6J 61 n " '' ,.. " n • \ell '0 ., ~' ,, 10 .. .. n " " . .. ,, !I }I ., 11 •• • " . " " .. . ,. ,. " " " . . .. .. " . " " .. .. . " .. '" . . " . ., 1~· ,, . .. ,. ,, on ~ . " .... " .. ... " " . " '' II •• ti IOI •• ~ u B52s Puund N. Viets ----~ ----- Allies Try to Lift Base Siege With Barrage SAJGON (UPI) -American warpW>H Jed by waves of BS2 stratofortrtssea dropped hundreds of tool ol bombo on JUD&les around fire baso O'ReWy today Jn a sustained effort to lift a five-day .rt<ge that ha! coat the Ille of ill Sootb Vletnamue commander. Saulh Vietnamese headquarters Nid 95 Communist soldiers have been killed - a figure ooollnnod by body count -in . ac:Uon around O'Reilly since last Sunday. Field commanders estimate another 200 slain by allied air strikes an<I artillery barrages. South Vietnamese lO!Ses al O'Reilly were placed at nine killed and 44 wound- ed. 'Ille dead Included the base com- mander, Maj. Nguyen Van Van. He died today of wounds su{fer~ in a Communist mortar attack. BS2 crews dropped nearly 500 tons of OOmbs on North Vietnamese positi9ns around O'Rellly, teaming up with smaller jets which raked the jungles with rockets and machine pn fire. One fllght ac- cidentally bombed . South Vietnamese lines. Military spokesmen said U.S. F4 Phan- .. ACROBAT THIEVES 'LIKE IN MOVIES' NEW YORK (UPI) -A gang of acrobatic burglars who swung on ros>es from building to building durt1g a. $1 million series of jewel thefta was stopped in the act Wednesday night by police using an electronic device developed for night fighUng in Vietnam. Polict captured one man and recovered $240,000 worth of rings stolen from the offices of lhe 1Botell Ring Co.,. Inc. on lower Broadway. 'Ibey cordoned off a square block around the building in an unsuccessful attempt to trap four other men who fled. "They were fantastic , real pro- fe1sional1, like 90mething out of the movies," said Sgt. Thomas Connolly of the poUce Safe and Loft Squad. ... _ IUICI, OLDS, CHRYSLER, PONTIAC FIRESTONE 2 09 5 ILACKWAU Ill."" CHAMPION I.!.•.!' l .SS.14., I.CJ.ti 4-Ply Nylo1 Cord AUGNIENT 2 MONtoMAnc PlUSIOTH 21HOCKaAr mt ... (0111 Mell l'IA1ton1 Store I 475 E. 17th St. -646-2444 HOURI: Me11. • frC .• I•·""-M 1, .•. -s ..... •·•· te I''"'' • tom Jeta accidentally bombed a South Vietnamese unlt operating six miles eut of the 'mountalntop · baSe, kllllng one aoldler and wounding II othera Wtli· neaday. The U.S. command said thr: accident was under invesUgation. The rommand a1'o reported the IDOS or a UHlH Huey helicopter over the Laotian southern panhandle Wednesday. Jt was the 56th U.S. aircraft JOit over Laos since ~larch 10 when such loeses were nm ttported.. Ooe of the crewmen was killed. • The 851s new five raids Wednesday night and today over jungles three to four mllea aouthwest of O'Reilly. The base, 28 miles west of Hue and 12 miles eut of Laos, Clllle Wlder North Vltlname,. artWery an<I mortar attack * * * ... again today u it baa nearly every day for a week. The but i$ reported surrounded by up to 2.000 North Vietnamese who milltaey sources say are trying to seize the installation in a campaign to rid the area of allied means for shelling Communist supply routes from Laos into South Vietnam. Field reporb al!JO aaid four U.S. Marines were killed and 11 wounded Wednesday when a leatherneck unit operating below Da Nang set off a 155mm shell rigged as a booby trap. It occurred 19 mfles south-southweat of Da Nang. North Vietnamese around the O'Reilly base shot down a tf.s. Anny observation helicopter Wednelday, killing on• of Ito creWUJen. Returning Viet Refugees Leave Cambodia PHNOM PENH, Clmbodia (UPI) - The last of more than 200,000 Vietnamese refugees in Cambodia left for South. Vietnam today . The dirty gray Soulh Vietnamese Ian· ding ship Nha Trang slowly steamed from itll Mekong River mooring carrying 2.000 Vietnameae. in ita holds and on decks. Gaily-eolored tarpaulins p r o t e c t e d children at their mothers' breast while dogs barked. The old, their toothless mouths bright red from a lifetime of chewing betel nut, hunkered down and stared straight ahead. Some of the children bore festering sores on faces and bodies. Bundles coritalnlng the material gains of generations ,,.ere piled on the wharf. Next to them Cambodian soldiers gaily put up bUntlng on a newly erected wooden stand for official ceremonies marking the end of the repatriation. Huntintlon a..ch Flr .. tont Store I 16171 Botch 81vd.-147-1 HOUIS1 M••· • fri., t •·•· te I, ... -s ............ , .•. The repatriation of more than one·thlrd of Cambodia 's Vietnamese population was completed by the deadline of Aug. 15. • Linh Trang, a beautiful 18-year-old girl, looked back with t.ean sparkling in her deep black eyu. She is one of ·two daughters being sent to South Vietnam with her widowed molher. She was born in Cambodia, like her mother and many other Vietnamese. Never has ahe seen Vittnam, the country authoritie&-now tell her is home. "We do not know where we are going," she said. "I go without hope .•• I don't know what will happen. I do not know what to expect." · Most of tbe refugees left Cambodia on South Vietname!e naval flotillas that took two days to wind the SO miles down the Mekong to the border. Ot.hert \\·ent in sampans and wooden barges. fits Moat FORD, CHEV., PLYIOUTH Flmlllt 1675 Ckl1111ln u.11 1Ww1ll ~'~ ·-~ C0tla Mota -Jerry Hall 1762 tf•wport llvd. -646-SO!t HOUIS: t •·•· M 1:)0 , ••. -s... .. 1 •• 111.ttt1, .•• I ! -. • VO[ 63, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS. 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1970 • 1xon, OS . . - Irate Man · In Rumpus At Station By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1M O.ltt' Mitt lllff A middle-aged man, angry over police seizure or his credit card, took his rtght to San Clemente police headquarters Wednesday, allegedly tried to run down five o!ficeni with his car, then suffered a near-fatal heart attack In his jail cell · The bizarre sequence of events, police said, started in midafternoon at the San Clemente Inn where the suspect. Michael Colin, 55, had been a guest for two days. Police-said Colin, who told them he had jU!t sold his San Clemente property, attempted to use a credit card which had been reported stolen months before. Colin allegedly became hostile during .1 discussion with two detectives and vowed to charge them with theft of his credit card. The officers seized the card at the company's request pending investigation. From the hassle at the inn, Colin allegedly went to South Coast Community llolpital lo Solllh Lo&lma. wbere a dliliriance ·allegedly Jook ~ ove( tr..,lpieal for 111nnan'1 htar\ ~· Alda tllere were qlJOtl>d b~ police as ov~llJ Oolln'I·~ to IU!ve the .._tlftHMe di~ an"l!Sted." Sbc,;iiy after that ~ appeartd at pollce headquarters In San Clemente, where be first asked visiting highway patrolinen to an-est the two detectives. Officers said Colin ~ walked to the front desk shoutinl insult.t as he went , .. ran to his car parked outside the front door , then aUempted to run down a policeman in a black and white unll By then, three more officers were emerging from Jhe office door. Colin wheeled his car and· aped toward them, screech~ to a falt a few feet from the officers and the doorway, ac- cording to lhe J>Olice account. After a atruggle In the car officers subdued the man l"nd booked bim. A short lime Iller Colin was booked and placed in a cell, where be suddenly complained of severe chest pains. An ambulance, aummoned before the attack, arrived and toot the 5&-year-old Santa Monica re!ident to Orange County Medical Center where he was placed under intensive care alter suffering a heart seizure. . Police this morning said they were seeking a complaint charging five counts of assault with a deadly weapon (hi! car), and court action would be scheduled once the man has aufficlenUy recovered. A police lieutenant and two patrolmen who narrowly escaped being hit at high speed, said the man barely missed the.m in his second pass with the car. The patrol car In the first alleged assault was not touched. "He just hopped in his car and noored It. After he mWed the patrol unit we thougbl he would make another •hol at it," one officer asserled, "but he just spun around and headed for m, iMtead." Laguna Bus Line Now Beginning To Make Money The Laguna Beach bus line, now undtt the auspice! of City Hall, Is 1howl• signs of financial Improvement, city manager J1me.s D. Whe11.ovl said thll mornin1. Refer'rlng lo a "cash report" of the bus line. the city wound up with a deficit of $155.42 for the month of July , The line was losing much more, 1.nd was near bankruptcy, wben the ell)' purchased It in June. The city repaired the bu• and h1red an additional driver to better serve the community.Wheaton reported. Wheaton sat d It 11 llktly the buses will be "going Into the black" later this summer, now that th& Festival tranu have been replaced bJ city bul eervlce. Tot.I locome brooght In to the Doe In July w11 11.161.05. Total expedllures lncludlna payroll and operaUonal cosll was $1,420.47. E1penditure1 not included In lhe repGrt. were the depreclaton of the buses and retirement contrlbuUona lot tht employ-, Wbeatoo DOied. Rock Pi.le Rocket D:~ve Stoffer of Laguna Beach may have ridden the wave of the ~ay 1 t~o days. At.popular 1urflng.spots such as the Rock Pile, sets ?f ~aves Wednesday when he bounced down the face oC this wall at the Rock ranaing in ·SlZe from four to seven feet were reported today, w1tp oc· Pile1on the north. end of Laguna. Lifeguards report surf-its up generally casi011al "biggies" 4ke th>s one. . along•the Orange Coast. It has been b'!lldlng in rnO.t spots•forlhe·l"'st · , , . ' . ' . . ente Studies Softer ' Parking Laws A softened version of a proposed ordihance coverlnflparking of campers, trailers, boats a~ lhe like on private San Clemente lots piwed SCJ"Utiny of planrµng commllsionen and critics Wednaday. The1 proposed tode, assailed by some for severaJ ~ as a discriminatory regulation cov~ing ~e the vehlcl.es could. be parked, now will gq before city councilmeo for' more COl)SideraUon. . I Tbe changes approved by com- missiooers Wednesday deleted a ban on parking of the1 vehtctes between the street edge and the front-yard setback of a residential lot. It means ·diet the code now proposed to allow any vehicle conforming as a passenger vehicle can be parked in a homeowner's driveway so long as It doesn 't prolnlde into the street. Tbe code orJa:inally banned t h e driveway park.inc i! a machine jutted past the front yard setback Une. A total of so San Cte{Tlenteans signed petlti9Da supporting-the complete original ordlnance1 but aome critics blasted the cod .. one of•lts leading roes was Mrs. Fern DicUOn, president or a local rockhound club. wbo had termed the Idea 1 "snob- bish, unAmerican" idea. She also complained that her family camper -her only means of transporta- tion -'wouldn't have been allowed in her own driveway had the ordinance been pawd. The code still ~ !hit vehicles not designated as paaaenger vt)llclea by the vehicle code must acfl\en to stringent parking and ol«age regulaW>!il . It also stat.es that no dlaabled or unlicensed campers, busts, boa.ta or tbe illee CAMPERS, Pal' I) I • ' 0. .. I ' \ ""' t· : .. ' . ' I , .. . . . t • ' Lagmta .CoUltcilnien Look · I ' ' ' For Cycle Riding ,A1·eas · By BARBARA KREffilCH or -. °'''' Pl ... •••tr Motorcycles are nolsy, can ere.ate a fire hazard ln dry brush areas and make ugly scars on the hillsides. Laguna_ Beach city councilmen agreed ll'ed- nesday night, but still they provide . a. lot of IU!nnless fun fir a lot of.1*1ilg people and It would 'be nli:e, if the' city could find sOme safe place £or, them to ride. . Th.ls seemed to be the OlllSeDSUS , ol the council as it reviewed a propoee;d ordinance that wo¢d ban riding of "vehicles propelled by lntemal oom- bustlon engines" on private property within the city without written consen.t of the Property owner. It aJso would ban such riding wtlhln 300 feet of the boundaries of residential property. except for ingrtSS and egress and beyond that area jf the resulting noise was sufficient to bring complatnt.s from adjacent residents. 1 The proposed ordlnance b similar to ope recenUy adopted by the Board of Superviaora to control cycle riders ln county territory. The county fire marabal IUls alao IUt> ported such !eg!sla!lon because of bnub fires started by cycle rKlera and the ordinance conta~ a requirement that cycles be equipped with a 11park aITe!lor approved by the U.S. Forestry SeJ"".ice and atatw.pproved mufDer. Councilmen agreed that the ord.lnanct llhould follow the county leglalation in 1peclfyJrc the vehicles cove.red to Include motorcycles trill bikea, motor acooters, mlnlblkea, dune buggies, Jeeps, or other motor driven vehiCI~. Councilman Chiirlton Boyd took note of the fact that. many people derive great enjoyment from cycle riding and felt the ctty abolud make an effort • ' I ' ' ' to find' a plae< wbero II could 'be permlt. ted with safety.' c.ouncllman ·EdW1rif ' Lot'r A id this would be 1 a good Idea., e11pecially for mlniblke.s, wblch1 are banned from the otniets by lbt St.le vehicle COcle but whlCb many parent.! give to IO.and 12- year ,olds. '"'Thie parents would have to ~ Ufem to a riding art.a.." Lorr comrtlirited.1 ' Boyd' 'said• II would be a 100<! way to cet , parents lnvolYed in their younfaters' activities, "sort 'ot llte LitUe League.'' It was agreed that find.inc a suitable area In Laguna would be difficult, ainct m~t adjoining open land is under county Jut.ladli;lon. Clty Manager James D. Wheaton noted that In San Clemente 700 acres of land owned by Brlcham Young University had been approved for blk~ riding, permitting the .ci.ty to proc~d with more stringent legislation to control riding In built-up areas. Councilman Peter Ostrander noted that the San Clemente riding area already la "terribly ovlrcrowaed." · He iuggested the ordlnsnce could be modified to permit landowners willing to admit riders to po!lt such perm1sslon on the land, instead ol havlna: to provide written consent for each ride. There appe~red to be no objection to this change. Lorr •uaested that Great Lakes Prop.. ertlea might comider permllUng a riding arta In il!I SOQ.acre triangle adjacent to Lquna Canyon Road and El Toro Road. Wheaton said this would be an ideal k>catlon , The only area within the city he cook! think of off.hand, he laid, (See CYCLES, Pa1e I) ·~ • ) la. l 'I • t • I r . t' "1 ~ ,.. ·it .... l?edro Wo,.l.i~, :· Beaten in Car, ' . Thrown on: ROfld . . . ' . , A 23-year-o!d San Pedro woman, ' ' brooght Into the Laguna Btadl· poUce 1t1Uon at 1:20 a.m. toda:y bf two motorists who stopped to•help lier ali.t she was OUoivn f.roin. a car, told ~ she had been "1aleo by a man •\'<> offered her i ride. The . woman said her llHl/anl, alter ilwaUowinJ "three ~ puts,~" tort i>.r ' 1 • l ' I clothe'. and •l\U~k. ber . ~i:al , UllJU In 111< · lace · with bis I~, lllen lllrew her out og tbe roadway when lhe res1sted hLs atteinpts to moleaf .hei setually. Erl route to visit a friend tn oranje, she had boarded the. wrOng bus aod wound up in HunUngton Beach, the woman said. She bad ~ walUnc two hours !or another bu.I wbeo the man dr.ove up and offered her a ride, .whlc~ she accepted. They irreiit first to Anaheim to chlnp cara, because the m10 was having car trouble. 'nlen, instead ol takina: her to the tius ·ctepol, 11 pionllsed, the driver headed for Laruna Bed They olopped at a l'Htiurant .for eof· fee, she related and the man bou&ht "some red pills.'' three ol which he aw allowed. ' He then . drove out Laguna ~apyon Road where the assault attempt was made. The woman aald 8be had uktd to be let out of the car becauJe he was driving eITaUcaJ.JT after takina: the pills. Law Bars Minors • Ill Mo.tel · Aft.r • dumplh( her In the . road, the man drove off down a dirt 1lde road, •he •aid. Two paul•a motprlotl'llopped f<hen she hailed them, tried Ulllll<> cesoluDy· to catdt up will> ber alOailanl, !hen took her to the pollca ~!Jon. Sile wu given firll aid for brulau on har' · larthead and Bp m abo bod chipped teelh.:pollce Mid. · . , '111• woman said· all the clothln1 ah< was takina: on her trip . wu. left In her utaUant'a van, aloni with ber purn cont,alnlng 111. : . . . No One Allowed Witliou.t Adu.lt C'lw:perone in Lagu.na, 1 Col.ta.. Mea poUce were · rtq\ieated to ru~y the rC¥YOa area · by helk:opter and ;pilot •Jim Wagner. .and oboorver Frank Uphim were dllpatched, but foro:- ed to rive up !he ltunt-due to 1.,. · An 'Ol'dlnlnce restrl~g occupancy of hote~ mot.ti and apartnt~t houle rooms by unchaperoned mlno>s Jn Laguna Beach appeared beaded for !""'lie follo'!h>I a City Council o~y 1 .... ton Wedneaday nla\11. The ordinance, one of 1everal tabled by the council after thelr presentation u or1t.ncy tMasures in June, •U back for CODlidor'tlon 11 a reguJar ordinance. It 1'0llld bar occupancy of 1 hotel or motel room by any person iunder ti lll'llesa accompanied by a partnt, iuar· dlan or authotlted adult, and occupilncy by more than five pel'IOM under the age or Zl, u:nletS accompanied by an adult. In raponse to a query from ~ cilmao Roy Holm, Coullcllman ~ Lorr, who had requested revival of 1the and other basea that lll)lthlng IOCI ln- rdln al t !med t La .. '"•· u ~ ' • ' o ance, 11 di was a m~a •- controllina unsu-"aed minor• '"'•"" at r Hi ql.M9ltklhed the ldvtaabtltty ol. trytnc. • ..-. •• ~ ~ 11leila1'te .moots," botrever., and 115d1 curblng overcrowd Ina. the law would be repnted aa "puoJUve. ••. • · 1 , ~ , • H• cited many police ca1e1 In wbtch Goklber1 laid tt •wu &y• no rbea111 Would 1Hurt'Economy unch•peroned juvenllee had f o u;, d pun!UV., but·r~ther an aUempi.to·proteCI !hemae!vto !n trouble afler ,.,,11n1 roqma yo11ngsttr1. • ' , ' JUARU, .!)!~ (~P) . .: ·l'iellden~ In 'the city, lnciudlnJ one In which police Holm . IUUt'lled the city mlpt bo Gullavo Dia, Ordu' plan to ouUaw foun4 a li-year~ g.lr~ tn a hold rOom taking oVer the reapoodbillllt1 or qukklre dlvorcu la Mexico wold .. coat with four mtn. ' perenta. ' • · thelr border ctty $3.:& mllUon a year, Mayor Rk!hard Goidbtr& repeated hil "No more thin the 10 o'clock cur{ew, aaya the man 1tl cb&r11 of Ute mWlidpal earlier commont that married couplea wllkh ~ allo lnttnded for Ille protedlon flnancea. and omtcemm obould be ucluded !f.O!n.! of youn1·peop1t;•c0oldbetg ropll<d. ~ -'!1..-iolo In tans alone 'would ,..,h the ruling. ; He read cornmenta on the ordlnanc;~ •t.• million tO fl.I mUU<!n annuall)', David Munro, <0mmeri1Jn1 •from )'Ule 1 from Pollet' cliie! Kenneth · lltlct and lgnaUo ouatte1 the lax eollector. aaid• audl•nc<, aaid !hi• "°"Id I m P t y Juvenlle olflcat Alea Jimenes who a1rete1 The rut WOUid ba Uvtna upona•. ftt dl10tlminator)' tnlort.,,.nt u ... 11 as that many jtJVtnlle nmawayo are found · divorce ...W. In lhll city -tbo "aMOUnclna to lltl'Victmen al El TOni (See llO'l't p .... I) Rio Grande El Puo, Tn. • ' ~ . '• I I , : I I Mexico Divoree :law ------------------ 'J'oday'• ptwal e Russ Chief To Attend U.N. Meet LONJJ()N (UPI) -Soviet Premier Alexel N. Kosygin plans to meet Pres!· dent Nit.on and other Western leaders ln New York early In October, thus toaklng a aummlt -....... virtually certaln, East European dlpklmata laid today. The occum will be the U.N. 211111 annlvenary meettnc Jn New Yc:wt which world l~en will attend. Koeygln apparently would pnfer a BIC Four p:>wer summit with Nllon and the pmniers of France and lirtta!n to a bilateral conference with the American chief executive. The ·diplomats Indicated that bebind this pref....... u.. the Kremlin's ai> parent desire to avoid charges of an alleged "eanging up" of the superpower1 by r~glng the Soviet , U-publicly on the side of the Unli.ct States. ' . The apeda! U.N. meeting Is scbeduled for Oc1l>ber 19-24-. Diii!omaUc: ., ............ apected to be pii\ out """11f. Some .......... ap- Hi:dy .... ~ !"lllF -fir Ibo in;e· or Ibo Jl'OjOoled lllP>mlt and 11a IO?P'· ' Br!:: Pri---U..tll ~=tea:'.:~ lo '!*ii wUIJ -Oii .... occuJim. '""" la ...,. doubt bbnYer aboul ~ rr.stdent Georges Pomp!dqu, who :11 not knowti to bave ...,.. ...... ;teat enthualasm for another visit to New York after bis disturbing esperien(:e 4"'1n& his ......,t trip tllere. Bui ai> ...,..uy no flllal deciaion IUls yet been tal:en lo Parts. Pompldou II to pay an offidal vblt to thO Soviet UnloO lo the first balf of October wbich may determine bis rurtber moves. U a lour-power summit proved Jn>. wacUcaJ, a 110..to-face meeting betweetl ~n and Nlzon appeare~ fjloeVUable," tbi IOUl:oel said. ,,,., nld there la "a lot to -· and latest lntema!lonal devetopmeots more Uian warrant ao excba.n&e of. viewa of the blghest level. By then the Strategic Anni Limit.lion Talb (SALT) between Rusala and America will have rucbed their flnt conclusions, and the Middle East peace Pft1b!e wW have advanced suttlclenUy to project the chancea of an extemlon or tenninaUon or the present ceas&-fire, the IOW'Ces aald. T!ie Far £'aJt scene, including above all tilt Vietnam war, also were expected to .~ UQder review, although the Raulai'il' lately have shied away from any peaoe lnHlaUve for apparent lack of lllfflclent !nOuence In Hanoi. Pair Win Primary HARTFOHD, Conn. (UPI) Gubenl1tor1al cindidate Thomas J. MeakiU \.and Senatorial aspirant Lowell P. Wlecll:er Jr. easily defeated their opponenlS Wednellday In the flnt RepubtJcan primary In Connecticut'• h!stoey. Orup Wea di er Filtered sunshine ia the word for FildlY aiol!I !he Orllll• Coal! with low cloodl provid!"I the Ill· tratlon and lowerln& the tempera~ ..... to about n locally and 15 fur1her Inland. , INSIQB TODAY . ' .. . l'iflO!I ~ nl~ a conslolll r;lfk of hearl. attq<ki "¢ lhei1' acUom coMrlbutt •to tncrta1cd prlaO!I l•nslO!I. Pagt 7. •-n -.. " Ct'""1tlll 11 ._ .. , Cle..,.... .... '-"' . ·-. - 0.-lttfkiM ,. " ............ ' ...... lfl.... , .. ,, ..... •11 ..... ,. .. ._. .. ' % DAILY PILOT SC Harassment Protested By Manson Ul6 ANGELES (UPI) -Hipple cult leads-Charla -biJ llblrt !all out and his long balr uncombed, appeared briefly on the stand at Ole Tate-LaBianca rnunler trial today to protest what he da.imed was mistreatment. by his jailers. Dllfeme coumeJ lrvlllll Kanarek had mowid that the cwrt order sheriff• deplllles from barwlng the slender defrdant. With the jury e1cluded, Manson was in the witness chair about JO minutes. his bands folded &CJ'06S his chest. But be never adually was questioned because prosecution and defense attorneys used the time to argue minor point.g and Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older continued the proceedings for one week. Manson claimed deputies forced him to completely disrobe several times each day then conduct what jail inmates term a "skin search" of hi.$ body cavities. Interrogation wit!I the jury present then resumed for star witness Linda Kuabian, who was asked by the defense Wednesday bow Ille felt about Manson and the three young women charged with him in the Tate murders. She aaid abe felt "compaasioo" for lbem and w1abed they would "get up her< and do what I am doing -tell the truth." Her interrogator WU Rooald Hughes, a roly poly man with a red beard who iJ tzyln( his fint criminal cue. He resembles actor Burl Ives. "What was the power of Charlie?" Hughes Wed. 'Ibat sent Manaon's attorney, Ka,narek, to his feel "There is no power of Qarlie, .. Kanarek ahooted. Mamon, Uny in hill blue denim prison clothes, turned to Kanarek and aaJd: "Watch your mouth." Mrs. Kasabian also admitted that she atole $5,000 from a friend and took it with her to the Spahn Ranch when 1be joined the hippie cuJt led by Manson. Her adm.i.salon of stealing the money from Charles Melton, a friend with whom •be and her huaband. Robert, lived belore &be joined the "Manson Famlly,'' WU the most damaging diallenge to her glory of why she joined the group. In the afternoon session, Hughes con- tinued his cross aamination and laW>Cb- ed • -of utonl&bing qu<Otloos. "otd you think Ollrles M&MOD was the devil?" ''Ht is a devllish man," she ~lied. ''The devil in the body of a man?" "Yu." Al the poilll -Blll!>u + · terrupted by Kananl<. tho lawyS' jull repeated his qoestloc: "What was the J>OWer of Qiarlie?" "I just wani.d to do everything and anything for him." "Why was that?" ''Because ( loved him. He made me feel good. He waa jual beautiful." "Are you still in love with Mr. Manson?'' "Yea." Orm.a McLean Services Slated Long time Laguna Beach resident Orma B. McLean died in North Hollywood Sunday. Mrs. McLean fint came to Laguna Beadl in the 192lls and built one of the !irst. weekend cottages on Sunset Terrace. Following her retirement from the TiUe Jnaurance and Trust Corporation, she and her husband moved to Laguna permanenUy. Mrs. McLean moved to North Hollywood followin1 her husband's death in 1965. , Mrs. McLean ia llW"f'lved by a niece Mrs. Ruth Noruk: thtee Dephew1, James, Pau!, and Jack Allen; eight grand·nieces and nephews, and 13 great.grand nieces and nephews. DAILY PILOT ,....,.,. r._. H...tt..,_. IMs1I a..,. .. '"" ......... ,..., C.... M-. hi Cf I 1•e OllAMGI! f-OAIT PUILllHIHG COMl'A.llY '-•i-•rt t-1, w,,, l'•u'""l •llfl'l'llll"'*' J•tt '-· Cu•l•v Vlu J0r11:•"'' tllf Ci9nwal Mf"""' lh ...... tc •• .,11 f.•I~ Tito"''' A. 'Mu1,hl11• MIMflnp liSllor l lc.h•r4 r. Nill ltvl~ Ot.,.. c-tr ~1iw -·· C.11 ""-' UJ Weil ..., llr..t "1...-rt 111CJ11 nn W•1 .. .,., hvlW•nl ...,_.. ---.r nt ,..,_.A~ ~~ ....... a.to: IJNJ Midi ~.­ IH ~ a5~1t~ll•I DAILY' l'ILOT lltff ,,._ FELLOW OFFICER DON ANDERSON CONFERS WITH INJURED CONNIE ATKINSON S.n ClerMnte Policeman lnlure1 Arm Lifting Scoot~r Off of Mettr Maid AfNr Crash f'roM P.,e J Vehicle Hits HOTEL ROOM LAW ••• Patrol Scooter; ·Officef' Injured in Laguna Beach motels · where they """' been permitted to ftgllter by owners who don't bother to ask f« identificalicm. 'Iboug!I ,moe:t bolel operators exercise controls, the oft1ctn Aid, m a n y YOIUl(.Sl<n do get ~ trouble aft« they are pennitted to move into Jeu sorupulouJ ellab!JBbmenla. Sw'f and Sand owner Merrill Johru:on said he felt the ordinance would be "a good tool for legitimate bu!lnesse1 ' to use." He said most cf the hotel and motel operators in town exercise their own controls, but added, "It is surprising the number of parent,; who will call and make a reservation, then send their yOWlgSters down alone or in groups. Then we have to disappobJt the yoµaoters_ by te~ theif we can't. .... ' -in witllOdi • ,....i.• '1'1*" ordina.noe could clean qp i bad 1ltuaUon and it wouldq.'t be a burden on the hotels." F~'I-~ of f°'?~\ pres;, deiit l!al'll' Lawr<lice said' 7' · pe- of -the hot.el operators follow a 1trk:t co4e ol bui;iness ethics. but the ordinance would be a good control for those who do not. ~yd wanted to know how the law wduid be enforced. The basis would be the same as en- fM.'elllent of alcohol la ws, Lorr said, by requiring identificaUoo, but the main purpose would be to give the operators a tool for self-policing. ~'It would serve to per-suade t h e operator to conduct his hotel In a manner conSisten1 with the ordinance,'' sald Wheatan. "Some of lhem have told me ii tbey bad an ordinance behind them it would give them the courage to tum people away, a legal basis for tuch action." Wheaton uid he would predict "no more than a couple of cititions ln to yean" under the ordinance.' It would be used more for "persu.u:lon." he said. Holm doubted the practicality of e~ ' forcement In the event one authorized person should regl!ter. then bring in friends tater, without the knowledge of !he operator. Goldberg said he felt the law didn't go far enough and thought a fine should be provided. Wheaton noted that violation of the ordinance would COMlitute a legal misde- meanor, whlch does carry a possible fine or jail sentence. "ln the ca.se ol consistent violation," he said. "if the police keep pick.ing up youngsters who say thry are living at a certain botel or motel and the From Page 1 CAMPERS ••. like could be parked 1n the driveway. Provisk>ns enforcing shielding o f stot"age areas on l'ear portions of pro- perty also remain in the amended code. In other action Wedneaday com- missioners delayed • request for a con- ditional use permit to operate a foreign car sales and rep1lr lot at 924' N. El Camino Rt:al . • Applicant Francllco Sanchez amended his bid for the permit by adding auto repair and service -a factor which w1s not Included In the legal an- oouncemeot qt Wednelday'1 public hear- ing. As aoon aa the •IUlOllllcement (tnd the addition) are readvertlsed, the bear- ing will resume. operator · does not heed our warning, be -«lllld be clled Wider the ordinance. It would be up to tJ.. coUrt to decldt if a pattern of vlol.aUon ex-lmd." Sap Clement< parking of!!= Connie Lorr said that 60 '°"I u perlOOI Atl<JnoP.o •llffered a ~ful leg injury, Under llt are cona1aerea Jn&or1 under cull, ·~ and shock Wednesday in the law "i~.1s incumbe'nt upon us to ·~ a _,cruh' which left her trapped for a ... that H, 15 "l"I IS.year-oldl don't time .In her ""all patrol 11COOt<r. &et into troubJe . .hert, or 1et mlaused The., c;o1Jt!ion between the parking by older people." meter buggy 8Jld a large luxury car Munro ~~sted thal "there were coun-occurred at about 1:30 p.m. at 305 N. ty agencies If morals are tht problem El Ca In R 1 and the police if It is crime.·· m o ea · Holm concluded the diicussion by Mrs. Atkinson, who &tarted as Sa.n saying he woold like to find some Clemente's meter m.lid a few monlh.s altematlve to such an ordinanct, but ago, wu norU:ibound on the busy roadway "I do feel there are ~ thoughtless when the scooter collided with the Jate- adult landlords who are using the kids, model Cadillac driven by Robert c. and ooe good thing aboul the ordinance is t~at it zaps the landlord and not Rochelle, 30, of 120'n Coral Ave., Balboa the naive kid wbo just got here from bland. ~ Midwest.'' The impact sent the scooter flying and It rupped and &kidded on tbe pave- ment Mra. Atkimon, wearln1 a 1e.atbe1t, was &iven first aid after fellow officers lifted the scooter upright. PN•,....el CYCLES ... would be the acreage at Top of the World owned by Chine.se for Christ. Another area now used by riders, he addr:d, is1 the hilly land near Thurston School, but there hive been complainU about ridini in both these locationa. Lorr pointed out that with the coonty and many neighbotjn& communities a<loJWig ordinances b&llfling the bikes, Laguna ahould act prompUy to avoid becoming the target or "an invasion of mot«cycles, dune buggies and Jeeps" displaced from other area..s. Councilman Roy Holm said he had "mixed feelings" about the ordinance. "Besides the noise and fire haiard, I personally hate lo see the hlll1ides sca r- red up," said Holm, "but I feel a lot of young peopit; are having a lot of fun with this so l would support the Idea of looking for a riding area, but 1 ju.st don't know where." Boyd suggested that interested groups and parents might set up a club ar· rangement for minibike and trail bike riders with tbe assistance of lhe recrea- tion director. Wheaton agreed that since the Recrea. tlon Department already has set up clubs for golfers, surfers and others. it should be pos,,lble lo establish such a club for bike riders and then look for a place for them to opera te. fl was generally agreed that the ordinance would be acceptablr, with the lll'lderstandlng that the city explore the possibility ol findln,g a safe riding area. Surfing Contest In Huntington Goes Back on TV Surfers compeUng in the annual United Statea Surfboard Contest In Huntington Beach will be "on the tube" again after one year's absence from television . The show, aa:ording to City Recreation and Parks Director Norm Worthy , will be fUmed by the Channel t t KHJ) crew under the guidance of surfing im· presarlo Neill Cross. It wlU be televised in the Soo!hem California, New York and Bol!ton areas and U... l)'lldicated Ind diJlr!buted to other U.S. and foreign cities, Worthy 11ld. Patrolman Don Anderson suffered a pulled tendon in his forea rm during the rescue. Mrs. At.kinson was treated at the Camp Pendleton base hospital. Pollce said she would probably return to light duty some time next week. Rochelle told highway patrolmen th.at his vislbUity was Impaired by a parked camper as he pulled out of a parking lot for a left turn lnlo traffic on El Camino. Hi! car, which clipped the side of the scooter with its right front fend.er, sustained moderate damage. Rochelle was not injured ln the mishap. The scooter crash was the third on record for the city vehicle fleet. The battered white buggy was heavily damag· ed. Readff to Dump N€-:rve Gas Cargo Loaded on Ship SOUTHPORT, N.C. (UPIJ -An old liberty ship tOok aboard a deadly cargo of 1erve ga.s today and officials said as quickly u the ve!iel is ready for sea, the port of Wllmln,ton and ship channels ln lhe lower Cape Fear River will be ck>aed. Clearing weather speeded the loa.ding of the veaae.I, and rear Adm. E. A. Allen Jr., C.Ommander of the Fifth Coast Guard District, issued an order declaring the area a "security mne, ·· closed lo shipping Friday through Monday, Aue. 14·17. The oerve gas is cOnta.ilted ill old rockets which the Army plans to dump in the AUanUc, providlna lbe federal courts do not intervene. A bearin& on the matter wU scheduled today before Federal Judge June L. Green in Wuhlngton. Sen. Ernest F. Hollings (D-S.C.), charged in a prepared Senate speech today that the Anny wu guilty of II'°" ne11ect and 11ahockJ.ng and carelea" pro- ceduru in pJIMing to dump the 1as in the ocean. He sa.ld the operaUon "Oouts the aimplelt rules o.t..common se:nae, lgnorea significant .tclentifk: evidence on the potenUally harmful eUects of this sea dump, and in eo d0Ja1 takes unnecessary risb with the ocun'a future -hence our future." Go•. Cl.lude Kirk of Florida al)!I the envlrorune1tal defente fund cOlittnd there are •imany unanswered queaUona" a.s to tbe effect the dumping will produc.e on the environment akldl the Southeut Coast, parUcularly Flortda. The 14,500 deterloraUna: rockets, en- cased in 411 • concrete -and • steel vau lts, are to be buried la 11,00l·foot deep water and Col. Jack Osick, an Anny chemical expert, saya the salt water will make lhe gas "innocuous.'' Salt waler dilutes the gas, capable of killing a human within minutes, into harmleu acids, the Army said. · Sixty longshoremen, given 16 hours of special instructJon on how lo handle the rockels, began loading the pote11tially- deadly cargo Wednesday aboard the rusting liberty ship Le Baron Russell Briggs, whlch will be scuttled as a "coffin" for the rockets. The rockets arrived at the Army 's ocean terminal at Sunny Point late Tues- day night and early Wednesday morning aboard two trains from Army arsenals at AMiston, Ala., and Richmond, Ky . The Army said the ner ve gas was begin- ning to leak from some of the rocket!; in stora ge and must be disposed of soon. The longshoremen were given gas masks and a belt-kit containing several syringes full of Atropine, an antidote for the gas. Hal! a doze n cages of rabbits were scattered near the docks as "monitors," meaning their deaths would signal a gas leakage. Authorities said the tedious job of shif- ting the concrete vaults containing the rockets from the trains to the shir would take until late Friday, at Jeasl Attorney Edward Lee Rogers of East Setauket, N.Y., representing the en- vironmental defense fund. had asked for an immediate hearing 011 his motion for a restraining order because "once shipping begi'ns it will be impossible for the courts to grant us relief.'' Kenly Webs ter, Deputy G e n e r a I Counsel of the Army, said there would be ample time for the hearing before the &hip leaves port. 'Saloons,'·'Bars' Now 01\. In State After 35 Y ea1·s Special to tile !>All. V Pll.OT SACRAMENTO -Banned for 35 years In Ctliforula, except on the swinging doors tif HoUywood western movie sets, saloon i5 now a leial name for a cocktf.11 lounge or tavern. Gov. Rona.Id Reaaan signed a bill authorizing such a \lf.le, alon& with bsr or barroom, WednelJ!ay in 1 modest ceremony at the Capitol here. "Now I won't be able to 1et Into one by mistake," said the governor, who chanced into a few saloon! during hi! career u a cowboy on the silver screen. He was usually hunlln1 the villain Instead of a anort. The banning oI lhe three worda came in 1P35 aa an interesting method of assuaging the stinging tense of defeat for those who had endorsed and 1up- port.ed the prohibition of liquor Itself. Saloon, bar and barroom , the theory went, had come lo represent sleazy joints with swinging doon and a swinging cllentele that often swung at each other over money or the favon of loose women . Speakeasies, bonkyt.orW, gambllhg, prostitution and booUeg1in1 were all associated with leu Innocuous terms than tavern or cocktail lounge. Agemblyman John T. Knox ())..Rich- mond ), Introduced the novel legislation recently at the suggestion of Don Bradley. The latter managed Gov. Edmund G. ''Pat'' Brown's unsuccessful 1966 bid for re-election. "WouJdn·t you like to be known aii the man who brought the saloon back to California?," Bradley wrote the legislator. "It would certainly place your name among the Immortals." For thoae interested, a saloon has been characterlredrVariously. "Back then~aloon wa:s known as a place for perpendicular drinklrlg,'' observed Assemblyman Knox, who failed to add that some perpendicular patrons finally got horizonta l. The committee that wrote the legi!la· lion against bar, barroom and saloon in HIM included one teetotaler, Sen. Andrew R. Schottky, Knox recalled. He said he knew of two who tippled, no matter what you called the premises. "I gue5'1 they aU did." he added. Sen. Schottky himself wrote a definition of saloon when the original legislation signed out of existence Wednesday was drafted. \ EXCITING PARTY SETS by STONE and PHILLIPS 5 Pieces Reg . $575.00 NOW P-.0. Supervisor Killed by Sniper Undr:r the terms ol lhe propouJ, the city would receive the ftnt $10,IXKI eroa from the syndication while Crou would apUt with them any further locome. Worthy ettlmaled a possible Income ranging from $10,000 to ~.000 from lhl': ayndicatlon, depeodlrl& on Lhe quality Ill t!Je ''"' and !be diJtrlbuUon of tho ftlm. You fooori!1 Interior d1afgnrr will bf hclpp¥ to N1l1e "°" ... LOS ANGELES !UPfl -A 111pervl10r at the Terminal Annex Polt Ofllce w11 shot &o dtath early today u he left the lacUlty. Police aid Ha1T)' Stndrow, 52, was 1hol three Urnea u he ran from hi• aaaauant. An all polnu bulleUn wa1 "8Ued for AU,.d K•llwn pf Loo Anaelea, wbo potlct " said 1pparently !aid In wait outside the facllity for ~w. The conl.est had been televised yearly by the ABC network which unexpectedly withdrew It.I coverage last y&ar. This year, the surf show la acheduled for Sept. II IO 20. ) H.J.GARRETT fURNITtJRE 'ROFfSSIONAL INTERIOR OC!:GNERS -TRY OUR RIYOLYING CHARGl- o,... MM,, THn. Ir Jcl. lvn. 121 S HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6'46°027r ( ( fhur1d1y, Auvu1t ll, 1~70 OAILV '1LOT J t Chai Medic-novelist Turns toDirecting-HisOwnFilmS- Undefeated . ON THE TUBE ,., t Ho bttl 11111111 , ........ !.rp••lillt •"' TV, r1114 lV '!ft l K -dt1tr!l111ted with ftie 'S,t11t4e1 Mlt111e ef tt!e DAILY "PILOT, • , ,• Ji "TllE MIND BLOWER OF All TIME!" At 111s.c •• ,.s••• L•t• •• 10:3' lex Offlc" O,•• 7:15 P.M. S1J•r Pley1r•1•4 -Tl• Marazi• Roted (R) MON. TKAU 1'111. • S.,WS-.cltler. ,, ...... f :IJ SAT. ): .... l :IJ..ll:>t IUH. l olJ..l:•f:<tt Al1• ly1a 0'1111 .. ~ SAJVIFS Altlldlllllll~lM,....., .:..-,or1 ... t••,_... ·~ 1111 'izlrn werld you mll ln"Pt1n11 O!Th1Apes"w11 on~ ~l•nlna ... WHAT UES BENEAlH MAY BE THE ENDI . A Program Everyone Will Enjoy EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING The most electrifyini ritual ever seen! t:· -·w~ A~flCIVI.--...... AOlllNA(.Wfll:ll-W &1wwwPfle -ALSO PLAYING - Steve MCQueen "The Reivers( ,.1 A °"'"""'QAtrr f linl ,_,... ....... A N..i'CJl'lal CAnml Plc'll.ln lttl"l'W' 819 cameo'' in the movie!, 'POflraY- ing, oC all UWi&s, a medical student. "But I don't think I havr: a fulurr: as an actor ~ 1ny size is against me," he remarked. He's I feet , 9 in· Ches. O'ichtoo admitted that his observation or director Wile gave him pau.ses about hi$ own film-malting ambitions. "I was amazed by how rnuch compet.enence he bas in so many areas." said Crichton. ''Not o.ly that He aho has bottomles.. diplomatic skill in handling th!!: cast and the crew. It is an incredibly difficult task to deal with such varied people and keep them all stimulated and satisfied." \\'ise has practiced his pro- fessio n as cutter, then direc· tor, and produced for more than 30 years. How dor:s the 27-year-0Id Crichton hope to learn? "I plan lo hire a good ca meraman and a good editor T a rzan Site o,.. ,:00 ~1 _fd~~L-7 noise free music and compete.It ecton: The one lhing J will requlre of lhem is that they, will ~ \olerant of my l.oeptlbldt. do tbat' now and dbUbt! that "Not at all. 'AB "Somerset he ever wilt Then does he Mau&bam said, trainillf ar a regret the four arduous y~rs doctor la the be1L poeslble in medical Khool~ . preparation for a novelist." ''1.Jndoubtedly I .will malu! mistakes, and .they will be ··r~T:!l'T'':r'I~ costly,Jum p Jnclnto ~methlo& libJ.tli~, l'm._bound to foul up. But I'm, prepared for that." Wrtl.ing, he odmlt!ed, Is becorning more difficult. This despite the fact lhat he is arooog the most prolific of authors. By working 10 days at 16 boon .a stretch -"U:Olil I'm 1 twitching wreck" - he can JX'Qduce a full-length book. "But t !'I.ave made the pain- ful discovery that libe rewrite is better thaa the f1nt draft," he said. "And U1e second rewrite is better than the first Ol!C." He has hi! MD, but can't practice unless he put.=s in more years as an intern lJld resident He's not wlll.ing to .... Lu-:1Lt 11 -.,...... . . .!.....UJ.--~ -&..J ALSO iOW! UiiCUlt POPUU.. PRICE! _,,,, ._, ... •""'ien,ng,fldWS MILLIE . f·IOn .. '•0,,,.1\11•'"' tLl Eun 1.\\ --., f - l'llEMl•ll• •N•A•llM.,..,I ,......, "'"' ... "TH•Y CALL M• M•. Tl••v c•,I ><:utll O'ar..., ""•AT••Y ti' 1•1•t1•,. t•PI .............................. ~ ........... . ' • [ rt DIRSCT FROM ITSll!N~ATiONAi R•SIRVID HAT INGAG•M•NT • POP·ULAR PRICES! ......... __ , Rated ''GP'' All A .. , Admlttocl- Parent1I Dl1cretlon "The epi: Ame<ian war ""'~ that' Hollywood has •l••JS wanted to inak1; bot """ hid Iha IU~ to do belor~· Sunastod 20tn C""""Y-rOA 'r•Hnls ..... ,.,_ ~C.:~/!'~!,:WJEN iiiPii. .... 1a"M1-1u.-!!'JI 111 1111• ~-.,....., ... L .......... t.i.w .... -llClllff• l!!£J iiiciiWliiiU•-1.•n·-.....-.-...-.. ~---alUll'1rrw .... 1...n~OH-...w.11 Premiere Orange CountI. Engagement ~~ l_.w•rd& CIMm• w .. t •2 ~-------....:.-- C~ll 546.3102 Coll 192-4493 Coll 639·7860 • • ' 1 • 2e D.\11. Y PILOT_ SC -·v .. r Mone1's Worth =-s L • •• • • ' lly SYLVIA POBTl!lll Ym tet at1 ad in YOlll' local neqpapcir !or a sllable above.- _......, swlmmmc pool _.,, .ftly $411 -with all the lrim· -.nqs. BV"I'~ when you loot over the pool~ the salesnall tells )!OU 1bM the vinyl liner jg not heavy enoup 10 hold water, that the deck is not real redwood but ooly redwood one, you end up oct with a free pool but poesibly paytna the replar price "-$1800 or ...... .wn, and that ""'1nt«laooe ·~ will cost you mart each year ~ Ulan Che sales prioe.. Ht may not even have sucb a pool We are now into the peak !ilea.son for b om e im- provements -and al!o !O< I.be widest r~ of l)'pl, ~lions and come- oos. 1be racketeers don't even hive to figtft out new ~es or twists, becaute you con~ to fall ao easily lorlhe~llWiodles. Home i~vemenQ. ·iP fact. remain our nation's number one field fc:." ra c IE._ teer 1, Unless you are wary, you can lose hundreds or e v e n lhousands of dollan on hom< non-improvemeots. • • c>1 haod. HOWEVER, perbops :Y<JU'd he Interested In• larger _pool, coa1ing 11,llOO .••• Or, you see an ad which says: •·wanted: to place swimming pools in Ulis com- ~ 1 munity £ o r demonstration BY ONE ESTIMATE, Americans are bilked out of $1 billion a year iD home improvements gyps. Tb i I trB11Blales into the warning that as much n $1 of every JlllrpOetS ; consideration will be given to those homeownen . chosen." ~ • BUT, whoo you answer this For get Repair .~ork ··:On Small Appliances • ' YORK \UPI ) . • ; NEW it's ·' .fllilliom of Americans J1re lime wnd money than worth . hopping mad because they can't get small applia.n<%s serviced these days, but there isn't too much manuiacturers Who is to blame for mess? ,a CIYI do about it. Ray Burdi, a vice president of Schwinn Bicycle Co. of Chicago blame$ the retailer. He says today's retail clerks are the poorest es:cust for salespeople in dlt history o4" the world and that too P\IDY retailers OaUy refuse to bother with service or carry a parts inventory. -· · • The blunt fact is that usually It . dOesn't pay "' repair , -anything that costs WICfe< 125 • new in today's economics. ;. even if you could find a repair ~· -man who knew bow to do •. IL AT A FORUM ON tbt pro- blem conducted by the Na· Oooal Industrial Con(ertnce Board, panelists 5UQested manufact.urer.s should r e l back to their former practice of fe'l'.'er dealers md in- sistence that they carry pans and provide service. FOR EXAMPLE, t h e -' minlmum SEnice charge for flXing a $24 radio may ~ $11.15. When yoo take a $7 transistor radio or • $9.95 t le<:tric drill to 1 repair shop. • ' ··~ ' •· lhe advice you get is "don't ... waste time and money on it, throw it away." Even on more ~xpensive II.ems, the xrvice problem has proved too difficult for inany m•N•facturtts to tolve. Take -......... which aell '· -for $100 to $1,000. Getting : parts for them in a hurry. , -or on a weekend when people All Burch of Schwinn pol il: ~we have let distribution decay. So we end up beggini for business from retailen who display every brand theft is but only atock a few floor samples." SUW BETAILERS. be said, won 't service anything, fil.t a complaint "or even be eivil to customers." • :. want to do their boating, is ? ·a serious problem. Several makes ti a v e diSappeared because the manufacturers couldn't adequately service the mot.on: they sold. But Richard G. Smith of American Chain & Cable Co. thinks jt aimply is • "people problem" that causes Ute trou- ble. "The competent serviceman of Hl years ago is or onl y borderline tom· pele.nce today ." he said. YOU CAN GET service on almost anything by sending it back'' to the factory or to a large regional distributor. However, by the time you ~ave found the address, by ' -telephone or mail, then packed ·~ and shipped the appliance, you ... · may have expanded more Manufacturers' training pro- grams [or service personnel are far too sporadic and often quite. superficial, acco rding to Smith . " • • r•p111t'' IAch 17:101. BIBLE THOUGHTS DIYOICI: N-.W 2:1• t•V• th•t God "-t.1tetl! putti11t •••y--" tdivorc1I. GGd, thrGuth Mo111, TOLERATED d iworc• for 1whil1 IM1tt. lt17J. Mo111' l1w b•· int • "SCHOOLMASTER to bri119 u1 u11t• Chri1+"; b.,f "-•• ''' 110 lo1191r u11d1r , 1chGol m11t1t" rG1I, ):24-26 ) 111d God ''11ow .:omm111d1tl! •II t111rt 1w1rywh1r1 to TODAY, J11ut 1tlowt ONLY ONE REASON for divor'' 111d ,,. "'•rri•9•, •nlf th•t r111011 11 FORNICATION, Miff. 19:7. Thot• whe tllver<• for OTHEll. r1110111 '"" r1 -1111rrv 1r1 tulhy of 1dul· ,,,., •11d tholl nof '"''' H11w111, I Co•. t.:9-10. ALL ef GM'• 1,..,, ''' fw th• GOOD af m111kl11tl i nd •• ;, t,;, how •II DIVOii.CE. F1w dh•arc11 would occ111 if for11i,1tio11 •••• r1<0911iutl •• tho 111ly v1lid r111011. Tho w1rld ii ll1r11t1111d wiffi ch101 bec1u1• af 1 b111lrdow11 of th1 hom1 RUSSIA ••· p1rlm111ted with EASY diworc• 111d ''"' *'• di11tl1ou1 r11uh1 ortd 11ow ••••• 9r11l•r r•1hirlio11•. OTHE~ rttliol'" hrou9ho11I hi1lory lt1w1 tfi.4 th1 •x111rim111t 111d 1uf(1r1d. GOO'S WAY IS lfST. Shi lt w• d1Jfroy out hom11 111d 1oci1ly by frivolaut di~o•c:• 11111 1110 101• our 1oul1 ''''"'"Y, or 1h1ll ,,.., eboy God', 11-..? WlltTE ., PHONE for f,., beokl1f 011 DIVORCE. Vi1if #11 Church of Chrkt, 217 W, Wlho11 St., Coit• M11•, C•llf. t2•27. Ph. 141.111 1.1-n ~ t , ~ 7:JI A.M • "'~========~ WUTlllN STAft UNIVllSITT COLLEGE OF LAW In Orone• County •-u ...w.t~~ ..... , .. .,_ ............ •-.a ....... .....,~~ ... ........ ..._, ... :r: I I _. .._ , ....... , ,.,._ ._ u.~ .... _.,.__. .... ,......,,_._ .._. ........... , .......... .... Apply Now fOf' S.pt9mtier. 11 Otti DAY OR IVINING CWIU ................. ~---·--- • 1001.- Anohehn Phone 635.3454 ltf TIUT •UNT, I ... Once considered an al- mmt unmentionable sub- ject, blld breath ts now more opooly dilCUSSed. 'n1ett a.re many possible caW141S of bftd bl'eath and therefore marw different waya to con- trol it. If H. ls a problem ate:mming from a condition In the mouth your dentilt tan augg~ an PffecUv1t method to lr1>S1•11 t.ir l"W!n ellminllte il. Certain mouth- W111tw. and oth<'r producta l"•n be U&t'fu l in r111•ryda.,v C8N". OU~r C&Ufi.t'I o( bed btea. th can wme from IM 1ton1acb or lungs and i11 JOmfl cal'iti Jiu been ~lated to emotlonal stress. Once tht ttauiie has bee n detcr- mJned a way ca.n ui;u11ly be found to iotop It. Do not hr afraid to dlleuq bad breath with )lour physician or de.n- U.t . YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHON"E US Yt1tl!n you QHd l deUvery. WI! will d~ liver pramptJy without ex· tnii charxe. A '"'""t many oeop)n rely on us for thrlr fitalth needs. \Ve wrtcom"' ,...,... .. fDt delivery .. rvlce and C:b&rtlrt aooCIWlt&. PAU UIO PMAIMACT '.:! .. ,....,...._ ..,.,.... '41o1• .... _ New Direclor Complete-Nelv York Stock List I I ·j /ffnrfeet Sy11abols I 11 I I .J r ·-·----------~-~-~---------------------·--- Thur~, August. ll, 1CJ70 SC DAILY PILOT Z} ' I TODAY .. . . TOMORROW • • • 10 AM TO 10 PM • Save up· to . 50% and More 5""' °" beddiog of all lri,,.fs at 1.e!titz ••• malheues ••• box spriogs ••• s1udio covchti ••• sleep M>fosl All fanK>us brands ••• Simmons, Kroehler, and many morel Sonae ore f&oor samples, some are discontinued,. and a few are uas is•. All subject to prior sale I Thif is your chance to Own fine bedding at the biggest savings everl Don't miss outl Come eartyl a. the first to choose! SIMMONS -KROEHLER -WILSHIRE Partial Listing .•• Hurry For Best Selection! TODAY ••• TOMORROW lOAMtolO PM WarehOIJSfl & Showroom Soiling Direct To Tho Public •TrlpleDNl .. r • fNmM Mirror •' He•dltoard • 2 Nl9ht St•ftd1 CWIS'1 10COAS1 Dltc!CWllr cmotHr -..orld of hom• f"mlthlng fu:QtJ at Lrritt. S.. hundreds of ffW dec.ooratlng idea1 rou con uMi In )'OVf on ho .... EASY TO ' REACH San Diego Freeway At Beach Blvd. NEXT TO THE HUNTINGTON SHOPPING CENTER •·Trll'I• DN1 .. r · • 2 PNme4 Mirrors • GvHn Size Headboarll • Nftht Stan .. Bassett 5-Pc. Spanish Bedroom Thia lf*'DClllar Sponl9't Oak bedroom set ottem to tM car. that 8ol$0it tokes Jn selectively matching their wood! Top quollty PittiOOrgh Plate GloP l10Md e•clu~ lively In the lol~ 1tot1ly mlrror1 and tht J,ordwor1 l1of p;penalft antlqllt'd brou. Dl'esH:r h<u 9 drawer• & night arond hos 2. Alto finely a:rrYed Quffn.slxe h.od- boord. f'Ot' th11 low leYtfi wareh®M, ~Jct you get all S ma;nl-pfocost I ( I I I I I ( Sata Cle11ten(e Boor~ Mayor to Publish City ·Directory The production of the new edition of the San Clemente cily directory will be handled by Mayor Walter · F'. Evans J r., who signed a contract U1is week• to work on an ad-commission basis !or the chamber of commerce. Mayur Evans, who will serve as the contractor for the telephone and oc· cupation directory , will sell the yellow. page ads and supervise compiling of thousands of data items for the chamber or commerce-sponsored project: The offices for the revisetl directory operations moved this week from chamber headquarters lo pr i v a l c quarters elsewhere in town . Evans. whose profession i s ad- 1ninistrator or a local plastics rirm. agreed lo take o" Lhe full-thnc task of producing the directory after suffering a near-fatal hearl attack. Slnce the seizure Evans' dut.ics have remained light al his regular post and New Chamber Chief Vows 'Big Start' The new manager of San Clemente's Chamber of Commerce made his first official visit to the South Coast this week and promised spirited leadership with a few "miracles" thr.own in. Robert Evans, a former newsman and public relations executive in l h c aerospace field. met-the chamber's direc· tors for the first time and vowed a strong start when he moves into the manager's office Sept. J, The chamber is planning a social "mix· er event" for Sept. 3 to give the general membership a chance to meet Evans. The new manager, hired from a large field of applicants this summer. cam~s from the Pasadena Chamber of Cont. merce where he held a community rela- tions post. He Jives in Glendora with his wife. Evans promised an aclive j o b performance here despite keeping his residence for a time in Glendora. ''I assure all of you directors that J will come here and do the job the way you want it done," he vowed. Evans promised ''l>ersonal contact'~ as a method of Jeamiing · the personality of San Clemente, then said his plans of action would sOon follow. "In my office in Pasadena there is a motto of sorts near the desk'. It says 'expect miracles'," Evans is the pennanent replacement for Gil Esell, who held the manager's spot for five years before his sudden firing by directors late last spring. Since then, San Clemente tax con- sultant Walter Hunter took the job over on an interim basis, guiding the chamber through the busy summer fiest.a season. Directors, who gave Hunter hearty praise at a Wednesday meeling. paid the interim mar-ager $800 a month plus ex:penses -the same salary that Esell was paid . Evans' salary has not been disclost'<f. One of tlw Feu.• he opted foe lhe chamber contract during his rewvery period, Chamber directors lhis week tagged a 11ew clause onto tho contract after a 7-5 vote. 1'he 30-day severance clause won ap. proval after considerable discussion by the directors. Evans said the addition was "fully agreeable." The income to the mayor for the directory work will be on a commission basis keyed lo sales of ads in the com- 1nercial section of the directory. No coinmission will be paid from the first $25.000 "''orlh of ads sold . Thereafter the commission will be set at 20 percent. One reason given for farming out the work on the directory lhis year was the draiJI on chamber staff and office space. The contract, chamber Interim Mana· ger \I/alt Hunter said, puls the ad sales on a steady professional basis instead of relying on seasonal workers. 11untcr told directors that the new arrangement could result in "double or triple the amounts of sales over the past few yea rs." Revenue from the ad sales forms a major source for chamber income. The directory -compiled in part from telephone records -includes most residents' jobs or professions along with their name, address and phone number. Addresses· and names of residents without phones also arc listed. Record Budget Wins Approval 111 San Oeme11te A record budget showing hefty in- creases for advertising the city's image nationwide has won unanimous approval by Sal'I Clemente Chamber of Commerce directors. The $95,500 document for the new fiscal year shows $10,000 more in income from ads in the chamber's city directory and $4,000 more Crom new memberships. Interim Manager Walt Hunter ex· plained that more income wou ld come from the city's conlribution of about one-third of annua l revenues from the bed tax. , Some or the new revenue will go toward aa expanded nationwlde campaign ad· vertising lhe attributes oC the. home of the Western White House. Ifunter said the coming year's plans call for doubling the number or ads run, but reducing each the size o{ each one. Newspapers on the East Coast are expected to carry the standardized advertisement. Two natio111al travel magazines also will be chosen, Hunter added. A cost-saving change in the procedure. · Hunter said, will be to eliminate an adverlising agency's services for ob- taining the newspaper space. The eliminalion of agent's services would cul costs by as much as $1,SOO. Chamber staff members will take on the agent"s duties. OAllV PILOT II~ PMl9 Th.is Dana Point youngster sailing during a class sponsored by Dnna Point Yacht Club is one of !be few signups Jn the faltering -but st.ill attractive -progran1 in Dana lJ arbor. Yacht club srxikesmen say unless .more children sign up for the sessions in the do.11aled sabots. the program will b{l scuttled. Kid s can save the venture by registerin'g at the club house in Dana Point Saturday starting at 10 a.m. A small fee is requested. . ----·----.------... ---------------------------------- 5 OAll V PflOT J°t! Down the M •• -IS810D Trail Curbs Planned On .Motorbikes SAN JUAN CAPIS'l'Rk~O -Motorcy· cle riders in San Juan Capistrano may soon be limited to the public streets. Nearing Co11ipletion On the ruggestion of Councilman Jim Thorpe, City Attorney John Dawson is preparing a city ordinance whlcb will directly correspond to a vehicular nuisan- ce ordinance recently passed by tbe county. The ordinance is expected to make It unlawful for anyone operating a motorcycle, motor driven cycle, mini bike. trail bike, motor scooter, jeep, dune buggy or ot.her motor vehicle to ride on properly owned by another person without that person's written permission. ·llnless permission is posted on the pro- perty. San Clemente's new, $2.6 million sanitation plant "vill be dedicated soon. The plant, atop a bluff on the north side of the city is desi_gne<l to produce treated waste which can be re-used for irri~ation instead of being dumped into the sea. \\'hen plant begins operations San Clemente will end aU dumtr in~ of effluent into the ocean. l(ihhutz Dw ellers Hang On -! G Tee11s Seek Site MISSION VIEJO -Fi.ndlng a suitable site is 1.he task oceupying the new teen center board of directors. Children Sleep in Shelte rs Despite Mideast Truce Chairman John P.1oers said maps of the Saddleback Valley were combed ~1on­ day and 10 to 12 sites were e.iamioed. KF AR RUPPIN, Israel (UPI I -Cease· fire or not. the children of Kfar Rupp iu slepL in deep Underground shcllcrs Wednesday night a.s they have done almost every night since the 1967 ~1iddle East war, Kfar Ruppin, a fann commune on the Jordan RivC'r 17 miles south of the Sea of Galilee, is perhaps the most battered of Israel's much battered border settlements. \Vith Arab guerrillas still attacking despite the cease-fire, its men, women and children are in one of the most clangerous positions on what has not become Israel's hollest front. "We've been a best-sheller for lhree years. We'll stay a best-sheller if we have to," said Hairn Kora ti, 5(1, a Czech- born science teacher. He grimaced at the play on words. Then be turned serious. "The Jordanians had some nice litl\e farms across the river," he said. ;'Since the terrorists sl.a.rted in here three years ago their (arms are abandoned no-man's· land. We won't let it happe n here." At first glance, this kibbutz looks like a vacation cottage colony, perched on a hilltop overlooking the Jordan and surrounded by some of the lushest farmland this side or California's Imperial Valley. The cream-white cottagt:s with red tile roofs nestle among palms, pines, acacias and flower gardens. There is a small theater for visiti.ng troupes from Tel Aviv and movies are shown there at least once a week. There is a swimming pool, a com- munity necessity in a region 700 feet below sea level where summer midday temperatures average 100 degrees. Down lhe hill and along U1c river lie Kfar Ruppin 's fields of cotton, sugar beet, wheat and alfalfa. pa lm and olive orchards. Across the Jordan and past the i1ow abandoned Arab farm field s rise Jordan's Gilead hills. sun·scorched ridges glinting through Ule heat haze . Dul a closer glance al the kibbutz shatters the image or bucolic peace. Even the freshest-painted collages have shrapnel scars. One has a jagged hole in the roof from a direct mortar hit in the latest guerrilla shelling Monday night. Tree lrunks expose girdles of tom. bare bark where shells sheared the branches away. The palm lree closest lo the theater ha~ been hit six times. Some of the young men in swim trunks 'heading for the pool cary submachine guns. "We gladly let the soldiers from the nearby posts lake a dip when they have time," Kora ti explained. Through the kibbulz wind deep , covered trenches, their nunierous enlranceways yawning up for a quick dive when shell- Pedestrian Ramp For Concordia To Span Free,vay Ha1.ards to children on roads leading to Concordia School in San Clemente will be reduced by construction of a pedestrian overpass, schoo l Superin- tcndenl Truman Benedict said today. The overpass will span the freeway, via de Frente and El Camino Real from the Concordia access road lo the southeast comer of San Dimas. according to state Highway Division plans. The overpass was requested by the school district rour years ago. It Is in the 1971·72 highway budget , act{)l'cling to Benedict. "We have been concerned ror many years about children who ha ve to cross those busy streets (El Camino and de Frente) without a traffic signal pr~ tcction," Benedict said. Slate Highway department engineers said the pedestrian ramp will be large enough to permit lludent.s to wheel their blcycles over it. Beachg~rs frnm !he south end of San Clemente al.so will benefit b«:auso !he overpass would provide direct accesa to San Clemente Stnte P<'rk. iug begins from across the river, They Jeni.I to the shellers. The shelters arc nir-{,'01\ditioned. gas proof and equipped with beds. plumbing, f'1nergency food and water rations, reserve electricity supply, telephones and even television sets. i\lore than once, television has proved a llfesaver-most recently Monday night. The elderly \\'Oman whose cotlage roof was smashed had gooe to a shelter to watch an American program. Most adults sleep in their cottages. But all children up to U1e age of 14 must sleep in the shelters. He said the directors expect to na.t?'O'# down the choice to six potential sites by next Monday and begin negotiations for one within a month. The direct.ors meet every Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the television 1 tu di o at J\.1Wion Viejo High School. Anyone is invited t.o ob~ve. acific • av1ngs • • • • • • • ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX for maintaining a $50022 balance in any of our high rate accounts -take your choice. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS 179°~ l50°1o $100,000~ ONE 6.18°1o 6.00°lo 5,000~ TWO 5.92°1o 5.75°1o 1,000~ ONE 5.39°1o 5.25°~ 500~ %th 5.13°1o 5.00°lo 1~ ONE DAY ANIMPORTANTEXTRA Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day. ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE ~ FREE . ~11111~ 1'..,.~ sY"i\~ 1. Traveler's Checks 3. Tickets to Sports and 2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Ticketron) 4. Many other FREE Services OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M . to 9:30 P.M. Saturd"y 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STIIEET • COSTA MESA, CALll'ORNIA • PHONE 540-4066 MAIN OfFICe.: l40I WHm'IEll IOULl!YARD, LOI ANGELES, CALIFORNIA • .. • 4 OAll.Y P!lOT ..................... _ A1J armed bandit toot '31 In cull from Deever m"l(ull>e shop .,,.,.. er ..... YoolclR. but left bebincl a cu..ue ._ ....,.rder. sayin,c: ''Keep the tape recorder; maybe it will malte w ...,,, .. Polic:e call- ed to the scent opmed the .........i- er and touml two Qll blllJ tucked inside. • A. taelO prutiQt n1tmu1ntt ir dedaltd to ... ""' IOf'fk 0'1 the 1514 flDOr of the J.,,.. I[.,.. cock Cf'ttttr bt Cllit:uoo. TM l.ocation od&d an un W'Ual prob-- I.em to thou ftDml4ll11 a.uocioUd klWt. nd onhtru. Wi:M1. Uw upntJ. uploiJI, toill ,,... .. be ltoftd at ground ttwr Meo.tut uie """' of the bvilding la the 117iAd tOOllJd nft /iM vi9ltagU. • MtE<o City JDOtocyde po~ LL Lois Ganum never bothered to turn in bis uniform. -. • ..-., badge and ~ver when be waa lirod frOm the force two weeil al!O fol' continued absence. Police d• tecti.ves who cauibt him futin( • molorut Tuesday altomoon found out why. GonJ.BJez, wlio purchased his own motorcycle. had JODe into b•!Slneu tor himself. They found S40 U.S. in rumpled bil!J In bis poctets. believed to be the day's rettlpts. Police charged Gonzalez wilh the usmpo.tlou of a pro,,. man's functiona. • Ramsgate, EngWid com;utfug center employ,e Jimmy -lit bis pipe Tuesday and sent firemen from neigbborin~ commµnities racing ID their truc:ts. A firm spokesman said Barrett's match had accidentally set off a new sen- sitive electronic fire aJarm. "At leut we know the alarm worts,•• lhe spoltesman &ai4. "But we may have to.baa llDOldng noar IL" • Poliu cars toxrtd Linton. Eng'4!1d TU<Jda~ a!<rting rm· dektl io tht UCUPt Of C be01' from a local zoo. Actuall11 it 1D111 more oj an appn! Ulan. a warn· ing. The bear U a C11dctl11, J. month-old cub anltffring to tM ~ Miicha.. • Mrs. Jo.n H•wkins of Farnham, England flies a red flag from her clothesline when her bi.I? tom cat Maxi Is out on the prowl. Neigh- bors have complained that the cttt, which weighs 24 pounds, bas at- tacked their pets. • North Viet Chief Heads For Paris PAlllS (UPI) -llolUI -..,_ ... -...., U..t !ti cbld oqol!otar at t1M Pw tallil. Xoaa 'lllQ>, la - lorlmi!Wloend •- ~cCIM __ _ -1be annaunoemeat on Tbu1'• f1'tw'ft came at tDt end d \lit Tltb lelllon d Ille taJb, a lllfttio( 111 wllicll DO prvcr9I ... reparttd. Ambulador David K. E. 81'11C<!, •P' pwin& for tbe .et'Ond time in his rolt as OUef U.S. Nqollator, called for ge- nlline l&lb. The bud ol Ille Nortll Vleinu-dtloplloo, Nguyen Miah Vy, said there .were no "positive results'' from the meetin,g. But the--« Thuy'• ...... was 5eel as significant. U.S. offici.all havt said that bis mum was an im- portant tndbtor ol North Vietnam'1 negotiallog -· "We have ttceived news 1hat mlniater or state Xuan 'tbuy will 1000 be *-k in Paris," Nguyeu 1lwlb Le, the spokesman far North Vietnam'• delq"' Uon. sdd 1t a newa coafemce. Le was answertnc 1 newsman'• qualion as to when 1btty was returning. Le did aot give a precise da1' for Thuy'• returo. The .._......,. hod hem upocied lollowlnc the appolntmtnt o1 Bruce 1o lllCC<td Ambusador Henry Cabot Lodi<-Lodge ftil&oed 1aat Novem- ber. Bdore B:uce'1 appointment, the U.S. ddqatloo ,... beaded by Philip c. Habib u •ctll1c chld. 'lbu7 walked out m May to proteat. Nimn'1 failure to appoint a new Americal1 deleptlon chlel. DUrini the meelln&, which lasted 3¥• . hours, Bruce told the communists he did not accept "Posing yoor demands u ~ which "" muat -if thtle d1salllions are to lead aJJ1WIMr<," accorcllni 1o U .s. spoliesmto. Bruce called for ''pr1ctlcal'' -cC the !slue• "In • gtnulnely eandllal«y almoopbere" and Pld the U.S. oontlnued "to IWlit llOIDt! 1ign you .,. read)' to cooperate in this manner.'' Vy, after c•llin&: for the talb to be adjourned for one week ''To live the Amerlca.n ddtpte more thne for reflec. tioa," kl1d iltWiDJtb, 111 rqnl to inform you 1bal the ,_ American cl1id lklepl< merely ltated well-known words of the Nbon AdmJnlJlnllon. I have the fedlnr the dllCUlliom are far h'Om bl'loa favanlale \o l*iti•t ruul11." Uruguay Dragnet Search Started MONTEVIDEO, U"'l\llY (UPI) -Al leut 75 penona bave hem jllled by a 10,000-man dr1pet aearchlnl for two kldnaped dlplomats lhrttl<ned with death by lelhring terrorists, police IOUl'C.'tl said today. 1bt virtuaJ door-lo-door hunt, b1eted b}' a Uruauayan government auspe:nsion of COlll\ltuUooal rights allowln1 police to arrul 1t will, brings the total of '"pollUc1l" pcisooen in Uruguay to an utimlkd 225. UPIT.....,... 'Spire Ap•rfe' Susan Peckinpaugh of Santa Monica jumps out of the water with the latest ol the Spiro Ag- new merchandise, a T shirt de- picting a nude vice president with his foot in his mouth and the name "Spiro Agnude" un- derneath. ABM Foes Claim Formula Found For Victory Push WASHlNGTON (AP) -Foes of Presi- dent Nixon's Safeguard anliballistic mb5ile system, claiming they may have found the formula for victory iii the ashes ol two Senate defeats, will mount 1 ftnal drive nut week to restrict ex- pansloo of the system . Bat Safeguard supporten, w h o ma.ste.nninded the defeat of a bld to carve $32: million and two AB'9f sltea from the proeram, said they have the votes to wlthstud any chaUenae. The third effort will come on an amendment by Sen. F.dward Brooke, (R- Mus.) to bJoct coastruction ol. two ait: · dJUonal ABM aU.es. The fundJ instead woukt be ape.at to improve tht two existing sites . Brooke sakl be would call his amend- ment up for a vote Dal Wednesday . "I lhlnk the oppoaiUon to ABM has hit its peak and that we cu now move on to other things," said Sen. John stennls (0.Miss.) Ooor manager o£ the bill that includes upanaion of Safeguard to two new sites . 1 B52s Pound N. ,Viets Allies Try to Lift Base Siege With Barra.ge SA.IGON (UPI) -Amer!Clll warplanes led by waves of W Stratofortre.uea: c1roppec1 bundre<U o1 tons or oomba "' Junlles around fire Ilise O'Rellly today In a SW1t.ained eUort to lift • five-day slqe that has cost the life ol Us South Vietnamese commander. South Vietnamese headquarters Mid '5 Communist aoldie:rs have been tilled -, figure confirmed by body count -in action aroond O'Reilly since last Sunday. Field conunand'ers estima1' another 200 slaJn by allied air strikes ind lrtillery barrages. South Vletnames:e losses at O'Reilly were placed al nioe1killed and 44 wound- ed. The dead included the base com· m.ander, Maj . Nguyen Van Van. Ht died today of wounds suffered in a Communist mortar attack. 852 crewa dropped nearly 500 toru of bombs oo Nodb Vietnamese positions around O'Reilly, teaming up with smaller jets which raked the jungles with rockets and machine gun fire. One !Light ac- cident.ally bom~ South Vietname.se lines. MII!t.ary spokesmen said U.S. Ff Phan- ACROBAT THIEV ES 'LIKE IN MOVIES' NEW YORK (UPI) -A gang or acrobatic burglars who swung on ropes from building to building duri'ng a $1 million series or jewel thefts was stopped in the act Wednesday night by police using an electronic device developed for night ftgbUng in Vietnam. Police captured one man a11d ricovered $240,00> worth of rings stolen from the offices of the Botell Ring Co., lnc. on lower Broadway. They cordoned off a square block around the building in an unsuccessful attempt to trap four other men who ned. "They were fantastic, real pr1> fessionals, like something out of the movies," said Sgt. Thomas Connolly of the police Safe and Loft Squad. tom· Jets accidentally ooqibed a South Vt~tnameM unit operaUng six miles east ol the rnount.aintop base. kllling one soldier aiid woondlng II otben Wed--.,. The U.S. command said the accklent was undor investigation. The command also reported the '"" ol a UHtH lluey helicopter over the Laotian southern panbaodle Wednesday. It was the 56tb U.S. aircraft lost over Laos lince March 10 when such losses \11ere firtt reported. One ol the crewmen was trued. The 852s flew five raids Wednesday nlght and today over jungles three to four miles southwesl of O'ReWy, The base, 26 miles west of Hue and 12 miles east of Laos. came under North VieLDamese artillery and mortar attack * * * aaeln today 11 It has nearly every day for• week. The bast. ls reported surrounded by up to 2.000 North Vietnamese who military sources say art trying to aehe the lnst.allatlon in a campaign lo rid the area of allfed mefns for shelling Communist iupply routes from Laos into South Vietnam. Field reports abo said four U.S. Marines were killed and 11 v.-1>\lllded Wednesday when a leatherneck unit operating below Da Nang set oll 1 t55mm shell rlaed as a booby trap. lt occurred 19 miles SOllth·soulhw~t of Da Nang. North Vietnamese around the O'Reilly base shot down a U.S. Army observation hel icopter Wednesday, killing one of its crewmen. Returning *· * * •nome' Viet Refugees Leape Ca1nbodia PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (UPI) - The Jut of more than 200,000 Vietnamese refugees in Cambodia left for South Vietnam today . The dirty gray South Vietnamese lan- ding ship Nha Trang slowly steamed Crom its Mekong River mooring carrying 2,000 Vietnamese in its holds and on decks. Gaily-eolored tarpaulins pro Le ct e d children at their mothers' breast while dogs barked. The old, their toothless mouths bright l"ed from a lifellme of chewing betel nut, hunkered down and stared straight ahead. Son1e of the children bore festering sores on faces and bodies. Bundles containing the material gaini of generalions were piled on the wharf. Next to them cambodian soldiers gaily put up bunting on a newly erected wooden &land for official ceremonie! marking the end of the repatriaUon. The repatriation of more than Ont-third of Cambodia's Vietnamese population was completed by the deadline of Aug. 15. Linh Trang. 1 beautiful 18-year~ld girl, looked ba ck with tears sparkling in her deep black eyes. She is one 1 of two daughters being sent to South, Vietnam with her widoWed mother. She was born in Cambodia, like her mother and many other Vietnamese. Never has sbe seen Vietnam, the country authorities now tell her is home. "We do not know where we are going," she said. ' "I go without hope ... ltdon'l know what will happen. I do not know wllat to expect." Most of the refugees left Cambodia on South Vietnamese naval flotillas that took two days 'to wind the SO miles down the Mekong to the border. Others went in sampans and wooden barges. ' • Morning after morning, precise- ly at 6:30. the wail of an ambulance siren split the sleepy quiet of a Miami interstate expresJWay u:it ramp. Mr1. R. L. Fleml,., whose home faces the ramp, became su- spiciou& of the regularity of the emergency calls and telephoned the ambulance company. "The ambulance company !Did me that a ni~bt shift ambulance driver who lived a few blocb away from me would sound his siren so his wue would know he was comin~ home and put the eiis on," she &Bid. The sln!n doesn't sound quite so fre- quently allymore. Terrorists who call t h e m i e I v e 1 Tupamaroe have demanded reluse or ill of Uruguay·s political pl"i!oMrs in udwlee for I.he two boll.ages, U.S. farm upert Claude L. Fly, 55, of Fort Collins, Colo., and Bruilian Qinsul Aloysio Dias Gomide, 41. The Senate rejected Wednesday by a 62-32 margin a bid by Sen. Harold Hughes (O.low1) to kill all Safeguard \~f"'i:~~~~ expansioo funds except tbose r or 11 11.-~ ... ruearch aJld development. fits Most A Tupamaro thrt1t to kill tbt hollages if police draw too cloM did not deter the aearch by 10,000 police and aolditn. Letters from tht victinu to their wives indicated Wednuday that they were ltiU alive. Then, by a far-allmmer $2-47 margin, it ended a drive to cut $322 million from the President's Safeguard bodgtl and restr:icl the aystem t.o the two slle.s approved last year. 1be 1meJKtment was sponlOrtid by Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R-Ky.) and Philip A. Hart (().Mich.). Brooke's proposal would allow fW'Kls now earm1rked for geographical ex.. pansion of the system to sites in Missouri and Wyomifllg to be used to improve altes lb1!1dy authorized in Montana and Nocth Dakota. Another kidnap victim, U.S. police 16- viatt Oan A. Mitnone., of Richmond Ind ., was fouDd lhot to dtath e.arly Monday. Mostly Sunny • Ill Nation U.S. Hotspot for Second Day in Rotv is Las Vegas-108 .... •-rw.. """"'""' .....,. ,... •••••.•••••• t tJ4•.111. .... ~ 1w ......... ,. ll:•f'.1'11, I.I ··~y lltat -....... -..... 119' •.rn .... , Jllnt ~lirll ........ .... ti•.....,_, '·• ......, -. ............ lr•t.m. t.• ~A· ....... , 11.,.m. '·' 14o¥1' .,,.. l :lt '·"'· "" l :.Q ,,fl'I. """" ..... •: tt •·'"· v.s. s .... _ ... T"*" ....,,. ""'' -MllN I/If Wt"" MlnHr'tM• .U.. ,.,... tf IM -,.,. .... ~. ""'""'''..., ......... ,. .... .,... .. Tl'lwt wu ,.ill w ll'lllr• •w0 9C> tMfr .,_ fl'lt ....... Artllintlc tlllft. ~.,...,.. ...,. ~ flwv. wt ,_ .... -........ "'"' "'""· ••lllfl" .. ''""' - -lllM, Tflt ,...,... tlltt llt<il .. ......., Mtw ·--... llWflM """""" ~ .,,.., I fww _,,.,.... #l'llllfM -............. Tiit i11t1ll4f ~ If tllt ~·· etnlll'l\IH ~. 0ntrt. l'IM 111111 ,... lltf fl llithl, Styf!I-. (tlll. llaf I te ... ,.. ,....,. •lilt! tllt Mffl ---· Tiit NllM'• llol "'°' WtfrlttdtY frW ,,,. NCOfllll ,.., "' • ""' ... , L.11 V,_.t. Hl'll,. ti tOt. Tiit ..,.,"""' lotr r_.....,..ru M1t111 Lew '°'"'· ·---" ~ ·-... M " -.11 ..... " " IHt'lfltlof '" n lltm.rdt " " ..... , . .. ..... " " Chic-• " Clr<ln,..u a .. CIWtltlld • " D~nvtt • " ..,,,,, .. " 1!'11< .... 1 " " Port Wttttl " " .... M , . • .... _ .. " HorWl~I~ -~ .. .. n Kt flfff Cl.., .. • U. VMff ,. " .... ._ .. " Miami teMtl " " MllWtull;tt • ~ Miii--* u " ~fW Ori.Pit " " 111.W YIW'lo; .. • .,. .... .. " ....... " .. ~.,. lllt!lft "' .. ... ,_ " " ~ ... -.. " ·-'~ " ......... " • ... -... .. ... "' ~ a..cr .......... • " II, L'""• u .. It" ltke Ct.., .. " S.11 O~IO .. .. Stftlt ltttlfrll .. " .......... ,. • " SetHl9 " • S..Utow .. " ""'"'" •• .. Wt•llflltfOll n " ... _ IUICI, OLDS, CHRYSLER, PONTIAC RRESTONE 2095 ILACKWAU :ll .... OIAMPION :.:-.. "' AUGRIEIT 2 MONIOMATtC ~~2a·!· COit• Mat.I flrestone s1o,. I 475 E. 17th St. -646-2444 MOU1ti1 M"' • ffi,. I-a.-. t• 1 """' -Set., I ..... te s , ..... ' '111 Many CAIARO, COUGAR, FAllLARE 4PLY 1570 IYLOI CORD ~ ... 7.JS-14 :..'"" .. "' llACKWAll '111-DOIGE, CHEI., IEIC.,PO~C fl"'"" 1885' °"""'"' ....... 4 "' .,.. a.. f$C. Huntington klch Firestone Store 16171 Beoch Bl¥<1.-l-47-6061 HOURS1 M.._ • frl., I ...... •• I ,..-. -Set,, I•·"'· te I p.111 • I FORD, CHEV., PLYIOm ~':: 16!! lltcb1H ~f.-1' ·~· _,. ~Ill.GI• RnREADS ANY SIZE LISTED 1.1 .. llt T .... 11, Lii-it, J.Jl-1&, T.11•11 nitewalls or BllCkwalls 4 for 4949 ""'#I fO ...... ,,. , ... ,. ........ .......... ,.. Costa Maa -Jorry Hall 176l Newport Blvd. -646-5019 HOUIS: I •.111. te l 1JO ,.111. -'-'·· ....... t• !i ,.1111. ...... Batt "'d U.S. Seeks Small Arm I. . . .Imitation GENEVA (UPI) - Unltocl Slotel aald tod>J that altpo .,. bllnC lo cootrol the aucJeor race, negot.latiom should get under WIJ Oil convenUonal weapon1. U.S. dolep1e J..,.. Leooord told the clW~'f<' conlerence the nuclw proliferation treaty it' dlect and atratelic Jiml1etlcm talb wllb the et government are under way "and we are hopeful f IUC- ..., to them. "It Is time, therefore t we begin in earnest our 1tarch for w•~ ol dealing with the thrtal posed lo us all by the ever..tncTu!lna: apre.ad and soP>latlcattoo ol COl!Vfntlonll weapons," Leonard said. W<rlcl arma espeaditurif rose from lt:lt billion to PlO billion In t~. he aald. "By faz the pttter part o! !hue fund& baa been devoted to con ven tlon al ~b," Lemard llld. ''The w.len of m\l!larJI spendlll(~:svld haa ...-. 'Ibis trend hu en partl Iarly Jl"ODOUnced. In the ' I e s s developod <OUntrlea bl the world," be 1Vd. r- .. _ •Y ol tolti.. at the s!UPrinj ......utui<• of ti trlffiOn fOr ·m 111 tar J purposes during thj. period 1MH'69 !1 to not. l!b't this 1t1m repre!l!ntl more1than w11 spent In the -· pe~od Oii Ill forma ol puhlJio eduOotlon and bealtb .-"!" 1-8rd aald. "One moy qOeltlon '!lbttller this r.necu 11naaotiable and judicious for mankind .'' '!be Unltocl 1es leeb that both countries e x p o r t i n g weapcm and those buying them mwot natralnl. t.er Eyes pllCt the AmrJ on an a1J. volun*r baslt. Goldwater pndldH t b 1 15onate wooJd -tho amend-ment, but WU pea1milt1c about the -for - approval thla - Goldwater, rqarded u a hawk on mWtary questlonl, called the draft ••A practice that haa no place In our aystem of freedom eu:ept u • temporary expedieot." •1 am just old fulilonfd enovch lo bellev• that ~ an aUll a IJUI many -......,,uswbo thlnt ellOUib o1 their -m that they ... wllllnC to fllhl for I~" be aald. ·Goldwater aald the -lll<llt wW be co<pmllOnd by 11 other Senaton In addltlon to H1tfleld, wbo 11 a n outspoken opponent ol U.S. milJtuy involvement in Soufl>eul Alla. '!be --many ol the ~tlonl of a presidential comrntuion headed by former Defense Secretary 'lbomaa S. Gates, wbicb called for r a 11 l n g mllltary pay high enough to attract enough volunteers to meet military needs and pba&- lng out the draft by July 1, 1971. Goldwater spoke Wednesday at a symposium sponBOl'ed by the Young Americans for Fnedom (YAF), a con- lel'VaUve group. Curfew Set After Riots HAGERSTOWN, Md. (UPI) -A three-hour curfew was Troops Gas Catliolics In Ireland LONDONDERRY, Northern lreland (UPI) -Roman Catholic youths a t t a c k e d British troops with stones and bottles early today in the violent aftermath of a day or Protestant parades and demonst.ratiool. 'Ibey were driven back by nausea gas. The catholic youths used mlrron to Dash beams from military 9W'chlights back into the eyes of the British soldiers then rushed them, throwing roiulle.s. Three o( the troops fell and newsmen said at least nine were taken away for treat- ment of injuries. 1be youths finally retreated back into the Roman Cattolic Bogside neifhborhood before a fusillade o nauSf!a gas. An army spokesman said seven demonstrators were ar- rested. The struggle with the Catbollcs came after a day c f Protestant celebrations marked by defiance of a government )>an a g a i n s t parades and the beating of Conor Cruise O'Brien, a former United N a t i on s diplomat and. now a member of the parliament of the predominantly Roman Catholic Irish republic. clamped on w s western . Borman Seeks Maryland town of 35,000 early ~ today after • night of 11reoorn-POW , R l e biog and roc1: and boWe s e eas -In the Negro aectlotl. City Pollce Qilef Gruoo Doambergtt said M o t o t o v cocttails were thrown at two furu.lture factories near the Nearo section and other Dru i. e set at a lumber yard a vacant bouie. 'lbe fires w quickly brought under I and damage wu ligilL ~ gathered and pel1ed pdlice and firemen witb stmes aid bottles. Two )JOlicemtn suffered minor tnjurtes and oile ol them wu treated at • /<'°'' bo<pltal. TOKYO (AP) -North Viet- nam said today that former attronaut Frank Borman will fall on his round·the-world mission se~ldng release of U.S. prisoners()( war in North Vietnam. 1bt North V let names e milltary newspaper Quan Doi Nhan Dan llkened Borm8'1\'s 13-natloo tour for President Nison to the unsuccessful er. forts of Texas millionaire H. Roe:11 Perot to obtain freedom for the POWs. Wa l~s 9th Birthday Defee ng Guards Tell of Restrictions the days that followed, the covemment of President. Walter Ulbrlcf'tt erecttd a wall from brick and rubble left over t.?m World War JI. In ·the montm after, the wall wu strengthened and made higher, the approaches miDed and watch t o w e r s erecl<d and equipped with aelrchlights. _l'ollgang Koch, 21, who ~erted as a border ,uard April, said E...i German ns bold 2,500 peraons Uibt trytn1 lo escape not only over the wall but through the mined, electrified harrier separating all of Eut and West Gew ~"'v. Kock sai fe for the guards wu replete with rertr1ctiom. For Instance , mWl transistor radios were banned. They could have larJer radiol: if they reigstered them. "But we had to pledge we would not llsten to Western stations," he said. Manfred Mwfeldt, 20, who fled from East Berlin guard duty in JWle, said soldiers caught Ustening to Western radio programs were confined to barrack! for four weeks. "We were not allowed to lbten to rock music ,'' Missfeldt said. "One man wrote a letter to a newspaper defending rock music and he had to write an essay on why It is damaging." Werner Brocthoff, 21, ned Jut May. He said a 90ldier in his outfit was overheard performing an imitation of the peculiar Saxon accent of Ulbrlcht. 'Ibe humorous trooper got 20 months in prison. SAN JU N HILLS Country Club GOLF Prt.r le 7.aG a. OllllN Pll - CAltTS - - fNfl'I 7,30 GltllN PIE CARTS - - IN SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ITH OINTLE OCIAN IREEZIS 11111 ....... o..11 ... 117•0H1 RANGE • LESSONS BY APPODmlNT ~AYS--WEEKENDS- ·-3p.m. 1f ............ -$150 .1.50 -$5.00 ~.00 .. a p. .... ,.~ ,,..... -~.uo $100 -$6.00 $4.00 , ....... ''"* Olll!N FEE - - -$6.00 $3.00 CARTS - - - -$7.00 $4.00 J I' .M. SPICIAL RA TIS SNACK BAR * COCKTAIL BAR * OPEN DAILY .IOI .. HAlllN•TON M•t. lllCW OF BAUS WITH THIS AD ' - DAILY PILOT I Governors Dispute Value of Parley LAKE OP TllE OZARKS, Mo. lAPJ· -Amid grumbling over t.be abtence of President Nixon and Vice Preaklent Spiro T. AIM" lh>m thll week'I NallonaJ Govanors Conference, It took Gov. Later Maddox of G<orgla to say what 1 number of his colleagues felt. "Sometlme9 I w o n d e r whether the governors ahould be here ," Maddox told a news con!erence. '1'be conferences isre generally alway1 the same, though the aeUings are different." Then, a r t e r totroduclng ~ three rHOJutions, he left r. his Atlanta home. The c::onlereooe conUnued and methodically puaed tta ll$Ull round of appeals for a greater ahare rJ the federal kitty. ;.. It ended w.-y. Gov. Raymond P. Shaler of Pennsylvania proclabned, "To me, this conference la one of the greatest thinp we halve In America." Some of the 46 g<Wernora who took part In the three-Gay conference at this ltllb rural Mlasouri reaort agree with Shafer that the governor• have the potential to be a major nattonal po!ltlcll force. Bui othera conceded In private converuUoa an ln- cruatng awarenaa of the GJGo fertnee'I Jbnltatkm. Eftn Gov. Ndloa A. Rocbfdl« ol New York. •till tho kadfnC fic1n among the pawn. bu more at Jeu abandoned bis hope of making the ota1e executives Into a major fcwca. Involved in ao election flabt In New Vert, be camt only briefly lo pr .... t propou1a by a committee he heads and to 1ttend the atate dluner Tuetday night. Gov. Ronald R<apn of C!llmM -.... ., -.... tcu'.,._GC efdn, flm!JJ' llJd ...,,. ...... "Galllnl 6illp -la °"'Ir-II a llnldHll7- b 1ot0 ..inl IOhlldl ,_. _ .. aald -,,...,_ --, .... _..... "U... I _, cD aD)llllac ... ..,... ..... . Alta' 0. l• ..... I rt Fl, wllhalcwaa,.W.,lbo p«DOn retrr tr• Wo CMlr own famll7 aad olf lolal -SWJ, ft1uDy all •s111W1r the-... ............. Ortho grows again! ••• and in celelntitlJ fl'OUdly tm8flts great samgs I• you at every Ortho Store! ALL STORES CELEBRATE UALITY KING ... --~ '°"""""" Trueqmlftylnam.dyloalpef9d--tprlngWll!wtth __ _ i'138 You gel a rtclt, ac:rol qulllod!_. • ... wntflalld, reinforced border. °'---- QUALITY QUEEN A Complete line of Sofa Beds ••• SALEM SOFA BED &rty AmerlcM 1C091"9d """'"'1lblo wtthwtnge, ..... wood bin med anna Ind MG boxplond-- Or1ho'• deluxe button-ftM r j;J:IOlil': l"*"P"• 1r1rnattrw:•H lfzM. Iii. -lporAal--s19915 ML SIZE REE IMMEDIATE OEllVERY fttOfC N«J MA&. ONX1'I ~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. (Noxt to Zocly's] ...._1 tJMS1t ANAHEIM 1811 W. Uncoln Ave. (Just .East of F.dMart) ~ 776-tlft the Super King lllalbess Ir 2 Bax Sprt111 Orlho-Pak Ir Double 8mlls -·---TlloO. __ _ crest no-lrcn King or Queen efze tcp -• fllldo crest no-lrcn King or Queen olze fitted -- • 2 King or Queon llze -~ • 2 .,._ CUN • IClng or Queon olze -pad • KiltO or Queen alze metal frame Oft a..,..,.olllng c1111 .. The Dotlble -for IOl1I • Qu11pc h11itbomd (not • llluolrllled) pluo quilted bodlprwl.,... Fulf: plastic headboard (not • Phllllmd) - metal frame on easy-rolling caolef'L --- Ulne Shephonl" ----..... 1:.':~~~*148 Twin or Full Size "88 ..................... __ .. __ Twins 'n Fulls always II QUALITY $ 1WIN OR FUU: Oneal ... -buyo ..... ~ Or1ho lino DI bo!W buys. FulMfme •leeplng comlort In a unit that'• buJn SOOUfl~ thar'1 bulMIOlatl __ _ E1peolally d11lgned ond-.cttd to pro¥lda,.. _ -aupport-won't aog orgl-..1 !!won.,. ~ ..... ~.-"' .. ...upport"'d11lgned.111C ...... O...... 9.-; You can only buy Orlho Matbe1111 at Orlbo Sluta LAKEWOOD 4433 Candlewoocl Dr. In C.ncllowoocl Shops (Across from .Ul-d ~ ............ , .. Of'lN DAILY 10 9•SAT tu G•SUN 17 6·1MMlOIAH OELIVIRY•CRlDIT lERMSAVAILABLl•BANKAMLlllCAHO·MA \llH 1111~11.1 • ' I • DAILY PILOT EDD'ORIAL PAGE ----~ Huntlniton lleoch's city finanrial ailulltion Isn't unique. '!'be municipal rovemuieat needed money - lots ot it -to build a muciH>e<ded civic center, to bulld parks, pavt -and perform all tho other ._iv~ chol'eS that ""' the respoosibility ot a cl13 that tries to Uke..,.,.. of tis people. " . Wi-ral!;lng the ]>ml>el'ty tax ralt, the HuntlnR· too Beach City Coon<;il. in one simple action, not ooly found 1 method ol · llnanclng tht new civic center, but also found a way to droi> a municipal tnsb collection dtarge that had beea impolsed as e revenue device sev- eral )~era.rs •1:0. Because the federal and state govennent.J have pre- empted the big sources of tu revenue. municipal iovernments are eternally diggin$t UJ> new thlngs ro tax. They put levies to derive "outside income" on cigarettes, on trash collection, gasoline, pets, amuse-- ments. and the saJe o{ almost all genera) mer- chandise. Some wags would suggest that everything in the world is taxed with the uception of sleep, and ~ Southern California cities have come close to mteting that chall..,R• by charginR· a "bed tax" for all vi.silors who stay in local botels and motel s. Hnntington Beach's new S«:rtt weapon 1$ a utility tax. Very simply, the city council,declared that elec- tric. gas, water and telephone users in the city of Hunt- ington Beach will find 5 )>el'Ct!lt added to their bills. Tiie sum will go into the city treasury. From a city government's viewpoint, the uWity tax is a beauty. It requires no vote of the peop!e. It hits business and industry as well as the individual. Jt undoubtedly can be increased a few pennies at a time witbout drawing too much notice. And it LI accompli&b- ed without further burdening property taxpayers. And. wonders of wonders, the utility tax 1$ collect- ed almost effortlessly. All the city must do is tell the utility companies to pin 5 percent on to their monthly bills. collect II and remit the special charge baclt to the city. Huntington Beach ls not alone in finding thl$ new These Assets Are Not Eas)· To Withdraw -Art Hoppe '· MIDkw of -will naturallJ he oalnged lo learn -the Govemmmt bu, In -. aJroad:J -• Na-1 DD Banli -a """°"' of _.... that nOlf toepo -1 ...... -buadnd thou>-and -'pam d ~ .... Wbll will ll3luMllly autrqemllliona AmfricaDI: ii the lzatioe they've b e en left out. Who wanll known that hii Government d o e 1 a. • t even cxmider him a "person o( intettst?" . '!bus t.r, however, the only wtraged American to take action is MT. Norbfrt Phr>ng. Suspeding !hat he'd - cmrlooked, Mr. Phrang marched down lo the Pini National Data Bank In WaSUngton's financial district a D d demanded to open an acount. BE WAS.GllEiTED rather coolly by the seventh vice president, Mr. Graspar Grommet. who wu seated at a walnut des\ bclliDd a placanl bearing the bank's "'""'" "The bank that cares about YOU !" "I'd like to opes a special checking account." said Mr. Phrang airily, "so that the FBI, the A.one Cmlit Bureau and whoeveMt-may-cooce:rn can nm speclal checks on me." "Not so fut, Mr. Ptlrang," said Mr. Grommet, dnunm.ing a pencil on Ills memo pad. "We do have a reputation to uphold . Now, Jet's see, have you ever been arrested?" ••well," admitted Mt. Phrang nervous- ly, 4'l've had three parking ticket.a and • opeedlng citation. .. "Hmmm. ff.aye you 'ver urxlergoo' banknptey1 been denied credit or failed to PIY your tus?" - "Never! I've got BD A~ credit raUna:." Dear Gloomy Gus: Why pok' fun at the Women's Uberation IDO\lernent? I'd join in a minute it 11J1 bllSbancJ waukf let me. -Mrs. J. w. M. "" ............ ._... ........ -•. ... . ... ...... .... ___ .. ..., ........ P-. ••t tee. Now then, baYe you. ever eogaged in adult...,, -ty. child molesting er unnatural aer acts?" "Good belveu, no! And I reamt your pyirC qiP'ltktaa." "Easy does it, Mr. ~ We're ooly doing our Job. Lastly, bow do yoo feel -Vice Pnsidelll Agnew?" "I think be'• the lhird .... test living America -only a cut below President Nixon and Billy Graham. A1ld when u .,,.,.. lo these long-hllred peocOniD .. ... "Look here, Pbrang," lnterrupU!d Mr, Grommet with a 900WL "You're wasting my time. Obviously, )'OU're • loyll, baoest, ·normal member of the Silent Majority, }J, such, you're a person of no interest whatsoever. PleaR tab your business el5ewhen. II MB. PHRANG Wa.J 10 inctnaed by this rebu!f1 that be took hill cause to the hustlings -callings 01 his fellow millions of forgottm Amerlcam to r1Be IQ> and .demand tbeir rlgblful pl'""' in the National Data Bank. 'Jbere was no question bll campaign would have caugtt fire in ttdl nation ol olablHeel<er~ But the Justice Depart· meol, fearing a run on tbe bln.t, declared hU •cttvities IUbftl'SiVI and a personal account was promptly opened in his name. Naturally, Mr. Phrana bu not spok'n to a person of no interest since. ait Mr. Phrang was simply a man ahead of hill Urne. Fir with the adva.noea in compl!ttr tecmology, our Government will soon be able to take a personal interest in All of us -keeping a daily record of the morality, the p:>litical think- ing and the comings and goings of each and every one of us. After all, lt'1 the only democratic way to TWI a bani: lii:e this- Cutting Down Jet Noise A KNBC EclltoNI '!'od>)' we'll J>rOPOM! a new kind of federal tax. One dollar per passmger addod lo the price of all airline Uckets, to he uaed lo reduce lei engine noile. There ltt!Dll no other way to 110lve the problem of noise pollution at all of the nalloo's major alrJ>orts. People who live near the north runway at Lor Angelet loternatlonil Airport bttllqht the noise matter to a boll Wedne>day, In their nmnlng11ar llaillll the screechiog, overP>wertnc noise of airline jeu. The cill' bas agnied to offer to 1>111 any of tbe 680 borne. which ,,... atand within 'IOO feet of th1t runway. While the purchaH offer 11 1ltloome lo moot people, aod II long Oftf'due., it doem't do more than put .., ur-plug In the total problem of aircraft noJse. AND BUYING -devalued l>y no!Je ""' .. action that could be taken lo Long Budl, f<1 tnmple, where airport utill!atlon II str411()ed by the flor al noise. lo KNIIC't -, the-"'1 to tllt pro- • ' Gue.it Editorial ,. blem is to reduce noise at the source. The technology to make eiJnt sttpa: towant quie~ low-<moa jet engine< is slowly bocomtnc available now. What's lacldog, 111turally, II U.. altllnea' d<linl to spond a millloa or ao dollan per alt pilot to ... ..n eJlsUni aircraft to -belnl met l>y 1l>e -IDOdels. IN ONE VIEW, Jt would be possible for the Federal AvlaUoo Admlnlstr1Uon to force the •lrlinH to cune up wilh the money tbemRlves. As a practical matter, pauengen ~ It a~ay, even- tually, 10 there's IOm< benellt in keeping the noise redudlon chqe ldenlllloble, jll>I to make «rlaln the tax ends when the job's done. Thia frontal attacll: on jtt nolR may be the only way lo lick the problem. There's a limit to the number of home• any airport can buy. -~- metbod of relslng cash. Santa Ana bu Imposed a mn. ilar levy as have at least It other Califoml• cilia. Ne""'°" Beltch seriously conaidered It tbb yesr. ~ow that several olives are oat ot the bottle we 1nUClpate a wave of new uWity .tax Jeiislation. In Jact. the California Society of Municipal Finance Offtcers bas urged th• LeaRUe of California Cities to promote a slate\lide 5 percent utility Jevy. The state would collect the sum. rtdlslrtbuU~ It to the cities on the basis ol populatfon. Wbether or not the statewide levy comes to pass1 Orange Countians might as well face the fact that Hunt· tn«ton Buch's new money mine bas not tone unnoticed elsewhere. No one. of course, is really fooled'. \Ve ail 'know who pays the bill for municipal services, \vhelher it is deri.~ from property taxes, aasoline taxes or an additiooal S )>el'Ct!lt taclced on IQ our uWity bills and the utility bills of those who sell us merchandJse and pro-duce our goods. $33,333.33 a Month. How much is three months of seniority worth in the Callfomta Senate? Oranae County taxpayers can put a dollars-and -cents pr 1 ice tag on It. The fee is Just over $100.000. That s the estimated cost of next Tuesday's special election to fill t&e Senate seat vacated by John Sclunitz who left the state position for a Congressional seat. ' Two men are Nnning for the three-month unexpir· ed term. One is Dennis Carpenter, of Newport Beach one of ~alifornia's key Republicans. The other is Doug: las Irvme, ot Santa Ana, a total political unknown who now bas announced he doesn't even \\'ant the office. Carpenter v.•iU win. Asswninx he's elected to the full four-year term in November (another J?ood bet). Oranxe County'1 second senator will have seniority over other new senators. At a cost of JI00,000. Editorial Draws Criticlsna, Praise •' Muddled View--or Statesma1'ship? To the Ediloro The Daily Pilot edltorial .. ,...,, Kinds ol Pollution"· (Aug. 3) struck me as puticulariy representative of the kind of muddJe.huded tbinkJng tbat Is largely responsible for our p r ' 1 ' n t en. Yironmenta1 c:risb. It ahould require no giant intellect to rtallu that the quallty of Ufe that you sancUmoniously advocate wilt be an absolute impossibility as long as government officials, and the media which you represent, continue to shrug their shoulders u the developers devour Southern California and create the vrry problems wttb whtdl JOU pnr .. to be '° cooce.- THE THRUST of your editorial wu beaed on two precepta to which I object strenuously. First, while you concede tbat popula· t:ion growth Is at the root or our e~ vi:ronment.al problm>S, you appear to be conv~ that further growth is unavoidable. Second, )'OU cvnClude tbat In order lo aocommodale the population lnlJUI we 9boukl be willtng to accept just a Dttle more dirty air. If the first precept can he dl!pn>ved, and ap- propriate actlcn takm, the!n the second wil be academle. 'Ibtrefcn let me aug· gest an answer to the quatkln "What can we do to keep Orange County popula. tion from growing out of control1" AGAIN, no gU intellect required: just a realization that rtsoluUon of the pn>blom lies primarily In what you do Mt do. You do 110t, lo< lmW>ce, promote expansion of power facilities to provide services for a future population th.at will strangle you. you also do not en· courage the unlimited housing and com- mercial deYelopment #lat will make thost facilities an absolute necesllity. You do not, in short. put out the welcome mat for those lntertsts whose only con- cern is development and its subsequent pro!ill -and "quality of life" be damned. To Ume who will answ'r the above with the tired argument that not to grow ill to die, r ask in return ; bu anyone tried it? HENRY C. OOOK 'Tiie Public lntere•t' To the Editor: Your editorial "Tv;o Kinds of Pollu- tion " was, in my opink>n, a fine example of responaible journalism and display«! 1latesmanship in "telling lt u It Us.'' At a time wbtn the emoUon of en- vi~ent and ecology seems to be con- trolling many decbloos, It Is vitally Im- port.ant to inject llDmt common aense into the equation. This Isn't to say that ecology and environment ·~ not im- partant. and muat be consjdertd.1 but Dear Geor1e: I am wondering if the diet plan !Kl popular a whUe back calk,>d "The Drinking Man'• Diet" worked very well and why I doll't btar as much about It any more. Did you try it and what are your recommendaUon51 V.N, Dear V.N.: Boy! Did I try "The Drilling Man 's Diet"! It worked great. I am now on ''The Htme0wr Man's Dl•I." (Low carbohydrat•, ·high aspirin.) Dear Goorge: 1ify Daddy broke all my rock Utitn from reader1 .,,. welcome . Nonncllt1 wriUn should comie11 tluiT memgea in $00 worda or Leu. TM right lo cond'11Sc I<...,., lo f!I 8!JOCC or eUminatc Ubel U n1erued. AU Ui.. ter1 mu.st include donotuT~ and mail- ing addreu. but ft.a1ml mau bt. toitn. held on requen if iuf/idnit rea..son u IJl'l'Gr<1ll Po<try tDiU nol bf pub- 11.rhcd. the total public Interest mll!t also he comfdered, u I~ wu In the case of our dedak>n in Huntington Beach. Your edltorlal vividly poinU oot the need lo balance the growing demand for electric pawer and the desire to reduce air pollutioo and mainlain envirorunental quality. A3 many are rtnding Out in the N'w York area, a shortage of 'ledric energy affedl the qualtty of life .and indeed the public beallb and welfare of our dally Uv... It Is bnportant to get the facts before judgments are made, and media comment of the quality of "Tw1> Kindl of Pollution" ii providing a valtiable public suvlce. JACK K. HORTON Oiairman of the Board Southern California Edison Co. 'It Db•ppolntell V•' To the F.dltor: Your recent edllx>rial, "Chavei and His Win" (Aug. t) greatly disappOinted us and Sttmed inconsistent with the fair-mindedness usually exhibited bf your editorial at.all. While rather piously stating you nialfzed there are two ;sides to the issue, you 1ave only one and showed a glaring Jack of concern (OT the full troth. . . You Infer Chavu passed o v e r 4'establlshed U.S. industrial law," the rtghta of the pickers to ,1ect unionization, Gov. Rap.n's good hearted offer of medl&Uon and Sen. Murphy's even more tremendous . proposed legislation". The facts DnT th.la to be nonsense. Certainly, yoo. II not the generll public, should bow farm l1boren have neYer been covered by an "established. U.S. in- dustrial labor law." They were deliberately and conscientiously through the: years n:cluded from the NLRA by the powerful growen' lobby and tbertby never gittn the protection or ron:e of law to hold union elections. GoY. Reagan's offer to aet up mediation came only yean after the ttruale began and only when the boycott began to effed.iv'ly tlnaten srower1' profils. The and roll 1'tCOf'dl and t am W-... Ho .,. I am old enooglt lo develop a matt mature -In-music. W1'1 doesn't he stlct lo !!» music he llte.s aod quit trylq lo didate my tastes! After all, I'm st. What sbouJd I do? FREDDIE O.ar l'r<ddll!O Pmll.111 10U could work out aome ....i of compn>mile wltb your Did· dy and -YOU'RE 31!1 Run IWIY from bomt.. <Se-.1 your probltmJ to Geora• and 1e&m the increufna value or poslago llampo.) • . ' "catch'' in his kind offer wall that Cha1·C'z would hav, lo caU off the boycott "'hile dlscus.sions to set up mediation and IK>ld eleotions . were going on. These could drag on and on and with the boycott's momentwn stopped, victory "'hich '\'as almost at hand , would once again be out of reach. \\'e would 1gree that federal l.:aws are needed to regulate the agricultural industry. For year1 the farm workers ha ve needed to be Included In labor laws -simple ttilngs we take for gran.ted like a minimum , wage, over·time, v.·orkmen's compensation, unemployment lnsuranc,, safety and beaJtb rqulations, no child labor. etc. ·etc. But they object to Sen. Murphy'1 bill which would outlaw Wlk's at harveSt lime. What'poss11Ullty could the union have ot achieving 1atri.s if they couldn't strike at the oil1y ecooo~lly meaningful Ume1 The most disconcerting part of your editorial was your personal attack on Caesar Chavez. You picture him as "an· Inspired pr'ss agent." You · q"oote his opponents who c811 him "a power liungry man'': you say he brought "dnmatlcs to bear with a 25 da y fast.'' You · fail to menlion he fasted to remind his followers who .we.re geUlng. im_pati,nt .and threatening violence that theirs was a non·vlolent struggle, but their power lay in the justke of their cause ·and the strength and courage they h;ad to endure all hardships for as long a11 it would take to win the dignity owed them as men. It would have been tunny if ll v.•eren 't ao pathetic to read the accounts depicting the poor growers at th' niercy' or this powerful, grasping union. Tht·only pciwer that would bring victory lo a few hundr'd uneducated men, women , and children fighting for five years on $S a wetk against not only rmancially and PollltcaUy pQwerful growers, . but an· unfriendly ·governor, senator, and legislature (and a Defense Department which raised its p..irchase o£ O'lpell during the ~ycoU by over 1IClO percent) 11 the .pewer Of jQstice and . the ability to btline, hope and endure in the rightness of a cauae. . FRANK 'AND JEAN FORBATH Proteet tlle Seal To the Edit«: Early itl July 'I observtd ,tbr,e dead s'a lions float to ahor' -Within a few days of each other -victhna of the fishing boat operaton who bring "sportsmen" to fish near the kelp bed.I offshore from Laguna Beach. Why can't pt0ple 1tt the tragedy of killing the Cllifumi1 Sea lion? the law prot«ll them but the law Is dllllcu~ and exptiDllvt to enforct!, The Jaw hasn't changed the atUtude of the · ftsherrnan who wants "lhat Duislnce" -the Ra lion -eliminated. SEA LIONS ARE being killed Ulegally with the wboJe..hearted enooW'lrement' or the J>ISl"lllen on the aport flshin1 boa ta. Suttly tbt,. Is """" In Ibis world for n.hermen ond -1 lo• s . II the lishormlo ltd Ibo ... """ ' the fish be wlD later tbrow -or bury in the roee 11POea1 the .ea 'Jlon would aoori 1#1m .awi)'. Yntmiay I watched 1 live tta lion leisurely 1w1mrn1n& down the co•st. What a al&htl ALICE POWELL N•U la die Cotti• ' To the Edltor o · I am appelltd by Ult actions of tom~ • of the 1>t<>Ple ol the world. Wh>t has come onr us! Must we prove our greatness by showing we can develop, pollute, and makt moneyl For womple.' night hete In Orang' County, tl)ere arc thrt'e ~ses of environmenlaJ rape: One large Ii.rm plans to dredge and fill the Ja:;~ ajor salt·wster ~ soulh of M Bay at sa.lita .Barbara. It speaks o ,high financif~ gains and great public Je.neflt, proVfded parts of that public c buy waterfrbnt property. Parks surro ding the JX:Oposed harbor 1 are aH situs d around 1 flood control \channel!, and main Jfirks may lose a major chu of spade due to the cha~ce of s ation J. the adjacent marina. THE FUU\f pla s to cover the ~c hills ~ith edium to high density 1ng. It tells f pla~ greenbelt.!, . h include cemete' s and private goll courses. ni, one· .ajor park in the area will bear no esemblance to nature as il is, but aature as man can make it. Another landholder hal blocked access to public beaches because it owns the surrounding land.CJ. It 1-efuses to grant public access and now the county must buy back whal it abarwlined. Now r read that v; th the reopening of a silver mine and new teal estate ~e\'elopment rre.arby, ilverado canyon 1n Cleveland Nalio I Forest could become, as one res' ent describes it, "another Laurel Ca on, or Coldwater Canyon, or atverly Hills." The total effectS leav·, her spe hless. ALL OVER OUR ountry Ule natural c.ovironrOent is · ng killed by an apathetic public om nature scare5 · becaulle they can t control it· as it J\a;l!ll'ally exlst3. 1'he Cheyenne River Ui North Dakola is/doomed to· dle under a proposed dam.~ mes built on floodjng pbins are wns out, so the river mU.,,t be control! . An almost untapped lim1~r land wo~J be lost, as ·well as mal,'f recreation. acilitles, ~ White C s mountains in ld.aho 's Chal\is Nation.al ' orest are being mined for rpolybdenum / .and this operation is certqi to traqsfoon the area into another ~ladtia . ' PtfoLYBoEl;, is not even needed until olar pre t stockpile rurui out in the yeir 2000. The difficu lty lie! ill the obsOlet. mfnlng law of 1872, whirl\ .pennits \miner$ to move in. mine what he can,\ and l1et out. He has .all the ri&hts ot a towner but none of lhe responsi'1Ht! =1 P . become aroused with talk M" poll n: few und,rsl.and what is ha to our wilderness. tr you really wonder t raw wilderness <k>es for an compare this area with down Los Angeles or San Pedro. <>net the spaces are gone it's another~ nan in ' coffin or the natural en-vironmen DAVID G. PORTER _ ~=---~-~-~-c·--•·===·~---;--=--=-cc•----;----c-=--:---,--:----:----------------------:----- r~. AYgUJl 1.3, 1970 CHECKING Pr~on Tension Result · _ If ,I-I--• __ u •' __ Guards R1s~k Heart Attacks -time<=>~ SACR'.A'.MENTO (UPI) _ . unlit a)one w1tb from 100 t.o alwny1 on lhe job," the CCOA· said thtre were ljOOO more PSA Im . The. ~ of bt.,. alone llO imna~. pr~l~enl sal<I. murderen, 2,000 more armed with U, ,ttate'1 moet violeDL "We'N!I not . Jost school }le aald ru1 organization "'as robbers and l ,000 mor e men mUet tile prilon guard crontng gutrds,'' he 11fd. pullhing for passage ot 8 bill a!!Dultft's In the pr~111 now an f!al)' mari. for a btart "We're g.etUng tired of the than there were 10 year1 •10. th atlo attack. fact that the correctional of· lhal wuld permi1 l"Orr«Uonal Re added that cerrectlonal e ~IC n. Wh!n a man takes 1 ·job fleer la nal. beJ.ng recognized olfliters t.o retire at SO percent officers earn a monlhly sala ry as a pte correctional oUker, for full credit ror 1 day '• pay 1t the age or 50. of from $651 to $751. ~ must face the fact that work. "We want to be able to Hart said that under current heart attack la a built-in "We are not just guards, get oot of the bu3lness before ltandards an otncu wllh 30 hazard j t tho potenll I f·~•-· I years e'lperience retires at of trout fllhlnc ~ at11l not au as a we perform "'""""'""; we JUS we have • heart attack and about $350 a month. - Yellow 'Classroom ln1proves Grad~s lly L M. BOYD wlt'lttoownaboet?"A.Trout ol being ~aulted or stabbed don't turn keys, we counsel, die," he aald. "Some of us don't get as •='OLY COW A by an lnmate. we ret.bilitatt, we Conduct lh't1':_.,..,_ 200 -n--Cfl'lrof ft&lng 11 best uecute<t from This was the -· ion today """""" counsdlng. We're with Harl abo pointtd oat. that ~11 -~u.wtlfare recipients," lalk .--day--_ thaPt,~•hat a rlmbank, sir. You sneak ··--· ~-t of ••• w. ~ -m a 1 w ol Sgt. Mel Hart, ,rreaidenl ( ~ inmates 24 boun a day. 1.u1;'. na ure 1..1111: ,j.-wm up on them ln your moccallim. r-.... u1... becauJe ...._ the the scl<?nce boys have came Q "Who's the world'• best of the CaJifomia CCnectlonal We're in his housin( .unit, •"-• wont o ... , up with now. I refer to, a ~.f~ Br1.t-player?" A: Us-Officers Association., who said we 're with him at med, we f1'IOllt v!o~t men wen being mechanical cow invented by f.d to be~ Sobel, but guards have the highest tn-work wilh him." aent to Iii.ate prisou. · one Dr. Hugh Fnntlln of 'don!t' 1mow who rants now cidence of heart seiiures in Hart said he would .like to A department spokesman Great Bril&ln. He Ays he J thti lhe'a --. Will check compariaon with all otbe:r see Jll(ft staff adMd to ~ feeds into one end ot thil ( & • .--•-st.ate employe1. stJt\Xldhs to Hat 'Ile tm4en ~ Disa ppear briefly on•. IMftvPSA IOOI'. Tum up . f ..... _, ton of ·~~. -~·~tem1onso1t!>e-·.... California Man w·•~UGTON('n).:..~--. .. ... Topof,,,.M .... ioGh"""9Ui Squa ... piece o m......, ........ ,-1'' a · ''When you're in a room .,.,... w..::: ._.... n.x1.1.1, ~ uc:si FlsherrMn'.a Wharf, or c:ndslng the Biy. Haines Named To New Post cabbage and gets 200 gallons NOT ONLY DO more peCJPle full of tnmales -maybe u "We dooi have mudt thne Ralph E. Haines Jr. bas been Hotel• (1\llo nigh ls), famoui mi:au11ints. night of milk ~ Ult: other. ~~·· ... rub DOlel' than Ida, bul more many as JllO of thtm -~ to devOte to the inmate.'~ Gets ,U .s. post named commanding general life, many f.l)(tras. Want 10 know more about plant milk. Reportedly, ll : pe.opte rub noees than abake you're the only officer ~~. ltaid. "Our first duty la for of.the Continental Army Com-PSA'1 San Francisco !ling 'ttlat stretches daY9 ~ u:aotly like the real h,a n d 1. • • NO wt THE · then'• a iot .of \enBion aM1 the protection ol 90dety. 'l'Ma WASHINbTON (UPI) _ and dollars? Can your travel 9Qent or PSA. thing and ls just about .,, Dl!JlMA'l'OLOGIBTs oon1'ncl alrallt. rehabllltatlon Is llOCOOd. Why p re 1 Id en t m..,, hal mand. P$A ct-JQU a lift. . nutritious. Out" Otlef Protnos-~ a girl harms her hair not . "Day ah.er day, il wears can't people understand we nominated W 111 \am R. 'Mle 51-ytar-old native of '---'---------------....,-,..-' ticator believes It will find ltst1 helPff tt, tf ahe bfUshe;. 100 you down." could do this limultaneously McLe.llan, 47, to be Assistant Fort Mott, N.J., will 1UCC'!ed li"t great market In India. jl 11rokea a day ... MOST FRU-Hart, ~gn<d to the Recep-il ~: ~ ~ "":!'!;;...t Secrelary of Commerce. :::· ~~ ... K. Woolnough.::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A CHECK OF police ftCOl"dS' GAL Tl.PP~ in cocktail tion Center. at ttie California 3,000 --""'* in 13 insU.tutions MCV.llan wouJd r e p I a e e .Ir show 81 out of. eveiy too lounges, ftaf£1nns a bartend-Institution for Men at Ollno, a ..... ...., Kenneth N. Davil who resign--Haine• will be replaced as gunshot victims recover aid er-of iong _experience, are the Bai<t in 1 telephone interview ~~ ~ ~b.. made ed rectnUy becaUJe of his commander·fn.c bl e f, U.S. N } E 93 oul of every UIO stabbing pipe smokers. that al l)ls facility 15 out ,.,-• a"·mpts to •• ,. wi"lh disagreement "lth admiJ>. Army, Pacillo, by Gen. WU-ear y Veryone AM rtt c:nu -= i.u-. istratlon trade po 11 c i es. liarn B Rosson deputy cmn-~= ~~ :"'1U:~ Uie ,,:;>; .. ~!'.t;...:;1..=. ~ ;!~%5 ,:'!.';: :-:' ~ Gov. Ronaldbut~s·~-~'\:" McLeU.n, a native or mande< of u.'s. force• in Listens to Landers ~ bea~ul 1 · n.... "'1-.. .a , situation as ua::11 re • Kearney, Neb., bas worked Vletnam. RoMoo's post will m~~ P ace tn un;: ll8Dlf: is Ima Violet "'KIUU,' year· fed in his efforts. for the FMC Corp, i n be taken by Lt. Gen. Freder·I'.================== world. .apJ.n must writes a client, "but my 'Ibe 42-year~ Hart, a "He'll meet with strikers Saratoga, Calif. fQI' the last ick C. Weyand, who bas been ncminate Butd\art Gardens on frleods call m e Ffuf. velum d. 15 years wlth tbe but not with us who are 20 years. nominated for bis foOrlh star. Vancouver Island in BrltlBb fy'.'., .Leonard H. Wright bu St.le Department of Cor·,-----------'------------------------------------- Columbia. THE COLOR taken the San Franci9CO rections, aaJd that fears and11.----------------------------------------------.. PSYCHOLOGISTS say thetr ctronicle for M y~. U he temion have been intensified studies definitely prove that doesn't hold the record among recentJ,y by the killing of two students in classrooms painted Jong-Ume suh5cribera to ooe guards at the t.'Or'l"eC.'ti yellow make better grades. ' newspaper, wbo does?.. tn.lnlng facility al Soledad.1 OPEN QIJ)'m'JON -Cer· tainly hope H'f DO offense to inquire publicly how I h e bathroom came to b e nicknamed "the John." Why? CONSIDER 1111S -Maybe you recall It was a sad ·J)n!ic- tice du:rtng tbe war in Korea to refer to a native the as a gook. No, Sally, I'm not indignant. Such a four-let. ter wm'd is not ' as offensive as, say a My Lai mas.Ycrt. Still, a ward like gook Ls off the beam. Way off. Don't jWlt conside!" Ille foci that tile hlD'llan being bell8ved to hive the highest l.Q. in the history of the WOrld is a K<nan. Consider al.so that the first printing in the world was found in Korea. Gook, my Aunt Sadie! " ' CUSTOMER SEJ\\'IC&-Q. "How can you be ., fond ' VA Lauds Lagun,a Vet Former commander of the Laguna Beach Post m of the Veterans of Fortlgn Wars, 0. W. Price, baa been awarded s. "Certificate of. Recognlt\on for Volunteer Service in Be.. half of Patients," from the v · et er an 1 Administn.tion Hospital in Long Bach. I Price frequenUy visit.s the hospital, where he talkJ with patients, arranges a<hnissiom, helps with' entert.ainment. and delivers books, magulnes, and other items the patient.s can use. He has been active as a volunteer for the past five years at the VA facility. The presentation was made by Dr. James Glot!elty, who recently retired as director of the hospital. Religio11s Unit Grows FULLERTON T b e religious studies progrl.m at Cal State Fullerton bas been expanded into a department begirmlng with the f a 11 semester. Dr. Dona1d H. Gud. a professor at the school, has been appointed dlalnnan of. the new department. Dr. Gard received his doc- torate from Prince ton University and has I bachelor's degree r r om Your qutstions and com- Jtnentl art tortlcomtd and I DU be wed in Checkixg Up wMrever possible. Act. drtu lttkrs to L. M. BO'Jld, Boz 1875, Newport Beach, Calif, 92660. "You get a Utile sblti!h when you • hear things like this," Hart said in com- menting that all offl«rs were more edgy over CUJT'fJll con- ditions. He poluted out that most corrtdlonal officer positions placed the guard in living First time ' • on sale ••• sale! . . . sl.00 OFF ' OJI 5,000 Set· Ft. llandini Plush or Blade. Reg. $5.95 now $4.95 Plush ••• the long la1ting, bllanc:ed fertllber tMt gives dichondra or mixed l1wn1 .a #sprint'' look In the fill. II .... , • a miner1I rich,. high "ltrogen fortlllnr -lally formul•ltd for Hybrid Bermuda, lluegr111, Ioysl1 and St. Augustine. . Pick either and have a green Fill on. landlnl. ' Prineton Theolqical Seminary. Dr. Gard. a1ong with three ~ ()lher faculty members, will serve the more Olan 350 student.! expecteod &o ,take classes in the new depll'i- menL ORDER YOUR NEW CHEVY VEiA NOW FO EARLIEST PO SIBLE DELIVERY. • CONMIU CHIYaOLIT 2121 "''"" 11¥4. C..t1 M ........ IJll ~: MM ..... M. t .. '-'-· 11 •·•· .. I ,,._ • ... • .., t ...... 1t11,... 2641 Harbor Blvd. E . COSTA MESA CALL 546-5525 COMMUNITY EVENTS ORANGE COUNTY FAIR ARTIST JULY 14 lhru 19 OF THE MONTH ALL STATES FIESTA -880 15 Y••r• r••icl•llt of Ot•11•• Co1111ty h•1 iio•11 p•illtillf 1•"4· Al COST A MESA PARK August 16th -Sunday From 1 O'clock On Sponsored by; Women'1 Division, Ch1mber of Commerc• K•P•• i11 oil• Hr 20 ., •• ,. - Sho 11 pr•1•11tly • 1t11.io11t ef lo· ••I arti1t Jorry Way11• Dow111 -Her w•rk m1y ... ¥itw1cl tt.rio July io HI• Colifen1ie F-ed· .,.1 loii .. y - 5.253~Hd 90 Day Certificate Accounts* &.39% AfwtueJ Yield If an nvlnga and Interest remain a year. No minimum dopoolt. Dally compounding. Earn from dote of deposit, 63 11111n1111Md o:ua1 2 lo 10 Year Certlflcale Accounts• 9.11% Annual Yleld If &JI d'Ylng1and lntM'elt 1emeln a year. $5,000 minimum depoolt.Dallycompounding. Elm from date of depoilt NOW! 4WAYSTO EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! 5. 7 5 3 ~:.~~;teed 1 lo 10 Year Certificate Accounts• 5.92% Annual Yield If aQ savings and Interest remain a year. $1,000 minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Earn from date of deposit. 7. 5 3 guaranteed 0 annual . ,.,. 1 Year Certificate Accounts* (Adju1tabl1 ratea for ahorter '"""") 7.79% Annual Yield If all savings and interest remain a year • $100,000 minimum deposit. Dally compounding, Earn from date of deposit. •W1thtlr1wolt .,,fero lftofvrity ''"'11itt1d .. wt 1ubj•r.t I• •om• Iott of i11tor•tf. ..... CAUFORNIA FtDERAL SAVINGS . I 5% P111book Aceounf, Currant Annual Rate. No mini mum deposit. Dally compounding. lnlereal day~n to d~ut. CaJ!{O!!!t~WE~n4£!!!ml§.~!l!ngs NATION'S LARGESI' FEDERAL COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300 . CLIFFORD M.-WESDORF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER qonwnlent OfUc:t1 throughout lot Ange In, Orange end V1ntun1 Counlitt ........... ,,., .. trf'lo JN.ODO und« 11rcMffone., .... ~ ...... "°. & loMJMOr-COrpclfOllOfl, • .,.,fMl!Oflt ·~r of the l.Hll1od Si• ... Oo\JMnlllOlll, ', • ) ' \ • .. • DAll.Y PILOT Draf tjng Halted By Board STURGEON BAY, Wll. (AP) -Tbe chlinnan cl Door Count)' Selective S e r v i c e Boin! No. 11 .. ,. bia - will -.. tnducUoD -oller SeJX, l unlels tbe ltdenl p.........i'._lettln1 dr3ft evaidtts walk the streets freely." "'We feel that we art u right in what we are doing. •s the fellow that has ref~ lnduction feels that be is right," Cbalrman S. F . Brunswick said Tuelday nlghl. ••And wt will stand firm OD this even if we att replaced."' State Selecttve S e r v 1 c e Diroctar LI. Col. ClhdoO KmbOn Nid be ~ "" -.. !lie local boon!'• -~hebodstudied the board's vote. Bnmwsick and two oilier board memben met Moodoy night and voted ' 'unanimously." Brunswick wd, "' halt inductioo of Door County men. He said be was refening to draft evldm: iD geoeral and did not cite any k>cal cues . .. We have several )"OIJDI men who have a.!Jked us why they have to go, when othen v.i>o refused to go are still walking tbe stree ts,•• Brumwick said. "l dJecked on JOIDe )Oc.a) cases md fowxl out there bad been DO acUon t.aten on the matter. We talk· ed it over and decided you can't really face a young penon &hat asks a question lite that. if you don't have a decent answer. We think tt'1 time our courts change the situation. It seems tht: Suireme Coort is protecting the guilty, oot the innocent,. "I have no idea whal the outcome of this action will be " Brunswick said. .. We ~ hope that other boards will pick it up. Perhaps if ~, enough of them did, we'd get a change in some oi these 1 rulings. Were in hopes this may start the ball rolling. I've bad a 100 percent favorable reactioo lrom people ' I .. , • ~ . . f . " • • . ·~ I've contacted on the matter, both Jocally and in olher parto of the state." "It's time we got IDDlethinl s1raigbtaied ou~" Brunswick added. "'lbe preaent 1ystem iJ m. efficient. I mean, how do "'° face a young man who mull enter the service when you've got boys walking the -refusing to go and the _... men! doesn't do • dorn tblni about lt1" · Lost Checks Discovered I N D E PENDENCE, Mo. (AP) -A mall aack full of 2,300 Social s.curtty checb lost. lalt week hu tu.med up flnally, but no one knows where it wu loll The checks, totaling $191,400, were suppoeed to be delivered to their ownera Mon- day, Aug. 3. but were not received at the Indepeod~ Post Office. The U.S. Treasury Departr- ment wrote a new bat.ch of checks ll'lld they w e re delivered. 'fhen the fint sack was found and tbe checb 1e11t back to Washington. "We disperse several hun- dred sacks or mail each day," a spokesman at the Kansai City Post Office said Monday, .. and we handle seven milllon checks each month. lt ls ml hard to imagine one sack going mtray." WANTED 100 CIGARETTE SMOKERS If you 11t1ok•, VO• .,.. we"t..I h per+lelpote i11 tlrio now •111110· ¥huol ,, .. ,,,. 411lt* +. oil•· l111to your 1'"okl119 hebit, Your 411i,.. to 1top '"'oldllf Clll lie• COlllO I r.olity wi~ .... ·i4 ef tho IM•1.i119 11Mflo ¥i•••' IPOf· t.1.. For tlotol11 ¥itit or c•ll Hie 11otlonal 111ti-tmokl"f ffWllCll M· fh;e 1t••re1t y9u. COSTA MlSA 1770 Oteitt• A.-.. S11Jde D 642-416) HUNTIN$TON IEACH 11112 leech tl..L S11lte 201 f6J-llJI C:Ull.OREN LIKE UNCLE LEN • ) r ·• TWMIF. -U. 1'10 JN, lob al c.alifamla tunic And~a Gayle polyester and panlSoU<odel • polyes-pan!Suil in navy or purple, ter. Wash and wear. Green wilh white ruffle al neck or blue. Sizes 1 O lo 18. and sleeve. Sizes 8 to 18. 1......io-122 34.00 aiomopotilanshop96 SO.OD Mr. George ottoman rib Puritan -forever Young safari jacke!, straight panls. panlSUit plus ski rt in acetate Encron • polyester. Gold, and nylon otlOtUCk. Blue or or royal. Sizes 8 to I 6. purple. Sizes 12Y.. to 22Y.i. ,., ... ,,..,d ttovel shop 49 36.00 -··dresses 57 26J)() - Green Briar longer cardigan sweater moer .wide leg pan~ Ribbed Orlon• acrylic in camel or rust Sizes 7 lo 13. young ~gnalllre shop 94 38.00 · I I j . a new way of life " Pant dressings .... very new, very today. So versatile you wear them everywhere, every way. Pants with tunics, panh with jeckets, pents with new, longer coatl. Pants in prints, bright and subtle solids. In wools and crepes and knits . Pant dressings , , • every life style. For every occasion. For everyono. Available in all 17 May Co. stores. may co south coost pla%a, son die90 fwy. at l:iristol, costa mesa, 546-9321' shop monday thru soturday .I 0 a.m. to 9: 30 p.m., sunday noon 'til 5 p_.m. Trevlra• polyester crepe shirtwaist ar!l_pan~ or black. Elastlc waist panL Sizes 8 to 16. boulevttd sWt5 65 56.DO • • MAVCO -~----. ---,.-----------,------------------------------------------------~~--- ' "l'Wo years at ...-ial oc:bool ud I wlDil "P ·~1··. FAA on t1ie Lookout For Bootleg Planes WASHINGTON (AP) -The AdministJ'aUon s a i d Wed- nesday it is trytna to track down soroe 48,000 1 m a J l aircraft. The ovmers of that many planes, among 190,749 cl'fil aircraft registered in Che United State. at the end of 1969, have failed to meet, a new June 30 reportin1 deadline, the FAA sald. Early this year the FM. sent notict'S to all aircraft owners of a new requirement that they submit a n n u a I reports validatin1 the regiatration of their pfa.n;t. Owrle'rs were asked to return lhe filled41t forms even though the ail'Uaft in- volved might have been teld for part.s or retired from servict. Blood Runs Cut by Rule MILWAUKEE (AP) -A new ruling forbidding tlxis to carry merchandi5e is depriv· ing the M.ilwaukff . Biood Center of its best mtlbod of makilig einergency deliveries of blood at night. Tlmm Hurst, the center's ;idmlnistratlon director, said 1.1onday the MUwaukee Coun- try district aUornty's offJce told him cab company llctnses allow taxis to haul merchan- dise only when It accompanies a puaenger. Hurst said the center is im- provising while searching for a speedy substitute. THE BEST ll••d1rthip poll1 pr••• "P••· 11uh" i1 0111 of the worlJ'1 l'l•1t pop11l.1r cofftic 1hl111. ll11J it d,.ily i11 tho DAILY P1lOT. Ttie FAA said that u ol the end of July • .1bout 143,000 forms had been returned, or 75 perCent of the total. The agency ls stnding new notices to delinquent owners, rtmlnding them that Jt ta il- legal to fly aircraft for which registratloo has not been '91Udated. There is no fee In connection with um regiltraUon pro- c<dure. YES Board Says 'Aye' To Officers Board members of the Yooth Empkl)llMnt Suvict, a volunteer group aiding Harbor Area youngsters fi'nd part- . time job&, has elected a new alate ol. leaders. The agency headquartered at 59t Center SL, CMta Mesa, will be led by; P.reaident Jim Wood. t• Seci>ad-~ will be Rod !Ahris, wllIIe recording se<l'ttl.ry is Genevieve Bates and ~ secretary is Jean Bechtel other ol(lctn representing COllllitWlltit! throuput the ON.Me Coest include: Carol Freich, treuurer; Di c k Hemandu, operations: Bill Band.aruk, public relations; Cllarlie Brown and Gwenda Wataon, directors. A<I•islng the IJTOOP wm be Walter Baade, F I o re n c e Ha,0., Dorothy Dietzel and R. M. Jami!lon. 1'le YE$ organilation was formed more than a year ago to help keep industrious youths employed and emptu1.sizes it! cohtlnulnC need for job offers from bus~. industry and Individuals. Tre High,·R:xD h:Xl !::; d CM:'J"' ti"'O u.x:t:eru...aJ And Golden Wast is The High Road. Now you can 11y to and from Calalfna'a ~Jar Airport·ln· the-Sky on our 19-p~. twin JET-prop DeHavill1nds. only $11.22 °"'.MY Includes an exciting $1.50 SOenlc Tour. San/a Ana to Cslallna Lv 9:~0M4 Arr 10:00,t.M (Frl lhN Mon only! Lv 6:30f'M Arr 6:IOPM (F~ lhN SUn only) ... Clt1/lna to Santa An• • Lv 10:00AM Arr 10:goAt,1 !"rl ttlnJ "'°"only! Lv 8:00PM Art 6:2qf't.I ,~ ttlru Sun Ollfy , Fcir complott Infonnaliol> call 10Uf tmol ogent or Goldtn WW. II (714) ~-4071. • End-Near for Federal Unit HUllTIMllTD• lllAllll ~-= NEED . A Lin? 2.66 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY & SUNDAY 9 TO 5 . 1299 ' •u~1n 0 Sill edh•ti.,o, !11st P••' tho b1cki1t1 .1IMI •h.1p it Oii. Nict 1111ibv wtovo, in • cholco of col.,., Do tht 111tlto woll, th, f•llfuro i1 11ic1. t I" width. 169 Y~. FLUID·MASTER BALLCOCK D End ffi1t ... oter 1011 '¥'4'o1Jl •Mi 11oi•v 1ci.,o.1I i11 tho w.1tor clo1ot. 0 Ne 111oro with th• iittli11q of tho ten• h111cll•, thir 0110 wor••· n. "1•• h i•"' ., •• co.11ld •••r h .. ,. •• N,.,,, co1h y•11 1110PO me111y, leh v•w dow11, or h.111t1 yo11 11(11. Wi1h I ft1J • ... 1111t.11 frioftd1 n•• th.11, 0 011e more 11tfht witlt tho 4rl11, Clvde • .1/IJ 1h•ll fo11 '(fl\I 111! • ' 0 J111t thin•, .Jer 4h VOW Clll t•Vfl tho 111.1rrl•t•· 0 IT••t'1 • •••11111. tt.111• of ffio 11p••111.I 0 n ••• •r• .... thift,, 1hor11 •11••· D s11,i111 •~ti•11 '•'••••· oH locklllf 4011. 0 lo"' 1ho•rt ~ •••• ffrio w•f• • llttlo f••* ""' .,,;.,, 1" HLO INTRY LOCK (J Do11blo k1y1lll •• ~oth vov .1114 v1111r wif• c111 1110 the Joor. 0 A lirllll.111t 1f•ttll'l•11t7 Co111,l1to wfttri 19101111tilllf h•rJw•'•· f•r thos• ftfl••r·t1y-4io 11l•tm111. MIRCURY SWITCH Thi• 0110 i1 tt"i•t I whi1h it 111•r• th111 I c111 ••Y for fl'IV s•cr•t•ryl. It works "roil t ••otl" {which it lfl•rt th111 I ca11 1oy for 111y 11cr1toryl, HANDY IOX D To ,vt • '"•~taclo 111 'l•lcHv, jw1t li11t .1'9!0, l•y tho wlrt, """ '"' ffllt flll11t 111 ffl t welt D 'l•11tv •f ~•••k ... 111+., 110 liit 4ril1111t •••I. 25' SCOTT'S SUPIR BONUS 0 Do yo11r 11olt hMt1 .,,, •••i11t v•• why ylll11 11lt111t .. ,, ... ,, •• ,, (J Thit thlff t•\11 tttt of wotk1, •rliltfto11, 011J ftirllll••• ...... Slftlll ff1110. c Wlriy 414 , •• ,, ... .... ~, ... , a 0 0 0 2000 LB. ROPE HOIST Stro119 roll•iilo 11vle11 hoirt with ton• of .,, ••. Li ~• h1•i11t y<111VT ew11 ,.no111I t i•llt .1ro.,1!41 tfoi1 f•'•t• H 011 • h1111tilr1t trip. It'll holJ tfoiet frl •;4 flflllf Joor, 2000 (ll011nd1 of uylhi11t. Y1•h. if vo11..li1.,, .11000 r,o"!MI foco, tt'll lift tfi•t too. 95 NYLON LINE GLIDDIN INDUUNCJ .. HQU-1 PAINT Poi111t i1 poi~t le ll•illt i1 ,.i11t 1111 "'iJ4111'1 .11 ~ ..... .... , ... 1 ""'"'· 0 Dt-io1 f.111, M hiJif!f, h •• ..., ,i1111•11t, ,...,. of 1ortlc1. 6 99 •AL 0 E•t1rltr l1l11r li•t• for wood, 1111t1l, 114i11, or wh.1lov1r. • 0 Th ie• at11H, on• co •f c••or1 •l111e1I rt1rylhint lli11t R.1q111I Wokhl. • 699 ~AL __ _ IXTIRIOR Rf)LLIR . COYIR !!Ji=~.:;.~ 0 Tht ftt rlwlfy Jo•il to "'1lo yo11 r wfr• t• f.11lor. 0 Ancl tfoi111 whit will yo11 .le tho r••t of th• 4oyf O Do11't worry v•11t wifo wUI think of 1o!ft'tthi111 ' I scons SPilADIR I\ DiNu No. H Q r.,t •llV kitMI of Jry ftrtlll10t thto.,th tfll• $11th ''r••'•'· tJ l wt if It l111~t • Scettt ,,~lltt. It 111oy-t,lt 11p. 0 If y•11 i.1o1v • Stttl'• ,,.411ct 411rl111 th• •J yo11 t•'I'• $5, 101110 it c•th lt,tS rot11ltr0 0 C11i .. rote4 .u .. 1 •" 1h•t•1ff h1•1llo •• ., •• ··~·t w.11to. . SS OFF WrTH PURCHASE OF ANY sc:otTs PROD~T 1495 ·~ .. lf.ff I I l I L \ Anti-smog • Bill Nixed In Capital SACRAMENTO (APJ -,,,. Auembly bu cleleat.d the eo1I' "'"!via( ......,,.. to d-• chunk ol at&to hJah: •' Chavez, Teamsters Reach Farm ·Pact SALJNAS, CalU. tAP) -A strike-boycott struggle with tends frorn CallfornJa lo Oahill, three major rarms ln respective member&hlps are UilJ week with his a.s.soclalion, sudden agreemenl bas ended table grape groftl'I, declared Alaska, Jrom Hawaii to the lhia valley about 130 miles ierved, they may participate which, with too membeni, P~ • bat1le between two unioolt war 1ui week Oil a Tea.mater .Rocky-· l.1ountaim _and -1n -90Utb of San Fnndscu-1l1e jointly in -consumer boycott 'olide& growa-1 with.801000 tleld over wb.icb will represent field agreement lo r e p r • 1 e n t British Columbia, Alberta and · ~ workers in the "salad bowl" SalinaJ Valley field handa. Saskatchewan Canada. valley producu 90 percent of activlUea in disputes, with workers at peak harv~\ time. reglon of the natloii's most 1'be dispute q u I e i 1 y Qlavez' wtioo agreed. in the nation'• teeberg lettuce employen." 1be contracts Chavez .signed productive agricultural state... developed into a bitter strlke, relw"n, to stay out of and vut quanUUes of other In Fresno, farm capital of with grape grov;era bypass The pact w Ith ~ which ended after only a few Teamster jurisdiction in can. vegetable crops. California 's vast Cent r a I Sinclair's a!!IOClaUoo in favor Teamst.er's Union Wednesday days when the Cat ho 1 i c neries, creameries, proceaalng Chavez, wbo began a fast Valley, the head of the Farm of union hiring hall&. opened the field ~or Cesar Bishops Committee on Farm plants, warehouses, trucking, Tuesday todramaUu: hiJ·figbt Labor Contractors AMociation A Teamster announcement Chavez aod his AFVCIO Labor announced that the produce markets and otber with the Teamsters, said be declared the Teamsters' set-here sakl the W\lon will United Farm W o r k e r s Teamsters 'bad agreed to let areas. wou1d continue Jt u long as Uement with Qlavei was a withdraw from agdeements in Organizing Committee to Chavez hand1e futurt organiz-All picket line.s were he felt caJ)able, "ln graUtude "betraya1 " of an agreement which it already has signed W&tllmdlto--- .... r..,id transit. But aup- •,.W. NY they blve the -to pulb "it tJrough 00 a -try. By a 41-14 ~ote, the lower houoe rejeclod w~ a p r o p o 1 e. d c o nstitutional amendment by Sen. Jamt1 A. Milla (DSan Diego) to put 00 the November ballot the broaden organizational efforts ing of field worbn. withdrawn in the Salinas for raofutlon ol this major to "drive UFWOC out of to represent some 2 , 0 0 0 M"""'S Halls lhrougbout the western United The pad waa signed by region Wednesday and several dlspute." business." workers in the SaJinas Valley, '-'° Saskatchewan, Canada. Wllliam Gram.I, field dittctor thousand striking f i e 1 d His wUon and the Teamsters GuiM Sinclair said tht Chavez claims support of 90 Olavez., victor less than a of the Western Conference of worke.ra returned to their jobs also agreed that "where the Teamiters failed to keep a percent of the 7,000 workers At Fort Ord ,_m_ .. _-._111_ • .cgo_in_•_f_lv_ .. _Y•_ar __ T_eamsttt __ ._. _w ____ · _.,_ .. _ .. _· _•t_P_i_c_'n_P•_•_. _Fr_esll_:p_ict_and __ m_u1_ua1_..i_f _tn_1er_es1 __ •_f _the_ir_:p_ledg_.:_e_to_c1r_._ .. _•c.p_a_coo_1r_._c1 __ in_the_Sa_lln_•_•_.,_._ •. __ _ Burned Out questloll ol di_.,. bJil>way F"t ORD, Calli. (UPI) - -ltomJhe bJil>wayo. Flames rullled;Jwo W<JOC!en Tbe ·.,.. ·,,.. mon thao ...,. balls w-.7 nJgbt a majcrlly d the ... ...,,.,., in a special processing ddacl>- As9tmbly but to votes short ment at this Army post al . the 54 needed to pass a shortly after an unexplained comtituilooal amendment demonstration. Assemblyman Georft Milia.s An Army spokesman, who ( R. G i 1 r o y ) asked for said there had been no anest recor.sideration and t o I d and no injury, estimated newamtn later he believed he damage to the ruined one. had '""""1 "°"'· He noted story World Wor Il building, there were about 20 mmiben and flo ooo .-during the "°"'· at betw,.. $5,000 ,. , . '!here is a crucial time fac-Prior to the fire-, he said, t« involved since all proposed a lf'OUP "-betWft:n Z and am e n d men. t s for the 30 soldiers gathered and November ballot fDUll be in unintelligible chants w e re the hands of the aeaetary heard. He said those nearby ol state this wed: and the could not toll wbat the chants Seoato Transportation Com------~ and ··-t the mittee bu killed all limllar :th:'~ w. y were propoaals. Special procc11lng .W.mblyman John Foran deta-house mainly (D&.o Francisco) author of men who are awaiting in· one cleleated ,,,,_., """"8-veatiplloos d ...,,.,ts that ly IUpport<d the 111111 amend-may lead to mllital}' charg" menl He llid Calif-agalmt them-Tbe detaclunenl m.ast be given a chance ''to at n. ~ located near reevaluate the dfrll1on they 1. Monterey ml,tie Pacific Octan made in 1938 to loet up tbe9e coast. bandies men from eight 1 funds for one mode of wt!lern ·states. transportation" -tbt AithoUgb there is a chain automobile. link fence aroond the cletacb- .. In 1.ipt "' today'• smog, ment here. men in.side are In light ol today's COOleotlon free In leave although they m the freeways. in light o{ are .ccountable for where the tranaportatim needs in they can be reached. at all California, we can no longer times. Many of them pull rely on one mode o f military details but they do tranopcrtalion," be aa1d. aot qrry out regular Anny A I I e m b I ,. m I n, Frtl)k duties. Lanterman (J!,La Canad>) ad-Al Ft. Ord, the detachment ded: .. The Ume bu net come houses bet.ween 200 and 350 but tt will ••• that ntomoblle '""" and this pm handl" pultflgera and driven: wJll courb martial for a part be prohibit.<! from the uae of the Slsth Army Area. of automobiles for X number Military police r e • e r v e af boun on X clays In certain units, undergoing 1 um m e r tbno d. the year." training, were· calltd to sur- Lanlermall a1ao re!emd to ...00 the dttacluneot during the hlglrtray lobby'a llln>ng ..,. the r-, lbe Anny spokesm1D pooltlon to ~ o 1 said. 111Pway mooey. Uthe amend- ment geto on lbe ballot, he predicted, 0 thtre will be more aptnt to cleleat this partlcUJor ........ than .. all pcllilc•l campaigns combined.' ..,,_ who wanl polltlcal ... lrll>utlonl know what to do.'' Lanterman declared. * * * Reagan OKs Polluter's Penalty Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) - Gov. Reagan has signed into bill that sell penaltia fur air polluters It Up lo $8,000 I day. The bill, by Assemblym1n Pet.r Sd>abanun, (M:ovlna), w11 pattemec! after a law law 1 tough new ant.ismog peaed. last year to prevent water pollution. It WU Ont ol 15 bills pnlp09ed this year by the Aaaembly air pollution 1t:1bcommtttte, headed by Sd>lbarum. To be eligible for a $1,000-•· day fine. ao lnduttrial or Sovt:nmental air polluter first hu to violate a cease and -.mer by air pollu- tion eontrol .. -. 'Fl ... ~P b) $500 a day art posaible '" -violatioM. The bill does not apply to aUlo « truck llllO( vlolatloru • Wel fare Bill Moves Alo1ig In Senate SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A major weHare reform bill backed Jn' Gov. Ronald Reagan advanced in the Senate. Wednesday but minus a provision. allowtng a wtlfare cheater to make reatitutloo to avoid being proeeeut.ed. 'Ibe measure was approved by the Senate Health and Welfare Committee on a split voice vote and forw anted to the Finance Cornmltlee. Assemblyman Gordon W. Duffy, (R-!lanlonl) amended his measure to remove the re;Utution provision. He told the commit\« be took ttie action to meet the objections d district attorneys. Duffy said distrki attorneys had challenged t h e con- atltut-llty ol the re.titullon clauses because they would have tilt effect of allowing "wealthier" redpienta ac- cused cf fraud to buy their way out oC prosecution while dlocrimlnatlng against penons unable to pay back the money. Lut weell, the Rt'ag1n-ap- point.ed state social welfare board said tt oppcoed the bill' 1 fraud provisions for similar .. -. Jes s~ Farewell 'Big Daddy' Image Fading SACRAMENTO (AP) - J ... Unruh nya bi1 nse at belnl carlcatW'ed nationally u tiit waddllnC "1111 Daddy" "* tbe CJ1llfornl1 Lllltla 1911 may have -hlsll&. 1'1>at --to trim the flab hl• ~ 2111......., -while ~ u Deuaeeratlc .,,..... ol Ille -ly. Kowlevd<dd.falallrm lit pamdl, the 47-yur-<>ld IJlnb la lm'lnc I h e .. ,,.,.... after ...11 stormy lo ID dJort to unseal lcu Go•. Reapn. •• aaatmbly colltal'IO .... ... • 1"'11111 lml\'dl Wednesday althougb his tenn olflClally """ throug)I the end of the yur. Later, • reporter uted him lf be had any regret& from hil legislative career -much ol which he devoted to turning the J'Jllalalllre Into a modern instrument of government. ''Tile nilhl ol the lockup," coo1111e11ted Unruh, relerrln( to -be JocUd .....scttnnt R<puhllca .. In the Aaaembly dwnber , ... 14 houn beca ... tbq woaldn.1& volt the 'w1,y be Wlllled. 00 a l>uQ<t bill. '1lt mfCllt have been • ter- rible political mlltakt for me, but It mJgbt have aaved my llle ~ •• \lnnih llid. Micro-mini & mini petti slip or skort \\hat a ~rcat idea~ ).>ick. a few i11 n~lon "'ilh larr l ri111. Wl1 ilr 3nd hrh•ht~. ~i7.e~ :-;.\1-1 .. Sale 78' l(G.tk SUPER SAVINGS ON . 'CASTILE' BATH TOWE L A ton•·l1 of !--p1in i11 • rirl1l_" i,cu\plured design in a .. oven tot Ion JKqt11rJ is carrd ou1 in mode rn rolors, lli~h ind lo•· lc11t1red for an"'"'~"' look. ,, • SK110NAL fUINITUll • HIDE~A~DS >OfAS • STUDIO COUCHES 'Su zanne ' foam back all purpose cover s Scotchprd19 lttated for &lain mist1ncc. roarn back for true clin~ fit. fil1rhinr w1~~~· blc ind dry1blt.. Never rru•h- r.J. rtt1~s nr wrinkle!. Bn~hl noral print~. 7hto" .. _, ..... ___ ''·'· 7ht01"DI ___ , S7,96 Sale $496 l'sis ® runproof '-riefs •mshed acetate of acetate tricot belted tunic Sale Sale $246 · '1t1achine was}iahle soft rahric V-11ccl tuniC. White. gold, blu r. burnl ·Or- ange. Size 32-38. Dcliutely dclailed /)' f';'.\~.i(! wi1h embroidery and lcminine lace lrim. Ch~ white, pastels (IT bright5: Sizes 5 10 7. Double knit nylon capri Sale · $4!~,6 'fwo way stretch 11}lon for 1.crma- nent fi1. A1achine washable. El astit: waist. Proportioned sizes: avera;;c 8- 18, tall 12-18. Fall colors. ENJOY BITTER LIVING WITH GRANTS CREDIT · Cotton striped knit shirt f.omfort weight rombed cotton. Sports crew neck, chest pocket and multi-colom:I ~tripe!. S..M-t.XL. Permanent press dress slacks SS!!.99 flandromdy ;ityk:d in I "'tl'i'C o[ (15~;, Dacron• polycster/353 rayon. Iv~ or con- hnenlal !'!~le. C:Olors. 29-42. $umme r·fun sneakers with miracle-wear sol es Salt Comfort's built into e1ery ~lout cotton t1n1a.s upper and cu~hionerl insole; "'f.:ar'!I th1: feature 0£ lhe thick PVC 50~-Women'11, girl~' ind ch1l- dren'ssile!. GRAllTS RUG YARll IN 26 POPULAR COLORS M1.chinr: w111oh1ble r1yon ind co ~ton hi end i1 colorl11t. 11h1pe rct1ininf, 70 yard .skti1t1. Come in now: Like 1dv111tqe cl Gmill prim! Grant Plaza • Brook hurst & Ad ams • Huntington Beach •• 962-3387 • - • Breaktlar9!'flh Newpo1·t Expert ' -Creates Ce1·amic · A 'Newport Buch acientisl has been credited w I t h dtvelOJi.ng a ,new cer11mic material whieh will virtually revolutionize the aircraft in- dustry and have wide ap- plications 1n other indus tries. Earl G. Spangler, pre111dent of Duramics, Inc. developed lhe new material, called LO-X for ''lo~· thermal expansion," workh1g under contract to Lockheed-Califon1ia Co. A breakthrough in cerarnic tech~ology, the new ceramic is t~e '\milt cf two )ltat's, de\·elopment work b)' the aerospace firm and Duramics.~ LO-Ji: is . said to duplicat, a material, Eucryp,tite, discovered only recently in nature Jn minute .qua-ntities; EucrypUte's distinclive and desirablt quality for industry is lb negative coefficient of exparislon-it will not change ~hape under very hi g .h temperatures, according to Spangler. ll.!I sy nthetic copy-the nrw cer;imic-i.~ found to have other i n1 p o r t a n t charac- terlslics [or induslry, lts use is promising as a nr:w mtttel'ial for casting dies-the p;rtterns from which aircraft, mi!!ilf': Qr other industrial part' are formed. Its granular str!Jd.ure forms 9 finished ~ which polishes to desired smoothness. lt can be ground to .a close to~ and r~ tains l'ICCU~cy of f 0 r m fbrwgh rina1 lf:irin@:. Spangler said st:udiei; are omtinuit1g into Its indtl6lrial applications. ', i(e .v >t.o ~he ;Pf aoUcAJ U>ITI- merc\a I production of t he ('('ramie---Oriiginally ~ tn the Lahor.t'(ll)' .-1. • msi q- proxiniattna I.hat of 191..._. a proprielrry p r o 'c es s d<!vel"l"<i by Span&ler .-,. contraet to L<lekMed. 1\Je Wilson_ Story To Be B<M,lk LONDON (AP) -Harold \\lilson ~·ill recei ve. more than 5240.000 for thie inside 6tory of his six year1 as Brit..ain·s prime minister, the Sun said today. The figure is 1nore than Wilson's salary as prime minister from his elecliO'n on Oct, 14. 1964 until his defeat last June 18. He received ~3fi.fl00 a year. \l/i\son i~ preparing a book for publ ication nexl year. It is e:xpecled to reveal new details of his d ea I i n gs with wnrld leaders including Sovie:t Premier Alexei N. Kos y gin and former Pre11ide'l'lls Lyndnn B. Johnson of the United Stales and Charles de Gaulle of France. The Thomson organization, 1vhich publishes the Times of London. announced earlier its acquisition of world seri11.I rights for Wilsnn 's book, but it did not disclose the sum \\'ilson will be paid . YOUR WATCH~· aerospace crunpany sooghl improved dies to form the MJ-C•lled "esolic" space-age metals such as titanium. The unique characteristics o( ~X-sustainina very high l.emperatures wilh no ex- pansion and almost measureless oontraction -is important especially fOf' forrn- ing the oew, heat resistant metals. P h y s i c a I charac- leristics and laaboratory dat.a indicate that It can be cycled repeatedly -that is, heated and cooled -with n n deformation, It resists crack- ing,, It has high compress.i1•e strength -that is, tolerates great "load," or pressure. And when cast. it requires t'IO ex- pensi'H.? machining for a smooth finished suri"ace. Problems in using metal dies for manufacturing have been initial high cost or materials, lenglfl of time re- quired to cast or eut the die and machine it to a Hnish, weight. limitations in size, time required for heating and cooling dies. and ~real ac· curacy in forming part..s from dies which retain structural intcgri!y throughout repeated use. The new ceramic promises another pj>lential -t'llstom casti'.1g. The formula for the ceran1ic compound ca n be ad- justed lo give the die 11n ex- pansion cha ra c i er is tic matching Ole n1atcria! lo be formed , again achieving great accuracy. The. caslable ceramic - n1ixed easily from powdered form -has many applications beyond industrial d i e s , Spangler notes. Its high temperatu r e tolerance suggeslS use in thermal and electrical In- sulation, in precision parts for radio, television and other electronic equ ipment, and as base material for microminiature circuitry. It can cut costs in manufac- turiTlg processes -in foun- dries where "permanent'' or •·Jost wax" molding is used to produce part! for items ranging from automobiles to "''fishing machi11e11. It c.an be u~ as lining for boilers, kilns,)umaces, aod other high temperature fa cilities. Ap- plications are seen, too, to such, conSU"*r product! as fire~ce Jogs, wructi glow realLSlically and retain and reflect heat. Lockheed now is sludyin-'! use of LO-X for tooling and manufacture. spongier anticipate~ wide use 'of the new LO-X. He said Duramics will sub-license pro- duction :;ind sale outside the United Slates. The Duramics president dalu his association with Lockheed fro m 1938, when he becJme a supplier of p11rl!I for· I.he company's first mass production of aircraft - Hudson bomber' for t h e British Royal Air Force. Spangler holds Ui patents, m 11 n y aviation-related, in- cluding de v i c es developed under contract for both the U.S. Air Force and Navy. LADIES' OR MllN'S <;OMl'l.ETEL Y OVERHAULED WITH THIS AD KIRK CHARGE e M.4.STEl CHAlGE e IAN KAMEllCAlO "Tho Store That Confid•nco Built" MUNTINaTON CtNTt• •utll I If!~••' N1111ll119I011 IHt~ •n·u•1 Open Mon., Thurs., flri . 10 1.m. 'tll t p.m. I . • • DAILV PILOT } abit-forming Don't 9tl weary. Read Lt11ry, 8111 Leary's one-lint comments 0'1 Uit world 1round us tan !.~ h"bil-form tng. Check tod11y's Gra!flll by Ltary. ' ' ' 1 BRAND NEW• 20,000 Mil[ ' GUARANTIED BONDID LINING 2, LABOR & INSTALLATION INCIUDl.D J, MICRO·MEASUR! ALL 4 DRUMS 4, ADD BRAK! fLUID Al NIEDID 5, ARC·GRIND LINING 6 BLHD SYSf!M & CLIAN BACKING ' PLATI AS MllDID 7, GRIASE &, PACK WHlll BIARlMGS ~ 8 ALL CYLINDERS INSPICTED INCLUDING _ ' MASTER CYLINDER 9, ROT ATI WHHll & ADJUST BRAKIS 1 Q, ROAD TUT VIHICll TD STANDARDS .,IUll"UP,UfU!!!llAWlll•IU..UWt , . DAILY '°IL01' 51•11 Pti.i. • h11w .... o.1io••••1f,OttMll••"••l•••iHC~•·•• $22'' ~li1JJiij!ij!Jl~i;tt1!1i1J~ii1:1:Q3ii.v_:~swAGE~S ·' .,,,,.._ SCIENTIST SHOWS OFF REVOLUTIONARY CERAMIC MATERIAL Newport'1 Spangler Heads Ouramics, Inc., Credited With Breakthrough TIRES •t4J.-: •r41 .. •~~ UNIROYAL, UNIRDYAJ:JIW_UNIRDYAL TIRES UNlllllYll., To flT Your Pocketbook • • • Garden Gro't'e 14040 HOOKHURST (CtrMr " 1,...i.;1111r,1 I w .. 11ftln1l••l 5JO·JZOO .Anaheim -luena Pork 6tlZ LINCOLN ILVD. IC•mw 11 Lln~eln •nd K"lt) 826-5550 HURRY! WHILE THEY LAST ••• * ' i-"1WHITEWALLS & BLACKWALL$ \ *CHARGE IT BRAND NEW , 4PLY I -~$ 6.SOx13 6.70xl 5 (7.75xl 5) (F78/15) s.ss.-14 (H78/14J s.ss..-15 '"''" 'J J I COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH AREA 3005 HARBOR BLVD. CORNER OF BAKER & HARBOR 557-8000 I l I l • I 1 DAILY PILOT Thul"SdllJ, August 13, 1970 - Vital Statisti~s --------...... ..-"--------------. .;;__--Births Jllll' )I, U1f M•, 1tw1 ""'"· Wee11tv Grte11, m Lllke St~ A.Ill. (, HU!'llll'lllloft ... ell. '" Mr. •!"cl Mr$.. V1n 0.....111111 ..,,.n11J110, '111 V1!1rdo. Hunltng!Dtl Bt1cll, bo\I. Mr. It><! Mra. Qirl It. Mc:C!1111. 1•771 NIWPOl'I A ..... ""'· a. Tu1tln, tlrl. Mr. •Ml Mr11o. llal>trl Olbfr111, Ult2 EOI~, S..nr1 AM, boY, J111r tt. ""' Mr. •<Ill Mrll. ROiier J. !lolll!Ol. 132 W. 201~ S!., (OS!I M ... , 11111. Mr. _,.. Mrll. C!Vde 5 Htnder_,, tS1 Cr .. St., L•l~lll 8ttcft, glrt. Mr. Ind Mrl. Rllbl!rl E. IC~llV, Jr , l'atn S..r111 L11>e, Hunllnoton 811Ct>. 11lrt. Mr. UICI M'I. ROlllld Strtub. loU W, 11th SI., (ctl1 Mil' .. , 111"1 Mr. Ind Ml"l. Cf\ttlC'.' R. Glllt, 2Cu1 Newlend 51 .• """llllQIOll 8e1c11, t lrl Mr. •nd Mr1. Tollv 8. $!.lllon. Hf w11""' Pl ~ ec.11 Mew, bot<. Mr. Ind Mrl. Mlcn1~I W. Angler. in w. w11... No. :i. c~•• """"· a lrl. T1·ansit Di st1·ict Going to Voters SANTA ANA -The pr(). posed Orange County Trawlt District topped Us last hurdle Tuesday and i! headed for a vote of the people Not1. 3. The Local Agency Forma- tion Commission (LAFC) in a 4-1 vote endorsed a decision l>y the COU\1ty Board ot Supervisors that the e\eetorate Five Irvine Employ es Due Honors should decide whether or not"'••••------•-••••-.-.-., the county should have such:• 1 transportation authority. If approved by voters , the ffiVINE Five Orange new district, got1erned by its Coast area miidenta, all employes at UC Irvine will own board, would hzve the GEIST FOR FALL Mr. •rlll Mn. B1rrw1 !I. Wllltewtl, l5lJ 80l'l!ll9 Ooont. C0tont dtl M•'-glr1, Mr. I/Id M<I. G•l~rt Cf Llt!I~. ?llJ No. A, Oei.•••t. Hun! ftlllOll Be.ch, a lrl. Mr. •nd Mn W!lll1m B. Freelv, 117 E. 2tlld SI, COS!I Mtlio, bo1'. Mr. 111<1 Mri. RONld WOl'deo\, '-°' S, Ofrmlll!I SI., ~nt• Aftl, boV. Dis solutions Of Marriage be honored at an lnfonnal power to tax up to five cents ceremony today for having per '100 assessed t1aluation achieved 10 or more years and to submit bond issues service with the University to the voters to financt any or other slate agencies. Chancellor o a n i e 1 G. rapid transit system il might THINK De ath J\'o tlces CALI.EM Cl•l>d A. C•lle11, llJSli MOnrDe Sir.et. G••Clefl Graw. Su...,1WO b'I' J iQlll· C•rl •"<I l uddY; llllu•Mtr, Gtt1ldl11t Ellers: 3 btol~n · lurl, T!\om•• 1"6 J1mt1: 1l1ttf", Elllt Oltr'llllU 1 1rtncKl'llldrMI I frUlilrlnclChlldr.... ~rvlc11 I PM 51...,rdey, Au1u11 1s. 11 P.-F1mllr tolonl1t F11n1r1I Home. GltOVI! R,,., Grout. IU4' 5•"'' ll1rt11r1 Slrte!. Fount11to V1ll1v. Survl....i br l••n~nd, Jtmes; daUthlt!r, Mrt. 1.111!1111 II , Mowl11, Los AllHll•: 2 1r1ndchlldren, Roa.rv 7.JO PM IMS eV11>lfl9, Smfl1!1' Chapel. .... 1111.,.. M111, t AM Frklav, Auoull II, al St. S!mOI\ 1nd J~ C1ltlolft Cllurclt. 1nte.,•1t••I, Good Sllffllw!•d Ct mt!erv. Smiths' Mortutry, dlreclor1. MANSON fl•rrV 0. MtnlOll. ltm 8lrdr LaM, Hu,.!lr>OIO<'I 811ch. Survived bv wl'11. W1noo1: 1 S<l"I' M1rrv D. Jr., tn<'I Jor. (.: I IUUVMl•I: W1nd<I Jtln Flynn, Gertldlnt Pl!!, SP>lrltt An<1 J•mhof!, M•rv 0..11 R•rll. C•rol Ad•mso... Do<• JO• SnyMr, Vf'lkl G••t H•n...,,, !1Dt1nlt1 J•n HIMOIH 25 gr1ndcr.\ldr .... $ervltH 1 P/o/4 511urd•l', AU9Vil IS, •I ~ M..,,.cw. 101 E1111n Mortu•rv In S•ll L•k• Cltv. V!th. Pt•k F•mllv (olOftltl Fun1r1I HGme, ......,..1rdl"9 d!rKTon. MANUEL Vol'9inl<I LN N.11....,.1, '" !lly\IOt Orlvt, NewllOfl B«t~. !M,lrvlvK bv ..on. Pr.11111> A • MtwPOll BHclH d.ll~Mtrl; Vlclorl• "· 1rwln: p.,,,.(, L. 5cllevtrm1nn a1 Cu..erllno, C1llfornl•1 ? grfndt~lld•tn Servkt• wtrl Mid 1! I ·lO PM lacll• In -ci..1>e1 11 P1tlflc V!tw. llevt•l'nd D•vid A. Cnimo 0Uicl1llM. lnltrmtnl. Pol(:l!i<. View M.....,1111 P1r\. P1tlflc Vltw Morlu•"· dfr.clor•. THOMA I k rl1t1no l w l•t Tl>OIM1. UU CO.,!el Pltcf, Cotlt Mtt•. Survlv~ bv Nl'fllt1, Mr. 1nd M". J~ltt>h T,,.,,..... (0111 Mfl<I! J 1l11tri: Georol1 Ann C1!hoim t nd JIMI lee Tl'H:wn11; m1t1rn1I trlnd· 1urtnll, Mr. tlld Mrt. Jtmtt C. Cl1rk. Fiiimore. C•!ltornlll. S1rv1ct1, 1 PM Sil· uril••· Auou1t U 11 '"-Prlnt e ct Pttct Lutllt><•n Churcr.. tnltrmenl, l-i1r~r RI" M-111 Pt'11. Btll BrotOWIY MOllUlrY, dlr«Tori. In 11.u of 11ow11r1, l•ltnd1 mtv mtkt cion.llon1 to ll'lt Krl1 Thom•• Mt- mot!tl Fund c/o ll'lf Prince ol Pt1ce LUllletln CJ111rch. COii• MtUI. ARBUCkLE & SON Wutcllff Mortuary U7 E. 17th St., Costa Mes• 14Ml!I • BAL'l"Z P.10RnJAR.ll3 Corou del 1tfar OR 3-9450 Cotti Mesa ~u &-!ill • BELL BROADWAY MOR11JARY 111 Broadw8J, Cot~ Mes• u W4.U • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MOR11JARY 1715 Lacun• Canyon Rd. 414-HIS • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARR Ceme&try e Mortu•ry Cllapel 3500 P•dfk: Vie" Drtt1e Ne"-port Beach. calllorn.l1 "4-t?tl • PEEK FAMJl.Y COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolll Ave. Wtstmluitr ISS-35%5 • SHE> FER MORTUARY lApn1 BtMt •H-tSSS Sa• DuDute ffMI• • SMTTllS' MORTUARY 111 Miio St. lltuod•.,.. ll<ac• - Mt. Ind Mn. Nfcnoll1 K•l!1y, 1"'9 LIOGN Cir .. 1111nltnglOll e..cri. bo'I. Jlll1' l:J, l '1t Mr. Ind Mrs. Alt;hilrd MllMkl. 100S1 Con>tl!U!IDl'I Dr., Hunti"lllOll Be1c11. M~.nd M11. W•vr-. K. .Steer.. llS R1laom Pl., Cotti Me11, 1111. Mr. Ind Mr1. BIM Tovl111 6071 lelTlllf' M~v .. ;_..Ai:!;,~· ~"f1ri:~· .a!~·llU!ll, 1631! MVrlttwOod SI .• Foun1111n V11ley, DoY. JU l1' U, !f71 Mr tn<t Mfl. P"'Uo Bor]t, 'I'll Ctoll1! SI., C111!11 Mew, Dov, M•. tnO M1., St1nlev C. flrl!Wn, '40 E. 19Th SI., Co111 /MW, bov. Mr. Ind M ... J1mt1s E. Luh,. II . 1~ No. D Cod1r'der 01., Co1t1 Mew. 111rr. M•. 1n<I Mrl. P1ul Be1Ch, 7'S Del Mir, (OSll Ml>.11, bel'. J11tv H, 1t11 Mr. 1nd M ... G-Greblrnlca, 11611! S.11 f~Upe St., Fount1l11 V1l1ty, oirl. July M Mr. & Mrt. Jol'ln H. V1nde Mlrlo.. 'loi.-1 Shrike AYe .. F""nrtln V•llev. "'· Mr. & Mrs. B•uce s,.,r,,,, no Apt. A, Al1blme, Hu11lll'llllOl'I llt•dl. ~1' Mr, •r>d Mn. 0•~111 l . ThOml>IOfl, 3112 '"""'"' Club. Costt Mou. 9lrl Mr, & IM. Eric ICll'""-11150 Bluebell Awe .• Foun!1ln V1llft, tlrl M•. & Mrs. Bruce HHold, "XII E. Edlnsrer, S.nl1 Aftl, vlrl JUl1' ,, Mt. & M,.,.. Chilrln E. H1<11t"roitt. "6~S w. Ol.l~n. Mo. ~J, Or1nge, Q/tl Mr. •rlll Mrs. Wood Wolf, 111J So. F•lrvlew, S.1111 AM, tltl Mr & Mrl. Jalln M. Kll_Pllrkt 24.«I l'1nc1r1 Dr. Minion Vl•IO, 1111 Mr. & Mr1. G1en 8levl111. 1012' Crosbv, G11Wn Grete, 9Jr1 Mr ... Mri. Edward A. NIJ011, ni•1 Diimore Or., Gar4M1 Grove. tori J\11'1' 11 Mr. & Mr1. Ger1ld Tw1rdowllrl, '"'" 11/h. SI .. Cosio MHa, boy Mr. & Mn. Lnter 511olher. 7272 Sc. Ra.ewOOd 11., S1nt1 Anl, boY Mr. & Mrt. WUll1m Cl1rt. 1~!:17 M!.Ofl f•YM~." ~~~'lr~""K~=; '¥111.9 Fer.,, N11WPOrl 9t1ch, girl MC.e11!r ~.r:'s.~1':7. .... ~"v~t· 1115 s... Mr. •nd Mr1. Wllll•m M. School<, nn L•n•I St., L-!le1o;11. ol1r M•. & Mr1. Aodne~ S•vles. lUIO M~.'~t\'~,.L;~~~~~~'~li,boJttldo111 O• , (g1t• Mew. elrr. JvlY H Mr. & Mr1. John W. LI'~'· ?t! kno~ Pl., Cctl• Mew. boy Mr. & Mii, 01v!d H. 9rldnt•. !.f!lS l.11 M1•1nl11, Soult\ l•11uftl, bov Mr. & Mro.. Kertnelll MtcF•ri.nc1, n;io Bf!lt1u "'Y• .• Cctll Mew, olrr Mr & M,.,.. Wllllam "'Ui--. 1"'5 Pltc1lrn, Cor.tt Mato. bov Mr. &. M'"I. H1rry !lrltton, 9t01 l.1 Crnt1 Cir .. Hunll'!,'lton e~~cr., ol•I M•. & Mrs. tilll'l' s;oor. 1n6( Euclid SI . Founllln Yalltt •. tlrl Mr, & Mrs. Jol'ln R. Coull•, UOO TIKI TORCH SPECIAL! TIKI FUEL • Beat The Heat TOASTMASTER FANS SPECIAL SALE! 99' • • 59c qt. STRUCTO BAR·B-QUE 24" WITH WHEELS $7.95 $3.49 18" TABLE MODEL LAWN F-URNITURE WEBBING 17' LONG WITH SCREW S 29P PKG. FOR ALL YOU R PLUMBI NG NEEDS ~~ WATER HEATERS • • , REPUBLIC "GEMINI" 20 Gal ••. $47.99 30 Gal ••• $49. 99 40 Gal ••. $59. 99 50 Gal ••. $74. 99 Tllll ~lllf ..,atHll... tllU MMif w11tr llMIM II ...,1,... •lltl wllllf 1•11\t. " ~ .,. Ml•. WI ... ,,.. ... ,,.. ''' 1111111111.... tvtU•blt. ii 'I'" w!IJI.. All _.,..., tMl1ll1lleol 11rt1 Ille.MIR, Clll wt _,.._.fttl11! fMI d•l'· "'ltl ~· lntl•lflfltfl •••llllttt, Al _. Hiii ttr ,,..,,.,. -INSTALLATION AVAILABLE · ' Come to t he Fair These six students, all aJumni of Chapman College's \Vorld College Alloat, invite the public to the World Campus Afloat Fair Saturday at the Chapman campus in Orange. Clockwise from top left are Caron Cole, Sacramento; Warren Dennis, Dana Point; Nancy Rowland, Tujunga; Sandy Soest, Santa Ana; Scott Acevedo, Newport Beach, and Ted Smith, Lancaster. International dress is in order. Man power Prog rtim Cont i11uation OK'd Aldrich, Jr., will present the propose. awards to: Only minor opp o s i ti on Helen I. Greening, 2976--A surfaced at Wednesday af· Royal Palm, Coala Mesa, temoon 's LAFC hearing. WESTCLIFF rLAZA residence haU manager, 10 c . . s I NEWPORTER INN years. omm1Ss1oner ta n e YI~==:========~ Mary M. Peterson, 305111 Northup, a San Clenlente city [: FernleaJ, Corona de! Mar, councilman, voted against thei.==='-=--===--~ senior typist clerk, 10 years. district because "once you Vincent 0 . Alianello, 24271 form one of these things you Lysanda Drive, Mission Viei·o, 1 k d · W Jd I Svdn•v Om•rr i1 en• cf th• STARS are OC e In. e COU pro-world"s q•ett 11trolog•"· H i1 principal laboratory mechan-bably do a better job 0'•1 column ii on• of th, DAILY icism, 20 years. transit in San Clemente if ~·e PILOT'S 91111 feilY r••· Laverne Stone, 20122 Santa had the five cents to spend 1 ,c_-_--------- Ana Ave., Santa Ana, ad·l~ou~'5~elv~e~s;.';';::;:;;;;;;;;;u;;;~~~i~~~;~~~~~~ ministralit1e assistant, I O years. Alvin C. Umscheid, Andros, Costa Mesa. senior laboratory mechanic, 10 years. laboratory mechanician, IO years. SANTA ANA -Conlil1uation or the county's r.tanpower Analysis Program ( MA P ) with the services of the Arthur Young and C-0., Santa Ana certif1e:;I public accounl.anL<i, has been approved by the Orange County Supervisors by a 3-2 margin. Allen poMted out th.it the 1'1AP program, which has been under way since 1967, has sav- ed the county money through better work programs. The SANTA ANA -The Orange County Salvation Army has ratio or savings is three Lo an emugency vehicle to bring one, Allen said. help to victims of fires, flood s R. A. BuUer or lhe county and OUier disasters. Supervisors Robert W. Bal- lin and William Hirstein t1oled against the Young contracl because, as Battin put il, "The rate ($25 an hour) is ex- cessive." administrative office argued The vehicle has a portable that the program should be generator to furnish lights and power to disaster areas. It continued on a "services is equipped to carry stretchers 1.b" St111e C...oach •I Knoll'• i11 • r('llll trip b11ek inro 1he Old "'·~I, '"""'Pif'le ... ilh a (our horw. le•m and • Sht11c un Hi•1cr ••. a nd u nce n. • .. biJe 1h&.1e ll•d 4,:",u7s e,·en ,,.,. 10 hold it up. rendered basis." li~a~nd~ha~s ~st~o~r~ag~e~s~pace~~ro~r~p:r~e~-~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~:~~~~ He said of the $50,000 ap-prepared food and coffee. propriated for the fiscal year by the supervisors only $33,000 was spent. For the current year an ap- proprialion of only '30,000 was requested and approved. Jn his opinion, Battin said. lt was $10 an hour too high compared with the prevailing rates for CPA ser vices." Boord "Chairman Alton E. MID-SUMMER VALUES! HOURS : 9 AM • 9 PM MON.·FRI. 9 AM • 6 PM RUDAYS 10 AM • 4 PM SUNDAYS Outdoor lighting you never thought you cou ld afford! -=-:!,.".;,~ A quality system you install yourse lf ... in minutes, with complete safety. No pem'lits, conduit or digging necessary ..• just plug in! • UI. approved 12 volt system absoll.ltely shockproof, child safe! • These low voltage sets are complete with l1r1e sealed beam lights, color lenses (amber, lfttn, clear, pink and blue), weather- proof, shockproof cable, tninsfDr"mer with on-off switch e r automatic timer, ground stakes and wall brackets • U.se thia exciling new tight from l ittle Gi1nl in dozens ol ways throu1h· out the year fDr" .security and outdOOJ beauty. Four separate sets to choose from. Prices start at $4495 Another Little Giant Product GARBAGE DISPOSALS IN-SINK-ERA TOR :;.-' .. : .. :" $3 3ss ou• ra1c1 •• Modi ! JlJ- t Yr. Gu1r1nl11 ...... '"$4688 •rt· S••.ts oua rt1c1 .• Moll 1I S5S- J Yr. G111r1nl1• ::-:.: .. :· $5795 OUA NICE ., Mod1I 77- i Y1. Gu111nl11 INSTALLATION AVAILABLE ' Now thru SUNDAY AUGUST 16 LATEST L /P. HITS! . MILES DAVIS Bitches Brew INCLUDES: Phareoh's Danrr, Bitches B1·ew, Spanish Key, John l\lcl..aughlin. l\[ilcs Runs The Voodoo Do\•;n, SanC"tuary . ISAAC HAYES Movement lNCLUDES: I Stand Accui>!'d, Onr Bi::;: UnhBJlpy Fem- il)'. I Just Don"t Know \Vhal To Do \Vith l'\tyselr, Something. SALE $ SPECIALLY PRICED BLOOD SWEAT AND TEARS #J LIST ss.•1 PROCOL HARUM WHOOSH LIST S4 .tl POCO LIST $4.fl * COMPLETE SELECTION OF TOP 45's at 68c ea. 88 * GRANT CITY ANAHEIM GRANT PLAZA HUNTINGTON BEACH Ll11col11 et S.... C.U.,..l•t A11•hol"' Ctr. Ho1r1 lO A.M ... ' r .M. 0.11, S11fl4oy 11 A.M.. te I P.M. lroollhw"t •• Ad•"" H•11rt ,:30 A.M. to t:lO P.M. Dolly l11•dQf 10 A.Ji!. 10 6 P.M. . • . . . --.. ---·---------------------------------------------............ -.............. ,...."'l!" .. 1111 DAILY PILOT ti • Vio·Iinist Re~alls Youth Would-be Suitor Shot Dead Landi's Love of Music Still Stro11g After 70 Years later came back Ind erubed be took the rtne and l1red through tho doo.-. Stancil aaJd ooce u Ry .. dulled - By PATRICK BOYLE Of "'9 DI~ ,lltf II.if 1 •Accordng to some p!]lcholo(lltl," Pietro Landt says, "I ·have had a very poor life because I never had a wy or a bicycle when I was a cjlild. "f only bad a violin. Yet I have bad a wonderful life, and I would not change •f1Y parr or it for any reason." Pietro Landi is a professor of mUJic. His studio is In hll home at 341 Peach Tree Lane in Newport Beach, aDd aU of hiS pupils are neighbor children. When he describes a piece of music, he displays an artiatic pjllion and a love for hi.a work. · A native of Italy, his speed! is sprink]ed with I t a l·l an words, aetture and poWlling to empbulu points. Profeuor Lindi WU born , In Cileotano, Italy. Jn 1900, "in the shadow of the Alps." His falher was mayor of the small town, a colony of artists and musicians. "There was a man in Colestano," Landi says, "who wa.s the local violin maker to most of the town. But to me, he was the town 's carpenter." When he was not quite seven years old, Pietro Landi receiv· ed his first violin , custom made to fit ·the hands of a small boy. "When I first began to play the violin ,'' he says, "my falher was forced to leave the family and flee to Switzerland for p o I i t i c a I reasons:' · "We did not hear from him for three years," he says. "V.'e finally got a letter from him telling us he was a dishwasher in New York City at a large hol.el. He said that since he could speak no English. he c<iuld not get a bell.er job.'' "My father wa.s not only a politician, but he was a · very good cook. He tried lo WONDERFUL LIFE WITH JUST A VIOLIN Newport Beach Music Professor Pietro Lindi tell the cooks thal they were doing a poor job. When they could not understand him, he began swearing at them in French." The head chef could speak French and overheard him. "My father was soon pro- moted to chef and he became the famous John Landi." Pietro Landi boasts wit.n pride. He wa.s head chef at the Plaza Hotel '>1.'hen it open· ed in New York . •·But I was still in llal.v." Petro L;indi notes. .. At the same time I got my first violin , I entered the Parma C-Onservat.ory to sludy mu.sic." • And it was then that Landi mel his life-long example, Arturo To1canlni, the con· ductor. Toscanini was a grad uate or the conservatory, and he look I.he young Landi under his wlng. When Landi graduated from the conservatory at the age of 16, he was the youngest student evtr to master the rigorous course or study. I le "'BS a maater of the violin i'!nd piano and could play all 1nstrumenLS. lie wenl on a world tour ""ilh Tosc1nini 's orchestra, playing all over Eruope and America. When ha wa.s 20, lnapulses to Brai1a Pru·alysis 'Cure' in Futu1•e? he joned his family In New York. Jl -th"1 !bat he beglO to teach. He opened studk>! et Carnegie Hall in New York Clly to teach professionaUy, but he worked fr~ ell~ bands in underprivileged areas of New Jersey. He taught many children to play, pro- viding the Instruments and trying to give them the lti.- spiration he had been given by Toscanini. But in 1957, Toscanini died, and Landi's life changed. "When he died." Landi says, tears coming to his eyes, "something died inside of me." He quit teadli!!I mlllic and Landmark Vandalized vowed that he would nt't'er VIRGINIA CITY, Nev. CAP) teach qaln. He movtd to -Bur1l1r1 hl vt d1mqtd California at lhe urainl of Plper'a Opera Hou1e, an hi! son, and th:Mlfbt that ht hlltoric landmark In thU would -d tho root ol Illa former Cornotock m f n In 1 would spend the reat of hll camp. life studying art. One of the original front But he could not ignore his doors ol lhe old building was own art. Nearly four years smashed beyond repair by ago, his wife brought a. someone who entered and to0k neighbor boy. Tom m Y more than $200 in antique IT MIGHT Dcnigan, to Landi. lamps and other articles, "He was trying to learn authoriUes said Wednesday . BE WISE the trumpet," Landi says, "The doors are 66 years ··but his cheeks were all puf· old and can't be replaced," TO ORDER fed out and he was getting said Alice Byrne. opera house no'>l.·here. manager. "We hope we can YOUR NEW "I just could not stand lo £.ind someone. who c a n see him try so hard and fail, duplicate them by copying VEGA 2300 so t taught him how to play. what pieces are left." AHEAD. The boy is 13 now, and he Mrs . Byrne said another is marvelous." door was torn off its hinges CONNll.L But Tommy Denigan is only and thieves did ' 'unto Id CHIVIOLn ....... _. LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK $55.00 6' to 12' ALUMINUM ltOLLll . HANDLE sa.so 4" NYLON STUCCO BRUSH $3.58 16 'OOT WOOD EXTINSION LADDllt , $18.70 9" STUCCO ROLLER COVER $1.49 WALKER PAINT WORKS 816 W. 16th St., Coit• Mis• 642-sn6 one of his 37 young pupils, damage" getting at the miss· 2121 H•l'W Blvd. and sev~ of them are from .~;n~g~ite~m~s~·-~=~~-~~c~ .. ~to~M~,..~~~54~6-~1200~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;; lh family of neighbors of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Denigan. Another Denigan, Cathy, II recenUy won a two week scholarship to the Jdylwild School of Music. A Creshmao at Corona del Mar High School Landi taught her to play the violin in only 19 months. Landi thinks there is "a lot of talent in California, more than any place else in the U.S." ··But the teachers In California are lazy and they don't spend enough lime with their studenl5. "The students have the talent,'' he says. "But they lack someone like To.scanini to be patient with them, to show them the, beauty of life SPORTING GOODS r.ii ~ ~ BIC YCLES -PA RTS TIRE S ACCESSO RI ES ~ -~ We'll be back f,.om Vacation and Open for Business Monday, Aug. 17 PttENLO PARK. Calif. (AP) -A Stanford scientist is using t. om put er·regulated elec· tricity, carried into damaged brain tissue on tiny wires, to make a monkey lift food to his mouth with a paralyzed right arm. strokes or accidents could •·Belon~ the computer. we . ~a~n~d~lh~e~be~a~u~ty~ol~m~us~ic~:~·-~::::::::::::!:!:!!!!~~====================:: regain some use of paralyzed had tn do this by hand , with !i The experiment, which Dr. Lawrence Pinneo has been conducting for six years, holds promise that humans whose brains are d1maged b y , CSLB Dance Major Added To Program limbs. p"eople 1tandin1 around An •application to humans i;ynchroni:r.ing the e I e c t r i c is al kast thtee 1o f)ve yean sinwlations," Pinneo, 42, ex· awa}if~the SUlnford Research plained. lnsUIUl.e scientist said Thurs-Arter years of mapping day tit an interview. areas of the brain thal control ··We can duplicate simple .specific !Unctions ol the rhesus body movements in a paralyz-monkey, Pinneo and his staff eel animal," Pinneo said, "buL have prepared an "atlas" to we ,roll have some way to guide the elect.rit stimulations. go before we will be able The areaa are rfached by to program the more complex electrodes -wlru less than functions. For example, we J/25,000 of an l~h thick - can make a paralyzed monkey that ar:e attached lo a move his legs , but we don 't permanent skull PI ate know yet how lO make him sura,ically Implanted in the walk." monkey's head. The animals, he said, "are "For human application we surgically damaged" for· the art Investigating better way. testf,. or aelting electrical ellthrl)' Tf\e ctlmputer governs the to the brain -way• w !Ch minute electric current -dn not involve suratry," Pin- a bout 20 millionths of a volt neo said. Trials with radio -that stimulates the brain waves "have not b e e n A dance .. department has to send the motor impulses particularly succe11ful,'' he been added to the School of ....:.'h.::•.::•:.ma=k:.•..:m.::u:csc:...:lesc:....:pe_rf_o;_r_m_. __ sa_;d_. _________ 11 Fine Arts at Long Beach State College, according to Dr. Robert Tyndall. college dean. Jean Schlaicb will serve as the department chainnan. The new department will h(\.ve three full.time r a c u J l y members and will include classes on dance methods and techniques and the cross· cu ltural variation in dance. Mrs. Schlaich has taught at the College of William and ~lary and Cal Stale Poly in San Luis Obispo. Long Beach has the largest School of Fine Arts in the sl ate's college sr.item. The Long Beach Summer School or Dance, the largest dance school in California in the 1'il!mmer, ls being offered by the college for the third year. Over 220 sludents f r o m lhroughout the United Stales ;irr being taught by visiting professors during the summer ~essions. UT'S BE FRIENDLY lC you have nc"'' 11clg:hMn fl r know or 11nyonr movlnrt: le> our tirtll, plr11sr. trll u~ ~,, th11t "'e m11y cictend ll friendly wcJcome •nd Mir the m tn become llCQUllinlcd in their new 11urroundings. So. Coast Visitor 494-0S7t 494-t:MI Harbor V'ISitor 6464174 F11!, f•ir. f1alu•l, Th111• I~••• wo1il1 t U"' ~p f1eton 111 001r1tio11 011 t~1 DAILY PILOl 1diiori1I p191 •••rv div. T Two rings for twci lovers . . both ring s $88.00 fl-• jj••tlty 41•111011d h1 14K t•l4 -""dflf ... 4 ,.. .... ,.., Easy credit term~• student ou:ounl1 ovo iloble .• up lo 12 month, to pay BonkArnericord • Mo5ter Chorg• "THE STORES CONF"lDENCE BUILT" Est•blished 43 Y11rll HUNTINGTON CliNTllt ,_..a lfl~ Hllllllllti,.., ltl<~ tfl•i.NI HAI.Oii IMO .. l'IN9 CI JfTll UM Ht,.., llYt. Ctett M ... ....... 0'1H MON .• THURS. a fill. 'TI L 'r.M. THE ORANGE COAST'S BEST SELLER It's the DAILY PILOT that moves the merchandise! You could put this "best seller" on your sales staff. Call today for rates and Information • • • RATED ''X'' <FOR EXCEi.LENT> DAILY PILOT DISPLAY AOVERT!SING DEPT • 642-4321 or 540· 1220 j I l 1 I Smooth & Opoque. S.t;n & Tr;co+ Underwire Bro. B • C ···-··-··· . $6. D .... --.-... $1 . Ve:ta's IWTl•An: APl'ABEL ............ .,., ...... • I ,--_, - !--' -I ::1 -J .. -' -/. \ WESTCUFF PLAZA 17th ·& Irvine ~wport Beech l Phone 642-1197 • ' ' l . . . ·o~e-sto~· :.shopping .. at its finest! OPEN THURSDAY :AND ·MONDAY EVENINGS . \ .. F / In red. tan j/ & navy blue. 'On the way to class !She'll show off in ,Buster Brown's T-strap' Westcliff Plaza, Newport Beach I NEW IDEA for Young Lovers Promise ring· Whe11 if'1 • bit rr1c1r1 th111 frl111dthip ••• the d•i11ty Pro,,.i11 ri119 i1 111 11r1ctlv ti9ht ''9oin9 1t11dy" 1y1t1bo1. Cho1u1 while or yellow 14K gold 11! with 01>1 tw i11kli119 IJIM!t.1i11e. di1rno11d. W1 prorni11 •he'll bt thrilled. SJD.00 CHA:R.LES H. BARR Wcstetif! Pim, Newpott Beach. Calif. 211 ·M•rinc ATenue, B~bOa "lllin~ Cil[, Wl5TCLIP.F PL.UA . 642·2444 NIWPORTll INK '4 .. 1700 HOLD l.T! ROBERT BERKLEY MEN'S WEAR WILL BE STAGING THE MOST SURPRISING AND SPECTACULAR M E N ' S CLOTHING SALE, EVER H E L D IN THIS AREA. WAIT.! Wotch For Our Ad WESTCLIFF 'PLAZA, NEWPORT BEACH ·. E - ' .,. -. ! • • f. ·. \ ~~~ '";,\ ~!t',l.':;i<:o/10i• ~ i'' \,l I • . f '. maps te8cHes .... '*• .;;J • • N' ,. . . . .... ,, ;" ' . ew~·L1 By J O OLSON Of MM DAILY PILAT 1'-ff Traveling in America isn't like traveling 1n a foreign country, but it can be difficult driving if you don't speak America's "summer foreign language," the lingo of roadmaps. A language of signs and symbols, its hleroglyphics at first gl~ce are an impenetrable mass of circles and dots, blobs, blue apots and Imes. Put them all on a map and you have mass confusion. Roadmap lingo can be learned, though, and its study can be a rewarding one. . . The time to start learning roadmap lingo for your vacation trip, however, isn't· at 3 a.m. when you're loaded ui:i and ~dy l? go, ~~g on the first crucia1 de<:isions to get the car potnled in the ngbt direct.ion. ••Why do they make roadmaps so complicated?" ~omen all over the country can be beard crying, for it is those of the lair sex who seem always to land the job of being navigator. They may lake heart. though, for il really Isn't that bani at all. Dangers lurk for those wqo don't speak roadmap lingo, however, so 1eminine navigator~ sboµlct be~8l'F·. , . . · . . · ..• .-·: II th1>.otap iS',nOt ·well-studi"l..~or ~aJDple ,11J!e lamilµ:H maybe • '·l'outec!' along .the stat1> boiJlerlin~ ii\~toad·.of ·l)le interstate bigbway, ~.to.a : ·:fmoomta:in peat. lnstl\ad··or a -recreatidl1 area... ' · · · · ·· · . · With proper Muili .ot~a ·giii>!f 'ro~~ :maP .. boweyer,. tr~v!"in( · a<1:!'5r ·~uptry by' car -cad' the a. reWardiDg1e~.ei:ic~1?"atber ·than '-a ·never.ending · . t.I" idb . ' ': 1 •.. • : • ' . \ . . '., .1 : :• . · r · ; MRn'y inten!SUng ~pois' can be \;lliled-th8t are not marted ·on road signs, and these make good side trips to break the mo~dt'o17~of a Jonv stretch of road. . . ·1 • ', • For example, missions, airports, dams, recreat1on1 ~teas. l~es, rivers, national and state parks, ski areas, national monurp-E?ts• ~nd points ol interest all are marked with their own symbols. · ... So, madame traveler may feel tree to draw upon the 25 centuries of mapmaking that have given her a modern, informative gtii~e 1~ plott~ng out the family vacation and she can be assured ol success. if she begms her study of roadmap lingo before she packs her suitcase .• _ If she includes her whole family in the project, the vacation trip will be a never.to--be-forgotten adventure and the children will:-look forward to the stops charted out along the way instead of wondertng-wbat to do to keep busy . . . . And, if Mrs. Navigator plays her cards. nght. the whole fa:nlly wtll become so proficient in speaking roadmap lingo that she'll . .be able to relinquish her duties for a rriid~ay snooze. . . ~ Better yet, when she wakes up, they won't be on that·mouotain peak or on those lava beds. ----------""'!"I ... TIHl""7, A....e 11. 1'1t ..... 11 • [Ou·~· ,,.. ·~ .11.· i.-6~ 00 . Pulling Up Stakes • . Adventure A waits • ' " ' • . .. .... Jly"JA""1!: COMBS "We're also near Russell, a horse.'' said Mrs. Coolv'od. or ,... n.llY Pli.t •t•H the first white !ettlement and Chris will begin an agriculture Cban1in1. cOurse Jn the mid· old whaling town o( New !dlool "'deep in a forest" in , dle of b stream is becoming Zealand . It contains lovely, February. The students have 1 trend. preserved Maori buildings," animal projects like sheep _ No longer do people wail noted Mn. Coonrod, • native raising or ~atlle. until retirement "ie t 0 New Ze~l~er:_. . FAMD..Y REUNION discover • new way of llviri'g. , T'd~ Coonrod8 qbrriied whHe · . '."* Cooorods hope lo be Together, Couples deci(fe 'to ' he served In tbe_~ne..~ Joined by .daughter. Coral. a ,;ve up all they b a'' e durinc W<>11i! War !I. 'i'hl;~ reglltued nurse wllo plan• to eatabli9hed and "crtiate a n!w daughter·, cOral; 2', wU born wed • m; Europe· fOr ·1 few life Btyle during mkld.le age . in Auckland, the na--years and Jr~~ to New The WOilam Coonrods 0( lional capital. F o 11 o w I n g Zea_land by . gn1ng ~gh r-· de! u 1 numerous trtnc to visit friends India, and Phil, 23, wt)() hves \,,All uu• .. ~at are a coup e rou • H ·· "It UI be ·1 .no have'Jiiacse their decision and family, they reached their tn a~au. w qui • :.Ou Ad I• the sall to Ne~ decision and started looking a r.eun~n whe~ the traveler1 •z.·a1anc1'-'llnyl .... forproperty. arrive, quipped Mrs. . es m gra,...,, ac-Coonrod • compane~ by their s o n LOVELY BAY They have soid their Cape Christopher, tz. •·we had selected a vacant Cod I ~ nd ~ "I•'s .goln,g to be 1 new sty e vvme a most \.II t lot overlooking the lovely bay. Jhel r nil "It 1 and exciting life for us," said When the deal fell through, r ur ure. s very r--~. ','Exciting In an 1 difficult, all we're taking are \,MllUVU we bought the small mote I be! 1 d ldylllc i .. ..a.1,,n. We're going our persona ong ngs a n qo•""' next door," explained t " ti edCoonod w~ get IW.QY from hu!tle and Coonrod. The nl()\eJ contains WO cars, 'fl' COO nu r • busUe and take it easy." .1.._ He explained that can art r--~ h 1 1 uuee apartments, complete very expensive In Ne~ . .._,., .. .,...., an asp a t pav ng with kllcheM, and a seven· Zealand and they save mone1 ' contractor, will go into ttie bedroom home. by shipping theirs, duly lrce motel business at the Bay Our d. Itlarids on the north tip " plans are to build our as lnunlgrants. 'of tbt 'North Island o( that own home nearer the "Auc kland, 150 miles away cd.lntry. , beach ... we'll just w a I k Is a lovely city the size ot. through 900le. native bush to San Diego. It is growing rapid. PANORAMA the water. 'I'tlen, we'll divide ly, especially in the last si1 1be bay coolalns 144 islands the present house into smaller years," she added. and from .their vantage point. apartmentll,'' added bia wife, A3 they leave l h e Ir the Coollrodl. will have 1 190 still possessing a tbiek New California life for another, th& dtgree riew o( a fantastic Zealand accent after 2S years Coonrods have some regret.a pmorama. "lt ls a lovely view in CalHcrnla. · but the potential for "the good . 400 the, .name cl'" our motel Coonrod pl&DI to golt, fish life" more than compensate_,. ii Panorama. of COUl"R," he and ftnd lots of maintenance "Oh , we'll miss the amenities · <.'Ollllnued. · work to keep hhn My but -supennarkets, c o r n e t 1be ae'w home is near the "all at a k>t slower pace." theaters aod culture. but A VIEW FROM THE OtHER SIDE -Mr. and Mrs. Willi.Jn" Coonrod and son Christopher of Corona de! Mar take a long look at the ocean they will be crossing as immigrants to New ZealaJtd. next week. Harbor area residents for 12 years, the Coonrods reached Uteir decision to "get away from it all" after nwnerous visits to New Zealand, MN. Coonrod's homeland. · int.emaUOnal deep sea fJshing Son Christopher thinks it's we're looklng forward lo th~ raort. town of Pahl a in a a great idea. "He loves adventure," c o n c I u d e d:: IUbtroplca.I climate similar to animals and we'll have enough Coonrod. And his wife amf: -aawau•a. room to have dogs and aon agreed. Reader's 'Leash' on Life C·alls for ·Muzzling Advice DEAR ANN I.ANDERS ' l used lo think your column beJonged on the COOlic page. Now I think someone ought to put a muu~ on you. Are you suffering from delusioru of grandeur? Do you l.hink you ire God Almighty? How dare you take it upon yourself to advise people about matters that might have 1t serious bearing on their lives. Most doctors won 't even pr'11Cribe for a com- 1non cold -and you, without the slightest hesilaUon, open up your big mouth on every IUbject under the IWJ, I am ao furtous ovtr your advkt 1.o the girl who had 1n abOrlion, I could wring your neck. YOO told her tf) TElL her flancc about ~elhill~ lh•l happened two itat& befor1 they ' met. Why? Why? Why? Moet •borlb\.1 are illegal. The transactlons are-~sh and no records e.xial ) J had an abortton 33 year1 atfJ• l'te be<n happily married for 311 ~ and have four beautUUI grandchildren. .f"o one knows about m~ past btcauet I was smart and kept quiet.. Had t; been dumb enough to like your ady.toc qty life might have been l'I mess. -M RE EXPERIENCED THAN YOU DEAR ANN LANDERS: £Very ·morn-· · meal1 oa 1hrt 1eUce. 111( my alster gets up at • a.m., take& her dinner out of Jhe ~-and DEAR ANN LANDERS ' We lo9l our leaves tt in the slnlt to tlaaw1 IO U. only son 1tven mmths ago. RaJph wa1 wtll be ready fOr cool:lnc -&be• :a year& old. He Jell a lovely wue rehirna from work at 4:30. · 'tfttenevtr aod two darllnc dUktren. Ralph and I 11ee it, I get sick. J'm afraid'Jf IOmlOl'llt-hl& wife moved lnto their own bomt DEAR MORE: y,. .,. Indeed mor• doun'l pt lhnlllgb to lhls,.u.,.iina. thr,. , .. ,. ago. The 17,000 mortgage tht'll ~ the whole famill'. wtllhed hovDy on iny daug!ltu-il>law'1 uperienctd. r" aever laacl 0 abortion. Please 11el her · atralght. Or U t'm mind. I decided to 1lve htr the mootY I ..,.. ,_ 1!11 mlllll lllve boe• the ooe who needJ to be 9'* <&lr&lpl, • lo poy off the mortgage. dllltrenl Md yw tou my od'1ct. II Jell me. -GREEN AROOND THE . When my ""'died, I received 110,000 mlJ!hl •IN lllft -olllfattit llld ..,_ GIW! · ti..n a lffe lniruran«> policy be h.ad one told yow fllllCe aboltt )'tar abor-DEAR GIW: Ltavlft& meat .at roem". , t.lken out on his Slit birthday. He wu don -•f&tt fOI Md llUrlN "m. lempe:nitllre for lt'it ltoart, tfftC5IDJ · unmarried then. My d1ughler•ln-law So, If It'• all Clit lllDt II ,..., 1'0 port nd ~~.ti a rhkJ h11M11. nevtt asked for this money, Ann. I continue 1• tpe:t ID.1 Ma m_. ud 'ne lldy hu *• llH:kler ._)1n1art. a~ It to her bttaute J fell UM! policy •dvlte people to l'la1It1tr11Pc. t i!h6 1hould hive • taJk trl1' hr btteher tfiiuld have been algned over to her ud lem btU.r tocluilq .. 1 ler preparillJ whon lhey married. The problem : My two daughters arflt nagging the life oul of me. They rcc.l they are entitled l.o l7 ,000 each. J am not • rich woman and have told them they wJIJ be remembered In my wtlL They want il now. Wbat should I do? -UNHAPPY DEAR U.: NolhlnJ. And I mua Htlll1. Yoa do•'t owe your clt11Ptem • money gill. Tiiey "Pl to be ullo .... tf themtdve1. Is alcobolism a dlseue:t How can the alcoholic be treated? la there 1 cure? Read the booklet "Alcohollsm - HOJl' tnd Help," by Ann LeQdera. €nck>se 35 cent.I In coin with your re.. quest and a king, stamped, aelfl.add.te33ed envelopf111 care of the Diii)' PlloL • I 1. I I I I I I I • ' JC DAll.Y Pilaf Orange Juniors Convene,, Calling the f~st boanl meeting of tbe lfX).71 year to ordtr on Wednesday. Aug. It, for the California Federa· tion of Woroen't Clubs, Orange Diltrict Junlora, will be Mrs. Frank Fedowita Jr. I '!lie meetin( will begio al I p.m. in Brea Ccmmunity Ceater. Mrs. Robert Ca~ood, fh'st vice presi- dent, will call ror reporU about upc:<Jrllinc projects from aD district chairmen. On Tuesdsy, Atog. I I , a..,.. Di.slricl off"""' and pas chairmen fer the Juniors wiD pttm' for their first ~ nual ~acquaiot.ed Juncbeon when aociety and woman's -., er..,. c.w.y newspapers will be ipeoiaJ ....... 'I!M! noon luncheon, to be served in the Anaheim Ebell Clubhouse, will be precedt.d by an 11 :31 a.m. "get,..ao. quainted" gather.Ilg io the """"°°" room. Relatives Hear News Of Troth A f.ruty diJUI' party was tilt oeUin& wben Mr. 111111 Mn. 1-K.ebleT or ea.ta Mesa reoaJed u.. _..,.,. or l tbeir daaCbf«, Naocy K.ebler I to Barry Bnmick or ea.ta , Mesa. Her fiance is the son and o1epoon or Mr. anc1 Mrs. DonaJd H. Sm.1th of Glendale. * '111utsdq, "-' "· 1970 League Members Frolic Philanthropic services will be temj>OI'arily forgotten when members of the Assistance League of. Huntington Beach and their husband s gather for a luau at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 15, in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Beem. Roy Lamoureaux bids 'Aloha" to his wife as Mrs. William Henry, social chairman, casts a carefree eye. In a tropical mood for the summer party will be provi- sional members and their husbands. Miss Keebler Js a eenior at Estancia lll&h Sdlool. The , bmedid r'?d b 9tf'V.ing in the--------,------------------------ 1 Navy, et.atiaord in San Diego. No ~-bu been .... VFW Au xiii e ry eoasuu.. Auxiliary t o Veterans of Foreign Wars. Post 3536 gathers the first udtllinl~atlp.m. -a.ta Mesa's Ameri can Single Girls Offered Another Handy Guide October Wedding Planned Mr. and Mrs. William J. " Legion Hall is the meetln( scene. NEW YORK (UPI) -There art cook books today that are devoted to everything from Wolf of Long Beach have appeiliera to Zen cookery, but all too often they require time, culinary talent a n d warehouse of equipment. 8 revealed the engagement of their daughter, Nancy Wolf to Lee Marston of Corona del Mar. Irvine Need Club Blossoming A$ the Irvine community grow~. the need for a women's club has become apparent to many r esidents of the area. Mr&. Fred Fry will open her Irvine home on Monday, Aug. 17, at 8 p.m. to all interest- ed young women for an informational meet- ing. General information on the forming of ;:i club and its possible goail and projects wiU be cfucwsed. None oi this ls much help to the harried working girl, v.·ho wants to whip up a won- drous but quick 8lld easy meal for her boyfrlend, husband or even dubious parents. A woman who really un-- deratand! the problem. Dixie De.an Trainer, now has put out a "Single Girl's Guide lo Cooking and Entertal.ning" (Tower). It suggests recipes for everything from "gourmet cooking for two" to leftovers to brunches and b o 11 d a y celebrations. And the paperback book is as handy for working wives a! single swingers. Miss Wol[ and her fiance, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bryant L. Mamon of Corooa de! Mar, have selected an Oct. 3 wed~ ding date in Quist lA.ltheran Church, Long Beach. The bride-elect is a graduate of Wilson High School, Long Beach, and CalUomia State College at Long Beach. Miss Wolf was affilated with Gam- ma Phi Bet.a sorority aod cur· reftly she is a teacher in the ABC School District. !{er fiance is a gradua~ of Corona de.I Mar High School, Orange C.00.St College and CSCLB. He was an af- fil iate of Sigma Pi Craternity. --------·----·-------·-------· ... -.. -.. -. ~-. --....... . Your Horoscope Tomorrow Scorpio: Directions Sensed FRIDAY AUGUST 14 By SYDNEY 01\iARR A Gemini ii vuuUle, active, pos&e11e1 a fall quota of tit- tellectual curiosity, loves to use ~· bucb, take pie.Caret, reports, ii ln tile Wet et t.b.in&•· Geml.a.I b one el Ute most 11bnbbly" 1lgm ef the zodiac. Amoa1 ttlebrttiet are Rohen Cwnmlq:a, Beuett Cerf aad Rolallnd Ruuell. ARIES (March Zl·April 19): Your efforts pay off; pro- motion, added prestige are in- dicated. 'lbose who previol.Wy took you for granted now show appreciation. Accent on bow you stand with superiors. TAURUS (April 20-May !!O): You are. due for surprite visit, call or special message. Travel could also be on agen- da. Routine changes. You will have to adjust. Key ia to ride with tide. GEMINI (May 21..June 20): You receive gift or male wonderful buy of luxury it.em. Atmosphere brightens. You are reunited with family member. Where there was rancor, there now can be harmony. CANCER (June %I.July 31): neighbor, relaUve. Be alerl Whit you may regard u to various possl.bWties. burden could be biesolnf in SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- lse y all Dec. 11): Ecooomic factors disgu • our great Y now could loom larxe. Ch e ck is patience. Be analytical. budget. Bel~ too 1enerous Perceive reasoru. Refuse to could backfire. Avoid scat- accept auperficlal e:r· tulng forcet. Various aocial planations. contacts wUI event.uaUy prove LEO (July :a.Aug. :IZ): Ar-beneDcial be I .u •• • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. rangements can in~. 19): Cycle high : IF TODAY IS YOUlt BIRTHDAY you are a passloute lndlvktuaJ, intense, ~edlcated. Some recmt em~ Uonal wounds. a.re beglnnln& to heal Your social life picks up steam. • 'Ibere ls fun ln store -&od it'• about Um.e, too. To fhW WI Who'• ludl;, tor yeu 111 m.-..r end m.. "*" Sffll.IY Orn«r'• bdlft. HJ«!" Hiii!• lw ~ and W9n)trl. IMll Wnflllr.le \~NT': ~enhDAtt\. til'o'T, ::!~ Gteftd Cemr.I ltetloll. N-Yort.. N.V. 10017. Make no iromises YOU circum~s favor your canoot fulfill. Some arouod special efforts. Some routine you may not a ppr e c i ate matters can be eliminated. humor, Stress practicality. Those in position to smooth AJsoclate needs to erpnsa: yoor way will be cooperative.. M ·A 'I' Mal<a the contact. esa ux1 ••ry ~ (Aug. 23-Sept. 31 ): AQYUARIUSaln (Jan. lo!!O-Feb. American Legion Hall In RelaUonsblp b put to test. 18): ou g access areas Costa Mesa is lhe aettln( for Nolblng hallway will suffice, pnviously camoullaged. Key the meetinp or the Allllllary 1be more you give of youraelf, is to recognize information of to Barracks 12f9, VeteraM of me more you will receive. value when encountered. Ask World war J. The fint Tue.s- Tbe ttst ls up to you. qut3tions. Probe for answers day of each month members l..JllRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 22): and analyze them. gather for a buslness session New approach to domestic Pl.SC~ (Feb. 19-March 20): at 7:Xl p.m. and the third · s1...... You can help youne.l.f up rung Tu a....i for socl.al and concern 18 necessary. ..,,.. of 1adder. Meana this is time 1;00..lay 1 playing games with security. for acbJe~menL Invest in'Oipofl_uc_tiiatiiliipii.iimii, ----. One close to you deserves a 11 poo!Uve, booeot response. Act your own talents. Spotlight ;, ROBERTS accordingly. on career, standing in com- SCORPIO (Oct. %3-Nov. 21):.~m=unl=ty:. ==::::::::::::::::::::;; Olde Time You get greater sense of 1 J C S O E direc:tioo. One wbo seemed in-BUT HER H pp dlllmnt provides needed in· formatklll. Pay beed to Welton-Smith Names Linked in Ceremonies Geometown Manor- 2"' M. n.151'91 AVL ... ._ Hlrft of 17dll a. -.., . -COIJNTY'S IA"GQT NID MOST BfAUTlfUL Foof.uriltt Mo1111!1191 loof. A fam• Our Lady Queen of. Angell! earned his ma.!lers degree In HOME OF lly .,utchor colti119 for vour •11· Catholic Church, New p 0 rt bu!iness at use. He is a Eti'fta.n1/.rA.Wen joym111t th o ... , ill ta11dar moat 1vai/1.,la. Beach was the setting for the member or Delta Tau Delta. single. ring rites l i n k i n g The newlywab will mide FU R N ITU RE N!": .! ~ ~-::::;:;, Pamela Rose Smith and Kent ~in~H~olllJlyw~ood~·-----~=========~~~~~;;;;..,;;~~~ Bestnr Welkin. 1- The Rev. Ralph Harvey performed the ceremony for the daughter of Mr. and Mn. Forest Garfield Smith Jr. ol Newport Beach and the son of William Roosevelt Welton of Hollywood . Given in marriage by her father, the bride asked her sister, Mrs. Eric Dean Welton to be her mab'oo of honor. Bridesmaids were her si!ters-- in..faw, Mrs. Michael Smith and Mrs. Fore.U Smith, whole husbands served as ushers. Mrs. William G. Philbrook, the brktegoom'a 1ilter abo was a bridem\ai<t.. Courtney Pbilbl\iot WU the nower gJrl and Forest Smith IV was the rU. bearer. Attending his brotber as best man was Bruce Welton, and other ushers were Eric -and Craig Welton, brothers of the bridegroom. The bride Is a graduate of Newport Harbor Hlgll School and the Unlvenlty ol Southern Caillornla where she pledged Kappa Alpha Theta. She ii a National Olarlty League debutante. Her husband is a graduate of Hollywood High School aod Irvine women who feel a need to become involved in their community through service projects, friend1y enterprises and good will are welcome to attend be meetinii:. All interested women may call Mrs. Fry al 833-0248. That she personally has Ii!-•""""""'.., ......... •--•••••••• been through the problem shows up in the introduction when Miss Trainer writes: ; • HAIR BEAT Potluck A Picnic A !amlly plcnlc -annual event for the 0r8flge County Chiropractic Society and Its Lldies Auxiliary -will IBke place at I p.m. Saturday, Aug. 15, at Jrvine Park. HAIR STYLIST Activities will I n c I u d e games, horsebad r i d in g , bicycling arKl h i k I n g . Chairmen for the day are Dr. and Mrs. David Bundy, with Dr. and Mrs. Paul DeLoe BS co--dlairmen. ROY IS IN EUROPE • WATCH FOR HIS LITTER FROM ABROAD 11 MIMtoM tlU.NI MIWPOCT canu ........ ~ picnic will be a potluck style, with Dr. and Mrs. John Such acting u f o o d coordinators. Chi ropra ctic doctors, whether members of the 90Clety or nci. and their families are invited to attend. Dr. Bundy will supply furlher lnfonnallon at 13M.105. ORDER YOUR NEW CHEVY VEGA NOW FOR EARLIEST POSSIBLE DELIVERY. CONNELL CHM OUT CS 211' H•rhr llW. :Ull j;=='=·=·=·= ..... ======-"""===='"°===;11 FAIR ~ f•ll, f•!r, f•ttoel. ll!o1e !lit•• woNl1 111m up fetton 111 opetatio11 011 the DAILY PJL01 •'llofl•I '''' ovary 'ay • "I once tried duplicating chicken tetrau:ini r r om memory on the theory that it's impossible to louse up anything made wilh chicken, 1nushroo1ns and spaghetti held together by a wine·based cream sauce. "I loused It up by in· ventlvely substituting red wine for white. The entire dish im· mediately turned a ghastly shade of maroon, and that ended dinner." Dancers Eye Stars . . -.. ~ . . . . - ,) -· . APPRAISALS DIAMONDS GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWELRY Soutli Co•ll 'l•1• lfhlol •I tho $011 Dle90 Fw,. Co1t1 M11• 140·'066 The Tee Tattler 13 13 . . ~ . COOK ON WHEEL~Demonstrating u se of "glider" which can be used by handicapped homemakers is Mrs. Juruth L. Klinger, project director for a research program concerned with helping the disabled or aged to care for their families. GEIST FOR FALL Anniversary Harmony Sung by Harborites THINK Members o f llarborlites Chapter of Sweet Adellnes will be "oul or Utis world" in song durwg the monlh of Au gust. Monday evening at I p.m. in College Park. School, Costa Mesa. WESTCL!Ff PLAZA NEWPORTElt INN Marking the 1 O t h an- ni versary of the singing group, song rests geared to that theme will take place each 54 ~ FASHION ISLAND N1wport c-tet a Opp. l reedwsy e 444-422J e featuring FLORSHEIM for Men and Women 1. e COMPLETE CHILDREN'S DEPT. ( featuring STRIDE RITE • s H 0 :5 s • Chapters £rom Mlsslon Vie- jo, Garden Grove, Nortb Orange County and Arcadia will herp celebrate the oe> caston by appearing on soo- cessive 1'iooday1 and perfcrm- ing their competitive numbet1 from a regional competition. Prospective members of the group and their guests are invited to attend the sessions, when the Harborlites chapter will be under the dlre<::tion of Mrs. Tony Ravallo. Women from Oriiige Coun{y are invited to join the group, a part of the intemational, nonprollt Sweet Adelines Inc. whose purpose is to educate Its members in the art of four part barbershop harmony and to provide service to the community by entertaining civic, charitable and social groups. • ~_,SH0ES Regular meetings will con- tinue to take place on Mon- days at S p.m. and those in- terested in joining th e llannooy may call Mrs. Doo Partin at 968-7471 or Mrs. William J\alltelli at 532-1741 . OPPORTUNITY WEEKEND WURLIZER ORGANS ALL Nr:W MOOIU DISCOUNTt:D 150 / UP TO /0 ' HAMMOND ORGANS WAlllCttl MUil( Cl'f'V MAI l lt'N Al'l'~ll(t!O vou• N•• HAMMONO DI AL.IRI Ntw !Mlllhi It• h-.,.. ttr "''""'" ""'"''•••ll•11i.. THE BEST GRAND -ORGAN AND PIANO BUYS OF THE YEAR! SAVE ON GRANDS IALDWIN, was $2199 -·············· .. ········-········ NOW t 11M STEINWAY, was $2999 ............................ -. NOW t 21" CHICKER ING BROS., w&s $1699 .. -···--· NOW t 1J" 010 . STECK, 1k'8S $1699 ···--·· ........ --NOW $1)M M AltSHALL WENDELL, \V8.8 $1699 -········ NOW t l2tt WUltLITfER ···-·· .. ·-·······-···-·-.. ·---l,.cl•I tlott LANCASTER ·--·· ··-··········-·· .. ·--·-·-l pecl•I t "5 ftltlMllR ........ ········--···-·· .. ·-· ... -....... ,_ ... l,.cl•I t 6M ANDlltSON . . . ··--··· -··-·· .... -·····-lpecl•I $ 6" All havr bet>n rebulllt ln our shop and carry a 10 year w&rranty. -~~~--'-'-'-'~-'-~~~"'--~,..-~~ WURLITZER PIANOS All new Ooor models MELVILLE CLARK PIANO SPECIAL DISCDUNTID 1 5e1-UP TO -,. .... , ,,.k. ""· .. ,.,.. 1595 ..._,., ilfflh'9'Y .... -,,.. i.-.,..,..,...11,..r •l f'f'aflfy. Wallichs1®&1eCily SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA ""°"" 54o.JIH HOUltl: MON. thrv SAT.-11•11 OPIN SUNDAY -NOON te I "'"" DAll.Y PILOT J'T Homema kers Determined 'Handicapped Manage Mu lt iple Tasks By PATIU<li MdlOllMACK NEW YORK (UPI) -Jlow would 1"U peel a potato, .U.. a tomato. or open a box of coca Oakes -usblg just one hand! For mll1iom of American homemakers -an estimated one in io -8UCh cballqes are a three-times-a-day oc- currence u they attempt to cook for tbemelves and their families. M°"' lhaa 12 million han- dicapped homemakers bave arthritb:.. otben, in wheel chairs, suffer from the af .. ter effects ol. polio1 strote.s, ae- cidenb. Some have a loss ol feeling In Ille hands which, for safety's sate, must b e .sensitive to bot and cold in the kitchen. Many can 't see well -or at alL A new book, "Mealtime Manual for Ille Aged and Han- dicapped" offers solutions for the handicapped homemakers. From the Institute o f Rehabilitation Medicine at New York University Medical Center, the book ill dedicated ''to tboae stalw ar t -wbo, althoolgh llmlt..i by ..,._I pniblems, .... -·-In their ahlllty and love In caring for their families." Judith Xllncer d Ire et e d _ _....carried out undef a grant lrom Ille Campbell Soup-Fund. The roultlng belpllll hlllts !or Ille handicapped were two years in Ille making and leoting. The ........ii ll!'OOP also iJ>. eluded medical advisers, a home ecooomw., a b I o - engineer, at1 electrleal englnett and a graduate englnetting lludenl Tbe boot eontains recipes: easy for the handicapped, tells how to make use of equipment. found in most local stores, li.sUi short-cuts and safety tips. A board wilh two stainless steel nails protruding is used to bold meat. vegetables, fruits and ci.ber foods when the one-handed cook works with them. A rf..lsed comer of the board stabllizes bread wblle rt is being spread or buttered. suc- tion cupa on the ba.se keep Ille boanl lrom 11iding ..... d. Ninety-Nines Leader Participates in Race The newly installed chairman of the Orange Coun- ty Chapter the the Ninety- Nines is prompUy taking to the airways. Mrs. Richard Bnmdqe will participate with Mrs. Denn.is Single Moms, Dads Planning Summer Dance Planoing a danc:o In 1i>t Di.sneyland Hot.el Cl1 Saturday, A11g. 15, will be members and auests ~ ~ Without Partners, Soutlletn Reglooal Cooncll. All single adults .. Invited to atteocf the IL1IMl«' event: themed Dance Away the Do( Dayo, --to begin al t p.m. Proceeds lrml tile evening, !or which music will be tu!> piled by Bob P!'atl ond h1' orchestra, will help send delegates to the a n n u & I Pa~ Without Partner• Convention in st LoulJ nm: year. Sbattock In Ille Palms to Pines all women air race to begin at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Santa Monica Airport and coodude In Independence, Ore. Al3o enter.cl lrom Ille group are the Mlssea: Shirley Tanner and Chris Hoffman and Mrs. Pete Paoli and Mrs.· Howard Rinehart. Other newly Installed of. ficer1 serving with Mrs. Brun- dage in the Ninety-Nines, an lntemat¥tnal organiution of UC6111ed women a i r p 1 a n e pilots, are Mrs. Jim Appleby. vice chairman; Mn. Cliff Nelf, secretary; and Mn. Dale Koepke, treasurer. InstallaUon ceremonies for the newly elected group took place In Ille Fullerton l,irport Roslaurant. A sponge doth, pJaced un6er "We have DOt been able to a bowl while the one.handed change package or appf4nce cook ls mWng keep.1 the bowl designs, but in two yean tlOmt from turnlng. eqcouraglng change ha v e pll..... w!lh dllflculty •• knoberelllaetolunl ... -lall OUL The knees come Into play bien noted,'' .VJ's. Klinger when the one-handed said. "Private ~ la be(in· nlng to explore better SOJll- tlooa with keen Interut," Mr1. Klinger sald. "Perhaps before too long we'll see eome ot the results -oo tbi market for all of us to share." homemaker wants to anchor Represent;.;tives of several a box or bag of food to be companies have watched film opened. of womoah struggling t.o open Mrs. klinger, a n oo-containers or handling ap- cupationaJ therapil!ll, bad heJp,,;=~~~~:;:~~~;:::;=;;;;=:;:::::~~ from handJcapped petSOM lnll the development ol praclical tips. "Mrs. H. i! one," she said. "A post • polio OOU..Wlfe with minimal use pf both bands and anM, she uses her moutb to bold tools to prepano foods." Ligh t Shed On Moods A new makeup mirror ha& four light moods: day, office, evening and home. 1be mirror uses a new lamp that reproduces a true pure north light, giving tbe mo6t accurate light reproducUon at any dial, the manufacturer says. In Harbor Ceni.r l/2 ....... SIZIS • THE BRIDE WORE AN ELEGANT NEW WEDDING SET CALLED, "THE SWINGING SEr' These are just a few of the ixampla of today's look in wedding set.a. Stop in 11nd take a look at the entire collection. From top: Textured bridal set with diamond cluster engagement ring, S595. Textured set w ith round and marquise diamond engagement ring, $350. Ove rlap bridal set with solitaire engagement ring, $250. Clie1q• Accow11h ln..,it.d Americtn Eipr11' l •t1kA"'1ricard 1~d Ma1+1r Chtr91, too. SLA.VICK'S J1w1l111 Si11c.1 ltl7 18 Fashion Island Newport Beach -6'44-1180 Op" Molldciy llftd fTIHy 111tH t~I • - Dance Club Square RiQ:en Sq u a r e Dance Club "iwlngs out" every Wednesday at I p.m. in Ille First Methodist O!ureb, c.osta Mesa. We'll be back f1·01n Vacation and Open for Business Mon day, A ug. 17 Martin's Anniversary Sate! Featuring eit S'4µ American Traditional AT ONCE-A-YEAR .._ .... SIDE CHAIRS ._ ... ARM CHAIRS 42.95 53 .95 «:ode life••'• OWnt Bo•e-4 P 11l'tllt11re Store/ Phone 148·1131 ' SALE PRICES Dint i11 th1 w1r111, frl111illlv co,,.fort of Am1rlc111 Tr1dltio111I fur ftlt11rt ind t•wt 111011..,, too l Tlll1 1119111! 9ro~p llv f1 mou1 C•J Sllopt f•1twr•1 1 '41" 1ct190111I t1lil1 with two I 2" fJU1, t11d with to p pro;t>cttd Ii.,-9•nul111 Formic I in b••util11I mttcllM 9r1l11. A h111thonit liuf,1t 1llCI chl11• 1110 1n 1111, M111v otflcr livin9 roo"' 11141 litff,oofrl 'iot11 •11 1tlt cl111l11t 011r I •th A11niv•,.••V 1tl•· h•llle ,...,.1 EXTENSION TABLE ,,...._ .. w,. ............. ffflh)I CHINA BUFFET 216 .95 319~95 1865 Harbor aln. Downtown Coda Me1a " I I; I J DMlY P'l\.OT Thu!'Wy, Autust 13, 1970 DArtlME MOVIES FOR ADVERTISING IN THE W 'EEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 Shrine Engagement · Moiseyev Dance1·s Remain Unequaled Money's the Cure By TO/.f BARLEY Of a. NIJ' Plttf Slaff Russia's m agn If ice n t Moiseyev Dance Company is back in town with another of those visually beautiful and tremendous ly virile programs tnat IOllg ago led this crltic to regard them as without equal Jn the world of folk ballet. They drew a standing ova· tlon from the Shrine Auditorium. Los Angeles, au· dience Ct! the occasibn of our viewing and it would have betn criminal lo have ac· corded this superb daoce group a les.ser recognltion in the wake of a vastly en· tertaining program that mixed offerings new lo the American scene with some of the well remembered and well loved stagings that have long been jewels of the Moiseyev repertoire_ They got an even bigger ovation for the final act of lheir glltterlng performance when they gave us a post.cur- tain performance of "Turkey in the Straw" and followed lhat for a delighted audience ~ith a bouncy rendition of "HalJ, Hail, the Gang's All Here." Inevitably. someone in the audience offered the observa- tion that this was "pretty shrewd diplomacy" on the part of these happy Russians. We prefer to remember the reaction of a pretty, blue-eyed blonde onlooker who felt - out loud -that if international relatl~ were only allowed to hinge on thi.s kind or e1- change the ~Id's diplomats Ing' foot-stamping Cossack would soon be out of a job. routines' pretty Russian girls For our money, the Moiseyev drifting gracefully through dancers' final tribute may peasant dances that must be have been planned but it L"t!r-among the Joveliesl and most lainly was sincere. reminine in the world and at 'l'wo ballets new to the leasl o n e rubber-legged repertorle (at least in our ex-Russian who vau lted high over perlence) drew tremendous the heads of the chorus line ovations ind are obviously in lo bring sasi>s of astonishment the Moiseyev book fo r a long time to come. "Partisans" is from the audience. a graphically danced and Then there are a couple beautifully designed setting of routines rich m Russian which movingly illustrates humor which should bave laid Russian guerrilla operations most of the audience in the against the Nai:is in World aisles but which must have War II and "Gypsies' is a caught quite a few long-faced lborougtily romantic a n d onlookers on the wrong day. splendidly danced sequence "Old City Quadrille" and that very vividly brings out ''Sunday" were cleverly danc- the haunting appeal of the ed and beautilully staged Romany way of life. essays in Soviet humor and Sophia Loren plays a wealthy female tycoon and Peter Sellers a poor physician in "The Mill.ionair· ess," a sophisticated co1nedy. on The CBS Thurs· day Night Movies, shows tonight at 9 on Channel 2. 'Once More' Comedy Cast at_ Huntington . It's !till the same old finale they deserved a better fate and our hope ls that it always than the few giggles and 9nig will be for there is just gers they received. They went nothi'ng on I.he folk dance down very well in our comer, scene to compare with the at least. rousing' b r e a t h t a ki n g Catch this latest Mosieyev "Gopak"that sent this critic's offering if you are at all in- party home shining-eyed and te rested in folk ballet. It's quite breathless with the just a})oul the best thins in ,_., __ _._._., __ $oO dto 111.mmottl IVp# apoctKVfW SlrltWy hfiY, 100 ,_..,. flf ..,,_ Gfe•U9t st.-Oft EitftftS" 1119n. AlfrC. 1) .•••••••..•..• 1:00 , .... ffl, A111. I' •••• , •••• , 2·45 & l :Oll p • .._ .. .._. 11....- $1! • .w,. 1~ ••• 10:>0. 1 :io • 1:00 ,.111. J'·oo-µ.oo-J'.oo.zt.so s..n. Alli· ii .....•....... 2 l6p.-. 'II.SIM .. M 0 II "'°"· Aq, 11 , • , , ••••. 1 '$I 1:00 ,.... C-.. Fri. •a, SIL I S.. Ifft.. ... ,. 11 ••••••••• 2"4S & 1:00 1.•, Wed, Mc. II ·-·-···2..S& 1.001.a. Tldl.eb. Now Diii SM ~ COMtNTllOti CEHTO. SO. CAL. lllU$11C .. AU.wru.& AGLHCaU. WAU.ICHS ---L-IUCll AtlJili Tll'S. AUL fl L .. I.& wo.-.11JM••••.a. ... t c.....-. ... Oftlf-lOOlt .......,._, ................... ~ .. a ...., ~,..,. IWlil FIEl w;a tldl 1kMt ,.,.,... • ,.._ • ., Mtll. Casting has bee11 announced for the opening prod uction of the Huntington Beach Playhouse's 1970-71 sea.son, lhe HalTy Kurnitz comedy "Once More Wilh Feeling." Ron Albertsen will portray the temperameatal symphony conductor Victor Fabian. with Carol Faulstick cast as his sometime wife Dolly. The ever-present agent, t.1axwell Archer, will be played by Martin Fuchs. Others i11 the Huntington "hc:eli..t ••• 11.,,...,lc .......... ,.. 111111"1 ••• ml~ •¥.., bt t.cllnlcJU., Htlw thlft 'TIM ElllllHI Jummer' ••• 1r1lltft 11111 ... 11r11lnlnt -•" '-•~I I• ti.o.. wtse "'¥• n1v1r ~ ,...r • wr1k•nl.'' WED.·T)IU•S . .P• l.•SAT., AUO. IJ·ll l.AGU .. A •EACH HIQH AUD. •H PHW A- Mtllllt 11.M CMlldr1t1 f!Hlder 1111 11.U kr-!lnw: I :• P,M. NOW p:LAYING • ONLY ON CABLEVISION --.~ "INTOLERANCE" By D. W. GRIFFITH NEWPORT: Mon. thru Fri., 9 p.m.; Sat.·Sun., 6 p.m. MISSION VIEJO: Mon.· Wed.· Fri., at 9 p.m. Never Before on West Coast TV! The Original, Uncut Classic STARTING MONDAY, AUG. 17 "THE BLUE ANGEL" Stirring Marlene Dietrich Thi• "Cl1ulc" Movie Cofh Only 22cl P:lnd out whit elM you're mi1.sin9, c1ll tod•y for your hook-upl ''THERE'S MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TV!" Beach cast are Bill Williams, wonder of it all. its field that you'll ever en- BilJ M~land, Arvid Ma Ina a 1 ii•lt;;h;;a;;s;;e;;ve;;r;;yth-in;;g;;' ;;lh;;e;;s;;w;;i;;rl;;--co;;";;";;";;';;· ______ _, and Ron Fili an. An eighth 11 role, calling for a middle-aged Latin type, is yet to be cas t Directing the production will be Tom Titus, who has staged plays in Mission Viejo, Santa Ana and Westminster. Randy Keene is producer for the show, while An11 Fili an is stage manager. "Once More With Fcellng" will open Sept. I! for five .~fJU//J ( rJ(IS/ f(<fJC/"/Or\ WIDNISDAY & THURSDAY "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY" FRIDA Y·SATUIDA Y-SUNDA Y "ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD" 1., To11t Stoppord F-Olt ltE5EltVATIOH5' CALL .... IJ6.l 1H1 HtWPOfl 11¥d., Cotti Mtlol weekends, through Oct. ID, at.1~"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~ the playhouse, 2110 Main St.1: in Huntington Beach. Reserva· lions are bei11g taken al 536- 8861. Un11ell •r11111 :.= ~ Continuous Daily from 2 p.m. LOOK TO EDWARDS LUXURIOUS CINEMAS FOR THE BEST SHOWS TONIGHT ""'*1' • -<:oil•~ """' -... .., .... --..... ·-------· NOW EXCLUSIVELY Gr "PAnON" Geort• c. Scott • • Bl:llCH 8 . AT •I.LI• • I •ft. C:OllOt HY('(. II O"N 01100 PWY. M 7·BM• • "UNTINOTOM B-..CH E11191 GllMtf O Oonlld S""'9rt1.-d ""*A*S*H ltl!M ti ! l.L$0 .. TMI •AMO" 151 =..-.:t-T"~"":=:.t:";9':: ""' •1co10 w111 GEOIGI C. SCOTT e KAii. MALllN "PATTON"· GP NOW IN SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY AT THE EDWARDS HUNTINGTON CINEMA AND HOLDS OVER IN NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY AT THE STADIUM "2 DR·IN "'M~S·H' IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDV SINCE SOUND CAME IN!" -,...,l•n• ~ ... , 1'; • ., Ycukt• • NOW AT BOTH THEATRES • STADIUM #2 DRIVE· IN ', ... SplHslaing Alo:tag \Vith arms and feet f!ailin.1:L nine-year-old Martin Len1bke of Anaheirn drives his surf n1at throui:?:h the \Vaters of Ne\vport 1-Iarbor ofi Balboa l sland. ID.t.IL 'f l"IL0 1 Sll lf ~ .. .Judgin,t:: fron1 his expression, his mission apparent· ly is a seriou s one. • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Check Out Books Vi Telephone A book ia as near as 1 lhe closest telepbooae in dun· tlng+.on Beach now lhat T tbe library has opened its tnew "dia~a-book'' system. ( • Llbrary patrons ma'y id/al 536-9327, ask for a parlitular book, and wait for 1he mail the next day. A member of the library staff will mail the bocli.Jm. mediately. When it arri~il - po.9ta.ge paid -the r~er remoVe!I it from a s~al carton, pots ZS ceoU id an enclosed m a n i I a en..,elope, lhen returns book and mOney in the same carton wheoo he ·s finished reading. The new system was in· stalled by city librarian Walter Johnson in an erfort to increase. the library's use by residents of Huntington Beach . Who Cares? OAIL Y l'ILOT 111tt """" Festival Visitor Mary Mdinlso {center) the onJy woman member of the Swaziland Parliament in Africa. is shown art displays at the Laguna Festival of Arts by SalJy Reeve. (left ) festival publicist. Miss Mdiniso is visitin,i? the United States this sununer with State Department in terpreter Michele MacKeUar (right). ANTIQUE ANTICS No otli•r newtp•p•r In lh• world c1t1t 1bo11t your commu· 11ity lik• your community cl•ily n1w1p1p1r ... , •• lt't the DAILY ~~~l~~~:en~ ~.~~tre~:! .. i;'~"~or~.~~;;;;;:;~~ ,, STEY(, DAN & IY•ON FENLEY Pilot who replaced a crop-for Slusser, said he "heard duster killed last week: in a a snap, looked up and saw crash Jost his life Wednesday the plane tumi'llg a somersault when his plane clipped a 1n the air." po1vcr hoe. Slusser v.·as hired by Wilbur II 'I'll/ 11111111 11111 lwl.,..hl...., Prtlllfl<I condlt111!11 llt eM\>911 19 ••I '1'011 IO tn•wlnt yovr hntt•n•l" Cleir 11p te 1111 tlllllw1, ctnlkltr th• •lllt yo.. would JM In "' you "'''' • cltlttn al Mtikt Clly. Orl,,.o .. 111 1r1lllc In 11111 l!tndlCI..,. clp!lal art c11t- cedt'd to IHI 1111 world'• W11rll - tYIHI 1 n11 llf:lew 1111 li.rvm·u:•rvm 1nl k;1 pr1cllc.cl on 1111 bllul•••r1b •I George Gordon Slusser, 44. Aviation to replace Ed Jack- Richavale. aliL, was dusting son, Yuma, who died last Wed-lf'"!;~~~l~i ~ in a Grumman ncsday in a crash, Slusser A -a bip ane when he failed .. , ...... , tn Mt•k• Clly II h con1kl1r«I • tllltr•ct 11111 I• ~• llrot 11 •••rY llfMl, 1 tlfll of ltlnt hllrt It 111'1' lfi TM .. ..._ 11111 .. trtttlc tor ""''' 1111• 1 hvndrtd y1n11 tnd • wMll· nHI It p111 1111 1111 1 .. 1. Tv.,.I 1r1 wld1, 1•HP•nt 1r1ce1111 m1n..,111n -I• lltfl9 I• Iha Clrl, lnK~I ... Hut• .. ,.._,., 11Ptlgllt. AdOl119 hi tlle l>le0d·Ch1lllll1 <tllllflleft ••• lo ...... •Kill..,n, 1t1 cwn• . . , ••• 111• ""'nl•1 M l>k"'°IK llilllrlf ~R tlHI IWl ltl IVlf"l ll11y 11 ... ac:b Ill lbl lt•lllC, Y••· d<lvlll!I I" twr 111<.k ti tt11 wttdf hll'I t c-1 de"g-lo rltlu 11'11 11klf~wlltr1n, b<~ w• II lt•il d..,1 ti.vi 11 e1<1llM wllh fWlnn1 ltl S!lf>lltY dtlVlfl HVlll dlYI I -I I A"d. 1,.eklll1 et orlwl...,, ••• ,...wr 11i1r1 flll'tl '""~ltly P"IKllHI Dy 1n111r•11C1r 11 "°'· k 111r1 hi <•II i3'-1JlJ 1o1 WI ctn work 0111 I ,..,. 9r1m lor you. IYtltON Fl!NLEY INSUltANCE. fO'l b'llln In N1111tlngt011 •••dt. 'Tht wiF1 bas --hagg"'9 tne 1 b a M 'oatl" Tony Tovatt Sez w""' w1M• a tur t1>11t Ill C•lilor1111r S"e'a re.oily •ati.er lltvt 1 "m.or<:nfd p<i!r" "''"""' •M dryer -oy wn.,1poo1 availaDI• now •t 101/""TT'S. She'll bf' .... "•PCJY wttn "" HU-<_,,. l....;t 11111 lllttr. Ille •111>11!<-W•lll Cr<ll and 01ner tea!u•e• t....,t •he'll ,...,,.. rniu 11111 tur coM. l1011till TOVATT'S APPLIANCES 401 Moh1 St., H111tf119fo11 leach Sl•·156l l roolihunt I. Wlll'11er Fo11ntol11 Yall1y t62·J41i6 YOU CAN TRUST YOUR TRANSMISSION TO ANY OF AAMCO'S 550 CENTERS. WORt.D'S l.MIGE.Sr Tff..lt#.slllSSION 81'£CMJ..J!;TS CAPISTRANO BEACH JJttO DOHENY PA.RX ROAD-NIAii VONS 496-1211 1---0PEN-MONDAY' NITE TIL __ _ 9 P.M. DANA VILLA COCKTAii, l ,OUN<SE SPECIAL STEAK DINNER FRIDAY EVENINGS 5 to l 0 p.m, 011ly 1.95 GOODBUSH GROOVY ENTIERTAINMINT W£DN6SDAY THRU SUNDAY DA.NCING NIGH'tU' EXCITEMENT PLUS THUR.SBA 't' N ITE IS l'ART't' NITE 34111 S. c-1 Nlt~wey DANA POINT 4U05727 to pull up fast enough and "'as pulled from the y,•reck.age clipped the top wire over .a by Gallyen and his father , power line. offit'iats ~aid . Don. who owns lhe crop- Andy (:al!yen, 17, Yuma, dusting firm. ~--~---=-~~~~~- Toda)"s Stocks Today Air Conditioning is great for hot summer d1ys. You can enjoy your leisure time more and 11Hp btttter. HAVE AN ALLERGY? Purchase a HONEY· WELL ELECTRONIC AIR CLEANER WITH YOUR NEW AIR CONOITIONER, o• •dd it to your existing S'f'f•m. The Honeywell eliminates up to 95 1,4 of the airborne dust and 991/. of the pollen passing through your air conditioning system and i_!!to your home. Call us tod1y for total summer comfort. PACIFIC HEATING CO., INC. AIR CONDITIONING SPECIALISTS FREE ESTIMATES L., ... Hllh • '/lel• 837-2000 gas air conditioning 1115 Lot111• c., .. Iii. GRAND OPENING FASHIONS BY M-ARCUS CONVENTIONAL STYLES SPECIAL PURCHASE TWO ITEMS GET THE SECOND FOR 1/2 PRICE .Thro~hA8B 451 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY AT LAGUNA HOTEL 497-1320 Ir U.WltlNt• lilTl.AOA Tlni., ton.cl or illlKl\oa 11•11 ~ ~ .,. "" t i • mlkl t111ne1 ,,,...,_ pOo, 11p.c:Lllllf Pftci-red !or t "* cHic IYlll ., ctllrlno. Tinted n11r 1llould lie ,.,,,_poalld Ill ,.,,rn •• ,.,. ., 1'ht11 llllt ,...!er, T-or bl•~thfl<I Mllf' r"'*"'• NII to 11\glltly coaltr Wtt9r. Mtlr ,.,., Ill lltf\tly to .... I ltrleil, .. , II t tlryer ls -, t VOIO 111111 llDt I ~1111<1, Tllllelf IMlf: Mn<ts to llecOtM dry INI llrlml. t'tt11 clllllllllotl ls nlct lY corr•lld ~ 1111 -of • 1ia~1 er..,.. Mir Jll•nalriO or cond;11011ln9 lrNllMfl.~t rour Mir Clfl Mve m•! lrltly 11'"'1~'f0\I Wint, II II 11 P•OP. .,ty Cl,. . Whetlltr II'• color, • ~-r Wll'ljlelo Ind '"' or • wllolt "" •lvlt • ....,.,,.. Oii NANOV INT ,I.OM "TMI! HOUSE: II 1 14f ar TV knoll 11~ 1oo.-1y, PIKI t Nt>i!ll piece of CICllll bllllnct ft ,.,. ""' 1111 llrmir. - ~ <( <( z :::J "' <( __J Compare Our COMPETITIVE Gas Prices! • • • BRING THIS AD FOR A FREE CAR WASH WITH ,lll·UP OP UNION eAJOLINI fl ...... Mi.,, GLENNEYRE Laeuna Car Wash 140 S. COAST HWY. LAGUNA BEACH·494-1922 0 -~~~~~A ~O. COAST HIGHWAY j fii/OST AfAJOR GR~:o1rr CARDS ACCEPTED OPEN lJAILY, SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS It 's Habit-forming Oon'l grt wrary. Rrad ltary, Bill Leary's one·llnt commtnts Oii tM-world arour.d Ul can bt habit·forrnl119-Check lOd~'s Grvt'lll by ltary. STORE-WIDE SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE 20% to 50% Discount Suits, Sport Coats, Sweaters, Jackets. Sport ShirlS, Knit Shirts, Dress Shirts, Slacks, Shorts, Swimwear, Deck Shoes. and llats . #·1~:.S SHOP tit AVINIDA OIL MAI, &AN tLIMINTI 4t2•2U DAILY PILOT JJ,4 IN HARIOR CENTER 2300 HARIOR COSTA MESA SEMI- ANNUAL SALE! SALE! SLACKS s100 With Purchi1se Of On• At Reg. Price SALE! SUITS s1000 With PurcMte Of One At R... Price SALE! SPORTCOATS s1000 With Purchlse Of One At R99. Price SALE! 2 PANTS SUITS s39so THIS STOREWIDE , SALE ENDS AUG. 28TH • ;{INGS' CHARGE 646·4242 ! .I r Thu~}', Auguit 13, 1'70 • Turkey Threatens to Stop Foreign Archeology Work ANKARA. Turkey (AP) -Mellaart, who sald Catalhuyuk Prof, Rodney Young of the Empire, headed from Tbit year foreian was "the flrst r<13l civiliza-University of Pennsylvania Constantinople. ByianUne .archeologbtl ~ working at Uon" and tbe "largest and found a royal Phrygian tomb treasures are scattered alt st.aites in Turkey, How much richest Stone Age site known." at Gordium near Ankara, over Turkey. Michael Gough king«· they wil dig i s· He was banned for his sup--possibly the tomb of King cf the British Archeological debatable, be ca u s e tbe posed role in the disaJr Midas. The m a g n i f i c e n t InsUtute is restoring a striking government i.s threatening to pearance of a board of gold bronzes and jewelry indicated Hfth century basilica at a put up a no-lresptssing sign. jewelry known as tbe Dorak the opulence and wealth of remote monastery n e a r 1be MiliF>' of EducaUoo treamirt. the lclngdom. Alahan, say& American and other Germans are excavating at "Jn the first and second The Byumline Inslitute of mllleUDlS Pouess certaln an-Hattusas, capital of the Hittle centuries before Christ the America restored the mosaic tiquea smugated from this Empire. Five t e m p J e s Anatolian cities were among paintings in Constaotinople's country: Unless these are unearthed there are amoog the ricbe.st, most important Church of the Holy Savior returned, it a•ys, permlts for the finest monuments of the centers of art and civiliza-at Cbora, 14th ce nt u r Y arebeologi.sts will be "review-second miUen.ium b e f o r e lion," ooe archeologist has masterpieces of bright color ed." Christ. written. and gilt. Constantinople is now It ia Pf«!PUing a list. ln the sevenOt century The greatest cf these cities Istanbul. U the tlftat is carried out, before Christ, the Lydian king, which passed from Hellenistic The relics and sites or foreign arcbeoSogist.s will lose Croseus, was minting gold at tc Roman rule was Ephesus, Selcuk and Ottoman Turkish a ricb field of operation. Dig-his capital oe Sardis and the south of Jzmir. civilizations are the pro- ging in TurkiJh .Anatolia pro-Pbrygian king Midas was Austrian archeologists have vi den c e of 'fur k j s h duces useful studies and boerding it at his capital of been digging there since World archeologists. They are also monumental rm from au Gordhtm. Both these sites war L They are still there, digging at 34 sites this yer. periods of history. were excavated by Americans. under Prof. Herman Vetter. Italian,. French, Canadian. In Turkey archeology starts A j 0 int Harvard-Cornell unearthing and restoring Uie Belgian and J a Pa n es e at the beginning. Cave man group is digging at Sardi!>, huge theater where St. Paul archeologists are working in settlements excavated by a ruined city in West Turkey. preached, along ~ith temples. Turkey , too. Turkish archeologists near the A m 0 n g o t h e r t h i n g s , brothels, marble streets and "Th.is country is a bay win· Mediterranean tourist resort Archeologist.s round there lh e homes of 2,000 years ago. dow to history," summed up of Antalya are called by a refineries where Croseus pro-At the end of fourth century, O"ile fcreigner. •·Naturally we top scholar "one of the major duced several hundred ounces Anatclia came under the are worf'ied about the Turks cente~ of prehistoric times." of gold a week. eastern Roman or Byzantine closing It up." Be11, Where's Mine? \Vhat do you say to a hungry lion'! Especially one \\'ho has 1nissed his evening repast. Those questions must be going through the mind al the driver of. t.hi.s Lion Country Safari feeding jeep. he tenacioU! king of beasts held onto the jeep and rala on two legs until he got tired and let go. Catalbuyuk and Hacilar. in1---='-------------------'------'-------- south ee11tral Anatolia, were excavated by the brilliant. controversial Britc>n, James ...... ., -st• basket Scenes of Caged Childhood ' Gal Solons Still Women WASHINGTON (UPI) -A check of this year's Congre$.Sional d j r e c t o r y reveals that cnly four or the t I women members o f Congress listed their ages or birthdates m their directory biography. 'Ibe four were Reps. J ulia Hansen {D-Wash.) 63, Catherine May (R-Wash) 56, Shiriey Chisholm (0-N.Y.) 47, and Margaret Heckler (&- Mass.) 39. Japanese-Arnerican Relives Days in 'Jewel of Desert' SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Sacramento physician flew to lbe Utah desert this month .. to look over some scenes from ::his childhood -the site or IN LAGUNA -~'-'.E J7J 5""' c... H .... W9J ,,. ,. ,,. 1 O.ys _ ... ~ ...... ...,_ (Ql. 497-1350 • \ • ' ' ' I ' W£~¥~1tl • Canllies !ieed~ D led fruit• fan<'/ r ' GfT PACKAGES . WE llM.. EYEllWHEl'E Dl\U6S $pectelisls i-Z £he L.cs( //rl of !lefll:C• f>ICI( llPOO\. ~UPl'UES • celllt:\IES • Wile.el... CAAIRS Cmmelic5 CaJt.di es Q.i~-ls a barbed-wire -enclo$ed detellUon camp where be aod 10,000 other Americana Wett confined during World War JI. Dr. Kenneth H. Ozawa spent the fifth, sixth. seventh and part or the eighth grade at the Topaz Relocation Center -some or that time under the. eyes ot soldiers in guard towers spaced along t h e barbed·wire fenci!s. He 'vas one of more than 110,000 U.S. Citi.zeM of OP" Nl.ptfy, 6:41 , ... Mofillff Hnff.,, 1 :45 fl·•· Japanese descen.t ...,.,.ldered a potAtlUal menace after Pearl J!art>t. They wer< put ln 10 camps ln Calllom!o, Arizona, Jdaho, Wyoming. Colorado, Utah and Arkanu. Topaz became tbe fourth largest community ln utah. 111.e Ozawu, living in Berke- ly, were given leu than six weeks not.ice to tell their pr~ perty and prepare f~ con. finement. "Molt people knew we had to sell so they waited until the last minute to get good bargains," O&awa r e c a I I s . "We sold our expensive piano fo; $15." NEW PODIATRY PRACTICE Dr. '· '#, ••~ lltt _.,.. lllf , .. ,.h'y 11".0:llC• ,,.,.. ,...... ,. utvni •Ndl. 11111 111-.. tf LN- Af'I '#11"111, HI 11M ~ wel"I ... tlllllt 11 1111 -9'11<1 i. .... ,_ .. •1111-'· 1111 It oWI e"-"Yff SI, Dr. •iNM»"'"" ii 1 _....., II' 1111 CllH1n1l1 111111 Al!llf'kll hlllla!ry ---l•lltM . EYES RIGHT .. DI. LOUIS J, H"SIL•ILD ' A1 w• 9row old•r, ou1 '""1cl11 whfch "1cco'"'"o .. 1t1" Ly , •• d11f1in9 th• 11111 •f th1 IYI for d11rp fo¢1u 011 tit• r1ti111, trow 1111 1bl1 to do th1ir job with1wt 1h 1i11 11141 f1li9w1. P1rh1p1 1 f1r1 i9ht1Hf PlrlOll Clll h1nd11 I clo11-up t1dt f1irly well fir 1 ti1r11, bul co11ti11w1C 1ffort• 11 the ey• '"u1el•1 to ICCOl'llflll• d1ie ceule lhl 1y'"plem1 of f1· ti9ue lo ep· :ilJ pe1rT irrit1ble 13 1ppe1r1nc1 of th1 oy•, he1C· 1ch11, '"'"re• pld tlri119, 1l11c1 H11 1f· 1 f1rt r1 .. 11ir1 .. • to 1cc11nrnc· .,,,, d•m1nd1 111 ••cf11lve 1111ount of 1n119y. 111 1uch c1111, 1y19l11111 r•li1v1 fl.1 1tr1in by focu1it11 ll9ht t•Y• wiffioul undue 1fforl 011 th• pir+ of tho •Y• 111w1cl11. H•• II b••• t10 10119 1i11ce y1ut loit I V• o11Ml111ti111? Don'l w1it 011y lon91r. C tll 141·1 211 ,..,.., ''HOW THE for ,owr •ppolnt1t111t. 0 11r •!- flc1 ;, co11v111l1nHv \1eot.4 '" WEST .... fl•o P11~h Shoppi11f C111· for. H1vt the chllch1~'1 •Y•I WAS WON'' dl1cko4 ftofot1 1ch1ol ••• ,... 1.~~::::::::::~===::;:::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;fl~iiiiiii PhoM 147· I 21iiil Si~ ''Artistry in Moving" ' for the BEST MOVE of YOUll LIFE can: 494-1025 580 Broadway r The family IJl'OI slJ. moollu at the Tmforan Race Track in Sau Bruno while the tarpape:r barracks were built in Utah. ~e parents, Ozawa and hia brother lived in horse st.alls, enQlUlllerinf! straw and horse dn\>J>ings whi,cb hid been ovedlOOked when the staU1 were prepared for bwnan habitation. When thlJ arrived in Utah, after a trip in a sealed train, ~:i~i:e :::. .. ~:; planted tr~' , some of which are stW n and growing in the e soil which Ozawa aa~· is ''Jlke face powder.'' Jlrmonth Those who listed no age includes Reps. Patsy Mink (0. Hawaii), Clarlotle Reid (R· 111), Martha Grirtlths (0- Micb), Lenor Sullivan (]}. Mo.), Florence Dwyer (R· N.J.), Edith Green CD-Ore.) and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R·Maine). Ninety-two percent of Ute 524 male members or Congress listed their birthdates. Eorfy llrd Specials MON. -TUES. -WED. FOR THE MONTH OF AUGUST THE SHAG An lntrlguliJg cu1 designed to actent your femi ninity. Equally romantic and casual, it's deceptive in lls ease of care. Created by exacting stylhts who understand the nature of the fla*tering shag. e Shag C)lt with shalllj>OO, reg. 8.~Now $ 6.SO • U you haven't any c1rl tendency, we suggest a genUe body wave ......... with cu t $17.50 e For ldded glamour, ""streak, with set $20.00 ARMONDS BEAU1'Y COLLEGE NOW FORMING NEW 'FALL CLASSES For lnform•llon (pll 4K-94U 340.52 L• Pl111, Ca • Point 011orted fftfivol plastic houseware items t fi';,;alpatt°'n 97~ "°'"'..,'°"' 147 .'."~ii.Ii• b<Kket laundry ba1ket • ~ -chi,. di1hpttft or 9 7~ fancy forty gla••-••et d-399-448 ,...,.. ,..., ......... ..-.... ... ...,..... , ........ ff. ""s .-.--~.-....... _......, ..... .,"'-- slip-on sweater • .• 4a1 .. ~40 1a9-41~.otinf ,. ....... wlthknt ......... , ...... .od; ... ; 951' .............. 5,. 111yl-. AwOf"IMI ,....,,,_ plaid skirts ··-s 1113 2a1 "*ill OCf')'iilc, ll4Kll1d II "'""' f• • trlsp A·li"• ailtl-"•· .. dt ,.i,, .... •.wtM ,,.kt calw l...-. ''wrangler'' ieans ··-500 • t1 l6 ...... 'V..,..1"1~ ...... ,.._ .......... ...... -, .. -1 •• 11 ....i • .,_, ...... ,1 •• stripe shirt ..... 2a1 --lff-wWI• .... ..... .... 1,...;w1 ......... . ~-"'"' trlM. W•1..._ i.z ,our poll ll'vt ·-,._., ............ y-IH0 ...... 11M,htor vl-lftttotN ... ,. ... , h .......... tk ...... 1MC.-.. ,.,_ .... _.,h,_ llltc~•fMI~. ironing 138 b-d "'" c1tt.., kNtt. AVAILAllf AT MOSJ LUCl'l OISCOUHTCIN1.1$ -k cat lltter pan 147 = ....... 67' l1-ln. x. 2•·in. lounger 176 pillow ... L pulYWJI pet shampoo 79* , ..... " . .._ .... .... .. ._. ... ,..,... .... ......,_ .......n ........... , ... ,............. 39' chew-be-........•.. bolo rugs 19 • ll , .... , 97~ 111 '•l'ICY , ............... .w.. ........... ........ ..... ,. Afil ... ic.co lco ,,.,.,._..,. , , , ........ II ............... .. 296 tefton 1 O.mch porcelain enamel skillet 199 Arn.I*"'""",...,-·· -..-eot "•ftodlwprG.u ... _11Wo,-dtr1-• ....,T..,._ll_._.. .................. . cer.aic tp00n r••t1 , 3 7 ...... ......... libbey glaue• ...... 10.... 97* 133 113 .... ,,__.h ..... t .. ..... ........... "'toww. , ... , ................ ....,.. .. ,...aMttw ...... •$o1•• .---............. ,. 0 cl ow hammer 76* ,..,.,.,,......... .... .., ... wwy1 ...... ·y-•IH-- 1f>'•1 ........ wt.•• ---(wlttl -i1.,.,.i,.. dllwt ti -•t111M11tw11 ........... IJ no• .. lp bathtub kits ....... flea collar as~ C....ffrll .... -"•'""" ,...,,._,,It, ........... ., -..... ., .. 3-ttll. ...... -.. 97' tie....,t chmft ......... . 100 ......... ....... 229 vitamin 'e~ ..... . ;;i~ba• .. ·--... J 99 , .. _ ::=r:::~'. ......... 2s9 100 .... ................ 329 senokot .......... . AVAfl.AlllATMOSl LUCICY •llCOUHT CINTllS . ..,-.., ....... •• :, • .• ; .i .-" ... " ,. ~---• 11 ,, .~ .. . ~-. . .. ~ -· DAILY l'ILOT .IJC Men in Service U.S. Aid Keeping L~ury_ Ships Afloat Midlhlpman Second Class Dalt TllorDtoa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. 'lllorntoo uf 21941 SLarfire Lane, lh.m- Ungton Btac.b, c: o m p I e t e d three weeks of aviation in· doctrinatioo at Naval Air Sta· lio n, Pensacola, Fla. Navy Midshipman Second Class P•ge F. K. Read, of 1221 W. Coast Highway, New p o r t Beach , is participating ln three weeks or training io the amphibious and subm.•rine phases of the Amphibious and Av I at ton Program at the N a v a 1 Amphibious Base, Coronado. Navy MJdsbipman Second Class Gary L. Stuart, son of Mrs. Grace C. Stuart of 331 E. Costa Mesa St., Costa Mesa, is participati'!lg in three weeks of t V ining in the amphibious and submarine phases ol the Amphibious and Aviation Program al the Naval Amphibious Base Coronado. 1 W ASl!INGl!'ON (AP) -The government is paying u much as $400 per passenger in federaJ aid to flnanct luxury cruises aboard ocean liners lo such exotic ports e Hong Kong, Tahiti, Jamaica and Bora Bora. Even a bubbly New Year's Eve party aboard a ship cntis- i.ng off the California CO&$t is covered by the rich fiow of federal aid. The payments are part of a special subsidy to American pas.senger ships that has cost tupayers an estimated $240 million over the pas\ five years. The aJd was begun for na- tional defense reaaons before World War 11. But now, government records show the only passenger liners beoelit- ting from the payments are JO cruise ships sailing the South Pacific and the cartb- ~. EXPAND AID Coogre.s, fed wilh plush campaign contributions from both seamen's unioM and the shipping industry, moved this year to expaod the aid to more cruises. The subsidies go mainly to ~ pay lhe dilference In lllt But Maritime Admlnlatro- h.lgber wagea fOr American ti~ ahow that t11>1m seamen u compltfld to the 1 ln tederaJ aJd wu paid for the low-paid aews oa fotef&n Santa Paula's two-week cruise. ahips, 'l1lll sublli<IY amoonted to The aid .,... nm as high $iOl.30 per -er. as half lhe Iota! -of a G&T SUPPORT cruise ship's voyage. CrWlt lhipe dori'\ even need A> the S.S. Santa Paula aail-lo go lo a fortlgn pert lo ed this •pring from New Ycrt gtl t!Je govenunent .upport. lo CUracao. HaiU, Jamaica Tie S.S. Pmidenl Wlbon and St. TbDmas in the Carib-ptllll a three-day New Year's bean. rew of the 300 tourists ~· "party cruise" off San sipping drinks in the Tecbo F\oaodaco this year, and a &r or dining off lllt pale OJJDPIDY oll!dal soys It will blue-rimmed china had any quallfy for aid. Tbe ship sailed idea Uncle Sam was their to Mexico last New Year's unsef'n financial angel. EVe. I Shipping officials say that wilboul Ibis led<ral aid to pay lholr h!gber ... ,. -· they would be priced out ol buaintss and the privauty owned American fleet ""'1ld be certain lo vaniab from lhe ..... The aid law makes teopln1 American 8b!Po tailing on overseas shipping routes 1 goal along with lhe oaliooll defense reasons. The defense purpose al lhe payments seems outdated. government officials agree, ln an era when a single junibo jet can carry twice as many GROUND BEEF lUClY IONDID fOI llNDEIKISS BLADE CUT STANDING 55~. FRESH ROUND CHUCK RIB FARMER JOHN FULLY HAM COOKID FRYERS STEAK ROAST ROAST U.S.D.l. GliD( A lUCKTlOP QUAUn lUCKY lOI" QUALITY WMDU IODT CHICl.lNS UlGI UD-lUClY TDP QUAUT'f IONDIDIElf fllll SHAMI Mi LP HOCl llMOYID 80NDID llEF IONDID lllf 29~. 88~. 48~. 79~. 58~. DISCOUNT PRICED FRESH PRODUCE ITfMSI 100%CHIQUITABRAND 1 oc BANANAS G~:~:" LB. U.S.N0.1 GRADE RUSSET 10 11. 54c POTATOES ':l~ ' FISH STICKS ~~'1':::~ ....... -........... 691; SKINLESS CODf!'~~f:.~_ ..... 65 ' ONION RINGS~~:: ................. 45' ICOLD KIST STEAKS ~;':t',':~~~~ ... 73c BEEF STEW :::.~:. .... -................... 36c EHCH llADAS VAii Df UMP'S (INJ, (lllUl,40' O:IClDlj 11'1 0L Pl$.._ •• ,. ROLts::~r,i::~~~~.~.~?.~~ ... -......... St JOHNSTON'S PIES ,..,_ ............. 69' IAHt.f. 11111.t.11. APll<IH. S-GAI ClllU Wi'Oll PIZZA Rolls Jll O'S ISAUIA6i, SNt!HI,, 62' ,lttUONl1 •0l.Pl.i.,,.,,,., ORANGE JUICE::~:~ ................ 47c BLENDED JUICE :'1o~~t!=~1.~ ............ 26c BIRDSEYE~~,,~,~~~.~ ......................... 41' llllllOl llAIS WfAlMONDS, MlllO V16llllllS WIONIOlll, OlllOlft Wl(llAMUllCL ,IAS. l lCl W/MllJN•OOMI) ,.. •... 1:4/&tf \J'TOMATOJUICE 27c ~UNT'S 46-0UNCI CAN BUNS llAIVUl D .. t (110TDO$ 31 < 01 llAMl111$1~) I Cf, PKL--- SPAGHITTl ~~~:~ ..... ,,, ... ,,_ .. 45' .,.. MACARONluoun..----19' GOl.D(ll GIAlll Clll.IO t. SMl.11 llllU.I BROWN GRAVY MIX ~;~J~u::;. ...... ~1 MJB TEA BAGS '""·'""·· ............ 98' ROYAL GELATINE1~r:: ................. 9' MARSHMALLOWS~::;~~~'" .......... 25' ~ BROWNIE MIX ;~\~:~~:.&. .... 43' ~. , ... Kat &;!. SIMBABEVERAGE 95c NO RETURN -16.0L .. BOTilES -6 PACK CHUCK ROAST mmm .... __ ,57~ STANDING RIB ROAST::.:'.'.--.. 98r .. T-BONE STEAK TAllJllMO'l'ID 'l" llltnllOMOIDIW.N-• I~• PORTERHOUSE \~'•-••-.. -·n:: E-Z CUT CUBE STEAK.-....... ,_.98f •. RUMP ROAST 88l. GAME HENS.-• ...,,,.._,,,., 79' SAUSAGE llNKS::::,'!:'oir.._29' CUT-UP FRYING CHICKENS~it.~:~-................. _ 33i YOUNG HEN TURKEYS UJ.D.A.IUDU ...... _ .................. _,,,, 48~. CROSS RIB ROAST::1:':' ........ -----··-·-.. 88~ MIRACLE WHITEIJ~~:'.:.~.-....... 73' .,... KlEENEX'°1n••••<1Atnuui 23' IU(l,IO) ... , ... ,.,.,...,, IVORY SOAP ...... , .... _ ........... -.. 12' .,... FABRIC FINISH::~'~'<'!~_.49' DOWNY somNER 1:~'.,'.' • ._ __ ,,,78' CAMAY SOAP ,.,,,. •. ,. ........ _J 7' ... Kiit&;!·--. AURORA TISSUE 25 C TOlllT 2-SOOCOUNTIOLU ..... CHIFFON TOWELs::::i .• ~.29' BOLD DETERGENT .................. ~!" ,,-. GLAD WRAP ::::i~ ........... 27' DASH LOW suosrn~:.:O'J ........... s2" ~ LYSOL SPRAY;i:':;:~':.~~ ..... 79c IVORY LIQUID ~r::.~',~ ............... ~57( IVORY SNOW n~~~:~~'.~ ................ 82' ()• .... Kiit&;! PORKl.IEANS 23c MUIR'S . 31.0J.CA• .,... GEBHARDT TAMAW .,,.25' .... PEANUT IUTJEl::':.'.w ............ *l" <>"' ORLEAtd SHRIMP~"' 51' SWEET PICKlES~~~.l.~'. ........... 63' .,... DRESSINGS::~'l~":~~.-39' fOll. .. Vlllllf~· (llQSt fllMSUID ISU.1101 OLIVES~· ..:.'.'~:'.:'.'.':'.'.~ ......... .41' -<r HEI KITCHUPl:lLm. ... 21' .,-. PRESIRVES::'.rl!~'.:.'.'.'.".' .... 45' LEAN GROUND BEEF CHUCK QUALITY •••••• EXTRA LEAN GROUND BEEF-ROUND QUALITY 77~ 88f.. BACON LUCKY SUCID 1·ll. PIG. RATH SLICED BACON:t:::::._78• FARMER JOHN BACON:'ll.":.._ 78' OSCAR MAYER BACON ..... -.. aa· THIN SllCED BACON~~~:'i'o'.'.~ .. 89'. ~ \:' . ! ·l~ .. ~....',."!!!J..~9.t.8.~ .. -.. 63< ~~~!.°.~~ .. ~~~--$)32 2~,!!l _SS• .. ~ .............. _ $366 ca .. 1111•1• .. MMt LIMllf Stetet) /OUK FORKEY BUYS U.1.D.L Rlllll ITm COUPONS Gladly Accepted LEMONADE TllUWUf 19' 1:1 01. Clll .. , ... ,., • .,.,.,,.,, • ., ()• .... Kat&;! NINE LIVES CAT fOOD!~'U~~~l 4' LITTLE FRISKIES:::t<.:.~ .......... .27' .,.. SPRAY STARCH ~~~i.l:.!~ .... 49' ;; •.• ,. LOW DISCOUNT PRICES UN HEALTH AND BEAUlY AIDS STOKELYCORN 2oc GOLDIN WHOLE KERNEL 1 17-01. CAN VETS' DOG FOOD IMfAT .. UllCU MI 9' •1~1111.u,1 ........... . GAINES DDG fOOD;r.:.w: ....... 'l" ' . I!" -'ii' . . 'Jilt~. ~O-DIOf ::.J '"""" COTTAGE CHEESE:?.i~l\ ............ 33• YUM YUMS COOKIESnoLIOX.N .. 45c ROD'S IMO ~:~'~t!,~~~~ .. ~ .. -...... 37' GRAHAM CRACKERS~::t<:01-39e oA PARKAY~:~z~::~.~~ .. : .......... 39' .,.. COOKIES \~~~::::~ ..... .41' LADY LEE ICE CREAM ·, -6S' fSIGAIWATOS,llMOllTMI NJ,Ol ... f;I TMl•SI " ll."'"•- -~01scouNT PRICES ON IRESH DEllCATESSEN ITEMS!'~= '"" 68 AMERICAN CHEESE '"""" c -"lllllUT llllf'l'll RICIS ••••.•••. 11 01. t i£ LONGHORN CHEESE \'.:.":" 69c 11111 WllClll• tllf.Nl.I ,,,,.,, , • ., .. !tll, Pl,ll. ROYAL SALAMI 69c Ill •O' ............................ 11 lttlllll KNUDSEN'S SALADS 39c u duo 'Dolla'JS .................. u.w. • OSCAR MAYER WIENERS 75< 11,lllltMl'tklfU' , ............... 1-&l.Pa. OSCAR MAYER BOLOGNA 79< •1tt1at llUIM llt lllf ......... , llll..P•. OSCAR MAYER SALAMI 89c ton1 u11m ....................... u.u m ~RR~.1,~.;. !i~~I.~.~~~~~.~.::. 39c ()'!.!" Kiit&;!·-- CANNED PICNIC $249 DllUtUI llAND 3 U. UllDWICffSTlll <•N l~~!!J.~J.ir. .............. .., ... 73c CASCADE =1:1.~~~~-~~~~ ...... ,_.:. 68• - I ' '' I • . ~PINEAPPLE DoH(t1us~1t, 11011n 24, (llUllJ I I\.\ OL CAii ...... APPLESAUCE IAlnlt DA• Ct•Uflll:lllA 15' UPIUI 1601.CAll ..... ~ ... .,... REFRIED BEANS::'t.~~ .. _'29"' GRAPE DRINK~·,~m~.~~;.~:' ........... 49c ·<>"' STOKELY BEANS ~~','l·~ 20' VIENNA SAUSAGEl~r.! ........ -.28' FOlGER'S COFFEE:!:~: ... 87' FOLGER'S COFFEE1::~.-'l" fOLGER'S COFFEE:::'.:...'2" FOLGER'S ::::::~:~'Ji• CHICKEN Of SEAl:."::l:'. ........... 34' .,.. BAKED BEANS,.,.,., 31 ' Ulltlftt'I IMafoUlllOlllOI Our WW [Yer)<lay Pr ice! HARVESTDAYPlARS 37c MiLVIS :zt.OU.CI CAN JEROEH'S All-PURPOSE F==:::::;;FACE CREAM CREST TOOTHPASTE WITH HAND PUPPET 6'4·0UN~l SIZI ••••••••••• 72c ···~&f/.1..-­ SCOPE MOUTHWASH ... .... -... ....... SCIJS lnli ........... .. •"" __ ,,, w ..... . IUPU 97c 24 OUlkl SU:I PRRL CONCENTRATE SUPllSIZI OUl&qw 97c lVDTOAf,_. •••• HEAVY IOTTOM GLASSES C!)lllMlw __ .... ...,__ TUMILEISrAC1A1101•.---·6lc IEVEIAGlrMUllOH .•• -•• -.11 c Shop Any Day • • • Save Every Day • • • With Luc.ky Low Discount Pricing P~licyl ~ .,... t11e Alllll!IC Iii lhcNmOweetil-laD all c:rube lblpo Gal cl No." Yott to a.. the-. ••t don't lmow ii Lt ' I neceaarJ for n at l o 11 I det.-e,'" coneed•• • ____ .,_ flctal. "Bat it keeps tllll' Ill& I 'at....... \ Tiie ,....,,_, lid - to bolh ..... ·-""" the _ .. 8blpl. -tlley ha•• nmcb largu .,...... lhc puteDJlllr ll!Mn roqulre -more ald per ahlp. AID LARGE AlJcNI •t• millloft • ,.., -; b -' In foderal lid rir around 2!!0 -lldpo lllilln1I -for American f1rml-........ !>' far outnumbered bT <arJIO ships, passenger Unen' aid ... bas......m.dlo~­ lhird tlle cargo cool • Tbe sit: puleOlfJr naela !ailing to lhe ~ and ·,. South America lir _.. >< Grace Lina out ~ New Yeti' :.,. •ol ,11 million in aid Wt l' • •• year. T Aboul '7 mJlllm -to :'· lhe Pra!dml C1eYeland and tlle Pmldm>I Wllloo .... Ille Padflc routes out of SUI Francisco. And " mJlllon .... pald lo -..i " -sh!Po, tlle M•'""1 and ~ whldl abo ull Iha Soulh Seas. '1be aid for tbeR 19 c:rtdat ships may be up lhlt year, bul tlle total spent "" pwenger Unen sbould be down frolll t!Je l50 mlDloa annual rate lo pnilaPo f3ll mJlllon becalllO tlle .-. of ships bu been tbrinklnc- Seven bave 1topped 111111111 aln<e 11181. Deapllo tlle nearly • • • millloD In led<ral aid ...it • into tlle S.S. lhliled Stalet 1 over tlle WI dtQde, that """ luxury lln<r ii Idle and em»IJ today, lied to • cJoet -ai Norfolk. Va.. becallae a!~ -.. tlle tnn.AJ!utJe route. QUIT SAILING 'fbe 11 n e r s lDdependlnce andCoos\itutioD. wbich together got f80 millloD lo l the same porlod, qulla sa1llng a year before the S.S. United states mode Its final voyaa• last November. And ttwo otben, tho S.S. Argenllna and Brasil, abo stoppod WI lalL Congress puaed . vlrluall1 unnoticed lhlt apring lhe law to eue tlle aid ellglbWty lw tlle cnliH shlpe. One - permlla lbem to c:llT1 -way passengers be\ ween American port.s now witbout IDiing aid lir doinC '°' Al a rtOUI~ lhe S.S. M..,. terey II golllnl JOV-1 aid for the Ont time for • frequent nm from Sul ,,.... cLsco to l!Mollllu. All olfldal ror its company Aid the fedora! fundl will g1,. the ftrm a pro111 .., Ibis route inslead of put -Ship owners are abo tJvfnC an airing to 1 new kSea to !rY to write Into tlle law nut year a Oat guarantee of enough federal aid lo IDlllre lhal all cruise sh!PI wW break even -at the vrry leut. A source clole to tbe lbllt Merchant Marine Commtttee oonf1nned con1re11men already have been laWnC 11>- fotmally about 1uch a lll"fllllee. Beach LWV Issues Call For Voters 5<1>1, 19 i.. tbe Litt day lo regloter Joe tbe Nov. i generalelectloll. Thll remlnder was lllued this week ln Huntington B*b • 1 by the Llaguo of Womea -., Volerl. Memben ol tlle ~ ' are cu r re n tl y rqister111C voten al HuntlnJlon Cent« from 74 p.m., Monday and Friday, and 1.S p. m., Saturday. The Loque will al90 IOlld a deputy rtJbtrar .to any na11hborhood lo Hun!IJlcton ' Beach wbero a croup o1 1 l'Olldenta would lib to re1tstu 1t one borne. ror this servlct phone Mn. Viole Mohn,.__, There are four requlrtmentl to be 111 ollathle voter. -MUii be a resident ol Calilornla one year by Iha dayoftbealeclloo. -MUii be a rtllddenl ol orance County IO dayt before the election. -MUii be 11 )'Ul1 ol .,. by the day ol tbe electlon. -MUii be a U.ll. clllla IO d&yt p1or lo tlle e!tctlon. Volin can cut lhelr ballola In t11e pre1idft>U1l eledlon two yt1t1 aao aro lllW npterod. but mult vote In Novtmbtr lo mllnlaln tllair ntlMUon. II a MJblired voltr llu "ll\Clved. -c!llJICtd ...., .,. Pl"'" ly 1ttlll11lon. lit mu•t r. rt&ilttr. "'"-.. -........... - ••• • ,3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS > CAny Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h Y 0111•seli i\. Pile Of Pe1111ies . (01· Eve11 Dolla1·s ) Penny Pinc hers 642 -5678 Dial Direct for Details Pile Up . Profits North County, 540-1220, Toll Free . . . DAILY PILOT · PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS T • I ? ' ·~. Thurldn, A119Vsl U, 1'70 DAILY '1L01 J9 Classi~ Cha-t M edic-rwvelist Turns to Directing His Own Films 'Price' Viewed Backstage .jjy 808 THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (APl- Mlchael Criclllon ls a man with a medical degree. and he's •llO a beist-selling auU10r . So why does he want to direct cameo" in the movie, portn)'· mg, of :ll tbl.np, a medical studt"t. "But l don't lhlnk I ha ve 1 future as an actor: my size is against me,'' he remarked. He's I feet , I in· ches. and""t"Ompeltllt .etors. The Ont thing I will requirt of them Is that they will be tolerant ol my ~pUtude. do that now · and doubts lhat he ever wUI. Then does he regret the four arduous yearll in medical school? ''Nol al all. AA Somttset f\laugham said, tralninc u • doctor ii the best p;lllib5e preparalion lot a oovWJt.'" By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK !UP!) -It doesn 't happen very often but when It does yw have a n1emory to cherish like 8 family heirloom. ln a rehearsal room in a grubby street. on the wrong side o( Central Park. Barry Sullivan and George C. Scott v.'ove an afternoon o r thealrie<!l magic for t h e benefit of half a doezn onlookers. Technicians do not applaud or they woo.Id have shaken the walls of the old hotel. All that anyone lucky enough 10 have been there can hope Is that the same quality is eaught by !tie N B C -T V cameras I.his week in London where Sullivan and Scott and David Burns aod C.Olleen Oewtn1rst have gone to tape Arthur ~iller's play "The Price." Be.fore lht' final rehearsal producer David SU$$kind was chatting about how bored he is with television and bow he sees his future mainly in films. He has had his triumphs but it takes a lot of those to wipe out the memory or a ''Laura" which provided the first, and pertiaps last. TV starring vehicle for Prince5! Lee Radziwill, sister of Jac- queline Kennedy Onassis. Yet when Scott uttered the curtain line of the play the veteran producer, obviously moved. \Yalked over Io Sulllavn and to the other members of the cast, and said, simply, "My thanks." "This cast," he exulted later, "tops anything they had 1n the Broadway version. I'd rather do Miller than any other IO playwrights in the world. He hits you between the eyes with truth." Scott. he said. was the greatest actor in the world today and Sullivan had been lifted to the top of his fonn by "playing with the champ." And he went happily otf to o.,. 1:45 7Mt.a.n.. .. ,~,.... ....... BUTOi CASS/Di AN01HE SUl'ilANCE Kl) ltrJI& Undefeated ON THE TUBE pack for the journey to Lon· don, where taping Is cheaper, oot as firm in his resolve to diminish his interest in TV as he had been. Sullivan hopped into a c1:1b to his hotel and on the way he was asked about Susskind's assessment of his co-star. There isn't much professional jealousy in the handsome Irishman who is so secure in his own U!lent he can can- didly admit lo being a Scott admirer.When I saw him do Shylock in Central Park," he said. ''I wanted to buy New York aod put it at his feel." Sullivan 's own coru.iderablr" gifts might be less underrated in some circles if he bad the drive and ambition lo match his abilities. But he prefers to loaf on his hilltop in California, Y:orking. mOStly under the pressure of alimony payments to two of his ex - i,•:ives. "I'm so laz.y," he said. "that when I get a new role I ask myself. ·can I do the part without shaving?' r ElfmT~lllMElll a movie? "I know It's a stale.rnent of madness," says Crichton, who doesn't seem mad al all. "but I've decided that I've got to direct my next book myself. If I don 't. 90me· cut lhe script to 90 minutes one else is going to foul without losing any oi ils cen-it up." tral theme-a confrontatk>n He is DOW finishing t.he script between estranged brothers, of the project which he calls "The Automatic Man." Soon a retired L'Op and a wealthy he plans to &S!lemble the surgeon, meeting aner many elements for fllm making on years to dlspos<". of the effects )ocatioo in Los Angeles. or their dead father. Coleen Crichton isn't fazed by the Dewhurst, Scotts' wife in the fact that until a few months ago he had never set root play, fills the s::ime role in on a movie set. But lhen. real life. what could seem impissible Sullivan . \.1-ilo is we 11 to a man who produced seven remembered for "The Caine novels: a nonfiction best- f\.1utiny Court f\1artial" and seller, ''Five Patients;'' a few many olher fine slage, screen movie and television scripts and TV perfonnanctS , has a and other works_ while com· thoughtful theory to explain pleting four years of medical why network efforts to run school at Harvard? regular series of major plays The medic·author's most Crichton admitted that his observation of director Wise gave him pauses about his own film·1,.aking ambitions. ·· ! was amazed by how n1uch competent~ he has Ill so many areas," said Crichton. ''Not Oftly that. He also has bottomless diplomatic skill in handling the cast and the crew . It ls an incredibly dilficult task to deal with such v1ried people and keep then\ all stimulated and satisfied." \l.'ist has pracUced his pro. fession a.s cutter. then direc- tor. and produced for mott than 30 years. How does the 27·year-0ld Crichton hope to learn? "I plan to hire a good cameraman and a good editor 'rarzan Site have never succeeded.. successful y,·ork "'as "The ''"\Vhen you go to 8 play Andromeda Strain," and lhat's ARCADLA (UP I) -Many "Undoubtedly 1 will matt mistaxes, and they will be costly . Jumping Into something like this, I'm bound to foul up. But I'm prepared for that." Wrlllng, ht admitted. l5 becoming mort difficuJt. Thij despite the fact that he ia among the most protirlc of authors. By working 10 days at 16 hours a streleb -"until I'm a twitching wreck" - he can product a full..Jength book. "But I have made the pain- ful discovery that the rewrite is better tha11. the first draft," he said. "And the second rewrite is better than the first ••• He has hi.!1 f\ID, but can't practice unless he puts in more years as an intern and resident. He's not willing lo ' "' . \ ' . . . .... .. ·LWJ!uz ~ . ...-.:;:· . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •.... c·m1"•'L~~=-~-~ ... j)--"1c:-w~J!::,,. Ill -......... "CHITTY Clllltt'I' LUO ........ 101 ... lt C.-- lkMNI M'"11 "A MAN CAL.LIO MOlltSI" (01'1 u .... 111~ "THI •llVllltS" c•l'I •n c...,-saew Ric...., M11'1'h "A MAM U.L.L.10 tfOlllll" 401') 11-'H ~ "Tiii •l"IVEll" COl'I '"This play." he went on, "must be the document of the year. 1 didn't want W leaYe home but who can say no to an Arthur Miller play? He overwrites , but he disturbs you. He's the best American playwright alive. I would have been happy W do the part for nothing which, tome to think of it, was what Sussk.ind y,•as trying to gei me to do.·· in the !heater that's your whiJt brought him to of the original Tarzan motion entertalnrrient for the night." Hollywood. Not lo write lhe pictures were filmed here at he said. "You think about it, script., but to observe the fihn · ~ .'i.ngeles State and County ·!C:.T~'NN~ soc~:'[' CW..· digest it. But on TV it's only ing by director Robert Wise. Arboretum. a horticultural l'Lus 1'11"1111111 INOAffMINTI ·---rNET CALL.Ml 111•. Tl••S" !Ol'I one item in a whole night He al30 played "aM extreme research ctnter. "THI CINCINNATI lJD" or viewing. Your critical and li=====================,ll •1 t11 si ..... Mr.a- """ 4'1r ... "IT••TIOT Of' Tllla-" !Ol'I eon•~ 5.....S.y, 1·• P-"'· pcrceptiv~ sense is so diluted 11=======---~1 the play cannot regisl~ as -~~~Fiix s" OUTH COAST l'lltlMllll INGAOIMl"NTI "01TT1NO ITIAIOMT"' l•I Ctolw ~0.0001¥1 COl..UMIUS" iltl cew u..iiw 11 Mlrlt •• "'"' .,.,_, ii should Too often it becomes r-M•TION"l IE JUSt anothe r program," GEHEAAL.'S PLAZA THIE.ATll "111e Price" is schedu led for San Dileo,,.._,. at lrktol • 548·2711 He said director Fielder Cook was a "genius" to have F'eb. 3 on the Hallmark Hall of f ame. PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! SHOWING NOW! wood#tock ''THE MIND BLOWER OF All TIME!" Af 1:15..c .. ._ s•ow io1 1 01 10i30 h• Officos o,.. 7:15 PA S•por Pl•71r•••ll -TIM M11azi• Roted (R) MON. THRU 'lltl. 6:)11 ..... ,,,s SAT. J:U ·1:1f.1t:,. SUN. l 1U·•:J0.1 :4S • S.,WS.Ckl1r. Also Ryon O'Ntal IR EiAJ\llFS -""""-' Wft91-U. ,..._ r..,'°'~111 !l.'~l• .,..... -~ The biz1m world you met tn'l'tanet Of The Apes"r11 oolJ Iha beainnlng .. :WHAT LIES BENEATH MAY BE THE ENDI .. A Program Everyone Will Enjoy EXCL USI VE AREA SHOWING The most electrifying ritual ever seen! BmBllD RABBIS u "1 llD C•LLID IOISI" --......-"""1'10N4LQtHD.Al,.~IUUM.H ACINUIA ~Pl\Ml--nQoo ~ -ALSO PLAYING - Steve l\1cQueen 'The Reivers~ .1 ,., f.nrn"' (. COie> I olm\ f'l"f"rf'lillnt A ,.., ... ,...,c~ r.c.1111n ~.nr S- CONTINUOUS DAILY AT l :JI r .M. .~ ~ "'--...... . .....:~ NO ONI UNDll 11 ADMITTID SHOWN at' 1,30 -3,20 • 5,10 • 7,00 . 1,50 -10,40 o,," 1:oO ~ NOW PU.YINli ALSO MOW! UNCUT! POPULAR PRICE! I .NlleAnd2'0Ws ~~UI[ --~I"--"' -•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 12.00 Pll CARLOAD Ali c.w SIM J--'llW ....... Jllll ·-"TMll OlltUSltOl'l'll" (tit) "THI MOOfilSM ... I ....... !11') U ..... 11 M..SI •1 Wlltl 1"1.....t Al c.llr f'IM!ty IMw o,......, I'd "M.\lltOOllllD'' 101 -... ,,.. .... ..._ "TME UMOll'l.l.TID" 101 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4th WEEK AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS & NOW AT STADIUM DRIVE-IN '#3 ~'' POPULAR PRICES! Rated ''GP'' All Ages Admltt1d- P1rent11 Ol1cretlon Sugg•sted "The epic Ameli(M • ., Jll<M•"" Hollywood ilas """' wanted tomaM. but never hid h ''" '' do boil)I~' ~-· .. ··- Premiere Orange County Engagement ~~ ldw•rlls Cln.m• W"t #2' ~--------~ Call 546-3102 Call 192-4493 Call 639-7160 c stereol03FM. the sounds of the harbor • • music ( J • • H DAJlY 'llOT s Tt1111~r. A1191J)t l l , tliiO l'Otlr JfJonep1's l t'ortfr \'ac * aa ad ia ~ lcal bN4JllPet .... siDble abo\~ ....... -...... pool co>1lo( oot, )OU tod up OCJl with a i ... pool but possibly p<yinj: the """'" """" "' $1100 ... """'· • ..., fl9I --wilh Ill "" '""" mlolL "'t art now Imo thr peak seasan for bomt im· ~~ -met also for • • • BUT. ~ you loo« over the pool, tttf' salesman tells you U. ~ viay1 liner J!' ... ....,,1 """""' .. hold ""*"' that tht' deck is not rul -but only redwood SLllia, Ind tha1 rnainknanct 1fiD rost you men eaob year than the sales pntt_ He may JIOl nteD hlvt !Udl I pool the -"'111' "' ll'l>'· m~iOoJ and come- • I» 1ww1. HOWEVER. perhaps ' ON.. 1llt. r<teketeen don't t:9en hl\'e to ftgUtt out new scbtmes or twists, beca.USt you continut lo fall so easily for tho lim&lm<red swindles. HorM i.mprovemenU. in fact. ~n our nati~'s number OM [lcJd fOr ta <"kt teer s . Un1ess )'Oll lf't wary, you can kJst-hundreds or e " e n tnoosands c( dollars on ~ lll'.m-improvemerits. ' • . ; • )'tlU'd \Ir ~ lD a larger pool. costinl SI .MIO. • • · Or, )'OU 11tt an ad wtUcb ~ys: "'Yi'anled: lo place swimming pools m this com- munity f o r demonstration ~. con.sider3tion \I'll! be gi\•en to ~ homeowners chosefl." BUT, "'ha! )'OU answer this BY ONE ESrotATf. Americans art bilktd OU1 of SI billion I ·year in ~ improverntnt.s gyps. T b i .s trarWat.es into tht v"aming that as much as $1 ol every Forget Repair Work On Small .4 ppliances NEY.' Millions YORK jUPl l al American> "' hopping mad because-they can't get .small appliances serviced lbcse days. bul iliett isn·1 too much manul11cturers C<hl do about iL Tbe blunt fact is that usually it doesn't pa)' to repair anything that CO!ts under S25 new in today's economics. e\•en if you could fmd a repair man who knew how to do " POR EXA.ftt'PLE. t h t minimum servitt charge for Cixing a $24 radio may be Slt.95. When you take a S7 transistor radio or a $9.95 electric drill to a repair shop. the advice you get i5 "don·i waste time aDd money on 11, throw it away.·• Even '>fl more expensive Items. the servW:e problem ha.'I proved too difficult for many manufacturers to solve . Take outboard motors. which se ll for $100 to $1 ,000. Getting parts for them in a hurry, or oo 1 weektnd when people want to do their boating. 1s ~ serious problem. Several makes h a v e disappeared because the manufacturers couldn't adequately 5ervice ~ mot.ors they sold. YOU CAN GET service on almost anything by sending it back to the factory or lo 11 Jarge regional distributor. However. by the time you have found the address, by telephone or mail. then packed and shipped the appliance, you may have expanded more time aOO wonh. Ylho is mess? "'°""Y lhan ifs to blame !or t.hr Ray Burch. a vice pres.ident of Schwinn Bicycle Co. --Of O:llcago blames the retailer. He savs today·s retail c)erks art the poorest eieust for sa1espeople in the history of the world and thai too many retailers flatly refusr to bother \\ith service or cany a parts inventory. AT A FORUM ON the pr.,,_ blem conducted by tht Na· tional lndustrial Conference Board. panelists suggested manufacturers should g e t back to their former practice of fewer dealers :md in- sist.enoe that they carry parts and provide service. As Bureh of Schwinn pot it: ··we have let distribution decay. So we end up begging for business from retailers who display every brand t.hett: is but only stock a few floor samples."' SUCH RETAILERS, he said, won't se'rvice anything, file a complaint "or even be civil lo customers." But Richard G. Smhh o[ American Chain & Cable Co. thinks it simply ts a "people problem·• that causes the trou· ble. "The. compete nt serviceman of JO years ago is of only borderllne com· petence today." he said. Manufacturers' training pro· grams for service personnel are far too sporadic and ofte n quite superlicial, according to Smith. BIBLE THOUGHTS DIYOlCf: M•l.c•I 7:16 t•y1 tli•I God "4•1•tli p~tti"' ew•y-·• I di•orce l, God, through Mo1e1, TOLERATED di•orce for ewhile (M•tt. 19:71. Mo•••' low be· irtg • "SCHOOLMASTER fo brin9 UI unto Chri1t"; but "-we er• no longer under •school me1lor" (Gel. ):24·1Sl •nd God "now commendeth ell men ••••vwh••• to rep1rrl., IAch 17:301 . , TODAY, Je1111 1llow1 ONLY ONE REASON for di•orc1 •ncl ••· 111•rrio9•, end Oitt •••ton i1 FORNICATION, M•H. 19:7. Tho1• who dlYorce for OTHER re•1ont •nd re -m•rrv •fl 911iltv of •dul· terv .Ml 1h•ll 11ot ettl1r He1••n. I Cor. 6:9-tO, All of 6oct'1 l1w1 ••• for ff.e GOOD of m•nkind end 10 ;, 'iii l•w Oil DIVORCE. f.ew diYofC:lt would occur i'f fornic•lioro wire r•co9ni1ecl et the onlv •1licl ••••on. Th• wor!d i1 thre•t1110J with cheo1 bece1111t of • br11kdow" of tile holl'le RUSSIA ••· peri111111'fitd witt. EASY di,.01ce end l•W tlle di111fro11 1 1e111lh 11rtd now t•••• 9r11I•• 111hiclio111. OTHER n11tion1 hroughout lli1lorv ho•• tried tile e•p1rim,11t end <uff1<ed. GOO'S WAY IS BEST. Shill we detlroy our homet ind 1oc:iely bv fri•olou1 c1;,..,,,, •ncl elio lot1 our toult elorn1lty, or ihell w1 ob1v Go4'1 1,..,7 WRITE or PHONE for free booklet on DIVORCE. Viti! ilio Chu1cli of Chri1t, 217 W, W.l1on St., Coile Mei•, Cellf, 92617, Pio . 141·1711. l•M TY Chaeel t , S1111tt1..,._ 7:JO A.M. wunRN STATE UNIVtRSITY COLLEGE OF LAW Jn Orange County now occepting men and womc .1 who .... •ltfter: • _,, ........ s,._., .. ..,,....,.. .• 11.,. ....... ,., .... •• _,_,.,,, ... T ...................... .... ........... -,..., ................. ., ..... , .... .,--..a.,._, 1i.. U-1 ... _ -• --I• ' _,, ti _., \.-"-1 J ·---.lo J ...... -ei-, Apply Now for September 10th PAY OR EVENING CLASSES I • 100 S. Srookhurst Anaheim Phone 635-3454 1rf mlT •U.NT, I .,. Once consldert'd an al- most unmcnl1oneble sub- jf!Cl. b&d breath Is now morl! openly dlscU&11ed. Ther" 9t'f" many poll.Sible ca\J&ell of bed bre11th and thrrefon n111r1y dlfh·rent ways to con- trol It. If It Is a prOblem stemmini.t from a condition In the mouth your dentbt ce.n i'U&ftetl M rftecllve mc.>U\od to Jessen or even l!liminalc 11. CC'rlaln mouth· v.11i~hc• 11.nd other producll!I C'An ~ Ullf'ful In .. veryda,y care . Ot~r cault'S of bad breath can coml' from thf' stomach or lunga and ln M>me caae. haa been ~ted to ~oUonal 5IJ"eK. Once. thf' causf' hu ~n detrr- minC'd a '''8Y can u1rually bfo found to 11top It. Do not bf' 8/nt.id to dlscuu bad bN'slh ''"ilh your 1lhyticlan or den- t i5I. YOU OR YOUR OOC'J'OR C\N PHON& IJS whf'n ynu Med 8 &llVf'ry. w,. wlll df'· Jlwr promptly v.·lthout VI• trl\ cha.rat'" A l'f'('at many people relv on U& for their health nct.<dll. \Vt> we.loom,. rf!qlll"Stl for de.Uvery tervice and ch&rJfe e.ccounbl. PAU UOO PHAIM.lCT Jlt H~ .... H..,.,. lffttl Ml~11ff -""'- 1 OVER THE COUNTER · Complete-New York Stock List Bill Hostetler Sy11abols • ----·-------- ..,.., '1910 Weilnesday's 'Closing Prices-Complete New Yo:-li Stoel{ Exeliange List DAILY "Lal' F a nee Jriefs SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Standard OJI Co. or Callfornln uld it will start om month to market both low-lead ..i unlead<d guoUnes. 'Ibo low· lead gu will be ofl«<!d ln- ll!ally In 1el«:led m,,.teta,but the Jud tree lu<I wtJI be evallabl• g011erlll)' Sept. 1 throughout Calao'• marloollni ...... • • • , :t8 DAILY PILOT v .. r Money's 11'orth 8 SVl VIA P<IR'l'ER \1 ou see an ~ m your local net1!pllpe1 hr a. siiable abo\'t· ..,.i ..... ..,mini: pool -tna one.. )'OU end up nae with 1 ,...,. pool but possibly paying the reculn pnct of $1800 (If' ...... • only $499 -wl\h all the trim-\\'t att now Into the pea.l: .!te&san for h o m ~ im· prottments -and also for tM widest T"'ll" ol il'P'• ~tions and come. ms.. 'Jl)t racketeen doo't e.•en hl\·t to f\gure out ne.w !!Cht!mes or twilll."!. becauSt you crmUnue to fall AO easily for tht t.ime-honar'ftt rwindles. liome improvements, in fact. rtmain our na:timi 's nwnber ont fiekl for rac kt I tt r S . Unless you are wary, you (an lose hundreds oc e v t n thousands or dollars on hornt noo.improvements. • • .,,,.,... • ' • llUT. Whel )lOll lool: O\'t'f the pool. me salesman i.t~ you lhat lbe \>tnyl liMr IS not l\et\J' enough to hold water, that t.bt deck is not rea1 redwood but only redwood stain . .,.tnd that m~ •1ll cost yoo more uch year tba the $Iles prk.ie. Ht may .noi. ~ havt 3UCh a pool oo ha!ld. HOWEVER. perhaps )'Ou'd be interested ln a larger • pool. costing $1,800 .••• • Or. you see 111 ad which ~: "'Wanted : to plact .swimmlng pools 1n this com· munity f o r demonstration purpnees; consW:Seratton will « given to those homeowners cholw:n." BUT, whs1 yoo ansv.-er this BY ONE ESl'IMATE. i\mcricans are bilked out or $1 billion a year in homt> improvemeau gyps. T h i s translates into the warning that as much as S1 ol e,·ery For get Repair Work On Small Appliances NE\\' YORK iUPI ) Millions o( Americans :tre time aad money than worth. / ifs . -bopplDg mad because they can't get. sma.11 appliances serviced these days. bot there isn't too much manufacturers <'a\1 do about it. "'ho is to b@rrit for mess? Ray Burch. a vice presidenl of Schwinn Bicycle CG. of Chicago blames the retailer. He savs today's tttail clerks are the poorest ei.:cuse for salespeople in the history ol the world and that IOO many retailers flatly refuse t o bother with serviC!' or CarT)' a parts invenlory. : • The blunt fact is that usually ii doesn't pay to repair anything that costs under $25 new in today's economics. e\'en if )'OU could find a repair man who knew how to do ii f'OR EXA:\fPLE. t h e minimum service charge for rii:ing a SU radio may be $19.!S. When YoU take a S7 transistor radio or a S9 .95 electric drill to a repair shop. lhe advice you get is "don·t waste time and money on it, throw it away." . Eveo tio more expensive ii.ans. the servtce problem ha!'l proved 100 difficult f« many manufacturers &o solve. Take outboard mowrs. which seU for $100 to $1 ,000. Getting parts for them in a hurry. or on a weekend when people want to do their boating, is • serious problem. Several makes h a v e disappeared becau!'le the manufacturers (Ol.lldn'l adequately service ~ motors they sold. YOU CAN GET servict on almost anything by sending it back to the factory or to a large regional dlstributor. flowever. by Ult time you have found the address, by telephone or mail. then packed and shipped the appliance. you may have expanded more Al' A FORUM ON the pro- blem conducted by thr Na· tional lodusuial Conference Board, panel ists suggested manufacturers should g e t back to their fonner practice ol fewer dealers and i~ sistence thal they carry pans and provide se rvice. As Burch of Schwinn put it: "We have lel distribution dec<1y. So we end up begging for business from retailers l\tbo display every brand there is but only stock a few floor samples.'' SUCl:I RETAil.ERS, he said, won •t service. anything, file a L'Omplainl •·or even be civil lo customers.·· But Richard G. Smilh of American Chain & Cable Co. thinks it simply ls 1 "people problem" that causes the lrou· ble. ··n.e compe tent serviceman of 10 years ago is of only borderline com· petence today,"' he said. Manufacturers' training pro-- grams for service persoooel are far too sporadic and often quite supe,.ficial, according to Sm ith. BIBLE THOUGHTS Dl'fOlCE: M•lot.lli 7:16 ••vt th1t God "41+,+h p1,1ttinq · 1w1y-" ( diworct 1, God, throu9h Mo11t, TOLERATED di~orc• for 1whil 1 (Mitt. 19:7), Mo111' l1w "•· ;,,9 • "SCHOOLMASTER to brin9 u1 '-'"'o Christ": b1,1t "-..,, ••• flo 101191• 11..d1r • •chool m•sl••" IG1t. l :14·151 1..d God ",.ow comm•,.deth •II m111 1v1rywh1re to r•p•lri" IA<h 17 :301, , 'TODAY, J11111 1llow1 ONLY ONE REASON for divorce ind,,. ,,, ... 119e, •11d th1t r••1011 ;, FOP.NICATION, Mitt. 19:7. Tho~• wh1 dlvore1 for OTHER 11110111 ind ••·rllltr'jl ••• guilty of 1d ul- f1rt 1M 1h•lf t1ot ,,,f,, H11•1n, I Cor. 1>:9-10. ALL of Getd'1 l1wt ••• fot tt.e GOOD of me11ki11d 111d •o i1 ~i1 l1w o" DIVORCE, few divorce1 would occur if for11ic1liofl w1r1 r•co911i1ed •• th1 o,.r., "'elid ••••on, Thi .,,.orld ;, thr11l1111d with (.h101 l,1(1111e of • l,re1kdown of the ho'l'I• RUSSIA U • p1ri,..111't1d with EASY d i•orc;1 1..d 11w th1 di111tro1,11 r•111lt1 1..d Ml'W 111k1 9r11!1r r1 1lric+ion1. OTHER n1tio111 hrou9houl hi1tory h,.,, t1l1llll th1 1•p1•irne11I 1..d •11ff••1d. GOD'S WAY IS IEST. Shill w1 d11froy 01,1r home1 1rtd 1ocit lv by frivolous divorc• 111d 1bo !011 our 1oul1 ,,,,,,,11.,, or 1h1ll w1 ob1v God'1 1, .. 7 WRITE or ,HONE. for fr11 bo1kl1f 011 DIVORCE. Vl1it the Churd\ of Chri1t, 287 W. Wl11011 St., Coil• Me11, C1lif. 92fl27. Ph. £~8.s111 . r ... n cir.....i '· s.itd..,., 1:10 A.M. WESTERN STAlf UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW In Orang• County now ouepting m•n and womc .1 who .,.. elttt.r: ' • -, ......... ' ,.._ "' .. ~ ..-1"9• .... , ... ,,. .. _,, .... ..._~ ......... -.... ........... _"" ............ , ..... fteMM_._. ....... J ll .. Ii •. ..._ ·-.. --, .... ,... •• t _, ............ . J ·--............ ',... ... _ ··-· Apply Now for September 10th DAY OR EVENING Cl.ASSES I ....... ~· , .. .,,_ ... _....,.. 100 S. lf"ookhur1t Anak9im Phone 635-345~ ... ,.o,..,..~ MOST BAD BREATH CAN BE GONTROLLED Ontt considered an e.J. m01t unmentionable sub- ject, bad breath ts now more openly dlscuued. There are many possible causes of bad bre11.th and thereforr n1any dlffel'ent ways to con- trol it. ll It la a problem 11temming from a condition Jn lhe mouth your denU..t can suggest an efftttlve method to Jessen or even ellmlnate II., CcrtA!n mouth• washes and other produi;:lJI can bt useful In everyday cart., Other C8.Ulf'9 of bad breath can ~ f:rom th.-atomach or lungs and ln game cases hu been related to emotional stren. Once tllt' cause hall ~n deter· mln(d a wa,y Clln usually 1)1" found to 111op Jt. Do not bf. Bfl'Rld to dlacu111 bad breath \\'ith your physici8>n or den· t ls1. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHON'E US w~ you need a dcllvery. We v.111 dl"- llver promptl)' '\\'11.hout ex- tnt f:.h8Jltt":. A CTe•t m&ny people tety on "' for lht-lr health neeth. We y,·eleomt request.. for ddivery urvta: and ('harp accounta. PAU UDO PHAIMACT JJ1 ............ N~.._. Ml•tl" -- Bill Hostetler New Director Appointment ol W i 11 l a m HosteUe.r as director ol hc- titil Miville Systems Opera- 11• Hal UID,) Mltll Y9 CIMI C111 • Mnrltet Symbols I .f.Lt9'1Jl I 1970 OAIJ.Y Pll.OT WeClnesday's ~Closing Prices-Complete New YorlC Stock: Excllange List a nee ~riefs -----------------------~--------------- -4 ~~' TODAY ... TOMORROW . • • 10AMTO10 PM Save up to 50% and More Save on bedding of all kinds at leYitz ••• mattresses ••• box springs ••• studio couch" ••• sl"p 50fosl All farnou1 brands ••• Simmom, Kn:t•hler, and many "'°'91 Some are floor samples, some are discontinued, and a few are "os ii-. All subject to prior 1alel This is your chance to Own fine bedding at the biggest savings enrl Don't miss outl Come eorlyl Be the fint io choose! SIMMONS -KROEHLER -WILSHIRE Partial Listing ..• Hu_rry For Best Selection! TODAY ••• TOMORROW lOAMtolOPM Warehouse & Showroom Selling Direct To The Public •Triple Dreiser • framed Mirror •Headboard • 2 Night Stand• Bassett 5-Pc. French Bedroom Master crafted by Bauetl. This stately & graceful Fniil· wood French Provlnciol bedroom set comes complete with huge lriple dreMer, framed plate Q!ou minor, pan.el heodboord for full or Oueen llze bed. and 2 2-drower night itoridtl This room full of elegan'' con be )'OVrt todoyl Onty ot l.avltil Only $2961 C'0.1151 TO COAST DiKO'Nf' anotkr world of ho• fvmilhlng luxury ot Levitt. S.. hundreds of n•w decoareling ideas you can vie in 'fOVI own I-lame. EASY TO REACH San Diego Freeway At Beach Blvd. NEXT TO THE HUNTINGTON SHOPPING CENTER •Tripi• Dresser • 2 '"'"'"Mirrors • QvHn Slae Headboard • Nl1ht Stand Bassett 5-Pc. Spanish Bedroom Thb spectocvlar Spanish Ook bedroom set attests lo the mre rid Bou.tt toke& in selectiwly matching their wood I Top quollty Pittsburgh Plate Gloss U used e>tclu- si.,..ly in the toll, stately mirron. and the hardware it of expensive onttqu.d brass. Dresser hos 9 drower1 & night Jtond hos 2. Also finely carved Queen--size heod - boord. For this low Levitz warehous• price you ge1 oU 5 mognlfkent plec:~I llEG. 699.9-' fllursd11, August 13, 1910 DAll Y '11.0T 23 Louis Called Chainpion~ Gentle111an JOE LOU!• Slu~ping Angels Still Fall at Honie Andy Etchebarren and Merv Rel- tenmund sometimes gol the social &nub from Baltimore Manager Earl We.aver. Wednesday night, they lefl t h e Califoml1 Angels dangling. Etchebarren and Rettenmund are only part-time employea on Weaver's talent- laden Oriole team but both made the roost of their starting status Wednesday. contributing wilh their bats, fee~ and defensive prowess to a ::i-4 Baltimore victory. The tk\lfllph was the lOlh in 13 games for the high-flying Birds, who now enjoy a JOY: game lead in the ~erican League East. California, reeling from nine losses In its last 11 appearances at home, tries to salvage the finale of a three- game series tonight by !ending Tom Murphy, 12-7, to oppose Baltimore's Jim Palmer, 1&-7. Palmer will be attempting tc join teammate Dave McNally and Jim Perry of the Minnesota Twins as the only 17-game winners in the league. Mc:Nally won his 17th Wednesday, thanks to Etchebarren and Rettenmund. Etchebarren e.nlered the game with a .219 average 1 and left with a .233 mark as the result of hls second home run and a pair of singles. He droYe in three and also stole two bases, doubl- ing his previOUJ output fM the seaaon. . Rettenmund, whose .312 b a t t i n g average is second only to Frank Rob~nson on lhe Baltimore juggernaut, chipped in with a pair of doubles, stole one base and collabortlted with Etchebarren on the play thi:t saved the game. With two otit in the eighth and pinch- runner Jay Jtilnstone stationed at second, Jim Spencer lashed a single to left and Johnstone steamed for the plate. But RettetlllUnd, with a perfect throw to Etchebap'tn. cut down the Angel runner by two feet. "Sure, itl.a my biggest night of the season," Etchebarren said. Don Buford, overhearing the conversation, had dif- ferent ideas. "It's his, best in five .years,'' Buford chided witb a grin. "I can't/explain it but I always seem to get some base hits when we come to Califorrrla. I see the ball real well in this park. I was glad to do well tonight because my mom and dad were here." So was brother Marty. "He asked me to hit a home run for him ~fore the game," Etchebarren said "bt.tt I wanted to know if he would seu1e fol' a single. I'm not renowned for my power, you know.'' But M~rty got his wish when Andy teed off ~ainst Ken Tatum in the eighth. a shot lhat cleared the center field fence. Billy Cowan drove in three of the four Angel runs with a pair of doubles as California outhit Its opponents 11:7. IALTIMOltE U.LIJIOlllMI• .. rll"'4 HrhrM Grk:h u I I 1 I •llM!Vr. 2b • 0 1 0 llleir," {! s O I l J.T•tum. d J 0 0 0 F.Reolfnon, rf l I 0 t Fngo.I, u • I I 0 J ,P-41, 111 4 I I I A.JohMOll, If 4 1 2 I R.tltnmund, If l 1 2 I Ml:M•lllo!. lb 4 I 1 I 11.llDblnlCln, Jb l 0 0 0 ~ rf • • , l D.JollntOn. 2b • o O I JGllnllol'll• cf I 0 I 0 Eld'>loblrrt'!I, ' • 1 l J SPfl'IC9I', ltl • 0 1 0 McM1!1y,p JIOOE01",c 4010 w1tt 11 ootlll,Mly,11 1000 1t1ct1fr1, I I I I t lt1yn01ch, pl! I 0 1 0 k.T11urt1. p o o D D II.u lt, 1111 1 o o o , ........... p • 0 0 0 .\!Cue, pl1 1 0 0 0 TG1tl1 M J 1 i Tot1!1 l1 '11 4 a11tll!'IPl't 000 GI HID -5 (1lllon1l1 DOii 002 OXI -4 I -(~"· LOii -lltlllrnore 6, C.l!IOrftil t. 11 -Grk:~. Rt ttenmuoO 1, Cowin 2. Fr9001r. "-· Jtllntot1, Hit -Etcl'ltb&rren (,). 511 -Elcfte. berr~ 2, lttlf9l'llTIUflll• IP M It ~II •• SO Mc~1nv iw,u-n 1-11J • ' ' o 1 W•I t/J 1 0 0 0 0 llk:hirt ).l/J I I 0 I I lt.~y !LA-fl 5 • 2 J k.T•Ul'!I t 2 I 1 E.i<W..r 1 I 0 0 f l SI"' -ltlcfllrf T11¥'11 -J::S. ,t,ften0e111:1 - l1.J11, DETR 0 IT (UPI) -Friends, llllll, poUtlclant, celebrlU.. rrom the 1porta world and an all-tt.ar cast of entertainen were on hand for Detroit's tribute to Joe Louis, the man who wore the most coveted crown ia boxing longer than any other champion. But not prese11! for Wednesday night's salute to the champ was the "Brown Bomber" himself. 1'he ailing, 5'-year-old former heavyweight cham- pion or the world remained ln a Denver hospital where he ls un- dergoing psychiatric treatment. "lt'a sad Joe couldn 't be here In person," hia wife, Martha, told a near capacity audience 1t Cobo Arena. "But he's here in spirit." Mn. Lou~. all« -ptlna proclam- •lionl from Mlcblpn Gov. WIUlam G. MllUken, OdroJt mayor Roman S. Cribbs and other local and .ta.le of- flciab designatirlg Wednesday as Joe Louis Day, nld her hutband told her : "1 shoUld really be iM't, Martha, but I don't-feel up to tt." Milliken, in a bflel presentaUon speeeh, said when he wu younger, he had considered Louis a upenonal hero." Gribbl de!ICrlbed Louil as a "champio1 and always a gentleman -one of the greatest this city has ever see.fl." Mrs. Louis received a standing ova- tion from the more than 12,000 In attendance before she left the stage. Singer Billy Eckstein said tater be wu "IOinl to c:tve him (Loult) a flnl-hand iCOOW\l ol just - beauUlul lhia wu." Other celebriUet partk;ipatln1 ln the 216 hour variety lbow, the procecdit of which went to a Joe Louil trust fund, were comedian Redd Fox:i. sJnsers Mahalia Jackso• and B. B. Killg and lwo popular 11inging groupll -the Four Tope and the Jackson 5. Former middleweight c h a m p i o n Sugar Ray Robinson, one · time heavyweight king Sonny Liston and Bill RusseU were there . Comedian BIU Cosby, the master of ceremonies, recalled from his boyhood days in a Philadelphia ghetto that "whe1teYer Joe Louis fou1ht you never saw anYbOdY on I.he atrett Jn our tell!lll>orhooo:" Joe Louil Barrow was born In Alabama and raised ln Delroit. He 8horttned his name when he entered lhe ring. At 21, on June 22, 1937, he knocked out Jame!' J. Braddock in the eighth round and became the youngest fighter ever to hold the highest title In botln&. He succeululJy defelded lhat crown 25 times before reUring from the ting, March. l, l~9. One of the film clips shown Wed- nesday night depicted the Brown Bom- ber's greatest pe.rsonal triumphs - his first-round knockout of Mar Schmelling exactly a year after becoming the 1teavyweight champ and two yeara following his dfttat at the hands ol Schmdin(. Louis, who won U of 7t prOfeaklnaJ bout. -54 by bodtout., and - purses netted more thaD t-4.t million, waa .in debt in excess of tl million by 1956 because ol opportunilta who had helped him squander earnings. lie uncompromish1gly honored his debts but the str1lin of the burden led to Louis' voluntary confinemeat at the V e t e r a • s Admtn.latraUon HospilaJ in Denver, where be had been ll$g with his wife and ton, Joe Jr., who alSG waa on hand for Wednesday Aight's testJmonial. "I hope as I know all or ycai do that Joe will win because God is on his side," Robimon said. 2 Big Swings Left for Flood Skulling By Agnew Got It Going NEW YORK (AP) -lfs still three strikes before you're out, and Curt Flood's attorneys made it clear today they still have two big swings left. Flood took his first strike while vaca- tioning ln Copenhagen when Judge Irving Ben Cooper upheld baseball's con- troversial reserve system against Flood in his antitrust suit. The ruling didn't surprise FloOO's backen, and they macfe ~ady for another swing, this time in 1 federal court of appeals, aod then, if necesaary, the u .s. supreme Court. "All that Judge Cooper held is that it is up to the Supreme Court to overrule the Supreme Court," said Marvin Miller, executive director of the Pl11yers Association, which has supported Fklod in his suit. "I think everyone knew it would be difficult for a district court to overrule the. Supreme Court." '·There will, of course, be an appeal," said attorney Allan Zerman. And from a camp in the Adirondacks, where he Is campaigning for governor of New York, former Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg, another of Flood's attorneys said "this is the end of the first inning. Tbe next inning will be in the court of appeals.'' Flood, a 32-year-old star centerfield who has a .293 lifetime batting average with St. Louis, filed a $4. I million an- tltrust suit against baseball after the Cardinals traded him to Philadelphia last winter. HoweYer, Judge Cooper, in his 47-page decision on the May HJ.June 10 trial, upheld baseball's 51-year-old exemption granted by the Supreme Court from existing anti-trust legislation. This reserve system is a set of rules which binds a player to one club unless he is traded, sold or released . MILWAUKEE 'S DANNY WAL TON EOGES TOWARD PLATE AS DETROIT'S BILL FREEHAN VAINLY REACHES FOR THE BALL. Halos Relieve Messersmith From Starting Pitcher Andy Messersmith, a 16-game winner for the California Angels last season, was dropped from the starting rotation Wednesday and will wort out of the bullpen from now on. Messersmith, 25, has been bothered by a . sore muscle on the lefl side or his ribcage. He said that he can go for two or three innings but the pain gets worse the more he pitches. Manager Lefty Phillips, who said he has had a "communications problem" with the hwiky righthander, held what he called a "informal meeting'' with newsmen in his office and Messersmith also was present. "I asked Andy often about his ribcage in the past,'' said Phillips, "an<l he would usually say he was t.Ilright. He wanted to pillth so badly he didn't wanl to get out of the starting .rotation . .. After talking to him today, I feel his best service to us will be in the bullpen where he can pitch two or three innings instead of trying to get !ltYen at etght innings out of him." Messersmith , who wu bombed by the Baltimore Orioles Tuesday night, taking his loth k>ss against e.ight victories, said. "after extended service, lhe pain becomes appreciably worse and I'm not effective. "The longer I go the more t feel it a.<; a professional athlete you try to pitch with pain but this hM been getting worse. It started u a very small thing, two and 1 half or three montM ago, but the doctor had no l<lea what caused lt." PANCHO GONZALEZ ON WAY TO 11-9, M WIN OVER JOHN SHARPE . Hit-crazed Dodgers Go Wild Again Pl'M'SBURGH (AP) -Pete Mikkelsen says he gets a kick out or beating everybody. This year, that means only the Pittsburgh Pirates. The journeyman right-hander for the U>s Angeles Dodgers pitched • 2/3 relief innings, survived temporary wildness and gained his first vicWry of the season as the Dodgers drubbed the divisioR Dodger Slate ,I.II 0..l'IMI Oii kl"I 4Mtl "-U9. U Dodv&tf •I Chlct9P "-u9. U OOdvtTJ et (l\lctllO 11 :15 1.m. 11:10 1.m. leading Pittsburgh Pirates \Vednesday nighl. 11-4 . Mikkelsen has been with the Pirates, Cubs, Yankees and Cards before the Dodgers landed him last year. The 200-pound Mikkelsen had a great season In 1969, had a 2.78 earned run average for the year, the best in his ca reer. Mikkelse• admitted he waso't pitching at his best against the Pirates. "I gave lhcm a lot of balls to hit," he said. "I was hanging 'em in there. I didn't lhink I was especially sharp." Before he was relieved in the ninth, he gave up three runs on three hits and five walks. His salvation, he said, was the Dodgers' volatile hilling attack. Los Angeles pounded out 17 hiL<ii and exploded for nine runs in lhe eighth and ninth innings. "The way we're pounding the ball," said Mikkelsen, •·we're doing something right" TUl.'lA, Okla. !UPI) -Doug Sanden has to be this year's Joe Bfsplk_ You remember good ole Joe Bfsplk. He's the brooding, bent-over little cartoon character Al Capp portrays with a dart rain cloud over hb head because wherever Joe B£splk goes troYb}e and misery are sure to foUow. That's the kind of year It has been for Doug Sanders, one of the best-liked pros on the profess:ional tour. He got a taste of what the year was going to be like early when he was skulled by one of vice president Spiro Agnew's fancier slJ<Jb at Palm Springs. Sanders didn't play too well after that. which was unfortunate because he had already lost mo.st of those vitaUy needed sponsor exemptions and the only way to get them back was by doing well. CROWNING BLOW The crowning blow came a month ago at St. Andrews, Scotland. Joe Bfsplk ... oops, wrong golfer ... Doug Sanders had the British Open au wrapped up, r".ght there in h~ two litUe hands, and he goes and blows. the whole thing with a 6-incb putt on the fiaa.I green ttlat's really too awfuJ to talk about anymore. Doug Sanders did not qualify for this PGA championship rta;ting here today. He is a speciaJ invitee. He was invited here by PGA officials who were im- pressed with his performance in the British Open. They weren't the only ones. Sander!ll had a legion of friends before Jack Nicklaus beat him in an 18-hole playoff al St. Andrews. He has more now. He hasn't woo much money tMse past eight months but he dOesn't think Uris has been a bad year for him at all. He feels it has been a good one. Maybe one or his best ever_ "Whal have I gol to complain about~" he sa.id. "So 1 haven't won a major championship. I won much more. So many new friends I can't begin to count them. 'Ibat's what's important to me. Certainly I've though about that putt. I've relived it many times. THOUGHT HE'D WIN "You know , I never even thought about. missing it. r was very relazed, but it was the type putt you could mlss for a dollar or a championship. I've missed shorter ones than that and ao has everybody else on the tour." When Sanders missed that putt, everyone inunediately was sure Nicklaus would beat him the following day. Everyone concluded Sande.rs had no more chance at all. "I never figured that way at all,'' Sanders says. "Even when I went four shots down r still felt I was going to win . Bul he made a ?a-foot putt ()n the lasl hole lo beat me by one shot, and the way I look at It I played Jack nine holes within one shot and anytime you can do thiit you've done all right." Fight for Life By Lombardi CHICAGO tAP) -Jerry Kramer in a taped NBC television interview releas- ed on the network Wednesday, described his former Green Bay Packer coach, Vince Lombardi , as ''righting for his life" in a Washington hospital. Lombardi, who left Green Bay to become head man of the Washington Redskins, u~rwent surgery earlier thl1 year and re-entered the hospital July 21. auhhy, Wife on Pro Football Team The Dodgers, 11 games back of Cin- cinnati in the Western otvlsion, have won four straight, have 67 hit,, In those lour games, 36 runs and a .419 aYerage. LOS ,t,Ho•L•I PtnllUllGM 1lllrhMll 1lllt~rfH Wlt11,,. S JJ OM.,t,.,,cf JOJO 1t:uu111.r1 •t21Atlty,N 1to1 WDIYlt.cl 11 I I c•-11. rf '.I' Kramer. a guard at Green Bay under Lafubardi, was interviewed In TUisa and the tape was run on Johnny Morris' television SPorb &how on NBC's Chicago station WMAQ, Morris said that Kramer told his ln- tervicwer that he had visited Lombarcti a few days ago. ~ORFOLK, Va. (AP)-"ll's a toU<hj silJalion .'' said Arl Aachary. 1 big 119- poind defensive eod of the Norfolk Nep- tu1e football team. le and other members of the team ar1 wondering just-how and where they Art going to tackll! Mrs. Patricia (Pat) Palnkas. Pit Is the first women ever to be '/ algned to play professional loothali, ud she'll play her flr!t game Aug. 2:2 at Foreman Field •l the Kiwanis Bowl when the Neptunes meet the Orlando Panthers. Other members of lhe Norfolk team aren't exacUy ecstatic that the,Y'll come race to face with the Ural woman player in profesaioaal football. "Besides being a diffteult iltuation In the dtessing room, she might presenl a sllcky problem on Jhe. loo<bali Jif.id. J don't like to think about fl," &aid George Jlughes, Neptune football ~ch. Pal Palinkas Is a -130-pound blonde. from Timpo, Fla., who signed a contract recently with the Orlando Panthers as a place holder. She 'U hold 1l1e hall for the field goals and extra poi11ts after 1 Panther touchdown. Pat wat signed Lo the unusual contract when she aceornpanled her husband , S\eYI, lo placekicking ltyouls Rnd Orl an- do coach Paul Massey signed the husband-wife team to one-year contracts. Unofficial sources clalm she's a better bolder than he Is kicker, WP&rlitr, I~ J l 1 I ,t,011-, 1• 4 O I O "•1111', c • 0 1 I 511H'Otll, It S I I e J~.W O llOS.f'IOUUlen, c 40 10 Tor'llM't• C I I I 2 P..,in, JI) 4 I 0 0 511-•1. 111 j I l 1 M•rerOMI, 111 1 1 I 0 :>r.>b&r'll'Wl!1,lb ' 0 0 I M_.. p 1 I I I C..•-1,11 ~lltGllllll,t tlll il"ttr. O 1 0 I 0 P-, I 0 G I 0 Or,11~~.rll"" ' J o J l ll.Lt mtl, p o o o o Ho\l"lll, o 0 0 0 0 9.itooorl!llll'l,111\ O 1 o O fo.~lt .13 11 11 t T01111 JI 4 I l L°' ........ ~ ooo •n on -11 Pll.,burgh 010 010 tl02 -4 E -Sl";tr. Allt~. DP -Plll1bul'O~ 1. LOB -LOI ,l."91lt1 '• "Int.burgh 10 JI -W. Olvl•• C•~w!of'CI lll -11111&1!1, 58 -M ,t,IO\I, *•"Oultltn, I -M-. iF -Cle"""! .. "Lombardi was ao weak he could tiarldy talk/' Monia quoted Kr1mer u saying. "He hu lost a lot of weight and look!J very drawn. LobmarcU told me ··'I'm fighting tc liczk lt.' '' Krame.r was quoted. as uying Lombardi la "f1'h<ln1 for his lite." There was no mention of Lombardi'• atfllcttoa. I I \ 14 DAil Y PILOT -------------------------------------------• South All-Star Grid Coach Lauds Huntmgton's Moro By HOW ARD L HANDY or IM O"IY l"lltt Si.ff Secrecy s urrounds the North AU-Star football camp at Rancho Alamitos High School as coach John Callard puts his favored Yankees through a series of rugged drilLs In preparation for the Orange CoWlty All-Star game at Orange Coast College 9 weeks from tonight. Coach Ed Bain of the South ataged tus team's only scrim- mage Wednesday afternoon and came away talking to himself. "We weren't very good. We aren't progressing offensively as well as we think we should." He then turned t.o the San Diego Rookies Sing for .Their Dinner By PHIL ROSS 01 1111 Otllr "fltf Sllff The scene was at UC Irvine. The nual-drene:hed tenor had just completed a rousing rendition of Figaro. It wasn't a performance of The Barber of Seville at the campus concert hall. Nor was it a bit of unofficial sho wmanshi.p at the Sprit:zgaraen. It was just one of the San Diego Chargers' r o o k i e s harmonizing atop a table in the dining hall or the squad's summer football camp at Irvine. By an unwritten pro football tradition, the yearlings are ex- pected to serenade t h e veterans occassionally on the table tops during the evening meal. wasn't bad. He had a good tone, but you couldn't under- stand him. "I just hope they can play football better than they can sing", Had! adds. Another vet, k i c k i n g specialist Dennis P a r t e e , seems to agree with Hadl on the sub-par group of rook.le vocalists. "We haven't found anyone yet good enough to make Ted Mack's Amateur H o u r ' ' , Partee says. He continues, ''Last year Larry Rentz (defensi ve back ) had an electric guitar and did all right." " defense. "This boy Paul Moro (Hun- tington Beach ) did an outatan· ding job for us. We couldn't do anything right with him in there at a linebacker posi- tion. "ffe·s able to see things and to pick them up quicker than most peopJe. That makes him extra tough and he &•f our offense all the trouble it could handle." Bain was also pleuet! with the work of Jim Votaw /Foothill) and Greg Newhouse (Westminster) in the defensive secondary. "We don 't plan to hit again until the ball game," he said Wednesday night. '"•Iitting isn't our biggest problem. Timing is the thing we have to work oo. The defense is always ahead or the offense in early practice and this team is no ex- ception." in a move similar to that employed by Bain, North coach John Callard is using his own staff u assistant coaches. Included in the group are Richard Adams, Doug Mercer and Paul Lorentzen working with lhe defensive secoodary and offensive receivers. Bob Mesa and Ray Vincent, the lone outsider. are working with the defensive linebackers and running backs. SOUTH STANDOUTS-South linemen (from left) Jim North (Corona de! Mar), Bob Tripp (Newport Harbor), Lee Walters (Huntington Beach) and Bill Champion (Fountain Valley), along DAILY P'llOT Stiff .. IM'9 with linebacker Paul Moro o! Huntington (60) will see action in next Thursday night's North-South foot ball classic at Orange Coast College. The general bill of fare In- cludes the various fight songs and alma malers from the different alumnae represented along with such classics as Row, Row, Row Your Boat and and Fifteen Miles <ln the Erie Canal. Perhaps offensive line coach Joe Madro, who has seen plen· ty of songsters come and go in his 2&.year coaching career, sums up how bad the 1970 nightingales really are. The Northerne rs htld a scrimmage Tuesday afternoon and will conclude the week's drills with another contact drill Friday. Oldtimer Lineups Set; Feller, Maglie Pitch \' Diving Ace Overcomes • Accident By CRAUi SHEFF Of IM Dllit "llot Si.ff ' -Eighteen months ago George (Jud) Alward suIJered a serio;us diving accident. While com1peting for Michigan State, Alward at- tempted to perform a reverse two .and a half dive from the l~mete.r platlorm, but landed head tint.On the board, ruptering two discs in his lower back. Since that time.: the Grand Haven, Mich. re:'kient has spent countless hours ex- ercisl{lg and . using I i g h t weights· to build up his body. Today, Alward, brother of Jerry Alward of ta lb o a Jsland. competed fdt'i lhe firSt time since the aCci4ent. He participated in the three.. meler event in the. r'National AAU outdoor diving tbeet at the Los Angeles S w i m Stadium. Preliminaries were held this afternoon with Lhe top 12 eom- peting in the finals at 6. Alwird started diving al 8 young lge Jn a YMCA pro- gram in Newton, Iowa .. tHe has beett working out at the Orange eoQnty YMCA wh'ile staying with his brother.) In 1966., the 22-year old Alward captured the one and three-meter evehts in lhe 'Na- tional YMCA finals. He added the one-n:;1eter crown in '67. AfLer the nalionals this week, Alward will return to Michigim State to complete gome summer school work. "J'll just keep working out.'' says .Alward. adding •·my coach (John NarcyJ thinks he can do something for me. so rm going to take his word for it." Alward has yet to finish a season at Michigan State. He was declared ineligible in hil frejbman year and the injury forced him out of com- petition in his sophomore season. Alward'• fam ily d istinguished background. has a diving His older brother Jerr.v competed for the University o( Iowa in 1K2-63. He was a stunt Olan for MGM for a while and is currently head designer of wooa Co. in Newport Beach. He also owns hil own company (Manage- ment Graphics ). Physical Exams Set by Oile1·s Pl>)'$i<aJI wltl be ht)d Satur· day ror pro•p·ec>1ve parllclpanl> In •II fell sports 81 HunCington Beoch High. All football , eros. coun try and water-polo eandldstes arc rflqulred to attend the 9 a.m.· tlQOn ...ion lll tht achool caldttia. Orange County Raceway Operating About Even Ora nge County International Race~·ay has not been operating in the black. By the sa me token, the Easl Trvine drag racing facility hasn"t been u n fort u n a le enough to be keeping it! book.s on the red side of the ledger either. Mike Jones, energetic young (33) general manager of the raceway. say s, "Actually, since we've been in operalion, we've becti running about even." The operation is about three years old. having. run it! first official race back in 1967, and the raceway is still a com- paratively lucrative effort in the drag racing fiel d. Jones adds. "Righl now our seating capacity is about 11.500. although we ha ve crammed as many as 15 or 16.000 people into ou r raceway . "During the recen~ PDA (Professional Dragster Cham- pionships) races, we had a crowd around 16,000. And I'd say at least 5,000 of those had pit passes." Pit passes are sold to spec- tators '>''ho· want to be as close to the action as possible. Jones' comments came after the third annual Sportswriters' Championships on Tuesday at OCtR. Jim Wolcott of the Anaheim Bulletin walked off wilh three of the six winners' trophies, However, Jones indicated that a sportswriters' com· petition will be resumed in .January in conjunction with the A I 1-P r o championship dragster series at that time. The DAILY PILOT plans on running its full sports stiff in the proposed races so opposlng sport.s staffs should be al their best again in January. Jones adds, "By the time the AH-Pro series rolls around this winter, we're hoping to have extra bleachers installed. "We'll be putting in extra bleachers along the way as we find a need for them." OCIR is a member of the National Hot Rod Assoclati<Jn (NHRA J. but Jones is of the opinion that Lion 's Dr.ac Strip In Wilmington, an Amerlcari Hol Rod Association (AHRA) track kept the Orange County strip on !ls toes. Saddleback Falls, 6-4; OCC Captures Forfeit Saddleback College closed out Metro League baseball play with a 6-4 defeat at the hands of the Orange Panthers Wednesday night at Anaheim's Boysen Park. The Gauchos were spotted a 4--0 lead in the top half or the first inning but were unable to hold the edge as the Panthers came back with five runs In the bottom of the initial frame. Mark Jackson, Eric Chris· Hanson , Rick Nelson and John Stub bs drew walks to get one run across. Ste've Shappard was safe on an error for ano ther and Steve Hazan brought a third tal!y home with a sacrifice fly to right. Shappard then was picked off base and Stubbs scored the fourth run. Orange Coast won on a forfeit from Cypress to end the season with a 7·10-4 record. tAOO\.llAClt (0 .. J~t-IO"• 3b (~rlstl111i.o11, It Ntl!.Oll, 21:1 Stubla.. c S~•l>Ptrtl. If• ~1111. lb ktl!T, tl·ll 8tftl. rl Otvls, " L.-nc<~~ .. t f $«~•· <:! ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' . • • Tolt ll " . s~ '' 11111111" ~ rbl . ' ' ' • • • • ' . ' . • • • • • • • • • • • . ' . ~(Jl~, J $10 111),c ... J 1 Pirate Five Slammed In Finale Orange amt College ran into foul trouble Wedoeaday night and as a result dropped a semifinal decision to Santa Monica City College In th e Long Beach City College sum· mer league basketball tourna- ment by a score of 81-57. The Pirates were 1cheduled to play El Camino for third place Friday night but the ECC coach forfeited the game and third place in the final standings to the Pirates. Orange Coast played without the services of captain Paul Holmes, who had other com- mitments Wednesday even- ing. Holmes scored 20 points Tuesday as OCC defeated Cer- ritos in the tourney's biggest upset. Wednesday evening against Santa Monica, Steve McClen- don was t.he lone Pirate player in double figures with 17, Orange Coast closed out the regular season wit.h a I~ record and the two tourney victories give it a mark of 3-7 for the summer program. 011.ANOI COA'T Ull " " .. " 0111\f ' • • • Wl!llt ml ' ' ' • MCCiendon • • • " Ct tt ' • ' • ,t.u;1t111 • • • • Ctble • • ' • $Hllm1y1r ' • ' • Gr1111111 • ' ' , SPllllb'I , ' ' • tni.I~ ~ " M " Htlttlm1 :KOl't; ~nit -· •• Ortnte Co•1t lf. However, when usage of the standard collegiate tunes is exhausted, the rook& must resort to more dramatic Managers Casey Stengel and games, including three no-hit- numbers. Fred Haney today announced ters. is Stengel's starting For instance, a trio com-their starting lineups for Sun-pitcher. He will be opposed prised of yearlings T 0 m day's all-star Oldtimers Game by Sal {The Barber) Maglie. Williams (defensive end ) , at Anaheim Stadium . who pitched a no-hitter for Billy Parks (wide receiver) The DiMaggio brothers will the Dodgers in 1956 and won and Howard Gravelle tight bat 1-2-3 and form the starling 119 games in the majors. end) recently thrilled (or chill-outfield for Sten g e I 's Allie Reynolds and Don ed, if you prefer) their capUve American League squad. Joe Coleman, third baseman Andy audience with an impromptu will be in center field. Vince Carey and catcher Lo u protest song. in left and Dom in right. It Barberct. Special Assignments Direc-will be. their first Southland First baseman Dick Stuart, tor Bob Hood thinks Pettus appearance as a unit since second baseman J o h n n y Farrar. first-year running they performed in a Pacific Logan , shortstop Roy back from Norfolk State and Coast League oldlimers game McMillan and catcher Ed Lee Thomas, rookie defena.lve at Wrigley field in 1956. Bailey are the other National end from Jackson State, are Bob Feller, winner of 25& League starters. the cream of this year's rookie ----------------------- singing crop. The p a I r specialize in soul singing. Veteran quarterback John Had\ is not quite u optimistic as Hood is about the present- day table-top troubadours, Hadl claims. ''This l s definitely a below average crop of singers. "Wayne Clark (quarterback) Area Auelcrs ' Catch Marlin Orange Coast a r ea nshermen had excellent luck out of Rancho Buena Vista south of La Paz, B.C. Mexico rttenuy. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Holstein o{ Corona del Mar. caught two ISO-pound marlin in ad- dition to a Colphin and four roosterf ish. Rober t and Rand Fulton of Newport Beach caught three marlin weighing. in at 132, 176 and 176 pounds. Next to you I like Green Strip~ best Bergeson's Shot Saves CdM, 7-6 Major League Standings DEAN LEWIS AME RICAN LEAGUE Minnesota Oakland Angels Kansas City Milwaukee Chicago Garth Bergeson scored the winning goal with 37 seconds Baltimore re maining Wednesday night l-0 New york give Corona del Mar a 7-6 ,,l)clrol~ victory over a stubborn Costa Boston Mesa High team al the Est.an-Cleve!and cia High pool to complete the Washington Cosla Mesa recreation drpart- East Division W L 73 42 6'l 52 fil 54 57 55 56 59 S3 6'l West Division 69 43 66 so 64 SJ 43 72 43 74 43 75 Pct.GB .6JS .544 101.1 ,53(1 12 .509 14~~ .487 17h .461 20 .6t6 .569 .557 .374 .368 .364 ment summer water polo league. Th e ga me was cl o s e lhroughout with OdM gaining a 3-2 firs! quarter advantage. The Mustangs lied it at 3-:1 al halftime and Corona wen! in front 5-3 after the third stanz& ended. In the final period. U was tied 6-6 when Bergeson hit his game '>''inning t a 1 l y . Bergeson and teammate KurL Krumpholz each scored three goals apiece for the winners. ri.1i.ke Beal had three for Costa Mesa. W .. fttMll~'l llttUlh Ml!w~l!l(~f •· Oftroll \ Btl!lmort ,, Ct lllontl1 ~ Chic"° ,, N...., York 1 &oiton 1-l . K1n .. s Cl!v 4-4 0 .... 1811(1 11, CltYt l8fld 4 W•Jl'Of1'19ton S, Mlnnetot• l Ttol•Y'I O•"'t1 s 6\i 27 \1 2811 21l Cltvt!18nd !MtOo""*I! 1•1! fl 01kl8M IOdO"' S·5J, night O..,lt11U IMtL1l11 '-JI &I M1Twtu~" r~1rtl11 t·•· 1119111 Min"'"'" !8 11l1vtn ._11 •• WathlMltlll l8o•m1n (11-1!, n!tM C~lt"o CMl!ltr !-•1 .i N~w York (MtCo•mlck 1-01 IC:•~1•1 Cl!Y (F\1rmor•l1 l-ll •I lkol•O" Otomo .,. !tl1l""f!r1 (P1!mt• 1'·1> t f (1!Hor1111 !Mu~v ll·I) nll!hl NATIONAL LEAGUE Ea1t Division Pittsburgh New York Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia ~1ont.real W L Pct. GB M 53 .5"47 61 53 .535 1 Yi 59 57 .509 41h 55 60 .478 8 53 61 ,465 91h 49 . 61 .419 15 West Dlvl1lon Cincinnati Dodgm San Francisco Atlanta Houston San Diego 78 40 .661 65 49 .570 11 56 ~ .491 20 S6 59 .~7 20\1 02 64 .448 25 45 71 .388 32 WM11,M11r'1 llt~lh .1o111nlt 1, MOlll•t•I I Ntw YOl"lt; 1. C!ntlMl!I l HoUJtnn 4, Pfllltdel'1't1• I l.11 -'"ttlt1 H, Plrhbvr1~ 4 S1 L.oul' S. Stn D\11111 1, h 111111,,.s S..n l'r1r>e:tKO 4, Chlc•to J T••tY'I e1mt1 $111 frtM:l~co (PIH&ek J.l) t i ClllC"° (P•POtl '·~) $t~ Olttn fltoberll •tl 1! $!, LOUii (Clt.,.lillO 0·0) Montrt1I (Wett"'I• J.li ti An1nt1 !ltffd '·JI, nit hi N'tw Yori( !StdtCkl 1·$) 1t CIMlll!lllf IMtrrlll 16,JG), nlth! PMtl.OtlPll11 (5ho<1 •U) t! HOul!Ofl (COok 2<21, nlt M Onlv 1181"\n sd'oMl.l1eod, Newport Harbor finished in a second place tie with COsta Mesa by defeating Lakewood 14-3 as Mall Greer scored flvr tlmes and Steve Smith hit three goals. COST.lo M•S.1o AA.lo Ll!AGUf !"111•1 ''•ft(ll1110 DEAN LEWIS (()1"9~• ~.1 , ..... C0t1• ""~·· N-PGrl M•'W L•~•-~ iuro!W ... 1 .. E1l•r"Klo G11d.., r .. .,,,,, ll WllJOn w L. ,., ""' '(I"'' ' ~ ~4 ~ ' &II ff ~ " ' • • . " I J4 ..., , ;J II , v .. 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 Service, Part1, & Body Shop Now Open Until 8 p.m. Monday Night• I Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota .llld Volvo Dealer • AUGUST SPICIALS SPIC I AL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON :~~ $1817 AD Otlier Mod.ls I• Stm M_. U-Hll11 Plck1,_ L4114 Cr1'-'-C6rOH VOLVO DEMO SAVE $466 #SU8782 1967 TOYOTA CORONA Slld•11. •tdlt, H•lttr. AU1eol'MI~ 1"nt. CVl!V )11) $1095 USHER'S GREEN STRIPE Since 1853, the original light Scotch • I f., ' -·--.. -...... -• ----. ,. WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? lly Jedi A-y lt'I &olnl lO be one of those good years fer deep ae1 fislliJlg off the Southern California aiast. The currt11t run Cl! "1bacore, yellowtall, yellowfln tuna, bluefin tuna bd sldpjack is considered by many skippers to be the best in years. Fbh count.s from San Diego landings are aumbering over 2.000 day aft.er day, with the best c:once111lratioa of fish some 50-70 mHes of! Polnt Loma. Moat bolts running out of San Diego, both party and charter, are bringing home catches cf more than JOO fish per boat. A good ShoiRlng, al last, of the yellowtail under the floating kelp patties out.s.lde has added excitement to the day's fishing. '-Iany boata are stopping 011 the patties ud equaling their longfin c:atche:a with yellows. Yellowfin and blue.Un tuna are being caught in the albacore :o;tops, but most anglers are losillg the big tuna because lheir lad;Je does not hold the larger game fish. Skipjack and large Spanish mackerel are also being caught i• the mixed fl.sh stops.. Top Catch b" Area Anglers Ralph Clook or Newport Beach, filhing bis boat the Tiet Tock out of Saa Diego, posted one of the better single catches over the past weekend as the party of four uglen boatH more than 50 loagflo• and to &0me yellowtail, most of which were taken from under µ.e same floating kelp pattit. Boals from Newport Harbor are bringing back good counts of albacure and yellowtalJ aa they an maktn1 runs out lo 60- mile bank and lhe %13 spol Most boats out or San Diego are running over loaded, making lor very poor fishing conditioos, wbercas boats running out or Orange Coast area laadJngs are hauling lighter loads. CoaJtal flsbln.r la also bot, wldl hall day and all day party boala picking up good catches of bus, boalto, yellowtall and a few yellowfln and bluerhl tu.na. Bonito •n runnlng very bl1, with the average fish weighing In al aroimd nine lbs. Jt reaUy doem't make much difference where you go fishing In the ocean as lhe warm water has really brought the nm to a biting mood. For information on fishing call Art's at ns.osse or Davey's at 67J..J4l4. Best n1a11 tu Cateh Yellomtail The besl. way to catch the yellows. whlch are working under the floating kelp patties, is as follows: After a large pattic is spotted troll by the kelp with eilher gr~n and yellow feathers or metal jigs. Slay just a re1v feet away from the kelp to avoid booking the kelp. As you pass the pattie throw orie or two anchovies next to the kelp and watch for a boil. If you see a boil, I.he chai.ces of a strike arc good. If you hook a yellow and Jarid it, then move very quietly t.owards the pattie and cast jigs or live bait near the pattie, but do not chum 1nore than one or two more anchovies. You will be able to se the yellows as you sneak up on them . Ba it fi ~h ... ~ml'n .cs·,,nld use light line and small hooks to fool the smart game fish. If there is no su rface action. put o" a sinker a"d drop down aboul 40 feel as the fish might be deep. As a last resort troll around the pattie by criss-erossing it at a distance of about 20 yards as you could pick up a breezing fish. While close to the patty also attempt to catch a few Spanish mackerel on a "lucky joe" to keep alive ror .a marlin or broadbill. .UArlha l'ictnre Looks 6ood The marlin picture is looking good even though very few spikebllls were weighed in this past weekend, Scouting the ocean from the 43 Fathom spot acros1 tbf: lf-mlle bank aboard the "Makelateje," this writer spotted no fewer Ulan tlx jumpen: aid two feeders, but we were unable lo get • stri ke. Tbe best concen lnttion or marlin seems to be off the easl end of Catalina Island. But it'1 my gues1 that the bes t fi shing this coming weekend w:lll take place near the zot or 177 spots. • Broadblll are still being takea by commercial f11bermen, but no more ~ave bt:en reported taken on rod and n:el. l11land Lake Fishing Consistent CaLfish, bass, and bluegil are the top species of fl'l':sh water rish currently hitting at our local lakes. The top nod &eem.s to be going to catfish, as m~ lakes list the whiskerfish as number one, followed closely by bass. Bluegil are ttitting in all lakes but they art numing small. Vail Lake has been giving up some good catches of f:at!ish for anglers fishing the shallows usi11g nightcrawlers and cut bait. The hot spot seems to be in Bayou Bay. Bass are listed as fair, hitting best in early morning hours and late evenings with surface plugs and poppers producing some 11ire catches. Rocky points are also listed as good spots for bass v.·hen fished about 15 feet below the surface. lrvi11e Lake has closed its private boat launching arl!.a due to )l)\V water conditio~ and fishing is listed as fair for all rt.sh except trout, whictr't!re non-active. Lake Shcrv.'ood reported U1e biggest bass caught locally hi recent months as Charles French of Thousand Oaks hung Into an &~-P<>U"dcr on a Smithwick Buckn·eawl surface plug earlv in the mor1dng. Fishing at Sherwood has been fair for bass aod good for catfi~h nnd bluegil. Very few crappie are being caught at Uie picturesque Jake localed off the Ventura Freeway. They've stocked the lake with Florida bass to supplemenl the good existing population of northeras. New boats have also been added to the renlal fleet Md the picnic Md recreation .areas ha\e bce111 renovated. for boat rentals and fishing infonnation phone (805) 49~2Sl2. Conslali-Deer Sea•on Sloms The cuus1al deer sea~n slowed doe to the extrtme beet, which fo~d dttr to slay In the shade t1J SUltJCl. A , few nice butks wtre taken out of C1eveland National Forest, but wardens report lhaC hunting presmre was Hght • . • dove irea~on opens In ri.texlco this wee~end and tlle outJook h: good for mourning dove, but the ••h1tewing populaUo• Is don, according to r.lexlcan officials. A "!ery liberal limit has bee11 given to visiting hunters by the Mexicans ... A good buildup of dove locally is pointing lo a wiod year for Southern Calif~rnia hu11ters, but every?ne i!> holding their breath lil the opener 10 hopes ~at the pre-apen~ng cold spell does not hit •.• A very high fire har.ard exists now and hunters are warned lo be very c:ireful when they are O\f ii• the hills. Oove Hunt Rules Set Ftllowlng art I.he basic rcri,.uons for california's i:nq dove l\untlng season. a ~~ split season that opens Tu~ay, Sept. 1, find applics :i.tall..,,·lde : Stlson dates -First period. !'cpl J..10 ; Secood per iod, Nov, 2'-t.<. II. !Ag.al species -Mourning •toVtA, ringed turtle doV1!!: and fhh!e IJpOttt.d dovt:t may be i.1'6n st11tcwlde. \\lhilr•\\'tnr:cd rlof111 may be u1k'n r in lt1lf,..rlal, Rn·crslde and Son Bernardino Counties. ri.1exican ground doves may not be taken. Bag and possession limit - Not more than 10 doves in the aggregate <:A .all species 1nay be Ulken In an y one day. Alter the first day of cadl o( the two !J>lil·sea.!Ofl periods. a maximum of 20 doves in the aggregate of au species may be ~ssed. Legal shooting hOOre -On&- h11U hour before sunrise to i;unset in the area being hunted. . ., Alanptos Racing Entries ISVENTM •ACI'. 000 ¥trds. ' vttr t1::t ~~~1.:icrJ.:.i.:o"t 11500• , ,, A Goin' M4on flanks ) llt !lob's !11r End fC1rdoz1I 119 Gos-· !Ortver) 119 .,.,,,. To Mlt.a fllpn1ml 119 Flv 0,111 CPer~r) tn 8 ru1>1'1 Miii CH1rt) 1!4 ~~~~ =~',i~zr.I""' ::; EIONTN •AC•. 170 Vlrdl. l v~1r o!d1 ind up. Allow1ncn. Pun.1 UJOll. Tiie Pl~ MIU "'ll'llf'tk Clllb. Seco Trick !Pernet'I 111 D•-Mok !llPIMmJ llt G1bbY'1 llO'I' \Mair! 112 Stnd RI'°"' W n (Hirt) llt Kllal1 Pro !Wells) 11t 8 ull R111u1 tW11110n) ,,, Ml 1'11 (Kl.,lt}. lit Tn" lr1cer A'::.'""~'Jt:i•i. Ht l<awnll EOUI 81r fCl'OlllYJ 112 HINTM •ACI!. 350 , • ..,,. 3 v~•r nld1 1nd up broel In Cillf, Cl•lmll'l!I. PU,.,. lllOI). Cl1!ml119 Pritt 11600. su..,!n D1I" (Ptr.,.•l 11$ Luckv flirt J~ IW•h""J !1' lev~n Trip~! (C1rdc1e1 lld •l•h' 81r fAdtlr) 11t ill:""'"'MI Tom INPl!on Pt"lol !IS L.., 01ndv l1r (Hirt! 1 !1 Suet11'1 •.ou1Jt flono.,,l1J TH Prlnc.11 P1r1nM1 (Y111t1l 114 Pllll•lm !I••• fl!IH'ltml 119 M_.. Dr Lnl {Wll.sinl 11' ... •lffl''-Slletd A lee !Wtltll 11, Harbor Area Net Juniors Recognized Wmning tennis juniors of the Harbor Aru have b e e n recognized by money awards for equipment through the Jean Wright Memorial Fund, e91.ablished on her death three years ago for the benefit of junior tennis playm in this area. This year each Harbor Area junior \rider 17 who was a finalist this year or last in any tournament outside his own club receives $15 casil for equipment. said J a y Burchett, lru.1tee. A total award of ~ ls being distributed among 15 harbor are.a junion. 1bey are : BaJboa Bay Club Racquet Club: Craig wn...,, 11, Adop- tion Guild toornament winner : ~lurray Wilson , 13, winner 3 sanctioned tournament.a; Steve Mares!, 12, AdopUon Guild finalist. Newpor:t Beach Tennis Club: Dick Miller, 16, AdopUon Guild finalist ; Tim O'Reilly, 15, Adoption Guild rinalist. Corona del Mar Tennis Club: Jay Burchett. 12, Arlop- lion Guild winner: Jim Curley, Tl, winner all Southern C alifornia sanctioned tournaments and Pacific Coast Championships as 10 year Old . AdopUon Guild finalist. Palisades Termls Club : Julie Kramer, lZ, slate tournament finalist. Emerald Bay Tennis Club; Eric Armstrong. 10. Adoplion Guild finalist: Debbie Fritz. Adop4.ion Guild finalist; Steve Spalding, 12, Laguna Junior Tournament finalist. Peninsula Point T e n n I s Club : ri.fark Jams. 14, Adop- tlo11 Guild fin<al lsl.; Val Lyon, 14. Buen.a Park finalist : Jim .Jecobscn, 14, Buena Park nnall~l. • $33 geta you two -that fit most Fonls. Chewrol-. Plymoutha, plus the Buick Skylark. Old•uobile C""-Dodll9 Clwger. Mercury Mont ___ ar. e Ragg..S 4-ply nylon cord e G-bac:tlon and akid reaf-nce e Good mileage at a low price B.UDGET TERMS AVAILABLE Size •1.00-13 7.75-14 8.25-14 8.55-1 4 •s.60-15 7.75-15 8.25·15 8.55-15 Tlwrsday, August 13, 1~70 DAILT PILOT 25 Los Alatnitos Racing Results LOI ALAMITOf lllSUl.n w..,.....,, An. It. \tl'f cw .. ,..ti ,llllT l•C•. olOt Ytrcl~. Mt lfd 7 "'' Oldt (ll!ml ... , l"Vt'J• tlfOO. L°"ll' NIDM IW•li.MJ t.JO 2.20 '·* 'tleht Cot>trol (llPPwi"1l J,JD 7.JO Hutlly Chtr•t IWlll.Olll j,211 Time: _71.1/10. ._,to "'" -Admlr.i Weith, Fl"O OY!. SPH<tv s,,., ttr, 111tk Fr11*. Ct D1 Vino Otrl, Detl'ld. S<:•Utlted -Turi Che•ff•. '•1111on Cllv. fltlltrl'1 Ooll. ''-CllY Olrl. t tt o lltr s•cowo •At•. UD '''dl. ' •••• llf<IJ ePllll UI. Cl1lt!llnt. PurM dOOI. Go Tl'll/"6e!'IMll !Cltdot•I 7•.JO 11111 •.• 1'!e•1 A llMUltl fPtttll) •.OO J.*1 Wllll luc:k (Ll1>Pwiml S.)O llm<ll: .11·1(10. .. Ito ''" -Wl!le. Gold. l'•llO' Mtrcv, TomtMr TDrHo, PHl•r floe. Fr1rMl9 PrM. ill:etkl Ml<I .. t'm E•rl'r. Sc::rtld!ecl -1'1.r Edcllt, Mr. CIJllkl. (OUMes Wer Clllc, LllCkf Jot l t11. U NIGHTLY DOUILI', 1 ·Ll"IT NIGHT A l · .. TIW .... •'-11, Hl<I 1111.•. TNllD IA( .. HO 'erd1 MtlC!fft I v.ar 01a1 bf.., In (•ht. Pun.1 t 1'00. MIH Tln1 Wttdl tWllJOlll 11-llO !,Cl 3.611 S.60 l.00 cn1rlw•rl llll>Mm) DH·MIH Go l id IAOCICltCt l DH·Mooft flurnl {AOtlr) Tltflt: .11-lJIO. '·" ,,. Alto ffl' -Devt1 J1n1, liM H !1VM. Cut• W11Ch, •ov1t Cr1.11. Ors* Fish Report Nl!'W"°ill:T IOtwt•'I Ltck•I -t?• 1n111t<s1 .. 1tbit<;><>rt. M ve110 .. t1U, tt blrr1cua1, ltl bol!Ho, 5et 111u. 1 whit~ IN baJe, 1 1:almo~. • rod! eod. t llellbut. CArr• LtlMl"")-20] tnDte,.; Jt t>.r.1ctld1, •1 bonito. "1 bitu, I lltllbul, l1 roe~ cOd, 11 ..,.a..-e1, 11 $pfn11n ltd( rnae~Htl SAN CLIMl!NTl'-120 f"'81eo; ru bt•s. n t tiof'>llo, JU llilf'ICU ... , >II mlKl<e,..I. t h•llbu!. 11 vellcw11ll. OCl!'ANSIDl!'-?U envlH!/ ?63 t.1•· •tc\lde, '16 bonito. Ut l>IM. 1 -!1e l"A beH, 11 'l'lllawfflt, J hllJbut, )J elbK.,,t , 5AN DIEGO tMllftkt.11 ,.._,)-tSt •llllfff5; 1.1~1 1l1>1c•ire. )t ¥tllaw1!n tunt. Ill:! wllowtin. LONG ll'•CH (l•-1 ,.lffl-U •nGIH5; f1l 11M1, l bunito. Bir_.. ,. 1nglen; 16 btrTKtldl, 1• bin. 66 11oon1111. lJ <r11c-1<1I. ''•<Ille s-1 .. tl1hln11-1 .. 1"'81eru .. 1lbecore. l •• uowt1!1. J t>fl,,.kUGI, t hl!IDUI, 1'19 cll!U> bliH, \U Donita. 56 rOCI< coo. Reg. Price Sate Price per tire ps tire $16.60 915.00 18.25 16.50 20.55 18.50 22.20 20.00 17.16 15.50 18.25 16.50 20.55 18.50 22.20. 20.00 •1..,., sn.-OOAI•"· "II t(tllf(flel, DH•DMdtlMt 1or it•. 'OU•TH •ACf. 5"" YltW, S ·- Old• tnd ""'· Clllml.,., 'u'" .... Rou OoO> /Pt""'I t .• fM 1.• To, S!dt !Htnllflll 11M ..... o•Arc1 iu, !lltnl11 •M TllM' .V·U1t. AlllO •If! -Tht lllf Miii, M~. LMe Shot, Mr. Sut l1r. St11w...._. Met Mo\11, Llll!t Olilt, ll•rtll T-. ser1tclltd -P•l'llOOfl "' ,,,... DK~er. lll•s Iv av.. 11,,_:.,,, •r .. cult. l'IJITM •AC•. lSO Yerdl. ' ..... , lllcls. tltl,,,fnrt. l'ur.. 12200. SlrOd fl.IPh.m! u .ot ._.. ).• Mr. ShldY IAd•l•I t .• f ,Mt 111.0ditt I•• lo>' lCt•dlt.l•I l ... Tim•· U..t/10 . .. llO ''" -Tiny Todl. Tr1,19 5'-lt, llurnr Cl•lltn. StHpln Cl4otwloer, Mo l<•••dlft.. ilXTM l"CI!'. 171 >'frdJ. 1 FHr tldl •nd UP AlfowtflCe, ltvrw ..... s .. 1ftm••• IAppdtUJ JO.Cl s.• J.,. Mollt•ll lloct " j(••d11111 l.lf ~M G•bbv'< aov !._dll•J tA Tim•· ... ntt. ._lllO ''" -Kl-•ll IE<IUI !hr, V1l- t1nt "•lnctu. N--.11.. s-i. It< "''"'· ""'· "'deou••t. Su•lclleo -,.,,_., lffl J11. T11r.,. Fo' ._II, S«o TrKtl. jEVl!NTN •ACIE. llll 1l•dl. J '"' c•ao 111d u1> • ._llDWtfl<H. l"ureo t:llOO. Que lllld1 (Drt•tr) 4 ... 4.0f 1<!(1 Fo•v Do" !"'11411>1 1.60 4.'9 TOii Deck JOlll 4Wll1Dnl 4.20 Tlmt: .11-1(10. AIM> r1n -V(ln(let' Go, l otiP'lle l1m. Ov• Dec:lolon, Slreh 0'0.U. ((11111! Cit •· en. "!Iffy Nott, ll<Kktl $elu!L Scr1tc...., ..: Alm Tl Mii ... l!'IOMTM ll:•CIE. 40ll VI,,,., S 'f•r 010~ •I'd uo • .ll....,.1ncQ. l'un.t U!DO, s,,..._ M1" 0<1nlsl J.60 • • .cl l.l'D Solid llockf! flliH'ltml HM 4.411 MISJ "'"Bir (p..,,,.,I J.l'f lime· .:io.1110. AllO •11>-0u Mou~•. &lrl.., lloUtt. Do¥IC11n11•1 Bir. W11C/1 El(. T"" Tfdd. ~o t<;rU~l. NINTH •ACI. Ult •trft, J •ffr tlth. Cl•lmlllf, l'urH VlOO, ill:-C ... rtlt (Adflrl AUl'lll Lulu {l1'*JI Tl,.., HOP CKtl'lll l lmt : .l .. JJ10, 1.• J.CICI l.«I J.ot J .• .. ~ •tso 11" -Scot! MK l .. ,., ltlll !!ff!>'f, Hull Hlllll . Sir llr N 1o1>. l !ffle l...,.., Ro.r, l'tlWtn ...... ,t, Oedluled. Scr.tclWd -1-la!I Sm.or!, DKtl ,. • .,. otl. ill:odo~t er-I v .. lll«t 11.dtd, '" F. E.T. $1 .90 2.17 2.33 2.53 1.58 2.19 2.38 2.57 • Av11llitQ In 2-ply only, Blletwall pnces t 2.50 I•'* 1"9. Otfv Ends AUVUlt 31, 1970 USE OUR RAIN CHECK PROGRAM. B.F.Goodrk;h will get. you ~he u1e 'f'Ou :-w•nt Should w• run out of YQUf six• durrng !his oller, we will bf: happy to issue you 1 r•in chKlt afld Otdef 'f'OUI' life •t the Mfvertlsed price !or luturll delivery. FRONT-END SPECIAL Straighten out that front end for safe, smooth summer driving. • Complete fn:>f'll~end a lignment • Expert wheel bolandng • Broke inspection ond adjustment JONES TIRE SERVICE ~:;;~~,~~;~ 1.1100 ~:;G~E. 646-4421 532-3383 ALL MAJOR CREDO' CARDS HONORED ~ ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' ,.•~ltU,.01 UPllAVEll llADIAL Tlllll • "r'OC.. IWE IHOUCO I I ltlOHIO ()It 1HlM" I I .. 1 ..... . t \ \ , DISTAFF DEALE R BREAKS DOWN 8.UTION OF MAlEDOM Women Win& Promotion at How•rd Hughes' Sjlver SUppitr G•JnbJJne H..11 J)istafi Dealer . Migrants' Pay Hiked By Coke 'No Women's Land' lnvtJd ed .ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -The Coca-Cola Co. announced Wed· nesday il has eslablished new job classlficalions and granted wage increases averaging 2.1 percent Lo approximately 300 fu ll.time workers currently employed in the company's citrus groves in Florida. The company had announced before a U.S. Senate sub- committee last month ln \Yashington a ·program to upgrade citrus workers. J. Lucian Sm.ilh. president of Coca-Cola's foods division, ~aid fann workers now have bee'n classified as regular employes and they w I 11 become eligible for insurance and retirement benefits Sept. I. For most. of the citrus c1nplOyes it will mean a pay raise of about $17 a week, the company said. The companr announced t1lso that It will initiate a training 'J>r'Ggram In enable migrarlt fann workers lo become full-lime employcs and pay them a combination of hourly and incentive rate rather than piece-work rates. Smilh said the prograJn "''di train about 50 harvest workers this fall. J. Paul Austin, president of Coca-COia, testified July 24 before a Senate subcommittee on migratory labor that the key to solving many of the prnblems of the nation's mi,11:ranl wor'kers ls to tum th!':ir season work into full· time jobs. He said, '·Every migrant ""ith the talent and ability In do so will ha ve the same opportunities tn rise In the Coca.Qlla Co., as any other emp\oye. "\Ve mus l replarc genera· lions of desp11lr with hnpe and imbilion and this will require a major and concerted array of .Mieial servlc.'e$." Baby Death Bill Moving SACRAMENTO ( APl -A bill lo make intcnLional kill- ings or unborn children murder has reach!':<:! t h e Senate floor with the appro\·al of the Senate's legal policy- making committee . LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Jean Brady flicked the cards across the green fell table and another male bastion fell as the first woman dealer v.·ent to work on the Las Vegas Strip. TI1e men Mrs. Brady dealt to didn't seem to care. "Yoo win, you Jose, who cares v•ho deals?" comn1ented \Valter Jenkins of Las Vegas. A 47-year"ld divorce 'tl'ith one gro'tl·n daug,;ter, Mrs. Brady says she believes in equal rights for women : "If a woman is qualified, she should be able to deal here or anywhere." Casinos in Reno a n d Nevada's rural towns h11ve Jong employed worncn to deal · cards and run their craps lablcs, but Ste ~lriR_ reserved those jobs iM.Q"unlil the slate labor co missioner last rnon!h told them lo stop discrimi naUng ag;ilnst won1en in a case brought by Mrs. Brady. She began Ill JI ow a rd llughes' Silve r Slipper Casino ~·londay withoul fanfare as a ..2 l" dealer on the overnight shift. ''Nobody complained, so I just kept dealing," she said \Vednesday. "It was just a tradition all along the Strip, I don't know how it slarted, but I hope it's gone now." t>.·lrs, Brady was a dealer for 2{l years in Reno and the small towns around Las Vegas before going lo work at the Silver Slipper three years ago as a cashier. Strlp dealers are paid about $30 a shlrt, hut the real ad- vantage to dcalb1g there is the tips that can be counted on to add a couple of hundred dollars a week to that salary. Questio11 Around D.C. Is Will Far1ner Quit'? \VASJ/JNGTON (AP ) -Al pri1•a1e cocktail parties a11d behind closed doors of hig h. a d 111 i n l s l r aUve oftices, political insiders are aski ng the same question: will Negro notable Jaines Farmer resign in protest from the Nixon ad· 1ninistration and, if so, when? The White llouse recently jotned Farmer in attempting to knock duwn p es is t c n t published reports the former director of the Congress on Racial Equality (COR E I will depart ~n from his po.st as an assistant secretarv of health, education and "'·CH:1re. Rut n1o.st signs point \o'tl·ard F<irmer's resignatioo "'1lhin the nC'ict few month.s. HEW secretary Elliot L. Richa rdson recently implied that Farmer wants out by telling a television interviewer he hoped lo persuade F'ariner to stay on the job a while longer. And John G. Venen1an, lhe J~F:\V under-sccrctflry was quoted as saying 'rar111cr wnu!d be lea v in~ soon. fArmer's stock answer lrl all this is "I don"l see how people can see Inside rn y head . I have no present plans for leaving." HEW insiders reconci le the 1naze of apparently conflicting stalemenl.3: by saying the former direclor of CORE bas decided to h~eve this year but has delayed his departure to avo id embarrassment for the new seerctary, Richardson. Farmer has been publicly critical of President Nlxon.'s civil rights polic!e.~. I h c Adn1i11is1ration·s r ep u led Soul hem strategy and of what he regards as Nix011's in- sensitivity to the r1ccds and aspirations or the bla ck com- munity. Sources close to Farmer say he i$ fearful of losing his credibility in the black com munit y by staying too long in an administration that many Negroes co ns Ider hostile. ).1oreove r, Farmer Is said by friends to be frustrated by his major assignment a9 good-will ambassador a n d listening post to the black community. friends also note the inajor program under Fa r n1 er' s direction, early ch 11 d hood de v e lopment, encountered 11umerous dcltlys in start-11[}. A director \\'as not appointed until June, they added. -------------- Tuh for Ttvo Ralboa J11land'11 Ruhv Street beach Is a nice ~not to ~ei a suntan, to take a dunk or ty,•o or even to trv an mtertube ride These heach aoers seem lo hav the balance problem licked as they oaiJ a~'ay from shore. ------ •• y oL-r" .. T-~ It's · Beautiful Un-cruise WASHlNGTON (UPll -It vlted abolrd lhe only rem· is an open lea'd i n ainln& pres:ideatlal yacht, the W a s h i n c l o n thal ad-Sequoia. ministrations past. and pte!elll •·The ship was in1maculate, have used Pres.identiaJ yacht, . Ill chrome freshly chromed, IO oitert.ain key rbemben or its teak varnished and polish- Congrus but rarely ha ve ed lo bowling alley sheen, Its ddails ot the sumptuous carpelin1 soft and Us chairs •aierbom lobbying been and l0W1ges sorter. disclosed by guest or host. "Sa1utes were rendered by Rep. Otis G. Pike (0 -N.Y.\, a spotless lleutenanl con1- supplicd 50me of those dela ils n111nder as the c11rgo (which recently in a newsletter to Pike described earlier as "a COftStituent.s, alter he was In-gaggle of other congreSJmen -~J 7 TIRES (. TIRES UNIROYAL BUY IN PAIRS •• ,1 .... 1'21·14 •• 110·14 235-15 and &enat.ora") l r o oped aboard. "Drinks 'ti· ere si-rved by mess boys in starched while Jackets, a magnificent lobster and steak buffet were served to the accompani1nent of a piano ph1yer 'tl'ho rendered 'All the 1'ime Goes By,' beautifully in the dining salon." "There was ju11t one liny liUle hitch. Only ;i picky prrson would ha ve noticed," Pike said. The thip ntver left the Navy Yard dock because of engine trouble. "Whtn the Sequoh1 ran't gel 11way from the dock on 11.t least 24 hours nol1« for the secretary of defense. it sort of makes you wonder about our ABM. which Is incredibly more complex and has to work r>erfcclly the rirst 11me on JO minute11 nolice .'' oo!l('luded Pike . a .foe of the antlba!li5tic missile S)'Stem. mJll!lll'•({~Jl!MI. UNIROYAL .. UNIRDYALilliil UNIROYAL EACH $16.95 EACH $19.95 Plu1 F1d. E•. T1• $2.17 lo 2.23 p1r 1ir1 d1p1ndin1 on 1i11 IACH $22.95 f'h11 f t d. Ei . Ti• $2 47 I• 2.10 p1r ti11 d1p1ndin1 on ,;,, UNlltDYAL (OAST TO COAIT liffTIMI I WAllANfY II ••7 ll•l to~o l -· ' ...... ,., ,,,., ..... ' .. Gn OnO ~•e•!lod "l•U " .. "t.0 ~Ill'', ,.,i. ... 205·15 1.,1 .... 1iJ.11 ., f70·1J 2 '" $79 2 ... •69 •o<h SJ7 so lo,IHto ISS·l4 lf ll70.1J 21 'l5 •••l1u• US·lJ .r 11 M10·1S 2 "' $75 ec1<h $40 !O TUBELESS WHIT EWALLS OR BLACK YW's 560.15 65011 :1 700x13 73Sx1 4 735115 •och $<12.SO . 2 for$ 48¥i'IF'i t71-l4 l'lus Ftd. C.. Tt• $2.35 IMf ti,. .+ GLASS llLT 2 for $56 2 for 160 racl1 $30 9S F71-1 4/7.7!·1.C. G7&-14/l .2!-14 n1.1 s11.1s.1s G71-15/l.25·1! •lw1 f1d. I•. lo.( ptr lirt $2.,, JO $JJ1 tl1p1 "dl~1 '" ,;,. '*''fit§j H71·14/ISS.1 4 H11.1 s11.ss.1 s J71 ·1S11.IS·1 S Plu• fed. lo . Tt1 ptr lir1 Sl.•l f'9 $l ,01 dtpt "tlliftl . ...... WHITEWALL i!INL Y $2.95 MORE Mott 1lrt1 !n1tock. I . TRAILER Tltt"•~--_.,._:::-:;:;,..,s •FOREIGN CAR TIRES · WIDE TIRES· WIDEOV!ltS ·STEEL REINFORCED· 78 SERIES. 70 SERIES. t Seiuritp Tire Stores 'Where tlz.ere is more than meets the e~ -SANTA ANA HAll:IOR AT IOLSA 139·3700 1961 IROOKHUll:ST (AT LIH{Olllf 635·1170 GARDIN GROV! 1601 WISTMIN5TfR 16 l lOCas I.I.ST Of llJ.(lf1 19J.ssts ANAHEIM I CORONA --~-SANTA ANA 1211 W. WARNER AVL !WARN!-II t"SIOLJ 540 .. 646 Jl E 111 STREET iJ1t At/0 'D"' SI.,] 544.9431 W!STMINST!R WlSTMJNSTll AT CEDAl t2 •LOCKS I Of liOlC[M w11n l t3.3S21 HAWAIIAN GARD!NS 11973 CARSON ST. (llJW(lll PIOM£1-I KOIWA •() 165·0227 COSTA MESA· NEWPORT BEACH J22 EAST 17th ST. 642·4131 USI MAJ CHDIT CA•D I OPEN 8-8:30 DAILY I 8-S SAT. ... HUNTINGTON BUCH 19411 liACH ltVO. M Mill ltO-tH nr l!l.\.liUf 5:16-7571 927 N. ll CAMINO WL ~ I SAN aEM£m 1·~~. •. f .. Prostitutes Favored Over Politifi~ns Only One FINil stocb In an homt tdltlons. That's I big dul7 ll Is I• Orange Councy, The DAil V PILOT h the OC'llJ dally ~ that dellv~ 111"" - CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERIES 111 OUI COlfYINllM'T SffOf' Al HOMl HnlCI ----1 --lf'Ml11 M7""41 For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PIWT •• ,.._ Thutsdlt, Augu~l U . 1970 DAILY PILOT J1 LEGAL Nones • • \ - ' DAILY I'll.ff iiM~" ~ U, 1910 ,,_ward For a Cha1npion Robert Grant (left) accepts the trophy for first Columbia-50 championship from Dave Domanski, ~odore of the sponsoring Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. Grant and Robon Ill topped eight rivaJ s in the cbampion&bip series by taking three first plae ... Yacht Racing Union Readies for Match Loi Angel .. Harbor's Hur· ricane Guieb wW be the scene ol the 6th annuaJ Yacht Rac- ing Union of Southern California's One-Design Own- pionstllps Saturday and SWl· d41y. This year's event will have U.S. Holds Star Class MARSTRANO, Sweden (AP ) -The Americans hope to cont.i.nue their domination of the Workl Star Class Yachting Champiooship1 when the com- petition resumt21 today. No race wu scheduled Wed- nesday. The Americans have won the first. three races in the five-race series and aim [or a sweep by taking the la!l two on 'Illuraday am Friday. James Schoonmaker, of San Diego won the flnlt raet on Sunday, Bill Buchan of Seattle the second race on Monday and Tommy Blackaller of San Franci8co the third race 't'ues· day. Schoonmaker finilhed se- cond to Blackaller and took the lead in tm: over-all sl.an- dlngs with 150 points to 146 for the runnerup, Buchan. Stig Wennerstrotm o f Sweden is third over .... 11 with 141 followed, in order, by Jorge Bruder of Brazil, 140: Birton Beek, of the USA, 133 ud Don Trask, of the USA, 1%7. Other American standings in the overall Include Blackaller 13th at 102, J. Mejlande:r 20lh at 93 and Lowell North 21st at 92. plenty of action with three races scheduled for Saturday and two on Sunday. To cut down on the wailing lime and lo further accelera~ the ac· Uon. there will be three-- minute starts. Unlike the policy In previous years, there will be. no entry fee (or this event A fine array of trophies has been arranged for competitors in Star, Soling, ~s. Geary·ll, Thistle, Cal·21>, OK Dinghy, Tempest. Flying Dutchman, Snipe'. Corona~IS, Fi n n, Llckrl(, lnternational·l4 and Flying Junior cluses. The event is limited to members of YRU clubs. They are Alamitos Bay, Long Be.ach, Newport H a r b o r , Bclboa, Lido Isle, Bahia Corinthian, San Diego, Mission Bay, Del Rey, Loa Angeles, King Harbor. Santa Barbara and the host Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club. Members or other clubs outside the Southern California area are invited to enter and match their talents agairl!t those of the k>cal yachtsmen. Ca ts Regalla On Aug. 23-3 0 N a t i o n a I championship regatta for the P a c: i f i c Catamaran Class is scheduled to. be sailed at Alamitos Bay Aug. 23-29-30. Some 40 boats are expected to compete in the title eve.it, including two from Hawaii. one from the East Coast and one from Texas. WHAT'$ MY LI NE? -This Is Rebec<:a Kapp or Pboenls al work and play. Which Is which? The 5 ft. 2 In., 100 lb Rl!becca Is shown in b~r work clothes left •s 1he models awlmwear during a lypical \York· ' • 185-Mile Power Ruta Long Beach Site of Hennessy Cup Rae Uterally from lhe four cor- ners of the nation, trailers carrying b u g e ocean-going boata are en route to Long Beach today for final tuning and practlce turu1 before the start of Saturday's 8th annual Long Beach Hennessy Cup off.shore power boat nee. 11kl 185-mile race, one of 15 on the Union of lnterna- tiooal MotorboaUng l 9 7 0 calendar for polnla toward the world champk>nsbJp, is ex- pected t.o see 40 or.more boats 1tart off Belmonl Pier at 10 a.m. as the next to last event of the 1970 California Interna- tional Sea Festival. Final weekend acUvity will include the National Drag Boat AMoeiaUon W e s t e r n ft e g I on a I 'Championships Saturday at 10 a.m. and Sun- day at noon at the Long Be.aeh Marine Sladlum. Among the entranLs in Lhe offshore race are B i 11 WishrUck's Boss O'Nova from New York; Bill Martin's HusUer. Clark, N.J.; Dave Puckett's 01 ' Wbatserface, Seattle: Bob Magoon's Andrea and Bob Rautbord's Fjno, both from Miami. They wW be joined by a strong western contingent ln· eluding the radical new tunnel hull ocean racer, Navalcat. deligned and built by Ron Jones of Costa Meaa , and by Peter Rothschild's Thunder- balls. West Coe.st Champion from Newport Beach. Spectators will be able to watch the start from the Belmont Shore Pier or from any place along lbe bea~b westward to Long Beach Marina. The boats will also be visible from shore from Point Fermin to Ne wport Beach during the first hour of the race . Mid-race paatings ..wUt .ae. posted at the Long Beach Yacht Club as well as broad-- cut at 1J :4S a.m., 3:4S p.m., 4:"5 p.m. and 5:45 -p.m. by radio station KBIG l740). The boat.II will return to Long Beach and ~ finlllh line starting about 1 p.m. The Offshore Class will be seeking shares of a 15,000 purse from the Frtndl cognac brandY-d1stilJ..inc firm o t Jamea Henneu'y & Co., u well aa nearly $1,000 in ac- cessory prizes lrom varioll! marine equipment firms. Boats of the co-sponsoring Pacific Off1hore Power Boat Racing Assoclation's Interna· tional , Pacific, Sp OT t and Cruiser cla.sses will join the UIM offshore glanta for a combined'st.art, then will race -...... _ COUllSE lOI Ml O.A.SSfS • -~· .. --OODDCD COURSE fDk UIM DfFSllDllf a.MS ,ACIFIC a.ASSfS .: ................... I II lfiltt Ulll OfFSHORf CWS ............ , .. , ,llS Miits Santa 81thra '•'•"" 0 lli-i.,- HENNESST CU, OlllW1-1ou with them from Long Beach ------------------------------ to Point Fermin to Newport Beach and to Ship Rock at Cataline Island. There they wil l head back to Long Beach to complete. a 118-mlle race ror POPBRA point& while the UlM racers continue westward around Sant a Barbara Tsland before beading back to the !inlsh line. Drag Boats Set Ra~e The world's fastest drag record set this year,'' said io go by the boards In the boats will compete at Long race director Ralph Roberts. Western Regionals." Welcome Aboard Beach this weekend in the "Mike Donnell s-:t the unblown Qualifying and practice runs Western Regionals sponsored fuel flatbottom mark in Gold start at 10 a.m. Saturday. by the National Drag Boal Fever earlier at Ski·Land, and Aug. IS with the flnab 1lated Association. I'm expecting more records for noon Sunday. The lively weekend of rachig1.-:.:::...:~=~.:::.::..._:_:.::... __________ _ Trailers Open W aterwa}·s will mark the close or the tw1>w~k California Interoa· tional Sea Fe!!lival. Included in the field will For lhrills and beauty ... By ALMON LOCKABEY aNtlltl IE•l1'w Trailer boating -for both poWer and sail sldppers - has opened the waterways across the nation to boatmen. With a good trailer, properly balanced and carefully check· ed, boatmen can l r a v e I thousands or miles with no worries. Owners or small sailboats in particular are trailering their craft to all parts of the country (or reeionaJ, na- tional and special rega~tas. FOR TllAT reason , trailer sailors are having to learn a few of the techniques that have been known for some time by owners of outboards and small power boat.s. Before each trip it is ad· visable to make a roUtll'lt' chttk of the trailer. 'lliese: s uggestion s come from Evlnrude service. personnel who have been preaching trailer 1afety to outboarden: for many years: The safety chain should be inlpected to make sure it is properly secured so as to kee p the trailer be.hind the car in the event It should come loose rrom the hitch. Although the average boat· man will never experience this, it is an e1cellen t safety precaution. When you mount your boat on a trailer, the center of gravity -with either motor or sailing gear attached - should be slightly forward of lhe center so that some of the weight rests on the hitch. This will prevent bobbing of the trailer and boat while on the road. A tail light Is necessary when driving at night. Ptfost states -including California -require stop and turn be all ol the top boats in signals. Many boatmen have -if you know how -but each of eight main racing a plug·in socket wired to the it is different from driving classilicationa. car's lighting system to a car. It takes a certain Althoogh Ed Wills' Mr . Ed operate the trailer lights. amount of practice. has bad a stranglehold on the A10ST BOATMEN make it Take it easy until you glamor blown fuel hydro a practice to release lhe become accustomed lo the ad· speedsters, he can e:s:pect stiff tension on th e winch rope and dltional weighl Remember eompetltioo fro m Dwight Bale tie-downs when the boat and you are now driving what in Lickety Split and the ever trailer are not being used. amounts to a very long car. present Warlock piloted by So before starting a trip, Be absolutely certain you Dick Rosburg, Veteran Carl remember to secure the lie-know the time required to Richardson in Hair is another downs and winch rope . pass, to tum and to slop. hot driver-boat combination. A visu<ll chock should be In backing a tr a i I er Three drivers are locked In made to see that all keel remember that the trailer battle in the blown fuel flat· and hull supports are in place. turns in the opposite direction bottom class. Fresno's Larry Also check the traile r lights from which you turn your Schwabenland was a wmner lo see they are operating pro-car's steering wheel. in the last outing at Long perly. keep the rollers and t watch the Thoroughbreds! Reserved ae11t1 from $1 .25. (Sslurd•yf & ho/ldoy1, St .50.) Phone (714) 755-1141 . Forap10/1/ buses, call Greyhound. Racing Mon. thru Sat. Poat time 2 p.m. ~ Tllot0111hbr# Club winch properly lubricated and With these simple precau· Beach in Joker's Wlld, wbl e k ~--lions there will be no need Gary Comwall has a Is o'b====================::; repac ·the Wucicl bearings ac-to "-'Orry when on the road triumphed twice thJs year In cording to the manufacturer 's Ith boat lrail •-e1·g Kahuna. Ray C•-·ltl and recommendations. w a er. ~ an ....:: Fastest in West It is a good idea to use added precaution, however, it his world record setting Panic a frame hitch inslead of a also is advisable to stop OC· Mouse should again be in the bumper hitch when towing a casionally and check all the thick of competition. boat trailer. Another piece or.pi•iiliioreiiiimiieiintionedii.iiiiiiiilliiiiem1;;i,.. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'ii'Wiieiiiihiiaviieiiiiooiit~y iioneiiiiiiW<>iiiiriitd;;;;., equipment that will offer ad·ll Buy il. 5,11 IL Try the fastfst rtspon$e In tit! West ag1lnst your own clock. Test Dirtlt·ot·llM Ads, whtre the action Is, In SalW'lii(I DAJLY PlLOT. vantages is an out.side rear view mirror on the car. DRJVING a trailer is easy Radical N e'v Yacht Fails SANDHAM N. Sweden (AP) -The American y a c h t Crocodile, con&idered a dark horse because of her radical new design. finiSled far back in 21st place Friday in the first race of the half Ton Cup sailing series. Peter Norlin, the defending champion from Sweden, won the race in his Scampi. 1'he race was sailed according to the new intematronal oHshort Qrean racing fonnula i n moderate winds In t h e Stockholm Archipelago. ' ·-·---· ------------·----.. ~ CHAPPIES ~lN°rRrk~ ~ '--·---------------- AlllZONA CALfOINIA ILLINOIS IOWA MINNftOTA WISCONSIN SOUTH COAST PLAZA l rllt" at th• San Dl~o '•Y·· Coat• MIN fl .""f'l"tl' Ltval -N•ar tha Wat•rfllll) •• USE YOUR CREDIT STORE HOURS o,_ h Hy II •.a. te t 1JI p.111. ~ t :JO ...... te 6:0I , ..... PHONl 14 .. 1106 QUARrEIUWJK SPORrS~ GOLF IAGS U ll Gol ASIOITMI NT COLEMAN SLEEPING BAG ;ttJ DAVEVON Two 8•9s Zipped Together Re9. $15.95 GOLF BALL RIOT ''TOMMY ARMOUR" A IU••ID PElFOIMll LIST SI J.ot DOL "SWEET SHOT" HIGH COMPl l$SIDN MOii DISTANCI LIST $1 I.II DOL f I ELDERS GLOVE by MacGregor "P&TE ROSE" model . All· Sttr lleidtr ond $595 hitter. R09. $12 ....... . "FRANK ROBINSON" mlum glove leathef. "Adjust•wrl1t" strep. model. Made R19. Price $11.50 ................ . FISHERMEN CHECK THESE VA ~UESI OAIC:IA AIUMATIC Ill lllL AND MATCHIN6 #1K TlUI n MPll IOD ALL J ONLY 1995 Pl JJOO e Pt UIO - T1U·n•r11 SPINNING COMBINATION I OD -lllL • 1t LI. UNI 1699 MM.t 61UT SOUTH l!ND SPINNING REEL MODI L 111 4•s .... 16.t S MJTCHILL JM lf'INNING l l lL WITH UTCt41HI HOLLOW •LAU HIDDON lOD 1995 IOTM ONLY Pl 17h. Pl 2711 DICO SPIN·CAST COMBINATION IOD.IUL·LINI ,. ... 24tl 9'8 COAST GUARD APPROVID .BOAT CUSHIONS .... 1.ts 2'4' COLEMAN TENT "'AG-AIOHD" f •1 I WALL TINT WHITE STAG SLEEPING BAG 3 Lb. Oecron "II" R19. $16.95 day. At right she is dressed for the role of a 19-foot offshore power boat racer whi ch she does for rec- reation. Rebecca '''Ill drive In the llennessy Cup race Saturday from Long Beach. YOU'LL ALWAYS DO BETTER AT CHAPPIES ! ------------------------------ • . I. , • ., ' - Bullseye ~ ... '"' . ·' ; . .., ••i ·~ .. ~.·~~ ¢V Thursday, August ll, 1970 DAILV PILOT JI) Russ-German Pact Vital Previ.ous Treaties Affected Entire World By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Fo~lp New1 Analyst liavlng achieved a pact with the Soviet Union that could have ll profound effect on the ruture or Europe, W e s l German Chancellor W i 11 y Brandt now seeks to reassure the United states, Britain and F~ance in a summit meeting that his alliance whh lhe West remains as firm as ever, All three have given tbelr support to Brandt in his self. appointed and delicate task of applying a healing balm to 2.S-year-0ld World War 11 wooocls~ but It has not been without a certain trepidation. Ttie pact to which Brandt alfixed his signature in Moscow was the 10th to be reached betw~n the Russians and an independent German state in the last 160 years. The tenn independent is used here to differentiate betwe2n tile Communist East German state which was set up by Moscow and the West German republic whose capital is at Roon. Most of these pacts meant trouble for someone. Emperor•' A1llance:" (Between Gennany, Ruaala and Austrla·Hungary) l o maintain the balance of power in the Balkans. 1887, June 18: Bismarck's ·'Re insurance Treaty" (Germany and Russia promise to maintain neutrality in war, except If Germany attacks France, or Russia attacks Austria·Hungary.) 1922, April 16: Rapallo Trea- ty. ("RapaUo" becomes !be synonym for German-Russian collaboration.) 1926, April 24: German- Russian treaty ol friendship and neutrality. 1939, Aug. 23 : HiUer.StaHn pact. 1939, Sept. 28 : Fourth division of Poland between Germany and Soviet RUS!ia. To Attend Meet Four Orange Coast teen· agers wiJI be among over 2,000 4-H Club members attendlng the 4-H Leadership Conference of Aug. 17·2l at UC Davis . The latest pact iept open Nevertheleu, whatever Lbe the: possibility of Oennan fears, thll la not 1870.71, the reunificat.loo. As F r a n c e time ol the Franco-Oennatt prepares ceremonies com-war, nor 1.1!1 It um when memorating the centenary of R us s i a n and Perman the Fra1M:o-PrusslAn war representatives neaoUa ting in which saw G e r m a n y ac-secret reached aaree~t at 'complish her unity a n d Rapallo. preponderance In Europe at Rapallo Rave the Germans the expense of a defeated im-lhe opportunity to build and perial France, it is easy to test Jn Russia new weapons see why the French get cold forbidden to them by tbe tre:a· !hlven at the: very thought ty Oc Versailles. of a re-united Germany. The circumstances today The: United States also look-find Germilny and France ed upon the S o v i e t . W e s t firmly linked through, first, Gennan negotiations w i t h the European coal and steel IOme misgivings, mostly out commun1ty designed to mak~ of fear that ln Brandt's anx-war between them impl)Mible lety to reach agreement he and then the si.x-nalloo Euro- might give too much away. peao C-Ommon Market-. All of the allies warned lhe The Soviet Union \s preoc· Wesl Germans that previous cupied by the danger' from treaties prohibited any fonnal Red Chnia and is anxi.OU! to agreement for frontiers until preserve the status quo in after a peaee treaty is signed Europe. It seeks West German with a united Germany. know-how and financia l help. 11,-llD SHAl'1MG•••·--MANICU"IHG <Jhe • There she was, cool, leggy and lovely, but nary an eye was cast her way. Pretty Trudy Carr, 15, at the shooting match 20 miles west of Ottawa, Canada, didn't mind loo much. She wa s intent on getting her O\vn bullseyes. SUJl>risingly 1 so were the men. Mere is a rundown: 1812, Dee. 30 : first German· Russian pact (neutrality con· ventJ.on of Tauroggen between The delegates attending the ronlerence and their club! are: Marya Potter, Costa Mesa Engineers and Pinking Shears; Susan Tovatt, Foun- tain VaUe:y Cloverdaln; Julie Drown, Mission v\e:jo Com· paneros and Debbie: Bender, Huntlngotn Beach Tri.City Challengers. mi;g:g .. Cham Happens Every Year Boxcar Shortage Expected WASJITNGTON (AP) r.rustrated federal officials and the railroad industry are searching for ways to eliminate the annual boxcar shortage when the peak shi~ ping season begins n e x t month. · 'A poll of shippers indicates m shortage of boxcars now bi.it no one is betting the trend will continue. Three rail can go east for each one that moves west. and the problem shows up when the Oregon Jumbennan. the Kansas 'A'heat grower and the New Engl.and utility de. mand service at the same Ume. The !nterstate Commerce Commission has dra\Yn a new schedule of penallies for use against shippers who allow cars to st.and idle. This has worked only partially in the past, and the ICC has had to send strings of empty cars westward to balance u p things. Several alternatives have been proposed but most would cost the taxpayer. Ifs not a new problem. A complaint from !he ranners of the Dakotas ~'3S the giant order of business for the ICC in 1887. "And they're still com· plaining," an exasperated Sen. Milton Young {R·N.D.), told the Federal Railroad Administration at a hearing recently. "The frustration is so great in Congress," says Sen. James Pearson (R·Kan.), "that we have the senator from ~lon· tana (fl.like Mansrield), not a radical man, proposing a $100- a-day charge, 'A'hich, if we passed it. would bankrupt every railroad east or the Mississippi." . ~ansfield and Sen. Carl Curtis lR·Neb.), are calling for abolition of the IOC unless the agency find s a solution to the shortage. ' A check of Kansas wheat shippers. Oregon lumber com- panies and utilities In New England indicates no shortage of boll:cars at this point - but the peak season begin! Sept. 1. "We are building up our coal reserves for this winter," said a spokesman f o r Northeast Utilities Co. ''But as recently as two week! ago we had a shortage of coal What's New ita World cars ... 1 would say the situa- tion has eased and i f everything stays on track ~ should be all right." A Georgia-Pacific spokesman s a y s , "There's been a su rplus of cars recently, but this could dry up." The only legislative solution under consideration is a pro- posal by Pearson to give the: Defense Department $ I 2 0 million ror its ov.·n 10,000-car fleet. Pearson has singled out the Pentagon as one big shipper 'A'hich Jets cars sland idle. paying the penalties rather than moving them promptly out of such places as am· munition depots. The Associatjon of American Railroads says 50,000 boxcars a year are needed to replace and beef up the t.S.million-car rolling stock to meet demand in 10 years. This would cost $18 billion. The association say11 the government should pay for a standby fleet, loan the 20 per- cent down payment on private OOi..car purchases, guarantee the loon and pay outright any interest charge over four per· cent. Kumba, the first gorilla borh at the 200 in Chi cago's l~i ncoln Park's 102--year history, is held by her mother, 'flfurnbi, as she mak es her first public appear- ance. The boby was \>Orn lb lb• tline-ycaN>ld Mwnbi and weighed about three end one-half pounds at birth. Whole New Life Found Under Ocean LA JOLLA (AP} -It takes at least four years of graduate work t.o b ecome: an oceanographer and one day with the pros can be an eye. popping trip into a world of wonders. A day at Scripps Institute of Oceanography reveals such facts as: -A strange substance from sponges is among the be.!t treatments for leukemia. -Algae from seaweed pro-- vides thickening for i c e cream. -Satellites are the coming instruments for marine scien- tists. -Oceanography bas yet to solve such basic problems as the mixing processes of the seas. These and other problems and accomplishmenl5 o f oceanography were: dlsCU5Sed this week by Sttlpps scientists and a group of Texas legislators and b u s i n e s s leaders. Headed by slate Rep. Ray Lemmon of Houston, chairman of the Texas Interim Study conunittee for Marine Resources, the nine.member delegation altended the in· tensive one-day seminar with the hope of eslablishlng an oceanographic center in lta state. "We believe that ocean science: and marine resources have a great future," Lemmon said in an interview. "In the next 30 years ocean related industry is going to account for from $400 to $500 billion of the gross national product." Dr. Walt.er Munk, director of Scripps' Institute for Geophysics and Planetary Physics told the group that altbougb oceanography has made great strides, some or the ocean's most problems - the mixing proresses of the seas. for e1ample -are unsolved. He predicted high·nying satellites will soon be used in oceanography bc-criuse of Prussia and Russia.) , 1813, Feb. 28: Against Napoleon. 1873, Atay 6: ~! u tu a 1 assistance treaty. 1881, June 18: ''Three 2 Bloc.ks Wnt et llroekhur1t 956B HAMILTON HUNTINGTON BEACH FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 962-8960 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GOOD If EAR WHI I EWAll-BLACKWALL "ltony.--Hurry,aale ends SMmdoy nlght_!:_------------Sa-turday night ! NEW TREADS RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES • T-9C1f llioe w JOld u41•4 tn-tnied dealgn 1btd: - -_. "'.Power c.woa• z ptJ polr-tnr cord lil"I! e Pk* T-Sbe Now-Go Gao.t,...t ONE$ LOW PRICE 25*,«~• Sizes: 6.00J.13 6.SOx 13 7.00 x 13 6.95 x 14 7.00.114 7-35 x 14 6.50 x 15 7.l5xl5 HLOWPREE V Cll:LOWPRICE BIG CARS $13?,!i* &.45 l! 15 ""' I.Mg" * P'lm :U~" 46¢ ,.. tit• Ua..d Fell El. T11. l"tCO'l'!ry ldepeM1nc 1111 silel Mid relteldlble lit! of \amt sin •• usr. OtMt """' CMICll: "°41tAM: a.c-fll • ~ l...,y .,,.Ind IDr ~ Urn. -~ run CNt of -slnos dur•nl!t t"''' .... , tlolol .. _,.Dot MIPPJ to..,,_.-Joi• Ill•~ prio9 1nd ii-)"Oii I rMn cl'leCA tor future •tlwe'l' ol lhtt mef~lndl.-. their ability to make frequent 1 ..... c.... cr.11: r.. 111 ~ =.....,.. and sweeping measurements J WAYS TO Lllltril .... ,1 ltl'll•-ltw LK1Ho111 •• f lh Id' I ··-II ... , MORlf o e wot s wa er masses. CHARGE ••1ui., PJ• • ... • .. ..,.. "9til Ocean resources will con· ,_... c..is. Unue to provide information I tP•••••••••••••••••••••••••-------------•ll'lll vital for medical advancement 95 · · and for appllceUon to every. BRAKE d • Tnlned ex~erts wUI day Ufe, said Dr. A. A. 1dju11 brakes on 111 Benson. an fourwhool1,oddbnilr.11 "A strange sulr.~3nce: from $ fluid u needed 111tl sponges," he said, "ls still ANY !":~ ~~~·,11~~n;~0u~: the best known lrealmcnl for 11·ign· m 0 nt wh.,l bo•rio ... All'" U S Iront and, correct • • c1mh1r, ca1ter 111d ftJ9·ln. Rotate 1U four CAR whl!f!l~. ._..., 11.S. 1111G 11hn ltfltl. ~ $2 tor tonleon Uri. ---~ . GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS• TIRES •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUNG &1 LANE TIRE CO. INC. COSTA MESA LAGUNA BEACH 1596 NEWPORT BL VD. e Phone 548·9383 4t2 OCEAN AVE. e Phone 494-6666 ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor Blvd,, Costa ·Mesa 642-0010 ""'~--.. 1!!11-.. --.......... -!l!!I ... ---.---------·---------------------------------·--• -• .. ••-r • " DAil Y I'll.OT 1U .. LEWEEDS . vou OfFERIN' A REWARP FOR"ll!E RlmJRN OFVOUR l &REf(H· • 1 CLO!ll ? MUTT AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER ._ ...,.,. Tai. "'"""' "" toVE-1HA.l' rM 60M6 PalWN 1D ~TATE Pl'ISOM WITH JllPGE fUkR 'THJS. l.FT'ErlrlOCll! I PON'i WAIT TMSk HOPES IAISEP ! PLAIN JANE .. .. • • 'Thursdiy, August lJ, 1970 ' -- • ~ f j. r PERKINS MISS PEACH ly Chester Goldd By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith By Frank laglnsld AFTB2YoUQ<TU.:="lO IT,lT"S NOTSOHoTf SALLY BANANAS MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CR.ACKERS m By John Miles ly Mel .MARCIA ~AS OM•t' ------f WI!~ I A FEW ~AM p · l(.~Ll."r' th®&~. £5®. 90fl.110W ANY AMOllUT -'METRUST~ • STEVE ROPER l Al'<LOGl%E """ -SO KICH ClF "ll>llR TME , • Wlllf !< Sl"l<LL WEDOOIG, fATHER M'CJJUMY I , . -- ---------..__-·A._--• ._ -____ .__ --__ _... ___ _ que6TIQIS.. ~ ·--- ly Saunden and Overtanl . . ··- . . ~· ~ ly Roger lolt11 DENNIS THE MENACE . ' ' • 1 , .i ·1 :.i •• I -l .. i I • ' " I ' I I " ~1 . I . , ' .. -. )l l ' I I I . -. ; I . ' . " ., .. ~ •ll • J • I J ··1 r ;.1 : ' -.... ) ~·· •· "r " ' •• " ' --- - ' ! i • l I 1 • l I -. " ' ' . • I •• 'l I I . I I ,j I ., ·•' ,r , I J I' • .. t , I •• " ·•I ·.;: 1 ·c - .. "' HOURI POR SALJ H H00$ES ,Olt ~LE .. HOUSES ,OR SALi! -!!_~_S_F_OR_SA_L.._!_. HOUSIS FOR SALE ~ •. 1111 ~.1 ,\. G-r.i 10000-r•I IOOI 0.-.1 1000 -··' 1000 Cool• -1100 EHtbluff 1242 t=~;5;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=:!;:;;;:::;;;;.;;s;;;1.~:::!!~~-:...!:~.~':::=~~~~~-,1:.,~~~~~~~~~~:'...~I ~-----------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 e EAST BLUFF "'. ,Lt !}, " * * * *' * * *' Newly Listed LusK PLAN-o, • hr. 3 ba. Back Countrv Uvlng · , , • './ . ('N 'NJRY VA In the Cott"• Park .,..., PLUS den w/vtew.Jg, beat. HUJ ind.a ~ j e . . . * r' AYLO. R ·* '"" a... to acbools, aboppinl ed pool "l>Wd<t>s tu b ... (I tu l Hunllngton P"EC:'TJGE W•'TER~'"O"'T HO"E OutsWKllna J&f'd. covered 8.l5-0ll01 * * ~.Norton eeacti,biggestbedroomaev-"' " . ,..., . " ~' IYI LIVING 4 BR / N D patio, 3 •family. """'"1on'=~o~Q=""R' " Thi< .,.. .... "'""ty " N..,.J.r listed -fle!'fect . or the fllDlly wbo 0 n by H. Excellen~ lute FIIA PRIME L T ' WNE kleally altuatid near all wailti a spacious Waterfiont home. • Extra loan to usume. Lge ~tory, 3 ~~ ba, ~m freewt,ys and a few miles li't. BR., 4 Ba ., pwdr. m ·Lge. Uv. nn: & den;. DOVER SHORE$-$10l,OOO Mesa Verde (Open Eveninp)' ~ •• ::~· :a":k ..,":" ; lo , ...... l5SD Total S hr g•rage. Beaut. patio/gard en; deck & Dellgbtfully Dltterenl) Brand new 4· bdrm, On A FuU Acre &""'-2951 Catalpa • 644-0151 down paymeot, ll83 per mo., dock. Lot #GO• ' den & garden roi>m with wet bar. Dramatic with _. type 3 """'°m 11ec • .,. o1 """""'· ...,. ---121.000 lull price. ·r· inf 2 • story living room with balcony. Formal home, ewripl ~painted, new will PQ the pointa tor yoo OE REALTY or onnatton on /all lots & homea dining room. King·sl!e. master bdrm suite dahW3hr.td!.Jposal.J..aeae. to USe )'OUJ' VA loan. Tbls ..._ .. ~ Corona dll f.Aar 1150 " CALL: llLL GllU/IDY, REALTOR with cathedral ceiling. OPEN DAILY ....,. . "°"· patio, ..,.,.., """bom• ls local<d 1 block I~~~~~~~~: I 133 Omit' Dr, Sult.= N.I . 642-4620 410 Mornlng Star Lane brick hi>lo " BBQ: M..,, born ochool and n>rary • OWNER. Immu. 2 yr. otd . '""' shade trees. Hone.a allow-shopping dose by, No down 3 BR. conv. den, fam. rm., A BIT OF HAWAII ed. Owner will fine. at 8\i% payment financing ia very 2 baths; trpJ. Patio awning. Gener ·~ lOOI GeMral . 1000 In Coron'a .del Marl Enchanting gardens and _hurry this won't last!! rare m Meu Verde. ao Nr. So. eout Plaza . view of the bay & ocean. A house to remem~ Only • • . • • please call right away! 1 Assume 6% mA loan of LUSE OPTION """" ~. Ir!-~~ '*· room, 2'J. batbs. formal 4 BED BEAUTIFUL malber1 EnD.R.J•1,,lhi::/il•yc1~4Jl'.·~.bj,,~d{;~~ $49,500 ·, Nichols Real Estate :::: ~: ::;,. pi!:: ... EXCLUSIVE WJ111; 5411-3423 for a hippy bome Ufe. f 79,500. 546'9521 ''Our 25th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton BY OWNER • Mesa Woods. 3br +fam,2ba,1mo old. Owner transjerred. Sell at, cost $32,950. Free $1000 in Improvement!. 3496 San in&'. aeJ>ihte t.am1ly Wet~HWl~n 8"ch, ~~tk>n. 114 ~¥~ea from bitleh. $1000 ~on ...,.,.,,.$325permo'Call ONLY· $26,900 FHA-VA CHOICE.Coll,.. Pvk .,..._ for~. 1 Ho .. tree•.Newcupets f,..* * * * * * $25950 3 BR. 2 Ba. Fam. rm., [ ~~~~~~~~~ [ Rafael Clrcle, 557·TG53 NEWPORT CENTER ' · aeated a truly Jjveable;I ===='==='-==="-==:=======I A large, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, F~nce. 335 Nassa11 Rd. · SPECIAL! HARBOR VIEW HILLS Luxurioull l BR. l Ba., hi cathedral cell., .all eJec. kltch.; heated, filtered pool plus bar room. May assume eXist low int, rate on loan. App't. only, DUPLEX Ont' of a kind; .Z.sty liV', rm., Swedish frplc., 2 BR., 2 Ba. PLUS l·Str. 2 BR., 2 Ba., frpl. Blt·lns b:ltb units . App't. only, SEMPLE REAL ESTATE 2S1S E. Coast Hwy. 675.2101 • ~ c:o..'" abaginden).Tbe ownerhas ' 1 bltiv, extras. FHA or G.I. · · home. $1000 down FHA or G.nerel 1000 Gener•I double car garage home, 545-2703 owner · WAL try No Down VA. ~-·-·------near be8utifUI. COLLEGE LOVELY 3 br, drps/c:rpts, !!!!!!!!O:E!'AS~T!!!S!'!l'!!D~E!""..,. .. ... . llA~ --------•I PARK All built-In appll· evrd/patlo. OPEN SAT. '551, '1:.~~· DANDY DUPLEX CAMEO SHORES anoes, Bullt-ln '"" alarm & 1134 Paularino, $25,!iXI. Ag. 3 0l:~~l•L, Y2 baH~~. dEandy Hullit .. OCEAN:VIEW Intercom C>"&tem. Block 549-mt !:KU•"'"'"' u..--=c--=-==-,~ den, kitchen with built-ins ;··· •-""u 1; WonderfUJ. f&mllv home •walled yard, Large alum· .;3-B" •. OEN' Now ,......... 1 OOL Do # "' ,.. incl, dishwasher -Plus a REAL ESJ'Att HUNTINGroN BEACH ore. 894-5.113 430-7511 Open 7 dlU'f -3:30 to 8:30 NO GIMMICKS G.I. RESALE Anyone can qualify to take over this low intertst G.I. LOAN on thia: 3 bedroom, 2 bath rancher w1th SEPA· RA TE 17 x 20 family room, fireplace, step.saver kitchen, dbhwaaher, carpeted and d r a p e d , $27,700 F\lU. PRICE . Walker & Lee Realtors 1682 Edinger. 540-5140 8424455 LEASE OPTION JOG TO BEACH ·;#Z~f f N:..t.ols Real 'Estate '--1·• ~--' •-~ Ana commwithuniptyriv~~-h lnum cov,... patio. "" c.,,U""'· A"ome $19.500 big 2 oar garage and "P. Ml ~"""' • .., .... ...,....._ ur:a.o; 'Sharp! CallN:ow! 546-2313. GI S%.%. $Z7,SOO. 218 arate workshop. $25,500 _ D~l;f ' E .,,9521 Country Oub in ocellent and sparklin& bIUe pool Hanover Dr, CM. Phone 646-nTl. Pictureeque 2 story shab- .,,... ~ neighbotbood. Big yard tor 3 Jledroom:s, 3 Bathll roof. Slate entry. Larxe 1 ~~~~~~~~~1 3 Br, 2 ba, lge lot. Gd I li I < h"• •~ 3 Queeft.S~ ma. large owners use and let tenant Large family room east-side loc. Lo 30's, con-s one rep ace, -oe "'"1\ol• :r=.. cttt~.:i: 1 "• ';;~~ r•~-"' PAJAc;E pay pan$3·1' you5o·o~•Y. Ste'f~ l=:oom slderJseoption. 646-m> ~r:;:.i~x ·=~:: HUGE • Carpets t.Uxury, eoteJ1a.lnmet)t-~e ' • I . $98,750· * BIG BEAR * 2 BR, llii BA Condominium. In MW with option to buy drapea-NO \foRK NEEtL iri Upper Newport Blur near 1t._ ~ * *-·-* Owner will finance! * LAKEFRONT. ~ All eltttrlc. Nr Mesa Verde 1 -~B"R~O~A~D=M"OO=R:--& easy rent, Hunyt can ED -'1)lllT!IOVJ:'IN, G.L Coonley Club and U.C.I. 4 TERRIFIC JRIPLU IO FL Iron....,. Prime, deep CC. 545-0214 'BEAUTY 1..:::&l>-0303=:;,· ,.,-=,---I and ~ Tenns. ~nts ~s (2 aJ'e'.O\let ~-water loc, Comp, tum, 3 ---·-,----Mid·West owner inltructed VA ·FHA· lea: tbiul ~CALL! • I z e. d bec1rooJn • s1tti~ $41 500 Br., bltn. kitch.; frpl., pa. Mesa Del Mar 1105 u. to sell as IOOn u pos!ii· 3 Bedroom 1% be.th. Glen WaJ)l & L rooms) with HUGE walk-in • tlo. All util, 1800 sq ft. w/ . ble~ 4 BR. 3 Ba. view home; Mar homP, Spic &. Span, er :ee ~. f'oRMAL D~ING 3 IndividuaJ unita; on large spectaculat view across LGE 4 br, 2 ba, Mesa. del comp. cptd., drpd., all bit. clea.nus ,describes th.is ROOM, apa.cious entry and Jot 50x1To. Owner will it!ll .lake. LOW, LOW, LOW Mar. Needs paint and crpt. lns, Profess. lnd!cpd, 6%% home, $2.8,(XX) ·no down to .-1 • lUaltcn mairlrured. fenced yard. VA Ol' FHA or "will talk ~altora & Co prtCe s.n.soo for quick sale. PrlcM accordingly. 549-3588 Assumable lOan. Reduced to Vea & small down w FHA. 2790 u.rtor mw: .. at Adami Otll' pleaB\O"I to show at turkey" on conventional fin. ''Our 25th Year 11.ZALroR (Miibt trade tor mobile $65,500 Walk to .shopp'g & aciloolJ. 5l5-9t9l Open 'til 9:00. PM just $.16,rm! ' anctng, Call to stt. Jn the Harbor Are•• Newport: Beach 0HiC9 home, Westminster area). ---V-rd----1-1-10 Walker & leeF*ANTA*s.T1c*Fou*RP. LEX* 673-4400 '°"~~Drl.. ~;:;.--::.,, ... & ..... MH•BY·OWN· ER c-.".:M:....51 ll SEMPLE 1 ~~~~~~·~11~·w~·~· ~~~ li !~·~~--~!r-~-~~54~w~10~3\ 3Ml Westditt Dr. Cuatom built, 4 bednn, tam.1 . • '"'" ~-- Im ~· Poss .. sfon 146'17U Located on Brookhurst Ave-MESA HIGfflANDS WHtcllff Buuty Rul Eslote ily room, 2 big fueplaoe•. STORYBOOK HOME 4 BEDROOM HOME "!::'i'f&Jli,!nc ""':~~]= ,Open 'ttl.i'OO PM "'!'in e=Il•>)I rental area. GUEST HOUSE 2515 E. c .... Hwy. 6'1S-21DI Th~ "'auliful bonie over· PLU$ INCOME with .,.,mable low mterest full .,.r.:' Ii ~vy ahak; No va~s & monthly ~ A truly outstandine 3 bed-with %. bath overlooking · STARTER BARGAIN looks the 17th fairway of Rustic charm would be the Joan. $185 monthly J11;YS root · trattJc fr'ff loca; p•r!.W:•"•:P come 18 $600 a month, Who• "A--with --cttw. POOL-goes with this beauti-ONL y $17,950 Mesa Vef'l'le Golt Course. undentatement of the year everything. El.ec bltine, w/w "«.: ... T .: tint,. room ,..,...... au.... 3 bath ho Own your home for leas than 6% auumable Joan, 3036 for this extraordinary one-crptg & lovelY drps tbru· tion move in tomotrow • 11 11 • $46,000 ~er d~~ ~~~~~ :! ~ 3tet;:;'~g nn with :ie~ rent. Nice bedroon1s 16' Uv. Java Rd. 54Q..4095, $62,900. ~~~u! ~~~ i~m~ out, Call 847-8.5.U. • Exclusive with: interest loan can tie.· USUin• + di.ntng area. Bltns, dish.. ing room, Washer dryer, BY OWNER -4 Br, 3 Ba, unit out be.ck. Loverly for VACANT &. washer dble gar. heavy ft'frigerator stove Incl. A 3 car gar. I.Lg famlly rm, 3-8550 Live Like • MlndaJin Newport ~:P anrne~ fDr shake ~f .Must ~ right real bargafn and it's R·2 formal din rm, interoom. onl.Y $49.SOO. Call 67 . inthifonly3yea.roldhome, ! ts )'OUl'I awaytoapPreciate!!No tin. ZoneCan645-0303. $45,500. '45--1848 2873 Boe • """""""· • batht + lam. •t 129•950• anclng .... b ... Under prloe<I FOREST L OLSON , _v .... _____ _ IO THE REAL ."'\.. ESTATERS gives pnncy, Guess the ad. C & N D. ch ' . •; tly nn.~ . alump11~ wall Fairview • COATS at $48,500. dress! 31J9 Mandarin Drive 646-1111 W w ••L• 'Cl! Inc, Realtors ewport ..,.. E WITH OPTION On! • .a 60'.A • ....,... I• , "" -HARBO, R N .• OF Wn..soN RM DR l FAM y -·-· -... , (onytimel . REALTORS By °""'r-2138 .,..,,,., !""'~''-TE bt'\C.>~ON! 5414141 Superlative Living Lovely 4 br, dtnlng nn, h~ 1200 J ...:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MARVELOUS VIEW 7001 Bayside Dr. Beaut. shake roof 1-sty, 3 Br. • ba. waterfront borne, x!nt swim. mill& beach. Newly redecor . $175,000 SHOWN BY APPT. BUI Grundy, R•altor 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6424620 -·-_ _..... -''Th• 1Bluff1'1 family nn, built-In kitchen, 4~~ ~.::;:: (Open Evanlnrs) 1860 Niwport Blvd., C.M. lb) .sq. tt. ot the gnatest step down ltving r ~, .. .,.., Leans CALL ~ or 545-3483 llvtna:. fl.taster sized bed· built-In vacuum, el e c. 1Jilliflre~placeJ. • Bullt.J.n ·desk. oiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&iiioiiii'"""I' 3 BedroQml &-family nn, COZY CdM Open Evenings room•, 3 bi.iha, 49 x 19 ft garage door opener. Driw .. ' DINING. Furiil1 IAYFRONJ Newport West homea Hun.. CORONA DEL MAR'S cholc-gla.u enclosed sundeclc with by, just 1 block otl Irvine ·Gourmet ldtcben with tington B:e'"ch. , Asking Mt value. Two Bdrm. beach a brt'ath taking upper bay Ave. PRINCIPLF.S ONLY t·ba.Move inwHh option Eastern charm, European $275. Possible option to home with beautlfUl carpet. FIXER-UPPER view. Priced below replace. $48,000. c:;a.u 805-489-6438 buy money I: reuonahle cratt:amamhlp. The ultima~ buy at $3l,500 or oUer. ing thnl out and modern FIVE (5) BEDROOMS ment. 842-5581 or 540-1720. after 6 pm. "1l Call 645-0303 in B.ieyfront living. Marble I Completely furnished, 3 Kitchen Roofu to add an-Only $a),$0 wUb big S!4 % Tarbell I 'e"E"'sr"'""'°1oc,...:-BaL="""'P•'°'nl""n'". °"V,,..a· llR£SJ £. OLSON paneled ~n, .5 bedrooms, &. family near 20th & Jr. other i~me home! Walk to GI loan to take O'll'er. Needs cant, lge. %. Br. homes, 1 ~ b&ths; pier A Jloat vine, C.M, on cul-de-sac. Harbor View School, Com· clean.up. paint & yard work. REAL LIDO VALUE I bJa: lots. Frank Marshall 1 Inc. Realtors $225.000. Available Sept. ht. for m unity Park and tennis but who bwws ·"your" deal Extra ctwmtng 1 & mi ly Realty. 675-4600 IARBOR N. OF WD.SON lO monUts. $32.5. . court&! Be part of the p>d mllbt be the winner. home. LoWest .priced 4 bed. BLUFFS C.Ol)do • 4 Br, 3 IRVINE TERRACE Intereatlng Door plan with "HARD TO FIND" 5 BR. & 3 baths. Priced under $45,000. Hurry!! REAL EllAH MART $24,750 POOL Hl:F," 4 Bed.rm, 1%. baths. Clean &: piarp. Close to beach, Flexible tenns. 847-8507 Eves: 642-0f2'7 tn;h§J!!I JOG TO BEACHI 3 to 7 Bednns, 2 to 4 baths, up to 3COO s(f. ft., &hake roofs, all hltns & carpeting, E·Z financing from $26,990. Rencho La Cuesta Brookhurst & Atlanta 968-2929 * ll AM to 3 PM (Open Evenings) Ille • wr have the key to (Open Evenfn&'s) room, 3 baths on the lsJand. Ba. Beat area. Below mrlrt. Realty Company &Na.suo happiness at $33,tXKI. OWN. ~ ••g. .. uo Asking $63,500. By owner. Aft 5 A: wlmda. Fountao'n Valley 1410 ::!:!".;.!.·::.!~ 675-3210 642-1235 ---ERWlLLHELPFINANCE! ,_.. __ PETE BARRITT RLTY _ ...... ~ ... ~~~~-=- ........... room on .bad< o1 GE R~~~ll M. M. LABORDE, Rltr. OUEGE R~TY e F..-Sato By°"""• e SPANISH STYLE Oetadied ...-60xl.15 R-2 4 IEDRM-$25,550 -• 6464555 Eve" rn.rus •lii0-11 o,Ql 642°5200 Short walk to beach, 3 br, HARBOR VIEW HILLS 4 Be<lrm "'"" ln top ..... mnn ,\ m: 11'11 ltl: \I.I\ I \I'. r '• • , • , ? • 1< rJ 10 r... and tor boa• trail 2 ha, crpts, dl'p8 ll bltn.s. Best buy in area. lmmac. 4 needs a little work. Custom ;,'I Nlce...,.bedrma A~ OCEANVIEWll DISTINCTIVE 3 UNITS · 3 BR . $22,950 Principl" o!"y. ~184> BR.2 Ba. a!ngJ"tory home. features. 2\i m old. >... nn • all 1at' onb' $Z.500. And what'• even greater you OCEANFRONT HOME PLUS ts•;. RETURN OCCUPANCY Neat & attr, 3 BR, borne, 2 BLUFFS DOLORES MODEL • Lge, patio, Newly dee. View sume low FHA inl.m!!at. Call usr .. can buy with no down G.r. • This 5 bdnn., den, family nn. 2 BR's each unit -convent. car prage. $5000 Down. 3 Br. 2%, ba. $42,500. of Bay & ocean. Only $56,000. $37,000. (Opin Emdnp only dosing costs. 2 baths. fonnal din. rm., expreg&ea ent location. near tchoola & Seller will carry bal. at 8%, 714: 644-5975 • 213: 469-7835 Call ~for app't, H.AFFDAL REAL TY On a "'""tilul "'11-de-uc dlgntty • fonnoltty; "" •hopping -ga.aga -pool BEFORE .SCHOOL ooJy l150 per month. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 842-44(15 •-stre.:t • .,.re for children'a children's wing' with own -aaldng $35,950 -owner OOJ: Patrick Wood 545.2300 N_•Wpolf Heights 1210 2 ba /'·--t will per """"'"' RI SHARP: 4 Br, , w '°"'" .......... play. Superb view 0 ocean sitting rm, Grau terrace on carry Pll -S dous 4 bednn, family • Biii Hav•n, tr crpts Ftexibl ! REAtTY & valley, M0-1720 ocean side. Beaut .. sunny r-make offer! :. honi.e in park like set. 21ll E. Coe.at, CdM 67J.32U BEAUTIFUL 4 lge BR. lge Balboa Penlntula 1300 ~:rw aw.ii. to assum! --·~ TARBELL 2955 Harltor patio wnge. pool. $232.IXXl ting, Corona del Mar High :pi:· p~t1~'o.~e:~ ;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.11~% FHA. Full Prtce GREAT BUY •j".500 DUPLEX $21,500 Call':=."::.':""" :~mi J;·;;nb~R;H~r . Cost• -llOO = tnr •m b ome. cff::E.~~*'E~1:~ ·:::;..:~.:..v:.:"..:bt.=""..:to.:.:";'..:.'~_'f""_7821~~~te• 4 bdrm. Bioadmoor .p q 546-5440 OCEAN View. 3 Br. 2 Bettis. from oCean le bay, Builder's OWNER Oetperate. 2 Br, ho-,.· .~-utitul Harbor l.ge. bedroom•, near ~ ~-~~ 646-3255 s , AU etec. kitch. Htd. pool, home, top qualltu. 2 a. Tiburon Condo. fl,-u"" 1111<& town, <;.M. Park, women'a1 .... 1«" rumpus rm w/bar. ' ua., .... ,,.,., View HWA Near commul'lity boys A girla club. Owner 700 ....._2430 LIDO WATE~FRONT . $66.900. By owner 642-U21 Biii Grundy, Reeftor as&Ume FHA k>ao. 968-6160 pool; Mt. View: cwner mov· need.I caah. Shown by appt. LIDO NORD 6% LOAN _ -· -~ 833 Dover Dr,. NB ~ a MAGNIFICENT Pool,· 5 ina: & mutt .ell.~ it now Lechenmyer Realtor APTS.-320' LOCATION.LOCATION Can ~ usumed by anyont, Dov•r Shores 1227 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,.. br Colonial-crpts &: dtps, • , • this won't lut km&. CALL .... 3928 or St;J483 JUST A PITCH NOW REDUCED TO i. 1he key to value; don't Larr• 3 bednn, 2 bath. tam. --------dbl garage. Near -.,, o.n to<_ pl,_ °"'" Even!nas AND pun $150,000-Xlnt .T.erms mlu thb o-. -tly room. Beautifully decor· * OLD WORLD * Lido Isl• 1351 Pvt. pty. $31,900. 003-24'8 I.ft ol 't'\iTmlt tistinll CHEERFUL DUPLEX From lr.iine ioll club, TucJc.. ' .... ~u~utillunityts. !:: .fu; ~~!.&!..boplin Wertdlff. ated thruout, w/w erpts & Exclusive Dover Shorei bay --------_ .. ·-~ .. .,. ""lq .,.....,....... cuitOm drapes. $170 Mo &: mt. view horn~. Unique & LARGE HOME Lagun• Beech 1705 2 BR. each. Shag cpta., elec. ed away in deairable Irv:lnt 80 ft tronting on 4xcellent .......... ~ 1 .... _ i---i..-. _ .. ..,1 .. -In 1 W< dlJJe 1 tyl Bull! f 5 Bednn,, familu nn., xlnt blt:nS, Trees. priV'. paticg, Terrace. Only a few short swimminJ beach. UnltJ att \AU •vi our p "' ... e ... ..,...IW" l*Y' en.,. .. '"'& c ea. ren 1 e. or • Asswnt 6~ % loan. blockl to Fashion llland n-'y •-•~ed. pt. cumnt liatings For all detallt call 540-1151, beauty a: convenience. ·~ stttet to street 4S ft. lot WOODS COVI aboppingcenter.Va~n~twu BUiG~~,R•attol' fi~l'!j~::1> q s . ~~~:~.bi;~ Byapp'l:.~ ~ek':~o~;~~~ FOURPLEX bedroom • den dell house. m Dovtr 0r: NA' "24620 ~ ·':"·-t!.'%5!.,% Heritage Owner may trade down fer 3 Bedrooms, 2% baths, bWlt SIX UNITS 1ncome $$5. Sell or trade tor In move in condition. Only • -' ' ~L - -1u.LT011S $1&9,000. S4S.?249 Bdnn. home in Tem.ces, In kitchen. Hard'NOOd noon, ~=tl"fMe: ~ ~ 642-5000 JG,!ril>. Call.~. . BUILDER. S UM700 T UnJv•rs_lty P•rk 1237 t~·o ~~ALT'!, j';c. =:!~ ,;,~ga & 2 fire. S:O!t:.!"'.:"~.:-= DOVER. $HORE,S . . FHA or GI NO ,.POWN . New Trl-Plexes WHAT A BUYI 33T. Vla Lido • 613-7300 :i olf•n Owner w1U 1'30 Galaxy Drive °"""' aay tal<e otftr on W"t tide Freedoti1 Home, $57.54!0 Thia ;, lh< low"t prloe<I 3 <5' lol-$52,500 · • 4 Bed-• ·3 batht 3 car •-··• N--!... He1""'ts (SOX: jtHt paintel and paneled. (under ccmfr..a-11 Aug, 30) bclnn.. 2 bath plan avail· ...,., own l!nanclng for -·-~' ' 5 HOUSIS ~·u ··~· ~.. v t w -~• m •u -~ hea u l'ISOO down. 3 hr, lli ba. • Buyer _ Shown pr. Tnmtibe martilt at. , 121) Jot Will ucrlfioef aean .,. ....... 1 move-· ~. beautitul "homes w!.th a.uie in u ful Urrlvenlf)' 615-$U or 497•1265 by ailiotntment ooJy _ rium, 14' hl&h .,ll&h~ On -lot Cotta Mesa. J Sm. illt Rea. Har Hu lure !•need Ylld. 0-an Income" located 1n Ibo Pvk-only $71,9SO with wry ======== CALL -tbR DETAD...S panoramic ·ww. Elq)ertly All rented. Good money 810 t et wW. PllY pointa -CaU tlrltltEutmdeareaotCotta good terma avail. Huntington &.ich 1400 1100 Glenneyre St. uM L•IORDE ·Rltr. c:rptd, drpcl, ~ deci>ral<d. maker•, 181' mo. Income. ,., -.• 5 · now .need5211":!"......, . 1,.,.., Featuring (lJ 3 BJ!, BOB PETTIT, Rultor 491-9113 Sts.om ~ ' ~ ' flM 000 v-. I Ward, lloaJ. ~•-l6tl ~ -•.. .---a BA "ownon unit" + (21 "SINCE 1946" ""-,,_. 642-1'38 ·-· . ,_, . ~., . . Call ~ ~ ··-•·p A ht WANT LOTSA ROOM? • HANDYMAN SPECIAL • c ""'· ~. Open daily. WANTED BEACH LIVING • , • _..:,;.;;:-•uw• ,.. 2 JIR ,.ntal units. See at Days 133-0101 Nig _ s • 4 UNIT apt., ocean .icie ot I led~"i\•J. ~vii la DUPLEX ?~.:..-: ;;,,;,-;:; I& ......, BU> • dupl<x, lei COIY POR 2 PLU$ = ~ =",;" = FULL OF CHARM .. Hero's • ;c """"°m bome :".;,,~~ :.",,;, °:: G L ~~ On •·-' • Jot wlth ed byTUdy brnyer. Otlt untt .beJJ piake ~ti. ONLY $17 900 at 6424905. , Uve In It •• love It , .. lock with a 21· Uvinr rm, 2 baths, yr. Nde. paint 4 deaq · no cir uawne-"' ....... ., UJITltt Call about! ' (Alao new tnoome unlts tor the door and leave It while f \nte.r Price --.. in& J1b. 5'4,", $lf7 fer' room to ~ b:cdlent CAL L G> ••••1414 m 29th St, Newport Beach 0WTt )'OUf honlfl tor )ell ,thin new•/w shag crptg thNOUt, o . ~.-. Mo. 1W ,.toe_S22.)00.. Ea&tslde ~. $28.500. Jlf!l. •,I~ m. Martuertte Nnt. Nfoe bedroom.1, 16 Uv4 aale ln Dana Point). on that lonr vacation! Cozy lot. cf tall Callf. shll.de for WllJ. TRADE. - Wells-Mc:C1r4le, Rltrs. rw•• Corona d.el Mar lng room. Wuher, dryer, FHA OR GI NO DOWN 2 bedroom, 2 bath home lor prtvacy, A cloU boYae with MISS!Oll llEAL'l'Y 49l-a13l , 1810 Newport Blvd. C.M. N••r Ne:,~:1L1.~1 Orflct MORGAN REAL ty 'f:~·.!~V:..lnclodA ,."al· ~~ West sfdeted~m Horneled'. o~y .F.d~llf Realty A small down payment & CUSTOM built-choice ~a, MS-1129 'Ewa ~ 473-6642 675-4459 .......... --.~ uar just pain .,., pant take over $1.U per-mo IOM,, Lagulll Bch. 4 Br. 3 Ba, -iJilr.4 • · ' pin and ltf -2. Call Vacont for qujck move-In Univ. Park Center. Irvine 125,500 Ml prict!. 2 dbl ..,.., Irr ltv nn. e llACtfllARGAIN e ~T!:.!P~N~~H 11' 2 BEDROOM 6454103. L Hull'I' fenced yard. 0...: ' Call onytlme 833.a beam "il'f, View! 6e-Jal11 * lllJPLE)(,ES * s BR. home ot ,.........,~ ba, fum>al ·dlnlrc rm, chef's EASTSID& CHAMPAGNE "' wlll pay polnll -Call Tur!le Roc:k 1239 .... CW.. te -•• prtcel Oply IZ!.:!00 • tmns. kt~ study + tom nn on appo< Wall to wall .....,.,.. tarre CORNER ""' -oetd• quick •"/"n. * BEACH k OME * BR. 21i:..,q. •••••.•• $54,5(11) Sttpe; to OC'f&I\" dub t\ ten-% •Cl't' fn sa.nta Ana. Cyn. fenc..d ya.rd, el'.ICIOsild pr-FHA or GI, no de~ Melll $21,500 OPF.J'i Hou*' Sun, 4 BR, -REAL ESTATE s.151!!00. OnJi 860 ft. to btach 2 Bachtlor unJta •••• $29,IGO nla. Hones OK aae •ts,95<1 dtl Mar by owner, Cuttm Call 613-6568 evenlna:• (lt' tarr. rm. 3 bl, 3-car pr. HUNTINGTON B£ACH OFC. PLACE REALTY *"8704 ..A-Olan REAL ESTAtE i • ; I I •• I I I • l 1 • • j, i • I 1~ •• . ; It • • • ~\ I ' • j 1,, .. ii :1 I I I I I ' :1 ~ e l i " G-. Wllll•.-CAYWOOD REAL TY MAIN °REAL TY OWNER.BROKER '""· tri.11er •pa<:<., S BR, ,-=.,,'""',....,·=::-::=;;;-;;,;: vi.w,""""' from park. Im. 194-.1313 430-7511 SM. S<duded ouic!oor-lncloor Rtolter ~ QO&..W, OOoll Hwy., Nil-REA~TORS ~· -""'""" 2·ba.-lletow ffiA oppntsot. DAILY Pll.01' WANT--AO. -mod O<CUp.-'U905-Antloch o;;enn.., -l :3!f10 8,,,,--ocuoritidlUIUeOlll;Telf··• ---• 7M1Jt 64$.1564 .... '·• 541-12'0 • ~. Olal 6Q.,16'7i ·-f~ Dr. lrvtne. °"""' 13>-1'1'12 -,,.. $18,500. '9j.'1329 I • u • ThursOly, AU9\l\l 13, 1970 ~z DAii. Y PILOT HOUSES POR. SALE RENTALS RE NTALS RENTALS RIKTALS RINTALS R.I NT.LS RINTALS RENTALS HOUMs Furnl"1od liov>H Unfurnl--Unfurnl"1od -~.!...."'!'l~u;...,...;.-. __ ..;.Apts.="-~·~· _1llh_lod ___ 1 _Afllt. U~mllhod Apt" Unfu,,.llhod Aph . Uafurnlshocl 1707 Summer Ronl•h 2910 ~'!'' 3000 Huntington Beech -Newport leech GGGN~ ....,, "* 0-ol 500I Hunting""' Bead. -HunH~ton BHd. --OPEN Spaee, l'Ntb ab; on ~~~.~~--~~-.;;..;.;.i,..;. 1 ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;1;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:;':;;;;::;;:;:;;_.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:.:.:;~·.::;.·•;;;;..""-'.;o:;'-...C.;.;; a. -ID tht ._, calll. LAGUNA BEACH 118$.3 fir. ·~· Gv. FllCd WALK To llch a &II OCll!t. ~. 3~~0::.: CONDOMINIUM .:.-:.:.r:i.r · ~ = ~1-· •' lr1_2-~ -~ I ... qoo. Lovel1 Blue Laeoon Vllla 2 ' · nr nn ... mco -=·~~~~·~· BR.>BAcon>p1'1CI>'. *-FIXER...Ul!l!ER ~"''"'""· $350 ""·cc'i--~ nlutQI $SS.5m. fl5..WS tabed, limns, dishta., etc. J153 tarp 2 1tor;y bo~ w1·1,:::::;;:.;.~~~===' • . Wa.~btt/drytt, Ava.D Aug 22.-4 BR. 2 BA. bup fenced s BR 2 Ba 1N NEWPORT 1740 Sept S. •99-2152 AM « yard, Pets & childrc f , WEST. Cpts, drpe::, bltins -!D1..079I anytime, VACANT? ~ ine. $'!,~ = A beach.. LOOKING FORAN-$185. mo .• 2 BR. beatltill>U, cH;.iomri .. ~Frul;-ndo--i>;";;;;;;:;-M-'S.;;i29;;;S;;l·l::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:I FHA 5*% LOAN? rum., w/.,...hwohr, -· 11"1 2 BR. °""'"'· "'°""· dryer &. pool, Adults or l Ref. ()opts, drps. Child ok. Fountain V•lley 3410 We have It .. on this lmma.cu· child, AYail. e11tl)o Se~t. •t late S BR. J Ba., wl vitw of llM. Dd Gado Rd., San Ce. Blue Bea.con. Bkr. 645--0lli LEASE. lowly tee 5 BR beaut. San Juan Valley • m•nte. "" ••• -~·-5 M on cul-de-Ac, •~ mo .,. ~-~ Costa esa 3100 'A ...... , pald. ••• ~-54 ' ocean. IA.rge tamil,y rm. ~ m. "'"" ...,_, parquet noon. frplc, Huge ~'c-,==,.,..~===~ feneed yard. Corner st~t e BALBOA PENINSULA: IO ftrett lot Only $.10,500. -45' Baytroht pier-float 5 POINT REAL TY br' ba. Lo~y! 3f1S6 Coast Hwy .. Dant, Point Avail Sept. 1st AlllO avail (n4) 49&5323 tor winter rentall. 673-"'39 ---- N_,tlleach 2200 * BAYSHORES * WINTER RENTAL.') 3 & 4 BR. -Furnished AlJo, one Bayfront "C" 'nlomu Realtor 224 W. Cit Hwy,'NB. 548-5.527 WINTER mi.ta!. 2 BR. guest m1 W/ ba, patio. 6134143 WINTER. Sm. cbarming 2 BR cottage, great pe.tiog, Ideal sgle person, 409 Iris. ENJOY Bay & Ocean Views, Sept. to June lease -3 Br's. 6Th-4081 '1t 54S-1843 Lido Isle 2351 ______ ;...._ e 4BR.2BA e WINTER RENTALS $400 mo. Cail 675-0176 Balboa Island 2355 1D10 SO. Ba.ylront Beaut. tum. 4 Br. 3~ ba. waterfront home + 2 Br. 2 Ba. garage apt. 2 Car pr. Boat dock for 2 bollts. """'· Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620 UTI'LE BALBOA ISLAND Beaut. 4 BR. 3 Ba. home. l.nvely patio. Avail. on yrly. bula; at $500 month Winton Reel Est.at~ 675-3331 3 BR. 2% be., ding rm. Yrly rental, 10!1; $400 incl ulll, No petB 67l-7894 a.fl 7 DIAL direct 60-5618, Charie yoor ad. tben sit back and liaten to the pbonle rt.na! $80 Priv cott tot/pet OK $98 2 Bedrm, 2 w/w '1. drps $125 2 bednn gar tots/pet OK $150 3 bed.rm 3 kids vacant fl75 4 Br older 2 atry kids OK $200 3 Br horse ranch % a.er STAR*LET 547-0063 * Show Palac:e Oean 3 BR on lrg corner Jot. Fenced yard w/patio & BBQ. Pets It children ok. S185. VACANT-CALL NOW! Home-Finders 645--2951 *TEXAS SIZE Large 4 BR. 2 story home, fenced yard, double gar. Bring the family! $144. TOO GOOD TO LAST~ Home-Finder• 645-2951 $115-2 Br. Lower. Stove. 01Ud &: small pet ok. }3.lue Beacon. Bkr. 645-0lll *SADDLE UP S©t:tJU}A-L££2rS9 The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle 0 ll:emrcmQ• lfitte~ of tM _.-., • ...---....._.,,...-., · lour ttrombled wordi • .~ ~ to form four simple words. TOH PET I I I I I ' IT Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach YEHDOME - DOIACIJLATE Al"l'SI ADUhT-m:t J"AMIL.Y Section CIOM to .......,1.,, Pork *~3BR'• 2ba • Swim J>OOI. ... 1 ..... * f'rJlJ, Indlv/lndey fac't. 1145 Anoholm Ave. COSTA MESA 642-m.i NEW 1-2'.l BR's. All bltn1, cpt/drp, pr. Nr. S. Coast P1a:u.. 51>-197l, st>mt Cotta Mesa SlDO .t._ M(RR I MA C ,A woo o s New 1-2 BR., 2 BA., turn or unfurn. alr-eond, sell clean oven. beam celling, dlhwr, priv pr, elevators, therapy + swbn pools, BBQ'1, saunas, clubhouse. Adults. From $140. J ust East of 2600 Harbor near Naber& Cftdlllac at 425 Merrimac Way. Ms..6300 * • • * THE HIGHLANDER ''Scottish Treat~' 16161 Parkside Ln. Mgr. 142-1969 I San Diego FN'Y to Beach Blvd, 4 blks So. to Jlolt, '1,V, on Holt 1 .blk. LA QUINTA HERMOSA 11Modern Spanish"' 16211 Park side Ln. Mg r. 147-5441 - FURNISHED MODE LS NOW OPEN Lush landscaping, 1cabana, cover,ed court- Y8:rds, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ s & foun- tams. "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS " I BR's-From $150 2 BR's--From All utll. incl. Furn & Unfurn. $175 c _•_n;...::.•_M~•·-•~-~5-l~OO Eas~-~~-5-242_ AVAIL now -by OV.'11Cr 2 Br. 2 Ba apt In 4 unit bldg. Pref. adults. Ph. 55/-<;248 PRIVATE VIEW El Puerto M•s• Apts. * .• • * 1-2 Bedroom Apts. $130 up incl, utilities NEWLY DECORATED Al.lo furn. Pool &. Recreation 2 BR. Crpts, drps, bH·ins. area. Quiet Environmtnt Jltd Pool. Adults. no pets. 1 Bdrrns., 2 baths; carpeted, draped. bit-ins, dis.bwshr. \J~stairs. $"50 f'.1onth. Min. i year leas{', •• '75-&050 0 -IWllllllllT 11 ..... Ott 11treet parking, No pets, I ~l~H~S. ~1'~'~-~~' _Bay,.o.·-~ 1959-1961 Ma,ple Ave. $110, 2 BR, be.th & ~ studio, Costa Mesa drps, cpts, po.tic. Avail 9/1. ---------1 I~==;;;;;;;;;;;:==: I ~k..,,,~1~4,~~543-8JO::l_•:r_~' 1~3~: Corona dtl Mar 5250 FAIRWAY * DELUXE 1 • ' BR ------1 Garden Apls. Bit-ins, priv. .. - VILLA APTS patio, heated pool, Irplc. ft..o.r_:~~- . • Adults. $145 mo. 546-5163 ~ 1 BR. dishwasher, htd pool, OX TEN ACW etc No pel.s, 1 child ok, 1 " 2 IR. Furn I: Unfunl S150 mo, uttl incl. 646-4663 Fireplacts I prlv. patics I ./ LRG 2 & 3 BR, 2 Baths. Pools. TeM1&. Contnt'l Bid.st. Frplc, blt-ins, crpts, drps, 900 Sea 1;11.lle, CdM 6#2b1.J encl gar, patio. 34&-lO:W (MacArthur nr. <Net Hwy) Newport Beach 5200 705 ORCHID 3 .. Bdnns., 3 baths, Carpeted, draped, blt·kis. Cov. garage. $325 Mo.; min. 1 year lease. 475-&050 __ 0!111. .. ' PARK NE\\'PORT -care free lvg ovrlkg the water. 7 pools, 1 tennis cts, $150.0CKJ Spa. From $175 to $'150. Bach, 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 sty Townhouses. Elec. klt. ptiv pat. or bal. Subtrn ENTIRE upstairs - 2 BR, stove, retrig, displ. 2 blks prkg, opt maid scr, cpts, mrkt, shops, China Cove. drps. Just N. of Fashion Perf. long rcntril. $145 mo. Isl at Jamboree & San Joa. 4081ri Femleaf, Cdi"f quin Hills Rd. 644-1900 for ".~,~B=R-, -,~.-,~.-1 -,-B~R, leasing Info. _,....------........ *~ 7n AMIGOS WAY 2 BR, 2 ba. unit!, untum. Outside living areas and double garages. S250 to $300. * 644-1617 * ~ 1 Ba. Attrac, clean, 1 blk to l.Jch. \Vasher &. dryer avail. $190 mo. 213: '41-1195 or 67>-7478 l BLK to beach -clean 2 br, l ~i. ba, stove, ref. Adults, no pets • 12 2 5 . 6T.r3580 * COROLJDO APTS. 1 & 11,i BA., frpl carport & large P &. up. 67:h'U78 Br, dbl $lB5 • ll!NTALS ~•;_~mlohocl 'A Sonia /(Ml !620 VILLA MARSllLLES aAAND Nl!W Sf>ACIOUS I lo t Mrm. Apia. Adult LIVlftf F•o;\'· • Unfvrn. • * * * * ~fh~und~ar,~, ~~=~i ;a~,~191~:;:;~-:;~-:;~~~-~OA~ll~Y~Pll:llr~-BFUISNl~Nl!CSSI •'L"" AHNOUNCIMINTS ANNOUNCIMINTS -SlltVICI DIRECTORY s VIC I D RIC RVICf DIR * -.:..;;;.:;~==":::.. ___ 1an4 NOTICES and NOTICIS ~ -c~,-=, •-,_ ~" -·-6620 lronl"I ___ _:6:;755:: TrM .. rv-BuafM11 F-IF,.. Mal -............_ MIO Oppertunltl•s 6300 MY WAY. t;iualHy bomt * JRONING * DON'S TREE SERVICt All ....:;,,,:::;;:::;"":.::..-= P'OUNO a CoUle dor. vic:lnlb' J"led MatDonald repair, Wal11, ct!llln&, tloon My Home, $1..Jlr~ ~ U.C a: lnt. Fl'N· EltL Mtlllattt ot 16th St. N.B. lU tehOal, Mtdallion Home BUUdtr •.tc. N.o Job too amall. PJck Up It DeUv. MS-16U ~mates, &«Ul584 Lm'ME 64:1-7031 2 Bro;,,. SU.to< o Miift BLACK curly baJr<d tom. M<dallloM @) ADDmONS. I. T. ""' J•nltorlal 67'1 JOBS a EMPL y 'OPPORJUNIJY will<• collar. Vie. Pia.,.,,. at 377 & 321 "' atnlctfoo, slnafe or 2 alory. WORKERS AvalJabi;,-" A1JY Job Wantocl, -7IOt tla l. Victoria. 6'&-0952 Vla Lklo Soud Plana, esttmates • la.>wta. kind ot work, anytime. -...._..." I-==-====== 1 -m.=1~51~1-,.-,,.-..,-,~-1 CloMlng, ta..., wwk, ti.. LICE NSED GUARANTIED & Lott 6601 1-.....,_. * _,.,.. Elliciut. rol!ab!e. 12'° ht. CAPTAIN SEC '"RED 1 ------~"' C11Mhry Lets 6Cll .,... K. Gorwlck. Lie. '"' '" , ...... Nlcl>olu Ill "PATSY" I--..;.;--'-..;:;:.:.;; _ _;;.;;; mfi04l * StS-2170 646-0075. Radar ~ l«an, 30 ,,_,. a· N( ~G-SPARE TIME LllJ'ae Female IRlSH SET. f Lott, Padftc VI ew SPARKLE JanJloriaJ Ir Win· prrienr:e ail« po'lft'I', Pro. A lucrtUve furun,, It )'OUrt TER. 2 yn old, wearing Memon.:J Part C~ttry. C•rptt Clnnfng 6625 dow deanina: Serv. wm. le11ional sport tlshtng rutdc DI.ill...-.......... -~ ecf applianca • pl""' ab.a ~ • cholect of I color ICbtmt• -, ~ths -•taD 1h0Wen: -mbftlred ward· ft>!!< .,..... • lndlre<t U.h• .,_ 1Q ki~n .. breakfut bar • bul'e private fenced p&tso • pluab 1 .. nuacaptnc • brj;k "'1"-Jl.Q'•·-..... ed iiloli .. i, .... Whaddya Wi nt? Whaddya Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Special Rat• In tll)s multibillion $ buaineu 11ea coUu, Santa Ant,. $200 each. &C-1323 o r dows. mid., comcl. cotisl Mui.can Ir Ct"nlnJ A.fMri... U you mett our require· HeJabte &re&. REWARD. ~ ~ ~ cleR.tlup, !'rte est. ~ e&."l Wlitel'I, Admlniltradvt ~entJ. \V~ _require consclen. ~ the Dally Pt Io t 4 BURIAL p!ot1 in PaciOc ~ ·v ~prrh!l'IC'f'. tiOUI . ind1vidu&11 who need Dispatch~ AU for Pat View Memoritl Prk. Ap. ' 1 • l nd AVAILABLE tcr weebnds, add!Uonal Irnrnediate cub LOST: Male Yorbhitt Ter. prox. in ce1t"Cail 54i-o8J.1 CARPET • Kaplng 6110 extended charters or ddl•· UOI SO. Brlatef St. (\i ML N.•of So. Coeiit Plan.) s ... 1. Ana PHONE i 557-1200 S Lln•s - 5 tiFn•• -S bucks Income to i:e•tock establ~-rierl s Lbs, bJclc • lllver \J) LOTS In Harbor Rest STEAM CLEANED NEW LAwNs, rweetttnr, ewrn~ ~t Mot 1ret060.....,..• ~·~ au&.•• -AO MUJT lflfCLUD• ed local biih-trattic retail on back/ red·brwn un-Veteran. eectton • R·EASONABLE RATES roto-tillJng,renovatlnr. ""'"""'"" --v 1-w1 .. 1 ""' ....,. " .,.... l-WMt ......... tf' ..... )-YOUlll .._ ... IW ,.,,..._ 4-5 ....... ""'"'*'° stores and coll~ rnoney. de r nea t h . Name ill ~l?St A1ilo carpet lnstallatloo dean.up, lt7. 2•1 7 or Pilot, 2211 W. Balboa Blvd., . ~OTlilflf. llOa I AL• -TAAOll OfrfL'rl Mu.sl be wUllng to start ln1. Heathdlft. REWARD! 5107 ~5971 146-CfJ32. Newport Beach. Ca. To Place Your Trader's P1radlse Ad PHONE 6C2M71 mediately, and Ult' a few Seuhore Dr, NB. 646-7326. ,\;;.Ion Diamond Carpet Oeaning: COSTA ~tesa man. Dqt. XI ti:ours a week of your spare 5 MO okl Boroer C.oUie black • 6iQO Auz, Spec. 400' t-'> MAIO SE R.V ·;.;•:;:C:.:E:_..;6825= yn, Sa I e 5 Eng'r-M&Jnt. $150 -LRG ·3 BR. Studio Apt, (Triplex). Family aize kitch. w/bltns, crpt:s, drps, frplc.. encl gar. 1 or 2 cblldttn ok. (Nr achls) No petJ. 2230 S. Cen-ter St., S.A. Nr Warner, 557-6502 $U5-Lrg cheerM 1 Br. apt. Crpts, drpa, bltns, encl gar. 1 child ok. (Jolr. schl.sl. 2230 S. Center St, S.A. nr Warner. 557-.6502. LOWE!\ Duplex, 2 lg brs, J& l'lpl.CiouS !Iv rpl. frpl, front porch, cloeed garqe w/drk nn for photographs, New paint, w/w cpts, drps, stv. rttrig., Neat' sh0p6 & high !Chool. I~ blks to beach. No dog. To reliable people, leue $185 month. Arter 6 PM 494--3727 Sat & Sun all dQy .. * * WOOD'S COVE * * &a.ch % block, new 1 & 2 BR a,ptt. Each have 1 ~ BA. Pool. $200 up. Lease. 21'1'5 S. Cout Hwy, 497-1630, 499-3929 * * NOR1li ENO * * 1· BR ocean vu % blk s~ ping, beaches. Laundry facll. adults. $175 mo. 494-4488 ' 830-4237,. Rl!NTALS Apt1. Unfumlthed Rentals Wanted 5990 11 A~ corner, Fairv~w &: SUntlower. $150,000 Equity for large: boat, Bayfront home or i 'Ed Riddle· Real. tor, fU6.8811. West 19th St, C.f.1. proper. ty 128' frontage with 3 buildings. Trade tor atre· age or home. 645-0139 Peaceful San Moritz home, 6 yrs old, 6% financing, $16,!XXI equity, 1% hrs from N.B. tor Orange Co. unit.a or home. Ownr/bkr 64Ml44l Trade Kentucky rltle, tig· er maple stock dbl trigger, octagon ba.m:I, very good cond. for boat trailer to tit 14' Gia.spar. 492-5376. Level view lot overlook.Ing Parker & Colorado River. Trade SUXI equity for local lot or car or '!' 494-2339 '70 Motor home 23 ft. Load. ed. Air, gener8.tor; clear. Trade for 3 BR home, inbd/ outbd motor boal, or wha.t have you? * 54980& * '62 Old!. Stuf.ire coupe, all pwr., air; lnelde l out in pl!!rf, cond, Want sailboat. prefer KHe or amall CaL 545-7783 eve11. '61 22' sell contained year ~net travel trailer, $2,200. value. '!'rade tor 16' to 19' VERY neet refiqed t.amily boat, trailer & motor. need houae or apt Sept. 1•.::92-67::.:.:.:".:..:a!;;':.· ,-,6'.c.°";...o•m~. -~ or Oct, Will care for your Fish 'n dtips, completely home as we do our own. equip'd, free &: clear. Nets Sm. repairs, painting in ;m, $5M value. FOR boat return for considerate rental /anything of value. 54.l-6639 fee. (11 U yr. old, (I) 18 dyi, 9624981 eves/wkndJ. in college. (11 non-destruc· tl'V'! dog. 54~71.54 Trade $35,COO ·~ in eleg. hm FAMILY wi&bes to rent <>r nr San Fran for OC b:>me, leue w/optlon 5 br home income or yacht N. Duke, w/pool. Up to $350. Loving 1231 Avondale Rd, Hfils. care. El Tor o /Laeu na borough, Cal. 415/342-9127. Beach area. 839-8117 TRADE home, $19,500 WILL You l&e your home vii.Jue, wlth polll. in Al:Ullll; to l retired adul t! (perf $5,f.m equil)'; tor home, oi>t to buy). Gd loc to $400 boat, Muse traller, etc. mo. Need Sept ocep. 1'1n. OWner/Broker 615-1225 6E"rtner 613-4621 SUITABLE Liv:ina qll"ll, furn. * or unfurn, fOr my Molher, * * l'rade equJly In our 3 br hoU&e in Mluion Viejo for )'OW1l in Huntington Beach .,.L bme. . tan, whlte, dox tall. lAst AUG, 15 • v~ Puti: Repalrlni & lnstalla.tlon -\Vanta aomethlng to do. If ~ are amblt~us and n!· at Fa:ira.rounds Mon. nite Oubhouie, Weheleon It Free est. 64.3-1317 C AND S Maid SUvk.-e 5C9-IS74 or: J. Sneller. 3069 qull'e'e1rtracashmcomenow Answers lo ''Kelly'' RDycoe, Irvine. Pre•i e w REMARC Serv.ices. l rooms Residentlal &: apartmenll. Madeira. CM and can immediately Invest Reward. 5.'0-5344. d 1 y 8 , from lO lo u, auction etutl ..... 50 1 Ph. 64$-$8Tl Of' &12-9874 EXPERIENCED Mfa:. eagr, ~-t unt of cub -.... · F\11 Y guara.ntetd. • a m.......-n. e amo SM-9424 at noon. Antiques, ap. Credit caro. OK. MT.fl688 tool desgrv. Electro-mecb (Guar. & Sec.). caU collect, BLK $bef>htrd/Ma.la.mutt J>Jlance8. toys, aportlna: =='""'~,,---,--,-~ assy1. sbt metal pts tab. Acreage near Rancho Cali- fornia. tor late model sail or power boat. Owner ·2133 Sarver Lane, San Ma.nm (714) 744-0M5 or 1#-3580. Mr, J~ (213) 787-8972 Long Beub lie. Vic: Npt. • equipment & furnit u re. STEAM Jet carpet cleanina:. P•fntln9, --'-" ;..:;3511=--'----I o:-writ! box No. M·2001. Blvd/Cst Hwy. URGENT • 833--~ or 833--3SM ~~~~:--~Ide i~~rM"!!!! 6150 ---------1 Palm Desert (2) 150' Iota Gd. for 16 unitll. Xlnt loc. $36,500 equity, Will trade tor Income or comm'I. NB, or Cf.f. Owner fi73.3048. Watertront lot, N.B. $38,500 Clear, for small home or units. Hal Pinchin & Air Dally Pilol, 22ll W. Balboa QUARANTINED!! Call col· • PR0n:s8IONAL Painting. Blvd .. NeWpOrt Beach. lect: 439--«153 l'T;.cuter;;.:.:;lftf~----.:":::"°;: ---------Neat work. Fine paints. *PARTNER* *POODL E ' SMALi. GERMAN CarpotLaylftf& RoU.r ......... air.le" silver-qey, male. PLEASE Gd Col'Jlltructlve l.eMOns R91Nir "16 spraying, aocoua. ceilings. Activew/$17,500 cuh&:man· REl'URN! CHIL DREN * 833-0554 * Local:re.fa.Lowprices.Roy agement abilit'. Xlnt start· HEARTBROKEN, c AN • T l SI1Ll. have the Best deal 841·1358. '"•··•·-·plus share of pro. SLEEP! 67' ~·1 FEM, Coll~ student wishes in tt:iwn i.1t Carpe:t·Unoleutn-·""='-'"..,,.~---=---.... .r•,,., t wrk /brain da Tile CA. Pf# S0-2rl0 HOtfSES, docks, *tt. !la&· tits. Should easily net partyl;w=sr=, -;Brlo=;-1-:.,...=-6:-m"°ualc-.-o! I ~~ chldrn ma:i:; or cm . LA ' • poles, anything • evecythlng selected over $35,000 1st Probebl.Y in fmt ol 1st call Oa~ m, · ue ET YER H AS t'CllSOlll.bly painted, For fret' year. This is a pleasant, Chrl.stl4n Science Church 2289 CARP.ET! Fantutic Say.. estimate 64&.9'752, di.gnilied busi~sa. &: will NB. Approx 3 wU aao: SERVICE DIRECTORY tnp. Call 6U-81M PHONE the rest . then phone bear most rigid mve1tiga-REWARD! !21-4460 Jobs Men. w..... 7100 "-' A S.fttr Position tion. To arrange for penon.. Applience Repairs the best: Jordan & Son . LOST • ....__ tabby P•rt 6510 Electrical LL•a Pain•i-. Llce ... ....1 bonded. -:==:=:=::::::::=:==:;=:=:I nel confidenlial interview ......... ,...,. I -w~. ~ 1" •.• :::,•. ,.,0 ~;:,';""' ii ti.1oblle Home Site, owner's 1· h 8JS.2Sil 10 to wlclear collar. b l ackl--;._;_ ____ ::; ·-w= ~ 30 acres. hi-desert, utll's, 5te ep .·~, am spttkled note. CdM atta. eWuber l: Dr:Yer Repail'se ELECrRJCIAN. Small joba. YOU Su pl The • 3 sociates~~:;.m Eq. ·~.ooo. F--•. clear pm aiy. 67>8754. Reward. 1'rff Estimate&. Wort maintenance & r e p a i rs. P Y Pa!lft. ~ •= "' 548-ml Br. Liv Rm & Kitchen for Oranae Co. income or BUSINESS and REWARD tar reeovery of Ciuaranlt'ed. Call 536-3159 Painted, $50. can »7-1638 R-3 land. 968-2645. FINANCIAL bronzes apc1 Schwinn man's Commercial inco~ , ........... r. bike, vie. CdM, m ICh. lebysltttr11. ___ '5JO Fi.ors ·-..--Bu1ln•st 545-2467 • -·- ty, free & clear, next to O rt ltlfl 6300 BA8YSITTING In my home. CARPET VINYL Tll.E Sean. Val. $65,000, For ~_!ft 811 VIC G~ld A:: Brkhnt Hr/day/evea/wld,y, Hr 75e/ UC CONTR. FREE EST. units, house or beach prop. UNIQUE OPPOR. FOR Sm browniah M&le Tttripoo day $6/~es $1; By wk $X1 * 5'0-7262 * OWNER 67S-6259 TRACT DEVELOPER OR mix, am '° ''F r t d •' Baby'• OK. * "6-7472. 40 or 80 Acrs, Whi&kcytown, LANJ? INVESI'. F IR M · 963:-f.(MB BABYSIT • m,y home • tenc- Trlnlty, Shasta Recr. lake Pending . lltigaUon, m .• Y BLACK w/white Pe kt , ed. yard. Near Ha.rbor a: Fumfture Relfvl"8 area.. Fabulous for hunting:, make avail 128 lots totalhng male, "fpo", Vic. Oglt & Edina;tr 839-.3353 _ &. Rtflnlthlng '675 '·h· '--~'" F lty 1,240,tn) sq ft in an ap-Santa Ana, CM. REWARD.l:ii'==.·:,.::::.::::;:-_,,,_,, r..,. ing, ....,.ung, or equ proved aub-drYision tract 646--l73S BABYSIT, my home, North FURNITURE Strlppl:ne I: sm hm etc. Meyer 549-1366. w/400 lot!, This prop is Costa Mesa. Infant O.K. fttinlahing 8 Units, good. rental area. located in the most pref. H~~ ~ale,V= Days only. Call: 61&-4256 * 642.9515 * Relittd Painter: 26 yn: exper. Neat &: honest. NoD- drinker. cat.I SJ6.6801 McAdams Painting Serv. Inter. A: E:ltter. Special ratea on apts. 64&-3645 METICULOUS PAINT. BLUE 'cHJp Sl'AMPS. INS. crew col. a:tud"nts. lnt-ext bouaea. Exp. Docks. li'Th-5812 No Wasting $38,000 Equity : income area of the Rona Cout Iale ~boa ~ .. 1r.· Rtwud BABYSITJ'ING My home $13,500. For lx:>uae, commer. o( Hawaii. For aU pertinent 673-1838 • Cotta Mesa. aru. Dt.y or cial or horse ranch. details write: C. Broe.ded, niaflt. Fenced )'cl. 642-5.299 + WALLPAPER * ·when yt1f{ call "Mac" Gardonl"I 6610 548-1444 - OWNER 675"6259 Box 492, Honaunau, Ha,wali GERMAN Shott h_ a I r e d. WlLL Babysit my bxM ~c=-1,-ar..:..a",'c,.':•-;2000:i;:""n":-•"l•"v~. I ::96::'::"'=----~---I ~ln~~mai~ V1C Sa.nW. Any a8' An~ time, Vk1 vie Lake Mathew11. For: In. STERLING SILVER Ingots na . . Llrdberg:h Sch Ref. M&--nM rom~/Res coasta.I area Joe. (barz) 3 ou, $9.65 tt, 50c LOSI' • Oranp striped cat NEWPORT Hgt.a uu. larae 8480 Camino Sur, Cucamon. postage. Romeo 365 Ojua, with red coilar, vlc OCC ard I ndbox Lu h ga, Ca. 91730. Miami, Fla. 33163 Reward fi42..l693 ~ckl~ :int~. 66-~M + $7001 equity in Hunt. Bc.h. FISH 'n Chips, independent. e CHILD CAAE Pref condominium for fr'R ..sin-$2'.lOO mo net Te r m • . Per1on1l1 MOS : • · non- ow-r. ..1 ~-day, .. rt,prelled kidl!I to • yn, gle cng airplane, '63 Olds .... ... '"""""" E * -* Cutlass convert for street/ 962-4981 eves &: wknds. A TH NA'S AL'S GARDENING * PAPERHANGING fGt Gardenlllf It small tam. It PAINTING. 'f 968--2425 acapfoa """"'' c:all ~198 * PAPl!RHANGliR * Servinc Newport. CdM, Cot-Recocnb:ed Authority, Prior i. Men. Dover Shore1, inalntctor. 646-2449: Westclttt. INT. & Ext Paint.ins'. Local AL'S LandlCl.pi.ng. Tree "f's. Jlc'd, lt111., free e11t. removal. Yard remodeling. !,.all Chuck, 645-0SO'J. Trash haulloa:, lot cle1U1up. Repair 1prnklers. 673-1166 din bike. 54!J...3123/962·5218. SPACE AVA IL! For interior of the Sunset Strip with GARDENI N G : L and Carpenter .• 1~ '590 cleanupa. ~ sy1, ro~ PROF'ESSIONAL. 30 yrs ~ll;p. pai:ierha.aKing & pain-- ting, from England. 968-7461 Granada !lilts 2 sty vu hme decorator or 1 i m 11 a r . the 1tt•te1t girls from 2800 act It, like new, $57,750 646-5383 HOLLYWOOD kl R &: L pe!nl:ing Interior • CARPENTRY cement work. Yancey exterior. Weare reuonable. MINOJt llEPADIS. Ne Job ~-,;:,..~=~-~~-64>-250~ 54&-0623 val.4Br,38a,lamrm.For * VERY wtll know n MASSAGE YOU ama.lr hme. lfrbr Vu Hilla. restaurant. 92 see.ls, beer Ownr. Ofc. 6444571, &: wine. $12,500. * 646-5383 Too Sim.II. Oll:dmt iD pr-JAPANESE Ga rd e n Ing .;;:=;;::,;;_;;"""=== qt1 A •t h• r cabtneta. Service. Neat work. Oeanup Now with a new 1oatien 561111. It no answer *" yd. maint. 968.2303. NEWj.ORT :=..:.!, llWl'2. H. O. ~mpl•t• Yard C:::1.., * * * Bu1ine•S W•nfed abilities t111Limitei) ageoc;y • Trainffl $300 (Fee Paid By Employer) Will Train For Mall Room e Also, Several OU~r Appti. ca.nt Paid Fee Trainee: Po!i· lions To $300. Also Fee Positions TRISH HOPKINS 488 E. 17th. Sui~ 224 C.M. 642·1470 ACTION HERE! Sec'y to $500 Ge.n 'J Ofc. ti) $303 Salei; fttop. start $600 Legal Sec'y 11tart $r>50 Mgr Trainee start $475 F /C Bkkpr start $400 Medlcal fmt ofc. lo $425 Gen'l Ofe. Sec'y to $400 NCR Operalor atart $350 -COASTAL AGENCY 2790 Harbor BL, CM Other fce/frtt jobs. avail. Adv. Sec'y lo s.120 Jr. Stt'y Trainee $300 F IC Bk'kper.Looa Deb lo me> nr markem & shops. Retired, doe9: not amoke or drink. Heu rent. 64)..7984. ----------~~ BUY or Lea• •m a l l IEACH CARPENTER: Re m o de l , businesa. Motel, mo b i I e · patio worl<, cement work CLEAN UP SPECfALisr New tenee 6 repa.lr. Odd jobs. 1tra1. 54U955 * PATCH PLASI'ERING All types, Frte tisUmates Call- Recept/Steno ID $470 Rl!AL EStATE G•n•ral --'----- REAL ESTATE General home park, retail fr:a~. 211 62nd. St.. 62nd 4 W, i& paJntinf. No job too F IC Bklqier $300 Cr_ Biddlna: Oerk to S470 * RENTAL SERVICE * . Fr•• to L•ndlord1 Bu1Jn111 R•ntal 6060 Office R1nt1I Couple wUl Invest lll-60 M. Cout Hwy In the amall. Frff eat,, 536--19« 6070 Box No. Pl01.l. Dally Pilot Newport Shore• Center CLEAN·UP ;lobs, haulli\i, ..__,.ATTRACT, Intelligent ln-concrtte work. Free eat. Cut le Edge L&wn ·Maintenance, Llc'd, lnMlttd 5CM808 a.ft •. Plumbing: 6190 Secretary to $450 ;..;_::;;;:;::::::. ___ ...;..:.:.:: I Sale8 Girl PLUMBING-AU. TYP!:S (will train> $286 Blue Beacon, 645-0183. CM BY AUG 15 • 1 Br. or studio apt, furn/unr. l baby ($83- $95) Cfl.1. NB , Aft 3, 646-4219 l OR 2 br apt In N .B. atta. Yearly. Single adult. 675-4429 alt. 6 S~fAU. house w I garage. Costa Mesa area for mature coup!~. 537-9151 an 6 3 Abut.T fl!males desire 3 BR furn rental, Newport, HB area. Aft 5. 832-8.194 SMAU. 11hop for antique shop or busine11s or R.E. oUic:e or what have yoU. Living quarters in rear. Npt Blvd. 548-2134 STORE OR OFFICE 600 Or 1200 Sq. Ft. Parkina: Reuonabl~. 646-2414 2630 Avon St., Newport STORE-OFFICE Newport Bch, 825 1q ft * Ervin 67S.1G01 * 600-1200 SQ. FT. offlce allO 600 eq. It. slott. $90 A $150. Roams for R•nt -C~·.::M~·~64~~~2llll:::..~--­$995 DESK SPACE 222 Forest Ave nu9 Laguna Beach '94-9466 LARGE offices • l mom 111Jlte $160, 4 room 11Uite $235, air cond., carpea, drapes, pane-led, 842-2525 /NEWPORT BEAOl $80 mo. Alr-mnd. Ervin •675-1601 NEWPORT Beach deluxe of· fices. Air-cond. Hid. Priv. ba. 2400 W. C.out Hwy. Men•J fe Loan --dt!pendent &: eultund airi Small bl ... -ln early 40'1, 5'2", 110 lhl,1~==°'-;::I·_-;:_.:;'_;:__~ 1st TD loan recot<>tly moved to l.afUM . REPAIR, R•modolrnr & G .... r•I S.rvlcH 6612 LovH art, muak, beaoh. '*tlc>-No job too "nalll boats It tioren. Speaks * 81l--Ml7 * ~~iw!:I~ ~i~ fl~n~y Enrtish, German, CARPENTRY: Cab jne ta , Re pairs R EM A R C SpanUlh Seeka a b o v e Room Additions, Patios. • avera,e bu a: I n e Is• pro-Any slU! job. MJke, 64&--2578 SERVICES, 847-6688 Terma ~ on equity, tessl9MJ man for COf'!1· REPAIRS * ALTERAnPNS FENCING, 1(paJn, painttna. 8% TNTERESI' 2nd TD loan 24 Hr. Service N•wr,rt FREE EmMATES .a "'ater hl'aters $6(1 lmtall. Personne ... gency Garbqe disposal S-45 instill. 133 Dovtr Dr., NB AU. RATE.! REASONABLE 642·3170 Call Jim Glenn, 715 Owem ~""""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!d .S;ct.:;., ~H.,;.B:,:·,.:5.!6-c;;,6608:;:.;;:;.· =~-I AMBULANCE DRlVtRSrd -PL'"""!NG n"'"'AIR &: attendants, exper. pre VlY!O "°"" bUf wilJ frain. $tart W/& No job too small nevi co. Gd pay + add. '42·2171 545-0611 panMhlp. AllO r lrl 1n * CABINETS ,,..., size job pnera.I ma nt Servin& Har bor area 21 yn. Mme •JtuaUon to share ' ~v 646-1809 HOMr REPAIRS • 642"3128 • co. benetlb:. For con. Sattl•r Mortg•1• Co. •me lnterem. Write 80lc 25 Yfl exper. ~ Ed's OtanlnJ" Servlce Plumbing-electrical. S7.50 Hr. fidenllaJ tntervw. C a 11 494-9748 or apply at 210 Beach SI .. Laguna Beach. 3.16 E l?th Street M2010, Daily Pilot, 2211 W. GEN. RMpatr, add, cab. Carpet.I. Upholitery. Win. 642-1755 or &U-0500 _., _ __; Ba1tx. Blvd, N.B. Formica. JJ&Mllna: marU te. doWJ. Jioor Cm!. 545-0487 R•al Estate Lo•ns 6340 Sinale • Wldow1!d • Divorce(! Anytbina:! Dick, 6'34459 24 HR PLUMBING H I Ii: REMODEWNG WILL mak• 2nd T.D:a by MEN & WOMl!N QUAlitY Woockra/t, •ml au I"! 6730 557·9'« ASSEMBLERS Sta.rt $165 Hr Co. WUI TnJn.So.O.County exl8tlng ht l 2nd '1, pvt :£veryo~• tooldna for the a~·J oonetr. A carpentery. HAt1UNG A: clean.up, t~s ""'==~;;;;;;;;=== ty .,,13..., Free con.uUatlon il quote. R mod II a BEAUTIFUL Room lorre11t, Office Rental 6070 Commerclel 60IS P · .1'ftr" ""'· right one. We have a way. can Ke &600l4 548-423S l •hrubs removed. • Int home privilea:es ava ilable. ----~ So call u11 A: beCln lo live! " ' · Jteuonable. In• estimate. _ R•p1lr 6MO ...... PACESETTER EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 2229 S. Main, S.A. ~D-22115 ~~~ar...,?;anae Cot.at Collea:e. ~m.~:-~ to Q~:1: NEWPORT C·l property M~nl'f Wanttd 6250 ::i= :: h.s"cle~;~· : Cement, CtMrete 6600 54g..1092 ROOM Addltlolll, sara&e•. ~ 1 _, Front~ on 2 streeti.$10,500 NEED $55.fm for 12 mot. T.N.T. Lawn Service. remodel. Loweet Pri« In R.OOM. Prlv. home. Furn n .ofllce.!Ultelll. mm.,...oc. down,7.S%inteiul. Repay $72,500 . Loan IOUl'«'I, CONCftE'tE.Alltypes,Frff Gan.at! clean.ups. haullna town.Uc.con tr aclo r . ASS'THELPER w/ut\l's paid. Cook prlvll. cupancy. Oranre Cnty. aecured. New Ho1 p lta l. WOMENll est. Saw1rc, bn!aklrw, haul· &: lli}!.t movin&. 548.5863, &4J..2988 Full Ume or pt·Ume. Age 19. Avail 9/1, $8) mo. 67l--0931, =:x. in:~. ~:~i;=; r:,i;91~~~t~~:n~~~~!~· 546-2759 Slim down, lose lnchtt, ~ci!ii!."1~:W::·:J.ce 531--3129 C:~'L re.modellna & malnt. 31, 6 mo residency req'd. CdM. JI I •-ba •·· ANNOUNCEMENTS fH I better with i;.z Trlm v· . TR.ASH A a:uage dean-up. No job too •mall . $3.75 hr start. ote &: ™"staura.nt, n .... , n-alonomics Corp. leor Spo<lal CJ1:MtNt job Call 821 '7"' * BEAUT home .I -1 ~ Ho--~ . , wo•v. ~ ~ Mo,. thru Su". 110 a load. di Mr. Winston -s · ~-1 San Diego & N'pt. Fwy11. Com mercial Bkr 67~700 and NOTICES "1'"' ;::"'911" ~z -•tt ..__,. .~ ... !~ ..::::.. ......_ ·~•5Q3 Uc' insured. m-8183, has extra BR for emp . UNCROWDED PARKING _ on y ~"· , s:r .,._, .x1i.u, rta.wo.,;11111, ra. r1..:e Estimat-e. '1'IO" 1 ARE YOU la.dy. Privil. SS6 MO. 54(..6740 LOWEST RATES ~: WR~~h ~~·oooae~ Found ("re• Ads) '400 term• av•llab1e. Tor free EtUrn. H. StuOick 54s...asI5 * HAVE TRUCK • Sewing -6960 FURN. room, kilch. prlv. O'Atner/mgr. 2112 DuPont Dr., Towm: ·COl't'IU-~1768 a.rt. home demomtratlon call DECX>liTIVE OONCRETZ * WIU. HAUL.* --BEAUTIFUL?? Ladies only. 1998 Orange Rm. 8. Newport Beach. CJllLD or ladieti da.rk·rlm· 537-43CS DRIVES.WALKS-PA110 * s.t&-9'1'41 * QUALITY you've a 1 wa y• Jt'a all In the eye: of tbt ti.- Ave ., CJ\t. 646-8137, MM159 833-3723 Courte1y to Broket'I lndu1trl1f Rontol I._,. med pre&erlpUon 1lauea *MASSAGE &. SAUNA CALL DON, ff2.1514 HAU' ,,..l. .... 0 A LO".. wal)ted. DreumUina' -boldu. Check the TV com--1'" found !n Se.fewa,y patklng EN!NG Lo •~ . uu~ •• """' alt t1o K •-·· 1763 • Prlv. 11al rm. In large C.M. GRI SQU•RE -----· lol, Fairview Rd, CM. Call GRAND OP . ve" * CON'CJtETE work: patioi, Clean up. Ttte &rv. Gen. era ns. ey .._,, ml. you watch and U )'OU pool home w/young fam. Yg HILL N '"' Commercial It industrial 5'f6..8222 or G42--8692, ask tor girl.I, EXPbou El\T MASSLu VAGE, dtvways, •tc. L l c•n l t d , Prunlnt 6"-2528, MWOt3 Ora:nre Ave., C.M. 645-1292. feel you'n u prett)' u l•dy prtf. 642-3755. l900 sq ft Deluu l Otti«e apace for lease on San Olego Mr. Rottman Aak a t our epa Phllllpe: Ctmeot. ~ PICKUP· LIGHT TRASH e RE-KNfTriNG ot Italian to!M of tboet people, CIU 111. • ftOOm with bath, pvt en. Avail. 10: lmmed, ease In Fwy nr Laauna Nigl.lei. Del. vacallon.I. to AM to 2 AM, ii . ..,_.._ ...... cl SlO bd 1: AH 1)t?e1 of knlttina CALIF. CASTING CO. 70 ono of c1Uea busiest sbOp. t El ctrlc: 831.1400 KEYS Found on beach vie. 1 DAYS. 2930 w. Cout Hwy, MO Concrete Pl~ far U't'O._,. eanup fabr1ca. is :ontln"''"" ib aearch tor trance. No cooking I · ptno cent·-. Will divide. a e · •·•·-.. ._ n .1'--· ,.-·1-IHI mo...a.· ArtlJtlc set+t-540-3697 - .... ,..,., ... ""• · ~tu ... a .. u,.,.. "'""""'"' Newport Beacb. M&-3808 '""~· ~·· ..;i::•• * 842--8&38 * ew-...i ... people who haft Cl(Jlle to beach! 61"""' 11 • Air-oood., mullc, panelina, FOR ~ sq. ft . prime at front count.er, Dall,y . Uc., call Max st """'111f' y A RD f Gar. c I eanup. I ---,-,'iio;:;;:;,;:,,-.,--.,_ I k' l bit ----·11 or ....... Pilot. -· •·•~· N.B. WOMAN. ~ k> 45, n1Ce look· -= • ;, . . ' * ALTERATJ6NS * • desire to work OD TV or * 115 PER Week·UJJ w crpts, drps, Max, par g watt .. .,.....~ ,...... '' .u1.1. ,Dill-. ftl i hunt Remove tree1, Ivy, trash. &fi..5845 modclini jobs t15 to $125 kitchen. $35 Pf1' wee)Mip malnt. 210 E. 17th St., C.M. Irvine Ind. Mr. BtUlud LONG haired White. kitten ,.,_1,1,ke ~ae onb l.amou1 ChLlffd Ce!~' Grade,_ bac~, 96U745 Neat • Accur. 2J ..,..,. exp. ..... .. day, No 1~ t.. )"Otl evv. Apts, l\iOTEL 5'4g..9155 Mr Bram 213: 651·2700 collect M6-8051 found • "'o: """ cen•-6'10 .1•• ..--w/black tail & spots '.Rogue River. Write c/6 Box •• -J •• , ,. ·-* FOR ON CAMJlU. 1 Bedroom! 1"1 11 3 bbalkthto. bc~o MEDICAL -OENTAL NN~ :::~ 1:8 F~~rv2:. 1~ Vic. 22nd 6: Tuitln, N.B. 431, Gold Beach, Ol'fp n DAY can:, ntar Lake Pa!'k, Heuncleanlnt 67H Tlr., Ceramic 6'74 AUDITION"* kitchen pv Pl · Suites avail. Best location. 642-1~ 97"4 or call 548--9'.IOO SUn reu. y,-__. .. play .~. hot CALL (114) 835-8'JU ~10~ tll 11 00 yr lease. SulllV1n MS-nT& '""'1:U TY HOMIOWNERS • rn-. t Tll •·-• 6 -· ••;,;;;•~;;w:;o;;,;co.' ;:,· === Xlnl parldn1. Modttn fadl· FOUND Tipr kM:~n with 9th. bet 7-9 PM Lvng. Mon. lunche1, n.pr. t.10 Utb St., ..,._ ..... o e ""' .. ,er 1D AM to r 1• ............... I I Illes. tmmed!&~ly available, RENT ri.1.t, 1125 sq n. SUS nea coUar and a earring * ruiLY ud.iiiib • H.B. FIOOl"f strt-pped I: waxed, Cptl am So. Main. S.A. :WS.-1817 BARMAID • Nlgbts, 5 ~ Motels, Tr1lltr BAYSHORE CF.NTER mo. 1356 Logan, C.M. on collar. ?.1N& Verde area Renownrd HIJ'ld,u S01rlb.J&l111t cle..ned, \\'lndow1 wuJ1td I AU types ot: tile -wall, floor, a week. No blldnf, no dan- Court1 S"7 601 Dover Dr .. N'pt Beach ~Sll6 546:4418 Advice on all matttl'I. (entr,ctw1 '6to lfnttal houMi • cleanlna: patio, entry ways, bath I: elnQ', $2.25 to tart. No ex~ SEA · 0 CAT: c~y •!riped back .a L«We, M.atriqe, Bu1Lnet1 now avaJlabJe by an fl:XJ!and. llhOwt.r~ ~rt 11'11\tllatlon perlera nectUU')', Apply t.=~~~es, lSO l • • '1S.60SO L.ott 6100 white chest It lep. 6 toes l\ead~s Clvtn 1 days a JJI& pt'Oftu~ janllorlll or fn:ot liiatrucUom for do in penon betwffn U am NIWPort Blvd, Gofta Meu ..... •u t' ..... ::;;;;:... _____ ...;."-' on frnt (ee,L Emenld &1 wttk. t AM • 9 PM • ltEMOO!:l.1NG amri~.:: =:ra.ntetd lt )'OUJ'lelil"t'I. Complttt line • 2 pm. Little John'• Inn, SELLER'S Loes ·Have are11.. m .. 1129. SUN. El Ct.fnlno Rql, e AODmONS ttnie. · ot •ettno:rlts Ir to011 tor 20072 N, Slnta Ana Ave, I 59ff Dltluu l-Rm. ot6co $42,tn:l in Jt..1 lee view lot. FOUND Orange and whitt SM Otmente, e ALTERATIONS inltallaUon. Santa. ADA lfctt. Mlac •• R,!?fl 10 --'~ Nr. Oranp County Alrport Dover ShOre• ~. 7!)' x hi.It zrvwn killeo. While 492-9138, ttJ..0076 e PA no I: DECKS BAY & Beach J11.rtttorlal 8ABYsrrJ'ER. Re 11 t bit , '--~••--• Irv! I d l I I ill• locatitd on Leeward L.n fl coll &-,..,,.u "11 •..t-Carpet.I, wmdowa, Doon, Tll C I 697' rl-.... _ •-..a.. ... 1, ...... ...., .. ...., ....... ~ • nt n u1 t a near Trad•winde Ln.~Lot ea ar •'1""J ... "' .., ... Prnnyrlch Bru .. Swimwear etc.fttJACOtnmc1.'46-1«U e, •r•m C' .., Vt .,.. .... ""......,.., ,.., mo 19th I ~~ c:·89'l-4885 =~~ai:hon~ ll. tr 3801, N.B. An)' reu. f:M . Ptl'tll::IMl tlttlnp by •PJt Alltl\ Ce111itructltn Ce, * • HOUSEXiEANING • 2 * Ve.me, The Tlle Mau * ~~ Ph &12-MU FrVS&t, 1_... ofJcr considered. H. C. l'VUND Black 4 white !'lib-549--00tS or~ Gtntral IU41. Contractor 'llOltMri. Fttt .a: etticltnt. CU•t. work. Ji.tall I: .Npain. · .: SINGLE aaraae. florare on-Janiwi-•e.l aarict. $125 Mo. Erlck9on, 547...019 bK vicinity ol Hubr • A LCOHOLJCS &nymou1 ';'t= lltach 49'-1110 Call M&-J.227 No job mo 1ml. Pla4t(lf BABYSITTER.. Full tune. ly. Near 21.51 A Onnat. SOB PtrnT, Re&ltor Bcrnant. ~tMO, Phone MJ.-7217 or writ• tO -n I: tlo 1.etkl own ln.N. 15-45. Utfl C.M. m. !W>-1675 • IS!<llOI • R. E. w...... '240 FOUND • •mall mbced P.O. Box 1213 ~la.M..... c .... ,. ... CTOll. JO&·s Cl.IAN SIRV. :-1r·. ., • h 0 .. er """""' .. '"'· Rluy .,,. •. ~= , ·-•DOVER Bl.DG. ih c:;.,., y l•mate ... •k N•-1 SAND'E'S CRf4TfVpJ° WIG oi'~nRAL co~ Wt do~':~. ~ 841·~1-~ '" 6. lncomt Property 6000 Dr.. Ne.wpan. J Suitt:a CA.Sii DU ER want& R.-3, Ha:ta: .• S48--«210 . $1'1\Jl'IG. J'r.e pick-up 6 A.d4l ftemollel'bi, Comm. .st. · =::ce , , * 4 , 4, BABYSJ'M'ER ftQ'd In the (2) M·lA 10Ca, Production A'lall: «lc/tq. ft, 1·rrnd Or, RA 2 M.'ttll or mot'f!, Oran,p FOUND aray lg Mind cat dcllW:ry. Llcewd & in-Mti<lenttaioCenttM'ti&l • . l'OA. X1Jlril HOUSE. T,_ Service 69IO ~ 9Chl dilt:nct. Mon.ht. Pl, Newport Bch. 67~1tl70, 640 l<l· ft. $3511/mo. 1".'2nd County, San Oleao. Lona • vlclnlty ol \l(arn.r •nd aured. Call &J&..1225 • W-M99 t 01.EANING. for ~ mother. ~ 1-=6'=2-"'4:i;:i:'=::::;=:;:::;z==_j nr, 6fiO 14., It. $264/moll. :=~~her:::: ,~1T,1~~:s F..dwAA'.la, 847-1197 COIN LtmNG FJiEE, Uctnetd Booded t CaM 836--0i4I * BOB'S 'J'RU,SUJlGEJ\Y aft8, ~ 1.::; I a i! ' S235/mo. Air CM! ' ut or-<nlf) m355S ~· and WHITE Ptntl\ll kitten v~ bu(alnt-1akn. w r I t.. Mta QllJlltW Sen-J• *1c oUtrtrw the ........ BABYS?Trii • Pimi•ntnl, ••• $ '°'° lhCtnr~.,.r.-~ wk ttds. HarhOr &: Adatna CM.. ~ JM OJu.t Mlamf. na * M JlEMODl!lL'E88 * Car0tt11, wtl'ldowa. OooN. etc. rin. QualltJ Tl'M $ft'V$ct. my ho'rnt. DEPENDUY:, e PJttM£ STORE LOC. Uxto. Xlnt. foot &; IUIO tn..f· r.Jc:. $l.5.i/mo. lBTI llrubor, C.M.6~ OESK SPACE !Al>-059' •It. ,,30 ..... 33163 ..,... .... -100• .;;.._,_ ""· " .. C.f!'!ll"'I. llMlll * -* • ., ......... """"' lO llrlwlt WANT to buy l BR house -rt= 19 .... .........,,._ -TREES H~· ,_ 51H71! 305 No. El C.mlno kee l b'octl owner. $25,000 plua or NO matter wbal it II, YoU wZfi 11!:.LP? Advtl"t1M 1n J(ltche.ns, raraaa.·~ · Gtu'l clecntnc. Homet • '"'1"· tr ..... cut, °'"':..:;.;::.._~----I Sa" Cl•m•nt• m1nu1. Wrile Box No. P1075, can seU It with a DAILY Dtdly Pilot CluslUedt. Complete ~mOOelinr. 'apls, Nile ()r Day 1tum~ ren.ovlld. hau.Ied. 30 Your ·loc&I ~Marlett.. '9l-4420 O..lly Pilot. PILOT WANT ADI ~I C8U 6'2--5671 tor R41ult1. QuaUty ~tra.cto:rt ~ * 546-5745 * Jl'I. exp, 1''ully IM. 642-4030 Dial~.\. chlrlt Jt.. I . ' I aC oAll.V I'll.OT -·· Au,un 13, 1970 JOB i EMJiLOYMINT Joas .. aMPLOYM.ENT JOil & EM,LOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLO.YMENT MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE MERCHANDISE PO R SA LE AND TRADE l • ME RCH~Dl$E F O R SALe AN D TRADE M ERCHANDISE fOR SALE AND "TRADE 11•1 Min. W.... 7100 ,,.. MMi. Wom. l lOO Jobi Men, Wom. 7100 Jot.-Men. W°"'" 7100 BAllTSl'M'ER. f<t ......... • EXmlT1VE SECR£. UQOOR ,... d<ri<. CM 0-2 e P L A S T I C S e TELE1'llOiu= &Al.DI _ t.ill ~nlture • 8000 G~•..;••:;,U:;•_S:.•:;;l.;.• __ ..;I0=22 P ianos & O rtMn• C.1 30 ~1callan~eou=''---~ 11P1 l t, lO, ~ Sehl. TARY far Cba!nuo d. tht da.H:y I aome eve. Retall dJM.. .JQUr blme or .mi-. Baud o1 ~ corp. ca.1 _..io.""-'"'=""'=·;..;"'-""'c:.:_='--\\'omen operators Exp'd, or will trab1 Pb: 616-Mlf. ~ for dMlinl wtth MIAUTY ()pr. W.-.d. mmt carpc:ldte cxecutivu. Ed. bc.i uper, ~ ~. ftlliw tn\lel klwlved to MACHINISTS Openlngl on follov>'irli -a..-"' KB. .,... -dtSes. Over 10 2d. Shll .. ,:IJ pm to 12,311 •m Pllaor. m..aa aft iPM. pttlnn!d. Send reswnt a DAYS ONLY 3d, Shtft-12:30 am to 8 am ~ ~~ ~W~~~~ e TURRET LATH E e Pleue ~ l to• PM - No dicf ttlt w.. Paid,,.... 5.10, L.A. 9lXl5 Elr»'d hi 1etup and operalion * Ora~e Coast Plutica • liorlL or.k .,.__ can Female PBX far ansM!fil'ls of Warner S•»asey #3 a.nd s:,o West 18th S1., ~. W-TIS ~~ 'r'M) l!lhifta avail. •S machine.\. Cosla Mesa., CAlit. BEAUTYOprn•-positlon 'l:JMPM I. 3-11 PM . • HARDINGE. RE.CEPTIONJST-e_;ood time, no expe~ re- quhwl tm~ ........ ment. 1.869 Newport m.d., Suite F. c,M. 54&-&'iOl. Telephone. Solk:lton Cbarlty ~al. Paid \l/Hkly Apply: 325 N. Broadwa.y Rm. '410. SU.nta Ana. TYPIST $lSO lntere.tlng work. PACESETTER EMPLOYM£NT AGENCY 2229 S. Mnin. Santa Ana . 549-2265 opeori for •sperier.ieed --:":-.:':'.:...,-----,--. . typist, da,)1', full time. O(ll!fttor prdmllll.y ~ _ Second operaUOn maehine1, Personnel Dept. H 0 a i ........,,._ Ne• •••••. FAT & UGLYi?? ""''. opua... """'ital, N.B I ======~== Newport ~a. Call ~1008 U you are, "9 ~can't MINIMUM 3 YRS. EXPER. RECEPTIONlSJ'. part ti~. UPHOLSTERER </ BUS BOY . tull a part UM ~ drapery ibop. Apply at llKl7 Start $5 llr time,. Ship Ahoy Rectaunnt CALIF. CASTING CO. * p1 1 Harbor Blvd., S.S.. ""-. ~-ftt •-· 1 .. _,1 • II -......... · lta:rch in Ptnnanent em oymen ......, ,....., • w. ,_,,. ... l.aawa Beach 494-::IDSO --.....,... Us * Xlnl company benclit& ./ REAL ~ATE OPEN-a.round man. So. 0 . County '**CASHIER. -Nat lo 0 n a I Orange Co. for a varte.ty ot * Overtime ING FOR Q U AL i F I £ D l...umbe', H~ Beech. t;ypes.Jorwodcintnaa.mGo SALESMAN. Excellent c.11 96l-Sl 10-4 pm. delb:I&. 1V comml'a. &: ird. APPLY JN PERSON' commission schedule pl.11$ CLERK TYP films. Great pay, pl time, many bonus benefits -Ask IST, mature. We u. client paid. no Jee. ror Mr. Snyder« Mrs. Joy =· mo. M""' have ""· No< • ochool. Shur-Lok Corp. · 0~1ATED BROKERS AJao F~ Jobs PACESE'M"ER EMPLO\'l•.tENT AGENCY 2229 S. Main, Santa Ana a.IS.2265 tel, voa. Many benefits. FREE ~ Can tar appt. 54G-551tl SERVICE. 3125 W. Balboa I"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"" BARDEN'S TV SCREEN TEST 1300 E. Normandy Pl., Blvd., N.B. or call 673-3663; * * WAJTRESS • Ex- 17 P.C. K ING SIZE BEDROOM El.EC lawn mo~er, new CABU:: Nellon Spinet, Hkr cond; Dinette. ael. drop leaf riew. WtJnut ..t/bench. New tabl~ w/2 chairs. 1 chai.c, rrno. tell $400. 675-{,793 1:::2'==··= Make offer, ~2975 l'G"'R.AN=°"o~.,,====~,~w=.i..,:.0,-,~. 2 aiJebe&dboan:I tram.' quili. •SAT SUN: Refrlr. y..._ little used. $350. Plano ed mattftu. ~ts 'blank.-roll-..wM,Y bed, pad d e d lilt SlO. ~1ettor»me Sl2. iets. etc ' headboard. Ho 11 y \.\'OOd MO-GU3 oi0sce of $p&Jl.kh frame & inottress. 646-1172 ORCAN I. Pi.ano leuons by or Modern Sty"' USED C' r , K 1 i ie profemional teacher. Fast All FOR $249 ............ drope~ "'°"· method. 518-4806 No down pmU. onl)t $9 mo. d~11, pidures, lols oJ LOWRY OtKan, Hor.;eshoe WELK'S WAREHOUSE "''"'" 962-l437 """"._·moo" m 600 W. 41b St., Santa Ana GARAGE SALE! E.lcc dryer * SU-2594 * DatJy 9-9 Sat 9-6 Sun ll-6 $75, cooch $25. Misc & 2 FL SIZE ma""--· bdrm. clothing 931 Tiller \\'y, ........... J' CdM THURS -SUN. Te1evlaion 1205 1U!tes. incld, dteMet & mir· ;.::::,.;:.::;;;:;::;;:~--1 .;.,.;;::.;;::::::o ___ _:= rot', night std. 1 ma.hogaey (51 APARTMENTS FURN twin aet dreastt, mirror, 2658 Orang!' A~ Apt-DCM. hieh boy, night std., cricket * * * * * chair, l mahogany dining e NEIGHBORHOOD SALE! 1'00l1J IPt, 6 chain, table * * AUG. 15th-16th * * I: leaves, bullet, china, 3068 Fe~alh Ln. CM. closet occ. chairs, tables, lamps. elc. 18944 Santa Madrina, 962-4161 GARAGE Sale Refrigerators, Dryer, Humpback trunk.. 646-7820 • 163 E. lBlh C.111. LG Hard ~ stretched painting Akal tape deck other hsehid item1. 548-2162 CLOSE OUTI 1 Wee k Only \Ve_ are n.-ducing new relrig. eralor"I, washer • dryer.s, 'JV's to coat & near <.'051. Also used color TV's ltow as sso_ Don't miss thest al ~~~;s. 1877 Harbor, Hi-F i & Ster eo 8'l10 *AUCTION* F RIDAY, 7:JO P.M. AUGUST 14th E1tata of K. Llck•y Jncludlna f'\Jrn, AntiquH, Bronll' 1!alllt, Old Bible, Type\\Tilfr, t~ recot:der. Al.lo nf!'W I. i.d tum by ThomasvWe, MariinM!le " Ornxel. 10 eolot TV'•, $tereos bdrro K"ll. din'a nn sets. s~Winc rmi.chlne, bunk beds, deskl, dinettes. R& tr1a·s, stoveJ1, wuhers, dry- ers. f\totorcycle, 14' fiber- glass boat, trailer & 40 HP Mere. outboard. Ntw carpel, and much more! WINDY'S AUCTION COME BROWSE AROUND l'.l751Ai N.ewport Blvd. Behind Tooy'1 Bkla Ma11s: Coata t.1esa * 64&8686 OPEN DAD.. Y !I to 4 EXTERMINATING PH: (n4} 835.dl2 Santa Ana ~ 642--Zl5.3 perier-.-ed, tull time. Apply. fiS6 A, -Av, C.M. ID AM"< PM tl ~k N. of M<F.&loo, REUBEN E. LEE SUR>" & SIRLOIN, lOJf) W. ti blk. W. ol Gr&ndJ ,.._,.. H N B "'--"' 3 Ban!ools $25, 2 oval braid· ed rugs 8' x IO' $20 ea. 8-plece antiqued Duncan Phyffe dining iiet 68" x 44" (2-3>" leaves) w/credenza SS. 6-pieee bk'ch dining &Pt (bat' top finish) 48" round, 2-12" leaves, $150. !l>-3921 DIVORCED -/I.lust 1e.U Diadem Tourmaline &tote $.00, paid mu>. appra.i~ ZEN mt Corniole 't er f' o, $800. 8' bla.ck llOfa $50. am/Jm .radio, Sl.25. Call ·'-b & COCO'S.REUBEN'S FIBERGLASS I a y· ~· ·~· · · ·-~· OM - Appllance 1 1100 646-.fi656 Small waonut ar ac:ors. 1--========· $~. SJ.ttp-teech machine C PLEX up, sanding & de-Equal l)ppl)rtun11y e.mployer NOW INTERVlEWING * WAITRESS * Ex- 4647 MaeArthur Blvd. O'KEEFE & 1i1f'nilt 40" $75. 548-0012 stove • d ean, ~·ilh clock. Ta pe Recorder1 1220 l,C"="":,..c=o----,--1 IN!'ERVIEWING MON.-FRL taffing exper. • MAIDS • P'ri"""" ""''· "'" ""· • ,. I 5 •--e-wn'• •io•-llo'-l • Dishwashers Apply in penion, The Cot· e CASH e Good "". DREXEL 8-pc mahop.ny .,,,, AKAi TAPE DECK din'g se.t wlbuffel, Duncan ' • pm Apply in person, moo s~ eo..1'.' s~i..'":;'. Evenin-.... Coif .. Shop. 5'2 w. °c!y ~ELP EDLER .,. l'"' St., c .. i. MoA. paid for good uted tuml1ure LI 8-3021 1'10DEL XI00-12 Phyfe. va1Ue $DX!, MU $450. er l yean MAID: h:Jr Newport-Ba.lbol'I. WAITRESSES Wanted, ex- • HOSTESSES INDUSTRIES INC. """"""" ...... Exo"d 0 ' • Ma1·n~--nce u · e BUSBOYS not/Call 67>346J 1S"1ru per .. tor fu time work. 2101 D St NB 1""~~07,"...,,--=--Man Jimoo-. c.u .. Shop -=·~D;;ISH::c..:W::,AS=H:.:Ec.RS=--I OYe •• • • MAIDS. fuU time, 25 « 3050 E. c ... 1 Hwy., CdM COOK (Dlnber) J."ULL or PART TIME. over. Apply ™8 N"'J)Dtt Part time. days WANTED: [)(>pendable llve- S30 Shitl. ID 5t.l'1 EARN UP TO $5 per hr. Bl.Yd., C.M. Phone &f2...9873 in babysitter. Rm & board. BLUE BEET G'n-9964 FULLER BRUSH CO. MAINTENANCE MAN *APPLY* Wary. Over lB. 2 mtl cbld. COOK. Femak, ,Pre-«hool 546.S745. Newport Cntr offic.e bldg. 5~ 151 E. COAST H\\'Y. 675--0519 appl., color TVs, stereos. 1 • MA 'fTAG Service t.1an. piece or a housetull. Top ha.'I washers. dryers & mill· dollar. F'ast, courteous ser. Ching sets, 8b1. GuaraJ1tt?e. vice. 24 hrs. 557.fi022 or 511-8637. Assorted tapes inc. •SlOO• • 962.3574 • ll30-0793. 'K=E=N=>710_R_E-,-,-,.-_-w-,-,-,,.,-. I -S~po-rt_i_n:g_G_ood~·--'--'85~00:;: TRADITIONAL Tres tie Xlnt cond. $50. fre e tablo• & bo•che•. •U.S. Divers Calypso " delivery. 847-811 5 or -utal --•I · ~ handcrafted inl~!t" ma5$ive 546--8672 -~.. or, u,,.,.. wice, g......., pine. Tablei; 72x32x30 rood, $45. * * 531-.3956*. REG/SLATE POOL TABLE e & ACCESSORTES $315 54~3777 art 5: 00 pm. KASHAN Persian Carpel, 5x8' purchased in Iran. Sell at cost, $500. 842-3670 Pool 1•bla • Like New Sacrifice S135 542-2252 ~ S days a wttt.1-.-• .;.G;.,,Eo.N~E~RA~~l-H=E-l~P-•• day ~-eek, Must haw &en'I NEWPORT BEACH \VA!lo'TED, dependable, all- _.......,• $4.2J an hour koowledge of plwnbing & around * COOK * Call- 11"= ~·~30 NE\V/Used appliaotTs &: •El Paipo ~ machine, ,JJ, ............... $119.95. 48" belly ...... '"· Matcltlrw benches $59.95 and TVs AU g u a r a n t I':" d . I----------•1995 -"AL ""'a• Dunlap's. 1815 Newport, CM * Wet sull, full, xtra small, * COOK * le. expandinl chain nMdl e.le<:trical. Pleuant work'g --------613-4530 Expe~. F v I I f Im f!, n or pt time bf!lp f~r sat~ cond w/paid insurance " Re.lif!f Cook, LVN & H~-G vacation. rum. Plea~e keeper needed. Bayview W I RE & SOLOERIN .,... • • V'fV":>JG.) 54~7188 UJ. 962-7176 Misc. W1nted MIO King 11iu bedroom set com-! i-,,';-;;C;;';;c;.,,.---7-"-,-.:.:,:;.;c;:,_ __ c;.;..; PARK JJDO CONVALES-usist&nt. Age U-35, 6 mo·1 specify age, exper, & n:l. Convalescent H~p. X15S Prinled circuit board.a:. Fe-pl'~ set of living roo~ furn. * LATE MODEL KEN-G 0 L F' ER'S -Men's WANT: Dining nn. te"t dinette set, like new. Sold t.10RE WASHER, $50. Call aluminum she.fl H-B golf w/buUet, ta.b~ le. 6 home, leaving stat" mu.st after 4 pm. 54!)..2027 clubs, t"Omplete 5'1, used chairs-MUST be in rood sell. 494-7314. 753 M~ita, NORGE ~·asher . just been twiCt'. Golf cart. kart. balls cond. call: 64Z-6468 CENT, 642-2410, NB. ~!ldcy n:q'd. Write. box 1iil038, Daily Thurln, C.M. 642-3505. male. Experienced, Apply 1----------CaUMr.Ndson 9'.Xi-28'73 Pilot, 2211 w. Balboa Blvd, RELIABLE sitter to mine 17811 Sky ParltCm:, lrvine. GIRL FRIDAY N.B. in tor 2 chldrn. El Toro ~5249. for HUDtirlgtoll Beach Real MAINTENANCE & area., 5 day wk. 837--0339 WOtt1AN 18-25 w/musical Laguna Beech. overhauled. In good order. ~~ $l?5. 5 4 S-2 4 8 7' USED compor;t s1u'l!dder In F 't F S25. 546-5TI2 --==~===--1 ,good oond. tor • m a I l • Counter Girts Jo'"OR FAST, HANDOt..rl' FOOD SERVICE. FUU. Elta~ oWor-. 2S to 35. Re-Houseman oomblna.tkln for att. 5:30 ability required. Intel"!'sted 1~1ble: sharp, sh~, Serrior Citizen Home, Larl'R;.EST;:;A~URA~~NT=-wo-ri<,cc-~10~,30~. in forming a unique Nite urn1 ure actory LG. COLDSPOT REt~RIG e POOL TABLE ganle:n, 1500 sq tt. 968-6489 Open to Public Thun • Sun 4 x 8 fu>gula.tion. typing, lite bkkpg, tiling • Bch. 494-9458 to 2: 30, 5 days a week, Oub Act, t>ntertalnment you na.rne It! Recent oHiee . no wknds Jdeal 10 r background helplul, but not * * _. SAVE i,s * * * W/Cross-To11 free:rer. Complete with all WANTED to buy. F\llt she :JJllJ Pla-010·• C'f S:..O • * 646-7820 "'hite canopy bed. Mullt bt TIME POSITION exp. nee. Start at $400 mo. MAINT .. Man • Full time, hou.sewife w/chiJdren. No 1 ,,:•~'"'"'°''"=··='~· ~C=•=ll764>-S056"'"""c.c_·;;;...~ w/xlnl oppt'y far rapid ad-~~ ~~Hu~!· expe-r. necessary. Hunl. Bch WOMEN. Lite delivery work. .... , " 11ccesso1ies. Xlnt oond. 642-7130 e Fret'zer·Uprlghl e $l'i0. 646-~ in good c:ondition. ~1879 9' RED VELVET COUCH U cu II. S90 16' to 19' TRAVEL 'I'railer vanoement. Exp, only. CalJ ' . malll." area. 962-9243 !\fust have own car. Apply; , "'2-mo2 SPAULDJNG Exer Alum. c•-~ ct!--" 1 2 o o ""' ..,an and in •"""' cond. pra t.-iwy new . !==========-! woods 1-J-4: iron!! 2-9. Apply in person only The llland House Mr"I Dirk 842-4466 ~ cl~aning, OCCaJI. pain-· • """' N --·• R W • · ting, gen'! cleanup. Must RN • Part tlme evenings :,....., · Biv;wway. m. 4 • l"I~-t 11 d Wiii pay SS00.$700. 962--1689 ,,. ... r 1ysem wa e A McGre""'r t.f/T'11 sto"I . shelves. 644-5.193 ntiques 8110 S48-980!iu ... WANTED: Mapl.e trundle •82, Fashion l1land Newport Beacil GIRL FRIDAY; Part-time, ha.vie own landsc&pe equip. tn Doctors offices. Call Mrs. Santa Ana . into 40 houn aoon (ad-Jncl riefer. Christiana Bay Of!cker 893-1321 l!Hi pm YOUNG LADY ovt'r 25 yrs justable) Typinz, general Townb>use1, Jnc .• P.O. Box!~::::::::::::~::;:: of at:<' for steady job in 1 PR ~-' h d · Wh I 1-~'o--'--~-~----bed, whilf!' bureau A: rn!JTor. · ......... rs. c:ouc . a Just. e e 1r Trad ing Post ·Scuba T a nk J-valv• 54S-0012 office procb=tion. Siend hmf 2221, Seal Beach. 90TIO I• shoe repa.ir !lale11. Apply in f.rplc screen. humidifier, 4 Books, clothes, Collector'!! $45. 548-4825 1-----------1 area rugs, walnut !M:Onee. Paradise. Spt'C. Indian \VANTED: ---------1 rftl.llM to BoX 13411, c.osta MALE Htl.p Wanted, pan See Betty Bruce al pt>rson ANTIIONY'S SHOE COUNTER Meu 92626 or full time. Apply bet. l-4 f1 SERVICE, 3401 E. Coast Vf!'ry gd cond. 833-3358 lipreads S4.9S. 408 Jo.:. Bal-POOL TABLE • BRINKTON Used dark room eqn•p. and ~fOVING to Miami, .selling boa Blvd. Auto ball ret11rn $100 4x5 675-0125 Start SZ.25 Hr GIRL wa.'rted b' bowiewort PM . Kentucky Fr I e d m (;) Hwy. Cd M. fi73--B04J Food Service Jook:l.na: tor ma-4 to 8 bn weekly, ;2 hr, 17th Oricken, 693 S. Coast Hwy, idj X(!C Hving room, dinette set, *962-~* U1ed Cement Mixer 54~2124 King size bed like new. Sewing Machines 8120 Wan1e<J 545-19'M ---'-------M isc ellaneou1 &600 ~ pl, ~ in JO days. Irvine fi42.58.l5 Laguna Be&ch.. 494-9418 Feoerq.So.O.Countyaru. e GROUND MA.IN-MANICURIST HAIR Acency tor Career Girls -;ii;';i:"'=---:-.,--.,,-0--~-I 1970 Singer t01Jclt-o-malic, IT'S YOUR MOVE WANTED to buy-Full r;:ize :zig·zag, beaul. walnut con- School1-lnstrvction 7600 Aho ftt job& TENANCE. STYLJST • le.male. Busy B W1 W. _Coast Hwy· .. :!,~ PACESETI'ER Starti..:: salu'y S360. pe-r mo. shop. ~3385 y appowt. ~ EMPLOYMENT AGENCY Apply Mainlenanc:e Bldg., MAN To a.uist mar of locall;;;'.'.;;:.;:'.'.:;:":'.'.:'.'.=:' whitie canopy bed. t.1ust be INDUSTRY CAREERS '' """' """'"'""'· ,,..187!1 :!:c:~"':..~:'.0'' :';''.'."• 8' SOFA, never used, quilted hems, detigrui & etc. Guar. 2229 S. Main, Santa Ana behind Food Giant Market, applianct storie. Neat ap-SAU.:SttlAN w/ n u r 1 e r y ~2265 2300 Harbor Blvd.. C.M. ptarance. 496-1183 Mr. garden center exper, send ( !!~\';;;'i";i~~ii'iii9':"""1 -be~twn~J;,~!0~•~3,~>l~PM~. -,-Wright ~10 am onl , bacQnJwid resume to Ray AIRLINE & TRAVEL ~~.:''i.":::" :~: ::'~" "' •m•U pym~ 530-8337 * REPAIRS* * i;>ELIVERY MAN * * GOOD TYPIST * .a..a_ • M y • Amlin&, Amling'a Nunery, e OPERATIONS AGENT ~ time wlfh 8lllet poten-Publilher'1 Ga; Friday w/ wwunne acftanlC 1500 E. c.oast Hwy, N.B. e TICKET SALES tial, neet ~· w1tti expe_r, on electric typewrit.. Experienced only. Perman-Sales • RESERVATIONS good 1 driVVW. reeord.c.c!:" er, to train on IBM Com-ent job, fringe benefits. To WE NEED e AlR FRElGITT~ARGO work n growq o;>'P· poser and Jeam newspapier work at mCK'iem marina. WE NEED CALIFORNIA'S e COMMUNICATIONS llBlary & co benefill Apply e TRAVEL AGENT ,,.,... F~ CM ' layout and puteup, Pb: Mr. Call or write full th!tails. TEN BEST MEN TO HELP A irli ..... Schools P•co'fo"c ~~ w, . · Holcome, 6.f2..4748 2 PM-6 Lake Arrowhead Marina, US SELL PART OF ,,.. DELIVERY DRIVER PM or 8 PM~ PM. P.O. Box 910, TI4/l31-2501. CALIFORNIA. 610 E . 17th, Santa Ana SPANISH dinette set with Clean, oil & adjust )'Ollr 6 chain &. extn. large table. machine in your home Jn good cond., only 2~ft mo Spccia1 $3.95, all work guar: ~"'=·~·~"~Z-4003:....:=-----· 1 antttd. 5-15-8231J MAPLE din'g rn1 . s..., t wlhutch. Xlnt cond. SZ'JO or bat ofr. * S'ls.-0826 • Mu1ic.tl Instruments 1125 CLASS Showcase, 9lx2lx42, 2 shelve-s, xlnt cond, $20. Doughboy !Lwimming pool, 15 .11 3, ~·/metal !ilep!!, nds pla.1tic line, $20. E:J f' c smokeless l'Ot!S!lerie ¥"/at- tach, $20. 3093 Yukon, CM. Alt.er 5 PM. .. SALES GOOD NURSING * MASSEUSE * we·~ a land co. rporation. The -~-:.S4;;3-;;65;:.:_96:._ __ n •• pt tlm• ••• •• •• 6 f I _, Po"ano l •••on• FENDER BASS AA1PLIFIER AD'flRAL -·-• ---~ • " ~. CARE Yll".mediale Exclusive SPA utest a;row1ng a11u corpor-,. '" "' '""""'"' mo., ,. ... ,.v ..,..,d lo . "-W UC I •l"d•"I has -· lo" DELUXE RICKENBACHER pl•·~-<•l•-I --le. G ....... ~ .~ .. • requin!a eood nunei:. If in-Openina. Experie~. Send al n 1n i..., est. · · . .. " '""m • J'"' '''" '""'""' ,_,, M• Jones ~ 2872 .... I "-I le _ _. BASS GUITAR cn1>. •k·.-.. ·-"" ook llOO. ........, · J-"' tetHted in join~ such a re11Ume 10 Box M 1093 Da.Uy We nf!ed bright young minds .severa ucg, or n rm.:u. .,,.~ "'·' """ru Office furniture 8010 ... I d •-L M · •-1•0 'd 34~ ··--, de-~. -===*='='=-..... =°'=*===. RCA -lo' TV 2'" 1100. DENTAL Secretary· ataff,call~l624. Pilot 7211W Balboa New. totunctiona1our esrt?P· J>uen.,,. earn lUIC n.ic: ... "'"" w!}UU ....., • ...., .. Pereooable, t"xperienc:ed, ef-DS port Beach. · ' riesenlatives. Theory, sight readinr, etc. $69.50 • Retin'd v.'OOd arm p · -t.lany n1 iscellaneous items !. ,__. ,....__,, . ·t1on. GUAR h f Ca11 8 MS-4478 rotary chair"I, $29.SO • We .!~nos_& Org•_!1• _ 81 30 1,:"';il!-,;2';;8'1~-"""°~~=--1c.,.~·': '-n.aue~ po&l •. • • MECHANIC NEEDED Wil a little el ori, you can nice, . __ Proficient t)'Pillt. x-ray, f!tc:. lmmedialt fl I pt titne pod-. make comn1isl.ions of $25,<XKI MERCHANDISE FOR have lhe largest selection "ONE ONLY" SALL MOVING -llsehld. Chest, Sa1ar)i dependent upon ablli-tions avail, San Juan Capil. • Part Time a year or more. SALE AND TRADE of used office furn in this New & Used table, <'hatn, stove, sola. ty. ($500-$!0)), Gn-ll65 trano areL Unitorma &. • C.Ontact Mgr. u you think you're one ol the area. PIANOS Type~T1ter, bike . Elec- D ENT AlrCtudr amri9tant equip furn!lhed, Fringe hen-Marcus ~fotora 64>0466 men we're looking for, asX Fur n iture 8000 Mc fl.taban De.sk Decorator .Spint', ...... s:l!19 trolux, pro1ector. garden wltront office capabilltiel efiU. Car A telephone nq'd. MED 1 CAL Rtteplionlst, youndf samething. ---l!JOO Newport Blvd. New KJt.1.BALL Consol(' S699 tools. 327 DriJt\.\'OOd Rd, Call 646-4801 Apply at: 13912 Ponderosa knowledgie of inB. Exp onl,y. 11 it jusl a job you want? Or 20 PC. 1 'MAORIO'' ===76<_2-84>1~~--~-I KIMBALL Grand ...... S795 Cd,\1 . ShoN'cllffs, f'ves. DENTAL ASSISTANT SUite F, Santa Ana. Fl lime. Dn. Longley I a liletimie career. 3 ROOM GROUP YEAR Old quality executiVf! • ORGANS '!'\VIN-St. mat1l"ess w/box Experienced. Chal:rside. HOMEWORKERS WANTED Rosenberg. 644-2922 l-'or appointment <'1Lll: FROM MODEL HOMES oltice tumitutt. Des ks, THOMAS Organ .. , ,, , $179 sprinn!! $12 Bdrm !ll'I $j(I Call 54&-8&44 (Envelope .Addtts&en:J. MOTEL MAID JAC K STANLEY Includes: Quilted sofa A: ch a I r •, I a leral Ii J,., HAMMOND Chord "A·l" $299 \\'astwr S35 Oril'ntal rug$?:';, Rush stamped, •e lf-ad· LACUNA REEF MOTEL l71.4) 835-3233 chair, 2 end table&&: ooUee literature racll.I. cupboards, HAMMOND 83 ...•.• SHl!l5 Misc + ! 540--0380 or d I ~.........., So <:out H""' table, 2 lamps, dttsser, mic-...-. clo9ets. Sacri f ice :>1>8997 e e Dr'ihw.-.a..--dre1111e enve ope """""' · ~;r *SALES pen;oonel needed, ,,...., ~ LANGDON WORLD J..aguna Bc:h, 499-2005 ma.lie or female. Experien-ror, headboartl, quilted box 1-"pri:.="":::.· ~"~'-:..::"~'~'"----includes bench. •IC'l l\'Cty & MATCHED pair of large TRADERS. P.O. Box 11Z7· MOTIIERS he,lpier &. chKdren ct'd for men's tirw:-furnish-'•P"""'1" & ma,'""",1 ~-51 hl!>C ----·----wa!Tanly ... /I.Jany other oblong oll paintings 1roscs\ DAYS AND NIGHTS PART TIME AND FUU. TIME APJllY in Pf!l'110n Ancient Mariner Restaurant A2l, Redondo Beaeh, Ca.Ill watcher. Must swim, drive, tng~. See Mr. \Villiams, ~~ :;:m; 8 e • · Office Equipment 80l l Bargains.·. framf"d Orig t'081 Sl50 90778 row, live In and bt In-* SILVERWOODS t 45 c in. • t.1UST BE SJ::EN! f.'ach, Aell for S7j eal'h-.23" I'll. -Lo·-1" ., __ ....,_ N COMPARE AT $749.95 e ANSAPHONE • Llko -w, e ALSO e B & W TV 125. 836-5672 HOTEL f'ood Checker-Cash-Ii'-'"'"· "'" ;r '""'"'• '"'-" }~uhlon hla.nd, .B. $399 •• f _, ..-.. fe.ntily. 52 Ltnda Iste, N.B., SEC'Y LEGAL BtLkitlg .. M. n.. .... 6r.>-"10~.. YA/l.1AJIA e J<Jr.1BALL Cli EST r J IJO 1er, em .... e. LoJ<per. nee. No "'Awn Pml•. Ooly 116 mo .,..\N ~D.Ja .woJ ~ o 'rawcrs . Bobb. n.,_, now thn.i Labor D II. Y. • "" · after 6. 642-5783 • 'l'HOr.tAS Redwood t11blP & i.n11che• Contact ie ..-....,uy, 61""3100/67' ..... TRAINEE $'-WELK'S WAREHOUSE 1---'-'-'-.c._;____ o '" NEWPORTER INN. 644-1700 J .>-<>'I..., I N -rt 0 _ h tlOO W <th S '-"--K MLER .!:· CAMPBELL SIO Manging lan1p S5. 117 NURSING SUPERVISOR. Lnve Y new ewpo P<:Rt · t., •>a.u!a Ana COAST MUSIC E. ·1s1h, C~l JIOUSEKEEPERfbaby Ofc'1. Xln't oppor. w/fine -G1rag• Sile 8022 NEWPORT & llAR"0 R ,_ F··'I tlm• -'gh'-l.l 7·!0 O< -----~ MA'IQGANY de•k wt (1·1, cere. Live in, own rm. ...... ...., ' '" "" · ·• firm. Top benetlts. Call Miss ·• ~ -.1 Old LVN. PARK UDO CON-MUST SELL TilREE family garage salt'. Costa Mega * 642·28!"ll & 17) 01hrr dra11·f'rs S35. 'JV. Teacller ''l'" er V'-• "'cvo""""" CENT ER Betty, 557-6122, Abigail Ab. Aug. Hrs Only 10-6 M-Sat ~~Ire. -n"' ofo·o·g,·dao< ~'00\an prerd, ref's f'X· ~~· bot Pe.rsonnel Agency, 'llO OVER STOCKED Chin.a cabinet, curio •0 ·-., .;.""':::c_w;_;,·~Coa::,c•~'-"~"",..:.c·~· _N_.B_._,_1 pected. SXIO per mo + nn 6U-8044. \'I. warner, suite 2ll, Santa Twins $49.~. Full.o $59.95, cabinet, glau door~buHet, SAVE NOW n1;i.keJ $35. 6-14-5&18 DlSHWASHER. Euy work & brd. 644-4150 NURSING: LVN, U-7:lJ Ana. Qui;ens,S89.95, Kinp $119.95, 2 show~. apt stovr, 2-DURING SUMME R 42" KITCHEN vl'n! SIO. ~ 6 days, ~-lan1. Sm SE KEEPER* reliief 1hifl. Puk Lklo C.On-::::=----~7.~-~ I Twin Size Headboards S7.9!>, 1'l'frig'1, 2 couches. CLEARANCE SALE It tub f'nclosure. new salety tt1taurant CdM. Call Dick, * HOU -'·· tlo v&lt'llCll!nt llospilal Ph . SECRETARY: 1Goo1. 1 ~d 'I'nlnd\e_ St"ts ~.95. Sleep. breakfast rm suilf', dlx !lf'W-We have trade-ins. reJlO!I, gla!lll $15. 117 E. l81h St .. _. 1T?l after noon. 2 Wttka uu•J', vaca n re-64~4 lypi~ skills, 1 lflil'., i.n-~0• Sol $169 ~Au s .. .o;-lfli mach, Shenton bullet, 1 CM l ~.,,;,,~==~----~.-,-1 plo-meoL 2 AdWU. Live-N•w p10----' o!c. near O.C. er as ·:JJ p, t........ rent retul'nl &: ! oor models •· I ~ Offl M .._... Couc"--189 = extension ladder, box lipi.ing 1 ___ 1 11 _, DESK clera part time rehe . ln. ~ Salar'y. 642-0371 . ce anager· Al r p 0 r 1 • starting ,..,... .ON. o {'very """"" amino ..... FENDER Bas!! amplifier Mlllt know all pbB8t<.I of 1032 Santiago Dr., NB BookkHJ)9r aalary S35G-$425 Call SI E STA S L EEP SHOP ~~~~kl :e~~i~: Organ. Buy oow l· receive deluxe Rickenbacher bau trout ~:.,...~~ud!.:.._~~. HOUSEKEEPER g. ~: 3 O Tbrouah Trial Balanc:f'. Sta· S.Sl-6006 81\M·lOAM . 1927 Harbor Blvd., CM tlecl. lllo\'''. P.!lscell an-extra di!icounl . ruitar lo: NCR .-. """" uov.... llhlft. Parkhul"lt Rrtln'ment bl!!. Call U>ralne, 64~. SECRETARY • E"t-•-ulivt> 6~5-2760 tlques ~ household ilemll. HAMMOND * 67~1}1 * MOOll' Holel. 31106 S. Cout Re aide n cf ' 9925 La Wietlcllfl P~r800°':'l A&ency, position. Musl havt pleasant 34155 Clil,'4~2Dana Pt. RCA a Ir-c on d I I Ione "· 1n CORONA DEL ?l;IAR FOH l{en1 . lttb1n r-.tam- Hwy, South Lquna Alemeda. F.V. Ai: 9fi2....M31 2043 We11tcbtf DriVt', N.B. penonality. Compelent in 64fr5647/955 W. J6rti St. ~ E. Coost Hwy, 673-8930 moth Lakf'fi, sips. 7. !urn., DRUG CLERK. HOUSE KEEPER-Re.fined OFFICE H~p mature, part gnmmu II spelling. High Collta Meu.. Open Mon &: Fri e\.'ell, lrplc. 5 Niles $1j 531-3374 MATURE neat woman to live I~ timt, typist/bookkeeper 10 etnc\en<"Y capobility. No STh1'-10NS King Rizc utln COLDSPOT relrig, OOH01n FALL MDSE or 540-0617 eVf's. F\lil time. Call 499-2205 No~"·-. Ne....-o-...r. to 2. Mon. thnr Fri, 642-5200. smoking, 646-48Il bed. lllll'"6, blue velvet trneier. 1100. Lugg•ge n1<k. e 8 1'1.YI CAMERA: .1 le!RS. "'~'" -~· ~,, ,p-•d o 1 m SOON ARRIVING no-u.t11f ~W. Wanted . -A~,. ORDER DESK-12 h<. -~ SERVlCE Stat»n Altendanl, .... ' piur ., rn on 1 SIO. Misc. anliqut: dishes, projl'otor. SPLICER Ai vun v•.rv.> _. • twlrn; lx-e.dboords 5 All discontinued mCK'it':hl ol SCHEEN nishl shift. over 3>. No f'X· HOUSEKEEPER, 5 dayM, Ume WOl'k ror wonien. 1wl~ shift. Lorin's Art"O, ntM!I. Mnll. bt' ~ 1 wo:Cd ~::~·· ~~:~'"ku~gg~ piano.s Ir orga.m now being • * ~~2-~709• • per nf'C. Apply in AM. MR U-'-Jod< homo Must 1\w Newport 8".ch. C 11 11 3201 Harbor Blvd, Harbor .....,.kc' •II oc•<ly oow Vo"c rlosl'( out at dillcount nric<·s DONU-'" E 17th St ,.... . -"A"-& •-o ·-fruno ~ M '""' ' ' • nin, Nowport Shores ,. LIKE "·h "k . ·~ ..., ' · out haw n"fert.nces own vtk" ""'" l-,.v •-J• 1.. .. • torian dres5er. many J11.n1p11, ~=-"-"'"-'-=:;.;.c...__ you cnn'l bellrvr rww • .,.. \.\'Inn bi,. - Cotta Mn&. tr.;,.. 644-t408 . ' PART TIME lntervle~'1 Mon . 3-lPM p1cturei;, f1esk, chair. 6 iron GAR Sale I:. nilsc, ilenlJJ -ShOp us & RN! laches 2G" df'lux l-speed .DRAPERY MMUfild.urlna· HSKPRS Emplyr pa.ys lee GENERAL OFFICE SERV1CE Statk:ln ne r II s chnin1, thw 11c-ceMOric!!. wul~r. dryer, reh'lg, M'W· \VAR D'S BALD\VIN sruoro $6."I, 642-1067 afl 10 a .m. Machinery, Etc. 1700 Woodwor king Mach. See. &: make oUe.r. 1611 Ohma Way, C.M. 645-0991. FREE TO YOU BEAUTIFUL dark ~ tiger striped ma.le kl~n about 3 mos. med. Jone halr,'needa permanent home. Very lovable &. friendly. Dtlys836-449!, 542-7096 tit 9 P?.f ans J KITTENS daughter1 "Of famous DAJLY PILOT at, J . A. Pre1h~ich. after 5 pm. C213) 597-5322 a r 536-1195 8/15 2 EXCYTICALLY marked beautifuJ box trained cal\.co kittens, 9 wks old, yearn.mt to kwe kind people. 675-349'l or 61l-4j()6 8115 NEED good home, fncd yd for lovable male Chihuahua, purebred house prt. Adlta or oldier children 1>refe1Ted. 968-2379 8/15 LIVELY ~fale \\~re haired terrier mbc, '7 mOI. Good with chldrn. Nd1 lovnc hm, fnc:d yd. 5-12-3846 or 968-2379 I/IS KITTENS. orange, blk 1. calioo. loog-hair A 1hort halt. Very a.ffectionall" &: ~Wf'f'l. Playful. Dy 11 : 836-4493, :)1~3 evei.8115 LOVABLE Lllng h a l r e d Calleo spayed female cat, and 4 mo. old gray stripped female kitten need rd home1, ~13 8/15 NEED Good home, fncd yd tor adorable young female Yorkk-type terrier. Aboul 10 lb!;. JIOUSe pet, S41J.M77 or 968--6209 I/IS NEED gd home, fried yd for lovabll" Lab/Gt"nn Shrt hrrl opinter mix. 9 m<ll. Loveg children, 111 llha!1. Mi-7019 or 968-2379 111~ LOVABLE younc ad u 1 t BpByed cat, I ~ yn. Dy; 836-4493 or e VII' I : 548--0l\13 I/!; 1'11'n'EN·toed ~taru: cat, 3" lall, 24 toe1, nulle, rood n1ou&e A. gophl!r cat. DYi: 8J6..4493, eves: 8!17-54SO 8115 3 l-"REE 8 wk old kiue.na . 2 fem , I mttle & r.1omma. 842-5013 1/15 f'email-. lmmed openifW.1 Ceo~ Allen BylaDd ~"" Cd~ Loraine. 64:>7J70, WtRI· np'd man, perm a, n r ." t. t.1us1 st>ll! 847-5066 Ing nia.chinf!, 1ool1, lum~r. 1819 Nt>wport, c.M, 642-MM 2 CHILDRENS f'hlllembes tor ~·Md I: u.Jl'lll!ff. l0&-8 E lltb SA.. cliff Per:>nnel Ag1!ncy 2043 dll)'I. ?ofust tum. ttf 11. Ciood F'lmNITURE retunled from garden tool1. t<le. 2349 ::otft S'.lll each. Arcl.lrdion $70. 8Mch ~ Ser v, :T~. . ' ' WeAtcUll Dr., N,O, ' pe.y. J.11..1 E. 17th, CM. Union d!!play studl.ea, model horn. Dame Rd., C.~I. ~9145 613--0!l35 FREE Klttt'n8, 6 .,•k11, + Mfr3900, 900 W. lTth. C.M. HO'"'L Pt run. (emale a.m. \.\'a\trea,!;;0;11~. =~~.,,.--0.,,--.,--.,-C!I, dccOrl'llon: cnnc:tllatlon. dll)' or nitt'. JIA.M1.10ND, Steinway, Yam-16 JUDO MATS beautiful Slamete male, 1 * DRIVEU * Is; • • • OCC: tucknl relerttd SER VJ.CE Sta.flon Atte~anl, ~J>Anish & !\.1editenantnn PATIO SAL£: FRI. & SAT. aha. New a used pianos of 1'1AKE OFrE:n yr. 671-1<169 l/l:i Vtty plff.M.nt worinng oondl· ~ , ~I Sh · i::rave}'ani shill. part tim(', R 0 FURNIT URE llfde-.·bed, SSO. Tt>ar tbl most makes. Besl tiuyg In 61l--0.'147 alt 6Pi\I 2 PLAYFUL kiUeJ1J1 _ Mf No Experience lbw In ftnt clul botl"I, 1n l51D W t i 'ire ~M :-6694 1l-1AM. 7 days a wk. App. 1844 Newpor t Bl., C.M . S10-almp rot5-BBQ-tbl I. So Calif. •I Schmidt Music ANTlQUED~eruA.J-;;;;=;; grty & "'hlte, one black N--~~ ttw bouaekepinc depart. · • r, Lorin'• Arco, llarbor Ir. San ... ~,...., nlle .,,1 9 benchetr. P.fi.ac. 1935 Pomona Co, 1901 N. Main, Santa I na a ~Ll\•er rlrav.Prs, Lais of & whne, G~U2.16 Ill!> -·-___. ~-.... -. PART TIME mU1 or ll"OffiAn ..... _ F'N"', C.M. 557-7585 ..,....... A r ~ uJC11 .. "'""'~ ....... ~ '""'"' ..,,... • ., 1 WM., Sal. A: Sun, •111 ti pt · ...... 1. storage. $40 ~731\ 2 Beautitul blAck 11 S1&mflf' Moat hav• dnn Hortdl ot wU1 train. Call tn4) for genenl wort lr1 anlma1 Serv S1ation &1tchen\o.Sales. --,..__ 7-"i;;:.c..;;;._;::;.~~=-~-ll b ol • -•-~ .~. I j•-• Writ Bo M •~ D BL 4 1 b d GARAGE SALE! Movini.::I * ......,.,~rted UPR I G HT * 10' Tile Arbor eo·1..... w d kilten to lood ,, .... ,..~u . ....., ... J.1'100Ext.57S. 10SJl1a1.. e: x _..,...man lopf>'Y 14~Su-rior ·PO I er e' Pl NO BEN ""'ho :.1°""' LL -c •• co ---'" Pl'~ . . ·-. Tho II b I h • Jf!'welry (.-lothlna, bOOluL. A \VI c II . Ctant' lablC' !DW. "'°'"' mr -o-u!!l3 1115 Y E "'" -"' ' • • ... ~"""" ,_ ' ~-•nm '"" Da.1.., ...,. •I Pia-•"• N n m11s\fl I', urn II I! '--R 1·--~~ b'--"-11 ·-""'~' ,, ... ~ ..,. --.u·-....... ._ .Do I din• & MlllC ttem&. '°4 64•0 ".'::',~ * ""'"""' 0 0 · & tland. ~ fE~fALE Cockapoo. t 1 ... _ 181 E. l$Oi St. uea. -~ ,_ •·-. N .. 1 RADIO OISPATCllER •nd SLIM GYM o1-•-11 el P m11.p f', nl&ttl"f.15, .11prings, A >" ml f CdM SAT & 'UN ~ ·-· c.osta ).(ea ...-.• ....,.., "'"" II •-fief I"'" ...-5 dNL~r chrirt. All for S19!1 o'NLYt<a ' S P<X>L Tablr, Anll••111• trun"n gorwi lor •tlult~. .1hot1:' ~· own tran5p. Ir t)'lltt. """' 1hlfl, en: d<>monstrate ~wid't No. I or SI?). S~. s;,o. Quilted ! 'M10AtAS SPINE:T ORGAN & A1iM:. ... "" fW.-.~102 S/15 F:XPDUENCE ~Rt Appl)' •:30 tD 3:3) PM, GUI MS-3456. exercillf'r & lnt~ce rx· 11prt""d SlO. JO 11 1 4 Rum m age & Bak• S.le Lighted · lreyboef'd. ~alnut ----c'-"""::.:='· -,,----!FREE kittens, 9 week& old c:eptkd11, cosmetldan,. mu. £. lft1\. Sant& Arra Suite RECF.Pl'IONIST for 11.8 . ('U1ng. new SUM GYM JET drror8tor'11 '"'"""n , '0 Id, Sat. Aua. 15, 8 am-S pm, 420 e WARRANTY! X1nt Cllnct. "'."'. ~'\ •-~ _ _.,_ 1--•-·---fl I .... ~-• Oflit"P slu i;lrsk . b b ' 1111) aeu.e, ,..,, • ..,..-. n-or ,,,... Pb: ...,....._... Qpt0metrl11'1 of ~. ful M BATH. No l'Jlpt'I', tW"{'. oranl{f' "'OOI thn1t r u 1 lO!h St, (Womien!I Ou1>1 S1!l>. 6#-0084 ('Vet/Wkf'nd11. 11 Y AOORAR trm1'lt:lH•lrHuntft'lls.lon,·1 .. ..,..-.,,~ ........ 11-. < J>llrl tlmt". Experlenct' ~hlrlPyGraham897-19*.loc ~·/•"'d 11••. ·~~11 0, ------ltf'mi.hAndtM\u•r l.Elnngh<11redkl1 . .. -~J·~r--· "'"' ,,.... .... U'llJ'-\JU lf.B. PRIVATE PARTY ~--"'"'~'1-!1939 '""~ 673-noo, ,,,, fuhlon IJHM N+llSl hrw .... ~ 3 -_,. dnlrablr 962-f.,601 Mlt--4AT1 6'1-1-266.1 =~~~~-~--1 1 b I _ ....... ~ o;:c;;-7::;--::::::,-;:::::=:: Ir:-""::='-~-~-=-STARTS f'ri . 3 lam1ly yaN W!lfl. 10 U)' [1 Al'l!I nnLE r1oor (lF.-l'i'f"'4.", r-1. ST \NDARO, Red o •• I EXP'D COUNTt.'1l GIRL tor-Wl!!l'k. 98.n a~e. S.n DAILY PILOT DlME A A Yoo'll find l;ft3t baora1rus ~ Cttllcht'll '°" ""111. All In alf. Ew .... th'"" hlll thio kit· for C1u;h 713: ¥11-112.l • ~ "' ...... • ..-..i-.. t-...i • .-.... ,. 1· ,.,,..-....... -... ,.._,, LIN"• 1 j··~ he -"-he "-U •;r ~.,.. -tx-d llt'dW()lld )'llNI lu1'n '-"~."i evt"1. !Ill ... , -.--........ -...... lllft "'9 .. ---.......... ..... -~ ~ you ... , IM!n· w II you ...... p t u. y xln't f'{',nd, •mm $10Ch$"1J. chrn 111nk, m2t A~ckl, 11-IE QUICKER YOO CATI L"it ~-I 1o1g..ag1 i.1'-l800 nlH a dq. Pilot ela.11Alfit!d ada! ft4.4-21'11~ S.nbi ARll Hatt. 11lE QUICKEtt YOU Sfll ~(.'lj;,:' P u~ ",':,ny othf'r Rvnillf'd 11ft1~q>aper1 2t9tl·A ----------•---...;;.--'"------• • .;;c:;;,.;;.c...;;..;.":;;'.::.m=•:;;·.;.':.:.-<:;;'="':_.1_~A~oo~e~n~c•~"~A•~·~ .. ~o~"'~"~'~'~' .. ~i I ' • . . ' FREE TO YOU FREE TO YOU . ' ' -' . . . ...... -- PITS i "d LIVISTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ] TllANSPOltTATION TRANSPORT.lTIDN ~~JU 'JlOf 11 TRAHSi'OltTATIOH -FREE TO YOU Oog1 111.S S.llboats '°" loot Ch•rlor 9039 MotorcyclH '* r TNck1 - NO:O folt•r home tot 2 Bl..K Lone hAlft6 beaut. Vt-ry preUy aald A white Ii-A Kc Pug Pvpitlu -Q;umbia 40 dlf'Rl S211,9::!0 21' TROJAN' t11 bridle - -... - -BRANO NEW w phalWd ()(\Wk! r•uJ)JMN ., mal,. kjtt .. n :'I mo, "'/shol:1, /lPr n1a1e lriU.-n, 4 m.,, ml"d 5 wk.told 'l4T-8675 Whl ftff.r1na. A"i)Uot, etU.iMt-loadtd...!pt I $il d.&)' I ............ • 1970 6.M.C 31. TON lmpor!M Auloo WHO WALE lie bell~ J~. Have bttn N •,. d • Id. ho m •. lq hair. Nttd.1 good homto. RadKI, DI, rarho, SJ»t(lo IUJ. "k. m.flO(XI THINK • 1• on bqlU@'l for s \Vk1. ll<lln 675-Ulill sn~ tmrable" iriltndJ.y, IJ6.i493 ! :eK..E A p<!° ~~ 12 M.ib, K/C Pn!lllJre ••ter EXE CUT l VE M. rl l n HOND' .. TO THE PUIUC kUl<d ' d•yo •h.r PUl'I LOVABLE m.U'"·I..., rnoY. • !'••"••. G ,..,, T•clde on-"" CAMPER TRUCK •• '". ''"-01!3 n1·LOVABLEA1'\C.Ctor.ahort · w. 3 Alh p AKCR Olmp·T-I •----~ YI ""' \lhllt fem .... 11en, mn11• g •n. UPI· .. Y 1t "'·"~s ~ ~ludfoft. SllS + tucl. ~!!000 -~:?·TO!'i 3/1~ ha1ft'd potnttr tan l wht tned 1 .... fur. ?'ri• sood QUA!.JTY.,. 1fi2.J98!1 AIM t2l 20' SliPi' 1111.1l!lblt' •'FRIEDLANDER'' Pomi!ttk trada otttr:l.QS Fantutic •vino AUTHORJZ£0 SALES, S!J\VICE I )T ·hlbrk. oldtr ehildf'l'n 1 1 ... ,. CIFIC y CRT GORGEOUS amber "'·"'ho:P I flltf. 4G.~l319 S/t.i hMlt. (1) 73.'.-Bm fir PA A ~ALES Mobile Homes 9200 fem. kiltt11. Vtry 1p1rlt<'d. 8.16-4 L!L1 8/IJ Horses 1130 lltfi Via ()pnrto. N R. i;/J-l.l70 --- l'iO V1, f 1peed. PG"'tr 1tter. 1n1t. C1Jl!nn1 mouJdillp. heAt- er, H.D. tbocb, H.D, 11prlnp, dual mtrron 1tr:p bumper, 1:irlx18 1plli rim tubt type tln1. • tSt3J.'i. Abo, '• SlomHe ••·•:· .< S"Al.POINT 5,.,,,.,. oduh LOVABLE d•·k Onuo,. tiJ"· -H-OBIE-CATS-•••••••••• v•hJte: (t.m., timid 1. ]11\·!n.::. ltma l • 1d moth •r . lltript khttn. 3 in01. mf'd. I'ALO~trNO Matt: 11/t Frf'e to qu11.!. homes, h•H1 _ 516-4508 tl/15 Jon,; hair. Very frndly & Quarter hone. Xlnt ridit\l shots. 549-1146 8/13 DARLING Patt Ptts\an kil-pret!y, ~42-7096 or •trail hnrse. $300 or ~I lJJ• slAClf 1HWT. Jf) ~T -5824 e tin. 758& NEW-USEO-SEltV. Don't Be Late V lovlible belie w/hlk I trns ~ Whitt, 1 black. 6 8.16-44~1 8/13 otr. 675-7049 aft 6-pm, u"; y11s: curly lt:mtlt Cock. ll'k•. M2'6892 8114 PERM Or f1:11~r home• tor 8 YR. old gentle mare; part apoo. Hou11tbroken, 11N'rls ~~-R~E~E,,.-KJ~.~,~, .. .,.,.,-_-:,-w=1a"""o1<1°" I 11_ blk I. ~·hf mllle cat, 2 qua r I er llOl'le, part good hom1>, fronN't'f )'lll'd. 1111 colon: ·· hou11ebrokP.n c&J1ro c11.11. I llie.r klU~n Mu.tanc. Tack Incl., $100. l~97'5A or 8..'ifi.-449:! 968-~1 8/15 mAle-, ~ belore-4 1 ,:64~"";,.:.1~27C;-;;::-:;::;:;:-7.:,-.,=c ALL COLORS FREE OEMOS CAP'N EDS Pick Your Choice Now In the l"U"'Ll'Ln.l't * SUZUKI * -52499 lwlth pun-hAM of 'T'ruck .l Kl'l.f ot RO&d camper. Su1al Nf'ed cood horn• • lt>nced Y•rd 101 JOV11.ble frlefll'ily youni hl11ck male wire·halr'td terr. mix, Ltu lhan a year old. l.t>Vf!~ chlldn!n !>42-3346 or 9AA-2.179 ~ ColUf', '1 Shr:~l'l'i bf'iJf', M. 10 ~. S.'1 lbl!. hou&e rrained. Xlnl "''ll lch do&'.· Fixed. Af!er ;; . &47-.9444 8/lf WHO lo.Rt me~ LookhtJt !or a ~ home -older people. 1 am ll nice !lihOrthaJN!d snY .\. white m1tlt c11t. 540-t~ Jl./13 FLUFFY kitten11, Ii I Ack • wh i lf'·jrlly. HSf'bkrn. ~159. 2065 }0\an11n1tn. CM. 11113 BARNEY, our hf'[O\lf'<I 81.ASe.U, AKC. llf'ffill lovin~ hom1>. Call 8f7--03lll 11lt 5 P.M. 11/13 Samoyf'd AKC Malt, 10 mo. W/Pa~Nf All 1h.o t1. 968-6060 ' 1/13 3 ADORABLE JI ~·k oJd kit· lt'lll. 2207-A Sllllt: Ave, C.1\f. ~IS-49:'i0 1/15 LOVABLE fond male-Che · ~ mM. Nds rood hon1f', f1k'.d yd. 96&-2379 8/U 6 Killt:ll4 -6 wks old 4 irn.v 1 blk 1 tisf'r , M~ 1/14 3 P/Siemtse Kttten1. 9 wkl, vt-ry pretty, to good home. 646-8615 $1/14 2 Bf:auriful Dachshund!'i. Re;:. Male. l blk, 1 mi. 847-3444. FREE Beauliful kittens 10 loving homf's. 962-2359 8/14 Lnr\gh11ir black kl1 ten. Lov- nh!e k t:rix trained. Jl9.1-29R6 l Chihu11hu11 puppit•, 6 wks. 64&.11i22 No Matter What It Is SELL IT WITH A DAILY PILOT WANT DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 f pm Att.i g Yr. old BtlclClk1n qtr hone, MEADOWS ·~,1~i . "'"';:.;"'• "'0:~,..... UNIVERSITY JOI BEllLOTTl'S TIM Motors MIXED brttd male pu.p, blae k \1•/wh.l te. un- dermarklng11. P11pt:r trained " ll'f'AIM'li. ~ 1/15 Xlnl row pony, ntt'ds exper/ rider, $300/be:t o(r. fM-5784, 2200 \\'. Cltt. Hwy. NB &IJ:o 2'!44 VACATION Over, Owrlt'r ttturn\na tn Ohio. $.166 Sabot purchUl!ll 6 ~·kl 11to \\~ll be Mid fqr $215. Ph. 673--1.~. ••• 9ofn9 festl luxurious New Adult Pork p.,,. • "''""'""' OLDSMOBILE JAMES LTD ""1 Hu..,. Blvd. IOll G•rdon GrO¥e lllld. Sm•ll pets •llowed Costa '.\ofeu. 54Q.t16.40 Sa.le:1 Oi>-n Sunday REG. QuatterhOTlt:-l op breed In~. best otftr .. Also h1\ttd S~tland pOny 646--5714. C11.Jiro i -=--'-'-:....----- 1' COLUMBUS-lfl'. r tqup S.A, f'wy at Jtftrey Rd. 1u--• Old New-t Blvd. . .. ~ r nl lo ~• , 1 Partt, 5ervtce Tue1., Tbura. .....,, ..-v.i o nx ~ ' on till s·.oo Incl · u 1l1, Ir• l I,. r • 148Sl Jeffnoy Rtf. 8l2-&5SS CMta MM.I MZ-0040 BEAUTlruL long kittem, 1 v.•kl old, " onnc• 11aer. MZ-6.129 00.i/cvr. r:I C" READ\" TO 5Jl-8Ul.S. :U0-2930 pauu f:T'Uck. com~SM>r <~~ B!k E. cf Bu.ch)' SAJL A\\'AY:. $139.3. 213: , KA\\.~AKA! -BS.-\. Ma1. mounted with raclc. 8ink!i 534-ZJM 89'l-S1 4z--,..oon •••••••••• :1j_:iachl. ~1010 Guel-Du-~~~1~~:i,:,n\~;=· 11~~~ BEST BARGAINS Fibe.rtlau le C'.elcoat RIVER SPECIALS Salts, strviCt', fWl.J'bl. clolhl ~1n11n1 1tatP. must COME SEE OUR Ca 11 TRANSPORTATION 8/15 Boo1ts & Yi1chts 9000 CALICO ~l11n 11.nrl kilttn. 1------- &r8.IC"hlng post and food frtt to rood h a m f' • 19)..Stl ll/U LICENSEO CAPTAIN Fl"l!f!: ~~=in* ~~rm Nf'\Y 12' wide tiome1, ahghrJy ACTION CYCLE sell. •~7314 ~ Manuruta., SELECTION OF . d~. Perfttt fnr tho! do. il2 Yorktn"·n H B. La(11M. Beac h. TOY OT AS 14 Glau SUpe_r SatPllire il-vourseJ(er Oriainal 4tli-. . · ' e '63 Ford Pickup e JIM SLEMONS t'aii;t boiat in gonrl rorYI 1 • . .....;...... 1 Red .\16-:trl.1 Tur-1·Sun I0.1 Rarlar . l.D1 tt, 30 yPua ex-. . __ • . • n,; price -..<N"l CQl. uc. --, Gt! cond S700, 962-4:\)3 1 1uaORTS J)e!r!P.nce Pil or po\\f!:r. Pm. \V/lrlr. S.~iO • 1;.~.i02.1_ e .. for r-lf'aranre $400).$5000 '70 Kawasaki 250 mr ff'1111lona1 aport !i1hin1 ~u1de SAILBOAT, Scorp10r1 1l1ke BAY HARBOR 140 W. WARNElt GUINEA Plp-&blea, ~~ cro~'n, full jrown. Smooth !\'lrxtran & C--ntra.t An1f'rl-Su~f .. hl 14'. Xlnl Con-1425 Bakt'r SI., Costa !>leaa Lil-.e n<>"'' D.000 ml!es lt'f! on Cemper. 9520 SANTA ANA c11n "'atl'."rs, Admin.11tntive dinf\n, S.100. MS-A..\l.'i J11.~1 So. ot Harbor Blvd. I.: \\11-tra.nty. Movtna, mWll ,87 vw , OPEN EVES. & SUN.' ha i r , 6 4 6·73SO or 642-4424 1114 ARISTOCATS Ariatol'.'r111.s-OR hf'lore 10 11m or FOR >-.""8 t'itprrlf'nc:f'. 20' FLYING Dutchman : Slln D1e11:0 F'nvy, tTI4 l se-U, · 54M11J AVAIL.ABU: for "'etkcnds. tlbet&JMJ:, !rnilcr, (:')) salts. M0-9470 $600 or Best pm. 11Hrr f; 8/14 MfXEO Sar.lOy<"fl &· Rlack Labf'l!dor pup111 200 Suzanna Pl, c .M. 5-18-7?33 airer 6 8114 FOUR fluffy, cu1p puppies, 6 "'N'kS nld Ntrri lovlna: f11m ily. !J.10·03~3 11 f I er 3;30 ll/l4 rREE k!llf'nR ~ •1 ks old • l blk, 2 putt' .... hur, l !11ter. 3ll94 ,\folokai Pl. ~1eM VPnif'. CM FREE 1dorahlf' blt1P eytti W 1rl hlk kitlt<n~. 5 wks old. :O.lothf'r Si11mt'!lf', faUwr ~, Si11mti;t, ~9-2AA.C! 8/l~ ROOSTERS, 2l!il I r v I n «' , N.B. 646-4519 8/15 •~"•ended charters or dtliv. 614-5685 SPAC!S 774-115.1 c er1f'11. &111 of referenct"s. COLUMBIA 26, ·m. m11.ny Av11llatilt: m lluntington amper \VrHe Box )f 1060, D11ily xfr1111 v./11llp. 52500 rlo11n. ~ach k Colta r.1e111:1 nic. Pllnt. 2'lll \\'. Balboll Blvd., i\!llumt lOAn. RJl-0.)61 est p,11.rks. =N~",.""''P",.'_,1 ,.8"''"'".-h_.,,c,';;;· == C'OLUM-BIA 22. sllp, n.b.. MOBILE HOMES SCRAM•LETS hlnj:ed m111"I. plu11 xrra1. A1nrricll's finest, a1·11llablt: $3650. 842-5916 u:: e\'ery s11,e ti prire range, f'Ully Eqwpped. Sundial lntertor. 1UQH 692! $2339 ANSWERS CENTER Boerrl S11.ll!111:" JOMICRA, INC. ninto?hy. 9'. r/z hull. yrl 19261 Beach Bh·n. H b V W dolly, lie. 52.l.'J. 546-;.1 47 llu1.1u11i:ton ·Beach l.""J\.F<,;11 =:!::=======I a r our . • I Po!('nt -Hon<')' -f.lf'11111 EN \ ·1 !----------\\' --GOLD 1 \'fft 20X;, , Top , -D1~"'JI -Pl.A Y. ITII. {-nnd. ~r11f°f'r&.tt'd 111r, 2 Auto Service Afnut'rl('('. A nch m11n Power Cruisers 9020 RR, 2 ba. drp.~. {'ptF, "P-& Perts 9400 l87U BEACH BL., 542--443S Hl1r-.:TINGTON BEACH APOLLO OOught hl1 rlnl a hnle boy to • 1 * BARGAIN * pll11ncf'~ Complet" Mtup _ -------- Pl.A\' WITII. S 13 Abst>nce for,·r:s NI'° z;· t•lln unfurn, Trantltrttd. 19361 1'\'0 1940 WllJ1, pa!Mngror FOR SALE -LEASE .... ~re"'' rru1M"r, pl1~ktd htlil. Riwk~unu. Spare No. 106. auto ftndtrt $."-1. Onf' J.~ :.IOTOR H0~1ES OR CHARTER T11p cond. & quallty. C('m-HR. StoP niana.trr A-f'fltsl·M !root buniper. • AU S!ttl Sttuctur" $"'15.000 Do"''n, 5 yn blllllll~ plC'lC'1/ .-qp'd tor flsh1n1. 24x60 1968 R11mArlA, 2 BR l'W'\rr ~n touchf'<1 $75. • f'lbtnrtul Ex1trlnr ol(' Flyhr1<1J:e \\'hN'lerCrul.s. Re~1 otter ovtr $.l7~. prior 2 ti11. {'OTI1plete, Lnc!srp~. 642-4321 ext. 3!3 llSk !or MILLIGANS er. Slttps 8. Complrlf'ly 10 Iii 2:1 \7141 !HS.3794, UP2n1 cptg thruout. Sht>rl. '1tkr Tnulf'r SAJe1 ,-,-,.,,.1,"••-' '""'"'"""'· ""'n1ng~. J'IC'l'<'h, skirting e V\\' Pfl.nA, trilnl ax.lei 1~1 H1ttbor Bh·d. ' "'" " ·~· MUST AtU. 26' J'ffln, Exptt.'1.S le •• "1~70". J\llNT C 0 ND. 1--l \P Ch-· SS Ii 4 llfiS-4167 303 Msgp .....,ne. /.· bortypart~ Gllrdtri Grove • :iJi-2852 ia • , .. _,.s. ' ps · tV e 643-0443 e X'l'RA:-: PLt:!': r.11!.kt offtr! Tllkt c11r f'll·pn1nl, pe:rn1 F: X C fl AN (i F: UN! my Day1 539-.~78 f:vrr. & ll'k-•llp, $3:,00. 6i3--02R~ HIX.'1:1 EXPANN'l, hltn~. «'I-111r-ronrl Cl\rllll~r f_n r t'!uiM 893-IWOS. . 70. nr TV, mnlrr, ~1nr11:gl'." .'lhrrl, T II T I 9425 Vn!klfw1t~TT C11mper or ALFA ROMEO '67 -1600 Spyder. Ofl. owner. Xlnt $2595. 547..ml day, 846-2439 ew. AUSTIN HEALEY AUSTIN AMERICA S&le1, ~. Parts lm.medla ta Ddivsy All Modcll J1rtupo11 311npo1 ls !100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. M24ffllo 540-17" AutMrlzed f.!G Dtalu 19'59 Sprite "Bu1eye" run1 rood. oet'ds ' body work, Mu i;t ull, best ot!e r . 5&7-8218 PETS ond LIVESTOCK ' Pets, Generel 8100 PARAKEF:TS. All co I o r 11, hlUf'll, yt-llow. 2ret1111, all •!ft-'· Nooe nvt:r 1 yr. old. $.~ itnt1 up e11<·h. ~10!!0 BOSTON WHALER OR Str.11LAR • SKIP JACK full a"'ning.'I. Adtt p&rk. tNo r• er, rave n101or homr. 3 11 f' r k 1 1.-LYINGBRIDGt;, N.B. ' . S·l995 -•* tii~45 •• pr:lll . nr shop ctr. · '69 11' f!REBAW.: T.,.,1n Sept/Ot·1 . Box r.t-lO&.t AUSTIN __ 7\ol: 6.17.q7 l9. r.::11.uctio.. alp~ 6, llll'lf·l'"rl-DllU)' Pdot, 22U W. Balboa, [ Xlnt Htaly 3000 Mull: '-ond. Beat oHer. Dogs 8125 POOOLE FANCIERS! I h11vr: t"·o AKC ~·hur tiny toy poodle. pupplt'•, 1 malt, } !!'mAJ!', \l'A~'J E:[' 10 Rrnt • 11111v ti! Lllhor Day, Resp, pa.1·1y, Ca!J Mr. Auth, 1<rt!lrct Speed-Ski Bo•t• 9030 2 BR P1rklaor, 9;,Q 111q fl. 1a1tlf'rl. l'rp1. bu 1 an e _N~·~"-· --:-;=-;:--.,---548-"'4 -'----· ('orn. lol on aolt co~. retr1r;:/11J1,'e, dbl 11nk5, 2 New '70 Datlun a '64 SPRITE-Xlnt ccnd. {1131 749-ZUl I •••••••• e 1 !1u·f1"·0fld &h Cluh. HR . I~ t:!OMl.!o. 11"' n1n11. l.lkP Ne~·ly rebuilt en1. S750 or Sac $6950, ~7~72. ;,.16-&r.lf\ brllnd ne" ! s~. !l!IJ-43! 7, I 1600 OllC, P ickup ~·1th earn~ offer. 54&--?49S 2·,· P111'1'111aktr • al)!:l11~ 1%7 1 16 ft, Ski" D-~ L",AVING Slalt! Rl!sl offrr, !MO\ Bannln1 A''" llB er N\le pr\C'9 S2Cl99 dlr.1----------llnnlT r. ' · (a ST1911) Will ti.kt cu ln SPflrt!lsher e om PI" l f' I} I takt11 IO\IP.ly 12x56 Slcyhnt, r.r HOUSE ~tlrr. nrrd~ tnde. \Viii !inafl('e J'lr'L\'llle 'Thty'rP tlif! "darlinJ:tal!" 33J J7rh s1., c.~1. 64&.-0142 \\'ANT An 110orflhlf' pt!~ Amhf'r t11 lhf' ~ for you . Shf''a 11 d11rllnp: AKC silky 646-0142 . 1\l 17th 51. ('~f. e PURF. RRED DACHSihJNDS 12 ~·kl, lli male. Sal f'11 •• 96U.007 rqulpptrt \1u1t M!-11 th1 ~ Rn9lOI lnhnoir•I ~1 ~J>'IN". 641-9HM. paint k rl~11nln1 \h!"'I pt.rt)', Call 546-4C52 or 11rf'ktnt1. S7!'!00. :xv ;. rin\\·n 183 Crol'\."f'tte r njt111" 11111\·r . $.l50 a1 1~. Ph: 49'f.&llll. "1th approved erffht or · IK-%61 1r11rll'." 1mall a 1·reage:, $1125 Motor Hom•• 9215 ~1' · · METRO VAN fiiJ-lJllJ OI' 644-tlU 1--------.,--·s.~ Nli\.1ROD Ot'luxr, ~1r:o1 l.~ "" T bu.lltin eampe:r. T H"' ,,.,.,7.,...., 11' p11~ An'O"'' rompietf'l) I>, stv. icl'."box, din \bl. SliOO. SI••, ~ink. "' box, "'" e 1964 22' LV,.1/\N. 1 8 .-OJ<> Dt';J ~,, ~!""' '" ,...It 1'()ntll1ntd. PO\\f'r pl11 111 J __, ·"" .... ,'""· ru.nl'l lin,, O.d, "'w V..it (;ray, S/S radio, hfr.i! _ ,~ . ..,, , ••• lank, hf'M. naV)' lop, lull t......... I. <1ullt air. lo ml. Clltr1 LEAVING F'or Orif'nl~ \lu.'t pllint. Xlnt cnndiUon. CO\'er. 1'op Cood. Jit;,o. 61~ ll' :O.tlNJ-SPORT: 40 hp Auto RtPfl.11, 1747 Anaht'lm ""II' ·~ l~' rrn"n C11mp1>r. * MS-124.i * ~l f'\'t!I & "kWll'ts, '\l'kd&ys r:\'inrurir w/tnulrr, elec. Ave, C.i\1. 2.'i-49 On.n;;e A''t. CM. 642·0010--cc.;:=:::-;::;;;-,. :<!11rt. $1200. Aft. 5; o o Mini Bikes 9275 tr'1'"•'", '.!!:... ~~v~:._. Tr~:: Nt-:\\' T.-1' c;111~p1tr hull, 10' 963-60:'17 , '"' ,..,.__.,, GR.EAT D11ne~ ~ "k~. f'awn l'it11m cradle 1neludl!f1. $18:,0. ·S:<i'~IS~'~G~l-."""'--,-.•.,=H~P;:-,~~-~.,.-1 'fllNi JOO, 5 hp, hvy \Vltl f"fl.Y S.'I00-$700 ll6'l-7i;ir~ &: Brlnrilf'. Show or <'OITI· r ton n f' 11.f!Pr 7 P!\l rii~. lull ('(!UiJ'I, 1·pry C"lf'an, ih11y lire". hi!.nri hrko:-, ;-:!(}' AIJO, ~rlr Mntll!nf'<I~ e ·10 Callforn.\an :\1 o tor Home. Sips 6. 1/r, J/r. il-1;,ny Xtr.as! 2 i\to. oJd. Sa.c. $6700. pa_ninn. HofW"y hollO"' line. '\l•rf'kri11y~. 1111 day Slit & $1400. 64>-0619. •hOck,, St.25. 646-1:'!3:1 !1\cr 11r11. Sip~ 6. $19M. Cll.11 s· t"ULl. cab-over camper, ~7156 ~un !=lfi2-8.l.l4 1•1' GLASPAR i:k1 ~I • Po"'f'll :'\-lln1 Blke,$125 67.\---3 1~.I:. I [;it!. dlK:Onlinutd mot" '. 548--316.1 LABRADOR RE.IR!f;VER 64 BELLBOY. g1au, JR It.. 11·/trJr, 4:. hp ~1Prc. $j05 e •Go-C1trl. lf) hp, $7~ Complete. $895. 869 \\'t~l 6 WKS. PURU!JtED Vnh·n in holl-rrllout hnl.rd ~"16.-2-12'2 + Call 67:'1--3428. Tralltrt, Utility f450 llll h S!. Costa P.1f'sa . WI 961'-7935 k 1r11llrr, $1:1~. 961-3439 11-6-. -,-L~L~-!;~L-,~.~,~ .. ~,~"°"~' -========== l.t \\'ANTED: 2 . 111 l'I f' e I e d ~·Travel QuHJI CHIHUAHUA Pup1, AKC, 8 • 1' DINGHY * 100 hp Mtrr eng .. ~·/tr11llf'r. ~o~rcy_c_lo_• ____ 9_300_ Untuy tr!r. t1pprn'I' 5~ Early CAb ovtr "·ks n!rl. Re 11 so nab It· Fibera:lu.wd hull 1hell SlfiOO ~!1-~.'i 11tt 6 pm · • 64l-Jl~71 al! 6pm + $4~ 962-;i618 MS-8146 * 96&-7;;74 • ·59 NORTON 750 Commsndo .116 V\V Cam ... r, very clean F11.81~rk (o()()IJ mi. )tint cnnd r-• !41 COCR·A·POO * • 1' FIBERGLASS Mo1rin• Equip. 9035 Trucks 9500 k lully t:qp'd. Rtuonable. •----'--'------,,,."" tAch r11.ble &: horn. 1u11 --------PUPPIES * ~ wlvt olrl. OINC.ll't !\tOLD * I 1;1;·>-184;. '' • ~,, • • • tunt'd. ne"'' Jlf11nt11, P ui:~. 'SS Fo'd Plck·up SIO • • · •"""•"' * ~7!174 • -" 11200 ... ·~ ECONO SuP'r Van -.ce.,..,00-::::::--:::;:::;;<.-;:; 1967 EVINRUOE rorRil'."n:<er. t'lr .... st li Ton. Complettly hr1100 ""'' AKC Tl'ly PnntllP1, ~dvtr lR' GLASS over .wood 5.i hp rf'l\Mnahle offer. ~lusl M"ll! Citmpt"r Air, 111utomatir, &f'Jf. I • 1 7 k 11 ll P. ~terh11nic11.lly pt"rftct. L •1.,,. ne"' re bu 11 t enc. N#w ,...,,,,,-·'. s•-. ,.1 .. ~~~ ma P Pm., ""' 1, Hnmt'l.itt: w/tr1.iler. !14 ..... ov ... •1r1.1 ...,-,.., .• ......,.., •« 0·75 ~fanual. hr11kes. Ne11• 6 ply tlrPs. \.\'/1hol1, SJOO r1. ,,......,..1 · 1~9:1 ~IR-lii:ll .• , "··ff Ii-• -"II "· 1 ~ .,., "R"'"ur-ft •• Qve"-r•b. $200 FIRM ""'11:rn, rompe n)' •-•· • New pa1n1 Lr~.~ r.,.,n "'"" " r:.IU'•LI~..., • 6 \\'f\ Did 1111 "'hllr: male 9• G1R~~ dif'll1iy "'/3 hp ,;73.64,1~ llfl, 3 Piii :0.·lany exll'lls, C'h11.mbPr. rte, f\n rni; ~IUllt StJJ, f.fo\•in11:. ;.9 (;l\IC-100. I cy1 . '2 ton A.KC Pekinar:u Pu PP Y. Ev1nn1rir lolt1-ur n111tor. T\VTN ~2 11 ~-Olvf'n tanlc.~ !11u111 11111-r1fll'I', riPnl leMt-r, 774.2\~'i. $119.) 61:l-7:il2. 67z...&'i92 Rare. 737-576~ 71 1/R44?-2674 after 5 rm. 11ktnnM P.!bn"'· Alt f"f'rr1·s1 0~,-..,-..---;-;--;-1968 ,.. \\'ESTWAYS 8AS.~ETI' pups A Kr 6 5!\i. 911. ~ir 1':\·1 nrnrlt 11111. ;iv111t Rl'~t otter l;i;...21lll6 '69 Chevy l/1• Ton OVERHEAD CAMPJl:R 11ePks olrl Tro 11riri C11n·"·hltt' ho!lrd $:l.!J Uphcllstf'l'f'rl l~'t. 1 969 HONDA C8350-\Vilh rJ1m~r. lo1v mlle11ae. S6..'il1 ~().7198 Seilboets 9010 hrit1Rf' llffl, 3&" ~'1dP. . .... h) rnlnr. 6.\'\-1\17 ----------~ All "1nl ronc! 673-672!1 Tnp f'nd ju1t t'f'huilt, Nt"' Au1omaue, po"'·er llHrlfll!, 1970 VV.' Camper, Wei~ph.allA OLD Ern;f;hs·',,....-r-rl"I!.,-. e i:r CHRYSLER. SLOOP I~========= l'lu!rh, K Ir H ca.ni, t'.\tf'l air ct1nd, Dir. \VIU take PoP ui>-Jl,000 ml. Best oUtr fem11l1>, 211 yn, f'pt 111111.lil)' RRAND NF.\V~ TV PRIZE! Bo•t Slip Mooring 9036 !rn! t·on<11Ul'ln, 642-143-1 r11or ln 1r1de or tl1"'r1Ce Prt-nv1>r $3.iOO. 494-3320 Sl?S. 646-&32~ • • 53f4016 • • ntn1•nln~s. \ lllP pa_rty. Call 5'16-4052 or :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: e SPRINCiE:R S p~l 12' Pt-:NC.l/IN t·luR wl!rlr l\'r. Arrhr~ up IO 40· -f"1"t'r. e '711 HONDA. C.B • ijO'l-'-"~·'8=' ~'-'·=,=="°"..-..-- ff'mRIP AKC. 7 n1n All ~ R11 Xll1'~. $2:11). 541-6639 : $2 J)f'r ft_. AvAil now Xt.l\'T CONO. 3.000 nu '5J CHEVY YAN 11ho!11. Make nltPr. ~7-9~4!) t'Vl'A & "''knd1 962-4911 • 640--1404 • S12.'IO GERMAN S""phf!nt puppl~8 '17' ~-EA™ER Sit'lflp, lrhl':I~ e SLIPS -'2'·~·-AllO Dry Dayi 54().~ Evet1 54Q.!l2."il 1•, Tnn enrln1Prl lrelghl hr!" • !'.I wk•. f.fale•. no pAf'f'r•. "'"'"· r;n l'tlnd, n1us1 ~ell . itorAtP ~ hn~I lllun;hinr. \1U~T 14!!1! 350 CC' it:!lli.36911 d!r. \\'11 1 tJ\kP r11r~ S~ M.\-.~1.\'i $11\9'i. 67;,.J:l9.1 or 5.1~ • lii,1·fi60fi Kawll~akt. Gd. Coiir!. B.i 111 !t at1r nr hn11nrr private e !rr. RERNARD 1\1 yn, Nlhol, top cnnd. NPw e \\'ANTED-Slip or ~ldt Ile olr 6•\6.-6692 &!! j ,_like or p11 rt~· ~Ei-4fl~ l\r 4!)4~11 m e . usr ,,,. . ..... sa1 ll"la• · ~"'l. 2-~ ... G~IC l Ton Trutk v.•/ al " o-11 • 11-I & I 1•.a· !or nt'W 22' hrtul'lebo11t. 1~~!,~ic-==,_,..=_,,,--.loi'ic':T1i;;;-1';';;;'k"~7 • fi1«.~14!t .. C,atl l\Th-0514 f)l :'I! i • HONDA ~L .\JO Si1Nhsh hyrlraullc broom. No GEA.MAN !l;HERHERD pups, • f'IBERGL.ASS r" r Jn a -JI * I,()\\' ~1tLEAGE * 111(1tor, s.;oo CASH. i14. Champ. AKC. 1001v 1. pet, SABOT k sai!l'I. X\111 ronrl. Bo•t_!ervlces 7v 645-2003 alt 6 pm. M!}..2'J:i7 nr 114· 6'1~2M2 1hnt1, ~'Ormerl. 4!M-.11fl0 $1R;, * Call fi7~70tl1 ~I AR IN E MECHANICAL e KAWASAKI 250 cc e ·;,7 FORD ~ ton PU. Near "'IEMARANER PUPS * * KITE. R.ACTNG RIG, 1ervk:fo. Tune-up, ove-rh1tul , it OfFER * new pt.In! A uphol. Xlnt • Chl.mpi()n LlnP • f.'X'TR.A!;~ Nn. M7. ~tr. Exri'I! 111! m1tke1. 4M-(1~2fi runnlr1£ ('l')nd, Sl.'WJ. 64~\0 646-4.11R :~11t:16.14, fi.lf..6!1.11 R47-ll!l1 Ouc1tl 250 Scrembler 11r 497-JOn e 2 Af'GHANS • male ' ~t11n Millrr Jlllr1ng Nllfll Fl~lul'I & Gelcoat s.M1~1 1 c=H~E=·V\=·-.~.~,~2~'>-ol..,-~.,:-cl<ln=.,~- ferna.le, 2 yf'1t11 o Id . \.\'1nl1f'r nf m11.ny fToph ir:o1 **Repair&•* 'l&kr produre !Tuck. Vf'ry "-· --' Jl.3.~~ Xln1 m nd • 67:\-47~9 Frf'f! r.~lim11es 5-1g..175:z BRONCO trill hike. Like-lo m1'1 100 W, Mll tAr1hur, .;~:;,;',;".<";;,'=;:· =·==·====_::==='<"=====-'--'========:=1 l'lf!~'. $200. Cll.!I 646-1587 ~A ~~101(1 after 8;00 PM • '69 Suiuki 250 Xlnt cond. J490 or T O.P. * 11~2-Y.IO~ • e '111 TRIU~1PH 2i'lll cc Xlnt conn. $700 or b•1 nlr • 9fi2--S7~7 • '1fl !"ORD t, Ton P1rk Up. /\lllo A.a.din. :\1any r-.;tnu! Low mtle&lf'-S2.~. 846-431R • 1'RUCK -·.~T Chevy pick· up VS, good concl . S'lMl. fi73·74:i2 Dun• 8u9gles 9525 DUNE BUGGY CHASSIES '61 CorvA1r 4 IPt-ed 1199 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN ~Valle Road San Juan Capistrano S.17 -~800'4!l.1-4Ml/499>2'261 '64 VW J)ln w/l!"ont end bralt-f'1, •tttnn.a:. pt<\&11 It <'~hi,.~ Xlnl 1111rt for Dune Ru~·! 646-4665 aft 6 & Wf'N'knt1~ 36 HP aJl.synchro tnns. f)f'!W'r1 rmc 11111 gllll's body. hlu1> metal·Dake, Trans-ax- lr. S!'IOO. ~ -. OUNE BUGGY; F'bt;;ls V-1600 XTRA!I PLUS! l:DOO . . • 962"1692 HONDA CT M mntl'lrcycll't. C•mpers 9.520 C•mPttrt 3r, mue... CLEAN· $300. J '~~-~~--iii~~~·~~~~~---· Jl20 :M'>9 Kno1t Pl, CM M~ fl • SS GREEVES tlO " "A COMPLETE SELECTION v • ..,, """' "'""· ""' c.11 OF C1MPERS AT alt ~pm, 64~776.it " ~ .... ~0~~~ ·,':"~.,~ ,~: TOTAL DISCOUNT PRICES" ;;1>5.1~7 anytime e SUZUKI TC 90 e $.l.".'1(1 ~71 • lfll\9 Pf'nMn 125 cc Tnt1 Cl"IM. J.195, Ca.JI aft. 4:30. ~8-3840 a 'SA HODA.KA 100 ct. All dlM, Vf'r)' cle1n e ANGt:LUS 1 • ilARVEST·VANS • TEAR onn P • CMtP KING VANS • HARVEST e ANOELUS·VANS • KlNG or THE ROAD • DLX. CAMPtR e ru·1 SlllLLS • nrscnvr:nt:R • CA.~1P KINO • CHASSIS ~10UNTS CA.l\fPERS BMW Authorized Dlr, Salt'~ • St'rv1et • Parts ALL r.tODEU TO CHOOSE rROi\t • 2800 Cpe ln llotk e hnmedlate Del1very Orang• County's - Newest Dealer COAST IMPORTS Of Or.nae Cowi!y 1200 \\'. PaclDc Coast Hwy IA~' l!"om Balboa Bay Club! 64l-04~ • 540-e29 DATSUN -1fr- "Leaaer In The r.ear.b CJ~" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARIOR ILVO. 540-6410 . '68 1600 ROADSTER L1aht blue. Exc~fJ'lt ccnd. R111dlo, Mater, dlr. 4 1pMd. !XIII ?Ml \VtU take car ln trade or flnartcii prtval• party. C&l.I ~ or 49-1-6811 '86 1600 ROADSTER S1lvrr tmith w/black \•tnyl lnltrior 4 •Jlffd. Dir., !RUC 851) will ta.ke trade I'll' fin. llflCfl rr1vate party C&IJ ~ or 4!'.M-6811. DOT DATSUN OPl!N DAILY ANO SUNDAYS Jiil> 2oocl\ Blvd. Hunt1Jlston Btaeh 142·7'711 ot ~ • '89 Datsun 2000 + Chrome whls. radials. Vin.YI H.T. t.a mt. Xlnt. S2f50, 49T·ll99 alt t 1959 DATSUN ml co.nvt:rt. Owner muat teU at o~. Ph art 6 pm, S.U.1092 INGUSH FORD -- ALL NEW ENGUl!ll FORllS NOW IN STOCK DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO CLEAR l..AR.GE SELECTJON TO CHOOSE FROM Theodore ROllNS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. li'i1·R1'4 tir M&-91A!J '68 BULTACO l\t1trir. III. Od tor 1tl'f'f"f or din. E.'<tru 1595. ~198 $875 eos1111 f.1na so.ono llONOA.•130, l\ave two-1 dirt. l 1trHI, GMd Cftnd. AllKI n11M· H()r'ldt pe_rtt. ~7-8211. EMPIRE CAMPER SALES ~~ ~: ;:,. ,:,:.··,:; So. Cel. Discount Center phont • can O.Uy PUot --•'OiililliiNii.iiHii•iirii~iii'ii'iiSiii.Aiii.me•lii>tlr·rilmm•-•I ~~ :,:7' a....., ' • • t . • IWl.Y PIUIT -· -1', 1970 ftAiUiiOltW10N tilANSPORTATtOH TllANSPOllTATION TRANSf'ORTATlON TllANSl'OllTATION !_llANSPOltTATIO" t~SPORTATIO" TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORT A TIO" '. 9 1 1M --I,_._ Au1oo -1....,.md --llllported Aulw -lntportod A--lmpomd Autoo -lmpwtod Autos -UMdCe;; WliQ llMd Ciro 9900 PEllAll MG POISCHE VOUSWAGE -VOLXSWAGEN VOLVO BUICK ~~~OLET-=C...:.H:.:..EVR:-0-LET- flltltAltl Koo,.._ Lt4 Or- __. 0 ;z" ., ..abm---s ar U SU::V&'.SP.ARTS aoo w . ._.....,. ~a.ch aa.SNm ~1'7'64 ..-........... Deob RAT '11 FIAT'S e DEMO SALE e 850 SPIDER AM·FM radio. c h r o rn e .tteds. l..ime Green. Just Ulll""'". $!291. 1>I COUPE ' -""""' ""'· ....,.,. li'tem>. All atru. Jmt 3,SX> --"995. AUTO SPORT FIAT 96Z1 ~ a.... m...i.. GG can O:iJect sn-Tm ()pm- '&9 FIAT -850 SPORT CPE 4 spttd <ZUK lBSJ $1199 BILL JONES B.J. Sports Car Center 2833 Harl>ar, C.M. 5®-4f91 ~ 'lRIBIWDER" . 11750 91ACH IHwy. Jtl 893-T;B • 5.n-6824 NEW.USED-SE RV. U"llV'U"l;I '69 Fiat 124 Cpe ~ &¥ ~ "EW MIDGET $1''5 1119 aaJIQf CMWT. •J S!J.75156 • 537.Q:M NEW-USED-SERV. ........... '68 MGC.GT Wire 1'hetts. radial ~ AM/FM ndilo,' eyl.. auto- matic transmllliaQ,, low miles. Lie. xss s. $2499 CHICK IVERSON vw S&J031 Ext. 66 or 67 197tl HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA ""' ---Immediate DeliwrJ. Ali lllodela . J~ ru1po rt jl111por1 ~· 3100 W. Out B"7 , N ..&. IC2-9t05 Sf0.1764 Authorlzed MG Dea1tt 1st COME, 1st SERVED '52 MG-TO IClamc> $475 Dir.~ EJdie '63 MGB f speed, wire wheel.$, radio. "'88. HARBOR AMERICAN 1969 Harbor Blvd. 6l6-07J1 Exotic red with black vinyl bl.tc.Rt .e.ts. Low mi1a hall '49 MGTC had e.xcd.lent care &en. Exttllent COlldition $1850. ficr! (XL Y735) Take older 54&--9637, 61J...fi688 car in l,rade. Will finance '61 MGB. radio, wire whla. private t-.1rly. Call Pat dlr, Xlnt eond. $'1950. Ph: cn4l aft 10 LI 494-7503, 541)..3100. C96Z-4066.:'-.-"'------ NEW FIAT 1970 llO SPYDER MGB All co!ors to chooae from. --------'"'.e, !.;'.;~ & .. L~~. '65 MGB ROADSTER '!...~~"':'i:! '65 VW Sedan '&7 VW Sedan VOLVO BUYERS .., au1c•..,...,. ,.. .... "'"' '67 CH~VY SS cond SJ!», 396 Vil, Power Steenng:, Bue. qlrR, new dutch, new sw:oot Rad.kl. (MJR 988) Air cood. (UVT 287) ;:s-: .::;.A~; $979 $1348 * !il6l-C262 • ket 5eal3, Ou-ome \Vheel.$. al Xl89 Harber Blvd., or phone K..tm. 9un lo 6pm 1!169 Pone.he 9ll·E Xlnt coo1. M.'USf SELL! S6lm. m: mam '56 Porsche, ~t eug, ydkiw $1[MXI * 673-9403 * l964 Speicial Wq;, Auto, PIS, Radk>, He~ter. f\YJB Mel. LET US CHECK ~ ... ~·~:·••' $1599 H b V W H b YOUR DEAL i..:==="----BILL YATES ar our .• ar our v.w. CHANCESAREWE'LL CADILLAC VOLKSWAGEN l87ll BEAOI BL.. ll<M435187ll BEACH BL.. -SAVE YOU MANTI-------Road HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEAOI $ $ '61 Cnd Convt, lmmac! 32852 Valle .2 000 pl ,_, •• ~'d San Juan Cap is tr QM 1 _ .,_,_...., ,64 VW . . com •~> ,._ . --s-~••Oft It's worth you r whil S3275. &a2-4DII, Alt 5: 83748001493-4511/499-2261 Of VW Campers, S9UARE IACK FRITZWARRE"•··.60-68 EL1"500··~ . roCHEVYlmpala.Neweog. V K bi RadJo . ~ 1mmac generator, brakes. tires. Ex. -. 0111 s, ........ M:tlc "'"'"· SPORTS CAR loodod·•leeo i..; ml. ' . rond. """· 54'>-m:l ·65 CHE\1£:1...LE S.S. 4-1Pttd xlnl oond. Radio. heater. chmme wheela, bucktt !iltl~. (NCA-789), $195 T & M MOTORS AUTI·IORIZEO SALES e SERVICE e '6.\ S90. Many utru e Must 1e:ll, $ltOO ~ * SU-8633 Show• exoeptionaJ care ' · __________ , Buses. New & Usecl 'Ibis wttk-end only cn:i CEN'llR $4500. 6(2....(k)62 '64 NOVA sta wgn, 6 cyl, 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. lmmMl•M Delivery 63)), "DEDICATED TO '66 Sedan de Ville., good RJH. auto, lo mi., xlnl 534.2284 t ~ ,!~ of Beach) SAAB CHICK IVERSON $999 SERVICE.. """"""'" $2000 "' ,,. .. o1., ;';:"'::;d:,;· ';;:73-32>:.:;:c._' -.,,..--.,...-= =~ no E. ht. S.A. 547-0164 fer. m.5181. '68 OlEV. ln1p. Convt. R/H, ·57 CHEVY 2 dr. ~dn Aulhorittd Dealer S&.ml ~""'" cHiCtC' WWON VOLVO 1...,'" .... '-"RESUL"',...==--"'~-,..-,..-.,..-su-:;:;. ~·=•ml. s1roo. Pv1 :f::.,"'13~"';,..~"" 19'10 HARBOR BLVD. VW '70 Demo. •8'782 Saleaman. .Daily Pilot 1963 Oievy Impala Corr '63 Chevy Van-6 cyl, 3":apeed COSTA MESA "'-....., ......._ 66 SAVE C!la&lit.ied 6't2-5618 -place wrtible. Very clean, Good ~·/radM> -;-69 YW BUG i9"to~1 ~t. or 61 your ad• charp it! robber. 6 cyl. $400. 644-1482. Call alter 3, 646-14,jS ~~VD. $466 l-'-"===========-=============-;__;o:::_.:::::;~:;:_;~l'J00:__.1 Dir.•""""' 1XXA ""''· soo; BUSSES Sales e Servi~ e Partl full price with m1all down & From s......men wfll linanoe. 494-1744. so,.:'ETT '63 Karmann Gh~ co.wer. CAMPERS Immediate Delivery tible -Rebuilt eng, new '67's, '68's & '69'•. 8 to choose ~ Counl.y's Newest Dir. brakes Ir; clutch. Good cond. fron1. smo ca11 6<2-'375 BILL YATES COAST IMPORTS •ro vw BUS. New ·-· = ~. = ~7 Hwy. ssoo or ~~7051 VOLKSWAGEN Across from 32852 Valle Road '62 VW, EXTRA SHARP San J uan Capiatrano = ~ Prvt pty $T:i0 837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 -------'--I * 64&<lm * SUNBEAM SUNBEAM Alpine '66, con--. -""· ~ TOYOTA '67 TOYOTA Pick up "'i lh camper 31,(QJ actual miler. Local 1 owner automobile. OriglnA! red ~ !sh, new tires, radio, heattt, ready for anything! (UPM- mi. $1399 CHICK IVERSON vw a.19-3031 Ext eG or 67 1970 llARBOR BLVD. '69 VW Sedan Radio. CYCT 961) $1755 Harbour V.W. 1B1U BEACH BL., ~ HUNTING1UN BEAOi '67 vw NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month $147.71 down Includes tax & Lie. VW LEASING AT CHICK IVERSON vw 1910 HARBOR BLVD. COsrA MF.SA WANTED CAMPER ru pay '°" dolla-tor ,.,.,, Fully ~uipped including Jug. VOLKSWAGEN today, Call gage rack. Runs & Joo~ and a.sk for Ron Pinchot, brand new. Lie. VTT 907. 533031 Ext, 66-67. 613-0900. Spend the weekend in '69 VW. red, Xlnt cone!, Wide comfort with ecrinomy Semperlt radial t I r c a, CHICK IVERSON """"'" .... , whl • shlfle<. VW Dix. inter. trim, $1195. 837-1276. Check our deab 1800 F. Cpe. fur delivery. Choerscai de.I Specialist. DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 AnllcfU"J Cl1ulc1 9615 1939 PACKARD Ctipper 4 Dr. Remarkable cond. 675-7800 Will $ell to ht $1000 • HUR- RYr JAGUAR '52 XKR 120, partially restored. Best of- fer or tnde 49&--1025. Autos W1nlod 9700 WE PAY TOP CASH fur used cars 1r; trudal just cal.I ua Jar free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales Mana.ier 18211 Beaeb Blvd. Huntington Beach 847-6087 Kl 9-3331 WE PAY CASH . FOR YOUR CAR THANK YOU FOR JULY! e WE SOLD 123 USED CARS e The Biggest Month in the entire history of Connell Chevrolet. NICE CARS! that's why. 100°/o 30 DAY GUARANTEE! that's why. HONEST DEALING! that's why. Need we mention Big Selection and Low Prices? Why don't you tell your friends you got • good deal and after si1le attention at Connell Chevrolet? A lot of other people didl Even Sale Priced Ci1rs carry our full 9ui1 rant ... '69 CHEVROLET I 08"" W.I .. 'h TON Van. New camper conversion. 13,000 mlles. 6 cyl., stick . This is a rare piece. fZZX619) '67 CHEVROLET FULL SIZE WAGON 6 passenger, V8, power st1.-cri~g, power brakes, automatic, factory air. Nice car. (J.lHs:!.11 Cali fornia Sport Ci1rs 001 E. lit, S.A, 542-8!IJ1 '61 f"IA T • Abarth lOOOcc Spideor oonvt + nrw hrdtp. medl P"f"fecl. Ori&: owner Sll!'iD. $7--9681 COSTA MESA Excellent eondition, wire -;;;;;;;;::;;;~~~~;::;::;; ~ ~":~·.=: !T!O!Y!§IT!A! !;19.3031 Ext. 66 or 61 '67 VW SQUAREBACK, light 1970 HARBOR BLVD. blue, 25,000 mi, new tires -~~C~OST=A~>~!E=SA~--I & brakes. Pt-rfect condition. CONNELL CHEVROLET '69 CAPRICE 4 DOOR HARDTOP Radio. heater. automatic, power .steerini::. factory air, vinyl roof, i'IO nit't. (UBZ581/. Remaining fat'tory guarantee. JAGUAR JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS TlX' only authorized JAGUAR dealer in the entire Harbor AreL Com.pleb. SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK "' COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th street 543-7765 '67 XKE 2x2 Honey beige o:terior. Excel. Jent condition IUIJ 3641 thrv-oul Take small dov.·n, w1ll lin. pvt. ply. Call Pat aft 10 am ~3100, 494-1029. '67 ~'KE 2 + 2 \~lire whla, AM/nt kl ml. Yellow, blk leather int. Beaut? S..1600 firm AlfljG '61 220 J\.1.8. ~an. air, perff'CI. $1600 pv1 ownrr. 6?S-.512T 642-4163 1962 Jag. Sed. Marie Tl 3.8. P/ff. Pfb, chr w/w, 4 apd/OD. XInt mech. 847-Zffi KARMANN GHIA '67 Karmann Ghia, Riii, likr new, lo mi's, Xlnl cond $1495. Pvt pty G75-m6 e 'b'9 KARMANN Ghia. Xlnt O)nd. Pvt O'Wlltt, Make of- ltt. 52l-8Th2 MmO METRO VAN 1953 %. T blliltln camper. Slovt', link, ice box, e&J1>el- inr, pant:lllng, ~. n e w painl Xlnt condition. .. 545-7245 • MG ·Q NG Mids<'. new poln~ beUa, exorpl}ONJ t'Olld, J8IS er bW o1i.r. IM$-llll Ballnl!U Opporhlnllln 1B Todl\V'I \V11.111 Adlf. Take trade or grnall down. Will fin. pvt pl.)'. Dir. Call DEMO Pat aft 10 am 540'3100 er '10 WAGON (6372> _,.,, $1817 MORRIS ONE Chester A-Morris ~U:nor, 1000 Woody 5tation V."agOO -real good b::>d - need.I a Httle engine M.>rk. $100. 642-43Zl ext. 31J uk IOr A11\e • • PEUGEOT e '6? Peugeot Xlnt cond $400 !inn. w..-0231 PORSCHE -'66 PORSCHE 912 4 SPEED lf\'PO 6171 S2999 BILL JONES • , Check our deals A OTHER OE~10S AT BIG SAVINGS DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M . 646-9303 '68 CORONA Automatic, radio, heater, (VIIH 3791. $1299 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN ~Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 8.17-4800/4!l3-45tt /499-2261 BIIL MAXEY !T!OJY!§!TJA! llUI llEACH llLVD. Hunt. llHch 147~55 I ml H. of Cout Rwy. on Bdrl 70 TOYOTA'S • '63 VW BUG n"' •97-1.158. '65 vw Red beauty. Excellent eondi. tion. New valve job, fWQO BUG 570) small down will fin. . . . Pvt.' Pty. dlr, Call 1.iaury Amencan mag~. wi~ li~s, aft 10 AM 541).3100 or custor.n metallic paint w·th . 4%1029. ::utifUI lace work. YPU. '63 vw Low miles on rebuilt engine, ne:w dutch, new brake.a, radio, perfect condition. Can be aeen at 20!9 Harbor Several other customited VW to choose front CHICK IVERSON vw Blvd, or phone 645-1982, 9am 519-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 to 6pm 1970 HARBOR BLVD. WE BUY COSTA ~1ESA ALL IMPORTS '61 VW CAMPER Spedalfaing ;, VW Br>ga & $2895 Buses Paid for or not. '68 V\Y Camper radio hellt- 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. r 4 spd xtra.' clean' tJ\llicle Call collecl·S37·m7 Opt'n sun ~'out. · • '68 vw ...... ohrome DEAN LEWIS rims, b11chelln tires, 1966 HARBOR BLVD/ sunro:or. exhaust system, 646-9303 chains. Take over1::===============-payments. 494-5139 alter 51· 2828 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 546-12XI IMPORTS WANTED °""""' Counties TOP$ BUYER BD..L 1.UXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. R. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS U )'Olli' car iA extra clean. leu US first. BAUER OUTCK 2M E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 54~7765 Auto Le•~~n"'g'-_...:.;:.;: V LEASE V '6!1 Cad CPe de Ville, Loaded! Like new. $1.59 per mo, and otlK'n;. SOUTH COAST CAR LEASING 300 \Y. Cat Hwy, NB. 64>2182 Used Cars PM O< wk•OO.. VOLVO ;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;, •• Ll'U"U'U"LI Si, THINK "87' 'VOlVO' "FRIEDLANDER" 1 dr. Demo. * $2750 * 1llM a•AC" (HWY. Jn 8$-7566 • 537.ol\24 NEW-USED-SE RV. ~ ·s:; Volvo Plll'.lO-AM/FM radio. air, mag \\'his, like TRANSPORTATION CARS Our Specialty AS LOW AS $99 We carry our own contracts Credit iii no pmblem Blue Chip Auto Sales 21~5 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 642·9700 * 5411-4392 new. $2100. 1-524-3023 CaU ManAger DIAL direct 642-5618. Oiarge 645-0466 )'0\11' ad, then Ill back anc! !l!!!l~!!!!!~!!l!!i!il!!!!!!!!!~ listen to the phone ring! WANT ADS SELL! Dot Sing Says·· Thon lee for business! I thought you would be here! How 'bout your friends? We gonn a wait for them now!! DOT DATSUN ~2·7711 • 18835 B"ch Bl•d, • 54~2 HUNTINGTON BEACH . Vlnyl roof, po"·cr steering & brakes, factory '70 CAPRICE 2 DOOR HARDTOP air, automatic, radio. Low, lov.· mile!!. Like brand new. Remainln~ factory 1tt1ar11ntee. !ADY460) -~-"'-"-'-"-C::C.""'-""-'--'-~-~--~-~~=-cc-=- IMPALA CUSTOM COU~E $2695 '69 '67 '67 Radio, heater, automatic. pov.·!'r stl'f.'rinJ:, factory air, vinyl roof. like ra:.i:or sharp. IYYN0581 Remaining factory guarantee. CHEVROLET MALllU ltardtop coupe. Automatic. radlo a.nd heRter. power Sll'<!rlng. Hurry! (VOL.5211 IMPALA 2 DOOR HARDTOP VS, radio, heatRr, automatic. power steering, tremendously nice car. <TPR900) '66 CHEVROtET CORVAIR 2 Door hardtop. Radio.hcalE'r,aulomatic. This 111 a 1 owner new car lrade-in. IRHY538J '65 CHEVROLET CORVAIR 2 Door hardtop. Radio. heatrr, automatic. 4 speed transmission. Nice. lHOY303J 2 Door hardtor. RAdio. hratC'r, 11.utoma lir '67 PONTIAC GTO transmission, po\ver ~leering. flurry. IWCA!J40) '68 PLYMOUTH FURY I~ Cr:inverllblr. Power 5lcrrin;, radio, auto- matic, air conditioning. Nice. (ZZ0786J $1699 $1199 * TRUCKS-TRUCKS * 1967 EL CAMINO Jt&.H, automatic, P.S .. ractQ1-y air. So nice. (Q4.1357J 1967 CHEVROLET 1/4 TON PICKUP VS, slick, heavy duty camper equipped. Hurry. (U582501 1969 FORD VAN 108" v.•heel basf'. Radio, hf'atrr. automatic, nice. 102021) 1966 CHEVROLET VAN CAMPER Conversion llkt' n<'v.'. fZZX619 1966 CHEVROLET 1;, TON Pickup. SUck shift, VS. 1harp. ( \1209611 1966 CHEVROLET 1;, TON Plck11p cam'P('r. V8. IP3."l48J) 1967 CHEVROLET 1h TON Stick. 6 <'yllnder f'nglnr , shftrp. IV94912J 1965 EL CAMINO Radio, he11.tcr. automlltlc. powtr 1ltrring. t RJ1660i 1967 EL CAMINO Rad.lo. hcatt'r. 11.utn1n11.tl<', 1:iov.·er l!lt'~lng. (V16899) 1967 RANCHERO Radio, hE'ater. nut(lmRtic, JXl\\•rr s tcrrlna,. air cond. ( 1223311 1 1965 CHEVROLET 11z TON Pick11p. VS. r11rllo And hcnt<'r. IS212fi71 1966 CHEVROLET 'I• TON Pickup. 6 eylindcr, radio and h<'l\tf'r. (Tj 1416) '66 ~1~kEu~~~~~nr!r.1s~~·k-.----------=s-7_99 __ 8 ft . IK'd, radio, hc11tcr. (~11 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor •lvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 t ... • • • .... • • V"•• -··-··· -~· -------·---·------··-- ThurMlu. August l.J, 1970 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION · TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Tll.ANSPCRT#'l'ION A MOON1w C1r1 9800 New C1r1 teOONew C1r1 9IOONew C1n 9IOO New C1r1 tlOO Now C•ro SPECIALIZING IN UALITY _, '70 OPEL GT. ------ONLY-- BHuliful sunburst yellow with bl•ck bucket seats. Autometic transmi~ sion, rad io .and heater: disc brakes. sport steering wheel, etc. (942080· 168.) t.!ANUfACTURERS CAR IUSIDl LARGEST SELECTION . OF ·1970 OPELS IN ORANCiE COUNTY! 1969 BUICK SKYLARK 1970 RIVIERA 1969 OPEL 1969 CHEVROLET 4 DOOR HARDTOP Full pow•r, f•c.lor;' •ir tonditionin9, AM .FM SPECIAL OF THE SPORT SEDAN MALIBU 2 DOOR HARDTOP VI, 111!01Y11tic. r•dio, h11 ter, powor 1fo•ri119, t1dio, cv1!0"' in l1rior, "i"yl roof, Em1r1ld 9r11n WEEK R1dio end h11t1r, 1 ulofft1lit t.111t"'lu ion, Thia Vt OllfJino, 1lick 1hift, pow1r lft1tint, ttdio 111'4 pow1 r br1kt1, f1 ctorv ,;,, vinyl rool, cu1lo"' in- t•rior. I own•r loci! cir. Only I l.000 mil• .. 1•!1rior. F1ctory w1rr1nly 1ppli11. ll57IEFJ loc1I I own1r 1uhl"'obi11 h11 only 6,100 mil11 he1t.r, sporl wh1•l1, whit• 1id• well tir•t. Still f1ctory w1rr 1nly in 1ff1cl. fZVC971 ), 1967 CONTINENTAL i nd i1 iu1! ifftrn1cul1t1. IZAE20 51 under f1ctory w1ri1nly. 1229A.5G I $3295 $4995 $1695 $2395 2 door ha rdtop. You'll jus t have to 1•• this one t o re ally bali ave it. Full pow•r equipm ent including electric head re1t 1969 VOLKSWAGEN lt69 OPEL LS. and reclininj pa111nger sea t, automa-1969 MUSTANG 1968 JAGUAR tic air con ition in1,, stereo tape sys· SQUARE BACK FASTBACK COUPE fem , fcOWltf door OC ~J a nd unbetiev-VI 1n9in1. 1uto"'1tit, r1dio ind h•1t1r, pow1r COUPE able ow mil eage, just 34, I 02 miles. Thit b11 utiful little cir h11 the fwll 1ulom1tic 4 ip11d h 1n1'!'ti11!011. r1dio i nd h11!1r, Thi1 h IYWS61l l. 1t11ri n9, pow.r br1k11, f1 clo1y 1ir c111d!tienl n9. 4 1p11d tr1ru"'i11ion. r1dio ind h11ter, chre"'e +.1 n1W1Jn ion, f1clory 1ir condilionin'il , r1dio i nd ju1I the ri9ht on1 1t 1 "''Y· •••v low p11c1. A Ioct l 1;>n1 owner cir. !ZNVl:ol5 l wir1 wh11l1, le1 #i1r interior. Thit one i1 ft(IW heifer. You mu1t dri•1 lhi1 one. !J69060ll 71 Hurry on thi1 one. ( YQJ 76l) s.3.1 95 r1duc1d to 1111. IWFY264 J $2295 $1195 $2695 $3295 s • 'speciilizing ·in JAGUAR 234 E. 17th St. AVTHORIZED BVICK.OPEL-.JA.GVAR .'iALES-nn.d SERVICE COSTA MESA 548-7765 9900 Used Cars noG Ustd Cara 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9tQO Used Can RAMBLER -CHEVROLET - '65 IMPALA 396 VB, 4 speed, power !itcer. Ing, radio, heater. (NKF947) $899 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 3285:J Va.lie Road CHEVROLET '67 CHEVY 4 door sedan. Auto., R.H ., Pwr. 11teerlng, Air rond. IZSC4371 $995 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN San Juan Capi11trano ~ Valle Road A37-4800/49345ll/4!l!).2261 San JWtn Caplmt rano '67 EL CAf.1 1NO. Runs prrf. R.37·4800/493-4511 /499-2261 ~low book fl\ S\•125. Can '60 CHEVY Parkwood 6 cyl help line. 64[)...1691. Sec al 3 sperd &talion wagon. Very 1100 Superior Ave, CM. good l'ngine G nod lc,12=CH=EV~S"°i."11o"o'"w=.,::,c:-,,•v"~' I tran!iml1aion & clutch. $125. Stick shlfl • c.xcell, oondllton Call 642-0022 -J'150. 546-1045 after 6 pm 1964 IMPALA SS Convt, '62 Chevy ll 4-dr, good rond. Runs good, Aaking S350. $350 nr best offer. Must 64)-1691. Set' al 1 TOO lff' 10 belif'vt! 644-2565 Superior Ave ., CM. pnm WANT AD! 642-5678 Want Ad. Get Results! Imported Autot 9600 Imported Ca rs 9600 "~: COSTA MESA ·HONDA s::. 40 MIUS l'U GALLON e Fro!'lf Disc lrakn e Full C1rpttl"1 ... 75 M,H • 4 s,...Trans. GREAT SELECTION FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY UNIVERSITY I• OLDIMOSILI 2150 HARIOI ILVD. COSTA MllA 540-9640 1 I CHEVROLET DODGE '6!1 CHEVELLE SIS '70 ~10NACO l''gn . 440 eng, B1 itlsh Racing Green pslpb, Iacl. air. s~reo PB, PS. AIR, NEW TIRES !ape. rigged for lowing T.T. 494.5739 alter 5 Must sell. 546-3372 EXCELLENT CONDmON 1-·'"10"'c"H7Au'"'"',E"N"G"E°'R-=R"°'.ro-. 494-5739 after ;; !Special edition) 44() C.I. '59 CHEVY Belaire 2 dr, AuloflraO!I, air cond. $3875 6 cyl, power-glide. Xlnt. • 6J3.-0667 aft. ~ pm <:Md . $425. 897-1903 1953 DODGE gyromatic 4 Dr. Sedan. 49,000 orig. miles. CONTINENTAL $150. Phone 549--0833 PORD '67 FORD Radio, Heater. CTRH-4851. $1135 Harbour V.W. MUSTANG '69 MUSTANG OLDSMOllLE '66 OLDS 88 6 cyf .• 1tlck, radio, healer. H.T. cpe, full po10o-er, air. (K\\IL 56). ttbuill t'nglne, vinyl rool, $1699 perfect shape 1076-AFX>. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN T & ~TH~2z~RS l2852 Valle Road SALES e SERVICE San Juan Capistrano M>Sl Garden Grove Blud. 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435 8..17-4800/49345U/499-2261 534-2284 I~ blk, E. or Bc!ach) HUNTINGTON BEACH e -'66 Mustang 2+2 Fstbk e 892-~l '67 LINCOLN • \Q ml.. FALCON '66 Squire Wa9on 289 cu. in, 4-spd '67 Olds 442 2 Dr. H.T. ""rf~1 cond. Con1plcteJy r · 1 Ith ood g ·n x New lire & Brakes Goraeou1 red car with ,~ arr ane, \\' w ni.r ~ -CLEAN' I 4-ll'peed and con&0le bucket equipped. r.1ust sell, going '63 falcon 2 dr. Auto. radio, lerior~ dlr, 390 VB, power See 11! 1B25 W. Balboa Blvd. seets, radio, power lteerin~. PONTIAC '61 PONTIAC WAGON llEB-287) $495 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San J uan Capi1tra.no 837-4800/-493-4511/ 499.2261 '68 GTO-Mu.1t see to 1.~ preclate! A real buy at $1695 Urm. 645-0307 e '63 CLASSIC f-dr wqon. Air. Runl eood· $425 .... ,.,. T·BIRD '64 T·BIRD F'WI power, loaded + .tr, dlr. iHGT 436J. Take small down, will ~. call 494-n44. '6.'I CONV. New pain t . Gorpowr Wiii take trade. Pvt. Pty. 644-2563. overseas. Real buy, $2590. hrarer, real nice car \Vlth steering, !llr cond. S!erco Newport ~ach Th1t 111 90 orlr lnal _ nice 642-3186 low mlles 1606-ASLl $699 ts.Pe, aulo. tr&n8, ~TA Y279J , (VFV "n) Sl699 r . 1 -used C•r• -\Viii 1~1.-trado or finance 65 MUSTANG -"" ....,nnl! l':rv\I ~ "69 CONT'L. LOADED!! guaran!eed cond . Connl!I n.l\f: Chevrolt'I, 2823 H11.rbor ~;::=============:i:::=il U1td Cari ' SAC RI t~ 1 CI NG. Under Chevrolet, 28~ Har b or priva!c pnr!y. Call 546-405:J Convertlble, automaUc, pow. Blvd .. c .r-.t 546-1203. ,. < ;:,:\~"""'book . ",,_'"''· ""=''=" .. '"'c=.M=--·=-=1="'"·== i '-'-'"'r-68opu. DOLLAR """'1"$a"~·90MK<-OO) '65 OLDS BB-- LUXUR1ous Platinum hlue FORD '63 . I•"""· AM/FM. ''"'· Bl LL y A TES ~~~;· Xlot 536-!72• '65 FORD LTD CLEAN JsED CARS VOLKSWAGEN =='=='=======-14 dr. HT. Auto. &: VB, power See Andy Brown 32852 Valle Road F'Ul1 powe.r &: air, dlr. (NOS TIO), Will la ke trade or !Jn. ance call 494-77"'4. CORVAIR CORVAIR PARTS 1960 cn1::inc complete $25_. Pol''Crp;lide 1r11naminion and a.xl~s $25. GIUI lank S2, Or take ALL lor S40. 839-1471 Afte r 5 pm. '62 Model 700. AT. R/lf. Jn sloraa:c a )'t'll, only :J3,000 ml. Very cln. mech perf. s.tl!.5. 361'1 Ocean Bl. CdM CORVETIE ·~ Corvette. Showroom con. dltion. Extras! S12l0. * 847-3444. • '65 VE'i"J"E:AM/FM, vinyl top, 4-speed. Clean. $1100. ......,.,,; -··' COUGAR '67 COUGAR XR7 '• fZHW11 4) $1399 BILI.. YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 VtJJ.t Road San Juen C.pl1lrL'.nn B.11-4!WI0/ 49.\-4Sll /499-2:J6\ 1961 Cougar OT. Air, pwr atr. dllC brakes. nm. 644·24!0 st~rlng fDKV-00:51. THEODORE Sen Juan C.pllltrano '63 OLDS f-85 Cut 1a!i1 $695 Convert Sharp. i S 1 S. ROllNS FORD l'IT""1J)/<9J.4s1v<!J9.2261 ,...,123• "'""" BILL YATES )I)!() flub<>• "1""· "~''"''""'"'"'"'""vco .. -:,=,100:-.-;v" .. '1.:====--' C:O.ta t.1esa radio, heater, power slttr---------VOLKSWAGEN 642-0010 '"•· 1," ai~1ow mu.. PLYMOUTH 32852 V•ll• Rood '65 FORD RANCHERO '"°"""m 1""" IVHF ... '3l ------San Juan Capistrano $2299 Connel Chevrolet 2828 '65 Plymouth Sport Fury 2 8.17-480D/4934511;499-2'26l Harbor Blvd., C.M. ~JZl .dr. H.T .. f tt1h new colar. 6 cyl Automatic. '? dr 268). '68 FASTBACK Must&n& • Ccneole Bueket aeatJ, auto. '70 COUNTRY Squrre wagon \Yll1 take car Jn trade or 390 Rllclna/carb. Sl150 vr Powt'.r Stttrln&. Ra d lo, • Loaded. Sell at wholesale finance pr 1 vale par1y, Mt olr. Xlnt cond. 536-01.3? heater 1003 30 day hook or take over 1~ 546-405:J or 494-68l1. wkend•/or aft 6 pm. iUflrBntec (ATB-361) $999 p;vmn!!I. No nK!nty dn. Olnncl Chevrolet, :J 8 :Z 8 541~: eves & wknds --------'69 MUSTANG Gold V-& Harbo r Bl vd., C .M. 962-4981 LINCOLN PIS. '""· I Ow11<" Gd 546-1"'1. 068 LTO.Xlnr cond. New --· Ca':, D~l~V~O~RC~E~f°""'--"~1,--~1965=' 40,000 ml Utt1, ps/pb, Air, \VHfTE '61 Lincoln 'I dr S229;i * * <19T·l829 Plymo(tth • 35.l Fury Sports 11uto trana, vinyl top, 300 scd!ln 1111 P'l"''er. 11.lr rnnd. "69 f\tU!llang 1\fach J, (351) Coupe. Power bnke1, 1t(l('r- cu In. 36,(MX) ml. $2200. Good l\re1. PreRllle car for Air, ste~ radio, p/1, p/b. Ing, factory sir. new 536-6389 only .~~. ~17U AJ11k1ng S:J795. <193-3291. tranlmialllon, R/H, vinyl '66 FORD LTD '65 l\iu.~t:ang, xln1 cond. 56,000 top, bl9ck leather inrerkir All Xtraa. Make OUu. MERCURY ml, R/H, ~ent 'NOlil:. i900 $100. Mz-1321 Ext. 2.S3 or ~ 494-Z7l5. 494-4i736 1213) 430-0742 'A.1 GaJa.xle, Automatic. good * Hl1'0 ME~RY Montego '65 Mustang fastback. 4-tpd, '62 Plymouth Vall1.nt auto. tlm, new p&int. lo ml. $399. 3200 ml, S2J50. Ow~ Y.'tnt p.b., p.a... fAc Air. new radio, healer low miles 11lce S46--0136. O\'erM!R1. 6464180 11res. Jo mi's, Sl:J95. 96:J...7440 car! Guani.ntffd condlli~ •gg Ford Tonno Cobfl. 4:J8, '60 Mere convt .. Int cond. '67 Mu•tang hrdtp, g, 51.000 11..BS-:«>ll $599 Conn e lnr;idr &. out, Pol'o-er, S.tiO ml'•· Xlnc cond. Mutt aell, Chevrolet, M H 11. r bo r I mAg whJ•, 9.000 mi, Xlnl or be51 oUer. 646-902:1 SIOOO. 968--2283. Blvct .. C.M, 548-1213 r."""'oc-_,' =-moo=~· "-.,..,===I '64 BARRACUDA v.a. PIS, '62 STATION WAGON MUSTANG XIOI 101. JWfb Vllnuoolc. S2'0 64$-0890 OLDSMOBILE Ooly 29,000 orii mll11 • ·~ Faloon: 2 dr. 6 cyl auto, '68 MUSTANG. Top t"Ond. CLEAN * S700 JJd. ,tran1. S400 or bat oir. V-A, 4 1pd, power xtru. • '62 01.08 • Ste ''Trider. MS-9500 Art 5 wkdy1, •II dllY 962-17A:J or M~l9 Seit oHf!r. 644-13'8 P11r1d\1t" column l .,Cw=k"",;::c'·===~~_, tJO malter Whal It ui, ynu '65 Convtrt. Mu11!anQ. SC~TI'8.'I 'G!I ROADRUNNER rd cond can flJll ii with A OAtLY Great ConrUtlon THE SUN NEVER SE"TS on 4 11p Cr11111r 11\11• $1900 art. Pl.LOT WA.Nt ADI ~ tu.DO m.uu ews. DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! 5 PM 673-4146 * -------- PRIDE • INTEGRITY • SKILL • llUNO lllLCli-s.n;'-........ 1 W1'r1 proucf of our t•••ice 111111eier olld with .... 1 r111on. We fee l 1h1t 81uno i1 the flne1t IMW 111ech1nl• In Sowthern Celifor11i1. He 1t1rttd hh ce1•1r 12 Y"· 11• In Gettl'leny w11d1r9(1!11g 1rl1ntl•1 tre!Jllrtt et I.MW'• "'01t 1110.:lern work 1hop. Drop in •nd 11y ~ello to' lruno. He't 1 fri en•ty fellow end 1 fine fft1ch111!0., VW SPECIALS COMPLETE BRAKE JOB $35 ENGINE OVERHAUL $95 VALVE JOB $55 VALVE AND RINGS $70 C"'-1.n l"A•n OM ALL f'JllClll AUTHOIUZ:ED SALES, SEll;YICE loe Berloctl'• T&M MOTORS 108 I Gorden Grove 11 .... .... 0,.. • ....., ,..,., StrYlce , .... nm. ..... , .. IVJ .. 11. I. ef .... , 114·1214 ff2:·1111 ~ I . • • ' • • • • . I l I ' ~ • ' ' ; I • • ' !t . t . . I t I i, ' " ' ' t: i: I ,_ ' i llAllV PILOT r-.-U.1'10 ANCHOR- MOTORS 2150 HAUOR ILYD. COSTA MESA . • 546-3050 OHN 7 DAYS t A.M. e 9 P.M. ' SI HAIL.A •ANO&. '63 Corvair 4 Speed, rffio otwl ket.r. l,.XR74~) '63 Oldsmobile 88 V-1. 011to. +reM., '·S~ 11'.I .. RIH. IJJWOtOI. '63 Buick Skylark Avtomotic, eir coitdi~olli119. {H00675l '60 Chevy 2 Dr. H.T. I IHJ47t) '63 T-Bird ,f...iife111otic, redio, Meter. IUY5ltl '62 Lincoln C.11ti11e11tel. F.11 ,.._.'"' 1M oir. IJRHSS.91 '63 Ramlller 2·0oM. Re4io ... 11.efw. l f-GTI071 '63 Chevrolet V-1, fvllv-~11ip,.d. IQAZ 9l!lil '63 Chevy 111'1pole 14r. H.T. VS, r1Jio, ll11t,r. ILZ154711 ~99 ~99 -f11111 T111 a11i Uu11••- DOWN PA HERE WE DO NOT REQUIRE A SPECIFIC DOWN PAYMENT No Roo...,.ble OH.r Refused on Over 100 Cersl '62 Pont. Tempest C.11•1rti"I•. A11to., r1dio artd lt.1tor. (No. 111551 '63 Ford V-1, a11to h1111., 1ir conclition. 17619 '56 Dodge 1/:z. Ton PICKUP. V-1. 4 1pe.d. fH41440l '61 Volkswagen A11th111tic G1rrru11~ ctlftptr. '64 Chevrolet Van '65 Mustang Y-1, foctory equippM. IKDS-0•71 '60 Volkswagen Wio, hotfitf', IP'VW ... 771 I ~49 $AVE $AVE 5599 I I • •• Bailttotlh oa .au coufry. S I E ONE TODAY AT lo !~~~!~ c-. M9so9 642 ...... I s z ; = Suzuki T·l25 II Stinger 125 co'• of qUlc- 70 mph. Twill oan., power·pipes. Tac:h,& s_.io. c-pe1111an styling. p~ ...... 12 moath/ ~ 12.000mllo warranty. I aailt to • ! .. the coutry. z 111 OHi TODAY AT JAMES LTD 1114 ot• Newport llw4 •. C.ta MtN M2-G041 Suzuki T-25 0 II Hustle r Tbo-250cc-• btbmadel 11'.l qqarter. -!OS mph. 6 opeecl !: =.7!!]Pati-F°""'. ; 12.000mllo A wammly. Ill A 5 .. hilt to take !. •Ille 9nt,ry. >-Sii ONI TODAY AT ; !~~~!~!! i test•~ 642..oMI 0 -z . r.n11olab· oli'tUCoUt,ry. ZIMMERMAN 2145 HAUOll IL VO. SIMflO BIG SELECTION • OF DATSUN Pick Up Trucks ALL COLORS READY FOR IMMEDIATE Dn!YERY ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR ILVD. ~10 BIG SELECTION OF DATSUN Sta.fion Wagons ALL COLORS READY FOR IMMEDIATE on1YERY ....17111- "Leader In The Beach Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 FINEST MOST RELIABLE SERVICE DEPT. ANYWHERE FOR AU SPdRT & IMPORTS --·-Hom,e of The Best s2000 Car · -11a&-i~ "l..f!ader In n.. Buch Citlet" • ZIMMERMAN 2145 ·HARBOR ILVD. -It '. + • .H A ·R B o~ ,..,, .. u -. R vw Has Trails West Campsters A Travel Trailer For VW's PLUS A LARGE SELECTION OF'1JSED CAMPERS WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN I I flerb I 137SO BEACH BLVD. <Hwy. 391 2 blOcks So.' of Garden Grove Frwy. 6 blockt Nl'I. of Sin Diego Frwy. 537-4824 1f 893-7566 -- ORA"QE COU.NTY .... ·-··-- e All Colon • All Modols lmm.ctiate O.fivary . . ' '6Z PORSCHE ¥ECHANICS Sl"ECIAlt Ht ,.rfec_t body, 111 .. rior, f\111 ihe"B" that attracts the birds: 11/119 t••r. RM I•, ht tt1r .... ....-'(._,, 1051t). THE MGB'70. $1795 '69 vw A•foM1.tis .mir 1hift. r•ii•, h .. tr.r. ~b •• <1,;.,., Ii • fachJry 'fr'9il1 hr. tXIH JO I I. $1495 '65 PORSCHE lrtfld llew •!\ti,_. eet f "'ii •• itl Rtdie. lie•t91. l111111•c• ltte · ttir .. 1li•11t. Ylhet ...... ..,r100111. • • $2995 '68 vw R1dio, hotter, cu1f.oft! 1f••r int wh.el, ••cenlnt 1111ch co'ilcUtion. IXSZt74 ), $1295 '68 vw ,W•1tf1li1 Cflllptt fully equip• ';.d i1u:ludi119 "'•P·Top.' Rt 4io, hotter, low low mH01. $,, to epproclt lol A 1toel 11 CWIE·551 I. $3095 '68 OP~L K1dotto. Rellty ~ul11p1d, re· Gio, heater. A·I 1h1p•. IWYN-'lOlt. $1295 '64 vw 13750 BEACH BLVD. (Hwy. 391 2 bJock1 So. of Gardf n GrCaive-Frwy. 6. blockJ No. _of San Diego Frwy. 537-6824 * 893-7~ II: I ,R.dio, ho1t1 r, 9ood tiro1, ~ Offer1'ng A Whale' of a Ill "' '"""··· Savings on all Honda .. .......... .,, ....... ,,. I $695 0 --,.,6=5-ovw=-=--• ;i:Models . ·~· ~M/FM r•die, h••ler. l~OY ,70) $795 '6T FIAT ·-· ..... I I. :J • ( 17