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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-08-14 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 • ~-- ' What~s ·Y ·our Pleas11re-Soot or · S1n·og? I ·' Efie~ts of Jets Over ~ounty Told DAILY PILOT . * * * 10' * * * FRI DAY AFTEJlNQQN , AUGUST '.I~, 1970 VOL. U, N0.1t4.' llCTlOHI, 44 ,AGIJ esa I County Jets lncreasi.ng Po~lution By PATRICK BOYLE Ot IM ~ l"Utt SMff . . Photo-chemical 9mog in Orange County is •being increased 'by commercial jet aircraft equipped with "clean burner cans," according to the chainnan of the California Air Resources Board . Dr. A. J. Haageo-Smit, a chemist at the California Institute of Technology, said the burner cans bum the soot which would otherwise fall to the ground. But, in his opinion, it is better to in- crease the smog by a small amount lhan to have a cloud of soot hanging over the area surrounding airports. Haagen..Smit is a pioneer researcher on smog, particularly photo<hemical smo~, t.he type associated with Southern Califom1a. He said photo-chemical smog is created by a chemical reaction between com· bustlon-pl"oduced oxides of nitrogen and sunlight. The soot produced by lhe .jets is simply a by-product of the burning of fuel. "The soot stays in the lungs if it is in· haled," he said in 11.~Ieplione inter.view tod¥Y· '"\he.burner ClUIS-inSlallj!<I O\l th< ~~aft jet· en'gihes are· vefy sinlpUfied aftetburnen ~ eliminate the-1soot." Jn;!kmi:og ~ ~~t, .~, .~~f .cans ~more· oxides· or· rutrogen' ife.o the alt,. he ~xplained. ·The two commerdal airlines Oying oui of Orange County, Air •California and Air West, both report that they have begim inslalling the burner cans on their airc:raft•. Under Federal law, all .com- merciill jet. aircraft musf be equipped wi'Ul the burner cans by the end of 1972. "Many peopleJorget.. that 95 percent of the oombustion takes place in the turbine of the jet engine," Haagen-Smit noted. "The oxides of nitrogen that cause smog are already formed. The afterburner just finishes the C6mbustlon, making a litUe more smog, but not a significant amount." . or. Haagen-Smit said the soot at Los Angeles International Airport has in· creised so much in the past few years that it now amount! to about 10 pereent of the air pollution In that area, · "11te soot !alls on a very small area," he said, "but the small amount of smog fonned when the soot is burned Is dissipated over a large area." Barry Hits Dawdlers WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Barry Goldwater CR-Ariz}., has accil!ed Senate OemocraU of dawdllng on the $19.2 billion military hardware bill to get max· tnum <1D1paign publicity. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tht o.llY ,., .. , Stiff Lifeguards in the flve cities along the Oraage coast today braced for the onslaught or weekend beach visitors who Thursday produced a rec<ird 1,300 rescues from booming surf aad the accompanying riptides. While large surf conditions prevailed today, lifeguards from San Clemente to Seal Beach said lbey expect ~ndit.ions to Things 'Normal' At Disneyland Despite Strike By STEVE MITCHELL Of th O.llY "llol Stlfl Disn~and: QWatious are continuing.in " nOl!l{al :'f,MhlQ\l . today, ,'dejpl1!' a threl\!itied ~ .. r~fusal-by 1!ther: uiil'<lns to •ql(JM piclet )ine1> set up by, ·the Amertcan,Guud or .V8ti~ty' A:hists. . . rue'll8l;<I A.-Nwis. .r Laguna· Bel,h, vice ?e1sident of Disneyl~ opera~ons, said · that more· than 1,600 ·Ji)lSfley employ es reported;to work today. The on- ly attractions closed by~the strike are the 'Kids of the Kingdom" variety show and tbe,lndian ceremonial!daoce shows. o01y 29 ,AGVA memberi are ,._out on strike today , compared with 80 who walk· ed off the job lasl Saturday, Disneyland officials noted. "The only other workers out on strike afe t8_iton workers," Nunis stated. "We feel that they are In as much violation of the labor contract as were the operating . engineers Wbo were out for only one day (Monday) 'but returned to their jobs honoring a court order." Disneyland is now taking the necessary steps regnrdillg the iron workers as was reqUired for the operaUons engineers. '1AU of our atlfactons are open and our number of guests continues to meet and surpass estimates," he noted. "Thurdsy we had 58,000 guests which is above nonnal for the park oo 1hat day," a spokesman stated. Responding to allegaUons of low pay scales mt AGVA entartruncrs a l Disneiland, Nunis pointed out that the In· dlan Ceremonial dancera are cur'renlly paid $2.81 to $3.33 per hour for an eight hour day. during which they perform -(See DISNEY, Page Zl • ' • .. I I • Belt Won~, D~; Dancer I Jailed o.,er Exposure • I ease a UtUe by Saturday. Huntington Beach was the hardest hit Thursday with 662 rescues followed by Newport Beach which logged 406 -a record number of rescues for both ciUes. San Clemente showed 75 rescues, Laguna Beach had 85 aad Seal Beach log- ged 39. Spokesmen for those cities said the number of rescues was not unusually high. Hu111lington lifeguard Capt. D o u g D'Arnall said the surf has been running a consistent three to six feet with some sets up to nine feet. Waler temperatures wre recorded at 67 degrees. "The surf has dropped a Jillie today and maybe down to 11ormal by Satur- day." he said. "The rough conditions may have been caused by a storm off Baja .'' Newport Beach had water tern· peratures in the high 60's and surf run-· ni11g from eight feet ·along the c.orona del Mar beaches to 10 feet on the Newport- ·Balboa baches. Sels •al Balboa's Wedge ~ere hitting 16 feet, "We rescued 406 people," said Robert E. Reed, director of marine safety for ·the city. "That's an all time high. we've iiever had•that-.ma,iiy rescues, before.'' Reed's !orce.of'701lifeguards was prais· ed fur their work;.'we have 23 new ocean beach guards this year and under trying circumstances they did an excellent job," Reed stated. He also said the three rescue boots greatly a~ed rescue opera- Uons. .Sea, .Sun~ Sail, St;i~I ' Reed warned beach goers to "proceed with caution" in the surf which shows few signs of slacking off. "I.don't know," Reed said. "Jt might go down. The sets are still big, but not as consistent as Thursday." In San Oemente, lifeguards said they rescued the 75 people from surf which was iunning from three to sit feet. Water temperature was recorded at 72 degrees. Llfeguard Ll. Hank Barnes said the heaVy side drift near the Municipal Pier drew al least 20 swimmers toward the pilings. The pier rescues were common through the day. San Clemente gUard Chief Dick Hazard said the rescues were not tn the nrord- brea'king category because surf y.'Q ~t running as ' high in San Clemente as tn olhe11 orange Coast areas. "It's likely there will be alight decrease in the surr, but It it remains strong today, then there'8 a good chance It'll be big for (Ste SURP, Pogo %) ,, . ' Sailing yachts head for N~wport Harbor entrance~ and~home -:-,as late afternoon sunlight sparkles on waters off Corona del Mar and. surf breaks along rocky shore of tidepool area below bluUs of cameo Shores. Using 35 mm1• single· lens ·reflex with 200 mn:i teJephoto lens, ·photographer shot into sUfillgbt at 1/16 ·and l/500th of a .seco6d to ca~ure unusual )igbt. p'attern. Camera was hand held and 'no filter .was used. ' · ' Girl Jailed on ''Expo~ur.e' • A santa 'Ana police officer c&lltd to niake an indece'nl exposure arrest in a local theater Thursday niabt decid'ed lhllt a 'bell around the suspect's waist was not SU.fficient attire. Police told the story this way : An anonymous caller told pollce that live nude entertainment was being of· fcred along with drinks at the Fantasy Movie theater, 320 S. Main St. • • Two plainclothes orncen ce1pondi<f to , , th,.e ,~rt and found out thJt it iWas in.. deed true. "nley saw Jonnle ~e Tolbert, . 27, o( Hollywood dancing m.i<le on ' t.be movie house st.age. , , . . . , 'The undercover men, 11atiSHed that they bad seen enough, call1d. ul\lfo!'")ed officer Paut Greiolre to· ma,ke the attest. At tbis ~lnt, theater rQanager. Ruben (See NUDE. Pago .11 ' "- • r .a1n Rides Bike. ,. • • Into Freight In Tu.~fin. ·, Failing to ... a qwJinf signal In operatJon, a Costa Mesa collqe girl rode her small motorcycle into a Santa Fe rreJgbt engin81 at a' TU.!t1n interaectioo Thufsday amt was ratally tnjur.e<f. Bonnie J. Kennedy, 21, of 378 W. Bay St., succumbed to multiple injuries at Tustin Community Hospital, less than four hours after the 3: I~ p.m. collision. Tustin police said lbe Orange Coast College student was dragged about 25 feet down the road bed before the slow- moving train could grind to a halt. The engineer was identified as Donald E. Houghlan, 38, of Fullerton. Patrolman Hart Beebe said signals at the crossing in Uie 1200 block of West Edinger Avenue were in operation and Miss KeMedy apparently just railed to see them. Engineer Houghlan was moving a string of flatcars onto a siding when the vli::tim rode into the side of the s\vitch engine, investigators said. · Miss Kennedy, who is survived by bet father, the Rev. E. E. Kennedy, pastor of a rural congregation in Pennsylvania. was the tl1ird county motorcyclist killed within a week. I Funeral rrervices were pending his ar- rival from the 'east over the weekend, IC• cording to a spokesman ror Baltz Mortuary in ~ta Mesa. Orange Coaet • Weadaer It'll lie anotlle~ weekelld tor llask· • lni on ·lhe 'beact\es~ 'sinCe the tem-- periture WUI stioot irito 1tbe mjddle 70'& along the cqast and reach up I to 88 furtl>Or Inland. INSIDE TODAY /\»1 aQuatic;s sh.ow at Niwport HaTbor Hidh. SchOol a1'd a 11outh • fil}n fe~~virl at. Laa~na Beach Hfgh Scllooi arr the featured let>sms, tn., iodofs, :Wee~cnder, •.Otibh. . . 1 ''""'' l f t :Mt .. 1 .... • IN!llt9 0 lf N•llNlll N• , .. I Clllftl'llll I °"'"' CIVfl'tY t CllK*lfll U• f ' • .....,,_.} 1 at-H CttulflM \ JI,._ lylwl• _,,... • I CM!lct lf """' I t•ll em.....,. ' 1• 11Mll ,~ tNl~ Dt.i~ "911ca • Ttt..t.itn , • 1 l"dt"'1tl "'" ' ;T11114111r1 »tt• ,..._, •11 w....... . "°""''"' 14 W'htlt .... ' 11 Mii L..w,. ll W-'\ ,...., ··l•tt MIH•11 f WHN, M-. ti j M#Tia~ Lkw-• WffitiflMf t • ... Mt~ltJ .. ,. t t • • r • ~ r I ' • ' • . • ! 1 • • ? • • . l i • • • • I . • ' • • • . • . ~ • . • • l ' I . ' . • • • .I MILYfUf s Cease-fire Deteriorates • Jn Mideast • ..lDIJSALEM (AP\ -Jsr>ell llr - planes 5CNCk at Jordanian army ~ Uans today, the military command ukt, hi funher de.tcrioraUons of tht Middle Eut eeue-fire. 'l'be. milita ry ujd the ra\d wN Wm- ditcl apnt JorWlion am>Y ..,...polda 'llllk:b have given assiSUnC< ,. pa)oSll- nlu perrillas 1n attacks qaiMt Israeli ,__ aeWeme!!ts. , A apol<t<mi11 WI the Jordanian army •'alllsb terrorists and mates U. posllble rcr ibem to act qainst lsr &ell d"'111J.Ds." A .spOtr.sman earlier had announced lliat Israeli Air Foree i<ts "'°""' lhe border ami bombed and strafed Arab guerrilla targets inside Jordan for the ~ CGOd stralgbl dly todaS. n.e Tel Aviv spokesman said thole raids were In..._ lb-'"' attocb Oii two Jeerim aetUemtnts. Tbe pl .... all reblmed safely aftor bi~ tine objectives adjacent to hrael s Bdml ValleJ, he sal<I. Bolsan Valley set· -ci Maoz Haim and Varden& came under mortar fire during 'nlursday night. but no damage was reported. 1hts, WU the aecoaf i.aeli air strib tmide Jordan since the Middle Ea.st c:iease-fitt went into effect a week ago. '!be guerrilla organizations hive disown- ed the truce initiaU!d by the United Sta1es _._. ..~~talks as a Y' .......... mary ..--·T·' A . An lsraell newspaper, the 1:.1 ~v y ediot Aharonot. .. ported that Egyptian soldien fired ac:rms the Suez Canal in a RCOrld miDor violation of the: case-fire 'lbandly. The -said lhe io-cideDl OCCUZTed in the waterway's central eedor when a few bullets from small anm weapons were rtred over Israeli ~military command said lt could oot coafinn the sboollng but refu>ed lb deny IL Two days ago lhe am>Y said lour bullets were fired from the Emrtlan gide of. the ca.naJ in the same sector. 'There were no casualtieJ and the fire was not returned. the Israelis said. Reports frtim Amman said Jordanian authorities bavt tightened s e c u r i t Y measures to prevent Arab commandos from kldnaping diplomats, llftlgners « govemmeot olfidals. Informants said the guerrlllu may .-t lb this tactic lb .,boage the U.S. peace plan. Two Beirut newspapers also reported that King Hussein of Jordan has warned his armed forces to be on the alert because subvemves were plotting lo assassinate him and other Jordanian of. ficiab. f The king said the am.ssins might be disguised as Jordanian eoldlers, ac-- ~ lo the .. ports publbbod by Al Ahrar and Al Klf>ll. purporting .. be the Urt of an Au1. 1 royal circular to tbe army. Cairo newspapers gave major coverage to Israeli charges that Egypt has moved several mlsailt. batteries closer to the Suez Canal. Fro"' Pqe l DISNEY ... tlevm 11).minulo !llmn dally lnstad al the Sl.85 houly wage reported by AGVA --"Our Kkis of the Kingdom made $175 tollan a week for a total of only 15 houri 'ti oo st.age presentation," Nunis said. ·nus group of young adull singers and tancen are. products ol Disneyland lalenl workshop. held last rau to train young people for careers in the ente.rtalnment >rofe.aslon." Nuni.s al.so noted lhal the present \GVA contract, signed Sept. 10, 1967, is n effect until Dec. 30, 1970. "The con- ract includes a no-strike clause which he AGVA has violated." he explained. '11'lerefore, thll independent action by a (!w J.(",VA members CaMOt be sane· toned." DAILY PILOT N..,.n hac.111 H .. ri ....... .U Lat........ ,. ......... ..., c:.... ,._ kill C1••···· Ol.AHGE COAlT "UILl,Hllol<i COMl'ANV lo'b1rt N. W1.4 "'··-.... .....,~ J1,k I . Cwrl1v 'Ilk• .......... , ..... C:.C-•• 11\MWtf' l~•"''' 1C.e1•il .... T~o"''' A. Mur,llPfto ......... "" l[dlW l icll• ... r. Hell Wv111 Or'lfltl c~y e.iu"' """• C,... ~: D WU.I fl\' ·-· H..,.,. 1Mc111 nn Wiii• .. llllo, 1tovlnffe """""" a.dl1 m .. _. ,.,_ H_,.....,... 9-dl: 11'7$ .. _,. 9"""1•_. lfll , .......... , au Herlll IEI C:."'N ••I ......,, -14, 1'70 • Linda · Given Freedom Resumes Testimony In Tate·LaBianca Murder Trial LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Linda Kasa- blan took her st.Ir witness Place today at lht Tate-L&Blanca murder lrlaJ after her flrat night of freedom ln nine montM dur- lne whlcb ahe cooked a dinner ci salad and spaghetti for her security guards. With her testlmony against Charles Manson and his three female codefen· dents nearly completed ThW'Sday the one-time codcfendant was granted full freedom. She lefl the Hall of JwUce wttb her •~ lOmey and donned a dilguise bef0tt ar- riving at her new residen«. Her attorney said Mrs. Kasabian ••got a kick" out of p,.paring the dinner for the ooe ftmale and two lQ.Ble pollec guards. ' He said she also watched television for Ole fint time since her imprisonment last yttr and saw herself on the scrttn. When she took the chair today, Deputy District Attorney Aaron Slovilz asked r-.trs. K.asabian if she. was aware of what the penalty for perjury was in a capital cW even though the murder charges had been dropped against her. penalty U ahe did not tesU!y for the !'<"' aeculloa ln the case. Over the objectloM of the. defense. Stovitz went over llQ:ain her taUmony that alter leavlne the home al srocor Leno LaBJanca on Aug. 9, 1969, she talked with Manson about killing an ae> quaintance of hers who lived ln an ocean front apartment. Superior Court Judge Charles ti. Older dismissed 1evm counts of murder again.st the a1eoder young woman who uJd she went with Patricia Krenwtnkel, Susan Atkins and Charles '"fex" Watson to the Tate house, then accompanied Mamon, Mlss Kreowlnkel, Miss Atkins aod Leslie Van Houten to the Leno LaBlanca home the following night, ''because Carlie told me to." During lhru weeks or intensive ques- tioning, the pigtailed mother of two bas stuck lo her version of what happened on the nights or Aug. 11 and 9. 1969. place 1n the fudge's chambers bt(or• court retUmed Thursday, but Wldcr quu- tlonlni by Ronald Hughes, Mrs. Kaublan Ibid the Jury •he had been roleued . '"Ibey ttll me l am a lrte womaq, bu& death penalty." she aald. She spent the noon hour In the heavily guarded ninth floor of the Hall of Justice, as usual, but her husband , Robert, and a friend, Charles Melton, were permitted to join her and her attorneys for lunch. When court rocesaed lor the nlih~ 1he WU taken to the basement of the buildJn&, and driven out of an un-. derground tunnel ln • turquolte sedan. She. sat ln the baci seat. flanked by her attorneys, and she made no responae lo the some 50 photographers a n d bystanders who watched her leave. "She can't quite reallJe ll yet," lawytt Ronald Goldman said. "She knows she I! free, bul she doesn't yet feel the en· joyment we hope she will experience later." She was to stay at a private home, under protective police guard, unW her testimony was completed. Artist111 in Surfing "I understand it would result in the 8lld two male police guards. Mrs. Kasabian said that no one ever had told be.r that she couJd get the death Although she must return to the witness stand for further redlrtct ex· amination, and still must be cross-ex· amined again by each of the four defense lawyers, Mrs. Kasabian no longer wiJJ a:pend her nights in jail. Formal dismissal of the charges took Thursday she testified that her love for Charles Manson changed after the slayings took place. ' Sculptures of surfer done iii bronze by Cardiff artist Edmund Shum- pert exduslvely for Huntingioo Beech"• U.S. Surfboard Champion- ships will go to top winners in the 1970 version of the event Sept. 19-20. From Pagel SURF ... ReagalJ Forces to Hold Up Voting for Carp7enter President in New Orleans the weekend," he said. Laguna Beach life.guards pulled their 8S swimmers from water that was recorded between 71 and 73 degrees. A guard a:pokesman estimated gels were running a lt appean: that the Reagan ad- For Talks on School Action consiste:nt four to six: feet and said they ministration Rlpporlen will wait for e1pect conditions to prevail through the Tuesday's !Ptcial election in Orange weekend. County before voting on the aecond half "As long as the wind doesn't pick up-of the governor's '1 billion ta1 overhaul Democrat would cast a "courtesy" vote on Carrtll's behalf if ~ administrlUon was 1till one vote sbiil e\til after , the Orange Counly election. NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -President Nixon arrived tod1y with a group ol his top advisers for • French Quarter motorcade and a talk with Southerners on haw fast and how far school de.segrcga- lkm will go this fall . The President and Mrs. Nixon were met at New Orleans International Airporl by national GOP committeeman Tom Stag, state GOP dlainnan <.'harles Dcgravelles and a group of other state Republican figures , The presidential party enter e d limousines for the drive along Canal Street which runs through the center oC the city's historic French Quarter toward the Royal Orleans Hotel where the group was staying. While the President. met with represen- tativs from seven Southern states. Mrs. Nlxon planned to visit the French Quarter at length. including St. Mary's of the Assumption Church, known as one of the finf:st ua.mples of brick architecture. In lhe COU!llty. ,Nb:on, Attorney General John N. 14itchell, Education Secretary Elliot N. RichardJon and Counsellor Robert H. Finch planned to outline adrnlnbtration policy and listen to local problems in meetings with the chairmen and vice cha.irme.n ol state advisory committees oo public educatioo. Sen. Goldwatei and it doesn't look like it will -the surf legislation. condiUoru: should continue through the The slate committees. consisting main-weekend," a guard official said. 'l'be outcome of the 34lh Senatorial ly of private citizens, are offshoots oft.he Se.al Beach had the least activity of any District special election is a1most a IW'e President's special cabinet committee on beach are due lo "abstinence on the victory for prominent Newport Beach at· education which has been trying to ease part of swimmers.,. Lifeguards said the t.orney Dennis E. Carpenter, l h e the mixture of black and white children surf was owning three to five feet, with Republican State Chairman. He would in Southern schoOls. The state committee. larger sets coming in occasionally. Water take office Wednesday. officials invited to today's meetng were temperature was set at 68 degrees. Administration supporters virtually from Alabama, Arkansas, Wt.dsiana, •·we had 39 rescues, which is not very threw in the towel today on hopes of Claims Plane Was Not His .. Georgia , Mississippi and the Carolinas. high," 3 guard spokesman said. "People enacting the stalled tax program without The flOll.()fficial nature of the com· have been forewarned by stories on TV the aid of Orange County voters. Sen. Barry M . Goldwater said today it mittees led Louisiana educ al io n and radio and in the papers and they're William T. Bagley, (R-San Rafael ) was neither he nor bis airplane that buzz. superintendent William J. Dodd Thursday slaying out of the surf. 1 hope it continues author nf the tax plan said the only ed homes in the takeoff path or Orange to question Nixon's trip. that way over the weekend... circumstance he foresaw which could County Airport Sunday night. "Unless he has the power o{ a {ortune Li"feguar•-at Hun ti··moa and Bo'--bring about a vote early nut week would , t I) he · t · ~ ·~· uwi. u.. hold ba d And he said he can prove it. e er, can t ge a true picture unless Chica state beaches reported making be for ~e 13 out senators to a n on he talks to people dewn here wbo know more than 100 rescues Thursday in the their opposition and vote {or the bill. The senator's name and plane were the situation, Of course, that's the way large surf and rtptldes. Carpenter is opposed on the stale connected wifh the incident Monday nighl the Republicans operate," said Dodd, a senate seat ballot by a fellow Republican, when NeWport Beach City Councilman Democrat. "They get most of their in-Douglas Irvine. who threw his support to ~1ilan M. Dostal publicly complained of a formation from Wall Street and Madi.son Front pnne l Carpenter. At stake is the seat left va· small jet that took off so low , "it al~t Avenue." -,, cant by former GOP Sen. John G. came through my window ." The administration on the eve ol the NUDE Schmitz. Tustin. v.•ho was elected to An avid airport critic, Daniel Emory, visit reaffirmed its plans to pursue a • • • C.Ongress. wtp was in the audience, although claim~ policy "rusonablene:sa" in seeking Twelve Democra~ and one Republican in( lo be one Of sen. Goldwater's most acbool desegegaUon in the South. L. Smith, 31, of COil• Mesa. became have blocked far more than two weeks ardent sup(>Ol'ters, tattled on the Arizona MttcbeR, appearing before a alarmed and rushed up t.o Miss Tolbert the key seoond half of the governor's Republican, saying be had seen the craft Senate committee, avoided a con· and shouted, "get something on.'' election year tax l'.Sc lion. and that lt belonged to the senalor. frontaUon with same liberal Northern She calmly snapped on a belt, the On their first t passage, ad· Airport off}cials the next day also con· senators by offertng an explanation that undercover officers reported . ministration sup s fell one vote firmed that Sen. Gol~water's plan e had appeared to satisfy them. Of£icer Gregoire arrived in due time short of the 27 needed for passage. The been at the airport Sunday. "Until the higher courts decide dif· and arrested Miss Tolbert on Indece nt ex· first half of the program was approved But alas, they all were wrong. !erentiy." Mitchell sald, "we will con-posure and lewd conduct charges and overwhelmingly earlier. Sen . Coldwater said this morning, "I no tlnu e to apply the standard of Smith on aiding and abetting the same. Republicans are confident that a longer own an airplane." reasonableness." ------'------------------------------------- Hair Let Down Schools Relax Dress Ru"les By PAMELA HAU..AN O! tM O.flJ Piiot 'ti ff hGive me a head with hair, long thick ha.it -shining, gleaming, streaming. rtiu:en, waxen, Give me down lo the.re hair, shoulder length and longer ... '' The words of the popular musical "Hair" don't exactly reflect the proposed dress codes for San Clemente High School and Marco Forster Junior High, but they come close. The community dress code committee, made up of 16 adults and 17 students, Thunday recommen~d the liberalization of hair guidelines for boys. The proposal Vrlll be presented to 1rustees of the Capistrano Unified School District Monday. It wouki allow halr no longer than the top of the collar line of a standard T-shirt. It al!IO would allow a mou.slache which does not e1ceed the corners of the lip and sideburns one inch ~ow the ear Which can nare into the midcheek. lt would ban beards and hair that covers the eyes, or hangs over the ears. Last .year's hair standards did not ac- cept hair over the ears, in the eyes, mut· ton chops, flare sideburns, moustaches (except for seniors the last semester ) or beards. Hair could exlend no longer tha n the dress shirt collar line and sideburns could only eitend lo the bottom of the ear. Legion Meeting To Face Youths ? POl\'M.AND, Ore. (AP! -The American Legion and thousands or young people who don 1 like Its otand on the Vietnam war are coming to Portland this month and massive eUorta are under way to keep them apart. About 14,000 Legion delegatea ar?. ex- pected, and officials antldptle an lnf1ux of 40,000 to 50,000 young people. "They say they know the best 1or America," sald a spokesman for R youth group calling ltaelf the Ptople's Army Jamboree. "We are. going to tell lhem they are wroni ... Ray Oliver, assistant superintendent for instructioo, informed the committee that the county counsel's office had ad- vised thal the dress code should be as specific as possible. Many courts have thrown out dress codes on the grounds that they were too ambiguous, he noted. Be.fore the meeting begao, Del Curlis, who had attacked the committee's !unction and organizaUon at the Hast meeting of the board of trustees, apologized for his remarks. He said he had built his case on very few facts and hoped the commlUee would disregard them. Irvine Confirms $1.5 Million Tax Refund on Land lrvine Company officials today COO· firmed the development firm has receiv- ed a $1.5 million refund on it.s 1969--70 Orange County property taxes for its 46,000 acres of agrk:ultural preserves. The re.bale drew criticism from Lyndol L. Young, lawyer for Irvine heiress Mrs. J oan Irvine Smith. who pointed out the rtsl of the taxpayers in I.be coonty are facing assessment hikes to cover the Irvine savings. Agricultural preserve! v.·ere created under the Williamson Land. and Open Space Conservation Act which permits farmers and ranches to establish agreements with their counties in which they guarantee to keep the land In agricultural use for a minimum period of JO years. The Irvine and Mission Viejo ranches were granted preserve status for much of thelr properties by Orange County In January, 1969, after a storm of con· troversy. Under preserve status, assessments on the 48,000 acres of trvlne land dropped fro m$25,887,610 on the 196~ tax rollS to 17.9U,500. Taxes an the land, acet1rding to county officials, dropped !rom $2,262,490 to 1701.510. SALE PRICED DREXEL'S NEWEST For kids •nd lun peopl•. Av•il•ble in two r•fr•1h- in9 finish•s. Y•llow •rid ,e\mon color. Th• best of ell, it is 1t•in, bum eftd tnar res istant. Your wti imsy will stey li ke n•w no ma· t•r wftet you do. Co~ plate b.droom famitute ..... M.01. from My bM1 to ch.-r., mil'f'On Mtd all at ""'Y fhou,g~.,1-~. s .. it tod•Y.· 0 ................. $140; Mirror ............ $ 41~ YOUR LOCAL DEALERS FOR DREXEL· HENREDON. HERITAGE INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 North CCM11t Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 1121 w .. 1d111 o •.• 642-2050 OPIN AIDAY "TIL f Profeuktn•I lnterlor Designers A•1ll1ble-AIO--NSID OHM PUDAY 'TR t ...._ r.n "'-Mw ., o....,. c_., Mt.116J • ' • ( ,. I I I I I '\ -----" . ~ -- • Dn~tington Beaeh ' ·-E.DI T IO VOL 63, NO. '194, 4 SECTIONS, "4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' • I ~ •' FRIDAY, AUGUST ,'14, 1970 TEN CENTS • u er ur as .es eac es Police Sou Marina Palace 'Not Nice Place' The Marina Palace is "a nice, clean place" where Seal Beach parents can send their kids to a Saturday night dance without worrying. That, in essence, was the testimony of Williain (Bill) Robertson, owner of the dance hall, who took the witness stand Thursday in a license hearing. But it wasn't the way the police depart- ment saw it, whose undercover officers testified by affidavit that the Palace - located near the western city limits - played host to youths who smoked mari- juana and popped pills, police also alleg- Burke Warn s Of Newpo rt Route Block By .\LAN DIRKIN Of ni. ........ , .,.,, Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Bun- tinglmrl!each) fired 11 salvo =-the Sanl<t Aaa Rlver IOdsy warning.Newport Beach that Jt laces "an environmental catastrophe" if the move to cut a ~ce out of the future P•cific Coast Freeway succeeds. ' He asserted that four bridges would have to •be built aCJ'OS!; Upper Newport Bay and four six lane highways would be required in the freeway corridor to meet the traffic needs. It Ls the strongest attack Burke bas made so far against the bill authored by his Assembly colleague Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach). The bill has cleared the lower house and now awaits . action by the Senate Transportation Committee. 'Qle bill , which would terminate the freeway at Adams. Avenue in Huntington Beach and restart it south of Corona de! Mar, is due for a committee hearing Monday. Badham, however, has suc- ceeded in getting the hearing delayed three times. Burke says the measure, intended to take the freeway out of Newport Beach, does not address itself to an alternative solution to Newport's future traffic needs. After claiming that four highways and four bridges across the Back Bay would be required to carry the extra load, Burke says, ''Some fine residential areas would lie in the path of these highways and' their bridges. It is a poor way to han- dle the coastal traffic problem." "But even without this poor solution. this multi-highway system, Newport's surfaCf: streets -as well as those of Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa - would be filled with cars pouring from the Orange, Newport and Corona de! Mar freeways, all of which will terminate in the coastal area," Burke said. "Not only would there be bottlenecks on these other freeways. but there would be auto congestion on local streets. particularly those of Newport. that_ could be characteri7.ed as an e n v 1 r o n- mental catastrophe, The impact on local bus~s. as well as on residential (See FREEWAY, Page ZJ Drum, Bugle Corps Sought A drum and bugle corps W carry the Huntington Beach banner has been pro- posed by a group of citizens who want to form the city's first such organization. • 'llley also want financial support from the city to the tune of $6,000 to buy in· &truments and a laler budget or $12,000. Parks and RecreaUon commissioners expressed interest in the idea WeJne.sday night, but because of insufficient time to study the proposal could not t&ke action on It. "We might start with 62 men'ibers and grow to 200." Jim Senecal, a spokesman for the group said, . "The publicity and hono_r the city would receive because of this group W®ld make It a ~eat investment," Senecal Said. Recreation commissioners will meet again Aug. 26, at which time they will give more consideration to the offer. '!be city council, however, has sounded the final note on whether to !Upport a drum •nd bugle corps with cilj' fWld.s. ed couples occasionally fondled each other in dimly-lit-booth!. Robertson, 71, testified that he keeps a claa.n house where marijuana and other drugs ""' pot .allowed. "It's reprehensible to give thought to it," said Robertson who claims to have never taken alcohol in his life and that there ill "nothing better than good water." Hearing officer Dennis Courtemarche, who lll also the, city's ioterim1E"ty manager, suspended testimony f both sides until early riert week when e ex- pects to render a decision on the II . Both sides reserved the right to re-open arguments if the decision does not satisfy them. On the stand for nearly 40 minutes, Robertson, a former gambling en· trepreneur and operator of the Air Port Club poker palace during the early fi()'s, drew disapproval from several in the audience when he declared, "OUr reputa. tion and moral conduct i.s unquestion· able.'' .. He said that be IOd bis crew of college- &tudent moniton patrol the place regularly, warning the teens who violate the rules and when necessary ejecting them ii"!'! tbe premloet. • . "I tell them -whatever you're going to do that's bad in the way of drugs and smoking, doo't do It bert," Robertaon declared. \' As far as the alleged amorout activtUes of lhe patrons wertl conctrned,;Robertson said.he.would jokingly ask 111ch couples If they had a "license io· wrestle." "That would usually break it up.'' At other time&, he said, he would tell those who appeared old enough to "look for a motel." He said also that he invited mothers t.o inspect his operation but advised that they doii't stay too")ong. "YOwig people don't like senior citizens around." As to the charge that persons older than 20 were allowed on the premises, Robertson replied that occasionally they were allowed Instde to llilten but not to d...,.. James Farquhar Funeral Rites Slated Monday Funeral services "Nill be conducted at 11 a.m. Monday at Smith's Mortuary, 627 Main St., Huntington Beach, for James Shaw Farquhar, publisher of the Hun- tington Beach News. Mr. Farquhar died of a heart attack at his home at 333 Crest Ave. early 'Iburs- day momiiig. Re WI! 80. JnteMQent ls expected t.o be at Fairhaven Mausoleum,· Santa Ana, bu' arrangements have not yet been com- pleted. Mr. Farquhar was one of the key figures in comlnunJty life m Huntington Beach from the time he purchased the weekly newspaper ia Se~ber 1927 and moved to Southern California from the Mjdwest unW his death. A public park near his home at Crest Avenue was dedicated in bis name last May 22. He was a p~ president of the Rotary Club, was a 32nd degre:e Mason, was a member of the Sigma Delta .Chi newspaper fraternity and was a former director of the city's Chamber of Com- merce. 1 In his: last column , published Thurs· day, be expressed bafflement at the changing tiiDel, writing "I am so far out of step with what i11 going on nowadays, I don't know what to think." MU< complaiiitng aboot a book with rour-letter wor~. wisigh.Uy long-hairs, tax increases, student strikes, and the Black Panthers, he wrote, "I could go on In thll line tlldeflnltely, bUt what I someuntes womtet ii -have I lived too long!" The rest of; his column is full of lively humor, including an ecologtca1 defen11e fQr aome lioru: and a shark killed in re- cent incidents. He recalls a saying "You can't make them over" ~ven him by. an old ~ quaintance for use when people get llomed up over the tncompreben.tble attitudes of others. "It taught me to adjust," Mr. Farquhar wrole. Lifeguards Bracing For Throng lly JOANNE REYNOLlll or .. o.....,......., Lifeguards In the five citiol alone• Ille Orange Coast today bn<ed for Ille onslaught of weekend beach visitors wbtJ Tbunday pn>duced a ""°'d J,311t -from !>ooming lllllf alld the acallllJlll!lybl( nptlde.1. , While large lllllf cooditions provailed today, ·lifeguards from San Clemente to Seal Beach sold they e>pect cooditiou to ..... little by Salllnlay. Huntington Beach· was the hardest hit ~ay wit,h ec-~ followed by Newport Beach wbich loggod 40S -a ~ nwnber of,ttlCUel for botb cities. San Clemenle l!boftd 75 -Laguna Beaob bad 15 ud Seal Buch log- ged 39. Spokesmen for those cities said the number "-rescues was not uzwsua.UJ high. Hlll!.Ungton lifeguard CapL D o u I D'Amall said the surf bas been running a consistent three to sis feet with &Orne 1eta: up.to nine Ieet. Water: tempenturea were. recorded at 67 degre~ , "Tbe surf has dropped a ullle today •jJ.. -. ; ' I I 1 • ' ' • DAR.Y'P'll.OT ....... ., T"" c..-. and maybe down to aormal by Salm'· + ' , A ~ • , • ( day'' be: said "The rough conditions mQ ORDER .qio .,ttRROW' D~E/t5'1RANDY .HAllDMAN'll::IPiU,•Jll~~1~RflELD'·M~1~1! , : ba•~ bf<n~ by a atorm oil Soja." , ~ ;~W\}W:''l , 11 t! ~-,tho ( f'ill.\: :~"' !} . i Newport . -h"'! waler tom- 1 -~t5-~ , . ~ . . ,, 1 .,1 f , :i.... . ~· ,. • pera.tures m the bi&h IDs and surf ~ · • ~ · • ~ : • l t." ~ ' 1 '· ,,. , niq from eight feet along the Corona del , NOBLE DANE SEEKS INTELLECTUAL GROWTH Jason -105 Pounda 1t Eight Months and Growlne TOp READER CAN'T PllT BOQK DOWN . Kalhtrl-'futod•lt, ·'· Sl•rl• 161,t'Volumt All Bookefl Up · Major· Plunges- Ou t of Copter · And Breaks Ankle Beach Reading Program Ends " They came by the hundreda to Lake Park, Thuraday~ Huntington Beach,polJce officer& warn. ed motorists to take other roads. One police helicopter landed in a nearby field, another chopper hovered above the crowd. Their faces were painted, many wore Indian costumes. They wandered all over the park. There was a lot of talking, but no music. It was the end or the public library's zummer reading program. '111e. kids - toddlers to 12-years-old -came to ~lebrate for the books they ~read th.Us summer. The police helicopter, HB Eye, landed ln a field where the pilot put on a short display of trick flying then allowed the Valley Police Hunt Men for Reserves The Fountain Valle)" Polleo ~ ment Is looking for men· to Join tliO pillee resene force. children to ,get a close view or the ' whirlybird. Major. Donald M-loves bll·lilck to-~veral girls from the library ,staff day, even if hi's leg hurts Jilin. ' painted lines on the fll<tl of )'li,ungsters, He fell 100 feet f~ a !iovertng changing' them into fierce Indians. There helicopter at Camp Pe~ton .~y was a Jarge.-••.-·-e contest to find .tbe . and Stlffered little more· thiln. a broken best Jridians ...... ""'11 left ariki!. .~ • ' Six-year-old Katherine Tr u e s d a J e ~alor Magee, a r~ist on· tWO w~eks rectived a round of applaus as Uie of active duty trajnihg at the b&se. wu champ book reader of the summ.er · ";'"" she reported in gclOd condition lrf tl'!e base polished off 160 volumes. "I just ,lt1te ,to hospital today. read," she· chuckled In a shy voice. J The 34-year~ld reservist whose home ts Boys from ·the Order of lhe 'Arrow \in at 3580 Wisteria' in Seiki Beach, !ell to the Huntinntnn Beach' and Fouolatn. Valley 1 ground during a helicopter training demon:;'ated a variety of Indian dafices. sesalon: ~ ,' More than 1,700 yOungstefs w.ho c0m. -A mounUng appar{ltus fo'r a rope dangl-- pleted the library's summer reading prcr lng Crom the hovering cboP.PI( gave way . gram were invited to the Lake Park after the m&jQrbegan bis desbent. <-'Freinonies. A~ least a third of them The part-lime leathernecll:'fell teet first came. to the grciurii. Charlie Brown books were handed to &se·spokesmen ukt five snilll .bones 140 chjldren who had·read'betwetn 60 and in Magee.'1 anltle were broken but other than a fe'tf scrapes and bruise!, that wu 100 books during the summer. Peter Jlob. the only Injury: ' • blnt of Newport Beach, tile tel••"loo M,Jor .Ma~ee·i mi•h•P was tile' onli vpli;e of Charlie Brown, was presept. · serioUs acCldept ' repqrteif amo'ng the Arlene G0nei ancl David • 1!jarli1Ugb , 11,000 .meros"5 fN!!1 th\OlliiJ.>!lUl lbt >lon· tile drawing for the two top jlriui, cotln(rj( uidng oiri In the e!"elCJoes. I t~ bieyclu. Costume wlnnert were t 1'le major' will miss the climax W the Mil' beadles'to 10 feet m-the Newport.. Balboo beaches. Seta at Balboa's Wedi• ...,. ldttlllg JI feel ... -406 people," said Robert z: -· -ot mariJ)S Ale!)' for lllt dll(. "Tbot's ail,all time hip. we'ft never bad that many resrues before." Reed's foree of 70 lifeguards was prais- ed for their work. ~·we have 23 new ocea beach guards this. year and Wider trying circWnstances they did ao excellent job," Reed stated. He also said the three .....,.,. boats greatly aided rescue opera- tions. Reed warned beach goen t.o "proceed with caution" in-the surf wbicb abowa few signs Of slacking off. "l don't koow, .. Reed said. "It might go down. Tbo sets are slill big, but not as consistent 11 nwtsday." In San Clemenle, lilqumla said they (See SURF, P11e Z) Valley Bohhysox Team Gets Win Fountain Valley's bobbysox all-star so_f~ team has Won again. Thursday night the local team edged Navabo of San Dle&o County, 6-~. for th;eir . second straight win in the state tournament' in Buena Park. Tonlg)I~ Fountain Valley'• girls f•ce · North Highland, a team from the ~amenlo .... at 6 p.m. In Bellis Pvt. B1.tena Park. . 'µle girls are playing In a do\lble elimination tournament ror the California bobb)'BOX champlonsbip. They haven't · lolt a game yet. • w-tlier. It'll be.anotber.weetead for bask• lng on the beachtt, ·ab:ict the tem- perature wtll ahoot lnlo the mlddla 70'• along .!he COIBl·aDd ~ up lo 88 further Inland. INSIDE ~DAY An aquatics show at Newport Harbor High School tmd a. 110""' filtn Jtativol o.t Laguna Beach High School cire the ftatwtd e*nli in today's W HlctmfCr aept;cm.. Local r<11denls betwJen'~ ol 11· 45, at le'ist 5'8" tall, wftb...._S01flslon cor- rectible to 20-20, end boldera of at least a high school diploma .. Should contact the department at 10200-;Slatet Ave.- lnd)an boy, Clrl Kam; 1ndlan g~I, m111eUvers MOJll)ay when lbO )iha1,n. of Debbie ll<>blnsori; mo.tlaulhenUe, Robin mervlltl hit the beiCb for throe diys of ~ Martin and John O'NeUI, funniest bOY, mock vfarfare. ; \ • Scott F...ter, and fUMlest cir! Sherry The Martnes will make the landlng by SttWama. • --· -~~·--·boll and-bellooptet. f . , , • 'i • - 1. D.111,l' ~LOT " r~ fo!oot 14, 1970 Flights · to -Stay at: 30 Cease-fire Deteriorates eranco COl!nty Airport commlssl-• tentatively resolved two of six proposed r«ornmtmdatJons UMiy will nuke to the board of ~ a.rt.er 1 three-hour aelllion tn s.nta An• Tbllrsday. 1bt pip Will mceL q;aln Saturdl.)r at t :30 1.m. in the supervisors' hwin& room in Santa Ant to oontinue their dollberatioos. .lbe -· ~ l1yill& lo thrash out ... ol •'nnd don't'• to fM"f!'•"'tr.4 ~ •""" .......... ii nlltloo .. tbe fta1I* I(. P.-.. Company's l'llase II rep.;n un air tu~Uon probltms In the ....,. ty. unveiled two weeks ago. Tbe alrpOrt advisory gTOUP oWted their dellbetaUons Jast 1\lesday, but flil· ed. to agree on any definite recom· mendations. At the end or Ibo lhreHloor debaU ·Bikers Press On Death Valley, Cocu wl Walks Continue ' By JQHN VALTEllZA Of .. _,,, f'1llt ...,. ~While San Clemente's Death Valley conservat>on walker rests today pa.st the nlidway point of bis trek across the bom- ilc sand$. two oilier ecology-minded hikers are hoofing it on more hospitable terrain -the soulhem Orange Coast. Jnel Blll'd, :>I, was reported fortifying himself ln>m the health-food larder al hla miniabn: covered wagon today, waiting for the sun to go down tooight -he will resume the trek back from Towne Pass to Death Volley Junc:tioo. ·AJ he mund>es his health foods in Death Valley, two """'8 La Jolla "5idents are mard!lng upcout and din- ing on health foods as well -EQgUsb.10; and Valeria Maym, 17, were ttpeded to walk thmogb the South Coast area this evening OD a hike from La Jolla to British Columbia to &tre!s the eQOlogical crisis. .. Maybe through our examples we can make fll'Ol>I• lee! a liWe guilty about driYiog ~ ~ Englilh said hdcre seWns odl 0. the West ca.JSI safari. While ~ couple walk in the cooler clime, Buicl Is tr;JJ>g to get somo badly needed liloq today atur spending two mere mpless days In his wagon beneath the blazing '""' --reedlnp top. ping 120 degrees. "It'• 111111 '°" hot oot there in !he daytime for blm to get ..,... aleep In the wagon, eo he turned In ID -t:reelt again Tbunday momlnll to get eome rest." friends report..i. Since Ille .start of the mardl for clean water hegac Jut Satunlay nigh~ Hurd has trekUd olf..uxkln tbrou8b the -1<'• dark hours on the llO-mlle mmd trip. Tbe toogbest leg of the bib took place before dawn Tbu!'lday when Burd hauled his 3)0.pound wagon up the ll!cep llop<t of the Paoamint MocmWn Range ID Towne p.,. -5,000 feet bJgber than his startinC point at the Junctloc. Two Wlldeotlfied hikus joined the bwded WagDll poller Oii the 1'111 up to !he -· friends saJd. hut ooe 10011 drop-ped out after collapsing from 1evere blisten Oil his feet and heat emaoatlon. Burd -who has lost 20 poonds eo far -prodicted his march WOllld probably end at the Junction on Sunday when he gathers some saod from the inhospitable valley's &and dunes. Tbe grains, he YOWi, will go ln!D hourglasses which he will pnsent to President Nl%on, Gol>eroor Reap!> and otberolfldals. "Time ia nuuUng oot," will be the writ.. ten ecoJIJlfcal messqe on the timepieces, Hurd said. Reagan Forces to Hold Up Voting for Carpenter It appean that the Reagan ad-take= Wednesday, ministration supporten ri,;w·• ,,.. -.J~/ofjuo~~ :;:Y)l:!ually . . · ".l r-, ·unw In '4 II ltilay ·~ of Tuesday • apeciJIJ electlOtl ~ enacting the stalled tu program without Cowlty befcre voting on the second ball the ald of Orange COunty vot.er:s. of the governor'• $1 billion Lu overbaul Wtlllam T. Bagley. (ft.San Rafael) legi&lation. author of !he tu plan said the only The outcome of the 34th ·Senatorial circumstance he toreaaw whld:t could DWICI rpecial election ia almost a IUte bring about a vote early nert week would victory far prominect Newport Beach at· he for tha 13 holdool senators to abandon i.....y DeMJa E. Carpenter, t h e their opposition and vote for !he hill. Republican Stale aiatrmao. Be woold Carpenter la opposed on the stale Crash Survivor Mak es Recovery The survtVlllg crew member of the fiery crash of a giant aerial refueling plue at El Toro Ju1y 31 wu reported in very good condition today at Orange County Medical Center. Staff Sgt. Ken11eth C. Davis, of Sant.a Arla, bas been taken off the criUcal list. He is being treated for burns and smoke inhaJa tion. There were five men aboard the KC130 turboprop when its wing I.Ouched the runway during a practice maneuver, causing it to crash in flames. Lt. Roger Mulling, 27, or HW1tington Beach. died in the crash. Cpl. Kenneth Metzdorf, 21, of El Toro Housing, died a few days later of severe burns. Maj. Walter Zytkewicz, 41. 25372 Andriana, Miaion VJejo, and CapL Robert B. Walls, Jr., 28, of Tustin. died of burns a week alter the crash. DAILY PILOT OU.HG!: COAST ll!J&Ll~o<tNG COol.l"""NY •obtrf N. w,,, ,. ... ~1-Pllllut~ ... J1ck •· c,..r,r Vic. ,mllerlt <Ind v e; .. :u l Mo,,..,.r Th""''' Kt1.,t M-!f'll Et ""r Alt11 o;,~:ft West o. t ll!lt eo..~1r Ee,+o• Albtrt W, ltt•• AQokJI .. Ed\ttr H••I""" IHtli Offlct 17175 ••••It ''"''"''' M.11111, u,,..,, r.o. a.II" 110, 12••• --~ "Kii: m .,.,_, •-. c..&11 Ill-: Dt 'Not lrf Sto-"t ..__.t .. .c1<1 m 1 w.t ••r.n fleiili. .. ., S111 CMl..,.,,tt: :.OS NOrftl £1 ""'"" ll.t11 senate seat ballot by a fellow Republican. Douglas Irvine, who !brew his support to Carpenter. At etai.e Is the seat left va· cant by former GOP Sen. John G • Schmitz, Tuatin, who WU elected to Congress. Twelve Democrats and one Republlcan have blocked for more than two weeks the key second half of the governor'• election year tu legialatlon. On their first run at pusage, ad- minl!tration 1t1pporterl fell one vote short of the 'Z1 needed for passage. The first ball of the program wu approved overwhelmingly earlier. Republicans are confident that a Democrat wou1d cast a "courtesy" vote on Carrell's be.half iJ the administration was aWI one vote abort even after the Orange County election. f'rom Page 1 FREEWAY ••. neighborhooda , should be obvious." By attacking the freeway bill on en· vironmental grounds, Burke Is righting back with the same ammunition that Badham used. Badham has v.•aved the banne r of ecology in urging that the freeway be kept out of Newport. Burke noted that the Pacific Coast Freeway corridor in Newport Beach must accommodate 110,000 to 140,000 local.car trips daily. "These are people living or working in the Newport area," be saJd. A:nother S0,000 trips would be made by motorists passing through town. The legislator stressed that without a coastal freeway serving Newport's needs somewhere, that city's surface atreets will be packed with stop-and·JO traffic. ''There wilt be more smog, more poUu· tion, more noise, more accidents and more disruption of lhe resld~ti.al com· mwUUes by far than with a freeway." Russ Magazine Raps CIA 'Provocations' MOSCOW CUP]) -An Influential Soviet political Wl!ekly magulne accused the U.S. Central Intelligence ~ (ClAl and lhe Pentagon today of disseminating "provocative" report! the Soviet Union I& about to attack Com· mwtist Olina. A J:lre-publicalion story o( an arucle lo "Za Rubethom" (Ufe Abroad), ss quoted by the TaA News Agency, aatd • .. the Soviet leaden mort lhan once have atre!sed that all atUnnatJoos or Soviet preparations to attack China an tcUr· rllous fabrications from begtnnlng to end Ind the SOviet Union stands for DOl'Jll.llla-in& Sl.l»Sov1ct relaUom." • -&Y. Ill< _.....,. did ten- t.tt\'ely -In a tpllt S-1 -that no mott jet flights should he added to the current 30 daily at Or•ngt County Airport for at least one year. A second tentative suga:estlon is that the Northrop CorporaUon's current noise monitoring program at tt'le airport be us· ed to set maximum noise standards after a U.month trial period. Commissioner Roger D. Slat.es of Hun· lingtOl'J Beach, who cast the lone dissen. Ung vote said. ''There ate two matters we should resolve before recommending anything on noise. Establishing a limit on a number of flights is the only sure way to pacify homeowners and to ensure the supervisors there won't be more jets, but there is no legal way we can bold the airlines to their present level of flights." Slates wu ref~in& to J,be county's lease C011tract with Air Ca!UornJa and Air West tbal allows the airlines to increase up to 3S fligl>ts In lt11 and 42 flights in 1m when the contracts erpire. The airlines are currenUy making about 30 departures a day Imm the airport. Artistry in Surfi1ag Sculptures of surfer done in bronze by Cardiff artist Edmund Shum· pert exclusively for Huntington Beach'a U.S. Surfboard Champion- ships will go to top wi.Mers in the 1970 version of the event Sept. 19-20. Hopelully to he roolved Salllrday Ji a remmmendaUon by Comm J aa Jone r &bert A. Clark of Brea to !he effect that airlines and private jet _.ton ralher than government agtl\CleJ should pay homeowners for ey Property that might tie condemned became of unacceptable noile ltandarda in the vicinity of the airport. President in New Orleans ForTalks onSchoolAction Clark also auggested Tbunday that the county ahould male an "a i r p or t NEW ORLEANS (UP)) -President authority" to replace the commiasion as Nixon arrived today will) a group of his a separate crganization to accomplish more effective operation of present and top advisers for a French Quarter future ab' faclllties in the OJwity. motorcade and a talk with Southerners on Oark said that in the year be has WV• h>w fast and how far school de!egrega· ed on the commission Jt baa become ob-tion will go th.is fall. vioos that the body had no power to en-The President and Mrs. Nii:on were force it. recommendatlom. Commilshxl Chairman James Gilmore met at New Orleans hltemational1 Airport of Santa Ana urged the setting of noise by national GOP committeeman Tom standards for Orange County Airport Stag, state GOP chairman Charles regardless of state or federal acUon in Degravelles and a group of other state the field. "Who knowa when either Republican figures. government body will get around to establishing standards?" Gilmore asked. The presidential party e n t e re d Slates objected to the I en g t h y limousines for the drive along Canal discussion on noise standards saying, "we Street which runs through the center of abould address ourselves to the real ques. the city's historic French Quart.er toward lion, What are we going to do about the Royal OrleanJ Hote l where the group Orange C.Ounty Airport ?" was staying. C]arJc. reminded Slat.es. ihat be was a While the. President met with represen- ndlority •the~ ip_~at view. ~ t.&tiv-jr~m sev"' Sou~ states, Mrs. (SliteS liad suggbled'~sdiY that 'till l'iftlli! p~ IO· Wit the Frenclt jet flights from the airport be banned Quarter at length, including St. Mary's of after im .) the Assum~ Cburcb. known ~ one of Giimore agreed that !he !mg term ob-the flneol enniplet of brick archlledure jectlve ahouJd he to eliminate all jtl ID !he country. fllgbts from tbt ·i.c111ty,' · , Nixoo, AttDrney General Joh.o N. County Aviation Diredor Ro b ert Mitchell, Educalion Secretary Elliot N. Bfetnaban vigm'ously objpcted t 0 Richardson and Counsellor Robert H. establishing any noise ~ 1t the Finch planned to outline administration airport.. "U you aet such ltandardl you policy and listen to local problems in will have to dose down the airport " be meetings with tbe chairmen and vice arped. ' chairmen of state edvisory committee.II on public education. f'rom Page 1 SURF •.. rescued the 75 people from surf which wu rurming from three to aiJ: feet. Water temperature was recorded at n degrees. Llieguanl Lt. Hank Barnes aatd the heavy ;lide drilt near the Mwliclpal Pier drew al leut 20 swimmers toward the pilings. The pier rescues were comm1>n through !he day. San Clemente guard Chief Dick Hazard said the re&CUea were not In the record- breaking category because surf was not running as high in San Clemente as in other Orange Coast areu. "It's likely there wUI he ollght decrease in the surf, but 11 it remains strong today, then there's a good chanct it'll be big for the weekend," he said. Laguna Beach lifeguards pulled their 85 swimmers from water that was recorded between 71 and 73 degrees. A guard spokesman estimated sets were running a consistent four to siJ: feet and said they expect conditions to prevail through tbe weekend. "As long as the wind doesn't pick up-- and it doesn't look like it will -the surf conditions should continue tbrougb the weekend,'' a guard official said. Seal Beach had the least activity or any beach are due to "alistinence on the part of swimmers." Lifeguards said the surf was running three to five feel, with larger sets coming in occasionally. Water temperature was set at 68 degrees. "We had 39 rescues, whlch Is not very high,'' a guard spokesman said. "People have been forewarned by stories on TV and radio and in the papers and they're staying out of the surf. I hope it continues that way over the weekend." The st.ate committees. consisting main- ly of private citizens, are offshoots of the President's special cabinet committee on education whl,ch hu been irying to ease the mixture of black and white chUdren in Southern schools. The state committee officials invited to today's meet.ng were from Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Georgia, Mississippi and the Carolinas. The oon-0fficial nature of the com· mittees led Louisiana e d u c a t Io n superintendent William J. Dodd Thunday to question Nixon's trip. "Unless be has the pOwer of a fortune teUer, he can't get a true picture unless he talks to people down here who know the situation. Of course, that's the way the Republicans operate," said Dodd, a Delll1)C(at. "They get most of their in· fonnation from Wall Street and Madison Avenue." The admtnlslraUon on the eve of the visit reaffirmed IL!i plans to pursue a policy of "reasonableness" in aeek.ing school desegregation ln the South. Mitchell, appearing b e f o r e a Senate committee, avoided a con. frootation with aome liberal Northern senators by ottering an ei:planatlon that apptared to satisfy them. "Until the higher coW't! decide dif· ferenUy," Mitchell said, "we will con· tinue to apply the standard o f reaso nableness.'' SALE PRICED • In Midea st JERUSALEM (AP) -Israeli air lorce planes struck at Jordanian .army posi· Uons today, the military command said, In further deteriorations of tbe Middle East oease-fire. The military faid t.t>e , rild was laun- ched agaln.$t Jordanian army stronaholds whlch have given essistance to Palest!· nian guerrillaa In attacks against Israeli £rontier settlemeiit.s. A spokesman said the Jordanian army "assists terror1sb aod makes it possible for them to act against Israeli civilians." A spokesman earlier had announced that Israeli Air Force jets crossed the border and bombed and strafed Arab guefrilla targets inside Jordan !or the se- cond straight day today. The Tel Aviv spokesman said those raids were in response LO mortar a~cks on lwo Jewish settlements. The planes all returned safely after hit· ting objectives adjacent to Israel's Beisan Valley, he said. Beisan Valley set· tlements of Maoz Haim and Yardena came under morta'r fire during Thursday night. but no damage was reported. This was the second Israeli air strike Inside Jordan since the Middle East ct:ase-fire went Into effect 1 week ago. The guerrilla organizations l;lave disown· ed the truce initiated by the United States as a pre1iminary to peace talks. An Israeli newspaper, the Tel Avlv Yediot Aharonot, reported that Egyptian soldiers fired across the Suez Canal in a second minor violation of the cease-fire Thursday. The newspaper said the in- cident occurred in the waterway 's central sector when a few bullet.s from small arms weapons were fired over Israeli positions. The military command said it coold not confirm the shooting but refused to deny it. Two days ago the army said four bullets were fired from the Egyptian side of the canal in the same sector. There were no casualties and the fire was not returned, the Israelis said. Reports from Amman said Jordanian authorities ha ve tightened s e c u r i t y measures to preven t Arab commandos from kldnapin8 diplomat!!, foreigners or government officials. Informants said the guerrillas may reso rl I<. this tactic lo sabotage the U.S. peace plan. Two Beirut newspapers also reported that King Hussein of Jordan has warned his armed forces to be on the alert because subversives were plotUng t1> assassinate him and other Jordanian of- ficials . The king saJd the assassins might bt disguised as Jordanian soldiers, ac.- co rding to the reports published by Al Ahrar and Al Klfah. purporting to be the text of an Aug. l royal circular to the army. Cairo newspapers gave major coverage l1> Israeli charges that Egypt has moved several missile batteriea closer to the Suez Canal. DREXEL'S NEWEST For kids aM fun f"OPI•. Av•il•bl• in two refr•sh. ing fini1h•1. Yell ow •nd ••lmon color. Th• b•st of •JI, it is 1t•in, burn •nd '"•r r"i•t•nt. Your whimsy will st•y like ri•w no fTMt. ter wMt you do. Co,.,. P'et• b.dt'OOM fun.itvr. ..,-..,1. from d.y b.d1 to ch.vi i .Mrrors Md .n et "flf"f thooghtfwl_ ~"' s •• it tod•y. .................... $140. "'"-···--··· $ 45. Lifeguards at Huntington ind Bois• Chica state beaches reported making more than 100 rescues Thunday in the large surf and riptides. .YOUR LOCAL DEAtiRs FOR DREXR · HENREDON ·HERITAGE Modem Dancing Oasses Offered Tbe Huntington Beach YMCA is Inviting youngsten to step right up for a modern dance and ballet class. Pte-reg1atratlon is now ln progrtSJ for the eight-week series of classes which Will begin Aug. 29. .... The eourae will ~ conducted In Lhe YMCA 's multipurpose room from 10 1.m. to 10;45 a.m. for beginners and 11 am. to 11 :43 a.m. for intermediatu . NEWPO RT BEACH 1727 WMfdlff Dr., 642-2050 OPIM NtDAY ,.lL t P1of111I .... ,,,. ....... Dool ....... AvAllebla 1..10-HSID LAGUNA I EACH 145 -Co.tot Hwy, °"" ..,. .. ' """ ' • ' ' • , • ' ~. ' ' ' • • ; • ' ' Seo, Sten, Soil, Stcrf Sailing yachts head for Newport Harbor entrance -and home -as late afternoon sunlight sparkles on waters off Corona de! Mar and surf breaks along rocky shore or tidepool area be low bluffs or Cameo Shores. Using 35 mm, single lens reflex with 200 mm telephoto lens. photographer shot into sunlight at f/16 and l /500th of a second l< capture unusual 1ight pattern. Camera was hand held and no filte1 was used. Joan Irvine Smith Move ~ To Block Present City Pla1 By L. PETER KRIEG or 111e o.11r 'n" st.tr Claiming current plans for the cily 01 Irvine would violate a Jong-standing agreement with the University or California, la wyers for Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith today indicated they will move to block development of the city as it is now envisioned by company officials. Lyndol L. Young, attorney for Mrs. Smith and her mother, Mrs. Atha lie R. Clarke, said the company now plans to build. its model city "on some 60,000 acres spread all over the ranch." He said there is a written agreement with the University of California that the city be built on 10,000 acres immediately adjacent to the UC lrvine campus - 1imilar to the UCLA-Westwood complex . Young said he has written to Newport Beach and Orange County officials asking for hearing dates on all applications and petitions filed by the Irvine Company and the Irvine Industrial complex on all mat ters. Ae said, however, he is primarily in terested in hearing dates involving the proposed community. Young said the Irvine Company is seek· Ing to have the agreement with UCl rescinded and saJd the matter will come before the UC Board of Regents at a meeting Sept. 17. He said he will attend to oppose the move. A spokesman for the compp.ny thi moraing dented this is t.rue. He said the company has no action pending before the board on any matter at. that meeting. Young said he was especiaUy irked at the fact the company had spent con- siderable money oo a master plan in the early J960's that mapped out the inilial JO.OCIO-acre city plan. He called it a "waste of money" lor the • company to have been working the pa:;t year allegedly changing tn~ 111.::. • ..:1· 1 .. The agreement with UCI, Young said, was made at the time Lb.e company donated 1,000 acres for the UCI campus and sold lhe stale another SlO acres for it. The sale, he said, cost c.tfjfornia ta:r paydt's $6,500 an acre, or a total < $3.315,000. He said the company only agreed I give the state the additional 1,000 acrr upon the insistence of Mrs. Smith. Responding to Young's criticism! Gilbert W. Ferguson , vice president of corporate communications for the Irvir Company, said, amoog other things, lh< statements are "silly." "Mr. Young's remarks, if they are cor- rectly quoted, are silly. Titey reflect little understanding of our new city plan anr' no understanrli"I! ,.. ~··~ ·~~-. ~ ·-· with the Board of Regents," Ferguson said. He cited recent remarks by NorL.;i Simon. a member of the Board or Regents, that he said were similar Lo those made by Yotu1g. "At that time," he said, ''Gover.nor Wteagan and other regent~ t.errtled the remarks 'confusing and baffling.' "Further," Ferguson said, ''Mr. Simon's assertions were vigorously denied by Chancellor Aldrich and the UCI planning staff, wjth whom we were directed by the regents to work during the master planning of the land adjacent to the university. "There ·is not much point in com- menting further on this kind of pet- tiness," Ferguson said, "We are too busy trying to keep our 1960 promise to create an attractive, balanced , urban en- vironment throughool the Irvine area Pickets Have No Effect On Disneyland Business By STEVE MITCHELL Of n.. 0.llY fillel S"ff Disneyland operations are continuing in a nonnal fashion today. despite a threatened mass refusal by other unions to cross picket lines set up by the American GuJkl of Variety Artists. Richard A. Nunis of Laguna Beach. vice president of Disneyland operations, said that more than 1,600 Disney employes reported to work today. The on- ly attractions closed by the strike are I.he ·Kids of the Kingdom" variety show and the Indian ceremonial dance shows.. Only 29 AGVA members are out on ,11trike today, compared with 80 wbo walk· ed off the job last. Saturday, Disneyland offic:'81s noted. "The only other workers out on strike are 18 iron workers," Nunis stated. "We feel that they are in aJ much vlolaUon ol the 1abor conlrad as were the operaUng engineers who were out for only one day (Monday) but returned to their jobs honoring a court order," Disneyland is now taking the neceuary 1teps regarding the Iron workers as was nquired for the operations engineer&. ' • "All of our au.ractons art open end our number .of guests continues to meet and surpass estimates." he noted. "Thurdsy we had 58,000 guests whi ch ls above norma l for the park on that day," a spokesman slated. Responding to allegations of low pay scales for AGVA entertainers a L Disneyland, Nunis pointed out thal the In- dian ceremonial dancers are currently paid $2.81 to $3.33 per hour for an eight hour day, during which they perform eleven JO-minute shows daily instead of the $1.85 houly wage reJ>Orted by AGVA sources . "Our Kids of the Kingdom made $175 dollars a weet for a total of only IS hours of on stage presentaUon," NunLs aaki. 'This group of young adult singers and dancer• are products ot Oisneylnnd talent workshop, held last fall to · train young peop)e for careers in lhe entertainment professkJn." Nunls also noted that the p~t AGYA con<roct, •igned Sept. 10, 1917, is In effect unUI Dec. 30, 1970. "The con- tract includea 1 no-strike clause which the AGVA has violated," he explained. "Therefore, thl9' Independent action by a few Ar.VA members cannot be sanc- liontd ." .. Frht~. A119111t lf, 1970 Linda Given Freedom Resumes Testimony In Tate-LaBianca Murder Trial LOS ANGELES (UPJ> -Unda Kw> blan took btr liar WllntlS place today It the IJ'ate-1..aBl.anca murder" trial 1fter her lirtl nf&hl of freedom In nine n\Ol11hs dur· 111( wblcb she cool<td • dinner of salad and spqbeW for her teCUrUY 1uards. W1th her tatimony against Charle!! M1neoo aod bis tbree female codefen- danta nearly completed Thursday the one-time codefendant wu granted full freedom. She left the Hall of Justice with her at· tomey and donned a dl!guile before ar· riving at ber new residence. Her attorney said Mrs. Kasablan "got a kick" out of preparing the dinner for the one female and lwo male poliec guards. He said she also watched televlslon for the flnt Umc since her lmpri.sonment last year and saw herself on tho-screen. When she took the chair today, Deputy District Attorney Aaron Stovill asked Mn. Kasabian ii she was aware of what the penalty for perjury was in a capital case even though the murder charges bad been dropped against her. "I understand it would rtsuJt in the and two male police guards. Mrs. Kasabian said that no one ever had told her that she couJd get the death penalty if she did not testily for the pro- secuUoo in the case. Over the objections of the defense, Stovill went over ag ain her testimony that arter leaving the home of grocer Leno Le.Blanca on Aug. I, 1969. she talked with Manson about killing an ac- quainlanct of hers who Uved in an ocean front apartment. Superior c.owt Judge Charles H. Older d~11isaed seven counla of murder against the 1lender young woman wbo said she: •ent wtlh Patricia Xttnwlnkel, Susan Atkins artd Olarles "Tez" Wauon to the Tate house, then accompanied MaNOn, MW Krenwinkel, Miss Alk1ns and Leslie Van Houten to the Leoo LaBl1nca home the fo.llowi.ng night. #'because Charlie told me to." During three weeks o( Intensive quta- liooing, the pigtailed molher of two has stuck to her version of what happened on the nights of Aug. a and 9, 1969. Although she must return to the wilneM stand for further redlrtct Cl• amination, and still mmt be cro.u-ex· amlned again by each o[ the four defe~ lawyers, l\tn. Kasabian no longer will spend her nights in jail. formal dlsmiMal of the charges took place in the judge's chaIQ.be.n before court resumed Thunday, but under ques- tioning by Ronald Hughes, Mrs. Kasabian told !he jury she had been released. "They teU me I am 1 free woman, but death penalty," she said. She spent the noon hour in the heavily guarded ninth floor of the Hall of Juslice, as usual, but her hmband, Robert. and a friend. Charles Melt.on, were permitted to join her and her att.rneys for lunch. When court recessed for ~ night, she was taken to the basement of the building, and driven out of an un- derground tunnel in-a turquoise sedan. She sat in the back seat, nenked by her attorneys. and she made no respoose to the aome 50 photographers a n d I I' bystandert who watched her I.eave. ''She can't quJte realize it yet," lawytr RonaJd Goldman ukt ••She knows sbe la free, but she doesn't yet feel the en- joyment we hope she will rxperience later.'' She wu to Illy at a private home, under protective polke guard, uatU her testimony WU compLeted. Sen. Goldwater Oaims Plane Was Not ffi., Sen. Barry M. Goldwater said today it wu neither he nor hla airplane that bun- ed homes in the takeoff palh of Orange Cowlly Airport Sunday night. And he sakl he can prove il The senator's name and plane were connected with the inctdent Monday night when Newport Beach City Councilman Milan M. Dostal publicly complained of a small jet that took off so low, ''it almost came through my window." An avid. airport critic, Daniel Emory, who was in the audience, although claim- ing to be one of Sen. Goldwater's most ardent supPoJ"ten, tatUed on the Arizona Republican, saying he had seen the craft and that it belonged to the senator. Sen. Goldwater said this morning, "I no longer o-wn an airplane." H DAILY "LOT 3- Police Say Girl's Belt Not Enough A Santa Ana police olllcer calltd ., make an lndecent upolllfe arrest.In a local theater Thurlday night decided that a belt around the aispect'I waist was DOC sufficient aUl're. Poll<e told ll1e mry lbit way : An anonymous caller tokl poHce that li ve nude enttrtainment was beint: of. fered a\oog with drinks at the .Fant.aly Movie Theater, 320 S. Main St. 1"o pla!nclolhes ollicers respondtd lo the report and found out that it was lno deed true. Thq saw Jonnie Lee Tolbert, ?7, ol Hollywood daocing mid< .. lbe movie house stage. The undercover men, JaUsl'~ that they had seen enough. called unllonned officer Paul Gregoire to make lhe arresl At this point, theater manager Ruben L. Smith, 31, of Costa Mesa, became alarmed and rushed up to Miss Tolbert and shouted. ''get something on." She calmly snapped on a belt, tbe. undercover officers reported. Officer Gregoire arrived in due time and arrested P.1W: Tolbert on indecent es:· posure and lewd conduct dl&rges and Smith on aiding and abetting the &a.me. Barry Hits Dawdlers WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz)., has accmed Secate Democrats of dawdling oo the $11.J billion military hardware bill to 1et mu-- imum campaign publicity. On Ch let dealerS- are having a clean-up on Impalas. l.al'Jllt pdced ful ....... You'll never have a belier chance to save money on the cars that are already lowest priced of their kind. So if you've been waiting for an opportunity IO buck lhcinOationary' !rend, save YoWSClf plenty of money now on Impala, world'• most popular car. Clearance savings now. You're on • . y· ngs .11ne. I • ' , " .. -.. --· • • • . ' ' ! • " • • • ' .. • • • • • • • • • • • . . ' • • . • • : • • • • • ( I· f. • • . • j Th• Woman'• LiberaUoa Fron! d claim anolber milestone. er schoolgirl tennis flash yn11 Al>llea, now Mrs. MlcNel loy, 21, was named coach of the Uy tennis team Wednesday at Mary's College, Mol'aga, Calif. etic Director Don McKllllp he believed SL Mary's would lbe only );CAA school with a an coaching a men's team .. • The Covnit'tl. England coun- cil hGI cha.t1Qed its mind about offering jTe< b., travel lo efd. .CrJJ peMoners and decided to 'keep tht one ~nny sptclol fart o council spoksman saJd 1t had recdotd scor11 of an9111 lt&ten from t:ldeTl!I re sidents insisti11g on paying thtir oum way. Ht 1 IOid a poU of old peoplts' clubt confirnvd t.Mv did not want jrtt: trow:l. • ~ress Y vettt Mimieux, a;tive i'r&- lpldtift contt1"00tion, cuddles Bengal filer and ;aguar cubs at tht: Los An.· !ti.ea: Zoo. She is campaigning to 111· elude the two species in the ntw Imo ilat hens importation. of p1lti of Cl dtrt.ain number of wild animal.I. t • t~Gillingham, England police are king into goUers' complaints at a brown mongrel dog harasse1 em on lhe 13th green of the Gill· ham Golf Club, A club spokes· !an said the dog runs out o! the sbes, bites players on the seat of cir pants and disappears. He said ght players. including two women tpve been bitten in the past 10 days d required shots. "The dog to select his target very y," be said. • • Bournemouth, Engl.and police have ,womed beachgoeTs to be· WO.Te of a gang of thieves who rptcialize in stealing tToUSetl 1ohile-thei r own.t rs are fn the water "theu don't want tht: clothes ." a police spo~sman sakl.. "But they take tl1ept to get the money insi.dt." : . : Red China's Premier Chou En--l1 i 1;1ys the future belongs to the ~ung people of today's world and 400 it doesn't necessarily mean IJlakiD~ and remaking the revolu· qon. •The revolutionary struggle if. a personal ~lruJ!;gle," <?hou was ~oted as sa~ m an interview ip the newsaper France-Soir. "One qan commit errors, change and p~ess. The important thing is to l'md lhe right road, the happy med· iµnt.'' rrld>I, AuiJUl 14, l 97G 15,000 to Lea.Ve U.S.-Cuts Troops In Saigon Area SAIGON (AP) -Amerlcao lorct8· in the Saigon military rqion are being cQt by about 15,000 men as the result of a major reshuffling of allied units and Ute transfer of a large base to the Viet- namese, offici.al 80UrOeS di:lclosed•today. 1be sourct:s said two full brigades plus other units would be shipped home from Saigon and the 11 sumxmding provtnota of the 3rd Military Region. Men who have not compleled mast of their 12-mOnth t.ours in Vietnam will be transferred to other units. Security regu!Atiom prohibit publica· lion of the units to be sent back to the United States until the U.S. Command annoW>C'e! them . Elsewhere in the war- Small ambush actioll.!l and mopping up operatioM were reported along the northern coast where U.S. and South VieUwnest forces clalmed they engaged more than 300 North Vietnamese in fighting Wednesday and Thursday. One harassing action waa reported in Cambodia. Military spokesmen In Phnom Penh said the Viet C.Ong and the North Vietnamese apparently were occupied with integrating newly arrived rein- forcements. Gen. Creighton W. Abrams returned from convalescent leave wilh his iamily in Thailand and resumed bis dutiea as commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam • His gall bladder was removed in Japan July 3. In the major reshuffle of allied forces tn the Saigon region, all American com- bat units except one brigade have been pulled back from the Cambodian border. Most of them have been moved to the northeast and east of Saigon, inland lrom lhe Sooth China Sea. South VietoameSe forces have replaced the Americans along the border west and nortbwtlt of Saigon to block North Viet- namese inftltraton, and the Tay .Ninh bue camp SS miles northwest ot the capital has been turned over tD the South Vietnamese 18th Infanlry Division. Only a few hundred U.S. support troops re- main at Tay Ninh, which once was the base for two American brigades. While the South Vietnamese army car- ries out the blocking role in and along the Boy, 10, Spends 5 .Days .in Wilds, Tells His Sto1·y LAS VEGAS, N.M. (UP I) -An Albu· querque youth found in rugged mountains t.old bis story today from a hospital bed. Miles to the south, authorities searched for a Texas boy lost for seven days in cold forest near Ruidoso, N .M. The nightmare for 10-year-old Joe Grady of. Albuquerque e11ded Thursday when he was found after five days in the Santa Fe National Forest near here by a man he never knew. In the Lincoln National Forest 125 miles southwest of here, 16-year-old Leslie Hamrick of Odessa. Tex., was still lost. A party of 2:>0 was making a search. Grady was found about two miles from where he wandered away from com· panions while on a hike last Sunday. "l slept all the time." he said. "l saw a rabbit and lolr; of other ani mals. I wa}i scared. When 1 was sleeping, I dreamed a bear was going W get me." Grady. sunburned rrom exposure to five days of sun and his arms scratched from the underbrush, said he once dreamed of walking to Las Vegas and "getting a bunch of jobs lo take a bus home to Albuquerque." l{e said he lost hls boots last Monday when he was sleeping. "They rolled down a hill. J ~pent most of the next day look· ing for them. Jt was fu n. though." ·He told how he went without water ex- cept when he stumbled across a high mountain stream. lie said he went without food. however, because he was afraid the berries would make him sick, frontier, lhe prolecllon of lhe u million penons ll'lin& in vUiaus •nd hamle.ts in the region ta assl.gnedlo the militiamen of the Territorial Forces and People'• SeU-Defeme unita. Industrial Output Shows Healthy Rise WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixotl ad· ministration says there ls aome evidence to indicate a revival may be taking place in lhe aatioo's sluggish business and iir dw;trlal acUvJty. Figures made public 'niursday showed that industrial production -one or the key gauges of the economy -registered an increase in July after a decline of three mo11ths, and that personal income or Americans also rose. In addition, revised figures on national output of goods aAd services for the second quarter of the year showed a larger gain than previous estimates. On the other hand, the biggest federal deficit for a single quarter since World War Il was recorded during the April- June period, but officials said this was not unexpected due to increases h1 Social Security and big federal employe pay raises. Assistant Commerce Secretary Harold Passer said that quota waa viewed by acme economist& as the period when· the economy was "'bottoming out.•• "The evldeace so far for July indicates l50me kind of upturn 11 taking place," Passer said. He added that while the statistics did not provide the basis for concrete conclusions, ••we can take ea- couragement we have seen the bottom" of the economic downturn. industrial production rose 0.2 percent tn July and b~come of individuals in· creased '3.5 billion over June. The Grou N atiaul Product for the se- cond quarter was estimated at an annual rate of '971.1 billion, up $1.1 billion on an adjusted basis -with effects of inflation removed -from the first quarter. The previous estimate was that the "real" rise over the January-March period wu ~million. The govemmeot reccrded a $1C.3 j)Ulio1 deficit in rpendllig over income bl the se- cood quarter, with fl2 billion of ll blamed lo t........ in Social Security and govemmeat eioploye pay. Jackson Deaths Blamed on Bias JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -Th< btad of President Ni1on'1 Commission on Cam- pus Unreal says racism· was involved in the police fusillade at Jackson State College when two black youlhs were kill· ed . William W. Scranton, former governor of Pennsylvania and com· mission chaimian, summed up his views .after a three-day hearing on the May l ~ shooting at the predominantly Negro col· legc. "l think it's very clear that racism is the major problem involved in the Jackson State incident," be said. "I don't mean to ill.!linu&te that there ia: no racism anywhere else ••• but it seems to be outstandingly so here, from the tesUmony we have heard," Scranton ad· ded. Some othen on the nine-member com- mi~sion were oul3pokenly critical of the police volley, which sent some 250 rifle and shotgun rounds into .a girl!' dormitory. :.Hot Spell Grips W. Coast Most of Nation Enjoys Warm, Summer Weather Clllllornlo .. ,..,. ~1111 row cloVIJ• •rid '°' 11- -"' tiotiit. Verl1ble cclov* fflr-h .. fllrfty mw11111,._ encl _,, .,Jtfl .at!tnlf tftfr~ 9M f\ltfllM 1~11~ dtn"-'t, Llttlt ....,..,r1tur• th•""· LO$ ... NOl\.IS ANO VICINITY - Melt!Y j•ir 111rwtll "'~ avt Ml(Jlr •rtY -111"' (otlltl filf, \.lttle ~Ill,, dlllltt. OWNITll'lt IO'Jl'I '1. HltM a H ... ltt WM ttM hot..., *"" Ill tl'lt nttlttl Tllll....,.., wl!'ll ,. rM4J119 tt llG, lrnperlll tolkiwttll •flt! A n11·J<j. 1'WI" or '"· -c-.i . Ma111'1' f1lr tt>M'I'. llfM vtr"•1• wlr>1111 111t111 •lld morn!,.. 1\9Un '*-'"' _,.,.l'f I •o IS .,.It. In .ntrMont locNv Ind StillfO&)', Hilll toclll' '9. C..ltl fMIPW•iw.t ,..,... '""" " to 7&, l~ltllll 'lemptrl!\rtCS fl~ from •1 • ti. w.llr fcmNrtlw. n. 81111, Moon, Ne• l'JUOA'I' $~ '""' '' '' , ... ""'· ,,, Stcllnd low ):JO t .rn. 2.4 i AT UllOA'I' F l.,1111•1'1 , ,, t .JO t ,,.., •.~ ,lrtl •ow .......... J.ao '""· .1.1 ~ hkri. ............ 11••·'"-, .. Temperature• All111111tt.._ ... net.or.•• A!l•n!1 lllM"Mrdl '"" Chi~ Clfle:ln111!1 Cit'V111rld ...,_ Otilrolt Eur•• i:ort Wot II! '™M Httlftl H11t11IOI! IC"ln••I (11¥ l.•1 ""'' U.Allftl" N11-111Mc11 MllwflAff ~ ... -ls Ntw Oi'iMM _v .. Otki.l'd °"""' 1"1Mjlt0blh ,.l'lli.t&ltl,.i.11 l"ltl.Wrtll """"hi l'Of't!ffld llllflllllff ·-5ttr•"""IO "· l.111111 S,1lt L•kt City S,411 0'-to " " ~ .. " " .. " N 1' T I! 41 ,0: .. " " " ~ " ff " .... 1e1 " .. " .... tt m lOI 1"t •• ... .. . " .. " .. " n .. ,, ,, u " .. .. .. fl n .... '°' " " " 107 ') 101 • " " .... " m " m " " u J1 UPI T•lel>Ml9 CAMP VISITOR Pat Tries Sweatshirt Summer Camps Host Fh·st Lady In Maryland BAINBRIDGE, Md. (AP ) -Firsl Lady Pat Nilon admired freshly caught crabs and shook hands with wet swimmers on a tour of two summer campt for inner city cblldren. "l hope they grow and grow -we need more of them," she said of the camps, run by Baltimore and Washington recrea- tion departments for children age 10-19 with the help of federal funds and an assist from U.S. military personnel and their facilities. A 200-mile helicopter trip on a hot, sun- ny day ThW'sday, took Mrs. Nixon to a day camp at the Bainbridge U.S. Naval Training Center where every week 600 Baltimore city youngstere get a chance to come to camp every day to swim in the ~:;re·: ~lri1!c~1ia~aa;t enjoy f1J11, The trip also i.Qcluded the District of Columbia Recreation camp at Cornfield Harbor, where 120 different Washington youngsters go every week for a taste of camping and tents alongside the Potomac river. Mrs. Nixon enthusiastically greeted 1oores of youngsters, ate in the messhall with them and even tried her hand at hammering a nail at a tentsile under con· structiOn. ''You need a bigger hammer because you're missing all the time," one camper observed. Later she went to the water's edge to a spot where youngsters were crabbing. She told them "crabs are my favorite seafood." After the day's tour Mrs. Nixon said she was mOfit impressed with "the happy children" she met. She d e c I a r e d , "Anything can be accomplished if we work together." "J came because J'm C'Onccrned for those angels," said Mrs. Nixon. Relations Resumed VATICAN CITY (UPI} -The Vatican announced today it is re-establishing full diplomatic relations with Yugosla via, the {irst such move with any ComrnunlsL regime in Easl Europe. • Scientist Says ' Gas -Dump Safe WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Navy oceanographer told a federal judge today that he could see no danger to tither human or marine life from dumping of nerve gas '!coffiils" in the AUantic east of Cape Kennedy, Fla. '!lie witness at a hearing before U.S. District Court Judge June L. Green on a legal move to block the dispoaal wu Dr. Note Found, Hin ts M urde1· Of Diplomat MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) -The Uruguayan government today studied an unauthenticated message found in a Buencs Aires cafe which indicated the Tupamaro guenillas might murder the Brazilian dlplomat they kidnaped. The message made no mention of American agronomist Claude L. Fly. who was kid- naped last Friday. Officials in Montevideo would not con- firm the authenticity of the note found in the Argentine capital 150 miles up the Plate estuary. But it contained language similar to that used in JO previous messages from the urban Tupamaros. and it was delivered in the same maMer -left in the rest room of a cafe. The communique said Dan A. Mitrione, t~ k.idnaped American police adviser '~hose body was found Monday. had been sentenced to death for "collaborating with the forces of repression ." It said the process of "revolutionary justice" for Brazilian Consul Aloysio Mares Dias Gomide, 41 , could be halted if the Uruguayan government released about 150 prisoners demanded as ransom by the Tupamaros. An earlier message, relayed to authorities Tuesday, said Diis Gomide and Fly, a 65-year-old CQIISultant working for the Agriculture Ministry, both were in good heal th and had not been sentenced yet. The later note said the Brazilian represented "one of the bloodiest dic- tatorships in America, whose tortures and assassinations go to such limits that they have been denounced by the justice commission of the United Nations." The note said the goyerl)JJlent bears "total and ab&0lute responsJbillty~ for Mitrione's murder. '11le goverment has refused to bargain with the guerrillas, maintaining the prisoners whose release is demanded are criminals rather than political detainees. Some 12,000 police and soldiers con· tinued their search o( the Uruguayan capital for traces of the ltidnapers and their two captives. About 80 sU!peCl.s were rounded up Thursday. The kid- napers have warned that if their hiding place is discovered, both their hostages will be killed immediately. Torhn·e Slaying Jury Deliberates ANN ARBOR. Mich. (UPI) -A jury of middle-aged men and women today begins deliberating the fate of John Norman Collins, the former ·student charged with torturing and killing a coed . Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge John W. Conlin was to instruct the seve.n women and seven men in the law tltis morning. Two of them will be elimineted by lot. For a guilty verdict, the re- mainder must deicde unanimously they believe Collins killed Karen Sue Reineman in his uncle's basement more than a year ago. Conrad Hll&O Cheek, head of the Cllemlcal Oceanography Branch o! lhe Naval Res<arth Laboratory. • 'r..utying in support of lhe Army's J>l,an lo dµmp lhe 418 , •• "co!linl" in tbrte-mUe-deep water, Cheek described the arta 282 miles east of the Flcrida coast u "Quite safe, except for any organlsms in the immediate vicinity of the point .of release of tbe gas." He aaid the ma;rl.ne population there was very small. A Point that clearly dlaturbed Judie Green Tfiursday-tbe Po&'ible dangu if the gas rockets exploded rrom the deep i!lea pressure when they reachtd bottom -was raised with Cheek .. He responded: "There is no danger occurring at the bottom, and a bubble rising to lhe top," he said. He ad(.!d, "I doubt that any bobble ffrom a explO!lon) would last more than a fraction of a second." He explained that he felt water pressure would stifle any bubble quickly. -,u the vats exploded or were crushed by the water pressure, Cheek testified the action of the salt water would rende'r the gas harmless. One Of the 418 "coffins" conlains a type known as VX gas, even more lethal than the other -known as GB. It wouJd take somewhat longer for the VX to be dissipated, Cheek said. "Within two weeks, we wouldn't have to ¥.'Orry about the G 8 at all," he said. "l_t would all be gooe." "What about the VX?" Judge Green asked him. "If you release it !!lowly enough. it· will not have any measureable ecological ef- fect," Cheek replied. "Jf there is an ex· plosion. I would prefer it at 16,000 feet, because the amount or water to be af- fected would be less, and the biological population smaller." An Army attorney told the judge he sensed a concern on her part over selec- tion of the disposal site. "That is cor· rect," the silver·haired jurist com- mented. The lawyer then asked Cheek if he felt there was any danger to hwnan beings at the site when the gas was dumped. "Not that I can see." he said, adding that any bubble would rise very little before being stilled from the pressure. Senate Override Of School Bill .. Veto Expected WASHINGTON (AP)-The Senate ls ex- pected to follow the lead of the House and ov~de Presidenl Nixon's veto of a $4.4 billion education bill. It would be Nixon'• second such defeat this year. The Senate vote is expected Tue~ay or Wednetday. The House overrode the veto Thursday by a margin of 2.89-114, 20 votes more than the necessary two-thirds ma- jority. But In a hlstory·making day of con- sidering two presidential vetoes, the I-louse sustained Nixon's rejection of an omnibus $18 billion appropriations bill carrying funds for housing, veterans, the space agency and a score of other pro- grams. The vote on that one was 203--195, a ma· lority but 63 short of twcrthirds. The second House vet.o ended any chance for the omnibus measure and madt it necessary for the AppropriaUons Committees to go to work to draft an· other one. Starving l{ids' Mom Held 'There is some sentiment at the Capitol for deeper cuts in the space program to preserve the extra funds provided in the original bill for veterans and for !iuch programs as urban renewal. Republican leaders notM the Senat e passed the bill 88.0 in agr'4!ing privately with Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield that the measure would be enacted into Jaw <>Yer Nixon's objections. DETROIT {UPJ) - A pregnant moth er oI 12 \vas arrested Thursday after nlne of her children were found suffering from malnutrition. Police arrested Mra. Bessie Carter, 37, for investigation of cruelty to children following an invesUgation starled when her son, Tyronne. 8, was found UR· conscious at home. The women's division said his 7·year· old sister, Regina, apparentlg was in a stupar from hunger. Police said both had welts over much of their bodies and may have been beaten. Tyronne weighed only 25 pounds when tie was admitted to the hospital and Regina 23 pounds, police said. After the arrest, f!Ve other children were treated for malnutrition and taken into protecii\'e care. Women's division Sgt. Janice Tuttle said the other children wert "all in about the same condition." The others were An- nie, 14, Alice, 12, Theresa. 10, Sandra, 5, Yvette. 4, Diane, 18 montM and Matthew. 9 months. The two youneest remained in the hospital. Sgt. Tuttle said the of.her chl!dren wert vi'ith their grandmother • Nixon objected to the bill because it ex- ceeded budget recommendations by $541 million. 'Ibe bulk of the increases are for two proarsms which the Saiate long has sup- ported. One is tbe Elementary and Secondary Education Act designed to improve tducation for children from p o o r families. Tht other ls the impacted areas pl'f)gram witich provides federal grants for school districts overcrvwded because of nearby federal lnsta11ations. Cash Counsels Con •Grads~ Singer's Wife Gives W omert .Words of Advice An.ANTA {UPl)-Johnny Cash came to Atlanta's Municipal Audi torium Thurs· day to sint before 700 convicts, each about to be meased In a new statt- bought blue suit wUh $25 in his pockeb. Before he waa th.roulht the country muslc al.ar and his singing wife, June carter, of£ertd words of advice for tht sevnl dozen wives sitting beside their lnm11te husbands. "To make a good man and l.o ktcp ::r. good man, you ha\'e to have a good wom· iln," said Cash, ffe called June onto the stag('_ as evidence of what he was talking brought cheer• from lbe pri>onm by joining Cash in a UVeJy rtndiUon or "Jackson," a song 1bou:t gttting married "in a fever lx>tter than a pepper sprout." "TeU the wives what they need , to know," cash told her. MJss Carter, 1 leading comedienne on the country mu.sic cltcuit before abe mAI'• ried Cash. appo&<:ect retucW>t to talk serious. Cash urge.d her on. ding over there?" She pointed to Sheri!! Ralpb Jones of Lafayette, Ca., who jailed C11h in 1967 for illegal poaH118lon of drup. This was one of the rougher spots in Cash·s loogllme blUlt wllh • pep pill babll lhat Mlsl C.rlar helped him win. "We're not &oln.C to tali about thaL,11 aald Caah. "It I can speak to the women." Mis., carter went on, "1'd like to tell them to speak kl.nd1y always. Be klnd. Se charlt.ablt. Sc:ttaming won 't hel p." 011ier 1111"' i-'""'41'1' •M ..,._, m~-"""""' !OltfV i,ft:1ualld1 L.Ol'lt ,,.,,, •l ,t. ,,,.,." Monlu n.n, Blll'MM n- ti. Mt, WU-Q4J, f'~ll IU.-106. ltflltrtlet ts."' Ptlrn Sltrlf\ti 10.S 1~. l•tr1illttcl 1u.1a1. $111 Olfot '°""• ""'' .. ,..r. , ... , .. 5~ k>w ,.,, 0"' ,,0 r....11 •i.•1, . .,~11'1 ,,,, '''1 '"'· $•11 '••ncl-&.11•• .. ,... SNl!!t • ~ .... W1JlllM!oll .. ~ " " " . .ns about. "If you ever had bard timee. your heart goes out to otben who had hlll'd limes, .. Miss Carter Aid. "We.'ve bad some hArtMlmes and some short tlmet. Jn Jact .. lohn, didn't you have one of your short times with that Sheriff J6ft8 ttan: She f.AIL!ed· Cl.sh whispered lo her "Yeah. ' she .igrced. "Kissing and hug: &Ina helps. ft helps a lot" MOM IUSft I. h JO,l!'I, kh );ti 1,11'1, Miss Carter, flesh.ing a toothy smile, ' " ' \ ' • 1 ,, JCDaAN MASTINOI• MJ...ldl ,,1'tp, Allfll.ll 14. 1'11 M I'-It Rare Fi 11 Wines Fund Rare wines, exotic cheese and crusty tidbits ol French bread await area residents who attend a wine.tasting party being sponsored by the Women's Division. Fountain \1alley Chamber of Commerce. The organization wiU sponsor the benefit, beginning at 8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20, in the city's civic center. The public is invited to attend, and tickets will be $1.25 per per· son. All proceeds wi!J be used to support the group's ongoing project of aiding needy families in the city. Funds for food, clothing and other necessitieS are provided year-around rather than just during holidays and are made available when a family's breadwinner is temporarily out of work because of illness or job layoff. Serving as general chairman of the Clearing House project is Mrs. Bobby Palmer, and co-chairman is Mrs. Jack Boydstun. The Women 's Division recently hosted a membership swim coffee to acquaint area women with the work being done by the or- ganization which celebrated its Cirst birthday last March. Hosting the event in her home was Mrs. Larry Riley assisted by Mrs. Don Blakely, membership chairman. The group has divided into teams to recruit new members, and the losing team will host the winners during a luncheon at the con- clusion of the membership drive. Membership is open to any woman with an interest in the civic agd community activities in the city, according to Mrs. William Hayes, first vice president and dean of chairmen. In addition to active membership, an associate membership now is available for women who would like to contribute their support but are unable to actively participate in the organization's activities. Meetings will resume at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 16, in the civic center. i Indian Maidens Plan Menu : Many tribes will gather peaceably at noon Sunday, Aug. 23, when the Pueblo 'and Chippewa tribes of Fountain Valley Indian Maidens host a family picnic rhetween noon and 4 p.m. Packing their basket are (left to right~ Maureen :Heckman (Starshine), Annette Heckman (Shining Star) and Jacke1' Maooog· ian (Raindrop). In addition to a least there will he games for young alJd old : with ribbons going to first through third place winners. I PARTY PLANS UNCORKED -The clearing house, a continuing project to support families in temporary need, will benefit when the Women's Division, Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce, sponsors a wine-tasting party Thursday, Aug. 20. Don Blakely, -vice president o{ the chamber, plans to sample the wines, cheeses and fresh French bread being served by Mrs. B.W. Trundell (left) and Mrs. A.G. Fonda, t.l'easurer oft.he Women's Division. , Surf So11nds ·Tennis Motto: Players Beware By JODEAN HASTINGS IT WAS A SMASllJNG shol June (Mrs. Thoma:s) Denman delivered on Che tennis court bright and early one morning. The only problem was that instead ci connecting with ·the tennis ball, she connected with Ile call of partner Pal (Mrs. Joim)· Swain. Undallnted although hob- bling am.md on cnrtcbes,-Pat joined other' members of Ule Huntington Harboor B e a c h Club for one of the year's moot unusual parties. Regular employes were given the night off and an authentic Italian buffet was prepared by members. Serving as maitre de bole\ was;ut Stein, and performing KP dlores along with Pat (of· ficial lettuce chopper) were Ed and Dorothy DeM\Jlis, Dorothy Parker, Cathy lsaet, Connie Robinson and Millie Kanter. Guests were greeted by hostesses Henrietta Sammann, Judy Martin, Bev Testa, Delores Virtue, R o n n i e Marshall, Sue Ekberg, Lu Kava.sch. Nancy Thell, Gay Stein, Bea Cuthbertson, Boo- nie Killian and Pat Byrnes. FRIENDS FROM all .,.,. the Or1qe Coast gatl.....t In the Fountain Valley home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim MacMillan to surprise new ·parents Mr. , and Mrs. Pete Nix with a baby shower for the couple's recently adopted daughter, Sandra, 8-weeks-<>kl. Both the Nikes and MacMillans are new residents in the city, and visiting the Nixes to welcome their new . granddaughter are Mr:. and Mrs. Bob Nix from Elkhart, Ind. BACK VISITING ttteir old Fountain Valley friends are Olin and Bunny H a r d y , Barbara, 16, and Tim. 18, who formerly attended Fountain Valley High School. The Hardys, houseguests or Dick and Barbara Gillum, now are living ln and thoroughly en.joying Atlanta, Ga. BUMY, past president o( the Fountain Valley W om an' s Club. was guest or honor at a party hosted by Sh~ley (Mrs. William) Pulford. Gathering to talk over old times were Barbara Gillum, Nancy Mowery, Jean Moss, Janice Short, , Dorma Booth, Greta Murphy, Joyce Erwin, Donna Allen, Jamie Derington and Harriet Sullivan. DEPARTING FROM smog, traffic, rushing and civiliza- tion were Lloyd and Judy Basil « Huntington Beach, who spent a few days camping in Sequoia National Park. • Island 'Atmosphere for Love~in Zeta Beta Chapter meinbers, Epsilon Sigma Alpha, will honor their hu g. bands and guests during a Luau Love-in taking place in the Huntington Beach home of Mrs. Guy Langlois at 7:30 p. m. Saturday, Aug. 29. Getting in the mood for the first rushing social of the year are (left to right) Mrs. J . Nor- man Thibault, Mrs . Langlois and Mrs. Thomas E. Browning. Fishnet, flowers and flying fish will set the stage for a group of Hawaiian dancers who will entertain at 9 p.m. Mutiny Ahead for Captain Who Allows Crew No Leave DEAR ANN LANDERS: We are two 1eenagers who need you to spe.ak up for us. Grandpa is 88 years old. We love him very much bot his mind wanders and he's like not all there. 1'be doctor said Grandpa would be better on tn the old folks home "'an at our house because Mom can'l give him tbt kind of care be needs. So three weeb ago Mom and Dad tnolt him to a nice place where the people are very friendly. Mom m&kes my brother and me (Wf!"' are 15 and J6) go with her to visit Grandpa every evening after supper. We wouldn't mind a couple nights a ANN LANDERS ~ being respectful and afler Graudpa Is pte we will be glad we were IO good to him. Will you speak up for UI? Mom is all the time· banding us your column when you agree with her. -WHEELING, W. VA. • -aloq .. wllal '"" -lldtn ... duly '11111. on the way home just for himself. You call that advice? ,.... In oor family if you are old enough to read a newspaper you are old enough to leave it Jn good condition for the next person. Common courtesy and re!pOCI for olllers should be learned early. A red ink underlining pen for marking ankles to be torn out later is cheaper than a 3eCOnd newspaper -and leas trouble, too. Anyone in our family who wants to tear out an item can wait until the nut day. wrong -and that'• roai,bly lbe humber tbat complained about mJ an!wer. I pteH temporary tnsaoily. DEAR ANN LANDERS' Please !ell women who go to bargain sales not to say to a person who Is looking at a sale item, "If you don't want that J would like to buy it." This does one of two things -both of them bad. It makes the woman who Is considering the item more eager to buy tt thao 1he would ordl~rUy bci Or it maket: her !eel guilty l! 5h4 '°'' buy It. I've be~n looking for. Hurry up and make up your mind." I am stuck with this "bargain!' and can'l return it because it was on sale. I could wring that woman's nttk fer what she did to me. Please print - MINUS $33. DEAR MJNlJS1 SM dido'! de uyWq to you. YIU did U II yoon<IJ. Coaslder It a $.13 ~IOfl and weu u.e drea to the netl bargalll aale. u a reminder. .. \ week, Ann, but this every-night routine DEAR WREEJ.S: I CU'l see that it make1 much 1tase for • CCMl)lie of ttenagen lo go v-1111 • non-compos grandpa every nlgbl of the week. Twk:tJ DEAR ANN LANDERS' I couldn't believe my eyes when I read your answer lo the rattier who signed himself "Second Cl.us Citizen.•• It seems by lhe time he aat down to read the oewJP8per it was ripped apart. H.ls wife had tom out a recipe, his daughter ctlpped your column, his mother-in-law went for the horoscope, etc. You told him to aolve the problem by plcl<lni up a paper Where were YOU. Ann Landen. when that column appeared? -DlSAP- POINTED · YestcrdA)' I paid $33 for I drtss. 1 didn't need and would not have purchased ll It a very pushy woman !\ad not stood at my elbow mal<!ng tueh remarks as "11lat'1 euctly whai What awah1 Yllll on the other •Ida of Ult martlag11 vtU! How can YoU be sure your marriage wllJ work! Read Ann Landen' booklet "Marriage -What ro E•pect." Send your request to Ano Landers In c11rt ol the: DAILY PJLOT, enclosing 50 cent.I in coin and a Iona. slamped seU·•dd!<sstd envelope. .. _ is like spacing us out. It's bortng tu l!il in a room and not be able'" lo carry on a conversation. Grandpa doesn't even know who we art. Mom uys it ii 1 wttk 11 plenty. I ltope your Mont- ..Ut recoaslder and stop drags!Dc yoa • DEAR DISAPPOINTED' I wa1 In Athu1 but t wrote tbe advice before t kit. FlftJ milllO'I ftadtn cu'& be • I ' .. ·' .. .. . • • .. • • ·~ • • ' • • • • • ! • • • • f. ' . • i .. ' • • I • ' • ~I ' ' ' • i: • I ( r-~ • ·! e ·: ' • ~ . . • . •, ' • ~ • ~ • • • ' ' ' . ·: .. ' • .. . ' l ' • i , k • ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I ! • ' ' ' ' . ' ' • ' . ' ' ' . • • • • • • • • ' > . • . . • . • • • 14 . DAILY PILOT Friday, A.u911st 14, 1970 Libr~ry T rustee-aoard . ' Elects New Chairman Servin& !he Newport Beach Ubruy Board ol Truste<s a< cbainnan will be Mrs. T. [)un.. can Stewart. Sbe is assumini duties from ~1n. Hancock Banning Ill, immediate past chairman. Mrs. Stewart WU president of tbe Friends ol the Library for 1959.$1. In this posllion, Peering Around RESIDING in Marin County are Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Dunbar (the former Mrs. Josephine Reid) who were married in the Laguna Beach home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wiley. The Rev. Ell s worth Richardson of the Noighbori>ood Congrega. tional Church performed the ceremony for Dr. Dunbar, formerly a prolessor of neural surgery at t b e University o f California Mec!Jcal Schoo!, and the new Mn. Dunbar. NATIONAL HONOR WU received by a Coata Mesa resi· dent for a poem she entered in the American P o e t r y League's annllll contest. Mrs. Magny L Jensen was among the top 12 winners for ber entry, ''To • Modern Xrittkoa:." ~etown Manor. 2101 JrL 'TUSTIN AVE. S.....AM North of 1Tih St., -... --""""1'l'S lNIG£S1' AMO MOST BEAUflflJL HOME OF Ethan"llA/lelt FURNITURE 8he WIS lllltnnnenlaJ In the campaign lo 'acquire the Corona dd 1o!ar Ubrary. She has been serv!iia the llbruy boord atnce April, t~. Otl>er 1lbraf1'.' ·trustoes fn. dude Mn. BarinlQ(, Cllarl.,. Sword, Roger · W. Hardacre and Dr. Thomaa A. Blakely. Mn. Marlin Sheely, city librarian, reports an 18.9 per- cmt increase in total books borrowed. fOi'. ~ Year, well above the average for 1 city. Tile figure repmeots JO books read per person. Families .may borrow 16- mm films and projecion, a new library service available through the film circuit of the Santiago Library System. Vows Said In Chapel Ceremony Suzanne Pauline Ball and James Michael Kempner ex. chaneed vows and riop before the Rev. Oiarles Smith ln the Calvary Olapel, Santa Ana. , The bride Is the daughttr of Floyd R. Ball ol Huntington Beach, who gave her in .mar- riage. Her mother is Mn. Ruby Ball of the 88!ne city. Her husband's parents are Mrs. George Mandarino of c.osta. Mesa and J u I i a n Kempner of SaH Lake City. Attending as maid of honor was Miss Cllristine Dales, while bridesmaids were the Ml""' Sandy Kempn<r, the bridegroom's aj,ster, Candy Hebel, Pat.rlcil Ball, the bride's sister and Tina Adams Best man mas John Yoak, and ushers were ~vid Hay s and Bill Richardsoo. Following a honeymoon in Mexico, the newlywed.5 will reside in Costa Mesa. Blue Star Mom• Huntington Beach Blue Star Mothers, · Chapter 2 stage meetings every Monday at 1:30 p.m. in Lake Park Clubhouse. Free Estimates RE· UPHOLSTER c-plete Seleetlon of Fa~ lnehldln!J: Linens and Velvets Mum Craftlmtn Always •• • C-KOSKI 1131 NEWPORT ILVD. .. • COSTA MESA (Hiit H•rMI') (SY.KOS.kEYl Pltone 642.-1454 '" ~ . ' '• '--' DAil 'f PILOT Pllfla by Gr .. Schneklff LAND OF OZ -Off to •ee the Wizard of Oz are Dorothy, played by Dee Dee Challis, 12 (fore~round ), and Toto, portrayed by Christopher Moore, 9, b-Olb of Laguna. They will JOm other cast members in a production of the famous tale Sunday, Aug. 16, at 4 and 7 p.m.1 sponsored by the Laguna Summer Tuealer Workshop. Lagunans Invited Yellow Brick Road Followed The Wizard of Oz will come to life in Laguna Beach on Sunday, Aug. 16, when children participating in the Laguna Summer 'I: h e a t e r Workshop take to the stage at 4 and 7 p.m . The production will be the final demonstration or the workshop's summer session in pantomine, improvisation , speech and technical training Mesans Recite Vows In Evening Ceremony Exchanging. wedding vow s and ri,nss before the Re.v. Jean Stewart in Anaheim Unity Olapel were Pamela Ann Chandler and I.A.yed Justin Hale. both of Costa Mesa. Parents of the newlyweds are Costa Mesans Mr. and Mrs. Garth Oiandler and Mr. and Mrs. Loyed Ha le. ror children and yout.lu from 6 through 18. Pyne castle in Laguna will be lhe setting for the play. for which no admission will be charged. The public is in· vited and donations will be accepted. Cast members include Dee Dee Challis as Dorothy ; Christopher Moore, Toto; Clare Glidden, wicked witch ; Leslie Lud~ick. scarecrow ; Robin Buck, tin woodman ; Wendy Yarnell, lion, and Michelle Vautier, Glinda ; SPECIALS FOR AUGUST The bride's grandfather. .. Oharles W. Grorr, also or Costa Mesa, gave her in mar- riage. Others are Michael Moore. jester; Kelly Clever, Margaret Mancuso and Michelle Ziegler, Oz crea tur e s; Charl es Rockwell, great wizard ; Chris Essley, guardian of the gates; Kenny Pound, Kelly Clever and Stephanie, Susan and Joan Mancuso, munchkins. Miss Gwen Yarnell. director or the workshop, is being assisted in the production by Miss Genene Kluck. NOW THRU AUGUST 31st Horoscope Virgo: New Outlook SATURDAY AUGUST 15 By SYDNEY OMARR DATING HL~TS: Uniasual places and sights are featured. Jet set is especially active. Discussions featuring greater 11elf-knowle<ige are In spotlight. Aquarius Is person- ality kid, while Capricorn gets tbe check. Pisces bu blind date, while Leo is conctmed about permaoency of relation- ship. Llbra is involved in ~ mantJe situatJoa, while Sagit- tarius does plenty of laugh- ing. Fine for cementing of friendships and realliallon of hopes and wishes. ARIES (March 21-APri l 19): Accent on new friends, a dynamic relation s hip . Personal magnetism soars. Nothing is apt to occur halrway -all the way or nothing. But give log ic equal time with impulse. 1·AURUS (April 20-t-.lay 20): Wise lo take safety precau- lions on lhe road -and at home. Emotional fuse of fan1i· !y members apt to be at short poil!t you antagonize, you wit ay the price. Slrive to be iplomatie. GEMINI (May 21-Junc 2Q): Reinforce beliefs t hr o u g h spiritual contemplation. You can have fun without going haywire. Means don 't toss principles aside. You have lo fa ce yourself m morning. CANCER (June 21-July 221: understanding. Matter which has been put aside reappear&. It concerns who owns wtiat -and what t.o dO with it. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Study Oaneer message. You get very little if insistent, domineering. Light touch is more apt lo achieve results . Concentrate on publiC' rela- tions. Improve image. VfRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Avoid strenuous act i vi l y , Catch up on health resolutions. New outlook could actually solve dilemma. Cement rela- lionstups with associates, c~ workers. LfBRA (Sept. 2HJ<I. 22): Children may prove ra1n- bu;1cllous. Remember your own age. Being a pal does not mike it necessary to act in foolish manner. Be fair but firm. Look out for safety hazards. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You could receive windfall. You are in expansive mood. Include family in en- tertainment plans. Have fun withoot being extravagant. News concerning property is fa vorable. SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22- 0ec. 21 ): Not so good for travel. You tend to overlook basic requirements. Take time to avoid scattering rorces . Relative who is insist.ent will respond to humor . CAPRICORN (Dec. ?2-Jan. 19): You may feel com- petitive. But it is best to be a good, attentive listener. All facts should be considered. There is change, but this does not necessitat.e travel. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2\l·Feb. 18): You get benefit of vigorous indlvidual who wants to aid cause. Expres s gratitude. Best to re1nain close to home base. Fine din- ner with family could smooth over dillert!'flces . PISC~ (Feb. 19-March 20): Some hazards are n o t l':Vidence. Be cautious. You could be victim of wishful thinking. Hold o!f on lm· portant decisions. One who carries rumors is irresponsl· ble. Resj)Ond accordingly. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have natural dramatic ability. But you someUn1es overplay yo ur hand. YOIJ are begirming now to build for future security -material and emotional." ,_lany comment on unusual quality of your voice. You love to be flattered, especially by opposite sex. Orders Ignored? NEW YORK (UPI) -How well do parents comply with doctors' orders regarding theil' children? Not too well , says Dr. Marshall H. Becker, pediatirc sociologist. Dr. Becker, who has con# ducted a study on the subject, said that parents have 1 "disturbing low rate or com- pliance" with the doctors' in· I slructions. F'riction with mate, partner erupts unless there is financial ,--------------------------------' 1 ' . Attending the pair a s matron of honor and best man for the evening ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Stephcnl-----------'-------------------------------- SUPER B VITAMIN ''A'' HAIN A wtll •rt•blithH. b.I. •"c.d fannul111, with ther• FISH Ul'l l OIL CAPSUW Stfflow111r Mt r9•rint 111p•11lic pott"ci••· 25,000 U.S.P. Unih JOT......_lef.S1.tt 100 CAl"SULU On111 Pound SPICIAL $1.S9 .... ,., Sl.00 ht1dllf 4t& &01'......_ .... SJ.4t SllCIAL $2.79 SPIC:IAL 79c SPECIAL 39c EL MOLINO WHEAT GERM FLAKES o•• '°""" _ .. G. •k .. . .. .. .. • . • • .. . .. SPECIAL 39c CAMU PLUS Calcium Lactate FAMILIA tO 1111li/111t-Th111 F111voritt A Millr So urc• C1lciurn I J "'· Ch•wtblt Yit111rn in "C'' 100 Toltleta, .... ''" F1rnouJ Bir(.h111rrnu111tli t•O MGS SP'ICIAL 49c c., •• r I UY THIM Hill AT 200 l•bl..,, a..-. Sl,4t 2 lottfel s300 ..... ,c. ... S'ECIAL $1.19 SPICIAL 69c VITAMIN "E" SPECIALS 100 1.u. -100 c•rsuLH -uG. "·" ..... ,, ... SPECIAL $1,98 , .. l.U. -100 CA,.ULU -UG ................ SPECIAL $3.59 SILICT CHAMOMILE TEA 1v .... ,_..,. 1t':.' .. ECIAL 79c HllNJCI Al'PLE JUICE Fro.111 '•r.di1• .. C•lif. lh•r• tu1't A11v l •tt•r .... $1.01 0... Helf W I•• SPICIAL 89c '1•1•tw ..... ....,1.,,,,,~0UAUTT la flle wtll•~I~. ' COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS Two Stores To Serve Yov Better COSTA MESA 210. E. 17th St. In Hlllgren Squore S4S.9S37 TUSTIN 1094 IRVINE BLVD. NEAR SAY·ON 544-7154 Case. Ushering guests to their seats was Ezra Briggs Jr. The new Mr. and Mrs. Hale, both graduates of Estancia lligh School, will live in Costa Mesa. She is attending a pro· fessional s'thool ror medical assistant~ and he has studied at Orange Coast College. Special wedding guest..~ were Dr. and Mrs. Guy 0. Becn1 . the bride's aunt and uncle. Precisionists Partic ipating An Air Force drill team will participate in the All Slates Festival al the Costa Mesa Park on Sunday, Aug. 16. hosted by Flight 12, Air 1''orce Mothers. The flight meets 1l p.m. on Thursday. 20 . in the California Fed al Sav· lngs 8nd Loan building, Costa Mesa . Interested persons may can Mrs. Waller Hurlado at ~g. 9748 or Mrs. Juanita Furrow at 546-3159. ORDER YOUR NEW CHEVY VEGA NOW FOR EARLIEST POSSIBLE DELIVERY. CON NILL CH IVROLlT 7121 H1rb9r llvcf, Ct1t• MUI .M .. 1200 ,, ,,. ··~· I . • I I r ' I . l I I I • Fo1111iain~ Valley . . VOL 63, NO. 194, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY;CALIF<>RNIA ~·-·FRJoA:Y,' 1'UGJJ ST ..... ) 970 TEN CENT$ • • u e~r ur _eac es Police San Marina Palace 'Not Nice Place' The Marina Palace Is "a nice, clean place" where Seal Beach parents can send their kids to a Saturday night dance without worrying. That, in essence, was the testimony of William (Bill ) Robertson, owner of the dance hall, who took the witness stand Thursday in ~ licellse hearing. But it wasn't the way the poUce depart· ment saw it, whose undercover officers testified by affidavit that the Palace - located near the western city limits - played host to youl$ who smoked mari- juana and popped pill!, police also alleg· Burke Warns Of Newport Route Block By ALAN DIRKIN Of tlle; Dloltr "'"" ll•ff Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- tlnP.>n Beach) fired' a Alvo acrou the San!JI Ana Rivel todoy warning Newport Beai;h ..t,bat it faces "an environmental catastrophe'' if the move to cut a slice out of the future Pacific Coast Freeway IU<neds. He asserted that four bridges wouJd have to be built aCl'OS.! Upper Newport. Bay and four six lane highways wouJd be. required in the freeway corridor to meet the traffic needs. It ls the strongest attack Burke has made so far against the bill authored by hJs Assembly colleague Robert Badham CR-Newport Beach). The bill has cleared the lower house and now awaits action by the Senate Transportation Committee. The bill, which would tenninate the freeway at Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach and restart it south of Corona del Mar, is due for a committee bearing Monday. Badham, however, has suc· ceeded in getting the hearing delayed three times. BUrke says the measure, intended to take the freeway out of Newport Beach. does not address Itself to an alternative solution to Newport's future traffic needs. After claiming that four highways and four bridges across the Back Bay would be required to carry the extra load , Burke says. "Some fine residential areas wouJd lie in the path of these highways and their bridges. It is a poor way to han· die the coastal traffic problem." "But even wit.bout this poor solution. this multi-highway system. Newport's surface streets -as well as those of Huntington Beach and c.osta Mesa - wou1d be filled with cars pouring from the Orange, Newport and Coroaa del Mar freeways , all of which will terminate in the coastal area," Burke said. "Not only would there be bottlenecks on these other freeways , but there would be auto congestion on local streets, particularly those of Newport, that couJd be characterized as an e n v I r o n· mental catastrophe. The impact on local buatnesses, as well as on residential (See FREEWAY, Pa1e %) Drum, Bugle Corps Sou ght A drum and bugle corps to carry the Huntington Beach banner has been pro- posed by a group of ciUzens who want to fonn the city's first such organization. They also want financial support from the city to the tune of A,000 to buy in- stnrments end a later budget of SU,000. Parks and Recreation commissioners expressed interest in the idea Wednesday night, but because of iNufficient time to ltudy the proposal could ll>t talce action on It. "We might st.art with 61 memben and grow to 3XI," Jim Senecal, a spokesman for the group said. "Th< publicity and honor ihe city would rcce.tve became. of this group wou1d make It a great investment," Senecal sald. Recreation commissioners will meet agaln Aug. 2&, at which time they will give more consideration to the of/er. The city council, however , has sounded the final note on-whether to support a drum •rad bugle corpe with city !undo. . ed couples occasionally fondled each other in dimly-lit booths. Robertson, 11, testified that be keeps a clean house where marijuana and other drugs are not allowed. "It's reprehensible to give thought to it," said Robertson who cla!Jnll to have never taken alcohol in his life and that there i.! "nothing better than good water." Hearing officer Dennis Courtemarche, who is also the city's interim city manager, suspended testimony from both sides until early next week when be ex- pects to render a decision on the license. Both sides reserved the right to re-open arguments if the decision does not sat.i!Iy them. On the stand for nearly 40 minute.!, Robertson, a forme r gambling en- trepreneur and operator of the A.ii Port Club poker palace during the early 60's, drew disapproval from several in the audience wben he declared, "Our reputa· tion and moral conduct is unquestion· able.'' .. He said that he and h.is crew of college- student monitors patrol the place regularly, warning the teens who violate the ~ and when necwary ejecllnl them 'from the premiseJJ. "! tell them ·-,... ... going to do that'•· bod to the way el clrup and smoking, don't do _It here." Robertson declared. M far as tbe alleged llDOl"OUI activJties or the patrons were concerned, Robertson said he would jokingly asJc: such couples if they had a "license to wreiUe." "That would usually break it up." At other times, he said, he would tell those who appeared old enough to "look for a motel." He said also that he invited mothers to inspect hls operation but advised that they doo't stay too Joog. "Young people don 't like senior citizem around." .As to the charge that penons older than 20 were allowed on the premise.s, Robectson replied that occasionally they were allowed tnsJde to listen but oot to dance. James Farquhar Funeral Rites Slat~d M~nday Funeral services will be conducted at ll a.ril. Monday at Smith 's Mortuary, 627 Main St., Huntington Beach, for Jamei Shaw Farquhar, publisher of the Hun- tington Beach News. Mr. Farquhar died of a heart attack at his home at 333 Crest Ave. early 'Ibur&- day morning. He was 80. Interment ls expected to be at Fairhaven Mausoleum, Santa Ana, but a1Tangements have not yel been com- pleted. Mr. Farquhar was one of the key figures in community life in Huntington Beach' from the time he purchased the weekly newspaper in September 1971 and moved to Southern California from the Midwest untU his death. A publlc park near his home at Crest Avenue was dedicated in hJ11 name last May 22. He wa5 a past president or the Rotary Club, was a 32nd degree Mason, was a member of lhe Sigma Delta ChJ newspaper rraternity and was a former director of the city's Chamber of Com· rnerce. In his last column, publishe1:1 Thurs- day, be expressed bafflement at the changi.Qg times, writing "I am so far out of step with what is going on nowadays, I don't kno'lf what to think." Aft.tr complaining about a book with four-letter words, unsightly long-hairs, tax increases, student strikes, and the Black Panthers, he wrote, "I could go on In this line lnde!lnltely, but what I sometimes WOllder ii -have I lfYed too long?" The rest of 1UI oolumn b full of lively humor, Including an ecological deleme for aome lions and a &bark klOed in r.- cent incidents. He recalls • saying 1'You can't make them over" given him by Ill old ae>- qua!ntance for use when people get ltelmed up over the incomprehe:M:lble attitudes of others. "It IJIU&hl me to 1djus~" Mr. Farquhar wrote. •. ... • . NOBLE DANE SEEKS INTELLECTUAL GROWTH Joson -105 Pounds ot Eight Months ond. Growing "rOP READER CAN'T PUT BOOK DowN Kotherino Tutsd.111, 6, Storti 16ht Volume All Booked Up Beach Reading Program Ends Major Plunges Out' of Copter And Breaks Ankle 'IblT came by the bundfeds to Lake children to get a close v\ew of , the · Park, "rburlday. whirlybird. Major. Donald Magee loves hia luck to. d~, even if his leg hurts htrn. ·Huntington Beach police ofilcers warn-. Several girl• from tbe library 1taff ed motorlsta to take other roads. One Painted tl,lel on the faces of youngsters. poUce helicopter landed in a nearby field, changing them into fieroe Indians. 'Ibere another chopper hovered above the • was a large costwne contest to find the crowd. best Indians. Their faces were painted, many wore Six-year--01d Katherine Tr u·e s d a I e Jodian costumes. 'Ibey wandered all over received a round of appla.us u the the park. There was a lot of talking, but champ book reader of the 11Mlmer -she no music. polished off 160 volumes. "l just like to It was the end or the public library's read," lhe chuckled in a 1hy .voice. summer reading program. 1be kkll -Boys from th& Order of the Arrow In toddlfn to 12-yeara-old -came to Huntington Beach and Fountain-Valley celebrate for the books they read I.his demonstrated a variety of Indian darw:ts. summer. More than 1,700 yoUngslers who com. The police helicopter, }{B Eye, landed pleted the llbrary's sunmer reading pro. ln a Oeld where the pilot put on a short gram were invited to the Lake· Park dllplay of trick flying then allowed the e<remcoiel. Al. lwt a \hint of tllom came. Valley Police Hunt Men for Reserves The Fountain Valley Police Depa~ ment is looking ror men to join the police reserve force. LoW rafdentl betw<en the -of 21· 45, at least 5'1" !Jiii, wl1h :JIJ.$l vision cor· rectible to 20-20, and hoJder1 qr at let!t a high ochool diploma, abollld aon!Jlct the dtpartmenl 1lltllllO"SI.l<r An. Oaarlle Brown boou ....,,, handed lo l!O chlldren wbo hid read betWMu llO Ud 100 boou during the SIIl1ll!ltt. Pettt Jlol>. blna of Nnrport Beadl, tile teltvllloo' volct of Qiarlie Brown, waa prelellL Arlene GomeJ and David Marfhuah won lbe drawing for the· two top Fbest two bicycles. eoatume wlnnerrwere:i !radian boy, Corl ~; ·ll!dlan girl, Debble lloblnoon; moil authentic, llO!>ln Martin an<I John O'NeRI, funnleti boy, Scott Foster, and flllllllelt" (lrl $berry SWllamL ' • ' He fell 100 feet from • hovering helicopt.r at Camp Pendlelon Tbw:sday and llllfered UWe more than a b1<1ken lelt ankle. . Major Magee, a ruervist on two wetka Of active duty traintng at the base, wu reported in good condition in the base bol!pl!Jll loday. The lf.year-old reservist whbse. home Is , at 2580 Wisteria in Beal Beach, fell to the ground . durinf a hellex>pter tr~lning aeaakln. • A mounUng apparatus for a rope dangJ. Ing ln>m the boverlng cboppor pn. way af\er the major beg•n ht! ~t. 1 Tile part-llme leatherneck fell feel lint to 'the powid. J ' . • Bue· ll[>Okesmen utd llVe•mWJ·-fu .:Mlgee.'1 anlJe were brok\!n tKrt Othtr lhan I few,llCt·~ and ~ tliat WU the ooly Injury. J,laJor Maaee '• mbbap wii uvl only ~1ous a<ddenl nI>Ortid •monc ttio 19,1IOO ....,.lsll from thloou(boul' the country '!Jlklng parl fn the exerCiaes, 1'be maJ<ar wW mill the dlai.u to the mineU"'1 Monday when the l>hallllll of rtierv(Jll hll the.beach_lor ltitoe ctoya of mock >iatfai:e. , 11lt M1rlnea will mue the 1••"·• by bolt @lid be1Ja>Pt<r; · • ~- Lifeguards Bracing For Throng By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' ... Wbt ''* ..... Lifeguards in the five cities alona the Orange Coast today braced for the onslaught or weekend beach vtsltors who Thursday produced a record ~ ~ from.booming surf !'lllf th~iccompanytnc riptides. · While lara:e !Ul'f coodlUons prevailed lod>y, lifeguards from San Clemente to Seal Beach ufd they upect cond!UG1111o ease a UWe by Saturday. ' HIDltington Beach wu the harde!I hit Thunda)' with 662 rescues followed by Newport Beich which logged 406 - a record number of ~ fpr ~th cities. San Clemente 1howed 75 rescues, Laguna Beach bad es and Seal Buch log· fled 39. Spokesmen for those cities said the number ol. nacues was not unusually high. HWltington lifeguard Capl Do u g D'Amall said the surf has been ruMlng a consistent three to six feet with some sell up to nine feet. Water temperaturea were recOr~d at 67 degrees. "The surf has dropped a little today and maybe down to no~al by Satur· day," he said. "The rough conditiooa may ha•~ been c'~ by a •lon!I oll·Blja." • Newport J1eacb bad wat,r t.m- peraturea In the high IO'a and sud run- nilc lrom ~t feel aJoaa the Corona del Mal'beaCbet• to 10 !eel on ihe. Newport.. ·BaJbo!! beaches. Sela at Balboa's Wedge WeN' lilttlng 11 leeL ''fl't rescued IOI people," ald Robert ll. lloed, director "VI marine ufety !or the city. "Tbat's an all Ume h!gh~ we've never had th:at many rescues before." Reed's force of 70 ll!eguards was prals .. ed !or their work. "We have 23 new ocua beach guards thia year and under trying circumstances they did an ei:cellent job," Reed stated. He also said the three .....,.. boall greatly aided re-oper .. tiOOJ. Reed warned beach goers to "proceed with caution" in the surf wlllch 1bow1 few GgnJ of alacklng off. "l don't mow:: l1oed said. "It might go down. 'llll oeto are still big, but not as coosiltent • Thursday." In San Clemente, lifeguard.! said they CS.. SUllF, Page II . Valley Bohhysox, Team Gets Win ·Fountain Valley'• bobbysox all-star softball team bu won · again. Thursday night the local team edged Navaho ol San Diego County, 6-5, !or their second straight win in the 1tate tournament in Buena Park. TOl)ight, Fountaln Valley's girls fa~ North Highland, a team from the Sacramento area ate p.m. in Bellis Park, Buena Park. The glril are playing In a double elimination tournament for the callfornia bobbysox cluunpion!hlp. 1bey haven't lost a game yet. - Oruge Coa1t · Weat•er It'll be another weekend for bask· lng on the beaches, since the tem- perature will 1boot into the middle 701s along the coast ind reach up to 88 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY An oquatiu •hbto ac NtVlpOrt Harbor High School and a U01<th fUm f<1~1Kl1 at Lagllna Bea<h H;gh School are th< f<Olund eHntl in tocfaY1 Weekcnd.r ldCtion. • ·-. ... ,.... 1t C.Hflonllll I _ .. ' CtMlltllllll ,, ... CttiOn 11 'C,...... If Dtltll *""' '• ,_,.,. ==.. ~ ""....... » ,.._ . --· .... ... I , l ·' • • •• .. .. ·: •• • . ~ • • • " 1· 1· • ' • ' ' • 1; • . ' - • • • I I DAI\. y lltlOT -H ' Flights to Stay -af 30 Coun:~Y. S tt¥iies A ~r.p port Itos and Don't.s v ... -.• • .. oranae County Airport commlsslonm a llat ol do't and doll'Vs to '""''"" i. "• ~, \!lo ~ dld ien. lentallvely l'<1<>fvod -two of six propoood _..,..la nlatloa lo the llall'4I M. tallvely decide In a opllt 3-1 vote that no recomrnendaUons they will make to the P.anioos Company's Ptu1.ae 11 rtpu'tt on more jet nicht! should be added to the board Qf IUpervisors after a three-hour air transpottatJon problem.I in the COUD• . ~in Sanla Ana Thursday. ty, unveiled two weeks ago. current 30 daily at Orange County The group will meet again Saturday at The airpOrt advisory group atarted Alrport for at least one year. 9:30 a.m. In the supervi!OtS' hearing their dellberaUona last Tuesday, but falt. A second tentative suggestion Is that room In Santa Ana to continue their ed to agree on any definite recom· the Nortltrop Corporation's current noise deliberations. mendations ·t · the · be '!be conimisslon iii trytnc to lhra:sh out At the e~d of the three-hour debate moni oring program at &11'port us... ed to set ma.1tmum noise standards after Bikers Press On Death Valley, Coas tnl Walks Continue By JOHN VALTERZA OI IM ii.1" Piiiot Jl•lt While San Clemente's 1Death Valley conservation walier rests tooay past the midway point of his trek aero&! the burn- ing sands, two other ecology-minded hikers are hoofing it on more hospitable terrain -the eouthern Orange Coast. Joel Hurd. 26, was reported fortifying himsell lrom the health-food larder of his miniature covered wagoo today, waitlng for the sun tc go down tonight when he will resume the trek back from Towne Pass to Death Valley Junction. As be munches hls health foods in Deatli Valley. two young La Jolla residents are marching upcoasl and din- ing on he&Jtb foods as well. - Roger English, in, and Valeria Mayers, 17, were expected lo walk through the South Coast area this evening on a hike from La Jolla to British Columbia to stress the _ea>logical crisis. "Maybe tbrDugh our examples we can make people feel a IiWe guilty about driving eveeywbere," English said before oeWng outiin the Weot Caost safarL While ~e <XIUJ>le walk in tpe cooler clime, Hwil Ls tryinfl lo get 110tne badly needed sleep today alter spendJni two mono sleepJ.,. days In his ..,.gon beneath !be blazing sun with 1hade ,..dln&a top- Pini 120 degrees. "It's still too hot out lhue in the daytime for him to get some sleep in the wagon, so he turned in to Furnlce Creek again 'Ibursday morning to get aome rest," friends reported. Since the start of the march fer clean waler began last Saturday nigh~ Hurd has U.llid oll-amk>n through tbe week's dark hours on the 150-mJle round trip. The tougheJt leg of the b1ke look place before dawn Thursday when Hun! hauled hiJ: 3)0.pcllDd wagon up the steep 1Iopes of the Panamint Mountain Range to Towno p.., -5,000 1 .. 1 hJiher than his slarlini point at the JW>Clion. Two unidentified hikus jo)ned the bearded wagon puller on the way up to the -·friends aald, but ....... drop- ped out after collapsing from severe blisters on his feet and beat exhaustion. Hurd -who bas lod 20 pounds ao far -pl'<dJct"1 his march would probably end at the Junction oo Swxfay when he gathers some sand Crom the inhospitable valley'• sand dunes. The grains, he vows, will go Into how'gl.asga; wblcb he will present to President Nb:on, Governor Reagan and other officials. "Time 1s nmnlng out," will be the wrl t.. ten ecological .,....ge on the timepieces, Hunl aald. Reagan Forces to Hold Vp Voting for Carpenter It appean that the Reagan ad.- ministration suwort.en will watt for Tuesday's special elecUon in Orange County before voting on the seo>nd half of tbe governor's $1 billion tu overhaul legiJlalioo. The outcome of the 34th Senatorial District apeciaJ election ii aJ,mo.,t a 1ure victory !or prominent Newporl Beach al· lorney Denn~ E. Carpenter. l he Republican State Chairman. He would Crash Survivor Makes Recovery The surviving crew member of the fiery aasb of a giant aerial refueling plue at El Toro July 31 wu reported in very good condition today at Oran1e County Medical Center. Staff Sgt. Keru1eth C. Davis, of Santa Ana, has been taken off the critical li11t. He is being treated for burns and smoke inhalation. There were five men aboard the KC130 turboprop when its wing touched the runway during a practice maneuver, causing it to crash in names. Lt Roger Mulling, 27. of Hunlington Beach, died in the cr<l!h. Cpl. Kenneth Metzdorf, 21, of El Toro Housing. died a few days later of severe burns. Maj. Walter Zytkewicz, 41, 25372 Andriana, Mission Viejo, and Capt. Robert B. Walla, Jr., 28, of Tustin, died of burns a week alter the crash. DAILY PILOT Oil.I.NG~ COAST PUIL.blollHG COMPANY kab•rf N. W•1d Praid.,I Int Puoutl>W J1ck k. Cwrl1y Vk• • ...,.,.,,, •nd .... , ... ¥11 .... ~~19tf Thom•• K11•il l!•l .. r lho,,,lt A. M11tphi~1 MIMtlr><J Ea'"" Wtst 0<1"" C..U"lf EOlttr A lb•rl W. 11111 .t.uocll .. EOllor H•lltl' ..... .._. Offlc• 1117' l•1ch l o11l1•1rd M1 illn 9 Aclclr .. 1: r.o. lor 7•0, t26'41 Otliet Offl~ u~ ••.Kii: m .,_, ,.,v-. C..11 ,-_, DI Wot e.v Sit~ H....-t a.dlt 2211 W•t l11bo1 &eu\fY1 .. &lft c11.-1t: llU No.Ill El CMfttno ll••I take office Wednesday. . Adm!Distration, support.~ ylrluaUy threw in the to\wl.• ·today on bopes of cmacting the stalled tax progr~ without the aid of Orange County voters. William T. Bagley, CR-San Rafael) autOOr of the tax plan aaid the on1y circumstance he foresaw which could bring about a Note early next week would be for the 13 holdout senators to abandon their oppmlUon and vote for the bill. Carpenter ls opposed on the state senate seat ballot by a fellow Republican. Douglas Irvine, who threw his support to Carpenter. At stake is the seat le.ft va· cant by former GOP Sen. John G. Schmitz, TuaUn, wbo wu elected to Congress. Twelve Demoa-at.s and one Republican have blocked for more than two weeks the key &eCOOd hall of the governor's election year tu legislaUon. On their first nm at passage, ad- ministration supporters fell one vote short of the rt needed for passage. The first hall of the program was approved overwhelmingly earlier. Republicans are confident that a Democrat would cast a "courtesy" vote on C&rrell's behaU if the administration wa1 still one vote short even after the Orange County election. From Pagel FREEWA Y ••• neighborhoods, should be obvious." By attacking the freeway bill on en· vironmental grounds. Burke i!! fighting back with the same ammunition that Badham used. Badham has waved the banner of ecology in urging that the freeway be" kept out of Newport. Burke noted that the Pacific Coast Freeway corridor in Newport Beach must accommodate 110.000 to 140,000 local car trips daily. "These are people living or working in the Newport area," he said. Another 50,000 trips would be made by motorists passing through town. The legislator stressed that wllhout a coastal freeway serving Newport"s needs somewhere, that city's surface streets will be packed with stop-and.go traffic. "There will be more smog, more pollu· lion. more noise, more accidents and more disruption or the residential com· munities by far than with a freeway." Russ Magazine Ra ps CIA 'Provocations' MOOCX>W (UPI) -An lnfluenUaJ Soviet political weekly magutne accused the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the Ptntagon today of dissemln.a1ing: "provocative" reportl lhe Soviet Union is about to attack Com. munilit China. a 12-mont.b trial period. Commissioner Roger O. Slates of Hun· linitm Beach. who ca.st the lone dissen- ting vole said, "There are two matters we should resolve before recommending anything on noise. Establishing a limit on a number of flights is the ooly &ure way to pacify homeowners and to ensure the aupervisors there won't be more jets, but there is no legal way we can hold the alrllnes to their present level ol flights." Slates was referring to the coonty'a lease contract with Air California and Air West that allows the airlines to increase up lo 35 flight& In 1171 and ~ flight& in 1m when the ctt1lracts expire. The airlines are currenil)'. making about 30 departure• 1 day from !be airport. lloptfully lo be resolved Saturday Is • recommendaUon by Comm 111 loner Robert A. Cart of Brea to the effect that airlines and private jet opuaton rather than gOvemment agencies should pay homeownerl for any property that might be condemned because of unacceptable noise atandards In the vicinity of the airport. Clark also BUggesled Thursday that !be county should aeate an •'a Jr port ~uthority" lo replace tho "'1lll!11sslon .. a separate organization to accompliah more effecuve operation of present and future air facillUes in the oounty. Clark said that in the year he bas &erv· ed on the commission It bas beccme ob- viOUJ" that the body had no power to en· force Its recpmmendations. Commission Chairman James Gilmore of Santa Ana urged the setUng or noille standards for Orange County Airport regardless of state or federal action In the field. "Who knows when either government body will get around to establishing standard.!?" Gilmore asked. Sl1tes objected to the I e n g t h y di.scl.w:lon on ooise standards saying, "we should address ourselves to the real ques-- tioo, What are we going to do about Orange County Airport?" Clatk m;nincled Slates that he was a minority On the corrur411ion in that vlew. (Slates had suggested Tuesday that all jet flights from the airport be baMe.d alter im> Giimor3:ood, that \he 1001 tmn ob-jective be to "!iUJnlntle all jet fllihta ma~ (ocmtr; • · · ~~!.6~ usJtiliectiJr Rob er t ~'~!'!" • yjpo y objected to eolihlJsllfng ally noise standards at the alrporl '11 you set such standards you will have to cl~ down the airport," be arlluecf. From Page 1 SURF ... rescued the 75 people from surf which WU rumfuii! from three lo oix r.et. Waler temperature WU "'°rded al 72 ~ Llfe111ard U. Hank Barnes said the heavy aide drift near the Municipal Pier drew at least 20 swimmers toward the pilings. The pier rescues were common throup the day. San Clemente guard Chief Dick Hazard ~•Id the rescues were not in the record-- breaking category because surf was not running as high in San Clemente as in other Orange Coast areas. "It's likely there will be alight decrease in the surf, but If It remains strong today, then there·s a good chance it'll be big for the' weekend,'' he said. Lag:una Beach lifeguards pulled their 16 swimmers from water that was recorded belween 71 and 73 degrees. A guard spokesman estimated sets were running a consistent four lo siI feel and said they expect conditions to prevail through the weekend. ''As long as the wind doesn'l pick up- and it doesn 't look like it will -the &urf conditions llhouid coritinue throuih the weekend," a guard official said. Seal Beach had the least activity of any beach a.re due to "'atistinence on the part of swimmers." Lifeguards said the surf was running three to fiVe teet, with larger sets coming in occasionally. Water temperatu~ was set at 68 degrees. "We had 39 rescues. which is not very high," a guard spokesm an said. "People have been forewarned by stories on TV and radio and in the papers and they 're staying out of the surf. I hope it continues that way over the weekend ." Lifeguards at Huntington and Bolsa Chica state beaches reported making more than too rescues Thursday In tbe large surf and riptides. Modern Dancing Classes Offered The Hulllinp>n O..cb YMCA iJ inviting youngsters to step rijht up for a modem dance and ballet class. Pre-regiair•lion ia now In Jlrogresa for the eight-week &eries of clas$ts which will begin Aug. 29. The course will be ainducted In the. YhfCA's multlpur(>05e room from 10 a.rn. to 10:4.5 a.m. for be:ginntrs and 11 a.m, to Artistry in Surfing Sculptures of su.rfer done in bronze by CardiU artist Edmund Shum· pert exclwlvely for Huntington Beach's U.S. Surfboard Champion· ships will go to top winners in the 1970 version of Lhe event Sept. 19-20. President in New Orleans For Talks on School Action NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Preiident Ni.ion arrived today with a group of bl& top advisers for a French Quarter motorcade and a talk with Soolbernen: on how fast and how far scboo1 desegrega· tion will go this fall. The President and Mrs. Nixon we re met at New Orleana International Airport by national GOP committeeman Tom Stag, state GOP chairman Charles Degrave.Iles and a group of other state Republican figures . The presidentlal party e n t e r e d limousines for the drive along Canal Street which rum through the center of the city's historic French Quarter toward the Royal Orleans Hotel where the group was staying. While the PresideDt met with represen- tatives from seven Southern states, Mrs. Nixon planned to visit the French Quarter at length, including St. Mary's of the AulllnpUcn Clwrcb, known u one of the finest u:amples of brick archltecture la the country. Nlxon, Attorney General John N. Mitchell, Education Secretary Elliot N. Richardson and Counsellor Robert H. Finch planned to outline administration policy and listen to local problems in meetings with the chairmen and vice chairmen of state advisory committees on public educaUon. The state committees, consisting main- ly of private ciUzens, are offshoots of the President's special cabinet committee on education which has been trying to ease the mixture of black and wblte children In Southern 1chools. The state comm1ttee officials invited to today's meetng were from Alabama , Arkansas, Louisiana, Georgia, Mississippi and the Carolinas. The non.official nature of the com· mittees led Louisiana e d u c 1 t lo n superintendent William J. Dodd Thursday to question Niton's trip. "Unless he has the power o( a fortune teUU, he can't get a true picture unless he talks to people down htre --who know the situation. Of course, that's the way the Republicans operate," said Dodd, a Democrat. "They get most of their in- formation from Wall Street and Madison Avenue." The administration on the eve ot the vis:it reaffirmed its plaru to pursue a policy of .. reasonableness" in seeking school desegregation in the South. Mitchell, &ppearing before • Senate committee, avo ided a con- frontation with some liberal Northern senators by offering an explanation that appeared to satisfy them. "Until the higher courts decide d!f- ferenUy," Mitchell said, "we will con- tinue to apply the 1tandard of reasonableness.'' SALE PRICED Cea se-fire I Deteriorates • In Midea st JERUSALEM (AP) -lSlaeU air force planes struck aL Jordanian army ~i­ Uons today, the military command said, In further deteriorations of the Middle East cease-fire. The military said the raid was laun- ched .....,t Jordanian vmy llr<>Nh!>lds which have liven assistance to PalesU· niaJi guerrillas in attacks 1galnst Iaruli fronUer settlements. A spokesman said the Jordanian army "assists terrorists and makes it possible !or them to act against Israeli civilians." A spokesman earlier had announced that Israeli Air Force jets crossed the border and bombed and strafed Arab guerrilla targets inside Jordan for these- cond straight day toda y. The Tel Aviv spokesman 1ald those raids were in response to moitar attacits on two Jewish settlements. The planes all returned Aafely after "hit· ting objectives adjacent to Israel's Bei&an Valley. he said. Beisan Valley set· tlements ol Maoz Haim and Yardena came under mortar fire during '111urlday night, but no damage was reported. This was the second Israeli air strike Inside Jordan since the Middle East cease-fire went into effect a week ago. The guerrilla organizations have disown· ed the truce initiated by tile United States as a preliminary to peace talks. An Israeli newspaper, the Tel Aviv Yediot Aharonot, reported that Egyptian soldiers fired acr~ tbt Suez Canal in a second minor violation ol the cease-fire Thursday. The newspaper said tbe ~ cide.nt occurred ln t.be waterway's central &eetor when a few bullets from 1mall arms weapons were fired over lllraell positions. The military command said it could not confirm the shooting but refused to deny it. Two days ago the army said four buUet.s were fired from the Egyptian sjde of the canal in the same sector. There were no casualties and the fire was not returned, the Israelis said. Reports from Amman said Jordanian authorities bave tightened sec u r i t y measures to prevent Arab commandos from lddnaping diplomats, fore igners or government officials. Informants said the guerrillas may resort tc. this tactic to sabotage the U.S. peaCf: plan. Two Beirut newspapers also reported that King Hussein of Jordan has warned his armed forces to be on the alert because subversives were plotting to assas..5inate him and other Jordanian of· ficials . The ldng said the assassins might be disguised a& J ordanian soldiers, ac. cording to the reports published by Al Ahrar mid Al Kifah, purporting to be the text of an Aug. 2 royal circular to the army. Cairo newsp apers gave major coverage to Israeli charges that Egypt has moved several missile batteries closer to the Suez Canal. DREXEL'S NEWEST For kid1 and ~un P9"0Ple. A•eil.ble in two refrMh- i"9 fini1hM. YMlow end 1eltnoti co~. The best of aJI, it is stein, biim end •er re1i.ta nt. YOQr wliimsy will .tey like ll*W no rn.- t., ..-hat you do. Col&o pJete Mdroom fvmiture ...-.i.i. .i-d.y 1-1. '• cho.ol ...._, .... oil • • ..,., t1to.ip.t1.1 ~ s .. ij tod•)'o ........ ···-···-· $140. Ml""'···-·······$ 450 YOUR LOCAL DEALERS FOR O(l.EXfL-HENREDON .HEIUTA6E INTERIORS • L.AGUllA IEACH :145 North Co•ot Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 1717 WMtcllff Dr., 642-2050 Of'IN NIDAY 'Tll t Prol-.1 1- 0..lgners Avall•blo-AIO-NSiD Of'IN NIDAY 'Tll t ,._ , ........... .,, 0..,. c...., .... 126J 4941\Sll A pre-publlcaUcm ttory of an article In "7.a Rubcihom" (Ufe Abroid}. as quoted by the T.,. News Agency, said "the Soviet le.adtrs more lhan once have •tressed that all afOmu1Uons of Soviet P.:rtparationt to 1tt1ct Chin. ara acur- nl0\18 lebrlc1Uons from beginning tO end and the Soviet Union ttanda for normaliJ.. ill& Sino-Soviet relatlons." !1 :45 a.m. for Intermediates. •----------------------------------------• ,, '• , i . ' ., f. -· ... .-:'-'f. Ne rtB~aeh. • • 'foday'• • N.\';-s:tiiliii • , ' , t RUD~Y, AU6UST '14, '1970 ' Wl CENTS \ ll County Jets Create Cll rirical s~~g 'Not Soi>t. I VOL. 63, NO. 194, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORAN&E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ... By PATRICK BOYLE Of .. Diii~ '"'' '''" ) PhotG-Chemical smog in Orange County is being increased by commercial jet \ircraft equipped with "clean burner ~ans," according to the chainnan of the ~lifornia Air Resources Board. Dr. A. J. Haagen-Smit, a chemist at the :alilornla Institute of Technology, &aid Big Surf Attacks Beaches By JOANNE REYNOLDS or rri. o.nr 'li.t Stan Lifeguard.! in the five ciUes along the Orange Coast today braced for the onslaught of weekend beach visitors who Thursday produced a record 1,:kX> rescues from booming surf a11d the acaimpanying riptides. While large surf condiUons prevailed today, lifeguards from San Clemente to Seal Beach said they expect conditions to use a little by Saturday. Huntington Beach was the hardest hit Thursday with 662 rescue:!J followed by Newport Beach which logged 406 - a record number or rescues for both cities. San Clemente showed 75 rescues, Laguna Beach had 8S aJld Seal Beach log- ged 39. Spokesmen for those cities said the number of rescues was not wiusually bigh. Hu•Ungton lileguard Capt. Dou g D'Amall said the surf has been running a consistent three to six feet with aome sets up to nine feet. Wa\er tempUatures were recorded at 67 degreee. "The surf bas dropped a lillle today and maybe down to aonnal by Satur- day," he said. "The rough cooditlons may have been caused by a storm off Baja." NewPort Beach bad water tem- peratures in the high 60's and surf run- ni1g from eight feet along the Corona de! Mar beaches to 10 feet on the Newport- Balboa beaches. Sets at Balboa's Wedge were hitting 16 feet. "We rescued 406 people," said Robert E. Reed, director of marine safety for the city. "That's an all time high. we've never had that many rescues before." Reed's force of 70 lifeguards was prais- ed for their work. "We have 23 new oceaa (See SURF, Pa1e Z) * * * Guards Rescue Injured Surfers In Four Mishaps Among the t ,300 surf rescues Thursday along the Orange coast, lifeguards reported only four serious injuries. Three were back injuries and the fourth was multiple cuts and bruises. The injury accidenls occurred in Newport and Laguna Beach. Fourteen-year-old Alan S c h w a rt z , visiting Laguna from San Jose, was dumped by a large wave 'l!'hile body sw-f- lng at Main Beach at 1:30 p.m. and taken to South Coast Community Hospital when he complained of back pain. A hospital spokesman said the teenager was transferred to Kaiser Foundation HoslptaJ, Bellflower. where he is reported today In satisfactory condition. A J.5..year-old Corona del Mar resident, Mark Magiera, suffered mu1tiple cuts and bruises when his surfboard crashed into the jeUy at Corona de! Mar. Lifeguards said the youlh was riding the swells along the Inside wall of the jet- ty when the mishap occurred. He is in good condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital. A Huntington Beach man, Bruce Campbell, body surfing in the JO.foot surf off S3rd Street In Newport Beach 'Mlurs- day evening suffered back injuries when he wu spilled out of a wave onto his head. He was able to crawl out of the water on his own, and was treated for back pains and released from Hoag Hospital. A second Corona del Mar teenager, Michelle Ryan, 15. was hospitalized 111'ith severe cuts and bruises after ahe was in- jured at Big Corona Beach while body surfing Thursday afternoon. She ls listed in satisfactory condition today at Hoag Hospital . All Injuries came In surf conditions that were described by veteran Laguna Beach lifeguard Art Smart as "some of the big- gest 1& I've ever seen around here." Smart said the surf was inconsistent, with quiet spells followed by huge waves which an.tght IOtne unwary rwinune:rl by IUTprl!e. - • -·.. .. the ,burner cw bum the -which would otherwise fall to the ground. But, in his opinion, It is better to in- crease ~e smog by a small amount than l.o have a cloud ol soot hanging over the area surrounding airports., Haagen.smit 's a pioneer researcher on smog, part.iculJrly photo-chemical smog, the type associated with Soutl)ern callfomia. He said photo-chemical smog II created by a chemlcaJ ruction between Clltt" bustion~produced oxides of nltroten and sunlight. The soot produced by the jeta Is simplJ a by-produc:I of the 'bunllni ct fuel. "'l'be soot stays In the Junes H It II !;i- haled," he said in a telephone lnlervlew today. "'lbe. burner cans ~1 on , the airdaft jet engtnes are very' timpUfied .. * * Dr. Haqm.Smlt uld the oool .a toe. Angeie. lnletnatioaal Airport IJaa Ja. . . creas<d oo much· Jn the past (ow yen that It now amounta to about II ~ of ihe air pollution In that ar<L : - '""nie aoot fk1ls on a veiy smaU .,.... " f~d, ~ ~ ""!t ·~i.:...i ""': dissipated OvtJI a tarp 1fe!-" * '-tr ' ~lits COStljr? • Official Sqys V~S .. Aid May be Lo~t Artistr11 la Surfing ' 'I ~ 1· ... j ~ Sculptures of surfer done in bronze by Canliff artlsf'.!drinmcM!ll-· pert exclusively for Huntington Beach's 'U!S. SurtbMt«.-C~ ' ships will go to IO!l winnel'f in the 1970 version of the-I Sept. U;a Reagan Forces w Hold Vp Voting for Carpenter It appears that the Reaa:an. ad- ministration supporters will Wait for Tuesday's special election in Orange County before voting on the second ball of the governor's $1 blllion tax overba.ul legi.slation. The outcome of the 34th Senatoria1 District special election is almolt a sure victory for prominent Newport Beach at- torney Dennis E. Carpenter, the Republican State Chairman. He would take office Wednesday. Administratlon supporters vlrtually threw in the towel today on bo_pes of enacting the stalled tax program without the aid of Orange County voters. • William T. Bagley, CR-San 'Rafael) author of the tu plan ~d the only circumstance he foresaw which could bring about a vote early next weej would be for the 13 holdout senators to abandon their opposition and vote for the bill. Carpenter is opposed on the state !enate seat ballot by a fellow Republican, Douglas Irvine, who threw his support to Carpenter. At stake is tbe 3e1t left va- cant by former GOP Sen. John G. Scbmitz, Tustin, Who .,.. elected to Congress. Twelve l>emocrat.s and one Republican ba'le blocked far more than two weeks the key second half of the governor's election year tat legislation. On their first run at pasaage, acf. minlstraUon supporters fell one 'VOie short of the 27 needed for passage. The first half ol the program wu ipprovid overwhelmingly earlier. Hirth to Study O·wn Proposal Newpc11 Beach Mayor F.d Hlrth·Tbur1- day night was named to head a d'IJ"e&.m.an Orange Coonty League ol Citles talk force firmed to &tUdy Hlrth's own pro- posal that would expand the poglUon of mayor in all of California'1 medlam aDd sm~size cities. Also named to the panel were Honllng- ton Beach Councilman Alvin Coen and Buena Park Councilman Anthony Fonte. Urxler the Hirth proposal, mayors would not be given additional authority, but their position woukl have ful~time 1tatu11. He said the cities need to concern themselves with pending aod pt_.i statt leglJlatioo creatlllg a number ol regional, « Interim, iovernmental boc1Je1 with authority In various areas, such at transportation, pollution and buildln1 re1- ulatiooa. U the citJes have no ooe to ait on theee bodies, the •tale wlll 1111 the ,..i, by ap- Jl(>intmma, Hirth aald, noting that he !eared Joas ol local governmental controL Any cutback Jn the number. ct: com- merclal :J"1 nlll>ta at 0qnp· County Airport Iii· vlolallon .of tho 'codDty'• "'' llllnC --wlth tlle-alrllna ccald ooot-ihe. ""'"ty 15.i mllllon, ~-io coun1y A-·o-· l\vb:ert Bmnalmi That Is the amount of federll lll0b01 he aaid bu been liven to the. alrpacl .-· the Federal Ald to Aitporta .....,,m:Tbe money bu been \lied for nmway. con- •trucUon. inMllatiOn of 1D1 inltiwnent landlnc system and other pn>jecta. "l think the airlinea cou111 ·file a .Wt aaalnat the county H ,.. broke the. con- tracts by cuWna . back aer;vlces.'' Bresnahan~ "ml.Ibey would aal:.the Fedtral.Avlallqn .Admllllllrail<l!> to .. IOl lnvolved. Tiie lull would be med. OG the bulJ of' dllcrimlnation ' a&alnlt the airlines." . "ll we 10.t," be added, "l·am.IUl't we woald bave to poy hick. the federal I - :W o~k . O;tJ I.Ong Tel"m Plan~ Orange CountJ Atrwt ~ lentailvely reaotwd two ct' m ·propooed fec:ommeod•tloll• they wfi1 make to the board ct~~ after a thre&l>oUr ~Sonia Ana Tburlday. The gioop 1'111 meet 1galn SaturdaJ at 1:311 a.ni. ·bl the "'pervlaoi-i" b!atlng room Jn S40ta .Ana to <OGllnµe lheJr de\lbefatioot. ' . 'Jbecc@i~ b tr)'ill& fo,dlrUlj G;J! a l!lt of'c1o•1.aDcrdoil~'• to ~.,,i to U.. ouperylsors '1n r<iatlim to. the· lWph M. Parioot Coinpany'a Phue n r<port «> air tr""8portallon ~le!Os ilrtbe .,,..,. ly, unveiled two ....U a&o- Tbe airport advtsory l""'J> stamd their deliberaUOllS'lut 'l\Jesdfy;but fall· ed to ' ....... aey deflnlte - mendatlofta. Al the end ol the thre&liour debate 'lbunclay, .the· ccmm~11onen did ten- tallvely decide Jn a l]JUt $-I vo_le Ulal no ll10l1!' lei flights lbould be added to the c:urreot JO dally at ·-Oran"' Couoty Airport for at least <Mlt year: A ·-tentaUVe' IUlf!ealloo i. that lhe Northrop Corporation 1 c:umnt nolSe mollltorlng program at 1he airport be•.,.. ed to ..t.mamnwn noise otandirda after a IS<nooth trial period. Commlnloner Roger D. Slates of Hun- Ungton !leach, who cut tho looe <lllN11- ti111 Wtte Aid, •-n.ere ••.two matters n Jbou1d molve before f«l(llumendiq anylhlnf on lli>lae. Eotabµ.hlng a limit on a number ol·fll&hta It the only-,.... way to paclly -and to _,.. the auperv11on111ere W<ll'f be more 'JoU, but 1here b •no 1ep1 ....., w• cao hold tl>t alrUne• to their pmenl level ol llJChta." (See Allll'OllT, Pap I) . Biologist Backs Irvine Marine Expert Says Bad 1969 Floods Cluinge4 Mind. A marine biologist wbo was ooce again11t the Upper Newport Bay land ei:change has revealed he changed ·his mind after devastatinc oooas in 1969 choked the natural eatuary with debril. Dr. Wbeeler J. North tesUfled before SUperlor Court Judge Claude M. Qwen1 that the disastrous floods did whal land swap foea predict It will do: ruin the ecological balance. Tremendous amounu oI sediment and runoff from aources fotdl.ng Into lhe Back Bay slaughtered marine organlsrns and wildlife, said Or. North. Dr. North Is employed bJ Caltech, wblcb rece.ived a grant from the Irvine Compnny, a fact which drew rlre from op- position attorney PhUUp Berry. Dem ls preaident of the Simo Club. Dr. liorlh testllled Tbunclay that flod- ' logs during h11 study of the CMS!derable, but varying degreea ol 1&Illllty In Back Bay walera 11.t() contributed to hl1 change of heart. Bulcally, be oPpol!ed earller tesUmony ln the trlal on legality of the swap be- tween the county and Irvine Compeny that the trade would doom the area'• eco. logical balance. Attorney Bony, however, predicted hi• change of hurt would make Dr. ·~1orth "the laugblngitock ol the oclentillc com- munity." He attributed Dr. North'• reviaed thlnt. Ing to the fJO,))o lnline Company grant to Caltech that allowed b!m to make-a 14-month atudy ol the natural eotuoey, covering watert-orld-wlldllfe. "Incredible and abounl, • Is Illa ...,. r ==•boll lpeol @I ~ =:in:~.·" IA'"::~:.=.: Thay ""'1iti iiaa 1...0 ~ w!lk ' ' Uoll IUll ,,..,...,., Air l)'ut and Air Qalllonlla wbli:ti. pro-vide for an Jnerdee ·m the' .. ....,. 'Dali Petenon, usilJled to the Alrport uwnber ol daily l1Jchll tlm!&b-llle d· Divlslon of the FAA, oald, ".\Ii a1!J>or1 plratloo ol 1he cootracls. · under the Federal Air to Altporil proo The Ab: ""1 acreomeo~ which expjrea gram can't get involved Jn dilcrlmlna· Nov. t, 1m. provides for a muimwn tlon." • • • averaae ol ll.T dally llllhts by the Olld ol "If the use Is limited to 0ne lype o1 1970 uil 2U dally fllgbts by Nov. O! 1m. airciral~ it must be done Jn •ud< a way ni. Air Wdt cotitract "'I'~ March that lt ts not unjust dbcrimlnatlon. For 28, 19'1t . lftd ~ kif. a maximum inBtance, It must be done in pie tnfefests averaae of 1.5 dally fllgbls by the Olld of of aafety or to meet the needs ol the lll'IO, 10.t dally Dilhts 'tiy the Otld of 1m putilic." and U.T dail)' Olgbts through Mtrch ol "II the di.scriminatioa lnvolved a 1'72. . · . ' breach of contract, the FAA would 111e There are preaenUy .a yearly averaae the akport," be said. "But this suit would of 22 daily c:ommerctal jet filgbta from normally be filed just to stop the Oran&• County Airport, md the ~\jnu discrimlnsllon. .. are permitted to have an average ~ of "l know of no cues where an airport 30 .dally fll&hta tb,rou&b 'the end of this was required to pay back the money ·to year. the government," be added, "but lt could An ofllctal of the F ... al Avll.Uoo baRpen." :rreeiVay .Fighter Group · ' . • To Seek Route Pact End Tba newly·formtd adjuncl fo lhe Fr~ Flibl<rs bas nled nollce fo tJ>• Ne1rpott Beacll City Clerk's olO"' tbai it 'oilI clrculale peUUoos to rescind the prMent' Pacific Coot Freewa:t agrte- tnefl.t bttween the city and the state Division of HlgbwlJI. , 1lle l""'1' ha 1a1io li1ed a notlc< of Jnlent to cittulale peUlloN fer· a chap- ter. amendment requiring '° !Uture cl_IY councils to conduct a city-wlde"t'refem>- dwn ·before entering into, any additional freeway qreemenll, 1lle group hu aho flied a notice of the Corona del Mar United Homeown- ert' Association, mu.rt obtain signatures: equalling 15 per cent of tbe number of voters who cul ballots Jn the Lut city ei.cu.n to fott:e ctly ""'ncu act1oa . oo the measures. ""sumfnl the olcnatures a,. obtaln<d and flied, the council wlll either have to readnd the. agreement on the. freeway, east from Bayside drive to the dty lim- illl, or conduct a apeclal referendum. Tbe c.umcU will ·have to conduct a refenndum on the propooed charter onieqdment bindln( future fmw1y agreements, H the algnaWtts are ob- talnejl.· * * :ti Freeway Hearing In Sacramento P~tponed Agaill 1l>e Senate TraDl]JOrtatlon C<iinmlU.e beallng·oo the wntroverslal Badham bill to allmlnsle the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach, ocbeduled for MondaY, has been ponponed again. }. IJJ<!ltesman for Sen. llandolph Collier ~y,.\a), chairman ol the Senate panel, ' 8ild thl:a morning tbat a crowded ·caJen-, ar bli ·loretd lhe !Ourth pootponement. · . ills 'ollk• lald'a hearinf woold Ulcaly , bet ochecluled at a speclal meeting IOmlt!me later Jn the -k. ~ly W~naday. TbO Senate ls hoplnf 10 ad- jodrn A•&· SL ' • • • A..tele(atlon of Or-Cotat olf<ctala and private ellls<no 11 expected to make tl>t trip to Sacramonto f0< the• llwi•i• whenever tt 11< 'Ibey hi•• made the jOOrliey befon, only 10 find ·tho • Item PoltPoned at Badham'a· rtquest at \be last 'mUrut.e. • J Tiie tlllrd postponement came lut -k-but the &lli>oUncement bad been made 1everal dlys tn 1dVtnct. • Ai wrilten, tho bill would slmplJ cut GUI 1be NeWpolt aectJon of Iha fr .. "1y, f-Be#b -al'd· ln• lluliitlnton -.to 't1Je·ct11 n.. ... ol ColoDa de1 MS. • Tho prilpocecl Pac:lflc Coa!t FtMway has been the subject Of contro'tersy since lls was !int propooed to proceed aloog the general route of the Coast HighwaJ'. Asoemblyman Robert E. Badham (ft.. Newport Beach) h8' before the llate Legi!lat.ure a bill that would ellmiflate the entire Newport 1eetlon of the free- way. The horn.owners' group, In lls peU. tion, stresses that the move in no way attempts to rescind the Corona del Mar Freeway, planned along f?facArthur Boulevard. • The noUce dealing with canceflatlon '!/ the agreement oontenda that the PadflC Coast Freeway, as planned., uvlolates the environmental quality of the city of Newl)Ort Beach, destroys large Portklnil of it:a historical and marl time . atmof-• pbere, encroaches upon nearby be~cb areas, addll retaining walls and embaDJI. menta which erase beauUfUI natural assets, seven and separates water-orJ- ented portions of the coDUllW'llty from tu ocean front beaches, emits tona or con· t.aminants dally and completely dlVidel the city Into two separate parU." lb addition to Curci, those signing the tntPit "noUces were Theodore Robins, 2114 E. Ocean Blvd., Mat10t Sklllil!8, WO W. Ocean Front; Waller J. Koch, 102 Cambridge Lane, and' WIWam J.. LaPlantt, 119 Tlmjuolse 'Ave • -· Weadler · · It'll be 'onolher1Helleod f<wbast• ing OD the beaches, lince the tern-- peratu .. will -Jnto t1Je "11ddlt !O's 'alOl!g' the coast and mch UP· to 811 fufther Inland. . INSmE TODAY . An aquatlcl show at NtW'/>OTC 1 Harbol' Hloh School and a uovlh film f"dtlai ol !AQuno Beacl> High School ort U.. fcottc.-.d eotntl in todatl• Wctkcndtr 1 •tcUon. 1,, • '"""' . -.....~ '\.. ..... It~ ......... C'tllfw-'41 • °'""' ~ . ' ca.u-. u, "' ........ • .. CIMllfW fl... ll'MI ..,_ a ~ ;: =·--= DMfll ...... ' ,........... • • . ....,..,_ . ,...... -,..._ --" ~· . .....,. .......... ... AIM '--*""' U ~ ... .. ..... . ...,. ..... ... --· -- • ' t • ' e • • • . i! •• • . • • ' l I I '• • ' ' • I -• ) ,. ' . ,. • I ' l • • . . , " ' ' OAI\. Y Pllqf • Creatures·t.rom the Deep Not really. Just two members of Newport Beach Parks and Recreation Department's Junior Frog- man claSs t&k.ing a close look at a marine speci- men. Kenny Haas (left) and Dane Hilliard have spent part of their summer vacation snorkeling and diving in Orange Coast waters. " N eWJ!Or!_ Council In Special Meet For Boys' Qub Confronted with an u n ex pee te d deadline, the Newport Beach City Council will meet in special session Saturday at 9 a .m. in City Hall to adopt a resolution calling for a referendum on the plan t.o build a Boys' Club on city-owned property near the Balboa Pier. The council had planned on acting on the request at its Aug. 24 meeling. but new slate legislation, adopted last Thurs. day, has moved up the deadline for special election requeats. The city must now notify the e0tmty Board of Supervisors it wishes to place the question on the Nov. 3 general elec- tion ballot by next Friday. In the referendum. voters will decide whether to amend the city charter to allow use of public property and whether a 45-yeer lease should be granted. The council Saturday must also pin- pciint the exact local.ion of the building. It is expected they will recommend it be constructed adjoining the present public restroom facility at the pier. In connection with the project, the council is also considering an expenditure of some $15,000 to refurbish the restrooms. • Massive Lava Flow Sparks Hawaii Fires VOLCANO, HawaU (AP) -A massive flow of glowing lava crossed the Chain of Craters road in Hawaii Volcanoes Na· tionaJ Park Thursday, touching off a large brush fire that threatened the valuaDle Naulu forest. Park officials were unsuccessful in their latest attempt to curb the creeping llow of molten rock wil.h dirt dikes push- ed up by bulldozers. This strategy worked successfully earlier in the v.·ee k with a flow in the same area . DAILY PILOT ORANG! COAST PUlt.llHIMG COMPANY J.oMtt N. w.,4 J 1ck I. C11rl1y Vici Pr .. io.nt •ftOll ~11 Mflllttr n ..... , K.,.a ihomtt A. 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From Page 1 UPPER BAY TRIAL ••• • company wol.ild have nolhing like the "~i5:istrous'' impacl suggested by-eftrller w1tnesse.!, among them Or. Donald Bright of Cal State Fullerton. Berry said today that he will recall Dr Bright to the stand to refute Dr. N'ortb'; testimony . North said rapidly improving condJ~ tions in San Diego Bay and Mission Bay both led him to conclude that the Upper Bay had .a brig.ht ecoJogjcai future even if the Irvine dtvelopment plans went through. ' ~e!""Y drew from the biologist the ad· m1ss1on that both southland estuaries had be~n included by Dr. North on the list which described those waters at "bio- logical deserts.'' That list. Berry noted, v.:as compiled before receipt ot the lr. vine grant. Nor".' was immediately subjected to a searching cross examination in which Berry read at length from a portfolio ()f scientific papers used by North to warn several organi.tations at a number of meetings that pollution of the Upper Bay should be immediately halted and the area preserved in its present stat.e. Among North'• comments quoted by Berry were the suggestion that the Up.. per Bay be preserved as a "natural land- mark for it uniqueness" and the state- From Page 1 SURF ... ~ach guards this year and under trying circumstances they did an excellent job," Reed .stated. He also said the three rescue boats greatly aided rescue opera- tions. Reed warned beach goers to "proceed with caution " in the surf which shows few signs of slacking off. "l don't know," Reed said. "It might go down. The sets are still big, but not as consistent as Thursday." In San Clemente, lifeguards said they rescued the 75 people from surf which was running from three to six feet. Water temperature was recorded at 72 degrees. Lifeguard Lt. Hank Barnes said the heavy side drtft near the Municipal Pier drew at lea.st 20 swimmers toward the pilings. The pier rescues were common through the day, San Clemente guard Chief Dick Hazard said the rescues were not in the recor<I· breaking category because surf was not runn ing as high in San Clemente as in other Orange Coast areas. "It's likely there will be slight decrease in the surf, but if it remains strong today, !hen there's a good chance it'll be big for the weekend," he said. ,. Laguna Beach llleguard.s pulled their s.~ swimn1ers from water that was recorde<t between 71 and 73 degrees. A guard spokesman estimated sets were running a CQnsistent four to six feet and said they expect conditions to p~vail. lhrou.gb the weekend. "As long as the wind doesn't pick u~ and it doesn't look like it will -the surf conditions should continue through the weekend," a guard official said. Seal Beach had the least activity of any beach are due to "abstinence on the part of swimmers." Lifeguards said the surf WN running three to five feet, wilh larger sets coming in occasionally. Water temperature was set at 68 degrees. "We had 39 rescue,,, which l& not very high," a gu81'd spokesman said . "People have been forewarned by stories on TV and radio Md 1n the papers and they're SU.Vin& out of the our!. ! hope tt continues that way over the weekend." Ufeguarda at Huntington and Bolsa ChJea state beachu reported making more than 100 rescues Thursday in the larp our! and riptides. mcnt that "conditions (pollution) worsen with each passing day.'' All those statements, North remlnded Berry, were made before the 1969 flood radicaUy altered the biological character~ istics Df the Upper Bay and before he and his Cal Tech team launched the study that is currently under way. It was poinled out by Berry that some of the statements made by Dr. North were made in,..August, 1969. five months after the ficdf. Dr. North cdmmented that it had not been possible at that lime to evaluate the effects ol the flood on the Upper B'\l'.. · Dr. North was ordered by Judge Owens at Berry's request to go to hls Pasadena office today and bring to the courtroom all documents relating to the li;.v1ne Com- pany's $10 grant ~ C&l~"i And or '• orlh's bi-Jef- .. --for g If I/le -r-,...,,. ~ the logist's copious ~,1 ~Y m qi, and ·wildlife. " Qualifications · · N arro·wed DoWll SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Mayor Joseph Alioto Is looking .for a Chinese. Catllolic, ··male labor leader with five years' of r'5idency and a strorig Sense of duty toward the public schools,' Alan Nichol~. board of edUcatiOn presi- dent,-asked him Thursda~ to nominate a replacement for Edward W. Kernmitt, whose term ends Dec. 31. The catch is that in San Francisco, Kemmitt's particular post traditionally is held by ~ male, Catholic labor leader Nichols also wants the new man to ~ Chinese. By tradition, the board has two Jews, two Catholics and three Protestants. One Jew and one Protestant is always a woman. the male Jew has alwe.ys been a lawyer and one .male Catholic always has been a labor leader. Kemmitt. who declined appointment to what he says has become a full time job, asked : "What ever happened to the poor Irishman?'' Le~ion Meeting To Face Youths? PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) -The American Legion and thousands of young people who don 't like its stand on the Vietnam war are coming to Portland this month and massive efforts are under way to keep them apart. About 14.000 Legion deltgates are ex· peeled, and officials anticipate an influx of 40,000 to 50,IHXI young people. "They say they know the best for America,'' said a !lpokesman for a youth group calling itself the People's Army J81Tlboree. "We are going to tell them they are wrong." SALT Session Over; To Reslltlle Nov. 2 VIENNA (UP!l -The first round of the Strategic Arms Llmltatlon Talk!; !SALT ) ended today with the Unlled States halllng "Important rrogr<SS" and the Soviet Union warning o ''dlffk:ulties" whlcb Ile ahead., SALT will rcs1J111e in Helsinki Nov. 2, according to a joint communique signed aL a glittering ceremony ending four monthl of negotlaUonl. .-. C1inningham Case JeWel Thieves ·Jail~d Life In prlloft -be tb8 price I Loe AlltllM halrdruMr will pay for gambl- ln& on pullln& off a 122$,000 jewel robbery nearly a year ago at the home of a Newport Beacb mJUionaire sp0ruman. Ronald H. Gordon, 32, was sente.nced to 10 years to life Thursday when he ap- peared before Orange County Superior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron. His accomplice in I.he sept. 10, 1969 atickup at the Briggs Cunningham home, 343 Via Lido Soud, was earlier banded a lighter sentence. From Pug~ 1 AIRPORT .•. was referring to the county's act with Air Calilornia and Air allows the airlines to increase up to flights in 1971 and 42 flights in when the contracts expire. The airlines are currently making about 30 departures a day from the airport. Hopefully to be resolved Saturday is a recommendation by Commissio n er Robert A. Clark of Brea to the effect that airline! and private jet operators rather than government agencies should pay homeowners for any property that might be consfemned because of unacceptable noise standards in the vicinity of the airport. Oark also suggested Thursday that the county should create an ' • a i r p or t authority" to replace the commission as a separate organization to accomplish more effective operation of present and future aJr facilities in the county. ~lark said that in the year be baa aerv· ed· on the C{)mmission it bas become ob- violl.! that the body bad no power to en· force i!.s recommendatiorwi:. Commission Chairman James Gilmore of Santa Ana urged the seWng of noise standards for Orange County Airport regardless of state or federal action in the field. "Who knows when either government body will get around to · establishing standard.!?" Gilmore asked. Slates objected to the I e n g t h y discussion on noise standards saying, "we should "address ourselves to the real ques- Hon , What are we going to do about Orange County Airport?" Clark reminded Slates that he was a minority on the commission in that view. (Slates bad suggested Tuesday that all jet flights from the airport be baMed after 1972.) Gilm~ agreed that the long term ob- jective should be to eliminate all jtt flights from the facility. County Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan vigorow.ly objected to establ~ing any noise standards at the airport. "U you set such standards you will have to close down the airport," he argued. Slab Kills Workers PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -A fi,e-ton slab of gfarute pfunged ·10 floors when a cable holding it broke Thursday, killiJ1g two construction worker.! aJ'Jd critically injuring a third I <ltJ1' L. Mc:Glnnla, 32, of Chaim.rib, aubmitted his case to Judge C.tmeron lut May and was sentenced to rive years to life in .state prison. The pair was arrested in Los Angeles last Februatt' and charged with belD& the bandit team that invaded the Cun- nlngham mansion, tied up the couple and threatened them with death. A lat. night knock led Mrs. Clln· ningbam to open the door and find herself 1t.artilg into drawn guns, she telltified dwing tb8 trial. Olnnlngbim, a-wulthy yachwnin and veteran sports car drivu-Wrned-dealiner · and collector did not teaUfy during lbe proceedings against Gordon. The couple -often the target of burglars and thieves In • the past -was tied up and threatened' With mW'def' If Oley didn't eooperate ln revealing where their gem collection was hidden. Los Angeles authorities working on speplal infonn~l.ion pic~ed up Gordon and McGinnis last P).burary, recovering some or Mn. CUmlblgbam's dazzling collection. Burke Blasts Newport Freeway Cut Attempts By ALAN DIRKJN Of .. 0.11, PIS.I Slaff Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach) fired a salvo across the Santa Ana River today warning Newport Beach that it faces "an environmental catastrophe" if the move to cut a slice out of the future Pacific Coast Freeway succeeds. He asserted that four bridges would have to be built across Upper Newport Bay and four six. lane highways would be required in the freeway corridor to meet the traffic needs. It is the strongest attack Burke has made so far against the bill authored by his Assembly colleague Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach). . The bill bas cleared the lower house and now awaits action by the Senate Transportation C.Ommittee. The bill, wblch would t.rminat. the freeway at Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach And restart tt aouth of Corona del Mar, is due for a eonunittee hearing Monday. Badham, however, bu suc· ceeded io getting the bearing delayed three times. Burke says the measure, intended to take the freeway out of Newport Beach, does llOt address itself to an alternative solution to Newport's future traf:fic needs. After claiming that four highways and four bridges across the Back Bay would be required to carry the extra load, Burke ,says, .. Some fine residential areas would tie in the path of these highways and tbe.lr bridges. It is a poor way to han· die the coastal traffic problem." "But even without this poor solution, this mulli-bighway system, Newport's surface streets -as well as those of Huntington Beach and Cosla Mesa - would be filled with cars pouring from the Orange, Newport and Corona de! Mar freeways, au of whicb will terminate in the coastal area,'' Buike said. "Not only would there be botUeneck.'> oo these other freeways , but there would be auto congestion on local streets. particularly those of Newport, that could be characteiized as an e n v i r o n· mental catastrophe. The impact on local busine!Ses, as well as on residential neighborhoods. should be obvious:' By attacking the freeway bill on en· vironrnental grounds, Burke is fighting SALE PRICED back with the same ammunition that Badbam used. Badham has waved the banner of ecology in urging that the freeway be kept out of Newport. Burke noted that the Pacific Coast Freeway corridor in Newport Beach mll.!t accommodate 110,000 to 140,000 local car trips daily. "These are people living or working in the Newport area ," he said. Another 50,000 trips would be made by motorists passing through town. The legislator stres.5ed that without a coastal freewa y serving Newport's needs somewhere, that city's surface streets will be packed with stop-and-go traffic. "There will be more smog, more pollu· tion, more noise, more accidents and more disruption of the residential com· munities by far than with a freeway." Insurance Law OK'd in Boston BOSTON (AP ) -A new state law will make Massachusetts motorists lhe first in the nation to be covered by a new "no- fault" system of insurance. But one in~ slll'.ance C{)mpany says it won 't continue writing auto policies in the state and more threaten to follow sult. Gov. Francis W. Sargent signed the bill Thursday night. ending a long effort to change the 43-year-old compulsory liabili- ty insurance law unde r which the state's 2.5 million motorists pay the hi ghest auto insurance premiums in the nation. The key feature of the "no-fault" bill requires that a driver's own insu rance company reimburse him for medical bills and lost wages up to $2,000 regardless of who was at fault in an accident. Suits for "pain and suffering" are ruled out when medical bills are less than $500, except for certain cases involving permanent physical damage. Persons whose medical bills and lost wages ex- ceed $2,000 can sue for the additoinal amount. Advocates say the no.fault plan should make lower rates possible because it will eliminate the costs of lawsuits for the amounts under $2,000. DREXEL'S NEWEST For kid's and ftlft peopl11. Ava ilable in two re4resh· ing fini5he1 , Yellow end ••lrnon color. The best of aJI, it it •tein., bum •nd -..r re1i1t•nt. Your whimsy wiTI stay ra1• n•w no rM- 11< wbat .,.. do. c- pl.+. b.droom farnil•• ...,.i&eibl. fran -'•Y b.ds: to ch..,..i mirrors Md in et very tittM>ghtful ~1. S1e i.t today. "'""' ........ '' $140~ Ml.,..., __ ... $ 451 .YOUR lOCAl OEAlUS FOR DREXEl . HENREOON. HERITAGE • NEWPORT B ~CH 1727 W11tc!lff O•., 642·2050 OPIN NIDAY "Jll t INTERIORS Proft.ulon1I lnttrMw Detigners Av11l1bi.-.t.ID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 Nor1h c .. ,1 Hwy, 49~SS! OPIH NIDAT 'T1l f . ~. '.'L,--;;:::;-----:-. ~. ;:;:-::~::::!9--~~-------------------.... • • • . atA AJllDllllSON, lllft# •rill••• Anvtl 14, trr• I'll .. .,. 11 League Lauds 'fear's Aids The pleasure of saying 'jthank you" for valuable assistance-- and the equal pleasure of receiving thanks for a job well done was t.he happy combination enjoyed by members of the Assistance League of Newport Beach at a luncheon gathering in the service center. Those who participated duri!lg the past year in the philanthropic: endeavors of the league were taking the-opportunity to thank associ· ate members for their support and encouragement. Welcoming guests were members of the league's executive board, along with Mrs. Nickolas Frank, hospitality cb.ainnan, and her committee. A total of 12 new associate .members also received a welcome from Mrs. Robert Crowner, chapter president, who then .introduced them to the luncheon aiidience. New associates include the Mmes. James C. Bridges, Lyndon 0 . Brown , Raym6nd G. Godber, Eugene Grasse11J and Burton V. Col· !ins, who was president last year of the board of directors of the Na- tional Assistance League. • Others ar~ the Mmes. Edward F. Lethen, Hugh Rou selle, Don- ald W. Starling, Ralph M. Tandowsky, Clark A. Tea, Warde Watson and KeMelh E. Reafsnyder, a former' president of the Santa Ana Chapter of the Assistance League. The group toured the Thrift Shop and the Children's Dental Health Center, run by the Newport Beach chapter, at the conclusion o1 the luncheon. YEAR IN REVIEW -Mrs. Robert Crowner, president o! the As- sistance League of Newport Beach, glances over the shoulder of associate members ot the League who are reviewing the year's philanthropic accomplishments preserved in a memory book. They are (left to right) Mrs. Roy Carver Jr. and Mrs. Burton'V. Col· \ins, who is former president of the board of directors of the Na .. tional Assislance League. " • ' • • •• JOLLY FRIENDS-Children arrivfui bt the therapy 1'om ol Ille~ Child Guidance Center in Orange will find a>!Jiu>py w(\lcom• :.l"ilh the reassuring presence of toys provided by m'eUtbers cit KeynOlis .. Including (left to right) Leslie AUen, Cathy Martin and Michele Sal1at who alsO have been painting and decorating. Chi1dren' s Joy Keynotes Effort It's always a joy to furnish a child's room. but mem· bers of the teenage auxiliary to Har~r Key of the Orange County Child GuiQance Center have found particular joy in their endeavors this summer. The project undertaken by the Keynotes has been to paint and decorate one of the children's rocms used in lher .. apy at the new Child Guidance Center in Orange. They also have filled it with dolls, trucks, stuffed toys end games, placed in gay array for youngsters' delight. Jn conjunction with their special project, the Keynoters continue their work on Saturdays at lhe Harbor Key Thrift Shop where proceeds of sales support the Child Guidance C(.inic in Costa Mesa. At the clinic, therapists and medical personnel furnish low-cost psychiatric help for emotionally diaturbed children from preschool to tl\e age of 16. The teenagers who form the auxiliary are futute Em· pire debutantes. They wiU make their formal bow to society in June of 1971. The new president of Keynotes ls Theresa Gilcrest. Serving with her will be Laura Thornburg, vice president; Heat.her Harris, ~ecording secretary; Nancy Collier. cor .. responding secretary; Janet Barry, treasurer; Shelley Ner· ney, historian, and Michaela Kelley, press relations. Among events on the calendar for 1970-71 will he a hen· elit auction at the Balboa Bay Club and Christmas caroling at the center, when the group plans to decorate a tree and participate in a family Christmas party, A major fund-raising project will be the annual Keynote fashion show in March, and a motheNlaughter tea and membership drive are on the agenda for May. Mutiny . Ahead for Captain W -.ho Allows Crew No Leave DEAR ANN LANDERS: We are two re.na;ors -need you to speak up ror us. Grandpa is 81 years okl. We love him very much but his mind wander• and he's Jilte not all there. The doctor said Grandpa would be better o(f in the ok1 folb borne than at our house because Mom can't 1ive hlm the kind of care he needs. SO three weekl ago M"om and Dad took him to a nice place where U1e people are very friendly . Morn makes my brother Ind me (we are 15 and 16) go with htt to visit Grandpa every evening after supper. We wouktn'l mind a couple rugbts a week, Ann, but this every-night i:ouUne is lik e spacing us out It's bormg to alt in a room and not be able to carry M 1 cooversatlon. Grandpa doesn't even know who "' are. Mom 11)'1 it ii ANN LANDERS ~ beil1& respecllul and alfa' Grandpa b gone we w111 be glad we were 80 good to him. Will you speak up for us! Morn ii all tbi time handing us your column when you agree with her. -WHEELING, W. VA. DEAi\ WHEEU: J eaa'L tet that ll makes mudi ltnH for a couple or te_;_eUttn 1o I• visit I IOll~pol pudpa ... .., lll&Jll " lhe .... 11. Twlco • -lo plenty. I !lope 7""' Morn IWlll nctllllder ... otGp drOQlll ,... lkt• aloat ta wb1t 1be cottst:!tra lier duty vlsllo. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I couldn't believe my eyes when J read you r answer lo lhe falher who ~gn<d himsell "Se<ond Class Citizen." lt seems by the lime be sat down to read the newspaper tt was ripped apart His wife had torn out a recipe, bis daughter cllpped your column, hla mother-in·law wtnt for µ,e boroscope, etc. You told tum to &0lve the Pl<#>Jtm br picl<Ina up • "'"°r on U'le way home just for h.imsell. You call that advice? In aur family If you aro old enouch to read a newspaper yoo are akl enoup . to leave tt In good <OndlUon for the -peroon. Common courteoy and respecl for others lhooJd be learned early. A red Ink underllnln& pen for marking articles to be tom out later ls cheape.r than a eecond newspaper -and leu trouble, too. Anyone in our famll1 who wanl.I to tl!ar out an item ca n wait until the next day. Where were YOU, Ann Landus, when that column appeared! -DISAP- POINTED DEAR DISAPPOlllTED' I wao la Alb<ao but I wrote Ille odvlce btf .... I le!L F~11 mlllloo ....itrl CU'I be Wl'OIC -I.Id &bat'• rDCl01Y tbe aambet U.at eomplabtecl about my aner. I plead loinp«al'l' !haalty. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please tell women who go to bargain sales not to say to a _person who Is 1ooklng at a ule item, "U you don't want that r would like to buy it." This does one of two things -"both of them bad. Jl makes the woman who is considering the item more eager to buy II Ulan she wuuld onlinerlly be. Or It makes her feel guilty ii alte - buy ll Yesterday I paid 133 for • drta. I dldn 't need and would nol have purchased it If a Vf'r/ pulhy woman had nol alood •I my elbow makJni llUCb -U, "'lbll'I euctly wllaL I've been looking for. Hurry up and make up your mind." I am stuck with this "bargain" and can't return It because it wu on sale. I could wring that woman's oeck for what she did lo me. Pl .... prln~ - MINUS 133. DEAR MINVS ' Siie dldll'I do ""'*'"' le 1"· Yoo did tt le yownelf. C...lder It I $33 lesson and wear lite drea to tlte neJt bargain 1alt as 1 remmdtr. Who! awali. you on the other side of the marriage veil t How can you be sure )lour marriage will work:? Read Ann Landers' bookl., "Marrla;e -Whal to Elpect." Send your requ.,I to AM Landers Jn care .r lhe DAlLY PILOT encl<islng 50 ceni. in coin '!( io.,,' llamped ..U.acldrwod envet ' • I I • • • • . I • ' . ,. • 'I• ' • ~- • • • • " " . . I ' • 1: ' " .. . . . . . I : • .. :J, t• ~ .• ,. •• • • •· • ,., " . I • • r . lf OAJLY PILOT Frld.l.y, A119UJt 14, l'J70 Librar)' Trustee Board • • Elects -New Ehairm·an ........ Jk:1pai Bt.ach uino-... cl Truolos u .,.._will be lfn. T. iJun. Peering Around :t:E SI D I N G in Marin County are Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Dunbar (the 'former Mrs. Josephine Reid) who were married in the Laguna Beach home of Mr. and Mn. ArtlUlr Wiley. 'l1le Rev. Ell.sworth Riebardson of the Neil)iborliood Congrega· lional Church performed the ceremooy for Dr. Du.nbar, formerly a professor of neural surgery at t b e Unlvarsity of California Medical School, and the new Mn. llwlbar. alJe Wll lmlll......ai fn the ... po;p l<I acquire the Coriloa ciel 'IW Uhr.,Y. She has --1o1· tho library bolnl .lnc6' ~-191:1. Olhor library -1J1. •ctude Mrs .. Bannln&. Otarles S'word, Roger W. Hardacre and Dr. Tbonw A. Blakely. r,tn;. Marlin Sheely, city lil>carian, .ieporll .. 11.1 per. cent increase in td.al boob borTowed for the year, well above the average for a city. The figure represmts ID books read per pereon. '. Families may borrow 16- mm fihm and projec<ors, a new library 8e!'Vioe available through the film clrouit of the Santiago Ubrary S}'ltem. Vows Said In Chapel Ceremony SUzanne PauUne Ball and James Michael Kempner ei- chancM vows aod rings before the Rev. Olarles Smltll. in tbe Calvary Ou1pel, Santa Ana. The _bride is the "daughter of Floyd R. Bili ol Hun~ Beach, wbo a.ave.~ ill mar- riage. Her mother la Mn. Ruby Ball of the same city. Her busb&od'a parents are Mn. Goorge -o{ Costa M~ and :J'allan .Kem(IO<r ol Slit I.eke City. . ---------- Horoscope Virgo: New Outlook SATURDAY AUGUST IS By SYDNEY OMARR DATING HlN'l'S: Unusual placu and 1lgbt11 are fUiturtd. Jet set is especially active. Discussions feat\lring greater •elf-knowledge are In 1poUigbt. Aquarius Is person- aUty kid, while Capricorn gets the cbeck. Pisces ba1 bUnd da te, whlle Leo ill concerned about permanency or relat100- 1bip. Ubra 11 involved in ro- mantic aitaatfon, wlille Sa&i'-" tariu1 doe1 plenty ol laugb· ing. Fine for cemenUng of friendships and realization of hopes and wishes. ARIES (Marth 21-April 19): Accent on new friends, a dynamic relationship. Personal magnetism soars. Nothing is apt to occur halfway -all the way or nothing. But give logic equal time with impulse. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Wise to take safety precau· tiO'l'ls on the road -and al home. Emotional ruse of famf· Jy members apt to be al short poini. If you antagonize, you wil pay the price. Strive to be diplomatic . GEMINI (May 21-June 20J: Reinforce beliefs t hr o u g h spiritual contemplatioo. You can have fun without going haywire. Means don't toss principles aside. You have to face yourself in momine:. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Friction with mate, partner enipt.s unless there Ls financial understanding. fdatter which has been put aside reappears. Jl concerns who owns what -and what to do with it. LEO (July 23-Aug. !2): Study cancer message. You get very little if insistent. domineering. Light touch is more apt to achieve resulls. Coocentrate on public rela- Uons. Improve image. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. !2): Avoid strenuous activity, Catch up on health resolutions. New outlook could actually soJve dilemma. Cement rela- tionships with associales, co- workers. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. !2): Children n1ay prove ram- bu'.ictious. Ren1ember your own age. Being a pal does not n1ake it necessary to act in foolish manner. Be fair but firm. Look out for safety hazards. SCORPIO (Oct. 1.l-Nov. 21 l : Yoo could receive windfall. You are in expansive mood. Include family i n en· tertainment plans. Have fun without being extravagant. News concerning property is favorable. SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 )1 Not so good for !ravel. You tend to overlook basic requirements . Take time to avoid scattering forces. Relative who is insistent will respond to humor. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19J : You may feel com- petilive. But It is best to be a good, attentive listener. All facts should be considered. There is change. but this does not necessitate travel. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You gel ben·~fit of vigorous individual who wanla to aid cause. Express gratitude. Best to remain close to home base. Fine din· nl'r with family could smooth ever dUferences. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Some hazards are n o t evidence. Ee cautious. You could be victim of wishful thinking. Hold off on im~ portant decisions. One who carries rumors is irresponsJ· ble. Respond accordingly. IF TODAY IS YOUR. BIRTHDAY you have natural dramatic ability. But you sometimes overplay yo u r hand. You are begirming now to build for future securil1: -material and emotional. Many comment on unusual quality of your voice. You love to be flattered, especially by opposite se.x, Orders Ignored? NE\Y YORK (UPI) -How \\'ell do parents cornply with doctors ' orders regarding their children? Not too well, say! Dr. Marshall H. Becker, pediatirc sociologist. Dr. Becker. who has con~ ducted a study on the subject, said that parents have a "distwbing. low rate of com• pliance" with the doctors' In· structions. NATIONAL BONOR was -by. COiia Mesa mi· dent fc.-a poem she entered in the American P o e t r y l.eqQO'I lllDUal cootesl. Mn. MacQl' L. Jensen WU among the top 12 wirmen for ber entry ... To a Moder n Kritikoa. •• AUeodillg as maid of i_,. was Miss O!risUne Dales, while bridesmfid.s were the Ml .... Sandy KemJlll<f, the bridet!room's lilt<r, Candy Hetzel, Patricia Ball, the bride's siSter and"nna Adams Best man mas John Yoak, DAILT PILOT .....,.W.,_ kflMldtr 1------------------------------ Geometown Manor. 21tt H. 'TUSTIN AVL s.D,,,_ Horth cit IN! St.. -... _ OCUH1'l'll ,_ lllO MOIT 8(AIJlllU. -"' Ethant/Alltn FURNITURE and u!llbers were David Hays and Bill Richardson. Following a honeymoon in Mexico, the newlyweds will reside in Costa Meisa. Blue Star Moms Runtlngton Beach Blue Star Mothers, Chapter 2 51.age meetings every Monday al l :30 p.m. in Lake Park Clubhouae. Free Esttma• RE· UPHOLSTER Complete Selertlon of -r f'abria lnrludlnr: Linens and Velvets Muter Craftsmen AIW•Y• •• CzyKOSKI 1131 NEWPORT ILVD. COSTA MESA'""'",,...., ISY·kOS.kEY·I P•one 642-1454 LAND OF OZ -Off to see the Wizard of Oz are Dorothy, played by Dee Dee Cba!Uo, 12 (fore&round ), and Toto, Portrayed by Christopher Moore, 9, both of Lag~&. They will join other cast members in a production of the famous tale ~unday, Aug. 16, at 4 and 7 p.m., sponsored by the Laguna Swnmer Theater Workshop. Lagunans Invited Yellow Brick Road Followed The Wizard of Oi will 'come lo life in Laguna Beach on SW'lday, Aug. 16, when children participating in the Laguna Summer Th e a t e' r Workshop take to the stage al 4 and 7 p.m. The production will be the final demoD.!ltnUoo of the workshop's fllmmer session in pantomlne, lmprovi!ation, speech and technical training Mesans Recite Vows In Evening Ceremony Exchanging, wedding vows and rings before the Rev. Jean Stewart in Anaheim Unity Ctiapel wert Pamela Ann Chandler and Loyed Justin Hale, both ol Costa Mesa. Parents o( the newlyweds are Cost.a Mesans Mr. and Mrs. Garth Olandler and Mr. and Mrs. L<lyed Hale. for children and youths from 6 through 18. Pyne Casile In Laguna will be the setting for the play, for which no admission will be charged. The public is in- vited and donations will be accepted. Cast members Include Dee Dee Challis as Dorothy ; Christopher Moore, Toto: Clare Glidden, wicked witch; Leslie Ludwick, scarecrow; Robin ·Buck, tin woodman; Wendy Yarnell, lion, and MicheUe Vautier, Glinda ; SPECIALS FOR AUGUST The bride's grandfather, -Olarles W. Groff, a1so or Costa Mts1, gave her In mar· riage. Others are Michael Moore, jester; Kelly Clever, Margaret Mancu.so and Michelle Ziegler, Oz creatures; Charles Rockwell, great wizard ; Chris Essley, guardian of the gates; Kenny Pound, Kelly Clever and Stephanie, Susan and Joan Mancuso, munchkins. Miss Gwen Yarnell. director of the workshop, is being assisted in the producUon by Miss Genene Kluck. NOW THRU AUGUST 31st Attending the pair a s matron of honor and best man for the evening ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Stephenl---------------------------------------- SUPER B VITAMIN ''A'' HAIN A w,tl •1t1bli1htd, l:.11. '"''" forrnul•, with th1r· f.ISH LIVll OIL CAPSUUS 1p•11tic: pot111ci1t. S1Hlow1r M1rt1ri111 25,000 U.S.P. Unih JOt ....... 1et.S1.tt 100 CAPSULIS 011• Pound srlCIAL $t59 .... , ... $1 .00 1 .. 11ler '1tc 60 f.Wlfh. let. Sl.4t 79c 39c SPECIAL $2.79 trlCIAL SPICIAL EL MOLINO WHEAT GERM FLAKES ONI POUND -llG. 4k ... , •.•• , •••••••.• SPECIAL 39c CAMU PLUS Calcium Lactate FAMILIA to T1bl1t1-Th1 Fe•·oril• A Milk $ourc• C1lciul'll I J ••· Ol1w1bl1 Vil11"11i11 .. C" I 00 f.Wab, .... 691-f1,..ou1 lirch1rmu11li l~O M&S srlCIAL 49c c., •• , IUY' THIM Hiii AT Zot Tet.!<tH, k ... Sl.4t .... ,,, 2 e.n1 .. s300 ... DICIAL $1.19 1nc1AL 69c VITAMIN ''E" SPECIALS ' IOll.U.-IOICAPSULU-H•.SJ.4S .......... SPECIAL $1.98 ... l.U. -IOI CAPSUllS -.... ,..,, .......... SPECIAL $3.59 SILICT CHAMOMILE Ti.A .... ... 1V• .._Peck• SHCIAL 79c HllNMI APPLE JUICE Fte"" r1r1il1•, C1lif. Th111 lt111t At1., l•tt1r °" " .. , ... ,." 1PICIAL 89c .... Jl.OI COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS Two St or ff To S.rwe Y eu le tier COSTA MESA 211 I. 17th St. In Hlllt,.... Sq.,.ro 54t-9Sl7 TUSTIN TOM IRVINE llLVD. NIAR SAV-ON 544-7134 Case. Ushering &uests to their seats was Ezra Briggs Jr. The new Mr. and Mrs. Hale, both graduates of Estancia High 'School, will live In Costa Mesa. She is attending a pro. fessional school for medical assistants and he has studied al Orange Coast Collegt. Special weddins auest s were Dr. and Mr!. Guy O. Be<m, the bride's aunt and uncle . Precisionists Participoting An Air Force drill team wlU participale in the All States Festival al the Co,sta Mesa Park on Sunday. Aug. 16, hosted by Flight 12, Air F'orce Mothers. The llighl meels al 7::l0 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 20 , in U1e California F'ederal Sav- ings and Loan building, C:OSta Mesa . Interested persons may call Mrs. Walter Hurtado at 548· 9748 or Mrs. Juanita Furrow at :M-3159. ORDER YOUR NEW CHEVY VEGA NOW FOR EARLIEST POSSIBLE DELIVERY • CONNELL CHIVIOLIT 2121 Harltor 11\'d, c .... MMa ..... ,200 ,, ,,. i I • • . f;•sta Mesa • .VOt:. 63, NO. 1194, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE CQUITTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, All&UST 14, '1970 County Jets Create· Chem~cal Smog-Not ~oot By PATRICK BOYLE Of Mlt Oflltr ,tiff Stiff Photo-chemlcal smog In Orange County is being increased by commercial jtt aircraft equipped with "clean burner cans," according to the chairman of the California Air Resources Board. Dr. A. J. Haagen..Smit, a chemist at the Calltornia Institute ol Technology, said the burner cans burn the IOOt whlch would otherwise faU to the groWld. But, in his oplnlon, it is better to In- crease the amog by a small amount than lo haYe a cloud of soot hanging over the area SWTound.ing airports. Haagen-Smlt i.s a pioneer researcher on smog, particularly photo-cl>emical smog, the type auociated with Southern Callfornla. He aakt photo-chemical amoa: is created by a chemical ructkln between com· bustlon-produced 011des of nitrogen and suullglot. The soot-produoed by the jets ~ sim ply a by-prodlict of the burning of fuel. "The. soot atays..!n lb~ tunas if it ls In- haled," he said in a telephone interview today. "The' burner cans lnStaUed on tbe aircraft jet enpnes are very simp!Ui.d aftorbumert whicb ellmlnlto Ille IDOi. • Jn burning lbe soot, Ille. burner CUI throw more oxides of nlltoltn illto the air, be explained. The ""' oornmen:ial l!rllnes !lying oul of Onn&e Cowl\)', Air Callfoml& and Alr West, both report that tbey have begun inataJJln& Ille ~--on their aira'afL Under Federal l .law, all com .. * '* * Air men:lal jel almaft Dlllll be equ!J>pld Dr. Haqen-Smlt said !he IOOI ot rA with the btlrner eans by the end of Im. Angeles lnternaUOnal Airport bas IDo "Many people forget !bat ~ percent ol creased so much in tbe past few yow !he combuatlon takeo pla<e in tbe turbine . of lbe jet engille " llaapl>Smit --• that ii now 8IDOW1ls to about 11.JIO'COlll 'Tbe oxides of ruir.teu that -.... , of !he air p>l!uU.,, in that area. are alrl!ady fotmed. Tbe afWl>urner just ~-llOOt lalls on a very 1111111 ana," finishes lbe combustlao, making a little be said, "but the small alDOUlll ol ..,.. more :s'fDOI, but not a algnWcant formed when the soot Is. burned ii amount." diasipeted over a large area.'' * * * * * * Cuts · Costly? Official Sa ys U.S. Aid May be Lost Swinas u i t Salute OAll!Y PILOT 111n PM• tPf# I l Sue Olson (on diving board) directs rehearsal for Costa Mesa .Recreation Department's fifth annual aqua show schedUied for 7:30 p.m. neirt Thursday and Friday at Estancia High School. Show 11 en- titled "A Salute to Orange County." AmOng per- formers will be (clockwise from IZ o'clock)·?#~­ reen Budzinski, Marilyn Lamb, T¢ Pic:Ult, , Tracee Becker, Amy Ciolli, Debbie .Grosz, Elllne Baden and Carol Horne. f opless Dancers At Mesa Tavern Freed of Charges Charges of indecent exposure and lewd conduct were dropped Thursday against seven dancers who appeared in the altogether at Costa Mesa's Firehouse bar. They failed to appear altogether, in court, but were represented by attorney Ray Legg who argued there waa simply no grounds for prosecution, He said he has never &een any ol the a.even defendants, among them Nancy Kimbell, who was arrested aa Sharron Katt and hasn't been seen since by lawmen either. Mias Kimbell ii wanted for quesUonlng aboot the use of identification cards stolen from her cousin's wife, the former Sharron Katt. She was under 21 and thus ineligible to show off her charms In the tavern at 177 E. 17th St., where lawmen caught her sizzling act some week.! ago. Attorney Legg argued that the law In· volves exposure in public places and that palrons pay to see the girls show their difference from boys, thus it Lt not a public place. Judge Dungan agreed. Reagan Forces w Hold Up Voting for Carpenter It appears that the Reagan ad· minlslration supporters will walt for Tuesday'• special election in Orange County before voting on the second half or the governor's $1 billion tu overhaul legislalion. The outcome of the S4th Senatorial District special election is almost a sure victory for prominent NeWJUt Beach at- torney DennJs E. Carpenter, the Republican St.ate Chairman. Ht would take office Wednesday. Administration supporters virtually threw in tbe towel today on hQPel of enacting the stalled tax program without the aid of Orange County voters. William T. Bagley, (R-San Rafael) author of the tax plan said the only circumltance be foresaw which could bring about a vote wly nut week would be for tbe 13 holdout lfllllton to abandon their opposition and vote for tbe bill. Carpenler ii oppooed on !he rtato senate teat ballot by a fellow· Republican, Oouglu Irvine, who threw bia support to Carpenter. At Nb Ja lhe seat left va· cant by former GOP Sen. John G. Schmitz, Tustin, who wu elected to Congres.s. Twelve Democrats and one Republican have blocked for more than two weekr the key second half of the governor'• election year tax legislation. On their first run at passage, ad· mlnl.stration supporters fell one vote lbo!1 or the 11 needed for passage. The fln:t half of tPe program wu approved overwhelmingly earlier. Toy Weapon Sale Ban At Airports Proposed WASHINGTON IAPJ -The Federal Aviation Administration has a a k e d airport operators to ban the sale of knives or Jmitalion weapons at terminals to prevent their po11lble use by sky. ae:kara. Carl F. Malsch, FAA security chief, confirmed Thuraday airport managements have been asked to discourage vendon from making such articles readily available to shoppers at alrporll, ' Any cutback ln the number of eom- merclal jll flilhll al Orange Counly Airport in vtolalion of the county's ex· Isling coolracl& wllh the airlines could coll !he county IU mUllon. accordin& to county A viatlon Director R o b e r t 8rf-'DahaD. That ii the amount of federal mooey be said bu been given to the alrporl under !be Fed<ral Aid to Alrporb progam. The money bas been used for runway con- struction, installation of an instrument Ia.ndlng system and other projects. .''I lhink the airlines could file a sult against the county if we broke lbe coo- trae:t.1 by cutting back aervtcea.," Bresnahan said. "and !hey would ask the Federal Aviation AdministraUon to get involved. The suit would be filed on the basis of dlscrimlnaUon agaimt the airlines." · "Jf we Joel," be added, "I am sure we would have to pay back the federal * * ·*· COmriQssi ' ' ' Wonk on tong Term Planning ' Orange QJunty Airport coqunillloner1 t.nllUvely reooJved lwo of lix proposed recornmendltlons they will mak.e to the board of aupervison after a three-hour session In Santa Ana Thursday. The group will meet again Saturday at 9:30 1.m. In the supervisors' hearing room in Santa Ana to coolinue thelr dellberatlorui. The commUsion is trying to thrash out a liat of do'11nd don't's to forward to the aqpervllOl's in relation to the Ralph M. Parsona Company'• Phase II rep;u1 on air tranaportatlon problems in the coun- ty, unveiled two weeb ago. The airport advbory group started their deliberaUons Jut Tuesd111y, but fail· ed to agree on any definite reoom· mendations. At the end of the tbree-hour debate Thursday, the commlsaiooers did ten- tatively decide in a split S-1 vote that no more jet flights should be .added to the current 30 dally at Orange County Airport for at least one year. A second tentative suggestion Ls that the Northrop Corporallon'1 current noise monitoring proaram at the airport be u• ed to set maximum noise standards after a ti.month trial period. CommissJoner Roger D. Slates of Hun· lingtm Beach, who cast lhe loot dissen- ting vote said, ''There are two matters we should resolve before recommendlna: anything on nols~. Establishing a Omit on a number of ffight.s ta the only aure way to pacify homeowners and to ensure the supervisors there won't be more jell, but there Is no legal way we can hold the (See AIRPORT, P11e I) Trial Date Set For Dr. Slocum Water Firms Join Forces Trial on charges he murdered and dismembered hi1 own infant daughter hu been set for Sept. I, for onetime Costa Meaa aurgeon Dr. Wu!ey G. Slocum. Judge Samuel Drelzen set the new lr:lal date Thutlday and ordered Dr. Slocum - held In Orange County JaU for five months now -returned to hi& Superior C.OU.rt on that date. He also approved replacement ot defense attorney Paul Aogllltlne Jr., bl Santa Ana lawyer Michael Gtrbol , which Dr. Slocum h11 adlmantly demanded in recent montbs. AulJUSllne, """' a neighbor of Dr. Slocum and his 1ucce.asful defender tn other crhninal cases, bowed out of the ca1e In July fonowtnc a seriu of bitter cluhea with the defendant. Dr. Slocum was In court wllh him awaiting pretrtal hearlnc on 1 '2.2 mJlllon dJlmage claim stemmina from a shootout with Santa Ana police that ruined hi.a career when arrested late lut March. Mesa District to Supply SA Heights Custome rs Freeway needs have led to a recon- ciliation between two Orange c.oast •rea water 1Uppllen and fnretd canceJlation of a 1ull by the smaller 11ency against the larger ooe. .D~ecton ol !hi OJrta M1sa Cowlly W11« Dillrict CCMCWDJ awl09ed 1n ag-Tbunday nilht by which they will oupply !hi old Santi Ana Heilhll Wal<r Company. Share-holders In !he Santa Ana lfelghl'• firm wUI pay the same price for their water 11 CMCWD CUit.omen. The deal WU nectSSlllted bf lhe lllle Div-ol Rlghw"8' acqulalUon of pro- J>Ol'IY which includel !he Hel&btl form'• primary Jtne to its water well. COnltructlon on the Newport and Corona de! Mar freeway inlm<Ctlon 11 Newport Boulevan! and Pallsadea ll<old will ellmlnall thal pipe line. CMCWD dlreclors also agreed lo pro- vkle a aervJce connection and allot IO acre-feet ol !he f60 they hold in the San Joaquin Raervott to the smaller com- pany. Irvine Company approval Is required, •Ince tt butlt the raervoir. The CMCWO now paya f!l0,000 per year for the 450 •ere-feet -or about tO ctnll per cuatomer per monlh -and tl!la roll will be llJ>P,OIOd on the S,nll An& llel&hll oompany, amoonUng to 11,100 per monlh. A melered aervl<e <0nnectloo beiw- tha two wallr-411P1>1Yin& qendeo will be ettJbllahed at Slntt Ana Avenue and PaJlsadel Road. Belldea flow• from lhl San Joaquin . t Rt.servo~. lbe Sanll Ana Het&ht& firm II upected to ua IOme Melropolilan Waler Dill.rict ~, at M per au.foot. Ill MWD IOrvic< 'lh! CMCWD pay1 lbe ...,. pr1oo for Dlrectofl of !he company ll>ul oU b' the Dlvlalon of Hlglow1y filed 1ull 1PI01t the CMCWO more than a year ago over Jta extepaion of water tervlce to a lar1e apartment coaiplu. They clalm<d lhef. had lurlodlctlon ,ver !he • ..._. °""~ cwp boun- dariOI, bqt had all<ieillY ~ unable to pr;vlde service aJid the buOder WU haul· inl hll nttt. Tennl ol !he ~yoar IOrYlce ._ ment bet.,.., Ille two ~,. require thal lhe 1Ull, -in the !:""'ll''Diltrjct Court of• AJ)"'8il in San Btm1rdlno, 1/1 clroppetl. . money that has been 1,pent1 at Oranp Counly Airport." . Tbe counly bas Jeaae ._menll wttll Air West and Air CalHcrnla wtucb pro- vide for an lncrea.se in lbe average number of daily flights" lhrouib 'tbe U· piration ol the eootracb. The Ali' C1! agreement, which expires Nov. I, 1171, provldea for a maxlmwn averqe ol 21.1 dslly filgbls by !ho end of llrnl and 2U daily tllgbll by Nov. of !I'll. The Air Wesl conlrad upJres March 28, lm, and provides for a 1I19imum average or 8.5 daily !lights by the end of 19'70, 10.i dally flights by the end ol 1171 and 13.7 daily Oigloi. lhrougb March of 1171 Tbere are presently a yearly average of %2 daily commercial jet filghts ·from Orange Counly Airport, and lbe airline• are permitted to have an average total of 30 daily Olgbil tbrou&b !be end of this year. An official of the Federal Avlatloa Dt"''t ~· 118'!!! Adminllllrallon in Los Ani•les sal<t Ille airlines colild poaibly Win I dlocrlminl· tion suit. Dan Peleraoo, UsJgned to tbe Airporl D.ivisioo of lbe FAA. said, "AD alrporl under the Fed<ral Air to Alt!>Orta pro. gram can't get in"olved in dlscrimlna- Uon." "lf lbe use ls Umlled to one lype ol alfcrafl, it muol be done ill mch 1 way that lt 1.5 not unjmt dlscrlmlnation. Fot instance. It 1llllSI be done In tbe Interests of safety or to meet the needs of the public." "li the d.Lsalmination involved a b(eacb of contract, the FAA would SUI !he alrporl," be said. •'But this 1uit would normally be filed J111l lo atop Ille dl,>crlmlnatlon." "I know of no cases where an airport was rtqulred to pay back the moot)' to the government," be added, "but it could happen." Costa Me~a Coed Killed Riding Bike Into 'Train -Failln( to .,. a a<llling 1Jpal in operation, 1 Costa Mw coUe1e 1!rl rode her small motorcycle lqlo a Santo Fe freight engine at a 1\l!tln inter1ectlon Thursday and was fatally Jnjured. Bonnie J. Kerutedy. 21, ol 371 W. Bay St., succumbed to multlDle injurlel at Tuslln Communlly llolpltal, las tl!a• fowr hours after °"' 3: 15 p.m. CQIJlsion. Tu.!tin police said the Orange Cout College student was dragged about 2S rett down tbe road bed belore the llow· moving traln could grind to a hall The engineer wu identified u Donald E. Houghlan, 38, of Fullerton. Patrolman Hart Beebe said 1ignala at ·Freeway Hearing I n Sacramento P ostponed Again The Senate Transportation Committee hearint on the controversial Badham bill to eUmlnate the Pacific Cout Freeway lhrough Newport Beach, l<lheduled for Monday, has been po!tponed again. A 1pokesnum for Sen. Randolph ColUer (D-Y,..kl), chalrm1n of lbe Senste panel. said this morning that a crowded calen- dar has forced the fourth postpanement. His office said a bearln1 would llkely be scheduled at a apecial meeUna aornetlme later In lhe week, probably Wedlleaday. The Senale la hoplni to 1d- journ AU&. 21. A delegaUon of Orange Coast offlclal1 and private cllizena It expected to m1ka . the trtp to Sacramento for the he.ring, ~never It ti. They have m•de the Journey· before,, onlj' to fi"li !he Item post~ al Ba~m'• requeat at the l!SSt mlnuta. 11>e third po1tponement came Jut wetk bul tlje announcamenl hid been made 1ever1l dafl: Jn .advance. As written , !ht blll would simply cul out !he Newport IOCilon of the fl'MWay, from Beach Boulevard In fful\llinlon Beach lo lhe city line eall ol Coron1 del Mir. 'Ille meaaure b11 dr•wn aul)l)Ol't from Newport.Beoch ofllclall, whU• beinc - demned by r<preaeplaUv .. fl'Oll\ Co!,11 Moaa Lil,... !Je1Ch1 •ocf KllnllJliton 1 Beach. It pr_. no altmoate rou\o and It ii !he' fO\lllnr lh11 haa ~eel Newport retlden~ ' " -\ • J. !ho .,..ing in the 1200 bJocl: ol West Edingw Avenue were in oper1t1Qo and Miss KeMedy apparenUy just fslled to see them. Engineer Houghlan was moving a strin( of flatcars onto a sidin& when the victim rode inlo Ille 1lcie of !ho r.ritcb engine, investigators said. Miss Kennedy, who la survived by her, lalher. lbe Rev. E. E. Kennedy. ~ of a rural oongregatJon in Pennaytvllliai, waa !he lhlrd COWlly mo<orcyclist killed witbln a week. Funeral aervices were peodlng his ar· rival from the eut over the weekend, ac- cordinl to a spokesman for Balli Mortuary in Costa Mesa . Mesa High Offering Help With Changes Costa Men High School'• counselin& department will be open from I a.m. to 4 p.m. dslly from Ail(. 21 lo II for llUdenll wiahing to tn1ke schedule change:i;. ~D~lng studenta ~ will b 1 regJatered and oo appointment ta necessary, Mrs. Fran Newman, auli'tant principal, uld. Ora•1e Cou& Weadler It'll be another w"k~ for bask. ing on the beachelr~· since the tefll* peral""' will &hoot lnlo !he middle 70'! aJooa lhe -l Ind ruch ~p lo II further ialud. INSIDE TODAY A. n aQUatica 1Mw ot NtlOJ)Ort llarbOT l(fah School and • 114•1.11 /Um /11Uva! •I Laauna 111 .. h /llgh School ' ar• U.. /e•lllrld 111enta Jn today'• W ttktMift 11ctton. • • I ~---· • . ' • , ' , • • • l :· '· ., ;; r • ~ . • • • I • • • ' ' • • • • • • c Mesan Held A~\Susrec! Li •1;.1-un -. A ~ lieu woman who allepdly aped ~•Y• le1viD&: an injured mot.oreycllst in the street· was arrtlted later af the scene of a carqcle coUWon 'l'lwlQy .nlibL Mn. _...,, Dlllonato, ti. "' JI& J~ st. wu booked tmo Orange Oou.D- IY Jill .. l!Ulplc:loo of !c:looy blt and 1'W1 •Dd felony ·drunk driving. The motorcyclist, Bert E. V1ughn, 11. ol 2113_ National Ave., Costa Mesa, was lllld Ill aallst.c!ory condition today •l Oranp Coonty Medical Ceola" with moJUple Injuries. Wtfutssei s.aid Mrs. DiOonato wu turning left from West Wlllon Street onto Fordham Drive at 7 :52 p.m., Yl'hen vaupn·1 we.stbound motorcycle 1lddded ldlo .the side of ber car. One witness told lnvestiptlng officers the wmnan saw what happened. ac- celerated and aped away. Officer Richard Fn!deriben was ad· ministering firJt aid to Vaughn, Vr'ho au!· fered a posaible coocussion, head lacera· tions, abrasions over h1s entirt body and loosened teeth when the suspect ·~ preached about 10 minutes tater. Police &aid Mn. Di.Dooato was brought back by her teenaged daughter. Officer Ed Sutton q1"!Stioned the woman and then placed her under UTest on suspicion of the two felooy charge1. Complaints were belng IOUght from the di!trie! _a~y t.odly. l',....P .. el AIRPORT ••. alrlines to •iWr -1 leVeJ of flli!Q." Slalol ..... referring to lhe county'• lease contract with Air California and Air Welt that illow1 the airlines to increaae up to :15 fifihti ln 1171 and 42 lliglJls tn 11171 when the .... t11cta expin. The airliner; "1't CUtTently mating about 30 departurea a day Irom the alrport. Hopefully to be reaolvecl'Saturdly II • recommendation by Comm I 11 loner Robert A. Oark of Brea to lhe effect lhlt airlines and private jet operators rather lhlD government ageoclel should PoY homeowners for any properly thal mllbt be coocltmned becauae of unacceptable nolae otandlnla tn the vicinity of lhe airport. Oark alao """-'.lliursday lhll lhe county should cute an ' ' a i r p o r t authority" to replace the oomminian u • ..parale organization to ~ more effective operation of present ad future air ladlltJes tn lhe county. Clark Aid that in the year he bas serv- ed on the eomm!alon it baa become ob- vious thal the bocly bad DO power to en- fotte ita reoommendaliom. CommlMinn Qa.lnne.Q J1mes Gilmore d Saoll Alli Ulled tho oetllng of ,,.,.. otandardo for Orqe County AJrporl regardlm of otate Ol' fed<nl -tn the fleld. "Who laioWB when either government body will get around to establishing standarda?'' Gilmore asked. Slates objedod to lhe I e ng I by ditawaioo on ooise standards u.ying. "we 1bould address OW'ltlvea to the re.al ques.. lion, What are we going to do about Orange County Airport?" Clark reminded Slates that he was a minority on the commlaaion in that view. !Slata bad suggesled Tueaday lhlt all jel flights from the airport be banned ati.r 1912.) GUmore agreed that the long term ob- }ect.ive lhoold bt to eliminate all jet lligbtl from the facility. C.ounty Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan vigorously objected to ~ishing any noise standards at the airpc::rt. "U you set such standardl you will have to close down the airport," ho arllJed. Slab Kills Workers PIDLADELPHIA (UPI) -A five-ton &lab of granite plunaed 10 floors when a cable holc&ng it broke Thursday, killiAg two coostruction workers ud critically Injuring: I third DAILY PILOT OUMO~ (OUT l"UtU'"IHG C0M'AN't l•IMf+ N. w • .4 J.,. l . C11..ley Yie. ,,... .. ..,, Ml4 ~ M•MW r1i ..... , 1< .... i1 Tli•"'•• A. Mwr,liiftt M-eilll ElflW c....111 .. 0Mu JJO Wtit l 1y Sh••t .. ,IU~t A4ilr1111 r.O. I•• IJ•O, 9J616 --,...,,.,. ~ nn w.t ....,. """'-" ~~-,,_,._ .......... ....,., 11111 ................ ... ~I al ,,..,. al c,,.NM ltftl Artistry in Sarling Sculptures of surfer done In bronze by Cardiff artist Edmund Shum· pert exclwively for Huntington Beach's U.S. Surfboard Champion· ahips will go to tap winners in the 1970 version of the event Sept. 1&-2D. President in New Orleans ForTaJks on School Action NEW OB.LEANS (UPn -Pruidenl NiJon arrived today with a lf'OUP of bis top advlaen for • French Quarter motornde and a talk with Southemen on how fut and how far school desesrega- lion will go tbil faJL Tbt President aod Mrs. Nilon "ere met at New OrlWI.! International Airport by natioftal. GOP committeeman Tom Stag, .state GOP cbatnnlD Charles Degravelle& and a group of other slate Republican figure.!. 'Ibe prealdentia1 party e n t e r e d limouaines for tbe drive along Canal Street which runs through the center of the city'• hlatork: French Quarter toward the Royal Orl•IDI Hold where the INJUP Mideast Truce .. • Deteriorating- l&rael Jets Hit JERUSALEM CAP) -Israeli air forct planes ltruck at Jordanian army posl· lioal today, the military command said, In further deteriorations ol the Middle East ceue-fire. The mllita.ry 11Jd the raid WU }&UJ)o cbed against Jordanian army •trorigbol~• which have Jiven asslstance to Palud· nian guerrillas in attacks against laraell frontier seWements. A spokesman llld the Jordanian army "as.silts terrorists and makes it possible for them to act agalrut Israeli clvillarui." A 1pokesman elt'lier had announctd that Israeli Air Force jeta croued the border .and bombed and strafed Arab guerrilla targets lnslde Jordan for the ae- CODd straight day today. The Tel Aviv spokesman said those raids were in response to mortar attacU on two Jewish seUlements • The planes all retumed safely after hlt- llng objectives adjacenl to l11rael'1 Beisan Valley, he said. Btisan Valley set,.. llements of Maoz Halm and Yardena came under mortar fire during Thur11day night, but no damage was reported . This was the steond Israeli air strike Inside Jordan since the Middle East cease-fire went Into effect a week ago. The guerrilla organlr.atlon.s have disown- ed I.he truce lnltlaled by tbe United St.at.ea: u a preliminary to peace talks. An Israeli newspaper, the Tel Aviv Yediot Aharonot, reported that Egyptian &oldie.rs fired acr01s the SUei Canal In a second minor violation of the cease-fire Thursday. The newspaper said the in- cident occurred in the wat.erw•y's central sector when a few bullets from small arms weapons were fired over Israeli positions. The military command said it could not confirm the 11lootiq: but refused to deny U. Two days ago the army aald four bullets were fired from the Egyptian side of the canal in the same sector. There were no cuualties and the fire was not returned. the JJraeli.a old. Reporta from Amman &aid Jordanian authorities have llchtelieii a e c u r l .t y me.asurt1 to prevent Arab commandos from lddn•plnc dlplom1ll. foralp•n o< a:ovemment officials. Informants uld the 1Ueirilla1 may rl!30l'i. U. lhil tactlc to nbotage lhe U.S. peace plan. Two Beirut newapapen a1Jo reported that King Hu11eln of Jordan hu warned his armed forcea to be on the alert because aubverslvea were ploUin1 to alaiainat.e him and olller Jordanian of· flclal1. 'Mle kJng 1aid the assaaslns might be dls&WMd 11 Jordanian 1oldler1, 1¢-" cor4JJ11 to the nports pelhll.shed by Al Mtar ond Al KUah, pelrportlna to he the IOlt ol an Au1. I royal clroular to the 11!111· wuat.oYlnc. Whtie the Pmident met tilth ,._.. taUvu from seven Southe.rn states, Mrs. Nixon planned to vialt the French Quarter at length, including St. Mary's of the A!lumptim Church, known u one of the fineat eumples of brici architecture in the country. Nixon, Attorney General John N. MltcheJI. F.ducation Secretary Elliot N. Richard.son and Counsellor Robert H. Finch planned to outline adminlatration policy and listen to local problems in meetings with the chairmen and vice chairmen cl ltate advisory commJtteea on public educaUon. The state committees, consisting maln- Jy of private citizen!, are offshoots of the President's speciaJ cabinet commlttee on education which has betn trying to ease Ult mixture of black and whtt.e children tn Sootbe:m schoois. Ttf It.ate committee official! Invited to todiy'a meetng were from Alabama, Arkan.su, Lou.lJlans, Georgia, Mississippi and the Carolinas. The non-official nature of ... the com· miUue: Jed ... IAoitiana e dqcatlen 1uperln~ WJ!lil~ Tbundly " ...... lllMJ tri . "l-.11oWt, ·of. 1or1uoe letter; he can't get a ~picture unle.,· ho talk$ to people down here wl1o 1cnow ~ tltuallon, Of COUr&e; 'that'• 'the waj the Republfi:IDI operale," II~ Dodd. a Democrat. "They get moat of their fn.. formatJon from Wall Street and Madlsoo Avenue." The administration on the eve ol the visit reaffirmed its plarui U:> pursue a policy ol "reasonabk!!ness" in aeeklng icllool desegregation in the South. Mitchell, appearing b e for e e Senate committee, avoided a ~ frentaUon wtlh 'tOme liberal Northern senator1 bf offering an el'planation that appeared to ut11fy them. "Until the higher courts .decide dlf- ferenUy.'' Mllcbell 1aid, "we will con- tinue to apply the 1tandard o I rea10nableness.'' Mare Hit by Ca r Shot to Death; Given to Safari Lion Country Safari received a dona· horae Thursday morning, taklna: it to the county Animal Shelter which removed a de.ad, stray brown mare from Tustin Avenue in the Santa Ana Helghtl area. The horse WU shot after • leg WU broken when tbe animal coll1ded with a car driven by Terry Waldon Slark, 27, of 94<1 lrVlne Road, Newport Beach, about I .a.m. Thursday. An animal ahelter crew removed tha horse Thursday morning, taking to the newly opened animal entertainment center for disposal. The county animal lhelter lt responsl· hie for removing dead anlma\1 from county roads when the owner lsn'l known, a 1he.lter apokesman said. Before the advent of the Lion Country, horses or other large a.nlmall were taken to a rendering plant in Loe Angeles, the 11pokesrnan uld. Slark toJd Hichway Patrotman D. L. Dicken.Ion he waa driving IOUtb on Tultln Avenue when the hone came galloping northbound in front of him. His car 11truck the hone aft.er an attempt to 1teer around the lfli01al falltd. Start not Injured, CHP said. Nixon Lauds Italy ROME (AP) -U. S. Amb1uador Graham Martin handed ltaly'a new prime mlnltter, Emilio CoJombo1 a m<ISlll• ol 1ooct w!Jbes from Praident Ntxon today. "l am co\l'.IU~ on our cooptraUon for the purtuance of the close and rrlendly relation• ulatlna: between ltaly and the United Sta tea,' 'the me. -s~-I!er Surf · Predic.ted Lifeguar~ Bracing for Weekend Throng 11J JOANNll llSVNOLD6 ot ........ "" lllft LUtQ•rds in the five cities along the Orange Coast today brac«l for tht onslaught of weekend beach visitors who Thursday produced a ~ 1,300 rescues from boomina surf ud the accompan)'i.ni riptides. Wblle large surf cood.ltions ,ftva.Ued toct.y, Ufquarcll from San Clemente to Seal Beach said they upect conditions to ease a little by Saturday. Huntington Beach was tht hardest hll Thurlday with 662 rescues followed by Newport Beach wbich M>gged 406 -a r!COrd number of rescues for both ciUes. San Clemente &bowed 7S rescues, Laguna Beach had BS and Seal Beach log· ged 39. Spokesmen for those ciiies aaid the number of rescues wu not unusually blgb. HWllington life(Uard Capl. Do u g D'Amall said the surf hu been running a conaistent three to sis feet with some set.a up .to line feet. Water temperatures were recorded at 67 degrees. "The IUtf bu dropped • little today and maybe down to aormal by Satur4 day," he said. "The rouah conditions may have been caused by a atorm off Baja ." Newport Beach bad water tem- peratures ln the hl&h &O's and surf run- niq from eight feet along the Corona dd Mar beaches to 10 feet on the NewporL- Irvine Confirms $1.5 Million Tax Refund on Land Irvine Company officials today COP. firmed the development firm hu receiv- ed a $1.~ millioo. refund on its 1969-7t'I Orange County property taxes for ill 46,000 acres Of agricultural preserves. The rebate drew criUcism from Lyndol L. Youn&, lawyer for Irvine heiress Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, who pointed out the rest or the taxpayers in the county are facing assessment hiles to cover the Irvine savings. Agricultural preaerves were created Under the WUliJmson Land and Open Space ConJe:rvation Act which permlta farmers and ranches to establish agreements with their counties in which they guarantee to keep the land in agl'i.cultural use for a minimum period or JO years. The Irvine and Mission Vle}o ranches were granted preserve status for much of their properties by Oranae County in January, 1M9, af~r a storm of con- troversy. Under preserve atatus, assessments oa the •e.ooo acres of Jrvlne land dropped fro m'25;887 ,610 on the 1969 tax rolls to $7,948,500. Taxes on Lhe land; according to county officials, dropped from $2,262,490 to $701.~IO. I , Balboa beaches. Sela at Balboa "s Wedie were hitting 16 fttt. "We rescued 406 people," Aid Robert E. Reed, director of marine 61.fety for the city, ''That's an all Ume high. we 've never had tha\ many rucues befort. '' Reed's force of 70 ureguards was prais- ed for their work. •·we have 23 new oceu beaeb guards this year and undu trylng clrcuinst.ances they did an excellent Job," Reed stated. He al90 said the three re.scue boats greatly aided rescue opera· tions. Reed warned beach goers to "proceed with caution" in the surf which shows few aigmi of alacldng off. "I don't know," Reed sald. "It might 10 down The seUI are still big, but not u consistent a.s Thursday," Jn San Clemen~, lifeguards said they rescued the 75 people from surf Which WIS running from three to Sil: feet. Wa~r temperature wu recorded at 72 degrees. Lifeguard Lt. Hank e.me. said th< het1vy side drift near the Municipal Pier drew at lea.st 20 swimmers toward the pilings. The pier rescues were common through the day. Sin Cement< guard Otief Diel: Hnard u..id the l't3CUeS were not in the rt<.'Ord- breaking category because aurf was not J"UMlng u high In San Clrmente as In other Orange Coast areu. .. It'I likely there wnt be slight decrease ln the surf, but if .il rernai.n! strong today, lhen there's a good chance it'll be' big for the weekend," he said. Laguna Beach life11.1ard:; pulled their as swimmers from water that wu recorded between 71 and 73 degrte1. A guard gpokesman esilmated sets were running a consistent four to aix feet and sa.id they expect condlUons to prevail through the weekend. "As long as the wind doesn't pick up-- and it doesn't look I~ it will -the &urf conditiorni should continue through the weekend," a guard officl.al said. Seal Beach had the !east activity of any beach are due to "abstinence on the part of swimmers." Lifeguard! said the surf was running three to five feet . with larger sets coming in occasion.ally. WateC temperature was set at 68 degree~. "We had 39 rescues, which rs not very high,'' a guard spokesman said. "People · have been forewarned by stories on TV and radio and in the papers and they're staying out of the surf. I hope it continues that way over the weekend." Lifeguards at Huntington and Bolsa Chica state beaches reported malting more than 100 rescues Tbursda,y in the large aurf and riptides. Petitions Prepared Freeway Fighter Group To Seek Route Pact End The newly.formed adjunct to the Freeway Fighters bu: filed notice in the Newport Beach City Clerk's office that it will circulate petitions to rescind the present Pacific Coast Freeway agree- ment between the city and the state Dlvialon of Highways. The. group ha ealso filed a notJce of Intent to circulate peUUoM for a chap. ter amendment requiring all future city councils to conduct a city.wide referen· dum before eotering into any additional freeway agreements. The group has also filed a notice or the Corona del Mar Unit«! Homeown- ers' Association, must obtain signature! equalling 15 per cent of the number of voters who cast ballot.I in the last city elecijon to force city council action on the measures. Presum1ng the signatures are oblalned and filed, the council will either have to rtAcind the agreement on the freeway, east from Bayside drive to the city lim· its, or conduct a special refertndum. 1be council will have to conduct 11 referendum on the propoaed charter amendment binding future freeway agrttments, If the alanatures are ob· ta In ed. The proposed Pacific c.oast Freeway has been the subject of controversy SALE PRICED aince lts was fint proposed to proceed along the general route of the Goast Highway. Assemblyman Robert E. Badham rR- Newport Beach ) has before the state Legislature a bill that would P]iminate the entire Newport section of the free· way. 1 The homeowners' group, in its pet · tlon. stresses that the move In no way attempts to rescind the Corona del Mar Freeway, plaMed along MacArthur Doulevard. . The notice dealing with cancellation of the agreement contend.$ that the Pacific Coast Freeway. as planned. "violates the environmental quality of the clty of Newport Be~ch. dcsLroys ~a~ge portions of 11..!i historical and mar1t1me atmo!i· phere. encroaches upon nearby beach areas. adds retaining "'.&ils ~nd e1nbank· ments which erase beauliful nalur~I assets sever1 and separates watcr-0r1· ented Portions of the community from its ocean front beaches, emits tons of con· taminants dally and completely divi des the city into two separate: parts " In addilion to Curci. those signing the Intent notices were Theodore Robins, 2164 E. Ocean Blvd., Ma rgot Skilling, 6610 W. Ocean Front : Walter J. Koch, 1112 Cambridge Lane , and William J. LaP!ante, 119 Turquoise Ave DREXE L'S NEWEST For ~id1 ~d fun people. ....... il.ble in two tefre1h- ln91 fini1he1. Y •llow •nd t•lmon co lor. The best of an , it is •+•in, bum end •er r.si1t11nt. Your whim1y wl/I 1t•y like new no rn ... .... wti.t yo. do. eo.... plet• bedroom fumitur. avail.Ole from day b.ds to ch...,al mirron -a an et v•ry thou9htful e:r·K.as. s •• it tod•)'· Dr .... r ......... $ 1 40~ Mirror ···-······· $ 45~ :YOUR LOCAL DEAlW FOR Dl.EX.!L· HENREDON ·HERITAGE NIWl'OIT BEACH 1721 W..tcllff Dr., 642-2050 Of'llf flltOAY 'TIL t INTEJtlORS L~GUNA BUCH 34$ North Co.tit Hwy. OP'IH NIOAf "TU. t ...... , .. ,,.. .... ., .,._,. c..., .... 1,,, 494-6$51 Cllro newapapua a:ave major coverqe to f,:raelJ charse1 that Eopt hat moved aeveral ml11lle b1tt<rlu cloaer to the &<lQCWJ. Alt Aid. 1----------------------------------- -----·-- I \ ' r • • • Saddlebaek N.Y. Steeb I VOL 63, NO. 194, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGU ST 14, '1970 TEN CENTS u er ur es "eac es '76,000 in Pot Patrol Seizes Record Stash Tbe largest seliw-e of contraband marijuana made by Border Patrol of- ficers at the San Onofre checkpoint took place today with the arrest o£ two men and coofiscation of f16 ,000 worth of the forbidden weed. Patrol Capt. Gene Harri! said the in- cident toot place shortly alter midnight at the freeway stop downcoast of San Onofre aa a small pickup truck with a cover over the bed pulled up. The patrolmen checking the vehicle for aliens allege they found M6 kilo.sized bricks (If the weed neatly stacked under the cover. Robert Frederick. Spengelman, 24, (If Tujunia, and Dona.Jd Allen Ralph, 24. of Granada Hills were arrested. The men face federal charges lodged through U.S. Customs of smuggling mari· juana. RarriJ said the grass -the largest haul by his men in memory, was alleged· ly hauled from Mexico in the pickup. He added that his men often receive lipt on contraband from the eustoms men at the border, "but this one was pure luck. Tbe men jWlt ran a routine Of smug· gllng aliens and turrted up the weed." The seizure was one ol several· major ones made at the busy checkpoint lbroogh this mooth, Harris aald. Human Fingers Spotted in Surf At Laguna Beach Two human fingers and thumb were .spotted in a Ude p>0l by Laguna B,each lifeguard Mike Mitchell Thursday af- ternoon, but were washed away by a wave before he could .seize them, ac- cording to lifeguard U. Dean Westgaard. Det. Alex Jimenez has been assigned to check into the mystery and guards are combing the shore! f(lr. possible further evidence. Westgaard &&Jd. Mitchell new to the Laguna Beach f«ce this' season , made the grisly find wben he awam oot from his post at Rockplle Beach to warn some swimmers off Bird Rock. When he climbed down to the rock he apotted the fingers and thumb, which he aaid , "appeared a few ~ays old but were recognizable," ln a hdepool. but was unable to retrieve them. Westgaard said there have been no reports of mi!sing persons in the area and It will not be possible to conduct a &eareh of the OCWl for a possible body until the present high surf subsides. lrv.ine Confirms $1.5 Mi11ion Tax ''It seems to be on the lncnue. So far this month we have arrested several smugglers and the amount of the stuff never was under 100 pounds (about 45 kiloa)," be revealed. The latest seizure amounted to 181 pound! of tbt weed with a street market value c.alculated at $100 a pound. 4th of July Beach Riot Investigated Laguna Beach city manager James D. Wheaton today questioned the validity of affidavits charging polJce brutality dur· ing the July 4 Woodland Drive riot is the city's official investigation of the rock and bottle-throwing melee cot under way behind cJoaed doon this mornjng. Policr Olief , Kenlfth Huck said he could not dllc.,. lbe report prepared by hl.s deparln\<llt folloorinc hll own probe al the char&es, but added, "I am of the opi- nion that the cllfrges art unfounded.'' Wh<aton said tbll fiv• lllldavlll frGm Woodland Drive ....idenb, preseolod to the city council by.Mrs. 'lllomaslna G<mn, Laguna Beacti di.airman of the Orange County American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) chapter, which demanded an iovestilation, "have no legal l!llatus." The affidavits. said Wheaton, "Were not signed and not sworn and could· have been written up by anyone." A three-man committee. consisUng o( Mayor Rlchard Goldberg, Councilman Charlton Boyd and Wheaton planned to spend most of tfte day hearing witne•s. beginning with Woodland Drive residents who claim they were mistreated, or witnessed mlstreatment of otherl, during the rnelee .. Police of Heers will testify I a 1 t , Wheaton said. The pitched battle that allegedly began with a fireworks vk>lation, finally brought units from six law enforcement a1encles to the Laguna Canyon area. Laguna Beach police were supported by uniL" from San Clemenle, Newport Beach, <ala Mesa. the Orange Courity Sheriff's Department and the California Highway Patrol. The Costa Mesa p:ilice helicopter was summoned to play floodlights on the scene as mo« than 40 officers twq>t through the area where an esUmated crowd of 200 had gathered. A number of arrests were made, most of them m charges o( failure to dJspene, and a few for alleg~ narcollca: violatk>ns. In a report io the City CouncU followint the riot, Wheaton c:cnunended local police for doing their job well under adverse conditions. The ACLU, however, demand- ed an impartial investigation, charging that police had entered homes, knocked down fencea and manhandled residents R f d L d during the confrontation. e 0D On an Mayor Goldberg nllllled the lnves· tlgating commltte but ruld that ls in· Irvine Company officials today con· ~ quiry sboWd not be conducted In public, firmed the development firm has receiv· since "penormel matters" were involved. ed a '1.5 mtllion refund on Ill 1989-70 (See PROBE, Pqe I) Orange County property taxes for its 46,000 acres of agricultural preserves. Lifeguards , Bracing ForThrDng By JOANNE REYNOLIJ8 Of .... O.llY l'fltf .,.,, ' IJ!quards In tbe five ciu .. along t!ie Oranp Coast today braced for th• onslaught of weekend beach visitors wbo Thursday produced a record 1,J» rescues from booming surf ud the accompanying ripUdes. While large surf Ctllditions prevailed today, lifeguaM> from San Clement. to Seal Beach said they expect coDditiona lO ease a Utile by Saturday. Huntington Beacb. was the hardest bit Thw'sday with 662 rescues followed by Newport Beach which logged 408 -a reoord number of rescues for both cilles. San Clemente showed 75 reSCUH. Laguna Beach bad.BS ud Seal Beacb los· ged 39. Spokesmen for those cities ')aid the number of rescues was not unusualJy hilb. Hu.Ungton lifeguard Capt. D o u c D' Arnall aald the surf has been numlng a consistent three to six feet with aome seta up to nine feet. Water temperatures were recorded at 81 degrees. '"!'he surf has dropped a little today • Mll.'t •aU>T ,..,. .._ and maybe down to llM'mal by Sa~ Celebrati~. a Festival ' , • I/ t:. ' ... "'fli Willlam Mar:tin ( gbt , ~ ol Laguna•s Fd- tiYaL.ol.Artl Boar:d.Clt -r 1-.lj)Ut dU~ Thursdiy'1 Observan .. <>I Ille lfllil b1l:\!14ay of the FesUval ol Arts. Mayor Rk:bard Goldbtirg and Vir- ginia Woolley, tlte Diily nmainlng Fe.Uva! exhlb!· t day," be sald. "The rough cooditions m~, ,j;'I'· :.' 1 1 1 ·~~ , \'... 1 ,'1• bavebeencauaedbyaatormoff.ja." lor w!Kl·dlspla,..i her ~ at tlte lint fllltlnt "Newport Beacb bad water tom-bl:l~--DO . lot' \bi'eti~· an d.?· ' ~"-!'-la llw .wp.lll'a -_, ._ • ' • • • -i>(!c Imm ei,bl feet aion.i! the eo,noa de! lol w War U)-:---. .ftnci'"to . -Mal' beadles to I~ ,..t .. tbe l!ewport; cake. Mn. Woolley • palnting Olackgrpun~) bas Balboa beaches Sela at Balboa"• Wodgf t>een·part Of tlte FesUval'• permanent ~llecllon. . were blttin« 18 i .. L • "We rescued to& people,'' said Robert Senate Freeway Heai·ing Postponed for 4th Time W oadland Drive Home Inspection To Begin Soon E. Beed, dfredor of marine safety fo~ the cJty. "That's an all time high. we've never had that many rescues before." Reed's force of 70 liteguarcb was ptais• ed for their work. "We have 23 new oceu beach guards this year and under trying circumstances they did an excellent job,'! Reed stated. He also said the three rescue boats greatly aided rescue opera- tion.!. The Senate Transportation Commlttee hearing on tbe controversial Badham bill. to eliminate the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach, ldleduled for Monday, has been postponed again. A spok"man for Sen. Randolph Collier CD-Yreka), chairman cl the Senate panel, aald this morning that a crnwded cal~ dar bu forced the fourth postponement His office said a hearing would likely be scheduled at a special meeting sometime later in the week, probably Wedoeaday. The Senate is hopilJi to ad. joum Aug. 21. A delegation of Orange Coast (lfflclals and private ciUze111 ts e:s:pected to make 4 Sheep Chased In Laguna Beach A report of "d<igs ebaslng sheep" on Bluebird Canyon Drive in Laguna Beach Thursday morning added a rilral note to the UIU81\y sophbtlcated Ari (;nlony police log. An SPCA driver, dispatched to il.l-' veallgala, found the sheep, four ol them, hrowlin( aalely fn the avocado grove where they aerve u four.footed lawn mo.-en. tlie !rip to Sacramento for II/< he~ing, whenever it ls. Tbey have made the journey before, only to find ti>• Item pqstpo~ at Badhan>"• request at the last minute. nie third postponement came last week but the .annOuncemait had been made sevual dafs in advance. As written, the bill would limply cut ~t tbe Newport section ol the freeway, from Beach Boulevard in HUflltinton Beach t.o the clty line east of Corona del Mar. 1be measure has drawn support from Newport Beach officials, while being~ demoed. by representallves from Costa Mesa Laguna Beach, and HunUngtoo Beach. It proposes no alternate route and it iJ the routing that has Ired Newport residents. AJ approved by the State Highway Qunmls!ioo, the roadway, considerably inland further-up the coast, cut! down to the Pacific CO.st llllhway throo(h '11le controversial JegblaUon bu alreldy galned approval In the Auembly and would likely be similarly successful in the Senate w~ 11 f a·v o·r 11 b I e Transportation Com m I l tee ~ mendaUon. Badham's postpooement reque~ts in re- cent weeks have been made because key supporters of the meuure on tbe com- mittee have not been present for the hearings. Housing !Npeclion In the Woodland Drive area. will begin during the first week-of 5eptember, They lbould be com- pleted within iO days of Sept. 1. Laguna Beach bulldin1 and planning direc- tor Clyde Z. Sprin&e has 'advised res.idents and property owners In a let--ter mailed th.is week. At the Aug. 5 city council meeting, when Springe was iMtructed, by a ).% council vote, to proceed with the in· spedort, it was indicated preparatk>n woukl take aboit two months. Under the program. to be undertaken throughout the city, beginning in the Wbodland area, inspection tearQs from the bqlldlng. fire and health deparlmeob will check out building and code viola· ticw that m)ght t'Oll.!ltitute a hazard to health and aafety. 1be decision to conduct tbe inspectioos on a building-to-building basis, beginning with the Woodland area, aroused wide protest and .... utted in a pelilion. signed by SQO per>ON, demanding that the plan bo c!ropped. City officials Wisted that a Hhot1slng inveotory" must be made under lhe general·ptan and .aid II bad been decided to atart iD the W<>Odland area beca.Ulle of the hip fire hazanf created by Its nlder hou!ea. They said tbe proe:ra.m would be car· ried on . throughout the city upan com- pletion of this first pha,.. Reed warned beach goers to "proceed with caution" in the surf which shl:n'• feW a1gns of slacking off. "1 don't tnow,,. Reed aald. "It migbt go down. The "1" are still big, but DOt as conslstent as Thuraday."" In San Clemente, lifeguards said tbej: rescued the 15 people !rom surf whk:li was running from three to six feet. Water temperature wu remrded at 72 degrees. Lileguard Lt. Hant Barnes said the heavy aide drift near the Municipal Pier drew at leut 20 swimmers toward the pilings. The pier rescues were common through the day. San Clemente guard Chief Dick Hazard said the re.scues were not in the reCOfd. breaking category because surf wu oot nmning as high in San Clemente as in other Orange Coast areaa. '1lt'a like)y there will be slight decrease 1n the surf, but If It remains 11tro111 today. !hon there's • lood chaoce tt'll be big for the weekend,'' be said. Laguna Beach Weguar<l.s pulled their q swimmers from water that was recon\ed; , between 71 and 73 degrees. A guard apokeaman estimated sets were 1'WUling a (See SURF, Page I) ' 0r .. ,. C.ut . The .rebate drew criticism from Lyndol L. Youn&, lawyer for Irvine heiress Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith';' who pointed oot the rtst of the tarpayers ln the county are facing assessment hikes to cover the Jrvlne ·savlncs. Schools Letting Hair Down Spl'lnl:e's latest letter to 10me 40 ownen and ,..ldeots in the Woodland Drive -South Canyon Acres ~ Arroyo Drive area, refer.red to bis original mliflcatlon of the Impending lnspeclioos. requested cooperation and auaeated that hls offi~ be called for Qlariflcatlon" of . the procedure Jr desired. · Weadler It'll bt anolbu weekend for btsk· lng on the beaches, since the tem- perature will shoot Into the middle ro·o along the ccaat and reach up to 88 further inland. Agricultural preserves were created under the Wllliamm Land and Open Spaai Co!'llel'vation .Act which permits farmel'I and ranches to establish aareemcnts with their counties in which they guarantee to keep the land in qricultural use for a minimum period of 10 years. The Irvine and Mission Viejo rrnchea were aranied preierve statUI for much of thelr properties by Orange County in January, llllfl, after a ltorm ol COP. ttovCr11y, ' Under preserve 1tatu1, aucssmenll on the 41,000 acm of Irvine land dropped f'ro mSSll,817,110 on the 1989 1a1. rolls to 17.14UQO. T11e1 mi the land, according to ~Y ornci.!als, dropped from $2,262,490 to $'101,510. Dress Code Relaxed at Clem ente 4nd Forster Springe L; on vacaUonJ~W Monday, a city hall spok,.man aalo. By PAMELA ILULAN Of .. 0.1" """ lttlt "Give me a head with hair, Ion& thick hair -""1nizlJ, 1teamlnl, . streaming, nuen, waxen, Give me down t.o there h!l(, •boulder leofltll and lonaer ..• " 'ile words of Ute popolar mualcal "H1~"' daft~ eilctly rdlecl the P(OpOStd dms codet' for Su -Olement& Hllh School aod M1rco Fonter Junior lllgh, but Ibey come cl .... The conu;a::iui:"ty dress code committee, made up Of 11 adults and 17 •tudents, Tbllnday --the llbtrallsatlon ol hair guidelines !Qr boya. The proposll wtU be preoenlod to tn111 ... of the Capistrano Unilied School could only .epend1o the bollom of the T W Sal B District Mondlly. It would allow hair no Hr, . . or eaP,OD e an I011fer than the top of the collar line ol a 11'1 Otlftr; ..S~t auperintendeat At A" ... b D..-d ltlndard T-shirt. Jt alao would allow a lot lnstructloo. lnlonlled 1he comln!U.. 11"po1·.., _.. .cupose fh&t the ciilinlJ' COll~'a office 11..i AU. I moustadle which does not uceed 1he ·~ ~1 the 'drob codl <ho<\1<lJ>1 Is · WASHINGTON (API -The Fede!al corners al the Hp •nd sidehllmJ one lft\lll •PfClll• ·~ posalblo. Mli\y courta •havt Aviation MmS!iltrallon ·has '1 • e d helo• the ear which can nare Into the thrown oul RrtlS C<ld'8 oc the arouncto ,airport _,ator! to , ban the sale of mldcheek. lh4t Uley WllJ too aiobia.,..s,.lia nol6d. knlvea,or !qlltatlon -_ppna at ~all · It would bail beards aad l\olr that lltfoi01 lbe meeltnc liecan,, Del eurti<, to pteYeet llMlr poulble .,. by •11· cover1 lhe eyes, 01 t-n&s over the ean. who ~ attacked U1I eommlttee'1 ac""- Lasl y,.r•s hilr alandm• did not ac-f\n)Ctloc and organlilUon • •t the llaal • Carl F. Mallch, FM security chief, cept hair over Uw urs, ln the eyea, mut· meetin( ol ·the boll'd ot trultetl. e o-a f I r med Tb u t< 1 ti a y airport Ion chopc. flare sideburns, lDOllltaches "'°lotbfod Iii hit ,.markl. He •id he ,man&pm•ll haolt be«> asl<ed to (excepl• for oenleft fllO lul •-) or ••d built bis .... on vtry few facts and dlaooutqe · vendon lrom makinl · sucb bearda. Hair could Uttnd no lcnpt than &oped the commtu.. would dlarer8fd , articles ru.W, avallahle to ~ at lht drtll ahlrt DOflu lint and aldallullll ...... aJrpc\11.1. -.Ii -7· J. r! . . ' ·, .. --- INSmE TODA. Y -. • - l I r , ------ SC a Given Free.dom • Reawna Testimony In Tate-La.Bianca Murder Trial h I.OS ANGELES (tlPI) -Linda Kasa-lolea toot bu atar wllnell place today at 11ie TatH..tlliaDca murder trial al1er her first Diehl of freedom in nine moo.tbs dur- ~ ,lfblch llhe cooked • dinner of salad ~ lllQbettl for her security guanls. 1Wl11i·-he. leltimony agaln8I Charles Manson and bis three female codefen· <IOnts nearly complet<d Tbunday the obe-time codefend&nt WU granled fUll lreedom. •She left the Ball of JusUce with her al- ttniq and donDed a di!guiJe before ar-rirtbl at her new residence. Her attorney did Mn. Kaaab!M "got a kick" out ol preparing the dinner for the one female Sbd two male polM.!c guards. :Jle said she also wat.cbed t.eleviskln for tile .firsl time sinc:t her imprisonment 1~ year and saw herself on the &Cr"ten. •'Wbon she tool< the chair today, Deputy District Attorney Aaron Stovitz: ukecl Mrs. K.asabian U she was aware of what ti. penaJty for perjury was in a capital ci!t even though the murder charges had been dropped against her. "I undemand lt would "5Ult In the dd two male police guards. .. ,Mrs. Kasablan said that no one ever .. 1>114 lold bor IW ... ~ pt u. 1111111 ~ If ... did not teoll!1 ""' tlle .... oocutloo!ntbecue. Over the cbjectiort3 of the defense, Stovitz -I over qaln her t.slimony that alter leaving the borne of '"""r Leno LaBianeo on Aug. t. 11119, lho talbd with Mamon about killin& an ac- quaintance of hen who lived in an ocean front apartment Superior Q:iurl. J'tadce Clw1ea H. Older dism lswt teven. counta of murder agamt the slender yawig woman who said abe went with Palrida Xz<mrinkel, Susan Atkins and Qm-les ''Tn" Watson to tbt Tate hou3e, then accompanied Maruion, Miss KtenwinkeJ, Miss Atkins and Leslie Van Hout.en to the Leno LaBl.anca borne the foUowing night, "because Q:iarlle told me to." During three weeks er lotensive ques- Uoni!lg, the pigtailed mother of two has stuck to her venloo of what happeoed oo the niChls of Aue. I and I, 11119. Althoogb Ille lllllll re!llm to ..Jhe witness atand fer fUrtber Mirect ex- aminati<m, and ltlll ml.lit be croou- amlned aplD by tad> of the loor de!eme lawyen, Mn. Kasablln no lollpr will ~ bor !!.': la 11!1-""-llwl cl !be ........ toot place In the judge'• chamben belGn court resumed Thursday, but under ques- Uoning by Ronald Hughes, Mrs. Kasabian told the jury she had been released. "They tell me 1 am a f1·ee woman, but death penalty," she said. She spent the noon hour in the heavily guarded ninth Door of tbe Hall or Justice, as usual , but her husband, Robert, and a friend, Charles Melton, were permitted to join her and her aturoeys for lunch. When coort recessed lo< the night, she wu taken to the basement al the building, and driven out of an un- derground tunnel in a turquoise sedan. She sat in the back seat, Oanked by her attorneys, and she made no response to the some 50 photographers a n d bystanders who watched her leave. "She can't quite realiu it yet," lawyer Ronald Goldman said. "She knows lhe is free, but she doan't yet feel the ... joym<nt we hope she will experience later." She was to stay at a private bomt, under protoctlve police guard, until her \elttmony wu completed. Joan Irvine Smith Moves To Block Present City Plan Major Plunges Out of Copt,er And Breaks Ankl,e By L. PETER KltlEG Of 1tw O.J,, l"iltt SI.ti' Claiming current plana for the city of Irvine would violate a long-standing agreement with the Unlvenity of California, lawyers for Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith today lndicat.d they will move to block development of the eily aa lt Is now envisioned by company officiall. Lyndol L. Young, aUorney for Mn. Smlth and her molher, Mn. Alban. R. Clarke, said the company now plans to build tt.s model city "on some &0,000 acres 1pread all over the ranch.'' He said there is a written agreement with the University of California that the city be built on 10,00I) acres immediately adjacent to the UC Irvine campus - 1irnilar to the UCLA-Westwood complex. Young a.aid be baa written to Newport Beacll and Orange Counly officials asking (or hearing dates on all applications a.nd petltion8 filed by the Irvine ~y ..ud the lrvine lndllltrial complez Ob all mat.- ten. He uld, however. he is primarily in· """1ed In hearing dai..s Involving the prnpooed community. Young &aid the Irvine Company iJ ,..k. Ing to have the agrffD'leDt with UCI rescinded and sald the matt.r wUI come bef«e the UC Board of Regenta at a meeUn& Sept. 17. He said be will attend From . Pqe 1 SURF ••. consistent four to six feet and said they expect conditions to prevail through the weekend. •• Aa long as the wind doesn't pick u~ and It doesn't look like it will -the surf conditions should continue through the weekend," a guard official said. Seal Beach had the least activity of any belch are due to "abstinence on the part of swimmers." Lifeguards said the wrf was lllJlning three to five feet, witli larger sets coming in occasionally. Water temperature we set at 68 deg rees. "We had 39 rescues, which is not very higti,'' a guard spokesman said. "People have been forewarned by stories on TV and radio and In the papers and they're a;tl.ying out of the surf. I hope it continues that way over the weekend." Lifeguards at Huntington and Bolsa ChJca state beaches reported making more than 100 rescues Thursday in the large surf and riptides. DAILY PILOT "'""""" ...... ... , • ._,, Y-'lity ..,c,_,,. t)ill.AHGE c;o.111t ~UILISMIHG COMPAHY lo~•,f N. Wo-4 P1u11Httr .,..d ""blltl>tf' J •• ~ a. c .... 1 • ., \lk• ,,..,~.....,! .Ind ~UI MMtlW Tho"'•• K ..... a '""' Tho••• A. Mv1p•in1 M IUlllll h iW l lchori P. Nill lo.tllt or.,.. c.ut.1v 1411'11" OH"" C.lt Mao1 :QI Wut lty •fl'..t H....,i aNO>i Ull WOtt .. ..,, ~-­W-._., m .. _, "- H111t.,.... IMdl: IM ...... aou-.., .... tlMltol1*: JOI ,....... El c..mi.. ••I DAl\.Y f'tt.Ot, Wfl'I W!kli a. ~ill !tie ,,. ............ "' ,.. ...... •111111 nwtl ~ •• , "' .... , ... d llMool .... .....,_ a..:~ ... ,,.....,, ~ C.!• ~. """""""" 90fCfl Mii ........ Y.1fitT, ..... wlltl •-,......,.. ""'..... Of.... c..t 1"1*111'1"" C.-.nt' ~ ............ , ttll •• , ..... e11i0111 .. .........,.. hlid'. ., .. ,. ....., e., ,,rHI, OM.le ,,,,.._ ,....,.... (7141 141-4.121 c1...iW ......... 14J•H1t s... c~ Al 0.,.,..,....1 T ........ 4fJo4411 ( ........... !. "" ~ C'.Ntl ...... 1111 ... -...... llJWlftl .. • ill ,....nw ., lfWrl~• ...,...,. "" • ,......_.. wli...,, ...,cit! .,.... -., °"''""' -· Ml.: .... ' -· 1111 at H....,.,. loufl ttO C...h lo ~lllllM llf (•'"" UM -"''" .,. ..,.., a• ,_"'"'' "'llllatf •••i...1-. U.OI "*lllllY, to oppose the move. A gpok..man for the company this morning denied this II true. lie &aid the compaey hu no action pending befcn the board on any matter at that meeting. Y"""' sakl he WU especially lrktd at the fad the , company had opent con- llderahle money OD a muter p!M In the early tse0'1 that mapped out the Initial 10,000...c:n city plan. He called it a .. wute of mooey" f« the company to have been workln( the put year allegedly changing the mut.r plan. The agreement with UCI, Young uid, v.·as made ·at the t1me the company donated 1,cm acres f« the UCI campus and sold the state another 510 1cmi f« it. The aale, he aald, ...i California tu• payers $6,500 an acre, or a total of 13,315,000. He said the <X>1Dpal\y ooly agreed to give tbe otat< !be addllli!nal UOO acres upon the tn.M.nce 111 li!llr. snllth. Responding to Y(IWlg'1 criUcisms, Gilbert W. Fe:rcuaon, vice pr•idenl oi corp:rate commwUcatlool !or tbe Irvine Company, Aid, among other thin&s, the llbt.ementa are "atlly." "Mr. YOW>c'• remarts, If they are cor· redly quoted, are silly. They reflect little understanding of our new city plan and no under-standing of our 19&0 agreement with the Board of Regents," Ferguson said. He cited recent remarks by Norton Simon, a member of the Board of Regents, that he said were similar to I.hose made by Young. "Al that thne," he said, "Governor Reagan and other regents tenntd the remarks 'confusing and bafflint-' "Further," Ferguson said , ''Mr. Simon's usertions were vigorously denied by Chancellor Aldrich and the UCI planning staff, with whom we were directed by the regents to work during the master planning of the land adjacent to the university. "There is not much point in com- menting further on this klnd of pet.. tiness," Ferguson said, "We are too bury trying to keep our 1960 promise to create an attractive, balanct:d, urban en- vironment throughout lhe Irvine area. A spokesman for the company added that lhe original agreement stipulated on- ly that a minimum of 10,000 acres be developed for a city of at least 100,000 persons. Current plam now call for a cily of -400.000 in an area covering 53,000 acres of the sprawling Irvine ranch. Major. Donald Maiee loves his luck to- day, even if his leg butts him. He fell 100 feel from a hoverln& helicopter 1t Camp Pendleton 'l'!nll!day and suffered little more than a broken Jeft ankle. Major Magee, a reservist on two weeks ol active duty tralnlng at the bue, wu ,.ported In good cooditioa In the -hospital today. 'nlt: 34-year-old rtserVi&t whole home ii at 3530 Wllf<rla In Seal Beach, fell to the flJ'l)WJd during a hellcopt.r training --A mountin, apparatus for a rQpe dangl- ing from the hovering chopper gave way after the major began his de5cent. The part-time leatherneek fell feel flnt to the ground. Base spokesmen said five small bones jn Ma1ee'1 ankle were broken, but other than a rew scrape.a and bruises, that wu the only Injury. Major Magee's miahap was the only serious accident reported among the 11,000 reservists from throughout the. caint.ry Llkil\I part in tbe exercllts. 'The major wlll miss t'9 cllmn to the maneuvers Monday when the phalanx of .... rvtats hit the beach for three day• of mock warfare. The Marines will miU the 1""'"" by boot and bellcopjU. . Sen. £-Oldwater Oaims Plane Was Not His Sen. Barry M. Goldwater said today it was neither he nor his airplane that buzi.. ed homes in the takeoff path of Oran&e County ~port Sunday n!ght. ~ he: aall;i he can prove it. The te11ator'& name and plane were connected with .the incident Monday night when Newport Beach City Councilman ?-.111an M. Dostal publkly complained of a .small jet that took off so low, "It almost came through my window." An avkl alrport critic, Daniel Emory, who was ln the audience, although elalm- ing to be one of Sen. Goldwater's most ardent supporters, tallied on the Arizona Republican, saying he had see n the craft and that It belonged to the senator. Airport officials the next day also con- finned that Sen. Goldwater's plane had been at the airport Sunday, But alas, they all were wrong. Sen . Goldwater said this morning, "I no longer own an airplane." Hikers Press On Death Valley, Coastal Walks Continue By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'-tlollY PllM Jl•ff While San Clemente's Death Valley conservation walker resls today past the midway point of his trek acf'CIM the bum-- Ing unds, two other ecology-minded hikers are hoofing It on more hospitable terrain -the southern Orange Coast. Joel Hurd. 26, wu reported forUlying him.self from the health-food larder of hia mlrUatW'e coverec1 wagon today , walling for the sun to go down tonight when he will res.umt the trelr b1ck from Towne Pass tf Death Valley Junction. A3 he munche1 his heall.h foods ln Death Valley, two YOUlli La Jolla re11fdent.a are marchln1 upcoast and din· In( on health foods u well Hoger Engl~h. 20, and V1lena M•yers, 17, were expected to w1llr throuch the South CMst IJ'ea lhl• eventnc on a hllte Irom Lo Jolla to Br!Ulh Columbia to llrtll the ecolollc.al cr!Jll. ''Maybe thf'OUlb our u1mpJe1 we c1n mau people feel a lllUe IVlllY •bout rirlvln& everywhere.'' En&lWI said before setUna out on the Weit CaOlt ufart. WhUe the couple w1lk In the cooler clime, Hurd 11 lryln& to gel aome badly needed •leep today altor 1pendlng two mort 1leepleu day1 ln hll wagon benealh the bluln1 111111 with lhade readlnp int>' ping 120 degttes. "It'a 1tlll too hot. out ~e Jn the daytime for him to get some sleep in the wagon, so he turned In to Furnace Cretk again Thursday morning to get some rest," friends reported. Since the start of the march for clean waler began last Saturday night, Hurd has trekked off-1nd-on through the week.'• dark hours ~ the 1$0-mile round trip. The. tougbesl leg of the hike took place before dawn Thursday when Hurd hauled his 200-pound wagon up the 1t.eep •lopes of the Panamlnl Mountain Ranr1 to Towne Pass -5,000 feet higher than hla •tartin& point at the JUDction. Two unldenUiled hikers Joined . the bearded waaon puller on the way up to the paS!I, frlenda aald, but one aoon drop- ped out after collapsing from lflvtre blisters oo hi• feet and heal exhawtlon. Hurd -who tw lost 20 pcundt ao far -prridlcted his march would probtbly end 11t the Junction on Sunday when he gathers some 11nd from the lnholpltable valley's 11nd dunes. The grains, he vows, will go Into hour1laws which ht will prt.m1t to Prt1ldent Nixon, G<lvemor Re114n and other officials. "Time 11 runnlni out," wtll be the wr!l. ten eoolo1tlc&J meuaae on the timepieces, Hurd 11ld. ---------. -- Artistry in Surfing Sculptures of surfer done in bronze by Cardiff artist Edmund Shum- pert exclusively for Huntington Beach's U.S. Surfboard Champion- ships will go to top wiMers in the 1970 version of the event Sept. 19-20. President in New Orleans For Talks on School Actio11 NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -President Nl~ arrived today with a group of his top advisers for a Fttncb Quarter motorcade aod a talk with Southerners on how fut and how far ICbool deaegrega- tlon will go this fall. The President and Mrs. Nli:on were met al New Orleans International Airport by naUonal GOP committeeman Tom Sta1, &tate GOP chalrman Charles Degravelle.s and a group of other state Republican figures. The preside ntial party e n t e r e d limousines for the drive along Canal Street which runs through the center of the city's historic French Quarter toward the Royal Orleans Hotel where the group Wa.J itaying. While the Pretldent met wlth represen- tatJvs from seven Southern states, Mrs. Nls:on plaMed to vi.sit the French Quart.rat length. !ocludin& SL Mary's of the Auumptim Orurch, known as one of lbe finest ex1mple1 of brick archltecture lo. the country. Nixon, Attorney General John N. Mitchell, F.ducation Secretary Elliot N. Richardson and Counsellor Robert ff. Finch planned to outline administration policy and listen to local problems in meetings with the chairmen and vice chairmen of state advisory committees on public education. The state committees, consisting main- ly of private citizens, are offshoots of the President's special cabinet committee on education whlch has been trying to ease the mixture of black and white children in Sou thern achool!. The state committee officials Invited to today's meetng were from Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Georgia, Mis.!lssippi and the Carol!nas. The noo-official nature or the com- mittees led Louisiana e d u c a t i o n superintendent William J. Dodd Thursday to question Nixon's trip. "Unless he has the power of a fortune. teller, he can't get a true picture unless he talks to people down here. who know the situalion. Of course, that's the way the Republicans operate," said Dodd, a Democrat. "They get most of their in- formation from Wall Street and Madi.son Avenue." The adm.inlslratlon on the eve ol the visit rearDnned its plans to pursue a policy of "reasonableness" In seekln& school desearegatlon in the South. Mltc~ll, appearing b e f o r e a Senate commlttee, avoided a con· fnmtalion with some llberal Northern senators by offering an explanation that appeared lo satisfy them . "Until the higher courts decide dif· ferenliy," Mitchel/ said, "we will con· tinue to apply the standard of reasonableness.'' SALE PRICED Cease-fire Deteriorates . ... t ,-,f In Mideast . JERUSALEM CAP) -Israel! air force planes struck at Jordanian army poai~ tlons today, the military command said, in further deteriorations of lbe Middle East ce~fire, ., The military u.id the r1id was laun- ched againlt(J'ordanlap anny s\rongholds which have given as~istance to Palesti- nian guerrillas in attacU against Israeli , frontier settlements. A spokesm~ said the Jordanian army 1'asslsls terrorists and makes it possible for them to act against Israeli civlli111J.11 A spokesman earlier had announced that Israeli Air Force jets crossed the border and bombed and atrafed Arab guerrilla targets inside Jordan for the &e- cond straight day today. The Tel Aviv spokesman &aid those raids were in response to mortar attack& on two Jewish settlements. The planes all returned safely after hit- ting objectives adjacent to Isra el's Beisan Vall ey, he said. Beisan Valley set· tlements of Maoz Haim and Yardena came unde r mortar fire during Thursday night, but no damage was reported. This was the second Israeli air strike 1.nside Jordan since the Middle East cease-lire went into effect a week ago. The guetrilla organiiations have disoW'tl· ed the truce initiated by the United States as a preliminary to peace talks. An Israeli newspaper, the Tel Aviv Yediot Aharonot, reported that Egyptian soldiers fi red across the Suez Canal in a second minor violation of the cease-fire Thursday. The newspaper said the in- cident oceurred in the waterway's central sector wben a few bullets from small arms weapons were fired over lsrJell positions. The military command said il could not confirm the shooting but refused to deny it. Two days ago the army said four bullets were fired from the EgypUan a1de or the canal in the same sector. There were no casualties and the fire was not returned, the Israelis said. Reports from Amman said Jordanian authorities have tightened s e c u r i t y measures to prevent Arab rommandos from kidnaping diplomats. foreigners or government officials. Informants said the guerrillas may resort t.c. this tactic to sabot age the U.S. peace plan. From Page 1 PROBE •.. The police chief was intruded to pro- vide I.he committee with a report of hiJ own Investigation of ch1rges brought against bis officers. This report was com~ pleted and handed to the committee last week . Wheaton sa id the committee will hear ''all kinds of witnesses" but probably will be able to complete Its hearing today. A report on the investigation then will be released to the public. DREXEL'S NEWEST for lddi end fun people. Aveil ebl• in two r•fr••h· ing fini1h11. Yellow end 1elmon <olor. Th• be1t of •11, it is stein, burn end me r res i1tent. Your whimsy will 1tey like new no me· ter wh•t you do. Co,..... pl~• b•droom fumlture •veil.bl• from dey b.ds to chwel mirro" end •fl et very t\or009htful. e.rtc..L s .. it tod.•y. ................... $140. Ml""' ...... -.. $ 45. :YOUR LOCAi. D~~RS FOR DREXEL. HENREDON. HEAITAGE NEWl'ORT BEACH 1727 Wttfcllff D• .. 642·2050 OrtN NIDAY "TIL t INTIJllORS Prof .. Mnal ·Interior O..lgnt" Avallabl ........ ID-NSID LAGUNA llACH 345 North Coeel Hwy. 494-6551 OflN NIDAY 'TfL t J I I I . -. . . • Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Fl•al N.Y. Steeb VOL 63, NO. ·194, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, liUGUST ·14, 'f97Q 1tN CENTS u er ur ·e·s eac es $76,000 in Pot . Patrol Seizes Record Stash The largest seizure or contraband marijuana made by Border Patrol of. ficers at the San Onolre checkpoint took place today with the arrest of two men and confiscation of $76,000 worth of the forbidden weed. Patrol Capt. Gene liarris said the in· cident took place shortly after midnight at lhe freeway stop downcoast of San Onofre as a small pickup truck with a cover over the bed pulled up. The patrolmen checking the vehicle for aliens allege they found 346 kilo-sized bricks of the weed neaUy stacked under the cover. Robert Frederick Spengelman, 24. of Tujunga, and Donald Allen Ralph, 24, of Granada Hills were arrested. The men face federal charges lodged through U.S. Customs of smuggling mari- }uana. Harris said the grass -the largest haul by his men in memory, was alleged- ly hauled from Mexico in the pickup. He added that his men often receive tips on contraband from the customs men } at the border, "but this one was pure luck. The men jwt ran a routine of smug- gling aliens and turned up the weed." 'The seizure was one of several major ones " made at the busy checkpoint ] through this month, Harris said. Human Fingers Spotted in Surf At Laguna Beach Two hllman fingers and thumb were spotted in a tide pool by Laguna Beach lifeguard Mike Mitchell Thursday af· ternoon, but were washed away by a wave before he could seize them , ac· cording to lifeguard U. Dean Westgaard. Det. Alex Jimenez has been assigned to check into the mystery and guards are combing the shores for possible further evidence. Westgaard sa id. Mitchell new to the Laguna Beach force this' season, made the grisly find when he swam out from his post at Rockplle Beach to warn some swimmers off Bird Rock. When he climbed down to the rock he Epotted the fingers and thumb, which he &aid, "appeared a few days old but were recognizable," in a tidepool, but was unable to retrieve them. Westgaard said there have been no reports of missing persons In the area and it will not be possible to conduct a search of the ocean for a possible body until the present high surf subsides. Irvine Confirms $1.5 Million Tax Reftmd on Land Irvine Company officials today con· tirmed the development firm has receiv- ed a $1.5 mlllloo refund on its 1969-70 Orange County property taies for its 46,000 acres of agricultural pre serves. ''It seems to be on the Increase. So far lhis month we have arrested several smugglers and lhe amount of the stuff never was under 100 pounds (about 45 kilos),'' he revealed, The latest seizure amounted to 761 pounds of the weed with a street market value calculated at $100 a pound. 4th of July Beach Riot Investigated Laguna Beach city manager James D. Wheaton today questioned the validity of affidavits charging police brutality dur· jng the July 4 Woodland Drive riot as the city's official investigation of the rock and bolt.le-throwing melee got imder way behind closed doors this morning. Police Chief Kennelh Huck said be could not discuss the report preptred by his department following bi.sown probe of the charges, but added, "l am of the opi· nioo that the charges are un~id.0 Wheaton a.a.Id I.bat five affidaVib frqn Woodland Drive resJdents, presented to the city council by Mrs. 'lbomaslna Gunn. Laguna Beach chairman of the Orange Counly American Civil tibertles Union (ACLU) Chapter, which demanded an investigation, "have no legal atatm." The affidavits. said Wheaton, "Were not signed and not sworn and could have been written up by anyone." A three.man committee, consisting of Mayor Richard Goldberg, Councilman CAarlton Boyd and Wheaton planned to spend most of the day hearing wltnessu, beginning with Woodland Drive residents who claim they were mistreated , or witnessed mistreatment of others, during the melee. Police officers will testify I a s t , Wheaton saki. The pitched battle that allegedly began with a fireworks violation, finally brought units from six law enforcement agencies to the Lagw-ia Canyon area. Laguna Beach polict; were supported by units from San Clemente, Newport Beach. Costa Mesa, the Orange County Sheriff's Department and the California Highway Patrol. The Costa Mesa police helicopter was summoned to play Ooodlighls· on the scene as more than 40 officers swept through the area where an estimated crowd of 200 had gathered. A number of arrests were made, most of them on charges of failure to disperse, and a few for alleged narcotics violations. ln a report to the City Council following the riot. Wheaton commended local police for doins: their job well under adverse conditions. The ACLU, however, demand. ed an impartial Investigation, charitng that police had entered homes, knocked down fences and manhandled residents during the confrontation. f\.iayor Goldberg named the inves- tigating commltte but nlld that is in· quiry should not be cooducted In public, since "personnel mattera" were involved. (See PROBE, Pap II CeletJrat~~g a . res~i~, · .. ' ' ' ' . . ' .·~ William Martin. (tlghl)bp~"'ld"'t of ta~·s T~· tival ol Arts llo'1'!1 .of ireci91l lea®~ durln& THmsdirrt OU.,Vance ot,.!Jie_ '3ith lil>thday of the Festival of Aris. 'Mayor Richard"Goldberg and Vir· ginla Woolley, the only remaining Festival exhibi· tor wbo !l;.ptayt!d her pilnllii11• at th~ fiist Festival in 1932 (tl\ere was no FesUVal for three years dur- ing World War 11) were on 1>and to help c:ut the cake. 'Mrs. Woolley's painting (background) has been part ol the Festival'• pennanent collection. Senate Freeway Heru.·ing Postponed for Ltth Time The Senate Transportation Committee hearing on the controvenlal Badham hill to eliniinale the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach, scheduled for Monday, has been postponed again. A spokesman for Sen. Randolph Collier (D-Yreka), chairman oC the Senate panel. aald this morning that a crowded calen- d4r hu forced the fourth postponement. His office said a hearing would likely be scheduled at a .!peclal meeting sometime later in the weei:, probably Wednesday. The Senate Is hoping to ad- journ Aug. 21. .. A delegation of Orange Coast officials and private citiiens ls ei:pectcd to make 4 Sheep Chased In Laguna Beach A report ol 1'dogs chasing sheep" on Bluebird Canyon Drive tn Laguna Beach 'l'bur!Jday momlng added a rural note to the usually sophisticated Art Colony police tog. An SPCA driver. dispatched to In· veJ{lgate, found the sheep, four of lhem, browsing aa!ely ln the avocado grove where they terve u four.footed lawn mowers. the trip to Sacramento for lhe hearing, whenever it is. 'Ibey have made the journey he!Dre, only to find lhe Item postponed at Badham'1 request at tbe last min!Jte, The third postponement came last week but the annOuncemf!lt had been made several days in advance. AJJ written, the bill would &imply cut out the Newport secOon of the freeway, from Beach Boulevard ln Hungtlnton Beach to lbe city line east of Corona del Mar. The measure has drawn support from Newport Beach officials, whlle being con· de.mned by representaUves from Costa Mesa Laguna Beach, and Huntington Beach. It propose! no alternate route and it I.! the routing that has Ired Newport residents. As approved by the State Highway CommlMlon, the roadway, considerably i'tlland further up the coa!t, cuts down 1o the l>oeiflc Coa.sl llJghwoy through The controversial JeglalaUoo ·has already gained approval In the Assembly and would likely be 1iml\.Jrly ~ccessful In the. 5enate w'ilh ·• fa v.o·r ab 1-e 'Il'ansportaUon Com'm'lttee recom- mendation. Badham's postponement requests in re-- cent weeb have been made becallSe· key supportera of. the meuure an the com- mittee have oot been present for the hearlnga. Woodland Drive Home Inspection To Begin Soon HousjQg Inspection ht the Woodllqd Drive area will begin during the first •-week of September. 'I11ey should be com- pleted within 90 days of Sept. 1, Laguna Beach bu.lldlng and piann~ dlree- tor Clyde Z. Springe bas-advised mldents and property owners in a let- ter mailed this week, At lhe Aug. 5 city council meeting, when Springe was instructed. by a J.2 council vote, to proceed wllh the in- apecton, Jt was indicated preparaUon would take about two months. Under the program, to be undertaken tbroughoul lhe clly, heglMlng In lb• Woodland area, truipection teams from tbe building, fire and health departmenls will check out building and code viola· tlool lhat might COll.'ltilute a buard to beallh and safety. The decision .to conduct the inspections on a bullding·t~bullding basis, beginning with the Woodland •area, aroused wide prOtest and resulted in a petition, •ilned by IOO pel'IOlll, demanding tbal tbe plan . he ·dropped. Clty olficiala insisted that a "housing inven~" must be made under the general plan and said It bad been decided to start tn the Woodland area because of tho high fire haurd created by Its older houses. They aaid ·the program woUld be car- ried on throughout the city upon com- pleUon of um first phase. The rebate drew criticism frnm Lyndol L. Young , lawyer for Irvine heiress r-..1r11. Joan Irvine Smith, who pointed out the rest of the taxpayers in the county are facing assessment hikes to cover the Irvine savings. Schools Letting Hair Down Springe'! latest letter to Mime '° owners and residents in the Woodland Drive • South 1Canyon Acres • AM-ofo Drive area, referred to his ortglnal notiflcallon of lhe Impending inspections, requested cooperaUon and auggeste<J that hls office be called for clarificat1on" of the procedure U desired. J·: Agricultural preserves were creeled under the Williamson Land and Open Space C:Onservatlon Act which permits farmers and ranches to establlsh agreements with their counties In which they auarantee to keep the land In agr1tultural use for a minimum period of 10 years. The Jrvlnc and Mission Viejo rancho were granted preserve sLatu1 for mu ch <>f their properties by Orange County In January, t9MJ af\er a. 1torm; of con· troversy. Under preserve .!IUltus, assessments on the 48,000 acres of Irvine land dropped fro m$25,887,610 on the 1969 tax rolls to 17.918,500. Taxes O'll the land, according lo county officials, dropped from $2,262,490 to 1701,110. Dress Code Relaxed at Clemente arul Forster By PAMELA HAU.AN DI lllt O.llr "'"" lltff "Give me 1 head wllh hair, Ions thick ha1r -lhlning, &Jeamtna. strtamtn1, Uaxtn, waxen1 t~Ve me down to thert hair, shoulder lt1n1lh and longer .• , " The wards Of the JIOPUl•r musical "Hair" doo 't exactly rt~J~t tbe ptopOled c1resJ codes for san Citmtnte ·1111h School and Marco Fortier Junior High, but they eome close. 'l"he community dress code committee, made up of 11 ldults and 17 •Wdtntli Thuraday recommended the liberaUutlon or h1ir guldellnM for boys. The: proposal wW be presented to 11 , .... could only Oltend to the boltom of the ear. Rly Oliver. aslirtant ·auperintendent for iJ!ttructloo. Informed· the committee that the county COUnJel'I ,otflc. l'lad 1~ vloed' that lhe ""'8 code . shoUld, be as 1 10.Clllc' it· p0albie: Mo111 '<,00rll brr,' · 111ni.m "'' c1r<11· ~ on !hi lroWlltit that lltey ,..... tod ambiguoUi, be not6C!. Jlejore lhe m~tinJ_. lMo(llD Del ~. 1 Who ~all · attic~ O!i · "°"'"1l!lee'f . , !Unction and oreonlWJOn at the Dul metllnr or • lhe ~~d al tru-. 'apoloelied for hi• '""l'rkl: Re aald 1\8 bed tiullt hit cs,. on YoO' (gw !Jell and hopod the commlti.o would dlart1ard !hem. ·Springe iii on vacaUon •WlUI Motiday,·a city ball spokesman uld. Toy Weapon Sale Ban ' At Airports Proposed WASHINGTON (AP) -Tho Fedehl AvlaUon Adri'llnl11tratjon • hat · a a k e d airport operators t6 ban the 1 die of lo(lvea· or bnltallon i¥e•J10n• at1tl!nn1nar1 to pnvenl tlil!lr pc\islbie · ii» by '•kl'- Kkerl. 1 CUI F. Mallcb. FM aeeurllJ' elllel. cenffrme·d T~~t1d lay ' ilrport managemenls have· . beeoi a.i;"I" to dllcour11• vtft9ort from mal<Jni such altk:lu JUdll)' aval~ble to ~· at 1frports. ·~ Lifeguards Bracing For Throng By JOANNE REYNOLDll Of ""' Del~ ""-' lt•ff Lifeguards In the five cities along the Orange Coast today braced for tho onslaught of weekend beach visitors whG Thursday produced a record 1,300 rescueS from booming swf a.ed the accompanfins riptides. While large surf conditions prtvalled today, lifeguards from San Clemente. to Seal Beach 11aid they expect conditiona lo ease a little by Saturday, Huntington Beach was the hardest hit thursday with 662 rescues followed by Newport Beach which logged 406 -a ncord number of rescues for both cities. San Clemente showed 75 rescues. Laguna Beach had 85 ud Seal Beach tog. god 3'. Sp:ikesmen for those dtles said the number of rH<:ues •as not. UDU5Ually high. Huatington lifeguard Capt. Do u I D' Arnall said lhe surf bas been running a conslsteni three lo six feet with some sets up to nlne feet. Water temperatures were recorded at 67 degrees. "The surf lw dropped 1 litlle today and maybe down to normal by Saiu(..._ day," be said. 11'be rough cond.iUons may have been cauoed lo)' a storm olf JWa." Newport Beach had water tem. peratures in the high 60's and surf rim- ru.g from ei&ht feet aloog the Corona del Mar beaches to 10 feet on the Newport.. Balboa beaches. Sets at Balboa's Wedge were bitting 11 feel "We rescued to& people," said Robert E. Reed, director of marine safety for the city. "That's an all time high. we've never had that many rescues before." Reed's force of 70 lifeguards was prais- ed for their work. "We have %3 new ocean beach guards lhls year and Wlder trying circumstances they did an excellent job,'' Reed stated. He abo said the three rescue boats greaUy aided rescue opera· tions. Reed warned beach goers to "proceed with caullon" in the .!urf which ahows few signs of slacking off. "I don 't know,'• Reed said. "lt might go down. The aets are still big, but not as consistent-as Thursday." ln San Clemente, lifeguards said they rescued the 75 people from surf which wu running from three to sii' feet. Water temperature was recorded at 72 degrees. Lifeguard Lt. Hank Barnes said lbe heavy side drift near the Municipal Pier- drew at least 20 swimmers toward the pilings. I The pier rescues were common through the day. San Clemente guard Chier Dick Hazard said the ttSCues were not in the record- breaking category because surf was' not running as high in San Clemente as in other Orange Coast areas. "It's likely there will be slight decreas6 In the surf, but if it remains strong today, then there's a good chance it'll be big~ the weekend," he said. Laguna Beach lifeguard.! pulled lhelr as swimmers from water that was recorded between 71 and 73 degrees. A guard ~esman esUmated sets were running a (See SURF, P•ce II Orange Coast l\'eatlaer It'll be another weekend for bask· Ing on the beaches, alnce lbe tem- perature wtll shoot into Lbe mlddle 70's along the coast and reach up to aa further inland. INSIDE TODAY An aqua.tlc.f Jhaw at Newport Harbor High School und o 11auth film ftatival ot Laguna Beach Hiah School arc the Jeoturd evtnt.t In toda11's W tektndtr ttcfion. i • ! I I • : • • ! • I : • • 2 DAll.V~ SC Linda Given Free.dom Reaumea Te.stimony In Tate-Lo.Bianca Murder Trial · . ' bod lllld ... tW .. -pt u. dootb _., II a did mt 11o111J for die pro. •nC\oeiD dliCUL Oller the obJectloos of the deleme, Slovltz -I -qaln ber i..umony lllal alW luvtns tbe l>orne of grocor Ltno IABiooca cm Aoe. I ...... lalked wtt.b MIJlmn about killing an IC· quainlanoe of hen who Uved in an ooean ln>olapartmenL $Qpa1or 0Jurt llldce ai.n.s H. Older dismissed ltYl:D counts of murder against the --_,,.. """ said she weot wttll Palrida Krenwintel. SUsan Atkins and C1'1.rles '"Tei" Watson lo the Tale bola, lhon ocmmponlod Manson. Miss Krenwinkel. Miss Atkins and Leslie Van Houten to the Leno La.Bianca home tbe follow!ng nigbL "because Olarlie told me to." During U.... ....0 of Intensive ques- liorting. tbe pigtailed -1ler of two has suack to bu version of what happened on tbe Pil)IU of Aq. I lllld I, 1111. Alllloogll * mmt retum to the witness stand for fUrther redirect U· aminllim, and still must be Cl'OlffX· amlned again by ..... of lhe !oor defeme lawyers.. Mrs. ~S1bi1n m loager will llPIJlld bet nil!>ll "' Jail. -dJiin*'I .of tM clw.., loot place In the ,.... •• dlombets w ... court resumed Thursday, but WKier ques· tioning by Ronald Hughes, Mrs. Kasabian told lhe jury she had been released. "They tell me I am a free woman, bul du th penalty," she said. She speot the noon ~ In the heavily guarded nklth floor of the Hali of Justk<. as usual. but her husband, Robert, and 1 friend, Cllarles Mel_ton , ftre permitted to join her and her attomeya for IWICb. When coort recessed far the night. ah• was tAUn 1 to tilt basement of the buildJng, Md drivw out ol. an Wl· derground tunnel in a turquoise sedan. She sat in the back seat; flanked by her attorneys, and she made no response to the some SO photographers a n d bystanden who watched her leave. "'She can't quite realite it yet ," lawyer Ronald GoJdman said. "'She knows she ia r..., but """ -~ yet fed the ..,. Joyment ... ~ ""' will eiperlence later." She wu to stay at a private home, Wlder protective police llUlf'd. unW hlr l.eltimoay waa completed. - Joan Irvine Smith Moves Major Plunges Out of Copter And Breaks Ankl.e To Block Present City Plan By L. PETER KRIEG Of ,,,. 0.ilr ~ltll ill'ft Calming current plans for lbe city or Irvine would \1iolate a long-standing agrttrMnt with the University of c.aliforni.t. lawyers far Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith today indicated they will move to block development of the city a.s it is now envisiooed by company ofiiciah. Lyndol L. Young, attorney for Mrs. Smith and her mother, Mn. Atbalie R. Oarke. &aid the rompany now plans to build its model city "on some 60,mt acrei 5prettd all over the ranch." He said there is a written agreement with the University of California that the city be built on 10,000 acres immediately adjacent to the UC Irvine campw - 1imilar to the UCLA-Westwood complex. Young said be has written to Newport Beach and Orange C.ounty offlciab asking for hearing dates on all applications and petition> filed by tbe Irvine C'.ompaey and the Irvine lndustrial comple:a: on an II.If.. ..... He said, however, be is primarily in- terested in hearing dates involving the proposed community. Young said the Irvine Company is 1eek· ing to have the agreement with UCI rescinded and saJd tbe matter will come be.fore the UC Board of Regent.. at a meeting Sept. 17. He said be will attend From Pagel SURF ... comi3tent four to six feet and uld they expect conditions to prevail through the weekend. ••As long as the wind doesn't pick up- and it doesn't look like it will -the surf conditions should continue through the weekend." a guan:I official said. Seal Beach had the least activity of any beach are due to "abstinence on the part of swimmers." Lifeguards 'Said the surf was numing three to five feet. with larger sets coming in occasionally. Water temptrature was set at 68 degrees. "We had 39 rescues, which is not very high," a guard :spokesman said. "People have been forewarned by stories on TV and radio and in the papers and they're staying out of the surf. I hope it continues that way over the weekend." Lifeguards al Huntington and Bolsa Chica state beaches: reported making more than 100 rescue! Thursday in the large surf and riptides. DAILY PILOT Hrqlf't le•• L..t• ..... t. C..te Met• H••tf .. tM ..... h1111tel1 Y.ti.., s.. er-.. .. lebert N. Wt•4 ,.,.....,.., .,,,, f'llftl......,. J1(\i; l . Cwr/1y Viet f'Nl!o"'I elllll C0-11 M.,,.,., lho11111 IC11•il f~lllor Tito"''' A. M1rpkl11e M-lnt Et!!« tlich1,4 P. Ni ll '-"" °''""' County l!dl .... c.tl MIMI l» Well .... Strwl .,...,.,, l&U"! DH WW .. IM, ..... ~ t._. .._,., m ,._, ..,_ Hltlflf!lttfl •-": 1111l .. tdl ~~ .... (llnwrt9: »S """" ., """ ........ OAIL'I' Pit.OT. wlllt w;,1(11 II umlll,,.4 11\t Nf..,.•~I. It ~lllell: •1Hy PUfl S- tlY 1,. M"9f'I• cdt!IOM '"'" ~ lt.;tll. N-1 .. Cll. CMll ......... H61111k>ttM ... ell ..... f'..,....lfl Yt•Y• ...... Wiii! -, .. .,.., tllllt-. Or .... ee .. 1 Plll:lll&Ntll ~ ...,.,..., ~ -.. nn w..1 ••11111• l h•ll .... ......, ll*fl, ... ,, ~ Wttl ••• 51<111. c.11 .....,.., Ttt1,.••• l7141 '41 ... JJI Cs.a.l"-4 UwtrW.,. '4J.U71 s-Ct...-•• Dr,.,......1 , ... ~ .. ,, .... ,. (.,.,,left', ltJlll, ar.,... C'Allt ~ ""-"· ... -· '"""'" ·~--fl!Wtltl .... ltw "' U-*'-"-'' "'"""' ..... 9" ·~ 9'11Nut 1..-:ltl ....... 111\t.l-.. (1111\'f.., -· \«-f11t) ~~II H_.-t kid! ... c:ittl9 ,.,_, e.111-ia. ~iflltlell " ,,.....,. UllO _ ... ..,, llJ 11\<f!I U ,M -"t!Yf "''~IM'f' ""'"''" ... ~ -"'''· to oppose the move. A spokesman fer the oompany this morl!fng denied this Is true. He aaid the company hu no action pending before the board on any matter at that meeting. Yoong aaid be wu espedally irked at the fact. the company bad spent con- siderable mmey en a master plan in the early lt60'a that mapped out the lnllial 10,CM»-acre city plan. He called Jt a "waste ol. money" fer the company to have been working the past year allegedly cllanging the masU!r plan. The ~ wllb VCI, Young said. was made at lbe t1me the company donated 1,000 acres for the UCI campus and sold the state another 510 acres for it. The aale. he said, coat California tax· payers $6,500 an acre, or a total of $3.315,000. He said the oompany only agreed to give the state the addition.al 1,000 acres upon the in.utertC9 o{ Mrs.1Smitb. Responding to Young's criticisms, Gilbert w. Fergwon., vice president <A. cori;iorate communicatiom for the Irvine Company, said, among other things, the statements are .. ,Wy." '"Mr. Young's remarks, ii they are cor· rectly quoted. art silly. They reflect little understanding of our new city plan and no understanding of our 1960 agreement "Ai th the Board of Regent!, .. Ferguson said. He cited recent remarks by Norton Simon, a member of the Board of Regents, that he said were similar to those made by Young. ''At that time," he said, "Governor Reagan and other regents termed the remarh 'confusing and baffling.' "Further," Ferguson said, ''Mr. Simon's assertions were vigorously denied by Chancellor Aldrich and the UCI planning statr, with whom we were directed by the regents to work during the master planning of the land adjacent to the university. .. There is not much point in com· menting further on lhill kind of pet. tiness," Ferguson said, "We are too blJSy trying to keep our 1960 promise to crea~ an attractive, balanced. urban en- vironment throughout the Irvine atta. A spokesman for the company added that the original agreement stipulated on- ly that a minimum of 10,000 acres be deV1!loped for a city of at least 100,000 persons. Current plans now call for a city of 400,000 in an area covering ~.000 acrea of the sprawling Irvine ranch. Major. Donald Magee loves bil luck to- day, even if hl:s leg hurts hlm. He f.U 100 feel from a hoverJnc helicopter at Camp Pendleton Thursday and suffered UWe more than a broken left ankle. Major Magee, a reservUt on two weeks of. active duty training at the base, was reported in good cood1tioo in the bue bospilal today. The Jt.year-old reservist whose home 11 at 3580 Wisteria in Seal Beach, fell to the ground duriJli a bellcopt<r training .... 1on. A mounting apparatus for a rope dang). 1ng from the hovering chopper gave way alter the major began his descent. The part.time leatherneck fell feet first to tb• ground. Base spoke!:men said five small bones In M11ee's ankle were broken. but other than a few scrapes and brulset, that wu the onJy injury. Major Magee's mishap was the only sulous accident reported among the , 19,000 reservists from throughout the country taking part in the exerci.ses. Thi ma,Jor wW m.iS tba cllmas to the maneuven Monday iltJeG ibe-l>balllllll of reservtsb hit the beach for three days or mock warfare. The Marlnoo will make the landing by boat and helicopter. Sen. Goldwater Oaims· Plane · Was Not His Sen. Barry M. Goldwater said today it was neither he nor his airplane that buzi.. ed homes in the takeoff path of Orange County Airport Sunday night. And he said he can prove it. 'Ille aenalor's name and plane were connected with the incident Monday night when Newport Beach City Councilman Milan M. Dostal publicly complained of a small Jet that took oU so low, "It almost came through my window ." An avid airport crilic, Daniel Emory, who was in the audience, although claim· ing lo be one Of Sen. Goldwater's most ardent supporters, tattled on the Arizona Republican, saying be had seen lhe craft and that it be1onged to the senator. Airport officials the next day also con-- finned that Sen. Goldwater's plane had been at the airport Sunday, But alas, they all were wrong . Sen. Goldwater said this morning, "I no longer oVrTt an airplane." Hikers Press On Death V alwy, Cocutal, Walks Continue By JOHN VA LTER7..A Of tll• 0.llY Pllill 1 .. H While San Cle mente's Death Valley conservation walker resU: today past the m1dway point of his trek across the burn- ing sands, two other ecology·minded hikera are hoofing it on more hospitable terrain -the IOUthem Orange Coast. Joel Hurd, 28, was reported fortifying himaeU from the hulll>!ood larder of his miniature covered wagon today, wallini: for the sun to go down tonight wben he will resume tht trek blck from Townt Pass to Death Valley Junction. As he munches his htalth foods in Death Valley, two young La Jolla tt:11idents a~ marching upcoast and dln· Ing_ on health foodt as welL Roger English. 20, and Valeria Mayers, J7, were ex~ lo walk through the South c.oast area tbl.s evening on • hike from La Jolla to Brllllb Columbia to sttta the ecolotlcal c:risl.I. ''Maybe through our eumplea we can make people feel a JltUe IUIJIJI aboul driving evuywhere." English 11Jd before IOIUng out on the Weal CaOll ufarl. While the couple walk In the cooler clime. Hurd la trying to 1•1 iome badly needed sleep today an.r apendlni two more sleeplw daya In hla wagon ben<atb the blazing sun with shade readings top- ping 120 d'il'ffS . "It'1 !till too hot out there in the daytime for him to get some sleep In the wagon, so he turned in to Furnace Creek again Thursday morning to get some rest," friends reported. Since the. start of the march for clean water began last Saturday night. llurd has trekked off-and-on throtqh the week's dark hours on the lSO.mUe round trip. The toughest. leg of the hike took place before dawn Thursday when llurd hauled hls 200-pound wagon up the steep slopes of I.he Panamlnt Mountain Ranae to Towne Pas:; -6.000 feel higher than hb starting point at the Junction, Two unidenWied hikers joined the bearded wagon puller on the way up fD the pass, friend! said, but one soon drop- ped out alter collapsing from severe blisters on hll leet and heal exbaustk>n. Hurd -who hu Jost 20 pounds IO far -predicted bil march would probably end at lhe Junctlon on SUnday "11111 ho gathers some sand from tbo lnhorpltable valley's sand dunes. The gralru, he vow1, will go Into hour&luse! whJch he will present to Pruldent Mxon, Governor Reagan and other cfflcl•ls. "Time ls ruMlng out,'' will ~ the writ. ten ecologlcal mwa&e on the Umepleces, Hurd 1ald. Cease-fire Deteriorates In Mideast JERUSALEM (AP) -Israeli air force planes struck at Jordanian army ~i· Uons today, the military command said, In further deteriorations of the Middle East cease-fire. The military sald the raid was laun-- ched against Jordanian army stronghold~ which have given B'sistance to Palesll· nian guerrillas in attacks ag ainst Israeli rronlier setllements. A spokesman said the Jordanian army "assists terrorists and makes it possible for them to act against Israel\ civilians." A spokesman earlie r had announced that Israeli Air Force jets crossed tbe border and bombed and gtrafed Arab guerrilla targets inside Jordan for the se- J cond straighl day today. . Artistry in Surfing The Tel Aviv spokesman said those • · raids were in response lO mortar attack! on two Jewish settlements. The plane~ all returned safely alter hit· ting objectives adja cent to Israel 's Belsan Valley, he said . Beisan Valley set· tlementS of Maoz lfaim and Yardena came under mortar fire during Thursday night but no damage was reported. Sculptures of surfer done in bronze by Cardiff artist Edmund Shum· pert ezc.lwi:ivety for Huntington Beach's U.S. Surfboard Champion- ships will go to top winners.in the 1970 version of the event Sept. 19-20. President in New Orleans For Talks on School Actio11 NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -President Ni.Ion arrived today with 1 group of his top advbers for 1 French Quarter motorcade and 1 talk with Southerners on bow fast and how far acbool desegrega· tion will go this fall. The President and Mrs. NiJ;on were met at New Orleans International Airport by nation.al GOP committeeman Tom Stag, state GOP chairman Charles De&ravelles and a group of other st.ate Republica.n figures. The presldenUal party e n t e r e d limousines for the drive along Canal Street which runs through the center of the city's historic French Quarter toward i.ht Royal Orleans Hotel where the group was staying. While the President met with represen- t.ii'll from se•m Southern states, Mrs. Mi.on planned ti> visit the French Quartei-at lqtb, lncl'udlng SL Mary's of tt.e AssumpUoo Church. known u one of the ftnest examples or brick architecture In the country. Nixon, Attorney General John N. Mitchell, Education Secretary Elliot N. Richardson and Counsellor Robert H. Finch planned to outline administration policy and listen to local problems in meetings with the chairmen and vice chairmen ol state advisory committees on public education . The state committees, consisting main- ly of pri vate citizens, are offshoots of the President's special cabinet committee on education wh ich has been trying to ease the mixture of black and white children in Southern schools. The state committee officials invited to today's rneetng were from Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Georgia, Mississippi and the Carolinas. The non-officiaJ nature of the com· mittces led Louisiana e d u c a t lo n superintendent William J. Dodd Thursday lo question Nixon's trip. "UnJess he has the power of a fortune teller, he can't get a true picture unless he talks lo people down here who know the situation. Of course, that's the way the Republlcans operate," said Dodd. a Democrat. ''They get most of their in- formation from Wall Street and Madison Avenue ." The administration on the eYe of the visit reaffirmed its plans lo pursue a policy of "reaiOOableness" in seeking schqol dtsej.regation in the South. Mitchell, appearing b e f o r e a Senate committee, avoided a con· frontation with some liberal Northen1 senators by offering an explanation that appeared to satisfy them . "Untll the higher courts decide dif· ferent/y," Mitchell said, "we will con· linue to apply the standard of reasonableness.'' SALE PRICED ru was the second lsraeli air strike Inside Jordan since the Middle East cease-lire went into effect a week ago. The guerrilta organizations have disown- ed the truce initiated by the United States as a preliminary to peace talks. . An Israeli newspaper, the Tel Aviv Yediot Aharonot, reported that Egyptian soldiers fired across the Suez Canal in 1 second minor violation of the cease·fire Thursday . The newspaper said the in- cident occurred in the waterway's central sector when a few bullets from small arms weapons were fired over Israeli positions. The mUit.ary command said it could not confirm the shooting but refused to deny it. Two days ago the army said four bullets were fired from the Egyptian side of the canal in the same sector. There were no casualties and the rire was not returned , the Israelis said. Reports from Amman said Jordanian authorities have lightened sec u r it Y measures lo prevent Arab commandos from kldnaping diplomats, foreigners or government offic ials. Informants said the guerrillas may resort le, this tactic to sabotage the U.S. peace plan. From l'a11e J PROBE ... The police chief was Intruded to pro- vide the committee with a report of his own invtstigation 0£ charges brought against his officers. This report was com· pleted and handed lo the committee last week. Wheaton said the committee will hear "all kinds of witnesses" but probably will be able to complete its hearing today. A report on the investigation then will be released lo the public. DREXEL'S NEWEST For kids •nd fun p.opl•. Av•il•ble in two refresh- ing fin i1he1. Yellow •nd s•lmon color. The best of •II, it is 1tain, burn •nd m•r r111si1t•nt. Your wh imsy will s+•y like new no m•- ter wh•t you do. Co~ pl•t• bedroom furnitur• •veil&bl• from dey b.ds to chrt•I mirTott end .n •+ v•ry thougJ,tful ~r~i. s •• it tod•y. Dm ............... $140. Mirror ............ $ 45. YOUR LOCAL DEALERS FOR DREXEL. HENREDON. HERITAGE NEWPORT BEAa4 1727 Weotcllff Dr., 642·2050 OHM "-IDAT "1'U. t INTERIORS • LAGUNA BEACH :MS North Coast Hwy. OPIN NIDAY 'TIL t """" T.I ,,_ .... tlf 0....,. c .. ...., 14t-1J6J 494-6551 FrldlY, k/gust 14, 1970 l ' Old Laguna: Do_es It . Still Live? By THOMAS MURPlllNE . ONE OF THE local editorialists suggested the other day that lf you d1dn'l believe all the bad things he wrote about Laguna's Woodland Drive neighborhood, then you ought to just go out there and ~see the horribleness of H all for yourself. So l did. Normally, I'm not inclined to abruptly accept blanket lnvitatiom into other people's neighborhoods. But I went this time, alter taking the added pre-- caution 9f calling an old acquaintance who has lived there t for many years and asking him ii It would be okay. Jn event that you've been out ol touch, Woodland Drive is a street near the ffiouth of Laguna Canyon and · in recent times it has fallen on evil days. 111ERE. WAS a riot involving some of the new gen· eralion Woodland residents and Laguna police. It has been accused as an area involved in drug traffic. Indeed, LSD advocate Tim Leary was apprehended in the vicinity and ......,_ no\v gets hi·s mail at the Los Padres' Men's penal colonv. Additionally, Laguna city authorities have 2lrongly suggested that homes in the Woodland Drive area fail to conform to certaJn dictums in the municipal building code. So a drive is under way to subject these places to official inspection of walls, plumbing, wiring and the like. Inspection notices have reportedly been mailed and the city visita· lions will start Sept. I. rt10ST ALL. of these developmenls, and particularly the inspection bit, have led a sizeable number of residenl.S in the Woodland area to look at the city's role in their neighborhood in a somewhat Jess than kindly light. Anyway, all of this became a backdrop for my visit. My host was Andy \Ving, a Festival of Arts exhJbitor of several years standing. He asked, quite candidly, If I felt I needed lo ''jnspect" Woodland Drive. I said no, I've seen it before, over the years, say since 1944. Then perhaps, he suggested, I'd like to view his neighborhood from a slightly dilfei'ent vista. Why not drive out the Canyon and enter via Mulligan Drive? Then I could easily amble down to his place at 1244 Victory Walk. IT WAS A PLEASANT, sunny Sunday afternoon as my old truck thread· ed oul Broadway through the traffic, past the bustle of the Big FestivaJ and the hustle of the Sawdust, and turned in at Mulligan Drive. There is a neat Jillie home on the corner with a manicured law_n~urrounded by a picket fence. Mulligan is more like a little lane than a drive. It has offshoot thoroughlarts called Roosevelt Lane and Victory Walk. Parking space is scarce. This end of the neighborhood is quiet A couple or dogs can be heard yapping in the distance. Some birds chlrp and the sun dapples down through the grove of towering eucalyptus tree! that Joe Thurston must have planted so many years ago. Thickets and foliage have insulated the place from the highway. YOU'RE GIVEN the impression that abruptly, you might have turned back lhe clock. This is really I...aguoa Beach of 1940, not 1970. Victory Walk, r reflected, mu st have been named during World War JI when victory was a popular name for everything. It is, as it implies, a nar· row walk through verdant bushes and ground cover. While it is the fronting thoroughfare for a number of homes, 110 gasoline buggy has ever smogg~ its shrubbery. • The residents, at this end cl the neighborhood at least, are most friendly, even to visiting newspapermen. Artist Lin Carr lives In a home tblt tower11 against the hill with a twin-peaked roof and large sun deck at 1295 Robsevelt Lane. She is a Sawdust Festival exhibitor in enamels, woodcuts and painttags. Miss Carr has lived on Roosevelt Lane for 10 years and has a dog named Oden. Her home is nestled in a profusion of green shrubbery and the plum trees produce more fruit than the entire neighborhood cap eat. SHE WILL. TELL you that sure, the other end of the neighborhood (Woodland Drive) has sOme problemS. But she is in Jove with her place and the atmosphere created by her friends and neighbors. Some of the neighbors will acknowledge that "the kids" Jiving down 01t Woodland have some problems but they seem reluctant to loudly condemn them. One Victory Walk neighbor told me, "A kid from over there told me one early morning that he was going to smoke some pot to get near God. Why, 1 told him that was like drinking martinis at 8 a.m. I asked him, 'What do you need it for? If you want to get near God, don 't smoke that stuff. Just go to God'." Another chimed In, "Many or those young people over there on Woodland have a deep feeling for God. But they don't get any help in finding Him. We need some clergymen willing to CQme out here and talk to them. After all, didn't Jesus walk among the people?" ANDY WING'S home on Victory Walk is not as happy a place as Lin Carr's. His house burned down some months bac k. All that is left is the founda· tion and floorboards and the stub ol one room. Wing ts now reduced to livini in a small outbuilding. Yet he is hard at work on his property and examples of his striking acrylic paintings hang everywhere; on part of the fire ruins, from posts or on stands atop his former living room floor , ''Acrylics aren 't bothered by the weather," Andy explains. Wing is a tall, rangy man with a moustache and easy conversation who has somehow become an outspoken advocate-at·large for his besieged neigh· borhood. "I CAN'T UNDERSTAND how people in other neigpborhoods can stand by and allow this home inspection thing to get started," Wing declares. "Don't they realize that they're goina: to be next? ''After the city gets through with us, then they'll be prying tnto homes and walls and garages and plumbing in other neighborhoods. We're just the start. Other neighborhoods better be getting organized now." Wing asserts that his home still stands in ruins because the city won't allow him to rebuild it. "The irony is that the city years ago rezoned this area to manufactur· Jng under a sort or subterfuge. Now, the city is demanding we bring all our homes up to R·I residential standards in what ls, by the city's own hand, a manufacturing zone." WING DOESN'T speak of his situation and that of his neighbors In angry oratory. He sounds more like quiet desperation. We talked in his yard and sat swinging In Andy's old.fashioned parch iwing, one of those with the awning top and long seat hung lrom 1prlnp. , There was a hint of breeze now, rustling through Joe Thurston's eucalyp- tus trees. The 20th Century was. somewhere else. When you leave Andy Wing 's neighborhoOd, chugging slowly back out Mulligan Drive, it's like suddenly being jerked back into reality. You're on Broadway, dodging two Volkswagen buses and a sportscar, ruShin& headlong into Laguna Beach oC the 1970s. IT WOULD BE LW than candid to suggest that all Is perfect along Roo9evelt Lane or Victory Walk or Mulligan Lane. It is an old area. It suf· fcrs many of the problems of other older Laguna neighborhoods. But it would also be less than truthful to write it ca u nothing more than a dumping ground for drug-crazed hippies. That is· a lie. There are a lot of real Lagunans Jiving in Utat neighborhood and many of them have lived there a long time. There is a certain grace and beauty and Jdyllic charm to the place. It reflects much of Laguna's yesteryears. I know today that all of Old Laguna isn't gone. lt would seem. tragic thst if In our headlong Mllh to wipe out bhght. us- tng asphalt, concrete curbs and sideyard Bet.back1 wt at the ume Ume de- molish all that was good in our past I am reminded of the evange.lisl'1 favorite banner which promisu tht &inner, "There is Still Time, Brothel." Perhaps. ARTIST-SPOKESMAN FOR LAGUNA CANYON NEIGHBORHOOD For Andy Wing, Little Victory Seen Along Victory Walk ' • CAIL Y 1"11.0T Stl'ft Piii* ON ROOSEVELT WAY : THE INSPECTOR IS COMING Artist Lin Carr Likes Her Neighborhood Despite City Critici1m1 II Only Ch let dealerS- are having a clean•UP on Impalas. You'll never have a better chance to save money on the cars that are already lowest priced of their kind. So if you've been waiting for ao opportunity to buck the inftationary' trend, save yourself plenty of money now on Impala, world's most popular car! Clearance savings now. You're on "ngslime. • ' . ' • ' • ' . •. l • • t ' • • • I I ' F-. -14, 1970 JS,000 to l..eave U.S. Cuts Troops In Saigon Area SAIGON (AP) --.,.,, lorca In Iha Saipl military rqi011 ore belnc CUI br lboul IS,000 .,.. u the muJi of • -W .. _., ... -_../IMjor reabaffllnl of allied unita and the ~ ttlm&t of • llrp ..... to the Vlol-~'lbe Woman's l.Jbenl~ Front namer oftldal IOUl"Cf.I dilcSoaed today. dalm &l\"tber milestooe. '!be .;...... Aid two full brlg..S.. pi;.. schoolgirl tl!llllis nash other Wllto -be &hipped home -Abioos. now Mn. MldlNI s.tgoa and the 11 ll1lmlUlldlng provlnc<ll 11. was named coach ol tbe of the :In! Military Region. Men who have tennis team Wec!J>esdoy at not c:ollipleted moat of their JS.month Mary's College, Moraga. Calif. -. 1n Vletmm will be translemd In Directw Don McKllllp Glhor units. 4id be believed SL Mary's would Security ,...iauoos pro.'ubH publlca-"° the Ully NCAA school with a lion of the Wiiis to be oent back to the ~ coaching a men's learn. Uniled States uotil lhe U.S. Command anoiiuooes them. • Elstwbere in the war-- TM COvt"ntry, England coun· cil hes cho.nped tu mind abovt olfMng free bui tro:wi to clef.. trill' pc:Mioners and decided to keep tM OM P""JI ipecial ft1n d COICacif apoknnmt Jaid it Md ttcdwd tc0ru oJ an.orv lettus fram clcUr1!1 refi<Untl in.rilling on papig tkeir own tooJt. He laid a poU of old peoples' dubJ confirmed th.ell did not want jree tn:rveL : • • tress Y vette Mimieu:c, active i"n ·ldlije conservation, cuddles Benyal er and jaguor cubs ot the Los An- tes Zoo. She is campaigning to in· elude t~ two species in the new lGio "4.t bans importation of pelts of a .t:rtain number of wild animal.a. J • : Gillingham, England Police are ing into golfers' complaints a brown mongrel dog harasses em on the 13th green of the Gill- am Golf Club. A club spokes- dian said the dog runs out of the ilishes, bites players on the seat of tlleir pants and disappears. lie sald 1:1.gbt players. including two women !IBve been bitten in the past 10 days ~ required shots. "The dog Sffms to select his target very direfully," he said. ~ . Bournemouth, England police havt warned beachgoers to be· ware of a ga11g oj thieves who 1pedalize in stealing lrotlstrs while their 01.01ters are in the water "the11 don 't wont the clothes." a police spok~mian soid. "But thty toke !hem to Qet th.e money inside." • • • : Red China's Premier Chou En-lai sp.ys the future belonj!s to the ,,,ung people of today's world and ""d jt doesn't necessarily mean !Jlakln.2" and remakin_g the revolu· "The revolutionary struggle 1 penonal struggle," Chou was ed as sayinJ? in an interview the newsaper France-Soir. "One c:ian commit errors, change and J)rogress. The important thing is to 4nd the right road. the happy med-iJarn ... . ' Small ambuab adlom and rilopping up operations were reported along the mrtbern coast whore U.S. and South Vielnam'"' 1...,.. clalmed they eog,ged more than 300 North Vietnamese in ligbtlng Wedoeaday and Tb~. One harassing action wu reparted I.rt Cambcvlia, Military spoke&men in. Phnom Ponh said the Viet Cong and the North Vielnamese •pparenUy were occupied with integratlng newly arrived rein- forcements. Geil. Creighton W. Abrams returned from convalescent leave with bis family in Thailand and resumed his duties as commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam . His gall bladder was removed in Japan July 3. Jn the major mhufRe of allied forces lo the. Saigoo regkm, all American com· bat units except one brigade have been pulled back from the Cambodian border. Most of them have been moved to the northeast and east of Saigon, inland from the South China Sea. South Vietnamese forces have re.placed the Americam along the border west and northwest of Saigon to block North Viet- oame9e infiltrators, and the Tey N'mh base camp 55 miles northwest of the capital bas been turned over to the Scwth Vietnamese 18th Infantry Division. On1y a few hundred U.S. su pport troops re- main at Tay Ninh, which once was the base for two American brigades. While the South Vietnamese army car. ries out the blocking role in and along the Boy, 10, Spends 5 _Days in Wilds, Tells His Story LAS VEG AS, N.M. (UP I) -An Albu· querque youth found in rugged mountains told his story today from a hospital bed. Miles to the south, authorities sea rched for a Texas boy lost for seven da ys In cold forest near Ruidoso, N.M. The nightmare for I(}..year-old Joe Grady of AJbuquerque ended Thursday y,·hen he was found after five days in the Santa Fe National Forest. near here by a man he never knew . ln the Lincoln National Forest 125 miles southwest of here. l~year~ld Leslie Hamrick of Odessa, Tex., was still lost. A party of 250 was making a search . Grady was found about lwo miles from where he wandered away from com· panions while on a hike last Sunday . ··1 slept all the lime." he said. ''l saw a rabhil and lots of other animals. I was scared. When t was .sleeping, I dreamed a hear was going to gel me." Grady, mnbumed from exposure IG five days of sun and his arms scratched from the underbrush, said he once dreamed of walking to Las Vegas and "getting a bunch of jobs to take a bus home to Albuquerque." He said he lost his boots last Ptfonday when be was sleeping. "They rolled down a hill. 1 spent most of the next rlay look- ing for them. Tt was fun . though.'' He told how he went without "'aler e,;. cept when he stumbled across a high mountain stream. He &aid he went without food, however, because he was afraid I.ht berries would make him sick. frootltt, the ptOleclloD ol tho I.I mfDioa pel'IODI ll'"1I to ~ and bamJeto In the rqtoo Is uslgbed to the mllltlam<o of the TtJTiloriaj Fon:a and Peop1<'1 SeU·Defena Willa. Industrial Output Slwws Healthy Rise W ASlllNGTON (UPI) -The Nl:roo ad- ministration says the.re ts some evidence to lndlcate a revival may be taking pl.Kt in the ution's sluggish business and in- dll3trial actMty. Figures made public Tburslay showed that Industrial production -one ol the key gauges of the e<OOOlD)' -re~ an Jocrea.se in July after a decline of three mOllUu:, and lhat perSOllll lncome or Americans also rose. In additim, rtvised figures oo naUonal output of goods ud services for the second qu arter or the year showed a larger gain than previous estimates. On the other hand, the biggest federal deficit for a single quarter since World \lt'ar II was recorded during the ApriJ- June period, but ofOdals said this was not unexpected due 10 increases .ill Social Security and big federal employe pay raises. Assistant Commerce Secretary Harold Passer said that quota wu viewed by 11>me economists as the period when the economy waa 0 bottoming oul .. "The evide11ee so far fer July·lndicates some kind of upCum la taking place,,. Passer !aid. He added that while the statistics did not provide the basis for concrete conclu.!ions, "We can take e ... couragement we have aeen the bottom" of the economic downturn. Industrial production rose 0.2 percent In July and l11come of individuals in· creased SJ.5 billion over June. The Gl"OS! Natioaal Product for the se- cond quarter was estimated at an annual rate ol '971.1 billion, up $1.1 bl.llon on an adjusted basis -with effect& of inflation removed -from the first quarter. 1be previous estimate was that the "real" rise over the January.March period was $500 million. The government reco"'.\ecf a $14.3 bUUo• deficit in tpend1ng over ti)come 11 the te· cond quart.or. with $1J billion of It blamed to inCreaaes in Social Securtty and governmeot employe pay. Jackson Deaths Blamed on Bias JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -The head of President Nixon's Commtssion on Cam- pus Unrest says racism was involved in the police fUsillade at Jacbcn State College when two black youths were kill· e<l. William W. Scranton, former governor of Pennsylvania and com- mission chairman, summed up his views arter a three-day bearing on I.he May lt !ihootlng at the predominantly Negro col· lege. "I think irs very clear that ra cism is the major problem involved in the Jackson State incident," he said. "I don't mean to iminuate Ulat thtre is TIO racism anywhere else .•• but it seems to be outstandingly so here, from the: tetti.mony we have btard,'' Scranton ad· ded. Some oillers on the nine-member com- mission were outspokenly aiUcel ol. the police volley. Miich sent AOme 250 rifle and shotgun r o u n d s into a girls' dormitory. Hot Spell Grips W. Coast Mos t: of Nation Enjoys Warm , Summer Weather-- Cellleral• .. ,,., ,._...,,.. llw CIMb •nd '°' tlcln9 *"""' -II. V1rlt1N (lfuob t11,,_ioi .. ..,,., -'•1'" lf'ld -f'I WI!~ Klflwld ,,...,._, llfld ...... .,.. ,.,... .... ~L. Litt!. ,_,,_,,,,... dw111M. LOI AHGl.LIS ~~() VICINITY - Mm[tJ ,.., 11""'911 S.tvnllY ""' Htdl'f •rtr -'M Cotll•I .... Llttl1 Mmllltltt\lr9 w ..... ~· .... "' ... ... ~· ... ~ .. !flt _. "' -.. ""''*" Tllllrtdl'f Wltft I rttoj]119 et llG •-1•1 lollewtlf w!ln 1 mul- """'"' lltf 10f, 011'1!!• "ttl'll TIIWld.., •NI lorK*ll ""~' H'I ""'l IOIHY Inc~! L-leH.11 t\ ti. '4111!1 N.mk• n..n. ~,,.. ,,. tJ, ~! 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Miii'"' SMdl MU .. llkM Ml-11111$ ""-... _ .... 0.lltl'ld ....... ~ ..... «iltt ·-· """"" -·· •ortllftd ~ .... lllf, ·-$Wl"*'te J t l.oo.it1 S•!t Lf~I (Uy s.a~ oi..o ''" '''fltlfU SIMI .,_,...,.. Jt11t11 SPOl!t11t Wt~klt'-' Hltfl le• ~rte. tt M .. " u .. .... N p M n T u '' A2 M .. .... .. " " " .... ''' ~ N " .... " . 101 ,. ... ... • ti . .... . .. " n N n n " " .. .. " " n m " ... . " " ,,, u 101 .. .. " N U .. " . " 6J J! ,. J1 ... ,, .OJ '' s• " . UPI T ........ CAMP VISITOR Pat Tries Sweahhirt Summer Camps Host First Lady In Ma1·yland BAINBRIDGE, Md. (AP) -First Lady Pal Ni.Ion admired freshly caught crabs and shook hands wJtb wet swimmers on a tour of two sum.mer carnpe for inner city children. "I hope they grow and grow -we nted more of them," she said of the camps, run by BaltinMn and Washington recrea· lion departmenLt for children age l!>-19 with the help of federal funds and an assist from U.S. military personnel and their facilities. A 200-mile helicopter trip on a hol, sun· ny day Thursday, took Mrs. Nixon to a day camp at the Bainbridge U.S. Naval Training Center where every week 600 Baltimore city youngsters get a chance to come to camp every day to swim in the Navy's Oiympic-alzt pool and enjoy fun, games and two meals a day. Tbe trip also lnclu,led the D~lrict or Columbia Recreation camp at Cornfield Harbor, where 120 different Washington youngsters go every week for a taste of camping and tents alongside the Potomac river. Mrs. rru:on entbuaiastically greeted iscorea of youngsters, ate in the messhall with them and even tried her hand at hammering a nail at a tentsite under con- struction. •·you need a bigger hammer because you·re missing all the time," one camper observed. Later she went. to the water's edge lo a spot where youngste rs were crabbing. She lold them "crabs are my favorite aea£ood." After the day·s tour Mrs. Nixon said the was most impressed with "the happy children" she met. She d e c I a re d , .. Anything can be accomplished if we work together." "I came because I'm concerned for those angels," said Mrs. Nixon. R elations U.es rnned VATICAN CITY (UPll -The Vatican announced today it is re-establishing full diplomatic relations with Yugoslavia, the first such move with any Communist regime in Ea.st Europe. ------,,_ ___ _ • lWo Danger Seen Scientist Says Gas Dump Safe WASHINGTON (UP I) -A Navy oc:eaoographa' lQld a federal judge today that he could ,.. no danla' to ellher human or marine life from dumping of nene gas "corftns" ill the Atlantic east or Cape Kennedy, Fla. 'Die wllness at a hearing be!ort U.S. DI.strict Court Judge Juite L: Green on a legal move to b19ci the disposal waa 'Or. Note Found, Hin ts Murde1· Of Diplomat MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) -The Uruguayan government today studied an unauthenticated message found in a Buenos Aires cafe which indicated the Tupamaro guerrillas might murder the Brazilian diplomat they kidnaped. The message made no menlion'Pf American agronomist Claude L. Fly, who was kid· naped last Friday. Officials in Montevideo would not con- firm the authenticHy of the note found in the Argentine capital 15"0 miles up the Plate estuary. But it contained language similar lo that used in JO previous messages from the urban Tupamaros, and it was delivered in the same maMer -left in the rest room of a cafe. The comm unique said Dan A. Mitrione, the k.idnaped American police adviser y,·hose body was found Monday, had been sentenced to death for "collaborating with the forcts of repression." It said the process of "revolutionary justice" for Brazilian Consul Aloysio Mares Dias Gomlde, 41, could be halted if the Uruguayan government released about 150 prisoners demanded as ransom by the Tupamaros. An earlier message , relayed to authorities Tuesday. said Dias Gomkie and Fly, a SS.year-old consultant working for the Agriculture Ministry, both were in good health and had not been sentenced yet. The later note said the Brazilian represented "one of the bloodiest dic· tatorships in America, whose tortures and assassinations go to such limlll that they have been denounced by lhe ju:itice commission of the United Nations." ~ noto llOld the government bears "totil and ibsotute responsibilit'J" far Mllrlone'1 murder. The govmnenl baa refused to bargain with the guerrillas, maintaining I.be prisoners whose release is demanded are criminals rather than political detainees. Some 12.000 police and soldiers con· tinued their searcli of the Uruguayan capital for traces of the kldnapers and their two captives. About 80 suspects were rounded up Thursday. The kid- napers have warned that if their hiding place is discovered, both their hostages "''ill be killed immediately. Torture Slaying Jury Deliberates ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) -A jury of middle-aged men and women today begins deliberating the fate of John Norman Collins, lbe fonner sludent charged with torturing and killing a coed. Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge John W, Conlin was to instruct the seven women and seven men in the law this morning. Two of them will be eliminated by lot. For a guilty verdict, the re- mainder must deicde unanimously they believe Collins killed Karen S u e Bcineman in hlt uncle's basement more than a year ago. Conrad Hugo Cheek, hud or the O>emlcal Oceanoiraphy Branch of the N1Yal Re:11earch Laboratory. I T6tllylng In support of the Anny's plan to dump the 418 gas "coffin!" in three-mile-deep water, Cheek described the area U2 miles east of the Florida coast as "quite safe, exCept for any organisms' in the immediate vicinity or the pollit of rel ea~ or the gas." He said tbe marine population there wu very small. A point that clearly disturbed Judge Green Thunday-the )>Ol5Sible danger i£ the gas nrleLs exploded from the deep sea pressure when they reac.Md lx>ttom -W8.'J raised w!!h Cheek. He responded: "There is no danger occurring at the bottom. and a bubble rising to the top,'' he said. He ad.::d, "I doubt that any bubble (from a explosion) would last more than a fracUon of a second." He explained that he felt water pressure would stifle any bubble quickly. If the vats exploded or were crushed by the water pressure, Cheek testified, the action of the salt waler would render the gas hannless. One or the 418 "coffins" conlains a type known as VX gas, even more lethal than the other -known as GB. It Would take somewhat longer for , the VX to be dissipated, Cheek sald. "Within two weeks. \Ve wouldn't have to worry about the GB .at all," he said. "It would all be gone." "What about the VX?" Judge Grttn asked him. "U you release it sloy,·Jy enough. it will not have any measureable ecological ef- fect," Cheek replied. ··1r there is an ex· plosion, I would prefer it at 16,000 feet, because the amount of y,·eter to be af· fected would be less, and the biological population smaller," An Army attorney told the judge he sensed a concern on her part over seJec. tion of the disposal :ilte. "That is cor~ rect," the silver-haired jurisl com- mented, The lawyer then asked Cheek if he fell there was any danger to human beings at the site when the gas was dumped. "Not that I can see." he said, adding that any bubble would rise very little befort being stilled from the pressure. Senate Override Of School Bill Veto Expected WASKINGTON (AP)-The Senate is ex- pected to follow th e lead of the llouse and override Pr~dent Nixon's veto of a $4 .4 billion educa tion bill. It would be Nixon·s second such defeal this year. The Senate vote is expected Tuesday or Wednesday, The House overrode lhe veto Thuniday by a margin of 28&-114, 20 votes more than the necessary two-thirds ma- jority. But in a history-making day of con- L!iidering two presidential vel.Oes, the I-louse sustained Nixon's rejection of an omnibus $18 billion appropriations bill carrying funds for housing, veterans, the space agency and a score of other pro- grams. The vote on that one was 203-195, a ma- jority but 63 short ol two-thirds . The St"COl"ld House veto ended any chance for the omnibus measure and made it necessary for the Appropriations Conimittees to go to work to dra ft an- other one. Starving IGds' Mom Held There is some sentiment at the Capito? for deeper cuts in the space program to preserve the extra fund s provided in Ule oriiinal bill for veterans and for such programs as urban renewal. Republica n leaders noted the Senate passed the bill 88-0 in agreeing privately with DemocraUc Leader Mike h-1ansfield that the r.rn~asure would be enacted into law over Nixon's objections. DETROIT (UPI) -A pregnant mother of 12 \ras arrested 'Thursday after nine of her children were found sul.fering from malnub1Uon. Police. atteated Mrs. Bes!lie Carter, 37, for investigaUon of c:rutlty to children following an inve:itlgaUon started when her son, ~ 8, was found u.n- conscioUs at home . The women's division said his 7·year· old sister, Regina , apparently was in a stupor from hunger. Police said both had v.·elts over much of their bodies and may have been beaten. Tyronne weighed only 25 pounds when tie was admitted to the hospital and Regina 23 pounds, police said. After the .arrest. five other children were treated for mal.outrition and taken into protective care. \\'omen's division Sgt. Janice Tuttle said the other children were ''all In .about the same condition." The others were An-- nle. l4, Allee, 12. Theresa, 10, Sandra, 5, Yvette. 4, Diane, 18 months and Matthew, 9 months. The two )'OWlJesl remained In the ho:ipltal. Sgt. Tuttle sakt the other children were with their grandmother. Nixon objected to the bill because it ex· ceeded budget rea munendation.t by $,Ml million. The bulk of the increases are {Or twn programs wbich the Senate long bas su~ ported. One is the Elementary and Secondary Education Act desiined to improve education for children from p o o r families. The other is the impacted areas p~1m which provides federal granl! for school districts 'overcrowded because of nurby federal Installations. Cash Counsels Con '"Grads' Singer's Wife Gives W ome11 Words of Advice A TI.ANT A rU PI) -Joltnny Cash came to Atlanta ·a Municipal Auditorium Thurs- day to ling: before 700 convicts, each about to be reltutd in a new stale- bougbt blue suit with 115 In his pockei.. Before he wu through. the country mll&tc sta.r and his singing wUc. June carter, ollered """11 ol advice ror the stvtral dotM wlvn 11.lUng bulde their inmate husbands . "Ta make a good man and to keep a good man, you h11ve to have 8 good worn· an," said Cash, He called June onto the stage as evidence of whal he was talk:ini about . .....MW C&rl.tt, flash.ina a toothy 1mile, brouaht cheers lrorn the prilontn by joining Cash in a lively rtndltJon o( ..Jackson,"• IOfll •boul gettJn1 manied "in a fcrver muer than a pepper sprout" "Tell the wives what they need to know," Cash told her. Miss Carter, a leading comedienne on the country mu:slc ciraalt before she mar- ried C.ah. appeared reluc:tAnt to talk serious. Cash urged her on. ·•u you ever had hard timei, your heart gOf8 out to other! who had hard Ume:i.'' Mia Carter said. "We've had ~me h&rd times and IOme short times. In fcict. John. didn 't you ha ve one of )'Our short limes wtth that Shcrlf.f Jonta atJ.n • ding ewer thert!" She pointed to Sheriff Relph Jones of Lafayette, Ga., who jailed Cash in 1967 kr illeaal poues1ion ol drugs. This wa5 one ol the roughtr spots in Cash's longtime balUe with a pep pill habit th.at MJsl Carter htlped him win. "We're not goin& lo talk about tha~" Bild C.ah. "Jr I an speak to the woml!n," Miss Carter went on, "l"d like lo tell them to speak kindly 1lv.·ay1. Be kind. Be charitable. Stteamlng won't hrlp. ·• ibc ptused. Cash whisptred ln her "Ye'!h," she agrttd, "Kissing and hua: &inl helps. It helps a lot." t. 1 ' . -... San Clemente . tapistrano EDITI O N ' N.Y. Steeks . ·, .. ·-VOL ~l. NO. 194, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CA LIFORNIA FRI DAY, AUGUST '14, '1970 TEN CENTS u er ur eac es $76,000 i n Pot ·Patrol Seizes Record Stash The largest seinlte or contraband marijuana made by Border Patrol of. ficers at the San Onofre checkpoint took place today with the arrest of two men and cpnf~tion of $76,000 worth of the forbidden weed. Patrol CapL Gent Harris said the ~ cldent took place shortly after midnight at the freeway stop downcoa.st of San Onofre as a small pickup truck with a rover over the bed pulled up. Tbe patrolmen checking the vehicle for aliens allege Ibey found 346 kilo-sized bricks of the weed neatly stacked under the cover. Robert Frederick Spengelman, 24, of Tujwlga, and Donald Allen J\a]ph, 24, of Granada Hill! were arrested. The men fa@ federal charges lodged through U.S. Customs of smuggling mari· Juana. Harris said the grass -the largest haul by hil men in memory, wu alleged- ly hauled from Mixico in the pickup. He added that his .men often receive tips on contraband from the customs men at the border, "but this one was pure luck. The men,jqst ran a routine of smug. -&ling aii.os~...i turned up. the weed." The seizure was one ol aeveral major ones made at tho bu'!' cbed<polnt Uuoogh Ibis month. Harris aaid. Hum~n .fingers Spotted in Surf At Laguna Beach Two human fingers and thumb were spotted in a tide pool by Laguna Beach Jileguanl Mike Mitchell 1'1ursday al· temoon, bet were "aJhed away by a wave bd'ore be could ieiie lbem, ac- cording to lifeguard Lt. Dean Weatp.ard. Det. Alex Jimenez has been assigned to cheek into tile .mystery _and guards are combing the shoreS for. possible furthtr evidence, Westgaard said. . Mitchell new to the Laguna Beach force this' season. made the grisly noo when he swam out from his post at Rockpile Beach to warn some swimmers o[f Bird Rock. When he climbed down to the rock he spolted the fingers and thumb, which he &aid, "appeared a few days old but were recognizable," in a tidepool , but was unable to retrieve them. Westgaard said there ha~e been no reports of missing per~s In the area and it will not be possible to conduct a search of the ocean for a poS5ible body until the present high surf subsidea. Irvine Confirms $1.5 Million Tax Refund on Land Irvine Company officials today con- firmed the development firm has receiv- ed • $1.S million n!fund on ii., 196~70 Orange County property taxes for itJ 46,000 acres of agricultural preserves. "It seem.1 to be on the locrease. So far this month we have arrested several smugglers and the amount of the stuff never was under 100 pounds (about 45 kilos)," he revealed. The latest seizure amounted to 761 pounds of the weed with a street market value calculated at $100 a pound. 4th of July Beach Riot Investigated Laguna Beach city manager James D. Wheaton today questioned the validity of affidav~ts charging police brutality dur· ing the July 4 Woodland Drive riot as the city's official Investigation of the rock and botUtHhrowing melee got under way behind closed doors this morning. Police <JU.el · ~· Huct. said he could not di.ocusa Ille report prepared by his ~t 1o11ow1n111!1.W. probe of Ille cllll:ges, but added, "I am ol Ille O(li- nion ll>at the charges art unlOWllJed." Wbeawn said that five lffldtvtbt from Woodland Drive residents, presented to the city council by Mrs. 'Ibomaslna Gunn, Laguna Beach dlairman of the Orange Cotmty American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) chapter, which demanded an investigation, "have no legal status." 'Jbe affidavits, said Wheat.on, "Were not signed and not sworn and could have been written up by anyone." A three-man committee, consimng of Mayor Ridtard Gelj)erg, Councilman Olarl!on Boyd and ... ion planned to spend most of !:hf: day \earing witnesses, beginning with Woodland Ddve resideQLI_ who claim they were Dlillbe1eed, or wltMssed mistreatment of others. durlng tbe melee. Polke officers will testify I a s t , Wheaton said. Tbt pitched battle that allegedly began with a fireworks violation, finally broughl units from six law enfora.mmt qeodel to lhe Laguna Canyun area. Laguna Beach police were supported by units from San Clemente, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, the Orange County Sheriff's Department and the California Highway Patrol. The Costa Mesa police helicopter was summoned to play floodlights on the scene as more than 40 orrice.rs swept through the area where an esUmated crowd or 200 had gathered. A nl.Dnber of arrests were made, most of them on charges of failure to disperse, and a few for alleged narcotics violations. In a report to the Ctty Council following tile Jiot, Wheaton conunended local police for &int: their job weU wxier adverse condltioo11. The ACLU, hmfever, demand- ed an impartial lnvestlgaUon, charging that police had entered homes, koocked down fence.s and manhandled reskienta: during the confrontation. Mayor Goldberg named the inves- tigating commJtte but ruld that is In- quiry 9houJd oot be conducted in public, since "per90Mel matters" were involved. (See PROBE, Pqe I) .• • ' ' I , Ollt.Y<l!ILOT Stiff,...., L • £e~fi;rqtff:ff . a r~··l~M..; . ' William Martin (nJht), pteo1dent ot'tagUiia's'F.ei- tlvtll of· Arts Boan! of D.h'.actors, leads -st dnring Thursday's observance of the 35tb birthday Of the Festival of Arts. Mayor Richard Goldberg and Vir· ginia Woolley, the only remaining Festival uhibl· ,.,,i,t!Jl ' , 'J ·~, '~.1 /i'); ·!·; torllflio·ili1Pla~ ber pa!ntihgs at 'Ufe-first:Yelti,,.t . in 19!2,(there was no Festival for threeryM '~ Ing World War' II) were· on .hand to help cut the cab. Mrs. Woolley'• ·painting (badtgrnund) bas 'been part of the F._.U.val's permanent collection. Senate Freeway Heru·ing Postponed .for 4th Time Woodland Drive Home lnspectwn To Begin· Soon The Senate Transportation Committee hearing on the controversial Badham bill to eliminate the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach, adleduled for Monday, has been postponed again. A spokesman for Sen. Randolph Collier (D-Yreka ), chairman of the Senate panel, said this morning that a crowded calen- dar bas forced the fourth postponement. His office said a hearing would likely be scheduled at a special meeting sometime later in the week, probably Wednesday. The Senate i! hoping to ad· journ Aug. 21. A delegation of Orange Coast offidals and private citizens Is expected to make 4 Shee p Chmed In Laguna Beach A report of "dogs chasing sheep" on Bluebird Canyon Drive in Laguna Beach Thursday moning added a rural note to the usually sophisticated Art C.Olony police Jog. An SPCA driver, dispatched to in- vestigate, found Ille lheep, lour o! them, browalng aafely in the avocado grove where they serve as four-footed lawn mowen. the trip to Sacramento for tbe ·hearing, whenever lt is. They have made the journey befOre, only to · find the Item postponed. at Badham'a request at. the last minute. The third postponement came last week but the annOuncemmt bad been made several daya ln advance. . As written, the bill would simply cut out the Newpq_rt ·aect!OO of tbe freeway, from Beach Boulevard In Hungtintcn Beach to the city line eaat of C«ona de.I Mar. The measure has drawn support from Newport Beach officials, while being coo- demned by representatives from Costa Mesa Laguna Beach, and · Huntington Beach. It proposes no alternate route and It ls the routing that has ired Newport residents. AJ approved by the State Highway Commission, the roadway, considerably inland further up the coast, cuts down to the Paoillc Coast Highway throo&h The controversial leglalation has already gained approval In the Assembly and wwld likely be similarly successful ~ the Senate with a ·favorab1le Transportatkti Com m l t t et recom- mendation. Badham's postponement requests In re- cent wee.ta have been made because key supporters of the measure on the com· mlttee have not been preeent for the hearings. ' Housing inspection Jn the Woodland Dtive 'a'.r~a will begin durlilg the· flrat Week of September. They·aboukt be com- pleted witbih IO days of Sept. 1; Ll!guna Beach bWlding and plaMihg direc- tor Clyde Z. Springe has advised mldent.s and property owners in a Jet- ter mailed this week. At the Aug. 5 city counc.11 meeting, when Springe was instructed, by a S-2 council vote, to proceed with the in- sP,tctors, Jt wu indlcated prepara.Uon would take about two moriths. -Under the pro_gram~ to be undertaken throughout the city, beglnnJng in the Woodland area, inspection teai:ns from the buildfug, fire end health depfirlmenta wUI check out building and code viola- tions that might constitute a hazard to health and safety. 1be decls.ion.to conduct the inspections on a building·fo.buildlng heals, beginning with the Woodland area, aroused wide protest and resulted in a peUUon, algn~ by 500 penonJ, demanding !hat the plan be dropped. City officials insisted that a "houlllng inventory" must be made under the geofl'al plan and said it had, been decl~ed to start in the Woodland area becauie of !be high lire hazard created by !Is older houses. They uld the program would be car-- r)ed oo throughoot lhe city upon -. ~!~~~;!.~::: Pre:; to aome 40 owners and resldentt ln the WOodJand Dri\re -South ·Canyon Acres, -Arroyo: The rebate drew criticism from Lyndol L. Young, lawyer for Irvine. heiress Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith. who pointed out Ole rest of the taxpayers in the county are facing assessment hikes to cover the lrvine savings. Schools Letting Hair Down ·, Qrtve area , referred · to his original noU!lcaUoo of the J,npendlng inlpectlonl, requested· oooperaUan and 1qggeoted that his ·oflke be called lor clarillcaUbn" al the proc:ei:iW'e u,desired. ,J Agricultural preserves were created under the WUll.amson Land and Open Space Conservation Act which permjts Dr ess Code Reln.xed at Cleme nte' (lnd Fors ter farmers and ranches to establish By PAMELA HAlJ.AN agreements with . their counties In which °' .... o.iir '":' .. .,, they guarantee to keep the land in "Give me a head l!Qlh hair, long thick agricultural use for a®lnimum period or 'b&ir _ lhlnlnc, gleamtoi, atreamlnl. 10 ~vir. and Mission. 'Viejo ~.. .I~ • .JI~, Give ~ down, to there were granted ptts:erve st.attn for much of hiir. sbouJder length and< JonCer ... " thelr properties by Orange County In The words of the popular muslcal J anuary, 1"9. after a storm of COO• "Hair" don't e•actJy rtflect U)t proposed troveny. dress Q)(fes for Sin Clemente High Under preserve status. assessments on School and MJroo Fonter Junior lli&h, the 461000 acres of lrvlne land dropped but they come ck>ee. fro mJ:S,887,610 Oil \he 1969 tax rolls to Tbe community dresa code committee, f7,"8,500. made up of II adultl and 17 stud~1.11 Taxes on the land, accordlna to a>Unty Thurtdly recommended the Ubtrallzation ollicials, dropped from 12.261.llO to of hair auJco,:i ... (or boy1. 1701~10. -Tk J>'OPI' ,J '1'!11 be pr.,.nled to . ' ..... ; • ' trustees of the Capistrano Unified School Dialrtct Monday. It would allow· hair nc> l0t1ger than the top of· Uie collar line of a ltandard T-shirt. ll also woold all-Ow a tnOlllfodie which does not exceed U>e corners of Jhe lip and sldeburnl -inch below the ear wtiich can Oare Into the mldcbeelt. It would ban beit~, and hair lhat covtrs the eyes, or ~pver the ears. Last year's hair ttandardJ dld not N · cept ha ir over the ears, 1n the eytl, mut· Jon chops, flare side~ IOOU!ltcbet (except for seniors ti>« lie temester)•or beards. Hair could ~·mJt;pr thab lhe dresa ahlrt ~ .. ' Springe is on \!acaUon \DIW Mondly, a dty hall apokesman said. Lifeguards Bracing . For Throng By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ... 0.Ur 'illlt lltff Lifeguards in the five cilies along the Orange Coalt today braced for the onslaught of weekend beach visitors who Thursday produced a record 1,300 rescuet from booming surf ud the accompanying riptides. While large surf conditions prevailed Coday, lifeguard! from San Clemente to Seal Beach said they expect conditions to ease a liltle by Saturday. Huntington Beach was the hardest hit Thursday with 662 rescues followed by Newport Beach which Jogged 405 -a record number of rescues for both clUts. San Clemente showed 1S rescues, Laguna Beach bad 85 and Seal Beach log· ged 39. Spokesmen for those cities said the number or rescues was not lmWiUally high. Hw!lington lifeguard CapL Do u g D'Amall said the surf has been running a consistent three to six feet with some sets up to nine feet. Water tempenttaea: were recorded at 61 degrees. "The surf ha! dropped a little today and maybe down to normal by Satur· day," be aaid•,"TheJOUgh Cjll!Cl!\!oounay ba .. been calised by a alorin olf BaJa." Newport Beach bad water tem- p;_er.atureJ in 1be hi,b 60'1 and surf nm- ru.g lrom eight !eet alone the ~ Mar beachea to IO feet on U>e Newpor1. Balboa beaches. Seli at Balboa's Wedgt were bitting 16 feet. "We reacued 406 people," said Robert E. Reed, director of marine aafety for the city. "That's an all time high. we've- never had that many rescues before.•• Reed's force of 70 lifeguards was prais-- ed for their work . "We have 23 new ocean beach guards this year and under trying circumstances they did an excellent job," Beed stated. He also said the three rescue boats greatly aided rescue opera· lions. Reed warned beach goers to "proceed 'Y].tb caution" in the surf which shows few signs of slacking off. ''I don 't know," Reed said. "lt might go down. The sets are still big, but not as consistent u Thursday." In San Clemente, lifeguards said they rescued the 75 people from surf which was running Crom three to six feel Water temperature was recorded at 72 degrees. Llfeguard Lt. Hank Barnes said the heavy side drift near the Municipal Pier drew at least 20 swimmers toward the pilings. The pier rescues were common througl1 the day. San Clemente guard Ch.lef Dick Haiard said the rescues were not in the record- breaking category because surf was not running as high in San Clemente as in other Orange Coast areas. ''It's likely there will-be alight decrease in the surf, but If it remains strong today, then there's a good chance It'll be big for the weekend," be sald. Laguna Beach lifeguard! pulled their 85 awimmen from water that was recorded between 71 and 73 degrees. A guard spokesman estimated sets were running 1 (See SURF, Page 1J Oraage WeaCher It'll ·be another weekend for bask· lnl on the beaches, since the tem- perature will shoot Into the middle 70's along the coast and reach up to 18 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY An aqwtict shmo at Newport Harbor High School and o t1outh film festival at Laguna Beocll High School are the. ftaturcd. I '""~ I~ ~~f·. w~. fCCtlQn , . , 1 , ~ . ' , .. ~ MutHI ,... • .................. °""" ~ • •"'"""'"' 11-x IJMI ,..,.,. ,.- '""* '"'' '**,........ •11 '~ Ii """''"" .. ,, '*"""" 4 Wftlh ... 1, ._.. """ 1iol4 --... ......... IMt ' I I DAILY PIUIT SC .. Linda Given Freedolli · RelWllel Testimony In Tate-~Bianca Murder Trial . I.OS ANGELES (llP() -UOda X- bian toot I>, IW w1lotss place today at the Tate-IA.._. 1Dllrdc< trial aflor her lint nillll ol -in nlnc monllls dur-loc -... cook<d a dinner of salad ud -"8111 ... ber IOCUl'ity guards. With ],.. -._ aplMt Quorles Mll'llOll and bis three female codelen- dants owly rompleted 'lbinday the one-time code.fend.ant wu ennted tuU ,_ Sbt itft ~ Hall of. Justice with her at· tomey and donned a clisgula< bd<n ar-rtvfnc 1t her new resldence. Her 1ttomty said Mn. Ka&ablan "got a tk.k" oul oC preparing the dinner f(f' the OM f'emale And two male poliec guards. He.sakl she also watched teleWs1on for the first time since her imprbonment last year and saw berseU on the s:reen. Wheo she toot the chair today, Deputy District Auomey Mron Stavitz asked Mrs. Kasabian if she wu aware of what the penalty l« perjury was in a capital case even though the murder charges bad been dropped agalnst ber. ·• 1 understand it wou1d rtllllt in the and t:wo male police guards. Mrs. Kasabian said that no one ever bodWll .... tW•-·--.... ~ tf ... ad "" lollil1 lor ..... _ ....... _ Over the ol>joctloos of the dtr.-, stoviti ~ over again fMI' t'9tlmoo,y that an.r lea•IJIC the home of grocer LcM LaBWEe an Aug. t, 1111, ... Wked with Manion about killing an ac- quaintance of hen: wbo lived ln an ocean front apar1rnelll. Superior Court Jodi< <llarlea H. Older dismissed ..... COO!lta ol lllllnler against the -~ ....... wl>o said she went with Patrida KrenwWtel. Susan Atkins and Charles '-i'el" W1tson to the Tate hou.<te, then 1ocompuied Manson, Miss Krenwintel, Miss Atkins and Leslie Van Houten to the Leno La.Blanca home the following night, "because Cllatlie told me to." During tbrtt weeks of intensive ques· tioning, the pigtailed mother of two has stuck io ber verskm of what happened oo the oiCbb ol Au(. I ud I,~ __ A!thoap llbe --1o the -;tma mnd for fmtber-redirect a:- :=""'.p;. '% :!l. '::':..;,,er: lawyen, Mrs. K•uNan m JoDcet' 1'ill • "~ r..=ii:· .... ._ tool: place In the fudge'• dwnben beloro court resumed Thursday, but under ques-Uanin& by Ronald Hughes, Mn. Kasabian told the jury she had been released. "'They tell mt I am a free woman, but death pe.nallY." she said. She spent the noon hour In the heavily guarded ninth floor of the Hall of Justlcc, as usual, but her husband, Robert, and a friend, <llarles Me!IM. ,,.,. pennltted to jo1n her and her attorneys for lunch. Wben court reces.ed fO< the night, she 'ffas Liken to the basement of the buDding, and driven out of an Wl· derground tunnel in a lurquoise sedan. She sat in the back seat, flanked by her attorneys. and she made no response to the some 50 photographers a n d bystanders who wak:hed her leave. "She can't quite realize it yet," lawyer Rmald Goldman said. ''She knows sbe is rr... but llbe doesn't yet led the ... Jo>-., bOpe she will uperlence later." She wu to ltay at a private home. tmd<r protectlve police guard, Wllil bar ...._, WU completed. Joan Irvine Smith Moves Major Plunges Out of Copter And Breaks Ankle To lock Present City Plan By PETER XRJEG Of lllt Hy l"fflll Si.n O•imbt& current plans fer the dty of Irvine would viola!< • loog..tanding agreement with the Univonlty ol CalifamLa. lawyers fer Mrs.. Joan .Irv1Dt Smith today !ndiated they will moYe 1o block deve)Opment of tbe dty U it ii DOW envi&iooed by company offidala;. Lynda! L. -Young, attorney !or Mn. Smith and her mother, Mr&. AthaUe R. Clarke. said the company now p1anl 1o build Its model city. ••on ane eo,ooo acres spread all over the ranch." He &aid there is a written agreement with the Univmlty of Calllornla that the city be built on 10,CMXI acres Immediately adjacent to the UC lrvioe campw - 5imilar to the UCLA-Westwood complex. Young said he baa written to Newport Beach and Orange County olllciala ul<in& for hearing dates on all applications and petitlom filed by the Irvine Com-and the Irvine Industrial complex on a'l'l mat- i.n. He said, however, be is primarily in- i.r.Nd in bearing dates involving the proposed communlty. Youna said the Irvine Company ts ...... ing to have the agreement with UCI mJdnded and said the matter will come before the UC Board of Reg~ts at a meeting Sept. 17. He said be will attend Front Page 1 SURF ••• consL!tent four to six feet and said thty expect conditions to prevail through the weekend. "As king as the v.ind doesn't pick U]>- and it doesn't look like It will -the surf conditions 5hould continue through the weekend," a guard officia1 said. Stal Beach had the least activity of any beach are due to "abstinence on the part of swimmen.." Lifeguards said the surf wu running three to five feet . with larger eets coming in occasionally. Water temperaturt 'I'll! set at 68 degrees. ''We had 39 rescue!, which is not very high," a guard spokesman said. "People have been forewarned by stories on TV and radio and in the papers and they're staying out of the surf. I hope it continue! that way over the weekend." Ufeguards at Huntington and Bolsa OLica state beaches reported making more than 100 rescues Thursday in the large surf and riptides. DAILY PILOT N...,.,. lit_. H...r.,,_ ._. L9f1M t.McJi ....... ,.., c.. ..... s.. cs. ...... O•A"IGlr: COAST PUaLtSHINO CDMl"AHY a.-..rt N. W•-' ...... ,....., .,.. "1Ml.i- J·~~ •. c.,,., • ., Vk• l"f'ti'.owtt .... '""'*"•' M• ...... n.-., ic .... a IEifllor TI!it"'•• A. Mw,fti11.• M ....... hlllOI' ll.r.tl1rl P. N•ll 11t1t11' OtMee c-ir Mt• -Qllilt .... , -wat..,..,.. "-""' 9ffdl1 lfU W.. ..... ~ ~~m,......,.__. ............... llldll IJll1S 9Mdl ~ a. .. , .......... ,..,. &I c..... .... to oppme the move. A opoboman for the eompany thlo nm>lng dmled this .. true. He aaid the company bu no action pending before the bcmd cm .any matter at that meetmc. Young aid be WU espec:lally irted at tbe lad the c:cmpony bad spent coa- liderable mmey on 1 muter plan in the early 191111'• that mapped out the inlllal 10,000.un city plan. He called it a ''Waste of money" for the company 1o have been working the put year allegedly cbanglllC the m&M plan. The agr,.mmt with UC!, Y oang said, WU made It the time the company donated 1.000 aa... !or the UC! campw1 and llO!d the llat. llllOther 510 acres !or it. The sale, he said, ODii californla tu· payers $6)00 an acre, or a total of $3,315,000. He aid the company only agreed to give the state; tbt additional 1.000 acres upon the -"'Mra. Smith. Responding to Young'• criticilms, Gilbert W. Ferguaon, vice president cl corp«at.e commu.nicatiotw for the Irvine Company, said, among other thin&s, the llatements are "allly." "Mr. YOUJl&'s remarts, U they are cor- rectly quoted , are silly. 'They reflect litUe understanding or our new city plan and no understanding of our 1960 agreement with the Board of Regents," Fergusin said. He cited recent remarks by Norton Simon, a member or the Board of Regents, that he said were similar to those made by Young. "At that Ume," he aaid, "Governor Reagan and other regents termed the remark! 'confusing and baffling.' "Further," Fergu.son said, ' ' M r . Simon's auertiona were vigorously denied by Chancellor Aldrich and the UCI planning staff, with whom we were directed by the regenta to work durin1 the master planning of the land adjaoent to the university. "There is oot much point in com- menting further on this kind of pet- Uness," Ferguson said, "We are too busy trying to keep our 1960 tromise to create an attractive, balanced, urban en- vironment throughout the lrvlne area. A spokesman for the company added that the original agreement stipulated on- ly that a minimum of 10,000 acres be devtloped for a city of at least 100,000 penons. Current plans now call for a city of 400,00l in an area covering S3,000 acres of the sprawling lrvlne ranch. Major. Donald Magee loves bis luck to- day, even U hls leg hurt& him. He !ell 100 feet from a hoverfnl hellc:optu at Camp Pendletoo Thuraday and suffered UWe mare than a broken I.rt Wle. Major Magee. a reservist on two weeks ol oellve duly training at the bue, wu r.portod in good coodilioo in the bue hospital today. The 34-yeaMld ,...rvm whose home ts at 3580 Wiate;rta in Seal Beach, fell to the ground duriJli a helicopter traJnin& .... 1oo. A mounting apparatus for a rope dang\. fng from the hovering cboppe.r gave way after the m.1jor began his descent The port-time Jealhemeck !ell r .. t lint to the ground. Bue spokesmen said five small bones in Magee'• ankle were broken but other than a few acrapes and bruiaei, that was the ooly injwy. Major Magee's mishap waa the only serloua accident reported among the 19,000 reservists from t.brougOOut Ute country taking part in the e:s:erclaes. The m•Jor will miSll tbe dlmaz 1" the maneuvers Monday when the pbaJanl or ruerviats hit the beach for three days of mock warfare. The Marines will make the landin& by boat and helicopter. Sen. Goldwater Claims Plane Was Not His Sen. Barry M. Goldwater said today it was neither he nor his airplane. that bon- ed homes in the takeoff palh of Orange County Airport Sunday night. And he said he can prove it. The senator's name and plane were connected with the incident Mond1y night when Newport Beach City Councilman Milan M. Dostal publicly complained of a small jet that took off so low , "it almost came through my window." An avid airport critic, Daniel Emory, wbo was in the audience, although claim- ing to be one of Sen. Goldwater's mo.st ardent supporters, tattled on the Arizona Republican, saying be had seen the craft and that It belonged to the senator. Airport officials the ne:s:t day .iso con- firmed that Sen. Goldwater's plane had been at the airport Sunday. But .1las. they all were wroog. Sen. Goldwater said this morning. ··1 no longer own an airplane." Hikers Press On Death Valley, Coaswl W al,ks Continue By JOHN VALTERZA Of ,,.. c."' l"lllM lleff While. San Clemente's Death Valley conservaUon walker rests today past the midway point of bis trek across the burn- ing sands, two other ecdlogy-minded hikers are hoofing it on more hospitable leJTain -the IOUlhem Orange CoisL Joel Hun!, 26, WU .. port.<! lortllylng himself lrom the health-food Imler of his miniature covered wagon today, wtlUng for the sun to go down tonight when be will resume the tre:k bict from Towne Pass to Death Valley Jlmction. As he munches his health foods In Death Valley, two young La Jolla residents a re marching upcoast and din· in& on health foods as welL Roger English, to, and Valeria Mayers, 17. were expected to walk through the Soulb Cout .,... this evening on a hike from La Jolla to British Columbia to slltso the ecologlcol crisis. ''Ml)'be through our eumples we can mab J>IOl>le led • UtUe ruiJty oboot everywhere," Englllb sald belore out on the Wut Clolt ufari. ,the ""pie walk 1n the oooler c:llme. 1Dird Is trying to 1•t ..... badly needlCI oleap 1oday alter spending two more lleepiMI days in hit ••eon bene•th !be bJuJllC IUD with shade readlnp top. • ping 120 degrees. ''lt'1 still too hot out there in the daytime for him to get some sleep in the wagon, so he turned in to Furnace Creek again Thursday morning lo get 10me rest," friends reported. Since the start of the march for clean water began last Saturday night, Hurd has trekked off·and-on through the week's dark hours on the 150-mUe round trip. The toughest leg of the hike took place before dawn Thursday when Hurd hauled his 20().pound wagon up the ste.tp slopes or the Panamint MounLaln Range to Towne Pass -5,000 feet higher than his starting poil'lt at the Junction. Two unidentified hiker> joined the bearded wagon puller on the way up to the pass, rrte.nds said, but one soon drop- ped out after collapsfng from severe blisters on bis feet and beat exhaustion. Hurd -who has kl!t 20 pounds IO far -predicted bis mardl """Id probably end ot the Junction on Sw>day when he galhen some ,.nd !tom the lnhoapllable v1lle1'1 &and dunes. The grains, he vows., will go Into hourgluaes which he wUJ present to Pre&ident Nixon, Governor Reagan and other o{ficlals. "Time 11 runnin1 out," will be the writ- ten ecoloetcal meauge on t.he Umepleces, Huro said. Artist.,, in Surfing ScuJptures of &urfer done in bronze by Cardiff artist Edmund Shum- pert exclusively for Huntington Beach's U.S. Surfboard Champion· ships will go to top winners in the 1970 version of the event Sept. 19-20. President in New Orleans For Talks on School Action NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -President NiJ:oo arrived today with a group of his top advisers for a French Quarter motorcade and a talk with Southerners on how fast and how far achool desegrega- Ucn will go this lall. 1be President and Mrs. Nixon were met at New Orle&ns International Airport by national GOP committeeman Tom Stag, state; GOP chairman Charles Dregravtlles and a group of other state Republican figures. The presldenUal party e n t e r e d Umouaines for the drive along Canal Street which runs through the center of the city's historic French Quarter toward the Royal Orleans Hotel where the group was staying. While the President met with represen- tat.iva from &eYtn Southern states. Mrs. Nixon planned to vi.sit the French Qutrt<r at length, locluding St. Mary's of the Assumption Chureb, known as one of the. fllle!t e1amples of brick architecture tn the country. Nixon, Attorney General John N. MilchelL Education Se<:retary Elliot N. Richardson and C.Ounseilor Robert H. Finch planned to outline administration policy and listen to local problems in meeUngs with the chairmen and vice chairmen of state advisory committees on public education. • The state committees, consisting main-- ly of private citizens, are. offshoots of !he President's special cabinet committee on education which has been trying to ease the mixture of black and white child ren in Soulhern .!Chools. The state committee officials invited to today's meetng were from Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Georgia, Mississippi and the Carolinas. The non-official nature of the com- millees led Louisiana e d u c a t i o n superintendent William J . Dodd Thursday to question Nixon's trip. "Unless he has the power of a fortune. teller, he can't get a true picture unless he talks to people down here who know the situation. Of coorse, that's the way Lile Republicans operate," said Dodd, a Democrat. "They get most of their in- formation from Wall Street and Madison Avenue.'' The administration on the eve of the visit reaffirmed its plans to pursue a policy of "reasonableness" in seekin1 school desegregation in the Soulh. Mitchell, appearing b e f o r e a Senate committee, avoided a con- frontation with some liberal Northern senators by ofrering an explanation that appeared to satisfy them. "Until the higher courts decide dif- ferently." Mitchell said, "we will con- tinue to apply the 5landard o f reasonableness.'' SALE PRICED Cease-fire Deteriorates .··, ... i.t~ In Mide.ast JERUSALEM (AP) -laracll alr !or<,. planes struck a.t Jordanian army posl· lions today, the. military cnmmand said, In further deteriorations of the Middle East ~ase-flre. The military said the raid w1s tau. ched against Jordanian 1rmy strongholds which have gtven assistance to Palesti- .Uan guerrillas Jn attacks against Israeli frontier settlements. A S!Xlkesman said the Jordanian ermy "assists terrorlsl.s and makes it possible for them to act against Israeli civilians." A spokesman earlier had &T1nounced th at Israeli Air Force jets crossed the border and bombed and strafed Arab guerrilla targets Inside Jordan for the se- cond straight day today. The Tel Aviv spokesman said those. raids were in response to mortar aUack.s on two Jewish settlements. The planes all returned safely after hi~· ting objectives adjacent to Israels Beisan Valley, he said. Beisan Valley sel· Llements of Maoz Haim and Yardena came under mortar fire during Thursday night, but no damage was re1>4?rt~. . This was the second Israeli a1r strike Inside Jordan since the fi.1iddle East cease-fire went into effect a week ago. The guerrilla organiialions have disown· ed the truce initiated by the United States as a preliminary to peace talk.s. . An Israeli newspaper. the Tel A vtv Yediot Aharonot, reported that Egyptian soldiers fired across the Suez Canal in a second minor violation of the cease-fire Thursday. The oewspaper said the in- cident occurred in the waterway's central sector when a few bullets from small arms weapons were fired over Israeli positions. The military command said it could not confinn the shooting but refused to deny it. Two days ago the army said four bullets were fired from the Egyptian side or the canal in the same sector. There were no casualties and the fire was not returned, lhe Israelis said. Reports from Amman said JordarUu auth<lrities have tightened s e c u r i t y measures to prevent Arab commandos from kidnaping diplomats, foreigners or government officials. Informants said the guerrillas may resort it this tactic to sabotage the U.S. peace plan . From Page 1 PROBE .•. The police chief wa s lntructed to ~ vide the commitlee with a report of h.is own investigation of charges brought against his officers. 111111 report was com· pleted and handed to the committee last week. Wheaton said the committee will he.ar ''all kinds of witnesses" but probably will be able lo complete its bearing l.oday. A report on the invesUgatK>n then will be released to the public. DREXEL'S NEWEST For ldd1 end fun people. Avail•blc iri two rcfre1h- in9 fini1hc1, Yellow end salmon color. The be1t of all, it i1 stein, bu"' ertd mer rcii11tant. Your whimsy will 1t1y like new no ma- ter what YOfJ do. Cor. pt.te b.clroom fumitvre eveilM»e from day b.d1 to chwal mirror1 •ttd an et very thoughtful_ e_ric.es. Sec it today. D.....,, __ $140. Mirror ··-······· $ 45. YOUR LOCA~ DEALE.RS FOR DREXEL. HENREOON . HE.RITA6E NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W"tcl!lf Dr., 642·2050 Of'IN NIDAY 1lL t • INTERIORS ,.,,, ..... 1 lnt•ri<w Dool"""ra A .. !lablo-All>-NSIO LAGUNA BEACH :145 Nol'lh c .. ,, Hwy. 494-455 t Of'IN N IDAY 'Tl\ f ., ' ' r r I ., I , , ''""'· ._. 14. 1970 DAll.V '1LOT I 1st West CoC1$t Def ender 11·1· . -----. --------- .~,Newport's Ficker .Hopes to Make Cup History . ' . V~t f~ • ~...,.~~~~:V"'l~ FICKER IS QUICKER -So said the buttons worn by Bill Ficker's crew aboard Jntrepid during the ;JaJy observation trials which lntrepid won by a score of 9-0. Ficker appears relaxed here as he takes Intrepid upwind in a brisk Rhode lsland Sound breeze. • INTREPID'$ NEW. COCKPIT -. Bill Ficker can liteer Intrepid from either side of the boat .as he goes into "the ·final ::;election trials ·for the Amerlca's Cup defense. The r.evolutionary new concept was from the design board of Britton Chance '.Jr. who also made other changes in the Intrepid, originally designed by Olin Stephens. What Is An1eri~a"s Cop? Millions Spent on Plain Old Pewter Pitcher What Is this America's Cu p on which milllcns are spent ev«f three years , by individuals and syndicates of yachting c:ounlries. In~ctbe first place, it is not a cup •.L!!!. but a home1y old pewter pitcher ~ DO bottom. ll has been bolted ln a cabinet all its <lwn tn the New York Yacht Club trophy room for more ~u~.AGS contend th:t It will be eplaced in the trophy cabinet by the bead of the first American skipper to lose il to a foreign country. In a s<>uvenir booklet published this year by the Du Pont Co. and edited by Robert W. Carrick, the compet!Llon [or the America's Cup has been called a~ for excellence." k, a modem chronicler of 's Cup competition revlews the 'of yachting's holy grail Jn these bly no trophy In the history world bes caused such a stir en and naUons as the pregnant that is bolted to the base of case in the trophy room of York Yacht Club. bnposalble to measure the mJI. doflara, to .&ay nothing ol the time alcal energy and the up-Ught that have been expended on ue bit of silvtt in lhe past : i"f'WENTY CRAUENG~ h a v e brought oJ.1$: the prkle and prejudice of yachtsmen as well as their skills and, despite our domlnaUon of th.is se:rie.'l, nothing has dulled the burning en- thusiasm this classic competition con- tinues to eVoke. "lt all started when the British in- dicated they would wek:ome t b e participation of an American yacht in a regatta to be held at the time of their World's Fair In 1851. 'Ibis triggered the sporting instincts of John Cox Stephens, the first commodore o£ the New Ycirk Yacht Clutl. ' "STEPHENS QUICK!. Y formed a syndicate consisting of his brother Ed- win, George Schuler, J. Beekman Finlay, Hamilton Wilkes and Col. James A. Hamilton. 11le group engaged 30-year-okl George Steers to dtslgn lbe• schoontr which was built at William Jt. Brown's Shipyard on the Eaal River at 12th Street in New York City. ·•A succwful dellJner er pilot boat.I, Steers departed from convenUonal design and gave the new hull a clipper bow, a Waight run lift and raked masts. The boat meuured .93 feet six inches on the water line, had .a beam of 22 fl . 6 in. and a dr:art of nine feet. She was launched on May 3 and chrlsten- ed America, as beliltlng a vesiet that would represent this country in foreign competUlon. "UNDER COMMAND ot a veteran pilot boat captain Dick Brown, America departed New York for Le Havre, France on June 21. The 12 in the crew did not include the IYJldle•!t mtmbers who made the uans-A1laaUc passage by : EDITOR'S NOTE: DAILY PILOT Boating Editor Almon Lockabev Z./t , toda11 for Newport. R./. wMre he will co11e1' th.t final Selection Trial.I for t iht thret V .S. contenders and the 1ail-off between F1'anct and A uttralia \ to tkUrmlM tht cholte11gier. Tht U.S. tri.olt 1tarc ntzt Tut1da11. steamer. Under v.·orking sails -her good racing canvas was below -the schooner made the crossing in 20 days. "Commodore Stephens met the boat in the French port where she was cleaned up, painted and fitted her unusually flat (for these days) set of dils. On July 31 she set sail for Cowes and arrived there that night but anchored oCC shore because of fog. "DIE FOLLOWING mornin1 the rt· putedly fast English C\IUer Laerock appeared to escort America Into· the harbor. The skipper of the British ve•l drew Capt. Brown into a. race which the Yankee schooner won by a quarter or a mile. "This not only astounded the British yachtarnen but led them to decline the challenges offered by C o m mo do re Stephena, No one was about to make a wager agaimt ttiis unusually designed boat. "To get some competIUoo, Stephens entered America in lhe Royal Yacht Squadron race around the Isle of WtgbL On Aug. 22 the Englisb bad Ii boats, five scboooer1 and nine cutters, on the line off the yacht club at West Cowes. unm START was made at anchor at 10 a.m. Ameriea got away slowly and momentarily was left in the wake of the neet Then she picked up spted and overhauled the British boats one by ont until she gained the lead. 11She lost this to Volante, a cutter, when the wind dropped off Vtnlnor on the 80Utlle81t side of tile Island. 'Ibo breeze freshened and America rwept by Volante and wai never headed. Sbe finW>ed at 1:37 p.m .. eight mlnute.s ahead or Aurcra. "It wu lhe resounding victory over the besL lhe English bad alloeL and it brought Commodore Ste'phtns the Royal Yacht Squadron Cup which has aince been known as the America'• cup.'' ~~~~~~~~~~ By ALMON UJCKABEY Dt "" O.ltr """' tftft If Bill Ficker of Newport Buch and his crew aboard the lZ.meter Intrepid ""' cbooen to defmd the America's Cup Stpt. 15 It will be Ibo rint Ume In the hi.story of the more than a ttatury old competition that a westerner ha3 betn at the helm of a Olp defender. A! a matter of fact, It wasn't until Pat Dougan of Ntwporl Btadl purdlased the aging Columbia and entered her 1n the lDM trial.I that a Western crew ha! even competed Jn the lria!!. THE I.ATE WaJter Podolak and a crtW ol Newport youngsters manned ~ Columbia that year and came olf at least third best In tile trtals. Uodaunted, I>ou&an had the. O>lumhja rtdesJgned by Olin Stephens an d remodeled It Drbeoll'1 boat yard in San Diego and took another crew - Including Flcttr -to Newport, R. I., for another crack at the defender's rote, in 1967. Sharing the helm honors with Ficker that year was Briggs Cwmlngham of Newp<rt Beach. formerly of New York, who defended the CUp against a British challenger in Columbia in 1958. But in 1967, Dougan, Ficker, CUn- niogham. et al were destined to come in second best. It wu the result of F:lcker's starting tactics in the 1987 trials that brought the former world champion Star sailor to the attention of the New York syn- dicate which owned Intrepid. AND SO It followed that when the redoubtable Bus Mosbacher, who had defended the cup in 1962 and again in 1967 agaimt an AustraUan challenge. was named to a high government post by President Richard Nixon the eyes of the lntrepid syndicate t u r n e d westward. Meanwhile, lntrepid had been remodel· td to design feal11tts of the brilliant young yacbt designer Britton Chance Jr. of Philadelphia. 'lltis move was made by the Intrepid 1}'11dlcate wbtn StepheN signed an· exclusive contract with a new syndltate, beaded by Robert McCUilough of Rl•erside, Corm., to build the 24th U.S. 12 meter. It's not diWcult to imagine the coocem or Stephens, McCullough, et al when their spanking new Valiant started being sound1y trounced by Ficker in the remodeled Intrepid. Up to now, Stephens has never designed a new 12-rneter that was beaten in the trials. BE CAME close in 1964 when American F..agli:. walloped the then n e w Con.dilation in the July cbstrYatlon trials. But some hasty revisions to Connie WHO ME WORRIED? Intrepid'• 8111 Ficker and • new skipper tn the person ot Bob Bavier changed all that. Connie WU .the deie.nder and soundly ""'hipped the British challenger. Second guessers on both coasts att now wondering what Stephens and lhe VaUant syndicate have betn doing - if anything -to the new yacht 1ince the July trials. Another question U: WW McCullough step down in favor or another belmsman? NO ONE will know those aMWera until the selection trials start next Tues- day. The people involved in designing. building and sailing 12-met.en l n America's CUp competition have a way of playlng things close to their double. breasted blazers. All photos by Howie Cevfmen, Teunton, M4i11. The selection trials wUt continue until the New York Yacht Club stltttion com. mHtee decides in their own minds that one yacht b faster than the others or that one 1iJpper and crtw can get the most out ol a boat. There is another contender 1n the 1'70 trials. It ii the new U·.S. It-meter No. 23, Heritage, designed built and sailed by the )'OW'IC Florida yacht designer Charles Morgan. The only reason Heritage hasn't been mentioned in the same breath with Intrepid and Valiant ii that she hu 1hown up poorly in the observation triaLs on Rhode Island Sowid. BUT MORGAN has hinted all along that he deslgned Htrllagt for lilt kind of weathir and seas that can be apected in the Sound during thie laUer, part of Augiist -we.alher llilt lli!b't been experienced thus far. The only other U.S. 12-mettr on the scene this summer has been Weatherly, the RhoOOJ-deslgned yacht in which P.tosbacher beat the Aussies in 1962. She i.9 officially in Ulil year's trial.1 as a trial hone for the new VallanL Steered by ~rge Hinman of New York. she bas shown flashes of her old power giving all thtte of the other yachts close competition. THERE'LL be ~thing different in Newport, R.J.. this yw. While the American yachts are fighting it out over the Amerca's Cup course to determine the defender. another set or trials wW be going on acroa the Sound between Australla.'l and Frtneh U.metas to determine who will be the adual challengtr. This ~ the fast tin.. in lbe history of the CUp that the New York Yacht Club has insisted on an elimination aeries to determine the challenger. It is al.so the first time that the club bas mo tertained more lhan one challenge. The Australian boat wUI be Gretel tt, owned by Sir Frank Packer, an Australian newspaper magnate who mounted the first Aussie challtn1e in 1052. THE FRENCH cont.nder has bttn named France and is owned by the . Fnnch ballpoint pt11 tycoon Martd Bich. In the last four yun Blch bas gOllfl so far as to purchase the U.S. O>o!Wla- Uoo, the British Sovereign, and has had O\ance design a completely mew boat just to serve as a trial horse for the challenger. Under the rules Of the New York Yacht Club a challenging yacht must be enti..ty lbe pn>duct of lbe country of origin -from design to • builder to sails to the most minute piece of hardware. READY FOR SHOWDOWN -Intrepid (left) with Bill Ficker of Newport ~ch at tho, helm, and. Vall·, ant, skippered by Bob Mc€ullot111h ol Riverside, Conn .. will be cr0s8lng tacks like this more than once durtng the ne•t t\Yo weeks as they start show- ·down batue for rJaht to defend the America's eoii. Al•q In the running will be Heritage, designed , blJlll · and skippered by Charley Morgan of St. Peteri- burg, Fla. •• j ' . • • • . . DAILY PILOT SC y...,. 1'101ae y 's Wortla OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock Li st Watcl1 £01· 'William sons' HfW YOltlC IAPt • l'rldfn ~ .. , • ............................... 1 ....... YO<ll St«l E11~ f>fiul; I' s.i. Nllt ' J ' .... ' - • -CllM ...... 1"-S'tt;,;:£ .. Im 46\\ -~ + .... Gt-rel•• .IOll I ri·'' n··~ ~:;:i·· ... · lly SYLVIA l'Olt'l'Ell Tbt '1'errible WiUiamsons" are ln my trta -have al.So recently been spoUed in other aubwtls around Nt>Vo' York City and in Bergen County, New Jeney. Thty surely art in- "ldine YoU" neighborhood now too. for this is their pea.k seuoft_ 8t wamtd and on \he looktAJt ! The Williamsons are a clan of sewral hundred Itinerant swindlers \\tlo have been vk- Umizlng Amer~am r r o m coast l.O coast for two full generations. Home r e p a i r rackets are ~ir specialty - ranging from roofing jobs and basement waterproofing to lightning rod insl.allalion, dmeway resurfacing and barn painting -and they thrive despite all efforts to crack down on them. Their favorite easy target is naive old ladies bu1 lhey prey equally victously on you. younger Americans. In some known cases. they have charg- ed $300 for •pplying on ef. fective roof "staler"': have coated driveways with gunk "'bicb remained sticky for weekt; bave painted -tiims with a concoction ot aluminum dust and ~ crankca.se olJ '1:hich wasbtd off with the flrSl rain : have iruJtalled lightning rods wi-"c:on· ductor5" were nolhing more thaJ1 painled ropes. 1llE WILUAMSONS (who abo go under :ruc:h SOOttl!h names as Stewart. McMillan and Pl1cDona1d) usually work out or true.ks. and usually manage to leave tov.11 before I.be police catch up with them -or befott their victim.S discover they've been bilked. There's no hard rule for s polting a Terrible Williamson. You simply must appl)' the same cautions YoU would to a.ay deaJer in home improvement goods a n d Swck Brokers: Come Out of Hiding Place NEW YORK (AP) -A "°" to all those brokers bl hiding: It may be safe to come out now and face the public. Sure they're angry about losing all Lb.at money on your recom- mendations. But they're not blaming yoo lor everything. Test tht water. Call up one of those clients who lost bis shirt and put it to him: "'Isn't now the time to invest?" All be can do is growl some: ad- vice or his own and slam the phone. Bui that shouldn't hurt. Courage. 'lbett's a good chance he might do nothing o( tht sort, that he may have no more danger in his breast than he has value in his account. Ask him bow he hopes I o participate in the new upswing if he doesn't get involved. How are you going to return to six figures if you don't make the coot.acb? Thad Bov.-man. sales and marketing d i rector of Sbearson, Hammill & Co., is one Wall Streeter who believes the heat is of( the securities salesmen and they arc lying low for no good reason. He uplaim: this way : Some 40 ezecullves of the company therefore took ol! £or the branch ofifces to lend their assistance to brokers, tO rebuild customers• accounts Md to offer their particular expertise to resoJve special problems. The coast. lO coast trips, which began in May and con- tinue through August. w-ere eye openers for the ex· ecutives. some of whom had confined their activities to the company office. \l'ltich, is just 40 r"t from ll Wall Street. home of the New York Stock' Exchange. "We obtained a new perspective," said Alger Chap- man. the president. ''It was refreshing to leave New York and all the bad news. Out there in the heartland we found people to be more op- timistic and realistic." Many customers we re shifted into municipal bonds so as to take advantage' of high interest rates. Almost all were advised to clear away the dogs and get into run· .:lament.ally sound issues. More. sophisticated customers were advised about straddles, pul5 and calls. Were customer.<i flip or .sarcastic! "Not lit all.'' said Chapman. --llY lllW ,,, "" U"° 1tr. -1, '""I"'"' .)J ~ .. ""'\ • ~I',' ' 'f 1 ~ !I" -• >K ·g: 'JI lo • ~ • • • ... - •••• --" 11\.r i., 11 -\.'1 .... ( °'·"' l ''"'· lil ··"'" -I __......... • ......... , ...... .,_ --lll'k -Iii allt. A "' n?: tn· l"' 14 ' l . ~ • ,.+.-i; servces, Here they art! ,.r;.o. ..... ._.,...,.... • .....,.......,. ....... ~ A~-~11 J 1[€"' F,'" j' -'"' :HYt''~# ! = 1; ~i,·=1• '~c': " ,1• •t• -" BEWARE if anybody who IN:! ~·.. '.! ,. I" A'o +"' 1111 ... ,, tt .. ·!l1~ ,,.;: + .. ~ "~fi ,..1.. .., U'-o 1.:.llol 1•'4 ..... ...... ...,... A<l'IWC .. 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Wtance ·acertainofferwhich~ ... 1•111.ed/ .. -n "=l.' 14 16 uu;..t l ..... ~ *' ...... :t\lo It ,. m• 1:·-'ffl _,,..,,,.,evtle I • 1''\ l~\lo I -~n ill : 'lhin I d llttrler (bldj. "'9;; 'ii'\ .... c • ! m wr' .. :tt ~~ ~f: l• .. F. A t.. .t. ~ nt. flt{._~ iii~·· , .. 1•1 iTl"1· ~ ~. i.. + ~ ru:~:wpt l;~s ~ m.ff ~... ,_ l; w elpltt w1 a ew ays: .,.."°' ~.:;r:_ rtn11.r" 11~ 11,1 1'cM t\lo , ! 1,.... " 1~ A °'ff;:,., .~ fr l•I• 1• ,, _,,.. 0 " 1 ,.4,. :f , 1 • 'l• _ \: r•~Ora 1.» , r "' ~"' ~'IJ or if your chimney isn't Oii• "" 11••· "'>c" ,sY(' u 1 .. 1~ sn1 S'h ! 111n • ,\, A .Jar" ll 1~ ,11'1:' 1~1• -. ~ _, , 'i'·::" !j '''" ,,1., 2411, -.,. ' ....,, 1.• 11 ..,, t-:: ~ .:TJ ·-.i • __ .._...1 I .1 ill io llOt lroc:h•• A •(ff 114 llM o..... !•• • !:!!.,~ ,J~, •• ~ ,,..• ·,'..,"• 11 ,.,. ~' \.; _,, 1 :!Mt lSl.i lSl't _ \I 1Morlr I.~ J I I) l !''~''4i. rep&lf If do'Q,I lnu•....., ate~ I W ~~~-:"'~ ll~~;,c }"" ~"' :=: f1 ?.!~ 1 111 ~ .. -·; ~. •'~ ,lS" "• ""• ,'·-'° ~ 1~ 11~ ::. \Ill' t::::rJ '·" JO ~ ~" ~ + ·~ il'W.:~ ~i~ "' tG1}: ~ ... l Ii · i' a wn: or termites are mlnlell. 111 114o '"' R.•m t;. i'"r.i t'•• , ., ~ , _...-.., 11 U'li 1rt. + l mwE• ~.., 310111.; 111 1j1 ·•· • rwnunn '° n 1 h ir~ lj\l " U,A E I • !' lff9tl 4\11 Jlt. II•"" Cp U 2'11 21114 :N\.I +o,;, tn'"'E Ptl.0 2$ 21\• 21 I -I,/, WU11 11111.11 ' 1t1'o l'°'"t . \4 chewlog away al your home's 'A• eor"p ,..; , ' 1.u1.11 21 t2" ll«;Mi• ,.,. T 1r _. AHMIJI .150 1 nv. n1.1o 22111 ..... -011 M -11 '"~ lJ"• p,1i + ~ rwu~ln-'° l '!" •!• fl\\...l:: foundatioo and the whole ',',,',"',..! lfu 16"' l::''ltl 11'4 'Ill :tt..~ 'it N .. +..-F< ~ :ttt=si':°11 ~ n~.· lit~ lJ'"' -+ .. ~~·" •,•, -~· -·· ,.',1.:' -It •• rr.J'ffn'i ~ I ' lo t ""' \'I .... 14 ·~ l\'I V.. llilW I lif" Ufll-.C~ ~\l'Ji . ~ 1' S ~ Alo-" ;,;_-IU1 I 4 fsl't 15 u" :_•..: i'•">~"1,. I .. , ,', •°'> ~•;+-'.!~ house ls about to !'.ave in,· or"• , ''", •,•• ,1 111 C"tC •,,, ~ 11;Md l'! ,.,,, I u J A .. 1rr1 •• '''' '! ''" ... ... 11~ ... -.. '5 D' , .. 1ov. ls 1.t..211o •eor .. 1.l 1i!~'"'u"!' ,•" .... _,.~c,"~• 11v.1"'u11o ·"4 • •nm:~r""+v. ~mnmeoi j,,.,., '"-~ the next thunderstorm may ~~11 C/n , ,,.._ ,,,., c~ ''• ™ 1-?.1 tto ~ u e "°' ... ...-.., '°' !f,,.. "' , ,,,. t ... an Id, 11S 'ltt 1n, 22b 11·~ 1''' 'ILIHld . .r.., "•• ""• • _+·~ E I 1i: Ill! 5c; 11•o111'1 Olt I 2\io J\iO ~11wl 11V.lt /<In.tr. l.llO I 22~ 22~ n~+~ Ol\Edl• pt' J 7JV. 14 ... 1si,;, \i,&"O'M0DH ~· •> 0 '°'>•"· .. ,_~ burn your house down if you ~wi,1K 1 1~ ""' 1o'1~ Ml<! m"f l4"1 1,. toY ts ,. o su-t•r EYI 21 AMM .so ... t ''-~ .,.. Ed31• J 1 .s11111 57:i.. l!" • ""o f • 1• -don't buy a lighlninn rod.right ',",~!ncl, ~. l ,..,, ,. ... , .M.I 1~ \Woo llYP .... ,, ]111 ~$ Trkl :l'N Nfwfr • ,,,. lO 11 I~• 1~ = ~ onE " i60 j,3\,, SJllo \lo -Ir. 11,11 II $0 'rl 2:~ 2, '-•• ;t.:: ~oe ·-'"' '"" "" U\l 1tv,; SHU. It • lJ~ l"tnP "21 "'"~~'° ' '"' :Jllr. S1'4-Wi ~ ,.10 21 l2 g·· 31'1oo -.... ~rltH~'& .)0 n:i. l!;.6 Z"' away. COnsider any tactics of ~\= ~ ,}'" 1!~ = r: ~ .~~ ~ 1! ,.. ~~ u1ff' .~ JYo 2~1'1 ~ ~ v~ rM:: r~ ~ -i " onFl'~1 ... ' n '~i. .i:: 2:~ -~ j'" pn'.:io J lS>l 1 "' ~ \<t this sort a warning to you "la ho ttt. l "'Cl! ,,. ... (pit 11' t.'Ai V•I U) J'to '"'MlrFlllr-.lo 20 •IV.~ ,ll ... anH•rG 1.1' Sl ""' *t. t.~+,z \~tr0~"~ ,'(g n~ n~ B~;:"." N~ lo'--( .th th . ,11rtc1 E4 J!,,,, I 1111 lnl ~'-> 1111 Incl Jll m Vll'Q SI 1A4 lJ\'i A.mAltll11 .IO "''°"" lflii 1th anPw e'f4..J! rlO !IV. \~ :::~ •••• 1 ... , .. ii ~ '! ~· lk-t•o v' uco \\'I eir users. ".., G.o , jl'I .....odn JV. 1 ot s-11\o \ WK!> 1t1t 1n111\li Arn '"'' .tt 10 ''" 10 "' ::r.i'OWI" S1 30 11 ,,_ t rw 013• 1 lli: , -• 'mlO( 'l'I 'II 1novr S lt 21 •ll>Pi H 17\i I• WlldlW P U lJ AllrJncll 2,10 11 lN 36\j, 31" + _.fl.JO J!!! st .S1>,•, .M " \IW pl.$ . .$ I 'II _._ WATCH OUT for an~'m•~~. ~HIYill\111 l"il~ roi.A ~--W•lltlld llVilm Amllda.l.1'11 llf22"21V.21h.-\lionlA•.25P """'N .r.o \~Hon Ind l5 6 "" -, .. ,,. ct ' El l-111 ) ) .... H...,H F-22\j l:W. It JJf I 1"'10 W R-"" l Am C.11 2.30 46 ~ 40'Ji .0.. «>! c ... \•* 61 ~ ~ ••• ..,,. -... _ul-" guarantee lhat a produ su ""' E"o l'~ '°'4 '" CP ,. ~,.,, ~£""' '"" w ... .,,..,. ) "°' eem .11 '°" • m N .:.:. ·,.. an1 c .... • 1 '" ,.. 114 -~ "'" .di 1. J ""' Fw11 ~ 6 IOoc 111'11 •1 "" __. • .,n f l'o 11 Wt .... NG lJ't 13 A 0..1" I.to l 25 t'1' '5 + .... Cp 2 141t JI '1f' 30\o -V. H.c~Wtl j 20 7 lO!'I JOlli '°"' :_' 1to as SI ng or 100 eum or ' ~~' ·~ ""' Hllliomn IW. 7'4 SW Grp ·~ s W•lfl RE l\o ""AC"""9 IA ' 11'1o 1 7~ 171.'I +\lo c .. il'IALJI 21 l1Vt J6111 l1l_? +,',' HtHIWf'l :cs JI li'{> :w. :Ill .... . .11 2(1.Atl'l l....i ,,.._141\ mEP :IO JI S.-Uo .Q iW•ITr '"")~"I.JS ll :l'n• ~ tt~+«. l(•e'fl2.ll l 31 .... 3' .... 311.-•mmWtl .2SI l 1·• }11 ,,,. carpeting wil ast 10 to ""' •Iv 12 uv. ~ '"' ' sv. w~ Rt •VI ~14 ...,,. I"" 1 1 'll! 'r.l uv. -lfo ?,• ",.., .s "'• 1• 1• .•• _, ,....., ,.., 1 , 1 ~. u~• _,.,...,1, b •·-· 1 ,,., •>• ttt ,,,.,, u ,,., wekllf,. •J(. """ A"'-t • "' •• ' :H ..... .._ ... .,_ .. ,,, "'' + " • -.,. )'' 1~ + '' years. It's atlTIQSt impos.si le .-.i*~ Ill N, nr. H--' Gl p~ 114 ~ '\It Wei Intl M UV. IJV. ~ Di>.1V .. 1 ' ~ '"" 11:· ... " °"' I "' 2 ... ~ ~ jl\, ,.. •mmlld • ;; 7)1'°; 2 14 2 .. • ... I I t .. ak ... ci 11"4 ,,~ ~ HoMn In 1111. h r:!-. 11at P ra l'li AOU•l .Dft41 1 11~· ,,.. ••'' ""' ant \ti 1 • J2 121' ~ -""H•lldlmn ... 'I I '' I +l or any manu ac urer m e '"''"" M "'" ,..,. Hk* Ml •'" I lio Wo•n MA •>:. ~·~ AmE1Pw ·1..,. 166 ,. •• 14 .... on! " ., '' 1tl\ tti~ 1\ia +·1,, H::::."', ~ 1J u~·~•~I ch if. I . . ........ !If ~ • ..,, 30"9 11111 PP 'Tl 2 "' " G• ,,...., W•Jn Mt• s•:. N ...... Erik• ,. 71 ~ ... J:V• ':i~ :.:.···· Ofllfol oii. lJ9 "'" :ill.lo 3:1 -"'!:1,.,ntMi; , 30 •\ l, \<. 4f\la ' SU 8 Spec IC Calms, Since Ar~ MoP ll;\;. l>lo H1111 GI• It'\ ljl'l w <he11 14'Ai 4*41 W1I~ Pull 11'1 • Am E~ ll!CI llf f"" IV. 14 _ \ n01I e'f•.50 1\4o •v•i. 4''11 -11\ fl,rto11•1 1 11 321• 30\'t \.ii'.+\1t •• man 'ables (I h ... ,.,,.., I( U•.l 211l ll"f ,. 1•.. !w f:IS\.t l•Yt IJ'-o Wll'lbw 15'1 16"11 AGtof,lns .JO :ms 1 \i 11 , "' -~ onwoad '·" ' 31i-, l ! ll\{, -"'H•rtll nt I 11 " • • •• •• ~.~ .... y var1 "'"""" ''""""H,UI Cp n>..12 ... = ' '\.\WIK P'l 1f1419V. Gnlfl Dl1IO ',,,,,, 27'• 2l oolr.U11ll ,i0 31).1 ,, ... 22 11 -11.tiH1r1<0C1t 11 16'• It\\ ... ... wealber the v.·ear and tear to .ucc 1101 2.Jl'l ,...., 1111 '"' 'i'•' 't~ 1., .. ,~, •,•, •,~ .. ~~ w' ,, •'•"•, 1 .i;; " 10 tl• •t• .:::;.::; _,,,_ 1..0 j m • 21 '""' -..., H•rtSM•~ .IO 2t1 1•11. 1t11i IN .. . • Alllo k l 4 .5 r.¥6' A11'1 • ,"! •''-,"'' ,.,...,1 HGme lJiO HS SJ S1V. SJl4o -1 -Tit I l ~ 1~ 11• 1 V. 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' ,,,_ ,. .., ...... be 111 usmess 10 or 20 years 11y1,..,, 11 n v1 1 0 ntrn" 1n •'• ~ Ain Phohl .12 ,., I Vl .,,, 1• t f owlon Com lt JIO 3'1 j~'> Htln1 H/ .n • " -.. " Be«llm llU. 71'' nt ew111 ~\\o 5" MUTUAL Alt"°" llt Uj .ov. •1Yt .n\oli 44 eckst .30 rt ll', 1311o 1 v, ·· ·· HMM url I 7i,a I\~ 1~ +"" Crom now? Birlieo Ille 11 17\i, 1111 Mullil l T\'I 1•.... Arn ke'tl..W. I lfh I~ UIO v. CPC Intl 1.1' .s w. ~ 2'1>91"'\ Htlleot l"t .60 3• 11 16'-• ;r~·::.{; 8tti 1..10 Wot 11 Int Sn II "'' Am Sl'llo ·'° J l"lo "" 1.-i. -~ 1••,,. !J,Oll • Jl'11 )II~ 3\Vi ··~ Htlr.<-111•-~I 1, n'" ~i~ Ask any door-t!Hloor peddler llUIUO'I w n. R• Int Sy pl u I.Sh A 5,,.,.11 l.tO 514 17• l•'~ U'h +·~ nllltfl Fin , 6 1•~ 1.o.\. 1'\. 1\ ~I-Pd! 1 ""' ,..,. '· • l lrd 5.00\ 11 n lnlt•• '"" I AmSoAtr .10 " 3'14 "'-~ + i.a rom111Cn .Ill Ji WI~• 13•,~ 1J"1 + •• Helm•llP .20 II 11'• 1J•1 U\~ + '• Of borne Improvements who 111dll' ~ i•'o lonlc0 s.'uo·o ll 14'' Ams.Aft f!l.111 I ]7 ll 37 , rd.tHHlncl l 1 111~ 7'1» 11 .,., + ~ Hemlw>I! C.111 l0 ' :., : ..... ~~ I · lo 5lt{k HI H 21~ • • ~>.:. H'• FUNDS Am Std 1 fl l',.. 3J>.1o lol\'o + 14 C.•owCol 1.Gl't 90 "• ,i, "° HtmlltK .lo.. S<\• _,.. ..,. '"' le Is you he is a stale or wn aou e.r , ~ 1mtis ,_ 11\ ,,, AmStd JJf•.15 o 92 \o:z fl»:. nv. +l« crown Co•-u 1311 ,,,.. u"' .:.::\.\Hert 1"" 1!ot> llM 31 31 ~ ... ~ "Inspector," or a repr-·-,'!!!""••' ,•,••,,;c ,•!!.u111w•'• ,'. .. ,':,; Ams1 ... u .d 1 11 U'lio 1' +~c,....11Zc111 . .i.o 109 2&t. 21\'o 2111 +1'1 Httlllf<I 1.10 ,', ,,. •'"' ,•,~•~ .. ~.--..,., "" " A Suoe• 1.60 olCI 11fo 1.s.lo 'Uf.11!• CT5 Cor11 .iO 6 l~i• \1~'o l)l'o-+ \\ HtullMlln .10 35~· !.. +,'"'- ! t. I ,. all ·--ra. C•P 1"' l lh j'""' F u,~:a. ",'"' ,llS"ll pfAl.•S l •O 411 411 ...., c...dr.::' .Ut ,, 1,;i. )0'4 !O'i t ... He ... P1,t .20 ~l 10 """ "•' ...... ·"' •• 11 1ve O a na ion y ........ wn '"*' ,,. 2,.._,5" •fl'llbV ,.. .~1 .... .,,,. ... .,,.,.,.,,..,"'"IAmsuo pt .lit 1 l tr 111. I\, .,. C~u11 .... 11 io 11 1~ 11 ~ Hiii~ v on-oir 13 ' 614 ft ~ .l .. _;0 um or s•-1 -mpany, •,~ s,Y, '..,'"" 11,. ~L'!!.F,•,• ,, ... ,.. AT&T w1w1 211 7't. 1v, 1.,., !filmmln .«lll 20 1tV. tt ,,... + •t Hllia11Ho1t1 1 1 11'1 ll'• 11"1" •••• ....... ~ "'" ,_,. ........ "''" ... ,,,T&T 2.liO '" (]~~ '311! ni.:..:.::·v. NtluWn I 2S 11,_ ''"' ~·i1 -tot+mr~W•1 ,f\I IS,,., l•\• 1f\IO, ~·" exactly which agency or office !!.!','!..II• 1'""' '!.. ,'","~ ,.st '1 'f A11Mr ,, '"" ·coA lo.a 11..u AlnWWk1 .s. 1 "" "' '"' u W• A r 1 1• ,. 2 t ... Hoff Eltd•n 1 51, J <N u .,..,. •• '""" "51 \JV,\..., NEW TOlllC IAl'l lrw Guld 1.lt 7.'tl AW Pf•I 1,2$ JlOO l.ff'o 1 ..... HI~ .:_:·14; g-"'-",'.,J'O 20 It'• 11¥1 ·\ '~ HolldylM .22 t1 ,, ... 241' 2~ •...: sent him and then telephone lout....., s :10 :io.... K•tv•r -The to1row1111 -1 ..... 1nc11c •.M '·"'Am Zin( 1i ~ '" "" +~ ·• . ' 271~ '''• 1,,. -·~ HlllldA 1.100 1 36Vr l6\.\ lMo\ .,.,,.. 11( L•• ~ J\I. ICl!t Gtft fit ~1 111;-, $UPDll..i 11~ lnvtt 801 t.S110.~ Amrton .14 2 14 14 16 _ U ~ 1 • .0 I !.Siio .S,S\.lo 55>,) -I' ;+oil~S<IQ 1.10 10 IS \• lJ IS ..... this office to check out his •I w Jw 7Jlo 2~ ~"""t 1,,. ,.,_. Ille N•lk>MI Auoci.. l"l'e!olo<'• Gr01JP: Amelell • .o. n ~ t , _...., -D-HQ!M1rlc1 ·"° 11 mo m.. 70-' .,,,, d . •mco 11'4 1~ r '''• ... "! "11111 Ill S«urlr!es 10$ l'ICI( 3.17 I·" AMF Im: .PO "" 221' ''' -· +•' 0 '' t'll)lll!WYI 1 30 fJ ~ ~ 7Ht. .,.i Cre ent1als, ~lnotl M 17 10 '1~ !6''• 1i..., Ol!1len, Inc., r.~ ~I !·:r l~l """'' .IG 6 lll'I 33\: j3,z -; o:~. C~ Pf' 15 ~ ~ 7~ ••· Hoit lnll ·.3' •l lHlo 2:1.JA ™II ... '4 NA I d ~·~e ... 61 ~::,,,£ 1\1 t ·•-...-rc. •• 1w11m s1:0l ,. SlAMPlnc .51 1S44" (] 4 -V.D•l'Tlnd ~~ Ull :ioo., 19 ~··1~,HOIJd lnd .IO I• t'!I •II< t\t. •• : •. Fl LLY, j you iscover~:;·Ml'lle 1~11: rwF-111 \JVo11••'11eH ~rlllti s!r, :·u ·:~,Am~l(cor: 9l l•\• llV. IJ.i.+"'8'"'ftdpt2 ll l6U 'J~ln•-~tbldpl1.2S 126 16 2•··· .• ; .• thatyouhavebeengyppedby •P ~ , w. "'tcP~ :~ J~r,:uiu111c10.1dlr;":~, ... v,"fPr J:S1 •.osAm&~r'.212. l(,,'I, ~ '~ ~-~c:,1t_t,•~,ti.••' "•• ,," ,.,. ,,, ... =1\~~"1 ·~ ; ll ~~ !.":!::: •11 lntU m Pt IP 71. 7\o •Vied) Thu,.,.,,. .... Reol! l.17 •.M "'-ond 'tO .... ::ri\'1 ....... -.. 0.111-;:Hud "° 21·~ ,, + '4 Hw1F pfJ:50 • "3 .nYt 421\' :J.. an unsa.ilpuloU s contractor _or :~,Tc~ &;~~"l::.'E', ,• "",• Abirron ~.~I tt:l~tl 1iJ;1ffiMdl Hoc0k.J 11 n l'"" !"°'""'P\. 1"° ~?flt ~ 2'·• .. Hw•F p12.J1 1" llh 5217~,,.. by an incompetent odd-job C.tl1 Ill J...,---, l(lril:: (p 2f 2) Allfl'll••ll'I' Funds: J Hncoct. I.II 6.12 Al>c.oOll I ih 2 ll Ni lf h Dwt Co 2 U! mo 7'\~ ~~: .!_ l: HWllLP 1.10 ~~ :it? ~ ~i:! H I al C.flr Go 1114 ltVo MO VDI -. 2, Grwll'! ~.'5 ,.10 Ollmln 11,711•.22 APL ·cor,P ~ ift: fl~ ~.. \lo 0."""tP I 11 II 1 .... ii lffio + \lo HHWGllMGo,,.~ I 4l\• ~l\• .Q"-·''"' man. OWL -to your oc c.,, NG th t \lo 11:re11110 -;;~ ni. 1ncom J.C 3.H "'Y•!-F-unc11: APL Pl 8.iO 1 .. \.lo Ott Mn•e 1:10 'HI 11v. 21'.io 211.., °"'JJ. P 1"" ,. ll\'I 1~4 1~~ B tie B . B r:'" C•P 1•,. !Vo LMC ~I 2l'ti '' l11•ur 5.'5 •.d Jll>Ollo 7,olol 1.14 AllA 5Y( " J ~1 .:tt ~ +1\fo O•ll• Air "° 1es U1~ 2.!lh ,..,,, +·" W' 1 kl' 12 l]\'• 11'1~ ! ~;.....·,,. e r us1ness u rea U , 1111~ nv. n~ L•Mt '" ,, ,~1 Advlvs •.u •.JO t u1 1n 11.(lol u .1;1 Afcil•N .if>e' 11 111:, ''" ,,,, __ ~ Oe11ec 1111 " ·~• ...,, '"" "" 0""me , -1l · . ~ YPS lllh 11 Lal'ICI Re< , ... IR AHlltald 110 '·"' Cui Bl 11.7.1 lf.15 Ard\ o.,11 1 lll6 'lt'J• 2Ro nh -.. DlllllMI• .llO 7 11•~ 15~ 16''o '.; "° Hutigrd 1,06t 20 lft\ 1f\'o ;r:"'IO newspapers and rad1() slatiOllS, f'·· ',"'"o l... 11:' t:::... Wd 1 '"' AFY•r• '·'° s.10 c,~ ,", ,'·•" •,·! Ml:Psvc 1111 14 111,:. 'al "" =..I'"··· o...m11to1 ·°"' " 6<. "" .~ _ 1io ~::'en U'" 1 ·~ ; 'it! 2::.Z ;'ii~"':': v. •Ce state attorney g·-·al's ·-' .... 1 • ·-· .. , ••,, .. Au Afl'I ,_ .ll 51 "'' · .... ...,.,_ os ·-., , •• • ..,, .. ,"' 1 '' -·· ... ,. -,·-+ ",,,-·-·'' , ,, , ••. !ill ,•:..·,, "r'<. the t "''"" =~ t;: 1,,• ,~·,"' t::: c; ,~ .. u" At111•'' 1...0 t :Ol cus K2 l.'1 '-27 ...,,,..;;;,, ,14 U: '"~ 1"' lWt. 0...110'; 1,1, t tl" ij ~ , ... + u. ~I." ?{! ,,,, ,,.. '3!" loo 0 ice, neares consumer (NI Ut!I 171h 1)\t; Ltfl CO.I 7 tv. A!lll'>• Fd I.JO f .JI ~u· ~~ 1"''" Amico l'!ilD 20 ~. ""' 'U\'a .:.:·~ Ot5ofo111C •• :ti 16'1. 16\{o 1ivo -\lo Ideal II•• .60 l6 lG'1 10\;o 1 '~~ , .... :~~ :"I Br&I 10 SI t •lwr G 1,•, •,-, ~·,, ,• .. ~. ,s .. ,',1 c~! SJ f:~ ,':".~ ........ J Jiii,;, llV. 31114 ... Oe'!Edll: I.«! 1• 11'\o 11"" 1~4' l.'illl (er.I 1.14 711 1fl., 19"!1 1"11' ''1 pro~uut• agency. 1"'r.' s 101 1°" """' BF '" 11 c '1 .......... :uv. 21\11 2S>4 + \\Ott Ed .is"° 1 n1;;, 11 11o i1u. + \"I 111 ce~ ptJ.511 n «1·~ l9V,. 40\11' :v. ., '' O OS o> LI-MIO 1•0 l'Ao Am Ovln I.to t.• ~ S4 l.U l .!J Aro CCN'D I'll 4 13'oo 13\,\ I~ -•· o.xtr .2• 11 I~ Uh •1• . . . . I I P11wtr 2 u 3.f'llo l' tt''' . •-tales h t up " • ·~ Afnfl' Ellprr": '""''' t,as 1.11 Arv., 1r.c1 •1 1 ,, •• ,, , "0 , ,,, ,. .:wme s ave se !"'1111 1 , 1..o1111w 1,• 1 .. C•P" ,.01 ,,..,l(t"•"•'• J.e1 1.11 , ••• 0,, ,.... ,.. 11 w. .... • ntn ...o la "' 1 ' ... 111 Pw pn.10 i530 ,.,~ 1~\ w.-T.,._ Ill ••• •••1 ,, ... Loll C<IY ., t '" ' ""' "" 57 21\lo ~~ 21U + ~ OJ•mlnlt 1.IO :J.J »'to l31"' ~ + 1~ Imp lp Afl'I 31 ~ •Vi "4'..< ~ Spec'·a1 ofto·ces and agenc1·es ,,,•. o;; • ,~, ,.~ ' -'''' ,,.L n v. ineme 1.11 I.oil "' . .1 Asl<I e.._ ' i n.. ' •• ••· ' •• ' '"' ' • ·-'' >•1· ....... -... Ir. U lo d I ·th .... ... 1111 u e 21 1iY: tv'tKll c 15~ ,,,~ •n.,._t 1·35 e.03 t~ f~ 1'A1'·" Auel OG 1-'t '' 3:11\ 11r. :o .:.:··· 01:i'11 -;;'¢, :11;, ~ ~~ ~:~ :.:· y, 1~,,,..,: c•1111 "l' 9\11 •·~ 'h""' -s 1c y ea w1 uie uume 1"'1" Ml 11" "'" ......., GEi ""' " = '·61 1 LTi!em tU t: A'ldTr•n .oso 4 j.h 11-1 "" +,.. 01ts "'01.20 ~' 1 .. 0 "'• 1.nt. +,.. 1necum .1~ s "'• ''' flfl"'·"' improvement industry and its 1!!•,L.M' 1•,~ ~.~ =lik~1"' ,!., J~ Am E""' t:; ,:tf Lt'•" •.·~, 5..JJ 6.os :::C~, 1'r',,. ,. 1S\'lo. 1~·· ,,,,.. + 'l 01(!'""°"' A 19 1'to I\' 1v. + 14 1nd1,.. Hc1 .60 ~ ~~ ~t; !!'_~ ::~.· ... ,_, .. ~· H• 1"""' Grlh •.tO S.JJ ,nc • J,lS l ,51Atl lllCl\floi1 lt 1,... lf"i lf\o!l-\li Dlellold -'51"' JIV.. .Sl 'l<-\l;/:1>:1f'.'ntili° '1 l51• ~· .t'~~ ... Problems. Check '"e listing of ',',~,,_•w0 ,!.! •,~, ~!"',,', 'M' '''-·Am 1nv '.21 ,,11,,,. ..,'.u i.to,,,,,. "''' 1n S711o 5'\lo ~ ..... 01c1c:w-11o ·'° '1o:>i. 101·. 101to I • -.-..-.,.. UI .... .• ' ,.... ~ .. Afl'I Mui 7 2l J '° .. CIOl'll.. les• " . 1110 •tw "'') 4tto • ' •.. 01111,..hm ,., $7 ·~ f '\ I\' ····· 1 ... d l!f1.l5 1l :n )).1~ 31.,., ·~ t le · ' ·-CP H' 1514 Ml_. C "'• 1'.t AmN Giii ii• 2it C1ntd 22 . ..i D.<U Atl Rldl JJf l S ff fSl'o " -Vo Diiion Co ... 1 11 1 .,. lnltiw:I Sn 1 iJ 2J11 :0.. ~-:t'•,;, ~erephon~gebooDCI~ O~n wrrt: U~ €::~ gp ,?~ Jll ~:~m M~v, ;~ 1~ .. ~~,,:..cGr~i>'! '·15 ~n 1tll 1tl: :~::;~~lllJ ~ w ~"' ~!: i \t &\=.,'t~ , .. fl>O ~~ ~\~ ~ :~ ::; p2;7 ~ 1fg ~r..? '~ 4~ :f~ 'A • ••'• , , '' M ••-r '' li c '' ''' 001 ,,. e-''' oon At111 '"·-'' ,.. l '~ ...... 4'"" +1\.\ tns!k;o .:imi 2:1 13~~ 1J',. 1.,i•-.;U'I"" Sta Co De I LP ~·· JO>~ Ml • . Ml ·~ , . AT ....,-p ..-. 21'lo 2\.'J -\. DIYWllN:I .M '6 ll'I. I I -"" lnslk pf,f,1,:z.! • 1e~ lt\ol 1 rr' ..._ your te mmerce par -ol011 5tt fl. D \') M•11I 0 11,,z ,,,,, Grwth 1.lS •.11 on• Jn 7.'3 IAJ O Inc .., ICll 1v. ' , _ 1-i 01~Mtw 1.n• 15 1~ 1tv. 19"4 + ""' ln,plr t<>P 3, JI ll'Vi :M ·:to. - I om.ct! ''* 1•1o Mt~ ,, ,, 1~ 6.71 1.35 M1M1n l.9• •->t Aurar• Pro<! 1 F< 5"" !;\;,. +.,. OrPtPllO!• .lll ll32. 17'1o 11 11\'o _ v. lnterco 1.:c , ,, 2tl'o ~-,... men -....... ~Ir ll JI Medi(' " 4illl F<I lllY 1.0ll 1,6) M•s, Fd I.I( •.• All-11 t1'1d $4 l~'i l\o l~ ... 0......Mlll .IO 11 !l\i 5'1'1 56'4 + v. t"lrlklll( 1.IO l 23111 11\lo nr.• ~ . .,,, TO ILLUSTRATE what can :::; r~• ~'u ~\lo ::: M~• 1:' 10 v.,., :Mo.Oii :it.~ M•" <'!h '·" ••11 Avai '' ·'°" " '"' ,.,, "" ... .' OomF-nll .•1• ' • !,_, • +. v. IBM •.to su m i1 ru 22'fMo ~ ' • .,.., _ .. _,._ APOllO Fii •.n 1.3' Mll ... •,1 Tt 11.t11J.ot Awco .-fJ.10 If 2n, 27'-21'!11 _ ,,-OollnllY M fl'I 1506 ' ''' + • '"'co "'''' 10 ,.,, s•c -0 '• be nd • be• d N Clfl'I Un 9't 1"2 ~·•n o">•' 0•1~• .-..ooc11 1.01 1.11 '"I 1.M !.Ii Altor'f Pd 30 6 2.S.\t 2~ J ,._ 0 O ... , .. _, ' a 1S 1ng one, ew om Psw 71~ 1:i.1 M••ld In • .-..iron 1.15 l."MI""'' 1.u 1.uAv111tlroc: • " •>o -lio ..... r tlwr J I\•.! ........... ll!F-l•F• .JOb 1a:i !I 4914 .SO'l.i~v. Y k C• . °""D .f, lV. .1111 Mldtd C. I ·,~: 6,•,1 A•t Houllhton : Mtfld Fd 1!,21 12.1'1 A-o ,. O.. 6'1'o i1,1o l\o . , .. °"'"II' (p .19 lt ~ ~ "'"' . \n! k•r-v 1,IO 1!9 2! J2"'o ~ ·-·~ or Jty s new consumer mo Cm st• '"" Mid~· -· • Fllftd " •.•! •.Ill MIGA Mu •.JI •.n A¥<111' ,-.. I JI l'1 3l $ 14 Oowehfl'I ,,.,, " ,1\, """ """ -... "' lnOl.i•I loll ... ~ I~ .... "" tect. f b I I mpln•I l l"..,,Mld.,.GT 11 17 FlldS 611•l1Mood¥CDl00J!Off •· · llJ'21.11.0V.lf"' Jl!Ortwo<:,.1• 21"42•'Al !41;,-~l.,11ric1pf1,'9 Nl~ltV.l~'!:rl1 pro ion aw ans no ony m111 ;"' J,, :Jl1o Ma11 G-• 'Jf""lll'°' "' · · Mooctt' 11·13 · ... 11co11 .m 10 11" 111,;, '"' tt.O•s.t..i J:'ll s1 21% 2' 1~v. +""\"'Ml"" ""1 1~" 11 11 .:. decept'·ve pr act,. c. s by omrn '"' 21' Miii VIG H'i 1s•1o ~~T°'co l:~ tl't MIF-F~ 1:~ 1J:lt -B-D~ pl'l.'10 5 :ll'lo 331'\ D 'lo nt M"9 .lOe 15 ~, lOJ.t. H~t + •.to Oii Rocle l S k1• Mo ll~ , •• l\fo 11.11..,., 1.26 1.H MIF Giit •.lo •.d lltllck w .iO ~ Ort$V pl 12 1] 1'1" ~~"' ttv. ·+>t. Inf Nlct 1.29 191 40 )9\fr ,,.,., ,.:... \It Unscrupulous romotc-but ontrld 1 1'10 Mad S<.I ,·,~ ,•, ... llHCX!t! 10,41 ljA ~.'!us GY 10,14 10,lt ll•ktOUT .I! 10 11:1 1• .• 1'U. -., D!Tfl\ISCll I ll 1.$ lJ u "'Int Pao 1.50 140 .,....., :m. ~ + l p ''" 011tr1n 1'• 1\'o Motiwk ll ,,-~U: Soro IC11I 1,U .11,.,.. OrnG •.OJ 4.31 ,all GE 1.ll 20 71i: ~ 1J:;: + ,.,. Oukel'w l,olO ).I 71 11'1 2H~ = \1! :~.' '•"-"io ( 1110 5' i•W. 56 -t;.1' also "unconscionable" prac--· L 1•\~ u\.'lo Mon! c111 • ., am G111 ,_s. •.ti"""' Omtn 1.l! 1 . .0 1J1G olC• 1.10 51 2j7 ll -owe~ 11N.1s 6 u 1Jv. u +1 \"' 't'T' 1 os ,, ' su ~A orp s Jh ' """""P~ 10• •01!"&1•1r F<I '-" s.oi.Mut Sh" 11."411.6"11•noPflr .Uo 44 ' ti , +·>,;,Ounl••d 1.20 ;olS 41~ m. o<t -11. n!T& olF• 2",1~!:t,,~,,.,'!J"11'!l" Ii--which take advantage of ~Pim Yr t 10 Moore P , .. 11-111t ~.M J·42 """' T,,.t 1.11 1.11 8-P of' , 1-· , ,. !"' " Dultl.I~ .dOI 11 11\t 11 1•:i. + , .. , , 1 """' -"' ,,....., rwlrd 1'4', 1,..., ""-t s 1,~, " •,m ~ ... u '·" ·" NEA Miii 7,11 1.07 llt ot C1I 1.34 ' 21\i: 11.; '""' + 14 OllPClfll 1 • .!0t; 1, 111 111'4 111 +1 .. 1f.{ o/r ~·~I l n '' I + a consumer 's "lack 0 I ... Mqt ''• 7'lo Mlllf TrA '· "~ 8<1:11 Fdft l.ll '·" N•t ,.., 1.1S 1.11 g•nk ol MY 2 lJ •lli •1'4 .c2Y, -~ OVQ Lt '·" '' '1!1• 21 ... ""' • "I • ··""· ,' ',', ~.~ ,", +. ,, NIM~ ii.. It,. Mt•i• wt f,~ f"" ~Ian 1.111 1.61 ~•I '£::1 S.6t 1.2:2 ,,.. Tr l,14 46 13 ,•,•.•• 6J Dl.oqlt •DI 2 tUO 2.,:. 21"1o 16\0 +'t. 1~ T&T 01(• 11 u .,, fl" 6J1A f" knowledge, abi l lt y , expe-ou c,a N u ~fm' ,,M, ''"''''l'°'d s1 101tsn.,1 ~,•, 11' Str: ll•rbOlt 1.!11 ,• 21'.l~ 1n,~.:.:.·v;oq 2.10pt!.10 r1oc ,..,.. 2'51~ 16~•+"1,.T,~IN 125 ,,, •1 •. , .... 1 .,,, ,, , ,. 1111:11 '"' S ,._ u ' ullort Ctlv "' •an f.10 f .9j 8at0 Cit .75 .15'· ''"' ,.,.._ •L o~· 1-~ '' • o• ,.._ " -..,. , r1ence. &:ores c 10.-, t 'lt M11et1,r f t:" ~ BullCk 11.1112.11 !\.end •.60 s.o 8•1Jc 1111; .IC 1 11" 11'" if" = ~ cYM"' A.ft"'·• l• w. s~ ·• -.., 1"1 \11\ i . .io J ~jj'~: ~1~' ~(; ~ :! ff O u' .cti :--" n• LllS 111o 1'4 M111R1 , 1,..z ,.,, c • ..,,. 11.1111.$1 Di•ld 3 . ..s J.11 ••111 Ml<! J ,!., 1 • _ 11o E r. sw. · " J1~r.r1111c,A1 3 1~ 11 m. .+:,,. Y re VI mue\I, your nly M 1 I Yt Mfr lE 1,_...31~ C>;w!d J.01 tJ: ~1rwtPo 1:n 1.tflllt1MI of! 1 ...., lflt IW.-\fo -•r-nt llrtnd ,fO I !'• 15 IJ yells may al least save others. &:1: ~ 1~ 1ru =.~.!r""c 1~~? 1m =~""-J ,r_.~ n:o. 1ncJ: t~: t~ a::::.~":n.50 l: ll"l2 k~ ll"-= l; ~:t:~l~ ::: ~ l~'i \;i! l~; -~ !~::~;~.!.' 1!! ~ ll~~ 11~ :r~t ~.~ And rY\<!l•ibly you'll get help 0.tlln p l'~ 2'" Nt• llmd I . 8"""' Fd ,_\J 1.11 SIOCk 6.60 1.21 8111ochlll .. l .. ""'" Jl'Jt ~ \'O E••I Al• l ift 11'7 16 IS'• u +1 ·-· 8HI 11 11 11"1 ll'oi •• , ,....-. • O.vl1 Fd 41.-t S N1IC1r It I~ i-~ CG F-d J.lll 1.to Nel Grth '·U 7.~ ill(ltllll ID 21( 'lV. :tO!'o 21 '4 ~ E•sl GF-.121 6 26"1 2~ ,.,. +'lo ·-•Ell 1.lO I 1~1 1i\o U'--·{~ NASO l l1tlng• lo. Thurtday, A111u1t 11.1970 '" M• MO "' .M8 I I -MO M• -~ ::.: M• "" Mo ft MO M• -M• ~: Mo M" ¥• •• M• M•· ~· .. M!' M "'" "" M" "" "" r.lc• Mtl "'" "'" "'" ""' "'" "" "" M" ~i' "" Mo M<' ... ,.,,, M!! ~ M" I.It\ ~~ Mk M\• M• //\Id Mk Mlh Mii' ~I~ "'" "" ,11.01 ,.,,. Z:t """ ... M• MO> '"" M« ,,.. M• -· M" M" Ml! "'" "" "In many ins~ the an· tagonism that the-c I i e n t originally felt for his broker djminished as the f u 11 dimension of the bear market rout became increasingly evi· t!enL ··Al some point in the present market decline -my own gues.s is that this point \11as re.ached aft.er aboul 12 months -the feeling grew tliat the entire affair wa s an economic phenomenon beyond the contretl of any person or group." "In an up market we might have received that type of answer. But the customer to- aay is too serious." Even t.0, they found . he is forgiving. in forrin" the individual Who ~-Ml0o, l~lz. 16>" ,•,c,moE C•, 1 C,Plfl'!r •.11 7.:16 Nevw ('~ l,,1 l.ff •II Fds I lf H\11 2~o 11\'o v;. Etll IJlll 1 • .IO ?• l'1'o 1~ 1i\'o _ '111 t-tlltG 1 JI 2• JOh lt'llo 1'~ ..... --e .,..... •n fc l~ 1:o\? C•ell 111'1 f.P 2,12 ~llUW Fd 15.6' IJ.M 11Kkma" .SO 11 11'\lo 71.\li 21"'-.... E•11Codlk 1• ... '° Sl''o 60 +l lowaPLI 1 .:! • 1:1 21'111 111,0 + 1'11 bilked you to make good on 8:t'l:1 r r..i '~ '~~ ~:: ~111° 2,;:. 21·~ ~!:l' :;; i.tt i~:~~ N~ld lt:U ll:~: ~,e,.~ j~ ~ ';~ ,,~ 2:~ + v., '•"M, Y, 1.411 17 ,~. 15~ 2.S-· +~ row1PSY I ~ •'• l.?:.~ J.?. l~ ..... ~. ·I Your deal 0. .. ~ c~ .. 5C Mill Mtd ll''t '~,"" C~•MI"" Fl.Ind!: Nitti SI•• 7.tl 1.13 B•ko Ptl ,jO •S 1•'4 l••· -chi" Mf .51 ,, n 11>.:. ,, + , ... lt>Co H<>lO ... <V>O •w 10 ... -h • O.IC.nT i3,.;,1• N•IPtl ''' Bl t111s1Nort!e't ll171J~7Beld l.cl l ,.l,\\-'IOEctt•dJ ,10 1'2'.2\lt llh?l'•-l'llTE l""'.60 "111111j'•Jllo -i... °" I v. M I Secll 7>:. ~\lo • ... •6 • 0c:...J. . . h "" . 2SV, 2SV. ",J~ + ~ Edl10115r111 I l 21h H I\ 2:1\'1 n• c ... o Id 1•'1 JIO 1i1 .... \.o .... .... "" Bowman is an unusually articulate a n a I y i e r or the groundhog neuroses that gripped many brokers. made them burrow out of sight and made them afraid or their own shadow wheneve:r they popped their heads up. "'Mle registered rep." he said, "has let himself be so conacience·struck by this turn of events that he simply freezes up at the lhought of facing the client." The typical salesman, he says, has turned in on himself. ·'Feeling as he does that he has hurt the interests of his clients, he is obsessed by all manner of private fea rs. even over his very capabilities as a broker. "carried to this r:xt.remc, the salesman is in a stale of shock. His own morale is low. He is no longer thinking lucldJy. Volume and hi.s own commission income have hit the skids." He lJ, Bowman concludes. "tru1y ooe of the walking wounded. • bona fide. blood- 90aked c:nualty of the bear markd.'' Faced with thls--1Ung situation, executives at -..n. Hammill concluded that not only WIS t h e saklman not belpina himself and lhe company, but he wuo't helpin( his customers eitbu. 1 1-& b<Kin•11m••>= ffom •&.000 to •I0,000 to ..,... fOf'.,Y~ on C.lifomil rtal at.ate of •nv klnd. whttbef paid for or no1, Benken look It your p&l or vour 9 . My lender• took anl'f 1t-yaur t(J.llty. Let'• dito.Jss your netdL Hohn Kahn , Ii· .. ,,,... bn>kor. 539-2122. • Div 11A~ l~ ,,,,_ N:1 Show 1;.. 1 ~~SI !~~ 4~ °"'"'~ i:ri f~ lie~~·':: ~ ;~ ~~ i;;.' t ~ EGl.G .JO ,, Jl ll''t 11 .f V. -J-K- Coast Firm Develops Clinical Thermometer O.wn £ l lie"~,• '•'M• ,:_ ,,'"' lncam (J11,ll100 Fd •1.3'1j.•S lletl 1n1erc011 • 61~ ,,~ ,•,,•l ,.:·,•,•MM•'•"'•."'., », ,':', ',,',• 'Y• J1dunAtl .1• 1 ,,,. 6'• Ol•m C• 11\.i 1l N " ..... Soecl l.J• 1 • ..i 101 Fd I.DI .11 1 .... 11 C1 I :JI '"" 1 .... .. ,.. • • J kA!I pt'° • S'1 S'1 l'.>l1c ltM: • "'• f'IJ ff11(1. 1' 111, ~ C"•M Gr 8111: One WmS 1!,.c2 11.C -II( 1.to U lHo 1:,,. 11.:.-: -+ .. EIHI Ali« 1l ~ l~ l1• : • , J:~ll ... ,tOt, I 121,. l,j" Olve CM ~ lYil Nlchsn F-',',' ,u C•Pll •.11 511 ~Mell 11.'lf ll,l, ll•MllC11 !..cl ll •1 '• •l'I E\ Mtm MIO lfl I 6'o 6\1 -~ JIPlnF-d .0.. J6 10" C>OCUTEL '''·• Hlrl1 " '' '' Fund 6.~ 110 l>tM I '10 4.111 ll"'lell JJf•.30 1 6Jl~ &J~o :~~ + \Ii' E MM19 pl l xS II\\ 11'.• 11"' -V. J10Fd 1~.06f ' 10"1 10\'o Dow Jon lJ .. 26\io Nllll B o•• ·,,. Frnt 5'.o:JJl.S1 P AIM 1.53 t.:11 Btnef $of'l.5C illJ n v, 11 ..... ElglnM•I I/Id 5 S\1 5\1 SI> .. , J•ftnllllol .80 .SO )S<\ 14~• Doyle 08 14\,, 1.SV. NA ll .. _..., ,. ., Shrhd I.SO 1.19 TC Ste t.Ot f,81 B"'1!1~1 ft J 4''i 1!:~ +11,.. EIP•ooNG 1 40 IJV) 1'"" 1S'< •• Jtro•n1A .SO 30 11 • 11 ~ NL J''t 71~ Ni•r NG ';"' ,,~ s....,1 6.lt 6,tt P~c .. FrNI 6 .... J.~. e-uet In 57 ''• •• -,. EHr• 11: 1.'10 II '10'\o lO ~ +" Jt""•' Co 1 JG •l11 43\lt Durlj~ 0 1~~ ~~ ~,;~'JI~~ 1l~ 1~~~ ~=~1, lJ_I\ UCll ~=~~ ~~v !·f/ !j~ ::~Pc~~' ,:~ ;~: i~ i~~ i:·~ ~Z:~A~ .~ ·~ ~;~ !~~ !l~ + \'o j1:::ww:\11 ~o ~ if• ~. oz Pain! '""111'4 "IW N1tG ,",~,I~ Eq11ty 196 tnP1 Mui 3 ·~ j.11llell'! sn 1.111 os 11''> 211 • ,,,, +\\Em,..r11.20 n ''" ll'> ll'•-•1 Jlmw111ot1 1100 11\o Ul'I EtolC '"'' J l\11 NW PuSY ., Fuftd l .tf t ,n Pltll~ 11 ..... 1 1 .lit Bill Jllree ~O lt tlb •o>o •1\~ I• Emp011I 1.16 l H I• 1"-16'• -\, Jol'!f•f•ltn 1.10 1' ll'1 .,.. E•ol !>!> ,,. ~ NllCI llK ''" 5 Grwlll •II '"Pl1or;,.., 6'11 •.63811{• Oo ·u >O -E .. lhMln .0 1' II \II, 11\>-"·J.,,,nJol!n .ll 108 4371 43'1 <=\•II 19-'wlO'i'I lo Art S... 6~\ lncom tO• •:11Pflol S.1' 61J lll1!rJDl\n '4 ,St~ ~"" fj;1'1 -1~EMl18111 :J2 I 1)1, 13'• u ... :JorinoSvc .IO 5 1•~· 1•b ••• +•1t .v. + " ,, ........ 10!0 -~. 10\~ ••• '! -'• 1 _,,. • '·'i .:.. '• ~±it 121 ..... " -~ <ll'lo -,, 2Hi .•. Q \';_,,, Sensitron, Inc. tOTC) ol Costa Mesa, California, has announced a $500,000 initial order rrom American Hospital Supply of McGaw P a r k • Illinois, lhe nallon's largest distributor of hospital supplie~ and equipment. to market the new Sensitron E lee tr o Di c Clinical Thermomeler to hospitals and nursing homes through the U.S. and Canada. The thermometer features a unique , disposable probe assembly to prevent cross-in- fection among hospital pa- Willia ms Takes Exec Job Dennb W. Williams has been appointed sales manager of Graphicolor, Inc .. Anaheim lithographic firm, according to Charles F. Mc:Conathy, presi- dent.. Williams hnd been a sales representative for Graphicolor :;ince 1966 and previously serv- ed &3 acaiunt executive for a Santa An.a advert.blng agen~ l'Y and editor-publisher of Orange COUnt)' -G o I f e r magazine. The new sales maruiger was tradualed from Cal State at F'ullerton after a I t t n d Jn g Fullerton Jwtlor C-Ollegtl; and completro marketing and pre>- tluction courses sponsored by the Printing Industrft'S of A mu lea. A resident of lrvlne, he Is 3 former director of the santa Ami Junl0r (.'hamber of Com· merce and an officer of the South Coast Adfve »-30 Club. Griphioolor, Inc. of m.o E. lfoweO St .. Anaheim i!!: a com· mercia.1 printing c o m p tll n y tpecializing in precb1ion color ..... k. .. ~ 1• 1>.i. ~ ;o Wal (j ~' Vent l •S l71 Pine SI I.t i 1:t1 81111 L•IJll. J I 11•,,, 11'" llV. + ,, E1111IG•1 l.:IU lt 21'o 21!o 71 JOlltO<I•~ .Ill Xl01 'J\1 o"o•c ticnt.s. Sensitron has I EIP••l,11...,Hl'IO!>tk•n 7,~1 1""to•Grlh t ... ?.aPl!l\F.:111 570S 1>11Blod:H1t :u l?.it ,1._,1~_"'E~ll1nc1.10 7117>,11 17 _,.Jon~v .MP 10•1 •• I . d s 2' 507 ~I:. s~: ~~ :v. &ri:"''rP ,~!~ 1~~ ~:;sicBd ;:l] : •1: ~~ ~~ :.i: 1i:1~ B~1~·1~.~~0 11 :ii~ 3r.! :ii , -~ ~::'!j~ ·~10 1° 2r1 2r~ 2~~i ~ ~ 1~~.;-r.J 1~ 1:~.? t:..,, 1~\'1f' .... , 1 ,.,,. It, recent Y receive a • Et NII• l m t"lver NA ll~ 1~,; (with .A!I 1.16 I I PtfCt Fund1: 11111no Co 40 10J 12~• l?I.', 1;t; .:.::·r E1ltrllnt .211 11 9'• f'• 9\~ J01ffn1 Q,7 • ?I 21 million initial order fr()m Gug· •,•,,,•,,~, ',~ ~ ~-"c''l,,1 11 • .,, 11,,, Cwlll'! co i.n l .4~ Gtw1n P .tt "·" 011c1s"i''U11 2s..t ~v. 40'~ 40" -2'1'1 E1h~• CP .... S6 u>. 11•• 19:i. .;. '' Jov M111 1 . .io ?O 31i.:. ll "" E4 I 104 COll'!o,f,~ 7 ~t 1Jl NEt• l ,Ut r.&ondl 67 I I'' t•~ l°"+\loElhYIPl1AO )431 JC'1 JI -+'•Kt\1trA1t i•11'oll'o genheim lnlernati""a\ toEl!f""" 7'~7 P•bltBr '""' COll'!ael s.:1o1s.1J N11or 11.1111:n &orden ii s1m."~''~•+••£ur111..,,2,.. 111 11 11 _,1 11:;111A•11u11 •IS 11 " b Je·~ .... ~ ,, .. , -\~ !S " vu El C SVI 21,, 1\oi PK ~ulo J ,;:" tam11 lld 1.60 116 Pro Fund 11J l.1J llorOW&t '1.2J lft 201\ 1, .... 21! +I.lo E.wofd ln,»f I 11 11 1' 1(81iCtm 10 1• 11 11~ market its electronic El O.t• ,.., .. I'..:: F1E ·~iomo Fd 11• 1•1Pr ..... an1 36' 'Cl'lBormtns to , u v. Ill, n·~ EY•"'P ,IOI! :111 Js1, ll:W lll...-J>.K•lit: a11i1 1 111.. ,,., u ··-. 11\io -"• 30'~ ..... '• !i?'~ + '• ,,,~ ... ,,,,_,. ~ El Modi/I ' 4V< P•~!O Co f~ fv. °""$!\ l Sii l tt Pur1!1n 1.11 t)J BM Edl1 j .2• 1' m,, I! 371,; ;rg1 + ~ E•t•llO l.2J 45 II .. 11 ! ..... + i~ K•nC Pwll I 10 31 lO'> thennometerloEUr()pean emoso11 l't"loU>:o Pineo! • °"'°'" •.1$ 115 Pu1nam F-und.; &oum. ltK s ,..._ 1o +"tF•c""A .60ll , n•, l2v. l7'•-'"'KCPL 11u 10 1io n•·· 57,, EM•llY C Ill• It: Parto;• Dr '~ ~·~ Conoo! In •I' t'I SO Eoull J,U 6.(] Br1nllAlr 50 118 1'4 ,.. , ... + ~, Flltch( .JO 111 \I', 1~ 11'-KC PL Pll IO JXI "'' hospitals . This increasc.>s~nerqlle 111ot"'P•rlrwH I l~~orr1u ln 1.ll'll.06 c..,.,, 11 ... •1.1s Brla&s11.-io. u••1v. 1 ~ -·~F1!rmorrt1 ;1t>o l•'•T•'• • KCSou!~d'; 1 ,,,,;i:~ Se11si lron 's electronlce~~1s1• !:,3:.,.,~:~~Te P I i•~con/rt;:, '·?J·\ll f<1M t.01111 1'/"MY 1.10 !2•• ™" .S2'!•+1V1 f•frmnto11 1 1111 11'>11•-, Kt:Sou r>1 1 lh I ha kl . t E"" ,_ 11. 1" Pttri M1, ,,•"' .•,::. r:'p Ld lf ,},J)• .~~~ ta ~:~ 11~1~1~:1 ~~t .~ l~;; 3i, 1:.., ::-.~ ~:J;.111~1,1~DP1 it 1~~! 1~'' 1~" ~ l'.: ''" •• , _ 11000,, n·1 ll'• 11 "•L '• ermome er c og o over !::oull 011 ~ "" """" ' ., ~",., '~" •.1s 10.11 v1111 6:,s 1 '' e11wy H•lt 1 I 30"' 311'~ :io•· , F , 1 1 1o ,, ,._ " .., 20·~ n~ ill.,. -, t• · · . Erl1 Ttc .S•O 614 ,, F-"°11\ ,,'!' ,'.~.· tn WDlv '!1 5.21 VOYti i.~4 S.n 1~" r' A7 l6 ' -" t ns ee !!f 1 ' " ,,,_ + ~ K•nPwl ) 11 J I 21l• ,, 11 $3 m!lhon. ACCOtdlng to J . Fii Citeo l'o 11~ ... G&W ;"' r11 WDfl S.5C •. 01 RH Ttdl 111 J.•3 rlrWY G . .0 6 1•lili r...~ r(O' i \'o F•r WHI Fill !DI-, IO'" 10''1 -<, IC"y Ind I 6"1 6~• 1•,..('lt (• II I s ., 1=.11 ...... 2Vi •• l'fftll P•c 1,' It~ •V9h .... 51 °' $1.0t lt.-.ore I 11 • 114 ll~lynUG 1.n ' )lV. ""'• uV: + tz ~~,·~1 .4" rs 2~: 2~... 1r.; -\• Kou/ ll rd 1t 10l 317'< 7''1 lD'\ .,. ·~ Presid:nmt .... rer!~1'; of 'mn',','°ke"t r,:.fl,"'1..,,.' ',1,~ •,',~ ;~,.,;,11-r,: l~ :J" 0e~!i" 0~~"1o.6i =~~:iii 1~:;; '~:~ l~'I..~" .20 1l ::.! :~ ~ :-: ~ ~:f~ L~ i~ llC Jf'' ~;~ -+ :~ ~:;::.\o~ 1 ' ~'· ~ W-:"" ·-~ o·c'"''":::.c......;~·.:..:~·.:..:'-"-""-'-'--ll~-'-'-I Oelwr 10.11111.11~•1.,,,,Fd '·'1 4.111wnShol! 1.50 11 nt• n•• j1'-+"F..iP1c Elec • '"' 1·~ I'• '"KP'lh~r 171'.1 1 "1\•\ 411'1 -«l'lt l'' tcsls have already indicated ' Dirn8 s.so •.01 SCt!u•tr 11.ssn .... ruMwk .10 ',' ,13t. "'' n; + '"" P~t .. n ,, 116 1i"' iJ•• 1:p.1 ·• 1Ct1101r1 1111 1 .ict" :itil ·~ H• Orexol 11.0S It.OS Sc..Odtr Fund!: l"YE• 1.20 ht 11 111.\ -V. F-eclSlgnS :60 11 u1~ l1'> 1Jl, :.__1· JCo!lotg wl I 70'> lB 11!'" 1, the new electronic thermomel-Drevl Fd •.65 10.~ Int •nY 12.4712.111 lludO' co .10 " ,,.. '" ''"' + '" Flde••ll inc 1 Jot ih 5._ _14 l(~l•ev 1.xr , ll'o 161.1 11v. " Dre11 lv 10.u 11 . .$4 Sod 2~.•1 1'·'1 11""51 F pl,oMI • '1'1 ' 6, -y. F..iO:s;:s11 1 jO 30•• 3G 301, + ""'""•'' .60 ' 16 15'o 26 ~. ermaysoonchangetem ...... ra. N E••,,.,&HQW•rd: 1a1 n .50 ,,50 11111oe11 .. ·"' 3 ._. , .. '"· fad co •'"• ,., ,.,~,,Ken"""'' ,10 l 11•1 21'• tt1'-., ~ Ca t llar.~ 1.11 t.s.I Com St I.JS 1,55 lluffForg 1.10 • 2'1'~ rt 1' "" < > "" > ''' • tur taking in U.S., Canadian te1·e1·s e Orwlll • ,, 10.lO Sttvrl'1 Fulld1: 81110'<'1 w .Ml 3 u:u """ -trro D .D 11 )4\, ,. ... 1'!11 -,. K'""(D!I ,60 J'lto w . ~ -,., lroc:om ~.11 5.6t "q~lv 1.:IJ !SI Bunt lt•rno 1~ ~ 1'1 F-ltirlbn:I t" • 10\'. ff'• 20\o KF-Ch Dl'I .10 304 lll"o 10 1~ _,,. and C"..-......,." .......... ;lals ...... _ S1>e<l •.60 1.11 lllYtSI 1.5'1 J.17 ···-· ~," 11 1 ·-w F-lekl<IM ·"° 12 1•11 2•'~ ,,,,, ..:.v. lteff M' •.50 n 11 IO n +i·~ ''"'!Ur--• ,..,._,t', 111'1: SI 0 U ' "'"' ""· It 21 21 2' ... l"llttl'I IAI ) 11 10>a )I lttrrM pl<50 I 70 Ill 10 +'" ,__ el h I S•L DC 101111,U llrt S.GS -'·I lu•llnd lolO JJ JR. 37"" 37\'t-\.'loFI" F-r.rn Tl Oh 10.._ 1o~+·i,1CevstC,,.,1n'1 1 711,, l l'\ •• i.rocrmometnder w g s ond y Pu $2 Mill1'011 ~~~~I i::~ l~:l1 ~~s~'1 l~'." l~~ I~~~: ~·,'t ~i 2iv. l~~! 2l1i +"~ ~.~~~ J,#t n n'4 ~;: ~~~ _+~ :1::i~ ~7~ '~ J::~ j,t l~~; ~ ()Unces, a can recor a a-Sn"rq k f.17 '·"° Sentr Giii 6.JO ~.n1 eur!>d¥ 10 1~ 1~ 1.s~• 15..,, + "' Ftt M•t• 1.w l 101, ~ 1~1 + I\ ~lmbCI~ 1 :ro ,1 l~·. ~·~ 3ol -.1"1 tienl's temperature in less ~~r~~. 1~·t 10·"' ~;;. ~ 1~J~.1Jl 8vrr;h1 ·.60 ltO t0 at~ u:;i, +-'• FstNl:jS'IT 2~ n •s 'f'I~ "o.o-'• '""'ll•D~1 ·~o , ,.,, 11·~ 7!;; +:_.!:: EGuJ!y 7.11 l.?l~h Oten 11.tfl .llOBuollUnv .J1t 1 11.,., 11 11 _._f'(Kl'I ..., 26 2''< lJ'\ 1s1,~~1(111ne¥NS ,, t111? n ·~ ,, .... 'ti than 15 seconds. p• 'INVIEW Ny (UPI\ -Eau• Gt~ 1.~. l .'10 Side 7.IO 1.15 -C-F-lahr cl .ue ll 10 N o 10 +;.,~I""" .. 11 ·u • .._,.') ., ... "-"'~ ..... ,., Ov ~ . E·~· ""'If"' $1Pm• F1,1tMh F~l\et'Scl ·" ' 6lt '"' -\lo Kl•-" Co ·, ' ·~ -,,. Hammerslag said." er 41 · · E ""' .... c i ~ '' " 1 l6 Jsv. l6 +"' F1tni1n1r .JO •l •1• •1• 1•1 -,,.LM_., .. , 10• · ~· ""'-'" Southern California hospitals Onesum::. N1~:nyg°',k,;~~!li~e~~-:~i:t.~~ 1t.~i 1:'.* t~;t i:~ !:H ~1:k~.~~~~ -l! it~ ,t!l ,t:Z +\'> ~H~k0~7A1.» 11~ ntt z:~ B\i + \; ~~~;i; .il!; 1;i ~~ rT'~ ;~~., have already placed initial i=.i.o • F-•rm ev •·a 1.ot sm:1h 11 , u ,_.. .. .~ 21 n i1 121,a 121• -~ l"lll t: cont s '' 11•, 1t + i\ K 1 .,, , ~·~ ,..,." ;r.,1. t ;~ W'.th a se"'ing capacity of Fl'd Gr111 10.1 11.<1 l'"' lnw 1.is 1.n ,••,oso 1 •. 10 11 u io ,,,_ ,~, + 1-11 Fit G•• ..so J6 1111o 11 11 '-~---·--------'--'~ orders dur'ng a recent market 0 ' Fld C•P '· 10,u ,..,ftw G1 •.u •.•1 r: rew • • 11 '~ •n M~ •. Fl• ,,_ 1.60 10 ,, · •6•~ .w;'\ -•,1 1 zero and a kitchen 30 miles Fld \ulld 11.61 ll.111 SoYer 1ny 11.Jo "·!' .,•,r,K, ',·",, 11 SS'·~ .u11 l"' -l" F••"-LJ t ID 1Jt. 1J1'1 u 11 -~, lest of the product b y . F-ld '"" II.JS 1005 soec1ro J.13 J.' 1 •~ """ ~ t •Fl• 11 .. 1 1 111. ,,,, II'• from Times Square did a 1969 F-1n8ne111 P•D'll : · s1Frm GI •.Jt •.:i •,•, .. £ r.,•'ll'a• 110 11v. 21 ,,~ • FtvorCP 1.ltl ~' 11•1 "'• Ult Americl'n Hospital Supply. 85 · , , ow~m 3,lt 3 70 ~111t s1 35.25 lS.U -~" 50 •t~ ,1:14, •l4t -.,, F~ p1 B J i .c "° '° .:.::1 g ross volume of $2 million, '""'"1 l .tl JM St~•""'a" Fu..,,: ~·",,= , 1P.~ 1M n :i. -'"' Fl 1,... .tu " 15•1 "'• U\.'J + >1 percent of the hosp i I 11 I " . f inc-om '·" 5,1J Am 1...i J.~ ,,., ••v "" i• tU, s-1\ $41t -"' F ~ .u 1u 1t'' ,.., u~) -" solicited in the test placed the Gas AP?li.anct Manu ae-F,~F"'v l.~ :: .. t,~:; 1-1, ~Al ::::~~ 1::S fl ""' JI;: ~~ -:.• ~F-ilrJ~'° .~ l, ~~1 iit. = ~ Market turers Association says. F111" o~. 1.oi !·" st!ln 11~ f41, "'••"•"", •, .., . .ci m ~ n 2Mt + ~ ,__ cl AO •S 110 1•1 11 + .. an order. The Sensilron mel'r b"I ""' \,,..."' 1•1~ .e1 l'l•l IJ.!! 1s.2.• • • 1 U'" 2'14 l1V.-14 ~~ M ~ '5 u no.. 1111 unit sells to hospitals (or The concern uses 190 mo 1 e F1t nSt• '·" J.« Ceo 0o '·s; ~.Jt c:~~ ·!!! ]J = ~~ ~ -i:·,,. F:t~1 :I 1~ 1il! t; •• 11~! : ~! catering vehicles to serve ~~: ri::. :J·ft J:H su~!O!j~,1 '!:u 01:1: '!','"[' i:W •• 12"" 11u 31'11 -" Fa.I Wiii .eo 12 uo 1••• u•• Sytnbofs under $30. Sales from our 1 ed b . Fle1 c8., 5,17 ~ptnSt g .2s c ,,°'' n •\• l'• f! + ~· Fo1 'Ml .. i;:L• • I •'• 1~ 131, -'• ~fedlcal Electrnn ie:s Division patrons emp oy y IO· ~:ef tncl •.» tM~' AG! ,:il i·n se~..: ... r~"'l ,] !ut 1.5(; 1.~. + ~ ~=ui'lo J l~ i'r.: 1~· -"'' 191~ IS • -~ .. ·--- Id ~ 11s ·Iii 1 dustrial companies in four of ,r:s cW. tsu" •1:n TNdlr1" J'. 1:u (....., ptA•.» 1 .t1~ l"' ll" P 111 u , •• ~ '"'" '"' "-,,.. · eou exceo;v m1 on n N y • c·1y• 1. a.-.. i... F011iw:1" , 21 TfCfW<!:• 1., , Clft'ICX! ,,., .lit ,:iii ~~ l'4 .. _.,,. FllQU• 111 :Jtt '"' 1\o 11w 1.,., _ \o 111 "" •toot ""'1cd ~ ... 1971 based on our current ew ora 1 s 1ve UV\'.vug~ "°"''"' 1:u 1:51 Tecto...,. s.i• '· ~IHlr FlfY ,"',.: ,•,~ ,"',,, -.,. · --G--s..1tt 11.,'""' ,,. """4'tl(l11. nd II of Lon 11 nd E h l'r~nl<l!n Gr'l!'•o· Temo GI D1125 j ~'"' \·• 0J -. •w eslimalts." a a g sa . ac m;rc •.~·,.6,TowrMll ·.,M'l·1 tf1H1L1 ·"' 2N ,,,. ""'+'il:GAcc .. 1.50 "!" ,, ... u \'• .-1 .... ,,,.,.nm1..ll-.f.nnu,,,.,. _, II lpped t k I 4,U S.lO Tr•n Ct• 1.0l ' s ,111L! pl1.YI J.50 '° 60 .ct -" i"f C0t~ ·* 1 •"• '" I '• ·~ -'""' •todr: dl\fkfotnd. 1.ltr 111 _,.,_.-...a y-equ rue S 3 Ull ~l.ol 6l1Tr•v Eo 1.U ,.11C~nll!P$ !.,, «D 11'4 1• !f:""··•,. 1"F~.'10 '1Ji. lS"' 1~-'' -v it+,..dlwl- lr11Veling "~taur8nl" car-F~ ... ~ ,'·,',' ,'.'' Tuo1.,~, •"• ','-•, 1 ·• ~~'i>"w ''1.14 1i 2<1'~ JOV. • · · '~! :i1 1 1f i l}.1 Po" ~· ~. "~11r.o "" nerd rn 1''!,r"" Safeway Sales OAKLAND, Calli. -s.r .. way Stores Inc. announced re· ccntly l.han unaudlled consoli· dated saJcs for the first 23 .... -eeks of 1970 ended July 11 Wl!ttl '2.481 million, an In- crease of 16.8 perctnl over the comparable period in 1969. C.onsolldated u n a u d I le d earnings (or lhe first 23 weeks of 1970 we.re $1.38 per share of common stock. Rn increa51! of 29 cents from Mrnlngs of $1.00 per shilre In the samt per10d of 1169 . ... " I ' !-" E::: mi ,'1!! ~~ +,~ :in Ml"' ' •• • ,.'~ + ,, llOct <1t¥~1111. -P•fd ! •• I .... • rylng • Var;~ of hot and F-d lrM~• 1 10 I ta ... ne Inc 1·11 lS I SW 1.90 l J l.. ... ... . ":I -..,., l"wl'ICI Am 1 !6 8! Unff Mui .S~ 1.11? 11nl Sow• .K 3' 1 ~ J 21 ""' '"1" • lf 11'. f1'o ?J.:~ -1 l'•Ylllle In 1!oct: d\11'1111 1.,., ... lttht!tt rold food and drink. Soup, S:!,twYSoo< i;J :~ 8~'~·~111 ~:j! ~~~~·1~.'4"' l? :!'!: I~ l~ +~ ''~"' J.71 'l :,., ~'1 ~ .t ;: c•Sll "''""en ""'°""ldr""" "'°i~ltlot> Canned mu•· and pi•!• dinnen 0G;w.nr 5.o. s.o. unllftl F-u1" C11<1·!fftl .ao ,•,• I ~ \5\i 1' -~ 1rw•Y 1"' 1 I'• .s ' .Sh -"" no.. .. ~ •....Ofclenll ., ..,., · 13 , · ,_ S~: ,t,cc:m A ,.f5 Ct»nM ,IOll l tlA' ti.. IM+ ~· ("'11 l l 1 lo+. 100' -I~ ... Ju are k....t hot on the: road 1n .... , J I.II •.OI ltKCWn I ,,.1 ·~ ~D!f •'l J '" !" ~ ~.. Intl\ .Ml " 101. 10'. 10·~ -'• 1111• Y••• 11-0oo<-llf.., Of ••lei ~ "t'• e.t F-d J.&? t~ Scle11 .ij 1· ,_m,.~ . •11 n\Or 'lt \;i; ••· !\AIM I.I"' 1 It'-t]~t ~flt>-'• llodl lllYIMM l>f .elt 1111. --o.t ovens heated by propane gas. 1~~" ~ 1g.~: •,.n 0~3,.\n t:i'J ; ~~t,~'i . 1!o ~ ~: ,5.., ~ :~~ ·:1 Jl ilVI Sf:"; nv.;:: :: 0t etltl 1ni, •e•r, •n ~111111"' 1:~;: r111 h'IO U.JI is 36 v,1uf Int fld: l!octtr M01 14 'l\'t n 1' '/~' +l \11 --:o~M ..1.M I fl 11>1, !Ollo -ot ""Ith dlYlllrrt<ll 111 ••l'tlf'I. _N.,.. !taut>. "'~" 1111 J,i 40 V• l,. '·# s.11 ,,.,,.,. .J • • n. 11• U ........ ('1 .'II;[ •11 l'I,\, 11•. ,, i "'-"•Id 11111 "•'· dlYlclirnct omitt Oinark Tests ~~~~ra11 : JO Ol .01 l:f°Tit t'7 !~ ,,.,'n I. 1..f u: lU! 1!~ + !! !e .'11: J ,r• l,6.:: ~ t ~ tfffH or llO ttllofl Uk.., It! l•st 11:!.~ H0F1 l !4 '" vnc,5 ~Ill ~ 1·• ,..'*'tw'I' .IOI! s Jlt S'\ '1" ..... "' 1 IOI Jf I '1 \~";, -i1111. r-Otciel'M or •-Id II' 1m •kit "' 'JI 5 n Vind~ . 1 V• l.IAI I '~ ,. ,. .. .. I« ,... IDJ • ,,., n~ t I.to lJod' lf'Yldlft• I " H•lllOF 111 I u V•"'4 , hH Drlle ' 11 '''l ~" t + \4 11 l•Jt ,1)1 I l 71, 1\l l \lo --.,. tft lll'IKll ~"' ELS€GUNOO,Calif. (UPl)~!' ~e• :1'\ l 1a~l'1~'111P l·n 1•: ;,, 11 111 'J ):' \I :-'.' . ._ "'"'tt111t .t0 :: 7 t"i,: 1'·~ ~',, 1•11.es;'-~".°,cauiwiiu.or.~.e~ • '' l~w.''.' '" 11 " \ f;'' •I > r• -•~ 11'11 ,JD! '' 17-jj'•· +'•Of" «<d•trl...,tOfl a11ot. -S•lft In .... -A nnn here that make!! ' •·n :~ w!t." Mu ~:llf 11: cl: M ~" pl j ~·1 ll:~ ml-'" •:i\~ t1 1 ~ n111 ,,, i,.;. cfd -<:•1""4. t•-E.11-0111ftrid. .-e...;~ lillrcraft bolll ipplies plenty ttt,=.,,. 1~.~•i'· w£~~1" 1'1'.~ft, 9:lin i,. 2 ,,."? 1;:t 1-+ ;~~11 11~ .:. M ff'' ;--1 .,,. •"" .-~ 111 "''~ •dl1-£•4!11tr• or push to get ahead. A testing u~i.1 i~ .... 41\ ~ )~~ l,. !'llll~ulrN,'1,. l I~ 11l't 1ru l :? i_!~t~.. 1 f: .. !f\• f1'1o t ~ llut• •r-E1 11elll. ft-Wltt>out 'Iii '• ···1 ... ~ b Omark l'iG"" J 4l 1.~ TKl'IW '·" C11r11Cn ' .30! ii }llo '1 ~ + r,Ulll IM '1 1f\.o 111· ,,,., +"' '"""---wu11 Wirt' ......... _Wllt.oi m.,..11 nc .... ~ y ! '"' 1 n iOl Trin1 I~ '·flt"" "'"")"' i 111l io 11 -•l.'l t1r1c1 l ,,, 1, hi , trsl•lllltfH ~ i.w... lndus\ri' .. .,.. ..... rates a million mr'i " s" 1.5' Wlf111t 11. • EJ" o:J:. 1 101. 1•1t 1"' + " "' !" 1.• 11 •Pt 'ft. u•• ...:1, ,.._: _ ... '" ......,,~ e -'"" mp •• ) $3 I~ Wlndr 1 _J omtl S Ill ,,. .. :'P. • • 6 tJ I~" '!1.' +•• ' 1H ,....,., m '*~' " ~ .... poundr; pre 1111; u re -the 1:° Fc1i l ll :· :~:~',\"' ,:·, 1t:!l ~~r.11 1.• n7 ~1. ~· ~1'\t !. ~ ~1,"r;'°l.\T ,j~ j'U' ~•'• .1.: ~. ~ .n111, .., 1tt1111 •tof'll .. 11H ~ ti.. f'Qulv~lcnl wei&ht ol 2$0 two-~o;;'..., , •·&l ,j: ~ ~l::f~Jd j·tt tft~l':.'181 ~~ 11: ui. ,1' "'~I~ t:i~ .,f1:JO •::z. I~ I''• f.~ ; ~ 111~~1' i:~ "'; ~u•lllfl ""--" lona·•-·"'ie• I....,~., 11wt•c'• ;ft1.•11'11 Mn1.• •»~ '•-""'r1,..1h ,,,, .111~!1 "9mM~. "'•..,,n,.11.Pbttctio ..,..,.,,UUI · N GN 6 11 .» Wor11'r OS .O> !Tl'l11 T 10 52 W.. ~---"" l.1t It) 2116 II -1' lfl""9# -tlllll!Oll "" ... ... ·N•~ ... ••• ... ... ... "" "" NDi "" . .. ... ... "' • •• '" "' "'I •• "Iii ... E·:: " .. ... ,,, IH;• ... ... "" t.i'I': ~~ ••• 'NII• ~rr. Nie• ·~ ·~ ·~ ... ... "" "" ... -·~ "' "" "' ... ... ~~ "" NW ... N•• ·~ " 1 I .... t~-· .. ~r•llCt .j·" :!!tt' ·" : 'Oitr''• . .lo'°" • ' . '· • .. SC DAILV PILOT 2}_ Frida y's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List I =-~-~ =---= • 1'1& m111 2:2'11 "' M k £'1!-b U ~~?.!.' , ~ ri·-ft oow J01111• "v••"e•1 "ffiic-.• 1• •m u .. 11• _ \• .i, ·~1r.· 't'" il~·;_~.,;_· ar et \..d.Ull s P. s;'a ';;.j 1fii•*:+1: ,._T1rl!CAl')l"l"'I o-.i-•Wlf-~=r~:rl:il ra ~~ :P: :!tt ~~ a .. ~,"Ji!"• ·1, .... t!'-:2-.,.,. ttoc•t ~~--" 1u; 1.. 1.. =··~ 1 r~.~ , ik I~ A. f E I R ll ~-&~o! i: l.~ ~ it~~~~ r.: ~I~ .. r;.; m~; ,~; t ;.: ~~\·~:*'~ ~ In: 1m l!t: -.. :·. ~.-~. " .. =-~~ ~ .. :: ter ar y a y ,.,, ... .. r.T'l" "'· .... -~ v.11 ·.ii iii:t m11 lii:~ i 1:: ~·:r.i .... ,-Wf·t;;~ ~ .. -~ "1~: 11~ J:lf.~'~.,.:-1• 4' '•~ "'~ ·~.::\4 ii.r••t ,1 ... toa.1u.01 ....... m~w:1.~~ 1f 1 1~," ;.1, I T•li.y r. •1 I t1"9 1tt' 1l" T 1 . ·• ' " • W1l-1t C• Y ,\~ 1,'1 4 4111 4 .,~ .. ,~ T::J: l .IO I 1t\) !:?">I•' trn ~""41.1~~1" ·., ,,':'.": , .. j4l,1 =:~~:0 1·:g' f 1i5lO~ j1Uo lJt\.+~: , 1 \t lo" I~=~ NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks closed higher ln lellPl'n~:'~.io 1: ?:~·~fl'=~" •11. •• •• •· •• ····"' 1• 100 w11~co iM "'ft!ll .-... ~·· • ... f" 1' II h tr d' Frid t I t r 1~...!... l)t ~ l\lo Ji.. r.:: w1rL•111 J,'IO tl Jl\lo J i~" !4\? l..:? +..., g t ~ 1ng 11 ay on aper ng momen um rom :r.;;;i;"t• ;g ~ ~ ~ =:; ~ ::0::~1·~ ': !? .... lf.! l""' :;· ~: I 11 11 ~ -1t an opening ra y. !,' ... ".!!"' "° 10_ I~ 11"' _ 1• 1a1ee ,. .. w • .i.w, ,,. ) ffi: tfo .. ~ 1.! + '"' Sh rtl be! lb I th Do J Ind ltd¥ 1.st J t-4 t-4 ~ +11t ""' c w1111111 J 1• u I 17' -... ii i~~ l'i -Vo o y ore e cose e w ones us· t~"'' 1 •tU'...,,, '=-\\ '""'> Lft -..a...w.,110-.1• 11 ..... 1t 1t _,,. J 1~ j!li um-;+' t: triaf average WQS Up 3.49 at 710.84. Tht indicator 0( l:::.~:'°~tt "J fll l'I i~ Jill\"'::!:'"' U11io!t. Cw• la ,,,~ i Sft +-~ ::::..~°".7J! t ~: 1:: :t: 1it 11v. I~ "' -v. bl bl 1. h d b ah d al 1 { T-~ n ., •~ ,,_ ~ u .. t:i.c 1.at ,. "' 1111 in. -"' Wtilltl o.f E 11 11-. •'-, , •• ~ • t 'II ue c ps ear 1er a een ea moa our 1,_ 1... , l't"-~ "' ·+" u .. 11r• $1 ao ,,,,.. sr., 11~. -\It wdl>ln .111 11 Jl'I I" f," ft ~ ~ • · t j'i1! " 'lj ,.., j!tt Uf()lic.. 1 . .0 in Ith ,.,. ,..., -~ W•ll•F•t 1.60 J JI,,. I " ~·· • I ~ 1.4 J>OlD $, t• '11 lA 31'4 31 .:.:·" UOC•I illf:l.JO M .._ 40'~ ff•.,+ ft W•t<oF 1.2'" IJ IN JV. ,._ _,.,, -• Volum• of around 7 7 mlll1'on sharts -pared u ••T ,,. i.-. "' U\11 u.. 11• c. ' "' :D1i1o J:m. n1-i + "' WtstTr• .JO J 1~ 1•~ , •• ~ ' I I -1,a • · ~v~u ftJIGSlll 416 1'1 lstl 1J\lio \J'h :..;_··· Ulllolll'Klf 2 11 31 ~ :IO'o -\• Wtll'tl' 1.lllSe 10 :iofO ~ :M ... -'• ' ., I~ l t\ -. ~ to 8,"",000 sbares Thursday. T•x .. 11.i 1' 2 ,,.,. ,.,. 1416 -u"'aic 11.• 4 ... ·~ •l'I ''~ .... "" W•"' Air L"' n ... ,' 1 ,.v. "" ""-+it, U'W T•~I,., .. n• UM. ''"" ..... + UllllMm I.ft ' .., 4J'• + l'l Wn llllC '"' "" JJ\lo """' 1S + '• .~ ~ t + U The opening spurt was touched off by govern--:,-~(hi ~ •1 ~ = ~ = ~~\ :, '!: i.iw. = ~!'" t t? :;or.-Mj.:"° 1i'lt Uv. :1~-; :: .~ ~"' ' Y~ = ~ ment statistics that seemed to lend welght to the t5i::i1 ·~· {. f"' M ! · u~ i1. 1}\ ~ ~ );.,. !\"' :~un~°".it: '1 ~~ 5"' :"' -•, 't! 'Ill~ '!ii f"~ !.1~ administration's contention ha he economy 11 oo. , .. ,,,. •"·•• ·~ ""' ,.,,. -u .. .,,,... • 1tto 1n1i ""' w .. ttE1 •.• 1e: ~ ~ ~\' -'• '1 "' 1)~ TedNI .,1.. s )O\.'I >Olio v.-Uftlfil "1'!0 '" J.I~ w "'"+1..,w .. ,..~ 1.0S fJ 1) 7'111 nvt -'• " 1 l I'" +·it toming out . mThlokr.i·t.. 2~ "' m ,._.:.;.· · i:::r •:-:. .'Zl,. ""1•_.1• • .,. ... == ·~.~ 11 I mt. ffl'w. :tVi. .... ~ 'l ~.· 'mz ~. =•"' However, one analyst said the nu"ITV withered ,,, .... .. r.w. U I. -:i 1>t11t V.,. c.1 1 ,.,.. '"' ,.,, -... wr.1iorn·~stt • 1"' 1• !!" • • 1 " if • • J , .60 t J.M ~ 1"4 + W. Ufllt a,.1 a 12"1 ,,.., 11.. WMell'lf l't S lJll ..i1t 'l'"' \II -r .. I" M,: 14 lC4lo ..... Ul'llf -I.» ,. 1"6 IM If\' w~~ .... l1 Ut. U\\ in. -+ .. •, 1.,l> 1., 1.,. _:··,·, because inv.estors are "gunshy" since 11 rec. ent U"". 1JG 1 :io ~ ..... 1H111 111111 ,. 1 ...... ,,,. + '• w;,1,., c. '·'° ' ""'· '1"' n\ot., •• 1; z111 :" ~ _.... \Yard .:'actions to ne\vs have dried up 1mmed1-l11:;::~1:· ~ ~ Jiu F."' -·" ~nN~.,. Mi• tt ~ ~ ~ w nc: ::l I ~ i'f :"' 1: 1tt 43\o .ft\o -41~ _ •, ately. 1 ,..k ... IM 1d1 ~J;:; \Ii tt -"U1 l'ldG 'to IO :D!'o :n J2l'i +"" Ifft"" ,.u I 14\\ 14'' U\\ t 'I '" .m\ ..... ~.,. l ~ 111111 A:lfv .... i• 1r1to 'n 1 "' -'" s '""' ~ ,11, 27 m • .. Wftt.Mo1 ·* " '"' llt• ''"' .. '• "'•• :r."~ t!l'I •h• He said he feels a series of favorable develo~ TotilnCi• A ~ p.'~ ,;tt ~ !. u ~ rr.11 1,... ' '°"' 20"1 ,.. ......... t:::ro. .. I ~~ ~ J:: 2~ -!\ -.. I ·u b t d . st r f~ ~a,:: <Q ' ll::~ n:-YI u Bf'" f "" Ir' .. , . .. Wi.tlt:Sfl' .151> ' , .. ~ .... -'• J: 111 ,.'* .,;"" = ~ men ~ ~ e necessary O raw 1nve ors rom ,.,11,un 1•20 u ,...,.. ,... -• u "'*'•' ·'° w tr-l.! 1 1° • • wm ltou .... ., "'" ,,,,. m. _ 'i xtl s~ s'lti '' .. ,,. the li1Jdelrnes r.,,., w Afr ,1t 11!4 1 + 'Ill u L••tti Jt ' 1 1•, 1 .. w11111,... 8,0 "' 11 Mlli u 1' •• II 7:lil. 1 1•• + IA. • ' J~~~i~ ~_J 1.1 lfli' ,, 17111 +a ~ f.~~PK·t ru 1f' D1~ ;~ ~ V. W""8t pl'.M • 11 11•1 tt>O + •t ,1 1!~ 'r.:uv. 1.!l~ + \• .T.here was evidence of heightened institutional ,,,,._,, ·'' ,u ,,\\ • ,, -~; 11 totr20 10 n'4 u~. -"'w1n1101. 1.a u ~ Ja•i. ,,._ + " --_.,. ~.. n "" . -ii I Ir 11\io t ~ Wll'lt> 01•1• e u 31• .. )1'~ :Jilt -1\ I t~l/o 14~~ 15 ... .+-'II. ,.. • tl • 1' ~ .... " -~ U Jnll PIS H • 40 -™ WIS .. SYC 1 " S I•,,. l•l.t l"'i -'• n •"" "' •1• + •·· act1v1ty as block t~nsactions picked up Among ',',',"·~·~, ,·.~ ," ,., ~ tw!!l +!tu 11 ·1b , " ,,... + "w1.e1,... 1.• :n 1"'" "~ .. ,,... -•• 4~ 1N, ~:.t ~i; = ~ the blocks were 1().6,200 shares of Boise Cascade at ~~:~· 1~ '° d1 ~ "~ ~ -1 "'u s1 .. 11'.• '°' :10 ,...., • w•ko c11 .n s ,,., 11vi. ,,..~ ' ' 41 ff I 3 4 37 400 K tt 38 1/2 !! 5/8 T•11YO.r$ Pi1 , 1' ?!.~ l'l u Tobi< ·11 • ,,.~ 7l \~ -J,. "'W.,WWW .la • '"' "" ,_. -'• 13t ~ ..... =I u\~ -· 0 I . ' enneco at 0 ' j•COlll 2J.4• ,, ~ ... 14\! •'l'I \\Unit Ulll .n " Wt\ w.... ~· Womtlca .'1 , 11Vt ,,,. '"" + '• 16 300 M 23 off I 3/8 d 18 loo D I r.l•n•INI • .t I t~\l »-'-' I~ -"unu111r1.2! 4 21111> ?l•t fl" + ~Wood•(• .... 10 ,, .... IOli IOV, + ,, ", ,1~ ,',"•" ?!.~ ...... ' arMott at an . art n· TltW IM 1 2l l't\lo ,.,, .. H<lll + * Vll'f"L•• 1,_!0 7 y 7.1 WGfl!wnl I 711 101 llP"' ,.,..to :ioa.. -~. --. 1•w pf.(JO 1l 70 ,. ,~ U~I'• ... 5' t '1Vt !'-'t-'4 Woolw pftll I d\lo '-!U. d •• 1~ :~ ~t::! lft{ -..,:;-dustnes at 30 off lf.a . 11w ~·i.e 12 1• n 1• +Nun h' Cm• m ff ml1''\ 14"1 ±,.,. w ... 111 AJrWv 11 s•Jo ,,,. ''-' ' l -1 .... • t r · I N l' al C h R · l nd X uUn E n 1 lj 1.1~ 1\ t "U• T."° ' 4 "' W•l•ln >-• 111 JG-1\'I 101 "'' 11 ~ ~· • ~·111 +'" vntroya a JOO as eg1s er a erox twen fflt' " "' 111. m ... u • '"° :n 11 1 f:· I '-W11•n11er ..o ' ... 1 • -" J !?~ ~ffi 1ir.1=-=-~ were traded.actively. Xerox closed at 67 1/8 up '"1 ... orp '° "' • '1' ~!\..1 F ·l'.o ~l ~lit 1: 1 t:x.,,,,.c. ·'° '1' ,,.., "\~ 11\\ .. ,., '" .., _.... ., -U·V-ufM ,/r, ,.· iUICI 1' If • +"' XTltA. hK J4 1• 17'-11'1> + '• II U'oli 12'9 lJ •• 1 1/8. UAt.. IM I .... k\~ Ii"-" t ¥11 u1111eoni llO 3J ll''t 4]1 ~ q.,., -~ Yr .. 11$0 ,,.,. 1 1N 1Pt ~\6 .... •t • 1''Jo ,, 11 U.t.\. Pl .,I 11 U ~tt· lH -'t Ulell I'\. fn 1 ?1~ 1N 1"'i + i\ t•'-COl'f ·-4 I '"''t 7'1''t " 1 u11i 1J\4o 1''4o + .,, Many glamors hard bit recently , chalked up u.1,lilco 1 io ' n·' :n~ 21...: -'"' v~•n AU. •1 11 1C11t 1~ -"' '•'-"" 4·11 ' 72"' ""' 111~ -1 lS \""' l~ u,,. . • ' UGI (p ! 10 17 :!1"• 2l'4 ~ + "'V A Co•1t tO 71 :» ~ im -1, T-1• Norn 4, 11"<\ 11lt '"'' -'' n .,.,, or. 411. + ., sizable gains uMC 1rw1 .n 11 ""' ''" •:11 + {~-,, c. p1"11 1 1sv. 2~ 1 -1• ..... ...,. cw• 1 7l'• tt\11 "'' -·• n J~. 11._ u i, + v. ' urw'ca .40 1 I'> 1>o ''" -It v""' 1 Mi I' 4 v, 4'l v, • .. '"~'"'" ,...,. '!I ,,.., ni\ Jilt ..i. ·• 11 It lilt lt ......... ,,. .......................... ,un C1m• I »I ~ W J. 1t"• _, ........ co .tO t II'" 1Jlo lilt + Vo 7.111"11 t"" " .. ,_.. 1-. !Hi • '• IJ Ii"'° 111. \I\--I.., UnC.ttb!<k l l•S )1 »4• .l6Jo ¥F (Ol'f I 1 t1'o 21~• 21'.li -.... ConrlorMM lrl' Tlw .t,sooclltldl>r-1t10 Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List .... ... tll*.l Mitt!&..... 0... ca.. Finance Briefs W ASJflNGTON (UPI) The Federal Reserve Board has approved the dlvesUture by the Dupont Trust of Its con· tro!Ung interests ln 30 F1orida banks. Tbe FRB also approved the creation of Florida Na· tionaJ Banks, Inc., ot Jack.son. ville as a registered bank holding company to take the bank.s over. The 30 banks have combined deposits or $988. l million. Florida National Bank of Jacbonville !is the large.st of the group. WASHINGTON fUPI) The Securities and Exchange Commission has asked the Federal District Court Jn New York to bar Ric International Industries. Inc.. and i t • subsidiary, Ricology, 1 n c ., from making false claims tor an oil-absorbent product tested d u r i n g an oil..spiJI last February in Tampa. Ric consented lo the order. Also named as a defendant is Nick Papol ls o( St . Pteresburg. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Utah Construction • Mining Co. said a strike bas hatted pre-mining surface stripping operations at its Shirley Bain uranium mine in Wyoming. Tbe union, a local of DIAtclct SO of the United M I n e Workers. is seeking higher wages than those prevailing in nearby mines. BINGHAM'TOl'I. N. Y. (UPI\ -British Overseas Airway~ Corp. has ordered a flight simulator for the Boeing 707· 336 C alrcraft from Link· Miles, Ltd.. a subsidiary In Britain ol Singer Co. It will employ the Llnk.btJllt vartabl9 Anamorphic Motion Picture system to simulate severe rugbt problems. 1 I \ r"-:'~~~----~!"' .. ..,.., ....................... .., .. ..,.., .. ..,,...., .. ,....,.., .. ..,..., .... ,.. .. ,....,,....,..,..,,..~_,,....,,..~ ... ~~--~~~~~~~'·'~'r'"'~· ...,.-·,~·~~~~~~~~-......----• . -- I Frld.lJ, August 14, 1970 Yosemite ~~ ... ;~Pg A~a y. From·, It All?~ Do n 't Go To ' • , "t • " ".::;'!t;'Ee~':!.1!: u we lot hm, one I"' up mass!" Hall Dome, the equa number is expected lhi.s limit ror per'°"' registering al 2,llOO campslta Ue Jn the related to the •alley floor. •lopes or the Sierra N•118da -. --~~it•..-. ' from hls bed in the dirt and ~·orld's largest chunk or year. camp Curry, and a 15-rnlnute fringe areas and are nonnally where at one time tend to lure ever, illCfCISIDg ~ .,.,_,. ..,... I toot off w:ltb his pack." grani te with at ~st one rou te h'I recent years. overnight waiting_ line at timel. Food ls occupied ornly after tbe valley campgrounds were Z:.eferred to numbers Into the park, "at . :.~=-.,..,·~,: Ron Foster, 32, Chicago, still unconquered by mounUn campinginpublicareaso!the served. by .tbe number in fills. u "slums" because of a liqte even .fllltn1 ·iae back :=-::::.:.,,.. ""', ~ ." ,... sald he forsook the valley climbers. valley numbered 10,000 a night Yosemite Village where two camping is limited to aeven youthful element that invaded (.'Ountry." $Bid Hadley , -7 g ... ,_.. ,_ "' Meadow Campgroond, a n she said of the ultramodern t Oumber bas been reduced , plastic fork and knife, sell or or Wires on lnles." Pets are narcoti cs. ;;ilong the 750 miles of trails, y()s·Elnr£ ·_l\A'l!ldNAL overflow facility built on.the camping units. '"One trai~r hall with a strictly en-$1.25. 1 \ allowed.in Camp No. IZ only. "When people think about where 1he only real campi'rlg , > ._,.....,.,;hu~-.,,, crowds for the Hodgd on "It's terrible, disgusting," ipeak periods. Hadley said pancakes, a .slice ·of flam and daY,s. A sign warns, "No nails the park, importing liquor and But jl's in the high country, PARK (AP) _ Barely seven p·ark'a western boundary. that came through tJli e ced program limlUng cam-Hadley said there are about\ one campground is for lhe park, they overlook the in Yosemite can now be found . miles square, with granite Judy Kelly , 23, Berkeley, ca mpground was better than gto designated areal, cam-1,140 cari:lpsite ·ln the va11ey. i_trailers and campers only. -0lhe.r 1,200 square miles and Y-0u walk lo get there and car-! clifb rising 8 mile above Its Calif .• was thert, too -trying the hemes mosl people live per registraUon, numbered lKlt including the commerclaJ Another ls for tents and •Im tend to become centraliicd in ry yoor essenllals and shelter floor and 1he green-tinted t-0 get away from the trailers in." sites and no a 11 ow a b I e facilities operated by the modem camping gear. the valley." -bul ifs there. Merced River cutting through and civiliz.ations spre84 oul Last year about Z.3 million overflow. Yosemite-Park and CU1T)' Co. Hadley said most of the The sun and a:eneraUy warm "Think Feet" the roadside l its midd1e, Yosemite Valley is llllder YOSl!mite Falla. aod persons entered the park. ~J There is a :ZO.mimlte parking The ttmainder of the park's \P.;ll.,.~ problems are direcily temperatures cf the western signs may read soon. a one of the nation's most con-1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ..... ,~~~~~~~--'-~--'-'--~~~~~~~--''--~--''---'-.:_~~~~~~'--~-'-~~~~~~~~~--=-~~~~~~~~~ gested outdoor hot.eJs. There are no reservations, though, tild bartering for a cholce campsite can be ruthless. Elbow TOOm is at a pr$Dium, Clotheslines may ·be all that separates · e> n e campsite from another. Persons seeking a weekend of 'SOiitude in a lD(ll\flt.ain sanctuary a\'tay from urban centers -·Ille poOutioo, noise and cong~on -find lbemse1ves m lhe middle of what tbey sought to leave behind. Traffic jams are frequent. Hit.ch:hlkers line the tw~lane roadways. When the campfiret are lighted at night, a thick haze settles over the valley, smelling of barbecue briquet.s. ·xm:BEN CORTROL I ALL-JLUMIIUM SCBEEJr DOORS ' I ! l • • • • • ' • On weekends the "Valley Campgrounds Full" signs go up on Friday evenings. CEHTER 2997 ' .. The signs went up three days before. tbe Memorial Day .weekend as 37 ,000 jammed the park. They went up before the Fourth of July weekend when 44,100 persons converged here and an estimated 500 "bippie- like " yooths collided with Rangers in the w o r s t disturbance ever to erupt in the serene valley. About 120 pel'30ns were ar- rested. Ten were ~nspitalized with minor injuries. Tourists often tote trailers compete with television sets, tents or sleeping bags as they mass in the valley. "'Jbe demand is such we can·t meet it," said Park Supt. Lawrence C. Had I e y . "Callf-0rnians, who comprise about as percent of the visitors, tend to go to the out- doors to 'do their thing.' All we can do is try to meet the demand in the best quality way we can." Restrict.ion of all automobile lraific in the eastern end or the valley and implementing of a public transit system for campers and s.i.gbtseers was announced Ju1y 9. Overnight fees at public campgrounds, as high as $3 a night at each valley camping site, were begun in mid-June. A $2-a-day per vehicle entrance fee is in effect. Mr. and Mrs. Don Sweet of Medf-0rd, Ore., tried to camp in the valley on a recent weekeod. They were turned away. They finally found a campsite on a Sunday after camping in the high country "where things were real quiet.'' "We noticed a Jot of hippies around here," said Sweet, leaning on a tent trailer. "Jusl School Funds To Be Used For Clothll1g WASHINGTON iAP l Federal education money can be spent to clothe needy school chiklren but it is up t-0 the states to deckie whetber payments should go dirertly to parents, says an F.clucatioD Department official. Following a noisy tw1>-hour session during whidl welfare· rights representatives ptessed their demands for direct payments, Richard L. Fairley said Tue9day the law allows funds for clothing u n d er circwnatances "where t h e s e clothes are needed." But Fairley. acting director ol the department's com· pensatory education division, added that federal officials "'will leave the criteria up t-0 the states" on the method ol paymlOlt. At issue is a move by a welflft rig!Xs group j n Providence, R.I.. for a clothing allowonce ol $41 per child for 2,000 children. ,,,. gra:rp wan!I IUCh education aid -to be made dn.ctly to Ille pamita. The lederal money t • di.llrtbuted to the states for use Ill sd>ool districts wlllch produco legally acceptable progranu aimed af helping "°"''""' educationally de!>ri•· od child ..... Fairley bas advised the atate educaticm off.idll1, who must detertnfne w b e th e r clothh• is a ~ty n<od. that llUdl ""'1<09 must be lhowa lo be an llltegr.il pal( ol • CCllllpreiltlllf .. pro- gram dalcned to meot needs ,..... . "'~.;.!lie.,... - nol lln\ltod only lo tlie children or f1m.lllc:I oa wetfart. You CCU1loMcllitino111omingo and ha•• o d••l witb slidb;ig dnrwer. lllO!lmUi.•cmd receipt IQCk wilb lighL and book I.bell. All colar coordinated cmd smart. Walnut cmd. whit., BAB·B·Q WAGOlf 711 6Xl5-n; BABMOO FENCING 197 ROLL Nan.ca u.~ ... bxkg1otUJd Jor (I HGwailml Of Orim~ land..,..ing'. Qr ju• pri~ H ya. Wlml: tt. WU. 1 .. u1d. ID-FOOT FOLDING FENCE Jt'• U tDc• hWh to-..., the littl1 doggies owar lroai your plcuat.&. It i1 eQCID:leled white IO you dca0t !tip o.w 11 lD the dim ligb!, and for uv.der • buek. ri'1 your1. ('~~· --u SAWHORSE BRACKm ··~AIR Jual cut up eoi:a• •crap 2x41 oad pul the•• on. Mab a aawhor•• or l\Collolding at jglt th• right height, Very ba.ody for obHr<"iv.g th• lady •unbolhw out door (but wh1a your wife talchn youJ SCOTT'S SUPER TURF BUD.DER Y•1. lf1 tr~•· we do11'1 ha•• the only N.ipply in the c:ov.v.try. bi1t we do hov• a tu.II garden •upply •hop in depth. ao you don't bc:\Y• to ruv. all ewer looking tw lb• re1t ol lb• 1tull. 1.00 OFF REG. 9.!IS 8'5 BIKE TIRE PUMP Yo11o no..-"' of !kilt lf\lfl ii lh~aed to IOYI tim9. Io-4.ad ol carting the kid down to th• ..,.1c: • .tu1Jon. let hhn fbr: it hlln .. 11. wh-d id It _,., .. CIOd c•tt.u• .. 5o Ill• monia:;1 lk""1 DEMONSTRATION ll to 4 cia.&TURDAT. AUGUST 15. th~ Scotti meo. will be at our ltor9I to 1bo1' you bow to u .. a spteader the belt wiry. IH• may-Ibo• VDU wboJ to pul thrwgh 11). FR EE CALIBRATION lri"!J your Sc.on11pr-.od1t In for calibration « cuk the Scotti moo lor o f'REE CalibalOf aod check your cnrn, FREE SPREADER f.dcb of our 1tor11 Will gi'f"• UWOT a Scott• No, 35 Sp!Wlder to the pw- wbo tradn ill the IDOSI rid.k:ulou1 and originol spr-.oder. (Lo:st year ll wal 011 aid golf bog.) Wltmen ID be a.nnounc:ed ha next w .. k'• od. NAME----------- &lltlftes5 -----·-- 3 BAR SCREEN DOOR 6" MALIBU ANODIZED DOOR 11" ALL COMPLETE WITH HARDWARE' MEXICAN PICTURE FRAMES 8 x 10 g x 12 12 x 16 2" 3" 3" Wed~ Ealgqe .outh ol th• border and in1tracted hlttl k> get to the 90!.lre•. W• bdy right. lo ..U right.1.offly lnmi.es lor les1 thoo you'd expect lo pay. NYLON SHAG 497 ~TK YD. MATCHING CARPET TILE 67' 12Xl2 This ls a "'av' ol ~lbtg loog o•erdv.e. Wb, b.i.y extra: .qv.a:re yan:l1 when you 11..ct .civ.are Ifft to !ill in. Tlle mn:h .. the roll c:mpet. ht Y"f bt~llng colon. fOOJD bm;:bd. DO pad needed. 8-FOOT TURNED POSTS 911 tt1N 11 a way ol 111oking v.ew li.Ug arl'<J• without the major coil ol 10lid wallL Point or 1tain lo mu it and you0 •• got loob going ior your home. FREE CLASSES WEDNESDAY EVENINGS iv. th• LA MIRADA COMMUKITY ROOM. The expert• will be th1r1 to •how fOU bow to do ii better and aUordably. Door pt\ .... refrfthmerita. lib a11 ..-.ning out. Au!Pltl It -.. How to Tab Cari ol Your LlfWn and Gardea" by Ortho lon11. Auguat 26 -"How to Cool Your Home Without Going To th• Coit of Air Cov.dlHoning" ~1"pltmb1r 2 -'"How To lutall a Garbage Dl.po1er" -by Amllriccm Stcuadord. CIRCULAR SAW BLADES 97c EA. Almost tor the cost of lhcrrpening a dull old blod•. Cheaper "1-i yw think of going to the lhcnpen.r nric:e. Cbob of ltylN. VIRYL RUG RUINER 77c LIN. Fi. Thick beer.,-d.,.ty 1tvJL la•e.i«L with liUle plo1tlc: 1 .. th that bold It In place on the COl'P•t. {Ain't gonna hcJYe no J1lo:1Uc: thing c;b1wlng can my corpel, nci slrff Bob!) ( l ., I r Down the Mission Trail Road Work OK'd For Capistrano SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Tl!O City Counc:U has approved the formaUoo of an improvement district within the city along Camino Capistrano from MWioo Street north about 1300 feet. The district, formed uader the p~ visions of the 1911 Act, was requested by two-tbirds of the property owners for the west side of the b'ighway. 'I1le city's supervisor of slreel.s, T. J. )..feadows, will administer the pro- ceedings with Jack Kubota, who was ap- poiAl.ed engineer of work by the council. Property owners on the east side of the hlghway, the Capistrano Unified School District and the Catholic Church, will be approached to see if they will participate Jn the agreement. e Scfaool Taxes Cut SADLLEBACK VALLEY -Property owners ln the Tustin Uaion Higlt School District wiU have an eight cent tax reduction this year. Trustees of the district recentty ap- proved the lax reducUon, lowering it 01e cent more than they had expected. The rate was lowered the first seven cents because of iacreased funds through tbe higher assessed valuation. Tre ad· diUonal cent decrease was passed when the board learned they would receive an additioaal $37,000 from over impounded agricultural reserve tu funds. The district's total budget is $8,98%,31%. :e Feaace ltle11dl11g Silt MISSION VIEJO -The San Joaquin Elementary School will be "mending its fences" before any accidents occur at two eleme1tary schools. Both Aegean Hills School (which Is currently under construction) and Linda Vista School will be fenced where there are steep slopes either above or below a playgrouod. Members of the board of trustees ap- proved the fence installation for safety reasons. e. Snell Reslgaas Post MISSION VIEJO -Perry Snell , who has been active in Teen CeAter organiza~ lion since its inception, bas resigned as a member of. the board of directors. He will remain on the board until the Mission Viejo Homeowners Association elect a replacement. sen, who ~ one of the 1n5Ugaton of , the Teen Center, has said rtasons of health and business compelled him to resign. e Slgaas a Hazard ? SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO-A possible traffic hazard caused by too many no parkJng signs is being investigated by the city sta ff. Dave Weeks, representing l n c a Plastics brought a petition to the City Council Monday protesting the no parking signs in the iodustrial park adjacent to tile Capistrano Airport. Councihnan Ed Chermak told We6! that the signs were posted along the streets in the park to avoid a traffic hazard in the first place, since the ,lreets do not have curbs and gutters. Mayor Tony Forster conceded however that :it might be possible to have "too mucli of a gooc! thing.'' Entomologist, 11, Given His Oivn Lab, Equipment By PAMELA HALLAN ot ttl• 01llJ l"li.t t i.ti San Juan Capistrano's budding en- tomologist, Robert Alien, won't have to gtore tarantulas in his mother's freezer anymore. 1be 11-year..old son or 1'-tr. and Mrs. Charles Allen has been given a laboratory and equipment to develop his ta1ent by the Shennan Foundation's Experimental Center in Dana Point. "What we 're doing is enlarging our lab i;o he'll have working space and providing him with equipment and specimens for his study project.!," said Ed Migge1 the center's director. "He'll be raising insects for us to u!e in our pesticide research and he'll be work- ing wilh doctors who are conducting cancer research," be continued. Robert, who has been gathering and rai11lng insects since he learned to read. has devel()ped his interest with his parents' encouragement. He bad been collecting and labeling species on his own and doesn't plan to confine bis wurk to the experimental center. In addition to his new projecta, he will conunue his job as a .Re9earcb A.s8ociate for the University of Ttrollto'1 Monarch Butterfly Program. lils work involves labeling and recording au monarchs he &ighl!. But his primary interest will be in h11 new aurrounding!J, and, although he'll have a shiny new lab lo v.'Ort in, be stlll plans to keep his family's garage full of specimens. "I'm collecting tarantulas right now," Mid Robert. 0 1f you see any, let me know." frldiy, A119111t 14, 1470 s DAIL V PILOT 3 .Cre•iing Dana Chal.!ader-:- lliirbors Chi.cf Describes WhaU~g Village Theme A whalilig village atmos~ with The only tljns aJlowed on windows will modern ace!!S30riea WU de SC f ib ea be gold leaf lttterlng, limlted lo 144 Wednesday as the ardlitectural and square tnche11 permitting only store landscape theme of the new Dana name, boura of business, emergency Harbor. telephone numbers and ADT sticker. ;'We want lo create a distinct Dana Percenlages of land to be P.lndacaped r'olnt character," County Dlrecklr of on each pareel ate BJ>e'<ified In the 1-larbors Beaches and Parks Kenneth arthlteclural and Jandacaplng re!lrlc· Sampson said in an appearance before tlons. They vary from five to 30 percent the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com-of the lot. 1nerce. Trees are an lnlegral part of the lleavy, hewn beams or wood which will waterfront design and a.re required on wealher naturally will be the predominant every harbor parcel. A list of 116 types construclioo materiab, combined with has been approved. rock and brick and other natural •J> A single tree will be selected as the pearing component.!, Sampoon said. dominant type. Placement of the trees of "The architectural review board ls re-this lype will be specified throughout the quiring structures that renect an atmos-harbor to create a unity of lheme, •• l ' phere or \\'armth, 1rJormality and hos-Sampson said. pitality." An arcade of hewn beams and redwood .. To evoke the memory of the days of the trellis with vines will be a unifying Yankee sailing ships, lhe review board ft'atures to extend through the commer- will require every building to feature cial and public areas. rougti. rugged, natural materials with a The greenbelt walkway strips "·ere touch of hand craftsmanstlip. described by Sampson as "places where Sl.i.lcco \\'ill be limited to 20 pel'Cent of oAILY l"•LOT 1t•tf r11o,. lk II paint or i·ust the extl'rior wall surface. people can wa · Of s • or .. Modern materials will be sulxlued and DESCRIBES DANA THEME look at the view." rest rained, but the advertising and di.rec· County Harbor Chief S1mp5on Sampson talked or park and beactl tional signs will be 1970 style -translu-development of Orange County, and OAIL l ~ILQl l"hth ~-Jll*'" V1fl1ru '!Hissed by That Much' cenl plastic, uniform in their "Columbus'' history of the Dana Harbor project, f>ut Mrs. Win Ayers of San Clemente signale: her opponent d uring recent type race and their colors of harbor blue, tlne-root, tt).inches high acrtlss the front his primary theme waa ~esthelic controls lawn bowling match at San Lujs Rey Park. :rlembers of city's Adult while and black. or the building. in the harbor. Recreation Association bowl three afternoons a week on the 'green.' Placement of the signs is also stan-There is also an optional choice or .. We have tried to establish criteria which actually is specially compacted soil instead of grass. New bowl-dardized: one sign for each structure not backlighted individual letters an d which would make this harbor the mOllt ers are welcome and can sign up at city Parks and Recreation Office. more than 12-feet, three-inches long and graphics, Sampson explained. beautiful of them alL" 1__:_ _ ___:_;____:____:_::.:.:..:...___.:.:=.::::::...::..:::::...::.::..:::..:::=-.::::::...=.::_:::.:::::::::...:::::::::::...::::::..:::::::.. __ _:::::::::.. ____ ~~ Marines Explain Big Booms From Camp Pendleton Business is booming at C a m p Pendleton. Uterally. And spokesmen for ihe huge military base which is the ~ne this week of training for 20,000 Marine reservists, issued a public explanation for all the noise wafting inlo San Clemente from the installation. The rhythmic; booms come from as many as 70 separate firing ranges in use at once, spokesmen said today. The ranges, filled to capacity with the largest colleeUoo of Marine Reserve personnel in base history, a.re the sites for practice with everything from amall arms to bombs. Arxl. much of the artillery being used, they added, ts onJy fired during the reserve training cycle. Jt'1 a once-a·yur chance to get an the units together fur practice sessions. The booms will subside somewhat with the start Monday tTioming of a huge helicopter and amphibious assault on the base's beadles by the reaervists, Marine spokesmen claimed. Scientists Urge Congress to Fund Oil Spill Researcl1 WASIUNGTON (UPI ) -Congress was ~ed today to earmark a part o( the revenues l'ecf:ived from offshore oil pro-- dud.ion for research on oil spills. The recommendation came from scien- tists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Mass., in testimony before the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly Subcommit.tee. In calling for additional research, the oceanographers said the only currently effective answer to oil spills was preven· tion or an immedjate cleanup. But they said adequate lecltnology for cleaning flil spills does not exist and cur- rent counter measures do more harm than good. Dr. Max Blumer, a Swi!s-born and educated senior scientist at the in- stitution, said some counter measures simply "push the oil Into the marine en- vironment" and kill marine life all the way to the bottom or the sea. "l wish to advise strongly against the use of detergents, dispersants and sinking agents," Blumer sakl.. Both Blumer and Dr. John M. Hunt, chairman of the department of chemistry at Woods Hole, called for .. a certain percentage" of the revenues to be used in research work. Hunt said the funds could provide for teams to make advance studies flf offshore areas to be explored for flil and to be immediately available when oil :splJls occur. Howard L. Sanders, a binlogist, said the teams of scientists should be organiz- ed to speed oil spills in the same manner as federal aviation officials respond to a major air accident. The scientists repealed earlier warn· logs that seafood from oil-polluted areu could be • public beallh ho.wd. Bfumer said there was danger cancer- causing chemicals in oil could be passed on lo people through ...tood. "Even animals that ~e not directly ex~ to a spill can become polluted by eating contaminated anlmala," he sakt. "This and the p~ence of cancer-causing chemicals in flil pollution Implies that the marileUng and eating of fish and aheliflah ff'Om polluted area11 m•y constitute a public beallh bazard." II Only Ch let dealerS are having a clean-up on hnpalas. l.Ol!Jllt priced fulosla CGIMl.'llble, You·11 never have a belier chance to save money on the cars that are already lowest priced of the ir kind . So if you've been waiting !or an opportunity to buck the inflationary· trend, save yourself plenty of money now on Impala, world's most popular car •. Clearance savings now. You're on· ·ngs Ti111e~ I .. . ' .. . ·' ' ----~-£ ' I •• .:.c I .... _,, ,f -ft .il"'i#' v::rs I DAILY PILOT 'Ibo Woman'• Uberalion Front could dalm another milestone. l!'onner schoolgirl tennis flash L'y M AbbM, now Mr1. Mlch••I Rolley, 21, was named coach of the ~rslty tennis teem Wednesday at SI. Mary'• College, Moraga, Calif. AlhleUc D!Nctor Don McKll llp llaid be believed St. Mary's would be the only NCAA school with a Woman coachin& a men 's team. • TM Cot1ft1Zf11, England COKR- cU Ml changed it.s mind about ofJtring fret bus travel to eld- . erly peniioners and decided to keep the one penny special fart 'a council spoksman aald ft had recettled scorei of an(lrtl Utters from elderly f'"esidents imiatfng °" paying tMir own way. Ht said a poU of old peoplt1' dub1 confirmed they did not want lrtt trootL • Actress Yvette Mimieu.x, active-in tbildlife con.!ervation, cuddles Bengal tiger and ;oguar cubs at the LOI An· gele1 Zoo. She is campaigning to in· ~lude the two species in the ?li!KI ~to tftat bans importation of petti of a ~trtai1i number of wild animGlJ. • Gillingham, England police are looking into golfers' complaints that a brown mongrel dog harasses them on the 13th green of the Gill· ingham Golf Club. A club spokes· man said the dog runs out of the bushes, bites players on the seat oC ttleir -pants and disappears. He said eight players, including two women have been bitten in the past 10 days $lld required shots. "The dog s_eems to select bis target very c:;arefully," he said. • Bournemoutli, England polict have warned beachgoers to be· wcrt of a pang of thieves who specialize in stealing trouser,. whilt their owners are tn the water "thev don't want tht clothe&, '1 a police spoke&man said. "Bui they toke thein to get the moneu inside." • Red China's Premier Chou En-lai say1 the future belongs to the youni people of today's world and and it doesn't necessarily mean making and remaking the revolu· tion. "The revolutionary struggle is a personal struggle," Chou was quoted as saying in an interview in the newsaper France-Soir. "One can commit errors. change and progress. The important thing Is to find Ute right road, the happy med· ium.." FflNJ, Auoust 14, 1970 _JS,000 to Leave U.S. Cuts Troops In Saigon Area SAJGO~ (AP) -American r ..... In the Salgnn mUILary rti!on are btlng cut by about IJ,GOO men Q the reau!t of a mojot rtShufflln& of allied unlll and the transfer of a lar&e base to the Vlet.- nameae, omctat IOUrCel diaC.loled today. The sources said two Ml brigades p!111 other unils would be lhlpped home lrom Saigon and the 11 IOll?OWICfing provlncu of the 3rd Military Region. Meo who hive not completed most of their 12-monlh toun in Vietnam will be transferred to other unit.s. Security regulaUOM prohibit pubUca- tion of the units to be sent batk to the Uolted Stites untll the U.S. command announces them . Elsewhert 1n the war- Small ambush actloD! and mopping up operationa were reported aJons the northern coast where U.S. and South Vietnamese forces claimed they engaged more than 300 North Vietnamese in fighting Wednesday and Thursday. One harassing actk>n waa nported in Cambodia. Military spoke6men in Phnom Ptoh said the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese apparently were occupied with integrating newly arrived reln- forcemenla . Gen. Creiahton W. Abrams: returned from convalescent leave with his family in Thall.and and resumed his duties u commander of U.S. forces In Vietnam • His gall bladder was removed in Japan July 3. Jn the major reshufne o( allied forces In the Saigon region, all American com- bat units except. one brigade have been pulled back from the Cambodian border. Most of them havt been moved to the northeast and east of Salgoo, inland from the South China Sea. South Vietnamese forces have replaced the Americans along lbe border west and northwest of Saigon to bMx:k North Viet- namese infiltrators, and the Tay Ninh baae camp 55 miles northwest of the capital has been turned over to the South Vietnamese 18th Infantry Division. Only a few hundred U.S. support troops re- main at Tay Ninh, which once was the baa for two American brigades. While the South Vietnamtse army car. ries out the blocking role in and along the Boy, 10, Spends 5 Days in Wilds, T ells His Story LAS VEGAS, N.M. (UPI) -A:n Albu- querque youth found \n rugged mountains told his story today from a hosplt.al bed. Miles to the sou.lb. authoritits searehed for a Teus boy lost for seven days in cold forest near Ruldoao, N .M. The nightmare for 10-year-old Jot Grady of Albuquerque ended 'Thursday when he was found aft.er five days in the: Santa Fe National Forest near here by a man he never knew. In the Lincoln National Forest 125 mlles southwest of here. l~year-okl Leslie Hamrick ol Odessa, Tex., was still lost. A party of 2SO was making a search. Grady was found about two miles from where he wandered away from com· panions while on a hike last Sunday. "I slept all the time/' he said. "l saw a rabbit and lots or other animals. 1 was scared. When l was sleeping, 1 dreamed a bear was ;otng to 1et me." Grady, sunburned from exposure to fivt days of sun and his arms scratched from the underbrush. said he once dreamed of walking lo Las Vegas and "getting a bunch of jobs to take a bus home to Albuq uerque." He said he Jost his boots last Monday when he was sleeping. "They rolled down a hill. 1 spent most or the next day look- ing for them. It was fun, though ." He told how he went without water ex. cept when he stumbled across a high mountain alrtam. He said bt went w\thout food, howevtr. becaust he was afraid the berri~ would make him sick. frontier, Ult protectlon of the J.S mllUon per-Uvtog In villages and hamtell in the retM>n Js ualgned to the mlliUamen of the Ten1torial Forces and People'• Stlf-Oefeose unilJ.. Industrial Output Shows Healthy Rise W ASHJNGTON (UPI) -The Ni>oo ad- mlnlatraUon aay1 there is some tvldroce to lndlcatt a rtvival may be taking place in the "atlon's sluggish buslneSI and in- d1Utrial activjty. Figures made public Thursday showed that illduatrial production -one or th! key gqes of the ecooomy -registered an incre1se in July after a dtcllne ot three ~lhs, and thal persoMl income or Americans also rose. In adcUUon, re:viJed figures oo national out.put o( goods od services for the second quarter of the year showed .a larger gain than previous estlmal.es. On the other hand, the biggest federal deficit ror a single quarter since World War II was recorded during the April· June period, but officials said this was not unexpected due to increases ia Social Security and big federal employe pay raises. Assistant Commerce Secretary Harotd Passer .said that quota was vlewed by aomt eamomlsta as the period when the economy was 11bottomtng out." ''The evide.ce JO far for July Indicates some k.Jnd of upturn is taking place ," Passer said. He added that while the statistics did not provide the billlia for caocrete conclusions, ''We can take e• courageme.nt we have seen the bottom" of the economic downturn. Industrial production rose 0.2 percent In July and iftCOITie of individuals in- creased $3.5 billion over J une. The Gross Nalio1al Product for the R · cond quarter was estimated at an annual rate of $9ft.l billion, up fl.l blDlon on an adjusted basis -with effect.a of inflation removed -from the first quarter. The previous tst.lmate was that tbe "real" rise over the Januaey.Marcll period wu $500 million. The .....,.,...1,..,.,ded a •1u bl!Uoa dellcll In opeod)OI o•tr !ftcomt IA the ,.. cond cjliat1B, wllb •a blDlon afH blamed to -· In Sodil 8ec:llril)' and govermnait employe 1>11· Jackson Deaths Blamed on Bias JACKSON, Mill, (AP) -The head ol President Nixon's Q:imm.lufon m cam- pus Unrest aays racism wu Involved in the police IUsillado at Jacillon Sllte College when two black youtM were kill- ed. William W. Scranton, former governor 0( Pennsylvania and com· mission chairman, summed up his views aft.tr a three-day hearing on the May 14 shooUng at the predominantly NeifO col- lege. ··1 think It's very clear that racism is the major problem involved in tbe Jackson Slate incident," be said. "I don"t mean to inslooatt that thtre is oo racism anywhere tlse • , • but It seems lo ht outstandingly so here, from the testimony we bave beard," Scranton ad· ded. Some others on the nlne-membtr com- mission wtre. outspokenly critical of the police volley. which sent some 250 rifle and shotgun rounds into a girls' dormitory. Hot Spell Grips W. Coast Mos t of Nation Enjoys W ar1n , Surnmer Weather c ... , .. Molli'/' t1lr IMl'f. Llefll •1rl1•t. wln111 11191!1 ..ci "'°'"1"' """"' --"" -•trlv • 10 ts •110!1 1n '"''-' .... ., tNI Stiwe.1, Hi.II ,_., 61. CMtttl """-'"'" .. ,... ,,._ ., .. '" '""fllf "'"'"'',.. ,_ "'-• , 19 .. W1tw '-1~ n. S11.., ltfoo11, Tide• fllllDo\Y ~ Iii.II •.• 7 •1.111. •·' *.-d low . 1.• 1.m. 1..1 SATUllOAY """' "1"'. .. .. '• f:•1m, •I "~~ ..•.••.•..•. )-1,m. •IJ SecllMI lllt~ .•••••..•• 1:•11.m. 1.0 s~ iow 1~1111.m. '·o s~11 •II• 1:1• '·"'· 1111 '''1 •.m, Mooll 1u .. l :H 11.m. kh Ji•I 1.m, Al~119!'­ An<lltort•• ""'"'' 8 1WMl"di: .. , .. <>-(l11cl ..... !I Cl-'•"' °"'m Dtlrolt l!unll• Fort W..-111 ·-··--· ... KtMtl CllY L11 'IM11 l .. ...,,,.." Ml11T1I • ...cf! Mii"""'*" Ml.,.. ... t. ... .. Or1NM N9""Y~ Otklol!llf ....... "'"° •oti'" f'hlltftl~ PJIUM'M --~ ......... ...... ·-..... -$1, Loul1 Sill Ulrf CllY 11 .. 01.., SIPI l'r1Ml1(9 s ...... ..,,,.,, M.IHll ..... M WttlllMllfo Hll~ L ... ,rte- '> M ~ ~ " ~ .... .. .. " n ' u ,, .02 .. " .. ~ .. " .. " .. -IOI "2 .. " .. .. .. ~ 107 7' .. . -. " " .. " .. " " " n n " " .. .... " " .... "' . H .. "' .. '" . .. p .... " H . ~ ... l l 7• S1 .. " .., .. " " ~ ""'' ....... CAMP VISITOR Pat Tr ies SwHhhlrt Summer Camps Host F irst Lady In Maryland BAINBRIDGE, Md. (AP) -First Lady Pat Nixon admlred [reshly caugbt crabs and Bbook band! with wet ;wimmers on a tour of two swnmer camps for inner city children. "l hope they grow and grow -we need more of them," sht .said of the camps, run by BaJUmore and Wuhington recrea- tion departmenL!: for chfldren age 10.19 with the help of federal funds and an assbt from U.S. mlUtary personnel and their facilities. A 200-mile helicopter trip on a hot, sun- ny day Thursday, took Mra. Nixon to a day camp at the Bainbridge U.S. Naval TratnJng Center where every week 600 Baltimore city youngsters get a chance to come to camp every day to swim in the Navy's Olymplc-slze pool and enjoy fun, games and two meals a day. The trip also Included the DiJtrict or Columbia Recrealioo camp at Cornfield Harbor, when! 120 dlfferenl Washingt® )"OUngatera go every week for a taste ol camping and tenll llooplde the Potomac river. Mn. Nixon enthuslastically greeted acoies of :youngsters, ate in the messhall With tbem and even tried her hand at tiammering a nail at a lent.site undtr ron· atruclion. "You need a bigger hammer because you're missing all I.he time," one camper observed. La.tu she went to the water's tdge to a spot where youogater1 were crabbing. Sht told them "crabs are my favorite seafood." After the day's tour Mn. Nixon :said abe wu moat impressed with "the happy children" 1he met. She d e c l a re d , ''Anything can be accomplished if we work together." •·1 came beta~ I'm concerned for those. angels,'' said Mrs. Ni1on. Relat ions Resumed VATICAN CITY (UPI) -The Vatican announced today It is re~slablishing full diplomatic relaUons with YIJgoslavia, the first such move with any Communist regbne in East Europe. • No Danger gee,. • Sci~ntist Says > - • Gas ~D~mp Safe WASHINGTON (uPl) -· A Nav1 oceaJIOiflpller to14 a l«lel'l!,Judge today that he could aee no danger to either hwnan or marine lite from dumplDg of nerve 1as "cofflnl" in the Atlantlc eul of Cape Kennedy, Fla. 'the witne.u at a burlng before U.S. District Court Judie Juoe L. Green on a JegaJ move to block the dl5posal wu Dr. Note Found , Hints M urde1· .of Diplomat MONTEVIDEO, Unwuay (AP) -The Uruguayan government tod•y studied an unauthenticated message found 'ln • Buen0s A1rt3 cafe which indicated the Tupamaro guerrillas might murder the , Brulllan diplomat they ltidnaped. The message riiade DO mention of American agronomist Claude L. Fly, who WU kld- naped last Friday. Officials in Mcmtevideo would not con- firm the a1JtbenUcity ortbe not! found in the Argentint capital 150 miles up the Plate e.stuary. Bul it contained language similar to that used ln 10 previoua messages from the urban Tupam1ros, and it was delivered in the same maMer -left in the rest room of a cafe. Tht communique said Dan A. Mitriooe, the k.Jdnaped American police adviser whose body WU found Monday, had been sentenced to death for "collaboratlng with the forces of repression.." It s.aid the process of "revolutionary Justice" for Brazilian Consul Aloysio Mares Dias Gomide, 41, could be halted if the Uruguayan government released about 150 p(isoners demanded as ransom by the Tupamaros. An tarller message, relayed to autboriUes Tuesday, said Dlu Gomide and Fly, a ~yW-old consultant working for the AgricuJture Mini!try, both were in good health and had not been senttnced yet. The later note said tht Brai!H1n represented "one of the bloodiest cfic.. tator!.hlps in Amer'ica, whose tortures and assassinations go to such limits that they have been denounced by the jUSUce · commission of the Uhited Nations." The nott aa.14 the 4ovemment bean "total and absolute respcos.ibillty" for Mltrione·s murder. 'lbe govennent. bu r.rusec1 to bargain w1t11 the ruerr111u, maintaining tk.priaoners whole rtleue is demanded aiO crimtMlt rather than pollllcal dellltMa. Some 12,000 police and soldlen con- tinued their searCti ·of tbe Uruiuayan capital for tr~ ot the: kidnapen and their two capU•ea. About ao suapecta wert rounded up TblB"lday: 1be ktd- napers have warned that if their hiding place is discovered. both their hostages will be killed immediately. Torture Slaying Jury Deliberates ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) -A jury of middle-aged men and women today begins deliberating the fate or John Norman Collins, th! formtr student charged with torturing and kUJing a coed. Washtenaw <:ounty Circ:Wt Court Jud&;t John W. Conlin WU to i.n.!truct the seve.'l womtn and seven men ln th! law UtiJ morning. Two of them will be ellmlnattd by lot. For a guilty verdict, the rt· mainder must deicde unanimoll!lly they believe C.Olllns killed Karen S u e Reineman ih his uncle's basement mlll't than a year ago. eonrad Hugo Cbeek, head ol ·the Cbemlcal Ocwlograpjly Branch ol the Naval R.e&rtb Laboratory. T"IUylng In support ol the Army's p!«n to d!unP the 418 gas "oolfina" In thrte-mne.deep water, Oleet described the area· liU mllu east ct the Florida com u "quite safe, except for U\Y organilma in the Immediate victnlty ol tbt point of release of the gall." He said the marine populaUOn there wu very small. A point tllal cJ.arly dtsturiled JUdge Green Thursday-the possible danger if the gas n>ektt.t exploded from the deep su prwure whM they reached bottom -WU rai!ed with Cheek. He re3ponded: "There b no danger occurring at the bottom, and a bubble rising to the top;• he said. He adt'.id, "I doubt that any bubble (from a U]lloslon) would ta.st more than a fraction of a second." He eiplained that he felt water pressure would sfille any bubble quickly. JI the 'vats exploded or were crushed by the water prtSSW'e, Cheek testified, the action ol the salt water would render the gu harmless. One of the 418 "cofflm'' containS a type known as VX gu, even more letbal than the other -known u GB. It would take somewhat longer for the VX to be dissipated, Cheek said. "Within two week.!, we wouldn't have to worry about the GB at all," he said. "It would all be fO!le ." "What about the VX?''. Judge Grten asked him. "If you release it slowly enough, It will not have any measureable ecologlcal tf• fed," Cheek replied. "U there ill an ex· plosion, 1 would prefer it at 16,000 feet, becaUM the amount of water to be af. fected would be lw, and tile blologiul popuJalion smaller." An Army attorney told the judge he sensed a concern on her part over ael~· tlon of the di!pogal site. "That is cor. reet." the sliver-haired jurist com· mented. The lawyer then asked Cheek if he felt there was any danger to human beings at the site when the gu wu dumped "Not that I can see." he aaid, adding that any bubble would rist very lltUe before being stifled from tht preeurt. Senate Override Of School Bill Veto Expected • WASHINGTON (AP)-The Senate Is ex. pected to follow the ltad ol the House. and override President Nixon's veto of a ft.4 billion education bill. It would be NiloO.'• second such defeat this year. The. Sena.ti! vott ls expected Tuesd.41 or Wednetday. The HOUie overrode the veto Thursday by a margin of 289-11•, 20 votu mort than the nectssary two-thirds m .. jority. But in a history-making day ol con- sidering two presi<mltial velO!:a, the House sustained Nlron's rejection ol an omnibus $18 billion appropriatJtlns bllJ carrying funds for housing, vtlerans, the space a1ency and a score of other pr~ grams. ne vote on that one was 203-19$, a ma-- jorlty bill f.I short of two-lllinls. The second House veto tnded any cha.nee for the omnibus measure and made II nece3sary for the Appropriations Committees to go to work to draft an- other one . Starvit1g IGd s' Mom Held There Is some sentiment at the C1pitol for deeper cuts in the space program to preserve the enra' funds provided in the original bill for vtlerans and for IUCh programs as urban renewal. Republican leaders noted the Senatt passed the bill 88-0 in agreeing privately with Democratic Leader Mlke Mamfitld that the measure would be en1cted into Jaw ovu Nixon's objectk>ns. DETROIT (UPI) -A pregnant mother of 12 \1'as arrested Thursday after nine of htr children were found auffering from malnutrition. Police arrested Mn. Bessie Carter, 37, for investigation of cruelty lo children following an investtiaUon started when her 90n, 'fyrormt, I, was found un- conscious at home. The women·s division said his 7-year· old sister, Regina. apparently was in a stupor from hunger. Police said both had· welts over much of their bocties and may have been beaten. Tyronne wel&bed only 25 pOund! whtn he wu admitted to the hospital a.nd Regina Z-1 pounds, police: said. After me arrest, five other children wert treated for malnutrition and taken 11\to protecUve care. Women's division Sgt. Janice Tuttle uid the other children were "all In abeut the same condition." The others were An- nie. 14, Alice, 12, 'J'bema, 10, Sandra, 5, Yvette, 4, Diane, 18 months and Matthew, 9 months. The two younaeat remained In tile hospllll. Sgt. Tuttle said the other chUdren were with their ara.ndmotber. Nixcn objected to the bill because ll ex· ceeded budget recommendaUom by f$41 mil lion. The bulk of th! lnereasu an f« two programs which the Senate Jong bu 1up. ported. One is the Elementary and Secondary .Educatkll'I: Ad deii.IMCI to improve educaUOO for children from p o o r famlllet. The other b the impacted arw program which provides federal iz'&ntl for tcbool districts ovtrerowded becaue ol nearby flderol lnstallatlons. Cash Counsels Con Singer's Wi fe Gives Women Words of Ad vice ATLANTA (UPI) -Johnny Cash came to AUanta'a Municipal Auditorium Thurs· day to sing before 700 convicts, each about to be released In a new st.at&- bought blue suit with $25 l" b1a: pock.ell. Berore be was through, lhe country musJc atar and hll $lnging wife. June carter. offered words of acMce rot the several dou:n wivt.t sitting beside their inmate husbands. "To ma.Ice a good man and to kttp a good man, you have to have a good wom· .an," sald Cash. He called June onto the stagt as evidence of what he was talkln& about. Mias Carter, noshing a tootlly 1mUe, brought cheen from the priaonm by joining Cash In • llve1y rtnd.lllon ol ''Jackson,'' a sonc about gtWnc married "ID a fever hotttr than• pepper sprout." "Tell the wives what they need to know," Cash told bet. MisS C!artlr, a leading comedienne on the country music drcult helcn she mar· ried Caah. appeared rtludanl to talk serious. Cash urged her on. "II you· ever had hard Uma, your heart goea out to itben who had hon! limos," Mias Carter aald. "We've had some ha.rd tlm6 and 10me NM>r't limes. Jn fJct. John, didn't you have one of your abort Umaa with that ShertU Jon.a Iii"' dlf\I OVtr there?" Sile pointed to Sherill Ralph Janes of t.atayette, Ga .. who jall!:d Ca1b in 1M7 rar illegll polllUlon ol drugs. This - one of the rougher spoil In CUh'1 lonrUme hatUe with a pap pill habit that N111 Carter helped blm win. "We 're not foing to talk -that," said Cash. "If I can 1peak to the womtn," Mia Cartor went on, "I'd 111<1 to ttll them to 1pe1k t.lndly 1lway1. Be klnd. Be charitable. Scrtamlng won't help." She pall3<d. Cash whispered to her. "Yeah," she agrffd, "Kf1J3lng and hua· 11nr lielpa. n helpa a lot." ,---..-I • ~ 'High' on Life The 'Miss High on Life' beauty contest in New York's Bryant Park is unique to say the least - all the conteStants are ex-drug addicts. Nan Schwartz, Janice Bridson and Sharon Bennett (from left) were all winners. Doctors say singling one addict out for honors is counterproductive to the therapy they receive. Nixon Veto Hurting His Ecology Agency WASHINGTON (AP) President Nixon's veto of the $18 billion appropriations bill has left his own antipollution agency, known as the ''ad· ministration's environmental conscience," in fin an c ~a I straits. House a c t i o n sustaining Nixon 's veto Thursday added to the problems of the six· month-old Council of Environ· mental Quality. "Obviously, we're hanging by our teeth trying to keep up with our problems," council chairman Russell Train told a Senate committee. . Asked bow the council would fare lf it doesn't get the utra money contained in the ap- propriations bill, T r a i n replied, "lt would luve m in a dUflcult situation." It was bad enough before the veto, said Train, whose council is charged w i t h monitoring all federal pro- grams for their impact on the environment. His budget increase had been cut heavily by a Senate- House conference committee which worked out the final bill carrying money for Train's agency and several others. Thls action, Train sald, created "a very serious pro- blem for the council, not ooJy 1n meeting our legislaUve mandates, but al9o the ex- pectations of the public." Train had a $650,000 budget with a staff of 17 six months ago and it was almost totally oriented toward making the council's first report to the people on the environmenL Cigarettes Cut Years BERKELEY (UPI) -The life expectancy of middle-aged men has almost stopped going up because of cigarette smok· ing according to a report published Thu~ay , by the University of California . The treild toward longer and longer life expectancy for older men in countries where smoking i.! common has ended "abrupUy," according to the report. It said that while the life ex- pectancy of the newborn child has doubled in the past 150 years. the expected life ahead for an American man age 40 tncreased by less than two years between 1920 and 1966. The report was prepared by Samuel H. Preston, assistant prolesw ol demography. Cyclamates OK? WASlllNGTON (AP) -T!ie Food and Drllll .Admlnlstratioo ii expected today to reverse itl d.llpu.ted cleci!k>n of sit: moothl ago and bar \lie of eyclamates ln artlfic1ally ..... tened diet foods. Tbe FDA said there will be an announcement on the coo- troveraial sweetener a f t e r !Jtockmarket! c I o s e d this altemoon. Extension of the cyclllJllte restrictions to au food would have considerable economic impact.. Train wants only a small staff. However, ''a critical mass is involved, and under present fWlding we are not able to reach that critical mass," he said. So Train asked for a $1.5 million budget to expand hi.s stafr to 71. The oonference committee knocked it back to $1 million, leaving Train with 39 new staff members. But even this gain was wiped out with Nixon's veto. Train is back with h15 original $650,000. TV Spending Limit Date Splits .Parties ' WASJllNGTON (UPI) RepubUcans and Democrat& w..., bitterly at oddl today over whether a blll to curb radl<>televlaion !peDding In m a J o r pollUcal campaigns abould apply to this fall 's elec-- Uo111 or take e«ect in 1971. T!ie Issue went befcn the Hou.<e today and WU llCbeduJ. ed to be -Oil later by the Senate. The bill would apply to caJ> didate1 for praidtnt, vioe president, both houses of Congress, governor a n d lieutenant governor. It would Jimit radio-TV apendlng to seven cents per each vote casl In the last general dec:Uon - or !20,000 U that fliurt w"" higher. Spending In primaries would be rutricted to baH that allowed in general dee. tions • '!he Rtpubllcan!J, with more money available to spend in the fall campaign.! than the Democrats can muster, were holding out for the 1971 date. But the Democrats, with their 30Ud majorities in both houses ol Congnss, appeared likely to emerge tbe victors in their ..... to impose the fall date, The Senate originally Jl""'d _.__.._....,. .... Angela Davis Whereabouts A Mystery SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Just where is Angela Davis, ousted Coril.munist professor wanted for questioning in con- nection with a Marin County shootout that killed four men, one a superior court judge? Television station KNXT in Los Angeles said 'Illursday without giving Its sources that the Negress who had been fired for unprofessional co& duct by the University of callfornia had obtained a passport and fled to Canada. Since passports are not necessary for travel by U.S. citir.ens in Canada, tbe station sunnised she intended to move farther. In San Francisco, Assistant Attorney General Albert Har· ris Jr. said he didn't think Miss Davis had left the coun- try. "My main concern is that she be available to us for questioning," he added. District Attorney B r u c e Bales In Marin declared be was not buntlng for Miss Davis and merely wanted to try to learn from her how the gurui fr.II into the hands of a youth who smuggled them into rourt. the bill with a provision that It take effect 30 daye after passage. But the House passed it with the 1971 date. When the bill went before a Bouse-Senate conference com- mittee Thursday, the !!Ix._ Democratic members over- rode objections from the fout Republicans and put the Senate provision in the final bill. As an apparent aop to the Republicans, the Democrats also amended it to provide that any candidate who con- tracted with a rad.lo or television station as to rates prior to Aug. 12 would not be under any limitation this fall. But the Republicans refused to sign the conferen<:e r<port. One of them was Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, who is run- ning for re-election this fall. Re promised to fight the bill on the Senate Ooor. '"ll>ey're trying to pull a fast one," be said. "They're changing the ru1 .. In the mid· dle of the game." House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan expr..sed disappolnlm<nt at the conference committee ac- tion. Rep. Torbert H. MacDonald (0.Mass.), the author of the House bill, said, ''Thia: blll will stop candidates from buying elections and it 1 e e m s Bbortsigbted to me to make problems about H just becallH of the effecUve date." Little Bit of Orient With a backdrop of dilapidated dwellings, a Japanese mini-park for rest and meditation is dedicated as part of a beautification program in San Francisco. Plush Interior? WASHINGTON (UPI) -from Seattle, Wash. and paid metiiod or buying fUrnlture Government auditors report them f1 ,800 ofr their services. recommended by the designer was "clearly unauthorized'' In•·r1or Secretary Wal'·· J ~em 111,llOO for their servl-·. \C .....i • "1 ........ because the government did Hickel spent Dearly $40,000 in The GAO said other expend-not put out bid.1 or negotiate publlc funds to furnish his of· ltures included $27 ,000 for fur· cootract.s for the purchases. It flee in lavi.sh fashion -fn.. niture and furnishings and said the most expensive desk eluding a $1 ,795 desk and $4,600 for repairs and altera· in regular government use lions, for a total of "about costs $463 and the most cosUy $56.25-a·yard carpeting. $39.400." government carpet runs $9.63 The lntertor Department ad· The GAO said Hlckel's a square yard. milled it Wll!J true, but said,------:=---=:-::-::::-:--::=::-:---::-:C:::- the desk, carpet and other fuml.shings have since been placed in storage unW the matter is settled. It said Hickel now is using an old desk dating back: to the Franklto D. Jtoosevdt ad- mini.stration. Hickel, out of the country on a tour, sald be didn't know ez. actly how much anything cost but pledged to "ship It right back" If it can't be kept. The matter was di8closed Thunday by !Up. R. R. Gross (R·lowa), who made public an investigation by the General ACCOUDtlng Olfice (GAO), the congressional watchdog on federal speodlng. Gross said Hickel "flew in" desigMd . IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR COSTA MESA SEMI- ANNUAL SALE! SALE! SLACKS s100 With Purchas• Of On• At Rev. Price SALE! SUITS s1000 With,.Pu~h•M Of One At R91. Price SALE! SPORTCOATS s1000 With Purchase Of One At Reg. Price SALE! 2 PANTS SUITS sag~o THIS STOREWIDE SALE ENDS AUG. 28TH KINGS' CHARGE 646-4242 t I D&n,y PILO'r EDITOB'Lll PA.GE - - \ Traffic Is Very Real • A ooberlni note brielly entered lhe emotion-packed Paclllc Coast Fneway controversy lhlJ week in th• Newport Beacll CllY Cow>ci1 chamber. One CCM•n<ilman had the courage to remind bll col- l-that underlying all of lhU ....Won and talk 11 a baM, uncluuiging fact: Newport Beach bal very tough l:Nlfl< problems which are related to IOID• tou&h trafflc problems along the test of the Orante Cout. But the dls<U5•lon alJo reflected Newport'• new at. Utudo that a coastal freeway Is no part of a solution to that city's WJ!que and difficult lraffic problems -that the freeway ls sometl>lng super!mpoaed on Newport for the benefit of outSiders. Tile tact Is no di)' llong the route can beglll to solve Its traffic problems on its own, not without the help of some substantially enlarged. ~ highway routes in their cities -whether they be called freeways or expressways or whatever; And the further tai:t Is that specific freeway route locations and construction plans are essenUll for ~y, • mOO!lingful city plaMing In each of lhe cities on, aiMl adjacent to, the route. A few of lhe lr-ay-related unknoVID5 facing New· port Beach, for e:s:ample, include such brain buster1 as: -How much will tl'affic on Coast Highway increase if some alternate way . of_ moving traffic. the 9-rnile length of the cilY Is not developed? The momu11eotal Coast Highway traffic jams in Laguna Beach o(fer aome warning of things to come in other coastal ati.es. -What happens if Coast Highway must be roughly doubled to eight lanes tbrouib Newport? How many businesses come off the tax rolls? -Conversely, what happens to a city'! tax base U some businesses fail for lack of a freeway system to brinit customers! Or if they must move away from a traffic-choked high:3.? -How many h red1 of thousands of dollars must the community find to expand the surface street system to compensate for at least some of ~e traffic flow that freeways otherwise could bandleT Some hlnl of concern about . the "mornln,r alter'' should the freeway route be deleted wu lncllcated ,.,. cently when Assembl)'.mBD R®ert Badham (R-NeWJ10rt !leach), author o1 lhe bill to delete the route from Beach Boulevard through Newport Beach, announced he would introduce a bill next session apeclfying,a new route. He made It clear that th•~ Hl(bway Comml.ulon would not be given a free band In determlnlni the -route. The assemblyman also wrote a letter to a Laguna Beach newspaptr stating: "I do not believe that the Pacific Coast Freeway should not cross Newport Beach at any point." He also wrote: •1 do not believe the free- way routes can nor sholild be detennlned by leg!slaUve fial" This prompted the La~ paper to charge that Bad.ham's statement implying that the route could cross Newport Beach Is not the same pc>1ltlon be bas taken with lhe Newport Freeway Fighters, and that bis state- ment bf not deciding freeway routes by legislation is contradicted by bis actions. Regardless of what happens to the Badbam bill In the Senate committee this month, there appears lilUe hope for .resolution o! the Pacific .coast Freeway snarl within the next three years -if then. If ~e Badh~~ ~ill ~ail~, Ne~rt citizens already are talking o! an Ulltiafive to reqwre a majority vote of the people before •their council can approve any freeway route -and all three routes in that city inter· connect. If the bill passes, Newport wiU need two or three years to gather and evaluate traffic and economic m. fonnatlon it sorneho\y fij.ile(I to gather .since 1963. An~ if , Badham tries to s.et a new route next year by leg1slat1ve act, the resulting hassle with eaCb city ought to be. good for at least a couple of years. So if you live on the Orange Coe.st, and were hope-. fuI of having a Pacific Coast freeway to use by the end of this d~ade, don'.t count on it. Look for it in, say, 15 years -1f you can get through the traffic jams. Childhood Emotions Sensitivity: Dr. Spock Was Mi-squoted AU children. when they begin to talk, allmble over COOJOQ&nil and rtpeat syllables and words the way a ttutterer does. SomeUmea they repeat eounds lfl'Y'eral times before get.Ung the sentence out. You've had this experlenct with your o w n children. A child ...... In from outdoors -a cblld or abotlt two and a bal[ yean - a o d says in great esclte- meot. ••Mommy, I saw a •.• lsawa .•• I aawa .,."Hels rar Loo excited to be able to say It calml1 and clesri1. The 'late Wendell Johnllll1, the grut and orlgtnal speeclJ palhologist at the Univentty of lowa, used lo teach thlt · what I& llftportant II not the foci that the child ttumbles over hlmseU wbe:a he tries to talk, but the mother's evalua- tion ol thit atwnbllng. U •he regards thla--ftpetitloumesa of sounds and syllables as nonnal, she'll just relu and wall for the child to finlsb tbe aentence. - BUT IF THE M<Yl'llER e1pecls the 1peecb fluency ol. a ~year~ld in a child who is only two and a half, she ma1 aay, whether to berseU or to the child. "What'• wnmc with him? He'• atut- tertq." ON;e lhe begins to 11y lhis and lo react to what she has said, ("Stop and think before you speak, bor\ey," ••take a deep breath," etc.) she can make the child eo sell -conack>us about h1I apeech that he he<ome! a stutterer. Wendell Jolwoa'1 theory II thal slu~ teren: are made, not born. They are made by over-anxk>ul parents. ThiJ ibmy may well be true, becallse stut- tenn are usually firat bon children, not the second or ~rtalnly never the fourth becauJe by thal time molben .,. too busy lo llsl<n. WENDELL JOHNSON '• BCCOW!t of what be repnls u the chief c8113e ol stuttering-of course I have over lill1jllifled the theory In my brief stale- ment of lt--su&gma that many or our problems wllll cblldr<n are created by our wire.U.UC expectation.I -0f Uiem. s~ pose liltle Howard well h~ pants. Is It a problem or 1sn 't ll ! 'lbll depe.lds on two things: First oo how old Howanl II, and -..i!y m whit 7"'! upoct ol a child of that .,.. 11 the fact tut Susan eats messily at table a probleml Again, It is or fJ not. dependln( on what you expe<t Qf a cblld of Susan'• 1ge. If you upect more of Howard or Susan lhan )'OU have aey right to elJ)fd at their devel-0p- mntll stage, you've really got a prob- lem -and you created it yourself. Hl8DID development ts an extremely ....,pa-. and I 1hould emphaslu lloth Ole compleiily and the fact that ~ Dear Gl oomy Gus: A open al' ODtllulial 'Wll Cf7• lo( Ill bis -oe TV-Ule the lnmrance rai. .... '° bl.ch he could not ·afhni It .... blcb per- fonnanca car. I -IO toucbod that I almCIOI raa don lo the TV -to bey blm • lrwl! -· · H.BJlcO. "'" ............ ._,. ...... ... ~ ............. .... ....................... ! ..... • tt lJ a procen. All IO!'tl of forces are interrelated and never stand IUlL MY WIFE WRcn'E when OW' chlldrtn were little, "li OW'. IOll Alan &ell into a flgl!t at school, h aUedl hi& bebaviot at JuncMime. If the oldest girl I• a family is feeling dl!pl&ced by a lillle ailltu, Abe may cling to her mother. 90Ck her lister, pour the bathwater on tbt floor-all three .or a doJtn more. We cannot view each Item d behavior lo a S(<pln!te p]gooiihole, and II '\f!t do ,,.. ,,,. lljrolJ .,. ... rill .... problem "1iaralel1. ..... Cborelln !n- ~tely. ..... ~;.=-~~~!.'~ up ... the . a""1i - You may be dolnc OlactlJ' tho -4hln& beCllllO tho -al luncli fl!Ay ,.wt 1n!m an e-onal upset ·al the ·pJayoround which hu nolhlng to do irilll tlie lunch table, exeept !hat the humu being II an Int.reonneoted creaturi: IO that &11 U1eee eventl have ldtrmnnec:1Jons within themselves." THE CVltRENT ATl'ACU on Dr. ee .. Jamin Spock are based on a cruel dlator- tioo and caricature of his views. 'M>e irtudy of urly cbUdhood development ii one -Of the exciting areas of ·rezkarch I• present daJ education; I hope that this kind -0r study, as it applies not only to infants but also to nursery school, kindergarten and elementary school clilldren, will not fall under the axe . in the course ol blind attacks on "pennisslvenesa." Dr. Spoct: himself llas analyzed the overpermissiveneu. It comes Crom parentl who themselves were unlu~ppy in chlklhood. "So lhe:y have welcomed the new theories. They have rtad mean- ings into them that went beyond what the scienti.!ls intended -that all the children need ls love ••• that they should be allowed lo carry out their aggressive feelinp again.rt pareats or others. .• that when childml misbehave the porenl& -·t become angry oc pwil&h ili(pa IM.lllau'l! lly IQ show '"°"' "'"'" All !hex mllconceptlons ••• eocourage lo become demanding and .... ; •. .. l:ftN ' . V,ATIJS ,...... Will ·-wllh )lr. lpoo\'• llalie pooltlon. •A ddld needs·Jo '"1 Ulat hi& falhct- and molher. boweYtr aareeat>te. have their own righli, lalow bow lo be nrm, won't Jet him be unteUCNble « rude. He likes them better that WJY •••• The 1poiled child Is not a bapp1 child even in hb: own borne." Mr. Agnew, may I introduce Dr. Spock? By S. I. Hayakawa Prt1lde1t Saa FrandBCO State Coilep Blame the O'Leary Cow Wu Mn. O'Leary, whose cow klclced over the lantern, legally liable far bum· 1ng down the whole city d. Oilcago! After all, H she had not ·left that lantern Jn the barn, the fire never . would have gotten started in the first place. Obvloualy, In following the chain of caiue and effect, It Js -0nly falr to cut off resporuslblllty at eome point. Even U )'OU do something wrong, the law won't blame Y«l for every linj:le consequence, frOm here to eternity, But just when ii the cutoff polnt! That is 1 crucial lslue In a ireat many of the personal Injury au.it& so common In °"' courirooma tod.ay. TO BEGIN WITll. you· m nol liable at all JI no casu1I connecUon can be shown. Suppose you are drtvln1 with an expired driver'• Uct:nle, and a pedestmn llepl In !root ol your car-too suddenly '"' """' lo lllOp. True, you did wrong by dr191ng wllll an expired license. But that would not. make you liable for hitting t h e pedestrian, since the.re wu no cauaed connecUon between the two events. Even assuming a casual connection, you are still not liable lC your •ctlon was not the "proximate'' caute of the final harm. What it a proximate caua? Of course, no two casu are identical: But what the law loon lot mCiOI olten is forueeabWty; That Is. yo• are usual!y not held lJable tf bum w11 not rwonal!IY foruttable u 1 ruult ol )'OW' ocllon. ON THE Ol1IBa band, If hlnil wu lndeod !..-hie, JOU m11 be...._,. b1e evm H the uaot fGnn ct the lwm WU nol. Pulling AftT' -·· ~ mill>( • minor bumP lilel)', could to ll&bWIJ fO< a major Jnlur1 • ...U. Whit 11 thert • an "lntervtn.tn1" cause IDmt mllCODduct b1' a thltd party, follow1o( }<Jin" owe ml~ and leading lo tbe accldtntl Dool !hat .. j;t' int&rvenlng cause let you "off lhe hook''? Often tt does. Yet you mJght gtill be Jlable lf that intervening cause wa1 aomethinf you could fairly have ex-pected. FOR EXAMPLE : a hardware dealer l~t a rake, standing upright, in a busy aisle. A amall boy, running by, 1tepped on the teeth of the rake, snapping the handle agai:nJt a woman'1 head. When she aued the hardware man for damages, be argued that his original error was nulllned by the boy's later mbconduct ln running through the aisle. However, the court held him Uable in apite of this intervenl.ng cause. Ream: be should have foreseen, when he ~rt the rake there, t h a t boy.s-especiaUy · small ooes-wlll be boys. An Americon Bar Associati-0n pub. Uc .service jeature bu Will Bt1"1'141d. .---Bs Georte ---. Dear George: My botftlend say1 -I am • prude. Maybe I •!fl old•tuhloned. Anyhow, do you lhink lt Is laityllke for a elrl to neck at a drive-in movie on a motorcycle? H.A. Dear H.A. You're not at all old-ful!ioned and U'1 nice to ,.. a gltl wllll oJd.lalbioaed -I Yo• lhould never neck on a motorcycle, ·uni.. ~ hat I lklecar -and even then, not oo the flnt date. Or, -at-1"111;-dllrlng Ille lint fe1bft. Training: It Needs Gitides Many readers have written in lately to ask my oplni-On' or those "sensitivity training" groups and classes that are springing up all over the country. Well, I don't have an "opWon," for an opinion (lo mean anylhlng) has to·be based on firsthand know1edge and close study; but I do have a prejudice, f o r whatever it may be worth . The idea of senst- livity_ training is an excellent and kmg --·The Wectem world has for centuries been ·cut oR from Its physl1:4l and sensory rootao has· been too verbal, too mental, too abstract. WI!: NEED TO understand and use opr' bodies more effect.ively, for ex- prealon and for C-Ommunication. We_ need to become more aware cl our :sensory needs. and way1 of rtlating more ba!lcally and intimately to others. As a whole culture, we are what the youngsters call •·upUght. '' But -and lhls ls a very important qualification -such bodily awakening and educalio1 must be supervised by the most sklllruJ and conscientious oE leaders. who are as fully aware of the. dangers as they are of the benefits or 11ensillvity training. When you start messing around with the homeostatls o( the human personality, you had better kmw which buttons to push in c a s e <>f emergency. FROM WHAT I have read and noted -all aecondhand Wonnation -it seems more llkely than not lhat we are moving too fast, on too many fronta at once, with too few quaUfled guides, lPlto this delicate realm. Being a naUon of faddists and quick· result optlmJst.s, we tend to look for lnstaat Joy or Meaningful Change simp ly by pracUclng some teachnique [or a few weeks lhat takn a guru a whole UfeUme to assimilate and master. Americans are inveterate sucken f-0r new promiseJ. EVEN ASSUMING that seJ1.sitivlly training can do as much ror Its adherents as il promJses, lhe need for educated, experienced and hlglt-mJnded leaders Is greater tha• in almost any other field I can irilaglne. For lhe possibUlty of doing harm -and sometimes lrreparable hann -to an uastable ptn(lnallty is at least as great as the danger of an Int.em perronnlnCl -compler tratn aurgery. In too many cues, those enteriag sensiUvlty trajning programs art looking for short-cull to gratlficaUoo, tor a Iherap)' that will 1vold the time, - and effort of convenUonal paycbatherapy or psychoonstysls. 'Ibey will not flnd It here, of emne -for Joy ls to be foul!d neither In the body oor In the mind, bllt In the tvU!'<l!anlinl equilibrium belweea the two, acllnr In <:on<ert for • ttio good ol the gnater whole. for which no better word has been coined lhlll 0 1PlriL It .. 'Of courae ehEJJ folJD w .us. You don't believe that nonsense \ about -nliavinl a mind of their own, do ;you1J ' Bad Vibrations From the Meadow Just a year ago a young, lank-haired army almost as large a.s the American force In 'Vietnam descended on Max Yasgur's m"t.adow-Ui upstate New York. For three dly1 lllCfiilghU, the Catskills surrow>dlng the hamlet of White Lake trembled 1o the eardrum smashing IOQDda of bird ~ music and we.re obscured by the 1wee~ied smok• of pol The Wood!Iock lluslc and Art Fatr wu 1n Ml bl.alt. 1 Perhaps ~ WU an Aquarian put.on. The festivities '*erel oot held in Woodstock but ~ mlle1 '.away; the mus.le was secondary; U)e , art was for the U'lost part unprodooed ; and it wa.s more of a traffic jam than a fair. But despite rain and mud, middle class k 1 d s eslimated anywhere from 250,000 to 400.000 gathe~d in one plact and did their thing -peacefully for the m-OSt part. PEOPLE OVER 31 still find it difficult to judge whether Woodstock was the curtain raiser for the revolution or mere- ly a bucolic version of Fort Lauderdale \\'ith pot Instead of beer. Maybe it was a little of bolh. Blues queen Janis Joplin looked over the audience and declared. ''There's Jots and lots and lots of us, more than anybody ever thought before , .. we're a whole new minority group." Cosmic thinkers had a field day. Beat poet Allen Ginsberg called it "a major planetary event." Mop-halted Abbie Hoff. man saw "the birth of the Woodstock Nati-0n and Uie death -0f the American dinosaur ." Instant soclctlogisls, such as a writ.er in Commonwealth declared thal, "It was the birth of a full-grown culture - a culhue of, by, and for the young." 'Popcorn, peanuVis, I ·a ' '!C! , gras~_. ANDREW KOPKIND, •radical journalist said : .. No one in this century ha s ever seen a society so free or repression, Everyone swam nude in the lake . , . and the 'pigs' just smiled ••.. For people who had nevu glimpied the intense communitarian close~ of militant struggle . . . Woodstock must always be their model of · how good we will all lee! after the reYolutlon." But if Woodstock "has come to denots the Oowering of one phase of the youlh culture, Altamont has come to mean the end of it," writes Ralph J . Gleason ln Esquire. During a Rolling St.ones con· cert at a drag sltip in A!Lamonl, Calif. on Dec. 6, 1969, a man wa s beaten and knifed to death within 20 feet of P.1ick Jagger. A! many as 300,000 people looked on. Since then, the vibralions ha\'C been bad. Many communilies have refused ID a11ow rock festivals. They conlend U1at the effect on health, welfare and public 11afety is too dangerous. At Woodstock, the youth culture reached the top of the mountain. The rest. has been down-hill. The Issue of Fr eedom To the average tAmerican, threats to basic fttedoml may seem obscure and ol Jlttle pertooal concttn. The cases that come up, after all, usually seem to apply to some other group or some other people. Moreover, the official reasons that are given for the quesllonable actions often seem persuasive. Preventive detention, wiretapping and n1>-knock police authority are said to be necessary to control crime. Com· puterized lists or demonstrators and other dls.sldents -even though peaceful -are said to be needed to prevent violent disorders, terrorism and subver- 1lon. Arbitrary b-Order aearches are said to be eaenttal In stopping the smuggling of drugL - The public rl]ll!l lo sslely, the need to prevent violence, the Importance of protecting the democratic system against 1ubver'3kln -tbue goals lhoukf nol be mlnlmiied. Too often. "Wc'Ver, the measures purportedly citolli10d Io ttach theJe goals are almpUIUc Md tJteffec:th'e at lhtlr bed, and coa11tt1,..od11Cllve at their wont. (WlllJout Jall ""'*"'• llYI former AUy. Gen • .Ram.ey Qark. prevenUve detentlqn wl!i cause crime, not reduce h.) Tho hanh trulh 11 thal Ihe"' are DO limpt. a111Wtr1 to tba probttma of public safety and order, sho rt of totalltarian repression. The hard answers involve basic reforms and persistent ef • rort, whether in dealing with the causes of crime {If in Improving the criminal justice system. The simple answeri can destroy American freedoms under the flli.se of trying W save them. Mlunpoll1 Tri- ---·W.. Fridar, August 14, 1970 The editorial page of "" Doflu Pilot setb Co i-n/onn and Jtifn.. \llatt rtadcn by prtsrnttno this ntWIJ>Clpcr'• opm'°"' and com- mn.tarw on toptcr of fntcre1t and ,;gmfktm«, bu prc>1"<11ng o forum for the t~tufon of our rto:derr' opinkm.t, mad bu presenting the divt1"11 t.itto- poinu of ftlformff oblrrvtrt end 1pokttmn on topicl o/ th• dau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher -' ' • • • . . ··------------------Friday, A(IOUSl 14, 1970 OAfLV''!LOf T QIJEENll! · By Plid lnterfaftdl --- ~OU belJowM !" CHECKING •UP• Sarah is Popular In Great Britain By L. M. BOYD ONE STUDY of u:-convicts Indicate the average such fellow bas changed his name at least three limes .•. rr WAS NONE OTHER than Trudy Martin who described a temper lit as "acting your rage." ... REMEMBER. IF it doesn't stike the hour, it's not a clock but a timepiece, says our Language man. • • . YOU'VE SEEN PEARU with a yellowish cast, Too much salt in the water causes that . . . ·"fOST POPULAR first name among 3-year-old girls in Great Britain now is Sarah. HUDSON -Mr old fishing partner, Hud.900. ts a veteran. Not just of tile military, although he served, loo. But of higher education. He went to college back when. Hudson swallowed live goldfish. He .stole panties out of ~Iris' dormitories. Where. is that kind of experience to be had today? At any rate, eter since J've known him, maybe 25 years, he has worn a black .spade beard. This week he shaved it off, saying it made him look too confonnist. And who can blame him? An in- testinal matter, 11 man's own identity. Once when I WU griping about how d~li<:ult the obstacles in thl.1 syndication game, it was Hudson, ever at the tiller, who said, "Don't forgcl, Boyd, a kite always rises against the wind, never with it," WithoUt the beard, his face looks a little pale, but I suppose it will tan up. OPEN QUE.mON -Is there any man left hereabouts who can slll'Vive in the wilderness for 30 days with nothing bul a book of matches and a sharp knife? SOME SOUNDS pitched too deep for the human ear to hear nonetheless can make people melaodJoly. That bu been establlshed scientifically •••. CUFS of coffee do you get out of one pound, young lady? The U.S. Armrhas told its cooks you ,ought to get at least 25. CUSTOMER SERVIC~. "Do unborn babies dream?" A. Some doctors say so .•• Q. "What were Twiggy's measurements at the peak of her modeling career?" A. Ex· actly 31 ·22 -JZ, it's reported .••. Q. "How many people are named Smith in the United States?" A. Maybe l,300,000. BELIEVE ONE ol the best short stories ever written cropped up in the dialogue oo a Bonanza rerum recently. "It ain't been the same sin« my ..poor husband 1Vent on ahead," said the okf pioneer woman. She and her daughter lived in a frootier cabin. "Ob, I'm IOI'· ry," said the villllllg straight man, "1 didn't know your hus- band was dead." "He ain't dead," said the old etrl, "he just went on ahead." NAME GAlllE -When Mr. and Mrs. Roses named thelr little dautlhter Wilde, they of course did not realiu &be eventually would many a man named Mt. Bull But IUdt «" curred, . reports our Name Game Man. RAPID REPLY -Y<S, miss, average starting salary now among girls w!io !Ue jobs as secretaries after • graduating from college ill '551 a rponth. Your questiom and com- menu art welcomed and toiU bt wtd ln Chtc:king Up whenever possible. Ptecue addrtss your letkrs to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, N•wport B•ach 92663 Torrey Pines Lovers Save 1,500 Trees SAN DIEGO, eanr. (AP) -Butler said, after nature walks A grassrools money·raising and other improvements are completed. campaign Ms kept the "We know now that 1t least bulldozer £rom 1,500 Torrey 95 percent of our dream will pines, aome or the world'• be realized," Butlt.r said, ad- oldest and rarest trees. ding that lhe trees "are our The state In 1967 allocated last. links with the lee Ap. $900,(XX) toward purchase of They're worth saving." 160 acres on which the trees 'I'he tall Torrey pines have grow if ciUzens In this area dark gnen needles and Joni would come up wllh a mal· cylindrical cones. ching $900,000. The deadllne,;:::::========;J was last June 30. Save the Torrey Pines. a conservaUon group, ca m e within $100,000 of that goal by the deadline so tbe slate le• ll •llP quietly by. Ed Butler, the group's chalnnan. says lbe state bas decided to 1pm1 1U noo.ooo now, adding k> the flK)0,000 raised by the comervauomsta: to buy most of the IllO private. ly owned acres. A bu11d1n& develosment wu planned on OFFICIAL D__Gll Clearance Sale MOST SETS ON DISPLAY th• site In the abl<oce o1 M I L L $ 3'.ate purchase. The acreage will be 1ddfld lo the adjolnlnJ Torrey Pinn T I L I Y I S I 0 N Slate Prt!serve, an 1167-acre a.inc c ... t Hlihway park where about 1,000 of the Den• P.lnt : J Freewa1 Favor 1 GAO Scores Congress H~ghway Spending WASHINGTON (AP) -The oatiooally • government tpenl ne•)J '40 Hennepin, w b 1 c b has a mllllon to • a apedal JglUlaUon ol. 39!,. ts a vWace superblghway u a favor for oa the 1lllnoh River about a -lled pjant m nira1 100 ml1el IOUllJwest o f lllinofl, lnveotlgators have told Qlieago, Conir<U· Tbe ...pOtt' o-IUcized the The 13,.mlle spur on the1 in-AdgliniskaUgn for turning terstate hljbway system was down other requests for spurs criU~ as unjustlfled ln the in larger metropolitan · areas re!)Ol't Monday by the General like Tu cs o'n, Ariz., and Aceotmtlng OfQCfl (GAO). Tacoma, Wash., while ap. The Interstate 100 link, provfug !be 1-llll !'Ollle. wblcb wos _..cr la!t fall, Tbe superhighway link dip.. runs to the entrance ot the down· from Interstate 80, a new Jones & Laughlin steel major crosS<OUntry r o u t e plant at Hennepin, OJ. rul)!llng west from Chk:ago, The GAO, which acts as and ends in a cloverleaf at Coogttss' watchdog on federal · the entrance to the steel plant. spending,· said the steel com-It includes a new bridge pa'.ny's otnclals insisted on a built over the Illinois River four-lane supe:rhighway spur just west of the plant. as .the prlee ol k>eatlng the ' '11le GAO repo<t said the plant in the tiny Illinois town, steel finn's <iUdals had The. interstate hief:y oost demanded coartruction ol the $47 million, with f · funds 1·180 spur 90 t:bat trucks would providing $39 million of the have an easy access to the total and the state paying the main 1-180 route to Chicago. rest. ' "No other interstate spur The price was four Umes route has been co03tructed the a v er a g e alst per mi1e primarily to serve a private no -wltfl *""" manolacturln( -· and or1CinaUy ~ t b 1 t f0< the steel plant " a eom-had. no Jnvnedla• OOllllll<nt no oCller ldersate ~ ..Ull'\.Interotate 55 l!<tween Cllkago promise at a meeli.'lg :1i'o. on the repon. serves .-n· area wi ..aaca..-aod St. LOa1I: be moved to 13, 1911, the report said. Tbe GAO said fhe J'ederal mWl -1atloo," Ille GAO. "'° past 8-\11, a -1y Al one pcinl, the GAO said. , H 1th way -Uon said. . change that would have added -the . iDterdlan@:e at the uw:t should evaluate all latent.ate 11llbols offk:iU, Who made an extra 2f mJles to the route. ot the route wu ttdesigned spur ~ta oo a national the oommltment to Jones & Federal highway offtclals in especially at the request ' of merit bMls rat.bu than: giving Laugblln when the plant site Wuhington refused to do that the steel fil'tn: pJeceneal_ approval, case by wa:11 announced in 111$, and proposed the speclal JpUr Jones & Laughlin spokesmen QX, 11 w'3 ~1~ 1-llO. -KIRKPATRICK'S 2• YEARS IN THE HARBOR AREA OFFICIAL RCA CLEARANCE SALE ftCASALES & SERVICE 2760 Cooit :Highway Coron11 del Mar s499e& ncn ~lkb : -Pho-673-2650. _"',.,.._ ... •1919·* .llCA'._.f'lc___ ill ........ ._ .... ,..._ .,, .. lll•llcll,----........ -.. 9(Jplonal llt1ttl delMr. ••s.wtnpopijos111 It pwtielpatin1 detftra. rAre trees grow. The addition 4n 4611 .,...1744 117.n11 •howd be ope• m October,1L.;__;:;.:__;;..:...__;_;,__;.:...;.J-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--"'-'-~~~...;,,.~~~~~~~~....::.~~~~~~ I DAILY P!lOT f)ldq, ...... 14, 1970 Super Department Blockade F allure SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Dlmocntie moVe to prevenL Goo. Roapn lrom creaUng a ate sqper~nt has Glllciatl1 failed -bu! may -intaml1Uy s......,.,d. Sm. Al&ed Song (D-Monte- rey Put), cb1ef critic of the plan to unUy oxl!tlng health ageodm, fell tlfte. votes short al blocltlni the ....,.ganila- lion. But be said Reagan spokes- men had usured him they ~ delay putting ll into tffect. a postponement. he ukt. which "constitutes an admis:sion that there are dtf· ficultiel bt this plan." Ragan said centralization of Jll'eaenl departments would md 1-Jth service fragmen- lllioo In the &tale. But Sang said the plan was riddled with flaws and should be subjected to legislative re.. \'iew. And members ol both par· t.ies were disturbed over tl1e manner in which the plan eot by the Senate without any affirmative~ 'l'bougb an Asjombly policy comtruttee hea&!d by Demo- cat Bob Moretti did endorse the plan, the Senate's policy committee never gut its hands on d. Instead, the plan was shunt- ed to the Republican-dominat- ed Senate Rules Committee, which simply did nothing with it. Unlike most legislative pro- posals, lhe bill did not require affinnativ~ action. ooly the absence of rejection by a ma-, iority of either house. Pleasant Task Democratic caucus d:iair- UPI r.....,. Water Bonds Head Ballot Anti-poUutiOn Propositiom 'Among 17 Facing Vote SACRAMEN1\'.l (AP) - A pro)IO!ed ""' mllllon boad la.sue to clean up polluted Calllomla wala's today heads the list of al least 17 ballot propositions that will lace vot- ers Nov. S. Sec:mll'1 of stalA! H. P. SuJlivan said he had numbered the ''Clean Water Bond Law of 197Q" as Prop. I on the ballot. -bond lt13Ue that will go Oii the ballot, Ir signed by Gov. Reagan, would maft $60 million available for recrea- tion lltd lbb Bild wlldllfe enhancement on the State Water Project. The propooal sponsored by Seo. William E. Coombs (R· Rlalto), pa3Sed Ille l<gislalure late Thunday. Legislaten .,. trying to get several other propo&ed con- stitutional amendm en ts tlirnugb the legialature and to Sullivan'• office in time to get them on the ballot -before the middle of ne:1t week. One is a proposal to extend the right to vutr, and other rights and nsponsibiliUea of adultbood, to young people 18 years old and older. . Here is the ballot lineup IO far, as nwnbered by Sullivan late Thursday: Prop. 1 -Clean water bond issue. Prop. 2 -Sets proced111< for the Slate Supr<me Court to declare a vacancy in a state constitutional "1'ice. Prop. S -Requires the governor to submit his budget to the legislature within the first 10 days ~ the legi!lailve supervisors in certain counties oesskll'l and requires puSlge set salaries ot county o!Uctrl, by June IS instead ol June 30. Prop. 13 -Granta: speci~ Prop. 4 r Allows approval property tu exemption lo of • diool appropriation disabled and blind vet.erarui before pusaae ol tbe budget and their widows. bill. Prop. 5 -Requires the Prvpo. ll-17 were suggested regents to boW: ·pub 1 i c by the Stale Constitution -1..... Revision Commlssion as it m-.-...,. , Prop. t -Makes technical continues its drive l o dlange in constlt.uUonal pr~ modernize the document. visions govunlng investment These provisions revise por- of teacher reUrement funds. tions of the ~itutlon deal. Prop. 7 -Makes the ing with approva l of !J)eaker o( the Assembly a amendments, initiative and member ot wbatever govern-refereodwn, the seat o t Ing board operates tht at.ate gcvernment, conduc:t of con- college sy•em. stltutional cooventJOM and Prop. 8 -Creates one ad-repeal o b s o I e le provision.s dlliona1 non..clvil service posi-._dea_I_in.:gc.w_i_th_w_e_l_fa_re_. -:-::=:-- !0';.tu:=z.intendenl ORDER YOUR Prnp. 9 -All ...... rtain NEW CHEVY counties, or groups of aiun-- tics, to appoint c 0 u n l y VEGA NOW superintendent or s c h o o 1 s , ralher than require he or she FOR EARLIEST beele<Ud. Prop. 10 -Makes lechnkal POSSl.BLE changes in the interest rate limits on s(ale loans. DELIVERY. Prop. 11 -Permits ttie Boaro of <l>iN11>ractlc Ex• CONNELL aminers to adopt it.1 own CHEVROLET Bludgeoning Suspect Asks Murder Rap man Mervyn Dymally com-Actor Ilick: Jason studies the clarity of premium mented: "The Rules C.Ommit· California wines a s he judges for the annual IM tee has done the right thing Angeles County fair competition. The best wines ~~~:?.vemor by not doing ~·ill be on display at the fair which opens its 17-4ay Soiig tried in vain last __ r_un_Sept...:..._· _I_B. ______________ _ month to force t.he plan to the Consumer Bill Defeated r·~~-12 _Le~ the county ··i~r.-.;·~.~'.4'· .--~~~~~~~~ Senate fJoor and finally gave up after extensive vote tries 'Thimday. He deooW>Ced the bandling of the plan and said it meant the Senate was "de- nied the oppar1Unity of legisla· tive review." Hit~hin~ Time Wagon. Train Rites Held SACRAMEN1'0 (UPI) - A duct costs by the ounce, pound bill aimed at giving the or other unit ol. measurement. housewife a better break on "Housewives don't need a bill like thlJ to help them grocery ~ces was IOllDdly make their compilations," defeated by the Senate Thurs-argued Sen. Clark Bradley (ft.. day after an opponent said it San Jose). He said it would HONG KONG CUSTOM TAILORS IZ Mys ..iwl kt./So. Aaflillt 1itti & 16th Opet1 AD Der ~ & S111td.., "unreasonable add It lo n al place an "unre8900able ad· LMIH' ... OenllNMI"• MeH-N-M .. ,.,,. H.1M-t11.....,. SAN GABRIEL (AP) - Chlkinc back tears and still weann, bis wedding ring, Fred Senff t o I d newsmen he war guiJty ol the claw· ha!nrjwr boatings thll killed his w If e, IOfto molher-ift. Jaw and severely injured his daughter. Republican Sen. G e o r g e ~jian of Lone Beach, obviously angry, """ the pr .. cedural muting meant "in reality you'1e defeating the c:oouniltee aysllm." would impose an "unreason-ditional burden on our free 1~11., T• c .. n. s,..-1 J•'k"• SA.rR'UVN'N\ (UPI) -piano and a banio· • able additional burdt:n" on enterprise system." R1w Siik s111t1, coctr.1111 Orn-. ).Pc. Knit S111'111, BMd- --··..-.. v I •-Sen. H L Richan! (R .o s-t•n, B• 1n111 GIOYH • W• Flt Any s11n ''If they give me first-degree murder. that's all I want," Senff, 34, Slid. SutTOUDded by covered It was the finM. wedding in ree ent.erpr~. · · son ~ • 100% Gva••"'"" s.0'•"'"'~"'"';.;:"•:...".' "'"•"•~-· ... ~-~ wq:<111 in a grassy Sierra the 2 history r th Sponsored by Sen. Anthony Arcadia), also opposed the ~'!;., ~= F~i.r: r s,1,ve '~ '° ~'!!. Bf!o•• N•w meadow, Wendy Sparks aod l-year 0 e C. Beilenson (D-Bever I Y measure, saying, "the con-trom t:no11..i, n•1v. Pcivnter w1;1ei Wwited 5.,111 .••• isi.oo MJM modd Randall w---~-•by wagon train, kl whkb 200 wild Hllls), the bill wouJd have re-sumer neecb little prot.ection. w1 N_. Dl111r1 o.cron woci ~'"" S11111 .•... ,,,oo •.• .l' '°'" UMU.i...:u Wool SIM'*lkln Wor1t1<1 Sul11 .... 11.ao n.• wagomna.ster Harold Cum-west buffs ride wagons and quired grocen to di!play lhe They 're reasonably capable of :!."~:;;::'::.~; IOlk •lld MOll•lr woroted su;11 .. 11.00 s1.M His admlsllon came after be met with b1I daugbter, Je.nny, '. lollow!ng his preliminary hearing 'lbunday in Alhambra Municip.1 Cowt al)(( in San Gabriel Hospital. He talked to reporlen lhrougb the barred window fl a priaon van. Chavez Ends All Strikes For 6 Days -•-· '---s over ••· hl~-~c lran•-wilt prices al foods . It was taking Catt of themselves." Nrw-1111 INN &uper11n1 wor1ted suits .......... es.Oii s1.• llll.J9. ~.X: IUIC: ~w1·1 "" ,...., !!lk/Woof Wor>led Sulr1 .......... 110CI M.Of SJerra route from Round H1ll, defeated 13-11, eight votes Beilenson said his bill would 1111, 110, ,,.,........, 100% P~.-. 1"111n sr1k su111 ...... 9s.oo ,, ... W'ThelredneadceretnCIDighty took place Nev •-p•--·ille ~e ·~ short of the 21 needed for enable •-···-wi'es •-do a bet. 11:t1., How111r1 eMC11 c,~',rt"~, •,• • ...,srio;,• • .:~1'11 · .. ·::::::. 1~1: ~.-.: ay n onawagon 1 J011~~&~··~hl~Till1ori~7°~al~~,,.·~~~br~=~•":·0~0~"';~~p~a~ssa~g~e~.~~~~~..E~Jter~~job·~·~~m~cooi~~p~,.';'~in=g~pr~ic~~~~~:••:•·:t:7oo~~~ .. ~~~~ .. ~-~··:···~·~~:·~~~~ C"umm1ain cr0:55ineding 04.the Siel rr:. organized by the Higbwa_y 50 With unit pricing the con-and save up to 11 percent on • • • Ask for Mr. Aswani ns JO .... e coupe y Association. IWl*' is told haw much a pro-the famil y food. authority vested in hlm by proclamation. Several hundred 'l'be closed-door hearillg was • .. .... 11101he hospital .. J""'y .--,.. 'lbe )'OWli '"'' is c+r t to a wheel chair of the near fatal in- ,... • lllflered in the July •• , t1•1iO&J. -.... .. ezplanatioo .. tile -.. what he and .... ...,,..,. bod -....... e.told._un: ''Siie (Jenny) ,... asleep wbm I hit he< and she WU W> c:omclous afterwards ••• she didn't see anything." After the bearing, Senff was onlen<I by Monlcipal Court Judge Pet.er s. Smith to stand trial on three counts o( murder, o~ couni of at- temp*«I murder and one count o1--. SALINAS, calil. (AP)-Ce- sar aiavez has called Off all strike activity by his A.FL-CIO United Farm Workers Organizing Committee in the Salloaa Valley for .UC days. He -pidcetlng would bt r11atd .,umt 1111 P"W'" 'Wbo do DOI • beli1I lalb d bis -..,. tllal dead!loe. • The end m a brief IJFWOC strike eame ~ Iller the Teamslerl Ulloo qroed persons watched. Wendy, of Placerville, and Todd, of Auburn, cut their large wedding cake witb a Bowie knife. Music, including such selections as 'She'll Be Comin' Round the Mountain," was provided by a tmky tonk Democrats Start Plans Wednesday to give up Jurlsdl<> SACRAMENTO (API -Key lion over some 2,000 field Ca l J for n t a D e mocrat.s hands which it obtained in gathered in the capital today contracts worked out with to begin work on their tt'TO some 48 growers tut moot.ti. election campaign plaUonn. 'Ibe Teamsters agreed with The of£icial party platform Chavez to try to void those convention will be held in the contracts and tbe union began Assembly chamber Saturday. ~t.e talks with growers Assemblyman Jess Unruh, Sena *A KiJls Thursday in an effort to ar-the Democratic candidate for &<; range cancellations. Grower governor; Rep. John V. Tun- spokesman Herb Fleming said ney, senatorial candidate. and F al Bill the opening meeting was in-Sen. Alan Cranston 1o1•ill be uner -conc!U!ive, adding negotia-featured speakers. lions would continue. The California Commission B 8 V A Teamster representative on Democratic Party Reform Y otes said a clau:se In the pact with scheduled a me<ting at °" UFWOC said there would be same time Saturday, lo sludy ••~•-('nl _ A "no raid., .upoo any firm that subjects auch as a proposed ~ .. av nr ls presently under an agree-dll'ect presidential primary mUestone flmeral reform bill menl with the other party." electioo in California. hu been l:iiled by lhe Senale,.1,_iiiii=Oiiii;.;m;;~----;;;;;;;;;;;;OiiiOiiiii;,o;;;iiiiiiiiii"il but 111 death may prwe only11 ~i .. -the Senate NO.W OPEN clooioed • far.<eadtlng pro--1 ..,. Seo. Antbooy c . Bellemoa to · require th e patrUne of funeral prices. llber~ rstrict:Sons oo the ocalletlnc of human ashes and -... funeral directof'S oboJ Ibo dead person's wishes ID lrnDll!nl last rilelt. -· • liheral Beverly Billi Democrat wbo for years ... .._the powerful -"' laUlrr lobby In oeek· llC -morm. lold ............. ....._of 21 -lo -the bill. But, Muld,he -~to ---.. the llottr 1'*...,. Bd' I 09 laid be felt hls reform bill wu workable and realiltic. But be Bald the !wwnl i-, continued to -them. otb<r !eobtnll of the bill would md -reolrlcliOlla "'cnrnallon. DIE MOST BEAUTIFUL and MODERN AUTOMATIC CAR WASH IN AMERICA I • • • 0 • > ~ SAN JOAOUtN HILU "OAD G<d NEWPORT CENTER lJ ~ CAR WASH i JSO NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE > NEWPORT + UST COAST HWY IOI lltlNe THIS AD VNl'J'ED S'J'A'IES NA'llONAL -.;uw·JL SOUTH COAST rt.AZ.( lllANCH -- FREI I CARWASH I With Any Purch•oa Of UNION GASOLINE SATilllAYS ' .. ' , ... ~ tMP.M. flfMn IMP.Mo rn4JMNl11 • ...._. ll't ... __ ..__ ........... Mlll- E. H. LEVAN .... ,.... __ . MOST CREDIT CARDS ACCIPTED OPIN DAILY, SUNDAYS & HOLIDAYS CELEBRATING THE GREATEST PIE SHOW IN TOWN · INDULGE IN ANY PIE A LA MODE A big. big slice of your own choice- heaped with pie cream ! 9791 Adams Ave., Huntington Beach 7 P.M. 'tit Closing Saturday, August 15th (Adams et Brookhum) LOTS~ Rlll.-L.NE EHTelTAINMENT 1HRIU. lo Iha 11 •tost lllrillY-• town! °"'sixty kinds ol Iha-· tlll>ulou5 pies-f'llll"o Ait1t1o. Bavarian Choccilto. Peaoot Butter Meringue, Sour er.... BI-.,., Gras"-1"-lo name o tow! fM! --·tor Iha lldlesl FREE 1WUm lltll-lor al clltklren I ' . ~ -.... ---~. -~ · •. ~----~~- Vital Statisties ARBUCKLE • SON W11tcllff MortuU"J 117 E. 17111 Sl, Cll1a M,.. -• BALTZ MOR1'JARIEI Coretia iel Mar OR Miit Ceola Meaa Ml HIN • BELL BROADWAY MQ111'1ARY UI _.,., CJMta -[J~ • McCORMICK LAGUN.\ BllACH MORTUARY 1715 Lqua CaaJ• N. OM'1I • PACIPICVJEW Jllt¥OIU,tL PAD c....lotyeM'"""1 .... ~'t" ... om. Nowpin -· Cllllwwla -• ~~ -'llft lllM A"' WI tu lll'!F .... • S'•11D'-~"Ell,. M01m1ARY ....... -411-1 .. Sa1Qt-Mo . -· • SMITH5' MOll'nlAllY 111 Mall& S..d""'" -- Birtlu UNIFORMS AIN'T WHAT THEY USED TO BE I An Original Collection of Da1ign1 For Prola11ions That Roquira An Identifying Costume PANT SUITS-DRESSES-SEPARATES • F1ntasticolly C.ra-frwo F1bric1 • •Al Wash & Wter • Traditionol White . or Choo11 From a Voritabt. Sunburst of Colors • Si111 1·18 Callfornla Carur Co1tum11 by • 1U1A1-.....11. H .... tM ...... 116·1166 O,IN TUU. ttini SAT. t 1lO.l1JI frlday, A119usl 1-4, lf70 DAllY mar ,, 32,816 6et7itile•• .,, County Unemployed Jumps 10,000 Two Profs At Irvine • Get Grants IJ PATIUCK llOYLI ., .. ...., ........... SANTA ANA -ftere art CW't'lnlly .Jl,41f p I r I 0 ll I J'flCtlVln« untmployment in- aurance 1u Oran&e County, the atate Department of Human Rell<lW'Cel aald today. Mn. Vesta J. SatUer, O<tin( manager of tbe HRD office here, said thjs is 10 \nc:rea.se ol more than 10,000 claimants ovtr the number for the aame period lut year. And payments for JJ70 are eipeci.d lo be 125 mlllloll, nurly double the unemploy- ment iMuraoce payment! for 11189 In the county. Mn. Vesta said the incrtase is due partly to job cutbacks County Seeking Ne.w Insurance Carrier SANT A ANA -Orange County is In the market for a new general coverage in- surance carrier. The current u n d e r writer, Agricultural l~rance Company of Los Angeles hu not only increased the county's annual premiums by $200,000, but has canceled the policies effective Nov. I. Count y In s ura n ce Administrator James Mc.Lees said the Los Angeles firm has carried the county's policies for severaJ years coverin& general liability. m e d i c a I malpra c ti ce and fleet coverage and had upped the premiwn to almost $'700,IMKI el· fe<'tive July I. McLees said several car- riers were interested rn bid· ding on the county·s blUines.'I. Bids will close Sept. 17. ill<)' Ibid • job. Tiiey ..... back IOOl'IU. though, beca use tbe1r work i.s more subjt.d t.o layoffl." Tb e unempklyment In· surance benefits are wholly ftnanced byC1 II f or n la '• private employers. Y•u woultln't b•ri •v• - The Wond•tful s•IKtion• of children'• boolr1 thet &1• on hend thl1 week. We're stlll un· p1clcing • lot of them, 10 d•n't mind the muss. But if you cen pick your wty tlirouth th• c•rtons, the eXcel1ior, the litt1r, end the peo~ pl•. you'll pro~ebly be eble to f ind • tre•1ure thet will rew•rd thet child you lle't'e in mind for the re1t of hi1 life. -Trude Harper •. • • ........ ,, ....... llli ....... _ ................ ...,,, _..,. ... _.SA\11,t..i o.itlt ... 11 11rt•1,.,... .......... -,_ ..... .,... ..... ,, lllryiawklla ... ...,_ ...... , MEN'S·· STUDENTS' PERMA PRESS SHIRTS SALE sl.94 Choose 1 wardrobe of n • 1 t plaids. Mens siies • Perme pr111®, cotton and polyester. Buy several. CUSHION FOOT WORK & SPORT SOCKS SALE 3 ~air 6 months we•r or thr11 pairs lroo. S.ft 'Ct11hion foot. In sl111 10• 13. SUPER BUY! ' ~ STYLE HAIR SPRAY 34¢ Rog. or hard Save Now! 13 Oz. lo hold. SUPER BUY! Dl1hdralner & Tray Set Sale 96' Re9. $1.88 Pie~ your favorite c.o lor. Durable pla1t ic. Cool Fa•h on SANDALS Sale 87' R99. $1.99 Big 1avlngsl Pick up 11v- 1r1I at our low price! AITIQUE SADI DUPlllES $2?.~ 50x14" .... 4.f6 63•,~,IC"',IOM ......... ·s-dr .~. Fqll bodied blendof_llld_le ... aaliilt-,.WICllu it.-OW11liakzc. Printed Velour KITCHEN TOWELS SALi 44c ~ri9hf ch11ry t o w o I 1 in soft cotton Titryeloth. N1w11t colors -<i9ht pricol ---------------------------' .... -.-----------~·---------~-----------.----GR·A NT PlAZA • BROOKHURSt & ADAMS-•.:.JIUNtlNGTON BEACH '"''"!'----------------------------....... -... ---~!'P!,.,,""'!:ol'""e'"",....-""":'.,,....O::,.:"':"-,..'"':C-~--:.,.-.,'7;-·n -c-~-.-.; -r""l -.-"•-·-r _:-•;...-:--" ._,. --. •..,• ;• . ~· -, ~· . •• ~ •• • ,_, ·--,. ....... .,. • Je DAILY PILOT ~rldl)', A11Jlllft 14. 1970 Cheap Land Gone On Balboa Island By PATRICK BOYLE Of ... Dal" ~1191 ,,.,. There was • time, less than 50 years ago, when the smell of raw sewiilge dumped on the beach at the end of tht streets drove many Balbol Island residenta back to I h e mainland. But now it Is the rat-race vr the mainland that drives the •tourutJ to the island. Seeking an escape, they come for a few days to he in the sun on the narrow beach surrounding the island. Thf' same beach that was once streW!l with 1ewage is now covered .,.,,ith bodies on a warm summer day, and it is so crowded that there 1s hardly a place 10 spread a to~'el. The island was divided into l.422 lots in 1910. On those lots, there are no~· 2,012 dwell- ing units stuffed into a nelwork. of narrow streets and tiny alleys. T~ Newport Beach Planning Department estimates the island popula· Hon at more than 3,000 people. The island is no bigger than It was in 1910. but it is cer- tainly rn<K"e avwded. Afte:r Ulf 1910 sub-division, there was a short-lived Jand boom. A wooden bridge was bul1t to tM main1and in 1912 and the com- ings and goings of land owners spelled a prospel"OWI future. But the boom began to die in 1916, when fishing b o a t s repe.atedJ:y cut the underwater pipes bringing gas and waler to the island. In the winter of 1918, the population of the island was two. By the end of WWI. lots that had once &Old for ~ went begging (or $50. One parcel of 12 lob; WU BOid (or $300. The most alarmlng aspect or the island, in the D08el or its res.ideuts, was the condiUoo of the sewer&. No plan for aewage disposal had been set up. and the sewers dwnped their load on the beach at tbt 11.reet eods. These conditions finally led the property owners to meet In JJ19 and form the Balboa 1'1and lmprovad<lrt --lion, which uilts today. The as!OCiation members combined their efforts to make their island a pleasant place lo Live and had sewers built by 1924. The streets were paved in 1925, and the wooden bridge wu replaced with the present ~te one in 1928. House& we re built , businesses were started and the island became a refuge for nauticaJ 80Uls wbo wanted to lead a simple life by lbe sea. Most ol. the old aalts are g:ooe now, replaced by the real estate agents, the summer tourisU and the w I n l ' r atudent&. One real estate man. PUT WH IN YOUR POCKET Sell ur:iwar1ted tu-ms v"ith a DAILY Pn..crr Classlfif!d Ad. PHONE 642-5678 There's somcding RrY m1nloiling about the Audi. ltssats were designed by an cwdiOpCdic mgcon. Teat drive it today. It's more of a car than you think. CHICK IVERIOI PORSCHE I AUDI !I00-0-H_/ __ 646-9391 -e--nJn"S ll1lKJllZll l!aO • Fails Again Bonanza i.s Hard-luck Hotel Levin-Townsend closed lhd Bonaru.a's casino in ?t1arclt 't\iltn ii was trying to arrange a no million loan to bolster its sagging finances. An. attempt to operate with a coffee shop and hotel only p r o v e d disastrously ex· pensive and the Bonanza's front door waa shut two weeks ago. The Bonanza was built In 1967 by a New York businessman, Larry Wolle. It.! casino immediately fell on hard Umes and ck>sed lhree mooths later. first time savings: fa mo us Sealy Firm Guard bedding Fomou s Sealy mattresses and box spri ng s red uced for the f i r s t time_ anywhere by Moy Co. Firm Guord ... qood for you ond good for o great nig ht's sleep . Beneoth the richly quilted satin-twill surfoce is Seoly's extra · firm innerspring construction, with exclusive Dura-Lux cushioning. The matchi ng box spring ha s Sealy's exclusive Dure-Grid foundation. reg. 79.95 Heh pie ce twin or full 59.90 2 piece queen set reg. 219.95 169.90 J piece king set reg. 319.95 249.00 al'° at wwings • • • Sealy's Quilt Supreme m1Hress or box spring, With the beautiful blue cover. Sealy's firm innerspring construction, quilted to foem. reg. 69.95 each piece 49.90 2 piece queen set reg. 199.90 149.90 3 piece king set reg. 249.00 199.90 sleep shop 145 may co south coast plaza , san diego fwy at bristol , cost a mesa; 5'46-'1321; shop monday thru salurday I 0 am to '1:30 pm ; sun day noon 'Iii 5 pm MAY CO ' • Aide Savs .I Nixon StiJJ Has South WASHINGTON CAP l-Post- master General Winton M. Blount, the only Southerner in the Nixon Cabinet, s.ays ad- ministration action to enforce school desegregation hasn't hurt the President's popularlty in the South. "There is great enthusiasm in the south for Ule Nixon ad· ministration," Blount said in an io_terview. ~ Even though desegregation ~ is "-a difficult issue for people ., ~-­ in the Soul.h," polls show Nixon 's popularity is high in the area, the ~tmaster gen. eral said. He contenCled the favorab le Image has resulted, not from a deliberate attempt to woo the South, but an "even hand- ed" approach to problems in both the North and the South . "I don't believe treating aJI parts of the country the same is what you could call a Southern strategy," B I o u n t said. "That is what 1 would call a national strategy." Fridaf, Augint 14, 1971) DAJtY Ill.OJ' JJ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE P.-Cllllll'IC.lTI 011' lvtlMIJS ., HOTICI 01" ll'UIL.IC MIAlll,.. ClltTtfll'fCATI 0, IUtlMIJL 11'1(.Tll!CWS NAM• NOTIC:I It HERf:SY GIVIN flltt ll'ICTITIOUS lfAMI ,... llft!llQllMd .., certlf\o ,..., ----· kl kllen s.n.1 or A!'lltltl ,,.. ~ • Uftlf'll ....... -COlllll.ltflltt. """-•I ... w. l'wlar!M IV, Clwl ... "'· "' .. " HI, o"""'-' ClllllUctl,. • IMIMM •I l.tn Ufil-'t'll Aw., Cott• Mtu. C.lltwft... 11NW tt\1 v ot M'll 1'1 .. lth W .. 191'r COM et Ot.. fHWllilf:t 1.-ch. Call,..... llMl!tr l'Cllllel.tl I~ -fl ICILDllOH ....... $11!1 .. c.+I..,...., .... le 11Mr1119 ll)f fktlllew """ ........ 11 c.•A<MAX Olilt Mid '""' It _.....,... ., ""' '°''"" will bt '-" Oii ~· It, lf?O. •I Mil 1Nf mkl ttrrn I• _....,. flf llW ,..._ ..,_ ,_ h'! f\lll ....i 1i• 11.m. In tl'l'I C:-.:11 c""""""" ... tollowlllt --.. ..,_ """'" In fllirM ti ""ldtnu IN It fotlowt; Gt 111t CIW Hill et M'll 'Cllv of Gflt1 11111 ....i """-., ,....._. .,. .. Wiii,.,, A ICOlltcl\. Jr., m fJTll'IOlftn /MM, '' n l'1lr-Or..._ C..1 ~. llllowll Drln. c.11 "'-· C.11 ......... ., .... ~ ..id ''"" 1'M ..... d er'"' A. Wt.ttlo ,.., U"""'™"'· ,....., w, ciror.. 11tu s..1c11 i.-of o~ of ,.,. Costlt ,.,..... s.n1tt...., Ot., N,11• • ,. •. ~ M1111rlrl91M -..ch. Oltlfld wlU llMr llld ftlwml111 .rortt11 Mu ~ • ...,.. u1• U~t'I' o.,.,. '""""' l'-lt7' ,..., o81tc1Jon• 11111 1W1Unt1 for ... Or .. N.I, Wlllllm A. IClllOflldl. Jr, 9"111'11ont. fl 1.w, 19 M'll _,...,.. ••· O.feid J11tr 1J. 1m ... 11111 w, Ofollt _, for 1r11i11 11111 --... co!Jtctlon "'-, A. JOl'Un ST'ATI Oii C:ALll'OltN14 •• Mt fwtll 111 1 r.,.n flied """" MIJI ... C'O. ..Kft OltANGI: COUNTY !hi Stcrtt.,.... of 1111 Ol•tTlc:I 11 -Sltf9 Ill CllllOl'lllt. Ofl ""-' U, 1'1'0 IMIW1 lftl. 1 Not1ry tttl~• ot 1111 OlllTICt, 11 ,, ... Ori~ .. or-C-fY: P'W!lc In 11111 fw .. II Sl1!9, -....ii C..11'°'1111, 0. Jul• U. lt10, .....,. -. I ,.._,., .....,.,, Wllllaln A. ~II Ind ltttllll! ICI' ll l'fl:llllV l'Ul:THE Jt l"llbllc: lit tnd hlr Mll SllM, , __ wo, W. Dr-. "-" .19 ,... '° " 11M --GIVEN t111t tM .. If '-' ~ 1111 ......,... Gree:. A. Jord111 "" MlltlN wr_. .,.._ --tcrlOlod '" IM within In ttw Ol'llC• tf It. Coll• ~ S...ll1rv ~ l•tcl ~nown "' -t. 111 llWh'WMl!f ll'ld ~*591d '"'"' •· 0111r1c1, n ""' onw., Jltl ,...,., ._ ...-""""--•rt 1llllilcrtbff .cvr..t 1'M -.. in, m.,.. Ill .. 1mlMd ..,._ ""' lleu r• "' !'* wtttllt1 lrlll,,.,,_I lfll tc~t• (011111CIAL SEAL! of f !OO ,.,.., '""' '100 "'""'· tel lllrl tx.cui.i m. -JOMllll IE. o..>lt J-"'-1 (OlllllCIAL SIEAL) Mlllf'\I l'\tllllc<•lllott1i4 Cl..-« ., t111 Ol1trld J-*I f.. o ... i.. ~llldpe1 Office In '"1.11111,,,.. Oraftff eo.1t Dl!l'I' 1'!1<11. Nolt,., l"lllllK-C:1Ulornl1 ar.11 .. C6llfllv ... ......,., 1, u. 1'1'0 1..._IQ l'rl!ICINI Ol'llc:• lrt MW C ... 11.,lulon f.U1r" :'TC.,:::,. J11.,. n. in• LEGAL NOTICI!! i!,..,,:'T ll lfl~ ~llltlld O<"_. CMtf 0.lf'f l'lio-1. ~tttr.d °'.;::: c·-, Dlltr 1'11o1, ~ 14 21. a .,.. ,..,..,.,. ~.1----,,.,,,.,.,-""'"""' ""'---• JlllY 14 >I and Au~ 1, 14 lf't 1151.70 1'10 UIS.-111 MOTK• 01' Ut.• LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ... Ket ., ""* .... fl 1Mt l'Mn..c "" Un ... ...., tlOTICI! 1$ MIE"IEIY GIVIH th,1, ..,,....,,. to ""' i.w midi --lo!Nd. ~ l'·.U. 1119 ullllllf'S(IMd, Mflt'llor Ttw1"8 wlll "'' CllTll'ICAT• cw IUSIJll••s. cl•Tll'ICATI 011 IUS•H•SS II -fk 111dlorl. II t51 A Wnt 11111 lltcTITIOVS MAMI' lllCT1TIOUS HAM.I ,,,...,. C•I• "'"'· C•tl10rtll1, It • o'cllc• ~ """'-....,... 0., Orllfy lfllY ar1 TJll IJ<'lditrtlllnlcl -· citrt!IY 111 11 4.M., on -.w, ,,_. '"" ~-of Aut111tt, aw-'11ot:llne • M l-II l!lal s. l'tCltl <:llldllctl"8 • l>llllt .. H " 12)' E. 17111 lf70, lM followlnt lt8Q'lbld ,,_ • ..,, te-st. S.n• AM. Clllf. '2Jm. C.lllotnl1. St.. s.ni. ....,.. C1llf0r .. I•, llllOll' lM wit; ....... r 1111 lldtliDlls II""' -.. •s• tkTltlow ti"" ,,..... ., MAGIC MUSIC er.. (II , .... l'otllllC IOIY r...... tc>HSULTIHG W ISi l!ld IMI Mid Orm 1nd 1111t uld 11"" I• cotrlPOSld .i CPU.ST. 10 Niii, 17 •s l t PI J 4 6' t , 11 ~ of tlM 191-11111 ...,MM, 11-followl,.. ""'°"' wl'ldte l\Mr'>9 Ir! C•llfOl'llla Lie-NU<l'lblr 1t10 XYN ~ .,...... lit ll>tl ...a llllM:n 11/f 11111 Ind pl1c1 of ,_Iden« I• 11'N1-.: 57' ~1r.11f'Ollowt: WILLIAM T, MOR.11, l1'11: llnll II• S.ldtal1l1!orlht~of .. tl.,.,_t"8 l:obwt L. •urr, llTI W, C011I HWY., 1bll, Co.it Mew. Ctlll. !\.,. ot lfll UftdenltMd fw Tawl"t 1111 No. 39, N-POrt l!ltldl DtlM ... ......,,, 4, 1'10. 1!0t-. Oonllo "· SllHl\iln, lUI W. COlll Wl!ilim T. MOtrt. Dllld A119111t U, lfllt. HWV. Ho. l •• "-' INC~ $1111 of C•llhlrftll. 0r ..... cow.,IY: ~IOl'd c. C-ltl lrvc1 .. 11e...i. JUI W. COl91 HW'I', On AlllNll 4, lt10, b110t1 ""' • Mlllllll' H•rl:llr Tawl,.. No. ll, New-1 11..c:fl Hotirv· Pul>l!c 111 •fld IOt i.a iot $ti!•, 1'11cllilltd Or•-Cotal Dlllr "1101, 011911J11n121, ltl'D --Uy -rid Wlllllm T, -rtl A1111111I 14. 1110 1$12-lll ft..Wrt L l11rr _,_., to me to !NI 11>1 --w11011l--------------O. ,. ... ,. n•m• !1 wtqc:rl tllol 11 lh1 wl"'ln In· l!lrwc. lllllllN 11,,,....,.I Ind teU-i.J1191 M UICU!ld Sltle of C•llfomltt. '"°' .,.,..., 1--------~~~~~~ LEGAL NOTICE Nixon has denied there is a Southern strategy. ll'hose Baby's Best? 0<'1t111 COllnlY: fOFl"ICIAl SEAL) HOTICI' Oii IHTaNTIOM TO .,,. ..... Oft J~IW lSll'I, a.for. -, I Nolt'\' Jo_.. E. D•vla 1111 TH• SAL.a O" ALCOHOL.IC ••V· l'ubilc Ill •1'111 "" Uhl "''-· .... IOl'llllw fllot•rv P11l)lk, C•lll0tnl1 lllAGll ,_,.. ftollotrt t.. •11rr. Conti~ "· l'<lllCIN! Otllt• In Alf8U•I II, lfl'r Blount, a member of the cabinet committee set up un-c:ountry singer J ohnny Cash (left) and Georgia Gov. der Vice President Spiro T. Lesler f\oladdox compare youngsters here at Atlanta are scheduled for early release. John Carter Cash, 5 monlhs old (held by Cash) takes a swing at Mad· dox's granddaughter, Traci Lynn Maddox, 9 months old. S11<111\i1.,, lr11e1 l1n1rd known lo mt °''"" COllnlY TO Wl'IOM IT MAY CONCf:ftN: "' bl ttMt INrMllll wlllllt -••• MY (Ot!lmll•!on E•Pl•ff SUbllCI to lllu.tll(I "' ""' 11(;-flUbKrlM& N llM Wflhln l"ltn'"""I •11111 JI/I'll 11, \f1( •Pt>lltO for, tlOtlcl 11 ~ 11....,. 1111 •clnowtldtld """ MWc:llltd .,,. ....... l'ubllll>ld o...... C:.Oltl O.l!y ,.llot, -...otrll ......... -lo .. 11 11c;o110llr (0F,1CIAL SIEAL) Alf811•1 1, I,, 11, 11. ltl'O 1~·7' l:levtr•-•I tM ""'"'( ... dtacrRltl: "•lrlcla AM ll'VW'I. 11 NUOW't' Holtl"I P11blk-C1U~rlll• LEG., N~CE MIO w-. eoa,1 Htlhw•Y Agnew to sell holdout South-I nternational Airport after Cash arrived to put on em districts on voluntary de· a benefit sho\v for severaJ hundred prisoners who l'rlr1CIP1l Offl~ Ill """ V • • N.-t llldt Or ..... C-'¥ Mr c-IMIM i'urw1n1 111 II/Ch 1t1tw111on, tilt .., segregation, said he feared no ----------------------------------------------\ political repercussions from acting to end dua! school sys. terns for blacks and whites. !le brushed aside critici sm from civil rights p-oups th::tt contend the administration is doing too little to insure that segregation will be e n d e d when schools open across the South this fall . "It's awfully easy, in a sit· uation like this. for people who know nothing about the prob- lems kl try tn be helpful I don't think it helps anyone if you assume their intention is to be disruptive.'• Blount said most Southern school officals are living up to agreements to desegregate their districts. In those that do not, he said, '·we are goin!'.! to have to see that lhe job is carried out." Warm Vieav l':ull'ft Jlltr I 1t7• Clrt.Tll'ICATI 0 .. IUllHllS dtnllned I• NOl1lt11 lo -~ l'llblf!lllM DI"•-c ... 1 011,., l'llot, lllCTITIOUI JllAMI "'Alconollc ........ _ c ... 1ro1 for bWlllK' More Cash for Vets U.S. Electi'on Jutv loj, :SJ Ind A11-t 7. 14, 1'10 135'·10 Tiit t.mCttraJ9111d do c1r!llY lllty •n l>r lr-f.r ol 11'1 tl~lc lllVll'..-(--------------(conOucllnll 1 llll•IM11 ti Ila E•tl 17111 II-Cor lie_..) for """' .,....., ... Str•t " lrvlrw. Coal• MllU, C•llfw"ll, •• fol-I< 11-1111 flCUtlou1 llrm ,,..~ o1 !RVINE OH SALE IEErt .. WINE PERSONNEL $1!l:VIC:IEl ANO AGE"'C:Y 80HA 1'101' PUBLIC •ATIN( D S h 111111 ,,,.., u ld llrm la c~ ol Tiie PUt.CI! LEGAL NOTICE MOT1c• TO Cll•DITO!ltl and "~ of rnldll'lr;t 1,1 11 follows: et well lk-(1) ..,... lllt 1 -1111 ay Oug t \---,,,occ:c=-c"'°"'°'"""--\11111ow1,.. ..,...,,, wtw.11 "'""" 111 tull .....,,,,_ -1r1,.. to "'o1"t""' 1- Sllf'••tOI: COUftT 011 TM• ""•!ti• HOP!lln1 l'orfl:I, "' Otc:llotrd P'llffl •I •<W oltlc• of lM OtPllort..-STATI 01' c•1..111oa•1A fOll ,.¥ •. , C•-dll ........ DI' Alblllollc kw ... _ Conlnol, "' Ir• THI COUJllTT GI" OllAN•I Jolln LOll!I l'orto. JIJ Ol"d .. rd A.,.., tt111U lo Ille DtNrt~ of Atcol!OHr As Holida Jle. A""'9 CM-~I Mir 81.,...191 CoittfOI, 12U 0 Sll'W. Y f1t1i. of WI"°" 1!11-l11llllr, 1111 Oiled .. 1~10 S..:r111'11n!o, Ctlllomlto fJl14 1l1tln · Loans Now Available for 41,i Percent SAC.'RA~I ENTO Certain Californian11 t·an get 4 '~ percent honle loans today, even in !his era of high in· terest rates, They ca n if they qualify for the state's Cal-Vet prngr:im {lf farm and home loans to \'Cterans. l:'.:ven under !tie federal hill veterans have to pay 1;1 8.5 ~ Lui,.,.., ~tltad. JO!ln LOI/II l'll'IO 1ro11nds for d..,111 u. ll'OYIOM lw i.o· NOTICI IS l'IEl:EIY GIVEN lo Tiie l'itrlclt Hoi>kl111 l'orl1 Tiie -..ii-lrt -LICtn.-.t hlf WASHINGTON (AP Cl'ldlfw• DI' lh1 .._,.. ....,,M dtcldtnt STATE QI' CAl lFOll:HIA 1111 Nill of tlwrllllc: ~-. Tio perccnl interest (Or home toda y's ffiOOey ." ) -!NI 111 P1nor\I ~1wlt11 'l1!m1 111lnH OllAHG-E COUNTY for"' Of v .. llk11!on mlY bt cbl1I.,.., I 'l'w ty H d Se IM uld CllCllltnl ••• ""ulrld to Ille On ..,u_t !), ltlO, Mtor• -· 1 from 1nv office ol lfM 0....,..,...,.1. oans. About $120 million is Je.ft en ouse an nate tiwm, will\ 1111 111e••..,.., v011Ci'olro. 1., No1trY Public In ,,.er ,.., wld s1111, "'"""' " Mtrlorll ..,,.o•rt$1N The 4'" percent barga1·n from t•· $200 million 1968 bond De-·-a'· tntrodu··• bills '"-offlc• of '"-' cterlt ., 1119 •rwr.. --u• -·• l'•t•Jcll MOPkln• """11.,..., o..,.. '°'" o.ur 1'110· ~ ·~ u""'"' "" 11..~ '""ft.Ill COlltt, w lo ""'-' llllnl, w!lll '"""° •11111 John I.all• l"orto k,_., tom. AUIM't 14 lt10 Ull-1 basen1cnt 'r.a1e will continue issue and it will take about Thursday to Jd r 1119 .__..., _,,., .. 10 -""',., bl 111, -~· -,....,... •••\----,,=-,-~----- for the foreseeable future"'" thal much to me<t existing an.. prov e or f'"''NCt •111o1""' lllllC•l ot •:i~.:6 ~ ""'-r1bM 1o •11e "'1"'111 ""'"""'"' •"" LEGAL NOTICE F federal enrollment of voters ll"CVl!W, "' -'' iw. 1C1t._1111111c1 '"'Y •~-c111w "" .-1111. lhough the bonds being used to p!ications. f d -" ~'!~ ~~"'..=:r.u~Z ~~~ 10Fftc1 .i.1. si.-.L1 ,..... run the program no\v are cos-An effort is under way in every our yea.rs An to m4Ae wttlcJ• I• "" '""' of IMIMu .,, "'' ~~ ~y~~'.utornl• c11:T1 .. 1c.1.T• o.-•us1N1u Id t'al ·' i' d 11l>dlnl1r>M In 111 ..,.lllr• _,,1n1.,. "• y .......... "tCTtTIOUS ...._. ttng the state n1ore Lhan 5.5 the legislature to provide new pres en I o;.ie<: ion ay a na· "' 1111 ••'•'• of wld dKtdtftt wlll'lln Pr1nci .. 1 ""~ In TIM lltldw•lllnlcl dO c.,,1.., ._ ., percent interest. money for the expected flood tional holiday. '°"" mor+lh• •111r "" ttrtt ,.,i.ii(itlotl ~:~°"'c;.,"l:~ E-•''" '""411C'ir.. • 1M1.,.,, " 111 w. 11 . I . o1 lllt• nottc1. J 11 1914 s1.. '•nt• .-.111. C1lltornr1, und« tt The Cal-Vet program was of veterans as invo vement in The measures, introduced in °•1ed•J~~,.:1;.1;':,(11m, ••o1t)t1.,.".: o;,,,.., coe•t D111., P1101. J~~~'r;'~1;m ,,.r;:::cv°' JllG " w .. rolj'·ng aga111 toda." after a Indochi na declines. both ch . E~ ._. .-,.,,11" 11. 21, tt '"" 511>t-.nbl< 4, 1, •1'111 ""'' 11 • ambers are designed -...... 111).10 '"' 11 com~ o1""' to1io....1.,. -""' hiatus of more than a year Ass e m b I y man Ernest ' "'"" w 1M ot..,. •bov• 1•10 wflo1' "'"'" 111 flltl '"° "*" , Mobley (R-Sanger), W1.th a to swell the voter turnout H•mtd rlKldlnt r•ldMoc• .,., ••follows: caused by high interest rates. J......., •· "'... LEGAL NOTICE w111i..,.. ,..,...., Mm., 1:iou line The state, with a five percent number of Republicuhoans a~d beyond the 6t percent in 19611. :~ ~~v\:' T-• ••1: *' LIJ~ o..w;:rt',.;~1'Gr::,,.'?4t, "'• ceiling, couldn't sell more or Democrats as co-a rs, is Both were recommendllions .. .._, c1Rtw °''" .,,1 NOt1c• TO c•101ro1ts •••lwoocl.. ""''' A,.., C•lllorl'IM. ' b'll h t Id let ,.._., a.tell. Cell..,... t2'M •• Dlt9d J11I• .U. 1'10 the $200 million Cal-Vet bonds sponsoring a 1 l a woo of a Democratic reform e-0m-T•h '"" ,......,, ~~:~:1g: cC,.'rf:J.:~ .. ~0.. wuu1m ~,.,; M111w th . -" b I . th the Veter.ans Affairs Depart· "-llwlll't fw ·~1(1jllf' TH• COUNTY 01' Ort.AH•• J-11.llll'l'lln Glbloll au orlZL'tl y vo ers 1n e ds mission. l'llbll"'*I Or•AD• CN.t D•ll• 11uo1. s1111 of c1111orn11, °''"" c_... I =• pr i·mary elecii·on. ment issue revenue bon Jutv 11 Ind A11•Yd 1. u. 11. 1110 1•10 N• . .-,..._,, 1, .. ,,, •. °" JYI• 21 1,70 o.tor• _ ·.,. ~ M "'-'d "al •• 1· 1!11•1• ot WILLl.-.M w. y ' ..... • • ··~· • • without a vote of the people. 81UJ1g prest en~ o;.iec KIO . WILLIAM WINll!R !l:VINE. Ol(Ulld. ~Diie In -for .. 1cr State, .....,.., But Tue! da y , State Th<'• would ,,1.,. -e d i' al h I Id LEGAL N011CE NOTICE is 1o1ER!8• GIVEN l<> 11>1 •-red w11111 ... l'wrv Mlllw Ind J- T k """ ay a na ion o a y , c•Mlior• 01 "" ·-· n.rnld dK'°"'' rttltmln GI'*"" known '° ,.... to t reasurer Jvy Ba er Priesl money to be loaned to Ole id ,; _ .. 1d 1 ,..,.,.,. ,,, , 111 _,.,,,., ll•v•na ,1,1,.,. ,911,.., ""-""'°"' wllOM ,..._ .,, ~ announced the sale of $50 sponsors U. • WUl,l.I 80 em· Cl1:1'11'1<AT• o.-•u11H•U. ...: ukl d1e-""' ,,, rt0u1r.cr to tilt lo'"' within lnsJru~ ...,.. ..:.._... million of Cal-Vet bonds, to ~:~:~~g ~:r~~eto i: nlze a moat important oc-11w unc:.~i!.!!.IOU.! ~!:i:-~ 1lll'f ••• '"'"" ;1tt. o1""n.,.'*u:k"' .. -;:•;-~~ it,,.~1~~~-:L;"' .. ,.,..,, I. 2 650 f nd ho ' 0 ' both · awld11ot:ll,. a l>llllMU 11 11'2 W, "'*'"" IM oft t c I tr\ll'rt wllll fr1~ JI. Crl!dtoft mance ' ann a me paMed· the Assembly but ls ca110 ' servmg a prac· A111 , Sin!• ""' C•llfornl• llflliff !tit 111t111td <Oii"• or io ,._ ' Ne>11rv l'IA!IC. c1111orni. I t t 'th . . • • • ·• 0 • 1111 Ol( .... rv YOIK ..... I, to tlla ""' l'tillc!NI Otlk oans o ve erans, w1 pr1or1· being held up by the )oolam of llcal and symbolic function." 11c:11u°". """ n1rne .i J &. s dll'•lt<>lll ,1 th• 0.,k .. o1 u, •lloml'I•. 0 • '" t · t bo t \()() d d ""' JAHIT011!1Al 1rld tllat uld firm 11 C tr...... klwmltl'ltt Coltm•n M!t1Y••d ''"" COlltltv Y given ° a u woun e end-of·the-sessioo bills in the The enrollment bill provides -"""'" ot"" 1o11ow1i11 -·-· wl!OM ,: ~•rd, us T-n • ...; C011ntrv My c ...... rnruio., l•I•• or disabled veterans or their Senate. Mobley's office doesn't "'~ •n tu~ •rid Pit<:" "' •ttio.tlc• "*· °''"'' c1u1orn1e "™"· w11k11 ~~ ltn ·d that the Census Bureau would ••• •• totiow.: 1, ..._ 1111c1 o1 _,.i-s .,, u.. 11...,.,.~ l'ub w1 O\\'S. expect ti> have major pr~ J1mes Robtrt ""''••· t102 w. 1 •I.I ,.,..11.,., _,,111"" 1o 1111 .,,,.. •r.'*' o.,,,.. eout °''"' ,.1 ... There is a backlog of 6,600 conduct a door·UMioor drive 441.,.., s.n11 A11t, C•Uflllrn1•· 0~ wtcr dteldtflt, wl!h1n '-mortttu AU1111t 14 at. it •nO a•t• •• blems with the bill in the SMrrl ElllN Kttallr, IXO w. ANl'l'lo. 1111, lhl nrit oubllc•llon o111111 notlct. 1t10 i-. loan applicants, seeking an Senate. every four years to enroll all s1n11 ,...., Ctllklfftll. 011.cr J, ..... ,.., u, 1t10 118 000 ' . 01ttd JIK'f "' 1'1'0 UMITl!O J.T4TES NATIONAL LEGAL NOTICE average , · Efforts to resJrict the pro-ehg1ble: voters not otherwise J1,,_ ftoberl «•1ter u.NK , --====~~-----The man who runs the Cal· 1. t SMr•I 1E111 ... Kaui..-,:.....1 ~. 1r1-.uoc:1e111r1 1 <••••••< T gram, or open t up o no~ regi!tere:d to vote. It ls atrlctJy ,,,,. "'c1111or1111. 0r.,... c-tv: ~.:Vi;."' of;;;:' Wiii., ... • °" aus•u Vet program said in a.n in· veterarui, have le$s success. . °" J11l'f ,., 1•111:, 111111r1 ""'· • Not•,., '"-' ,...,,, ftlll'rt«I 11tc..,,1 Ti,. •tc"'"'°"' ,, .... terview '!',, __ ..ifty, "Nobody '"'TI voluntary, aa1d Rep. Morris ll'~lc: "' '"" for Mid Sllohl, 111/'IOl'lllW COOKS•Y· $CllVMACHI ... COLIMAJllr due ·-Utldln""" ... C>trl.,. .. Is-~ ·~ ..... Assemblyman Willie Brown . .,...,..., JI-llolllri ICtllllr •Ill MINYAllO. lfOWArtO ,H .... ko1rn., ,, IW ..,. Lr really understand why we Jr. 1n •·n F r 1 n c I s c 0 ) , Udall of Arizona, a sponsor. ""'"'' l!lllN K••llr k-11 "' ,,.. '" , ... 11111 c.-i,., ,...,. 171~ hldt. c111"""11. ......... "" ,, ~ O ( th I to bl tlle --wtio.. ,..,.... •••Of' .,.. C..iu.r.11,,... """" firm ...,,.. Of 111 COMTEIC 1 should be putting out 4.%5 per· sponsored a bill this year to ne o e main reuons or wbtcrlbtd i. 1111 wltflln 1-wtr-~t '""' 1~, 11111 ... ,.1111 CofntnUtllc111ot11 T1C11....., 1111 ""' u cent money." o~• the home •··-pr=ram the low voter turnoub: ol past K,0•,-,1,"'1,,•,,"",.,-... t11t ,-. .,.......,.., i.r •-"'"""" 1~ .._'1""' 1' _... ot ll'>t __ ,...,._ ,._, !VWI ¥• · th tr• . " .. Pulll/al'lld Ortflfl c .. 11 DI •~ l"llol, I -In flJll lfld Pillot II~ Frank D. Nicol, director of up to a.II po~ntial California yea~ 11 e i:nany res 1clive ~~~.lf,:i:,:bi~."'l~~,..111, .-.u...,., 14, 21, :ze •M .._,..,,_ '· ••;,,~rows.'... L..,1111• 1.., the Veterans Affairs Depart-homeowners. requU"ements m the stateJ, lbe l'•tll(1p11 001c1 1n 1t111 •SH>IG N_, BMCti. A"11' Lr men!, explained. "We're still "ll was a way to put us (totie sponsors said. !':'t'-C,,.,O:Z, 1:.111,._ LEGAL NOTICE oa'""si':."::' ~~L!':' ... retiring two percent bonds . state) into the home finance Estimated first-year cost of Ju,.. 21. 1t1• STATE oF CALIFOftNI A The average cosl or money b · 1 I i t t the enrollment bill •· ISO '""*u OltAHGE COUNTY us1ness a n eres ra es :ia c••Ti.-iC:ATI 0,. cortl'Ol:AT1ot11 ,.Oil °" Aue1111 u, "'°· Mtw.-. , Mot• over the life or the program ordinary citizens can afford," million. It would set up a na· LEGAL NOTICE T1:.1.NtAcT10N oli' 1us11••11 uMo•rt l'uDtlc in •nd tor u.1c1 11 .... --1 t tod 3 8 t .. Id Th' Id be t' al il t 1--· lllCTITIOUS HAM• ·-••M $1111~ L L ...... •-n to ~ up 0 ay was ' percen . B rown sa ' IS wou ion enro men oornm'°"1on lttE UNOE R!IGHEO CORl'Ort.ATION IO bt lhl """°" Wl\He -II ""*'' The latest sale will boost similar to the federal FHA and staffs in each state to ci1tT•"IC":1..,.~a; 11.111H1s1, c1o1~ h•••I»' c1•111 ... 1h1t 11 1, ,.,...,001 ... " '° th9 '"1'11!" 1""''-' ., h I b I I t h di the k Th Ce lllCTITIOUI MAMI' • tivolntn loc:llad 11 U) Wa t l•Y Kk"""'l~«I ht •~..:ul«I 1111. u.mt. tat o are y i>ur percen , program. ~n e wor . e nsu.s TM 11,.,..1,ntd ... cini,., ,...., •ri StrHt, c 01,, M•••, c11t1orn11 IDFF1c1o11L $EAL I Nicol said. ln other words, the The bJll was killed in the director would serve u na-conc1uct1,.. , bc11t"''' ., ,._ Tll'!ll•INt, ~""'' th• •1c1111011a firm """"' of 111 JllllPfl e. Divis t I th bo ds th d i t, I II t d' to ll'Olllll1ln Vtll•Y• C1lllotnl1, unMr tilt PILOT Plf!NTING (7) OAIL Y PILOT Cll fllol1rr f'lltlll(;<.tllfWnl• cos o e n e epar • Assembly Government Jona enro men lfet r, tlctltklu• firm ,,..me 01 v1n.., T-ll l'ILOT ADVERTISER 1nc1 11111 ••Id 11•m Prrnc1N1 Oflic.I ,. ment has to pay off right now Administration Committee in Enrollment would not be ""' 1t111 .. Id 11rm r, c-.cr M u ... It ~ 01 tM 1o1~'"'"' c<>n•or•tlOll. °'',,.. C011nty i Th d Oft .. _A• follow!"' P1r11111. """°'' ,....,_ In lull """'' prlntll>•I PllCt ol 1)\111...U 11 ., Mv Co...mluior! E~Plrff stilJ is less than interest it May. permanen . e OOl'·LV'\1Vl.ll ,1111 011,11 of rH1donu 1r1 .., foltewi: 1ouawo: Ju,,. n. 1t1~ h C IV i to ' """ ' "" ' Oii "I C nY l'W11""6 Or_. Cllhl Ol!IY ~lk' c arges a · e cus mers. "Mine would have permitted drive would take place only in Gill• A, v-.,, --•m•• • Or•nH c ... ,, u •n "' .,...,,. · ""'-1 1• 11, -.., ..,,_. __ • . . fou1111111 v.111w. no Wt11 111 '""'' Coit• Mtci.. ., ... ,.,.,....,-At present, 125,000 velerans them to charge up to s ix or six pres1dent1al election years but w.11., c. vo.-r. 604 c:.1t11:11. 1111110. ct llto•nl• ''10 u1~ have $1.3 billion on loan from and a half percent interest." would apply to all federal elec-c~111orn1•· w\lNE$S 111 h•fld '"11. lJrd 11' LEG .. NOTICE • 0.ltd Jlll'f JO, ltll GI July, lf}O, ....... Cal-Vet. Brown said. ''That's the only lions. Special elections and off· G1111 "· vo.-r O<•n .. c-1 I f I th I Willer C. Vodtr Publlll'>INI GomNnW l'Ul' ~ H Qua i !cations or e oans way lo do anything about the '\Ulaf federal elections would 1,.1, o1 c1111om11, O••"" c<>11n1Y: J•ck rt. curttr '"'"" EARINO.S Wil l II! MEL \Vhile they are too n1uch of a novelty for the presi· 1 ,_ 1 .I" ,. , av THE cOlrA Ml!SA PUroNN•~ are simi ar to requuements o hou sing supply problem." not be covered °" Jul'f JO, 1910. lllfor• ..,., • 0 •"' vict l're•lfM>I cOMM1ss10H ,, ,,. citv .... 11 , '"' d t f th B d f S erv'.sor to wear wh1'le pre --'-'--'~==~~·===~--11'ut111c 111 •nd tOt' 111cr "'''' P1r-11v icon•or•hl ~.u ... en O e oar O up s · t he U .S. Veter a n s Brown said he'd try again'' LEG" NOTICE ,.,,..,~ 01111 'A. Yocttr 1ncr w111<er ITATE OF cALJ FOl:Nt.-., criw, Cot•• M-. c1111orru., •' '' Sl'dt'ng over San Francisco's legislative r1uestions, · · · d h GI t rh 'th ~ c. Yoc1tr k-"' ..,. 01 w 111• coUNTY OF ort.-.NOE. ss. P.M. or •• -.. -.lbll ,..., .. ,,. Adm1n1strat1on uo er t e nex year, pe aps WJ some IAI: iw ,..,IOlll .....,., ,.."''' ,,. oubo<r!btd on thl• ntd e11w " Jutv. Ao 1no, °" ......... Y. A_, 2(, ltJO. Supervisor Dianne Feinstein wears these heart· bill, Nicol .said. modifications. NOTICI 0, T1tuarii•s SAL• 10 111e w11M11 1"''"'"""' """'acknewlttfl. beio•• "" JMlll" E. oay11 • Mot•r• ""1rcr1119 '"' tot..,i,. -•1c.111o<>. - h d I · th t f h f(' d B t th t ch Th · . "ghl · Ka. 11n1 Id lh.,.. t•.c:vlflll 1111 111111, PuD!lc In •nd tor Mid Co~nw •1'111 s ape g asses 1n e sa ne uary o er o tee an u e sta e can arge e prov1s1on w en1ng up 0., ... .,.1111 11, 100, ,, n :DD A.M .. !OFfllCIAl SfAll 51,"· re•ldln• lher11n, dulY c0tflm11111w1.cr 1.,AlllaMrNI ., • _,.. ~ 1111111> ti d lh l. pro 1'de a "arm touch that ,., I -I t becaus the VA · lhe 1· · •·• '' 11c TIT , 1•s ••-• JfAN L. JoasT •fld 1wo•n, ...,_1i., _,.. Jac11 .... fol'"'"',..._. 9111..,, •• 1 n s ey some 1mes v \y . ess tn eres e 1s program was e 1m1na~ ANSAME A L u ..... ""''"' Pubtk. ciutor11111 , ,,,1_ t-.. n 1o _ " a. 1111 01c11.,, 111 ,,-.. "ac1 ""' u. ' "I ndl I t f bef 't en( I ff COMl'ANY, • C1Ul0tnll COl'IOl'tllll\, •• . ., ·-s ,. often missing in City Hall. u ng 18 program ou o even ore 1 w nto e ect. dutv ._1,.1.,. TruitH Ynd~r ,,... l'rlttC:IPll omc. •n \/Ice ,,,,1cren1 ot t11t co•-•111111 th11 .... ..,,. °" 1111 111 IM offic.I -------''----'-----------------------------------------------\111rw.nl lo Ottd of T<utl dt!M Jtn\llr>' O<•nt• COllft1Y ••Kiiied -W11h!n IMlr"""n' 1111 IMl\llr "" 1'!111111 ... °'"'-'· .. _ r t , 100, U:IM:lllH ttv CAL.AH CON· MV Commlltlon E•llll'tll ol the cor110r1llor1 llllrtln n1rnld, Ind (IN Hill, 11 Ftlr Ori,,.. ~t1 1rM1. Rough -it ... AT THE NEW RODEWAY INN NOW OPEN AT COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA Convenient to Disneyland, Orange County Airport, Newport Beach. 124 gracious rooms all with color tv, Spanish architecture, pool, Hawaiian Skillet Restaurant. Ideal family (or business) headquarters for Southern California. Phone (714) 557-8700 for reservations. Located 5 minutes from Orange County Airport. • STll.UC:TION COil,.., 1 Cttlfoml• c!ll'-M••t~ l. 1tn 1cknowlldltcl lo m• tl>tl wch (°"'°'Ilion C1Uf. peritlon, ,,.... r-dM JtflUlf'f' 20, 1t1t. l'ubll"""' OrtM• C:.011t 01llY '!lot. u..:1111<1 lh• ....... 2. 11.._ hfll* NI. 11.7.,., for '*'"" · •• lt'M!I", Mo .... 1. In book ''"· ,. .. Julv JI ...0 Alf8U•l 1. 1•, 21, ltll 1J1f.10 In w1 ....... Whereof. I t\1¥1 111•-ht R. WHlltm•, 411 0. Soll Twr1< MJ, ot Oflleltl llKotdl In the el!lct yf m't l>tl'lll Ind tfllxtd tnW ofllc;J1I COl'Olll Otl Mir, C11llorni., t.·· ol 1111 COii"" RICOl'Olr el°'""' c...,n!Y. LEGAL NOl'ICE 11•1 1i.. div 1fld Yllr lfl "'I• carflllcel• -m11.-..,"' ,.._•-•IV -..Ctl~ • Ci!tlornt1, WILL $Ell AT l'U8LIC tlr1t •ll>OVt .. •111111. It • _.11.., Of Loi fl, Trld '3 AUCTION TO HtGl'IEIT llDOEft fOlt T.uf (OFflCIA.l JEALI •nd !0(11'1d 11 ll'lt l'IOrt"-51 corn. CASH lll'tlbll 11 !lmt of ult In IUf'•lllOrt COUl:T O" TH• JQtPh IE. l)ew!1 Of Vtc;!otll tlld C...\'Ofl Orlva, Cllot. l1wl'ut "*'IV of llw United Stein) ITATI 01" CALl,OllNIA 1'011 NOlll"I ~11bllc, C•llfor.,I• MIN, Call! •• tn:wn •t tD 11+.C.I'. 11 1111 lot>b't ot l r1n11mtrlc1 l'lllt T"• COUNTY 01' oaAM•I Prlnc:tlll Offkt In 2, •-hfl"-!ti, 1+1'. fW r 1n111r1nc1 Compe...,, 1102 Nortll Mtln 1t1, ...aitt O••n•• C011ntr V. & \I, •. lollon. ....,. l'rlfllU $1 .... t, l•nt1 An1, C1lllornl1, 111 rl•lll, HOTICI Oii N•AlllH• 01' ,..TITIOH Mv Commlltltn •w..ir.. Or .... •; II ... H. Mor11t1, 4.5f t"ri....ett 11119 •11111 lnlffUI COIW.,td Ill IJMI -1101: l'llOSATI' 01' WILL AMO l'O• J11111 ~,. 1'14 Orlyt/ ,.,. J. c. & ft. c. AMMll Mid llV If ....cr.r a1 Kf Oetd of Tn11t llTT•lll T•STAMINTAaY f'~l!lhed Dr•llft c .... t Oalf'f "1161, u.t l"rlllcllon Orly•, C11tt1 Meta Ctlll In 11M ••-IY ftl u•lld 1n ll>t CliY Ett•I• ot ftlX It, AHOirtlQN , O.U11· J11IY l<. l! •"" "'utu.1 I, 1'· lt10 l.U.10 lot' ~ltalon 10 r11-.,._ of ....._. ltK~. In ••Jd C111ntr tM .er. d•K•lbld It Loll I, l, Ind l '' :!illlt de9C•lbtd '" HOTICI! 11 l'IEl:EIY Gl\ll!H Thft LEG" NOTICE Ttlc;I *"' •11111 !«•ltd •1 4S4 • An ur\Clh<l<Md _...l.lflrttr lnl•r11t In WALTl!ll! O. Wl!llNLAHOfll 111• tltld ""' '"" _.. l'r11K1ton OrW.,. Cotti Mn.. 11.cl 10 Lot 1:111 '' 1'11'11 Ac!d1!1on !\Ir.In 1 Hllllor< tor .rob.tit 11 will ,,.. (1llr.,"""' 111 kl Cl<I'. lb Ntwllllrl Miii TrKI. •• i.llOWfl l1lr ti~ "' Lllttl'I Tnlllr!*llll"I .. i.. •n"1• l'wMll NI. ti*" on I Miii r.c•l'fed In llOlt. f, ptll !O flll "9tffl111Mt, ,...,ll'l<t II wlllch ....... fir 0--.. C-OIA COlll ~ " of Mbc:tl.._,. Ml••· '" ti.. I• ,,.,.... "' lllrltlw Ml'lkvllri. Ind ClrtTlll'ICAT• Of' •USIM•s•. A¥IO w. ........ 1'11c ... 111 ,._ offkt Of IN C_,., It-•• tf 11111 till tlnw -tlac• of rwr1M l'ICTITIOU$ MA.Ml c .. 11 Mnt, C1tll.. for ... mlulo • 1tld Or1n11 Countv. !hi U-1'11• t11r1f1 Ml fol' AutUll Tiie ufldlf1ltMlll .. Cffllfv tllal 11111< t9 tnerMCll f II. Into 1"Ulni ,,.., SIMI wll wlll bt mte11o boil wlthOlll n. 1'7t. •I ,,,. '·""'" "' 1111 C'Ollrlroom ,,.. ~111:tlrit • bu1l111u 11 lUVt »rd w.rd llftl<k II M "· ....,.,urld 1r..-CO'ltt>•"I or w1rr1n1v. •••••to• lmplltd, °' DwartlYllflt Na. I ol Mid Cllllrt. $1 .• flt-I l1Kt1. C:tlllo•fll.I '1IUO. 1111 (Wl ... 111'11 .. Plt(tnlll .-.v._ ...••di... !ltlt, 110tie11lori, or ~ ,1 JOO Chile c..,tll' Ortor. W.!. tn \ltldM' lhl fl~IU~ fl rm ftlflll llf t"AUL.Art wlltl 1 MConl floor ldlltlon ""tthen · Clll'nllFlllCU, ..... ., 1111 prlMIHI 1um , ... Cl!\'"' .. 111. Ma. C1lllorRl1. t!fllfERl'lllllS ll'ld 11111 Mid nrfl'I I• 1111 • tllloUI,..,. •kll flrl -11111 · ol tht flftt ll(llfid bf ••Jd 0... 0.1111 Alll\111 1, lf711. cornpoi.ed ot lllt NllOWll'll ,.,_, ...,,.. w•ll• WI tr-1'11 1ocaltd 11 llt !If Tr111t, lll-wll1 117,JOt.ot, wlltl lllll!nl W. e. IT JOHH, n•IMI In filll •11\t 1111-ol ,tl'ft«I Pltelflll4i .Aw_, C11l1 M-. Cl.lit_ ff'tlm Jl-IJ' H, Jf10, II In Mj,O C-'Y C'ltric. •r-. 11 fOtlOWH .. .,. Ml -· nollt 1rovlcfld, HYlllC ... 11 ,...,, llllCllr c ......... c. MCNl•l'f' LAllllY HOTTON, 1n »"• ..... ,, s. "* ••Ullf!H "'""n .... 11..,.r' !tit ........ " "'" °"" " Tr1111 .............. , Wllllllll' aiw. NtwPDrl llMll. C1111. tor llLldlll'I A. ._, ... Ooll'I '· 11'• (II.Ir ... IMI ......... of "" .. }'111'"• Ml•ld•H• Cllffwlll•,... "A\Jl SCHlOTTElllECI(, 1nv...., ........ C1tl1 Mita, Ctlll .. to t Ind el tilt ltUlb Ullhif •• II ..,,.._ ltrl Petll'llMr Sltttl, .. ,....,..,. 1Nc11. C.lN. .... ....... Ion 11 amtflld .. ruww.ii. OM ., TFVll. T"' Cl1~) 01IM J11h' tt, ltJD 1Nrlt'Mflt ""fll Otl '11,1* "-ti, I TM lllMllc:ll"Y vnetr lllf Offd of flvllll Or'..... Cll" Diiiy P!ktl, Lury Hvlloll 11111 1r.. 0 111111 _. ldl .... fl T,,,.t, "V ,... .... " • Wllctl II' lltflllft ........,.. 1, 14 lf11 14'l-P!I l't~I kl'lltlhirllldl: of 1111111 .... ) In II> 1111 -· Wiii 11'1 lht llollllttll-Mtll,..,. tlllrWf, 51111 o1 C1lll1N1t1< I 10 fl , llflCl'Ol(lln'-.nl In retul,.. l'llttlOIO!'• Uttulll IM .. l ....... M lo -o...,._1 COlllllY ' fl'Olll W1rd .. t!M(ll. .. a 11, mttlU!'-.; !'It •~l;nll • Wfllfltl 01C11111tet1 On Julw n, itll, llttfWt ~ a Net•.., tr'"' c..,t•tlnl of 1tr .. 1. •nd 1 ..., of Otltult •Ill Ot!Nt'WI for 5111, ~ ,.ulllk: lfl ,,,. tor aa!O Stl!lt, "'"'""'llw toot 1klit w1nl Mtlll<I with 1n l!llCl\9 wrllhlfl 111111« ti IM'lldl •111 •I •tlc:lllll -l'ld l1rry Hvf1f111 ~ ,..._,. •""'tol· • Cit' "'-.,. -NII "'"' ai le CIUM 1111 ~IO .. 11 .. 111 · ""'" •-I ... I -( I"'"" 11r-rty to .,.lltt'I' 1111 OOllt•lloM •11111 CH 11 DBEN ltrtltcll. '"°""' • -,. tlla _,.,.. HI' ",.111 '1 llC 1 •~ • '""...., ""'""'' _ A·"' ti lt,: ..,.; llf'I< ~ '#llell .....,., 11'1 "*'Crl... to tilt "" ..-tY IOtltli:I 11 'lll ''""· lltl'•ltfllrid' c,;'Y.,.""~ld .:.0.ICI' '"' •rttell within 11'1•~1 11'111 ~Id ttltl AVI,. Cosl1 Miu., C1tff. •rid ot llfdlel! I lit rtcelf'ffd lfl llltW t.WKlllfd ftlt """'' '°" M1'lllf tnfol'lnllllll Oii IM lllo\W -.. m4 -· 1l " Mid Ofllcltl LWWZ-.., cOFF1c1Al SEAL) •Hllcl!JOM. T1i.r-131-llo&J Ill' can ftKor'dl --.....:,, Nll\tY ~. Wfft, '' -afllCI tt 11'1 l'l-11\t Dl!Mi~. Dlhli 'J11w n ltJD. Nottt• l"11lll~llMmla ll!oorn -. n "'" Of'l'tl, c:111111 Mttlo '' ' OR 4 TITL• Ptll'C.INI Offkl Ill C•lltorllll. AHSAM IC Ofll'ltt Covntv COStA M!SA PlANNINO ~~·~:"~~'~OMl'ANY IJN(;LE LEN MY C0tnm1u1ei1 e_.,.,,,. COMMtS110N Ir Wiii ' J,,._.,.... Mtw 10, lt14 Cl'IAllLIS alCIC, Cllllrmt11 For.ctoiuri Tlllt Ofllc1r JOHN \ll•TUI, Alftt1IQ' W!llllm L. 01i1w1. l'11bll1111d N...-! M1rw N ..... ,, .. , "" W11tdlfl' Dt .. NI... . """*'•'• •fld comblltW w1111 DPI~ ~1i.1. Ntwl'Ort ,.......,., •••ell. C1llflflllll tlUt Q{f~ ti p~ "K'\ O.Ofonill, J11h' al 1ntf A11t11•I l'u'blhhltl Ofiii91 C:09tl De!lr '11it. '-f!tt'91111 °'11"" C..11 O.llr t"11tt;; '· , .. m 14\J.1t Jul\' ,,. 11 IM A~ltllll ,, 14. ltlt 1-.1'1 Aul\l•I I .. ,,,. ....,. ------------·-~~~~-,_..!.._'->---------- L ..... 11!1111 ............................... ____________ ~ ....... ~.,_..~~~~~~~--~- • r -Artificial Dut~h Stoekade. Re111ains Found • ID ~ement Probe Used KINGSTOfl{, N.Y. (Ufl)' -th1s .ii the fim dJscovery o[ 1. The lldewalk and the ad-the dig. "'This was ~aUvely holes were probably under the gift for Ci>nstrucUon of a 'I'ht remaiM bl .a l7th centuty Dutch co&onlal lttUemtnl w. jOining area were lllated to be: near the surface, Just covered road, in which ca:te there single 1 tr u ct u re of a Dutch Stockade, pouibly '?Ullt , know ol," be 11id. Wsturbed by a nearby toad over wt th top .:ill. wbetea.! lhe would be nothlng left." "historlcul nature," m i g h t by Peter Stuyveunt, liave Tbe find iachades an orderly' {'OOStruction project and clty othen have been bW'ied under Kingston ofliclals have not consider re bu I Id ill.I the been unear1hed In this bbtorlc row ii-pool holes for the lop ontelols dedded to nub thr-r!v.,.-fW. decided lhat wW become-ol stockade oo the or~ aile Hudson Rivtr city by an t.bal formed the llocbde wall diggings before W'Ork ataned "We can't say for surt that the land, which Ls CWTenlly-::o:;ver=loo:;k:;ln:;g=th:;e:;H:;udson=:;':;:;;;;;; SEQ•TTU Wah. (UPI) _ arcl><oly k . ~ical .~ from New broken pieata o( 16th cenlurY nut month. , this is Stl1)'vesant's stockade, owned by the city's Urban ,. ~ ... ~.~ or Uruversa Y· Dern ~ nearly complete '"What amnied the uca\faUng although research t.dls us tMt Renewal Agency. ll will be ' , A nudelr probe tipped with p a u l H u e y ' I e n I 0 r white clay plpes and at-team was that the post boles be directed one to be built covered over by heavy plulic For 1/108,moth of an ounce of the archOOlogist of the New York rowheadl datfnl mm'e than a and olher artifacts were found here when the Dutch settled sheets until construction ls artl!tcill'ndioactive element State-Historical Trust. said. century before the American just 18 inches below the the lll'ea," Salwen said. "What completed. Then more digging Weekender Callfomium-2.52 can be used ''There has been no discovery Revolutloo. ' -$U1'face. we can say definitely is that may be scheduled. to proapeot for minerals 00 as significant in the history of 1bty lay under a flagstone ~·we know that New we have found a Dutch Huey said the state may be A J rt• • · the ocean floor from either New York state in terms of sidewalk across the street Amsterdam (Ne w York Clty) stockade that was on this site Interested in obtaining the ( Ve lSIDg k ait.narines or shiP' on the the Dutch. from the stone house where and Jo't. orange (Albany ) are in the mid 1600'1." land and adding it to the Phone aidace ci the se.a. ''There are English set-the first New York State Sen-still down there somewhere, "We w~ incredibl y lucky, historic site that now includes tlements a1 ..Jamestown and ate met in 1'1'77 to adopt the probably 20 feet down,'' said they tried to find something the senate house and sur- The probe) developed by Plymouth, aod, ot course. state constitution. Kingston Bert Salwen. an associate pro-here Jasl· year and failed," he rounding grounds . But 642-4321 =~ i!ror~ e ~~~; !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:__S::'pa:::ni:sb~al:,:Sl:_:August~=ine:::•_:_b::ut:_..:•::as:.:lho::_:llta=: .. :'•:_::fir:,:sl:':c•::Jll::·ta1:::_· _ _:f:ts:sc:::_1r_•::t:_NY::..:_U::._w::bo::_dir:·::ec1=ed:.__:"':id::_· _"_:W::•_:thou::gb~l _:the::__'JlO'=l_..:Ki_:':ngs~ton:::·:...w.:::hi:::ch:,:bas=-.:•:_:Wl=.000~==========' spooioNilip of the U.S. Atomic F.ne:v Commission. has betn tested and proved successful at the lnstilute's Norlhwest Marine Research Laboratory in this twon oo the Slrait ol Juat1 Dt Fuca. 1be de.Y.icf' will reveal the: kinds and quantities of from 2:0 to 30 elements, including gold and silver, on the ocena nOor in from three to five mim.des. "This is the first time sca- oned minerals have b e e n measured in their nalural en- vironment by a direct probing technique." R. W, Perkins, head of the project, told UPI. The device is serviceable up to> depth of 1,000 feel, which pennits its U!e (){I most of the cooti.nenlal sht:lf. The probe is laid on the bottom. lllere it analyzes an area d. about three inches in diameter. The 0.2 milligrams of califomium-252 at one end of the probe emits neutrons which are absorbed by the minerals b e i n g measured. 1be charged minerals give off energy in the form of cielayed Gamma rays. These are picked up by a det.ector which is exU'emely seositi.iie to these rays. nie detector is at the opposite end 1rom the probe, about five feet from the Callfomiwn-252. Californium-252 has a half· life cl 2.65 years and decays by rponatneous fission which produces neutrons or the same energies as those in a nuclear read.or. Different elements in the minerals give off rays o( distinctly different energy, or signature. In this wa y the mioerals can be identified and measured. The artificial element is in • sealed stainless s t e e I cylinder about one-half inch in diameter aod thret inches long. The dec.1or" is two-inches by twoinche! In siu. "The induced radioactivity poses no environmenta1 pro- blem, since the residual radioactivity in the ocean floor is nondetectable several hours after the Irradiation," Perk iM erplained. "After a few hours, the induced radiation is Jess than 11100 of the total natural radioactivity in the same area o( tht ocean tloor." He said the new approach to mineral analysis is called "In Situ,'' or In-the.fie.Id arudygis, as opposed t o laborSory analysis. Perkins believes the probe also will be useful in geophysical map. ping ci the ocean floor. Transplant Patient Now Busy Doctor LOS ANGELES (AP) - About 16 months ago, Omer Bele.11 of the Sudan recei ve.d a kidney transplant after resigning himself to dralh. Now he's back in the operating room -performing t h e delicate surge.ry b e un· derwenl. When his patients here sometimes feel downhearted. the tall, 31-ye.ar"ld doctor -a fourth year resident in nepbrology at Harbor Gene ral Hospital -tells them: ''J've gone through it. I know how it feels." Beleil came to the Uniled States in June to work in Los Angeles under Dr. Richard Gla.ssock and at Harvard University under Dr. John Merrill. Eventually, he plans to return to Sudan to set up a treatment center for kidney diseases in Khartown, the capital city. Beleil received a kidney from his younger brother, Babak.ir, 29, in London on April 23, 1969. His story, he says, began a year before while he was in residency in neurosurgery at University C.OUege Hospital in London. One day, he said he felt ill and diagnosed the kJdney ailment. .. , had my wife, Najat, and daughter, Sara, with tne in England." he recalled. "I c.·ould not tl'!tl them then so I pretented to be well. 1 was a Jive man insidl'! the house; a dead man out.side the house.'' His kidneys deteriorated as he completed his residenc..-y, Beleil said, and so ''I decided to return to the Sudan lo die . I told n1y family my work was done in England and that it was time lo go home." By the time Beleil reached his home, he said he was convinced his illness was · in - curable. He finally confided in his father, who urged him to seek help. Three days later he was back in London and underwent lreatment several months, still hoping to get a transplant from a cadaver. He said he did not know his brother planned to donate one of his kidneys until after Babkir, a police sergeant, ar- rived from the Sudan. Real McCoy? Columbus' Flagship May Be Near Haiti MlAMJ (AP ) -Two experts Jn marine archeology will travel to Haiti this weekend to he.Ip a group of explorers aod bu sinessmen seek evldence that the Santa Maria . long -Jost flagship or Christopher Columbus, has been found. 1be explorers aod businessmen. led by Fred Dickson of Welt Palm Beach, say they believe a coral.en- crusted wreck in about 15 feet of water of Cap Haitien on Haiti's north coast ill the Sanla Maria. "We art now 95 percent sure we have found the Santa Maril,'' aald Herman W. Kitdlen, oodiSCOYettr O( the wreck. It.ems remoYed from 1 wrecked ship at the site have been dated by scientific techniques and apparently are rnwn the Columbus er3, the -r<)llll'ted. 1be Santi Maria, one or three ahlps that c a r r I e d Columbu.s era, the t e a m re~ .. ,nt.a Marla, Of)f ol thrte .liipa that ca rried Colun\lolf lo hla dlacovery ol the N.,r Wodd, ran aground and V.'as abandoned a t Christmas 1492. More artifaclS will hf' soughl by the two ezpens. Dr. John ll.aU of the University of Miami, an assistant professor of art and archelogy who specializes l n underwaler archeology, will be visiting the site for a second time. Or. Raymond McAlister, professor of oceanography at Florida AUir11tic University in Boca Raton, will a_ct'Ompany him. "Jt looks as if we now have .11 Spanish wreck of approxi- 1nately lhe t:..'Ofrect time per- iod approximately where Co- lumbus Jog says ii had been beeched," llaU said. "The artifacts -ceramic. wood and melal -have so far tested out approximately in the llme period we're con· cerned with,'' he &aid. ··we'll try tCl get juat as many artifacts as we can that can be given l:lbsolute d1Una. Then, 'A'e'U Jet I.he data be cht!eked by certain hl.storiana who are suPfJOSed to knoff a gno:at deal about shlp con· structiotl ol the flee t, among other thi ngs,'' Hall eiplalne:d. Nearly Everyone Listens lo Landers $1° Cannon Bath Towels $J • - Ch•ck your Mfdlochoou h i;h <IUChty need1u, pln•, bo00"1i, frOt • ir>g .,.h••l1, hook• (J •~n. •~P!. mGl'lf "'G<l'f mor1l G•t set for bock-t o - •hool wwlrig. Regular 21:. Penetray light Bulbs •4:53c • •o •• 1oow.1t Comport in quality to other 1egulor ln•ldt f""t 11lobo1 fflllflQ or A for 89!;. Notionally know"! Scl-.- ciol d11CllOri• ""''· '4" Value! ii~clriij'i!~:~3:s1 4-0J_ rmouUM JW.Y-BUY 3' SAVE 35~ 45' Vaseline .... 3:s1 Sale of 881 to 961 Hasbro Toys .,.2:s1 • 8Sc Doctor '" •Sic 01lux• Ptncll Color- l11g S.t • 9~c Tidd!y Winks or Skill Soll • 9~ Nu1Uo '" $54' Steel 30 Gallon Trash Can With Tight Lid !,...,,.;~ s311 Golvcrnli.d il'tt!I !'Of 1l•tr>glh ond ck<rci· bihty, y1t lloht· w1lght. LA. city ·ordinota ~Ifie& 20 to ~.5 OQllorl c.outolne11. 1f:lll!!!tt. ~1, , lady Wilshire l'L~f'"'\ a Agilon J/ \ l. -~· \ Panty Hose . 2tx.U inch ........,_ fwty In Row,..,_ --prit>t one! """"'°"' • 91c 16&t7" Pece TllWtk Jt• .,.., ... w .. cwi..1.t-JI (ht:L,, Automatic Tr••lllisslon Fluid 16x30'' Polyester Shag Rugs • Travel Spinge Po1dtZ... • JOMMy..Alii" ' $1 2' Pack of 3 Sylvania Flashcubes II $1" Girts' .r . 3 i s4 Sle8flWear ,,,!!;'!.::::.., , hos. that · fit and • lolly Dell'•&•PJ'• "''°' '° .... 11. Com-pare to others wiling .,_ 2 J ~ DI $2.50. CMk• O 4 °l:!" $1 Thick p11. ,,, tweed 6-Slrit-d cl.Wg,,,, 2-ton.1fri~•nd1. New colon! , .,_ ___ .......... I -_Chlpper's Butter Tofftl Cashews ft OI'. v .. ftftC Nl#lf Tin. 77 23clo 31cStacking Nofo pott"" • • .... ,,, bl•• .••• ~,., $1 Mugs or Bowls ...... ~ 5'$1 7 \IJ 0%. 0 :Slle!Nrts. I $2" Value! Round Metal 980 "· cut1err 1'"' ~ or·PolJ Dish' Pan Patio Table ~t;.:,:: 2 ~$1 Fold!,. -.. ·...,,. Drain Rack l Ila! •o•ed toble t0p 19 lni:t.n In d!Ofl'leter, Col0<1 choic., $1 .Gr..,t f11r u,..;,,g 17!7x\:2f.i111 p.JO!,,de, in patio. A'' l'O(k. 19.c Oak Valley Straight Bourbon $299 15" mot, s.,,. t9c ft•(• 37c ea. Flour Sack I ~·1or clcl •ll'<lloht bourbon -llllf• , ffal'ldlno vol.,., •111.fSVel .. ,A•,WMAt• ~\ GellM ......... 110.t • 1 Dish Towels ,.,,.,, S.ve ... , (]"'" ''·4 ~$1 chu. Rtody 1 10 .. 11. • 51411 Cordless Norelco Shaver · .. lor M•n • s12 Twht..,,..... tiW • &fllllOth, --~ .,._ with lt'IClf dMw\ tloY f .. hflll. Kleenex Tissues !:~!~!'!! Box 4 ~ $) 1252-PfyT-It 91' Recordlag Tape Pock" 3 78 ~t~~H!i ( $1 .,.~,., $3 • 5 Yr. Gt.latonN• •With At todlnwlh 6 CanyC.u l •t · ltii 11 .... 1.., t • S.v1 Jlc2 , SJ Faultless :'i::.l. ~ f·••· 1.., I •"' s. ... Sh 791 Dow ::-.. -2i$1 ··-· ,.,. ..... ,..,. u. 61' lysol l:.":'. 2~s1 e1,.. Ogt, Glvn voo 12 fhn~ J8c EDSV-c'" I $ t ,,__ · Reg. 1' ea. Pr-In .alld GOlars, gay prlnb, ~Oney trims. .4 to I~. g Reg. 'I" Bors' I Pelo Shim Auorled knit :' :i~ SJ It roo! S/J:et 1-'- ljM Yoluel Papl11 !~'Banks ..., .. _ 88' Jn 4 onl- nocil 6' bird ...... .Reg. '6" Hair Clipper Set \llll . _$529 0--.KhlOft, IOll- .,lllt '"~ , c • .., b' 111111\!tttor.. ,.,.. for ltwtf. Boys' Jeans )' 4:s5 Girls' Vinyl Krinkle Boots • '$399 ·' .. ' • • -' •• 'l I I I t ' ' I " • IA"tAltA oua.•11 • .,..,... • .... ,, Luau Ease Beckoning Members of Laguna's Altrusa Club, whose leisure moments are few, plan an evening of dining and danc- ing in the-relaxed atmosphere of the Polynesian J,s. lands, as summer draws to a close. Tahitian torches and tropical flowers will decorate the patio area of the Laguna home of Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Burton, where the annual party will take place on Saturday, Aug. 22. Mrs. Ann Whitener, Altrusa Club president, will join the Burtons in greeting guests, while Mrs. Beatrice Crist will take charge of the authentic Polynesian style menu. ReservatiOns for the luau gathering are being taken by Mrs. Ruth Denhart at 494-3550. Althoogh Altrusans are supposedly vacationing dur· lng summer months, actually they have contiDually been involved in community projects. Each Sunday, Altrusa Club members have been supplying infonnation to Festiyal of Arts visitors at tho Chamber of Commerce Information Booth near the grounds entrance. Some members serve in the Winter Festival Booth and, others appear in the Pageant of the Master:1 pre- sentation. CINDERELLA'S SHOE? -Thlln!'ll be a fairy tale end- ing to their fund.raising story If South Coast CMpter members of Americtn ORT have their w1y. PlanniJlf • POLYNESIAN HARVEST -Getting into an island mood for the Altrusa Club's aMual luau in Laguna Beach, Mrs. Rudy Burton, hostess for the event, picks bananas from the tree for Mrs. Bea- trice Crist. who will be in charge of dinner fare. Holding the ladder steedy in the palm·tbatclled surroundings is Mrs. Larry Gere, club treasurer. for La Casa ·de ORT fashion show and coffee hour are (left lo right) Miss Mary Barnes, Mrs. Lester Samuels and Mrs. Norman Hammer. Coffee Benefi t Magic Touches Fashion Show ' They may not be modeling Cinderella's slippers, but the La Casa de ORT Cale fashion show plans the magic of turning funds from a pleasant cofiee hour into foundations for an engineering school. Members and guests of South COOst Chapter, Wo- men's American Organization for Rehabilitation Through Training will gather in the Mission Viejo home of tbe president, Mrs. Edward Clement, at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 19. Proceeds from the event, for which members will model fashions from the Casa de ORT :stoce in Anaheim, will go to the new ORT School of Engineering on the grounds of the Hebrew Univers:ity in Jerusalem. Groundbreaking ceremonies for the school are scheduled before the end of summer, wilb the first stu- dents planning entrance in the fall of 1971. South Coast Chapter is joining other chapters all over America in attempting to raise two million dollars for the school over a period of seven years. · Models for the fashion showing will include J\1rs. Edward Kligman and her daughter Lisa, the !11mes. E~ward Edelstein, Ira Goodman and Stanley Berman, with the Misses Mary Barnes, Sara Samuels and Janet Hammer. The Casa de ORT Is a project which Is staffed by volunteers throughout the region. Fashions modeled all may be purchased fol!O"Wing the show . Reservations for the morning program stlll may be obtained by calling Mrs. Fred Eckstein at 830-0418. Mutiny Ahead for Captain Who Allows Crew No Leave DEAR ANN LANDERS : Wt are two tetnapn who need you to apeak up for ua. Grandpa is • }'etn old. We km him very much but hil mlnd wander• and he's Uke not all there. 'l1>e -said Grandpa would be better ofr ln the okt folk.I home than at our house: because Mom can't ttv. hbn tM kind of cart be needs. SO three weeks ap Mom and Dad took bbn to a nloe place ,,,..... the people are '"l' lrlendlJ. Mom ma.bl my brolher and me (we aro u and ti) ,. wtlh her to •1111 GrandPI every emln&: after supper. We wooldn't mind a couple ru1htt: a week, Ann, but this every·ntaht routine is like spactnc us out. Jt'a bortn1 \o alt Jn a room and not be able to carry on a conVttlltloo. Grandpa dotsn't even ~ who we art. Mom NY• i\ ii ANN LANDERS ~ belq r<IJ)OC<ful and allB Grandpo ts aone we will be glad we we.re IO rood to him. Wiil you speak up for ua! Mom ts all the time bandln1 "' your column when )'OU .,... wtlh her. -WHEELING, W. VA. DltAR WllE!U: I cu, tee !bl It maku maeli te:a11 hr a eoapk ti 1et1aaer1--.-.. ~,~tt • "", .. ,. srudJlo ...,, ll&ltt " t!te -k. Twtoo a wetll ~ plnlf. I .... ,_. -""° ..... '* ... atop .,..... ,.. lklt aln1 11 what the con11dera her n1y .r11 ... DEAR ANN LANDERS : I COllldn 't believe my eyea when t read 19Uf answer to lho falher wtio 1lgned him.lei! "Second Olw CHlltD.'' It oeem• by the time he 11t down to read the newspaper h w•• rl~ apart. Hit wife had tom out 1 recipe, hi• daughter clipped yotlr column, hill mother-in-law went for the """-""· etc. You told him to oolve Ibo problem by plcl:ln( up • paper on Vie w11y home just lor hJnulelf. You call that l<Mce? 1n our family H you are okl enough to read a newspaper you are old enough to leave H In good eondltion for the nexl penon. Common t<JW1esy and ~' for others should be leamed early. A red Ink underllnlnJ pen for marting articlts to be torn out later ls cheaper than 1 second newsp&per -and leu trouble, too. Anyone In oor family who wantJ lo fear out 1n Jtem can wait unW the next day. Where were YOU, Ann Linders. when that column appeartd? -DISAP· POINTED DEAR DISAPPOINTED' I wa1 In Atlltu but t wrt&t tbe advice befor. I lelL Ft117 atllliml reaclm <H'I bt wro11 -aad Utat1t rtqiily &he 1utmbet ~· ~mplalaed about my anawer. I plead temporary tmully. DEAR ANN LANDERS' Please loll womtft who 10 to bargain sales not to 11y to a person who t1 looking at 1 sale Item, "Ir you don't want that 1 would like to buy It." This does one of two lhlnp -both of them bad. It makes the woman who ls corWderlng the Item more eager to buy It Ulan ahe would ordlnar~y be. Or II mak,. her feel guUly ll &he dot.I bey IL Yeaterday I paid '33 for a dreaa. r didn-oi n<M and would-nol-ha>. purchased tt lf 1 very pushy woman had not 1tood 1t my elbow m1klnf aucb remarb as, "That'a uldiy wha J've been lookina for. Hurry up and make up your mJnd.'' ' I am stuck with this "bargain" and can't return It because it wu on aa)e. f ®Id wring that ,woman 's neck for what she dld to me. Please print. -MINUS 133. DEAll MINUS: llbe didn't do a111f•ln1 to yw. YN..IUd le • ytuneV. Ceaskter It • tu le11oa •Del wear lbt dreu to Ule Hit bar1alo. Pie at a rtmledtr. What •waits you on the ~ •kt• ot ... lhe marrla1e veil! How can you be oun your marrta,. wtD work! Road Ann Lander•' booklet "Marrla.ce -What to Erpect." Send your "'IUOll to Landen Ill care ol ~ DAILY PILOI' encloatnJ ao cent& In coin and 1 k>ni.' atamped sclt-.addrelled euvelope. ' I ---------------------------===_IJ i( ~ • J4 OAJLY PILOT Library Trustee Board Elects New Chairman • s.rvu. Ifie Ii"""" -lhuy-olTnlste<sas cllainnu will be Mn. T. Dun-• -. she WIS instrwneota1 in the campaign to 1cqujre the Corolul de! Mu Lib.-.ry. She lw been """"" the li1>rary board since A!'il. JJQ. • • • • ~ ' • • . CMl Steftrt. ae is a:tBUminC duOes from Mn. RlllCOCk Banning UI, immediote Pl" d>ainnan. Mn. Stewart WU: JftSident ol tile Fri..m ol th< Ubrary . far lt5Mlll. ID this po5ition. Peering Around JlESIDJNG in Mario ~nty are Dr. and Mrs. Robert 0 . Dunbar {the former Mrs. Josephin e Reid) ~'bo were married in the Laguna Bu.ch hOme of Mr. and ~tn. Arthur WUey. 'Ibt Rev. Ellsworth Richard son of the Neighborllood Congnga· tiooal Church performed the ccremon7 for Dr. Dunbar, ~ I -professor of tieuraJ SW1ery at t b e UniveriltJ of Callforni1 Medical School, and tbe new Mn. Dumar. NATIONAL HONOR wu rectlved by a Costa Mesa resi· dent fer a poem she entered •~ in the American P o e t r y ! t.eaaue'• annua1 contest. Mn. : ~y1L. Jensen was among ! the top 1J wlMen for her : . entry, ''To a Modern : Kritikos." • • • . • .. . " .. ... ,. !:: Geo~etown ~ Manor. ~ .!.: 2101 H. ~ AVf.. _,._ ..... of1'N18L. -.... COANaE CClUNTY'S LAMDT AHO MOST IEAumJL Other library trust.ea: l~ elude Mn. JlaMlng. Olarles Sword. Roger W. BardlC!'e Md Dr. Thomas A. Blakaly. Mrs. Marilll Sheely, city librarian, r<pOIU an IU per- cent Increase in total boob borrowed for the yw, ...U above the aver1ge for a city. Tbe f.igurt represents 10 boots read per person. Families may borrow 16- mm films and projedon, I new h1nry service available lhroop tile film cimrit ol the Sanliago Ubrary System. Vows Said In Chapel Ceremony SUwme Pauline Ball and Jamea Michael Kempner n- changed vowa and rings before the Rev. Charles Smith in .,. Calvary (]iapel, Sant. Ana. '!be bride is the daughter of Floyd R. Ball ol Huntingtoo Beach, wOo gave her in mar- riqe. Her mot.he!° is Mrs. Ruby Ball of the same city. Her husband's parents are Mrs. George Mandarino ol Costa Mesa and J u I i a n Kempner ol Sal Lau City. _, .. maid ol booor was Mia O'lrlsUne Dales, while bridesmaids Wert the Ml&ses Sanity Kempner, tile bridegroom's !lister, Candy Hetzel, Patricia Ball, the bride's sister anct 'nna Adams Best man mM Jctm Yoak. and mhers were David Hays and Bill rucbardson. Following a honeymoon in MWco, the newlyweds will reside in Costa Mesa . Blue Star Mom s HOME~ E ~l -n~' A 11 ·n Hunlington Beaoh Blue star i/UJ. '11.J,Uj, Mothers, Chapter 2 aage meetings every Monday at FURNIT U~E uo p.m. in Lake Pari i:::~iijl'ree:;;;~:&~~~~~-~tet;;· RE-UPHOLSTER Complt!te Selt!ctlon of Fabrics lncludl"9• Linens and Velvets M1at., Crathrntn 1Jw1ys •• C-KOSKI 1831 NEWPORT llVD. 6 I COSTA MESA tN"r M11WI . •, •• F (SY·ICO~ICf'l'I Pi.oae 642-1454 DAil \• PILOT 1>t1tM W G .... kll""59r LAND OF OZ -Off to see the Wizard of Oz are Dorothy, played by Dee Dee Challis, 12 (foregro~n~). and Toto.. portrayed by Christopher Moore , 9, both of Laguna. They wlU 1010 other cast members in ·a production of the famous tale Sunday, Aug. 16, al 4 and 7 p.m., sponsored by the Laguna Summer Theater Workshop. Lagunans In vited Yellow Brick Road Followed The Wizard or Oz will come to life in Laguna Beach on Swiday, Aug. 16. when children participating in the Laguna Summer 'I h e a I e r Workshop take to the stage al 4 and 7 p.m. The production will be the final demonstration or the workshop's summer session 1n pantomine, improvisation. speech and 1"chnlcal training Mesans Recite Vows In Evening Ceremony Exchanging wedding vows and rings before the Rev. Jean Stewart iii Anaheim Unity Chapel were Pamela Ann Oiandler and Loyed Justin Hale, both ol Costa Mesa. Parents of Uie newlyweds are Costa Mesam Mr. and Mn. Garth Olandler and Mr. and Mrs. Loyed Hale. for children and youths from 6 through 18. Pyne CasUe 1n Laguna will be the setting for the play, for which oo admission will be charged. 'Ibe public is in- vited afJCI donations will be accepted. Cast members Include Dee Dee Challis as Dor o thy ; Christopher Moore, Toto; Clare Glidden, wicked witch ; WI.le Ludwick, scarecrow; Robin Buck, Un woodman; Wendy Yarnell, lion. and Michelle Vautier. Glinda; j SPECIALS FOR AUGUST The bride's grandfather, Qlarles W. Groff, also of Costa Mesa, gave her in mar- riage. Others are Michael Moore, jester: Kelly Clever. Margaret Mancuso and MicheJle Ziegler, 0i crea ture s ; Charles Rockwell, great wizard : Chris Esiitey, guardian of the gates; Kenny Pound, Kelly Clever and Stephanie, Susan and Joan Mancuso, munchkins. Miss Gwen Yarnell. direct.or (If the workshop, is being assisted In the production by Miss Genene Kluck. I. NOW THRU AUGUST 31 st Horoscope Virgo: New Outlook SATURDAY AUGUST 15 By SYDNEY OMARR DA TING IDNTS : Unusual places and sight. art featured. Jet set ls especially active. Discussions featarblJ ireater •elf-knowledge are In spC>Wgbl. Aquarius 11 per.sa.- aUty kid , wbllt Capricorn gels the cbetk. Pisces has bUod date, while Lto is conttrned about permanency of rtlatlon- sblp. Ubra i1 involved In ro- mantic situation, wh.Ue Sa&li- tarius does plenty or la111h- ing. Fine for cemenU.g of frltndablps and realiiaUon of hopes and wlsbes. A~ lfi.1arch 21 ·April 19): Accent (In new friends, a dynamic relations h ip . PerS()nal magnetism soars. Nothing is apt to occur halfway -all the way (Ir nothing. But give logic equal time with impulse. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Wise to take safety precau- tions (In the road -and at home. Emotional fuse or fami- ly members apt to be at short point. If you antagoniz.e, you wil pay the price. Strive to be diplomatic. GEMINI (May 2l·June 20): Reinforce beliefs t h r o u g h spiritual contemplation. You can ~ave fun .without going haywire. Means don't toss principles aside. You have to race yourself in morning. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Friction with mate, partner erupts unless lhere is financial understanding. Matter which has been put aside reappears. IL concerns who owns what -and what to do with it. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Study Cancer message. You get very lltlle U insistent. domineering. Lighl touch is more apt to achieve results . Concentrate on public rela . Lions. lmprovt image. VlRGO· (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): Avoid strenuous a c t i vi t y . Catch up on health resolutions . New outlook could actun lly solve dilemma. Cement rela- tionships wilh associates, co- workers. U BRA (Sept. 23-Ckl. 22) ' Childrefl may prove ram- bu11clious. ~emember your own age. Being a pal does not make it necessary to act in foolish manner. Be fa ir but firm. Look out for safety hizards. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You could receive windfall . You are in expansive mood. Include family in en· terlainment plans. Have fun without being extravagant. News concerning property is favorable. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Not so good for travel. You tend to overlook basic requirements. Take time to avoid scattering forces. Relative who is insistent will res Pond to humor. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You ma y feel com- petitive. But it is best to be a good, attentive listener. All facts should be considered. There is change. but this does not necessitate travel. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You get benefit ot vigorous Individual who wants to aid cause. Expres1 gratitude. Best Lo remain close to home base. Fine din- ner with family could smooth over dU!erences. P!SCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Some J:iaurds are not evidence. Be cautious. You could be victim of wishful lhinking. Hold off on im· portant decisions. One who carries nrmors is irresponsJ- ble. Respond accordingly. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have natural dram&tic ability. But you sometimes overplay yo u r hand. You are beginning now to build for fu ture security -material and emotional. Many commenl on unusual quality of your voice. You Jove to be nattered, especially by opposite sex. Orders Ignored? NEW YORK I UPI) -How well do parents comply with doctors' orders regarding their children'? Not too well. says Dr. ~1arsilall H. Becker. pecjlatirc sociologist. Dr. Becker, who has con~ ducted a study on the subject. said that • parents have a "disturbing. low rate of com· p\iance" with Uie doctors' in· structicms. .STARTS AUCTUST 15 ~ All i31KINl~-~g.oo .. IOP.S ONLY -:f 4· .!! ~ ~ au.y-~~'!! 1ftl '5 208 /YlARlnc AV BALJ30A l.$LAN:D Attending t.he pair 1 s matron of honor and be.st man for the evening ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Stephenl--..--------'------------------------------. :: ., . • • • t· • f· .. . ·-' • • . . ~ • • ·L -.. .. .. ~ ~ '· ·-" •• +:.. . , ,, ., • • .. • ' .· ., :$-• • . .. SUPER B VITAMIN ''A'' HAIN A well 11t1bli1httl, l:.11- 1M1d formul1, willl lh1,. PllH LIYll OI L CAPIULI$ •p•ulic pol1ncl11, 15,000 U.S.P. U11 ill S1fflow1r M•rt••in1 ,,,......., .... $l.99 100 CAl'SUW . Ona Pound $PlCIAL $1.59 ... llf., $1,00 1 .. 11lar 49c. 60 ToWm. It ... $).4t 79c 39c IPICIAL$2.79 SPICIAL Sl'ICIAL EL MOLINO WHEAT GERM FLAKES o•• '°""" _ .... •k . . .. . . ... . .. .. .. .. SPECIAL 39c CAMU PLUS Calcium Lactate FAMILIA to T1bl1+-lh1 F1voril1 A Milk Source C1lciu111 I J •1 . C.h••1hlt Vi+•111i11 "C" '" t.i.s..,. .... ,,. F1111eu1 l ircl11r1111111U 150 MGS Sl'ICIAL 49c C1r11I IU't' THIM Hiii AT 200 ToWtfl, 11.,. SI .4t ........ s300 ....... ... SPECIAL $1.19 $PICIAL 69c VITAMIN "E" SPECIALS ... l.U. -... C.USULI• -.... "·" .......... SPECIAL $1.98 , .. l.U. -1H CAPIUW -....... ,. .......... SPECIAL $3.59 llLICT CHAMOMILE TEA . ... ... 1.V._,. .. .,. SHCIAL 79c . HllNll APPLE JUICE Fre111 r1r1tll11, C•lif, lll1r1 l111't A11y l •tt., .... $1 .tl 0.. H9lf • .,._ l>ICIAL 89c •1•a•111, .... ~ '""'""""" fUALITT h ... -ti..,..,. 1..,.;IHt • 'COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS Two StoNS To S.rve You letter COSTA MESA 270 L 17th St • In Hlllgren 5ftu•r.• J41..9JJ7 TUSTIN 10'4 IRVINE BLVD. NEAR SAY-ON 544-71:14 Ca.sc. Ushering guests lo their seats was Ezra Briggs Jr . The new Mr. and Mrs. Hale, both graduales of Estancia High School, will live in Costa Mesa. She is attending a pro- ressional school for medical assistants and be has studied at Orange Coast College. Special wedding guest& were Dr. and Mrs. Guy 0. Beem, the bride's aunt and uncle • Preci sionists Partic ipating An Air Force drill team will participate in the All States festival al the Costa Mesa Park on Sunday. Au g. 16, hoale<I by Flight 12, Air Force Mothers . The fljght meets at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday. Aug. 2n . in the California Federal Sav- ings and Loan building, Costa Mesa . tnteresled penons may call Mrs. Walter Hurt.ado at S4&- 9748 or Mrs. Juanita Furrow at 546-3159. ORDER YOUR NEW CHEVY VEGA NOW FOR EARLIEST POSSIBLE DELIVERY. CONNELL CHEVROLIT 2111 H•rltar llY4. C"t• MIN 546-1200 ,, ,., . • ,.,,.,,. . -. . DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom K. Ryan REJOICE, LAD! REJOICE Ni 9E ~I.AD! YOU'RE I.OST 9REECHCLOTH HAS eEEN FOUND!! ': I , I MUTI AND JEFF -·-IT'S 51"UPID 00 KEEP A S11JPID BIRD LIKE THAT ARoUND T+lE 1-100$1 JUDGE PARKER I ' WHAT GOOD IS HE?HECAN'T FLY, HE CAN'T SING! l-IE'S J UST STUPID! 'IOU' c;o'f NO ID!':ER 'l ' ·1 ' -~ ' '-1-=~ By Al Smith r:::::::===---... ai ... --. •"".w:::e"1'°w-,....=::-=;--:::PT=n<=,....,"°'=:::.-,°'~"' .. "us:';iC'='-... --IT'S--&ELIEVEP'-TH-~T ~ I GUESS n.48'EU BE WO INTERVIEW WITM JA,SON · M..EXA,NOEll!: I TM.KEU 10 11-lE W"R:PEN 't'BTERP"'t' ABOUT JASO~ ALEXANDER ! ME SAIO ME'S SEEN A MODEL ~ISON EI!'.'! I WANT Y08 m SE Tl-IE~ WMEM I MAVE A. TALK WITH MIM, ~AM ! PLAIN JANE 'G ACROSS l Quol11i011s 5 Controll ed slices, in golr 10 Crust on ill sore 14 Superv is ' 1 publlc11t1on 15 British !sirs prop Ir lfi. R Iver or Sw itz.er land 17Formof Elizibf!th 18 Odrs, sonnets, etc. ]' Kind of communf· cat!on 45 Ass1ult 47 U1dr I bow-lnr sound 4'J Voung ch~p 50 Po1tion of :tn entir e !rip 52 Covering garmrnl 54 Thal fde ntical 11·~le on r 58 Unbravr 59--rulr: 2 '/lords 60 Spa11islt -· bl lrksameries s &5 Slush bl Houst f1,1r11ish!n11 Hem TO &R:ING 'IOI A SPECIAL MEWS SULLE· PliSONEri ESOPEC> TIN ! HOOPEll!S ARE &EING CAllEO lO ,PURING TME CDNFll· TME STA,TE PRISON WMER:E INMATES OF SION &IT MAVENT (Cl.L. !LOCK S AR.E l lOTIM6 lNP SEEN IPENTIFIEP MAYE. fAl(EN TMREE MOSTAGE!i,! AS YET ! TOPA,V! By Frank Baginski 1~ YOU ~.A.VE rT, FLAUNT IT!! 8/l4n O j Fr~turc 31 kaving a Ill\ of mosl JQ !Jan's namr hllman fee l: J'J •••• dr camp 2 words 41 Fisll b Verb lorm 43 Freli119 7 Gossip: sorrow for Slang one 's sh1s PERKINS ,.,. ,,.. a.,;-,.,., ... r.,.., •• ,_. '.., ... MISS PEACH F )OU l-l°"VEN'T '901" IT, FAKE IT!' · • -• .. • ~ l .__ ... -. Ll'L AINEI SALLY BANA"AS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS TODAlJ, ~l..O TSlSIOIJS TOOK A T~l.l FOfi:. lHE \llaSE • By Mel ----20 Stair or fitness 22 Gate receipt s 24 Undr1go de· composi1 Ion 25 Undrr1y mg SOUfCf S bit Accomp~istird 70 S. Amenc;in nal1on 71 City or Europe 8 Pirce of ~b Rain rrally pros t hard IJ Hebrrw co in ~B Femininr of old title M.&.-.C11i'f' ~A M P KE:L..L-'( ----ANO WfTM AN MONEST FACE LIKE YOURS, YOU SHOULD. HA.YE NO PROBLEM ROUNDING UP 'fQ CO~SIGN5"R5 . 27 Brtomrs sallow in color 29 E1tin9 placrs• 2 wo1ds 32 Golfer's pioblt"' 33 Grampus 34 Intended 3~ Gr01Jp or S. P1cihc lsl1nds AO l iturgy 42 Sall ing ve ssel 44 Half: Comb, form 72 The Br idge of Siln --·Rev 73 Antimony: · Comb. form 74 lilovr sudd enly "' .,iolrn11y" ,5 Tl11s : Sp DOWN l Food it rm 2 Empty 3 Draws ~wa• f•om an 011qina! goal ~ lilacllin~ p~rt l D Tool ~1 Open 11 City or spaces io Arr1ca tile woods l2 lil issi1r 53 lnstrumr9t 13 Vrgetablrs 54 Fastrnrrs 2l fillbtic. SS Arch iJ)'/ago "'a king 1m1t drvicr Sfi. Onr of a Zl Grrrk cil y Polynrsi1n si.atr peoptr 26 Pe tilr 57 Fore most's 28 Mrt•I o;irtner 'l.9 El --'l US a9en(y: Marine Bast, A~r. CiHf. 113 Fi1st 30 Hom e lo n1tu11! Hie lrlsll 11umbr1 ll Prying 4C Hill mecldler 6£. Wortdngm1n 's 35 V•z: club 2 words 68 Through 1 " " • I,, " ' . < " ' " " ,, ~ " ~ ~ u ,. I•! "00 ·~ ,, r" " " " .. " , • ,. .. .. " M N '?l: ~ l·.f" " n .. 1 11 .. N ' -.. .. ,. ....... IO ~ ,. • !') • ' l'.:10&~ CS©· -~ ------. .=~W5LE.N0 MONEY -ON 'fA c E" VA l.U~ . . ~ > ! Ir •' I STEVE ROPER - -·· • I Sltll COME BACK SOMETIMES TO \llSIT WfTH MYGlm. FRIEND N4D··V'YJl(N/ ·TELL HEI? MYTRCllBl.ES/-SME'S 60T A HEART Alt 916 AS A SUCKLE./ • PEANUTS By Chailes M. Schub ~---~ ~--------, ·---------. - • •·• HE'SLUCkV HE'.S NOT~ I< A CME. IF 'llll'RE 1111' lNli6 l'f A Qf,f..J.../>JJ. \lll RfAU!/Hl!PiH™'S l.lfE Kl IE IWl'I' IS llliU~l)\.. . ' • 1 I I • frldu, AuvlnL 14, 1'170 •·• ~ ~f (i) CT) C. D '"' !IAtt. -• THI UIANGI WOllD MR.MUM ----· D~llV OllOT JS ly Al Copp By Charles Bwwtti WMc..... ~~? By GllS Arriola By Ferd Johnson ME'S ~I/Ell <ilVl~<O l'll6 W~$ . COO~Glt ,lN ULC61'1 .• _1,_ 1:1 ~ C!l By Roget' Bolen EVfl<' GeT 11-IE F?El..1~6 lfllW'~ ~-INl.IUl"'G 1He IJe\OS if GIANT .SD!="T " ' • College Football Radicals' Next Target lo -dl!nq>llOn-ln what form bo bn't ll)'ln&. "We htw, oootldl cm evtrJ caJllllllS In th! COW1llJ. SOmt d my clootsl......,.,. radials and thq ll1 U...'D bt a k11 d bell rabid with foot· bill, .. Mount nvata.. ~ "Their only obotacle In~ lhil objective Is lbetr "'"' lack (If orpnba· tion.... he adas. "Their bed is thal football is the best eu.m~ d white men erploiting black JTlelH>( rich exploiting the-· Players a.re u!ed to entertain 1 lot of fat c•l alumni, much like the old 1ildltton did. "They l't out of achoo! -a ~ that mr.ans nothing and their edllCltkll is a joke. lleamdtlle, schools make a lot of money because of them." tdll the Ployboy ocribe, w1lo ooce "" a rtlll!Ow editor. Detro it at Big A Wright Seeking · 16th Win Tonight Boger Jtepoz figuru h! · 11 a candidate for tht ''<'Amebri" or the Year" award "!"' Ille Calllomia Ang<ls filure lbey're hick in the ?'flDUJf race in the American I.ague We>t. The Angels send JS-ea.me winner Clyde \\'rig1lt against the Detroit Tigers and •Mickey Lolich tonight., secure in tht know~ that I.My haft picked up 3~ pmes on lhe front.running but stumblinc Mfune.sot.a Twins ginct Saturdly. California stiJJ resides in third place, 1:JJ ....... 1:1.5 •-"'-''" , ..... 12:!i "·"'· 1: '-"'-,, .. ..... ''" 11 .. ... •:U ll-"'- ooe-half game behind Oakland and ~n behind the Twins but the feeling was one of opUmi!m after Repoz crashed a )eado{f bomt nm off Moe Drabowsky T!Nnday nigh~ lilting lhe Angell lo • :1-2 \'lctory over the Baltimore Orioles. The home run wu the 14th of the year for Repoi. a career h1gb. Lu1 seuon he batted a meager .16$ with only eight bome.n and 11 RBL Be now O'W'os a .%!JO average and 40 RBI. ''I'd like to win the award," he said. "I lhink you rould call me a candidate. Last year's average must qualify for gome:lhing." Repoz credib a sllghUy altered atance and the chance to pily regularly u Ille 1'1!astJn for hls turnabout. "You can't play once or lwice a week and atay sharp," he said. "You have to Jook al all types or pitching.'' now," Repoi revealed. "I didn't think I oouJd swing: it that way but m far 1·m having pretty &ood IUCCeSS." Re:poi: was not the onJy Angel who established a career hi&b for home runs. Jim Frepi slammed bis 1tth to &Iv< lhe Angeb a Z..l Jead in the sixth, topping his ~vioos best ol 18 set in J964. "We've got 4S games left," Fregosl said. "I don't think you can uy tJlil race is over." ( Mel Queen permiU«l a Frank Robinson double which chased home the tying run in the top of the eighth but set the Orioles down in enter in the ninth to even his recon1 al 3-J. Drabowsty took his fourth lou in .even decisiom. IALTIMOlll CALl~OllMIA •• , "..i l!lllford. 11 ' l I O A\o!Mr, 111 Rtol1-'nunll, d l II 0 ll-1. r1 J.,_11, ID l t I ,-f'99001, H f.11~ rt ' I 1 A.Jori.....,, If H-rlcb, c ) t ' Sl*'IC.,., lb 8. llOlllftlOtl. lb ' t I MtM"'ll..,, lll 0..Jollftoofl. 7Ci 4 I I --. d Griclo, II 4 II 0 Eg•n. c ,.1 ....... p 1 I I 1,M .... plly, 11 Crwlly, llfl I t t LI Rodll. 11 Or1i.ws.ky, p 0 0 • o...e..i. , ai.1r. I'll t • 1 Tot1l1 J:l 2 1 Tot1 1& ... ,_,... ' t I 0 ' , l l 4 1 I I • I I t • • 1 ' , ... J 0 I I l • l 0 l t 0 I t I I I • • • • JI l I J a.111....,,, 1GD ODO tt• -2 C111tor~i. 000 101 Olli -I LOa -l!l•nlmor• 1. C1tolkni. s. 11 -,.....,... S-"C.,, EOI'\, F R~. ll -A, Jtol\M9!\. HR -l'rlffliD'l (If), ~ fUJ. S -T, Murpfly. " " ' .. .. .. .. _ ' ' ' ' ' ' Dr1Mrir IL.J.I) ' ' ' ' • • T.Mll'f'Sll'ly ,,,,, ' ' ' ' ' .. ,_ "' • • • • • -{W,).JI 1·11> ' • • ' • Tlf'M -l :tt, Att""41n« -U,U6. And Mount may "'lab he'd have stuck with rollaion afttt tabbin& USC for na· tloaal bonon. ''Thty (SC) hav. the beat ........ u,. - ---------WHITE WA.SH -----...-- .....,....1 In th! cotmlry-wlth the -I· bit txctptkln of Ohio Sttte:." he says. Mount says cotchln&, material, ex· perience, excellence and s c h e d u I e: strength •rt the tangibles be uxs to mokl his annual pigskin predicUms. Tbe lntanrlblts are wealher, Injuries. morale and hack. He admlll USC hu a m- sdlldule -one thing 1111N1 U.. 'll'ojano fin!Jilln& u the COW1lry'1 top eleven. And he expecll them lo lose 1 1am• a1alnat "'ch 1,.... u Notre Dame, UCLA ond Alabama. Jn rtct. ht coneedt$ the: naUonll crown may we.U be decided on a hctt September night ln Altbama when the Trojans duel Bear Bryant'• Ctlmson Tide in the seam opener . "Before, Alabama won with little, quick, fast mtn. Now the BeaT has big, quick , fast men. This may be the best team he 's had in five years," 1'f0Wlt says. Mount, like •n)'OQe who risks calling tbe futu~. hu had bl.s ups ind downs. Like the year he picked USC's Mike Oar· rttl a1 an AlJ·Amerkan b1Ck In a P~ ...... tuuo. Only trouble was he hid Oaneu oa def ..... Mike went on to Trophy and red-offtnalvtly-lor Chiefs. win the Htbmln later star- tbe Kw•s City Another Ume be tabbed Iowa'• Jmy Burns •s coach of the year. Instead, Burns wu ti.red. Mount rank• former Sanla Ana Hi&h wtus Jauc: Cwt1a aa 1he teeond moat outatandln1 collqiale ,.phomo<e arklder in the notion, btlllnd Georato Tecll quarterback Eddie McAll!tn. Curib ii at the Unly1rolty of California and was Instrument.al in tbe Galde:n Bears' stUMlng te1m trlwnph in the NCAA lr1et meet two months tp. Repoz was looking at Drabowlky, who had just replaced Jim Palmer, when he Jed elf the call.fornia eighth. He sent Drabowsky's second afferlng aver the center field fence. Laver Wins, Emerson Falls In Net Play SLAMMIN' SAMMY SNE AD SUFF ERS AGONY OF BLOWN PU TT IN PGA CLASSIC. "I'm holding my bat up and away Dodgers Tr)· Chicago After Losing Singer CHICAGO (AP) -Los An&eles Dodger ,.U.Chlng, ance the ecourge of Natianal League batsmen, netded a lift today in Ole apeoer cf a four~game series against tbe Cubt al Wriflley Field. 8111 Slqer, who pilched a nohitter lut mootb alter missing nearly two month! Doqe r Slcle All o-M Kfll CMll o\•· lt Oadte" •• (Ille- .... 11 "°°"" .. °''"" AOll. " Ooci.ers 11 Cllluta lue. 11 0..1" 11 SI. L1111h AUii. II ~ II 51, Lllllh 11t,111. If Dod9l'r1 .i It. L011l1 AUii. JI ~ VJ 'ltt•IM.lr ... ""· 2t DedHfl ", ,.fthbyrwfl ll:H 1.m,' 11:1• •.m . lhlO •·"'- J:H •.!ft. J:SJ "·"" t :H11.!ft. 7:H 11.m. ,,u ''"" with hepatitis, has been sidelined for possibly a month. Despite his illiteu, Slnger had been the Dodger•' meet dlecUve: pitcher, winnin& eiaht of 13 decisions. But the right·handf:r dfered two linear fracttlfes In hi! right index finger Wedleaday while attempting to bunt In Pittsburgh. Rlghl-lumc!er Don Sutton, 13-1, sought hil fll'lt vktory of Au1115l and the Dodgen' second in lour meet.bigs wiLh the CU.bl! Wa .season in the: aeries opener. He hoped to benefit from 1 coolinued 11rl' of Dodger bJUln8 which has pro- duotd 311 runs ii the lilt lour games, all Victories in an offerWve dilplay unheard of when Loi Angelet wu winntaa pen- nant& with puny bltUng aod superb pllcblna. ~atton't fortune.s 1platt lht CU.bl have bem dllUlrolu. Re f oced them tOctay for the nm tlme th!t year but hll 11feUme r rd apinst Chlcaeo "'' only l·lt Tht Doditra were idle Thunday but dropped 11 \0 games bthlnd !Jr1t.plact QnclruiaU wbto the RedJ dumped New Ytlfl. i-1. , TORON'TO !AP) -Pand>o Gonulei, the old lion of the tennis court, stalked his way throogh lhree match points and whal he termed bid calls by a linesman 'Illuraday to advancf! to today's quarter finals (I( the $23,000 Canadian Open tennis tournament. Nicklaus Puzzles Everyone Gon7.alei: erupted in the second aet of hl!!i match again11t Ron Holmberg when a linesman called service faulls. Ohio Belter Adds Neiv Look to Old Talent But he managed lo curb his temper when the presstlfe Will on lo beat his doubles partner, M , H. U . In other matches top.seeded Rod Laver of Corona del Mtr defeated Australlan countryman Bill Bowrey, 6-3, 6-t; Marty Riessen of EvartslOO, Ill. got past T1mail El Shafei of the Unlte:ct Arab Republic, 6- 4, I~, 6-2. TULSA, Okla . (AP) -Jack Nicklaus was strolling through the club house when he was approached by a middle-ag. ed woman wearing dangling earrings and a look or l1ero worship. "Oh, Mr. Nicklaus," lhe lady cooed. Cliff Drysdale: of South Africa upset thlrd·seeded Roy Emerson of Newport Beach, 8-3, 6-2. "Tell me, is it true that you an: going lo Hollywood lo make a movie? J've heaTd talent scouts have been alter you." 1Jack, who shared the first -round lead in the PGA championship, blushed. Keith Carpenter cf Toronto was dumped 6-l, &.3 by Aussie Fred Stolle thta eliminating all Canadltna from men's singles contenlion. "No, ma'am," he replied politely. "I play golf. That's my career." ShorUy afterward, a man strode up to a press ph<ltographer and asked the name a( the yoUJ1g player whose picture he had Lombardi WASHINGTON !AP) -Pr.,ldenl NI,. oo, with a phone call and Ccngre:.sa with a speci•I tribute , took time out this wetk to '1 honor \\'1shingion RedskJn coach Vinet Lombardi, hoaplt1llttd since a second major ope ration July 27. The President called Lombardi at his room ln Geor1etown University Hoa:pltal Tuelday night and wished him well, the Washington Poet said in today'a ediUons. The call lasted ae:veral minutes and the President thanked Lombardi for what he had done for Lhe cOW'ltr)', pertlcularly "'""' people. The President and Mrs. Nixon ha\·e alto 5tnl a telegram and • noral display to Lombardl't room. Meanwhile , there were 1 eve r • I 11pceches tn Congreu pralsin1 the former • Green Bay Packtr co.ch. Lauded VINCE LOMBARDI just snapped. "That wa s Jack Nicklaus," the photographer answered. "So. I kno1v Nicklaus,·• the questioner pe rsisted. "J mean that kid with the blmd hair." "It was Nicklaus," the cameraman repeated. Th e man walked away, scratl'hing his head. The new Jack Nicklaus Is puu.ling everybody. He is trim and ha1dsome . He looks to years younger. He has a pleasant new personallly. And he's playing the best golf of his life. The JG.year-aid helter from Columbus. Ohio, who has we• more than $60,000 in his last four tournaments which includt his second triumph in the British Open, goes into the second round or tht PGA Championship tod1y tied with San Fran- cisco's young John Miller for the lead with two-under-par 68. Everybody's predicting J1clc wW walk away with the $40,000 flrat prl:r.e, thw completing an unprtccdented second sweep of lhe four m1jor pro ch•m· ptonshlr,•· He a ready holds three. Masten, two U.S. and two British Open crowru. He won the PGA in IMS. Only thret othtr players have won the four major litle:s once around -Gene Saraien and Ben Hogan. no longer active. •nd Gary Player of South Alric•, lhret away from a RC1>nd awetp. Trailing Nicklaw •nd Miller after the ·opening round ovu the 6,962-yard, par-70 Southern Hills Country Club course Larry Hinson and Charles Coody, tied a dourt bracketed at eve.n par 70. They are Arnold Palmer. Jt cky Cupll, Oick Hendrickson, Homero Bl•ncas, Dave Stockton and Sam Snead. Hen- drickson 11 1n obscure club pro from fl~arllon. N,J . He'1 ~ and .winaer of more lhan 100 tournaments, including three PGAs, in • fabulous 30-year career. Defending champion Ray Floyd, blam· ing a patch of red :sand for two of his bogeys, had a 7Pand Bill Ctsper, the Masters king, fired Ill slrailht pars and two bogeys for a 72, a score he shared vdlh Lee Trevino. Tony Jacklin of Britain, llie: U.S. Open champloo and Player had 74. J1cklin took a triple bogey 11iI on short 14th, where he hit h.is tee &hot against a fence . Nicklaus once the 210-pound fat boy of the tour, now Is hard to dlsUnaulsh from a C'Wple of hil young pw-5uer1 -Miller and Hinton, lwo blond 1trlngbe:an1 who look IO much 1Jike: they often are mistaken lot each other. Jack wm on a diet after coming home lut Jail from the Ryder Cup matches in EncW>c!. "We had 1 friend ~ followed the wclgbt-•alehert program," sa;ej Jack'• wife, Barbara, mather cf his four small children. "J~k tokl me he was detennlned to tedlJCt. And he went •bout It like • m1rtyr. "He ca11ed up the manuftdW'er who m1kt1 till 1ulta .and told hlm to comt over in two weeks and mate him tomt new clolhe:s . He 'l\'ll that tt:rtoua about ll." SC Spikel' Dies Dick Coulter, former s.nia An• Valley Hllh tr~lr 1tar and recenUy • member of the Unl vtratty of Soutbtm Callfornl• team, dlt<l ln 111 Norwalk ho1pk•I earlier th is wetlc , app11rently • suk:ktt vletlm. Fune.rt! 1t.rvlcea for lht 20-ytar.-akl ' JJprinter wtll be Saturday, JO:JO •.m., at Pee~ F_.ruly Chapel In Wu1mlnlter. ·- .. , ........ ·-·. ' GLENN WHITE Sports Editor Heavy Fight Card Slated At Forum INGJ.EWOOD-Mexico's two undisput- ed world boxing champlon!hips may tab. a back seat tonight at the Forum as countryman Chucho Castillo and Ro- gelio Lari batt1e for a crack at the bantamweight crown. The Castillo-Lara bout is scheduled for 12 rounds and promoter G e o r g e Parnassus has announced plans to Plir the winner with bantam king Ruben OUvare:s for the title Oct. 16 at the Forum. And Olivares will be on hand for a glimpse of his future foe as he meets Joie Arranz of Spain in a 10.round non- title bout. Welterweight champkln Jose Napoles is pitted in another nontitle JO. rounder against FlghUng Mack from Aruba In the Dutch West lndJes. CuUUo, WllUCCe:Ssful In two tiUe fights, will be favored off experience: over the hard-punching Lara in the light which also Is for the North American Boxing Federation'• championship. • ATLANTA -Promoters say only the lack or signature:J on a contract. - S<ll'Dething they view a.s a formality - stands between a heavyweight cham- pionship fight between Joe Fra:r.ier and Cassius Clay In Atlanta Oct. 26. The proposed bout has been rejected by a number of cities because Clay. stripped of his heavyweight crown when he refus- ed induction into the Army, has been unable to secure a license. But the AUan-- ta AthleUc Commission has i5lued him • llcen!e. And Clay said ··at a news conference Thursday that he It willing to fight Fratier, the champ, In the 5,00G-seat City Auditorium. Announcement that Clay has a license and Is ready to fight caught the Fra:r.ier camp by surprise:. • LOS ANGELF.S -Cynthia Potter, a 19- year'(lld coed at University of Indiana, sll~ in an early dive and barely qualified for the semifina ls but Thursday nlght ran away with the women'• Na- tional AAU ane-meter springboard diving championship. Craig Lincoln, also 19 and from the University of Minne!Ota, triumphed in the men's three-meter springboard finals. f\fiss Potter mc.ved up to third place in the semifinals and won going away with 419.25 poinL'i, more than 21 ahead of Joel O'Connell. Santa Clara. 398.16, and Micki King of the Ph.illips team, Long Beach, 336.10. Lincoln, representing Gopher Swim Club of ~1jnneapolls, compiled 556.53 p:>lnls to defeat Don Dunfield of Santa Clara, who finished second at S4t.8J after leadlng through the preliminaries and semiflnsls. Defending champion Jim He: n Ty , Bloomington Gatorades, finlShed third v.ith s2s.n. • LOS ANGELES -Hedgemon Lewis , 145, Hollywood, unloaded a left hook, knocking out Chu Chu Almaz.an, 140, Mexko City .. in the eighth round of their !Cbedule:d JG-round fight 'Miursday nilht at Olympic Auditorium. Referee George Litka halted the bout at 2:02 of the round when Alma:r.an wa1 down with his 1houlders against the ropes. It wa.s Lewis' 34th victory against <lnly two defeats and dropped Almuan's record to zs...I. • CINCJNNATl -Grea: Cook , sUlr quarterback for the Cincinnati Bengals of the NaUonal Football League, wlll un- derco IW'gery next wetk and is not ex• pected to play thb year. Paul Brown. coach and ceneral manager, announced Thurtday. COok wlll undergo e:i:ploratory suriery to his right shouldeT ftlondey or Tuesday at tbe Cleveland Clinic. "After examination there Thursday ,'' 11kl Brown, "Gre1 deekitd ht should undetto IW'IUJ· "They'll be dolnt 1n e1plor1l0ry opera- Uon. They fetl thot the Injury la 1 sheath of mutclt tbat may hive worked IC'IOse .'' Cook waa placed cm the unable to perform Ult, which puts him out of action for 1lz wttkt "but doctors feel he wlll be kilt. fOr the ae:aton," Brown 11.kL • LAKE FOREST, Ill. -The St. Louis Cardln1ls announced Wednesday lhe release of veteran cornerback Lonnie Slnders and Fulletton'1 rookie runninl bKk Gil'}' Fowler, rfducl1!g their Na- Uqnal Foolboll L<1gue root.,. to 61. ....... ~-.. -·~· . ~ . . .. . ... . . . ~ ... ·-~~ DAILY P1LOT .Bain Counts on 7-11 Combo By ROWARO L. HA.NOV Of l~e 01111 PJ111 ll1tl In the gan1e of chanec where dlce are prominent. a 1. 1 t combination is considered lwciy. Coach t':d Bain of the South All.Stars is coonting heavily on the same number com- blnallon to give the Rebels a victory in the 10th annual Nortb-Soulh Orange county football g1:1me to be played at Orange Coast College Thurs- day night. ijain named ~ven Orange Coest area graduates to the •tarting defensive lineup for ~ the Lion~ Club cxlravaganta and barring injury, this grou1) will attempt to 11tem the tld<' ol lhe ¥p.nkec onslaught Under Baln's pre -game planning, the first t e a m defensive unit will become the second team offensive squad if the occasion arises for platoon Football. "With a squad or only 2."i 1nany of the boys will play both ways, although we will start out with a dir!erent group on defense.'' he says. Switches are also l.ikely if the coaching staff feels a boy is ca pable of replacing a man on the first un1l of the opposite leani. Huntington Beach 's Poul Moro I linebacker) and l.ee \Valters ltackte) gave the Oilers two men on the defensive unit. Tom Grzecka (end) of Mater Del ; Dennls Kennedy (tackle\ from Marina :-Mike Shaughnessy (halfback ) of Estancia : Dan Shuw (halfback) of Fountain Valley : and Greg Newhouse (pfcty I of Weslmlnster, are the Orange Coast players lii;ted to start on defense. Bcilaoce of iht defensive unit wUI Include Dave Porter !end) from Orange : Steve Bixler (middle gu.ard) from El Modena: Dan Popichak (linebacker) rrom Santiago: and Jim Votaw (safety) from Foothill. Rain 's Foolblll squad is represented by five players on the current ~man roster. Fountain Valley is neit with three. "We have 25 boys on hand ~ight now and all of them will suit up for lhe game. Jf we had 26 or 27, I would suit them all up. I don't think ll b rlghl to uk a boy to W'lft out like this, lben tell bim he can't ault up for the aame." S.ln alto staled lhal the Sooth would bold two workouts Saturday. "We will work early in the morning and 1galn in lhe lalo afternoon. Some of them are still working and we are limited to one session a day during the week." he. adds. The 7-11 combination may be just the edge the South needil to upset the favored North 1quad. Hard Pace Hurt .\ce Swintmer PARIS (AP) -France's best known swimmer, a ' former world record holder, says nine months of intensive training in the United States ruined him as a freestyle sprinter . He ha! tbe ruults to prove it. An Olympic bronze medal winner at 11.lexico City tor the 200 meler frttStyle, Alatn 11.fosconi failed even to place in the event al the French na- tional championships after his return from the University of Southern Ca1ifomia. '"The on1y conclusion you can draw is that I've lost the crawl tedmique," Mosconi said. "They wanted to give me more power in my ums. I'm naturally a leg swimmer and I just wasn't right for it. Now I just annoy myself when I swim freestyle - 1 feel so awkward in Ult water." Mosconi. 21, approached USC roach Peter Daland in Los Angeles last year with great fanfare in the French press. He was going to become the country's first great swim- mer with a little Am~ican polish and coaching. French television had programs on Mosconi'! progress and newspapers were full of pie· lures of tiim ln USC T·shlrts. INSTRUCTIONS -San Diego Chargers' No. 1 draft selection. Walker Gillette from the University of Richmond, gets a fe,v instructions from San Di.ego gen- eral manager Sid Gillman, prior to checking in to camp recently. Gillcte, whose nickname is Blade, is a 6-S, 198-pound ,,·ide receiver. Alworth's Retirement Doesn't Please Gillette By HOWARD L. HANDY BooA-·I when he caught 20 °' ..,. O.ilY Pil9f '''" pa~ for 242 yards. After One woukt think: tbat a rook-completion of the 1969 footbalt ie, destined to play in tM season, be playm in the North· shadow of a great wjde South Shrine game and the receiver such as L 1· n c e Hula BoWI. Alworth of the San Diego He played in a!l 30 games as Chargers, would be more than an undergraduate, catching happy when that player decid· 151 passes and scoring 2:2 ed to retire from the game. touchdowns. Not so for young Walker GJJ. Things happened pretty fasl Jette, the No. 1 drat\ choice of for the your.g Virginian this the Oiargers this season. summer. "lf he (Alworth) was here. I He took a Unal examination could learn something from one day , was married the next him," Gillette said in t~ 1 May 30) and graduated a Charger camp at UC Irvine wetk later. rectntly . The honeymoon with wife ''1 am sure it hurts Ule team Jl.ldy is already one or separa " with him gone and I feel I lion. walker played in the have a lot to learn." College All.Star game in ·Gillette is a mathematics major but right now his entire int~rest is on football as Car u a profession is conee.rned. The conversation returned to the gridiron am-he-was asked how he feels about the pro game. "f don't know yet . I haven't played enough to tell. In tht: two games (the All.star clash and the Dallas Cowboys tilt l I have played only about a half of a game." He. has never had a major injury on the gridiron and in addition to football in college, he was also a member of the track team where he ran the 400 (49.0) and the high hurdles 114.9). He wa9r1 't interested in basketball or baseball and pffhaps it "·as his parental herilage that 'brought this about. Asked if he thought much Cllicago, then reported to the about playing pro(essional Cbarger camp at UCL He football before the draft, he hasn't seed his bride since added, "1!fveral teams talked leaving Dome early in July. to me and all 1 could do was ---'--------------·------ wait and see which one ii would be." SOUTH HALFBACK MARK DUNN DRILLS FOR AUG. 20 CLASSIC Now, Mosconi is thinking of going off into the mountains for an oxygenation cure -be just doesn't feel right. And he thinks the cause fl. the trouble \\'35 the terribly hard pace or practice in the States. Hia last name and the slender physique b r o u g h l about the mo6l natural nickname in the Ch!ll'ger camp -Blade. :·st. Mary's ,Na1nes Gal Net Coach ~,'1.0RAGA, CaHL (AP ) - All·male St. J\iary's College has jumped ahead of the Women·s liberation drive by naming Lynne Abbes Rolley as Intercollegiate tennis coach. The pretty 21 -yea r ·o Id brunette from Orinda , Calif.. is one of the youngest and no doubt pret1icsl coaches of a men's team in the country. Si. Mary 's officials said \Vednesday lhcy did not know of 11ny other woman coaching a tnen's team on the college varsity level. "I'm really thrilled about this " Mrs. Rolley said at a newS conference . "I like v.·ork- iog with men." Mrs. Rolley, who was rank- ed seventh among U.S. women fennis players before retiring in 1967, has been a teaching professional three years. "I'm teaching my husband how to play tennis, loo." she said. Recently she has been an assist.ant to Kevin Merrick, \he. tennis pro at Orinda Coun- try Club. Merrick. also coach aL the University or California. recommended Lynne for the SL Mary's job. St. Mary 's is admitting women for the firs! thne this l,il. and M~. Rolley plans to staA. a women's team. The catholic school"s enrollment is atM>ut 1.100 and about 130 women are expected to enroll for the coming term. For the past several )'Cars . the school has had no tennis coach. A player-captain has been In charge of the squad . Vjctor Gill , last year's p\aJ'er-captain, Is one of Ule leltennen returning from the team th!lt was 4-10 last season. Mrs. kolloy. who won several national llU~s M a Junior player. never attended oOlltge. •·-~ Norton Ends Rich Career "I don't knaw bow many times I told mysell Jn Los Angeles: Buddy, you're finlstl· ~-Why? I didn't know why I had a terrible lime keeptna up. So it's no surprise I lost my style. I got along as best I could and didn't have enough energy to polish Uehnique." Young Giiiette weighs In at 198 pounds oo a 6-6 frame. After Cutting Own Throat Mosconi saJd he wun'I blaming Daland (or is failure, but rather his own fatliue. But llt said he thought American training methods didn't fit the French department. What about his thoughts after being drafted by the Chargers? Did he think 100\lt how a professional camp would be run? "I didn"t think too much about it. l came here to find out and that's what I am doing right now." , MIAMI (AP) -Rich and frustrated Rick Norton has ended a J350.000 career as a Miami Dolphin also-ran after admittedly ·'culling my own throaf' in a bumbling prese<liOn game. The former Kentucky ace became the first veteran head to roll under new coach Don Shula. "It 's the end of four years of frustration," admitted NorlOn when Shula delivered the news this \Veek at the Dolphins· camp. "I sincerely hope some team. so1ne place will pick me up ., Norton's colJegiote career earned him the financial bundle on a four-year contract That ended with the 1969 season . He still wilt receive $15,000 annually for seven years beginning in 197~. It was Norton who became the uniformed symbol of George Wilson·s co a ch Ing career at Miami. a 15-39-2 ef- fort tha1 ended with the former Detroit LionS boss' fit- ing in February. They were sometimes cheered. but more o f t e n booed. during the expansion team 's first seasons "Fans never got under my skin," claimed thC' 2&-year.old Bucs Schedule 2 Scrimn1agcs Orange Coast College·s fool· ball team has sc hedul ed scrimmages against M i r a Costa and Whittier College. prior lo lht' opening of the season on Sept. 19 againsl Golden West. The Mir11 Costa scrimmage will be ht.Id Monday, Sept. 7 el OCC-with lhe \Vhlltter en· counter lo follow on Saturday. Sept. 12. also on the PlrDte campus. " Norton. "Fans are fans . They want v.•inners." Crilics in the news media did rankle the handsome former Wildcat. He said that \Vilson. as hls coach. "could have set people straight It was his place lo defend me. not mine.·· Norton threw five times in Saturday n i g b t 's 16-10 preseason triumph over Pittsburgh aL JacksonviUe. He completed one for six yards. two were inl.ercepted and two fell incomplete. "I played a lousy game," he admitted. Shula plans to go with two quarterback.'! during l he regular season."' He still has veterans Bob Griese and John Stora and rookie Jeuie Kaye. The experienced slgnaJ callers '11ill likely be kept on the varsity while Kaye is placed on the taxi squad. "Maybe I'm wrong," he said , "but we're not made for it. Our methods aren't bad and they correspond to the way we live. You can't succeed, all many people suppoae here, by doing nothing or a I m o 11 t noUtlng, but between the assembly line in the United States and our dileUantlsm , there's a middle ground. He de.scribes the University' of Richmond as a small Bap. ti.st school but his credentials ln college belle his modesty. He wai!I a consensus first team All·American. He was All-Southern C o n f e r e n c e three years and set • con· ference yardage record with 1,090 yards in 1969. He was the most valuable lineman in the 11168 Tangerine Major League Standings DEAN LEWIS Al\1ERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore New York Detroit Boston Cleveland Washington Minnesota Oakland Angels Kansas City Milwaukee Chicago East Division W L 73 43 63 52 61 55 57 56 51 60 54 62 \\'est Division 69 44 66 51 65 51 " 12 44 74 43 76 TllUncllY'I •11Uth t111ton111 3. &11t1mo1e 2 tltWtlll\ll A, 01-!•nd ) M11,..IVl\!t l, O~lf'OI! 7 ff!IW Yor-t. thlc•90 J K.1~111 t !IY 11 , flo•ton J WMMnttlOfl 1. Mlllftetell 0 Tl'dly'1 O"'"n Pct. GB .629 .548 91h .526 12 .504 14 'h .487 16 1~, .466 19 .t11 r .564 .560 .379 .m .36r B•llmott fHll"dl" ~ti 11 0..111111 (Oobto!'I •·111. "'" Otl!'Vll ILolld'I TO.hl II C.ltftrt1i. fWtlt~I 15'0, nitM Clewel•nd IC"•nce 1 .. ) 11 MU.....,..le fLeckWOOd J.,, · nl11"1 C.Mcl90 /JOl>n !t.lJ) •I W1.,,!flt!fltl (Cottm•n '4), "'·~· K.1nnl Clll' !Dr..o ••II It Nl>W Yor• CP'tletllln IJ.1), nltM Mlflne.011 l•ll'lt•e<i 4'll 11 8o119" CC~IP l•lt), n!Olll NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut Dtvlskla Pittsburgh New York Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal w L Pct. Ga " 53 .547 6154 .~2 eo 57 .SIS 4 55 61 .474 IY. 53 62 .401 10 49 69 .415 l5% Yi'est Dtvltlon Cincinnati Dod1er1 Atlanta San Francisco Houston San Diego 19 4<l BS ff 57 59 58 59 53 " 43 71 ,,,.,,..,,, ll"""" 4118 .. 11 •• MO!ltftll 1 Cfncl.,nlll 6, Mtw Ytf'll I HO~•hlfl ~. PhlllMllll>~ll l s..., DI-t , SI. LOUii 1 Cll!Ul'O i, S.11 ,rtnckcl l Onl1 fln'!U Khtdllled. .,..., .. ·-· .66• .~70 JI ~ ·'" 20% .'37 21 .4SI 25 .393 32 L._ ""'ttff (llllhlfl lJ.tl 11 Cnklto thr1 1·1 Ot Coibor11 J.I) s.., Diiie (Doblft> .. ., •1111 IUrtr 1·111 11 l"ltt1bllrtn CIHll 21·t .nll W1llo1< "31, 1 twl-.,llht 5.., Frat>c;lllll (M4orldl1l ... l!MI l'liloU WI 11 SI. l.oull fC:lrllOo! 4-16 •Ml Rtutl •-4,) t tw~111tht Htw Y111i !R1"' •7 Ind IC-111 .. 'I It Atl1.,l1 CJlrVI• 1).t ,..., MtOUM!I 0-1), t twf.fti.trl ,.ll!lldl!IPlli. tWlH J.10) 1t Clnctrwl1tt fl!~ 1-t-J!, nltl'lt .-.w,rr11I IRlflkl ... , v ~·""' ICMlf M !, nlthl DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 Service, P•rts, & Body Shop • • Now Open Untll ·I p.m. Monhy Night. I I Orange County's Large.st and Mosl Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer , AU•UIT Sl'ICIAU S,ECIAL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON ::~ $1817 AllO.... ....... ""' M .. 11-Hlfa-LwlCNllen c.,.. .. VOLVO DIMO SAYE $466 •SU8782 don't be quart short THE fRUE OLD.STYLE KEllTUCKY BOURBON I I I l I I - JS Dlll.Y Ptl;Df Area Briefs Three of Big 4 To Race Tonight ,,,,... ol the big ,...,. rider> ..,.. rego1>1iy compete In the woekly apeedw<Y motorcycle racing f!llentl al Orange Couo.. ty Fairgrounds 111 Cost. Mesa will be 00 band 'IOD;gbt (I ) lor the fut.urt races. Allboogb Stev< Bast. lbe U.S. 1 peed way titleholder 1run Vu Nuys, will be Barracuda Hold Steady, Bonito Drop Business bas st.ayed on an even keel u or late at the three m.aj<r Orange Coast area spcrtfishing landings. Art.'1 Landing reports things have even picked up a little ~·ith near limits on calico and sand bus near the Huntington Beach oil rigs. Barracuda arr also holding ,,tea<ty with bonito starting to drop off oa.ftet having made a strong sbo~'ing most of thr summa-. Reports d large albacore catches in an are.a just IC}-15 miles off Oceansidr have been verified. Some mt.etestmg luna counts are being turned in aboot six hours straight oul from the Jetty with good albamre and yellowfins reported by O.vey's Loc:ka-. Davey's abo not.es that yeUowtail have held up well in the vicinity of the kelp beds with some wbHt sea bass around the Barn. Bass are still holding up at Davey's with bonito falling off. • b seat, Sonny Nutter (TopangaJ, Rick Woodi 111un- ·1inglall Bead>) and Bill Cocty tGarden Grove) wi.D all be on hand at the Cosla Mesa dirt oval. Tht »year-old Bast is in 1.oodon, England ~ be has accepted • starting spot on the Britilh L ~ a g u e Wembley Lions 1pecdw1 y team. a raricy f(r 1 n Ame-ican cycle rider. He el· pects 10 return to 1 b e Southland in Ot'tober in time for the American finals, which marl. the end ol the regular Costa Mesa racing sea900. Tonight's match at the fairgroands. meanwhile, pita the teom of Woods and Cody against Nutter and Bast's younger brother, Mike. Officials also announced that handicap events will now be run for five fu11 laps because of the many 6-yard -handicap riders running in weekly races. • The Marina Vikings Quarterback Club will have its first. open meeting Tuesday at the Marina High flClllty cal et.eria. All football fans are invited ·~1ith slarting time scheduled for 7:30 p.m. • Fred Dougherty and Larry Schoenfelder of Costa Mes.a are competing currently in the toth annua1 Cal.State Masters bowling championships at San Diego's Frontier Lanes. Dougherty will m e P l 0 • The next time you $et 1 pro- 'ftssk>nal aolf toumamtnt, pay special attention to tht pl1y1rs' lower body action. Watch how ··nvetr' or activ• these golfers '1rt in their legs. ThHI 1olfers, especially the long h-itters, are actually forcing power up from thtir legs, and this power ev1ntu1lly comes forth in ad· ditional CltJbh11d speed and in· cre1std d1st1nc1. No &otltr, however, CIR gen· eratt his lower body'' potential power if his knees ire not slight· ly fltx:td 1t the addr.ess position and throughout the swine. When the knees are stiff {ii· lustr1tion # l ), leg mOYement is stifled. The arrris are forced to take over as a much · 1ess effective power source. Keep your knees flexed slightly, as I am doing in illus· tration ;2. You will experience 1 new feeling of rhythm and power in your swing. LOW' SCOIESI HIGH ~El:! G.t pllftty of golfirv help :"n Arnold Poftr'I booll1t, "le• snot.. ..:t foirway Woock,• Wlittori uckai.,..~ for readen of ~1 column. A copy ti )'Ol.lfl tor~n4ttlllllpff. -11~ --to AmoW Po'-r. c/• fhi1 .. ~. Los Alamitos Racing Entries lOI ALIMITO\ ffrjT•l~S fl<D• s..t.TURDl.Yb:VUG. IS. lt~TH CLl:AR & Jl<AST. l'l•n POST J;O ..... JOONT\.Y DDU•\.I: ON 15T • JNO •ACES, t:UCTA OH fTH RACE fl<l&IT •ACI . ._•••II•. l Vl!lf Olelt 1.-.e 111. c111m1"'. ,.,,.., IUlllO. c111,,.,. !ftp .,..k e 11.00. acib'J R1sll,n. IH. ( ......... ) 11, •u11;1n•1 1'11\CV (PlltloJ Br..c.olt (l-llr1) Que•! Moat> tWll$Dnl Tomblf Tonia (P.._,J Biii's RHutJI 18-"kil T-rve C1n Fil" IL ......... ) a1r1<>mbl (W@llll lllOCllY Em-.. IC.nloUl Diii F11Jt (Pl<le) A1111 t 11ti. .. ~ Diii !PeM) V1ni.11t Pail!! IH. C..trrl Mr. lob Det (Hlrdlnt) Double Hssrv t'"ill'dlnvl "' "' "' "' . .. "' ... "' '" '" . " "' "' Ralston Praises Plunkett; ' Calls VSC Team to Beat Deep Sea Fish Report ,. OCIANllOI -.. -ifrl:lJ" Mr· r1tude, 5J borllM. t7J a.ttt. I~ 11.ii.w. •• 11. s fltllCMlt ... 61--, SANTA .......... -41 _ ... ., ns ti lko \>tu, • lllNllk. J ... u..,. • NEW YORK (AP) -Jobn tenden. Asked lo narM tome Dummlt and runnlna ~ack .~'i!.~·r:: ~=~ , ... , _ 1·1 " Ralston, lhe Stanford football of the top prospec.ts tn tht MI ck e y Cureton and 1M1~~1t41<l_•_"l"t!~I\;,;.1~ •• ~:~~1\..!1~ coach, sang the pra~ of r~• E··'l •·•~ list~ .~ ba k -el! ruoom· g 'n11rr<11';1l~ , , • I Pl ket h. -~-back --.ulC 15'1• • ll4.lao.00 ~ qu ... er c YIWlll ' HIWl"O•T ID•V''' ......, ...... ~11 '!, m ~n ~ qu:1jh" ~ Southern C .a l ' s Unebacker back Bob Moore and center :.~f{., 'fv~~Dl';·11n~ ;:!T: f atrongest arm he had seen. Greg Sloogb, defensive end John Sande of his Stanford :1:'"; i~1~';~. 3r.*ll Rais nd J~. J•~i Chari'• W t b k t •llGlll'J" SJ lllMICO,.., M -1'• ton a uuu 1111une, ft: eaver, quarer ac earn. tie ... ,~.u11u1.10,_kve•~, •• ~'" tht new Wl!ICOOSin coach, were Jimmy J-and "'Mi.... JA..i:.,. praised A I an oxN.a•o -10$ .... i.r•t !II ~ """'" '" ~ _."'"" ti Mllbul, 1,0.St IN11, 200 ~ , ~ guertl at a preseason college back Cl n. Is 0 , 'Ibompson, hL! WfJCOl"lsin run-u,.. C'OCI. , .. ,.. r·-'•-u get •-ether run by arence UGV I regon s 1• • b k MO.•O IAY CYlr•'I Lllllf~~" ~ "'6. • ... _.. Bobb M ner u ' an out.stancltng ac ·i:.~':I » 11,. , •• s11 r.q. c 11 the Pa!adena Toomamenl of runrung U<l\:a Y oore, who compares with Me I ~coo.-11 •.,.1•11 s:t 1~. •: Roses Aasociation. and quarterback Tom Fan'." Jardine was an a81is· ,_,T Mu•N•Mt -111 .. n Ralston, wbose ?·2·1 team Blanchanl., Cali(ornia'.s of· tanl coach under Tommy bl:IA...,, boftlto. )I 11•11""''· • MALllU -'1 -11UI jlASl missed I.he Rose Bowl fen&ve tackle B;ob Richard.s, Prothrv at UCLA when Farr 1111n;.,.'V/:a':-,~~1o"' last season, has a stw:it at UCLA's quarterback Otnn1s was thtse. w11r11 » .,..1:s;.i11· 1 au 111_llbut JU IO. 2J it this ye&r, Jard.int.. taJting IN-II Ullfllll -14 I wb 11Hc.cn, I ll,IM., ' ... rT over a Wilct:n9in team ich bonLto, sit u1tco 1111 ... n· ·-on1 ··-OCIR F T ~.n ...... ,._ WUfl Y l-IU""' games t \.ONO •U.C:M fPIClfk In the last three years, h8' ea ures op ;;;..:~ :"::;'.;.~,!'":".::~ a rebu.lkllna job ahe.ad.1 c111to 1111u. w tionli.. 1 _,. 111111er11 1• blu. 'bol'4 Pluntttt, a 23-ytar~ld A , s l e.it •.. ,...._.. ,.,.11111 ai senior Who ha$ thrown 34 nn iversary ate llolllhl. 1 Mt~,» IMCMl'll. 'J touchdowns ir: two years after bl~..,~ =1~~~ iYul:. ;. sitting out his sophomore _:~~\'\':~""~·~·~~·=~,.,,· .. ..,,.•="=~....;' seaJOll as a red ;litt. ~ ex· Orange County lnlemational performance on 0 CIR 's IT MIGHT pecteid to be a Heisman Raceway has plenty cl action clocU. Tro~ candidate and a high in lhe works for its third Deve Beebe or Anaheim is E WISE pro draft choice. Beca~ he annivel'W')' celebration Satur~ the leading Orange County B was kept ineligible for one day. hoperul In the funny car TO ORDER year he has this third and Qualifying in the top fuel division agallist Alley. An ex· ~ last year Of ooUege eligibility. and funny car categories lead.! plosion two months ago at YOUR NE ' . "Plunkett has as strong an off the ' program al 2 p.rn. OCIR prevented him from arm as anybody I've ever with fmals slated to go al 7. posting a sub-six-second mark. VEGA 2JOO :-.':· seen,'' said Ralston Wed· In between the two sets of Fountain Valley's Gary nesday. racing, Torrance's Bob Here~ Cochran heads the top fll!I AHEAD • "Some-may release the ball deen will put on 1 l~minuk entries, which include world CONNELL quicker. I think Bill lt.1unson exhibition of aerobatics, which dwnpion and PDA winner (Detroit Uons quarterback has earned him two national &ieve Carbone of Manhattan CHEVROLET i ., whom Ralston coached at title and runnerup honors at _!ll<~acb~. ----------'==='.,.==H='='=..,='='= .. =·;j··~::: Ulah State) p:it rid ol the the rectnt world contest in ball a little faster . But this England. fellow tan throw the ball 80 In addition lo a $10,000 prize yards and put a lot ol air purse, OCIR is offering a· under it and he can really bonus of $1,000 for the first zing 1 those quick passes. 1be sub-seven-MCOOd track record thing that separates him from by a runny car. the others is the strength of Ray Alley ol Garden Grove, bit ann. Uie old pro Gf Southland funny "Somt think he can't run car sipeciallsb at 4%. was the the ball. He may k>ok a little first driver on the West Coast awkward at times but be can to dip into the sixes wllb nm~ He-ran-for 1"16 yards in a · 6.99· second clocking -on a - one gamt, I think it was Seattle track two weeks ago. against the Air Force." But. many of the drivers Ralston called S o u I h e r n who will coml)ete aga~ him Califom.La the team to beat Saturday have e r p re s s e d Bluefins, a scarce com· modity most of the swnmer, .,.. still nearly no<>WstenL Riverside's Hal Dunbar while Sd>oMfelder will tangle with Chuck Moran of San Diego in a pair of matches Saturday night Alan1itos SECOMD •ACE. «Ill Yl•lli l Yt•·,.~Md~~~li>t~«l~~Cagli~f~om~l~a~a~nd~~d~ou~bt~th~a~l~A~l~le~y~w~W~be~a~b~le~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ oldJ. Ind Ill>. Cl4olmlllf. P\ltM tllOO. '"'---amona the top to duplicate hi,s Six·secood Cl•lfnJ~ P<k' t l'OD. "''"6"'' •'9 tJl!dt E:f:r t~il :=:c~r"f~~l...1 VW BRAKE SPECIAL l•HM 4 Wheelt MKhlM 4 °"'"'' Ov.,.haiul 4 WhHI CyllMl1r1 $39.95 VW SHOCKS ............... $7.95 IMtolfod 100,000 mU~ a:;U11ranteE'd (DOI pro·rBled l . \'7E 00 ALL f OREJGN CARS. e OISC llAll SP'ECIAUn • COSTA MW STOIE ONLY Jiii """'IM. Mt-4122 ., Mt.mt DRIVE YOURSELF CRAZY 50 YOU WANNA llACE! ••• FASTllACKS' OPIN M-~ wJttri .... r11t.I .. ..,.e c• 4riYfl • ,.... c.wl TM S... MW.I-.. • ...i r...i co11rw. FASTUCll T~,MAS. CAI ....... '"-' It et hytOM. YM ~H '"' No ... uiltlt- No U.C-MCllJO'Y· WMkly prim eM ~""' ..._ tt .... ...... .., •:Oo P·"" to 1o:oe , ... ~ •:OO P·•· t• \2:00 •-"'· S41fllf4err 12:00 p.M. to 12:00 l .flL SPHy IJ:CNI 111.11. '• 10:00 p.11. A._b, .. h 11 ,_ .... S,-tot•rs fTw.. Drlff f.wtt cray .t fASTUCll Results TiwrM11y , AMt. U, 1'1'1 Clllor & ''" fl<l•ST •ACE. '"'Cl Y•tdi. I vur 0101 Ind "'· Cl•lmlnl. PurM 5110f I-IV 11-..J! C\.lc>Mn"\l 1l .0 l .Jll l . .0 In ll-r...,;1 (Ailll•l I <II •.GO C.1111 Cllu •..o !H1rO •Ill Tl-· .72_./lt . krlld'lff -llay•I Rio!. Gol'll .... ~. p.,...,... .. ,. •u1i111·1 ''""'· seCON D •.act: «lo v•...,~. J ve1r OIOI Ind llP (l•lmln1, Pur)I SlflXI. F1111 EOdl4P !H1rl ! '·'° 1 • .0 1,00 l'lud IE•t IHerdln•I I.la S.DO TF\Jckle Rott !W!tlll) l lO Tl .... : .:ia ..... 10. 5crtlchect -Gold DIJI. \p~ Cflc!W", l'!rll To Go. Sir l ll!Lkrt•t. n NIOl'ITLV DOUILI, I · Nl" ll• WMI 6 1 · ,Ill ldc!lo, •114 iJ.1.JI. THl•D •ACI:, «Ill ¥•rc!t. Mil""" 1 •t•r old1. Cl1!ml.,., P11•1e Sl'tiO. S.....tD!rtf IWl!llOllJ UM • 60 I.DO FaurAlldMl!vlt1 (Ptr,,.,J J.611 '"° 1'1•w111 1w11,.,..1 10.JO Time: ,)O.fflO Scr11ci--Dall 9tr'• 1,,., • ..,, T ro- ""' St1lkhlr. Mor1om. Tlppln1 a.,. 'OVllTM RACE. J.4' Ytrdt. J v••• 111111 tnd .,. At-•""''· Pu•w s11po 91r1 l'OI' lltdi fllnlcll 1.00 l,IO 1 M RO<I Slcll1• CPerM•) 1 . .0 , . .0 M1rll. I! Now CC1rllot1l J.1'0 Tl-· 1l·7/10. We K•lld'l!I l'l,TH •1.C•. <00 Yl r"ill. Mil.ten 1 •~Ir oltl1. P1trl' S1!'00. 811 811ly ll""'1ml H.-,1,u !(•'11<11•1 Fin'! Kl ... I-lorn 1At11lrl Tl"" .J0 .. (10 AllHI ,.., -Tolc~n·1 (~let, Bl .. nv"• 81rt. PluflCltr B••, Wt• WOP, 0'0< Na1~. k r•tchl<I -F1nc v Tin. ltt. $111"TM IUCI. lh y1rd> l ~t•r old• 1nd UP Ct1fmlt1• Purse 12100. TOP E .. lt !H&<d(n9) 11 . .0 7,1'0 l ~ Uncle I>•!•• l 81.,.,•l S.:IO 3 . ..0 •uln!I lllP"tl"I 1 611 TlfM: .._7110 AIMI <It\ -C••tll Ill.,, J1g't Sun, 1olfdo't ~•l-0... And Onlw. C1Mr11r Ltt. k r1tthed -Sl1r E•tn. Teu Dalldw. Thi WOP. krto<hrl. SIVl!lltlM •Act. "' y1rt11. ' ... ,., alt11. Al..,.,..•nctt. ~urw lt!DO. Ai.m11.,,.1U111 cc ... 00i1) J.flll l .IO , . .o 0..al bl\IUll !Adllrl J,DO '·"' Fu-Gill Too (Ofnlf"I 4,00 Tl-~ ,11·1/IG. AllHI r111 -l~w •ei.. ~ L• CHllfu•, 0u11e• 111r1....,, Sir w111 .. 1or. :.Crlld'le<:I -LMI' l•r 1111, llONTM RACI:. IOI ~1rd1. J tt1r alcll Ind UD. Alio'orlllCM. i"urM UllDO l •lllf Min !WliMll'I) •.M S.ltl J.to Donh 84 Good (CF"Ollr;) 1.• I .Oil Lit 911r fl<1t11' (Aclllt) 1.111 Tlfne1 .»l/10. ..... r1n -,._\rel •et1, Pr!HY Lule, 9•otd t. .... Mr. l••MU Na Krllclllt. INSPECTED .USED TIRES Big Selection Most Sizes $ Big savings on slightly used new car takeoffs, tool Costa Mesa Firestone Store -475 E. 17th St -646-2444 HOURS1 Mon ... Fri., I a.m. to 1 p.m. -Sat., I e.m. to J p.m. BrUJt To Win tPtftJ Grwwln (Wrllll =IWllllOll) Hi911 (H, Ctotb-o) k Miu (Wrloflll Sonk "'-' IH1rdl"8I .... Bl .... y !~ti) ....... " .... T-IN Bly /Wllsoftl Mr. S11t hr C 1ro:loz1I A.n Of Me IC..•Clou\ Wlln I'!-!Orever lN/lltO •ACE. Sit Y•rll•. l v~1r 01111 -UP. Aliowl-. P Urit $1000. ~·· R-• u._....1,f loci SI°' (H1rdl .... I Llr5 Byr IY• tL!s>Nlml Ton Mlft (Hirt) W1r Oii Poverty IK111!1! Trlllle °'='d<er {DreverJ Rov•• w;., lhnk•/ Rm• Dao CPe~r Miu Gold l"0p IMlbl>dt) FOU•TH llACI". J51 ¥•rOI. old•. AJ1ow1nce1. Purv S300D. Slrrr1 Gui"""''" IW1lloOl'I Rock•1 S11ut• cw..i11) C1rttr °'"'k•r !Cror.11¥} ll•e LIKkY (Hirt! Slleftl L!gl!t CP...,. rl Uz B1bY IC1rdoz1l 0"'9111 ta Go fLlpll..,,J Fll'TN RAC!". 5't y1r1b. J v~1r olcll U'ld UP. Allow•-· Purw tltOCI. H1•1ll111 Kl"! (WHtOlll Sir Wh" IH, ro~l Hvstll"8 1111'1' CPernerl \ltlle Ml•• Bu• IB1nlul rvlY Mite> fHlr11 l ll!W Obi• (Ad1ltl Mr. L-SllOI IK111l1\ llrfftt ~ On fWellol O!t;1;;..,.1 llab<f Go CC1rcto1.1l 6oo loo Radel ILIDl'l.,,,I SIOTH lltACI", 11'0 ¥1rdl. 3 YH< olds ¥od ue. ~lllf. PurM S2lll0. (l1lm. t'":'1;/'~~r. S1nds 1we1~1 SNm1 Liii.eil' !StT..,,,I) Cr11Y ~¥ ICroW>rl lhrM For An 11-11rdi..,) OcNI Pftlbln ll~I Mr. """"'''' co,...~rl Bl11l"1 H.flrrv (Hirt' i;«rtt Gll!ftr (l•nktl Abe Ellt!Mt ~ ';l'rr'~1~\~:ir1 S1rtor!111 ~'"'''' Ci'oerollH (OO'f' lll1M.1l SEY!:NTH •ACt:. llof Y1n11. 1 r,f1r f.~..:~1'2.:io.arlcll11111. TM LOI N not. ~~,.:~· CH1f:i.s.bv1 lJg unc•e 3rc 1Ctrooz11 no S.Ur.cl Btn (0 .. verl llS V• Got Trouble (H1rdl11Q) IU Mr. OillldY l«<! Cll1'111ml 1111 Too Tidy (P•r!ll!r) 111 COIJnlv F1lllorn (W1laonl uo Oyn1110 Gtt (Ad1\rl 110 ot!sl.G~~H l::c,.,.m~ v&',!t.,. l p~~:; ~1tm·~ c;oi,, c0rvu1 Ml11 Thret Wero (Adlld '""""" 2 CPerner) Mlrbt.I M111 (A-lc•l Red ClllHfr Bir (W1to«1I A·Sl\amtoc:ke (Crolb\'I •·AM11 Bfl!M e •• CH•rdlllf) B·On.w:lll !Kl"lt) BIO<MIY R.ac:ke!le Ulne=I WlllllWIY To Go (Li I AIM fl !till J"u•f Roc•et tC1rOOr•l Hlle¥0 Mucll•cll !Rln•ldll UO "-Mrt. CH.II H. St•nw•r-11, E, Cronc>ton en.Irv 1-11, E. Slndt15-•111<1et Forlll!'lll E111rv. NINTH •ACI:. lSO y1•d1 l ve1r OIOI o~ rn:Cl1lm)ng, Pu.,. ll'Klt. Cl1lm. '"" Or ll'OOO. lt11y•I I tW1ttot1I 117 T....c:tlt Bell CH1rl) lit C"-mP ... , Tl><! Bii (He•Olnol Ill :,,1'1i:'"O:~' 1~'l.'r,t•I /~ Mll"btc Lgter Ullnlt.t/ '1j Al111n1 Ir fWllMl'I 11 Trvcklf R-cwe1111 111 Cl1Ul" •oct<tl {Pfrllf:rl 11' LADIES Specia I Notice! l11r11 how yo11 t111 br11lc tM h1bit i11 10 41.,. w itlle11I 4n191, hyp11o•i1 or will p.owe r. l n•11ti· ,.1 .... , , •• ~ ..... ,, ,,., ...... ~o• • fte1 11111111 1114 t o111ul· f•lio11 witlt 110 obU911:0111 c1lt OUI OfFICI NUIDT YOU ,,.-mi.,. .... NATIONAL ANTI· SMOKING COUNCIL Cost• Mes• 642-4163 Huntington Beach 962·1128 3 ways to 8ENERAL TIRE GENERAL TIRE INTERMEDIATES. s22s5 n~:: STANDARD CAltS s25s5 8.25.1 4 8.25·15 • ~· " . ' BIG CARS ·• ""'' s27ss 8.55·11 .,,11,,. Tubeless whitewall price.s pr&J ' Sl.78 lo $2.!13 fed. E•: Ta•.'" per lire dep tndln r on sin~ plus eieh1111e cisinr. . ·•' t BAU GOLFER'S VALUE ''' ' JATO' SUPER 100 GOLF BALLS.;·· .. PLUS FREE 50¢ GOLFER'S GUIDE · · '• New Our~1on cu~ress cov.er! New enercized PB !J:~ ce nter! H11h tension w1nd1n2 for maximum fliaht~ . ·' LiMil 1, :J.lwltl 1t•c1 lllr ll!flllftt' FOR CAMPERS •VANS • PICK-UPS FARM AND UTILITY TRUCKS ;-f!!.,.,-.,jg•. ·I General Jumbo POWER-JET COMMERCIAL Prov ides s~rlof c1r1rin1 c1p1c1ty. not1tlOll. Mlle bi'Se tr1etioit Pric:ed • -'-et Gsnmr• TR 8torM. ~·"'*Y orlomd II lll6!tfltind1!'i "'11r1 011pl1y1n9 11'9 a..,.,91_.lfl\:" -sw-.. . AVERY . COAST GENERAL GENERAL TIRE TIRE SERVICE 585 W. T9th,, Cosio M ... 5~0-5710 646·503) 16941 leach loulnord, Hul'lthuaron ltoch 847-5850 --·, .. '-----------QEHElltAl Tillt!I .,, WOlltTH DflfYIHG ACROSS TOWN TO GIT I • •• . . . . . . • OAflV 1'11.0T J, 1st West Coast Defender J· ' , :.·Newport's Ficker Hopes to Make Cup History • ' 1•1•· • Fl~KER IS QUICKER -So said the buttons worn Bill Ficker's crew aboard Intrepid during the -· observation trials which Intrepid won by a score of 9-0. Ficker appears relaxed here as he takes Intrepid upwind in a brisk Rhode Island Sound breeze. INTREPID'$ NEW COCKP IT -Bill Ficker can steer Intrepid from either side of the boat as he goes into the final selection trials for the America's Cup defense. The revolutionary new concept was from tbe design board of Britton Chance Jr. who also made other changes in the Intrepid, originally designed by Olin Stephens. " What Is Ameri~a 's Cup~ Millions Spent on Pla in Old Pewter Pitcher What is this America's Cup on which milUon~ are spent every three years by Io<ljviduals and syndicates or yachting counttl.ea. In '1he ftrat place, it is not a cup af....all. .but a homely old pewter pitcher wil.h oo bottom. It has been bolted In a cabinet all its own in the New York Yaclrt Club trophy room for more tha'f)ceDtury. MftliERN WAGS contend tbat It will be replaced in the trophy cabinet by the head of the first American skJpper to loselt to a fore.ign country. In a souvenir booklet published this year by the Du Pont Co. and edited by Robert W. Carrick. the competition for the America's Cup ha! been called --St for excellence." k, 1 modem chronicler of 's Cup competlUon reviews the -. ;ot yachting's holy grail in these bly no trophy In tbe h~tory 'world .bas caused such a stir men and nations as the pregnaht that i5 bolted to the base of case in the trophy room of Y ort Y acbt Club. imposalble to measure the mil- dollara, to say nothing of the Ume 11 energy and the up-tight I.bat hive been erpended on ue bit of silver In the past ,,..,,.. "TWENTY CHALLENGES h a v o brought out the pride and prejudice of yachtsmen a! well as their skills and, despite our domination o( this series, nothing has dulled the burning en- thusiasm this' classic competilioo coo· tinues to evoie. "It all otarted -. tbe Britisb in- dicated they woukl welcome t b e participation of an Amerk:an yacht in a regatta to be held at the time of their World's Fair in 1851. Thi! triggered the sporting instincts or John Cox stephens, the lirst commodore of the New York Yacht Club. "STEPHENS QUICKLY formed a syndicate consisting of his brother Ed-. win, George Schuler, J. Beekman Finlay, Hamilton Wilkes and Col. James A. Hamilton. The group engaged 30-year-old George Steers to design the scbooner which was bunt at William H. Brown's ShJpyard on the East River at 12th Street In New York City. "A auccwluJ d"lgnor or pilot boats, Steers departed from conventional design and gave the new hull 1 clipper bow, a straight run aft and raked masts. The boat measurtd S3 feet six inches on the wat.er lint, had · a beam of 22 ft. 6 in. aOO a draft of nine feet. She wu launched on May 3 and christen- ed America, 11 befitUng a vessel that would represent lhls country in foreign -petitioo. "UNDER COMMAND of a veteran pikJt boat captain Dtck Brown, America departed New York for Le Havre, France on June 21. The 12 in ·the crew did not lnclude the ayndJcate members who made the lraM-At!anUc passage by EDITOR'S NOTE: DAILY PILOT Boating Editor Alma• LoclOabtv f</I eodo.11 for N«WpOrt , R.1. where ht will cover tht final Scltctkm Triall /or tlte three U.S. contender• and tht' tffJ,U-oft bf tween France ond Auatratia to determtne &ht c,talltnocr. Tilt U.S. trialt atari ntzt Tutadau. steamer. Under working sails -her good racing canvas was below -the schooner made the crossing in 20 days. "Commodore Stephens met the boat in the French port where she wu cleaned up, painted and filled her unusually flat (!or these days) set of sails. On July 31 she set sail for C:Owes and arrived there that night but anchored off shore because of fog. "TIIE FOLLOWING morning .the re- putedly fast English cutter Laeroct appeared to escort America lnto the ~arbor. The skipper o[ the British vewieJ drew Capt. Brown into a race whi~ the Yankee schooner won by a quarter of a mile. ''This not only astounded the Brililh yachtsmen but led them to decline the challenges offered· by Commodore Stephens. No one was about to make a wager againJt this unu.suaJly de.!ligned boat. "To get some competition. Slephens entered America in the Royal Yacht Squadron race around the Isle of WJaht. Oo Aug. 22 tbe English had 14 boats, rive 1ebooners and nine cutters, on, the Jlne off the yacht club at Wesf Cowes# ''THE START was made at anchor at IO a.m. America got away aiowly and momentarily waa left in the wake of lhe neet. Then she picked up lpMd and overhauJed the British boats one by one unW she gained the lead. "She lost this to Volante, a cutter, when the wind dropped olf v entnor on lhe southeast side of the bland. Tbt breeze freshened and America swept by Volante and Wall never headed. She lln~hed at 1;37 p.m •. eight minutes ahtAd of Aurora. "Il was the resounding v~ over the best lhe English had afloat and It brought Commodor< Stephens the Roy1tl Yacht Squadron Cup which has 1ince been known as the America's CUp." By ALMON LOCKAl!l:Y If Bill Fkktr of Newport Beach and hb crew 1board the 12-meter Intrepid are chosen to defend the Ameiica'1 CUp Sept. 15 it will be the llrst lime in the history of the more thao a century old competition that a westerner bas been at the helm of a Cup defender. A! a maUt:r of fact, it wasn't until Pat Dougan of Newport Beach purchased the aging C.Olumbia and entertd her in the 1964 trials that a Western crew has even competed in the trials. THE LA.TE Walter Podolak and a crew ol Newport youngsten manned the Columbia that year and came off at least third best in the trialJ. Undaunted. Dougan had tht Columbia redesigned by Olin Stephens a n d remodeled at Driscoll's 'boat yard in San Diego and took another crew - lncludlng F!cUr -to NeWPJrl, R. !., for another crick at the defender's role. in 1967. Sharing the helm honors with Ficker that year was Briggs Cunningham of Newport Beach. formerly of New York, who defended the CUp against a British challenger ln C.Olumbia in 1958. But in 1967, Dougan, Ficker, Cun- ningham, et al were destined to come ln seamcl beat. It was the result ol Ficker's starting tacUcs in the 19r7 trials lhat brought the: former world champion Star sailor to the attention oC the New York syn· dlcate which owned Intrepid. · AND SO it followed that when the redoubtabJe 8us Mosbacher, who bad defended the cup ln 1962 and again in 1967 against an Au.stralian challenge. was named to a !Ugh government post by President Richard Nixon the eyes of the Intrepid syndicate t u r n e d westward. Meanwhlle. Intrepid had been remodel· ed to design features of the brilliant young yacht designer Britton Otance Jr. of Pbiladelphta. 1'lis·move was made by the Intrepid syndicate when Stephens signed an exclusJve contract with a new 11yndicate, headed by Robert McCullough of Riverside, Conn., to build the 24th U.S. U meter. It's not difficult to imagine the concern of Stephens. McCullough, et al when their spanking new Valiant started being soundly ~ by Ficker in the remodeled Intrepid. Up to now, Stephen.!! has never designed a new lZ.meter that was beaten in the triab. RE CAME close In 1964 when American Eagle walloped the then n e w Conatellation in the July observation trials. But some hasty revisions to Connie WHO ME WORRIED? lntrtpid's Bill Ficker and a new skipper in the perwn of Bob Bavier changed all thal Connie was the defender and sowxlly whipped the Brltbh ch;allenger. Second guessers on both coast.!I are now wondering what Stephens and the Valiant syndicate have been doing - if anything--to the new yacht ainee the July trial!. Another que.!llion is : Will McCullough step down in favor of another belm.mlan! NO ONE will know those an.!IWen unUl the selection trials start next 'fuu. day. 111.e people involved in designing, building and sailing 12--meters i n America's cup competition have a way of playing things dose to their double- breaated blazers. All photos by Howie C•ufm1n, l•unton, Mt!N. The .. -ll1all wtl1 -1111111 lhe New Yori< Yacht Qui> -_,. mJUet dec:idel In \heir own mindl that one yachl la futa Ilion the oUtert or that one skipper and em can aet the most out ol • bool There Is -· --In Ille lr70 trials. It is tbe -U.S. U.mder No. %!, llerita&•. ~ balJt and aailod by the younc 1'lor1dll JaclK deliper Charlel Morlan. Tbe r fdy ftllDn Heritage hasn't boon mentlcloed In the same breath with Intrepid and Valiant ~ that !he bu lflown up ~ In tbe obaervatloo trtala m Rl>ode Island Soond. Bur MORGAN lw ldaUd au along tl!al be deslped ll<rllap ""' the ldnd of weather and aeu that Cll\ be apeded in the Sound durto( the tall« port ol August -wuther that bun't been es:puienced thus far. • Tbe only other U.S. IJ.meter '"' tbe """" tbis llUlllmtt bu boon Weatherly, the Rl>odes-deslpd y1dll In - Mosbacber beat the AUSl!lies in 1912. She i.s officially in th1s year's trials U a trial hone fCl' il'le DIW Valiant. Steered by George Hinman or Nn Yortc. she has shown flashes of her okl p:JWer giving all Uv.e ol the atber yocbls close competition. THERE'IL be somtthing different in Newpori. R.I., tbis year. Wltile the Amerkan yacbta are fl&htinl Jt out over the Amerca's Cup coune to determine tbe defender. another Mt of trlala wtD be golns on ICJ'Oll the Sound between Australian and French u.meters to determine wbo will ... the aclual challenger. Tbis ;., lhe lint time in tbe _,, of the CUp that tbe New York Yacht Oub bas in.!listed on an eUmlnatlaD Mrits to detennloe tbe ~-It II allo the first lime that the clv.b bu en- tertained more than one challenp. The Australian boat will be Gnld Tl, owned by Sir rrant Pacb!r, an Australian newsp1per magnate ~wbG­ mounted lhe fl.nt Aussie challenge 1n 1962. THE FRENCH cootender lw been named France and is owned by the Fr<nch ballpoint pen tyCOOll Mattol llldl. In the Jut four ye.an Bkh bu gone so far n to purrhaJe the U.S. ~ tlon, tbe Brit!Jb Sovenlp, and bas bad Chance design a completely MW boat jU!lt to serve u a trtal bone for the challenger. Under the f1Jlts of tbe New York Yacht Club a challen&inl yacht must be entinly tbt product of the cowitry of origin -from design to builder to sails to lbe mo.-t miflu1e piece of hardware. READY FOR SHOWDOWN -Intrepid (Jell) with Bill Ficlter of Newport Stach at the ~elm. and Vall· ant, •kiPJ><!red by Bob~McGullough of 'Riverside, Conn.. will be crossing tacks like this more than once durinf tho next two weeks as they 1tart show· down battle for rl.hl to dolend the Amtrlc1'1 Cup. Also In the running will be Hentare, dtltgnld, built and skippered by Charley Morgan of St. Peter .. burg, Fla. ... • .· DA.11.'t' PILOr Yoew Jffone u 's l t'orth • OVER THE COUNTER Watcl1 £01· 'Williamsons' !y SYLVIA PORTER The. .. Terriblt \\'i11lamsorui" ~ tn my arc• -hi\ c a 1110 recently been spotted in otl'K'r IUbw'bs around Nf'W York City and kl Bergen Cwnty. Nt:W Jersey. They surely are ln- vadin& yoor neigbbOrhood now too. for this U lhetr peak M!a.90D. ~ v.•arned and on the lookoot! 1be Williamsons are a clan nf scv~ hundred iUncrant n1indlen v.·bo ha~ been \'X'· umizing American.'i f r <> in coast to coast for two full generations. Home t e p a I r rackets are their specialty - r11.nglng from roofing Job.ci and basement "'11terproofing to Jighlning r o d installaUon. driveway resurfacing and barn painting -and I.hey thrive despite all eflorts to c,.ack down on them. Their favoritr easy target is naive old ladies but they prey equa.Oy viciously on you, young« Ammct.n&. Jn ""™" knov.<n cases. tbef bl\'f: charg- e<! $lXI tor applyinc an ef. fective roof ""Scaler": ha\•e <.'Olltcd drivev.•ays with gunk which remained sticky for \\'ttU; have painted barm with a coocoction ot eluminum dust and u.'>ed crantcase f)I! ~·bich washed off with the first rain: bavt ln.1:1.alled lightning rods dose "COD· duct.ors" v.·ere nothin,e mo.re than painted ropes. THE wn.LL\JllSONS (•·ho also go under such Scottbh names as Stewart. McMillan and McDonald) owally work out of trucks. and usually manage to 1ettve town bel'ore lhe police catch up with them -or before their victim.Ji discovu they've been bilked. There's no bard rule for spotting a Terrible Williamson. You simply must apply I.be same cautions you wou1d to any dealer in home improvement goods 1 n d Stock Brokers: Come Out of Hidin g Place NEW YORK fAP~ -A note to all those brokers in hiding: It may be safe to come oul now and lace the public. Sure Lhey'l'e angry about losing all that mnoey on your recom· mcrrialions. Bui they "re not blaming you for everything. Test the water. Call U1l one ol those clienU who lost his shirt and put ii to him: "Isn't now the time to iTivest?" All ht can do is growl some ad- vice of his ™'n aod slam lhe pllon<. But tbat-4lhouldo't hurt. Courage. There's a good chance he might do nothing of the sort. that he may have DO more danger in bis breast than he has v&lue in his account Ask him how he hopes I o participate in the new upswing if be doesn"t get inV(llved. How are you going to return to six figures if you don't make the coniact.s'? Thad Bowman. sales and marketing d i r r c t o r of Shearson. Hammill & Cc., 1s one Wall Streeter who believes the hr:al is off the securities aaJesmen and lhey are lying low for no good reasoo. He ei::plains this way : "In many instances the an- tagonism that lhe c 11 e n t originally felt for bis broker diminished as the f u I I dimf:nsion of the bear market root became increasingly evi- dent Some 40 ci:ecutives of the company therefore look olf for the branch ofifces to lend !heir assistance to brokers, to rebuild cuStomers' accounlc; and to offer their particular expertise to resolve special problems. 1'he coast to coast trips, 14•bich began in May .and con- 1.lnue through August were eye openers for the ex· ecutives, some of whom had <..-oofined their activities to the company office. which, Is just 40 feet from 11 Wall Street, home of the New York St.cN:k Exchange. "\\'e obtained a new perspecti11e," said Alger Chap~ man. the president. ''fl was refreshing lo leave New York and all the bad news. Out there in the heartland we found people to be more o~ timistic and realistic . ., Many l"Ustomers w e r e shifled into municipal bonds so as to take advantage of high interest rates. Almost all were ad11ised lo clear away the dogs and gel into luo- damentally sound issues. More sophisticated customers were advised aboul straddles. puts and calls. Were cust.omer5 !Up or sarcastic? "Not at .all," said ChJtpman. "In an up market we miiht ha11e received that type or answer. But the customer lo- aay is too serious." Even so, they found , he is forgiving . NASO Ll1tl091 fo r Thursday, Auguot IJ, 1970 · H •"--._..,. ...ri ... .,........,. _...._ • __..._..,. ' ..,.., tn111 .... ,D. :tf:rV1ces, . ere ...... ,. are: ,rk-M • .......... ~ ... ......., _... •• ~ _...._ BEWARE if anybody who ,.,_ comes to your door and tells •11 Alli ... •w you he "just happens" to be in f\IEW YO•K I"'' ,-.,...,,, the ,...;.,...~ •nd "Just -""'-M11ow11111 ~1c1 F•t '"'' ..... <ti......,............. .,. '""' .. ~ .. "'IG "'" happens" lO have enough :~-.. ,=: "'*-.'1. f!~~1" matmial left O\ler to perlonn ~.'":'d...,1~·...= ~' 0ri ''"'"' job for you. 11wit. l!Y' -,..,. """'!• ·--·-.,,,..,.. ~! Gflll Don't fall for ANY form of !:,'4;:',1~!W~ • ~ ~lri' 'I hiab nressurt sales 1'.ctic. For a.en~ •I wh1t11 ,,,... ''*"' '6 ,.. i..... """ -· ........ instance; a certain offer wbich ~-11•tdt •• "'°""' 11 wm expire Within I ff!W days Jffler COlllJ. -= 'C\u.c..,:, or if your chimnty isn't i:::~ d•~~~ !t"i~ ___ ,...... . Jo ,., inct.udll •lrttt , ... ......,. QI immediately il will ,,,,u ........... 1e111e11t ran down: or termites are ~" O!' '°"'" :!.1£•1 chewinc away at yoor home's ~ C.:: ~ ,.. ~~:11 foundation and the v.'bole t,FA.Pr s 1J1-t i:v. ~ ... w 11ouse is about to cave m; or *:'•:' t~ r ! lV Lbe n•-th d '" y t,VM Cl •l'o 101' --C ~· un erswrm ma A.btrlt 1,, • •V. rtDh lr burn your house down if you ~(' ~1.e1 I"" ~ 1g'i\~1e1 don't buy 3 lightning rod right' r lndUI 2 21-t Gr..,. M,• ' .~.. " '"' 9.\1 Genii It! away. Comider any lactlc:s of ~:ii:: t,., 1?"" 1~ ~ r: lbiJ sort a warning to you t/:t'm'1,w0 r.z : ~ • .5" NOT to deal with their users. -.ipn <>... ' !"' ""'°" ,......,, ,~,, \1 ....... s WATCH OUT for any ''" 11us11 ' '" Ht...,. 111 ' El L..ob l l ''I! He<1rtcl I' guarantee that a product such ""' E•a . Sf":. 60\lo itlr-11 c11 '<m F11r11 ~"' ' r.:!Ofx 11111 as siding or linoleum or ' Gr ... 1 •N ~ ~1:11t1hmn Am lf't>d '~ U\41 l"Olm E"' carpeting will 'Jast 10 to 20 Am ~" n U Vt HO!oOm I , al · ·bJ Ar>Mvi I ..Sl4 '~ HOO-.f'r years. t s most 1mposs1 e Ar>a:tn in m 1 .. HOWf'd GI ( uf ct •· k A.n:• Incl 411., ,.... Howm In or any man a urer ...., ma e A.rde11 M 6.,.. ,,,., .~ldl Ml b pecil. I · · A.nt.n 111 21111 JO"" lt'ud "'P sue a s ic c anns, since Ark MoP 1ru ,,..i. ~~ G8• so many variables ( l he ~= H ~ ... 11:. il1r~~t t11 weather, the wear and tear to A.ICC 1o1 25V. 2*111 r.'..,.1tt '"' A.uto Sd , S Hvdt All! ~·hic.h it will be exposed, etc ) a.Trd Ar P4I w. '"''ff s.,. · ..AKER: o,,t:.on U Ind G11 are involwed. And "·hat com· 111 "''1"' -"'• ,... 1,.., Nuct e1rwc~ '"' t 'Io 1..,.co I pany can be sure it will even a..111 "' 1"'> ,.. 1nfr1ro e1vmr1 1SV. 1''-~ lnl Con! be in business JO or 20 years a..,.111:U n Jfu 1nrr111 In 8eKt>m n 11. w.i. I"' 1w111 from DOW! klle hle 11 11"' ... M"llH ~II Ub U.... V IM SYI Ask any door-lo-door pcddJer 9J11....,1 w ~• n-. 1n1 s, 1t1 eiro Son 31 n I"'!" or home improvements who 81rtcl>r 1" JI'• on~ llloM:k Ml lt 21"-' It S.OUlll !ells you he is a state or town 8011 ••• , "'-Jtcoot I" • 80llti'oe C 1\~V -J•<111ln C "'inspector,' or a represen· &oei AH 1• ,,.,,. Jtm w11 . ( II k '"' C•P 1llo l'h J•MH F I.alive o a nationa y nown ~~"."'$c': lt:ti~"' ~ri~d• alumiIJum or steel company, !Srwn Ar ._ 7v. J11ns11 Pd exactly which agency or office :~: ... et 1£1 1~ ~:Im :l sent him and then telephone IU!"""P 5 20 tci'.11 K1lvtr ,.,~ Lu.1 +'-> .j~ Kiit Gr11 lhis office to check out his §:me~ Sv rr.: 1::? ~::rot credentials. c.-M •r 10 "~ .. " CtnllM I Pl-I '' ~tllwd FlNAU.. Y, if you discover ~:-~'" 1_r,,: ,_n: K~ "~" that "Ou have been crvnped by C•P kw 1 7"" Ktvt c .... " ~" r CIP lnlU lta 3"' IC.-nl PC an unscul""'I""~ contractor or C•pTch '" :At 1~1"° '"' r-""'"" C•rr Dtw 9'/t ''" 1"1"'11 fl by an incompetent odd-job,.,,, 11 1v. 1 K•r-C11 irlr GP lf.'I. 1•V. Knao Vol man. HOWL -to your local ••c NG t~ tv. IC••l•lr ••II C.P ,.,_ l'h LMC Oii Better Business Bureau, cintt,., 11'4 22~ Ltn1;e 111 Ctn VPS V. 11 Lltftd ""' newspapers and radio stations, c,., • .,,~ 2 2v. L•ne Wd •• I' CMt1 o ~ 61. Ltrwn u1e state. attorney genera s Cllm LH '"" •~ L1rwn M ((. •• t Cllft I"" no lV. Le..iv Ld o ice, uce neares consumer c11es 0111 11v. 1M L111 co.• lecu :~I lr&I 51 !3 L1l111r G pro on agency. ..,.,111 $ 1c1 16' L .... 1. eF Some states. have sel up .~11';'~1 1> •'1 '~ t::l.!11 ' lllr MIO 10lo 11~ Loll Caw special affices and agencies 111., u A 21 ,..,.. LOii Etrn · U d al ··• the ho nlr u e 21 21 v. Lvndl c SltlC y to e Wlu1 me J!yln Ml l)l,1, '""' M~ GEi lmprovement industry and its c\:~...,MI 1t~ 2'f~ ::1111~\IV Problems. Ch ..... k ''"e tis' ting of cuni Mt-• Jf ,.,., Mom1 ,., "''" •H Cl!nlon O 4~• Sl'o M1nl11 M state agencies in yo ur ·-C1> 1••1o 15141 Minor c ~g.eur o s~ '"° M•r Ml11 telephone book, or write. to l:'!.~~1 CPF 46 , "10 ~t•~,,;; your Slolt.e Commerce Dcparl· 1o•on sir 21 n.,, M1111 LP orncel ~''> JV. M•vtt 0 ment. om Ctr 31 :!' McQuv lorn Git 10"' 11V. Med1t H TO llJ...USTRATE what can orn Tel 21 :n Mt-<1 M11 om H+tll .s.... '"" Mtdlrri be and is being done, New om "''' r•.1. 1>1o ~•Id in C• • omp A J1'> ...., Mldld 0 York 1ty s ne.w C011!Wller ,.,0 cm M ,,,., Mkn~• ·~'"" I b t I cmo ,.,., J 1'l'lo Mklw GT pro""'--...... ' aw ans no 00 y Cmp Te<-J'. Jli Mots Gt• decepti\'e pr a cl ices by ~:,,''"l'°otJi ?~· ~;: ~11':c:~ unscrupulous promoters. but ~:::~~ ~ •• r,: Mah._::1" also "unconscionable" prae> i-· L l•11r u 1, Mcnt c,• orP S l.._ • Monm It tices which take advantage of ~o "' 1~1 ~%'""' =:::: f a consumer·s "lack o f ~'" Mo-1 ''" 1'lo Mt ... Trt. !JrMI Mii 1'4 I~ MtoTt wt knowledge, a b 111 t y , expe. ~~rc,, c& ~,. ,~ t::i"'c11i-'t. rience. '' 1>rt1 c 1v. •'~ M~u,, n1 lbl 7\1, 1~ Mu!ll:I E• Ir you're victimized. your n1v M 1 '"" MY'' LE l I •• ~!1 Del • '"" NCC Ind yells may .a · east save ou1ers. " ~n 11 1n.r. N•••ft• c And. possibly. you'll get help 8:~i!"/a ~ r• ~:it:;1 in forcing the individual who oJ0,Ml~ 1~ 11111 ~fr"'E<i~i bilked you to make good on Otllttl Aa 21~ , ...... NII Gt.O ~Ill Int ~ 1"" N" Lib Your deal 0.fux Ch <It so Nill M1'd • Dlf C1nT l.W. 14 Ntl Pt! 0.-1 tl~ 11 1111) Ntl Secll" On Am m n1o NII ~ Dewey E l Jh ,.,., Sltvr "Al some point in the pre9e11l market decline: -my o'<'·n guess is that. this point was reached after about 12 montm -the feeling. grew that. the entire affair was an economic pllenomenon beyond tht control of any person or group." Bowman i~ an unusually artkulate analyzer of the groundhog neuroses that gripped many brokers, made lhe:m burrow out of sight and made them afraid of their own shadow whene11er they p:ipped their heads up. Coast Firm Develops Clinical Thermometer Ol•m Cr U\11 ll NEn GE OllC t11c • "'' •IJ N1!G Olv' CM ,.... l\li Nlch1n F OOCU1EL V.\olo N!elt A Oow Jon ''"' 2iv, N!el1 8 Doyle 08 lf"' l5'4 NA llf•C Orfw NL 'P, ~l'o NC•r NG Dunkln 0 9\lt JO 1<1E11r 011 Dutlr"" u•~ U NPA G•t 02 Pllnl t\(o 10'4 NW N•!G EtolC wt l l\lt NW PuSv E11!· S~ 61'1 ~ NIKI II~ Econ L.ID 19"' 20'1t Eo Arl "The registered rep." he said, '"has let himself be so conscience·struck by this turn of events that he. simply freezes up at the thought or facing the client." The typical salesman, he says, has turned in on himself. "'Feeling as he does that he has hurt lhe interests of his clients, be is obsessed by au manner of private fears. evtn over his very capabilities a.s a broker. "Carried to this cxlremr, the salesman is in a state flf shock. llis own morale is low. He is no )onger thinking lucidly . Volume and his own commission income ha ve ht! the skJds." He ls, Bowman concludes, "truly ooc of the walkinii wc.1nded, a bona fide, blood- soaked casuall y of the! bear market.•• Faced wlth this appalling 11ituallon, executlvts al Sbtm. Hammill concJuded that not only was I h e .aJtm\an not helping himscU and Lbe company, but he qsn'l htlplng his customers either. lnwston Si Wsiw1r'le11: ftoom tli,000 to tll0.000 1o .,.., for my purpo•• on Callfomll ml lftate of •nv klnd4 Wwthlr pekf tor ot oat. Sank.-s look If yc>ur p&I or your qe. My flf'ldws look only •t your equity. Let's ditcu" your needs. Nonn Kahn, Ii· censed broker. 639-2122. I ~ Sensitron, Inc. (OTC) ol Costa ~fess, California, has announced a $500,000 initial order Jrom American •lospital Supply· of "1cGaw Park . Illinois, the natioo's largest distributor of hospital supplies and equipment. to market the nev.· Sensitron E I e c t r o n i c Clinical Thermometer to hospitals and nurSing homes through the U.S. and Canada. The thermometer features a unique , disposable probe assembly lo prevent cross-in- lcction among bOiSpital pa· \VilJi a n1s Takes Exec J oh Dennis W, Williams has be.en appointed sales manager of Graphicolor. Inc., Anaheim llthographic firm, according to Charles f. Mc:Conathy, presi- dent. Williams had been a sales representative for Graphlcolor since 11166 and previously serv- ed as account executive for a Santa AnA advertising agen- cy and editor-publisher or Orange County G o I r e r maglllnt. Tht new sales manager wa" graduated from Cal Stale at Fullerton after a t I c n d I n g Fullerton Juntor College; and completed marketing and pro- du ction courses .sponsored by !he Printing Industries of America. A resident ()( Irvine, he 11 • IOl'lllff dlrector of tho Sanll Ana Junior Chambtr of Com- merce and an offictt ol the Sol.1th C03st Active 20-30 Oub. Grnphlcolor, Inc. or 2220 E. Howell St. Anaheim is a com· mercial printing c o m p 111 n y spec1<1IWng in precision color work. Educ: ~V\ 1~'< ~ ;o Wfl tients. Sensitron has also ~In."\~~! ·'~~ 1:t o~'" recently received a $ ! . 7 lEl"t11e1' f"' ;...., g~; ~: million initial order rrom Gug· :cit~ ~~ ft; grcct:,,, genhrim International Io ~l"t's..-. :r,; ~: ~!ctn',. .. ~~ market its , I e ctr on ·1 c et 0..11 .,.,; .. p...., F•E El MOd<tl • ~ Pa~co Co thermometer l-0 E u rope an 1~~!., o~ 1m~ 11;~ ~:;;:~1 0, hospitals. Thi~ i n crea s e s e~f~ ~· 1!• ,n; ~:~:r. ~ S en s i t r o n ' s electronic Eniw111 1~• • P•v1:1,, Eon Coro '• lW. P~rl Ml thermometer backlog lo over Equll 0 11 ''• '""" Peertn r Erlt 1.c; 51~ '"• P~ FnPln $3 million. According In J . F8 ciocco '"" 1v. P• G&w l"~b Teti l'.• J'\ l'enn '°'~c G. Hammerslag, Sensitron Firr!f'lll tv. l'!o P•l'S1 w. President. results of market ~~1!"1 ~ii: ri~ ~1t~~· ~ tests have already indicated • the new e1ectronic thermomet- er may soon change tempera- tur taking in U.S .. Canadian and European hospitals. The thennometer weighs only 5 1.~ ounces, and can record a pa- licnt's temperature in Jes~ than 15 seconds. Hammerslag said. •·over ~I Southern California hospitals have already placed initial orders during a recent market test of the product b y American Hospital Supply. 85 percent of the hospitals solicited in the test placed an orde.r . The ScnAitron meter unit sells lo hospital!! for under $30. Sales rrom oor Medical Eleclronic!I Plvislon <.'Ould exceed $15 million in 1971 based on our current estimates." Safeway Sales OAKLAND, Calif. -Safe· way St«es lnc. announced rt· ctnt!Y than unaudited consoli· dated sales for lhe first 23 wet.kl of 1970 ended July It were $1,482 million, an lrt- creue of 16.8 percent over Ole comparable per)od In 1969. ConsoUdated u n a u d I t fl d tarning! ror !he nrst 28 wttks of 19i0 were St.39 per ~hare or cQmmon ~tock. ~n Increase of 29 ~nts Crom carnlnRs of 11.09 per !ihare in the same ptrlod of 1969. Catere rs Net $2 Millio11 Om ark ' Complete-New York Stock Li st ,,... " .. tMl.J Hltll &Aw C"M Cll' Syuibols ·· .- ' .. • • .. •• .. • ' •• •• .. ~ •• "' • .. •• •• '• .. "' •• lZ .. • ... • " ~ " " ,, " ... ~ • •• ~ ~ .,, " • "' .. '• '• • • • " ••• ... ' .. .. ,, •• '• .. •• • " " :I .. " • M " " .. .. . , " .. ,. "' • " .. . , '• • " .. " .. .. .. '' • ~ • • " '" .. • .. • ... " .. • • " • •• .. " '• ,, • • .. ~ .. • ·~ " .. • •• .. ,, .. " '• • " ~ •; .. . . '• '• •• .. ' • • • • ·-· 1'70 DA"i "1l0T JJ_ Finance Briefs CHICAGO iUPO -Gould, Inc., announced it will build a $2.5 mllUon Cactory at Woodruff, S.C., lo m a k e flashlight and radkl batterif.s • The plant will employ zw . CLEVELAND iUPl) A.T.O., Inc.. said It 1 automatic sprinkler division has joined Bronswerk Co. of Holland in a venture to market fire protection equip- ment and services in- ternationally. The new firm will be based at Amerafoort •nd subsidiaries will be set up in Germany. Belgium and Spain . BETHPAGE. N.V. IUPl) - Grumman Corp. has formed a new marketing subsidiary. Grumman Pacific, Ltd.. and u~ to bdt it in Singapore under Robert W. Somerville . The company will sell and seM'ice both military and commercial aireralt. NEW YORK !UPI) lntematlonal Telephone & Telegraph Corp. has con· firmed reports current in Canada that It i s con- templating a large new Jn. vestment in the Port Cartier area of Quebec and I s negotiating the matter with Quebtt provincial authorities. But the company refused to idenWy the project. NEW YORK IUPll America n Electric Power Co. announced it will intteaae to $130 million from $11 millkln a prospective issue of short term notes it lnttnds to at.II to bankll and commercial paper dealen:. Mrs. Fay Joins Macnair.Irvine Mrs. Gloden Fay, Nmed 11169 Rea!L>r of lh• Year by thf. Ne w p o r t Harbor-Cotta M ... 8o"11I of R'8llor!, boo joln<ld M•cn•l>lrvlne Rullr In Newport Buell. Mr1. Fay, a member of the realty board 11inee 1950, b lh< 8'COllCI Reali« of the Ynr to become • 1taff member of the newly establ!shed Clrm. Tho olher b lb presldto~ Jobn Macnab, who was named Rc11Jtor ol the Year 1n 1968. I • Gett~ ~···~y~;~Fr9m .'I .. , ~ ... ·· ,_., 1\J-I?· Don't Go \ro Yogemite I I t r I -~ .';,lS:,. :-c -r ~ ~· as we got here, one got up massive Hilt Dome, U>t equal number Is expected thla limit (or J)el'IOOS regist.erlng at 2,800 cam psi tea lie In the related to the v..UV floor, slopes of the Slerra . Nevada ~--=-: '!.~~ • from his bed in the dirt and world'& lataest chunk ol year. C.mp Curry, and a 15-mlnute fr\nge 'areas and are normaUy where at one.. tim e .tedd to lure wer ll'lC~in& 1 ....... :~,,,._ ~? -" t.oOlc: off witb his pack." granite w\Lb at least one rou~ ln recent )'earS.; overntgM aiUng Une at times. FOQCI is occupied cmly after the valley campgroucds were Merred to1 IUlmbers ipto the .,park, "ac :·':\,,.~a:"" ~-.:!'', • .)I0!1 Foster, 32, Chicago, still unconquere<I by mountin camping tn public areas of the se<Ved by the number "1 nus. as "slums" bee•"'\ of ·a l\m• •''" ftlllAg the •t..ck "*' . ~ ~ ":' seid he forsook the valley cJirnbers. valley numbered 10,000 a night Yosemite Village where two Camping Is limited to seven youthful element tbal 1nvaded1 country," said Hadley. ;-~ I .i (i..,.. ~~·~· crowds for the Hodgdon "It's terrible, disgusting," al peak periods. Ha\rk said pancakes, a slice or ham and days . A sign warns. "No nails the park., importina liquo.r and Bui !t's i.p Ole high.®untry, • Jl).$!'B\1£ ~ • .• 1' Meadow Campground, an she said of the ultr'amode:rn that number has been uaed .,.Uc for\ and knife sell for or wir:es on trees." Pets are narcotics. ' aJoog the 750 mUcs or trails, y 0 S EMJTE NATIONAL overOow facility built on I.he camping uffiP.. "One t.raHer by half with ai stricO en-l\.21~ aUowed in Camp No. 12 onJy. "When people think about where the only real campMg PARK (AP) _ Barely seven park'·s western boundary. that came througll l he forced program.-Umillng cam-Hadley-said there are about One campground is f o..r the park, they overlook the in Yosemite can now be found. miles ...,uare.. with granite Judy Kelly, 23, Berkeley, campground was better than pingtodesignatedare.s.1,cam-1,140 campsite in the valley, trailers and campers onJy. other 1,200 square miles and Youwalktogettbereandcar- clif:(s rWng a mile above it.s Calif., was there, too -trying the homes most people live per registration, numbered not incl\lding the commercial Another is for tent.s and less tend to become centralized in ry your essentials and shelter floor and the green-tinted to get away from the trailers In." sites aJ)d no a 11 ow ab I e factli~ operated by the JTtQdem camping gear. the valley." -but il's there. Merced River cutting through and civilizatiom spread · out Last year about !.3 million overflow_ Yosemite Park and curry Co. Hadley said most of the The sun-and generally warm "Think Feet'' the roadside its middle, Yosemit.e. Valley is1_u00 __ er_Y_oscnu __ ·i. __ r_a11s __ and ___ .,._,_...,, __ •_n_tere<t __ the_pc_ar_k._A_n __ ,,,.,. __ •_"_· -•~»_m_inu_lt_.;.par_ki_.ng_;;__Tlle __ rm1_a_100. __ ,_o_f_the_c_pa_r_k_'•-'-par_k_'s_pr_ob_l_ems __ •_r_e_d_i_rec_t1_y_i._m_pe_r_a1_u_re_s_of_lhe __ w_e_st_er_n __ •i.::g_ns_m_ac_y_r_ea_d_s_oo_n_. __ _ ooe. of the nation's most con- gested outdoor hotels. 'fttert are. no reservations, though. and bartering for a choice campsitr can b e ~lhless. Elbow room is at a premium. Clotheslines may be au that separates 0 n e campsite from another. Persons seeking • weekend or solitude in a mountain' sanctuary away from urban centers -the pollution, noise and oongestion -f i n d themselves M thf-middlf' of what they sought to Jcave be.hind. Traffic jams are frequent. Hitchhikers line the tw~lane foadways. When the campfires are lighted at night, a thick hazi: settles over the vaUey, smelling of barbecue briquets. On weekends the "Valle)· Campgrounds Full"' signs go up on Friday evenings. The signs went up three days before. the ~1emorial Day weekend as 67 ,0CM.l jammed the park. They went up before the Fourth of July weekend "'·hen 44.100 persons converged here and an estimated 500 "hippie- like" youths collided with Rangers 1n the w o r s t disturbance ever to erupl in the serene valley. About 120 persons were ar· rested. Ten were l/lspitalized ~'ith minor injuries. Tourists oflen tote trailers compete with television· sets, tents or sleeping bags as they mass in the valley. "The demand is such we can't meet it," said Park Supt Lawrence C. Hadley . "Califorruans. who comprise about 85 percent or the visit.ors. tend to go to the out- doors to "do their thing.' All we can do is try to meet the demand in the best quality way we can." Restriction of all automobile traffic in the eastern end of lhe valley and implementing of a public transit system for campers and sightseers was a.nnotroef:d July 9. Overnight fees at public campgrounds, as high as $3 a night at each valley camping site, were begun in mid-June. A $2-a-day per vehicle entrance fee i!I in effect. l'\1r. and Mrs. Don Sweet of Medford, Ore .• tried to camp in the valley on a recent weekend. They were turned away. They finally ·found a campsite oa a Sunday after camping in the high cou ntry "where things were real quiet." "We noticed a lot ol hippies around here," said Sweet leaning on a tenl trailer. "Just School Funds To Be Used For Clothing \YASHINGTON 1AP 1 Federal education money c<in be spent to clothe needy school children but it is up to the states to decide whether paymerts ~ould go directly to parents, says an Education Department official. Fotlowing a noisy two-hour session during which welfare- rights representatives pressed their demands for direct payments, Richard L. Fatrley said TUesday the law allows funds for clothing u n d er cirt'umstances "where I he s e clothes are needed." ,But Fairlq., a,::tiqg ,director -of the department's com- 1 pensatory education division . added that fl'deral officials "will leave the criteria up to the st.ates" on thr method ol payment. A$ lssue Is a move by a welfare riglb group i n Providence. R.J .. for a clothing aUowanct c4 S48 per chi1d fflf" 2,000 dlildren. The grcup wants such education aid fuodl to be made dire<.'ll) .. the parenls. The federal 1noney l s dislrtbuted to lhe states for .... lo ocbool districts which produce legally accept• ble J>l'Olll'<n>I aimed at h<lping so-callelli e.due1Uooally depriv- ed clilldten. Fairley bu aclvloed thr stale educalloo dlldols, wllo must determine w h e t b e r tlothlnc Is . • hlgfl'f>'lority need, that scitfl ,....,.,.,. must be llhowo to be an inttgral part of a comprehensive pro- gr,m dOllgn<d to me<l ~~· 1 of ,.....p1ero In fheo 'amt - not limited only to the children of famllid oa we.Uare. KJTCllElf comoL CENTER 2997 You ain ~*11. it i.a 0 mol"ll.lJl9 OJld aa •• II dest witb sliding d.Mwfl', inag11:1iM aod receipt rack" witb ligbt. and bank abel.I. All color caordln11ted ud &alCl't. Wa.hiut and •bl.le. BAR-8-Q WAG.ON 711 This i• what tber coll lh• ,«rd .... " o Ndiculous lo.,.. price .,..blch I• ~ppoHd to briag yoa. tn and you .,., up .buying tb• bigger. -"tier one. But our J'MdeT• aren•t outfoK.d. ta.., bur lhi• 1111 .. GDd gi•• th• bur- ., the ..,,...b.,.,. &XIS-FT. BAB MOO FEllClllG 197 ROLL Maia a !lice w'ind.btt!Ok. e 11n bociivnni11d lor a Hawaiioa or OrMaat lanUcoplllg', Or jl.llt pri~ U JOU wcn:it it. WU. hound. 10-FOOT FOLDING FENCE 99c It'• 18 tnchn high to Pep the little doggies awcrr lrom fOW' planta. h U. •ncaneled whit• .o y111.1 don"t trip o•• ii iD the dim 119bt. and kw oadw • buck. if• your•. SAWHORSE BRACKETS ··~AIR Ju•I cu\ up aom• tcrap 111ol• and pul th••• on. Make o sawhorM or .cotloldlDg ot just th• dgbt beight, Very bandy lor o~ lb• lady sunbatb.r nnt dO<)I' {but wb.., f'OQJ ..,u. cakbes you.) scon·s SUPER TURF BUILDER Y•• ii'• 11\1• •• don'I ha.•• tit• oalr aupply m th<I cowitl"f'. bul ••do hem 11 full gardea aipply Mop iJl dtplh. 9(1 you don't birft to run ctll ower looking tor lhe ....t of th• •lull. 1.00 Off REG. 9.95 8'5 BIKE TIBE PUMP You lmow. mc11191: d thia llftlff W da1igned lo'°"• time. Inst.ad ol carting tM kid down to th• Mnlc• Acitioa. l.t him fix k him .. H. Whe,. dld tt llOY• ''ODd choulfeur'" in d1• martloge lken .. ? ALL-ALUMINUM SCREEll ·DOORS $JOO ON A SCOTT'S NO. 35 SPREADER REG. 19.95 ~~' 12" DEMONSTRATION 11 to 4 on SA'NRDAY. AUGUST 15. th~ Seous mea. will l-~ ou.r ._ 10 1bow Jo. how to UM a tipNOCi• tta. bMt •ar. lH• mcrr .... -.bow'°" what to P1t~iU. AUTOMATIC WITH ,. REG. 14.95 TIIADt 10 • -.. : FREE CALIBRATION Bring ,our Scona spreader In for calibration or aatr the Scott• mllll for Q nu:c Calibrator and cheer your owe. FREE SPREADER F.och ol our •lore• will gh·• crway a Scotti No. 35 SpAGder to th• p•t- wbo trvde1 ill the moat ridlculou1 and originol 91>reo:deT. G.ast f.:zr it-• cm old golf bog.) Winn•1• to be announced in bext week'• ad. r-~h~~~-.. t',~~;;:,-.~~==~!I I fRE[ Spreader Judging. I I NAM£ I 1:= I L-;; ••••• i.I Mtm•MAI. s•u.s cWCAr (ttee.I" 3BAR SCREEN DOOR MALIBU ANODIZED DOOR 6" 11" All COMPLE.TE WITH HARDWARE: MEXICAN PICTURE FRAMES BX 10 9 x 12 12 x 16 2" 3" 3" We deport.cl Eugen• south ol the border 11Dd ln1tnicted him to g.t to the .aurce. W• buy right. to All rlghL Lo~y lram•• for leu than you'd expect to pay. DEEP AND \t\IQc NYLON SHAG 4'7~;,, YD. MATCHING CARPET TlLE 67' 12Xl2 Tbi1 ii a way ol Al.ling long onrdue. Why b.iy exlra squcue yla:rds when you neeoi squ<U9 IHI lo till lD. Tll• match .. tb• roll Cmp•L Uurr•rr lnl•N•tlng colon, FoatD. backed, no pad needed. 8-FOOT TURNED POSTS 9a1 Her• la a way ol mc:ilring new !iring area• wilhoul 1h• mojor cost ol .Hid wall•. Point or stc:i.ln lo .ult cind you·,.. got loob going !or your home. FREE CLASSES WEDNESDAY EVENINGS in the LA Ml.RADA COMMUNITY ROOM. The experts will be there to show you how to do it better O'lld aHordably, Door pri1e1, r•fr••hment .. lib on ••eolng out. Augu1t 15 -"How to Toke Cono ol Your Lown ond Garden" by Ortho Jones. l\u51u~1 26 -"How to Cool Your Hom• Wllhout Going To the Coit ol Air Conditioning" .~tr1ombtr 2 -"Ho.,.. To lnslo\I a Gcnboge • Dispo•er" -by At11•rican Stondcnd. CIRCULAR SAW BLADES 97c EA. Almost lor tht co1t of sharpening o dull old blade. Cheaper when you 1hin k of gOID'iJ 1o th• 1hcnpen•r twice. Choie• ol styl••- VINYL RJG RUNNER 77c LIN. IT. Thick b.a..,-duty s111H. ih color .. with little ploltk" 1Mlh that hold ii in place on lb• carpet. !Ain'I gonna Mn nu plo.tlic lhlng ch•wing on my cnl'p*I. no sirM BobU . s I .... -l~.1970 I r ' A Complete Guitle • • • Where ALYS ANDERSON, FRON T, MICHELLE HOWLET PRACT.ICE Aqua SI1ow Winds Up I Swim Class "" Culminating an eight.week course In synchronized swimming at Newport Harbor and Corona de! Mar High Schools, 25 young ladies will be seen in "En· chanted lsl1ncl," an aqua show . 'Illlll Is an annual show sp::nuored by the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department and comes after Jong hour! of practice by the girls · whu hive been taught by Pam Fontius, Sue O'Brien and Tina Echternach. It will be presented in the Newport Harbor High School swimming pool at 8:30 p.m. tonight, Saturday and Sunday. Jim Miller, sports director of Newport Beach Cable Vision. will narrate the production, which promises to be • Jot of fun for the whole family. Twelve routines are planned, among them a mermaid number, a cannibal routine, a clown diving sequence, a volcano number and one called tropical rain. Tickets are available at the pool on the nighl of the performances. Adults, 7S cents, children 50 ce.nts. E to go • •• What to Film Festival • Ill • tlo • ••• • Laguna Young People Prese nt Ne w Cin ematic Visions \ I . • DAIL 'I' PtLOT ,,_., ....... LE GIVE SYLVIA ECCLES THE BIG WASH IT'S SPLASH TIME I I Hollytvood Backstage ,. " Auto Raci g Stars' Sport By BOB THOMAS AIMd .. M Pr911 Wrl"" HOLLYWOOD -In every era the fUm colony has had its own· "in" sport. Now it's auto racing. Polo was the rage in lhe 1930s, with Walt Disney, Will Rogers, Spencer Tracy and other notables playing before stellar crowcls every Sunday, Tben Charles Far. rell's Racquet Club in Palm Springs helped make tennis the fashionable sport. Bing Crosby and Bob Hope created the craze for golf, and hunting was furthered by s u c h he-men as Clark G a b I e, Gary Cooper and Robert Tay'lor. 1be trend toward speed cars was demon- strated Aug. 9 with a ~amateur Celebrity Invil.ational Ra~ at tbe brand-new Ontario ••~ .. _.,. Motor Speedway. Among those ractng were Paul Newman. Dick S~n and director Roman Polamtl, a1 well u astronaut Pete Conrad. Othtr entries in<luded Robert Redlord , Clint East.wood and James Gamer. Steve McQueen wot1\d have Uked to enter the race. which wtll contribute $50,000 to the A-totioo Pk:wre and Te.le· vision Rellef Fund. But he's ln Europe making a movie about car raclna. Wba1 atlracta the 1W'1 C.o tbe ' I I l? David Lacki.on, presi- Ontario Speedway, offers Uon ' "I be prejudl.:ed, but I thin!< race drl ert a r e the heroes of the 1970s. e-a ma11 like Marlo Andretti. Last 1 r he made over $900,IMM> - but he ld be dead toroorrow. ''Thet lupttheroes of today -movie stare Ud astronauts -need heroet of tbtJr own, and they find such to admb-4 in race driven. Racing is also an i/cellent releaae from the tens.ions tbeu superheroes are under. •1r•ul Newman and r own • fonnula Fo~, and wa sometimes spend ~ hours rading aroultd the track, one alter the oilier. When we're do11e, we feel that 'l'orch Runner f Salutes 'Doll y' we have put in a hard day's exercise. The mental relaxation ia Incalculable." The Ontario plant, 40 miles east of Los Angeles, has Hollywood backing. During the fonnatlve stages Lockton discussed the project with Klrk Douglas. He was so impressed with the actor's Ideas that Douglas was added to the board of directors. Dick Smothen is another member, and Newman ts likely to be added. The 12$.S million racewoy is !Wing shape amid the or.a.nae groves of Oiiltario. Aft.er the preview with the pro.am celebrity race, the track will oUicialty open with the C&llfomla 500 Ott Sept. 6. The stadium I.I designed to seat 140.000 and Locklon hopes to BU IL "We had three survey1 made btfON: we went ahead with the project," Lock- ~/ a3, said. "Twelve million people ll\le wuntn a 150-tnile radius or the track, nine million wilhin 70 mlles. And there is a greater densit)' of auto racing fans i11; Southern California tha11; anywhere tlae in the country." David Merrld< Is ~ a 1oog. But It's the nonfons thal the track cilatance marath«I runner to ca:n1 an ~· to attract, Lockton admitted, and eternal torch from Yonkers to the St. the advertising is aimed at them. 'f1te Jameo Theater Sep . I, to mark\ the I' track will be in use daily with teolt, dey on which ''Hello Dolly! "the ~ televl!km commercials and totJrs; thett muaica1, will pass ;,My F~lr Lady" al will be 35-40 racing days. 11 that enoUih the. longest-running mU31c.al In BIFOadway to make I.ht enterprise pa,y oil? .. hlaiory. Thal happy event~ take place "Ye11" repl.ieo Lockton. ' 'The &t the matinee perfonnance on that Call!ornl1 500 itaelf Is e1pected to groa day, the •how'• 2,718. 13 million." • • A series of Hims is being shown in the Laguna Beach Hlgb S c h o o 1 Auditorium. 62S Park Ave., Laguna Beach, each Sunday at 7:30 p.m. They have been showing each Sunday since July 26 and for those wh9 have not seen them we can only say, "Give it .a try." Thert are three more screenings, each different, Aug. 16, 23 and 30. The cost is $2 per ticket and the proflla go to support the Laguna Beach Free Clinic. The films to be shown on Aug. 16 and 3ll come from the Student "Take One" series. The Aug. 23 films will be from the "Kenetlc Art Series." Both Intermission Musical Theater 'Life' To Lag una's Doris Shields By TOM TITUS Of .. ~ ..... It.ti Musical theater Is more than an avoca- tion for Laguna Beach's Doris Shields. It's a way of life. And since there aren't enough musicals staged each season at her home base, the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, she's quite apt to be found at various points around Orange County, helping a new group get started in TUstin or condensing one of her favorite shows into the small San Clemente theater. Between musicals, Doris fills her time as a vocal coach, imparting her lyrical wisdom to young performer! in both the amateur and professional theater. In fact, aside from tending her colleclk>n or miniature bonzai trees, all her time ls spent in either teaching or rehearsal. It would be next to impossible lo catalogue Miss Shields' creqiu into capsule form and ~ late lhem in a sln&le column. Suffice lt to say she has served as musical director for some 14 productions at the Laguna Playhouse during a period in which she was com- muting back and forth to the Pasadena~ Play· tn&le where Ille was DOllll I HI.LOI • member of tbe teachilll! IUll. NOW TUE DOOM art bolted at the Pasadena theater -"It was a crime to tee It close while they were receiving the greatest. number of advance registra· Uona ln many years," she laments - but the "spare thne" she might have enjoyed bu been 1boorbed by her vocol coachinJ wort. During the swmner sbc trained performera who are now ap- pearing across the country and abroad . One young singer from her studio, Tara Leigh, ii now 1 member of the Golddlgers ttlevtaioo group ; another I.I a regular on the: Llwrence Welk Show, whlle a tb1td ii 1 night club singer currently enjoyina an engagement ln the Bahamas. On ·the t.butrk:al aide, one of her sludenta took the lead In a Los Angeles production of "Anything Goes," while on a more local plane, Robert Engman 1tudied under Miu Shield! for bis le1din1 role In Ora~ z· Colleae'1 "Man of Lo ManchL ' With lllo-yW ball &O!I<• Doris already has helped bring three county musicals to the stllge. First was Laguna's "LltUe Mary Sunshine" in January, followed by "The Apple Tree:" with the new Tustin Community Players, and most recently, "The FantasUcks" at San Clemente's Cabrillo Playhouse -which was her fourth production of that particular musical. "EAtll CAST IS new and shiny, with new talents and new problems to aolve," she says. "Witness the contrast In Carol Channing and Pearl Bailey in 'Hello, Dolly.' "Actually any role coaching experience holds great delight, for every singer must be something of an actor, and opening the chracter goes with openln1 the voice," she points out. "Whether It be an experienced pro- fessional who invariably appreciates most the help In anaJyiing his craft or a talented amateur, It's a dellghUul business to help stretch the singing actor, to unzip him and help him climb out of himself and into a role." THERE IS NO "off sea.son" for Doria Shields. Last week she took advantage of a break in her schedule and attended the voice clinic at USC with the Nltional Association of Singing Teachers. Today she's looking ahead to the second annual musical romedy workshop in Lquna whlcb she'U conduct alon1 w I tb choreographer Joan Wulfsobn. Then, of course, there's the constant study required to keep a musical director and vocal coach at the forefront of her field. "New ideas are being born In music and theater ao fast we mwt ab9orb like sponges to stay afloat," she ohlerves. Music is, Indeed, a way of life for Doris srueJds. Or, u she puta Jt. ''It's my vitamin; I guw I live on It." Ex-football Player Coaches Film Fight Ex ~footbalJer Chartea Powell who turned pro fighter Is teaching and gukf. Ing Jon Voight for his ftgbter role ln Warner Broe .• '"11le AJJ..AmuJcan Boy." Voigbt insist>d that Powell be the one to tt~h him the do'• and don't.I of lbe pugilistic pme. 'lbe1·'"' looJ ttm• lritn<b. ' are assembled and made ,POSSible under the auspices of'the Education arut1V1su.a1 Arts division of Universal·City Studios. The mtthkal world of the old Hollywood motion pictures hM shifted and changed through ihe years and While they gave a dimension to the business .aoo the '°""try they depicted for a •Ume, the lworld they continuaJly·~ted became more and mOre unreal. A· new generation b.lls been born. It gfew up in front of a television screen watching Hollywood myths until one day U realized it dldn't believe the myths ·anymore. Called lhe film generation, these Btu- denta are in college oowi.and busy creat. liig their own myth_, on film, presentJ.iig flf.!W visk>DI about their OGUntry, their w,orld and thefl'\Selves. . 1 ~ Wms are ·not manufactured in tbe huge 80Wld stages of Hollywood. 'they come froJD· the campuses acroas the counb:y, ~ated by students. ·'l'hil ii "Tale 0n~,:t.1i'llmi With showing daf.es of Al!&· 16 and 30. v ' The "Kenetic Art Series" has been designed lo bring , the best new filq)s of the world'.s · leading film m.aken fo audieoce.s. Here the~ materials of elec- tronic technol6gy 'are used to make .new Mes and ~ sense of different ways ~being alive becomes ,tbe 1theme. The Kenetlc films o!fer strong colors, sharp definitions and exact ' reallUes, c;ountered by oon.Iogical obsessions and the · humor of the uneipected. The Aug. ~ selections to be shown are of the Dew crop ftom many countries and bring new wofk.s .from leadirig film makers as well as• some first films from several ne~comets. '.Tbe:se films will not be shown in any of the commercial theaters in the area. 'Phe opportunity to see them locilly in a'high school auditorium is coupled with ·the chance to help the Free Clinic main· tain its services to those who need it -and have an enjoyable hour or 110 in the process. 1 Ticket.I are available . at the ·Free <;linie, 422 Glenneyn Si.. Laguna Beach. or at the door before the performance. WEEKENDER INSIDE FEATIJRES Friday, Aurust 14, It7t Everything seems to be busln~. as-usual at Disneyland with JOOy Miller -and Carl Smith featured in Sunday's "Country Jubliee" on ~ morrowland Stage. Story and pic- ture on Pq:e n. Wbeel1 aad Camptnr Tnvel Ill the Gallerie1 Creedenct Re•lval r Uve Tbealer Gerrie the Giraffe Oat 'N' AbcHSC Gu.ldl &t Fu.a UUlt Miss P11ernt Televl1~11 Loa GWff to Movies Japtne1e Deer Park ClftUI Fin Leap Page•U PqerM Page Z4 PageU P1pru Page U· Pq"ZW7 Pa1 '11 Pip l'1 Pap II P11• II Pop 11 p ..... -- , I l ' . f'~, AutllS& 14, 1970 .. JOOY MILLER SINGS F9LK • WESTl!.RN On' Temorrowland Stage Sunday at 5, 1 and 9 p.m. In the GallerieJ Andy Warhol Work Shown JACK GLENN GALI.ERV -2&11 E. Coast Highway, Corona deJ MM. Hours: II a.m. to 5 p.m. d&ily. CUrrtoUy on exhibit, a one-man ghow ol Andy Warhol graphics -silk screen printa, 1965 -1970; signed limited editioo posters and originaJ paintings, Aug. 5 -Sept 7. TOURING EXHIBIT -The works ol 26 contemporary Callt. artists, under I.he sponsorship of the Cali£. Art.a Commission, will be on exhibit at South Coast Plaza during regular busi- ness hours through Aug. 30. CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY--00 Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar. On exhibit through August during regular library hours, weaving by Jarmila Macho11a. LAGUNA ART GALLERY-307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. All Calif. Exhibit sponsored by Festival of Am to run throua;h Aug. 30, noon to I p.m. Admission is SO cents. MARINER'S UBRARY-2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. During regular library hours, the Jr. Ebell Artists of the Month exhibit featuring a collection of art from the last 11-month's uhlblts and drawings of Malcom Cameron , lllrough Aug. BOWERS MUSEUM-2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours : 10 1.m. -4:30 p.m. Tuea.-Sat.: I to S p.m. Sun.; Wed. and Thurs. 7 lo t p.m. No charge. Micrographic phol~ by Dr. Norman Hodgk..in on view through Aug. 16; sculpture lrom Art West Auoclalion, and <lld silver from private coUection.t, through Aug. 30. COSTA ,M&'IA LIBRARY-566 Cenlt.r SL, Costa Mesa. On exhJbit during regular library hours through .Aug. 15, oil paintings by Louise Young. MESA ART LEAGUE-513 Center St.. Costa Mesa. Hour: Sat. and Sun. I to S p.m. continuous exhibits of art work in various media by Art League members. No ad.mission charge. UNITED CALIF. BANK-3039 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa . On exhibit, during regular businw hours, through Aug. 15, pastel, oil and acrylic paintings by Helen Patzer. SECURin'-PACIFIC BANK-196 E. 17lh St.. Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular busines,, hours through Aug. 1$, oil paintings by Jane Huffman. P.fESA VERDE UBRARY-2969 Mesa Verde Drive E;lst, Costa Mesa. On exhibit durin1 regular library hours through Aug. IS, <lil paintings by Anny Mettl Kirk!. CROCKER. CITIZENS BANK-2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa MMa. On exhlbit during regular business hours through Aug. 15, oil paintings by Marjorie Ludlam. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive, New· port Beach. On exhibit durlng regular business hours through Aug., woven wall hangings by Micki Lippe. MARINERS SAVINGS AND LOAN-1515 Westclirr Drive, Newport Beach. ""On exhibit during regular business hours, oil and waterco~ paintings by Ruth C. Frymire, thr<lugh AIJi. "· fr NB CIVIC CENTER G ERY-3300 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. On exh during regular business hours. through Sept., a collecUon <lf photos gathered by the New- port Beach Historiciil Society fr<lm %2 sources, showing old Newport Bucb and Dalbo.a. CRAUJS GALLERY -1390 S. Coast llighway, Laguna Beach. Hours : 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Current exhibit, two- mu lbow ol Mart Coomtr and Ron Roesch, lhroogh Aug. 28. ''Creedence Revival' Explains I ts N a1ne O.dence Clearwattr Re- vival, the big-time PoP music VollP• .h11 a date wilh hi Jllll Aua. 211, •t U>e Inglewood "Forum. CCR euUy won a nalional pol) lut year for having the nat unusual name of any tel In die U.S. Joba Fogttt.y, CCR's leader, uplaJDI the name's meaning , and ho• ht and his lhrtt lellow eni.rutn<ra arrived •• It. "Qoeedence, believe It or not, ii the firll na~ of • pod friend of oun. II deootes IJ"l.db, SO WI borrOWfJd it,'' uld roeerty. "'Nal ... Utte.I ae.rnter from the Olympic Beer com· mercials. We were enchanted with t.he idea nf the. clear, untainted sprmg water used in brewing our favor ite tipple. Then came Revi va l. sym· boJi&ing a rehg1ous rally wherein people purged thtmlelves or base thoughts and past aclions and became pure. There's excitement and fervor in the whole lbough , " accordjng l<l f'<lgerty. OCR's Aug. 29 performance 11t I.he f()rum <lpeNi al 11:)0 p,m. Good teals art available and Udret.s an M obta.lned al the hos ofOct, and all Soufhland ticket agencies. Country Jubilee At Parl{ Dlmfnutlve aonastreaa Jody Miiier, whole rerordln1 <lf "Queen of the House" ls con· sidered 1 western mu.sic milestone, and guitar stylist Carl Smith combine talenu for this Suod1y's ;·Count.Ty Jubilee" at Dlsneyland. Complementing the t w <l talented stars will be Tony Booth and his we.stem dance band from San Diego while KBBQ disc jockey Corky Mayberry serves as guest emcee for the S. 1 and 9 p.m. performances on Tomor· rowland Stage. For those who savor music with a different · b e a t , Disneyland offers celebrated vocalist Margaret Whiting and the Freddy Martin orchestr1 nightly frorii 9 p.m. until I a.m. in the Plaza Girden.s. Jody Miller burst onto the country and we.stern actne with her millloo-selllng ren- dition ol ''He Walks Uke • Man' and then qulck.l.y follow· ed that with several other musical succe~s. including her Grammy Award winning '"Queen of the House." An eslabllshed slat in the C&W field for more than two decades, the Smith approach rombines a unique guitar style with his powerful voice, which has been featured in the "Grande Ole Opry" and on 5UCh hit tunes as "Let's Live a LitUe" and "Loose Talk." "Disneyland After Dark" continues to offer special sum- mer entertainment, staged to commelll()raite the P a r k ' s founding IS years ago. Still one <lf the highlights ()f the summer is tf1e col«· filled musical c om e d y ""Show Me Amer ica,'' presented every weeknight on Tomorrowhmd Stage at 9 and I I p.m. by its zany cul ()f brilliantly co stumed characters. Other features include the ni~lly 9 p.m. "Fantasy in the ~ky" fireworks spec· tacular : the specialized jau music of 'I;eddy Buckner and Jewell Hall every night uccpt Saturday in lhe Fren c h Market. and the "now" sounds of Sound. Castle Ltd. every evC'fling escept Sunday on the Tomorrowland Terrace. Operating on its elongated summer schedule, Disneyland is now <lpen da.ily from a a.m. until 1 a.m. Ford Starred CBS has scheduled a one· hour special, "'America ," for Sept. 10. Jt furnishes a look at various aspects <l r American life In segments filmed in many parts of the country. Actor Glenn Ford is starred. and Co1.nie Stevens. loo Rawls, Joiln Hartf<lrd, Bill Medley, Gary Puckett, Mark Lindsay and MscOavis participate. AN INSIDE JOB Gerria the Giraffe 'Giraffe' In Mall NextWeeli Gerri, the Fabulous Giraffe will be entertaining in the Stage Court of Feshioo Island, Aug. 2G-21. Gerri is a 12-foot "pe<>ple stuffed" fellow who blinks his eyes, wiggles his ears. horns and tail, talks lo the audience and even sheds tears. He will make his ap- pearance oo the. stage in the mall at 11 :30 a.m ... and 2:30 p.m., Thursday ; 11 :30 a.m .• 2:30 and 7 p.m. Friday, and 1:30 and 3 p.m. Saturday. This enchanting animal was born t>years ago in the im· aginatioo of comedian ~rge C<llmon while he was ap- pearing in Europe, He found a discarded backdrop in the thealet: where he w a s performing, cul otA two glraf. fes that were on it, sewed them together and he and his sister g<lt in side and "wowed" the audieDCe with their com· edy. From that oomense Gerri emerged in present form, and has been de~Ung audiences all over Che United Slates and Europe ever since. Travel Guadalajara: . -. ·Growing Up By STAN OILAPLANE GUADALAJARA, Mexico -I came oown he~ a long time ago. Al the border they hooked a bOx car full of soldiers onto the train, and just aboul everybody wore a pistol. Guadalajara· was a town of thick-waJled colonial buildings. They -...ere ripping out a line of them to widen a slree\1.into the first boulevard. Now it's Mexico's second city -more than a millioa people. Big shopping c e n t e r s . Supermarketl. A famous university thi:y say bas the best medical school in the Republic. NoO..,ol G..,rophk says it ls one ol two places in the world with a perfect climate. At 5000 feet it is never too warm, never too chill. * Ten thousand Americans have found it Tite cost!? Rent, $200. A maid, $32 a month. (She does your laundry, too.) We paid $2 for a hundred oranges -two of them give a glassful of juice. * lf you go for-a bigger house, you get a gardener for $48 and a houseboy for $25. All the Americans agree it's. the perfect life and they say: "Please, PLEASE don't write about it. A lot of people will come and the prices will go up." * "Should w• Include l1r11el on our trip? Or Is It dang•rous?" Just been in Israel. From Haifa to the Negev. From Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The hot-and-cold war feels as far away as Vietnam. A LOT o! tourists are going in and out. They don't let you get close to any place where there's shooting. We've got two pl!:es staked out with the ~realest chicken soup. (Jewish·made chicken soup ts the best in the world and is supposed to cure anything.) Anybody going to Israel, write me. l 'll send the addresses. * "We are thinking of Puerto Rico for Chri1tm<1s. Some of our friends say tM mosqultoe1 •re very bad •... " The Caribbean is mosquito country, and a Jot depends on whether they go for you. Tbey don't get to me much. They latch onto my children who are probably juicier. I put a towel over their eyes. ~land them up bare and spray them all over with "Off!" Mornings and just before bed. That does it. * I spray our rooms in the evening. "Raid" works best. I 'm using it now. in Mexico. They say perfume and lotion on the skin draws mos- quitoes. And they do go for your ankles early morning and early evening. Try some spray-on "OU!" at that time. There's a rub-on "Off!'.'' too. It's stronger. "Can you Continent?" * ship • c11r from Entl•nd to th• There are train and car ferries. On one of them, you can piggyback the car while · ypu sleep. When you wake up, you're way into Frqce. You can Oy the car over from Lydd Airport on the south coast. Takes 10 minutes to France. You fly the car. Just enough time to buy duty-free cigarettes and whisky from the stewardess. * l did this often eight years ago. It cost $16 for the car and two passengers -I'm sure it's gone u~. Rates and schedules are at the British Travel office, 64 St. Jame's Street in London. That's just oU Piccadilly and near Green Park. ~ * ''Do you know of • r•llable 11ntiqut "ealer In England?" M.uf1durer11 Reps Answer Que1tlon1 Campers. Collect F 01· Trailer Rally By JACK KNEASS The lrallerlst, motorhome owner or truck~amper en- thusiast who does not belong to one of the bigger trailer ck.lbs sponsored by manufac· turers has eften felt left oot of things in the past There ls nothing quite like attending • regional rally with several ._ ________ _ hundred persons who have !Olllething in rom.. mon -<lr rolling on I<> a natiooal <lr sectional rally that ._.,. draw a thou. sand trailers or m«e. The sclJed.. ule of event.s is orten of great in-terest. ~CIC ICNIASS MANY TIM'ES represenlf· tives from manufacturers of stoves, fleaters, rdrigerators, and such accessories as gen· model. They also oiler assis- tanc. in correcting whatever troubles you might have with their appliances. Now the big trai !e r magazines are gelling in the act. One eastern publicaUon has <llfered a $20 a year club membership. West coast bas· ed Trailer Lile has taken over the Good Sam Club (which it obtained when buying an unsuccessful publicaUon). and is turning It into a national club. They started wllh a rally In Harlingen. Texas, early in 1970 which , due to conditions beyond human cootrol, was n<ll so good. But lhe one held at Butterfield COUYltry, near Temecula, drew over 375 rigs and 1000 people. Rallies are now planned for Colorado ; Ontario, Canada: Oregon, and Fiest& K e y Resort, Florida. These three and four day events are not for everyone. Some club members go once and forget ll from then on. Some members only go to the rallies in their immediate neighborhood -if their Ume happens to be "open." • THERE IS A difference in campers as there is in the general traveler. Some people prefer conducted loura - some despise them. Some try to see how many countries they ca n cover in a given time. Others go lo Rome or Paris and take a few side trips. At the rally level many retired or semi-retired RecVee <lwners attend every <lne their club holds wherever it may be . Other campers or trailerists never g<l unleg., ac· companied by friends. The.re is M doubt a small group ol trailerlsl!, perhaps belonging lo a pet30nalhed club, can have a lot of. ftJ.n. ALONG WITH the big cvm· mercial-type clubs are tbo5e 1 of large organlzallons :such as l Nati<>nal Campers and Hikers Association, Family Motor Coach Association, and North American Family Campers Association. • 'Strawberry' Star Set I'd guess they're all reliable. The British take great pride in their antiques. They'd get pretty starchy with anybody peddling fakes. Now English women tell me that London's antique shops have been well worked over. That the best antiques are found in the villages -and nearly every English village bas a small antique shop. They buy locally when estates ~re 'broken up. A RALLY al Lima. Ohio, drew 252 campers, trailers and motorhomes, and 847 club members. Events Included a drivlna: road-e-<>; mass poUuck supper; crafts displays, and activities for the yoongsters. Perhaps It was not quite up to the standards of the mass producers of RecVees, but it was good for 1 starter. In short, there ls no Jack of large, nati<lnal organlu· tions to join. And they all are run, although a() m e members enjoy big rallies m<lre than others. It's a mat· ter of ch<lice, . -- For 'Willard' Title Role * lllDAL ll•IMT ACCISSOlllS DANISH 'UINrTUll IXICUTIYI •lfTS Nol antique but a handsome buy: the hand- ed young man, ju.rt <lUtside hammered. annor·finished iron work at Battle. .society, who pos~s terri-(The village where King Harold was killed by M 1t\ "'"''ni!L Bruce Davison, who scored recently as tM college rev<llu· lionary in "The St.r1wbe1Ty Stateme!'lt," has started film- ing in Los Angeles for his newest ASllignment , "Willard .'' the Norman arrow.) This work seems to be a . .-U_' fying and strange powers. local hobby -they say Caesar taught the Britons d0nt~~e These powers bring untold here to forge iron and repair the weapons of -;, fear and horror to the people the Legions. I bou~ht a big wheel candelabra hun~ 2'40 E.Coull-IWIJ., Cotono 4el Mor Davison st11.rs In tm title role as a sinster and frighten- he fetls wronged him . on chains. Brought it home and had it wired ~ily 9;30 ~S:~ Tel: 673-2.11/0 Davison, who fully establish· for etectric lights. ""'*V• 11 +oS loFA -Mcs~arCharga ed his slardom in "The 1r=========~jiiiimlii;.!i:iiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiamiiii:ii0iiililiti0iiii.iiiiicmiii0iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili!ijj Strawberry Statement," also THI w.1.t111c0Lo111 o, Live Theater FRANK was one ClfLa U>e5 four ~tllih M. stars in " st ununer, e HAMILTON award-winning and seering portrait o f t<l day 's adolescents. SWTing wilh Da vison in NOW IKCLUllVILT AT CHALLIS GALLERIES "Willard" are Ernest Tiii' lernow erlltt fM' 19<111., "'°"" Borgnine, as the mllJ'I he is ., .,,. L-.-••""' "•'IY•I er out to rtvenge; Sondra Locke. :;,~ ;:H~~~'!: ~~~ "Oll•tr" the young star of "The Heart sHow, 1 .. ...-.. .., c-o1~"'" _, "" 11\Qe ,_ ,_, •I -CHALLIS Musical version <lf "Oliver Is a Lonely Hunter ;'' and El$1 GALLE•re-s, UM s... c ... t H.., .. ' ·--•~ hj t"---LttUM 8Ndl. TwU:t" on stage 1t the ....u."'-'•~er, as s mo •OCJ . Moulton Playhouse, g O fi • • • • • • • • • • •• L=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=.=. Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna • • Beach, Tues. -Sun. aL 8:30 • • p.m., through Aug , 30. Reservations -494--0743. • "Slota" and "ne American Dream" Two one acl play& are on st.age at the Nifty Theater, 307 Main Sl., Huntington Belch at 1:30 p.m. Fri. and • Sat. tnrough Aug. 22. Rtserva. · tlons -133-4571. • • "Spon RJver Antholou" I On stage at the Sooth Coast Repertory theater. I I 1 7 1 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, I Wed. and Thurs. through Aug. a %1 at l :SO p.m. ReservaUons • -646-1363. I "llotencr1ntz and I Ga!ldellllero"' 1 On stage at South Coast Repertory tbeater. I 817 •· Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa, • ·' Fri. -Sun. through Aug. 30 • SINCE 1888 ESCORTEO TOUR 14 DAYS .:::., $169 u O•rt i.<" .. ry llff ,-., ~ llll9""9 I• •lrl • • • • • MEXICO: MEXICO CITY -I NIGHTS TAXCO 1 NIGHT ACAPULCO 7 NIGHTS OctolMr ll -November 13 • • • • Newport Produce, long famous for the fined produce • • now even more famous for fresh flowers! Com• s•• our "st•ll1" of f•bulous Aower1. EYeryth ing from "C•ndelions to V•nd• Orchids," •nd w• 1•11 thous•nds of '•rn •t s•nsi ble prices. Com• s•el Come Se..,•I -Why not buy your flower• here • , . • lot of Florists dol WE WIRE FLOWERS NOW TOO! NO DISCOUNT "IALONIY" "NO STAMPS" JUST THESE LOW PRICES! ···················~·········~ • 1RUIT DaPT. IPICIAL • VIG. OIP'T. SPECIAL • PLOWllt SHOP JUICY OUA,..{PAMOUS SPICIAL • : VALENCIA • IC~ERG • GORGEOUS • • ORANGES : I "T1UCE : ROSES 10 Lii. 19• I! ,. IA. I! 99¢ DOI. • • •• • • LIMIT-lt • ,.",IT-6 LIMIT-2 DOI • WITH THIS COUPON WITH TH IS COU,.ON • WITH THIS COUPON • . . -.. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS IEXPl~I AUCiUST 1' These rest•urants d•mand the finest for ·, custom•rs. Th•t's why they feature NIWPOIT PIODUCll P•troni1• th•ml '11tii!''kArchn. Newport; Aley W .. t, N•w· port; 11ta St9ft Sllllrt, Newport: ne S~I lttld.,, Newport; t.nslllrea ''11 TH Sky", Newport. "ORANGE COUNTY'S TASTEST GROWING PRODOCE ORGANIZATION" ~ NE!!!Iw!~~~~CE 2'1' Newpott ... la..-4 .. Tllt Poolosalo ..... &7U711 '7U711 67MH1 "35 Y.cn of Produce Kno.o ffOtDH "Wh<rt Q11411ty h TM Ord4r of the llotUe .. 11t 8:30 p.m. Reservations -• •dllllMli'• -Newi-t a...:• • 646-1363. • • • • • • • • • • • • • a • • a • • • • • •••-•=---==-=----cz:ac•~--""'-""""'..---1111-:t j I I ·our. ' N' -~To, -.... _ .. _ --. -. • • Frida;, Au9u.st 14, 14'70 'ABOUT NORM DArL V PILOT ~lJ By STANl.EY and ARLEY STEVENS ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT , NIGHT ·CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE The Head Bagel Nowadays, aprarenUy, being just an ordin~ry run-of·the-mill bage isn't eno'tf~~ One 1boUld aim for being the Head Bagel or no · g. Such, at any rate, is evidenily the reaso~g of the whimsical Keys Brothers, Don and Phil. who hfive just opened a cozy Little restaurant by that name on Balboa Island . Occupying the site of the one-time Hali Ki , the Head Bagel is located at 305 Marine Ave. So far we've only tiad time to check out the place witb a quick Jubeh , but the wares we sampled were quite sufficient to take us back again for a more leisurely meal at the earliest opportunity. BREAKFAST. FROM 7 A complete breakfast is served from 7 a.m. daily and features among other things, ~ome ap- petizing sounding corned be<:f and .Pastrami om~l~ts and eggs Benedict. In keeping with the preva1hng humor here, pancakes go by the more appropriate name of pancagels. The luncheon bill of fare includes such items as the bagel burger, 55 cents, and the bagel cheeseburger, 65 cents. We had the Kosher corned beef and roast beef sandwiches (85 cents each) on Kaiser rolls. and found each extremely tasty and generously heaped with portions of meat. ~ DINNER CHOICES Hot specialties include a chicken fried steak, with potato and vegetable, $1 .25, and the veal cutlet a la country, again with potato and vegetable. $1.35. Form the sea there's fish and chips, $1 and shrimp, served with chicken fried rice and fresh garden vegetables. $1.65. At the Head Bagel one can aJ so partake DON JOSE' NOW APPEARING VIC GARCl/4 LTD With Vocals By GERMAINE e COCKTAILS e Enchilada and Taco ....••..•..• , , .• $1.35 Chili Relleno • Enchilad• ..•• , .•••... $1..50 s.r.M wl1• Ric .. .._., T"lftltol •11d s.1 .. 9093 E. Ad1m1 {at Magnolia) Hunt. Buch 962·7911 WORLD FAMOUS Sina 1922 ••• Extlir Pol)'11t1i1111 l drinkJ swrd ;,, 11 lto/li(t1/ par4tfist i SUPERB SEAFOOD AND STEAKS !NUrtl\'ltllf.MI HANK SURAN If •' '""' PIAJIO Ill 16278 PAOFIC COAST KWT. HUNTINGTON 1£ llqitr l!lnrsr lfntt Buffet For Lunch Is Back - Starting MONDAY, A * Group facilitie• for lunch * Monday night Special ST 17th Complete Prime Rib Dinner •.• $3 .25 1i Wednesday night Special Champagne and Stroganoff •.. $3.25 * Dancing to Lee Ferrell's New 1Group * Exquisite Ceterin9 3295 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach ReMrvation.s 473-1174 j oC a rather plentiful supply of side orders and fountain and "beverage things.'' as the Keys prefer to call thein. HEAD KEY . \Vhile_ ~~ is the head Key in charge of ~tchen act1v1t1es and other "things,'' brother Don 1s an ever present helping band in t h e establishment. <;>ut 'n. about~r suggests you drop around and give this sterling, ne\v, litlle establishment the pleasur~ or your company. For nigbt owl.> the place 1s open to 4 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. The Wine Cellar A' truly fine dining experience becomes a treas· ured memory. When one dines out frequently, one is apt to become rather jaded and not easil y i1n· pressed. The Wine Cellar in tbe Newporter Inn, impress· ed all of our senses. The decor is one o! antique elegance. One finds it difficult to believe this room was not transported pie<:e. by piece and stone by stone from Europe. TINY -BUT The room itself is tiny, compared to most res· taurants, seating .only 34 diners. Wine racks cover most of the waU s with occasjonal patches of old bricks showing. Flickering candles in antique chandeliers and cast iron owl lanterns on each table provide soft light. The Spanis·h and ltalian carved high·backed chairs are over. a hundred years old and a large Italian crede~ is utilized for serving cheese and fruit. Warm cbJor comes from the muted reds of the Orienta1 ri.tgs and the bMgbt reds of the table- cloths. 1 INTIMATE MUSIC The setfse of intimacy and warmth is further enhanced by the romantic song stylings of Bob Moline. Bob suits 'l'he Wine Cellar well. hi~ rich melodious voice blendini? but never distracting. His tlie FLING ENTERTAINMENT • 1 NIGHTS A WEIK ANCING * HAP HALL DUO wflll J.tlll lt'9W• "" ••• n.r. ftr• S11. MON.0TUU.0WlD. * Larry L•kt Singer Guitarist Re1r-Mes1 Theater S:ue!:e Costa Mesa 141L1M St. JUlt eff N..,_rt lh4.. RANTS BRADFORD HOUSE" s p E c I A L Your Family Restaurant SAT.-SUN.-MON.-WED. NITES STEAK 2 DINN IRS "'" s., .... d with to,1ed green ,.l.d, l!'koiee of dr••Ji rtg, 011ion rin9t. fr1nch fried pof1to11, ·hot rolls end butter, SI NGLE OtNNER-$2.2S Proudly Presents George Tipton :..:._ ....... _, ............. CJo~rly •t tit. t.. C.St• C.C.) I ........ ., WED. lo SUN. AFTERNOONS THURS .. FRI .. SAT. NITES ~ ... ,,_ Hoppy "Double 109.., .. Hour, Me9dey '1lnl ,.,._, 4" & ALL FACILITIES OPEN TO PUBLIC -FOOD 1701 Golf Course Dr., Cost1 Mtu 540..7200 rt 'I Our Ser1'ice ls So1nethlng 1 lfe Tea~h. Read the Stars With Omarr ' ' ~ifted tlngers on guitar weave a garland of musical Jove notes, creating and capturing the mood . ALTERNATE MENUS There are two dinners available, each served !or a two week period. The evenin~ of our visit the meal began with consomme au sherry. (The rich beef stock comes with a small flash or sherry which one adds to taste). A thought came to mind -if the rest of the dinner measured up to this fine broth it would be one of the finest we bad enjoyed. And measure up it did. Jumbo shrimp provencale. sauteed and served in a light tomato sauce was followed by a superb Caesar salad. The preparation and serving of-thi s particular saJad is a true art. Each in~redient must be .perlectly proportioned and blended so skillfully one does not taste any ingredient separately. Tournedos Rossini unbelievably tender mi gnon- etes of beef tenderloin topped with pate de foie gras and mushrooms was the main course. This was served with asparagus tip hollandase Potatoes Pari· sienne and broiled tomato. CHEESE ANO FRUIT A choice of six imported cheeses. \vafer thin crackers and a basket of fresh . chiUed fruits ar- rived at our table next. !ollov•ed by nut filled S\veet· meats of flakey pastry and English mints ,,,,e re served with an excellent cup of coffee. NO PLACE FOR THE HURRIED Dinner is leisurely and unhurried at The Wine Cellar. This type of dinner takes time to prepare and serve properly and is not designed £or those pressed for time. Service is so efficient one is never aware of a need before it is filled. FINE WINES As the name implies the Wine CeUar has a superb collectinn of noble vintage wines. The pf!r- son who chose the wines and compiled tbe list is to be congratulated. He is truly a connoisseur of fine Pacific 1:Jinin<J· Car 111 lOTH ST. NIWPOIT llACH llSllYATIONS 675·0l00 PRIME EASTERN B~EF AGED & CHARCOAL BROILED Seafoods & Prime Lamb Specialties Open From S p.m. Tues., thru Sun. AUGUST 16-17-18 Master Hypnotist Now Appearing 9:00 .& Ii-ENI Dl!NNtsON $2 .00 ii ,oo p.m. BALBOA PAVILION Covor TALE OF THE WHALE 400 Main, Balbo• Peninsula 673-'1633 THE WHISTLING OYSTER SPECIAL ATTRACTION THIS WEEKEND ONLY "Johnny Smith ood Th AlphoHtlcals" Now ope" for S11ndty Ch1mp19ne lr1111~h 10 tel ANO DINNER 4 to IQ 11 J/.o,,;. ' l -• -> . ~ 16903 ALGONQUIN STREET (0,.fl .. ACU'IC COAIT HIOHWAY & WAltHllt AVI.) HUNTINGTON HAllOUR \Vines. Th~ restaurant Is only open four night; a wefilt, Wednesday thru Saturday from 6 p.m. reser· vat1ons only. • The Newporter Inn is located at 1107 J~1>lr~ Road. Newport Beach. Tale of the Whale . Sununertime in our beautiful county brings tourists, sun wors~ippers, surfers and bright bikinis to ou,r bea~hes 1.11 droves. Tiny seeds ol envy combme w!th a desire to l"oin these vacaUonen and bask m the sand-bu duty calls and one mµst be_ satisfied with wishful thinking and an ~vory skin tone. Day's end and solace ts found in a soft booth at the Tale of The Whale in the Balboa Pavilion. Early evening is a beautiful time of day lo be. near the bay as boats ol all sizes glide by with the setting sun illuminating sa.il.1J and silhouetting the passengers. SEAFOOD OR MEAT The Tale of The Whale restaurant offers ocean fr~sh seafood or steak and a spectacular harbor View. The swordfish, halibUt, abalone and tot~a,va (sea bass) are all fresh-caught and dehc1ous. A complete dinner Includes a choice of Manhattan or New England clam chowder or salad; potatoes or rice pilaf. ' EXTENSIVE · MENU . The . menu. selections are more than ample. 1 he appetizers include the usual shrimp, crab and Continued on Page 26 1fatreois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE FLAMING DUCK OU.NGl COUNn·s MOST llAUTIFUL llSTAUUNT r THE DUKE MITCHELL SHOW Wl"TbN.-.b Ot11c ing Te Th• l ig l•11d So1111d lllO& COAST HWY., SO. LAGUNA-Ill. 4ft·2,6J DEL4lNEY'S SEA SHAltTY Featwh19 OratMJt County's Finest OYSTER .BAR E•stern Bluepoint Oy1ttr1 on H•lf Shell $1 .50 E•stern Ch•rry1ton• Cl•m• $1.50 L•r91 Shrimp Coekt•il $1.35 M•11, •th41r We...,,.. Seltctf•et o,_ .. J P.M. Enttrt•inmtnt Nightly By ICAPPY At th• 'Pi•11• l1r 430 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT IEACH 475-0100 LOBSTER LOVERS Ev•ryont is t•lking •bout our 9i•nt Au1tro1li•n Lobster T•il 116-20 01.I JOIN THE l'!RSTOOL SURF-ERS AT OUR Coclct•il Hour Ev•ry Frid•y S to 7 Red11,H Rete1 •11 Oti11\-• E11t11rteinrne11f Sterh •f S ,...-----------------------------. ... ..,..-.... ------................................. ~~ ........... "'.~,,...,.--.. ---·-,.---.-·-~.-,...---. . . ~:.,._& --• • • • • • • • • • • • IWl.Y I'll.OT FAMILY DINING COMPl.:£Tl DINNEll UNDER $l "HQME MADE 'PIES" --• A.M. .. 11 ,.,... Dally -~ UDO, NIWl'OaT llA<H OPEN FDR LUNCH 1ntimete •nd O.lightful FRENCH RESTAURANT I f:JO-f e Twtufty fhrw Frillty DINNER 5:30-10 P.M. CLOSED MONO A Y c ..... of ..... ,,.. -~ c.... .... '404 ... 1 Continued from Page 2.S 1obster plus fresh oysters and clams on the haJf sheU, steamed or baked. A children'• menu features halibut, shrimp or scallops for $1. 75, or a hamburger for $1.25. The childrens dinner includes soup or salad, potatoes and dessert. WE CHOSE For dinner we chose the fresh swordfish, moist tender and flavorful, $4.75. Our second choice was the chioppino, complete with bib, $5. 75. This is a delicacy for fi1b lovers. The seafood -shrimp, scallops, lobster and crab -are still in the sheU . requiring a bit of dexterity but well worth the effort . DRUNKEN CRAB Other items which caught our eye were the drunken crab, served in a sauce o( bourbon, wine and beer, $4.75 ; sole stuffed with shrimp and crab and baked in wine sauce, $4 .75 ; and the sea food brochette {served flaming), consisting of scallops. swordlish, shrimp, lobster ,and sea bus, $5.25. ~'~ ENTERTAINMENT The Tale of The Whale is open from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. Entertainment is provided Thursday. Friday and Saturday night by the Jan Deneau trio. Sunday finds Gilbert playing Spanish guitar from 4 to 10 p.m. The Pavilion is located at 400 Main St., Balboa. THE BERLINER German Family Restaurant F•mout For SAUERBRA TEN wah POTATO DUMPLINGS o,.. hlty ,., Dt-Pr .. I P.M. CHILDllN'S MINU SATURDAY, AUGUST 15 ~.,. ANNIVERSARY PARTY ~·"'=+,..," '",_:-!lo., ASTORIA TRIO .... ~~ FROM BAVARIA 8:00 & I 0:30 p.m.-Reservations Suggested · for 4 or more people. 18582 Beach Blvd., Town & Country Center Huntington Beach 968-5800 Closed Mon. .................... , • SPICIAL ANNIYllSAIY COUPON • .... u, Nit.I-lexc.,t Aitt. 151 TUES. THIU SUNDAY -• • Derl., _.,. el Aitt•t Mr -111--• • leulft ........... "" Wf ,rlu! • ....•............... ~ flDI JHID HOURS OF CONTINUOUS MOYID Pina Palace CARIBE ROOM Presents -Entertainment -01ncin9 -Mon. thru Sit • 16121 H•ltet .r illfl..., I N•lt t. ZMr'1J l.19·7290 BUFFET LUNCHEON MONDAY thru FRIDAY Songstress/Song Writer KATE PORTER 5:30--l:30 P.M. Mon. 1hru Fri. JACK COSTANZO and GERRIE woo • WI MONO"-All PIZZA COU~I 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BEACH-536-1421 • ~··········•••&••··········· PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS • SPLASH THE OCEAN TOAD PUSINTS • , • Prim• Ritt ................ S.SO Ground Slrloht ... -... 2..SI s,.. llllbt ...... _ .. _ •.• .S.15 hef K1~1> .•. _ J.2S 'otorflne Shrimp __ 2.95 Swftfilh _ :J.tS lr•llMI Center Cwt llMk Ch.,. .. _ ~25 Tep Slrl1I" .............. 4.25 Terly•kl .................. _ 4.SO Pl•h '01..t ....... . •.SO N.. Terk -· .. -·-.. ·· . 5.2.5 Pll•t .......... .. ....... -5.15 L•tw ---............. _ 6..25 C.mWMt'-n .. ... 6.U CtllJl'f S.1•4. H• .,...,, lutt1r, Ctlffee & TN l"cllilffll hkllll l'9'1t. l5c -Artk:tt.b 75c -ChffM C•k• 7k 1 OJ NORTH IA YSIDI DR. iiiiiii~L=l:•:Tlo::•;M:•~l=oa=D=•~o..,~N...,.... laatll-644-40!1 ) ' --------- Enchantment in Oini.1111 For lhOtJt: who enjo• Magnilicenl Cui11ine and J.'W Wines Romantic Vocal Guitar ... __ ""'_ PHONE 644·1700 ftMEftA 1U:&TAUMNT Contlnental Cul1lna Cocktails Sef11ino L1'11Chcon and Dixncr lllondaw through Saturdow. Closed Sundays We •r. loceftcf ntxt te t..h• Mey Co. in South Coe1t Pl1u. ,,,, s. ..... c.... .... 141-1140 ' OUT 'N ABOUT ews of Note . A1 yOU drive around southern Orange County amazing to note the number of new restaur· and night spots which have opened in the pest _,. Ys or are about to open between now and the .. N Q( Sept. ,In Coata Mesa a few come to mind such as Lee s Collet Chop on the corner of Harbor and 19th St,.; Jier,e'a ~ohnny on Baker just about Briatol and Richard s Villa Vida at 719 w. 19th Street. Iiuntingtott Beach is catching its share of the new business too with Yankee Fiab Fry i..p the shopping center at Brookbunt and Adams, and just ac:oss the street a new Bob's Blg Boy Restaurant is bemg built. It plans to open the firrt week of Sept. and .a half-block. ~way on Adams is the new House of Pies where m!Dl·meals are served as well as pies. ~~ In Newport Beach the Ocean Toad has just opened next to the Dunes on the Cout Highway at the old site of the Sea Byrd. We don't know all aboUt the food In all of these places ye t, but as soon as we can check it out alon~ with the service we'll tell you about it. RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE Plano .... EiitOftalom ... friMy oo4 Sot•.i., HAPPY HOUR Moo. thru Fr;. 5 lo 6 LADIES NIGHT Fri. •nd S•t. 10 ,.m.. t• 2 a.m. 'l'e•nple Gardens Chinese Reataurani 1500 Atl•m• (At Harlter) C•ta M ... S40-IH7 S40-1t2l .... OPIN: lt:JO •.& .. 11 , .... s.M.y .... 11:Jl..a.t.2e.-..Prt4.,-4~ Real, C1nfonese Food SJ A·G CHDISE 111 21st pl., Nowport Beach DRiolo 560 -• o,.. y_. ltHIMI hlr 1Z..tl -M. ....... 'ti ~ t 1{efreshmen ..Means a , .Cot of Things · A long look at the rolling sea The nostalgic cry of a wheeling gul• The floral artistry of a French Garden And, good foodanddrin5o 1 in such a setting! The VICTOR HUGO INN has been refreshing dinm and making memories for <Nef a quuttt of a century • Open Daily Luncheon-Oinner- Cocktail5 Oiampagne Brunch- Sund1y from 11 ~O a.m . to2 p.m. diff Drive at Coast Highway-Laguna Beach 494--9477 OPERATED BY FRED HARVEY •N cAmfac COM .. NV FAMILY DINING Al Retscnable Ratas ARTICHOKE APPETIZER COUNTRY FRIED STEAK BABY BEEF LIVER BUCCANEER CUT OF PRIME RIB STEAK ANO LOBSTER CAl'TAIN'S CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN M ... , fwltttt. Pim. UMler tJ JOIN .US FOR OUR IUCCANEER IUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR Mon. thru Fri. 4 to 7 p.m. In Our CROW'S NEST LOUNGE WAYNE GABRIEL ENTERTAINING T uas., thni S.t., 8:30 p.m. to I :30 a.m. 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER RtMrv1tions Accepted 540-t.535 One-Year-Old The Berliner restaurant ls celebrating its fi rs t birth· day with a party this Saturday. Owners, Mr . and Mrs. Oskav Scbawnann have some fine entertain- ment planned featuring the Astoria Trio from Bar· aria. Above, Mrs. Schaumann joins a member of the trio in a song of welcome. The Berliner is local· ed at 18582 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, in the TO'Wn and Country Shopping Center. Yisit a bit of Oltf Japan,,., @MIYAKO LUNCHEONS•DINNERS ·COCKTAILS }Q 1-3303 33 Town 6: Country. Orang~ sunday BRUnCh 11.i.m. to 4 p.m . JFHVE~ 3801 E.lsr Co.An HllG.B-W.lT C<aoMA mt. l{Aa, CALD'mJll..&. Pwon: (714) OS-1374 I For an e egc;:int evening Goach& 'Borses Superb Dining and Dancing SEVEN NIGHTS 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. I OURCHI!:F IS A REAL PRO. TAY HIS LOBSTER, IT'S THE flNESTOUTSIOE MARINELAND. STEAKS. TOO. ANO A FIX ... T- YOURSELF SAL.AO BAR. TRYOUF.1 NEW COCKTAILS TOO. LIKE A FOOT OF YOUR FAVORITE MARTINI, A OR EAT DINING OUT VALUE AND SOUTHERN CALIFOftNIA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW, TAKE SAN DIEOO fftWY • TO HAWTHO"NE BLVQ. ANOGOSOU'llf TO MARINB.AHD DISCOVER THE AU.NM OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH I. DINNE~ Info Fr•n Dini "' ti Oct111 2•01 w. Co11t lru11chi119 H .. y .. Ntwptrt lt1clt lu11chi119 f•r R111,..,t tl•11•, "1iti~i11,. l'i119 U1 •t 541°1166 "THE ONLY AUTHENTIC 84LIOA IAY WILD LIFE PRESERVE" 1.11tt1r th11 Lian cou11try, yow ctn 911 •ut ti y1wr ctr • , , I ' FEATURING ENTERTAINMENT NITR Y The Irresistible CORSICAN BROTHERS Returntn9 this Sunday b! popul•r dtmendl Newport aeys "Tn•y't• 011r Thing' fCete No1trt? Chell lut co.m• "'••t that 1ound end we tloiink th1y'll be your 1h1nig too • P.S. D ...... 1.. M MOR•AH -..... ~ •• tllls Sot· ...,. r I -·- Fridl1, Aug1ttl 14, 1970 D~ll V PILOT fl l7 our Gtaide to Fun 'Greatest Show on Earth~ Running in Anaheim Center AUG. II·• FBITIV AL OF AJ\11-The Festival ol Arla wl1h lit 11'1111.1, ICUlpton and cralbmon dlspllylng tbeJr w«k on the featf. val lrounds, wUJ be open fhnluih AM· ·30. Al 1:30 each evenlng the Pageant of the Ma,,ten will be performed on the stage of lbe lrvlne Bowl with live models posed and costumed in thirty paintings and sculptures aa the creator of the original work &bowed them. Vtc Schoen bas composed special music for the period and mOOd of each work and the 13-piece orchestra wiU be under his direct.Ion. other featuru ol lhe festival include Rene's Puppet show, The Anna Mary Beck children 's art elhlblt, and Sunday oo the Green. Ad- mias.loo to the grounds is 50 cents for adult&, 10 cents for <*ildrm under 11 yeara. Pageant ol the Muten ticket.I are II-$> Moa.·'l'bur.; -Fri., Sal and Sun. Pbone 4M-IH7 ror ticket reservations. AUG. 11-30 ALL CALIJI'. ART SHOW-The Laguna Beach Art AssoclatJon · Gallery, 301 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach, is having its All C(alifomia Art Exhibit in conjunction wilh the Festival of A(ts durtna: the run of the Festival. Gallery Hours are 10 a.m. to I p.m. daily with doctnt tours on weekends at 2 p,.m. There are 74 works exhibited oot of over 1,100 enlerfd by California artists. A tram shutUes between the 'Fest1val iHld the Gallery during the complete run of the sbow. Ticket.a to Gallery are 50 cents. AUG . H • :Jll ART-A-FAIR-The Laguna Beach Fine Arts A&loclation ls presenting its fourth annual Art-A-Fair at 346 N. Coaat High- way, Laguna Beach, through Aug. 30. About 65 artists, !CUlpton and craftsmen will be showing their work. Hours : 11:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Admission 25 cents, children under 12 free. AUG. 11·30 SAWDUST F.E3TIV AL -Over 150 artists and craftsmen will be displaying their work at the Sawdl!St Festival in the. 900 bloct-of Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, from 10 a.rn. to midnight daily. There is no admission charge. AUG. II NB IJBRARY FUP.fS-The Newport Beach Library audi~ vlaual department in cooperation with the Santlaco Film Clrcuit is presenting free films each Fri. at 3:30 p.m. In the maU at Fashion I.stand, Newport Beach. This Fri. the program includes "Peter and the Woll," and Jacques Cous- teau's "Sunken Treasure." ~ -. Great Seafood! TAtE/1kWHAtE AT THE HISTORIC OLD ~\llA PAV!"t, ~~ 673·4633 ~" 400 Main Balboa Peninsula "a-:r-AUIU.NT nu""' COAfT ltl91fWAT NIWPOlT NJ.CM P'lllJ W... BUBBLES THE CLOWN CHILDREN'S PARTIES MAGIC SHOW -PUPPETS -FAVORS REASONABLE RATES 0644-4290 AUG. It· U JAPANESE VILLAGE -Rock groupo and llaht show1 wUJ be lhe "heavy happenings" at Japaneae VU111e on SaL even- inJls lhis swnmer, from 7:30 p.m. to midnight wUh lhe "Samu- rala" and "Tbe Prophets" perfonnlng wilb tbe aid of Fil• ment - a lljbt show. All th.is in addition to the other attrec-- lions at the village Including trained beMs, a seal show, karate exhibitions and tame deer. Food is avalJable. llU Knott Ave., Buena Park. Phone w.2381. AUG 14-SEPT. I 1 DISNEYLAND SUMMER -Disneyland is c e I e b r a t I n g IU lSth birthday with over 500 entertainers all aummer Jong in the "'Super Summer" celebration. There will be ZI aped al shows and talent groups with "Show Me Amerka,., muaical comedy on the Tomorrowland Staie at I and 10 p.m. Mon.-Fri. The Tomorrowl and Terrace will have "Sound Castle Ltd." with new sets, new CMtomtr and top rock favorites every eve .. ing from 9 except Sun. The "Minority of Sil" will take over the Terrace on Sun. and may also be heard on the Tomorrowland Stage on Sat. and the Plaza Gardens on Frl. The "Entertainment Com· mittee" plays oa the Terrace Mon.-Sat. afternoons. The Pl.ua Gardens will have "Big Bud" &OUDds for ballroom dancing, nlgbUy ei:etpt Fri., with leaden such as Tex Beneke, Sammy Kaye and Harry James playing. Swlday brings "Country Jubilee'' on the Tomorrowland Stage with a different group each week, drawn from folk-mus.le upert!:, Jazz will be heard in New Orleus Square and aboard the Mark Twaia. All th is plUJ the SS pennanent fun-filled attraclioa.s all summer long. Hours: a a.m. to 1 a.m. daily. AUG. 11-SEPT. 1 KNOTT'S BERRY FARM - A Golden Cavalcade of Country and Western Mu!ic will bt staged each weekend at Knott'1, through Labor Day, Sept. 7, with sbowtimes -Frl.-SaL 6:30, 8:JO and 10:30 p.m.; Sun. S, 8:30 and 1:30 p.m.. "The Sound GeneraUon," a group of 24 young men and women from John Brown University, will present shows Mon.-'Iburs. at 7, 8:30 B.Qd 10 p.m. llours: 9 a.m.·11 p.m. Mon.-Thun.; 9 a.m.-midnight, Fri.-Sat.; Close 10 p.m. Sun. Admiss:lon $1 adults, ~ cent.I for chiktren 11 and under. No add1Uonal charge for &bows. 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Puk. 'Little Miss Pageant' Telecast From Dallas A giant is on its way to KTI'V, Channel 11 -giant of th e pageant world that is. Come 1 p.yq;, A11g. 19 , the seventh annual "Our Little Miss Pageant" will air Jive and in color from the fa med Dallas Apparel Mart in Dallas, Tex. More tban just a children's beauty and taJeot pageant, the 90-minul.e telespecial is a youth development program featuring 7 lhrough 12-ye&r-old beauties from throughout the United States and the world. "hcellwt , •• ll'fJlllflc ••• ...,... lalUlll • • • _., -.. tfdlltkfllY .,.., ..... .,... ......... '--'*' ••• ""'9tk .. ....., ........ ........ .. ....... .. "'--...,. ..... ...., ... ,__, . .,,.,.. ...... A full scale production, with "labotate sets, guest stars and musical ertravagamas, "Our Little Miss Pageant" Is a combined contest and variety shoW which aymboltzes loveliness and advantages or our America'l'l yooth. ln addition to 01" "Our Lit- tle Miss" beauty competJUon, which incltms three-minutes of taltnt judging, thtfe•s a non-talent "MW La Petite" coolest for the three through six age bracket. Reigning queens Lauri Lynn Huffaker ol Dallas, "Our Lit.- tie Miss." and Cathy Colvin of Feniday, La., "Miu La Petite", claimed their crowns and cash sch>w.hiPJ of ,l,000 and '500 respectlvely, last )"81over117 contestants from 3.1 states, l l major cities and sii: foreign countries. Urxler the guidance of Mister Lynn, International master of ceremonies, tht wee mis5es will parade along a 65 foot runway amidst mam- moth fount.aim, danclni teddy bears and Walt Dlaney characters. THE NIFTY THEATRE ,.,,,.,.h EDWARD AllEE'S The Amerlc•n Drt•m .... *STARRING ENGLAND'S BE~· WRIGLEY ELLIOT FJllED'S Slots NOW THRU AUeUIT JJ fll. • U.T .. 1"10 P.M. 101 MAIN IT. ON STACE • " •• 4 vi1114' m11Jttrpi1r1 •• "-"Register " •• ;,,, 'UJOrJ, mapi/ir1n1 • .1'-Daily Pi lot "., • f;,u p!Mt lo Wt tbt fA1t1ilJ •• "-L A. Time~ LAGUNA MOULTON PLAYHOUSE 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach Tuesdayo thfOIJgh Sundays at 8:40 Mfauenl 10 lht Fe1tiral of Arl1 ·Al seats, erry night at lf2 price for children •nd rtud..m 18 ind und.-d ....; .. pe'10nn.t TICKm: CALL 494-0743 WITH PILOT PRINTING Phone 642-4321 For FREE Plck·Up -D1llv1ry mABUSH YOl.lll PREmGE f.Complele Modem llllit Facilities For Every Job From Busln•SI to Social Prlnlllli. PILOT PRINTING 2211. WIST BAllOl llYD.,. M.B. HUNTINGTON llACH .... ....,.-.. C.it 17141 , ... ,, •• 2•:..,.. 2",_ SOUTH SW TROPICAL FISH Tropical Fish & Largest Selection of Supplies in the area. Newt........_ ,,. 'ff. WILSON, COSTA M•s.t. (di F•lrvllw Re.. .541'11 IJ1.G, lt,,,.1111cko ~. -N.......t 8Mdl llltlllncl lilt~ Off!WI ~ MCMEMl1N08 RJR fWtEN1'8 AND 'YOUNO PBlPLE T,...._....., ... ,.....,. ..... ,__..._. ... ..........,., --.... ..--. .,. .,..... dlMa -------------------- ®. M-11' MMITTU IA'9 ,. ,.., ..,, 111'91 ... ...., •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •D• ... ·-----·• ---.. - ' AUG. II · II CIRCUS -Ringling 'Bros llld Barnum and Balley Clreus opena iD the Arena or Anabeim ConvtnUon Center, a:10 W. Katella, Anaheim, Aug. 13 to run through Aug. lt. Reserved aeats for adulta are $Z -"5; children under 12, $1 oU on all seats at most perfbnnances (some eiceptlona:). Performanoo every night. at 8 and matinee.I at 2 :~ p.m. Fri.; 10:30 1.m. •nd 2:3&, S.t.; 2 and 6 p.m. Sun.; J:4S p.m. Mon. -Wed. Ticket.t aval1able at most agencies and the box office. Phone: Ji3$.$00ll. AUG. 15 TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and Parka: Department wW hold a Teen Club Dance' tn the com- munity Center, aoo WestminSter Ave., (for Westmimter teen a) each Sat. from I p.m. to midnight. Admhs.ion, St. for membera. $1.50 for noo-members. The '"nlird Side" group will play for dancing Aug. IS. AUG. II ALL STATES FESTIVAL -The sixth aMual All Slates Fest.Iva! (formerly Old-Timer-New-11mer Picnic) ls sched- uled as a kJck-off to Costa Mesa's Cultural Arta Week , Aug. 16 in Cost.a Mesa Park 18th at Park Ave. from 11 a.m. to sundown. There will be an art show, entertainment, door prizes, informational and food booths and a spaghetti dinner. The dinner is $1 for adults, 7S ~nls for children. One may bring his own picnic or purchase food from the concessions which will_ be open. Ftee cotton c:andy for kkkiies. AUG IS· 30 BENEFIT FILM SE~ - A series of films to benefit the Laguna Beach Free Clinic will be shown each Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the Laguna Beach High School auditorium, 62S Park Ave., Laguna Beach. These are experimental films by student and professional filmmakers. Tickets, by do- nation, are $2 eac h. All funds raised will go to the Laguna Free Clinic. Ayailable at the door or at Sound Spectrum, 1265 S. Coasl Highway, Laguna Beach ; The Groove Company, 2303 W. Balboa, Newport Beach and at the Frtt Clinic, 422 Glennerye Ave., Laguna Beach, AUG. 17 • 31 POPS CONCERT -Henry Brandon will conduct c11Deerts at 9 p.m. every Mon. in Stage Court on lht pedestrian mall al Fashion Island, Newport Beach. A 3S-member brass band will perform one week and a concert orchestra on the alter- nate Mon. No admission charge. 111-GIJ1111r 1001 Hecktlt w.u ....... "SPPPORfl'OUR ~ . ~ LOCAL SHERIFF" "llf" r!PCOLOl by D1t11.ic1 Un1tt• Al'l1rt1 r ,,.._ ,CONTINUOUS DAILY FRoM 2 P.M. PltlMll.ltl ... OAOIMINTI ..,, ~,.... • OMfl M9rtlll "AlltP<tltTff COi ~ 11 ,,,_..Stirs 1!111 IMI• Wllll PltEMltltl INOMJbtNTI "WOOotTOCIC" Cit) C.llr "UST SUMMllt .. Ill.I C..... UMw 11 Mat I• Wltll ,,,.,., ······~····························· .. -.r,., AU C.111" '•mll't tMw c:.,i.-. Jetry LIWt1 _.._ "WHICH WA'l TO THI l'ltOHT" (01 _,...,..1 Dldt V911 D~I i.:::==.J "CHITTY CHITTY IANO aANO" !01 ·-·-~ ..,_.,,, P'REMJEltE ENOAOEMENTI 1111..., P'llllll' "1'NFf' CALL Mt Mlt. Tlllt"' IOP') 1'11t~ o•arl•~ "STl.ATEOY 01' TlltllOll" IOP'I P'lllMIEltlt INOAOtMINTI "OUTING 1Tlt.AIQH1'" (I I (1191' "OOODIYE COLUMIUI" Cltl C•ler U!Mfl' 11 Mvtt It Witt! 1'1,.,.I All Clltt" P'_I.., ..... AH lltr C11! "HOW TME WEn WAI WON" ~OI "1'H• WONO'l'•l'UL WOIU,O OF THS altOTHlltl OltlM" (GI All c.ttr I"'"" Jlc:W+QM lllwt • JIM ll'WWll "THI OltldlMOPf'•tt" 1111 "THI MOONIHINI WAit,. 101') U~fl' ,, Mllll .. WltR •trllll ANC.....l'lfllllY '""' .,,__ .,MIJtOONID"' COi .HM • .,.,.. • •116 ,,..,._ "TNI UNDll'UTID" COi •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• AUG. -Rn. HARBOR Cl\UlllF3 -ruJb' oarraJed ttUllea a-.1 New: port Harbor leave each hour, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. and a i:noon- lllht crulJe at a p.m.. from the Flln 7.one Dock by Ille Ferry Lllldln~ on EdJewattr A.._, In 8albol. Bolll crulR Jn shellered waler a-.1 the lslandl, viewb>g the homes and yachts of the area. nwts. $1.2$ for adulta; Cblldren AUG.~SEPT. HARBOR TOUR -The Pl\'IUOD Qu .... Newport Barbor'• newest fun attractJon, ls making algbUeeing trips at 11 a.tn., 3 and i p.m. dally, deparllng !rom the Pavllloo for lbe 90- mlnute cruise of the bay. Cocktail cruiae1 with an open bar sail at?, I and 11 p.m. The boat is a replica of an old-Ume river boat, Javbhly decorated in rlcb reds and cold!. (Avail- able for charter partiea. too .) Faro for slgblseeJng II ti for adult9, $1 for chlldrtn under 12, tots unclu 5 free with adults. 8'servatlooa -~-• A Program Everyone Wiii !n'joy EXCLl,ISIVE AREA SHOWING The most electrifyinr ritual e\'el' seen! ••..... ..,. .. 'I IUI caup ... ,, . --ANGDIJ.i.ODlllW.fl::nn\9W Aa......c:atnllnu9i ( llQIOil~ -ALSO PLAYING - Steve McQueeo "The Reivers"I' Aeirllma Cenl:e,-fin'ls ~-.. A NAl!ionll Gttlnlf PlcMft Adtme fil9 EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY (]!) ENGAGEMENT llllO&"'"ft:LM-11,.M. IAT.1~......,aJNlllP.111. SOL 1-111t.&i•7•"'° P.M. T,ATCH·ZZ IS, QUITE SIMPLY, "•' THE BEST AMERICAN fllM + l'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" :-;·~-:- • ---------------·-··--· .wrw,_;,..NlllllrMllllfl•mr•111111MU.EI•-. lllBIMnmar '9111rr •C1UR•---ml9n•mm ---·-•l--T-1r.-__ _ NO RESERVED SEATS · FREE PARKING EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT NEW .. DOLLY" SHOWTIMES!! MONrJAy THRU FRIDA y 7:00 & JO,oo SAT. &SUN. J ,00 4'00 7,00 & 10,00 SPECIAL NEW POPULAR PRICESll OllLDRENCWLY $1.00 8H times CNIS all Y $2.50 all ti,,,.. 1, I [, • # • ·.' .. 21 DAn V PILOT Frld111 A11911st 14, 1970 Guide to Movies . For Advertising in TV DAILY lOG 'Mister Tibbs' Stars Poitier The Weel<ender Phone 642-4321 •,:.T1,,,R(1t.Y ' AUGUST l!i '.' ( p • • •• l_, FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER • PHONE 642-4321 l I ' Editor's Note: Tl1 i1 movie guide is prepared by lhe film! commitU:e of Harbor Council PTA. Mrs. Nigel Bailey is president and Mrs. William Ware is committee chairman, It is intended as a reference ;11 detennining suitable fil'M for certain o 9 e groups and will appear ~ekly. Your views are .tolicited. Mail them to Mo- vie Guide, caTe of the DAILY PILOT. * ADULTS Catch %% (R): Account of a bizarre bomber squadron on a Mediterranean island. Alan Arkin and Orson Welles. Getting Straight (RI: Elliott GouJd plays a veter11n of Viet- nam who returns to college and campus violence. Candice Bergen co-stars. G(tOdbye Celumbu.s IRJ: A summer romance between a poor librarian aod a nouveau ricbe college girl lapses due to their different views. A satire on sex with Richard Benjamin, Ali MacGraw. The Grasshopper (RI: • Jacqueline Bisset plays a Canadian girl who seeks ex- citement in the United St.ates and finds narcotics and pr<r- stitution. Joseph Cotten and Jim Brown. John and Mary (R): Dustin Hoffman and Mia Farrow star in Ulis contemporary Jove story about the "now'' life of a young couple who become deeply involved in a 24-hour period . Last Summer (R): Film about a group of teenagers thrown together for a sum- mer. Barbara Hershey, Richard Thomas. Mackenna's Gold: Story of a group of men and women. who all share a fear of ram- paging Apaches and a greed for gold Gregory Peck, Omar Sharif. M-A-S-H (R): Imverant comedy about the Mobile Army Surgical HospitaJ during the Korean War. EllioU Gould. Donald Sutherland and Tom Skerrltt. ~1yra Brtckinrldge (X): • Screen portrayal of Gore Vidal's novel starring Mae West. John Huston and Raquel Welch. 1 ~WoodJt.ock (RJ : Three hour H · film of a music festival. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS Ba.ndolero: Post-civil war western in which two outlaw brothers, James Stewart and Dean Martin, join forces with the sheriff when the posse ~ursusing lhem is attacked by savage Mexicaa bandidos. Raquel Wlech co-stars. Butch Cassidy and lbe Sun· danet KJd (GP): A deft com- edy about two charming legen· dary bandits who take the ways of the old West to Bolivia. Paul Newman, Robert Redford and Katharine Ross. Downhill Racer (GP): Study of a young American's strug- gle to become a champion skier. Robert Redford. A Man Called Horse (GP): Story of an English lord who is captured by Sioux Indians. Stars Richard Harris, Dame Judith Anderson. The Moombiue War (GPJ: Story of a young Kentuckian's booUeggers to keep his illega l whiskey. Stars Patri c k McGoohan, Richard Widmark and Alan Alda. They Call Mt Mister Tibbs (GPJ : Set in San Francisco and starring Sidney PoJtier German Film 'First Lov e' At Festival Sidney Glazier's romantic drama "First Love,'' starring alld directed by Maximiilian Schell, will be this year's of- ficial German entry at the San Sebastian Film Festival. "First Love·• is the first film directed by Schell and the first UMC Pi ctures release selected for competition in a m a j o r , i n t e rnationa\Jy- recognized film festival. It al- so marks the screen debut or British playwright J o h n Osborne. Also included in the cast are John Moulder Brown. Dominque Sanda. Valeatina Cortesa and Marius Goring. Barry Levirulon and Schell CO: produced from a screenplay Schell co-authored with John Guild. Tue,_ film is based on Turgenev's . classic novel and was filmed on location in Hungary. in the adventures of a cool detective. Martin L a n d a u portrays a militant minister . Palo& Your Wagon (GP ) : Musical of the California gold rush days with Lee Marvin. Clint Eastwood and Jean Seberg. The Relvers (GP): Steve McQueen stars in the filmed version of Faulkner's novel. The hired man's ody~ey leads him from a small town in Mississippi to the sinful big city of Memphi! durlng the early 1900's. I TKENS AND ADULTS Airpor' (G): Film version of the best·seUing novel. Burt Lancaster, Dean M a r t i n , .Helen Hayes and Van Heflin. Btneath the Plane' of the A !>C! ( G) : Sequel to "Planet of the Apes '' starring Charlton Heston and James Franciscus. The Games (GJ: Four young men in separate countries prepare for the Olympic track marathon in &me. Marooned (GJ : Space rescue of sLranded astrona11ts. Gregory Peck. Richard Cren- na and James Franciscus. Patton: Salutt to a Rebel (GP): Portrait of General George S. Patton portrayed by George C. Scott. Karl Malden plays General Omar Bradley. The Undefeated (G): Post Civil War story of a friendship that blossoms between two Colonels (John Wyane, Uni -Rock Hudson. Confederate), who meet en route to Mex ico. "'hieh Way to the Front IG I: Comedy starring Jerry Lewis and Jan Murray. FAMILY Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (GI: Dick Van Dyke portrays the crackpot inventor of Ian Fleming's fantasy. He remodels an old racing car and spins fabulous yarns to the amusement of his adoring children. Sally Ann Howes also stars. Hello, Dolly (G): Barbara Streisand portrays Dolly Lvi, the matchmaker, in this lavish musical. Walter Matthau ro- stars. How lht: West Was Won (G): The settling of the West, presented in rive episodes with good photography. Support Your Local Sheriff (G ): Hilarious tongue-in-cheek almost non-violent western with J ames Garner, Joan NOW PLAYING 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" Starring Mtrlene Dietrich C ...... CM_. 1 Cet.t.ml•11 CeU '41.J26f This "Cletslc" Movie Cotti Only 22cl Fitld out what else you're mfssing, call tod1y for your hook.up! "THERE'S MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TV!" Hackett and Wal ter Brennan. Wonderful World of Brothers Grimm IG): Carnival of col· orfuJ excitement. * The let ter immediately after the title illclicates Ott rating givtit the picture by' ti~ Motion Picture Code. The Motion Picture Code And Rati11g Program may be found on the 1n.otion WEDNESDAY a. lHUISDAY "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY" FRIDA Y·SATUIDA y.suNDA y "ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD" Ir Tont Stoppcird FOR ltES.-;ltVATIOHS: CALL "*!:Ii) \IV ftewtOrf ervt., CloJll MtU picture >'pa".'g~e:_. -----'~~~~~~~~~ ,,_ • .,,o .... ~ ... Rated ''GP'' All Ages Admitted- Parental Discretion Suggested "The epic American war movie that Hollywood has always wanted to make, but never had the guts to do before:· .... ,.,, . ..., ' ;>0!11 C«irury·Fcu P•eunt5 GEORGEC srorr /KARL MAUIEN "'"''~~-..... -........ ,,.. .... _, Jn"l'll1TON" ·-· ·-· .... llCUllT.fWWllSCUIJlll l'IMCllll·rU. Nlm!·IWllJIJ.Klllllll iiiCiS ;w c;;.o ·-•· lltll· ..;.'iM'iiitil .. lllllM" .,tJlllSW llWf-"i SllllD;S mtf" .llMI 1.llMl.l'f' • j(ftj 00~•11 ~ EDWARDS ~ •it·r.;ta Hl!AT"E "-·~ COlilit.lloUo\. l'llOM!' 346-3101 --------°' .... -..... Call 546-3102 li\oestmlMler •M Gelclet1 w~'I ltlWHfl Qardlft Ciri:o~t & SU Oieto Frwyf, Call 892-4-493 Call 639-7860 Now in Southern Orange County at the Edwards Huntington : Cinema and Holds-Over in Northern Orange County at the Stadium Drive-In '# 2 ''4 COCKEYED MASTERPIECE -SEE ITTWICE!'' ''\\Wlout a doubt the funniest service comedy I have ever seen." -~Crist. #mC:-TV .. 'M ~A'°'S~H' is what the new freedom of the screen is an about" -RW:"*d ScHctel. U. ,,,.._,.,.,_ Anlngof'tmqerl'rodldim "'M ~A ~S "H' begins where other anti-war films end!" "'M* A :s ~H' is the best American war comedy since sound came in!" -hutiM Kaoe<. ~ l'Ot"•eor si."" DONALD SUTHERLAND ·ELLIOTT GOULD · TOM SKERRITT ... ._ ..... -··-·-·--.. -Co$Wmt SIUT artl!IN•ll -Aa!ERI Cl1f'4 • ll WI PRtt: • RCtt: ~R.l'.l"I06 ....,.,, INGO PREM~R "'""'hr ROllRT Al !MAN Sc•"""" hr RING lAAOOER, k. f-•-'tlff!IO-.i IQllft ~bJ 0-lWD.l b,.,,, b'/ ix LIJX.te ~ NOW! AT BOTH THEATRES ~- Call 847-UOI C1ll 639-8850 ., :.! • I ! ,. • D_olphins a Hit at Japanese Village s.q.rups\1ng, twts1tns and 90lrin&, the dancing .dolphins ol Japonese V~. In Buena P•rk Invade !he sparkling blue 1-~·• times daily and .eve# Wiles on SaturdfYi' for Ibo sea """'· To l!Je· delight •! guesla the dancing dolphins. ,•~ ' ". / U/.Jll'lz ci-~ 'H• -~ Ja_$.._.rt Mll!lfY,...... "'CHIYINNI SOCIAL CLUI" PL\lt "THI CINCINNATI KID" """' ""' _.._ ConllfluOUI SW.CWy, J:lll p.m. "THE MIND BLOWER OF All TIME!" Atl1lS-C••,,SllewL1t111 -TiulilapZf• 111• hll OffkH o,.. 7:15 Rated P.M. Seper Pl1r1r•114 (R) • ..,_s-k .. r. MtlN, TMltU "lt1. ,, .... ,,45 IAT. l•U..7:1to111JO SUH, ':IM:JM:~S BAJVlEA ·~w..w.u.i:.. ,,,,._, -1!/Dl lllta ........ ·!!ii TU llizam world you mll ln'.'fllanet Of The Apu"111 DJllJ I lhllletlnnln1 ... WHATUES BENEAlH MAYBE THE EHDI I I acoomplllied by clowniJb sea- lions; a l<>ot>d .. toopln1 lrapeu bear, and, ol course, Qeeuteous waterbelles. di.splay I/le pr<clsion aci:ol>atics which are the mull of their hours ol !raining. . Ra~ CG-Pl e ALSO Undefeated One man holda a l"O&t deal ol ....,...illjllty lot t h • perlomwices ol lhe dolj>l1lno; Fred Bumllllh. prolealonal animal.uatner and chit! or tbe dolphin tralnln( otal! a t Ja-VUlage. Frid la • veteran o! some .. nding ln lhe anlmal- bebavlor world. Re worked wlttl animab first while livln1 in Arkansas, tralni!l:g them comm ercially for the bebaviari.a1 sciences and the entertaJmnent Industry. He also participated In tile 1964 World 's Fair in New York, where he worked with a demomtratioo lnvolvlns con-- dllioned ot trained animals. 1 From Jbere be moved to the Japaoeoe Village. Conditioneif resporwe, the Pavlovian system for Instilling an automatic readion to cer- tain stimuli iii a 1 subject, ii the meth>d Fred uses tG train his animal ""-· lir.1kln1 their complicated acrobi.Ucs up into small stepi and work· ing from 1he ground up, he has managed to creatf! ac- complished performers out or wild sea animals. (T h e s e dolphins are captured wild in th! wvm Caribbean off the coast ol Florida). ''Tralnlq ii Ibo • .., part ... F"'1 l&YI modestly. "The handler In the lhow ls the Important one. He can loae the 1ralnin& or kttp it." It the ltl·abow handlen dOlll' reward Ibo dolpillns In the manner to which they are aCCU!torned, their carefully built-up habitual responses will be conlll!ed and perhaps obliterated. Fred and his asslstants are always busy teaehl.ng the dolpillns behavior -beekfllps, twlsta, land.em and triplicate behavlor -even behaviors in- volving humans and dolphins t.osether. But Freet Burrough la more than just 'an animal trainer, he ls an animal lover, with deflnJte ideas about the future of human-animal rela- Uoos, "I don't Uke to see animals In captivity. 1 would like to set anlmalJ in r.oos doing somelhlrfg ... sornet.hlng interesting for them a n d for spectaton. Zoo.s like they are today bug me," he says. Frtd and his dolphins can be seen dally at training sessions In the Sea Theatre at Japanese Village and Deer Park at 6122 Knott Ave., in Buena Park. Leap Through Fire England's Saxon Family present daring exploits astride beautiful horses in the IOOth birthday edition of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Clreus at the Anaheim Convention Center Arena t;hrough Aug. 19. THE ORANGE COAST'S BEST SELLER • • • RATED ''X'' <FOR EXCELLENT> It's the St•rring Charlton Hetton -.James Fran~1c~is~c~u~s ;Jliji~~;~~~~ii}ll ~ LOOK TO EDWARDS DAILY PILOT that moves the merchandise! ~=~F-·~·SOUTH COAST NATIONAL GEHEAAL'$ PLAZA THEATRE Sa" Oleco frMWay at lristof • 548·2711 CONTINUOUS DAILY AT 1:30 P.M. RATED "GP" An ..... A4111ltted -P•l'fftfll Dlttmfn '"""'" FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTER • • •• • • •••• ... -... • --------- ' LUXURIOUS CINEMAS FOR THE BEST Sf!OWS TONIGHT • • •llACH •LY • AT llLLt• • ~ ...... C:OUT -· & ...... Dll•D P'W'F • ... 7 ·•M• o HUNTINGTON •llAC .. 111"1 0...011 • D9ft11d lvltl••••lld M*A*S*H .... 0'THl G-AMU" !Iii ----.. ·-·-NTWIU ._,, -.. 1M lllM N'flo 4rtl ltfCOltD Wiil' GfOltGI C. SCOTT e IAltL MALDIN "PATTON " -GP You could put this "best seller" on your sales staff . Call today for rates and information DAILY PILOT DISPLAY ADVERTISING Dll'I'. 642-4321 or 540.1220 C stereo103FM. the sounds of the harbor • music " l • • I ' I • r •• .. ' • •.. • .. .• . • ' 'I I I • I I NEW 1970 Frilly, ._ 14, 1910 D~~!~,~ 1AAND NEW 1970 CRRYSlER ___ J _ '69 PLYMOUTH SAnLLITI llDAN V..., .ul-tk:, rNJo. Mii· ... -··-""· f1clor'I' 1lr. IZ:LN721J $2295 '69 DODGE SUPll Ill VI, 4 ......-ct, r1dkt, h111 .. , -·· tlffflntl Incl mort. IXWZ .US! $2395 '61 DODGE DAIT 2 DOOi SID.AN •..tlD, llfftw, ' atlllder f1ll" "'II ~·· !WTI' lOSI $1295 • ·-----·--~~--·------- '68 PLYMOUTH VALIANT SIDAN ounTANDING SAVINGS ON A~$.· .CHRYSLER/PLYM9UTH'S ENTIRE IN'iENTORY Of NEW 1970 · CHRYSLERS. I' LY M 0 U T H S AND . ' IMl'ERIALS, I ·AS A T L A s CELEBRATES THR.EE YEARS OF SERVICE TO ITS MA"NY .f RI E N D S IN ORANGE COUNTY • • • SEE ATLAS CHRY$LER / PLYMOUTH TODAY & CELEBRATE W~ SA.VINGSI ' .• ' '67 lnt•rn•tional '65 RAMBLER '68 DODGE 'TIAYIL..ALL '11toma11c tr•nsmlu lon. r .. CHAltlJll Sltflort -gon. V1, 11/t'Om1'· "'1tllmll!k, ·-· '"'"" 6 cvt.. t ijlDmelk, lrntl'lKY-lie, radio, hMT..-, --1tterln9, .. ot11 .. 1 c.ondltlln. dlo. hul1t1" -•1-lntl. _., t1Mf1N, I nd br9"-. l1t1 toMllion. tWJl WI CW1S61 (Cl lt 10I) Vll!YI fi>, (VUW•U) " s1395 s1795 $695 ·s1995 '65 PLYMOUTH '66 fORD '6'4 FORD '6'4 KARMANN IAllACUDA MUST AN• THUNDllllllD GHIA VI, All!Orr..J!iC 1r1n1mlHIOll. radio, M1t1r, po-1!-· VI, 4 1!>e9d, rldlo, ~ffltr, A~tomtllc tr1n1mlHlo<I, rt-4 i,peed tr1nsml11lat1, rtdla l.,g, power brekn. (MPP· W$W, n~• cir. (TZMll.'.11> cllo, t.1111r, POW•r 1IHr!n11. and h1111r. (HUP 511}, '"' POWlf" tw1k11. (PCZ 268). s995 $1095 $795 s995 '65 FORD '69 PLYMOUTH '69 PLYMOUTH '69 PLYMOUTH Folc•• St~o• w.,oi1 SATILLITI llLYIDlll COUPI •OADIUNNI• VI. 1111..,...lk, <Mio, ...... 2 Dr. H. T. VI, 1"'11., rMlo, 8ffllllful. ' -• ...-h .. 1..,., P.5., ftetory t lr, 4 _...:! lrl nl!'l'llulori. rldla .,, 1m!"l"lftAlllll condlllon. virlyl !OP, WSW, di•. whftl bllt wtrt. uMer 11.-mllt:&. 1nll llHlff, CY'IW olMI IPOOJ90l dba. CXYK W J. (YXxtttl ·s2 495 si595 $1995 I ' • I ' I ·: •• l l • • . • • -·---~---~----------· ------·-.-----· ----·-·-·---.. --------·-~-----·-----,---,c---:--,_ • • ' • .. ' " • • ~ • • , DAil Y PILOT 31 ' D·•1ck w1·1so"n sa· ys· •. OON!T WAIT FOR THE PRICE· INCREASE. BUY NOW WHILE __ i_11_E s_E_LEC_1_10 ... N ... 1s...,G_oo_o_. - BRAND NEW 'l970T UNDERBIRD : SUPER SPECIALS 2·DOOR LANDAU. SAVE •29 VI. ~MN. w ,._., f«tlry .... """" ~ ...... C.1nil,4M1FM1iw-..-.c~ -· ~· ~.:1.,...-1,..,.,.;... '"'· Serial No. OJ84N149772 Fro111 Factory · Su11ettM List Price NEW 1970 F·100 PICKUP Se<~I No. F10ARJ53626 LOWDOWN • LOW PMTS. B::0· 1970 GALAXIE 500 HD P. V-8 engine, cruis&-o-matic, Powtrlsttel'ing, power disc brakes, foctory oir, tinted gloss. vinyl top, wheel covers, whiteW1:1lls, & full foctory eqpt. Serial No. OJS6H102669 , ...... mr, • S•111m.ILhtPritt NIW 1970 MAVERICK $988 '69 !!~!L~s~!"'~~ '"";ng. ,.. $1888 dio, heater, xtro nit•. No.'105159 RENT: WHY WALK? DRIVE A MAVERICK 16 :!~~~' LIASlz LTD 2-DOOR HARDTOlt • 1150s Power steering. disc brokes, 390 2V qint, oir.oeonditiontng, whitewall tires, 24 month open-end ltose. CAll IENTAl DEPT.142-6611 01 J.40.7780. ... MO Pl.US TAX BIAND ID 1!1D Tm & CAMPE! 3/4 T. FORD TRUCK & El DORADO CAMPER IMMEDIATf DELIVERY '70r·250SlYl£SIOl P .U. Mlh lent ltd, I ply lire&. h'fth Dir hlol•, ,m tlltf'H. Serio! Ho. F24ARGIO 160. '70 fill <•• o,,r "Ott•••" 4 Me.,,er wilh C!Ul'll 111'4 bed + oand-- ard bed. T\1'11 ~ rllflit wirh hood. Centtr dintl1t & 1arQ1 wonlrobl. SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABU BRAND NEW 1970 MUSTANG HDTP. Serial No. ORO 1l160544 SYEAR. 50,000 Ml. WARRANTY AV41LABLE NIW 1970 RANCHIRO LOWDOWN ' LOW PMTS. Soiiol No, !)!t46616147_3 BRAND NEW 1970 LTD~OUIRE 429-V-O Eng., cruise-o-mohc, air tond., power disc brakes, radio, corpeled sto-wog. floor, reel. poss. seat. H.O. suspension, tln1ed gloss, stereo lope system. lt<~I No. OJ71K150586 faOM FACJOIT SUGGISTED UST PllCI BROUGHAM HARDTOP • V8, cruis•o-motic, foci. oir. AM.fM stereo. vin yl roof. power steering, power disc brokts, tinted gloss, belted whitewolls. Serial No. bR36f110727 VACATJON SPECIALS . ' ' '65 f.?,~~-~; tongs.~ Camper S38869 & 8' non factory camper, '66 CHEV, 3 4-T. Pickup FlEETSIDE -V·8, Ra4io, heater, all heavy duty. 55066'. '63 ~~.~~.!.,~~~~I Van . $388 g••••. l'J711EI '68 R~~.~~he~~~ v:s Engj"' very low mileage, 7321 a '69 FORD 1/2 Ton Pickup STYLESIDE V-8, 2·1one finjsh. 38945C. , I \ I I I ~ I I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE '"'""""';;;;;.:...;.,.;;.,;.;..;;;..c""-~""".;;.:;.;.;...~-"~~ . 0-•1 IOIO ~al lllOI G-ral ~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ * * . Pet.e Barre'tl l<ea/t'I * 111111 0-ral 1000 G-=r.::al,_ __ __:I:;::•::: '0-ral lDOOGMMral pre~enf~ ,._ UDO 1511-Best buys in $60's _ "" All-around family home. Superb cor- ner location near clubhouse. $88,000. ; ., Rustic charmer with 4 bedrooms &. .. 3 baths, nothing else like it at only $61,950. ..,. Orifinal owner-builder offers lovely 3. bi?droom and den home, it's really sharp! $69,500. '... WESTCUFF """ Move in condition -ready for family before school starts. 4 Bedroom, 3 baths, dining room & family room. Best neighborhood. Just reduced to $72.500. 1507 Lincoln· Lone. Open Sun. I U> 5 Office Open S•turdays & Sundays PETE BARRETI REAL TY 1605 Wostclilf Dry N.1. 642.5200 . ---------- 1000 * DUPLEXES * CHAMPAGNE Closo to ._.. CORNER 3 BR. 2 baths : •• · • ·• • $54,500 FllA or GI, no down, Mesa .;; 2 Bacbelor um ts •••• $29,950 del Mar by owner. Cumn ~ Georfe Wiiiiamson dtps, tri..iler gpace. 3 BR. -"' Rt•ftor 2 ba, BelOw FHA apprailal. · '1Ml50 '4>1564 Eves 545-STIG. "· • . .. • " •• .,. : ~ ' 1--., 10000-ral 1000 Coldvsell.Ba1k81' OFFERS: -- TWO EXCEUENT VIEW HOMES . Dignified, appealing -2 bdrm., 2 bath - pier & slip ................ $147,500 lleiort luxury -R-3 -elegant I bdrm. bome & guest apt. ......... $149,500 Kathryn RaulsU>n DOVER SHORES 4 BR-4 BA Greatest view bome w/entry yard, custom tiles inside & out. Three car gar. w/auto. door plus more. $97,000 Al Fink SPANISH HACIENDA Cool shaded patios + pool size yard w/ room for family orchard -more to spare. Heavy beams -Mexican tile, 4 Bdrms., lge. tam. rm. & din. rm. $77,500 Mary Harvey WATCH THE PAVILION Lights twinkle from high above the har· bor. 'This 4 BR., 2'h ba. view home has ex- quisite decor, plush lndscaping & private community pool! $72,500 M. C. Buie WALK TO THE BEACH In lovely Balboa. Lge. 4 BR. borne. Paneled 1-fam. room. Picturesque location on quiet 1 • ·strada. Immediate occupancy. $69,960 ,-, Calbryn Tennille • ... ~ ·•" ' • • t.- 1" ' . . ' • ' . : ' • HAUOR VIEW HILLS You own the land. Former model home. Lwk 4 BR., lge. family room. Professional· ly landscaped. 3 car garage. Immedi~te oc· cupancy. $64,000. C&thryn Tennille & Leidy STOP LOOKING-THIS IS IT!! Sharp -4 BR. Broadmoor Home in Har· bor View Hills -near comm. pool -Mtn. view -owner movin~ & must sell -see It now -this won t last at this below DW'ket price of $63,900. ud AusUn OUT$TANDING UDO BUY Three bedrooms & 3 baths. Separate din- ing room or den, two fireplaces. Close to beaches & tennis. Full price $59,500 Gene Vreeland EASTILUP:F VIEW Large 4 BR., 2 Ba. home w/cbaracter. Prof. decoral<d & landscaped-walk U> schools, sbDpplng & l<nnls club, Good financing avalfable. $48,500 . Harriett Davies SPIC AND Sl'AN Shows on this one ! Great location, nei.r shopping. Ideal for retired couple or young family. 144 ,9~0. !r.rry Frederick EXCLUSIVE BEACON IA Y Bell w,.i.rtront location. Private beacb & tennll, Ill~ for l 8' boat. 4 bedrooms. 4 ~ ~ Encloeed patio. 2 Kitclums. R-2 Lol can build up. lllrY 'Lou Marion 644-100 * * * TAYLOR * * * DOVER SHORES Dramatic brand new 4 bdrm, den & garden rm with wet bar. Formal dining room fine carpeting & marble baths. Cathedral ceiling in mstr ste. Be the first owner! $108,000 410 Morning Star Lane Open Sat-Sun 1..s,30 RECOGNIZE VALUE See this just reduced 4 bedroom, '3 bath West. cliff charmer. Located on best street. Near schools, shopping. $49.950 1112 Nottingham Open Sat-Sun 1-5:30 CORONA DEL MAR VIEW Near new 4 bdrm · 'Broadmoor" tri·level w / family rm & formal dinin)? rm. A superlative setting with it s gently terniced garden of tall trees & lovely flowers. $79.500 2716 Windover Open Sat.Sun 1·5 ' 30 lRVJNE TERRACE -$40,000 A real sleaJ in beautiful exclUsive area. Spac- ious 3 bdnn home w/near new carpeting thruout. Rear patio & large yard, 1515 Bonnie Doone Open Sat-Sun 1-5 '30 CORONA DEL MAR CONTEMPORARY For the young at heart and just two years new. One block to beach & short walk to shops. Custom built with fine Quality detail. Ocean view and deck of.f hugb master bed· room. A PRIVATE KINGDOM_:_ $43,950 Close the courtyard door and behold Ibis mini·mansion. Spacious 3 bdrm home w/ Spanish motif. Ideal ldtchen w/blt-ln R/O. 20ll1J lrvne Ave. Open Sat-Sun 1-5 :30 NEWPORT HEIGHTS View -2 sU>ry Colonial home. 3 & family rm. 2 baths. Blt-in R/O. Near schools & shops, lge rear yd. Trailer & boat space. $41,950 LINDA ISLE BEST buy on beautifuJ Linda isle! Owner moving to another state. Spacious 5 bdrm. home designed for the ultimate in living on this exclusive island of boating & fun. Pier & slip. The most for tbe least! S135,000 IRVINE TERRACE -$17,500 Tremendous View! Watch the boating activ- ity from most rooms of this beautifully main- tained 3 bdrm &: fam rm home. An inviting front patio with rare planting around lovely H&F pool. Call us to see. 11' WATERFRONT PATIO 3 Bedroom home with pier & Ooat. Walk U> Lido shops. Owner wiJI carry lBt T.O. at Jow interest rate to qualified buyer. Zoned R-2. Call U> see! $160,000 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX Corner privacy! 2 bedroom front unit with fireolace plus 1 bdrm rental in rear. Patio & charm. See this new exclusive ottering to- day & profit ! Only $42,000 "Our 25th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hilla Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 * * * * * l Owner says sell . 2.T.;i Thi!! attracth't' 3 bedroom aetts surrounded by ~me has lhe most you'll hunting fishing Nf'ar find for the money! Good Klamath }~a.I.ls, Oregon. location !Qr sc~ls. GREAT 2. Incline Village, level R·2 landscaping wlth corner lot lot, close lo ski Utt, boat. and very ~rlghl and chttr· ing. On golf course. ful u11~r1or. Unbeatable Priu-Jocalton. lerms. with fllA or VA OR :1. Lake Jl.1athew11, 2 lols, AS.SU ME 63 VA LOAN! vii:>:w of Jake . no smog . Only $26,500. cil.rus area. Jean Smith, Realtor • COATS & . WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- BUSIESI' marketplace in Adi. a.ck them now! (0p-:n Evening•) BEACH ORIENTED??? WALK TO THE SURF & SAND from Ibis almost·new Spanish custom· built home wilh four spacious bedrooms. Formal dining room, separate family room, pool· table-size GAME ROOM. Use or associa· tion pools, tennis courts & recreation area for nominal mo nthly fee. $64,950 INCLUDES TH E LAND! EASTSIDE RUSTIC ASSUMABLE low.interest Joan. Charm· Ing 3·bedroom/l ~-bath, coi y living r90m with knotty pine wall and bric k fire· place. HARDWOOD floors and new car· peting. Pool·sized lot with alley access for your CAMPER or BOAT! $28,500. e Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR New·port l•1ch Offlc• 1021 B•y1lde Drive 675-4930 COUNTRY LIVING On A Full Ac,. with ranch type l bedroom home, compl rep&inted, new dahwahr A. clilposaJ. Lie de. ta.cbed cov. patio, outdoor brick fl'lllc 1: BBQ, Ml.ZI;)' lhade trees. Hones allow- ed. Owner will fl.nc. at 1"'9' -hUIT)' this won't Wt!! Only ••..• $49,500 Custom 4 Plexa Spacious 3 bedrm owners 11()1 + (3) 2 bed.rm, 2 bath rent· a.ls in exduaive area of Newport Bea.ch. Excellent owner oceupied and tax shel.tt'r property. $9,U"O Jn. come. S Buildings scYd this month. Only 5 available. Select )'OUl'S today. SlS,(Q) down. Open Set I Sll.n 1 to s. 41.50 Patrice Rd, $75,000 One of a Kind Attractive Non:h Costa Mesa 4 bedrm with all the bltinl & huge muter bednn. C&ll now for appt to att! $28,500 EXCLUSIVE WITH: DOYER SHORES Model Home 1430 Galaxy Dr • Ivan Wel11 model home now available for lmmediale OC· cupa.ncy. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths, 3 car garage. You may have your gardm in· door11 in the spacious Trav- ertine l'Mt'ble atrium witl;i , I08.ring 14' hil'h lk)11aht or out00on: thru the &lidtna glast1; walli of a 1118.dOW living rm with Panoramic View. Expertly carpeted, draped and deoorated. Com· plettly land1eaped. pa:;,oco. Open dally 10 to 5 Ivan Wells & Sons Roy J . Ward Co. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS 1430 Galaxy Drive 646-1550 (Open Pally) MESA VERDE MACNAB -IRVINE FINER HOMES DOVER SHORES IAYFRONT Elegance & grace in this new 4650 sq. ft. cus- tom home; spiral staircase from tiled entzy to tremendous. master suite & sitting room vlith fireplace. 4 Bedrooms, huge family room, spacious kitchen with delightful ml>m· Ing room. $169,500. Open daily. 505 Moi'ning Star Lane. Pllt!CE REDUCED H!gh on bluff with panoramic view of bay & ocean. Almost 4200 sq. ft. of luxury borne for executive livln~ & enl<rtaJnlng. High cell· in gs, marble fireplace & entry. Sumptious master auite, garaen kitchen wilh .breakfast room. Huge paneled den, formal dining room. Now only $139,000. Open Sat. & Sun. 1330 Gal- axy Drive, Dover Shores. ' EASTBLUFF CUSTOM Top EastbluH plan for family living. Exl<nd- ed Child's room makes great nursery. 3 Bed· rooms, 21h bat.ha, famUy room & dining room. A great buy at $49,950. Also, lease/ option possible. Open Sun. 2137 Aralia BAYFRONT LOT Prime area, 50 ft. pier headline. Tenns or exchange for income. $68,500. DREAM COME TRUE Assume a low interest loan on this outstand- ing 4 bedroom, den, family room & pool ; in beautiful Baycrest, for only $58,500. Now wake up & call Lois Miller 675-3210 for app't. Open Sat. 1749 Skylark. Newport Beach JEWEL-LIKE In a beautiful setting. 2-Story 3 bedroom, English sparkler. S39,SOO. Come try me on for size. Open Sun. 433 16th Place, Costa Mesa DOVER SHORES Spacious, beautifully constructed family home. 4 Bedrooms, 6 baths, formal dining room. breakfast room. Kitchen designed for entertaining. Extensive, new walled terrace. YOU OWN THE LAND Sunny 3 bedroom, dining room or family room. Cheerful enclo sed garden. Comer view lot. Pool & clubhouse 2 blocks away. Many, many upgraded extras. $39,500. Call Amy Gaston 675-3210 LOW INTEREST LOAN Pool; sharp 3 bedroom, separate dining room plus family room with raised b~arth fire· · place. Baycrest. $57,500 GREEN GRASS GROWS ALL AROUND All around a stunning split-level 3 bedroom, 21h baUt home. Choice & airy location. Ready to move in. $44,650. LOTS Corona Highlands Vie\v. Spectacular view of ocean. High on the hill. 2 Street frontages. Fee property. Asking $35,000 Dover Shores Bayfront. Lowest priced water- front lot in Dover Shores. Float in place. A great investment at $53,500. Easy terms . MACNAB·IRVINE Reelty Company 901 Dover Dr., Suite 120 IOIO Bayside Driv• Newport Beach 642-1235 675-1210 SPECIAL Onl.y at WALKER I: t.EE.1-=-'-----= I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. G""'"""'' bodroom ".-OPEN HOUSES #73 LINDA ISLE Estates home nHr the golf SHORECLIFFS Beautiful ba.yfront home ~~~iivm~:!': SAT. & SUN. 1-S OPEN HOUSE This: weekend HUGE sexy MASTER BED· See 3 lovely homes. priced 5 Bedrooms, 5 Baths ROOM' with private be.th. from SG0,000. See Tim Thom. Larae bay11ide family r oom Large kitchen with electric u at 319 Driftwood or Helen opens onto buill·ins. Intercom T/O. GJ. Anderson at 249 Evening Spacious sundeck Can Large pier & slip ~ ntA ;:rm~~ IR~l'N1 TERRACE Formlll din\ng area you q • . SUNDAY 1-5 Lovely ya.rd and Walker & Lee 5 BR. 3 Bk. plu~ huge ram. ConttimporaryEngllsh design nn I formal din. rm. Only $178,000 Realtors ~4:750. See Thelma Young Excellent financing! lli90 Harbor Blvd. a t Adruns at 1407 Sanlanella. &1"'491 Opeo ·m ''00 PM CAMEO HIGHLANDS SUNDAY 1-5 FIXER-UPPER Beaut cuslDm 4 BR 3 Ba. FIVE 151 BEDROOMS ho • w/tmnf! oceai\ view. Only $26,950 with big 5114 % Se:~ean Cole at 4507 Dor. GI loan to take over. Need• che•ter Rd. clee.n up, paint & ya.rd work, IAYCREST but whoknow1 .. "your"deal SAT.&. SUN. 1-5 Realtors "Our 25th Yea r In the H1rbor Area" 673-4400 might bf' lhe ~r. Very tlne 4 BR. 3 Ba, oome (()pen Even1np) w/lormal din. rm. lt Jae. I "l!,..!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!O!!!O fam. rm, Reduced to $55,000. l!~llllllRllll"'11"'11~ s.. ,Lucille Butedo •• 1lOO LIDO OPEN HOUSE Irvine Ave. SAT/SUN fron1 1:00 219 Via Eboli Speridln.a: clean, large " & tamfly -newly redecorated Only $43, 900 + now .,.,., & crptg, Attrattlw ( Bedroom Ray· Over1Ued family room with ~II I\ ,\ 111.1111 111:\U\ l\f. • I' ,· crtst hOme. It'1 lmmaculateloiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i& I f'atinl" area opens onto ln- •nd n ic el y la.ndacaped. OPEN DAILY 1-5 vitlni patio. Su nd ttk, Take You'IJ Jove It. 1311 C•mbrldte L.t. a drive -stop by ! JERRY FREUD WHtcllff B11ut1 "'"'" """"""" CHAS. ARNOLD GUEST HOUSE -~ !Ml·UIO 388 E. t71h St., C.M. with " bath cverlooklna: <•.._.._. 646-7755 POOL-goes with thl1 br:autl-~~~'!rl ""!!'!~!'!'!~~'l"'~~I rut s bedrm, 3 bath bon1t'.1 '!"!1!!!!!11!!!!! •" BEACH BARGAIN e 14' "P llvln& rm whh f"Plc I' + dlnhtg '"'·Bl..,, dish-SPANISH CASTLE 3 BR. homt! 1.t yeltt>rday'• waxher. dble &ILi' •• heavy J\lm lilted, This lovely· near prie&! Only $25,000 • terms. ihlke roof. Must see rl&hl new hnme. 4 lge bdrm11' + Stepa: to oet«11, c.:h.1b It ttn. away to app~in.1e? ! No fin.. Wn. rm. + fonntl dlnina. ~~·YWOOD REAL TY anclnt trouble. Under priced s.car rartat. Yard lt'pente at $48,500. from pool •~• -beautlM r;g, ~v si;l'~~· NB L•ch•nmy•r Re•ltor lftted PQOhPark A achool1 CAIJ..MS928 or 5f5.3f.M Ck:Jle by, ./Ult $61,95(1 -To 6 UNITS '"'""' 'Ptme 646-1m. In thr hf'-'rt or eu.t 11. M!!N. BUSIEST marketPlaee In X1nt IOC'Oml'. 2 B<lrm. home town. The DAILY PILOT plus f!w l·bdrm. •Pot•. Room Claatned teeUon. Save for mOf'I' units. I( Of "" m(lnty, ttme &: e.ffort hy T l 11 : Rr:/\J, ~ f~T.'\TJ:RS IUT". $.'J6,!XXI -Firm. Rh opp i n1 trom )'O'.lr TitE SUN NEVER SE'J'S on 1 -~111!!!!0!!!0!!!0!!!!!!0!!!0!!!0!!!0!!!0!!!0!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!" Sm11c Pmprr!te1 ttTX\T,f umcbalr. OA1LY PILOT WANT ADS! Open Houses 'THIS WEEKEND C2 Baclrooml 409 Volero Way Newport Beach 642-4759 (Sat & Sun 1-5 PM) (2 Bedroom & Family or Den} 447 62nd St (Newport Shores) NB 67!>-5830 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (l Bedroom) 319 Driftwood, (Sboreclilfs) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1537 Santanella Terr. (Irvine Terr) CdM 675-0473 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 316 Narcissus, Corona del Mar 673-6642 ;675"6459 (Sun 1-5) 4607 Wayne, Corona del Mar 67:Hi642;67S.6459 (Sun 1-5) 1984 Federal Ave Costa Mesa 673-3211; 54!>-2300 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 17572 Griffith Cr. Huntington Beach 962-5585 (Sun 1-5) *20151 Bayview Ave, (Santa Ana Heights) NB 540-0814 (Sun 10-5) 4601 Sierra Tree Lane (University Park) NB 833-0820 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2039 lrvine Ave, Costa Mesa 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5,30) 1515 Bonnie Doone (Irvine Terr) CdM 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 26115 Cordillera, Mission Viejo 830-6060 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (3 Bedroom & F•mily or Den) *354 Broadway, (Eastside), Costa Mesa 835ol288; 643-4614 (Sat & Sun 12-6) 281 Nassau, (College Park) CM 545-2656 (Sat & Sun noon Iii dusk) 1800 Sabrina Terrace, Corona del Mar 673-2083 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 595 Traverse Dr., Costa Mesa 673-3211; 545-2300 ISat & Sun 1-5) 1707 Tradewinds (Baycrest) NB 842-8235 (Sat & Sun) 2137 Aralia (Eastbluff) NB 642-8235 433 16th Place, Costa Mesa 675-3210 2215 Aralia (Eastblu[f) NB 67!>-3210 216 Via Genoa lLido isl~) NB 673-7300 23341 Gondor, Lake Forest 830-6060 (Sun 1·5) 26921 Via Grande, Mission Viejo 830-6060 (Sat & Sun 12-6) (4 Bedroom! ***#5 Collins Island, Ne\vport Beach 835o5184: 673-9043 (Sat & Sun 12-5) *1721 Galal<a (Irvine Terrace) CdM 642-6472; 673-3468 eves. (Sat & Sun l·S), 4507 Dorchester (Cameo Highlands) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 249 Evening Canyon (Sboreclilfs) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) **11 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) llSO Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (4 Bedroom &. F•mlly or Den) 1915 Chubasco Dr. (Irvine Terr.) CdM 673-3211 ;545-2300 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 363 Vista Baya Newport Beach 640-3255 (Sun 1-5) 7647 El Portal Fountain Valley 962-5585 (Sat 1·5) 1800 Irvine Ave., (Baycrest) NB 675-3000 (Slit & Sun 1-5) 1330 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 842-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1606 Antigua Way {Dover Shores) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) *1749 Skylark (Baycrest) NB 675-3210 (Sat ) *4627 Camden (Cameo Shores) CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1430 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Open Daily) 2716 Windover Dr., Corona del Mar 644-4910 (Sat & Sun J.5,30) 1112 Nottingham (Westclilf) NB 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ,30 ) 410 Morming Star Lane (Dover Shores) NB, 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 18426 Irvine (Baycrest) 640-7755 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 5718 Minon:a (Mesa Verde) CM 546-0716 (Sat & Sun 12-5) (5 Bedroom ~ F•mlly or Den) 1407 Santanella (Irvine Terr.) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1536 Galaxy Dr. I Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 128 Via Havre (Lido Isle) NB 673-7300 (Sun 1-5) (7 Bedroom & F•mlly or Den) 3449 Quiet Cove, (Harbor View Hills) CdM, 673-2222 (Sun 1·51 INCOME PROPERTY . (4 Pl•xu) 4150 Patrice Rd., Newport Beach Mi.1771 (Sat & Sun 1-5) DUPLEX FOR SALE (J & 1 lladroom) 609 Poinsettia, Corona del Mar 67!>-5729 (Open Daily 1-5) ..... . ,,. ., ....... ~ .... -. * * ~* PMI tiMI W•,...fnttn ---· --------,-.-~~-----~~~-~------------------.... ---------.... -----·--,,---,-'""' __ Ftldly, August. 14, 1970 DAILY PllOT 63 HOUSES FOR SAL'.:;.r::.r.;H><oiiui.s1i.sn~R""SA..-;-;LE .... '°HOUSES FOR s LI-HOUSES FOR SALi! -HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSIS FOR SALE ~ -HOUSES l'OR SALE HOUSES FOil SALE ·~l-G:.:_:::..::,.;:;o=l~...::;.:.o...:;=1=009'--Gonor= ~ lOGO G-rol lOOOG-ol llMIO 0.norol IOOOGOMral UICll MoN Doi Mar 1105 Now~'!_Sho=r.:. .. :__1:;:22::1 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;!;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::~~~~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;1~iiiii~;.--·~~ii~~----iiiiiii /LCE 4 br, 2 ba, Meu clel e RELAXl l e c.,..,. ~Mar 1~ ofinJa J~fe fRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 26 Linda Isla Drive Corp. owned. S Br. 5 bath home facing lfarbor j _llland. Ja~uui. &. ~aun.a. Coll!p, tum., lor i !mmed. occup. W/dock ............ $200,000 ~ , , ; 1 J . • . , .. • j ' . 60 Lindi Isl• Drive Newly listed. Prestige waterfront home. 4 extra lg. Br. 4 ba, pwdr. rm. Lge. liv. rm. &: den; 3 car gar. Beaut patio/garden. Deck & dock ....................... ,220,000 17 Linda 111• Drive New 5 Br .• 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Huge mstr Br. has beam ceil. &: own trplc. Large liv. & farn. rms. w/lrplcs. w /deck ...... $185,000 No. 54: Waterfront Lots On lagoon. With plans ..... $60,000 No. 41 : W /76.2 Ft. of long water view ·racing Harbor Island. With home ....•.. '295,000 No. 76: Wide lot on lagoon ........ $85,000 No. 88: Corner Point lot with 118 ft. of front- age. Long water view. Plans available. For complete information on •II other homes & loh, call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Manager of Linda Isle from Its inception to completion US Dovor Dr., Suite 3, N.I. 642-4620 llMIOGonorol DOVER SHORES "the" place ta live 1000 * VIEW LOTS -beautiful Galaxy Dr. lo- cation. Prices start at $25,100. WESTCLIFF r8:. S.. Col .... Raoltv hr Mu. N-palot and erpt. ld•at beuh • .......,,. EZ Lovely 3 BR., fam. rm. home can be you rs ' MESA VERDE GOLi' Pri«d &C<01'41'1dy, 549-3583 •o.1ni...,,... ""'" ID '""· with only 10% down & assume large 5'h% COURSE CUSTOM Ma11 Vorel• 1110 J>OOI. l•MI> """"· ' BR. loan. Full price ,.a,500. EGE HOM&S Iron! '6'.JOO to 'Bo .. 1,.. tam, nn. Im,,,.., · RE.&1..-r\i occu1>1ncy! $27.500. HARBOR VIEW HOME . "'"' r $'2,540 IY OWNER Open Sot/Sun. l·S Beautifully upgroded 4 BR., profess. land-1116 Jomolco Rd eu.tom built. • bedrm. tam. 447 '2nd Streat -QUIET COVE OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 T BR., S.~ ba.. Family ll t'\lm.. 9Ut ""· l..ar;:est ~ Sot in Harbor Vk w JllU.! DON V. l'RANKLIN RNltw • '7J.2221 • scaped. Sprinklers front & Nlar. Huge Cul 3065 Country Club Dr. Fun • -'° band tn Uy room, 2 bii ~-BOYD REAL TY De Sac lot, will take big pool & leave large Lo~·. rambHna. spacious band ln this hup black· This beautltut home OYU· 3629 E. Coast Hwy., CdM OPEN 1 • 5 lawn areas. $48.000 & YOU OWN \HE LA.ND. Calif. modem with about walnut-pen@lled ab' eondi· looks the 17th l'a.irwa.y ot • 47.S.StlO • Less than l yr. old, but owner transferred & ~~Qt.1~ :f ~~: t uoned pme room with 12• Mesa Verde Golf Coone. -=========-I 609 POINSETTIA selling below his cost. !Arnily, formal dining &: wet bar Bolv er!~king the ~% ~~Joan..,'.., 900 3038 University P•rk 1237 3 Bdmu., t ba. front hOuw: p me rooms. Even a lln,y cr.une. 4 g uo:urooms a.<i: ava sw. • .,,.., • rtlf!:W t BR.. den. 1 baU. aiiit NEWPORT HEIGHTS pUttlns green! br,~~kf:!t =·~~~ai: BY OWNER ~ 4 Br. l Ba. ''L• SALLE'' Ex~ally11barp. 81~ Immaculate 3 Br. 2 Bath home on lge. cor· beautiful extras. 3 CM' aar. Lrg f.amlly rm, ls tht name or thil noor plan. Scenic Properties :~~~~ie. '35,000, With irnmed. occupancy 3040 C•prl L•ne 3090 S.11 Circle ~~~-~::S ~n.-os! :~~~ri~~~~ Designed tor just the right About 175' along the 15th Vilta yard. "Tinkling" fountain in BAYFRONT LOT 2119 Bayside Drive BAYCREST Exceptional 3 Br. 3 Ba. & pool home. Owner will carry.lge. 7'h% loan. 675"000 CALL ANYTIME 67l-3000 family a truly large (2522 fairway, and an occaslona.l I~~'==-----li ~q. ft.) cwtom "two bed· view of ocean A. Ot.talina. BY OWNER · 4 br, tam nn. e.ntry courtyard. 2-S1Y. v, room" -1uch about 15' Big 5 bedroom + tonver-Immac? Beaut. decor. quiet rm. Frplc. in tiv. rm. A JC 25'1. Grecian tub, rad!· tible study 4: both dining st. $41,500. l'713 Mtnarea, matr. bdrm, z:Q) sQ. ft. of ant heat, plumbed for pool. & family rooms, 4 beths. S:Mi--0116 sood living! Prime loc. on Truly dirrerent & in terest· Sparkllng, fully equJpped I ·TIRED---.-,-.,.-, -old-funu--. ..,.-! rrttnbelt. $38,500. Price in- ing floor plan &: expand-pool -most inviting. Spe-dudes a ··Forever" view, bo C M to reA1•-. Just ntch the SS Ft bulkhead wtth pier area.'$2:11,000 (Fee J11imple). Biii Gr11ndy, Rltr. 833 Dover Dr., N.S. 642-462D I able. claJ brochure available. It'• nally not that hard BOB PETIIT, Re•ltor 1500 Ad•m• at Har r. 01ta e1a _..... "SINCE 1946" ll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·:1~~(n~o~o~r~C~i~no~m~o~theater) 546-SllO :row:: i!' ~ Daya IU-0101 Nlghh Genaro! 1000Gonerol 1000 s.ct!on. TRULY A BARGAIN Gonor _a_l _____ l_OOO_ I General t• --------Owner has drastically reduc--Newport leach 1200 ed !ht-price ... wantx Im· W. Boy Wot.rf.....t Beaudtul. newly redec, 4 BR + bonus room. Patio-cfeck. beP.Cb·pier &: slip. $115,QOO. Bill Grundy, Realtor 83:" Dover Or., N.B. 642-4S20 THE TOWERS Panoramic qay & ocean View. Exclu- sive 2 bedroom apartments. Elevators. terraces, Jacuzzi pool 7% Financing with 10% down. Very special buy! $44,500 To $58,500. Open Daily 1-5 P .M. 3121 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach. MACNAB • IRVINE 675-J210 DANDY DUPLEX FHA-VA TE~MS Great family home with 1500 sq. ft. ot iiving space, 3 big beodrooms, gigantic rampy room. Lge. backyard w/&fl- tio & many fruit trees. The VA says Jf's \\'Orth $~.000. It's yours tor that p:-i~! - /fila.. COATS ~ wAt't.AcE REALTORS 9551 Hamilton Ave. Huntington Beach 962-4454 EVERYTHING I I View • POOi • 4 BR .• 3 Bathl, bar •. new drapes • new car. pet • new paint Now vacant &. ready -see thia l'rvine Terrace home TIO\V! $79.500. CURT DOSH, Realtor 64U472 Eves. 613-346.! 1730 \V. Coast High>A'a.Y Costa Meu 1100 6% LOAN mediate otter on this 4 bcJ.. ENCHANTING VIEW rm. 2* bath townhouse. Xlnt View of Bay & Ocean, spark. grttnbelt toe. \Vill !lell with Unr lites at nite. Prestigious small down paymt. Full Clift Dr. 3 BR., 2 Ba., • price $30.000. Lido Isle 1351 large iuest rm, Court yard e Red Hill Realty patio. Owner moved to Univ. Park Ctnter, Irvine OPEN SUN. 1-5 Europe, anxious lor ofter. Call Anytime ~ AU Broke.rs Welcome $59,900. ""'!~~~~~~ 128 VIA HAVRE CHINA COVE 1._ S BDRM., tamily mom. MILLION$ VIEW Turtle Rock -~ Street to street. A beauti-- Vlew overlookin& Harbor, OPEN House SUn. 4 BR, ful, immaculate homt'. jetty, .l Ocff.n. A pleuant Fam rm. 3 ba, kar pr, S9'1',(0J & exclU1i,·e community-: 3 View, Aero. from park. BR., large liv. nn., view tmmed. occup. J 8 9 O 5 balcony, 3 prqts. Best buy Antioch Dr, Irvlne. Owner, in the Co\'e at $64,900. 833-3712 WANTED . 2-STY. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Fam. rm. OCEANFRONT amall house A&a\lm~ 6% % Joa.n. 10% or duplex \\'&Tiied by ready Dn. 18805 Tabor. 833-2929 -" 216 VIA GENOA 3 BR,. family roorn. 3 Car ........ S19.500 LIDO REALTY INC. 331T Via Lldo 673-131Xl 45' lot-lSl,500 * EXCITING 2 story, View from every room, 2 Story, beamed ceiling living roo~. 4 bedrms, 3 baths, parquet floor family rm .. expensively carpeted, draped, land· scaped. $89,500. 10°/o Dawn VA Can be asswned by anyone, Large 3 bed.ml, 2 bath, tam. ily room. Beautifully decor- ated thruout, w/w crpts It C'Ustom drapes. $170 Mo pays everything Incl taxes. For all detail& call 540-fill. CA.LL G> t4t•l414 I/~.~ E11tbluff 1242 moo _._ 3 br, '" ba. ---- Located near Santa Ana Country Club in e.iccellent neighborhood. Big yard for owners ~ and let tenant pay part ot your wa,y, ·i * UNUSUAL 5 bedroom View home. Unique floor plan with 2 bedrooms & bath in one wing. Formal dining rm., crptd family room with 2nd fireplace. $95,000. $31,500 * * * * * TERRIFIC TRIPLEX ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors $41,500 ' ' • 4 BED ,:' BEAUTIFUL ·I : ONLY $26, 900 ... Hu.p tftes. New carpetB (red lhar in den). The owner has •' created a truly liveable , homt'. $1000 down FHA or ; tr)' No Down VA. •\ •I JMN111101, · l Nichols Real Estate " " ' 546-9521 A WHIZZ-BANG VALUE ' We'll ro to bat on this 4 bed. room condominium, pcll'Ji!lvl!. 1 Iy priced be:low reproduction ,• cost. Thi.!t home looks just 1 like a model home and )'(>U ~ 1 can buy furnished or untum. •) ilhed. $195. Prine., int., ' I • \ ' taxes, ins. PAOL-WBlll CARlf A.BAii as.&lo'IT CO. ) 1093 Baker, C.J\f. 1915 CHUBASCO DR., Ir- vine Terr., Corona Del Mar. (1nytime) 4 BR., Pool. !~:;:;;:;:;;~~~~~= Call : Patrick Wood 545-2300 1: $2l,SOO e Bill Hoven Rltr. l 2 HOMES • 1 LOT ZUl E. Coast. CdM 673-321 Start building YOUR ES.- REDUCED TATE mth th;, "M'iHo $1300 value In excellent rental area. 2 bedroom + l bed- O"•ner sa,ys "sell'' his va. room + double garage. Sell. cant 3 bedroom 2 bath homl! tr \\'ill pay points for your in COLLEGE PARK. 1650 FHA or VA loan! square feet of living space. W I k 0_ L G" BuHt-Ins. N•w C•rp<I" a er II( ee Newly painted. Heavy ahake root Doubl~ car garage. As-ro43 WestcJif( Dr, sume a 5'h% $158 PITI VA 646-ml Loan. What ~re could you Open 'Lil 9:00 P~f ... '°' at • low priO< of JUST A PITCH $27.900. call 546-2313 AND PUTI 'O THE REAL \"\. ESTATE:RS From Irvine golf club. Tucked away in desirable Irvine TelTa.Ct . O!liy a few 8hot1 blocks to Faahion Island ' ---------1 shopping center. Vacant two 'kfJ@~!p Leases bedroom & den doll house . ..... ----111 <I 3 Bedrooms&; family rm, In move in condition. Only Nt\\')>Ort West homes Hun. $40.950. Call 673-8550. Ungton Beach, Asking .. ! OUTSTANDING m s. Poss.Ible option to ~1 Hilll!M, inner circle home. buy at S.12,500 or offer. O THE REAL \"\. CSTATERS ~ 4 Bedroom, master bedrm ./ Completely furnished, l l ~::;;:::;;;;;;;~ downstairs & formal dining &: famJly near 20th & Ir-!• 1 nn & clen. Coverl!d patio viht, C,M, on cul-de·sac. DON'T MISS'. ' . open.~ to perfect yard. I!~ Available ~pl. lat. for blockt to Mesa Verde Gou 10 nlOllthl!. $32S. Club. 1919 Suva Circle. (Open Eveninpl "'·"°· ')ll<sii\ en\, J\,ati~ 546-5990 FOURPLEX fl"IC'C!m• $fAi5. Sdl or trade for "' hoose. " FORTIN CO. &C~ DUPLEX \ou_th Coast COLLIGE P>,RK TAKE OVER LOAN lmmedlete Po11e11lon l Spaciowl, ~ bedrm, family Sharp 8uct(lla Ranch ttyll! rm hO~ In .,.rk like set. on tree lined ltl'fft. 3 hu1e tlni. Cttrona dcl. Mar Hi&ll br. Family nn. Cheery fire. School, ror appolntment, •. pt,.,., N•w Paint. """""' J S "tit R II VA loon, Start "'"'°' her<, ean mf I ea or C.a!I 645-tllOO. 4 BR I No Dn Mesa Verde 'O 'THEREAL IC' ES'.J'ATERS 0Wl'I your home tor le11s lh1'n S ront. Nice b(>droon'li, 16· Uv. * 5 HOU ES * Z BR. l~ SA Condominium. Ing iwm. \Va!ltK"r, rfry~r. On extra farce Joi. $49.!iOO. All electric. Nr Meaa Verde On large come1" lot \\•It h ro0m to bulld. Excellent I f'.a!tlkJe )OC"ation, $26,5()0. ! Well1-McCt rdle, Rltr1. f 1JlO Newport Blvd. C.J\.1 . ' !Wl-1729 Evf•. 644.QQW FOREST L OLSON fridge lltove ln<'Judt'ld ~p. L.0\V DOWN. "-"'"' CC. 5'."t--0214 • .,.._ ... ,,646-3 ..... 25 .. s .......... 1 Ant.le • P""i"'' A Tf'ai bar 494-5488 546-16911 Eves. DIAL dlred 64J-Q678. Charp 16MY2Pfibf WM XBY1 pin and 11'1 R·1 CaflMONEY iN YOUR your ad. thtn sit b11ick and Olal ~~ fm R.ESUL TS 645-n.103. POCKET! lbt4!n to the phonl 111'(1 Near N1•p•rl P••t Offlce OPEN HOUSE OCCUPANCY BEFORE SCHOOL OCEAN View. S Sr. 2 S..thl!. All elec. ltltch. l ltd. pool. ~ ntmJN.t nn w/l>ar. sm.900. By owner 6'kln PLA.NNING to move1 Yoo'U find an a.m1.zlna number of bomt• ln today's aaum.d Ada. CMck them mw . • 615-2643 or 497--1265 PRIME LOT. OWNER I ..::::::=::::::====:;:;-I Lge 2 story. l BR, J ba, tam Huntlneton hach 1G rm home, prof. landscaped; [ ;::;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 overlook Back Bay. $56,9"' 2957 Catalpa. e &M-Ob-i e EAST BLUFF LUSK PLAN·D: 4 br, 3 ba. PLUS den w/view.lz. heat· eel pool crpts/drp11. 8J5.0801 * * t.1.n. Norton BLUFFS: Condo 2 Br. 2\; ba.. den. Spilt le:vel, <..iloieest greenbelt. $38,500. By Oi<ner M4-4906 LUSK 5 Br. 3 Ba. ram rm. prohm, ldscpd, xlnt (.'(Ind. $57,500. Ownr. M4-08Ei6 Back Country liYinf lH beaut i ( u I Huntington lk'aeh, biag:e1t bedrooms ev. f'r nu. custom beauty i9 ideally situated l)l':ar all freeways and a few miles to ? beach. S550 Total down payml!nt, $183 per mo .• $21000 full priCI!. REAL FSTATE HUNTINGTON BEACH Of'C. Corono dal Mor 1250 lff.5Jll 434'7511 ==:.:..=..;.;.:.:.:.. _ _c;;_ Open 1 ~ -8:30 to 8:30 OPEN EVERY DAY 1-5 709 LARKSPUR STORYBOOK HOME PLUS INCOME Ru.roe charm would be the understatement ot ~ year fGr this extraordinary ooe- of-a.kind 2 bedroom Z bath home plus a handy income unit out back. Lo~ly tor only $49,50CI. Call 673-K{iO. O THE REAL \"\. ESTATERS Ou1tt1ndl"1 Buy In IRVINE TERRACE 3 br, ram.Uy rm. ).'.\nt e¢Tld, Healtd A Rllettd pool, Lee. lei, lll.llb.ly tand11eapt'd, llil,SOO Open llouse l.S Sat. A Suri. 1800 Sabrina Timi.r~ G.I. ·RESALE · $148 P/M PAYS ALL You can u.sume subject to 6Sb Gt loan · this sharp 3 bedroom hOme with custom avocado shag carpets, drapes, modem step-saver kitchen on an oversize. 88 X 100 Jot. $23.000 FULL PRICE .. Hurry, it m&y a.J. rtady be gone! Walker & Lee Real ton 7682 Edillitr SU-4455 54()..$140 LEASE OPTION JOG TO BEA~ Picturesque l star)' sh&ke root Slate entry. Larrre stone lireplaCf', 4 bup bed· rooms. ruchly paneled ram. ily room. VA terme, mbvt' in now with option lo buy & easy l"l!nt Hurry! Ciill 645-0303. • 4 BEDROOM HOME with assumable low interest loan. $185 monthly payg everything. Elee bltina, ,.1w cn>ti &: lovely dtps ~ out. Call 847-SS31. REAL fSTAIE MART $24,750 POOL lJ&F, 4 Bedrrn. ;t,._ bathil. Cl!!an &: Jharp. aoae to beach. 1'1exible terma. 847-8307 Eve1: 642--0427 tnih§ll!t\iJ JOG TO BEACH! 3 to 7 Bednns, Z to c· bl.lbs, up to 3000 sq. ft., aha~ roofs, all bltm & carpel"1a, E·Z financing from s.26.990. R•ncho Le Cuest• BrookhU1'11t & Atlanta 9GS-2929 • U Mf to 8 PM WANT LOTSA ROOM? Hert'• a 4 bedroom hoin<! '"Ith a 21 · lh•lna rin. 2 baths, new w/w ~ crptg thruoUt. lo(s ot tall Calif. shade tor privacy, A doll house "'1th a amaU do\\•n payment Ii t~ over $148 per mo loan, $25.~ f\IU prlr.e. REAL ESTATE HUNTINGTON BEAClt OFC. IM-5313 ~1511 Open 7 daya -8:30 to 8:10 I SAVE $4,aeol J1nmcd po&.'I. Beaut. 4 br, 2 ba, ""' "'"· lt<hq>na, ahar crptJ.. beaut. cl.raped tbtuout. t blk irom bch. SJ2:.S00, O"'llC\f \\'ill cury 2ntl ,,,.,,,... •• ~96(, -~------.-....................... ------------~~~~-~-~-------~--------------ji! a ' :s e; ~;; •as s • • • ,. • • '" • frid.IJ, "-1 14, lt7D IB~ilfl~llHISUl'llSflFOOltifSirli)iiillliiT.AU_ ; .-lt1N'{Al5 • -....r~.... lllNTALS ' ~INTALS RINTALS ....... ,.,.,..... ""''"'·"""'"""'°' 111 -""'""""'"" _ Af!to. f~lthell """" ,.,,,,.,,... •• ..... ..... DIS -· .. !:!°!)•!!'"'!!!!"~·~ .. ~·~~4-~!"'!!~·~l*'!Mclf~~~L..!•!!•!! j . ..!!~!:'!l!~.!!~~~!'!!!!!!!!!!!!'.!..!=::..:=1 .,,-,--. , . ~.iMar me . ... :; ~ -..,... 1ftft' OPEN --olr, '"'a S> ~ 8.oot. ~ ' • IST Ta , .,. _.. ta .,. -..t c.111. ..._ 4 Br. ~ '•. $115>.S lit. ~ Gt<• """' 1'-' BR. doA. 2114 * '::::~ A KIL l llR. SBA. -...--+ s Br -w..1'.-' ~~·*"'°· 4 ' • .... J '-th crpt:a. d:t1ISo an,L Cardne . -t~ ' ...... ~ li'Call -.t * 22 5 t) llcldllil wi6 ~ • / sprlallle r1 J BL ...,... qt. 2 CU> 813 I lietl(~ "" VERY ... . -All!,, -t-. -.,... _. ~ -· """' "" ' ...... * PtX8: -u"'a ! ,, ..... __:.___ l"P'--....... -. ,..._ ft-. IJ>.--11111r_,,:~,1111>. -Ill>. 1-t .... ~"' Mllltl!...., -._ SEPAR. .· . _ • ..,, .__. " • .,... = Am -,_ ""' ~ J.ARGE c !Ir, S Ba, -. UTIU: IWJIOA JSLAND c "!'. ,2 -BA, -·~ ••'/ r , ,p '1oiiiiitim --... ,_ tor boat•-... -. c l!R. 2 Ba. ....... ..,.i.Na t..,c:ldliiii<tlll>e! Hilwflflllii._ -~--· ~ Owaer/Blrer. Loftb'pt.tlo.•A.U.oa.Jlty. VACAN"ll . , · .\• · --. in.-. .... ---at $l00-lh __,._., 6U-1'Jf 2 811, 2 "" condo 1 ml PIUCE. -Real Elttle -l1!0 2 Bl( """""" Stow -b<t,<JL ~--IL I L Min .... Viii" 11!,I s jilt. :Ill .... ~ .. nn. )(<ly 11,d."""' -Clli1<I ... ' ~ = ~i:::r :'~ I .. er ee OPEN Sot• SW.. U<. -~ Wt; $40ll Ind atil. m .. -•. , """1U ....,; <OUl'l. ~ MM/Fri ,q. l\.tal bomt oa MillicaA Viejo GoU No pets m.18M aft. f -· 1 · a..s, a&-4310: Aft. 5::.> l --" °"'"'· 'l'Ue °""" Vliley Costa -31• ' wtmda ,.,.,_ ... 1or fiiiicia Ellllr 510S140 ult. ...,_ -. Act ............... loach -2 Ill. DUP'LIX O>uck. m..am flft. ONE Ytu J.tut, ..,. 2 BR. ()opts, c:trpi, bUins. w=ALK=-=,..=-_ """""'"""""•:-'"-:;-""",.,,-;-:-· .._~,-..,.. _. s... a.-1n1 -. rdric. ,....... Lr1. ,..,.... Y' fw &owl u..,. ·• "'· ' .._ :-. -,.... -....,. -.. -· -pr. s ChlWren & P'-. !annal dinlDc mt •• '< """ ,_. a ..-.tnfall Bar, BLUFF nck"'+••, 2 ..r,. 4 bidll to ocan.. in mo. ind Prlv pr S150 ~w/~tJo. ~ mo. bltla rw.ro OWrll. ~ .... 2 fUll • 2 wt .... p,rdener, ~ Rlty Ill Paularh.o. C.M. 5'9.1.T ... ,,, st 7 ...... ~ Pnva.te .aet '° 'owtl. lfT...mJ. -commtY Oub vm. CODI.tr». "l!Dim b, poa1.. m 00tm. ~,..,,, view, -..soo. ~ 2715 3 hr, 2"' bl.. trp1c. 2-cu 3 BR J Ba IN NEWPORT WEST. Cpts, drpl.. bltins -walk to ICftools • b@t.ch. S26Smo.-tall e9Cl'W' -. IDday ~°"""~~~'1>~'1~~m~-~~<r=I Lef'IM pr., pool. Adjacent Memo --.. ' · m-.2lll by ......... ""1t v~....... ,._,.-., Club. s BR ocean w, 1~ bib tD ~ ..__._:? !-:::========= o-,,_ 11• ......_ 12'<1 mo. 1 Bit Jl" ,._.•In Valley 3411 (-1 ·p mo. G&-1'TIJ ar 21l/24USl5. FOR i.-. 4 BR. Jli. BA. -LDOICING FOil AN O>wrod -· <r -· LEASE. lowly ... S 'BR · WALIC TO BEACH FHA S\lt% LOAN? Cepim-loach lnt ""''"'° only S21ll. -· on cul-&ac. 131» mo, 9' VA Lou-Pmnts kir:' We haw it • on U:d& ~acu--OCEANntONT •. 4 BJt 2 BA. ,-""..,,,';;-PP~';;;t.;;;;:-;;;;;;--;;;;;;;-1= ... ="=',.'°'="',.·=-==== ltaa ttnt.. S,.C. l bt., li-lair 3 BR.. 2 &., w/VtrW of dlD mo. i..e..1 Sept. ii tllN 1 BR bclilDe. Bed, stow, r..--. 3 ba, Medlt. ~ beaut. San Ju.an Valley 1= lime 1L ~ n:fric. Steo ind. u:HL Adulta LefUM ... c:h --~ ~ ~ OONA, l»ce tamU,y rm. • • c;!Y· No dop 2331' ~ AVAlL St-pt. 10, 3 br, 2~ bll. P!~ In trs. ~·rm. cu• =t:.o::· :::= VecatW Rental• 2tOI Jd~~TICELLO • attr ~';..N~:.U i!'3~ • ftn,drp&.crpt.536-11'10, to street lot. Only $!0,500. BAL•BOA PerlnlD.16-detox fUm/unr 3 Br. 2·aa tnhse: mo. Up Wn2ey to 3)312 m.mt. ~to re-POINT REALTY ctupiH. J br ea. Sl!iO wk bal", p1,t,, 9001, $250. orittwOodOr.499-3081 at SSl.!ll»:<>wner. M15i5 Oout Hwy., Dana. P¢nt aummtt, SlTS ma winter. 961-»n'. ,..., -.n v~ ru ep,re.. 2llfe9M(lll --------BEAv,, 3 ...,., nr .w. -=.,., .. y ,._. 1411 ('llf) 49C-5m er <I 3 BR. 2 Batbs, din rm, $350/mo. Morrni. 'A; Eve, I I _.,. •DEEDED BE.lCB MXES.S -frpk'. ~-VACANT. Will 494-2921. or wori1: 6f4..2ll3 SPANISH STYLE Quiet nlltk UM nr. IUfllllMf' ........ 2t10 be lhOwn Son aft 10. 250 E. e:irt. 224 c Bednn ...,,. In ""' .,.. • -"""""" ""'-~ 3 Bd LAOUNA llACH 11oy St. 213' !ln-2"1< : -. • uw. --..Collom l llo + ....... .-.... CoNDOMJNIUM 'BR .... cpb, """· . ,':!,._mta;_!'lt ..!:! ~-~:!! ~ =·:.nit::mr lmely Blue Lqoon Villa. 2 f!fleed yard, S165 tno. -.--"DA UO<C&~ .. ,:::~:,;·-======::;::-1 BR, 2 BA campletely fUrn. •M>~* CHIWREN OK, Do pd:I, 2 hr, den, yn lae. Ir7 Q i. qUibL Open Sat • SUn. (213} lOT..,,., -$31,UIO. S Ot-lm ilhed. 1iJJem. di*&. etc. l BR 2 ba M<lflt:iio!llo tnhat, JiAPFDAl ltEAl TY ..!!!__':!'"' Wube•/-. Avail A"' 22. cpt/<hp. ftC. 1'lc $2IO ..,, letUNI Ni,...I 1ft.44e5 WOUW YOU BElJEVE?' Sept s. -.2152 AM er Sa""l'-M99 a.fler 6, on Wkndl. ..,...J'I R. 2 37'7 l..£ASE -· 3 B • OPEN HOUSE SUN 01stom 3 br. a dell> adobe arr.mt anytime. •2 BR-$135 mo. BA, ~ dips, VIEW. ~ 4 Br, redMJOd borne. NaUed in ll&i. mo., 2 BR. bea.utifulb' 1987-B Oiarle. Child BEACH • POOL prtv. • ,,. :Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newpo~ Beach · lt"1 !1111. be JUlfPbors &114 prbli8o IMa:, ail fn one..liDl;miOUI pacbp. 11i1t11 Oak-· ,vood Girdft .Apirtmeru1 ia Ne1vport Reach. just minatea:froia. Balboa'i-Bi.y and beaCbes .. There's• s/, million dolltt Club.house ),\·it h ,party room;liilliardJ room, indoor xolf driv· iag r1nge,·men's and.Women'a liealth clubs • saunas, tenniJ cpurts. reaident tennis pro And ·pf9 ·shop, and OJYJ!lpic .size .pool .All th is. and much more, ju.st steps from. you r profe11ion~IY .decorated apartmenl. r.a•:h . ,~·ith :private·balcony/palioa. Air conditio1~­ jn;Jftreplace1 optional Ookwoocl GardftApor .. •til1 0• 16lh Strtet htwea lrvi•e u ,d Davsr Dr. . (714) 14Ul70. a,w...~ 1 •s...,.....u1 ... f11r11WM ., uh~ ·S1il l•.l11L .. i..Miall Oc;~p._,. f.IJnib' rm. 3 cv pnae, 5+ Ac. of ·~ ~ tn turn .• •/dsl!wlbr, wuhl!r, ok. No pets. &C-2259 830-Un bo1it door, dbl frpl. bmal Valenda CftDIH.. Fvttl drytt A: pogL AdaJts or l HOOSE Jn court. Crpt.s, "'========= =========-;-=:======== t>r. Jl 2!1 -. Trlr yard. -,,__ Cnfl>&m,:;: child. Avail,, 8"" Sept, at ..... 2 BR. 1 child ok. Ml11len Vlei• J7ll Gonorol -Coste MoH O' pR.. ·Atriain. 1'1&50 Sln Cllllftl. doc "pen. , lM Dd Gldo Rd-. J)an 0.. 976 W, 17th St., CM. --~-;;;~~~;;;:~~; 1:-:--: ~ Ctrde. -Ull ::"'.;,,. -,..,,,._ 1-nc. ....... ~ .._ s SMALL ' Bit ROUSE. RENTAL option "' ..n. ' • * SUNNY * . 4 Br, 2 ho. w/Wn. pm, · GARAGE. NO OOGS. 'f• 4 ':;,~· .:'; PALM MESA APJS. ·1m. ~w .,,,.._ ,,...,.. .......... -fwS.lo 1m lVooD'SO>VE,t.a1un • Sllll . .....,.. :,;~151.,;Tpm · * ACRES * ~ ..... .., •"'"-,. .....,. ....,..e Beach. """ % block ID * 2 1IR. stow, ,.lria. apts. --' BR FURN. 1149.50 * Mo~l-Apts. * 'm% m.A Full Price * UN · 345 Bachelon ftirnlshed •• -~ 450 See · to ~te' * .LAG A beach. 1 l 2 BR Qts8from ~~· A8dults;...no iwts. D•n• Point 3740 from $13.'i. Studio A I ledreema _o&...jby....,..,11111..h B''"H "* $150wk..Zll5S.°'*" ">· ·~~• t.~• I o · L-. FV 961-'631 ~ lf , 4911630,, -499-3!Z9 2 BR. 1 dil1d wdcome. No 2 BR home. oceu view. $175 mo. mo. K vn RATIS ' ' ' lnc:om. will carry unique 1 SO. LAGUNA. DLX turn. per.. $1.tS mo. J.91> Wal.lice. mo. on year lae, lit I: Jut e POOL Day, \Vetk or ?tiontb ~ Delp!n,te. 2 Br. bedroom units. Private-Pl· Stild» ~ Cottap. 4 Call 548--280'2 nq'd, BHn1. lenoed yard. e SAUNA e Color TV Air Cood. 2 S.. TSbun:m Como. $1,900 tx., ocean view, dme -fmn beh. Pvt' p.&, Avail hnmed. 5 46-2759, e JACUZZI e Pool le. Phone Serv incl a,.ane mA 1ot.n. 9611110 beadl, aboppifll'. Ov.'De' cori. $100 wkly w/ utll '= linena. Mia• V•r4e 'Jlll 34096 D Contento 1Sli1 Mna Dr. Com. Meu. e Maid Sen1ce avail • MACNIP'ICENT Ptlol, 5 sider land coo.tract, Acent (9')....0)1 -~-------1 FFOORRi1i:ix0i•liSE>:;", cc1eiiR.i'.:2iBea&:. I PhoM J46..tl60 1 SlaNJ. So. of O.C. ......_. .. ~. A: dtps 4!M-65!M v RtiJJy :S BR 2 N ft.m rm, dbl frpl, New paint '= carpetlnc. 2 I !!!!~~~~~~!!!'!!'!!! F~ 41DO • I 1ll BIGllUllB •,1Scott1ah '?raat" 161'1 PerluW. Ln. Ml•· ~·IHt ·Sin Diop frwr to ·Beach Blvd. 4 bib So. to Holt. w. on Holt 1 bllc. lA QUINTA HERMOSA "Modern Spanish" 16211 P•rluldo ln . Mt•· 147.$441 - l'URNISHID MODELS NOW OPEN Lush landscaping, cabana. cove.;eit court· yards, llllllken swim'g pools, BBQ• & foun- lains. "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" 1 BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From $175 All ufll. Incl. furn & Unfur~. CHI• Mou 41DO Lagune lloach 4115 I NASsAu PALMS • 1 It 2 TO Mature e.mplo)-K v.vma.n BR Apts.. Furn h Un!. Pool, .,~1/ttferenoes,, ch&rm~ 1 pinJ-ponr BBQ s b • d y BR, clean, quaint. resX!en- !av.ns. iTr E.' '2r.d St. tial M~bortlood. clo1e 1)4?-3645 :thopplna & beach. $115 mo. $150 -vecy nice 7 BR mobile .:1::<rl::·_:"c::til::., .c49'-33c.,,;c.9'!~-,..--I home, $100 -1 BR. trlr. e $15G-Lovely 1 Br. apt Adults 0~ no 1J8\5. 132 * $ll~Studlo. Near beach! \V, Wilson, CM 54S..9517 Reap _ ErnpJ.y'd adults. Furn. 1 BR I. 494-@X> BACHILOR LGE 1 BR, 2 blkl ID bch. 2111 N.-t Blvd, CM N•'"1 turn. J1&; incl util ·r-WkndJI: 49'Hlr58I -Newport llooch 4200 BA YCLIFF MOTJ:l 2 SR, 2 BA, view, % blk bch. No child, no pet: SS&! mo. be. Mn. Nep 494-5250 * LO\\. WEEKLY RATES * s;;o;;;.,te Kltchen, TY '•. maid aervice . Heated Pool. 646-J265 1 BR, liv rm, kit ~ bath Clcf!an view, wlk to heh, 1 l. 2 BR furn il. unfum. 1hoppi n1 " 1how, Crpts, drps, patio, pool, bit. reuonable rate 492-~ ns. tl40 to $160. Se.aclltt ~·~,._,,,:;;,"=-''·~,.-----I ""'°' Apts. 1525 Plocentio. RENTALS 518-"'2 uk al>oul our di>-Apte. Unfvmhh .. count • OCEAN V1£w -Winter lae -2 br, im mo; or 2 br + fam. rm. $250 mo. Fami· Ty w/sm dilldrf'n o k. 642--5436 Gener•I 5000 VEN DOME IMMACULATE APTS! ADULT and 1'"AMILY Stetion Clon to oltoppl"I, Park * Spa.cl.ow 3 BR'•, 2 bi. 2·"n"'°""'UP"'P"'ER-=w.lk=;:--;10-;:bdl7, I * Sw1m pool, put/ireen $250 Incl util. Yrl)t avail * Frpl, lndiv/lndry tac'i.J 911 n+67>7045, 213 -1145 An1h1lm Ave. OCEANF'RONT lower duplex, 2 BR, l 'ii ba, frp.lc $245 mo, Avail 9/10 to 6110 646-2830 441-9443 COSTA MESA 6d..2l2.t -;;;;:-;;;, -· · · UDO.-LINDA Ille, -cp</d'!' • ..-yml. Otlldnn OJ<. 17?5 M""lh RENT f'-IJUR[ 2376 N-" Blvd. Pb' $.1'1_.., 9&1-2C21 . RENTALS Dr. " Pen1ft. wa1n'fronU, $225. 673-5809 POlNT REALTY -496-5:123 UM 54&-9755 SPACIOUS Oceanfront Apt. · · tt.uHf Furnished of!-watft' Udo tmmu. T S MERRIMAC WOODS new 2 Br: Adul~. no pets. Year· CCMP.UUBT 1715 8!l1 Gn!Jldy, RI"-142-ClO No-rt ... ch 3i1i REN Al . * Dll\ECl' TO TENANT lurwy ,_,BR..-. 425 -',,,',,.IJoo-=trno,---..,m.,--"°'_,---1~---------Gener•I 20ll BALBOA lal Attr. 1 Bl' apt, ·-Apta. '""'....... 24-Hr, Delivery Merrimac Way. 56-6300 See LRG.U_Brm, lurn. apt. year· PANORAMIC ;-Gant Conage .,.. .. A .. thntL&llar_Doy. llAYCREST a-r•I -~ ... ~~ clu.SIDO ly .... !no, 211%""" St. '"t.=~~:r 1 • OCEAN VIEW \Vllltft'JlO ~. 513-150.1 3 BednioaJ. pool newly dee· Low •.• fll/mo. LG=E'", "'1-Blt=,-..,,..,.,-0..,---, ~bltno~-.1 cNS.-;;;;m-<5119====== Hundrtds ot Apartmnll ·BR'•. plus faml!7 rm., '~u~ :-:.· :,ew =::; CdM ~ Jtot!!le· .,,. 5• orated. 60M 'to xhoola, Just For JG.Day Mlnimwn S1lO mo. inquire 1'5-B • \VINTER RENTALS • UQ!d N~ 1 Bath ~. CatbearaJ cell., . · -:.-' on bead'l. ~ $50 shOppinS a. tr&NpOrt&tion * WIDE VARIETY James St. 6G-8017 or Rent NOW SIM' Sept.! C•ll Ml-M5' • .... llvin& ""·· ...... rm.. TODAY! lntlo S.2'51 .,-. "511 wt......... ""'Pu month. . s· I Ad I CUSTOM FURNITURE , ... ,,,. ABBEY REALTY 641-3850 I "!!'!!!!!"~!"'l!'!!'!""'!'!!'l!'!'""'I ........ """· l<vol, m1n1-H-F " 64 Rl!NTALS 1n• e II ts RENTAL 0 B"E"Atrr=1ru=u.7"y--;;FU;-;RN=.-LUXURIOUS Be.ch fmL 2 •m:w 1-2-3 SR'~ All bltm ::m ma::!:· tnne1:: ':. ~ !J'~~ ::· ~ Unfuml"*' South ~ Club Is • whole si1 w. uth st., er. 541-34Sl 2~~· ~~.m ~~Ma:i~ ~~111.A~ rn:_1~9160-~~~n~~im c...i cMice addlUon of hlllalde BllK Beacon. Bkr. 64>0ll1 Gwr•I ' 3IOO ltealty Company . new Wp$ o1 l~efilned ..,.a._ $ll SO Wk Mui.tr, no pelli. Av&l.l now. lOxSO 2 BR. Mobile Rome. --$53,ltXJ. 0..... -&7Soa11 Mt-12n· , Nst .,,, ...... ... , II'• ...... m • " I 51M CDnlldtr leue/OptJoo. RMt•I• h SMre 2m * COOL IT . . tun livtni' wtth nnn, dY· Frum lJ.65/mo, Luxury Sin.. SMAU.. In.Her, prtv yard. ~;"'pie w/ref.s. Cal ,;;C.;.ott=•-Mt=.;.'•;_ __ ,;,,.., I ~ . air Larae 3 BR w/Pu:K' DbJ pr T.wnhouHa ~Adult• namJc nelfhborg. It.. • &I• Aptt:. Complete maid ~~~'mo~ ¢~I========= r 2 GOOD VALUES PRIVA~ ~=.TV art Pet!I It chlltbu wal: SDJJ.t..levtl 2 Blt. convert. den, $750,000 Oubbowie w I t h aarvlce, housewatts, linens, S48-2'752 Coron• d•I Mtr 4250 For~ family, in lA.rUna ~tdn:lftd· 3hue jQbt ~! $170 SEE l'ODAY! l ha ., fl1il .• blt-iM. P1tlo; ,health club, 'aunu. tw1mo all utll, heated pool, COTTAGE _ $56 plu s -------- -l'flluel. Spackms J BR, ~ Jltlvilept ~ family ot H.,.... .. J.W.ra MJ:.2'5l face1 pool. 3 cu pr. Avall. mine JlOOl. party rool'h. b1L VILLAO~ INN tillties 333 W Bay St LEASE -Lovely 1 br & batbhome.Inltt'lordeooraL 4 (2 btthl) ;..,. 0CC .... Stpt. ht, $!85. liardai, Indoor plt drMn& LqunaBfach 49f.9C6 ~M Off ~·2 · den er 2 br. 1~ blkl to bdo fully""""'"'""~,. ... , -. . * Jot To ch nnr•. tennhi ..-., pro BALBOA INN ;-;;' :;;·-,...,>«;c':-'-=-::--7 b<acb. Aduli.. 1195 mo. "1aryou. $31.500. Lar&e 4 BR. , Sharp 2 BR W/fenetd yard 2 BR. 2 ba. new cpt, newly ahop and rMidtnt Wlnit pro Balboa 67'".J-3740 1 BR._ 1 BA_ with catport, 67Ul01 "W;'Ww of hills room for WGrkinc P1 to ~ loWly + p t &:: tLild "'ti dee. 2 car CaJl'Ott. S225. ~ 1 & 2 Bedroom lux. Eutakle. $150 mo. Collq:e * 1 It 2 BR. Furn '= Unt 'iool. pla,ts ~ ,..rd for apt, pvt ha.th, Sl.21 mo._, i... come.~ ~R~!! -REALTOR SU-6161 U1'Y apartment. with all the RD.l.UtKA.BLY ~ti. Agent 546-.cl.Cl Limited aumber a v a t I. -joUr imafination. $11,SCXI. RUna Beach; Mon-Fri '"5 Htirft..'lndera 645-2'51 e J YR 001 • 3 Br. 2 modern COllftnienc:et avail-trNBELIEVABi.Y 1 BR. furn. $150 ind util Jamaica Hotel. 6'lUl3) Bmb near Crown Valle)' 548-4n4• 49ta241 aft s. e. tun nn, din rm. qrpts, able. Fumiabed and unfllm. EXTRAORDINARILY le pool. Adulta, no pell. P.F· Scbool. , SHARE My •l••••t * A SHOW OFF """·dbl pr, ..... pool ....... BEA1JTIFU1. .---=""....,-.,....-,-....,.....,.- .. • ..~.. waterfront home w/dock. Otu 2 BR w/hltna, crpts, prlvil, kkk le 1 pet ok. Vil D'lM'9 Garden Apt1 1 Br. New beaut. f\lm. -Man. 36-8:1 ;yn. $150 mo. drpr. Good location! Child $400 mo/)'riy. l.e. Avail RENTS FROM Puttln& lf'tt1l. watma.U A Mo-Mo. Adults only. m> 6Th-t331 ok, $135. WON'T LAB'T' Sept. 644-53$ $150 .. $lSI irtrnm, Dowen~. Elden. 64&-9273 evn. OCEAN v;.w.t.quna Bch. 3 H.,_l'lndon 145-2951 * * ILUFFS * * <!I' p<iol, rt<. room. bllllar<lo. FURNISHED 1 er. ""· util BACHELOR, near ocean. 2 adult.I -only,· ~trig; sum. mer rental . m1304. FURNISHED 1 br apt. New obq carpetJnr. 1153 mo. 6'13-UllO b• unL hoe. Empl.,... ,,.,., * SWIM ~-SR , BA NEWPOltT llACH BBQ'~ ...... turn........_ paid, 1125. Adulb, no pelA. &. ••TAT• over 21. $70.$95 mo. 4~7318 FRESH-~ry l . 880 Irvine Ave. J 1: 2 er. abo StncJ,el frcim Call 6'&-~ I 1 BR apt.~» blk to ocean . .r ,.,... Wanted roommate i1rl. ear-You nimmers! Extra sharp Townhouse. Comm. Pool. Irvine & I bth $135. S.. tt! 2000 PUllOIU SHARP, compact 1 br. quiet UtU pd. $125 mo. le. up. ~Be~Wl.Y· ~ ~~lh;e2-4~: on, BAI· ;~:: ·i:~P !~·~~O eS:i::· =pt~k~ Sq. (714) '4S-OSJO . :& :~=.~ ~~97~dults onb', $133 mo. Uc ~:c:.~rl~d:~tr. s: of . ,,.. ...,.7511 . AVAIL. NOW! ft. 3 BR. 2 Ba . home: put, to ri!= y Hwy. Beam ct!l. Relrig. No =·~;,,;,;.~=='°1 1~28• 3 •!My beach ""'"'· ' H-Pl..i.ro 145-2'51 turn. """"" 9 ,..., ,,.,., SOUTH BAY CLUB Coote Mota 41DO * 1 Bo. tum. Jl.Q, Adul": kltch. IU5 Inc util, 613-<;!IOI, NT"~ PRIVACY ~:;,";-,_.,.c Coll * PONDEROSA Avoil&blos.,.t.bt.67>-4691 2 BEDROOMS. S padoua ~~"c,.Mar. Apt 6, 21.1i; BACJIELOJl,.lmm&c. Quld, 2 1-th home. pm 3 BR, fam. rm, bltiM. 21,i . · J'eiP., Mtuftl emply'd male. Upper story tor child~n • N •-..a.. ·-• $139. 5 BR + ruett hoo11e! ba. I.e. liv'rc rm. Ir. ftnoed APARTMENTS room•. Luxurious furniture. 1 BR. fumilhed apt. Adult.I, $US utU pct IT.s-9103 1&,;irlbr room oo!&n view l'WJMrt -•m uw ·lzl fenced yard, P•I• I:. yd Nice area $300 per/mo. • • • Shea:· carpet Brick snack no peta. $00 mo. 1876 _a .• ___ _ ~1 6 2 bedftioms. M1.11l(r WATERFRONT chlldttn -.'doome! P.fOVE i.e°ut. 546-Mit Liv• where th. fun isl ~he~. 'P=~b~a~u::f. FU.Uerton Ave. StS-ll56 81y l•l•M. 1 4HO .W\e an m&ib flool', En. PlliR & FLOAT 'JQDAY! OVERLOOKING Upper Ba.ck ti 2 BR. dowmtain. Kids tf&Jl?!. Juab ~ry. used l Bedrm., 2 bath, fom\al din. HOl'n9-Flndtr1 "5-2951. :e.y, :s BR. Condo. erpu, HOLIDAY PLAZA ~:r:~. 35~ v~C:a, ~~ ok. $12.S/mo, 1925 Pomona. ON \Valer, up1tain w/ .. •lew, "1Ml:li: ..... " wood ....... lnr nn. • ..... ,.. w/w * COTTAGE $95 d .... hpJc, $3')0, 6'<-UI! DELUXE .... -1 Bdnn, FURN. Sml 1 B•. ""''"· '91"'8;. ~ !u~'t. ~~Avail •, · crpta, and furnbhed. com. Utll paid! AJipnanoel. hts N SM 2120 Furn apt. tW.. Plus util. drpt, bib\!. Wkly 0 r 5;~~~~Uo ~•ts ok. i -~======== ·'';:,IO" /. pletto. DblP pr. Leue only, a: ctiUdttn ok. VACANT! •wport ,... Heated pool. Ample park-monthly, Util pd. No retired. Strll 61'-1.IOt or lelltN lalend 43.55 ,...., ,_ 0 QR s,:ro per mo. Re&ltor CAU. NOW! WALK 1'o Beach! 2 story inr. No clrtldrtn -no pell. cbldm.. no pets. 9il El . · L ESTATE &42--4353. Hen'l•'lndff• 641-2'11 A4rame, 3 Ira: BR Ir: 2 1003 Pomona. C.l.f. Camino Dr Sf&...0451 l B=-~m. no dl.Udren. or NE~Y NEW: 3 br, 2 ba, : EA *~:'~g!j" *IT SPAIKUS ~u~"~~ Tn!,~11~~; Nc~ ~t1:t~ 1! ~ <;:,·d:.-"ei!c 8i!b.,~~ pe * Callrno~UU * ~&.~=~ !1:r~c:i S "4 BR.· Fumiahtd Cttan 2 BR w/nft yard. t thru July. 9SS-tXN PIL0r WANT ADI ~& Frwy, Adults. 540-4893 DJ.ME..A...LtNES. 6Q.{i6'll ba. lffse Se PI· Ju ne. Allo one Bay!J'ont ~·· Pets I: cbl1drtn I========:; =========.....:;;.:;===:.::.='---'======== 1,..633-ll=_T0="'.,..53Hl3=:::-L-:::-= OPEN HOUSE * ••f:!• ;,,..,u, .. .,... ...ioome! 11... sa: TO. Unlvonlty Park Jt37 Ot~ral -0-ral -GoMral -I BR. iiEW. Furn. "' •''· ls hnMrvina. AUwne 2M W C.t Hwy NB SU.SQ27 DA y1 Yrly. Doc1r pr Iv l le I es • ' 1 IOw lnt loan. Low ~··er 2 ... : 2 ~-~ ....M.,lnd9r• MJ.2tJI 2 Bdrm1, 1·bath $280 GT:J..fJMO;' ~ Gl"bd C:anaJ. -0own. 3 BR, 3 8a. LoveJ1 A• •n.n • iw, ._ ... ""c, 3 BR, 2 Baths $123 ~ 10--6 Dal.17 PorWina beaut. p&tiol. Baytbores. $IO PriY cott tot/pet OK l BR., 2~ &tM U23 ~Nu"·~· u Nyt. Pl off Avail . late Sept. 2 52' $91 JBedrm,2w/w6drPJ 3BR..2b&.fam.rm SlT5 ~ H p • Crestview Dr. &fg.5476, SUS 2 bedrm IU' totllpet OK s BR. ::n~ ba. fUO :b.t.TY ,u.-9704 WINTER. rental, 2 BR. pest Sl!iO· S bl4nn :S ldda,J.:-.~i e RED HILi.. REALTY • • rm w/ be, patW,. $17$ 48,roldlr2atry,,,..,.. Univ. Parle Center, Irvine 6JJ.4,NPYMAN SPF.CIAL GtJ.-0'3 ~ S Br hol'M ra.neh % .er Call An)'time 833-0UO tpfl'I' ..,c .. ;an lideao:! STA"tLKT 547-00U FOR ~Mais In University · "t'i".!. 1 :.".xi 1u< c ....... t1a1 Mtr _2251 * Sllew Pellac• Pvt<• Ttirt•• """"-oo: .. Ndt. pail\f. le c1-nup WllL yoo *' )'(1\11' JM>me 1?1eb• S l'R on lrl c:orntr IOI ~~~TjS:.!•ttor of \ottr. Jlrior U&,500. to 1 ret1ftd adult? (pref lot. J'enotd yard w/paUo D~ l.U-0101 Ntpt.s WIL1. TRADIC-opt to buy). Gd loc 1o "BBQ. ~lo • cbOd,.n °"·I="======="'== M"5ION ll&LTY ~ $400/mo . .-1 Sepl occp. $Ui.-VACANT-OALL NOW! 2 BR• -.now""""· 1\ln. Ge""" 615-4621 .._,...,..,. 14J.2'SI C-• tit! Mar U !Or, liM, "'"°""' i1RGE 3 Bdrm. 3 BL vtow * WV.s ·sm e MAGNIJ'ICDIT Nlt\Y nut OCIMft. park. hcmcplu.peorl (orardUm.) 15.fU'll OCEANIBAY VJ:EW ldt •!MIO . mit ·lO MOii. let.le. $4C10 Mo •• t.&1p 4 88:-2 ttlr7 homt, lf1~E! &. Br. 3 b a , laam.ii'ii"'"~~-~~~-:.U~I Wt1l1y N. T1yM Ce. . kneed )'&id, dc!Utde 111'· faM/rm. Avail Oct. lit. J ...._ REALTORS --Ille Wlti!YI 1114. TOO IGl5/mo. Coll 614-4391 oft -llt:I>. • ... 3 I!&, -' GQOD 'TO 1.AS'I'! ,,,.,,; ... .,:;;,.· _,,.--~--,. S tlbl ..... "" Uv ntl. ";.~· .,_1 l*UOO. H~l'~n Ms.2911 cillNA &We • Stepo to ' ..., ...... vi.wi O&S-lDIO ,,,.., ..., ~ 0 1rlA. hlw Br. • .,,...., -· btoct>. be!· vt<w. , "'· , hll'ilO ,__ 2 ·car OWd • Jmt.l.l pet ok. ba, :s cw rar .• appll&non, IEACH H I * 1 BIL l&O ,...a. a..,,..., 111•• a..-. Bltr. ac;.om Ct'Plo • d'!"· 1<'5 .... D . <>nit IJlO IL • -~·Mo. A.tot 61'5-$1JI. • *' SA ... DLI UP ........ -.. ,_, l'fACE REAi.TY -'°' 3 fift, din I jjlay rm• encl a; &::LLl _ .. _ "'' I I 2"'1 3 8R home w/con"alt. Peta patk>, chldm ok .$350 lllt. "'"" -.. .. ._ ~1 ~... I I N .. ehlldi-.n holw:s ok, N I -• 1-A I "It.I lle...ICr'tUtld sm:roorn. 'hn" --·-, ew '1 P•nu m.. v o , ..,_, 111,ltXJ. IM-712' e c BR. 2 li . lltT.10. DOll'T WAIT-CALI. ~'..,!H68"',_,3""'_-.-,--,,, a.Miki·· ..... ..-. Wlll'nl!.~,Df!."!fl,~ $400 mo. =~lntlor• 145-2951 I BR. s~~ "'''•· .,,,i.. ,.. an Id flO aru tftlll.11'5 _. ••-•• frplc, beam celll"I, 1undk A · -. ""'llMlll. """Ad. aet l\tiilii.i1 l'llDI' WA!i.t Al>t ~ ra•-122:1. •r~m• l j s~~.lllA-ai.~s· Th• 'ml• with the luift./n C~ud/1 ··-.... '-" ... , .. , ... -~...., f. Ri!JJ:r ~ . l"So"r1 Fj:-I ~ .'J''.I I ... 1 I :'.~, O IR RllA .I J I Advice loo fo1her, If yoUr. '·:·~· ~-;::;~·;:·~~)...., bQby ho1 troubl• 1l1tpfng. r mov• him. to tM edge of tt\e I F £ £ L I D I bod. H1,I .... --e-111-• I , , I r [ e Com·•~ ... """"' qv~"' by filling 111 the m1Atnt;1 wcir91 \'OU d1W1lop fl'O!ll ,•tp No. 3 "'"'-I SCRAl\if•UTS ANSytER IN CLASSIFICATIO " 7000 -Huntl!'!i.t ...... - • 0 II ·7 --L•I""• loaoh 4715 -~-·------2 bt, oet'11 vtew. t bl) tG betc.. ahilg a'JfS, f'ffl1&:, v\eW deck S200. 49Wfat .i_ Ml Rf~IM/\( A wooos New 1·2 BR., 2 BA.., tum or untum. alr-eond, Hlf cleaD ovtn, beam eefllDc, dshwr, priv pr, alcvaton, therapy + swim pools, B~'s, 1aunas, clubhouse. Ad bl. J'ro{n $140. Jart Eaa ot 2600 Harbor near Nabers CMDJ1c at 425 Mttrimac Way. 545-6390 * * • * Iii Pu.rte M.1• Apt1. * • * * 1-2 hdroem Alita. .. $13() up incl. utUltlea Also film. Pool Ii Recreatton area. Quiet Environme"t Oft street parJdna. No ,.fl. 1959-1961 Maple Ave . ColtA MeSJ rERWAY IL YILlA APT$. 2 & 3 Ill'• Prt:vate patio, pOOJ, • h141v. latmdry tac. Nea:r Oranae Co, Ail'plrt ' UCI. Adults Onl)'. 3'122 Santa Ana A~. },tgr. Mn. Joachim, Apt 3-A B.lY MEADO\V APTS New o:clUna 1 Bl't, $140, 2 BR, U65. Beam celltnp. Wood pan'l(, •htr -prtv. patio, eome w/trples Pool, wid volley ball ert:, ne bldr .. pool tablea, put. tlJW arefn. .lduJts, DO )'eb. 3r. W. Bay, Open lloaoe U.1pmdally,6*007S, Like Livi"' In y..,, OWN HOMI •• I I \Vhy pay $115 lCl'r an •tit! • when Wt cl)l rent you one for $160. 2 BR, l'll'N\y dee, trpt/drp, encl patlu, 1pae arndJ • 2 Poolll Adults Only, 2'l3S Fountain \\ll,y E. (Jlar. b&r, turn w. on wu.n). VILLA MiSA APfS, 2 BR, Prtv patio. Htd pool. 2 rar eml'd aar. Chlldnn weklomt, no pets plsue! 11&,:j mo. TJJ W. \Ylhon. '46-!ZL HARl0111· iREl!NS GARDDf 6 STUDIO AM'S a.ch. ~ ~ ' n .. · •. ,,... ""'· lroO )'<f.rt0n Way, C.11. -TO ~"~·-'"'5'"'" 1r,..,...,i"°'bo"".-CI'pll-. ctrpa. rerrit.. blt.ns. JoA.rin S\· \Valk 10 Harbor Shop- Plna:· J\'O tlnt:lts/ptll. 2 sm. <;bU<lren OK. 1111. 642-1467 flril QUICDR YOU !1!1L ~ICl\l<lt YOU CALI. ( ' " • ! NOW LEASING! P•rl-like r.ving for fami- lies with children end odults. I, 2 ond 3 bed- rooms, f.urnished or unfurnished. She9 car- pets, drapes, eir conditioned, with self. cleaning ovens. Complete $400,000 rec rea- tion club in three acre perk. Pools, tennis, volleybell, heelth club. teen focilit ies ond o pre -school! Ne x t to shopping end golf course, near U.C.I. end Newport Beach. From $150 per mo. At Sen.Diego Fwy. ond Culver Drive in Irvine. Phone 833-3733. Owned and m•n•ged by The Irvin• CornfNny lllNTAU RIHTAU ...... ~-~~-~~--T,--1~~ JUI 1mto ""'1 . • Apts. Uofumlthetl c • ...,. ftl Mlir ....................... llllimltlllAL•STATI Frif11, AltlUSI. 14, lt70 OA.lL.Y mar~ -="-ANrniNOUi._ ~NC<MilMirir.,ll'TS...,.,._'"'s'"'iifYl"""cililliRT~ '* ~,., ~~cu A;,11--;-1t""'1;, ... l Acri!... , -Loot .... .!!__rf!,_ ___ .. _.•1 * * ---,.. LOSI': Nale Y~ Tf'llo e W&lkr • l>ryer ftepatne 1 • • VILLA MA,UllLLll "°"""""" ~ 1cre -1 s IM, bid! 6 tl!Ver v .... Eodma1t1. w°"' • • IRAND NIW '°''rfte.Land ~e. 1133 on badtl ftd4'rwn ~ Guarantffd. c.n ss.ntt. ~ -· S .. ACIOUS .,_,_,, ""' b11> 9"10 d or .. a 10. Name b - I l f ........ ...... HHthcllU, l\EIVAJU>l 5107 lffytlttl111 ~I ON TEN-~ 'Alluft'L......, ltoMrt_ P..,.rty '205 S.u-O.. NB fl&-7306. ----, • ._ ... ":.. ' . BABYSJ:m.NC In In.>' 1 A 2 BJ\. hrp 6 ltnfanl ,.,.,,_ Ii ~ e cANYON LAKE Sot. Uni! 5 YO old l3onkt CoD!C ila4" Hr/dq/tftJ/wldy. Hr-'&/ nreplaets: /'prtr. pallet' I l>tYftll!tr.eolorooordJnat. l, 3tc1 ·t1itr Vu;w, IOU!O. tan. whtte, dox fa.ii. Lwt W W•v,. n: By u $iJ Pools. ~-...<laniDl1. Bw.. .... r..e. \. pltzah lhaJ ime. 90o-8Q.ll • at Fal~ Moo. nlte a.. .... 1 OK. * w;.1.m. 900 SM · I.MW, Ofl4 ....an.1 ~ • eb01e. al 2 eolar --A~'trt 10 · •Ke l 1 y ' ' oq .:_J.. lfllacArtlnlrnr;O»lf.H,,J .etwmin •1....,ltui , itaD • I W-62.aa Reward.~ day1, BABYSTT-myhome-- -..ii;;.... """ ft, • o --· Id )'anl. N,... -7 ... GllCHIO • .,_ ... -. ' CASH BUYER •~•ts !W. Ed._: ll:J!>.33Sl 3 Bdrma.,' "~""· c..;..ted. ::c" ~ ~ ...Je s~ c~l':J1~~~"(1~ °;'J11 RA'..,.. or ...... On.no• B,!;_~ ~~~~i., BABYSl'i'. '"" -.. !iii. dnpod.blt4oi.c.v ........ .., ............... -NATUllAL BORN SWAl'PlllS County, s.o Oiqo, Lon: Blvd/C.t Hwy. URGEN'I'"-Cool• ...... lnlant O.K. $325 Mo.: min. l fHl' leue. patio. lti!Ullb ~pins • $,.Clel ltete ~&Cb area. Beyda Inc.. QUA.JlAN1lNED!! Call col· o.,y. onq. C&U : M6-4253 1'7UoQ 0 brjclr ~··--,,_. S lt..1 -$ t '-01 -• • .. -ks R.E. B-r. (n() $15.3!6! Iott 43!1-1153 BABYSl'l'l!NG My ~ •~·=·i:iiiiiiiL:;~ ed -•-6 Ja.'--• "" ~ ..,.. or tn41 r.~ e\'el and .....__ •-__ ~-........,. --...i-, IVi.11 -a• fill.llT tttell.llll k -'~ * POODLE: SlfAU... ....._.. .. _ ...._ -L& flll S.. lrlstel St. ~..., 'f'M ._ flt .,.... ~-.. ,.. WIM • .,..., 'I\' e_... fl) Pl.EASE NchL Fenced )'d. 50-5291 . "1 a.IL N ... So. O>t"1 '1Ul) .....,OOI ~-~ .. ~ALI -Tu'-'oa-OHL;'I • .., .. ._ \VA.Yr to ....... 3 BR ~ \"f:l'-Jftf, male-. nm• D..'"""'-i - .. cl ,~ .,.. ........, ..a .,..,, pl RE'r\11tNI CHILDREN ..,.,£.M ~,. .. t, my , 1 BI...K to ' ar.11 • ean Sant• Ana T• Piece Your Tr1cler'1 PeradiM A. trom owntt. $25,000 us or HEARTBROK£N. CAN· T Ally «iie. Any time. yrc t br, 1~ bt, lrlow, rer. PHONE: 557..atl ,HONE '42·5'71 mlnut. \\'rtte •Box No. PlO'i~ SLEEP! 613-7351 Undberab Sdl Ret. ~:n.91 Adults, no .PC!'ta: • S 2 2 5 • DI.Uy Pilot. LOSI': Brlef case ._ mllsicl 67~ Trt~ Kentu(jky rill:e, tta--Palm Deaert (2> 150· tots •uSINESS ,-..a &b)'lltti"'l • ltoo-Fri. Niat 1 ~-1 u ~ """ .Probably ht trnt of 1st cl home Jenced _ ...... * COROLIDO APTS. 2 Br, Lipa leech 5705 er maple stock, dbl b1.'!£er, Gd. for 16 units. AU1! oc:. FINANCIAL Chrlstlan Science Dwfth. C:: meals.' SIDOT-0.. ,. ... ~. l I: l~t BA., !rpJe, dbl LO-\.;;., . ;.._~, i .. l ~ octqon ))am.,}, \'f!I')' sood $36.500 equity. WUJ trade fl:lr NB. Apprck l wk! qo. carport & I~ Pool. fll5 ·•~ 6'"Y'n. -. ars, cond. for boat trailer to tit Income or comm1. NB. or lualnen REWARD! l21-M60 NEWPORT HtU-area. &: up. 613-3378 I&: apac:lous llv rm, !rpl,... 1"' Glupar, 02-5316. OJ. Owner m..30U. "'----a.:.... 6.311 )'tld w/Wldbair..j =""'~=,,----,-7"--.,=I front porch, closed rarare .............. _........ REWARD for recovery o( -eta. Xlnt eve. -OPEN Dally l~. 324 w/drit ~ lbr photoeraph.'l. Level view Iai: O\'erlookina:; \Vaterfr'.Qnt lot. NB. $38.500 ' lllt bronze 5 iipd Schwinn man's .::~=.::::::.:::::::..:..::..::c;,il I.,.~!!'!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!"!!''!"!~'!"!!"!'~!"!!!!!!~"".' Mu(uetite. 2 BR. 2 BL New.pa..illt. w/w q>U. cbJ:is, Pari:U I Colon.do JU\l'et'. Clear, for small home or * ARTN * bike,. vie. Cdll,. Hi liidl. TREE Yout hm. nitu tt r -------·-···· Dlshwsh,r, epts, drp&, trpl. lf.v, rdrf.a .. Near ahopf It nade $UXI eCiuitv for local \l.iilt.1. HtJ Pinchin I As-56-Z.w7 nn. kit privU. be. Rdt~ Coste Mase STOO Newport &.ach 5200 \Vill: to ocean. AJt. V>S726 hlzh 9Cbool! 1" bJks to lot or car er.! liOCl&Wi Realtol'S Aeli\'e.w/$11,500 cuh l: m~· l =,..,-,=-~~-c lad)'. loc. refs. ca.r . .;:u-- -----------------2 BR, 2 BA. Attr, clean, 1 blk be•ch. No dQr. To rellable ~ Can 6T'~ ~~~·:~~tor~ ~~ .. 1;;,~~k. ~~·~ • CEllLD CARE: Pref. mrt QUI ETI ALL NEWI PARK NEWPORT Wlgh on to bch. \Vuht'r j; dryu people, leue $).83 month. '70 ?.Jotor hQme 23 It. Load-l\loblle Rome Site, owner's tits. Should easily net party Slnta. Aha. CM. REWARD. re~ued tidt to 4 yrs. j I Cpl8, drp.~. bh·ins. 2 BR. • bluff overlookfni the avail. $190 mo. 213: 43J..119t A!ter 6 PM 4M-312'7 Sal ed. Air, r~ri.tru:; cleu. 30 acres. bi-desert, utll'11, sclected ov~ u;,ooo 1st 6'&..11",,.j * 536--Q4 * Adl1lts, no pets. Nr Harbor "'ater. 7 pools. 7 tenn~ eris, er 67S-1478 ft, Sul) .all~. Tn.de for 3 BR Mme, 'inbdl Eq. SS0.000. Free-i: clear year. This ls a pleasant, IHAJ'-"-,~,c,3;;1 £R-~~,-,onai.~-.-.rown- &: Adana. Garage available, $750,000 Health Club I:. Spa, LRG. older 1 br. Steps to .** WOOD:s ~VE ** outbd motor boat. or \vhat to1· Oranre Cc. Income 01· tllvlill~ business l:: will '"'/ivhft tummy. V\dnlty 546.3997. Bach., 1 or ·2' BR.t. Alao Bay. crpb!, drps, 1to\le Ii Beach ~ ~ new 1 t: 2 have )'OU! * 543-9806 * R-3 land. 968-.21N. beu most rigid investiga· Balboa A: .. ,.. Reward. 2 SI)' Townhouses 'v/2 or relri&. Stn mo. 673;-69(M BR. ap~ F.ac~ have 1+1 BA. '62 01ds. Starfire,cou.pe, all Commercial income proper. tton. To IUT'i1lj;e for per.IOn-i73--1!33 2 BR. d?l>s. crpll, sv.•im'g pool & gar. AJ.90 l BR. cpts. drp.I, pool gar. No children. no pe tJi. Quiet neighborhood. &12--804~ SPAC. Oean 3 BR, 2~~ Ba, Freshly painted. New drps & wlw crpt. Elec bltns, lrg ~v pa.tio. Nr schls &: fl'\\')'. No pets. 515-4893. BEAUT new duple" unit. Nice pri\'. patlo. cpts. &. drps.. hit-in kiteh. 2 Br. l Ba. Din. area. Choice art!& 64?-0128 after 6 P~f QUIE'T ADULT LIVING 1 lc 2 Br. Shag crpt!. bltns, pooJ, beaut. lndscpd. Sl::.0 &: $170 mo. incl all uW. 2-11 Avocado Sl 6.$.-0979 MODERN 2 Br. l~t Ba. Crpts, drps. GE klteh., patio, encl gar. Nr. bu1. S158. AdulU. r-.tgr. 124 E. ''"" ~'R New 2 Br, l '-:s Ba. ti>l/drp, SIV..(J!lh1vhr. gar. Avl 8/28. 766 \V. \Vilson MZ-7~ 1 BR. $150, 2 BR $l6.>. Pool. Elec. & \Vtr pd. Adlts, no pets. ll1esa ~ianor, 241 Wilson Ave, C~t. 548-740J Ul\'FURN. 1 BR. Apt. wt priv. balcony. CloM." 10 nirkt. Adulta only. $110. 549-1&39 3 BRS. Elec k1tch., pt1v. e 2 D"D, ~-. -•· -·. Pool. ~. up. ~I.Se. 217.5 S. p>T., air; inside I out ;n ty, he & cle"', .nut to net, \.'Onfidentia.I tnterview ~~~~7""-..,-..,7'.''"' balcony, or patio. From$175 -· ....... -r ....... r r •• ~a-. GTI630 ~ __ 11 ~e::."""' F l l GER?.I.AN Short haired pvt ca.rare. $225 mo. .......,;il ..... ,, • • perf. cond. WI.lit -...boat. Sears. VIJ. .,....,,......... or t~ephooe W:sl 0 «rn to Pointer male, lost '"ic Sanra 10 "'50. Subterranean parkg, 6i:>3n7 * * NOR1ll END * 1t prdtt Rlle Qr aiWJ . Cat. Wlitl, house or beach prop. 5 pm daily. A • elev., opt. maid ser., 1 BR ocean w %-bllr.: lhop-5"5-77&1 f\"e.S • O\VNER 6T"~ STER.UNG SILVER r~~ts na Hgts. ~. oonv. sbop'g. Modell Open NEW 2 Br, ~ Ba. S of Hwy, plnz, beaches. L 1 \Ind ry 1.:.::.c.:=-:.:.::::·----·~ 8 am • 10 pm Daily (ta 6 on f.farguent~. Frp1. patio, fad!. aduks. i 173 mo. 'i7, 22' 1elf l'Ohtainl!ld year I Untu rood rent&J area. (ban) J ou, $9.~ ea. 50c Per1M1I' 6405 pm Sa.t.) Loe. 1at J-.m-bm clngr. ~1983 ·~le 881)...(237. round travel traller,.$2.?Xl. $3!.000' Equity; i~ post~ .. Romeo 383 Ofus, ---'------- borne Ir San JtJaq\lln Hilk -------value. ':'l"ade for 16' to 15' $13,500. For hoUJe, oommer. l.Ilaml, F1a. 33163 ATHENA'S Rd, u; Nwpt Bch. Just N. Huntington Buch 5400 NE\V Ocetn 1~ a.J>tll. with boat, trailer ·~ motor. cial or horse ranch. 2 Operator Shop or -• ..,.__._, I land m111nn :. ·---• PQOl. From S20o month. 492-G75" aft; 6:00 pm. OWNER 6751)259 equipment. C&D 64&-3621, -, .. ~,·-on ,_!0 • -0 C E A N FR 0 NT . vle\v PLACE RE.A:IJI'Y · · 4~97CK .... easing lill' , Fish ·n Cblp!l, comple$elY Clef.I' acres.2000 ft. eh!\'. exeept Mon. Ir Wed. bel~ -. ..-. _ :_ ~ sundeek, bcb. Ne1'·er, spac snJNNING OCEAN VlE\V eqUlp'd, iree.'l clear. Nets \<ic Lake ~lathev.'s. For: In. -t?hf. ~ * dlx 2 Br, bltns, crpt5, d?Jis, e Beaut. 2 BR, 2 be. s::nxl, $$}if value. FOR tio.t come/ru,s rot.stat a.rea Joe. i;=o~SH~.-.-c=,~,-.,-. ~ ... ~ ... -,,,,.,~nL 7n AMIGOS WAY refrlg, lndry. Nr shops " Sl.85/mo. * 494-2008 / a.nythlnc ot'value. 541.&J9 8480 Ca.mfno Sur, Cucamon.. $lXlO mo net Terms. 2 BR. 2 ba. unit!, untum. ::DM.Th. Adults, baby ok. REAL ES'FA. TE dys, 962~1 eves/.,.,·knds. ca. Ca. 91130. Owner. :>41--61iS9 d • >' • : Outside ti~ areas and GeMrel · Tn.de ~OOO ·>q ln elee. hm $7<nl fq\llty in. Hunt. Sch. 96:2-4911 evH" v.•knds. double ........... ,. $250 to $300. \\'ALJ< l blk! to tie.ch. _ ·-·--Almost new le 3 mt apt. R""a•~ Wanted SffO nr s.n fur OC home, condominium for fFR aln· - -..i 6305 ~ Dbl .c;:ar, "l:PI, 'v/w crpts, ~._.-~--· Income orsacht. N. ~· cle ena-airplane. '63 Olds lu1lnt11 Went drps, ds;,o.~hr. 2 ba. $22:) NEEDED Agprox Sept . 1231 Avondale Rd, H1lls-Cutlass conwrt for 1treeU BUY ar Lease imall DELUXE 3 BR, 2 bath. fireplace, bltn nnge &: dlsh1'•asher, fully carpeted. $220 mo. fodults. 6.U-US7 or 642-lm · 2 BR. $200 Yr!}·. Frplc, p.r. Rede<:. &: new crpts .t.. drpl. Avail no"'· 1 child ok. 309 ::6th St. &16-46'26 mo. No sgls/pets, childn U.nlce 3 br home, pool ~I\ Cal, 415/342.9127. dirt bike. 5'9-3123/962.s218. businc1s. Motel, mobile ok. 536-1111 pn!fen-ed. Co: executlye TRADE home, $1.9,SOO Granad1. Hilb 2 1ty w hme t-ome park, re~il h-anchlse. MOVE JN NO\V 1'•/fa.mily .. RA!,fereooes avail. value, \\'Ith pool, in ~sa: :?SOO sq ft, II~ new $57,'150 Couple 9'111 Invest 11).GO M. brand new' BR apts Under $300. Call collect SG,000 eqU.lty; for home, val. 4 Br, 3 Ba, !am 'nn, For Box No. P107l. Dally Pilot * from $133 * 714/822-6,2.U boat, houJe hiler, etc. smalr hm«;. Hrbr Vu Hills. •• ·- Crpts, drps, bltns, famil~· FAl\IILY wisheJ to ren1 oc· Owner/B.roker i7>'122j ChVN". Ole. 64ol-ob-n. · Mll"'Y te.LAtt '320 area. 5152 Heil, Huntinct011 le¥" w/optlon 5 br home ACREAGE oear Rane.ha 40/SO acn, \VhWteyto\vn • -1 -1 TD L a Bch. 8464696, 833-02'2 v.'/pool. Up to $350. LO'illJ Callfomla tor 1.a.te model Shasta Lake area. Fabulous $ Ot1 ft NEAR Huntington H&rbour ca.re .. El ,Toro /L acu~a sa.ll or po"'er boat. !n'fler, huntinr, fishing, boa.tin:. . or the Sunset Sbip \\ith the ma~ cfrls innn ltOf,L\"11.000 to MASSAGE YOU l>iO\\' 11oith a net\· location In NEWl'OlT IEACH 211 62nd St., 62nd &: \V. Coa3t H\\'Y in the New-port Shorei Center Slrcle-. \Vldowed • Divorced * UFE ii e..'l:citini It sha.rH v.·/1he rii;ht onf'. Stop \\>astinz: )'Olin. \~e ha''e • m1art v.·ay. &47-6t'1i, 2-4 hr. l'e<.'Ord. Ira1ltute o! Scientllic Re-4 BR. 2 Ba. New cirpets, ne\\' pa.Int. Upper: beaut. view of ocean. Yrly. lse. ABBEY REAL TY 642-3850 New Tliplexes. Quiet &n!a. Bea!'h &fta. C9-8117 713.1 Sarvel"'l..n, s..n ~fa.m>.t Equity small home, Tntn I~ INTEREST . Lrg 1 & :: BR.'s. Dishwasher \VIU. }'OU lse your home cn4) 7~ ~ 7'4-35ia. cabin etc. ?Yle)·er :>o17-1366. 2nd TD Loan iOUrt'e$~C>MENt ,-- StiO up. Pet ok. (%13) 592·WZ: to 1 ft.tirtd • adult! (perf , 8 r-~n n--T-d• ·~.-,. 1" modern . In') •-"'~ opl -buy) Gd 1-to t'AM CUJtom r; ..... Y '~'" •• _, vw Slim do1vn, •-·· inches. or " ~ •v • "" ~ 2'!h tia, J>90S for" (Dunedin I Santa Anita eat.ate, 5 b.r, 5 Tmns ~ on equity. feel betttr .,vtlli'£.z Trirn * BA YFRONT * BLK to BEACH ·Quiet, ind-mo. Need S!pt occp. ~trs. SI,' Petersbura:, F1a. ·prop. !ta, Olyn:iPk pool, 3 bl.Its '42-2171 545-861• Home Exercisol'. ~ial, LUXURY APTS. St•rt-proof! New 1 Br $ll5. Prv. Gertner 6'1s..4621 ert;Y. $20,000 equity, to b'Wy. TUe late boat ol Serv-tn: Harbor area 21 yn. only $G!l.95. E-Z credit ing et $375. * '42·2202 patio, gar. Sni,::I adults, cpl. SUfrAM,E Livin: qtrs, furn. * sd-0355 * cqus.l· vatUe. 61"3-656i. Settler Morft•t• (e. tcnns t\•ailable .. Fnr C!'ee --202·A 14th. $1319, 6'1!-1784 or un~, for my Mother, \\'W ••do 7 hand knit m11.d 336 E. 17th Strttt home demonstni.tion call PENINSULA 3 "-4 BR.. 2 •eACHBLUFF APTS nr . m&rlccts k 1hop1. "69 N:e~s Benz, ms NEW custom u·i·plex. l-3BR. BA, firepl, bit-ins, crpts, IP Retired, does not smcke er auto trana, radio, excelle-nt money mini ma~ for J:ood ---· --• --3'0 537..cc; 2BA, frpic S260. 1-2BR. 28.A, drp&. sm .t· S325 mo/ and Ne" 2 Br. 2 Ba, P 0 o1. drink. Reu rent. &a-1'9Mi. C"Ondltion. 'frlde t.or' land, used ~Iris bicycle!!. 1628 lte•I I state L••nt 6 +MASSAGE &SA.UNA ~1?~=!2.1~3..~ \\'. 18th., o'y~rly=. 67~:1-_9';_'_2-,-----,--Dshwhr, .,atios, 8.231 E1lla, FAi\flliY "'' 3 diildrien Income, ·car ot !! Equity SlndalY.'OOd SI, C.N.. Yi'ILL makt lnd T.O.'~ b)' GRAND OPEJ\'11\G. Lovely V"l'r-""" 1 NE\VER yearly apt.g on 8C2-MTI Ol' 8t1-39a'1 • det.il'l!tl 3 BR un1urn home «PPl'O)( S1200. lf2.323S. • ;,A,5.:r19j • ex:l1th1t; 1st .I: 2nd's, pvt 'ilrb. EXPERT MASSAGE. AVAIL now • by 011·ner 2 Peninsula, 3 BR, $300 mc. • Adult! -2 Br 11h.Jdio in area E. of Newport Blvd. * * * _pty. ~--1326-_. Ask about our t,.s Vec111 Br. 2 Ba apt i11 4 unit 675---5532 13• Ba, patio, b a Icon y, CM. tU51>-Stffi. 21 l: * * * VllCll.llons. 10 Al\r to 2 AM, bldg. Pref. adullll. Ph. 1-.-NE-l_VL_Y_Red--ee-.-U-ppo_r_l aan.ae. 2 hlkll Jrom ocean. 425-a'.lTT , Money WantN '"' 1 DAYS, 2931. \V. Coast Hwy, 50T-432"S BR. 2 BA. Walk to beach! SIJO. l40l OliW!, H.B. ESTAB. family or 5 ~ irm __._.. • ---Ne"'POfi Beach, 548-3603 NEWLY DECOft.ATED 1 £.t2""""6836 (21 2 BR. Apt$. 1 w/yard, outdoor,,..,.. desire 3 B" 2 R,f.Al &STATE '\EAL IST~TE NEED $35,000 for 12 mos. d S240mo.Yeary. " 1 ch!ld OK Without a.rd ..v• ,.,.,,, . ., G-rol. · G I Repay ST2,500. Loan \V0}.fAN.!lOto4.i.nicelook· 2 BR. Crpts. rps. b1t.ln11. GOLD J\fedallion 2 BR, 2 BA . Y tia h"', bet 9,. .W. Xlnt loelll en.re le<."Ured. Ne1v Ho• PI t a I. Inc. like to 11.?!h lr. hunt Hid Pool. Adults., no pets, SlT;>..Sl&5. l.M. i\lgr. -423.J has patio. ad\l.lts only. $1f0 1'1!1, Pref &aide CM or N.B. --:-· · ---.---OfH I ,.70 5"&-2'1:>9 ~ keep house on femous Sl<lj. 149 East Bay. Dana Rd. Zl.3-981-7039 ea. M2-4ac9 ~2389 lvs&nes1 l:entel 6060 c• Rent. -Rocue RJt;er. \VrUe c/o Box $170, 2 BR, ba1h & 1', studio, '~~~~--,..,.,--.,,-=-I 2 BR l~ BA patio .. .,.,.-·~~ · . ANNOUNCIMENTS-'"' Gold "'A~A.. Oregon iHOAG H 2 B • ' ., • * .n.c.i .. 1l\L .u.n. ...... .,. • ---·-·. -,--VJ> lo 3600 sq ft.·Dcluxe. air encl NOTICES -~ .,.... .... ., drps, cpts. patio. Avail 911. 2 Ba. $~ ~~· !Iii~ pool. $16.> mo. MORA KAI l'rM t• LaMlerfli STORE-OFF1CE cond. CTpts, drp«. Jn oom-, ----97""'4 or call sg..~ Sun 714: f>.18-8301 or 213: \\'a.y. By Appt. 54().-0093 apt!:. Eut or &ad! Blvd, Blue Beacon 6'5-0ll3 ru Nlf'"'P011 ~ IZ1iq tr pu~ Wiler bldiiL 64&-7Ui ,euM (l'rff Atlil MM 9th, bet T-! PM Lvn:. l\Jon. 592-5227 % blk ott Garfield. • · * Ervin 111.rlfiO * or 546-6080 -----* Ji1JLLY IJCENSC:O * E-e~st Bluff 5242 * AT'TRAC. 2 BR. $139 li. lyOR 13 br ~ ~ bl.Bd ~:· 600'.i2j(j sQ. Fl'. oUice a1io LARGE offices -2 room CHJU> or ladtu &ark-rim-Renowned Hind\I. Splrituall.sl * DELUXE l l 2 BR Garden Apts. Blt-il'I!, prlv. pa.tlo, heated pool, frplc. Adults. $145 mo. 546-5163 I BR. dlsh\\·t.sher, hid pool, ttc No pets. 1 child ok. Sl50 mc. u1il incl. 646-4fi63 ./ LRG 2 k 3 BR, 2 Bath1. Frplc. blt-ins, crptl, drp5, encl gar, patio. ai&-1034 SPAC 3 Br, cpl!i, drJ>s. pool, fam. & 2 kids ok. 2214 College Avt. No. 2. £46.-0621 3 BR. 2 Ba, lreshly pe.lnted. New crptldrps. bltn!'i. Xlnt area. S175. ~7-6151 NEWPORT BEACH VIiie Gren•d• Apta. $300. Four bedrooms with baloonies 11bove &: below. Graeioua: livina I quiet 1ur- roundings tor family \vlth ch!Jdl'l!n. Near Corona Del Mar High School, FhTplace, wet bar & built-in ldtehen eppllancts. 835 Al.fJGOS \VAY 644·2991 2 BR $149. All extras. Poe!. ear y. nt e • u • GOO llCI ft· stOre S9iO I; $150 ed f(Tiption &luse• Advice on all matters. Kid'/ .. ~ ok. 1 7, 3 1 _ C 615-4429 aft. 6 · · · suite f160, 4 room aufte 1235, m ~re .. C.M. ~21SO air cond., ca~ls, dr«pei, fo\l.nd Ill Safeway PAZ'.'dna Leve. l\larria:e, Business Keel8011 Ln. MT~ SMAIL houM w/ p.rqe. -~ ·----·-· paneltd, l42"-2S25 Jot, 1'·alr,vlcw Rd, Of. c..i 1 I Readlncs lf{ven 7 days a Coe1a l\tesa ~ tor m..ture Offl • tal ~10 ,..,A -"~" c""" k k 9 A'I 9 PM l BR. Ne':". Frp!c. •Near couple. 537-9151 aft i ~·-~!~ -,NEWPORT BEA"CH ~J or""~• u or Wff ' ~· • 1 ocean. Patio. Adul ts. S\JP""DEL·-QUAI m· 1811 ·~ -nd L'='='·=Ro~ttm-•~•--,-_,,--,--312 N. El Camlno Real, LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 3 ADULT femalee: deaire 3 l" :""" v~to S ,:,,.,,,' E~· ;'~::isoi 'KEYS Fo1.1rxJ en beach ':ic· San Clemente, B1t tum nm'-1 Newport. . .....,. l'OOm, ·up ,uuu sq. !"'and 6 •-•~-I ~-9136, 942-0'.176 *LOVELY NEW APTS s ;,,,,. civu . ft. oftlce suites. Jmml!d. oc· •-•-• -"' 0&.<.,.,.., rwruire HB ue&. Aft · _.._.... Of'F1CE Rtnwua .... run• at front counter, Daily Near Ocean A Park. 1 le 2 -----l'\lp&ncy. On.Jl&:e C n I y. Bch. SU5 Mo. ~ Hv.'Y. Pllol, 22'11 Balboa, N.B. Br. "25 Uth St. 841-3951 · RMml t.r ltent JHJ Airport IJ:vtne Com;nert:. Real Estate O.R .494-97:!'7 . •..: with 3 BR, 2 bl. .,., lar&e fenced -i--·-·-· Compltx, adj. Airporter FOUND Tirer •• tten yard. Couple w/2 chldm. RETIRED Profss. couple Hotel A Restaurant, banka, Commtrclll &0a5 ftea collar and • earrlns 8.f:?-4549 deslret clean, attn.ctl1-'e S.n Diep A: N'pt Fwys. on collar. ?-le.., Verde an!a ~ ~at A Siik• G9" luckl wntr ftntal. Pref.. wtrfront UNCROWDED PARKING C·I CORNER 546-UT~ 2 BR, upgtain1, larre front er v le w Io c at lo n. LO\VEST P..ATES In Cost« 1.fesa with 'dr1Vf'·ln 10FEM=~ALE'"'"'~G<~,-.,,-,.-.-Sho~~pho--:rd S\VlNGERS! New Ora• ~:dttn~l~b! ~~ ~~~ld' Reterence.!I. "'rite D •I I)' O\\.'Jltt/rng'(', 2l'12 DuPont.Dr., re91aurant Incl, all equip. blk: 6: tan about 8 mos old. Co. Gulde. For free Info, The Girl• •f Newpert ~ Cerpenterlnt Mii \ -CARPENTllY > : f lll!NOR REP.&D<S. Ho ·~ Tar Small C)liMt to .... 1,p3 &: • t ll • r a!\l~ ~a. U 1'13 answer ..... lT13C at M&-..."172. a. ~ Aildeno.'1 ~ ~ENTER: Remo Itel, patio work, cement W'tlrt le painUng. No job' a small. Free e!rt., ~lSUI j CLEAN-UP jobo, ba<i!liii coocrcte wurk. Free -. Small or big. sa-7801 • REPAIR. R.fmodelil!l" a Patio-No job too small! • i'B-54.17 • CARPENTRY: Cabinet•• Roon1 Addltlol\ll. Patios! Any me job. Mike, ~ REPAIRS* ALTERA110NI * CABINETS. Any sl1.I! JM 2.) yra exper. 548-67U GEN. Repair, odd. .ab. Formica, paneling marlhe. Anything! Didc, 67l-U59 QUALm Woodcraft, .ml atn'I COl\llr. I: ca.r'llt'ntei;y. t""ree coniruhation I ~. Call Ket1 ~. ~ Cement, Concret• '611 . --- CONCRETE. All ~-Fm e111. Sa1rin;. breaking, haul· In;: & skiploading. Sel"\'i« & quality. 5'&8-8668 Bob Ci \IENT WORK. no job too Small. l'P.'asonable. nit E~thn. It Stutlltk 543-1&15 DEOORATIVE CONCR!!TE ORJVES·WALKS-PATfO CAIL DON. 642...til4 * OONCRETE work: patios, 1 drvwll)'ll. ere. Llcen1e:d. Phllli1>11 Cement. ~ l\JORE Concrete patio far leu moDey. Artistic ae.Uinl. Lie .. ca11 ?.Iu at ~""'! Child Car1, LlcenMcl ,• .... DAY care, IK'&r Lake Pipe. reu. Fenced play )Id., ~ lunches. naps. 510 Utb ~ H.B. Cont rectors -··----- e REJ\;IODI:LING e ADDITIONS e ALTERATIONS e PATIO & DECKS ., ' Allan .Con,tr\l.ction C•~ General Bid&:. Contractor Lqtma Beach {.~~!1 KING Siz<' deluxe Ne\1•-2 Br, )3" Baths. All extras! $20(), 6:IB-W6. 673-lJ3:i e NEW DELUXE e ~ ... :--;~.-;p:-r;;;c::-;;;;;l~P~il~o~l ~Bo~x~P_.'1~00~9=-;:::-=::;-I Rm. I, Newport ,Beach. mcnt. At th'e N.\V. corn@r or Choke chain found in upper \Vrlte S.C.S.G. P.O. Bo:tc J BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. 2 BR, oomp. ftdec.: new BEAUTli'UL Room for rent, IJ3..3223 Courtesy to Brcken PlacenHa l Centl!l', adj, the bay area. 56--1~ I ====·:.;'.::"'="":,c1m=., "'°'=~--' CONTRACTOR·~.-j' Incl 11pac. muter iLrlte, dln Zi~~~. b~tns~~SJi_~ rm. home prlvileres avall«ble. HILLGREN s°OUARE Vlat.. Shopplni Ce~ter. Good CAT: Gre)' striped back l Pennyrich· Bru -Swimwtar GENERAL Cc£'!:.•' I OLX 2 Br. crpts, drps, bJtns. IM!am clngs. Adults. no pets. !-'rom SI40. 5*"5386 rm I:. dbl Pl'&I". auto door Near Ora.nae Coast Col.. 1900 sq ft Delci.:e OfflCY term1 & only Ua.(l()J, Call white chest A lq.!1. 6 loes Pet'IOll-.1 flttln:s by appt o\ddltloNJ...Remoct-Jb€';. 1 opener •v&il.. Pool"~. S.nt• AM 5621 ~ Avail. fDr ,1nuned, lea!e In Watter Per1hall, eves, on fmt feet Emerald Bay .,.,,.,;,~;,;;;:;:°':;-=5'&-7,""'l:::;'-:o 1..e~ntial.COnun""-~, t * l BR. Newly c1rpeted. drapes, elec. k i t ch en . Children ok. Ph. 6~6-81~ "'" ----* BEAUT. home w/ pool cnr of cities busiest shop. 5"4-2l~. . l area. "91-l~. A LCO'ffOIJCS Anonymopi I :;;;;·~5'~!~...,,~;;·~;~1 • FRO~t $263 e $150 • LRG 2 BR. studio hu extra BR. for ~mpl. Pini cent~rs. \Vlll divide. Tulun' Auoeia1es nc. FOlfNO Orange and \\"l\ite Phone 542-T?tT or \I.Tile lo Licfllsed 865 Amigos Way, NB Apt, (Triplex), Faml.ly she lady. Prlvil. $80 mo. 546-67ol0 Al~. music panelln:, R.faltars. 544-l«tl hi.It ~wn kitten. \Vhite P .O. Broe Im 0:.t« ~iesa. ?Ytanaged by kitch. w/bt~; crplJ, ~. t Bedroom, f\lll be.th. No crpl.!, dri>s. ~. park'& l: NEWPORT Bead\ comer lot Jlea cotla.r 673-52Z4 6"11 Iris SAND'E'S ~ATIVE WIG Tnt.E REM0D . \VJLI..Wt WALTERS <D. frple., encl l*l'· 1 Ol 2 kHChen. Pvt pa.tio. l bUt to malnt. 2'iO F., lTth st., C.P.t. 30 x 8l fl. Only $3500.do\\'n. Cd~1. ___,_ STYUNG. Free pick-up 6: ~ ests • 100"• fin • 2 Br, 1 1, ba.. TK'\V crpts, drpg. $lj(l mo. l dtlld ok. MS-2486. e .1 BR duplex-lit! yard, N .E. Costa rifesa. $115 838-7381 PRIVATE VliEW children ok. CNr K'hls) Ne bch. 613-1023 til ll:OO. P.lr erani 213: 851-3100 collect ;~at. \Vl~red. Ha.• tt-delivery. Lie@~ • in. Kitchens, raraees • c 2 Bdrma .. 2 baths; carpeted, r~·N~u!cr ~~st., FURN. room. ktkh. priv. MEDIC4L,·,OiNTA.L ~~~~~~~e~ac_1~: ,."',",t ~ .. ?vie~. INta~:_tl1'f'"-el:,CO ,'="="IN~·-· C'°u'=!_,,;64&-=N~O=Tl25_,-F'°'R"'E=E, ~~fye~~~~1H~ dr«ped, blt.11111, dlahWllhr. · · ' Ladies only. 1993 ~ Suites avail. B'1lt location. 1776 Sq r• ",_ l t 1 "'• ~·• _ C3 U,ntairs, $"50 J\1onth. 1'.fln. $11~ cheerful 1 Br. apt. AW!., CM. "'6-8137, ~59 Xlnt·parklnr. 1afodem facil· · " ..._. un ° "x C.11.f. MS-3983 after 5 PM. J>arratns p.lore. \Vr l le, 1 ~at leN:e. ~~id dr:s'c~~tns~ ~ Prtv. 111 rm. in tarae C.M. !tics. JmmedlatelJ' (vill«ble. ll'.I. ~-=mies eor,. FOUND 1110170 boy's bike ~ 365 OjuJ '-liami, na Contrect~o,,,rs:_ __ _-;:+j 001\fEBODY 9o'8ntl what you l?S-& i 0 S. c Cen~ei si, S.A. nr pool home w/youni tarn. YI BAYSHORE c_ENTER Commere!.a.I Bkr. 6'7>6100 v1c Bushard le Gufleld. 1,:z::======= ~IY WAY, qiiaHty • have to 9"li! hh-ertist In ,, 0 0 Warner. S5T150l. · lady pref, 642-3Ta;j. 60] Doo.·er Dr . N'p.t Beach • 5 Sl'ORES, $110,QXI. '86c !!·~·50,,.()v.-ner ldentl f y l·AnniuM:ements MIO repair. \Valli, ttilil'l,c;:", .., OON"l' 1h>e It away, 1el W •• 1 L& ..... .._.Want Ada:.~ ROO.\I tor employtd man. 17~,0Sl&O 693 \V. 19th ~ Bethel .....,.. u etc. No job loa lO\t ~·;;"~"::;,,,":;"";.:,"='="'='•' =wi='"='"-'=========.:='-==""'=====i Kina Ne bed. $'15. Nr. 17th T°'"·ers corner. a..j.:116& art. WELL GJ'OOmed, ol d~r Fred lif«cl>onald 543-14M I 1 Irvine C ~!. 6'6-l'Tl.& -N'i' I La ~ ~ Bea:le tound vte Gi~n Medallion Home Bullder ADDITIONS. L. T. ~~ r,~;;;;.-~r:::~:':;:"""".;:-:;;;;:;;;:;; .. ;;:;;~ • $15 fE~ \\'eek.up .,.., lnlfu1trlal Rent1I 6090 Vt11ey Homes, F.V. ~ 2 Brn.tte @ 1trucHon. 1lngle or 2 ·~ STAR G.AZEK1< ~ kitcl>on. , µ; "" ,.,.,,., ,DelW<e ;-Rm. oHfot HORN 8111"1 blnh<tlni\y of M""1llons ;,._ PlaM . .,umai" • ~ ~!..!..,;_--!fa.AT1 A.pis. hlOTtL 54g...9153 Nr. Oruliie County MrPari Commerclt.I 6: rnchatrlal 17th &: San\l An-... CM at !tr t: J29 • mt 1-114511 M Y-0.ilf Aditlfcu;Je.. )( I;;=;:;:.;:======= I 6 tr:vtne .Jn Q p 1 tr l al ~ee for'leue on Sall ctes:o ~lfK>B Via·14do Soud Additions '* Remodel,b:\) Y' A.~1 .. ,,. tk Slitlf. -r Motel1, Trailer Com)lex. ~ drapei, Fwy nl" Latuna Nlruct DeJ.l:FO;;.:U,;N;.:D::,,B"'l•"o•"""•"'w"h"i'-t•"'n=i; fTS-000 Fred H. Gerwick. Lk:. To dMl.op rnnso"' fw Sotutdoy, C.Urts stf7 mu1lc, aiN'ctldltloalna Ii; ta EJectrlc 331·1.olOO. btt vlclntty of Harbat' A 1-,,,_ =~-,-.,·-===--=--I 16~rs.tml~~~~·~-=d~~ j r«ldwon:km 1~1d~to,....,_ jl.nltorta.l service. S125 Mo. FOR LfM,300 aq: ft prlme Bernard. ~1840. Celnet9,Y L9t. "'' I· Clf)'IN'Zodb:blmtslgn. I WEEKLY P..ates. SEA BOB PE'M'IT. Realtor \\'arehiie' space--til or part. FOUlfD a Col.lie do(, v\chUty ~~ ~~~ :~=-LARK MOTEL 2$01 e m.aJ.Ot 'e 11'\11ne It'd, Mr. Bullard ot 16th st. N.B. Hi IChool. 'V:W~;a:~: l;,;,ac~~ :J~ JlM 'lG.11'11 Newport Blvd. Oastl ~feM. e OOVER BLDG -&al'Dovtt ~, 6"2.-1031 % t Call Sl2--061T ;r;: ~~ :;~ -Dr.,"' ?i•\\l'Qft. s _Suites NEW bid,. l!'.pS to ~ It, =----:-=-=====-:_-:;:_ ptOX. ' COf '""" »....-",...._ Ml•f· lllinfill "" Avail: 4DC!t11. ft. 1-tmd nr, Nr. Baktr 1; Fal"'8w. 1 Lett ... CV2) LOTS in Karbor Rnt. ·'"-J7 Ui.,,..., ",_,_ i4D sq. tt $236/mo. 1-:nd •yr~i.u.~;.,· ~sun~1v~1n~"'-~2I~T6~/iiAii'il!F.Ait'TVi •tilhnf l'eCliofl. :~ =~ =~ StN.,Gt.£sanre.•~on-nr, 660~ •• tt .. rn/mo.1&NT)ti WSaqtt S12'SHALE 1 1 tlEA ltTt! SfO.lT&I 1 •-~ --,........ • '"'ear, Jill • vnltllto 1 2nd' .,_ c:w -ft • • • · YachH"'"" y,idO\l.•et, \1.-hhelJ --;:_:-;,::_;:-::=====::::--1~1:: 41,._., ''t=-C.M , '20.+$016.51, sz3Jmo. Ah-:·...;; A uni "19· "?5 Lola.n. C.?ol. ta. ~ 1fduent. widow, ~ctltne '4JO l~~ ~Z.-. ~Yw . ~ Incl. M&na.rer. 613-UST m:su' dePende'nt OK. To~ e:t. ~-~----- C•rpet C ... nint • o~~ 'cARPET " I STIAM CLEANllJ' llEASONABLI RATi Ahlo COJ-pet instailaUQn; 646-5'71 1.a......._ "'"* 7•"-onl:)' $20 mo -61_ pel'!!leS, \l.'Orlt 6: tun oft hlY· AUC., 15 VU)._. Park .,,,_ •-,...,. 19th•...,,.;.... Clll. 'm-cl!> DESK SPACE Lots -""°"' yadlL Objffilft s.n-Clubbou.,, ~llcl>•1-• Dbmood Carpet :~t ;r= ~::...i ·-.. --,----· JOI: N•. El C•mtrre Reel SELLER'S Losa.·H•v~ IJttAMalrtmcnyt! Royce, Jrvtne. Preview n-~~ .. ~· ... 400~,f!'~ 11'-... ,,.... nNl6 Iv I 11~ I "'° S Cl I ~ lot. 2U/43MOOS ~ iO to 11. auction •W'tl ....,_.., • \111&1 ''"'' lfl.M 7'-nt. I MU -• '" •m•ri • $42.000 In ~l tee view ~ Fl'M ul. 5tJ.. fl= ri~. ::=... ,. • PRIME sroRE LOC. ~' ' Dcwtt ~ llftlL 'ra' x "PATSY" ~-=-'°Ys~ .~~ti:; REM.A.RC Se:rylcn. l 22-,.,,. .,_ ~. Xh>L loot 6 auto lr&f-DESK SPACE ll2' iocal"1"' lawanll,. l.&rge F..W. llUSH SET-tqU\pn>tnt 6 fu~nltur.. 121!0 Flllly 210t u ,__ ao. J .A 1111 u......... nest' Tradewlni:l1 Ln.-Lot TEil J yn .i•. weartrw --.. .. -~. ..._: .. 11" -~OK. .,7 ~:_ ~~ =:::,... ..z ~ '1Mfma. ,........... 222 fi>rest Avenue t~\ tr IMlt, M.B. ~ nu. nea collar. Santa Ana .............. ~ ~ ..... -... " -_,, ,._ I C.M. --ouer con.t~e.red. 'h. C, Hef_...ts uca. REWARD. T-'"9 6490 Sl'EMil jtt urpet t =-,.....,. " . Y L ,. B h ... ~ :11-,,_, -STOlll ult o''"' •~une eec £tic-. 1141-tOlt c..n "" DaJIY Pt101 ay Cilrl<Art!, nal~ ~t::t.. ~I:.. iE:. m." lllO Or 1J:lO Sq. 1). Pukil\r $SC66 Ia >'OU ad bl the elw1f1ed Dispatch Dept, .A.Ilk tor Pat FEM. Coiled: •tudent ~'1•1>6 tervlce. J'fte trt. · »Glrrle ,..y_ f) 1111 I NAl» Reuonab!f., "6n2"1." NEWPORT Besch dlluxt of. SECrtONT Someone 11 L01n' • Oranre 1trlped cat to wrk w/braln d&ma#f or WANT HELPTCI~ Qiol '°'""-N-U • 2• 2UI A-SL, Newport "--!IOI. Prlv. watchlOll tor IL Dial •1th ..... 11ar, vie OCC lw>tll-cN<lm. -Dail>' Pllol1 • === ;;;~181~;;~~;=~~:!~:.__ __ _!Jo~AIL§:)Yt!P~l!Dl'~JW~-§EtAD.~ ... Hill W<Cl ... t·H.... l42-56ll Jot1.,1 ll<!wud Ni-16'0 call 01udette 13-2119 c..n ~.,. Roaulti J ' ·. I I I c F'""7, AUllSt 14, 1•70 1 •• ,..11v1t• ... 11 y j JOBS & EMPLOYMINT JOiis a IMl'l.OYMDIT JOU & IMl'LO\'MIHT JOIS a EMPl.OYMINT JOIS a IMPlOYMINT ME•tHAN01s• l'Oll _ • SALi ANO TltADI 1 '*"'""-· JM Waftted, ~ 1111 Jobe lt'M.. w~ 7100 J•"• ~ WeM. 7100 J1M Aw.. WMft. 7100 ---------ic;..,. .. L oylof I ~-p~i _, JolJo -.w-7100 • MAINTENANCE 6 +!W.ES,.,.....1-. ,.,..1..... IOOO MERCHANDISI 'Oii SALi AND TltADI ---!!_• .. !! Sa_1e ___ ~ LI~ 1 ·~r~olt~---_:-~ -.....;--~"'...;...--SCRAU..LETS -..,.....-. , rou. i M PART 11ME. •1ouwmt.11 t'!Xllbtt.tion tor male • femalt !:Kptrien. -to" n.dial ••. 12'' band snu. -... -.... PllOf'ESSIOl<AL ........ ...-COCO'S.REUIEWS ~ ~~ ... c~· -ou.. n..,., LAI ced, lor ...... ti.."'"'""' 17 l'C. ICING SllE .,.. 3 -Col ..... .. ..~-· .... N .. 1 _.. ,..... -ANSWERS COMPLEX ---. BdL -lop. s.. "'· wuuama IEDllOOM "°'~· -tabl<. Scoloh · --i:;et < 1•· Rober, bro .. a l r ·_le11 _ .SCf lilacAtu. 8hod. _....,_ , MAINTINAilliCI ~ • SILVERWOOOO • '5 l.arte ldratNr*-',mtr. moiu, ~ cht1t, tx10 ttf'lt, I ~ C.A. --........ -. -· 11'11'.RVIEWIHC"llQN .• FJU."""" fltlDAY ............. SI ..... -Apply ,._ Jlland N.8 .... t -........ ""'" --,.... ·-· .. -•..:.~•I -Lomln-ra.L<N'pricea.Roy Pftfer ->"'Ollt -Annor-J:)OtoSpn Into 40 boura _..(Id-tomanqttll:3Dto3PM. **STOCK~ 9 lbta...dt.nt.fruw,quilt. rod A automa& reel, 1\4 J:-=-N1-llll. Dem. -DROP OFF. DAY HELP juslable) ~ _..i Hotd i.i-_ 4'S So, eoasi 5·JOPM. Ida, Kltow...;: _, ma--ti, bJaall. HP air coolod O.B. "'°'0'· tiE~=~~~~~-·~-~ HOUSE'S; docks. bollti ca,. Mvklf. to a tathtr. lf )'CM' 0..-U '""9 o<tiot )ltOOucUon. Stnd llritf Hwy La,un. bN.ch., old. _ a ... ~•-I'd eta. .... fC5 ct.I. revolvtr, Brown!,.: • ..,,....., • bl.by hlLI troubl. 11Wptrw • ~ss _ f'ffbme to eo. Utt O.ta • _, • ~ Pttt · Olob ot Spt.rdilb 22 nn. " To.m _.., It D' • r •pat r 1 • pall!&. all)'thitlc • C!\ltt)1h!nr; movt him to tt.. _._ or ~ e "1-u~a' E,,..,,_ SS Mesa 9X26 ' MALE H•lp W&Mtd. put WALlJOI'~ MUSIC QTY' flt Modern St.•"' ~!.°..:.... S/W ma-:'M, --.....,...., .. ,.i..1, Fnr '""' . ~· -, • o< lull -· A001Y bel 1., s. Oouc Plaaa. » r • . LL •011 ~r. '·-8'l.bm.lil' 646-m.1. ~. HU '°°" DROP OIT. e DISHWASHERS CIRL l\'8.:'ltad llr house'-''Orit PM l\wt\lclot F r ltd ~ A r ....,..... • v&CUUm., wort btnch,, 2 ---. • 4 to I hra ••ltly. n hr. lTtb • No down pm ts. onl,Y $9 mo. 'oov.illng balls \\'/hap, 1! PllONE"" ft&\. then -Job Wanted, * COOK * '"""' 64'""835 Cblclten, 693 S. Cout HWy, I • • SEC'Y'·LEG,llL WELK'S WAREHOUSE bu& &<CO<dian, ..,.,, 35 -. CDPl."1' VJKYL TILE the bt!st: JanSe l Sari Women 7020 ~need. P 11 l-l t I m ... ~ BMcb. 4'MOI ~ TRAINI• $500 600 w 4th st Santa Ana mm camera w/ftuh, Muef'I UCCOHTR. FR.EE£ST. Paintina:.~bonded, ----PARK tJDO COHVAI.D-GOOD=LNG M A NICURI ST M~}R ~MWN"POZ"tlkuh DUly.9-SS..t9.sSunll-6 morel 11090.huPl.M• • 5ll)..Di2 '* itl5Urtd. sg.sm \\'ORK W11'"11.r'd. Ottice wor\ CENT. 6CUIJ.O, N.B. tt'ltt1ifts -Nlntr~. II ln-STY'lJST • femtle. Bu.y Ofc'1. Xln't oppor. w/tl.ne 2 1'"1.. SIZE _.,....._ny bdnn Vtrdto 8--4 Sat l SUD only t========" I YW SuJJpbt-1'k Paillt. l Pft~. w~ t 11 abop. C7So-3385 firm. Top btntftLt. Call Mlct .. _. . . BORHOOD Br-, Uv Rm l-l<it.cbm 2PM "' .-tend&. Mia Ottns tereated in jOinlnc .such a Marl ... __ .._ I Blrt¥ 5Sf.fi!J2. Abi.pll Ab. .ulln, lneld. drtsaer l mlt· NEIGH 1!_.._Red•w.e & Rofiollh... "15 Palnkd, $50. c.u sn..... ~ • Counter Girls ...... calJ .... ,.,., .. ...... .... c bot il.r.t..i ...... ""' .......... •Id. 1 -· SALE --GU & •ns Expntmced orily, JlmDan. ,., w Sui ... 1 San N>in Rt drttter, mtn'Ot', EXCLUSIVE JUNK! Marll\e Retired Pt.inW': a yn ' expel'. Neu ' honest. NO& -·~- JM anted FOR. FAST, JlAND'OlJT AR. • • • en~ job, frinct bent.fib. To • &racr, te ._ ta hip boy, nilbt lltd .. aicket Toilet picnic/~·!&-~ & yj°"""" 7030 l"'OOD SERVICE. TULL lmmed~ ft I pl time Po&i-M>f'k at modtm martria. Alla. cbalr. l mabop_ny dininrf hie/but: lamps, vuu, lawn TIME POSITION tionl anil, S&n Juan Ca.pis-Call or Wl1~ Ml dttallt. SEX:R£TAJtY, uper. for room Rt, g chain, table mo"'·er chande:liu linen/ McAdarnl Pamthw Sent. eoopr to manqe aJIU't· trano area. Uniforms l Lake Arrowhnd Ma.rt.n.a. medlic&I dicb.tion, Im . &: &: lu.\1-e1, buffet, chin&. drps, ~pre:ad, cOrfee ta· ....... &..... 6'11 lnter. A: ~.!"2°..:.~~ r&tes Jnf'f1b. Dl:pait:uu;vd. Apply in pcnon onl)' equip turniabed. Frin(e be~ P.0 Box" 910, ru.t.m.JSQl. ~ ,!!,,lrr rrou~.~ c110Mt occ. ~~·. ~~~ .. • bl.e ,i ?.lUClt MORE! SUN --.. ori apt&. --.-• 5CS-«m • .. au. Car A: telephone 1'!q'd, · S bee. _......, Mrs. Au..-. amps. t>lc. "3:m .,.._., 1~. 3615 Blue Key Dr, Cdr.t. AL'S -£'""""ENTNG METlCULOUS PAINT. AppJy at: lJ9l2 ~ * MASSEU I* •SERVICE Station 1'fadrln&.962-t l6l ' LUSK TRACT. ~ The ls'--d Ho-• tr.:mediate Exclusive SPA :c:.:::.:...:;:;...;,,_~~.....,=-·1 If!~ a m:naD 1aa4-BLUE <JIIP STAMPS. INS. JJ<~abl~;;·~Mot~:··~W~om.=~7~1~00~1 IUft •-SW.le F, Santa Ana. ()penlna:. Experimc:ed. Send alesmall wanted. Steady FURNITURE retumed from i-YEAR accwnui&Hon: Shop ~ Rl'9ias call se.s19I crrw cal. studmts. Int-ext ~ HOMEWORKERS WANTED resullll! to B4X M 1093 Dt.Dy wcrk! Apply In penoa. dilpl9.y shldiea, model horn--Smith ,, .. , many &lt&ch, 9llWic NNJ«l, Cdlil, em.. bomec. E:qi. Docb:. m.sll2 .,, A letter Position •12. }'uhlon Illan4 CEDve1ope Addrenu1). Pilot, 2:ll1 W. Balboa., New. Harbor Shell 2'249 Harbor ea, decan.td'I c:snctllation. $150. Zenith 21" con!IOle W/ •1 Mtsa. DaYet SbDrea. No Wutite • Nt'WJ?0"1 Beach Rush •t:a:m»ed. •elf· & d· port Beach. • I ~BIYd:;;:;;:•,;C~.M:::,,. -----SpuiBb • ?.lediten-anean rerno~. xtnt cond, $75. 2 Weddttf. * WALLPAPEi.. * dressed envelo pe . SERVICE St&tion Attendant, lit 0 ,URNITURE couches $15 l $20. Jld'oA.' .• fAL.'S ,,.....,~ Trt'" \\''hen )'DD caD ~.. T ,~ J • DELIVrnY MAN* L ANGDON WORLD MECHANIC NEEDED n1q shift. Lorin'• Arco. 1144 Newport Bl., C.M. lamps. cloth. tum., MuMarc ft!ll!:Wal. Yard remodelin&. 5¢.l"4 6C-«m _ _ Full lime witb ales pot~-TRADE:RS. P.O. Box 1127-• Part T\mt' 3201 Harbor Blvd, Harbor eVt'.ry nl~ 'tit !I Tonneau CO\'el"ll & hitch. Ttalh ~ lot delJlUp. .J::: "<J t1a1.. DM1 appearancl!, with A2l. Redondo Beach. Cali!. • Contact Mer. • Su Dltao Frwy, C.M. Wed .• Sat. 1e SUn, ·w 6 buaY parts & more. Sat le 1 n~;. --.i · * PAPERHANGING --' dli.,;,_ record, tor oo:m Marcus Motors 64.5-0tGI J'ntervlews Mon. 3-7PM -SUn "'II 6 pm. 3109 Bern Dr, ~~~~~.,..,~~m-~~11~!6;., Ir PAINTING. "' ~ •"""' ·-.... D BL 4 ·po 1 I e r bed , u ,:: J C L d m 11:.rotOU• • ........., ~ worll In cnnrinl: corp. Good HOTEL Food Checker-Cash-M ED I C A L Rece~, SER.VICE S T AT I 0 N &I· '11lomuville, bur n I 1 he d J~Lqu~;""~· _,<94-;,:.;1:;592;:,.,7'.7.-,,, G.AR .. -N N : •n *PAPERHANGER* 4.IOIC-O,.•N._r._. -1GY~C!>·btnetits.Apply w, female. Exper. nee. knowledpot im:.Expo.tily, tendant.FullorPuttirne maple,mattreu,sprlnp,& GARAGESaleincludlnr ~ ~ ~n~ei.; ~ AuthoritJ. Prix .,._t;:".t!,?itNCUJ~..,_ 2'll1 Fairvit'w. C.M. Omtact Bobbie Purdy, 1'1 time. Dn:. LonPY It, http wanted. 3196 Harbor 5 drawer chert. All tor $195 drums thousands ttcanll, ~ instructor. 6f6.2-H! DELIVERY DRIVER NEWPORTER INN. &M-1700 Rotentierr. 644-292l _Bl_v_dc.'..oCM""------or $125, $35, ~. Quilted ti's, "33•,, 78'1. Gay 00 JAPAXESE Gard•n i •I INT. le Ext. Painfu:lir. Loc:aJ SALES ~ ~fCTI'EL ?.WO Serv Statlon Mechanic-Sales-Slftad $10. 10 x lt Family awing. TV, Mlllt)' ~-Nnt•wk.Oe--.p ref's. Uc'd., int.., tree ea:I. cibiUties F1 or pt liiM. a.g~ 19-31, 6 LAGUNA REEF MOTEL man, top pay, 1495 Superior, decorator'• creen. &old. othl!r ttii.rw'B. Sat-Sun . yd maim.,.,..._ t.all Qmct, ........ uolimite() mo'• .... ey ...... HOUSEKEEPER """'So. Cout Hwy •• Placontla, N.B. """"' wool ..... , •• c ...... 2tlth. 19!19,.,...,..,, CON!pleteY•rdC•rel PROFESSlONAi:o JO Y~• Cal! Mr. Jones !J56.2li2 Fuft time t...quna Bch, ~:m; SLIM GYM Diltr help ~ $135. &l6-6018 or Pl.01642-3393 JIM Sil-t8!7 ~-~A: pa1&-agency DENTAL-OWr usi9t&nt ~tontERSMJper'l-childru dt:mobstrate worid's No. 1 BEDR00?t1 set $15 fine, from ~ ~1461 TRISH HOPKINS w/tronc officio capabilit)ts Perm1inent Position watcher. Muat IWim. drive, ouc1ar A. introduce t'X· Shopgrnlth $'Q Air com- 0-FA'!_l!!' ._~ R l' L ~ inlerlor. Call 646-4801 for OU,. MW facilhies row, llw in and be in-dtlnc.nt•SLIMGYMJET , • SftSiOr $75 Kenmor e ~ • ~ ~ ~ W att reucmablt' '38 E. 17th. SW~ 2M C.M. DENTAL AS&Sl'ANT tdll&'ent. Lt>vdy home, nke BA'lll.. No exper. nee. wuhet' "5 ?.! at ch I ea 1 joba. Beu. SCM85i 66-~ ~ . "1·1470 Experienced. Cb.ai:r5ick. ly famUy. 52 Unda ltlc!, N.B., Shirley Gnt.bam 891-19116 or motoreyde $300 Color TV CUt , Fee l.n"D Call 5t3-38W App in person now thnl Labor Day , ~ · · $:ISO ~fercury outboard $10 ~ Lic'd, l8IUn!d Plasteriftl, Pach, AMBULANCE DRIVERS 615-"3169/673-1446. ~TELEPH:;;,~:,,O~N-E_S_AL_ES ___ -.. ~II • . , : Misc. 64S-9Sll -'1t l R I -• •11endanto, ""'· -· DESMOND 'S HUNTINGTON BEACH MOTHER N..., end ohwn· lime, no expui•nced ,.. COLDSPO'I' ,.1ng, bot1<>m .. r but •ill train. Start ••la F1shion Island CONVALESCENT mtt hdp. Chldm/U lallcp&. quired. Immedia~ employ. trttzer, SlOO. Luaaae rad:. new co. Gd pay -+ &dd. HOSPITAL Lido late &ym:int. 115-ll!Mi. menl 1869 Newport Blvd., 3 Bantooia $25.. 2 oval braid· $10. ?tflsc. antique dilht'I . ..... al SM vices 6'12 EXP. Japune Gardeoer. Gen. deai:qJ. Raulln& bft!. • ........ -......._ ,,... 646-061' ~ m;:., • PATOI PLASr'ERING ·• AD typa Ft'fle estimates 104'• °"'.... """"" I ===CaD=540'8%5==== ~ -U)ilolldla) • wtn-I' -· ,,,_ c-. 56<Mll Plumblnt 6"0 co. bt:netits. For con--NEEDS-Sui F CM.. 548-550l l!d rugs !' x 10' Sal •a. bed!lpttads, Hoover updcht fidenti&I iotttvw, Call 18&11 Florida Si, i1 -::::1::..'.:.:·..:::·:::..::=.=::;·c__I 8-plece antiqued Duncan vacuum & tnilc. ~ Lua:o- "94-971S or .. apply al no newporf ~ T~lephone SoUclton Pbytte din1nc .et 68" x 44" nia,, Newport Sho.res Beach st., l.qw:'• Bu.ch. Full Time CSl&n& Lane) ~._.J Cbartty appeal. Paid weekly (2-3)" leaves) w/crtdenza ~=~;c-,.-.,.-,-,,=-CASHIER HunUna:ton Beach r-toM!llr • Apply: 325 N. Broadway $250. 6--pleoe birch dining GAR Sale &. m11C. lterr!S' - ASS'T HELPER Over 20 -....-.--~---.-b4 lgttftN Rm. 41D, Santa Ana. 1ttt Cb&r top nniah> 48.. washer, dryer. retrtr. lleW· FUUtime cr pl--thm,Age19-HOUSEKEE P ER/bay ,.....,, nd 2-l2" If' I '"" lngmachlrx",tooi&,lumbeT, 3• 6 mo re&idervwv -.'d. --. IJvo in, own nn, ba, eTRUCK DRIVE Re rou • aves, J.,N. ool t .... A9 N tre .., ·-J .~.. APPLY IN PERSON , ... _.._ Proh11Jon•I Strvlce 841·1186 anytime 833-3921 garden t 1' e c . ..,., 0 $3.'lS hr stut. . TV. Teacher cpl. Older _ __c:.::..::::....::o..:=::__, I Dame Rd., C.M .. 546-91~ Pl..OMBlNG REPAIR CalJ Mr. Winston 12L41«l #3 FASHION ISLAND woml.ll prd'd. ref'• ex· for th9 empleytr •• WAITRESS • Ex· e CASH e day or nit•. 1---.._ ___ _ No job too small ARE YOU 1 __ NEW __ PO_R_T_BE_AOt ___ 1 peoettod. $D> pa-mo + rrn and the •ppllc•nt perlenced, fill.I time, Apply, pa.id for good used furnituu ""'o"'E"'co=RA°"TO=R:-;M"o"'v'"m=G-1 lUULING I:. dNn-ap, trftl. • 60-ll2!I • &: brd. 6"-4150 IJJ Dover Dr., N.I. SURF &:: SIRLOIN, 5000 W. &ppl., color TVa. sttteos. 1 Hdboartl, dbl bx spra:s " ~-j,, = .:;,:~:l--:H"'o"Mr"'"REP='°'AIRS=:--IEAUTIFUL77 • • Dishwashers AOOSEKEEPER """-""' '42·:1170 CDut Hwy. N.B. No ph. •""-.,.•"°""""'·Top malt. 'l'l'pl -. '"""·kb. >41.lcm PlmnbiJW'..electJieal. S7.50 Hr. trs all in the e:>oe of the b& f« l!lderly womu. Llw in. NURSING SUPERVISOR. calls. dolJar. Fut, courteous att-rics, other items. 600 Mali· HA~ .... =-141~-~~-.... ~.~H-aul-1 642-2155 or "2-0506 holder. Oiedc I.ht TV OJm. DAYS AND NIGHTS Rd'. ex~. Send Full time, n\ehts, li..?:30 or * WAI'l'RE.s.S * Ex· ~lt hn. S57..W.U or bar, CdM. - '--. -· M .. -24 HR PLUMBING ml. you ..... tcb and lf you PART TIME AND resume to Box M 1~-~ LVN. PARK LIDO OON-pe_~!_~ only. ~~ ~-1-'~'-"-· -~~---1c~o'°'u,ccu=.-,-hain-.---.. ~ •• -.-• .,.-.. " I • •--J ~ -u >"'", ~"" ly Pitol. 22U W. oa.1..,. VALESCENT CENT E R Awa.r m penon, ''"" .....,.. Furniture f1ctory -~-Fr r • It REMODEILING '"""' )'OU'"' as ,....,,.., · v~ • u..u.. ~ n..... =" W • baby items Ml9C clothea, ;~ .. _.. 55?-9644 IOl:De'Of0..peoplr,call a&. Blvd., N.B. '42-8044. ~ <.NUte """"'' -.. · Open to PubUc Thun. Sun ODDS &r ENDS! 406 San ~.!l.T. L&WB S e r,. Ice. J-=========~J CALIF. CASTING CO. Apply in penon HOUSEKEEPER 9.5: l 0 NURSING: LVN, u-7:30 19th SI., Cost& Mesa. * * * SAVE % * * * Bernardino, NB. <&I Jey " Rliltldilq & is :ontinuinr Jta aeucb for !!hift. Parlchunt Retirement rdid shift. Park Lldo Con.. WAITRESSES Wanted, ex-l'.IU Placentia, CM pnteJ'J Gara:e clfto..vps. laaWizw; R I ---""··· .-..J-wtlo ha~t' A • Ma • Rt• i den c e • 9!125 La valellt'l!nt H05pital p b , per., for fWl time .. wk. 642-7130 ALE FRI ••T !£1!e ~ ~ .. r =--~to~ on TV or ftClent nrter Aiemeda. F.V. Pb: 90-5331 00-80« Jimbo'1 Cofhe Shop 9' RED VELVET <X>UCH. PATIO S :,:n i-e."' .-bi ~•.1:1' __._,._ .:..... ..,o; .... ..a'IC a.-... ta t __ ... 'Ot\:t\ E Cout H..,., Cd?.f Hide-a-bed, .Nu. ar t ROOK Additions. pn.ee&. ·~ ,.,.-. •'" w ..-.. ~ Uf'Gft Ji 0 USE KEEPER-Refin•:u, ORDER DESK·$2 hr, part .;,A#JY • -J.. pnctically new $ 2 0 0 . $10-eamp ~BBQ-tbl I: remodd. l.oftst Prieoe h1 J>l!r' dq. No feet.. you ever. nr:at woman to live in time 11.'0l"k for woimn. WANTED: Ot'per.dl.ble live-Interior system w a I l c d bencheli, l\1iJlc:. 193S Pomona ~..;.,.Lic.cont r1 ctor . •FUAURDOmNOCAMERAN_. 2601W.Cou1llY>'Y .• N.B. Nodilldren.Newpor!Beach N....vport Beach. C a ll ~1~?~-1~~~· shl!lve11.644-5393 AptF,CM. ,,,_.._ . .,. DISHWASHER. Euy 1ll'lltk 675-0315 6U-.&4 _,_ v.,..., .a. • ..... "' ..... 1 PR. chain, couch. adjuat. GARAGE SALE! Movinl! ~ * RAVE TRUOC * GEN'L ftl'llOdel._ &: mad. CAU. (714) !35.&!:U 6 days, 5pm-lip.m. Sm HOUSEKEEPER. 5 ~s. eeePART TIME 6'f$..Cl51f tri>lc acreen, humidifier, 4 Jewelry dothinc, bookl, • WIU. HAUL*"· No job too amall. ___ 10:;_,;AM,::..;;_to~l..;PM..;.,~-I reataurant CdM, Call Dick, Unda Iale home. Must live Large company in Anaheim WIRE & SOLDERING area rup, walnut SCOllC."f!. china &. Mil" itemr. 504 . 1 • S4M'741 * Uc'd/~. 615-118.l. BAR.MAID • Ni&hll, S da.ya 61l-i'i'22 after noon. out, have n.ference, own hu part ~ oPPCftUnif)' Printed dmlit boards. Fe-1 _v-'"""-'"="°"":.-.c.·..;833--"-""'"-"---Fern.leaf, Cd?>.f SAT .1 SON' U .f.ID.JNi., ..,. J. LOAD a week. No bikini. no daJ)o . tran&. 644--4408 I 9 ~--I ..... male. Experienced .. Apply :P.fOVING to Miami, 9dlin.,. ONLY! ..... ~~· -S.Wint 6MO cine. $2.25 to •l&rL No ex-DESK clerk vart time rclif'f. or men, ...... ...,,, pt! 178'11 Sky P ark Circ, lrvlne. living room, dinette ~t, ...,...~ap. T1ft Serv. Gen. --~------~---~. Apply MUil know an pbaaes of HOTEL • • • work. Hrw. 6:30-9:30 evea. .,_.,.5.,9. Rummtge & Bike Sale ' Gt6-2511. 50-IDC.1 ...,.n;i,...,., ·~~--,, -..i. ftl..w udi' PBX N Me For -nionaJ ,,,..., .... King size bed like new. ·-QUALITY you've al ~ a Y • in peraon betwttn 11 am front ...... _ ._..., • " , Vp;ry plcuant working condl-0 exper. · .... 545-192-4 Sat. Aug. 15, I am-5 pm, 'HU HJ iUUNG Clnnup, k>tl \de-wanted. Dftsln>\ki.Qg - -2 pm. Little John's l11n. & NCR 4D>. Ben 8rowlJ a lions in first cla11& hotel, in interview call Mon. •Tues. WOMAN 18-2:l w/muslal I c:::.;::;:.:_______ 10th St., {Womens O ub} anytinw ytou alterationa. !CeJ' .Sl.y, 1163 20072 N. Sanla Ana Ave. Motor Hotel. 31106 S. C.OUt tht' housekepinr depart. f rJt) 77t.'7231 tJ>Wty required. lntere1ted WANTED to buy-Full size H.B. I e iH. &n-.1398. Oranp Ave., C..M. H>l2D. Santll Ana Hg1~. Hwy, South Lacuna ment. Experience ·welcome Pt timefema1ea.m. wal~ss. in torminr a unique N!bt white campy bed. Muitt be 1~ST~A~R°'TS=rr1=-."'a"'w.,.-"'u"'y_y_anl-:I l~aruP-UGBT 'TRASll e RE-KNrmNG ot Italian b.ABYSITI'J!;K, Full lime DRUG CLERK, or will train. Call (TI4J OCC student prefel'T'ed. ~he~;:~! in rood condition. 54&-lB79 sale. Ewrythina: but the kit· j~ ~! $19 .leed a: All Types or lmitfuw: own tran1. ~. Lit~ MATURE 644-1700 Ext. 5'15. Scotty's Pie Shep euentt&l. Call 64~ 8' SOFA, never naed. quilted chtn sink. 20321 Acacia, ~ .....,.__,, t.abria:. -~keeping, salary open. Full llme. Call -4~Dl.5 e JANI'l'RESS for 1..quna 1510 W. Maker, CM 557-669C WOMEN, Lm de'"·--· work. floral, arotchguarded .$125; Santa Ana Hcta. j • PICK-UPS * M2-86.16 * . 54>8395 aft 6. OONtrr Ladiew Wanted, am, part ti.mt' eves. ?';eat RADIO DISPATCHER and Must have own ~~Apply: =~ loveaut $ 7 5 ' 'E°"LEC=,...,1"'awn-~,,,..=.".'."-,-,,,."°'w i ch;c~~E~AN~x.z,a Atte,.itions _ 642.-5145 BABYSIITER req'd 111 the night Rhilt, aver. 20. No a· appearanct', O>A'n tra.Iwp. Ille typer. Reller ahl.1l Ph: 325 N. Brot.dv.'9.)'. Rm. 410, SPANISH d' tfe t .tb cond; Djnr:tte set, drop 1t'fd Neat. accurate, 3J )'eats exp Cox !Chi district. Mon-Fri. per ntt. Apply m AM, MR Apply !1:30 to 3:30 PM. 610 S48-M56. Santa An&. nie M! WI table w/2 chain. 1 chaist, •RD I Gar , CI eanup. --• for working mother. Phone OONUTS. l3a E. 11tb St. E. lTth, Santa Ana SUite RECEPTIONIST', part time, YOUNG LADY over 25 yn i c:ho.in &: extn large table. ?tf&kr otter. 968-2975 trtt&, tvy, trub. Tiie, Ceramic: "74 aft 6, 96J.-0186 Costa Jloft'Sa. 10%. Ph: 83&-4026 draptry shop, Apply at 1.907 of age for steady job in -~::"<::""°"c..........,:.::..:"""':::_"_0_"'_'_21_1_m_o F11R.NITURE, Refriierator, I ~"""'~=·"be=cldi='="=·,,"""=:4'"':':' e Dilcount Tile Center e BABYSITJ'ER, Re Ii ab I e , DRAPERY Manufacturing. JANITORJAL-Part time, t Harbor Blvd., t.5. shoe repair l&les. Apply in l ~chi!& tor salt'. All ln port TV. miac:. S.t 9AM. ~ •m varied hni ,. days, 1-4 mo FPma!e. lmmed openings hrs pet ni&ht. l nlpta per ,, REAL FSl'ATE, OPEN· penon ANntONY'S SHOE 2544 ~. Apt D, Coata l;;·ti;IM<;:;;;le;;;;a;;;ni;;;ng;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~Sa. M&in. S.A. ~1617 old. Ph 642-4513 Fri/Sat, for •xperiencl!d Ir trainet-1. v.-eek. SAn Clemente, San ING FOR QU A L l Fl ED SERVICE. 340l. E. Coast ~~~· From $~. Mtea Allt)'JIC'Softile·wall,floor, C.!.f. 81!11.ch Drapery S~rv. JuanCaplltranoUH..Call SALESMAN. Exc e llent nwy.CdM.673-3G41 USED Car, Ksize I ;;'-HOMEOWNERS paoo, entry w..,.. beth ' BABYSrTfER • Ptnn&Mnt, 646-3009. 900 W. li'th, C.M. 536-89XI conuni.Mion acheduJe plua ========= 7' KROEHLER SOFA, l>eds'pttad, drapes, pl&nt&, rs stripped l waxed. Cpts ~. Expert illltallatioo my homt'. DEPENDABLE, * DRIVERS * Jani.tor wanted maey bonUI bffleflt5 -Alk SchMl .. lnttructlon 7600 $50. * 675-1549 dJshe1, pictures, lots of ' Windows wubed l or 1ttt iMtructions for do own 1nn11. APJll'OJ' 20 hr/wk cm.. Meea area Theatre tor Mr. Snyder or Mn. Joy SINGU: bed-box sprinp, misc. !!Gl-1437 ' hrJuN. • deaDinC ii yaune1ten. Complete line 5'48-11718 No Experience sro lYt't'ktY 545-9909 ASSOCIATED BROKERS .,. AIRLINE mattrese & traine, i ::.o. Ex· • NEIGHBORHOOD SALE! available by an~ of a~ £-tool.a for BABYSITIER. for children, Necessary! Lelsu~• Tim• Boom · SERVICE, 2025 \V. Balboa SCHOOLS eellent condition. 546--6410 • * AUG. 15th-16th ** .. proleuional janitorial inlltallation. g g JO p Sehl If h t be-cum a pftl't Blvd NB oc call 613-3663· C C WALNUT •--! · 1...... 3068 Fe.rnht'ath Ln. CM . ., . For fut cuarantt'«l -~-~-=-~-1 agtt · • • omona · Must have clean Californla you wi. 0 e .. . . ' PA IFI ....... onmca "'I'• .,..,,_.,.,,_, call &f2..2557. * Verne, The Tile Man • dist, Y<M!r home or mine. driving record. Apply ·of a n.pldly·rrowin1.recrea-ews 6U-7l53_ ~ • Nlf bt .Clusea $125. E:.~cellent condition GARAGE Sale Retrlrerator1, CusL work. JMtall l rtpaln. Ph: 646--5414 YELLOW CAB CO tion firm-opporturdbeit are RELJABLE 11tter to come S43-6596 6«-6028 Dryer, Humpback trunk. A Besch J anJtorfal No job too •ml Plaster BEAUTY ()pr. \Vant.eel, niusl 186 E 161h St . • available for high comm\1-in tor 2 chldrn. El Toro <\ ••'-E,. • .,',.'ll>!!!!S!!C!!,!!Sant!l!!!!•!!!!Ana!!' I BEAUT. Pecan oval din. set. 646-1820 • 163 E. 18th C.M. ts. wiDdowa. tloon. patio. Leakin& show tr be expcr, p/lirnt! poUible. Colt~ Mesa sions. Full or p/t~m~ in the area, 5 day wk:. 137..o339 6 chn. Hammond Spinet LG Hard Edxe J1tretched 'L 661401 ft'POlr. Clientele avail. N.B. area. . sa)p of an exclusn.·• club & &ft. 5:30 Plano L•saons CJri'l.n. 644-49()( ~;RalConunc M7-1961/M6--0'106 Phone, 892-428.1 aft 6PM EXPERIENCE ~ired-Re llA facllltie1. For interview RESTAURANT v•ork. 10:30 UC I student hu room tor1--=--Sol-ld---.-.. -~-.-.. ,-0~~ahJAdk~e-1:.pe~~~ ·:P.OUSECLEANING • % -cepbonl1I, C011meticia.n, mu. wrilr p O Box M-1022 2211 to 2 30 5 d k . . . uan. "'"""" "'"'" "'~ '""" ""' ~~· "!: Fut Ii ellicienl TrH Service 6ttl BEAUTICIAN for bu •Y • seu9f' hair :11tyllst fmale or .. Blvd N , rt : . ays a v.tt • several tier. or lntermed. 34X60. ~-GARAGE 2653 Orange, apt i M&-oll21 , ()OpUlar Costa Mesa shop. femalei HairHuniersSalon W, Balboa ·• ewpo no wlmd& Ideal for students. Learn Music * 642-35&3 * F, Costa ?\1em. BOB'S TREE SURGERY No clie.n~lt' nee. Pa.kl vaca-FutiM>n Island 644-n5I • &ach, C. .. 92600. housewife w/children. No TMary, alaht readin&, etc. I~====:=::=:::;:=::: 646-7'0!! S CLEAN SERV. ii back oU~ the same oona. Grari.it \\-el~. Call ex~. necess&ry. Hunt. Bch Can Bru ce, 546-4478. di> EW!')1binl-Ral A: Fine Qualicy Tree Service. Manaaer, 546-7186 EXP'D CO~NTER GIRL tor ana. 96:J-924l MERCHANDISE FOR Office Fumlture I010 BEDIL'\f Set. lamps, end &: · Free Est. '42-'rSfil. * 540-3798 '* BEAUTY OJ)f'rator : pasiUon ~~~~l.llllll plant. Call MACHINISTS RN -Pa.rt time eveninrs SALE AND TU.DE Rdin'd 34x60 wood desks, =e~~~~lo~n&- •l'OR XL.NT HOUSE TREES H~ . opf!n lor ",;per 1 en c e d in Docton ofOOit. Call Mn. $69.SO e Refin'd wood arm ,.. Q.EANDllG. stumps 'ren~. =~~i, opentor, ptt!erabty >A11b EXPER'D I~uranoe a&~llC)' DAYS ONLY Decker B-137111).5 pm 'urnlture IOOO rotary ctwn. $29.SO e We 10 h • P · a.I~. !:;_·~ c.II 836-064!! • fallowing. New sa \011 -tiri wanted, part time. -ha the large I km ct.il'll. BRIC-BRAC, ODDS -o.n1i.-Srrricre )Tl. exp. F'u1b' ina. 6C-4lnJ Net1pm1 area. Call 6t6-7008 &u.-6500 or ~2» e HARDINGE •. See Betty Bru0e at 20 PC. ''MADRID" ot v:.!ed oUice ~ 1tt inert this li: ENDS l!m Federal, C.M. 1.1.;;c,.::::ts.: windo'ft. noora, etc, Trff Service •tlO # BUS BOY . CUJI ' part J>'emale PBX for arwwttinr ~It. open.-~: ms.chine•. m 6 ' ROOM GROUP area. :t. I: Commc'I. S4&--(ll1 ---~-----ttrn.. Ship Ahoy Rt'Jrtsurant, Mtvice. Two .t:iiltz avail. te P · FROM MODEL HOMES ?.le ?tfahan Desk ~'I _nl..., Home.1 DON'S TREE SERVICE All. Lquna Beach 494-2050 1:36-tPM It. 3-11 p ht . . EXPER i6& XeC Includes: Quntd aola l 1600 Newport Blvd. ·-, ,__ J &"w..,._ T"-· • ~.,,. -.. ti1lNIMUM l YRS. . cba1r 2 end ta"'" " coffee !'J!ll•ncn 1100 O'KEEFE & Menitt 40" ~ . dt'an, with dock. Good $55. 4 la.pts,NiteorDay lYpta.~" ns . ..-i=-.c.lllti. ••CASHIER. National~ ' .,.. 642-MSO " ~ ·-•7" * ma•-, ••• =-• FAT Ir UGLY777 •·on~ tor ea-Glt'la ""'•.2 lampo, dr""'· m"' -==='='=-== ~ ' ..-..:no-.1 .,,. "" • ~ Lumbtt, Huntington Beach. • Pumanr:nt "mployment "6 VJ H N 8 ""· h<adboanl, .... ilted boil .---~-• -~1 1.., • 410 IV. Coyt wy • • • '" Olli E I ~ IOll LJ ~I Uphol tfO ,~ ...... ~ ... ~ ... _,_.•iimii.iiiiiilrr you a.re, WI!' probably can't * Xlnt. company beneuts By appoint. 6'S-393t qrlnp a: matftM:, 5 pc ice 1fU pm•n• IHinl"I 6755 •fwry 6 use you. * Overtimt' dininr room; tablt I 4 ht-• MAYTAG Service Man, 111 WIUJA?ltS Furn "Crpts CAREERS ! CALIF. CASTING CO. SA!.t;SMAN '""' nu r a e r y ho.ck chain. 1:?'..!t~~~~~t.S~4 has wuhen. dr)'ers &. mat- "DtONlNG In my h;lme, Recovtr e repair e clean. Medical fmt. ofc 1n S4Zi la mnUnuina il!I search in APPLY IN PERSON prden cen1er expe, wend COhfPARE AT $7t9.95 drawer flln, $35. Secy desk. cbing aet& &l. Guarantee. Meu. Ratlooabk. Beaut. 11.'0tk. 6U-8164. St-c'y gd itkllls 1n S500 On.nge Co. for a varlet)' of backp'ound ttru.me to Ray $399 $.30. Swivel chairs $20. 531.$)37. ~ • 54&-6970 .16BS & EMPLOYMENT Gen'I oUicr 10 S303 types, for work in mq:. mo. Shur-Lok Corp. Amlina. Amlin&'• Nunery, No down Pmts. Only $11 mo Slrafrth chill.rs $8 _ $15. 1882 KENMORE aulD. ,vasher. -r G lSc A PIECE Sales ~P ~111rt J600 dellng, 1V comml'•. A ind. lliOO E. Cot.at Hwy, N.B. WELK'S WAREHOUSE \Vhtttier, CM. 60-3408. Xlnt COQd. $50. Fret ~ """': 546-425.J * ~ob~antad. Men 7D00 Legal Sec'y s.tart $550 Wfllm11. Gre&.cl'at ~idrt ti~. t300 E. Nonnandy Pl., Salts 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Alla 'e_A_N.;,S_A_:_P_H:..0.cN:..E:..·.;.IJ.:.....ke;,;_°"'_· delivery. 1 4 7-!111 a or MIJ'. Tra111tt 1111n S47S e an! ,.,nt -' no ee. Santa Ana WE NEED uklng i.too. Daya 6?5-1083; $46-.8672 •7" LICENSED F/C Bookkttprr ,1111.rt s;;oo Not• achoOI. (I blk N. or McFadden, WE NEED CALJFORNIA'S MUST SELL after 6, 642-5783 iiffoorlal CAPTAIN Gt'n'l ofc seC''y tn $400 FREE i,, blic. \V ot Grandi TEN BEST MEN TO HELP OVER STOCKED NEW/Ueed appliances .t: ~ -~ ~ Radar . Lofl.n. 30 ,YMts ex-NCR Opr 1tan W TV SCRn~E~ST US SELL PART OF T\\>fns $t9.9.i, Fu& $.i9.95, Gar•t• Salt I022 ~~. ~·;e~;!~.e~ · pcicru sail Ot' ~'t!-~ ~$1 PH: ( ) Equal oppaMunlly cmplo}'t'r CALIFORNIA. ~ns $89.95, K1rws $U9.95, MS-778S ll.11•n WOf1c. etc. teuional sport filhing ruide COASTAL AGENC'' 10 AM to 6 PM e , 'AIDS e Y.'t 'tt a land corporation. The Twin SUe itudboarda $7.95, THREE family p.ragt We. 1 ~==-~-~-- rtUUlt. !!:~~~ Mexican &: Central Ameri-:mo Harbor 81., CM FIBERGLASS I a y M f.ute1t ~land corpol'· Trundle Seta qs,96, Sleep. Chino cabinet, cur I 0 NORGE washer ~ bft.n Jolla'I « ~ can watt:rs. Adml.ni1tnilive Olhf!r ltt/f~ .iobs .,,IL • Ben Bro11.'T\'1 ~totor Hot~ at.ion In the \Ve.I. er Solas $169.95 A Up, Studio cabinet. l(iau dOor butlet. overhauled. In order. lit.. t:Xpel'it:Jlct' Up, sanding & .... l1l06 S. Cout, S. l..quna w, need brlaht )'OU,_ minds Co\lcbeJI $89.t:i. 2 lhoWOIKS, apt alDVe, }. :$25'°".= ..... ==n>=--,~---- Jatt\tnrfal a Wln· AVAILABLE for ._~bnds. a.ERK n ·PIST, mature. tailirMJ exper. ~lAlD: ror Nt•'POf1.·8;-lboo. to function u our Ah np. SIESTA SL!EP SHOP rehij'1, 2 cov c he•. FRIGIDAIRE refrigerator · ttJt cleultW ...... Wloo extended charters or deJtv. $350. mo. Mull Mtt £d, • Penln1t1\a atta. Exp d or tHt:ntotivn. 1!2T Harber Blvd., CM breUtast nn suite, db( sew-Apmiment size, works iood. .... ruid .. onmcl. (Qlll't. ene1. Bfft or retett.1,cH. Id. volCe. M11ny bt:netll•. Apply lft person, not/Call ~S463 With a little euon. )W can 602760 1,. mach. Shttston buffet, M"x36" $25. 673-3245 ~P· f'rtt dt. tp.0872 Wrt&e Box M ]OflO, 0.Uy Call for ~~~70 EDLER MAIDS-Full ti.me, %5 ot make commlssiohl or SXi,000 3-USS Csl H11y, Dana Pt. :xte:~ddt'~ ~c ~ REFRIGERATOR. WU! buy j4 6111 Pilot, 22ll W. Balboa Blvd., EXTER.MlN TIN • O\"tr Ap,,ly 1MI Newport a ye:u or mare. 496-4552 dttsaen. desk A: chair, 2 dr. frwt frff. lt '-16'. ;~~~!~~n:. nt•••.nfi ~:·:.~~p. ~ 696 A. EUr;JolpbA Av. GG.~I. 21N1 OD1UDSTRIESSt INNCB. B!vc1 .. C.M. PhOne 642--93?3 I~~!'·':! f!~ ""'::.' !': ~SIM!!, "'•"'1o'°N"'s""""'"'"""".,",."",.'""ttn ~~ :t~~l~tei:. p~u: :~lot ·•no••t1Jll, S le• ,,,.·-~· COOK (Dln~rt O'#e •1 • • MAINT. Man • Full time, yOW"H:lt aomethl"-"· ht!(:!, linen&, blue: w.lwt ""t""'" £)( .... lle .. ~ __,Ilion ' .,.. a ~-.. "'" ru·t .. ~. ll•nt ·~ RCAal•-condltloner. ~~ '" '""" .-...,. 111-241f r1 wJ':'-. IOmt'.thillC ta do. $30ShifttoJ111,.1 •• GENERAL HELP ...... u '""" • lsltjustajobyou~utTOt aprtad, pair Slmmon1 r.HJ.ito_.71•95S w. 16th St. ~l50-=-=====~645--0G38=="" l----BLUE BEET ~ -· h Hlltbour. t.andsca.pe main!., a lllo"--··-. lwlM ..... -. $ pc. -~-.:. $ft..JSJ'4 or J. Sndltr. 3089 F v•..-~ M.25 •n our pool c"an.i11&, oocu. pain· F -~ -1 1--_ 1 _,. medJi. &Inn, be~twood COit.a Me~. LG. COLDSPOT REFRlG • M*'tlta. CM COOK, e~. ~hool Le. txpandlna chain, nttdll Una. gen'! cleanup., M113t or •PJIO n ..... n ....... : \\'/0-0.Top f.:rttter. MAID S!RVICE "15 EXPEJUllNCEO Mr,. t'fllT, luncheit. ~ days a week. n or pt ll"'* help for u.Jt11 ha.Ye own 1andsc•pe ~!)I. J ACK STANLEY =d::i .. ~..:~~:~ s:~'r:!%.~ ~-24~: $50 * * &J6.T&2!1 • (?ANO S Maid 6trYict I~ ~· Electro-mech &l&-0677 uaTs1an1. A(e 19-!3, 6 mo'1 Incl refff. Christiane Bay ITt.4l 83.S;S2S3 pictures, dt!lk. chair, g Iron frm P ; Pewttt bett mUfl, DAILY PILOT DIME -A nr,.Mmtlal l apll'fmtnt.. a.,.a, tht metal pbl tab. DAILY PILOT \VANT AD. rndey ttq'd. TownhoulWa, Inc., P.O. Box Your locll 9.fper-MarktL , ch1lrs, fine M1C1anit1. boy'a dotl\.n, 2-3 )'1' oo'd. • LINES COii jtotJ Just pen- ~~ or so«TC etG S5IJ O:ll &42-M78 ' eharp It Cali Mr. Nrl¥Jn ~73 .zm. Sit! 'Besch. sono Dl&l 14'"4fm • chu1;t 1t. ~ltta1 tc.111 847"'808& .-'M-""'=·..:•U;;:..;N..;uc:;.;;;"'="';;:·..;Cdlif-M'-"-""loa:::.c:•..:da>:o.,:·__c ___ _ • • 1 ' \ • ~ '-'=....:;=..:..;~....;.;.;:... __ -'' • .. I • • ' ' MERCHAND1$1 POil ' M.IRCHANDISI POil SAli! AND TllADI MlllCHANOIS. POil SALi AND TRADI Frfd•J, A11911st. 14, 1970 OAILV PILOT -------I PITS Ind LIVUTOCK TRANIPOllT,\TION . , _____ _;;,;;;;,;~;;;,;;;;.,;~=====,.;;;;;,,;;;;~~f FREE TO YOU • ans s.11 .... 1. 9011 SALE AND TRADE Dot• Antlque1 lllD ~l'°rtl,, Goodt 1500 Mloc, Wonttd NII GILBERT & Sulllvu • 1 ------Columbl& 40 dine! 128,9!0 llooWheete!,_ Trading Post e SURFBOdl ARD ~G" Bn.bd WANT: Dlnhlr nn. Mt =-~ti.= .:ti~ ~ ~~nd ~~~ RM!w: ~~:.00 ks, <:Jl,llbt1, Collector'• new, no rws . ..-w/bufflllt, tabk-A ~ loYirw Cl.ft. Low chlldNn I: -'"=""'-:,_·..,m.""":w'°"'1~---ll2 au., H/C pn!U\U"e water-Pll.tadlte. Spec. Indian MS.3152 cba1n-MUSf be ln l9'd atfecdoa. J'amtly movllw to A •P"""' $4.90. 408 E. 8"" DiWXE ........ -only coal. CaJI, -i H&wtll,. "°"1 ...... b OU> -lob -· dot. Oi>melc Tempuot 13696 boa Blvd. UNd onct. Mes» S. $!IQ. C..U WAHJ'U> If tiqy • J\lll 1111 pa rt 1,1 w J~ll thtm.. ~~· Pct qu.aU\f fJ*> (J) 21)' Sllpi avJllable l~~~~~=-~~:li-~~::..:.::.=-=-=:1--bed. MUii be l1W1lll • 1115 ~-;,;;··,;;;;,.:;;:""',-.,:---.-PACIFIC YACHT SALES IS.wing Machi-11%0 ID-ooqdllb•5IO.trll 8EAiiTii\fu .-oruao ,'.la,Qllll\JAlllJ.U, 7 -Sl<IVla()porto,N.B.6'13-1570 mo Slnger ... -.Uc. Mloctll•-· -IS' to 19' TRAvn. ni.Jler ' -~ .... kltt.o =-=-=·=-...,._~·~ .. ~":~""~· ~· I HOBIE CATS stg...u1 btaut walnut con-· Oean and 1n eood eond, about S ,..., med. k>na ICJe, ~akes button holea, MOVING SALE .. Uf .~ Will Pt.>' SSIJ'>.$100. tlC-1689 , t';;,,, -:-..:•;:.,~en~ ~ ::=:~~t~ci: overca.ata seams, blind Immaculate: fbUoo25 col-WAN'I'a>: Ma;iit tru!dle Me:cdb' Dl.)'l'ISt ,491 bklodUnea.$100. 8l>-1391 htma. dealgns & etc. Cuu. or TV, Packard Bell 21" bed,""'*-.. A m!rr'w. 50-109l:til 1 PU .. 1115 • -~--S ALL COLORS FREE DEMOS CAP'N EDS $44 cuh or small pymu. color TV. Y,lbrWt et.Ir, 5tl-OOJJ »rnu,v_,, panlel Sls-8238. card tabl@ w/'4 cbab WANTED 3 Kl'Mnm dauthterr of "1nAlf! AKC. 7 mo. All 2200 W. Cat. Hwy, NB 645-2244 * REPAIRS* breaktut table w/4 chain: u--• •-·k ........... : • __ .. f.amoua DAILY-PJLOT eat, tbota. Ml.ltf otter. 507-9349 den corner bed unit & table, i':5 ~-..u ~·P· anu J, A. Pteatwich. alttr 5 GERMAN Shepherd puppies • CAl4 XI. N.B. slip avail, Clean, oil & adjust )'OUt l;lawalian chair, hammock, pn, (213) 597-5.m or -5 wkl. Males, no papen. tull)'/tqUlp, new u.ila, 6 hp. machine in yuur home, bicycle, 2 Coeco bar atools, Used Cement Mixer 5.16-1195 1115 $25. 548-5755 OtB. head. $2695 WILL Special $3.95, all work guar. GE ll' re f r I • • ra to'. Wanted 56.21241 '°'°"'~"'"-----= ;,;;,,..,;;---;;:=-.,,,,-,-,-.,-HAGGLE! 8J0..08S4 anteed 545-8238 KITl'ENS. on.nae, bUt: " BEAtn'. Cdl~ pups, Lt.sale SACRIFICE • 496-3300, 26305 Via Ca1llor ---nJ.lco. l.l.q:-hair le .tiort Ukt>nea. Purebred, 4 wkl. nla, Apt, A lupstaln) Cap. Mec:hlnery, Etc. 1711 ha.tr. Vuy aftectionatit &: 646-1592, &IZ-3252 22' FRBGLS SLOOP Muslc•I latra B<:h 548-1164 OR 67>4T95 Instruments 1125 r.o · Woodworkl"I Mach. sw.et. Playful. Dya : • ST. BERNARD 1~ yn:, l=~~---~~- 1---'--="---'""'l·CLASS Showcll!le, 93x23x42, Set• make offer.1613 Obma 836-4493. !W8-08l3 eves.8{15 mm Must Sell! $150. Fibetglus • Gelcoat FENDER BASS AMPUFIER 2 ahtlVff, x1nt cond, $3). Way, C.M, MS-0991. l/JV ABLE Long b a I red * MS-9149 * * * ReJl8.int * * DELUXE IUCKENBACltER Oougl•hey swimm' ..... pool, Calleo _ ... -.1 female ca• FrN Estimates 54&-1752 .. ,. _..,,--. .. GERMAN SHERHERD pupa, BASS GUITAR 15 x 3, w/metal steps, nda FREE TO YOU and 4 mo. old sray •tripped awn A.KC hO 14' GlaSI Super Satellite * 675-6404 * plutie line, $~. E1 e c female kl~n tlM'd gd P. • 5 w "-pet, Fut boat In good cond. k le . rl •--••• -· B/IS ahota, wonned. 494-3100. W/trl •= * 6~ ~ Fender bus & Stwx!el amp. smo e SI rotisse e w/at· NEED foster home for 2 , .... ICII, ~I.> \VIEMARANER PUPS r, -......... ~ Good condlton $.300 tach, $20. 3093 Yukon, CM. orphaned Do.xle puppies :3 NEED Good borne, fned yd * Champion Line * SAILBOAT, Scwpion 644-2831 Alter 5 PM. be bottlt' fed. Have bten fl:Jr adorable, youna female 646-Ull SUnfish) 14'. Xlnt llike "''"· ACOUSl'IC GUITAR AMP MINI-Dragon 15c, l>raftin' on botttea: for 2 wb.. Mom Y~ 1'n'iti", about dition, $000, 646-3535. Model 260. $!..O mlni $300, hand kn I t killed J di.Ya after pups 10 lbl. HCUle' ipt, 54l).8fT7 e 2 AFGHANS • male & 14' CHRYSLER FIBER· 675-7825 ANYTLME ~ ~ 3 for $3. born . 548-0lll or or--\ 8/15 female, 2 years old . CLASSAll/gdrond. S250, 1-========:::I kJeal»-for money $25 ff •• S0-1U96 3/15 NEED Id home. fDod yd Registered. 835-S047 67>1159 or 675-5018 Pianos A Org•ns 8130 3-0 picture mirror $7, Vny lovable beiu w/blk tor Jqw.ble Lab/Gema Shrt GREAT Dane, A1':C Reg. I------=----· I Touter doll.-$15 ea.• llm ttps-Ylll' curly female Cock. brd .,mter mil. t moa. Fawn, 15 mos old, friendly, "ONE ONLY" SALE Sandalv.'QOd St, OM 54$-85 apoo. Houaebroken, needl ~ ~n. all abotl. Sac $45. 54().-0!)00. Moving . 20' FLYING Dutchman : flberalau, tntller, (5J 111.lls. ........, New & Used AD!IIR4 nidJo A ~ cood home, fenced yard. ln-'IGG at 9IJ84S79 S/15 J AKC York:y males , PI~?S p&ayet1.(etereo) ooneoir, 1 1.m.9'158or83Mm LOVABLS JO'U'C adult * 646-0lG * ~~~Ip~·~= Doeorator Spme, ...... 1399 ......,.; •IOI"! 061' $lDO. N ... -hem< "°""" trd -ca~ 1% >ft. 0y, AKC p PvpplH NewKIMBALLConsole$69'J Re.A~ TV )t" $100. b loYahlt fliendl1' ~ lll-C4.93 or eves: 5wkaold UV 847-8675 Auum~los.n.~ ~AU. Grand · •• ••• f19$ Many ~ tbunl bladt mt.1-wfre.ha.tttd 5'3-0ll! 8/lS COLUMBIA 22, shp, o.b., ORGANS , ~ mix Leu than ~· MFJ'TEN<toed Manx t. !" Afthan Pupt • AKC R.. hinged mast, plus xtru. TJJOMAS Organ •••••• $179 · __ • -1 T-.:_ -""~-~~~ · tall 24 --·'-a.~ QUALITY. *'tc.9989 $3650. 842-5916 ........... ..., ..... ,... ... "' ........... l'hoHS Are Open 1:00 o.111. • 5:30 p.m. 9 lo Noon S.turd•y -ao..d S..nday DIAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678 . ~ . . WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUl'{rY DIAL FREE 540-1220 Hunllntton kach: 540-1220 S.n Clamonto: 492.-4410 Hours-Regulations-Deadlines 111011: Mwlt"tlMn ....... cNdr tWr .. Ally .... ......, """*'i.ltllly ernn .,. t11Nct.~ THI DAILY •IL#f , • ., .... llAttlllty fw .,.,.,.. ..,, t. .... nhnf ., ,.,.,...,.. the .......... AQill'Jt nrnctly ....... OIADLINI POI: COPY AND KILU1 l:M P.M. .... ..,, W.. l"*lkatt... eDlllf ferM..iay Uln.. ...._ ....,, .... i. .. ...,..,, tJ--. 'OU MUST HA.VI KIU. NUMlllf WhM -..... H .. ._. _ _, ............... " ..,. .. ...,.. a NAft flf tM ltW ........... ,.. .-, r-r ., tater • ••lflal ... " """ ull.' l...ry.,;.,,, ......... fdll • ..,.. ..... 11111 ,.., ......... .,..,..., ... -... Mt 1u.rafttM ......... u the ................ ht ... ,.,.,.. DIMl-,A..LINI Mt'" strlttty ~"' ••nc• .., -n ..... MY .... "' ew efflca NO--. Thi DAILY PILOT,,....., .. the...,,,. ... cJa...., • .itt, CW' er f'lfw...., ..... tlHIMllt, • ,. ct...,. tfl r•t• an4 .......,._. wttheut ,,._. Mtka. MIU .....,_: la 1171, ..._..,, lwh, Clllhnllli CIJlllPllD COUNTIU ,,.. ...... u ,.. .... , COSTA MESA 330 W. BAY NEWPORT IEACH 2211 W. llALllOA HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA BEACH 17175 BIACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. SAN CLEMENTE -305 N. EL CAMINO REAL Daily Pilot Classified CLASSIFIED INDEX llAMMONDChord"A.1"$299 *AUCTION * -~ ~· -er • , .,_, •-CENTER_,.. Sa\llog HAMMOND Bl .. ....,. 968-2?19 moult I: ~ cat. Dys:· H -...•.•• ,,,,.,,, Fine Furniture .. EXOl'ICALLY d 136-4m, ~: 19T.6a0 8115 .,... dinctiy. 9" fig hull. yd HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS CARPSNT•-·· ... ~ marke dolly, lie. $235. 546-5147 tllM•NT, ~ ,. , includes bench deliVtty .&: I: Appliances beauHtll box trained ealico Vtty Ptb' satd,A white d.o I YR.. old .,eotie mare; put ••••UL ,.. ~ Fumithecl CMllO CA••· ~ .,.. warranty,.:Manyother A~Frl~0'1;30pm JciCtens,9,vkidd,~ IUmaleldtten,.fim(),m~ quarter hone, )»art~~~~~~~! COITAM•IA 11• :nAMIM = ~~!!c;!°~~! .. ,111• = ~ins . Windy s Auction B1m to Jove kind people. 67>M92 Iona hair. Needl aood hom~. MU1ta.nc. Tack incl .. $100. * * ~-.... 16 * * MISA o•L MAa u• Miu v1101 .,1• CAIPtT uv1,.e a 11PA1• ... Muir' BE SEEN! 2075,, N•--CM ,, .. ,. ""'"" or 673-4508 8115 14'able A frieudly, 83$-44.93 64.S-0121 . -,,,-,,==~=-,-.,..--::,,-IMllA v1•01i 1 u1• ,.,.,.., •••c" .. o1tA,.11;1t111' .,. 7'I .. _. • ., '"""°"""" i2 PENGUIN cl /trlr COlLl91 •Ute 111• •tWPOIT g .. Hn el• OIMOC.ITIOM ... e ALSO e Behind Tony'~ mdg. Mat'L NEED aood home, fncd yd PERM Or foster homes tor I Yr. old Buclaldn qtr bone, ass w . 111....01-r 11-.c•· 11 .. •IWHIT twillt ett ""a"''"'"oi lln'O .m YAMAHA • KIMBALL r I) r 1 0 v. b I .... I. .. bllc • wbt male e&t, 2 Xlnt row pony,_need,s Uper/ & all x:tn.a. $250. SU-6639, ffSWPOlllT Ml..n 111• WISTCLll'~ mt O.YWAU. DIVORCED .... ~ ... ··-· • "'"""' ~ '981 lALllOA CM'lt ........ ............ ...... ftl1 •1.•ctaKM. • THOMAS • .. .. _, Cblluahlaa. pmebud bouM ealleo cau, 1 tipr kitten rider. $000/bat o1r. 644'578f. •'<' GI'. ...,_... ••W""T ..... llA(:ll: .. ~·. ... llOVIPNllNT llM1'AU KOHLER & CAMPBELL Diadem Tourmaline stole ~ Adlts ot older chlldren male, 546-35815 bekft ' REG. Quarter hor se-top 21' FEAniER Sloop. Mgr.a ::~=• = •.ut aLU'• on ••Met•• COAST MUSIC $450, ~ $1»1, appraj~ preferred. 96S--23'i9 8/15 pm. 8/14 hrffding, beat atter. J.00 o/wd. Gd rorxl, must tell. OOYA aM011n lm ~:-~OIL 1111.Ut : ~ •• ,,. ... ,.,. 1tc. NEWPORT & HARBOR $800. 8 black aofa $00. LIVELY M-" -ha'-· MIXED ·-· -··· pup, ~u~...o ....nu 646-5TI4. $1695. g'5.1393 or 531-5363 I WllTCLI,~ Int IAT llLMl'Ot QM l'UllUTUl1! ••no•twa Small walnut bar" ac<:esll jllll:" .. ~ ... ~ ... ...., .,..,. ............ ,. .. , • MAllJO• .... "LA"DI Int LIDO ISL.a .., a •••llUIMI ... Coeta Meaa * 642-2851 . · ~mix 7 mot!' Good black w/wbite un-TRANSPORTATION Sabot, topoond. N"' VMJYS•1m PUS 1• uuo• isun au e.uo1M••• .,. Aug. Hrs Only l!Mi M.s&t ~· .,.~'!r'uteach machine with chldm.' Nds ~ brn, dennarkinp. Paper trained aall " Q>U1. $2§5. llllVI... :: MUNTllMTOM •PC• .. ••MlllAl SlltYICaa ... "'"' J'tO"'VV ._ ---.> -~ I 15 r-11 """"-MMf &ACK U.'t' '"' l'OUWTAIM VAU.IY .Wll OltADIM .. OISCMile ... SAVE NOW fncd yd. 543-3M6 or • ...w ... ~. -I .. ,. a Y•cht1 '00!0 ....... .,,,....,.. •.t.tnLUH '""' •I.ACM .... GLASS ... DURING SUMMER MOVING: 5~· ttbig, dffp 963-23'19 , 8115 BEAUTIFUL k>nr haired * FIBERGUSS r •~inc. r~v= TWIUC9 ~: ~::.~--c:tm' = =~:•:"°T,.MVM• = . CLEARANCE SALE free:re, dining tablr & % Olllie, % Shepherd _ kittene. 7 wJcs ~d. Calko LICENSED SABO'l' I: sails. Xlnt cond. eot•A DIL MA• 1w •Alllo•• ••OY9 .. 1, MULTM cLu•s '"' chain stereo mlac "-1c_ • •-c 11 CAPTAIN SJ.I$* Call 67~7063 Tv•TL• •oat ............... lut wanMtlllT•• .. ,, MAULIN• .,. We have trade-ins, repos., 548-S'ltls 1972 ' Ro8eme.sY .,.,Jge, M. 10 mos, 85 ua. • orazwe ....... a IAlllOA •111111111111vu u• NllOW•T crrr .. u Mousac1.u11111"• ..,. tent returns & floor model.a ..... CM. house trained. Xln~ watch 842-6329 . 8/15 Radar • Lo\ ~n. 30 yean 0.. ** KITE, RACING RIG, •••* •AY UM 1.t.ltfa ...... ... U•T••tO• OKOUTllM .,,, T•att .i-~--" All 5 EXTRAS N 647 LIMDA llll' , .. SAJITA A,MA Mll•Kn .. IMCOMI TAX .,.. ot every model Hammond ' ""5· :r........., er • GUINEA Plp-Be.b~ % perlence l&il or power. Pio.. ! o. · •aT llUMDI 1ut ,111111111 ..,.. 1ao•, ~ 1tc. ,,. Organ. Buy now &: recclve ADMIRAL 10' refrlg, used 2 841-M44 B/14 crown. f'U11 grown. Smooth fn•ionat •Port fishing fllide 548-3634, 646-6991 LtOO ~ 1•1 COAs-rn mt tJOtllM• 01ll "~ .,_ -·•· h I 146 7350 aALaOA ISLAMO 1• •••UMA, •IACM UIS IK51.>U.ltllll• ~ extra di&count. mos -· .....,.,,.,.., • ..., ... ->Cr, TINY stubnoeed. big eyed, a r. -0 r Me.scan & C"ntral. Ameri. Stan P.1iller Racing sabot MUHTIM91'0N •IACll ,. lA•vN.t. MIOUl:L 4111 INSUIAMC• .,,. HAMMOND good COfld ~ Luxurious tan temMe mixi!d ~mer. 11 "2-4424 1114 e&D watera, Adlnlnis;tratlvt winner of many trophies MVNTINOTOR u..t:••v• ... Mnltort VJllO .,. llitYUTt•ATIN .. ~ '"" elec stove $225 Travel old RffJl li>v1 " .... ~ .... • .. ••,:.w.ay :• .. It SAM Cl.IMllMT• '"' J,tJUTD•lAL "" tn CORONA DEL MAR trail $150 548-0203 tnOll. • y ng AR Is T 0 c AT s F 0 R ~not. Xlnt cond * 673-4739 suNi•t •IACM ,. , ... JV.t.M CAPllT9ANO •ns llWIL•T llPAta. .... - 2854 E, Cout Hwy, 673-8930 er . cute. Ndl. good home. Ari. toe ratl-OR >3558 AVAILABLE tor • weekends, P.!ETCALF No. 82. Excellent OAllOIN ••ov• IOI CAPISTIAMO •IACM 01 LAJIDICA .. IN• ... Open Mon & Fri eves, DREXEL 8-pc mahogany ~ 8/U before 10 am _. after t ~ dw'tm: or dellv. condition. 2 sails $400 or LON• •UCW • 1• :::."t.":~ ::: ~~~~~Vtcl' ··-··· ....... = l•ii0ii0ii0ii0i0i'"'iii"'""'"'I din'g set w/buHet, Duncan B1K Long haired. beaut. pm, 8114 erlea. Bes( ot refettnces. best offer 646-8180 ~~~ ~= COM00111u•1wt .. MASOlll:"& •.;:=:..,., .,.. FALL MOSE Phyfe, value $2000, •11 $450. male kitten 5 mo, w/ahota:. MIXED 8amo)'ltd 1:· Black Write Box M llllk>. Dally 2.1' TEMP ovT OP coulfT't 1• MOTIU .... s····-··-----· _, ::,"::~ .... ,_..,.,..,, = SOON ARRIVING *'* 531-!956** Needa ed. home. Lal>rador pup1 209 &mMa Pilot,. 2211 'fl. BaJb:>a. Blvd., Esr alp. lg. aux. 6 ou-r or natw: 1• RINTAL PAIWTIN .. .._ • AD discontinued models or NEW Crane 3 pc talJC'ets tor STh-1981 B/14 Pl, c .M. 5'1-ml after Newport Beach, Ca. ~·.::i~i.=.· =+9~ey ~:.~~0:.1,,. ;r,~ •• ~e Unfumlthecl ,.· :~~~~•.t.PHY : plan°!' & organs now ~ing me.rbie top. l.AJCite handk-t. LOVABLE AKC. Ger. abort 6 8/14 FOR SALE -LEASE e LIDP·l4: W/new trailer. =~:~:,.rrY :: ~W."v'1~~. r,: :t:!!°.~:~a. •..a.._., closet: o~t at discount pnceJJ Wholesale $85, sell $45. haired pointer tan Is wht FOUR ftuffy, cute puppies, OR CHARTER Bst ofir:r 0~ s7oo? •AMTA .uA Men. 1ae MD'l'ff't' aa-.tll ,. PIT ••00Mt111• JOU can t believe. 642-3163 1 yr hsbrk. older children 6 Wftka old Need Joving $4-$5,000 Down, 5 yn balance, * ~·c .,.~1 '* 01U.1111•• lfa MllWf"D•T M•••M1'1 on Poot. 11111v1c1 Sho •· • pn! ~· 2319 l/lC Jt ... ....., rvnnt ,,.. .......,.T SNOlllll -P'OWll ,...,,..,.. p m ... see. . . . . _.. family, 5f0.0383 • ft er CC" Ftybridp Wheeler cnus.. llOlllTM TVITI• ... WfTCLI"" ~ PUMP tlllVK• \VAR.D'S BALDWIN STUDIO EI.EC indin&tor, stail'wa)', TIGER Kitten 2 months (l) 3:30 B/14 er, Sleeps I. Complettly * Victm'y Zl $129S * :::.-J.~~00 c.....,.. ;:: u1uva1:srn PAIW tm ::::."~ ....... .,., 1819 Newport, C.M, 642-8484 chair twe. 1 yr old. Oo&t old, mayed or desemd at FREE kl~ns 5 wb old • tteond1&ned throu&hoot. 3 Sails, motor, al.Ip. HAVASU LAK• 1'111 ~:rKllll~. s::. •IM00•1.1•0 • •••Atlt '"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"''I new $1850, Xlnt buy $500. our hou!lle -needs ' iood 2 lk ' hl 1 fol-.. 1970... MINT c 0 N D. (213) 592-2135, (TI4) 846-3631 uev .... HILU ow IAtt •1.Vl'll ftfl •.• MOO.LI.... IUTCMt• i~ 646-6300, 673-7211 home. 546-«78 8/11 ~ ' M:.i w ~: ;;;;.: XTRAS PLUS! Make otter! RAINBOW 17'-Clh!I: CAT-t::~:: :rc:J:L :: to•ottA Dal MA• Qll :=so...,,.. .... HAMMOND Steinway Yam-• 4x8' POOL table slate VerW CM D 539-8978 Eves A wk-TR Xtras + AJmost new MISllO .. YJllO 11'1 ·.·.~·oa ...... oa = SIWINe MACMIJll ........ '"' aha. N & used ~ of • . KENMORE Wuberlnttds ' ays * 646-!till * . , .. ., Cll!NllltMl• 1111 LIDO tlLI .. , , ... TIC TNlll(L ........ lk. .... f!W bed. Like new. All ac-pu1ll • f'l!IJMllrs modern FREE adort.bl• blue .ved enda 89.1-8405. IAH JUAN CAPllTllA,NO 17U .... rA"·O•IM9 . ..,,. most makes Best buys in -~--"-'-'luded n~ o! ' I ., 14' o-~ -pl I 'th CAPlnlAHO 11.t.CN Inf MUNTINeTDN lllACllll , ....... COHT•OL .. So CaliL at .Schmidt Mw.ic ... ~·=-.... ~ . ~· . ch air In e ed. up h . aolld blk: kittens, 5 wk:a old. %5' Pacemaker ~ alglas 1967 ..... ...,m e e WI DANA l'OfllllT 11• l'OUM1'AI .. VALLIY Mll T'IUL C.-k fer.~........ 548-8019 8/17 Mother Siame11e, father 1i4i Sportfia:her completely IJ'll.tler. Ready to sail! OCIANllDI 1111 IH.toA ISLAND "" TILL°"""""". Mfltllt Co, 1907 N, Main, Santa Jua $325 * tu'l.7853 U.N Ollff 1111 SIAL Ill.I.CH MN Ta•I HIVIC• ANTIQUE wi}t din's rm set, WJIT, Fem. ldtteD ti> ad· Slamete. 5'~2189 1/15 ~· Muat aell· uµ. . . • ' "fr • • ..... ," COUllTT , ......... IMCM -ftLWtllOH .......... RAND SPINET· Walnut 3 wlhr "' clrjoer, port. Kit-borne, hsebroken. REG Is TE RED kmlJ.e Wffkend. $1500. XI% down CORONADO 15. N~'~ =-~=:: MOVID ;:: :::: :~ = VPMOUTWltT G . · • cben.Aide dsil'wlhr. 173-5543 548--8019 1117 Dachshtmd fr'ff to Pod with approved credit or Ir DECK. wrrH ln.11.l.UW\ eUl"tDll ~ taLt "" WltTMtld'TI• NII dLOJN• ,,,..... .,, yra, little \llled, $350. Plano •ft 6 .. .,. .... nl">,ftl'IO --~·1 home. 60-1806 1117 trade tmall ac11e ••• . * ~ * ...,UTMINTI· •o• IALI '"' ,. ... AT Clf't .. ,. WlllDOW a.• --.. ;o Ute $10. Metronome $12. ~ ... ,.. .uw ~USS or 644-1133 " SMITA A•A 11" O & EMP'OY 540-0033 AVON cancleMic:ks, wigs, female sd mother, FREEperiod~reportlonin-SCHOCK Sabot-flberglus, SAllllT.t.AMAMl .. tm .,. JBS '- KNABE GRAND PIANO 20'' bike, drafting tools, 5t6-4508 8115 come property develop-e 1964 22' LYMAN. 178 HP many erlraa! No. 4912. $410 RENTALS, ~!'ri-~1. ...,:: :: :::~:: =- Harnmond/B!ttach. $600 ap-c1~. books & more. mt DARLING Part Persian kJt-rnenta. 6t6-3410 8/11 !.!c, G~d. ~~vy~~. ~n make offer. 67S-5877. HouM1 Fumiahed ::::~:: :~~:L ::; ~o,•,. ~":~~~" --~ $1300. DAYS ONLY EUJS, Hunt. Bch. ~121 tens 3 white, 1 black. ' 2 MALE blue dutch rabbits. "'-nd ~·~ ~ !»=========;, ·.·.·.·.·.·,.·TO..... .... MllllOM VII.JO S7ll ICHOOU a 111111'1tucnoll "'" .... """ ks 842-6892 8114 cover. Top'""' · ........... "'.po • '""' c1.l!MIM'rl mt Joa '""'"A•ATIO" 6'2-9851 MAHOGANY desk wt tile w • f46..!Q79 1/17 58&2 evH A wk~. wlilrll,)tl tOl'rA MllA "" ...... JVAllll CAPlfTllAllO rm TlllllATllltcal. *Converted UPRIGHT Ir (1), athtt dl'l.wen $35. l'R.EE Kittens -6 wkl o&d ,m etttl LIVISTOCK HJ.001Q. ::::e:~o~11 ~:: ~~1r::::••AcM ~1: MERCHANDISE FOl ' PIANO w /BENCH. Elec. nnge (~dalr all colors -hr:luMbroken MUST SELL ~~';~•'-r"::!c" :: REAL ESTATE, SALE AND TRADI!" ~finished blonde. $1 00. make) $35. 644--5838 96S--S363 8115 Pot1. Oonoral llOO 1965 32' T/S PoJb1 Craft •x· N•WPOIT MOTi, mt Gener•I ~~=1~~u::.,.nv•• 642--5443 * FllmER Bua ampUfteT l ADORABLE I wk dd kit-Pfff3 cruller w/ft)'lng "'"'o•T SMot111s ::' n:tPl,.ll, .ic. .,.. 0111>1c1 •out,M•llllT TH OM As E lee t ro n 1 c deluxe Rlckenblcbu bu• tene, 2207-A Stab! Ave. C.M. PARAKEETS. All c 010 r a, brld~. c-d "'"'· M•t.. of-:,~~".0~::... ..,. COllllOOMIMIVM ... $TORI IOUIPMlllllT ••• •-ott< bl -11-. .n ,.~ "" ~ ll•NTAU WAllllTIO lltM CAl'I, lllTAUl.MT organ-Like ~w. $275 OI" euitar ~ Of,W Uff, T~... IP"ff1W, .... ,fer 646-2834. WRSTCLll'I' :: llOOMt l'DR ••NT ms ..... 101.11,.M••T trade. Wknds only 548 w. * ~ * 6 Kittens --6 wka old ' qes. None oi.oer 1 )T. old. 26' PACEMAKER delux ~.~r.·:•tTY PARIC mi ~c::J. ~~~~ •• COUITt:: ::~!~:o~LF" Victoria St. C.M. FOR Rent • cabin • Mam· gray 1 blk l t 1 a: er' S5 and up each. !540-lO!IO ...... ttltlher . radio &: n)"lia: •ACK •AY :: OVIST KOMll .... •u•MITUll AUCTto .. ORG ""' 549-4398 8/14. .--•U'r •LUI>, MllC, Rl .. TALI t9tt Al>,LIANtU nJOMAS SPINET ~, moth Lakes, slpt. 7. tum.. C•t• mo bri~. Aalclna; $7500. II T-2' .. lllllCOMI PllOl'l .. TI' ... MTIOUll Ughted keyboard, ·walrlut. -.Je 5 N~B rm, 531-331• 3 P/Si&nlde Klttent, ' wkl, 567-'D)l lllVllllll T•••ACI IMJ •UllNllS PlllOPlllTY ... SIWlllllO MA(MIMlt • '"A""--~· Xlnt cond Ml"' • .... ...-.. .... .........i ...__... co•o•A DllL M•tll tut T••Al•• f'A,11(1 ... NIUllCAL INIT•UM•Wf '' n.r.AJ,' '· · or 540-0617 ewa. very .,.~..,. "' •""" '""""'· BURMESE Kl'l'TENS 33 FT. 1959 Stephens. Teak •At.•OA :: •u1••••• ••flfTAL ...-,1ANOJ • CNllANI J.495. &W-0084 eves/wkends. ••MM CAlMv••, 3 le-~S 3/14 Trl-Olllnplon aired. CFA decks, Chrysle'I" eoe. Beaut' ~::O 1::-t,1111" un 011•1c11 lllN'rAL .. ,. 1tADID PRIVATE PARTY ~ ·-3 TREE 8 k old kitte rea: ShOtt Pl1yful aAt.aOA 1su110 im INDUSTRIAL PllDl•lllTT '"' 11llv1110M proje<tor SPIJCER .. w ra. . • -. cond. Mu.at tell. 673-2801' MUlfTIMOTO .. ll'l:A,CM 1 ... CoMM••tlAl "" 111-PI • ITIR•C> wanta to 'buy piano SCREEN~ 2 fem ... 1 male Ir Momma. 714/831).2382. 30, OWENS ,64 _,,IN i-, lo PDUN'rAIN v.t.LLIY tnl INOUST111AL •IHTAI. '"' fAP• ••co101as f Cash 213· 4611423 84l-5013 8/15 'n 4.Q llAL •1.Ac1111 , .. I.On •t• tAMIRAS a IOUll>Mlwt' or · • **642:-5709•• . -HIMALAYAN KITTE'JiS a1so hrs. immac, xtrM, ~· LON• alACM "" ••1111cM11 "" NOll•Y IU,.PLt•.,• ORGAN 11:. Pia.Do lffSOllB h)' .....,,, .,. -GE ~ Dble 1'REE lOttens. 6' wb, + Sliver Pel'IS&n ~. n4: WW I'-M··~ .. u. "'"'7-ORAN•I coVNTY IHt ttTIVI OIOYll 1111 SPORTl•o .00 1.1~ ._.. 16 ... _,_ "" ACllAGI '2" llMOC:UUll, SC0 .. 11 professional tea.Cher, Fut b@d. Redwood ·--" • tum. beautitul SiameM male, l S.l531 Of 114: 871·9S90. 6' ELI.BOY I 18 IL w""as'T~'IANNIATt• Mii UM• IUlllllORI t1t2 MllCILU.MIOlll thod 548-4806 ; .... ~ 673-3969 8/15 B • I ass, • ... "" lllOIT PltOPllT1' '"' Mii(. W'ANTIP me . Kitchen let plus many othtr yr. PERSIAN Mbt, I ..web, Volvo In board/out '"*rd MIOWA'I' CIT'I' = o•ANOll co. PRQl'lltT't .,., MACMINl•Y. •N. 'l....... boUlebClld ifltma. &lf-(399 LI'1TI.E Da!,N W~ (lf dWI' ani! tabby (4). $10 6 trailer; $1395, 96J.3"3:9 . ro::TAAtMA MllOMT1 "" OUT Oil ITATll l'IOf", '"' LUMllll Tel1vl1loft AU> SINGER .. ,.., .. ,.. $ 20 . .... find) 111 ahota 1: new eech. 546--4291 * 1, DINGHY * uou1i1a a1acN 11t1 MOVMlA*• • o••••' .,,, •To•••• · ..... OUHA MIOUIL 1117 IV•DIVISIOM Ul'D flll •Ull.DINe MAT•ltlAU --Jumor desk. $5. Baby ..,..mg, he. 833--0647 1'17 Fiberalaaaed hull •hell MIStJOllll VllJO 17'1 ..... llTAT• tilYtCI •tU , ...... HI-Fl & Stereo 1210 S3. 1.oonBetdw.Jt tr.mes, HEALmY AJbioo sulnN. pla Doti till * ..... 7574. * ••1111 c1.~""'"'1 !!!! ~·• .. · •.x~=~•":• ~1: PETS ind \ifVESTOCK _. l•M IV•N CA .. llTllANO .,.., ,.. ZENITH Con!Ole stereo, S5. S40-079f rood home' :ll'2 Matff stf ,OODLB flANCllRSI * 1' FIBERGLASS ~!~:T::~~ ••ACK ;;: BUSINE»~ and ~::~ •11111•111AL = cnlfm ra.dio it25. Call WALNUT be.r, fonnica top, C.M. Bil I have two AKC white tJny DINGHY MOLD * 11v1111101 CDUHTY -FINANCIAL oooa -' 6f6..665G • $125. EX'Cdleat: condition. DARLING % Poodle pups, • toy poodle ........ I ...... ., ... 968-7574 * VACAtlON RlllllTALI .... IU111••SI WAMTID -Mo•••• 644-Q)28 k$ Need rcJ h COHDOMINIUM .... INYISTM•HT °"""""'""' fJll LIYISTOCIC .., ' ·--· w • • om'• l fem.ale. 16' GLASS over wood 55 hp ourLallll •U•lt. "" 1vs11i1111 Ol"POlllTUN•T111 .. CALIFORNIA LIVINO f Ta-Recorcl•r• 1220 * CAMPER SHELL * 536-8121 1117 'Ibey're the "dulina:ertl" Homellle w/traUer. IMYltl'Mll•" WAlfTID tnt MUllll•111c1 '"" r--$50 00 KlTJ'ENS 7 Jm MOfillY TO lO_,. ml ltOO*.S w•I TAPE DECK · · W 3.l3 17th St., C.M. $595 548-6731 RENTALS •IRIOMAL LOAMI mt IWIMMIOSIN• ,,,.,....... 642«i70 ~~"1447 ••• •t•• /IWIUY LOAMI -P•T MODEL Xl00-12 "'"' B/lfi '"""' .... 9' Clal:t dinfhy ·w/3 hp HoVMI U"fumllhod tOl.LAT1•AL LOliM dSI e~~~'... ! .__ed tapus ;..,.. MOVING East. Dlriliw room BARCA IN~ ble.ck Evimude f~ mo&or. -•:-:•Ac-.n1•.TI~. -!~ TRANSPORTATION .. ~·.1100 • ...... IJe'I: & bun.t, s thlh:. ){en-, SWEET kitte~ tern. 2 m __ ,__ _ ...... -p. --.. n~,.M! 2674 .rttt 5 -. ••N•uL .!..".."!!"" -.,.,...,..,. $45. 64$-1596 6 ~ "~' ._._,. _...-. ..,.,..,.. I''" COlrA MllA ... WAM"9 ... IOAT11 a T•CH'Tt l ·==~·;oou;~~":,,*~==IM""""Iiii~':'i\~~~~:itiil white, 1 chal'nplliilne a t~ ')Tl Old, Medi rood T .... NSPORTATION ,.,.,, D•L •• ... •'Ua.louNc•u1NTS ••1l•oATt ! MUNTZ Tape deck C-100 white, l calico. ·~ Bll'l home wMb 1ddl iD exdlu:1p llU" MllA Vl•DI .... "'"" .... POWI• Cl\Ullllll llttn' COLllOI •••IC = .. HOTICIS tfttlO-Sl(.I •O•'rl Sportin" Gooclt 8500 BliK' Jlebt $35;< ."8ab7 lake 2 PLAYFUL kltte.n1 -OOI for ¢ek of oext . SollbHh t01t ti11w,.01t •u<:M .., '...u1i1o 1,._ AIU ..., '°"' T1t.t.11.1•s . • cat&b $1 ea 64&-190'7 _, & white, Ont black &U-223C -NIWHl:'r ...n. LOST '411 •o.tT MAllttlMA1111c• a·~~ VACATION ~ ~ MnPOl'r 1110111 !!! PlltlOttl.U ... aOAT UVMCMIN• •U.S. Dlvt!'tS Calypao REG/SLATE POOL TABLE l \\'hite. &U-6246 8115 WANT An adorable pet? r. IAYINo••• -AHN MINTt ._11 MMIMI 1ou1P. regulator, uM!d twke, aood • & ACCESSORIES $375 2 BeautiluJ black 1i4i Slamele Amber ii tbe dos tor you. returnlnc to Ohio. $300 oov111 •~•n :: llltT;MCr Mii •O•T S.lttt. Mno•••• cond $45 She' dul'-AKC ~ii-. Sabot purcbued 6 wka ago Wtn'CLI,., nn PllMtU1.t iMlt tC>•T llllVICla • · . 549-3777 a1t 5:00 pm. 11 wkl old kltt~n to good • a .. ,. •u.v wUl be aold· b' $275. Ph.. t,tN1v1111rn PA•• .. PAID o.rtUAIY 6411 '°"' ••N,AL• ·:. ~~~ ~ $2.S maclune, 8' DAVENPORT, good $40. home -548--0813 8/15 646-014-1 • U3 11ih St,, 0 .t f13....l.l9I, :.."J:~AY t:MI PUNtl41. Dl•llctolll ..,. J?t:.1111~":::~ * Wet suit tu11' xtr'a smaJl Large plftSUN: cooker $5. FEMALE Cockapoo,. years, • PURE DRE D * COLUMBUS.15: F/equp, :~.!LU"' = ~~I~ rn:-ic• =~ :::~ :::~::. $20 962-7176 • • 3913 E. 19th St. CM gt'IOd tor tidu!IJI, a.hota. DACHSHUNDS 12 wks, (2) Incl: sails, t r a i le r. ~-:;:;:.., "==~~. :: ~~=T~I LOT1 :::: lOITI WAMTWD GO.LFER'S Men'• mAILER, 4'.ll: ,. box, light ~5402 8/15 ~· ** boa.Vcvr. •tc. READY TO llALIOA ... CIMl'T•*'' CIYPTt .. ,, :t~~::~.ISOMS aluminum shaft H·B golf wtlgbt, $50. FREE kittens, t weelu old. ea 962-«07 SAIL AWAY! $1395. 213: aA'Y ttu."OI = ~=~:~'::..., = MOa11.1 !ff>Mll dubs complete set u!led * 83'1-8868 * 5'0-5605 8/15 GREAT Danes B wkl, Fawn 425-0023 ~:,Oao'!l~su110 '* AUCTJOwt ..,. ~~1':°'*'' tw1ce'. Golt cart. lcl.ri. ball• LIKE new Schwim bilct -STANDARD Red Dox I• • Brindle. Show or com-TIME FOR. =~:TT.~o:-::.c.. ::: ;::.T~~· •••vl(I a ~~=~~~~~.CA·• • ttt!I $125. s 4 8-2 4 8 7. iadiff 26" delwr ~ 643.-0545 tvet. 1114 ~n. Haney boUow Una. ""'" ... ,.... ......... ... Alli 'fl"'"""T .. TIClft ~OTC>lt(TCLl:I 6'2--0506 $6.i. &12-1067 aft 10 a.m. B··~ ---~-A _.1151 .I '"'rAfllll VAL.UY •n• Mn'8 'ntMl1P!Ql't'A'rNHt ..U Nl?lt'tt~()OlfJtl ......_ ......--~ •·Kc SILKY QUICK CASH IUt., MACfl Ml L...._ •icQ ..,. AllT'O •••v1c11 a •A•n POOL TABLE 16 JUDO &.IA.TS Americ.n Ave., Ooltil ....._ ~ eu• _..,. = TU'Tla.~;;&l~f DIR"CTOR~ f~t.to0., t:A~1-..ou1P. , x 8 •-·•at•·-MAKE OfTElt ---...... , -IO TIRIUlltS •--• Cl••-'-.... -~~ v ., '""'5"" IVfl. If rw:."" ZKaUU4YI Sfr.fn36 * ~ ,_,. ~· .... ~Im M ... fRAIL••S. tl"llh' Complete wtlh aU 673--0847 art fPK kwlnc homes. •D tn4 , * * * THROUGH' A a:... •hn11 ~ '"' Ml •z111vic1 ..., raUCK• 1cee81(111e1. Xlnt rond. POOL Table. AntkiUt tr"'*9 , _....._~ IUck ii&li Lew-ilBRADOJi ~ .,,.. --r-Miift~ :;? 1:".:. 1'AIU. """' ~ ~:~':.111 •'fth 6f6.3629 A Mile. -.... -.. ·I Wit& PURIZRED AnlitaKe U.WTa AQ ,..,...,. ,... AIPMALT.•ott mt CAMPI• llWTAU _..... r!tl'l!llM able I:"°" tnlnad. m.2985 $50 •1135 DAILY PILOT to.1.1Ta1. • AICM"ICTUIAL 11•vte• • DUN• •fftl••• SPAUWING Exec Alum. ..._.._ 6500-6900 LA.tllltA •IACtf .,.. •1.110 ••l>A••• ... IMPOll110 AVlOI --·· 1..1-<·, lrona 2-9 .• otnce •ite de•" blby 2 Ch~ahua puppies, ' wkl. AKC TOy Poodlt:s. .Uvtr U.MlllA •IOUI' ..,, AUTO, .... ••"'-,.... .... "" 11.0RT CAllll wuvu ... Mfj.7822 ,_ In fhe Ml1SIOll VlllO INt •AaVal,llllll• ... ANTl•VIL CU.ISICI McGregor Mff'• 1ttel. tteorns, b&nd mower. male A f•m .. 7 w ... , WANT AD 1,1,1111 ct.tMt•T• ,.,, toA'r MAINT•MMC• ..... •Act uas. •oos Sf8..9*)6 fl62..9Q39 3-10'' pots (1( B:omellad•. w/aOOtl, .$100 ea. 5'>8.'16. • ...... JUAll ~ .... ,..."° mt •llCIC,. MAil>N•'I'. -.... AUTO lVINTI . -• I CAl'ltTIMO • ..,... mt llltll .. ISI lltYKtl l '*'' AUTOI Vfl'.ftMTID POOi~ TABLE .. BRINRTON 1900-<Sftss chf'on::.Nat'J cuh -1m /18 • WK Old all while .,.1. 642 5678 OA .. A POIWf { " SUll.D••• ' ..,. MIW CAltt Auto ball retum SlOO rePttr.hflr~.A-lcond. ROOSTERS. 2111 Irvine. AKC Peki~• puppy . • ~=:m~;1~: .. u•fL ::: ~I~1111111J~i:...tiiti·--.... .,_ = ~~C:.~~" •96>-7008* 642-mOO 11.B. "6-<Mt 1115 !taro. m-ms i•---""!"===•I -·= i I I { I r -........ ' . . • • . .. ' .... • • .. \ SO YOU.R LITTLE . RED WAGON • . IS REALLY DRAGGIN' . . • ' l\LL BILL 81LL ' . . . -... ......,-.. . . . " ..:.f I ' -1 . ..., .. :»I .. ' .1 ~ ,I ~ ~ ~) . ' ' '. ! • :J .·: I ~J 1 •• • I I ··1 .. ti " I .I :, I •' -, . -~ . ·1. ,, ""i •! : 1 ADD HORS .EPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET I You can handle those bills. 1'11 you · need are the dol· lars you'll get for all the still-good, but. n·obody ·uses. them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar· ticles into extra cash~ It won't cost you ; ~ • it'll pay you. And you'll be surprised . at how fast you ca.n sell iust about anything with a DAILY PILOT classified ad. 'll Try it today. Every day is a good day to use . DAILY PILOT WANT ADS -· (And You. Can Charge Them) ' . ' • • ~ ... .. ' . .. ' ... I .. ':. j " ' " • '( , .('! .. ., . w ......... : ,, -i :J . I ~I ' ·:1 I I ••• • • 1 'l .. ~ ·i: il ; i .. ' .. _ ...... ' ··-·· .... ...-............--..-• ... -.. ,~::.--~-::"":::=::::'!;:-""-·"'~·-4'"-·""''~ffi~·"''""' "':' .. ..,.,~&":'.-,..-,~ ............... -:-._..,,,..,..,....,.,...,,,o;,.-... -='""'"I!"'_,..._..,...,.. __ """"""' ____ ..,."" __ .,..,.""'""""'· .... Ill • • ~ • t ~ ••• TlAHSl'OltTATION TltANSl'OltTATION TltANSP'OltTATION Fr"'1, Au911!1 14, 1970 DAILY I'll.Of .if) TltANSl'OllTATlON -TltANll'OltTATlON -TltANSl'OltTATION TltANSl'OltTATIOli TRAHSPORfATION TRANSPOlTATION -cru1 .... --"· ........ ' -TNlloro, Ulfll!r -c.,,,,. .. 6381689 •••••••••• ,.. IUCll ...,., • ., ' 537.6824 • 89,1.7566 '65 16' G,.._, "'HP M= NEW0 USED-SERV. q, full iequlp, vuy dean, -... - - - Sl@. 645-0629. • - - - -I 14' GLASPAR ski boat w/trlr, 45 hp Mere. '595. -= 16' ·ALL GLASS Ski Boat. 100 hp Mere ere .• w/trailer. $18'.ll'.I 56--2585 aft. 6 pm ' Marino Equip. ~--------- e ANGELUS e TEAR DROP e HARVEST • KING or ntE ROAD • DJ'• e DlSCOVftER e OIJ.SSIS MOUNTB 1:nup Lll l l\ lllP L111 '.' IMW Authorized Dlr. DATSUN e HARVES'l'.VANS e CAMP JONG VANS e ANGELUS·VANS e DIJ<. CAMPER SREU.S e ,CAMP KING CAMPERS ' "PULL CAl:,11~ CAMPlll $875 ,ROM ------- '""'"" ... '--·-tod'Can -._.. ... _ UICK.NCOSTA MES Spoci1Qrl11 ••tum JAGUAR , ,. Opel , 234 E. 17th ST. SPECIAL OF THE WEEK 1967 Continental f floor htrtltop. Yo11'll lint h•"• to ••• ffii1 •II• to reelly 1Hille11e It. Full l'•wer •q11lplft•11t i11cl1Mfi119 •l•cfflc ht•tl re1t •Ml rt1ll11i119 11111e1191r 1e1t, owto111•ti1 t ir co11tlitio11!..,, 1tere• f•p• ''I''''"'• p•wer door loclr1 erwl u11hell•111b!e l•w inll••t•· I"' '"$3'195 lHt CHIYaOl.11' MALllU 2 0001 HAIOTO' VI ellllllt. ltkt tllfft, fll'Wtt' 1twr .... rMlt lftlll .,....., -' wllofll:, .,.. ''-"'" t!NI. 111n ...,. fMtlr1 _,,.,.,.,, (DMIOJ $2395 lHt OHL l"*.T llDAN lttdle tfllf Mttw, IMl!OrMlk "eMfl'llttlM, Tlllt lecel 1 --•"'°'"'*lie 11 ..... ., .... ml* .... " 11111 ~ ... , ....... . $1695 COSTA MESA 548-7165 -----.. "SPECIAIJZING .. IN QUALITY" letutlf11I t1111livrst .,.llow wttlt lilac• liv•'"•t •••h. Avtolfl•Hc h•11t,. rtcll• •1111 heet.r. cli1c lntk•1, ,,.rt 1t••rl119 wh•t1, etc, 1•41010161.) MANUFACTURERS CAR fUSE~l lHt MUSTAN6 'w .,.._ AliltefMtk. Nfle .... l'!Mtw, ,_., ''-'"'· --..... frtdttY tlr cftllfllnllll. 4 leQI .. """" nr. (VIVMI) $2695 1'70 llVllRA "I'" .......,., ......,. •Ir, "dMltlolllnf, 41/t.PM '""' _..,.. """'ltr· """" l'fitf, .,,.., ... •""" uterlw. "ldffY _,,....,., 1ppll-. IWll') • 1'6' lutCK SICTLAlK 4 DOOi: HMOTOP va, •rMflwllt. ,..... ....,.,., ,.._ ''"''"'• ~ ...... ,..,., •• ,. 'f'llWI l'90f, (Ill ...... ~ ... tor. I ....... llUI ctr, (MJy lMOO "lli.. PICllWV' •rrlf!b' Wfllhd,, (lVCf7U, l . $3295 19,69 V.W. SQUAREBACK . ' $ Full Automatic Plus .Air Con<litloning. . A very herd.to.find Model. (369060237). --·- . ' • ' ' . • • . • • ' • :1 ' ::i ' '• '• • '• ,, • • • : I ' " '• . . . . '• . '· . . • • • • • . • . • • . . 111111"""''"'-"""'"" __ ...,. ____ ....,.,....._~--..-----~~~~ ........ -:-~~---~-~----------····· ----·-. ··-· Frido1, -14, 1970 TRANSPORTAT,'ON j I -Imported Aulol NOd Dor Sing Says •• Thanh• for businesl! I tho119ht you would be htn1! How 'bout your lrier ds 7 We 9onn1 wait for tliem now!! DOT DATSUN I0-1711 • 18835 l!oodl IML • -2 llUllTllllTOI IEICH Dally Piiot ClaulRed J2rtupon .!l111por1 ~, MGI '65 MGB ROADSTER TRANSPORTATIOJ1 ONE QeMer A-MOTT ll 1'1inor. l!m Woody •tation wtlOf'I -ft'al eood bod -needs • little ~ work, SJOO, 6'M!2l ext. 3U uk tor Mift . -ROYER ROYER TRANSPOltTATIOH '67 OPEt Kadetta ..,., 4 speed, AN/FM, air cond. (XJ<F 98'1) '1299 Bill JONES B.J. Sporta Car Center 283.3 Harbor, C.M. 540-+m TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOltTATIOM TRANSPORTATION PORSCHE '66 PORSCHE 912 4 .SPEED -lmpo<tod Autot TOYOTA '600 Imported Ctn YOLKSWAGEN -VOLKSWAGEN.: ·:,. :!....~~~: '&5 VW Sedan ·63 """'""" Ghio ~: Pvt pt,. $lJB5 8S3-14'9 tlbJe • Rebuilt ens, ft• • I====-====== I Sunroof Radio, CMJR 9118) brake• l clutch. Good~. TllUMPH ;.979 S700 Call 64,_T3T5 <NPD 617) -•. ;p Cool Bluo-Supor Sharp $2999 '68 ~r 6 '63 vw convertib le . II w Mechanically perteet, Sac- llLL JONES , .. 1 ... """"' .... -"' Harbour V. • .:·~.':· ::" .. u. B.J. $ports Car Center ~ly ~n~~ ~ 1ITll BEACH BL., 842-4435 il1/FM. 1unroof. Good 2&U Harbor, C.M. 54G-M91 :i.f)ny Sacrtftce ~ trade HUNnNGTON BEAOI cond. ~or 51)...4545 '68 Ponche 911 Coupe, )f.,800 or small ~ will fin pvt Large Selection * '67 vw we. t p ha I i. mU.., """ """· ""'1o and pty, db'. CIJI Maury aft ui Of VW Camp-C"'!p<r. Xlnt '°""· FuUy be&Crr. Uc. WL 960. am 540-SlOO or C9f.l029 •••• eqwp. $2250 ~7 PORSCHE ~;!'~ ........ Imports '67 Triumph TR6 I YansN, Kom&buis,_ .. i:..:: .... u:,,.,: w~w':"'' --------1 120 W. WARNElt 4 1ptte1 w/overdr:lve wttt UMS, ew Ssu ~ 'fiO PORSCHE Cabriolet, 1600 SAN'I'A ANA wheels AMI.FM di; low lmmMlate Deflv•ry auper, with bani 1o9. Now ()pm .,,,.._ A Sun. fi>4l25 mil•"' R""' like •· """ CHICK MRSON e~, new clutch, new 'SS Poncbe SC new rblt ena. watch. fUOVMiJ Will take YW ttrea, new pa.Int, AM/FM, 01rm whb:, lWl root. 125 car in made w finance pri- just like new, can be ll!f:n 23rd St. NB vale party, 5t6-4052 or at""'.,._ Bh•d., or '61 PORSCHE l'.....atl.====== ~ Ext. 66 or 67 llml HARBOR BLVD. COSTA M"-'A MUST sell '68 VW led. Xlnt cond. l!ln'le bodY wcrk. ~ ofr. 548-.3815 e '59 VW-NEW UPHOI. , A'LNT t'ONO. * $500. _ * * 549-1011 * * ..... ·-' .... ~. ,:= ;:,:;•-;. CABRIOLET VOLKSWAGEN FABULOUS 3500 '""'"' -cond. $1000 "'"''•" 11um1n1 m.talllc V-8 with air mnd.ition, auto-6~272'2 sllvt'l', with brand new in-'66 VW PANEL '60 VW BUS. New engine. $flXl or tradl!. 67[>.7'51 '58 V\Y Camper. 1&1 I!.~:_. MUST SELL LEAVING'. !· FOR SERVICE! 544-7741 ~ _ --: e '68 VW-XLNT COND-:· matie transml.aion, power terior, chrom& wheels, ta· Radio, heater I •~). BEST OFFER • - '""""'· """ -ts. TIME FOR dial ""'· AWFM ndlo, $1295 Excellent cahdltion, wire 2 EXECUTIVE DEMOS Uc. WYW 215. 9625 Garden Grove Blvd, GG ........ (VNE 099) 0...... N•w ""' ........... low mil· Cj)UICK CA.SH S1899 Coil Colloct m.rm '69 VW Sedan Radio. CYCY 961) * 673-9523 * ~I '!~ 'ti6 VW 2--0R: New paint, ex. • ceptlonally dean, lo mf, ::; new tires. Must Seli! $775 (I[ .,. bsl otr. S4'5-6519 or 96Z-1782: :; ~~·~· ~".=: ... SlOOO CHICK IVERSON '69 YW BUG Will fi•. pvl .... DI<. Cail Discount THROUGH A vw Dir ....... (lOCA "9), 11"' p,. o.11 10 em 54<>3100 or FRITZ WARREN '4"-3031Exl16 or 61 lull p•ke with small down Harbour v.w. '68 vw .......... """"' : .... lll29. SPORT CAR DAIL y PILOT 1910 HARBOR BLVD. "'" !Inane< ..... ,.,... '"''"" 1700. : e '61 MtB-OT lo mi, -COSTA MESA '67 VW 61S-?4'9 C : • """'· MUST SELL. make CENTER WANT AD -> 1l'1ll BEACH BL., w."35 • 1916 vw ...... """ : . $1755 ofkr m.3348 '65 NEW ""' new = 1"" CAMPER HUNTINGTON BEAOI ~ m""'6n\cally. 50 l •. 1,-~-~-~-§~-~-;::-~-::;~-~-;::-~-§~-~-;::-~-::;~-~-;::-~-::;~-~-;:::-~-~-~-~~g;~~· ===d171D~E~. ht~S~L:,, S~.A.~=~"~'"'™~1.:=====:::::='-I q~r paint, new tires &: disc "......... -DI& • I. braket;. Im.mac! $3595 . Fully equipped lncludins 1111-1 ~CIJl=fiG-5611~==•=cl>a<le==lt.=. . .:,:°""'=z:="'=:A="=·=Cd=M=·="=:'7 :::=;[; · YEAR-END .IONll CONNIU "NO GIVEAWAYS NO GIMMICKS" ••• Jnt 22 Ye•r. •f 8-t 0..11.., S9'li1111 O...,..l•t.. ALL NEW 1970's --EXEC'S -DEMO'S --NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED BRAND NEW 1970 CAMARO Brand New 1970 Nova 2 Door Coupe Tlnted 9l•1s, deluice belt11 power 5teeriFlCJ, AM radio, ..,ap. emi•1ion control, white wall tires,' large wh•el cov.,s. ll60T) 17· 36241. ' s25&2 FULL PRICE FOR RENT 26 ft. Horizon Motor Home Air Conditioned And Fully Self Contalnad. At Populor Prlcas. Phone Immediately For R.ntn1tlon11. Roger Miiier, 5,..1200 C o u p •· Tinted glass, •••P. omission control, AM-push but- ton radio. citrus green with green vinyl interior. Stock '#: I 054 {530202). , Brand New 1970 Full Sized Chevrolet Wagon Tinted 9!111, turbo hydr•· matic, eo'ap. •mullon, power sftering, 250 va e11gine, AM r•dio, vinyl in· terior, (907) 1181716), FULL PRICE s329a CHEVY BLAZERS-1971 VANS CARRY AW-4 WHEEL DRIVES Now For Immediate Delivery At Connell Chevrolet. Cell Ron Kranz, Truck Dep•rhMnt. 2828 HARBOR BLVD• COSTA MESA NIW CARS 546-1200 USID CARS 546-1201 49S--6255 gage n.ck.. Runs 4: looks I c 9608 '"' '55 PORSCHE SPEEDSTER brand new, Ut. V'M'907, l i'li"'~"~"ii'';;°";;A~-iiiiiiii~9~600~~\m~"°~rt~ad~A~-~iiiiiiii •• ; e New m:ilt 1700 e,.. ! Spend the 1'r'ffke:nd In * $1600 * * * * 642-1154 comfort with ecommy -: • CHICK IVERSON WE SELL • • · ~: .==--.. PORS:HE=~s ...i.=-=-""·1 vw Cars That People Drive : ~ ~all -:::.. ';.;; 54!J..3031 Ext. 00 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ply. Best ofr. 646-3(KO COSTA MESA. '61 PORSCHE CABRIOIEI' -~'-',;.~,...,,'=-~-I Mlift ,.u '"' .,., ott" '63 VW BUG .. STh-1323. Red beau~. Exoellent condl. -,,,.,.,.._=--,...-, rl>l=t""•ng,,,,-, -I tion. N!!W valve job, (WQD yellow $1000 570), 1nu.ll down will tin. -~~*=-613-94~'-'03~·~~-I Pvt. Ply. dlr. Call Maury e '63 soo, Many extras e aft 10 AM 540-3100 or Must till!'ll, $2400 fM..1029. 673-4386 * 524-8633 '63 vw ======== ltow mllH on rebuilt l!Dg\ne, SAAB new clutch. new brakl!I, --------1 radio, pttfed: condition. Can bl! seen at D9 Harbor Blvd. or phone 64.>198%, !lam ~--~ to6pm ........... --,w=E-;!l;;;U""Y,,,_-- de All IMPORTS The welbu) 5'1'11 Spttlalhlng In VW a.,.. & Bwea Paid tor Of' not: 9625 Gudf::! Grove Blvd. kla • &!rvioe • Parts oo collect 531.rm Open SUn From s-... '69 VW KOMBI BUS SONETT ~io, heattr <•7*>. Immediate Ol!liwry $2595 Orange Coun1y's Newest Olr. !!625 ~n Grov!! Blvd. GG COAST IMPORTS c.ii CoUoct m-rm ot Orange c.oun~ lDI W. PacWc Coasl Hwy. Across from Balboa Bay Club 64Z-04IJ6 • 546-4529 SUNBEAM SUNBEAM Alpinl! '66, ~ vertlble 4 iipttd. rr95. 962-34.19 '66 vw Gd. Cond, 1825. - '63 VW lug MECHANIC SPECIAL Llc. OKC612 $299 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. TOYOTA COSTA MESA '64 vw '67 TOYOTA SCj)UAREBACK Pick up with camper 31,000 Lie 895 actual mlles. Local l owner $895 automob~. Original l'l!d fin.. bh •.. w ""'· ,. • .,, .. ,,.,, CHICK IYERSON ready tor anything! (UPM-VW zm. S 1399 54g.3031 Ext. 66 or 67 19'10 HARBOR BLVD. CHICK IYERSON COSTA MESA VW JOBS TODAY! Cl.au 7100 NOT ••. Cars That Drive People w.·.,. 4j!Ot the thr•• greatest Triumphs of th• century. The Spitfire MK Ill, the GT-6+, aod tha TR-6. , E1th one in ifs own way, can give you beck th• unebridged sport of motoring . Take the Spitfire MK Ill. With its racing· type rack end pinion steering, ·its i~depen. dent spring ing, it1 four forward-speeCI 9e1r- box, iind it1 ultr•modest price. Or the Europe•n Grand Touring Coup• .. styled GT-6+. le•n •nd tough, with it1 bi9 six-cylind•r •n9ine, superior Redi•l-ply tires, •nd front disc br•kes. Or the TR-6, Triumph's bicjgest J.se•ter, wfth ih 2V1 litr• hi9h performence •n9in e. T•k• •ny one for • short drive from our 1howroom11 end right •w•y you'll discov•T • lost •rt. '11 .. Something ullid "'Driving" LARGEST SELECTION in the St1te of C.11ifomi1 • , • and Points "E11t" .... FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAl CENTER 710 L 1st St. S1nt1 An1 147-4764 54!J..3031 Ext. 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. New C1rs 9IOONew C1rs 9IOONew Cars COSTA MESA ITIOIY!O!T!AJ DEMO '70 WAGON (6372) $1817 Check cur deals 8 OTHER DEMOS AT BIG SA VIN GS DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 BIIL MAXEY !TIOIYJOIT!AI lml BEACH BLVD. Hunt. leach 147-155.1 I ad N, d o:i..t ffWJ. • Bd 70 TOYOTA'S In stock. Immediate ddJnry, lllP-'l 1':::'-V' .11 L•gun1 Beech 900 So. Cst. Hi9hw1y '94-7503 * ~100 '69 Toyota OlroM Coupe, 4 lpl!t'd, racUo A heater, Uc:. ZSJ459, S!.511;.00 Jim Slemons Import• 120 W. WARNER. SANTA ANA· Operoi Evts. 4 Sun. 6412S '67 TOYOTA O>!ona. Good <oodl<lon (.Wt. 92TI. WUl take ca.-in tn.de or HMnce private pu\)t. dlr. Call -.. 49<681J. rn.or W ANl' ADS! 642-STl HOW TO BEAT THE DEALER AT CLEAN-UP TIME. WA.SB AND PU.ISlf "l'OOll PIIm<r CAL The bettec your car loob, the better trade-in you're likely to get After an, deakn are human ... and they ' respond just lib you do 1o • nice.ohiny car. Chrysler Plymouth Clean-up SIJ}e ... On Now ·:1 •. :· ;- l : .. • .•. . : ' . -. • . . . . , . . -. . ... . . .. -• ... lmpo<tocl Autoo 96001mpof'led Autos -TllAHIPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION u.._ji Con 9900 :;~~~~=~~I PRE OWNED PORSCHES VOLKSWAGEN ~;;,~G:: 1 :=:w:GE; 196b Porsche 912 ,.,..,,,,.1.,., 1967 Porsclie '91 2 •••... st.ck •Pt4A 19~5 Porsche 356 ...... S•••• •t1A 19b8 Porsche 912 ........... ''" 1967 Porsche 912 Torqa 'M S2SffPER ~ NEW YW IUG $55.89 pr. RIOll!h $3895.00 '68 vw Campor Ndlo Iota• S9UARE BACK $4250.00 er, 4 *Pd. xtra' clean°lnaf(le Radk>, beater, Arctic whlte. " ou t. S~'ll f'XceptloMI Cl~. $3495 .00 DEAN LEWIS Th;, .......... only !TEX. $147.71 down lnckidos '~ """ tH & Lie. Opon End $+495.00 -HA;!~, BLVD. $999 VW L::SING '68 vw wbeeI -p&lnt job $51.!15 dn, • $l7.7(1 month CHICK !VERSO $5b95 oo 1600 cc" mu.~ .... m•~ CHICK IYERSON N • offer or trade tor Van VW VW $"95 00 ~93$1 lJ70 HARBOR BLVD. ~ · ""'31 Exl. 60 or 67 CX>SrA MESA $4795 00 '67 vw Bua.bit eu1tom interior, 1970 HARBOR BLVD "lO VOLKSWAGEN BUG, . new re enr. Must .ell, COSTA MESA • $ , 195 make otter. Call 6'13-32al ~ 580AKV. 12 ,000 ~ .00 10 VOLKS .... '""' """' '67 DELUXE VW BUS ml.... rodio and -· CHICK IVERSON PORSCHE AUDI ~Priva,.' Party : Radlo, 1Wt51•00l<). :1~~;"' olld< •hllt. , 9625 Garden Grove Blvd., GG Jim Slemont Imports , ••••• Stock •lt 5A 1968 ,Porsche 912 •..... Stffk •1444 1968 Porsche 912 •••... s .... ii a11tA 1970 Porsche 91'4-~.J .... Stock •111.T F•\dq, .-_, 14, 1970 • DAnY PILOT 41 ruNSl'OllTATION fRANSPORTATIOH!!i.-'?rtiniiN>lisniP0"'5RT.,A"'T"'IO"'N.,---:-r;;RA1i="'s"'PO~RT~A;,T~ION~~J lmpo<tocl -_,.........., _ -l--------l 1r1n!!!''~1~11!!od~A~u~lwl~_:-~!!!I lmpooiod --- --'-VOLVO VOLVO BUYERS VOLVO 1--- 'G Volw PlQ...AM/'ni ndlo; air, ma&' whla, Ilka ,...., PllO. l-Si+.3023 "" . . LET Us "7 ~ ........ Font '60 CHECK V-1. -11'1', + convt. YOUR DEAL Alum """' A Duo lop CHANCES ARE WE'LL =-· Xlnl -· fl3..J546 SAYE YOU MANY =:-==-=-====I $$ ~. Claulce •U It'• worth your whlle. • Ul37 FORD l'ickuP· 283 V-1 FRITZ WARREN ens .• autD trant. Good cond. SPORTS CAR l1S0"2!'!c.~CM. CENTER 1939 PACKARD a._.• o... ··omtCATm ro Remarb.l>Je cond. 115-7880 SERVlCE"' Will ten ID ht JH0t -ffUR,,. no E. lst, S.A. 547-07&4 ~R"'Y~• -~~--= Authorized Sales. Service-Parts 62 VW Call Collect 537.rm 120 w. WARNER, Ru111 good. Clnn! , SANTA ANA 900 WEST COAST HWY. I· 6<>-0236 :m'!rl;"·~~."":'i,'~~· 0peo Ev ... • s.n. .,.,....,. Test drive it today, NEWPORT BEACH 646-9391 -50-3325 69 VW POP·TOP CAMPER woodeo ,,,... •ill & mitttt'. '67 vw s d 1::::::-::======~~~~:;;;;~=~·~.....,~~31~·~=--Db. '"'"· trim, 111'5. e an It's more of a car '11l D<mo .• ,,., ,,..u,.. c.rs 83!-1Z76. Air"""'· •UVT ,.,, than you think. SAVE -VOLVO '= ~m-'! fa er trade ~lQZS. ...,., 2'1.IXKI ml, ""' ""' WE PAY TOP 1====~~~~~~~ '61VW SQUAREBACK. l;gh< $1348 $466 ~THANK yo·u FOR :l:oo~~BruvwG .-... Harbour v.w. cH1c1r'1VERso11 ~[~:~:.: ""S~~!!.~ . 18711 BEACH BL 142-«35 call lor Ju Ly! Ammcan .,..., widr ""''· HUNTINGTON BEACH PORSCHE I AUDI 1966 -· C.M. 646-9'03 "' -.. -... cuatom m•laillc paint w'th . 900_0-_/__ I - --·-• GROJH CllEYROUT beautttu.I lace VrWk YPU 64 Volkswa~ Camptt. Llc. -·-- -... !IOL . . OMR 199, l"" Box, ...... <. 646-9391 ~ THINK AJI< lor Sales ..._ S.V•nt other ""'omn.d 11.296.00 OIAKI: COllllTl'$ AU11tGllZDI DUlII 'VOi.YO' l82lJ Beach Bhd. e WE SOLD 123 USED CARS e The Biggest Month In Ille entire history of Connell Chem>let • NICE CARS! tllat's why. ·100°/o 30 DAY GUARANTEE! that's why. HONEST DEALING! tllat's why. . ... Need we mention Big Selection and low Prices? Why don't ~u • :tell your friends you got a good cle.t and after ule attention at •:Connell Chevrolet? A lot of other people didl Even Sale Priced .. ~rs carry our full gu.rent ... ---------------------:-.69 CHEYIOLET 101" W.I. 'I• TON :. Van. NN> camper conversion. ~: 13,000 miles. 6 cyl., 1tlck. i. Thia ls a rare piece. (ZZX6191 . . ~·61 ~=n~ v:.i:.,~;~~.:,co:,, s1799 • brakes, automatic, factory air. :• Nice car. (TZH93JI ···~~:.:=c=.~:=:::._~~~~~~~~~-:169 CAPllCE 4 DOOi HARDTOP s2999 ! Radio, heattt, automatic, powtt zteerlng, .. · factory air, vinyl roof, so nice. CUBZ581), :· Remaining factory guaranttt. "70 CAl'lllCE 2 DOOi HARDTOP s3599 :· Vinyl roof, power st.ttrlna: A brakes. factory rj IW', automatic, radio. Low, low miles. Li:Ce brand •, new. Remainlng factory gU&rantee. (ADYf601 !-.69 IMPALA CUSTOM COUPE $2695 f' RadJo. heater, automatic, power stHring, factory ,;. air, vtnyl root, like razor 1harp. (YYN058) -! Remainina: factory a;uarantee. ;t61 CHEYIOUT MAUIU ~ Hardtop coupe. Automatic, radio and it heater, power steerln&->-Hurry! (VOUl21) £167 IMPALA 2 DOOi HARDTOP " VB, radio, heater, automatic, power zteerlng. "' tttmendoualy nice car. (TPR900l ~ 66 CHEYROUT COIYAll $1699 ti 2 Door hardtop. Radlo,heater,automatic. ~·-This Is a 1 owner new car trade-in. t'"• (RRY538) :f.65 CHEYROUT COIYAll .. , 2 Door hardtop. Radio. heater, automatic. : ~ 4 speed transmission. Nice. lHOY303) :Jo_: =·~1 PONTIAC GTO ... • 2 Door hardtop. Radio, heater. automatic .. -:; t.ranlirnlnion. power 1teering. Hu.rry. (WCA940) :~~ $1199 ?i.~8 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill •:,, Convertible. Power steering, radio. auto• ~1 matlc, air conditioning. Nice. (ZZD786) ~499 * TRUCKS-TRUCKS * ::1967 EL CAMINO R.lH, automatic. P.S., factory air. So ni~. fQ43357l 1967 CHEVROLET l/4 TON PICKUP .,vs, 1tlck, heavy duty camper equipped.. Hurry. cu5825o) :.1969 FORD YAN • :~OS" wheel base. Radio. heater, Automatic. nice. 102021} :1966 CHEVROLET VAN CAMPER .~96t'ct4mom"1/z TON ckup. Stick shift, V8, sharp. (U20961) '1966 CHEVROLET 1/z TON ' ·Pi<"kup camper. V8. (P.35481) :1967 CHEVROLET 1/2 TON ~tick. 6 cyllnder engine, 11h&rp. CV949~) '.>1965 EL CAMINO ,;itadlo. healer, automatic, po~r 1tttring. (R37660/ ·~1967 EL CAMINO 1'1a967hRANCH'ERc)''r steering. IV16899) :Radio. heater, 1utomatic, power •teering, air cond. (12233A) -1965 CHEVROLET 1/z TON .:Pickup. VB, r8dlo and hellter. (521257 1 .1966 CHEVROLET 3/• TON :Pickup.. 6 c:yllnde.r, radio and h~t~r. M'51416) ·~66 ~.~::.v:~:,,,;::,,T,~~k. s799 • 8 fl bed. radio, heater. ('rn0951 ) ' !=---~~--~~~-~---~~--- . CONNELL iCHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 • ·-~··- vw to choose from J im Slemona Imports Huntbistoa Bea.di CHICK IYERSON 120 w. WARNER, I ======::::-:-====== .. l<!.aJBT IQ-= SANTA ANA 1· -VW 0peoEv ... •&u>. fi-025 VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN "FRIEDlANDER" ~~'?-~ st9-3Cl31 Ext 66 or 6'l '64 VW CAMPER 2 dr. Demo. U ~ car la nu. c:1eu.. l970 HARBOR BLVD. Complete C&Il'lper unit ndio • '$1 VW sedan, chrome WA * $2750 * aec: us first COSTA~ beater (DDK-150) ' ' rlim, Mlcbdin ttrea , N'IED ,.,.. IUCH IMW"f".») BAUER BUICK e '67 KAR.\tANN Ghia -r/h, $1495 , SUJ'D'OOf; exhaust aystrm, rD ,.,. top dolla~ b' JOG!' 193-756& e Sl7.mt %W E. lTtb SL like nev." Jo mi, xlnt cond. c.au Collect !1.17-Tm chains . T at• over VOLKSWAGEN b:tq. Call NEW.t:SED-SERV c.osta Mesa 5#-1115 -=,;;:,;;;:;;:~::.:.:.::__1 ~ts. a40-l30I after 5 and aak fat Ron P\ncbot.. • Very reas. Pvt pty. 6Ta-m6 Pu.or WANT AD! 642-$71 PM or wkends. 5eMll Erl 1164? 61S490D. • -..-.....-....-: DAILY PILOT WANr AD. (SM347) · --------------Dial &G-.sm l dwze It --ea .. MRY NEW 1970 MODEL IN OUR TREMENDOUS STOCK NOW DISCOUNTED TO CLEAR RIGHTNOWI NEW19711 NEW1970 NEW 1970 MARQUIS cou••• MONDGO X1·7 2 Dt. lllNt.; MX 2 Dr. Hm lo• •Deoa•ABTO• $761" :=: $81613 ~:::::~:;:;:;;;;:;::'=m•~~==~~;;;:::::~ • 69 NEW 1970 NEW 1970 MONTl•IY MIRCU•Y 411<. H1nl TIJ C1llltlf hrlt SN. W10. OFF WINDOW STICKER! $99195 · ~ 101871 $1566 '69 MUSTANG """""' _____ $2966 ,...... ,__ 1-illf, (JOWff jflH) ................ ..........,. .... ,,._ .. ,... ..... ~ZWO'I '67 OLDS 98 •Dw-•···---$2166 -~1u11,,.__,..._, ===~~ll roef, 1i11tt1 t"-n '66 TORONAOO 2-DOOI IAUTOP, ....... -...,. ....... . ........... -.. ...... t*s)· w...-............. ... :::t.u" ........... _ '66 FORD . . ............ _ ....... $1199 lr1n1 .. 1-ci.r, 1lr U11titi..-.,, ,. • ..,. , ............... .,... -..i..ttr.-.tii- .... u.1r ... "'""ties•· .,ti.et!''"'' """" '67COUGAR .... _ ........ -. .... , $1498 1lrteM1111H1lllf. ,._ .. ..,.m9• '"-w... .-. ._..,.....,.. W.. liM· .. ,_ TXSttJ llOW•HIRI 1971 CAPRI ... T111 Driw Trx/ay! THI SJXY EUIOPIAN IMPORTED BY llNCOLN~llCURY AVAILABLE FOR 1MMEDI E DEUVEIY ' ' 1301 TuStin Ave. Santa Ana Tb,.,, {tf iNMltl Pro• Tbrtt FrtlWllYI NEW CARS 547-9113 USED CARS 547.0707 T1,Y,,WUN y,.,. B•ti,,111' l 4J DAILV PllOT frlda1, Aug<ot 14, 1970 u...i C..rs "" u...i e:... "°°' ~~.~~ltTATIOH TRAHSPOltTATION .u...r___E,1ro "°° TRANSPOll.TATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION --;;-::=·=====~~~~=::::::~i l Autoo W-fl'll Used Coes "90 TRANSl'ORTATION Ustd Clrs '900 Ustd Cars • s u.-td·C~ra ·-;;oo Ustd Cort '900 ,.. • IN'fDIRfTY·· SW. WE PAY CASH WE 109 CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHRYSLER CORVAIR FORD ' ' : : • " :: . " . •• ~: j ~ :; :: ,• " ,• . " w.·,. ptou4 of .... , tt{"'ico "''"''w 011d with 90011 1001011. Wo f•ol rilot l r11110 i1 ffto fi-t IMW fl'IKho11ic 111 South1r11 C•lifornio. Ho it1rtN hi1 ,,,..,, I l \'ft• 090 hi Gorfl'IO•Y w114or9oi119 oxto111ivo h'oilllflf of tMW'1· 11101+ 111odor11 worlr: d1op. Drop in ond 1oy hollo to lrv110. Ho'1 o friortdly follow oriel • fi•• ..,.clit•11ie. ..----1: YW SPECIALS COMPLflE BRAKE JOB ENGINE OVERHAUL $35 $95 $55 $70 VALVE JOB VALVE AND RINGS AUTHORIUD SALES, SERVICE Joe Ber4otti'• T&M MOTORS 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. ..,,...,.._ Poltl. Senk• T..._ Thn. tfH 1:00 t •/1 Ilk. L flf looclil IJ4-l214 ' lfJ.1511 FOR YOUR 1'1ff CARS ! 19&1 NEWPOR}'.· New V•~•. CORVAIR PARTS '65 fORD O " Wt c.i7Maniaeer 1 '62 OIEV Statton Waion, V-3 '115 atEVELJ..i S.S. JQO(I bocb1 & motor,' bus! 1960 eng~ con1plete $25. .. 64S-Of98 Sllck sb)ft -uceU. ~iUon 4-apeed Xlnt cond. Radio, ~ worlt. Make otter: Po~rgt,ld'e trarwnl!1lon and 2 Door HBrdl~ 35.2 Vt iuio. ' ·· CONNEL1 · w;o. 516+'Jl)O •fler 8 pm kcater,. chf'9mc wbttls, ====-====~! axlei $2S1 Gas 1ank 12. Or Rldlo, l·re•ter.' (515 BRJ:) CHIVROLET • '64 VOU<S """· ;es air '62 Cllevy It <-<Jr &OOd.,;..,. buckot "''"' (NCA-789). take ALL '" l«l. 83!<ll21 $1295 " X28 Harbor Bllld. cond Olds. Both aood shape. $350 or beit ~lfu. Musi $195 COMET after 5 pm. • ! Costa ..... MO-t2lo ... i.sm ... '" be1~-.1 ~~-T & M MoToRs co .,..... South Coast IMPOft.'i'S WA1'l1'ED '59 CHEV'f BeJa.tre 2 dr, • 1961 COl\fET -Xlhl RV5115 ·~ Oral.we O>urltiai BWCK & cyI, po"·er-aUde. XInt. n1echan\eal QOnd. New tires, , --.~ -.: F'ord • Mercurr BUYER c600. $.US. 897-1'03 Clean. ~7801 58 Corvette. S"!>wroom con*. 303 ~dwtcy' Lquna ~aeh nn .~f .. ~ .mtlWI•"'-'62 BuiCk _ SIQ<lark con\!\. Xlnt -:-=.,-,,,..,--,.,...,.-,~-dlUon Extras $12ilO. ,~ ~.1 <14-B:i~ ~ .. ~ ..... •V4Yln ·-.--cond $39:> '63 Chevy van. .. ~rcy1, 3-fipeed • '62 COl\1~ COUPE 847--3444 . '"""""· or - l8SS1 Sea.ch Blvd.. -• W/radlo lt.jr..tAc. LO J\oU. . * '66 COUNTRY SEDAN H. Beach. Pb. 147~ * 962--0262 * Call· alter 3. Gf&--!-45.S 111" 536-7930 * e '65 VE'ITE·Al'llF.i\l, vinyl. 6 PkSS, Jo ml, PIS#J.B 1964 Special \Vag, Auto, PIS, ~· ,,,.W 25 peed. Clean. fl700. Gd. cond. Re-a& prle!. •uto Loosl-9110 RIH. Xl"l co,dl OOCHEVYJmpaJa.li•w•ng. CO....,NENTAL ~ • ~·~11 e ·-~ "• Reasonable! 64&-3431 generator, braket, tirer1~!:t. AUTHORIZED n11 ""~ Y" LEASE Y" oond. !300. S<H/23 SALES e SERVICE DODGE 'GS FORD LTD · CADILLAC · All Xtras. l\fako Oilei'. '69 Cad CPe de VW.. Loadtd! '63 CHEVY S.S.-327 '"*• •l8l Ganie G '67 LINCOLN • lo mi., 646-3582 Like new, $15.9 per mo, and 1---r-----PIS, buclsea.ta & console. n rove Blvd. perfect cond. Compk:ttly .--· ------ others. '65 Cad1llac Coopt' de Ville, $600 * • 536-3068 534·2'284· (~ ~~-of Beach) equipped. l\lust sell, going 70 MONACO 'vifi. • 440 eng, ~.,-2 -s=T~A~T~IO~N-w=A"'op=N SOUTH COAST Full pomr, factory ''' con-·54 NOVA "' w.,,, 6 cyl, ove,..as. Real bey 12500 pslpb, !act. "'· '""° 12"' - CAR L .:ASING dltiontng, 42,100 ni i I es. RIH, auto, 1o mi., xlnt '64 Impala 00-3186 ' · tape, r ig&ed lor towing T.T. "'" r.1usl seU. S-*3J72 JOO W. Cst Hwy, NB. 645-2182 $2,495.00 Lie. TFB434. cond. 613-3244 '69 CONT'!.... L 0 A D E O ! ! ,70 CHALLENGER RT Used Cars TRANSPORTATION CARS Our SpeciQJ.ty AS LOW AS S99 \Ve ClllTY our O\vn contracts Credit is no problem Blue Chip Auto Sales 2145 Harbor Blvd., C.?i.f. 642-9700 * 540-4392 . Jim Slemons Imports "68 CHEV. lmp, Con\'!. RIH, 2.~00:_ .. "."".!~.·· <TF'""sd"'59,+). s.A c R J FI c ING .• Und.er (Special editionJ 440 . C.t. ll'O \V. WARNER, V-8 13000 ml $1600 Pvt "v u y,hsJe bluebook 675-39-ro SANTA ANA pru: ~ · · \VIII take trade or finance. · ' Auto/U-aru, air cond. ~~ ~-Su •"" '" Call 494-7744 &,12-7416 * 63J..-0667 alt. ~ pm "'Y'<'l' Eves. & n. 456-4 ~ 1963 Chevy Jmpa.Ja Con-1 "'-~==7• ~~~-i:imrniiiii<P,;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;; b;;:;;;~~:'...!'.'~=­,67 Cad Convt, lmmac! '"'rtlble. ve-clean Good 1964: L\fPALA ss Convt. ~UXURIOUS ~~.Unum b1Ue 1953 DODGE gyromatlc 4 Dr. .... , J 63 • leather, J\.l.n/FM, elec. &edan-49,000 orig. m.ilu. 42.000, comp1etcly equip'd, rubber. 6 cyl. $400. 644-I482. R~na KOOd . Asking $3JO. SUNROOF. Xlnt. 536-lT2J' '"~''. nt..---54,. ,....,. um. &U-4011, Aft 5 : • 645-1691. See at 1700 or536-6697 ....... J"'INUI:< ~ 642--~ 'a7 CHEVY 2 dr. sedan &iperior Av-.•::. .. _::C::::'1::_. ---l"""'===rn;=c:::::;l'61 Dodge Coronet 500 ....,...i wagon. 00 denls, l crptJ, gd -,67-C-1962 Continental. \Vhlte. GOQii Engine, drive trans, body 'GS !ledan de VIiie ., .~ '""wag. $325. IW0-2422 • amarO d . I p . t condition. $2000 or besl of. con \t on, r1va e excellent $1~. MS-7408 f •--1., '56 Chevy 4 door. auto trans. Autoznatic, radio, heater, O\mer. • 644--069-1. e '62 Dod,,..,. Lancer 12'0 er. '"";,· · _ _ XI.NT oond. About S250. ..~ -"111 \vide ovals, dlr. {UDZ ()87), co· RVAIR-Rcliab.le..J:~.rtation CHEVELLE u•..-u \Vil! take trade or finance ",.,...,......., '64 Cbevy s""" Spon, .,,.., call 894-7744. ------~~~==~--~ PERFECT Second car? 1965 \\'Ork, ntake offer. 646--4381. '67 EL CAMINO. Runs pert Chevelle 6 cvl, sld shtt, r/h. NO matter what it is • .YOU Below book at $1425. can only 44000 ·mi, xlnt cond. can sell it 'Yith a OAD.Y help flnc. 64a--l691. See at $600. 494-1945 PILOT WANT AO! 642-f.618 1700 Superior Ave, CM. '62 1\-lodel 100, AT, R!H. In storage 5 yn;, only 23,000 FORD ml. Very cln, mech perf -·· ·-~~ ---- $48:>. ""°""'" Bl, CdM : '65 FAIRLANE 4 Door Sedan 289 \18. Auto. Po1\·er Steering (EQU 6W) '66 LTD 2.Door Hardtop. eoo vt'"Juto. Power Steering &: ~es Air Cond. Pov.•er \Vlncibws, Po\ver Seat&, Speed Colibi Red w/matchln' ~ (SLV 9391 ~....-. $1595 ;·:: South Coci5t f'ord • Mercuri: ::oJ 81'08.dway, Laguna S,i:eh 5~9-3851 or 49-l-8515 3; '70 COUNTRY Squire wiF. -Loaded. Sell al ,...holepa.Je book or take ever ·l11e pyn111ts. No money ·Jin, 541-0039; -eves &: \v~s S32-4981 i '65 Fal<.'On ; 2 dr 6 cyl au.to, gel . tran.s. -$.ml ' or bst -,rr. -· THIS WEEK END ONLY -- $895 South Coast , f'ord • Mercury $03' Broad\\'BY. l;a,.,,"'llna Beach 519-3851 or 49"1-8315 962-178.2 or 545--6:)19 ~ • '5S Ford $175 Good condJtifm. 834 Congress. C.M. 54s-.5()6'7 !\!UST sell im1ned! '61 fqrd, Jj2 eng. reblt trans, · P/s, . . THE MOST DRAMA TIC CLEAN . UP SALE IN OUR 18 YEAR HISTORY • ' ••• • + 2°/o For Hondling THAT'S RIGHT. $70* OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL NEW 1970 COUGARS, MERCURYS~ MONTEGOS, CYCLONE GTs, MARQUIS, & MARQUIS COLONY PARKS OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF OVER 100 TO CHOOSE FROM NEW 1970 LINCOLN , CONTINENTALS, 2 DOoR HARDTOl'S AND 4 DOOR SIDANS INCLUDED IN THIS SALE ANI) LINCOLN CONTINENTALS NOTHING HELD BACK ALL 1970 COUGARS XR7's, HARDTOPS, ETC. Drive Them Away Far Only MERCUR·Y MARQUIS STATION WAGONS, SEDANS, HARDTOPS 011~ OF THE MOST SUCCESSFUL CARS OF THI '70'1 NOW AT $70 OYER FACTORY INVOICE• OVE~ 100 NEW UNCOl.N • MERCURYS TO CHOOSE FROM ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CHOOSE FROM OYER 100 LINCOLNS, MERCURYS, COUGARS & MONTEGCS *Please add 2°/o for handling ~ Now Is The Best· Ti11ae In Teta Years To Bug A Litacolta•Met•eury Prodt1ct -- ' -- J'oll.nson. son 540-5630 COSTA MESA 2626 Harbor 8lvcl. ' 6'2·0981 TBRBff GENERATIONS IN TB E AV'l'OM081LE BVSINESS . THI at.DIST UTAll.ISHID "FACTORY Dllllcr· LINCOLN-MUCUll1' DlALH IN O«AN!il COUNTY P/b. $200. 892~156 • '62 FORD XL e '63 FORD Country !iedaiJ CJ~n!--P/S-RIR~· • " * * 548-2635 * ..... : Z Or Sedan. Radio. Heat_er, ===~==:;:;::;::! Air Cond, Po\ver Sleerin~ & Brake' (TAY 6.'.J,jl FALCON :: · $695 ------~ ' South Coast '63 Falcon 2 dr. Auto. iaJlic, heater. real nice car 111ith lo\V mUes (606--ASl.1 '699 guaranteed cond. CoMell Chevrolet, 2828 Har ltor m,,d .. c.ri.t. 546-1203. :· I f'ord • Mercury 1 303 Broadv.•ay, Laguna Beach ::ii9·.?.85l or 494-&>15 • 98c.D New Can \ 1968 CAMARO ? dr h•rdtop. F•ctory 1ir c111d., VI .~l o;t in•, p11w1r 1t11rin9, •utom1fie lr•n•"';,. tion. A b11ulif11I R1lly1 Gt1•~ fun c4r. !Xl:Z·44ll. $2595 1969 MERCURY COUGAR Sp1rkli119 Whil1 wilh 1 bl.ck Yinyl fop 1nof 1nl1rior, (Z.X.E·ll9), $2795 1968 OOOGE CHARGER R1cli11, "'••l1r, 111lom1tic tr1111minion I clerv 1:r c:ond. D1rlr gr11n vlnvl lo~ 11•1 1rklin9 9r•1n body. !·U~1-AKS L $2795 1967 GRANDDl>Rflf---._ ll11ulif.,I gold wlth co11ir•1fin9 bl1c• .. in top. F1clory •ir, low 111il 1s. IPRHJ171. $2095 1967 COUGAR XR7 Only 19,500 mi!e1, dirk 9r11n wltll bl1ck inltrior, 81111tifully c1r1d for. IYXT104l. $1795 1969 FIREBIRD V1rd1ro !'''" with ••dio, h11ler, p1w1t 1t11rin9. pow1r brtktt, turbo hydr1m11r~. IXR.5994 1. $2995 1968 FIREBIRO ,.,fr h•rdtop. R•dio, h1•l1r, vi11yl lop. eu~lom trim, pow1r 1f11rin9 •'"4 pop11l1r 4·1p1•d lr1nsmi11ion. ( YQF-t J 1 l. $2495 1969 TOYOTA CORONA Ftclory 1ir cond, I •11lom1tic fr1111m i1• 1ion. Oti9in1I 1ilv1r with b1i91 i11f1rior. !YX R·04tl. $1795 1970 GRAND PRIX F1 cfory 1ir, ~ow1r winclow1, 1!1r•o r•dio, .,;11yl top. !9,71EOI .. $4695 1967 MUSTANG 2 + 2 GT R1dio, h11t•r •ncl •ulorn1tie tr•111minio11 on thi1 b1•utlful 9r1y t•t. ITYl.t6J L $1795 1970 MUSTANG MACH I FuU pow1r •n thif 6000-mili Rolli·Royt.1 lr1d1-in. E1c1plio111l 11Yi1191 ti thl1 pric.1, '071 ·ACN I. $3495 196' FORD LTD WAGON IO /,'''•"I''' •ir to11difi•nin9, 'l'lc1tion r•• y. ltk1·771 L $2795 _,apo . .. . . ,· •' ·i:. • :· :- " ' " -. •, ~ . . " . ! . . . • . . ' l I . j ;: ~ROY CARVEil! ~ RO"LLS -ROYC tr • 2925 H~RBOR SOULEVARO, COSTA ME~ 546·44<1.( -.. . • i ! . • . . ! - .... I t •ch lN B IN ... -, no. '" ••• ,.., "" t ion ale Jae ""· Xis LlO, •fr. '"· " "'· ''· .. -,;o, Ith 199 •D or ' ' .. "' •I " " I! I' l ~ F 'I II .. .. " ., •• ~. •' . ' •• •• " " •' :i . ' . ' :1 . : .. " " --·----·------------------7---------:~---------------~--------------.. ---· 1 ::' '70 CORONET 2 DOOR $75 NO. WL21COEI0167f OVER FACTORY INVOICE COST 5,000 BLUE CHIP "Ju1t••• m• firit •nd you'll r1c•iv• STAMPS 5,000 l lu1 Chip St1mp• if you bu~ from "'' or •nv oth•r d11 l1r." ''JUST SEE ME FIRST" • '67 Pl YM.OUTH Sport Fury. R&H , •uto., P.S., air C<l!nd. ITREl821 '66 CHEV. CAPRICE '4 Or. H.T. Full pow•r, air cond. lTRU0961 . '64 PONT. LE MANS Coupe. R&H, •ufof, bucket se•fs. ,16PE- 6401 '66 CADILLAC Cpe. OeVille. Full pow•r, •ir cond. IRHW- 0551 FORD FORD -- • frldq, All9Ull .14, 1970 OAILV PILOT \Cl TRANSPORTATION TRAHSPORTATtbN 1'itlH SPORWIOH 9IOO - ' ·~~0 '70 CORONET CONVERT '70 DODGE CHARGER ·:-~0 '70 DODGE CAMPER VAN • • FORD NO. WP27LOG1ll905 OVER FACTORY INVOICE COST. $J5 NO. XH29COGl2l249 OVER FACTORY INVOICE COST $75 NO. A1..2AIOU I02ll4 OVER FACTORY INYOICI COST ~ you are not completely satisfied w~h the service you are getting from your present deoler pleose drop in lo our AA Roted Award Winning Service Deportment & give us a chance lo service your car properly. I hove been a new car dealer in So. Cali~ for over 20 years & would very much like to be your deoler, We have the best financing In ~ Califomia. If you are short of money and need low monthly payments, SH our ex· perienced counselors. Si11cerely, Cal Worthington P.S. We give Blue Chip Stomps in our Service Deportment I YIARWARRAJITY PARTS & LABOR '68 MUSTANG • Auto., R&H, power sttoring, IZAXB621 WSW. '67 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 Or. Air, R&H, P.S., tint•d 9!1ss. IAKJl511 . '68 Pl YM. FURY 2 Or. H.t. A ir .co'ld., RIH, auto., P.S. IVRM8071 · '68 PONTIAC GTO R•dlo, h••ter, autdm•tic, tinted 91•••· ;(XSFl57l LINCOLN MUSTANG PLYMOUTH OFNl UPlllS WID., AU•UST 1ttli '65~ Olds. Vista Cruiser 9 pais. R&H, 1ufo., P.S., 1ir cond. IWEN- 7041 '67 DODGE WAGON R&H, automatic, power steerin9. IYDL- 1691 '66 BANCHERO R&H, •utom•tic, P.S., •ir conditiontn9. IUKD7l4l '65 CHEV. Y2 TON Pic;~up. R1dio •nd h••t•r. 1547966) RAMBLER T·BIRD 9900 Used C•r1 TORINO '69 Ford Custom WHITE '61 Lincoln 4 dr '67 Mustang hrd!p, 6. 51,000 '6.5 Plymouth Sport Jo'ury l sedan all po~·er, air cone!. mi's. Xlnt cond. Must sell, dr. H.T., Fresh new color. • 'Ii() RAMBLER WAGON '70 MAVERICK " '65 FORD RANCHERO '70 TORINO '61 T·BIRD 6 cyl Automatic. (~ dr 268). : • \Vil] take car in trade or finaiice p r i v a te party. 5464052 or 494-6811. " 4 Door Sedan. Radio, Heater, Good tires. Prestige car for $1£00. 968-2283. C.Onsole Bucket eeats, auto. * Auton1atic. $100. Automatic (715 BSO) onJ "7-""1711 ~ St · R d · 968 \V 17th SL CM Demo. 250 6 Cyl Automatic, Y ~ ::i. vw-'68 MUSfANG. Top cond . .-vivcr eenng, a 10 '1----'·-· _ _...:•c..:_ __ _ $1895 White \Vall Tires. Pov.·er MERCURY V-8, 4 spd, pov.·er xtras. heater 100% 30 d ayl---------f\tll Power + Air Cond. So th C t St,er;ng, Afr Co"<I. Tinle<I Be•t oUoc. 644-1848 guorontoe (ATB-3611 1999 T BIRD (QTS 034) U QGS Glass. Radio, ll eater ----· '65 Con·.1e11. Mustang. Connell Chevrolet, 2828 ----·-----$300 o..no. ' °""' ,...top, :m VB, Auto. Air Cond. Tinted Glass. Power Steering. Radio, Heater <•tf73ZU ford .. Mercury ' c •~nM2l '62 Comet Groat Condition ~~or BI vd., c .M. '6.1 CONV. New paint. :; 303 ~rlway, Laguna Beach $2661 Automatic. Radio, heater, $llOO 833-l2l3 eves. DIVORC~ Jorces aa.le _ 1965 Gorgeous! \VIII take trade. SoUfh ' COcist •• Racio, Heater, Automatic, 519-3851 or m-8515 South Coast bucket seats, console. 11\VT Plymouth • 35.'I Fury Sr>orU Pvt Pt.y. 644-~t '62 Ford Sedan $3395 South Coast " " p.....,, si..nng !RYS !ll'll ,66 F , I 7431 dtr. Ex""'"' tran•· OLDSMOBILE eoop.. PoW<r brakes, ,1,.~ DIAL direct 642-5678. °"'"" f'c!rd ·Mercury Ford• Mercury $595 air ane . Ford. Mercury portation car. \Viii lake Ing, factory nlr, n e IV your ad, then 1it back aJx! 303 Broadway, 4guna Beach 303 Broadway, Laguna Beach So .. th Coast Convertible. Automatic, vs; 303 Broadway, Laguna Beach trade or finance private par. '67 OLDS transmission, R!H, vinyl ll1ten to the phone ring! 549-3851 or 494-8515 Sfi..3161 Of ~ radio, heater, dlr. Excellent ~9-l85t or 49-1-lr>.15 ty Call ~092 or 494-6811. lop, black leather interiorl===='==="=''==..:========:;..:,==='='='====I Fo d M cond. IZZV 074), Will take ---,:""'==---I* 1970 MERCURY Montego $700. 642-4321 Ext. 253 or Imported Autos 9600 lmJ)oi-t.d Autot MOllmported Cert 9600 . r • ercury trade or Jinance prlvale par. '67 FORD 3200 ml, i2350. OY.'I!er \\'en! Automatic, Air Corid. Radio, (213) 43()....0742 i~~~~~~ii!ii~~!!iiiiiiiiiiii~~~~iiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii;~~-iiiiii 303 Broadway, Laguna Beach ty, Call 54&4052 or 494-68U. overseas. ~780 Hvealer, Extra C 1e 8 n. '62 Plymouth Valiant auto. W f>lS.3851 or ,.,..,15 c a. 139> . · E HAVE THE · l=~--,c-=-~~C,_,..b-"'•28"" '68 LTO-Xlnt cond. New Radio, fteater. {TR1-i-485J. '6S Comet, 4 dr., auto, $lB95 radio, healer low mlle1f nice mag whls. 9,000 mi. Xlnt auto trans, vinyl top, 390 $650. Call 847-9848. SO th C t <LBS305) $599 C 0 n n e 11 W • 1600'a • 2002 • 2500 '69 Ford Torino 0 ra. • 40,000 mi tires, ps/pb, Air, $1135 r/h, lo mi's, l owner. car! Guaranteed condition BEST SELECTION OF cond. $2700. 533861 cu in, 36,000 mi. $23lll. '60 Mere convt .. xlnt cond. u oas Olevrolel, 2828 H .. r b 0 r BM 's :: WANT AJ)S SELL! .G<M;78 ~ ln;ide & oot, Po"''· $300 Ford. Mercury Blvd., C.M. !i<S.!200 IN ORANGE COUNTY "!===~===============~· Harbou' r v w orbtstoffer.64&-9022 303 Broa<fway Laguna Beach '66 PLYfl.-fOUTH hi-perform. w. have. fln•nclng pl•n to flt • 2800 • 2800 cs :: Imported Autos 96001mportMI Cars 9600.' ·•-·• --·-5'19-3851 Or 494-8515 . 383. heedert .. ~odilied auto, b d C I d I'-::. 1j~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~l l8ru B~ACH BL.. 842-4435 --'"°"""""=o-=c----1 ta)')(!. Sacrifice, $ 7 9 s. your u s•t. ome n •n t• Ill e ALL COLORS e ALL MODELS ·•·. II HUNTINGTON BEACR , ___ M_U_S_T_A_N_G__ '66 OLDS 88 544-<034 with on• of 'our oxperloncod Now COST.A MES.A 1 H.T .. cpe. full power, alr,1,,69=-:R"O"A"D°'R°'U"'N"N"Efl"""g-,d_oood_,,,, counselors. e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .. .. ... ~~ " ... " .. ~ ft ~· :t :-.. ·i " '• .. •'·. '63 Countl'J Squire •. 66 M"•lang •+2 ,.,!bk . rebu.lt onglne, vtnyt roof, ... c .... ar ...... lllltXI a!L Ill Nf!~ ~ J~ ~s perfect shape CO'IS.AF'X). 5 PM 673-4746 * '62 PORSCHE MECHANICS , Radio, Hemer. Autometic, CLEAN!! SPECIAL! $1795 HONDA 680 P ... r Steering & Br""" s.. at 1825 w. Balboo Blvd, T & hi MOTORS "" '""K' ....,, '"""'" ~ PONTIAC n11111111Nr, but nlllll 119ht '61 OPEL $1295 !Cadent', ltllll't' "IVIPl*I radio, llMtn. A-I ._ (W'l'Htoll. Air Cond. New Tires. Every. Newport Beach . AUTHORIZED mec111n1u1 ¥10rk. 11ac11o, llNt- SED All thlng w$1 9.9 200) '68 MU!ltang V-8 auto. V-8 ~~~! ~:V~1~Tvd. :~9'~~~ $1495 • ' t , 1111 • . radio, he.ateti, power steer-53f.2284 <% blk. E. of Beach) '69 GTO "uro,,..tJc i11c1: 111111, tlldlo. Sout.L Coast ing, fact air-tow mnes he•t••· 1oo1t1 1nc1 d•I"" "-·, fl Showroom fregh (VHF-8.131 ~1 11ctorv freJh (1r. !XIH-JOll, llarbor IJlvd., C.M. 546-1203 AM/FM Ste_rco, M .. Wheels Br1t111 new lftG!,,. not • mil• '64 vw lltldlo, Mt11f, "*' tlrtl, -.. 1n1, ••"'1*11 m«llll'llcll condition. '65 vw AM/"M rtdllo hM!W, CltOll.tn>. Ford'. Mercury 12299 connen c""""'" 2828 '69 Cutlass Supreme Vl!. •utom.nc, rur eond. '65 PORSCHE ~995 303 Broadway, Laguna Beach -on 111 llldlo, ,...,,,, tm- 549-3851 or 49'U&l5 1965 .FASTBACK 2 + 2, Full power + factory air Power Steering. Pow e r mec111111 1h.oug11out. Wh11 • '67 FIAT ~:-::.--.,.-=,----1 hydrama~ r/h, Tow ml. Windows. Power Brakts. Detu1r1 100211. '66 5 • W XI ffll;/\ ,,_u, "~"" cond, E."(cellent condition. ii,68~vwi+.i=----~$----Cpe., rKlo, ltNltl'. GoM tiffs. qUtre ""Oft nt oond. -· ~ 0' Tilt Stoerlng Wheel (346-805) 1295 '"YONI. -, 16.000 actual mllet, Owned Fairlane. with wood grain-ex. 673-7211 by little old banker OITG $2999 !:,~; ::::r.;,,'=::. :Jt'D terior, dlr. 300 VS, power 'M FASTBACK Mustang -(1631, Will take C8l' Jn trade. 1111n. IX5l,7•J. '69 VW steering air &xi. Stereo •390 Raclog/carb, .$1751l or Small down will finance pvt. '68 VW $ lltldlo, 1111tff. ltMI cl•n cir, tape, a.Uto. trans, <TA·Y279J bet otr • .fClnt col)d. 5.1&-0137 pty, dlr. Cali Maurr aft 10 w.,111111 c•mper Mir ecru111-• 3095 c'l200.SI. Will take trade or finance wkends/OI' ~ft fi pm. am 540.3100 or 494-1029 BILL JONES *· 1nc:uldl11C1 "J>Op.T~'°.11. .. $CJ49 . ...,_, c•,. • ....,., • B.J •--Ca Center dlo, l!Mlfr. row low m!!eJ. '" pnvate PllJ1Y, o...cul ~ '6.1:1 MUSTANG Gokl V-8 '67 Old 2 • "'INl~ r ro •PC1n1tl1111 A 11 .. 1 11 '58 AUSTIN or 494-6811-PIS. Auto. 1 Ownt'r, Gd Gorg~ 44 :e.d ~· ~~ 283.1 Harbor. C.M. 54DM91 rwn•·5511· H,,~~Y, $AVE Top DOLlAR C8l"t!, Hpeed and COJ'll!Ole bucket '68 G'J'O..M111t see to al>' '68 TOYOTA $13 49 .._ $2295 • * 497·1829 8efll8, radio, po\ver steering. predate! A real buy at CttfM• H.T. ep., -"*''°· "Cl•tslc" '69 Mustang Mach !. (351) This is 80 O\lginal -nlce $1695 finn, 6t5--0307 r::• ,:,:::;:. 11=11i:... ~ll'll'l'llCWl'I CIMltlorll ltw Wltll •IKk i.ttt-1 C for Air, 11tcreo radio, p/a, p/b. -(VFV-071 ! $1699 Connell --------CM-llLI, 11\ttor'IW, eome -11111 -t '"-'0.111>. LEAN USED CARS Aaking $2'1!15.4!U-3l9L • Ot<»'ldel, 2'28 Harbor -"T"~~~gr:e '00 Mustang: xlnt rohd. ?iS.000 Blvd., CM, ~~1203. ml;R/H, recent work. $!V» '63 OLDS F-85 Cutia at~ RA.Mm.ER. Ue RHA1o7 _R.OB.!'15 FORp 494-m5, l94-6T.l6 Conver!, SltJU'll. JS7~. Mod<!-,.,, 1 · •••r: 3)80 Harbor Blvd. '65 MUJtaiw fUtbacir:, 4-1pd, S49-3123, 96~ automatic, nu:llo & .. ~ater. C:O.ta Mesa • p.b., p.a ... , fac a.Ir. new • '62 OLD~ • See "Traders $695.00 642-oolo lltts. lo m1 '1, $1295. 962--7440 Paradise" column Jim $lemons Imports 'fT FAIRLANE ~-PS, kp e '66 MUSTANG VI, auto, S45-1T83 J30 W. WARNiJR. 3llO CID • .int .cond. Moat """"1oy( top, Xhtl,.$UT5. -OJ>oortunlU.. SANTAANA ,,,;Se;c.;,ll.,,,;ll::tl9S= . ..:84&-c:.;ll::65::.......;;*_.;.,,:9tl2-8958::::.:=c.._-----•tn Today'• Want Ads. Open t:ves. 1 19.!n. 456-41Z RAMBLER loe Berlotel'1 T&M ·MOTORS IOll GARDEN OROVE ILVD. SALIS OPIN SUNDAY run. SllYICI TUIL. THUlll. TIU. I . tj.W.214 f Vt ~ L 9f IMlllt lf2·S~ ........... . -·- . . _ .. ~ --·· . , ..__ ..... _,...., ,___ ~---------------------------------------.... Cit :c > ~ .,, rn ~ .... . .,, rn z n - -z .... :c rn ·-·-.. I!! _,n VACATION DISCOUNTS RENT A CAMPER D.J ... 111f cM11iHlll ... ,.,. 11111 _..,. i..... Jw f1111ily ... -• '-ill Milt-t· ._ ..... .-..,. /JM 41ilJ. ... ,.,.. ..... ,_ .... ,,., • .., ..... k ,.... ll'll'te. MUSTANG SAL E • AMIRICAH IXl'RHS 20 to chooM from. '65 thru' 70 models. Coupn, hardtops, con- vwtiW. ancl 2 + ·2 FostMcb. Somo with 4 llf'Md's, a loo air con- dltlonlnt and automatic models. EXAMPllS: 12) 1967 MUSTANG HARDTOPS VI, 1et... PJ,. R&H. tTSSJSfl M" Vt, Jt1Mlri RJ~ (IYIJ6JI OUf! P.R·~~ ." $1.?99. 1966 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, 1utom1tic:, r1Jl1, h11t1r. ISLW041 ) OUR PRICE $1095 n '~ I!~ I 67 ~'~~~~1~~:~'.~~~~I ~ $2295 t~~ -,6-7-'-~-~~-.!=!~~f~ .. ~~=!o=--~$-1_6_9_5_ ~ii '67 ~:~·~~-~-~-~-:~-... D-.,.-~-~~-•• -",,--$-,-· _9_9_5 i~r ____ h_, .. _., •• 1.1uzs_,._,,_. _________ _ Esz~ '69 !o~~c.~.~~~~~ ... ~,, $2295 c.MIH011irMJ, ~ucket Moh , power •foorilMJ. a pow1r cll1c br1k11, radio, h11t1r. 21,000 1111111.1111 Mok !Hk• S1011 IXSR.1,31 '63 '69 JEEP WAGONEER 4 wh••' dri•t. v.1. t ir co"4ltie11i111 rfTX22il F~~.~ .• ~~.:!" '·'·'··'"'·· .. $2995 Air, P-'oor loc.•1. AM-FM, llue look price $JJH . 1140ASH> Everybody's Doing It! Wher'9Wf' you ltuy • MW cir tlurl,.. efficlal' f1ctory cl11nup time, you're ...... te 11ve • -INndle. There's no clenyf .. it. S. all we ••Y 11, look around but, before you 11ctvally rneke the deal, consider ThMclere RoblK ••• 1. DISCOUNTS YetU'll .. , .. they're unbeatable wherewr . you shop. . ' ' . 2. S&LECTION Why take a model or color yov don't realty want when we have one of the Swthl.,.,.I blt .. lf 1'70 model I-lot t9 ~· from? · ' 1 BAC KUP Since 1921 Thoocloro Robins '•nl has .,.. er.ted under the Mme ownenhlp. Your invesfment 11 Ncktd by 1lmo1t 50 y11r1 of know how encl lnl01rlly. WHY NOT ADO SATI SFACTION TO "YOUR SAYINGS ••. WHEN IT'S F REE ? GOODYEA R TIRE CE NTER ALL llIH e SPICIAL TAKE °"' l'RICll e lt.iMs e l'OL YGlASI WlDI OVALS e TRUCK-AND CAMl'IR TIRES. l'REl'ARE NOW ,OR A WE VACATIONf• C A THEODOltl ROBINS EXCLUSIVE . LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD! 100% l'AltTS Afo!D ~IOlt ; WARRANTY 4000 MILIS OR 90 DA')'S . c ............... ,... ................ ,, I ........... ,.. ...i, nus..--....,_,_...._.,..... All..,..,... .................... .. . . ALL OFFERS CONSIDERE D TRADES ACCEPR.D PAID FOR OR NOT '64 FORD FALCON H.T. $895 Auto., P. S., radio, heater. (XTH830) '63 RAMILER 220 WAGON $495 6 cylinder, radio, Mater, (KIL083) J 63 Ol.DS STARFIRI $495 2 door, HI'. Full power, factory air condltionin1. cwxam > '64 FORD XL GAlAXll SOO s995 2 dr. H.T. Buck1t.1eata, factory air, L full power. (NCD042) '68 SCOTSMAN CAMPll $795 8 fL cab over alttps 6, ~ ). . . l ' ·~ ,, .. 'I . • . ~ . • HIV ROH --------- . OV.ER ,2 ACRES OF ' FINE TRADE INS TO C,HOQSE .FROM LEASiNG? . . . ORDER· YOUl 197l . TODAY FOR EARUEST ' \ D'UVEliY. r-. I ~ .. -. . . . WAGON SALE! ., 10 to ci-so f....,._ '63 lhru '6' modolL • & 10 pas-. s..M fully equipped wllh full power encl olr dndltlonlftl. "EXAMPLE : ' . 1966 COUNTRY SCj)UIRE 1·0 ,l'ASSl!NGER . YI, 1utol9!1tic, ,ew•r .•te•riltf, 11:-•r wiMlw 1, 'r141o. httft r, low 1nil11. (TE't. 1211. .. OUR f!'RICE $'1195 • 1969 COLOl)IJ PAlllf MAltCj)UIS A11to., ~&H, P.S .. '·'·· fe ctory ,;,: Wtn'tllty ••ttlt!Jlo. 11110 Mok price $l•40. IXW6i62) OUR PRICE $3495 -. . '68 SHELBY CoJt•t riible. low miltt9t , 4 1pe14, rtdio, heeler. IYWT1 121. • • '68 T-BIRD LANDAU 2dr. Full power. ft~fory t lr, till wht1l, 1ftrto +•pt . IWJA701 l. ~ $2795 I 67 ~~~~,~~~S~Ai•~~ 11" loo• $1995 . p1lc.e $2265. 121F925 l ----. --------------'-- '70 '67 ~~ !.~.R,~~~ $17.99 Li••""'· IYWT2171 FORD ~TD 2 Dr. Y-1, ftcfory t lr, t ll'te., P.S., P.I., vi11yl roof. lTANtOI) 7 AM To 9 l'M MON PARts Det. ONLY 8 AM te 6 PM SAft.itDAYS 7 AM T• 6 PM TUE-FRI ' • ' .. . . ... . . • ... '• .. " '• ·-'• •, ·-:: ·- • • '•