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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-08-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa.. ~. ,.. .. , ... '· ' ·. . -= ._ . • • • . __,~/Krxs ~na .D~se~les. ~l!o •ead: ·Softer: . . • . -~ ' . .. . . . ' ' -. a•eaeh . ' m I ~y AmRNOON, AUGUST 19, 1970 Carpenter Senate Win . . . 8y l(J to 1 • .NIWl!Orl Beacll at1omey ud stale ltopubliclft leader Deiyile Carpeqter f'leodly became '¥. ,.tlrot mn to be ~ fo ·t!l!e~al state -from • .. --'!llY· . :.,r. ..-~""· 41, -• ' = 11'!:?' ~!Iii !!!"t:" ..... ' 1 • ~· _,,_\' ;.t ~11.'"~a:i:=g,t: .... . ... ~· ... . ' . ., -1-----r-'E~ast _l)el~anons ·.In CaPl-81~ ·J'lan • * * • . . FreeWay -Fig~t . * .;' . ' " " ' uei: . . .. ,, * * * ' • . '· . . -• • . 0 co , * * fi • P.t to ClrJ 1 •• • • "'' tete: ca;;ztez. •,• r'!"" · S,117. • ' • • c. ..... ·• olodiclll'. .. *"' .... ·-~llria al ___ Jdll) G. . "°"' ,.. . " li,.I. ~~'~.a.- ~. f -Fight ,.,._..e~ Didn't Gd..' To .Polie'.e ' ' ' ~ the .... J--11. u . ' ''" . ; ·~ ·t1oe1 a Dtm1a1ilw .,. ,....i, Dwlcht .,,, Illa al~ Qrt!e ..... N .. ember6-11 Elecll!!n.t.tlbe Tronieal Swrni Qn Free.way . nill . ,... lour-,.-tmn . belllm!DI •eat t' ,,,..,, MIJit dK 1111 Ille l9r tl>&.-1&1 By L PETER KREIG efflill DeltrPIMlflf .. ="~11.,.._a1'-" Dorothy Rages ~.-..._ e-t18<1alt lllld tbe :a,m SACRAMENTO -Delqatlonll ln>m . ~" ~ lectlon T d J 1 --..J _ Orange Coast communlU.. were In tbe ~=:' ~ J. !::t 111 ---! a1 111t owar SUUl.U.3 stale capital today pol!lblng .,.._ ~ .3 .,__,,. taUons for the long awaited 1en1te • • ·~ ,..,1111 . ..ptend voters. SAN J.UAN, P.R. (UPI) -Fast-Tr..,portaUon Commlttat hearing On ~~· =.:,• ::l~11 dev<loplnf tropical stG!'m Dorotlly was Assemblyman Robert Badham'a blO to .;...., _..,.to ·uve In Nnport Beaeh. born llO in11 .. eul al Gllodeloupetoday wipe out Pacific c.e.t Freeway In. • ...,.~ nolded Lido I le and quickly appraached full hulTicaoe Newporl Beach. ~ ilohn Mardy on ~ 1trencth u ·ll bore clown on the I.eeward Badly wtnumb<red, Newport Mayor "11!!l,h0 Tollr••l'f•om olllce In lllf, t Island& w)th f6 mile on hour winds. Ed Hirth and Councilman Howard Rogen 114,.~ -from l!mltlqton Beaeb "Realdeots of tbe threatened Islaods were present to plead fur passage al the .........: ho hail Uftd -of bla Ille. tly ad •··• to lete bill that Id ldU ... ......,. te f •-;r..=...,, •ddltloo to lht Senate GOP are urgeo •-comp wou .~ pro,..... roo o -~·:11 expect:ed to akt ·MVfl'•l ot preparatiolll today," the National Hur-the future freeway through their clty. ,,...,., .. , , Jeglllstlve "PfOPOUls rlcane Center said. Robert CUrcl, represmtlng Newport'• ~:i.: !~!..~ bloclltd by the laclc or lloroley -tbe fourth llonn <( the newly-formed Cltlzena Coordinating Com- Wlual ... "'.. t b aeuon -wu expected to reacl\ full bur-mlttee against Jhe fr~way, was al.lo nece,aarr votes to overcome e ricane strength w~ 2t houri. It was present and expected to address Jhe com. Democratic bloc. hoaded for Ille Leewards, bordering the mlttee In support of the. bill Top1 amolf theR 1• the much :"ul:: Caribbean Su, at • fut t7 m.p.h. City officials from Costa Mesa, Hun- tu reform 'bill which-ts now JC At t a.m. PDT •. forecuters aatd the tington Beach and Laguna Beach and tor a_. Door vote on Jl'rlday. storm ·wa1 c«1tered aboUt 500 mllel east-representaUves of the coun&y filed Jn thil ~. nid:lf 7'leldi:! !t!84ver!i SO(ltheaat of .Guadeloupe ~ar latl1ude morning to· argue against the meuure conmiltild'.._, '"' 1 •• lhe JJ.7.nodh and.Jongltude 54.5 w'8t, !ale today. Bidlilllr '81 wtilcll -~~ ·~ lrin Immediate lhr<at to the 'llte blllh.Csored by Ammblyman l'lillk -............... ,., --· ""'"&' ~"-'-•-Ooldeloupe, •••-·• 9·~-( ,.__.)bu ........ Beijll~ln.Jta••ipe~lo ' -.... l'lllaliia~ ;;;i'"-11 troina;'--~ C«m~-· uld ·11e · ~-w.....W: and Ital -naltlnc -•ellon ... ...= -.=::...-=--) ,,,...... will be -'!ld'·IC1-neorlr a-mootlL . / · 1119111 •11111111111 ..,.... ... 0raldllit1 Four -~ lrlr-· "' ~ .......... , n. . A llon .. ll'P'I to·IUe -_,., _ _._ .. ~14"11!10.#Mll "ii• LP'I '"•1111• 1*I :-11 =caplml """--1lilh havt -eaneelled, hilco al lhtf Jul ·~~to-••11 11 12 flcou&llltlll1lbtav)'ralnllllll mtnate when by cornmlttee m 'n ·~."-•=:/*,.tbe,;:"'' · iDI01noch-ll!lr"y ..,.notabletoalload. ' °t1' ~Ill~ tq t:"".&":.,.. «' __ ... .,_ -loud." -blymon Ba._ !hit a:-'*' llllorw al !he lolu.riy fouafll .-n , depended IZilh..,. ,., u.· falo • tbe C st1ine Bill N . D f s.n .... ~ Commlltet ... '-' • o·a ear e eat j;. :~=~·~.::;;{: .... ' : ,. • .. cllalrnluaald~f!la~tlie Badha111 :blll A W 1wlllcl!·-·,....i;llltl.:ioo-°'' "It lln't very M~/' llldWuooo. W!JI td!dou~ be illlled 1n !?,I.::= eaiir.rfda .......,._,,.. ,, 1zc Tho bill which 11 W-1>y 11o e11y ~"'~;.!.,!'~'11a'l:-'hul"'~•nd~~y;trli,..,doiw,-...-.. ol 1funitl'll'n lle1ch, ' , ,) .-*teat In.the Seoalo~ (~rwlliod , Ntwport Iltlcb.1-lsolb and hn iJ.., to sac.ramento, ... 17 ·IM!!J, PNO S) . , ' Clenllnte; would ~ Jlltowlde pla"' • ~prlv~cto.ZJ>u'-_ 'rjo,b1D,whicl11>1"'!"11lloA1'p•~f nil'I --on •ll ll<OJ><r!)' Wllhi!I 'l'c•"i~-'-~ alllfl ·i .lfl>YOte ~-~~--Wllt (i l,IOO,-ollbe-~~ -·~--,_ • ........,,~·,.......,..nit~ l"lvt "Ilona! --........ ~ GU\ )I "'* j. I .,.,U..x(lllie · htarlntf •Iii ·.Ille •,~te -~ dards for new bo!ldlnfll!, 1Ubdlvl1iolll Ind· !ecli.li" Or1an'ii.ltion c.minittee was st!' fi>r ocean actlvltlff 111Ch'u dredging aod Ill~ e ttM Mw aeoator said he did not expect 'l!Nnday juai one day before tl1e Ing Wilhin t:hret miles. to-bl aworn jn to office until Thurlday legt1Jaturt ia alated.to adjourn. Oppo1ltton to the' mea1ure Is \n the 9Mboqb count)' elecUon otficllll wired 'Ibe author o1. the me 11 u re. form or fear or interference with )l'lv1te r..iia fl tbe -to the Secretary fl Aloem~ymlft Pelo Wllaon (JI.San Diego) PfOl!er!Y rlghta. Slt!t(t .mcc 'l'lleoMy n1111t. -not hold out midi hope I« Senate The bill, u It 1tm11, ~ provide fOI' ~II a ,..._ FBI a .. nt. 111111-• _ .. tllll ...,;.; 1 tl1e !tut lmpo&iUon ol atate authority ln- prolossl0nal bukollloll player and a .,. If the \In ii approved In tlle Thurtday lo tr1dtll<>naf <My planning and 200fn1 tive al Miftlleaota. He Dves Jn Nnpotl ,.,.kin, It mllll Phi 1tlfl another com· powers. lleaCb wtth hl1 wtre 1nd tour IOlll . m1tte~1 a .sehilt.e f 1 o or vote and an The moet recent '1Mnd'11Cnt would ex· Ho moved lo branp County 12 yean Al&embly Door •Oii to CCllCW' in the elude the dty of Long Beach fl'om !ht (let CAl\PINTD. P• .. I) · .,.endm<nll. ' rtgulatlons. • ' .l , aild,11111 Ille -----· Camll (J>.llln I'-) ud -llill1ll ,(Mia .,,_), -.Id ""'bt prettnl today Qilt lhlt•.tba btulnp Wuld havt lo .... without lllem. BadhUl dlj!Uned to pndlct how ... powerful lralllportation commlttat -Id vote on the JlalllUN, · "Our dmlcel ere IMO," JI mil M would AY• He Indicated that with Cmelt and Marb preoent committee •PP'0¥11 would have bNll UIUred. Tht llnlle -Jmportant flcuro In tile Iuturo of tbe bUI pnbablJ ~la eommlUat chairman -Jlndoll* Oolller (!). ' Yreka) wilo nporlodly. --tile bill and potl!bly could IWIY It Joaol I bere majortty ti. 1111 --1 to bla aide. Laguna Krishna Group Promises To Lou1er J'o.icu .... , ....... Z•• Zaa Kobbe• Actre11 Zoa Zsa Gabor was robbed In an elevator In the Walaod Altorla Hole! In New Yori< eerl1 today while return· lni to her suite. Ml11 .G1bor said that 2 robbers toot lwo 48-carat rings and a, set; of dla· mond OOJ'ringa v 1 I ued 1t '700,000, She was not. hurt ll> Ille bicident ' which "l""'rred lhertly before· 1 a.m. tod,y. Johi'i Irwin Gets • N{j. "2-Position WABHDIOTON (UPI) -PrH~I· NbGoi IOdaJ .-Joi,.. Ii, Iiwtn u, .,, Allflll!!l tlecfltar)' al Def-""""' .... :ttlettbowtt AdmlnlltraUon ~ aod .,a , NfW, York I aw ·,'• •• UnderiecrWtUy 'ot State. Irwin, II, """*"'Elliott. llldlln!ooil In tbe No. 2 polillon In the ll)all ~ -~WU tJIPOllllld ~ thfl ll1l1Tlllltt' to --H. rtnch u !ecMlry ol Health, l!ducllloa' aad Walllit. ---- Irwin, a Republlcan, will recetve • aal1t1 al .CZ.JOO. Hil nomfnatlonJmlll bo' _.....by 'the Seha11. "fn"'1, • natlYe al Ktoluk, I0111. J -1 ~In llle •llW flrm'ef P• ter'°"' lleflmlp ~ Webb, wu deoq'tbed' by tho Wlllte R o u I t u a Jont-ili!>e ··-'•te of Nlson. He ,...,.,. '""" 1• to 1911 u Aullltlnt locrttary al Dllmlla, for lnlltftltlonll ~ Alllf7. · ' r . Over Fear .· I . ; ' '. LOS· ANGELES. (UPI") -·l.lnfa -!>jan adm!Uod today· lbai .... llld lier hillband ..... t Ille TI (t. ·LI B~.a a·ea, -• few dayt llllr lhty _, .. but that •fther of tbeDI -,,,, .. lomfll •-pollce. • Under a'Oll eqminaUon by D'vq: Xanartt. the atlomey fGt ltlpplt cull leader Clllrlal Manaon, Mn. ~­Nld !bat slit did nol really, lmo!i !lo!r lo .... to tbe police" .... tell !be llorY,. •:You mean you dldn~q ai. _.., to tell the police!" Kanartltubd. ' HJ don't know," Kanarek aiked her what lbe told ·w huaband Robert about Ille alaylnp I Yut qo this month. "I told him Qiorley flli1oed aad had • whole bunch of people tillid," the u..r. "I 111d I aaw a number ol people lililo4 myself." . Kanarek uked Ille---lw huaband had nol .......... lb!Q' -contact authoritlet. 1o. "Ills reaction wu lbl 1'Jll pt to'11mTY UP and pt_ Utlll ....... ol U..," w aald. "lit didn't oo lllt nillt,y al IL• Mn. K-r.. ............. told bot ttory briedy to a cq~ 11.,-_.. Joe !la&• In.New-,, • ' •lie told, ""!· ru;;;ia-., M ........ (lee TATE,· l'!oll ')° 1 Cenll I I -. I ... r: .. , .. •• •• • • - B•BU·ia Stciss • ~ call it the "stone cheese." J.t sits in Hunting. tan Beach'• Late Park and it draws kids Jike flies. lf1 O"*Y to -why. All you need is a little imag· iDaion. The imaginative kids visible here are Bar-- ination. The imaginaUve kids visible here art Bar- . Lalone, 8. Joey is the one not facing the camera. Cheryl Lalone, 5, is inside peeking ouL ls that her behind Barbara Anh! Or is that our imagination! L .Badham OpposesAtte~pts . . !~To Hold Up P9wer Plants "'" , -. Newport Beach) said today he will op- "" pose all bills whlch would delay con- stnx:tion ol J>O"W planla or would make -;-.. ..,, clllages in lhe authority m lhe Public ~ Utilitim ()lnminjm (PUC). .., :;,._ . '1 jull nut ID be s= that In lhe fuWre we hive ligbtaJn the-when I ""' push Ille IWitdl, .. be said. , Bachm made bis remarlm ta tt:SpllilC ff ' ID lilll pm!q Wm.. lhe LfCjslabue "'" "'1ldl lie llid "aluld delay compktioo ..,.,., <<> -p1mm) and --'b!!C; power lbortages in Calif<rnia.. ·"'• "I realiu that environmental pro-~:11·. tectioa ii. nert"IU'J effort and certainly ,,;,, should be pr.ta:t.d and-considered, but [ "-I... btlieve at IOme point. we must pratect lhe health ud lllely'of the people .. tills • ' • ... le who depend upon elec!rical energy ""'1·.: for their daily lives," be said. ,.,. '· He pmllctod that Jt'i-dpaosicn of ...... -pI.m .... Oomlndioo of -, ,, loolliti<S, Ille ... le will IUrt bavinc ti·''' power shortages in four to seven years. "But tbe militant preservationists hint r.;•,1• that thef are a:oini .io stop coostructkln "'1 <. ol these Plants or they'll sue and tie the ~ ~" utilit)' cmnpeies up in court. "[ don't lhini: legislation should give • Senate Approves ~-. . ~~ . ~;,. ABM Expansion 1•; oor_• WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate ? ... • voted todly for expansion of the S.tfeguard Anliballistic Missile (ABM) "l. • • System -a clear-cut legislative victory • ,.. for President Nixon. The AdministraUon victory w I s ,. usind when ABM _..m. failed in their second and final attempt to confine deployment of the defense weapon to two site& authorized Jut year in North Dakota and Montana. '!be \'Ott, oo an amendment by Sen. ability to hurt the-majority of people by indefinitely holding up needed J>O"-'et facilities. "SUrely il -d be ooe thing U pr<5ent law dtd not g1,. adequate protection and oppm1unity f.tliin bearings, but pmml la"' ud ~give full opportunity lor the l!flVil'olllnell Interests lo be beard. .......... declared. The -lymaa cited the problems of finclq an adequate water supply for the planls, noting "liulcally the water ID operate , tile: pl.anti n~ to oar future Modi m eltctricKy mmt come from tht ocean. U and when they are built on our coast. these plants are con- structed in a way that will have minimum impact on the environment "People are usually apathetic about problems -Ibey don't dlrecllf ailed them. And thm lt'1•jut ~ nalure ID ri9t to 1ta aa •Iba and ic:ram when -~ cane home lo roost at lholr ~ ... be aalil. ' Fluor Rumored Buyer of Niguel Rockwell Facility • 1be Fluor Corporation of Loo Angel,., HoUiton, Taiwan and l.<lndon is the -.st rumor«! buyer ol the $23 million North American Rockwell AutoneUcs plant, wxfer coostnictloo in ·1.agu111 Niguel. A spokesman Jor Fluor, major in- ternational firm providing enginetrlng and comtruction services for the mi!ling and petroleum industries, said Monday, "We are engaged in serious t.a1ks with the AutoneUcs people. 'lbe Laguna Niguel plant is one of several possible Jocations we are comiderlng to accommodate the future needs of our persoMel." From P91e 1 TATE ••. belim: that -I don'l lhlnk il hap- pened... . Kanaret 'pttued her u ID all lhe ......., why Ille bod not IDld the police her story in the moDth.s before she sur· rendered herself to police in New Hampshire. She said she still thought or police " "pigs" and didn't know how to approach them ID tell bet st«y. She said Ille wu afraid they would -........ ~ Mel tab away her little girl . She allo said she dtd nol know where Manicn and lbe other glrll of the "family .. were at that lime and that they ml,ght come and kill her and her daughter. She said her thinking a1Jo WU influeoced ~ the fact Ille WU pngnnl again. Kanarek was &lill cross examining Mn. Kasabian when the court -Tues-day. The 2~ra~~d blonde 9temed rom-pletely ed and almost gay u the burly Kanattk and olhor lawym pound· ed at her story ·of teVID murders a year ago al the T"8,aod 1•111-. bomes. Kanarek, wbo .... --slcip- ped lrom subJe<!t to !Mb)ect and al -point WU as.king '~ Kuabian about a "'vibration" she said she was able to send out and rece.lve from .the universe. Tbe lawyer uUd tier to describe a vibration and Deputy Diltrid At1orney· !..... stovitz, ioterrapted to say: ·•u sbe bad true vibrations, she would will Mr." KanareJr: to cease his questions." Earlier, Deputy District Att.<rney Vin· -Bugllosl concluded the state'• u- amination by asking her whit she meant in previowl testimony W was an "emisaary from God ... "I feel that I am doing the will of God. What ha.! been done WU wrong. J did wrong, too. "I am truly repentant for it.. My being here testifying ls my rt:pentanoe." Deal P1·esented To Strikers By Disneyland Suspect . in~ Strangling Of Coed Found Guilty ANN ~RBO!t, Midi. (AP) -J.obo Norman C.OUlns was convk:ted Of fJnt. decree mw-dtt today In the s!raqilog ol a .-! artar the jurors dtlermln& hla fate deliberated 2711 houn. coutns, 23, beard tbe wUmous verdict with little visible show o( emotion. His mother, Lc;n.U.a COiiins of Centtr Line, Mlcb., siAred ~ lorwanl as the vtrdid 1rU ~ by the Jury l<nman,buta-g!rlwholOo conipanild the family began IObbing quill!)'. • .Alts. the \'Udlct was anaonaccd, Colllhs WU romand«I to (he Washtenaw OOunty Jail pandJnc -log whkh Cln:uil Judge John Conlin .. t for l ::JO a.m. Aue. a Hia f•mlly remained in the locbd counroom after otlw apectalon left. Collins' elder slater, Mn. Gail Dale, broke into uncontrolled sobs several minutt.s after the verdict WU umounced. Aod ber mother moved ID comfort ber ~ lbe courtroom. ' A Romu Cltbc>Uc priest, who ac- companied the family to moot of lhe c:ourt.sessiooo llincl lcstlmony be1an Jul)' U.S. Claims Israel Trl{Ce 21)1 wu there todly lO comfort the -Shortly afterwards, Mrs. O>lliM alao began aobbing. Under M!cbipn law, conviction of llrst.-• de.gree murder requires a preaentenclng invt.stigation. But Nell Fink, defense at- torney, told the courl after the verdict Wu announced his client wUl not aid anyone in the presentencing Investigation · and will provide nothing exoept his name: and age. A first-degree murder convk:tion car· rles a mandatory penalty of We Jn priJon In Michigan and there Is an automatic righl to appeal. Washtenaw County Sheriff Douglas Harvey was virtually the only trial parUcipant willing to comment im- mediately. He said, "I'm very pleased. Th~:m'tor did a fine job." Cha U ub · • • d'· 'T. -wu convicted in the slayiog ol rges HQ stanhlW·te , ,~ 8ue Belneman, an 11-yOIM!d I'~ ' '11(.1, "'': J:utem Mlchia:an UniveraitJ freshman ' · . ~·'f?Wn Grand Rapldl. The girl was last . , Hen alive 'July 23, 1969, and her naked WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United be,...S the -came enUrely froqi • and balttnd body ..... found in a - States doctlnd todo1 lbal It had no -!,,..ii -and tbe United Stslei bo<I gully tbi'ee days later . elusive eviderot to __ .,. lsrlell aot bell 1bli to rucb NY cnoduelon 1!f , • 'An elder Nte:r of tbe dead girl w~ in • ....,... • lo lb nl!dltJ'. ' .·1he courtroom today ID bear the verdict. el!ar&Os lhlll EcYPt aod ~ violated The Urill«I states adviaid the 'bnell llarbara Belneman sat fn a front row the .-..illlill -t in the period Im-parwwwrt 'fltudly that It doOI not , wltb State Pollie Sgl David Li11J. ud bta mediately following Ille .. aso-li .. In the -.. ---.. -~rt . wife. Mn. Ldl:·Is the -of Collins' Suez Canal :rone. • mllflary -..ta&o by lily EID'Jllllri • rilotber and ~WU fn tbelr bnme the .tale The State Department said there was or Soviet actions. said the Beineman girl was murdered by "some evidence" from the Israelis that The U.S. statement added : ,Collins. the forward movement of uti-aircraft "With respect to additiooaJ informallon Miss Beineman's mother was at h.er mi.ssilel whic:b hid been kt progress hn-that the Israeli govumnent ·hu brought Grand Rapids home when. told of the mediately pior to the cease-Ore co.-to our aUentioa concening possible viola· verdict. She broke down m tears and tinued beyond the eeasH1re deadline but tioos of lhe cease-Ore, we are uamining declin~ ~ comment. , . , added that uour evidence of this ts oot it and are in trucb. with the parties Collins is also undei: md1ctment. 1n ~ conclusive.'' tbroa&h diplomatic channels." murder of a fOWJi gut near Salinas m A dtParf,ment apokesman, Robert J. McCJoskey said the "main thing now is June of 1!69· P.fc:Closkey, ukl tbla applied to alleged to concentrate all efforts on getting Mss ~e~n was the seventh young violalions GP AJrl.I I. He ukt that the discussions goiag" under supervilioa on ""Oman slain m the. Ann Arbor area dur· Unitf!d Stata wu still examinbii ad-U.N. mediator Gunnar Jarriq'. tng a two-year ~rk>d. There have ~ diUooal charges made by the Israelis that ''The United States beUevu that these no charges filed m any of the other Ill there were Egyptiu violaUons of the ta1b should be&ln prompUy," be com-deaths. standstill agreement 01 Aug. 13, 14 and mented. . 11. 1be U.S. spokesman said the Ul\!!«f The key portiori Of the U.S. statement States had repeatedly usured the lsrtell said: . government that "our intent is not to '"\h haw: concloded that then was permit the military balance to change." fonrard "deplO,ment of surface4o-air Asked to commeRt on the Jsraelii' mlailes into aDd within the u:ioe west of co mplablts that Egyptian violations tbe Suea Canal around the time the aJre.ady had shifted the balance again!t cease.fire went into effect. Israel and Put. them in • posiUoo of 0 Tbere ls IOIDe evidence that this has relative weakness, McCloskty said: contbwed beyond the ecase-fire delldbe, '"Any such changes as might have oe-. altbou&h oar evidence of this iJ not con-curred would have some effect on the elusive.,. overall milltary situation Wt I want ,to McCloskey, under questioning, sakl the emphasize that we do not in.tend to "etidencf:" of conlbrued deployment permit tbe balance to be Up!let." Landseapiu-g Due Caretakers Read.y for Nixon Visit IJ'rom PIJfle 1 KRISHNA ... Ullcit sex and 11:one on to other centers. Some even have become presidents of temples." There are just four disciples in Laguna now, said Das, but the number varies. "We are the only ones who c:an truly change the lives of some of these young people. U-people are really concemed about youth, they 90uld aUow us to con- tinue. There is no other hope fM many." Asked if be had been approached by ci- ty representatives regarding the com· plaints, the, temple president said, "We were approached by our spiritual leader, A. C. Baktivedana Swami. who came frOm India to found the sect here. He told us to stop selling miue and to start giv. ing our literature 1"18Y free , only to those who wish to take tt. If they wish to 1be Nlloo family will have tome more weddi"" and parties with a rrequent donate to our Clltl.9e, fine, ir ool, alM . ... fine ." . plllants IDbenmaiplhtaJn at tile W~ White cs~, ~~~inc~f:;· and C-Ox, a , ~ut as far u the chanting ii concerned. ouse w ey arrive for a working Das said, UUs wUI not be ...... ped. "Thi.• tion F d Harvard Law School student., attended a .. ..,... vaca ri ay. Y!'edding last weekend, then went to is how we practice our religion," he ex· Landscaping started thi:I week on .several parties with his friends. • plalned. "We ere supposed to stand in unplanled spacu within the President's On the Monday trip through the Fifth one place and chant, but we try to move est.ate in bruby area which once &tn'ed and Madl!on avenue areas in Manhattan, along if people complain. However, our as a pasture for rid1ai stock. Mr. N.iJon, Pat and Tricia were joined by leaden have told m we abould not move. In the meantime, preparations are former New York Governor Thomu E. Of courae people complain. They don't under way for the seaind honeymoon trip Dewey and two of Nixon's old school like the sound of the music, even though of President and Mrs. Nb:on to the city chums from Whittler College. it is a sound of happiness. But we must where they first viaited 30 ye.an ago. At the dinner hour they dined at tht learn to endure complaints and hope that After spending 'Ibunday and Friday in posh La Cote Basque restaurant. .90me will hear correctly." Puerto Vallarta, Mexjco, the Presi.denl. While the wek's activiUes continue for The young man added, "We do this in and bis wife will join tbeir two daughter& the President in the east, younger every major city of the world and so far and a son-in-law at the Spanish villa for a daughter Julle and her husband David none has been able to stop us. Hollywood stay luting through the rat of August. Eisenhower are spending a quiet week in and Beverly Hills: tried to stop us, but the Mr. Nb:on spent Monday in New York San Clemente waJting fer the weekend district aUomey told them 'forget it.' He \'islting with the brass of the New York reunion. knew it was too controversial to try to Daily News and strolling the streets or No public appearances by the young kep us from pract.king our religion ac· hls old neighborhood wilh friend! and t'Oupl e have been noted here. cording to its precepts. elder daughter Tricia. Presumably the Elaenbowers are apen-"We just hoP,e people will realize we MiM Nixon wu fresh from sparking ding their Ume within the estate, where can save more human lives than most Edward W. Brooke (R-Mau.). gave the Administration what it felt was an im- port&nt bargaining wedge in the Soviet- Amer)can Arms Conl{OI Talks. He said Fluor, which now employs 2,500 people in its Im Angeles headquarters on Atlantic Boulevard, ei:pects to double its work force in the next 10 yean. some new goaip among White Hou..e some of the new landacaping is taking government agencies, and that is all we Disneyland will rehire the 29 fired observers after • weekend of attending • place. want to do." members o{ t~ American Gulld of Varie--!,-:==========='=='===============~~=========, ly Artiata {AGVA) if AOVA will agree to • • l ' • ·' r• \ , DAILY PILOT .....,...,. ... .. ._ ... .. ....... " ...... , ...... ,....., Yillhy 's.c ....... QCNtOf CO.UT ~tllllt.t!IMG COMil'AH'I' l•Mti N. W,.4 ~-·-r ..,.. 1"•••41- J•c• l . C11r/1y "~ .n1-.... Gl:Mr" ~ 1i.-., "'••·" H i .... ,._. .. A. ..... , ...... .............. Efll9r lict.."1 r ....... Sftlll °'""" c-1' E~i"" ""'"' C.• Mne: nt '#1JI 1.,. Sl<HI w...,..,1 .. s.:11: nn ""' ,_ .. , ...,._.,,.,.. UrlllN lektt: m ,..,., •- .....,..,. .. l.Mdl: llVS .. 1dl ·~· ... '"c~ m,..,,.. ~ c....... ttMt "ll'a hard to tell where the ta.lb {with Aut.onetlcs) will lead," he added. 'lbe gianl Laguna Niguel •facility, des°igned to house ? ,500 AuW;netics employes, wu placed on the market la.st February when Norih American was bit by cutbacks In the 11pace program. Since then there have been repeated rumors ot it.a sale, with General Electric ComPWIY . atnQO& the lirms reported viewing the plant With interest. 1be Fluor spokesman said the plant would have much ;nore space lhap the firm ribw requlr.et, but added,, "I'm JUR we could eventually grow into a ·facWty• of that site." : He i~at.a tlia4 enlargemenl ol lhe Southern1'Cl1111lfomi1 operatloli woalil not· lovolve mov1ni per50ru}tl fr<1m other Fluor kJcaUom. The Co<por~tion hat Ol- flces in lblston, Tex., l.<lndon, Holland and Taiwan, an engineering con.structJon subsidiary Jn Palo Alto and smaller of. fices in· many other locations . .f'rem Pe9e 1 CARPENTER. • • ago, and rapidly 'rose In GOP cltcles, reechlnc ·lhe top l'\lng ol the ladder wllh hi1 11111 elec:Uon a5 state chalnnan of lhe central <!Ommlttee. Jn that post he has carried forward the wellknown COP Cal Plan, a program dellg~ tb .1ain control or the •late l•gl•l1lure. Four years ago with C1flltnle.r headin& the drive,· Gov. Jteaaan was elected and two years •ID the Republicans took over slim majorities in both the senate and asoembly. take no action against the 53 non·striklng AGVA members employed at Disneyland, a=rdiog lo Rlchard Nunis, t parks chi.er admlnlstrafot. Nun.is said Monday that he w of no acUon,plahned bj AfJVA againat the non- striken, but 'he aaJd he bad heard rumora that they would be fined $2,500 and "black-tialled" from the union for two years. I · 'J'ht dispute began Aug. I when 29 4G\'.>, memi>!'i walked oil lhelr jobo, atlepdly O'(er low pay and long hours . Dlarieylind sdlloequently lire<! the strikers'. !or faillog. lo nPort ID work, c:iUna a, ~striike clause in tht: AGVA contract. with tbe park. 1be contract ex· plres OI) Qec. ~. · N'rOUallONI a re' currently under way betwe<n D!Jneyland and AGVA ID detremlne Jf the contract is valid. AGVA rduaed 1 bid by Disneyland ID submit the dlspute lo arbilralion ID delmnine the Ieiallly ol the contract. AGVA spokesmen have eontencltd re- cent Disneyland moves were .. part of a stall pattem" and that no real park_offer bat been made fn the-ne1ot1at1oos. ' Bombs Scare Britons LONDON (AP) -Bomb 1<:aret cieand ~ London movie houses. the Houte of Commons and the Brlti1h MU11e.um'1 reading room Tuesday night u poUce searched for terrorists in the BrtUsh "'"re fOund . BOmb aquldf alio were clll-,.. ed to ralll'Old 1Lalloos, tb1 aevtral ltretts wert blocked oft as $1fltChet were ear- ned out In Blrmfniham, lOO nlaht ahln workers at an auto plan~ were sent home aflcr a bomb tbrul CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE FocalimiMlii-..Jy 1 m124llllT_..~,.._ a'# c.,sfl6...-pm.Y-._.2'S•flllf61 F . '--*'le~ pl.ce aail:tp er ••••f'-...-. O.'t ... lhil-ii.seppw1 ., ........... ,.. .. ..... ... .,...,... ...... ...... .... -,_ S.p,;,,6-,,,. ... ~--.... ...... .... -hrMo s. p;. r-,.,,_ J. C. ..J/.ump/,,,ie& Jewefe~ 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION !Ill NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA • PHONE 5~1-340 I • • • I • ti I h • I ; ti [ I l r l I t I ' • ·. Beaeh VO(. 63, NO. 198, 6 SECTIONS, 102 PA&ES ' Full-time -. Mayor Joh By ALAN DIRKIN Of .. ~"'t Pl ... Sltff UunUngton Beach voters will decide in the Nov. 3 general electJon whether the clty'needs a fulltlme, salaried mayor. Five councUme• unanimously approved I a ,d!iolution TUesday 1ighl to put the pro- po<IU.0 oo the ballot U1U'1Ucceed.1, there would then be an \ eiectlon ln April 1971 and every fourth 1 1 l ¥'~ after that to pick the man for the ]Ob. . The mayor will not be a meniber of the cit,teouncll, as previously envisaged, but wOOTd only preside over the procedings antf :~uld have the rl&ht to vote oDly in the ab8eact ot a eouocllman, an absten- tion, or to break a tie. Councilman Al c.otll voted against the provision giving the mayor tbe rl&bt to vote in a councilman's absence or in Ute case of u abstention. Councilmen esplalned that there would still be sevea members of the cooncll. The mayor woukl simply be an e:i~ el<ded official, -Ing as the "politleal and ceremonial head oftthe city." In another major change to tbe""801u- tion proposing the charter changts, the council struck out the aection calling for the city alt<lntey's post to be appolnUve rather than elective. Councilmen COea l!1d other• objected to the WIY City At-Doll Bollfa had written the standards and responslbiliUe1 of the posL Bonla ttpll<d that tt was Wllfde,; no di!· fe.renUy from the unsucoeaful p~ poaWon that was on · the balklt in November, 1961. 611 beard none ~ tbele objediool P<ior to that election," be llid. Thi move to take the city eUomey11 pool off the ballol meant ,_ or the elected oflice'a' poi-...Wd be In the propooltlon. It was propooed earlier that both the city clerk's and city treasurer's offices be appoinUve rather than elective but the in- • eac _..OUllCl ,·Planners T-0 Discuss ···~ S~setBay .. 110" Ult first day in September, Hun· UnitDn Beach residents may learn if • JlO million.plus marina developmenl - lnc~inl two 11-story ttruct.ures -wiD tver 1d' off the ground. .Planning commissioners will restudy the Sunset Bay proposal at that Ume and ;~ whether to grant a variance for uithieh rise buildings. ia'Uiltlogton Harbour re sl dents prden{ed mixed 'reactions Tuesday_ night .. to the development which would border them ·on the wesl, along Pacific. Coast: Highway. Some supported it, others ques-- lioned it. Briefly, the project proposed by Real Property Managemenl, Inc., of Beverly Hills, includes: -Creation o( a small penimular island populated by an ti-story apartme_nt tower four three-story. apartment umts and ~i-subterranean parking. -~ty-three homes and about 7S t.ownhouses on the mainland facing Hun· lington Harbour across a 150-foot chan-- neL -A· four acre neighborhood shopping center. ~A waterfront restaurant. -A four acre "specialty shop" develop- ment . ...,A, four-story office building and an If· 1~ hotel. ~:Dredging of two short channels afld Cl"iGlon of a 335-slip marina. 1\f total project is scheduled for about !5 :)Cres along Pacific Coast Highway ~n Admiralty Drive and Anderson StreeL A large number or Harbour residents lauded the plan as the best they have seen proposed for the area and hailed it as in "enct· to the blight we look at now." Other Harbour residents wondered if the r~idenUal area would really ht .-vtloped as promised, while some op- pooed ·the density ol the hotel and apart· men! am. HEADED FOR SACRAMENTO New ~etor C1rpenter 10 to 1 Vote Puts Carpente r In Se nate Seat Newport Beach attorney aid state Republican leader Dennis Carpenter Tuesday became the first ma• to be elected to the office of state senator Crom the C1Jmmunity. As expected carpenter, 41, scored . a landslide victory over his oppcnent Douglas Irvine, a Santa Ana land developer. Irvine after filing for the post had a ctiaJ;ge of heart and threw his sup- port to Carpenter. The vote: Carpenter, 20,733 ; Irvine, 2,127. Carpi?nter's electio1 Is for the unex- pired term Or former Stale Sen. John G. Schmitz of Tustin, now the U.S. Congressman from the 35th District, suc- ceeding the late James 8. Utt. Carpenter races a Democratic op- ponent, Dwilbl W. Mize of Garden GEOYe (See CARPENTEB. Pqo l) Valley Assessed Funds • . - :Might Build New Park -.. ·A $50,000 "gift" from increa~ aneised valuations might help build another park in Fountain Valley. . C(ty courteilmen expressed a desire Tuesday night to use the mon&}tJ.bet way, rather than to lower the $1 tax rate as lits! suggested by Councilman Job.o ~lmtn approved a $1 lax rate for the :operating budget same as before - bit. did not immediately con&lp the ·~ ooo windfall" to park development. I I 1'tley'll cooslder how much of It should be used for parks at their SepL 15 meeung. Harper agreed to the park idea saylng, .... J. "just want to sec this extra money returned to tht taxpayer In some C1Jn· crete form ." _ Harper's proposal to lower the tax rate -perhaps by 11 much as eight .pents - wa1 batted down by other councilmen on I.he · &rounds the money can be u9Cd for •·unexpected expenses" and the exc!SI 1Trigbt disappear next year. "Besides, It wouldn't amount to more than $4: for the largest hom£ In the city,'' added O>uncilman Albert Hollinden. "Who would we be kiddinr." The exlr• money comes from an m.. crease in assessed "Valuatioos not U• peeled by dty officials. Valuatlonl were IOIJle $5~ million men thin upected "'1lch l!1eons ID estTa llG,000 lo-the dt7 in taxes. But some of that money has already been planned for use -such u $16,000 for a part in Juarez Colony which bad not been budgeted. Councilman Ron Shenkman agreed thl! extra money should be put to park use, with the reservatkm that it be available during the year for use to handle any "unexpected opebdilure&. •• .. I just didn't want the windfall tn disappear Into the geoe:ral bod.get and find ourselves makln& rea80flll to .pend it,'' Harper aaid. Fluoride Opponents Lose Fight Fluoride opponents failed to ~Vince the Fountain Valley City Council Tuesday night that it should let the v~ decide whether they want ~tn city water. About a _dozen ftsideJI&. appeared at the COllDCil meeting to'llf'ge·tbe council to set up an election for th! fDriJe '\tsue. Four eouncibnen maintained their prevk>ua: stands in favor' el ..fluoride and refused the elecUon r,quest. Councilman John Harper -the Jooe dissenter -publicly dedf:111d he would support all efforts to br1nl a referendum on fluoride. P.1rs. Jan Wjlhelm urted the council to approve an elecUon, then said, "We drink H, we pay for it, we should vote on It." She also asked the four coWlcilmen why they would not support an·efection. "l surveyed several groups " people and I don't feel it will come to a vote so It would be a waste of money to put it on the ballot," Councilman Albert Hollinden replied. Other councilmen agreed and Coun- cilman Ron Shenkman added, "I've .studied the issue and a thorough report on court cases involving fiuoride . We are not violating any constitutional rights." "I feel the council has sentenced 35,000 people to use water, medicine, not their choice. I will ~upport these people in their drive for an election," Harper declared. Beach Airport W ins Extension On Its Extension Meadowlark Airport has won a delay in a city order for flyers to stop using a 300- foot runway "extension." Huntington Beach councilmen granted the delay Tuesday night an.r ROOert E. Dingwall, prelident of the HOME COwJ. cil, said tba( new paving co tbl ranway by lldl AvaM made<Ollditlom aafer. DlnpaU, who was appoin1e4 l\ldlday night to head I committoe to s1""7 the airport problem In Huntlngtoo Beach, promised the council that s t a t • aeronautia_engtneers would submit reporta: soon that the new work at the airport made flying Jess hazardous. The council granted a delay unW the next meeting, Sept. I, in enfl'.'rcement of the. cease and desist order. The order is over failure to obtain a ust variance permit for the new pavina at the tiny, private airport. Dill(waU aald that the nutWaY, ez. temloo was not for l•ndlnp but for tal:eollt. He.aald the -ana -eloar· ly marted and Oym-...,.. forbidden to use tt !or landings. Dingwall aod councilman George McCracken, both pilota. said that any homeowners seeing a plant land in the marked area should note the registration number and report Jt to federal authorities. "'lbe problem IB not with Ure 2,000 pilots who llY regillirly out o r Meadowlark. INt .oth the tnnalt pilots or novice Oyen, -Dingwall Aid. "The pilot does not wanfto come down on a rooftop an.v more than tbt homeowner wants il." • ... ......... .. .. • ~ESO~Y, All&UST )9, ·1970 Put on eumbmts -Paul J..,. and Wamo u.n -quMhed that by opposing I t Uwmlelves. Tuetday night's meeting produced rnore than two bom'I of dllam.ion 11 the -tried to -t out the line< polnta ol t11e.fullume mayor propooal. The q11e1•m. of bow and wbetbet in- cumbeat mmctlmm might be: able. to run !or the maywal ofllce wl-jeopanliz. Ing their COltllcil seats took up moot ol the time. The original proposal called !or the lint eledlon to be held In Apr!~ lt'/2 at whkh Ume two councllmen and a mayor would be elected. s Beach 'Ille !«ml of Ted Bartlett. Donald Shipley and Geort• McCracken wUI be expiring at tba& time but it was pointed out thal one of I.be other four councilmen could nm for mayor In 1972 wtthout jeopardizing bill 1<8l Councilman Mc:Cncton suggested that a way to make tt fair would be for a councilman declaring: for mayor to resign his seat. That IUg&estion aeemed near agree- ment but a later propooal that tbe elec- tion be beld in the ol!-year -1171. 1175, 1979 -between council elect.loos ao that any member of the counc:ll could run ax DAll.T ,ILOT ....... w:·.-~ HOW TO BEAT TH E UT ILITY TAX JN .HUNTINGTON BEACH Ton• Out-·Appli11nce1, Which Tr•sh Miin Will Now Haul Aw•Y FrM Beach .Officials at Capitol To Fight Freew;iy m6ck By L. PETER KREIG Of .... O.lfY , .... ll•tl SACRAMENTO -Delegations from Orange Coast communities were in tbe 'Jlate capital tod~y polishing presen- Gas Attenda nt ' Thwarts Thief A 1a1 !taUon attendant was·nursin& a wounded lelt arm today alter pertly foil- ing a boldupa I a station at Magnolia Street and Adams Avenue ln Huntinjton Beach Tuesday night. John M. WUUams, 25, w9' workina In the station at 8972 Adlll1\J Ave. when a bandit, bra)ldlshing a aix-Jnch blue steel revolver walked into the office at IO:IS p.m. The bandit, described as an ap- parent Mex1ean.Amertcan, age 15-35, of- medium-bulld, told Williams to go ouL-to the pump ISiand. There, police 1aid, the gunman remov· od f10 !tom the cub Hiiater. ,. tatlons Ior the long awaited" ,aenate Transportation Committee hearing on Assemblyman Robert Badham's bill to wipe out Pacific Coast Freeway in Newport Beach. Badly outnumber«!, Newport Mayor Ed Hirth and Councilman Howard Rogers were present to plead for passage of the bill thal would kill the -propooed route of the future freeway, through their cit)'. Robert CUrcf, represenUng Newport'• .neW!y,lmned CitlRm l:oordlnatinc eom- mlUee against the. freeway, was also present and upected to addE•a the com- mittee In support of the bllL City ef!lclala from ·Cotta M"eoa, Hun- tington Beach and Laguna Beach and repre..mauvu ef the county filed In this morning to argue against the measure late today. · The bill, opofllOred by A,..mblyman Badham (R·Newport Buch) has already gained 1pp1'9val Crom the lower house and hu betll awalLlng mate action for ,,....ly •-month.- Four tin\es however. transportation C1Jmmittet hearing• tehtduled on the bill have been cancelled, twlct at the Jut (Seo FJIEEWAY, Pip II • = -• Ballot willlout !ear of lolfnc hls Mat .- unanimous support. .. If the e'8ction ii ta an odd rear. all could have a go for it,., Caunc;ilmaa Ml't'f Matney llicl "The people - - tnow dearly -t they are .otinC for - just tee-df'ft.of mayor.• City Clerk Paul Jcws poiaCed oat that ti the mayeral doctioa is combined with • oc1>oo1 district wee the cost -111 bo about It.GOO. The proposal a1lo calla for a nmoll election between the two l<odlll(I cah- didalel fl no candidate taib to win a ma- jority in the lint vote. -• I e New Levies Increased In 4Areas -tington Beacll -acted .. -tues .. four -TueadOJ Jlighl -'Ibey _..,ed .. -.... c"1Jinc !or a ~ po.-tu on all ps, ....... dedric, and water btllJ la the c1t1. • -They 1ncrewc1 tbeo br•L . ~ fee a Jlat 50 pett<DI In all..._ .... -They ordered an ordinance dmm up to lncruae the levy Oii ·~ from 41 •IL -~ -........ de~bOwlellap•ta•,...._ borJttts. ~ • ~ ... Tllo -traded In the fUO tras!i collection fee !or the new levies. The truh fee wUI be dropped Dec. 31 to coincide with Introduction ol tbe olllllJr tax. 1'tle utility users' tu and the hike In the bt1sinesB fee were passed unanlmous- ly. The jwnp in the aparlment levy was .appfoved 3. 2 with councilmen Jerry Matney, Jack Green and Al Coen in~----­ aod George McCracken and Ted BirtleU oppos<d. Before the a p a r l m e n t increa• becomes law, a fourth vote in tav6r - maldng it ·a majority of the council - must be made. oBth ~yor Dcmld Shipley and Councilmen Norma Glbbl ..-re on vacation. The possibilily or a leyY on mobile homes was raised by Green when he ut.- ed ij they could be included In the tu •• apartment&. Flnaoce Director Ben Arguello aald that he was mt sure bow moblle homes were presently taxed -by space or bJ unit. He was instructed to look Jnto lt The levies were approved with lltdi discussion. Tbey had been debited previOU&ly In the mon•long search for additional revenues to fnnance the civic improvements program -the el~ center, library, fl.re 1taUons and cor· poration yard. Only the utility tax. was earmarked Tuesday night for the c:Mc facilities pro- gram. The business liceoae fee Jncrease and the apartMent tu wUl ao Into the ge..ner•I fund, as recommended by Arguello. Olle of the -for I defidl In Iha (Seo TAXP.ll, Pap l l Weadler The sun will be out Thuraday. but it'll be filtered1tbrouab a eloudy har.e when it finally bnaU out oC the morning fog about noon. Tem- peratures wlll be in the blih IQ'I. INSmE TODAY Whatewr vou1 tcutc fn the- ater, Vo" can "fiM it along tht °"""1• c ... 111111 .... -"' • half ctoU1> 1Didflp ..,..mg pro- ductions. S • • lnterta:imnmt, Paa• ll. MM • ttnfft 1f -. ...... flo1J ..,.... ....... " ...,,.., '""' t-1 Or ... C-" • ., .... ,......, ,, .,.,.. ... ,, Dr. ••t1• .. ............. ,, T-n T...... 11o11 -. -----.., ~ ~ OAtl. \' PILOT H Fron• P119e J Fwill i11 'l'ears 1 Suspect jn Coed CARPENTER •••• In the November General ElecUon for the regulor four.year term beglnninjs 11c:11:t January. MlU did not file for the ipeelal ti«tloa c•UIOI It "• wasi. of t11paytrs' 111oney." Death Convicted Coun1y electioo orridals said the 22,870 votes cast in this special tlectlon represented only about six percent of lht district's 359,801 registered voters. ANN ARBOR. Mich. (AP) -John Nonnan c.oJHns was convlcttd or fir.it· dt~ murder tbday in the stranglirig of a coed atll!r ~ turon determine his fate deliberalad m; .hours. ··~ Comm. 23, heard the unlrnous verdict • "t>I UUle vWDle W w of emotion. ffis " '1'DOlher, Loretta Collins of C.enter Unc, t"M'tch., Jtared straight forward as tbt .;«l·erdk:t was announced by I.he jury foreman, but a yowtg glrl who ac- ':1ttomJ>P)ed the family began sobbing )t~uietJy. '"•' After the verdict was announced, "'!Collins wu remanded to the Washtenaw County Jan pending sentencing which •;Ciro.lit Judge John Con1in set far 1:30 a.m. Aua:. a . His family-remained in the joclced counroom alter other apectaton 1"t:)efl it~ Collins' elder sister. Mrs. Gail Dale. l>ro\< lnlD uncontrolled oohs several ' lniriuta after the verdict wu announced. D!And her moth« m0ved to comfort her in 0~the courtroom. ':~ ~:Tower Pl.ans •·.· ifleld Over ~By Council ~: The Tower of London wasn't built in. a .:,ii.y. and architect WIJJiam Bluroct WI ;.;·uesday night he .could wait aw~lt before starting on a tower for the Fust .!"°1ristian Owrch of Huntington Deach- t'l:f So plannifte commissioners cranted a ~£*>ntinuance to Sept. 15 on the chdrch's ·,:::.equest for a vari.anee to construct• 17· story retirement tower at Main Street ,-::and Adams Avenue. ~1 Bluroct did outline the tower and ad· ~ining chuttb expansion ror com- ':"ftl i.ssiooers before asking them to con- ?.idnue the request. He said he just wanted J:., open the door Tueaday by presentina: than wilh the propoSal. :: Church mtmbtts hope to build 1 17 .. -~Mory. 28'7-mtit retirement fa cility in con- jun(:tion with a new aanctuary and drlve- ·!111 fhurcll. ,,(.~ Some Oppi>s1tloh was rtJlslerecl by -t.BorDownen, Worried' that the tower will .. ~ their residential 1tmosphere. Tues- 1a1, residents simply asked ror mort in- ~~atioft on it. Blurock said he intended io develcp lht ~ =fiurch ~ in 1 "ptri-like 1t- ~~" commi5Sionera: auecd lo a ~ oo the}' could oJ,o further ~~ tlle propoaal. • 11'.: :~P>mmittee Study .. ' ,;of Parking Area ~:\Vithdrawal Set :..;ii'"The Huntington Beach Company's re- 1uest to have its five-acre partel ,1.'ithdrawn from the area designated for ~xpanslon or the Parking Authority will M? studied by a citizens committee. c.ouncilman AJ Coen recommended at \tonday night's councU meeting that the ::ittuna: Steering Committee of the Urban .and Institute (ULI ) ana lyie what ex- :tusion of the property Wou1d mean to lhe ,vtrall plan to build a 1,873-space park.ins M downtown. • Cioen aa.id that the committee cou1d use <i~aaibllity studies made by Economic i!ilesearch Associates of Los Angeles te 'nefl whether the project would still work. Coen's motion was passed unanimously. .,~ The company asked for its parctl - 1 1ve acres of east of Lake Street -to be ~.fithdrawn because it is "ready, willing ind able " to develep tbt property itself. ' . q< < •I ,, . , • ' •· I • ' bl "' " < "' .. ., ii DAILY PILOT Ito!."' N. w •• 1111 , .. ,.i.111 t nd ........ ,,,., J.ck It. C.11rlt~ Vo~• ,,.,,o...,t •".ii "tr . ..,.•I M•e•tt Tiio,.,•• K •• ..,1 1ho"''' A . Mwrph111t ,,.._., ... l•- AI•• Clirlii11 W•I 0. •1111 c-ty l.•!Mr Alb.rt W. l•l•1 """''''' £•" ... H•1'tl11tl•• IHcll Offi.,1 I 1tfS ''"'~ lowl• ..... 11 M1iliftf .t.dd•111: ,,0 . l o• 1to, ti••I Othr Offlh' l 11u,.. •iuf)I !D ~., .. , "-·. ( .. 11 M .. I ,. WU • t lf""J' '""~ t11-i:ior. ltJ(ll n 11 Wol lt'OOI ·~ .... •1"41 )t11 (!f....,.IO :.t ,..,lh (I (tllllllo ltu l A Roman Catholic priest, who ac- companied the fa mily to most or the court sei;sions since testimony began Jul y 20, was IM:re today to comfort the women. Sborlly lflerwanll, Mn. Collins also b>gan >ObbJni. Under Mkhtgin law, conviction of first· degree murder requires a presentencing invesl.lgation. But Neil Fink. defense al· tofney, told the court after the verdict was announced his client wiU not aid anyone in the praentencing investigation and will provide nothing except his name and qe. , A first-degree murder conviction car- ..,ries a mandatory peoaJty of life in prison -in · Michi&an and thert is an automatic rigl>t to app<al. Washtenaw County Sheriff Dou,glas Harvey was virtually the only trial participant wilUng to comment im· med.lately. He said, "I'm very pleased. The prosetutor did a Cine job." Collins wu convicted in the slaying of Karen Sue Beineman, an 18--year-old Eastern Michigan University freshman f.rym Grand Rapids. The girl was last seen alive July %3, 1969. and her naked and battered body was found in a wooded gully -.c1ay, later. An elder .sister of the dead girl was in the cowtroom today to hear L'le verdict. Barbara Beineman sat in a front row with State Police Sgt. David ~ik and hi5 \\'ife. ~trs. Leik is the sister of Collins· mother and ii was in th~r heme tht statt' said the Beineman girl was murdered by Collins. Miss Beineman's mother was at her Grand Rapids borne when told or tht verdict. She broke down in tw1 and declined to comment . C.Ollins is a1ao under indictment in the: murder of a young: cirl near Salinas in June of 1189. Utility Valuation Ju Count y Down From Last Year Pub lic uUJity assessed valuaUon in Orange County ~ropped aJmoat Ofl' per. cent in 1970-71 under comparable ~~ for the previous yrar, Count)* Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw announced Tuesday. The assessor sa id the values, as determined by the st.ate Board of Equaliuilon wort '24',411,2iji, a drop or eight-lt!lfhs of ... pm:ent. • Added to Hlnsha"'s fifUJ'es for all other l.a1able property In the county the utiJily U&e18ments boolt the total county assei8ed value to $4,185,597,rTO. Hinshaw attributed the drop in public utility assessments "to a decrease in earni ngs Of public utilities dut to the 1969 recession.'' The reduction in utility assessment conlrastl sharply with 17.6 percenl in· crease in assessment figures for general property values in the county announced by Hinshaw last month. County aupervison Tuesday passed a resolution protesUn1 lhe manner in which utility properties are assessed and called for a legislative investigation or the Board or Equalization's practices in the field. According to supervi90rs, utilities are assessed on "historical" (OriginaJ) cash value or the property leu depreciation. In contrast private propert~ of the averasr ho meowner of bWilnessman is assessed on replacement value and has tl· perienced a steady increase because o( va lue appreciation over the years. Ulilily assessed valuations for Orange Coast cities and the increase or decrease over last year are: Costa Mesa. $8,288,670, down 4.6 percent : Foonlain Valley, $2.845,080, up 1.2 pe rcent: •lun- tington Beach. $48,989.930, down 2,6 per· cent, but still the highest public ut ility valuation of any comm unity in the c.'oun- ty . Laguna Beach. $3.520.780, up 6.5 1>cr· cent ; Los Alamitos, Sl.205,490. up 2.2 per. cent; Newport Beach, $7,329,640. up 2 2 percent; San Clemente , $3.075,720, up 1.6 percent: San Juan Capistrano, Sl.847.iOO up 6.2 percent : Seal Beach. $6,241,350. down 2.4 percent ; We s tm i n ster. $9,902,&fO, up 2 percent. OAIL'I" f'ILOT ....... ly T•rry Covil .. Bat1as i1a Swiss They call it the 11stone cheese." It sits in Hunting· ton Beach's Lake Park and it draws kids lite flies. It's easy to see why. All you need is· a litUe imag· ination. The imaginative kids visible here are Bar· bara Brown, 2: J\1a r c y La u g e n , 9, and Joey Lalone, 8. Joey is the one not facing the camera. Cheryl Lalone. 5, is inside peeking out. Is that her behind Barbara Ann? Or is that our imagination? f'rotn Page J FREEWAY ... minute when key committee members were not able-to attend . Assemblyman Badham. this morning said that the two men, Senators 1bomas Carrell (Man Fernando) and Milton Marks (R·San Fraocbco) would not be present today but that the hearlnp would have to go cm without them. Badham declined to predict how the powerful transportation committee would vote on the measure. "Our chances are SO-SO,·· is all he would say. He indicated that with Carrell and Marks present commltttt approval would have been assured. 1'be single most important li1Uretfn the future of the bill probabJY la committee chainnan Senator Randolph Collier ([). Yreka) who reportedly supports the bill and possibly could sway at Jeast a bare majority or the LJ.member panel to his side. Commi~ee_ apJ:l'oval is '1rf,ually tan- Wnount to ~le -s>Pf'OVIL Cam.mittee rejectkr:I means the-full Senate will never 1ee tht bill. Forces opposing the measure were ex- pected to present detailed arguments at the hearing. Al Koch, COWJty road commilsloner and As,,tmblyman Robert H. Burke (ft. Huntlnjton Beach ) were expected to represent the opposition in addre:ssln& the hearing. Coata Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson was expected lo be present but had not ar- rived early this morning. Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy Jun e hesitated lo predict the outcome, but said he waa epUmistlc that the bill would be rejected. Costa Mesa officials are opposed on the grounds that there art already enough freeways completed and pl&Med through lhat city. Huntington Beach is using a 1lightly different argument, stressing t h a I although it didn't like the adopted route. It has adjusted long range plaMlng around It. The Badham bill would actually ellmJnate the proposed freeway throu1h a portion of Huntington Beach, easterly from Beach Boulevard to the far souther- ly end of Newport Beach at the Corona del P.1er boundary. Huntington Beach City Engineer James \Vheeler, Laguna Beach Mayor Richard (ieldberg and City P.tanage r James D. \\"healon were also expected to attend the hearing although it was not known whether they would speak. Newport"s ~1ayer Mirth and Coun- rilma n Rogers bo!h maintained their op- ti1nism on prospects for com1nitlee ap- proval. Rogers said. "\Ve are sUll hope ful the Senate Transportalion Committer: will hear the voices of the people of Newport Beach and act ravorably on the bill ." Ficker's Intrepid Ahead In Cup Selection Trials By AU10N LOCKABEY OI ~ 0.llY 1'11111 51111 NEWPORT, RL -Bill Ficker and Intrepid enjoyed a four-minute and SO s~ cond lead over George Hinman and \\'eatherly after three marks in the second race of the America's Cup Selec- tien Trials here today. (Early story Boating Page.) Intrepid led from the st.art, beating \\'eatherly to the first. mark by 1:46 and increasing lbe lead to I :57 at the reach· ing mark. . On the aamr course, Charlie Mor1an 's Heritage appeared to be taking a drub- bing frpm Bob McCullough's Valiant with a deficit of two minutes and 11 seconds. roundin1 the third mart. Heritage trailed f rotn P .. e 1 TAXES ... general fund, Arguello has said, is thit dropping thr trash fee will take $502.000 out. r.tcCracken said that ht opposed the tax on apartments (It will a(fect all 10,000 units in the city ) and would have prefer- red to see apartments included in the business license increa&e. Bartlett said that the jump from SI lo $& was "too high." No information was given on why mobile homes should be taxed other than to bring them into line with the rate on apartments. No one said whether thr money was needed or not. The staff did not ask for additional rt\lenue. 1 n related action, the council also rixed the city's tax ratr: fo r the next year al SJ.45 and rejected a request by the recreation and parks commission for a one-cen t tax rate increase for the parks program . The utility tax also includes a levy ror the users of cable teleYision. There is no cable TV network in the city but an ordinance authorizing such a service has be<!n approved. by only 57 seconds at the windward mark but lost Ume on the reachinB and running legs. Meanwhile, the Auslralian 12-meler Syndicate today dropped a bombshell in the midsl or the selection trials in the form of a written protest against the New York Yacht Club measurement of the Australian and French yichts. The protest was signed by Frank Packer of the Australian America's Cup Challenge Association. The protest said, io effect. that the mei.suremeats o( both the Australian 12. meter Grett! U and the French yacht France were Jmproperly taken and not in accordance with requiremenLt of the International Yacht Racing Unton. "U the measurement of both boats are not properly taket before the com- meftctment of the 'match (between the Aussies and French) there is a risk tha t !he winning yacht may subsrquenlly be found Jnellglble to race the America 's Cup itself," said the protest "It is with reluctance that we raise the poin t at th is time, so near the com· mencement of the match. but we be lieve it can be adjusted in a malt.er or hours," the doc ument continued. In the case of Gretel II. according to designti r Alan Payne, the mea.surer I Robert Bloomenstock} did not check the requirement of rule 21 which affetcs the entire arrangement of the yacht on deck and below. Jn the case of Fra11ce. the after "L" mark is not placed oo the aftermost point of the hull, according io the prote1t. "The. altenn05t point of her hull at the water plawe is undoubtedly the extreme lip ef a thin unsupported extension of the hull surface at some distance outboard from the yacht 's center line, but the mea sure· men t mark has been placed so as lo in- dicate the aftennost µoint of the hull at the center line." The protest wa s filed soon after the four American yachts left for the starting line fer the sr:cond racr or the selection trials. Of the tot.al. 20'l,295 are Republicans. Technically, Ca rpenter is not the firs t slate senator to live in Newport Beach. The late John Murdy resided on Udo Isle when he retired from offictl in 1964. but ht wu elected from liunlin(ton Beach whert ht had liYed most of his life. Carpenter's addition to the Senate GOP ma jority is expected to aid several of Gov. Reagan's "legialatlve proposals which have been blocked by the Jack or necessary votes to overcome ,t h e Democratic bloc. Tops among these is the much debated tax reform bill which 1s now scheduled for a sr:nate floor vole on Friday. Carpenter said Tuesday he had, not committed himself on the controversial Badham bill which would delete lhe Pacific Coast Freeway segm~nt from Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach lo Corona del Mar. But: lhe newly-elected senator said he didn't think it made mu ch difference how . he.stood en the measure. "According lo the best information available lo me, the freeway measure is assured of enough votes on the senate floor, if it gets there," Carpenter said. He said the key to the success or lailure of the bitterly fought measure depended entirely on its fate • in the Senate Transportation Cominittee late to- day. I Sources close to Carpenter. who is the current state Republican Committee chairman said toda y tha t th e Badlwm bill will undoubtedly be killed in thc'\5enate --comm ittee. It was scheduled for heari ng at 2 p.m. today after fo ur postponements.) Carpenter flew lo Sacramento early this morning after a private victory par- ty. Br fore leaving he said he was "gratified by the support of rus workers in the 34th District and to those few who turned out to vole in a rather unexciting electio n." The new senator said h~ did not expect lo be swern in to office until Thursday although county election offic ials wired resullS cf the votr to the Secretary of State "s office Tuesday night. Carpenter is a former FBI agen t. semi- professional basketba ll player and a na- tive of Minnesota. He Li ves in Newport Beach with his wife and four sons. He moved to Orange County 12 years ago and rapidly rose in GOP circles reaching the top rung or the ladder wit his 1968 elect.ion as state chairman of centra l committee. In that post he has carried forward wellk:nown GOP Cal Plan, a prog designed to gain control of lhe s legislature. Four years ago with Carpenter headi the drive, Gov. Reagan was elect~~an two years ago the Republicans toolci:eYer s!ifu majorities in both the senatt and assembly. Accident Kills Beach Cyclist A Huntington Beach motorcyclist . in· jured in a traffic accident and released from Hoag Memerlal Hospital on Mon- day. died Tuesday morn ing of a fractured skull , the Orange County Coroner's office said today. . Michael G. Craddock, 17, of 501 14th St., was proneunced dead on arrival al l-funtington lntercommunily H o s p i t al where he was taken by ambulance. 7 a.m. Tuesday. An autopsy showed 'the youth died ef head injuries. About 6 a.m. Monday, Craddock Wa!!: thrown from his cycle on \Yest Coast Highway at Balboa Boulevard. Newport Beach police said he was !raveling west and turning into the left turn lane when his motorcycle collided with a car driven by Maureen S. Brunel, 17, of Anaheim . F-310 Under Fire i:.. 0 timilod .... ..i1 ,--i Towle Sedqi - ..mi.Yt 11t 25S oE ngul•pric::es. Yau ..w 2,s on nut re' -,;.p. p-., pi. ltuUip or aci~ .,...._ Ball Protests Sta ndard Oil Ads HunUnglon B e 1 ch 's self-appointed "Ralph Nader" tod ay attacked what he called the ,;prO!!IUtutlon or the Sood name of Or ange County by an oil company to promote their produ1.1'." David Ball, who calls hlm$e lf the leader of the "People's Lobby" said the use of advt!rtlstment by Standard Oil Company bo3sllng of a succeS!Jful trial of the company's F-3 10 gasoline add ltlve in t:ounty vthlcles should be prohiblled. Ball added that the coonty should in· stead .be Uilng lead Cree p soline in it s fleet of cars If it really waoted to aid lhc eliminaUon of air p01lution. Ball apptared be.fore the county Board of SUperYl90rt shortly aft.tr members of lhe grou p had ins pecled a county vehicle u!)ine 11 nc."' smog eonlrnl de virr. developed by the Dupont Company. llr protesled th8l toda y \\'llS the flirst tim~ he had been allowed to address the board snd said he had lrle:d on several oc· casio ns to get on the agenda bul was rc(ustd. Aeling board cha irm an David L . .Saker explained to Ball that the county had not endOrsed Slandard Oil's F-310 product. He said the county was usfng Standard 's gasollne because th1t firm w1s the lowest bidder for the county's business. Baker s.iid later that Ball had al· tempted several times to att on the supcrvi.ors' aarnda, but was refused because he had no defi nite subjec t to s~ak on. The seco nd district supervisor gav' 1s an cxllm plc a call from Ball to his offict recently in wliich he !'iald Ball requested ~rmisslon to speak on "treas"'. -------------- CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE Don't mim thil .... ~IDltmtOl"CDCDP.~ .. .c ..i;d .;i ... . 4-p;.ap... ...... ~priot-~,. s.i.pao. r... ,37.n ~--.. ~ pao.1-'"""" Soltpa.--- J. C. .J.l.u1nphrie~ Jeweler J 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION 1821 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 541.3401 I -" • • DAil Y '11AT f • L'inda 1rotd Htishand About Deaths ' .Bearing Thursday ' Coastline Zoning Bill Near Defeat A bill which would put 1,100 miles of California ooaslllne under state planning and zoning aulhorjty, is a step closer to defeat in the Senate today. The bill, which passed the Assembly by a 12.-vote margin two weeks ago, was amended again TUesday and another hearing in the Senate Government OrganiZIUon" Ccnunlttee wu let for Thunday jllSI ..,. day before the tegl91ature Is slated lo adjollm. 'Ibt author of &he me11ure, A.-ibtyman P<te Wilson (R.Sln lll<go) does not bold out much bope for Senate passapthlslmn. u 1he bill ;. 1pproved In 1he 'lbundly session. it must pasa atll1 another com- mittee, a Senate f Io or vot.e and an Assembly floor vote to concur in the amendments. "It isn't very likely," said Wilson. The 6ill, which ls backed by the city governments of Huntington B e a c h • Newport Beach, Laguna Beach ind San CJemente, would impoee statewide plan- ning .standards on all property within 1,ooo·yards of the ocean. Fl•e ,..ionat boaNs would ser·1111J..----"''-' dan\I for new buildiup, subdiVlskms and ocean ldlviti .. rudl .. dredging and m~ Zsu Zsu Robbed Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor was robbed in an elevator in the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Ne'v York early today while return· ing to her suite. Miss Gabor said that 2 robbers took two 48- carat rings and a set of dia· mond earrings v a I u e d at $700,000. She was not hurt in the incident which occurred shortly before 1 a.m. today. · Tropical Storm Dorothy Rages Toward Islands SAN JUAN, P .R. (UPI) -Fast- developing tropical storm Dorothy was born 550 miles east of Guadeloupe today and quickly approached full hurricane ltrength as it bore down on the Leeward · slands with 65 mile an hour winds. "Residents of the threatened islands ire urgently advised to complete preparations today," the National Hur- .ricane Center said. Dorothy -the fourth storm of the season -was e)CJ>ected to reach full hur- ricane strength within 2t hours. It was headed for the Leewal'ds, bordering the Caribbean Sea, at a fast 17 m.p.h. At 9 a.m. PDT. forecasters said the storm was centered about 500 miles eut- sout.heast of Guadeloupe near latitude t3.7 north and longitude 54.5 west. "There is an immediate tl)reat to the blands of Dominica, Guadeloupe, Antigua and Barbuda and the rest of the Leeward Islands," forecasters warned. "The storm will be approachiDg the~ islands Thursday morning and residents are urged to take immediate prepara- Lions qainst dangerous seas with flooding of coastal areas, heavy rains and winds thal may reach hurricane inltnsity before the system strikes Janet" ing within three miles. Opposition to the measure Is in the form of fear of interference with private property rights. Tht bill, as it stands , would provide for the least imposition of state authority in· to traditional city planning and zoning powers. ' 'Ibe most recent amendment would ex· elude the city of Long Beach fr~ the regulations. * * * Access to Beach Nears Approval In Legisla\ture A bill forcing subdividers of oceanfront property to provide public access to beaches appears headed for approval by the state legislature. The measure specifically would pro- hibit local governments from 1pproving new oceanfront subdivisions without pro- visions for public access to the coastline. It passed the Senate Monday, 22-11, with minor amendments from a previously-approved Aaem~y verljon. A&oemblyman John llwllap (D-Napa), sponsor of the bill, uld be .ee1 litUe dif· ficuhy in tbe new version winning con- currence from th~ lower house and receiving the signature of Governor Reagan. The measure would not be retroactive and would have no apparent affect on such developments as Promontory Bay in Newport Beach or the Salt Creek Beach dispute in Laguna Niguel. The bill had drawn criticism from Sen. Randolph Collier (0-Yrelr.a) who called it "a blackjack to subdividers." He said, "By indirect condemnation, you're taking away private property." In response, Sen. John A. Nejedly ( J\.. Wa1nut Creek), Senate manager of the bill, said that current law does guarantee the public reasonable access to beachland but that subclivisklns often block the way, He said that subdividers now must make provision for other kinds of public purposes such as providing for schools and streets. . The measure, according to Dunlap's of. fice, does not provide for compensation for the developer who is making certain land! available for public access. Thia drew criticism from some comers. Ne- jedJy; incidentally, was quoted 11 saying it did provide for compensaUon. A spokesman for Asstmblyman Dunlap also confinned that tbe bill does not .pell out how much or what Ir.ind ol aeceu should be provided, He also said it does permit some ex- cluslons, ciUng as examples extremely small subdivisions or developments built in areas remote from other public areas. Reagan Gets Carpenter Vote .,,,, ...... Denise Young, 17-year-old pilot in recent Palms to Pines air race for women, breaks into Jau2hter at antics of her 2-year-old nephew. Scott YounJ!:, who makes like the Red · Baton him sell at the controls of her plane shortly before start of race. Denise. with her mother, Adelle, as co-pilot. finished 7th in a field of 37 Hgbt planes in the 791-mile race from Sant~ Monica to Independence. Ore. U.S. Probing Truce B!eak Will Pr essure Russia, Egy pt About Violations WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Unite<! States is taking up directly with Russia and Egypt Israeli accusations of viola- tions by them of the Middle East cease- fire agreement. The U.S. itsell is still ex- am.iaing tbe recent charges. la a atatment Wednesday, the State Depptmt.nt announced a U.S. conclusion that there was ''forward deployment of mrface to a.it missiles" on the Egyptian side ol the Suez Cana] front ,before the cease-fire went into effect and "some evidence'' ild.icat.es this movement con- ti11.ued beyond the cease-fire deadline. But the statement dtqar~ that "our evidence ol this (fonftrd' movfment alter the cease-fire begin) is not COD- clusive." The effect or the statement and of com- ments made by a State Department spokesman on Israel's charges was to deny fuJl support for the Israeli ltC"' cusations, to appeal-for a prompt start o• peace talks between Israel and the Arab slates and to ze•ew U.S. assurances of military support ol Israel. "I do want to make clear," press of- ficer Robert J . McCloskey said, "as President Nixon and Secretary Rogers have done .before, that we will not aUow the bllance lo be upset -lo be turned lo the disadvantage of Israel." Under questioning about p o s s i b I t military a.uistaace to Israel as a means of maintaining the baluce, McCloskey uid the United States and Israel "have 'Wa!lr.ed in specifics." He clearly meant that the United States has told Israel what military asislance It will provide if necessary. McCloskey's statement said, "We have concluded that there was forward deploy· ment or surface to air missiles into and within the zone we:::t of the Suez Caflal arowtd the time the cease fire went Into effect (the night of Aug. 7-8). "'lbere is some evidence that this was continued beyond the cease-fire deadline altbougb our evidence of this is not con- clusive. "With respect lo addilional !Qlormation which the l!raeli eovemmetit has brought to our attention concerning possible cease-fire violations . we are examining U and are in touch with lhe parties through diplomatic channels. .. We do 110t anticipate malting fW'the.r public statements o• the matter. "Adherence to the cease-fire and standstill is of great importanct to the suctess of current • peace e.fforts. The main thing now Ls to concentrate all ef- forts on getting di5CUSsions going under Ambassador (GuMlt) Jarring'• auspices. the United States believes these talks should boiln pn1mptly." Voters to Get Final Say On County T1·an'sit Plan By JACK BROBACK or -. °''" '"'' •™' Formation of a proposed Orange Cou•· ty Transit District is ~w up to the voters. The Board or Supervisors gave final ap- proval to aubmlttlng the Issue to the elec- torate oa the Nov. 3 general eleclion ballot Tuesday following· sanction <~ the move last week by the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC). The trEWit district fonnation was W'g· ed last June by the four-year~ld Oruge County Tran.sit Study Committee beaded by Fullerton industrial r e I a t i o n ' colDlselor Hubert C. Ferry. Ferry told board members that his committee had decided that creation of the district was necessary to solve future transportation problems. The district Is allowed under a state law passed by the legislature Jn 1965 which pumlts creation of the authority by a vote of the people. The supervisors accepted the recom· mendation of the committee on June 17 a11d held a public hearing on the issue Ju- ly 21. LENGTHY DISCUSSION After lengthy discuss~ at lhe public hearing the board voted to submit the matter to the voten. if tht: LAFC ap- proved . Only spotty opposition surfaced at the public bearing. Traffic engineers of several -COUAty commttnitles urged further study on the need for such • district before it wu submitted to lhe electorate. But the board members voted approval because they said a district ii needed to bring the Iota! county transportaUon pro- blem under 01e system, that such 1 di'6ict would provide an agency for roce!vifl& state federal and other funds, and the d.iatrict would provkle a vehicle for county participaUon in rqioul decisions on transportation. County Road Commissioner Al Koch, a strong supporter of a traaslt district and a member of the transit committee, hall· ed TUesday's decision as "• step for-1 ward." "Mass transit facilities as they etlst to- da,y in the county are fragmented. u"· coordinated, and non-eonUnuous," Koch .argued. "They offer at best only a very limited service restricted by artificial boundaries .and are unable to meet the demaJld for movement in meanlng!ul traMportitlon e11rridors," the road commissioner con- tinued. FUNDS AVAILABLE Koch said fund.! are now avatlable through the federal Urban M a s s Transportation Administration to study the Jteed !or a transit district and to finaJ1Ce such a district. He said such funds are not now available to the county because it does not have a proper agency to receive them . Tax Revisi)on Plan Nears Showdown Participation in regional studies in transportation "wu allO cited by Koch u another reason to form the district. He named such studies 11 the ~ort.h Orange County Tralrlc Study now being conducted by the Los Angel" Rapid Transit Study group. By GEORGE SKELTON u .. 1 hd'll'lltllfe 111 .... v Ctlltf Gov. Ronakl Reagan picked up another vote for hia deadlocked $1 blllioa tax revision plan today as he neared a final Senate showdown o• his top priority pro- gram ot the legislative session. Tbt added vote was assured when Republican State Chairman Dennis E. Carpenter won 1 Senate seat Tuesday in · 1 special Orange Cowlty elecUon. But the governor still was no closer to victory than he was three weekJ ago "'hen a Jone RepubU ran -Sen. Clark L. Oradiey otSan Jose -and a dozen rigid Democrat. blocked passage of the em- battled bill on the Smale floor . Reagan and lhe measure's legislative 1pan&0r, Auemblym an Wllllam T. Bagley fR-San Rafat.I ), planMd a rlnal attempr t.n pry loose the property tax rtllef plan Jbur8day night er Friday. The ltglslature hopes to adjourn this weekend. Sen. Mlllo• MarkJ CR&n Francisco), planned to return Thursday from an . ' Asial\ trip lo be on band io vOte l6r the governor's program. / Reagan's packag::s would pro v I d e substulial homeowner• property t.11 relief -$105 for 1n average $20,000 home -and finance it by railing olbu tuet. The sale& tax, for inatuce, would be In- creased from 5 to t cent. on the dollar. Withholding ol the allte Income tu •loo llould be ldo(>ted, The bill ttquim 17 -,... -·· EV<tl With Carpeoter'r >vie II would llllll need one more, and the IS 1m1te op-_.11 chowed no ~p 1t I meeting Tuetday of weWning t be Ir idlmllll stand. One Democrat who voted with tlie-- Govemor the first time now ii in a hospi•·I and not eipec:ted to return before adjournment. Sen. Tom Carrell CO.Sin Fernlndo), ii recuperaUni lrom what hls of!lce ducrlbed 11 ''CO"(tetted lUPlgS." The admlnlstrauon pinned !ta hopu on a potenUal "courtesy vote" for Carrell, cul by ..,. of lht bill'• opponentr. But tbere were no lnd.icatlons thia w11 eolng lo happen, 141be whole concept ol 1courtesy' II one that wu invtnteG tbis ses8ion. lt'1 part of Baglef"• psydiologlcll wll'l1re,' said Senate Democratic caucus Chatnnan Mervyn M. Dymally of Los All(eles, one of the oppmenta. "Tbey'l'e not going lo get 1he bill unleas TOm (Clmll) comeJ back. in ID ambulance." Bqley told I rfpOrl<r, "YDll can1 bring1n a man who II Ill and jeopardlu hll health." Retgan11 preu teerttary~ Poul llec:k, also aald ll "Woold be 1p- palllng, llmoot" 1o-no1 cul • "courtesy vote" for "a poor guy who la: akk." Bot -of the dluld"1b, s.n. Wolter W. Stiern, (D-BakersfJeld), said. "!don't have any fttllng of respon~billty becauae they had/elent7 of time to take up the lilll before n. carrc11 got tll." AdmlnlJtratlon..forces were waiting un- til Carpenter's election before calling another vote. Although the State Party ChaJrman has declined t.o publicly com· mil Jilin.self to votlng for the measure, he has said, .. t support the Goternor's tar progf&m right doWn the line." Carpenter was expected to be sworn In- to office Thursday or Friday, and backers planned a showdown soon a!· terward. .Reagan was expectad to confer today altd 'Illursd•y with senators, incll>ding opponenl3, in an attempt to secure the extra vote. The governor alao was con- akfering issuJn(c a special appeaJ for public llUJlPOl:I. The de1clloCte<1 bfll r....,.nts half the govunor'1 tu revision packqe. The other half ttqulred only 1 oimple ml· Jorlty vote and paned tile senate last month. Jt now Is in the assembly awaiting concurrence in s e n • t e amendments. · Reagan'• pack11ge waa unanimously en-oorsed Tutoda_v by th< ._., Angil .. Coun- ty Board of Supervl80ri. One membtr, Burton W. Chase, wired Reagan that, "The Supervisors are Jn accord that Loe: Angeles County proporty ta1poyen are almOllt In a it.ate of crill.s." Koch al!IO cited the county's own study of a Master Plan or Air TraMportaUon, the networks ay1tems aegment of the county'• G~aJ Pla111Ung Program: the regional transportation plarmlng study of the SOulhem Ca.llfornla Auoclalion o! Govemmens (SCAG). Also, the San Clemente-Los Angeles Urban Corridor Study be!q COllducted by SCAG lo develop oolutiom lo the con- guted Santo.Ana FreewlJ Corridor, and 1he proposed. aludy of ihe Sin Diego-Los Angel"' bJ&b opeed corridor lo be con- duc1ed by Siii Diego CCiunty'• Com· prchmll•e PllM!ng A&ency. Koch Slid the trwtt commtttet believ- ed that the most k>gical 11y1tem for 10lu- UOR of the sbort-ruge rapid traMtt needs of the county apptan to be buses. Ht said 111Ch • IY•lem, If •!>Proved by ihe voters, could be achieved In a much ahorter 11J>a<e of Ume undo< the transit district -and could be 1n tntegrll part of any Jont-range 1e>l\.rtlollJ to mus transit Ill the county. • Didn't Go To Police Over Fear LOS ANGELES (IJPI) -Lindo 119- blan admilt<d today that Ille told llor husband aOOat the Tate· La BJ aa~a murden a few days after U>ty otaiied but that neither of them made .., ·~ tempt lo contact police. Under croa eumtnaUon by lntnl Kanarek. the allon>ey 1..-blpplo eoli leader Cllarlel -Mn. l'OAbil'I said that Ibo did DOt really !mow how ID "go lo the police" lllCI tell the llory. I "You mean you didn't have the couraie lo tell the police?'" Kanarek -''I don't know." Kanarek ~ke<I her what she lold !><r husband Robert about 1he llaytop I 1Uf ago this month. "! told him Qiartey nipped and bad • wbcle bunch of people killed,• llhe Mid. "l said I saw a nwnber of people kUJed myself." Kanarek ailed 1he witness -her husband bad not augaested they lboold contact authrities. "His reaction WU tbal yGU p lo 1"'rry 1111 and get your little glrl out ol tbett, • she said. "He clldn 't ae the reality ol it.,. ' Mrs. Kaaabian said she .... told Jllr story brieDy to 1 o>mmune leader nmfted Joe Sage in New Mexico. "'He told me 'Linda I don't want to believe that -I doo1 think ft blp- pened." Kanardt ........ her u to Ill the .......,. wby &be bid not told Ille police ber story in the mootba belo<e Ibo illr· render..i bonell lo police in New llamplhire. She said she still llloughl ol pollco u "pigs" and didn't know how lo 1ppooch thein lo tell her sto<y. She aald Ille - alrakl they woold think she was Cl1llJ' and take away her little (lrl. She also said sl>e did not know wtw. Manson and the other girls of the "family" ,..,.. at thal time and that tlicy might come and kill her and her daugbter. She said her lhlnlli& lllo - influenced by the fact !be wu Jft1D111t again. Kanarek was still cross esamininc Yrs. Kasabian when the court r«altd "r.:. <l;iy. . The SI-year-old blonde aeemed ...... pletely rdued and ~ PT u the burly Kanarek and other !1wyen ....,.i. ed at her story of seven !DW'den I ,..- ago at the Tate and 1.am1nca bcmlL ";- Jtanarelc, -• ..,. .... 11 --ped lrom l\lbj<ct lo 11Jb)ec:I Md at - point WU Ukinc Mrs. Knah!an aboa& a "vlbrltloa" ahe said sbe wu 1blo lo l!ind out and receive from Che uoh'ri. h lawyer asked her to describe • YDnUon and Deputy District Attorney Aa!on Stovftl lnterrupt<d lo say: "U Ille Iiad true \Obratioos, she ...Wd Will Mr. Kanarek to cease his questions.,. Earlier, Deputy District Atlorney '1 .. cent Bugliosi concluded the 1tate'1 u- amination by asking bu what abe mtflll in prtVious testimony she WU ·ran "emissary from God." "I feel that I am doing the will of God. Wbat hu been dooe ... wrong. I llid wrong, too. "I am truly repentant for it. My beiQc bett testifying ii my repent.ance,'' Nixon's Es'tat.e ·• Gets Greenery l 1i San Clemente The Nixon famlly wiD have acme men plants to maintain at the Western Wl'lit2 House when they arrlve for 1 workinf vacatk:n Friday. Landscaping· started this wiek on unplaottd spaces within the Presideqt'a estate in bruf_by are. which once lel"'(ed as a pasture fOl' riding stock. ln the meantime, preparaUona Ve under way fer the second booeymoon trip of President and Mrs. Nllon lo the cjty where they first visited :.> years qo. Alter spending Thunday and Friday In Puerto Vallarta, MWco, the Pra:ldenl and bis wife will join their two dalllht<iro and a son-in-law at the Spanish vWi rOlf a' &lay luting through the re<t ol August) Mr. Nixon spent Monday In New Yett visiting with the brua of. the New Yett Daily News and strolling the str.eul his old neighborhood With frl<Dds elder daughter Tricia. Miss Nixon WU lrah lrom spor some new gossip among White llcxiMi ob.servers after 1 weekend of at:1a wedding and parties with a t escor~ Richard Finch Coz. The 24-year--0Jd Tricia and Cox. a Harvard Law Scbool atudent. a4 1 ,wedding lul -kend, then went lo .. veral parties With bis frleoda. On the Monday trip through the ~ and Madison avenue areu in Manbl "· Mr. Nixon, Pat &Dd Trtdl were joined former New York Governor Tbomu : Dewey and two of -·· old 'i chums lrom Whittler Collep. ' Dump Site Changed ' EARLE, N.J. (AP) -The U.S. N~ hat owllched the site of a pl1nned ~ ping of 5,000 tons of exploalvq lrom IO mll • off the New Jeney c:out lo miles ofl the shore of M1ryland. 1 A ship WU lo be IWlk Thunday 150 mUea ••st of Barnopt Llabt and ..,_ than 1 mile lrom whero a llblp or -- mustard gas and contaminated Pl T lsterw was IWlk In 1o1_, 1117. • ' 'I ~· Wtd-. A119ui1 19. 1170 .. Blas Charged 11 Schools Lose Tax Exemptions ' W ASIDNGTON (UPI) -1be In .. rnal Rev"""' 5'ni<e today revoked tbe tax exempUop ol 11 all-white private ICbools ~ 1111 • a... '*" ....., in M'•'nlppl which refused to adopt ent has b~ setlte~ six potlciel' llainst raciaI dl.scrtmlnaUon. It .,.. tbe finl suspe!llion actJoo by m on probation because be the IRS under tta new policy to deny tax p pollution for art's 'saki~ exemptions to ICbooLI which practice In Vintura. Rkftarcl Tr•vi1, ~7. a disc:rimlAaUon. student al the Los Angeles Art Ceo-The ms declsloo lllWll that gilb to C rt the ICboo1a -a dUef llOUl'Ct of financial ter School, told i1un1cipal. ou aid for most private academies -can no Judge. l,lert Henson he hall , beep lonler be deduclel from a donor's In- assigned I!' pbotograp~ lhe_ efiects come~ It allo means tbe acboob will of oil polhltiOQ:on ocean life ·and ' hl•e to pay tues on anf income they beacb!i'1 TraVis said he couldn't earn. find any pollution but found a dead ' 'lbe 11 ICbools were Included among 41 st.fl and some dead birds. He ar-namedln • recent decilion by a federal ranged these Jor pbotograpbin~ and • district CX>W1 in Wuhinglon which pro- for . added eUect sprinkled around hibited favorable tu treatment for sonie: oil ·rrom a Car crankcase. he segregated •cademies. said. Henson, ·sentenced him S3tur-1be IRS llid the tchools were given a day after he plea®<! no contest to chance to eliminate racial bars bu\ refus.- a charge of placing petroleum pro-ed to do ao. ducts on state waters. As a condi-Schools involved in the lRS order in· tion of tirobation Travis is reQiured eluded: the Otizens' EducaUonal Foun- te'rwrite essays on bow California daUon, Vicksburg; Covlngtoo School hmldles offshore oil leases and on Foundation Inc., Mt OUve; Forrest advice he should have souibt from County School Foundation Inc., Hat- oiicials before spreadinK oil on un-tiesburg; Oktibbeha Educational Foun- tM.bt.i. wa~rs. _ daUon Inc., Starkville; Parents's Educa· • tional and Development foundation Inc .. ~feridian. You ·ve heard about the hard- luck motori1't who Tami hil W}tic:~ into a 90lice car? La!t week Ronald R. Guenther · of Lrinlton, Idaho,· h i t t w o. Guenther sMUnvi~d the ~rson- oar of Deputy Sheriff George r,t'. Minden on a Lewiit-on street, ~ bounced into a sM:riff'• ll~rol oar. He wa& charged with 4ftattentit7f! dritri'ng. l< f"' • ant to buy the rose petals that sinter Mick hgger threw to udience last Thanksgiving? Or (Uitar that was smashed by Peter Calhoun Educational Foundation Corp., (cal)loun Aca4emy), Calhoun City; Pass- poirj Private School, Mosspoini; Rd>ul Academy Inc., Learned; Pines Privale School Foundation, Wigget'li ; Haniaon Counly Private School F o u n d a t i on , Biloxi : Tunica Institute of Learning Inc., Tunica. Two or the 41 schools covered. by the court order, HattM?sborg Academy, Inc., HaWesburg, and Southside Academy, Jackson, have gone out of business. The IRS said action on the remaining 28 5C'hools covered by the order would de· pend upon whether the schools agree to drop racial barriers. The IRS, shortly before lbe court order GOP 's Spending Issue Eroded- B y Republicans . nsend of the Who? Tbe·se and ar-items of rock music memor- abilia are to be auctioned Oct. 12 at1$b.e Fillmore East auditorium in New York. The proceeds Will go to A the campai,ans of peace·eaodi- dates. the ol')'!;anizers said thurs· 4lll' Wan t to buy a Oute bell b~ lo~i to Nin Anderton i>f tfle WASHINGTON (UPI) -By refusing to .1Wuo Hull group? How about e Dack the Nixon adnunlstralioft'• spending limousine that is said to ha~ trans-curbs. defecting Republicans ,lowly are fitted, amon.it others. Arlth• undermining a prime GOP ampaJ.sn Frankl In, J1nls Joplln ~Dd the. ;,ssue -excessive pend J g _by a •ttn? r Democratic controlled Cangress. ~ e ; Twice in less than two mooth.1, ignoring GPme of the patients in the matern-. Prqident Nison's orders to cut spend!ng, lf.I. ward I stanl rd U · it Co~gre.ss hu overturned his vetoes. . . a o !"vers Y In both cases, Republicans deserting tcm>1tal has a beard. He s archl· the administration have 1provided enough t~t m=;r~ ~1s, .36, who sbar~ a votes to muster the two-thirds majority !OOfD '!1th his Wife. ~ wer.e tn· needed to override. 1ured m an automobile accident The Senate, following the example set liJ une 6. ~rs. ~as, 28, iave by the Houte, Tuesday comfortably over- b ·to ~Ir f1r~t chdd J une ~· a rode Ntxoli's veto of the $4.4 bllllon aid to . h .thy .~1rl named Sh1wnee Eli11~ education appropriations bill. The TT to 16 beth. 'Tile father asked to be pres-\'Ole automatically made the measure ent for the birth. despite the ela-law. bora~ t.J:action gear for h_is wrious \ Joining with all voting Democrats, 23 brok~.bones,. So the ho~p1ta1 wheel-Republican senators cast balloU against ed his bed l!JtO a delivery room. tile admlnistration'a position. Sixteen All three patients are reported do-Republicans voted to sustain the veto. ing fine. Of the baby, Mrs. Saas, Jn June the Senate ovell'OCk Nixon·~ : ·~we are sorry she .h.ad t~ veto of the hospital comtructien bill, 76 to us tn such adverse cond1t1ons.' 19. with 23 Republical'l!I defecting. • ·The Senate's action on the aid to educa· • . . . tion bill gave NIJOn a split on hls vetoe11 At the Monterey Peninsula air-so far. The President's vetoes of the Port a mechanic .spotted a bird·s fiscal JflO health, education, and welfare nest in the engine of a parked priV-bill and the fiscal 1971 housing and in- ats tilane. He turned the propeller dependent offices appropriations bills for a closer look the engine roared Democrat!; who want to use Nixon's to lif~. and the plane raced 100 . refusal to allow more funds for domesti c yards before crashing into a tract-programs as one of their campaign issues or and. a small hangar. Damage rejected coritenUona that providing more was put al. $6.000. The mechanic money for education could be translated wasn't injured but bird's nest was were sustained. blown away. into excessive spending. was lssued last June, adopted a policy de- nying tax e~empUOM to all ,private scboo1.s wbich practice racial discrimtna- tion. The IRS prevloualy gnntod tu ex- emptions to seven Southern priVlll-e schools, none of them in Missiuippl, which filed no-disa'imlnation declara- tions. Final decisions on the tax status of other private acboob ""' 1Wl pending. Wife Killed, 3 Wounded In Gun Spre~ . . AKRON, Ohio {UPI) -A mental pa· lient shot and tilled his estranged wife Tuesday nlght. wounded two men, .and kept police at bay for nearly six hours by holding his teen-age step:son hostage. The tense incident came to an end when Vin- cent Amelia, 48, shot and wounded his stepson, Randy Smith, 18, in the back. Police saw the stepson lying on the floor of Amelia's borne in the city's easl side and ordered Amelia lo come out. When he refused, police lobbed tear gas into the home. Amella, who was on probation from Llma Stale Hospital, staggered out of the house with tears running down his cheeks and blood streaming from his nose. ap- parently from flying glass. Summil County Prosecutor James Barbuto had just finished giving Amelia an ult.lrnatum over a bullhorn from a police car. '"All right," Barbuto said , "we want to see Randy. We think someth ing has hap- pened to Randy. If we don 't see Randy now we 're coming in.'· The tear gas was fired into the house, "'hich had been floodlighted by the fire department, when Amelia made no move to show the boy. Randy was found wilh a buUet wound in. the small of his back. lit! was admitted to Akron City Hospital in fair condition. · Amelia was charged with one count of first degre e murder and two counts of shooting with intent to kill. Police said Amelia entered Louie's Bar earlier ·in the evt!ning, firing two guns simultaneously. His wile. Rita, 43, wa.s killed and George Grise, 44, of Akron, and Edward Jont!S, 24, of Canal Fulton, Ohkl. were wounded. Grist was listed in serious condition aod Jqnes was reported in saUsfadory condiUM. The siege on Amelia's home began about 7 p.m. when he called police and told them what had happened. While he was holed up; he yelled to police, "I have nothing to lost, but the k.id has.·• He jalked .over the telephone with police, his attorney, his probation officer an d Barbuto. 3rd Kidnap Note Found in Brazil MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay \AP) -Qf. ficials were not commenting today on the third message in four days warning tha t a kidnaped Brazilian consul wlll be killed unless the government frees l 8 3 prisoners. All three notes were found in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and the Urugua)'an police decided the first two were fakes . The third message. found Tuesday, said 1he Tupamaro guerrilllls would kill Brazilian Consul Aloyslo f\.1ares Dias Gomlde at 11 p.m. Sunday unless the government freed the prisoners by 6 p.m. Saturday. Officials said they were stu- dying the note to determine whether it is authentic. .Blythe Nation's Hot Spot Hea vy Thundershowers Soak Central Plailis, Rock ies c.11,.,...,. IOOTHE!ll N U.LtN>llNIA -Nlthl •M ITIOl'n!l'lt lo'# tlauot 11111 ,.. -r Ulltf. "'"'"'"'"' mooUJ 111r ,,,,...,. ,,.,.,,....._ llOlllll!! ~ ......... "" ttr1or MClio..• w~.,. •"•"*"' Md fll'91'1lflt. Ll!!lt ltm-•tu,.. a..n.1. \.0$ AHGl!'LE5 ANO VICINITY - Nlfllt Incl N •ly mo<l'llM Witlll lollf tlW!ll lftll 1111. ""'""II IWUY tlf"' llllne tlnuf~ Ti'IU<'adlY. l.lttl9 d\lllH I~ •-•kl•• °"9r*'""4• ltW• nut ~. 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"" _,,,.. f..lttle '11-"' .............. ~rtltllt IOWli .. °"'"" Vlli.t, ;it • '3 illMWNrl. Mi.rtl f1·11•. nt:Yllw Of UllWIAntOllJHMfroltWT.TO 7:t •A.M.l1T t •lO·"IO Su•, Mff•,· ;ride• Mo.tl'l'IM.IN!Y fO:M1'. t.tti.f '1111-'ilt W'llllk ~ltl\t •M """''"' tlclll~ ltt<M>· IM -lttlr 1,fl91S ltN"'lft '""'-• lodlY lflf W...,..,_ HIM fMt~ ,1t .. "· . . Cot1t1I '-•fll•tl 'lllfl "-'' II 1 .. lllltNf '-"rttvr .. •111M tr*'\ 114 i. tJ. W•ltf ltml'lflh:ll 11. Coa r.I WIOl':llSPAT ........ MW II 4' 1.lfl, '·' '"°"" ilW 4,'2 ,,,,,, u 'tHUltDAY P1,.1 """ , • U:,,1.111. ST jq,., ... • • , •=ti . 11'1. • •• ! Ste-n'-i tt:lt 1.m, •·' Mew ~ , 1:.n 1.m. OA 11111 •'"' • 11 '·"'· •~" 1.u ....... "'-•IMt t 11 1.111. Ith t.!41.m, •• ... ,. '"'" V.S. S11mw1ar11 Hff'l'f"."fNndt<'llw>ll1 "Utt"' 1!'i41 ~ LIUl'-"'f -· of tl\t: flllltft TlllMW 111tfit, Mitt ~ ....,,_, '-.rlVI 1-1 r'i!(t;•IM 1~ tt1e """'1 MlH l•tlHI Vt!lfl' Wind' ~td I ""' ""r Wl\Ll<;Oll'll:t. OllM., • lr1fllr WI) ti! ..... 0Yt r II fllld, ()11.11,. l rid "lflt elltff, Al'll., ~H l'M!'I !II'" 1n ltltl! 11 rt!!! 1'I Ont l'IOllr. A 11*1'9 lO¥ll'I .. (Ilk -r-11111 1.n ~., ,.."' hi 11 1111num ,._ ... ., 111ttrt ....... l ... ~ ,,_ ..... -ll-. n.. city._ lffki.I ....:orf• Int 1!1tlill, Mr.w1, ... l•P011. !ltd )I ~ 1111 N II l!M. •0.11\'ln .. VI , rtell~lll 1.M ~ In on• hov• 1111t ''°'""" 1.c .. trld 1.1, llldlft 111 •l• """'" Tetnpe rat11rea At~._. 1'ow;llor'9" Att1n11 11k·1 .. n11d 91tmlr(~ 10111 OM~ ChlCll-0 Cl"'l11n1ll c."".i•lld """" O.•roll lhrrtt• ,.OI'! Worjh ,. ... J ... M1! ... 1 )'ICj,l\ll'!fl ICl'l!Nt Clf'J .I.II V .. 11 l•Anfflt• Ml1ml ... t~ Mll,..•ut..-. Ml1111 ... fldll1 H-Qrr.tM• New Yort. ...... ..., .. . ,. ... ~ ~Mlldl!llM• ~11116ul'fl't ,_ . l'or"ll•l'!t ltllllllufl ·-Sir?;'~- s1. Loulo! J,111.LM:t City k~b .... ''" '"'"'ltco S•nf~ ll••b1ra ... .. s-•~• Tlltrm•L W1tfrllltl9ro NI• C...W 'n<. " u !It ., .?j ti 11 100 ,, '' &2 01 .. " U IJ I' •S U " . .. " •l Jt 11 II " . 101 llO " .. l l 4l .. ,, !IS Jt I~ 1' " ,, '' " .81 " '~ .ir " . " n ·.e1 .... ,, $, .. .. " -.. ~ ,:: ti ~I 11 IJ II .... .... ... .... !Y ~ -" '' ., .. .. " )01 ., " .. PRESIDENT GESTURES TO MANHATTAN POLICEMEN Enjoyinv • Nost1l9ic D1y on Sidew1lks of New Yq rk Nixon Pays Nosta -lgic Visit to Old NY Haunts NEW YORK (UPI) -President Nixon paid .a walking visit lo his old Manhattan neighborhood Tuesday, enjoying the abundance of well wishers and 1be lack of the usual ant.iwhr demonstrators. Nixon came to brief the: editors and ex- ecutives of the New York Daily News. . There also was a bit o{ rmtalgia in his visit when he took an impromptu stroll from the Hotel Pierre to his former apartment resldenct at 810 Filth Ave. with his daughter Tricia, 2L The President not only stopped but seemed to teek out long-haired youth!, yQung men1and women, for br~ef chat!. The croWds Which trailed him were friendly and e.ot.busi&stic. 1be visit, kept secret until Tuesday mornina:, was free of the militant antiwar Qemonstrations he and h.is predecessor, Lyndon B. Johnson, faced on previous New York trips. 1b~e were a few antiwar signs. Some placards with obscene slogans and some calls of "We want peace." But Nixon felt free and safe to walk tbe streets, and he said so. He told reporters: "I think the climate is some better - yes, i't.s better. It's the hope that people have. "I think whether it's the ~1iddle Easl, Vietnam or the rest -that we are mov- ing -even though they must disagree in various ways -that we are moving to- ward a period when we can have a peace- ful world. "And incidentally.'' he added, "I was very; glad as you will note that we rlln In· to· a nUmber of young people -some with their hair a liUle bit k>nger than mine -they were extremely friendly I understand. But I have alwars •• rn- phasili& .to'people that you nev'tr )(Jdge what arpenon's reaction is going~ be by the length'<lif'his hair." · 'the Pieaidenl spent two hours disicuu- ing foreign end domestic policy with I.he editors and executives of the nation·s larges:t circulation daily. Nixon recalled that five years ago he briefed Daily News officials and pro- mtsed to return if he ever became Presi- dent. "I don't think they believed I ever \\o"OOld win," ht said. • Nerve Gas Leak Check s Fail, But No Trace Found ABOARD THE USS HARTLEY IUPI) -The Navy today abandoned it! efforts to determine whether a sinking Liberty ship released its cargo of deadly poison jlas into the Allantic Ocean 282 miles off the Florida roast. Elaborate experimenlB to determine v.·hether 418 concrete and steel vauli.B of nerve gas had burst apart under Ule press ures of three miles of ocean water ended in failure, as did efforts to pinpoint the exact location of the sunken hulk . The Navy said its special satellite navigalion equipment failed to find any trace cl the SS Lebaron Russell Brigg~. leaving It and 67 Ions of lhe obsolete but ,, to1ic gas lost under 16,000 feel ol water. Navy expert.s expressed disappqlntmenl but indicated the failure of the ex- periments woold add nothing to the possi- ble threat to human life. They said the threat was almost none1istent anyway. Only one test. worked, but it was in- conclusive. WateT samples taken from a line lowered almost half way to the sea bed ~wed negative results for gas. A Navy spokesman said that particular test '.l'ould have been meaningful only if it had reacted positively. No gas was evident in water samples taken at the surface, but none had been ei:pected . Mj es Davis' Car Fou11d; No An gela Ul5 ANGELES (UPI) -The discovery of Angela Davis' 1959 Rambler in front o( a Black Panther party member's home late Tuesday resulted in an Intensive but unsuccessful search_for the black militant wanted on a California murder charge. Miss Davis, a self-proresse<I Com· munist who was placed on the FBl's list of 10 most wanled persons earlier in the day, is souiht on a coUrt affidavit Utat sh~ ~ht an 1our 'uns used in San Rafael, 1n an uttsu~sslul courtroom escape that lt:ft four persons shot to ' death. The Rambler had been identified in an all point,, bulletin issued by authorities when Miss Davis was first sought-in con- nection with the slayings. The guns Miss Davi.! purchased in 1968, l969 and 1970 were smuggled into the courtroom by accomplice Jonathan P. Jack.son, 17, but it was reported police were seeking Franklin D. Alexander, 28, concerning one of them. It wal!l in front t)f Alexander's home Miss Davis' auto was found. The weapon had turned up in the militant's apartment here during a police raid but was return~under court order and not seen again until the San Rafael shootout. Police and FBI agents staked out Alex- ander's home after the vehicle was found. When a relative of Alexander's returned lo the home, she allowed ofricers to search the residence. Officers. finding nothing._left the car-where it was. Police also nported that several witnesses said a woman matching Miss Davis' description arrived at Los Angeles Jnternational Airport Tuesday aboard a flight from 'New York City. However, officers said the clothing descriptions from the witnesses varied greaUy and police tended to disa:>unt the reports. Earlier that night, Los Angeles Airport detail officers searched a Na- tional Airlines jet at 1nternaliona1 after they were informed by airport security gua rds they had received a tip Mis!'O Davis was planning to hijack the plane to Cuba. A search of the aircraft turned up nothing and it left as scheduled. Miss Davis, ousted UCLA faculty mem- "'"'ber. was placed on the FBI Ii.st after escaping a series of police raids in her home town of Birmingham, Ala. She is the third woman ever to be M listed and the FBI said she should be con- sidered armed and extremely dangero\1!1. Soutl1 Viets Deny Reds' Charges Of Lao~ Entry SAIGON <AP) -The South Viet· namese military command today denied Communist charges that its aimbat troops are operating in Laos. but in· formed sources reported again that South Vietnamese reconnaissance patrols have crossed the border. The sources said most of the patrols are landed by U.S. helicopters along the 200-mile Ho Chi Minh trail in the lower panhandle of Laos to· spot targets for American bombers. The Communist Pathet Lao reported in a radio broadcast Tuesday th at on Aug. 9 ''the United Slates introduced a number of Saigon puppet army units into the boundaries of Saravane Prov ince, under the control of the Lao Patriotic Front {Pathet Lao). These forces have con- ducted military operat ions against the region.·• The broadcast said the move y,·as part or the Americans' "overall plan for using Saigon and Bangkok puppet troops l() conduct and widen their war of ag- gression in Lam with the aim of tu rning Laos into a second Cambodia." The broadca st said Prince Souphanouvong, the leader of the Pathet Lao. made the charge last Saturday in a letter delivered to Prince Souvanna Phouma, the Laotian premier . • COFFIN SHIP LEBARON RUSSSEL ~ BR IGGS SINKS BENEATH SEA A9ing Liberty Ship Carritd Nerve G•s C1rgo to D•vt y Jones' Locker I I \ I w .................. 19, 1910 DAil Y PllOT ~ OPEN DAILY SAVE MORE at GRANT'S 7-DAYS·A·\VEE"" 9-9 SATURDAY 9 'Ill 6 SUNDAY 9 'Iii 5 ,._,,,,,,,,.,,,, T '"' P E NOL_ET ON F'' · · " ' , 1 • r. '''I 1• '" ' ,t,.--_, v•r..ru1r. W(".:J' Sportsweu by the Wool People FOR THE BUTTON-4town mind· ed, Pendleton has designed this virgin wool classic with such details 11 hangtr loops, tapered body ilnd sleeves ind box pleat. Sizes S-M-l-XL s15so Wijfj y e LEYl'Sa XX DENIM BLUE JEANS ~urr1 '°"'• MM• , .. ""° -w·1 -· ••,i.4 ,...,.. ........ ,..,~ ...... ha, ........ •fttl Cf..,.. 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"HANG-TEN" TRUNKS $8-$9-$10 "HANG· TEN" T ·SHIRTS The most f1mou1 shirt of 111 Is "Hing-Ten" ..• ·in 1 91ll1ry of colors incl Grant's Ms 'em 111 ••• in eYery 1in and style. $6-$7-$8 T·SHIRTS & TRUNKS for BOYS ........ . . LEATHER JACKETS * fringe * Norfolk * Satori *Suede * Rough-Out ' YOUR $39'5 REG. CHOICE $S5-$19.9S Jcrv• ltt Our Compl•t• leather Dept. HAVE YOU SEEN "HANG·T!N" FOR WOMEN MAD! BY CHARLEY'S GIRLS-1t GRANT'S! Sff All ol the l'odllc Jrolls ol Gronl'sl Select From 12 Dyn1mic New Colors! WESTERN SHIRTS by Miiier $695 W!STllN STTlED for W11ttm1rt ... •ftfll P1rm1Mltt PNltt f1trk1, too. lold Pl1ld1 anti tolld colort 111 •II 1loov1 lonttht ond nodl: slit a. . P'ACl';1_C ''Windking" 4 by ~ Pacific Trail! HIRE THEY A.REf Thost rugged, wind· proof. luxury f1ck1t1 by P'1clnc Trill. 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YAlYAN Pt"UNfll ,.,,.. ,.,...,le r..i.,., i. 111 $IS ... celtn ...; 19 11t ll1u UYl' .. l'OI OAl'I IHy Jlllrh ,,,...., $l0.qt " ••w "'"'" ,:, Family Tent" ':;• ~'"'-•It '~~~:·!,:'' h111 '"' l1tt '" SAVE $21 .07 •r~ii:':::.:!~~'&.:;. w ... ,t,:~~"~·s,~~,,.°jlch $58 ARlY $79.95 111 88 ALL 1970 •····· & TENTS DISCOUNTED Jumbo I 2'x9' ,,0 ~~PLETE ••l•cllo" of // ASIS'' •t•lto11d" 1 " • rho pop I .. Colernin Ch Ir Olrrn11/c" t u •r 011i, .. low prJc~1 , •c lh1 f111ur11 '"' 111•d1l1 •r ' ••f ' · · •nf Gr1nr1 IO'•I' "OASIS" Sl11p1 4-•• REOUtAR $1 IP,95 $8811 13'110• "OA.s~· ,_J9f,fS , ...•. , . ', :''.''' .~ ••t. S$14f.9S , , • , , , . Stwo $21 .07,.,, •79 .. '•IO 'OASIS" ········•• lt19, $J99.9S . • ...•.. S1v1 $SJ.07 .. • ..... lO'Jrl'"V ·····•··· •• 7 Sl~op~ 4-~::.·~;::;S ..... , ',,,., .. ''"' 171.07 .. , , $ J 2888 TJ 19 "VAGAION " "''' · · · • • ~~1;11t.ts ... 0 ... .. . ...... s,v, •21.01 ... '7888 lt11. $1.;r.~:AIOND" , ',.,.,, .. ,. St"t $3 1.07 $8888 l 'r6'6" "Ol '1' ' · • • • • • • . ' ' • •••. SSt.fs -~~IC" ....•... · ....... ' .... Stv1 $4J.07 • . • '98•• AU IPTO ~~;~· ....... "" Sll.07 ·. $4881 MAN TINTS ON SAU/ .. USE ·: YOUR ·· CREDIT.; at GUNT'SJ • * ... kAlllerlc4rjl * M11t1r Charge • ~------------------------------~ ---------- • • DAILY PU.OT E DITORIAL P A.GE U611S'I t. WIT~EFS 81>.ot<tltS: Well Worth the Effort Teen Help needs help in Fountain Valley. The pri- vately run agency was knocked out of its store-front home two weeks ago by the complaints of neighboring bu!inesamen. __ --some ocal people felt Teen Help was dra.wing Joo many unruly teen-agers into the area and d1st!J.fbmg SWTOUJlding commercial facilities and some residents. II true, tihs was a backhanded compliment. to Teen Help -it was supposed to draw teen-agers w1Ut prob- lems so they could be helped. . . . ' Teen Help offers several fine services including a youth emp!Dyment agency, a drug help !toe, guidance counselors, and a pli>ce lor teenagers to go and talk with other youths or adults. Tbe drug line wasn't kept too busy -perhaps a good sign for Fountain Valley -but the employment service was ~ble to find 200 jobs tor teenagers this summer. The counseling program was JUSt gettmg started when Teen Help was closed. . Tbe community should do all It can to find a new location and put this valuable service institution back ln business. GWC's Rock y Ro ad People who liVe in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. You knbw that. Well ~y shouldn't even think of throwing stones. Trustees' of the Orange Coast Junior College District know that. The students faculty and administrators of the district's Golden ' West campus in Huntington Be~ have been living in a sort of glass house for some time now. Rock gardens, full of baseball·like decorative stones, have lain temptingly below the many plate glass windows on the campus; But no one has ever done any· thing about it: like pitch a stone through a window. Police and insurance agents have thought about Ctear Warning- Know the Driver To the Editor: Each day you see hitchhikers -most of them seem to be lucky. One mwit agree however, y9u take a cbant>e when you enter the car Of a stranger. It should not be -the laws are not strict enought. Your paper g.ave a good accounting of the tragic· ride of a young woman who was raped al'ld shot. Yes, one feels sorry to see another so needlessly hurt, however, no girl enters a man's car al the midnight hour wttboul taking a chance. No girl consents to •·pose" for pictures at lhat hour. She gambled and lost. • Although it was a terrible ordeal for the girl, it seem! to me that article should have been a warning -don't let thil ~ to you ; don't get into a car when yml do not know the driver. The article was slanted to elicit sym- pathy fti-the girl -it should have been used as a"warning. The gjrl does not need a:ympatby -she needs prayers. She, and all others who get into a strange car, need good, old fashioned sense. L.T. KELLER A K Eu11 To•• 1'o lhe Editor : Hey watso matta you duinbheads over there at Golden West College? For almost 4 years silting there is 278 plate glass windows and ~er all the windo~s is boulder rocks just like baseballs and m 4 yrs only a couple lousy windows you get broken. In our school we only got 1 wtn·- dow in the front and our kids break it every week. M:ui~x Letter• from readtrt are welcome. Normally writers 1lwuld COft.2''11 their messages ;,, 300 wordl or le11. The right to condense llttm to fit apace or eliminat.e li be l i.s re1emtd. All let· ters must inelud4 dgnahlrt and mat£. big addres8, but names moy b1 with- held on reque,;t if suf/icient reuon is apparent. Poetru wlU not be pub- lished. company is just an electrical power com· pany. My ilTitalion wilh SCE and Jack K. liorton (Edison president) is due to the fact that they are goina: to build two air polluting electrical generating plants Jn my area while using the most flimsy or logic to justify their actions. They tell us that if those two air polluting planti art not built that wr will have a power shortage from about the begining of 1972 until their new atomic plants start.! pro- ducing power someUme during 1975. In other word s lhey want to build those two air polluting plant.s to prevent · a power shortage for about three years. Would you believe that those two planta will be producing electrical power well past the year 2001 and while they are pro- ducing electrical power they will be polluting the air we breathe. Jt, however. The trustees recently bowed to pressure and ordered the stones removed. It's one of the least ex~ected,;onsequences ol cam· ..e_us disorder. The rock ga'rdens were an integral part of thearcfiffiicluRil ae·s1gn-and-natural·drainage. Wbo could have foreseen this problem when the campus plans were drawn in the mid-sixties? The only cheering note is that Golden West students did nothing to warrant removal of the stones. It's a case of rocks thrown at Berkeley and San Francisco State being felt in Huntington Beach. Sp1·eading the Word 11 popularity is a measure o1 success, the Hunting- ton Beach public library's summer reading program for children rates at the top of the scale. The library program certainly proved its popularity last Thursday wheq Lake Park was filled with youngsters celebrating the completion of the summer season. Library officials said more than l, 700 children took part in the guided program which sets goals for the number of books a child should read during the sum- mer days. A total of 150 of them each read more than SO books. • ·One little girl, six-year-old Katherine Truesdell, was the all-time champ reader, polishing off 160 books -and she isn 't even in tbe first grade. Reading is the foundation of knowledge and the earlier children can start, the better they will be. School stops in the summer, education doesn't, and the library has made itself a cornerstone of education. Librarian Walter Johnson and his entire staff have done a fine job with the city's children. They deserve the plaudits of all and maybe a little better patronage of the library from more of the adults in the community. H Dear Gloomy Gus: Mexico Greets 'l'he Daily Pilot says it costs $100,· 000 for the special election that puts Dennis Carpenter in the state senate for three months. Why don't we just forget the November election for the same seat -it'll save even more than $100,000! -R.M.M. W orli Within: Does It Work? I could sympathize with those middle Americans who deplore demonstralions, riots and violence if J believed they were sincere in calling for "peaceful petitioning" of the gov- ernment. But are they? On a Saturday morn- ing a rew weeks ago, one or my daughters and her school friends deployed themselves on comers of various "nice" neighborhoods with pelilions urging support of the "Cambo- dian Fund Cut • Off Bill,'' as it is informally called. THEY WERE DRESSED n e a t 1 y , behaved politely, and told passers-by that the petitions. when filled with signatures, were to be se•t to our ~ ~~ .. ~a .. ~ , . . , :. "' .. ..,~uif. ~" Richard Nixon "Poor Mexico," once lamented Porfirio Diaz, Jong-time dictator or the cou11try. "So far from God and so ciose to the United States." For more than a century, proximity to the Colossus of the North ha! been a determining force in Mexico'• development. But in rece11t years, the often embittered relatioru between the two neighbors have steadily Improved. The agenda for talks between Presideat Nixon and President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz during a 24-hour visit to the Pacific resort of Puerto Vallarta tomorrow reflects this historically wary rela· tion.shlp. Topping the list is Mes:ican ir- ritation at American attempts to stem the flow of narcotics from south cf the border. The salinity of the Colorado River and problems resulting from t h e meanderings or the Rio Grande alS-O will be at issue. NIXON MAY expreu the concern ot organized labor in lhe United Slates about factories set up along .the border to process parts for electronic eqWpment and clothing later sold in this country as Americaa-made. "Tbese are not the kind of issues that make headlines," a State Department olficial told E d i to r i a 1 Research Reports. "But that's a good sign." To Mexicans, imperialism has had a "Made in the U.S.A." label OR it. An- nexation of the American Southwest resulted from the Mexican-American soldiers repeatedly crossing the border in pursuit of bandits and bands or Apache Indians. DURING THE the f\.texica111 Revolution, President Wilson in 1914 ordered Marines laRded at Veracruz. The incident mir· rored Wilson's quixotic determination tn "teach the Latin Americans to elect good Editorial ·Research men." Two years later, an expedition led by Gen. John J. Pershing pushed deep i111· to Mexico in search of Pancho Villa , who had raided the U.S. border town of Columbus, N.M., killing 18 Americans. American ambassadors ill Mex.ico often acted like p~nsuls. Henry Lane Wilson, envoy at the time of the outbreak of the Revolution, openly supported Diaz. America• investments in the country amounted to $1 billion in 1911, greater than the stake of Mexican capital. They :tow exceed $1.5 billion . but Mexican law requires a minimum or SJ percent in local capital in new industria l ventures. THE NIXON VISIT comes at a time of unparalleled prosperity and deve lopment for Mexico. Two years ago Mexico was the successful host for the Olympics. She exhibited a1 economy growing at a rate of 7 percent aooually and a capital filled with new buildilllgs. Presidential elections were held on July a in which Luis Echeverria Alvarez, 47. candidate of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Par· ty, won 87 percent of the votes. The balloting continued the line of peaceful elections that began in the 1930's. But Mexico is also a classic example of the mixture of poverty and progress that besets Latia America. Mexican youth is restive and demands rerorms in the face of repression. And agriculture is lagging while the government emphasizes forced· draft industrialization. ~~' 5icll!*'!l!M!l!llii9Ml!ll!ltll!.llJ Iii ll!IAl_llilli.i>·,, Power of TV · As a Weapon Draws Fire In the eyes of many lawmakers, It is clear that television stations don 't do much of anything right in their news and public service programming. • Some members of the flouse and Senate think the President gets too much exposure by reason or his high office. Others think individual networks have goofed in allowing free p a r t i l! a 11 responses to presidential telecasts. Sen. J. William Fulbrlgbl ([).Ark.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. has argued that t h e President's access to TV is a threat to the constitutionally Jll4Jldated balance cf powers in the U.S. government. Fulbright wants Congress to legislate itself a piece or the action. 1'COMMUI\11CATION is power," says Fulbright, who has peered at commiltee witnesses through flip-up dark glasses on many TV screens, •·and exclusive access to it is a dangerous, unchecked power." All this is currently under study by the communications subcommittee of the Senate which is headed by Sen. John 0. Pastore (D-RJ.). Fulbright has also made TV activities a part of his long vendetta with the military. He has qWetly proposed an amendment to the still in-committee defense money bill which aims at Pen- tagon film crews operating in Vietnam. Fulbright has told the Senate Ap- propriations Committee that individuals involved in that Vietnam coverage have described some of tb.e supposedly authcn· tic news events as "faked or staged.•· • l • . 1 You got some kind of commie pinko un- American school over there you don't read the papers and Life Mag and you ain't throwing rocks thru the windows and now me a taxpayer gotta pay to have lhe rocks hauled away because its pretty easy to see something pretty funny .is going on over there an· we gotta get rid of them rocks because you so-called students don't know how to act like real Emericans at real schools Jike Columbia and Berkeley and San Fernando State. Surely even a mOron will agree that any alternative method for bridging the three year pov1.:r shortage gap is better than building those two air polluUng elec- trical generating plants. HARRY B. McDONALD JR. Ho11or Roll Lbtlt1g sc111ators and congressmen in Washington. Nobody was argued with, and nobody was pressed to sign. She and her schoolmates returned home dejected after a few hours. "You know," she said, "most of the people who passed by called us Communist!! or fascists er other dirty names. And a lot of them signed the sheets just to mock us -with names like Donald Duck or Captain Marvel. They were annoyed tha t we were just standiJ1g there, exercising our 1>eaceful right.s." An Un-competitive Spirit "Tb.e American people deserve better than to have staged government pro-i paganda films passed off as straight TV i' news," the Senator declared in a state- ment supplied to the committee. ' • • MRS. HOWARD JOHNSON Not Jtl e: Goldwater l AM INFORMED THAT A STORY CARRIED IN YOUR P A P E R ASSOCIATES A RECENT AIRCRAFT INCIDENT WITH ME AND M Y AIRPLANE. FIRST OF ALL I NO LONGER OWN AN AIRPLANE ANll, SECONDLY, I DID NOT FLY ANY AIRPLANE OUT (,F ORANGE COUNTY AT THE TIME THE STORY ACCUSES ME OF. I RESENT VERY MUCH THI< TYPE OF LOOSE ACCUS ATIO N PARTICULARLY AS IT SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN MADE BY A PUBLIC u,·. FICIAL AND I WOULD APPRECJA1 I': YOUR NOTIFYING YOUR READ~r.~ OF THE TRUE FACTS. BARRY GOLDWATEH UNITED STATES SENATE Apotog~_to tht' senatot. Th e ,.~. port that he J)iklted a low-flying pri· wte plant' tD0.1 made lo the Ntwpot·t Stach Citt1 CouncU bt1 Dan Emory, chairman a} the Airf)art Noi.st' Abate· mnt CommitU!t. -Editor To 1he Editor: There ts oo way for me to live com· fwbly wllbout uslng el-I J>OW''" 'lbettfore I mun buy electric:>! power \ from Southern c.attfX"Dil Edl&on or move to ........ that la lm'ia:J by • difftrent power utility. Of c:oune, one coold be Jumpfllc l'l'Oln lhe llytq pan ll,>IO 1he Dre ~y ..,..., ,,...,,.. an lleclrical power To the F..ditor: Early in the summer an article was published which glowingly told of the huse percentage of students on the se- cond semester honor roll at Corona del ~ 1'.1ar High School. The article stated that nearly 50 percent or the student body was included and compared the amount to a mere 15 percent so i!r.luded at Newport Harbor High School ror the same ' semester. Knowing that both the students and teacher are of relatively the same calibre at bolh schools, I wondered what could have caused such a vast difference. 'The July 21st article explained the mat- ter. After listing all the straight A students, all students "who eamed all B's or bet· ter" were named. The catch, I realized , was in the rcquiremenls for inclD'sion on the hoJtOr roll. At Harbor, students must earn a minimum of eight points --each A Is worlh three paints, each B, one: physical educaUon is excluded. In other words. one bat to earn at least two A 11 and two B's lo be listed. This is far di.fferetl from the straight B average "ot better'' re- qulrtd .at Coroha. Therefore. the com· parlaon wu no comparieon at all, rtnce tb• lllandarda m IOI Ille 11me. LOYAL TAJl.-19711 LOllCll TtJT ma.lc.s • J>Of•• for olhtr r~iah schoOll a.s well. A wklelu di.Itri· but«d it.st oj "Streight A Students itt South.cm Ccli/omia" rtJl.tcuct. the so.JM miZed criuria. Some 1chooU Utttd 1c01'tl o/ names and othtr1 with l'quot enroUmtnt , IUUd onlv a feto. I• fol,....,, all high tthooll shou,ld ,~ the IOrnt' st.and4rdt /or honor rolli. HERE WERE youngs lcrs doing exactly what the leaders of the Establishment have been asking them to do -working wilhiR the stru cture of law and government, collecting names to seRd to their reprtsenlatives. This is the "ef- fective" means that Tricia Nixon ~vised them lo employ not long ago. Bilt the people who deplore violence apparently don't want non-viole•t iatereat in government eilher. They suspect anyone \Vith 1 petition of OCing "sub- versive." They don 't Y1ant the boal rocked. or waYC! rnadc -even thoug'h we are livb1g through one of Uie worst social and paUUcal storms-of the century. 'rHE \'OUTll OUT on the comers should be appro\'ed and applauded, no matter which stand they take, for bein~ serious about our national predicament, and ror their willingness to work within •lhe system. I11stead. the mass of Amcrtca.u stem to f1vor lnertla and blind advocacy of whatever course our leaden care io-~rsoe. 1bl! is not ••patriotism'' -it ii somnrunbulls.m. And thb is the surest way to "turn oil" young people !Oday -by denJgra.Ung, Insulting and mocking their efforts to be better citizens. by their OWi U,hls. For If they're not encouraged to do It peacefully 01 the comera, hoW can .we object lo lhe~ dotnr It an(l'ily on the barricade5? Jumping to conclusions : While age fears youth today, youth fears age somewhat too. Young people are particularly distrustful of older peo- ple who can compele with them in any field and who refuse Jo "act their age ." They prefer old people who submit tame- ly to Ille and have one foot in the grave. Such oldsters are no threat t<i them . The average bowler is shorter, heavler and more congenial than the average golfer. He is also more likely to drink beer, smoke a cigar, and have more trou. .-~-By George ~~, Dear George: We've been having an argument. Didn 't you have a column ez- pla.inin_g how the term "blue law" got st.ailed G.G. Dear G.G.: The term "blue Jaw" started with the Puritans who passed laws prohibltlng-dt1l!k!If~tlasl>g, lDel'- rymaklng and practically C<erythlllr else.-Evealually, all they bad to do was sit around and look at each other and 5igh, "Boy l Am I blue!'' (Send your problems to George:, 11'& only advice columnist in the nation wbo admita absolute and utter defeat.) r: .. ' • • H.il Boyle • FULBRIGHT is proposing that five Pentagon.financed film crews, now \ operating . in Vielnam, be .eliminated 1 along with the operation which makes their films available to networks and TV stations here in the United States. ble keeping his shirttail in wb.ile he plays. Thirik twice before lending money to a guy who habitually wears a tie clip. Anybody who is that neat and orderly in h.is dress ought to have his financial af· fairs In order also -and therefore have no need lo borrow. SOMETHING GOOD can be found in every dirty movie -but that isn't why people stand in line to see it. Our values do change with time. Can't you recall when a mun though! his date was a golddigger it she ordered the $2 ste11k a la car.te in a restaurant instead of t.1king the $1 blueplate spec\al like a lady? If you asked 10 secrd.aries what kind of animal their bos.o; reminded them of. two would SIY a lion, three a rat, and five a hippopotamus. · The trooblA! with 1olng lo a baseball game anymore. is that by the thne the game is over you nted another shave. A good girl to marry is one who looks at the ceiling while bawllng you out because 1he is too kind·hearted to see you &ufftr. Show me a man who, given the chance, would like to relive his college days ()Ver again and I'll ihow you a man who la sUIJ livina them •nd never managed to grow up. The senator's TV amendment is a part of his drive against the Pentagon 's public relations apparatus. He is suggesting that the Defense Departmears PR activities, which cost more than $40 milllon last year, be held to $10 million. Fulbright says Pentagon flackery is costing fifteen times what it cost as recently as 1959. The armed services, he says, used "the tools of Madison A~enue'' to persuade the public thal _their O\vn weapons are the very best. By Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmllb ---W- Wednesday, August 19, 1970 The editorial page of tht' D<µLy Pilot stek.a to 'nform and stim- ul4t1 ttaden bu pre1entina this ntW$pOptr°I opfniom and eom- ~ry on topicl of interest and HgnifU:ance. by prcw(dfng. a /oT"Um. /OT tht' e:r:prc:1sfon of our readtr1' opfnlont. cmd by presentJno the diwr1t i:iew- poinu of lnform<d ob1<,,,cr1 and ,fJ>Okttmen on topfc1 of th1 do~. Robert N. \Veed, Publls.ber ) i I I J I . I I I ' I \ Founiai11 Valley vor~~3. NO. r,8, 6 SECTIONS;-1 02 PA,6ES:---- Full-time Mayor Joh By ALAN DIRKIN 01 tti. DllfY l'Mlt 5ttft HLinUngton Beach voters will decide in he Nov. 3 general election whether the :.ity needs a runtime, salaried mayor. F'i've councilme• unanimously approved 1 remlution Tuesday aight to put the pro- KlSitioo on the ballot. If it suCceeds, there would then be an !lCCtion in April 1971 and every fourth ,ear 8Iter that to pick: the man for the ob. · ~mayor will not be a member o( the :lty:eouncil, as previously envisaged, but voo.ld only preside over the procedings 1od ~uld have Lbe right to vote 011¥ in the abseace of a councilman, an absten- tion, or to break a tie. Councilman Al Coen voted against the provision giving the mayor the ri&ht to vote in a eouncilman's absence or in the · case of JUI abstention. ~ilmen explained lhal there wou1d stiU )e seve• members of the council. The .mayor would simply be an extra elected official, serving as the ''-politlcal and ceremonial head of the city." In another major change to the resolu· lion proposing the charter changes, the council struck out the section calling for the city 1attor.ey's post to be appointive rathe? than elective. Cowlcilmen Cota and others objected to the way City Attorney Don Bon!~ had written the standards and responsibilities o[ the post Bonfa replied that it was worded no dif. ferently from the umuccemut pro- posiUon that was on the ballot in November, 1968~~1 beard none of these objectiom prior to that election," be said. The move to take the city attorney's post orr the ballot meant none of the elected officers' positions. would be in the proposition. It was proposed earlier that both the city clerk's and city treasurer's offices be appointive rather than elective but the in· • eac _..OUllCl ' Planners I-0 Discuss ~=-·--~~set Bay -----.---(;~-fhe first day in September"", Hun. ington Beach residents may learn if a .-i ;10 million-plus marina development - ncluding two 11..slory structures -will tVer. 1et off the ground. PJamting commissioners will restudy ?ht &wet Bay proposal at that time and 1 .fe!:;ide whether to. grant· • varianc.-for Q:ht_gh rise buUd1ngs. kuntlngtop Harbour r e s i d e n t s ifisented mixed rtaetlOl'I! Tuesday nJght 0 the development "'1.lch would border hem on the west, along Pacific Coast iighway. Some supported it, others ques- Joned it. Briefly, the project proposed by Real ?roi)erty Management, lnc., of Beverly Illls, includes: -Creation of a small penin.suJar island toPwated by an 11-story apartm~nt ower four three-story apartment uruts lnd ~mkubterraoean par.king. -Twenty-three homes and about 75 O'ifnbouses on the mainland facing Hun- 5ngton Harbour across a l~foot chan- oel. ...:...A four acre neighborhood shopping ~enter. -A waterfront restaurant. -A four acre "specialty shop" develop- nent. :.-A four-story office building and an ll- 1tbi-9 hotel. :=-Dredging of two short channels and t~on of a 335-slip marina. '.tile total project is scheduled for about ~:acres along Pacific Coast Highway ~~D Admiralty Drive and Anderson Street. A large number of Harbour residents lauded the plan as the best they have Jeell proposed for the area and hailed it ~s an "end to the blig~t we look at now." Other Harbour residents wondered if tQe residential area W1>uld really be t~ve]Qped .. promised, while some op. pesed file cleasity oi the hotel Ind apart· ment area • DAILY l"ILOT Staff l"hlt9 HEADED FOR SACRAMENTO New Sen•tar Carpenter 10 to 1 Vo te Puts Carpenwr In Senat,e Seat Newport Beach attorney .aid state Republican leader Dennis Carpenter Tuesday became the first mu to be elected to the office of state senator from the community. · As expected Carpenter, 4 I, scored a landslide victory over his opponent Douglas Irvine. a Santa Ana land developer. Irvine after filing for the post had a cha1111ge of hearl and threw his sup.- port to Carpenter. 'Mle vote: Carpenter, 20,733; Irvine, 2,127. Carpenter's electio1 is for the unel'.- pired term or former State Sen. John G. Schmitz of Tustin, now the U.S. Congressman from the 35th District, suc- ceeding the late James B. UtL l?arpenter-fatt1 a Democratic op. 'pooent. Dwight W. Mize of Garden Grove ~ CARPENTER, Pop I) ' . . . Valle y Ass~sse,1 Funds Might Build -Nef;V Park ' A $50 000 "gift" rrom locreased assessed 'valuations might help build another park in Fountain Valley. City councilmen expressed a desire Tuesday night to use the mooey that way, ratl\er than to lower the $1 lax rate as firsf suggested by Councilman John Harper. CoUncilmen approved a $1 lax rate fur the. operapng budget same as ~fore - but did not immediately cons~n the "$50,000 windfall" to park development. They'll coosider how much or it should be . ~ for parks aflheli Sept.. 15 meeting. Harper agreed to the park idea saying, ••1 Just want to see this extra money . retUmed to the taxpayer in some con- crete rOrm." Harper's proposal to lower the tax Tille -pcrbaj,1 by as much a1 eight eent.s - was batted down by other councilmen on lhe grounds the money can be used for "unmcpccted txpenscs" and the excess might disappear next year. ''Besides, It wouldn't amount to mO..· than $4. for the largest home In the ·city,'' added Councifrnan Albert Holllndj!Si. "Who w;,we be kidding." ., The e.xtr'B money comes from an in- crease in sse~d vatualions not. ex- pecled by cipr officials. Valuations were some $$'n million more than expected which means an extra $SO,IXM:l to tht city in taxes. But some of Ulllt money has already been planned for use -such as fUl,000 for a parlfn Juarez Colony -wbkh bad not been budgeted. Councilman Ron Shenkman agreed the extra money should be. put to park use, with the re&erVaUon that it be available during the year for use to handle any "unerpected expenditures." :•f just didn't want the windfall to disappear lnkt the general budget and find ourselves making reason, to spe~d tt," Harper said. Fluoride Opponents Lose Fight Fluoride opponents failed to convince lhe Fountain Valley City Council Tuesday night that it should let the voters decide whether they want fluoride in city water. About a dozen res~.ts appe~ at the eouocil meeting lo'llrle tbe ~U to set up an election ior the ifuqride'iasuc. Four councllme.n ITI\li':nWned their previous stands in fa Vor of fluoride and refused the election request.. Councilman JQho Harper -the lone dissenter -publicly declared he would support .all efforts to bring a referendum on fluoride. Mrs. Jan Wilhelm urged the council to approve an election, then· said, "We drink it. we pay for it, we should vote on it." She also asked the four councilmen why they would not support an election. "I surveyed several groups o{ people and I don 't reel it will come to a vpte so il w0uJd be a waste of money to put it on the ballot," Councilman Albert Hollinden replied. other councilmen agreed and Coun- cilman Ron Shenkman 1dded, "I've studied the issue and a thorough report on court cases involving fluoride. We are not violating any constituti0oa1 rights." "I feel the council has sentenced 35,000 people to use water, medicine. not their choice. I will support these people in their drive for an election,'' Harper-declared. Beach Airport W in s Exwnsion Ori Its Exwnsion Meadowlark Airport has won a delay In a city order for flyers to slop using a 30(). foot runway "extension." Huntington Beach councilmen granted the delay Tuesday night after l!obert E. Dingwall, president ol the HOME Coon· cil, said that new paving on the runway by Reil Avenue made ccaiiUons safer. Dingwall, who was ·appointed Monday night to head a committee to study the airport problem in Huntington Beach, promised the council that i t a t e aeronautics engineers WOUid submit reportr soon that the new work at the airport made Dying 1 ... bawdous. The coundl granted a delay until the next meeUng, Sept, 8, in enforcement of the cease ml deoist order. The order is over ,flilure to" obtain a use variance permit for the new paving at the tiny, private airport. _ _ DingWall said that the runway ex- tensioP WIJ not for landings but for takeofls. He said the new area was clear- ly marked and Oyen were forbidden to use it !or landings. Dinpall and C.Ouncilman George McCracken, both pilots, Saki ·that any homeowners seeing a plane land in the marked area should note the regi.!ltration number and report it to federal authoriUes. "The problem i.!I not with the 2,000 •pilots who fly regu.Jarly out o ( Meadowlark, but with tht tramJit p!IOU or novice flyers," Dingwall said. 11Tbe pilot , does not want to come down on a roortop any more than the homeowner wantl IL" •• ... ,. ... •• • -, WEDNESDAY, :AU6USl~9, ·1970 Put on cwnhents-Paul Joneo and W8l'l'Oll llall -quashed that by opposing i I themselves. Tu...i.ty night's meeting produced more than two boun of discussion as the councilmen tried to work out the finer poi1::1ts of the fullUme mayor proposal The questions of bow and whether iir cumbent councilmen might be able to run for the mayoral office without jeopardiz· ing their -council seats took up most · of the Ume. The original proposal called for the first election to be held in April, 1972 at which time tW1> councilmen and a mayor would be elected. s Beach 'Ill• terms of Ted Bartlett, Donald Shipley and George McCracken will ·be expiring at that time but it was ~inted out that one of the other fQU\ councilmen could run for mayor in 1972 without jeOpardizing his seat. Councilman McCracken suggested that a way to make it fair would be for a councilman declaring for mayor to resign his seal That suggestion seemed near agree- ment but a later proposal that the elec- tion be held in the off-year -1971, 1975, 1979 -between council elections so that any member or th• council OJUld run ax DAIL ... PILOT l"lltMI W AIM Dirkllt HOW TO BEAT THE UTILITY TAX IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Tota Out Appliances, Which Trash Man Wiii Now Haul Awayi F.,... Beach llfficials at Capitol . ' To Figl1t Freeway Block By L. PETER KREIG 1 1 01 It!• OI HY l"lltt 11141 SACRAMENTO -Delegations 1rom Orange Coast communities were in the :ilato c1a.pital to:<'aY polishing presen- tations for lhc long awaited senat& Transportation Committee hearing .i. on Assemblyman Robert BacBlam's bill to wipe out Pacific Coast' F reeway in Newport Beach. Badly outnumbered, NeWJ>Qrt Mayor Ed Hirth and Councilman Howard Rogers were. present to e:lead for passage of the bill thal would ltlll the propooed route ol the future freeway through tbelr city. TEN CENTS Ballot without rear ol losing his seat ..,,. unanimous supporL "II the election is In an odll year, all could have a go for it,:' Councilman Jerry Matney said. "The people. would aIM know clearly what they are voting for - just the office of ma~ ... City Clerk Paul Jones pointed out that if the mayoral election is combined with a schoOI district vote the cost would be about 19,000. The proposal. also calls for a runoff election between the two leading can· didates if' no candidate falls to win 'a ma· jorlty in the first vote. • I e New tevies Increased .In 4Areas Huntington Beach coundlmen acled to Increase taxes on four fronts Toeaday night. . -They approved an ordinance calling lw a._ 5 percent tax on all gas, phone, electric, IDd water bills in the city. -TheY increlled the busintll -le< • llaf.51 percent in aB cotqoites. '· -Tber orclend an onffiiarte l!rawn up ' to incr<ue the,,.._ on~-·~·~ fl to 16. _,, ,..,....,.,._~ u- -They in!lructed the gtaff 1o ell~ ho1f to slap • tax on'mobilo ljl!mes. 'The eWndbnen traded Jn the $1.51 tru h colJection fee for the ftew levies. The tnuh lee lffll be dropped Dec. Jl to c9incide with introducUo~ of the utility tax· ' ' The ~tility users' tax and the hike Jn the bw"iness fee were passed unanimous- ly. The jUmp in the apartment ieVY was approved 3 -2 wJth councllmen Jerry Matney, Jack Green and Al Coen in favor and George McCracken and Ted Bartletl opposed. Before the apartment Increase becomes law, a fourth vote In favor - malling It a majority or the councll - must be made. oBth mayor Donald Shipley and Councilmen Norma Gibbs-are on vacation. , The possibility of a levy 'on mobile homes was raised by Green when he ask~ ed if they could be included in the tu: on apartmenls. Finance Director.· Ben Arguello said that he was not 11ure how mobile homes were preseoUy. taxed -by space or by unit. He was instructed to look into 1t. The levies were approved with little discussion. They had been debated previously In the lDOIUN-Jong search for additional revenues to fnnance the civic improvements program -the civic center, library, fire 1tations and cor- poraUon yard, Only the utility tax wu eannarked Tuesday night for the civic facilities pro- gram. The busineas Hcenae fee increase and the apartment tu will go into the general fund, as reeot1tmended by Arguello. One ol. the reasons tor a deficit in the (See TAXES, Page Z) Weatller The sun will be out Tliursday, but It" be liltered through a cloudy haze when it finally breaks out ol the morning log about ._., Tem- peraturu wlll be in the high !O's. Gas Attendant Thwarts Thief A gas station attendant was nursin~ a wounded left arm today after partly foll· Ing a boldupa t a staUon at Magnolia Slreet and .Adams Avenue In Huntington Beach Tuesday nigbL Robert Curci, representing Newport's newly-formed Ci_UKns Coordinating Qom-.~ mlttce against the freeway, was also present and es:pected to address the com- mittee in .support of the bilL JNSmE TODA 'Y --whatever 11our ta.stt ftl the- ater. yoii can find it aLong th_, Orange -COC1t tlW t0eektnd in a holf dozen wid1Lr ooruino pro- ductions. Se e E1ltft14iamnt, Page 12. • John M.-WilJlams.-:15, WU. working-Jn' the station at 89?2 Adams Ave. when a bandit,. br•ntilshlng a six-Inch blue steel tevolver walked lnto the ofHce at 10:25 p.m. The bandit, dUC:ribod as an a.~ parent Mexican-American, age 2$-36, of medium build, told Williams to 80· out to the pump l.slahd. · 'M'lcre, .police said, the gunman r.emov· ed 170 l"."m tilt cash register. ,, , .. City officl1l1 from c.aeta Mesa. Hun- tington Belch •nd La"'°' J!each and reP'O"'ltalives ol the COUll\Y' filed in lhll morning 1o ·argue 1plnol the .,._. late todiiY. The bill. S(JOllJOred b1 "-tb11mao Badlialll (&.N1111port Beach) has already gained 1pproval from the lowe~ hou&o and lla1 been awaltlne aenate acllon for nearly a month . Four times however, transportaUon committee hearinM~ 11Cheduled on the bill have been canceJll'd, twice at the las~ {See FllEEW.\Y, P ... I) , • • .. _ . . ' .. 2 UJLV PILOT H • Wedn61d11, j,Ufuit. lt, 1970 .. " " ' :Fa11tll11 in Tears' f . • Ill Coed , Suspect Death Convicted~ ANN ARBOR, Mich. (APl -John Norman Collins was convicted or first- degree murder tod1y in the str1ngHng of a coed after the Juron determing b1s fate. deliberated 271'. hour>. ·•~ C011ins, 23, heard the unlrnous verdict >!.C,.,ith 1ittle visible show or emotion. His " 'mother, Loretta Collins or Center Line, l>~ich., stared straight forward as the J!\rerdlct ·was announced by the jury foreman, but a young girl who IC- :.neompanied the lamlly began oobbllli J l<~uJtuY. n~. After the verdict wa11 1nnounced, nt CoTI!n8 wis remanded to the Washtenaw County ' Jail pendln& aentencing which ~Jtircult Judge John Conlin set for 1:30 a.m. Aug. 28. His ramJty rem1ined ln lhe , jocked courtroom after other speclatora "'t!: e(\,. · Collini' elder sister, Mrs. Gall Date, htoke into uncontrolled aobJ several ~ r · d !-.giinutu aftu the verdict wu announce . ;~nd her mother moved to comfort her In !he courtroom. : ... · b"' .'~.Tower Plans . ,' iHeld Over ::ny Council ~· . ir>. The Tower of London wasn't built In a .~.ctay, and architect William BJurocil 11\d r ""uesday night he ~ould wait aw~lle before starting on a tower for the Ftrsl ~~(;hristian Church of Huntington Beach. ti:>' So planniDC commissioners granted a •r&ntinuance to sept. 15 on the ehurcb'• ~uest for a variance to const~t a 17· • story retirement tower at Main Street .t1fl1d Adams Avenue. ,~.l Blurock did outline the tower and ad· '19inlng church ex:pan1ion for ~- 1~ issioners before asking them to con· '·'Unue the request. He said he just wanted :.1;;, open the door Tuesday by pN!senting tbem with the propo1al. ~aiurcn members hope to build a 17· -~lrtor)', 287-unit retirement faclltty in con· .wnctlon with a new sanctuary and drive. ~ church .. ~· Some oppolltlon was registered' by .;f9inownei1:, worried ihat ¢e tower wUJ ~\:J,o111heir residential atrnofflhere. Tues- ,...daY, .re'.aldents simply asked for more in- ~"'nnaUon on it. .,rfX ilurock said he Intended to develop the ~;i1urch .expansion in a "park-like at· ,~01phere." 0(i, Plann~ng commissioners atreed to a ,,0-ooUnuance . .,. they could allO lu.rfher ;)JUdY lht pt-L !(,' . ;f.ommiitee Study :r:- n{)f Parking Area ,. ''Withdrawal Set ~'":The Huntington Beach Company 's re- ~utlit to have its five-acre parcel .1·ithdrawn from the area designated. tor !Xpanslon ot the Parkin& Authority will be studied by a cttb:ens committee. Cotmellrnan Al Coen recommended at \1onday night's council meeting that the ::itlzens Steering Commtttee of the Urban ..and Institute (ULI ) analyze what ex· :IU1ion of the property would mean to the werall plan to build a 1,a1a-space parking at downtown. ... -. Coen said ~at the committee could use _. .. 'l>,aslbiHty studies made by Economic 'll:eaearch Assoclates of Los Angeles to ~.r'cll whether the project would still work. ··~ Coen'• motion was passed unanimousl y. " : The Company agked for its parcel - t 1'vt acres or east of Lake Street -to bt ~\.lthdrawn because n ls "ready. willln& _,Jlld able" to dtvelop the property ltseU. DAILY PILOT :r t, OllAHO!' C0.46T l'Ulll$MINC. COMl'IN"l' l•b•rt N. Wee1' ' • •! l'"ltlcttnl l..C l'UO<ll/111<" J1ck tt C11,ley Vitt I'~....,, •M .....,_. ""•~tfff Tho'"'' l(,, .. a 1 ho"'•I "· Mutph;nt Mtnttlrlt 1!11•"" Wu! O••"'t C-IY ll:ti!er "tl111t W, ltttt .U.tt\fll ltlflltr H111tl11tt•• ...... Offlct 17175 lttth l11tlO'l'IUtl M1!ll~1 Allllll11,i: P.O. let 7f0, fl64' Otfltf OffJc" '-"-ttac/11 m ,_o A-, CMll M .. I ; JJO Wtlt 11'1' llrut Ntwtot• lttd!· 2t\I W"l lt111ot ,.., ..... ,, Stn C.lt.mtr1!1: IOI Httlh I J (......., l .. 1 . ;.L ~, A Roman Catholic prleel, who 1e- companied the family to most or the court ae.ssions since tes timony began July 20, w1a there today to comfort the w~en. Shortly a!terwerds, Mn. Colllrnl also btgan sobbing. Under Michigan law, conviction of fi rst- degree murder requires a presentencing investigation. But NeU Fink, defen&e at~ torney, told the court alt.et the verdict wa1 announced his client will not aid anyone In the prtaentenclng lnvestigati-On and will provide nothing eicept his name and age. A lint-degree murder conviction car· ri~ 'mandatory penalty of life In prison in Michigan and there is an automatic right to appeal. Washtenaw County Sherirf Dougla!! Harvey was virtually the only trial participant wlllipg to comment Im- mediately. He said, "I'm very pleased. The prosecutor did a fine Job." Collini Wal convicted in the 1:1laylng of Karen Sue Belneman, an JS-year-old Ea.stern Michigan Uni versity freshman from Grand Rapids. The girl was last seen alive July 23, 1969, and her naked and battered body was found itJ a wooded gully three days later. An elder 1later of the dead girl was in the courtroom today to hear the verdict. 13arbara Be.lneman sat 1n a front row vo'ith State Police Sgt. David Leik and h.is wife. Mrs. Leik ill the sister of Collins' mother and it was in th:?ir home the stale said the Beinernan girl was murdered by CoUins. Miss Belnernan's mother w1s at her Grand Rlpldl home when told of the ~ict. She broke down in tears and declined to comment. Collini ii also under indictment in the murder ot a )'Oiuig girl near Salina's in JWle of 1869. V tility V aluatiof! In County Down From Lust Year Public uUIUy assessed valuation in Orange County dropped almost one per- cent in 19'1f-11 unde oomP!'ll'll.le 'Nlure1 far the "Jlriivtous year. Couril.Y Anessor Andrew J. Hinshaw annOunced Tuesday. The assessor said the values, as determined by the state Board o( Equaliz.alion were $241,481,2?0, a drop of eight-tenths of one percent. Added to Hlnlhaw'1 flauris for all other tatable propert,y In the county the utility S1HAmentJ boolt the totar county assessed value to $4,185,697,170 • Hinshaw attributed the drop in public utility 11se11menta "to a decrease in earnings Of public utilities due to the 1969 recession." The reduction In utility assess ment contra sts sharply with 17.1 percent In· crease tn aYessmtnt figures for general property values ln the county announced by Hinshaw la1t month. County supervisors Tuesday passed a resolution protesting the manner ln which utility properties are asseased and called ror a legislative • 1nvest11atlon or the Board or Equ1li11Uon'1 practices In the field . According to supervisors, uUllties are assessed on "historical" (original) cash value of the property less depreciation . In contrast private propert) of the average homeowner or buainessman is asseued on replacement value and has ex· perienced a steady Jnctease because of value appreciation over the years. Utilily assessed valuations for Orange Coast cities and the Increase or decrease ove r last year are: Cos la Mesa, $8,288,670. down 4.1 percent ; Fountain Valley, $2,845,060, up 1.2 percent : Hun- tington Beach, $43,989,930, down 2,6 J>ff· cent, but still the highest public utility valuation of any community in the coun- ty. Laguna Beach. '3.520.780, up 6.5 per. cent; Los Alamitos. $1.205,490, up 2.2 per- cen t: Newport Beach, ,7,339.640, up 2.2 percent ; San Clemente , $3,075,720, up t.6 percent : San J11an Capistrano, .1 .147.700 up 6.2 percent: Seal Beac'h. $6,241.350, down 2.4 percent; West m i n s le r, $9,902,640, up 2 percent. DAILY P'ILOT P'~olt ir, T1,ry CtYllN Hotns in Swiss They call It the 0 ston e cheese." It si t• In Hunting- ton Beach's Lake Park and it draws kids Jike flies. It's easy to see why. All you need is a little.imag· inallon . The imaginative kids viaible here are Bar· ba ra Bro\\'n, 2; Mar c y Laugen , 9, and J oey Lalone, 8. Joey is the one not facing the camera. Cheryl Lalone, 5. is inside peeking out. Is that her behind Barb'ara Ann? Or is that our imagination? f'rom Page 1 FREEWAY ... minute when key ~ornmlttee members were not able to attend. As1ernblyman Badham this mornlhg said that the two men, Senators Thomas Carrell (0-San Fernando) and Milton Marks (R-San Francisco) wc:iuld not be preaent today but thal the'hearlngs would have to 10 on without them. Badham declined to predict how the powerful transportation committee would vote on the measure. "Our chances are 50-SO," Is all he would Say. He indJCated that with Carrell and Marks present committee approval would have been assured. The single most Important figure Jn the fgturo of the bill probablY:ll comml!tee chairman Senator RandOlpb Collier (0- Yreka) who reportedly supporta the bill and poMlbly could sway at leait a bare majority of the I~member panel to his side. Committee approval ts virtually tan - tamount to senate appfuval. Committee rejection means the full Sen.te will never see the bJll. Forces opposing the measure were ex- pected to preaent detalled arguments at the hearing. Al Koch, coWlty road commissioner and A11emblyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach ) were expected to represent the opposltlon in addreMlng the hearing. Costa Mesa Mayor Robert WllsOn wa~ expected. to be present but had not ar- rived early this morning. Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy June hesitated to predict the outcome, but said he was opUmistlc that the blll would be rejected. Costa Mesa officials are opposed on the grounds that there are already enough freeway! completed and planned through that city. Huntington Beach i.s using a slightly different argument, streeslng t h a l although it didn't like the adopted route. it has adjusted Jong range planning around It. The Badham blll would-actually eliminate the proposed freeway through a Portion of Huntington Beach, easterly fro m Beach Boulevard lo the far souther· ly end or Newport Beach al the Corona de l Mar boundary. Huntington Beach City Engineer James \Vheeler. Laguna Beach Mayor Richard Gold berg and City Manager James D. \Vheaton were also expected to attend the hearing although it was not known whether they would speak. Newport's Mayor Hirth t1.nd <.:oun· cilman Rogers both 1naintained th eir op- timism on prospects for committee ap- proval. Rogers said. ''\Ve are still hopeful the Senate Tra nsportation committee will hear the voices of the people of Newport Bc<1ch and act ravorably on the bill." Ficker's Intrepid Ahead In Cup Selection Trials By ALMON LOCKABEY 01 1111 Dtllr P'llt.t Sl•fl NEWPORT, RJ. -Bill Ficker and Intrepid enjoyed a !our-minute and SO se· cond lead over George Hinm'n and \Veatherly after thrtt marks in the second race of UJe America's Cup Selec- tion Trials here today. (Early story Boating Page.) lntrepid led from the start, beating \\lea therly to the first mark by I :48 and increasing the lead to I :57 at the rea ch· ing mark. On the same course, Charlie Morgan'11 Her/tage, 1ppeltf:d to be taking a drub- bing from Bob McCullough's Valiant wl1h a deficit o! two minutes and 11 seconds. roundlnr the third mark. Herltace trailed From Page 1 TAXES •.. general fund, Arguello hu 11aid, ill that dropping the trash fee will take •502,000 out. McCracken said that he opposed the tax on apartmenl! (it will affect all 10,000 units In the city) and would· have prefer- red to see apartments included in the business Ucense Increase. Bartlett said that the jump from $1 to $6 was "too high." No information waa &iven on why mo bile homes should be taxed other lhan to bring them into line with the rate on apartments. No one said whether the money was needed or not. The staff did not aak for additional revenue. ln related action, the c0uncll also fixed the city 's tax rate ror the next year at $1.45 and re jected a request by the recreation and parks commis&lon ror a one-cent ta1 rate Increase for the parks progra m. The utility tax also includes a levy for the users of cable television. There is no cable TV networ k in the city but an ordinance authorizing such a service has been approved. by only 57 seconds at the windward mark but loet time on the reaching and running legs. Meanwhile, the Australian 12-mtter Syndicate today dropped a bombshell In the midst of the telectlon trials ln the rorm ot a written protest against the New York Yacht Club measurement or the Australian and French yacht.s. The protest was signed by 1"rank Packer of the Australian America~! Cup Challenge Association. The protest said, in effect. that the mea.sureme11ts of both the Australi111 l2· meter Gretel II and the French yacht France were improperly taken and not In accordance with requirements of the Inte!'!Mional Yacht Racing 1,Jp.ion, "lf the melsurtment of both boats are not properly taku before the corn· mert~ment"of the match (between the Aussie& 1nd ... Jl'rencti) there Is a rl1k that the winning . yacht may subsequenUy be round ineligible to race the America's OJp Itself," said the protest. ''ft l-with reluctance that we raise the point at this time, so near the con1· mencement or the match, but we believe it can be adjusted in a matter or hours," the docum ent continued. 111 the case of Gretel JI, according to designer Alan Payne, the measurer (Robert Bloornenstock) did not check the requirement of rule 21 which a.ffetcs the entire arrangement of the yachl on deck and belO\V. In the ca11e of Fra1tce, the arter "L'' mark is not placed on the aftermost point or the hull, according to the protest. "The aftermost point of her hull at the water plaAe i11 undoubtedly lhe el[treme tip of a thin unsupported extension of the hull surrace at some distance outboard from th e yacht's center Une, but the measure- ment mark has been placed so as to in- dicate the aftermost point' of the hull at the center line." The protest was filed soon arter the four American yachts ler't for the starting line for the second race of the selection tri als. F-310 Under Fire Ball Protests Standard Oil Ads Jluntlnaton B c a ch 's se1C·apeoint cd "Ralph Nader'' toda y attacked what he called the "prostituti on of the good namf' (Ir Orangt: County by an oil company lo promote thei r product .. 01vid Ball, who cal11 himself the leader of the ''People's Lobby" m.a,ld the use of_ advertisement by Standard 011 company botlatlng n(. 11uecesaful trla l of the co1f'lpany's F-310 gasoline additive in countr vehlcle1 1houl d be prohibited. protested that today Yo'&S the lllr!t lime h<' had been allowea to address tl1f bijard and said he had tried on several OC· caslons to gel on the 11genda but was refused . Acting board ch11irman David L. Bak<'r <'Xplalned to.B11l th11t the county had not endor!led Standard Oil's F-SIO product. ._He 51\d the county v.·as ullng Standard's gasolina because th8t rlr rn WIS lhe lOWCSl bidder for the county's buslneu. From Page 1 CARPENTER'. • • in the November Ge 111eral Election for the regular four-year term beginninti •ext January. Ml,. did not lilt '°'·W" 1pact1l ~lectlon callln& It "a wu!AI o{ tllJeyers' money." County elect.ion officials" said the 22,870 votes cast in this sJ*ial election represent&t only about sl1 percent of tht ·district's 359,801 registered votera. or the total, 202:,2§ are Republlcarus. Technically, Carpenter is not the flr&t state senator to live in Newport Beach. The late Johll Murdy resided 9n, Lido lsle when ~ retired from office in 1914, but he waa elected from Huntington Beach where he had lived most of his' life. Carpenter's addition to the Senate GOP majority ill expected to aid several of Gov. Reagan's legislative pro~ls which have been blocked by the lack or necessary vote s to overcome t h e Democrauc bloc. Tops among these Is the much debated tax reform blll which ls now scheduled for a 1eftate floor vote on Friday. Carpenter said Tuesday he had not committed himself on the contrqversial Badham bill which would delete the Pacltlc Coast Freeway segment from Beacb Boulevard In Huntington Beach to Corona del Mar. But the newly-elected senator .11aid he didn't think lt made much difference how he stood on the measure. "According to the best lnformsUon available to me, the freeway measure is assured of enou gh votes on the senate floor, if it gets there," Carpenter said. He said the key to the success or failure of lhe bitterly rought meallure depended entirely on ita fate In the Senate Transportation Commltl.ee late to- ·day. (Sources close to Carpenter, who ls the current state Republican Committee chairman said today that the Badharn bill will undoubtedly be killed in the senate co1nrniUee. It was scheduled fQr hearing at 2 p.m. today after tou r postponements.) Carpenter flew to Sacramento rarly this morning after a private V\ctory"par- ty. Before leaving he said he wa5 "gratified by the supporl of his workerJ in the 34th Dis trict and to those rew who turned out to vote in a rather unexcitinr election." The new senator said hJ did not e1pect to be sworn in to orrice until Thursday although county election officials wired results of the vote to the Secretary of State·s office Tuesday night. Carpenter is a former FBI agent, seml- profe~ional basketball player and a na- ti\•e or Minnesota . He lives in Newport Beach with his wife and rou r sons. He moved to Orange County 12 years ago and rapidly rose In GOP circles, reaching the top rung of the ladder with his 1968 election as state chairman of the cenLral committee. In that post he has carried forward tht wellltnown GOP Cal Plan, a program designed to gain conti'ol or the sta legl1lature. Four years ago with Carpenter headin the drive, Gov. Reaaan WIS elecletl and two year1 •to the Rapubijcana toolt' over sli m majorities in both the senate and assembly. Accident Kills Beach Cyclist A Huntington Beach motorcyclist .in· jured In a traffic accident and releaatd from floag Memorial Hoapital on Mon· day, died Tuesday morning of a fractured skull. the Oran1e County Coroner's o.Uice said today. Michael G. Craddock, 17, or 501 14lh St., was pronounced dead on arrival at Huntington Intercommunity H o s p i ~ al where he wa s taken by ambulance, 7 a.m. Tuesday. An autopsy showed .the youth died of head injuries. About 6 a.rn. Monday, Craddock wa~ thrown from his cycle on West Cout Highway at Balboa Boulevard. Newport Beach police said he wa~ traveling west and turning into the lert turn lane when his motorcycle collided with a car driven by Maureen S. Brtqitl, 17. of Anahein1 . ... , . • 1 • • • Bal added that the county should In· 1tead i..u1tn11 lead free 1asollne In Its neet of cara I( It really wanted to aid the elimination of air pollution . Ball appeared before the county Board of Supervlaor1 shortly after members or the 1roup hitd ln1pectcd a county vehlcte using 11 new smog control device developed by the Dupont COmP'ny. 11e Baker said later that Ball h.11d at· l<'mpt~ several times to get on the ~uperviAOrs' agenda, but was rtl\Jsed because he had no definltti 1ubJect to spnak on. CONVEN IENT TERMS BANKAMiRICARD MASTER CHARGE J .. C. fiumphrieJ J11wsfer& 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION The scron d dislrict supervisor gave as ;in example a ca ll from Ball to hl1 offlct rrccntly ln v.·hlch he &aid 8111 requested pcrm1ss1un to speak on "Lrecs", ) • 1121 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 541·140 I I 1 \ \ ' . . . ' -! 1 . 1'~w·por~ Beaeh .,~ EDITION VOL. 63, NO. '198, 7 SECTIONS, 112 PAGES . . ORANGE COUNTY, CAUl'ORNI>< TEN' CENT'S Fraud ·charges Tossed Out. a~.-Bay Trial E·nd·s By TOM BARLEY Ot Ill• O.Hy 1"1191 llfff 'J'wenty·four thick volumes of lestimony were piled high in the courtroom of Superior ·eourt Judge Claude M. Owens today as lhe veteran jurist began wbat is ~~ to be at least a three-month study of the Upper Bay Land swap trial. Judge Owens' fmal aclioo in the trial wu f9 deny Attorney Philip Berry's plea tor permi ssion to write charges or fraud against the Jrvine Company into the lawsuit. The j1,1dge ruled that no evidence had been offered during the trial which could possibly justify such charges against the compan'y, . All in-ed In the lawsuit agree today that a linal ruling ii years away. The issue is expected to ~veotually go to the Ba~side Drive Bulkhead California Supreme £ourt for a final rul- ing. Judge Owens ended courtroom pro- ceedings in lhe land "swap dispute late Tuesday as. he and, the five lawyers in- vol"!"i took their -boat trip around the Upper Bay and visited the San Joa. quin marsh lo view {tbe UC Irvine p<e"""e referred to dunng the :dz-week trial:'. DAILY PILOT Stefl ....... Workmen bijild concrete wall along 2000 block of Bayside 'Drive in Corona de! Mar. The wall stretch- es 357 feet along the roadway and is to range in Ute $M,OOO structure Is being paid foi''.by resl!1ents of Irvine Terrace. It is designed lo leep dirt from cliff from sliding into the roadway. Lawyers for both aides must now prepare final brief a for Judie Owens' ex- amination and then appear .. iti '.Illa courtroom later In the 'year rOr• final arguments on the issue. · That will be alter the Judi• bu •ludled more than 4,000 poges ol trtalt<a~. U Judge °"'"" decides ·that· the trading ol 4ilO -" Irvine CmlPllll' uplands for 1.17 ..,... ol COlmll' owned tldeianda ls lrifuf and e<R!Siltullonal he will aip ._ wrUe ,al mandate ordertiig county a'l'(ltor Vie Helm to ·~Y Upper Bat dredcmc li\lll 'a®milted to him by the Irvine Compaiiy. '" r. H'elm 'WQ aued lfy 1!ie .cOUn•Y and the b'.vliie CompPny In a planoed -plaint . ¥licb IOll&hfto eatabllah the lawault ... test cue and clear. tbe. way for a land lWll' tbat bad been •-Od by 0ranae . County supervlaors and lhe State Lands Commission. • The acUon took on an adversary aspect when a group of Newport Beach residents succesifully asked to be allowed to enter :o::;s~1 F~=~:::y~ that the land swap wu unlawful and violated the tidelands b'ust created when the state of Ca!Kornla deeded the aboreline to °'"""' County. Route S·howdown '· Newport Freeway Foes Outnumbered By ~. PETEii KREIG Of "" _,,"" ..... SACRAMENTO -Dele&ationo from Orange Coast communltlos were In the slate capllal toda' pollahlng preaen- tatiOM for the Ioar awaited -.te Transportation ;;;;;;r'"' hearini ... Assemblyman Bldham's bill to wipe out Pacillc COast Freeway in Newport Beach. Badly outnumbered, Newport Mayor Ed Hirth and Councilman Howard Rogers Utilit T y ~ were •preaent to plead lnr -al the bllMllal would kill Ille propooed roote ol the !Wae freeway through their ctty. Robert Curci, tt-tine Newport's newlY-lermed cw.en. ~tine Com- mll""I llainll Ibo freeway, WU aJao presenl and expected to addrea the com- mittee in support of the bill. Cit)' officials from Costa :Mesa, Hun- tington Beach ml Laguna Beach and ~sentatives of the counfy med in this Eug Landslide morning to argue against the meuure late today. The bill, spomored by Assemblymae Badham (!!-Newport Beach) has already gained approval fl'nm the lower• house an4 has been awaiting senate actioa foC' nearly a month. Four limes however, transportation committee· hea rings scheduled on the bill have been cancelled, twict at the last (See FREEWAY, Page I) Assessn;ient C~rpenter Fi~s~ Dowu Slightly . N .. · . , . ' height from four feet to 20 feet. City officials said ~-"~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- #="·i• .. h:i;....,:,: • · ewp· ort Sen.ator ... In lllt-7\ ~-bit ·llPl'I . " ' " . fOP . the ·}1reYkiua1 J'Ul', c.!Ounty "--'!IOl" • -· Gorona del Mar Chamber Refuses Merger Off er 1'be Corona del Mar Chamber of Com· mtrce wants to be the Chamber of Com- merce (or Corona de! Mar, not Newport Beach . That was the essence ol a reply from the Corona del Mar Chamber to its big- ger brother, the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce. ¥onday the directors of the Newport chafnber issued an invitation for the ~a del Mar Chamber lo merge with lflem. In a Jetter sent today to Charles Cur- rey, presidenl of the Newport groop, Corona del Mar Chamber President Carl Kegley politely, but firmly turned down lheir offe r. '1 Almost annually an invilat.ion from yoUr chamber to ours, inviting us to JTTW"ge, join or associate is received. We are flattered at your persistence and the warmness of , your welco me and the ieaerous offer of your participation. "The latest, ih the fonn of a leUer from your president. Mr. Charles Currey, hes been received and referred to ex- ecutive committee and the directors of the Chamber. Their viewpoint a11a1nst ac- ceptance of such an offer is the same as fo~erly con.sidered and acted upon. . ' • .Gru(e • C.alt Weather The sun will be out Thursday, 'but it'll be filtert'd lhrough a cloudy haze when it finally breaks out or t,he morning fog about noon. Tem- peratures will be in the high 10·1. INSWE TODA.Y Whatevv 11our taste in the-- ater. you can find ti along the Orange Coa!t this weekeM in a half dozen widelt1 varying pro- ductions. Se e Entertainment, Page 12. •lrlM f l••llflf :It C..lll9rfll1 • Ctrttf tft'lltr ~ ClliKltlllt U1 I Cl1t.sff}llll ,,_,. C-kl ti c.,,._... * °"" "9tktf t ''"""' ,_ ' ltMll'ltllllMM lf·U ,.lft_. 1•1t .......... ,, A1111 LanHn M "'-l!Mt ' ,,.... Ill Senk• 14 ,,,,.llftl) • MWltt 11-"ll MV11al TYMI 11 "-''" .. ' HW'I ,,, Ofl-CIV"" t Srtri9 """' lt '-" . 11-11 °'· ltt'KIWllll ... lfldl Martl9h 11:'.1t T~ II ,.......... 11•1) -. W-'• Ntwt U.U Wwlll l+twt .. , Alldmrl;HloiliaW-""""'llllldaY,' '" ' t1IOlio!I --...... ,..,..,.. nw ~.sst.aor .o:lakt -& ~ -n -•F ~ .~'*! ~-. ~-:.:C- dettimilled by 1he 11aie BOord fl(' 'Re~11cift -Demlia Carpmi.. Equalization ...,.,...,.. 1 drop-ti ,.,,.., becapie the Onl mu to be Ficker's Intrepid Ahead In Cup Selection Trials By ALMON l.OCKABEY DI th Dlllr Plltt Sl1ff NEW PORT, R.I. -Bill Ficker and Intrepid enjoyed ~ four-minute and 50 se- cond lead over George Hinman and Weatherly after three marks in the- second ra ce of the America's Cup Selec- tion Trials here today. (Early story Boating Page.) Intrepid led from the start, beating Weatherly to the first mark by 1:46 and increasing the lead to 1:57 at the reach- ing mark. On the same coll'se, Charlie Morgan 's Heritage appeared to be taking a d~ bing Crom Bob McCullough's Valiant with a deficit of two minutes and 11 serortds, rounding the third ivark. Heritage trailed Mesa Resident Files Suit Against Cities by only 57 seronds at the windward mart bul lost Ume on the reachlng and nmnin1 legs. Meanwhile, the Australian 12-meter Syndicate today d!'QPped a bombshell in the midst of the selection tria1s in the form of a written protest against the New York Yacht Club measurement of the Australian and French yachts. The protest was signed by Frank Packer of the Austra1ian America's CUp Cha llenge As.5ociation. The protest said, in effect, lhat the me..sureme111ts oC both the Australia• 12- meter Gretel II and the French yacht France were improperly taken and not in accordance with requirements of the International Yacht Racing-Union. "If the measurement of both boats are not properly take• before the com- meacement or the match (bel~n the Aussies and French) there ill a risk that the winning yacht may subsequently be found ineligible to race the America's Cup itsel(," said the protest. "It is with reluctance that we raise the point at this time, so near the com- ----inencernent of the match, but we believe A .;.. ooo• I It bas •--1.1ed . it can be adjusted ill a matter of bo\lra," ~·. awsu ~1 I . Jn the document continued. Or~e Cowlty-Superior Court against I• the-case of Gretd Ii, accordlOg to the c1Ues·of C.osta Mesa, ~ewport Beach, . designer Alin Payne.-the meuurer a Newport Beach detective and 20 un· (Robert Bloomenstock) did'1191,chod< the named ,Newport city employes oo allega. reqdrooeat of rule 11 whlch all-the tiooa of fahe amost. "-· 1 al the -~ , __ k The suit, lUed Aug. 10 with County en~.,. arraneemen Y~• GD UQ.: Clerk William E. St Jolm, asks $100,000 and below. eigh~tentl}I ., -,..,_. · . eleded to the ~ al state tenator fro111 Ailded lo_.,..,_ 'I« al Uio'~'" · . 1olher tuabi, .....,..1,,lo tlie'ooualY !M Aa--C&rpentu, 41, ICllred a utihty-·boGilthetotilcOmill' liOd-~ over Illa oppooenl asses:sed value to! t',t•,...,,rlO, n-.1-:... -.L. .. S la An land HJnsbawrattrl>uted the drop in publie1 .,.,,..... .u-.-&1111;',. a an a utlllly ...... mem. "to a dicreue In deftloper, Irvloe after lillng I« the poll eamlng• al publlc ulflidol clue Jo tlieillll had l chaiiiO fl liOart and threw hil SUJ)-, recession." port to Caipenter. The reduction In alillty .....,....,1 -te r·-·•· --lrvln contr...U llbarpl' wilb JU perceol in-"~ YO : -,.......r, w,o~; e, crea11e in aaessment fiSUrts for ge.nenl 2,127. .. property values in the county announced Carpenttrts electioa ls for the unex- by Hinshaw last month. plred term of fonner Slalo Sen. John G. County <wpervl!on Tueeday paued a. ~lb of Tustin, now th> U.S. resolulion )O!'Oleatlng the miDner In 1'h!<ll courelllllih •fJom q,. 3Sth District, •U<> utilily properties .... .;......i and called ceedlng die lite Jamea e. Ult -· for a legislative Investigation of the Carpenter faces, a DemocraUc op. Board of F.quali.z.aUon'1 practlce8 in the poneat, Dwight W. Mize of Garden Grove field. in the November Geiteral Election for the According to supervisors, utilities are regular four-year tenn begiMlng Hxt assessed on ''historical" (original) cash . January. Mize did not file for the special value of the property less depreciation. In election calling it "a waste of tupayers' coo.trast private proper1j of the. average money." homeowner of businessman is assessed County election officials said the 22,870 011 replacement value and has ez· votes cut in thia apeclal election perieoced a steady jncteaae ~ of r.epreserited only about 1ix percent of the value appreciation over the yean. district's 359,801 registered voteNI. Utility assessed v1luatiom for Orange or the total, 202,295 are Republicans. Coast ciUes and. the increase or decrease Technically, Carpenter is not the flat over last year are: Costa Mesa, state senator to live In Newport Beach. 18,288,670, dowo (.g percent; Fountain The late J bn Munl ided Lid l•I Valley, "MS,OIO, up 1.2 -t: .HUJl-o Y res on o e .,.., ...--when be retired from omCe'in 1964, but tington Beach, '48,989,m ; down 2•1 per.. he was elected from HunUngton Beach cent, but still the highest public utility where he had lived most of his life. valuation of any community In the coun-C&rpenlu'1 addition to the Senate GOP tyLagu. •-ch 13 520 -15 per majority Is expected to aid -.veral of na D'll:a , , 11V11, up . • ..;.,1 ,_ cent; Los Alamllol, 11~490, up U per-Gov. Reagan'• ie.;..auve propooa~ cent; Newport Btach, 17,329,MO, up U which bave been. blocked by-the lack or percent; San Clemente, $3,075,'120, up 1.1 neceaury ·\'otel to· ovucome th • percent; San Juan Capiatr-11,MT,790 -alla·bloc. up u percent: Seal Beocb, !1,lll,l50, Topi --18-the·mucll debated down J.4 percent; west mt n 1 t e·r, tu reform bill which 11· now ICbeduled itn,MO, up I peroent. (8" CARPENTER. Pqe I) \ punitive damages, $200:000 g en e r a I dalllfges and legal and medical expenses on behalf o( Cosla Mesa resideoi 'Law- rence Rothrock. Rothrock was arrested on a stolen cheCk charge Dec. 12 by Newport be't.ec- tive Robert Brockie, who is named as a codefendant in the case. Rothrock was later rileased when another mispect con- Power Failure Predicted fessed to the crime. Badham Will Opf!O_se All PUC Delay LegislatWn Rothrock'• sui• alleges he was amstecl Aaemblyman Robert E. -.n (R· "wllhout BDy warrantJor bis IIl<Sl-"".-·t;ewport lleoch)-llid loday be will opo process ol any court al law aod without au bills---.... ,_, .,,.. any right, justificadon or cause." poee ~ Brockie aald Rothrock was arrested struction of pewer plants or would make atter a search of hill car turned up some any changes in the aulbority ol the Publlc or the stolen checks. He said it was later Utllltld Commission CPUC). established Ulat Rothrock had nothing to .. l just want to be sure that fn the dn with pl aclng the checks in the vehicle. ruture we have lights in the house when 1· Rothrock rurther claims the -arrest push lhe switch,'' he said. resulted in damage to his physical and Badbam made his remarks In response mental heaJth as weJl as his reputation. to bills pending· ~ore, the, ~lat.ure The city of Colta Mesa is named in the' which he said "coulCi delay completjcrt suit becaUM Rothnd. alleges the detec. (of Power -plant&) and c:ause seriol.11 Uve w111 "acting as an agena. and o(fi&f' J)Owtl' shortagea hr Caillornia. ot: the City of Costa Mesa." NeWport "I realiZe that environmental pro- Beach and the wmamed city employes tection l.s a neceaary,elfort andurt.alnly Are listed as delendanta becaust of the should be protected and comidered, bllt I part they played tn bookln& Rothrock. believe at iOme .poinl we mual protect the health lllCI aafely;,, the peot>le al thla laws lllCI prooedarea give 1\111 opportunity state who de,.nd -electr1cal -0: "" lbe -lidlnota to be for tlielr dilly liva,,; tie ii~ -Jiir,f,• Badbam cleclmd. ' He predlctecl lbal witboul .._...al Tiie ~ c1W the problems' power pl-and -of -ladutiea, the state will atarl bavlng of ·~ an a~uate •-ouppljo !or JlOW<t' aliortaga In four to ....., yon. the jllaritl,_ ~ 'bulcally1be water to · "Bul'the mllllant 'pn1WV1llonllts hlnl operate the planla -.ry to our Ilia• they Ile IOinC to atop antnictlon llltUre -al eledflclty . must come al --p1ali1a or they'll aue and lie the lrom. the ocean. U lllCI when they a<e utility companies up In c:ourt. bull! on our coul, -plant. are ""'' · •i dciil~ \lllnk leglalatlon -Id· give 1truclad in -• way lba,t will han !hfst em'irofinMlllalilta the ·Ullbrldled minimum blipoc\ 011 llit ••b~. abltlty' tcr lilltt lbe ma)oril' ol people by "l'floplO are -1ly . r,>ltbell< alM>ul ~ •lloldln& "" neeiled -problenw· -tl)eJ don't ~ -lacDltleL tllem. And -K'1ju11-1n0lure la "SUrtly Jt '"1'ild.be-.... liq If~ riMI lo tho oceutcic and ........ 'wllen law did nol .alft adeqUale·pio4octloo· and -probllna come lioino la ,...l al opportanity tir'IWI bearlnp, 1ful ~ dleif ~.":lit aaldl , " • • ' I DAii. Y rll.OT ltlft ...... ·HEADED FOR SACRAMEN:rO New Senator Carpenter New Boys Club . On Balboa Site Not on Ballot The proposition oo the propooed ...,. atruction of a Boys' CUb·on city property near the Balboa Pier wUl not go on the 1enera1 election ballot Nov, 3. Meeting in special sesslon .Satunlay. the Newport Btach Clly Council refused to approve the retolulion calling for tbl question to be included on the lballot. In deterring action, the c:ou'ncit recom- mended that the propooal'be retW'!led to the Park, Beach and Recreation Com- mission for additklnal study. Couodlmao Howard Rogers, ..- moUon sent II back to the PBR com- ihlssion noled that lbere likely will bavo fifti< a ij)e<fal-eledlOR anyway later OiJI fall on the move to rescind the city'• agnemenl on the adopted Pacific €oast Jl'rtieW'1 route. ' He iald the Boys' Club meosuro could be put before the voter• at the Nme time. ln.ordedor. tho.question to be lncllided. on the Nov. 3 ballot, ttle resoluUon ,... queatlo1 It would have had to Ii. In the .,bands al the Ooonly Board al Supervilorl byWedneaday. That WU the ~ QI Saturday's tpe<!ial ~~ ........... ~ and otb* councilJn<m too many 1oooe v:= .:J location to rush approval al tllo plan. • % DAILY PILOT N W°""'ftt, ~t ~t, 1970 • • I ... 1 Coupcil t.o Look ltttd Jwre:·AJWi Debris • ' • • I' , i,• ,. !-ir ' ~ ; Nt"1'(1rl Harbc< ne<ds lo be bol1' plan-CllamlltP'. W Ill•,..., . O.U,.• la P,ljlplri• ... _. ... ~= _.. . r,-• . aloi;o' Jill lndl~-· -~-ned out and dt&tled up. according to the Hant rwL • ""'' Wttfiln~ 'h ~ .. ah:ltbe l" Chamber oI Commerct, and NewPorl He introduced a leu.tr. to J>e •t to . ~.;Ne';fport 11 Tomorrow" i.S 1 co:'e.oera.1· Beach ?tfayor Ed Hirth Monday promised Mayor Hirth and the NewPort Cltj <'Aun-.. uidebook of recommendl~ for the the city would look Into both problems. cif by Larry A. A1.lllet, chairman of the aevelopriient of Newport BeaCb prepartd Discussion or a recommendation by a 'Ndelands and Be8che.s Committee of the by a citizens' c:ommlttee. Newport <7limber committee on the need chamber. · In the letter to Mayor Hirth. M.lller for a master plan for the shore area dur· The ltUer, 1ppn>ved. u.nan!moualy by I points, out lhat hla ~µtie hu talked ing the Co! C board ol,dlredors metUng lht board, '""8<SI! tht c:Uy "ag. with clty o[fldals a~ qi nlalld pr<> ,,~evolved into. a number cl complaints greslivel)' pursue a o:im?reh«ialye jecta that are DOW under Wly •• .,.., a boot the cond.ltion or tbe watci-. itself. sbofeline 'plan."· He also cites the fact that the city ls !._l Several board members cited the p~ It recommends "something along the committed to a maattr. plan, lncludlng a ._...,, blem of litter and debris in the Harbor concepts of the Upper Newport Beach shoreline element by the councU'a 1ctlon 1' Area and Qaz:nber President Charles R. Planning Project that would carry easen-oo recommendatiom ot. i 1 New Po r 1 eurtty noted that severaJ areas seem to . tially the same priority ol i ltort." Tomorro•." . . .. " serve as "cat.chbasins" collectin& con-The city is curttntly conceotraUnc on 'Ibe committee, ht aaid, "IS 1llo &Wirt Jli•· siderable Ooating junk. Jilannittg fot the UPJJer Ba,y Uta. of the · cumnt1 tbnlst <d lteialaUon "'' He said he did not think it wou1d be an · 'Ibe committee offered Hs help w:ith the demand.llfC ·aborelinl plam and tbe. im· ,.. cspeclall)' difficult task to clean it up. new project and sat4, "'We reaij.le \hat petu.s that Jt.cis}ative propoula are len- Mayor Hirth noted that there is a qaes· we are valunlterin& for IOmt: ubau.slive ding towuds cdmprt.herllive Shoreline "~( Oon of responsibility for cleaning opera· and delliled work to produce a plan that plans. . . •• tions involved. but sa id that is no e'lcuse wooJd implemenl the conCepta: e1tabliah· "Putuog all these things together. _ for the harbor not being clean. ed by 0 Ne1tp0rt Tomorrow:' hoftver. Miller slid. "it.~ occun:ed to us that ,...,, The recommendation for the master such a plan, once approved by the City nOw is the time . to get aoine on a c::orn- •¥.:?I" plan came on the heel! of a report by Council , would be of immeasurable help prehenal~t shoreline plaanlnl ii.tudy. . ' .. :~Michigan Ju ·ry Convicts ~(11; • :-7Suspect in Coed Death. ANN ARBOR, Mkh. (AP) -John ,.. Nonnan Collins was convicted of first- p;.,degree murder today in the strangling or 11 coed after the juron deterrning his fate ""'1.deliberated 27 ih: hours. ....,., CoUins. %3, heard tht unimous verdict ·li'•with lltUe vimble shollf of emotion. His •:":mother, Loretta Collins of Center Line, ~fich.. stared straight forward as the ,.& verdict was announcM by the fury i!'.)C fpreman, but a young girl who ac· ·~~"companJed the family began sobbing ·;;.; quJetly. After the verdict was announced. ::~:Fluor Rurnored :'tllf 'r!;.• .;Buyer uf Niguel ·~"· ,: Rockwell Facility . " . w" .~ The Fluor Corporation 0( Loa ~eles. .,_.., Hooston, Taiwan and LOndon is the neWeat rumored buyer of the ti' million ,.1 ;North AmertClfl Rockwell Autonetics ~ .'r plaDt, under construction In Laguna -c. •;Niguel. ht\... A spokesman lor Fluor, major in- ~'i'·tema\iooal firm providina .~c .v;..·and construction servlcea for the mining i 10·,and petroleum iftdustries, uld Monday, 'b\t' ''We are ena•ied in Rfiou1 talks w:ltb the . ,z,-AtlloneUcs people. 1be Laguna HJguel pl•ol 11 one o( 1mra1 ~II lo<1Uon1 "' ,/we are considtrf!lJ ~ •ccpn:lmodll.e the itt future Jieeda: ot our "rso~." . '"" !Je said Fluor, whlcli """'tmploy1 l,ilOI · \ people in Its Loi Ansdes heJdquartera on AtlantJc Boulevard. expects to double its ~ .. work force In the next 10 years. ~!t' "It's hard to tell where the i.lb: (with AutoneUcs) will Jud," he adde~ :;.,-The giant Laguna Niguel facility, designed to house 7 ,500 Autonttica l'mployes, waa placed on the market Jut February when North Americ1n was hit by cutbacks in the space program. Since then there have bttn repeated rumors of IU aale, with General Electric Company among the firms reported viewing the plant with interest. The Fluor spokesman said the plant would ha ve much more space than the 1 inn now requ ires, but added, "I'm sure we could eventually grow Into a facility of that size." :~··. He indicated that enlargement of the ·' 'Southern California operation would not 1a''1nvolve moving personnel from other " Fluor locations. The corporation has of- " 'rfices in Houston, Tu., London, Holland b '..1nd Taiwan, an engineering construction • ~ub&ldlary in Palo Alto and smaller of. ~· lk:t:s in many other locations. ,,_ (If,, 1rt .. " 1n1r .,., •• I .. ,. ,,1' 1o • br.:, DAILY PILOT # O•ll\fGI: CO<lSl ~l\.llHING ('0¥•,lN'I' lt•il•d N. w •• 4 ... , ......... -~- J.,~ It C•rl•v r~ ..... r ••• a l li•111•1 A. M•t,hl11• ..... _,~,." .. Collina was relflanded to tM. Wash,tiena...- County Jail pending seruenclng which Circuit Judge John Conlin set for 8:30 a.m. Aug. 2.8. His family remalned ill the locked courtroom after other spectators Jefl. Collins' elder sister, Mrs. Ga.ii Dale. broke into WlCOlllrolled sobs several rnintites after the verdict was announced. And her mother moved to comfort her in the courtroom. A Roman Catbollc priest, who ac- companied .the family to most. of the court sessions since testimony began July 20, was there today to comfort the v.·omen. Shortly arterwar<b, Mrs. Collins also began sobbing. Under Mjchigan law, comilction al first· degree murder requiJ;:et a pnsentencing investigation. But ~eil Fink, defense at· torney, told the court after the verdlci was aruxnmced his )dJflt w.ll1 pot •Id anyone in the preserllencln& lnvettlgatfon and wfll provide notblna: except his name and age. A first-degree murdtr convlctkln car- ries a mandatory penally of life in prilon in Mjchi&an and there is an automatic tight to app<al. Washtenaw Cwnty Sheriff Dou&las Harvey -was virtually the only trial participant willing to comment Im- mediately. He a.aid, "I'm. yery pleaaed. The proa:ecutor dJd a flneJob."' C.OIJins waa cOnvicted Jn the 1laylng of Karen Sue Reineman, an J .. year-old Eaatem Michigan Ulilveralty freshman from Grand Rapida. The girl . w .. last &een alive ·July 23, 1869, and her naked and battered body was found in a wooded gully three day! later. An elder sister of the dead girl was in the courtroom today to hear tie verdict. Barbara Betntman sat in • frool row with State Police S&L D1vid Leik and his wife, Mrs. Leik is the sister of Collins' mother and it wu in thcir home the state said the Beineman girl was murdered by C.Ollins. Miss Belnemao's mother was al her Grand Rapids home when told of the vt.rdlct. She broke down ln'-tears and declined to comment. Collins is also under Ind ictment in the murder of a yoWlg girl near Salinas in June of 1969. Mss Belneman was the seventh young woman slain in the Ann Arbor area dur· ing a two-year period. There have been no charges flied In any or the other si'I deaths. Miss Beineman's battered body was found July 26, 1969, by a couple living on the outskiN of Ann Arbor who were walking from their home in a heavily wooded area to 1 mail box on a main road . An intensive search had been conducted for the Belneman gi rl after she failed to return from a trip to a wig shop . The owner or the wig shop testified In court that 1he !IOld a small wig to the girl and then watched as P.11sa Belneman rode away on a motorcycle with a young man. The woman identified the motorcycle dri ver in court aa Collins. ' t'rom. Pqe l , CARPENTER • • • for 1 senate floor vote on Friday. Carpenter said Tuesday he had not committed him.sell on the controversial Badham bill which would delete the Pacific Coist Freew~ ae:ament from Beach Boulevard in Hwitington Beach to Corona del Mar. But the newly~lected senator s8id hf didn't think it made mud! cHfference how he stood on the measure . "According to the best information available :to me, the freeway meuure ii a&sured Of enough votes on the tenat.e floor, if it gets there," carpenter aaid. He said the key to the 1uccess ar failure o( the bitterly fought mwurt depended entirety on its fate in the Senate Transpt>rt.ation Committte: late to- day. · ' (Sources close to Carpenter, who is the current state . Rept1blican Committee chairman said today ·that the Badh1m blll will undoubtedly be killed In the senate committee. It wu scheduled for bearint at 2 p.m. todl.y 1fter f o u r postponements.) Carpenter flew to Sacrameoto early thb llllmiill allu .•,PM••!< victory par· •re Btf.. luvq lit laid ht "" "gratified by the .Upport Of his worktra in the 34th District and to those few who turned out to vote in 1 rather UDtJcitinc electJm." · 1bt new atnator said 11.> did oot expect to be awot'ft in to QfUce unW 'l'hurlday ilthougb county election offidall wired results·, ot &be vote to the Secretary of St01<'1 olfice Tuto4ay niJhl Carpenter i.1 J fprmer P'BI •1ent, semi· profen~al bukltbJQ player and 1 na- tive of ~. He lfvea Jn Newport Beach.lf.Uh hl1 wlfe 'Ind four tons. He tnoved ·to Oraqe County ll yeara ago 1od rapidly roae ln GOP circles. reaching the top rung of the lldder with hia 1968 election as atate chairman or the central committee. In that post he has carried forward the wellk:nowo GOP Cal Plan, a program designed to 18io control of the atilt leeislature. Newport Boat Burglar Sougl1t Newport Beach police today are looking for a strong-backed bur1lar who 1\lelday made off with about 1,000 pounds worth of bronze propeller shafts from a Newport boat yard. Blackie Ga~;u-ian, owner and operator of Blackie'a Boat Yard, M.14 NewpOrt Boulevard told police 20 propeller lhaft!I r""ging in length from four to 12 feet ind valued at $500 were mis.sing. Investigators speculate the thieves cll mbed a six-foot cbaln link fence. took the shafti from an outlide stora1e area, pushed them out through the fence and carried them off by unknown means. Ex-Chaplain Dies WASHINGTON (UP!) -Tht Rtv. Dr. Frederick Brown Harris, 17, former chapl1in of the U.S. Senate, died of a heart aUlck 1t bil Northwest Wuhin&too home Tuesday. ,.....,., .... Offk• ~r;; !Ml~ .. ~ 111~i F-310 · Under Fire • ' . •J ~·l >r ~d 3 I(('; l 't'' ·mt lhll I.Cr t>al .. , ""' 2211 w ••• '•'h• •• ,,, .... ,, M•lll11t "44•••" P.O. l•• 1171, tf66J O,..._ Offtcet C.~lt MIM ~ S» Wllll l•'i' Sff .. I l••-•••Cl'I; '" ,.,.,., ... ~-t'.,1'11""91M ._, 11171 .. Kii ...... .... •111 Clt"'lrllel JOI .. ...,., 1!:1 CWIW ... . Ball Protests Standard Oil Ads HunUngtou 8 e a ch ' a aell·appolnted "Ralph Nader" today attacked what he called lht "prostitution o( the good name o( Or1n1e County by an oll company to promote their product." David Ball, who calls himself lhe leader ol the "Pcoplt'1 Lobb)'" .. Id the use of .advertisement by Standard Oii Company boutlni ol I '"""'811uJ lrlll of the oompant• F ..!10 1uollne •ddlUvt In COIJDly veblcr.. lhould be prohlhlled. Ball added that Lhe county ahoUld In· stead be usinc lead fret 1uo1Jne In Its fleet of Cltl i( It really waoted to 11d th' ellmlnatlOft of alr pollution. Ball appeared before lhe county Board ot SUperv1.Jor1 shortly 1fttr member1 oC the &roup had i01pected • county vl'hicle u&lnt1 11 new 1mo1 control device developed by the Dupont Company. He prote.1ted lhal today was the fllrs1 llme he had been allowed to addresa the board and said he had tried on several oo- cuk>ns to cet Ol'I t.ht agenda but waa refused. AcLing board chairman David L.. Baker t11>lalntd to Ball Illa! the counly hod DOI -&andard 011'1 F..!10 product. He said the OOWl!y wu llllDI SW>dard'1 cuou°' because that firm -wa thl iowta bidder for the county's bualbell. Baker said later tha' Ball had at- tempted several Umes lO 1et on the superviJOn' agenda, but wu rttused because ht had no definite subject to speak on . 'Ille second dis trict aupervlaor 1ave 1s an e1ample I call from Ball to his ofrlce rtetntly In "111eh be .. 1d Ball requested pe rmission to speak on "trees", CIAI\. Y PILOT Still ,"'1'1' Greeter Gets Award Eiler Larsen (right) Laguna's greeter in residence, accepts plaque from Claude Hanna ~f Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club. La~· sen was awarded plaque Tuesday in recognition of his support of this year's Silver Anniversary Fish Fry in Costa Mesa. Annual comipun· ily event raises Iunds Ior charities. OCC's Oean Air Race Car Sidelined by Gear T1·ouhle Orange Coast College's entry In the coast-to-coast Clean Air Race has devt- Joped gear box trouble, according to its owner, Dave Armendariz. The 1987 Volkswagen squareback, pow- ered by a 10-horsepower electric motor Ced by a bank o( five batteries, was the backup car (or DCC. The college's orig. inal entry, an electro-turbine powered SUbaru, developed extensive trouble last v.·eek and had to be withdr8wn trom the. ra ce. The Clean Air Race, sponsored joinUy by'Mu1achusetta lnstltute of Technology aqi:I California Institu te of Teclmology. 1>tifn1 Monday on the M1T campus with 52 can acheduled to start. However, the OCX:: car may nol make the race, Armendariz: sai~. He 1aid the electric engine is auch that it must be kept at a constant RPM when II is run· nlng. He said the constant bigh speed poses a problem for the transmission when the gears are shifted. Visitor Hurt In Bike Wreck A Hacienda Height! man who Is vaca. Uonlng in Newport Beach is in good con- dition today at Hoag Memorial Hoapital after he was injured in a traffic accident Tuesday afternoo'n. Raymon Marotta. 44, was bicycling southbound on Newport Boulevard ne8r 30th Strttt when he collided with a car driven by Erwin Weinhart. 17, of Inglewood. Police said Weinhart was making a left turn out of a private driveway when the accident occurred. The Inglewood teenager and hi s passenger, Kathy Ward, 17. received no injuries in the crash. Armendariz, who owns Armenco En· gineering in Paramount, said he has been in touch with the race officials and was told that if he could not make the beginning of the race, he could join it in progress. The car is to be driven by Jim E1chen and Glenn Hanson. bo!h sophomores a1 acc. The seven·ray race wlll end when ~ finishing vehicle• paS!lt over a ceremonial finish line al Cal Tech in Pasadena. The present list of entries for the ract' Includes 36 intemal combustion engine ve h.icles, using fUels ranging from gaso- line to alcohol : five b11ottery-dri ven cars: six hybrid electrica l sys tem caa;: four steam.powered cars and one gas turbine •!'•· Commissioners To Look Into Midnight Curfetv A public hearing on the curfew on beaches and bays has been !ICheduled for Oct. 6 by the Newport Beach P'ark, Beach and Recre ation Commission. The dale was set Tuesday night after the city council last week turned down a PBR Commission recorrunendatlon tha t a uni form beach closing time of midnight be adopted. Council members indicated they agreed that a unifo rm time might be a good idea, but that the late hour of midnight v.'a!I not. Currootly closing limes v a r y along beaches, mos tly between 10 and 11 p.m. In returning the preposal to the com· mission, councilmen suggested a meet- ing with homeowners to produce a mutu- ally agreeable closing hour. Fro1n Page l FREEWAY •.• minule when key committee members v.·ere not able to auend. Assemblyman Badban1 this mornin1 uld that the two men, senatora nomas CUrelt (D-Sln Fth>ando) .,wt MUlon Marks (R·San Franc!Jco) would not be pre.sent today but that the he.arlngs would have lo go on \\'ithout them. 'Da~arn decliqeQ to predict how the powerfyl transportation committee would vote on the measure. "Our chances are SO·SCJ ," is all he W°'1Jd say. He indicated that with C~rre!I and Marks present commlUee approval would ha ve been assured. The single most important figure in ihc future of the hill probably is committee chairma.n Senator Randolph Collier ( (). Yreka ) who reportedly supports the bill and possibly cou ld sway at least a bare majority of the !~member panel to his side . . Committee approval ls virtually tan- tamount to Senate approval . C.Ommittee rejection means the full Senate will never see the bill. Forct>S opposing the measure were ex· pqcted to present. detailed arguments at the heating. Al Koch. county road commissioner and Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach) were expected to represent the opposiUon in addreuing the bearing . Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson was expected to be present but had not ar- rfVed early tJtls, morning. . Coata Mes' City Attorney Roy June hesitated to predict the outcome, but said be was optimistic that the bill would be rejected. Costa Mesa officials are opposed on the grounds that there are already enough freeways completed and planned through that city. Huntington Beach is using a &lightly different argument, stressing th • t although it didn't like the adopted. route. it has adjusted long range planning around it. The Badham bill WO\fld actually eliminate the proposed freeWaj through a portion of Huntington Beach, eaaterly from Beach Boulevard to the far souther~ ly end of Ni:,wport Beach a~ \he C.Orona del Mar bowtdary. Huntington Beach City Engineer James Wheeler, Laguna Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg and City Manager James D. Wheaton were also ezpccted to attend the hearing although it was not know n v•hether they woul!;I speak. Newport 's Mayor Hirth and Coun- cilman Rogers both maintained their op- timism on prospecls for committee a1>- proval. Rogers said. "We are still hopeful the Senate Transportation Committee will hea r the voices of the people of Newpor' Beach and act favorably on the bill." Supporters pointed out that the senalo has approved the deletion of two secllorw of the freeway, one part through the c of Venice and the other through Bevc Hills. Other forces known to be in opposili to the measure include the Irvine Co puny and prominent Nc\\'porl land rwne Hancock "Bill" Banning III. Kurt Redwine. a prominent lobbbyi st here, is also know to have been wor kinJ; to defeat the measure. CHART Slates Meet Thursday The Citizens Harbor Area Resaarch 'T'eam tCHAR'T J will hold its Augus~ mee ting Thursday at the Costa Mt!3a Golf and Country Club. The 7:30 a.m. meeting will bt highlighted by an assessment of the cultural programs in Newport Beach and Costa ~t e~a by a group of experts in various field!'>. 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TblJ active puab lo Uicorporate was brought on In part by the Irvine Ccmpany announcing its plan for a 480 000 l>Ollulat!on Irvine city and asldn~ !or 1J1<0rpora- Uon and accelerated by proposals of Azimuth Equities and' Collins Radio lo annex lo Newport Beach properties eatmarked for the oew city. Azimuth hill withdrawn tta annexation request. but Collins is still in the game. Meanwhile. Newport Beach has applied the biggest spur to Irvine incorporation activitie1 by announcinR tts de61re to annex au the way out to the San Diego Freeway. As a result of these annexation maneuvers. incor· poration of the City of Irvine may come a whole lot aooner th.an anyone foresaw. GWC's Rock y Road People who llve in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. You know that. Well they shouldn't even think of throwing stones. Trustee; of the Orange Coa.st Junior College District know that. The students, ·faculty and administrators of the district's Golden West campus in Huntington Beach have been living in a sort of glass house for some time Clear Warning- Know the Driver To the EdltDr: Each day you see hit.chhilr.ers. -mw;;t ol them seem to be luci.y. One must agree: however. you take a chance when you enter the car of 1 stranger. It should not be -the laws are not strid. enought. Your paper ga\'e a gooo accounting of the tragic ride of a young woman who v.•as raped and shot. Yea, one feels sorry t.o see anoc.ber so needlessly hurt, however. JO girl enters • man's car 1t the midnight hour without ... taking a chanct. N• girl coneentl to '·pose" tor pictures at that hour . She gambled and lost. · • Although it was a terrible ordeal ror the girl It aeems to me that PJ1\c\e should have been a warning -don't let this happen lo you; don't get into a car "'hell you do not know the drivtr. The arUcle was slanted to elieit sym· palhy I°' tbe g)rl -It llhouJd have been used as a warning. The gjtl does not need 5ympathy -she needs pra yers. She, and all others who get into a stranae car. need good, old f11shioned sense. L. T. KELLER AK E••ll T ou To the Editor · Jtey wat.so matla you dumbheads over there al Golden West College! For almost 4 yean sitting there is 2'11 plate glass ";odow1 and under all the windo"".'s is boulder rocL just like baseballs and 1n 4 yrs only a couple lousy windows you ~et broken. ln our school we only got 1 win- dow in the front and our kids break it e\'ery week. . You got Sofie kind of commie p1nlo un· American school over there you don 't rf'nd the papers and Life Mag and you a.in 'l throwing rocks thru U\e windows and now 1ne a taxpayer gotta pay to have the rocks hauled av.·ay becRuse it s pretty t>asy to aee something pretty funny _is going on over there an' we gotta get rid of them rocks because you so-ealled students don 't know how to act like-real Emericans at real schools \Ike Columbia and Berkeley and San Fernando S111ll'. 'Mail.box Lttter1 Jrom rtadcr1 ar1 totlcomt. 1Vurnial111 writtYI 1houEd convt11 thtiY Tltessagts in 300 tDOf"dl Of' ttn. The right to condenae tetUr1 to fit rpace oY eliminate libtl i'..s f"flff'Vtd. AU let- ters must inelttdt dgnatur1 and mail- i1,iJ addrtSS, ltul fU'.lmU maJt be witJI.. held on Yeque.;i If IUfficUnt reaaon is apparent. Poetru will not be pub- lished. company is just an electrial power com· pany. My inilaUon witb SCE and Jack K. HOiton (Edison pretident) Is due to the fact that they are going to build two air polluting electrical generating plants in my area while using the most filmsy of logic to justify their actions. They tell us that if those two air polluUng plants are not built that we will have 1 power 6hortage from aboot the beg.ining of 1972 until their new atomic plants starts p~ ducing power sometime during 197S. ln other v.·oras they want to build those tv.·o air polluting plants t.o prevent a power shortage for about three years. Would you believe th.at those two plan1' will be producing electrical pov.1er well past the year 2001 and while they are pro- ducing electrical power they wlll be polluting the air we breathe. Surely even a moron will agree that any altemative method for bridging the three year po\1,_,r shortali!e gap ls better than building those two air polluting elec- trical generating plants. liARRY B. Mcoo:rAtO JR. Oo11or Roll Ll1tl1111 To the Editor: now. Rock gardens. tui1 of bauball·llke decoraUve stones, have lain temptingly below the many plate'gla" windows on tbe campus. Bu.t no one has ever done any· thing ab0ut1it, like pitch a slone through a window. Police and insurance agents have thought about it, however. The trustees recenUy bowed to pressure and ordered the stones removed. It's one of the least expected consequences of cam- pus disorder. The rock gardens were an integral part or the architectural design and natural drainage. Who could have foreseen this problem when the campus pl8Jls were drawn in the mid-sixties! The onJy cheering note is that Golden West students did nothing to warrant removal of the stones. It's a case of rocks lhrovt'n at Berkeley and San Francisco State being felt in Huntington Beach. Armchair Adve n t tu·es Harbor Area travel-lovers are being offered their 12th year or armchair globe-girdling adventures via the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club. The club's top-flight travel and adventure series once more offers a series of six films narrated by tal- ented and ex pert personalities. They range from under~ the-sea explorations to a look at Russia in the 1970s. The series -priced at a reasonable $10 for adults and $5 (or students -will be staged in the Orange Coast College alldit6riu'fn in Costa Mesa beiinnlng Sept. 11 and running through February. Tickets can be ordered through the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce or by calling 646--2163. The series has proved outstanding in previous years and has "'on plaudits from those who attended. You might like to join them this year. N c Dear Gloomy G u~: Mexico Greets The Daily Pilot says it costs $100,~ 000 for the special election that puts Dennis Carpenter in the state senate for three months. \Vhy don't we just forget the November election for the same seat -it'll save even more than $100,000! -R. M. M. Work Within: Do es It Work? I could 1ympathize with those middle Americans who deplore demonstrations, riol.I and violence If I believed they were sincere in calling (or "peaceful peUtlonlng" of the gov· ernment. But are they? On a Saturday morn- ing a few weeks ago, one , of my daughters and her school friends deployed themsel ves on corners of various "nice" neighborhood• with petiliona urging support of the "Cambo- dian Fund Cut -Off Bill," as ll is informally called. THEY WERE DRWEO n e 1 t I y , behaved politely, and told passcrs·by that the petitions, wben filled with signatures, were to be sent to our .. Sydn ey j. llarris senators and congressmen In Washington. Nobody was argued with, and nobody was pressed to sign. Richard Nixon ''Poor Mexico," once lamented Porfir io Diaz. long-time dictator of the country. "So far rrom God and so close to the United Slates." F'or more than a century, proximity to the Colossus of the North has been a determining rorce in Mexico 's development. But In recent years, the o{Len embittered rela tions betwee n the two nelehbor• ha ve steadily improved. Tht lgtnda for talk! belween Preaident Nixon and Presldent Gustavo Diaz Ordaz durin1 a 24·hour visit t.o the Pacific resort al Puerto Vallarta tomorrow renects this historically wary rela- tionship. Topping the list is Mexican ir· rltation at American attempts lo stem the now of narcotics from south of the border. The salinity of the Cok>rado River and problems resulting from the meanderings of the Rio Grande also will be al isaue. NIXON MAY express the concern or organized labor in the Uni~d States about factories set up along the border to process par!s for electronic equipment and clothing later sold in this country as American-made. "These are not the kind of issues that make headlines," a State Department official told E d i t o r i a I Research Reports. "But that's a good liign.'' To Mexicans, Imperialism has had 1 "Made in the U.S.A." label on it. An· nexation of the American Southwest resulted. from the Mexican·American soldiers repeatedly crossing: the border in pursuit of bandits and band• of Apache Indians. DURING THE the ~1exican Revolution, President Wiison in 191-4 ordered Marines landed at Veracruz. The incident mir· rorcd ' Wilson 's qui101ic determination tG "leach the Lalin Americans to elect good EditQria l Retearch men." Two years later, an expedition led by Gen . John J . Pershing pushed deep in· to Merica in aearch of Pancho Villa, who had raided the U.S. border town of Columbul, N.M., killing 11 Americans. American ambanadors in Mexico ofti!n acted like pro-consuls. Henry La~e Wilson, envoy at lite time of the outbreak of the RevoluUon, openly supported Diaz. American Investments In the country amounted to $1 billion in 1911, greater than the 1take of Mexican capital. They ROW exceed Sl.5 billion , but Aiexican law requires a minimum or 51 percent in local capital in new industria l ventures. /'· THE NIXON VISIT comes at a lime of unparalleled prosperity and development for Mexico. Two years ago Mexico was the successful host for the Olympics . She exhibited an economy growing at a rate of 7 percent annually and a capital filled with new bu1ldb1gs. Presidential elections were held on July 5 in which Luis F..cheverria Alvartz, -47. candidate of tbe ruling lnaUtutional Revolulionary Par- ty, won 17 percent of the votes. The balloting conllnued the line of peaceful elections that began in the 1930's. But Mexico Is also a classic example of the mixture o( poverty and progreu that btsets Latin America. Afexican youth ls restive and demands reforms In the fact of represaion. And 1grlculture la lagging while the government emphaalzes forced- draft industrialization. A11 U11-co1npetiti ve Spirit G I== ·'----- Power of TV As a Weapon Draws Fire In the eyes of many lawmakers, ll is clear that tele\'islon stations don't do much o( anything right In their newa and public service programming. Some members of the lloUSt and Senate think the President gets too much exposure by reason of his high officf'. Others think individual networks ha\'e All eu-Gol<l8mith goofed in allowing free p a r l I s a n responses to presidential telecasts. Sen. J. William Fulbright <D-Arlr.. l, chairman of tbt Senate Foreign Relatlons Committee, has argued that t h e President's access to TV ill a threat to the constitutionally mandated balance o{ powers in the U.S. government. Fulbright wants Congress to legislate itself a piece nf the acUon. "COMMUf\'lCATION is J)O\\'er," says Fulbright, wha has (>C!Cred at commiuee witnesses through f\ip·up dark glasses on many TV screens, •·and exclusive access to it is a dangerous, unchecked power." All this ts currently Wider study by the communications subcommiltee of the Senate which is headed by Sen. John O. P~tore (0-R.I. ). Fulbright has also made TV acti..,ities a part of his long vendetta with the military. He has quietly proposed an amendment to the still in-commiUee defense money bill which alms at Pen· tagon film crew1 operating in Vietnam. Fulbright has told the Senate Ap- propriations committee thnt individuals involved In that Vietnam coverage have described some of the supposedly authen- tic news events as "faked or staged." "The American people deserve better than to have staged government pro- paganda films passed off as straight 'TV news," the Senator de<!larcd in a state- ment supplied to the committee. MRS. HOWARD JOHNSON Not Ille: Goldmalf!r Earl1 in the summer an article was published which glowinaly !old of the huge percentage of students on the SC· cood semester honor roll at Corona del '-1ar High School. 'Mle article ttated !hat nearly 50 percent or the student body was included and compared the amount to a mere 15 percent liO irluded at Newport ltarbor High School for lhe same semester. Knowing that both the student• and teacher are of relatively the same calibre at both schools, I wondered whal could ha\'e caused such a vast dUferenct. TI1e July 21st artlcte -eiplained the mat- ter. She and her schoolmates ret urned hon1e dejeeted after a few hours. "You know," she said, "most of the people who passed by called us Communists or fascists or other dirty names. And a lot of the1n signed the sheets just tG mock us -Nilh names like Donald Duck or Captain P.tarvel. They were annoyed that "'e were-just standing there. exercising our peacefu l rights." .Jumping lo conclusions: \Vhile age fl!ars youlh. today, youlh fears age somewhat tno. Young people ~re particularly distrustful of older peo- ple who can compete with them in any field and v.·ho refuse to "act their age." They prefer old people who i;ubm.U tame- ly to life and have one fool in the grave. Such oldsters are no threat to them. li~I Royle FULBRIGIIT Is proposing that lh'e Pentagon-financtd film crews, n ow •, operating in Vietnam, be eliminated along wilh the operallon which make~ their films available to networks and TV J stations here in the United States. I AM INFORMED 'THAT A STOH\' CARRIED JN YOUR PA PE P. ASSOCIATES A RECENT AIRCRAIT INCIDENT WITH ME AND MY AIRPLANE FIRST OF ALI. 1 NO LONGER OwN AN AIRPLANE ANI>. SECONDLY I DID NOT FLY ANY AIRPLANE 00UT LF ORAl'IGE COUN1 Y AT THE TIME THE STORY ACCUSF.S ME OF. J RESEN'I' VERY MU CH THIS TYPE OF LOQ6E ACCUS ATIO N PARTICULARLY AS IT SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN MADE BY A PUBLIC 01"· FICIAL AND I WOULD APPRECIA1 E VOUR NOT!FY!NO YOlHI J\EADEJ:S OF THE TRUE p~~ii'iiv GOLDWATEll UNITE D STATES SENATE Apol0Qft1 to tht senator. The r~· port thal ht pUokd a low-f111l11g pri· wte plane WC1I madt to t/1t Newpo rt B1ach Cit11 Coundt bl/ Oo!I E·mor11. chairman of tht Airport Noa1e. Abolt· trll'n& Commlttc1. -Editor P •icer •r 8 reall11' To lhe Editor: There ii no way for me to Jive eo:m- lortabl' wlll1oul uslfll! ele<tt1c:el power. 'l'heretott J mw:t buy electrical power from Southern C "~:wnll Edbon or move to an e.rta thlt ii lf!n'ic:,; by • d.lfferenl ~er uUllty. OI ""'""· ..,. CO<lld be umplJli I,... th< Jryln1 pan Info lb< fir< fniwtna bec1111e an efedrtcal powu After listing all the slralght A 1t.1.1dents, all students "who earned all 8'1 or bet- ter" were ·nomed. The calch, I realized, was: in the requiren1e'l1' for lncluiiion on the honor roll. Al Harbor . students n1ust tarn 1 minimun1 of eight points -each A iJJ worth thrH points, each 8, one ; phys\cnl education ia excluded. ln other words, one has to earn at least two A'a and two B '1 to be ll1tfld. Th1I it far dlffarenl from the slr•i.&hl B averqe "or belier'' re- qulred at Corona. Therefore, the com- parbon wu oo eomparlllNI at Ill, aln<e the staodmla ara llOl lhe UJM. LOYAL TAR-1119 ~1 Tor make1 o: point ft>Y oflltr hlol1 1chooti e1 well. A wfdtlll dlltrl· buttd IUt tJ/ "StraJoht A Stndn1t1 In SauJIU!nl Collfornfa" flfle:cr.ed 1111 aamt ml.ttd ctit1rio. Somt 1cllool1 U1ttd 1cort1 of nanu• and ot/1tr1 wit It equal tnrolh11e11t t(11cd 011111 o fe w. Jn Jafrn111, all hloh 1chool• 1~0 1dd hovt &111 1aJM 1to:11dard1 for ho11or roll•. HERE WERE youngsters doing exactly v.·hat the leaders or the Establishment hsve been asking them to do -working within the structure of law and government, collecting nan1es lo send to their represent.a.li ves. This ia the "ef· rective" means that Tricia Nixon advised them to employ not long ago. Out the people who depklre violence apparently don 't want noo-v1olent iri.terellt in government cith<'r. They auspect anyone with a petition of being "sub- \'crslve." They don't want the boat rocked, or wa..,es 1nadc -even though \Vr are living throu~h om: of the worst liOCial and pollUcal storms of lhe rentury , TUE YOUTH Olfl' on the corners should be 11pproved and applauded, no matter which stand they take, for being serious about our naltonal prtdlcament, and (or their wllllnpss lo work. within the sy1~m. lnate1d, the man of Americana seem to favor inerUa and blind advocacy of •'hltevcr oour1e our leaders care to pursue. Th1I 41 not 1'pa1rlotlsm" -it Is i!IQmnambuUsrn . And this is the surest v.•ay to "tum olr" young poople loday b 1 denlaratlng, lOIU!Ung and mociJna their eUort1 to be. belltr clUzena, by their own llghls , For if they 're: not encouraaed to do ii peacefully on the corners, how can we object to their doin& Jt an1rlly on the barricades? The a'ierage bowler 11 shorter, hea vier and more congenial than the average golfer. He is 1\ao men likely to drinlr. beer, smoke a cl1ar, and have more trou· Bt1 Ge•r ge --~ Dcnr George: We've been having an argument. Didn't yoo have 1 cohqnn ex· pl&lning how the term "blue law" got started G.G. Otar G.C.: ~ The term "blue law" started with the Purila111 who pasted laws prnhlblUn1 drlnklq, tllsl"I, mer- rymakln1 and pr• e 11c1 I l·y everyt.bln1 elMJ. Eventually, 111 they had to do was s1t around and klok at each other and sl &h, "Boy! Am I blue 1'' (Sf:nd \yoor problems to Ceorp, the only advice columnist In Uie nation woo admill absolute and utter dtre11.) · ble keepln& his shirtlall In wblle be pt1y1. Thlnk twice be.fort lendtnc money to • guy who habitually weara a tie clip. Anybody who ts that nea t and orderly in h11 dress oucht to have his financial af· fairs In order alao -and therefore have no need to borrow. SOMETHING GOOD can be found in every dirty movie -but that Isn't why people stand In line to st.-c It. Our values do ch1:111ge lvlth Ume. Can't you recall when a man thoui;ht his dale was 1 1olddigger U she ordered the $2 steak a la carie in a restaur&nl lnstMd of taking the $1 blueplate special like • lady~ I( you asked 10 secretaries what kind of animal the.Jr bou reminded the.m of, two would PY a llon, tllree a rat, and five • hlppopot.tmlll. The troobl< with l•Ina to a bu•ball game. 1nymore 11 that bJ the time lhe pm• la over you Mid another ahave. A good glrl lo marry la one who looks 111 the celling while bawlln1 yoo out hecauae. she 11 too kind.Marted ta see you suffer. Show mt: 1 man who, alvtn the chance, v.<ould like. ta rellv1 hl1 college day1 ovtr again and I'll shaw you a man who Is sllll llvin1 them and ntvtr mani.ced to arow up. The senator's TV amendment is a part of his drive aa:ainst the Pentagon 's public relations apparatus. He is suggesting that the Delense Department's PR acti'iities, which co.st more than $-40 million last year, be held to SlO mill Ion. Fulbright aaya Pentagon flackery I! costing filtetn times what it COil as recently as 1959. The armed services, he says, used "the tools cf h-fadiaon A'ienue" to persuade the public that their O\vn \\·t"apons are the very btst. By Robert S. Allen aod Joha A. 0.1.Umllh ----Wednesday, Augu!l 19, 1970 Th• •dltoriol Jlll'J' 0) "" Dcllv Piiot Sftkl to Inform and 1tim- vlotf 1eadtr1 b11 prt11ntingi thtl ncwtpcptr'1 oph1ioru and com. mmtorv an topic1 of fntcre1t 0:nd aigni/fecnce. b11 pravtdbtgi a forum /01 the c.ipre111lon o/ ou,. ,.eadtr1' opl11lon1. att4 b11 ,,,.'''"'i"f th• dw..... i.it~ poinU o Informed '1b11n1eY1 o.nd ,,,okf1m.t11 on topic1 oJ r.hc dau. Robert N. Weed. Publl1hu I VI - ' I... ' I... l ( St. "'l pO rl1 __ 1 P. h• ell. P'' cil Oh Be! '" tio ob th• be or Im qu . Wt Wl as ll() ., w: ti< m } j .I. • " £1 ti A " cl •• " ti .. 1 A • • c c p b d ' d ,. < • I • I I Costa Mesa Tedey'• n.al · .. . voi:. 63, NO. '198, 7 SECTIONS, ·112 PAGES ' . ORAf.IGE COUNTY, CACIFORNlA WEONESOAY, AU6UST ·19.-·1970 ·-• 1IN CENTS • St. Clair Sign Flap . No Cr ime By Wll.UAM SCHREIBER Of tM Delbo Pllet staff c.o.ta Mesa ..City Councilman William St. Cliir today was cleared of all guilt in ec:rmection with a charge of illegally ~ campaign placards on a public ilgllt'Clf·way. Harbor Judicial District Judge Calvin P. SChmidt rendered the verdict after hearing the charges against the coun- cllmao. Tht nap over signs began during the pre-fi1ection days when aspiring coun- tj.1man Tom tt1anus, 24, staked out St. Clair'i barber shop on N e w po r t Boulevard and signed a citation to the ef-.. f~t Plat the signs advocating the re-elec.. tioo of Councilman George Tucker were obstrueting tbe public right-Of-way and thus in violation of the law. 'l1te acqWttal came after the lrial had been delayed several times from its original Ju1y 22 date. Manus blamed police and court actions for the de1ays of the case and the suMe- quent acquittal. ije said that he is beginning to agree With those who believed that St. Clair wu acquitted solely because or his status as a city councilman. "It appears as though a city official is not subject to the same laws as the .average citizen,'' charged Manus. wbo was a losing candidate in thi.s year's f:lec- lion. St. Clair could not be reached for com- ment at preu time. M~gic Kin gdom Rehires Fired . ·. AGV .4 Members ).. ~ T'... I -~lsneyland will rehire the 29 find nf&QJWI: of lhe Americ~ Guild or Varie- !y Ailkla CAGVA) If AGVA will agree to take 6o action against the 53 non-striking AG VA members employed at Disneyland, aa:ording to Richard Nuni.s, lhe park3 chref administrator. N"unis said Mond ay that he knew of no action planned by AGVA against the non. strikers, but be said he had heard rumors that ·they would be fined $2,500 and "blaet-balled" from the union for two years. The dispute began Aug. 8 when 29 AGVA members walked off their jobs. allegedly over low pay and long hours. -. Route Showdown • Mesa S~nding JJy to Oppose Measure By L. PETEii KREIG ' · Of ... ..., '!lit .. SACRAMENTO -.Dele1allono """' Oranae Coast COllllllUllille ..... In tt>o state capital today poJW-!q presea- tali<lnl for tho !Gii( awllted seqate ~ 0immiu. hwlnl .. Assen]~ 'lloberl.~·· 1llll to wipe out Pacific 0.. '"9way Jn wert ~nt to plead for pwqe <l tha moming lo ll'iUO qalnst-the .,......, bill tllal ~ ~ tlio --' 1"Ule of late lodoy. ~'Mure tteew11 u.r...p their city. The bill, ._..i by ~ Robert Curd, rtpresenllng Newport'• Badbam (R-Nawport Beach) bas alrelllf newly-formed Cli&ens Coordinating Com-gllned approval from the ioftr' - mlltee qalnst tho 1r .... 1y, wu also and bas be<rl awalU., -te ad!Ga ix' prueirt and 11pO<:ted to adilms tha com-nearly a !nlll1lll. _llle.wJ)G<t Beach. . : mlttee In SUPPorl of the bill Four -. boftver, tr~ City <llicials from Costa Mesa, Hun-committee bearfJliS :icbeduled on Ille bill tlDgtOn lltaCh and LigUNi B<iCil iiiir tiaveoeen clllC<MI; twl<i' U-G!Ollst Badly outnumbered, Newport' Maio< Ed Hirth and CowlcilmaD Howard llO{jerl ..,,...senialiVfl of lbe county filed in lhU !Bao FllEEWAY, Pqo I) Eu11 Lcncblide Utility T~ .. Assessment Down Slightly Carpenter First Public utility .........i valuation In Oranae County dropped almost cme Jer. cent in 1970-71 ww:ter comparable figures for U\e prev:iowr year, County Assessor Newport Senator ' DAILY PILOT Sttff ~ Greeter ·Gets Award Eller Larsen (right), Laguna's greeter in residence. accepts plaque from Claude Hanna o! Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club. Lar- sen was awarded plaque Tuesday in recognition of his support of this year's Silver Anniversary fish Fry in Costa Mesa. Annual commun- ity event raises ,funds for charities. Newport Beach attorney aad state Andrew J. Hinshaw anoowiced 1\ttsday. Republican leader Dermis Carpenter The assessor said the values, as ~)' became the ftrSt mu to be determined by the state ~ of elected to the office of state ttnator from EqualhaUoa were $248,468,%20, a drop of the community, eight-tenths of one percent. • • AJ expected Carpenter, 41, scored a Added to Hinshaw's figures for all laodslide victory over bis opponent other taxa ble property In the county the Douglas Irvine, a Santa Ana land utility assessments boost Uie total o:>Wll)' dev~r. Irvine after Oline for the post anessed •alue to ft.JIS,5tT,m. had a cbaqe of heart and threw bis sup- lliDahaw attributed the. drop b\ publlo port to Carpeoler. uWity auessments 0 to a. decreue in The. vote; Carpenter, •.'13.1; Irvine, earninp of p.ibllc utilities due to the 1911 J,127, OCc' Q A. R Car ....-... · Corponter ... •lecliol " " Ibo ..... 8 ean -.-.. !lll'P The ndutlloo In •lilftr •m•_. ~·.c·~~ ... MllG. . . . .. Mi'1Y . ...... ,.. .... -IJ.• ~"" . ........ ., ,..... .... ·tllo IJ.1. . ~ . ~ll .. l!PM't~(Ot1!'ftlri1 ~~~*5th~-• '' ~ity•alueiilltheCOUBly~ ~IM·~1-B.UIL . Sid~lined ~y1 Gear TrQubl~ ....... by""'cw ll)naba.~-:U~=r~ J"'..t~~=~· uiility properties m ~ ~called m tho~~ Eltclloo f<r the Oranre Coast College's entry In the coast-to-coast Clean Air Race .ha1 devt.. loped gear box trouble, accordinc to it! owner, Dave Armendariz. The 1967 Volkswagen 111quareback, pow- Mesa Resident ' Files Suit Against Cities A $300,000 JaWsuit has been filed ln Orange County Superior Court agaiNJt ~red by a 10-horsepower eleetrlc motor · feel by a bank of five batteries, was the backup car for OCC. The college's 0(1&• inal entry. an electro-turbine powered Subaru, developed extenalve trouble last week: and had to be wllhdrawn from the race. The Clean Air Race, aponsor«I jointly by MassachUsetts lomitute of Technology and CaJifornia Jnst.itute of Technology, begins Monday on the M1T campus with 52 cars scheduled to start. !or a legislaUve lovt!ltiplion <l the replar ICMll'~. to.rm belfnnln& oex1 Boord of Equalisation'• praellcot ii lb< Jmuary. -61 Doi Die for tile IPldal field. e~. callinf Jl ... w•te ot ~,en· According to supervisors, uUlltles are money. assessed on "historical" (ortg.ioaJl cash CoUnty election officials said the 22,l?O value of the property lem depreciation. In votes cast in tbls special eJection contrast private propert) or lhe average represented only about Iii percent of the homeowner ol businessman 16 aJS'*d district'• S69,801 repaler«I voters. on replacement value and has ex-Of the tota.1 202,295 are Repoblican.s. perienced a steady increase because of Technically' Carpenter ii not the first value appreciation ovet the )'ef.l'S. , ... ciftPENTZR. hlfl I) UUllty asses9ed valuation! for orange: , CWLl'PMT .... ,._ HIADID· ,Olt SACRAMIN:l'O -Sonolor Car,...nr Oisru:yland subsequentJy flred the strikers for failing to report to work. citj.n& a oo-strike clause in the AGVA contract with the park. The contract e1-pjfei on Dec. 30. Nejotlatlons a r e currently under way between Disneyland and AGVA to detrerrtine if the contract is valid. AGVA refused a bid by Disneyland to sub mit the dispute to arbitration to determine the Jea:ality of the contract. · the cities of Costa Mesa , Newport Beach, a Newport Beach detective and 20 un- named Newport city empklyes on aUep· lions ol false arr~L However, the OCC car may oot make the race, Armendariz said. He said the electric engine is such that it must be kept at a constant RPM when it ill run- ning, He said the constant high speed poees a problem for the transmission when the gears are shifted. Armendariz, who owns Armenco En· gineering in Paramount, said he h a s been In touch with the race officials and was told that if he could not make the beg!Ming of the race, he could join it in progress. Coast cities and the increase or decrease <tVer last year are : COsta Mela, $8,288,670, down 4.1 percent; Fountalft Valley, $1,MS,080, up 1.2_ percen!; Hun- tington Beach, $48,988,930, down 2,6 per- cent. but sUll the hiibeSI public utility valuatkm oC any community in the Coun- ty. Lq:una Beach, $3,5r20,7'0, up f.5 per- cent ; Los Alamitos, $1,205,490, up J.2 per- cent; Newport Beach, $7,329,&40, up Z.2 percent; San Clemente, $3,075,720, up 1.f percent ; San Juan Capistrano, $1,M7,700 up 6.2 percent; Seal Beach, $6,Hl,350, down 2.4 perttnt; We s tminster, $9,902,840, up J percent. Fraud Charges Tossed Ont As Upper Bay Trial Ends AGVA spokesmen have-t'!Ofllended re-. cerlt Disneyland moves were "part or a stall pattern" and that no r~al_ park offer bu been made in the negot1auons. Economy Boost Seen WASHINGTON {UPT) -the Commerce Department said today that the U.S. economy "seems ripe for a r~newed upswing" in the la tter parl of this year and the first part of 1971. In a 54-page midyear economic review, the depart· ment pedicted tbat the upturn wooJd be fueled by a new wave "-consumer spen· dilll 1111rticul1rty Increased purd\a,.. " cars and houtehold fumisbinp. Weather .. · The sun will be out Thursday, • but it'll be filtered lhrough a cloudy haze when it finally breaks out of ~ lhe morning fog about noon. Tern· · ·peraturu will be in &he tUJh 70'1. INS W E TODA l' • \Vhattvt,. uour tastt In tht· ater, uau can find it alona . the Ormige Cocut thll weekend 1n a tuil/ do.it• wfdcdy vort1ina pro- duction&. St t Enttriainment. ·, Pagt 12. ~ Ill $•ntlc• u MMllltrt f MtYIU U·U M4.111•I I'll""' 11 ,.,,..,,, .. """ .. , er111tt CM!tl' f l"f'IY" ,..,... It 1'*11 tt·I' Or. lltlMnlMI 4f ""' MM119'1 Mo If ,........ 11 n.tll""" , .. ,. """""' t .,_...., """ 'U.U w.rN ...... .., The suit, filed Aug. 10 with County Clerk William E. St John , asks $100,000 punitive damages. SD),000 g e n e r a I damages and legal and medical expenses on behalf al Costa Mest resident Law- rence Rothrock. Rothrock was arrested on a stolen check charge Dec. 12 by Newport Delee"· live Robert Brockie, who i11 named as a codefendant in the ca!'le. Rothrock was later released when another suspect con- fessed to the crime. Rothrock's suit alleges he was arrested ''without any warrant for his arrest or process of any court of law and without any r.i&ttt, 1uatification GI' cause." BroCkMi said Rothrock WU am:eted •fter • eearch ot hi5 eJr. turned up 10me of the stolen ebecb. Ke uld has liter establilbod that Rothnltt !'!Id notbinf to. do wttb placing jbe -Ill the •ohlcle. Rolhn>ck further claims the arrest ,...ulted In damal• lo hia physical and mental bultb u-well 11 bil reputatJoa. The car is to be driven by Jim Eichen a11d Glenn Hanson, both sophomores, at occ. The seven-ray race will end w}\en ~ finishing vehicles pass over a ceremonial finish line at Cal Tech in Pasadena. The present list of entries for the race Includes 36 internal combustion engine vehic les. using fUels ranging from ga~ line to alcohol ; five battery-driven car&; six hybrid electrical system cars: four steam,powered cars and one Bas turbine auto. Fishing Ships Collide llALll'AX, N.S. (UPI) -Seven IWtugueee fllhermen ..... belleYed kill· ed when a IWtugueee and a ean.dlan filhing -1 "'llidod In c1e .... fog today IO mil,. Soulheut of St John'1, NOd. Senate Approves ABM Expansion WASHINGTON !UPI) -The Se!lalo voted tcxlay for expansion of the Saleguard AnUbaillstic Missile IABMl Systept -a clear-cut legislative vktory for President Nixon. The Administratk>n victory w a 1 assured when ABM opponents failed tn their seoond and final attempt to conlino deployment of the defeooe ""apon to two sites 1uthorized last year ln North Dakota and Montan1i. Power Failure Predicted Badham Will Oppas.e_All PUC Delay Legislatiori Bv 'TOM BARLEY Of *' .. HY Plitt Stiff Twenty-four thick votwnes of testimony Wert piled high in the courtroom of Superlor On&rt Judge Claude M. Owens today u lhe veteran jurist began what is expocted to be at ..least a three-JOOnlh study of the Upper Bay Land swap trial. Judge ~ens· final action ln the trial walto deny Attorney Philip Berry's plea for pennission to write charges of fraud against the Irvine Company Into lhe lawsuit. The judge ruled that no eVidence bad be<rl offered durinl the trial which could -'bly jusllly 1uch cbargea. a&aln!t the , compmny. AJl iDVGlved In tha lawsuit -today that a final ruling ls yetr1 away. 'I1le juue is eipected to eventuallJ IO to the California Supreme Court for ·a final rul- ing. J udp OWens tnded courtroom pro- ceedings in the land swap dispute late TUllday as he and the five lawyers ~ volved took their second ))oat trip around the Upper Bay and vlllted the San Joa- quin marah to vlew the UC Irvine · pruerv• refemd lo durinl Ille .i.--k trial. Lawyer1 tor botl\ aidea mu1t now Asumbifmin R<>blrt E. -., (It· tho lleollh aod Alety ti .tho ~ <l'lllil la WI and procodurtl glve full opportunity prepore fina l briefs !of Judge OweM' II• 'fbat wJU1 be1alter the judge· has ttudltd more than i.000 pagts of.trial testtmmy. If Jud•• Owens decides lhal the trading of 450 acres of Irvine Company uplaods for 157 acres of eounty owned tidelands is lawful and constitutional M will sign a write ol 'mandate otdtrina courfty auditor-Vic Helm to pay Upper Bay dredging biilJ Mlbmitled lo him by the lrVine Company. Heim was sued by the county and tM Irvine Company in • planned complaint which soueht to establilb the lawsuit as a test caae and clear the way for a land swap that had been approved by Orange Counly supervlaon and the State Landi Commission. The aclloo took on an aclvonary _.t when a group of Newport Beach raaldenla IUCCe!lfully Wed to be allowed lo tnlor the lawsuit as tntervenors. 'nley argued. tl'lrough San Francisco attorney B.errJ that the land awap WH unlawful and violated the tidelands"tnm' cre·ated when the stale of Califurnla cloeded the lhorellne loo....,. County. Victor A. McGee ~rvices Slated N.wport ~---•) l8id ,.,.,. liO will --~.•lzlyrUvr1-,, •• ~Id for tho ~environmenlal~Jo be aminaUOn and then aj)l)W In his ~· _, ·r ·~ -· _ ,. ·~ta ~ literln-iht-,..r !or final-Memorial 1trVlceo---wDI "' bold SOlur· pooe all bills which -id dal•Y ,con-lie pn!dicted thai -t ~ of hoard," Badbllm declared. argumOllla on tho lloue. cloy at Central Bible (!lord> for· Victor A. otruciion of power ptanta or would mae . i»-pilnll and codltnlCtloo of .new The Mlemb!Ymon cited the problema • J.fcGeo, la-year Colla Moaa rtlideJ\t who any changes in Ille aulhorlly of the Public !aclllties. the stale will start hovlni of flndinc an adequate water lllJlply !or • died Aug. 14 aftor • lenlthY Ill-. utmuea Cmhmiuion !PUC ). • power lhortaga in four to 1even year1. the planta, noting "bulcally the watei-to. Bo,nb1 Scare Bn tons McGee, II. 'NI w. liOth St, w• born In "l jUlt. wanl to be IW't that In the "But the militant preeervationis\S hint OJ?tf'lle the plant.I necessary to our P'ulletton. _ future we have lighLs In the hQuse when I jhat they ai:e &oing to atop eonst.ructlon 1suWre }l_eeds of eJectrlclb' mutt com~· NOON.(AP)-89mh ac;.arta c"•~ He 'la survived 6y bis wife., Grace "'V. push the switch," he &aid. er these plants or· they'U 11e and lie tb' • ilt:Prii lM ~ tr and when-: (ti~)" are ~ motAe ~~ ~ Hlcda f! , McGfie: three 1on1, Vk:Wf J ., M1u'tln R. Badham made his remarks in response ut81Ly companie1 up in c:ourt. • biut oa.tu;~t. these plants are con-Com~ns and 'Ute &r~ M~ & nd Allan A., all ot Cotti Mesa: His lo biilJ pending before ·the Leaislaturo "I don't lhink le&).slaUon abo\lld give. Ml<IOil i• • .way that wfli bav raadil>& r°'"' T .. •41!' ;J!'pt' ~ J\oli<V" molher.'~~· ~~ i .. ,""-l1f'I• 1 which be said "could delay completion the&e environmentillisll the Ul\brldled minim~ iJ;f\plot on the.envlronmenlr· --.~ JCJ' tel'f,Ol'\Slfo Yt /OM ~-• Malt "' f; Y* Jr~.~~,~- lof power ·pianll) and caU10 aarious ability to hm'fthf majority of peopl• by "P'l\l>lo ,J,i.e usually· apathe~ J1>0U1 .,,,,.found·. Boml>f11Uad1Jllo0.,...N'oal\4 · ,,....,,.,, •itri th!An: ' ' power thortaiet In Calllornia. indelinitely holdln1 up .....i.d "°""'' prob!""' ,ff,en they don't diid)ia!Jecl . odlo railroad 1t11iona, the _.11110aft'•, Rev. Rlchard Reed will Glllclalo the "1 realize lhal environmental pro. lacilitiu. them. And then K'• juat bwnan ature to ~In blacked off u ... rchet were<d!'-oervlce• to. J>e held at Ibo churdl. l3NI tection i• a """""""' efforl 'and certainly "Surtly it would be one lhing if l'R'ent r110 tq tlwl occ11lon 1nd oa;lltm wben rl«I ool In 81nnlnatlfl!). 100 •lglll tlllll Sl!ftt and Oranae A"""'· Cocta Moaa. •hould be protected and cons1dered, but l Jaw did not give adequate protection and thole prOblem• come home..l\o 1*-at worktr1 ·~ 11'1 a~to pl~were aent .,._ 1 1 The family hn lllUetted memorial believe et ,.... jlOint we muat protect ~1¥ for lull bearlnp, but pr,.. !belt dOon\'PI" he aald. aflllr a beolb tllrul ' • 4 , 4oolll«le lo !he church'• lo!lldlq lllod. • ~ I I .. ' .- ~ ' " DAILY l!ILbT C ' l ~ .-- Fieke:r's l_il~repld • . . • Leads in 2nd .. . By ALMON 1,0CKABEY ot 1M o.l!r PMM Sitt! NEWPORT,' .l(.J. -BUI Flclo!r and lntrepld enjoyed a four-minute and 50 se- cond lead over George Hinman and Weatherly after three marks tn the second m:e· of the America's Cup Selec- tJoo TrWs here today. (Eor!J ,...,. llHtlq Pq<. l • .,, lntnpld Ind limn the •WI. beating · eatherly to "the 1irst mark by 1~49 and ~ 1ncreasing lhe le.ad to 1 :57 at the reach- .• '>u,g mark. ,. On lbe same C(!Ur'&t, Charlie Morgan·s ..Heritage appeared to be taking a dru~ ~1r.binl from Bob MCCullough't Valiant with .;,,, deficit of two minutes and IJ seconds, flt rouOOing the third mark. Her ii.age trailed by only $7 aecond1 at lhe windward mark ·~:s. lost time on the reaching a™" runninc Meanwhile, the Australian U-meter ~ , ' tliln --~ ~tol .!lot. surlaot at 10me distanct QllJlboard from the yacht's cenlef ~~ bvt"1ht IJ'(:•e- ment mark has been placed so as to in-- die.ate the artennost poiftl of the hull at Oie cen~r line." The protest was filed libon after the four American yachts left for the at.art.in& liM for tbt second ract of lbe selectio1 trlall. I' I ' . ~ lYRU commiu:ee was teen to shove off for sea, presumably to consult the NYYC Race Commiltet ahorUy afler receiving the protest. A bee.ring on the pro~t was expected this afternoon. U both yachts are re· measured, lt may mean Qte postpane- ment or the challenger eliminations schedu\ej lo act .under WJIY Friday. Tbe Australians bad previous!~ asked ft>r a J)OStPohement but were turned dOwrt . .... , yndk:ate today dropped a bombshell in Prem P.,e l e mid.it of the selection trials in the form or a written Jhtest ag.Wt the New CAR' PENT'ER • ¥ork Yacht Club measuremenl of the f-.tustralian .andhencb_y.ach•u..-------••• bt:'. The protest wu signed by Frank state senator lo live in Newport Beach. packer of the Australian America's Cup Tbe la.t.e John Murdy resided on Lido JsJe :~piallenge Aasoci.ation. when be rtUred from office in 1964. but • ....: The protest said. in effect, that the he was elected from Huntington Be.acb , .mc..suremcats of both the Australia11 12-v.·bert he hid lived most of bis Ufe. . meter Gretel ·II and the French yacht ···',France were imprc;>erly taken and not in carpenter's addition to the Senate GOP .,~ccordance with requirtments of the majority is expected to aid .several or i-JnternalXllal Yacht Racing Union. Gov. Reqan's legislative propo15als "If tbe meuurement of both boats art which have been blocked by the lack of ~~1not properly take• before the com-.rllletteement of the match (between tht necessary votes to overcome the i Aussies and French) there is a risk that Democratic bloc. .tr.Ille winning yacht may subsequenUy be Tops among these is the much debated ~louD!l, i~ligibfe to race the America 's tax reform bill which is now scheduled 1iCup itseU," said tbe protest. .ICJr a Senate floor vote Cn Friday. ~ '•ft 11 with rtludlaoCe that we ralse lhe Carpenter said Tuesday he had not potnt at this time, so near the com· c0mmitted himself on the controversial "~eoctmeDt of the match, but we believe Badham bill wh.icb would delete lhe 'bit ca be' odjull<d lo 11D11l<r ot houn, • '-'tht-dOc:lameat c:Oatiaued. . '. Pacific Coast Freeway segment lrom '('I". 1' h cue of Gretel U, ~~~ Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach to 4estaner Alai\ Payne, the meuurer Corona del Mar. •1JRobert Bloomenatock) did oot check the But the newly-elected .senator stid he lt'd~tdttment of rule 11 which a(fetcs the ' didn 't think it made much difference how t entire arrangement of the yacht on deck 1'J.o.--; he stood on the measure. •i;.ana~. ~ In the cue of FrJP, the alter "L" "According to the best information • 'lomark ia oot placed on the alte:nnost point available to me , the freeway measure is • pf the hull, accord.inc to the protest. "The assured of enough vole! on lhe senate ·.jftmnolt point of her hull at the water floor, if il gets there," Carpenter said. pl.ue ia undoubtedly the eitrtme tip of a He said the key to the success or .. ~ ... ; -;New Boj1 Club . ,"/)n Balboa Site ot on Ballot I ..,. Tbe ~ on the .,,_ci con· b'9truotion ot 1 Boyi• CUb on dty property -.;,..,. the Balboa Pier ,.W not go on the "Feneral electl<lo ballot 'Nov. s. x~ Meet.in& In special session Saturday. )<.II!< Newport Beach City COUncil refused .,~ ipprove the reaolution calli.nc for the question to be Included on the ballot. ~-fn deferring action. the council recom· ' ·hi.ended that the proposal be returned to ~e Park, Beach aod Recreation Com- ' 1tliss.ioo for additiooa.1 study. Councilman Howard Rogers, wbose motion sent it back to lhe PBR com- mission noted that there likely will have to bt a special election anyway later this fall on the move to rescind the city's agreement on the adopted Pacific ~st Freeway route . He said the Boys' Club measure could be put before the voters at the , same Linle. • ln order for the question to be Included on the Nov. 3 ballot, the resolution re· ,,~ i~ would have had to be m the 11tianda of the County Board of Supervisors 'ittly Wednesday. That was the purpose of Saturday's ltl\_P.edal session ; however, Rogers and " tither council members agreed there were b!lfoo many loose ends involving the exacl location to rush approval of the plan. '" ------'-'--------, 11:~ V~I ,. , .. ;~- • DAILY PILOT OllAHGli CQA$l ,UILIStllHG (()M,ANT l1~11t N. W114 J 1c~ It C~111y 1.•11w TliH111 A. M11r,hi~t #lltNI ... E.i1tor failure ol the bitterly fought measure dependql. ent.i&;eIY pn its /alt jzJ the Senate frin1portatidi'Clmlilittee tlte t.f. day. · \Sou rces clOtie to Carpenter, who is the current slate Republican Committee chairman said f.(lday lhat.the Badham bill will . updoobtedly be killed, i~ the senate com'mlttee. It was scbedu1ed•for hearing .at 2 p.m. today after (our postpooemenLa.) Carpenter flew to Sacramento early this morning after a priyate victpry par- ty. Be!ore leaving he said he was "gratified by the suppof1. of his workers In the 3-tth District and to those few who turned out to vote in a rather unezciling election." The new !lenator aaid h.: did not expe<:t lo be sworn in to office until Thursday although county election artlcials wired results of lhe vote to the Secretary of State's office Tuesday night. Carpenter is a former FBI agent, semi· professional basketball player and a na· tive of MiMesota. He lives in Newport Beach with his wife and four sons. He moved to Orange Counly 12 years •&o and rapidly rose in GOP circles, reaching the top rung of the ladder with his 1968 election as state chairman of the central committee. In that post he has carried forward the weUknown GOP Cal Plan, a program designed to gain control of lhe state legislature. 2 Mesa Streets Get Slowdown OK Traffic speed decreases werr approved for two Co.5t8 Mesa strl'ets J.n Monday night's City Council nieeling. Reduction of speed limit from 35 miles per hour to 25 miles per hour on Anaheim Avenue from West 19th Street north111ard to York!:hire Street was appro\led 4 to I. The council also approved reduction or the speed limit tron1 65 to 60 miles per hour on Red Hill Avenue between Pallsade.s Road and the noftherly city limit.I. ' Fanail1f ita Tears • ID Coed Suspect ,. Death c ·onvicted ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -John Norman Co11tns was conviCted of first· degree murder today in the strangling or a coed alter the juron determing· his late deliberated. 2111 houn. Collini, zi; heard the Wlimo<I! verdict with Utile vWbl• show ril' emotloo. Ills From Page 1 FREEWAY. • • minute when key committee members were not able to attend. Asseiriblyman Badham this morning said lhat the two men, Senators Thomas • C.rrtll ([).San Fernando) and Milton M1rks (R-San Francisco) would not be Present today but that the bearings would have to go on without tliem. Badham declined to predict how tbe -;--------powerfiil transportallOn committee would v~ on the measure. u,, .,, ....... The Reul War Troops at Fire Support Base O'Reilly car·ry artillery ammunition, dropped at landing area by helicopter, to storage bunker. The base is located on a mountain hilltop 13 miles from the Laotian border in northern South Vietnam. The location of the i10lated fire support base is aimed at hindering enemy movement from Laos to South Vietnam. Surprise Witness States Murder Suspect Story A 16-year-old Santa Ana girl testified TuClf:lay that a hunted murder ~Qspecl bad\eeo living ltJ ·a U:id rowl.os Angeles apartmenl just two weeks before two young Mexican nationals were mistaken· Jy shot to death there by police July 19. B&rbar. GuJWenqan 11ve her aurpri1e lcstimonJ in the preliminary hearlo1 of sevM policemen c h a r I e d with N. Californians , Scuttling Plan For Water Deal? Northern California lnt.ereals Monday were accused of trying to scuttle ttle California Water Project, a program designed lo bring millions of aallons or waler lo Southern California. Congressman Craig Hosmer {R·Long Beach), addressing a Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce committee, BC• cused the county of Contra Costa of at- tempting to "safeguard ill cost.fret anti· Pollution program." Rep. Hosmer charged that rather than allowing water fron1 Shasta Dam to be routed to So uthern California for puh\ic consumplion, lhe county wants 10 "!\elfishly monopolize it to dilute waste in 1he San Francisco Bay and Sacramento- San Joaquin River Delta." He also contended that investigation has dlsclosed thal San Francisco Bay and the Della are rapidly becoming cesspools because the county ts u11ing the free fresh water to dilute the sewage rather than spending money to treat it. As planned by I.he water proiect , ap- proved in 1959, this water is lo be brought 10 Southern California through the pnr po.sed Peripheral Canal . Contra Costans are fighting this canal, Rep. Hosmer said, claiming the Delta 11rea i• getting "the world 's greatest free ride, and let no one foraet II ." manslaughter and felonious assault in the Incident. Miss Gunderman identified lhe murder suspect, Danny Corostiza, 22. as a boyfriend of her sister Jackie, 19, who wu also in court Tuesday. ~ said the suspecl had been living with her family near Sacramento until !hey movt.cf to Santa Ana. She said r.orost.iza had called her and related the story of how he had murdered his new girlfriend, Wilma O'Connell, In San Lean- dro. Miss Gundennan admitted visiting Gorost.iza in Los Angeles lhree times in early July, twice al U1e Bro't"nlee apartments where !he Mezican nationals were slain and once in a park. She described an apartment vestibule sim ilar to the one in the apartment where the shooting incident took place. Charges against Gorostiza ln the murder of Wilma O'Connell have been dropped. The testimony was the first unqualiOed declaration thal Gorostiia had been in the same building where Gilardo B. Sanchez, 23, and his cousin, Guillermo A. Sanchez, 22, had been cul down by police gunfire. Ex-Chaplain Dies WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Rev. Dr. "Frederick Brown Harris, 87, former rhaplaln of the U.S. Senate, died of a heart attack at bis Nort hwest Washington home Tuesday. "Our chances are 50-50," ls all he would say . He indicated that wilh Carrell and Marks present committee approval would have been assured. The single most important figure in the future of the bill probably is committee chairman Senator Randolph Collier ~ J). Yreka) who reportedly supports the bill and possibly could sway at least a bare majority of the· is.member panel to his side. Committee approval ls virtually tan· tamount to Senate approval. Committee rejection muns Ute run Senate Will never aee the bill. Forces opposing the measw:e were ex- pected to present detailed argumenLa at the hearing. AJ Koch, county road commissioner 11nd Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach) were expected to represent the opposition in addressing the heiring. Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson wa~ expected to be present but had not ar- rived early this morning . Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy June hesitated to predict the outcome, but said he was optimistic Iha! the bill would be rejected. Costa Mesa officials arc opposed on the grounda that tJiere are already enough freeways completed and planned through that city. Huntington Beach is using a slightly different argument , stressing t h a t although It didn't like the adopted route, it has adjusted long range planning around tt. The Badham bltl would actually eliminate tbe proposed freeway through a portion of HunUnaton Beach, easterly from Beach Boulevard to the far souther. ly end of Newport Beach at the Corona del Mar boundary. Muntington Beach City Engineer .James \\!heeler, Laguna Beach 1'1ayor Richard Goldberg and City 1'1anager James D. Wheaton were also expected to attend the hearing although il was not known whether they would speak. Newport's Mayor Hirth and Coun- cilman Rogers both maintained their 011- timism on prospects for commitlee ap- proval. Rogers said , ''We are still hopeful the Senate Traruiportalion Committee will hear the voices of the people of Newport Beach and act favorably on the bill." Supporters pointed out that tbe senate has approved the deletion of two sections of the freeway, one part through the city of Venice and the other through Beverly Hills. other forces known to t.e in opposition to the measure Include the Irvine Com- p11ny and prominent Newport land owner 1-lancock "Bill" Benning Ill. Kurt Redwine, a prominent Jobbbyisl here, Is also know to bave been working to defeat the measure. mother, Loretta Collin!I of ctnter Llne, Mich., stared straight--forwai-d as the verdict w1ts announced by the jury foreman, bul a young girl who ac· companied the .family began sobbing quieUy. After tbe verdict was annowteed, Collins was remanded to the Wuhtenaw County Jail pending sentencina; which Circuit Judge John Conlin sel for 8:30 a.m. Aug. 2.8. His family remained in the locked courtroom after other speclators left. • Collins' cider sister. 1'1rs. Gail J;>ale. broke into uncontrolled sobs several minutes after the verdict v.•as aMounced . And her mother moved to com!~ her in the courtroom: · • A Roman Catholic priest, "who ac- companied the family to most of the cour:tseMiom since.les.timon)' bea:4D--July 20, was there today to comtOft the \\'Omen. Shortly afterwards, Mrs. Collins also began sobbing. Under Michigan law, conviction of first· degree murder requires a presentencing investigation. But Neil Fink, defense at- torney. told the court after the verdict was announced his client will nOt aid aoyone in the presentencing investigation aod will provide nothing except his name and age. A first-degree murder conviction car· ries a mandatory penalty of life iri prison in Michigan and thue__ is an autei;natic right to appeal. Washtenaw CoWlty Sheriff 'Douglas Harvey was virtually the only trial participant willing to comment im- mediately. He said, "I'm very pleased. The prosecutor did a fine job." Collins was convicted in the slaying of Karen Sue Beineman. an IS.year-old Eastern Michigan University fres hman from Grand Rapids. The girl was last seen alive July 23, 1969, and her naked and battered body was found in a wooded gully three days later. An elder sister or the dead girl was in the courtroom today to hear t!le verdict. Barbara Beineman sat in a fronl row \vith State Police Sgt. David Leik and hi:-: wife. 1'1rs. Leik is the sister of Collins• mother and it was in th~ir home the state said the Heineman girl was murdered by .Collins. Miss Beineman's mother was al her .Grand Rapids home WhJn I.fl~ of th' verdict. She b~oke dowrt in tears and declined. to comment Collins is 1lso under indictment In the murder of a y0W1g girl near Saltnu In June of 1969. Mss Heineman was the seventh yoong woman slain in the Ann Arbor are, dur· ing a two-year period. There have"been no charges fi led in any of the other six deaths. Miss Belneman's battered bodj wall found July 26, 1969. by a couple living on the outskirts of Ann Arbor who were walking from their home in a heavily wooded area to a mail boz on a main road. An intensive gearch bad been cond1:teted for the Heineman girl after she fallid to return from a trip to a wig shop. . The owner of the wig shop testified in court lhat she sold a small wig to the girl and then walched as Miss Beinema111 rode away on a motorcycle with a young man. The woman identified the motorcycle driver in court as Collins. Nixon A~ks Gas B~n \VASHINGTON I AP) -Presideni Nix· on asked the Senate today to ratify a 45-- year-(l!d treaty banning gas warfare, wit~ the understandin~ lhal it docs not outlaw tear ga~ or dcfoltants. • "' ... " Jn! c.... ..... OHi•• JJO W11t 11, 5tr11l ,w,;~119 A.l.l•1n1 P.O. I t• •s•o. •1626 Ott.« OHl<tt F-310 Un1le1· Fire Fora--.."-oolr w..iT.WS""'w- au l""' 1t ,,~ oE nrl-prica.. You...,. 2,~ • ~ pun::b.e-1iriglc piocu, plaot aulnp • cmnP-_...-. Don't mils thia stdina: opporoaai17 to-' ... ·=rl• 7W let of tolid ailttr. • • •• l ·~ ' • •• .., JI.-! ltt<l"ll: 1'11 Wtll 111111 lil"/lc¥1•• llt\OM IMtl> 1U Fwnt •w- ""'""'1"' It~· llllS lt:Kll l~t•4 '-• (""'4o>lt ~ N .. "' fl ,_,.,. '"! Ball Protests St£11td£1rd Oil Ads Huntinglou 8 ea ch '1 &ell-tppoinled ''.Ralph Nader" -'Oda)' atta~ked what he c11led the "prostitution of tht good name of Orange Counfy by an oil company to promote their product." David Ball, who calls himself lht lt.1der ol the 1·People'1 Lobby" said the use of ad\lert1sement by Standard Oil Company boasting of a auc~1ru1 trial of the company's r-.3f0 gaS:Ollne addllh·r tn counlr vehlclt.t should be prol1fbllt':d. Bal added that the county should !n. stead bt using lead frre g•&ollne In ils fleet or cars If It really wanted to 111d the elimination of air pollution. Ball appeared befort !he counly Board or Supervisors shortly after mt mbers of the ,eroup had Inspected a counly vehicle u11lng 11 new tmog control devlre de veloped bt lhe Ouponl Comp11n y. He protested 1hat today was lhe hirJl Llme he bad been slk1wed to addreS! the board 11nd said he ha~ lrled on several oc· casions to get on Lilt agenda but was refused. Aeling board chairman David L. Baker ei:plained to Ball lhat the county had no&. endorsed Standard Oil'• F-310 product lie said the county was using Standard's gasoline because that firm was the lowest bidder for the counly's bu$\ness. Baker said later that Ball had ll· ti:'mpled several lime." to get on the ~upervl10rs' 11gend1. bul was refused berabst he had no dellnltt slibject to speak on . The BeCOnd district supervisor &a\-e 1s nn cx11mp1e a call from Ball to his office '"'<'Pnt\y In which ho said Ball requested permission to speak on "tr~i··. CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE •1*«1"-..... ~pa..-~ .. Sok pa.. r-'11-n ,,.,... ..... "'...., ll<pI.r pa.. ,._ -~ Stla.---- J. C. ..Jlumphriej J etueferJ 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCA llON Jill NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE '41-1401 I ---....... _ ... -- w-...... , 19, 1970 DAU. V' PIUIT $ OPEN DAILY .SAVE MORE at GRANT'S 7-DAYS·A·WEEK. 9-9 SATURDAY Uil_6 _ SUNDAY 9 'Ill 5 ,y,,,..,,, ... , , ' '. P£NDL_ETON µ . •'· " . . 1•JU \/If,~,"' \JvU '1 Sportswou by tho Wool People FOR THE BUTTON-down mind· td, Pendleton has de1igntd this virgin wool classic with such details 11 hanger loops, J IRtrtd body~ni !l1eve1 and box pleat. Sizes S.M.t-.XL s15so aui1 • LEVI'S• XX DENIM BLUE JUNS $650 AU $1ZISI IOYS' xx DENIMS s5so SIZES 0 TO 12 LEYl'S9 JACKOS s9 SHALL OF THI lffi GEAR 0. ..... , Ill ........ Grant'• le,..,... AU Colemon AppllorteN · NO SHVIQ CHAaGll '9t your Ctltn'ltft '"U1nc11 r .. ,.i,.1111 ""_,."' ,.,-,..er tt-,---: ''"' UH4 -NIVll t Senlce Ch.,11. ' ' "" '" " BACK-TO.SCHOOL with •• ~, LEVl'~OJtDS~;· -. '650 Complete Selectlonl SE,£ GRANT'S COMPLETE S!liCTION OF ALL THI NEW PINOLETONS I THE FAMOUS ltvi'1' ~tnim ftckth,_:":=-:1.( prHIN'unlt to size. You'll find tht CAREFREE CORDUROY th1t 1lw1y1 looll1 grett btc1u11 1.,., Levi's•. Pick your favorite color of Gold, lti9e, Chocolij( lrown, Ollvt, P11le or Royal llut. Sizu 26 to 31. 'r ..... ~~~:~:~~.~~! .!.~~! ..... '8''· 1iz1 you nttd at Grtr1f1. Rough and "The Greatest Selection ••• Anywhere!" touch doublt stltchtd. Si111 34·.SO. "HANG·TEN" TRUNKS -. -$~•-$1-0- "HANG·TEN" T-SHIRTS Tht most t1mou1 shirt of tll 11 "KM,.Ten" ••• in 1 11ll1ry of colon and Gr1nr1 ha1 '"" all ••• ln tvtry 1lzt and stylt. $6-$7-$8 T .SHIRTS l TRUNKS for BOYS .. .. .. .. . $!.DO .LEATHER JACKETS :Jc Fringe * Norfolk * Safari * Suede * Rough-Out YOUR $3995 llG. CHOICE $55-$79.95 SOYO '" Ot1r Complot. lHthor Dopf. HAVE YOU SEIN "HANG-TEN" FOR WDMIN MADE IY CHARLEY'S OIRLS-tt GRANT'SI '" .,, ., , ... , .. ,,,, ,,.,,, al Granl'tf Select From 12 Dyn1mic New Colors I WESTERN, SHIRTS by Miiier 56'' WUTEIN STYllD ftr Wt1t.r1ter1 , .. end '•rmt11tftf Prt11 f1llric1, '"· 11111 ,,.1 .. 1114 .. 11.i te'-" In .u ., .... ltn1tli1 •nil MCk i ii•·· .--··w• dk" II . l'ACtf'tC 1n 1ng • by ~ Pacific Trail! HIRE THIY ARll Tho11 ruggocl, wlni- proof, lu.1ury jacktt1 by P1clflc Trill. Ft1furint the ntwtst ''out4tor look" in 12 t,Mnlk col..-1, SIJH 34 tt 46, CPO SHIRTS s9ts NEW STOCK tf the tll·tl"'' ft'ffrlte far c11u1i wlntt r· wt1rl l u11•il ind w1rm -•I cro 1tyl1il 1hlrt1 In 111 ,, tht Mw pltld1 tnll 1oliil ctltrt. Sl111 S-M·l. Siu XL ,,. $10.9l Boys' Sizes 8-18 ........ $7.95 FAMOUS BRANDS AT BIG SAVINGS! IEG. $6.95- 0.1, 1tyi1 1turily t•""'' ft ldl"t 111 fer homt tr '''"'· 3 -lb. JNSUL 100 COllMAN QUAUTT-1• 1 ,,1et1col ~•Iii· through tltclPt with 3.-1. ti ln••I 100. Fun slit, runt411, ltnf'WNrint poplin conr with Mft fttftntl Unlnf. Gr1nt'1 lll1 tht Grt1test ~tl1ction ind lowest Prices Too ... I MOtll Il l RUBBER LIFI uns 1 ·MAN •.• , , , • , $14.95 · 2·MAN , , ••••• $29.95 4·MAN • , • , • , , $'9.95 6-MAN OVER 30,000 PAIR LEVI'S• NOW IN STOCK AT GRINT'Sl * 1r11r s1z11 * 1Y11r c01011 * 1r11r srr111: Ml. UVf $9', full cut, 1i1t1 34.so .......•.....•...•. $11 ·$1C, LEYrs• CASUALS, all Sta-Prtst, all 1i1t1 ...••••.••••... $7·$1 ); NUYO FWES, groovy colors, 1lzt1 26-31 ..•..•••.••••.. $9:'51. REGULAR NUYOS, St•Prfft Hopsacks, all 1l1tt ..••••••... $1:51! WHITE Lrvrs•, whltt and colon, all sizes .............. $5.SO ••w wi'..J~:. ~ ami/y Tent" Mlrt lltht 11• v11c,1 •ff ltt 1 SAVE $41 O .. r ,,..,1d. ,.. •ictvr, window 1 2-•nd ltb 111 4 • 7 Ri' n,lon •c:.:!~"i'&· ·:. ''"'il1t1~ ... u.~~-m_ ... ".' $58 BB GULA.IL y $79~95 •11 ' ..... . ALL 1970 @@§ TENTS DISCOUNTED Jumbo l 2'x9' "OA ~~~:lE:: 11l1cti.n If •II ti._ SIS'' ,,,,,.,::. c'i.'~1c 'th"o1,,.,,,, .. :.:~''' "011lt" ltw 11ric11 t I 1 l•1tur11 ~fflt ... . •• . .. '"' w.,.,.. JO'tl' "OASIS" S/~1111 4-••i. $ff f JJ •JO' "OASIS" . J . '" · · · · si~,, ' ••1. ''"'' ......... s,.,, s21 .01.... t791a '' xto· "OASIS" . .s . ''' ....• 1.,. Sift.ts .. """ ''" U1.07 t99q :,:~,,~' ~1::.·~::•;1" •' • • •', • •''',•''•·~VI .71 .07 .. ·.· • • 12111 ~~~·~;r:::•oHo:. . ................ s •• , •21 .01 . •7911 IJ'•IO' ''VAGAI . . .. ''' '. . . , 1.,. 11'9,fS OND" """" .. , s,., $.1 1,07 $ •••• •1'•6'6'""0ll' ·~..... . ... •••· u ..... ~'.IC" ........ '................. ...... .. . •oa•• ... """"" ..... '" 07 ..... -1'10 COllM . " .. AN "''1S ON SAU/ LEVI'S' . for ~ GALS! · ' USE ·~ ". " .. ,, ~ ~ " ,, 'I ..... ' . 'j • .. • ·' YOUR : CREDIT . at ' GUNT'st * llnkAnltriclrl * lla•ttr'hlr1o r a • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE U6ffS~l.WITMEl\S <l<8P.01<Ell~ New .City Push Is On The move lo lncofl)Orate a city of Irvine is und.,... Will' with formation o! the Council ol the Communities of Irvine. • couriCII -COiii.]>C:rred-of"'five homeowners as.so- ciaUon presidents and representatives of UC lrvlne students faculty and stall; Irvin• T!>wn Center; Irvine Industrial Complex: Irvine Ranch Water Dislrlc~ and a local church -are expecting lo use 200 to 300 volun- teen studying incorporation, with the idea ot putting it to 1 vole 1t leart by DUI summer. 'Ibis active push to Incorporate was brouabt on In part by the Irvine Company announcil>R ill plan for a 430,000 population Irvine city and asking fur lncorpora· tioo, and accelerated by proposals o! Azimutb Equities and Collitu Radio to annex lo Newport Beach pi:opertles eanna.rked for the new city. Azimuth has 11111.hdrawn its anne:1aUon request. but Collins is still in the iame. Meanwhile, Newport Beach bas a pplied the biggest spur to Irvine Incorporation activities by announcing its desire lo annex all tbe way out to the San Diego Freeway. As a result of these annexation maneuvers, incor· poralion of the City of Irvine may come a whole Jot sooner than anyone foresaw. now. Rock gardens, full o! baaeball·llke decorative stones, have lain temptingly below the many plate glass windows on the campus. But no one has ever done any- thing-about it, like pitch-a stone through a window. Police and insurance agents have thought about ' it, however. The trustees recently bowed to pressure and ordered the stones removed. It's one of the least expected consequences of cam- pus disorder. The rock gardens were an integral part o{ the architectural design and natural drainage. Who could have foreseen this problem when the campus plans were drawn in the mid-sizties! The only ch·eering note is that Golden \Vest sludenls did nothing to "'arrant removal of the stones. It's a case of rocks thrown at Berkeley and San Franciseo State being !ell In Huntington Beach. Armchair Adventures Harbor Area lravel-lov~rs are being offered lheir 12th year of armchair globe-girdling adventures via the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club. - ewe's-Rucky Roatl- The club's to~fiigbt travel and adventure series once more offers a series pf six films narrated by tal· ented and-expert-personalities. The-y-range-f.rom-under--·----+--------- the-sea explorations to a look at Russia in the 1970s. People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. You know. that. -\Vell, they shouldn't even think of throwing stones. Trustees of the Orange Coast Junior College District know that. The series -priced at a reasonable $10 for adults and $5 for students -will be staged in the Orange Coast College auditorium in Costa Mesa beginning Sept. 11 and running through February. Tickets can be ordered through the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce or by calling 646-2163. The students, Caculty and administrators of the diJtrict's Golden \Vest campus in Huntington Beach have been living in a sort of glass house for some tim• The series has proved outstanding in previous years and has won plaudits from those who attended. You might like to join tliem this year. N c Clear Warning- Know the Driver To the Editor: Eacb day you aee hitchhikers -moe:t ol. tbtm aeem to be lucky. One m1.A.1t agree however, you take 1 chance when you enter the car ol 1 stranger. ll should Mt be -the laws are not llrid enoogbt. Your ~ cave a gooa accounting of the tragic ride o( a )'OUQe woman who 1''U raped and shol Yes, one fetla ory to see anolber '° needlesalJ bwt, however, • girl enltrl a man'• ear at the midnight hour wit.bout taking a cb.anct. N• girl content.I to •·IX*" tor plcturts at that how. She i;ambled oncl loot.. Allboiilch k WAI I terrible ordeal ror the girl. It ....,. to me tlutt article should have been a warning -don 't let t.hll happen to you; don't get into a car when you do_llOt know the driver. 1bc article was 1lanted to elicit sym· patby for the girl -it should have been \lied as a warntnc. The glrl does not need sympatby -8he needs prayen. She, and all others who get into a strange car, need good, old fashioned sense. -L. T. KELLER A11 Ee111 To11 Tc the Editor: J-ley wallo malla you dumbheads over there al Golden Wesl College~ For almo1St 4 years 1ltUng ther .= ii %78 platt glass windows and under all the windows is boulder rock.. just like baseballs and in 4 )'I'& only a couple lousy window1 you gel broken. ln our tcbool we only got l win- dow in the front and our kids break it every week. You got aome k.lnd of commie pinko un- American tchool over there you don't read the papers and Lire fi.iae; and you ain't throwing rockll thru the windows and now me a taxpayer gotta pay lo have the rocks hauled awa.v because itf> preu . .v usy to ste tomethlng pretty funny .1~ going on over lhett an' we gotta get rid of them rocks becauae you so-ealled student.I don't know bow to act like rtal Emericans at rul schools like Columbia and Berkeley and San Fernando State. MRS. HOWARD JOHNSON Not Me: Gold1cate r I AM INFORMED THAT A STOii\' CARRIED IN YOl/R PAP E P. ASSOCIATES A RECENT AIRCRAFT INCIDENT WITH ME AND MY AIRPLANE. FIRST OF AU, I NO · LONGER OWN AN AIRPLANE ANO. SECONDLY I DID NOT FLY ANY AIRPLANE 'oUT i,p ORANGE COUN1'\' AT THE TIME THE STORY ACCUSES NJ!: OF. I RESENT VERY MUCH THL' TYPE OF L006E ACCUSATl•J N PARTICULARLY AS IT SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN MADE BY A PUBLIC (JI·· FICIAL AND I WOULD APPRECIATf; YOUR NOTIFYING YOUR READ~l1> OF THE TRUE F~RY COLDWATl'll UNITED STATES SENATI; Apolodit• to tM 1enot.or. Tht rr· p0rt that ht piloted a tow-fl11i11g pri· vote pion« 1DQI modt io tht Newport Beac.li Cit11 Council b11 Do:n Emorv, choirma" of O.t A.trport Nolle AbaUI· ment CmrimJC&tf. -Ediior Poicer or 8realh1 'l'o lhe Editor' - Thert 11 no Wlf for me lo Uve com· fartab.1¥ without us1ng eJf!drieal power. ,,,.,.,.,. I mwil buy el<ctrlcal power rrom SoUtbem ea::fJmla :Edl10n or move t4t • .,.. that iJ Jervlc: J by a different ~•lf. OI l'O\ll'lt, ono co¢d be lniit Ibo ll'l'lnl pin inlo lhe lire becauae an electric.al power , - Letter• from readtr• arit wtlcmM. iVorma.Uy writers 1l'°'1td conveu Chtir n1essaaes in .JOO wordl or tea. The r ight io cmuUmt itu.en to ffC apace 11r. eliminate Libel is runwd. AU iti- ttrs mU1t include dgnotur1 and mati. it.g address. bui "'17nel mar be with.- he/.d on reque.>I If iuffic~ni recqon is apparent. Poeir, iolll not bt pub- lilhed. company i! just an electrical power com- pany. My Irritation with SCE and Jack K. Horton (Edison president) is due to the fac t that they are going to build two air polluting electrical generating plants In my area while using the most Olmsy or logic to jwtify their actions. They teU us that if those two air polluting planUI ire not built that we will h.a ve 1 power ahortage from about the begining of l972 until their new atomic plants starta p~ ducing po~·er sometime durlni 1975. In other words they want to build those t~'o air polluting planta to prevent a power shortage for about three yun. Would you believe that thole two plants will be producing electrical power well past the year 2001 and while they are pro- ducing electrical power Uiey wl11 be polluµng the air we breathe. Surely even a moron will agree that any alternative melhod for bridging the three year po\. ~r shortage g11p I., better than building those l\\.'O air polluting elec- trical generatlng plants. HARRY 8. McOO:lALD JR. llo11or Roll J,l1th111 To the E<Htor : Early in the 1wnmer an article wa~ published which glowingly to ld of the huge percentage of students on the se- cond semester honor roll 1t Corona del Mar High School. The article 1t1ted that nearly 50 pereent of the 1tudent body wll! included and compared the amount lo a mere lS percent so i~luded at Newport 11arbor High School for the same semester. Knowing that both the students and teacher are of relaUvely the same calibre at both schools, l wondered wh11t could have caused such a vut difference. The July 21st article fxplained the mat. tcr. After listing all the straight A students, all ~tudents "who earned all 8'1 ar bel- ier'" were named. The catch, I re1dized. was in the requircme.rita for Inclusion on the honor roll. At Harbor. students n1ust earn s minimum ot eight points -each A I~ worth thrff points, each B, onf:; phyalcal educ11Uon ii excluded. In other word•, one hu to earn at le.ail two A '1 and two s·· to be listed. nu.11 far different from the rtra.l&ht B avenge "or better,. re- quittd •t (;oronl. Therefore, the com- parbon wu no compaNon 1t Ill, •Lnce I.be standard.I are .oc thl same. LOYAL TAJl,..lt70 Loual Tor makes a point for oll11r high 1thooll aa well. A wldtl~ d i1&rl· but<d "" of "Slralghl A Stude•ll i• Southern Coli/orrtlo" re/ltcced the 10mt miztd criteria. Some 1chool1 lllt.td 1cort1 o/ names and other• wllh tquol enrofbnmt lilte:d ot1IJ1 a few. In foi~e••· 4U ll iQh 1cllooll 1hould hove iht tame ttatido.rdl for honor rolll. Dear Gloon1 y Gus: The Daily Pllot says it costs $100,· 000 for the special election that puts Dennis Carpenter in the state senate for three months. Why don't we just forget the November election for the same seat -it'll save even more than •t00,000! -R. M. M. Work Within: Does It Work? f could 1yrnpathize with thotie mlddle Americans who deplore demonstraUoru:, rio1' and vJolence ir I believed they were sincere in calling fo r "peactrul petitioning" of the gov- ernment. But are they ? On a Saturday morn- ing a few weeks ago, one of my daughters and her school friends deployed Uiemselvea on corners of various "nice" neighborhoods with petiUona urging support of the "Cambo- dian Fund Cut • Orf Bill," as it is informally called. TKEV WERE DRWED nea t l y, behaved politely, and told passers· by that the . petitions , when filled with signal.urts, were to be sent to our $yaqey 1. Ha~i s senators and congressmen ln Washington. Nobody was argued with, and nobody was pressed to sign. She and her schoolmates returned home dejected after a few hours. "You know," she said, ''most of the people who passed by called us Communists or fascl!'lts or other dirty names. And a lol of the1n si gned the sheets Just lo mock us -with names like Donald Duck or Captain ~farvel. They were annoyed that ~·" were just standing there, exerclslQg our peaceful rights." HERE WERE youngsters doing e1.aclly what the leaders of the Establiahment hav e been asking them to do -working wlthi" the struclure of law and goverwnent, colleNing names to se nd to their repreeentalives. This ja. the "ef- fecUve" meaDS that Tricia Nixon 1dvl1ed them to employ not long ago. But the people who deplore violence: apparently don't want nori·vlolent lntere11l In government either. They suspect anyone with a petition of being "'sub- ''erstve." They don't v.·ant the boat rocked, or wavt.>s niade -evtn though we arc living through one of the. worst social and pollUcal storms of the etntury. THE YOUTH OUT on tht corners ahould bt t1pproved and applauded, no ma tter which st1nd they take, for belng IC!:rioul! about our .. alional predicament, and for their wUlingneu to work within the rysttm. Jutud, the mua of Amttlcam aee.m t.a favor Jnut1a and blind advocacy of whatevt.r course our leader• rare to pursue. This is not ·•patrlotlsm" -it ll aomnambullsm. And this It tha Mll'tlt WIY to "tum of!" )'OUllS people today -by denigrating . 1ntulUng and moek.lng thtlr efforts to be better cilir.en1, by their own Ughls. For U they're not encoura&ed to do II peacefully on Ole come.rs, tlow can we object to their ctrun1 It anerUy on the barrlcldes? Mexico Greets Riehard Nixon "Poor Me1ioo," once lamented Porfirio Diaz, long-time dictator of the country. "'So Jar from God and so close to the Unit'ed States." For more than a ctnlury, proximity to the Co'°51ua of the North has been a determining force in Me1ico's developmtml. But in rtctnl years, the often embittered relations between I.he two neighbor• have lte&dlly improved. The agenda for talk! between Prtsident Nixon and Pruide:nt Gustavo Diai Ordaz during a 24-hour visit to the Pacific reaort ol Puerto Vallarta tomorrow reflects this hiltorically wary rel•· tlonah.lp. Topping the llat is Mexican ir· ritaUon at American attempts to stem the now of narcotlca from south of the border. The salinity of the Cok>rado RJver and problems resu!Ung from th e meanderings of the Rio Grande also will . be at Issue. NIXON MAY express lhe concern of organized labor in the United States about factories 1et up along the border to process parts for electronic equipment and elothing lat.er sold in thia country as American-made. "These )lre nol lhe kind of l&sues that make headlines," a State Department official told E d t t o r i a I Research Reports. "But that's a good sign." To Mexicans, imperialism has had a "Made in the U.S.A." label on it. An- nexation or the American Southwest resulted from the ~fexican·American soldiers repeatedly cros1Jng -the border in pursuit of bandit.a and bands of Apache Indians. DURING TllE the Mexican Revolution, President Wilson In 1914 flrdered Marines landed at Veracruz. The incident mlr· rored Wil!IOn's qu ixotic determination tl't •·teach tht! Lalin Americans to elect good • • Editorial • R¢!iearch men.'' Two years later, an t.xpedilion led by Gen. John J . Pershing pushed deep in· to Mexico in search of Pancho Villa, who had raided the U.S. border town of Columbus, N.M., killing 18 Americans. American ambassadors in Mexico often acted llk1 pro.consul!. Henry Lane Wilson, envoy at the time of the outbreak of the Revolution, openly supported Diaz. Amerlcu investments in the country amounted to Sl billion in Jill, greater than the stake of Me1ican capital. They now e1ceed '1.5 bllllon, but Mexican law requires a minimum of 51 percent in loca l capital in new industria l ventures. THE NIXON VISIT comes at a time of unparalleled prosperity and development for Mexico. Two years ago Me1ico wa!I the 1ucces1ful hoet for the Olympic1. Sht exhibited an economy growing at a rate of 7 percent annually and a capital !illed with new buildings. Presidenlial elections were held on July 5 in which Luis Echeverria Alvare:i:, 47, candidate of the ruling 1NUtutiot1al Revolutionary Par· ty, won 17 percent or the votes. The ballotlng co11.Llnued the line of pe1ctful elections that began in the 1930's. But Mexico is alao a classic ex1rftple or the mixture of poverty and progress that beseta. LatiJI America. Mexican youth is restive and demands reforms in the face of repression. And agr\culture it lagging white the government emphaelr.es forced- draft industrialization. An Un-competitive Spirit .Jumping to cooclusions: \\'hlle age fears youth today, youth fears age .somewhat too. Young people are parllcularly distrustful of Older peo. pie who can compete with them in any field and who rt:fu1e to "act their age." They prefer old people who rubmlt tame- ly to lift ind have one foot Jn the grave. Such oldsters are no threat to them. The average bowler Is aborter, heav ier 11nri more congenial than the average 1olfer. He is also more likely to drink bffr, smoke a cigar, and have more trou· 811 Ge or9e --- Dear George : We've been havlna an arcument. Didn 't you have a column ex· plaining how the term "blue law" Hal Bo yle -· __ J ble keeplnl hi• shlrlllil in white he pllya. Think twice before lendlnt money to a guy who habltu1Jly ?ear• a tie clip. Anybody who la that ne11t and orderly In his dre1J ou;ht to have his financial af· fain In order al.9o -and therefore have no need to borrow. SOMJ:'THlNG GOOD can be found in every dirty movie -but that Isn't why p00plt stand ln line to sec II. Our value! do change with thne. C11in•t you recall when a man thouaht his date wu a golddlggcr If she order~ the n lteak a la carte In 1 re1taur1nt lnltead ot taking the $1 blueplate speci al Uk:e 1 · Dear c .G.: G.G. la~T;ou uked-to s~~~~,~~t k.1~ of The ~rm "blue law" startad animal their bou roe:111111Uau .... m o . ~-o got started with the Purtlanl wbo puaed laws would say a lion, three a rat, &Del five a pnohlbiUn1 drlnkllg, kltslllg , mer-_J _hl..:..!!!"'D>e~bl:' with ~1ni to 1 blsebali rymaktnr and p r a c t I c 111-r •v tho lme \he everythln1 el1e. Eventually. ell ltml anymore la that by t they had to do waa lit around game Is over you need ancther shave. A good girl lo mury ls one who looks ~~~!m'~ ~f!'1 .?ther and si&h, al the celllng While bawllna you out bt!c1use she lJ tOo klnd..t\earted to 1t!CI you (~nd your problems to (;eorgt, I.ht only advice columnist In the nittlon who admlla absolute and uttt.r dertat.) suffer. Show me a man who, given the chanct, would like to relive hit colltge days ov<lr 111ln and t'll abow you a man who l8 11ill llYlni them and never man11fd to 1row up. -·---·· ·-~~!1111111-­.. _ •g .• gc 2.) IQ,£~ Power of TV As a Weapon Draws Fire ' ln the eyea of man)' lav.'makers, tt is clear Ulat television stations don't do much of anything right in their news and public service programming. Some members of the House and Senate think the Pre!lident gets too much exposure by reason of his high office. Others think individual networks have Alleu-Goldlllllith goofed in allowlag free p a r t I 1 a n responses to presidential telecutl. Sen. J. William Fulbright (0.Ark.), chairman of lhe Senate Foreta:n Relations Committee, has argued that t h e President's accesa to TV is a threat to the constitutionally mandated balance of powers in the U.S. government. Fulbright wants Congress to legislate: Itself a pll'Ce of the action. ''COMMUNICATION is power," says Fulbright, who has peered al committee witnesses through fli~up dark glasses qn many TV screens, "and exclusive acceu to it ls a dangerous. unchecked power." All this is currently under study by the communications subcommittee of the Senate Whlch is headed by Sen. John 0. Paatore (0.R.l.). Fulbright has also made TV activities a part ol his long vendetta wllh the military. He has quietly propoaed an amendment to the still in<»mmittee defense money bill which ainu at Pen· tagon film crews operating in Vietnam. Fulbright has told Uic Senate A~ propriatlons Committee !hat individuals Jnvolved in that Vietnam coverage have , described some of the supposedly authen· tic news events as "faked or st.na:ed." "The American people deserve better than to have staged government p~ paganda films passed off as straight TV news," the Senator declared in a state- ment supplied to the committee. FtnJll\IGJrr Is proposlng thal five Pentagon-financtd film cn:ws, n o w operating in Vietnam, be eliminated along with the operation which rn.!ktll their films available to networks and TV stations here In Uie United Slates. Tile senator's TV amendment Is a part of his drive 9.1alnst the Pelitagoo'1 public relations apparatus. He is suggesting that the Dete:nae Department'1~R actlvlUe:!!, which coat more than Sto million last year, be held to •to mlllion. Fulbright says Pentagon naci.ery Is costing fifteen time! what it cost as recently as 1959. The armed services, he says, used "the tools of Madison Avenut " to persuade the public that Uletr own \\'eapons are the very beat. By Robert S. Alie• and Jobn A. Oold11n.Ub ---- Wednesday, August ID, ID70 The tditorlal pagt o/ the Dnfl11 Pilot 1telcJ io inform and ttim. ulatt readers bv prt11ntino thfl newll)O~• optnfon• and com. menta~ on topfc1 o/ fnr1rt1t and rig1dftcancr. bu proootlno a forum /01 the e%prt11fon o/ i oiir rcadlr•' opfnM7u, and b11 prtttntino th• d.Jv1r1t tftw- point.t o/ fnformtd ob1ervera a.nd ipokttmtn on topics of I.ht c1au. Robert N. Weed, Publl1her ' ' i I I . ' • . I I Saddlehaek EQIJ;I O l!I * voi:. 63, NO. 191, 6 SECTIONS, ·102 PAGES ·• • QRAl'IGE COUNTY, CACFqRNIA • . -• WEDNESDAY, :AUGUST~·. 1970 ' T e day's Fbutl N.Y. Steeb TEN CEJllTS Krishna Sect ApOl 9gizes, Won't Stop Chants , By BARBARA KREIRICU lhls activity ls prescribed by their -by tho -croup -In-l!cmt tvtn have .._,,. pr<Sldenls o! Of • OlllY Pi• Sllff religion, aaid president DurJabb Das. terfertng wff:lt tbtir wort. • temples." Memben of the Krishna Consciousness ~ctivities of the colorfUl],y garbed 1be president of ~ temple .-id, uwe There are jll.!t four disciples in LagUna led: are sorry if they have offended Krishna disciples came under fire at a anyone In Laguna Beach, the president of recent city council meelipg when Mayor apologif.e to· the people of Laguna for any now, aald Das, but ~ number varies. I.he Woodland Drive Krishna Temp.le said Richard Goldberg said be bad received offense we may have caused, but we hope ••we art lbe only ones who can billy today.' From now on, he vowed, members complaints about the selling of incense they will try to be tolerant and Wt-change the Uva of aame of these young of the sect will stop their alleged ''high and attempts to press magazine saJes on derstand what we are dobtc bere. In the peiopie. U peOple a.re really coocaoed P""""'" salesmaMhip and give their the st?<eb. past year, fl young men and -about ,...U., they oould allow us to con- Uterature free to those who desire it. A further tomptaint was regl!tered by both residenta and trwiailnb, hive come tinue. The.re la no other hope for many." However, they do not intend to stop lifeguards at the Main Btacb guard tower Into our orpnilatioa, ~up drup Ind AaDd H'be hid belD ~by cl. cliiiitiiii;-a<iiflte-."plalnts;-becawe-.vho-.ald-tlult-bomhralt-chant!ng-lllicl~--11111 -·"1 to -·~~-tho • com- plalnts, the temple praidelll t181d, "Wt ...,. approached bJ oar l(>lrilual. lelder, A. C. B&ktiveda.na SwamJ. wbo tame lrom India to !ound the IOC\ here. He told us to stop se1lin& ia:eMe and to start giv· ioi our literature aw1i free, only to those who wish to take il I! the)' wi.911 to donate to our cause, fl.De, il not, also fine." 8ut as far as the chanting ls concerned. Dia lllid.-tbis.wilUloU..atop~Thls- Is bow we pradice our rtUgioo," he n:. plained. "We are aupposed to dand in one place and chant, but we try to move along if people complain. However, our leaders have told us we should not move. O! course people complain. They don't like the sound of the music, even though it ii a IOWld of bapptnesa. But we mmt learn to endure complaints and hope that (llee IUWlllNA, Pqc.1)_ Another Freeway Needed 1 1 Swim for Life 1'\ikt Anderton, 13, San Clemente (foreground), and Randy Riley, 15 Laguna Beach, practice lifesaving technique used to stay afloat atier falling or jumping into water whi1e f\illy clothed. Boys were required to remove clothing, fill it with air and use it as a lifejacket during exercise in two-week lifesaving class for 12·l~year-olds at Laguna High pool. Coastlin e Zoning Bill Near Def eat in Senate A bin which would put 1,100 miles ol California eoastline under state planning and 10ning authority, Is a step closer to defeat in the Senate today. (See related 1tory, Page 3) The bill. which passed the Assembly by 1 ti.vote margin two weeks ago, was amended again Tuesday and another tieatjng In the Senate Govemmen~ 0r1anliaUon Coounittee was set for 'nnnday just one day be!ore the Ieglsloture is slated to adjourn. 11'1• author d the m e a s u r e , M9bnblyman Pele Wilm (Jl,San Diego) does not bokl out much hope for Senate passage this term. 11 tho bill is apptoved In U.. Thursday se~ tt 1l\Ult pass still another 'com .. mlti.M. a Senate f I o o r vote and an AllttM!J 11oer vole to <Ut<ur in the .mmdlNM "It isn't very likely," said Wil.!on. The bill, wllich Is backed by the c!ly government! of Huntington Be a c h • Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemen1e, would hnpose statewide plan- ning standards on all property within l ,000 yards of the ocean. Five regional boards would set stan~ dards for new buildings, subcllvlslons and ocean activities such as dredging and fill. ing within tbree 'miles. Oppostuon to the measure is in the form of fear of interference with private pn>perly rights. The bill, as it stands, would provide for the least tmpo11ltian or it.ate authority in-- to traditional cMy planning and zoning powers. 1be mos& recent ameodmenl would ex· elude the dliJ' ol Looi Beldt -the nsuJationl. ·.· Landsrap~g Due Caretakers Ready fo r Nixon Yuit ,,,e Nixon family will have some more plants to maintain at the Western While HOUll when they arTi ve for a workin& v.caUon Friday. Londacapin« started thi.s week oo unptanted spaces within the Prealdent'a eitatt in brushy area which once 1crved as a pasture for riain& stock. ' In the me11nUrnt. preparation! are under wt)' for the second honeymoon trip ol Prakltnt and ~trs. Nixon to the cily where they first. vllited 30 years ago. After apendlng ThundaY and Frld!y In Fuerto Vallarta, Mex~. the Prel1dent Jind bis wife wtJI join their two dJught~ and , 10n-ln-law 1t the Spanish villa for a otay !Utlna throllah the rut of August. ~tr. Nixon apen{ Monday In New York vl.altlnc~ with the brass ol lhe New York Dally New1 and strolling the .v.eta of his old neighborhood with lrilndl and elder daughter Tricia. Miss Nixon WU frelb from -king some new 1oaip among White 'Houle observers after 1 weekend of •tteDdln& a wedding and parties with a fffiluent ffOOf't, Richard Flncb Cox. The 24-year-old Tricia i nd Cox, a Harvard Law SChool student, attended a wedding last weekend, then wtnl to aeveral parthw with hil friends. On the Monday trip through the F~th and Mtdlson avenue arw in Manhattan, Mr. Nixon, PaL and Tricia were joined by former New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey and two of Nixon'• old tcbool chum1 !rom Whltllor OoUece. Al the dlnntr hour Ibey dlnod at the posh IA COte Duque reatauranl. . For Saddleback Valley County's Plan Chief Cites Growth Woes By PAMELA HALLAN Of .. Ollff' ,. ltltf Another rreeway, ia addition to the S.nta Ana and Saft Diego freeways, Will be needed to absorb bllUro tralflc flow through and ""'"""-.... Sliltdlelltf< ~:!;·~C::.c~~rn:· Oickasoo's re.marts cuM durlng a talk belore the Saddleback Valley Chamber o! Commerce. Freeway traffic .flow, the cou•ty plan- 111er sakl, is only one« 1DIDY arowth pro- blems facing hil department Jn the yeara ahead. He pointed to needs for pre1UVaUon of the environment, conflicts b e t we e n urbanization and the Mariftl Corps Air Station at El Toro as other pressinj: pr~ blems. r' "Another freeway ,will have to be pla111- ned through this area in addition to the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways," said Dicltaaon. "We have to face up to this problem oow and start dealing with the highway departmellt." He pointed out that several offramps wert planned for the Saddleback Valley freeways to help alleviate some or the future congestion but this won 't be enough. "We should be concemed whether or not automobiles are our on1y means of transportation," said Dictason. He 1ug. gested that the Irvine Coo>pany'a deveJopments might lend themselves to another mode of transportation. He did not elaborate. Dickason described the opportunity for providing a better environment u "tremendous" when working with large developers. He said it was more dlfficUlt in places like Dana Point where there are so many small land holders. One of the Saddleback Valley's en. virorunental problems. excesalve air noise, was described as 10mtlbin& to be lived with. "We bave here one of: tbfl largest Marine Oorpl air slatlooa in the nation," sakl Die~. "'Mley have a com- mitment Mre and indicate they will re- main fot'-1 long time. .N1tunl)J1 this ca-a eon!llcl with .........imc lane!." He said Lellure World qcljoalt with tile jl'Oblem and now plam to expand into (floe. PLANND, Pqo I) ' Putting· Teeth • Into the Law Undetllnllc tooipl'1 city' COUDCil vote .., ordinance. nltridllll clop ·in LIJU111 Beach, the-Ari Colony pol!ct blotter ....,.. .. a new caDloe caper. At 7:111 p.m. Tuelday niafl~ 1111' tilt report, officer Jolln Baporlio parked hla pollco car In the DO block o! South Coul Hlchway, Fl out 19 mnke a rout!~ check and WI.II promptly bitten of. {he lei b)' I '·I.email brown-1ray terrier tj!pt dog." O.maae Included one amall eu\ on Saporito'• right calf and one rlp- ped pa~ o! unilorm trouffl'I. Whereaboots of the do& b Jt present unknown. potl ..... te, , .. t on attempt 11 being IDldt to find \lie owner 10 the animal can bf! qull'ln- Untd as required UndJr r•bles ~ trbl regulations. I' .• Easg Landslide Carpente~ First Newport ~enator Laguna Plan s • Future House lnspe~tions With a house-to-house building in- spection program scheduled to get under way in the Woodland' Drive area Sept. 1. the Laauoa Beach city building and plan-Newj>Ol1. ~ attorney ~ Jlile, ~ ... W'!fr"" 'l'loliidOy·"" .... •!foe •1 •· ~ ~ ning department already is mappln1 IU~ JnspecUon dt!trict!, Director C~de elecloo to the office ti M!e seaatw - the community. As e1pected Carpenter, 41, scored a landalide victory ,.,.. his GpplWM'Jlt Douglas Irvine, a Santa Ana land developer. Irvine after lill111 fO< tile post bad a cbaO(e of !\eazt and thrn hla l1IP' port to Carpenter. The vote: carpenter, :I0,733; Irvloe, 2,127. Carpenter's elect.10111 ts for the unex- pired term ·of former State Sen. John G. Schmitz of TusUn, now the U.S. Coagreuman from tbe 35tb District, suc- ceeding the late J-B. Ult. Carpenter face. a Deloocratic op. poneo~ Dwlgbt YI. -o! Gmlen Grove in the November Ge.eral Election for the regular four•year term beginning men January. MJze did not file for tbe special election calling it "a waste of tupeyera' money." County elec:Uan official! said the 22,870 votes cast in this special tlecUon re~ted only about six percent of the district's 359,801 registered voters. Of the total, 21:rJi,295 are Republlcam. Technically, Carpenter ts not the firsi state senator to live in Newport Beach. The late John Murdy resided on Lido Isle when he retired from ofrlc:e in 1964, but he was elected from Huntington Beach where he had lived most of hi• life. Carpenter's addition to the Senate GOP majority is eipect.ed to aid several of Gov. Reagan'• legislaUve proposals which bave been blocked by tile Jack ol M l'-Y'Pa.oT hlft"""' HEADED FOR SACRAMENTO · -Senator C•rpont•r necessary wte1 to overcome t h • Democratic bloc. Tope amoag these Is the much debated tu relorm bill which la now schedu1ed for a seute floor vote on Friday. c_.ter 1ald Tueaday he had nol (Seo CARPENTER. Pace l) * * * * * * Laguna Officials Set .tTo Fight Badham Bf,ll By L. PETER KREIG ot .... rt.llY l'ltlt ..... SACRAMENTO -Dole1aUOD.'I lrom Orange CoasL communiUel were in tbe •tale capital today polllhing pmen- taUons for the long awaited senate TransportaUon CommlUee hearing on Assemblyman R9bert Badham's bill to wipe out Pacific Coast Freeway In Newport Beach. Badly outnumbered, Newport Mayor Ed Hirth and Cow!cllman Howard Rogers were present to plead for passace of th• bill that would kll! lhe propooed routo of the future lreeway thr""lh their city. Robert.. Cu~,J!P~tlng Nawport'1 newly-fonned Cltt1em t:ootdlnailng ~m-­ mittee aaalnst the freeway, wa!I alto· prt .. nt and'<xpected'<lo address the com· mlttee In ouppert .. f the bill. City o!llclals !rom Coeta M,.., ll\Ul- tin1ton .Beach aod Lapna Beach and repniaentaUve1 of • «IWIQ' fl.led in this mornlnf to ar111e ,,.ainlt the .me-• late today. , The blllc 1ponllOt'Od by Aloemblyman .Bldham (H-N""Jl"l'l Belch) ~ tl19aclY ,eaJM<I _..11 b'Otn tho --~ ( • j and has been awalUn1 -~clloo !or iiearly a month. • Four ttmes however, tl'lnsporiaUon committee bearlnp tcheduled on the bill have been cucelled, twice at the last minute when key commiUee member• were not able to au.id. Assemblyman Badlwn this morning 1ald that the two men, Senators 'ftxnn1s (llee l'llUWAY, Pott I) Qay Mitchell Out of Hospital South !.apnOll ~y -has betn. 'dllcbortrod _, lloUth Oolll Oomnwnlty HosvttaT, Where he WU admllled J\111 fl, lollowlng a heart attaclc; and b rtCUperatJna at home . ThO flt.)'tar-ol4 lllle · llCllOol boOl<I membtr, who llvas at I S. Alta Mira Road, uld he bopetl to bo well enoup to 1Ueild the Stptembef ~Una ol tho boM.I, to wf\lch he -lll(IOlnted In 1elna!Y by-Oover"f Raopa. ~ Z. Springe said today. . . fipelop said .. .,. :Ill distrlcts ,WU\ be mapped under the loog-raoge inspectioft program. which coold \ate years to com. plete but be should be able to presene prelimiDary mapping of two or three districts to the city council wilbin perl!apo IO days. Cemus f:flumeration districts are used tor a start, Sptinge explained, since theM divide the clty into geograplUcal areas. "Two or three years ago, .. the city or- ficiaJ said, "building inspectors toured the entire city over a period of months .tnd made observations of individual houses and buildings rrom the outside, without entering. "Based on the age o! the building and Its outward appearance, a rating or good, fair or poor was made, just to get a general feel cf the housing situation In the community." This infonnation, Springe said, was U!- ed in the general plan land use reporti which set forth percentages of good, fair and poor housing In varil:>us dis1ricts, Now the information obtained from thls lnUal wrvey will be reviewed and plotted oo enumeration district maps. This is m: .. -pected to reveal the areas wilh the highest percenta1e o! poor '"' only fair housing. These will be subject to a r1f:W visual oh.vrvalion prior to drawing boundaries around specillc poor housing neighbor~ hoods that seem to need house-to-house invesUgation, SjX'.lnge said. This mapping and recommendation wllt be presepted to the city council, which will oet up priorities !or 1t1cb Inspections, tilt building dlre<tor aald. Initial plotting of about four ol the 10 census enumera~ tlon distrlc;ts Is ne&ribj con:ipletion, he added, and detailed mapping should be ready" for presentation to the council ln the near future. We•dier The sun will be out Thursday, but it'll be flllered through. cloudy baze when Jt finally breaks out of U.. morning log ahoul nooo. .Tem- peratureo will be in the high 70'•· • INSIDE TODA l' Whatevtr vour t01te in tlie· attr, 11ou can fifid ii ntona the Orange C001t this wttktnd in a It.al/ doz•n wldel11 vorpng pro- ducticmr, Se d Er\tettainment, Paa112. ..... ' ...... .. Cll"'""8 I car.., Ctffft 44 a.dllftt U• 1 c........ 41 .. C-ict •I ·-.. --' .....,., ..... ' ..... .....,.., tJ.ll ,llMn: , .. " -..... Allfl "...,.. " -' • r I I Z OAll. Y PllOT SC Linda Told Mate· • r ... ·About Murders LOS ANGELES lUPI ) -Linda Kasa· bian admltttd today lhal sbe lold her ..... ttust.nd about tbeT• le · La Bianca 't'""~ ~ few days aflcr they OCCW'Ttd 'T bUt that ntither of them made any at· .IJ!,;. tempt to mitact polft. ,.. ' UnDtr mm ex a mini lion by lrvktc 1 I Kan&ret. the at!Mley fO< -cult 1.-. Clwtes MIMOO. Mn. 'Kasa- ~. said lhlt !lie did not ... 11y ""°"how to :J. -go .. lhe poll«" and toll the story. ••You mean you didn't Mvt UM: cwragt k.i··'° lell lhe pciico''" Kanarek --"I don't tno-." "-" Kanattk asll<d her .-!\al sht told her · . huiband Robert about the llayinp a year t!'1 .ap this month. • "I lold blm Owiey Dipped and had a "" •ioole bundJ ol people tilled,·· sbe said. .. J said I SIW I number or people tilled "'11>yoel!."' !Wlattk asl<<d the wilness -her "' .. husband had not SUQesi.d Ibey should !r.'Olftlad. authorities. kx "His reaction WU ·that you got to hUl'T'Y up and get your liWe girl out ol there," ?( she said . .,~ didn't se lht rulity of it." it~ Mrs. Kuablan saJd she also told her sicry briefly to a commune luder named • .,J;-.Joe: Slae in New Mexico. liP .. He told me ;l.Jnda I doo't want to ·1~--e that -1 don't think it ha~ ~-· Kanarek pressed her a! to all the rcums why she had not ~d the pol.ice her story in the months before tbt SW'· i~ ~ to pol~ ill New llampshr.. Sbe sajd sbe still thoul)ll ol polic< IS ' and didn't know bow to approacti to &ell her story. She said she was they would think she was crazy and take•way her litUe girl. Sbe a1lo said sl>e did not know where • 1 ~an.son and tht other girts of tht -]rtt .. family" were at that time aod that they -ovmigbl come and kill ber and ber !J<;,<laugbler. Sbe Slid ber thinking lllo was 111."1nfluenced by the fad she was iregnant again. 1':ra... K.anarek was still croa eumining Mn. 'IZ) Kw.bian when the court recessed Tues- -o. da7. rt,;:' The Zl-year~ld blonde aemed com- -p1e1dy rdu<d· and -gay as lhe burly Kana:U and other lawyers pound- ~ at ties-story of seven murden a year li i>\go at the Tale and LaB~ homes. Kamrtt. who repceseDll MIDIOQ, skip- ~J>ed from subject to subject and at one ' lX>int was asking Mrs. Kasabian about • ·2 . "'vibrat.ion" she a.id &be was able to send ,,.11;: out and recei.vt from the universe. The ..-,:r&awyer uted her to describe a vibralioo llo • .and Depuly District Allumey Aaron t •-.stovitz interrupted to say: "U she had t!l':.true vibrations, she wtKJ.ld will Mr. ~ldltanaret to oeue bia qoesUona.,. i ro.-.: 'lo , F..-Page 1 "'J ' · ~,nPLANNER •.. ->';,aingle (amily, aJJ .. ge dwdllnga. Lake ll!!. Forest, too, iJ apanding and hu added , IOO more acres. ".F·" ''We have almost all of southwest . ~ .. -. ~ Orangt County ytl to be dtveloped. This !.l:·Provides a tremendous opportunity. Wt11 bavt lo Set if we can capltallze on il" ".~ Dickason said providin& . parks and v-1,1'"-n~t& wttt major conoems of the tt:.vpj~ deparUnent He said ht was ..!\"plused lo see large recreation -~ 'devdoprnerlU such as Lion Country 1l'I 'Safari, Coto de Caz.a. Starr Ranch in I.ht '"'''•re.a and indicated that the: cwnty has . ...,,,plans to make El Toro Road a scenic ""~ highway. t ~ He said he: hopes lo keep power lines . off El Toro Road while making Aliso ~n.:·ereu • linear park all the way into the '~ta Ana mountaim. t:I(.~ "In the 1960s we aaw tremendous b growth in Orange County," sai d Dickason. "Despite sttbacb in the -;erospace Industries and construction .alowdowm because of financing , the ~ seventies will show an even grtaler srowth. ' , "We must be prepared for this growth 10 that we can maintain the quality of OW' cnvtronment," he t'OflCluded. DAILY PILOT ".....,_ .... ....... ,..., .... ._... «•••rt N, w •• , 1 l'ru...., ...., ...,...,..., J •• ~ ... c .. ,,,., Vott l'r•1:-t .,... 0....11 MIMfW Th•111•• K•t•!I 1(411Jlw l\•111•1 A. M11t,hi~• • MIM9~ [Cli.. ltlt.lie1I "· Nill 19v111 Or• ... (-1, l41111•• Buller. l>apulJ lllMri<\ A""""' Vll>-ccut BU&Uo&I ooacludtd the state'• tJ:· aminalioo by askUli be< wbal sbe mean\ il'I prtViou& testimony shf: Yo"a! an '"emissary from God." "I feel that I am doln& the: '!''ill of Cod. Whal bu: been done wu .. rrong. I did "1'UIC· too. .. l &m tndy repentant klr It. My bting h<tt lel1lllio& ~ my _..i.nce. .. f'ro• r •• ., J FREEWAY .•. carren fD.San Fernando) and Miiton Marks CR-San Francbco) would nol be ~nt tod.a,y but that tht bearin&s woukf bl.vt to go on without them. Badham declined to predict how the powerful transportation committee woukl vote on the measure. .. Our chances are so.-50, •• is all he would say. He indicated that with Carrell and Marks present committee appro•al would have been assured. The single most important fiJl,Jre in the futurt of the bW probably is committee chairman Senator Randolph Collier ( 0- Yrei.a) who rtportedly supports the bill and possibly could sv.•ay at least a bart majority of tht 13-membtr panel to his skle. Committee approvaJ lJ virtually tan-tamount to Senate approval. C.ornmittee rejection meam the full Senate will never see tht bill. forces opposing tht mtasurt v•ere ex- pected_ to present detailed arguments i!.l the bearing. Al Koch. county road rommi.ssioner and ~lyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach) were expected to rtpresent the opposition in addressing the hearing. ~ Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson WU eapected to he pruen1 but had nol ar- rived early this morning. Costa Mesa Qty Attorney Roy June hesitated to pred.id the outcome. but said be was optimistic that tht bill wouJd be rejected. Ollta Mesa official!: are opposed on tht grounds that t~ are already enough freeways oompleted and planned through lbat cily. Huntington Buch iJ using a sllgbUy dilf ..... t argumeo~ lllttulog t b • l although it didn't lib the adopted route. it has adjusted long range planninf around iL Tiie .Jlli!bam bill would actually el imloale the proposed lreeway tbrougb a portion al lluntlogton Beach, eulerly from Beach Boulevard to the tar souther- ly end Of Newport Beach at the <'Arona de! Mar boondary. lWntlogtoo Belch Clly Engineer Jam., Wheeler, Laguna Beach Mayor Richard Goldberg and City Manager James D. \Vheatoo were also expected to attend the hearing although it wu not known whether they would speak. Newport's Mayor Hlrtb and Coun· cilman Rogers both maintained their op- timism oo prospects for committee ap- provaJ. Rogers sakt, "We are sWl hopeful tht Senate Transportation Committee will hear the voice.a of the people o( Newport Beach ~ act favorably on the bill." Supporters pointed out that the senate has approved the deleUon of two sections of the freeway, one part through t~ city of Venice and the other through Beverly Hills. Other forces known to be in opposition to the measure include the lrvine Com· µany and prominent Newport land owner Hancock "Bill" Banning Il l. Kurt Redwine, a prominent lobbbyisl here, is also know to ha ve been working to defeat the measure. Should tbe transportation committee side with Badham and the Newport in· terests and give the bill a favorable recommendaUon Badham said that he would get the bill to the senate noor as rasl as possible. That could be a! early as tonight. Laguna to Delay Budget Adoption The Laguna Beach City COuncil ls es· pected to postpone its schtduled addpUon of the city budget at tonight's council session on the advice or City . Maoagcr James D. Wheaton. Wheaton ,In a memo to the council, said that Director of Finance Shelby Langford has been advi1ed by the county auessor's office that rlnal figures on a53es1ed valuation are ·being held In abeyance pen· ding a Senate decision oa the governor'1 tu blll. Whf:alon said there may b e "modifications" In the auessed value rolls. Abo missing arc the State Board or Equaliutlon figures on u t i I I t y assessments. For bUdget purpoee1. the city has been using a Laguna assessed valuation figure ol 162 m!Uk>n, ••bslalltially higher lllan lhe 1$7 million eapected orlilnolly. Langford said today ht did not Know whethtt (he possible ''mldificatiorl9" in final fiprts would involve an increast qr deaeaae. Ex-Chaplain Di es .• WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Rev. Dr. F'redtrick Brown Harrb. 1'1, former chaplain of the U.S. Senate, died of a heart attack at bis Northwest Washington home Tuesday. Greeter Gets Award Eiler Larsen (right), Laguna's greeter In residence, accepts plaque from Claude Hanna of Costa 1.1esa-Newport Harbor _Lions Club. Lar· sen was awarded plaque Tuesday in recognition of bis support_of this year's Silver Annivenary Fish Fry in CosLa Mesa. AnnuaJ commun· ity event raises funds for charities. Fraud Charges Tossed Out • As Uppe1· Bay Trial Ends By TOM BARLEY OI ""• 0.llT l'llel Sllfl Twenty-four thick volumes of testimony ~·ere piled high in the courtroom of Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens today as the veteran jurist began what is t:rpecled to be at least a three-month study of the Upper Bay Land swap trial. Judge Owens' final action In the trial was to deny Attorney Philip Berry's plea for permission to write charges of fraud agairt3t the Irvine Company into the lawsuit. Fluor Rumored Buyer of Niguel Rockwell Facility - The Fluor Corporation of Los Angtle!, Houston, Taiwa n and London is the newest rumored buyer of the $23 million North American Rockwell Autonelics plant, under construction in Laguna Niguel. A spokesman for Fluor, ma}or in· ternational firm providing engineering and eonstruction services Jor the mining and petroleum industries, said Monday, "We are engaged in se rious talks with the Autonctics people. The Laguna Niguel plant is one of severaJ possible locations we are considering to accommodate the future needs of our personnel." He said Fluor, which now employs 2,500 people in its Los Angeles headquarters on Atlantic Boulevard, expects to double its work force in the ntxt 10 years. "ll's hard to tell where tht talks (with Autonetics) will lead," he added. The giant Laguna Niguel facility, designed to house 7,500 Aulontlics c1nploycs. ~·as placed on the market last February when North American y.·as hit by cutbacks in the space program. Since then there have been rtpeated rumors of its sale, with General Electric Company among the fi rms reported \'iewing the plaflt with interest. The Fluor spojesman said the plant would have much more space than tht nrm now reqllires, but added. "I'm sure we could eventually grow into a facility of thal size._" He indicated that enlargement of the Southe rn California operation would not Involve moving J)trsonnel from other Fluor locatlons. The corporation has of- fices in Houston, Tex ., London, Holland and Taiwan. an enginee ring construction subsidiary in Palo Alto and unaller of· fices In many other locations. Teen Dance Set At Boys Oub A d&nce for junior teens i11 schedUled 1t the Boys Club in Laguna Beach from 7 to 10 p.m. Friday in the new clubhouse, tOG Laguna CanYQn Road. The judge ruled that no evidence had been offered during the trial which could posaibly jU1lify such charges against the company. All involved in tht lawsWt agree today that a final ruling is years away. The issue is expected to eventually go to the California Supreme Court for a final rul- ing. Judge Owtns ended courtroom pr~ ceedlngs in tht land swap dispute late Tuuday il.S he and t.he five lawyers in- volved took their second boat trip around the Upper Bay and visited lhe San Joa- quin marsh to v\ew the UC Irvine preserve referred to during the six-week: trial. Lawyers for both sides must now prepare final briefs for Judge Owens' ex- amination and then appear in his courtroom later in the year for final arguments on the issue. That will be after the judge has studied more than 4,000 pages of trial testimony. If Judge Owem decides that the trading of 450 acres or Irvine Company uplands for 157 acres of county owned tidelands is lawful and constitutional he will sign a write of mandatt ordering county auditor Vic Helm . to pay Upper Bay dredging bills submitted to him by the Irvine Company. Heim was sued by the county and the Irvine Company In a planned complaint which sought to establish the lawsuit as a test case and clear the way for a land swap that had been approved by Orange County supervisors and the State Lands Commlssioo. The action took on an adversary aspect when a group of Newport Beach residents successfully ulted to be allowed 10 enter the lawsuit as intervenors. They argued. through San Francisco attorney Berry that the land swap was unlawful and violated the tidelands trust created when the state of California deeded the shorelint to Orange County. Short Agenda Clemente ·Eyes Trailer Park Bid Following • short.er-tharH11ual agcnd3 tonight San Clemente's councilmen will reoptn the on-delayed hearing on an ap- peal b1 deve'cpe:rt who lost a bid several weeks ago to build a mobile home park whert • golf count now lies. After several requests lor poslpont· ment, spokesmen (or the Contemporary f'rott• l'a•e 1 ~1obilhome CorporaUon or N e w p o r t Beach will bring their formal appeal of a planning commission denial btJort the <.'Ouncll ln the only public bearina: or the evening. The delays, Contemporary aides 11ld, came about because of the recent reten- tion of the legal finn of Rutan and Tucker. Rodger Howtll, a senior member of the firm. ~·ill make the appeal to councilmen tonight. The company was denied a pennlt to build a z.».space mobile home park on CARPENTER • • • the Harbor Hills Golf Coorse after scores of nearby homeowners vigorously· pro- commllted ~self oo the controversial tested the idea. Badham blll which would delete the Many of thost same residents are eJ.· Pacific C<iaat "Freeway seg~ent from peeled to protest at tonight's hearing. Beach Bouleva"Jld In ·.Hunttnaton Beach to Other agenda items are relatively Corona' de,1 Mar. . \1 routine -due in part to the vacation by Buf the rle\.vJy..elected· RitatOr said he City l\-1anager Ken Carr. didn't think it made much difference how The usually abundant category of city he Stood on lhe measure. , manager reports and recommendations is "Accord.in& to the best lnlo;mation abbreviated for tonight's meetin&. available to me. the !reeway meuure is City Clerk Max Berg will sit as city assured of enough votes on the senate manager pt'l>"tem. floor, if it gets there," Carpenter said. Other items on the slate include: Ht said the key to the auccess or --ConskleraUon of an u r a: e n c Y failure of the bitterly fought measure ordinance slapping a ban on · riding of depended entirely on its fate in tht motorcycles, minibikes and othtr recrta· Senate Transportation Commlttet late to-tional vehicles on private property units.! day. the rider has in his pos!tSSion written {Sources close to Carpenter, who is the permission from the property owner. The current state Republican Committee draft also ineludes prohibition of riding chairman said today that the Badham bill within 300 feet of the property line of a will undoubtedly be killed in the senate lot with a residence on ii. committee. It was scheduled for bearing -A Jelttt from Mrs. Peggy Moon or at 2 p.m. today after f o u r San Clemente citing the hazards of the postponements.) intersection of El Camino Real and the Carpenter flew to Sacramento early rretway offramp. She urges the city to this morning after a private victory par· install a traffic signal . ty. Before leaving he said he was -A request by the owner of the Stage "graUOed by the support of his workers Coach Inn to offer live entertainment and in the 34th District and lo those few who dancing at the nightspot at 3707 s. El turned out to vote in a rather unexciting Camino. Donald Mulcahy asks the election." pennission to offer the entertainment on The new senator said h.! did not expect Friday and Saturday nights up to 1 a.m. lo be sworn in to office until Thursday -A request from parking com· although county election officials wired results of the vote lo tht Secretary of f!1is.sio~ers tbat the council obtain a debt State's office Tuesday night. !~nutation ~rt fO: lh:e P!'°posed forma· Carpenler is a former FBI agent. semi· ~ ~ a parking distr~ct . in the Del Mar professional basketball player and a n&· shopping area. ~ m1.ss1ve also asks • live or Minnesota. He lives in Newport realty board appra11a! of all u.ndeveloped Beach with his wile and four sons land suitable for parking lots m the area Ht moved to Orange County 12 ·years along. the south side of the l~block or ago and rapidly rose in GOP circles, Aven1da Cabrlllo . ~ rth 'de ol the reaching the top rung of the ladder with 100-block of Ave Gr. d!: his. 1968 election as slate chairman of the central committee . tn that post he has carried forward the weUknown GOP Cal Plan, a program designed to gain control of the state legislaturt. ' Four years ago with Carpenter beading lhe drive, Gov. Reagan was elected and two years ago the Republicans took over sli m majorities in both the senate and assembly. • From Page 1 KRISHNA ... some will hear correctly." The young man added, "We do this in every major city of the world and so far none has been able to stop us. Hollywood and Beverly Hlll1 tried to stop us, but the district attorney told them 'forget it.• He knew it was too controversial to try to kep us from practicing our religion ac•~ cording lo its precepts. ··we just hope people will realize '>'·e can save more human lives than most government agencies. and that is all we y.·ant lo do.'' Nixon Asks Ga s Ban WASHINGTON IAPJ -President Nix- on asked the Senate today to ratify a 45- year~ld treaty banning gas warfare, with the understanding that It does not outlaw tear gas or defoliants. Pyne Suit F :e4 To Speed City, Wheaton Asserts City Manager James D. Wheaton ha! directed a memorandum lo the Laguna Beach City Council concerning a law suit against the city from Pyne Estates Com- pany, suggesting the suit has been filed to expedite acquisition of the land for roadway uses. The suit claims damage because the ci· ty allegedly ha.s failed to pennit Pyne Estates to ust its property. The land in question is in the Boal Can. yon area and must beacquired by the city for the construction of Campus Drive , a right-of-way shown on city and rounty arterial highway plans. The road will be built partly with fund~ made available from the gas tax . But before the funds can ·be had the city must approve a route through I.he Boat Canyon area, through the public hearing process. Such a procedure has yet to be held in determining the route. ''It is my belief that the court action has been filed with the idea in mind of encouraging (the) city and county to get together .faster than we have done up t() this point to resolve the acqu isition ques- tion," Whtaton states in the memo to councilmen. F«aliloiood timo ...,._ '•..i T.W S...-. - ...a.1>1< at 2'!1 oE ngulor pDm. You -2)'!1 • ...., ,...._-""al< p.a., """' """'" ...... ,;... ........ Doa't ~~ .... oppoctaaity•--· ..... .,.. ... "d;d ..... . 4f0o~~-~,. s.lepm'-hi-a ~-""·.,,., ~,...-,.,;JMo ' s.i.paa.-,,,,, ... Admission will be restricted lo students: tn the seventh. eighth and ninth grades, the club has announetd. Records and R snack blir wltl be !calurtd and the event will be fully supervised. The dance is sponsored by the Tel <;Jub, a group within the Boyt' Club con~lstlng of Ray Kletn, Guy Grind!~. F'r11nk Vining and Mark Nelson . Admission charge will be 10 cents. CONVEN>ENT TERMS IANICAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J. C. .J./umphrid3 JewelerJ 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCA !ION Ill! NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 541-l40 I I VC - ] Ill "" ·~ .he od< '" ore ile H :hi I I I l l ~ J • . •• • !Aig1111a eh IDlt lOM 1'.Y. lte+• l(rishna Sect Apologizes, Won't Stop Chants • By BARBARA J\BEIRICH Of .... Nij't '"'* ..... Members of the Krishna ColllClousness lect 8l'f; 30tJ')' if· they have offended u1yone Jn Laguna Beach, the president of .he Woodland Drive Krishna Temple said .oday. From now on, he vowed, 10embers ~r the aeet will stop their alleged '1Ugh •res:;ure" salesmanship and give their iteral\ft free lo those who desire it. HqWenr, they do not intend to atop :hanfing, despite complaints, because this activity is preacribed by their religion, 1aid president Durlabh Du. ActiviUes of the colorfully 1arbed Krishna disciples came under fire at a recent city council meeting whu M~ Ricllard Goldberg said he had recelvtd complaints about the selling of inceme and attempt.I to press mqaz.ine saJes on the streets. A further complaint was registered by lifeguards at the Main Beach IUlfd &ower who said that boardwalk chlJllln( .,uiollll by the ~ ll""P WU ln- torferillC with lbelr -11. 'lllo pniiJd>DI of the i_. Mid, "Wo apoloila to the -1e of Laguna for any ' offense we may have~ but we hope they will try to" be toleraftl llld un- dontand wb>t "" -doine heft. In tile past year, 'rl young men and women, .. both "8idootl and -ti, have come into our orpnlsation, given up drup llld Illicit ... lbd -.. to .. C<Dlers. Some even hive become presidents of temples." There .,.. Just -dilclples in Laguna now, said nu. but the nianber varies. .. We are the only ODf.I who can truly cbanp the llwl of -of theK )'OUll( people. II -1e are reolly oo-ned about youth, Ibey -allow us to ..... tinue. There ii no other hope for many .. " Amd u be !lad been 1pp0Kbed by ci- ty ~ ._..iinc the ..... plaint.I, the tenip)e praldent uJd, ''We wert appro1ched by our spirttual IMdeT-1 A. C. Bakttvedana Swami. wbo came from India to found lhe 10Ct here, He told WI to stop 1.Ulng lJEenlO and to llart glV• ing our literature away 1ree:, poly to tbo9t who -to -It. If Ibey -to donate to our cau1e, fine, il not, also fme." But as lar u the chantin& ii eoncemed, Du uid, thlJ will not be ttopped. ''Thia l.s haw we prKtk:e Mil nli&lbn,~ lie G· plained. "We are supposed to ltmd in one placo and cllant, but ft try to """" aloog if people complain. llowem', our leaden have &oW. us., sbould not move. Of '°""" people """""'"' Tbq don't lift the IOll!ld of the mllli<, evtn lllouib it ia a IOUDd of MppimSI. But w must ltarn to endllre eomplainll Ind bope lbai (Seo lll8llNA, ... I ) MQre Home Inspections Set for LagWla Beach .• . ... Planner Says New Freeivay To Be Needed By PAMELA HAUAN Of tlM Diiiy l'lllft Slllff Another freeway, ia addition to the Santa Ana and Su Diego freeways, will be needed to aboorb fllture trallle flow throogjl and around lhe ~bade Valley, Orange Coonty. l'IMll!!l11lbector Forest lliCkason declared·hdiday·nigh~ Diekason'.s remarks canit during a talk ' before the Slddleback VolleyOlamber o! Commerce. SWl~ {or Life . . Freeway trarfiC now' the eoullty plan- aer saici, ii only one of many growth pro- blems facing ru.. department In the JOllNI ahesd. He pointed to needs far .....,.ailon of the envirorunent, confUcti b •twee n urbanization and the Mai1M Corpl Air Station at El Toro as otber JX'Wlinl pro- blems. Mike Anderton, 13,_ San Clemente (loregrouad). and IW>dy Riley, 15, lAlguna.~. prac).ice lifesaving technique used to stay afloat ·after Jalling .or jumping into water· while fully clothed. Boys were required-to remove clothing,~ it wi.th air and use1t as a ~ejacltet during exercise in tw~week lifesaVIng class for 12-15-year-olds at Laguna High pool. ••Another freeway will have to be pla•· ned through this area in lddition to the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways," uld Dickason.. "We have to face up to this problem now and st.art dealing with the highway deparlme11t." (Joastllne Zoning Bill Near Defeat in Senate He Pointed out that several offramps were plmied for the Saddlebact Valley freeways to help alleviate tome or the future congestion but this won't be enough. "We should be concerned whether or not automobiles are our only means of transportation," said Dickason. He 1ug .. gested that the Irvine Company's developments might lend themselves to another mode of transportation. He did not elaborate. A blH which wookl put l,!00 miles of :atifornia <.'Oa.Stline under state planning ind 'zorting authority, is a step closer to lefeat In the Senate toda y. (See related tory, Page 3) The bill, which passed the A~bly by t t7rvote margin two week11 ago, was imended again Tuesday and aoother iearing In the Senate Gove{llment >rganization Committee was set for ~Uf9day .just one da? before the egislature is slated to ad)OW'n. The author of the mea su r e. lsa8nblyman Pete Wilson (R-San Diego) loeS "°' hold out lrtuch hope for Senate .a.uagt this,tenn. ' -If the blll ls approved•ln the Thursday e~ion, lt must ~SS still another com- nittee, a Senate 'f Io or vote a.nd. an ~ase.mbJJ floor vote. to coocur 1n the Bnendment.s.. ' .. ,t isn't very likely," said Wil~. The bill, which is backed by the city governments or Huntington Be a c h , Newport Beach, Lagt1na Beach and San Clemente, would impose statewide plan- ntni standards on all property within I,000 yards of the ocean. Five regi~al boards would set stan- dards for new buildings, subdivisions and ocean activities such as dredging and fill- ing within three miles. Opposition to the measure is In the form of fear or 1nterrerence with private property rigills. 'Ille bill, as It olaods, wouldiprovlde !or the I-imposition of state alllhortb' In- to tradllional cly planning and llOlling powers. 1'\e most recent·amendment would eI· clude the city o1 J.ooc Beach 1rom the resulatioD!. Dickason described the opp.ortunily for providing a better environment as "tremendous" when working with large developers. He said it wu more difficult ·in places like Dana Point where thert art so many small land holders. One of the Saddleblclt Valley's en- vironmental problems, uces,,ive air noise, was described u aomething to be Jived with. "We have here one of the large.Bt Marine COl'J)I air statlonl in tbt nation," said DickaPI. "They ba•e a com· mitment here and in:lk:lte they will re- main for a Jong time. Naturally, this causes a conflict witb surroundiDi land." He Did, Lellure World had deall wllh the prOON!n and -ptana to expand Into (See PLANNER, l'o• I ) Lands~aping Doe Putting Teeth . . . Into the Law • ( Caretakers Ready for Nixon Visit Unclerllnlnl ·tooichl'• dty aomcll vote on ardlnance restrlcthl& clop 1 The Nlxon family will have some more >lanll to maintain-.at the. Western White :tOll.'t when thty arrive for a wori.ing 1aca tlon Friday. Lagaicaping started this week on "ll'fioitid space• within tile President's mi'te in brushy area which once. served .,_a pasture far riding 'St.Oek. ~1' ·the meanUme, preparatiol'll are ancfer way foc the second honeymoon trip )f President and Mrs. Nixon \o the city where lbey firs( visited 30 years ago. After rpendihg Thursday and Friday in 1 Puttto Vall~MeslCO. the President ""' bl• ,.a, wil !heir two daughter< ind a 10n-ln-laff' at Spanish •ilia for 1 1tay lasttng throuf h the ml of August. Mr. Nixon spen Monday in New York ''b~tin& with the bran of the Ntw York .· - Daily News and strolling the streets of In LalUJll Beacll, the Art Coloey hi! old neighborhood with friends and ~ blotter records a new canine • eaper. cider daughter Tr icia. _ __ AU.;30 p.m.--7uetday nllht.-»YL Misa Nixon was fresh rrom spark.log the report, officer John S.porltio some new gossip amoog White HOUie parked hil police car in the mo observers alter a weekend o! attendin& • block al South Cout lllchw.,-, flOI wedding and parties with a floquent out to mah a routine check and escort, Ricllard Finell Cox. was promptly bltt«t on lhe log by • The 24-year-old Tricia and Cox, a 111maU brown-gray terrier type Harvard Law School student, atteoded a dog.'• wedding last weekend, then wont to Damaae lncluded one small cut several partJes with b11 frleodt. on Slportto's liiht calf and one rtp- On the Monday trip through the Fifth pod pair o( unilorm lnMIJers. and Madison avenue areas tn Manhattan, Whereabouts Of "Uie~ dbi ls· ,at Mr. Nixon, Pat and Tricia were Joined1b)' prt&ent unknown., PollcrtJ;ate, ·but former New Yort Qovernor Thomu E. an attempt ii being Olade to fincl'the Dewey and two of Nil<on'1 old school owner so !he anlinal 'Clll'lie ~atiii- churns from Wbittier College. tined a11 •requ·1red under rabies con- At the dinner hour they dined at the trof regulaUons. posh La Cote Buque restauranL '------------' • I • Eas11 . Landslide Carpenter Fi'rst Newport Senator . ~ Newport Beach attomiy aid - Republican lelder' Dennis CaJiilifor· Tlie.cr.iY brame 'Jlle !jn\< ll)U i!; '.1-1 elected to the olflce of •state .... tor,-· the con:unwtlty. A.s expected Carpenter, 41, .cored. a land.slide ~ Oftf-; hia oppot.._t Douglas trvine, a Santa Ana land developer, Irvine after filing for the post had a chafle of heart llld tlnw bis lllP' port to Carpenler. The .wti: Carpenter., 20,'133; Irvine, 2,IJ7. Carpenter's eJecUom is tor U>e uner· pired term of .former State S!n. Jctlh G. •' Schmitz of Tustin, now the U.S. Congressman from the 35th Diltrict, sue· ceeding the la te James B. Utt. carpenter faces a Democratic GI>' ponent, ~ight W. Miu of Garden Grove in the November Gemeral Election for the replar lour-yesr term beginning .ext January. Mize. dXI oot fJJe for the special elecUon calling it "a waste of taxpayers' money.'1 County election officials ·.said the 22,870 votes cut in this special ekction represented only about six percent of tht Watrict's 359,801 registered voters. Of tbe total, 202,295 are Republicans . Technically, Carpenter i! not the first state senator to live in Newport Beach .. The late John Murdy resided on Lido lsk when he retired from office in 1964, but he was elected from Huntington Beach where he had lived most of his life. Carpenter's ad<liUon to the Senate GOP majority is expected to aid aeveral of Gov. Reagan's legislaUve proposilS wblcb have been blocked by the lack of ' DAll.Y PtlOT Sitt!~ HE'.ADED FOR SACRAMENTO NoW Sonotor c • ....,., necessary votes to .overcome ·t b e Democratic bloc. Tops amORg these Is the much debated tax reform bill which is now acheduled for a sewate floor vote on Friday. Carpenter said Tueaday be had not (See CARPf;NTER, Page I> * * * * * * Laguna Officia~ Set To Fight Badham n·~ll By I. PETER KREIG Of .. Nlltr ....... SACRAMENTO -Delegsllom from Orange Coast eommunltie.s were In the slate capital today pollsiJlng pro,.,,. tations for the long awaited senate Transprrtatlon Commitloe bearing on Assemblyman "Robert Badham'1 bill te wipe out Pacific COast Freeway in Newport Beach. 1 Badly outnumbered, Newport Mayor Ed Hirth and Councilman Howard Roters were present to plead ·for passage of the bill that would kill the prupoaed route of the future freewsy through tbeJr city, Robert Curci, repraentlng Newport'• newJy.fonned cm-Coordinating Com· mittee against the freeway, was abo pttJent and elpt<led to address the com· mltlee In IUpport ol 1be bllL City officials from Oo5ta Mesa, Hun- tington Beach and i..,una Beach and repre•onlal!v~ pf· the counly filed In this momln1 (o VIiie ~'-lhe ''1!1e..ure rate tOda.y. ' .J ~ The bill, ._,.c{ by A>Rmblyma• Badham (~Beachl'hu alreadY. 1aioed approval .fll>m ..tbr; J,ower'-i1-1 . ' ., and IUll been awaltln& lel1lle action tor nearly, a month. FOUi' times llowtver, lrllllpll<latlon commlttee hearlnp adleduled on tile bllt have :i.e ... cancelled, twice al the lul mbNta when ke)' committee member1 --nol able to ·--Asoemblywn Badbam lhls motninC uld that the two men, 8enator1 Thomu Ike FREEWAY, Pap I) Cla y Mitchell Out of Hospital SOUtb Laa1lml Clay Mitchell ... -dlsdlarged hm lloath Cod Community Ho!f>ita~ -. he WU1ldmltled July '7, following a heart a~ arid II recuperatlnc at home. The 69-~ear-old atate tcbool board memlii, iihcijiWl. atCll ""· Alla M~a R<Nld, Nld'~-~ to bo-1"ell ellOll&h to altend lbe .. ptoi!\bel' metllnJ. al the fioord, to wllleh he ,._ ~ed -ID Februar)' )u.•Gcwo-lleqW. ' ' • , ... I ' 20 Districts Included In New Plan Wilh a bouse-ll>bouse building ln- •pectioo program .cbeduled to get undor way in the Woodland Drive area Sept. 1, the t.aauna Beach city buildln1 and plan- 11ing doparlmellt alresdy is mapplnjf futurt IDSpeclion diltriclo, Direct« Clyde Z. Springe sa1d today. 'Springe said ..,.,. 20 cflstricts will be niappod under the long-ranp lmpoetioa program., which could take years to com. plete bu\ he ·tllou]ll be -lo in-* preliminary mapping of two or - diltricts to the city council wtthin perbapo ~ d'IY'· Census enumeration districts are used f<W a llart, Springe uplalned, since tbeio -the cily lnlo fqrapbjcaf .area. "Two or lhrei yean _ .. tile cey ol. flcW aid, "building inlpeqon. -tbe entire cit)' over a period fll moatbl and made observations ~ fodividult houses and buildings from !he outme, wltboul entering. "Based on the age of the building and ll.s outward appearance, a rating of good. fair or poor was made, just to get a (onerai feel al the housing situation In the community.'' This infonnation, Springe 1aid, was UJ- ed in the general plan land uae report whicll sel forth percentages o! good, fair and poor housing In various diltricU. Now the information obtained from th1J lntial survey will be reviewed and plotted on enumeration district maPs. Tb.is is ex- pected lo m-eal the areas w:lth the .. highest percentage o! poor or only fair housi ng, These will be subject to a new visual observation prior to drawing boundaries around specific poor boualng neighbor- hoods that seem to need house-to-Must investigation, Springe said. 'l11il mapplnc and recommendation will be presented to tile dlY <OWICll, which will set up priorities for M:b tnspections. the building director said. Inltiaf plotUng of about four Of the 10 etnllUI enumera.. tlon dlstricta is neatfng compleUon, he added, and detailed mapping should be ready for prnentatton to the e:oundI in the near future. ....... Weatller 'Ille 111D will-be GUI Tbunda,y, but 11 'II 1>e mterec1 tbrougll a cloudy hue when II finally break.o cut ol the IDOnllng fog a---Tem-peratara Will be ln the bigb 70'L INSmE· TODAY Whattvtr vo1tr ta.sto in Ute· t1ttr_t__Uo1' ca11 find it alot1g the OranQe Coa1t thl,, weeJimd in a half doze H wMUtv vaTtfing pro- ductions. 8 • • Entcrtcrinmm4 Page U . ..... ' ..... ......, 1•, ~-"• -..........--....... 1S.11 c....... cw-... PIW!llll .... " Clledl .. "' , ......... ..... +1 ~ ., .. --..c...,, ' c.-a .. .,,... ,.,... 11 ,,.....,.. • """ 11>11 DMftl IWfklf t Dr, Sttliw:ttlllt 44 .......... ,... • .... Mllbh 11>1• ............. ,, tt>» T..m.-II ._..... 1•1•'°' .. TIIM,_.1 '"'' ·-. ... """*" 11 ~· M-IMI ....... . ..,. ....... .., • ' I l 2 D,\ll v Pfll)I SC w.-r, '-1 lt, 1110 • 'Linda· Told Mate • About Mu~rders LOS ANGELES !UPI) -Linda Kas .. blan ajbtlllll!ol todllY lhal silt told her husband .about U. 'T 1 .a. • ·"'-1 B i a n c a murders " few dai,ys after they occurred bul that neither of tl:itm made 1ny al· -nY tempt to contacl. police. >Ill .. JJndet croa examination by Irvine t.l ' Kanarek. the attorney lot IUPRtt cuh ader Charles Ml.nlOJ\. Mn. Kasa.bi.an .l\'.rl said that she did not really know how to ""'-' "'go to the police'' and tell the story. !"fl "Yoa mean you dktn't have lJlt courage • to tell th! police'!" Kanarek asked. .. I don't know." • ....:. Kanarek asked bu 11·hat she to)d her 01 husband Robert •bout the slaytngs a year ·t' 11eo 'this month. "' "I COid him Qwley flipped and bad a !;V:• v.Dole bundt of people killed," she said. -err., ··1 said 1 saw a number of people killed . m)'lell." Kanarek asked the wi~ ~t.ber her iw.band had not S11Uesled Ibey obould C! J , oontacl. authcrities.. >'.x! ··ms reaction v.·as that you got to hurry 1-'lZO up and get your lltUe girl out of there." ...11_·W said. ••&didn't se the reality of it.'' ~nw Mrs. Kasabian said she also told her >11 st<ry briefly lo a commune leader named ~en• Joe Saie in New Mexico. "He told me 'Linda I dol'l"l want to ru believe that -l don't think il hap- .,,. .... .-A .. n~ ,........,... _k • Kanarek ~ her ~s lo all the reuons v•hy she had not told the police !\:.le her story Ui the months before sht sur- b.!.-rmdered benelf &o police in New -ma.• Hampshire. She said sht still lhoogbl ol police u rJ '"pigs" and didn't know how to aPIX"Olm ..ni."l1hem to tell her st.cry. She said she was 41!: afraid Ibey would lhink silt was a"azy and tab av.•ay her little girl. ..-;111.T She al.Jo aid she did not know wbert l 5M Mamon and tM other girls of the _q!.tJ .. fmilly" \\·ere al that time and that they jo zt_mighl t:OrM and ' kill her and her daughter. Sbe said her thinking alJO was ·:?fS(;influenced by the {act sht was pregnant -t:oo again. "IItJilf Kanarek was still mm eumining Mrs. Kasabian when the court reoemed Tues- r lo day. .. ~....... Tht 21-year-old blonde see.med com. plet<ly relued and almmt gay as lhe ,.,1 ;burly Kanarek and other lawyers pound- ~v.:."fld at her stOQ' of seven murders a year ...,'.X'ago at the Tate and LaBianca homes. J r , • Kanarek. who repre!Cllts Mamon, skii> ~ .froru iU.bJect to subject and at one ..im.P9int wu asking Mrs. Kuablan about a ~ .. vltratlon .. she said she was able to sml ~-.out and receive from the Un.iYerst. The lawyer ubd her to de3cribe a vibratioo .., J•and Deputy DUlrl~ Atlamey Amin ,._;stovill lnt.ml(l«d lo aay: "II she had .:Ui true vibra~. she wouJd will Mf. r.r., .. Kam:ret to oeue bis questions." .:¢1'. FroM Pagf! I PLANNER •.. •iolle lamlly, all..ge dw•Ulni•-La~e FQl'llt, too, ii ..pancilnl ml baa added aoe more acres. . · ""W• hav~ almost au of. ~west Oraiw• Caonl7 yet "' be developed. nu. provides a """""""'opportunity. We'll have to see i! we can capltaliie on it." •$r.h Oiclwon said providing ·parks and -'greenbelts were ma jor concerns of the iu!,.plannlng department. He said he Wall c~leued to see large recreation us~devefopment:s such as Uon COO.n.try Safari, Colo de C.... Starr Ranch In the > ~ aru and indicated that the COWlty bu ~.. plans to make El Toro Road a scenic J'~:~.higbway. ~ .. ,. He said ht hopes to keey power lines ::JC') off El Toro Road while making Aliso ~·. Creek a linear park all the "'''Y into tht ;r. An . '1::l'' S:;lDla a mountains. . , "ln the 19605 we saw tremendous '\•• . . -growth ln Orange County ." s a 1 d · .!c;oicUaon. "Despite set~acks in the ~ aerospace industries and. construction ,slowdowns because or financing, the lf!iL sevenues will show an even greater nocgrowth. ~...1t>t-" •·we must be prepared for this growth a ~ that we can maintain the quality of -_,,,~ .... d' our environment," he concluded. DAILY PILOT " ............. ............. S-Cfc ... l•9•rl N. w •• 4 ,,,,...,w • ..., ,...i.._ Jtc~ R. C11•l•Y \lo(t l'rt•.-11111 0-tl M t "f"r tlti•"'•• K•1•il .. ,,, Tliolll•• A. M11r1"hit11 Mtfllfl ... ltdlltr 'lti1ker4 '· Nill iel;lll o,.,.. c...rity ·-11 .. ....... CIJ'9 MIMI ut We.II ••Y 51'1ttt ....,..., .. U~: 2'11 W.I ltlltllt l~l'f ~ IHdl1 m ,.._, ..,_ "~ ... dll, IJIJJ .. tdl b""'tf'f S.~ c.i--ffJ -"«111 lt C11t1ifle ltMI Earlier, °""'" Dillrlcl Al~~ cent B_ug!k>it cqndutk!d' the state• U· aminltion by asting her whit she meant In previous testimony she was an "emissary from God." ··1 feel that I am dolnl the ~·ill of God. \\'hat lla.$ been done -.·a.a wrong. I did ~TOng. too. "l am truly repenl111l for it P.ly btil\!: here testifying is my repentance.·• l'ro11& Pafl" J FREEWAY ... Carre.11 (0.Sa.n Fernando) and 1'1iltan Mvb (R-s&n FrucUco) would not be Present today but that the hearings would have to go on without them. Badham declined to predict how tht powerful transportation corrtmilltt would vote: on the me1sure. .. Our chances are 50-SCI.'' is all he v.·ould say. lie indicated that with Carrell and Marki present committee approval would havt been assured. The single most important figure in the future or the bill probably is committee chairman Senator Randolph Colli tr t [). Yreka• who reportedly supports the-bill and possibly could sway at least a bare majority of thr 13-member panel to bis side. Committff approval is Vir1.u1lly la!l-' tamount to Senate approval Committtt rtject.:ioo means the full Senate will never sec the-bill. Forces opposing the measure were ex. peeled to present detailed arguments at tht hearing. Al Koch. county road commissioner and A.Siemblyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach ) we.re expected to represent Ille opposition in addressing the bearing. Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson was expected to be pre!ent but had not ar· rived early this morning. Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy June hesitated to predict the outcome. but .said he was optimistic that the bill would be rejected. Costa Mesa officials are opposed on the grounds that there are already enough freeways completed and planned through lbat city. HllD!ln(loo B<ach II using 1 111JhUy different llJUllM!lll, stressinl l h I l allhoQgb ll dldn'l llke lhe 1dopled '°""'· it bu adjusted long raqe plannJn&: aroond It. The Badbam bill would 1ctually eliminate lbe propooed fr<eway through a portion ol Huntington Beach, eal\erly from Beach Boulevard to the far souther· ly md ol Newport Beach at tbe Corona de! MB bOundary. RunUiiglon Beach Clly Engineer Jam._. Wheeler, Lqunl Beach M.ayor Rlchanl Gol~ and Cltr Manager Jim., D. Wheaton wm also ezpecied lo attend lhe bearJnl although It .,... nol 1 known whether they 'would speot. Newport's Mayor Hirth and Coun- cilman Ro1ers both maintained the.ir op- timism oo prospects for committee ·~ prov al. Rogers SI.id. "We an sUll hopeful the Senate: Transportation Committee will hear the voices of the people of Newport Beach and act favorably on the bill ." Supporters pointed out thal the senate has apProved the deletton of two sections of the freeway, one part through the city of Venice and the other through Beverly Hills. Other forces known to ht in opposition to tht measure include the lrvlne Com- pany and prominent Newport land owner Hancocll. "Rill" Banning Ill. Kurt J\edwine, ;i prominent lobbbyist hert. is also know to have been working kl defeat the measure. Should the transportation commlltet side with Badham and the Newport in- terest£ and give the bill a favorable recommendation Badham said that he would get the blU to the senate floor as fast as possible. That could be ai; early as tonight. Lagtma to ,Dela y Budget .Adoption The Laguna Beach City Council Is ex· peeled to postpone iU scheduled adoption of the city budget at tonighl's council session on the advice ol City Manager James D. \\1healon. Wheaton ,in a memo io the council. said lbat Olrector of Finance Shelby Langford has been advl9Cd by the CQunty asseasor·~ olllce that final figures on a1111essed valuaUon are being held In abeyance pen· dlng a St.nate dec\1ion on the governor's tax bUL " Wheaton said lhere may b e "modllicatJons" in the asst~ed v~lut rolls. Also missing are lhe State Board or Equallzalion figures on u t 111 t y assessments. For budget purposes. the cily has been using a Laguna assessed valuation rigure of $62 million, substantlally hi,c:her than tbe $57 ml!Uon exptdcd ortgtn1lly. La.Dgford said today he did not -know whether lhe poulble ''mldlflcaUoos" in flnll figures would Involve an ina-ea1e or docr<lff. Ex-Ch aplain Dies WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Rev. Dr. Frederick Brown Harris, 87. former chn.pla1n or the U.S. Stnate, died or 11 heart attic~ at blJ Northwest Washington home Tuesday. • !M1L Y PILOT Sii" ,_ Greeter Gets Award Eiler Larsen (right), Laguna's greeter in residence. accepts plaque lrom Claude Hanna of Costa Mesa.Newport Harbor Lions Club. Lar· sen was awarded plaque Tuesday in recognition of his support ol this year's Silver Anniversary Fish Fry in Costa lifesa. Annual commun- ity event raises funds for charities. Fraud Cha1·ges Tossed Out As Upper Bay Trial Ends By TOM BARLEY OI IM D•ilY Pillot SIMI Twenty.four thick volumes of tesLimony -.·ere piled high in lhe courtroom of Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens today as the veteran jurist began what is expected to f>e at least a three-month study of the Upper Bay Land swap trial . Judge Owens' final action tn tht trial was to deny Attorney Philip Berry's plea for permission to write charges of fraud against the lrvine Company into the lawsuit. Fluor Rumored Buyer of Niguel ' Rockwell Facility • The Fluor Corporation of Lm Angeles, Houston, Taiwan and London is the newest rumored buyer of the $2.1 million North American {tockwell Autonclics plant . under constrtlttion in Laguna Nigu el. A. spokesman for Fluor . major in- ternational firm providing engineering anP c<>nstruction services !or the mining and petroleum industrie s, said Monday, ··we are engaged in serious talks with the Autonetics people. The )..aguna Niguel plant is o"' of several possible locations Y!'e are considering lo accommodate the future needs of our personnel." He said Fluor. whic'1.Jtow employ:; 2,f>OO people in its Los AngeN:s'headquarlers on Atlantic Boulevard, expects to double it~ "''Ork force in the next 10 years. "!l's hard to tell where the talks ~with A.utonelics) will lead," he added . The giant Laguna Niguel facility, designed to house 7 .500 Autonelics en1ployes, was placed on the market la st February when North American was hit by cutbacks in lhe space program. Since then there have been repealed rumors or its sale, "''itb Gtneral Electric Company among the nrms reported viewing the plant with interest. The Fluor spokesman said the plant would have much more space than the fir1n nov• requires. bul added , "I'm sure >A'e could eventually grow into a facility of that si ze." He indicated thal eolargcmenl or the Southern California operation would not involve moving personnel from other Fluor locations. The corporation has of· fices in Houston. Tex., London, Holland and Taiwan, an engineering corutruction subsidiary in Palo Alto and smaller or • fices in many other locations. Teen Dance Set At Bo ys Oub A dance for junior teens is scheduled at lhe Boys Club in Laguna Beach from 7 to 10 p.m. Frlday in the new clubhouse. 1085 Lag ... Conion Road. The judge ruled that no evidence had been offered during tile trial which could possibly jwtify such charges against the: company. All involved In the lawsuit agree. today !hat a final ruling Is years away. The issue is expected to eventually go lo the California Supreme Court 1or a final rul- ing. ' Judge Owens ended CQurtroom pro- ceedings In the land swap dispute late Tuesday as he and the five lawytts in- volved took their second boat tcip around the Upper Bay and vi.sited the San Joa- quin marsh to view the UC Irvine preserve referred tD during the six-week trial. Lawyers for both sides must now prepare final briefs fo r Judge Owens' ex- amination and then appear i11 his courlroom later in Ille year for final argumenll C)D the issue. That will be after the Judge has studied more than 4,000 pages or trial testimony. Jf Judge Owens decides that the trading of 450 acres of Irvine Company uplands for 157 acres of county owned tidelands is lawful and constitu,tional he will sig n a write of mandate ordering counly auditor Vic Heim to pay Upper Bay dredging bills submitted lo him by the Irvine Company. Heim was sued by the county and the Irvine Company In a planned complalnt "'hich sought to establish the lawsuit as a Lest case and clear the way for a land swap that had been approved by Orange County supervisors and the State Lands Commission. The action took on an adversary aspect when a group of Newport Beach residents successfully asked to be allowed to enter the lawsuit as intervenors. They argued, through San Francisco attorney Berry that the land swap was unlawful and violated the tidelands trust created when the st.ate of California deeded the shon!llne to Orange County . ·-- Sltort, Agenda Clemente Eyes ' ' I Tr·ailer ·Park Bid Following a Mter-than.usual 1genda tonight San Clcmente.'1 councilmen wlll reopen the oft-<telayl!d hearing on an ap- peal by develope1'w~t 1 bid several weeks qo tq build a mobile home park wt.ere ·a go!! C!O!Jrsc now ties. Alter several requests for postpone- ment, spok_esrµen for the Contemporary CARPENTER. • • committed him!itlf on the controversial Badham bill which would delete the Pacific Coast Freeway segment from Beach Boultvard in Hunttogton Beach to Corona de! Mar. But the newly-elected senator said he didn't think it made much difference how he stood on the measure. "According to the best Information available to me, the freeway measure is assured of eoough votes on the senate floor, it it gets there," carpenter said. He said the key to the success or failure ot the bitterly fought measure depended entirely OD its fate ln the Senate Transportation Committee late: lc>-day. · (Sources close to Caq>enter, who is the current state Republican Committee chairman said today that the Badbam bill will undoubtedly be killed in the senate conunittee. It was scheduled for hearing at 2 p.m. today after r o u r postponements.) carpenter' flew to Sacramento early this morning after a private victory par- ty. Before leaving he said he was ··gratified by the support of his workers in the 34th District and to those few who turned out lo vote in a rather uneJ:citing election." The new senator said h"' did not expect to be sworn in to office until Thursday although county election officials wired result.s of the vole. to the Secretary of State's office Tuesday night Carpenter is a fonner FBI agent, semi· proftss.ional basketball player and a na· live of Minnesota. He lives In Newport Beach with his wife and four sons. He moved to Orange County 12 years ago and rapidly rose in GOP circles, reaching the top rung of the ladder with his 1968 e.Jection as state chairman of the central committee. In that post he has carried forward the well known GOP Cal Plan, a' program designed. to gain control of the state legislature. Four years ago with Carpenter heading the drive, Gov. Reagan waa elected and two years ago the Repub1icans took over slim majorities in both the .Jenate and assembly. From Pagf! I KRISHNA ... some will hear correctly." The young man added , '"We do this in every major city of the world and so far none tias been able to stop us. Holly"·ood and Beverly HiUs tried to stop us. bl.It the district attorney told them 'forget it.' He knew it was too controvtrsial to try to kep us from practicing our religion ac· C1Jrding to its precepts. "We just hope people will realize ~·e can save more human lives than most govtrnment agencies, and that is al! we \\'ant to do." Nixon Asks Gas Ban • WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on asked the Senate today to ratify a 4S.. year-<1ld treaty banning gas warfare, with the understandinK that il does not outlaw tear gas or defoliants. Mobilllon1' Corporation of New po r t Beach will br ing their formal appeal or a planning comnllsslo11 denial befon!: lhe council in the only public he.iring of the e11ening. Tbe delays, Contemporary akles aald, ce1ne about because o( the recent reten- tion of the-legal firm or nutan and Tucker. Rodger Howell. a senior member or the finn, will make the appeal lo councilmen tonight. The company was denied a permit lo build a ~space mobile home par'k on the Harbor Hills Golf Course after scores of nearby homeowners vigorously pro- tested the idea. Many of those same residents are ex· peeled to protest at tonight's htaring. other agenda items are relat.ively routine -due in part to the vacation by City Manager Ken Carr. The usually abundant category of city manager reports and recommendalions is abbreviated for tonight's meeting . City Clerk Max Berg will sil as city manager pro-tern. Other ittms on the slate include : -Consideration of an urge n c y ordinance slapping a ban on riding or motorcycles, minibikes and other recrea- tional vehicles on private properly unless the rider has in his possession written permission from the proJ?E!!'1.>' owner: '!'he draft al.so includes proh1b1t1on of nd1ng within 300 {eel of the property line.of a lot with a residenct on it. -A letter from Mrs. Peggy Moon of San Clemente citing the hazards of the intersection of El Camino Real and the freeway offramp. She urgts the cij.y to install a traffic signal. -A request by the owner of the Stage Coach IM to offer live entertainment and dancing at the nightspot at 3707 S. El Camino. Donald Mulcahy asks the pennission to ofter the entertainmeDt on Friday and Saturday nights up to 1 a.m. -A request from parking com- missioners that the council obtain a debt limitation report for the proposed fonna· tion of a parking district in the Del Mar shopping area. The missive also asks a realty board appraisal of all undeveloped land suitable for parking lots in th'e area along the south side of the JOO-block of A venida Cabrillo and the north sidt or the 100-block of Avenida Granada . Pyne Suit Filed To Speed City, Wheaton Asserts city Manager James D. Whe8ton h83 directed a memorandum to the Laguna Beach City Council concerning a law suit against the city from Pyne Estates Com· pany. suggesting the suit has been filed to expedite acquisition of the land for roadway uses. The suit claims damage because the ci· tv allegedly ha s failed to pennit Pyne Estates lo use its properly. The land in question is in the Boat Can- yon area and must beacquired by the cll.v for the construction of Campu'.\ Drive. a righl-<1f·way shown on city and county arterial highway plans. The road will be built partly with funds made available from the gas tax, But before the funds can be had the city mwt approve a route throujith the Boat Canyo n area. through the public hearing process. Such a proce<lure has yet lo be held in detennining the route. "It is my belief that the court action has been filed with the idea in mind of encouraging (the) city and <.'Ounty to get togelher faster than we have done up In this point to resolve the acquisition ques- tion:· Wheaton states In the memo to councilmen. For a 1¥tof bmo ool1 omaed T.W S40dins a.- anilabl& at "'" of rqu1x pc:icts. Yoo Sift 2)~ Oil etmr pal• -1ingle pilco,'plu: adQ.oga or owpkw IGTiaL Doo.'t P this ....._appoc....,to-•c•,._ ,_. •m..iidoilnr. ~1*-t """ ........ ~,...-~,. s.i.,a.. r-')7·11 3>piect IUf'ics '3r c:ighc ~..-.-,,,p... Sok ,... r-,.,,, ... Admission will be restricted to students In the seventh, eighth and ninlh gradci, lhe club baa announced. Rec,<Jfds and a snack b.ar will be featufed and the event will be rully supervisfd. The dance is SIXIR!Ored by Lhc Tel Club. a group within the Boys' Club con3lstln{l o! Ray Klein. Guy f:rindle, Fr11nk VinJng anrf ft1ark Nelson. Ad1ni$ion ch.1rgc "'ill be 10 t'Cnts. CONVENIENT TERMS BANl<AMERICARO MASTER CHARGE J. C. J./umphrieJ Jeweler& H YEARS • IN SAME LOCATION I Ill NEWPORT AVE .. COSTA MESA PHONE 541.)40 I DAILY l'U.Of J Sur:yey r:ream Needs· Home :: City Ends July 4tli Riot Probe A special commltttt o( Inquiry con- cluded its investigation into the July • Woodland Drive riot in LagUAa Canyon after hearing three more police officers Tuesday. The committee, composed 0£ Mayor Richard Goldberg, City Manager James D. Wheaton and Vice Mayor Charlton Boyd heard a dozen witaesses, including poUce, Woodland Drive residents and other interested citizens in two days of hearings. Wheato• said findings of the committee will be compiled in a report to be made · pUblic at a later date, but probably not until after the group meets again to disctw the testimony given during the heariwgs. He said a tentative meeting has been set for next Tuesday, though by that time he officially will have left his Laguna Beach post and taken up his duties as ci- ty manager or Corona. The city manager explah1.ed, "Corona owes Laguna some Of my time, because I've already been given some Ume off here to go down there and get started looking into some of their problems. I'll be able to come back to tie up the loose ends here.'' \Vheaton anU Goldberg lefl this morn - ing for Sacramento, with Fifth District Supervisor Allon E. Allen, to attend the Senate Traasportation Committee hear- ing on the Badham freeway bill. The two will be back for a City Council meeting in Lagu11a Beach tonight and Wheaton will conclude his city manager assignment tmre Friday. No Stop Sign, Maybe Signal At Intersection Plarui for a boulevard stop sign at Lhe corner of Broadway and Beach Street, in the downtown area, have been dropped by the stale Division of Highways but the Jntersection may be due for a traffic signal. A study on feasibility of traffic signals ;ii.t lhe concested intersection is now being · conducted by the state agency, and is subject to a letter to t.be CJty Council to be discussed at tonight's 7:Xt o'clock ineeting at city hall. "When a four-way stop is Wtalled, the traflic volumes of the intersecting roads should be about equal," the letter states. "An eight-hour manual traffic count revealed that the volumes on Broadway are almost three times those on Beach Street." The letter goes on to say that if a stop sign were installed an unbalanced backup of traffic would result on Broadway, and could irKTeaSe the chance of rear-end "fender benders." J( the findings o( the traffic study In- dicate a light is needed at the in- tersection, parking in the area would have to be restricted on both sides of the street, the state reports. In other action on Broadway. the DWision of Highways plarui to put up necessary signs to make left turns onto Coast Highway legal from both of the westbound lanes. Cuba Announces New Con1merce l\Unistc1· ~lIAMI (AP) -Cuba announced today the appoinlmenl of a new interior com- merce minister, continuing a cabinet shakeup started July 6 with the toppling of the minister of sugar industry and education. ' Uf'I T.....,.,. Belly Laugh Denise Young, 17-year..old pilot in recent Palms to Pines air race for women, breaks into lauahter at antics of her 2-year-old nephew, Scott Youn~. who makes like the Red Baron himself at the controls of her plane shortly before start of race. Denise, with her mother, Adelle, as co-pilot, finished 7th in a field of 37 light planes in the 791-mile race from Santa Monica to Independence, Ore. · Voters to Get Fit1al Say • Laguna Planners 1 OK Child Center; Ref use Another On County Transit Plan By JACK BROBACK Of tlll D1llY f'lllf Slltf Formation of a proposed Orange Cou"- ty Transit District is now up to the voters. The Board of Supervisors gave final ap- proval to submitting the issue to the elec- torate 01 the Nov. 3 general election ballot Tu~ay following sanction c! the move last week by the Local Agency Formation Commission (I.AFC). Tbe transit district formation was urg- ed last June by the four-year~ld Oraage County Transit Study Committee beaded by Fullerton industrial r e I a t i o n 1 counselor Hubert c .. Ferry. Ferry told board members that his committee had decided that creaUoo ol the district was necessary to solve future traasportation problems. The district is aUowed under a state law passed by the legislature in 1965 which permits creation of the authority by a vote of the people.' The supervisOrs accepted t.he reco1n- mendation of the committee 911 June 17 aid held a public bearing on Lbe issue Ju- ly ·21. LENGTHY DISCUSSION After lengthy discuM!on at the public hearing the board voted to submit the matter to the voters, If the LAFC ap- proved. Only spotty opposition surfaced at the public hearing. Tralfic engineers of several couaty communities u r g e d further study on the need for such a district before it was submitted to the electorate. But the board members voted approval because they said a district is needed to bring the total county transportaUoo pro- blem under 01e system, that such a district would provide an agency for receiving state federal and other funds, and the district would provide a vehicle for county participation in regioaal decisions on transportation. County Road Commissioner Al Koch, a !trong 8upporter of a trusit district and a member of tbe transit committee, hail- ed Tuesday's decision as "a step for· ward ." "Mass transit facilities as they exist tcr day in the county are fragmented, un- coordinated, and non-continuous," Koch argued . "They offer at best only a very limited service restricted by artificiaJ boundaries and are unable to meet the demud for movement 1n meaningful traRSportation corridors,'' lhe road commissioner con· tinued . The Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission hu approved an application for one day nursery in the city while denying a similar application. At their Monday night meeting, the commission refused a conditional use permit for a day nursery at 356 Cypress Drive alter hearing several opponents of the center. However, in an earlier action, coii\- misslonera voted in favor of a day nursery to be operated in conjunction with the First Oui.stian Church, on tbe FUN~ AV All.ABLE comer of Glenneyre and Legion Streets. Koch said funds are now available In turning down the request for a full through the federal Urban Ma ss time day care center for working Transportation Administration to study mothers Crom Eunice Du Maurier, at the the meed for a transit district and to Cypress Drlve location, planners heard riilalCf: IUCb a dlsb1ct. He sakl such various protests. funds are not now avallab,le to the county Both in Jette.rs and in persoo, com- becau.se it dbes not have 1 proper agency t>talnts were lodged igalnst aD«tM nolJt to receive them. created by such a nunery, parking pro- Particlpation in regional studies in blerns, lack of safety and the km of transportation was allto cited by Koch as Cypress Dr:lve's resJdenUal atmosphere. another rea90n to form the district Planners added several conditions He named such studies as the North which have to be met, in approving the Orange County Traffic Study now being First OuisUan Church dJ.y nursery. conducted by the Los Angeles Rapid The nursery will be requited to have Tramit Study group. '* four additional off-street parking .spaces. Koch aJso cited the county'• own study operating hours between 8 a.m. and noon of a Master Plan of Air Transportation, M~y through Friday, pick up and the networks systems segment of the delivery on Ramona Street _only, stag~ county's GeneraJ Planing Program: the gered ~Iva! and depa rture. times and a regi6nal trall!pOl'tation planning study of fence wh1c~ ts compatible with bordering the Southern California AssociaU r nelghbo~ m the R-2 zone. I~ addition, the Govemmens (SCAG ). on ° center will be up for review one year from now. Also, the San Clemente-Los Angeles Urban Corridor Study beiag eo1dueted by SCAG lo develop solutions to the con- gested Santa Ana Freeway Corridor, and the proposed study of the San Diego-Los Angeles high speed corridor to be con- ducted by San Diego County'• Com- prehensive Planning Agency. Koch said the transit committee believ- ed that the most Jogjcal system for solu.- ti<>11 of the short-ruge rarld transit needs of the county appears to be buses. He said such a system, if approved by the voters, could be achieved in a much shorter space of time W1de.r the transit distri~ agency and could be an integral part of any long-range solutions to mass transit in the county. The center will serve 24 children, in about 1,000 square reet of space at the church. It will Include play equipment for the youngstel"3. In other action, the planning com- mission : -Approved a request for a wne change, to R·3 from R-2, on the 600 block on Coast Highway, between Boat Canyon and Beverly Street. The approval was given contingent to installation of a new fire hydrant in the block by the property owner. -Passed to second bearing a request to rezone Crom R-3 to Cl at 352 Park Avenue. The change is requested so a professional bullding might be con- structed. :Reagata Gets Carpenter Vote . . Tax Revision Plan Nears Showdown By GEORGE SKELTON Uf'I S•r..,.._. .. ,,_. Clli.f Gov. Ronald Reagan picked up anotber vote for his deadlocked $1 billio11 tax revision plan today as he neared a final Senate showdown 01111 his top priority pro- 11:rim of the leglslaUve session. The added vote was assured when neP<1bllcan Slal< Chairman Dennis E. Carpenter won a Senate seat Tuesday tn a special Orange Cou1ty election. But the gt>vernor sUll was no cloeer·to victory than he was three weeka ago when a lone Republican -Sen. Clark L_ Bradley of San Jose -and a dozen rigid Democrats blocked pawge or tlle em· battled bill on the Senate Door. • Reagan and the measure's legi.slatlve 11ponsor, Awmblyman William T. Bagley 1 R.San Rafael ), planned a final attempt to pry loosc the properly tax relief plan Thursday night or Friday. The leglslaturt hoprB to adjourn th is wttkend. Sen. ~ilto.i ,.,tarks (R-$fln Fr1nclsco), planned to return Thursday from •n Asian lrlp to be on hand to vol< !or the 11:overnor'1 JX:OIJ'&m. Reigan'a Package WoUld prov J de subetuUaJ homeowners property tu reUef -$105 for an average '20.toO home -amt !inance tt by raising olhtr loe&. The sales tax, tor lnstaace, would be ln- crea&ed from 5 to I cent.s on the dollar. WilhhOldlng or the mto lilcoale In alao would be adopted. The bill require• 27 votts for passage. Even with Carpenter'• vote tt would still need one more, and the 13 .mate·op- JJ(wnt.a showed no sign at a meeting Tuesday of weakening t b e I r adamam stand. One ·Democrat who vo~ With the · Governor the !lral lime now la In a ho<pll·I and not upo&d to return before adjoornment. Sen. Tom Carrell ([).San Fernando), Is recuperaUna from what his office described u "coq:ested IURgS.11 ·The administraUon pinned Ill hopes on a potential "courtesy vote" for Carrell, rasl by one of the blU'a opponents. But there were no tnc:Ucations thJa w11 going to ha-·-whole coocopt ol '~Is one lhlt wu lnvenled lhla ...ilon. lt'1 ~ of Bqley'1 poydioqlcal wltf1re,' said senate Democratic Caucus Chairman Mervyn M-Oymally o! Lot Angela, one of lhe -la. "Tbey're not going to get the biD unlal Tom (Coml!) com<S beet tn an 1mbul.ance." 1 Bagley told a J'fll>O"l";r, "You can'l bring In 1 ntan who b: ill end jeopardize his health." Rtagan'1 press secretary, Poul Beck, 1lao llld It "Woold be ap- pailinc, almost" to not cul a "courtesy vote" !or 11a poor IUY who 11 sick." But another of the dissidents, Sen. Walter W. Sllem, (0.Bakersll<ld). llld, "I don't have any feeling of responsibility because they had plenty of time lo take up the bill b<fort ~. C&rrell got Ill." AdmlnlattaUon forces were walling un· tll Carpenter's elect.km bclore calllng another vote. Although I.he Slate Party Chairman has declined to publicly com- mit himself to YOUnr for the measure, ht .... ·ol ,... • has said, "I support the Governor '• tax program right down Uie line." Carpenter was expected 10 be sworn ln- to office Thursday or Friday, and backers planned a showdown soon af· terward. Reagan was expected to confer today and Thursday with senators, tncludlng opponents, tn an attempt to secure the tlxlra vote. 'nle governor also was con- sidering issuing a special appeal for public support. The deadlock«! bill repruenla half the governor's tax revision p1ekage. The other hall required only a simple ma- jority vote and paued the senate last month. It now is In the USlmbly awaiting concun-ence tn 1 e n a t • amendments. Reagan'• pa<:kace was unanimously en- dorsed Tuesday by the Loa Angeles Cou"' ty Board ol Supervlaors. One membtt, Burton W. Olase, wired Reagan that. "The Supervltora ar-e in accord that lA>l Angeles County property t1xpayer1 art almost in 1 state or crisis." . Council-fo Take - Action Tonight 11 BARBARA KJIETBICH 09 .. a.lr,.. ..... Tbe Laguna -City Council IDnight wW receive 1 progress report on the cotmty-rpomored health survey now get,. Ung under way in the community. together with a request that the dty con- tinue to pro9lde olflce space for Ille survey team. The team bas been wortlng out of the high school cafeteria since July, but will ha ve to vacate this space at the hep ning of Stptanbor. The joint profeuklnal-resident study of Laguna's needs in physical and mental health facllitie! was initiated following a City Council re30Jution reqU£Sling county a.ui.tance. After meetings with Co u n c 11 man Charlton Boyd and Mayor Richard Goldberg, Dr. E.W. Klati., deputy dirtO> tor of the county's Community Mental Health Services program, decided to have a south county survey team focus it.s at- tention on the Lagim.a area for several months. In a letter to the council, Dr. Klatte lists the major Lasb as: -Recruitment of the team, Including several special consultants for the city ot Laguna Beach. -Design and Initial implemenlaUoo ol a three--pronged study with emphasis on broad participation by Laguna residents. -Training ol a staff to ba,.... . prepeli- tion scretning for the Southern Onn&e Coast district. -FinaUy, participation in countywide health planning efforts which affect not only the city of Laguna Beach but the en- tire Southern Coasial. are.a • Recruitment of the survey team la almost complete, Dr. Klatte repo.U, and design of Ille 11udy la noarlng Ila final phue. It will include a traditiooal statistical aurvey of disease lnddence in the area; extensive interviews wi.lh reiidents as to local needs and problems; and a community workshop series. Emphasl21ng the -.! !or Ille broadest possible resident participation in the study, Dr. Klatte notes that the coopera- tion of the IAguna Beach Coordinating Council bas -IOliclltd. The ueeutM committee of the Coonllnatlng CounclJ mt! with the team Monday night and volad Ila lllpliort. Resulla of the aludy will be contalntd in a nport to be completed by the end o( November and presented 1o tJw City Cooncll oo Dec. 7. The report allo will go to the county Board ol Supervllon with recommendaUona as to the health facilities needed in the Lagw\& aru. In bll ldter to lhe council, Dr. Klatte notes, '"lb.ii effort ttpieMUt'I • bllMD- doua cornmllm<llt ol -.. Ille port ol the Oran&• CollDty team .. Illa ... ty ol Laguna --" Tolal coot ol lhe IUl"V"l' will be ...... ol Wbldl Ill but 110, .. aJrady 1* liem budg'1ed r..., cou111y ewm1111111111-1 Health -i-. Ula( with • 113,480 (ederal grant. Director ol the -team .. Dr. Willlam Routt, psychlatrtlt wbo a11111-to Laguna Imm an'Ull~ wltlt Illa Na- tional lmtllute for -1ftaltll ill Wasblngtoo, D.C. and bas bod -.. uper-. In the orpnilalioa ol _,, munity bealtb IUVka. Others oo the team an: Sam Albert. M.D.. nsidllt l • psyd>latry "' Or-CouatJ lfedlca1 Center who will focus on. traclittinl ep~al UpeclS ol tbe ..,..,, Smed 8F,ber· ~ --years as juvenile muwlar wiUa ti. California Youth Authority and ()rap County ProbaUoo Do~; Molly Crooio, wbo bolds a B.A. In anthropology, is aperleoced In limo!Ew proctmires and youth ptop .... """ will serve as librarian and. coordiDltor of voltmteers: LJM Daubs, public beaJtlt """" willi many yun nperlenct, wbo bas """" as a nurse on. the crtsil ~tum at Orange Coonty Medical Caner; Nadia Ranuy, -.I eandldalo In anthropology wbo has wMed !!ft ,.an with Dr. Routt and b tnter.sted In Illa field interview proces.a; Van King; architect and planotr, work- ing as ,a consult.anl for the National: Institute of Molllal llealtb, wbo brinp with him a federal grant for the dollp ti service structures; _ Joo Reichelt, photo journallJt md plaD- ning assistant with ~ In ,_ <ounStllng wbo will assist In --of the final roport: Marcie Tamayo, registered 111ne with an M.A. in social t)lfWk. who will coe- centrate on field interviews; Bob Van Marie, who bolds an M.A. In social wort and bu an utensive background in casework and lll!'Tic9 ocganizatloo •truc1ur<. wbo w i 11 participate in preparatlm ol ~ Peg smlJh, :ID-year Lquu -..... dent and former JAWQ It 1 a .._. • will belp coordlnaf.e .-Ubop - and conduct field Interviews. Vohmt.tert from the cmvmmllJ wiU be needed in all phlJeS " the heallll -• •ccordina to Dr. llooll. p,,_ "" terested In aasisUn& may caDtad tum members at the high ICbool by call!n1 ....-,£11.11 .. a Public liccess .to Beach # Nears Leg~lative Okay A bill forcing aubdivtders ol oceanfront property to provkte public acces1 to beaches appears headed for approval by the state legislature. The measure specifically would pro- hibit local governments from approving new oceanfront subdivisions without pro- visions ror public access to the coa.sUlne. It passed the Senate Monday, 22-11. with minor amendments from a previously-approved A.!13embly version. Assemblyman Jobn DU1111p (0.Nipa), sponD" of the bill, said he aeea little dlf· ficulty in the new venlon winning con-- currence from the lower house and receiving the siinatu:re or Governor Reagan . The measure would not be retroacUve and would have no apparent affect on such development& as Promontory Bay In Newport Beach or the Salt Creek Beach dispute in Laguna Niguel. The bill had drawn criUclsm trOm Sen. Randolph Collier (0.Yreka) wbo called It ••a blad:jact to subdlviders." He said, .. By Indirect condemnation, you're taking away private property." In response, sen. John A. NeJedly CJ\. Walnut Creek), s.;tate manager of the bill, said that current law does guarantee the public reamable 8CCf&I to btachland but that subdivisions often block the -:ay. He said that subdivlders now must make pnwlsloo for other klnds ol P<1blic P"fllOS'S such u providing for sehools and streets. The meqsure, accordint to Dunlap's or- fice, doe• not provlde for eomponullon for tbe developer who Is making attain tandt available ror public accta. This drew o"lticism from some eomen. Ne- Singapore Diplomat Cancels Asian Visit KUALA LUMPUR, MO)'olala (UPI) - Prime Minilter Lee Kuan Yew of neighboring Singapore ClllCOled an ol· ficiat Visit to ~ Allan naUon ioday tiiecause of 1 d!spute over halrtub &iven by Silulapon poilce to three loni-!lalred Matays1an youths. . The yoilths -Tins Choon Wah, F1y11 Ahmad Falah Moh1mmed 1nd 11-tn Abdullah -charpd tfult lht Sinppore police held them !or two dly1, cut off lhtlr hair, (toenlly mlslrHled lhtm Ind made disparaging remarks ab o u t Malaysian ol!lci11J'. • jedly, Incidentally, WU quoted U ll,Yil>I Jt did provide for compenu.Uoo. A spoitsman for Asotmblyman Dunlop also confirmed that the bW -not spell out bow much or what kind of aCCllll should be provided. He abo said it does permit nne U· clusiona, citing as examples ubernely small subdivisions or developments built in areas remote from other public areas. Msemblyman Dunlap, hlmlelf, ~ firmed lhll! morning that the ...UOO d Ille bill eicllldlng Ila die<! on IQb. divisions that have already received U!rt- tative approval, was Included tn the languaae at the request ol the de"'1open of Laguna Niguel. That development Is t'UJftDt.Jy blttllna w i t h tl)e county Board of Supervbort: over efforts by the county to obc.ain public access to certain aect1oat or Laguna Niguel. Laird Rejrets Compromise On ABM Issue WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe Ptll'- today dulled the lut hopes of foes Of lho Safeguard oollmllllle •Ylfom !hot Presi. de11it NlsOll coukt accept a Senate com- promise on barrtnr . the 1 y 1 t 1 m • • geographic upanslon. The -· by Secretary "' -Melvin Laird 1ppeored to make Ubly a defeat ror an amendment barring u- pansion to two new lites and Ullnf the '322 million saved to Improve -1t the two sit.ea: approved Jut yur, "The Departme"t of Defeae camiot support and is oppoeed" to the ~ ment sponoortd by Stn. Edwant - <R·Masa.), Lalrd said ln 1 loller""' 1e lhe Senai. by Chairman John staanll di Ille Armed Service• Committee. Lalrd uld the·--..-an lddiUonal l5llO mlllloo, fall to ..- sulflcltnt oumbero of ol(att!Jle bomWI, and c1uae "an unac:ceptable .w.r-In providing dtlenKI for U.S..mlW... Last week, Brool<e md other ,... porters of the compmnl11 .,... -they had "evldeneo" from INlde Ille While HOOJe and P"'lap. ibat the ad- mlolatr1ilon could "ll•• <amlotiablJ" wilh the Drool<• .... - • • . • • ,, DAil Y I'll.OT l td : II• ...... bllftt .. IW •ftl '' ' . ~I bas .bee1I •entence\I six '. S cm probation because be praCticed pollution for art's sake. In 'Vesil!ln. Rlch•N Tr .. is, 27. a student -I the Los Angeles Art.Cen- ter Scllool, ti>ld Mullicipa] Coar! Judge Bert Henson he had been assill!iM to Jlbt>~raph the el.feels of oil ill"llQUon bn '"l"'an life and . beaches. Travis said he couldn't find any pollution but found a dead seal and some dead birds: He ar- ran&ed these for pbotographint and for added e!fec'I sprinkled around sonte .oil Jrom a· ~ar crankcase, be said. Henson. sentenced him Satur· day after he pleaded nt') conte~ to a CQaflle of placing pe(rolellJn pro- ducts on State waters. As a condi· tiQJJ of probation Travis is reqiured ta"'write essays on how California hWMles offshore oil leases and on advice he should have souJ?ht from ollcials-before spreadinJ? oil on un- tMbled waters. • • You'w Uard Clbovt the hard· luck motori.lt 10ho rami his vehicle i!Uo a poliCt' car~ Last tD«k Ronald R. G~nt'htT of Uwisto•, JtUiho.' hit t 10 o. _.thtr iidt:.noiped the -perscm· . car of Dtput~ SMriff George , Mindtn on a Uwi.sto;n street, n bounced into a s~riff's car. He was c.harged with ntivt drivTng. • Want IQ buy the rose petals that singer Mick Jqoer threw to audience last TbanksgivinR? Or guitar that was IJllashed by P•t•r n59ftd of the Who? These and o items of rock music memor· abµia are t.o be auctioned Oct. 12 aCtbe Fillmore East auditorium in N:e.w York. The proceeds will go to Ml·the campaigns of peace candi· 4111.es. the organizers said Thurs· dl!Y'. ·Want to buy a flute belt be- Io_Qffng to N•n AnderSOft · of the Jelhro Hu11 group! How about a limousine that is sald to have trailS· dtited. amont others, Artth• '-'~M.11n, J•nis Joplin and the Mtles? !>O • . One of the patients in the matern· ~ ward at Stanford University H~ital has a beard. He's archi· ted F rwd S.•s, 36, who shares a room with his wife. Both were in-. iured in an automobile accident i!iune 6. Mrs. Saas, 28, iave b to their first child June 23 . a h y tiff named Sh•wnee EliU· Nth. The father asked to be pre~ ent for the birth. despite the ela· borate traction ~ear for his variouS: broken bones. So the hospital wheel· ed his bed into a delivery room. AJJ three patients are reported do-- int fine. Of the baby. Mrs. Saas. s: "We are sorry she had to . .,., w: in such adverse conditions." : . At the Monterey Peninsula air· port a mechanic spotted a bird's nest in the engine of a parked priv· ale plane. He turned the propeller for a closer look the en2ine roared to life, and U1e plane raced 100 yards before crashing into a tract· or and a small hangar. Damage was put al $6.000. The mechanic wasn't injured but bird's nest was blown away'. ----- BU.s Claarged 11 Schools Lose Tax Exemptions WASHINGTON (UPI) -'!'ht tnternal Revenue Servtce today revoked the tax exemption of 11 all.white private schools in Mississippi which refll!ed to adopt Polkies agslllsl racial disa1mlllatlon. It v.'as I.be-first suspen1k>n1 action by the IRS llOder ij.s new poticy to deny Ulx ex:emptions to schools wlUcJI practice djscriminaUon. ' . Tbt IRS deciskln means that gilts to tbe 9t'bools -a dlief IOUl'Ct of tinancia.J aid for most prtvate academies -can no klnger be deducted from a donor's in- ODl'De' w . lt abo moans the schools will have to pay taxes· on any 1ocome they earn. The 11 schools were included among •1 named in a recent decision by a federal district aJOrt. in Wuhingtoo which pro- hibited favorable tax treatment for segregah!d academies. The IRS said the schools were given a cha~ to elinUnate rad.al ban but mus- ed to do so. Schools involved in ·the IRS order in· eluded : the Cit.hens' Educational Foun· dallon. Vicksburg; Covington &:hool Foundation Inc., ML Oltve; 'Forrest County School Foundation Inc., Hat· tiesburg: Oktibbeha Educational Foun- dation Inc .• Starkville; Parents's Educ•· Uonal and Development Foundation Inc., Meridian. Calboun Eduealiooal Foundallon Corp .. (Calhoon Aoademy), ea11iow> a17; Pass· point Private School. Mosspoint; Rebul Academy Inc., Learned; Pines Private School Foundation, Wiggens; Harrlaon C.ounty Private School F o u n d a t I o n , Biloxi; Tunica Institute of Learning Inc .. Tunica. Tu·o of the 41 schools covered by the court order, Hattiesburg Academy, Inc., Aattiesburg. and Southside Academy, Jackson, have gone out of business. The ms said action on the remaining 28 schools covered by the order would de- pend upon whether fhe schools agree to drop racial barriers. The IRS. shortly before the OlW"t order GOP's Spending Issue Eroded..;.. By Republicans WASHINGTON (UPI) ..:. By musing l<> back the Nixon administralion's spendtng curbs. def.ecting Republicans slowly are undermining a prime · GOP campaign issue -ncaaive p e ndl n1 by a Democratic controlled Congress. Twice In less than two months, lgnorin& Pmident Nixon's orders to cut spendlna. Cor1gress has overturned his vetoes. Jn both cases, RepubU~ans desertinJ the administration ~ve provided enough votes to muster the two-thirds majority needed to override. The Senate, following the example set by the House, Tuesday comfortably over· rode"Nixon 's velo of the $4.4 billion aid to education appropriations bill . The 77 to 16 \"Ole automatically made the measure law. Joining with all voUng Democrals, 23 Republican senators cast ballots against the administration's po1ltion. Sixteen Republicans voted to sustain the veto. In June the Senate overrode Nixon's veto of the hospital construction bill, 76 to 19, with 23 Republicans defecting. The Senate's action on the aid to educa- Lion bill gave Nixon a split on his \'etoes so far. The President's vetoes of the fiscal 1970 health, education, and welfare bill and the fiscal 1971 housing and in- dependent offices appropriations bills Democrats who want to use Nixon's refusal to allow more fun~ for domesti c programs u ope of their campaign issues rejected contentions that providing more money for education could be translated were sustained. into excessive spending. was lsaued Jast June, adopted a policy de- nying tu exemptions to all private schools which practict racial discrimina- tion. The IRS previously gratUed tu U · emptions to seven Southern privlte schools, nooe of them in Mississippi, whlch filed -lion declar•· lions. Final decisions on the tu statua: of olher private scboob ano still pendinj:. Wife Killed, 3 Wounded In Gun Spree AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -A mental pa· Uent shot and killed his estranged wife Tuesday nighl, wounded two men, and kept police al bay for nearly six hours by holding his teen-age stepoon host.age. The tense incident came lo an end when Vin· cent Amelia, 48. shot and wounded his stepson, Randy Smith, 18, in the back. Police saw the stepson lying on the floor of Amelia's home in the city's easl side and ordered Amelia to come out. When he refused, police lobbed tear gas into the home. Amelia. who was on probation from Llma St.ate Hospital, staggered out ol the house with tears running down his cheeks and blood streaming from his nose , ap- parently from flying glass . Summit County Prost:cutor James Barbuto had just finished g;ving Amelia an ullimalum over a bullhorn from a police car. "All right," Barbuto said. "we want to see Randy. We think something has hap· pened to Randy. lf we don 't see Randy now we 're coming in." The tear gas was fired into the house, which had been floodlighted by the fire department, when Amelia made no move to show the boy. Randy was found with a bullet wound in the small of hl& back. He was-admitted lo Akron City Hospital in fair condition. Amelia was charged with .ooe count of first degree murder and two counls of shooting with intent to kill. Pol.ice said .Amelia entered Louie 's Bar earlier in ,the evening. firing two guns simultaneously. His wife, Rita. 43, was killed and George Grist, 44, of Akron, and Edward Jones, 24, of Canal Fulton. Ohio, were wounded. Grist was listed In serious condition ~nd Jones was reported in satl.sfactory condition. The s;i.ege on Amelia's home began about 7 p.m. when he called police and told them what had happened. While he was holed up, he yelled to police. "I have nothing to Jose. but die kid has.,, He talked .Dver the telephone with police, tiis attorney, his probation officer and Barbuto. 3rd Kidnap Note Found in Brazil MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay lAP) -Of. ricials were not commenting today on the third message in four days warning that a kidnaped Brazilian consul will be .killed unless the government frees 1 8 J prisoners. All three notes were found in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and the Uruguayan police dt<'ided the first two were takes. The third message, found Tuesday, said the Tupamaro guerrillas would kill Brazilian Consul Aloysio Mares Dias Gomide at 1 l p.m. ~unday unless the government freed the pr!SOl'lers by 6 p.m. Saturda y, Officials said they were stu. dying the note to determine whether it is authentic. Blythe . Nation's Hot Spot Heavy· Thunderslto·wers. Soak Central Plnins, Rockies c.u1 .... o1. "EYIEW DFUSAwtATHCllUllUUFOl[CAST TO J:ttA.M. EST 1•20•"0 .. Temperatures Co.utal . "'"""'"'" S.CWWI -.,,\. .,1, II ~·•·"'· 4.4 St«ni!'IOw ·~··· .. ~.:.;•4~"'-•I •Tl!IUMt>AY Flrtt llllfil .., •. • ••• II·''•·"'· SJ tl'lrti ltw .•• J.:.(. •..•• t:et1."', I .I kllflll111i.ll .... , •• , ... U~n1.m. 4.1 ltCOlld \fof , 1:-ft ... m. I .I Su11 •i.tt •:11 1 m. Stlt 1:.» t.M. ~ 1u ... t.111.m. l•h ••1•1.m • ll.S. S11mn1ar11 "•""' ""'"°"•le•m1 "-".,."" Md ---k"'lerwl ..... , Of ......... , .. rlleld.., 111t11t. 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Yot11 o.li;l•nd ...... ,. ... $MM •Ml1"'r"'l1 '""bu'"'ll _,, •ortl11'>d ""' llu!f ·-~<••,,,.,..,, SI. t.«ill t.•11 t,.tMt (II, $111 °'"° 5111 ''•l"ltlS<a S111i. 911~r1 ltfll)t ·--Tll"1"!MI Wtl~IM!O~ --•--- Hl9'1 1...w .. ..c. .. " !of ,, .)5 ,1 11 Hlll 11 11 ,, .11 " .. 14 ,, " 61 .u ., " . ~ fl JI IJ 61 " . lOl Ill • p ll •• .. " m " 11'0 " 11 ,, ••• 16 ll 11 " . .. 17 .N p p II SI . .. • " .. ... 103 11 II S' •s '' • • " ~ .... ~ .. ~ u " . -ff n " .... JOI II " M PRESIDENT GESTURES TO MANHATTAN POLICEMEN Enjoyint • Nostalgic Day on Sidewalks of N•w York Nixon Pays Nostalgic Visit to Old NY Haunts NE\V YORK (UPI) -President Nixon paid a walking visit to his o1d Manhattan neighborhood Tuesday. enjoying the abundance of wel1 wishers and the Jack of the usual antiwar demonstrators. Nixon came to brief the editors and ex· eculives of the New York Daily News. There also was a bit of nostalgia in bis \'isil when he took an impromptu stroll from the Hotel Pierre to his former apartment residence al 810 Fifth Ave. with hlt daughter Tricia, 24. 'f'hto Presiderit not only stopped but _seemed to seek out long-haired youths, young men and women, for brief chats. The crowds which trailed him were rriendly and enthusiastic. The visit, kept secret until Tuesday morning, wu free ot . tbe mililant ant!War. demonstrations he and his predecessor~ Lyndon B. Johnson, faced Oil previous New York trips. . Tb:=ote were a few antiwar 1l.gns. Some placards with obscene slogans and some calls of "We want peace." But Nixon felt free and safe to walk the streets, and he said so. He told reporters : ''I think the climate is some better - yes, i'ts better. It's the hope that people have. "I think whether it's the Middle East, Vietnam or the reit -that we are mov- ing -even though they must disagree in various ways -that we are moving to- ward a period y,•hen we can have a peace· ful world. ""And incidentally." he added. "I wa& v~ glad as you will note that we ran in-- lo a number of young people -some wjth their hair a little bit longer than mine -they were extremely friendly I understand. But I have always tm· phasized tb people that you never judge whafa pehon's reaction ls going to be by !he length or his hair." 'the President rpent two hours diSCUBS- irig ·fort.l,gn ·and dOmestic policy with the editors and executives of the nation 's Jarg"esl ctrc14ation dai)y. Nixon recalled , that five years ago he briefed Daib' News officials and pro· mised to return il he ever became Presi· dent. ''I don't blink they believed I ever 11.:ould win," he said. Nerve Gas Leak Checks Fail, But No Trace Found ABOARD THE USS HARTLEY (UPl) -The Navy today abandoned its efforts to detennine whelher a sinking Liberty ship released its cargo of deadly poison ~as into the Atlantic Oceao 282 miles off the Florida coast. Elaborate experiments to detennine whelher 418 concrete and sleet vaults of nerve gas had burst apart under lhe pressures of three miles of ocean water ended in failure, as did efforts to pinpoint the exact location of the sunken hulk. The Navy said its speeial satellite navigation equipment failtd to find any trace of the SS Lebaron Russell Briggs. leaving It and 6? tons or the obsolete but toxic gas lost under 16,000 feet m water. Navy experts eil:pressed disappointment but indicated the failure of the ex· periments would add nothing to the possi· ble threat to human life. They said the threat was almost non existent anyway. Only one test worked, but it was in· conclusive. · Water samples taken from a l\ne lowered almost half way to lhe sea bed showed negative results for gas. A Navy spokesman said !hat particular test would have been meaningful only if it had reacted positi vely. No gas was evident in v.·ater samples taken at the surface . but none had bttn expected . Miss Davis' No Ai1gela I.OS ANGELES (UP I) -The discovery of Angela Davis' 1959 Rambler in front of a Black Panther party me1nber's hon1e late Tuesday resulted in nn inte nsive but unsuccessful search for the black mllih1.nt wanted on a California murder charge. Miss Davis, a self·proressed Com· munlst who was placed on the t'Bf's list of 10 most wanted persons earlier in the day, ts sougbt on a cow1 arr1da\'ll that she bought all rour guns used in SAn Rafael, In an unstiCt'eSSful courlrOOm escape that Jefl four persons shQI. ltl death. The Rambler had been identified in an all poinls buJletin issued by Authorities when MW Davis was first sought in oon· nection with the slayings. The guns Miss Davis pure! ised in 1968, 1969 and 1970 were smuggled into lhc cow-troom by accomplice Jonathan P. Jackson, 17, but it was reported police were seeking Franklin D. Alexander, 28. concerning one of them. It was in front of Alexander 's home Miss Davis' auto was found . The \\.'eapon had turned up In the mililant's apartment here during a police raid-but was returned under court order and not seen again until the San Rafael shootout. Police and FBI agenls staked out AIWI'.· ander"s home afler the vehicle was fOlUld. When a relative ol Alexander 's returned to the home, :-sbe allowed officers to search the residence. Officers, findlng nothing, left the car where it was. Police also reported that several witnesses said a woman matching 1\.Uss Davis' description arrived at Los Angeles International Airport Tuesday aboard a flight from New York City. However, officers said the clothing descriptions from the witnesses varied greaUy and police tended to discount the reports. Earlier that night. Los Angeles Airport delail officers searched a Na· tional Airlines jet· at International aflet' they were informed by airport security guards they had received a tip Miss Davis was planning to hijack the plane to Cuba. A search of the aircraft turned up nothing and it left as scheduled. 1\.1iss Davis, ousted UCLA faculty mem· her, was placed on the FBI list after 'escaping a .series of police raids in her home town of Birmingham, Ala. She is the third woman ever to be so listed and the FBI said she should be con· sidered armed and e1tremety dangerous. South Viets Deny Reds' Charges Of Laos Entry . "SAIGON (AP) -The South Viel· namese mililary command today denied Communist charges that its combat lroops are operating in Laos, but in· formed sources reported again that South Vietnamese reconnaissance patrols have crossed the border. · The sources said most of the patro~ are landed by U.S. helicopter.i along the 200-mile Ho Chi Minh tr.ail in lhe lower panhandle of Laos to spot targels for American bombers. The Communist Pathel Lao reported in a radio broadcast Tuesda y that on Aug. !t "the United States introduced a number of Saigon puppet anny units into the boundaries of Saravane Province, under the control of the Lao Patriotic Front rPathet Lao). These forces have con~ ducted military operations against the region ." The broadcast said the move wa s pilrt or the Americans' .. overall plan for us1n,e: Saigon and Bangkok puppet troops to conduct and widen their war of ag· grcssion in Laos wilh th e aim or turning Laos into a second Cambodia." The broad cast said Prince Souphanouvong, lhe leader of the Patht>t Lao, made the charge last Saturday In a letter delivered to Pri~ Souvanna Phouma. the Laotian premier. COFFIN SHIP LEBARON RUSSSEL L llRIGGS SINKS BENEATH SE A Aging Liberty Ship Car ri N Nerve G•• Cargo to D•Y•Y Jones' Lock•r • I I ~~~-~i ~.y = .... r-~c." ' .. . • •• San Cle1nenie Capistrano EDITION * voe. 63, NO. 198, 6 SECTION • ·102 PAGES ...... r KriShna Sect Apologizes, Won't Stop ChantS .. By BMIBAR~ KR!IRICH or 1111 Dell• ~11• 111ff Members of the Krishna Oonsciowinea1 »eel are 90rry if they have offended anyone in Laguna Beach. the president of the Woodl&nd Drive Krishna Temple aaid today. From now on, he vowed, members of the sect will stop their alleged "high pressure" salesmanship and gi\le their literature free to lhose who desire it. However, · they do not 'intend to stop ::hlllling, despite complaints, because Swi1n for Life this actlvlly Is prescrtbed by their rellgk>n, said president Durlabh Das. Activities of the colorfUlb' garbed Krishna disciples came under fire at a recent city council meeting when Mayor llkbard Goldberg sald he had received complalnlll about the selling of inceme and attempts to press magazine sales on the streets. A further complaint was regllltered by lifeguards al the Main Beach gua1,Hower who said that bolrdwall: cbanllng Mike A.pderton, 13, San Clemente (foreground), and· Randy Riley, 15, Laguna Beach, .practice lifesaving technique 'used to stay afloat after' falling or jumping into water while fully doUJed, Boys were -required to remove clothing, fill it w.ith air and use it as a lifejacket during exercise in two-week lifesaving class for J.2..l~year-olds at Laguna High pool. ' Coastline Zonin g Bill Near Defeat in Senate A bill which would put 1,100 miles of :alilomia coastline under state plaMing and ~ning authority, is a step closer to Jefeat in the Senate today, (See related 1tory, Page 3) The bill, which pa~ the Assembly by 1 12-vote margin two weeks ago, was unended again Tuesday and another ~earing in the Senate Govemment Jrganization Committee was set for rtiursday just one day before the egislature is slated to adjourn. The author of the measure . lssemblyman Pete-Wilaon (R-San Diego) toes not hoJd out much hope for Senate ...,.ge Ibis term. ' u the bill is •w<>ved ht the 'lbqr&day iession, It must pass still another com- mittee. a Senate f I o or vote and an hsembly floor vote to concur la tlle om...-.U. "1t Isn't very·Jikely ,'' said Wilson. The bill, which is backed by the city governments of Huntington B t a c h . Newport Beach, Laguna Beach aDd San Clemente, would impose statewide plan- ning standards on all property within 1,000 yards of the ocean . Five regiop.al boards would set stan- dard! for·new buildings, subdivisions and OCi!8Tl activities such as dredging and fUl- ing within three miles. Opposition to the measure Is in the form of fear o( interferen« with private property righls. The bill, u It stsruls, would J!l'OVlde for the least tmposfUon of state authority ~ lo tndltiollll city planning And zoning powers. ·The most recent amendment would u- ctude the cily of Long Beach -the regulatloh!. ·~ Landscaping O.ue Caretakers R eady for Nixon Vi.sit Tbe NiJ.on family wm·bave some more planta to maintain at the We!tem White HOO. when they arrive for a working 1i1acaUon Friday. l:.and!caping started this week on onpianted spaces withiO the Prealdent'a estate in brushy area which once served as a pasture foe riding stock. tn the meanUme. pieparalioos are under way for the second honeymoon trip of President tnd Mrs. Nixon to the city where they lint vi!l.ted !Ml yean ago. After SPOndlng Tbunday and Frldsy in i>-io Vallarta, Mellco, the President Ind bio wile will join their two dsugbtert ind a aon-tn-la" at 1be Spanish villa for a slay lastlng lhr«Jgb the ""t ol Augusl Mr. Nixon spent Monday In New York visitiZJI with tht brw: ol the New York Dolly News and atrollillg the .-of bis old neighborhood with -and elder daughter Tricia. Miss llfixon was fresh from sparking some new gossip among WhUe Houae observers after a w~d of attending a wedding and parties with 1 frequent escort, Richard Fincb Ca The 24-year-old Tricia and CoJ., a Harvard Law School student, attended a wedding last weekend, then went to .several parUes wllh1his friends. On the Monday trip throogh the Fillh and MadllOO avenue areas in MaMattan, Mr. ~. Pat and Tdcla wm joined by former New York Go...,.,. 'l'homu E, Dewey and lW'O of Nixon's old acbool chums from Whittier College. At the dinner hour they dined al the posh La Cote Boque restaurant. seulonl by the Krishna ll<IUP WU ill- terferin& with their wori<. 'lbe prelldenl o! the temple said, "We apologize to the people o! Laguna for any offtMe wt may have camed, but we bope they will try to be tolerant and un- derstand whst we are doinl bere, ID the past year, f1 yc..ung men and women. both resldenta and tranalenll, hsve come into our orpnization, liven up drup and illlcft IOJ and·-OD to otbor - Some even !>ave bec:ome preaidenla o! temple1." '!be .. are.just lour dladples In Lquna DOW', Aki Dis. bul tbe numbft 'ftriea. "We an tho only -""" ean truly dwlpllle_of_ol __ people. tr poop1e ... na11y ....,.,. ... about youth, they IOUld lllow us to con- tinue. 'tllen la no olhar l>opa !or many," AaMUbebod ___ b)'d- ty r• 11 lltiua ncatdlJ:C b C8ID- plalnta, the temple pnoidltll Did, "We were approacbed bf _. ~ ...,, A. c. --llwaml; -.... fn>n> laolta lo -Ille lld hen, He told us lo llop allias -ud to olart llh'· inl our ll-•n1 !no, onlJ to - -wish to ·-K. II tllty ·w1111 to donate to our caUM. tine, tit not, allO (. " me. Bui as far u ·lba ebantils ls.....,.tned, Du Did, ~ Will """bo ltC<lfpod. "Tllil II how n pndlol • /dlfon, • ~ ... P1aine4 "We ._ lllfPllOC( to lilllll In one~acbul,bulwetryto- aloq .tf pil>plt .................... .. --ltlld•w.-··-Of -_.. --,,,.,.. ,..., like the -of Iba mtialc, evon °"*"' ftlla-ol~Bul ... .... 1urn lo .... o .... Q aad ... .. (llee 08NA;1"p I) Another Freeway Neede~ For SaddlehacK ·Valley County's Plan • Chief Cites Grow th Woes By PAMELA HALLAN Of Ille DllWJ '"" '"" - Another freeway, ia addition to the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways, will be needed lo absorl> future traffic Dow through and around the Saddleback Valley, Orange County Planning Director Forest Dickason declared Tue9day night. 'lljckuoo'• ~ canio~ t~ bdoro thl! Saddl<!bac:I; Va~li • ,..i__..... . \ T"' ~ ' ~~-e. .f,_., traffic flow, tii<Ciiuolt'plal> •!'{.o.Ud..il ooly..,. Gt many ....,.th pro- 1>1ems facin& bis departmenHn the )'Ul'I ahead. He Pointed to needs for prt!lel'V&tion of the environment, conflicts b e. twee. n urbanlzalilXI and the Marlae Corp> Air Stalion at El Toro as other presain& pro- bleins. "Another freeway will have to be pla.- ned through this area in addlUon to the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways," said Dickason. "We have to face up to this problem now and atart dealing with the highway depart:meat." He pointed out that several offramps were planned for the Saddlebaclr: Valley freeways to help alleviate some of the fu\Ute congestion but this won't be enough. "We should be eooct:med whether or not automobiles are our only means of transportation, .. said Dickasoo. He sug- gested that the Irvine Company's development.. might lend themselves to another mode of transportation. He did not elaborate. Dickason described the opportunity for providing a better environment as .. tremendouJ" when working with large developers. He said it was more difficult in places like Dana Point where there are so many small land holders. One of the Saddlebacll: Valley's en- vironmental problems, ucessive air noise, was described as something to be lived with. "We have here one of the largest Marine Corps air statlool in the naUon,'' said I»ckaaon. '"'Ibey have a com· mitment bere and indicate they •ill re- main. for a long time. NaturllJy, this CBUHll a conflict With surniunding land." He said Lelsur< World bad dealt with 1he problem and now plans to ezpand btto (See PLANNER, Pap 11 Putting Teeth lnw the Law Underlining tonight's clly council vote on ordloance re1trlcting clop in Laguns Beacll, tbo Ari Colony pollce bloU« recordo 1 new canine caper, At 7:111 p,m. Tuesday nigh~ aays · the npoct, otfioer John Saporito 1>1rked bis police car in the 2200 block ol South Cout Hlghoay, IOI out to make: a rouUne check and was promptly biUen on the lei by a "small brown-gray terrier type dog!' I Damagle tnclurted one smtll cut on Saporito'• rtght calf and one ri~ ped pair of uniform trousers. Whereabooll of the .... Is •• pr....t unknown, polbt -, but an 1Utmpt Is being made to (lpil tho owner '° the animal can be qdartn- tineci 11 required under r1~ coD- trol h!gul1U0111. . .. Carpenter First Newport Sen ~~f?~ Newport Beach attorney ud stale Republican leader Dennis Clq>mter · Tuefdo1 'became the lim ..... Jo le •~to Ult ~'t!cot• m·iai""":· ~-~·~~~1,('.:. f. I---c~-:;-' , .r ~ 1"tOe, a Sin/a Aiio developer. lrviJ!e after filing for 1lie Poot -. hs4 • chaitle of heart .... -Ills """' port to CarpenlA!r. '!be wta: ~. I0,'133; 1rvlDei Z,1%1. Carpenter's electiom ls for the une:r .. pired teria of former Stale Sen. John G. Schmiis al Tustin, ..,,. the U.S. Coner< ...... """' the :IStb District, suc-cieding tho late-James B: Utl Ca~let facea 1 Democratic op- ponent, Dwl&ht W. Mise of Garden Grvve in the NOYtmber Geaeral Election for the regular fOllf')'Uf term beCiMil!& aext January. Mile did not tile for the ~ e~Uon calling it "a waste of tl:rplyen' money." Counly electioo ol!lcflls said the D,1'111 votes cast in thJs special election · represented only about aix percent of tbe district's 359,801 re1iltered voters. Of the total, I02,19i are Republicans, Technically, Carpe11ter is not ~ ftnt state senator to live in Newport Beach. '!be lat. John Murdy r<aided on 1Jdo lot. when he retired from office in 1914, but he was elected from Huntington Beach where he bad lived most of hi• llfe.. Carpenter's addiUon to the Senate GOP majority ii upected to aid .everal of Gov. Reagan's le11alaUve proposals which hsve been blocked by the laek of Dl'ILY'•n.oT·IWI ,_.. H~.-DED FOlt· SACRAMINTO New Senator C•t,fflfet necessary votes to ewticome t!h e Democratic bloc. Tops 1mo11g'theae ls the much debited tax refonn bill which is now scheduled for a 1e1ate Door vote on Friday. Qorpenter said Tuesday be hid nol (See CARPEl'n'EB, hf< I) * Laguna Officials Set To ,Fight Ba<J,hµm p,fll . By L. PETER llREIG Of ... o.JIY ,... Stll' SACRAMENTO -Delegatiom from Oranae Coast eommunlties were In the state capital today polllhlng .presen- tationa for the long awaitea senate Tran1portatlon Committee hearing on A•mblyman Robert Badbam's bW to wipe out PacUic Coast Freeway in Newporl Beldl. Badly outnumbered, Newport Mayor Ed Hirth and Cooncllman Howard Ropra were present to plead for pas&age of tbe bill that would klll the, proPQOed roote of the future !rteway thnllJlb their city, Robert Curd, repmeotlng Newport'• newly-formed d"""" Coordlostinl eo ... mlttee apinlt the freeway. was also p<Uenl Ind expected to address the com- mittee In IUpport of the bllL City o!!icif.11 from Coota Meaa, Hu .. lington Boacb and Laguna Btach and l'!l<"letlt,lllVll ql tbe ""'1b' filed ~ 1his _,lo· ....... tllllillll tlle -· late 1oc1a1. . ' . The bill, '!"9'0'ed b7 ~· .Badham (Jl·lieWport -~ bMJilresdy 111ned approval lnlm JM lowlt - I Oay Mitchell - Out of Hospital Seotll•La&unm Clay 111ktieD'iia. -dilcharred from lloulftOoMt Coal-117 Hospital, where he w11 ~ J111y 27, following 1 heart allJoCk, and Is recuperating 1\ home. 1he '~~ ......... bwd member, w!IO -al 'll & ~­Road. said be~ to lie.well'~ to ·~the ~ ~ ... lb! bol!'ll, lo '11111~ ""' -• .,..,._. "" FebrlftrY bf Golwnor R,stpn. '•. , ' , ' ' I • ....... ' . . • • ' • I I ~ r • ' lf DAILY PILOT SC :t inda Told Mate ' !\I • ~-· Abo1:1t Mu Fde ts 'rils "ANGELES (UPI) -Lindo Kasa- br.,,• -lled klda7 tllal she lold her -.-lh<Talo~aJllaoca "'lir"> murders 1 few days 1fter they occwud ~t U}lt neither of thtm made any It-~' tempt la ODOl&ct police. l!'"' 11.lciet. ..... .-u.. by lrviftl "' • ~ tho atlomey r... hippie ell! • J. ie¥<f,~ ai_., Mn. Kisabiall aali ~ sbe did not realty know bow lo "'"· "go lo lhe pollce" and lell lhe llory. • t·., ~·yOu mean you didn't hive the courage lo.loll lhe pollce?" --ff"JI'"• •1 don 't know." - 0 01·• ~k asked her whit she told her ~ Robert about lhe slaytnp a f'M •<!: l&O tllll monlh. "l lllld him Olariey mppec1 and bad a "' . Wliolt. liundl ol people tilled,.. lbe aaid. "l pid .I AW • number "' people killed : I"• m)'ltlf . ._' -aated lhe wiU--her ·i:> hmbud bad not -led they lhould ,,.,.. c:optact autbort~ I ~.r "l{ill'f:ac:Uon was that you got to hurry up asKl get your Utile girl out ol there," '""' · sht did. "He didn't ae the reality of it." or J J.Cri.. Kasabian said she also told her ·~briefly lo a commune leader named ···.:;· Jde Sa.Se in New Mexico. ·~.,. "'He told me 'Unda 1 don't want to • .,.,, bellaie· that -I dooi lbinl< II bap- pel!Od." K..w.t pressed her .. lo all the ttasons why sbe bad not told lhe police her story in the moolha before she sur-~ rendered berlelf to P.QUce in Ne\f Ha~e. · ' She ·said she still thougbt " pollce aa "piga" and didnl know bow lo a-Clb them to tell her ltc¥'Y. She said she was afr>id they woold ihink !lie was crazy arict lake away her little girl. She .... aaid abe did not -....... . ' "'!-Mamon and the other girls ol lhe ~ ··family'• were at that time and that they "' _,... -and . klJl lier and her '" ~. She aaid .... lhlnklng .... -~·.1.,. b:dluehced by the fact she was lftllWll agAln. . , Kinarek was atiJI crou e:umininc Mn. "11-~ Kuabian when the court receaed Tue., 1'· ' day. ' :• 1be 21-)'tar~ld blonde seemed com- .• ,., pJetely relued and llmolt ltJ' u the burly KmwU and other lawyen pound- ;;..;· eel at her story of seven murders a year 'I !>"' -io at the Tile and i.B1anca homes. JCanarek, wb:> reptt111ntl Mamon, skip- ,,,., r pt'ld ·~Om wbject ~ tubject aod at one · • poipt .. wu asking Mrs. Xuabian about a ~I '1f1brallon" she said she WU abJe to aen<f ,-.111 out¥ aDd rective from the univerw. The '") 1 u. laWJ.tr asked her to deacrlbe a vlbraUoo tin•.l• and Deputy Diltdet Attcrney Aaron . '" s~ !ntmupted to aay: "U ,_. had .1~.... trUe . VlbraUOna, she would wUt Mr. :·1·r._. KinlrU to ceae bi.I quatlom." ~t.:io..1: Fre• p .. ~ 1 : , . ~ '.•IE:1 PLANNER J1r~· t ._. · · · • • • ')~ .~,. -.fariiily, .u .. ,e dwelllnp. Lake :iu1·: • F~ 1oo, ia e:zpandini and bu-added tot more acres. r:•11•• ••we. bave almost all of soutbwest t111'it Oraoce eounty yet to be deveJoped. Thia :-,· ~a tremenclooJ opportunity. We'll hlq tq see if we can capttallze on it." '• -Dlckaaon said providing parb and •:•r. ~ti were majcr cooce1ns of the J•;11~• ~ department. He II.id he WU ~.,., .... p~ to see large recreation .,..... dev.~ such u Uon Country ~;,.~ !'r!.arj~eota m:ca'i:fili~~ ~~: • ..,; · ~ to make El Toro Road a ICtnic "r1' highway. ,,.,... He said he hopes to keep power lines oil· .&I Toro Road while making AU.. .:,.·r· Crttk a linear park all the way into the ,.~JO;· Santa Ana mountains. ·.t1r .... n the J91!10s we 1aw tremendous ··i; lf'O!!th 1n Orange County," 1 a I d Ok:kuon. "Despite setbacks in the atrcit.Paoe industries and construction aJowdownl because or financing, the anmUes will 1how an even zreater ,,....u.. .. We must be prtpared for t11i1 growth ae tllit ,.. can maintain lhe quality ol our ~hunnmt," bl! coocluded. DAILY PILOT "..,.... .... " .......... u,n. ... ,. ......., .... C...M.. S.Cl s ftftMOI C04ST fiUlLtSMIMG COMP'Nl'f' 11:•~"1 N, Via.I ~ ......... ~ ' • • Earllof, Dai!llJ ~ A~ VJl>. c:t:nl BuatJol' condUdecl lbe ltate I fX • •mloallon bJ..Mkllil~ what sbe meant in prevkJus tt:stlmony s~-wai an "emissary from God.'' ·1 feel that I am doinc tbe will of God. Wbal baa been done was wrong. I did wnq, too. •1 am truly repentant for it. My being bttt IOlllfy!ng b my repentanc.." Fre • P .. e l FREEWAY .•. Camll (D-San Fernando) And Millon Marks (R.S1111 FraDCisco) would not be present Coday but that the hearings would have to go on without them. Badham declined to predict how the powerful transportation com.miUee would vote on the measure. "Our chances are SO.SO," is all he would say. He indicated that wilh Carrell and Marks present committee approval would have been assured_ The 1ingle most lmpiortant figure in I.he future of the bill, probably is committee chairman Senator RaDdolpb Collier (0- Yreka) who reportedly support! I.he bill and possibly could sway at Jeast a bare maJ,oril)' ol lhe l~11>ember panel lo hiJ :aide. ; Committee · approval Is virtuaUy tan. tamolmL to &mate approval. Committee rejection means the full Senate will never see the bill. Forces oppoeing the measure were ez- pecled &o praent detailed arguments at the hearing. - Al Koch, county road commissioner and Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach) were expected to represent the opposition in addressing the hearing. Costa Meu Mayor Robert Wilson was ~ lo be pre-i but had not ar- rived early this morning. c.osta Mesa City Attorney Roy June hesitated to predict the outcome, but said be wu optimiJUc that the bill would be rejected. ~ Meu officials are opposed on the grounds that. then are already enough freewaya completed and planned through that city. llunlf!ipia Beacb)I, using a 1lighUy diflenot ........... strl!Ollt!i t ha t •llbooP tt didn't HU tU adoPi<d route, il bao adJjqled long rllll• plannfnc "'.:::'' ~ bltl w<iuld .....n, el-lbo pr_.t.freew17 throush a portioll ol Bmitlngton Bead>, euta!y !tom -Boulevar'1 /I> the lar -ly en11 al Newport Beidl at the Corona de! -tio!!!dwy, ~ Boadl Clt1 El!llJ>eer James wbliler, """"" Beadl M110r Richard Goldberg and City Manager James D. Wbealoo ,.... ~ e.pecled to attend lhe heaiinl allhou(h II WU not known whether they woold speak. Newport's Mayor Hb1h and Coun- cilmall Rqien both maintained lhe~ op- limlml on proopecla !or conunlUee ap- proval Rqiera ,.Id, "We att ltlll bopdul lh• Senate ~anaportatloo Committee wUI hear the "'1ces ol lhe people ol Newport Beach and act favorably on the bill." Supporters pointed out that the senate hat approved the deletion of two sections of the freeway, one part through the city of Venice and the other tbrougb Beverly Hilb. Other forces known to be in opposition to the measure include 1he Irvine Com- pany and prominent Newport land owner Hancock "Hill" Banning III. Kurt Redwine, a prominent lobbbyist here, is also know to have been working to defeat the measure. SOOuld the transportation conunitt~e side with Badham and the Newport in· terests and give the bill 1 favorable recommendation Badham said that he wou1d get the bill to the senate Door as fast as possible. That could be as early as tooighl La g una to Delay Budget Adoption The Laguna Buell City COW.:U b ex- pected to postpone ill !Cbeduled adoption of the city budget at tonight's Councll aession on the advice of City -Manager James D. Wheaton. Wheat.on ,In a memo to tht ew,ncil; said lhal ~~ ol Finance Shelby Lan1ford bu betn.ldvlled by the county u1moc"s olfice 111.ot llnal l~es on ancised valuatiOn' are being held tn abeyanct pen· cl1n& a Senate. declalon on the governor'• tu bill. Wheaton said there may be "modJflcatJom;" In the assened value roll!. Alto ml.sling are the State Board of Equallzallon lllure.s on u l 111 l y ......,... ... For budget purposes. the city has been usin& a Llpna aueased valuatlon figure or IC million, 1Ubata•Ually higher lhan lhe 11'7 million expected orlglDolly. Lanfl..-d aald lod!IJI he did not know Whether the poulble "mtdlficatk>na" l.n nnaJ fipa would involve an lncnue or decrUSe. Ex.chaplain Dies WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Rev. Dr. Frtda1ck Brown Harris, 17, former chaplain of the U.S. Senate, died or a heart attack 'this Northwest Washington bom< Tu<:aday. Greeter Ge ts Award Eiler Larsen (right), Laguna's greeter in residence, accepts plaque from Claude Hanna of Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor.Lio~s Club. La~· sen was awarded plaque Tuesday in r~ognition of his support of this year's Silver Anniversary Fish Fry in Cos ta Mesa . Annual commun- ity event raises funds for charities. Fraud Charges To sse d Out - As Upp er Bay Trial E11d s By TOM BARLEY OI IM Dally '''-' 51.tll Twenty·four thick volumes of teslimony were piled high in the courtroom of Superior Court Judge Cl1ude M. CN.·ens today a.s the veteran jurist began what is erpecled to be at least a three·month ii:tudy of the Upper Bay Land swap trial. Judge Owens' final actiOfl in the trial was to deny Attorney Philip Berry's plea for permission to WTite charges or fraud against the Irvine Company into the law1iUt. Fluor Rumored Buye r of Nigiiel Rock well F a~ilit)' The Fhlor corporation of Los Angeles, Houston, Taiwan and London is the newest rumored buyer of the $23 million North American Rockwell Autonetics plant, under construclion in Laguna Niguel. A spokesman for Fluor, major in- ternational firm providing engineering and construction services for the mining and petroleum induslries, said Monday, "We are engaged in serious talks with the Autone:tics people. The: Laguna Niguel planl is one of several possible loc ations we are considering to accommodate the future needs of our personnel." He said Fluor, which now employs 2.SOO people in its Los Angeles headquarters on Atlantic Boulevard. e1pecls to double its work force in the nexl 10 years. "It's hard lo tell where the talks (with Autonelics) will lead," he added. The giant Laguna Niguel fa cility, designed to house 7 .~ AutoneUcs employes. was placed on the market last February \vben North American Y<'as hit by cutback.& in the space program. Since then there ha ve been repeated rumors or its sale, wilh General Electric Company among the firrns reported viewin& the plant with in terest. 1'1e Fluor spokesman said the plant v.'OUld have much more space than the firm now requires. but added . "I'm sure we could eventually grow into a facility of that Size." He indicated that enlargement of the SOOthern California operation would not Involve moving 1>9't'sonnel from other · Fluor locations. 'Ibe corporation has of- fices in Houston. Tex., Londo.n, Holland and Taiwan, an en(lneering construction subsidiary ln Pale> Alto and smaller of. flees In many other locations. Teen Dance Set At Bo ys Club A dan<!f: for junior teens 11 schtduJed at the Boys Club in Laguna Beach (rom 7 to 10 p.m. Friday in the new clubhou&e. 1085 Ulguna Canyon Road. The judge ruled thal no evidence had been offered during die trial which cou1d possibly justiry such charges against the company. All involved in the lawsuit agret today that a final ruling ' is years away. The issue is expected to eventually go to the California Supreme Court for a final rul- ing. Judge Owens ended courtroom pro-- ceedings in the land swap dispute· late Tuesday a1 he and the five lawyers in- volved took their second boat trip around the Upper Bay aod visited the San Joa. quin marsh to view the UC Irvine preserve referred to during the si z-week trial. Lawyers for both sides must now prepare final brief! for Judge OWenS' ex- amination and then appear in hi." courtroom later in the year f'ol' final argument! on the Issue. That will be a,fter the judge h.as studied 1nore than 4,000 pages of trial testimony. It Judge Owens decides that the trading of 450 acres of Irvine Company uplands for 157 acres of county owned tidelands is lawful and consUtutional he will sign a write or mandate ordering county auditor Vic Heim to pay Upper Bay dredging bills submitted to him by the Irvine Company. Heim was sued by the county and the trvine Company In a planned complaint which sought to establish the lawsuit as a test case and clear the way for a land swap that had been approved by Orange County supervisors and the State Lands Commission. The action took on an adversary aspect when a group of Newport Beach resident! l>'Uccessfu\ly asked to be allowed to enter the lawsuit as lntervenors. They argued, through San Francisco attorney Berry that the land swap was unlawful and violated the tidelands trust created when lhe state or California deeded the shoreline to Orange County. -~- §laort ,Agenda • 1 Clemente Eyes Trailer Park-Bi Following a shorter4han·usual agenda tonight San Clelnente's councilmen will reopen the oft-Oelayed hearing on a.n ap- peal by devekipers who lost a bld averal weeks ago to build a mobile home park: where 1 goU course now lies. After several request! for postpont- n1ent, spokesmen for the Contemporary From Pflfle l CA RP ENTER ••• ct>mmilted hiinseU on the oontroveraial Badham bill which would delete the Pacific Coast Freeway segment from Beach Boulevard in HuntinJton Beach to Corona del ~af • ; J • I But the newly-e!feted senatcr said he didii't think it made muCb difference how he stood on the measure. "According to r µte belt information available to me,(lhe freeway meuure is assured of enopgb votes on the senate noor, if it cetsitlire," Carpenter said. He said the key to the aucceu or failure of tbel bitterly fought measure depended entlre!y on ill fate in the Senate Transportation Commitl.ee late • day. (Sources clOse: to Carpenter, who is the current slate Republican Committee chairman 1ald today that the Badham bill will undoubted1y be killed In the senate committee. It was scheduled for hearing at 2 p.m. today after four postponements.) Carpenter flew to Sacramento early thi1 md'ming alter a private victory par- ty. Before leaving he 1aid he waa "gratilied by the support of his workers In the 34th District and to those few who turned out to vote in a rather unexciting election." The new senator said h~ did not expect lo be sworn in to office until Thur!day although county election officials wired results ol the vote to the Secretary of State's office Tuesday night. Carpenter is a former FBI agent, seJni. professional basketball player and a na- tive of Minnesota. He lives in Newport Beach with his wife and four sons. He moved to Orange County 12 years ago and rapidly rose in GOP circles, reaching the top rung of the ladder with his 1968 election as state chairman of the central committee. In that post he ha! carried forward the wellknown GOP Cal Plan, a program designed to gain control of the state legislature. Foor years ago with Carpenter heading the drive, Gov. Reagan wu elected and two years ago the Republicans took over slim majorities in both the senate and assembly. F rom Page l KRISHNA ... some will hear correctly." The young man added, "We do this in every major city of the world and so far none has been able to stop us. Hollywood and Beverly Hilb tried to stop us, but the district attorney told them 'forget it.' He knew it was too controversial to try to kep us from practicing our religion ac- cording to its precepts. "We just hope people will realize we can save more human lives than met1t f.:Ove rnment agencies, and that is all we "'ant to do." Nixon Asks Gas Ban WASHINGTON (AP ) -President Niit· on asked the Senate today to ratify a 45- year-old treaty banning gas warfare, with the understanding that it doe! not ouUaw tear gas or defoliants. Mobilhome Corporation of N e w p o r t ~eeach will bring their formal appeal of a planning commisaion denial before the councll in the only public hearing of the evenlng. 1bt delays, Contemporary aides said, came about because of the recent reten- tion of the legal firm of Rutan. and Tucker. Rodger Howell, a senior member of the 'finn, ~ill make the appeaJ to councilmen tonight. The company wa1 denied a permit lO build a 231).space mobile home park on the Harbor Hilb: Golf Course after scores or nearby homeownu1 vigorously pro- tested the ldea. Many of those same residents are ei"!t pected to prott:st at tonight's hearing. Other agenda Uems a.re relatively routine -due in part to the vacation by City Manager Keo Carr. The usually abundant category of city manager reports and recommendations is abQreviated for tonight's meeting. City Clerk Max Berg will sit as city manager pro-tern. Other" it.ems on the slate include: -Consideration of an u r g e n c y ordinance slapping a ~ on riding of motorcycles, minibikes and other recrta-- 'tional vehlclea on private ~ unles' the rider has in his possession written pemllssion from the property owner. The draft also includes prohibition of riding within 300 feet of the property line of a lot with a residence on it. -A letter from Mr1. Peggy Moon of San Clemente citing the hazards of the intentclion of El Camino Real and the freeway offramp. She urges tbe city to install a traffic 1lgnal. ·-A request by the owner of the Stage Coach Inn to offer Uve entt:rtainment and dancing at the nightspot at 3707 S. El Camino. Donald Mulcahy asks the permission to offer the entertainment on. Friday and Saturday nights up to 1 a.m. -A request from parking com- missioners that the council obtain a debt limitation rtport for the proposed fonna· Uon of a parking di!trict in the Del Mar shopping area. 'l'be miuive also uks a realty board appraisal of all undeveloped land suitable for parking lots in the area along the soath side of the 1(1(}.block ot Avenida Cabrillo and the north side of the 1(1(}.block of Avenida Granada. P y ne Suit Filed To Speed City, Wheaton Asserts City Manager James D, Wheaton hat directed a memorandwn to the Laguna Beach City Council conceming a law suit against the city from Pyne Estates Com· pany, suggesting the suit has been filed to expedite acquisition of the land for roadway uses. 1be suit claims damage because the ci- tv allegedly has f1iled to permit Pyne Estates to use its property. The land in queslion is in the Boat Ca n-. yon area and must beacquired by the city for the construction of Campull Drive, a right-of-way shown on city and county arterial hi~way plans. The road will be built partly with fund~ made available from the gas tax. But before Lhe funds can be had the city must approve a route throu gh the Boat Canyon area, through the public hearing process. Such a procedure has yet to be held in detenninlng the route. "It is my belief that the court action has been filed with the idea in mind of encouraging (the) city and county to get together fa ster than we have done up to this point lo resolve the acquisition ques- tion,., Wheaton it.ates in the memo to councilmen. r.a--.i-.i, ,_.Towla5ao1'S- rn!.Mt11t 2'~ el ~prica You..c 2'~• ~ ' __ ....,. ...... """ ....... .....,i..-... Daa't .......... ,, 4 -,. __ a's,.. ... • ..w,.,,... ..,.. ......... ...,.,..._ '*'" s.1e,--If? ... ).,... _"',;pc ........ -~ Sole,...,... . ,.,.. Ad mis!ion will be restricltd to stude:nls ,Jn tbt seventh, eighth and ninth grades. the club has announced. Records and a snack bar will be featured and the event will be fully aupervi.sfd. The dance Is sponsored by the Tel Club, 1 VoUP within the Bnys' Club consisting of Ray Klein, Cuy Grindle. Frank Vining and Mark Nel!Oll· Admission charge will be 10 ccntl. CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J. C. .J.l.umphriej Jeweferj 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION 1121 "NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 541-1401 • I I ) ----------------------------------------~~-~---------~---~--------------·--· ~----~-----·. -·~ ·--~ ' ' ' ' t ,, ,, ", Start Your -En-gin es! f<T • by Deke Hou/gate "';. _____________ _ .::rv . .,,,;.. When the drivers round turn 4 and bead for-the green nag '• i.iiGt wtl1 stgnal the start of the California 500 Sept. S at Ontario '~~Gt.or Speedway there l.s nothing safety minded officials can ~' Cf0.· The ract wil11 be in the hands. of the drivers. That is the realistic view of the m&D responsible for the safety and conduct of 33 brave men that day, J. Gordon Betz· Betz pointed out that some ol the most thoughtful people in auto racing have contributed to the design of the $25:5 Jllilllon racing plant. The iatest and most effitient iii comm~caUons systems wU! link key officials. The finest visibility a chief stew· ard has ever had will give Beb: infant information on which to act. But on that first lap there Is nothing tha't can be done to pre•ent disaster except inside one of the race ca.rs. "Going Into turn I," Betz said, 1'1.! like being in the eye of a tornado. You are just swept along. You are in with 11 rows of cars. You can't do much about backilig off, or :you get hit by the guy in back of you. You can't move up or you run out of room. Every car has a full tank of gas, aod the tires aren't · · 'sCnffed in yet. That is the most dangerous time of the, race. ,.,, "The driver who makes big trouble is the man who tries to ~$neak up on the inside or outside and gain positions at the start. ;'~. 'J,'he orf.~clals can't spot him, because there are 33 cars to watch, •')'. aiid you can't watch them all. , . "There's not much we can do about the start except impress .,~:;·tJi~ drivers wilh the importance of getting into that first turn r·~1eanly." ,,,,. Bet:r Will Break Tradition ·,·.r;: ·' • Betz will break the Indianapolis tradJtlon and oversee ,the race lrom a vantage point high In the tower over Ute 1&arttnr llne, like an usistani coach at a footbaU game. But· that assist.- ant coacb relays what be stet to bit boss Oii the bench, while • -.JM&z wW hive the option of informing tbe other two ranting 1 ::?a'tfldalt, coafen1n1 with them or Issuing direct ordtrs. Tbe other two men In Beb't team are Boots Archer, Ute ref· IUJ", on tlie Infield or pit side or the starting line, ,and DJck KIAa, Ult 1teward, standing along1ide the starter in a cupola-like tttudure outside Ute startin.1 Une. Their coounterparll at lndlanapo1!1 atadon themselves In the pits, where they have a good view only or Ute main straightaway and havr to Rly on leaser oHlclals to keep them Informed of what 11 going on where they can't set. . "Keeping the three offldals together 11 prebably the best •1 ,i,ystem for lndfanapoll1," Bea said. "Bu\ here It would be a -' ..Jbme not to take advantage ol the fad that you can see all over the track. , "I never thought about puldng an ofliclal In the grandstand .,._~fore I left active offlclaUng In 1954. and went up In the pre11 .tiJ bo:i to watch races. From ap above, many Ume1 t have teen when accidents were about to happen that were invisible to . officials down on the track. I wl!bed I could have told them in· somehow." ' Snfely b Jlloha Co1ttentratlun ··~ ' Like lhe names chief steward, Steward and referee imply, 'llhey are the working officials who keep the competitors from , transgressing and who certify the order of finish. However. be--;;~,c.8\lie of the perllous nature of the sport, they concentrate more ,.;,Qn aafety than any other aspect of the race itself. ·~ ,. ,. "We hired the two best men we know to handle emergency equipment," Betz said. One is Clarence Cagle, superintendent of .. o: Indianapolis Speedway, and the other is Charles Thompson. .ir, · .• In addition to a fleet of fire trucks, ambulances and tow •"•trock:!I, Ontario will introduce to racing the world's first motor· :•·:Cycling firemen. <.. • Eight men on Yamahas, strategically placed around the course, will be able to carry fire extinguishers Into those tough 1; ''11pots on the track in traffic long before a fire truck could move. " ' Paee Car to Slow Caution Laps Racing Entries "OUll-TH llU.Ca. MIO )'l,dl. l vt•r i•• I~ "f.· Ct1!mlng. PurP S2400 • l•lm "! p.r u "4000. lllller l!l•n1t1) 117 cott M•cLe•n (P•11el l,n Go Thundertr411 !C•rdor1) • r, Mldw1y Mlllle ( ml!ll) 1 f Ll11Mt1ln1 .... \H•r1) 1,n Mol1M APOd1~ 22 "''TH •ACI, «10 y1rds. 2 VIit o!:'h brHI In C1lll. Cl1lmlnt. Purw 12100. c1a1m11111 r••« Sl500. $peHy S.Yen (H•r1! 110 B41'1"1111 81d fAPOd•t•l lit L•ne'• ear LldY (A.!l1lrl 117 P-rou• Qu"·' (Smltn) 111 Lovely Nl11ht (LlPll1rn) 117 Rocket Ooocltt IC•r.brl 117 Cut ~or Ac11(1(11n11 110 St1vt Tht Vtt !Pqel lll Coomlc '"•rner) 120 R•vtnO!!d 8•• 811Y rc1rdoul 117 "*" 1111111 .. Ide Jlufl ll'lttl V1ta·1 Son Brue• fSmltfll ~:rtn'tf.1oJ:J'(~i~1u11I "' "' "' ·~ SIKTH JIACI. 170 1>11"111. S Yfff old• 11\d up. c11fml1111. Pur11 n100. Clalm· Int price S2(l(IO. Tiie Fttd H"11er, Ju111n1p fKln111 111 Trvcklln G1· nfln.,,l 11• 'Trko l ob IL Dll1ml 11• "1·1 sun CDreevrJ 117 c~ 1 Co!ltd f$m1ffll 111 T!IO Otndv IL011110tl1) 111 TOP il111lt tH11l!ln1) 111 Don IUl;r CPerner) lit Al'ltl lll11lltl1 Tfl,.._ For All IH1r11ln1I 11i llr1., Land (Vinson) 117 Si.rcn T-(Hlrl) ll7 lrl1h Bl'C9W (WlllOlll 113 t!IOHTH RACI. 3!0 v1rtl1. l . year OIC:1 •nc;I UP. Allow•~·· PurH $ll00. Tf\e McDoru1'1J~Oovol•*-T11ff 80.1 ll'ernM") 1~ MU• Ll~1mJ 119 W•tch EH ~Ac1•1•l 1n 8r ... ~.nc1·1 ,, 1c-.11<11 111 Ml11 T1-TllM Hardi"') II' 8.ivr~nx·~0G'o'1~.o.r1o1 l~r NINTH aACI. «:10 ft rd1. l fflr old1. C!almlnt. l'ur .. S2300. Clllmlftll Price ..... Bob'• Bir Ind tC•raouJ P11>um llequn (Perntr) lllv 0.111 IOrl!'f'trl A Goin !'Mn !8lnk1l ~nor P1noe U "'i,"' r OK11lon H•rt tnl ktM I •t: ~I Llfflt Lldv Jlo.r Cro1Dy) lttbel Ct111111 IA tlrl "' "' IU '" "' '" "' "' HIT FULL IRON SHOT INTO GUARDED GREEN Today's illustration shows 1 green that ls guarded · on all sides by trouble. When such a green is small ••• such as the 7th at Auauste National shown here ••• you must be very careful about plannina your strategy on· the hole. leive yourself at least 1 full w~dgt shot on the approach. If you don't, you m~y not bt able to put enough backspin on the ball to make It l•lJ:d and hold on the green. · The wise golfer wlH use less cluti thin i driver off the tee in the situltlon. By hitting the shortir' tee shot, you allow your.self th1 chance to put full backspin on your •P.Proach. ~c 1mMArL_.,.._. ,- Los Alamitos , Wo ... ...,, -1'. 1970 DAILY PlljO! J7 At Rancho San Joaquin . Costa Mesa Gou and ~try ry Bell tomblned ta1lror a I Andy Maur<S c1-with a loW net score of ' 136 for two rouods of pt., to wln lhe Rand\O San Joaquin seniors gulf tl>W'llament by a 1lngle stroke over FrMk Beckman (137) last weekend, Bill Asher (138) filimed In third place In the toorney for players over 50. 'In a mixed couples tourney, Bill Winters teamed with .Lor- raine Peterson and Mr. and ?\-!rs. Orrin Wright for 1 low ner store of 60. Another team composed of Mr. and Mrs, Hal Hoagland and Mr. and Mrs. William Ritter tied for first place In the beJt ball of foursome competition. In a ladies best nine com· petition, Pat Pennywell had a 34 to win the A fi.igbt com- petition, tlub over the weekend. score of SI to wtn Urlt pla«. G<lor&e Dernbach bad a low s-f· AINI• net of es for fir'K place. • n Richard van Mttrt was next M embtrs are e u r r e a t I y with 68 followed by R. W. pracUcing for the upoontlng Jaega-and Steve Woodroff men's ctub champloMlrlp com- (67) Glr)t Orlon Ital and P. pelitlon at Santi Ana Country Taormina, Jack tanc:ute.r and Bob Darnell (69). Club, ., ' In a women's most pars tournament, Inna Havens won A flight with 12 followed by VI HO$kbu with 11 . ?,1'.axine Asthmus and Jean Creighton Ued for first place in B !Ught with 10 and Elhe SUpes won C flight wilh 13. Slgnups are now being taken in the pro shop for Sunday's third annual father -son, .father-daughter tournament. Action will get under way at l o'clock. Jack Vnn Rpssen;l will (Se. fend hJs title on two SU«elSive wt<llends In September In a 12-hole sirolte play' am. petition. Action starts sept. U and cooc!Udes sept U·l'-, 1be eight low acores a"'1' 36 holes plus Uet 'tfilf comjlete for the champlon9hi~ with ·balance of the fteld compotlng In the masters flight tor the !lnal 36 holes usli>g loi< 'net scores wi~ full haodica'Ps: Jlfe1a Verde Martha Kennedy came in with a 34 to win the B Oleht <unpeUUon while M 111 le Mlle Square In 6 •• ~,·, best ball of Stevens had 36 to win in C \ .,..... wn. flight. Betty Blikemore tcored · Ja<:k Steingraber fired a low ·fO\lrsome tournament -.L-Mesa a 36y; to win the D title. grou 70 to Win a club pro golf Verde Country Clilb laS't Next big tOurpament at San ·toumamerit at Fountaln Valley weekend, Bob and ,Pu& 1Lit· Joaquin will begin Sept .. 19 and Mlle SqUare Golf Course Mon· tleton ·teamed wit,h Joe and 8tr. At 8 ••v. L-•~•·.A l lk•IY run fo,r five weekend.!. It is the ,day afternoon. Pat Chartrand Billie Sparago to finish with a Racing Results T\1114111,, Aut. 11. 1tM LOl AL.AMITO$ fll!f'ILTS Cl11r & "••I Att1lr,•Oot1 e1r'1 trn.oe, Mud In Yovr was second with a 72 and five score of 57 for first place.. "IRST aACI!. «lO y"rdl, Mlolcle" .f YHr olds. Cl1!ml1'11. PUl'SI 11f00. Mr. OU1rtt Hiii (Adair) '·"° 2.IO 2.olO Oii 0..C:dY (Ll~fl•"'' l • .O ?.olO P•Pl't TOl'loi IP1g1) '·"° Tl17'I : .M /10. Alao "" -Old Hom11tefC:, Kif'• SIM.Ir, Bii o• 8••· llegrtll. Mortom. TOD Ra.tit•! Gil, 8urnt Mtrblt. Scr1!tlled -J~IO. WH Wop, llltck l"ranlc, L~n1'1 M1rlc. s•COND •ACE. CIO v1rc:1. 3 Y••• 01d1 •M yp, Cl1lrnln11. Punt llt«I. ldlt O!gg2r !$tr1YHI 22.00 7,111 $.00 Bun~Y'I 8111 <Drwer) 3.«I 2,IO 8tldV RKkril ILIPfttmJ 5.IO T1m1: .20-•nc. AllO r1n -OU11tr ltr 80!• Mr. P1T1 e1r. •Ot'k1 e .. ch H•nk. Sou1h- "'"''"''• ,Cl\lcktdOOllt, SPY CIUher, 8'.,HI TOP. s-cretcl>lcl -CJa11v Toni, 81rt Fer Ludt. Cu~ Deck, Trut V1ndY. 11 NIGKTLY oou.Li, I • Mr.,QUlth Hiii Ii 1 • ldlt 011"'' Ill~ t1N.•. THlflD JIACI. ;;-;••di. M1ldth 2 v•1ir aids. Cl•tmlno. Putt• 11'00. M111 Rht1CMC U1trMr) '1.tCI 11.CIO I.to Ano"'•' Cupid (Smllfl l 1,111 2.IO T'°"'" Sntlchar IP19tl J.CIO Tlmt: J1'3/1 0. All-0 ren -1"•1hl01'1 Cllf. SP<ltdY Stn Deep Sea Fish Repo~·t SAN CLIMIJCTI -201 ,,..11111 2ll bonllo. 111 i..u, 3t t11rr1cud•• 13 y11t'""'111. 1 bl1clt 111 blu, I whllw ... Mn, 1 bl•ii!lln "'"'· · OXHAllO -1.0 t"'ltrl/ ~· hlllbul( 1.011 bt'lr,ufJ l"lldl (Od, 1' 111'19-COd, wf\llt -to , fl bo"lllJ. NIE'M'O T IArt'I Ll!llllftl) -'" 8<1titN~ 11 1lble0ro, l 11UcrW11ll. U btr••r:wde. 12 bonllc.. 111 bl•'· •">K' ~!1(1. · 20 m•Ckertl. (DIV'll''• l.oc tr -200 •no"'"; 89 11Mcort. '~ ve11~wlftl1. 6 IUM, l ""'ltt Ha bl11, 437 to.11, )It bonlto. t5 btrr•cucl•. l h111bul. i7 'OCk coti!AI. l"C:H -ISi 1"91•ri: ltS bofllto, w ' u, n ba•r•r:wd•. Berot -,,. JMler•i ,7 ttonllo, II bi'!.'· LONG l•ACH ("""'91fl! .,,.fllllllltl -21t •ftllli'fll lt,•lb.licor., 1 Y•UoWlal!, ,,, ~1100 blH, 4 boflllo, 1 hetlbul, .(12 l'O(k COd. 10.•-t l"lff) -y •ntltlf/ 1D1 t.t11. 14 bonito. 1 llallto.it. 81roe - U 1n11ll11: JO ftllowttl!. 1 Hrr1cut11. 1 bl•ck ua wu, 727 ttllco wu, US bonito. SAN l".!DtllO llttMI II. L1Wl11tl -100 •"911111 7J 11lbtCO,., I Ytllowl!" tu.,., ' bluefln l\ont, 11 ttllc:o b•u. ( htllbu•, "" bonito. (Nemt'I Llltlll~•I -115 1n~t1r11 J4 e!batort. I btr- r•cud11. 11 boflllo. tit ctl!eo b•••· 1J .. ~~ "I''· OCI "41101 -11' 1n1ltr11 f b••· racud•. H'J bonl!o, UI btu, l whltt ne blu, t yellowf•11. 2 htllbut, ' 1un1. MALllU -llt 1"91tru 50 'tllCCI blu, ' h111lbut. 340 rock cll4. e.v.. annual High-Low event with · 1 1 din •-Ski Whl Donna and Chuc._ Wortti Scrtlcl\fd -"IV •lll'tl, Ct De Vlfllt r\liinn<J'C bei"g rnade Sent, 12, pros nc U g 1~t p tt• .. 0a11. Dutttr ••tlvnM, Trw Rodt Jtne. rM--.... .., r et Ued f0r third with 73. played with Grace a n d POUllTH iuca. 110 v1rd1. ' "'' Cost.a Mesa Others included Cecil Harris, Richard Hooker to ~ a 51 ol~I •l>d u, Cltlmfnt. P1t'U l2000, Monte n1~~u Ha~ Caporu· for ·-·d. Jim and Pe•""' Stir Evin (C•rdN•l 20.olO t-'11 ~.olO """"~ • • • / ...,........, at>J c.tc11 0e0; fA6-ln • '·" J.oo Roy Stoddard fired a low and Manuel Quezada. Henderson teamed w i t b 1~;4'~~~T1fLIPll•ml J,:io gross of 69 lo win a men's Jn the best ball pro.pro com-Charlotte and Stan Wood for Also •• ,,· -"''""" wmow. '"'"1cr1t-sweepstakes · ~ent at petJtion, Glen Dunlap and 1J!er-third place at 59. '"'' lrlah 8"""''' GolcM" Putb!o, •11'''j0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiii;;;i1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimji McCor. II Sc•1tc~e\f -lnrlntrt!Or. Lllllt Obie, Mr. L-$hof, C1'11•11tr Lff. "'"™ lllACa, UI vaf'dl. 2 y.., tklt. Allowa1't<:H. Pllrll snoo. N" ll11tr1kot (Llllh•m) 1.60 J . .0 l.00 MIH H ... rl Tllrob (HtrcllM) 3.DD 1.fO 8old S1llv !P1;1) ·~ Time: .'lt.2/10. , AllO ••n -Ooo.itl1• A•tln, Gii Ml11)' Jot, Trul1' A Gttot1. S•1IH Mldlt 'f, Trhtle C Trvly, llOfoh Clrct. Scr1tcl>ld -Tli lux. SIXTH •ACL 110 vard1. , ""' oldt 1nd up, Clllm1111. Purlt S2000.. F-•rd B'tl!trv • IC•l'dooltl 1'.60 ~.«I '·'° r"lttA Hun~n ILontorltl U .to 11.10 Tll•• C1111 IM1t1Udal S.20 T!("1: .41·1110. AllO ••n -Paci/le S!D(m,, Hurl'\' John. To1t_ llodltl, Grtf Clnd1,.,.ll1, SPl"llh Lock". Stralth~ -01ru111 llov. kvtn Str•n, Htntf TM t!h, Ton,•1 $-If. btll. . • ll!VfMTM aACI . tio Yll'tU .. ) ,yff' o1C:1. Allow11•cn. l'u•M SUDO. Lin•"""'' !H•rtl 4 .20 t ,tc, 1.«I oM.Au"''' tutu (l•~kil J . .o c.ea OH-Ml11MV 'Moon (WlllGl'IJ 1·00 (,2(1 OH·L1nl'1Go M1" ($mllnl 1.•J~ Tl-: 11·1110. AllO ''ft -Sun Kllttti. Sltt•t Gui"' .Wr'I, lledlllm II.II Ooh, K•MI• Jtl. $lick Jlctl;,• Moon 81d. $cret(htd -H11th'1 llocktt, Cull, flN.,.,, S•hly OtP01ft, Gooil SM, OH-Tr1pl1 R9dh111 ~ ll<O)lld., ' l\OMTH RACI, UO \11rd1. '3 ~11r olO. 1M ul. Jdlow•nct1. Purse t21fle. Solid •ock1t ILlJhtmJ J.20 2,• t .20 Hol>l..,lt1 04•rtl 1.60 '·'° Tloer llotktt tAd1lr) 2.«I Tlt'M: .11·f/10, Alla Fl"'-,NltlY Nott, llOYll T1H;tl, IA~. l1r11ttt. No K"fttcllll. NINTM •ACW. Sj!t flrd!, ' Y•I• old1 1NI UP. Clllmlno. Pur .. 12100. Jtfflrt (Ad•lr) H.00 '·'° J.llO LtoTa•s Dla1 (W•ll0"1 L• J.20 zi-Hink {Mt!IUO•l ••• Tlt'M: .Jt.f/10. Aho r•n -Slltnf Gr.,..nd, S1UC'I Coc:kl1ll, Sir Btr N lob. ~lfll'll COK, 1(1,,.,.'t C011'1tl. Clndo lltY 8•r, Chic •ecrutll. Scr1tcl'led -wnat luck, Go!!1 ll1r Too, Apecl'lll P111um, 51_, Ch•l'll•· -u....DACTA, f • J1tf1r1 Ii 11 • L"lt'I ·11111, ltld 1111.N. ' ift$fOftt 10-Point ' BRAKE OVERHAUL All: work done by skilled mechanics using the most modem precision equipment GUARANTEED 2 Years or 20,000 Miles W1 ~,.""' ""' brth Uol.af ror tht lll*lflod nd•t.tr of 11111•• ot ,. .. ,. ftOll'I d•t1 of l111iall1liaa, whlchrltt ODrtlll fi,.L Adi..im.t. pmratod on mll...,,. tM bM-t en priolt c:umllf, •l tl...ol~t. Not just a reline ... we do all this: l . Replace brake linina: on all 4. wheel• '2. Arc linin1 for perfect contact wi\h druma 3, Rebuild all ( wboel cylindero • -'· Turv. and true brake cirumt 5. Inspect maiter cylinder 6. Repack outer wheel beari'n11 on both front wheela · '1 . J nepect brake hOlel 8. lnapect brake ahoe return fprin11 9. Add super heavy duty brake tlu id 10. Road teat cer - 88" Prlte ltr 4nllll•IJ'llll' ll'al" •a .,_, ,...._. Pb'MMUI .. °'">'to .U.1rlc111 _.,.m •d lfdll lrttlls. OIW1 111111111 Al1.llw. • ,. , From the spectator's point of view, Deb's use of the pace , CF ·on yellow fl ag caution laps wUI add some piuau, althoagb ,~,&be drivers aren't likely to be overjoyed. ' I\ The pace car 11 expected to slow caution l1p1 dowa from iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil /I .• the 140 m.p.b. they avera~e at Indy to 110 at Ontario and to wipe out any margin the leader mi.:bt have cprefQlly buUt ap. It's the same device that turn• NASCAR stock car races Into "fl•e and s11.man scrambles, causing a1 many as %0 lead chanies In sOo mile• of racing. The Idea Is to give emergency crews oa the track a safer , .place to work by buncb.lng the can •P· This enables track work· r, ~ to get their jobs done quicker and clear the oval seoner for "raclnr. Betz believes that Instead of 1lowin1 down the race, Ute , pace car will actually speed things up. ~ . Muy of the drlver1 don't agree. He hasn't won any points * whh them on the pace car Issue. ---· Very f'ew Rookies at 011tarlo ~~ t; ll Very few rookies will be Jn the Ontario race, as Betz bu decided to hold Ume devoted to giving rookie tests to a minimum. "We only have two weeks, instead of a month like they have ; .~ Indianapolis, and we can't squander it on rookie tests. The. · /ftleck opens on Saturday. and I hope to have the rookie tests and ~..fifresher runs over by the following Tuesday/' he said. At Ontario about eight rookies will face a new testing pro- cedure. They will only have to make live laps at each speed plateau, Instead of lhe 'lO they do at Indy, but lhey will have to Ye faster. · ":Tbey'U hit 140, 145, 150 (Indianapolis requirements), then and 180 before being allowed to qualify for the race. • "These day1 anybody can run 150, but the speed differenUal f>etween. that and 170, where they'll be qualifying, Is tremen- dous," Betz: said: "We're cutting the number or laps they'll have to run. because it doesn't take many miles to tell whether 1 ~~ow's a race driver or not.'' ~ Apron to Renaaln the S•me ~~· Ontario'• ctn&r.over1Jial apron, the Jn1lde lip of asphalt which w19 pavfJCI on a dlffertnt plane from tbe banked tum and 11tert 1t;,Jghtaway1, will slay like U It de1pUe driver complalaU, Beta revealed. ti ~ .. By the tlme &rick offlclal1 decided to correct the probMm by ~~pint It wltb new paving, 11 w11 too lat.e for tbe HW •• :;... ·•· • IM cured la time for the race. VW BRAKE SPECIAL ... ,,.. 4 wtie.11 M.tchlnt < Dfvm• Overh•ul 4 WMel Cyllft1119f't $39.95 VW SHOCKS ,, .... ,.,,, .•... $7,ts ......... 100.000 milt guarontml (not pro-n.tedJ. \VE DO AU. FOREIGN CARS. •• DISC ...... sn:cwm • COSTA MHA STOH ONLY )111 H.W llw. l•t-4DU ., Mt•ll.,t -•. • ' ~ ·~ r • ., • ' • ~ -• • • " , Comprehensive evening programs toward Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees Systematic, dynamic Instruction is given by an outstanding facu lty of practicing aclentlati and engineers holding advanced degrHs from top unlveraltles throughout the nation. More than 12.000 technicians, engineers, and administrators-both men end women-have continued full·time emplorment while working toward their degrees at West Coast University. 8.8. degree• In engineering, computer acl1nce, •pplled m1th1m1tlc1, and applied phylk:1. M.8. d1gr111In1y1t1m1 engineering and m1n191m1nt scJ1nc1 with •lght opUon1 for 1P9Cl1lluUon. New term 1t1rtlng: Undergraduate courses begin Oct. 26 at Los Ange~ Center and Nov. 23 et Orange County Center. Graduate courses begin Oct. 28 at Los Angeles Center. Send coupon below or phone for Information. W.~.!t£9.!t~t.Mt1lY!rSity 550 So. Main St .. orange, Callf. 92868 los Angeles phone: Orange Coun1y phone: (213) 382-tS72, Ext.20 t7t4) 54Ni7t2, bt.20 Pl61M nnd information on : O Undergraduate Program ·a Graduate program l NAM'"---~------------------~ ADDRESS. ___________________ _ CITY STATE ZIP ____ _ ~ -.. -----··---___ _.. Brake & Front End Service Offe~ ~. Here's what we do: _:,., F.xlr• t Mrat fllf cir• .,,1111 tenlrrri tN.r1 '' 1lr 1"4lllt11ol ... 1 ~rtront Balanoo both 2 front wheel• ALL FOR ONLY 3 Adjust brake shoes to drum 4 Repaok outer front wheel bearlnp 95 'I Famous brand SHOCK ABSORBERS .~ Wben7ou ·el!T TRI '4TR . ONLY ~bu7Ulennt three at oar eve?)'d&J ' "!' low prtee. -r . ' fir~•tont DLO-lOORetreitd; WHITEWALLS OR BLACJ{WALLS '•"'• ta.lt---f'lu. •:If *"' tit!' F..a .... iuMli:J ,_l'P'!b't t1 .. Mlllol llllilllll )'Ollr "°' ! Other sizes simil.arly low priced! COSTA MESA FIRESTONE STORE 475 e: 17th ST, -646-24-44 HOURS: Mon, • Fri., 8 1.m. to 7 p.m. -Sat., 8 1.m. to S p,m, HUNTINGTON ~ACH FIRESTONE STORE 16171 IEACH BLVD, -847-6081 HOURS1 Mon, • Fri., 8 1,m, i. 8 p,m. -Sot., I un, to S p.m. COSTA MESA -JERRY HALL 1762 NEWPORT BlVO, -646-5019 ' HOURS: I a,m, to 5:30 p.m. -Sat. 8 1,m. to S p.m. I , I I JI Dlll.Y PlLOT SC Your Money's Worth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York: Stock: List Her·0 ... -·e Remodelmg" T1° ps , .. ___________ "'"'""""""!!!1-==-·1 .r.! .. v~·:.:::~;o::::::"tl:'":: .::: ...... -:: =. ........ , ... :::. ~ .tl..I [M$,) H .... UW ( .... Cht, jtl'lr.; pf It ~ 21!! 21: K + I~ ~ ~It pt 4 J 'Jl• ~ lrl• -+ 'l NA.SD Li1tin9s for T\ltsday. Augu1t 11, 1970 _,,,,_ i:~11j ,~ ~~ m: da ··:~ zil1'~~~ \l:: ut: f'Ji f+J!_:;.._ •--ttlw 1111M'111Mlr owol•I ..... at •-.nxlllwl9ftl f -. 1'9111 114.foJO. ... IM<:UJ .ff! I 11 1• 11~ 11\t + \' ih(-ulf 1.. 1 a\.. " fl' f"' Geft. Tlrt 1b '· 11\11 I~ 1~ -\l • By SYLVIA PORTER A key rorce behind the dramltlc upansion In our speod.ing on h o m e im- provements: b the fact th.at licht and cosUy money has propelled new borne building into a deep and protraded slump. B<cause of the sharp decllnt in new home con· stnlction, h u n d r e d s of thousands or would-be buyers of new homes are turning to o lder homes and going in for extenst.ie remodeling. Btta.use ~ei mortgage squeeze: will not Jet them sell their old homes and buy new Me$ to ac-- commodite their g r o w i n g families. hu n dreds or thousands also are adding ex- tra rooms to their original dwellings. WJtb the weather now tht: most ravorable of the year for outdooc home improvements, the millions or d o -i t - yourselfers are at work day and nJght -end so are the builders, the contrac tors, all lbe rest. U n d e r the circumstances, a rem inder of the basic rules can translate into hundreds or e v e n thousandJ of dollars or savings for you. Specifically: Don't skimp on m aterials. family to help yOO°: AnlOng the most obvious do- il·youne}f jobs fO< which you are probably qualifl!:d or which you could learn fairly easily art: Interior and/or ex· terior painting, waUpapcring, wlndow-glatJng, weather-strip- ping, lnsWling inlu!JJtion, Jap- ing and rilling wallboard Joints and seams. With the p ay of pra!e.s:i:Wnal borne repairmen skyrocketing lhis yesr, the more jobs you do on your own, the more you will save. But do not tackle the am- bitiOU! and dllrlcult jobs UNLESS you are h i g h I y qualified: for instance, roof- ing, re-siding, putting in a la wn, building kitchen • cup- boards, laying or i:ven sanding down a Ooor, installing a ma- jor appliance. Stay away from s uch demanding ;om as the installation of electrical w ir· .ing. fue l Jines, plumbing. Before you embark on any big coostruction or r e modeling project. check your loca l zoo.. ing ordin~d/or building codes to make sure your plans and specifications conform. U a reputable local contractor is supervising the work, he'll almo9t surely be fully awa re of the rules: -but if you're Pric.t .. Mt hie: ...... n lall N .. 1n.11-. ---"'camml"""-Ablrli..b 1.10 l pt i! ~ 00~ -+\.'I ~;u1~~16 t3J ,111. lu:! \\ ~ g~':o 11/,J f:f r.~ ay"lo ifv. :.,_-. •••• ;,. " your own ...-.n ACF ir.o '·* ~. .. ,,. "is "1 •111tt"" :it ,, t;;; '" 14 o .... "'" .rot ll •~ ,, •v. i ~ .,.... •--.. .. ~.-Prior ....., Acme(:~ Ji .. ' 1 -\lo WA Finl · iJ I ~ !t\' P" .._ ~lnPI .JS lo 29 " 19 ~ tractor, obeying the zoning .......... •it.uii.-... :~:., .. 1;1:J~~i ,1.1r ;: "'~trf"aa,· ri ~~ ,. ... ~"'-:: :p~•p;tt. an1 .:j~ "~ M ~ I aw g w I I I be y OU r N!!W ~IC IAl'l ~llllN Ml s~ )IV. •1 lit1" •Vt ~"' '*'< Tv ~ 2~ ~~MUiis' ~ IOG ,. '' 1 + • SG1 .,ti. t t .iv. ~1u ~111i +YI •Pee t1A ..... If ...... ~ ••'bil.ly -TM fOl I,,. lllO ~r~"l lo•J. I~ t HI( I. ·m Im:' ' ,. ll: -~ ·-2S 1 J 1 i~iel 1.4' Ht .. l, '11..i Miio +1 .11 4 U~ "" !fil -"' ·-·~ ' • ... ••• • ..... -, •• ; ·-... , •• •• ,, ' Aom ••I .. -· •• ' " ----_,_ -· _,. ... ·-'' -i, ""''' ~v,.... ik;,. .. ,.... " •• ""' )\'o AflntLll I A 11 Ml Jf'li "~ + loo -• •• ..... ~'"" ""' " YY ' ... "'1' + Do not sign 8 work com· !.., ,· ,,-,_~, '"••·-~ •,•,:o"tr.' "·~ "' •• ~114, • •ll>Pll 150 •~,. Ae\i~_,.. ,£' , Ti... 1\\ 111t _ v. COil! P11 1.:io n ,.,. J7V< IN +\\ r.t>ti;cP11.20 1 ""' 14,_ 1 ''" "' '"'"' ....ti \lo rYd min M 'Ill ltllH" All~.. ,.._ SI ~ 27 21 -\lo fl pf].~ l200 4\lo 4V. 41~ +lh '"' ·'°" ,.•, 0°'>. ,',• ,?~ pletion certificate before you mri .. of .~~·1~n ~f,'o..;'. " : Jl? ·~~ ~:J. 1::: lf~ f:r,r::· w ~" ll\'I !\~ p= ·.I: I~ m: t1tt :r, f ~ C~1(r,:11Al~ ~ TI"' l~u ~r"' ·~ l~t-F.!~ 11 h~ ''• ;;;; t ~ get proof (such as duplicate ::!.. :S;.f .~~·fl::. ~::1 ot lll! i1l: utlt~:'' 1~1 'il r~ ~ ~· I': AJ ll'ld111lrle• 21, •r,i.'~ ,~ '1!~ ~ c:" ,~ 1"'° ,t p,~ ff~ t~l4 + 14• r:::.t:,'_ i,.~',:-~ '1~ if~ ni: n~,,..; ~·· bu~) that the tr to ha! '.' ' -. ,_~ , •• J" ··--· ' -··· ' ,_ I ·~ All Oh 1.10 ~.... -,.. ,. ., + '' ~ ,. ~ .• COn .c r '""'" .,. "' . ...... .. .. _ .... -.. .. ........ ,,,., , •• ,, ,, "' +··· •• , ••• ,, : .. , l"" ",'· ~. ,_ A""-,. ., • • ' --O.•lt< or~I I' ol Foti t11I ~ 8ennel lf I ..-ldVn IJ'tt \lo --" ~ lt .,. Ir.-. ...-~• Id"""' "" p31d all SUbconlractors Wbo •-aitkNl0 J!,'!.. 3 ~:':fo CP S ~ IC':'.!~ c'o' l,J,, U\11 -~!!.A,• ,1 .1~ :=~ ~ i J~J'o l:'-)~1' + V. er! 1~ • .::·" W w.l nh t.fl~ .::_ ,._ ~I Pl ~l 4 JI U lS •-I h.ve 'uppli-· labor 0 r :.:,;.:,, .. -· --"""' Jrnklfl E IU ;~ -t ,· 1'\\ ·-~,.::"· " ..... AIC&flAhl '·'° 262 2(11~ ?O '° .: ... :11, C85 pl I , l'h '''" ,,\;, ~ """'II 7! ""' '"' 11 "" + .. <;'ll • h•vtletbffn ~~Fulv""" l\loj"11tlCM '"' "rth.Y1n Jy;NA~tlf'ld~ jl!.14\k 14 1•'-". ~Oh•G••l.611 "''~i:''~'~"-+"-~'k~·rh J2"'1~,;;-:2it%: .. :i.t materials for your proJ~. ~Md to!:r'edln.: ~:::~: U i'v. ,~ Zc. '0~11'1 ;t; t: r~n c~ jil 1~• :~~~ :iO: 11" li~ ~~~ lU t :t c:I~ i~ f! 1~~ »\• 14 ·+v. orJlf:.{ ·ff ~ !2 ]14 n~ ffia t tt 1r you fa il to do this, you 0111ler rnt•tlh IU CIN ll 't •h•ll c 1!: ,m f~~: 0 1 ~ 11 :\l::t~ ~/g 't Ul1 ~~ n~ ~ti g~~E~l~1~ ,, ~: ~j i: +l'h ~!~cf ff l~~ :~~ Im 11?: + n could be Hable for such~rn;.d1,.1"P~:;i:· ::''t~ lj~l11V.A!~~~ tt n ,,1MoOtt ~,. lll •,','•"'--c',•,'.·11101•" ,,..., 1tloii +"'com11orv . ..o '~ 111~ 11v. 1 ~·• r1~1.'° Jl,,21~._,,1•,.,,n,..-.~ .. -· o~· Al•cll Vi ,.,,.. g l • ''" ''''' ,.. ,. ,,,.. ""' "' llJ 11~. 11-. 11 t l\ omwfd 2.11) 137 )(Wo lO~ Xi•• + • "::ft"" ·f, "" Paymen•· •nd s u c h su• ·-•• , ,~ ••••M·• .-• '' _,_ -· ' '' C ' •-• ' ... "" U" rt11ll .... nc.... IUP1ellc 1.., ·~ qoqq <1 »II 1~ ftlcMlr ia 'fldMti'> Jib ,,..... ..,.1-a 7'V. "-rnw or .... °"' I~ .•. ~In llt(. ti n !IV. 1~ 1~ - contracto-could legally -• "m~.~-M. ' w -,••,•w,,• :11"1 • 11 Cttd 31 -lJll'i frwlu 31\.li , 'l::l ,· .•• 10 11\.li n H -\\ CmwE pl1. 11 71 71 71 r1nllevUe I 2 Ult ,, u~ _"' '" vv-I '" JV. IOclt p, I> "-·-" oo• -J 12111 12'-11"°+ \\ ComwOIJ ·'° 11 16\' I._.. 10•• +• '"IW I.,. ., ''' >I ,, •• + ... I \o S! " •T-• , ll4 All Sit I.Cl 1t 2lloio 2J ~ + ( ,., .._ ..-..., "" "1 tain a m echanic's Hen on your ~ c~ 11:, ~~ }111 A~ ~: \~w. Y u~11ri1Vl"I ,.t! 1'\io AHklSop ,1511 • '" ,,,.. ,h ••• ~ c:::::'I sc1 2:: '~'" ,::: J~ -1" ~~·~'1 :.~,q 1: ~:~ Uii ;:11. ~ ... bou!IC -since they still "own" AfAPr s l''"lt 11 :1'2!-'f OO!n M ,. ,, n McGH -$ .SY. ~Ills CIW!m •1 ll 11"1. lJ .. c-MIU1 1 I 11'4 UV. IS\• + \t G!Norlr l.l>cl I 11\~ n\~ 11\.li -\" ·~s Inc t•VI w 70 20" Olt!Orl J , ..... us &knot 6\(J ~~~Ac'·'°.... ,. ..... •1"' .. ti! ... f COl'lnMl!I 309 .. 21'4 '°"' 21 \oll + v, GINONell 1.60 n '° '° (0 -"' certain materia ls lncorporated A l'ld 11111 ,',',' '•• 'i• '',', ',',!~ ,•• ,',"• '! '':11"',' 11 u A""" ea 1 .n " 114 7' no-\'o C011•1cc~ · 60 6 nl'r 11 11, n·~ -~ 01 w111 Flnt 11t 11w 111~~ u:w. _ v. A pf v• ~ . U S :WV. af Am 2J IA 16V. '""' + .... COii f11!1 i.10 11J 1J11 2114 2114 +\.\ <llWnUnn .tO 12 17\.\ 16._. l~ -.... 'Into >'!. Th'-rule,.·. espec1"aJly ,'L,,",. "c '•• rn'' .,",',ff"' "'," "•"• s, '••·'o B'r,:• n10 ....., ·-·.~i:n::°",,·!'! 2 " :nv. '2\~ ·· C011Edl1 f>f ' l 1s•.r. IS'~ 75" gwUo ~·· 1 o•> '''' '''' +•• .., -· " \lo V. .. """ ~· • 405 ~ l~ 36h il"ll C011E0!1 • J "" " . . • .. unpo~·-t h n , , -I; "' ,.,. , ,,.. ,., ~ nv. .,. •• c s .st 1o1~ 5t • .. . tw•lll n .JO 10 r;. 1... 1v. .... . , ...,, now, w e som e Atme 1 •:::: " -.. .. -.--.. • 1111 5Ld •'II M lrfH, ""' onF-1 10 11 l l """' n ... "'G•eenGri1 ·'' • 11i. 11Vi ,,~ .. . ha . . •11 51• ,..... 11"' l! hot! 1., l}~ l'9 VIII Ind ""' , • ...,, Am Altlll'I •• 1' "'"' ~ .. ~, , •• ConFttlOfol0 I " n~ 2114 ,,,~ +\O G......,sh 1.20 J :r.P• 13\lo U llo -Yt contnictors are vmg d1f-A, 1110U1 tA Mtt1 fl""t!.'1 1 Cot• 1~ N ti lo $"i '"'""'&••er 7~ 11v. ~ 2n .. "''""' t.ttil"!I 11 fl< 4\111 .,,.,_1;,G•a1r.r .'O • 21._ 21 21u. ... Ioli f''culty borr ·wi·ng m oney to •,•,~n .! ,'!',,' ,•, ,.~ ~ ~· '"'~ 'I"' ,•,.~ •,,~,..!..SI 1~ 10$t! ~!.' .. '""!': ',·!!.. " ~ 10 ~ iolll · · · CDtlN•tG 1.n 1n 2111-'r '"' 11v. + ~ G"'mmr>Cp 1 :no •>'·• 1J nu. _ ,._ " ,,_ ., •• •• ., . ..,, ...,... ..,, ,...,, ..,. U ..... J7 "-~.+~Cons Powr' 1 ~ ~-· 301.\ 30\\ -;\II GllL!HIO .•Ge 11 21"° ]11'; ?!"° .. hco l ' b.11 Alblltll ' 6V. rove PY-2-.; lV. t :F. I '14 H\O Wach llll If 1•v. ' -o· >'-~ r• !l:'+ ·• C-l'w ·•o •• ll"' .. .,_ •••• GO•M"• l ... ' 0,4 I• •• Pay Su Dirac ·rs I s -·•• ' •• ·~ ''' ' j •t o "' " •v 11 ,.... ' • •~ ~ -· "' ·"" -_,,. ... • + h "" · • ., .... -"" , · • Aljol11c 4 Ao , .. , " o '°1w I' , lo\.', •ro• 00 1,·,1 ~... ,.. ... ContAlr ~O • "' I' ' G '' 000 o •• o \0 11 11• 0 . ht l th Al to \.nd ,, Ulli g"''rd Ch •VI 4 •I~ pl l ·~ 111 •ht ao • f ""'• " ,, 2•\lo 24 1•'4 -... . ,. -14 u .... t 21'lol ·1-1' r YOU ITUg ge e COil-All'! Btv '"° ,..:, ull lnl S~ 6illi 11 Cmo y.., ~ """'°" 2'l't l ,•,,.<'!!' ...... f 51 ~ No 7141 -~ Conl C1n 2.(0 n40 '2V. 6' 411/o -\',-Gulf OU 1.SO 1111 21 27V. J1~ + ~ • Gd 7'111 mo 1 9 9YI •In 2 1'~ ls"' 1.5'ii Cot11 C1n wf ~1 •1 42 • .• • ulf ll111rt•1 26 t~ t t + 14 tractor to sign a "lien waiver" !l:!,,td ~ ;,~ !~ :~~ s 1t 21 l:~ G'; 4 4 N:~~n:G 3 li! ~s111 .Cl ,, 11 111o u~ +· · ·;,., con1 C0p .1~ ' 7\111 ~ 11t • , • . Gu11s11u1 .ff u 21•,. 221A1 nl'I _before you make your final Amide 21'1 t \'t ~•¥""" In 111o 11,ii Sev"' fl-. "'"° .0111 ·~ IU! 1,~ 1,1, : •. ,,''•' ' . ..:?! 13' l011o """ lOl'I i,.r; con,1 co 2 111 J0\11 111o;, )Ol'J +l>loo GulfSU ot4.611 ,'l! •,,•. ,il, ,",,, •' ,,· Am 8Ull'I ti/lo 10 Het1rtd " 7l 21'-" ri.<idoh SVI Sh ., Tt ,· ::z .~ ..:...,,v-no 510 2.W. 7.IV. 'l -1 I II pl'A).'3 a l1VI l6+o )]t' + GullWlnO .50 •• ..... l to hi which A fl L l Jyt Herll Cl N 31.1. mJtn M "° 1\00 :m ll "'" ...,. I 1"' 11.. ~ f Ito ConlM~ .14 21 Ii U"' 15 + \"i GullW' pt.1,17 I ll"° ll ... lll~ +<> p.aymen m -Am f•~ ~ni, .\;lo HIOOC Int ll-o S•, 11d $1 S l t'O f'Ai e trn t y,ii AOu•I pf,... 2 1n• ll!'a 11~ v;, Conl Oo t 1.50 1161 2J~ tl »>lo +H• GulfW pt!l.IS I s.in 54.., Sol + i\ absolves you from any furthe r A1n Furn SV:I t Hlllhvnfp ~ 6~ SC•I WIT ll'loio ll!\ ti 1'19 M ll l:W. AmEIPw I.'-' 51' 2•?-t 2•11o 2• 41 Con 011 pf 1 l lol 34 34 +I Gultwl h>d 2J 6¥1 Mi 6 -lo • • • G'"' ''"'•"Holm ~ :It s.owe r,1 lS\li ~ tclt p '•'• ''" '•"• E~•, 1, :n 29~, 21-'lo 29 "f Con! 'rtr .IO ll 1''11 It 19t• -lo\ H I I b I l f ~ ,.. !Obin •l'i 1 U G '" ffl\l f1Jo E-M t.J 91\ 1:1 I~ ->;. Conttol Otlt 100 lJ :11:\<o :»ho + -"" -• -r es p 0 n s . 1 I y or SUU" ~~~ l~" l~"" t:'OO'<~• ~,,. 11\'o ~ 'G.c: l.111 ~~ :m ::.~ J'.lo ~ AEJ!nd DI"' 110 51'~ ill' ~·\4 :j:I c .. 011 p!0.50 ll:JO ....... d ll:i ....... -\lo Hat,;kW•I 2.20 ' lOft :un. 'Xi~~+\~ contractors .. bllJS. Am felv ll l~V Howrd G0 0 ,1• •'•"\• 1~.~~!!~t 1!,'-:11,J 11~ Pu,b .·~ .~ :°'o·'<!n"p,,~r. ',' ,',1~ .J~ ll1~ ~ c,~~IO 1.tt ,1 3ni ll~ Jl'li + 1" H1llPrl 1.6().o I 1' 11 1( •• Anlleu 8 J'4' Howm " !"1 .-~· • •-• .., W ... ,. "" 1 ""'" -• --. ....... u" ·""' 12\lo 211~ 22\o\ •'~1lllbutl 1.0l 171 :16lt "Vi 36 I .+'• Never Sign any -mplicaled •••••• ,. ·~ ........ ~· l~ ''"' 11"''" ,,. ,,.. ···-' •• ,., •,mttol1 . 0 I I IOV. 10 I -\'., '-•In 1 " 4] 11''-,,.. >"• +··, •••W•• "' '' ,,. !It . ' """ ..,, " " ~ r. ,., _,. ....-. ,, H-1-I>•"'',,. ''''i'"f-' ,,·, -,. ,..,. . • .., • d I ··~-· --·' . Ates Ind ' 11' H 11 \~SM Rt<!ll 11\.', 11'4 Ile PL 11 .... 1"1; -·-·'"' ''' 1'" ,. •• ll"-,L :::::",, ... I... 2 15!' lSh !Sh Hemm Ptp I 9 Ul.i ll\'t l + '• !:B Wlwuut COuawting }'OW' Arden M • ~Hut Otl U\11 j \\ Ian HPd 22 2• rd1w E 2 2\4 ~.::..c::i J._! ,. .. .. ,.. ~ S '° '° 40 ·:_14 Ktmmncl .7D 11 l\t I"" ~ • d ... -... L Mu~I p ' 7111 !trio ~lr "" TO rloM w 11 11~ ... -• I n~ • -.... c-Att SOb 3-1 30Vi "~ ""' -·· H1Mrmn ... 11 2•'• n.. ' lawyer M d, if YOU don't have A~t '"Mof. fiu. (i~ H'tltl Cl 12\11 ll Slttw Cl ll 25 rOny E 1\/4 ~ ~~:: b;": 11 )I.,. ,. "'lO -1.o Cas>wlSll 'l 10 5 Ult. I~ 1~ HtM Htr .72 J 11 U.\oo -~ 1 1 '"t H 261'1 Jf~ ~,111 tnl '-"" '"' Am Molon 20~ -: .... ,\6 'I +ll':I C0tl.,ll\8 j29 21 1•111 fJ"Wo 1•"" i·-:11, HIN'I Cjl ,$0 II ll\i ll =\'a a awyer, ge one. Arv • 1·.~ '" H~ Aln 3 Jiil •W•tGa1 '10 lJI ~ JI ,. .... +·" l":~11~·~:.r IJ 1SJ 151V. 1Sl\:. I\& HllWIM 1.,0 ! '1W llV. '1\lo.~,.. Never pay a contra ctor in •'•"•• .!',' '•'"• ~.:~ 1!"00'"0 ,',' ,•,\II,~=-A,•,.!'~ ",,._1 " '"" iv. ,,,. -l'I cowl•• co-72 2'11\/o "~ 10\r. ¥ Hftrcourt 1 • Ji'r2 J2'" J • ..... •-4 .,. ~·v• .,. 'Hl6 •S41. .. 4, "' 2• J\l:i l\9 lV. +11. Ht••I• Int I "' •.)>., (J 41\ "r •• full beforethe workis done 1111ro At ~ J~ n0 Nuc01 »••11•• AmS.,.,11n., 1 2 1~ 11i,., 15,,.,:.:_·"Cow&dcsl .311 21 ,,1'11 131\ 1(\'of t.H•rKoCo n ui-. UYI uv, ,, • a.Iler 11\11 lJ ntXCP ~ 5'"• A Smelt 1.'6 411 1•'-1 2(\'• 1.4\.'o _ .., CPC Ill!! I 10 lD4 27\lo 16.Jli 21\/t + ..., HtrlSMtll .IO • t 11(.\ 19\lo 1~ '" And never pay in cash B11 P11n1 •\4 .-. 1 1"f''Cd 1 ,,; 1'~ MUTUAL AmS.O•t• .10 ~· 31h :ias;, llll• + ~ ,,.,,, ··~ ' :til'o ".,,_, J1i1 -''• Htrv Al 1.10 l "~ 1•'·• ,~ . ~ ' ::~p ''° i\1 ~Inn onl" ~~ ;~ :~sfJO ii!4.15 ~~~ ~~ i~;: ll~ .t:: ~C~~l(HI t.i, \ \;"' ;~\1 ,~~ -\'o ~:~~ El1~·~ 2 fln n ff\9 = · • ll1umM ts '16 lnl llW~ j'll I... Am Stedl ... ,3 """ , • ..._ 1611 + ·~-noU 15 ?I '°'"' "°"" ._..., ri•ieltliw 131 • no • + llt•1"s ll 1J\1 Int Mull<! 11W , '• A~.-... , !."' -1-o ''°""'OI 1.071 ~ 1oij ,,. 10 -"' HKlllMll .11~ ., " ,. 2dU. -Ml For inslance, the quality of paint you use could m ake .a tremendous difference in the Jooks and endurance of the job. The rew dollars you save by ming cheap paint could mean you'll have to scrape down and repaint your house aU over next year. Have Achievements, Goals Matched in U.S.? a~ 1114 nv. 1n1 5,, 11 11v. A~-ptAl1s 5l !7" 11 21-~ CrowC on 20 1 1''• 1t•i 1t1~ +ll'o H1ln1 HJ .t1 t Jot\\ :1-1\.\ .J41'l + ~ B~ll• hie 1•'111 17'1o Int Sy ~ l•,,. "," FUNDS •m "' • '• 10 " 1-",,, "•• +'" ,',-•• •,,<, ~,·k,. 1'1 13s;, ll\\ 1,_ + •-..i..i.n. Cuti 2 ""' Ho 1YI f" •• ' -'"' I o lntt•I ,. · ... .. .. "' ,... "" 39 71V) n "' rlfll1t lnO -" >• '!''>' I'" I \ Ber'~' H• 38 :19\o\ lonoc~ 11.,., 1• A fl. T WI wl S21 I 711. 7'1a + 1~ Crn l pl1 ·70 11:11) Sollh 5A ~!,lo + "' Mtller ot(.01 J l • J~ lJ • nt Stu L.tO 35V, 37 I• 5oU111 21\lo 'U•;, AmT&T 2.60 l6l •SV. «'lo 4'~ + .. CTS Corp 0 ((1 Ii 13!/.i 12'1; lJ'~ +···-Ht!,,,. PO> I IS (>,It ... l•'ii \\ 811lUPI w )~ H'o Jacob~ F 21. 3'• Amww~ •. !O 20 e•.-. ..... " -Vo CUd•~· 61'1 11 " 101, 10h .,. H.tmrhP .20 ~ Im Ul't ·~· 1~ •rrd SOii 31 :.:i J .... Ull'I c 1 7">;. 4WWSPI 1.lS 1100 16'h 16\111 , • ..., +14 Cudhy P11.2s 1 16>.I 16 111 ~ _,, HtmlJPfl Cap 11 • Jl't 11'1 -... 8 Mehr JV, :P4 Jim W•I ,..., f. Amerori .60 1 lSV. 1'\lt 1~., -"-Cu!I~.., 2t 13 11\Q 11 llV. ,.. Htmllric .10e 10 \io ~ Siio + l'I HI 2111 21V.. J~ F u -. 21''. AITll'lf\< .llOI 3S I~ '"" I~ + \'o Cufl'!mln :IDD • 2''-4 2''• 7'"-' .+ \ Hire Irie .I~ l? 34\:; Jo( 34 El 2 .... 11-'a {"",,, ~·. •,!? ~\PJ NEW YOAIC tAP) NTGN 6.12 2.)11 ::; .... 1~.IO 150 n·~ "'" ZI .... +v. lunrio,,,,. ... lJ "~ ..... ··~ _ .z Httlll\FO 1.10 ).16 2~ 2:Mt 2J>A +·~ 81r 6\IO ,,. .... F • 16:,· 16'1. -TIM IDllOWI~ Q-lfl¥ COA 10.SJ 11.5~ AMP ..... ~ •• l l~ uu 34"11 +i-. urtbs W'1 l .1f u~, lJ•, IJ•~ -~ H"'lll.rn .ao 11 .,,. 3S\lo l6\11 + ... BllOll\I C .,,, • J~nlll PO telll>n•, IUOOll&d by Inv C.uld 1.ll 7.:b '~ ... ICM 141'1 (J'loi "'\• +~< CUii Wr A ! 1 '4''1 1•1~ '"'"' Hr. Pld< .,10 i! 100\1 ~~ ~.,,. i···u a.OOJ AH 11\'o 1J ICtl"' ~I ...S '6 l~t Ntll°"'I AHOcl· Inv lncllc •.M '·" Amlle~ Cati II 11~~ 1•\\ ,.,_. + <.. C:utler H 1.1 I 4 11h Ill" 18\.li \~ Hloft VoU.U1 •• ....... ,. "' Similarly, by buying im- properly cured lumber, you may rind that it buckles or contracts. In choosing flooring and noor coverings -linoleum, carpeting, tht: newer vinyls, etc. -choose the produd grade which will offer the durability you'll actually need in the area to be floored or covered. There's no sense in splurging on a super-hard grade of wood or linoleum or carpeting for a room in ""hicb there will be only a minimum of traffic. At the s amt: time, it scarceJ y rnakt:S e c o n o m i c sense to save $50 to $100 by buy ing a light duty grade or flooring or Carp!:ting for a children's rumpus room. By all means, do as many home repair jobs as you are qualified to do yourself. While you're at it, also recruit a s many qu.alil.ied -or al least willing -members or your IN THE l'.Al'RI MOTEL ARCADE HANK a' HAii Beauty Salon and Men's Haircutting and Stytlng Shop. Dpon Mondoy thru S.turday I -5, Sundays 1nd eves. by appoint· nwnt. W1lk-in1 welcome. 141t •2J S. CMSt Hlt tlwcty, L9'•t1• hoc.\ 494-5054 OVER 80, 1970 TOYOTA·· MUST GO Wt need the room forthe 1971'5 SAVE MORE NOW JIMSLEMONS . IMPORTS 417W.WARNER SANTAANA, CALIF, open tV91'1inp a aundaY• 640-2612 By JOHN CUNNIFF Al' aus1,,..-. A"'l">'ll NEW YORK (AP) ·-The present state or the economy may be described in the con- ventional way, t h rough statistics, or it can be shown by contrasting our ambitious goals with our inability to a c hit:ve them, our dollar wealth with our environmental poverty. To put it lo q uestion for m : Have the increases in incomes really permitted Americans to buy a better life? Has the quallty of life improved to the samt: extent a s the: Gross Na· tional Product? These are the statistics: -Gross National Produc t, the market value o{ the outpu~ or goods and services pro- duced by the econom y, rOM! to Edward Miller New Director Dr. Edward A. Miller has been appointed director of Newport Beach Operations for Pb i I co.Ford Corporation 's Western Developm t:n l Laboratories Division. The WDL Division Newport Beach OperatiOM, for which Dr. Miller has over a 11 m anagement responsib ility, is conducting re-entry a n d la unch vehicle systems pro-. grams for the Department of Defense, a erospace e lectronic counter-m easures projects, is ad ive in the development and production or deployment and carrier vehicles used in E a rth re-entry s tudi es , and spacecraft systems a n d subsystems projects for the Defense Departmant a n d NASA. Investors & businessmen: ! From •6.000 to •&o.ooo to io.n for any purpose on California rear utate of any kind, wh ether P1id for or not. Bankers look 11; your p&I or your age. Mv lendeB look only at your eQuity, Let's diteuss your r9ds. Norm Kahn. Ii· censed bn>ker. 539-2122. I See by Today's Want Ads e Beautiful 1-fontkcl.lo 2 Br. J Nth, 2 car gll.t8.(e. M'JI~. rlL.t.pe~. maintf'r.. a.net :ind pool llll for $185.. monlhl • Do )'O'l like lo pta.y pool? AMF 4:<8 pool 1•bl~ $DI. • Art-you right honch .. "<I and .and haw. ,. Jell haMed refrtpntt.or1' Jff!r'f''A ll cltllf1Cf' 10 1t.ll It. 5orMOnt N!edl • ~ Ultd left hand e>penlna rcfrip:rator. 8o1 C•P IV! I IC•ll.Sl Dt 17 11 It Ion Qt Secur!tltl hwf> Bns t.J1 l0.70 Am~!N 1.• I :ii'• 21 II'"' .... I• Cyc10P$ 1.1>11 ll ?J 2114 ""' + ~ HlllonHolel I » 30'Ao 2'41 lO'Jo ""' $93[ h .11. . f !•Inks 1~ t'-111 '~"" K1lvt• 1J , 1' Oealtr1. Inc., 1,. lnveslor• Group; Arnie! .J2 11 "'-6''1 •~• -""C•P•usM 1.60 J ~!• S6"' S6liio +"' ~-~!w' •' "."" .J lJ\lo W.. 33\lo b I IOn 10 1969 r om $629 ,.;c, Set IS~s 16'• ICllt Orn 1: .. 3'> mt orlca at wn Lch IDS ndl l.2J J.S! Anecona 1.90 119 ll 21't:I t'ZIO 0 " •~ 4• 19\t 19>\ If~ ..... bill• f• 1 . Btw.,Ar 1 7.,.,IC11Y1m j•:l""°toeie ~ecurl!lts Mui 1'.llf12AllC1'1Hot~I J022~11 ... '2>..41 - -01f;ll(!rn S 11• 5 Jlll il• ion 1ve years ear 1er. 11ru'" '' lJ,,., 111 KN• T :i.. 11"\ coYkl ,._.~e been Prov fro 1•29 Anc:orPN$v 1 ' 14~·· 14t1 u i. . 00..nlllvr .H11 • ~ ~ P• H OYl"n .22 1!3 2•.,.. 2l'Jo 74.,.. -. . &uc-n .,._ 61'1 Kelltll • ' 1\.'o IOI lb~) ar lll>u!lh1 $tort l•:Sl U)t Arid Cl1y 1.)0 S ;i!\.', :JO :JO -'t •n• C.. 1.1$ 50 211~ ?01~ 70,, ... i.j, Ho ldA 1.700 4 3'11 3' Jol\'I \'I -National incom e, the total Bvt11uP s M 111•-. 1t.11twd l• 16.aQ c1J.11tc1J Tutt<11v. Select 1.10 '63. Art.ld'leCp 7! ' 1J1~ 11 n + \lo De•!"'° .JOD M :it 111' ,., .. = ,.., HGllYSuo 1.10 !,! ,",',•, •"•• ,",~ _ ... ,, ' !IC Leis ~ ~·~Ktutf E , ..... 11. •w Al-V1r"" 5.sJ 601 APCOOll I.lit ., u•. 2! 26 +ll~O•tf lnd "'' u lSttt u•· 3(\j ,_,komftl~• -~ •• .. eammgs of la bor and property •I w sv n:i1o nr1 .c:ne Flt> i1o.i. 11~ At1eron t ,, 1.11 in .. A•"'1 ,00 ,:,, APL Corp • 1~ ,,.,.. !:Rio + \It 0111 p,oa,. J2 1v. 1 ' 1 -1, H-•wl J,:JO 111 ,,... li 11 -IC. f th rod . •mco 11 1? KnoJ CUI 7": I • ,l,clml'all'I Fvndll : l"fl IJ.~ "·12 APL Pl 1150 I 9'4 9\\, 9"' i YI O•YCllCo I 14 J 14>;, IOI~ 1'"4o -HllCW SI I.la •1 l\o l\la 2119 -"° rom e p uclion or goods .,_ M t1 10 ic ..... 11 PC 4'• 1 o-w1n .... s.1J vy 1.1• 5.14 All.A Svc 1 06 ~10 1tv. 1s11 11 ' oa .. to Pl•.iis itoo J?"-51 5, +-.~ Hotl 11'111 . .w 111 21\111 to a-i ~ d · · $7'Q ... nM 8 6o1 61 1(1"' Int 21\ 1~ lricom l.IO J.IJ J Hncoc• t 76 t IO Are111N .\°" i5 16'• 1''• 16\lt -Ioli 01YlnHuO .50 J 7• ... 7•I~ ,_... ., Houd lnll .IG 16 ':-'J t\'t •l'I 1.-a n serV"lce.!, rose tO 1ntad 7\li 2~ 1Clno1 ft"° J•• ,•,V:i Insur !.tJ '~ JO!lnlln 16"1,. 1.:10 .·,·~1110• •,J l lt'.\lo. 32>,I, :12'111 -I.:. o~"nPI I.loll 1> 11'\ 21 11'-'> +" HOUCIMltf . ..r:t t U\,. 1'\1 1.W. I,\ bill. lo f o Mloo \I 0'1'1 Kirt. Cp ~ • '' '' , oo • < , F ~" tn I 21\• V 11 -ll·, PPL 1>107 ."' o•• -"' ..... .,. l'ious1111-1,lij •9 ~ 34 3-4 ' -\llo ion 1969 rom '514 billion c,: !>ow 1 •Ui ""•~ vo1 21v. 21·~ Aui11;rd 6:11 6.t9 7:011';:" ~ 50 :t.JJ A•liPs~ l,OI is U\o u:w. U'h+\~ 01'!•• co 1 ;. ~ 21,, ;~ •. ··· Hoo1F 011.•o 2 102 101 101 -1\.11 in 1954... cw 1n1A 2\1 'l'J. 1<te111r ,.,.. 3V. "'rl•• s u s.77 c~, 61 11:01 11.14 A•i•n• os .10 15' 6"-< ~ ,,,. 1' "'! 0e1m1rP 1.12 2-11 1r, 161:. 11,: +"' Hou'I' 011.so i •2.,, AJ\ft •iv, .... P I • hi . !':~;re~ ~;: :~ ~.£. °i~ ri~ ~ A/i.f1':'• F ,:ft t11: f~: =~ ·~·H 1'i·~ :=s~J:ro 1~ ~\.? ;:~ ~~ :+ i: R;l,.~~i.1·.1fo ~1 "~ "1 ''. ~1~• + ~ ~:~fL.."'~i~ J !l~ ~ ~lt'!:; r. -ersona income, w ch IS a•1e s1 1"" 3 1..1t!d Pf5 1-. • ~ 1oti.o Fo 8 11 •.SI Ciilo Kl ,:,J :u Ar"'"'" 1 .o 9 lt 31"1. .:11>.1 -t• ....., itt 1n1 ui ~"• !~~~ !~++:' Hou11NG1 10 11 "''-• "' u \lo + ~ th t ,_1 · , ed b u1r GP 11'4 1~1'1 Lint Wd • 6'-mc•D l 11 SU C<n I(! J '& , 1J Arms!Ck .IO 13 1~ 7S~ 1111\ l '0..0 "Mfg .60 ,. 16\.1 lM lSJ'O '" HoU~I Dll.J.O 2 .. "' .. + e 0 1.o11 UlCOm e receiv y ••e NG ''• ,..., _.,'°" 1 21~ "' a1n 2:1. l.OJ cu5 s1 is:G1 lt"il """'~ 1>111s aoo "'*l<o • .. " tnn•lht o. ~ 7''1 1 • ,, -'•Howmet .10 '10 UV. 1w. 1.1\9 ••... pe-•ns f II •Ill C11> 1'+'1 l'llo l..lfwl'I M l•"t lJl>fo. ~ ... ovt" 1.62 t.a Cu\ S? l.•1 , ..o A'mlluD 1.60 s 211.0 17\o'o 11,,. .,; Oent111/'fl1'1/ 1 21 22'1 11 21 • + l .. Hulll>rll 1,0C>t 11 '10 19'~ ,,,.. -\'I '"" rom a sources, rose tnle.• ttl~ 13 Ov Ld l•YI !JV, 4,...,r E•trns: Cus SJ !IJ 4 :Iii Aro COMll .!>Cl 12 1'"-U14 1'/ + 'llo °""II.Gr !.!O ) u IJ IS -lllt Hud81f 1.20 1' 20*-'° n~ + 'io t.o$749billion inl969rrom$495 ~~: ... ~:s 1~~1t:!•.:1~11::"t' ,r~,r.'I?' cl~~ ~j~ tfi ~~rll,s. ftt f~~:~~~o11~1 .Jo a:~'~ !f~ ~f~+1 ~.g:~:1~'~..., i 33, ll J:l ... ,,.r~i:t:,·.~ sl Mv. 111 ~··+·1; bi111·on ·m1n.ft• !11MO $~~v.Ltw11llF 17 ll "Vfttl 7••1.IJICnrc~D !IU6 ••A~Br1W 1 II• /:\II 1~ ..•.. D~IEd/1 !.611 ~\l(!'"'J~l.4 11'-'>+ ... 111e•lll11 .60 :lflG'i• ov.1o;·.+ ... llV't. llm Lt• 1':,, I'~ lr>e M!q 1,,_ l "I S11ec1 i .111 .... ICnc~ GI 6"31 6;11 AsSd 0G 1.10 M ll 32V. ,11{, + 114 Otl Ed o!S.$0 1 Jll 11.(? ~::-+•<lo 1111118 !Ml.IS l J9 59 .59 -II\ D. bl naJ • htl trid 2'• J,,_ LOl>l1w 7"" /\, $!oct 7.~ 1.ff LtX Gr!!I 6 ... I.GI Aadfrln .CSQ 12 6'"' 6..... Ill"' +~ ~I Sll'tl I l l~ 14,Z +o..;; Ill Ctn! l.U .cl '10 70 N ..... -iSposa e perso Jn-.. !IH Utll 1~'.> \J\IJ _of! Cd"1 ,> 0101'! Am E<1l"1 l .IS 1.!1 Le• ~~II 11.05 ;3.17 AA!!'CIOnt ll'ld l! UV, 15 Ul'o --'•~ O•U~t .24 If 17 16' I~ ' 111 C"' pl).50 .cl 40\11 .0\'o (11\1, + 11" th . C'l!I l!lr•I Ji' 5A Ettn 0 .. .., Grtt\ 4.9• Ji.olO L!beMV 4.ff 5 IJ ":ryEI 1,lol ll 101.io 20'' :>ll'o + '\\ Ol1!Fln111 A 11 l'lo 1i.j, + °' 1 f'DWll' l 1J l-1'1 :M'l'I l#'o+ ~ come, or e mcome re-fhr111 s 1J1 l t' -">'""" c 11v. 1'\4 •m Inv ,,, .. .,, ti'~ 5!1r 1n .-,. Atl Ricnt1d 1 161 5~ Sil'<. st"llo +7'\ 001am1"u F.IO ~ !s'.· 35,~ 3~~:; ~ 1~,••,,P~~ i1a :M 2• '' ...... ·· I fl !"'"'°' '' t7 GEi 1~1• "'"'"'"' ,;:n1.oo It Inv J°51i02A1•cnplJ.7!tlOOn\,4 4''•+"' llfn5h1m1 "U'l l•"-l!V.+i\:iNACol"" 211,.,.,..,. N +'JJ ma1n1ng o persons a er pay. u111e1 1 9 •\ A!tv s 1v. AmN Glli 2.21 2 . .n Inc N•t 7·,, , ... AU 11.1,~ pl J 6 """ " """ +>\< 01.sn Pl·C2 i '5'. 251. 1s,, t '•inc-c.i;'lt , .. 21 16\.'o 1tt• + ~ ment of personal tax e s . ',,",', .~'•' ,','",,'•,, •,•-2-,",, ''"" 6•1'. rn PK Ji.It •.JO uno ,·,0 its An~uo 1111.IO •J al\• u>\ •S'· +1'• o,r•s Pl 01.10 t• 1"• 1..,. 1 ..... v. i..ccum ·'"' 2: ;:' t,:.• 11. -u "' , .... I>,; AnthO<' GroUD Loami, s1.16: ' Allt• , ...... 1 111 21'0 ]J"' ,,.. + .... Cl•Phofl A 15 tl.I ··~ ~ + •• '"'"' "' ."' • • ,.... ..... J·umpcd lo ... 2 billi·on fro c1111 ua 10'"-'114 ""•"il'I M ,,, J~ C•Dlt el• 6•s C•Md 12s•lJSl'A111~corD ~! ,'-,, ,'" ,',".-+•"•0°,'0",',,"i•···-~. "'"'' 101,1 ....... ,·,-,,,,, ,_,-, '••' ,','c'•. l!v.. ,','~+·"~· • 'f\>oJ m C tl'ln Ml 1)1_, h\oio 11>0r C •l!o 6''• Grwth 1:JO 9:~ Cti>ll 1:21 1:21 ATO Inc .Cle ..,. .., T 11>' ~•·• ~ '"' .,. "' '"" "'436 billion In l~'. 'r~rk Mf 1••1o flt Mt• Mia 91.\ '"' Inc.... '·7• 1.11 MUI 11 .•1 n .•1 Auror• Ptod IS ' su. • ""' Diii/no ... " 12! 9\~ I~ 10'• .... \41 lna,u N•t .I'll • II llh )1\~ -~ ., :117'\1 C IYlon \"'° 11.:. 1rm Or t' .. 1-"' F~ ln't 1 11 7.7' Lulh Bro t t71n tO Automln Ind ll V'o J >• J~ ~ Dill"' OI Ji. 1 1 15 9'/o + .... lntMRl'1d l \JS lJ"a lS 35\o'i + 11'1 Those are the four rna)O· r 111n1 Mt,t I ........ lltowr 14 2S \ltnl )6.JS :1'.1J M•tnl lrt 7 ... 1:s1 A¥tc1 Co .60e 16 ,\. 9>, t~o + U. \?f011on Co .U 4 1~1' ~~ lS\ ll'ltllld Pll.U l JI -.. JIV, 3i\.'o •.. 0 •• I CP f> 10• • <• •O 0 -> Q .. o _..."" 1•1-l> 17 -._ "'J,,,., .-~ \•• ,..• • ll \ + \ .. lno1nd liU 2 10 2J"-~ ~ -.... f rod . d MOn •--. ol'o tu • Po ... • -111 ( 01 • !I e '"~·•v _ "·~ 'l l »" OO•O'--, -1!4• t7', ~ !-I _tt. 1• ·~ '>L <2.< t •• m easures o p uction an 1aw c11 11'41!\lo •1e• D ,,,.1,\o\Anoc•1 lOl l.nM••• Fd too tuAvtrvPd .10 "' .. J + ""'" .:io •1 ... "' " +,.,11'1l11ko IOb 49 1,. •-" ,,.,, " • Otllt O ~~ fl~ cQ\I">' IN ll\& Mtron l .10 4.lll M•H GI!\ tu i•3 Avnel Inc .40 17 6\'t 'lo •'1' .•.•. D!v~rslnd .:Iii ,, l't ~ II\ + ••,_,,,''I'.' ,_ •• ,,-.. .... ~ ...,;±_ ,__Ill Income. !lo they tell aD ac· ffi'~ C11 il "' Mfdlc H •t• '"° t l'!--Mon· Miu '' ,,._,, 11··j' ~•Mi pn ~ 1 $\ :.S'h lS .... -+ l Oo°'pM11 1.1'1 Jl 1 " '''> ''' " ... - --·· _,_ •• •• ,,. ,,.. -•• • p ''' ,. " -· ff' t .. ' -.-. • -.... lnllrco ,10 • 11~ ,. •• n·· -~ l l , Qr ••••·Id th """ E J JI', fd MIO ' •• Fuf'4 A '-~ 4 .... M1l1K 2 M 2 6 van • •Y _,, ..... _ ""' '6 1114 II 1.7•~ + ~ lntrlklnc l .IO I J llu ,~ _, c ura e s ory . ;>.IJIAI e 0111ns ~ ,,.., '"' Mldt•n 11~~ 211, Funcl a •.n 6.76 Me111e,, 1:.t 1:19 Aztec on .nt 11 11'\to 111--. ! 'l'f YI o=iMln .IG 1 ~~ 5''4 U ''1 + ._IBM 4 '° ,.. 1~ 2.,_. 2~ s tatistics be forgotten for the ~,s'' ~a 'l"" ~!di: ~ l'; 113~ ~r~o lll !:t: Mefdid t:! 1!·1:1~ ir -B--Dor1 ... ~,-~~~ ' • • • + •11 1m '" · Nucl• 11 mi. 31 ..... ~ .:~:;,.\ 1 ~' ,' .. • 00 1•• •• • •• , • ,_. 1 ·o · o·•-l' •• •• i••-oo lo" i •· 8:;'' fir. .-10' ,",:! ',,•~ 1o~• ... -''-ln!Fl1Fr ICI:: '~" fl' jj,. ,•,• :J: ~ m om ent and the econom y "" ,', >t, ,.>~ e• '"' -, luo0" · CD 0 ! •1 t't _....... ·""' ..., 9T> .., w '"' .,, ... " J 1 H _.. lMO 1'\lt Mklw Gf lS1.<i ,," t~con lOSllO.~ M-~·~ 11'1s1•1t BakrOll .6~ 11 ,,,. 16'6. 11~• ' , 0...., 1.S e•4 I ,. -... n •tV . al led · naJ om T~I 21 ~1:i.. pl• GI• 30 30'1 ll1r11 IC~! 1.:n 7.1'.! FIFO Fd 1·1• J"n Ball GE 1.1'1 ,',' ',",•, 10H,~ 11'\\.. ~. ~'.".!!~ l.~ ,.f 351,. :M\la :W.• = "• o,~','°,~~.1·,"" 1,j o"o•• 'I• \02 c_;_··tt· ev ua 1n m ore perso !§ 1--!llh !!"• ., Mlu VIG ,, ... 15\.'0 a.rk Glh •. s9 S.0, MIF G•h 4 IS •At BIMPnt .U11 ~ ............ ~,, ... ... 6,.. 6~ .. ..u... '• .. T W'ys. ~ "'•' 11.o 7'io a RKh 2loo 3 11181, Fd 4.n s.21 MuU5 Ov io:1J 10.» B0a"9P &>I 1 1 11 11 11 ,. Oreu1r111 1.00 " v """ 6 +•~ 11'11 Ind Pll.10 l2 19 11\lo llM -_,_ • 4"1. Mod Sc:l )loo 4V. llondSlk 4.,, 5.-d Mu OrnG 4..07 'G 1ntf> Pll.Z!I 1 12~ lPoli 11\1 -\.lo OrlHlr ""·"' 5 :lJ$to ~ra. ~ .. -v. 1 .. 1 Miner 26 ,"" 10 10 -~ If ..••• ~. f JOO ds f C ' "-~~ O• ,_ I••• • l $0 O •• l I> -· ••.r C•O 0 •• II , •••• 10 .... ,,, + • •--,, • •> I -· -~ l"I i:c: .xi. It 1111! 10~ 1114 + m ·~ , .. <1111 Mont car Sli\ •YI 8otl Fdn 8'3 t76 ul stirs 11 n 11 n • of NY 2 S '3"'< n .. 41'~ • ~Co 1 11 IJVJ l!l'o !J'r'> -..., " -.. v •• • :WI'> 3''• ~= 0 U8afl 0 1~.· ,::, S'' '"' .,.,,... o•• •• DI on .... ' M'1 .,..,Jn l.6r '0 0 .... .. -.. ""•' ,,.... 2' 71 ... I t N O -"' - ra miHes for ••ample have SO m11 TK J l ''• Monm Pk 11 11~ lloslon 1 QI 1.n Mui fr.I 1'11 1·7, 81 ... Tr 2.1.1 '3 ........ """ 6"1o f \'I OulrtPw 1.40 '1 20l'o '°"' ..,.r + \to lnl PID I.JO 117 loli'o ~ l1\.'i ..... • • ...... • ornrt$ ' ,...,Moorr p lllo 9 lln>&d SI l1.lll2.:1'2 NfA Mui ifl 1·1' B•rDOll 1.Jfl 50 , ..... ,, .... le , .... Oull;eP Pl6.1J I I! lj 1r· ..... ll'llt AKlll 25 .... Sh • f. henelilled by ~eady jobs and an R«k '' IA'£ Moorr s 1004 11 ,.,11.-..;k c11 .. 1n: .. ,, ,_ ,--,· ... llerd CR .2s 14 lS'4 JJ "' D1111&r.o 1 20 <12 ,,, .. ,,,. ,, • · '"1 s.11 1.«1 • l6~ ,. :s.v. 1 o• · • , ' \O I>• 'tt ro "" .. •"' '' 1 o '° ,. '''' oo>> 0 •• • -,,,. __ ,. \"' '7 • + '" lnr 1&.T t.05 .«t> '"> Jl" •n· n r ••lng wag-that they have ontr11" l"' ~•• 1~ r wt • ,.,, cond" 11.10 1f. 1 NII s-.. , •·.-. 11f1 Mlg ... " "' .. ..,, .... •157 !<'01.1 ''"', + ··--. ~&ntrlO ,,,. 7\'t Migl • llullck 11.27 1 . Nal '"wit J.71 •. JZ ' I c "' . ' ... ... .~ ~ ,-,,.:,· ,-,,..... ~ lS'>., 13'~ ll~ --'II ln!T& T Pl~' _.,,~ t,,·· '!'~ ''' • ,, .., '-" ooper L 1• •• 15 Moten M f:llo !IV. Olvld '· U ,(J 8tll,;-,jl t '°' ll1le1 Ml Pf I 2 12-.. 12.... 12V, -"" duPont Df•.SO I~ lnlT& T DI ' 1200 1)(1'! 1 1\(o 11'V. +I saved an amount that once 0tP s J'lo 3:i.:; Mor c1uto 11\.'o H •• NarW ~ '·" t.ff 8-.-,1 •·00 B.rn Ind i. 1H• 11'\l 12~ +T'\o duPorit DfJ.M 11 ~'' ~,,. ~\IJ •• ·· ... 111. T P1'1 ' n 11 " 11 ...... Would h.··e served as the ,',.,.,,v' 1'<1 IU. Muellf' • ..,, IV! NY Vnt 11 ,0112.11 Ohkl J.•J i n 811t>l11 PIJ.50 10 ~ Jl"lo 31"-of 2 Ow LI '·" .. 21111 JI 21'" +·;.; l~ITtf .. pf~.' ) 11111 JlV. 711-'J -1 v , .. , 15 17 ""ulRI E, Th P,, 8UI MFd t.16 6 1$ G-wltl 7.H 7 .... Bau1d'ILD .IO 11 ~ J:W. ll'1 .. OQ (.70oU.lo 1270 26 2t 16 _ -'6 ln"l>-IN 2 U 23 .. •n-. U i' down pay -•nt on a house. C!!1,, ~!'! 6~" ;>~ v1r LE 19 19\111 G FO 1.11 1.'9 Pf $111: 5.16 6.lO 81XlrL1D .IO 13S 20 ... ll + \lo Del 4..1Sof2.01 rHlO 76, 1' 1" -<~ In! "Ill 1 '... 352 4~ '""' '1"" \to ,,_ ~·· ..... ,,, 1 .... cc lnll )"lo l't C•11tm• '·" i ·'l lric..... ',, .... BaYukClg .jg ) m ... '"' Ouoll -.! ' 1Cl0 26•. " 2'1U + 14 Int i'.itu A -l'O "'' 'M\~ ,. .... i • N th '( h th l ro:n Co 2.s:1. 2<1~ NtOl<I C 11'\ lJV, l~t Inv 1.St .Ill Sloe~ 6.117 1.:. e0eal1nv1 1 12 3.s"lo J6'1oo 36~ i *Oct l.1So11.t1 1'0 1~ .... ,,,,., 7"-_..,. ,,,,,,-, O II 71:i,;, 71\-\ 2t\1< \.I. ow ey can uy a •u!ch ~ 41~ """ "'•t B•lld 1v. ,,., '°'' s~r s.01 !.5' ~•I Grlh 6 '6 ~ s1 0ea1 Fo1 l 21 l7>1. " 2AI "' Oofmo Ind 1 •"' ,,,., .. , ~ f n"' 21~ :nv. + I h ,,Offl c ' 7 N.,!Cllt II; ~ 11>'1'1 '"' §~r t ,!6 l0.12 N'1JW Ct! l:•s J)I Kit..,.., ... so 51 lJ"-211/a 22\lo . C,-n1 Am ·'° ll S't• 5\-\ ... -1'11 l"I B•ll\d .ti) 165 "'-lJI') IJV. _, ouse... O~n., Lbt '"' , ... CmD CP 1·~ 1'111 Channfn11 Funcl1: N'1Jw F~ '"'·'' IS.t7 Beet Olck .XI SS JO 29'1k ff"" + \.. E F )\.t • ' • ln!eriPw 1.2, ' 111\lo 16n l•'to + 'Al lnl l l d • 01"1"1 M I S'h •t Eoul 1' 16 ll1!11n 9.14 1C.61 N~ W1d 10 .. 'I& ll.S6 llete~Ar .7!.b •l '"' 9\.'0 f~ + '·--• -lnle .. ISlr .60 lJ 1'4\ IJ\'t 14'"-+ 1 Cres ra es a n prtCe5 Oa!t DiK •'4 6'~ NII G&D 1 S''o 16llo Com SI 1 JI I.SI Newlon H .llO n '1(1 Beka Pel SO lJI lS\tJ 1(\'• 1S<t -+IV. 1':1<11,Pth .llO U If\; tt It + 1 lowi l.leff '~ 11'111 17',I 11 have soar...,. a nd la rger down 0111 Gm 11 1ni. NII LID 7011> !'"" Grwth • 10 ..... Nld'I sir, 1.fS I.Os Bild~ t.60 I 'JI.(, 'jl/, ,5~. E•K• Co '1(1 .....! 1114 11' .. 11·~ .~ lowtEI\. I.XI 1• I~ 1•11o ''" t ~ 1;\.I, Oe•~tn " 2 '"' Nell "'"° 16\~ 11-'1 lntom 6.!J 1." No•Pll<I 11 " ll .• , Btld ... H .i60b ll 1)\, IJ'.. IJ'" -"' E••• Al• LI" ..... 16 ,~ !SU =-" :=t.UIG,, :·~ II 10\-\ 19.. :>11\o ,_ ~ payments are required fore-°'""'' Fo 01~ •.Iii N11 Pei 2'~ '" SDtCI 1.1s 1... nvon s '° !.Ml eeu How .eci 19 11~. 11w 111"'1 -,., E111 GF .111 19 "M·~ '' 111 • .... ~ 0 0 -10 22\• 21:i.. 21'4 + ~.1. , ' Ot• Ml• 16 11 11 Ste~ )~, 11':1 Ch~W' Gr Bot: H<'I s.1• ~'lo Bell lnlfl'con , 6"• 6114 61/i -llo E•1t Ulll I.Cl I 16'• 16 ... 16'•• t \la ow• 5v l :M I 1' .. lf\.I. Jf\\ -\.I. mg these famili·es to remain Oe<or tn • .., sv. N11 !"°"' '-• ' C•oi! •-•' 1.12 100 Fd l.'6 u semis co 1 1 1~ '"" 1•'11 + 1~ E•1Kod•-111 6U 60'• JN. ~ , lpeo H ..... :u 11 111.'i 21 11>& .+ 14 nt11111 ~" '21' T."~ 111 nvr • •VI Funa 6.60 1.11 1g1 Fd 1.10 •.•s llendl• 1 60 11 11'• 111\ 111 .. _ o,:; EatonY11 l.•o i6 u•11 10\\ 16\lt " •TE Imp 60 JO 11'-11 ?0''-:!O"'--•lo where they are. To many peo-~1111 IM 1 1v, NEn GE H'4 1•1, Frnt Sll.11 s1.10 one WmH 11.60 11.60 Bendix .;. J s J?\• 39,,.. l'I''> + "'° Ec1111" Ml .5J 21 n·~ 21:i.. 121'" ·• i,i Itek Corp 1lJ 1s~. ''"° 2•_,. -_.. p I e, g 0 0 d b 0 U S1 n g '\u't,~~ f;~ ::tt ~ten~~!~ ~~l'I ~f' ~:~ ::1: ;:f, g~~t> 1~:~i 1l:~ :::::c:i,1: 1,1i ;7"' u:~ u:~ -~ ~~~ll~oi'°1 3: ~~ ~~\'> ~f'~ l ~ ITT sv 01~ JO _J.i(_ to1li f2 +Ht. is unavailable at any price o.~ '/:., 1r~ 11"" N\:\~ ~ l&~~ ~\'.~ c,~fu";.;f.:1.. 13·95 lJ.ls 0\0, ','!t •,·.~ ',·.','• &ent1 sP1i10 1100 11~" 2•"• 21,z · ·,, eG&G · 1° es n 11~ 11,'!' -v. Jttk1-nA1t ·'' 15 "' •w. ,,~ -+ l• bee th l . o.-we~ E l''o 1V. "" Re>t , •• , Fout~ '·" 3.11 Pa.;e F';i 6.-s 1.0l Btntll91 ,,, s .... l!t =" ~:::~•ICAj~ '~ ·~ 4p.. ';,.. .. J&ckAI! ot.40 1 ~ "" S\6 +• .. ause e coun ry IS pre>-Ol~m Ct u>~ 1J Cir NG , • ., ''• Funll .... f.U PIUI Rw 5., '42 8en911tl In 1 '" '"' •'4 El Mem M~ ,. 1 •• ,, 1 +-~ Je~tr .:>u 2 1 1 1 + ., ducl"ng ho·m es a l 8 rate that 000,,,,_ •,~. l'• •'~ Eur 011 1 '"' G<wt~ '·'' s.OJ P""n so 6:75 6)s eer, k•v Plloc '3 ""' S'1. '"" ~ '" E1MM110 p1 1 1 11111 11,,_ 1,.,, + '• ~:~.~;, -~-11 12'\ 12 ,,,,., + \.,, ·~· ''°' 3\\NPA Gtt 11 11 tllCGtn t ~1 9,M Pa Mui ]U ll• O'l'l\'IK oro ~ 7') 1~ ,.. ElolnN111 lnd 21 S'< s•-. y +, ..... r> 1"'-li I~"· 10» + ~ 'I f. I h If th AA..i Ooc.ulfl • ...,, NW N•tG 1•• 1•.. vent J.•• l 16 PM!t 11 1' n ::12 8!'" Sii l.IO 1JO lll• 71•\ 11 '\ . EIP110HO 1 11 IP. ,,.~ 11v; • J•PFO ln.ll'e , '°"' 1.,.., loot. sa 5 tes on Y a e n~. 0ow J"" 1!"• 1sw; NW Pu5w 11 19,, 01 G•!~ , S4t •.S6 p 11,,1,., 6 " , •• B•• rtir.e ·'° 12 '''• ~,.,, •1•-. + ~ Elt•• Cp \.<'I! 11 '°"' '°'" JO\'!·:..:, Je11n1111c1 .aa •l 2s111 '4'" 111, :..:1· • •me ··ca 1 h sur 00>/lt 0" H',lo u Nuc;I llK l.. .... 5 Eld l.t5 '.,. Pine SI ' 1J tu Bladt Ok .II .,. •T\.:o " ll'-" Erne< flee 1 '1 ,, .... 50\'J 50\.'o .... ~ Jef9•n•A .JO JO 16'~ 15\o'J IP. -... " r ns a SO ave • ounkl~ o t\li '" §'lo At1 s... 6'.. wit~ 11.e 1.10 I·" Pian E.,1 s 11 S11t 8111• Jal!" ·"' » 1111o Hl.4 11~ -•& Emer,Alr ,90 u 501. ••11 sov. +iZ JH'CPL of • uo " " SJ + v. roundt-d themselves with a n ou.i..,,. 1• \,.,. ho w11 21 12•n ~w1111 co 1.33 .'l PJon Fnd •'.50 io::it e11u LftJa 1 10 11v. 11 11 -\\ Emhft•I 1.:10 1i 2JllJ '*" 2sv. +I•• Jewel Co 1.so " ,.1.11 "'' "''"' -El P1lnt 9l~ 101,. a Sein 111\ 1l .omo A• 7.6' 1,:it Pia" Inv 1.4! 9.20 l.lladt Hll 6 211 '9>1! '' • .,... + 1'I EmpOl•l 1.1' I 161\ 26\o\ ''"" -a\ fl~ww!11.~o 113 27'r1 l•l~ 11 Incredible array of gadgets ~t•/C .~ 1 J'.\ mont '~ ,,., omi>e! 1 ll j·~ Prlt e l'vnll.: Blve a.11 t 10 ,•, ",,, "•" ",'• ~ ~·. ~2,M1!.9,~'-•" 10 ',,.!'•,, M•, .. !~ "" 11,,,w,11 "' 1 1,Jg lf lf ,n, + " 'ha' alleg·"ly so'm plify lo'fe. but 1,'!.. ... ,,·, ~i.;; 1'~ le• 1P 11'• 1~,1.1, omo 11<1 7,M l Orwt~ u 31 11.31 BoODle Btt> ·~ ,,,., •. ..., ,. ... ,.,.... 1 " eu -· ,, ,, ...... r NA l '" I\ omD I'd J.U • .. N Er• 1.16 1.26 &Ollno Co .40 , .. 12 .. 12 .. 1!~ .. 14 Et>O M Pit.!! 1 111.1:1 112:U. llN :.:.c., , ..... n .:>u Ul n~ JJl'o ll"' -'• allen the awners learn thal "'• ',,•,,••, ''" 1''o l•vC81 111.,ll\& omslk J.11 ,.•1 w Hor 11.•11 ... ao1.cts .Ub JIS •'.Wt ''" 411\+I Ennla& ..... 7 J 13"" 1J\, lll/4 Joh.,':loh11.J1 lJO 46'1• 1511 '51.i. •• ~ 11~ lU~ PEC 1•11 llYI 11 .... "'"°0tO t .OI tOI Pro Fund 1,1-5 7 ,5 BOftd Ind .•1 .. • 8'' ..... l l't-1., EOlllG•• 2.i!I S "l9'l 21 il•Ao·+;.:, Johnt Svc .IO U 7(1' ,...,., )(,,_ +"• lh d • ,. le l'f 1bt $VJI 9•\ "~ al»! Br •O <IC) or.91 I" f ,1)(1 •.50 PrOll(lt>t ,.II ~ 01 lorclfl'I l.:>11 21\\ '!J.~ 21 .. -'" E.Sll Irie 1.2'0 lJ 11'.• UU 17 -V. JonLoe1" .JO a W~ UV. LI ~i \, ese ev1ces comp 1ca 1e1!1oer Bt !'• ' l'ac Av10 s 6 omu 1 .. 211 J.Ol flu•1t11n ''' t:n orvW•r 11!1 16 70'• •v :>u,, •• _ ...... Ee,'?~,",!,·",.-JA 11 1~ 10•, 111~ +I"" M111 JW .so J uv. 1n-,, IS!\__... · l d · II h th Fr NII' J 1•11 P•e F•E l'l'll JI~ ontl Ml -5 ff S.fll Pulntm Fu"i": · 11orrn'"s .IO '6 11\" 11'' ..., -.. .,. HS 12\.o 21•; Jl'"O _ "'-J-L•t.1 .31o 1 11)11, lOV. 10\\ _ 1\ 1nS ea , l?Spe<:l3 Y W e n ey El NIK j >I 51; Pakco Co !'' J &nl Gth 6.11 6.IS E<1uh S.~• t .'9 Sol Edi• 1.J( •1 12'• ! .. 2"" 32"--,_., E1!ttllnt 2.le 16 9'<1 91t t•:.1 \, J0t-1n 1.311 5 18.... 11"• lit~ + '~ b k d d C nnol he l!ictc11v 1•• 1 11ntol l'• 1'4 oro Ld 11.18 IJ.11 Gl!Otg 1] 61 l1 ~ llournJ Inc 6 9¥0 t \l:i -\14 E11\vt Cp .14 20! 2Q-"1o 1•tt 'X>!io \.Jo.ten~ 10 2 20•\ ~ ~ _ 11, rea own on a l'"r, 6'• 1111 P~•kf Or '~ 5\t n1v c1_p t.u 10 21 c.rh a·O'I ,.,, B•tnllAlr 50 u ''"' 111 11·, -·~ E!h•I otJ.*l ' 31 ll 3' .,. Jnv Ml; 1 •O ic l"" :io ~ + -. serviced. 1 ,•,,Yt 1 2 ... ··~w H Tho I fll WOlv •.•• 51' lnc:orn 6.IO 0 BtiH S! 2~ 12 qi..,, •S'• q -,. Eu•Oln<I .He ' 11!..lo 17\fo ll'W-"· 1(11111 Al 1 ., ,,..,, 2T':'o m. +"" I :19 ..... ~1 1.'t Peuley p 1\6 SI\ In W0..1 5 50 11.01 1nvt11 J,s.i 6.0S erbr Mf 1,l'O 59 $2'4 jP\ SI\\ -1·~ f:'v•n•P .600 :w )4\l:i lj:i.. )JI.lo -.... Ktls Slt>U.7S 1 ~) •l 6l Ilouar -'"ue-•--pcrrn1·t MDdHI • ,,, •vtllt ··~' 'eVqn M 51.5'51.S Vi.i• •" IOl8fi•IMY ~1 1 ll'• 36'• 36\'o -.... E~C•llO 1.2$ '111-. 1 v. 1111o +:i..«•t1 S•Pl•7J 1 ., .... M''t 61"'"+• AUi '"'"' IJ.dli ... moS 011 11 11~ ttrl Ml '''• f\~ Oel1w~•P G•ou~. Vwe• ~·la \.tM 8rlt Pel .J?t '51 10\\o 9•t IC'~+-.. F•berllf! .611 11 "'• lCIO H I'•+ t... M;tllAI Pl'.12 l Sol~ JAii ~ _ '6o led hundr eds Of thousand' Of nt•oY c 11 II tl<'le• r 21 21·~ l>K•T 9,76 10111 ~"' fl'Cll J }I) i·'I II• Ptl tn.Jlt 117 -~ t i\ tl~ ..•.. Flld0tA .60D l l n•.:. 31'~ !2'\ ...•••• ··-···· ··-•• ,, •••·• ••. , . !._,,,, o•'-1'4"aE..a1" 11\ 1"\ ~-,,, oo.•oo••i-••• OD -•--Ho'· 0 0 -r..:1"'' C -I .., ..., -.,. .... ·~ ~ ,,. • v-. .,.,.,7 "" , ...,_ • • '<;tt .~ 3ol 19\~ 11•1 11~• -'I Ktls cem .to , 111-. 11 i> _ ,,_ Americans to own two cars nl'll• B • ... 11• o&w 1111 19'' 0t11.. ~-1~ 6.11 11 nr•ei n . ..o "~ &rloW'!' 01 ·'° 24$\ '""' "'Ftl• Hiii .1s. " n. 1 -, K•hC .,,, so 1 •• _,, • b ul t hey baYe !_corned to their "",,,,'~o,', 1 ,..., ~P'I W• s•. 6"• Dt t VI Fd 9,7] !C~ 1·""' Fil j 0 ,., ll<owro Co • '"' '"' ..... .. F1l1laH .HIP 20 6•\ , ..... ...., ,, Ktl'C PwLi 1 1 11 ,... lt +•lo ' lntwl•I 6 6>.I enn P .. t l\o\ p, O•t•tl 11 .? 1!.12 Rosen!!! '·" J.11 B•l'tnUG 1.n 10 2•>.1.. 14111 ,,\'I .... Fl(rmont 1 1' IS'\ *' .. l•'~ + .... KllJC Pll.37 ..... !1111" .• ,,. f\, Pl!rolll 3'\~ ll D•I•! Lv 10 II 11.1• Chu>lr 11·~11fn SwnSl'llro .10 l I '\ I '~ 10:. -14 F1mllv F!11 I f 11"1 11~• ll"'o ~" ICC P\. "'" 70 JOl o O''> 3111-'J •• •• Chagrin that lfl SOme areas rl~ fK S_.. t'~ ?hlldj DI SJ Jt 11on&How1rd~ $cl>dtltr Fund1: ' BwnShot I 50 10 2l'• 11V• 2214 ->,:, !11n1to-el Inc 17 9 I'·• l 'lf +\~ICC Soulna" l JIO ""' IT'r'> ~T\lio · go••ernrnenl Offl'co·als ha ve,•,•0 Ce(O 1~~ 11~ ~+I \lb 11 Ir'~ Bt!tn Ill 9.lll lnl !n't <1,~121]8rvl'l'W-.IO 53 13"' 11'11 12:0..-\\ erWtst Fin 6 11 10\'1 lD .... \lo a 18'-< 2N. 21':••~ v tel l :)>t. ~11o1on "" '1'" Grw111 '" 10.31 51'CI 211."JI 26.jl been! FO'f' 1 ,., ,... I'• -,,, 1r1hM! .IOD 3l '6U "'" 46>.I = KC Sall "'' I 111)(1 n~ 1]1,1, lN ..... permitted more r egl'strat1·ons F1rr!... ,..., . 71,; le Pd I "" 11'<0"1 !o..10 J.61 B•• 1\.5' :' ... BucvE< 1.:io ' 11 ... ,, •• !Tit ... \It FAS l~!I .761 lSJ 6h 6V, 111 -~Kt" GE l.•G " 71 '°'~ 111\4, + 141 SDtCI 6.U 719 CO'" SI .il 1.6$ 8lldd Co .10 110 61.I 6'°' el.I + l-. Fl!'lldtr1 ,IO 6ll 21 26'-271-o +I IC11nPwL 1.76 t 71 "• 21\\ 21141 -t• th Jh< I gaJ parki g Jto<lt 11.06 1111' S~tltf Fu""": B"°" F ltf.llO 1 ~'• .5't s~ .. -\o ~fdet•I 1.10 JO 10"-XI 20 -11o K1tv Ind 11 •"-6'.1o '''° .... an re are e: n EQrtl 10.0. 10.•1 EQUt>t '·" 2.12 a"'°"'' 1.. ... 36 ..!"' • .., , '-+ 1.t FeO""'°' 1.e 14 11l!. 22 :n• .. + 1 .. IC"'' Bro ·'° 106 :t11~ ~ :n"' ..• Spaces. ""'' 10.:1111.3-1 ln.,....t ,,60 7.,1 lluttFor~. 1.10 J ~ 7"ll JO -1-. Fl(IP•c Elec 11 l\t 11' llo. + i. M;•weca .21'11> 4 l! 15 U ;_nrori,e JOO \Jllr1 J11 S l.lulovt W '° 111 lffi 15'\ 15'..,-111 F' PK (1.M ' lJl.11 1J•1 131 + \l ICfttller 1.20 7 '°''I fGV. 40\~ ..... Afeatureorthe economic B HiJl EMf'O'I 1c:/i1a.sase1ecArn 1ti1.s7Bunki;111..io sJ 1 '" 6~'< .Fe0sr11n .111 •u4'u•.1;pi,. te••IMIM .50 111 •~11v.n'A+•t1 etty ":GUI Glh '·, l .ll !ti Si>KS 11.'7 l~ot &unkR pf\,50 1 ,. 7• 1• ' itde•t!• Inc ' s·~ J'• !'' -... v~··-· 11'0 ~ ... ,~ -~ ...... e1pans.ion has been e asy -Emro sc •.21.11 SM'I G!h 6,,1 '!je."'''l\d 1,40 &1 21"" 311~ 11"'-'" edO•D1s11 ' f' :r.r .... ,11, J1v.+1v.K•1io,.wt s 1111,1, 20v. '°''-"' ed avil't 1.•1 l.jl Sham Fd '·ll 1.6 BurtNor l.~ 102 2•'1to 11 ,_,\~ + " fd Dey o I 71-lo 7 1 .... teer'~" 1,:io " "'' 17\\ 11~-. , credit -consume r Cr it rose Yl!f'SI In 10.67 ll. I ~he•r Ao U . "· l!lurlNOr Pl.il 10 611.i .~,. 6 -\Ii F'f.rro C11 .10 11 11'11 1•'" J(\.O • , Ktl\dltl .$0 lJ ,,... 2J 21 _ °" from $77 billion Jn 1964 to 1122 N Off• -»e~, 12.1! n.n sn o.e.n 12.u 1: l~ llurnOy .10 10 ''1'1 ..... 11~ _._ ~• F!tl•ltltd 1111 '° 7l'Ao :IO'• """ +1 1C1M.,...1 '° 10 2) 21\o\ ,,,,. e 0 IP '· • '·' ~Ide '·" '·'' Bu•rt'" .61 u.s t1'lt. '"' ,,"' -i, FleldCIM .• 1 11"' ?N 2J'll -!Jo Krnncott , .0 llll 'ti'~ ~ """' :. billion in 1969 -but tha t w 1ce r :~~au ~:~ l:li 51r.':u Fund,~\. 6.1! Bu.l\UllV ,ff! ~c'!_ 17 " +" ~l~"I!.!:.,.. ,l m: ~~ ~~ :,:;,., ~~CS,fr'l ~D 111~ ~~. ~.~ ~~ -\6 credit burden now ha ,... ... .,. Id Gflh 10.2111 .n lntt)I f.01 '·" F!••1lne 1.60 "°•• •4\tt. :li,! '-ll!-_ V. K1tr Mc i.50 11 ,..,, _., ...... +•'• ,..........., -Id C•P 1.6710.lt T•u•I ,_,, 1.1~g111DIC1>.IO W6 Molt 36~ J6l-.-111FSI n•T1ltt .... u-"I(" M ltf450 ,ft'"'"___... .......... I th I bo ell E }l'llh hee ~Fu-"11171~···-1111• 7(ti(t ·r····-· '' -"• ···+••F•IMI••'·" ,,,,.-.. ,, .. 11· ~· . ,,·., .. ~, ... ~ •.•.. · .. ···. many o e poop e w a c--e y , 1 as n nam -Tr;;;,' u'.tH :io;iJ ~,"ws'1 ·~· 1.15 1.1• i• 1.~~"'M"' II iii; ,;\& 11V, _,,, F1tNC11! 1.611 ~1 uv. ~ 66~ IC••llCo~•" ' .. .. l ed -1 . F n1ocl1I Proq: wlnv Gt 4.ff •.ff •~i;!l •11 231'\ 1"" Jl + v. Fit W•I '' 11 l 2'.1:1 mo :it:ito -1-------------"'-"' cep 1 • (Id insta llment consumer lo..in D'l~m 1.:11 J.71 ~ver '"" 11.tt 11.•1 1moS11 1.10 •• M\o'J 1111\c ,6\o\ _ ~ Flic~bch ·'° 1 ''"' 2•ll. ''-" ..... ~-nnmlc e•pans lon ha!i 11. 1nc1u11 1.1' l.H ~·• s,34 .ts loenw • .o. 21,, ,,1., .! 1 Flll'tr FO .ue 1t ti'\ th rn + •.4 """'" • o teer at Bank of Amerlc:1's 1~ 4f• 5.~ 1Fm GI •.21 '·ii dn Pet 11.10 ... .... !j +·'~ F1ttiersc1 .1• n 1 • ..., 11 .i-~ permitted mill ions of v,.n, J.u ag1 1ate s1 ~-MM.M '""1!1:0 .10 1 H•, ,,..,, 1 t~ ... Fll1111t.01~ 1 • ,.111"' ''"'-" Americans to afford R college Costa Mesa b r a n c h • an-t:rl'I 't\ ~-.~ ::t l~~"'l~ l~w-~"1 =~II Bf<•1 ~ ~1"' ?,,1; ~I~ +." ~ltnl EPI~.:.~ 00: t:.. n;: tlio ! \, education dcnled to their nounced ~tanager Chic Cla r ke. !t 1~: '~ t" {~~ ,Ji J:B ~1~ .. ~ s ,,: ll.,,. jj~ llv, 11~ ~I: ~:. ·t:.o :n•, 11~ ~'A\ !J(; ·· · . . •t ~ulll t JS 1.9 Sleln ltot Fdl~ 1roP~ ,... o ll'h ' \, 110.:. -V. FllPl)l'Lt 7 " .. \~ '3'' M'• -+ \., parents, bul many of the Mrs Hlll. \.l.ilO Joined the Fu N11 6,c1 '·'' a11 1s.ll u.SJ 1nirc 1 60 x12 ~ j'"' -"Fi. s1"1 1 1 11" 11u 1...., + ~ ,1A _A • "'' SlerA JCl.26 ll.ll Cap 01 •· •.ai 1rrler o 60 191 JI,,_ Xl•t.i 1.,,. t , .. Fllt«CP 1 ltl 26S W 111\ I"' 1 educational inslituuut~ now bank 1n Hl47 at Pasadena has Fl"' tao ~ 21 s.2' s1,..;, l . io.45 C•rrG" 1 t0e , 76 is~; '\lo -\-'J F1YTl1ftt .'tu :u I'" 1~~ 41,1, =" 'lflarket Synibols l If rd l d '• d ' t.1 f>d 4,SS . SvP -lliGI . S.11 C1r1ttW .Ille 71 1'''t 103~ ~ --•. ,FMM> .si."" U1 >'< • ,,'" 1 .. , \o ... ·~ canno a · 0 s u en ~ an are been at the Costa Mesa brafl(!h F::_ G•:;, ;.~ t" ~~nStGt -~ t:ri ~·~\<i.-i"? ,,; ~~ ,,;; 11"' -u F;l:iF,rr ~"° ~ w' u 1, ~ + 1. 1n fin.incial distress. th She d h h ,.,0\11\drs •.13 1.J6 TMll Ap . 11 !'I c~ ! • '"' 4. + "'Foo11 c1 .60 10 n. ,.., 11, _,_ 1. Th~ flltiewin. " 1 lfl<I .. f'l'm'°" ..,. So-to·-· are l"tle •-tier ree yenrs. an er us-,w,,•,•,•,, 0,01'!!01. • n t,!!""'' 1.1 • S,_c~o on ll ls-*to 1s"' 1m ... Foote ,,.,1,. ' 11 11~ 11 4 '• ""' ... ~ II ln; ,. ~hnCI ....... Cor -1 15'6 II"" 1~ • Foolt Pf1,l'O • 7)'4 m 1 'I'~ ...... 1 .. tlll t.111(11: mlrt'irl ,_... off: the condiUon or m unic.ipal band Bill reside at 1546-B g~,:~ ~-,f 'i~ i':i!;';'°'~, ·ur•vi3if :l:n 0,A~.~ 111 !""',•,, ftl'l,. ""u t h~"~ '·'° 1ll ~~ 1!~ t, _ 1~ iti., 1111u"" ... unonkiat · ha d t I led to Cor d D ' I C I um ~ w 10 Mlt • 1 '19 Cen Hud · 1 ti ·• '-' i: \t F~"':t :u:I! l JO.,.. 301\ »'\ .........,, .. u:tre or ..m-tt. ll-A111111tl ""9 serv1ccs s e er ora 8 inn er rive n os 11 ll'lcom 1•11 1 ,. rr."~ <l' t'" It•' '"' •nLt ,,,, 'I 1»6 •.1. ...., F 1 wr.1 '° 11 14\ol u 11 u1.- depressing degree, an y ""' , ''""m .•• . riv " 1 ~· "' -,... -,,, ,. ..... ..... .. I ln FO !rMut 120 I 1uoor Fd 11.lJ 12..Q MPw .l• ',', •"i"• ~· < ·+-1> •,~"•,• 0.IO 7l 1•~1 ll 4 -'h OtrtO. a-Dc .. ttcl ar ••kl 111 19111 •!vi . M M••a • ·~ •->~ 1 • I''''' 1-' ~· ... • 1r. :..:·:: ,",,,,,, ."• '·' ,, ,, I' -+ :~ it1u1 •toct dl'ttdtnd. -1.klu1c111..:.... ... . l.WllS ha•~ been unab e '""' l<K Grp· wnC Gt 2 )6 l.U ''" 'JW 1 to f"VlllC:1 >O 22 ~ -. :a... + it T<= CMtt 7 M 'I Twl'IC Inc l" l U ~\5ov• tD 1 1 ~ 1 14 115 + .., Fvou1 In Jili 101 11.1. "744: _ h 11'Ddl: dlwldtftd.. -P•ld It 1 t -· ,_ r .lnA """""" to Imp r 0 y t! 1M1>1• S.fj 6. Vnlt Mui 7.lt IOI tn •IU Mb ~ '"" I,.., I ,.. P•veble In 11---·-,,,. __ -....... , nd F 1 l\._T l"'CI Trd 10511. Ul'llfd '·" 11, .... ltOD ?! II'~ '"'I \'t ···1 --.... ..,..,.. streel,, seweni, reservoirs a Orf J., c~·p orl P11<;11 1. '· vn c.0111 '" ''' 1tr1 ''" 111 'f 1~ l~2' ,.,. +.: I Ac CD 1.1C1 m 111• 14"' w. -~ aoo11 .... 11 ... Ol'I .,,-lllYIOloW or .-.. 1ttrtt. SChoul'' m .l'nly bee ..... they ·~ •• 11 ' ..... , .. ,.Undl: trt·~ p!.., l .. !"" + ~ Af COfO • 4l l't ... ,, + ........ ----,, ... -,,, ...,.. v '°" 41 i" Ii~' N+ \Q AF ltfl 2(1 I lS'\ 16''> 16\\ -"" ._.. ·~ _...... - hi h · t l ~:!,t7et i·~ '1·"' r: 1!,~ ,;~ ~stt.~ .IO.i I t •... tm ~o I.JO 'j 2'-.\t '1t., W• + •6 lfll9 ">'flt', ~ w H !4 ~ cannot pay th e g tn eres Cb' f p • k J ,,1b1an r i.11 ,n s.:i.i~ n ~.,, E"'dtH'l \"" 11 ~t~ l" •W. .. 01rns Pl1 ,to ,~ ,~ ,!" 11«11 01vkltnd or ..,.11 • k-....... ,_ ratc~ now prevail!~. Je IC . C ( "·.e:i. sr : i·" 1·" ui:"!,~ ':P :·~ ~:::=y·~ u ~ I.H• 1i~ ! ~ 2:~~ .. -~JO l ~~ ~ij,'' l-m_ ~ ~or Mid "'" ''"'· •n •ccumwlet.:'":.~ Larger cities a.re faced with . ~::,. Fs~ 11·:; 1 ·U. v'..l~ Ll~nt • 1'' 1 ~1 c~k .. " J: •J....ll:11 W,:~ ~~'' ;\', ~·:! ~t::W,~;,!,"', "2 ltl'~ I ~ .. \~ i '• ~~.~,~~ ,,'!',,•~~-!,:_~ " hee . , rlh Ind 1 .57 il JI Pl Sit ! ! -• l .. '! 'f.1 "t !> O ·~ t ,.., lo IOtl -'' -"'" t Ill 1, .....,.'*"" • more -plosive slluallon _ Or. Edward A. Miller ha~ r1nFo A 1-•J '·a. lf\{om :.~ 'P, 1~~~1 .,. .. t11 ' ... c, 7 ~ ~.. ~ ,.,-,..,.. •• .-,., , ,~-".., ••. the condl.tlon of the j r n appaLntcd d irector of •vlll\fl 1 .:n ·" rices ,.., 1 .20b ,, Jl• 1' -11 nv 1 io 1 '• lf"t -t• r-Dederw or Mkl "' '"' •tut , lll<d" 30.ll .Ii 11\d~ 1 .f5 htl VI 1 . .0 1 11'~ »'' ) t~ -"ffi:O[I 1311 "°"" JIB «l'o i " .............. ~ downtown living arl'as that, in Nev•Port Beach Operations ror~~mu-: 11"11'.1 jg' 5 » -"" on1o • ff 01~ '°'' .n1~ -1 1 8:J rtn · .60 " 11;: ,., lOI' -~ '""°" 111.--... 11 Jfll« """"" Ph 11 F d . , ~111 3 61 ) '4 II•• lnll,. tt , lj ~DnlvCI I l4,~ ·r.: X>1--0.. A fn ltl1.\f 1 t ·~ 1\t O\.', -·~ 1f10, nt1m1+.cr a.II Yel\lll flfl P41¥1denf m•ny casts, arc llttle moro co. or • orporat1on s c.1~ , .. I·.., ik1no .J1 ~-• !"k' 11i · 111 s • . aitn( ,. u i 101.0 1011 -'-~roo• 112 ~! N~ll~t In t•1~~' MM! Sl'I' 31 I .. ,._. _,, !}~IDll! .IO w" !"" T•'• :j 1'I r e:ii-ctl1trlbvtlort lf•lw, -.S.ltt. Ill flllll. than s lums. \Vester n 0 e v e J o p 1n e n t ~t~w11.~ ·al 10: wau. ~u 10 n 1 11 n1M • W' Df l W" ;:11 10 ..j: 1., C-nF>J!' 1.10 ~}.; 1:~ r,;. 11 cl!l-ctlltll. 111.-.E11:.011>~ V'-l•-4M> The stalistics Rnd lhe dollar La.boratories D1 1 vlslonf .h. ~ 't.;. ::Jl I:" wf~1'n \)'~'ii'·P. !F.!~:il~~,~: ' 'It: er' frt.t ~ et: f~1:~ ,.,.., ,~; 1:~: _,.,,. _. .. tts "' 11r1L ....ri-Ei1-4t1tri. signs look impressive. even "nnounccmen o II! ~P-tteritooo 1"4 ·~ Mot• 11 11 Fut1 .lJ• ~ 16~ 1.'\ 1"° h n"1tt1 •7t "'l 't.. 'ft 'J~~~DuflO!l. xr-E• rtell'I. ll'W-Wl"-'t.,...,.. I l l d b Dr ~ M•rtn U ~I "T fo<~v 6 !1 tit Cfl r f"at 5'• '• S O \, f01 1AO ii n;, 12"-11 th nl'I.. ._With _,...,.._ ~ whentheeconmnvl.sbadlyin-ponmen was ma ~ y . ..,..n i.1 ·I 1r1111 ,., •1J ~,_11 . ~ 1"• 1'"' 1,., ,, H-ot1 • • ! ,.., - -' I '!M ~•nl •· w,1nl'I '~! 1~ tf ~ 11~. • 11 -. !'-. -\• iMI .JM ti 11' 1 1) Dll'ltd. w+-~11 nated &nd battling a ~ion \Va ter 8 . l..aBcrgc. vice prtst-1 , o• j·' w1nc1~ 1.t ··~ 1"'1 C·E i.JO ,,~., tJ ,.... .... 1111111 lj " 11 I'"' n _ .... •tf'ttnt. '11-1!1 ""n11rwto" r..1111> .t lh. '. [Im' 81,1 do 'he d."l ."'I g'""ral man•g•r of 1 fnc . ' .v •• 1 11>11 '·ai ' l"GE P'•,,, ,•,-!l,, ~•,> i"••• _, ..-._ t.1 »,• u.". 41 • .--... • , -·•• ,, .,,_ ,_..,,.. -_ . mt . .... " Imo &'" u "~ NMtplill . 11111 1 I~ Gf O• ~ "" .. , .• '-' ~ 1' ~ ' .... , ..... -· ""' f. I " th I th WDL DI I I ·1h h d ,_, " 'l to •·i~, '' ' '!"? cinn "'' '• ' l"' " ~-; ·~ '"'>i.~, .: '' ! '' ,, .. f"' + •-"••··--·-.••• _ .. ,,.. -.... , 1gures e11,, e sory e l\'11)' V!On , \\'I eA ·1;;; Fd'I t 11 'o;4t.r.r:?. fi! '" CHf"in 1.M nt 11, •• + ~ Pu ... 1 1..:: n 1 ••• 1.: ''" t ~· ~"' ;;:.:._F-:;..., ~... .., - ll should be told? q111rte.n lo P21lo /\Ito. ::=:f.1 ;,.. M :"' 1M Joi. f!~"f;'; '.ii0 ~ll ~~ 1 '• ._1.,. '"2r.'1So 0, !,~ :, 6t; ,_ ~ '"hlrat :U.u •• 11o11 -. .. •-Miid "' .. - ' I ...... ----------------------------------·--------------·--------------.--- Wednesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List DAILY PILOT JI) Sa'" llltof IM1 I Mleflc t. .. CllM ( .... at ' ' " " '" " ' " • Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List N.l'. ----••"'-"' ~ ..... -._ .,_ _... . -._ -__,._ ----------- !•ltt "'"' tM1 I H11ll t.1w Cllwo Cllt. Sl~IH Nt1 !llels ) Hltll LIW Clf1~ Cltf 1-tltt Net 111111 J Hltll llW Ci..t CRI S.ltt Net U•••• I Mltfil UfiJll ClitM Cllt. Finance Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) -Stan- dard OJI Co (New Jersey) ac4 \."" Roya1 Dutch Shell anl'1 nounced what appears to be a natural gas di scovery of com merc1al importance 1n thfl North Sea 53 llllles off Den lie.Ider Holland U so 1t would be the second comme:tci~ petroleum held in w1ten: of { Molland The first r 1 e I discovered by Tenneco Inc , Is not yet 1n production •• SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Natomas Co Sun 011 C.o and the gove:rnmtnl of Pakistan have obtained a conlract to exp lore 25000 square kilometers in western SaudL: .- Arabia f o r oil D1lllngham Corp of Honolulu alliO has an Interest In the concmkin which Includes land and Sta areas NEW YORK (UPI) lJnltC!d Air Lines h111s t1n- nounced new daily non stop p.1sscnger 1ervtce between New York and Minneapoll..SL Paul starting Sept 14 ~ will be lour da ily roundtr1p.i serving each oC the twn centers Two nights w i 11 bt r r o m LaGuardla aJrport and two rrom Kennedy AlrporL. W ASlllNGTON (UPI) Soulhern ftf;llway S)'sten has org1n1ied a new subsidiary called Southern Region Ca.I Tran.,port, lnc to engagt Jft l'ontrac:t h~uling or coel by barge on tht Otno and Ttn- llC!Sct Rlv,rs ' ' ' • ,, ' _ _J ' • , .. • " . • • . . . ' 20 DAILY mor WtdlltSd1y, August 19, lt70 . Heritag e Looks Good Valiant ·Gets Win Over Heritage By ALMON.LOCKAllEY ........ lflter whlclLallowed the .boats to set the spinnakers. · .sec:ond! behind al the ""'Ylr'"'.;;~.:~:;i:;;·.;~ mar~ STILL CONFIDENT -Bob McCullough, syndicate manager and skipper of the new 12-meter Valiant appears happy as he prepared to go up against Bill Ficker in Intrepid and Charley Morgan in Heritage in the final selection trials for the America's Cup defense. Tuesday his confidence was justified. STARTING EVEN -Weatherly (top) and Heritage are even as they sailed on first leg of their race as competition started to choose a boat to defend Amer- ica's Cup next month. Heritage was easy winner. Hard Luck Sailor Buys Boat Sunday, Wrecks It Monday VENICE (UPIJ -On Sun- day, \Valter Talley, 56, bought a used 32-foot cabin cruiser. On Monday, while plloting the boat to Morro Bay whert he planned to Jive aboard it, the craft ran aground here. On Tuesday, Talll!y was wet. cold and miserable and the boat was still tightly wedged i11to the sand. "They'll never get that one off," a veteran lifeguard told Talley. "She's there and she'll stay until somebody comes along with an ax." A Coast Guard CUtter at- tempted to free lhe cruiser but ~ed only in pulling off a bow cleat and part of the d<ck . . The boat went agrolll'ld When Talley hit bad Y1eathtt and lost control of the craft. A gaping hole where the craft had !rtlacked into t h e breakwarer was clearly evi. dent so Talley w r a p p e d hirilself in a quilt and decided to sleep on the beach until his insurance company represen- tative arrived. "I've bttn a civil engil'leer for the U.S. Army Corps of EngiAetrs for 28 ya rs," he said. "and I was ready to start taking life a little easier." But his troubles weren 't over. While he slept on the beach, looters crept by him and oRto the boat, 5teallng the ship's radio, stereo and three expensive suits. NEWPORT, R.I . -Bill Ficker and Intrepid found themselves in the odd position of ootsalling the competition Tuesday and losing the first race of the America 's Cup selecUon trials. Intrepid lost to B o b McCullough and Valiant by 42 seconds over the 24.3 mile cup course in Rhode Island Sound seven miles southeast or Bren+ ton Reef Llght Tower. At the same Ume, Charley Mo r g a n ' s significantly im- proved Heritage from St. Petersburg, Fla. was making a sh.ambles of her race with George Hinman's Weatherly, beating her by six minutes and 19 seconds. But the interest of the jam packed 125 spectator boats was all on the match between Intrepid and Valiant, the se- cond pair lo start. The race started In a light northwesterly that dwindled to nothing during the first 50 nllnutes, and then c am e booomlng back In the form of a 15 knot southwesterly. It was this wind shift that blew Flcker's lead and chances and prom pted some observers to call It a race of navigators up to that point. Still others called It no race al all as the first leg was the only beat to weather. With the wind shifts all other legs of the course were close reaches with the exception of the third Ahmanson Coast Race On Saturday Ocean Racing yachts en- tered Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ahmanson Series will line up Saturday, for the start ol the 63-mile Coast Channel race. The start wll be ap- proximately one-quarter of a mile west of the Emmy Drill- ing Island which is ap- pro.1imately two miles west of the Hunting too Beach Pier. From the start the fleet will sail lo ttie Point Fermin Buoy west of Los Angeles Harbor, thence lo Ship Rock off the Catalina Island Isthmus, back to Emmy Drilling Island and finish off the Balboa Pier. All marks will be left to port ex- cept the Emmy Drilling Island on the rteurn trip which will be left to starboard. St.Francis Cruise Set Both Ficker and McCullough claimed the start. Said Ficker after the race: "We had plan+ ned well in advance lo make_a port tack start and get close to the shore as quickly as poss!· hie. This we did, deliberately taking Valiant's stern and forcing her to follow us oo port tack by tacking on the line." McCullough told it a little differently. Sald he : "We plart- ned on the southerly filling in and wanted to be on lntrepid's southwest side at the start. and that's where we were. Soon after the start Intrepid appeared to be ouUoollng a1'd outpointing Valiant and left her some 500 yards astern but still to weather. Both yachts made frequent head sail chang~ as the zephyrs all but disappeared. "Did you fall into a hole on that long tack?" Ficker w as asked. "No," the genial Newporter replied, "we just opened the door and walked in. We should have tacked a Jot sooner and consolidated <lUr position, but we felt too confident because of our big lead." ' When Ficker did tack, his boat was going almost 180 degrees to his previous course. "We knew then we had to take our beating and get as close as possible," said Ficker. As close as possible turned out to be two minutes and 4Z On the close reach to the se- cond mark Ficker had cut McCullough's lead to one minute 30 seconds, and on the spinnaker run to lbe end ol the triang le the time split was one minute and 17 seconds,. What shoQld have been a beat to the foort.li mark was again a close reach and Ficker IOBt four seconds but made up eight seconds on the reach to the mth mark. 0n the final reach lo the finish Intrepid had pulled lo within 40 .seconds of Valiant. Asked how be accounted for the difference in speed on the last five legs, McCullough sakl Valiant was usiug a new boom with no vang.s, so it was im- PQMible lo trim the mains'ls off the wind. So the race was won and Io s t on what Fk-ker called "that weird first leg." "It led us to think we had it made , and then had us wonderinf if we would finish in sight o Valiant." McCullough said G e r r y Driscoll took the helm of Valiant for about five minutes on the spinnaker run. It was noted that St.eve Colgate or New York was at the helm of Heritage during most of her race with Weatherly. This and the ::.ignificanl changes in rig and sails made the Florida boat the star of the first race or the selection trials and definitely a yacht to cont.end with. Mooring Areas Bad For Boat Accidents Many boat accidents which occur in Newport 1-larbor in- volve boat.! under way going through a mooring area of whlch there are four or five major ones. Mooring areas offer the boat operator his equivalent of city traffic -both figuratively and literally. It should be remembered that all boats in a mooring area tend lo point in the same direction in response lo wind conditions. The exception is in an area in which boats are moored fore-and-aft and do not change with the wind or current. In any event, moored boals form "avenues" in which boats going or coming from the area tend to travel. At the same time, lenders or dinghles running b e t w e e n nearby docks and moored boats create traffic that tends to flow across these avenues. Jn a large mooring area such as off Newport or Balboa Occupants of moored boats ofte n decide lo go swimming in the water adjacent to their craft. So, another thing to watch out for is swimmers. Legally, you are responsible for damage caused by your wake. Among the m a n y reasons for operating slowly in mooring areas is the presence of yacht tenders or dinghies. These small boats, unfortunately, are often b.idly overloaded as they ferry ~ pie and provisions from docks to boats. A passing boars wake can easily swamp these craft. The best rule to follow is lo proceed through moorings al a speed so that your boat makes no wake at all -as can be verified by looking behind you. NHYC Race Set Saturday yacht clubs, there can be a Newport Harbor Y a Ch t Non--resident members of St. whole s er i es of "in-Club's Coast Channel Race, Francis Yacht Club from tersections", just as in a city the fifth in the current Southern California are plan· v.·it.h its blocks. W h e n Ahmanson Series for ocean ning a roastwise cruise in ear· operating in a mooring area. racing and Pacific Handicap ly September for yachts -the wise boat operator pro-yachts, will get under way both sail and power -plan-gresses in a reduced speed Saturday (Aug. 22), from a ning to be in San Francisco and keeps his eyes moving starting tine at Newport Pier. for the September lnvltational from port to starboard lo The &J..mite race will take Regatta and Tinsely Island watch for cross I r a f f i c the fleet around Emmy oil Stag Cruise. b e t w e e n moored boats. island to port, lo Ship Rock 'J'he cruise Is envisiooed as There are other things to off the Catalina I s I a n d a port-to-port type starting in keep in mind in mooring Isthmus -leaving the rock San Diego and calling at such areas. When going across the to starboard. thence around intennediate p 0 j n t s as "avenues" and pa ss Ing the Point Fermin Buoy to Newport Beach. s ant a between moored bo a a ts , sLarboard and finish at the Barbera and Monterey. This always do so well ahead of tfu.ntington Beach Pier. would allow for wives and their bows so your propeller Entries for the race must girl friends to "keep up" by will not cut their mooring be on file al NHYC by 5 car'and for crew changes as lines. p.m. Friday, Aug. 21. required by individual time These lines may be slanting The final rsce of the schedules. down in front of the moored Ahmanson Serles is Balboa Non-resident members of St. boats at varying angles and Yacht Club's ''wrong way" have to be Walched r-ra-a-••d Catalina Island. FYC are requested to contract •. i" _______ w_. ________ ._-_. ____ _ the cruise committee if they II are interested ln such a junket. BOAT SLIP OWNERS LOOKING FOR ••. MARINE ELECTRONICS ,... AT DISCOUNT .,,, ... ,.. ·:.,,_, ... Why Pay Retail Prices? WE SELL FOR LESS e WE REFUSE TO BE UNDERSOLD Simpson Pe•rc.-Slmpson lendlx Rey Jefforaon Slm~L•wrence WHtern M.rine c.1 ..... -Id L-co General Ol"aN DAILY t A.M. .. , •.M. ~lM l".M. -..... Jlll!CMtl -SALES -~--... .... . •."' "•W a ..,., ,., INSTALLATION newport be•ch =-A '"' ~ -> ....... Boat Marinas fr o m Sacra· mento to Sa n Diego use vinyl dock p•int m•de by W •Iker Paint Works -because of ease of application, Io w • r cost end lastin9 qualities! WALKER PAINT _WORKS 816 W. 16th St., Cost• Mn1 642.5776 i\'e1v Ra.ce·r The 48-foot sloop Nalu 1 V is trucked into Ros- an Shipyard from the Chapman and Associat- es plant in Costa Mesa prior to her launching, while (bottom) Marta (J\1rs. Andres) Gerard christens her before a huge crowd of guests gathered at Rosan Ship- yard Friday • ., TIRE BUY OFTHEYFAA -CELEBRATING OUR NEW COSTA MESA STORE! • MICHEU!NI X RADIAL The .steel-betted radial tire! FORDS, CHEVYS, PLYMOUTHS all sizes, all makes· -all models PtllaS START AS LOW AS: s3s~~ Ask us about b11dget terms Famous Michelin X features include: • .cort01111 Mic~elin X gives YoU econ-• P•rlorritaite• Michelin X ti res offer omy you never thoue;ht you'd get from superior cornerina, superior brak in1, a ti1e! They roll easier, use less en-superior turnpike drivin1 with no wan· ergy . Actually last al least twice as dering on straight·aways. Iona as convenlionat tires. • conatrvctle" Unique radial desi1n with • ut•tJ You get hi&hest degree of safety · super-stron1 steel cords make tires a1ainst punctures -test-proven for 1rip hardtr-track surer -roll easier hi11t-speed safety at 115 mph. with minimum dist11rlion and scufflnr. ~0:!~~~:1;~~~E.::~~~;_:1 ~I '1;;;;:...11 __ ....., __ IOl_., __ il ____ .......,. __ ______ ...... ..._ ... --· Drin In for Y.!!!!r Mlchtlfn ~y of tlie y11r -todayl " ' • • • • ·: ·= . • We feature------. AUTO & ··TRUCKS ALIGNMENT -BRAKES FOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARS SANTA ANA ... .. 1739 SUPERIOR AVE . 117tti a N-,_nl 209 BUSH STREET IJHl-4 ... 1 •HONE' 642-3384 PHONI: 547-5685 HOUIS; HOUlt5 t MON. tllr'I flit . 7:Jt TO I P.M. SAT. 7:10 TO J P.M. ' fltl. NITIS 'TIL •:M TUIS •• WIO .. THUlS., I TO 6 P.M. SAT. I TO J P.M. MAITEll CHA•ll-MOST ClllDIT CAllDS MOHOllll)......4,lHllAMlll1CAllD I I • . , • I , ' 'I • . . --------. ------· . ___ .... _______ ----·~----• ......--... .. .. .. .. ·-··--· • -·-·-....... ,.-....... ..,.~. , • ..,,rT .... -...... -.-.-~ .................................................. ,,.. ......... ,...O'<;,.... .... .,... ........ ,,......,~.,., ....... ,,., .. ... • 5outh Co•1t Plaza Supplement to The DAILY PILOT, Wed., Au9u1t If, ltTO ' ~- ' ,...-• 't • • .. • _, . • .. • ' . . }. ·i • • • . . , ' ., : I: ' i ·~ . • • ' 1 • ' , . . • ~ • ft's ··Jlatt 1Datic , ' . 1'el evi~ion 's fa111ous 'Magic J\1an' 'vi ii perform in the 1nall at South Co~st Plaza starting August 19. '!'here \viii be four , Back-to-School shows da il y a~ 1 p.m. · 2 ;30, 4 p.m., and 7 p.111. each day through : August 21 in the C.arousel Court. See ,. ' . ' • his incredible repertoire of fantastic n1agic illusions and sparkling entertain.- 1nent. It's family fun and just· what's to make your Back-to-School South Coast Plaza that needed shopping at much more enjoyable. &oath Coast ?tua "THE GRANDEST Mj\ll OF All" BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA . OVER 80 PINE ST.ORES AND SERVICES , .. A la Card• Alb1rt'1 Hosiery• Alroe'•Chapples Spo(t1 Center• hrtn'1 Tall Fathi 1 I lereatrom's laby News• I Av Sovin9s & Loan • C." H. laker t lank of Americo • lorticlnl Candies~ .. .. tter 8arbers~ltot't C~ild111n's Shoi1 •..Cameo Shoes • Carat'• • ChappJes Sports Center !II Chasin'• • Chef V • Chic Accei .. rlet • Chris' PathM»ns • CllM'• Stationery • Crocker Citizens National lank • Crowning Glory Salon • Dec ... ~tor Line • .fdf Jack's Coffee Shop • Field's Shoes • Finn's Fashion loutique • first Western lank • fax So11th Coast Plaza Theatre • The Golt.on Gifts & Candi•• • Gene's • Gentry Ltd . • George Murrby • Golden Needle • Grodi n's • ; ude~larnett Shoes 4t Hallmark St5t.tioner1 •. t1.a1<is & Frank • H.F.C. • Harvest Hou .. Cafeteria • Hickory Farms • HouM .t ,..a • HeuN ·.t Nine • Hou• ef Tait.ring • House of Terry • itubb\.lb~• lnmir Shoes • Jewolt by Josoph • Mph MaAnin • Joy<e Sho. Tree • Judy's • J. P. Connole Optometrist • lcapLan'• Deli<ateuen & Restaurant • Knit·Wlt • tc.Vent Jew.Wt • Lane Bryant • LINS fOM 9't1 • s..e1•M•r •.Pl•!l•!eM o ~!l >flnw 1,1.4>111•M • llUDt IDUO!•DN ·s . • Mortene Fobrique • May ~o. Miss Hawaii • On The Go Travel • Pa<t Sf'llter • l'a<ific Savlngt & Loan • Pickwick loebhett • Tho p,.p Shop • Raj ef lncft,U9'001 e pt'OM A1nD09 1.10Do1 o •uoJn°'••I DJt!A!I o 1ouo1•ouJ .. ~ !DI • •! luggage• Sabrina • S.Or1.• SinAer • South Coa st Drugi• Sunaet HouM •Thom McAn • Tie lta<k • Tinder lox• Toy World• U.ff's Heme furnishin11 • U,UOtll'l"N IJoqpun o s,uo11111 o 101.45 ••P"l • 1uo.ino11•1 uoxlnoS •1 o Of!f94 a • Wlntttod't _Camera • Wiison'• Men '1 Shap • f, W ,Woolworth •Young Mat•tnity •Zelig'• Vlllogtr•,ladybug ................. ~ ...... -.._ ...... ~ .. ...._ .. __ . ---~-~---~--~ ------------------------- I I -2-s.uth CeHI Plou Su..,.le....,. to The DAILY PILOT, Wod .. Aug. 19, 1970 • • JOSEP AGNIN Back to School Days at South Coast Plaza ROLL CALL-Members of Sears Teen Board al Cos· fa Mesa store gather around the leader and in- 1tnu:lor, Barbara Stacy. Shown (left to right) are Sherry Wents, Diane Johnson, Lori Lee Semeniuk Victor Rodriguez, Sandy Brower, {Miss Stacy) Sharon Rumsey and Kinuko Kumamuto. Teens Who Must Show c_Af ake the .Team ) at Sears They Have · Spi'rif; Enthusiam Seara Costa Mna bu wbal finishing their year on the Costa Mesa store are now in s~lect one representative from you could caJI a spirited Teen Teen Board (they have to be thei r third year of Sears each high school in lhe area to Board. Of JI.a eight members, high school senklrs to serve on service. serve each year on the Teen three are cheerlelders, one is _tbe __ 1ioa_rd_)_a_nd_som __ •_a_1_1_h_e __ s_ear_s_m_an_ag_em_en_1_tr_ies_1_o _Boa_rd_. ______ _ a song leader and one boy la on hl1 school's footblill team. The high achool sludenta are selected to serYe on Sears' Teen Boan! only alter being reconunended by their in- dividual ICbool's s t u de n t d>unlelor and then "surviv- ing" three different Interview teSaions with Sears officials. Young people 90lliht for the board are Ule all-around .,.....ality type ml -who are active in student ac- tlvitie.._.not nece11arlly the ••.str1isJrt·A" types. In addition to acquiring a retail bakcif'OUDli and teaming 1tlllng techniques by actually working 11 salet personnel. members of the Teen Board also do community service project. during their tenure on the bolrd. They also act as live man- nequins in the store on , Saturdays, modeling clothes which they often have helped the store to select. Some members of the board. stay on with Sears after The Fine1t In Pipes, Tobaccos And Gifts SOUTH COAST PLAZA L•w" l.eftl H.., t .. Msy C•. Phone: 5404262 IN STYLE -Nancy Logsdon of the South Coast Plaza Knit Wit Shop, at wheel of 1912 Metz Roadster, 'v a s joined by Anne Pack- wood (right) and other me1nbers of her staff in their enthusiastic ac- ceptance of the shop- MALIHINIS KAMAAINAS If yo u are planning a trip lo the Islands or having a patio luau-you'll find ju!ll the gay, colorful fashions here. Conic in an d see th e exciting South Sea wardrobe we have for you. Shop in our Jfawaiia1t corner for men The care-free styles and gay colors ()( our fa shions for men wUI put you in a relaxed new world of cdmfort and fun . B~•uliful floor lrnGth m11u!t, shorttr n1uus and 11un shiftll to put )'OU in a holiday mood. mLjj fiawaii SOUTH COAST PLAZA LOWER LIVIL .S46·6.S67 ping center's Turn of The C e n t u r y Days the1ne recently. Vir- tually al l sales person- nel at shops along the center's enclos ed. mall dressed in keeping with theme. Displays, such as the vintage auto here, helped dress up the mall, loo, for the occasion. Le J'etit ,.rench Cafe TRADITIONAl AMERICAN FOODS SERVED WITH A FRENCH FLAIR HOMI O• lHI "EIFFEL TOWER" BURGER South Coast Plaza CAllOU51L COUltT LOWllt Lt:YIL ) ' ' . ~ • • ----.... -.......... -------~----~-~---· .. -............ ~. -... ,, Back to School Days at South Coast Plaza MA YTE EN~Members of May Co. Youth Advisory Board for the Costa Mesa store show off some or the "today" clothing they help the store seiect and sell. Board members-they call themselves the Mayteens-from left to right a re Darrell Walker, Whitney Terry, Da wn Richards, Debi Vogler and Jeff Child. 10 'Mayteens' Learn Retailing, and Serve Community on May Co. Advisor y Board Ten y 0 u n g peopl~ight Advisory Board also allows youths In various ctimmunity said it hel ps its young gitls and two boys-from all May Co. to offer the en-service and charity projects. members "improve our world thusiastic support of these One member of the board and stimulate our minds." over lhe area served by the ----------------·--------- May Co. store at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa comprise the store's Youth Advisory Board, J,ed by ''pacemen'' Darrell wa'Iker, a senior at Huntington Beach High School, and Jeff Child, Corona del Mar· High · Scl)ool senior, the "Mayteens" include: Debbie R i I e y . Estancia : Rc>Pin Grower, Corona del Mf: Anne Walsh, Mater Dei: Wijjtney Terry, Corona de! M1f: Jan Mudakas, Tustin; Dehi Voyler, Huntington ~ch: Dawn Ri c hard s , Wcptminster; and Charlotte Bllh:, Newport Harbor. fn addition to helping the M<iy Co. keep in touch with youth and their clothes·buying atliludes, obviously, t h e . -------.------- ' ... "'"'~·· rx ... -a.-"''-'-- TIME FOR STOPPING, NQT SHOPPIN~udy ·Clarke and daughter Erin of 1226 E. Mardell, Orange, admire freshly planted mums Jn planter of Lady PaJm tree. Almost 50 mum plants have been utilized to give the Plaza a "fall'' look for Back To School Days. .Revlon Joins Pitt On ) As an added attr11ction to Its current majcr Fall Fashion Promotion entiUed T H E GREAT RllT ON, .May Co california bas IM0'1JlCtd a series of Revlon Be a u t y Clinics to be conducted at 10 May Co. sloru. The beauty extravaganza, scbedUled to start Aug. 17, will feature the complete Revlon line o f Natural Wonder cosmetics. It wUl be staged at the May Co. store in South Coast Plaz.a on Tuesday, Aug. 25. Revlon's special makeup artists will conduct an in- formative tw~ session which will include fasbiol;i tip1 on the coming ~ in eye makeup, peroooBlized makeup and skin care charts. free Natural Wonder booklets and posters, plus the chance to win • a $10 collection ol Natural Wonder Aquamarine beauty aids. Admission tickets to the clinics are available at the special Natural Wonder cos- metic boutique adjacent to the Revlon counter at a cost of $3. This amount may be applied towards the pW'Cbase o f Natural Wonder merchandiae plus a free gift at all stores. In order to create the most exciting and stlmulattn& at- mosphere for the event, May Co. stores will transform their training facilities into tbeater- in-the-round setting -l i v in g participants a rlnpldfi aeat lor a two-hour magical journey into the fascinatin& world of mate-up and beauty. The Costa Mesa s to re 's "theater" will accommodate &O persons. ., /SCHOOL Y S_UPPLIES ~/OFFICE Y SUPPLIES Soulf1 Coett Pl1zo Supplement to Tho DAILY PILOT, Wed., A.,. It, Im-I on campus the lo0k of the 70's the • IS . . INDIMIDUAL LOOK 0 &oath Coast Plan LOWER L!VEL ' At Gentry Ltil. you'll find the variety you need to expreu your individuality. You'll appreciate the quality that marks your good taste. And you'll get the now styling that keeps you in step witli the changing times. Don't miu our big collections of both c·asual and dreuwear • especially selected for today's generation. See J;>ick rtm. See Jane run. See .Spot run. See Dick and Jane ron for a long time in their strong shoes from Thom McA.n. Boys' atra~ sliP-OD: .;,.. 10..12, Ji.99 body shirts • FLARES d " d -12*3, $8.9!1 si7.es 3Y~ $9.99 See Spot. See Spot cry. Spot doesn't have · any strong shoes from Thom McAn. But we 're worlcing on it.' _....._ WIN! FREE! in the little creative genius contest! WHAT C,AN YOUR CHILO DO WITH A THOM the entry Wo _.,of then.-ljlc:An Du:w IAed . McAN SHOE BOX? Mm a bamyord WI of~ THE 12 BEST ENTllles W1.L BE°" DISPLAY AT ~7 MM•• c-e? Ma~e a doll house? let your THOM Mc:AN FOR A Rill MONTH AND ONE ~ttle ct'9atiff 9-• gi¥e it a try ••• wl t'-bring CHIU> WU WIN A PAIA Of ROI I FR SCAJES . C°"'8llt ,... Jar aift ai6:lrat t2 « .OOcr,. ~~ for ~ ii Sept.. 11, J'l)?O. SO\ITH COAST PLAZA UP,11 Ll;VIL. COSTA MU.A HARBOR CENTER • HAllOI ILYD., COSTA MISA BY THESE FAMOUS NAMES AND OTHERS LEVIS CACTUS CASUALS BROOMSTICK LANCER LEES A I • vest suits knit tops mode jackets Topsider shoes IPlllY e CLA .. K'I e Dlll .. T IOOTI • accessories COMPLITI llLICTION OP PllMA Pllll WAIH 'N WIM. PANTS Gentry Ltd. SOUTH COAST PLAZA • SAN DIEGO FWY. & IRISTOI: PHONE 540-1502 Open Dally JO to 8130 Sa&. JO to • P·•· • • • ....... ~ ,""", ~ 1 "'•t"'''-·~" ""' 't.,. 't' "'I'.,'.,.."-" t ''t '<"('..-"""iii' 't "'":"'I'. .,......,.,~,rY.-.-'<-.t~tr<rTi:,•~·-·-•,-r.-....,.....,.."T"rr..,...,,..,,,..,.....,....._~---.. ,.~ . ...., __ _..,,...._•,,._.,.....,-r,........,....,..,,_..,, ... , .....--,-,,.....--:----- I Cooll Plu1 Suppltmont to Tiit DAIL V PILOT, Wed., Aut. IJ, U10 $600 Gift Store mannequin, whose glasses' are s~ to give her 'a studiou s "teacher"' look, reminds Sou.th Coast Plaza visitors they can win set of EncycJo. paedia Britannica valued at $600. Coupons io regi,.. ter for the gift are available in all stores and can be deposited at Carousel Court. Winner of the books provided by the DA ILY PILOT need not be present to win. when tbe recipient is cho&en at 4:30 p.m. on Monda)', Aug. 2-4. No purchase is neces&ary to make registrants eligible, either. No erp:ployes (or their immediate family) of the DAILY Pllm or. South Coast Ptaza merchants are eligible to win the encyclopedjas. Retired Sears Expert Join~ Segerstrom Co. John Wadha1n, property 1nanager in charge or site selection and leasing for Western operations of Se.an, Roebuck and Co. until his ~ cent retirement. has been arr pointed to the newly created position of Real E ! t a t e Development Consult.ant for the Segerstrom Family, it was announced this week. !'.le will participate iii land planning and leuing o f Segerstrom real estate, and a.s such will assist in develop- BOOKS. BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS fXT~D&n 't ti.A« STOCJ • f\IMillp 'ti to PICKWICK~ BOOKSHOPS Soul~ Cont nau, C.11 JMloa :.40.219:...• -~ 1.141 Holl,..._. II ... '°'17"'0CMI (2.1:9 MO Nltl ment operat.iooa of the various Seg-retail, -c111 and industrial propertiel. The Segerstrom F,ID\lly In making t h e anoouncement said that Wadham brinp to hil pogition yeon d ... perience in the deYekipa:MD cl commercial property and hll vast lr:noWledge d retailill( and its appliclUon to the devdj)pment d .commeioial land insures the o r d e r 1 )' growth d all Segerstrom --merdal, i ndustrial and residential propertie!. FILLS NEW POST Jahn Wedham lllil Crowning ~lory beauty salons HALF PRICE SALE!. $20 MAGIC CURL .......... ~10 $15 WONDER CURL ............ $ 7"' BUDGET PERM •.... ALW~YS $ S" (Norm•I H1lr Only) ENJOY THESE SAVINGS AT OUR -,_ SIMI· ANNU'AL EVINT * EAIL Y WEEK Sl"tCIALS * SHAMPOO~ -$2"."95"' Si:U HAIRCUT $'.so sz.oo 51ylllh flrk .. ......, .... Appolntment1 Wetcome But Not Alw•y• NtctH•ryl CROWNING OLOIJY lfw-rtt' C1,,rc. CtH!wft) 2,7 I. 17ftl ST., COSTA MIS.A SOUTH COAST Pt.AU PHO HI .....,.,, ...... L..wt -,... • IMr• PHONI ..... 7116 ' \ shirt sale trim Mach · u body shirt in • big styl• choic• · Pick from strtP.,., prinu or 50Jids on a host of colors . S-XL. r•g. 9.50-12.00 5.99 b.rrton hall 13 shirt sale famous maker nwn's shirts short ind long sleev•s .!ldepteble for sport, dross weir. Button-dow n or point colle,., S-XL reg. 7.50 2 • 99 ...._ ..... 13 . ---- boy1' white <otton crew SO<•• iR • pack•Re of Ii•• stripe lop .JNiir White collon crew socks ·with colored top-stripe. 9-11 ,.10. n. reg. ; .. ~~-1. 99-2 .49 boys' f~mishin15 13 • -~tarts:-f~ttrselay-fer feur Gre~t-Oays_,_. - .Of . sclilBol • s~ae ' . ... ' . • • '. .. . ' jean sale ' sa.vings on boy~~ jeans in a vast style selection N~imn sllfll!r jean• with a triple guarantee. Choo5e from rMny colors, Sizes 6-12 •nd 25-30 (14). Stripe flare jeans- ha.e·~ch· PQ<lcets. E•sy-ca"' cotton. denim. Sizes 4-7 (.52) • res. 5.50•6.50 2.99 boys•wear 14 and 52 • , \ \ ,.;,.,. """" tchocil ie•~· by • vttr fa..,... Californi• maker boys' w&ol sdtool sw••ters fr°'1' man)' very famous manuf.actilt~rs Trim-fit polyester and cotton i•.1ns, .f11t·b1ck styling_ 6-1'21 25-30. Crew.-k and •·neck pull-Overs in blue, tan; n1 vy or gold. 8·20. res . S.OIJ.i.oo 2.99 reg. 10.00 6. 99-7, 99 • mey co south' cCla&t plasa, s•n Cll•to fwy •t lirist•I, cost• mese, 546.931 I' shop mondiy thru s1turd1y 10 am to 9:l0 pm. sunday noon 'til 5 pm MAVCO ---~-~----------------- l • ' l ' --~ .. ·-----·-·---.-.-.. -.-.~.~.-~.~-~--~-. ------..---.,-.----,-.... -.-.-~~., ... -.-1 -v--...--,~----. --.--,-,--...-,-.~ ...... ,-4"'1 ... >"'•" ,.., ..... ,-,,, ... , ........... -, ........ --........ ,_. ... -. .... ~·.~.-,.,., ...... ,, .......................... ~ ............... , .. -. • • . . .. ,. Shop Every Department for Values for Kids I ' off to· school S·ale dress sale save up to 60 % on a group of dresses by famous makers Here's every dress a little girl needs for back to s~hool. There are plaids, prints, and solid colors, too. All In easy- care cotton or bonded acryl ics. For both big and little girls. Si zes 7-14 . Sizes 3x6x, value 8.00 to 17.00, 6.99 value 9.00 to 20.00 7.99 • iamuus makers no-iro n pdjama s in d c hoice of 3 styles it's pdnts plus J fun jumper wear them alo ne or pa ir t01etller Choose from comfortable cotton broadcloth, fl an<'e l or •nit s•i- <tyle. Many color;. Sizes 8-20. reg. 4.50 3 .69 boy~' furnishin~s ~l A two-pocket ju1nper 10 \Vear as a dress or over matching pants. Plaids or solids, navy, red, 4-6x. 1 vahte 8.QO 5 • 9 9 girls' sportswear 77 m.•Y co south coast plaza , ~an diego fwy ·•t briltol, c~spt me11, 546-932 I · i hop mondey th ru 1aturday I 0 am to 9: 30 pm . 1u i\d1y noon 'tll 5 pm skirt sale you can choose from kilties. dirndls, •nd A-line skirts There's so n1any skirt styles to chooso. And don 't forget the sweaters. too. 4-6 x, 7-14. Reg. 9.00, 5.99 r~. 4 .50 3.59 girls' sporbwear 77 vest set sale for girls, it 's vests with smooth pants or flip skirts Just in time for school. It's the vest w ith pants or an A-line skirt. Red, navy. gold. 7-14. Val. 13 .00. 10.99 value 13.00 1 Q. 9 9 girls' sportswe,Jr 77 choose cotton denim in navy with bOld, patriotic zippers A ju1-nper1 skirt, hip-rider pd nt·,, and cotton knit top. With red, wh ite zippe rs. 6-14 . r.9. 11.00 6.99 , Big Boys' Toys This scale model of F·l ll ls only one of many which comprise the United States Air Force exhibit now on display at South Coa5t Plaza. The "air show'• !will continue through Sept. 3. Displays ar.e open, free of charge, to the public from 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. daily. Grodins ' VP Gets N ew Jobs 1n Realignm ent Louis Mik'hell, vice presi- dent of Grodins Southern CalifOl'nia Division, has been appointed gooeral manager of Grodins Southern Division and vice president in charge of operations of both Northern and Southern Division stores. .He succeeds Michael 'Fein- man, who recently ruigned. Jack Rose. executive vice president and g e n e r a 1 merchandise manager of the Interest Keen in ' Teen Queen South Coast Plaza is an- ticipating strong i n t e r e s t among Orange County youths in its first Teen, Queen in American Leather contest to be held in I.he Carousel Court of the Shopping Center on Fri- day evening, Sept. II . Northern Division wumes lhe same responsibilities for the Southern Divis.ion. Guy Craig has been promoted to the posi· lion of merchandise manager or the Southern Division stores. Advertising and S a I e s Promotion bas been coo-- soiidaled at the company's 1nain San Francisco offiCi!. Mrs. Willah Haberman has been promoted to Uie post of advertising director of all stores. Jerome ' Green has been appointed creative direc-. tor, and Gerald McCann has been appointed art direct.or. Don Colebourn, formerly a merchandise manager o f Sears. has been appointed manager of Grodins main San Francisco store at Market and Stockton. Arnold Michaels, president of the company, added that olher sleps are being taken to coordinate and strengthen Lhe 28-store chain. All Grodins corporatiOns were merged at the end of the compa'ny'~ fiscal year (July 31) into two corporations -Grodins of California, a sinJile retail corporation ; and To-.vne & King, Inc., a wholly· owned wbolesale subsidiary. Grodins of california in· eludes one store located at Sout.h Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. ' All girls between the ages of 13 through 17 are eligible to rompete and entry blanks are available at all South Coast Plaza stores. Contestants will be judged on the basis of beauty of face, Ugure, charm, poise, personality, leadership, scholastic achievement and community service. . The winner ol the Teen /;;iiiliiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiii;; Queen contest will receive a $100 wardrobe of American leather shoes and other prizes and awards from South Coast P laza merchants. Contest officials will include a repcesentative of t h e Segerstrom Family, owners and developers of South COast Plaza, a representative of the Plaza Merchants' Association, and representatives from the D~ Y PILOT and at least t\lfO other daily newspapers. For Unu•u•I Ri ngs SOUTH COAST PLAZA lri1tol 11t tf\11 S11n Oi1190 Fwy. Co1t11 M11i11 540-906& SPECIAL! 6.99 CHARLIE TEE 3 DAYS 5&0 O.NLYI Good Grief ll'his Charlie Brownaboe bu YOUDI ideu. Jt'a a ki.d~styled twin '!' ... trap with •titchdown t0l• and brown waxy leather upper. YoU11ataaviDp now! &oath Coast ?tua 8rl1tol St. at Sin Oit90 Frwy., CMt& 1 I ' ' • -.--:-:-r......--...,..___,,,..._.....,._.....,..,. • • • • • • 't' • + • • wv • • •" • .,-. •,.. • • ..,..,,........,......._. ...--• • ....-.... ,....,. ..--_....,................,......,....,......,....,...,...,..,.....""'...,..,..~,..""'i'"r"'i"~•,_,.,.,._,,'>-·~r-..o;.~~~~~•-~,~~~--~--• • • .. 10 ...... , •••• ~ ............... ,;1 ...... 10 ••• ., ............................................... . -,,~~-- I Buntiy on a Broo••• Ch uck Jones, who gained his reputation as a magic man on Los Angeles daytime television, may stand more than a rabbit on his ear with this levitation trick-and other feats of magic, including the saw· ing of a woman into four pieces-during four-times- daily performances this week on Carousel Court at South Coast Plaza. Show times today, Thursday and Friday are l. 2:30. 4 and 7 p.rn. 'People Don't Laugh' Says Coco the Clown SAN FRANCISCO I UPI) - Coco the Clown says it's tough nowadays get.ting people to laugh because life is so grim. Coco, with Ringling Bros.· Barnum and Bailey Circus, is the third-generation Coco the Clown. His grandfather was the original in Russia during tht' days of the Czar. "People are so darn uptight, so tense today," he said. ''It is difficull even to make chlldren difficult even to make children laugh." "People are different. We used to work in the audience -throwing confetd out of a pail supposedly filled with water. And we had a chap dressed up in a gorilla suil," he said. He said he used to be able to get a laugh just by falling down . "But now a man \\tlo falls down has soc i a I significance." .. 8ut people sue today. A woman gets a piece of confetti in her eye. Another person claims he is shocked by the fake gorilla. So we don't work in the §lands anymore." Fo• Fine Oiemonds SOUTH COAST PLAZA Bristol •• th• S•11 Di•90 Fwy, Cost• M•1• 5'40-'f066 CHILDREN LIKE UNCLE LEN r> ---·---' I t -·""""'''""" ·-·""""'·-- New 6.,.~.,.,./,.,...,~ ... The spirit of fabled Persia unique contemporary . In stoneware. The form ••• the feel ••• the very essence of that exotic land-now so perfect for 'f(Nr table, )'OUr home, your way of life. ~markand's basic hue is delicately mottled Charcoal Brown. Its hand painted motif is Spice 6eige and Desert Gold embracing a heart of Burnt Orange. Plates and all other fliltware are plaln. Denby Stoneware is made In England -the product of a 150-year tradition of quality and craftsmanship. Speclal unmixed elay, secret glazes, and firings at temperatures that melt steel l!ke butter create ii stoneware that is unsurpassed in strength and chip resistance. Denby Stoneware is oven, freezer, and dishwasher proof. Free replacement of any piece clamoged during oven use within one year of purchase. ' l ~ i 1 ' l J j j 1 •S·pi•'• 1•1wico for. !op•n 1+0<~ Y•lu1 1216.9~ s11s .oo "·P••c.• ,1.,. s.ttti11<r-'1•.•• i...., Mlfll HNt n.. Worerfoll South Coast ?lua l rittol •I T~• S•• Oi-.• Frwf .. C.11• M1.11 PMMt Hf.1'J7 Student Records Secret? Blaihe1·g's Life 'Hell ' Says IGt1 Confidentiality of Dossier s on Pupils Questioned · How confldcntial are the student records kept b y schools! If Utese records con- tain derogatory information about a student, can he and/or his parents "clear" his name! Jm:ie, a B-plus student, wu rejected by all colleges to which she applied, while her classmates with similar grade averages were accepted by the same schools. The reason! Unknown lo Jane, records sent by her school to college ad· missions officers i n c J u d e d degrading information about her. What can a student and his parents do M a case such as this! It may depend on Ute st.ate in which they live, the nature and soutce of in· formation contained In lhe records, and a hosl of other factors. ' In one well·known case - Creel vs. Brennan et als (generally known aa the Bates College Case) -the court ordered that confidential in· fermatlon about a student must be turried over to him and his parents. But laws in most states are extremely vague about lhe conridentialily of student records and the use that can be made ol Utem. Virtually all school systems now maintain eitensive pupil records. These contain, in ad- dition to a pupil's attendance ai1d achievement rec<ird, stan- dard.ized test t co r e s , on family background and cur· rent status, health data. teacher and counselor observations. anecdotal rec· orda and so on. With the new data pro- cessing a·nd memory bank facilities, thls vast array of ifl..., formation is available at the push of a bu tton. Despite this fact. very few school systems have clearly defined policies on the way in which In- formation is collected, bow it's used, and who may have , ac- cess lo il. Principals and other school officials ought to examine closely the methods of handJ.. Ing student records, says the National Association of Secon· dary School Pr\ncipals (NASSP)., an assoc i a. te d CAPE TOWN, SOUTl1 AFRICA (UPIJ -Dr. Philip BlaJ· organ~t1on of ~h~ Nat1~al berg's daughter says the 19 month:s he lived with a transplanted Education Assoc1auon. While heart were .. hell," NASSP has not so ~ar take.n a .. 1 don't know if it was the drugs or just Uie transpl~nt, b~t formal stand on this questl!.!'1, he was a different man;" Jill Blaiberg told the Sunday Times m It has suggested that pr1n-an interview. She said her father underwent a complete pcr- cipals study the survey and sonallty change after the transplant operation Jan. 2. 1968. recommendations on st.udent "He became excitable and utremely extroverted,'' Miss records made .by the Russell BlaU.erg, 22, said. "We had terr}ble Hgbts because he tried to Sage Fou.ndahon. The NEA show me off to the world all the time. group pouits ~t .. however, ''Physically, my father's life was hell after .Ule transplant. that each . Pflnc1pal mu~t He was suffering terribly all the time, but he d1d not want the operate within the rules of hlS world to know this •.. he wanted 60 much to .live," she sai~. own school system .and the "For him the transplant was worthwhile, but it took. all his legal framework of this state. moral courage to live even a semblance of a no~m~! Jile. But The Russell Sage FOll'l1-I personally think heart transplants not worthwhile. dation .!~nd such "potential Blaiberg, a dentist, died a year ago when his body r~j~led abuses tn the use of student the heart that had been implanted in his body by Dr. Christiaan records as : Barnard 19 monUls and 15 days earlier. He was 60. I. ''Information i.s often col-,,.. .. ·,....,.,,. .... _. __ _ Pru~ents Can Help Clrilch·e11 lccted without the informed consent ot parents or pupils. Or where there is adequate consent to <.'Ollecting informa- tion for one purPose. it ls o f t e n subsequently used for other purposes w i t h o u l permission, For example, in· formation collected by 1 counselor for use in guiding White House Confab Cope With Mounting Pressure To Discuss Children Whether you realize it or not, subtle pressures are on the increase for your chi ld to succeed in school and at almost anything he or she tries. Pressures, however, are not all bad, according to a Na· tional Educatiorl Association (NEA) pamphlet, "Pressures on Children and Youth." ''The emotionally healthy in- dividual finds ways to deal with conflicts as they arise and becomes more mature through each experience," the pamphlet says. "It is when the pressures are too many or when they come before the child is able' to cope with them that they result not in learning but in varying degrees of mental or physical disturbance." Some common signs of too much pressure are listed by the pamphlet as ~mper tan· trums, cheating in scllool, delinquent behavior, inabili ty to study or total absorption in studies, sudden dullness or apathy. little response from chlld to fr I e n ds, secretive behavior, unusual restlessness, agitation, poor eating, ~ail biting, twitching or stuttering. While the pamphlet warns there is little parents can do to eliminate most of l h e pressures on children, hints to parents that can provide guidance include: -Rather than retreating from the problem. or capitula· lion. help the child face it with some kind or action to reduce stress. Such an approach is consistent with sound meDtal health since it helps the child determine the most effective action for the circumstances. -Let yQur child know that you care about his or her pro- blems and are available and willing to help. -Be a positive force in your child's life, not his or her major pressure point. Do not push children into social or educational experiences at too early an age. -Teach children to live with limitalions, since no one excels in everything and no one is perfect. A healthy at- titude toward handicaps and strengths is most important. -Children should have time that is theirs alone . They need time to think, dream , plan and make decisions. -llelp your children form good study habit:! 8.1 soon as they begin steady homework assignments. -Parents should have a value system and ground children in good, ethica l values at an early age. students is sometim~s reteas-\VASHINGTON {AP) -The ed, without consent of studepts 29-year-old bachelor dentist or parents, to a college or planning the White House employer for use in selectiflg Coferencc on Children says students. he hopes it will "stir up con· one lo speak up for them." There have been s I x Creative Kids previous \Yhite House children's conferences -one every 10 years since Theodore Roosevelt called the first in l909. 2. "Pupils and parents troversy. get people exciled.'1 best, incomplete knowledge of what information about them Jn preparation for the Dec. "Never has this ... con-. ls coolained in scbool records 13·18 conference. Dr. William rerence come at a time of and what use is made of this s. Lieber said in an interview, greater national questioning ," information ... For example. Zfi forums of study groups President Nixon said in an· Spark Not Li1nited to Arts teacher or counselor evalua-nouncing it last December. t, f .,, 1 racte -d have begun ·'the most in-L'1eber ,., ''''"''"' ass1'stanl , Today's teachers try to use methods that will stimulate their pupils to think crtative- Jy. They have found that all children are creative to some degree and will perform creatively if given a cha.net. "J ust as the schools adjust their policies and work to eliminate some of their bar- riers to creative expression, you as a parent can help nurture your child's creative ability outside the schools," according to a new National Education Association CNEA I pamphlet on creativity. It is enti Ued "Is Your Chi 1 d Creative?'" CreaUvily, the pa1nphlet stresses, is not confined to the arts. It can occur in any human activity. "Everyone who fiajs a unique solution to a problem -from the person who invented the safety pin to the mother who thinks of a new way to keep her bedrid- den child amused -performs a creative act," the pamphlet says. The NEA pamphlet also notes thal creative persons are intelligent, but a high I.Q. does not necessarily imply a high degree of creativity. "Crealive persons tend to have many ideas and to be curious, enterprising, persis- tent, willing to take risks, non· conforming, independent in their judgment, open to new experiences, self-sufficient, sensitive, self·assertlve, resourceful, and s e I f • a c· cepting,'' the pamphlet says. It adds that creative persons " • . . show the need for recognition. variety a n d autonomy. They gain a reputa- tion for having wild or fan- tastic ideas a n d charac- teristically exhibit h u m o r , playfulness, Jack of rigidity , and relaxation when perform- ing creatively. Instead of ad· justing to their environment, they try to adjust their en· vironment to themselves." The pamphlet warns thal creativity ma)' be inhibited in a child who is emolionally in-Jon o a pup1 s c la r .... • secure bec8use he may be personality traits may be ln· tensive study of the American to Stephen Hess, whom Nixon afraid to seek ltls own answers corporated into the pupil's child ever made." appointed national chairman and depends too much upon permanent record, without Each group, made of up If! of the White Hous~ Conferer>C$ the judgment of 0 1 her s . parental knowledge, and used experts from such fields as on Children and Youth. Among s u g g es 1i 0 n s for .subsequently as a basis for a medicine, law. education and As director of the children's parents to help de v e I 0 P college recommendalion." the social sciences as well as activities division. he is in creative potential in their In addition. the study found young people and parents, ls charge of preparations for the children, are: lhat il is often difficult if not to come up with two specific convention y.•hich will consider _ "Help your child to impossible for parents to rerommeadations for 4,000 issues concerning children up recognize both his strengths challenge the contents of stu· convention delegates to con-to the age of 13. A conference and his limitations and to see dent re<.'Ords, and in many sider. on older youths will be held in that his creative taJenls - states there is little protection "We don 't want experfs sit· _F_eb_'"_"_'Y_·------cc by unauthorized school person· ,-wherever they lie -are nel, law enforcement officials. ting around reading papers to valu~?~ open to alternatives. ~~!~!'.al employers. and ?.~r ~:~~;~;: :i:f~: o;a;~: BOOKS tolerant of different ways of To help overcome these tion." achieving the same result, and ''potential abuses.,, Russell Since the f..'tlnference "should supportive of tentative eon--Sage suggests that : be a reflection of our times," BOOKS clusions -instead of ex-_ No data be collected he said n1any recomn1en- pecting certain and final about pupils without the in-dalions probably will center on answers. formed consent of the parenLs. individual rights and identity. -"Listen receptively to _ Schools establish pro-Subjects to be considered by BOOKS your child's ideas, and en-ceduresJo verify the accuracy the forums include child courage him to test them in-of data an'd for, destroying de velopment and the n1ass stead of passing your own periodically information no media, myths of education, BOOKS judgment on them . longer really needed. family planning, children and -"Encourage the natural -Parents /lave full access prejudice, the rights of EmEM£tYtARCESTOCK •£1t111inP 'tille fantasy play of )'Our youngster to, and the right to challenge, children and -one Lieber PICKWICK ~ as you guide him lo the accuracy of data on their says there's a lot of interest in distinguish reality from fan-children, and no one but school -the child advocate. BOOKSHOPS tasy. personnel and parents have "Children have no con-.,, ' p ., ~ So .. .Ca" Pwo. "'" ..... -· rov1 e SOiue non-access to pupil data without stituency, you knO\V . They 540-2191 academic outlets for creative either subpoena power or have no political power,·• he ,,,1 Hoi·~,,.-.,.,-,,,c-,.,, activity •.. help your child parental and pupil permission. said. "~faybe we need some-ti<>nrwooc1 (2111 Ho t4l9J develop a wlde range of in-,-=~-~::--:;;::;::==:::::::_..:;;;:.;::;::;:. _ _;;;;_;;:;;:;;:;.;;.-_..;;;;;;:.....;;.;;"i terests, and show him thatl knowledge comes from many sources. -"Praise your child for logical thinking _ . . avoid stressing grades and ac- quisition of factual knowledge as the only ends of learning. -"Help your child gain the courage and independence not to ha ve to conform to the group at all times. -"Maintain Ue1ible -but real discipline -that will grow inlo self-control. You should dislinguish between in- dependence and unruliness, in· dividuality and rebelliousness, healthy s1>1itude and morbid withdraw a I, preferred separateness and compulsive isolation, tolerance for am· biguity and irresolution, abili- ty to delay choice and in· decisiveness.'' SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA MESA LOWER LEVEL PHONE 546·0051 YOUR CH~ICE OLYMPUS TRIP COLOR PACK 35mm CAMERA POLAROID CAMERA AND CASE OUTFIT with SPECIAL CASE OR 1tuhbuh • 0 ::'''k/J..w 11.. l.lc:lio" !JJ." • FIND IT! YOO C~ OISCOVER USCf.) •• ~ . • ID ...,..,£. 'lMlltO 'PtAAlET ffO;lf-"Me SOA.).' SOOTH COP-.sr PLA ?A "°~' LEVEL.·8ETWUA> F<IUNT~IU • SllllkCASl·· I • 0 Alltot!Mltic p•tf•ct "'P••1or•• • l uilt-i11 "Mol Sho1" Ho.ii •ynchrOt1ito1;.,. • loty film •4vo11~ for fo11 onio11 th•ll • •••1••mmH 011Mmotic thlltttt • (omplthl with tl•luI• c•mp••""•"' , ... l'O h•hl com••• •"' oll ou•ttriot • lltc"ic "l'' for l11lty ........... ..,..,.. • lket film pockt for a ,.,..ct C•lor or l & W pktvrH • C°"'f'lell with • COMPO"'°'Otlt •M 111•1 h•11h ••-•• o:ul •" ., ..... ,;.. s44aa SPECIAL! AM CLOCK RADIO s-rtly ttyi.1111. 1111• ""olily, iolid S!OI• $688 Aili' Clock •11t1io ontl lllKH•ON Clt<-~ -w•m•nl ofld \11ttollt t'l1potttt l11nln1 <f;ol. llG. $9.tt ,,. ........ ., ........ -_ .. _ .. FREE PICTURE BUTTON A "Piov" lutto11" fr•• •f ,..,. Nw•rl .. 1riopci..1, "'h' or bloc• 01114 whit. will! 011f filN ltr•111h1 " Wir11-il1 hot 1111 .... 1,piftf 0114 prifttifl1. A $1 ,tl wohie flElt FILM & CUBE PACKAGE • l tt•1. 1 lkuhc.,li•1 I•• 17 ll1nhe • llCf, S I _.$188 --·-----~~----~--,--.....-_,...,.....,..--_.,--, +-• c:• ... •r-1 r r p -r«r .. •> .•:-.•.,...,. •.•.,• ..... r, • ,., ... ,.,.j,. ,• ,• ;w-. .... ~~·.• • .•~" ."'7' ;w '! ,• ,• .• ,•, .. , ..... South CMol ,., .. 9vppf1mltlt le Tho DAILY PILOT, Wed.; Au , 1', 1"9-7 ~ ' Enrollments Up, Finances Down at Comm unity Colleges A financial squeeze at a time of record enrollme'Jlts is the main problem most of CallfOrNa's 93 community col- leges ~ lbis fall. Dr. Sidney W. Brossman, chancellor of the state's com- munity colleges, notes that the colleges are now being engulf- ed by the wave or post-World \Var II babies that inundated the lower 5Choob in the 1950s. The community colleges are alSO bavin& to enroll a higher percentage or four-year col- lege a n d university-bound pupils than in the past and give them their first two years of lower divisiori education. The reason is that the st.ate colleges and University of California are diverting more and more freshmen into the eommuntty coUeges aa these institutions phase in more UJ> per division and graduate enrollment UP I0,000? Statewide enrollment at the community colleges this fall is expected to increase about 9 percent. This is an Increase of about ao,ooo full and part-time pupils for a total o f 800,£m.-the largest s i n g I e system ol hlgber fducaUon in the world. "Most of"the state's 68 com· munity college districts are now on deficit financing and dipping into reserves,'' Brossman said. "UnleS! the community colleges g e t significant addilional support from the state, there may be More Strikes? Teache1~s' Unions Gaii1 Momentum WASHINGTON (AP) Teadler labor lea~rs predict that union activity will gain n1on1entum this fall in urban, suburban and rural schools of all 50 states, bringing Ydth it the increased chance of teacher strikes. Their forecasts co1ne alter a decade which saw dramatic escalation in thel number of teacher walkouts. tn the past three years there have been 425 teacher strik~s -nearly six time! as many as there w&& in the previous seven years. 1 The labor movement, which was confined mostly to elementary and secondary K'hools in the 1960s. now has begun to spread to the two- year and four-year colleges. Both the National Education Association , with LI million members, and the AFL-CIO Amtrican t~ederation of Teachers, with 2 O O , O O O members. are actively organizing higher education personnel. "The n1ost dramatic change in the next few years will be in tbe field of higher educa- tion," said Robert H. Chanin, NEA general counsel. "There will be a revolt of staff rela- tions to ad1ninistration in every university." In three years the NEA af· ftliate, National Higher Education Association, has chartered 1 ~7 ·chapters with 7,770 n1en1bers at tv>o-year colleges and 132 locals with 23,000 members at four-year schools. Negotiations now under way In New Jersey with 14 state colleges are at an impasse that could lead to a strike ~Select an showdown, Chan.in said in an interv!tw. AFT spokesman J o h n Converse said his organization has enlisted 15,000 higher education members spread over 200 locals. He said at the "present time the <>nly place we are having difficulty is at Seattle Community College." Adding thrust lo l h c educators' labor movement are new laws in Hawaii and Pennsylvania I e g a Ii zing teacher strlkes. S i m i I a r leglslatioo is sought by both teacher groups at stale and national levels. \Vhat happ ens in Pennsylvania ·will be v.·atched closely by the NEA and AFT. "Pennsylvania could be smooth if the school boards play the game,'' said Chanin. "We don't expect them to love it but we hope they will accept it and bargain in good faith." Pennsylvania had 15 teacher strikes last year and Chanin said there undoubtedly will be Tio re. Converse and Jan1es E. Mundy, AFT director o ( cvganizat\oo, said among their locals they coukl end up with strikes ln lllinois, New Haven and West Haven in Con· nccticut, Philadelphia and Springfield, ~lass. Converse added thal there Is a "grave posaibility of trou- ble 1(1 Wuhinglon, D.C., and a distinct po6SibilHy of it in San Francisco." · Since AFT has negoti!iled multi-year contracts !.here Is llttle likelihood of labor trou- ble in New York, Chicago, Detroit, Kansas City o r Pittsburgh schools, he said. ACCUTRON by Bulova Perfect gift idea for every manl Water-resistant• with a suinless steel case. Open a charae 1ecount! • South Coast ?taza COSl'A MlSA "THE CITY" ORAN'l 'HONI 140·1117 UP,ER lEVEl serious problems in the ruture regarding limitaJiQQ:i o n enrollment '1 He noted that enrollment limitations have not beeir ·a problem In the past for high school graduates who wish to enter the community college of their choice, but a test of the situation is expected this fall. ··•r! a number of muhi.eam- pus districts such as Los Angeles 1eight colleges\ precautionary plans have been made to refer possible overloads at one campus within the district to another,•· Brossman said. ' · T h i s alternalive is not available to single-<:ampus d i s t r i c t s . however, and serious pro· blems are anticipated al many oI Ute_ smaller college1. '' NEW SCDOOLS Brossman added that two new-college!! scheduled to open their doon in the fall. wlll help alleviate the expected student sqlleeze. The College of Alamedo In AJameda and Coswnnes River C o 11 e g e. Soc:-amento, are expected t.o Lake some 0£ the load of Mer· ritt and t.a.ey~Ueges lo Oakland and Sqcramento City and American River colleges in Sacramento. T"·o other col!eges. Skyline in San Bruno and Columbia in Columbia, got U1eir start last year aod will be operating '' 1 a larger scale this fall . Another major problem fac- ing the community colleges i'I i • ' .,, 4'/1.. CHIMP MEETS NEW BOSS AT LION SAFARI Qu inn Assumes Ck.lties as Zoological Manager Lio1i Country Safari Gets New Zoo Chief Lion Country's 800 animals -as well as the staff of game rangers -have a new boss. Waller C. (Pal) Quinn III was named zoological mangl'r o( the drive-through 200 !.his "'eek. Quinn wilt serve as to1J assis~t to Chief G a m e Warden Bill York, v.·bo is from Kenya. A zoology major from the University<>! Tennessee, QI.Jinn , 3S. spent many years in the C I e I d studying the behavioral patterns or wild animals. He previously worked as director oC t.he Pensacola Zoo iD Florida. I-le is a member of the American Association o f Zoological Parks and Aquariwns. As zool<>gical manager at Lion Country, located at A1oulton Pac)tway on the San Diego Freeway, Quinn will be responsible tor t.he health and welfare of lhe preserve's anhnals and will supervise lhe park rangers. Quinn, a oal1vc of East Orange, N.J., was raised in Madisonville, Tenn. He served three years with the U.S. Army in Korea. currently he resides with his wife, Doona. and their five children in Tu.strn. Work 'fogether The National Ed u c at ion AS&OCialion \N EA I has <1n- nounced it hopes to establish 5.000 human relation.'> centers throughout the nation this year . 'l'hrough the centers, teachers will be able to work with community groups lO help solve social problems. the "AdmlJ$lona crta:b." That, Broa8man ei:plaliitd, 11 the fact that many communlty college graduates are having college gr-aduatet are having dU!lcufly tr1!11ferrmf lo the lour-year insUtuUon of their choice. He noted that as of July only one campus of the Univertilty of Calltomia (Rlverslde). and only two campuses of the state colleie system (Ba~afield and the Calexico campus ot San Diego St.ate) were ac- cepUng admission appllcat!ona for the fall. A number or the univer3lty and state college campuses still had openings for selected majors or at the graduate level. ··t11any Northern Callfomla community college graduates, DOI wlahma lo alterul colleie ln Southern California, have had to enroll In priv•te col· leges or 10 out of state to complete studies toward their blchelor's de1rees," Brouman :said. 'BARGAIN' Brossman noted that the community colleges provide "In a number of multl~m­ the best bargain in higher educaUon in the nation. For example, the cost of educaUong a Call£ornla cOm· munlty college student ls about $800 a year, while U1e cost at the state colleges Is about SJ,000, and about $1,500 at the University of California. He added that Callfornlant, hued on the naUonal average, could aff<>rd to spend much more on community college ii a (11rect. result of their .local educaUon. responsiveness a n d com .. Jl'or example, the '800 spent munlty involvement," h • on cawomla community col-declared. lege ttudenl! l! about '200 "HOftVer, be warned, •i1111 under the naUanal average of future complacency and lack tI,000. of conaideraUon of ttudent Brossman said that ln-righta could reault'ln the 1ame creased state and local su~ type of campus dlsordec that port of the community coi. Is oceurring at other collqes Jeaes Is imperative because o( _ throu1hout the naUon. their close relaUonshlp with ~"We know that there 11 younger students and adult publlc reaction to everythlna students at the hometown that hu been ~lthla: mt Ult level. He credited lb1s close camp111. The Jealtlature la r e I a t l o 11 s hi p and the well aware of thl1. And we do responsivenw or the com-not want the community col· munJty colleges for the fact leges to be penalized flnm- that they have been relaUvely dally because of tbll, but we free of violence ln comparison alJO must keep ln mind thU · wltb four-year lnsUtuUons. one of the tteuure1 of <MD' "Absence of violence on aoc:lety 11 the comtltutkmaf community college campuset right of dtsse.nt." Student Protest Growing U.S. Education Office Predicting More Unrest WASHINGTON, D.C. -The :ichool offlcie\s that they, like Student Property : ''Th eJjjiio;;;;;~~~~~~~~ alarm bell of student dissent is <>lhers in authority. "Mwt be general rule is that a student's ringing loudly and clearly careful to ensure due process locker and desk should not be across the land, and it's not to dissidents." And it adds opened for inspection except about to be stilled any ti1n~ thal the minimum of "due when approved by the prin· soon. All indlt·ations are th at process" is a guarantee th11t cipal becauae he has dissent and rebellion in our each individual can present his reasonable cause to believe nation's schools-dipping even views and will be dealt with that prohibited articles are into the i n termed I a t e fairly. The NASSP guidelines stored therein. If in!lpection grades-will grow rather than for achieving fair treatment of takes place the student should fade in the coming school student dissenters, largely be present." As a rule, poli· SOUTH COAST P'LAZA year. gleaned from actual CQUrt cles dealing with search and lri•tol •• '"• s.11 Oi9+Jo fwv. The office of Students and decisi<>ns. include: seizure of student property Calla Mo•• 540·9066 Youth of the U.S. Office of .Frtedom of Expre11lon :li~s~h~ou~l~d~be~a~r=rl~ved:~•:t~w:llb:th:•~~~~~~~~~~~ Educatioo, in a recent :survey "Freedom of expression can-help of counsel. of violence in t.he classroom, not legally be restricted unless predicted 1nore disturbances its exercise interfere! with the to come. Dissent a n d orderly conduct of classes and dcrnonslralions that rose to school work.'' Students Can ex~ the surface, OSY say s, press their opinions through represent only the tip of the speech, wearing butt<lns, etc .. Iceberg, while "the greater so long as such actions do not number of disruptions remain "intrude upon _the rights of under the surfa~." ready to others during school hours." erupt at any time. Personal Appearance: A But it doesn't take a report student is free to adopt hit by OSY or any ot.her group to own hair style and manner of tell us that more stude nt dress provided his action does dissent is coming. A glance at not present a hazard in such ne"·spaper headlines-or a school acliviUes as shop or lab brief look at what's happenlng work, or prevent him from in schools..-is all it takes. doing his best work because or H.ow does <1ne deal with !.his blocked vision <>r restricted situation? Educators generally movement. Yor instance, ex- agree that students have a lteme styles lhal are likely to right to be heard-provided create classroom disorder, or their \'olces are not too shrill such items as boots wlt.h and are not accompanied by cleats that create a school acts of violence. maintenance problem, can be A National Educ al i on ruled unacceptable. Restourant, Delicatessen & lakery "A Sandwich or a Full Meal" e IREAKFA5T e LUNCH e DINNER IANQUET FACILITIU ANY OCCASION-SERVING UP TD 150 Association affiliate, l he Code1 of Behavior: School Associate for Supervision and officials can prescribe and Curriculum Development, control conduct in schools so PARTY PLAMRS recently expressed the idea long as rules are "reasonable IUFFIT STYLI this way: Students "have a and fair," and are necessary MEAT PLATTERS -$1.85 1Mr ,,.raon right to speak on matters for the .Protection of the ria:hta FISH PLAnERS -$2.4S per person about which they are con-of oUlers and of the school. cerned, and even more im-Rules that requJre quiet in the or1N ' •·"'-te 10 ''"" portantly, "ally lo be heard library, or ban smoking in !'hone 540·9022 by older people-particularly, sch 0 0 I !I, are rea:arded aa Jlll IRISTOL AT SAN DllllO IWY. -COITA lilQA by elected officials of eom-•·reasonable and lair" by Lo.., ......, _ o,,_i,. Mey c •• munllies, states, and the na· .'.cou'.'.".'r::t''.:.·--------~""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~~ Uon.'' ,- Anolher NEA group. the Na· tional Association oC SeC011- dary School Principal s (NASSP) has prepar d guidelines on how to deal with student dissent. They are con· tained in "The Reasonable Ex· ercise of Authority," by Robert L. Ackerly. At the outset, the pamphlet re'minds principals and other a 'new dimension in ·furniture dwell for a moment in a new concept. Versatili ty ... Usability . and 5impl~~i ty ... oil of the~i::i qualit ies arc found in the sniortly desi gn- ed wall un;ls from DECORA - TOR LINE. They ore .-0;1. able in ric.h wood tones or lively colors, which are so popular for toda y's dec.or F-======~f.========~ and fempo of living!!! t 00 I w•ll ..,11it combln1tion1 •~oil· •blo , , . tlli1 on1 1how11 11 prlc11d C.OLOI WOOD TONI 1117.10 1100.00 = = de~orator line SECTIONAL AND WALL SYSTEMS -lamps ond •«tnori11 South Coast ?lua The Stn Oi1qo Freeway, Cost• M''" low.tr MitiU lavel 540-7777 tANICM\EltfCAltO MAJ fiA 'cttAA.08 WITH PURCHASE OF A HICKORY FARMS SPECIAL BL,END CHE E B"~ The1e flav<>rfuL bite-slii; Old-Fashioned Cracker. are an ideal companioa. for lhc Hickory F1tm1 Cheese Ball-1 1n1ck or party trc8t made from a1pccial blend <1£ age d cheeses, covered with ground. selected nuts, an d topped with a bright, red cherry. This perfect combination will deli.(lh t your sue1ta-and •1.l"'la family 11 Will. Iii' iii AuCJu•+ 19 thru A019u1+ 23 ~~, hi SOUTH COAST PLAZA 8rl1tol at the Sin Diego Frwy., Costa Mtu Phono:S40-'991 -------_ _:-: __ ---_ _"_ "'------- 1 I ! I I --~ ....... -...,--..... -~ ......... -.............................. ~ ........ -~ .... ..,..,~~ ................................... -...... -... "' "' ..................................................... ..., ................................. --~---· ------~-- r· I l Womeq's Histor}- , ' Re)eet Disobedience I ;.1 Students Accept Protests Offered , ST. l'AUL. MIM. !UPI ) - Protesls, proxies, ballot! and closing off access to the na· The antlwar staleinent eal1- I eel the war "geoocjde'' and Lion's capita . said it CO'J"J,lributes to n1any of 11 , pej.ittons are better ways or · S.\,N ,lllEGO (API ~.TJM, attacking the/nalloa's pr.o-libet"°" ol -YiD1 rarik blems than W.tting Clown the ~ right up with "F.irw.... Men lD t "Total U.S. War Machine" or !fisWY" in s .. -n~ Stioto · This seems to be the feeling Lheir country's ,1.nter.0;al pro- of student goverorpenl leaders . 'blerns. '.. _ _ -: · :. -·.L attending the National Student Students crunpar.ed t h· l l • Association (NSA) Congress 31 country to Hitler's German1 t.1acAJester College. in many ways, including the C.01.lege ~~ ae1t . .• ~~;.... ~~··. ;Luill.. Movie Stars Program, wllh posSlbb 10 The students early Saturday economic c 1 i m a t e . ~ ... barely rejected a plan offered polarization and the repression, by "Chicago Seven" trial ·of cert.ain groups. ' defendant Rennie Davis for a "When we see what is bap. "concerted a n d continuing penlng to people iJ_1 Soutlt V~et~ campaign of nonviolent civil nam .•. see what 1s happerun(' disobedience, which will close to people in this country ... wia· off the nation's capital from can't be good Germans any ;. the bureaucrats.·• more •• Bill Leo Grande ot~ Boav N.ow Browra • •• Barnyard aJli'l"'1" get acquain\ed in .Ojai ~ a lazy summer day, compJete with blut' Hies 11Dd gent.le wiJids. It's onfy a through-the-fenee:.cliat. bul;!bis shaggy beanie<! bone seems. completely cowed by !be round brown ey,es of 'bis ltovine neighbor. . NEA Girds for Year Ahead . .. . . WASHINGTON, D.C. i &enera.UOna_I pr_ocess tll~t together the parties to a topics of last .year's banner "Ollly he who att.empLs the will pass wit.h the :;easoos. ~I problem s l t u. at i o n headlines-busing and blac;:k before it erupta ~ getting studies coorses. They wanted absurd can achieve the irn-~ association believes the them to meet, rap together. unbiased treatment by po68ible," says U1e sign over causes «. wnst··~e .set;iQUs discuss their problem aild leal:hers and · g .u id an c e the .. desk ol the National aod Ille poteltial for Yiole}iS:e develop solutions for post~--counselors; they wanted equal Education Association 's tough· great, but 'they also fetl-'\he ference work back in their access to sportS; they wanted talking man-in-charge o f present. ---hometowns. their girls to be cheerleaders human relations and urban af· "They told us it couldn't be Notes Dooald R. Shire, a co-and prom queens. fairs, George W. Jooes. done," says Jooes, "but we worker on the problem : "In "They wanted," noted 'l1lis year when school want to be a&iut the bnsirfsis the conlerence setting we try Jones' assistant John 1£eke. opens, Jones and bis of .~ dlang.e, '°we ilf'e. ~ i..POOP to-focus on tlJe.pro-~·tun integratiQn into. the associates at NEA will resume domg 1t: We believe, ~·-btems the participants can do academi.c community. They what many consider im-fhat all of the people 'Dl· a something about: Jn this way wanted pluralism rather' than possible jobs: working to stem communlty who w a 0 t · to • we hope to solve· real pro-assimilation, based on. respect the tides of racial unrest and change. 5bould ~w get blems in the high schools and for differences rather than a student clissensicm in the high together .and ~de ho"I! they dissipate t.be tensions resulting design for amalgamation." schools and gcieratiog a can best or:~~ ~tr .~&-hopefully, through these in-There were ' other problems. movement for change in urban ~ces lo bnng 11 about... dividuat· ef!orts, help produce loo--r"eflecting the everyday education from within lbe In a nutsb~, the NEA ap-a quality urban educational problems outside city school 1>ywtem itlelf. proach (off1C1ally e 8 11 e d system uniquety sw1ed to the walls : racial agitation, whites Student unrest, the NEA sometrung 1 i.~ e_ interll;l'OUP needs of urban youth.'' beating blacks, blacks charg. believes, cannot be passed off relations _sensltiVLty sessLons) The specifics of the u r b a n ing whites bathroom ad- as a mere "sign fll. the times," means sunply b rt n g 1 n g educational crisis were mission, drugs, po Ii c e ·----jji--jjijjjjiiiij .. jiiiiiijiif,iiiiiiii~ii!i~~lj palmed vividly for the NEA in . ''imensilivity," under~411d ~ a. series of ''institutes in newspapers. But the problems EVERYO.NE IS J'A"l. KIN' G, .thafalloft.hepeople'inacotn-were discussed openly, and • Changing Urban Edw:atibo" representatives of all sides and .. Student Unrest d>rtfer~ agreed to build .. cooperative A.OU "' SKIRT ['rUGTHS ences" held across the coon-solution. . I 1J . ,.;'1,.. , . ·. try last year in conjilncUon Exemp!Uying the spirit of y011 c•t1 do ,01110tftirtf •bout it with 1 w•rdrob• of lenttht with lo ca I -.N~A ~.ffiliates, the sess,lons was a pre.53 con- \'•11 fe.hion on your_ll-other KJiittint M•chino. fit to '"'"" ""'" local school h<iards aiid, in at ference held _by eight students proporlio111 to IN ;11 ttyle. ·1east two cases, the com-who attended an institute munity relations service of the outside Omaha, Neb., last U.S. Justice Department. April, as reported by the courses to ~tart,. will take its s.· an Ca rd place a10f!881de ~ _ip-e ~ ' ." ' Women's Research Center, the new W o m e n s Publications Center. the Child Care Center and the oew Women'l~al Center. The classes -appl-oved by faculty, administration aod student groups alike-are only the l a t e s t victory of the Women 's Liberation Front on campus. "It is an attempt to re.Pair \be damage done to women by the omissions and distortions of traditional education," Car- ol Rowell, 22, student coordin- ator, said Monday. Sbe said academic programs have been geared to men, mainly be- cause of career needs. The college has aiiled to two full-time faculty mem. bers, another half-time and an advisory council of "four or Jive" senior professors with at least one male member, said Dr. Wairen Carrier, dean of arts and letters. The classes will deal with subjects such as contempor· ary issues in the liberation .of women, women in history. &0eialization process of wom- en and self · actualization of women. Starting in September, all 'Will be three-unit courses designed for juniors and seniors. "They want to open this as an academic field," said Car- rier. . . The women behind it admit they are "militant-minded" but Miss Rowell said they won't become violent. Carrier said: "There is a great hope they can educate the men as to the problems." "We, as women, have suf· fered too Jong from society's discrimination and neglect , " added Miss Rowell. "No.w. i$ .the time for our talent!. .and resources to be maximized in order to create new possibilities." The program, if il goes through as the coeds hope, isn't expected to create an on- campus rift between l be m and the men. Earlier they d e l e ate d syra_~use University said on • SAN blEGO (AP) _ want overwhelmingly a proposal for tlie floor o1 the congre3s. ToNavy Man to cheer up your serviceman? '"Nationwide Revolt" to shut My r 0 n Chenault , a black: Send him a cheer-up card down "The tot.al U.S. War student at Manchester College t signed by 28 movie stars. Machine." in Indiana, spoke to the CQ . such a card measuring two But less than 24 hours later. gress against the plan t_o cl~t feet by four feet came for they promised by a 2t5--50 vote off Washington, sayu1g it; Sealna.n recruit o· a v i d U1at NSA would "carry out the would cause n1any problems~ Carleton, 21, lbe Other day. most concerted and dedica ted for the city's mostly black The. card ~as the jqea of effort of its history of op-population. ~ Morris AS'rams, a .television· position·lo the war in the neit -About 900 students, repre•4 director and a family friend of ,nine months. senting 300 schools, are at,_ David and his parents, Dr. and And if the Indochina War is tending the congress, accord.,., Mrs. Rodney L. Carletoo of not ended by May 1. 1971, the ing to an NSA spokesman. Hollywood. . _ ' same resolution has com-About two-thirds of those at~ Among ' the sfgnen ~ere mitteed NSA to "A concerted tending are delegates or alter~ 1ony Randall,~ M le, expansion of massive , non-nates, the rest _ob~rvers. She Vincent P.~.. \ e violeQt action, including civil, said the organization ~as ~ and Lucille Ball. disobedie~ "at the local,_ .l)lember schools! i_ncludi~g ~{ A~,M8!8ha H~t w;rote,' regional a'lld nalional1evels," tK-.i small, rehg1on·affil1atedi ~femngr,~ ~arletoo s ~~ 1 Nonviolence was stressed1tr ~co.D · l Ir~, Uke gallstones,~ all the·proJJOSala that re~ved -.. lOO sha pass!' . serioUs c&nsideration Crom the PUT CASH IN Abrams, an f x ·Marine delegates . ~ curren_t TV pro~,affi: is Mike Fowler, Student Body Love,. American Style, tried President at the Universi,ty of YOUR POCKET to mail the card by U.S. Chicago, liked Davis' plan, post_men but fmally ar~anged especially because "It's in the for its delivery by Marmes •. A spring. I still think people leatherneck hand-carried it, should work in the elections Carleton's barr~cks: this fall.'' In a letter with d Abrams The studenls seem to be wi:?te:. . ~· # • hoping the war will be ended Sell unwanted items v.'ith a DAILY PD..OT Classified Ad. PHONE 642-5678 This letter might be a very by Spring-the other methods small o!f~t of warmth and will work before lhey turn to good feelings about the "Massive nonviolent action services in this time in which .. ~i~nc:'.l~ud'.'.in"lg'-c':' i:vi'.'..I ~d~iSobed~:".'.ie~nc:'.''.:.-'_' ~· ~~~~~~~~~~~ there are attempts to make1• the wearing of the uniform · something to )ook down on." 'Young Carleton attended the University of California at Los Angeles before entering the Navy two months ago. Leads Fight The California T e a c h e r s Association (C'TA) is a leader in the fight for women's .~ights. B~clt in ·1925, the CTA went to bat for a teacher who Jost her tenure because she got married, then was Jired. rn a suit pushed by C'l'A, the Slate Supreme Court ruled that the Jou of tenure because of marriage. war un- consUtulional . South Coast .~~ '1ua • lrl1tol 1t ... S.11 DJ,.. frwy., Ct1f9·Men • • ·BROTHEi KNITTING MACHINE Each ineeting featured the Omaha Herrald: · coming toge~et Of all J)artles "'The eight' studertts at the - involved I in school tension )>ress conference (five of them ,11it1,1at'ions:,students (from all white; three black) linked All State Campsites Filled for Labor Day now at savings MODEL NU'-'tEI\ 113 • • • ., , -. , WITH tACE. . $,. 4· 9so ATIACHMENT WID .. lNUD,. Fii. & SAt.,.AUG-.1t,.lt, 21, 2Z Beautiful Nt.w Yams 20 b•l11 cf ytrt will "ltll• • "li11i drt11· with P•"h-p~ift 11iil.- $CAMPll 11 .l t .JCH4P .. U NJt $1,70 DOLLY $1.41 TWJ'lD .ITYL! St,.70, • ).11 ce11 la doot0 h1111tifu!ly '"' th•• lrothff 4(11iffiflt M1clt;M. • 'Come iR 'for fret 41mo111tretio11, w1'll bt h•ppy to h•lp. THE KNIT WIT . SOUTH ·COAST ~ LOWll MALL AuOf!°'t•• WHlwertli'•; COIT.A MUA , !•.141-1111 levels of achievement and all arm! 1as (one) spoke of their Southern California campers County, San Clemente and grades Or political opinion), resolution to Continue bringing without reservations may be Doheny, report that their educators, administrators, students from different high in for a disappointment, par-campsites are res~ed for parents, police, community schools together In cooperative ticularly tf they have planned every night through the second organizations and -s c ho o l situations. • .When we· got to their outing for the Labor Day week in September. " C\4Stpdial staff. (the conference) we found that Weekend. The . iwo coUnty parks with Here, in Jones' words, is the faculty feels the same way According to WiU,iam p~ ' camping facilities, Featherly some of the feedback from we do. The administration Mott, state Director r~~· Pat'k,, , .aqd O'~IU, rtpQrt that They those meetings: feels the same way we do. So all state campsites iif~··~lll be:avallable for the t.abor "T'pere were derii::iltely ra· ·we had to ask ourselves where California and along the entire !~y Weekend. The·parq have · fjal firoble~.-On lbiJ, black . is the confllCt! We decided )l California coast are ·,teaer.>ed·:·~mplng areas for a to\al ,of and white students agreed, but was all a lack di com· for the Labor Day Weekend." ~bout ·MO> vetllcles,~;ind they 1.he ldds-black and white--mWlication." The state parks in Orange do not accept re11ervalions. were most angry at die lnsti·Jl·;--------------.;;-.-. .... .;;._ _____ iiii_._._,J tution itself. They w~ pro- testing against the pathoJogi. cal bureaucratic structlD'e that wa.s-· more concerned with perpetuating itself than with serving the needs of the people. They were asking it to pay attention to their needs as b!lllliUl beil;lgs." · · ' i 'The sp.~e cry for hu~an recognition was inherent in the racial complaints or Ute black and Puerto Rican students. They w~·t asking for the C,_;V' ~~ OPENING SPECIAL ~~,~0 U.1it . Our new BACK TO SCHOOL COMPLETE>LIN E OF "JEROME ALEXAN~ER COLLECTION" ' WI GS, FALLS AND ACCESSOtt11S STYL ED FREE WITH PURCHASE KANEKALO.N . NOW!! SOUTH COAST Pl,AZA COSTA MESA lklSTOL: AT SAH DIK-0 fkEEWA'f • • ••• ' Oltt)lf'I I t1arqt-l I • • SOUTH COAST PLAZA ' L•wtf Ln11 -o,,_i,. c ...... BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO F~EEWAY COSTA • Mi:SA ; . ..J>HONf : 5-40-9521 M ..... ..._..._.lt'lll._.....,_,_...,;., • wootWO.lit1•flot ...... o....., ..... SHOP EVERY EVENING •..ti.4.., fiN 1riffy htil t 1M P.M.-SlbNl•y 'Tll t PM. SUNOA Y·NOON TO 5 P.M. 1 ' • ---· .. 1-=-----------·-------___..------7 --··-.-; -,. . ... -.... -~" : : !. : • !. : ~--.~-" ........ _..:..____~ ..... :...:.. _____ :. ..... .:....:....:....:._..l ... ~-·~·-~-...... - I I I • : ' ~ ' f f r ' 4 "LOT ·AOVUTISU . • ..,......,, ._, 19, 1910 ' DAILY PILrf '(l , 1 • • OHA~CE t;OUNTY'S F LNES'E SELECTlON -. CADILJ_.AC . NINETEEN SEV ()F PREVIOUSLY U\VNED ·CADILLACS AN D OTHEH Fl"NE AUTO :HOBILES . I I , , OUR·'NEW 1970 CADILLAC SELECTION IS GREAT ALL MODELS • EQUIPMENT & COLOR CHOICES READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. I· 1970 CAD1LLAC Sedan ~Ville. Early trade-ln. Ooth A· le&thtt In- terior', run powf!r, factory air conditionlq, ltefto AM-FM multiplex, power door locks, tilt-telescopic wheel, twili&:ht sentiMl, etc. Local, 1 owner car. (~l.AFV) 1970 l YfAOUTH GTX Hardtop Coupe. Vill)'l top, vinyl buckM 1eaU. 440 VS en&tne, automatic, radio and bH.ter, power stttrlna;, power bl'ak@s. factory air conditionin&, mq whttls, wide track tires. (325AGE) 196G CADILLAC Coupe DeVille. \1nyl top, cloth A leather interior, full power, factory air, 1tereo AM-FM multiplex. tilt telescopic wheel, power door locks, twili&:ht aen- tinel, power trunk opener. CVUT032) 1 .. 68 CHEVRO LET rm,.ia c:u.iom coupe. v""'' ~r.,,..m lrlm, v-1, """ dramatic. factory air cond.itlo powtt 1tttrina:, radio I: Meter. Nabtn lel'Vice loaner. (VTP357). · 1966 CADILLAC 1966 T-BIRD Landau. Vinyl top, vinyl lntmor, fuU power, t..c- toey air oondltionlna. 1tereo tape:, swtna..a-way atHJ'inl: wbeL MOit every extra delwct feature. (SVV2$2) • SAU $1444 PllCI 1965 CHEVROLET 1970 EL DORADO • DIMONSTRATOll Vinyl top., leather' interior. fuD power, factory air, 11tereo AM-FM multiplex, tllt-tele. whNl.I power trunk opener Is door lock.I, twill&ht sentinel.. (0920). Low mlleq:e, 1969 CADILLAC Sedan Devwt .. Vinyl tOP. Cloth I: leather Interior,· run power, factory air condlliontns. dull comfort seats. 1t.ereo. .multiplex, powtr door Jocks, tilt·tele- ICOpic wheel, twill&ht untintl.·pav.ter trunk openM. (065ACC) • ; 1968 CADILLAC S!d&n DeVille. Vin.YI top.•cloth 6 ·1eather Interior, fUll power and "acti?ry air conclitionins, power door locks, ,·ery low mlleaae. CZVD660) 1967 CADILLAC Sedu DeVW... Vin)'l' top, .doth • leather interior, fWl power, factoey air, stereo AM.J'M multiplex. tilt-tdeacoplc wheel, ·power cloor-Jocks. (VGRUf) =''2888 1966 EL DORADO ~~·2222 1969 MARK Ill Continental. J:mbuq root, leather intftior, fUll power, facj:oty air cond:ltlonlnc. aWno tape. at.ereo radio, t1Jt-wheel, all polalbile opt.Iona. CYCM386) SALi s5333 PllCI 1967 CADILLAC YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED Bel Air t pua:en1er wqtin. V8, automatic trans-Convertible DeVWe. Full powtt, factory l!r condJ-miu.ion. power 1\Hring, factory air condltionlnl, tionln&, leaUter interior, AM-FM radio. tilt-tel..-~ bea&.er, etc. (REC800) scopjc •teerlnc wbetl, power llow locb. (Tl'Z161) CADILLAC DE ER NAB.ERS 26.00 IJarbor· Blvd., ·· Costa Mesa 40-910 SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM .l'tlon. thru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SaL and Sun. ..,. ... 0.,.rtmont °""' Meft,.,,1. 7:it-t:•. ' ALL CARS SUIJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SALE PRICH EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, lt70 ' . • • • SUllllllh LEASE Sl'ICIALS 1910 • EL ~.JVU'OO ... . . 0111.T $ 199 1110. 24 · ...... 0..M4-e AUO lllllllDlA11 DIUVllT lHI Alff CAI It S10C1 0 \ •• .. ,____ _____ _ ---~--------------------------------------------. ~ -- • • . . I I I -.. , • • • HOUSES FOR SALE ' • 1000 Costa Mesa 1100 • . • • • . • J • t • ofmJa J4t PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 77 linda ls-tt OrfW'' ' • • N•w 5 Br .• 5 bath horn• on lagoon. Marbl• en17Y ..... bar, AM/FM lll!erailn, Hug• mstr Br. has beam ceil. & on f11>k. Larg• liv. lt fam. rms. "/fiplcs. "/decl . . . . . . $1115,000 For information Oft All loh & homos, coll: BIU GRUNDY, REAL TOR m Dovtr Dr., Sutt. J, N.8. ~ -.i 1000-ol -----DIRTY COLLEGE PARK FIXER·UPPER--51'>% ~ housr It; a 1neSL \M JI ~ .. laf'f>"' ~... ~ i.tb.s. ri«'tric built-in kn- dltn. stopara~ family room. dailabk ga.rqe, bJrced .. lT COUNTRY LIVING boat. 1.,... ""'...._..., 1o1 On A. Full Acre eilb IN1t tr'l>es ~-CO\'-• _ _._ l ~ If i.t's Ayres •. ~· ' .,, BUILT' DOVER SHORES I . I • ""lobllldl1 -... ., s...nd new t b:tnn, den & p.rden rm w/'Y.<et bar~ Or.matic 2. sly living nu w/balcony, OPEN DAILY nml,IJ)) tlO Momin& Star Lane WATERrRONT 81' on channel w/pier &: dock. 3 Bdrm, 2 sty. Beam ceiling. • Tu·nrr v.ill cany 1st T.D. Hurry! Won't lut. $85,000 . ' ' "Our 25th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. Realtors NEWPORT CENTER 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road 644-4910 Beautiful New listing! ~ Low-f'Bte a.aumable life insurance loan. * BANJO street. * IMMEDIATE poMCSSion, 1000 General 4 BED $19,SOO BY O\VNER: LOVELY 3 Br, crpts/drps, 2~ c&r/garap. LARGE CO\•ered pa 11 0 ~.;:.:.c1e1=u1~~"":: BEAUTIFUL 3 &druoni, :! bath, dbll! car ~a.rage with huge 8lxll8 en. cl~ yard. Neat & cie11.n 11.dult oecupltd home. Cal1 J1ow to see "THE BAJlGAIN OF THE YEM". w/brlck BBQ, N i c el y landscape!<! ysnl Walk to elem/Jr/& High schlii. SV. ..:. Assumable Gt Lo a n , 6U-ll37 OPEN SAT-SUN )1).5. room1 parate master ••"•· Just ,wamng ,,..,, ONLY $26,900 lamib''s in.rf*Uon. It's Huge tree&-. New carpets (red SHARP i: lM1ilAClfLATE a:ha.i':: in den), The owner hU with aJ\8i crpts, a~·ta sur. created a truly Ji\oeablc rounded by lots· ol & honic. SlOOJ do1.1o·n FHA oc 2 patios! NO 00 TO 1ry No Do1.1o·n VA. Newport •• Fairvt.w ASSUME FHA 6% 4 Bcdrm, l~ bath &. den, \\!'esfllide, 1950 sq. ft, A.J. condition. S2500 Down. ~ Costa Mesa lnwstment VETS OR TAKE O~{:R S%~ ntA LOAN. t'ull pn1J.: $31.900. 646-8111 (anytime) 548-7711 JOa.. COATS J.M?o.tACULATE 2 yr. old 4 Br. 2 b11, fam. rnt. Nr. So. Coast Plaza. 1!>XJ8 patio ~ wAL&LAcE 1 Nichols .Real Estate REALTORS 5464141- (0pen Evenings) BAYSHORES w/<0v. '""' loan UL.-21 • ~ BUY ' B 2 Ba assumable. · .$28,950. $2500 --v-1 B"""' ! r. ·· dn., owner w/can-y 2nd. ==::z ====~I forced air hea!; (.'Qv_ patio, 5'16-1363 Aft. 6 P M, all ~ OCEANFRONT bl.t·in BBQ w/[rpl. Furnish-1.1o•eekc!nds: owner. ed, ONLY $39,SOO. ,,c..:,::::c:=~--'cc-- And oce&. vieW' lots ''C" THOMAS CLEAN 3 Br. & farn, xtra ln an exch..sl've ~w lge lot ideal for storiJV Beacbfront cwnmwril)' Realtor camper & boat, large patio, w· bea b h I.... COLLEGE PARK area. 1th private c du 224 w. Cout Hwy. 548-5521 close 10 shopping, college a: Tennis COU?U Newport Beach eves ~ «t!d paue and playbaaw. j \1(11'-........ !;)'Pe • --"'* 0\-et S%':1i loan • 1171 ' hOmr, com.pl repamted, new -1-•-l«o ""-paymena _ ~ tacbtd CO'Y'. patio, outdoor -"""" "1>lc " BBQ. ...,,,, You SAVE MONEY by ord1rin9 your new home •ow. SH these 1m1Jfft9 cu1tomi1ed home• built, utili1in9 t PROV~ CONSTRUCTION METHOD by Frank H. Ayr11 I: Son. You will LOVE-" our wellecf..jn d•li9~tful neighborhood witft cu-4 ... 11c st,...+s .ti .... your children c•n ptey ht Sf.,FETY. Our home1 ere ¥try clo1e to HUNTIN?TON STA. TE BEA:CH encl ere priced ffom $26..990_. they very in 1i11 from 3 to 7 ~1dri>om1, Jp to )000 iq. ft., 2 & l c•r 9e· r•9es, 2 to 4 beth&, shek-. or rniisaion tile roof, firepltces; <oncrete dri¥itwty1, wet ban, un. d1r9round utilities, ell buittln1, basic carpefiruj &nd cl•an 1oceen a ir for your FAMll Y'S H~LTH. VA arid co,,.,.eittionel ftnencing i1 IYtil•blt. 1 RANCHO LA CUESTA * Large 3-bedroom/2-balh, 4 family room. Closed circuit 'FV schools. $26.250. ,M>-2656 281 Nassau Rd. Open 1U Sccurily system And n1any addJtion11.I l>UPLEX Assume $22,000 5V49/• GI *TAYLOR m.de t:rers. Horan allow- ed. Owner will fine. at 81n % -huIT)' this WOll't last.J ! Onl)' •.••.• $49,500 AYRES HOMES SINCE 1905 · MODELS AT BROOKHURST l ATLANTA HUNTINGTON BEACH 9U.2929 ,, 961· I lll. 11 A.M. to I P.M. ---------' EXO.tJSJVE wrrn: Generol 1000 °""!.".!' -...,. 1000 -. - * $33.950 •..• wpw! S.P·L-A-S.H •.. YOUR DAYS AWAY in this lovd,y sun-drenched POOL an4 wp will nen include-a shazi> 3-bedroom heme tha I ii: fn lTICNe In condlOon. 3 blocks iet ~ and IM· MEDIATE POSSESSION' lf~R= ~Es.e l . YEAR 'ROUND o,;, well loca.., < bdrm. j 'SKINNY 'DIPPIN' home ready fur ~·I I.t does1J"t make any dif'Jer- Family mt., dining rm. " I ~2 I n1 Anyt" ence if It's snowi?W' out&Mte VA available. can no"" $30, 750 C. F. Cole1worthy & CO. REALTOR kM.>.ly pool m,«Kl. -• ""' )'OD can rtil.I go IWimmina '"Our 25th Y ffr" :=-1-C-Cil:ZZr::lZ::r::l:I in your binhday auit ~ WESLEY N. OWNER'S LOSS ..... ""' pool ......... .. TAYLOR 'C.O. ~:;_~,:-~i!,":!; Real ton NEWPORT r~--R YOIJR I' I llr.I bomL" klob llke a model 1111m oo... Wilh 2 died oam. . 4 BR I No un·l=--·-~s'.'.:=3o0ri_'v_• - Mesa Verde Beeaute of urgency, owner ''lllcsf\crbc 'J\calty 546·5990 Leases..Qptions We have! ~Yer'"al 3 &. 4 bedrooms (one with poot + aeperate 21' x 20' game room) and OOl' completely furnished. S2'l5 to S3Zl Ucs irable fC!atw'C!S Joan on 4 BR, den, 1%. ha. Jo'rom $33.000 In fee $21,500 Cpt/drp. 270 Robinhood Ll'l. L..ge bedrooms, near dO\.\'TI· $31 ,IXk:I FP 645-1294. town, C.bt. Park, \VomC!n's l -==========~I Boys & Girls Club. Owner Mesa Verde 1110 Real to~ "In the Harbor Area Our 25th Year" 673-4400 needs cash. Sho1.1o'TI by appt. Lachenmyer Realtor C.\LL 646-3928 or 545-3483 CO'i!ONA DEL MAR T1.1o'O 'lklrm. & Dining nn. home 'Vith large Dble. gar--:::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;: I age (sbessed for 2 story) ii ~on paved\IIC!y. Very charm- FIXER-UPPE"R Ing • GOCd neighborhood. 5 Bedroom; big $19,200. S\4 % ONLY $31,5!."J. GI !Olln at S15.J including M . M. Li18orde, Rltr. e Y e r y t b i n g may be &16-0555 Eves. 673-6116 assumed. Asking $26.9~. DOVER SHORES ON THE FAIRWAY Custom built, 4 bednn, tam. ily room, 2 big fireplaoel. This beautiful borne ovefl. looks the 17th fairway of Mesa Verde Golf ~ 6% assumable loan. By o'lll'ft. er. 3036 Java Rd. 540-4005. isl.500 .. BY OWNER -4 hr. 3 ha. 3 car gar. Lrg F/R, fetrmal din nn, Intercom, Vacanl $45,500. 645-1848, 2873 Boe Vis1a. 1 . nu San Joaquio Hills Road • ~ • 444-4910 let .... , )Qll' '9\....unent ill ·th\, ..... willltt- Mautifut bullt-d; ldtcben de- ~ fDr & 1IQl1JlJ] '. con- will pay the PGinbJ for you FIXER UPPER to i.-)IUUI' VA Joan. Thii Bargain'. Hutdn attention! nice home ii located l bk>cJr Qwni.z.ed 13$' lot, 3 bi& from llCbool and ·Hbrary -bednna, spacious kitchen I. shopping clo8e by. No daWn dining. Hantwood nn, dbJe payment tiM.neing: is very garage. Needl paint ls rare in Mesa V~e. M cleanup. Assume S% % loa.n Soml' v.·ith option lo buy $27,500 lo S33.950. H)pcn Ev('nlngs) but 1nakC' oUl''r! Needs 1430 Galaxy Drive cleanup, po.int, yard 1.1o·orl\. 4 Bedrms, 3 baths, 3 car Newporf Beach 1200 .. .. f!rrbl:llfir'l alt.A-must ae1l1 Very attracti"V!' 3 bednn. 2 beth with patio It bltin BBQ. Good corner )ot k>cation. FHA-VA W:~ $26.SOO. vmience:·a;:, over exlst-lnc 6% . percentage rate loan with total p&)'· ments of $196.00 per "'°' Call now. You'll be swim· ming belcre )'OU know it. S-46·5110 gar. TraYertine marble at. ----.,. ~ · A WHIZ:Z:.BANG ,ii;, VALUE (l'llll'cilelMthilbta riwn, 14• Wgh skylight, PARK LIDO POOL ~ We'U go to bat ari tttis 4 bf!d-LLEGE REALTY pano""''' vi•w. Expcnty • 15tXIAdlmsatltl!W,tM. crptrl. drpd, & decorated. • :'.• l'OOfD condominiwn, posi1ive. • :j-!Jo pnced below rt'producUon -..., ·-r coat. This home lookti jus1 ~ ~ • model hornl' and )'OU Joa.. COATS ·~w~cE ........, pleue caU right away!! -$121 p;!,)11 all. Or net cklwn Nichols Real Estate v .. caJt 540-11.\I ----... 546-9521 Heritage ;:;;:;;::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::;~ l-2 Je\v-E~UK_E__ ::·:&i:t Jc,;~a~;~ SPIC & SPAN . . * DUPLEXES* In a beautlfuJ setting, 2-Story Close to ocean Nl!'arly "fW 3 BR. 2 Ba Kit bit-ins, p11.tio, 3 b.ARAGES . Near Hciag Hosp, A loYely clear title condo home ftJt carefree living_ ~.500 can buy furrusbed or W!lum- lsbed. Sl!6. Prine., int., taxes, ins.. REALTORS · ---5'Stl66 .. Cl4l-LIQUIDATIDN SALE 10,.11 Evon"'9t1 WE MUST LIQUIDATE tho p .AIJI,. wm l'E last or these l'M!W duplexe1 • CAILNABAN 9552 " Ir• A¥e. the ~and 1erm1 art! no ..__,;•;.;;•;;AiiJ.ioiToiT;..c.• •• 0 ttiiilf'qt• leodt oiteria, Buildtr is open on ... ! tU-4454 price and wlllJ:S" aown the .1\'. um Baker. c.M. ~ !1 , =c=:::=::=::=::=:=:=i balance can he: financed et .. aVl\.TOll ., J ~ Nl'11Cit> COLLEGE PARK Shows on lhls one!" G~al location near shopping:. ldC!al for retired coupJ.e or )-oung family_ $44,950. ............. • 3 bedroom, English sparkll·1·., 3 BR. 2 baths ..•••••• $54,500 $39,500. C.Ome tty 11\f' on lor 12 Ba •-I unt•· -~ . "'"" or "' • • • • ~"·"""' WANTED Oceanfront small si~t· G w ·11 · · · · eorge 1 1i1mson house or duplex wanted }))< Realtor ready buyer . Macnab-Irvine Coldwell Bankef1 Heally. Company EMtaide, C.M. ......___ _ _:._~ • 641·823S '· 6_75-3210_ TAKE. OVER LOAN 673-4350 645--1564 Eves CA.LL 0 ,,,.l,14 Costa Masa 1100 Aa°dldC. 7:.EALTY Ne•r Newport Pott Orfltt Govemment IMMEDIATE POSSESSION? - _, . .... llRTH COSTA MESA r· ' 8% inlett11t lo " qualified ...,,.,_ om: UNIT HAS 3 BDRAIS, 2 BA.; Jaige livinlr nn. two flttpla~,.Din. Rm, BIN kit A WW. Fam. Rm. Tht other" unit 1, an attrac-ttVr ~ w:rm. i pt with s1 N's & fireplace. Each uni! bu separate yd&. and gar. agc1 with ulillty rrru;. Land- &eaped-incl. sprinklers. The Bargain you havei>een wait. in& tor -ACT NOW!! Loan nss. per mo. 2 ~ Sharp Buccola ranCh style 133-0700 . 644-2430 I Santa An• Heights New Tri-Plexes ~ w/~be clo9e_ts. on ~lined-street. 3 huge ii;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~ Own~r 1.1oiU sell FJIA or VA $57,SOO .Llvine rm w/!ll'l!p.l&ce, di~ bedroom. l'amily room. iii :: beoilrn1, 2 baths. 20x2(I )iv· (under ronstr-avail Aug_ :II) BEACH HOUSE.$31,000 2 Bdrm&., 1 bath; on R-2 )ot. Localed between bay & oceM. PlC!nty or parking! '= ·" ~ ~· NHr Public.· and CathoHc IChools, 4 bcdrm. family rm, 2 ba. 2 paUo5, dble gar., eecluded & private. A.uume existing GI loan at 5~ ',<-. $136 per mo coven au. $25,950 y Cey Hester Realtor • Out ol town owner pricing for immediate sale.~ ling l bedrm hetmt' with Dt8.J" new carpets. sunken living room with cov Ottptace. all bltio1, heavy 11hakto roof • mank:und yard. Won't -lalit long at $29,950! ~ Call ,.,....,. M. M. LeBorde, Rltr. 646«i5ti Eves: 548-3265 1ng room + _e•tlng area m Cheery fireplace. New paint. FHA TERMS 1ng rooin + Jge dining rm. Large, beautiful "homes with kitchen. Service porch. New A.ullme fl-iA· Joan. s 1art Bit.in.~. Llblr ~ar. near u.C.I. an income" located in the crpta: &. drps. New FA htat: school here Call 645--030.1 Eestiide Special Or 1r11d(' !or lttrge 4 BC!drm . finest Eastslde area of Costa ~.J.:. __ ~·m· ~1~!;. Onl>pr. fORESJ. l OLSON Custom buill, 3 BR, 2 BA, S251Xk:l Mesa. t'eaturlng (]) 3 BR, . .l'IU1W! .....,.....,.....,., EXTRA, EXTRA lgl' living ' . I 2 BA ,.,_,,...,...., unit'" + (2) I Lachenmyer Rea tor .,.. ........ $24 950 rm w/dining + dining iu1'a, 2 BR -ntat units. •--at ' · aJ' I Call 616-3928 or S45-3483 •'" ~ Lachenmyer Realtor Inc. Jl,ealtoni hrd1.1o·d tlrs, good qu 11 Y c-r-""""""""""""""""""'I 2035 'l\ulin AvC!., cor \Vood-IROKER5-REAL TOIS Call 646-3928 or 545-3W EASTSIDE BARGAIN plJ dbl<' gar. \Valk to ~hops. land Pl. or call Mr. }'auria '!"'~~~~ .... ~~! WANT FAST ACTION'. $;t5,950 -2025 w ........ N.I •• 4 BEDROOM 2 BATH 2 3 88f~~~~ Lachenmyer Realtor 4 Bdrm. +·Family Rm C~ new .income uni.ti ti1r • (Eves. Call: 673-8.368> COLLEGE PARK lt'• dlrty. ~ with :iOme Call 646-3928 or 56-3483 Beautilul hom'f!: in prime sale in Dana Point). l'~s=y~Qw~.,-,,_~21~38~8~,..-,-m-ar- Coll 673·1661 associated . ' -\out h. C oast DIRTY MESS pain! and elbow grease, it area. 4 king bedrooma, huee EAST SIDE BONANZA Lowly 4 br, dining rm. huae $178.00 MQ. at 69/. will look like new, and 1.1o·hat family rm.., fWI dining rm., Two stucco homes, 1 lot fan1Hy rm, builr-rn kitchen, .. - ... .. Easts;de Spec;al VACATION PROPERTY --nx It up and mak• ·--• _. ,..,___ . LIDO WATERFRONT 2 balM. 30 tt covered pa. _.... .... ,. drl.., ·-~, 1 ,_ 11 . _ .. a.,.,ce.uw11erveryanx10us. DO NORD -......,.~ • , ........ · scp uvwn Ying rm, money. Owner anxious. 'n'Y Full price $21 .COO. Don'\ APTS.-320 LI CED TO T,A,,.R,...BE1L120L· 2955 H bo Rent value S3900 oow. built·in vacuun1. elec. Now v.i ll gu VA/FHA 11.1 onl)' [ '!!!~~~~'!'!'~~~ .. 1 SZi.500. Neat 2 & rllning + ATTENTION VETS bi& detached !llttptng: room TRY No.NO DOWN on gara~ '1 32' 1.1o'ork shop, rear of lot. T<o1ost unuMlal. Owner 1'n&1 Pl1 all cosQ, !Open Evmi~t 1'brH lwae bedroom&, 2 full bath~ Paradise in trce1. .S.C6·511Ct Full price $23,500. Thi! woo't lntarcbmlthm!t) 111~· OLUGE REALTY ;JG.8000 lla),...llHal'blf,rJI f.1.000 down. Built-ins, dou-wait on thi~ one. It sold NOW REDU ar r 3 btm $175, 2 brm $150. srarage door opener. Drive L = :~~ 2~ ble gar'lge, forced air hl'at, onC't', but il'i back on lh<' $150,~Xlnt Terms e BEACH BARGAIN e Pr $32M.-OWC 70"'~ lsl by, just 1 bl ock olf Irvine hunting, fllhing. Near big: lot. See it todiiy. market, liC> H\lM"y! 6 Beautiful unlls. 6 car Ka-3 BR. home at yesterday's 63xl35', blk N, of 17th' Ave. PRINCIPLE.5 ONLY Klamath Valls Oregon. • 566-8660 MM&W ragt""s I.: uHlity room with pr[C('! Only $25,!iOO ~ terms. ncar Npt Bl\'d. Bu~. $48,000. Call 805-189-64.38 2. Incline VIilage', leve l R.-2 l 80 II. fronting on rsccllcnt StC'ps lo ocean, club & IC!n-Variance euy hert'. after 6 pm. lot,closetoakl lift,boat. I s1.1o·un1ning b<·ach. Units a.re nls . LYTE REALTY BEACH SPECIAL tnir. On eolf coune. nrwJy lum"nd1sl11-'11. R I I CAYWOOD REAL TY :-,SJ \V. 19th 0.f 548-94~3 10~:, Down, Sharp 2 BR . .l Pril.e IocaUon. ~;;;~;;;;;;~~---;1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::~~---1 Bill Gru y, ea tor 6300 W Coast Hwy, NB e OPEN DAILY 1-S e l -BR. dupll'x. 1-Blk. to 3. Lakt"" ~iathews, 2 loll, • DUPLEX 833 Dover Dr., N.ll. lil'l-.S20 e 541-1290 e' Jil sold! As.'!Um(! 6%',~ VA ocean, Xlnt Cond. Priced to view nf lake . oo smog • CUSTOM WESTCLIFF ,;,;,;-;..;;,;-;;-;;-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,: Joan. $148 Per rTIG. Redecor. sell! IRVINE TERRACE Owner anxious! s Bdrml. 3 bt.ths. Huge family JWm, 144.750 citrus area. Family living in complete On large! corr.er lot \\lilh Superlative Living FHA 5¥4'/• LOAN J Br, \V/\V rpts, drps, Jm. MORGAN REAL TY ---====---1 Jean Sm1·tl1, Realtor privacy. Deaigoed by lil"thi-room to build. l :xcell('nt "The Bluffs" Im1ncd. pos.'tCsslon. 3 cheery med. )Xlssession! Only s22 .. 673-6642 67s.64St $ tect fot minimum malnten-Eutaide location, $26.500. 1800 sq. fl. of the "'l'Cnl~I '"'". 27 000 "' bdrm!. 1% baths, bltins. """ B c , arn:e. 3600 Sq, FL 4 &Irma, Well...McCardle, Rltrs. Jiving. ?o.ta~er sizffi tx>d· hd1.1o·d floors, F'A hf'at, f/ Call: Palrick \Vood, &tf>.2300 A K BAY-3 or 4 BR hoUle 4 Bdrm. + Den ~3255 dinln; rm, lamily nn built 1810 Newport Blvd. C.l\1. rooms, J balhl, 49 x 19 ft. place. covd patio & only e Bill Haven, Realtor + lamily +"Pool, CUJtom Spi&cio\ui: hetme. J ti.tM, en· around a lush secluded pa· 548-7729 EYC!I. 644,()684 glass enclosed sundeck 1.1o·lth 125 900 "--1 1 1 7ll.1 E. Coast. Cdr>.I 67., :''"I built on cul.<fe-sac. sell er try ball,. Luce Uvtng nn.. SALESMEN tio. 3 + Garnp11. I~~~~~~~~~~! a breath laking upper bay MA'iNR~A[ry ....... , trade to Triplex or duplex. ... fJ 11 l\ ,\ Ill \1"11 111: \I I\ , , ... cozy den. buill-ins. A11n011t 21 -·· otd N--•-a··h PETE BARRffi RLJY 1-* FOURPL'EX * viC!w. Priced below f'l!Place.. E-S1":,U2EbTrl-plC!Gx, xJn't 1ioca· s1s,950, eqt. $18,950. 646-9528 do Gl t'HA S40,t:' .. ~..... ..~,,..... • D'C .. • rnent, S42-55Sl or ;:.10-l720. REAL TORS S4s.atn "' . r ea. arages, ~nc-Bkr. ·~ . " I' .. ' • , . " ' • '. l .. ' ' ' " • . ~ : ~ .. • • ' ' . r • • ' ' 00 wn or • firm h8a openiop br 2 e•· Dell.I.Xe, 2 BR. !!Reh, NC!ar ~~~~~~~~~'. l NI yds. Income $·toS nm. I "''-"'=~~~-~~~1 TARBELL 2955 Har r peMenced real estate u.les-642-5200 lho1tt1, Mesa Verde. Tarbell No matter what-It ts. you Principals only, By owner. 8ti'~~~t ~~ Be1:W ~ "'~' 1..,;:,,,,~~==~==~ DAILY PILOT \VANT AD. men. ca!l: '"!~~~~"!"!~~~'.'ICF;_:O:'.:l:_<T~l:'.N_:CO~.==-c,...;:64;.2;-5000;; DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! ,.11n gr!J it with a DAILY $18.500. 642-~1. DIME-A-LINES. &U-567! 1 · S ~ By owner. Nt 5 &. wlmSI. Dial 642.-$78 & chars;:e lt. Walter Heal• 675--3000 r'ILOT WAN1' ADS! &U-Slm Saturday -DIME-A:-LlNES! Dial 642-fl678 lot RESULT P ILOT \VANT AD! 64~ Saturrlay -DIME-A-LINES! 644-486!t 1DD0General 1000General 1000 Gen.rel IOOOGeneral 1000General 1000 General 1000 General IDOi J'(fil ! :i #I ;DJ §4#4 NOW 1$ THE TIME TO _BUY NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646-771'1 -c·o·S-TA_M_E-SA_O .. FF-IC_E ___ 545 __ ,-4-,,-.54-5-046..;...-5~H;.U.NT_l_N_G-TO_N_BE.;;A;;:CH OFRCE 2043 We1tcliff Dr. at Irvine Open Evening• t · I , 2790 HAUOl ILVD. 0,.. EYOol11gt 'tR t P.M. IMAGINATION 9UOTllNT? '\ Jl you bavr imaglneUon I.hit won't quJt, put tt to work on I.his B"alboa PentnRul11. HQ) Tt1E IEACff1 ' • "Majestic /.taoor''I 4,100 aq. fL Dn 3 lot.I, 4 car praa:c and elegant ltalinn T ih· -· courty&rd. Really UNIQU~ ll TODAY! Great location for thi.~ 3 bedroom hon1r situated an a Country-Style Lol \\'Ith • LOADS O F TREES. Farm-llkl' kltclw'n 1t.·!1 b 2M rA n£t', wuher and rl'frls.-:f'rlllor MISA VUDE MANOR 5 btdroom-. 21n baths plui> LARCE FORMAL DINING nOO!it. l mpmsaw Tll.EL> ENTJlY. A unique v..iue in .Pte1U1e MC!118 Verde tor $46.r>OO! VIEW HOMIS ~2 ooo Custom wality nn 11uli•t cuJ.de-Sllc. 543'900 Jmmaculatt Ea&t.hlufr, Lulk Hom~. m '.ooo Park-like teltlni;. Newport "mlnl..-Aew."' S1'9 000 Ocffn• of~ vlew-4rchlt~t'1 homt'. st.50.ooo Fabuloi.lf Emerald Bl)' with POOL. EASTILUFF ILEGANTI! lml'MCUlatr Lw:k VIEW holTW' wtth llUCE covered pello. Gll'am1ng PARQUF:T noon 1n the •iJ&cloul tamlly room. Jo::Verythlna: your family could de&irr A.I $43,9001 ·included. \VHY RENT? No l\1o ncy Down Cf 1 or $800.od f'tl4. CAU. ME. $22,'50 FULL PRICE ~ Quren·Sltl' n<1<l!'uom~. lari.;t ,;or11:""· dl!t'r lot \\'ith lota of l rt'~s. '':'\111111", II ha11 1 1-IUGE k.1(1·hr11. Cal'p('I~. dra1)($-NQ \VORK NEEbVI>-JUST ?ilOVE lN, c;.1. and FHA Trrtn1. Payme:ni. leu tban.n!lll CALLI NIED .~ IEDROOMS?l t ' Takf' ov1:r $18,-iOO Gr tMn wU.h 6'1* ann1111:l tllle end t.otat fll.}-ment of $16) oo . Ov.-nf'r will c~ 2nd T.O. It n~ry,JfuRt, and I mt'&n t{UOE cuJ-dC!-iqiC lot \\!'Ith lTl'e& and work 1hr!d. N~ T'ENDtR LOVING CAR&. CALL! 7682 Edinger Open Evenings Ol>l'OSIT9 "UNTINOTOM CaJOI• $19,1501 WOWI FULL PRICE! 842-4455 540-5140 For this •1 bedroom, 2 bath beauty "'Ith 1pr&ce·age kitchtn, dllhwuher, &nltle- dl"l'l' t:Arpt'ts and drapes throt.IJ;hout. Submit your down wllh total paymentl undf.!r $200. IUY LIKE llNT Yo• \\"Cluld lM' proud to O\\"n this cuatomb:ed 3 bedroom, ~ bath ranchrr t1Me lo all n1R.Jor Rhoppi.ng and fn:-..ways. Large famllr, kitchen With bulltrlM, d llh· \\'Aflht1r, tlreplatt, custom PfUlt!llng. cuttom carpe and piayh<>Ule for the! kldl . Total JJrlct" of only $26,750. \VON'T LAST! MOYE IN BEFORE SCHOOL STAUS by Al!w111ins: aubjt'ct lo 6% annual pt'n.'('ntage rate loan lhll 11pacloua 4 brdtoum, 2 hlllh party home "'ilh COVERED PATIO, B-B-Q PITI ..,ork·aaver kit.chef' for MOM, fircp1acc, rvf'rythlntt upgra~ and a 1lf:al for w than ~.000 DOWN. C411 berore lfs aone!! $20,9501 BELIEVE IT OR NOTI To\111 11rlct rnr lhl~ :\ brdroom. 2 bath l'hnrmf'r 1<'51 thnn 11 1nlle from sandy llr9chrs and I.ht" BLUE PAClf1C. S1rp·IA\'er kll.c;hen with built-Ins. flN'placr • dl'Cfln'llor cllrpcL'! nnd landscaping an-only a few of the featul't'I. Sttlne b; bcB,.lns:. $-$?:: . .-BOW IS JHI: TIMI _fO __ BUYll :?'"?..~ =: \~~~~~~~~~~~~::J - ' i • • I ' ' ' 8 • ' -• • r -• 3 L L • w--., -i., 1'711 D.ulY l'UT 49 Jjt' ~ILOT·ADVERTISU w ........ ., ....... u. 1'70 AU •IS 1'011 SALi HOUSIS l'OR Uli HOUSll l'Olt SALi lllNTAl.I lllNTALI RINTW RIHTALI I Ill •• ---· ---HeuMt l'urnfthed ..._., t.WutNthM Ill ••, Unfwn11•1• .,.... ,.,..._. ~ UflfwRll._. A,ft. Ui!hts 1 1 N-port llnch lli!O L,.-lilt 1351 La __ .. Mlt 1715 -----N •--~ -N ~ ...... -...:.:,_ • ---..... IJIO 0-al • c..t. ljloM ~t• ._.. ""'""°" -·-•=,..• OOPU:X -I b< up. 2 b< Spaclout Lido Homa * Ol'I N HOUll * --I 1111. l --Ho J...& f c1own. , "" ....... ,,... Prime , °'· .... llllil• ...... 1a btl ................ '" ea.VUE ....... -* -'" 11 ..... _ .... .._. .. , or ::»',;.:."~O..: :=; ~ =·::; '! :="'s~R. ~t~~ C""'..;81';..,"'"'..:~ ,.... c.a-.L Iii le A•1lls 1114) 133-1400 A Ii. 119.!00. """ • JU Dolly, 11. Nr ..,._. k1L 2 It 811,\Ul t 1111. ll-.-,. ...... m ' e For Soi. lly Owner • -' Primo Lido Noni ~ na: up N,... ...,.._ P<O ""· Pl" 12111 .....,._, ,.11o. h • •• •'"ei. -.., <» 111 • - SbDl't wa11t '° beach, 1 br, !i Br. ,-,, bt.. rr. new waWr-Pl. ott Cout Hwy, 1f1'9...MOO ot ew • wk Rdll 1U'd-POOlJ CALL HOW'f aalT ,.. "1 cl w. dellsntd ' he, ........ ..,,. • bltns. front -· a.out --PLACE llEAl,TY -cn11 m-4071. "'"· IAYC ,.,. ... '""'" ...... h '• Prlnclp!H ooly. 14>-1"5 Declc, pier A llDa~ For II> * llACH HOMI _,_,, ~ntl I -pool, -IA liYtoc -...,,.: ob'- 2 BR, 2 ha '°"""""" ·Good p't can: 135.r.llO. Only IOI IL !01-:b. ....... ....... 2JSf smaPAC S Ir, 'II ... DR, -0-It ......... Mmle ee-L 11'1 1 ..... pl1n. 128.000 Good B.Unmdy, RHltor PLACE REALTY -10IO so. -I; 4 Br Sil lr>I, bQp >d. F1m wle. ~ 1 !..M,_•_ mt.o<ll ~ ,, J t h terma. ()wMr 6T S-82 00 , 833 ~Dr,, N.8. '42-a ba. watertront home. iBr. NB, • l:ltaltb club. •W... nb- "'-'1188 ~ ,.,,.... 1707 1 s.. ,.... a¢. Docli tor 2 * BEACON * -11 -..,., -....., b1L BLUFFS 001.DRES l\o10DEL Huntl!"fl!On IHch 1409 Q.tl. Bill Cruncty, RJtr. Gua.n11Wed/PerionaJbld Hudl', tndDol' pU drMnl n ... 3 ~·1:'5 ~2-13~:'2>:.... 2 STORY ~!'._EN Sp&cett ».!:"'" .... ~ .• ~ tc-40J. * Moye la Today .u -"'11"""~-• ...,.., --~,.. " V't'l"V'7• -·°"" S28 500 4 bedrm 3 bath bltn .... cou ., \""11 .....w. J! mt. 2% bl, dinr nn. Yrty .,.,..._ ~ abop a.ad r--=---pro 1"r,:AB,;,,,ULO'=u.,,S,--;Ba::-yv=1e:--w-; -;;i ' ' .:_... Mta. 3 BR. 2 BA. bl~lna, nm.al, 10n: MOO tncl uW. Skl&lt 1 A 2 Bedroom JQ:x.. rarct. oven, dllbw ... ..,r. crpta. dt'Pll. tltepl. euerne 1 BR wilb tnc.d yam. A Penin.. PL m Sq 1117 ~ wHll .n a. ..,...Dr .. !·.!? ::!".;. ~1.,~~ ~'~ dAlble1 ~':!!'· ldtcPI w I 1 p rtnkler1 YRNoLpeYuOrm..~t~~ 7.._ , Yr'ON'T ~-~ ... -. 1 fL s BR. t Ba. bl:mt; part: modern~ •ftB. · ... ..n ........ ·'"" ~"·~ pat)O. ... ... ..,.m thnaout. Peattrut, quiet • .. w """' ....-, • ...,..._,.._.. ~ tin. Prtlrr 9 IDOi. ~. able FUnrlsbod aad WtfunL. N ......... u-1..&.11 1210 tile kllcllen, with deluae co. .. 1ax1n1-1U.!il0 . ._ pallol, newly patnlfd. You'll B N-· • v ·~"-Avallahle ...._ht m-e1 ·-..d ;:;.::.r.;;;.:. n.... bWta. tt~I dr1ve-n.y, k>~ It! ~1. 6'1S-m72 RAND ~" ~' . . blocl< wall landoet~ So C'-lnl -I ll<dmL "°""' w/crpU. I 1111. lam. rm. bl-1\1 Newport H.l~hfs ' -· CJ>U, ft -la Hunt,_._ ..... 2111 ..... ,.tto A co m p I be. le. liT'"" no. A len«d MODELS OPEN DAILY "I drpl, frplc, ~ t&mil)' nn. ...... _.. lt.nd9ctpq. Avall Sept ht. yd. Nice area 1275 per/mo 1t A.M •• 9 P.Jl. I L \VALK to btach \1ppe.t A t · · Bare• n ot If fUv\etl. 4 br, 1~ ba. I.am ONE Year~· CO'ZY 2 BR. :5 n~i:er mo. re II • Leue. 5C:6-oWl .. 50xm Lnti, make oUer, nu, &d cond. S 3 1, 5 0 0 , bltm, tt:fli&:., freeze r, <u. t BR. 2 be townti., 19e or lllNTS 'ROM may accept much tea than tU-4471 ( :J 146-11 $.a:m wuhtr. dryer. dble pr, 3 SUS 3 Br, 1% ba. 1tv, cpts. tie option.. $250 or Slt3 mo.. $1st,. $151 listed price of $16.500. CASH -blcb to ocean. S20l'.I mo. incl mp., ~ or ana:ta. CM. Cwntr. C'7S-D)O, ~ TALKS! PRICE REDUCED I Dan• Point 1740 pnlenu. Tn>d<wlnds Rlty * IEACON * 66-tlll BAL. llland, &yae.t Lido Jean Smith, Realtor , s1ory.~1 =~~ tam•l.Y --;;;; no"q-lil.'",... -:'-:S~R 0up1.,. • Frplc. *7ac:1i~.:"-..ti~ lii:. .. ~ '46-325I mt., elec kitchen approx 3 Bedrm. 2 b&lh. WO 1q. It. prage, stn. back nrd ft ,,-OVER.LOOlmi'G Upper Bade 2000 111 ft. ClOle tO echooll, 10me oceao vie\\', nr new patio. SlGO mo. Call s.16.n46 Condo Crp NIWl'ORT BEACH 880 Irvine Ave. Irvine & 16th 1n41 MS.OSS1 shopp'g, rnA/VA term.1. Yacht Harbor. Small Iota. -.•. ·---tots ft pets. Nest 2 BR with Bay, l BR ' ti, Un1v1r1Jty P•rk 1237 S.7-8507 714: 431-3769 See at 34001 Aurelk> Dr. L•1vn'a Beach 1705 bll-inl. SltO HURRY! drpa. frpk:. mo. &&+.1247 SOUTH BAY CLUB m BUILDER 612-l!IOii H-"""'" '4S.2'SI Unlwrtlty P•rtc m7 iff;~' a110 iww triplex $66,000 2 BR, trplc, sunroom &: $1%> 2 br/4-paex, crpts, drps. ----. IBlllTllnltt TRULY A BARGAIN Owner has drastic.ally m:iuc- ed the price ... \Vant.s Im. media~ offer on this 4 bd- rm. 2~ bath townhou11e. Xlnt greenbelt., Joe:. Will sen with small down paymt Full price-$30,IXXI. • Rad Hill RH l!y Univ. Park Center, Irvine Cali Anytime &l3.(l82.0 • 14!:!00.,•• RENTALS patio. Oo qulot SI. No pell. stv. Srcb Dir. C!I! l BR Tnbou ... Eutblutt l'f"l IU"llllllllUU.J , • , • '••...-u n _Hous11 P:urnlshM Avail Sept.June. :xi5 Lorn· *BEACON* MS-t111 ! Bdnnl, 1-bath $280 bardi Ln. tst-522S. S175Jmo Guaranteed/PenonalUtd S Br. 2 Baths $325 Live wheN the fun it I TRANSFERRED! G1ner•I 2001 Wlf, $190/mQ tum. l BR. 2%1 Bathi ~ Must .. u in • h""Y -'"" 2 --, 3 BR ,,.,..,, vµ, 1 % bt .. to * SPREAD OUT s BR. 2 i., tam. rm im KUT n~• story, 3 &drm I: Wnlly. ~ BOI. 1 Br ud beach. $250 mo. 1 BR Sli.i 5 BR., 2 ~ ba. $340 AUii lUIUWIUllt Immaculate in ol out. ntA pd, C'hikl/peta ok. Szwls. NB roo. 4M-7780 or nJ/2""'386. ~ 3 BR 11"'1: corner e RED HILL R&u:n• or GI terms. Only $33,950. * BEACON * MMl 11 . _ ~ yard. ChUdttn A Univ Parle Center Irvine Call 847-8531 GuaranteedlPttlonalittd V•c•tion Rent•lt 2tOI pets ok. HURRY! $1!5. eall ~ 133.os2o- -Fln4or1 '4S-2fll 1;:;-,,.::;;.;;;;:'::::.:::.:::-:::-I REAL ESfATf MART R ... 1.1 ... Sh... ~ d W--'-DU<. 3 BR ......... ~. '""· 1-----------BAL Bo A Pen.insUla-«iux * No Yar vra yd. Uae of s pools. telll'lil, • DIRttT TO TENANT 24-Hr. Ddlw-ry 100~ P\Zrcbue OpUon Coatp)ete l BR Apt u Low a1122/mo. REDUCED PRICE WANI'ED -3rd party to duplex, 2 hr ea. Sl..50 ~11: puiu tot lot!, eolf etc Charming 2 bdrm, & den, 2 s~ 3 hr hae, Hunl summer, $115 mo winter. Gardener Included. ! BR. Avail.' Sept. 15. $125. JO.Day Mtotmum bath, separate home. Rr· ~ ~ Harbour area. All h&e priv m Cp>ftss or %13"98-8)12 ChiJcltt:n ok. VA.C ANT! m.-0.171. *WIDE VARIErY duce<! Sl..500 to S.11,950. New •UN0eR~$24;""000T incl. $75 mo. ,vru nrrotiate. CAIJ.. NO\V! $130. FOR Rtntals in Univel"lity CUSTOM ,Ult.NITURE Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach lt'• r ... Inc aeiPbon and pmtJae ti-ring. 1.n in oa.w..homrlou pacbp.. '11aat'a Oak·.· \\'OOd Cardla .Apirtmenta ia Newport Beoch. ju1f10iA11wJrom BalbN'• Bayed beaches. There'• a•/, million dollar Ctubbcnue '~th. party rooJ11;billla:rds room, indoor golf dru; ... Jng rante,·men·s a.ad "·0~·1 heallh ~ubs. saunas, tennis courts, n11deat tennis pro and·~'1hop, and Olym,plc 1i1e .pooL.All this. aDd much mo~. jmt stq.a Jrom. you,r professionally decorated. 1partmenl. 8•ca . \\·ith .privatl balcony/patios. Air conditim:.- ingifireplaces optiOD•l. Oakwood Gsnlew Aport•••I• 011 t&tll SltHt lietwwa 1rTfft ud»o.er Ur. (T14J 14%-117" 1,.u... a"""9, s a s~ .um. r-.nWM4 M' aa,...-...·ttU t.tnL , • ..,,,. .. ~-er loan avail. & can be pur-10% Do\\-n on 2 SHARP 3 Need pty lmmed. Homt SumnMtr R•nt1a. 2910 H.,,,.,lnders ~2'51 Part le Turtle Rock. can: . RENTAL • chased on xlnt tenru. Don't hf!drn\ homea with bltins, &-16-0573. work 74~7989. a.Pc I 1 ··-k IOI PETTIT, Ruiter 517 \\·.19th S1., CM, 541-lW l--==============::::'i mills Sffin( this o~ -it's lrplc's, one with pool and for Brian French. Anyoftre LAGUNA IEACH * leCJ nnen MK "SINCE 1946" REAL VALUE! lnloolocationnoarallmop. wolcomo. CONOOMINIUM Days m.<1101 NllbU PALM MESA APTS. _.....,. loodl -Hunt; ............. - BOB PETTIT, Realto r p'g. CONGENIAL Working drt. l..Dvely mue Lqoon Villa 2 NEAT! 1-BR home. }'encedf,;;;,_;:;====== "SlNCE l946" P•cific Shores R1•lty 20--25 to 1bare Newport BR. 2 BA completely fW.n. yard. READY TO l\IOVE (ONM •et M.r 2251 1 BR ruRN. $.14'.50 I h 536-8894 Eves: 536-9866 Shore! house, $225 mo-split JN1 $130 -----Bachelorl 1'\1mlahed D•Y• llU101 NI ts ·-~-~-~-;;~-~-;;-~~-~-~-;;~-~-~-~liU~iil~pd~.~....-~~~· ;;;;;;-;;; ished, ~~· •"""'uA·· et;; ...;..P:inders 645-2951. ,..IAGNIFICENT NEW --fl't;.. THE HllllWID .; Walher/u.o.,..,r. n UI... OCEAN/B AY VIEW uvu•- Turfll Rock 1239 Huntington 1.= inw~~ ~~~ . Sept. 5. Alao anll for win-. $115 w/pool-LRG :Z Br tep HOME! 4 Br, 3 b a , mo.Imo. OK H•rbour· 1401 patio, 4 blkA to beach. So. ter rental, .f99.2152 AM or tme, pr, pat\O, child ok. Wn/rm. Avail Oct. ht. • POOL "Scottish Treat'' 16161 P•rlctW. Ln. 1rSTY. 4 Br. 3 BA. Fam. nn. Assume 6% ~ loan. 10<!'- Dn. 18805 Tabor. 8l3-2929 837~lil anytime. CM $673111'1111 Call 6"-UH aft e SAUNA t.aeuna. $125 mo. 499-4307 e BALBOA PENINSULA: * BEACON * MJ...111 1 6 pm. . e JACUZZI Mgr. 142-1"' RED EC l.: Lnd1kcpl d \Vorkinr &'irl to Rh8h lovelY 4&' Bayfroot pier-1.loe.t. S bt Guaranteed/hrsonallttd . VERY nice. redec. 3 Bdrm, 00.Mna Dr. 0.-ta Mesa Waterfront 3 BR l doc or apt pvt bath SUO mo La· bt.. Love"•' E ,_ !A6- B•ck a.y 1240 sa.1~. lse, or lse option ..... .: .. n-ach.· M .... ro:..· a l< 4 ~· * S.P·A.C· 2 bath. ~. frlMc."====== ·--i.>o:: .......... _, Avai1Sept.b!Al90availlor Ath.lltl, no pets. Re f 1 .1t PRICE REDUCED 6 ....,., 1 548-<n<, 4!H'5>11 alt 5· wlnttt ,."i:;.,, """ 1.-1oL patio • 61'-1191 "'flronl $11.50 Wk. San Die-co F'ney to Beach Blvd, 4 blks So. to Holt. W. on Holt 1 blk.. 3 BR 2 BA + 3 room d~ Fount•in V•ll•y 1410 ts.28, 3 ltOry beach home, 4 BBQ. S BR. Pttl A children * 3 BR. den. 2 BA * From $165/mo Luxury Sia. la~ 1tudio . .$45.950. A.gt. Bdr, 4 bath, 4 frpl.c Call e BALBOA 1 ~ 2 Br, ok. $19.l.. N"'' .... OCEAN $400 mo -. \ 54~14. ---------1 6Ta-81i89 alt 9 pm. ~wkly tor Sept. Al9o .._,.lllndert MJ..2951 ~Call~ * · ~e Aptl, Complete maid :I' Eutbluff 12'2 e !AST BLUFF LUSK PLAN-D: 4 br, 3 ba. Pl.US den w/view-lg. heal· ed pool crpt.s/drps. 835-0801 "* * !\In. Norton BU1FFS: Condo 2 Br, 2% b1, den. Split level, choicest greenbelt. $38,500. By Owner 644-4906 Owne~ Trans~1rr~I ' BALBOA, l\1 or r. 21-30 to S150 mo. winttt rate . $1.SG-NEWL Y Dec 2 Br dpb, LGE 1' BR. trpk, bltm, nn :~· ~· linem, U QUINT& H(IUllf l Very anxlOUS! Priced ~t,. •hare house. ST3 mo. 1rn-813--6880. ,_, h. ..._ tot ck CM .. ..-... Best $200 I N II -POOL -heated I; tillered. mediately! Bob 675-697i. BALBOA 111. Attr. 1 Br apt. •tv1n.i, c ....... . cptl • ... _ . area. VILLAG IN uModt m Spanish" Lovely 4 bedrm, many ex-alps 4. Aue tbru Labor 0.1. 1t.~!~~~ID..!...:ttu'c:' mo. 673-690(. l...apna Beac~ .. INN~ 1'211 P•rksW. Ln. tras, Large yard! C I .. _._ 1100 "'inter-'70 ~·. 673-1503 U\lanun~ .. ..-g_. l BALI_.. &&... 147...5441 HAFFDAL REAL TY os • _,. "-••IJy l'I .. ~ Livilll' Ball>~• • 3300 Balboa ll7'.>3T40 .... r. •••5 RENTALS _, 11111• .... FURNISHED MOOELS NOW OPEN •42~ ~ r!~R. .. ~~ ~a: Hou••• Unfurnlsh_ ad___ OCEANFJtONT;ldl Bu' •Adoiln HOLIDAY PLAZA Lush landscaping, cabana. covered court· 4 BR & tam. rm, 2 ha. new , ....... """: ~ · .,........ s BR. Family roon1. 3 lkU., LC/yd. $300 Inc u · va DELUXE Spacioua 1 Bdrm. yards, sunken swim'C pools. BBQ's &: fo~ crpts, Xlnt mnd. $3800 down Adults. S~-543--2!34 • GeMr1I lo. all b\1111, newly deoonted. Sept. 15. 644-'627 rum apt $135. Plua util. tabls. to . assume !11A Joan. Full twwpert a..c:h 2200 POOL + ALL rec . Heated pool. Ample park· ''THE ULTIMATE IN APTS .. ptice $27,650. By owner. fl.cWtleS! $300. Huntf,...,. a.Kh '400 q,. No cblldttn -no pets. 2 BR' Fro $175 17821 A"' St. 96M038. • "BAYSHORES • c.~, "'L--L Homo-l'lncltrs Ms.2'51 2 •• • ha -··-I mt 1961i ......... C.M. I BR's-From ,150 s-m tal ....,.. ..,_,. ~ ·~~ All utll. Incl. Furn & Unfvrn. Corono dol Mor 1250 Tustin 1'40 Wlnto< n:n • N•wl.Y =: SWttt Ti'oat 2 Bd $85 Bkr * Iring The Kids "°"' be&ch. Cpl" """· C -'1111.::===:=::=::=:0'--T:===::=:;="'=:=;:::;I now w/w '.""· & • CALL EVELYN 95~2200 fii>lc, bit"'· 2\ku pr, S Mf• a Now__. lo-" -L_. ...... '115 new rtfrl&., turn. rec.o~ swim pools jacuz:rl u una r""" ' BROADMOOR BEAUTY l\tkl-\Vest owner Instructed us to sell u !OOn as possi- ble! 4 BR. 3 B1. v!e1v home: comp. cptd., drpd., all bit· Ins. Profess. Ind&c.pd_ 6% % AMumable loan. Reduced to i&;.500 _.._ ColmtN.MNmNjl a==:::llMHI 'J -E•st MHts West Atlantic c.olonlaJ 1 blk. from Pacific. 2 Sty. cl11sk on 2 full Iola. 4 BR., 1unroom, dlnlni::. New kitc.h. ol heat· ing. $79.500. Terms avail H•I Plnchln & Assoc. 3900 E. Coast Hwy. 675-4392 * OPEN OAIL Y 1·5 * 609 Poln11ttt_. 3 Bdrn1. 2 Bath home ~·ith 2 BR., den, 2 ba. apt, Cpts., drpt, Ir bit-In~ in both unita. Good loc. -aood income. Scenic Properties 675-5726 •CHARMING re mod 'Id hol1'e rna-1. R·2 101, 3 blki to heh 2 BR & den, 1" BA, crptd, 'drpd, blt·in1 &: fire pl. Owner carries pa.pen. 71 • .si% Int., no principals, 675-7632. t GOOD Income unit.I on 2 adjoin. valuable I o I I • Always rented. 0 ''"' n e r &r:>-.5787 BY OWNER: 3 BR, "tam nn ed. O\armln1 3 Br, : Ba. 2·BR. Patio, carpets, dn.~~ tenlilil oou.1. Call At~IFri * SUNNY * w/fii>k. """ .,.,.,_ ''' ro a,.., patio. Only ""° Haunted House • POOLJ CALL TODA · ._.. bH3IO: Mt 5,30 ·• * ACRES * t BR ..... """" 10 bay • U35, owner will can")' bal 11.tonth. Dirty Bird 4 Sd Sl55•Bkr Sl«I. wknds ~ ask for beach. Fum/Unfum. Aleo, ~·1 reas dn. 646-5093. no "C" Thomas, Realtor CALL EVELYN 916-2200 H..,,.P:inllllr1 64.S-2'51 Chuck. * Mot.a.Apts. * bach. apt. 1216 \V. Balboa agents. 224 W. Cal Hwy, NB 548-5527 $225 4 Br. J b&. patio, fncd WALK To bch l all 1eW.. Studlt & l .. ....,.,.., . Blvd., N.B. Eves. 6T,,..787i or ----1705 WATERFRONT Nifty Nugget !orlddlA-SA e..u1. ........ <Ir,> ha, LOW RATES i,;' ... ,.,;;,:r.oo;;i;:;. ""'"°"=":;; Lagu .. llMch PIER & ~LOAT A""' pad 111 Bd ITO Bkr *BEACON* 66-tlll tonnd dlniiw nn. !• toed o.y, Wffk or >1onih e WINTER RENTAl.S • ---------13 Bedrm .. 2 bath. formal din.. CALL EVELYN 95 .. 2200 Cuaranteed/PenOnallzed yard wlpatto. $350 mo. e Color TV Air Oond. Rent NOW tor Sept.! HANDYMAN m, nn, liftploce, w/w -. ,.._,,.. e PDOI • Phone 8'n Incl ABBEY REALTY &1>= SPECIAL """· ""' lumlshod com-Ml-'--•ieo 3 BR. 1onn dio nn,3 ha, ml e Maid Sorvlce avoil OCE A N FR 0 NT lm>'tt plete. Dble pr. Lease M1y, nlu••• Cetf• Me.I • 1q ft. M-heh. l!e $325 1 SJinat So. ol O.C. duplex. 2 BR. 1% ba, flillc That's the-best description of $500 per mo. Realtor Cutle 2 sly rnoW-like $1711 w/grdnr. Bkr 847-8531 e\~s FaJJ'll'(lUnlls t'-A5 mo. AvaO 9/10 to 6110 thl t sprawling contemporary 642't35.1. CALL EYEL YN 9 56-2200 RENT or be w/opt. 3 BR. 96:l-363:>. 2376 Newport Bl\'d, 646--2&'30 11JRN. 1 Bdrm. (kean View. Empklyed aduit wf reta.. No chlldttn or pets. 4!»-7079 '740 ------·1 NEW Studio 2 bedroom, I 1~ bath. Av&ilab&e Sept 1, $225. monthly. 496-6243. RENTALS -~·Unfvmllhwd 0-ral 5000 home . Dble. door entry ~·/6 * BAYSHORES * dl1p., cptl, ca.rporl. rttr >:d· AVAIL. Sept. 1-2 br, 2tii 548-9755 2 BR tJPPE&.walk to bch. ft. TERRAZO TYPE EN-WINTER RENTALS Please fncd. W. 19th. Shops ~a. VWa Pacific. $23.5, Child ok. I NASSAU PALll.1S . I I: 2 $l'iG incl util. Yriy avail 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 TRY HALL, SUNKEN LJV. 3 &. 4 BR.-Fuml.shed Rent tne! Laurhini Irids \Vant emp. adlta only. efs. Pool, tennis, aauna, Jacunl, BR Apts. Furn .':. Unf. Pool, 911 71"1>11)G. 213~ VENDOME RM. Wll.DADS OF GLASS, Priced from $250 l Bel. Sl4CI $175. ShoWl'l appt only. 6'2--3731 pln?.-pona. BBQ, s hady "7-8143 UNIQUE l\IODERNISTIC Also one Bayfront CALL EVELYN 916 2200 LyUe R!ly 5&1 W l9th --!.awns. 171 E. '7.lr.d st. IL;iUXURli;;i~o"u"s""e.;:ac:::;:h-cfrn;::;i.-,2 F1REPLACE, from fioor to "C" Thomu Realtor • 34&-M93 24 hr phone L19una le•ch 3705 642-36C5 Br. Avail. 9112/10 ceiling. Elevated dlningv ""or' 2'14 \V Cst. ltwy' NB ~'l2? Shi Aho l\IONTICELLO 2 BR, 2 BA 2 ------P:urn. 1 BR • 61~171. SZ'JS mo. ,64&-9760 wlih a SCENIC VIE\ . . pl y cu ru, .,..u. d r p 1, 2 BR. trplc, •unroom & BACH I LOR TIIE OCEAN le CATALINA BEAUT. 2 br, 2 ba, frplc, View u.!ly air $150 S Bd m a'"l n ten an c e A pool. patio. On quiet at. No petl. Na I "I d CM FURN. l I 2 BR. A.pis. ISLAND. Spacious 4 BDRM, fncd patio, clubh!!e, pvt heh, CALL EVELYN 956-2200 SJM/mo. Call 333--0283 aft 6 Avail Sept.June. 565 Lorn· 2111 wpw ., y , Ask for • Anita & FAM. RM. FLOOR plan, htd pool, &'I.la.rd patrol.led. pm. bard! Ln. ~. 1tra/mo LARGE 2 Br. Furn. Avail Jones Realty 673-6210 has \V/W CARPETING' Adult.I , no pet.1. $250 lae Fish Hook •2 BDRM HOUSE : unr .• $190/mo turn. Sept 17, $156/mo. Pool.1846 DRAPES TitRUOUT. Mstr. Sept.July. 6'f3..M19 crpta/drpe. 1 Child.I NO 2 BR. den, $250 leue. Placentia Avt, CM. l•lkl ltl•rMf U.IMAC'ULATE APTS! ADULT and FAMILY Section CloM to shopping, P•rk * Spacious 3 BR's, 2 b. * Swim PCl(ll, pul/IJ'ffn * Frpl. l1xdv/lndry fac'I• 1145 An•holm Avo. bdrm. has p RIV A TE -~ --2250 Bite it Quick :Z Bd SSS Bia Pett! ChUdttn OK. Newly ffdtc.. Manaa:er Apt H. DRESSING R>l. k DATii Coron• dol Mar CALL EVELYN 95•·2200 :11111 Wdluo, c.M. 161 Ollqulta. -1057 o.m. 1 BR. 1 BA with cuport. NEARLY NEW: 3 b<, % ha. I "'*~'!l"'ea""'c:~h"'l'lo"""y"'-""'11 "-i lh marble type pUl.lmana WILL you Jse YoW' home 2 BR Houte-$13S F.utlide. Sl.50 mo. Col.lep all eltt/lritchen, Ir PI c . ..... • & ultra modern kitchen has to 1 retired adult! (pref ~ 1 BR private cottap Prl~I• Yard LafUM NllUl'I '707 .iudents. Apnt 546-4141 petlo, BBQ. Aho 4 br, 3 COSTA !dESA "'2.211'4 bill-in RANGE A OVEN, opt to buyl. Gd 1oc: to o. $110 with everything &4)..596( Br New beaut. turn. ha. Ltue Sept-June. DISHWSHR.., CL AZ ED $4011/mo. nt!e<i Sept. occp. 2 Bedrm!, fnced for tots $120. SOU11I Lquna, Prlv. att1 loto-M:o. AdUlll onb'. zm 53$.-MTO or M9--8Sll. CERAMlC COUNTER ?tfn. Gertner 673-4621 CM 2 bednns •.••.••••• $160 Jl§-.2 BR unfl:lrn hie, no leue 2 br, 2 bt.. dtn, din .,Eklen. 6t&-l:27t tw1. :;l"'s""BR;;-:,.::,:-..,;::;"';:":;U<;;Ul;;-.;lo;::;cl. TOPS. SUdln& 1lass windows 1.ARGE S Bdrm. 3 B view l BR everything tota/pet.sj pr. Older cou;p~ pert. 224 nn, fam ~· w/OCfffl view, BR· N ti Ltue l225Jmo. Nr. South for""'** thru ~to pl.· I pool ( a.•·-) ·················• $170 E. 16th St., MM!M. $.150 mo. 49.')-.41&4 ~. ADULT 1 , ~' crp ' -a.u, Newly dee. Cal I .-home P UI or unaurn-Old 2 4 BR kt OK 1175 bJtinl. SJ.35/mo .....,.. evtl -v tio bar \VITH VIEW OF JO Mos, Jeue. $400 Mo. stry dli • EASl'SlDE -S Br, 2 Ba, al-q LOVELY S br., 2 ba., homr• ~ Pasadena (2131 "198-4003 THE OCEAN. This truly W leyN TeyktrCe. STAR*lET crpt1.nrlCblLl.Mpj0mo. partJy turnbhrd availabJe.1~~-·-=-;;-;;..-:=;;: ----- dramatic home is VACANT. R~~RS' 6"-4;910 (1) n'-7"1 M&-lU9 Sept, 1. 4!t.S-526. $150-wry nice 2 BR mobUe Huntl"'"" llHc:h 4400 SHARP! 2 BR, blt·ln stow, diahwuher, OIUdnin wd· come, HURRY! $160, H-l'lncltrs Ms.2'51 NEW 14-3 BR''-All bltN, CJ>t/drp, pr. Nr. S. Cl>ut Pl.aa. 5«>-lm. ~ Belongs to our OF STATE ---· -. hOme. $100 -1 BR. trlr. ,;;;;~;::;;;~~~~~ c .... Meta 5100 OWNER ft hM been rented Gener•I 2CIOO Oener•I 200I General 1tlO Dtn1 P•lnt 3741 A4ullll filly no pets. 132 ------- L •• p I I 1300 ,.,. .... ...r ,.. ..... NEEDS w. w--. CM_,, ON BEACH' ---B•I-en ns_u_a__ PAINTING A YARD \VORJ<. 2 BR home, ocean vfew. S115 e t BR. furn w/ulllltlel. • $170, 2 BR. bu.th A 'ii •ludil>t OWNER Oespmt!r owner &ayB sell it S@~}A.-~t.trs• mo. on Yfll" be'r!:t' ta.'I S1Z mo + $25 cleantn1 fee. • 2 "R. Fiim. From l285 ;::;• c~l!X>-o~val~ 19~1; TRANSFERRED "AS tS" nrardleu ot Ion req'd. Bltnl, k yardl S40-"623 5.92-6221 * Penin&ulA Point* lot ' Avall lmmed. 541 -21511 ' Cupetl-draptl-dlahWQher · ,,. ft 34096 El O:lntento * WKLY-Lovely apt. Bacll .belted J)OOl~Wnnl1 ~*-;D"ELUXE"°"=,....,1-;6-;;2-;B;;;RI '!::.;'.~;':· ,:''~:i~ c'i:: $U,~~,!elftL~o':l'~CE T/ie 'ml• willi f • lailf./n C KAie RINTALS ': .':'·~;1Kttch. 135 wk ,..; ......._. .iews 0.,... ApU. 811•1.., priv. boat nunp, ba.Y Ir ocean. DOWN PAYMENT ~r::mJ:n _:! :: 2~~ furnished Pum t Br duplex S98 mo. "=:-:-~la. mi':o.1:1.SisT>lc. $45.950. MISSION REAL TY 1"" to,_, leer --0-rol 4010 UHi pd., \ c:ar .. ,. FURN. ii1>o Avoll. I 1JlC 2 • 3 BR. 2 Datha. 0<-. •• , 985 So. C-t Hwy., Laru"' I I 220 Slel'kl, CM 54M34T HUNTIN ... TON _,,, bit-·--. -. -• BR., ...... d'" -..... -P'-a (1141 'M-0731 A l 0 ¥ " A llEMAIU<AIILY LG 1 BR. ....... "''" .. ;.;.;; .... .;&. ~034'"' "' COOL ,, GREIN 1 • 1 • I -, I UNBEW:VABLY paid, 2130. quiet ........ PACIRC N~~ i:·.Ho~;:,;.,::· eX Superbly landlclped 3 bed-• • • • -• • IXTRAORDINAlllLV ll'ff, $41--1517. m OCEAN AVE., H.B. Sr.!~ l•Bri cp:t. ~ ':'4 I I I • Ft•nk Jofarahall Rf!a.11)' room. J bath home with T A F•H l V ,::_~ .&-. S.""1J. Studio apt, quiflt, (tt4) 536-14ST Olllen Ave. No. 2. ~ 510 w, Balboa Blvd. m.f600 family room Ir fireplace. I I i al D I ......... 7:_ 1t.lblil pe.non only. SJOO locl ()fa, open JD un-C pm neu, 3 BR, 2 Ba. -.. ......... ,.....,. ~ Lu&h '"""'""' ~ -• Pii!tJiii -,,. __ • utJl. 8*'1119 alt 4. >!-by u-~ ~-~ .!:~ V=~t.~Fr!: = ~trdw~~ . ( 11 I I i ==--nt!."'=N••l*f ~··· WJWAMWALTERSCO. ~=-~~:iu.. Xlnt Marshall Realty 61~ Jot pmnha wtde i.wn. I: 11 BBQ's. Sauna., b'n.~ • 8LK to bch! Q tt It t • KJNG Sia deluxe New-2 Lido -.~--00 obundant ........ Shadod I P E It 1 G f 1 A I Br. oJID --1 A 1 BR Jum • unlllni. ..i-Jllfl ,,.. 1 Br 11>0. Pn Br. lli Balhl. All ...... 1 ~ patto "" ,,.._ .... ,,..._ I ' I I I • Did """ •-'-""°"' SIS!. Seo tt1 ~ ~ Crr>ll. ..., patto poot, bl• ,.tto, ..,. SnsJ adlto, CJ>I. m. 646-111•, m..11'4 LARGE HOME .... $.15.r.llO •••••• lho ....... mwboy ..... _ Rd...-·i'm ""SJO) .~ iuO. Seocllll ... llih !3'-Utl, DLXIBr,..,. ... drps,bl ... 5..!:~ ::."i' 4';"1t ·.::;• ~O 1,,_ I Go D •A It l"'1Mlld fordrvnbft ·11J ""'*•;::..; Ho.;.. =t!! ~:":"~ ~=-...., -· ~ =~':.':"'.-B .. 1pp·1 only. ' ../TOl-W-rc-1-:--r--r-i-:-r-TT-1 • ~ iho -...... .....,,. bod. Gu/wtr pd. SSS + 115 2 BEDRM l!l be, crpU, d"'° ' 197.000 REAL ESTATE 1 I I I• I I' -· l'.,'/!'T.!:. tt..,.,;.:_""'I,:. Com"'"" furn~H<d 1 Bit. e OCEAN"ViEW • w..., dop. 9lJ Pllm SL. HD. bltlro. $160 mo. 54>-IDI Ml< ~r ni~ tradf! down lot S - --,.. ,.,.... pado, lawn eh a I t a, etc. lee • 2 br, $225 ma; or ~ br !136-471 lc:t" Mt. Wint ra. Bdrm. home In Te1nca, 1190 Glennt1f'e St. • ~ nn:NM8EiECC tmW p r r r r r r I CALL NOW! S12J, + tam. ""· SZP. mo. l'ami-FURN Bachtlor, ~I u r. 2 BR, frpk. pvt pa.tlo, do.td Cd1of with ncean view. f94.MT3 MMJSJ.6 _ """' "'6aUI ~ ~ _ _ _ _ _ _ • ....,,..,lndert 64J.2tll \)' w/n chlldrln o II , atnslf S15 Incl uW.. H.8. ..-.ce1 S2T "8" Cdrilkt. LIOo REALTY IN C. e SECLUDEDHou,..Out. fO I l l l I f l l r. ,..._..i_tn the dslllltl<d, 6IUl38 I Rlty,~•w• l;;-54=H69•1=::::-'""'=-:- 33T Vla Lk.lo 6T3-i300 floor-11tdoor 1lvl111. ·~Lfm1S SD:TJONf Someone litBR,%bllctobtt.eh.AvaU. SINGLE. CIO!llt In, modem, 2 BR Duplex. New4' doc. You llntl J11tll-bart1til'llt Sun1oom, tcrnced prdel'll, ---~ • watchlnc g lt, otal for wb44 l/1""6115. $1'1 clet.n. Jtetp. mature Ptf'IOIJ. BllN:. Child <*. tlSO/mo. whon,... •00•,,,. OaDy ,.,.,. •. 1 BR. 111•500 · SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICA110N tOOO -IOdQ>I mo.~ Peen1\$90.Roll.!9H1JS 368E.l6ttlPl54Ml<ll. Pilot ddollled Idol 4*1129. • • ! -I ~"'iiiR[Yrl'll.::.:.Of'-~~'fll!'iflrlt~l .... ;::.;.:c .... :::.:.·-M~·-"~l,':·1791Vi<' 11111! 1 ... -... ,.....,_ ,,, HTAlS _ii _____________ , RIAL ESTATE 'A * * * * * O-ral --·----------SI• h>f Blulf __ _;,;na;_.; -~ Beodl 54C1t • Loft "" BUSINESS •nd FINANC:llll WtdMidl)', Augurt 19, 1970 A NC: s and NOTICES loot 6401 ---------~~ll~lo..~U~of~w~Ntl~h~ ... ~~r-Apts.~-Unhlm--1~-Apia. Unfuml,,.... • * • MEW DELUXE e l BR. ~. n,tc NN.r SEALPOINT SIM.nitse aJ. IEI ·!.--.. u.~-.. ~ l BA, 2 BA Apt f• kaJlc. OOC.ll. "*U.. Achlts. SELLER'S l.oaa-Have 2 Open.tor Shop °'" teml ~le. Sh yni:, nanie lualne1a Ot>Portunlfl• ...--~ ,_ ....--Ind apac. mutt-r .ite, din UNOaOltG CO. •15i79 $42,000 Ill R.-1 fM view lot, equlpmeitl CaJl ~ "Sam" Vlc: 29.lll ~laul Pl .. · • ~ N a "atlt Pr&C't. ali10 ·-:V"NEW AP Do\'m' SMlu atM. 75' ~ ~Dt Mon. a.. \\ied. bel,m C.&I. REWARD! S57·1990 1-1 111'1 ... n .&-. -a•-" -• R--~ 'Tii -localed OC1 l;M~ 4P&t. ---'1-,';§""';;,:;.:;;.:;;:,,,;::::;,:;::;,~ p IP bid..~ U.. ·-.-.,.. ~-Near Ocfttl A ~ l a nrar orr.c:tewlr.ta Ln..-t.ot LOST: 911' ALUM. OINK Allohm. A:d • -• ~u -• 8r, OS lac. St. M7&1 "' U tr 3801, N.8. M::y ~ .'*fl' \\'JG $HOP, Call \\'rd. W/arn. I .oi A o a tll . '~ -' BR ta•-I .__ • offer conslden!d. ff. C. thru Sun, $-5, 811 tm, REWARD! 673-2870 .... Qr1itt ~ £i Amlcos ~'l)t. l\11 , QPll MA, &f1'C uvul li'S..'7":¥:') Oii'~ ~No pets. ~by yard, .mo util paid, _ ~. Eridmln, 5t7~19 · ==" f'LUFFY FC!m Tebby kltttn, --)llQile Aft. \\UUAM WALTERS 00. Ctrildttn, pets t:ilc.. $36-2821 :.• ' , 3 ARC:I Bay, abcM tnedical 8u1Jne11 W•nted 6305 ::n~~~ C~S~i''J.: : c.a. ..._ PRIVATE ,VIEW 1 Br. Nrw ahq" crpc.. B!tna I --,.,_ -hldc. unobstructed v~'loe. rdrig tm mo. lncl. Util's. • $16,lJO. &17-1Dll. JANITORIAL Sforvi~ or Ac-FLUFFY fem Tabby kltlen, Y M£.tJ>OW APTS Z Bdnns,. 2 batb&; ~iro. Tradrwindl ~ally 84T-8Stl WM.Mr•· W.mt WhiMldy• GM? • c:wnts or Rua: cteanlrc rlea collar. 8/3. v i c : -_...,, 1 BR. l140. -""""· a-. 1 8R. unrum. <>!>.._ SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR • Ranchff 6151 ""'"· <<>mn>'I oa1y '9Ul522 Bttntwood St, CM 5C8-4719 t BJ't, ._ 8-m oritiap.. ~: Maud\ Min. °'lJ&. stcM\, ntric. NAT\JRAL BORN SWAPPERS ----: st1'ndard black trm poodles, WGdd 11P'1c. llhlc Cf'P11, )'Ml' AdUlta. n?JO.. -sJ&-9511 Speci•I R•te l 1/3 Acr. horw property Moftw te LNn 6320 vk. Lquna Niauel. "99-2313 :::· ....... ~ ~ ~~ &~ o • 3 BR. 2 ba. crpts, drpf.. S Lines -S time1 -S bucks ...all lf'\'f:I A 1.11able. Spa.ciout -or f95..5573. ·-~~ ·--.. _... • 131 ...... sundtck. 1 blk lk>........ aui..s -40 Mii.iT lftCLUD• 3 br, 2 bl.. 3 car pl'q!i Het 1st TD loan ===~-====""' l'l!IC ~ --'"'-, -1--.... ··-....,.... ,__..., ,.. ,,,... .. .,.... ._...... ,... -• ill ,,_ I ly P I --.. .--~ ...-Sl1S. ~ )-YOU•.._....,,.,...,_ ....., ._., ~.,.11.._ comp~t rtnovated er&on•• 6405 tire ~. A4Dits., no Ptts.. • _ _ .......ono.i• fl'Oa Ml.I -Th.NS Oft'-"' "''/new noor covering a: It;$ INTERES7 31.:' "W Blu'. Open Roede Co 4hi M.. 5l50 S.nt• An• 5QO To Pl•ce Yovr Tr•der~• P•r•clln Ad cltt. appliancts. $52.W>, U-;' .pm daily, 646-elm, ' rona r ----. -... PHONE '42-5671 o.,,·nc_r \\iU tina.ncf!. l07l2 2nd TD Loan l..ikf --Uvint in "'t ACREAGE nr-ar Rancho r7tm equity in llunL Bch. :\1ead11: A\·c. Of"& Pk acres . OWN ! eur-VILLA MARSEILLES Calilbm.ta fer late ~I condominium lot U'R $1.n. 633-llTGC. Terms bucd on eqully. ·• HOME. • I .,,, BRAND NEW .U or power bot.L ~r. ~ e,. llirplant'. '63 Olds -.r--•111 ••• ~11 ...,,,,._$l'l5J<ranopt!. ~·.,. SPACIOUS _ tlS!S......LoSaM euu ""'u Ac 6200-• ~ ~ We can rellt )'CK! Mil' 0..: .,... . n aJ'QDS us convert 1'ttee ruge SevJrc Harbot art& 21 yn. lor JltO. 2 BR. nn.'ty dee, ..,,..,,. 1 & ! -rm. Apt1. fnc1 744.054$ or 744-3580. din btkl". 549-3123/96U2ll. _ 1 Sittler Mortg•p Co. Cl'tfdrp. encl pat*. spat ON TEN Aal.ES F Adu';._ lUtv;:i C\lltom 3 Br. Family Room, Trade $40.W> ~ in nxidem HORSES! POOL.! BOAT? l16 E. 17th Street .,-ndl. 2 Pock! Adulls onl)·. 8R. um. m. 1\1. bl, pool for (0u~in1 Sllllta Anita. es1ate, S br. 5 5 min ID Dana Pnt Harbor, ~ . __ _ %!3S Fouma.bi ~·-..v &, nw--I A 2 F'um A Uflfunl Dl!.hwuher . «:tor-cx>outlual· St. Pe~rg. 1'1•. prop. bi,;., Olympic pool l bib plenry of atta on 1.79 actt1, Re•I Est•te lNns 6340 a . tum w. on Wil9onl. ~ .~~ueisB· w.: ed ~ • pla6 ahq; ttt)'. $38.000 equity, 10 ltv.)'. Take Jale boat of zOOf'd small nklt in ATHENA'S ot ~ Sunset Strip with lhe cre•ttst girls from lfOLLYWOOD lo MASSAGE YOU NO\v v.•lth a new loca1ion lo NEWPORT BEACH ~ £-......... • ....... ~ . choice of 2 color • • $43-0355 • l.'<1UA1 value. ~-Capistrano city limits, all THE VICl'ORlA..'1 JQli Sea l.a.'R. ODI "4--'1.I 9ChPmq • 2 batht . 1talJ ·-M~--•--s ulil, 4 ~. l.itn possible. VlTLL make 2nd T.D.'s by 2ll 62nd St., 62nd ti. w. NEW .2 Br. th Ba v./ pr. CMacArtbczr ar O»c Hwyl sbowf'l"I _ m.lrTor.t ward-""' ""'"""""" ot:nt., _,... \\'111 trade 7 band knit mad °""ner 49f-064 t":dsUrc 1st Ii: 2ncrs, pvt Coast Hwy in the> ~ Adults;. Crpu. drps, robe-doors. fndiftct li:ht. au10 .~. radio, v:C<eUent mo""Y mull map for gooct 1--Gov<-----i.-... ----ply. r>t&-1326. Ne,vpon ShorM Center blcm. !nod )Td w/ patio. 705 ORCHID q 111 tltche:a • tn.Jdul ~tlon. Tradr .. tar ~· uatd g1.r11 bicycles. 162!1 mment S5 acre I"'"===°"·===== eG'i E. V-Jcioria f El • l Bdnm., 3 batba. Carpf-lcd. bar . -~-to fenced ~.· car 0t · ~ Equ11.)', Sbndal11•.-ood St, C.M. \\'rite-Land Packa&t. ll85 Money W•nted •3JO * nJU.Y UCENSEO * ----· bl •--"'--· .,.... annrox $1200 SC..3235 A~ San Bndo 92410 Renowned Hindu Spitilualist _...,..,, D2:t • 1~n•. """"· p.nge. patio -plWlb '''tutctpi~ · .... · · * ~5-3!95 * --------Advice on all matters. VILLA MESA APTS. Mo.· miQ. 1 year ttue. brick Bat-B-Q's. J.arae bu.t· 1 Uni1.1. good ~n1al are•. 80 Whl&ke 11 ACRE>.-WEST C.M. Mfg. Co. needa $1S ht Lav"· ~talTia@:t, Buainess J BR. Prh tio Hid pool &7S-605e o ed poOO • la.'11.1. S3S.IXXI Equity: tnCOmf' '40J acrs, )'tOWll •1 _==0.......=== .... ==7994===-for expansion. Se~. Readina:s given 7 days a 2 • __:, •• pa · ..... ~•A-~ '' •JOI So. Brl~• St. $13.500. For ........ -. com-Shula Lake vtt. Fabulous 1 --968-7935 ft S 00 ..... 9 ... , 9 P'! car .,......, gar ..... ~, • •nn ............ hunting, Ulihing, boating.' R. E. Wint.er 6240 ANNOUN•C•E,ME' NTp.Sm. ~· " •<'--. no -· pleut! -ca..-. (~Ml. N. or so. Col' 'f Au.a) mtrcial or honie rancli. 1 ..___ 312 N. El Camino Rt:al, "-'""' O\\'NER """""""" E11ulty 11ma I ,_,..,., mtn !!_,6:1~ ...... mo. Tl! W. \\'il8on. ... COROUDO APrS. 2 Br, l s ... t .. Ana V•OMM..C cabin t'IC. ~!eyer ~1366. ;:::;;--Opt -, -•• -.-8-R.-.... _: •nd NOTICES San Clemenle, ...,..~._ PHONE: 55'7_,. F.q in beaut nu l BR v.·at"r. ~ .....,.,. 492·9136. 942-0076 Ir l~ BA .. trpk. dbl car-,front.....__,,,. -'-k .• H .. -G,, ___ _._ ""'· 2 •IY vu'---do or Home. Cd.\l Hiab Found (F'" Adol ,._I H & ··o GREENS IA-Pool ..., .. ~ """ u• ........ • .............. ,. ILIUC -Sin;i;lro -Widov.·ed -OiY()t'CCl'.l ~ R port" ..... 5., • nas' up. $150 • LRG 2 BR. Stud\o Harbour ol m.cm Jmmed 2SOO gq ft, like new, SS7,7:;G area. M4-4265. GARDD! A STUDIO AP'l'S G73-337t Apl (Triplex), Family s~ PQM. ~'OR an~, incOn\t" prOp val. 4 Sr. 3 Ba, famnn. For BUSINESS •nd BLACK C. t . you n & * LIFE 8adt, l, 2, 3 BR's. from SWI. UPPER l BR. 708 ACAOA kitcb. w/bltns. crpts. drps. in OC onr 548-ml srnalr tunl'-. Hrbr Vu Hills. FINANCIAL n~ery pro r 1 o n 8 b I e, !7llO Prtsmn WQ, C.M. Unturn or pt fm'rl ·Onto fri;lk.. rond car. 1 ar 2 Lavtly ho~ 111 h~M Ownr. Ofc. 6t4-45TI. • ----'-.;....-'------talkative. Balboa ProniMUla. i11 exciting U: shared "''/lhc scs.as1U ma.turr adult. Ui(. $16. i:lc! child?'ftl ok. CNr schls) No fur V.'ttkmd or perrnanenl Business Appeared •I beginnln&; of right one. Stop wa.\o'ling 6.150 Beby1lttln1 ~-------EXPER. rclia. xln't e&re m•ri,y rtU.. Lunch A snackll. Bushard & Ada.nu. 96i-2700. CHIL.D care niy hotne. sgc11 2·~. ~"'em'l"d yJU'd. 2lm Rale~CM. &16"-iSlG CHIL.D Cate at n1y home. Harbor It emr vicinity. C.M. Ml)...5248 OCX::K & boat clcanifl&' 1'. 111aio1 witJ1 good y ft a r around !ll'rvi«. SJ,2.-0682 "'°"''"" Brick, Masonry, etc 6560 -----·· ------BRICK * BLCX:K • SJ'ONE By lM hour. alter S:Xl 642--1948 • 645--0'lSS Carpentering 6590 -·--·· CARPENTRY ~flNOR REPAIRS. No J~ 1W Small. CalrlDtt ta IV" ages ' o t h • t caDl.nellr. 568115, U no ansftr leave m!C al •2372.. ll o. ........... CARPENTER: Remodel, patio work. cement work Ir painll~. No job too limall. Free est., 5.36-1944 CLEAN·UP job6, haulJ.nr, concrele \\'Ork. FTtt esL Small or big. 548-1801 REPAIR, Remodeling Ii. PalJo..No job too small! • 673-54) 7 * CARPENTRY: Ca bl nt I 1 1 Room Additio111. Patios. Any We job. M.Ute, ~2576 REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS • CABINETS. Any sill'! job Z5 yn exprr. 54UT13 ~!rpentering 6590 QUIET! All NEW. uti1 '1. ~4 I pe-ts. 223] S. c.tnttt SL. I' • V 1 s~",.,..... ..,_ d \\'ANT SAIL or POWER Opport\lnitits 6300 I summer. 07a-87s3 eves. yours. \Ye have <t Mnuirt S.A N W 557...c.M ,\'lnt;: aue .-..... U<N. ''3 e YACliT ID $100000 Have QU. drps.. bit-ins. 2 BR. OPEN !'lily l~. 324 1 · r amer, for your local property. · ' ' KEYS Found on beach vie. way. M?-6667. 24 hr. record. QUALITY Woodcraft, 5ml AdLllts. DO Pl'U. Nr liarbcr M_UfUl'~. 2 BR. 2 Ba. $11;...Lrg ~ l Br. :t.pf. 494-47t6, $U1l \\'est L.A. inoome. O.C. rtn· Affiliate Island & BaJboa.. Inquire *MASSAGE & SAUNA a:en 'I constr. Ii. carpentery. II. Adami. Garace l\'&ila.ble, Dilhlli'Sbr. cpt.S. dJi>s. trpl. Crpts, drpa.. bltn&. encl car. . I.al hou!l's '-S90,000 T.D.a. LIFETIME at front count.tr, Dally Lo\•el}' girls/ EXPERT l\IAS-Fre-e consultation &: quote. 56l!Bi. Walk lo ocean. AgL 6T>-Sr.li l child ok. <Nr. schlsJ. ml t BP. HOUlf!; Hi&b deeen, ~Tiet 673-4621 . Pilot, 2211 Balboa, N.B. SACE. JUk about our t..as Call Ken 66-0044, 548-4235. s. Center St, S..A. nr smog free-area -Desirr-, 2 BR. dtpl, crplli, s•im·i 2 BR. I BA Attr. dean. l blk ~'a.mer. S57-6rro2. able tor rel.irl'd, cot>! oI liv-Comn1crc1al ineomro proprr. OPPORTUNITY GRAYISH Bro11t•n miniature Vegas vacations. 10 AM to CEN. Repair, add. cab. pool &: pr. A1-> t BR. '°. _bcb. Wuhn' ~ dryer ing reas. in area TRADE 1 I). fr'l·e & clear, next IO poodle found vie Brilltol & 2 A!ll, 7 DAYS. 2'J30 \Y. Formica. paneling marlite . ..... lli ,._. ........ gar ~o •'ail. tl9CI mo. 213. Cll-ll!M S or 3 Br 'W'1 or So s A Sears. Val. $65,000. For San D)ego Jo' re e \V a y. Coast Hwy, NB. 548-3608. Anything! Dick, 673-4459 ~~-m~tl. ~t or 6T>-ifil I l.gvna Beech S70 Ov.·ner 646-5461 . . • units. hou.-.c or bt'ach prop. GUARANTEED & .~,......,,="'-,-· -~~~~ INCURABLE Dise-asc" l i=-'=='"=='=-===I oe~. GU-M2 l.GE ne\l· 2 BR, 2 b&, frplc, ----OWNER 6'15-62S9 S J.'OUND small whil" Jong-terminal cases are my Cement, Concrete 6600 1-="='=~="T"""'UVIN==G"'" all bltns cpt&. drps beamed OCEAN VIEW • LrK J!I U apl Bldg, N. Holly. ECURED Mired male dog, Vic 12th specialty. Nothing to lose QUIET ADUL bit <-"'il'g, ~ p&t.. So.· oI H11t')'. Bachelor, 1 l 2 BR apt.s.. wood, pool/air-cood FOR: HAVE hardware storro, (:og. Nt SELJ..JNG-SPARE TIME St in N"wport a...h. Call your llfr To gain. fTI4J CONCRETE. All types. ~ I Ii f Br. Shal c:rpta. D&. SBl-S275. 541--79Sl. Furn or unlurn. CrptJI. drps. 41).50 li btd:;. Jeu than 10 11 Ml"lll, "kx':k, stock Ii A lucrative flltul'!' Is yours 673-llG6. e1t. Sawing, breaking, haul- pooi. bl'aut ~· JJ.50 bhru;. pal!OO>. w a J k Ing yn old, L.A . or San Diego barrel val. $12,500", tot in this multibillion S bullineu I ~""'~~"~' ~--~-~~1 "°""0::=:::;--;:::-::..:=:-. ing & skiploading. Service Ii SJ'1t mo. incl aJJ util. SPACIOUS f br, 11is ba.. w/w d.isia~ lo IO\l'f!. 100 CliU Cnty t?l.~! i6J..Tn5 aft ;,. home eqwty. vacant kit or s.i..1 blk Ir brown long haired 12.l Reward for address &. Ir quality. 548-8£& Bob UI A.voe.ado SI. 64&..o!ml crpt. stove. ft'lri&. AdulU. Dr 1 '"" &h 494-5491 • "! 0v.'ner 646-1675 if you mttt out require-do(. Part p 0 mer 1 n I an . telephone of Lydia Flahive *CONCRETE .-,k· ... ~. 1 .,A no _,~ m;. mo ST>-3580 ·• ~· · 37 An(lf'man SciJOOOCr ment.s. W" require conscien. . c-r• , .-add ...... , "'-... ...,,. MODERN 2 BrG_El ~.;,::'."' "'".,,.. · _ •• WOOD'S COVE 'ft dsl·aux. Ready •'or ld tious individualA who need Victnil.)' of Mendoza and El ' ,,.w ......,, ,.,.,, ~. drvways, etc. L ic ensed. Ctpts. ~ ..,.....,_ 2. 1968 Buick Riviera Grand Camino. Sf6..-4253 Ulguna Beach. 71.f.-653-2185. Phillipa Cement. 5-iS-6380 - 1 md ·-r l\'r' ~ lido Isle 5151 BMcb i,; bkiick. DI'• l A cruise: V•I 12.Sm. \\lant ~ S ~-•I hl additional immediate cash I===~~-~=~-SWINGERS', N<w O-"-•-· · BR Gold M!'dailion aipts." lf'P. A/C /I pon.._,...,,tnut. a.g w 5• income 10 restock eslabltllh-FOUND Sunday in CdM near .... ..,._ $1.SS. Adults Mar 124 E or t'lli n ' • .,.,. ow fuU pwr. Tnlde S32XI l'QUlt;y 2nd Ir Marigold blk "'/wht Co. Guldt!. For ltee info, 20th i . • • LRG BAY VTEW-2 BR Each haw 1 ~ BA. Pool. timf' rongs. f>.16.3'.!>I t'Vt"I •II lo' VW , 546-;;+15 or 540-101!, ec. local high-traffic retail f _., Writr S C S G p 0 Box ·· S3XI up. Leasro :nn S. Cout 8 pni store11 and aillect money, fl06e, ffi. arai tummy. · · · · · · · l\'R N-2 Br. 11.ii Ba, Study, crpts, drp!i. 1 ~ ba. .. , Hwy. 497-1630 or 499-3929. 1-~---------.uk for Jolu1. ~fust be willing to ,tart im. tiT::J-6.~ 21ll. Anaheim, 92804 cpt/drp, st-:lshv.1lr .. P"'· .trplc: v."SlKlry. ~vail Sep1. •• NORnt END ** Fill~ .'n Chips, <'Omp.le~ely mediately, and UM a few FOUND Boy'~ small bicyd". Pennyrlch Bra~ -Swimwear A\i 1121.. 1li6 W Wilson • ~ lae. '7J..7:i02. 1 BP. oce1.11 vu 'ii blk shop-eqwp d, lrtt l clroar. ~els What Qo !'O'I ba~ to trade! hours ;i \.\"r"ek of your sp&rl" Vicinity of Fairview and San P!'rllOnal fittings by apPt &12-.,a pi~. beaches. Laundry $DX!,~ V&iUl'. Jo'OR boat List It bett -in~ · Diego Fwy. !;,46-2777 54§.-0026 or 546-9029 2' 3 Ba unfllm. Aduhs, pvt &.Ibo.-lsl.-nd 5355 facil. adu!ts:. 1175 mo. I anyth1nx of value. 541.Qi.19 O::lunty'I 1alKUt read trad-1:~ are ambitious and ~- )'IJ"'Ct l"od pr. lmmed. oc· 4M-4488 6' &30-4237. dys, 9624981 f'ves/wknd~. tne polrl -aM make a de:a1. quire extra cash income now C\lpcr'IC)'. E. tsth SI • I hr partly fl.Im apl, NEW ~n side apl~. with r * * T * * and can immediately invest GIRL'S bicyclt" found Sat. 15 in J\.1esa Verde a r" a . "41).4133 A l. COHOL.ICS Aoon,ymous PhoDt? 542-7211 or write to P .0 . Box 1233 Co6ta P.fesa.. l\fORE Concrete patio tor l"ss money. Artistic 1etting. Lie., call Max at 644-0687 01'.:CORATJVE CONCRETE DRIVES-.WALKS-. PATIO CALL DON, 642-8514 CEMENT WORK, no job too small. rekMOnablro. Free £5tin1. H. Stunick 54R--ll615 ~. ~ 1135 mo. YNI' ll"ue. pool, From JaJo moa1h. /1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!l!!!!!!!!!ll a moderale amount of cash J BR. ,Jl.50. 2 BR 1165. Pool. Ca1J 64&-JlilJ. Judi PLACE REALTY 494-mt REAL ESTATE REAL "S1ATE <Guar. Ii. Stt.), call collecl, Bluepoint SianJCSC, female. PERSONAL Mana.i:cr lor Contractors musida.ns, singlro, duo, lrio. ---6620 Dtt. .l wtr pd. Adlts, no --REAL ESrATE General Gener•t Mr. John110n t213J 787-8972 ~ts.' )1Hll Manor. 24l Huntington Be•eh .5400 ------o: v:rite box No. 1tl·:nll, Wilson Ave, CM, 5&8-7405 _ Gener•I Rooms for Rent 5995 Office R•nt•I 6071 Dally Pilot, 221J \V. Balboa •.---"-...o_..i... .. t;JBR, OCEANFRONT . view R t f W t-' 5990 Blvd., Ne"'·port Beach . .... c.. .... .,..._u .. ~ en• I •n..,. 2 R00l'o1S "''""'' ~th, pvt Deluxe l-Rm. ottioe 2BA. ftpJc m . 1·2BR. 2BA, sundedc. bch. Ne"'-er. ApaC .... •CANDY SUPPL y .-nn .,.,., w ~...._ d1x 2 B bftnl t d ---rontranr.c. Singlt> party only. Nr. Ora.nil" Cowlly Airport D'plc --"" · u1n. r, · crp i;. rps, WORKING c:oupll", no Si.> mo. 839-218.j. le. Jn10l' Industrial ROtJTE* ~UJ55. 673-9565 ttl'ri&'. lndry. Nr s'1op5 " (PART OR FULL Th\fEI !========== f p;tt. Sl TJ. Adult.t:, baby ok. children. no proll, wanl 2 or * $13 PER Week-up ..,,., Complex, Carpet. drape», VERY H.IGH INOO?ttE Newport Be-" 5200 ,~"6-......-t~ll-l-o-"'70,--c--,--c-3 br hsc, condo (JJ' motiile kikhen. SJS per 111-eek·up music, a.ir-oondiUonfnt Ir "FREE BONUS ROUTE r. homro. C.M., Hun!. Reh Ap!A'. MOTEL ~~ janilorial service. $125 Mo. PAP.K NEWPORT • catt "'ALK J bl.ks to beach. rt~a. Ph ~7 o r 1~=o=c==="=""'== BOB PETTIT. Rea.Hor PLAN" free livi ovrlkc the .,.,,1"r. 7 Almo1t flC\l' IJ:'. ~ BR apt. ~Z'L.~ e .833-0tot • Now available In Oran~ ~-7 1_,,; .... ~ --so.~ Dbl car.. -.:pl • ...,., •• crpts, '· Motels, Tr•ller Coun•y and surrounding -......... .._.., .f•J ......., d dsi'Tshr 2 ba S2'l5 NEEDED Approx s" P 1. Courts 5"7 D S CE ""' From $175 to ""'' .,.., ' ' . ' '""'"" ! br horn<. pool --------ESK PA ........ All locaUo• "" Bac.h. l « 2 Br. Aho 2 sly mo.~ No sglll/pctfi. childn pf'l"lem'd. Co. f'xe:cu live ./ WE£KLY PJtlell. SEA 305 No. El Cemino Reel comm"t'Cial or factory furn. Vic. Potntettia, Cdi\t 67:..-3211 Pointer Pup Vic.. Sant.a Ana SI., Ol ,....;16 BLK And while Collie, mall". Vic Orange County Fairgrounds. ~ SIAMESE Cal vie Killybrook Ln .r. Walson St, Halecrest. 6TS,.M()O N.B., afl 10 AM Cemetery lots 6411 Cl) LDrS in Harbor Re11t. Veterans section. 5~5-1764 SERVICE DIRECTORY Applianct Repairs Phone: 545-6583. ===~C"O-ooc---= 1--f'OUND Bluepoint Sie.me~ 8 e \\'asher .c. Dryror Repalnre Parts 6510 mo old w/collar. Very Free Estimates. \Vork genH". Identify GT:>-8754 . Guaranlred. Call 53&-3159 TO\\'Oboulff. De<;.. kiL pri o~k~··~'36-=-~'~"~'~=-.o-cc.-c~ \.\'/!amUy. Hefcreix.~ avail. LARK f\f<YrEL. 2 3 0 l San Clem•nt• ishl'd by la. Qua.lilied pel'llOn pat or bal. Su.btrn prk&:. opt NEAR Huntington llarbour Unde.r $300. Coll col:ttl Newporl Blvd. <:Mia Mro~c1 492-4420 will bl'comc dlltributor for Lo1t 6401 Bab~!_l~~ng-'550 ma.d 1e:r. cpts. dtpl. JLDt New Triplexes. QWtt &!Tl. i14/822-6Ul ----------~=-------our candy INroBUe~. Plant· I-------------·- N. ~ ruruoo bl •t Jam-Lr& I, 2' 3 BR. Dishwubrr 1 1~ •• -,~1~,L-,~.-w-~~ .. -,-10-,.-,.-0-rl Busine ss Rental 6060 1 DESK SPACE rr:., Toots.i!' Rolla, Milk LOST: MaJe Yotk&hitt Ttt· LJC sitter bu 2 vacancies, bor("t &. Stan Joequln Hill~ $150 up, Child/pel OK. jnJ1 lt•ast" wfoptlon 5 br home ... _ •. -· . 222 Forest Avenu!I Duds. etc.I You mu11 have riror! s Lbs, blck Ii. silver my home. Vic OCC Ii. H.d. 644-1900 lor le:uing in-592-2l&Z3 or t'l'l4~ 846·35.'.19 "'fpool. Up to $3:10. Loving Of'.'FICt~ Spa.1!f' ~ h 0 a 1 2 to 8 h1·11. per wttk spa.re 00 back/ l'!'d-brv.·o un-C.ol.lroge Pk school11. Xlnt to. l\fOVE IN NOW care £\ T 0 r 0 IL a gun a d111ph1 y 111-ea Jo •. \ l',. JI . Laguna Beach lllnc tday1 or evc1.l. de: r n ea l h . Name ia 1 ~'°~"'.,,·,ong:=c""~~· -"~"'"-7tl6-~~ ---.---............. b-·-• 2 BR t o-._h •-•. -•11-, mlil'1n1• ''~poiiun:. 2ti02 $1750 CASH REQUIRED llroatbcilff. REWARD! 5107 WANTED Our ho1nc, 7:4:>-4, ~ * '"'; f:; $1~ .:P 5 ~~=·~·--"~-~-~-.,.-,..,.-1 Ne11o·pon 81\'d . N. B I 494-946& For n'llltt in1ormaHOtl "Tile: SellMor'e Or, NB. 646-7326. 2 IChool age ~. light 791' AMIGOS WAY Crn1s. d-. bl!ru;, fani1 t1· WlLI. you hit> your home li73.-ti600 /l:t't'd immedialely· Small of. "ROUTE DEPARTMENT • housev.wk, mu.st ha~~ own .,. ... ~ 10 1 n-o"'d adul1~ (pel'f ------f 1 I LDST : Briel C.l.lM! Ii. mu11lc! ~~" ""~ z BH. 2 ha. w:ulll, unfurn area. jJJ2 Heil, Hu11tin~on opt 10 huyt Gd loc 10 S400 BAY. 6~ !<(!.It & one ;,oo sq, irr spll.Of' or acMunt ng 23," P.O. Box 1739. Covina, Probably in lrnl of lsl 1.t'Bfll!i, .C. ref . ..._.100:, :or Oul.!df' living a.1-ea1 :md Reh. &:tG-4696, 833-0242 mo Need Sl'p1 occp ~f r1. fl wfrn1 plul!-3000 11q fl. !ll'l'\'lc.1! Lagunu !Wach. prtl. Ca.HI. 91722, lnclude phone Christian Science Church, appt. double prazes. S2'Q to $300 e RLK 10 bf'h~ Q u i" 1, Gt!r11M'r &13-4621 ~IOraj;f· yard or parking. North rnd 49:r5'.ilO. no=.~=~~--~--NB. Approx 3 '''kl ago. BABYSIT. 1ny home, fenced * ...... 1617 * i>nd-proC N"' l Br Sll.'J. PTv * LANDLORDS .-Largr cvrrhcad door!! 1980 UP ro 36fJO ~ fl .• De\uxe, 1ir HEALTii Forces aale cf REWARD~ 8ZJ-44ti0 yard, lunch, all play roqulp. ~ patio, gir Snd •dlts:. cpl. Ha rhor Blvd. 64:>.1440 cood, crpl.ii, drp11. 111 com-Janitorial Sl'rYJCe routt:. From Victoria to J\lro8a Dr. * IAYFRONT 1f 2Q2...A l41h. :i l 6· 1l19 . FREE RF:NTAJ. ~F:RVICE STORE OR OFFICE puler t't'nler bid&. ti16-7425 1963 Ford Eronova.n. all ~;™= :i~~Rra~~~ Price reas. 7;jc hr or U8 wk, fi7l-li&t tt_i_.,.._ .. _,_oo_n &43-0lJIJ ~ """o-'""" 11...., f't, P••k'•"" or ~~ l"quipment lo MrvlC'C n.u· 646--0100. LUXURY APTS. Start-. ---U<N ' u;vv ..,.,. ' .,. -Laiuna ~·h Sal. Ans111·('rJ lo . t •HS * .1..11 --S1jQ MO. 2 BR. unlurn. Apl R.:;; ·f~; ·R;;;t 5 ,;·5 ReaMn.ibl('. 61&-2414 LARGF. otfu"f's -2 room l'('lllnlli. G .. o K ~es ap-"\Va.lly" Reward. 49+-3922. BABYSIT'G, "'kly. my -~a .,., · -v.uw..1. Overlooiu""' beaut "~""-n 2630 Avon St., Newport 11Uitro SHiO. 4 room 1ui1e S2lS, proximately $7,000 per ye;ir home. lncd yd, baby ok, -. .,. _...,.. C be b "I t do' :\1Al.E Collil", "Stroppe", OIW' Nl."WER yearly apl1 un patio " !1'!11.l.t<I pool . \OJ:"i -----·--~'TOR&OJo"FICE--air rond .. rarpels, dra1)tl, an u1t up o tng white fQrr IP~. Please vie: Bch Blvd I. P.C. Hwy Penimula. 3 BR, $3)) mo. 12th SI 1acrou from t..4ke AVAii. Aul:. 1-1: Room \.\'/ Newport &h, S2j liQ 11 p!l_ll('ll?(!, 812-2.i2:> much 13000 Jarg<00r ~~!·, f'ull return. (ilwl llll"!ll' Yoo. Exper 53&-7073 ~ Parll.1 :.iJ&.-4:900 Yr!J: ta.nilly. C~1 · Brl•11.kf~ * Ervin 67!".1801 __ •_ ./Nf:WPORT BEAOI priC1' . · ..,...,......., . 543-9208. BABYSITIING In my home. -~v ••-•--u l B I '"" I.1.nuty, kitchen ' ........, -Sil) Al _.. DYNAMIC, growth oriented l-fr/day/Pve1/wkJy_ Jlr 7~ .... / • •"'"'"".. ~. pper • AITFL\C R. w::: l 2 pnv1I Rrru1: Yni; lady fi00.1200 SQ. Ji"'l'. ottlct abo mo. r--corai. Co. w/lfl'Cllred invest. ~ 2 LO!!! kitlcns. klt"ntlcal ... . BP ... 2 BA. Walk to beach: BR Sit!! All utru:, Poot. prel'd. 61Z..37a.'J 600 Ml . fl. Sin~ SOO' Sl3CI. F.rvtn •ST";,.-1001 twins. bl•ck \\'fwhile chin, day $6/eves $1 ; By l\'k :211 S2-tO rno. Yea.Ii)'. 642-Q.36 Kid&fj.ot"t• f.lk. I 'l ~ l 1 ·C c 21 -por, require& IU~M mind-81by'1 OK, • 646-7472. 141-432.' J Bf'dro0m~ll brlH~o .. M. 616-30 Pro...,rt-y 60IO ed individual. Direct l: lhroot. sinm.1.ch .C. bootll. Lt:c I BR, patio, on b&y, Cpl.I, ~ La.. ' kilC'ht'n. P\1 p&Oo. 3 blk 10 ,... mollvate your own ~e~ Reward. &15-0937. WILL Babysit, niy home, drpc, me U. t•all. "'"'· (21 2 BR Apu. t w/yonl. bd>. '73--ID23 Iii lt•OO. Offlet Ranl•I 6070 ------·---orpnluUo,, Loe,. I i " BLACK w/Whlfo P•k•. Aoy •K•. Any tlm•. Vk JOO. 67U14l. I dlil.d OK Without >;u-di i>rlv"-;;~;;;;-;;;-i;;;;;;-cCMci·---------BLDNG 1800 i;q. 11. • 4 loll ttturm! Con\act Mr. mal". "lpo", Vk . Oal" A Llndbcra:h Sch Rel. MR-7198 1-============='i hu J)lll;O. aduiu: only. SltO Prlv sgl rm. In Lara;r C.M. SUP'""DEL M·l 1.ont> Jo~hua Tree Gul11.rtr at ~1052 or ~Jr. Sanla Ana, C.'\f. REWARD. • CHIW CARE * H I ... , 5210 ... '"9 ........ hom" w/~•nA• fem. Ya C.IV UXE QUlcLITY Newport e •" I ea. ~ .,....n ' ,,v_ .. ,. Down town area, Owner Sf'ny at 838-0148. MS-1735 i\1y hcrniro, H.B. area lady p~f. 642-375.i 1·1·3 room. up to l,000 '"I· 6~1 7 BR d\lplex. 1'1aturr adltl ./ 2 AR: 1'" BA; patio, ~""°"'"°--'°~~----1 n. olfi<..>t 11u1tc•x. lmtned. oc-fl.SH 'n Chips, independent. LOST : 1''Gn1alr r.hocoh1te * 536-4909 * cm! no pell JlJl &42-1226 JJllOl . l lGJ ffill. ~10J~ KAI IROO~I ~dth bslh, prvl en. r.upaocy Oraflil" C n t y, Commerct"al ~· snio mo Ml Te t m 1. Siamt"6". c11. Jt\~«I ""• NEWPORT Hg11 area, large >'•lna · ' •pti. Eut ol &ad! BJvd, Ira.net'. No cookii'lft s70. Ai~ Irvine Conimcn::. ~ Owner. 341~ d1y1:; oollar, Vic Back Ray . yard w/1andbox. l.iJnch • ::.:-.:'· --= i.,."'-''~"=""==c.==""=="..;· --==--"'a=""=·=··=""=·=""='="="""'=='=> I Cbmplex. ad,J. All'J)Orter 1="'=""'==' =·=·"'='r"~"~m~-':'·~~~"r'-::":1~7.~~~==~~=·:"':c:•:··:x:';"~':""';~· ~"'";;;;"="~'-•RVJNE ' 5231 !•Fountain Vall-··10 Uot~! &: IU!~taur11n1, bank~. Nl'lll'Pf.>11Prn11·1·.1\i<;;-Rrturn. l ;;;;~~~~~~~~~lliiiiiiiii"il'iiijjS4iljjOjjFiouinitajj1jj'niiiViailjjlelyiiiiii~liil San Diego' N'pt. f'wya. Ta.\ .shl'her '1 spendable. ·-UNCROWDED PAR1'JNG -' r.;.,, .. STAR GAZE"'D"IC¥"1 NOW LEASING! l.OWEST RATF;S Nr~·po11 St>nrh C-1 .-vmrr. A.,'i4"'3J{ II\ ~ '-¥ Ownerlml[T'. 2112. DuPont Dr., Sl2.tm To1al -30Xtri ft . •• n >r" Q.AY JL POIL\N Nrir, Jt.mlly .m adult unlls ~ R1n. 8, Nrwporl Bf':ach. R,•n1<1non\\1•a Corp. .1"I ~.J.1 ~ r-Ooil1 A<fiwffy c.HO. M: Im'~~ -. rh total recn:11tlon club 1133-3223 Courtery to Broken Co1nnlf'l'cl:'ll Ukt'. 67~700 ~AAH,. ,, Au1rJi1f t• Iii• Sl1t1, Y : ~ .,_,, ~ 1N 1 !;. e MEDICAL . DENTAL e 5 STORr.s. SllO.M~ R)]1-1a.i~ ~~'===d~or ~~~~ :ft" bdrml from ' r, SUllf'1 avail. Eko1t locstit:in. 698 \\'. 191h SI. Bethel "'*"' ofwm•.,.-11ocblrthslgn.1ng 0 ss..N1 ..-..... , aolf, liCbeJoU. Just T "•1v• t ~TAUlln 1-IAlil ........... ..,...,. Xlnt --..t.• ..... J\.1odtrn f"l"il· O\\"r rs !'Otr\(•r ....... '"" ~ · ·-1 V'-" 31 to """-" t -~ tooth or s.n Dicao f'wy. on ""u ........ ........,. n °" 11~ ""'""733 t ltlc1. lrnmcdi1tlt))'~Vuilabk. . wAr lf 11..ftw.-I 31 0... 62Todl1 • CWwr Dr., 11"\•lne, ~ · • lndu•frial Rtntel 4490 ~ > "-33 !itttn "J Mon .. i "°"·JI ·A·~ WIST oun at"" A BAYSllORE CENTER II·",'~~·", ........ '"· ... _ ... 1 .. r """" ,~ 601 DOV1'r Dr N'pl Beach -,/&.n.a !I~ 1$0 .. t A .. ·~ l s~~.!6 AP.AUM£HTS~-, ,, L .onpnnv liOO "1 fl •f .. , .... _ &IMIHI .,.,_.. .U a. ........ ~ n...~ ----' ........ ft .. ed by "Jl eilillrraneon ~f.'ri.t 11%Uty --•7r i11Pa 0 .... -·~ " ..,,,_. ·-7 ..._ 110.. •'~ """"""IA vw1.v '1&IU ..... -.. >« • ~-:.v llJlllCe 1n 11r1\ So S.A. Incl. ~ ,.,,..,.~,, -''"""°" 111~ 6'0r .,..,_ ··-.i~ r~pa.... -.. ~~ • • " ,, •----I '°"·"'.Ao ., • .,. ,_,,.. .. ,. .. ,, -IUl..,.CI.... trncl Air ronrl oll!ct, <;fJJllHt21 10~"'-..,~~ 7007-• MC.JI f':!l 1&28edrooms-%Ba.th'.' ov1•rhrldQr1rfL"turr~1n.S2W ~!..a:,"," 11v-•ISho;Ad 1110 2 6-J.25 • l•tl Bluff 5242 NEWPORT BEACH VIII• Gron .... Aioi•· '350. Fotr bedioom• with balconit'I abo~~ -t belltW• Gredola Uvlnc le quiff JUr· rounilh\b for family 'With cbUdftn Nl!ar Corona Del tot.. lll&h School ~ •-rt bat I buJlt.tn kitchen SJ'/Jlllancir' q:'j: A.'11005 Y..'AY fill·29!1J ), Adult Ltvlng HlllGREN SQUARE "10· Ph :,.t~nn, g.;, U11lly ~..,._ :~::=I( :J~ ~i ~ &2MS.16• Furnished~ Uafurnhhed 1lQ) 1q f1 Dclu;ite omen >'OR J.~t-...llOO ~ r1 prin1e ~~~11 :j~ !t~ ~•TMl.i CUlJOOIM . '"' • l)W.,.J;.,. e S"-1 C.IJt'f• .,,......, ... • er._, c.,...,. ......... c.a1 .... 9565 Slater AfellUt ), ' -; __ ;~ !~ ' L A.vs.II. for lmmed, leMe In \.\'11rrh11e 11ptu.'fltall or part. ,,,·, 11 1,~ •4M.oot ,! ~ ~'" ~ of 11: ... b J t '""'-Irvint' Ind. ~1r. Bullard 11'kio ..,.. ·n ~-A#. tt ~ ~t;!. :wca di~~ ~-=~-~' ,-~-____ ~~~ ::~~~ ::=.. ~t;::t_ ~~~ Ait<ond., tnulte, Ptntllng, r-1r..1v bldg. 1368 to n>o fl. ~ 20v...,·,. 50~ '°"""' ~ d M k• U0 11 Soc.lo. SI lo II Or o\QUMrVS crp!A, Tf>':. ax, p&r I: l Nr. Baker & F1irvWw, I §i_Jutr 21 111y :i2~;., 11Qh.1_.. JA#. Jt malDI. 270 t . 171h S1., C.1\1. yr ll'fl!'C. Sull ivan 548-2116 • ))h1MMI. )Jf l(.1tv1 SJ1tt-1.. • Mr Brain 213 : 6Sl·2700collcx:t ------i)ji~":~ u,..,'-"»E, ''''~od '''·" RENT ~l·l, 11 25 11q ft. SllS .. _ U~ !·!!'!?° OmCE Rtnlal5 Laguna mo. ll').) LoR11n, C.~. ~~ ~' '°"" ..,. Bch. S125 ·Mo. c.oest Hwy. 6Th-~1 16 YIUO av ... -!ltf :.lW.' PllCG Re11J E11ate 0 .K .4S4-912'7 IZ'IO SQ f'J' l\f.J indui1lrlal [,1A""°JJ .~~ :~ =~ 'If;"~~ NEWPOt'lT Bc.1.c~ll!~ !'Jllll'r w/offlCf', :J..p cun't1.t, ,sur. Jt ./£. "'"'" I\ SJ)) ~l~:.'Ji lk'fs. Alr-eond. ll!tt. Prlv Jgr rt't1r rloor. 12~0 1.oii:11n l ___ _:, __ ~~~1• .. ~ .. = .. t,=~~~=Cood'.::'.::®:::A:d:""':::::.,;=N='wnl===""'::':""::":"~l ~--ba, 2400 W. Co.ut Hwy. St. C...'1· 646-<*1 , - e RE~10DELJNC e ADDITIONS e ALTERATIONS e PATIO I: Dl-.:CKS All•n Con1truction Co. General Bid&. Contractor ~na Be1ch 49'1·1810 * 'TIIE REMODELERS * }l'ee esl! • 1007o financini: Kitchens, garages· carports Complete Rem<>dellng. Qu111lty Contracton: 642.3600 l\1Y WAY. quali1y ho1ne repair. Walls, ceiling, floors etc. No job too small. 54l-l494 Additions * Remodeling: Fred H. Getwick, Lie. 673-6041 • 5-iS.2111) ADDITIONS, L. T. Com true· lion, gingle or 2 11rory, plaM, <'SI & Jayool&. S.17-1511. C•rpet C_la_a_n_ln~g~_66_25_1 µ.-o CARPET STEAM CLEANED REASONABLE RATES A1ilO carpel lnstallatlon 646oS971 Dia.n1ond Carpet Cleanine Aug. SpPc. 400· $20 Repairing & i1111tallaUon Free est. 64;....1317 RE:\1ARC Service•. 3 roo1ns S21.SO. Fully guaranteed. Credit can:l11 OK. 847-ti68S STEAM jt"I carpet cleanlna. By ClaTKarc. nation-wide .service .. rl'@C e5t. 642-4a55 Carpet Laying & Rtf>l!lr. 662' I STIU. have the Best deal ln town In Carpet-Llnoltum- Tlle. C.A. Page. 642-2070 Eltctrical 6640 --·------El.ECTRICJAN. Small Jobs. mainte~ Ir r<epal t 1 • 541.-Ml13 ----Floor• 6665 --------! CAllP'ET VINYL TILE UC CONTR. 1''R£E EST. • 540-13J2 • Furniture Rtstorlng & Rtflnlohlng 6675 ··--------·I fi.JRNM'URE Slrlpplne .l niflnil;hin1. •64Z..9ST.1 • = P1lntlng, P1perh1ngln9 Al.'S l.a.ndtc:apln1. Tr e • r~rnoval, Yerd ren1odtllng, Tra~h J,aullna. Sot cle1u111p. ficpatr 1prnkltrs. 613-Ur..6 " \ J9 PILOT·ADVERTISER Wtdnrsdiy, Au9u1t 19, 1970 Are You Letting Cah Slip Through Your Fin ers See If You Have Any Of These Things A WANT-A Will Sell Fast! 1. Stev• 2. Guitar 3. lloby Crib 4. l!ltctrlc Saw 5. C1mer1 6. W•sh•r 7. Outbo•rd Motor I . Stereo S•t 9. Couch 10. Cl1rlnet 11. R•frlger1tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing M1ch ine 14. Surfboa rd 15. M1chin• Tools 1,, Di1hw11her 17. Puppy 11. C1bin Cruis•r 19. Goll Cart 20. 81rometer 21. St1mp Coll ection 22. Dinette S•t 23. Play P•n 24. Bowllng Ball 25. W1t•r Skit 26. FrHz•r 27. Suite•• 21. Clock 29. lllcY<I• 30. Typowrllar 31 . Bar Stools 32. Encyclopedl• 33. Vacuum Cle1n•r 34. Tropical fl1h 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 36. Fiie C1bln•t 37. Goll Clubo 38. St•rllng Sll v•r 39. Vlctorl1n Mirror 40. Bedroom S•t 4 1. Slide Prol•ctor 42. lawn Mower 43. Pool T•bl~ 44. Tires 45. P ia no 46. Fur Coit 47. Drapes 48. Lin•n1 49. Hor•• 50. Airplane 51 . Or91n 52. Exercycl• 53. Rar• Books 54. Ski Boots 55. High Chair 56. Colno 57. El-J_ Troln 51. Kl;-J,r Auto Tabla cycle Ace Jon 63. Sklo 64. TV t 65. Wo bonch 66. DI• nd Watch 67. Go-1rt 68. lro r 69. Ca ing Trell•r 70. An qu• Furniture 7J. Ta ltecer.der 72. So at 73. S 1 Car 74. tr•u lox Spg1 75. I rd lpoedboot 16. S lgun 11. s di• 78. rt Game 79. nchlng 819 10. by Carriaga ll. um• 82. 11. 13. tk 14. UBA GHr These or any other extra thin9s oroun th• hoUH b• turn•d into cash with a DAILY PILOT WA T·AD so Don't Just-Sit he rel DIAL DIRIC -~-;_,...,._ OAll. Y Pll.OT SJ !_l~I DIRECTO'!'.".. !ERY!C~!~O~ JOIS & IMl'LO!"!!!~~~~~~~!°p.~~A[!~~~~l. o.,.,,,,.. ____ ._ •• _ MAID SER_v_1c_E __ 112J_ JeltWMflid. , ........... w .... 11ao1 JJo11~·~~,.~-~--;i,,.~W~-~..:11~•!! Al/I 04llDENIKQ c 4"D I --Moot " w-~ _,..A lllR.IER ... .__. --_.., • -°""" .. -.,.,.. ~ FACIOllY -..... --·-=:..~ Ph.-·-· """':"s::::.":-BOYS :;;.::--"·t~... -l!~· .. s~--~~ .. ~w~ .. ~··~71~ooij WANTED -11oa --c;..11 madt.. Y w· • .... __ ...,_ l4MIJ$ G"l1n>INtfc: t aaa PROPU!l<»W. hlll.... D .. 'L.,.Y ~LOT .... __ .,.,_ ·-p ~~ ....... ctmtne ...,_ Yance7 Hut worti. FlM paint&. ""~ .. ,,_. u,... ..... ,..., ..,_, FAT le U4M.Ym ·· • •• • RoGrf, bnalb. alr·l••• ~. Dana PaUll, Su lla.n ._ JOQ.. ,_ -<tit.... ...,, C>-a..i CAI.IF. CASTINIJ CO. EXP. ,.,..._ GIJ'dlttWr. l.OC*l nra. lAW' Jll'1cel. RO)' ~ Br.eta. II coot;t• he * -.di Gm. -aop llaol""' -· "'"""'· O>nlact ""· s.., .. Onop Co. .... --. ""'_,. 1---;,..;:-;;;w;::_:;:,.=-:-. -DAILY PILOT -.,. _. 1o - JAPANESE _ Garde nln1 "* WALLPAPIR "/! 'Jf..Afft'{[f:;.:=,1. = Sa.n Oemtnte ottlce cldb1c. 1V coaal'a. A tad. • .. , • lwvlct. riett ....... ~ rWbta JIOll ed. "'Mae ' .._,_ ciii'J ...,_ n; N, ll C.mino Ral mm.. c.n.t JQ, pl dim. • Jd.. rm.int.• am 50-14+1 -.1n1 n.. 11 m.tCI) w • .,. die.-,.w. • t.. . ..,, ~ i.: • ~ "~· 1:.':;,w .... 1=cz:o:':b:;:i:L:i:;t;i:e:s:~:.;..:..,..;CillUER.ooii·~-~::.,;...~aii1 \..-iOo:Oa:Oaiil Not a ~EE ,... • ·~ )Ol>L Rua -.....;....,. ,.""~·...,.,: c.n "'""61 1,,_. pm. TV SCREEN TEST /t Campi••• Yord c • ...i ......... &46Sm. anlimite() ClERIC·L RECEPT. m rlHJ -~ • .ru.; 54G-4&17 "" JO AM tD t PM • " PHONE the,. ... ,...,..,.. agenc;y Majo, ui. ,....,,._ eo. 2 '"' • """' L&wn the ""'" Jon1an • Son TRISH HOl'KINS "" °"· N.u. ,..., -· ' ~ !!-.f::' Maintenance, Llc'd, lnluml Paintinc. Ucensed, bonded, day •·k., 9-S p.m. Stutinc ThbWT Frame - 54&-«18 att •· 1 insured. 5Q..S32S '8l E. 17th, SUitt 22i1 c .M. sa1ary sm. 6t64S2J. 1or m E. 11u. st. CM. IF You wan! anythinr but a M2~l470 .. .J~•~PP~'c,· ;;;;:,..,;;;;;=-:;--:::;;;;:Jr.;m;~'i;i;i'~~;;;;...r·~ Isl rate job, do.ft call u. e CLERK-'.f'YPIST in P'&blic F=· ~. ~.,.._.....: .• Othrrwlae, for tr-et elf, a.LL THIS accou.nt~ s oltict. Booll-7:31'.MPM ' J.U pal. Ed's O eanl..ng Service Painting Ltd. S4-45f9 "' ke ep 1 n r know le-d re 146-«0) Cupeu -Upbobtery ·WI~ I;;;=-.:=;:,-=:-;=:;--,; and pttfen.blf'. Pnftt O\'ft' 35..!--------- dowl • Floor Cart. ~ YOU Supply ~ Paint. 3 F-Ala .u-...1-, Tool f Call ~11MO klr inteMew. FEllALE ~ nw:him Br. Uv Rm I: Kitchen ·-~ ..... ......., Pain1"', SS0. Call 507_,.,. ORIGINAL COASTAL AGENCY a-.t at loool HIP < Haulfnt 6730 :£: A -m•-, 01 SdlOOI. lS br ft. m{illl2 -------M<Adanu J'alnllne "'"'· HOUSE OF PIES ,,_ ~ T .N.T. La\\·n se rvice. Inter. a: Exttt. Special rates Sntlllng • Sntll"-t tir. FI BERGLASS ~OLDERS Gl.r8.P clean-upg, hauling on aptl:. 6t&-3S45 11 you're a wa.itrHa: and you'd TM Workl's l ar .. st Nat1. mJc ol ~ Nb. A: l!,::ht movifl&. ~-OU P INT ll'njoy beirw •: Professional &: shOwft's needs band~ .. , 5.U...3'1'.!9 METICUL S A • Waitre11 Utilityllusboman Employm•nt Service tn..ton in IDOi dept. 'n. PICKUP-LIGIIT TRASH BLUE CHIP STAMPS. INS. Cashier Y :mt" Harbor Bl 01 ~ Wtgn; I: twnll'rlm lcrr ~ Caraae cleanup $10 lo.ad crew col. aWdentJ. Int-ext Hoa .. 11 Bake helper Harbot-Bh-d." at Adams ,.~t~I meJJ. J.Jlllll'ric:ml ... 540-369'l hooses. Exp. Docb. 115-5112 ~ )W lib Pll'Ollle._ .• ml do-COOK. Oldtt coupll!'. lite Superior, 1911 £. Or:cidlto-~ ''~ "Y'"A'"R"°"D'"l'°'G I' r . CI ll'&nup. * PAPERHANGING ll'lC ~r own thirW .•. op. ~ in ex!'~ for board ta1, SJ.. J,; • ~move trees, tvy, lruh. &: PAINTlNG. "' !lfi3.Jf25 ~~ ':w ~::; &i apt. etc. No up nq'd. GAL FRIDAY Grade, backhoe, 962-8743 * PAPERHANGER * i\lan \\wk other Job. Frnt. otc. ~ ca.mom-.. ILWLING 110 A LOAD Recognlttd Authority, Prior othlf'r job yeu've bad bcfott. ~-job for tut~ ad~. ..1 We're optnl~ soon ... at; •• Ott.n up. 1'l'ff Serv. Gen. instructor. 646-2449 lllG Newport Bl. NB ** COOK TRAINEE ~ can Gll'ni. Wb!Wf Pruning 646-2528. Ml-mU INT. & Ext. Paint.i.nr. Local Don't ftlk ... Run!! Xlnt fringe bene.fits ·, k BAYVIEW CONVALESq.il'n' COASTAL ACENCT ""'ir'; HAVE P-U a trlr. Haul ~l's, He'd, ins., fl'M esl. -·--'··· A"• 21 1970 ~ ,,..........,, -· · HOSPITAL """"'" Thurirl St.. 279:1 Hutor Bl_ ....... .... .-;,_ Anytime: Mov· l.&ll Chuck, &IS-0809. •A ......... 6 p•; -• ~ _...,.,.,_.., ... ~ IU I' C.!\t. 642-3.505. Other lee~ Jot. avail. ' ' . inc/clean-up/trash. F r !' e PROFESSIONAL.. :J) yrs ..... ~S..;;.'~·ou:;,...,..;;~·~·~·~ .. 1=-::;~~~jru;;<i--1:--:=~~Fo~'f=--= ,_ Est. S.ST~ exp. PfliPll'rhan&lnc &::: pain-t'CX>K tDinner) Gal lfridey HAULING 1.: cleanup, trees ting, from Enctand. 963--7461 * ASS'T HELPER * DI Shift to sta.'1. 1 Pl ottke, lite S/H. mll ~- I lhrubll N'moved. Reas. BLUE BEET 61l-9!IM Loraine, Watdllf ~ ;.· Free estlm. 5-IS-1092 Pla1ttrl"" Patth, FULL OR PART 11i\tE COOK. Female. Pt-e-scboal llll'l Ag\"ncy, »CJ Watclil! "~ TRASH .1. garage ~lean-up. Repair 6UI Age 19-n, 6 months rcadcy. :unches. S da.yJ a •ttk. Dr. NJL IG-2'mt ,. Mon-Sun. $10 a load. req'd. $3.15 PH' hr. 646-06TI •• GENERAL HELP . • ~ Free Esthnate. 5411-~l * eATCH PLASTERING COCO'S.REUBEN'S-$4.25 an hour .. '· All typn. rtee estimates Ph J" nm OOG-287J MOVING, Ga.nae clHn-up' Call 540-682.\ : 1n1 mpeon, COMPLEX Le. expand dw.ln. 1' « pt lite bauU,.. R.eaaona.ble. I====='====:=. ASS'T HELPER 4&17 MacArtbur Bh.-d . time bll'lli lor ales 1.11t. Air Frtt HtimatH. 645-1602. Plumt.lnt "90 "111 Umt or part-time. Ap INTERVIEWING MON.·FRI. 1J.3,S. & mo '1 rftd!:."y req'd. Housecleaning '7l5 HOMEOWNERS noon 1trlpped &: waxf!d., Cpta deaned, Wlndo~' \\'ashed I reneral houSf' • cleantne no'v avallable by an expud. lng profHslonal j11nltori11 ICfVIC.!. For last guaranlell'd 1erviCf' call 642.25:;7_ BAY Ir Beach Janitorial Carpets, windows, Doon, etc. Res I: Con1mc'I. 646-1401 JOE'S CLEAN si ltv. \Ve do Everything-Rell l Comm. t'l"C(! E!!t. 642-i."~I. FOR XLNT HOUSE CLEAN INC. * Call 836-0648 • * 1-tOUSECLEANING • 2 woman. Fairt A. ettic!enl. Call 548-1227 Meaa Cl~n!ne Service Car1>et•, windows. noon, etc. RH I: Commc'I. ~J e HOUSF.a.EANING Ii ~·1 day work". Re-l11ble. • 5"11-5651 • ~n'I cltanlJJI", Homea & apts. Nlte or Du •546-5745• ---~-----19-31, 6 mo. rttidency tt-2:30 to 5 pm Call Mr. N~bon &lib PLUMBlNG-AU.. TYP.E.."'S 24 llr. Servi~ FREE ESTI!\tATES \Vater heatf'n '60 imtall. Garbare d~ $45 IDll:all. AU. RATES REASONABL!: Call Jlm Glenn, 715 Owens St ., H.B. 5Jll.66(l!. PLUri.IBING REPAIR- No job too small • 6<f2...3l28 • H0!\1! REPAJRS quittd. ;J..'la hr start. DAY HELP GOOD NURSll'fG Call hlr. Winston 821-4740 Over 17 ye1m1 · CARE " APT ma~rs.. husband A e HOSTESSES ~ rood ~. 1r b-:a v.i.le. expu, lndu .. o:trious, e BUSBOYS ttte•tll'd In joinlrc suds a rtpalr abilt~. ~al e DISHWASHERS atatt, call 64S-11M. ARE YOU HAIRDRESSER -i. ,, • C t G•rts llcll'n911'd. to ...ui1 ~ BEAUTIFUL?? oun er I l.&gu,. ....... -er "' Il's al! ln the eye of Uw be-FOR FAST llAND<>trr 491'-lilSI :~ holder. Ch<:k the TV eon\. }'(X)D SER"vtcE. ··uu.. HOMEWORKERS w.urrm ml. you "-atch and If you TThtE POSITION (Envtlopt Addrnlen). I' feel you're as pre1ty a!I Rush stamped, s e l l·•" Plumbing..f'\f!ctrical.$7.~Hr. 110meoftllosepeople,cR.l1u11. 1 dressed envelope. 642-215.S or 642-0506 CALIF. CASTING CO. Apply In pcnion ony LANGDON WO RLD 24 HR PWMBING I< REMODEWNG s.;7.9&14 R•mod•ll"I A _ ~ep1lr - is "Onlinulnc: its i;t>llr<'h for TRADERS. P.O. Bos U21'· ('Vt'ryday poopl" "no ha'" Tlte Island House A21. Redondo eeacb. CaliL .._ a desire to \\"Ork on TV or m7!i ... 1 mod•llna: jollll. $15 to $1 2:; •81, f"1111hion lsll1nd =c;;.o_,H70zS~T=E~S~S-• .,---I ... per-day. Notre I~ you c11er. N('~'porl Bc11t'h Agr r-MO. allnal'd\'t, Pll'f1ldD-.-i *· FOR ON CAMERA ablt to n1ttf'public. Marine 1fl ,\UDITION * DENTAL M'I, chair-SK.it, Rr:slaW'&flt, Del Webb'• ROOM Additions, 1arqe1, CALL 1n4} 835-8282 ~Un. t yr 01100 exp. Full or Newportf:r Inn, 1107 Jam-, .. remodel. Lo.nit Price In 11AMto6 PM pt·lin"lf', JO\'t'ly office, borte Rd. Ne-wpon Bndl. -u- lown, Uc. contr a etor. **BUS DRIVERS Tu11ln.~ Solary open. Applylnpert0r1onl,yllam-1 ~-C, 642-2988 Ten nltOnthll posi1ion11, $3.10 S.1-1-121.1 2 pm. .t" GEN"L remodeling &: maint. per hr. Apply Mon. thru DENT Al.rO\air aulatant HOTEL ·~ No Job too • m • 11 . Fri, 7 am to 4 pm at Bus w/fronl ottk» caP1billtie1 • • • -:. Llc"d/lnlll~. '1Mll1. earUr. Im Irvine Avenue, Call 6't&4ll Vtty p~euant work.Ina toad.I-.. ...:,. -Ne-wport Beach. (7141 DES"OND'S dona an ftrst c.lus hotel, kl .I': l•wlnt "60 sc.1e01. m ttw-hOUll!ketplnr dfput-· • QUAU;.y )'OU"Ve a I w • y I BABY~ Full time, F•1hlon lsl•ncf ,:r~n~ll~:;l~~CI~ .• ": wan1ed. Dl'll'sam•klnc -own t .,.,1\1. 2.HS. Lile -NEE~ 644-lTOO Ext. ~~ 'if- altaratlor.. Key Sly, 1763 ~ee~n:· aaJary open. ~~ ,. lronl"I 675$ ""-..... C.M. 64$-U92. . Full Tim• ' '" =="-----'-""'-• RE-KNmtNG o1 nadan BABYkiriErt wanted , .,.., C .. SHIER HOUSEKIEPIR ·- IRONING. My Home . A All T'yptt or knlltln& own t ra na, Harbor "' F Q 1. ·' You pick up I dfllvtr. fabrle1. Blvdl,We1t Kent St., S.A. Owr 20 u 1me 1' t5c a pc. 6'6-&211 * 64.i..8636 * ~l-8167 P•rm•nent Position Jronlnf{, my homr. SI S.wlng & Alt•r1tion1 BAB M"l'ER • my name, APPLY IN PERSON for our IMW facllltiea hr. You Dl'lh~r. Call 83().3682 mu• have refettncH. own •l FASHION ISLAND 646-:-i643 rtation. 646-6106 NEWPORT BEACH • IRONING in my hon1c, Alterations -641·5145 ER wanted , Dtllcaltlaen, f\1.11 time men CO&ta lt1e11a. R.eaeonablc. Neat, accuni.tf'. 20 years f'XP. Parlr 1chool dist, 3 Must be nllable. See Jerry Apply in ptnon HUNTINGTON BIACH CONVAlESCINT HOSPITAL 548---6970 __ -----a wk. 51'i1-n4t Stock It Dellwry man, part '<•' J a nltorlal 67'0 woRKER.s AVaiiibF Any kind ot work, anytime. Clf!anln1. Jawn work. etc. Elficlent, n!Uablt. $2.SO hr, Ask !or John or Nicholas 646-0075. SPARKLE Janitorial &: Win· dow c~11nln1 Serv. Wln- dnw11, re11d., comcl, con11l. cleanup. F'fte e1t. 962--0672 L•nd1coplng NIO NEW LAWNS;-tt-:'~1iii; rolt>-tlllln&, r f! n o v a t I n a , clean--up. 197-2 417 or Tll•, Cer•n1lc 6974 BAB smER. 1 cbUd 2 yrs, time. daya. Sef' Harokl. ---------my me. 1-4 Monlf'ri. own 495 E. 11th, C.M. e Dlacount Tile Cenlll'r e t • ~ll09 att 4 ••DISHWASHER USll Fk>r!da St, 2023 So. Main, S.A. 546-1617 B'""""'"r"1c"1••N••1o=-•.:-::-:-::-·1 ·. WAITRESS -EX· (Stanc Lantl All type• of tile • wall, floor. r u • Y' ptrle~. lull time. Apply, JlunUJWton &"ch ·~ pat.lo, entry way11, bath It pop ar C.ri.f. p'~dp. No SURF k SIRLOIN 58.10 W ~ clle •J.e nee. • vac. ""-·tH NB N calls · HOUSEKEEPERJ~by .... ·11· ahowrr. Expert lnlWlatk>n Cn 1 ..., t I com t . Ph. ..~ wy, · · 0 · ...... or free lnstructioM for do Mii fll(f'r. 54&-TJJ6 DESK Cll!rlc s-rt time relief. can!. Uve in, own rm. '*· ,.,, ll -·-·ll•-. •-mplele llne --::-:=:-=:,-,::-;o-1 ri.fu1t know all pbuta of 'JV. ~r cpl. Oldtt ! · .•• ,fVY...... '" ....,... Ben I>· operator. male or IP: rt.I'd rel'• ex .I •-,..,~, • IOOlt for M)nl dHk, n.laht audit, woman P • • ....... ... 1111 . Niguel Hair Fa1hlon1, """led $:x>O .. r mo + rm ·" ln.'·"•t'·n. p PBX, It NCR 4200. Ben ..... ~ · .... "' "\ Monarch Bay lua, Brown'• Motor Hotel, 3UOll It brd. 6'Mt.50 \. * Verne. The Tile ri.1a11 • CUit. •'Ork. Install I: ~p.ln.. No job too 1ml. Pla~ter patio. l..elilkln&" ~ h o w e r repe.lr. 1141-19511146-(1206 Lil un11. Nlruel. S. Cout ffW)', South HOUSEKEEPER ComPtinM>n ;• \A.rune. ' for tide~ wom•n. Live in. ·' BANK TILLERS * XPERIENC&D * DftliG CLilll:K, Ref. extha~. !end MATURE reaume It ttl. e to Box M F\111 Ume. Ct.II 499-m 1029, 0.Uy Piiot, 2%1.t W. 1, Balboa Blvd., N.B. ..J l'6-0932. 1----·----op aal1ry le belll!!tlll ~~or mf!n 6 women .reated In jolnlna a fut OONtrr Ladlll'• Wanted, It 9 •• 0 ... i· nla:ht ahltt, over 20, No ex· HOUSEKEEPE • v: • •. The DAILYi -PIL'OT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace TrM Service 6910 wine: rtl10nal bank. per ntc. APPi¥ In AM, MR 1hUt. J>arkhunt Retirement DONUTS, 1~ E. 111h St. Realden ce, 992S La Cocta Meu.. Alameda, F.V. Ph: !IG-5&11 BOB'S TREE SUP.Gl·:J:r I!' OOck olf11r!na: lh(' it11111e . Fine Qaullty Tree St'l'V11·c. • s.tO-J79.1 * •ntin•la lank * DRIVERS * 1~';!!'..": AI~·~,J:" ...!: .-si: No lxperl•nc• "' 1~s E. 16th. ..... .. TREES. H!!dgq, IJ'ln1. cul, atumpt nn.ovcd. h"ult.od. 30 yn. exp, TUiiy In~. U12-4!m DON'S TN~E Sli:RV.ICE'Ail typea, LilCl & Jm1. t'rte Ettl. mal•s. &(2.5;",,q1 ·111 Carole Vanderkooi N I MT--039a. • K .. IClry! INSURANCE Ofc. H 'l O, : '' . Must have clean 6.Jiton'lla Tvi>lnr; A eltrictJ, to $2.'° drlvlnc remm. Apply hr, p/Li~. s.nea AM ..... , .. lookkH r YILLOW CAB CO. Coll 541-4369 tOAM->PM. ",. ln4l &M·n.21 N.B. MJT·B,Jocal.~ Loraine, 186 E. I6th St. e lNSTRUCTORS ill' 11 1 e11tcUft PertOML"I Alflf'CY, Cotta Mesa Modtlln( School. ST.50 per ,. Uphofst•rv ---'-"°-Wt1tclltf Or.. N.8 . EXPERIENCE ttq\&lred·Re-hi'. 1 year ,~. cab .1<'11 WIWAMS ~·urn "Crpt• ceptlonla1, eo1meUclan, mu. blwn 9-6. 131--510. • • Recover I rtpalr •clean. +---.ll::u:-1•a.r.::y:----J "™· hilr •lYlllt. <male or J, W. ROllNSON•s •• l ~ ... "I" ___ ,_ I female~ Hair llWlttn Salon, • NEWPORT u··-· • ao11au . WOn1.. 9'-.,.., mtaurant iia:us n ce l'Uhk>n lt11.lld tu-215t ~vi JOIS ,-IMl'LOYMllff ltal><lll """"· N• ·-·I==="=--'----' --·---ectN. Start $1 .65. Ccf ESCROW St c re t • r y or ~ob_!.1nttd, MM 7000 ly Han ~ Tn.ll'lff, IOl"flro t.)tp, dnln!d, COASTAL AGENCY Mach •rtt DAILY PILOT, CAl'TAIN mo"""'" e1., CM Bo• m, mi w. Balboo 11 .. ~for 1-·ua or Part Time • SALES e -- LICINSED Other let/tree Jobi a..U. BIYd., Ne._ Beach. r.adar Lo· n )0 ~ll'I ex-JLD ct.re: and Mottlll'I iiXPER'D lN\l!UCtl qtncy Apply In P'l"IOn 10.S pm .Jt1 ' . 'u ' . Pro. &lrl wanttd o-rt time Pert0nnt.I DlpL ' :1• 1ieritnce a or JIOWt'r. l'lelper. Mu•t awlm, drl..,., ·~•-•,,_ ..;. ~-· e 2 ruhk>n Ill NB te11M>nal 1port tlthlrw tuSdt row, Jive lrl and bl! In-.,.,...,,_or_._ · · • • A-fexlcan 6 C•ntral A.mm. telllctnC. L.ov•ly hoime, nice EXP!:IUENCEO So.Jeslady. Equtl opponunll)' emplo~. • ·• can watm. Admlnl1tnUve tamlly. U Linda Iale, N.8., MUST bf mature, for JANn'OR§: Full • Pan , · l· operk!~. now t:hnl Labar DtJI. f& mattruJlf lhop, 6ff.l9fM timt evn/wrll, Mm/ .. • ·' AVAILABLE tor w.tken4ai 3191tm144t, m,.n or 00\lPlta. Ae@' at • l!Xttnded charten or dtlJv. EXP'D nunery-prden ctn-D> W. W~ Ave., SJ.. ;,f eriel. Bell of ttftrenots. H-r JUST WISH IDr tt.r ...ttcnan. Amllna:'• Hur. or call $45.121J 1i \Vtlte 8o~ t!f 1000, Da.lly lurnlahlJl(I for )'OIJr home, 11!1')', N.8. Ph: 6ff·25T3 •• Piiot, 2211 w. Balboa BJvd,, find ar-•t bQYW lrl tod,,y'a Your local Suptr-Ma.rtcet. • Nf!wport Beach, Ca. ClwlOed Ada. Call ~ A chi* tt. Dial M)..S678 A charat 1l. -· ------------~-----------~--·-------------------~----~..1..----~~--~~---~------------'--- t , -· .. ---. ••-r-···· . . --·' • ~ I, ' • . --. ~ .. "1'° I " I ~ 3 ~ LINES l •• I 2 ~TIMES I I 2 DOLLARS (Any lte"! ~riced $50 Or Less) • I ' ' • • Pin~h Yourself A P e Of Pennies (Or Even D · Jia1·s) . • . . . . Penny Pinchers Pile Up Profits • • North .-' DAILY PILOT PENNY PINC ial Direct for Details 642-5678 ounty, 540·1220, Toll Free R WANT ADS ·r \ ' • .. '1'--T'fl""}"'• • to l'Wlr·AD'IUTl5E~ Wolnt1el1)" A""'119, ltn Wtdondit', ~ 19, lflO ". -· .. ' .... • JOU" IMPLOYMINT JOI$ i · IMP[OYMENT JOIS" EMnOYMINT JOU" IMPLOYMINT MIRCHANDISI flOlt MIRCIWIDIU l'Oll MIRCHAHDISI ifoin~mWiDiiin~"'TilH~--:-;a. Joflo -· w-7100 Joflo Mon, w-. 7100 Schoolo-I-7MIO......,.._ 7MIO SALi AND TUDI SALi ANO TllADI SALi AND TUDI SALi AHD TUDI KITCHEN Helper. -;;;; RESTAURANT ~ Now takirw Furnfture IOOO 0.r ... Sele m2 S.winw Mechlw 8111 Mh11U.1111 :» W MIN.. Wa•1I lood -plant, .... -·"'-lol' .COOKS• 21 l'C. "MADlllD" GIGAl!TJC.·P.uaa!<G wr mo .... -.-. * ...... TION * wk. l.anafoh Fancy ,...... Apply, Ciili>ny J{llA:hen, 3211 2 ltOOl!t GltOUP MlZ -"!-Aoo· 11 .,. ..,._ bOmit. --.._ Fooda, 21144 Lquno ea.,.... Harbor Bl\'d., C.lll l'1lOllf -80MES l'l1. ""'-... 11, ............. -....... -PRIDAY, J:a .. .M. Rd., Laaui-Beach. 494-:1020 ........ _ a • ••--fl~ · See ee--·A-at · • wa ; Qlalltild IClfa • •~•· • c•••a.•11:1 own::uw .._ '11t•d -·· •• ~man. ,..,,. clean •v ™--. 1...i -· ..-~· -a< -daioN •..._Gem-. '""' "-lt-~U.i!nx::~ ..::r:: :! m & t:ata.t-...---.mi.o-. ; ~ budwllft -: ma. IDllll-,,mtt. &-Mellll f ... tsll ... ,.,.t="llPll. .S.: wk. $t'br. No·-·oee."'Call· -: ·~-.,,-,.-_.,....-,.,. 9Qllted.lllle --_2 • -,_ , -I -TV'L •--W.um:D:-• ~ -• """ ,.~ ....... ......_,1,.•<•IPm••--*RIPAIRS* -·--.. Goi4<n &or, 586-9102 Aatncy "" C&roer Glrb c!IDw ,_ -6 • bl. _,,,... ,_ • -de ~ ~ • --a --':" ::.-- LICEliSED (lJ) II', Cout HWJ., N.B. ----8-·"""'' ........... In ,... = °"""-o•·--. REAL ~STATE By appolnc &4M939 MEN ' WOMEN' ~ARE AT sra.11 lnr -. 184 w. Dlll SL, _,SS.II, all -• -., --"'* WANT!llo Old • c ......... l -,_.... . • ... J CM. utMd~ 5f5C3t ,_... ..... Ott...., chah, ~ ~ -~ llUSWYOMANOf'•ICE SALESLADY, "'-· • 1NHA1.>;T10N'THERAPV r<o-Pmts.ONJ'1f.,. MOVING -,.._. -maiolc -· Captato ..... ..,...$...._...., • r 22 a ... ,, Jdllt opportwrltleo Wl!LK'$WAREHOIJSE --· <dcr TV, Mwlcal ----~ CASLALL~~v29-51 t!".~.chain •. · c' h~1lh, • MEDICAL ~SISTANTS ~ w. • 111.,...,. """· ---..._ -1.,._ 1121 ,,.---•GIP FREE TO ·YOlf : .... • •DENTAL ASSISTANTS """ -at.-. -. ,,.,_,.,.., . F"""°'· 0>otact Mrs . MUST SILL -. oddf!ls-. _,. l'DIDERIWI ..,. .......... --::--:-:-:-:--..,; e MAIDS .-cruldl, 545-361!8 • MEOIC~L SECRETARY OVElt STOCKID w ..... • mllo. 11'14 DIVIYE,IUCKl!lalM:llEa bmtaia. _.._ -v.., -..._ • Ben Brown'o Molor 110"1 SALESWOMAN WANTED • EKG TECHNICIAN Twlol $8.11, Nb $S11. -dt CO-. CM -&t,111 GO?TAR ---1 mod> tlpo 1DI ...i. -moo s. eo..1, s. 1.agw1a ~~1~ ~~·.:1 Quieat sa.ss, laap sm.e. MOVINc tD __.,. pw • * '3.4IN * mcft! ;::~ =·~ • MAIDS <2J. ,..,,.,_ ,, ., SALESLADIES,. lull " ..... _• • R~RATHOllUTooA:c"' l~:'A~N ~ s.~'1t .:!' ::!'":"iv~ • ACOUSTICAL ..,... WIDY'S AJml i-.. - oveT. • lifAINTENANCE time. 'ApPly ln peraoo. 11lE way beda. $29.95, Studio WM I: chain.' IUl'f'boud, Glbeon J.:iO w/cue_ Xlat man, penn. Ph: 494-71Jll SHOW-OFF, 22 Fa.sh Jal, e STUDENT PAYMDlr fl\ANS AVAIL.All.I Couches $89.95. oddt • endil. Wed A Thun. COl:ld. S135. 6GlltT a>ME BROWSE AJtCJllND MAID: for Newport-Balboa N.B. e OWNfO & O~E:::i:·~~=l:;~sg.l PROFESSION SIESTA SLEEP SHOP 11961 5P'ttwuod Wq, univ. GIBSON IM5 U striJICGuitar ~Newport $vd. Pcnimula area. Exp'd or SEC~ TO e •RADUATE PLACIMltlT SllVICE 1927 Harber Blvd .. CJ Park. Jrvlne 'll"OW'r' beads, ~. ~ Behind Ttq'• Bid& Mat'JI: not /Call6'1$l463 ' V .P. &t5-2'1ti0 Y1r Goldenrod. CdM. bardcue$.l«t.l'D-0717. o.t&Mna * ..... MAID' JOI'. N•wport-Ballm AVCO CORP. CA 0 SOSll Cit. Hwy, ""'"Pl ......... " ..... -• S-PI!:CE -"""" OPEN DAILY t ... P""""'la aren. Exp'd ., Thi• " • dream job w/~n--~ Llf RNIA f9S.e2 """' b<do. --· oet ·Good """'-17S or l>eot * * aus.MA'l"l'Rrn, SLEEK -Sia not/Call 67S-3463 ~':tted ~: :ir::; saddle, dr1)C. prN/~ otter. Call SJ&..TS:l lb'oller, CSl' .... dlid'• tmWe cat WrJ ..,. MANAGER TRAINEE average .kills ,.... will PROFESSIO"AL 17 PC. KING SIZE ...-, Nm. -• • 121 boa oceordlon w/cue maple rocbr. -cbalt, uiu. --• ' FOR TOY CHAIN · make ,YQµ the Private sec'y 11) SCH BEDROOM MISC! Xlnt coodil1an, infant bttb t•b/•afet7 4erttan4i'll1 ·~ X!nt oppor, 111·25, manied, to an important man. The _.,,.. WOll.D OOL Larze 9 dra'ftf drea:m', mJri. GAR sale 1; misc. tttmt _ ca.aMT pta I bottle w •rm e ti ~ dnJt exempt, many Co. locale will t;ie a.real! Do )'OU • rar, 2 bedside ttandl. Kine wuber, dryer, rdlis, MW-diaptn/dllper pd A ..,_ Dua Sweet Alla: ben•O!!. Call Mon, 8124 M>-. fit the .....-.menu? Free. OP MIDICA1, & DINl:AL PIRSOHNll. ---..... loc moc!U.,., -lumber. Pl .... a ~ 11a ~ A lnlonf• -· _... -..;,,. • · Bnibal"'· 545'<383 Call Mary Lloyd. 1195 Nowport lllvd., Caito -645-2922 ed mattftu, ....... -........ -.tc. 2349 ,._ "ONE ONLY" SAU: --a _, - MAN To uiist mgr of 1oca.1 Abo, Fee Positions •Iii. etc. Dame 8d., c.M. 56-9145 N I: Uled AMF Grand Prix 9* '13-0ll appliarice ekft. Neat ap. Fl!.!_ •• M W 7 OO Oiolcoor ,...~~ St>e5~1:t ~or nite. ~OS recula&n pool talMe 'ffitb 7";;";;===,.,.= ......,.. 4116-2383 M>-. AVCO PEltSONNEL-Jobi Mon, Wom.· 7100 .... -, om. 1 ~· v~ GARAGE SALEI >«wU,,! °"""' · all ...._..., - Wrighl 9-10 am only. SERVICES ALL FOR $»t Jewelry dothinr. -. N<w ~~~· ...... $399 --OtWbl cut *SECRETARY* We own No down pmts, only $9 ~. china • MiM! Hems. 504 ~ Olmole -$1500.. Mov l ns. must MECHANIC NEEDED 2323 ~0·,!'::w:;1'. SA N•al "PP'""""'· -~ WELK'S WAREHOUSE Fernleal CdM SAT" SUN KIMBALL Grand ...... 11'6 acrtlice.,. l9'iO-. As11 e Part Time enttgetic )'Ollltg lady for 1 • 800 W. 4th St., Santa Ana ONLY' ' ORGANS Jar Chuck Trapp 5«Mll.D. ;';~~::;-;;;:::::;"-;:;~ e ccintact Mgr, ...., - -_ _ _ _ girt ofc. Shrthnd. typinc, (I piece Dall)I' M Set N SuD 11..S . moMAS Orpn •••••• $119 er after 9:00 PM. 51j...70M ;: Marcus Moton 645-0466 SeCilETAfy:r:--r lite ~. Real Eatate or 1 FURNrrURE retumed from R~ & Bake Siii HA?GllNDOQd .. M " $298 DINETTE Rt 36" IOWlll •MECHANICAL $G45 "" monlh C0111tnletion '"'" belplUI. of California ---· ...... Sal Aug. 15,. an>5 pm, '21 llAMMOND B3 •••••• -..... °"' leol -.. DelblllelY ............. *ENGINEER Three years ~tarial ex. SalU'y open. S47.s667 • es, deeoratcn cancellation. lOtb St., (Womens Qub) 41"'. ' 4 Y)'ft ~ Needs kwtnc fatd:t • MacGregor Y&cht Corp. perlence, High School grad\l-SECRETARY, exper. for w f SDeJrlsh I: Medimnnean H.B. indudtt bendl. dtllvery A pedettal chain. llel&'e Pd-ed )'Vd. ~ 1631 Placentia, C.M. ation,'50wpmtuo.1 .... ,t.:! med.teal dictation, ins. 1: e're USSY RD FURNITURE GOOD ~ofa-bed SlS: ~! • • · MaQy other Ule new. a.t S1S5, ''OL\IUJE" ad.er.,~ v•·~ -...... a ............ -·-.. -S15. OSl-'111 -~-· -· _._ • Medlc•I Frnt. Ofc. hand so Wpm required. ~ collect~ in 1ri group pn.c-1144 Newport 81.# C.M. ..... ....... .n-e• ·~1 -· ---.- &:per. gal will Jand this ter. ply at WelrtminBter School tke. 646-0545. Mn. Austin. Q bout who ~ nite "ttl 9 <n<r••.u. ....... ~ .~ 2-AMANA-Air-O:lndl• _. ~ ~-·-all-• rifie 0ppor, in doctors ofc. District, 14121 CedanKlod SERVICE station Attendant, Wed.. Sal I: Sim. 'tn 6 .a.-11 1100 YAMAHA e KDCat.Lt. v,,.. •"""' 1W1JU.o -- TG $450. call Gloria Kay, Ave., Westminster. swing shift. Lorin'• Arco, t t b • ...,..... ences • mOM,\S C.ott $350 u/aac. $100 ft. 1 chDdrm. 171-lll ... " --~ 3201 H.-Bl\'d. -'ge s 0 uy 1t. O'KEEFE • Memtt .... KO!!LER"' CAMPBELL n>d .... ~-="=$30. --.. COASTAL AGENCY Soc'y (2) A San Diqo r.wy, C.M. •tow • dean, with docl<. COAST MUSIC 1 bllh ~ l<EED, o,.,a -•: mo Harbor e1., cM 55-"75 Int•""""' Mon. >-?PM And fuss1'er Good 155-NEWPO T tL ..._..,. ....,. -... ~ Coeta M!!.. ·.a:. RAINBOW V11t I cleuN. lbiped.-·w.etud .. M:i:::;~bs ~vai~~ C=t:~~~tni &/or $~~ve~.ERH~~E won:~: bou e M.AYT~G ~ Man, Aua:. Hn 0n1,y 1JM M.S..t Idea.I for utblna. Wattt fil. and ·one Cl"I.)' wry r _-,:,,,. portunityf!Jretal\Je~l.Part . Ne:r;rt pennanent $UO wee kif 0 t Who buwashen,ciryenl:mat· SAVE NOW ters air aa it cleaJB, un m-3llt Of...,.. l: fllll time. Call before 10 trainq; period. Servmott.. chine aetL Bit. Guarantee. ntw! tncJ.. all/attach Ir floor TWO ~ male am & after 5 pm M6--0223 Ptrsonne Af1ncy 506 31st St., N.B, t t II •t Bunk beds drtlRr ·/mlr.. DURING SUMM•R pol!Uer $3IJ) __. WA brcllta Jclttem frte t. I===='='"""="' 133 Dovor Dr N B ge S 0 $8 I • •·-A ----':: 1· SSl-8631. CLl!ARANCE SALll 54&m1. • -· u-11 p MAIDS EXP! TOP WAGES '42-317'' • • SERVICE Station aaleSmen-ror, .... 5C ...... ..._ ~le w NEW/Uaed apptlaneea I: We have fnde..inl, repos. . m.o!llD • AppJy in person-Roadway full &: put tbne. E:xperlenc. It's h:)t' that v.-e CONickr plate gl45I top, end tables, TVs AU r u a r a n teed . rent returm a door mocleh 10 rr CaboYtt' Camper, ==....,--..,..."""" Inn 1400 Pal, ..... CM ed only. Neat, Appt .. 2590 Callfomla •acre d ,...,. Medlterraoean dftuer, w/ -··'ap'1 •M• ~,.-CM ~ ~1 stow rtfria' etc $851) ll'5T FREE to FOCI , .... ~. · · Sec'y BookkHper NewportBlVd.,C.M . ..,. .• ~llfttb&t ..... minor, DUX din rm set, 5;.Trsa'~~-.-.. _.. ~~~ &mrnond._ .. _ ron1'2door~.~~3 beclltiMb' mmed MEN-Experienced gelcoater. Gd skills, If you like variety, wicker bar atoola. 499-1186. ..... ..... ut4J ._...."' JPd. ' cyL $125. See at 2l4 b&adt and wblte W. Apply, MacGJ'ti9r-Yacht this ta it' Great boss To SERVICE ST A T'l 0 N a .. ; lt'a ;fud that we worhd Ye'Y MONTGOMERY Ward auto extra ~!_~OND Albert Pl, Coeta Mea tetMoed en ' fML Corp. 1631 Placentia, C.M. ..-...-Call Geni .. ;........ tendanl Full or Part ~ bard to become the' West's NU QUEEN bed w/q1.1Uted washtt, 3 yrs old, Uke new, nAIUJ.u .... --. ....__ MOTHER Needs end of sum· ~ n-un~. help wanted. 3195 Harber foremost land corporation gold tpread, $115; Dbl bed $T5 del.lwred & cuarantee. In C'ORONA DEL MAR HEAVY ~ drapet:, &Wl 6 TB?V ·;;;._. --::::-. mer .help. Chldm/Lt hskpg. coASrAL AGENCY Blvd: CM and we're not about to b1~ w/bookahU hdbrd ' $SO ' 847-3ll5, 54&-8672. 2854 !! Cout Hwy ma93D rain prool; ftd'wood table I: 0 •" 4 "• • LldoJsleBaytront.675-aUH. 27!!0HarborBl.,CM Serv StaUonMechanie-Sales. our status on al i ck, 67>-3173 h."EmlORE Auto washer, 0peftMon1:Friews bench••: Goodyear tan ·kmllemmdllmie.'", t 1495 SUperi m1ick-buck aaJeamen. 8' SOFA, neVtt used, quH1ed XI -~ 10 le •• ,. ' &lburblnke tirta T50xl.4. tna1. ok:I. RuJty ~ e OFFERING: Xlnt Ao-Other fee/frte jobs avail. man, op ~· GI', ,_ , nt ........... eye • ...., FALL MDSE 67'5-l196 eute. Nda. pod .... _. . •-_,1 --===·'°"',,;,..--a• Placentia NB Jloral, acotc~ $125; dell\•ered Ir 1uarantee. ~..., -conh11uuat1ons w QN ege * SECRETARY '* · _ -• ' · Jn four ahori years, we turn-Mat.chine 10\"e&el.t $ 'l 5, S4i'-3ll5. 546-367:1. SOON ARRIVING • SrROlL-OOIAIR SET I ;i---;;:::;:c.:-;,,.,,:-:-.,..,:...;i. student. For lite household Beautiful New Offices. SHARP r!rl 1lP lHO, no ed an ldea mto a mult:L.. 5.30-8337. SEARS ~--"c 30.. ... AD discontinued --"·ta ol Convtrta into the 10 nee. ~-hni&n Blue.-Cr• duties. 675-0310, 54~7197. GOOD -rtunlty a..* ........ COAtume, atral.ibl beer IJ¥. million dollar -·bl.k (.'Ol'oo .._,,.,,., .,..._, ..._ -• 1p fo ha' .,.~---~,~-~....... ~ .... a.K',-, "'Jbe Place" 2000 Vt pon_tion. Now;; broke1' ._ DIN'G Rm Furn. WILL n,rce, 2 Jge ovens. Servkle ¢4noa & organ1 now being n..,nu ~ equ · r .,y. kittWta", 2 &......,.~:· Ofc. Tr•inee $325 secretary to worlc in fast Balboa, "The, Local," 219 ~: Jookin& fOl' Ua l"e1ft9e"-SELL plecH .eperattly. contract tran6femi.ble. Like clOM( out at discount prices !!0050 ~"'., '!=. ~ ~ c~nL &Ml ~ ~ Rea nt H.S. grad OK. Beaut, paced N.B. advertising a.gen. Brf9tol 6'J5..51n Gt~~ tadvea: who tu lhillk the * 645-2553 * new, $200. ~7369. )'Ol.I can't bellew. •• • ........--... ~~· ~ ' --: N.B, offices, Top benefits. cy. All 4Jplll ~shorthand . . WANTED b • Shop us. see! FENDER 'Bau amp11fier M St. Bemml ~.~ Call Mias Betty, 557.fil22 req'd, klnt uJary A bene-SLIM GYM &&Jes • HSitet 'o\-'a)' we do. to uy-~ alze KENMORE Was be r , 2 WAl\D'S BALDWIN STUDIO delue Rkbnkdwr bl.u tn.lned. Nttda ~boriw Abigail Abbot Personnel tita. Under30. Ph: :. ~ =.~·: ~ An,"* cne ot 1be men he's ~aoo:=:.:.~be ~S:,,.. worltl. SlS. 5M-MCM l!Jj Newport. c.M. 6'UC84 ·pitar * tarp )'Vd. 5*-Ull' I ~~u~";""'~,,~m~·~·~:~n~ta~w~A~:~ . ..,""',...r •. I I """";;;!•~833-~1B70~~*=;"""' 11; aella Hkt ~ l1n ~ ~ prevtom NEW modem avocado dining ANTED Good \lied left * m-MMI pm. I· e ORDER DESK e SECT'Y • TYPIST bunches, Call B. Snyder he~.1 will lie rm set, Swivel chain Ph: ~ ...;.rm. refrlser&t«. 0 • ..__ ... -.-.. y PICNIC table, bencbH 6 2 ~ ...._~• .... ~ Ml--1494 ..,..... 540-l969 or 5C8.1J.33 ¥ .. ~ • ~"A,....,, .. .-.....-...,.-, .IJllo. patio chain $12; umbrella ·~ -or "'"' Part time work, $2 hr. Type 70 WPM, good phone ~ 'fteuclmble. 66-ll89 ..._New A u.t pla.noe: ot tf!nt $10· Exfl'.GerUie $25; call day •r n Newport atta. 642•2664 voice; light s/H, lite Bk· ~HONE SALES. eill Aft )'OO.,usedtotarninrseod. Mr. Shelkln * ELECTRIC Ranre mlit makn, Best bu;ye tn ?~ajpor<~· ~·:-~·~-¥:~~·:1~-:~~-~~~·~~~I kpng, $450, Xlnt benefitJ, time, no experienced ire--money. WMh a little effort (....i.-..tre make). ps, So. Callt. at Scbmklt Mwdc PART time Sale slady Good advancement quired, Immediate employ. our repruentatiws can Office Furnltvrw IOIO ..,.,. .... Call 644-M38 Co.1fl07N M&Jn.SutaJu NEW 'Roberts stereo tape necessary, Virginia'• SniJi Coldftll B•nke~ & Co ment 1869 Newport Blft make $25.000 •~•up. · reawde:r, 1 track; ""9pd. 2 ~W)'~~ 3334 E. Cout N~RT BEACH 833-0700 SUite F,·c .M. 548-5.'ijl. ., Are )'OU more ~ tn Reftn'd HdO wood delkl, <;;~i:i,~· ~;;; BdUT. l'Oktftt oak rdln. S.::,. ~'i:. 14M. Telephone SOliclton advisinC people to Invest In $89.50 • Retln'd wood arm 548-4aOf • ~ piano, $100 ... -.-nr,.. ......... """ ..,_ PART time help wanted, S•C'Y·LEGAL Charity appeal. Paid weQly l'ftJ. matoe tban bl hartMtlJ. row, dslJn. $29.!0 e We uniStt ttore price at p.ts, -···.....,--• .......,. """,.. ~~ Cou~~iowyn, ~· TRAINEE $500 AppQ>: 3JS N. BroadJll'&Y Jrc an acre~ and ttltte!' blve the laqed .election LG. COLDSPOT REFRJG e ii(, tu 675-0023 men We. dryer $40. ,!_~~ 1'";;;;,.;::..:::;:=;:,::;;,.=:;;:=::~ I Lovel)' new -Newport Beach Rm. 410, Santa Ana. + Cu you tUt a big, new car of ulOd ottlct 6Jrn Jn this W~Top freezer. _.;_ , cottee tt.blt $10, tent ~ PBX Anlwering itervice exp. Ofe'1. Xln't oppor. wi fine ;;iii&Oiiiiiii ... iiiiiiioo .... J plan and el'ldleu ~ ~ $50 * * 646-Tdl . ABE GRAND Pl.ANO 1251), Sf&..2574 7rn~~~.;;;:-::;a:iJ pref'd. Full time or part flnn. Top benefila. Call M~ • TratntellNpectton M.ch. benefits ln stride!' 'Mc Mahan DHk e FrHu,..Uprl9ht • H~/Mta.ch. '800 ap. 10" bench•• w/1tand $130, n , tline. l'I" 53&8881 Be!IY, 557-6122, AbigaU Ab. Shope Exper, Pub a"'11 !BOO !<ewport 191\'d. 12 cu ft PO. 612-2252 !'!:':.:! !Ulll. DAYS ONIJ •Ill" jol-145. 5 hp mo mot. ndoJ .. • ~" ChnSde Ant For wen come oa. Tell your .... ...... • t ......_..,~ Zebra mini trlU lltlO •. ft-. w/llfld Md 4 "111~"'! People who need AVON -bot Pmlonnel Arency, 110 ,._.~ ; .... e n--nt: e 9eCfttal')' to take a coffee ~ -lO PRIVATE PARTY 561l'l3 afte ' 9SM1M ':" Can be served by you -in \'.'. Warner, SUlte 211, Santa ~..,..:n;• 1 t .._.."'°ri bl'ft.k and then e&U u• while :Kl9 Autom/oopltt, $ {$0 l AntlCIUll 11 wantt to b\11 piano r ..,====::::-...,,. your 11pare time -they get Ana , i-~-Y _.J!f>,'p' I ahe's out. (cost $1300). Exe. dnk "4 BEAUTIFUL curYed China for Cub 213: 481·1423 El.EC incllMW, •~. -..iOll&I 1tU4ranteed products -you SECRETARY ~penuwn ·~ LU-tbtt cbr $10, new typv.tr chair f1pe:, 1 yr old. Coet "' earn lot• of money. / Afency • Oh. one word of eautlon. $40 IBM c A B, stereo c*>lnet, Oak, wood carvinc. E11tfy-~net Orp.n new $1850> Xlnt IN1 i500, C1ll Now-B~e s~I:. ~~;:,al~ 1716 Orange, Suite C, CM SUclc opera.kn need not ap. We./ceb, llte'Y deek, etc: $325. 2 •18th Ce:~tury velvfl ·Xtn't Cond Vibrato &f6..S300, 6'.B-?211 ;;-==::-:=':""=,;;;i 54.0.71)41 546-5341 pay $500, Call Gloria, ""'"'!!64!!2-00l6...,!!or!!!!!!515-097\1"'"'"'"'!!!!!! ply. ~11 just be wutina CLOSING OmCEI Owner ~in$1ooroee/~:·iw:;•:. (nf) lf&..4222 (JlmY CAMPING ~WM ti. '' ~blue .. ~~.-~ PRACTICAL N Pt f ..,._ ,..., ' 61J.46ll ~ 12' '°its.s~ Tl!OMAS SPINET ORGAN hap, kntama, -.. '"1..r ·~· mil p ....... ~ asat1tefderlyfa7r111~: co>.5rALAGENCY . * nPl$T5 *FOR APPOINTMENTEXECDesk,3.tttlmaater ' . Wa&nut.Coet$6$.!.Ynold. aastd Item•. Very Jdtte.na,SCl'Nlll.-W, ,eml-tnvalid. Lt luJehold 2790 Hartm Bl., CM Reglater for • CALL: delkt, ~ ehairs, Adler ",!,~R~-:_ ~blecut ~.:; !_~ARRAN'I'YI JJkt new. reucn.ble. ICM70S. a.Hco. MS t9S5 duty.·$2.25 hr. 673-3547 Other tee/free joba: avail. Jo JACK SfANLEY Eltc 21 l)tlewritl'r, top .. -· NATVRAL Oerulean ink 3 Mq. d4 ~ ~ I REAL ~ATE, OPEN· a tern= <n4) IJS...3233 qua.lib A · prlced ri;ht! :::~n::;.,.:;nr1.: ~ e ORGAN, Hammond. spin-tCoft, atlwr, 14 sklnl,'"tull. mcbr Md part ~.1 INGFORQUALJFIED SERVICE CENTER lntervwa.9-12 e WOM·ENWANTED e 536--8894,eveii536-98&6. Isabell FV btwn Warner et.truttwooct.S?M. Letout.OttcC!Olt"PIODS.C need·a Id llolll• • SALESMAN. E x c t llent Employment Aftncy Westlrn Glrl Inc. 'l'rotttt'• 8aftry A MarMi~ • ' * 549--23El6 * WS. -.mi. 541-T48I Iii commislkln ichedule plus '66'1 MllCArt!Nr Bt\'d. 23' Forest Avt., G1r .. I $1le I022 SLEIGH bed John Quincy ~-& SM'~ BNr....tek pool THURS AQI JO net a1t. • many OOnwi benefits -Alk * S•l•a ...... Comm. Newport Beach t.quna Beach Adam's (1767) "Sleiib Bed" r'-Emorl•I _ _. .,.,.. table euet, cue-naclr, bdl1 ~ _,. -'~ ~· for Mr. Snyder or· Mn. J oy (f'uU/P /t:!me) ~ See Mn. Rauw EI.EC lawn mowtr, new .... the Empire Guest r ~pm..--.. NW $40. 113-0l'N or a.u..uu at ::r • ~ .... R ASSOCIATED BROKERS Oppor. IG make extra To $lJ,OOO WOMEN, Liltl ddtvery wc.'k. tond; Dinette Ml, drop teat room of the Wilke Rouw !IXlO, 6X7 & ' X 5 vit:W'I, 359 ' ' ~ SERVICE, 2025 W. Balboa money I.elect your own hrs/ Senior Planning Engr muat Must have own car. Apply: table w/2 chatn, 1 cha!Me, $15. 673-0174 « ~Ult ext JenA, tripod, t!Offl. IPOt 9Xl2 NYLON rua. never Blvd.&fi.1:2: call Sil-3663; pleaMnt euy work. havt dell'ff, 1 3-5 m:. exp, 325 N. Broadway. Rm. '10, MalGt otter. ~2975 359 ~lites. 4 X t s/s llnk. TO inm uted S50; DlilbMlll. exc eves * lkkplr .. , , , . , $5SO In kmi l abort raJllf! tacfl.. Santa Ana. LG Hard F.dp tlntehed e ENGLISH KNEE-HOLE Jlflkor outfit. 536-~. eond $100: Air cond. Sood Relief Cook. LVN a F/C to trial bel/peaboal<I 117 plamtlng. r .. Pd, (oJIO ScL-1 .. 1n-uct•--1-ptlntl .. ~Akal .... deck DESK -$11S ... -ol!er. ¥mm y ....... wl!h 115 .... '""11l?S.66-l381 ;i;ii~::.:t:ii':&==~ Housekeeper. Bayview Con-helpful -not neccu. fee Jobi can Ann We1teun ~ •• .-.... ..,., otflel" 1-hld Items. 5'&--2182 &M-5986 'and aluminum cue $50. 2 VtSTA delb A cheat + valeACMt ROllP. 2055 Tburln, 1t Sec'y ....... , . $5$0 ~ Art,.q, 200 Dltcover • Greet New ! * IG-&;M * Stone· Mutln ttole. Stl1 C.M. 642-3505. Sii I0-90, ,,,., tiO + !Apl, Wellldlt! Dr N.B 64S-ZI10 C With --· ,umlturo to00 Pumlturi t000 ....._ or -b' O>iM RETAIL ..... Clerl<: -R.E ............ l>c"*"'1I • • ..... ... Sporting Good1 t500 coblnet. -.. -· 17).J,51~ • wk, Sat, sun. """' .......... M. UR5ENTLY AIRLINES T!UMMER Pront Tllro w mU'l'IJ'UL • ~,, 642-1133, w ""Phil. * lkkpor ••..... $650 Sale of Rental Sofas POOL TABLI lawn mowwr. Cd. amd. , "!" bllc'.W.-1a '~ REUBEN E LEE ··t1c, tivy mpanllb1Ut1 a NEEDED • • • .c x a Recutat1o•. * 961-!IH * M~ . -o 1 a , • ouperv'dlon. A "'tural for ""'"' -YOUR CHOICE $88 ' Complete Wllb all • WAIS!' -llPt blonde .~M9'2!1:.,::;l~;,.,.,....._.....,.:: NOW INTERVIEWING * Soc'y ......... $500 • T-l•fl who wont exclteMent plus! acce-1u. Xlnt ccnd. ... .... -wlc w/cue. 2 . n:MAU:. a .. ,, Night Busboys & Dishwashers RJ .. t opot for • det>ll or!-rr Ticket qent! Air lreilht! Not Int -lltot -1~ f9 -,,.,., !3!0. -._ -· liwpllerd NI• I '..;, entedp!W/topoktll•. • Secretaries Sutlon •r•nt! --"" 2 yn ... otllt l yr ..... ·-l'O<JLTABLE •BRINKTON •AMF"'8l'OOLTAllLE """' ....... -·· * Bkkpng. Moch. e K..n.unch Opn tlona? Ramp or tnvtl -,.... llltal 11yt101 ol fllntlaottd, Aulo hall tttum llGO $IOO • GREAT Dint • Oper•tor ...... $450 • -rr &eentf We'U train yoo tor ~ ...,.~ • ...,..,..... We •• •• el fl•• •962-7008• * M4-0tN • mbcl\ll'e t mcJio tW WIU troln qualllled opt, on Bookkff_... ..... Ind ....... day ot lllto. ..... ~-fw ~-~•-• ,___ fwtlltwo •~· POOL bl ·• ~· lleMfU r-· -W" Include placement y. __... ._ _.._ 1 -•-· ....o ft e, -..ate _... 2 LGE metal dt*I 135 eacb.1-'-':i='-====,,,;; new equjp. $520 atatance. ....... . ..,,. lJko mw. All acce11. + 2 chtlta ot: dnwen, lliDt TWO• Tl: KrrTD r * APPLY * * Sec'y . · · · · · · · • Work whett end movtna Ir •tup. Btt. otr. fllW $25 •· so.ton Ticer A: Calleo. 1 151 E. COAST H\VY. NEWPORT BEACH Rtq'g ad •ktlh: • bck&rnd .,t.ere you ~inti 'Quil+etl IOI" tof1, 9rt•n flor1I ~eve * SIT na. "" ~ In toch. or aov't contracts. I E•t. 21 YN. ~ I«' N-rololl $339 , • SALE Prlctd $11 ' MAii S opl bl .. SZ. 2'" blloe . • ". ' * Follhlon .... $450+ Interim v .. ...., .. Eligible lnltllntlon • t-•l•h "" 1110, wood --w/ bol1ton SURFBOA!U> • ,. !lat .,... $10, --·$15. 111 "1 OU> Ytiil ooo·' -Rellaura•t "'W u.-tlle f-.Jty lnwed •• ~"" Ion>. aood r.ct -· criJI 2 E. lSth St .C.M, I PY I wtit eld .., .. ""= TACO BELL fl-fJtnt catttr oppor. for Ntw rtt•il ,299 •• SALE Prlctd ttl rno1 old Xlnt eondl e75-625T .-v.1 Pref. 1.-t-ale student w/nlte lhal'P ;al w/retail bckgrnd itudtnt lo&n PJ')lrl.m. Spent1h 96" ttft, red b•ft•l9r••" flor•I · POOL tal'IM $25-. OM tr'hffl .._._. """''· Good 11art1 n g in womeno •l'JIU'!. Salary Persannef tervice Alrll-•-L--li Poclflc N•w retoll $299 •• SALE Priced $11 Mlocoll•-• -lrlller 12'-111 E. lSth St. ~AI<Cj(C'"iiiat;jj1t!ii""'"i"''-Oii'iii;:i lftiary. No exp. nte. 118 + c0mm. r ·-~ Modem 96° soft, blec:~ vinyl, wood trim C.M. 1 mo. Ttt bonM w Ocean .... Hil-Bch. * RK•pl ...... ; • $'90 445 I'. 171h If,. C.M. 610 I , 17th, Sonia Ano Now retail .299 •.SALE Mud SH BOY'S Schwlm s tin rr •1 R.EO/l!LATE i'66L TABti: r;>dr;·;'-•;1;;'1111=::--::::-,,;; Sl&-1800 -.~Only ukina: far ple.asant Pl 64t.7StJ IQ..6St6 $_p1ril1h .96" aof1, rtCJ/,b'roWn ptlnt "Applecrate" bike, Xlnt e a ACCEllOIUl:S $l7i RM. llilm.e ;;;( Reo1auran1 who con,,,.. A wm handlt ~ Oppor. Employer PV't'-.,. . .._. ,....._, Ntw rtl1ill299,. SALE Pflud '" Cood..lo. 6~ SINTIT'..alW,m.pm.. ...... ,,.,......_ otbf'n ,,acloualy. j,...,;,...,...,...,...,,,;,.;. ... I by tehlrshp stude:nt LA art Sp•nlsh 96" tafi, marine fl..-•I VACUUM Cleaner S1J. Chelf: 11 lUDO MATI 2 kittens, l malt, t ~ Full Tlono e 8U5llOYS e DISHWASHERS . * RKtpt . " ..... $375 e WAITRESS. .EXPER. e ..... child or adlt. 63H187 , Nw rtl1II U9' ••SALE Prlctd SH of & 11ra,....112, TV 12'-MAKE OFFER liflOnd-•mi If you are tnttrnted In filth. · Full 'If Part T1mc MIRCHANOISI flOR MocleNI 96" soft, 9old m•ftt•• * 6*-1$25 * 81S-(14T an IPM S B , L Id...._ k>nt, this o11<1 11 ..,. ,..... Typ. """'""" Co_llH Sltof> SALi .AND TRADI N1w rot1il .299 •• SALE Prlctd SH 15' Upright """"'" W.. -SHOPSMml •IJll •"!: lo<inl -· - Ina/Ute rtcord lceeph1g, 133 S. (:out, Utcuna Reh Sp•n i1h tO" tof••· 9m/9•td'lbltter1w••t flor•I 115. mn.tte Rt,~ Fonnica Atr\ttl apray; eomprttlOI'. S..10'' pots el. * APPLY IN PERSON * * Coll Clerk · · ·' $500 WAITRESS. °"1 21. Lillie PurnlluN t000 N1w reloil .299 •• SALE Priced SU lablt, & chltn.12'--· All xlnt "°""· ~ -11U-1m ' !:xper, In time lloeplnc .: HeldJ-.r, lot' llld'.lddon MOVING • 11 cul ft·-·· D1U1UL ""° --· COltlni. Some <1Pln& ft<J • Pl, N.B . .,,... DIN. "'-dbl bed. t ..,_..., ,._ price ..... lfWo -TM141oy IOnd oond., cleytt, dint,. dtn'r 111 wlbullet, °""'"'1 AmmcUt "':""'~ 500 Ne·-Ctnter Dr NI! WANTED: ~bla 11... -,_ lllt• lland, llu<lml TffE USED fUB11mlR£ FACTORY table. Mloc. It.mo. !llW932 ~. Yllut llOOO. •D lflO, '°'• ·~· ·• In babY1itter. a botrd, clot.Ir, m. lf:Ol29 nnuu *TV '!1'AYS • Lartie -** ~ ** Lorctiolr -- Suite :m, By Appl . ..._ ~90ver 2 om! chld. BDRM/SET ma,,it, dln'I lttl H .... lid iw4. CoiN M-33x1Sx21.~lephone lillll:h !1£FRIG PJ, S-12' a 1b:e."" traint<I. Claullied'1 action po-. .:.:::...:::::...-----1 ltrn Ml ....,io, -1141-9417 1001 °""' $10. 1'71 ""°'1'W'1' FRl:E 8-ldr.t klt!ft · Snock Shop #1 23ll5 E. Cout Hwy. Corona del Mar PLANNING 10 mow? You'll find an amazinl number or bomet fri (Oday'• CtusWed Ad .. Cbedc them now. For .. od In .. n U011nd WANTED pt.lime driver, <lelkl .. clot.n . --Woololay1 M 11t, .. _,. •••• • RRAND -t-Pl. -· ~ -... ~ tt... clOck dial-· ,.., car or mint. H.B. I' Do-port, Choir CJ-"""''" di• BrltaMlca, 2' YO!. Mblt na: QUICKER JOO CALL 2 Cltlhuahua ,..,..._ 1':1: ' a-. • -* .Malle on... lHl-C25J ..i1 11<~!164'1 THE QUlO!l:k YOO mL W.tm •Tf • • • . ·:' ,. ----~---~ --~ -----. -- .. • •• \ .• .• • ' . • • .. . \ I .................. -· • • • • • • • • • ......... -~ ...... .._ .. "''Ir • .........--....---. ..... '1; ... ~~~-·~-~-----·"""=" '._ ,;,..-...· .. .:•.;,· .... ,-...1 1~··' ,· ~··"'•'l•"i •·.,·.·,•<" .. ,. .•• '\,,~,~~ ............ I'•" --:-7~'-;1;,• •tr.----.--.-----;-.! , ,,--:::r--io·--y-r-r-r-.-•• .,.,..-.-... ..----·~-...-·.-.._,,_,. • DAll.V PllOT W ... ""7. -1', 1'711 w-.A-19,1'711 Pl~OT-ADVE•n5U %1 TRlNSPORfXTION ~~~~=:':::=:'.:=lllJOO~tl:tftoiiri'f'D NSPORTATION ------I~;;;:.;:.:;~:::;.;.;.;.:.:..;.:;.;.:...... TV.NSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOltTATION TRANSPORTATI ON - t:IOO Tfycko 9500 lmpo"°" A-N00 "'""""" Autot Hoo !!!1~~--C:::;•:.;";_...:.-.:: '"''""'"" Autos 9600 ..... & Yachll -5pHd-Slcl ...... 9030 ,,.,..orcyclo1 ; ----· ~ .. A8l,.l; Mlttitn toed sraY and "llooc....,.. """" 1 FOR SALE· LEASE -........ home Olt CHARTER 1.-....m or l3IM493 &Ill ~ODO °"'1. fi 1?1 bllar>ee. v.,. -...... "1>1te ... .,. F\ybrld&> """'" °"'> ... male ldtltl\, 4 mo. U»ed et. Sleeps $. Compltlel)' BOAT u~· ct....ovtt 'ltwd Nl'lt.boul 1''indlibkldl. ptd:· ded .. Muir 55 Me:n: 018. trailer. Gt't'l.t for wter •kKnr· $550. m-otl4 or m-uu ext lM lloe loolr. N-pd....... ~"°':INT ~ri: Lwable A flit:i>dlf. ~ XT,R.u l'Lt.m Make ottert Bo.at M1lnten1nce to3S ntEE -5 ..... old • """' ,,,...,,. ~ ...... 1 blk. 2 JIUl"': wbiie, 1 daft. enda: S93-MQ5. JOtt llok>bi Pl. MeaSA '""C111="n"c"E,--· "'u"'"'"'•-.,..=,. Vu4e. CM cruiwr W h.p. bl&: Chr)'llkr MARINE 1970 GMC 1500 PICKUP WITH CAMPER 292 e~lne. heMH'. dtluxt cab. uti.q!All; tires Wit) I loot cab <Ntt Kini ol Road Campor. Sto". ~ AUSTIN HEAUY AUSTIN AMERICA -.---.. -... -. 11 nt1p 111: ii 11 1p11 I i' en.tor, 20 pl, v.'1.lcr ltulk, S\OO W Oout ""' N.B. natural •'OOCI ••Uh Iota of ~ ' .. 561114 FIAT 'IHllll "Ni -''FRlllUlaR" 11"41-lllwy.'Jtl 893-7511ll • Sl7- NiW·U51D4il llV. ll'UV'U'U roocn. • Author'bed MG Dealer $3295 • '61 Aw.Un Heoky 301» 4 '69 124 SPORT CPl seater, over/drive, n aw KARMANN GHIA '63 GHIA Radio. Heater. Run1 Great! 1''\ill Pr1ca $799 dlr. (XE'/ mi. \VU! take cu: in Trade or finance. Prl\ri.te Party .M&-tm2 or 494-6811 e '89 KARMANN GHIA,' Xlnt oond. Pvt owner, Mak'! otter. 523-8Th2 *'fl Karmann Ghia* Xlnt cond, SlMD * 646-M70 * 5 ~ C'fO kitttns, 1'farine.. Just p-.l n ted alm SiameM: f~male thruo\IL Pcrlect ~ti.ape a.U ( lempermt1ntal ). around. Jn wattr now. 8l"Wll8 W R«loced price $2200. Call ll&ALmY Male PUJS, 11 art 7;J:l ,.ro. 49.W996 9.'b. Wuts I o I) 4 borne. I ~=:::::'-'.:::::::::===-1 Sirial 5ST44 UNIVER5m OLDSMOllLE ""'' • ""'i. METRO * ~o * Radio, heater, 1peclal ex· Shots. *..98611 aftrr 6 p ·"'' Sl'lO S.llboats ==='-"'·====I haUll IXEP U3} ---------$1ffS METRO VAN 9010 1'LO~VEL~=y~ ........ ---mal-,-e-~"°'t· -------~ 2850 Harbor' Blvd. IMW BILL JONES 1953 .. 1 billlUn camJl('r. Stov~. alnk, lee box, carpet. in&:. panelllnr, bed, n e w paint. Xlnt condition. ten. Box tra.lned. Wt l I SEALED BIDS e l967 EVlNRlJDE 6 hp motor ... ,.n11 ~lion tank. Good cond. S17i 838-8148 delivft'. 838-&34. S/20 1970 34' Columbia Aux Sloop, ADORABLE lt.l~ 1 wht ~Is, as-15. 4 eyl. dtf:~I , IDl'Of! calico, .:wne tlpn'. erw .. tbt1'.1' ~!Net. leak 5t6--5242 8120 intenor. m •1ls or mast, --LlJ.e 6 000 mil wuel's NJJJ damaged on BOit Slip Moorlnt to36 new! .,, . es let! on land while in tran5it. Ves.~I Warran~. MOVtn&, mu.st may be ~n 11 COLUMBIA e SLIPS 32·~·. Abo Ory atll, y A C H T CORP., 275 storage & host launchi.n&. S600 Or Best TAKE t.be-rn pleue! RAB· BITS. 5'6--9390 after 6 PM S/21 Costa Mesa 54().!l640 $795 196!! lntl":matiooal Pickup, VS, radio, heal•r, t speed, 8\ii' Bed. 139;;96(:) DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor_...Bl.Yd. 646-""3 Authorlt~ Dlr. B..J. Sport, Car Center 2833 Harbor, C.~f. S.10-4491 '69 Rat 124 Cpe E:r:odc red with black vlnyl bucket .eabl. Low miles, hall bad excell•nt c81'1:. Sacri· !Joe) IXL Yl!SI Tlle older car in trade. Will tirltnce private 1111y. Call Pat dlr. * 56.1245 • • 1958 Metropolitan • Good cond. New tttt-5. $125 842-5130 MERCEDES BENZ 'nVO Latre whitc ducks, Good pets or ~ eating Z59 Feden.l. C.M. 11/lS MeCormack Ave, C.M. on ===·,.""""'===·=== jjm;;;;;;;;;17;4;-2~155;;;;;;;;;;;;; Sat, Aug. Zl, S.12 noon O'\!y, and ~fon. Aua. 2t. 1-4 m_Q•. 8o•t Services 'SI FORD 'h TON Sale1 e Service e Pe.rta ALL MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM aft 10 i. .• 1 494-7503, 5«).JUJO, --------- 1 beautiful bbck female kit· ten wfll'ftn eyes. ~ Siam- etll':, 549-2889 KITJ'£NS 7 ._,ks 545-1447 Sealf!d bids may be llJUh. -------- milled to SO. COAST M AR I N E MEOIANICAL MA R I NE SURVEYORS. ten·ice. 'l\ine-UJI, ,overhaul, 5-• E ~, S , ••• "·h ttpair. Exp'd al makes. Qri!. B~~~o ~· ;~ ~ 2 s~1-3814 . ~c::.~:..::~:::.:. ••• ~ •. ~~-~., ~Ge~,_-, pm,' A1u:;. 27. 1970. F\111 .. ,.,... ........ "" .. _,_ S/lS purcbasr price due "-**~** t.D~ESPERA===TE=L~Y,_..nr-«1.,.-,ho""m"e I payable A~ 31, 1970. Sale Ffte Estimal@I 54S-1752 1968 l'i'.u.o.JE1', 5Dcc 4 lip. lar 2 loll:" hairrd male kit· Slb~t to s<;t c.alif tiled St. l'Oadrattr. First reg. !ml, u ·wts. ~. 11/20 tax. All bkli must bt' 11.Jb. Boat Charter 9039 611'0 u new. r..o ori&inaJ I ~ bk! • -miles • passed chp i~ rREE to you ju~ 1)'!'11, mltted w a b,-111 of · 'lT TROJAN fijr' trldgc spection w/tticker • S200. and Mrbeque ~ 11118 Cub or c.uhlers cbttk cruiset-~llps I $85 day Call 6· 30 .9· 00 p.m. ~ll90 ~s d LIVESTOCK made payable 10 ROYAL $450 wk. 646.-9000 , rm;' an GLOBE tNSURANCE CO. • '69 Honda SL 90 in good EXECUT~VE. Marti cond.Usedonlyltimesince Pets. GtMral .llOO c.olumbla ·40 ~~&el . $28,950 • jishing. 6 pan. 'I'lclde fn. it has had a complete top fARA.KEETS . All co Io J' a. \\111 5leenng, A·pilot, l111ded. U3S * ,fi>eJ. ~ end t'ngint' overhaul & ney,• blJff. yellow, cfeens. all Radio, o.r .. Fallio. Speedo' chain. S.250 or bf!st oUcr. U aili, HJC pre5illl'e "'·ater F ish~nt _Bo.t_ts 9040 Call 673-4274. 11.&6· Noof' O\'ef' 1 yr. old. __ SS and op each. 54G--1090 Olympic TemPHl . ~ •30• JEFFRIES mooring '69 DUCAT! 4 5 ~ cc also f2l al' Slips a\'llilable R.B. Chr)'sler ~· MW Sttambler -l:llO m1. Xlnt ~I lllS PACIFIC YAQIT , SALES . Bendix. $3300. 543-6110. cond. t"'ully toquipped, never AKC SILKY 3446 Via Oportii, NB.·673-lS7t --ridden in dirt. _ST:ill. 846-9446 * T,E~~~R! • HOBIE CATS' ~:c..:~~E 9100 ., 213 -5!12-58511 '~====-~---1 ALL COLORS ~i...t\l"t "'anted lrom Auto Service GREYHOUND P' em a I•, M priv. puty. 4 P1act . lor & Perts 9400 1.payed, faun color.! FREE DE 0$ Labor 09)-week •nd . ------- Pure!> ..... friendly. ' '"· CAP'N EDS .. ...,.,. "' -pttl'd .... P.U. "' Ford. R/H , ,. SZl. IPS-l<Q. . 2200 w. c~1. ""'>'·NB 662244 &4:>-JJOO r1whl w~~~~t~ 5~~ AKC Toy Poodlei, '11"'er Coronado 27 Cancelled·Im· Mobile _Homn 9200 week! 646-5&17. male >-fem.. 7 wks, med rlt>!Mry. Alao 2 more • • -V.W. frame-trans.. 4 gd. ••/r;hots, SlOO ea. ~iti. SAVING~! •••••••••• liter;, misc. t"ng. parts. • BOXER PUPP.IES-AKC. \'&eh\11 Hov1Jle tnc &1~10 962--0130 or 536-i072. 2 brindlt males. 5 •1'5. ai. 29U \\1• Coe.it Hwy, NB Don't Be Late -. vw paru, 1rans axles bloodlines. nm. 8.10-1391 VACATION I OvPr. C)Y.'nC'f Ch I N & bodyperts. <DLLlES AKC pedlgftt'd l"t"tumlng to Ohio. S3f.6 I Pick Your o ct ow • 642-0443 e Sables Ir trk.'olored. 6 wb Sabot purchased 6 "'la ago Jn the . ===..,-===== old w/lhots, etc. 846-6!71 will bt sold for $275. Ph. MEADOWS Trailer, Travel Gl!~ATDane puppte1, black. 673-4394. • •• 9olng f•stl 11' "TRA_VE_L-_EZ_E ____ -.. -If ~ l wks.. S150. fl) * COLUMBUS.IS: F/~p. Luxurious New S2S-8l53 lncl: sails, tr a i 1 er . cont. trlr &. ~fT Intem'l Ad It P k truck. Both lat~ model, fully AKC ko' poodlH, 1llvtr. 2 ltoat/cvr, etc. READY TO u ar WAY "-ru equipp'd. w/lincsl towing malH ~ female, 8 'll:la, SAIL A ! .,.......... : Small ,_,, allowed ., ........ S60 ea. 837-8910 425--«122 ,.. aids. A ste11I at $4500. -~-----~--~'I S.A. Fwy at Jcflrt'y Rd. 673-4776 e AKC POODLE PUPS 8 COLUf,1BIA dcJender 29' 14851 JeffN"y Rd. Wk&. Fem. Blk. Sleeps 6. Inboard. Full rac-714/530-5331 call colltct ·59 Streamline 28'. mctaJ 9425 PICK-UP Brand new eng, Leu than 4.~ ml. new brak1!11, new 6 ply tlz'H new batt~·. renerator 11.' radi111or. New paint. In fillf! oonditk>n. Aft. ~r 3 p.m. SU-4330. Ai1k for Bob Larson, rompM.lng. Campen_ ---'"'5"'20 APOLLO !\IOTOR HOl\IES • 2bl Cpe in noclt e Immediate De.livery Orange County's Newest Dealer COAST IMPORTS or Orange C.Ounty 1200 ,V, Pacific Coast HW)' (Across from Balboa Bay Club) 64.24Kl6 • 546-4529 CORTINA '69 850 SPORT CPl 4 speed, yello\~·. (ZX'W 39;;) $1595 BILL JON!$ B.J. Sports Car Center 283:s Harbor. C.M. M0-4491 NEW FIAT 1970 ISO SPVDER All color1 to choose trom.. $2335 + Tax I Lie. All models to choose. Callforn1• Sport Cer1 e '61 CORTINA Deluxe, 4-9(11 E. lat, S.A. 542-8801 * All Steel Construction dr. auto. Good Um;, Runs '70 FIAT 850 SPYDER * All Jlberglass Exterior \Oo'Cll. ~2514 Sl!J95., 3700 mL Owner tta... MILLIGANS ./ ,68 CORTINA GT. fered 496-4683. Trailer Sall'!I Beaut. condition '68 124 WAGON l~l Harbor Blvd. 61]...737() or 492•2387 Garde~ Grov~ • 531-2852 .,,,;;;;;.:;;.:;=:==I New '70 Datsun DATSUN .,, '°""" • wheel """ '""'· '1 e1, 4 11pttd. (VWW &ill 1600 OH\jo Pickup with camp. $1295 ''· Sate priee l2D99 cllr. ce BILL JONES 1 a 67'f!8) WiU take car in ..,_ MlSUI ,_;. B.J. Sports Car Center trade. W\11 finance private 2833 Harbor, C.f.I. 540-M91 PIU'tY· 1Call 5tS«'52 ar 494-68.11. ....... ·r in The Lellr.b ca1e1" METRO VAN ZIMMERMAN 1953 K T builtin camper. 2845 HARBOR BL VD. SIJV!', sink, ice box. c.ar-11.•t•: . .&..11 IO petina:, panelling, bed. new _._ paint Xlnt ""''mum . DOT DATSUN • 545J24."l • OPEN DAILY JAGUAR JAGUA" HEADQUARTERS Tbe m!1 aolbarlml JAGUAR dnlrr ta the tntln Harllor ..... CAMPER shell Im' \1: ton AND truck. sliding w 1 n do w !! • SUNDAYS CompJet.. door. Sacr. S200. Eve' 11335 Bear..h Blvd. SALES 4!J4....{;7Q) llunttniton Beach SERVICE '65 DREAMER-8' Over-eab. sq.n81 or 5'!0-0«2 PARTS s;;:~iS:.'.'b~ '65 DATSUN PICKUP BAUER l9'7D vw Camper, Westphalia Radio, hffttt. Exce.l.lent BUINICK pop up-8,000 ml. Belt offer cond. (450GI, over Sl.100. 4~ $495 COSTA MESA 9625 G•rneo G"''"· Bl,.., CG ~~C::•::il~Co:;:ll.:o"":;'-,Sl;:;,1·~1777,,;_~1 ,, 234 EMi-7~ Street Campe.r' Rentela 9522 J75. * 545-3563 in& gear l extra.I. 49f-713,j J3l-8l0Cl. 5J0..2930 1 awning/~klr!ing. Located at No. 2 Terrace. Lido Park. '10 V\V Pop top camper. TOY Poodk puppy, ailver.°' -:...:.-'°='~'===--IAdul~ oolyl Extnu Lo Sl-P' •" Avail Wkends '66 1600 ROADSTER _;;____,6::.7:::..::XK"=--E - male. 2 ma's okl. SJ). -SACRIFICE •••••••!•I do\Vn, owner· will ~. 61~16 ";· 644--0501 · Silver finish \Ylblatk vinyl . . 84&--16113 . 22' FRBGLS SLOOP COSTA MESA 645-2.171 or 613-la.56 1.;;:=::::::===== I interior 4 speed. Dir., (RUC. Convtrtible. Y,'ll'f' wheels, 4 e OUHUAHUA PllPP;es ·i~~,.._~_ll_64_0R..,..67$-4195_~.,....., MODEL CLOSE..OlJT 21· NOf.1AD. Self contained, Dune Bu~gies 9515 ~ ~ri':! tra~r :u r;peed, (V;t:' AKC. ·JO wb. 1 ma.le $25. 1 FiberaJaa A Gc-lcoat Ne w model mobile homes shQv.'t'r, gas & clec rerrig, ,59 RENAULT 546-40.52 or 494.ssu. BILL JONES fmiale $35. SM:-1746 * * Repl.lrs • ii' ~ being offered at r-Juc.. crpts, s.leeps 6, tandem B S Car Ce AKC, Pug Puppies F'fft Estimate• 543-1152 cd prices. All are set up in wheels. Very clean! Must DAUPHINE '69 DATSUN PICKUP .J . port& ntcr 5 wb oJd 847-867S 14' Gia.a Super Sa.t611te beautiful Grtt.nleaf Park l sell! Asking $2495. 96S-7281 Er&. & h'ame in gd, cond. Radio, heater (6948) 2833 Harbor, C.M. 5-to.-44.!U A&.&.-D.-.. •A.KC R., Fut boat in Eood eond. mile lrom ocean. ' SANTA Fe 1964 .J.2'. Toil~l. Hu blown clutch. Ideal for $1395 '67 XKE 2 + 2 wire w.iu, -rQU-........ ~ * 962-99119 W/trlr. s;sso 1r 6'JS.m23 Take ~wport Fwy or ar. s~r. elec brks, 5J>8n! maklna dune buggy. S50 9625 Garden Grove Blvd., GG ilf/FM, kl ml. Yellow, blk ~· ~ Bl•·d "'· to 10.1. then ··-'-', xlnt cond. -=. cash. Alter 3 pm. A.!lk for Call C.OUect 531.7771 leather int. Beaut! $3600 ~~fT'14·~,<ln~ll g!,~ =.it to 1150 Wbtttl'; .. A\le. ;&ms* 613 rk:;'mer', CP.1 Bob Larson, rompoging. -:::========"J linn Aho '61 Zll M.B. Cos f\ 642-llJO '6'1 vw pan w/fmnt end ENGLISH FORD sedan, air, perfect. $1!500 dltion, $300. 646--8535. ta 1csa 16' to 19' TRAVEL Trailer. pvt owner. fi1S..-5]J7 642--4163 Hor••• U30 braker;, steering, pedals & ;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;!!ti(f,@fj;~f+ji;'iii,-;;; :::rs f yr ~o ~\:i:.g •51!,· 1 ~~wood kttl boat, Dr!{~~CE hom~o~~b~~l;~ ~;t' pa~n~J,~962-f:· cables. Xlnt start for Dune --JAQ .Xl{E 19612+2, air, new $300 M need ti Buggy! 646-4663 alt. 6 & ALL NEW ENGLISH P~W.. vitry sharp, $3»1 • lmmed. ~· or sts .1350~· ==~=---=~"'-"-03!-~ ba, 3 br. fep . {'1 oh, * ~· Aljo, selr contained, w~""'"""""'c,c:o-·~-~~.,-~ FORDS NOW IN STOCK 1 ~"=-""c::..· ~Call=-"53&-"--91166"'--· __ otter. 6f6..,.w.r fuWMBIA 26, "ro, ma.ny porch. sloragc. rune ieac like ncv.'. Slps 6. $19!15. Call -: DRASTICAl..J..,Y locabon $4,59:>. 531H41:i s= "28. CORVAIR bllgD'~ glisl body, TIME FOR 1; ARAB, papered Bay 11;elding. !> years old. Gentle. 1-:nghshf\\'ctrtem. Broke 1o drive. Phone 546-625j, lG-7. REG. Quarter hor ,e-lop brffding. best aff~. Also Shetland pony &t6-47J'. TRANSPORTATION Xlras w/sllp. $2500 do\\'J\. ,.......,.. bu k .. M 1 REDUCED Auume kian. 832--0361 2 BR Parklane. 950 6<f It, new eng, c et seauo. U! TO CLEAR corn. lot on eolf course. Trucks 9500 c":c:;.11-<>~."'"'-'"~"-8--0l-='-7~'~~ LARGE SELECTION Ci)UICK CASH COLUMBIA n. $3300 DlrH"'·ood Sch Club, HS. 1910 HONDA Trail 70, 400 TO atOOSE FROM Yachts Royale Inc 64:5-0180 Sac $6950. oog.747l , 5JS.6928 ml. l2.)Q or besL.oUer. Call THROUGH A 2912 w. Cout H•>. NB $1895 ..,._2139 Theodore 2T FEAntER Sloop. ""''' Motor HomH tzlS 1967 Ch">' Pkkup and cam. ~~'=-"'· ==== ROBINS FORD DAIL y PILOT o/Y.'d. Gd oond, must MU. 1---------per, radio, heater, ~r Imported Can 9600 Z>6Q Harbor Blwt $1695. 61>1393 OT 531-5363 21' Pa~ Arrow completely stetting, (\'939791 1----------Costa P..1~ 642.0010 • VlclO'Y :n 1129; • "" con!Alned. Pow" '''"' DEAN LEWIS ALFA ROMEO WANT AD o, ""'J' C'.'L'"'Y ~ L. •ti"'' '·I• ,i.011 N•" .-. LJ,,.d ~,,,,,,,I·· ~'-· ''1 Jim Sie mon; Imp;. \'. ""'~' t\. M.l111 SI. Sant.i An ,1 5.J6·ll\: '68 ~ SL-like new, 15,000 orig. ml., auto, ps/pb, AM/Fi\1, 1.w. MWll sac. 840-1441 '61 190 SL • showroom rond. new radial ti.res, AM/FM. Reasonable. Pvt pt y . 675-2176 '9> NEW style xa>s, Runs beautifully & loola 1ood. • 54g..1S23 eves * '69 MERCEDES T.:AJ Be~. $4,250 or consider TRADE. 646-1286 MG '68 MGC·GT Wire wheels, n,dlal tires, AMIFM radilo, 6 cyl., auto- matic trannnl111oo, low miles. Lie. XSS '1$. $2499 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ~ ~ THINI ... ~ .. ''FRIEDLANDER" NEW MIDGET $1995 1J1M 1-...C:H IH'#Y. 1'1 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SERV. ~ $2595 1969 f,fGC ST6 Radio, beater, 4 gpeed, wire wheels. Price:!: way below market price. <YYA 635) DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor Bl\-'.d. &IS-9303 '67 MIDGET MIC Ill Radio. heater, chromt! wheels l\YFV 7701. $1195 BILL JONES B.J. Sporb Car Center ~ Ii.arbor, C. M. 540-4491 • ·oo MG f.1kleet -New radials, wire wheell $1050 84&-"'38 MG riG Sala, Servk~ Puts lmmedllte Dlilwry, All llod ... J~rlupo1 t .ll111po1 I :· MOO W. 0out ""7. N.E. 142-Hfl W0.11" Autborldd MG Oe.aln ·63 MGB 4 Jpeed, wire "''heels, radio. 1988. llARBOR A'dERIC\N 1969 Harbor Blvd. ....,., MGI '65 MGI ROADSTER Wire v.·beels, 4 ~peed. Radio, beater, whtte lop. CNFYnJ. $1395 BILL JONES B.J. Sports Car Center 2833 Harbor, c.~t. M0-4491 '65 MGB ROADSTER Excellent condition, wire wheels. (VNE 0991. Owned by little old school teacher. Ta~ trade or small down. Will fin. pvt. pty. Dir. Call Pat aft lD am 5t0'310tl or 4M-1029. '64 MGB Win~ wheels. radio. ltlCCl79l $1195 BILL JONES B.J. Sports ~ Clentn 2333 Harbor, C.M. 540-4"91 1969 MGB-GT Black. Custom equip, comb. FM rad~ stereo tape deck. Xlnt. rond. Make oUer. 642-6925 $1095 1964 1.1GB Rodtter Radkl, heater, 4 speed. CBP'E 1001, DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 e '67 MGB-GT Jo ml, good cond. MUSI' SELL. make oUer 675-3348. $1295 196S 'MGB Rodster Radio. heater, 4 speed, wire wheels. (ULK 0401 DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor Blvd. 646-9303 --' OPEL '67 OPEL Rally Coupe, 4 s p e e d, Ai\1/FM, air cond. IXX'" 9811 $1299 BILL JONES B.J . Sports Car Center 283.1 Hnrbor, C.M. 540-4491 '68 Kadette Ralley Bir Engine, 4 Speed. Read;y lo Roll {ZX\V 336J $1299 BILL JONES B.J . Sports Car Cent~ 2833 Harbor, C.M. 540-+f.91 '69 Opel Kadette, 102 HP, R/H, lo mi'1. Must sell Best oiler? 831-5399 $595 19&1 Opel Station Waaon Radio, heater. nice 2nd car. !PIX 373), DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor ffiVd. .... ,,., 3 Sai!J, motor, slip. & dual air. lo mi. O!U~s (2131 592.21.3..5, (714) MG.3637 Auto Repair, 1147 An11.helm 1966 Horbor Blvd. FERRARI Ntw Cari 9100New Cars 9IOONtw Cars CAL 15 SLOOP Ave . C.1\J. 646-9303 • '67 • J61ij Spydcr, org. ---~;:;;;:;:-:---l1•iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ -9900 Bo.tis & Y acht1 ------CAPTAIN '65 t"ord long ix'd 11' ton owner. Xlnl. $2595. 547-5837 FERRARI =""'==Ex~·-="'..,"..,',..· ,.-~==-I Mini 8 1kn 9275 paint tnick. compressor day, 846-2439 eve. LICENSED 11' HOBrE Cat I trlr, $1000. ·--·-·---_.:.. mo\inted ~'ith rack, Binks=~=====;:;'= ~~~r.~~tt! Radar • Loran, 30 ycan ex· 9· sail raft, collapsible, '50. e Powell Mini Blke.$125 Airless convcnlional &pray AUSTIN HEALEY ~~dealer. Pf'rie'nce WI«' PD"'el'. Pro. 61j....3143 e Go-Cart, 10 hp, $75. ~lpment. ladders, drop SAl.ZS-SERVlCE-PARTS fnsional sport tlahln:g tuide LAPWORTH 24 lnhrd' * Call 67"":>-:\428. cloths. Leaving i;tate, must 3100 W. Cout Hwy. 2'fexlcaii A: Central Ameri. Ya<'hls R.oyale Inc, 64:>-0810 l'iflNI.BlKE lOO. Untcyct &ell, 494--1314 . 753 Manzanita, '61 AUSTIN Healey, white, Newport 8Ncb CCI waters, Admlolstntive 2912 \V. Coai;t Hwy. NB Lacuna Beach. new traN & over drive, 142-9C05 540..1'7&1 _. -$8. ---.-1 _ _. E·-494-4991 Autbo..1-.. Ferrari De-'---A~~ far •ttkend,I, KITE . Racing equipped. Im. Call ~2076 '69 Chevy 1/.z• Ton J ~·;;;;;;-;;'°=·~;;.· ;"'";;;;;;;=-:.Z;==·=-====-= mac. cond. $650. 67l-1000, -===c:.-: .. ====i:. With' I mll -• C 96001 ......._. A t 9600 utende<\ cb&rtus or deliv. 646-699l. Ms-363-4 I 9 ... .:.1 camper, ow esp. lmJ>!rfwu 1rs m.,....-,_ u 01 e.r1es. Beat ol rdt.~noes. Motorc:yc ti JIV Automatic, power •leering, i~~~~~~-~~;;;;i;;;;;';;~;;i;i;';;iiijjji;i~ Write Box M 1060, Dally Coronado 2.5, used S6.'300 air cond. Dir. Will take Pilot. 22ll w. Bllbot Blvd,, Yachts Royale Inc 66-0810 ·10 KAWASAKI Side Wlndet' car In trade or finance pri. ~ewpM't Beach, Ca. 2912 W. Cout Hwy, NB. t:e. $550. See a1 602 vale party. Call 5464052 or I-:,-:-:-:=..-._,==• I ___ ---Clubhouse, N.B. 67J..4!:)74. 494-6811. SCR·A. M-LETS Power Cruisers, 1 9020 Ask tor Jim . HARLEY OavldllOn ~ In '53 CHEVY VAN ANSWERS 1966 TOLLY Cnlt 26' 210 , bukel F0<k, """"'· HP. SS. l%J hn. Like oew. tiTTS etc. No cn1. ~l7a3. 1~~ Ton encloacd freight box S7000. A~t part trade for' , ' l (G9636'91) d!J'. \l/UI take care Aw'ftl' -Faith -Gripe Bo5ton Wha.ler. ;;.ig.1936, 66 HON DA 300 dlrl b kc. In trade or finance private _ 0~ _ DROV~G 644-4684 fbglr; tank. xlnl rond. S300 party !W&-<\052 or 4M-68ll Old )IOU ever hear about or best offer. 640-2139 · · the dn:lnbn ODWboy who was 2'J' Century Labstreak. 32T cu * .70 Kawauki Centurian FOR SALE: ·55 Int~m.1f~ arruted'far drunken IDROV. In Gray eng. New cover, Showroom cond, ridden 4 ~ Ton. ~ spd, Pick-Up. II lllG•. g.u p!!rlttt c:ond. AlllO SaboL ti S395 846-S77S Bed, new radiator. Gd. 542-79'14 or 54l-144S. mer; · cond. Befit Oller. 6U-3433 41' anus DCFB. '59, 2.S '69 KAWASAKI 250 cc ,57 CHEVY truck. Good KW ONAN. '&UCO pilot, llJW 5-....t~<kl Boat& 9030 • $295 · ---' .. tt= "-"" "'0 70 F •'--•tt ~ 673-l440 aft 5 n1n i: ._..,,. .. , ,,_, .. -"-· f'ldlo, RDF. • ...... ,..., r. 1----------See at 2539 WNtmUISttr St. lhowtt, 2 hl!:adl, tiecaalley, '70 KA\VASAKI 175 cc '.::C::-':::'--,,,,-:===:-- ' J:ll,000. 6"-422l 1 •. •• ••• • • • • $47' • * '' 'M FORD VAN a• PA.CD.tAKER dtJu:x 16 ft, Ski loat 494·5548 Rcblt eng. New tires S700. -· radio i lly;ng e SUZUKI TC 90 e 646-03!0 .,._2239 -., ......... $7 500 . 11r1~ I•--~ ·~ ·~~11 . . 5$T-'Dl3 • ...,. n-.... .....,., "'"""" '67 CHEVY Van, xlnt. oond. 283 Col'wllte tn&fne • ·68 HONDA 90 Sell or trade. New tires I u· FIBERGLAS d i nch1 · Xlnt mod. S1!'AI paint. 646-269S ..... --· """"'"""" $1'"125 Sfl-4883. .....,,, '68 CMC. Gm.t tor be.)' fillWw. '68 BULTACO Mark !Il, Gd CLEAN. lo mi's, mes. ....an ~ for street or dirt, Extru. * 548-1~ * 30~w:;.;,~ ;:~ i::~ .••••••••• $595. MG-6198 '68 FORD Eoonolu~ ..... , ww nn, Mun H ll. 567-7718 l~.~68~SPO~k~TCRAFT~~~~c!!J:~ .. !!l•le~ l ""''tel'·<i65fiHoiiOnodd.a~cfl'lliOolel-I trade. Priced to setl quick. Xlnt dirt bike. 64&-l698 :IJ' PDIBllOKE '62 S.aSldlf U' FUiiy eoulp. Ind lld& l 1100 962-<llJI,';~""'-==-==~ cabin; 1S5 HP sray marine trtr. ONC ~ IJO. Xlnt 19Zil l 'i TON GMC w/ ...... now:• $3250. ~1 CC)ad. $2500. 5f1·lfTD , 'iO HONDA CL 175K-Lo ml, endoltd bfd. $975 orbnt WILL You take ..,., S90.000 .m-""'°"ll:JO,.,,,---,,=~= Som. &II twolmet so:rrx. orrer. 962-342'7 •·y r1-.a..-..... -tl'D 11 flAi, $1S, aft 5: JO. 83$-2S7S '""' ""'RO R.a'IChen:>, 151 V •, <T.I), or West L.A. Income '55 li' ..,_.,..., -,...-ere 1;J.:1 r '1 -o "r.w COSTA MESA HON A e Allt COOllD ,llOMT •MOIMI • lltll~T '#Hiil Dlfll\11 I e l"OWlll AISllTIO llLP'· ADJUITJNO ,llOttf DISC '"""'' e MAXIMUM Sl"lfD n M .. H e UI" TO .. MILll Pllt GALI.ON e l'OU!ft.PASSINOIJI, I 011. SIOAN 600 SEDAN 1'1111 llN N"' C•t f'"'H•I• ~I frtllltt., T•ll a Uc-. UNIVERSITY OLDIMOllLI 2150 HAHOR llVD. tor • )'OU2' u.11 or motor ~ns. fl.ill fqU.lp, Wl7 dein. '70 BSA 650CC 4 otpd, f'l('w tl~ll. xlnc. rond. J"l'Cht! Owner 61J.-462l. f1400. ~. Cu.ltom, 96US13 ~13!SO!!:!!:..· 830"'4!!£:~17'..._ ___ .1 •••• l!!!l!!l!•••!!!!!!!!l••••!!!!!I!!! •• l, ' r • HOW TO BEAT THE DEALER AT CLEAN-UP TIME. Ltl' l'OUI DEAUJr AalANG! l'OOI J'INANClJ'G, Most dcalen work wjth a number d financial sources and know what int.emt nte each one clwga. So at the Vtey )cal thoy CID .... }'Oil runnia.g around ••• and they just might get you a lower intemt rate thu you'd find !or yoancl!. . Chrysler Plymouth Clean-up Sale ••• On Now 1 ' I '!'I ........ a"•-··--..,,p..--·~· ~· ™....,,. ..... ,. • ....,.., ,._.-,........,., • ..,..,,......,.,., .... .,,,.., .. ,, ..... ~..,.~...,.,.~ .. fr'<;".~· ---..,.. .. "-T :" ;' ;------~ .-, • • -~__,,. r-. ., .... ";""J -~· ~--~· ~·-,....,......,,,-.. ........-•• ' ' l'ILOT-AOVDTISER WtdnHd~, A1>911st lt, 1970 T I T ANSPOllTATION TRANSl'ORTATION --Imported Autoo -Imported AulM 9600 ' PORSCHE SAAi VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWA51N '63 SlfER 90 There's sometliing very mlillortlng about the Audi. '61 PORSCHE • •et vw Mdtn, chrome Authorlltd Dealer 70 TOYOTA'S """" Michelin "'"· ·-S.l1ctloft ''5 vw mo In stock. Im.mediate dellv~. tunroof, uhault 1,Vflem. -r MT.IJ:IO A~ Ch~an A!I Brand New, A;\f/Pld, (JZY -M5) dlr. Will t.skr car tn rr.dt or 11nl.nce •Private Pllrt)I. ~ or 494.Qll. Its scats CAIRIOLET Hr rdltlp, 1~ metallic 1llver, wtih bnlld qtw ln- ttrior: chlome TJhttJ.1. n . dlal tlan A?ttlf&f radJo, Uo. wYW 2LI. eb 1.l n1 . Take •ver Of YW C.lt,IX-1---=='---·1 ~--m!!9 ~. 11 Z.. ..,.,,..,.,. -a11or 5 ~ '&I VW--AJ&.nr-. ~ If.ii PM or_...._ · Vw, K••ll, ""' '""· .... ndt. - •ltln .,. vw. n.i. XJnt """'· ....., ...... New Ir lhed """'· '1300. m11111 lhe·IAll b.i&rtlcle S•n>P•rlt ndlal ttru , lmmldi.te Dollw~ '13 VW na too.,..... pall, '60 POR..l/CllE Cabriolet, 1600 tiuper, with hard top. New ""lint, new clutch, new tirr"I, new paint, Ar.1/FM. junl like new, can be seen at ~ Harbor Bh·d., or ptione 64$.1982, 9am to 6pm were dcslgncd by an orthopedic surgeon. $1899 CHICK IVERSON YW Sales • Service • Pvt.I from Swedon tho '66 PORSCHE 912 Coupco. A!\1/1'"'1it, 4 Speed dlr. Air Condltionlni;: lSUN 512) l'ull Price S359.l. Small Down will Finance. call 494-n -M 5'19.3031 Ext. 6& or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVJ.). COSTA ME&\ '66 PORSCHE 912 4 SPEEL SONETT Jmmediale Deliwry Oranee Col.int)''• Nnvat D\f. COAST IMPORTS ol Onzwe C.ounty lDl W. PaclHc Cout HW)', Acros1 from PORSCHE '70 914 (mmac cond .. extru include FM sle~. g track tape, cover. Buying new house. 1.tuat aacrltict. S3995. Test drive it today. BaJbol. Bay Club 642-0406 • 54M529 ""'577 'a:i PORSCHE Spdstr. best oiler ovt!r 11000. f>tS.<960 '61 PORSCJIE CABRIOLET MUil aell for be1t oller • 675-1323 * '56 Porsche, rblt vig, yellow $1000 • 67J.-!H03 * Turn those White Elephanll into cuh thru a Daily Pilot Dime..a-llne ad!! It's more of a car than you think. CHICK IVERSON PORSCHE I AUDI 900W,sl: COHt ~/HeJ,port 8eilcl1 646-9391 OllAMGE COIJllT!'$ MllllOllZEIJ DEAUI SUNBEAM YEAR-END JOHN CONNILL "NO GIVEAWAYS NO GIMMICKS" ••• J111f 22 y,,,, of Honed D•1li119, S,!li1uJ Ch••rol•h. ' I ' • .ALL NEW 1970's EXEC'S -DEMO'S --NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED BRANm NEW 1970 CAMARO Coupe. Tinted ·9lass, evap. emission control, AM-push but .. ton radio,, citrus green with grun vinyl interior. Stock "#~ I 054 (530202). .FULL PRICE Brand New 1970 Nova 2 Door Coupe FOR RENT Brand New 1970 Full Sized Chevrolet Wagon Tint•d 9l•11, turbo hy~r•­ m•tic, •v•p. emission, power steering, 250 V8 engin•, AM radio, vinyl in · terior. 1907) .(1817161. FULL PRICE s329a CHEVY BLAZERS-1971 VANS 26 ft. Horizon Motor Home CARRY ALLS-4 WHEEL DRIVES Air Conditioned And Fully S1lf Contained. Now For Immediate Oellvtry At Connell At Popular Price1. Phone Immediately Chevrolet. CaJI Ron Krani, For ReMrvationt. Roger Miller, 544-1200 Truck Dep1rtment. 2828 HARBOR BLVDJ COSTj MESA NIW CARS 146·1ZOO USID CAJS 146'. IZOJ ' L-.una leech woocten •lffr whl a lhtfter. ._, inon mann ttu n&. .... 900 s.. cat. Hltihway °"'" '"'"'· 01m, S11t5. CHICK IYERSON ..... "'°· """· .-.ies 4'4-7503 * 541-3111 m-1716. YW • "' vw Sqrbclt • "67 TOYOTA '67 vw C&mpor. lmmacWal< -""'· •• " ""° or -O&r •. ' r..-..IM..i-t q •Ip p • d , •-llARBOll BL•,.. * D-Jl~ * Pld< •• whit """..,. n,ooo -, •. ·~~.~~:: H'-....,., .,...., ....,.,.., .r.n-.... ,_ ......... .-.. --v """ T~•1 u.A">1"" ..,._ '6.l BUS OJIJl)er'fWW ..wt •C'lUl:I mUu. Local 1 o rNmnable. :»T~ or trw. Xlnt tond. Mut aQ. automoblle.Orilfnalnd f>'l>.1979 JULY 'ail YW. Auto. $1150•ofr.!W&-6111 lah, M'W tins, ndio, beater, 1 _ VW Sedan I ia.t.dr:. 13,lOO Ml. Im-e -VW _ UPH~ rTadf for anythina! (UPM;. ~. i-.4io. dark= IMC.I Sl.ICO. xtNr mm~* - 7"), $1610. MUlt 'Rll, Own8r m-a3I Atttt 4 PM * 1r 59-1011 * * $ 1399 .,,, ......... 64<-1291 e 'IS VW CAMPER * 19'111 VW 5'don. Qoan, CHICK IYERSON 1966 vw Bur -k> mL, REBLT ENG. ms aood """""""'· so 1 YW oulltandlnc cond. w/alr. **IM-'627** On.tUd Aw, Celli. ~ 549-3llU Ext. 66 or &1 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA Check GUI' deals 3 OTHER DEMOS AT BIG SAVINGS DEAN LEWIS 1964 1'o)'ot& Land Cni.iser Hardtop, radio, heater, 4 whed drive, W&m!n hubs. Uc, (XEV 904) DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbllr Blvd. -'67 TOYOTA COrona. Good cond!Uon (Zl..K- 927). WW take car ln trade or finance private party. cDr. c.u 546-4052 « '9t-68ll. '63 CX>RONA ~pe ~ vinyl top .tndrd tr&nl. Xlnt cond. Pvt pty. $1~. 113J.-lt69 TRIUMPH '67 SPORJS 1200 4 apetd, radio, heater. CVOT 3581. '"' BILL JONES 8 .J. Sports Cat Center 2133 -· C.M. 54<M49l '&8 GT & Italian Racina Red tutback ,fully equipped, wire whttla, eboey black Interior CYEM 4141 Sacrifiee, take trade or amall down. will fin. pvt, pty. Call Maury aft 10 dlr. am 540-3100 or -494-1029. '65 SPITFIRE RDSTR (P693A) $499 BILL JONES 8.J. SportJ CU Center 2833 Harbor, C.h1. 540-4491 '60 TRIUMPH TR3-Xln l cond, 4 spd, New top, Good ttm. $450. 96z..&\OO ai't 6 pm WIWS 1950 WILLIS P•nel, set up for 283-327 Chev.·no engine or tnlnJ".. budttt Jte•l!I • SZ».00. Call i :J>..9:00 p.m. 546-1190 VOLKSWAGEN e '69 VW-automatic stick lhilL Slut. $1600 Call- **'59VW tt 'fl eni. $400. 642-5172 '64 VW Bue· CJet.n. , Ptv Jf7, -·~· 'M SQBL1Ct new •na. ftW tram., rims, hdn, 'fit 11tatl extru. $1300/beSt. 6Ta--5449 '70 VW SQUAREBACK, ex~ ttlknt mod. fD(IO. M-2459 al1orS:IO e "10 V\V CAMPER e Pop top + tent * Jlkf: MW * ~12-40 * '" vw °"· °""'· sm. mm 't4 vw Bua Gd. cond. I: pt ens, ~ owr wbolnell -•• $6!0' Ooll 5IM111 833-~ '15 VW 8QU&ftl1Kk, IWW enr. '62 GHIA CXJUPE • '61 VW BUG • -· am/Im. xlnt coad. Good Oond. $100 JlXD/make ctr. 9SS.an Belt arm. 494414 675-U&I or IC-321l ONLY AT CONNELL CHEVROLET '70 CAPllCI cou" 12,000 mt. Showroom fresh. vi nyl roof, air, auto., P.S,. P.B., Rmialnlna: fact. warranty •. (ADY460) '70 IMPALA CUSTOM CPI. . . 7,600 mi. Auto.. P.S., air. vinyl roof. renwnmg fact. i'J&l'Ultt'e. Dead ahup. (7l1CKBI '69 IMPALA CUSTOM CPL Auto., RA:R, vlnYI n:iof. tact. air, remaining fact. warranty. Low mtlff. IYYN058) . !SIX OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROMl 6 pass. VB, auto., air, P.S., P.B., '67 IEL All WA.c>N 1ure is a nice car. ('J'ZH933) '66 IMPALA COUPI 2 Dr. H.T, Auto., P.~ ~beat.er, nltt car. (lJI..A965) 6 pas. vs, radJo. P.S., auto., air. Low '66 CAPllCI WA.c>N mllH, 1trona: car. (RUZ.l!S2) ' '66 CHIYlOLn 2 Door hardtop. StronJ car • .Automatic, , radio, heater. <RRY538) ' '65 CHIV.OUT IMPALA 2 Dr. H.T. ~o. heater. automaUc, P.S.. Real nlce car. (NAZ487) '65 CHIVIUI 2 DL 1 owner nt'W car trade hL .Automattc, ndJo. heater. CNIVOllJ '65. MUSTAN• 2 DOOR HARDTOP Auto. tram., will ialnt to tuft" buyer. Strona: car, (12791) '67 FORD GAL.AXIi XL IOO 2 Door hardtop., Radio, autorm.tie, pov.·er slffrlni• CTRU.367) '66 FORD CONVUTllLI VB, P.S .. autornatie, raillo. , Sharp car. (SJlH59.1) '68 Y.W. IUGo Radio, heattt, •lick. Clean 1tron1 car. (Z51145l '69 OLDS YISTA CIUISIR 6 pus. wagon, RW, P.8., auto., air. ReaJ nice car. Won't JUL f670AGH) '68 PLYMOUTH Sl'OlT PU•Y Convert RAH. auto., P.S., I.it cond. Stroni low tnil~1e car. fZZD786) 53599 1699 51799 '899 ~399 53399 ~499 TRANSPORTATION TRUCKS· TRUCKS· TRUCKS 113 II\. •Ill: t 9", M.T. A ... ., P.I .. UM. l'f'CM411} '82 VALIANT t IW. M.T, .................... ILtlMO 113 OLOS t Ot. M.T. .......... ,,,., ... lilt• DOMI 4 Dr. 0.... .. A"'9.o ...... (fM&ll'I) ... 1' TOM CMIV, - -IT""'O '66 Y1·TON CMIY, w/c_,.,. f PJMll) '67 'h•TON CHIY. 6. ...... f"4ttll -'61 IL CAMINO. bM, P.S.. ..... flJJ .. .... $419 '61 l/1•TON CHIY. Vt, lltH. 11212171 '67 IAMCMllO. A, llN. Pl. • 11~ JJAt 'If IL CAMINO, A, UH, PS, f'161ttl ~ ... '61 ~·TOM CHO. ft ..W. ITl1411) ...... '67 f•·TON CHIV. Ya. ...... IWIJlll '6f fOID \It.TON, UH, ....._ llUJllJ - '61 POii \.IJ.'fON. A. Vt. All. 112114) 'U Cflllf, Ya·fON. I., tt. W. ..... IUJf. ,,,. '11 CHIY. ¥..JON lpt. Y-. YI. A, I . .... ,,.,., - .... 'M ,.._ ...... \It.TON Y-. A. efr, 1. :...;..._N.f~· CONNELL( CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 ' • ' ' -~ , ,. . • • ~· i " ' .t "h : • ' . • ~ '· . • • •• • ~~ • • • -• . -• ' . .. ' . --. • • . " . • .. . • . ,. ' . . ··.r: . .. ~~: ' : .. . . , ' ... • . .. : :-· . . ' ...... -.!' , .. • ... ~. ' ., . " ' . ' ' .· -~ .... . ·-~· .. _ .... . ' • ' " .. '• ' . ' ! . ' • . : ;~ , ' l "' ~: r I ~:.1 .~ j ~~· 'l . 'i :" " ' ~I r ' ' .•:'! ~1.· '1 olj• l .. ,.,I ~ .. • -! 'r ~: ~ (:' ,.:"" ! : ·'-" i ,l'V .. ' _;.; ' :ti ~ • ,.,. t . : ··-. " ' "" ·;·-~ ...... : • ...... ; ' . ' . '•'·· ' ; ". ' ' ' ~ ... " " " ' ' . ' ... " " h .. ~· . . ' -. .: .-. • • ' . ' .. ' ,. ' . ' " ' .... " ·"•' ~~: ""' ' ' , ' ' . . -.•, ~ ·' . ' .... : ~ . ,, .c . I . ' . ' , ~ ... : ~- . .. ;.• . . . ' . ' .... ,, . ' ·'--". . ., : n• •'if -: " "' • .. , ,' i~ . " I , ' r. '1 .. I ' 0 DAILY l'll:OT _..,.,., ...... 19, 1970 W-, "-' 19, 1970 ,ILOT·ADVERTJSER ~~~~~;;~~jE;;;~~~~;~r~Sl'OltTATlotl TllANSl'ORTATIOH !~~~~~TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'OltTATIT ._RAN=;;.;S:.:.P..::;0;.;R=A.:;l:.:ON:.:..._,;T:,:::::;::SP~O:::R.:.;.:.A:..;T;.;I :.:.:..-1 "'W::? -... ,...,. AU... HOO lmporied""'" MOt lmp•rt9tl --lmpo<totl A--Im'°"" ._ -import9tl A--lmportotl ._ 9690 lmportotl Autoo -Uwl c-.1 ,,.. \. .. , .. ·' VOLKSWAGEN ~-.1--..,--.--- --VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN CHMLLI VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN <L'M VW . '67 VW ,-NN YW •UG '65 YW .:gJ:' ~ $1295 '68 OIEVEW: SS386. Mt><!. :: • ' . . ' ' ' . • '· ... ' ' : .. ••• : " • ' ! • • ' • ' ' ' • ' ' . ' . ' '•. ••• :·.; ' . •• • • i~ ,:.:, .. ~ ; .. : • • ' . ' . .. '64 YW 5qUARESACK . Ui:·• "" CAMPER -. -$~~ $55.19 fl', Wiii IUCi Lie. ~ ll8C vlv~-....... """' ctul<h, 113'0. S4)UARE IACK Fu11> ...,,_ ll>CI-,,... i....., ""''" 4 ..,... ...._ American ·....,, 'lride ttra, CHICKimlYEISO., ~!°· beater, 4 .,_,, \TFF•b61=s-=1<2S===== 1 5'95 . Raruo, hellter, Arcde whl~. pa rack. Runs ~A ' )o6ka dy ~IQ, cvWv 919) SIO.JI ._ ln1IU'd11 CUltorn metallic .pamt w'"h ft.-,.,.., CHEVROLET ~ ,,..::,:~ ~ ~~~~ DEAN LEWIS t•xvw& LLlc.I o.on1.,;,1trd .. :;~•Ulul ta.,. -.. YPU. YW DEAN LEWIS CHICK IVERSON vw 611)), • • comfor\ with economy ASIN\. ...., ,. s...:mi Drt. 81 tr CT 191t'Harbor, C.M. 646.9303 1 -EVY $999 CHICK IVERSON IS66 =Blvd. AT Se.mt other cutombed 1970 llARllOlt BLVD. '68 VW, wbeelo, pa~! job, 67 CH SS VW I CHICK IYEUON VW to Choose from COSTA MESA HOO CC'1 must aee, make 396 V8, Power Steering,' Bue. ~ Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. $51.9' ••.• $S7.'JS moolh '63 vw IUG ' I vw · CHICK IVERSON offer or trade for ... ·k•I ..... Chn>me \Vbee!1 CHICK IVERSON s<»m Ext. 66 or 61 VW $2095 m.93S2 Radio, H;.1 ... <wm 5116>'. VW , , l970 HArulOR BLVD. ""1 bean!y, Excellent condJ. 1970 HJJµ!OR BLVD. ! IS66 VW Campor ~A """"• tlon, New val\re 1ob.' <WQD a>STA MESA 54~3031 Ext. IC or 67 Heater, 4 ,....,, -•tt -Mt '62 VW $1599 '63 VW •~• ~ "70) -·" -· ~" fl ' ·~ •-• Runo JIOOd. CI•0 "! 51""31 Ext 68 or 61 •e• YW llJG • , ,,,_ " ·~ n. '64 Volkawqoa Camper, Uc. 1970 HARBOR .BLVD. '"' with all !he awnt.,... 6<>-0236 ~ BILL YATES COSTA MESA Low milH en 'ftbuilt encloe, 1910 HARBOR BLVD. U't Pvt. J>cy, Call dlr, Ma\D'Y OMR: J.99, IO!! Box, S1ttp1 4, COSTA MESA (SVH 789) new dutch. new brakes, COSTA MESA , aft 10 · AM St>-~ or $1,295.00 -· DEAN LEWIS ca-· pedeetcoodlilao. Can '69 VW IUG Radio, Heater, !TAZ 300) 49j.10l9.-./. , Jim Slomons lmporta WANJID 1966 -Blvd. ' VOLVO VOLKSWAGEN ~ at 3l89 Harbor Small . Down wll1 tinanct 'M VW Black. Org/owner. . .UO w. WARNER, I'll PQ' top doik"., lat )"KI!' 32852 Valle Road Blvd, or phone &cS-1982. 9am Dir. 4 spttd lXXA 989), $1!i85 Private Patty. Call 546-flM Xlnt cond.~R/H. $13$. Wlll SANTA ANA VOLKSWAGEN toda.J. can 6t&Ol3 I ..... - -• San Juan Capistrano to 6pm ru11 pl'iee wtti: small down or 49t-&8ll take trade or )'OU may; Pfl1 Open Evn. ol Swt. 4564125 and ask fGr. Ron: Pinchot '67 DELUXE VW BUS - - -... .. 83T-4800/f9.l.4;5111499-2261 (dol Blu.-Super Sharp will finance. 494-7'144. .66 NEWLY P * inted, me direct,, w/sm. dwn '6T vw SQUAREBACK. li&hl 56-30.U Ext. fi6..6'7. S'B-0900, Radio, heater C•0514J. ~ THINI '66 CAPRICE '6.1 VW convert I b I e. 'GJ VOLKS bug, x1nt cond. o v e r h a u 1 e d , Xlnt payment. call Mr. 'Thomu blue, 25,000 mi; new tln!s '56 VW, 5 good tlru, radio, · $1695 ~ lOl..VO' Mechanically pert~. Sac. SC9;). Priva~ P-a r: t y . throu&hout. $109S. Must sell! 549-6997 Days, 6 4 5-1·35 9 & brakie1. Perfect condition. runa pod. S285 or llelf: otter. 9625 Garden Grove Blvd., GG .rlfioe S900 firm. 540-6539 M8--0534 60-7374, 6'1>-01'4 Eva. $1400 497-1558. 497·1674 aft. f . C..U Collect 531·77'17 , -2' Door Hardtop. Full ~ "fRIEDLANO£R" • Alr Cood. dlr. Vinyl Top. DUE TO POPULAR REQUEST, WE ARE REPEATING THE MOST DRAMATIC 'CLEAN UP $ALE IN OUR 18 YEAR HISTORY ' ,. •• THAT'S RIGHT. $70* OYE.ll FACTORY INVOICE ON AU NEW 1970 COUGARS, MERCURYS, MONTEGOS, CYCLONE GTs, MARQUIS, & MARQUIS COLONY PARKS ' AND OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF OVER 100 TO CHOOSE FROM • LINCOLN CONTINENTALS Nt'f.,ING HELD .BACK OVER 100 NEW LINCOLN• MERCURYS TO CHOOSE FROM NiW 1970 LINCOLN CONTINENTALS. 2 DOOi. HAl.DTOPS AND 4 DOOR SIDANS INCLUDED IN THIS SAU , ALL 1970 COUGARS XR7's, HARDTOPS, ETC, Drive Them Away For Only $70 OV!I. FACTORT INVOICE• MERCURY MARQUIS 011~ OF THI MOST SUCCESSFUL STATION WAGONS, SEDANS, CARS OF~~ '70'• NOW ......... ~!~~!~!~.......... $70 . OYlli FACTORY _INYOICI• CHOOSE FROM OYER *"'-acid 2°/o for handllllC) 100 LINCOLNS, MERCURYS, COUGARS & MONTEGOS f 69 CONTINENTAL $4666 Coup!. V-8, ractory air condl· tion1ng, run rz!r, radio, heater. Landau Roo . All Co:ntlnental ' '70 MARK Ill ' E~an~ penonlfi!d! This fabu1ou1 car driven on1y 6, milH. EqulGped with every poS11ibl! luxury tea- I 68 CONTININTAL $3888 4 Dr. Sedan. V ~ factory air conditioning, ful power radlo, h!at!r, Landau Roof, rub of luxury fnture11. (XSR852) I ture including tu I \:)er, of course, automatic apeed control, power door ockl, tilt steering, AM/TM 1t!reo, lndlvld~djustable 6-way pow!r a!ats. Landau roof. (6 . I luxury extras. CXEU891) I f 66 PLYMOUTH ~555 Barracuda. V-8, auto. trans., factory air, P.S., n.<Ho .l beater. (88R869) s7333 I 68 CONTINENTAL $3666 Coupe. Factory air condition- btf, full power, beauti!ul condlUo?L (8EK795) I . I I '65 MUCURY $1111 Parklane. Auto. l.ralll., radio A: h@ater, P.S., P.B., etc. (NCA320) . '68 COUIOAR s2111 Auto. trana., power 1tterina. ~ heater, 23,000 mllee. ( 663) . '66 MUCURY S999 Caliente Coupe. Auto.. tran~, power 1tttrlng, radJo, heater. SRM721 Now I• TM Best Time Jn Ten Year• To Bu9 A Li~oln-MerCllrfl Product -~ Johnson.s-on n.ooo©®n.~ ©©Joovooo~oov&n. • 1£001!{ m. 1rnm©l!Dli\1 • ©®l!D~&11 540-5630 COSTA MUA 2626 Hamor Blvd. 6'2-0981 fllftEE GENERATIONS IN TBE AVTO/llOBILE BVSINESS lHI OUllST UTAILISHID "FACTOlY DIHCT" LINCOlN-MHCUaY DIALla IN OllAN•E COUNTY t . ~ ' ' -~ • Great Condition (SYU 469) 2 d .... ..,, Small Down will Finance. r . .,,;mo. * $2750 * CaU .... 77 ... IPM IUCN IMWY. »I 1965 ~ 11 V-8, 4 apttd, 893-1566 • 537-6824 11,000 mi. MMy extras. Ex· NEW .. USED-SERV. ttll!nt condition. Sale or ~ trad<. ,,. .. 21Xll -. --_ ''3 CHEV BE LAI RE VOLVO 6 cyl, Stick. Good lran.lpor. ta1.lon. M!chanlcally peri'l!Ct. Asking $325. Stt Arl!y at th! Daily Pilot, Monday-Fri. day 12-2 PM. '10 Demo, #8782 SAYE $466 Check our deals 18XI F C})! ror delivery. Overseas del Specialist. .. DEAN LEWIS 00 ilfri>or, C.M. 646-9303 $1695 '65 IMPALA 396 V8, 4 spttd, po\\'et' steer. ing, radio, heater. (NJ<F947) $899 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 1967 Volvo 144 Sedan 32852 Valle Road Radio, heater, automai~c. $an Juan Capiatrano Nice and cl!an. (314 AYV) 837-4B00/49J..C511/499-~ DEAN LEWIS '64 I I 1'66 Harl>or BlW. rnpa G 646-93(13 2 door hardtop~ 1oaded + l===~::=.:==-1 air corv:I. dlr. ITFB 593). Antiques Cla1ilc1 '615 Will take trade 01' tinane!. , Call 494-7744. 1939 PACKARD Clipper 4 Dr. 1964 IMPALA convt. 56,000 Remarkable cond. 675-7890 mt. 1 owntt. Air. Xlnt cond. Will sell to 1st $1000 • HUR-Worth tnOr! than $700. Ph: R~! · 613-54~ . Autos Wanted '700 .64 Il\1PALA ~· 409 cu in. ===::::::__;=1 4-t;pd, 411 Poli, Xlnt cond, WE PAY TOP Make otter. 646-4914 aft CASH Spm. • '67 EL CAi\fINO. Runs pe:rf. , Below book at Sl425. Can help fine. 645-1691. See at for uJed can 1s·truckl just 1700 Superior Ave, Cl'.1. call ua fDr free estimate. 166 CHEVELLE SS396 GROTH CHEVROLET Real s~. best otter ""°' • 495-089. A!k for Sales Manqer '6.i Ma\ibu SS. kpd, lite 1!211 Be:aCb Blvd. blue, blk int New tltts. Gd ElunUnaton Btach cond. $ll00. 67$-7704 U7-Cl87 KI 9-3331 """''64,,-:Cbevy--,Su,-pe-,~Sport--I WE PAY CASH """' ~""' .aer. FDR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLIT :1821 -Blvd. a.ta Mesa s.;.1D1 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS CHRYSLIR 196f. NE\'VPORT • New tire•, ro'ltl ·body &: motor. Trani nee& work. l\1ak! otta-. ......... CO, MET U ~ car J& atra ~·1------- ., UJ first. ./ '62 COMET New trans BAUER BmCK ntw brakes •• Make otter~ 2H E. 11th St. caH 6U-1310 Costa M!sa 5'8-7765 IMPORTS WANTED Orange Courltl!S TOP $ BUYER CONTINENTAL BD..L MAXEY TOYCJrA '69 CONT'L, LOADED!! 18881 Beach Blvd. SACRIFIC ING. Under R. Beach. Pb. 847..a5.'i:> \.\1tsle bluebook. 67a-3!MO, TRANSPORTATION CARS Our Specialty AS LOW AS $99 642-7416 e •64 VETI'E -New tirn, __ ...;:_;==--I map. top, lo mi. Xlnt coad. '&I WlLDCA T HT 2 dr, lo ml. 54S-3227 after 5. !lee _wnd.ws •. wat. antenna; • ,65 VETfE.AM/FM;-v111)1 tilt wtu,AM!Fl\I, air, all ... ........ " '~100. pwr. Top cond. i1rJ0. ~ · ean. .... 53$.l134 ~,:."'0 ~~ DODGE 11400 • p •' '&& ciJRiiNEf «o- "•""'"'"'"""Spedal="'w""""_,Aulo,.,.. . · PIS. llJH. XI,. a•ll 2 °""' ""'9 .... NI -~blel M6-.JUL fZNV 213) Must S!D! Small "2 Buk k Slcy1art convt, XlnC °'""' wW 1'"'tnanee. Cl.ll coad $395. 494-7714 * ,...-* 1'·10"""M"'ON"'Aro=-•"''1"-· 440=-,-,., p1/pb, tact air, lt!reo . CADILLAC ..... rltJred '"' lowin& T.T . Mumt .. n. 54G-33T2 '68 EL DORADO'. Jlkt new • 1967 DOOOE MONAro LOADED! Full pwr/1lr/ tl.000 ml., p/1. p/b, 313 tl\I. -·-·---·-· • ' ' ' ' . ~~~----·-~-·---------~ ........ --·~·-·-------------} '·, . \ z,j PILOT...t.OVERTISER Wedntsd<J, A,.ust t•, 1919 ~t'l.-itA"M"'s"'PO"'R"'T"l'°T"1o"'M.-'-'-t~RArr.'.iii$ii:1'9"1R<itnA:1'Tri(ON'""'"---.'""llA~sl'01tTATION .- Tl!ANll'OllTATloN TIWISl'Ol!TAtlON fUHSP'blflflOl'i OAILY PILOT 11J7 rRANSPORTlTIOf( 9lllO •::D '70 CORONET 2 DOOR NO. WL21COEIOl67• OVER FACTORY INVOl~E . COST ' 5,000 BLUE CHIP "'"'' ''' m• fiul "' ""'" "'"" STAMPS !i,000 llu• Chi p St1mp1 if you buy fTom 111• .,. •ny eth•r .:ie•lar." . "JUST SEE ME FtRST' '67 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury. R&H, euto., P.S., •ir Cond. ITRE3821 '66 CHEV. CAPRICE: 4 Dr. H.T1 Full power; •ir cond. 'ITR.00951' '64 PONT. LE MANS Cour•· R&H, auto., buclc:et s••ts. '.lOPE-640 . . • '66 · CADILLAC Cpe. OeVill1. Full power:, 1ir cond. 'llU;fW- 0551 Ustd Cars 9900 UHCI Cars ;;._,;;.;;;,..;c__;_ __ ~-1 FALCON FORD ·:~:D '70 CORONET CONVERT '70 DODGE CHARGER ·~~D ,'70 DODGE CAMPER VAN FORD NO. Wr27L061Jlf01 ovn FACTORY INVQICE COST $75 NO. XHltCOG t 2J24t OVER FACTORY INVOICE COST $JS NO. Al2AIOU102Jl6 OVER FAOORY INVOICE COST ~ you are nol completely sotisfied with the sel'Viee you ora getting from your present dealer please drop in to aur AA Rated .. Wlming ServiclOepartmont & give us a chance to ·service your car praptrly. i have been a new car dealer in So. Calif. far over 20 years & would •• We have the best financing in very much like to bl ywr dealer, · Southern Callfomla. If you are short of money and .need low monthly payments, S'ff ow ex• perienced c_..lon. Sincertly, C1il Worlhi,,,10,, P.S. We give ~lue Chip Stamps in our Service Department I 'YIAR WARllANR PARTS&LABOR OPfll DPlllS THUL. A.Hun~ ... '68 MUSTANG Auto., R&H, pow~r ' 1t•irin9, WSW. IZAX8621 : , '67 FORD GALAXIE · soo 2 Dr. Air, R&H, P.S., tint•d 9!111, IAKJ351 I .'68 PLYM. FURY .2 Or. H.T. ~fr c0nc;I., R&H, euto,. IVRM8071 '68 PONTIAC QTO. P.~. FORD 9900U...i Cars LINCOLN $1395 '65 Olds. Vista Cruiser 9 p•••• RlrH, aufo·., P.S'i eir cond. IWEN- 7041. '&l ,: DODGE WAGON R&Hi automatic:, power steering. (YOL-3691 •• l '&&I RANCH ERO Rl'H~i•utomatic, P.S., 1ir 'conditioning. IUKD734 f '65 ~· CHEV. Yz TON Pi.~kup. R1dio and heifer, !lS41966 1' ---"°°-u~ tMf ·' MUSTANG : ~ . l·liRD $795 !!GOUsodCors T-llRD WHITE '61 Llncoln 4 dr '67 MUSTANG VS-auto, new -'-r------1·---'----- - '61 FALCON, 8 cyl stick, stn WiJI, $115. Mt 6 p.r.:i.: 832:1 Malloy Dr .. H.B. '56 FORD • New trans, '65 LTD hnttop . ps/pb, pwr IM!dan all power, air cond. tires, ndlo, xlnt rond. Must '63 CONV. New t;1&ln-t . '&t BRbUGilAM. Beautiful '~-l .. _ Good tires. Presti .. car for 8eil. $1400 or ofr. M6-5619 Gor&eous! Will take trade. condition, air + full po'W'E!I' brakes&: tln!'!I. \Vhole car or w ... .., .. W1, a r, new ui-.::s, for · TOP · DOLLAR * '62 HW '.">I>• .U.000 ml. Xlnt rond. ~ 1 Owner. Pvt pa"'· 54< "'8 radio. ...."""'. 644-5510 aft only ;475. 64.6-1711 e '67 Mustarw Convt w/air, Pvt. Ply. 644-2563. LlO, blut, $995.. 64.l-2267 ~~ •-CLEAN USED CARS P1y. """· ~ * * * 1965 RANCH.ERO w/ 5:30 8ee And B '68 .f.DR Lincoln, X1nt cond, R/H, Xlnt cond, 33,IXXI I-:-:="""==,,-,== THEOyDOrownRE Med mi's, new . rubber, mi's; 613-1895. Used Cars 9900 Used C•f'I 9900UMCI Cars t900 AP mags. $1150. * '66 COUNTRY SEDAN' ..,..... ·~----iiiiii----.-----~---------.1 '67 FIREBI.RD 400, auto. €all 897-4521 all 6 pm. 6 Pass, Jo mi, P/S-P/B ROBINS FORD Loaded! ...,_., 846-1492 • '61 Musia1:¥J Mach 1 - FIREBIRD p.s., p.b., Qistm trim, It Gd. cofld. Reu prlot. 2060 Harbor vd • '63 Linc, Cont'I. =· ~toPt:'::.J:1«:f. , ~t ~7· $l600. 833-l!MO ~ r:i ::ch-f~;s;::. '61 G~::2:r Jed,;i co.r. ~ . = ... ='==· $650==*=5.16-=1131== . . . . J ORANGE ®UN TY'S LARGEST '" P t F. b'ro us P-& ca11 'Dally Plloi ,,h, tac ..... '''""· l new 64U010 MERCURY OLDSMOBILE ... :::vo1 :..:. ;,,....,,m.,:~i ~~·~ ,:;;~ Chui< ..... Xlnt <Ond. 1 ....,,, $1095 -~-'67 QU:>s Della Cuotom 'dr TRANSPORTATION CENTER 9ell $1995. 646-9161 aft 7 pm. Pvt pty. $1S95. 54S-060'l '"' Fon! M hnltp F t tri / '""'===="'=='=--'========_:..:=========I uslang '62 C . t · " . "' " ' '· ,. 600 Hardtop, V8, radio, heater, ome PIB, P/wlnd., P/aeata, lo ALL MAKES & llllD£LS 1957 1967 l1J1POrtad AUtos 9600 Imported Cars '600 Imported Autos 9 power steering, automatic. Automatic. Radio, beater, ml'1, SW under warr. Best • ""' • ' WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • • 1600'• • 2002 • 2500 • 2800 • 2800 cs (SAA 917). b0<ket .......... ,-•. (IWT -ofr"' !rd. 64&-nl No Reasonable Offer Refused .On llYer 100 cars DEAN LEWIS 713) '"'· Excellent ...... PLYMOUTH . portatlon car. Will · take 196U Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 trade or finance private par. 1 _______ _ '66 Fairlane '' eau -"' •91-48ll. oivORCE '"""' ..ie • 1965 WE CARRY OUR OWN DOWN PAYMINT CONTRACTS NO PlOILIM lvtrytM Of ~ a • .....,... CM l lff HERE A C.r t Alldltr Mtt.n • We hive 1 financing pl•n to fit your budget. Come in ind t1lk with one of our experienced counselors. e ALL COLORS '68 C.ULONY Pk 10-pau wp. Plymwth • 353 Fury SporU ~ble. Automatic, VB, 4 new premium tttts. f\1l.I Coupe. Power brakes, steel"o radio, heater, dlr, Excellent pwr a: lac air. Xlnt cond. tr.v. factory air, new cond. <ZZV 070. Will take Pvt. pcy. $2950. -· --lon, R/H, vlnyl : llV•lf 11' YOU lfAY• LllO CllllCWT 1·1 IUDOIT TllllMI WI DO NOT llQUlll ' trade or finance .private par. • ,56 MERC· Gd Sha toi;t, 'tilack Jeathtt interior t)', Call S46-4052 or 49'-6811, ·Trantp:rtatior'i cu · pe ffOO. 642-4321 Ext 25.1 or e ALL MODELS e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '66 ~uire WalJOll 1100 * 61:>-23"6 <m1 430-07'2 '69 VW s1495 '67 FIAT s949 F=::th:""vf*'"..;; ·::.,:~ ':.."'!..: ~ :S''5 ~~~ 4 Sr:i~~ :;-',.to~'!"~~ 1 • ~y=~'*. ter,Goodttm.. 1~ iJr cond' Stereo orbelto&r.64MI022' STERO. LOADEDll ~·~·'-· '-cx_'"-"'-"~,,,.---,--,~-1 tai>e, atito, trans. frAY279) $1300 OR BEST OF• :~.,~~~.c.~~·"''~· $2995 ~.~~;1°!,U~J~ $1495 . :rl°!:.~~ = MUSTANG .:i;:.!:>R=:· .. """" lmml<*M flll'OUllhOul. Whl =~r-· .-,., 111.,. OJ' .f!H-681..1. ' 4 ~ Cl'l.pr mis, $1900 aft ·:..:;=·vWc.',J"'"';:.."c..· -------1,61 TOYOTA '65 FORD RANCHERO ~~'i..S:.AN~~ ~ .s PM m-1746 * $1'295 air-H.T, C-.. -RWlif. $1349 cond. Must tee to ap-63 Ply. wagon. XLNT cond, ~-, wN• wtlll lllK-1n-6 cyl Au--llc. Ct •--·, -i...te. $1200, 1118-3493. , Nu ttftl, etc. $599 MUSI' i.rsor ........... ,. c.ldlllwl. ......... Ill" -i .... ~... SELL! 66-1628 !o.NILJ. WUl 1ake car in trade or '66 MUS?ANG 8 ot., xlnt ~ '61 OPEL SJ29-!S '69 vw s13 n...... prlvale party. cond .. new bat • poln~ PONTIAC Kadtt'I" R•ller _,,,_ , .. Joo 1t1e110, t.aorer, ""' cl""' 546-W or 6"811. aacrlfice at $1200. atb!r 5 l'lletw,-A-1 llltJM, IWYNtllll. ::.r, flXICJJ), · 962-3661. J---------~ --=:_==---.,..."~~~'tj*'!il4!Ullall&..2.>.l.ntbkJ p.m. __:_ _ "8.l'ONTIAC~lwc _ '64 VW 2B9 cu. in, .f.1pd 1965 FASTBA~ j + 2' 2-dr Hrdtp. Michelin radiaf $695 '61 OPEL $1049 New tire & Jmlir1 hydramatio, rlh. low ml t!M, v1nyi' top, ah', .. aut ::~.=1:;.,~~ ~~~~l.L-· CLEAN!! Xlntco00.$950.M&-U»er a:m, throughOUt. Under allldlt111n. See at 1125 w. Balboa Bkrd, m.1211 wmuaty, $2400. Call after '65 vw W /FM •••fill, loetltr, lltOY.fi'CI). $ '69 VW BUS $ Newport Beach 540-13(18 '67 MUSTANG G-T 4 epd, 4:30, ·557-8825 795 .,., sa.<11• 111• w1111 -'ti t•"°'· A''E SEOOND car -'64 Ford diec Jrll, 390 'I'll· X1nt '&l c· Air new sw & drlv• ""' •.uf'f' to ~ f' Corrvt. Galaxy 500. Good ~cond. ' Bnt · ovtr $18)). bl"akel 6 tires: a.EAN t Bat •PPl"C111'-· tHMI. condition. $aKI or mtke of.. fi4.....a782 otr/over $675. 61$-6151 PLUS A LARGE SELECTION OF m-. Call llter 4 p.m., '67 !dustang hnltp. 6. ~1,<XQ 1988 aro Conve.rtlble. Auto KOMBI BUSES, ALL COLORS 6IH330. ml 1. Xlnt cond, MUlt oell, p/dllta brlca, Pi• many u. Joe Berlettl'• T&M MOTORS IOll GARDEN GROVE BLVD. sALn OP'IN SUNDA'f PA.ITS. IUYICf"TUU.. THUD. TIU. 1:11 IJ4.UM QI, .. L 9f ..... ltWH1 e '63 FORD Country Sedan $1000. 968-2283. tn1r $3)50. C.U ~ Qeanl P/SR/H. $395 ~15 Convert. Mu1tazv. e i9i5 TEMPES:' wqon-C --~* ~2635 * * Great Cond.ltlon dt. UOOO • lllOO 133-1213 ..... • 5*Z7' • JAVELIN '67 MVSl'ANG C7r/AJz., La» .-llO-J-AVE-LtN--34-3.-·-v-.s~.1 "'" H.T. $ll00 Tl'O<llT STUDEBAKER Pftftct. ooncl.; kit.ded; alt, Owner 673-4621. , • power, etc. Blut Boolt $2800 •• '86.MUST.ANG '111.to/tra..:. Unm·s dellthl; Wqon >'Int $2llO Taketr 1111r. I eyl IVH, Xlnt cond. 45,000 WI-l'llOl, 'G S11>1t L Bond. &t8-U55 Days ml t1250. M5-214T -.-$3IK4 a.m. e WllKLY, SIMI WllllLY a MONTML."I' l'AYMl!MTI A SPICIPIC DOWN PAYMINT e OIYOlllCI O -lfO llllD TAl'I • YOUR CHOICE • ht, 2nd & 3rd Ciro From 1961 Down At Low, Low Prices . .,_ •u T·IW .,, C11111.e..t 'Ha..,¥• " '"911, r111111 W """""''k· rfflo, """ lrooltwood 1i.tton ~ hlrt c.IMll (UT-414} fllellf', ll'Xllt 7'°), ,llltYYU.I. .... ~ru1~...,i,. ... {ltTU J:tl , Sa•• $199 $199 $79 ... ":"'=. '62......, '6'Uoula 'IJ:hllt.T ....... '"°-"""' --Ctll'IW1!CI'*. ""'°~ ,.. (K 1. AutlnMitk .,..,.,, ,_ COrr!'-'ttl. !'VII f:r. dlo ... llllflr', (lit .. $599 twY ...... IVIW IMSU. S\1l fl ltd tlr, IJAH ). $99 $199 $399 .,,..,. \1, tvlo, tr-.• •Ir JMilanlijliilt--···-~ IMtnlnf;-'-(iHM').-- Autt!'Mllt. •Ir CONll-$199 $299 • "°'*'· lt•ll ... llel'llfll, (HDO '1SI, ••· (l"GT ltl), $299 $399 ... ~ ... ,-''4 , •••••• ,ICKUP, • .,..., j lH~}. llltcllD, llMi.t. ,~. . '61....,.,.,... .,, a.INl.t $399 $599 ~~ ,.,.., ,,..... hdt" •tt. V.t, Nlly --.,, ....... ......... ~. rldlt ,., ,.....,, (OAl·tU), '""'"*'le: o..m-1111111119, llelltr, UmperJ, II>), . ·$99 $179 $a'fe $399 II KAILA lSl'ANOt. ALL (Altl l'lUS TAX & LIClNSE , ANCHOR MOTORS COSTA MESA 546 3050 .. . .. '· • • ~ • -'I ~ . . . . - • -z ... ::c lft Ill ~ ... ·-·- " --. ANY-.NEW ' 1970 'MUSTANG IN OUR .BIG;"' BIG,~~>STOC K \ ~ver .you buy ci 119'J. car Clu,rlilg afflc:iill ,,,.c:iory c:lean·' \ lllp t1m., yau're golirg to 1C1Ye o bunclJe. TIMre's liO denying It. So oll we say Is, loalr ~d but, before you oc:tualy '$ OVE1R·.1 i..._'.f l",,.J, ACTUAL . FiCToil ". .. ~·!~, ~ .. -.. INVOICt: ;f ' f ·, : • • POSl,TIVELY -NC)' ~QDED DEALER CHARGES! t ' ' .J OFFER EFFECTIVE .W.ED • .....JHURS .. I FRI., SAT., SUN., AUGUST 1;· '.· '1i 21 . . RENT A CAMPER Deluxe Mlf cont1ined' campers and motor homM for fomlly fun on a famny lludget, _,... da~· today. Also dally cor rontel1 n low a1 $6 por qy ancf 6c per mile. • VAC ATION DISCOUNTS • AMI Ill CAN . I PlllSI 4! HARDTOPS ' . e· FASTBACKS • • ' 1 • -1 • •. MAC.II l's. • BOSS'S . ~--~----• • ~-' ., e NO EXCEPTIONS! -J F IT'S ·-HERE,'< IT'S. J~T I • 599 OVER OUR COSTI ·· --·· OODYEAR·· llRE CENTER . •• "" ~. c:cpllllder Tlleodore Rabin' ••• . ·-.,. ' ;-Yeu'll egrH thoy're ·unlNotelole ..,,.,.. .. yo~ shop. 2.; SELECTION · Why t1ke • model •r coll!ofo ywJ ch>n't rHlly w1nt When we~ hive one A of tho Southlend'1 lolff"t 1970 model lnV9nloritt to chooM from? · -""' ' . ' 3.t BACKUP . . Since 1921 Theodore llollin» Ford hos -ratwd under "tho ,_ .W... erthip. Your lnvfftrnent It tiaCked by 1ltno1t •5:0 . .,,.,,. of know how end lntogrlty. · . ' WHY NOT ADD SATISFACTION 1 TO YOUR .. SAVINGS •• :·WHEN IT'S FREE? . • • .. 'PERSONALIZED. FINANCING . AL~ SliES e SPECIAL T,AKi ;,., !'lllCH e ILIMS e POl YGLASS WlDl·OVALS .• "'."TitucK AND CAMPER TIPS. • CHIYllON Let our finance '-cpert1 , help.' ~ drive the car you .w~nt ... the t,rm1 yeu want to-tMY· Wo f jn. -th ...... Bonk of A......Su; Ford Motor Credit Co., NO"P!l'f Na~ Bonk, Socuoity Pacific . PRIPAllE NOW. F.Olf l. WI VACATION! • ~~k, Unit9cl 'COllfW'11e lank. . · · ... . . . OVER 2 'ACRES QF-~ FINE TRADE' ·INS °'T.O' ~ettO~SE "~.o~ . . ' . MUSTANG SA L~. ' •. A THEODORI RolilNS IXCLUSIVR ' • • ' r l ~ i. .._ """'· '65 "'"''70 ..-.. c._ ..... ., •. --'Ible ond 2 + 2 PHffNcks. Somo with 4 spood'.;.iee •Ir-· ditlonl"9 ond automatic modiils. · · · .. EXAMPLES: . (21 1967 MUSTANG HARD10PI · . . ... -.ilflf''PYtiCi~ft'!Ji''F.,, -~ 1966 MUSTANG HARDTOP. o&.ntt·reri'ie>wn . ' . ·. . -LOOK · FOR THE , DIAGNOSTIC . '·. .CENTER SEAL OH . THE WINDSHIELD! ', .. • ' ... . ' ; 100% PARTS All LAIOR · -~ ' WARRANTY 4000 Ml • 011 90 DAYS . . . ' . c.... t1:-s' I •• ,_ f.!4: ···~m:j ! ........... ........ Pl.IS ....... ......, -..... "JU.,..., .... I t .................. · ·•·. . . ALL OF-FE RS CO NSI DERE D . . TRADES ACCEPTED -\ PAID FO R··OR· NOT I 64 . FORD FALC:ON H.T. . t~ls~()}s .. radio, be&ter. 5895 6 cylinder, radio, I 63 llAMIUR 220 WA•ON heat.er. (KII.083) $495 ' · FUil factory equpped,. Radio. I 68 CORTINA •.T. (7.µ724) ~ i 295 . 2-dr. H.T. Bucket set.ta,· ,, M' FORD ·n fi'Al:AX• soo factory air, ' • ., full powtt. (NCOOC2) . 5895 J.68 : SCOTSMAN CAMPIR '· s795 · • S·ft. cab ·over 1leipg 6. ~». . . ' ' . . . 1969 COLONY PARK MAR~UIS ' . A11to., R&H, P.S.. P.1., fHt.rJ·•ir. w.,,.,.ty '"'il1We. .tln-k eli: ,,ice t Jt40. ', OUR PR'ril21 $3 49S- . . ,,. 5 CHEV~ IMPALA S.S. • VI, 11111., P.S., R&H, 1lr, "i•yl r.otf •. (NGCtlOI '70 ~~~ .. ~.~~~.~!~ $3 295 '. lt111, •11Jt. t11t, h1nil to fiM 111M1!. 177 2ASKI '70 '67 MAVERICK R141o, h11f1r, l·1p11d . Ll ko 111w. IYWT2t71 FORD LTD 2 Dr. Y.t, f1mrv 1ir, ...... P.S., ,,I .. "vi11yl roof. ITANtoll: ' $17:99 .. 7AM.tat.'Pl\fMON ' . 7 AM To ' _PM TUE-Fil ' PARTS 'DEPT. ONLY I AV'f.I 6 PM 'SAVUIDAYS Dow• the Mission Trail Ne'v Principals In Sa11 Clemente SAN CLEMENTE -There will be two new administrators at San Clemente High School this fall. Edwant A. Kincaid, formerly 'l humanittes Instructor. has been appoihted aui.sthnt principal of the high school . He replaces Ferd Pasquale, who had been with the di.strict four years, but has moved on to become lhe new principal of Santa Ana High School. John E. Smart has been employed as the boys' vice prlnclpal replacing Jack Gyves who resigned earlier in the year to btcome a principal of an intermediate school in the Monro via. Smart. formerly a math teacher, has been with 'the district three years. Kincaid has served the district for fh•e years. .. e Sr/1001 lt••n•e E11ed CAPISTRANO BEACH • -Scho o I trustees are st udying a plan which would include razing the current administrative headquarters for the Capistrano Unlfied School District and movini;: operations to a coodemned high school in San Juan Capistrano. The current headquarters are in the old Serra Elementary School in Capistrano Beach, \11hich no longer is approved to house students. If the plan is deemed feas ible, a mo\·e to the empty halls of the former Capistrano High School would take place by September of 1972, district aides said . e \'0111/1 l'arl!J Slated ~11SSJON VIEJO -A party for fihh and sixth graders ls planned Friday at the new Sierra Re:creation Center. The end--0f-summer swim party vdll take place from 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Hot dogs, pizzas. salads, chi ps and beverages \\'ill be in cluded on the menu. Those attending are asked to bring their swim suits and $1 for the party. For guest information contact Montanoso Center al 837-408t Arte1ial Road Alignment OK'd In Capistrano The San Juan Capistrano City Council has approved the controversial precise alignment for La Novla arterial highway, The section curves from San Juan Creek Road north to Orttga Highway. tt includes a bridge across San Juan Creek to replace the Ganado Bridge washed out in the floods of February of 1969. "The engineer has done a feasible job and the alignment of this highway isn't going to bother any residents in the next 10 years,'' se.id1Councilman Ed Chermak. "Construction of the northern section of the highway will depend on the develop- ment of the Honeyman property, which is probabJy 10 years or more away." 1lle council's unanimous decision Mon- day 'A'a5 influenced by the fact that the decision on the location ol the bridge- head had lo be made before Sept. 15. If councilmen had not decided, they ~·ould have bad to forfeit about $62,000 in federal funds which were provided to replace the flood damaged Ganado Bridge. Before making their decision , several councilmen viewed the entire route of the highway, from the air. One councilman , Josh Gammel , sa id he hiked in the area looking for another possible location. but c:ould find none, Olen Dozier, whose property lies on the north aide of the aligned section. pointed out that property values will be decreas- ed for several owners of expensive homes on the north side of the highw ay. He ask· ed the council not to vote for the rou t presented, but his plea wa s rejected. Count y Cool To Track Plea San Clemente's efforts ·to study the possible relocation inland of the Santa Fe Railway tracks through the city got. lltUc support in a report made to the board of &upervisor1 Tuesday. County ttoad Commissioner Al Koch and Planning Director Forest Dickason in a report to the supervisors said that the federal Department of Transportation and the Department of Housing and Urban Development had no funds available at this ti me for a federally financed study oL the proposed railway track relocation. The reguest for the assistance was made several wtll!b ago to the board or -supervisors by the San C I e m e n l e Chamber of Commerce and refem.'d to Koch and Diciuon for investigation. Czech Borders Shut VIENNA CUP1) -Czechoslovakia has cloled ill borders to foreigners in an ap-. parent attempt to avert trouble on the se- cond anniversary of the Soviet·led in- vasion Aug. 21. A spokesman at the Ciecho«Jovalc legallon In Vienna said the ban, that bcR•n during the weekend, \\'ill remain 1n effect Wltll Aug. 25. Tire Hetil W "'' Troops at Fire Support Base O'Reilly carry artillery ammunition. dropped at landing area by he licopter, to storage bunker. The base is located on a mountain hilltop 13 miles from the l..aotian border in ~or~hern Sout_h Vie.tnani. The location of the isolated fire support base JS auned at htnder1ng enemy movement from Laos to South Vietna1n. . , J' oters To Get Final S.ay . . On Coi1nty T1·ansit Plan By JACK BROBACK 01 "'-0•111' ,lie! Slllf formation or a proposed Orange Coun- ty Transit District is now up lo the voters. The Board of Supervisors gave final ap- proval to submitting the issue kl \he elec- torate 01 the Nov . 3 general election ballot Tuesday following sanction of the ~ list week by Tue. Local Agency Formation Commission (l!.AFC). The transit district formation was urg- ed last June by the four~year-old Ora11ge County TranSit Study Committee headed by Ful1erton industrial re I at i o n8 counselor Hubert C. Ferry. Ferry told board members that his committee had decided that creation of the district was necessary to solve future transportation problems. The district is allowed under a state law passed by the legislature in 1965 "'hich permits creation of the authority by a vote of the people. The supervisors accepted the recorn- mendatioo of the committee on June 17 and held a public hearing on the issue Ju - ly 21. LENGTHY DISCUSSION After lengthy discussion at the public hearing the board voted to submit the matter to the voters, if the LAFC ap- proved. ~ Only spotty opposition surfaced at the public hearing. Traffic engineers of several couflty communilies urged further study on the need for such a district before it was submitted to the electorate. But the board members voted approval because they said a district is needed to bring the kltal county transportation pro- blem under ofle system, that such a district would provide an agency for receiving state federal and other fund s. and the district would provide a vehicle for county participation in regiorial decisions on transportation. County ~d Commissioner Al Koch, a strong supporter of a tralllSil district and a member of the transit committee, hail - ed ·Tuesday's decision as "a step for- ward." "Mass traasit facilitJes as they exist t<>- day in the county are fragmented , Ufl· coordinated, and non-continuous," Koch argued. '4They offer at best only a very limited service restricted by artificial bOundarles and are unable to meet the demaJ'ld for movement in meaningful traMpOrtatlon • C{lrridors," the road commlss'nner con• tinued . FUNDS Av All.ABLE Koch said fwub are now available throqgh the federal Urban M a 11 TranspOrtation Administration to study the need for a transit district aod to finance such a district. He said such funds are not now avaUable lo the county because It does not have a proper agency to receive them. Participation In regional studies tn transportation was also cited by Koch as another reason to form the distrlcl He named such studjea as the North Orange County TraHk Study now biting conducted by the Los Angeles Rapkl Transit Study group. Koch also cited I.he county's own sWdy of a Master Plan of Air TransporlaUon, the networks systems segment of the county's General Planning Program; the regional transportation planning study or the Southern California As,,ociation or Governmens (SCAG). Also, the San Clemente-Los Angeles Urban Corridor Study being C'Oflducted by SCAG to. develop sO!utk>ns to the con- gested Santa Ana Fr~way Conidor, and the pr"9pOSed s~y of the San Oieg~Los Angeles high ~td corrJdor to be con- ducted bf San Diego Coonty's Com· prt!(lensive Planning Agency. Koch said the transir committee believ. ed that the mos t logical system for solu· tlOll or the short-range rapid transit needs of the county appears to be buses. He said such a system, if approved by the voters, could be achleved in a much shorter space of time und..-the transit district agency and oould be an ln'tegral part of any Jong-range solutions to mass transit in tbe county. BOARD OF DIRECTORS 1be state law provides for a five.. member board of directors to gOvern the transit district. The board would h::ve the power tc levy a property tu ol up to five ctRts per $100 or assessed valuaUow as well as the powtr to incur booded in- debtedness to create a rapid transit system. Such bond issues wo1.1ld have to be ap-. proved by the voters, however. The district's governing body could also issue revenue bonds, upon approval of the elec- tcrate. Koch said the district may eventually be disso lved or annexed to the Southern California Rapid Transit District (RTD) by a vote of the people. Courity politicos sought passage ot the enabling act for the transit district in 1965 because at that time they feared they might be swallowed up by the rapid· ly developing RTD. But the legislators who framed the law perceived the possibility that a regional solution, rather than a countywlde one, might eventually be the bat courae to follow in solution of the county's transit problems. Bids for School Being Sought Bids on an estimated $400,000 s.lte developmeot project fol Dana HUis High School are being sought by the Caplsl>aoo·Urilll<d School Dl!trlet. Trustees approved advertlJementl for bids !or the project alter -1eamlng Mon- day night that )ho llate Allocatlom Board has made funds available for the alte development. Sale of bonds tn October should enable the di.strict to call for bk!s on con- struction of the new high IChool 1n Dettmbtr, according to Joe Wimer , district director o f •dmlnlstratlve servi<u. Sd>edul<d to •Pen ·1n September 1172, the tcbool will house t,a students. Two othtr high &ehool sites owned by tbe 'district In Ulguna Niguel and Mlsalon Viejo will not be developed for 5 to to Ye•rs; 00.pending on population 1roowth, •ccord!n( to school olllciall. s DAILY f'ILOT Hospitals Cost MoneY-- ToQ Much for $qn Clemente to Proviile - Thil 11 lh< third oll4 JQll m • atrie• of articles dltailino So:n Cltmcnt.'1 problems '" 4~wlop­ lna a locol ho,Pllal. By JOHN VALTERZA ' t .... ~ ........... Railing millions of dollars through private sourcea for a San Ctemen~ COJJl· munity hospital seemed an impassible tult for the critics of San • Clemente Medici! Center. \ And the trips through the city looking for a site for a community hospital -not a pri vate one -Wu only the flnt step in "A'h.at would have to be · a long march before such a facility beeame rellity. · "Getting that much money fl'01'9 th.b city is about the hardest tblng I can think of." P..11!-YOr Walter Evans sakl)ater. 'But the goal remained y~e for the ~up because all agreed· the San Clemente Medical Centerl'proposal had turned into (ln the mayor's words) "• mess." Through the sumrntt months, however, eudden overtures came . from Chapman General Hospital in Orange where ma- chinery had begun to build still another hospital. THREE OR NONE? Thus devetope'.d an interesting question: '\\Im San Clemente have thrtt hospitals. or none at all? A~ the planninl( continues to roll on at least two of the fronts, already there hll been one showdown in the hospital issue. It was predictable. But lls location 'A'asn't. The normally noncontroversiaJ monthly meeting of the chamber of .commerce directors became the sounding board this n1onth for the hospital acrap. l\t"ld Mayor Evans figured prominently. Tile mayor Introduced San Clemente heart specialist Or. Herman Sobol, also chief of surgery at South Coast Hospital. Dr. Sobol, an outspoken critic of the DeClnces plan, lashed out bitterly at the years of delays and promises and said, "We have been sold down the c:rttk too often." He added that no support would come from San Clemente's rned1cal fraterni ty which woukl normally use the San Clemente Medical Center. At least 91 percent of the doctors infer another pro- posal, be sakl. ANNOUNCED PLANS Dr. Sobol heatedly attacked the toktn work at the DeClncea site, then detailed the announced. plans of Oiapman Generll. The Iind for that prop)lal is in the lA9 Mares t.rw:t on, flat terrace land: east of the San Diego Freeway. It ls In escrow , and Lincoln Savings and Loan has In wrltlni commJ!tO<I l.,.H to 1 Joan of $1.1 million for the purchase of the site. The Chapman general group. which runs a hospital in Orange,. already baa dewloped four succtsaf'ul hospital!. San Clemente General would be the fifth. But ln oi'der to build the facility •nd receive state licensing, Chapman General must compete with the DeCincu plans before q,e county health pl&iming group. That duel is expected ln Novembtr. Evans, who spoke -in essence -for the community hoepital group, said the Chapman plans were too new for a aolkt commitment of suppurt from his group soon. SO FAR, SO GOOD But he did Indicate that what has been learned so far ii ill good. "So far we haven't turned up any negative side of tbe Chapman idea," he said. ''When we call or wrile to Orange and ask questions, we 1et 1tralght answers Belly Laagh right a•ay." That 11ve1 ut a 1ood fetl· lng." Evan., rectivinJ data dally from the Chapmon l'OOP, Is following the propooal cloael)r, and Jt teem1 nearly certain that th~ community hoopltal l!<l!IP ' will join with the physiclana and ibfow support Chap:nan's way. In the meonlfrM1 the DoClnHI c1mp Is comJna: aJlve agaJn, tts ml spokesman told lhe chamber dlnclorl.' Steve Michalec, a · lbngtlme san Clemente realtor lnvolvid in t b • O.Clncel project told' dh-ec:torl the tm> blema with plinniftj and flnancinC for a new hospital bive hem immeNt. MANY PROBLlfl!S ClUng the tirne-consumlng delays because ol state and local inspections of plans, the realtor conceded that the medical center's developers have had more than tl)elr share of problems. First, Dr. Toma, the founder , became too Ill to carry on. In later years a plane eta.sh killed one of the · four physicians Involved in tl\e organlz1Uon and months of probate and Uligation problems have followed. The Jlghtness of ready cash fur the proj· ect threw another bind in lhe plans, but things have changed, the realtor said. In recent weeks five New Jersey in- vestment flnns have sent negoliaton to Van Nuys to hammer out solid financial aupport !or the ~1edlcal Center project. An<f Michalec vowed that the necotfa. lions wert successful. "We are ready to start construction In. 90 days," be aald cheerfully. "Th.b time It mlly will happen." OPENLY SKEPTICAL Some who heard ~lchalec were openly .Uptlcal. The DeClnces • group has until the. N,overnber planning associa\f>n meeUng to pound oul a ~vincing rationale !or its receiv.inl , another rebewal o! l t 1 pennlsllon Ip build the hospital. The coinpeting forces will be prepared • .... wage battle for the frandllse to build a hospital: Wiii t b e fatest promise of a hospital near sin Clemente dvlc center become re .. litY in 90 days! Will the pawer indeed switch to the pdvate hospital developers in Orange? Or will. both projecls gather d~t on pll'l"ll'lens' shelve1? The month! ahead mlgbt yield answers to those que:slioM. But in the meaalime the only real "vie- ,,.., .. of-the ·delays wlll be tlle citizens who would be the patients at a loc al hospital. They are the children struck down by autos or flshed unconscious from the water. They are the elderly who suffer heart attacks, strokes or other lingering illneas and must constantly find transportation to South Laguna. Public Access to Beaches Nears Legislative Approval A bill forcing 1ubdlvlders o( oceanfront property to provkie public ~ss tc beaches appean headed for approval by the slate ltg.tslature. The measure specifically 'Mlllld pr~ hiblt local govemmenll from approving new oceanfront subdivisions without pro. visions for public a~ss to the coastlint. It pasaed the Senate Monday, 23-11, with minor amendments from a previously-approved Assembly venlon. Capo District Lists Priorities Worth $40,000 C•plltrono Unllled School Dlslrlct trustees hive ICfopted a 440,000 shopping list baaed on dlllrict priorities. '111< lilt doesn't Jniludt i pool for San Clemente. High School to the dismay of Trustee St1n Kelley. He termed waiting to see H the Clly or San Clemente wUJ shire pool coats "a put off." Kelley called Mqnday for a delay in votJng on\ &he priorities until 11fter the nut board meeting wtien a study on the poo1'1 construction C{lsts will be before trustees. - Among needs of the district included on the list were: microfihnlng of district records, eatabUahlng an inventory control system, various site improvement pr~ jectl, removal ot the heavy, tile roof from Laa Palmas achoo! aOOltorlum and rental of a portable mulUpurpose room for the same &ehool. Superintendent Truman Benedict had listed inltallation of fire alarms in district schools, aa·required by insurance cmiea ror bulldinp valued at more than IU0,000. Tru.!leea voted to conduct a study before proceeding with the alann in- sU.llaUon, the"'by mnovlng them from the immediate priority list. Assemblyman John Dunlap (D-Napa), sponsor of the ~ill, said he sees little dif· flculty in the new version winhlng con· currence from the lower house and receiving the signa ture of Governor Reagan. The measure would not be retroactive and would have no apparent affect on such developments as Promontory Bay in Newport Beach or the Salt Creek Beach dispute in Laguna Niguel. The bill had drawn criticism from Sen. Randolph Collier (O.Yreka ) who called lt "a blackjack lo eubdivkter1." He aald, "By indirect condemnation, you're taking away private property." In response, Sen. John A. Neied.ly (R· \Valnut Creek), Senate manager or the bill. said that cum!nl law does guarantee the public reasonable access to beach1and but that subdlvts~s oft.en block.the way, He said that subdivtders now must mate provision for other kinds of public purpbses such as providing for achoolt and streets. The mea.stirt, according to DuoJap's of. flee, does not provide fot compensation for the deveM>per who is malting certain lands available for public aqcess. Thi! drew criticism from some comers. Ne- jedly, incidentally, .was quoted as saying it did provide for compensation. A spokesman tor Assemblyman Dunlap also C{lnfirmed that the bill dOC!I not spell out bow much or what kind of access should be provided. He also sakl It does permit some et· clusions, citing as e1amples extremely small subdivisions or developments built in areas remote from other" public areas. Assemblyman Dunlap, ~lf, COl'I· finned this morning that the sectlon of the bnl excluding Its effect on sub- divisions that have already received ten- tative approval, was included In the lan(Uage at the request of the developers of Laguna Niguel. That development Is currently battling w i th the county Board ol SUpervison over el'forts by the county to obtain public access to certain sections of Laguna Niguel. ""IT ....... Deni•e Young, 17·year-old pilot in ,. .. nt Palm• to Pines air race for women, brealcs Into laughter at antics of her ~year-old nephew, Scott Younl{, who makes like Iha Red Baron hlm..U at the control• ol her plane shortly before start ot race. Denbc, with her molber, Adelle, as co-pllot, finlshed 7th in a field ol '¥1 light planes In the 791-mlle ra<:e from Santa Moni11a to Independence, Ore. ' ( 4 DAILY PILOT A .tudent has been sentenced six £ probaUon because he •Poll•llon for art.'s sake. IQ tura, Richord Tt•••· 27, a ,a;'i.ht :;! the Los Angeles Art Ceo- ~ lsci.iot . told Municipal Court Jud&e Bert Henson be had been assll!l'4 to photograph the effects of oil poUutioo on ocean life and beaches. Travis said he couldn't find any poUution but found a dead seal and some dead birds. He ar- ranged these !or pholoj(raphin2 and !or added effect sprinkled around some oil from a car crankcase. he safd. Henson, sentenced him Satur· day aft.et' he pleaded no contest to a cbarge of placinR petroleum pr~ duels On state waters. As a condi- tion of probation Travis is re~iurt;<t to write essays on how California handles offshore oil leases and on advice he should have souJ?bt from officials before spreadini oil on un- tmibled waters. • Yott've heard cbaut tM hard-r. luck mo&orist wlw rami hit ehicle into a polict car? Last wttk Ronald R. Gutnthtr of Lewiiton, Idaho, ·h i I t w o. GUntMr lidtl1Diptd tht perwn.- ol c.or of l>f'put11 Shtriff GeOf'ge N. Mindtn on a Ltwiston .stTttt, thtn bounced into a shfflff's tTol caT. He was charged with alaatkntive driving. 01 -• tlWant to buy the rose petals that ~ singer Mick Jagger threw to • audience laBt Tbanksgivln2? Or 4gu;1ar that was •mashed by Potor .....,send of the Who? These and tir items of rock music memor- ia are to be auctioned Oct. 12 the Fillmore East auditorium in York. The proceeds will go to 8.id the campalans o! peace· candi· ifat,es, the orianizers said Thurs· day. Want to buy a Dute belt be- I•1dnR to Non Anderoon of the Jethrn Hull group? How about a ~lne that is said to have trans· port.d amon2 others, Arotho 1tt1on1al1n, Joni• J011lln · and the """"? Ill • ...One of the patients in the matern· jft'· ward at Stanford University ~ HMiltal bas a beard. J;le's archl· tlt!t. Fr.d S.111, 36, who shares a ~m with his wile. Both Were in· jftt'ed in an automobile . accident Ja« June 6. Mrs. Seas, 28, iave birth to their first child June 23. a healthy girl named Shawnee Ellz•- l . The father asked to be pre~ e for the birth. despite the ela- te traction gear for his various til'oken bones. So the hospital wheel· di his bed into a delivery room. AJI three patients are reported do- il'l# fine. Of the baby, Mrs .. Saas. says: "We are sorry she. had to find us in such adverse conditions." • the Monterey Peninsu1a air· a mechanic JPOf.ted a bird's in the enRine of a parted priv-ate plane. He turned the propeller for a closer look the en~ine roared to life, 'and the plane raced JOO yards before crashinR into a tract· or and a small han~ar. Damage was put at $6,000. The mechanic wasn't injured but bird's nest was blown away. Wodnnd11, A-19, 1970 Bias Claarge'd 11 Schools Lose ' Tax Exemptions W ASIUNG'OON (UPI) -'l1le 'lntmlal Revenue Service tDday revobd the tu exemption of 11 all·whlt.e private achool1 in Miss:Wlppi wbiCh refused to adopt poTides against racial dilcrimlnation. It was the IJrst suspeolioo a<lloo by the IRS Wider It& new policy to deny tu exemptions to ICboolJ which practice diserimination. '!be IRS cledllon means !bat gilts to the lchools -I dlief IOUJ'Ce ri· fin1ncl1! aid for most private academia -can no longer be de.ducted from a dooor's in- come tax. lt also means the IChools will have to pay taus on any ind:>me they earn. Tbe 11 schools were Included among 41 named in a recent dee'*>n by <a federal district <OOrt In Wublngton which pro- hibited favorable tu treatment for segregated academies. 1be IRS aaJd the ICbooll were given a chance to ellminate racial ban but refus- ed to .do ao. Schools involved ln Ute IRS order & eluded: the Citizens' Educational Foun- dation, Vicksburg; COvlngton School Foundallon Inc., ML Olive: Forreat County School Foundation Inc., Ha« tlesburg; Oktibbeha Educational Foun· dation Inc., startvllle; QI.rents'• Educa· tiooal and Developmont toundation Inc., ?.1eridian. Calhoun F..ducaUonal Foundation Corp., (Calhoun Academy), Calhoun City ; p.,,._ polnl Private School, MOSl)lOinl; Rebut Academy Inc., Learned; Pines Private School Foundation, Wiggens; Harrison County Private School F o u n dta ti on , Biloxi ; Tunica lnltitute of Leaming Inc., Tlmlca. Two of the 41 !Chools covered ·by the court order, Hattiesburg Academy, Inc., Hattiesburg, and Southside Academy. Jacbon, have gone out of buslnesa. The ll\S uJd action OI\ the ...,...1n1ng 21 schools covered by the order' \\'ould de-- pend upon whether the schools agrtt: to. drop racial barrien. The IRS, shorUy before lhe court. order GOP's Spending Issue Eroded- By Republicans ' W ASBING'OON (UPI) -By-rellasln& lo back the NlJon administration's spending curbs, defecting Republic"'" slowly . .,. undermlnlnc a prime GOP campatp issue -excessive p e D d f n & by a Democratic cootrolled. Cqreu. Twice in le• tllln two mooUal; J.porfng President Nixon'• order• to. cut aperxUnc, Congress baa ovtrturne~ his ~tfes: In both cases, Republicans ~rUug the administration have ~ enou1h votes to muster ijle t~thirdi'majority needed fo overriKt. The Senate, f•llowlng the e1ample 1el by tbe House, Tuesday comfortably over~ rode Nixon's veto o( the $4.4 billion aid lo education appropriatiom bill. The 77 to II vote automaUcally made the mea.sure law. Joining with all voting Democrats, 23 Republican senators cast ballots against the administration'• poslUon. Sixteen Republicans voted to sustain the veto. In June the Senate overrode Nill:on's veto of the hospital construction bill, 75 to 19, with 23 Republicans deJecting. The Senate's action on the ald to educa· lion bill gave Nixon a split on his vetoes so far. The President's vetoe1 of the fiscal 1970 health, education, and weUare blll and the fiscal 1971 hoosing and In- dependent offices appropriatioos bills Democrats who want to use Nixon's refusal to allow more fundl for domestic program& as one of their campaign Issues rejected contentions that prov14lng more money for education could be translated were sustained. into e1ctssive .spending. was issued Jut June, adopted a policy de- nying tax exenlptioos to all private schools which practict racial discrtmina-· tlon. The IRS previously granted tax ex. emptions to seven Southern private school.I, none of them ln Mla:iulppi, which filed no-diJcrimination declara· Uons. Final decisions on the tax status of other private schools are sUU pending. Wife Killed, 3 Wounded In Gun Spree AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -A mental pa- tient shot and killed his estranged wife Tuesday night, wounded two men, and kept pollct at bay for nearly six hours by holding his teen-age stepson hostage. The tense incident came to an end when ViD- ceot Amelia, 48. shot and wounded his sttpsoo, Randy Smith, 18, in the back. Police saw the stepson lying on the floor of Amelia's home in the city's east side and ordered AmeJia to come oot. When he refused, polia: Jobbed tear gas lnto the home. Amelia, who was oo probation from Lima State Hospital, staggered out oI the hoose with tears running down hi! cheeks and blood streaming from his f!QSe, ap- parently from fiying glass. Summit County Prosecutor James Barbuto had tust finished giving Amelia an ultimatum over a bullhorn from a police car. "AD right," Barbuto said, "we want to see Randy. We think s0rnething has hap- pened to Randy. If we don't see Randy now we're coming in.'' The tear gas was fired into the hou se, which had been floodlighted by the fire department, when Amelia made no move to show the boy . Randy was found with a bullet wound in the small of his back. He was admitted to Akron City Hospital in fair condition. Amelia was charged with one count of first degree murder and two counts of shooting w:ltb Intent to kill. Police said Amelia entered Louie's Bar e"arlier in the evening, firing two guns simultaneously. His wile, Rita, 43, was killed and George Grist, 44, oC Akron, and Edward Jones, 24, Qi Canal Fulton, Ohio, were wounded. Grist was li!ted 1n serious condition . and Jones was reported 1n satJsfaetory condition. ~ siege on Amelia's hQa)e be1ari about 7 p.m. when he called police and told them what bad haepened. While he was holed up, he yelled tp police, "I have nothing to Jose, but the i1d bas.,. He lalked over the telephone with police, his attorney. his probation offic er and Barbuto. 3rd KUJ.nap Note Found in Brazil MONTEVIDEO. Uruguay (AP) -Of· ficials were not commenting tochilY on the third message in four days warning that a kidnaped Brazilian consul will be killed unless the government frees l 8 3 prisoners. All three notes were found in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and the Uruguayan police decided the first two were fakes . The Utird m~ge, found Tuesday, said the Tupamaro guerrillas would kill Brazilian Consul Aloysio Mares Dias Gomlde at 11 p.m. Sunday unless the government freed the prisoners by 6 p.m. Saturday. Officials said they were stu- dying the note to determine whether it is authentic. Blythe Nation's Hot Spot Heavy Thundershowers Soak Central Plains, Rockies ! - nrnctr0UJSAWUl111U81Ul-·11r."Ul.llT I·•-- Su11, M_, Tltlu Motltr tullM' .... ,.. l.i.M ••rltllle w1 .... ltlltot .... -r111 """" lltcw!\o i.. -'91"1}' • "' 11 kl!OtJ .... ·~ ,.._, 11'11 W.._.,, l-IWI tMty '1 •a. C.Uttl ........ tvNI ,.,... ,,_ 61 "' 11. ·~ '--""'" ··-...... M "' U. Wa• ltfnNftlV,.. n . c ... , .. W•DN•tOAT S..tllllt ,_,,.. . , .. 11 14'• 1111 l I StcW io.. •:C t.m. t .I TNUllOAY l"l~I Ill~ , ••. ,. •••• ,. Tl;).4 '·"'• $ , l'lrlf .................. 61 .. t ....... . ~'flltll .,,., • ., .• U:lt,.111, •.I l«;Ollf ....... ,. .•.••• •i•1,.1n. 0.1 1ut! ••l:T1t.tn. ittll<MPlll. .._. ....... •lllll'"'· ''" til••·"'· • IT, .. ..... HH"ff tf11Mdtr11ormt k it..... t/1111 -kM IClllt"'° t•HI et lllt Mllfw. ,......,, nllllt, Miii llltc:t1, ,_..,.,., lnift"M CIHr $1tln. ,._.,Ill, "'""'' "9d!t!M l!lrwtfl !ht _.... Ml1tlnl....i '11111¥. WlllCll io.i>1M t k l"I\ llHr Wtulctmll. Oltlt .. fl trt li.r w.1 "--ti Enll:I. Olli. .• ...,, ,,,.. llllff. ""'-·· 11111 ....,., llM" .. , lncJI et •t in lfl -"'°"'. A wttvrb JOVlll el ClllCtto ,.._,.,, 1,tt lrw.llet of r t ln In 1J 111!1111!1• -rw,. <lllY nltM t• wlncll f.tlnlHd ''"' 111!1 -l!fltt, Tiit dlY'• el(k!.l rl'CIM'll• IM 11•11111. Miner Air-I, ~M M IOCll Ill t Plt11 fltut. Ol11Yrll•, Vt ., ttct!Yld l,to lnctle• In -l'lov• t ll4 'ltrtlf( .. l.C .. Md 1,11 lntflf1 i. Ilic ""'"' • '1 1 --'----- Temperatures .. _ ........ Alttnlt ltkwtll911f l !lmel'tk .... '""" Cllktff ClndllMlt Ct.Yt!tnd ... _ ...... E~r-1 ll'ort Wonh ·-Hel .... ...... ~ .. ...... cllY lA• v"•• LOIA-le Mltml 9"c!I l'llllwlull .. Mfll-eolll N'"'Ol1Mn1 N'"' Yor'k OtlllttlCI ...... .. ... hlllto ""tltdtllNtl '"'~ -P'onl•l'ICI ll:ld l lllH ·-s.c ........ i. lt. Lwlt Stll UbC!IY ,.,_ Sin l"r1111Chco .. ....... ,...,. $Mlttt '"°"'~llf '"""'' WMlllM!on Hllll L'"' P'rtc . " .. • " '" " " .. " " .. " " " "' • " " " .. .. .. " .. • " " " • H " " . ,, .Jt IOS l't 100 ,, 11 " _,, " ·" .. ,. .01 " 65 ·'' " ~ " " " II " " " " " " -.. .. .. ... ,,,, 11 11 ·~ " " " .. ., -" " ,, ,, . .. " .. -.. " .. .. " IOT 11 . .. ___ ,. -------7---~ .... --=----~.,....·~-.,.,.,.. ... __ ...,.~---------------- PRESIDENT GESTURES TO MANHATTAN POLICEMEN Enjoying 11 Nostalgic Day on Sidewalks of N.w York Nixon Pays Nostalgic Visit to Old NY Haunts NE\V YORK (UPI) -President Nixon paid a walking visit to his old Manhattan neighborhood Tuesday, enjoying the abundance or well wish~rs and the lack of the usual antiwar demonstrators. Nixon came to brief the editors and ex- ecutives o( the New York Daily News. There also was a bit of nostalgia in his visit when he took an impromptu SI.roll from the Hotel Pierre to his former apartment residence at 810 Filth Ave. with his daughter Tricia, 24. The President not only stopped but seemed to seek out long-haired youths, yonng men and women. for brief chats. The crowds which trailed him were friendly and enthusiastic. The vis.it, kept secret until Tuesday morning, was free of the mllitant antiwQr demonstrations he aOO his predecessor, Lyndo.n B. Johnson . faced on pre viou.11 New York trips. Th~e were a few antiwar signs. Some placards with obscene slogans and some calls of "We want peace." But Nixon fell free and safe to walk the street.s, and he said so. He told reporters: "I think the climate is son1e better - yes, i'ls better. lt"s the hope that people have . '"I think whether it's the Middle East, Victna1n or the rest -lhal we are mov- ing -even though they must disagree in various ways -that we arc moving to- ward a period when we can have a peace- ful "'orld. ""And incidentally,"' he added. "I was very glad as you will note that we ran in- to a number of young people -some v.·ith their hair a little bit longer than mine -they were extremely friendly I understand. But I have always em- phasized to people that you never judge What a per30n's reaction is going to be by the length of his hair." The President spent two hours discuss- ing foreign ,and dom estic policy w)th the editors ana executives or the natiqn's largest circulation daily. Nixon recalled that five years ago he briefed Dally News officials and pro- mised to retum if he ever became Presi- dent. "I don"t think they believed I ever ~'"OUld win ," he said. Nerve Gas Leal{ Cl1ecks Fail, But No Trace Found ABOARD THE USS HARTLEY (UPI\ -The Navy loday abandoned its efforts lO determine whether a sinking Libert y ship released its cargo of deadly poison F!aS into the Atlantic Ocean 282 miles off the Florida coosl. Elaborate experimenls to determine whether -tl8 concrete and steel ,·aulls of nerve gas had burst apart under the pressures oI three ni1\es of ocean \Yater ended in railure, as did eflQrts to pinpoint the exacl location of the sunken hulk. The Navy said its special satellite navigalion equipment railed to fmd any trace of the SS Lebaron Russell Briggs. leaving it and 67 tons of the obsolete but • ·---~' toxic gas lost under 16,000 feet o( water. Navy experts expressed disappointment but indicated the failure of the ex. periment!l would add nothing to the possi- ble threat to human life. They said the threat was almost nonexistent anyway. Only one test worked. but it was in- conclusive. Water samplrs taken from a line lowere.-1 almost half way lo the sea bed sl10\Yed negative results for gas. A Navy spoke sn1an said that particular test would have been meanin gful only if it had reacted positively. No gas was evident in 1va ter sRmples taken at the surface, but none had been expecled. Miss Davis' Car F-0m1d; No Angel~ • LOS ANGELES (UP I) -The discovery of Angela Davis' 1959 Rambler Jn front of a Black Panther party member's home late Tuesday resulted in an intensive but unsucce~uJ search for the black' mllllant wanted on a California murder charge. Miss Davis, a self-profes~ Com· mwtist who was placed on the FBl's list of IO most wanted persQn! earlier In the day, is sought on a court affidavlt that she ~ght all four guns used in San Rafael, in an unsucce55ful courtroom escape: that left four -.,enons shot to death. ' The Rambler had been klenlified;ln an all points bullelin issued by authorilic~ when Miss Davis was first sought in' con. nection with the stayings. The guns ti.USS Davis purchased in 1968, 1969 and 1970 were smuggled into the courtroom by accomplice Jonath.an P. Jackson, 17, but it was reported police were seeking l<'ranklin D. Alexander, 28. concerning one of th em. It was in front ol Alexander's h2me Miss Davis' auto was found. • The weapon had turned up in the militant's apartment here during a police raid but was returned under court order and not seen again until the San Rafael shootout Police and F'-DI agents staked out Alell'.- ander 's home alter the vehicle was found . When a relative of Alexander's returned to the home. she allov.•ed off icers to search the residence. Officers, finding nothing, left the car where it was. Police also reported that several witnesses said a woman matching ti1iss Davis ' description arrived at Los Angeles Jnternalional Airport Tuesday aboard " flight from New York City. However~ officers said the clo!hinj! descriptions from the witnesses varied greaUy and police tended to discount the reports. Earlier that night. Los Ange les Airport de tail officers searched a N.i- tionaJ Airlines jet at International aft er they were informed by airport security guards they had received a tip Miss Davis was planning to hijack the plane to CUba. A search of the aircraft turned up nothing and it left as scheduled. Miss Davis. ousted UCL.A faculty mern- ber. was placed on lh<' F'Bl liSt <iftl'r escaping a series of police raids in her home town of Birmingham. Ala. She is the third woman ever to be !'IO listed and the FBI said she should, be con· sidered armed and extremely dan~rous. Soutl1 Viets Deny Reds' Charg~ Of Laos Entry SAI GON tAP) -The South Viet- namese military command today denied Communist charges lllilt its comb.it troops are operating in Laos. but in· formed sources reported again thal South Vietnamese reconnaissance patrols have crossed the border. The sources said most of lhc palrols are landed by U.S. helicopters along the :!00-mile Ho Chi Minh trail in the k>v.'cr panhandle of Laos to spot targets for American bomber.;. The Communist Pathel Lao reported in a radio broadcast Tuesday that on Aug. !I •·the United States introduced a number of Saigon puppet anny units into the boundaries of Saravanc Province, under the control o! the L<io Patriotic 1;-ront IPathet Lao). These forces have con- ducted military operations againsl the region." The broadcast said !he n1ove was part or lhe Americans' "overall plan for usin,r:: Saigon and Bangkok puppet troops to conduct and widen their war of ag· gression in Laos with Ure aim of turning Laos into a second Can1bodia." The broad cast. said Prince Souphanouvong, the leader or the PalhcL Lao, made the charge last Saturday in a letter delivered to Prince Souvanna Phouma. the Laotian premier. 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LEVI'S", full cut, sizes 34-SO ......•......••..•. $11 ·$'14 $ 3 99 LEVI'S& CASUALS, all Sta-Prest, 111 sizes .....•....•.... $7-$11 YOUR 5 REG. ~f\ NUVO FLARES, groo•y colors, ,;,,. 26.JB .; ....•...••... $9.50 CHOICE $55-$79.95 REGULAR NUVOS, Sta-Preit Hops~c•s, all sizes .....••.•.. $8.50 ,, I WHITE LEVI'S ~. white i nd colors, 111 sizes .............. $5:Jo - SaYe In Our Complete L•ather Dept. ~ HAVI YOU SEEN "HANG-TEN" FOR WOMEN MADE BY CHARLEY'S GIRLS-If GRANT'SI " '".Ill of rho P•lflc Tr•ll• Ill Gr•nl'•I Select From 12 Dynamic New Colors I WESTERN SHIRTS by Miiier $695 WESTERN STYLED for W11!1rn1r1 , •. ind Ptrm1nent Prtll f1brlc1, too, lold Pl1ld1 1nd 1olld color• in 111 1l11ve l1n1th1 ind neck 1it11. ...... -... -C-11'-IC-"Windking'' 4 by S P "f' T 'I I ~ at11c ra1. CPO SHIRTS s99s d I d NEW STOCK of the 1U.1imt HER£ THEY AR.El Those rugg! , w n. • fivorite for c11u11 wint tr· proof, lu1ury 11cktt1 by P1c1fic Trf!I, weir! Rugged ind w1rm wool fe1turing the newest "outdoor look" in I CPO 1ty!1d 1hlrt1 in 1U ~f 12 dynamic colors, Site1 34 to 46. ' --1):t n1~ pl1!ch ind 1ol1d colors. S1r11 S-M·l. NOW! $10 Size XL ... $10.9S Boys' Sizes 8-18 ........ $7.95 FAMOUS BRANDS AT BIG-SAVINGS! RIG. $6.;s· I.I. tf1N Jturliy (1111111 '9141nt cet f•r ht111t er c1111,. ii:ilitd 3-lb. INSUL 100 COLEMAN QUALITY In 1 pr1ctic1I quilt- through dt1lgn with 3-'bs. of ln111I 100. Full 1i1e, rugged, long-w11ring poplin cover with aoft flannel lining. Grant's Has the Greatest Seleclion and Lowest Prices ·~ .,,_ Too .. .I MOOll UI RUBBER LIFE RAFTS l·MAN ....... $14.95 2-MAN • , .••• , $29.95 4-MAN •••••• , $49.95 6·MAN ••••••• $59.95 S11 Gr1nl'1 Gi1nt ;}H'~ S.ltttion of L1.,i'1• for ~ OINIM JIAMS 'II!~., 100% c.ttw-AM $7~: ' C.krl. lllH 1·1 1 MOMl.SNN .jllANI $!•""'".. ....... $11 , •• t1lln loo 111 111111 • ·1 llGIMINTAL llll,. JIANI ~ All C11Hi $9 ~ lo 1lt" S·IJ • .. l'IHLINlll Sltl,o4 IW:ffl ...... 1 IR $14 00 111 IM c1l..s, 1IH1 S-11 • fAIJAN l'IHLINlll "-"'•••Ille f1rh111Iii111 $15 ..... c1l1<1 tll4 kl tU t llH '~1 Ll\11'11 JOI GAL'S ~· '"' 1111.,. $ t O' • ~ ,.,...... • i DI NIM JACllCn •:.J '°"" C.rtM--i••H $10'iliiti) ... •. • 11,,.-•u ,,f.,. ~v; J•IH ... MllHS JlrH J II 11....i; 19 SllHt, MHI-..,, Jill; . _, ,,: ... .-. ,.~ ' '" SAVE $21.07 . .,. ... ALL 1970 $5311 ,.,,,~~fbo l 2'x9' "OASIS" TENTS DISCOUNTED "V 11/1c1/011 of 11 h C-1 •111bond" & "Of 1 1 t pop11/1r "O · ., o •m1 Ch l'mplc" t 1111 low pr/~1 1 t ck1 tht f11111,11 •nt '"_.Od1/1 bl' • 00 ' • • '"" Gr1nr1 REGULAR $11P,Ps s99aa IO'•I' "OASIS" S/~1p1 4-R111. $99 9S ll.1110' "OASIS" ·•··•· • · ·· Slttp' 6 ltt ''' • · · S1v1 $21.07 16'•10' "0A:is~149,9$ . . . . . , , ••r. ''''·'S · · ........ s1v•ss101 .. . lO'xa• "VAGA .. ' .. Slttp1 4-Rt l~NO" . ''' · · · • · St rt $71.0T 12 •• 9• "VA 11. 99.9S . , ... R19, SIJ9.~:·oNo" ....... " .. Stvt $21.07 13'110· "VAG '· · ·...... . '' 11•r. Sl39.9JAIONO" ......•.. ,Stvt $31,07 •l 'k6'6" "OLYMPIC".'.''"'·····. 11· $59,95 .. '" .. "Se.,. $4L07 $78•• $98•• $12888 $7888 $8888 $9888 $4888 . 1 • USE YOUR CREDIT · . at · : 'GRANT'S! * llnkAmtriclN • , • Rea·sonahle Dog Law 'l'bru or the 11uraency" ordinances that raised aucll a storm in Laguna Beach when they first were present· ed in June bave-bien revived. With 1<1me modUications, they now are routine ordinances requiring two public readings plus a »day wait before they become law. Two of them, pertaining to molorcycle riding and bot.el room occupancy by minors, were stu~ ln depth. by the city council last week 8Jld seem beaded for adop- tion. though they are not on the agenda for lonlght's meeting. This doea not mean they could not be present· eel durfug the councilmen's Individual reports. Tbe ordinance restricting dogs on beaches and ln parks i.s on tonight's agenda and, since it's up for aecond reading, could very well become law and •go Oil the books fn 30 days. It.a surprise presentation by Councilman Edward Lorr at the last council session arou.sed some ill feel· ing directed specWcallv at Ibis unusual procedure, and' It ~as passed to second reading by only a S.2 vo~. However questionable the procedure, the ordinance as modified is lairly acceptable .. ~e first section ls more or less a repetition of the ex1sting leash law, and pl-obablv will be as dlflicult to enforce, citywide. Per- haps with a more active animal control service, &!SO bemg planned, it can be enforced to the point of dlmin· lshing the number ol free.running canines in the more populated pedestrian areas where accidents have QC-- curred. · th There mav be some merit in restricting dogs m e children's paik.s , though the need here is doubtful, and also on the beach at least during the crowded hours. of the summer season . This is customary in many touru:t- oriented beach resorts. , However, the year-round 9 a.m. toe p.m. beach ban seems a lilUe exagaerated. It should be po11ible lo make some concession during the winter month.a when relatively few people use the beach a~yway. Progress seems to include a proliferation of restric- tions and most populous communiUes by now have taken 1ome steps lo control their canine Inhabitants. One thing that can be said for the proposed Laguna ordinance is that is could be worse. N e'\v Hospital Plan Six years ol cloudy confusion, delays and outri&ht 1peculat.ion might clear in a few months in the on·apin. 01f11galn plan for a hospital In san Clement .. Orange County's Regional Health Planning Assocla· tion wil,l hear the latest in a long series of appeals by a Van Nuys developer who seeks a si.1·monlh renewal for the sanction to build a major hospital in the city. But this time O. T. OeCinces of Van Nuys, who has served as a developer oi the San Clemente Medical Center for years, will have some stiff challengers. San Clemente's doctors and leading citizens are angry at six years of delays and have indicated their support of a brand~new idea for another hospital by the Cha pman General Hospital group of Orange. The Orange group says it has tl.l mUlion commit. led by a reputable lender and more pledged for build· tng costs. These credentials might be v.ery impressive to the planners in view of the Joni history-and lack of results -on the part of DeCinces. -' Clear Warning-Dear Gloon1y Gus: Mexico Greets Know the Driver Tolb<F.clilor: Each day you see bitdlhlktr• -most of them seem to be lucky. One ml.Wt agree however, you take a chance when you enter lhe car of 1 stranaer. It should not bt -the laws are not strict enougbt. Your paper gave 1 gooa accountinc of the tragic ride of a young woman who was raped and thoL Yes, ooe feel• IOl'T)' to see another 10 needlessly hurt.. however, • gtrl enters I ·man 's car aflht midnight hour without taking a chlbce. Nt girl consents to "pase" for PJctures at that haUr. Sbe gambled and losl. Altbougb it wu a terTlble ordeal for the girl, it seems to me that artide 1hould have betn a warnlng -don't let tht. hapPen to you; don't set into a car when you do not know the driver. 1be arttcle was slanted to ellclt sym· palhy lot the girl -It should have been used as a warning. The girl does not need 1ympathy -she needs praytrs. She, and all otbtts who get tnto a strange car, need good, old f~ sense. L. T. KELLER Aa E••• Toss To lhe Editor: Hey walao matt.a you dumbheads over there at Golden West College! For almost 4 ye.a.rs slWng there is 2'18 plate glass wtndoWI anU under ! U:e window• is boulder rocks )ust like baseballs and ln 4 yra only a couple looly Window1 you get broken. In our school we only got 1 wtn. dow ln the front and our kids break it every week. You got some : __ . of commie pinko un· AmerlCan &ehool over there you don't read the papers and Life Mair and you ain 't throwln& rocks thru the windows and uow me a tex1 yer gotta . .1y to have the rocks hault:d away because its preUy easy to aee aomethlng pretty funny is going on over there an ' we gotta get rMI of them roclp because you SCH:alled student.I don't know how to act like real Emericana: at real school.!! like Columbia and Berkeley and San Fernando State. M:tS. HOWARD JOHNSQN Not Me: Goltlteater J AM INFORMED THAT A STORY CAlllllED IN YOUR P A P E R ASOOCIATF.S A RECENT All!CRAFT INCIDENT WlTlf ME AND MY AIRPLANE. FIRST OF ALL l NO LONG~WN AN AIRPLANE AND, 5EOO D I DID NOT FLY ANV AIRP NE C.F ORANGE aJUN1'Y AT THE T Tl!E STORY ACCUSES 1dE OF. I RESENT VERY MUCH THIS TYPE OF LQ06E ACCUSATION PARTICULARLY AS IT SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN MADE BY A PUBLIC OF· FlCIAL AND I WOULD APPRECIA1'E l'0\11l ltOfll"YING YOUR READ~ns OF THE TRUE F ACl'S. . BARRY GOLDWATER UNITED STATF.S SENATB ApolooU• to the 1ena4>1. '!'h• r~· port that h• pU.ottd a 'ow-flt1n1g prl· wte p&ane IOtll made to tile Newport B•"" Cltu Cm<ftdl bu Dan Emoru, Maitmm1 of tl1t Airport Nobe Abate· ....u com..iti.1. -Editor re_,..,. •re•ll•1 To tilt EdlWr: 'l'bere ii no w11 for me &o Jive com· 1_1, without 111lna elocl11<:ftl power. 'nl«tfore I must buy electrical power from Soulhffll Oal~omla Ji',dilon or move t. an area Ui.al It Mrviad IW • different JIOW" uUIJty. Of ceune, """ could be ........ 1rom tho ftytn1 p111 illle tllt flre )>J iln& becalllt •• ellpower • company ls just an electrical power com- J>JllY. My Irritation with SCE and Jack K. HortOn (EdtJon pruldtnt) Is due to the fact that thc7 art going to build two 1lr polluting electrical eenerating plants ln my area while using the most filmay of logic to just~y lbtlr actions. They tell us that If those two air polluting plant.s are not built that we will have a power shortage from about the beginlng of 1972 until their new atomic plants starta pro- d:·.,ing power sometime duri In other words they want to build t.bo8a two air polluting plants to prevent a power shortage for about three years. Would you believe that those two plants wlll be producing electrical power well past the year 2001 and while they are pro- ducing electrical power they will be poUutlng the air we breathe. Surety even a moron will a~ee that any alternative method for bridging the three year power shortage gap Is heller fl· : .. 1 bulldinl those lWO air polluting elec· trical generatlnl plants. HARRY B. McDONALD JR. B01tor Roll Lbtl119 To the Editor: Early in the rummer an artlclt was published which glowingly told of the huge percentagt of sludenlJ on the st· cond semester ho.or roll al Conlna del P.1ar High SchooJ. The article 1t1ltd that nearly 50 percent of the student body "''°' lncb.kied and compared the arnount to 1 mere 15 percent 10 htcluded al Newport Harbor High School for the same semester. Knowing that both the student.I and teacher are ol relatively the 11me calibre at both schools, I wondered what could havt caused such a vast dlfferenct. The July 21at article e:rplalned the mal· ter. After UsUna all the stralaht A 11tudtnts, all students "who earned all B's or bt:l· ter" were named. The cstch, J realized, was ln the re<1uirements for inclusion on the ho.or roll. At Harbor, students must earn • minimum of 1:J1ht polnt.a -each A ls worth thret-pol.nt.s, each P, O'lf ; phy1lcal tducaUon is ucluded. In other words, one has to earn at teall two A'• and two B'• to be UJted. Thll IJ far dittertnt from the atraJght B 1v1ra1« "or better" re. quired at Corooa. TbJrefore, the com.. parloon wu oo comptrllon at al~ 1lnce lhe Jtandarda art 90t t}\t 11me. LOYAL TAft.-1170 Lo!J<ll Tor make• a point /or other hlgli 1chooll 41 will. A widtlV di.serf· buted U.s& oJ '"Stre1ight A Students in Southfna CoU/ontio" f'C/lfcted the 1cunt mi:a:td ctfteria. Sonu 1chool1 Ji1kd 1cort1 of nomta 01Jd other• wit/~ equal cnf"OUtn.mt 11,tcd or1t11 a /•w. In /afntc1s, oU hfot1 &chooll al1ould how tl1• tarM 1tandardl /or llo11or roUt. The Daily Pilot says it costs $HIO,~ 000 for the special election that pulJ Dennis Carpenter in lhe atate senate for three montlu. Why don't we just forget the November election for the same seat -it'll save even more than $100,000! -R.M. M. Work Within: Does It Work? I could sympathl!e with those middle Americans who deplore "'mon.traUons, riot! and violence if I believed U)ey were slncere ln calling fill' "peaceful petitioning" of the gov· ernment. But are they? On a Saturday morn· lng a few weeks ago, one of my dau1hters and her 8Cbool friends deployed themaeJves on cornen of various "nice" neighborhoods with petitiona ur1ing support of the "Camt». dian Fund Cut • Off Dill ," as it is informally called. THEY WERE DRESSED n e a t I y , behaved politely, and told pa!Sers-by that the petitions , when filled wtlh slgnat.ures, were to be sent to our . •It' ll j senators and congressn1cn In Washinglon. Nobody was argued with, and nobody was pressed to sign. She and her schoolmates returned home dejected after a few hours. ''You know," she said, "most of the people who passed by called us Communists or fascists or other dirty names. And a lot of them signed the 1hee\s just to mock u1 -\\'ith namet like Donald Duck or Coptain Marvel . They wtre annoyed that we were just •landing there, exercising our peaceful rlghta." llERE WERE youngsters doing t:ractly what the leaders of the E.!itabU11hment h11ve been asking the1n to do -working within the st.ructure of law and 1overnment, collecting names lo send to their representatives. This Is the "ef· fecUve" means that Tricia Nl:ron advised them lo emplo)' not long ago. But the people who dcpk>re violence aw-rently don't want non.viole1t llllere11 In government either. They su1pec:t anyone with a petition of being "Ill~ veraive.'' They tlon't want the boat rocked, or waves 1nade -even though we are livb1g lhn'lugh OM: of the wor1t l!OCinl and poliUcal slorms of the ctnlury. TllE vol.ml OUT on lht comers 1hould be approved and applauded, no matter which alRnd they take, for beln& serious about our national predicament, ind for tbtlr wUllngneu lo work within lbe ll)'IUlm . Wteld, the MIU o( Americans setm to favor lnerlla and bUnd advocacy of whatever CO\lrae our leaders cnre to pur.we. This !1 not "patrlotlsm" -IL l110mnambulism. And this is the aureat way to "turn off" young people today -b y df:nlgrallng, ln1ultlng and mockin1 their efforts lo be better cUJzens, by their ()wn li&htJ. For If they're not enco11r11ed to do II peacefully on I.he comer1, how can we object to their doin& II &nJll'llJ on the barriclde:s? 1 Richard Nixon "Poor Mexico," once lamented Porfirio Diaz, long-time dlctalor of the COW!otry. "So far from God and so cltse to the United States," For more than a century, prox.imlty to the Colos~s of the North hat been 1 determining force in Mexico'• development. nut in recent years, the often embittered relations between the two n11&hbor1 hav• lleldlly improved. The •i•nd• for i.lk.s between Presldeat Nlmn and Pretident Gustavo Diaz Ordu durlni a H-hour vlllt to the: Padftc ruort d PUU1o Vallarta tomorrqw refJectl um hlltorlcllly wary rela~ tionlhlp. Topplnr the lilt Is Mexican ir- ritaUon at Amtrlc1n atte.mpU to attm the flow of narcotics from sooth or the border. The aatinlty of the C:OlorJdo Rtver and problems remlUn1 from t h e meanderlnt• of the Rio Grande also will be at issue. NIXON MAY express the coDCem of organill!d labor In lhe United States about factories setup 1lon1 the border to proce11 parts for electrlftlc equipment and clothing later sold in this country 15 Amerlcaa-made. "These are nol the tlnd of l.uuea that make headllne1, 11 a State Department otnclal told E d 1 to r I a I Research Report.I ... But that's a good sign." To Mexicans, imperialism bu had a "Made ln the U.S.A." label on IL An· nesaUon of the American Southwest resulted from the Mexican-American soldiers repeatedly CT01aln1 the; border in pursuit of bandits a()CI bands of Apaobe Indiana. DURING THE the 1ttexic1.1 Revolution, President Wilsen in 1914 ordered Marines laftded at Veracruz. The Incident mlr· rored Wilson's quixotic determination to "leach the Latin Americans to elect &ood --1 I :t'Af ltbrial 1 "~~b ' ~ men." Two year1 11t.r, an ezpedl\ion led by Gtn. John J. Pershing pushed deep iJt. to Medco in aean:h of Pancho Villa, \\'ho had raided Ille U.S. border town of ColumbuJ, N.M., kllbng 18 Americans. American ambauadors in MeJ:ico often ac~ like. ptO-COnsuls. Henry Line Wilton, envoy at the tlme or the outbreak of the RevoluUon, openly supported Diaz. Amerlca11 investments In the country amounted to $1 billion In 1911, greater than lbe 1take of Mexican capital. They 1ow ezceed tl.5 billion, but Mexican law re4(ull'U a minimum of15l percent In local capital in new Industrial ventures. 1111 NIXON VJSrr comes at a time of unparalleled prosperity and development for Melico. Two years ago Mexico was the successful host for the Olympics. She e1hiblted an economy growing at a rate of 7 percent annually and a capital filled with new bulldlag1. Presidential elections were held on July 5 in whi ch lAlis Echeverria Alvarei, 47, candidate of the n.tllni ln1tltullonal Revoluti onary Par· ty, won 87 percent of the votes. The ballotlnc continued the Une of peaceful elecUon1 that bejan in the 1930'1. But Mellco ls also a classic example of the mi:rture rJ. poverty and progre11 that be1teta Laila America. Me:rlcan youth is re1Uve and demands reforms in the face of repression. And ilJ'lculture la lagging while the government emphasizes forced· draft industrialization. An Un-competitive Spit·it Jumping to conclusions: While age ftar1 youth today, youth fears 11e S(IUe:wtlat too. Young people are parUcularly dlltru•Uul of older ~ pie who can compete with them In tny fitkt and who re[UJe to "lci their 11e." They prefer old people who 1ubm.lt tam• ly to IUe and have one foot In the rrave. Such oldsters are no threat to them. The avera1e bowler 11 aOOrttr, heavier and mon! conpnlal than the average golfer, ije 11 also mere likely to drink beer, smokt 1 claiar, and hive more trou. ..---B11 Geer1e --~ Dear Georae: We've been hlvln1 an lrfUD\tRL Ddn 'l you hive a column tt· PlilnliljOOw llittum "blue 1JWW- 1ot started G.G. Dear O.G.: 1'le te.nn "blue law" atarttd with lhe Purltam who pasHd lows prohlbttln1 drlnkl11, tlasl•I, me!' eymaklnc and praettcally tvtrythlnr elle. Eventually, tll they had to do wt• &it •round aqd k>ok at ellch other and lllgh, "Boy! Am I b!Ue!" (Send your problems to Gtorfe, the ooly advice oolumnitt In the nl'ltlon who tdmllt absolute and utter dereat.) ' • &. --- bl• keepln1 his shirttail In Mille he playa. 1b1nk twice be.fore lending money to a guy who habitually wears a tie clip. Anybody who j1 that neat and orderly In his dre•• ouabt to have his financial af. fain In order also -and therefore l1ave no nttd to borrow. SOMIC'lmNO 0000 ctn be found in every dlrty movte -but that lm't why people 1tlnd ln line to aee it. Our values do change with time. Can't you recall 'tl-'hth 1 man thought his dale w11 a 1otddlaer if she ordered the '1 --,teah la carte ln-.-n:111urant ln1tead of taking the fl bluepltte 1peclal Uke 1 lady? If you asked 10 secr«arles what kind of anlmal the ir boss remtDded Utem. of, ty,·o would 11y a lion, three a rat, and five 1 hippopotamus. The uwble with IOlnt to a bu•ball pme anJmOIO ta th1t by -Ole time the 11me i.s over you need another shave .• A good atrl to marry ll one who looks al the celllna whlla bawlln& you out btcau• she 11 too klnd·heartld to tee you auffer. Show me • man who, 1lv1n the chance, would like to rtllve his college d1y1 over •&•In and I 'II 1hol\' you a man who 11 allll llvln1 them and never mana~C<I kl arow up. l{ ' K •< &•-~ • Power of TV As a Weapon Draws Fire In the eyes of many lawmakers, It Is clear that televialon stations don't do much of anything right In their nev.·a and public service programming. Some members of the House and Senate think the President gets too much e1posure by reason of his high office. Others think indivkluaJ network.a have goofed in allowing free p a rt 11 a n responses to preaidentlal telecasts. Sen. J. William Fulbrlj!ht ([).Ark.), chairman of the Senate Foreip Relations Committee, ha• argued that t h c President's accesa to TV is 1 threat to the constitutionally mandated balance of powen in the U.S. government. Fulbright wants Congrwi to legislate It.self a plec1 of the action . "COMMUNICAnON is Power," says Fulbright, wbo has peered at committee witnesses through flip-up dark g\aues on many TV screens, "and exclusive access to It is a dangerous, unchecked power." All this hi currently Wlder atud,y by tbe communications subcommittee or the Senate which Is headed by Sen. John o. PasUlre ( [). R. l.). Fulbright has also ma.de TV activities a part of his long vendetll with the military. He has quleUy propond an amendment to the .WI in-comrrilttee defense money bill which alma fil Pen· taaon film crews.operating In Vtetn,.m. Fulbrisht hat told the Senate AP" propriatiOflJ Committee thnt individuals Involved' in that Vietnam covtraae have described some of the supposedly authtn· tic news eventa a1 ulaked or 1ta1ed." "The American people dese~e better than to have stased government pro- paganda films paued orf as straight TV new•," the Senator decltred in a state- ment supplied to the comntittee. FUL8R1Gtrr Is proposing that five Penta,oo-financed film crews, n o w operating in Vietnam, be eliminated along wllb the operation which mak~ theirJilms available to ntl1'0fks and TV stations here in the United Stat.es. T'ne senator's TV amendment Is I part of his drive against the Pentagoo'1 public relations apparatus. He is suggesting that the Defet\le Department'• PR activities, v.'hich cosL more than $40 million last year, be held to $10 million. Fulbright says Pentagon f\ackery is costing fifteen tlmea what it coat as recently as 1959. The armed 1ervices, he says, used "the tools of MadlBOn Avenue '• to persuade the public that their own ~·eapons are the very best:- 11}' -.t I. AU.I nd Joll1 A. Goldlmllll lliiiiiiiiiiwww. Wednesday, August 19, 19'70 Th• <dftorlal page of the Datlv PUot 1eekl to Inform and 1tim- 1dotc reod•n b~ prc1nUno thi.t M1DIJ)Opn'1 apiftft»U and Cc>mo ment.ort1 on topic• of fnttr•at 011d 1fgnfJi<:ot1t1. bu proofdlno a forum /01 th1 1zpr11tlon of ottr r1Cldtr.s' eph1fon1, nd bw pr11e11tit1Q th• di0ft'11 vitw- pofnti of fn/ormed ob.strvm and 1polctf'Jltn on tat>ft• of tJJt ctou. Robert N. Weed. Publiaber ' ··-~,~----------------~------- • CHECKING •UP• Matchbox Save1·s Are Cumyxaphists "'hich day of the week do you get the mosl work done! ).1y best days are Tuesday and Saturday. Almost invariably. Police Kill Looter Raci.al Violence S preads ,in Florida • FORT LAUDERDALE, Pia. (UPI I -Police lhot and Wied a. Neero looter today and ar- rested 19 persons on riot charges. ~pplng four night.a of racial violence that has spread to four South Florida cities. Police said 29-year-old Willie Lee Toomer was shot and kill· ed when he was spoted at- tempting to break I n t o Turner's Corner Grocery In Fort J..auderda\e's troubled northwest Negro dlstrlct. Racial violence, which had been concentrtted Saturday, Sunday and Monday in nearby Hollywood , Dania and Pom- paoo Beach, spread to Fort Lauderdale Tuesday night Police said two buildings wero put to the torch, four businesSes -including the Triangle Bar -were looted and three polict cars wue Guards 'Unprepared' ln Kent Disturbance? dtmlJlt(l by rocb ud botlles hurled by a n 1 r y crowds ol Negroes. Two ft.rebomblnp w e r e rtporled In Hollywood and two arsons in Danla Tue1day night, but dam11e from the fires was &I.Id to be minor. Police sald four officers spotted Toomer and an ac- complice alttmpUn1 to break Into the grocery. Toomer turo- e<I on the police with a gun in his band and. reportedly was shot when he attempted to fltt. His accomplice escaped, police said. Of the It penoru arrested by Fort Lauderdale police, three were juveniles. DAILYl'llOT U,.IT ..... CUSTOMER SERVICE - "Whars a mouse house?" A. Our Language man says that 's the car salesmen's jargon for loan company. And the finant-e commission that the mouse house pays, he says, ls the mickey ... Q, "What's the dif- ference between a catastrophe and a calamity?" A. ''It's a catastrophe Ir at least five people die in it. It 's a calamity if you personally feel the great loss and lasting distress. • Why is a mystery, At any rate, the. question arises because a time•nd·motion scholar contends his studies indicate i\1onclay and Thursday are those two days of the week when the majority of men ac- complish the moot . They do the least. he claims, on Fri- day . KENT, Ohio tUPll -A tnem~r ol I~ President's Commission an C a m p u s Unrest said today NaUonal Gua rd troops y.·ere "absolutely unprepared" to cope with the f\.fay 4 Kent State disturbance w h I eh resulted in four students bring shot to dea th. "The soldiers were absolute- ly unprepartd for the type of situation in which they were involved," said Re vi us 0 . Ortl· Que Jr. a fonner President of the National Bar Associatioo. Leroy Tunnage. the manager of the Triangle Bar, sald the looters "busted every bott1• ., whisky anc1 be<r r End of the Line had in the place. I guess the T ~ .. Joss in boou and furniture will wo ~nt.a Clara youths \vere ~Wed and two others badJy injured Tuesday run at leasl $7.000. when their spo rts car crashed into a pole in \Yoods.i.de. According to police, the A GROUP Of' Tokyo husbands has started a club formally called "The Scared of Our W i v e s Socie- ty." .. , EXTROVERTS LI KE hotdogs, introverts p r e f e r hamburgers, did you know that? ... DOCTORS SAY the collapsed lung Is another af - fliction that ~mmonly crops up a1nong people who t11ke bennies and dex es ... WILL BET YOU a quarter on the corner that Chet Huntley never, but never runs for public offic e .. A FEri1INlNE CLIENT says she knows a Mr. and Mrs. Canns "'no named their llUle boy nm. OPEN QU~TION -ls it I.rue nobody ever blushes In the dark ? "Thty also tried lo burn the small car can1e around a curve at higb speed and hit the pole. place, but when we rebuill it _________ _:_..:.::.:..:..::...:::...::~:...:'=:..:::::..::::.=~:::::::_ ____ _ DON'T FORGET N 0 \V those who collect labels orf matchboxes are phlliumenists, those who collect matchbooks a:-e philJibermenists, and !hose who oolte<·t matchboxes arP cu my x a p h Is t s , Got that" Yea for Ga ls LOS ANGELES tAPI -A mother of eight is promoting Sept. 30 as a national "Celebration of Womanhood Day" -partly to counteract the women 's liberation move- ment "Strike Day" Aug.' 26. CONSIDER.. T H l S -On Your q11eslio1L• a11d com- 1nen11 ore welco1ned a11d will be used iii CHECKING UP 1ohe11ever possible. Please address your letters to L. M. Boyd, core of DAILY PlLOT. Box 1815, Ne wpor t Beach, Ca l i/. 92660, Helen Andelin, 50, of Santa Barbara says each wife should wear her "most frill y , fe1ninine dress" Sept. 30 and should "sing before break.last -or turn on music." SAN JUAN HILLS Country Club IN SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO GOLF •• OPEN TO THE PUBLIC WITH GENTLE OCEAN BREEZES 493 ·1167 J.Z1 zo s .. J••ll CNft ltd. 137·0361 • ,t. • "" ~ " GOlf ~w ClUI ..... LIGHTED DRIVING RANGE · LESSONS BY APPOINTME~T -WEEK DAYS-~WEEKENDS- Prior to 7:30 1.m. &. after 3 p.m. 11 H•lel ' llole. GREEN FEE ---$2.SO $1.50 CARTS - - - -. $5 .00 $3.00 From 7:30 i.m. to 3 p.m. U H•lel t H•ln ' II H•I•• t "4•1e• GREEN F!E - - -$6.00 $3.00 CARTS - - - -$7.00 $4.00 3 P.M. SPECIAL RATES The four students were shot to death during a con- frontation with Na,tional Guard troops following a demonstra- tion to protest expansion of the war in Indochina. Ortique said after touring the site of the !!hooting the soldiers should never have fired from a knoll because they did nOI have a clear \'iew of everything 'A'ilhin the range of their weapons. ··when you have a .30 caliber \\'eapon ) ou should never fi re unless you can see everything beyond the murile of that gun that Is within range," he said. The commission o p e n e d hearings here afte r President Nixon rejected an appeal from Gov. James A. Rhodes to postpone t~m. The com- mission chairman. William Scranton, former governor of Pennsylvania. said It was not the purpose or the bearing 10 detennine guilt. .~cGee Wins In Wyorning CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) - Democratic Sen. Gale Ml'Gee , a supporter of U.S. policies in Southeast Asia the past 12 yellI'S, easily won e a s y nomination to a third term over a peace clndidate in Wyoming's P,fimary elecction Tuesday. ' McGee and U.S. Rep. John Wold, easy victor In the Re pu b I i c an senatorial primary, meet in Nove mber In a rematch of their 1!164 race won by McGee. ~~~e i~a~~re;~:;;~ t j~0st:·c1o:·~ understand it," he said. Tunnage's bar is on the cor- ner of East Sunrise Boulevard and 27th Avenue, \vhere racial trouble erupted Tuesday night. The same area was tht scene of three nights of violence in mid August of 1969. * * * Youth s Yell 'Kill Narcs' In Mian1i MIAMI fUPli -Aboul 400 youths, screaming ''Kill the narcs," rioted ror 30 minutes Tuesday night after t w o narcotics agents atlempted to arrest a youth in C.oconut Grove's crowded bay f r o'fl t park. The two narcotics agents ~ere attacked by the scream· 1ng youths before b e i n g rel!lcued by a 3G-man ri<>t squad that rushed t.o the park and qeulled the disturbance. Officer John Scholll recei v- ed facia l cub, brul9es and a severe bite under his armpit and Officer Daniel Zell was slightly injured by rocks and a garbage can that struck him in the back. Both officers '"·ere treated and released at a nearby hospital. The park, a traditional even- ing hangout for youths who live In the Coconut Grove suburb of Miami. wu closed by the riot squad shortly before midnight and three persons we~e arrested. Puerto Rico Bound Jet No1 v in Cuba Labor Pains Help Foil Hijack in Japan T 0 K 'I 0 (APl -Because to land at Hamamal!u, 125 SAN J UA.!'l, Puerto Rico a woman complained of labor miles southwest of Tokyo. (UPI) -A Trans Caribbean pains, police foiled the hi· Tbe landing was made safe- Airways OC8 jethl'll'r with 149 jacWtg of a Japanese airliner ly and about 50 passengeri persons aboard was hijackl'd today. were allowed to gel off the od Officials said polire sneaked plane alniost immediately. t ay on a flight from aboard the Boeing 'I'll at t•· N k N •re The hijacker held the olhera: e\\·ar . i .J. to Puerto Rico Hamamatsu air base during and ordered to fly to Cuba. !he confwion after the woman and demanded that he be The Federal Aviation Agcn· saJd she was about to give given a sniper rifle with cy (FAA ) In New Yo rk birth. Tte police tackled the telescopic sighb, lOO rounds of h.Uacker from behind and ammun!Uoo and two fivc- reparted the plane landed ln found he wJs armed with a toy gallon cans ot gasoline. Havan\ at 2: 19 a.m. PIYI'. The pistol , the officials said. Later be demanded that the aircraft wu scheduled to con· The All Nippon Airways plane be flown back to Nagoya tinue its flight to San Juan plane had taken off from but automobiles had been (rom Havana, bul there was Nagoya bound for Sapporo drawn up l..n front of the with 81 ~rsons a boar d . forward land.Ing gear to pre. no indication when It would be . Shortly after, a slim Japanese vent the plane from moving, aUowed to lcavt' Cuba man about 25 years old pulled troops surrounded the craft An airline spokcsn1an sHid what appeared to be a pistol and two Japanese fighter the plane's pilot, ca pt .,(ioo~t;:he;;:;p:;;ilo;;t;:a::nd=:;:;ord;,;;e::red:;,h~im;;;;;~p~la;;n~es::c~trc;;:led=o~ver::::he:a~d.-::;­ \Villiam Cunn inghan1, advlsed l the San Juan lnLernalional Airport of the hij<1ek three hours after taking off from Newark. ll was the first hijacking of a Tram Caribbean Airways plane. The fli ght, No. 401 , carried l 'i2 passengers and seven crew members. The 01irlint's station manager here, Gu 111 er mo Rivera, said the aircraft orlglna!ly had been ordered to proceed to Miami to change crews after the hijacking but that it was later decided to Jet it proceed directly to San Juan A viail to \he .. Haunted Shad.'' -·lU prove to you th111t GHOST TOWN didn't get ib na111e .. for nothi01." Exp9ct a b'g thriU the aUt time you're •l Kaott'L GREEN FEE - - -$3.00 $2.00 CARTS ----$6.00 $4.00 SNACK BAR *COCKTAIL BAR * OPEN DAILY GIORGI HAltltlNaTON MOit. ~lcGee, the state's only ma- jor Democratic officeholder, coasted past slate Sen. D. p. "~1ike'' Svilar. who was back· ed by antlwar factions Jn the Democratlc ranks. The crowd managed to free the suspect that Officers Zell and Scholtz were attemptlna•-------------------------==---=---=::. lo arrest when the youthful from 1-lavana. FREE BUCKET OF BALLS WITH THIS AD CELEBRATE on1 Get your head out of that oven! Things don't have to be so bl ack. For less than a dime, elec- tricity will clean Y.our oven and your broiler -automa t1cally. And that means totally clean. . . And when your range ts clectnc, you can cul way down on cleaning your kitchen, too . A Oameless electric range crea tes no by-products of combustion lo dirty kitchen walls, windows and curtains. ~ . ---- crowd turned on them with screams of "Kill the narcs, don't let them escape." • An electric range also means a cooler kitchen . Electric heat goes into the food-not up the sides of pots and pans. And when you choose an ~kc­ tric range with a aclf-cleaning oven, you don't make an oven out of your kitchen! See your dealer now. Then throw away your scouring brush and live the good clean lifo-el«:trically. F · • ~ new! travel agency around the world This is the bank that's I Travel Agency, too. Take care of all of your !ravel arrangeme nts IN ONE PLACE -AT ONE DESK. From !he taxi lo take you lo the airport to the car JOU rent at your destination, we 'll handle it all, Traveller's checks, letters of credit. hole/ reservalions and airline tickets are part of the service. of course. and the fact tha t JOU are an accounl holder wi th the Newport National Bank entitles JOU lo pay later. OPEN UNTIL 5 P.M. DAILY-AND 6 P.M. Oii ft/DAYS. • ... _. """"11tza.ooo . ....._ r.._.. "-It 1--c.,..litl. ----0~-~tWPOnr ~~' ~, (.... NATIONAL ~ ]! , ·~~BANK _J~ . '~ .... ~ rc-:·,, / --~ - ' CONVINllNT orrrc11 lllYING OIANGI COUNTY ELECTRIC o.'ENS FOR TOTAL SELF·CLEAN -. ------Ak"•t ona Mitlltl.on 1t MtcM/11111J:t.J111 • .._.,... "'9161 •t J1rnbof'tl '42·1141 Wetl PM Ofkt NlltwtN ti C..111onwttltl\ 171·2JC!O-......... Htnor tt .. 171•7211 1 -----·-~.~!f.2~ .• • =::n.,lfliit.tn.•111.c-.c1••• UMMO---"" .. _ 1 0... MZ.Slll leal IMctL Otllu lt blln Worllll, Sul lucai l.._,1J 1 • t,... Miit -.. ui.,. Wtrld, lap,111 ttl .. IJO.JZQI , c ) ..... '''. l~ltl '""': 1,"I~~ "'.•1 , .• 1;'·11 ~ .. ~~ Y'/''>f; •• •&.' ... l.'o:1' .... i!11 "" '" •. , .. 11• ·''r!li, ....~ .Nai P"', I > '"'· "6 ..... ~ •i..cl<*. t1r.i'' f •ur. "'t'• ~""' ,, ''"' oh•t '-'J '.f .... llAU.V - 2 Mue Blll'dl~s Briggs Bill Step Closer wLaw IACIWmlftO (AP) -A lpldol new cor tu to ..., lor &eliWAl$1L Jlftlll'IDW and lmlN parD and Nebel ii a • lllip-to law 1odo7, bat it School Bill Near Defeat &ACRAMENTO (AP) -A watmd<lown draft ol a plan to dlop lhe huge Loo Angeles IChool lY$lan in 1% or more semi-independent parts was ~Jayed once again 'I\Jesday • ni8bt. 'Ille measure -amended nine times since its in- troductlon two months ago - waa amended three more times by the Assembly Ways and .Means Commitae and ordered reprinted belort a IJnal committee volL 'Ibe delay leaves J. barelY ooe Mii away ' defeat becat,,. ol ed adjournment "-the L<wJaia-Friday. Tb e measure by Sen. Joljn L. Hanner (11-0la>dala), ·IJillBI be appn>Yed by both the Aaembly and Senate tt ii-wins ;. cornmiU.ee a pp r-o v a 1 ·Wed-· ntaday ... 'lbunday. takes two DXft legislative hurdles in the nert two d~s. 'Ille bill bY A"emblyman John ·Briggs (K-Fullerton), levies a three percent state sales tax on new lean but would go into effect ·only ti a seven per cent federal excise tax scheduled to ezplre1 at the end of this year is not rebewed by Congress. lt was approved Tuesday on a voice vote of the Senate QUEENIE By P,hll lnterland i .-I Encinitas Students To Learn in Tents ENCINITAS ( A P ) Starting next month some 400 students wbtt Jive less than 45 minutes sootb of the Western White House. will a t t e n d classes in tents. The area is dotted with COl!ll· ly homes, but t h e re ls no money for classrooms. Since the ·school district lacks bond money ror new, building>, Supt. George Kibby says students will be ac- commodated in 11 canvas tents, the cheapest way to pro- vide needed clas.vooms. "1 thini I'll cut my hair like a Mohawk," says a long .. haired youlh. ..Maybe we should have PQW-wows and tribal dance!," I q g g e It another. ·-· ' Ca~p~~., To Begin Labor Day Ex-GI Dies • Ill Fire Husba1id's Death Ends Famous Courtship --FRESNO. Cal~. (AP) -A courtAblp that caught the at- tenUon ol lbe natton two ~CRAMENTO !AP) -U decades ago and f I n a 11 y lheret1 any American tradJUon overcame all obs tac I t ·S between here and war-torn still u red, white and blue as Germany bu ended with the a Fourth ot JUiy picnk, it's death of Charles M. Eller, 47. probably a Wbor Day political In 1949, Eller, a former all Army sergeant who saw six r Y· Al nd years of service in rlca -a So, even ln this pge o[ Europe, offered to sell his p o 11 t I c~t 1 sophistication, right eye for money needed to California's two major con· bring hil fianoee to Fresno tenders for governor plan to from Germany. kici. off their multimillion Eller and lhe former Else Beckmann or Oberramstadt. dollar campaigns on the Sepl Germany, had met in a dental 7 holiday, office where he went arter the Democrat Jess Umuh will war to have a tooth pulled. tart ·lb t :AA' r~1:r · They were forced to s wt a YP""""'::-u;onua-• separate when Eller was sent atyle kickoff, operung ID Los back to the United States for AngeJes iri the morning and treatment of tuberculosis. He then flying to the San Fran-made the offer following his clllco Bay area. recovery. Republican Gov. Reagan's plans 1WI are tentative but the campaign probably will start. in Southern California where the bulk of the votes are. Riveliside Pop Fete Restl'ained Soon · alter, Ebe wrote a po.lgnaot letter offering; both her eyes to finance a trip to America but added: "Keep hoping. Some ooe sure will help "'·" The couple's plight was publicized and money started pouring in to this . city from &Cl'Oll lhe nation. A national radio program knowrl as "\Ve The People" arranged to bring them together. Ip a simple ttremony in the home ot lhe late Mayor Arthur Selland on Aug. 13, l!M9, the couple recited lMlr marriage vows before a police Juc;tge. nie romaiicc ended Swlday when the Eller '1 northeast Fresno house caught fire. He apparenUy died of smoke in- halation while sleeping. The fire , or undet.ermined origin, erupted just three days afier the couple celebrated their 21st anniversary. Else and their son, Charles Eller II, 18. were on an outing in the nearby Sirra Nevadas. fo~uneral services will be f'ri· day. Ethics Co mmission Killed by Senate SACRAMENTO (AP) -The the measure. by Assembly legislature has killed the last Speaker Robert T. Monagan tR-Tracy), would ha ve ol this year's crop of con-permitted the governor to Cllct-Of·lnterest bills. dominate t h e commis,,ion. The Senate Governmental Five of its II members would Organization Commiltee killed be appointees of the governor. a measUre late Tuesday that The other six would be named . would have set up a Com-by the legislature. Labor Day has been the traditional campaign launch pad, but ·other factors are more important. say Reagan and Unruh campaign o(flclals. Paul Haerle, Reagan 's Northern California manager, said in aq interview, ••Before that time, half of America is away on vacation and doesn't really care about politici." mission on Governmental Bui, said Sen. Stephen P. Ethics to study \\'BYS of Tea!e (0.West Point), with preventing conflicts of in· just one ally among the RIVERSIDE (AP) -Will terest. legislative appointees, the there be a three-day T'OCk Committee members said governor would be in control. festiva1 at suburban Anza lhisi-----------'--.,.,,====== * * * Pat Brow» weekend ? Riverside Cowity officials are still is!uiq: copies or a temporary restraining order to prevent the "Fiesta de Vida" -Festival of Lile - but workers are busy at 'the Cahuilla Indian Reservation preparing a 3%0-acre site for the much-advertised event Friday through SUJ1day. ' • ISearsl WARNING It remains to be seen how students will react to clusu in the 2~foot educational teepees. but several or those who went tbroagh a 1imllar experience S3 years ago aay that by and large they enjoyed it. - Endorses Demo Ticket A newsman who visited the scene Tuesday saw -with the aid of field glasses -Indian men erecting a huge elevated stage, rest room facilities and a water dlstrlbutio11 system. • • • • • This Sears TOUCH-N-Go · 10-Speed ' Blender in White May be Unsafe .... r Onlr Model 663.82235 ill ,,...ite, 2;0ld sinte last Deumber, 1S69, ii affu ted. Check Model N'.umber lmpriated .. li bel undtr blood er, Jn order kl prevent injury to any user we are rdqlle8t.- ing the relurn of all blenders with lhis model number, This blender was ti0ld primarily throu1h the Sears J»70 SprinJ-8umrner at.laJoc. Jl aJliO Wa.8 SOid throucb· eome Sears retail i>tores. THERE JS NO PROBLEM WITH ANY OTHER COWR OR MODEL SEARS BLENDER. We •re not certaira &hat •nY of I .. aoJd are unsafe. But an inspection of factory invet1lory' lound a timall number o( ltMSe blenderA wu imprctp. erly assembled. creatinr a potentially ·dimrerous iihock ))Ruud under certain conditionK. 1£ yau :ha:ye this model b1entler, pleue retum it JnnediaJel.Y". to qe nearest Sear~ store or catalog facility, for ezchanse or refund. \ I 1 Sears, Roebuck and Co. Someth ing Special Almon Lock.abfy on bo.allng, Tom Titus on theallr, TllOmls Fortune en tduc;ltlon. the DAJLY PILOT on \ht Qrat19t CN.K,.. lt•s the age of speci.alluUon. And our speclalty Is btlni rtlllJ somtthlng sptd1I. "We were in tents with plain v.·ooden floors but It wasn 't bad," Sidney Shaw aaid Tues- day in an interview. "We used -to sneak out of claSSeJ and go 4owntown to .shoot pool and ~ coaches apd the teachers would come and round us up." Now the owner of an EnclnitM dry cleaning plant, Shaw said he believes "the ten¥%ts will make the students a · te a good bullding!' veteran ol. the 191'1· 38 school year, Allco Atherloo of °"fbY Solana llfaeh, nmembtred the tents used to Jea.k wJiea it rained and were very bot iii the aummer. LOS ANGEl,f:S (AP) - Assemblyman JDI U n r u h aaya endorsement ·of bis cam- pai&n for · governor by former Gov. Edmund G. •\Pai" Brown shows "renewed unity"· among the slate's Democral8 and "pointa toward a Democratic \llctor)' in November.'' Brown, governor from 195& to 1966, when Unruh was Anembly speak .. , Hid Tu ... day be ·could remain .silent no longer and endorted th e ·-1e Democratlc tlcl<et" for dedlnn Nov. 3. Tbls lndllded bis -. E4ffiund Jr., the Democratic · nominee l o r secretary of stale •. Un r u II, responded: 0 0! cour1t I'm very pleated about .Pat's b1Yol•emd 'in OW'' cam~ palgn. I t)>Jrik Ibis ;. a ftgn of renewed uolty wllhln the \ DemocraUe party following our strong showing in ~t Senate to Vote poll•. "This points toward a ' At mid·afterooft, Ernest Salgado Jr. led a caravan of about 10 cars and pitkup trucks p a s t no-trespassing signs at the entrance to the reservati11. Sheriff's Capt. Gilbert Crowell , speaking from an im- provised command p o s t in Anza, about three miles dis· tant, said his force of deputies from Hemet and Elsinore, would try to avoid a direct coftfrontaUot1 with the lndians. Instead, he said, the tactic would be to seal off the site. County officials obtained the restraining order Ofl t h e ground that Salgado · had advertised the fesUval befoni obtaining a pennit to hold it. Closed Meeting Bill to Reagan ' On Blll. Change ~~::;'i!'_:, vie t 0 ' Y in SACRAMENTO IAPl -The Brown, now a Loa Angeles legislature has seat to Gov . SACRAMENTO (UPI) -attorney, surprised few Reagan a measure that would The Senate has agreed to vote poJltical observer• by his en-allow state and local agencies again on wbethet a defeated dorleltlent. to hold closed-door meetings If bill to change the name of the He and Unruh, . however. attempt.s to hold o p e n state colleges to state have not been close In recent meetings are disrupted . universities should be revised year1. Some have said that The final rorm or the bill - to meet opponents' objections. Brown's unsucceutuJ re-elec-which permits ei:cJus;on of 1'le Upper House Tuesday tion campaign a g 1 i n s t newsme• as well as members defeated an attempt, 11-16, to Republican Ronald Reagan in of the general public -was revise the measure b-y HIM might have been helped approved by the Assembly IS. Assemblyman E. R ic.har d by Unruh's more enthusiastic 11 Tuesday and sent to Barnes (R-San Diego). ll wa1 help. Reagan'• deli. deCeat.ed f\.1onday by a 13-111 -.....;.-----------'---------·! iiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~o:~~-------------~.J \ S1i111 struggling ftlr loe cubes? \ l THERES A BETTER WAY! · \~ wrrH THIS FRIGIDAIRE SIDE-BY ·SIDE with AUTOMATIC ICE-MAKER ~·· Ets,~ ==door ""' .... ti ... )'Oii' Wldlt• or JOlf fMOd. ~Ille let Mlktr tills, lrteHI, Mle .. s cubls We .., .,_,.,..,AU 111I011tl· ....... "' fill "' ..... 21 .1 Cl. fl .,.u111211 .11.1i11 •ertlc•t fr"•· l1M HIM JG• wl•. .. frost·PrDOl1 Yo.'I "'''r deltast ltlln! Fully Adjustable. Shelwes MOvt U'P tt town to lit foods ol eny llellflt. Sw11cll • pbtwlz• shell to 1 1ur,er· Sill shllf irl seconds. COMPLETELY J NSJALLED_ s5999s .-. ... u.i,1. 111 c.1." •t 11• .-nr. ~1ri.,,.1 411 E. 17th St. COST A MESA -646-16'4 Dolly 9 to 6, Mon·Frl 9 to f ' Two rings f1>rtwo love rs . . . both ring• $88.00 "THE STORES CONFIDENCE BUILT" EttablithM 43 v .. nl MUNflN•TON CINtt• •..ell • ••111ttr N-1iflt... ._. ........ OPIN MON •• T+tlll$. & Pit. ilL t P.M. \\ The WENDELL • IUHW Supmfb O•ni1t1 Modern 1tyled compact conaol9 I" genuine oil lini•tl•d Walnut v.ne•fl and ••!eel tla1dwood solids w11t1 Scandi• s tyl•d ba.H, Now get all 3 most wanted features 1. Space Command· Remote Control 2. Color Commander 3. Zenith A~F~C ~=::;;;;~ LOWEST PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTY Space Command• 600 Remote Control Ao!U~l co1o• r.~,s id1us1 volume lo low, med•um, and h1gtl. turn 11t on Ill() Oil cha'lgl VHF ch1nn11s lei: or fight. mule sound. Exclusive New Zenith Color Commander Simplified Color Control Now one contr()j ''mu1tane01J~tv ad1ust1 con1ras.1, co101 l1v11 ard l'lr c,t·~.,e~::: m 11\ooer halanc~ to pro••clt lh• mos1 pl11s1no picture 101 anv conc1111on5 in thl room. Zenith Patented AFC Automatic Fine-t uning Control • New Zenith H•ndcr•lted TITAN 90 Ch•••i• 1·. Ill e~clu11ve ,.volu11onarv. ne,v Solfd·S!1l• Our•·Modul1. • E1clu9lve Z•nilll CHROMATIC BRAIN lnlegra1td c;1rcull DemQdu111or , • Supef Cold Vldto Cuerd Tuning Sptern • Advencff GYRO-DRIVE UHF Cllennel ltltc:tor COLOR TV ASAi 0 w S278 SALES & SERVICE SINCE 1950 1877 HARBOR BL VD. l!TWHN NEWPORT & 19th ST., COSTA MESA 548-7808 / ----·-·--------- For TI1e R ecor d Heefh tg• THUlllDAY Bii•t lis De at la i\rot ice~ IDAID TM•• .. BOik> !i¥vtC•• .,..,OlnP Wf\! <lilt Mortu.rv. <~• t.l11lr (emP, lw.62 C-· L~nf H""'· ln9l<>n Beecn S11rv11old bv 1 ~'" LI<"~ 111d Br•M•O (•mp; d1u9hlrr, Fe•n ll'lomPIOn Servtc ... ,,.,11 he ht•a •' Ru9nv, No"h Da•ote. Peel< F•mllv Colonl1I Fu nrr1I nome. fo""''O"IW a"ec1or•. Cltl.DDOCIC Mlc~a•I G!•n Cr1ddoc~. 11. 11! Ill 1.in .Stree1, HuMinvton 811cn Wrvovld II• 11arentf, Mr ond M'>. W•lllAm f "~' Oufi 2 bro!/\t!rl c;eor111 ~na P•tr•c~: 11\!er. ShltleY P..,.rln Se•vlce• 2 PM F•id•v, Augu1t ~l, •I ~mlln•' C~•P~t. ln!•rmenr. P11tl!lt Voew Mtrno.,&I Par~ 'ml!~I' Mo<tu1r~. a1,ec1c" ARBUCKLE I SON Westcllff !tDrtuary 4%7 E. 17th SI., Costa fl1esa lt&-4881 • BALTZ fltORTUARIES Corona del flt ar OR s-J.450 Costa fttesa fill C-t4%4 • BELL BROADWAY fttORTUARY JtD Broad"'ay, Cosla l\1esa LI S-l433 • ti1cC0Ri'fJCK LAGUNA BEACH ft10HTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon ltd. 49~·9115 • PACIFIC VlE\Y ft1~10RIAL PARK Cemetery e ~1ortuary Chaptl 3500 Pacific Virw Drive Newport Rea<'h. Calllomi1 64,-!70& -• PEEK F A~lfl. V CO!A)NJA!, FUNERAL HOME 71r1 Doi•• Ave. Wt1tnllntler m.J5?5 • SHEFFER MORTUARY t.agun• Beach 494-ISU t----1..iJn-(kmtllle -m.8100... • Sftlr1'JIS' t!IORTUARV m ftf aln St. Huntln(tott Be1ch 53645.11 Sup ervisors Ge t Horse Tax Pla11 SANT A ANA -A proposal to tax Orange County hol'$t ov.·ners with a $10 annual fee lo raise fW'!ds for equestrian trails has been referred by county supervisors to the county planning commission for st udy. Gale Harmon o f \Vestminster, head of the Orange County Recrealional Trails Counci l, proposed the annua l ree as a means to raise funds to be 1natched by state funds to build county trails. Supervisor David L. Baker, an avid horseman. objected lo the horse tax, because. he said. the plan would burden children. ··Young -horse owners in the county have difficult time buying feed for I.heir charges and should not be saddled with this additional expense .'' Baker said. Harmon urged development of horse trails in Trabueo Can- yon anti noted ·they OOJld be part of the Pacific Crest Trail. The PacifiC' r.iest Trail is planned I.I> ultimately link Mexico and Ca,na_da in a 2,000. mile-long eq111!!itrian r o u I e through the Western Sta:es. D ra in Pro jccl Contract Given SANTA ANA -A $184,655 storm drain improvement job in the Huntin gton Beach- \Vestminster area ha1:1 been :.iwarded to the S av a I a Construction Co. of Torrance. The firm was the low bidder on the channel improvement work on the Bols• Chica~ Valley View project. Flood Control Disi,lct engineers had estimatei tfic jQb at $165,000. Bids ranged up to $233,940. DAILY PILOT ·'White Knights ~ Stav~ng Off S e ete1·· ' By PATRICK BOYLE OI lfll D..,., 1"1111 Sit# and from the yet - seasonal e m p I o y e s are says, •·u you know where to 1tudenls, -and oll,duiy loo&. Y"" can. llDd, lhem portable sprayer, OOusewife is saved another attack. GARDEN GROVE -The llr<meo. • ' anytime,• l. franUc voici of • harried Tbe white jacket wu from He bas Ohe man for eYWJ SO He says that if bi.Ii o!Uce hou.st!wl!e comes over the the Orange County Mosquito or IO aquare mUet of Orang~ re«ives, three or four calls phone. 'Help! l'm being at-Abatement District. not from County. And I.be Ole!\ work in from Ute same area, and no tacked!" a TV commercial. He was sent tbe" da,ytlme, wben most of 1be bugs art turned up, be aends The d~patcher calmly takes to the scene of the disturbance mosquito.. ire inactive. ie.ms Of me.n into the the <:al.I, gets the address, by Jack Kimball, manager of "l can llnd a man out dut'-neighborhood to canvas door notes the time and tells the the district. ing the day," Kimball says, to door, informing t be victim that help ls on the way. According to Kimball, 'wtme "and~~ only find one or residents of the fr The emergencr request is district includes all of Orange two ~ilol ln th e callers respcnsibility to curtail the put Io the "oul' basket and County, his office received 450 badt yard. A• night, t1iere .. mosquito ,problem. the d13pa~her gpes back to fil-such service requests dUrlng may be bundredl of them.'' He saYs tbat 80 to 90 percent ing ,her nails. WJtbln hours, an July, anci., all "were answered For ~ l'UIOn, his men of his cal1' are ''backyard pro- o(ficer in a white unilorm is within 24 hours." first checl known ~ulto blems," and that the best way sent to the scene. He says the calls cannot be breeding attas in the beseiged to stoP1mosquitos is to preveot Arrivjng at the hysterical answered as quickly a.s a f~ nei.&fiborhood ~ flood control them from preeding.' woman's home, he ls led to the alarm because be only has 36 channds, ornamental pools 11tere are 20 di f f•e1 en t backyard wbere his keen e)'e mosquito abaters working for and tthers. species of mosqWt., i n taloer or calm with some s breeding in saU ter. Kimball PY/ that t b e kno'N!li largf.:b r e e d i q g grounds In Ill ty are kept under conlrO y his men who periodically ray the areas to kill the I ae on top of the water. Scien · research in the past fe years bas helped develop' spray that kJlls only the ultos, not harming any o er organisms or plant life~ mball notes. U er state law, the owner ol e land, on which the mos- Q ~ breeding i s 1>9nsible for the abatement the public nuisaftce, Kim- sald. ,,_ "But we havt never bad lo take a violator lO court," Klm· ball adds. "U we hJve been called lo spray lbl!tt· property three or lour Ume<t, v.e just send them 1 lcltcr-3.bout it and they see that tile nusianca IS re.moved.· ADVBllTiJiMi-NT Do Your FALSE TEEl'H j Keep Coming Loose?, Don'\ be«> llllYald l.ll•t your fll!H I tee\b W1.l.I oome !OOM Oii' dl'OD Jutt "' the WT'(Ul.(I LUne. ror inon -.:1.11'11 Mid oom!on, 'l)rtn'lle rAB'Tlll'TH J)utun Ad.lliMl•• Pewdtr OD. rour J)lM<MI. P AST'tETB bohtil Cllu hu,. armer aon. .... ""._ •liQc -..~. J'ASTl:E'I'H .. ~t M:l4. No l\VD.DlY, l'OOf1, Dfo&!J .... Dtntw. tlllt ~­... ....,.t-.& co b9.!Ul. &... )'1111? cleaU11t n!!JU!ulf 04& 11117-00--.- PA!TnrB 1l all dnq; CIOUDW.. discovers the source of the at· him--%0 percent emp1oyes and ''Even though the mosqultos , Orange Coul'l1y, and Kimball tack bidden under &·bush. It is 18 "during the se~." The are most active at night," be aan ,tbeY ~ in any CODo an old coffee can, half-fWed\---'-"-''--"--'.::_.:._ _______ _:___:__:;:.;,_:__.:..:.__:.:::i.:.c:.::....:s..:.::_.::__c:::__:___:__.J_ _________________ _ with water. • ~ On the surface of the water ................................................................................................................ .. are several mosquito "rafts," i groups of several hundred eggs recenUy hUd by mother mosquito. The man in whitt: sprays the t breeding grounds with his + Stud y Slated On Highway SANTA ANA -Studies of feasibility and cost or landscaping the right-of-way 0·11 the north east side of MacArthur Bouleva r d , between the Orange County Airport aod the Newport Freeway have b ee n u~ dertaken by the county Road an d Flood Co ntrol Departme~ts. George Osborne , ~ o u n t y flood control engilleer, sug- gested to county supervisors that the area between the boulevard and a paralleling rlood control channel could be beautified to "offer a better face" to the thousands of visitors who use the roadway to reach and leave the airport. His rccommendntion was accepted by the supervisors. provided the county can afford it. Ma rijuana Talk ANAHE IM -"Has Pot Af- fected ft1orality" will be the subjCct or a talk lo be given by Collier McDermon. spec ial a~istant to California Supt. of Schools Max. Rafferty Monday al 10 a.m. at fttelodyland Theater in Anaheim. McDermon will be dressing the Parents o f Troubled Teenagers (PO'ITJ organizatio n , a group sponsored by the Melodyland Drug Prevention Center. • I '·'MARATHON 7811 tire ' • New I rom Bead lo Bead • 78 series • Low profile \: • 7 ri b tread pattern • Range of sizes • Looks ,l great! Low profile for stability, new 7 rib tread it pattern for mileage and traction. Hi:h Jced look I' -in s houlder and sidewall styling.,Availab e i~ i b~ackwall and extra narrow whitewa : sign. , • 1• 1: Two More Stude nts Ex pelled at CS F Sin ·'£·'fie• wl Tradt $21.40 $2i50 $24.90 $11.15 $1LH $22.41 ' WHITIWALL PM fM.: ILTU. hie~ NeT,.. NeTreff.111 ~ ...... $21.IS $1.71 126.85 $21.H $2.25 $25.41 $2.44 if !: :.: ~~ULLERTON -The latest round of Disciplinary hearings at Cal Slate f'.'ullerton have led to the expulsion of tv.•o students and suspension of six others for their participation in the disruption of a f\1arch 3 judicial hearing on campus A total of lhrer student.~ have been ex pe lled permanently as a result of hearings on various charges due to disturbances at CS F following the Feb. 9 ap- pcaranee of Gov. Rona!tl ltt'agan there. Prcsit!ent W i 11 i a m B. Langsdorf said the expulsions ca rried with then1 "orders for the two students to remain orr in the college's 11-year history to be expelled as a res ult of his part in two incidents oo the campus -one being disrup- tion of Gov. Reagan's Feb. 9 speech and t he other an assault on a campus security officer during a February wit· in. Chu r ch, and ~lacl\owiak , 25, of Corona, we.re arrested by Fullerfun police for their involvement. in the disruption ·of' Reaga n's speech. 1'1\eir arrests made tht!ir names public record and is believed to have touched off unrest on the CSF campus that continued throughout the spring semester. $27.30 $24.S'I 129.90 IZU $33.90 131.~ $2~00 $1 $30.65 $2UT 12.60 l lJ.25 $37.25 VS.I' Tubeles's ~n Plus $2.25 Fed. EJt, Tax. No tr~ aeeded. 6.50x 13 Tubeless Blad.wall Pl us $L7S Fed. LI. lax. No trade needod. •• •• • 't • • : • ' ' \ the CSF grounds for a year. ------------1 ·'s itfite" n,:< RATTERY the maximum allov.·able under state law ." Retired Judge Karl L. Davis. of Orange County Superior Court. conducted the college hearings. The expelled students were leaders of the March 3 di sturbance, which required Fullerton police being broughl to campus to restore order. Suspensions run through lhe spring semester of 1971 and v.•ere accompanied by a "denlal \if access'' order for the same period. The decision increased to ntil'nbers of students punished to 22, including three e X· pulsinns. eight suspensions and 11 '"'h-0 received "lesser l\anc- tlons. '' Cases Involving 14 students, including Uve wtio already have been disciplined for other ---uffetrses, are-set1hrough-mi - Stptember or are waiting oul· comes ol c r imi nal pro. ceedl ngs , a campus spokesman said. Under the education code the colleg~ ma)' not release namea or students involved, ~lllold.JLpersQOI were at· rested one! or more Umes dur- ing the spring campus unrest. Of these, 31 Wtre students, lhe spokesman noted. Bruer S. Chun:h, 31, cf r ullerton was the firtit student •1e1 n,...;w•" .... . .,.~ ... """ ... $)1.» •• ~ 7.00 1 ts T..tie T.,,. I l"lt • .....,_ $2.11 ~ed. (1. Ta• WAS •3970 ............. 1-.... .,,.s.i.,. ... ,.,, __ .,.,, '"' .... Nl'IUt t .\IS ••• lllic:\ l15*• 'l+'M, C~ ..,. .... C')'I. J17 -.ot; ,.,. '$ji.'64 teac.pt no""' ?II 111111-sllf.J Ml•· aKJ ~·14 roll tM-1 r.ti« ~·w ...... -•... 3 WAYS TO CHARGE • ......,.l $15as WITll nM:IC .. =~srw. i • 2 .• 1 ' ' l • • • ; 3. '"·~ ...... , .. L ___ :' ~ ' • t • I GOODYEAR-THE ONLY AKER OF POLYGLAS-TIRES • Phone 541-9313 482 OCEAN AVE. •. Phone 494-6666 ' '• I . I• ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642..0010 i• ••••••••••••••• ..................................... ~· ' I • • . ' l ~Y ri.oT w.4-. -· 19, 1910 e Cla -· • Unkind · s Not One ·ot Los Arts -hf<o• I'm. -... .._ -salem11 I ... _,... II "'1 lo *' Jo' loll I ........ _.._'I..., .......................... -.............. ,.... _ ~?-01at4dq 1e11 _,_ ........ .. ,.... It -.... Ro ...... IM-'"1' ... bal "" • --v ...... yeo __ 'I ___ ... ..-.............. 'l_ ~G~- I '!lio ..... -II Pf<>-~ diM!i•nc II -Ibo sla-tlm ............... . iin. Y111 m1Pt lrl' nt""lnl irUll blm over 1.-or tn a JOlaftd lolU.. eull!de Ille of. ~-Wltll ' !llln ell Y""' fooe, i.11 hll1l llU job .. ~ ln\o jludl. I'll,_,... ....u- leol like plnf 111 atnke far -........ Ttl1 blm tllal ,... -,.... induotlY!ty lrUI -II ha ... .i .. Dlltr Je7«: I'• ll e ...... " • lf.flrl tlftet __ .. .....,_. ,, ...... LtDl7l!I <••teal _, _ •. _ _.., ... , ....... _,....., ... • "' ..... 'llMll ... ... ,,.... .... ... lldlN ,... fW • •t tar WW. •-Pol II "11 wUiooiat rUdr lw wort. rve lrle4 .....-IN llftato. l!!lcejll ler au. ••r a pod werbr 1nd l'I We It ...... -Of'· ncs MANAGER IN a.zva.AND Three -lblUtlel' ( 1-) -prior llllllOllllC<!M ........ far I Jlllofolrlpher lo -.. """" ........ piclllre at•NJ>--1· Pi-I prinl Oii bff deok. (I) Occuionally, t c bed u 1 e ap- pol n t mt n t 1 -.1th male -ftnl tldn1 In the llJOlllnc. Meet them In Ille n6aJltion room. Liiiian wlU eltl!er 111 .. fo ... her -!nr al bcxne or briJ!1 a PIP" btC for bor --(I) Meet her .C Che door with 1 u e h lflilUnp U '1YOQ klOk Ukt a mllUoo lhll m<nln(. Evory year ti IL" fill ..... yeo -,.., JoliT l'C lllia It ....... 111 I JdM 'lflfli we.r, I .. 't .. --) -,.., Jiii ...... 11 loyct Lala la ..... " .. _., ... .._,.., ·Accept Exeepdons If You Feel Worse Stick to Bland Diet .,. ,_ J. -.... i,. Dr. Stolncrollll : I !love o-1 uktr. l've known it l'el' Ibo pUt two yetn. I UIOd to -· 1"o J*CU a day, but t'v. concratullted my.if on liaYilll lbe wlll to cut out dprollol. I've aleo rtvon up liquor, wlllch I uetd to take -lely. But, at list, I'm taklnc a ..... On my diet. I llke to ut, ""9 l 'U bl Qmad II Ille -ii ao4nc to tab my f1vortte ....., nq fJom me, too . Ooclll;nally, I like fried with them, even if the diet b>- eludtd fried laoda, hiahly •uoned dllhe1 and raw vepotabl" and frull.s. If Ul<y feJt wont on a\JCh a liberal diet, then there wu time enoulh lo say NO -betlor 1et back on a bland diet. Maey 11omacb spoclallllt1 -wlt!> lhlJ procedure. But most ..,.., ''Jetttt llY IWIY fJom -and liquor." A roc<nt sludy by Dr. Elwood Boehman and UIOdMel of Veterans Admlnlltni Hoopllal and UnlvomtJ' ,.,,. 11 tn-. -·· It II called "Unrestricted Diet in the Treatment of Duodentl Ulcer'' and a~ -aod blihlY -poor<d In the m e d I c a I ..... But my doctan 11)'1 p e r I o d I c I J ' 'Gutroen- DO C TO~ IN THE HOUSE llo. Im, u-a mJd4le. torotoa." .,.....S -! I d«l't They ' found thal active Jani ""' -al'dl for llvtnc -...i ulcen appear lo btal )!Ii U-and tobaoco. but u rapidly wit!> • rtsular u _.,., 19'1 think thoro ""'1t fo wfflt a realrl<tod diet. Neither ~ -rtlulllon In ttriol llt symptm>ll much dllftrtnt •· fool on !hi two clloll. ·.Tm alelt of milk, ena, They ltudled 103 111Uentl In Cnam. -· olowld fniltl hoopltall. lllll-In heal· 11111 cool<ed vlfO!lbl•. I'd Ilk• Ina. -rved by X rll't after to -a pod tllU lor a thnt -· boopltallullon dwrp And 1101D1 lnndl -no appnciable chanp. -iii-. .Gil-bl Ob!i lo-elf a H....... -----many jUlal apple onoo In a while. esoepllont In practko. I cau· Ant 1-f-Mt. J. Uon1 ~~ = u"·~-111 ~CXJIMMENT: NM belnl on 11\l"IQ.,.,..,.. ..-.:: Ill _,., I _, ~ you a bad. Oba)' the doc:1«'1 advice ipadflc ,..-, )Ir. J. Bui if fo tlay on • bland diet for at #ooJ wlllt my phllooopl1y of leut a f.,, WIOlll. Don't p> hetmOnt 11 11 11111: no 111lilnt "ldctln( ovor lhl tr1«1" and .lllolJ]L bl llMl!!LbY "Ille iOlllnl Info Ul1llOCfllltY trou-..._" '·-· ' M* can bl trt1i.d ef. ;========:;! lfc:U"11 wttllout btin1 "'° rMtrlcdva. Thll la tru e for miny.._...., lnc l udlnc duodlnal ulcer. STARS Sv411ey °'9!1rr I• •111 ef flit worltl't 1re1t 11~el•t•"· Hl1 &el111P111 It 011e of th• OAILY ,ILOTS t 'e1t fet1t11r••· , Pw 1•n 1'•• 1Uowld uletr 11\i Ir· ..... "'!II *trold!:::::=======~· .. -.. --- PILOT-AOVE RTISElt 2 HAVI! YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT : 111"0UHTAIN VALLl'+'-11101 #1 ..... l .. )I ~I Tl ... 11 l'OUNTAIN VALll!Y-1•141 M1rMr ''°'"·a l til .... v I~ f Oll0-11 ,.,.. •I R.Utie. .... 5881 WARNER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINOYON •llA(N-41li1 ~ &1119. 11 •ri.i.11 IANTA ANA-1 .. W. l*"tff -l ,..ltt ~t. WltTMINSTllR......V WHl'""'W• 11 CHIMll ..... COST• MESA~M ... ,.,.,. 1•¥9. 11 Wll-~I. • or Castle Dry Gin FIFTH GILLON s211 YOUR CHOICE Thrifty exclu- sives and best sellers ••. none better at "'Ff price! Out• standing values . at our everyday low price, f1CM' priced even lower during Thrifty Week. Sola. Stock up ,_, Mickey Mouse Swlilt1hlrt1 *2" Value! llllfol and (lutch Purse • Toll••"1 l>Jllfoldo In $) 4 K11nldt pottnt or bro11 • trlmmtd lt\'Mtl "Extra f11a- 1U,.., wtllets cl'Mt ckrtchts Ill .Crinkl1 pottnt 6' CNlh-tone. An., MWftt mlonl •3•• Value! Jumbo 40 Qt. Wastebaskets •3•• Thermos Plastic Workman'• Lunch kit with Plnt"loltle s2,._7 Vlrtuolly unbnokcble .. "' klr big -... • lftOl't<4b• lwch. With fot'l'l(U Perft!OOIM pint -·----- \ Reg. 29!. Women's Acetate Briefs · 5,,, $1 Run-ral1tont oettat• In popular olastle log s.tyle. Choic.o cf whltt, postlls, hl;h shades, 1fir:es 5 to 7. Wo5'<1 In o wink.! Men'i Long ·Sleeve Fashion Dress Shirts ~::~ ... $3'' '-Giids, including ioft sheen laok with Frsnch front, long po int cot/or, 2 button cuffs. S-M-L-XL. Hits on campus. Girls' Flannel ·culotte Pai a mas ~~$298 wltk ~tton f1t11nt and self belt, lace ond ruffle trims, Pretty printt In soft comfortable 100 % cotton flomel. Boys' Perma Press Sport Shirts 65 9' Polyester "'"" & oo1..... $198 ond 35% cot- ton. Newo1t collars, vented al~ top1Nd & talltd. e .. 11. Boys' Perma Press -western Jeans '"°'"'--$29 aft • ..,. io 8 11'4«. dm- im with 4tu- blt: me. for ~:rtra wur. Sius6to1&. COSTA Ml lA-UI Ii. Utll it, MUNTUl•TON 1•ACM_...1 .....__ •I l ,..,_n l s3•• Women's Acrylic Sweaters iifll'h c~:~:. $299 • Cnw 6' V0 HHk C.r•i11111 • U & V-Neck Rill K11it Veit• • V.Crrw lt Mock T .... rtt• Heck ,ullo'+'Ott Full fashioned sweoters in styles, weaves, fancy and cable fron t designs. White, colors in S-M·L. Men's No-Iron Dress Shirts ."'4 icely tailored Permo - Press dress shirts in a drip.dry bl end of 65 ~6 2:s5 Polyester & 35% cotton. Styled with new long point flair collar, 2 pockets. Choice of wh ite and new fashion tone cole>r$. 1-4 Vi to 17. over wove n ccetote ii'! 'ev~rol 1tyln, ciot- te•ns. Nylon hned. Woslioble wonders in fu ll cut sl1es 10 to 18. ~ Women's Striped '.rf 9 Summer · Blouses Now ' h o r t ,1,e v e knits with U nec k, s3•1 or boat neck' with button trim. Woshoble ocetote In Re d, White ond 811.61, sires 3'2 to 31. Love&Peace Jewelry ~rai:~dk~~: 69' k'V"""C'haln.-.n-d - pierced e arrings with Love ond P.oc:e •V't"bots, Fo!.+'lion rooe ! - $ r • • ' - -~ I - :J l'I LOT-AOVERTISER _Wrdnrst!ay, A ugu~~l~O - HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT , 5881 WARNER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH f'Ol,INTAOt 'IAl.1.IY-11'M Matfl'tl .. '1 ~1 Tl ..... l'OlilNTAIH 'IAl.1.l!Y-ltl•I Mttaw ··-·· & l•lf09tF II. TOIU) ....... I Tfrl 11 1t•tltlll .... MUNTIHOTOfll llACM-Jtlt1 hMll I W.. 11 111•1111 IAHTA AH'-1• W, ·~ -1,.,,..1 II, ' Wl$TMIN5Tl!•-.el, '# .. ll'l'l1J1iltr '' f<lt~Otl '#111 cosr.t. MUA-lM "'''"' ...... •I WU-\I COiTA Ml~Jl lo. 11111\111. HUHTIHOTOH llA(.._.I .tC..~ 11•1r-110fl'M _______________ .,.. __ 9"!"'------------------------------------------------------------------------. • --Reg. · 69' to 894 Electrical Accessories Qui1t switck1s, pull chains, cube t.aps in brow" or iv01y! Night lights in b1 lg1. blue or white! Pvsh-thru sack. ets, 3-wire bound!, 6' - 9' & , ! 2' . e1Cf1nsion cords . , , ot .s.avings. 4fC ea. Stuart Hall Tablets & Envelopes 4:s1 110 counl ruled orid uriruled tc:iblt1s, 60 rttumoddrtu housr- hold envelol)ts,. 100 Thrifty-Pak .,,-v11oo- u , 4S lO"ertVeloPts, 6 4~" air mall e'l- velopes! Stock up! Always Plenty Of Free Pa~klngl Scoop 89' Y I I Purcha11l a ue. Hazel Bishop ~"-Lipsticks 39c Top fo1h ion ihod1s i n Pinks, Corols, Reds and Bti ge s ~u full site In met· ol or plastic ca1es. :Stoy creomy, lustrous, 'f10tt9rfng oll doy long. OiK. pkg. $500 Value! Mod Glass Globe Table lamps ~ 8$399 Full Year's Supply · \iMf :L~ Multiple Daily Vitamins $2'' ea. Polyester • Multiple Daily •Multiple Daily with Iron Bed Pillows 2.i$3so Bright new ldeo In onoccentlamp. Brlghtlycolored boM in decorator ·~hades ond frOJled Sl .79 "· llet0enic, l'IOfl.matting. Pink, Blue Gold prin1ed ticking. ........ globe. Perfect in any room, school or olfke. Buy now ot Thrifly's low d11;. count price. SJD Decorated loxed Notes ,,~ Lorge selec- tion of smort designs on quality poper in famous Whit ing note ossortm41nt . Sale of Child's Games • Pull Out th• Rug Brou:plot1d. l" •IHI tu~ Ing 1lond supports ariy Tobie model ' TV set. Arms extericl to 25 i11Cbes. 491 Pk. of 4 Vinyl A Baby Pants • Huff and Puff /llf ! li/JJ Ill// .. 3"'·$1 y,s.'1"·,;·.· u · ... 1st quolity, Ii. ~ gvorant11d . ' wot1rproof. • ' Fun · Eloitlc waist, gomnfor 1 legs. S1 o y 1v1ryon1 ! ~IT· --------12'h" Ilg Boy Table Barbecue '$344 Ois cou n t pr;c1~ 19b!1 barbecue for 1oble, p oT•o o r beoch. Chrome plot-ed odJv1tobl1 grill. . 79' & $1 00 Binky . , Tote Bag • Infants' • p,;,. ... ····3•• tic with bot· Alu•lrium & Web Chaise Loung• ··~JYI!- ""' with 6'<1~599 w1oth•rproo'i 'I -.obi,., Adjust• to S potlUol'IJ. ti• holder. $3.18 Yaluel Diaper Pall With cove r, $)•2 t1odorant hotdtr. 984 Lysol Spray 69c 7 ounce oeroJO/ "* . con spray d iSin- fectont. Faultless 694 Fabric Finish ~~-53c 4 position ••ot !ifh s1" plastic foompod. White ond ovocodo. •Chewable $1~ Compare to na- tional bro n d s selluig ot tw 1c1 1he price! Sc>eci· ollyprkedforbig Thrifty We I k Sale! Reg. ~4'5 .30x60'' .Shag Rugs N1w" 1ull:vry poly19t1r with $39 'nubby t111t1u1 d¢ vibrant 9 tweed cofl?r:s. s'k.id proof rubber boCking. All around frir\g1. Wo~l1, ' large Plastic Utility Chests $)99 Two styles : one wtfh Troy lor Mwing ne•ds, M• for hair roll- '"' plus stor-o g e ore o, Clearor Tor-· $1 4' 36-in. YJnyl Window Shades 99 4 Embo ssed<!, gouge vinyl in l rorislvce~t Ful- ly guororite.d. $2" Thermal Sleepwear With Grip l·Z IL'Ht r.: ,)., j •• s.1" '2 pc. snop s~ould • r s1yle inwo1h- fost cotton -perfec t year 'round. Pos t1J1 in 1i1H 1 to-i. r, 69' ltHy w,ods 'Sflampoos • ltt SM•..-•lat,. •ictt • $pecl1I f-ui. Cl ~;:;,.' 4f a-. oUtstondina bu v • -p Ot their regu lar price-now priced evfri lowerfOf limit· lfd time. s..,. IOc. $1 00 Trejur Bubble Bath Choose from sc.ufp-5 9' tured Fish ot Bud Vo1se CO!ltoin1n. 911 l•Hy Woods Foaming Bath Oil 14• Lorg e 3'2' ounce plastic bottle. Pro- d1JC•• heavy, luxu r i- ous foom . Florol, Spic• or Non:iuu1. Fomou1 Slrls :zipper top bogs in 2 11- :zes & from• \lyle. B~u­ tlful prints with wot1r- proof llnlng, Hir111Jy1He1 or . \'(llSH[YS ~ ' • ""'"-"'< ' \ ., avo 1.' 1 ,. • 2ocr ····~· Hert1'e)'. Candy CO!!IH --Paiinut1 Pound 8ag 59c Your (hoic• • ' ' Tom'• Fine Candles • 8 oz, Coconut Sllots • 8'14or, Pua Candr -, J1ir.z. Dliliilfr Tuii!J Yei!f Ct-.Oce 33~ ' , Your Choice /• Vt11l•H • J1Ht l•~ .... •k••h ' • fra.• S1111u . ""' "'", . TIJ111111 lr111 I • DUR Mll'lh • C•tt •• .,., Ltwll • ltlMlllJ 11¥1rt • Mortl Spectacular Disc ounts Today thru Tues day A fontostJc ..electiori of ,4.merlco's great- est performe rs ori fomous Dot. MGM, Lib- erty, Verve, Kopp , Repr1~e, Worner Bro', Capitul, RCA Victor, GNP & other teod- irig k>b.11. BONUSfi PHOTO FILM PROCESSING G•t on li xlra Wollat Print w ith Every Regular Print or Koda(olor Film 126·127·120-620 Squor• film Only Make sure you have plilrity 'of film I Yau May-R•lurn Unust d- Ralls for Full Relun dl I I • I 1 -- l • C • J % DllLY PILOl I ! I I I W ED N ES D AY fd.-ltt's fibtt (C) ()Cl~ (II! "'Tiit Ptelr>tii ' {QOll 5lr11tb!W NI 111 1m"11er1111u oltieitl llf1W:r itluu• to ""'W Mri ll'li"lltOll'S Y!SI. Mee 'flylhe 1~~1s. AUGUST 19 1 e ro. ''""' "' <lllf £D LI Cntcll -_ttt1 Crildlc (30) a.os me Tllfllilll (55) A.JO 0 ~ a tr.etlf tlillbitlia (Cl t:• f) Iii Newt. {C) (60 ' )f!rl) Oi;11phr f 101 (R\-SllOity I• fl'llmed hf nm · O KNIC ~t8 (CJ 1u.. tl~e to Dry~ale'1 be1utff111 btllk UUJ •l'C<~l'l' (~!Ina BrtllMr). 0 C.. Y11 lat T)l.i;~ (C) f30) 0 Ql11J1101Uip Wresthlll (t) 0 Sit O'Caldt .... : (Cj "'A fir• t9CI) [I S..nd100. r retdie 8111.ilC Wlfl 19 An!ll" ~1' 1 (II lllllfl ·~~ -Jen11~e1 XIMS. Rock Hu. !011, Y•1 I.QUO di.. SIU.. £md...Jitn.J00)'.1 Slory ol two peoiMt wtla 11 ~ kl .. c dunnt WoiW W11 I •midst de<1ll. alld dlwlSttbOll illl Italy. 0 ANlotl l Cell.Hi. (Cl (30 m"" JlintltOnls 1C> (30) (!)Stir TrH (t'J ('61l1 1tl rn uc rwn111c Ntwi <CJ (31 til Wblrs Ntw 13.. ~(j)tss Nf'tn (CJ !30' (ID O~lreldl Unliwttled/Mu~Lt· g;) l'lltbll 111 Ufltftnza i 10) m W.Uer111St (C) (30) •l'ld John TolCI~ l!f leatuied o :fl ill rn •-m '" '"'' iii ~UMY MonrY " Pet• 'lrnds a llOYfll war to tudl remedial read· Ill( •nd hildi tllll!Stlf Ill lfuubl1 with the w111nntelldent Qt Div~ FIOSl Shaw (Cl (90) Stw1111 A1e11imr, Jlm 8out111, Matt Monrr;,r., l~•c Hayti; IUfil.. IE) Rul T1• liel!MdJ fC) (60) ED E•iat II l"opt (C) (60) (II) G11111ust Clltt Al~lni i~h.. 0 r1.-f1111i, (30} ED SollOSM (C) (30) 9:00 £)~Lil Medical C.tw (C) (60) (R) A black ftlol!Hnt ill $Ullff'Y i$ ,oov1nced ttwlt Of. Gannoo L1clr!; CE latrl de 1•1 Es1rt11a1 (JCl al liall0f'i11e liourrae1 (C) (301 , ?flhdefll:t 111 111m •hen he tails lo ' 1·.:e1w 1 111c11tNe researcll 111111. 'NIFTY' SHOW -Dan McCarthy reads his new spaper oblivious to the f8ct ·his c~ori sianrGrd Browft rutSfs. ~·ife has set it afire. while Susan Fried makes herself at home in scenes from &:20 @ CJ) WNtller (CJ Ill ti et Shit). ~lll 0 ¥i1Jhtil Gr1h1111 SllOlf (C) (b!ll f1nn1t fla1&. Johmty Whlntktl Bobby ~1n and Elmer Bun.bt, an ant l«m«, t:ual. O "2~ ti 1iD lir.tt M11sic tu11 (C) __ '_'T_h_~_Am_e_n_"c_a_n_D_r_e_am_'_' _a_t _I_lun_t_m.,gto;_n_Be_a_c_h_'s_N_i_ft:.y_Th_e __ a_le_r_. ______ _ ~ :,01 De!. O'ConllOI weltomi!S i:uesh M .1~ 1e M1tturu, Al M•111no, lon· OC.fldlrtl ~(301 m MJ F-nte Ml!tiM (30) th (}) l"eny Ma-(GO) t1>t Oo1e1a11 •lid PhJJh~ Diller. fJ 17 @ Cl) Tiie [lltfly Br1111H1 (CJ (60f Tflt Lenno11 Sisters. Mi· ChieJ f';,~ Do\li ~W Ind Al· bel1 8!110b. 1!ll5t. Barnyard Con~ert Q;I ~1 MIC Phptly ""'' (C) (~ ffi LR fw !ht ?Dl (C) (JOI w ([)..,. r-1tt W.rlil• 1Jo1 EE OuU11dr UnUl!ritM/ftl• (C) ilJ 8111 de Mtiic:t (60) CE ltllKM (60) Pianist Likes Acoustics-and Odor iID l°ltttni I• l.Mn1 ISO) €!) Neticie!• 34 (C) (601 9:3U 0 ID News !CJ 1101 'THE !lEA RANCll, Calif. in-residence at the University ID TM Nh'Sltai M11se (CJ iJOl t AP 1 -As pianist Gunnar or Wisconsin at Madison since mr.. Dewrt R,,.rt tC) i:,... fo,U!n~•· mw.al satinst len Johansen "''arml'd up for his 1939, and has been giving his C~1naler joins produc..a>mm!!'lll· m Slnl.I lttt11 • lliu (30) I IOr tew lrw~ lft I 111usicat loot concert. the ranch hands Haybale Concerts, as he calls CD -World As-rt (Cl <30) at th• he1dlmes. escorted Silver, Nomad and them. for two years at this 7:00 E css E,.111n1 N!•s (C) 1301 EB M11siale/l"ast.1"1 Detlt (Cl Poca from their slalls. 1'he au· resort on the rugged Northern 0 m NBC N1ptlf News (C) (30\ 10~ 0 119" (i) Hnrlii rlft-0 (C) (61J) dience took seals on hay bales. Gal ifom ia roast. D1w1d Bnnkley, f11nk J.kGee • .loh~ (R) McGal'fttl hts 12 hours 10 find in lofts or anywht're <:om-He said he happened on the Ch1ncelloi. • tn1 tube tilled wi»i deadly "'Q lorlable. barn by chance and decided il O wurs 11tJ lint? (t) (Jt>) .t.lln Strain.~ Cd fllflden ruests. Con· With the smell of horses and was a good place to give con· Aid• Gail ~he1do11 .and Anthc;n_; duslon of 1 IWG·pil1 S\llfY. hay in the b a c k g r o u n d , eeru while he was living at Rot>erh 1uesl ! D ~J ~ 1 m Then tuw Iron· .Johansen pl•yed selections his. summer hotnii: in Anchor m !) , ~ wa (CJ (&0) (IQ •'The Miry R.~ ! 1'(SIA\ I Uf u otlt Miss ,.,,. B1onS011 helps I decrtpit bolt. from Mozart, Beethoven and .Bay, 12 miles north. Mnl (C) (90) I ll!lkll AY~lon ~nd · S' . •-• ~ 1.. ..A. Gf'l&ld S. O'lwettlin. Bob R1nlklm Liszt. He has give n five 'recitals in nan u:" CIO-, ... st orfS ~uty l "' 8 I G ""' ~ p11eant for 1 th1ou~ l 2 re11 oias 1 ""1 Y ar liUQ<. llis concert hall was a the Sea Ranch barn. His au-Con~•l'lls !ro111 48 · st•!es. 40 0 m Hews (C) (60) cav,.rnous. whitewashed barn dience is composed main ly of black and white keys of the keyboard." A native of Denmark, he has made concert tours o[ the United States and Europe and for five years played a series of radio recitals for the Na· tional Broadcasting Company. He has recorded the complete works of Bach and Busoni and is recording origi n al marruscript.s .of Liszt. 'C itizen' Wins m11or tele¥15'0ll marktts and sr~ Sea h nd ,111 f01eipn courtun 1,11u ~ie lbi O ll1!00 Q)T•• S•1t•e1s from \vhich the three horses Rane home owners a NEW YORK (AP ! l~• titlf, 0111 Lrtt!e Mi~ Br11t11e11 (C) <60) had been led minutes before. nearby residents. plus a lcw "Investigation of a Privatel (El hit tbt CIKt. (CJ (30) Q;l i:) Hi&li ..nd W~d (C) (30) 0 C.11 ol tile West fCJ (30) .Johansen c· a 11 e d the from the San Francisco Bay Citizen," the Jtalian crime @ B•r\e's Ln (6D) barnyard odor "poetic·• <1rtd Area 90 miles south. thriller starring Gian Maria Tlaeater Notes . Varied Fare on Coast Stages Culldtnstern are O t a d , ' 1 lmproviselional theater 11 By TOM nTUS which Is being staged Friday the rare a~ the Open End °' .. DMtJ "1i.e "'" through Sunday in repertory Theater ln Ni:wport &:ach There's sUU no summer w l\h •·spoon River where .. Joy : a Sen.sory vacation for at least a hair Anthology," playing tonight ce1cbr11.tl«i'' continues Its long doz.en theaters ln the Orang, and Thursday. Martin Benson run. Perronnances are given Coast area this week. as 8 seI· directs the first play . wit.h Ron Frlda)'tl through SlUldays at tet or widely varying stage Tti~~. n gu~dtng the latter 2815 Vill a Way, with tickel.!1 productions continue the Ir sho.. available al f15-ll20. respective runs -and. for Both prod u c l ion .!I are 1'he younger generation oc- once, there·s·no newcomer. pr~ented at SCR 's Third Step cuple.!I the stage of lhe Santa The curTent lineup offers. Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd., Ana Community Players with quite literally, something for Casla Mesa, The reservation a t.eenage version ol TV'5 everyone-a splashy musical, number is 646-1363. "'Laugh-Jn." The show play5 a new avant garde play, a con· The new Nifty Theater in FriQays and Saturdays at the temporary comedy, an even· downtown Huntington Beach theater, 500 W. 6th St. in santa 1ng-<1£ Ofle-Jr.Cls, a revue bOr· winds up Its curfent evening na·,-Wilh reservations "being: rowed from television and and ol. one-acts, a program which taken at 54~1647. :• an improvisational production. includes Edward Albee's "'The In a mart traditionat(\!ein. The musical, now enjoying American Dre am' ' and "The Impossible Years'! ~,,... its nei-t-t.o-last week of a two-"Slots" by Elliot Fried, direc--tinues its run at the !Uong month engagement at the tor of both shows. Beach Community Pla>touse, Laguna Moulton Playhouse, is Final perfonnaoces will be 5021 E. Anaheim St. U(Long "Oliver." wh ic h continues given Friday and Saturday at ~ch. Performance .Jiia:hts t0:0ight thro.igb Sunday. Ben the theater, 307 Main St are Friday and Saturday, ffilh Wrigley. Greg Osborne, De:,,.. Reservations may be made by reservatioM available by call· nis Wheeler and Diana Claire calling 536-9158 evenings. i'11g (213 ) 431-0.S36. Stagner play the principal .r;o;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;O::.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i roles under the direction of Cris Timmons. "Oliver" is a joint pro duclion or the playhouse and the Lyric Opera Association and is on stage at lhe thealer, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Tickets may be reserved by calling the box o£fice at 494..0743. Among die ne wer offerings Is South Coast Repertory's ''Rosencra nt z · awd NATIONAL. GENEaAL"S Fiix ~*..'1!1!! s.. Oile9r...., ......... ,..1111 OPEN DAILY 1 :00 P .M. WEDNESDAY &: lHUllSDAY "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY" FRIDA Y4ATURDA Y0SUNDA Y "ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD" ly To111 Stopparcl FOlt RliSEltV.f.TIOH5: CALL ""·UU 107 Newport Bl~d., Co1t1 M• .. EXQ.USIVE ORANGE COUNTY (]J) ENGAGaUT llOIL Tiii FBI. '-1-lt P.M. ;fiii:H·22'l IS.QUITE SJMPLY, l ~· THE BEST AMERICAN FILM °"' l'VE SEENJHIS YEAR!" :·.~;;" • I tD ln"'1ltt (C) ~30) "tllermog rapll~.~ lnh1rfd TV r1mtriJ ~ow p1ct11n ol l'l•lt fflfl!U tm:tted by all objecrs '" ~o'U't OJ Alldn V.:ille. a dorec~o>r cl r:irdictl ie !.tlfcll. 1Yt"l5. I QI CiJ Trirtti IN Ccl1s.tqwaGtff (Cl ED T\n'tttfl Apinll f1't (60) '"Tlr• praised the bam·s acoust ics. Admission is $2 per adult Volonte and F.torinda Balkan, Ir.ends." Jealo'.ISJ Mr a bliutli\11 The 76-year-0ld barn is and $1 for children. was the recipient uf the woman ma\~ a man siul i~ II"' about 50 by JOO Jeet with a Sunday's concert drew a Special Jury Prize at the Can· ~to lr•mt hts best Ir.end • .lei· ptank floor. Above 40 horse standing-room-only crowd of nes Film Festival this yea r. Sita lhmn1nc. f1edtfltk !aetff,. . I I ---=======~==;!! ~•l!dor 06 IJtd u111betll Bell stir stalls are My lofts which 450. many o whom e ambered r ---\P~IS«>N~ 1£C~ '~·-bros. ~-, ....__ ' i . ' ' ifa Ties YMI• Distiitas (30) '~ t.reate large open spaces up onto the lofts in their Sun-LOCAL . beneath the gabled roof. day besl. §l)Cllnst thf L.i~.na Word (CJ (3-0i {E)Tel.•.~ E!JIAMI (Z hr) .. 1 think the storage s=ce N11 etk1r n1w1p1p1• t•ll1 vou lO 30 r.. 1 1 .--Jo~ says he wants to "'or1, ,.,...," div. 1b11ut whit'~ SHOW TIMlS: 1 :JO, 1:45. 10:00 CE .5110,icmenlt M11 c1 (55) j : U wi 1fllt Zolll (60) <ibove the stall acts as an echo be ~ as a musK:ian 1oi11g 1111 i11 th1 Gr11t•r o •• ,,9• m rht liil1 (CJ (30) a:!Mi Mnstr. (30) ~ber," said Johansen, &4. ..co wilb more than Co11t th.111 the DAILY PILOT. 7:30 0 Qt, .... Wbltl'• HilGdln (C) ll:IXI 0 '2J (J) m Mews (CJ li~J~oh~a~nscn~~ha~s~~~~··~artist~·~-~jus:,t d~i=· ~gu~ish:tn~g~betw:;~ec~n~(~ho~-~~~~~~~~~~I ·"' ~ I (301 Mrmltld tilf\oo~ •bout two 0 ~@ m Htw5 (C) mimed llfO toottN!I p.a1tri. O l!imi Actiol (C) ) 0 @~ a;, The Vue1111an (C) 0 N - ) (90) (I!) ~Hign !>Ulk~ ' lhP. \lir rws ''"' r iinian lrxlli t1olltn I Jill! ot ou1 0 Tlleetre 9: (C) "flrbtl W1t11011t ' law brolheB susper!td ol mu!de! 1 • Clusc" (d.rllNI) '55 -Ja111es I inr his friend. J1c~ l.Drd, M1clt1et AASlll and f!!IJ Moo1r KU~sl. Dean. Nirlirhe Wood, Sii Mineo. l 0 Tiit Moitr1 ''"'' (CJ (30) Lloyd ID Mori.I: "The T1rt·He1ded SpJ• Hl)'lles. Ctltlte Holm a~d Oarit~ 1~d~enlure) '59-Jack Ha~111. Git McG1vi11 mmpett IRlill'SI: W1lh1m Sci!la. W1ndOA1, Uiz•t• Asf!I,. i nd Jett ffi Topper I ' l I l I I I I I ! • • • l • • • • • • : I Bridges. 0 @ (f! (l} l"lfMtER[ Coinedy f'1ev11W (CJ (~O} ''J !or T1h111·- Tllt first tn 1 '-fr~ o! thttt hall· !11' @ SN tlu11t ffi ft£T Journfl (60') (RI "Sll~IU· ltt -A Coll¥tfSllto11 Wi1h BobbJ Seile.~ l-0111 corn~ shofts lPa!ures Roben Hog1n, S!fYt f l<l"-en .. rd Bob (1n (}) Lt rs Mike a Dul (Cl s!e•11 •s hardworP.•nf younr; bwsi-11 ·10£1o """'f M o~· c """'$mtn ... ~o RO oH lo l.ith1h and · -"'..:!! I "' rmra ( ) t.~ome tnVOl•ld w1h a t11n·down• 0 ~(6j €DJohlll' Clrso• (C) tnatcl!td-ioo! holet ._.,°"'" a~ lht Jotn Rl'lers is "1>sltlS.. 6;ih Hal. Th~ boy~· hipllJ (lrefm O MllYie· "Kl d.k '· . ., (d bftllme:. 1 no11ht11 .. rt • · an I e ""••t fl· ma) 36-Mae West, Vidor Mtllf· 0 M1Uion S Mo-;11; "Tht B11yf' len. Ph•hll Reed. tdr11'111) 'bl--li1chi1d TDlld. Robert o -. Morie,. A d•·'enff 1t1orney at llll (I) (1) Did C.Wtt IC) tempts 111 0!01«1 !ou1 younrsters @ MO'lir. "lllt lilly S1ys No" <hilR!d _.,11~ murdrr. <comedy) 'Sl -Dat1d tl1~en, Jo•" @Peri, MIMI" !&Ji Ca"lhetd, f!)Tllt rorsytt Sl£I (~OJ (Ri l:OO EJMovie: .. Hellfire" (drama) ·~g -Fa11est Tuckei. Mirre Wm<lsor m Sel!tl!d film (C) {30) Wilham Elliott, Jim OiYIS. ' 7:!15 CiE) C1est11111 dt !legYndos 00""" (CJ 0 Cornmunity Buttelin Bo1rd (C) m Movie: HM1n-£1ttf ol llttm.011" (ad11enture) '48 -We ndell Co1ey, 1 RnGde!. R~ason. S1bu. kiannt Paf!. 2:00 ID Atl·NitM Show: "We11d Wom· •:oo t1 ~ ra GOfflrt PT!t (C) (J'l1 (R) Gome!"~ {io' d11IRenre rn W~lsh r1bb1I turn~ !' e llumble pu vate inlo 1n 1n~ry , 11vnl~e1 w~o reads tilt uo1 <1ct fo c.~nor, 0 Di'lofu ~urt (C) llOJ I ~11,'" ··M1 Gui T1Si" and ''lo;t :Story.~ o 11J rn m rtie cotirti1t1, cl 2:30 Ii) Nm/Gille Us Thtl Day {C) THURSDAY '' DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 0 "Tht Pfkl tf Fe1r" (dram•) '56 Merle Oberon, Ltx 81r~er, Ctl1rle3 0111ke 9:00 O NHenry Aldnch H111nls 1 Ho11st" (comrd1J '-4l-J1mm1 Lydon, Charlt~ Smilll. l :JO 0 "lew1rt of B\111d!t" (tOl'l'ltdy) '51-l'tnnr SulilllOll. AttllUI L•kt~ - m ''Soitf~ (comedy) '34-Kltl!· arrn• Hepburn, Robert Yo1m1. R1lp~ Btll1m1. 1:00 0 USou!s 11 Se1" (1dv&111u1e) 'J7- G1ry Cooper, Georar 11111, I 1111Ces '" U) ~L!tlef fr1111 1n UnkllOWll W• min" {fomanc1) 'JS-.kNn Fon1 1i11e. ll)U1S Jodrd1n, 2:00 D (CJ ''East of Edt11" (dr•m•) '55 1 -limes Dean, Julie Harris, R1ymond !ii~:;;sliy, ID "Boin To Spied" (adttnlure) '47 1 -Johnny S1n<1s, Ooo !dsllt 4:30 Ii) "lite Y1111n1 Stra111er"" (d11m1) '57-llmri MKArlhut, J1m!1 01tr ll1m l+unltr. FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WE EKErq--DE1l PHONE 642·4321 \ . NOW PLAYING Only on Cablevision "THE BLUE ANGEL" Stirring MARLENE DIETRICH NEWPORT: Mon.· Fri at 9 PM; also Sat, Sun. at 6 PM . MISSION VIEJO: Mon. Wed, Fri. at 9 PM. Ne-before on West Coast TV: the original, lllCUt classic . STARTING MONDAY, AUG. 24th "SALLY OF THE SAWD~ST" . tarring W. C. Ftetds--- INSTALLATION $14.95 Local Channel J Cabl•vision Coll 642·3260 MONTHLY SERVICE $6.50 "THERE'S MORE ,TO SEE ON CABLE TV!'! • " Shaw Ti-: 3:30. 7:45 ••ly LOOK TO EDWARDS LUXURIOUS CINEMAS FOR THE BEST SHOWS TONIGHT "Paint Your Wagon"·GP NOW EICLU51¥El T GP "PAnON" George C. Scott • '"' BEACH BUI , AT ELLIB ._, • B•'· COl<ST ................. Ol•GO """'· ...7•9908 • HUrqtHGTON BllAC:H Elll•t GOll1d e De!wllll S111Mrt111C1 M'*A*S*H I •. ,. (It} llN ntll WllSTfllllNSTaR c.l!N)"'t< 1 ca1 I ma:www••--.. ---~-._. -• .,,. -rwu. Joli• Way ... i• "Chisum" {G) "Wait Until Dark" :tr.'-~.:-.·=---= 4ttl Record Wa.t GEORGI c . scon • KAIL MALDEN "PATTON"· GP _ ..... ___ .__ • • l • !Ea.1111 llMlllll ., ~i'.:z;, .. t..,..'1 _ .... "®.l ' ;:;.-----==--·-,• :l --~------·••llmlfU(l•waE. mllllll'••-Pm111t•tlll11111111111lifilBJa1J• ---·-·:--T-11--•--'' NO RESERVED·SEAlS • FREE PARKING v EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • • ' ''Ice Station Zebra"·•~ Rock Hodson PLUS! JANE FpNOA ;,. \. BOTH' IN COl.0 111 ------· ----------- Wrdn1sd.1y1 .l1.1;ust lCJ, 1970 DAILY PILOT :J -------· All Under 3 0 ~·r 'A quarius ' S how i_n _D~but , Movies Seelcing Aid F1~om Government Dy 808 T.UO~tAS force out of steady employ· JIOLLYWOOD API -. The ment. or 1969. But figures ctn deceive. shoestring venlu~es l h a t employ no union rne~rs. ,, ' "Age o( Aquarius" 11 a new show debuting on Aug. 21 over Channel 9 at 10 p.m. 'Phc progrum h o p e s to conl- munlcate lhe principals and Ideas or the younger genera. lion through a brand ntw · format, a combination of vnrlety -rap In which on- camcra suests arc all under JO, (iuests on the open ing show will include Patty Duke. Beau Bridges and Pacific Gas & Electric. The show wtll have con· lroversy -lht result of treely cxpreased opiruonl. The opi· nions will come from the younger people of tM aru, the professions, buslncu agd cnlertainrrie.nt fields. The show l3 based oo the premise that the f u t u r e belongs not to the militants or the violent hippie groups, but with the young people who arc already successful - teadillg useful. positive lives. Keeping it all together will 7 ~~~~~1 ,, '' , ... , I I '• t\1e-rnesa T • I ' 'j'' ' ' rl • ~~r\'lf'1~~·1 ."',[ f·', ~ 1 •~ ,,',r~ ,..It,:, COi.OR OT' MCMD."8,~ [Qlo ·. I ; ., ALSO IOlllT ll!DGltAVl-GI' "THE DOWNHILL RACER" CONTINUOUS DAILY FIOM 2 r .M. ·--~Wayne f ""Chisiim" f'aresti.de.(]~l6'~.£!6ilfuml!nre~ Qm Cabett·r..ri: KruMes·Ardtw f'rile ,IW\lfd ~ 1\-Trll llii·kd~~[)wj&P<mJaMMyier (_'CfClA~ l'IOd.ICer MIC.1"'4 w.vnr . YmlleA <lf.:l l'IOO.Jrl'(! tw NicirewlffNd"'I ~==:v:.liglrn; -~'~ 1~~-=--l RATED "G" IT'S FOR EVERYBODY! I • *fl l*I* 1111 I*111**1 I*' ................ •' I .. PllEMIEltE ENGAGliMt:NTI Soo-1"'' "l'UFNSTUI'" • (GJ C.,.,. C...--"'THE COCkliYl!O COWIO'r'S OF of!·-CALICO COUNTY" • IOI C.19f fil"'5'U llnt•rt•ill-1 flor TIM l'•lf,. fllmlly •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• i!Wi ~) ........... I '' .. PltEMlllltE ENOAOl!MENTI JOHN WAYNI: ~ e "CHISUM" • (GI C.ktr A ....... ""'""' "WAIT UNTIL OAltK" e CoMt' l'ltllMllEltE l:Hc>AGEMINTI JOHN WATNE It e "CHISUM" e !Gl C.IOr A""'rwy H.,wn. "WA IT UNTIL OAltK" • c ... r Pltl.MllltlE liNGAGEMl!MTI "l'Ul'HSTUI"" e (GI C•IM' "TMll CGCKEYliD CDWIOYI 01' CALICO COUNTY" e CO) Coi.r .. llf0rt111!1Ml!t '"' TM E11ftti1 "•mlly l'ltEMIEltE EMCUOl!.Ml:MTI "COTTON coME5,TO MAltLl!M" (It) "'TKE CHltl5TINI: .IOltOl:NSIN STOltT" • (It! C.IH Ulllhr U Mvsf II With l'I""" ....................................... -ALL COLOlt SHOW !GfOI Cliftl IKIWIMll f "' ·-''l"AIMT TOU WAOOft" ltw.rtlt ....... "OOWiolNILL •AClll" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All C•19f SlltW Teny C<tr!fl • Hlllll'f ...... "THE IOSTOH STltANOLllt" ..... \tlfktllt """ ''THI. OSLONG I OK" • 10~1 C.llr H:l'MIElll l:NeAOIMIWfl ""1,ll"WITUI'" e COi C ..... DH Sltdl« e W•llY C. "TMli COCKl.'flO COWIOYJ 01' CALICO COUNTY" • 101 C.IM' be host Kevin &ughlln. 1 24. year old mollon ptcture. Broadway and televlaion ac- tor, who has 17 ye11s to hls credit in the entertainment In- dustry. 1 Strangely. lhe number ur <k:8perale COfldiUoo of Ule film film~ being mitde In this coun- tndwtry wat underscored last try during 1mo is far ahead or Mort than hair ol thooe plc- tum are being made by in- dependent companiH, not thr major ltud~. WWle 50flle are legitimate product.ions. a great many are ''jJkln fl ick.9" or In an ctrort to gain employ-_ mc.nt tOf' their mtmben: n such fllm1, the craft and actor unions iiiJreed lo lowec their (.'Olltract terms for movies cc. ting leia than ll mWloo. · week when tabor and manage-· 1969. During the flrst hall of menl joined lo 8ttk a 20 per. this year, 78 movies were cent tax exempt~ oo gross started. compared to 14 for all l EllllT AINMEMT lncome for American-made movies. The chancea that Concrtsa will respond favor ably .are slim. It Is hard lo cOnvince the Coughlin has been o n television in some or the top shows inclu ding "Studio One," '·Robert Montgo1nery Presents," "U.S. Steel Hour," "Bob Hope Presents," "The Fugitive,·• "Bonanza " and the "Virginian" -Re--netd-tlle-contii'rufng role of T. R. Ryan ln the '"I Remember Mama" series for five years. He co-starred with Bette Davis in ~ motion pie· lure. "Storm Center ;" still other motion picture credits indlue "The De(iant Ones.'' wilh Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier, "Happy Anniversary" with Mitzi Gaynor and David Niven; "Wild in the Streets" with Shelley Winters, He star. red in A-1GM's ' 'The Runaway," and he also wrote the main title mmic and lyrics for that film. Ueuuilcd lawmake" that lh• once-lE£ C&JNT J".&ao booming movie bu.linen ls at MARVI EASTWOOD ~ HOLLYWOOD fU PI \ -Ron Us lowest ebb lnSO years. N SEBERG Moody and. Jack Wild, who "HollywooJ llas always had played Fagin ~nd the Artful the reputation of beinrr a gold r · ~er In "Ohver!" wlll be " -...,. rillnitea rn Colum61a-.5''F11g0~town~y1-an industry of the Doves" with Ralph observer .. •.low can you pay Nelson producing and direc· stars a milhoo dollars a ptc- ting ture one year and then plead · poverty the next? C:HARLll l l OWN" ,1a "HOW THl WUT WAS WON" PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! SHOWING NOW! II "THE MIND BLOWER Of ALL TIME!" At 1:1 S.C••P· Sii•• l•t• 11 11:31 I•• Ofticn 0,.. 7:15 P .. M. S•p•r Pl1,1r•••4 • s.,., SHClt iw. -Tl• M.Jtid• Roted (R) MON, lflrll l'ltl. ''Jf •"Ill t ;U SAT. 1:1f I 11<!0 ,,m, SUN. J:lJ-•::IO-t 1•S NCWfORT 1 £.lCH • OR. 3 8350 ~,P.!~f -~ 67l-'2'0 2'05 East Coast Hwy. EXC LUSIV E AREA SHOWI NG NO ON( UNDlR 17 UNLlSS WIT H l'A.RfNT Corona del Mi r i&iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii! -GOOfREY RAYMOND CAlVlN , U\MBRIOGf·SIJAOOUfS· lOCKHARI ::i..by:: ,~ JI( lllMISCH ~HOii ,,_ · • BLAKE EDWARDS """""" e1tC1.•tt•• rJU'RSlll" "The government has never lifted a ringer to help the movie busineM in the past. There is no reason to believe it would start now. Especlally wilh so many voters up in anns about dlrly movies." Still, the companies and the unions are hopeful. They see governmental assistance as the only way lo el[tricate the industry from its economic ills. The seriousneJS of those ills is demons trated in the finan- cial statements of the major companies, most of which are awash in red ink. Hollywood also has suUered chronic unemployment. with as much as 50 percent of lhe labor 5th WEEK AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS & NOW AT THE STADIUM DRIVE-IN #3 r ' Rated ''GP'' All Ages Admitted- Parental Discretion Suggested 20ll'i Ct>!>IUfy•Foo Prefffll~ GllOllGE C. SOOIT /KARL II ALDEN ---~-·-··--· .. -ln"PA1TON" -· -· .tW..Mll'ln.fMmlllDIRO ,_,..IMll NM11f•l..al SQWllll ~ ... ~ Bii •llll• _ .. ,.,,...~ .... "The epic Ameri"'1 "" .... Iha! ltlllywood has always wanted to make, bul never had the guls to do belore:· ____ ., -~----·~ .... ,_ MIUI -l•ll•.,.,..mat • JlllWI" ,.LMISW 11MN .JI SN!a'i l'l'M" ...... l.tlMln · Kll1 MUW!li Premiere Orange County Engagement • TH•ATll• Mital.•~ ccsl•"lilBA. ~ _______ .. ,.._ ..... t , Coll 639-7860 DIRECT FROM ITS EXCLUSIVE RESERVED-SEAT ENGAGEMENT. •• CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES AT POPULAR PRICES ! "A Big Musical Hit- ln The Winner's Corner!" -.illtCN£1t WIHSJON, New Yotk 1'011 "Hilarious And Entertaining. In The Stream Of 'Sound Of Music '!" . "A Big Bawdy Rip·Roaring Musical! Howli ngly Funny!. See It!" -WAHDA HAL(. H Y Oe1'r H....., i ~ I !~; &!'I ~INTYOUR WAGON FASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENT£R • • • ••••••••••••••••••••• .~ ~ . RATED "GP" • All AIJH Ad111ittff- P•re1!111I DIKretiot1 Su.1Jeste4 Prn.11ted 111 St.,it0plto11ic; So1111d Sth Super Week! NOW IN SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY AT THE EDWARDS HUNTINGTON ¢1NEMA AND HOLDS-OVER IN NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY AT THE STADIUM DRIVE-IN .#2 ''A COCKEYED MASTERPIECE -SEE ITTWICE!'' "Withou t a doubt the funniest se rv ice comedy -Joseph Morgenstern,. Newsweek I have ever seen." -Judith Cri.st., fllBC ·TV '"M .. A•S0 H' begins where other anti-war films end!" -Tfliirle Maf3zinel "'M•A"S0 H' is what the new freedom of the screen is all about." "'M''A "S "H' is the best America n war comedy since sou nd came in!" -Pavffne IC.el,~ Yorker -Rich•rd SchlcU I, Lil• 10'0 ~1 roi 111tt.tnl\ An lngo Preminger PrOOuctio'l ..... DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTI GOULD ·TOM SKERRITI f.o SllrlllJ Wl f ltl.lt(llMIN • llOE!ERJ (.1.J\'lll. • J'J ANN F'A.15 • 1(1( AIAl(ll(H)S ~""'" o, INGO PREMINGER """'"~ ROB£RT N. !MAN """''" bt RING lAR!HR, Jr. fll'lr'll llllMI by lllQW!O l«Xll\ER IMic bt Xllffl'I'\' MNIOO. ~ bJ D£ LUXC• ~· R _If_ ... -··--~ ,_ .. ,._ ~2N° GREAT WEEK AT BOTH THEATRE Coll 639-8850 ' • w ' , t•. AuOIKl lt, 1970 PILOT·AOVUTISU J 2 Orange Coast Area Men in Service Around the World .. U.S. Atr Fomt captain Qf 10241 serenade Lant, Hun-Drive, llunUn~ Beach. Is completed basl training ll l Class Robert A.. We11lbkt!, 1parllclpJ1tlni In a \).S. Air USS Alamo CIU'OUte lo the hfo.rch AFB I Peter P. Ab\. aon o1 Mr. and Ungton Beach, is participating participating in A U.S. Air t.o ckland AFB, Tex. llt ha s of ~ Oxford l.aoo, Costa Jo,Of'ct lleserve 0 r f I cc rs Western Pacific. Mrs. Henry F. Abt of tfD..14 111 a Us. Air Force Re.scrvt Force lteserve 0 ff I c e: r s been asstgned lo Shepparct fl.tesa, is 1l01' serving aboard Ttaining Corps (Af'ROTCI Norman T. Langerak 11, son mh Ave... fUchmm>d WU. orricers Training c 0 rp s Training COrps (A.FROTCI AFB, Tex., for training in the amphlbiol.lS auault ship field training encampment ut l\illr<: w. ti1orte.uea, 10n or of Mr. and l\1rs. Norman T. N.Y., hat asumed command tAFROTC) flcld trailtlng en· held trainlng encampment 11it tht: trans~tatioll fiela .··uss Ahamo cnroute to the March AFB. P.tr. tnd Mrs. l\1arcus Lanjerat of 16222 Monterey ,., " Detlcbmenl 2 ol the 4th campmtnt at Myrtle Bach ri.1arcb AFB. Artman Doherty, a 1 9 e 8 Western Pacific. Mortensen o( 9432 Lanai Cir· Lane, HWlUngton Beach, fi • "1eM.bel' Wine at Klngtley AFB. S.C. graduate of Marina lllgh Navy Petty ()(fi«r 'Mlird cle, HunUJ\gtoo Beach, Is participating ln a U.S. Air FleJd. Oft. Airman James r.t. Doherty. Schoo!. attended Golden West l\11chael J. Van Vel1et, soa Class Robttt s. Dalley. of participating in a U.S. Air Foree R.esttve 0 r ricer! , Captain Abt previously ttl'V· l\11cll.•el J. s tepltetson. 50n m of Mr. and Mrs. Grant Junior College. of r-.tr. and Mrs. Vinctnl C. 116 Vla Udo Nord, Newport Force Re.terve 0 r (i ce rs Tr a In Ing ~(AFROTCI ~ •Ith the 21st weather nf '-1r and ritrs . Ar<:hibald s. Doherty Of 1S8tl She:rbeck Van Velzer of 6282 Shields Beach, is now serving aboard Tra!ning ,Corps (Afo"ROTC) field training encampment al ': ' " Squ•dton 811 As ma r a , A. Ste~son or 6441 Camille L.ane. Huntington Be11ch. has Navy Petty o rr1cer Second Drive. lfwitingl.on Be~ch. is Uie amphibiOUI assault ship field tralnlnt: encampment at March AFB. F.thiopia. His new unit Is a~• ...:....:...2-"•C.::::i·::_::__:.::::::...:..._...:._::_...:...::...:._...:......:......:... __ ...:..._.:...... _________ ;:__ _______ ...:..._:.;.:....:..:....:..._::::._...:...:::::...:..:....:.:.:....::...:.::.:.::....:.:....:......:......:......:......:...------ P'rt o( the Air \\1e:ithcr Service ">hlch p r o \ l d e s w e 1 t h e r information for millt.an· fliQ:hl operationS. His 'A11tt . AMfll~. is the daug'hte:r of Mrs. Anna Lo\ i of 171M Vin Buren Lanto:. Hun- tll\llOn e..ch. Army Reaerve Major Rene A. Aaps, son of Mrs. An1onia P. Angus, 4S2l'r4 Avacado SI., Las Angeles. completed Phase 10 af the com.ma.nd and gen. era! staff officer courst al thf' U.S. Anny Command and Gmen.I Staff Collf'ge. Ft Leavenworth. Ken., July II. Maj. Angus and his "ife, - Elayne, lh1e at 1808 Port Seabourne Way, Ne"'' po r t Beach. Marillf' Private First Class C".eorie R. U..Uield, son of Mr and Mrs. Ralph B. Hatfield of 9142 Clnistine Drive. Hun- tington Beach. bu reported for duty at Marine Corps Air Station, Camp Lejeune. N.C. Specialist Four David A. l\foria, whoSt' mother, Mn. L<>ui!le H. Morin, lives at 1935 E. Monroe. Orange. received the Army Commendation Medal on July 15 while serving w1th the Americal Division in Vietnam. Spec. 4 Morin earned !he award for meritorious service as a cannoneer in Battery A, 3td Battalion of the division's 111 rw:t Artillery. He enered the Army in January 1969. com- pleted basic !raining at Fl. Ord. and was last stationed at F't. Sill, Okla. The specialiiit's fa I her , Roger A. Morin. lives at 913 W. lrtll St.. Cost.a Mesa. Cadet AJber1 L Wallatt. son nf Mr. and ~rs. Albert L \\'allace, I 9 2 0 Commodore Ro.ad, Newport Beach. is al· tending the Army Reserve Of- ficer Training Corps' ad· vanced summer camp at In- diantown Gap. Pa. Navy Petty Officer Third Class Alan c. Doyle, son or 1'fr. and Mn. Frank F. Doyle of 4Jn Pier3oo Drive, Hun- tington Beach. rebu'lle<I to San Diego aboard the destroyer USS Henry W. Tucker after a 1wcryear cruise in the Western Pacific. • Marine Seeond Lieutenant Buni1 K. ~foore, of 16.132 Golden Cate Lane. Huntington Beach, compl!ted his first solo flight aboard the Navy "Men- tor" primary training aircraft at Naval Air Station. Saufley Field, Pensacola , Fla. Coast Guard Seaman Ao- pre n tic e Anthony D. Fredericks. son of Mrs. James 8. Fredericks of 38-Beacon Ba y. Newport Beach. was graduated from eight weeks o£ basic recruit training at the U.S. Coast Guard Training and Su pply Center, A I am e d a . Calif. Airman Dennis IJ. Fujihara. son of Mr. and Mrs. Tadashi Fuhihara of 21342 Bulkhead Circle. HunUngton Beach . has completed basic training at ~ckland AFB. Tex. Ile has been assigned to Lo\lo·ry AFB. Colo .• for training in the muni- tions and "'·eapons main- tenance field. P.1arine Lance Corporal John O. Qulnn, husband of the former Miss Patricia D. Jorden of 19362 Brookhurst. Huntington Beach, reported for duty at Marine Corps Air Sta- tion, Cherry Point. N.C. Army Private First Cl ass Qllllam J. Baller, son of l\1r. and Mrs. William J. Baker. 2QS6 Phalarope Court. Costa ~tesa. recently was assigned as an infantryman in Com- pany, E., 2d Battalion. Isl Infantry, 19Gth I nfantry Brigade, Americal Division near Chu Lai. Vietnam. Navy Lieulenant ( j u n i o r grade) Ronald E. campbell. '°" or Mr. and r-.1rs. Paul W. Campbell of 2201 Vista Doaado. Newport B e a c h , returnOO to San Diego after a two-year deployment in the \Vestem Pacific :itxnird the destroyer USS George K. Mac.Kenzie. Kirk D. Reinhardt. o<>n ol Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Reinhardt THE BEST ~eedtt1hip poll1 p10•• "I'••· n11t1" h one ef #le worlcl '1 MOii popyler coll'llC slrTpt. R1•d U 4aU, h1 the DAILY PILOT. ., Pacquin Lotion Un:QtJe aimbiM1on of iigredie!!ls ••• l 11r.1rldl 10 :;moo!h & ~flen dry ~ulL 1111 DI. 59c Bathe 'n Glow DrySkias.tt.Oil fi j Relief ••• lld 1111 bal~ !J.~ ril'!ll! 32 Oz. 4.8B ''PRO'' Brushes and Combs Men's Packet Combs ~·· 81.v.~ f1~ Tootll Comb Men's-Ladies' Dress Combs Barber's Combs 2:39c Variws sly!es a'ld SJLes kw ~IJY 11'..e. R Mtllli-Tult Toothbrushes PRO ••• f irm or Calle For Mull> in DN:· 29C 011tor Colors. Yo lf Cbt1c1-(1. ANTl·PIR5PllANT Deodorant CIKtllfnltld M1•s••1ld ClllHf l /l llMll lL lt11lat, S11p1r ff1ld. U~sce1Ud SIZE J.6X SHOP EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 10 P.M. DRUG STORES Flare Leg Pants r,url~,~ I root W1'~ Bci'!I' Back. 81ig'1\ SIZE J.6X ''''" ''~"·d: Bias Skirt Jumper 2 69 Button rron! ~,·~ fwo !16Jl A .t. P1ir • 'I SIZE J.6X ~''"' 3 69 Krinkle 1: • ~~~~h~r~~~.~~~.!s,,, /j : ·L:~1t:r6:tteKRsktrts r'l<ot ~'"':••I ,,, J pitrll'Ct aJtht. {{.~, • V Yol.r. w1!h G.'d NJ11t~ad Trim. Mock Turtle & Turtle Neck SWEATERS lad ies' F11ll Fashioned, flat Knit styles in High F ~sl\i{lll Falt Colors. Wasti- able and ideal fur Skirts or Pant > Sizes 34 to 40. SIZE :J.6X Princess Jumper 0.,~1 Jo1 f~ -PrHlt ~ , line r.dh : Pdl~ Po·~!lS. Ass'L Color;. 3.69 SIZE J.6X Yoke Jumper Ollon .,, 'b ~!I tJ~ 11'1'!31 tab !rim. flar~d s~"'· A~ L Co'llf 3.69 Pdo•6 , 2.98 if 8''"8i<~;~8<0•2"· 9B I • • L ~ SIZ!J.6X Krinkle Leatherette Jumper SIZE 3·6X Shawl Collar Jumper ~o fd·~iunahi~ ... Po'inr~·:~ L111~. Cold button ; and pat~ fu.~Pis. Red or s.,, 4.49 B~'B&t .~====.'C=.==~1 B~f?&Q, "Thirsty-Skin" sPEc1AL Kanekalon WIGS Ten-0-Six Lotion !"or dry ~lu~ problems a,.j I 1oungf'f, ~mootner r.omple-1on. ::;: 3 50 6 00 • Rer. "Dutch Bay" Perma~nUy styled in the ~ew slttk loot Many hand 11.1\lP.d t~lur~~. All natural 19 BB ;ind ho~ted shadi' .. ,, , Ret. 22.11 • •.. i! deans deep!~. t1P.lps t:!ear ~km problems & nor· malizes sk•~. 2 or. Pla~ll~ 5i1 Trlal and haver Size wrtll • ReguLlr 8 01. 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(AP)~ The YOUlll boy jammed a ytirbooll: and I relt pe.n Into JoE Namath 's hand, and over his autoaraph, the New Yott. Jet s• quarttrback wrote one word : "Peaet''. Nothing may be more symbolJc of Joe Namath'• pllghl -ror ptace is somethlna Joe Namath wllbes ht had. Joe Namath ha1 Ion& hilt, earthy aood looks and a •100,000-a·year contract Joe Namath bas a brown Ji&u8.r to brhl.a him IO practice. Joe Namath his the Jdcil11ty or counUeq fans ol both suu and 111 .,, .. But Joe Namath doll not havt pttiCt. And Joe Namath Aid u much Tuelday ••he rejoined Ule Jeta, brinaift& wUh him not ooly hll admltl<d talent for com~tt· ing a J)UI but all the ltm.t that VI plaltJed h1m durlng t~IUffimtt ef I greatut unhapplnf'!ss. . Not necessarily in order of importance, the pro!>Jema are : -Trouble with his kn~• that ap- parently jlrelf:Qt, at least In hls own mind. e.aouab problem. to make him aay : UJ>I T ... llt .. CATCHING uP -Joe Namath, the controwersial quarterback or Ute New York Jets, catches up on some exercises as well as camp news Crom teammate Jim Hudson after joining the Jets in training camp at Hofstra University. Namath ended his holdout and reported to tbe camp 11 days late. He missed the first two Jet exhibition games. '/tloeller Goes Tonight V ru1ce Looks Like Dazzy In Mowing Down Cards ST. LOUIS (AP) -As far as Ille St. Louis Cardlnala were concerned, young Sandy Vance's name might jwt as well have been Datty during the muggy heat in Busch Stadium Tuesday, night. Flashing a sizzling fart ball, the 2.1- year-old Los Angeles Dodger pitcher mowed down the fitst 10 Cardinal! en route to a 7-2 triwnph. The Dodgers send Joe Moeller, >4i, against the Catds' Steve Carlton, 6-16, in the series finale. Vance's fifth victory in eight decisions came following a mkl-team tour of duty \1·ith the Dodgers' fa1111 club In Spokane . The air felt heavier Tuesday night, he said. but the fast ball defied tbe descrip- tion K~eping moat batters off balance, Vance permiUed ~nly five hits -One a Gih11er to Head FJC Spikers Saddleback coach Tom G~r has been selected as ~ bead cross country and track and fie.Id coach at Fullerton Junior College, the DAILY PILOT has learned. The action is subject to approval by both junior coUege boards. Gllpie.r, 30, has been the cro•s colUltry coach at Slddlebock for U}t past ,..,.. and aJ90 his wisted head tract and field coach Don Guyer. Gilmer guided the Gaucho cross coun- try team to a Due.rt Conference cham- plonahip Wt sauon. Tbt Santa Ana ruilllnt IP'odUll>d from Orlftil llJgb School and tht t!nlvtroity of Redlandl, befort ttktna a position with Foolhlll IUg)l. lie was the head track and lield coach at Foothill -for six years and also WJS the varsity line coach tor five seasons. He is currently aglstinS South football . coach Ed Boin (of Foothill} Iii preparetion for Thundlf nilht'• Oranl• County North· South all·1tar aarn• at Orange ~t College. Gl1mer replacu Jan Underwood at Fullerton, who rtal;ntd to accept a high IChool coachlni poolUoo lo Orei°"· ) \ booming double by Jost C~tnal that of- fered too little and came too late with two out in the ninth. Ahead of that he had' betn touched for two hits in the fourth Inning, one a sintlt by Joe Torre that provided the Cardinab a brief 1-0 lead. The Dodgers, however, teed off on Jtr- Doqer Slate AJI 01-e11 kPI CMtl Aut . lt Dodttrl If SI. LOUii A .... '1 ~ v1. ,.llt•""rth Aut. n Oodti" "'· "'"Nlwth !:SJ •.111. 7:JS •. Ill. ,,JJ II.Mo ry Reuss an inning later and moved out of range with a four.run blitz In the sl11h for a 5-1 lead. St. Louis reached Vance for Its only other ta]ly in the bottom of the sixth, afte r which the Dodgers cha!ed Reus11 with a run .in the: seventh and added another in the elthth off Reggie Cleveland. 'The Dodgers' Wes Parker, hitting .337, _,,1 four safeties in four times at bat and Ted S!Jemore had three hits. The Dodgers have won sis: of eight games from the Cardinals this aeuon. 'The West Coast team's 15-hlt barra1e lifted their total to 29 for the two pme.s in the current 1erlell and their tun iro. duction to n for the year in five 11mea at Busch Stadium. A.side from Cardenal's double and Tor- re's tlrigle, the only other Cardinal hits wert 1lngle1 by Joe Hague, Julian Javttr and Reuss. Vance recorded four strikeouts and walked but two in completing hit HCond game in 10 startl. A victim of bis pitching wu Lou Brock, who went o-for-4 in an attempt to e:a:te:nd his l5-aame hilling 1treak. LO) .t.NOILll IT. l•Ull •llrlttol ffrtllrM Wllit,U ••tlaf'Dl;k,JI •••• M9M,ll fll l J1vMr,:lll lltt W,Dtvl1.cf SlllH"IM,I• 'fll W.ll1r1ttr, \II t 1 t I To•r., Jb ' I I I Sl1-1. )b S I I I C•t4WI, cf ' t 1 t lullkll, c J' I 1 1 Jl"-1, c. I t t e Ore1N1k'wl!1,a I I t e LM. " 1 t I o a.u1t ll, " J 1 I I ..... llYlll, h I t t Venc:e, • • • 2 1 lllevu, ' ' t 1 t CIMlll\lll, 11 t O I O n-... 1111o, 1111 1 • • ' hrfwlnl, 11 t t t t Tt11l1 ti 1 IS 1 Tel91l 11 t J I LH ,,,...i.. • •l-4 Jtt -, $1. L."11 IOO kll .. -1 DP -L .. M11tts 1. LOI "'T tM Alllftl9f. 12. SI, LOUii I. ti -Sudlklt, W P'lfk,,., Vi. O.v11, C1t-.ul. SI -J1vlu, Gr1Ntktwltl, S -Ylnc:t. "" -'""'"-Vtnct IW.J.11 l!wu CL,•·J) , ....... -.... . .,, .... VIII -ll""'J, lllllanU -...... Ill II It alt t I I J • 11 • ' ' ) 1 I t 1 • • Clt W.•N. Time - •• 10 ' . I ' ' ' • • J:~• ... ,. "1 don't ttµnk I can play." -Muta! pro-l<lm. poulbly olemmlna from hit knee• bul compounded by other fact«1, that prevent him from uUn1 1 meal or drlnklna 1 cup ol oolfee before a &•rM and make him "woodtr lf It'• worth It." -"A bullnm problem," dtflned only in those ltnns ud a problem about whkh he -.oold not elaborate. Nunath talked about all tlklle pro- blem• ln 1n unu1U1l tctne that took plaoe outalde the b1ek door al the Jell' trllioln1 room on the lfofstra University campus where Namath spokl!l to radio and televlalon people with newspapermen barred . bn his arrival at camp, wear!ng striped bell bottoms with a blue ahlrt open at the neck, Namath had refused to talk to newspaper people becauMi "Everything that's been written about me 11 a lie." Seemingly petulant, even with club ol- ficlals, he would only ~BY : "I'm htre to prepare for the t.-Ombig ICllOn." J.!:ventua!Jy, however, after making his way Ui the training quarter• for the Jets' afternoon workout, he u n b u rden ed himself for televildon cameras and redlo mlcropbo9e1 at the back of tht training facility while close to S,IXll fans w&ted out front tor bis flr1t appearance . He began by explaiJllng hb absence , pointing out: "I was not in the right frame ot mind mentally." Then he talked about the final 1ame of the 1961 uason, a 13 -8 playoff IO!s 10 J\anti!.s Ctty that eliminated the Jets from eontenUon In the American Football League:. "1 hat was a ho rrible experience - being bumlhale<I like I ff.I.It we were because we M:ored six points," Namath erplainid. "lt "•Vts a bad tasit.1 didn't know whether I wanted to do that aiain. "I didn't know 1f I wanted to get up in the morning and be 51ck. Every time before a game, J.can't even eat or drink a cup of coffee. I didn't like that feeling. You get chills in the morning and yout stomach is upse t. 'ir.u wonder if i1'1 worth it.·· Wright Closing In on Recor d By llQWAllD I. RANDY ·°' .. o.ur "'"" stett Clyde W\1iht ii closing ln on Dean Chuce In the .\nitl record book aoc! the Halos cloaed UWJ door on their former teammate early Tuelday night to wln • 12· 1 declllon over the CleveJand Indiana at Anaheim stadimn. Wright ,... hll 17th victory u the Angels staged the second blgMt Inning in thtb' hiltory In the seventh -a frame in which they scored nJne times. Wright spent two wetb on military du- ty recenUy and was asked 1f the rett had h<lped him. ''I flinre I had started 26 or 27 1ames before goina to camp. I'm IW't! the rest did me some good. "It's 9DIDt kind of a feeUn1 1 tbou1h, to have tJ nms to work with. "I dan't thlnk I've bad five or more runs b.Jt four Umes ln the 29 1amu I've :>tatted this year.'' Ht WU then uked jf he WIS think.in& Playing With Pros Thrills Pistol Pete MONTICELLO, N.Y. (AP) -Peta i1aravich strapped h1.s pistols on once mon -th1J time to play 1n a pro game -but Dave Olwel'll did most of the straJght shooUn1. Maravicb, collt«t basketball's all-time scoring king, &1ld be '\'U thrilled pl1ylng with the pros in the annual Maurice SIOkes charity buketball 1ame Tuesda7 night. Maravich acored oaly 10 poliit.t, way belew hll CQllese averaa:e, • Cowens took up the •lack with n aoc! led the Red Auerbachs over the Dolph SChlyts, IM!, .at Kut.sher'a Qmntry Club. 'l'tle Pistol, however, wasn't to dtny the crowd ~ 2,000 a toot at his formidable p&s1In1 taltnis. He drew "ooha" and "aahl" fn>m tht flDI whilo llrlng the bill from lllotlcal, off·bal1DC• po8itlona. Maravkh wOUDd up with 1J as.si.sts wearing an AUuta HawQ unlfonn for the fJrat Urne 1n a gamt. While the former Louiliana State 11eat was doing h1s passing thine, Cowens - Boston's first-roWld draft pick from Florida Stale -also pulled down 22 re- bounds and blocked a half dozen shots. The performance earned the ft..foot-9, 240-pound forward the 1arhe's Most Valuable Player trapby. Although not ahooliJ!g well -4-for-11 - 1.taravich played a sturdy defensive game, not ooe or his fortes In colle~e ball. And nlnt of his points were scored 1n a last-period spurt as he te1med with Cowens to brinl the Auetbachs a la.st- mlnutt vlclOt)'. More than a million dollars worth of National Baiketball Assoclt;tion talent asst.mbltd at kullher'a for the game to honor Stokes, a former player who died th.ls year. Pioceeda from the came will be used to aid NBA players who might require financial aislslanct for d!sablllty or illness. Jo Jo White of Boston chipped in with JS points and Jack Marin al. Baltimore added 10 for the wlnnera. Billy Cun- ningham of Phlladelpbla and Caztle Russell ol New York led the Schayes team with 1$ each. Vikings Minus Top 2 Players MANKATO, Minn. (AP) -Tbt Min- nesota Vlklnas go about preparinJ: fOr the 1970 N•tlonii Football League 1eaaon minus thelr two biggll.!ll nlln\ts - quarterback Joe Kapp and d e f e n 1 I v e giant Carl Eller. Both have refused to repGl't to the club"s training ca.mp at ?ifankato State unless contract dlmlnds are met Eller, howev4r, hu not btcome a free 111ent -as in Kapp's case -and ts being fmed tJOO a day until he ttPof'tl. Gentral ~tanaaer Jim Finks levied a tlOO flne tor Eller'• tef\Jsal to rtport SUnday. Kapp wu repOrted working out, water okllng and cm>eln( near Laite T1h>e with hi• agent, liw;tr John Elliott Cook. Eller 11 In MlnntapollS . "Thttt'• better th>ngs to do than pljylna bilnM "" getting plid.'Lllld tUM, a '-loot-I and 2$5iM>Und end con- elderfd ooe of the moat talanted Vlkinl• defendtrt. '111'1 pure and tbf\ple.'' Eller ex- plained. ''1 wasn't satllfltd with my COD-- tract. I don't know If J"m going to play out my option or not. I'd say the nest movt would be up k> JlDl." I about 20 victories this season. "The last two or three limes I've pitch- ed 1 thouaht about it. But I'll take them a game al a lime. I know how hard U is goine to be lo win 20. "I'm jurt trying to help our bullpen. Angel Slate All -M kMI'( tnt) Aut. l• A,,.ell v. i-""' A~. fl' AP!ffll 11 1!l1mort Aug. ti Al'!Oth 11 ~1111_,.1 A1111. n ...._. •• '' e1111111on .... is Af!Otl• II ~ralt UJ A1111. ' At11tl• It TAii AUii. 1' Antell 11 ie..11no11 ''il ... . I: r .... . I: p.111. l :U o.111. :25 0.111. 5:15 D.111. ,,. p.111. Thm Murphy had better stuff ta.st nigh~ I'm sure." Wria:ht 's 17th vicrory may have been his easiest of the campaign. 1'he big seventh inning saw 14 Angels go to the plate and Jim Freeosl bad a pair ef hits as the Angels: scored rune runs on eight hits. Cbant"e, the only man In history to win 20 games for an 'Angel team ln ooe season, wu chased early. He was lifted tor a pinch hllter in the third inning by manager Alvin Dari. The Halos had scored three times in the second on four base hits as nine men went to the plate. Irvine's Bill Voss drove in the first run and Oood gates wn-e opened. Lone Cleveland run came in the third inning on a pair of base hits including a double by Eddie Leon. Toqight the two teams conclude the- three game series with Rudy May (&-10) pitching again.st Rich Hand (4-9) of the Indians. It Is allo the final game of the currl!nl home stand for lbe Angels. Wright Is several weeks ahead of Chance's time table in 1964 when he won 20 and was named the Cy Young award winner. Ch~ won h1.!I 17th on Sept. 2. The victory kept the Angels in second place behind Minnesota. 41.; games off the pace. Oak land's A's lost to Mickey Lo\ich and the Detroit Tiger3 Tuesday, 3- J, and remain in third place. CLa\llU.ND CALl1'011NIA &!Jrlll'lil .. rllftll L.aroW!I, .A l O o O ,t.1amar. }ti a J 2 t LIGl!,:ID •Dl!ll1~1.cl 5 11 1 Dunftll\t, a o o o o Fr,.,...r, u ' 1 2 J Fot1 .. , II • 0 I 0 A JGllMDl'I. " • I I • Foue,t •O D OS11<1ric1~.lb 5122 l-l•nl....,, rl • o O O McM"ll~n. JO 4 1 J 1 T,HDtlCI"• lb J 0 2 0 Vou. •I J I 1 I 8r,t.Glord, d l t I o lley,>0<h, p11 1 a • • Htld11¥MM, U l 0 0 0 JCl'O'ttlQM, cl J I I J C"411e1,p 0100 E<;P",c •OD I llOIU,,., ph I I 0 0 C 'Nt'Vftl, D J I 2 I J.uslin. D I 0 0 0 C~lber!. p 0 D 0 0 MJ"''rl, p 0 t 0 0 Ct~llll. 211 I 0 0 0 To1•1s ll I s ' To!~~ • ,, I' II C11¥11a"" 0111 COO COO -I Cilltornra C!O coo "l• -11 I: -Mc.M11•1e". Cha~c•. OP -c11v,1a"" 1. C•lllo•~I• 1 LOB -''''''ond •. c~ +fo•~I• 11. l'I -R$C>l. l"°"· ( wr.~M. ~ .... 1.,, 5peric11, ""'""'· II' i'I II Ell II SO CMllf.I (L,1 1) 1 J l 1 I ) l'.u•ll" •S ••l l co+i..rr 1.1 • 1 s 1 o Mlf!IOll 111 1 D D O 1 °'-"'"lrtll ,, •• ,. C.W•ltllt IW,lf tl t J 1 I 1 a T--1.v. •ntnd111C1 -10.cn. WRIGHT ON TRACK -Clyde Wright, ace o! the California Angel pitching staff this season, oolcbed his 17Ut victory Tuesday night in a laugher at the Big A, 12-1. Wright was given support by his team- mates with a big nine run seventh inning. He also contributed a pair of base hits including a double. He is only the second Angel hurler in history to \Vin 17 in a s ingle season and is closing in on hjs lifetime win total of 20 prior to this season. Plunkett Gets Pro Feelers Stanfo rd Star Not W orrying A bout Fat Contract NE\V YORK (AP) -Stanford quarterback Jim Plunkett, who Jllay be a million-dollar commodity on the market next January, .says it's too early to start worrying about the Hei.sman Trophy and a fat pro fOotball contract. "That dotan'I mean the presaure hasn't l _begun," the &-loot.J, 2t~pound passing whiz from the Pacific Coast said tod"af. "I'm already getting some feelers. Peo- ple are calling and wanting to represent me in negotiations. Everybody has ad- Vit'e. "Ifs against the NCAA rules to talk about such things while you 're playing football in college. I wouldn't want to, anyhow . I just wanl to play the best foot- ball poulble my Unal year." That doesn't mean lhat Plunkett hasn't thought about the lleimu1n Trophy and the statu~ 11 well as the bar1ainlng power that goes with being t1elected the be1t college football player In the nntlon. "Certainly, I've thought about II.'" he said. "I've dreamed ot w:nnlng the He:lsman Trophy ever 1lnce 1 was a kid throwing the ball around." Plunkett was a kid In San Jose. llis mqther Jost her eye!ight before Jlm was born. His father, who worked as a waiter and a new1 vendor, was afflicted with progreulve blindness. · It wasn't an easy childhood for the young boy and two older sisters. But Jin1 learned lo throw the ffiotl)llJI on a t'Om- munity playground, slso wrestled, played basi:ball and ran in track. Now, as a senior at Stanlord, he i3 one of the best -·a top candJdale for the quarterback honors. His coach, John Ralston, says he can lay the ba11 in a water paU at 20 yards and bit a running target «I yards away. Ile· has lhe pro scouts drooling. "Winning the Hetsman Troplly is never easy for anyone and thl1 year It will be e!pccially tough because there are 90 many fine quarttrbacka," the !2-year-old St.anford Mar said. lie b lJl New lu." with a group of academic All-Americans, football 11tars who made the grade al.so in lbe c1 .......... 1 - ''This really looks like the yea r of quarterbacks," Plunketl added. "There are Chuck Hixson of Southern 1'1ethodlst, Archie Manning oC Mlsslssippl Joe Theismann of Noti;e Dame and Re~ Kern of Ohio State. You can pick out a dozeo olher1. "I've seen most of them on television, one way or another. Ptlanning is terrific. He's a roll-out passer who can also run. So can Kern. llixson i.ii rrwre the proset type. He's a tremendous thro)Ver with great poise. I saw Thelsrnann on TV from the Cotton Bowl. He's nashy and very ex.. citing.•· Plunkett takc5 his sea!IOn·s dtbut Sept. 12 against Arkansas at Little Rock In a natlonally televised game. They 'll see a strapping alh!CU With a ri!le ann and a strong pair of legs. ··rm essentil11\y a pocket passer but I've been doing niore roll-out.I," Plunkett said. "I grew up watchlng Johnny Unltu 11nd Bart Starr. l\1y ambition alwaya hu been 10 be able 10 throw like Unit~ and be a strategb\ Ukc Starr." -; .. ~ ., , I ., • ' j I f JI DAILY •ILOT Davis Cup Retirement Threatened NEW YOJlK -Because ol lhe P>IS!billt1 tennis' -would compete this may be the laat year ol the Davis Cup. Dw\ght F . "Pete" Davis, Jr., 1''hoSe father ftnt dcmted the cup for amateur competition in 1900, said he would retire it after this year U contract pros an alloftd lo participate. Davis' remarks wu.e made in an in- ltrview with Murray Janoff in TUesday'1 Long hland l'!<ss. Davis said he has been approached by the: U.S. Lawn Tennis Association of· r)Cfa)s, trying to fttl t>i., fllll about allow- ing contract pros to compete for the cup "When my father donated lht cup ~re Yt'IS a spirit of competition ht was ied.inc," said Davis. "It waa: a spirit for nmtions to compete with each other and at least every other year to bring out the players and apread the game to all coun- tries. "But if the pros are allowed to partieipat.e, which country could get into the challenge round besides the U.S. and Australia? No other country has the con- tract pros capable of winning. "I can't see the acceptance of prOJ in this. It 'l\'Dtlld driinitely kill the spirit of the cup u it w u rtven. •• • SEATl'LE -The Untvmity of Oregon was awarded the National Collegiate Athletic Association track and field championship TUesday for the plvotaJ 1172 Olympic year. The award was made by the NCAA's Eucutlve Commlt1'e holding Its annual late swnmer meeting here. A special meeetlng of the NCAA 's 11-man Es:- ecutive c:ouncil is to begin htre Wed- naday. Charlu M. Neinas, assistant e1eculive director of the NCAA, also announced tm rites for the four regional basketball championahlpo. West Vitgtnla University waa awarded the East Re1ion&1 champlorulhips, the University of Dayton the Mkteut: Iowa State Unlver&.ity the Midwest and Brigham Young University the Wtst Division championships. All are to be held March 16-11, 117%. The 117% naUonal championshjps are to be held in the Los An1elea SPoMI Amla. • Quarterback Roman Gabri.I, wllo missed act.Im last Saturday Naht becaua of a IDl't knee, worked out with the Loi Ana:eles Rams Tuesday at Cal Slal< <FullerfDn). 1be veteran team leader appeared to be movin1 wdl. Coach Geor1e Allt• haa aald be HpecU Gabriel lo play Saturday nlghl when the Oak-Raiders tangle with the Ram.I at the Los Anj:elea Coliseum. Gabriel "" no terV!ct last Saturday when the Harm but Dallas 17-10. Defemlve end Greg Schumacher, a three-year veteran from IUiMla, was placed on the "waJved 11 injured" list when Xraya indicated two fractured vertebrae in the lower back. • Jockey BUI Shoemaker, who won One raca: at Dtl Mar Monday and needl only %1 more to Ue Johnny Lon1den's career mark of &,032, was excus.ed from his mounts attu complalnUi.1 of a aore back. • SAN DIEGO -All Pro 1uard Walt Sv;eeaey ls rejoinlnl the San Dieeo Char1er1 after a two-day retirement which he says he regrets. "J made a rat.her hasty and emotional decision," the el pit-year veteran 1aid Tuesday nl&ht. Sweeney said he wants the protection d a no-cut cla111e in his co11.tracl, aa yet Wlligned. He aald, "I nted protection in caae I would eo and break my lea and couldn't play aa:ain." • ONTARIO -A one-day juriidiction strike put aside, workers are back on the job preparina the $25.5-millio11. Ontario 1'fotor Spe«tway for ill inaurural evsnt, the S.pt. I California 500. About 400 workua refused to cross picket lines ·eltabUahed Tuesday morning by the Bulldlna Trades Council of Riverside and San Bernardino counties. But they wtre bad: Ofl the job In the af\a"nOOn aft.er the cou..01 agreed with the Team1ttta to hold a representation elecUon in 10 days. • DARIEN, Conn. -Two members of the U.S. CW1ll Cup team, medal~! Martha WUkinson and 17-year-old Nancy Hagtr of Dallas, Tex., meet in the open- ing round of match play In the U.S. Women'• Amateur GoU Olampionshlp to- da,y. 1 Wfdnt$CllJ', AilOUSl 19, 1970 James Gets Last Crack at Offense '" By PKTL ROSS ot 1M O.llY f'li.t l l•H Cary James hu been a great olfwive back at Rancho Alamitos High for lht put couple of years. But the S-1 ~~. 185-pound athlete is wil· ling to accept his ·1nevit.ble destiny as a ddenslve apeciallsL Thursday night's 11th annual Orange County North-South football classk at On.nje Coast College may be the last cl\anc:e James will have or lugging the pigskin from scrimmage. 1be UCLA-bound speedster will be starting on offense for North coach John Callard (James' prep tnf:ntor at Rancho) at a running back slot and will also be in the opening Yankee defensive secondary at free safety. llowever, be discloses, "At UCLA they have me penciled in as a secood·string running back and a first-stringer at strong safety. But since you have to specialize there, I •xpect to play strictly on defense." Another possible factor in James' im· mediate future as a defensive specialist .... i.11 be the presence of Jim l\otcAlister, Kermit Johnson and Jim Upchurch at UCLA. J\.tcAlister and Johnson, bot'h ~aduatc~ of Pasadena's Blair Hlgh and James' South teammates in the recent Shrine game in Los Angeles, and Upchurch, a Valle;o product who ptrformed for the North In the Shrine foray, are all ultra-talented running backs. Concemlng the current subject at hand, the Orange County North.SOUth contest, Ja~s says, "It'll be· a real pleasure playing in tht gltn!"f°'""'oach Callard. "He's probably the one single person who bas helped me most with my pro. gress thus far." Callard has been coaching at Rancho for five years and his teams have cap- tured thrte Garden Grove League titles and the Crestview loop diadem In the school's last year In that circuit. Callard calls James the best back the Garden Grove League bad last season. The veteran mentor elaborates, "Gary was the belt back in the league lut year, but (Ken) Eppethtlmer (Soulh back from La Quinla) w11 probably a lltUe better when both were junlota becaUH: he car- ried the ball more." James was 1 quarterback In his sophomore year but was ahlfted to hls present halfback slot for hls last two prep campalgna. Rancho went 7-2 in his junior year and came back to Improve to &-2 when Jamea was a senior, losinJ only to Foun~ Valley in a pre-league Wt and to Glen- dora in the CIF playoffs. James' two biggest thrllb In hllh school were beattna crosstown rival Garden Gmvt f« the league UtJe (Jamea aoored the wUmlnJ touchdown in the Ul:te decider) and wnln1 1 berth In 1be Shrine clmic. 1 The Lons Buch native JCOred 10 Um.es for the Garden Grove loop tltllsts but claims defense was the forte of the Rancho eleven. "Our 1oal was to build a wall Oft defense to stop the other teams and we were pretty 1ucceuful. · "In fact, there's nothing more ucitinS than setting an interception and runnptl it back for big yardaae." be concludes. In spite of his defensive prowess, ·o'nl C8Jl bet' thal John caUard is hoping GV)' James can be • arut offenslve back fat at least one more came. ' ' Personnel Changes / Pack Will Be Bae%~ -But Not This · Year GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -The "Pack will be back," but 1970 probably won't be the year. Coach Phil Bengtson has almost com- pletely rebuilt the famed Green Bay Packers who swept three consecuUve Na.. Uonal Football League tilles and two Super Bowl championships in 1965-&M7 • Retirements: forced most of the changes, while trades accomplished lhe rest. The green-and-gold~lad warrior• atill around who were vital parts of those. Golden Years include quarterback Bart Starr, now In his 15th NFL season; wide receiver Carroll Dale, center Ken Bowman, guard Gale Cillln1ham; defensive end Lionel A Id r Id I e , linebackers Dave Robinson and Ray Nitschke and defensive backs Willie Wood and Bob Jeter. Gillingham Is the youngster of the group at 26, whlle AJdridge and Robinson are 29 each. Bowman is %7; Date 32; Nitschke, Wood and Jeter, each 33 and Starr 36. While Green Bay might have improved itself with trades and the college draft, it is not believed the Packers can catch either Minnesota or Dttroit who they finished behind in the C.en~al Division last season. Starr is a proven leader, bul injuries have cut deeply Into his playing time· the. last two seasons. Don Hom, a fourth-year man out of San Diego State, could pro- vide the Packers with a more exciting at- was on the ta1i squad last seuon, or rooitjes Ken Ellis ol Southern, . • speedster, and Alvin Matthews; the 'le- eond round draft choice from Te1as A&d. The rest of the defensive backfield f• mains Intact: Wood at the other col!ler and Jet.er and Doug Hart at the safeties. Ken (klwman hasn't been ousted from the ctn'ter job since hallway through the first super bowl game in 1967. He'a,rlank· ed by gumis Bill IAleck and G~ and tackles FraftCl.s Peay and ~ Himes. Area Albacore~ .; . ,. Bass Fishing · ' " Improves Ralph Hilgins, out for a haU-daf ol fishing pleasure on the Sum Fun oat ol San Clemente Sportfishin& I an d·t J\,, returned with two prize fish over tht weekend. Higgins was one of lS passengers ·on skipper Jon Mansur's half-day boat 11ong the coast when things became a .Utt.It dull. ,. ,. + tack if he· takes over tor Starr. Hom also is more erractic. Mansur, never one to sit around I~. headed for deep waters and four miles offshore from San Onofre, ran into a school or albacore. Higgins boated two,f4- pounde.rs and balance ·of the passen~ brought 15 more fish to 1alf wifh an VERSATILE BARON -Fountain Valley High's Gary Valbuena will be used as a split end in Thurs~ day night's 11th annual North-SOuth Orange County Football game at Orange Coast College. The talent- ed Baron is also ca pable of quarterbacking the team should it become necessary. He's sparkled at both positions in practice. Moro--Specialis.t at Work By ROGER CARLSON ot llM DMI' ,, ... II•" At s.101,'t and 187 pounds, you'd hardly term him a runt. However, when Huntlngt-On Beach High's Paul Moro stations himself at his Unebackln1 posllion for the South Thurs- day night In the I 1th aMual North.SOUth Orange County football game at Orange Coast College, he won't exactly tower o\'er his rivals. But despite the disadvantage in relative si:r.e, Paul Moro seems to get the job done. He did it well enough last year to lead his defensive-minded Huntington Beach teammat~ to a 7-% overall record and reaped several individual awards. under coach Ken Moats with his seek and destroy tactics st linebacking. fltoro and the rest of his Rebel mat.es \vo rked under the ligh ts again Tuesday night al Tustin High and wrap up the practice sessions with a one-hour light workout today at Foothill High. Rebel coach Ed Bain of Foothil l prais- ed the ex-Oiler, stating, "He's really a quick boy. He seems to know where the ball i! going all the time." One spot Benatson is not worried about is nmning back, where he can call on flve veterans with impressive credentials. 'l'he most explosive are speedsters Travis WiUiams and Dave Hampton, while Perry Williams. Donny Anderson and Jim Grabowski are only a step behind. The running back spots .are so well fortified that Bengtson traded vtteran Elijah Pitts along with offensive lineman Bob Hyland and linebacker Lee Roy Caf- fey to the Bears for Chicago's No. I draft pick. With the choice the Packers picked massive Mike McCoy of Notre Dame and immediately put the 6-loot-5, 284-pounder into the right tack le spot left vacant by the retirement of Henry Jordan. Aldridge Is still one of the best in the business at right end, while sophomore Rich f\toore, &"'6, 285, is at left tackle and Bob Brown, 6-5, 270, is at left end, giving the Packers one of the biggest front lines in pro football. Nitschke is tlanked at linebacker by Robinson, recuperating from a cracked rib suffered in practice, and Fred Carr, the Packers' top draft choice in 1968 who has taken over for the departed Caffey. The unexpected retirement of Herb Ad- derley has left a big hole at left corner. back . Bengston will fill the post with nerback . Bengtson will fill the post with Leon Harden of Tuaa -El Paso, who Among hi.s laurels were first teanl honors as a linebacker on the All.Sunsel Le.ague and All-Orange Coast Area t'levens, a second-team choice on the All· Orange County unit and a lhird·team l."hoice in ClF AAAA circles. Monday's routine was a typical day for Moro during Ole recent workouts in preparation for Thursday's showdoY1n with the North. Major League Standings PAUL MORO The native Ohioan turned oU the alarm at 3 a.m., worked an eight-hour shift on the beach crew al Huntington Beach, slept for a couple of mid-afternoon hours, reported lo practict apd returned home at 10:30 p.m. -just In lime to eo back to sleep. Like many other Oiler standouts of the past, Moro will continue hl, education and football fortunet at Orange Coast College. His long.term goal Is coaching follow· in,R; his collegiate activities. f\ioro. a co-captain for the ~outh In Thursday's skirmish. came to Huntington Beach from Scottsdale, Ari:r.., and it was April Fool's Day when the Moros touched home in Huntington BeRch. He made fools out of several enemy runnin1 backt-for the next two-years NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh New York Chicago St. Louii; Philadelphia J\lonlreal Cincinnati Dodgers Atlanta East Division W L 68 65 64 56 83 60 57 65 " 66 52 70 \Vett Dl\·lslon 82 ., 68 52 60 61 San Francisco i;o 61 Houston " San Diego 4! Tu.\f•,'I ll:IMllh MOnlrNll 7, CIMllllll!I 4 All•nll J. f'lll!Ht!Dl!lt t N....,. Vor~ 1, HOu11Grl I Lff A"ttlt1 l, SI, LDul\ f S•n 01'!'00 n. Cllk•.e ' ~lttsbv!'Vlrl; SI" ''11"Clfal ! T .. •~'I O•m•1 67 75 Pct. GB .553 .533 211i .512 5 .467 1011.t .450 121~ .426 m; .661 . 567 II .... 20'• .... 20'> .446 26 '> .390 331~ Hol.lllotl (l l11lntMM Hj •t Ne"' Yaric !St•Y11r 11·1) AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore New York Detroit Boston Washington Cleveland l\o1innesota Angfls Oakland Milwaukee Kansas City Chicago East Division W L 71 •• 66 ... 65 56 82 57 53 63 57 64 Wnt Division 71 47 68 ... 67 SS 46 76 45 7g 43 II ,....,., •• •-lh ltl!IMOA J, Ml!wMlllH I Ctlli.n1t1 lt. Cltvtlt !l<ll 1 0.lroll 3. OHi-I Ml""''°" I. Nrw VOl'll f 9o1ton-I ; Chic-• Ktft~tl City 1', W•lll111•fl'" I , ... ,.., ....... Pct. GB . 636 .SSS 10 .... 7 11 .~I 14 .479 19 .471 20 .602 .562 411 .M9 I .!77 27 .377 27 .!47 31 equal number 1etting away. .., Landing manager Don Hansen says San Clemente has no plans for runnint an albacore special and the fl.sh were rn.Is&o Ing when Mansur's Sum Fun attempted a repeat performance the next day. Inshore fishing has been fair for bass: and bonito and a lar1e number of email yellowtail are seen daily. lncldentally. Mamur boated a 21-pounder on Ftiday and Ed Wilt of Orange brought In a 13- pounder. Half-day boats run at &:30 ;..,; 7:30 and again at noon and l o'clock each day. The all-day boat gou at I in the mornlne with .a twfllght special at 5:30. ' · Art's Landing In Newport Bf'ach reporU that the bass bite is holding .up well and that albacore are running fall\ A tew yellowfM tuna to 40-pound,rf, .are being caught on the albacore bofts ~ the three-quarter day boat. , , At the moment. the albacore speoi~ i! going eo to 70 miles offshore to find lhe longflns. Davey's Locker reports a 1 b t C'ti'r e fishing pleked up Tuesday after a ~ weekend. 1bt Sea Horse had IO fish ~on board at 10 o'clock Tuesday mornlng·at 1 point some 70 miles out to sea. Locally, bass. bonito and barracuda are still holding the limelight with 1 om e yellowtall showing but few beln& caught. DEAN LEWIS• AUaUST SPICIAU SPIC I AL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON =$1117 AIOthrM ...... .._. M.tl~nct:.,_ L-4 ·c.i,._a C""" ,, ,. VO.LYO..::"... - Swim Records • Ill Jeopardy Sa" Fr1nc:lt" OMtktltl .. ,, II f'ltt11>urell IWtlti,tr 10.)1, ni.M 1.91 """lff fMatllt • U, II SI. Loul1 CC1rt1on t-111, nlel!I Pl!l!Pt!Dl'llt IWIH It-Ill •! oOl1n!1 (J1l'Vl1 u .. 10), n1t111 1'1""'" INltkro 11.10J ., o .. i.1111 1s.. ... 1 ,.,,, 1111111 Citv•i.ncl CC,,tc• 1·1) fl C .. lflfrwM 1Wrl9M l~t). 1119h• 11111-. ICllfll•r 11·7) t i Mllwt"*• CLIKll• -1.n. 111111t N-V~ (,,,.,_ 1>7l t i M~t !Z- t-1), nleht Nlnelern world m:ords appear in jeopardy as the tt70 Amateur Athletic AslodaUon's outdoor swlmmlng cham· ptooshlps slltt on Thursday al the Lot Anctlff Swim Stadium. Record holders and Olympic champions from IS natJons art expected !or the four da)'I ol competition. 111111' Spits and Debbi< M•itr of Ult United Slal<I, uch • hoklet o/ three worid r-dl. wtll be oo l\ind. So "1ll I• ,.j auch champion& ., ti.llkr: Burt.on, Olympic a0ld medalist in lhe l,500 meter freestyle , Gery Hall of Garden Grove. the rirst man in history to win four Individual evenl..'l al the AAU Indoor championships last 1prll'l1, and Susan Atwood of Long Beach, who set two American marks a year ago. P'ellpt Munoz of Mexico, who ci:iptured lht Olympic gold ml!'dal In the 200-meter back1t.roke. heads a big foreign con. Unimt which al~ , lncludes Jf ii n • ., Fass nacht of \Vest Cern1any, \\.'ho holds the "'orld record in the 400-meter freest yle at 4 :04.0. P11ssnacht batUes Burt on in both the 'OCl and the l.50G frtestylc races wherr. the latter holds the world record at 16 :04.S. With John Kinscll11 of lllnsdalc, 111 .• also In the race, there appear pr~ ,;pteU for the first tlmt under II mlnutts. t MCMl"t~I cwev-r ... I .. Clfttlftn.111 /Ntl•n u"''· nt•llt '"" Dleff (llabtMI 1·10) ., C~l~ta fJtnkln• ''""! K•11111 (lty !Or ... '1·tl ti Wtllllt!tltn IC•i. m•11 S.11. 11i.1i1 C~tc ... /MIUtr M ) •t 116tl0ft l h l'"'1 IM! DEAN i.EWIS 1966 HARBOR ILVD .. COSTA MESA 646-9303 Strvlee, Parts, & Body Shop 1 Now Optn Untll I p.m. Mond•y Nights I I Orange County's La rgest and h1ost Modern Toyot• and Volvo Dealer r ·- ~If $466 •StJl782 I ' lff7 • TOYOTA CORONA ' Jtd•11. lltHla. H•I.,, ""'IOl!lllllc: trw, !V•V Jl7l • r $1095 ,· .. ----__.__ ~ ----·~ ~~· • • -----~------------------------------------- ... Start Your Eng~11es! .. ,by . ~···~ Deke Hou/gate " ... !:i-;~en the drivers round turn 4 and head for the gtten fl,11g tw'.'.)vu1 signal the start of the California 500 Sept. 6 ~t . Ontario . .tfoW, Speedway, there is nothing safety minded offJC1als can 'T.lie race will be in the hands of the drivers. ~ i·:lnat is the realistic view of Ule man responsible for the safety and conduct of 33 brave men that diiy, J . Gordon Betz· Betz pointed out that some Of. the n_iost thoughtful peopie In auto racing have contributed to the design of the $25.5 million r acing plant. The latest and most efficient in communications 5ystems will link key officials. The finest visibility a chief stew· ard has ever had Ydll give Betz instant information on which to act. Almpitos ·Racing E11tries -I "' "' lrl "' "' '" l~ •N "' ·~ ·~ ·~ But on that first lap there is nothing that can be done to SECOND RACE. 150 v•n:1~. l ve•r prevent disaster except inside one of the . race car,s. ~11~,mf~ ,~k', f::."1"9· p...,.M 1000· "Going in to tum 1," Belz said, -.is like being in the eye of r..':e ~·8':1 1c1;~:~:l ll~ a tornado. You are just swept along. You are in "'lth 11 rows t_:lde~i~r /}J:l',~""1 Jl: of cars. You can't do much about backing off, or you get hit ~:'11'(1~ !~~:~, l~ by the guy in back of you. You can't move up or you nin out oI 1 ~~~1~H~'/.:'.e;1i;-t1 l~ room. Every car .. has a full tank of gas, and the tires aren't coo.mce• w1r cM, 1F1nc11trJ 11' Flebbl!r lH••<l~nol 111 scuffed in yet. That is the most dan~rous time of the race. 51, 111111~rieci ~:i1.~r1b1• 111 "The driver' who makes big trouble is the man who tries to ~:1,~ti,'.,~O:i:.~~1.r.,~lrl ll:. HIT FULL IRON SHOT INTO GUARDED GREEN Today's illustration shows agree" that is guarded· on all sides by trouble. When such a green is $mall ••. such as the 7th at Auausta National shown here ••• you must be very careful about planning your strategy on· the hole. Leave yourself at leaat a full wedge shot on tne approach. If you don't, you may not be ablt to p1.1t enough backspin on the bill to make it li!ind and hol d on the green. The wise golfe 111 will use less club thin a driver off the tee in the situition. Sy hitting the shorter tee shot, yo1.1 allow yourself the chine• to put full backspin on your approach. 11.0 1mtu.n.-...,.__ Los Alamitos w ....... -19, 1970 DAILY PILOT J 7 Mauro Wins Se11iors Title At Rancho San ]oaq.uin Andy ?i.1auro closed with a COsla Mesa Golf and Country ry Bell combined talentJ for a low net score of 13$ for two Club over the weekend. .800re of 61 lo win first pl.a<."t.. rounds or play to win the Ge<irge Dembach bad a low S Rancho San Joaquin seniors •-auta An• If b · 1 net of 85 for first place . go tournament y a Slng e Richard Van Metre was next Members are current 1 y • stroke over Frank Beckman 1 (137) last weekend . wilh 86 fol~ by R. W. practicing ror the upcomillg Bill Asher (138) finished in Jaeger and Steve Woodroff .men's club champioosb.ip com- third place in the tourney for (&?) Gary Orton (6&) and P. petition at Sama Ana COuntry players over so. Taormina, Jack Lancaster and Club. · ·• I Bob Darnell (69). ln a m.txcu coup es tourney, Jaek Van Rossem will de· Bill Winters teamed with Lclr· In a women's most pars raine Peterson and Mr. and tournament, Inna llavens won fend his title on two successive Mrs. Orrin Wright for a low A flight with 12 followed by Vi weekends in September in a net score or llO. Another team lloskins with 11. 72-bole stroke play com· composed of Mr. and Mn. Hal Maxine Asthmu.s and Jean petition. Action starts Sept. 5-6 Hoagland and Mr. and Mr s. Creighton tied for first place and cone.I~ Sept. 11·13, William Ritter tied for first in B flight with 10 and Elise 'llle eight low 5COf't!! after 3& place in the best ball <H' Stipes won C flight with 13. holes plus ties will cmnptte foursome competition. · Signups are now being taken for the championship with In a ladies best nine com· in the pro shop for Sunday's balance of the neld competing petition, Pat Pennywell had a thlrd annual f ather · s o o . in the masters flight for the 34 to win the A flight com· father-daughter tournament . final 36 holes using low net petition . Action will get under way at l scores with full handicaps. Martha Kennedy came in o'clock. with a 34. to win the B flight Jtlesa Verde competition while Mi 11 i e 1'1lle Squa-re In a n..-.. tner's best baR of Stevens had 36 to win in C 1 ,.-flight. Betty Blakemore scored Jack·Steingraber fired a low foursome tournament a1 Mesa ~rte,ak, up on the inside or outside and gain posiUons at the start. F111v Ra~•I ILIPh•"' ns ~hiiflicials can't spot him, because there are 33 cars to watch, ::!~O you can't watch them all. ;I 1 r~'rhere's not much we can do about the start except impress ~jirlvers \vith the importance of getting into that first turn a 3611: to win the D Uile. gross 70 to win a club pro golf Verde Country Club last tournament at Fountain Valley weekend. Bob and Pug Lit· Next big tournament at San Mile Square Golf Course ~fon-tleton teamed with Joe and ••r, Ar 1 ••r. L~ '""· A lU~tiv Joaquin will begin Sept. 19 and day afternoon. Pat Chartrand Billie Sparago to finish with a Racing Results Twt5dlY, .1111. 11, lt1f LOS .tU.MIT05 ltf.SULTS Clt1r a '••I ,.,.,.,,, °"" e.r·• •••••· M·-,, v-, run for five ~ekends. It is the nd 'th -nd "" ""' was s-w1 a '" a f1'vc 0 -re ol 57 for "1-t place ~~y." FtllST It.tel. 11:/J v1r111o. M&ld111 2 vNir otos. Cl1tm!"•· Purtt tlfllO. E1•. annual Hlgh·Lo'* event with .... v .,._., u... · scr11c11M -Fir •ov11. c. 0e vi... pai~ings being made •·pt. 12. pros including ho6t Skip Whiu. Donna and Chuck Worth O.rt. °"''-" a.r1VnJ1t, Trw 1toc11: J•11e. .. "" et lied for third with 73. played with Grace a n d "°""™ •1oc1. 110 v•r"•· ' vHr Costa Mesa Ol'hets included Cecil Harri~. Richard Hooker to score a f)S old• •llcl ~ ciaim1,,.. '""'"' uooo, M nt Bind tt H C . I nd J. nd P ~.,~~: Bet= H'UI Break Tt•adlllon Mr, Quarh Hin (Ad1lrl •.«I 2.llO t ,40 on 0)ddy (L11>harnl J.«I 2.41 P8"9'1 T0111 (PtVtl 4 . .0 ol'!li nBetz will break the Indianapolis tradition and oversee the ·~"'~rom a vantage point high in the tower O\ler the starting Vik. like ao asslatant coach at a football game. But that assist· ant coach relays whal he see1 to bJs boss on the bench, whUe Betz will have the option of informinR the other two ranking ofrlclals, conferring \\'Ith them or issuing direct orders. Tl°"': :20-1(111. si.r ev111 (C1rmz11 10 . ..o 1.60 '·"° o e ge , arry apon1 or seco . 1m a eggy c11t11 Oeck fAdllri 4Jo '·"" Roy Stoddard fired a low and M.!inuel Quezada. Henderson teamed w i t h AIMI ran -Old liomtSlltd, KIY'1 SOllr. Bit 0' Bar, A:t~rtlt, Mortom, TO<> Rocket Gtl, Burnt M•rb!e. Scr~lctitd -Jottehlo, WM WOP. ·~.~~r,;L~""1 3·20 gross of 69 to win a men 's In the best bell pro-pro cont· Charlotte and Stan Wood for "*• "" -F•11CY w1now, "•"1c1".. sweepstakes tournament at peliU011, Glen Dunlap and Ter· third place at 59. lllack Fr•,.i., LeM'I Mtrk. !ECONO ltAClf. 400 vtrl!-!i. l Yttf aldt •rid vP. Clalmlng. "'"'' 'lf(l(I. ,.,.., lrlt.11 l~u.. Gold911 l"ufflo, 1t111''liro;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i;;;;i;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;~;;i;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;i.;;i;;;;;i;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;ii.;;;;;,;;,;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"1 McCor. 5Cf'UcMd -IM !Mr1t•r, Lfl!lt Oblf, Mr. LCllll Shot, Ch1r91r lff. •l.'le other two men in Bctz's team are Boots Archer, the ref. :rH, -OIJ the infield or pit side of the starting line. and Dick King, tht stewtfrd. standing alongside the starter in a cupola·llke structure outside the starting line. Ti)eir coonnterparts at lndlanapolla station themselves in the pits, Wber.e they have a Jtood view only of the main straightaway and have to rely on lesser officials to keep them informed of whal is going on where they can't see. "Keepi ng the three officials togelht'r ls proba~ly the best 1vJ1.iem for lndianapolis," Betz said. "But here it would be a '\ ~ .... , 1AAfrte not to take advantage of the fact that yo u can see all fH°i;'b'lbe track. • t) , ''l never tbOugbt about putting an official In the grandstand before I left active olflc lating Jn 195-1 and went up in the press . ,btx.;-W \\'atch races. From up above, many times I have seen MeJl. accidents were about to happen that ~·ere invi sible to ~,officials down on the track. I wtshed I could have told &hem '" "' '" '" '" '" "' "' "' ·~ Idle oivo~r 1Str•uul n.oo 1.e S.00 BuMy·~ St$! (Orevtrl J,«I t ,llO Bald¥ 116cket tL!pJ\11111 s.to Tlmt: .21).j/10 . .tlMI r1n -O...tltr 111~ t ov, Mr. Pete a •• , Rocky B••Ch H•~k. Sovlh- wt'llt'n. ClllcktOOO:lt , SPY C1tchef", ll•rrld ,.CP. scrD1c~ed -c 111sv Toni. II•" For Luck. Cut Otek. Trut Varldv. 12 l<llGKTL'f ooliilE-. •· ""'· Qul •h HUI & l . ldlt 01191r, ... 141 JIN.ti. ,.N1RD ltACI!. ;;;-;1rd1. M1hltn 7 Y••' aid~. Cl1\Mlnv. Purl• snoo. MIU lth~a CMC (P.,..,f"'l 41J0 11.00 1.20 Ano1her Cu~ld (Sml!hl J.IO t .IO Trol>llV S•tlther !P&9fl l.OD Tlrnt: ,21 -J/10. Aloo r1n -F•llllon City, SptMIY S&ll Deep Sea Fish Report somebo,v:• ,".'.b: •' aim Snfely is 1'Joitt Co11ee11trutio11 5.tH C.LlM•HTE -2(17 ·~.~·; rn bo'1'ill', 171 .,.,._ 3' b&rr~I, ll "' "' "' "' ~ ... <>J rt t.ike the names ch.ief steward. steward and referee imply, b!~~{1~\'.~1r~·~kna~ b&H, 1 " ... • o • o~a.•o -160 1ntltn 1 11 11anw1. ~-•·re the working officials who keep the competitors from SEVENTH 1t.1cE. Jso v1n1~. J vNr 1.or, _, ,, r0tk c«1. 11 1Lr19 too. 1 ~,, old• &nd llP . .tllaw1nce .. Pwro' 52100. wh l~ __ ltf ~ ... ti bMllO. 0 f'e!sing and who certify the order of finish. However. be-The Jo11n SlrtY. NEYtPO•T 1arr 1 L•11Ctl11t! -,,. , Go l8rnb (PerMrl 1n &lllll~n: 16 111Mcoro, 1 ye!lowt1n, 3S caUse or the perilous nature of the sport, they concen trate more Mr. GP oev11 c.tPOd•c•I 1?11 barr•(v<I•· ,, 11on110. ,,, 11111,•""" h . °""Of T~H (LIPh1rn) 111 c(ld ~ mackeril. (OIVIY'I L&C: If) --~64fety than any other aspect of l e race 1tsel[. SWtt• P~"''' \H8rt) n 200·.11111e,.1" 11~•1, °' ve11ow1~1.1, . ' h lh be t k t h di Ra." Mena~ (Smith) 111 6 IUlll.) wtl,11• tel blU. -37 blOI. -'" ~·~.:we ired e two s men we no\v o an e emergency Laav BonQll!''' cAd11r1 111 tionito, ,5 b&'rr•ty111.' hallbUt, u rOtll -AQ\lipment," Betz said. One is .Clarence Cagle, superintendent of c°til.tL,Jt.tCM -151 1r1111eru 19' • tlGHTM ... c~. Ull v1•di. l Yei'r borillo. blU u b.lrr1(\l([I. ••r•• - 1 L.AM. .... polis Speedway. and the .other 1s Charles Thompson. 0111~ 1no vP. Allow1"'''· P111H moo. 1u 1m11eru u'1bonito.11 b•••,.. 1 , ~-TM MtOon~IHlovgl1~. I.ONG l&ACH (f'ltl'l'olllt LIO Ill -Jn addition to a fleet of fire trucks, ambulances and tow Tuft Bou tP,rnlll"J in 11t 1nql•n: 10 11!1>1Q1rt. 1 vtnowt81t. · th I • f'-W•!Ch E!I \A<ialrl lU 616 c1nco b&11, la bt!ll!a. 1 twollbUI, M12 1atcts, Ontario will introduce to racing e word s ust motor· Go"' Mite L11>111m1 119 rock c«1. 11,i.nont 1"1tr1 -51 111111•.,: ·~ii..... f Olv!dtnd'• Ba~ !CrosbYl 111 101 twt•I. •~ bo!'llto, 1 111llbllt. llat9f -.,,15 Jremen. ~!5'~1: T~Q" !H1;n1nv) n: 6S tnvi.r1; lO Ytll-ttlt. I blrr•WOI• ,Jsr:1PJght men on Yamahas, strategicall y placed around the g~fnc~ ,.'r:.a G'o"~Mo.,111 1n 1 bl1ck '" 1o111. n1 t111co 11111.-us ~tti;;e, will be able to carry fire extinguisher1J' into those tough ~!':· 1"to1to 1n11c1 11. L1111111111 -'•""~ on th• track 1·n lraff1'c long before a fire truck could move. H•NTH ••c;E. * ••rds. 1 ve•r 0100. 1e111 •ng1irr11 1s 11blco••· 1 yt1towt111 pul') Cla!mlng. Purse »XIO. Cl&lmlnt PrlC• luM, ~ blu.lln 111n1, 1' (11ico bin, 4 =,.,EM \C8<d018) 119 b•llOO!. "' bonito. tH•rm'I L.IOIMll~t) ... ,_,. r,: f•nce Car (tJ Slo1«' Ca11i io1a Laps P8•1urn R_,,1 <Ptrn,ri ut -11s •nv11r11 s.1 11b&ec••· 1 tHi•· ........ . .. Flv Pelt• (Drfyl!I'} 119 ••tUd8, 11 bonito. 119 {lllCP btu, 1) " of A Goin Mtn (ll1nks) nl •8~~ b~•~. , .~·,,· • _rom the spectator's polnt of view_ • Betz's use of lbe par.t. senor P1n<11 ttlph•ml ,., OCE.tNStDE -111 '"'1''" t blr. • .,, Our Dttl1lon Ht•t) 11t ••cun•, 1•2 bonito, UI blH. I wll!ll car on yellow nag cautloD laps wlll add some pitUIZJ, although ~11en1 Sune 1 1rn111111 116 '" 1>o>.,, • .,..11ow1•11., h1lltov1. 4 tuM . L!ltt• L&dY Ree• !Crcsbv) 111 M.tLllU -110 tl'>lller1: 50 U llCll ''"" ltAC:I. UCI Ylf'dl. , Vffr olds. All-ln«f. l"llrM $n00. H• ll11trel"t ILll'l'l•l'lll 7.60 ).'° 3.00 Ml11 Httrt Tllrlltl fH•rd!nt ) !.00 1.66 Bold $1!1V <f>&H) i.20 Tl,...•: .ll·t/10. Alto r1n -0..blt A•1I". I)., M111V Joe. Trolr A o."11. $1>1dt M1<:*1v, Trltl• C Truly, llltotn Clrtf . s~r•lchld -T11 aw. 90CTM lt&C:•. t10 y1rdt, J vur tldl •rid OP. Clllml111. "'""' siooo. F1rw1rd l•tt.rv (Clrcloz•l 1!.61) I.Ml •.to ,._,,111 MlfllCI\ IL-r!1) 22,IO 11.'° Th,.. C1ll1 {Mll'tudll 5,,, Time: ,47·:U10. Also flll -l'KlllC S!orM. H1,1rtv Jolin, T• llocktt, GrtY ClllOertlla, IPtllllh LOCktl. Scntdltd -D..U••• a iw. ~ Str1w1, Htnrv TN tlll. TOflY'I SHIO- b&U, SllVEHTM llAC•. 150 Y1nl1. 1 ve1r Olds. All!Jw111c•. l"u•M t:'100. LIM f'tHtr (Htrll •JO t.to 1 . .0 OM..t..11t1tlt l.oh1 (l1n~1) J. '·'° DM·Mlthtv M(IOn (Wtltr1n) J.00 '·'° OM·Lt lfl's Gt Mtn !S,,,tll>J 2AD J.10 Tlmt: ,11·1110. . Aho ,.,. -S\111 l(ltttn, S1err11 OU1"'" .Vtrf , lttdl11M Al~ Doll, l(t'*ll Jtl, l lldl: Jkk, Moon l id. k•t tchtd -Hult!'• llocktl, Cott. llllHdv, 1•lttf 0.-11, Good SIM. DH·Trlpl dMdhMt fllr tKl!ld. •l•HTM llAC•. UO y1rd1. ' Yttr ol41 t l'd "'°' Allow111Ut. '"'™' t71'11 • Solid ltoc~.t ILhlhamJ S.10 2.<IO t .20 Hoblerllt tH""}. 1.60 t .20 Tl11t'ltoi::k•I CAO.Ir) 2..«I Tlmt: .17-t /10. AIM ran -Nlfh' N.tt, llltovlil T1tH 1. Mr. ••'"'"· No ·1cnlcP!ft. HIMTM •Ac•. )!D )'l fcU, 3 Vttr oklt and ""' Cltlm/M. l'llr11 U100. Jatr1re (Ad&lf) lt.00 '·'° S.IO Ltota"• Dl&I (W1tltr\J ).111 JJO ZIPOY H11* IM&lllldt) l .«I Tlmt: .IW/11. AIM r111 -llt•~I CrOllnd. St<IU Coc•t1ll, Sir .,., N loll. Flvr"' COll. Klpty'1 CM>I!, Cando l1~ l11r, CJ\I{ lll'l"'*l l. Ser1ld ,.tl -Wl'ltt Luck. 0orr1 ••• Too, AN{J\t 1"•11111", l !HPY Cllt1'9t. U •X.tCT.t, I · JtH•n & II• Lttll'I IU1t, .. t.11 f111.U. JM!drlver11 aren't likely to be ovcrjoye;d. A:eWt c11 •• 11e c.11111.i 11t ~ ••• • h•'l11v1. 2•0 rock c.oa. 1..s ~~'lite pace car is expect«! to slow caution laps down from 1-iiililiiiiioooooiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;,.iiii;,.;.,iiijiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii the: (ft> m.p.h. they average at Indy to Ill) at Ontario and to ''*l~~eut any margin the leader might have carefull y built up. ..,_ •• 1ttie same device that turns NASCAR stock car races into fJve and six.man 11c'tambles, causing as many as ZO lead changes · hf!~ miles 11f racing. ··1 .. 1"'~'"1" '·Tbe idea l~ to give emergency crews 11n the track a i;afcr , 'p}llcq, to work by bunching the cars up: This enables track work· :,4lf,' 1.,to. gel their johll done quicker and clear the oval sooner for .,r'l$i,g. Betz believes lhat instead of slo\\·iog down the race, the , l!ll~ .ear will actua11y speed things up. P..fany of the drivera don't agree. lie hasn't woo any points ··-Mh'tbem on the pace car li;aue. ... ., t' • ;ri~~·" Veru f'etv Rookies trt 011tn1·i1• .~ry few rookies will be in the Ontario race, as Betz has ~ dea.t to hold time devoted to giving rookie tests to a minimum. ~ .._.~& cnly !)ave two wee~s, instead of a n1onlh like they have • al Indlanapi)lls, and we cn n't squander it on rookie tests. !!'he Comprehensive evening programs toward Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees : eftsher rons over by the following Tuesday," he said. : i .opens on Saturday. and I hope to have the rookie tests and ----- ~ l'1tt Ontario about eight rookict will face a new testing pre>- ; . They will only ha ve to make five laps at each speed : plateau, instead ot the 10 they do at Indy, but they will have to : drive faster. i~-ey'll hil 140, 145, 150 (Indianapolis requirements), then ~ 160 before being allowed lo qualify for the race. : . days anybody can run 150, but the speed differenllal ~ n' UW and 171), where lh<'y'IJ be qualifying, is tremcn-- .. doua," Betz said. "We'rl' culling the number of laps they·n have ~to rt.1\1. because It doesn't take many miles lo tell whether a ~ fello.J's a race driver or noL" : Apron to He1n11in Ilic Same : ~ntarto•1 controversial apron, the fn !Jide Up nf a11pbalt which : s paved on • dllferent plane fr11m the banked t11rn1 •nd thorl t taway1, will stay like it Is despite driver complaiDB, r Bet. ,te•••led. ~ ~.Jilt tline ·track ofRclal1 decided tn correc1 the: problem by ~l ·me It wllb neiv __P.!vlngi it wa1 too late. JQ!' the new as-'° be: cured ht time for the race-. , • • • • VW BRAKE SPECIAL "•llnt 4 WhMI• Machin• 4 Drum• Ch1rh•ul 4 Wh ... Cylln4trt $39.95 I YW SHOCKS ............... $7.95 lostolftd 100.000 ml\r ~nAranh'<-'d (Mt rrro-rated), \\1E DO Al.J.. rOHEICiN CAR S. e DISC tUXI SPECIALIST e COSTA M SA STOr.E ONLY 1111 H«tlMr II~. 54t-4012 ., ,,,. ' ' Systematic, dynamic instruction is given by an outstanding faculty of practicing scientists and engineers holding advanoed degrhs from top universities throughout the nation. More than 12.000 tec hnicians, engineers, a nd administrators-both men and women-have continued full·time employment while working toward their degrees at West Coast University. a.s. degrees In engineering, computer scl1nce, 1ppll1d m1thematk:1, ~ 1ppll1d phyalcs. _ _ ________ --Jl -- M .. S, degr_111 In 1y1tem1 engineering and management ec:lence with eight options tor a ptciallzatlon. New term •tarting: Undergraduate courses begin Oct. 26 at Loa Angeles Center and Nov. 23 at Ora nge County Center. Graduate courses begin Oct. 26 at Los An geles center. Send coupon below or phone for Information. ~!!.~.~,Q!l.,.%tJ!t'lY.!!Sity 550 So. Main St., Orange, e.fir. 92668 · Los Angeles prtone: Orange County phone: (213) 382·1372, E•t.20 (71<) 5<7·5712, Ext.20 Please send Information on: 0 Undergraduate program 0 Graduate progr1m NAME---------------------- AOORESS'---------------''-------CITY _________ STATE ______ ZIP·----- • irt$fone 10-Point BRAKE OVERHAUL All work done by s.killed mechanics using the most modern precision equipment GUARANTEED 2 Years or 20,000 Miles w, ,....,nt" our bnlle linlll,( '"' !hi •PICilkd 11utnl>if ol "'II•• or ,._,. f10111 d1t1 ol h>tltlltlio•. wh~., _... llnl. Arlt::enb Pfl'••tad on mllM-• •!Id on 110..-""'"""' 1111.tnt o( 1djutlmtnl. Not just a reline ... we do all this: 1. Replace brake lining on all ( wh@e l1 'l. Are lining for perfect contact with drwns 3. Rebuild all 4 wheel cylindera 4, 'furn and true brake drumt 5. ~napect master c:-ylinder 6. Repack outer wheel be&tinp on .both front wheel• 7. lnapect brake hoses 8. lruipect brake shoe rt1\urJil aprin111 9. Add super heavy duty brake fluid JO. Road trst car 88 f1resrone Here's what we do: l ~!fn front 3 Adjuet brake shoes to drum 2 Balance both front wheela 4 Repaok outer front wheel bearings -•:•It• (hlflf tor r1r1 wllh torolon Hr1 1r 1tr condllloftlnc. ALL FOR ONLY 95 ~IOA~ American 1·11r.o. Pitta •xlre U aeede4 ,Famous brand SHOCK ABSORBEl\S GET THE 4TH ONLY . Wben7ou '>. buy tbe flnt :it' three at our evel'J'tlay low price. Cant and llgbl truck• firt•tont DLC-100Retreads WHITEWALLS OR BLACKWALLS Other sizes similarly !.-Ow priced I COSTA MESA FIRESTONE STORE 475 E. 17th ST. -646.2444 HOURS: Mon.• Fri., I 1.m. to 7 p.m. -Sat., I 1.m. to S p.m. HUNTINGTON BEACH FIRESTONE STORE 16171 BEACH BLVD. -847-6081 HOURS: Mon ... Fri., I .•. m. to I p.m. -Sit., I e.m. to 5 p.m. COSTA MESA -JERRY HALL 1762 NEWPORT BLVD. -646.5019 HOURS: 8 m. to 5:30 p.m. -Sat,, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m • , --------~~--------=":;:::.--"---"--·--------·------·-----"'---.. ----" ""~ "' -____ ... --------·---~---- I I 1 , JIJ OAILY PILOT Wtd ntsday, Augus:t lt, 1970 Yoar Itloney's Worth OVER THE COU·NTER Complete-Nelv York Stock List H R d lin tf.t!W Y~l'll( ~Pl• l119.0.1"1 comDltlt ..... Ill• Sti. JMt Ar 0 T" i•••••••••••••••••••••••••..,••il "' Y« ll ~c~ntt Prlctt: t...._, Hit~ L-ci.11 Chi ,...,, Mlfa Lew C*" QI. ere ·e e Ill 0 e g 1ps NASO Ll1ting1 for Tu1M:lay, August 11, 1t70 'i:::.1 1+19~ LN ci-ct! ~i=:\• ~f5 j1\ ',J,t~ 1~·~~ 'tfi1 i,t~ ·: ~'r.1~ ·~ !: ;r~ ~IS411 it'A +·.- -- Ctvv11tr .IO .. ... \., Mltl\ oll.1) l .. .. + " By SYLVIA PORTER A key rorce behind the dramittc expansion in our speodifle on h o m e im· provementa: is th,. fact that light and C?StlY monty has propelled new bome building into a deep and protracted slump. Because of the sharp declioe in new home con- struction, b u n d r e d s or thousand! of would-be buyers (Jf new homes are turning to o1der houses and going In for ext~ve remodeling. Because ill!! mortgage squet:ze will not let them sell their old homes and buy new ones to ac- commodate their g r o w i n g families, hundr e ds of thousands also are adding ex· Ira rooms lo their original d\\"elllngs. \Vllh the weather now the most favorable or the year for outdoor home improvements, the millions of d o • i I - yourselfers are at work day and night -and so are the builders, the contractors, all lhe r est. U n d e r the circumstances. a reminder of the basic rules can translate inlo hundreds or e v en thousands of dollars of savings tor you. Speclfically: Don't skimp on m aterials. For instance, the quality of paint you use could make a tremendous difference J n the looks and endurance of the job. The few dollars you save by using cheap paint could mean you'll haYe to scrape down and rtpaint your hou.se all oYer nezt year. Sim ilarly , by buying im· properly cured lumbl!!r. you may find that it buckles or contracts. In choosing flooring and floor coverings -linoleum, carpeting, the newer vinyls. etc. -choose the product grade which will offer the durability you'll actually need in the area t-0 be Doored or covered. There's no se115e in splurging on a super·hard grade Qf wood or linoleum or carpeting for a room in which there "'ill be only a minimum or traffic. Al tbe same lime, it scarcely makes economic sense to save $50 to $100 b y buying a light duty grade or flooring or carpeting for a children's rumpus room. By all meam. do as many home repair jobs as you are qualified to do yourself. While you're a l ii, also recruit a s many qua.lilied -or at least willing -members of your IN THE CAPRI MOTEL ARCADE HANKa'HAtr Be1uty Salon end Men'• Ha ircutting and Stytlng Shop. 01>9n Mond•y thru Saturdey 8 • S. Sundeyt and ev11. by appolnt· ment. Walk-ins welcome. 1<11t-21 s. c-t Hltlitw•y. "-tMMlffclt 494-5054 OVER 80, 1970 TOYOTA·s MUST GO We need the room for tha 1971's SAVE MORE NOW JIMSLEMONS IMPORTS '17 W. WARNER SANTA ANA, CALIF, opm wenlnp Ill tundl\I• 540-2512 ramlly to help you. AnlOng the most obvlowi ~ it·yourselr job.s tor •1hlch you are probably qualified or which you could le:1rn fairly easily are: lnterlcr and/or ex~. terlor painting, wallpapering, wlndow·glating, weather--strip- ping, installing insulation:, t:&p. ing and filling wallboard joints and seams. With the pay of professional home repairmen skyrockel..ing this year, the more jobs you do on your own, the more you will save. But do not tackle the am- bitious and dllflcult jobs UNLESS you are h i g h I y qualified: for instance, roof· ing, re-siding, puttlng in a lawn, building kltchtn cup- boards, laying or even sanding down a floor, installing a ma· jor appliance. Slay away from such demanding job!I a s the installation of electrical wir- ing, fuel lines, plumbing. Before you embark on any big construction or remodeling project, check your local zon- ing ordinances and/or building codes to make sure your plans and specifications confonn. If a reputable local contractor ls supervising the work, he'll almost surely be fully aware of the rules -but lf you're ._ ................. wNllllMt If_ .. ,.... f ...... ,_ "LUO, /M ~I J ,olO iflo! ~ i ~ tnMo! 1.1)1 If 611.o I 16 lf''t +II ....... ...i ................ """-............. ~ ~.·.er,. ~ ui~ u... !1 +ill ir:t' 8t ~~ 110 l .. , tt~' ~ 1·• = ~-11 iJ .u .. {t'J mt+ i: serving as YoW' own con-,,.., ,,_ :.f~~-.i.Af ,, ,P,i; ff"' lfl -~ ""'!,/:1\ i1ac ';K:' ~t u:~ i.; ~"5f" -*I 111,n~ dt: flt?~-~ tractor, obeytn; Utt mning 111 .\ak..... •11 ,....,... Acl'fl•Mki "' 11 !Jn !i{.? !~1 • I F11P5.s' 1 1 tit. r1(\ '11. l f:•!l!u"''~(~ ' '"" 11-. 11;1 • I I !I b AdmE• 1.2'• •• 1~11 " I + ~I •$Yt 2.20 d "6~o •1... ft n 1.211 11 ~\, •U.~ ~V. l • aw s w e y 0 u r N!W VO-IC t"P) '~"' Ml ,,l"o ···~~I kNn "'1 1'\~ wbtt lv "' JU .t.d MIU(, .lt I I I ,... tlil. -fy 111¥ _jso II• jl' illi' ill:~ "' •II lo pl • ,. -. '1'•• 1,J \11. ..... ponsib.llily -TM follr#L111 bid, rw:ll•i IOV. 1Ai ortr HI( 11 ~ llld•I F 1 ... .lo'\ "dd'"" 1.«l l2 2 'I" >jl>i + " llY l\I' ""8) JI 2 • 5;1 " 11SH!'J' .< · lrw:I 11kl<I J IKll .. I'" 11..tl 1\'i t ro Golf ~ . llbO FCI " "Mt ~~({1 I.AO il "~! :lf\i """ + « ~i111t 11··~ l~ ~~ .U\'1 ,)t; i•• t. ~111~r1 \~I ~'17f n~: ?:1 1:t: 1 \: Do not sign a work com-'~,,f:':i11 A..Jl ~:lo-W~ ~\'' ·m~ ~ ~ ~~ t. == UI 114 "•m:L.11 Jll2 l Jt,, J'•• ~--It! ~:.1'1).).:..I• 1·,·, 1i;· ll ... lln ~ &:fltitO 1.10 .,• 'J'" 1' 2ll• \, Pleuon -~"l•ate belore "'"" o1 S.C1,1r11111 F•t WFln 2'4 vi ~ '" 1'" "'' r--•• .~-1'"• AA•I,"!.!!' 1!;.• ''"" ''"" .. "" ' ,,. ._ •t•t .i'Oo i"' '--a·w.. """' •Ir 1 ,1.... ., .,.. -~-..... Jlfl """" ·-1 11v. 26\11 ti" 1 1vtn .,. .tO 1! 1i•<o \j"•'• \'I"_~ e1>1.1lnPI .I! ' '• :Ill\ 2tl~ ,. t. r ( h d !" ••. llC.. •r• """1 • HM •"'l"''•'•"~,w J) " "r PrOd JO• 11 fO\.o f9 <tlllo \' Ni'.F.!JI! .~ 112 Ill.ii ~ .. G. PK'°" ,,. ~'· .. \.t .,.,, I ge proo sue u . up ~te ri::.s tr,r1 .r.•n:::: :::1 oft 1lf.Z ,:a i::1~11:C' r' ~ rvt~°"' : ~ Air 'lJ'• » J 116 'ls 111 1 NA 11 "J·11 ~ l.!11' yv. 1 \t. ~ 9.PK oi1.... , tt ,;\, '""' t• blU..1dJ allthat thbcone contractor h00as ~,;~· Pt'lj'" ~~,,~ ~~~rnt :z:'l'I ,i" 11u'a'rM11 1/ \I: T:~,n~ J?~ 1,'!~ :,Y, ,0~11·1¥.:11 ~ •1s;t 13'(? 1F-U, ~:~~°' 1,:: ~'° ~ "1• !'1\t t , G:~:.c,. ~~10" J i!t!~' ~;~ itl 2·1 Pa Su tr.cl-W oo~-1-, •• > ~ol.. •• "' •i,::· $1 >> S" t '"" '" 11 -' 1 \011 I •. ~ Cot1lltl~ \·" ! 3i\'J lJ JI~ JC h gettYO.;,OH 71, ~\ r .it\lo ~ -~ ..,_.,, ,,... ......, <ny Vl •••i "' •' .>• Al'"'~"1/' <• >> l!~ > t '!:'!' -l >>• I•" J< ~ > >•<' '''' ha lied •• I' "'"' ... ---.11111 c1 , '" ,, ,,, "' "' • --,. -... •tt¥ 1.1<1 '1 I • . . .. !'" \'e supp labor or ..wr11" ...., CG.:ii't Frt1t111 rv. '"" " • .. "Mr1 . I »114 JIN. \lo co1 n1 "111 1 211 21'"' ~' 1114 + \'I 11,,•P "'°' 1\ 111 •~1 •• '·ls 1 .__. 11tv1 '"-" IDllr· "u1vew n1: ,., ..,., CM l ..... '~ Til"~: f~ f~ fv. ~f.i!'~~~ i~ w ,:,m"" J'"' iii+ t? s~.t ... ~r., .,•,! in ll:11:: !.~ ~ -. ~ G,1,t~1.'.".~'. 't i1;: 1~ i;;i \l• mau;rUP. or your proJ'='·"· ~ (•sit.ii ..,. F.....u1 n ~· , '" "T S!'t1, I~ ~... ~.·,· c'i ,,, ,. A ,,., J: n \ ...._ ., .... ... ..... .,. G ..... ~ •• -"· 'Ill Mid (l>lcl) t F~ 110 ~ O'I' ., ,.... •• Y ' •Vo •• •· C~I 11111 i 11 l 1~1 13"--1C1 &11'-lt• 1 . ..0 )Cl J9\1 -If you fail to do this1 you dffltr · rr,.:J.:+; gRI (1'111 ~ •IJI ·~•It c Jn rnc:llT 1~ 1>1 AA\r"'c" .,':! 11 1~ 1 I~ + \lo co11 In 114• u 1$ ~·" '9 ~"" + 1-, mbtl I r 1 t! T7~ 27\li ~ -Mi -uld •· J'•bJe f-SUCh "'''!.:. ltiroullh· •r"'kl 11 ... ll'N •111b El l4r,;, l" •-> ><o ., A looM' ,!, ">. lO • flt. !'!("t '" 11 f'! 1 olOb ' N 24'4 1~ 2'"' t ~' I-l"t It ll"' 1'11'1 ,MO ·•••• .. v I.Ml us v• -·> d p ~ $·• l j'" 'J\l ' o C ,.. ·~" " .. ..., IS 2tVlo 7'1~ 2t\~ -"' B ~· > 1• >> '"° >•• '" G•o ••al!ll i• JI• S '\<t _,, ..., II'. r 1 • ·~ .. IYC o 6' 1 trlMob H no Jl4 "\\""'' l'J 1 311\.1 •1'. 3e'li l ~ f .... .. 1111. t 1 ~ payments and s uch sub-dD not lncJu 'G ... ,,," .... •Ym Co 13\li u:ir. rrlco PO l'tl't il)t.') " .., Pw n '' I~ I"' 1n. Vi Col1,1 II 1... !:It 31'4 ~ 1111 ·-1§~1 1,).1 } l~~ ,:\, I~+"' 191111 l'ltrku•. G Kl:r.tlt U! 111 lt~OCI Eq Uh I~ Trkl•I• ~Vi 4 AtJ!t«~ 1.11! , JI 7U 111'o . 11j Col\IP~ I .& Hit 9\-11 I'• t ,, · ·· 1 Ml<lll 1 t 'i th ti• ., .. contract.ors could legally ob-~r:.~" ..,. -.~·r.t "4 m tL crr:i ,, ij"" Troolu TO~ ll~ :11~tln',;~ lf~ tJl-i if~ 4t ~g:,.~~ M' aJ~ 1:~ 21~ 21~ -+" ~~~ 1~2 1.," ',',!.: n1~ nl~ t a lain a mechanJc's lien on your AA",, Ent 1 ~ 1l..ll 1 ·~ 1~ r.t: si: 11 2fVi 1~1:: Fd 1"' ,.,, "!led , ·" • t'n. ''"' 11l.l ..... com ... , ~ 3111t. " 1111 +l !''' .u ~ i • ...... since they slill ''owo'' AAA A••"' ,,,; ,w. S\.'I · ~1 "°"" E~ lt\lo II vn 111....,.. 1'14 16\l A111ec1s1, 1.... " ""' ~ ~·\.lo + ;... COmL$Olv ·'° '° 1H• 11\oo 111' 1' w ~ 1¥A .74 / t~ '-'' "" " IJUWH: -"-,. . s ' ' 21 2'Vt Obin M " " McG!I J 5" "lllOSuo 15• tll' •i. ,i.,, ~ -\; combEn I.JO 1)0 ,.,.. :IS''I J.J\':I . Gw..,l>-.c '-'° 1 !'" i t11t :n• 1~ 20 ~ OHlor> 1 ~ I !knot 6"' "'~AIU Ch.II 131 lJ\.t 11 11 _ \.\ c-Miiii 1 J Uh Ult ui... +· Gr•ttCt LIO il ,.1;~ ~ g: +1~~ certain materials Incorporated ,.1roe1 ~ "' 2 J o., C••t • ..., ~ u Env.r 11·"" "icJ,1pc ,;., 11 n u IJ • cmwE 1141.01 4 21\.o 11 21 -"'Gr•nbv 1·'° :; 21~ u . .a ~ +Yi Into IL This ru1 >• ialJ ' N 11'1 ~ SIO<.I, 2Ail Ul S11111r 3'1'1 31 Ak'OI 1.IO 1J 4 111 '1>to •111 t V. Comw Oll .60 :tot U~ IJI~ ISV. + o,, Gr1n11Un .Ill 12 Ill~ 11,, ll'io + \t e ~ espec y C• Ma 1 \.'o 1 1"" ~¥111 Ho »'-'! V. Tr1(L ?IV, 2f o\Mll"C .50 J6 • P l I \'o ComwEo 2.20 17 ~·• :JOloo '.ll)t<, +14 G<tnl!!C Stl '''' ><' +" Jm-~•nt -w b AWi• II\ 4 m 1· l" glllller 31h 4\11 Uo ~nP 20'Ao 21 Mier 1!.1 1.20 12 1~ ,, 1'\~ -14 ConllMl(I .JOe I' W,1 10\o. 20-\o + 14 Gr1n!lwtl~I 1J ll~ 3.tJ4 ~ t (; 1"V'...., n u , W en some A~mt l!.I . lo.It t r1Dt1 C11 l't "'-u1"" I! )\'o ~ 1111 SL.4 ~-~ Am E~ on fO .s 3:J:\~ 32 J'l'lt ! !lo:; Coo•t~Cp .60 S 11~ 11-h 11~ -\~ Gr•nlW 1 11\.\t ~ -tract -are ha • dll " I Shi; j'4 fll'h Sc 1 'A UV. II In 3\.\o m Ulll Ind t.1\.\i ''\Ii Am Ht11 .1Sr J.C2 »'41 3.l'it »VI nr. Con E41• 1.to 2l1 Ul'J 22..,, ttlot -,. Or1v0<1 l.1'1 U Jlh ~:~ UV. + it. """" o,., Vlng u• "f lndU• \Ii " Mlt 321'1 ~a Col• 1~ tv. 11 LO Alo , .... "m.H 1>13.50 ;m 7710 7• o »"'-2\li ConEdll 114 I • Ul~ 15 IS\4 Gt °'~P l.)(I "t' 12'4 ficulty borrJwlng money to "'•f: ., ... m ~. rJ 1~ IJ Incl I'~ •\.ii V•11t1 s. llV. IW. ""l•Flllr .Ill 10 d h C2V. d \.'I Il\'f onFood l.10 ,,.. l214 Jl\11 31\1,, +l GINorlr 1·~ .~ ~.t U"' .«lit t-'"i4 ... lfVI 1 cvt S-1 \'"" l1l•Ol'I 4\li .i'i! Al'fl "lrlln .10 !II 11\. 20\4 10'lll V. onE1H1 pt J ] jlll,o Jt .st f 1.1. &l~~N';,'1"'.Cl J ll''t 11\\ 11\i I\ pay subcontract-rs' bills " rt1 ' :s ,.,. 2\1 ,... rl-H '™ l:wi WKll lltlf It \'"" Mo lllk1r 50 I~ IO ~10111. v. on L.1••11151 2CI l !'o ... ·~ +11o Gt 'iVtS1 Finl 2" 17'M 111• 17\Co \<t • " I.lie 4 4"' rw1 In !:U •1-i rlolo I! ' 41' tdsw ' 1J O'i Alrand!. J 10 15' Jll JI.,., !r. >.. 1111Fr1lvhl 1 6 2'11\ 21'11 nh •.•. giwnunn .M 15 111~ 111' 171/i ..... Or yoU might get the -n-" CO L.nll I• l fl.I. Cf! 4i\ ''-' rlt (II It~ li\lo •In lkl I t "mhu 1.20 SI 22\~ ,l'i ~\ VI Pw.r•·-1UO ... Sl\lo ll . W"o ~ • ., $ <"' ... ';!: -W A~·~ 7\, ?:wi 11 Int ~ ,.,. 1, Cmo I" l"N •••do l'' > A-C•· i·n >m ·~ >< "" -u ,.. -rM t do to ' "!' • << All .. G "~ T ... .,. •• "' " ' '°~ ~l\lo \ CO!'IH•I 1.la I~ 21 1AI 21', < t • G>Wo>O>o ·... -<<I •• -" ra r Slgo a 1en waiver 11 ....., si.~ .,.,.,..n '' "' 1n11rn \I) w1r,11w 3 3•~ .-.ca11 Pl .1 • 1• '' 2,\~ "· c 1 ... .. ,.. , , -•• " "lpn G-o J\{O 3'4 H•llOYf' ' 11 tl Y1: G•P • • ••h HG lJlll' uf,'i ""'c,m .I.SD m "" OlllA r ....... ,. .. ,, ••. Gr~nt " ' II!'. 11'' .. ~, -l! -before YOU make your final "m•Ot 21\ 1 ..... !'v"' In V. 1~ ie.oen Vll ~\~ 411'-\U'asll R~ !.\:. t ' "Chain 1 tO s l2!V. 7~~ it,..-+l't. con: ea,..:: .·.-~ 51 ... l' '2lw 1~'°' -1\1• Grffl'>SI'> 1°20 II )1'411 2J\o ?3"' + \ ""' au1n •l>l lO •nred F n 'J hellOoh 111 )t.Ntl Tr v. 6:U "CryS...11 l.IO 4 11v. 11\'I 111-1 -~0 f::1 ep 2'"" ~ ~~: 1"' ;l'.!+'ftt.,eyhCl\ll'ld 0 I 51 ll~~ I~ 13'14- payment to him -Which A E!I L.1b ' '~ •rll C• i411 l mlth M I"° Yt Nt t>b Rt 1111. AmCY1n 1.15 101 791,. 79\lo 1''~ +~\ Ct Co 114"2 .}G 11 1111 n;.: ~It + ~ g~~~n(~ I ri n)! rffl rn'r.-tt absolv-you fro {·· ... "'·-""" E•... 5N t0\4 H!r.:; lrrl lU 3\~ SOiid St s lh JIJ. eldtrn JI ... 614 ""' 0111111 1 3 i71~ ,,,, lUi + ·~ CO!'ltM!I .... 51 1411 u U\-1 +~. Gtlt.IHIO ··'°' .. 71h 11 21.; + ....., m any w UICI °'"' F11r11 5VI J H 11h""E J'-SC•I W1t lllo I Ho ellllQ M 13 Ill.I. "DlotTtl .:Lllor lS 21\t 23\o 1' -"-Con1 O 1 1..IG 295 21 11\o'J :11 , •• GllMOll 2.IO.o xl HVI ... 19V. + Vi r e I p 0 n S i b 11 J t y for SUb-:m G~::ci tt~ 11 \It. t:"'Lobtn p ':\'I 1 ~~ ~~ it~ ml N~~t H: ~~ tu :t>1u.~~~:: 13 IV. 7 1 • ··•· Con! Oii p1 l l >J ~ ll + °' G<itl 011 I.~ •11 21 26 21 +1 tr ~. •bills " ~le• 1~ 101,'i ..._.., 30\o 311,j, Sw GiCO 1~\\ • ''" Miii 50,. ~ AmE IPw l.'6 ,.: U!" llh 1 1 ~ i ·14 Cont 511 1 2 131'-l 2l•,Q :11.,.. +Vo Gulf ltnrtH 61 f'\ •~l I~ -li.. con ai.:wrs • ""' ltlv 11 111 ... H-rd 01 61' n1 w EISYt 14\~ IJ' w,111 ,I.lb ,~. 1".i ·-,... •• '' -~ ??~ ~.. " Cool lrl .IO to It~ 19 191'1 + "• GullRH',f.1.10 1 l:P• 1! \l ..•.• N I ll ted Afll'llUI I '3V.. 13'!0 ~ 111 131'1 1:i1t. ,.cerv :P.1 •':• !NI Wit J l 61\ """ '"' ............ •s-o ... COll!rOI 0111 1. lJl--'I 32\\ 32.,, -v. GtlRH 1.XI ' ,,,,. lP!o ~ -~-ever I gD any COmp ca Ank'" In 1:W, ~I Ht,1ck Ml lJ~ t't.11~f!dYn 11\1. ttl'I Wlnbla 11':; lsi..11 :~fn!.P Jir:'1 u1~ S~ .Jt~ ~\~ ,j~ CC~w" .. "',·l!.. i!O '' 49 •9 + ~ GullS!I I .ff ~ 111• 71'-' :12~ + 1,Q deal Without consulting your•Arc1.lr>e1M .... 4~!j~ PG'o I r.l'l tdReqll 17\li 111t.Nl1c Pt. il•t..UV. "0en!n• SO ,5 ll \.'i l lV. V.. "" ..,. 1 Jlh JI\~ ll\1 -\.'lG11l~VoU.U '"° S'l'i 52~ S'IV.-+1 ~,. J .,. M"• J ll'll 11~ j'•" HPd 'J.2 t• wr~ E' ii 1i~ "Gnln 1>11.ta ,1 11.,. M•o 23 = v. Cook unn :50 U 23 :1:111 21\~ .•... guusv •U.IO .,.:io fl SS SS ·~ lawyer and. lf you don't have !nc ~ 12~ tt~ H~~~ C• -~~ \~~ :~~~ ~r ii'"~ w~n¥' r '~ ~ !"°H~ i:: 11 l!l'h 1ov. 10"• -\\ z=1;.~1 2i rl;; l~ ~r;: +·\to G~~~1r.g,,:: 'r J~ u~ Uv. t ~ a lawyer get one "rryN H 26~ 211\ Hr111 1n1 1 ...... ~ " H;;;; 114 1 ''1 ~~ ~~; ~~ ti~ C""4!111111 1 20 :n .o•• Jtl1 'o'.11 ..-'"'G~11°" 11111 7J tU '"" '~ •·••• N ' · """kl' 1'A 7\'J Hrde All! •..:. ;;; Am Hoo• •1, lll ?tl'o 21~ 711, +\O C-1511 1.N ~.~ jS.• !St. IS~ -\.'I -H-1- tver pay • contractor in :~c :1' '!(? 21;;:,: :::::.••&.~.,. 25 '"' Aml11ve11 .50 s '"' 11~ 1111 + 1~ '°"""" JOti IN l'Q ~"" ~~ + +. H•c-w11 1.:oo , 31 -.. ,.,;o •i full before the work is done 111rd "' Mi l!• jnd Nuci '°"' 1114 o\Mt1c1~ '-"' '° :M'lo )l\4 ~ +1 1;. CIN'"lnihl ·21• "" 1''" 151 1s1 +s\Co H111Pn 1.1.0.1 1 21 14 '' ::. • B1k1• 12vi 13 nexco O ,'l> J',·•, MUTU 1 AL A,o,,-,,,M,•.,, ,','• .~~ ,•, ,~ .• '+"• c'!"~11~·so...... ~ 1,5lv. U\\ 1,,, H1111111,1n 1.os 1s J6 u )S\\ -4-... And never pay in cash. 111 P1lnt 1\~ 4'i 1n1r•ro -" ...... , .. c"'_i._ c " 4 1,,, ~. ~1 _ \. tt1rnw.i .25t l ,,sl'! lV. su Yi !1•1ln fl 1\11 "'"" Ill ,.,., 5 Alte10v .Ile 32' 45 131> u +~CCIII llOOI .:IO s \3'• •• H1mmrid 10 ~· p.f 11. .... • •• 11..,,.,,,, » inf IW l.h 5,,.. m "m 5'1111111 1 1 in• i5'1 1!'• t;PC ln!I 1.10 46-1' l!¥f 2•~• 21 _,,_, H1ridlm11 ·., n ?•~• 110.. 24\1 ...,. Have Achievements, Goals Matched in U.S.? B•rwcit 1 J" I"' Cof>t JV. ,,,. Am PllO!c .1' I• 1n &<-•~• • ow l ~ I>" "·• + '·• "''"'"' Pap 1 31 .• II'\ u v, -! " ••l'leH 17 llVI 111! Mulilf 11\, 11» Am Ship .60 lJ 11% 16~ 11\4 . +.t.lo Cr•M 1.-.... J1lo ~] + ~. H•rid Hlf '.n •' , .. ,,., • •• ~ , .. ,.. ~ BHClll'O'I 2 "nv. Int SY• IT 111'1 " 'mell I'° 1~12 14'1 , .... 7•'• -1~~ c KIT!! Fifi I ' 1'"° ,1,•• ,•,•• .··· Hlnft Co .50 .. ... -l•1i. lilt 16U 17\/i 1111 51 pf U ljl1 "m:°soAtr Jo JO ~ ~ :lt .. -1\ CrompKn .IO 2 U -Hi11111M 1 XI I ~1\Co 11 41\0 '4 ••"" I,.., J f lnltkt •l'I FUNDS " S"I PY. )0 1 31 31 31 .••. CroultH!llCI 1 6 11 11 21 -·~Hire 1 ,· 6 l2" J?O:. n1~ \' t...t H• ,. ,.,v, lonlc1 12'~ u "~ sid 1 · 11a JS\.'I l•'• :W'i t •1 Cr-Col 1,011 13.l 11Flk 10 10•-+ ~ H••rr."1n• l 51 111~ , • .., d" +1•\ I.it L.1b 3j\'J :r7 II $oVtll 25" '»II> "'"SIC! PU.JS 10 ti\. t•'" t•"1 2'h Crawl! C11<k 16S l)h lt!k 1)\i • H••KD C• 1 6 IY) ,tj>.< 15"1 Bilk111t w Al n· JKoOI F 7to 3\o ,t.m St ... 1 .... IS 16'. l5h 1''" \, Cnr;nZ1!1 1 . .0 llB :If 21\1 fl\t -~-Hlrv "I 1.l'O 2 ,..,.. ~ 11-1' + "" l l rd Son 31 ~ 1 J1C1Ulft C 7 7~ "Sugar l.tO 71 27~1 21 77 -~• Cr11 l pl•.H UO ,. 5' 5' -'1.o HawH El 1.12 1• 71'/o ,.,,.L 71"oli + 1-rtch• )\\ l 'I' Jl'l!I W1I ~" /\ ,t.Sll!I gl"2,6S ~ .41) Ill Ill ••••• (f5 Corp .tO 1 1J•J,, IJ 11 ··•· H•¥1S Atll 1 17 11,_.. .. 111. .. I I-Ck H\ 27\'i, llllo J1mH F 26\lo 27\lo "mSv;o o1 ,t.11 l1 l'!t I'~ I\~ -\, Cudllr P!11' 1 11 11 11 ••-• HAltillne 10 1;'4 no P t ;_::it, ~OllU• I!. 1\.'i ''" Jl'l!llbY 6~) 7\it N!W YORK (""' INTGN t.12 1.)1 "T&T wl wl !'12 1~ )\1 7~1 ..... CUd.thv _ • ., II ll't 10(0 lo~. -~HCA tno .\(Ip ,, •Vi '"" •1~ •.... hi! ••r f~ ,._ JltlV FOs JV. ' -TM follOwlilg q:!'i 111v Co.A 10!11 t.1S Am T .. 1 2llO •• "\k 4l•1 "''-' + '" Culll9111 .21 • l!'< lG\lo 11'•-+ ·~ HKl1Mn .11• J9 21'~ 26i't 'fl + lk Boottte C t \.'I 9 Jh11111 PO I '4 1•~ r.11or>t. •vO!llftd Inv GulO 7Js 7 ]S ""'W'Wkf ,56 ' I~ •~ I\< -\\ Cumml n IOb ' 2''• ?f!'o 2t\lo + \'Heinz ~J .91 l1 3114 l •14 31'6 ~ By JOHN CUNNWF "' a1n1-AMl't'll NEW YORK iAP) -The present state of Ute economy may be described in the con- ventional way, th r o u I h statistics, or it can be shown by contrasting our ambitious goals with our inability to oacbieve them, our dollar wealth with our environmental poverty. To put it in question form: Have the increases in incomes really permitted Americans to buy a better life? Has the quality or life improved to the :iame extent a.s the Gross Na· lionaJ Product? These art the statistics: -Gross National Product, the market value of the output of goods and service! pro- duced by the economy, rose to Edward Miller New Director Dr. Edward A, ifiller has been appointed director of. Newport Beach Operations for Phi I co-Ford Corporation's Western De v e l opme nt Laboratories Division. The WDL DiYision Newport Beach Operations, for which Dr. MU!er has overall management responsibility, is conducting re-entry a n d launch vehicle systems pro- grams for the Department of Defense, aerospace el!!!d.ronic counter-measures projects, is active in the deYelopmenl and producUon of deployment and carrier vehicle.s used ln Earth re-entry st udi es, a nd spacecraft systema a n d subsystems proj«ts for the Defense Departmant a n d NASA. --- Investors & businessmen: 1 From •&.000 to •so.oooto"""' forMypwpae• on California real 'atate of 1ny kind, whether p1ld for or not. Bankers l~k at your p&I or your age. My ltnd.-1 look only et your eQUity. Let's di scu" your needs. Norm Kahn, I~ c:ensed bnske<. 639-2122. I See by Todays Want Ads • SeiutUul 111onfleel.lo 2 Br. 2 bath, 2 ct.r I~ rrpts, drapes, mainte.~ 11.nce and pool all fQr JI&\ month! e On you Uke to pl1y pool? AMF ol"tl pool table PIO. • Art )'OU ri.&ht hendtd and 11nd h""'' a lt<ft handtd ~tricr-ra1or1 lfery'1 a ck&nct to 11tll IL SotnfON' nttd.I a toed uled lfft hand ~nirt£ rth1rerator. llooz "H 12"" lj •·1~..,. SI "' ... ... H•llonll Allot Inv lndlC '·" '·" "w pref 1.2S l:IOI ''"' '"" loMO +I• C1111110rui .. n ''• a I'• + t\ Helellf '~" • 1\~ 71'1 I~ ' .. "',,,.','f. ,~~ .. -!•'•'",'," ',', 1•,• "'°"Of Securll!nlnv•tlcs tl'll1170°'W '.11111.u 2llOQ I,.._ 11 11 +~•c11r1111wr1'1 n I •• 11 lll•+a;.Hlllerlnt..60 ?t 17'1\ 17 1~1 " 1931 bllllo • 1-f rt1 .. .... -. '*" lllC 1 ._ G Am11•0<t ii J 15"• 19.li lF.• + "" Otrt wr A 2 2 1411 21 ''\" + ,., Helm11 Pd1 ; I 14"1 U''< 1'\lio '" n ln 11'119 rom $029 1r1c1 Su IS\.'I 16\/o 111 Grn l \< ~ I grJCn 11'' whl~~ "fifs"" n:i1 ~f'1 j1 "rneltk IOI 67 111 l\ii Ilk -"" Culi.t H 1 N I 11"' 11"• U\\ + !lo H1lmrllP .20 J~ 19't0, • Im liU _ }t bWJon five years earlier. a::= ~·. ,•, •• •'•" K:l~"\-31\ Jf.e "'"' i1eurl1.. Mui 1.:it , i2 ~f.c 1111..IO.to 13t, 2nv. 2ui~ 'i.,, ++~ CYclOM 1.,0 1 11 11 ,, • ,.Heml/nc -~ 13 '"' .... ~ -'• kl .., K 1'1t could hav• blen Proo J.03 3.211 -'MP Int SI 11 1, 41"° 4.J'lto + ~• CvorusM 1 . .0 26 5olh SA< S.Vt + l'I H~~~h/nj LIO 72 UV! 1~ t • -National income, the total 1::.n~: s 201-ft it~ 1:11~ 4 11,,, ,JI~ !~ik~~,1~'~11' 1~~1 1::~ 1b~' "mM• co;o ut l•fi '''i loMio -\\ -D-Heublein .to N 11:t :lJ\~ .u l..ll 'II< tarnlngs of labor and property i!f ~·:: ,;tt rit'1 ~: J111 IH1 I;; benln '!~ ~-~ ln~•R.':;\' !~ !~J ~:m!f" ~·"° ~; 2!u 2~~ 2~~ 1' .Vt 8:~.~~v; 12~f '~ ~ ,;',,.: ~ -l'i ~1~";; Pv';1~aii7: n '¥'• 'f1: ~ -'~ from the production of goods ~,..: M ll JI ::!r ~l ill~ '\lo "0:~~~11 F4~::1l: .u :~· if:: 1f ;~ ~~~., 11~ y ri~ R1.: : :.: 8::: ,1;: :r 4; ~~ Il;,z Il~ ~· ~ ~=rc,1.~ I r~ ~ 1;~ mi + ~ and ••-•Jc--· to 17'1Q lnnM a 6' •1 11111 1"1 \ 1ti Lnc:orn 3.«I .)3 J Hncotk 1-" I IC ~nc:or1H$Y I l> ,."',•, !,!! ~;,,>+ ,", 0 ,11 P<cc•>• ~ fl" n , "' t"• ,"-:rr.,'•W1•.!,. 9(1 ) lf\1 lf~ lt\'t ..... ~ y ""'• ._.. 1nr1d , .. ·~ lnvs El ...... 1-·-'·" 'JI ,...... ··J,···-"1111 c IY 1,7CI ......... ... + • .. ,.,,n I s s s blillo -i1r1( c J "•¥• ..... 15 13>.~ 1w n~ _ '" 01vcoCP 1.u 2 l•h H't 1•~ -H •·· · • n in 1969 from $514 billion 100, If.!!! lS 1;~ Ill• J'-• ll l+ 1?i vb,. 4.11 • 1 K•11~ F1,1 • "P•d'lfcCP .?:S " JR> lO'"-,0., __ ..., 0.ytnHutl . .IG '111'' ,•,~ 11¥! L,~ + ~ .,!J,~yln,•,,,..tt "•' !~"1 ,."' "",. --~ ,,,,_ 1 \I "' 2~ n1,.l llllllld 6.11 •. It °'POiio 1 .}G I 23 "PCo0U 1.lll " _..., ~·DI t Pt. 1 60 . :Ow ,.,... """'"'" ~ " Jn J~. ~=T~~,.. rn f'lll tlo.~'10.1 ,,1"'" ~· ~lrA~ F 5j 1l '·:!!" ,c~: ft~ ~f~, :f.1,•, :A=.~ ~,ct,1 ... ~ 11' l~t: g;~ n:..: + '•.<. opt n Pll J)5 t10 •1 ., !!. + :·~ ~g~~'!k'. 1 :: :s ~~ ~f11o ~iio .::·~ P I . Carr Dw ,,, • t.llltl '" '\'I 2.JOll •II ' ' I ' ' • .. "' .... 1 9\\ "' t\lo -~-OPL. p!O 7 .... 111fl ?(!\< 11!1 ~ -,., H~,.1 •.• .,9 ..... 11 12l~ +•'• -ersona mcome, which ls t:•rt• 81 ,,,. 3 L•"" R.. 2" · • • e · · us 8• 1.1 !·" "lit" Svc '·°' 40 ™• 15 IS-I• + •o Dee•'-co 1 ,,•,l ,,~, ?1•1 ,, · HOO~ e1 110 5 111· 21'' 21~ th. total '·-me receJ'Ved by !ll'lr Gii >O" >>'~LIM Wd I ~ i'oll)hl Fd •'",,' ,t .5ll Cul IO 6,73 .3, "rc1t1N .IQe j7 11~1 lb .. 11"• + ""O.lm1rP 1 12 16•t 16>.0 1•--+ iA "'-r >nll '•• •I l.t'~ 111~ JJ(/, :.::ii. M~V -., l l 'IT>(IP · .15 Cvs IC2 )'6 •.ll I '"" .,,, •otL_,,,., Oe!Mnlc I.ID >">• 111J:o 11 21«o nw• • .,.. 11c NG •II. t \.'I "•non lP 1~1'1 Arn Buo 1.M j .07 Cu• s1 1s"o1 1,ji! "rcer•H pt 1 '' ,-,,.", ,-, ,. .... ! _ , llo!I!• "I' JO 17\'o 11"' 7&'ilo +' H-oud lllCI .IO 3,,' .~~·, ,•,~ ,"', ... -. '.'. persons from all sources rose •stl C•• 1=w. 1:u u,..rwn ,M, ~ '"" 0v1n 1.62 .42 c11s 52 1-.1 t., "'en 0111 1 .,. ... 0,11 c 1 1 , " " ,~ v. HouG Miii ·"° ... .,. •• ' .... ,. '12\.'I 1J v .. '!t"" I,:~ m•• ExPtHI: C111 S3 s'11 'J6 "rlzPSY< 1.0I 1:11:1 llVI 111~ 1714 • .. °"'~Miu" '° lll 11\~ 1~ 15\.0 -HWl"'F 1 IQ "°" ,4l\ ~Ill 3",, •••• ~ f749 billion in 1969 from $495 ~,,,Y:' #'~ 't::, ;r..,,fi} l~J 1.u T.!t~ \:fi 6t·~ ~~.rs. f;, ji: ;~,:s~~-·Fo 111 .:-• i'!! 1~ = ~ ~nv1t•1 :o• 5~ ~vi ,r.~ ri"' +·,. =:!~ ":~·~ ~ 1g;; 1~~ '~~ :-:-.~ billion in 1964. Ch0~m' ,o,, 5\t "' ""~'M'••' _ ,',, lnwll 1."4 1J l(nlc-11 J.U •.u A-.:::...,",' ,0 33 :M~ 'M~ :l4-l1i -· 1 °""~1;11\o' t y y IS -It. HoutF of2.l7 ' 52 SI S2 ··•·· C NII.lo lllC ,., 5 I '-" I{ I G •••-,. S 19 lf :It +Ill _,· J ,,L• 31\L ·•···HoU1tLP l.N '' 41 .«!'~ olO'l4-'t Di!IVI• bl al 1 ch.. 111d '"'" 3"' co •w '"' no ""' f --"<-' 6·" 1·91 """'''k ·'° .~~ ~~1, ',"',,L ~ £ .. •L 8:~1nr -~ 6 14;.? ..., 1&>4 +·;,o, Hou,rHG' .ao 2f &S11o "'..... u \'I -.._ -r-a e person n-•8~h1-1 u111 1~\., \'J\I) on ca... ,•, ,21'1 ,.;'"'E\il"f ~·~ .:~; t:: ~~~ 1;:g .~:~' "'""c-p11.1s -, ,;,,, ,,,, , .... ,.. ~. 0etei11, ,.,o ,, 1,•.~ ,•,r:~ 1,,•,•i, -.,,, ~'!':'.,G•,.!','·".•• ,', ~,,,•, "',,,!, "",,. +, \', come or the In"" 1 l r&I St S• Elttl 1 Al'fl Grri'\ •.t, .s . ..o t.1twer1v • '' , 11 "rm Rub 1.llO •• ,-0e1 srire1 7 .. .. .,,..~ "" n~ • .. .,me fe-'I" 5 1~1 ''11 ~yncll C 151/1 it~""' Inv 4.11 •t21 I.lie Slit iu i.>o "'o Coro 90 • U '.< 11 \''~ i... Cle 2 '' 1 ' 16'" 1611 ·: .. Hcwmtl .10 10 IJ'lo ll lPl + l\ maining to persons af•·· ~r ·'!f pt n " ""Id GEi llllt ,, ,,,, Mut 7.J2 1.0G t.lfe tnv , '' • m A...,ln 1"" 1 s'i •,•,,, !!~, J•,,. --• •. ~ 01:1'lfnln' .111 , ;,,t •~ 1\~:. ;,; l'ivbbro 1.04e 11 20v. lt'• lN -\'t t of Kl pay-IT•dtl I I ""'\ RllY 5 51, "mN Giii 2.11 2.d LIM: NII 1"•• .:.. """kl 011 1.:11:1 ' , .. ·-,-,._ ·~, •.• -::. P!•mlntl J.IO •J 3j ::u~ " + ·~ Hu<lll•• 1.20 21 191, lt ..... 1'"' + \\ men persona) ta Xe S ltll M~ 10/ 11\.lo • !krl 61\~ 6'1'Jo l'fl •at l .1, I .JO L.1nt1 iTO 2..tl .U..:l II•~,.. ... .,. "" ,. Olam Sll•m I 11 1'11 lAV, ,,,1 + .,. Hutll H1I .60 l Ao t\• ti,. -t~ j ped to t .lllt U" ,, 11i;. l'fll M 1<; 1~ nc:l'oor GrC1U1>: Lr::I• S•v1ff· Auel 0G 1.:IO 21 ]') l2 l'l . · 011Sh rt a ' 15'• ?•~ 2S•-. + \' H11n!Cfl m .U 1J U Ulo 11 .... um $632 billion from '\'It v 1 '°"" 1,v; 1o11n1n M 3li )I• c..1111 1.:J..1 '·" • ...., :n .st :n 5, """ S1>11 1.10 a 26\t. 2~• 2•" + "'011s o 0110 tt 10~ ,,,, 1'•,. 1o•ho"w 1.i.o 1s 21"' 11 21i. + "' fJ.'t.e biJIJO' A jn I~'. , !Cl~~!\ /ti' 1,1·,~ .:.'~ Mi:.i°'M~ . ~. '"" Gtwl~ l.!111 t.~ IPll 1:'1 1:21 °'..:ITr1n .05• S1I 6''> 6 6 -I<> OIC"l•ohon ·4 ~ l'o I'> I'~ -'~ 14HI 8•s . .0 101 10'.o HI .. ~ IO'i\ + ft ...... "'1'11 •• G• ,,~ ••• Inc:""' 6.16 I.ii Mui 116711 61 All!-lllCI I~ ~· 1''4 1r,• t'" L: 01ebo10, All ~, 51!'>t,,, 12{' ~~ + ''l 111 Ct nl 1.1• l • 20 N :Ml •••·• ~--.are the fOUr !na)'Or l~!>"M"•• 11~ .·."1~lr1m_..! •''' 1'1 Fd Inv ).l1 l.7'Lulll l!l ro t:t1 10·~"11C1YEI L ).I 1 •• lfh 1 ~ ••OG1o<11c .60 13 w 1 n -~HICen ptJ~ it ..ov, 1''4 .o _,,.. JINll .. "" '"TI' 4 . 7s V•nt 36.1~ 29.ll M•on1 In 7.14 1.57 Ail ltlchlld 2 •N J7''r SI'" SI '" DllUnohm .'II 12] •'• lh t 1't ' f rod 11'9n 0 4~ 4~ Y,1u L.P th ~ °'DOl!O Fd 4.lt 7.0 M1n~ln 1.01 , U AllRCfl pl],1S 160 4 V. "31'> d l'I -~ Ol11onj Co '' S 1"• 16:\0; ~:r, :,,,,. i::,:tpe "~ ;!1 :i;~! 3i~ ~~ +·i~ measures 0 p ucUon and low CP l•V. 'l" "ii'' 0 1-:!' lt\' l\11«l• 1.0I 1.11 MIH FCI '·OQ '·"' "!I lt\Ch 114 J lj " 95\'t ,. + \.', ~·r.ev .30b 2•1 ,, .... •s •• -'"-IH" CD IM 3.)9 26('• 21 \'J ~ -\.. •·-Do th 6.11 _,,. 0 .on, \lo UV V • 21.U .-,.1r0<t l .70 1.0. Ma11 G!h •.ll t tJ "II Rt~ !>111.0 51 <Ml'o U U . s!Stl9 1.li i ~• 1' .. .... I C ., o '' 01 ''' .u:rr.;ume. ey K:U an ac-°''' c11 4> .n It H ••'" ,, .. ",.."""A"'oo, •' , •• M•u Tr 12.111 3.21 "1111 c,.m 1 .JO 211~ 11·~ 2l\o + •t venllld . l5 1\t I'~ 1~• +"" ~011Mc ,'"' , , • ,.,• .., """ -•-le story• Or ·"-"d '"'-t>lem E 3 l\IJ eel M1'CI ...,'1 'Ill F . -Miies 7 M j-16 "'II• Co • ,.o 1h 1V. 1.\t + \" IE::Mlq 1.1 t St '111 lt~4 1,•,• + ," 11".,1,11mu.-" ~ • ,,•,, II" 11,. •·· ' .. .., a • """""'-' \UC: Col11"1 " I \' t \lo Mldlrll ,.U ll'll Futod a •.%2 I.Ii Ma""°rt l.tt •• A'O I-.-. _, .JO .JO 111'1 11 -Ii. II nu --v• '" • 3t.allstics bt forgotten for the ~=:u,5" ti.I'.! 1~,:~ ~~ t~ 1:, 1m l""c ~·ll !·" Meor1<1 Fa 11 .12 13 J1 A..,..Cll';,~ p;';;, t~ t1~ 1,~ ~.:: -~ g::::~" iT° ,,"15 5f~ ~: w~! = ~ \=P~r~l:~ 1 \ ir~ iJ1 • P," +1 c: Cl ~ ...... ~I , 2~ ti 0 . ,.11 MklA Mu '·" •.11 "UIOl\'>ln lllCI " l (e l"' 3'.-~. _,,.,·.: u .... 1! 15 +~1 ... ll'iltlncl, 71 u·~ :w~ J + ,. moment a nd the economy !"'••'•"",,. .. ",,~''•••"•, "" •l•tM.Oll ,_ .. _..,,_.,c.101s.1rt"vcoCP * 6l t'1 ''• tVl+\oB:':' ·-,,, '''' ,,, +• ,, , .. , I'", •• ..... ....,. 1514u-ia11cen 10.~10.YMoco~·· 11 :u i•:it "ccllfl1o 61 2;n.:, 211" lm -\" r ... 0 o ... 1 •'• 110 av!-~11o01•,.,•,,1.-, T Jllo 3 ., 1 ... -1. evaluated in mo-personal °"" Ttl 21 1i DI• G•s » '°'' ,,,.,. Knt 1.n l.22 FIF Fo , ,, Jn A' ,,· -, , .. , , + ,, rr 11v.. n 131 1~ :l1h ••. •~ 9T!H!lti 511< j.,Mlu\llG UltU\.lollt<kGlh ~..It .02M!F Giii i11 · ... · ,•••,, -~::_ '• 1•'1• 1·• •oav1rCo 10 ll lJ'~ lS\, JSV. ..... 111l'flonl.2'P 37 I 1'-l h--li. Way• orro , • .., ....,_ Mo Rich ~ l I I• F• <>> l '' · vne nt ._ » Mo 6'~ •t. . OowChm 2" i.o 11 6 '·• f>lllt 1>11"4, .. l••I"· >O> " >>" >J" IJ'• + ~ ... .,.,, " ,... 1~ Mal Stl ~ •l'o 1~11-.:n :u ~~VA~G l~·i7 1: ~ .-.v011f'O 1.io •20 61~< 61'11 ,,..., +1v. g:•voCo 1 ·'° ' 11 j3"' 1J~ -"' 1 i~ "'"l 2s " '"" '' + """ Hundreds of thousands or .m. c ni. ~,. ,,. ollwlo; R 111'1 14\(o Bolli:>n SI •.w 1.1) Mu ()f'ftl~ 1"61 ,.,. A.lite on .lJI 2t 11\lo 10~ 10~1+ \lo 1u lnd 1:.0 lS 11 6\1 Y1~ ++'~ 1~:111. Coa )a J ~:: !.~ 41h -~ f mlll t I'"• '"" 7'1 m M""1 Col Sito 61'1 Bat FCI" "' "' 111 s~ .. 11 'n 11 l'l -8-0~= ~"'a~ : ~~ ~v. ,.,.. +\lo 1"1.,co I.lo 21 1' 2•0,r. :tt + ~ a es, or example have so m• Tee l ?.! Monrn Pit 11 11\1 gostofl 1.01 1.ll Mui Tn1 (7, (1, 11 be~ w .50 n 16~ " 11,., + I\ o ... vtui '• 1 11 1s;o, u 1~ + ·~ 1nrrlkl11C 1.111 2 2J''ll 2 n" t t• benefltted by steady 'jobs and :;:"r,roc11; ,~ ,t~ Moor: { 1~~ if 1~ s~1/Ji~~ 11·z:1 ~;," ,~ut {Z: f~ a:kr0u1 .u u 11 " 1 .... + ~ o11kePw l.4o u "" :00•1 10•. -11o iBM '·'° sa1 7•0'• 1nh 1JP.< !'" ••. th Olllrltf 7t't 7VI M'8fT'" 11 17", Blllltk 11 .171l.34H1! lnVlll 5)1 1:nB•"•'•"••·'·Il :w 2A1 ,,_1 16'·-lt.ovkeP llf'11 s IJ M'• IS l11tCll Hvtlr 42 lf"• Jt Jf'% ~ ruimg wages at they have ontr111 1~0 ~\/oMl'D r wt 4 ''I cancrn 1,5011.11 Nat SI.cur ,e,. ,• ,• -, 11111 '1 SI•• st,;~.-1,._o~11sr1c! 1:111 •O ,, 11 11 •l't :· 1n1Fl•Fr _ _, "'n't. 51\• '2-" , ... 'ayed an amount that One •. ~' 's C "•-u, .. •"'•'•l'"cio~ fl.i '\~ OIY~ 3.lJ 3.IJ Bllln t l l ·9!6 aM nt .Io 11 61'1 6\.o 10,'l ~ Ouple" .~ 6t 1'\~ 1,v, 7411 +h Int H1rv 1.IO k '1(0 22\'• ZI~ + ~ -... ... u 1J~J n~ N1IW s 9.21 t.H p.""" •"•t .. j 8;oMP pf 1 -u 16~ 16\~ '''"' -t ;-: du Pon! 1.SOe '"° 1101/• 118'1 1191\ +I'\ In! lndUJl XII ''1 ·~ ·~ + ... WOuid have ' ·-•d a s the ,,,,T,,v. •"'·. ,•,v. ~~.!,"'1 ·,, ··~ )\\ NV Vnl 11.0111.11 Olvld i IS 3 Tl Bli: cf Cll 1.34 2 21\/o ,, ··-..... "~"°"' ol•JO • 61\'J 62'4 61\1 +·~ 1111 lr>d 1>11.JO 2J 11'\w 1• lt -~ ._. • ,.., .,,u, 2\o l\o '""° MFd 1.U 1.71 c-· > ->'•• 61nk ol HY 1 16 •l'li ~1 ..,.. ~ ... ·Pon! oil• ' " •S:wi '' -'·" In! Ml111r 56 IDh 10 10\11 + ... down Payment OD a house. !-... , ¥!'.! ',!1 ;,." '"c' ,!-.!' lf UV. G FO 7.11 I... pj .. fj-,·7;: 6.:lO BlnK T• l .U SI '414 111;, .... ,. I~...... . ~! ,l''o ?1 21 •\ ln!Mlnlf DI 4 I AOll A(I\.', '°"" ..... ... cc ,., ~. J'i 111m• a.H 1,,1 tncom i 1• i6'1 11••11011 1.511 ll 21"< 711t 211-• -1~ g~q ;~~~10 z2G 1lt'olo u•~ 161' -v. In! Mnm .209 I n ltl'o 11 + '• Now they can't buy that rou Cc " 261' N•rr•o c 11·,~ 11111 loll •~v 2..59 ).13 Stec-iu '" l1rd Cit .25 Sl JSt~ l51o 35!1 -..... 0 qt.I 41>1 , 1100 26 16 21 '" lnl Nldr. 1.211 1111•! :191, ~ ~ -t ~- house s;~~~~ ~ :'"' ;"' H:lc~~~ 1\' 1att :ri' s~~· lflit.# ~:!,wG~:i ,::1 fl:::;~ 'Mi.·'° 10 ,• ',·,·~ ,'1, 1 •• ',1,'.. _+. -~j ~="~ ·'° I~ ~~ ~~ ~1• ~ ~ :l;,:11'·.·K,', "1., .• ~ ",',' ,'•,",',: ~. 'f.',:~ t~·::" • 'Di n-Lbs 71,\ ;'to, Cmo Cll 1'\ Ut ChaMl"ll Fulld$: Neuw Fo.1 1~'11 1.'pi ltle~ Ml pl 1 .. .,. .,. .. E f " .., .U • Interest rates and prices 01~11 M 1 •:?N•t Eout 1, " a11on '·"10.'' N""' w1<1 1o·511;-56 eat~ 1n0 42 Htt 11 1n.-v. -• -1~1 &1 101 421 31u ll'i »~~ t>111 ~· ~· ... ~··' ,, G~O 15'10 16'1\ Com SI 1.31 1.!1 N..wlo~ 11 '111 1•'° ll!hln Pl1.5D 10 XBlo J7>l l1l,, -E1111toPtll 10 ' ia•o 11•1 u i. l11IT&T •IE ~ lltCI Mjl-t HJ\'11113'11 ' have soared and larger down %111 Gen 11 11~• Htl L!11 1C1"' j1 11 G•wrh •.10 '·" Ntch srri ,-,1 :; ,5 ea11S<hL11 .111 11 JJ-1-"'' """ + '"Easco co ·'° 1 1 ,,~ 11 111., •·· 1n Dfl •.so t 1 15 15 -1 • 111111 P 1 ~~•ti Med 16\~ I'~ lncom 6.Ss 1.11 ~o•e~<t 1,-,.,. if~• ll••l•Lib .10 .lU 711-1<1'1 :00'111 1; · \$ 1s· ·· 1 l111T&i . p!I 4 11 ll n 72~) i '> payments are r-uired fore· 1v11 Fd •'.~ tu '' Pet 11'• 1u SPtcCI 1.l5 1.61 OC?1oDl>h s'i.o 5·10 Bal'!J~CI• .so x2 9>,0 ''~ .!"',-= 1~. l:~ u~lf 1~~ 157~ lfi: 16:~ 1~ :I:,? 1n1ra.T 01K• ,, 61 """ 11 IVI '"g these fam'ill.es' to re' ma'm Dll:lf:" M,1! 1~ ... 11li! .. •,•, '!~~ 7\; '" c11aM Gr 1os: o"".o~ 5·~ ~··~ 1e1tint1 1 J1 31 llllo .... -... , 1 y 1.,, ,1 26 •• 16,, 16,, +....1nTTpt N 2.1' m ''" .. 1, ·~• " ... .. ..,. " """" 1•1 ' Cooll •.11 S.32 100 Fd ·11 -16 u Bffl Fdl I i1 1m 21 11"1o 'Oii I ,.., 76\~ -.. In! u111 1.ICI " :U\1 2511 20•.. 11 h th Ill"• nu,.v. el llv• ' •l'o Fulld '·'° 7.11 101 F" 110'11~ 8etkmJ1n .5D s. 1 l 12~1 nviot'""i~E•11 GF ·1" '}Ii '6''> 76'1 st•. +1•\nl Ul " 16 71 21' .. 21 l W ere e}' &re. TO m any peo-Otlhl Int 7 7\IJ En GE lS>~ 1'1' Frnl $1.21 511.Jo One wmH 11't11 li"lil 8..:1 Oltk .JO 1'6 2'11• :19 ?ti'> 'r> EislCoCll~ 1' ~ 'n1:.; ri:! :11~o + , nltrP1ce t ~ 111'1 111'a 71 \\ ·• I d h . Otlux en """ •""' J HetG U·~• 1'lo 511rhd a.s1 t .ll 'N'!I 11 ·3111 ·17 Bel-d\Ar .151> 11 9\l 910 1•1 + ·~ Ethlln M .51 'ii '12\~ 11,,. 22"11 +•: lnttroc• l'I J l n 17 n -.,.. p e, goo ous1ng °'' c;nT lml•\) 1ch1n F u 11 sotei 1.11 1.o1 o~h .-21 '"11~1toP~1 ,.IG 1s ,, 1J>to u +O,EcterdJ .10 3 11 .. , 1,~ Jl +Yt1n11t1Pw 1.u i l~~ J6,:~ l1\,,~=~• is unavailable at any price &:!.. 1"~ 1~ 11" ~11:\~ ~ ~ l\\l Z:r.,r;;,~1: iJ.'' u .ls °"oic •,~ •,··ll •,:','• l:l~o~·'°.o ..ol ~;~ ~I.Ii lit•=~ @~1~1~1~1 1 ~3 11\'t 11 '• 12 ~ .... 1~~;11~~·"' '' u 11~ 11 + ~ b th t l'.l•wev i: 1• ~"<N" Resc 1111 2 e 2tt 17< <~ • .., • eeu '''' l oRo o•~ 6'i+v.E!Mu1k: .Oii! 11 •1• ~·· ''•. 1ow1EIL. 130 142 1~·~ 161• 1~+'" ecause e COWJ l"'j is pro-illm c~ I''~ 13 Ctr NG t'h t!'o F~~y 1:111 t :u =:~f ~~~ !·ll ~-~ 8tml1 n Co "jn t i~%1 14"1 1••0 -l'o Eleci Aucc: 11 l'o J~o J'o + \lo l""'ll!IG 1;)1 5 l'tl~ 19~• 1,i1 -o,ii ducing biml!!S at a rate that ',',',, lc"M ',' • .', •,•. '•"A' Go,1,1 2 ~. G•Wlh '·" s.01 P•nn SQ 1·,, 1 IJ ll~ndl• 1.60 10 21to 21-. 21'• + \~El M~m Meo 11 1 6'• •'1 ow1PLt 1 r.o 1 11•·, ~I ~\Yo .•• · 17 II In.tom t ,Ol t.N Pt Mui 3·14 J"u BellOI• Pl J 11 39'~ 39\k 39\'o EIMMIQ pl l .\ 11'\ 11'0 11'\ -"" low1P5v 1..16 l l•'o 191;, 11'~ -\lo satisfies only half the need. ~~1e,1_ ..!,, l!.'1 H~'w" "•'•'"•• 1r1 11;, Vtnl 11.:.1 1.)6 Phll• 11 ·1i n ·i2 fltMllC• 1 . .0 11 •1"' 0"11 ~,, .. + >i ElolnH1t 1no 31 s>• s•o S\• -""1cco Ho•D .J• 1 21•1 '°"' 11<1 ..._, ......, un ._,,., ,,.. 11 11•~ OI Gtlll .,.. t.W Pll•rlrn 6 n ft• 81!111'11 Di4.50 llO JI lO lO'\ +1 EIPtwJ>IG I 61 15•• 1!'1 15'' i \~ llE Imo ,6(1 '1 l \l.lo 71''• 1111> + l• Americans also have sur· Oovle oa i.:% s 11CI iltS< l"i 'I\ oms ad 3.•5 '·" Plt'lll 51 9·13 ,-1 lellf'll oil.JO u 6!\lt lit~ 6.S"' +1•1, Elf•• iJ: 1.10 11 10•0 20.., 70>, ""11t11 Co•" ~• x •, 21i.1 ~ .... rounded Utemselves w ith an &:~~';., 0 1~ 1~ ~ :~ ,r" J~ :1:~ ~g 1:1~ l:l; ;i:: ~~ f~ ,i:u ~:~uel°11'50 tt! 2r' '!~~ ~"' :-.'·~ @::::ee'1 ~~.ii 11t ~!'• ~1' ~· :1:"1:! -J-K-• . F.l P1lnl ti~ lO'ol< ot ~Ill 11"1 ll .omD A~ 1.U. I.ff Plln Inv 1·0 f:io 8e1151~e! In I ,,; ·~ •'1 • E,,.,.rv"lr .M 'I 19"' •9•0 '9\1 + '• JKksn.\11 .U 19 l>t ,,, ''0 -'II 1ncred1ble array of gadget.. i!1ptC wt ' l~~ Oril'•o111 "' ll'o comoet /·" I·'° Price Fulldo; · e1<1<eY PhCI 6l s•o 5l:o J\, +•-. Emft•rt 1.111 12 ,,,, 2•1• '''•+Ill J•ck"11 p! . .j() > s11 ~t s·~ _ that allegedly simplify life, but !il::i {~b 1f·• 1ru ~v':: ~: i;~ 1~ :~: ~~ ,:it 1:~ 2r"E'r. 1:··~J 1J·~i l:f:~n '~IO t;~ ,i~ ,P" :il~: .-~ ~~~1~·~.o 1~ 1r.! ;:~ ir.! + :~ 1:~:~'Fd°~O:'e J 1~: 1~: 1t\: +_~ .f•·n the awners leal'TI that '1"',,',,", •'•"••'•'•r,;,l,,'",,~ 11v.11..., omslk l .st J.t1 N ttor 11·411·41 111g Th•e• -'° '~1,,. •H~ •1~• +'1Enn1•Bu1 .l, 1 11•. ll'• 1l'~ J1•Fd 1n ....... t 10•• 101, 1011 •. ""' oh " 12\.'I 13\.'I CllCOrd 9.0I t .M Pro ~und ilJ fJ• Black Ok .II I' •1 It 'I I~ +1•1 EoutG11 1.:IO 11 l1'o 21l.4 7p., 1 ··~ J!'f!nPl..,1 .IO 16 "" 1!'o l5'l + ') these d-"cea -mpl'icate l>'fe ;,1,•,•, "•'•' ,",,: 'i" •,•,,",.',', ~, '° DMDI 1n •.oo ,,50 P1ov<1nr 3·11 .:os a0111rJo1>n .11 1 11 n 11 -\., ES! inc 1.20 11 111~ 11 111~ i ·~ ~!,?',"," ,-~ ~ .1"~,· ]~!.• ,'"', ... -, ,.•, ..... , "'u i" ._ I OMll In 7.17 3.1)] Pur!l~n I« 'n Un Lt~ I t 11\~ 11'< 11"1 , E10t1lrt .JO J 10 10 10 \., J•·~• o •-"' ,.. ...,.. .,. ' ·ns'·ad espec>'ally h th y 1 Nl!e 3 l \o'i '' F•E .... 1~ 11\lio °"" ""' 1111 5.tt Putn•ll'I Fundi· · l ll><:k Hit .:i. 116 .,.., q•1o " +1 Euexlnl 110 11 '''~ n•• lJ'\ '• J Jm win •'° no ll'' "'~ ~' t'~ i..c:' w'n e EtNuc l~ru•tkc:oCo 711 1 on1G1t1 •.H•.•s Ewll s •i•••!Uueflllll.:00 U 3r>\3'\~]7~i +1~1E1torllne .17t ! •·~ oi, ''•+"'JlmWDll.60 1112 l!~•.t! II.\ break down and canno' "'· F.lclCP1 1"' ' 1ncol l~i "' O•O t.d 12.41 13.l' G-• 11 '111i1ot ll lull•I DU.7' '101~ 101:o.;, IO?l·, .... Ellll'I CP .... ~ !~'1 lt l1 ,,,, _..._ \~ Jll'O'IWlll pl I z•.0 13 12'• !1Vo ,.,, ' ~ 'llrDm l:i.t 1l\ '•<l<r Or '" S\.lo nly C•.P '·" IG 1 Grlh 1'ot 1·1, 8-le lt~S 1S t\.o t 'o th ..... ElhYI Pl2.40 71 311' JI ll" + '• JollnMtn 1.20 JO 3.l'~ :IJ'o :IJ'~ ~ '" Serviced E C SV1 2 1\.lo Perkw tt T\~ I rn WOlv '·'' S.?t ll\COl'ft ilO 7'~3 lliiefn11Co .ollCI 33' l~t 1?-t 11-, ... Euro!YKI 1~ 1• 111, 1 11'~ +I\ JOl'>11Jolln ,32 1SI .16'~ 4j>O'· oil'~ 1''• ' I Dtl• 39'1'1 111':1 P1ult1' P 41~ !\i '" WO&I 5.50 ,,01 nver;I 5"51 1 05 8olsC~1 .1511 117 •J •1 1~ •ll~ +l''o Eurotd tn.1~ l II II 11 JOhn• 5Yt .N 1C1 1•'~ .... 1•1.1. '• Dollar affluence has ..-rmit-1 Mcd•1! • ,..., P1Yell1 110 ' tVQ~ M s1.:i611 .5 Vhll 1·11 707 Bc•6en i ,10 1au ,,,, 11:0:. n•• -1.1o Evan•P .IOfl " J..,. Jl'• J..<'\ + h JcnLCll~" .10 SI .. 4.l''• '4 1·~ ,,.... mPS on ll llll '"'l Ml '"• ''~ Oelt,,.,.re Gr~uo: VOYao 53; \·11 j0<0W1r 1.7S l5 70!1 211 N ... ExCel!O 1.2S 20 11 1''• 111" J~l•u .:Wp I lO'l 101' loll,+ 't ted hundreds of thousands Of llt1'f1 C 11 II Hrl" T 'n 7l\llo Otc:&I I.I• 10.•I lteo Ted\ 3°'.JO J.SI Ol"""lm to II 11 .. 12•• 17•0 + '~ Fab•l'(le • ..O '5 UV, U 14'1 + '1 Jone,~t. OI 5 JlO U't ''"" "'·• + t,; . ENtl It• I•\ ltli ii'• Encoln 1\i 1"1 Oelwt IG.lf 11.) Revere i ll 1·09 Bos Edl1 ,,2~ SI 11'·~ l11< J11'1 -'1 F•clor" ,60b ~· llh J:!'\ 37'• -'' Jor9tntn 1.>0 I 111.o 11..., i1111 .. Americans to own two cars, <=nnll B • '"° "• G&w 11" 1""' 0.11• s.5' f,11 lltlntr.T 1i..o 12 so BourN l11t 1 't' ••~ •'' + •< F•l•(hC .J;l 2'1 N 1!'• 1••• + \, Jostens .70 1• ,, '°'" 2a:. -1• but they hay. le.med to lh.'-l~lwlc'!., •1 '"•• '•i"•• •w•,c n • 1•; r1s·e1 11.12 ll.12 Rounth i•1 s 2J er ... l!Alr .50 100 I!< II\ fl, -l\ F•lr Hiii .l.k 11 7•~ 1 1'• + 11 Joy Ml• 1.«1 '~ :If'~ JI'~ 39 + ~ I.I" -· ,,. ru lh rl'/f Fd •.n 10.N $lie-Ill FO '0 .... gr1oos1 ,,..,. lt •&•~ '6" ~ -~ F1lrrnont I 22 II'• !1\1 1, ... + '· Kllffr .\I I •1 ,. ... 21\lo .,. •• +!,,. chagrin that in some areas .~11 T~ rJ m ~~R-::;1 DI lf'\ ~ o;~~:w~~-J~ 11·1• t= FJ~~·;.11.n a~:::~v 011 r 'f Ui! m: ll:Z ~ ~~ ~:::i111!'Fi~o.1 ~ 1t~: ,f:; 1t!t ! :: ~:1: ~tn i ~l! ~~ ri:~ .. : : gOVtrnment offic!a'· ha Ve ",! ... Ct0t, jii 2V. ,hll 50ub II 111.1. 81t&n 1,11 t .tJ In! Inv 1"1 •1'12,7J Brit Pel .Ve lJ tlli tho 'lk -'~ F•n$!ffl Inc 1• •l't l 'l llo + '• IC•I 4.111>12.31 11~ ~ •• • •,,',•, •,,~ '+' • UI ~uTlk ~hole 7'Ho 1'\ Grwlh •1910.17 Srcl ,..S12•S1fl<lWVHllt 1 ·', "',1• 30).~ 31!>''··1,FtrWtilF!n 1$ 11"• 10'~ 11 +'.\tKlllCem .IO ,. .,. ,. rwormitted mo-r eg'•trationa J:1.r1.,. 21'1 ,.le I'll 1 ,,. jrw:om s.10 I·" 19,1 11 s• ~J'\• ew.H• 01 "' :11< ... ~ + Far111M• .IOb 1 .110 •I'• '''' -·~ K•\~ "1·50 1 :111~ :.•~ J11~ + ~• r~ ... w Pf(! 'll " C""! SI I.I! 16J Br~WY GI ·'° ' ,,~. ,. 1• -,., F"S Intl 161 JS 6'1 ·~ .,. -\11 ICI pl .JI ' 111/o 11\1 11~ + ·~ than thut are JegaJ parkinrr 1cc:k 11' 12.09 S~r(!\I' Fu..:io· 8k!YnUG I 11 1 74 7JU 1.' + \, Fedder1 ICI 2(11 JI'• '6\• ,.,i., + •o Kan il'wl l 2 .!_! J0>.4,,,: ~ •• ~ ",Jl -.. •. ... ll!:Qrtl 10.0' If '1 !:CNfV 1 IC j 62 1~.;,o XI • ~ ~·· :•• :" ;.:_ 1' F,~!f!!, 1,.~ \O> ~ .... ~,,,, ~I< , , !'f P~':._!fJ.IOl ...., • " "\ !mlCU. ber.t 10 • 1 .u 111ves1 '·'° ,n 1,., ... 1• '' 'J n • '' ~ -.. + ., """Ind I ,,..., '"" 17\' + •t •r f of th B n!Drw 500 Jtlr• S,12 s I ••""" ""' ' ·-··· FROP~ Eitt 42 t:it 1'4 llt +''IC :kKJ pl 1 rtOCI 13'1,j 1]\, IJ\\ _ "-A eaturt eeconomic tl Hill ne•ot 10./i'i·.s.s11«""" ,,1117 •u"'-w1110 211 1 12t.12to .. FPK.i1" 141jt.131,1J'~-•.1t•ncE1.• 2,10,.,101~201~+'' .spa"'lon ha. been .. ~ e y QlllG"' 2.1 .tl~•t:OPfC.511t1130'la" .... ~E1<01 •'!l .,! 1,",,' 17,:~ 1,1~,-.~!FedP1•ld 0l 2 l 'i 11'• 17'•-'tlC1nPWL 1.16 S '1~ Jli,t lllJ. .. "'1 rJI k 4 J 151 Sentt GI~ 1•1 )ii '" "' ~ .,..F PIP r l 15 t110 1~''o 11'• 11•, 1(1ty 11\d lJ 6\\ IV. l'A I.lo edit edi lt\IHY f.lt .lJ Sl'>lfl'I Fd J"! T 00tlCl<I 0 i>I ! 1!00 ... I~ ff\~ .ft~o + 'Ill FeCISlo~ .6o 5 ll\t 1~\') ll>o -'• IC1k/f !rd ,20 '" !'/~ 311.i< ?1'>~ +I'" O" -consumer er t ro.se i!v'"' 1~ 10.•2 1 11 ""e•r "11 1 ,.. 8~:.,t,not:: 11 • ' • ··· F'-"tt•ls inc 1 '"' s~ s•• 1t.1wecl9 .JOb u BU. '''°' u + '• from $71 billkln Jn 1964 to $122 N Off' ~'tl'"c •• 114~f,12~~l ltde~•11 1J:U 1~.!: 1urrF01• 1:10 1t :it~ ,;:e stn + ~; ~~z·0~!'' ~ 12~ t.~! ~:: ~::~ ! ::; ~:;:r;~~.;o60 11 :~ :~ !o~ .... blllto · J-bUt that ew lCCr tfrfCI 7~ f't ~1.,....1 .,u!ICI,. gv!!_veW ·"° 23 IS" lY-io Uh ,. Flllr.tiro Ja 11 201'1 '111\'I 70•;, •• Kelterlrw:t .50 J 111._ 11 11,1 +•\ n m """ -•m au ,:,, :10 c11>11 1.i1 4.15 8~;..t.1t:;r~ 71 ,! ,~.,., ,r; ····· Flellk•M i . .a 1 ~· '' '' i<••teo• 1.10 11 ,..., ~ .. ,.1, _ ,, credit burden MW harasses t0 Grit! 1/-' 11.22 lnv11! f.'7 t,M Burl tl!O 1·.o H1 311.. i~ ll'I t '"•l~ro,1 l.'°,o>o ' 10\~ l'" :Ml''o -"• ICllHY I.SI 11 II\• 11\t 11\t •I.I. •• i·o .P IO.S7 Tn.oJt I.~\ 1.11 l ••I•-'.. • ,. ,,. -' .. edt ~ n•. O't 101.o • '• l(tf'CltM ,Ill " tti;, ~1 ,,.. ~I '• many ol the -pit "'00 a~ BeUy E Hiii h bee • "'" /2,t71J." Smlftt I 119 • 19 a ~ · ·• .,i, 1P• '• F rtdnt l 60 ll Gt• 4.J~ 43i.,,-+ ~. it;~nn,..,tl .lfl ' 'l'i 21'4 1,., -l-,, · r~v " ._. . 8S nnam-lei rnO l .• ,tll.Jflwstlnv/ J.?S 7.l•sllrlHor~.J.S ii!'' 11.~ lt'AI 1::~t }<Fi!Chrt1.7'f 10t ::b'• W-. ~'•+"'ICen11COn2.60 16) Jt~'t lll,i Jnt+y1 <epted jt ed install Nncl1I ProV: Wlnv Gt 4 5t t H lurn4V · '1\~ ti t' 1 -l-ll\ ,',',' M,,",',,,'· .. ~ 205 ))l; 70'1 'l -~,,, -----------"-'-'-'" E-nom' lc ment consumer Joan cw,.,"" J.ll j·" !rm 1nv 11:tt 11·•1 ,•,,..rrt111.!. ·62.., ,, , 214 1s•,. 45 '1 -t .,. ... v expansion has Ill . c""~' l" ,ll r'•CI,. J,34 S.IJ ,,,. .... 1 I "'• H• ..-h F•• N1tS!r !• 1 '~~ :zt•• ~'~I -" pennltted m 11 110 n. of 0 Ctt at Bank or Amcr1c11.'s ncom .•• .*! Fm GI ~-'' •.11 -C-FlsChl>ch .IO s "'~ 2'" !A'• -'l 1nl l 6' •.OI f111' SI :IS.50 S6 jO C ~. C -'' J> ,.,. ~· ! ,,_ '°l'h' FCI .1~ ! '• !'• 9>; -•·· Costa Mesa branch in· ttF V•1 •ll •Joi ,,,,.,,,,.n _,u.,.,1·· c!r'~r..:n1·'" 11111 11~ 1~ ·1·. ~ F1w..rsc1 .!6 n ''' i.. ~·· t 1• Americans to afford a college • 111n o, /· .... ,_.. Am 1f!d '·" !'" c1n11111 ~ 16 11 .. tn• 111~ • ,, i:1em11111 .)0 l '"' ••· ••· -'• ed ti d 'ed th nounced M Ch' Cl k II tnGlti 11 I.~ FldlK J 11 61 ( It -~ I JJ'• 711 ,,., -lo Fn""'°'' I St "'~ '~'· ,,\, .... UCil on ttll to eir an.ager IC ar e. II t11S!t ,;,, ,;,. SClffl 2:511 :u ,•""Psi i II u U\I "5\to ~I +\) F nt Df"•,50 mo " •S'1 M 11''1 •-b t of th '1 Hill h • . JI MulH 1.lJ 1 d Slf'ln RDf Fct1· c'"o' .... <I 1 F nl '1&2 H j jl 32 JJ + \o paren1.11, u many e i-rs , w o }Olned the 11 N11 •.oi a.s• 1a1 is.u iJ." c:n ·~ec · 3 20 6 SN. J~ 544 + '.lo Ft• E cN~1 ti\ 1f • " educational lnstltut., ... no·-ban'". ,, S!tr11 Xl.21Jl.11 , •• 01 '·" 142 c ,,, .... I }]•, ,,,. ,,,, '·"~ ,•,·.· 1•. H ,.,. ''• 1111• .... '• ... "' In 1947 1t P;isadena, has F.1.,1 ?' s,.•,,s "'' i Stodl 10.olj 1o:•s ,:"', c 1.,o, • :u 1N ' 1 • ''" .. ,, cannot afford student.a and art betn t the r •• t M b h .. G~ • .., ·n ~.~'fl l·lf j-U Ct•llrun 1.~ ~ !/.'; ~l\I) J/:; ::. '· ~1:p:r~1' ~2 1l "1•~ ~:; fl:.: i1 1 : ln financial distrw. 1 ~ a esa ranc "" Giii Jl. • j: 1 YT>C~ G1 1:,1 ;117 c1•111111 .eo ' ii•\ 12•1 1fl.1 , Fluorca 1 1 ss ... 11•• 11•, • , , th ••· ··• '·· h unll•• • 1 TMR A• I" l" C•l'Dl'Ll 1.'6 'l 21') 21't 11'' + •\ Fh10r •I• l ..,._, IOI~ ..0.1., +-a_ -Some t6wn& ate tlttle better ree....years. .,..~ ·~'---ut-oun~ 1." t'.n r~tt.Jus :..u .:i. g;r~~~ 1 . ..0 1;J ~::----U:; ~ t ,!;: F~&_.J..1 a. 19 . "'• 11 .. -•• no, t&L11M1,. 111 • ""' ffl ~ _. off th ndJUo of · · t band Bill 1'6ide at 1546-B F~"\t." GTI!1 6.U T:g::l ~:if ~:\~ C1rrGn ti;: t w. H~ 1•1· ..,.. FMC 11t2.ii'~ --, ~r-~fl ~1"...,-"" 111-~'"""'""'~,,., --; e CQ R muruclp& . Grwlft '-" ill 1~· •1 UlllVIJI C..-i.rW . ..0. Jl1 14" H l't -lo F-F1lr .f(I t 1)'1 ll•• ll'I S.I" fltv<ft •re UllOll'l.clel servicu hu dttmorated to .a Conandcr Drive in ,..A••· u111 s.t1 . -~ •.11 ,_,.. c.niea: . .nll 11 ~ it'' 1C1~ +'• Foo11 c• .66 1 " 1... ~ -.. 1 tr ~ ... lneor11 '11 'j ,-C1m't'r 1211 N :11 '"' JHo +-10.F-•• Ml• , U <I'•'''' .......... ew 1 11'mrfr•.,11-.Alll!V1l rai1 d.pr-•lng de~•. 'I a n y 'f sa ' · r•n •• ·•• 1 t2 · -" -•• -I> •• e • F•llCI,.., '· 1 . .\t •&V ~ 4 •. ' CCI C11<p ' J.\ )'• j'• -\ Foolt P'2.10 ,, ,, !'I'~ ,,,, -'· 1>111' •lllO lf/Yldlftd. C>-Lhiuldot1l11t1 1111 ... to·-· have been •••bl• .. Fd llMUI 1.20 t .)O ~ Fcl n~JIU.•2 l;tt0Cc•1 .t'll ) II 1,s>.1. 1 1, .. FoolMol 2 • ..a )tie •I'• "'• 41 '• !1-·-~ ... ... ,..., 1"1Jl'lf Int Orp: T""" Cl 7 :11\ '·ll Cllint .. o 1 !II IOI\ 1••• 5•>o + \~ FcrMcK• .llO tJ 11'1 16., 11'1 >, , -. ' °' PIM !ft 1'11 •"" ral&e mon""' t6 I m p r 0 v e f:::( ':ft I:" ~"'.,, J"' I·" l • ,','~", 1•,',".·~ 1 S1'• Ei;. s1•. . fo1• w111 ·'° ,, '"• l•'' i•>o: + ~ UO(t 01v1c1t1.,.,, ~·"' 1, • t ,,_~ ..._ t ts ''ra oirs and F d N '"" Trcl 1,.~ > J~ Un1111 "' ..1!f 11' c"1't FCIY ,.. 16' "f:: 'l:Z '::~ .f'~! ~~:::"ttr ·~ .1 4,11~ '11'u11~u 11'!. ~ P1r1blt In 111d! 111ur1,. 1'71. ftfl~IN J rtt • Sewt t reser\' or c1vport ,lie! .11 . Un C'pl11 , ,. 1/J CM Hud 1..11 1 ~I'~ fl•1 '11• _,,_!Sul IC 51 1''~ Hllo 1411. + '•tail! VllW ti' ~ ... ., 111'41rtrlll¥ -~-Is mainly beca"-they Ftltlll "'" .u Un lt.d f'ulldt: c111 1u1.1 1 u " "" m• n 11 . F"'thcr, '"'-101 1S'• 1.tt. 1Poli -.1-" ;J\;U\N • _... •!."'}__ i·"' ,... "'rm J.52 • ~~ c lltll 11U" ~110 '°" .. 66 .. F\111111 n ..... .. 11. • .... + \, llOfl cUol ... ·--O•cla~ ........ ,,, cannot pay the hlah .tnttrest Chief Pi'ckect r;...~ s:~ :;: ~~ 11-a 'i'Jl ~:!. ,,·~ ,,. u I~ " + 1' -G-lftf• .... ,. lo-Otc~ • ••kl .,..... ratts no'# """'Yliling. roup Sr: \1•111_ 1.. H Cell! SW 1"to ~ ,!l~ 1111 !:.:: t+;: " Cl U.I 11t 111~ IJ 11•\ Sl'llO: llllwhl9nll II' 11111' """ t-OICi.... r•v ""' H1 1·~ lJl'CI c111 1~ '.:r ce~• SoY• Ao SI 71"t t1 )I .• AF cC•,.. 1 iol 1:, IJ._ *-'., + ~. ..1111 "'4• ~...-. u -a.ii.. i,_. Laraer citlet are faced with )~ 's~ 1fZJ 1 ::l v'1~ ~~~nc ,5f: '"~!'ii·'~ ,;:b '1 ~~l'I ~r~ \~!-,, "F _;if.)b"° , 15'., 1}11 it..--\~ ... 1111 dlvklll!Ol 1n •f'Tffrs.. _,,.,.,. """ a more explosive situation -Or. Ed•· a rd A. ){Iller has !!?"d,,.A •l··ff 11.·• .,1 .. 1-,1, t'R •, u c .. ,. H'li .tO 60 1...., uu .. ,1 + ._ •::i'" s-o 11» 1 n 21 11 _ " -P•ld ffll• rw. 1111v'""" ll'l'llf!M, ... the ndl Ion of h I been .ppol I-· d ' to of .... " n c·-....... _, -' '' ' t ,., • 1111. 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Th lat'·tl nd th c!Qll • •bo' l r1 DI '"! ~ 'o';v M W•flln•Hft r.i<•~· Cllm11" Mc• ~ J~'. 21•; '''• + '~ m n•n : /,:: 1'0• ',' 1j'•' -W Cid -C111r11. tr-b<CllYklfflll. t'-h-Cll·~ e S ~ O a e at ...,.. I 0 ti VA1!100, o ,·,,, l··u <••r ''''llf' i--·' 11 ''' 1 i -·-""'""" I 1'• tl1't '~ ""'l"V l.6S. ' !1•1 11't I 11 •''I Clt!oll •nd ••In In f\oll. 1'<11111-ll!:!Nlli--IJlmS look lmprusive. e ven Annou~mtnt of his 1~ -· t.7• · tY'" 1f•1 · • l'Mil'INV 2eo 11 w, '7'' se>t 11• fl'\011 .t0b ,., .a ll'1 ,.,, ••• , ..... ,_ , -• ... II"' ,. Ht rllor-I," l'!i f,Dfl ''1 '1 llPmwt '1llh ti S.. 1't S>t '~ "1'r1n !Ill l'j J1 ~I ll'• _I·""'_,. rr-1 "~I. -Wlflllllt _ .. wbtn the economy is badly in· pointmtnt was made by Dr. _M!:..n ul,' .. 1 '~••' i"• , n ~~ "o~·..1 '°, ii n-l "' t -'• "'r," .n.lO d 1 "l.t •i>• -1, ~•nb. -Wtffl ,,...,.,.,Ms. --wtitn '"" ). '•Ill .. '-"" ,.., n 4'1t ""' :t:' -ll't ~ ~ .J.I IJ 11 I 10 1 1\ 1 -1 , lrl\11,1 WI 1¥ttrn nat.ed and battling a recosion \\'alter s. LaBergc. vice presf· l!iG~"' t-n ~, :.;•1,.• ~ ·~ '~," ""'1.,.r~,' ·~s ,f.,. J1 i... . 1,~ .,•,, !' ,1••• "' '!'• .._ .~ 1·• ,.. -• .........._ fll-Hr.xt I th I B do th d and f 1 t!o ,. 1 .. .\t . ~n ,,•~ ',?:.: '••' -, i. Ur Clflivfn. vi-In ilfoftlr"1nltc'r., r-..._ a e same t me. ut e rnl g'ntral mana-r of ' t ·~ j ff '· ·""" [flll .... • ,, h1M11 "' 100. 1111, 1t1ot + -. ~ ·f.:' , ,..., ~·- th 11v lml •o I 1· ..,,tltl'I I 1"1' \!I' ~IJl~•u ) I :It'• 19 ... "'"1 + ... ro J" I', !''• It'• I !" ""'-~!• « flloll\'f 1-••nllH -ft\t { lrures ttll ' slory tile W&Y \\"OL1 0[\'islon ~·ilh htad· Imo 1~ \ . ·· · '"Cl ;· • ·~ n.it1,. ct uu ~ 1.• lr>1 11~'4 -''I.,, ll'i. 1o11 t. 1 :• n l t••• .'••~~..,.it• "''· ., w-c ... 111 ....... ,_, t ho Id • told! I • ft(, f'dl 1 ~~ ,.,,,,,.,.,, *)I i•1 '"""""" T1r i ~-I ' ., "., .... 1,,.. • '" ,.. ,., ' • .,. o# ~-~ s u wl quar~rslnPalo Alto. "°'~ •1 -·1.,f1 '1c~ .. v::11 ""' "'> • J ~"~d• Ml u1 ,,, ,,., 11 , ,•fam1111111n.tro-For111"1""' 111bl'°"'" lllOlltf ~.4' J., Worlll LO• J II' C.tort ,v,,l.1or I 1 10 • 10 I t I,. tn Hosl I 1-. f1 o t ~ <11! .. 11 t-lltlllofo I•'- Market S91nbols 1 I I --------- H1' DAILY PILOT Tuesda y's Closing Prices-Co1nplete Ne,v Yori\ Stock Exchange List Co111plete, Closing Price s -American Stock Exchange List 111 iHltCl'S Rltff f;f)Sf!l'S , SI It Nel !hell I M th I.OW Cle~t (Ill Slltl Nt1 UIGI ) Hflll Ltw (IOll Cht St iff Ntl \llft I Hltll Lt W Cleat Cll• ' ' • '" , . • '" " J' • M~ Coro 111 •• '' hu t • M u, HOIT\~ ,, u~. 11 • 1•\ M 1111k Air• 12 30 n , '., tf" 514 -• MO VltCI (Ill I J'' 3~-2'11 + Mon P irf•~ 11 '4 '2\ lo -;Mooo ln<. IS~tS " • ' ' I ' . ' . 31\o I • .. '. " . 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" +I' l'Jrll'lt nd Ind 10'1 s 51 ' •l'Jx1~11el!!c s s•• l>4t s "ddF11 1 on I .i> ~4 I~ 011rk ol. I nt • tl &:loio 6 ,_ P&ol. lndu!I 11 j 1 •~ 1 T • P&I" 11\i!USI ','j ro 1 :.... :t: -Pat> Ct! Proa t 1 -1 PGE ,.,, I.SO 19 J' l o I -\f PGE pt l!t l! *j~: ii~ 1JU ~ • ~ge,J&: ~ ?t 11 1 , .,1 6 ;+ PG <J.-A ?5 1 1 n +•PGl 50of!U 10 21' ?! " ~Poe Hod 60 i 1i , ,,si; '• = "" ;::o 1~ 10 it I M:.o+ '"P1clt pt<U • • • l ' I + I Pa<Nwftl I 4 •••t+•p1!P&LolS 11 ~ i: •;),-+' ::~;r,~ ~I -J·M-"•UC1> • tto "'"'5%'-'" I )> 1~ l'>->P•rll lt.,UI ", i 1? I?;_ • P1rkl111 1101 111 t \'lo -; P~rkWtl~ 011 10 I o I 0 t 0 + 0 Pt •OllJ JIM l ·~ lo •'I + 4 P8r~ln Doh• 6 1 1 ?• ,,_ 1 PllPPaa ll ~ j ;· ;·-·::!t'~11~, IS 11•~ 11' 11 Pl'el Eder 11 1 , 1 1 p~~" Eng 60 •, ''7 , 1 r , '"fll<>bS~ lo. 11 II t • P111fr011 e1 ~ l !l~o S , Pt(Koml~ •O !U 1< l •, 11v,-.. PEPI 1 lC 1' 4 • i! ~~ 1 )Perln\ Cao I ' • t t\~ Pe man.tr ?! " '1 , 2• 1-) Prtl'le Str •S I •, ) • ~ 1 ~ Ph111.aOl1 ,, ~),7 Pllf!o5c0Sp • •I t Pf1Dt111 Stl ~ ; . ' . '" . ' l 'S i ' PlrJed! A, rf & o 6 Pick Nfck l"I! • • " 4 Pooi«e PIO! i '1'lo Pi.oner$y 111 ' < P llWllV 60b \t o 1l 'o Pli Y(Yf~ d 1 I• 1 ,. . ? 1!'• t ' t> 't PJ<I. Co "o '• "I'"' i,.., " !ft _ Pait Otuo 1 i 11 i _ PIYO•tn :loll . " ' ? I 1 II lo ' ' ' ,. , .... 1 i , . ~ . ' "'· . ~ ,. . ' . , ,, . .. , \ 1 ~ : 11. T'\ 1, .. ' . 1? 0 1• • ' ' ' . •• .. , ,, • ' . lJ\~ _ ,.>n.11 Sell 10 11 , Pneu"'° ov~ 1 + ~ i"O!OrOI' .Ul ,, 4 ~:/~~:. 'fl " , ~~~r:~ b"'' 1' Pall [•m~ ' t \ Prtnrlf~!I H ' i Pre,11:11 9 10 ' + ,,. Prlct Cafll!~! ',, -.,. ....... s. 1~• , ~ " Prov G1J •• !•"' PrudRet JOp • ~ ..._ Pn,1d8 do 21 ! lo .... I ~~~~ri:: ii 1.~ ~ 115Calt ol~2J ., fll11r!t•" PHii ~~ :i: ' ~~t":f1s J: 1!;..., ~ l''l'roll Co 2• • -NO- ' )I ''"" Hft IMI I Motil UW C•M Cllt ,j " '"' Finance Briefs MINNEAPOLIS I UP!J Honeywell Inc , announced It wlll lay off 375 more workers ln the Twin C1t1es at the end of August bringing to 2 09S the nwnber -Of Honey" ell workers fur loughed since March Those to be laid otf mcluded 27S ad m1nistrative technical and clerical employes The Jayofrs will be ln the aerospace and ordnance divisions and will be cau:1od by defense cutbacks HARTFORD (UPI) -Aetna Life & Qlsualty Co said Mon day its direct underwr1t1ng losses caustd b>' Hurricane Celia on the Gulf Coast we1 e about ~ rnlllioo Remsurance recoveries wdl be mpdest the company said Cella also con Aetn a $2 S mtlhon m pool 111 surance losses wltb other com- NEW YORK tUPI) Crowell Colhtr & MtlcM!llan, Inc baa oblalned -. new lhrtl'-- - --l • ' .. ,. ' fj DAILV PILOl Wtdnrsday, A111jj11~t 19, 1970 ~~~-'--~~~~~---'-C Heritage Looks Good Valiant Gets Win Over Herttage. By At.MON LOCKABltY which aUowed the boats to set _..._, ,....,. the spinnakers. NEWPORT, R.I. -Bill Both Fielrtr and MCCullough Ficker and Intrepid fOUDd claimed the start. Said Ficker . . after the race : "We had plan- le<Olldl belllnd at lhl! fint.,., mark. On the clole reach to'the se- cond mark Ficker had cut McCullough's lead to one themselves tn the odd posit.ion ned well in advance to make a of ootsalllng the competlU..0--ponuokStartanaget closeto Tuesday and losing ~ first the shore as quickly as possi- race or the America s Cup ble. 'This we did, deliberately minute XI seconds1 and ono ,~the)!._..joiM'lii.i splririiker run (() Die enifOi"' STILL CONFIDENT -Bob McCullough , syndicate manager and skipper of the ne"' 12-meter Va1iant appears happy as he prepared to go up against Bill Ficker in lntrepid and Charley Morgan in Heritage in the fin al selection trials for the America's Cup defense. T uesday his confidence was justified. STARTING EVEN -Weatherly (top) and Heritage are even as they sailed on first leg of their race as competition started to choose a boat to defend Amer- ica's Cup next 1nonth. Heritage was easy win ner. Hard Luck Sailor Buys Boat Su11d<t)', W reeks It M 011dfty VEN ICE (U Pl 1 -On Sun- day, \Valter Talley, 56 . bought a used 32-fool cabin cruiser. On ~1onday. while piloting the boat to Morro Bay where he pla nned lo live aboard il. the craft ran aground here. On Tuesd ay, Talley was wet. cold and miserable and the boat was slill tighlly wedged into the sand. "They'll never get that on!.' orf." a veteran lifeguard told Talley. "She's there and she'll stay until so mebody comes along with an ax .'' A Coast Guard Cutter at - tempted to free the cruiser but succeeded only in pulling off a bow cleat and part of the deck . The boat went aground when Talley hit bad "'Cather and lost control of the crafl. A gaping hole where the craft had smacked into t h e break1,•:ater was clearly evi- dent so Talley wrapped hi znself in a quilt and decided to sleep on the beach unlil his in surance company represen- tative arrived. "I've been a civil engineer for the U.S. Arm y Corps of Engineers for 28 ya rs ," he said, "and I was ready to start taking life a little easier." But his troubles weren"l ove r. \Vhile he slept on the beach. looters crept by him and onto the boat. stealing the ship's radio. stereo and three expensive suits. selection trials. taking xauant's stern and Intrepid loet I:'° B 0 b. forcing her-to follow us on McCullough and Vahan~ by 42 port~ tacit by tacking on the seconds over the Z4.3 mile cup line " course in Rhode Island Sound M'ccutlough told it a liWe seven miles southeast ol Bren-differently. Said be : "We plan-- ton Reef Light ~ower. ned oo fbe southerly filling in At the .same time, Charley and wanted to be oo lntrepid's ~1 o r g a n ' s signlficanUy lm· southwest Side at the start, proved Heritage from St. and that'• where we were. Petersburg, Fla. was making Soon after the 1tart Intrepid a shambles of her race wilh appeared to be ouUootlng and George Hinman'• Weatherly, outpointing Valiant and left beating her by sil: minutes and her some 500 yards utem but 19 seconds. . still to weather. Both yachts. But the interest of the Jam made frequent head sa.D\ packed 125 spectator boats chaoget as the zephyrs all but was all on the m~tch between disappeared. Intrepid_ and Valiant, the se-"Did you fall into a hole on cond pal! to start. that Jong tack?" Ficker was The race . started In a light asked. northwesterly that dwindled to "No," the genial Newporter nothing during the first 50 replied, •·we just opened the minutes, and then c am e door and walked In. We should boooming back in the form of have tacked a lot sooner and a 15 knot southwesterly. consolidated our position, but It was this wind shift that we felt too confident because blew Ficker's lead and of our big lead." chances and prompted some When Ficker did tack, his observer! to call it a race of boat was going almost 180 navigators up to that poinl degrees to his previous course. Still others called It no race' "\Ve knew then we had to at all as the first leg was the take our beating and get as only beat lo weather. With the close as possible,'' said wind shifts al1 other legs of Ficker. the course were close reaches As close as possible turned v.•ith the e:tceptior. of the third out to be two minutes and 42 J.:langle the time split was one minu~ and 17 seconds. What shouid have been a beat to the fourlli. IJ\8rk ·was again a close reach and Ficker lost four seconds but made up eight seconds on the reach to the !Ulh mark. On the final reach to the finish Intrepid had pulled to within 40 seconds of Valiant. Asked how he accounted for the difference in speed on the Jast five legs, McCullough said Valiant was using a new boom with no vangs, so it was im- possible to trim the mains'ls off the wind. So the race was Won and I o s t on what Ficker called "that weird first leg." "It led us to think we had it · '5de, and then had us ondering ir we would finish i lght of Valiant." ~cCullough said G e r r y · Dri.!coll took the helm of Valiant for about five minutes on the sp innaker run. It was noted that Steve Colgate or New York was at the helm of Heritage during most of her race w i t h Weatherly. This and th~ significant changes in rig and sails made the Florida boat the star of the first race of the selection trials and definitely a yacht to contend with. Ahmanson Coast Race On Saturday Mooring Areas Bad For Boat Accidents Ocean Racing' yachts en- tered Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ahmanson Series wlll line up Saturday, for th!! start ol the 63-mile Coast Channel race .. The sta rt wll b I! ap- pro1imately one.quarter of a mile west of the Emmy Drill- ing Island which is ap- proximately two miles west of the Huntington Beach Pier. From the start the neet will sail to the Point Fermin Buoy west of Los Angeles Harbor. thence to Ship Rock off the Catalina Island Isthmus, back lo Emmy Drilling Island and finish off the Balboa Pier. All 1narks will be left to port ex· c.'e'j!Jl the Emmy Drilling Island on the rteurn trip which will be left to starboard. St. Francis Cruise Set Many boat accidents \\'hich occur in Newport Harbor in- volve boats under \~ay going through a mooring area of which there are four or five major on~. Mooring areas offer the boat operator bi.! equivalen t of city traffic -both figuratively and literally. It should be remembered that all boats in a mooring area tend to point in the same direction in response to wind conditions. The exception is in an area in which boats are moored fore-anci-aft and do not change with the wind or current In any event, moored boats form "avenues" in which boats going or coming from the area tend to travel. At the same time. tenders or dinghies .running b e t w e e n nearby docks and moored boats create traffic that tends to fiow across these avenu~. In a large mooring area such as off Newport or Balboa Occupants of moored boats often decide to go swimming in the water adjacent to their craft. So, another thing to watch out for is swimmers. Legally, you are responsible for damage caused by your wake. Among the ma n y reasons for ope.ratin g .slowly in mooring areas · is the presence cf yacht tenders or dinghies. These small boats. unfortunately. are often badly overloaded as they ferry ~ pie and provisions from docks to boats. A passing boat's wake can easily swamp these craft. The best rule to follow i.! to proceed through moorings at a speed so that your boat makes no wake at all -as c.an be verified by looking behind you. NHYC Race Set Saturday yacht clubs. there can be a Newport Harbor Yacht Non-resident members of St. whole s er i e s of "in· Club's Coast Channel Race, Francis Yacht Club from tersection.s", just as in a city the fifth in the current Southern California are plan· with its blocks. \V h e n Ahmanson Series for ocean ning a coastwise cruise in ear· operating in a mooring area, racing and Pacific. Handicap ly September for yachts -the wise boat operator prir yachts. will get under way both sail and power -plan-gresses in a reduced speed Saturday (Aug. 22). from a ning to be in San Francisco and keeps his eyes moving starting line at Newport Pier. for the September Invitational from port to starboard to The 63-mile race will take[ Regatta and Tinsely lsland watch for cross t r a f f i c the fleet around Emmy oil Stag Cruise. b e t w e e n moored boats. island to port, to Ship Rock I The cruise is envisioned as There are other things to off the Catalina I s I a n d I a port-to-port type starting in keep in mind in mooring Isthmus -leaving the rock I San Diego and calling at such areas. When going across the to starboard, thence around 1 intermediate p 0 int a: as "avenues'' and passing the Point Fermin Buoy to1 Newport Beach, S an la between moored boa at s . slarboard and finish at thel Barbara and Monterey. This always do so well ahead of Huntington Beach Pier. would a11ow for wivts and their bows so your propeller ' Entries for the race must: girl friends to "keep up" by will not cut their mooring be on file at NHYC by 51 car and for crew changes as lines. p.m. Friday, Aug. 21. required by individual time These lines may be slanting The final race of the 1 schedules. down in front of the moored Ahmanson Series is Balboa Non·resident members of st . boats at varying angles and Yacht Club's "~Ton_g way" FYC are requested to contract have to be watched for . race around Catalina Island. I the o-uise comm?ttee If theylpii __________________ _,111 are interested ln such a junket. BOAT SLIP OWNERS LOOK ~NG FOR ... ' MARINE ELECTRONICS AT blSCOUNT Why Pay Retail Prices? WE SELL FOR LESS e WE REFUSE TO BE UNDERSOLD Simpson Pearc.-Slm son en 11 Ray Jefferson Simpson--L•wrencl! Western Marine Calmec Norcold Lewco Gen eral 0'EM DAILT t A.M.. i. 1 l'M. Syndl rt-lt-.1 l'.NI. SALES INSTALLATION 2430 west coa•t highway newport btech ..... '"' Boat Marinas from Sacra- mento to Sen Diego use vinyl dock point mode by Wilker Paint Works -because of ease of application, I o w • r cost and lasting quolitie~_! WALKER PAINT WORKS 116 W. 16th St., Cost• MM1 642 .5776 . ~ •• 'A-..-.n,: """"" ... iVlt-·"""'-"'"'""""""'_-;, ........... ",,.,."-""'" .. 111"""""""''"""""'""' __ ., .. :, '&..-------------------- 1\'e10 1fltlf"f'r The 48-foot sloop Nalu IV is trucked into Ro s· an Shipyard from the Chapman and Associat· es plant in Costa Mesa prior to her launching, \vhile (bottom) Marta (Mrs. Andres) Gerard christens her before a huge crowd of guests gathered at Rosan Shi p-- yard Friday. HERBERT L.MILLER, Inc. TIRE BUY OF THE YEAR CELEBRATING OUR Nl':W COSTA MESA STORE! • MICHELIN X RADIAL The steel-belted radial tire! FORDS, CHEVYS, PLYMOUTHS all sizes, all makes all models PRICES START AS LOW AS: As~ us about budget terms Famous Michelin X features include: • economy Michelin X gives you econ- omy you never thought you'd get fl om 1 tire! They roll easie1, use less en- ergy. Act1.1alty last at leasl twice as long as conventional tires. • s1fety Yoo get highest degree of safely against punctures -test -proven tor high-speed safety at 115 mph. • ~rlorm1nc1 Michelin X tires offer superior cornering, superior braking, superior turnpike driving with no wan· der1ng on st1aight·aways. • constructien UniQIJe radial design with super-strong steel cords make lirts grip harde1 -tratk su1er -roll 11a3ier with minimum distortion and scuffina. 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE of actual tread wear! ~ .... , ............. _.. ................ -.. --... _ ............. -.. ,_ ~ .. ,.,..,.,_"'•--......... ~ ................ -......... "' .. , ... _,,, __ _ .,_ ............ -......... '"' .. -·-.... ~,--... ---·---... 1·--·-· .. ·---Drive In for YJ!l!l' Michelin tire buy of the year -today! \Ye feature AUTO & TRUCKS ALIGNMENT -BRAKES FOREIGN & DOMESTIC CARS ., • • • • • . • • • . • • • ,• • 1739 SUPERIOR AVE. llJtti' "-'*"' 209 BUSH STREET (Jrllluda..'il •HONE' 642•3384 PHONE: 547·5685 HOUIS: HOUl5: fll. NITIS 'TIL 9:00 TUIS., WID., THURS., I TO 6 P.M. MON. ttlr1 F•t 1:JO TO 5 P.M. SAT. I TO J P.M. SAT, 7:JO TO J P.M. MA ,Tlll C14AllOE-MOST Clll"Olt ("'llDl HONOl fio-11,.Nl(AMlllCAID Try the Born Larry Filer of Rough and Ready, California, decid- ed a steering wheel is better than reigns any day. The veteran horse trainer began training his horse "Doc" with a steering wheel two years ago. The -"' WtdllndlJ, August 19, 1910 OAJL Y PfLOT %) Coa t Students j LEGAL NOTICE ,...m ,...,,. Get Diplon1a~ ,, --cmnt:1~:.~~0U~J' N~~NUS, CIATl,,CATe OP' aUllHll. CIHl,,CATS OP' COll ... •ATION "°" TM llftUrt19nN ._ certl" tit I\ "CTITIOUS NAMI T••UllACTION OP' IUSllfWU UNDlll cWU<llM • W.IMH el f01 W. ltlll Tiie undtf'lltnod dt CV!Hy tfley .,. Tbr nr,.,.~ C t lllCTrTIOUS NAMI $1., COii• MtN, Ctllfwlllt llflllW IM COftdllC'lllW I Mintie er 7~ We,_ ee v • ... A6e 0 I s ~~:,o~~':t:? tt ~~:::.r:~ fl(llt*-'1 flrlll ,.MIN ef LICH'TWOUnSI Ave., Hunlll!ltori l•c.11, ClllfOntlo, -residents are amoni 277 bullnel• i.uted •• m Wdl 1'111 SttMf lllSH 'N CHI '· •nd '"'I UICI rm • ., tlll nc1lflolls flrrn lllllM ., HUNT• und~raduate s t l.l d en t. Neowl'Ort IMCll (It 0 lo• 17"). .. ~ ol 11141 ... loWlllt ,..,.*" IHOTOH BEACH AllTO IOOY .... tflot IC h e-d \l l td to receive Clllfwflle t2iUS ~ ~ fl<tllkM firm ~=•"' 11111 end '1ect II retWeflcf ~m~,CC:!:"111 o:i11":.. ~=~ l!ellle ef 0 '~ Allnu•I It) H•• ,. o_.. MKNl'llt• '2S Merrlmec ruldtn<t ,,. u follows• bachelor'• ~ at the ;::1,:r~ .... ":-'il'-•:,L""1 I Niki w • .; ..... .,., COSI• Miu. C•llf. Mork c. How1rd. '"' koll'Nll er.., Uni·--'"-of n....-v•r's sum· ...... -"'" ..... 1111 cor· ~ ~t I. 1t10 H1Mt1noron ltKll. vw ... , &Jal ~ ~ .,_. Jf'lftcl!NI llloct of bvtlnui '· ~ Mtcllell'ltf' VMlfl L. Howard, tlll Scoutall ,,,. mer c0mmencement exerclla " u _.,_., ".,. "' C4....,,.11, OtMtt C041ntyi H111111n0111n Boac11. D-1..1 .... ,. IUlTON 'UILllHING COll,OllA• On Allt\llt J. 1'70, before .,.,... 1 Otltd AODvtl ), 1'70 r n....,,. l~1 "2-·.W.·· lf"-"'"'•· HtW'llM .....,..,. ~ lit •ncf 1'r' .... M• IN~ c . ..._.,. 'niey art Dee Renfro, 1927 lwdl. C.lltornla. ptrtolltllY • .._,. "· Owtt Mocll•IMf' Vlvi.n L. How11rd 1:1......1 de Drl"e, Corona .1 .. 1 •=~~~:. 1" Miid tlll• 17111 .,.., "' ~'*"' to fM • ._ ttie ..,_ WlltM It ... of C.llfwnlt. Or•nH C011nty; ~.. • uq (C.-... S..~ ntl'M ts .-cir::.,_ tlw Wl!tllll Ill-01t A=t 4 tJtO, b9for• """ e Mar: WllUam Shinn, 33201 a u1troN ,UB1.1s111HG ;::.-:. Inf .c *'-' "' ... .,,.. ~"' llDl~";,.'"t.~~ ~~,. ..!,~':d Ocean Hill Dr\ve, Dana Poh\t co1tPORAT10H co,,ICIAL llAL) lflCI IMI '-· HllW•rd know" ._ nM JMn Jurich, J()al'*' a. DAVIS " M tM wsona wlloM nom. er• and Albert Tbompaon Ill, 1104 Ablsl•nl Stcrtl•rY .... ffY =C•llfllrnla ~ ,... wtthln '"'''~ .,. E Balboa Blvd ~ .. .mnrt ITATI OP' CALIF01l1'11'1,, l"tlncl!Nf Ill ~y extWttcl ft\t .. l'llt. • •1 4~"-COUNTY OJI' ORANGE, u . OrtMe ( , l!ALI Beach Oft !tile 1'ttl doY Of Aututt. A.O. 1'70, MY CernM...-n a.1r• JIAH L. JOIST ' ~ IM J~ I , Devis • Holtry June n, 1'7.. HotatY P11bllc C•lllotnl• l'llbllc lfl w for uld COllfllY •nd &l•tt. ft11blls1Md ~ c:.tt DlllY l"llltt. ftrlnclp•I Otflc• In rHldlnt therein, dulY commlUloMd e nd Aututt $. 12. )t, M. lt7t IQt.70 Orentt counlY twwn. HnOMllY •-elf Jun Jurl<ll m ._.. My Commlulon Expires 1-------------k.l>OWft IO mo IO bt the Aul1lan1 S«ret•ry ~ ·~·-Mlltdl t. 1'13 CIHIP'ICATI OP' auSINHS of Ille . COfPOr•l10n tllel txKllltd the ~llMd Orantt '°''' Dellr '"'"'· Tilt ~~':!!! :,:r..: w "_. :;'!~,_ ""i::i.:...--:e~ !'a:!:ti!f.: c1m"1~"'•:,. 1ut1•1U ...,.. 1• It "· 2'. mo 1...,.19 Mtll'(t • IMIMtl It ~ J2M, ~ .... fM ,.... IUdl ~·Ion Olfot:llted P1Cl1T MAMI • w;.GAL N !Midi, C•llfwllle, llMtl' .... flcllt.._ t11it .-. 111 Wltllttt WMreof, 1 how The undth ...,. wtHY he Is ._ OTICE """ Mme .t T"~ CHIU>tllN'S IHOf' ~ ... nw 1N11W aftd affixed my of· COMllCllM • ......... et fHt Annlll •!If 11\ot Mid """ It ~ et tM tkllll -I tM M Y Mii .,.., 111 thb Drive, Hllftl,..._ -..Ch. C.t"°""', '·lm> ..._.,... W-. .,_. IWllM Ill Ml aM artl~ flret "°" wrttttn. vnder lllt fldttleuo firm Mfnt ff CANUU CftT.,ICATI 011" 01$CONTINUAltC• qi "":t;.!; folleliW: (0,,ICIAL HAU CHDIT $YIT&MI. ~ IMt .... flnll Git Utl AN!>/ott UANDONMINT OoCIY a. , •1t ltlY• Alie., J.._ 1. Devis I~ c:ompeM ft .. ~ "'""" 01' l'ICTITIOUS NAMI N-1 atedl. Clllf. NotOtY ,.ul>Uc-C.llfvrll,. whos• M IN lilt Mt •frl' .. r'f nMo TME UNOEllSIGHEO d-11ttWY Doled Al/IVSI l7, mo. l"rlnclHI Offk:t lfl dMU Is .. .......... cwtlf'f tlllt. tff9Cf1Ye .,,,,, U, m• DollY a. MulflOlltfld Otentt County JCIM ~ ~ ttl2 A1111• lie cw ... '9 40 bUlllwsl 11Mtr ltMJ Sl•le of C.llfwnl•. Orante CMHllYI M.Y CMWlllHlon ai.1ru oriw ........ ·---c.llf. "'46. fkt"*-fltm nome of SANTA ANA On Aue. If, tf10, MfW'9 IM, e tlot1rt June II. m4 OllM ~ a. "10. flU•NITUltl MAllT •I 06 WMt ,~II ll'llltllc 111 lfMI fDr Mid St .... ""°"'jty flul>I~ Ottnte Coest Oelly l"llot Jtfwl HetCIOUf' MMtll MrMt, S.!IM Ano. C•llfofnlo, wlllel'I ....,..red DollY I . Mlfllo!IW ltMW11 '9 AlltVlt 19 M Mii S.leml>tf 2 t Stllle If Ctlw.mll. On"'9 c.nrt: lllvtlMet wt• flltm«IY COITlllOHd of tM ~~ :-~ ~..: 1f10 • 1~,0 H:...., A=lc l.ifl '!:' ~ .. "?...: :.-::c..":r"~= I~: ~1.!'! .c:Molwtd .... lllt txecutff tt1t MmO. ,,.,.._.,.., ~ JtlWI f4erqurt AMl'lll ..,_lh (Ofl,,CIAL If.Al.) e ~n, lt.-wll .. mt to lie tM '9t'Mf\ ~ OIOllOE '8lOMAH, 2'1S L.oknlde 11e0e H. c111tttl 11ANAU NOJ'ICE ntmt la t111Mcrlbed '9 tn. wllhlll In. Avtfl.ie. o"""' ceuromlt. Nolary ,ubllc • Calllornla ttrvmont end 11Cltn0Wlodttd 111 •11tc11tld Ctrtlflute tor lteMKllon Of IMIMU Prlnch••I Office Ill NOTICI INVITING •IDS IM .. mo! \lndtr • '"' •boY• flctlllOV• "'"" • .,. Ol'•llet county • Notice .. MnbY 11\'tn tll•I th• Board (OFFICIAL SEAL) •Hl4evll 01 llUOllcatlon tlltreof, .,. - LEGAL NOTlCE MY c;ommlHlon l!K11lrff of Tnltl~ ., ttie Oro11tt Co111 Junior JIAN L. JOIST fll• In the office of "'' COllnfY Cltfk u,. T•"*• S_,, 14, 1'7l Coll"• Oletttct .. Or•ntt County, Notary 'llbllc • C•lllornl1 of Or•n•• Countv. under lllt llfOYllltnl l"Ubllsllld Orone• CNet O.llY P'llOt. Celltornlt. wlll rocelve , .. ltd blda UP l"rlndNI Office In of Stctlon 1466 of 1111 Clvll Code. wheel is connected to a wire-ring aroun.<i the horse's neck. Filer said he was going to equip "Doc" with an Indian bridle with a sign saying "For Emergency Use Only.'' Alltlutl "· 2' •nd s.tombor 2.. '· to 2:00 '·"'· ThurMMY. Autull 27. 1•10. Or•net county WITNESS my hind thl• '"' • .., ., 1'10 lSAMt et tM P'u(dllltlnt o.t. of u ld ldlool MY Commlulon Explrei Au1ust, 1'70. dlalfld loco!.. •t 1m Adams Avenue, Morell 2, lfll Gtort• Ftldmen 1f 111n.aw N~E C"'8 M .... C411tornlt, •I whkll llm• 'ubllJhed Ora~• CoHI Delly ltllol, DONALD KLllN ~'U'-vu"' .. ,, llldll wtll bl -IMklY Qllened •NI AUIUll s. 12. "· 26, 1'70 1443-70 AlttnM\' •I Low Cll•TU'ICATI 0, aUSINISS rttd for: Mfl•I SlltMnt fol-Food StNIQt ... N. Moll! St .• Ste ... 1 '9CTITIOUS NAMI ArH •I °''"" Cout Colltt•. LEGAL N011CE Sall!• Aftl, C•lltef'll~7tl All bids .,, to 111 In occord•llCI T Tht unclwil•ned do ctrllfy tllW •re wllll tllo lnatrvctlons end Condition• •nd 'ul>lllhtd ora~e Coest ''-!Iv l"llot. COIWllCtlne • bllSlnetl •I U.'261 OunlllM l ft.)11• ... .,. ' Ave .. G1nl111 Grovt, C.lllorni.. uncltr tM Slfll( flClllloM wtlldl Ire PWM on flle ind ClaTl,,CATI OP' autlNIH Auf utl 12.. 1', t• and sat-tem... 'I, fictitious firm nomo of ST. LUKE'S OAY rnoy lie _.. Ill h office Of llll l'ICTITIOUS NAMI 1'10 '"'"" ..... SEllY (NO .. ··CT••t•"') ·-· t"-" ,llfcMtllll A9enl of aald ""°°' dlitrld. ...... undorslt•-' ........ _ ~-.. 1... he --------------:;.; •1rm Is ~"'~"';;_ .;'..wi; rtc:11 blddot mutt Wbmtt w1t11 "''I• ·~11<111111 • ~ .. :':i ,;;t'tlart.or LEGAL NOTICE . . Miles of Trails New Lobby __ ._ 'IWtlole nalMI 111 tull •1'111 111oc. Of "'41 • cotllMr't cMdc, certified cllKk. llVd.. c .. 1. Mote, Callfornl1. UllCMr -------------nsld-.,. H ftllews: w lllllMtt'I llolllt mMI H Y•blt 10 tllt tho fldlll-firm nome .t ltECOllO P."*52 Jollri Y. CWsliilr. ltlll Jllld•Y Or .. .,..., ., .... °"'"" CNtt Junior Colltte SHACK •ncl '"'' Mid firm I• '°"'"'" ClltTll'ICATI °' aUSINIH Hunllntlon ... ell, Calif. Dlrtrlct llMrd ef T""fffl In •n amount of tbt follOWlne ~ WflOle nerno l'ICTITIOUS NAMI not las •lltn fl\'t HrCllll 15'4) of .... f"ll ..... ... f ••---1 Nulle J. QUfllelr, 10112 Jol'IOIY Or,. ttlt aum bid es • euarlnlff tllet the '" " ..... ,..Kt o res,_..... • es TIMI uncHtlltMd ~ ctrtlf'f "° Ii. Hunt11111on Btodl. C11lf. bidder wlll •nttr lnlo ltlt P,_ed folio;:~., S lendltr OS Mtrrlmec conctllC'llne • buatness .t 2* S.. Gfend Walk Out of Smog Into Angeles Forest • LOS ANGELES (AP) -To leave the smoggy Los Angeles , basin it's usually necessary to deposit a trail of dirty car or airplane emissions on the way There's a cleaner way. You can, by summoning the stamina and fortitude you usually reserve for driving the freeway, walk out of the smog. Yous simply head up the nearest mountain. It's nol a sport f or everybody But it's catching on. An estimated 600,000 persons hiked last ye ar in Angeles National F o re s t , which is spread over the San Gabriel Mountains, cradling I the basin on the northeast. One trail in particular at- tracts the urban resident. primarily because or its pro- ximity. IL extends 28 miles from a U .S. Forest Service station above Sierra Madre to the J et Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, 20 minutes' drive from downtown Los Angeles. I It serpentines through two canyons, paralleling strea~ on a 2,500-foot climb that -on a bol summer day -starts in dense smog and rises sharply out of it. Until tbiS summer the trail was divided into three sec- tiQ11s. Last month the sections were given one n a m e , Gabrielino Trail, the first trail in the National Recreation Trail System. Few mountain trails this lor:ig are Laid out more painstakingly for the urbanite who wants to chuck the r at race for two or three days. ll 's carefully marked by signs and virtually impossible to stray from. It's aCCesl!ible by road al severaJ points so it can be hlked in sections. lt g enerally stays on the canyon floor. But it holds the promise of high adventure. After all, this is ratllesna)(e country. a Cact the inexPerienced h i le e r tJSualJy 1'eeps firmly in mind. Th~ trail crosses steep ridges. winds intermil'\ably through thick underbrush, scales fair· sized cli!f s. At the lower levels the tops of trees -sycamore, Live oak. white alder. maple a n d Douglas fir -are dead and dying from lhe effects of smog. When the hiker reaches Spruce Grove Campground, elevation 3,120 feet. after a 1,000-fool climb Crom 'the Forest Service station at Chantry Flat, he rinds the trees whole, the air clearer. About this point the htke really begins. Squirrels and I i z a r d s abound. Mule deer appear oc· casionally. Not far away are bobcats, racoon and perhaps a bear. The stillness is eerie . Edging around the face or a granite cliff, the h i k e r wonders if he hasn't gotten off the trail. Were he to slip, would his body ever be found? About this point. t o o • disillusionment sets in. Skip- ping around the cliff comes a troop of boy Scouts. Aids Rights For Women O.ttd AutU11 u. lf70 Contract 11 11,. """ Is ewirdld 1o Way Costa' Mose C~llfOnlll Aw.. Sent• .,.., Calltoml•, "'*" the Johll J. Q\nllalr him. In the event of fallure to tnlw Dated J111Y tr ,;,. . fictitious flrm nomt of OllAl't•lll Null• Qusllalr Into tUch contract. 11\o IH'OCMd• Of Sidney S • Twi« BY Mlt. JOHN •ncl ttlot llld """ STATE °' CALlfOllNIA. Ill• clledt Wiit lie forfeited. ., Ill tho Stet• of C•llfOrn#o. •• 0,.M. Ceut11Y: Is COl'ntllMCI o"'f lltllend ro1, 1ow1ot"' """"' ORANGE CO\INfY: case of e boi\d, the Ml 1111'11 thereof Oii July 27 I bof!We .... • Ntttry whOM 11111111 Ill a Pace IW!denm On ""'"'' le. tt1G, ~ ""'• • Notanr wlll be forfelled .. Hid scnool dlltrlct. ftllttllc In end fir uld sta't.-' -llY 11 °' follows: l'ubllc In end tot uld Slete, llt'IOMllY No bldcMr mey wlltlclr-Illa bid for fflltlrtd Sldllf'I ·s. Tt"411t; r---to Joll11 W•lsh, 1'1' W. St. Gtt1rllde ~,!~k;::~ To ,:";:1'111°';c'111~~~· • !Nflod ot forlY·flv• (.Ul ~Y• ofter me to be tM "''°" """°" n•mt ~"·:~· Ano.1Cl1~ BOISE Idaho ( .. P ) A w11ost namts are aubtcrll>od to tlll wllhl~ 1"° dale set for .._ OHnlne llltfoof. la allbtctlbed to tllt Wllflln lnstrvmenf •1 uevsJ 1 'w' 1 1 ... .n -Tllf loord of Trva,... rtstrvtt the end ock..-ltdted 111 txlCultd Ill• Mmt. °"" • ""' ' l11'frvmtnl Ind acknowleclted they ell• prlvlltte of rtlocllnt •nY •nd •II blda (OFFICIAL SEAL) STATE OF CALIFOllr-tlA new women's lobby group tbal fo:~::cl.:"S.!~:'"· or to waive •nY 1r,..u1ar111" or rn.. Joseoh E D•Yls ORANGE COUNTY: is determined to make state J"" L. Jobst lonnt lllftt In enY bid or In tllt l>lddln•. Notary l"Ubllc. Callfoml1 Oto Au11nt n, mo. Mfortlf mt. a .. o1.-ftullllc . C•llfornla HORMAN E. WATSON Prll)Clp•I Offlct In Hot1ry llPlll>llc In ·,":' .... ..,.w"1·"' SI.,.. J la •-1. " '• Stcty., 8011td of Tru•tteo ' Or'alltt C.VnlY ,.,_. Y •-reel _,._,11 • ... knfwl\ egis tors w.Ae greater DOtlet ,rlncl111I Offlct In OPlll: Autusl 27, 1'70 2:00 p,111, MY CtfllftllHIOfl EX.Crta to 111t to be tM 111nen whOH MIM Of the fair sex and their Opi• .~:ntt~l~~on Expires • Publlilled 0<•119• Coost Dell'( ftllot, Juno J), lt7.( II IUbscrlbtd lo lht Within lnetrvl!ltnt . h Mtrcll 2, 1912 Au•u•I 12. "· tt70 1"2·10 J ~~Wd .. Or•11t• (Ollst 011ly, '"~ i8111~f:.nos:'~»''" II• IXICllltd the Mmt. mons as been formed. in 1"11bll1110c1 or1111• coe11 0111y ,.1101, LEGAL NOTICE u.., " •ncl .-titust s, 12. '· 1'70 •7·1V JOM!Mi s. on1s •Idaho A11t111•t "· 26 1nd S1Pltrn1>1r t. '· . LE:O .a 1 NOTICE H•t•ry l"ubllc. C1llfornll • "70 1$4NO T.-IU4 l"rlnclNI Office In C lied the V NOTICI TO CltlDITOllS OrOM• County a ote Rockers, the LEGAL NOTICE SUl'IElllOll couttT oit THir P·•l• My COMmlulon EX1tlr• · •jo will k th STATI 0, CAU,O•NIA flOlt ClaTtPICAH 01' aUllNlll JUlll 21 1'74 orgaruza. n as e NOTICI INYITtN• llOS THI( COUNTY OP OllANOI "'CTITIOUS NAM• ,llltlllMd Or•~ Coul Otlly ftli.t. I isl t to . T1le C041nlY Slnltallon Olslrlct1 of Nt. A"'6UJ Thi Undtrtltntd does certlfV w h Aueust u. It, 2' •nd s.tomw a. eg a ure g1ve ID 0 r e Or~ CounlY wUI receive HOied bids Estate of EDWARD J. STE,AN, condllctlne 1 111/slNH •I 2AOO W. COlll 1'70 1"7·,. Serious consideration to those unlll 11 :00 a.m., MolMllY, Aututl ll, "10, OtcMMd. Hlwo, NtwlOl'f Beldl, C.llfornl•, llncltr . J • • at whkll time llleY Wiii bt PUbll<IY OP-NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to '"' "" flcttllws nrm nom• of TICKll!O SOCla ISSUeS Of greatest un-entd and eumlned 11 lflt office of !tit crtdllon of tllt 1bo\le nemed decedent PIHIC BOUTIQUE orld tll1t Hid firm port LO WOmen says the Sta~ Olllrlcls, 1094• Elllt Avttwe. F011nl1ln 11111 all fllrtOm lllYlllO clllmt 1g1ln&f It cOll'\POM4I of 111t fellow1nw peraon, ------------- cha. Mr• C) '-VelleY, Callfornl•, lot 11\t tollowlne eCIUIP. lllt 111d ~I •ra r ... ulred to flle w+tost l\llM In full 1NI 11lact of -~ NOTICE TO ClllDITOaS ITIDaD, S. a r .r. e m111t: "*"• with lllt ntCISNf'f vouc11tr1, 111 la H lo!lows: SUl'Ea1oa COU•T OP' THI Ehrlich. ONE Ill l"OWElt V ACUUM lllt ofllu of tllt clerk. of Ille abote Ue ••lnwatlrl, ti* SUDO Ave.. STATI 0, CAUl'eltNIA ,Oil "W , defl-a-t' . SWllE,Elt S,ECIFICATION N 0 . antllltd c011rl, or to prffllll them, with OllWll trovt, CalWot11I•. TNI COUNTY Of' OllA ... I ere umc:ay mterested E'454 '"' _,.ry ~s. to "" un. O.ltd JulY •· lt10. ..._ A'"'5! in WO~eJt'S r igb.ts! but WUe ,:i~ed~:':: =~i:i 1:" ~ ~~~~. ·~l':o~'tlca ,;:1 111lv:i.ome:t lt•lt et ~ll~i:::·~r:,.. Ct11t11YI ~:i Of lllEllE .HIVE.NOA WILTON, not militant feminists like tbe Wltll all -I'*" of Ille IMClfk•t..... tM St•rs. Suitt *· Los AllOll•· On July ,., mo, b*fw• mt •• Not•rv NO~ci IS WEllHY GIVEN t• ttMI , 1a.-• SHclflcotlon1, bld ~lllkl eM f\ltttltr C411fomlo *'7, wtlldl Is tn. l'lece ''*le hi Mii tlr Miii Stttt, --llY women I IJV'IC48Uo0 groupl111 lnfptt'flttlon mey be obtotnM tt t1lt How of bllelneu of t11o unclenltlltd In •M •-M I.ff •.•lnwo1tr1 llMWn te mo crtdl of tM ebove "°"*' "°'""' adds Mrs Ehrlich, •&.... ff ..,,_, ~ MN'tl ti MOdfll. IMtttn "'1111\1ne te ttle ..... tf tt be tM MfWOn wtloee -Is IUbKrfbo ltlel ell ~ ~vine ci.lmt ... llllt • • WI!; -J W•vnt ..,,_.., Mid d~t. within f04lr mOflllu ,,,., --"" Wllllln IMfrVIMlll •nd "" Mid ....,.., .,. l'tlllllrM .. file year-old wife of the com-o\rtetcr of l'IMnc• tt1t flrat PUtillUfton of fhll notiu. •c0ctil0Wt,.,.101~"-., ~"" MiM-::"t.t:.ltll «fh:tttie'*:''"' °'~....!: mandant of ..... Idaho MW•·-P'\llllltiled °"'"" CM•t OIJly ltlfet .,. ... AlltlUll a. 1'70. -..... L) erk Of &.111: ...,., Allell&I 19, mt IW." Mllltt Ltt Key, Admlnl1tr1tor Jotn K. Mdltlllll'IY entitled covrt. tr to _.._, ''*"' wlttt Academy She has no children. of 111t Estate ol 11>1 Not•rv 'ubOe.C.ltftNll• tllt lltCtts•r'f VO!ldltrs. to IN ~ "W think• LEGAL NOTICE above nomed d1eed•nl. l"rlnclpal Offlco In dtnltned •t Ille offlc• of his .,,.._.,, e a positive Ip-IOMN ' WANHL Orlnt• COllnty Tholllll c. Kine, HNP«t N•"41NI hlllc l'Wf\<llcb 1• .. :-g do d SU1"a1t10lt ceultT OP' TMa 1 .. 1 A..,t.w. of Hit Siers My Cemmlulon l!!JCJll'U Bulkll119, IS01 Walcllff Dr!Wt IUlte r~ -S """ WD an STATa o, CALll'CMlNIA HR ..... ... Fab. 10, 1'74 Humbtf 220, Newport le•dl, Cellfw11le discussing the issues we THI COUNTY Of' OllAMtl f.M AneMI. Calif. *67 l"ublllllod Or•nte C:0.1t D•llY 1'1191, '26'0, Wllldl Is fho piece of MIMA beli in with late ,,_ Toll (tU) UJ.2ttl July 2' Ind Au1111t S, 12, 1'1 1'70 l3'1·10 Of the Undenlt ntd In ell m•lttta -4 eVt our S IUMMOHI Alttnll1 t.r Adml11Ja1ra11< tel"lnf to fllt at•tt of ••Id dktl!efll, legislators -can and will MACCO lllALTY COM,ANY. A ,ubllalled o .. no• coast Dally Pilot, LEGAL NC11'1CE wlllllll IOllr month$ ofter'"',,,., .i1ce- work ., •he says Cori>orellon, "•lntlff ve. al!TTY 11. AlllU•t s. n. 1•. 26. lt7o 1.w1.10 llon0 of1..,.th1• "°!_1c3•· 1,70 , ~ . BAUIR, OOE I thrOUl h DOE V, .... 171 1 -o;::u•• ci' I W fl Issues in which tbe 48-:;~;t;' 0.:~rrt~NI STAT• 0 ,. LEGAL NOTJCI CHTIP'ICATI OP' aullNlll Adm1~11r!1; of •,:·E11t1• member Vote Rockers are C:ALlflOllNIA tt t11t 11tt•• "'"'" °"-•1c:T1T1oua NAMI of '"' •llov• nomtd d1eedent l · te ted Mr Ehrlich ••llfu The Undll'lllnM do clf'tlf\' they are 'fMMlt c. 10111. mos ln res , S. Ytu •re l\ll'tl>Y dlr1Cttd to fllt • writ· ft411t7 torldllcllnt I llllllllHt el tnSI lltY N-1 NltleUI alllll a11llfl111, says are public kindergartens t•n Plttdlne In r""°"tt to "" ver111ec1 c11tnlfl~~~· •" •u11NaSJ , ..... Clrcl• Dr .. 1rv1111. C.llftr,.11, undtr ,.., Wett<llff onw. Sllfft "'"""' • • • COl!lfllelllt Of th• •boV• named pl1lnllff lflC I ous """'' th• fletlllova """ nome ef OMNI IN· Newll'tt ..... Clllftnll• ,,... ecology, weUare, he a J t h wna '"' cltflt 01 the aboY• llllllltd couri Th• undlf"sltnacl dot1 certify It• 11 DUSTllll!!S and tt111 uld firm 11 com-Tllr <n41 '41"2S3e • · I al bo ti d 1 "" lltled lion br Ill tond11clln• • buJlness •t 7100 Ptttrson POHd of tllt followfne ""'°"'' wtlot• Alttl"NY fW AMttlllllr•tor .,erVlceB, eg a r On an ~Inst ::, :Zrd ~c wllhln ~'H Wey CP. O. Box 1>62) COiia Mose, nomos In full end plactt of realdence Pllbllslltd Or•ntt Cotlt Delly l"llet, birth control. days after Ille atf'Vlce Oii YtW of thlJ sum• C•llfornl1 .,mu, under fht fletltfOllJ fl~ era 11 follows: • Aueust s, 1!, 19, 2•, l'70 lOf.19 "It' b dJ b ed " be -If wved wlfhln'tho •llO•t Mmed nome ol MAlllCETWEST ASSOCIATES JOMPll H. Lllllf, 1S41 W, Fern Or•v•, ------------- S roa y as , s _;., w wllflln THIRTY ••n 11 ..,...... encl '"" Hid llrm ts composed of '"llerton. callfornl1 nm. LEGAL NOTia adds "with women from aD •IMW~• "" fo11ow11111 ""'°"' w11ose Mf'llt 111 11one1e1 IC. Lewellen, 1m ~. 111t1 )j ! I . You "~ llettbY notified ""' 11111tss YOll IVll •ncl Pleet of rtlldtnc• II .. lollowa: Sll'Mf, Newport BHdl. C•ll!Ornl• nuo.•------,-.-Jl154------ po t1ca parties, young and '° ttle , written rt1110n1lvt pltldlnt uld eum.n H. Gay, 2100 Pttersoll wav, oattd July :JO, 1'70• cl*Tt•tc•Ta OP' aUSIN ... Id both ti and ' Bldl. 11-G, Cost• Mao, C•llfernl1. JOltllh H. L11tlf ,.. .. -0 , COnserva VeS lllalnllff wlll t1h fud•ment IOI' 1nY Oaltd Aueutl .4, 1'70. llonold IC. Ltwtlllfl P'ICTITIOUS NAMI I i b e r a I s . Th ere a re money °" d•ma"' c1emonc1tc1 In 1~ St•t• ot CallfOl'llle, or..... c-1Y1 stet• of c11tfwlli., °'""' Cwnt'f: Tiie Ul'ldtrlltntd ooes ctrtlf't lie ·~ . . Yl!'lfled com11lalnt " 1rl1lnt upon Con· On Alltllll 4, 1910, before '"'· • On July 20, 1m, before 1111, • Hot•rv condutllne • bl,ltlntls •I 2010 ...._,...,, housewtves, Careers girls and lrect. or wlll J#IY to 11141 court for any Notary Publlc In and fOr said Stole, ,ubllc In orld for Hid State, lltrlOntllY llvd.. Cotta Mt», C•IHOrlli., -*' some weliare mothers " other rtlllf demolldtd 111 Ille verlllad ,.raonallY ,_,red Bl/rton H. Gey knftll •PPt•rtd Jo&ffll H. L.utlf end Ronald tilt flcllllolll firm neme of CAllLI • ~lalnl. to me to bt tllt person wlloSt neme IC. Lewtlllll iu.wit te 111t to M tho TlllE &. llOAO SERVICE W tMt She says the group was Yw IMY ...... •ntu •f H •tttrMY Is 1111>1crlbed to tllt wlltlln lnatn.l"*'f "'""" whot• Ill"* .,. IUMcrlllM .... firm Is c~td of the ftllewlM Started after the 197 0 • •llJ 1n•tter _._ wt• Ille -end ock-ledtltd ht •xocuttd lht UMO. to lt\t wHllln lnlll'UITltl'lt end •cknOWted• -son. whosa llllmt In fvll .,.i -!tee , .. , ... tr tlll• lllltlMML '"" •"'"'" (0,..,.ICIAL SEAL) tel they txlCUtld "" .. ,,.,.. of rutdonc• la .. fellow•: Legislature failed to enact sllou ..... _,... Wfttll1' ,.. ... ""'" Dorothy A. N111t COl'lf!CIAL Sl!ALI Carl Ktnn1tll Collon. toeO N"""" bills e S t a b 11 S h ·1 n g Jcin-atalM 9'I tllle WllMMlll hr flllq • Wr1"M Notary "'1bllc<•lflotnla J1c11111tllN M. Lewollt11 Blvd., Cosl• Mesa, Cellf. , ... ~Ill le lllt -•191111. PrlnclP•I Oflltt 111 Notary 'ublle< C•lllernl• Oaltd Aueuat ll, 1'70 dergartens in the p u b I i c 0111c1 JUM ,,, 1'70 orane• COl/llf'f PrlnclHI Offl<• In Corl Ktflnttll CollOfl h l (OFFICIAL SEAL) My Commission Explrti Or•~· Coun1v Sitt• ol Cellfornle, Or•nt• COllfll'f; SC 00 s . w. E. ST JOHN. Clerk Ftb. 7 •• 1'7J MY CommlHIOfl lolrts On Aueust 11, 1'70. befor, me. • What bas been the reaction BY Anlholl'I' A. ThOmPJOll l'ublltlltd Orene• Cout Delly l"llot. Jllllt u. 197J • Hotery ,ullllc In Incl for Mld um. r rt.cul I Oep11ty Clerk Au11u11 s, 12, lf, 26, 1'70 1447-10 ftubll111td Oren.. C.Hf O•llY "lof, Ptl"IOllOllY 111Herl4I Carl ICennofll C•"'" 0 men, pa I ar y govern-W11lworth, Seidt! a Cr•ll, Au1u1t $, 12, lf, :U. 1'70 IUMO known lo mt 13 tie Illa lltftoll WlloM ment officials to the group? u11 Wt1tcllH ortve, Sutt• N111nw 2tt LEGAL NOTICE n""' 11 subKrll!M to tllt within 1,,. • · NfWMrt at1ch, c1. nut LEGAL NOTICE 1trum111t end eckllOWltdttd lie encuttit "~ppr~bensive and nervoua, ~~w :--=...... NOTIC• TO CHDITOllS li-,,~~L SEAL) at first, Mrs. Ehrlich 1ays. P11bllallod Orantte Cont D•llY l"llot SUf.'••101t COURT Ofl '"' NOTICI TO CltlDITO•S JOSl!l"H E. DAVIS "Jdabo is e"""'"t1'ally a con-AlllllM ,,, ,, •nd St11ltmbar 2, '· STATI 0, CA.lll'OINIA ,Oil IUl"lltlOll COU•T OP' Tl411r Hot1ry ftllbllc. C•llfor11l1 • .,.,..., 1'70 l54>1o THI COUNTY 0, OllANOI STATI OP' C:AL.,OINIA l'Oll l"rlnc1,.1 Offkt In servalive state and men are Na. a "m Tl41 couNrt OP' ouN•• orane• c-1y • ' Eslat• of LIDA 8. WAllOLOW, DKH.. No. ~ Mv G I I ,. I e unused to having women so in-LEGAL N011CE eel. l!st•te of AltLl!IN MAY IWGGLES. J.Ine ;r."j'~ on "'xP r 1 volved in the political process NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN •• "'' '''° known .. AILEIH M. ltUOGLES. ftllllllalltd °''"" CNtl Dally l"llot. ··s t . tarted' ClllTIP'ICATI o .. •USINIH. crodllors of '"' •llov• Nlmed cllcedtnt •lso tonown •• A•LllN •uOOLIS end Awuat 12.. It, 26 •nd StPtamltllf' i. U Stnce \ve S , ,,CTITIOUI NAMI lflot 111 Hl'SOlll havllll clolma • .. Inst II A. M. llUGOLl!!S. Otclt1Md. 1970 14'2-Jt newspaper editors have sun. The undenltned dO cerllf'f !MY •r• tho said c11<e0tnt are .r .. 11lrtd to fll• NOTICE ts 1111tEBY a1veN to th• LEGAL NOTICE r conductlne • 1>111lneu al IS27 Hewllott them. with the _...,., YOllCIMts. 111 atdllora of tn. •boY• nomad decedent ported us and state legislators Blvd., cos11 Mn•. C.llforn)•, under ""111e office ot the cltrtt of tM •~ve ''"' all 1NflOllt tlwllle c1e111tt "'lnll1-------------h called d • llcllllou• nrm nom• of MY WAV •nd that entltltd court. or to pre1111t fhtm, Ille aald decedtnl .,, rt11ulred to fli. ft412JJ ave an given en· 111c1 firm 11 compOll(f of 1111 tolklwlne with 1111 ntcatury vOUClllrs. to Ille ttiem. wtth the ,._.,.,., veudltra. 1" CllTl,,CATI o, tuS1NISS, couragement." ,.,_ ""'*' "°""' Ill tuu Md '"" Uncl•rsltnad '' Oonold E. W•nllow, cl • tllt office Of "" d"1t of "" •lleVe ,ICTITl•u• NAMI Re . of tttlclt!IU are " teti.wt! Porker & 5eely, AttOtMY• •t Law, •11lllltd court, ., to 11rottnt ftltl!I, with The llftdtnltntd do cerllf't lllr( ~ State p. Ji> a t r I c 1 a J•ctt Toul•ne· 1S17 N-' llvd.. ... H. Main Street. SUit•. IOI. Slnt• '"' necuury VOll(hen. to '"' Ullo ductlne • IMlslneu ., talS Ad•me. Hiii" McDermott one of f l v e COii• ,,.... Mor•ant T•11i.nt. 1m Ml!. Cellternlt. f27tl, wtlldt 11 '"' dt'11tlltd 11•' t,111,. .. offlc._,!! herB Awtt~..!.· ltnet.il aeocti. CellfornJI, _,., "" fk· • • Nt)llPOrt alYd~ Gottt /MU. piece of butlneu ol the undtnltned Slmutl • "'' ""' • "'""' tfllolla firm nam1 of $AV.MOit alAUTY women m the J d a h 0 Oi led Aunst 17, lt10 Ill •II m•ll•ta pt<1lnlnt to lht ffl1la 1617 Wtslcllff OrlVe, Suitt Humber 204. SUP,L y CO., encl 1!111 Niki ntm 11 Le . 1 t ts the V te Jtd. Teultnt If Hid dectdttll, within four months HewPOrt ludl, C•llfornla f1UO, wflldl comPOsocl ol tllt followlne ~ wti.o gtS a ure, SUppor 0 Mol"laret Teu'-n• . •lttr 111t first llVbllcatlon of lfll1 notice. la flll Pl•ct of butll!'lll tf Iha llnclt'11tntd M111tt In fUll •nd •laces of r•IM!a Rockers. but the 32-year-<>Jd Sltlt ol C•lllO!'nlo, Otlnte C041nlY. O•ltd AllfUll 7, 1'70. :; ellld~lllir.,. ';.,~ ~ lfe ts tollo'#ll hort kirt I i--· ts he Oii Aueinl 17, 1'70, btfort me. • Ntlal"f Dol\llld E. W•nllow 11 • flobtrl L 111natlu1, 201SO Ml•noll., s ·S awyer u1.:11S s Publlc In end for 111c1 51,1,, "rtclll•lly Admlfllttr•tor Of 1111 Estett alter 1111 11rs1 publfc:ollon of thl• notice. H 11 IOll ·8 di is not a wome. n's right mili-.. ,.,..," J1c1t Taul•ne •ncl Maroaret of 111e above n•tnto doctde11t Oiied ~:/i:,U;, 1~~Hlll• o"1o:I: .. ._,,.,~ l•Mllu•. lQ2SO Munolll. tanl And he admits he ha T1ul1nt tcnewn to ma IO l>t tllt ""'°"' P'•rker a s..tl1 l!xtc11trht of ftlt Wiii tf Huntlntton 8ffdl • . · S S • S wllost n11M1 ,,. au~rll>td lo the Within ... N. Mllll II., Sllllt * tllt 1bow named dactttnt J•ck T. HtPll11. 202'4 Lente1111 Dr,. rrux~..,.feelin~s about ~e m-~~~~ .:~. acknowlecltte1 1111y .... ~::·,~":'~.:.;nm i''..,"'"•' ;.tr.""r/' Hu".!.'~" ,.Buc111.1 ...... 0 eta~ political activity by (OFFICIAL SIA~) ~· .., .. lllttnrtw • , F............ . Hep •• ~ ...... L•nfant ,., Jo.IE,H .... VI~ ,Ublleillf Of"lntt ~ l>'llY P'llot 17 Wta Yt 1 Sllllt ~11m .. r :IM, Hunlln.ion aae<h. women. • ..... ~...... , ..,.,, • C•llftrtlll ,,... D•led AIHIUAI s. 1'10 "W -i.i,;,.,. l t b Notory ,Ubllc, C-lwflf• Alllust 12, 1', 24 .._,.,,_ ~ .. , (1l4} W.JUt Robtrt L. lt11•llu• omen are , .., .... "' a o y l"rt11e111e1 Otflca 1n '"° 1••• Attw~•. "" t11ec11trl• GIO!',. P 11no11111 becoming so involved .. she Or•n•a Caunty LEO A. NO'nCE ,ubll•lltd OrM>O• (Nat D•llY P'llot. FIO!'tnee' P. H•Plf• ' MY CommlHIOft Ex11lr~ RM JulY 2' •!Id AutllSI s, 12 • .,, 1970 13't-10 J•clt T Ht11ll• says. " bll1~:· ~;.~'"74 Coe•t Delly f'llot STATE OF CALIFORNIA I " u • • ..... ,., LEGAL NOTICE COUNTY OF ORANGE I u LEGAL NOTlCE Autual 1'' 26 •!'Id Solll'l\Mr ~. '• CllTl,,CATI Ofl IUSlhllS. On Au1111t J, tfJt. "*'°'' ""' fft8 LEGAL NOTICE -------------lt10 ' " PICTITIOUS NAMllr ,.Jll.. undt1'1tned. • Not•ry l'ubllc llt ..... ·.-~-,.aw LEGAL NOTICE Th, undtf'llelltd dO clflllY thtv ere cHTl,.,CATI OP' aUllNIH for 1111 Hid Sl•te. HfHNllV ,,,,..r .. CIU'IP'ICATI 0, •UllNIU condllcllnt • l>uslMU ., '°' Merino, l'ICTITIOUI "AA4' JKlt T. l'MPll• kllOWft to .,,. ......... u" ,....,...1e Bi9f1 Noo11 111 Ro11ic It's high noon (see clock at left) on Rome's busiest street, lhe Corso, and there's not a car in sight (top photo). The occosion ii; "Ferragosto," the mid·August holiday which no lt.allnn would dream of spending at home. So. lea"1ing at the same time. and jamming the same roads, everybody heads out of town Into the countryside (bottom photo). l'ICTITIOUS NAMI Balboa Ul•nd. Collforlllo. """' "" fie> Ttl• ullde,. .. necl dot• cerlff\' """' .,. -loll WllOle l\tmt •• Wblerlllef .. tlle Tht..Jmllenlilltd JIOa CiKllfY JM It ,.,.an lllloll• firm name Of HU•U and thot conductlne • tllllll*I et l7tt HtwNt1 wtlllln lllltru"*lt .,,. odcMwt._. -. C«lductlfll • 1>1111ntu ., ism Lot ClllTIPTCAtt 011 lutlNIH Mid firm " comllOtld of "" tolloWllll •11111.. Co.It ~. Celltomft· 1/1\dtt ••tamd I~ '°""'' Allot. FOllflltln Vt flty, Cellfornll, 11nc1tt l'ICTtffOUt NAMW HrtOftS, Wllost nalM9 In full Ind Dlocet Tiit fltlllloUI firm ntttlt flf SWING'N (0,,ICIAL H AL) 1111 flctlllollt firm "'"'° of RADIO Tiit undlnleMd l6tt Clrllfl' tie ts tf ruldellc• '" " followt. ..Allt •nd thtl Hid n"" '' C1M1110tM Jov« L. Odeurd OUAllO ALARM OF F 0 u NT A I H condll(11ne • lllHTMJt II '°'' aolM, Ltwll Gerry ICltf!, ,UI w. P1lmyr• ot IM tollowlM Ptf'IOlll. .,...... """" HeltrT 'lll>llc-Cllltomla VALLEY 1nc1 I hat told firm 1s c-"4 wutmlnnor. C411fornll, under lht fie· "0" • Ora111e. C.llf. Ill tull encl !Ileen 11' ~ •r• Ort.,.. County °' Ille fOllOwl... PtrlOft, whose llllmt tltlous """ ,..,,,. ol ALEXANDlll Hendrik A:, ,SdltlllnterhOlll. ,,,, 91 folloW1: ~y ,_IUlon Ex.Ir" In lull and 111o<e o1 realdance 11 ., SALES end 111e1 H id """ 11 co~ W. l"almn• O' • Or•not. EC•tlf. ltobtr1 w. ''""· 1361 Le c.n111 A1rll u. 1m tolltws. of ~ tolloWlne ,__, .,.... .. mt Jn H. Oytt,. ICIM N. dt1t "·• Or., Tustin, Celllonll• STATE OF CALlftOltNIA I l(enntfll ll. Hl,_ton, 1"29 Lo1 Attoe, 111 f\/R end 111oert If r•Wlflco " H l'llllerttn. Callt. Mo•IN A. Brown. tMI LI CMIM I 0 Fountain Vefle'r llllCllW•· O.ltil Jtlrt 't.:::' Or .. Tustin. CellfoMI• COUNTY 0.. LOS ANO~LES) O•tld Awu 1 11. 1'70 Jim AltnlldW, toU '•" Vfr*, ~:flt A. ~u ..... rnovt Dlt .. Ju~.':;,~': 1,_ °" AC11111t J. mo. llefert -. lfte -1<to111t1ll •. HlflkMlll Mt. IOr lmt a..cti. C411ftl'nlt . .If/In H o.,., Ml I A. I NnltMf. t ... ltrY M lle Ill lfW tw St••· of C.llftml•. Or•ne• C-'Y· O•IM Alltlllt 11• ,.,,. Stal•°' ""'°"''' Or•nt• CIUf'll'(• 'TAT~ OF cAt1'ro1tNI~ ui. .,. ... """"'"y ......... ~ L. ... :n. ·=IC 'la =· :°:!it '":w! SUI& ofJ~11~1~"':."" C"'"'ty Oil JUIY "' ,.,.;, btfor• "''· •. Nol•rY OANGE CO\IHT'Y: '-"''"' .. Ol«lo ... lfMllut. fll.,.. ... _., • ,.114111c '"~ tor....Mld. Stal-. PUJOMllY Oii J~ U. J'1Q. Mt1tt ft'lt, I Nthn< H•llf, II:-lo me It bt tile "'9111 -•-llY #Hired l<-'h R. Hinkson On Auelnl ti, lf10, Mftrt mt. • •PHtrtll Llftll Cerrv Kith Htndrlll ,ulllk In r'" tor Mid State ""°"''"' WhMt ,..mt, art wburlbed to lM = know11 hi mt to bt the ""'°" wt\OU Nof•rY ,.Ubllc In efld ftr Mid Slate. l ._.. .... ' ... = .,. ' name '' subKrll>td lo Ille w11111n I~ --.llY a~rM Jim Mewlllcltf It-fl A. SClllll ~...._. a.nd Jvnn "' ., •PH•"td llobert W. •rew11 •nf M4llltlt llltlnlment •nd aclt,_lldeM tt IM ·-• .-n .. "" .. lie '"' PtfiOnl A. lrown ltMWl'I .. MO lo " lllt """' tXKultd Ille .. mt. llf\ll'lltfll •nd Kl!nowl"4• !If oecuted to mt ,. .... ... ,... ..... """' ntlMt .,. 11111tcrtlltd .. Ille wllll " "'"°"' wllote NIIMI 1r1 wtlw'lbtd {Ol'P'ICIAL SIALl m· .. :~r:·L SE'.ALI ~incla~~'Td ..... '.!., :-.. :':':. :i=.ent lnllrumtnt elld eckllft'ledted lhlY tX• to lllt wllhlll lns1r\l!Mllf end eelMWI.... WIT'Hl!SS mY ht1141 end olficltl -t. )"n L. "*' IOflf'ICIAL'i'iAL> • ~r.c'r:1.·;n·1.) ~t:1 ·;.-:w-"" Hm•. • EDWARD KAJAllAN Nof•ry PutlllOoCallf«nla JUI\ L. JOO.t JOStl'H E. OAVIS J-11 •• Devi• "'°""' P'vlll!t<•llfttnl• Prlnc11111 0111ce In N011ry 'ub1ic.c.111on111 ,..,..,., P11t1llc. C.llfOr!llt Hot•rv 'ullllc. .C•lltornl• l'rlnclP411 t"1ce Iii Or•ntt Cout!IY 'rln<INI Offlct In Pr!MIHI Otflet 111 itrlncl ... I Offlte 111 Lot M"lt• G01111ty Mf G~lulel'I t~lf-Ortlltt COllft!Y C>n.tt•• CM!IY °''"" Q*in,, MY C-.mrnh•left ..... , .. MafcJI .. ltn MY Ctt11111IOl4ll ~ /ltr (9"Vt1INlon EICJllU MY Cff!lmlttlen ..... ,. Allf. "· "" 'llblllhed Or•nH ~· °'"' ,llot. ~·~ '· ,,,J June ti. "7• JllM ti. 1,,. flutllllltd Ortfttt (Mat 0,11, ftllelt A11tuft tt, 1t, '6 t nd ~-1. !'Wllwrd Or1111t CMst 01111r ,,.,,, 1"11111..,_. Ort'"' ~ Qtfl~ "~1 l'ul!llalltel Or•ne• (leut O•llY fllltl, ~"'"'' 12. If. ,. •1111 s.ttnl"r t. 1'70 ,,,,._10 ~·111111 u. "· » end ._em..., '· .MY tt w AWl>tt " It. u , m• ,,...,. J111Y 2' ut Auelllt ft u. "' 1m lm.11 mo lft.JI ---------------"~ ...... ,.1•--------~-----1---------~--~1------~~-~-~-- '----------~----- .. . • • • • • • •• • ~ ,. . • r . ~ ' I ~-------···-. . . . • Wodoe!dq, A.,.1t 19, 1970 PlLOT-AOVEllTlSflt, J,'l 1\: ~ 1' '1 I. ' ,' I \ ~I I " • l· I ~r 11• r ~. H ~, ·, ~'i'1 !,1: '\•!(, l.,lf\\I ,1 ' il l\ p 11'1• I, 1.•t • I ., ·.,i, I' I , , If ' ilo 1,t ,', ol 1 t11f ~ \ f' , 11 ' :' • 1 f.tl I i I ,I • • • • THE REAli ESTATERS ' , CURES ·••HIADACHIS!!. FAIT • Cures And '(!elps Prevent Real Estat.e ~MS RELl.EV'ES '~AT ·UJU'LEASANT FIEUNG CAUSID IY CONGES-'~N I THAT '~JUST· NOT. ENOUGH· ROOM· FOR• EVllYONI" flEUN'i-J. ,, \ THAT ORRY THAT IS 0 F'T IN CAUSED IT HIGH 11.00Dlf'IWUll AND HIGHEll MONTHLY PAYMENTS • RELAXES REVITALIZE'S ·=G~H~Ns::J: OUT OF MOVING. "MAKING A HOUSING SHOULD IE FUN." \ SAFE •• ALL USERS l'UASED WITH RESULTS GUARANTEED. THE llEAL ESTATEIS CAN IE USED WITHOUT FEAR e OF ANY HARMFUL SIDE EFFECTS. NO AmR TASTE. GIVE A CALE o o o YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID . COUNTRY ct·UI VIEW A permanent view from this 1500 11quare foot rustic home of beautiful Santa Ana Country Club. Large Family area & Dlnlng Room. Double-Car Garare·with drive.tbru boat door. It'• a Buy at $24,500. Call Nowl.se&-2313 • "FANTASTIC~ A large 3 bedroom, 2 bath, double car garage home, near beautifuI College Park. All bui!Hn fire alarm & intereom system. mod: walled yard. Larr• aluminum covered patio. All I.bis, under FHA· VA terms of Ollly $25,ll!O. 54&-2313 • HAPPY LIVING blgb on a blU in beautifuI MESA VERDE. Tri'level, 4 Bed· room, 3 Bath, Separate Famffy Room, Formal Dininr Room + Breakfast area. Really a fine home that you lhould see without delay. Priced at $48,950. Phone Dow for an appoint· ment to inspect. 540-2313 Selling Your Home? Loi us talk lo you! We lnow we con do o good job of selling for you. W • always hove spociolixod in tho sale of rosiclential properties. Our RHI Estate lusi- nou is built on satisfied customers -on quality sell-. ing habits and on prize winning 1dvertisin9. We have th. best fin<1nci119 ovailoble. Y.,.. property receivo1 our personal attention. Our • n I y l.nineu ii Reel Estate. Surely a ful time effort i1 what you wont and hove• right to expect. NEWPORT HEIGHTS·, $19,950 Hold this small, one bedroom liveable cottage on a~ 5D -x rt foot -lot until-you're ready to build your dream-borne. Thi•· is the best location in Ibo Heights. Call for Showing! ~Z313 MESA VERDE FffA-YA $28,500 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, all electric built-in kitcheo, large.family room home on a comer lot with room for Boat storqe.·~ 1ume low lnletelt Ioan. See Today! ~2313 LIDO IE1'UTY You read about new fashion in clothes, look at this lovely four bedroom home, with lbe latest fasbloo in decorating. A home with style for any type of furniture. Patio for enter· taining. Three doors from private beach & Space for boat. 175,900. 67W550 LOOK! E~STILUFF! One of the finest home s in the Eastblufi area. Built by LUSK. BeautifuI master bedroom, + 3 other large bed· rooms, 21h baths. Living room, family room. Excellent landscaping. Only $51,000. Compare and buy • EASTSIDE FAMILY HOME 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, dandy den, kitchen with built-Ins Incl. dishwasher -Plus a big 2 car garage and separate work· shop. $25,500-Pbone 64&-7171 VIEW FROM MOUNTAINS TO THE SALT WATER The sunset and night lights are beautiful from this 4 bed.· room, 2 bath, ElstbluU home. Minimum care landscaping. double garage and car port or boat storag&448,500.-Call 1116-7171 WAKE UP , with a amile, in thi11.)uxuriou11 3 bedroom, t bath, double fireplace home in Nelijkirt Beach. 2000 square feet of living space. All electric, bull1'in kitchen. Newly painted. Easy maintenance yard. Brighten up your future !or $37,950. Own- er wlll lease option. 546-2313 ' ' IF YOU HAYE EVER WANTED LIDO ISL£ This is a chanca of a lifetime. Owner has reduced his price $5,000 -4 Bedrooms. separate dining on a 45' stteet to 1treet lot. $58,950. Don't miss Ibis. Call today 64&-7171 PANORAMIC VIEW! OCEAN-CAT ALINA-CITY LIGHTS $37,ll!O -10% down. You own the land! Very dallgbtful 4 be4room and formal d~rJ.: rcom. Beautlful easy eare yard. PRICED FOR QUIClt ! 1146-7171 JUST LISTED EASTSIDE 2 Bedrooms + Den + Family Room. Huge Brick Fireplace . Rustic with lots of wood paneling. Big corner lot. Room for boat. It's newly listed. "Come See" or Call 546-2313 LIVE in spectacuiar China Cove. Waterfront •.• Corooa de! Mar Beautiful Birch Paneling 3 Bedrooms,_.; Baths, Declt Patio, :.,:=1aces, Boat Davit &: Winch. unered at ,121,000. - THE· REAL ESTATERS Serving Newport Beach • Costa Mesa • Corona del Mar • Huntington Beach -------- 3 Convenient Locations Near You NEWPORT IEACH 1700 ~ ..... lllvd. 646-7171 COSTA MESA 2790 Herber llvJ. 544-2)1) CORONA DEL MAA INVESTMENTS ll2 M1r-a1 2714 Ho"* m..I., Suite 201 673-1550 Costa M-~ll 16 EXPERIENCE ELIMINATES EXPERIMENT - -· SALi-i - • PIOPLI WIN lllOll JlroffultMl-l'WMMlll• TrHlflll ......... ~a,1 ...... _te_ um nnn Mtre ..... ~--­ fOI IMTllYllW Coll RANDY McCARDLE 546-2316 I ' 7 .• I I I • ; I • i II e. ! I = I I ... i. -i I ~. ii?. I I ,,. ~~~~ .......................................... "" ......................................................... ~~ .............. ~ .............................. .....,~~ .... ~~ .... .-...,.~ ... ~,..,..,....t...,,.~ ........... ~ ..... -~~ ..... ~~~ ..... ---~~-.-~~~--~~- 7 Ba rhecue-· Merntm-n~Beef ed -~ tJ Grill Good I Al1 Year Californians are fortunate to have the finest home grown beef in the land and an almost year-round barbecue season. Top qualiiy Californi' beef offers .a wide variety. of cuts suitable for barbe· cuing, many--Of which save on the budget besides t.asdng great with a charcoal flavor. · Beer in a ground form is the family favorite, ecort0mical and easy to prepare. Ground beef is the juiciest and least ex· pensive because it includes more fat; ground sirloin also is an excellent choice economically 'as there's no wa~te. Chunks ol any boneless California beef are perfect for kabobs -marinate the less tender cuts before cooking or ten· derize them wilh inst3Tlt meal tenderizer, following package directions. Little canned potatoes or mushrooms are nice to skewer with the beef as they need no exg:a cooking or attention. FINE EATING For the ultimate in fine beef eating, spit roast Ji rolled cross rib of beef. This moisture ~tainh1g, self-basting method of• cooking' can be done on an oven rotisserie dt over the coals. It results in ri chly brotfned beef on the outside and incredibly ).uicy beef on the inside. It's best lo let the roast come to room temperature before cooking. When the coals are ready, insert spit rod carefully through the center of the bee~ -if off. balance, the spit won't rotate properly. A mej:t thermometer is the only trusty gu ide for doneness and should be inserted with tip in cent.er of roast, not touching fat. bone or metal spil. Other cuts or beef sujtable for rotisserie cooking are rolled rib, rib-eye, rolled rump, rolled sirloin tip and eye-of- the-round roasts. Do rot ~e_rcook the Jess tender roasts. TheY. sllolttf-be Olio the rare side and sliced thinly .. ·~. · BIG BONUS · A big \onus from roasts is the won- derful Wlovers. Thin slices of cold roast beef rolled around cheese spread make tasty hors d'oeuvres. Strips or chilled beef can l>e tossed with salad greens, and leftovers also make a good quick slroganoff or hearty hash for another day's dinqer. Whew ~cuing, start the fire at least a half hour before you start. ,cooking; The "au naturel" flavor of beef from the barbecue is unbeatable. However, many specialist! have their own secret sauce which they never will divulge. ft'ith great ceremony barWcue chefs swlSh on the magic baSte which Ip\· parts their flwn trademark. i Here is one developed by a well·known cattleman which the California Beef Council shares with you. It is perfect for a!\ of tha 11fick cooking beef cuts. It may be brushed on after the beer has begun to brown or be used as a sauce to go with the beef after it comes from the barbecue. CATTLEMAN'S BASTE FOR CALIFORNIA BEEF l /3 cup chili sau1.;c l/3 cup red Lable wiM 2 tablespoons lemon julce 1h teaspoon oregano, crumbled l teaspoon sugar -% teaspoon pepper I teaspoon prepared mustard v, tea'spoon salt · · Combine all ingredients. Heat and slir until sauce simmers. Makes about ~ cup. Here's a marvelous sandwich fill ing to make with leftover roast beef. CAUFORN IA BEEF SALAD SANDWICHE,i, 6 tablespoons white vinegar 2 tablespoons sugar J teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon pepper 2 egg yolks 1h teaspoon dill weed I teaspoon German-style mustard 3 cups dited cooked 'roast beef 1,1; cup chopped sweet pickle I cup diced celer.y and leaves Hard cooked eggs Heat together vinegar, s1,1gi.r, salt and pepper. Add hot mixture kradually to egg yolks, whisking briskly ,with 'fire whip.or beater. Continue beating until..mixture is light and thickened. Add dilL weed and . mustard. Mix with roast beef. pickles and celery. Garnish with hard cooked eggs. Makes l quart sandwich filling. ' GOOD GROOMING BONUS Miu Lily John"'" I ROLLED CROSS RIB OF BEEF 'MEAYS' THE . TEST CALIFORNIA BEEF SEVERAL CUTS ABOVE' Beauty Turned On Appliances Given Five years ago the first electric klOthbrush came onto the American scene, and riot iar behind it was a portable electric hair dryer. Since then a parade or small, portable appliances designed to facilitate good grooming have appeared on the. market and the end is not yet ii;t sight., The newest in portable grooming aids were described tor Orange County home economics teachers •by Mis.s ; t. i I Y Jobnson, home economist for the General Electric Co., during a two-week class of- fered by Pepperdine College and the Southern California Edison Co. To do the "daily dozen of good groom- jng, \• a dozen appliance! have been designed to do the job:bettec than it can be done manually, the speaker asserted . Miss Johnson streS.'led that Portable ap- pliances should be used and should be us- ed correctly. Otherwise, they take up vahJBble shelf S,P.ace·.' When P-Urchasing appliances, one should conSider the needs of the user, what the appliance will and will not do, wlieiher 'il has ·arf l1 nfirWr'i·ter1 Laboratory seal and that it can be servic- ed easily. CONSIDER BEAUTY Also, 6~e .should consider the beauty ot the appliance.; ·the convenierice of. usi\'\g, cleaning and &loring It ·and ita !lelibility lo do more than one job. Irons, appliances that have been Around for more than 65 years, have new features dlctatea".by the new fabrics they will press. ·Steam Irons should be preheat for f1ve minute.a, Mias John. Bon pointed oul, for maximum steamJna results. lrons now have magnified water level window:i;, a wide heel to s~bilize the iron and nonstick finishe.s for easy cleaning. Electric toothbrUshes insure dental health when Usect properly, she said. Teeth and gums should be brushed and massaged for a minimum of three minutes al each cleaning. The brush should not be pushed against lhe teelh and the bruSh 'should be allowed to do the work. Dental irrigants have been widely a!!6 cepted ind' .reeobimended .by dentists, Miss Johnson related. The irrigants clean particles of food from between the teeth. CLOtluNG CARE New ap~nces to aid in· the care ·of . clothing are '.an electftc clothes ~h .that picks u.p lint like.a -vacuu~ sweeper and a fabrlcf Wrinkle remOver that steams wrinkles out. ' Massagers are a boon to the tired and tense· 6m,erican-and-several kinds now are available for home use. A light touch and short duration of use on one area are the key !actors to their use. Home-manicure-sets ate popular both with men and women, and their most . prominent feature is a callous remover. 'Hair setters. both dry and steam, have foond popularity for ~ettlng both long a,nd . shOrt hair, as Well' as hi.Iman ha ir wigs. · Lighted malte·up mirrors feature twn · kinds of mirror surface and light settings to match indoor, outdoor and soft evmlng lighting. Miss Johnson, who was one ln a series of. speakers who told lhe tea chers what is new in the use, care and selection of hoose.hold equipment , also presented recipes for arooming aids l.O be made ln the blender. GOLDEN DAnl OIL 1 pint safflower. o~ • , 2 iablespoons liqbid cocomtt oil or sbam_poo Few drops of favorite perfume (op- tional) : Place all ingredients into container of bl.ende~,. Bl~nd at high speed for 30 seconds. Use 1 to 2 tablespoons to a tub o! water. TING 1 cup .f'O!e .w,ter ~ U3 cup witch hazel * teaspoon honey \i teaspoon white vinegar 1 tabJ~sll">OO spirit or campiQ' 'ii telspoon181ufn Jf>Jdtr Few dr~. Of Petrume BlenC:i' Until sTnooth. Pour Inio 0 botUes. FACE LIFT. ~ ·I ~gg white • - 'l lsblespooii. drj skim milk powder I teespoo1t spi ri( or camphor 1 teaspoon mint .extract Mix 11IJ-:ingredients In 1 cup. Whip . smooth with a fork, blending very thoroughly. Apply thickly over the face and neck and allow to dry for about 15 minut~s. ,U you lie down wilh lhe feet eleVated and head lower than the body, yo1J"wlll Increase the effectiveness of the treatment. Rinse with cold water and follow wlth Icy cold water. Apply Ting. Orange Coast home economists enroll· ed were the Mmes. Stewart Ryan, San Cletnf!'i'lle ; Dana CaUtn, Huntington Beach : Verdean Simpson, Dana Poh1t, and At\ss Glenda C.Ox, Huntington Beach and Mlsa Pat Hale, Laeuna. Beach. ~. ""'"' ,,, ,,,. , ... JI ttome News Hubbies To Wear Aprons? By DOROTHY WENCK ' OrlftP Ctl!lllY H-AllVIMf' Does your husband help w i t b housework? This Is a touchy question 1n some hOUseholds, for there are hmbanda: 111d wives with strong feelings both for and against men doing housework. There are some men who guard their masculinity so jea1ously that they would· never lift a finger to do anything which they consider "women's work." Tbere are some women who agree with th.la philosophy. Oppositely, there are some women who think that women have been put down too Jong doing "the dirty work" and it's time for the men to take their tum . In between are the men and women who see homemaking as a sharing of tasks and reaponsibllitles, with each person contributing varying amount.a of time and talent. American families seem to be trendlng fn this latter direcUon although women still\! spend considerably more time on housework than men -even when the women are employed. CORNELL S1UDY A study of the time per day used for hwsehold work by 1,296 homemakers and their husbands was completed at Cornell University In 1967~. Husbands in this study contributed an average of S.l hourt a day towards household work ; women contributed an average of 7 .3 hours. Tbe time per day spent on household work by homemakers decreased con- siderably as their time in paid employ• ment increased -as we would expect. The homemaker spent an average of 8.1 hours per day on housework if she 1"as not employed ; 6.3 hours per day if she worked 15 to 19 hours per week ; and 4.S hours if she worked :Ml or more hours per week. ' However, oppos.lte to ·what we might expect, husbands did · not contribute 111y tnore time to housework when their wives were employed at: when they were fulltime homemakers. Employed homemakers with babiea received considerably more help from husbands than did other wives however. Older employed homemakers received less help from their husbands than dl(f .those not employed or those employed for only a few hours. TOTAL WORKTIME The average weekly total worklime (a t home and away) was 65 hours for men ; 70 hours for women employed 15 or more hours; 40 to 50 hours for nonemployed women with no children; 60 to 70 hours !or nonemployed women with young children. Men , it was fou nd were moat likely to help with house care activities. These ac. ttvlties included the care of the inside and out.aide of the house and of the famlly'a aecond house -their car. Husbands con- tribllted over a haU hour per day to houte maintenance and yard care, women 1912 hours. Food prepa'ralion ahd cleanup received an average of 6 minutes a day from husbands and this increased to about 12 minutes a day when wives wotked (Wives spent about t ·hours a day on tile~ tasks.) Husbands also spent an average of 2S minutes a day on marketing and recordkeeplng and ?.O mfuutes a day on family care (like helping children with schoolwork or driving them to meetings) with no change when wives were emplO)'ei:I. (Women put in 1~ hours on these t..ks.)' Wives spent an average of l V.. hours a day on clothing care and tecelved JittJe or no ~Ip from husban~ op th.ls tast. The latest ·news ls that the Women's Libera. tion Movement is taking on 1 new cause -equa! time (or b!'~I on washinc and ironing! QUESTIONS ASKED -Q, Does margarine have the same food value as butter? A. Butter and margarine are very com.. parable In food value. Both are about IO percent fat and have about 100 calories per tablespoon. Both are a good source ot vftamin A. Butter has this vitamiil naturally, and it is added to margarine. The essential fatty acid composiUon or the two ra~ varies. Butter is. higher In saturated fatty ·acids; margarine hfibe:r in pol~turated fatty acid.1 - P11*ularly Unol~ic -H l.lquld oil is one ol the first ~en!.! llotld on the label . ' Q. Why does, whlte-aspa.ragus cost more than green asparagus -it doesn't Ma to tute· any better! A. White asparigus coats more becaUM It' is a spedlllty item, grown u a delicacy. It Is produced by mounding the earth around the plant ao that the atalk develops entirely underground . Actually, the green asparagus ia more nutrilJous u it has ten times more vitamin A than the white asparqu.s. ............................ , .... , .... , ......... 2., ..... JJll ........ JJIJJll ....... , .. ,., .... , .......... ~ .... ~, .... ~ ......... , ........ ~ ..... ~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~ DAJl.Y PILOT WednMlt, AutUsl lt, 1910 Beauty:StudentGoes to Head of Cla,ss 'Jbl paatw'9 Jooked 1"17 5tt on the other llide « die ,_ toJeacNell, ..... doddodlo bop..,._ to_ if kWIL Sun .......... the -H• tin""" -r-ieuod tNl k w .. ..., !bot M '- gettlnc' ,.._. Ml• !jd!,, . who .....U1 lilned her uln ltl<hin& -- trecl et °'lid"' WOii Colllp •• 1n • 1"*1tckr In a. motolo&Y, has· CGmO Ille ..,_ w •i' art.ind by nrtt ...... • • coomelolo(y lludent llereell when tht JM'Ol"lm w .. locMed. el Orense <:o..i oou,... Her ambition• hive . skyrocketed ' and ft now '-to atltnd Calllonla Sltlt Collett• at 1'q -to ~. a -Ion c1e.,.. !a vocational education. • ... ti 'llllllllioou. ' 'h:a, ... :. • ..-w <( ••• I ••HIP .... .... ' ~ c.a Otllttt ....... ' . w.. pin flt .. ,,, ... 1 ----· Cl I w at ua.A.. 11(1;4 a.All _._ -"""'5IUtin( .. 1sow-.._.-a -,., tile ,... ""' -fOI' a -ci.e Ill -.. !( II a CD\' ... IUCh topics / .. YlluaJ aldl, control of dr *• .. ,.,, .. , in the e' OCIO, ' -·---d-lo ......... 1salr "'YHnr """ ""' and hair.,..._ while ..-, -· Into tlw . ...,+tc ro1it at Golden Wiil. woA; U I receptionlJt. ll ~ ursine al Mn. ,...,. Cal!Uan, -<( the COll!lttoi. elf. portmMt. ... _ wwked Into beill(. IAb tecmld.an, then · a -toadlor and .- alped htt loachlnf -· TM requlremeat. lot a voe&." ~-I tetdllq c:redenUal 1 .. crude an AA deFee and five to •Ven ywa of erperlence. •Jone with tbt eourw at UCLA. • She otjll ltii'l lhroulfl and mwt take a~ eore ct.s bu& tlWJ time wlii .. to echool every other saturd1y for a ytar. TllA VEL NEXT One ol Jean'1 hl1be1t upir1tlot11 la to live up to what a ltadier llhould be • "A teacher la 10m10ne &ho ,, lnlerest.d In -· Studentl are the center ol )'OW' worklnc hourt," lhe ex.· plained. "Yqu ~ be will· Int to cive up aorM.ti1n1 when necesaary to help y o u r a'l.udenta." A teacher J, PTltlOl'le who l! open to her atudenta' needs, J un feeil. "You hive to think back to when you were JI and 17." She look1 forwerd to he/ping .i.udents wtlo enter the COS· metology prosram because they "have to do tomethln1." It 11 v~y rew1rdln1 to motivate these kind o f 1tudents, the feel11. prepared for disappoin\l"'nls. Team te.M.tllnl auch a1 la done In the <.'08tnetoloi:Y depJtl· ment at Golfifn We.st ls a tool for motivating atudtflls, she feels, because if one lnatructor can't motivate ..one, another might be abJe to. All of her stUdies h1ven 't left her much time to play, bul: sht has plaMed to do 80!Tlt of tt\at when her major studies are over. After completing ts hours of homework". foor hours ol. drlv· ing, 16 hours oC school, 11.nd 32 hours of work.Ing per week, she has been almost too bu.sy for romance, but_she 11 keep- ing a nexible schedule for that when It appears . WEARS NEW HAT Jun Ntii But 1 few thlnp remain to be ~ yel by lhe attractive, blonde~or..id taodier. Mic etmplaths bar lr'"*c 1n· _,.......,. at Or-c.. c.ollqe, .... -lnatoloefetayar tllao .... -to occ to': When lliat II finished , travel 11 -.. ""' lilt. She hopos io 10 to Hewall nett unmer and rent an apartment M the ltlW ol Kawall, her f1vorite Wand. Europe 11 nut after tho I. TEAM TEACHING Re1U1Uc1lly 1 Jean alm ls Woold romance change her travel and achoo! plans! Not al all. "IL would be fun lo takt that trip to EurGpe with aome· one you care about," abe smiled. 1 . . Banner Luncheon for Kiwis • , Flying Actress Nun Has Friend B1 GAY PAULZY NEW YOlllC (UPI) -Talto vllllon hu Its l11l:il nun. It '"" ha1 Its fl)ltaf -· and for retl. Suaan 0UYI(' 1 the actreN Heft In ''P ... Place" Ind ----.11. UctN<d comnwdal Jlllot. Juot nctntly thl .... p11o1oc1 • 1in1le enatne Piper Coman. ·che 28t'with the veteran flyer, M•tattt Meed, to vittory .t• t h e aMUal Powder Puff Derby, the fot.wome.only 'n. ~, who'• 1 trim, .,_,. tftd blonde, ii an i-ar, mombor of tho Amorl<U· Plpl<r Pllota and now 'hat mare than '100 ah: houn ~. Gnct, ft ukl, IN jhouCht 1he never woukl board a plu1 111ln. She wu a JlllWJlll!r on that f1mou1 comnwcial f1i&ht U\4t 1t.1d. denly loll 1llltude and plu111ed . from 27,000 lo 1,000 feet before the crw eould pt It under ...U.I. tr1nacentlnantal rtee flown Por tn year• lhe didn't 10 thJJ YW' from Monterey. J.o near a plant. Then a hypno. Briltol, P··· Mlh Meed, • tilt CMYinctd 1w she would SaMa ~ 1ircraft broker, Jove llyJnt 111in. 11 • prevleua winner. SM worked for the Circle In Mla1 Oliver at. holds five the 1qu.,. 'Theater In New world records for men or York, the M1U.ee In C1Jlfor. women f1°"J'fld at • New-Illa and bnaU tnt.o moria with Yortt.~ fiilht for Wornw -.. Jn all, ohe 1in1le enti~eraft. That one h11 mlde JI movies, plua the WH cortlflocl \y ihe J'edtra• lfllY!eiln wort. Uon Aeroo1tklue lntemldenal NOW' aht'• 1tlrrinl tn two which 1Jae eartlfted the Ubl moriell Mot en the UnJvenal of the OWltl A.· ~p lot atrtctly for tekviaion . hlotorle tr•~lantle .....ins. 'lboy'U bt preml•ed In tho 11111 n1itir took· at.-dayr f,•11 . bot only 2t hliun ol actual Acttnt aJld llylftl WUVI to- fllcht Umej bectuee wtllher .... •ioelY, .. a.Id, 11Wl · 1tounded her for foll( daya in ahe 1mowa ltWll'al acton who Goose B1y, N...toundl1M . · are l!illta. "Every pilot hntt Uld they "Tho kind of bual-w• wouldn't tlv• me 1 OM lt1 • (aC\arl) .,., tn t1 eo nebu- mllllon chanN "-maldnt: tt." lout:, .. lhe a1ld. ''You need 1 the Mid In tn .,,..,.Jew. 811< ,..1 Jo tehlev• ud ftyJns foulht ldnl eoodltlonl moot fl sl•ff It, Jl'ltl•I .,..., func- tht roUlt. tltsthlr at a hlshtr level tllan The a ctr.. Md hoped lo I• ..,_,., Ille.'' llyonfntm~lnto Moacow, but wv• could aet Soviet permJ1Jlon for her plane •Jthou.lh "Ml• Oli¥et hene.lf m1y come lft." Sh< hod been lo Ruetlo be- fore, for a fllm ftiltlv1J, ind thM vl~tocl tlit Sofie! wltll tour groupe. Sht Ir atudyfnJ: Ruulan 1t UCLA "j11st tG kiep my hand in." Betrotha l Disclo sed Mr. and Mrs. R. A . Newpart Beach Kiwis ere dusting of( the welcome 111at in honor or the up-- com1n1 visit of their national presidenl, J\1rs. Donna Folke:s Goldfe.rn who wUl be honored during a noon luncheon Saturday, Aug. 22, 1n the Airporter Inn. Hanging banners for the occasion are (left to right) Mrs. Mel Ormerod and Mn. E. G. Lipman. M\11 Olivs', whc> now make• her home In Hollywood, he· came lnteiretaed in fl ytna several years 110 *IU• "I wa1 dating a new1 comme..- 1.al.or who w11 1 pilnt." UI· tim ately. ahe said, "he flew bis w1y and t flew mine." .,, 1he'1 ltill Miu iMte9d el Mrs. Bruhear, fomwly of CM ta Mea new tlvlnt In Nnrco, have announced ttie en1a1e· ment of U.ir d1u1hter 1 Barban Bl"lllhear, to 1'ymn BeellOn M Gl'fWer City. The: weddina will take place in Norco in 1171, with the date ltl11 t• be •iected. The brlde-e.tect 1 t t t n d • d N•wporl Hart.or Hllfl lchool and <'.lenlna del Mar High Sahaol •nd waa erldauled 1nm Ntrto Hi,h. She j1 a member ol Fuhr• ranner1 ol. America. Her Overtime's a Nightmare DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a happtly married woman with a wonderful nu .. band and two fine chUdren. My husbaad '1 mother has m1de her hom e wll.h u1 for tht pelt ei1nt Yea.rt And as you Oaw, oo kitchen 11 bia -.enough for two women 10 l went back· to1Work. My problem wtll ieem 11illy lo you but Jt'a making me nervoos. J dream About my boss nearly every ni&hL I slll'ear to you, Ann, J have no lnlere11t in him -durini office hoor6, that is. But between midnight and ? a.m. I'm ashamed to tell you what goe11 on in my head. My rlream1 are so realistic I can no km1er look my bosa ln lhe eye.. To make malt.er• worse, I'm I blusher, I 'm surt ht must think I am crazy. Ttle boet II '9 very 1t.tr1ctlve mao, .. nd one -d I.he finest peoplt in the world. unrortunately hi1 wUe I• not goon enough for him, but \hi• ls oone ol rny bualneu. • My ridiculous drt1.n\1 Ar& be1innin& l.o interfere with my efficiency. Do dre1ma have any real alplHcance! Please help me . .-NIGl-rr LIFJi: DEAR NIGHT UFE: Orta1n1 DO have a"m• re1I tlpUlca•ce, IMll lnterp~tlnc dream• 11 •' .t 191 lint, It la airer M llJ, ilowt¥et'"1 Uiat )'*! mu1t ilave 111m1 auf1Prtaed dt1lre.1 relallna '41 )'•ur ""' -dttlm Uiat )'OU don 't dare face uJi w le y .. r w1kln1 how-1. II U.. blllMlq .... M ti ilud ud Y'" ANN LANDERS ~ find yooraelf becomin& too l1ttlflclent you ahould dlllslder lookla1 tor anoditr job. ll~All ANN LANDERS< My d•Uih1'r· In-law had last minute sitler trouble F'riday evening and ca\\M to 8sk if I would take her 3-year-old !Mln for the night. I enjoy the child anQ was happy lo do so. The following 1noming t telephoned 1n,y daughter-In-law and ask.td whit time I should brlng the boy back, She laid -"When he is ta." J"m sure she said ii to be funny, but 1t hurt my heart. Whit's the matter ~·ilh young mothers today? They ~m lo find child rearln1 such a nuisance. Almns1 every ynung mother l know wants to enrnll her chilrlren in .school at the earl iest poss.Ible roornent, just to get tht.m out of the house. It seetns such • plty. A chlld'.11 litst live years are preclowi one5 ind they 8re pie too """1! I brought up four chilrlren, whhoul auy he.Ip, anri nnnt of lhem went lo preachool. I c1n trulhfully say I enjoyed t very minute of their childhood. Com· . 1nenl, -please. -OLD ITYl.I MOTHEJl DEAR M.OTRP:I\: Yar .._..., ti e lltUt mty, No .,..., -..... .., enjny ev~ry mlna&e el r1W.1 l•r children. There HAD te IM 11lft1 lfeklWI. 1ecldet1U, npt1, tll11,,.a1&1M1ta, a11· lely 1.cl fna1tndell. Tl'MWe ill 11 t. evltable part .t r1l1la1 1 f1r1tt, Htl no motlier caa e1t1pe lt eemflt.tt1J. Time ii•• a w1y al 1treui.1 •I uftple.1saalM1t at tlM ,.,L A,,.retd)' mfltherileecl w11 • JeJ911• ,.,W .. )'tit life , but llioa'& .ve.rttata lite el,fl. MaM. '1'11ere mu11 ••¥e t.t .. jeM 1 'lttt11te11l nr two durlna tlttli )'all'I diat Wll'el'1 pure bll11. CONFIDENTIAL TO •• VISION AND BEAl!MFUL BINOCIJLARll; YIW' eyes m1y be terrific and the binGCUlar• do indeed IOI.Ind "beautiful," but you h1v1 a aeriou1 c111 of nGlt trouble. flty co ndolence• lo your nelthbor1. Whe.a rom1aUc paeet .. ,. .. w•l'M embr1ce1 la It lo\le .,. clteml1tryT klll ror 1be bnoklt:l "1A¥e .,. SU 1N Mn In Tell UM Dlffere.RN," by A• IA.Mui. Encl'* a IMI, atam,..e, lelf-HdNIHlll •nvelope and 41 teilta 11 ..t1 .., ... ,...., roquul ii can ti IM IWl.Y Pil.OT, Her fi1nce, the IOn al Mr. ind Mra. Jl. W. Bee9on « Norea. WU FldUlted from Arroyo HIJh Schoftl in El Mon. te. He J1 •tLend.lni Shoreline CommlUlit)' Q,llep In Seattle, where bl " en ldoeatlon ma· jor. San Clemente Arts on View The llMUll 4'IUklocw Art-craft Fair will illlrt JH1et i11. San Clemente on Saturday ind Sund1y, Aq. n and 2.1, from HI a.m. to 5 p.m. 8f>oneored by the S a n Clement• AN and Cr1ft.a Club, the evtnt will tlke place on lht Community Club Hou1e ........... Parent. Club Oranrt Coali C h a p t e r , P1rentt Wtthtlut P a r l n e r 1 aponlOl'I • p6DCalre bre1lrf1st tne lalt Sunday of each mflnth in Coata Meaa C"y Parlr from t 1.m, to 11:• p.m. Willy Rklhlrdl, chairman, w i l 1 1newer qu11Uon11 rt1ardln1 IM -publk: "rain or 1hlne" tvtol at Ml-Oil Ml-. Bowled Over by Success Competitioo was keen between members of Golden Key, and benefiting from their bowling league was the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. More than $250 was raised for the center by team members. Mrs. Jack Greeley (left), captain of the winning team, looks forward to the new season beginning Sept. 16 with Mrs . Bob Fickett. most improved player and high series w!Mer. Comprisin~ lhe winnin2 team were the Mmes . Bill Reed, John Harrisoft and Greeley. Mrs. Dale Peterson had the season's high game. Horoscope Scorpio: Av oid THURSDAY AUGUST 20 By SYDNEY OMARR AJ:le• l1divj6a1l1 like &o be rtrtt-lltey •IN Wini '° be wltli wh1ner1. SeC4Jlld pl1ce er 1ti1wbel1 si mply do wet appe.11 &o n1tt\le1 •f this nery 1lp. I hive dlact\lered tbat many A rle1 women • ppear to be frownln1. wbe1 they merely are 141ulal:in1. One ef tit• rre11e1t assets •• Arle.1 wnmn his 11 her amUe. Actrets Gl•rla Swu1011 it one 9f the bell ex1mple1 I Qew of •n Aries wom11. Site h11 very definite Ideas 1boll 1 variety nf 1ubject11 l11ch1dln1 11trel11y. AIREll !Marcil ll·Aprll 111< Cycle high ; you c1n tuc- cessfully take In 111 a t I y e. Utiliic innate qualltiea ol in- dependence, orl1inality. All indlcatkxl1 point to I<'· Talre the lead. Others will follow • TAURUS (April 20-Mardl 20): Take time to 11thec ln- formalkln. Coooperate I n charitable project. Be active in affair• which aid hoapil11, rest home. Get rid or aecreL fet.rs. You are due tor One opportunity. GEMINI (Moy tl.Juoe 20)! ACCftl'lt oo k1Cl1l aclivity. Ther• Ill break from rootlne. Belt In ltAve details to othera. Gain over111l v~w. See picture u a wboilc. Frlendlblp could 1row Into a«nelhlng mean· inlful, CANC1:ft (June SI.July 22): De1l wllh thoee In po11\tionll ol authority. You may be call· ed upon tn dn 11nme renov1Un1. Mean1 added f'MPOOllbility. But ch.a~ for rtcotnltlon •rt 1lao enhanced. LEO {July ll-Au.g. 12): Scan future po11l bi! Ill es . Be curious; 1111: qonlioos. Study wriU.en m1tertal. Review pro- cedurea. Yoo could recei ve from one 1t 1 dlst1nce, Clear eof!\munlcltk>n llne1. VIRGO (Au1. U.S.pt. 12): Check financial resourcea. Be 1ware ol lax records. Double checklna now coukS 1vnld flJture arlef. Some 11 me p.y~ntl can-should-be ad- justed. UBllA (Sept. l.!-Ocl. 12); Be caoperaUw. Cfteck fine print In any partnerahlp AT· r1n1emtnt. I.el o t h e r 1 1pe1k-en1lyu wttat'"lhey prn.- poee, Pk:lurt la not clear. Deceptloo mq be port ol ll, SCORPIO (Ocl.1.!·Nov. llJ: Take epeclal care where hMlth, ofely measures Are concerned. AWlld excua. Nol nectlUll')' to prove yoor1elf. You hevt a ri&:hl to nt senal· ble !>'«· SAGITTARIUS !Nov. I· Dec. Si l : Your enthuiiaam pmvea contagious. Participate in cre1Uvt 'Pi'itie1. Erin- j Excess • younell. Stick to unlf.' t style. Appeal widens; you lolna to get more recognit n. CAPRICORN (De<J II.JM, 19): H nm e im.Pfi_vament.t emphaeited. Take in1.f18:tiv• In l!lecurln1 wh1l yoo neied. Post. llon amon11 elriers ;'wnl im· pro ve. One lmpor.ta..;l to you makes \/Ital concesalOfl, AQUARI US (Jan. 21)..Feb, lll : Strive tn catd!i up on c1lll1 correspondence. Short trtp could e n h 1 n c 1 pro- motional M'tlviliM.' Hu n c b pay1 divldeQCls. 0 I 1pI1 y cour11e M conviction&. You i re going placu. PISCEll (Feb, l9·Mar~h 20): Earning pow!r can lncre11e. Pay and collect debt., Streu versatility. Show 'thOM who doubted that you can utlllze various asaetA. Be dbceminc. What you desire is avalilble. IF TO 0 A Y IS YOUll. BIRTHDAY you will begin to tee rMUltl of past-· effort•. You often expect tOI) much • too IOOl'I. P1llence 1 n d peniltenct would make areat twin 1llie11. This mnnth )'Otl mAke tlrh1ea toward 1011 Relation.ship Is put to le ... Ha111 on tn what I 1 worthwhile-.and worthy of y<!U. I > ' I • Fine Arts Village Gala Opening s·et 'Opening the new Fine Arts Village Art Gallery at UC! wiU be the exlilbiUon, Roy Lichtenstein: Graphics, ReUe!s and Sculp- ture (1969-7ll). With the opening, University Galley As- sociates are preparing for a gala evening fea turing a tour of the exhibit, dancing to the Joe Moshay Trio, cocktails and ho rs d'oeuvres. , The invitatlonaJ affair will take place from 7 to 10 p.m. Oct. 24. Selected Associates will guide opening night guests through the 1~ acre complex to view the 425-seat theater. concert hall and dance and art studios. Chairman of the event is Mrs. William J-1. Jahns and Mrs. Thomas P. \Yilder will be in charge of reservations. High Flying Females T·ake Fourth 1n Race ' 'l'he Newport Beach team of MiS! Shirley Tanner and Miss Chris lloffman secured a fourth place in the Pa1ms to Pines women's air race which took place last weekend. With Miss Tanner as pilol, the two women flew her Citabria, christened Charlie, from Santa Monica t o Independence, Ore. They competed with 35 teams for the be~ handicap Bpeed with s t o p 1 al Chowchilla, Red Bluff Medford, Ore. The two Newpor t pilots also secured a first place for the Chowchilla to ROO Bluff leg, a third place trophy for the SanM ta Monica to Chowchilla leg and a first place for the spot landing contest at Chowchilla. Both women were racing for the first time in a new race. The Palms t.o Pines race may become an annual event. VJRGJNJA'S SNIP 'N' STITCH SH0PPE l ll4 E•it Co•st Hwy. • Coron• del M•r Phone 011.aoso . COLLEGE BOUND! 6 11 off lo 1chool in S1pt1mb1r ln 111y lo m1k1 f11h i11111 f•om Sl!npliclty, McC11!1 •ritl l utt1rlek p•lt•rn1- Th1 m1d-pl,,d-midi-1ull, McC•ll1' S 257l f1om q1y pl•id w1ol1, il'1 gr••'· M1k1 I qr1.1t po11cho, McC1U1' •2456; with bn11h1d wool pl1 id or r1v1nibl1 ""ool with wid1 fri1t4•. C11I• go midi or m1ill, Mlk• lh1rn of fun·f1k1-fur1 or vinyl, 1irn plicily #1502. Tk1 vounq 1linky lool of b11utilul print1d b1nlo n1, Simplicity #1951 i11 11! l1nqlh1. Split l1w1I 11p1r1f11, 1~irj1, v11h & p1nh in ll~w l1nqlh1 , M,. C1ll'1 #1411 for knit1 lwodl", poly•1l1r I lcrylic.1), W1•r ,..;a; c.•p11 ov1r p•nh •nd ,..;,.; I rn••i ikith . M•~• froM f1lt, wool, or f1•• fur, 1irnplic.ity •11020, W• k••• rn111y ll'IOf• lo 141199111 -c.orn• in w1'U h•lp y:i~ wilk your 111w w1rdrob• ef'11•n9th1! S •• You Soon, VlkGINIA -......... '~~ --,O' MO Bea ch Part y in Off in g Sw1111ming , volleyball, roasting: \vicnfrs, prizes and dancing to the 1nusic o( Freddie and the Earthwornls will add Lo the beach party festivities being pla nM ned by \'oung Sophi sticate~ \Vomen·s C'lub or Southc;n California. Redondo Beach Marine Park will be the selling for the Saturday, Aug. 29, outing. Ready to have a ball are A1r s. Oe\vey Erney (Jert) and J\·1rs. Roger Rhoades. Prir WrdnesdaJ, Augu5t 19, 1970 DAllV PILOT ~9 Griers Home In Maryland Lagunan Claimed As . Bride SL Andttw"s Pmbyterian Chw°Ch, Newport Buch was lbe ,.lllni loc the double ring nuptials linking P a me l a Kingsley and Richard Carter Grier. The Rev. Dr. Chari~ ll Dierenfleld performed l h e rites for the daughter of J.tr. and Mrs. John B. Kingsley or Newpart Beach and the aon or Mr. and Mrs. Wendell W. Grier of BalUmore. Md. GJven in marriage by her I•~. tho bcide uked Mn. James L. Barden, btt sisler, to be her matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Joseph Meadowcroft, the bridegroom's sister; Mrs. Job.n M. Kingsley, the bride's slner·l~law, and Miss Ellen Gardner. Attending bb aon as best man waa Grier, and· ushers wtte John and Pat r ick Kingsley, lbe bcide's brolbers and Rhys 0 . Carter, the bridegroom's uncle. Alter a yachting a"Uise off the Southern callfornla coast, the newlyweds will travel across country to BaJUmore, Md. whero lbey will rosiclo. The new Mn. Grier at· telldod schools In the Harbor MU, is a graduate of La Jolla High Scbool and majored In pollUcal science at t h e University or Arizona. Her b111!>and majored In English and bosineM administration at tho Unlvenity of Maryland, Bargain Sale Hund.reds of intriguing items will be offered at bargain prices when the Women's Republican Club of Laguna Beach stages a one-day siale. To be staged in the Women's Club, the sale will take place Saturd ay, Aug. 22, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Proceeds will be U&- ed for the rental of a downtown headquarters Jor the club in the fal l. Lettuce .a -TOPS Lettuce-S.TOPS convene at 7: 30 p.m. each Tuesday for programs in Fountain Valley Elementary School. MRS. R.C. GRIER Recites Vows Diana J•ne Hirdlu and Lester Emeat COrdova were married in double ring nup- tiaia performed in SL Niclloia• Catholie Churcli, Laguna Rills. Paienis of tho b!ldal..,.:tplo are Mr. and Mn. Rk:hatd Hlrdler of Lquna Beach 111d Mr. and Mrs: Ernest Cordova of Anaheim. Maid of honur was Mlss Nancy Martin , while bridesmaids were ?tliss Calh.v Brown and Miss Judey Ann Cordova, the bridegroom'.! sister. Emily Chandler was her cousin 's flower girl. Attending his brother ai best man was Del b ert Cordova, and U!hen were David Hi.rd.let and T l m O'Hara. 11'6 bride ls a graduate of Laguna Beach High School. Her husband b a graduate o( Anaheim High School and al· tended Fullerton Ju nior College. He b serving in the Air Force. LITILE GUYS •fl DOLLS CHILDREN'S HAIR STYLING l'Nt111i.11 ~ Stv-. I :(Mt Al'l"OIMTMINT Dlllr t It l C..... ,.._.,YI . '41..J&ff 130 E. 17th St. ~'::wt, Cost• Mew , ' easy-care •div• w .. r for · m•.n •nd boys boy's Je..,is •ncf h•n9·t•ns.. lots of them I •P•ll 5111H11y1 , t • fer th• 511mm1r 11 to 5 \111l1"'eri1.•rilll e 11111t1r •k•rt• f f11~J•11 itl.!141, ftlWpert \11ch •44•1070 ~ THE N·E·W ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1:~=."~_"W~i~li:_•".id'!_ll:'Jh~e_Jilea~chcOmber Center for_i_·lan_di_ca.1_ped __ Y_o_u_th_s_. ______ 11 LQQK A lOYaY GIFT FOR YOU FROM POLLY BERGEN This week only, AuilJSt 17 through August 22, we invite you to meet Miss .Germaine, special Beauty Advisor fo r Polly Bergen ••• and with any $5 purchase of the fi ne Polly Bergen Beau ty llems, receive this love ly gift. Call 547.7111, ExL 397 Cos metics, First Roor • BULLOCK'S SANTA AN~ I fASHION SQUARE, 54).llJi, OPEN MONDAY lHRU FRIDAY, 9.JO A.M. • 9.JO P.M., SATURDAY 9:30 AM .. · 1.30 P.M. Double Duo 7190 Crochel for mom a n d daughter ur big and litUe sister. Twice-pretty! C r o c h e t beginner-e1tsy. JNSTANT vests with big hook, novelty yam. Lacy, simple mesh h a s unusual border. Pallei'n 7190 : sizes 10-16 and 2·12 included . Flfo'TY CENTS for each potM torn -add 35 cents for each paltcrn for Air Mail and Spec ial Handling ; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more . Send to Alice Brooks the Daily Pilot, 1~ Needlecran: Dept, Box 16!. Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Address, Zip, P a t t e r n Number. BIG 1970 Needlecraft cata101 -40 pages, 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Knit, crochel fl'lshions Quill, em· hro1der, weave. Toys, gifts! Send 50 cents. NE\\'! Complete A ( I h a 11 Book -tnarveloll.!I a(ghans, rash!ons, pillows, baby gifts, morel $1 . rttuseum Quilt Rook t -pal· lcrng for 12 11upcrb quilts. :.0 cents. at your service for a ••. NEW YOU! w. hne ... ~ ..... , .. ef PALL.I' ••• Wl•Lm ••• CAICADU elMI Wl•t le o,.... CMMJ. M-.. ,,. • ltflff fef .,., I'll hY e1I "MIRACLE WIGS" Tho INSTANT HAIR-DO! •• , l•r heliJ1y 91illl·1b1uh . Jui! ton If in vour li19 & t11.1 lt 1l1J1t l l ru1h11 i11lo your ow11 •iyl1 i11 1 flASHI lb 10 111y lo w11h 1nilll 1tvl• yowttelf. IGO 'X. K1n1k1l111 fi. b•r. THE TRAVELER Stretcll <II', curly or 111ml curty IOP wllll J11>1rlld n«k. ~a. $14.95 THE VOY AGE·R Wllll or Without 1>1rf, !or ,,.. --· ;.1. $19.95 THE "GARBO" H•MI ...... for tllt 11110 111 l~ilt­loll 1tyla. ;.,., $27.95 Have You Seen Tho SIHk Now DUTCH BOY The "A~Line" special -contoured at tho book -end groduolly lengthens ot the sides. It can even be brushed under for the pogo boy look! Of r.ghtwoight Konek.Ion mod•crylic. Comes in f•sh ion frosteds, too! R111ulorly $34. 95 Now Just $19. 95 _ SAVE S20 TO S60 NOW 100% HUMAN HAIR WIGS Fully Hand Tied • • • s59· 95 all shades OTH;;ER--;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.__~ HUMAN HAIR WIGS s19ss ALL SHADES Pll·ITYLID • , • , •• SJ4.fl YIYIANI WOODA•D COSMITICS FAlLS DIMll ~ ·I I"" PALL ~ WI• PALL ~ LON• PALL $22.95 $32.95 $42.95 $52.95 IAYl 17 SAVI 17 IAYI SIJ SAYI 117 CASCADES 3 01. Regular $12.95 ~ 4 oi. Giants $17.95 .... 117.tl .... Sii.ti m JJ4 , · WIG & BEAUTY allie .1 -SALON 250 E. 17th STREET COSTA . MESA 548-3446 DAILY TILL 5:30 THURS. & FRI. TILL 1:00 , - • • • ' I I -. ' I I 28 DAll.Y r!LOT Wtdnts4Q, August lt, 1970 Proportioned ~Look Accented I FASHION PLEASER-The rnicUvest over pants is a fashion pleaser for the sportswear scene. f"ashions emphasizing the longer Jook are showing in cam- pus and coed shops at the May Co. U-SH APED VEST-Long line vest is favored for coeds this fall in combination v.'ilh proportioned plaid ski rt . Campus wear for n1cn includes leather jacket \vith fur lapel s in combJnation with striped pants. Childb irt h Painl ess Of interest to e1pectanl mothen is lhe Jnfonnati<ln class to be offered by the Westminster Childbirth With· out Pain Le11gue on Tuesday, Aug. 25. The group is inviting all those interested to the home of 1'1rs. Roy Hamsey i n \Vestmlnsler a! 2 p.m. Discussed \\ill be t h e forthcoming six weeks series of cl;isses on the Pavklv- Lam.aze method nf childbirth v,.ithotll pain, which includes brealhing techniques a n d ncuro-muscillar control. 1'trs. Ramsey may be reach· rd for fu rther details at 892· 2722. SUki11t 1 l'llW, 1xtilin1 'lrMr? Thtrt i11 uiliu.l 1hort111 ol 1r1in14 MEDICAL AND DENTAL ASS ISTANTS S~ett, inlS11.i•1 co~uts follt q110lil'( yo11 01 nn Au i•lcnl In th• 0111<1 nl o Phyii<kr• OI' D1nlnl, 4 "'"nth prog111111 f<ll' D111lol Al• '"'°"' or ,M1di<ol Olli(• ltceplionUt. '1 l"001h P'Oi'",. lor Mrd•<cl Ani>l<llll. Da1 .,, •"ning •In• .. •· lolt1imt p!ace111t nl 11111lotanui cit 110 odclltioftol '011. So~them Californi1 College ,, Medica l ind Dent•I Assist1nt1 (lonn•rlt lo1 Arij1lis Colltg•) i• ill@~ by lht Aurtdlling Commlulon of 1h1 Nit's. As1n., of Trd. tnd T1thn~1I Scilll Writt •r Phont for Fret lrochurt 1717 South llrookhurs r Anaheim Phone 635-3450 Porchos . Versatile St.roo.( lasblon tr e n d s emerging from "now pro- portioned" fall styles for the young &el include the midivest in oxnbtnation with pa.nu or skirts and the gaucho suil alone or Pfired with a poncho. The jlO'>eho style i ' especially versaWe, since It can accompany boOi skirts and pants. In a n e w pro. portioned innovation, it .also can be lowered below the hip to create a "schoncbo" skirt. Sleek jumpsuits create the clean cut look thcit is rising in importance, and new, longer coats emphasile close fitting silhouettes. Assessories, in a n in· tematicnal appeal, include Moroccan belts and Indian fringed purses. The ' • n o w proportioned look" will accent below the knee, mid~alf and to the ankle lengths. October Nuptials Planned 'Educational' Clothes The concept of educational clothes was originated by children's fashion designer, Ruth Sharf who feels that now is the perfect time to market them. To a Id .disappointment, prospective brides ar, reminded to have their wedding stories \fitb black and while ~lossy r.tiPt~ graphs~ the, DAILY PILOT Women• Do- parlme one week before the weddinJ{. Pie es received after that time wlU not be used. For 'engagement announcements it Is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If dead.line i$ not met, only a story will be used. To belp fill requirements on both wed- dinc and engagement stories, forms are avwlable in an of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by · Women's Section stall members at 642-4321 or 494-~. Collectjon A Jewel Among museum-like pieces from the Paupne 'l'rigere col. Jeclion or ~e jewelry is a group cf Aztec rings, brooches and neck1aces. Many have the look o! old goJd and are studded with tiny jewel-like stones and mini pearls. DTEBY SHOIES ,01 WOMEN & CHtt.D•EN ?lJ I . 1111 51. Cffl• MU. • Ml-1111 ,BACK TO SCHOOL! BIDWELL OF NEWPORT PlaMing their wedding 00 Gigi Sonmez models one of the outfits. Oct. 10 Jn tile First Christian-~------------------ Church cf Santa Ana are Nan- cy Ruth Michaeli of Costa Mesa and William Everett Nunan of Newport Beach. Announcement of t h e forthcoming nuptials w a s made by the bride-elect's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Michaeli, following the future bridegroom's graduation from California State College at Fullerton. Miss Michaeli and her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs Everett Nunan, both are Newport lfarbor High School graduates and Orange Coast College cilumni. Meso Re bekoh - Every first and lhird Tues· day of (he moolh members of Mesa Re be k ah Lodge assemble in Odd Fellows Hall, CoSla Mesa, at 8 p.m. INTRODUCING FROG LOVERS TO CHC)P.INI PARENTS', DON'T WAIT tJNTIL YOUR CHILD IS our OF THE fROG LOVERS AGE BEFORE YOU GIVE TH EM THE GIFT Of MUSIC -YOU WAIT AND H MAY BE TOO LATEI Children in the frog lov1119 11191 f•·Bl i rt the pe rfecl i ge for le1rnin9 mu~1t. Y•mAh•, iller Yt•rs of rtst••~h d11i9ned the Y t m a h ii Mu'ic Course lo •ssure that •II chil dren t•n let rn musi<. Millions of Y•mah• 11r•du11es from i ll over the world 1es1ily lo !ht suc.c:ns of lhe YAMAHA 1MUSIC COURSL You do not have lo b•,y '" in· strument. 1her1 is no homt Sludv -jusl loh of fun for your ch1ldrt n whole !hey le•rn mustt • DON'T OfNY YOUR (HILD THE CHANCE YOU MAY HAVE MISSCO IN YOUR CHILDHOOD. Cl•sscs •re now enrolling-won't vou ple1se ;we us • c•U i nd let us show vou tht whole storr of lhe YAMAHA MUSIC COURSE! YOUR BIGGEST REWARD Will Bf \Vff[N YOUR fR OG LOVER LOOKS UP AT YOU AND TEllS YOU , , • "I GAVE MY fROG A NEW NAME. BEETHOVEN.'' Don 't Dtlty-C1U Toclty 642-1 844 YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL IN COSTA MIS A 'I Parents Tel I News The engagement of Susan Jean Darling has been reveal- ed by her parents, Mr. and , Mrs. Lawrence M. Darling of Corona Jel Mar. Her fiance, Daniel Allen Naber of C.OSla Mesa, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin H. Naber of Snyder, N.Y. Miss Darling is a graduate of Corona de! Mar High School and holds a BA degree in social science from San Jose State College. A graduate of AmhersL lligh l I ' . • I School, t h e benedlcW:lect received a BS degree in engineering from Clarkson College, N.Y. Their wedding is planned for Nov. 7 in Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic C h u r c h . Newport BeaCh. C octus Society Orange Cotmly Cactus and Succulent Society meets the first Wednesday at noon in Odd Fellows Hall, Costa Mesa. ~k BIDTIQUE FINAL • --.....• :J.-_ I UP TO 75%oFF V SWIM SUITS V CAPRIS V LOUNGE WEAR V PANT SUITS f;' SHIFTS V KNIT DRESSES ' V CASUAL & BETTER DRESSES We Still Have A Good Selection Left ... But Hurry MR. TOM'S SHOP FOR MEN MENS WEAR W• .... tr.I~ .... .._. et bt'•tlfid Le .loll• M•'• SllMr Wffl SIKb ••• Si th o • o lportl CMb • o • .... s...t.rs frl;fll OllT Mr. T1• , .. ,, aMer. H...i, Pol• Jprl191 .., tltll ......... .., ~.. " LA JOLLA SUITS 500/o ~~ Off LA JOLLA SLACKS 75 0;. ~~ ~ff Sport Coats ~~1s01~ff fANTASTIC SAYIN&S flUT COMI fllST SllYID 6'«to ;::-~4 I/'-~,.:;;-'\I . master charge . L.: ) & MR. TOM'S SHOP FOR MEN 3424 Via Lido • Newport Beach BLUE RIBBON WINNERS -Among 143 South Coast Community Hospital volunteers receiving sel>'ice pins recently were Mrs. H. R. Alrick \\•ho holds a money bag s;:epresentlng the auxil iary San Clemente Juniors Select Tea house Theme pledge, l\1rs. 11o'nt Mc1'1illen and Mrs. Leonard Davis, holding a replica of the blue ribbon \vhic h carries gold stars and bars for years and hours of volu ntary service. Volunteers Win Service Honors One hundred forty-three $17~,000 to build and 1naintain w.-.... Au;ust l'I, 1970 OAILV PILOT %'( e 1110 GI"°'• 1111;. Somebody Fights Back Hanging Japanese lanterns a·.id wind chi mes will decorate the San Clemente home of the Freeman Fowlers on Saturday, Aug. 22, for the an. nual membership tea of the San Clemente Junior Woman's Club. p.1n., with f\trs. C e r a 1 d 11-1c0onald, president, a n d ~1rs. Bruce Lewis, mem- bership ch<µnn an, on hand to greet guests. t.fember~ip in the ctub, which is sponsored by the San Clemente Woman's Club and is a member of Orange District, California Federation of Women's Clubs, is ()pen to young women between the ages of 18 and 3fl. n1embers or South Coast Com-the hospital and arc working munily Hospital Au.riliary on a second pledge of $100,000, half of v.·hicn was retired last I received awards for voluntary year. service during the annual -~~=::::::::::::::==:::::========::::=====================================:- Who fights city hall? The DAILY PILOT dots. That's who. And whfre else can you find cogent comnientary Oii )'out community? Cl!Kk the editorla.I page of YOUR community's dal ly Mwspaptr, th! DAILY PILOT, of CC>ur$e. Themed Teahouse of the August Moon, the event will take place from 1 :30 to 3:30 Tots' Shoes Softening Children·, shoes are tending to softness, says the American Footwear Institute. Soles will be lighter and more flexible. Even where the sole is a miniplaliorm there is softness and bounce. Worthy projects to whic h the group ca.itr.ibutes include support of an Indian orphan and financial support and voluntee r assistaoce to the Interfaith Se r vic emen's Center and other ctlmmunily projects. For further h1formation con- cerning 1nembership or at- tendance at the lea, ~frs. Lewis may be reached at 492· 1764 . La Cresta CLEANERS GUARANTEED DR'¥ CLEANING* If we les. lt--or •bltH It .•• We wHI poy for It I• c•lrl! Drapes 50~ t:XPIRES SAT., AUG. 12, 197 0 1687 ORANGE AVE ., COSTA MESA PERM I-CURLS awards coffee at the Rosan Ranch in San Juan Capistrano. American ~lospital Associa· tion honor pins representing service hours given to the hospttal were presented by ?o.1rs. n i c h a r d J·lutchinson, volunteer service chairman, for a total of 45,184 hours. Among those honored were the ~I mes. Thomas Swanson, Harry Sowden. Tho mas Fletcher, Harold Ekman, 'fan· dy Colema n. l\'an Ma rsh and ~i iss Elfrieda Biggio who have been auxilians for 12 yea rs \\'hile cootributing thousands of hours. ~i rs. Jack Ly.Jns, auxiliary president. welcomed special guests who :!lCluded Victor And re\\'S, hospital president : \\1alter J. Evans. mayor or San c;Je1ncnte, and membe rs of the press. Other guests were winners of scholarship awards. the ~1isses Janette Brylla, Bonnie Clapper and Barbara Stamp. Each of these students is a Candyslriper and ex pecls to further her career in the n1ed ical fie ld. Working on com1nillees for the annua l presentalion were the ~1 mes. J\f. Ackerman . Lyons, John Turk , Patrick Shea, William Imh o f f , Fletcher, Lawrenc~ Cam pbell and Miss Fra nces Christeson. Volun teers have r a i s e d GET SOME BOUNCE ·INTO YOUR LIFE PERMS $22.50 SALONS Al u1n in S.Wntnn FASHION ISLAND Ne .,..port Beach • OnaliC1af't has go-with shoes fo r every look! ~ patent. suede. Charlie Browns. fringe boots. Handbags. socks. pantyhose. Here. suede saddle 6.99. shiny boot 14.99, super strap 9.99, fringe bag 3.50. Ou r going-wi th shoes will 6 99 10 99 only set you back a mere , to • . . • , dNG'i ON CENTER Huntington Beach • boots 12.991022.99 FASHION SQUARE Santa An• • SOUTH COAST PLAZA Coda Mesa • 2 5 5 22 22402 2 25 a : z a 0 2 0 coo a••••• esa ,,,,,,,,,., •= ! • !a--Ol!LY PILOT 'Virginian' Says, Lemon Flavoring's the Berries !~ .., .. • 2 5 77 1 -2 2 v a : • I [' I • I I l • . -~ • , t i • • . •, ,• J!y JOHNA BLINN NE W YORK-"God lmows t love bl\Jeberrle1.'' a well Wined, si1-root-plu1 James Drury, 5:1ld ror opene.ft. "I can nev"' get tny fiU : You can put them on breald'ut t.'tV'eal, hi j1111 or jeUy, or mix them into pancakes and wafnes. J'll eat 'em all !" Television's ''Virginlan,'' v.<ho ldlllll.Y •pent most of hlJ youlh traveling with his advertising and marketing professor father from Ne w York Univm1ity to Oregon where his parents ke pt a sum- 111er r anch. Is an expert on \'arietics of blueberries. "Each w-iety is quite dis- tinct," he said. "For exam- ple, •rubel1' are basically for jams and jellle11, because they are tart, The berry is, smaller and pear-shaped. The 'pioneers' lohk like miniature blue grape.fruit: they're big, flat , very sweet and tasty~ and go on your breakfast cereal. So blueberry t,orowers of the \\'orld .uni~,'' he said \\'ith great gales ~r laughter. l 1 '1 haven't talked about he rid• oo tho sbolr. which Bllon!i::> llOCllY MOUN. \4o cup !lour bluel>ttri.. In tJ ~W:•. In lhla year bee-'"Ibo Men • U TAlll I tAlpOOll 1111 fact. 11m rtachJ.n&1 i ~'utt1e1" From Sbtlalt. •• "I havt ao ~ alJNaOW TROUT Jilt \ellPGlft f'rtlbb' '""*' he said. I ter"t bi a brttdln& ronch Jn black Pfpper "W• u...i lo have a com· Gras• Valley, W• hive 40 • ~ Moonlaln rainbow• 1 *-- me<cl•I blutberry rand! dur-brood -md lour lland: lreut, eacb w•l&hlnl I - Sol\ buttor c;ltltl IMtl tlloRugbly, wuh In cold-waltr, wlpa with dllllP, cloth. Bland flour, 111~ popper, w.....-ire IJ1d llbuoo (ooedl-11 wtD form Rub "° lnalcle and "'tilde al trtoL Dot 111111ll bill al ooflJftld butter on fllh, Broll unUI nelh bellnl to flake, Turo, dot other side with but, ter. Broll Serve at once. Servtl '· • Ina tho ear\y yean ol World inc itu<it, We -..,, l'O'llil, 1:11•...p;,,_ War 11, oear ~O'tiport an lilt wbm lrun 21 to IO Ytll'llnpl----':_:_:~,,,,_ _______ _;:c_.;1';,.1';,.-------------------_,,,,,-.y I Oregon coast At ttie 'lime if annually thl'OllCb our ..... was the-onl)' cuJUY.lted blue-bame. I m!Jlt }tave an Interest beny rancll oo the West , In I lfO borpoo ar more, Thlt'1 Coh:l. No,,. tMre are many kind of.rf1111*nlng when you ~bring Jn !Oto --Ill ~. obout 11111 .-ol bllll). a&.,.1• I>Nry'1 ,..erU sUll hly. malntaln the family home, a Another of Jim'• favorite 1sa.,cre ranch near Salem, punu)tl 11 deep • or fNlh and .a ranch in California. water fishing. l"nlair1 a IP'elt "Wt oever JI.le le/n~ w)th way to relai. PhylU1 (his the~ uial't the wiy!IPy; wife) Is not a i fiahenroman, mothei-schooled us. A Jot of but she'• very . 11porta·minded people use lemon in every. and an ei:pert acuba diver. thing. t don't particularly care We di~~ to1etblr 111 over the fbr the taste of It on fish. Irs world. In the last ye1r the used too JJJ.UCh with fru1t and. pair went scuba d!vlng In the juices. Mind you, lemon's a~ Bahamaa aad the Virgin h - cellent ig ill pl.itet. ar\d 1em lands. . onade'a wonderful. But you ''Ba1Jcally, l'm"li •ny'fidwr. ruin the true taste of btuebtr-man , preferably trout. I've rles or Johnnie W~lker black fished in the Rocky Maun- label," he 1ald. tainr and Sahatu. Every T 'allted•1\im a~l hil Apa-year 1 have a special lake I Joosa hoises. He owna the one ro. to In Utah but l'm not going to mention 'Ailttt, be- cause r don't want anybody else going to it!" Lik.e many angfer1, he Uke1 to cook hls catch. He brolb the trout urn maklnl' up • f1our mlltpre teamed with WorcntenQlre and tabaaco to rub on the filh. "People give me a baleful eye when I say Worce1terlhlre on trout. Ttle Indians made trout and salmon filets without-any con- dlmentJ." Jim was looking forward to a fistiing trip to Ketchikan, Al11k• for the opening of the salmon run. He'r also planned a blg- f!&me safari to Africa to "take the big five" (elephant, lion, rhinos, leopards and buffalo). "I hunt with a rifle but J also hunt with a bow and enjoy both. Rine hunting ta tome- thing r believe in Ulln& when condltlona warrant it: I don't want to go after a CriulY be,~ f~~ 4~~petent with a bow and 1 would try Jt be- cauae I'm crazy enoulh to try anything. But that's a Httle hairier than 1 want to try rilht now !" Nonetheleu, tbe ifnr- le11 hunter planned to 10 after a jaeuar In Brazil wttb a bow. SALE STARTS THURS., AUG. 20 . J J.' KrA~--• . ' Ho 1 e o Gift Siop ' I * ' MAIN LEVEL FONDUE l'OT Slaiol•11·11..i ii.I w ,.,.;ng tray, hg. 22,00 1 S.00 ' GROUP OF VEN!TIAN GLASS, lird1, ash- troy1, lighten, If<:, Reg. 8,50 to 30,00 SALE • , • '/1 NICI I G,ALLERY PIECH, 0..-.f..,•kind, wall a"" 1obl1 pi~"· Rtt. 15,00 lo 250,00 '/1 t• 1/i O" INSTANT W , .. r ac-torm lo • "'"• lit· dudes reci1111, ber t..11, mix•, Mr>kln1, ete. Rao. 8.00 4.SO 1 lllOQUOfS CHINA Gtovp el black and wM1 sarving piu, lllducll"' ..,,..,., .. and eel- ''' ..,.., w'/warmar. NOW '/1 NICI STACKING CANDLE HOLDERS in chrome and black or all chromt. Rtt, 4,00 2.50 GROUP Of DECOUTl.VE CANDLES 1/, to 'h Off ZODIAC PLATES !arthonworo for Hrving or "-"ging, Reg , 9,00 5.DO GROUP Of NAUTICAL aoC>KENDS Bran and mnu. hg. 20.00.50.00 'I• to 1/, Off SET OF 6 GLASS AS~ YS WITH WOOD- EN RACK, Rog, 7,00 • 3.50 INMty, manY. ""'"Y le !ill. more 1 ~f-o·kind items, too ; as lS., TABLE FANTASTIC REDUCTIONS! * * BLUEBERRY EXPER'I' JAMES DllUllY'S BLUEBERRY LAmCE PIS One IHnch prep11ed p)t putry (or 1 pacUlt pie LOWER LEVEl James Drury 'VIRGINIAN'S' LATTICE PIE crurt mix) 4 cups blueberriea lh cup suaar " cup light brown 1Ular, firmly packed Scant 111 cup nour ~ teaspoon salt Iii; teaspoon nulmef " teaspoon cinnamon (or mace) 14 cup melted butter (or margarine) Roll out two-OlirdJ Ill the pastry ( pr<part packqed pie cruat ml:i accordinf to boJ: lnstrucUOOJ) on llgbUy floured board. Line bottom and 1ldt1 of an ungreased 9-lnch pie pan. Combine blueberrle1 with sugar, brown sugar, flour, 1alt, nutmeg , cinnamon (or mace) and butter (or margarine). Mi:r well, pour inlo pie shell . Roll out remljinin& pa1try, cut into ten IA-inch wide slripe. Arrange strips In a lattice over filling. Crimp or flute edges. Bake in preheated 425 degrees F. 35-G mi'nute1 lor unUI brown al'ld bubbly). Gool sllgbtly beforf ""1111, Gan\lsb 1pacu betweln "IA.t- tices" with addlUorlll un- cooked fr e 1 h bluebtrrtes. Serve plain, with crNJP or v1o nilla tee cream. Serva I. Read Label for Choice Pickles and picnics are natural companions. Therefore, It isn't strcinge thal , , , of the 84 pickles you are likely lo eat I h i s year' .. you'll eat most or . \hem this summer. Pickles' popularity Isn't a sudden thing. It's a centuries- old fact. Cleopatra ate pi cklf'S for beauty ; Caesar's legions never marched without lhen1 and Amerigo Vespucci, for whom the American can- lint'.nts are n1uned. was a pi ckle dea ler in Seville. Purchasing 11icktes can be 1 puuling project, considering the rtykl1 and type& of packt, brands and kinds. Cootainer sizes r1nae from I ounces to half i Pllons wilh an added choice or individual pickles pac;klld In 11led plastic ba&i available 1 n refrigeralfd coonlen. Alto&ether, any one marktt m1y have more than $0 d1ffert11t·plckle nems from right dilfe,,.nt processors. Pjcklff can .be CIJNifit:d 81 dlll, l()U r and 1weet and they are procerted by l"''O n11tln 1ne1bod1 ••• freSl-pack 1 )' p e and cured or fermented ty pe. Fresh.pac k pickles are made from uncured, unfermented cucumbers. 'They are packed in a vinega r .solution wllh other ingredient.a to make partially des~led1 ~n proc· them s•eet, sour or dill ; then they are pi'ocessed by heat hermetically sea 1 e d con- tainers. Pickles of cured type are prepared by natural fermen- tallQll of cucumbers Jn salt brtne which cootahu flavor- ings typical ol dill, 80Ur or sweet pic kles. 'llley may be to assure prese rvaUoo tn -.ed. Generally, fresh-pack: ptckles cost less than cured or fermtnled type because lhcy lake leu Ume to prepare and process. If you remember your last pick.le purchase, you know the label has more information than just "dill," "swte:t'' or ''sour." Dill pk:kle labels, lor Hample, may !Micale "gen- uine dill,'' "Kolher sl)'~" or • Po\lah ... Oenulne dill pickles a re cu red ... natur1tly fermented, r1ther than fresh- pack. The word "genuine" cannot appear oo the label unleu natural fermentation 11 used. "Kosher style" mew garlic was added as a sta!Ol'l- ing during pickle processing. Polish 1tyle dill pickles Jre highly spiced. Labels on sour pickles in- dicate whether they are Mt sour pickles, mi1ed sour chow ..• word11 which do a pretty good job o( t.ellln& what to e1pect in the way of flavor and appearance.. F r o m reading the labels of 1Weet pickles, you know whether they are whole pickles, chlpe, candied chlpa, sweet dlllt, mi1ed dlll1 and sweet rtlllh or piccalilli. Each ha1 it.I own characteristic navor bl.It the label dots glva ICXDI clue as to what to e1pec:L Ju1l 11 11ch 1tyle and t)'t)e o( pickle pack i1 a bit dif- ferent, Individual p a c i t r 1 have their own naYOrinl and spicing formula . Your p~kle pre ference b probtbly baaed OD ta1le ••• IO )'OU may need to try different J)ickl1 lt)'le1 and brands .•. to be sure you have lhe one you like best. GllOUP OF WEAHVH TEFLON li•U sauco- pan1 and cottaralM, ""9• with oraoga lids. 1/1 PIJCI LARGE otEHE ZOAIDS. Halvral wood with orOPIQI or y1ftow enomefWll•• ln1~ and bile. Rog. 13.00 NOW 1.00 PADOlE SPICE RACK. 12 cloor pla1tic ea•, loinon with celorlul Nels. Rag. $14.00 SALE PRICE f,00 MATotlNG COOfCIE JAi. R19. 7.00,. 4.00 LACQUERWARE STACIC CANISTERS. Stl of 3, with hondl.,, hof or cOld. color lrio, Rtg. 10,00 NOW 6,DO PfTOiE•S, all •~opes, sizes, colors and de .. 1ign1. '/• Off GllOUP OF MUGS. Many polltrn• and 1ho1M•· Rao. LOO to 3,00 oach 'I•, PRICE "AS IS" TAILE-Great Savings. U,PER LEVEL ALL ltOSENfHAL.NETIH STUW Fath ac-LUOTE DESK AqCESSORIES in block witli eessori11, including ti11ue, ba1ktt1, ht1mpers, soap 'dish, glou holder. ,..,,.r11o1 .. 1ors. lao, L00· 13.00 1/1, Pl!CE GROUP Of HAND PAINTED PLASTIC llATH ACCESSOll!S lnclucllno hand mir,.,.. 1/1' NICI GROUP Of REGAL ltUGS, lid .. ,.,, 30" rounds, centoun, 3'•5' ovals. RUGS, leo. 10.00 LID COVUS, Rao. 3.50 NOW 6.00 NOW 1.71 canary, bron11 with white, lime with clear, enamel on copper trim. Including letter hold. er, note pod, pencil holder, waste baiket, boehnih, ttc. Rtg . 7,00 to 36,00 'h l'llCE ODDS AND ENDS-DESK SETS, Reg. 4,QO to 50,00 'I• to 'Ii OFP GROUP ·OF NOTEPA'ER AND STATIONERY, 'I• to .'Ii Off YACHT SHO, COMPLETE GROUP LADY WlANGLElS Straight and flare """''· short 1hart1 and :Jameica•. All ca-. 1tlld1, pleiol• Hd cel- en. '/• l'lllCI GROUP Of JACIC WINTH T-lops, """"· shirts, ••irtf, fclc•cits. Polyaslar, oll machln• -·"""''· .,. 0 .. GllOUP OF f . I, HORGAN Polyastor, panll, lop•, jatktts. 1/1 OPP ' WOMEN'S T-TOPS GltOUP 1/1 ;1:c1 SHIP'S MODI~! a•d wire 1culpt1"9. Rao, 110.00 • NOW 60•1QO • SAILING SHIP SCONCE, wired for ollClricity. Rao, 25.00 NOW If.GI NAUTICAL OIPTS AND DECOU.TOI PIE<llS, m1ny 1\o1.., •• 1 ..... 1/1 ta ,'11 on & MOU GROUP OF DUfflE AND SEA IAGS. 1/1 to 'Ii Off FLY flSHEllMAN KNIPE liy Kolar, Rao. 8,00 NOW 3.00 SWEDISH DECK CHAllS, Mahogany with camil or hlick canva1, or black with white .. Rao , 32 ,00 SALE 20,DO MATCHING OTTOMAN. Rao, 22,00 12.DO T~ Y converts ottoman to table. Reg. 12.00 SALE 7.DO WE ARE OISCOl-!TINUING MANY MENS WW LINfSI LR!y Decha, Catalino, Mortin, 11c. '/1 ta 'I• Off and MOU , FISHING otAIR Pompon1tt1 1 w iv t L R,g, 120,00, I only 75.00 613-63~ !' RAMBUltG D I WITH SALLIE WANNA TRY THEATOZ ROUTE And \Ve don 'l mea• eveeything fr9 m Appl~ to Zucchini. If you f I n d anylhlng usual here, -we'll eat ii. A stands for Arrowro<>t Lhe great thickeaer and Anisette Toast . • you can smell the licorice clear throu gh the package, very breakfast . in St.. Mark's Square. B for Ban~na 1plit glasses in green or gold, lhe cl wtky old fashioned ice cream parlor kind, what fun for strawberry shortcake or chunks of watermelon. C- Chin11. peas, but (resh in the produce for y o u r favori te Chinese recipes. D -OeLUX Delight, the ,sw. inger sa'!dwich on grilled sour dough brc.1d with rare roast beef, cheLse 'n onions. E EXTRAS VlA CHEESE Extra Old Black Dia n1onfl Cheddar fron1 Canada. ex· tra sharp cheddar from New York. Flatter Platters , squ<1re or round to keep your bacon fron1 doing flips Ghiradclli chocolate from San f<'rancisco in bits or bars. H -Hampers that Happen , the world's second largesl match box or a Tex· as cookie jar, s ta s he11 blank.Ls too. l -Iceberg Polish Pickles, grea! long pale green, Kro le-Kured quar1er cucumbers. J - Jewish ~lohn Hread. Joika for canned reindeer meat lovers, and Jane's Kra zy rilixed up Salt. KINDA KALEIDOSCOPIC ' K -K.JlOckarounds, liy US Keds, the bare skin o.;. ford in brown, natural or white f\.1ustang or Kie\, breast of chicken ala by Grand Tour L' -Lemon Flake Ice Cream from Sa11· ,, ta Barbara·lhe richesl and JI most ex pensive ice cream anywhere p a c k e d by McConnell. M -Mother's Matzo BalJs to heat and eat like soup. N -Noodle nests in a ca11 for a la king things, fresh be rries and ice crea1n. O - Oregano. olives by Graber fresh Oysters and Oxta1ls in the 1neal department, fresh Okra you know where. P -PeMsyJvania Dutch, country sty le, fully cooked frozen whole chicke n takes only abo!Jt JO mi1ute1 to heat. Q. SHOULD BE A STOPPER Not at ruchard 's . , tlow abou l pickled quail eggs, in pink or blue and Quince jam or Que R.it which means who laughs and goes with La Vache Cheese bits R -R1k·Rak' Uy Ci1g1, big Ci!lln bags of O\·cr grO\\TI pecans .ind almonds all mola ssed up "'ith popcorn. S -Sencgalrst So u p , chicke11 fla1 orcd 1·urried and creamed to serve co ld with unsweetened c·rearn, or stea med clams c.i r1ned in their O\\'n shcils from ti1aine. T -Topiary Tree, green and artifically lovely 4 feet high to dccorat l! with anything from a pp J e blossoms to holly berries. ULTRA UNUSUAL UTMOST UTILITY TOO U -U11side down cakes, lhe bakery will On pineap- ple, cherry, apricot. pearh ~r any flavor, any size, any lime. V -Ve i. I u re titaga zine. the traveler·s world, or Vinaigrette, a series or vinegars with whole spices. \\' -Wow Won ToR skins. frozen lo fry crisp and serve with sweel sour pork or sprinkle with powdered Jiugar and jelly. X -Xo~. canape filler-ups from Germany, all dlffennt-o hap es, eor. nucoplaa, squans, rounds. Y -Yorkshire Pudding, <tdd a cup o1 \\ ater, bake lltlle golden jen1s 10 ser\•e with roast beef gra vy. z,._ ZeJlar Salita, which you Reed fresh celery root 11> n1Rke, and Zod1ac1 you can even buy i clock with al lh c stgn1. 1~u1. them all together, lhcy Bpe11 Ricl\ard 8, UO• typically your1, but you'll al!o find Rngelfood cakes Rnd Zani1 h,1r or 7. a 1. a cocktail and Zah1tll date..o; , as •DJ u 2£• ' ' ' I I ~.~19,1970 ___ DA_JL_V_PILOT %9 PltBDUEE PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME f)ELIVEl{Y - ' IN OUR q&UVERY AREA • ----· ... . . • PR)CES EFFECTIVE AUG: 20, 2,1, 22 ....... , .~ ..... ~.\ $1 .. ·· ......_,\ '' :' .,.I ! . ...... . . . / ' , \ . ' ' I \. ; \1 1 •''" • • \, , ' I ' SEEDLESS "GRAPES? 4 LIS. GARDEN FRESH CRISP. GOOD SIZE FOR STUFFING .BELL PEPPERS LARGE , VIN~ RIPENtD, THICK MFAT, SERVE WITH A SLICE OF PROSCIUTTO CANTALOUPE MARSHBURNS, YOUNG & TENDER CARROTS 1 LB. PKG. 2 PKG . • 19~8. . ' \' ... ,. ' .. _ ... ,,,, . .,.-........... •\ '.· .... ,.~ . .· ·. .. ' . . : ', ~ : " ..... l Organ Serenade For Your Plet1sur• LIDO MAR~ET CENTER NEWPORT BLVO. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIOO ISLE URBEBRY ' -by Bernice Fay ' ARDEN A.A BUTTER 1 LI. NABISCO IS OZ. OREO SANDWICH COOKIE BERTOLLI O~IVE OIL 14 oz. HILLS BROS. COFFEE 1 ll. HILLS BROS. COFFEE J LI. WISHBON E ITALIAN DRESSING 8 oz. 3 TREE TOP APPLE JUICE 41 oz. NESTEA 12 OZ. CANS ICE TEA 6 PK. • 7 JELL-0-L<"RGE PUDDINGS ALL FLAYOlS UNCLE BENS Converted Rice B & M BROWN BREAD B & M BAKED PEA BEANS S & W DUNGENESS CRAB MEAT BETTY CROCKER BORDELAISE SAUCE BETTY CROCKER , .. CHEESE SAUCE BETTY CROCKER HOLLANDAISE SAUCE BETTY CROCKER MUSHROOM SAUCE BETT Y CROCKER NEWBURG SAUCE ALL FABRIC BLEACH CLOROX 2 41 QI, ,, oz. JJ ot. 6V. oz. 1 ¥4 oz. l \'.t oz. '"'' 01. •~'4 01. l l,'• OZ. 40 '01. ~ 83¢ 47c 1.29 asc 1.69 FOR $1 39c 69¢ 2,..29c ' 69c 3 '" '1 3 ... '1 98¢ 3,.. 11 3 ... '1 3,.. '1 3 ... '1 3 ... '1 69c PROZEH FBBDI TREESW!.._( 6 oz . GRAPEFRUIT JUICE BRI DGEFORD I LB . "Bake in the Box " Bread KUBRO 16 oz . Roma Minestrone Soup KU BRO 16 01. Barley Mushroom Soup KU BRO New England I b oz. CLAM CHOWDER MORTON 2 LB. Chicken in the Basket BIRDSEYE COOL 'N CREAMY PUDDINGS BI RDSEYE 9 0 1. FRENCH BEAN BIRDSEYE 'I oi. JI 01. Ol'lllONS wltll ,,... ..... BIRDSEYE 7 •'- Rice, Peas & Mushroo s BIRDSEYf. 9 .,. CREAMED SPINACH s ... '1 s ... '1 39c 39c 39c 1.79 69c 3 ... '1 3 ... '1 J ... '1 4 ... '1 \ .. _ .. .. . • f . ~ •• 1t·s a ·Great Day ·' ·fora · CooKoUT On .the patio, at tho peach. or in the par~ -everyone loves a barbecue ! We've got everything to ma~e your coo~out more fun t:, • • dispo sable plates and cups, s ~ e w er s, sauces, • spices, and of c.ovrse the finest meats you can buy! AND HERE ARE TWO GREAT SALADS FOR YOUR COOKOUT : .FoUR BEAN SALAD Combin• 1-1 b 01. e•n .e•ch of kidney be•n,, Gar- bi10 bean•, green beans end war beans. Add 1/1 C. .thinly slic ed red onion and I 9reen pepper chopped, toss. Make e dressing of; V1 C. oil, 2/3 C. wine vine91 r, 1/1 tsp. Worcestershire, 1/1 C. 1u9er, I clove g•rlic, split, I tsp. salt, 1/1 tsp. pepper. Mix t horough- ly end discard g•rlie. Pour over beens, mix well and re fr igerate. J1;1st before servin g, add several slices cooked, crumbled bacon, toss end serve. Serves 6 SOUR CREAM PoTATo Sft.LAD 1n boilin g 1eltecl water took ~ med. peeled potatoes till tender, about 35 min. Dra in end chill. M"lenwhile combin1 I C. finely chopped celery, 2 T. minced onion, I C . creamed cottage ch1c111, I C. sour cream, I ttp. finey chopped chiv11, I i1p. salt, da1h pepper. Dice chilled potatoes. l ost with 1our creem mi~t ure. Refrigerate until well chilled. Arren91 on 1aled 9r11n1. Serves 6 BAKERY ,uc.K. WHEA l-.J\ • ' HONEY ,BREAD CHOCOLATE • 8. ·LA YER CAKE DATE0NUT bESSERT tOAF 99~ CINNAMON TWIST . 'COFFEE CAKE EACH llllT , s 6 1 ... C' U.S.D.A. CHOICE Ion• In 1.19LB. STROGON,OFF TENDER Round Steak 1.09LB. MARINATE AND BAR·B·O Swiss Steak 98P LB RICHARD'S SPICE ISLAND SEASONING 100% PURE PORK SAUSAGE 69P~B. SWIFT PREMIUM · CORNISH Whol• Body GAME HENS 69PEA. BOX OF 12 flLL YOUA FllEZEl 7.98 NEW CANDLELIGHT MEAT ITEMS READY TO BAR s B s Q METAL SKEWERS WITH MUSHROOMS. AND PEPPERS BEEF KEBO.BES METAL SKEWERS WITH ONIONS . MUSHROOMS, \ND PEPPER LAMB KEBOBES ALM OND DRESS.,;• 1.98 .... STUFfED PORK CHOP 1.29 LL CHIVE AND BUTTER S'"CE Chicken Ala Kiev 1.39 .... ORANGE WINE SAUC> LonCJ Island DucklinCJ 1,09 LL WE CARRY A COMPLETE SELECTION OF U.S.D.A. PRIME BEEF· DBLIEATB!!Bll ARMOUR ,rAR Al_L MEAT HOT DOGS 1 LB. 69P LASCCO l 01. Shrimp Cocktail 3 FOR $1 CHEDDAR , SOUR CREAM & CHIVES TOASTED FRENCH ONION, TACO, Filled Snack Fingers KRAFT SLICED MONTEREY 1.19 Jack Cheese 6 oz. 45¢ DANISH CHEESES 1 oz. SAM SOE CAMEMBERT HAVARTI l 'I• oz. • oz. St. PAULIN 1 oz . . BALLET I OZ. DEMO. FRI. & SA I. 49¢ 59¢ 59c 69c 1.19 FLBIERIHBP HAHN'S IVY REG. 1.b7 NOW 1.49 7 7 a : sW jJ Zt#Zh?Ul?'CU1l11UMEJ7&S:f?Ji\&3Alt&3Xf 5 7 '77 •• ,F v 7 cs ws?U z-7 SI 777 , 14 U!Ultt SW& Edi& SSE a LEST& WS!? CFS? TN?AIBSAWU .. 7 • 400 YACHT SHOP otEN DAILY, 9.6, SUN. 10-l ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS "'£~ MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP OPt N DAILY 9.7, SUN. 9.6 OPEN DAILY 9·6 pAILY 9.5,10. SAl . 9.S OPEN DAILY •• , DAILY 1:10·6, SAT . l :Jo.s ,, I I ' ! --... ---------11111••·-----------------... ........... --............. --~--.--------p·-···- I t • : I • ' ' i I I • 1 t • I • Burgundy, Claret or Chablis! .•. half.gal. Mateus Rose '178 Deliciou$. 'rith dinner. si59 5th I - And El Rancho makes it so convenient! Kabobs-Broilers- S teaks . , •. ready for ~h e coals ... season, broil and serve! Skewered ••• with all the.vegetables added! MIN. 7 oz . • • • • • • • • • • • • • Chunks of lean tender beef ..• ready to barbecue •.. each skev.'er generously atacked with beef and vegetables! U.S.D.A. Choice bee!, naturally! Skewered .•. with all the vegetables added! • MIN. 7 oz . • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cubes of U.S.D.A. Choice lamb ..• threaded on skewers with bell pepper, cherry tomatoes and mushrooms ••• ready to cook! convenient ... deliciou1? N. Y. Steak ...... $2 1! N. Y. _Strip ........ $2 5! U.S.D.A. Choice ••• the steak that's Popularly acclaimed the favorite! U.S.D.A. Choice ••• barbecue the strip, slice, serve, • and collect ravesl Ground Round 3·9~ Split Broilers 39-~ Fresh! Lean J ••• in bulk or patties al this price, for better burgers! Kinr sited California chickens ••• Fresh! Split into halves for barbecuing! Sliced Bacon ......................... 8,.n. EI Rancho's ranch style: . , . Thicker and leaner: Super Grocery Specials! Australian Lobster · .................... A~~~.1~_10 .. 111. ~ .................. S1.98 LS. Dole's Pineapple ......... ·. 3 : $1 Sliced, Chunks or Crushed! Big No. 2 cans at a price you'd pay for unknown quality. Kleenex Towels .............. 29' Jumbo rolls ... choose colon or the attractive Bou tique prints .•• save on each you buy! Lemon Pepper ........... 39' Schill ing's •.• 31,4 oz. glamour spice! Y·8 Cocktail .... ~c.~ ..... 49' Ve,et.able juices blended for health ! Uncle Ben's Rice ......... 79' Just the thing to serve 'vith kabobs! 42 oz. Los Olivos Olives . . . .. . . . . . 39' Stuffed manzanolla, 5 oz. jar! Party favorite. Cocktail Wieners .... ·:~ .. ).''. ..... 49' Oscar }fayer •.. little "'ieners, or little smokies! Bordo Grapefruit ................. 29' Ripe, juicy ae1111cnts in a No. 303 can! Dl 'J' 6Patl 49' o e s u1ce ........ &0:. c.ns ....... . Pineapple or Pineapple-Pink Grapefruit! Kubro Soups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 '" '1 Frozen ... heat and serve! 16 oz. ai~e for value: Com Muffin Mix ................. 10' J iffy. , 8~ oz •.. serve hot '''ilh lots of butter '. Liquid Joy ............................ 43' Makes diahes sparkle! 22 oz. size. Gain Detergent ................... 69' Giant size ... (or savings and brighter \vashes ! folg er's Coffee ( 10~".'_•_•JlJ,) 85 ~ 2 lb. can ..... ,,fl.69 3 lb. can ....... f2.43 Royal Host Sherbets .................. 69' Refreshing fruit flavors in ha\f.pllon" cartons. Kingsford Briquets ..... 10 LB. BAG .•••• 79' Burns hotter, longer! 20 lb. ba1 ...... $1.S7 Wizard fire Starter ................... 39' Gets the hardest coals going quickly! Quart. C&W Pea Pods ........................ 39• Unique flavor! Regular or \\'ith chestnuts~ 7 oz . Birds Eye Combinations ...... 4"' '1 Peas with Celery-Peas with Cream Sauce- Peas "'itil Onions-Peu, Potatoes and Cream! C C I IQ.(Jz. Bottles 6 75 ¢ • oca 0 a ... No Return . . • '" The pause so refreshing ... and save 18c Hamm' s Beer 16 ~.'j.~,"' 6 '°' $1 34 More than beer ... it's Hamm's ! (H1mm's Dr1fl .•••. 6 fOf IU9) T anqueray Gin H•ll-G.lllon $13.39 Nothing needs to be said about quali~)'. Ancient Age H111.c.11.. '10. 98 Straight whiskey .. , and you save $2 .00. Holiday Times Rum nnh '3.99 ACked capecially for El Rancho? QU1rt ..•••• SU! Gin or Vodka H1 li-Gallor1 '8.88 El Rancho's own private label ..• quality nt a ver~ Attractive price! This 'veek enjoy steak and lobster, ria-ht at home •• glad you chose El Rancho for value, variety, qualityl fresh Oysters ..... ................ ... . 7'r Green Shrimp ...................... '1.69 lb. From Pacific waters, •• 10 ounce jar. Ocean Garden .•. Frozen to preaerve flavor! Delicatessen Specials! Hormel franks ........................ 59~ Corned Beef ............ .. ... .... ...... 59• AU beef or all meat ... all delicious! Real McCoy, full of flavor ... sliced , .. 3~oz. Burger Rounds .................... 3 FOR '1 Sliced Pastrami ...................... ·4r Fisher's sliced cheese food ••. 6-oz. Real McCoy, wafer thin slices ... 3·oz. Produce Specials! Necliarlne11 ................. II Lusciously ripe! .•• one of the wonderful th.inrs Ui.at come "'ith summer! Romaine Lettuce ................... 10:. Crisp and cool and men ... aummer favorite ! Celery ....................................... 19:. Crisp ~ For salads, for sticka, for atuffin2'. I Prices in effect Th1,r&. th.rouoh. Su11. Aug. 20, 11, !t, !,, No aales to rUalera. Open dailv 9 to 9 •. , Sundov 9:SO to 6:30 Ask the manager about our convenient Charge Account Ssrv/ce HUNTINGTON HARBOUR: Warner Ave. & Algonquin St. NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village Center) Also conv!Jnlently located stores in Arcadia, Pasadena and South Pasadena i"" .............................................................. ..., ........... ~ ................... ~,.,, ... ,.,.~-""-""""~~'l"'..,,..,..,,.,,,.,..""~""' ... ~"'~""'""'~·r.·""·"' ..... ~ .~ JO PILOT·AOVERTISER N Wtdnrsdar, August iq, 1970 Wtdntsday, Au911st 19, l tn'O DAILY. ,ILOT Advi€e Grade A • Anti Free ·1 NEW YORK (UPI) -Uncle Sam's advice on buying and storing food is Grade A , and mostly free. But until recently, a shopper either had to cran1 her purse with individual folders and booklets to memorize their contents. I\ow, Lhe latest U.S. Depart- ment or Agriculture (USDA) -information on shopping and storing fresh and pr~ cessed foods is available in one CQnvenient 9 1'2 -o u n c e , pune-size paperback b o o k thaiois as practical ror grocery shoppers Is field guides are for birdwatchers and amateur botatJists. "How to B4µi-Food'! was comp.led and edited b y Valerie Moo lman from USDA publications and published' by Cornerstone Library. Cha(iel'$ qn beef steaks and roasts are immensely helpful , with pBltographs of basic cuts and captions that tell how to reco6'Jize each and the best methods for cooking them. St rangdy and regrettably, similar information -On veal, lamb, pork produ·cts and variety meats is omitted. To its credit. the $1 book describes rare storage times and methods of dozens of dif- ferent food&. It recommends refrigerating berr ies un- covered in Snallow containers so they won't crush under their own weight. Washing them just before meal-time also Is suggested. to retard spoilage. Directions ftir three dif- ferent methods of thawing un- cooked poultry are a great help for last·miwte meals or coping with big birds when refrigerator space is limited. Poultry thawed Jn a water· tigh t wrapper .lo several changes of cold wa ter will • PRICES EFFECTIVE THURIDAT tlono IUNDAT AUGUIT 20 .... 2:1, 1970 u.s.D.A. CHOICE BllF RIB STEAK LEAN AND TEN DIR 95:. l t POODGIANT SLICED BACON l·LB. ,. gc PKG. IWllT IMOKID Ill. Wl'IH THIS COUPOll D&UBLE 8LUITH1P ITAMltl WITH AllY fOOD PURCHASI Excluding flvid Mll•, Tobocr.:•,.•,.· u.··-~-' __ 1 l~;';I ONE COUPON PU.CUSTOMEl r$ ·VALID AUG. 20 thrv ~J, 197<;1 _ SHOULDER CUT c lb. PRE·CARYED ••• 49,t, U.1.D.~ CllOICI BllP ROLLID ROAST IHOULDIRCLOD ' ·91C BONIUll . Hi. take about I hour for small , . bi rds, er 6 to 8 pours lot ' large tu rkeys, wrote A-1iss 11-toolman. Another safe foo'1 tem- perature method in v o Ive s placing the poultry in its original plastic wrap in a clos- ed, double-wall pa per tag er wrapping in newspaper and setting it in a corrugated box. All poultry should be thawed only until pliable. Fresh fruit and vegelables are cheapest when they're in season . But how does a city dweller recognize harvest time unless he drives past a faJlm or an orchard when ne pickers are at wort? MU! Mool man's book reproduce~· USDA chart that indicate month-by·month. when U: · ferent lruJt.s are in good, f ' or small l\lRPly. . She adv1Jed against buying vegetables ·that ~have begun to decay, even though they're priced lo"eYthan unblemished produce. Decay' spread rapid· ly, so you'll prObably end up with less edible fruit for the money than you would if you buy top quality. An alphabetical b u ying guide for fresh vegetables describes the signs of good and bad produce. \Vith car· rots, a shapely. smooth, firm and welt-colored appea rance is desirab le. Root s that have green "SIJ!lburn ed'' areas at the top and flabby rools are not. Shoppers ballfed by the net y,·eights quoted on canned and frozen food labels get help in planning servings both from the text and from cha rts that indicate the volume of solids in various standard size cans and packages. Half a cup of solids is considered an adult serving of vegetables, and ~4 to 1/3 cup, a ~ing for small children and light eaterl!I. To save money on canned and frozen vegetables, cut styles arc recommended in- stead of whole ones, because It's hard -and also costlier -to keep fragile products \Vhole during processing. BuL fancy-cut vegetables, such as trench-style green beans and julienne carrots usually are more e.z.ensive than plain cuts. Grade A and f a n c y vegetables are suggested fo serving when attractiveness and top navor are desired, but Grade 8 and Extra Stan- dard quality also a r e nutritious and a good buy for casseroles gelatin s a I ads . soups, purees and sooffles, in which shape, tenderness and flavor are secondary. Molding Tip When yOll are unmolding a salad or ~essert matle with gelatin, be sure to loos;en the gelatin mixlure by running the tip of a s1nall spatula or pa.r. ing knife bdween the gelatin and the mold. After a dip in warm waler and a gentle shake. the s.ilacl or dessert should be reatl.y to turn out. OCIAN BRAND WATER ANTHONY . KORRT'I SOFTENER SALT SALAD MACARONI ENGLISH MUFFINS · CO.,-SE or MDltllll ·SO·LB.BAG 69c •BEEF • CHICkEN • SPANLIH •HERB 6·0lt •. PKG. OR IMALL IHILt 3 l•LB. 6 C PKGI. 3 6PACK., PKGI. OL' VIRGINIA AllORTID ·CHIPPED MEATS •BEEF • WHITE TURKEY 'CORNED BEEF• HAM 3·0Z.PKG. 3:•1 DUBUQUE CANNED PORK SHOULDER PICNICS BON ELESS-NO WASTE 4 LB. TIN s3'' · N ! REGULAR OR SUPER FIRM, Rff'E · CHARCOAL FILTERED UINOPP . VODKA CLUB SELECTED ITRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY BOX o•:ao : MIDS TJMPONS STANDARD PRUNES •3!u!n '3!.!. IMPORTIDWl•I LONG, GREEN, SLICING AD••• . ll:t:G •• HA II:[). TO.HOLD. NlW UlTIMATf 'UC UMBERS HAIR 1:1.02. 'M 58 SPRAY SIU ~I LARGE, BROWN, STEAi( MU.SHROOMS MJB COFFEE All GRIHOS 1 ·LB ............ 87c 2·LB ........... 1.73 3·LB ........... 2.52 PURR CAT FOOD, Z. ...... , ........................... .J .............................. .2 For 35c PURR MINI BITS CAT FOOD ""'""'"''ml'"'"'·'""'"'U...,61><>< .................... 2/37c PURR CAT FOOD GourrM1 Delight, Octon Fish, Seafood Oinntr, TGlty Trt0t, 6Yi-Oi. ~ ............... 10{$1 VIVA TOWELS, DECORATED, 2 ROLL PACK .............. .' ..... ;.~ .. ~ ......................... 47c "THORO FED DOG FOOD, Hecrt, liwr, KidMy, Chicken/M!Ot Bolls. No. 1 Con ....................... S/$1 SNAP E TOM TOMA TO JUICE, 6·0Z ...................................................... 2 For 31 c . LllBFRAUMILCH YINTAIE DATID CAllOP 12 ... •10.69 9~PTH JELLO PUDDING&PIEFILLING,ALL FLAVORS, FAMILY SIZE. 5Y~oz. ........... , .... 2 For 35c JELLO GELATIN, ALL FLAVORS (INCL 2c OFF), FAMILY SIZ~ 6·0Z .................... 2 For 39c CHIFFON SOFT MARGARIN~, l ·LB. TUB ....................................................... 47c BORA TEEM LAUNDRY DETERGENT, I 00,0~ .............................................. $1.59 MOTTS GRAVENSTEIN APPLESAUCE, 25·DZ. GLASS '. ......................................... .41 c TREE TOP APPLE JUICE. 46·0Z... : ................... o ............................................. 49c · 2300 Barbor· Blvd. at Wilson St.. Harbor Shopping Center, Custa Mesa j I . I 'I . I • I ' • • • I • • • • • • I ' I ~ l' • • i • • I • I : • • • • • • • ~ • • I • I ......... i ...... J.l•l•J•t•l~i~!~i~i~i ... •t& .. l~P•JE~.~l•t•:•1•1•1•1•1~f~t~;~;~o~1~:~;~0~0~0~1~0~0~0~0 .... o~o~o~o~:~:_,.,.,.,.,.,.,_,~~-·~·-·-·~~~~----------- ... ,,.m .. n- • • Keep the wolf from your · dll0f.·~. . ' '· !f ~ . • ' Rising food costs chewing away at your budget? FAD to the rescue with discount ·pric:es on each and > : " ' every item you buy. FAD doesn't raise a big howl about specials and then sneak prices up on other items. ,. . ' . ' • " . , • At FAD you get honest-to-goodness discounts on everything. And that· adds ' ' ·;. up to the lowest weekly food bill you've had in a dog's age. What's more, . because FAD Cliscounts prices, not quality, you get all your favorite, brand-name produds too. . . . ' So come to th~ affordable·store: FAD. The only wolves you'll ever find here are tall, dark, and pretty good-looking . ' ; I '7 J r - SANTA ANA . 2120 SO. HISTOL AT WAIMll COSTA MESA 2200 NAllOI ILYD. AT WUOll . . • • ' '· • • ' .. --------.-----------------..... -................ .,...,.. .... ,.... ,.....,_,....,..~~ ........ ~~·..---.-...-.--.-. .. ~ .... ·--,. ·-..... . · ..•. WHOL' . ' or HALF ' BAR M WESTERN STYLE BONELESS HICKO~Y SMOKED 2 IASTllN G~ PED LOIM IND PORK 79' ROAST LL OUR OWN COUNTRY STYL! TAVERN HAMS PORK 3°' LB. SAUSAGE 7 LB. -------------~ EASTERN GRAIN ,ED ---CENTER CUT LOIN EASTERN · GRAIN FED .. LEAN MEATY . . . . EASTERN GRAIN fED LARGE LOIN PORK 98' CHOPS LI. OUR OWN CUl!l.D LIAN 8Rl5KE9 CORNES°' BEEF 7 LB. PORK FARMER . , STYLE + ,. .. ,, ...... 1' SPARERIBS PORK CHOPS LB EASTERN SLICED • f'ltESH 'SIDE 89' PORK LI. . . . . . MORREL PRIOE I BAR M BULK E'ASTERN GRAIN FID ALL MEAT,"· 59, I SLICED HICKORY 89' 1 CENTER CUT RIB WIENERS ""· "·,BACON SMOKED LI. PORK CHOPS SPRINGFIELD 39¢ INSTANT BREAKFAST ... Box Of Six PLUMS EXTRA FANCY KENTUCKY BAR M SLICED FRYING CHICKEN DUTCH LOAf. 79' LEGS & BAR-BoQ LOAF . "·,THIGHS OSCAR MAYER ~12 OL FRYING CHICKEN VARIETY 89' ME!TY LB. I PACK I I ... BREflST I CALI FRUIT GEBHARDT -Toll Cans 4 I $1 FREESTONE TAMALES Regulor 33c . . . . .. PEACtlES ....... . .. , I VIVA PAPER TOWELS · BIG ROLLS • st! 1 ; ' SP~INGFIELD ·fCE CREAM 1-1 GALLON 1 303 CANS • ~ COMBINATION StLE QUART JAR 1 BEST FOODS MAYONNAISE I 65c Without Light Bulb Pur'ch•se 29' WITH PURCHASE OF ANY 4 REGULAR 30c EA. GENERAL ELECTRIC 59~ 69~ INSTANT • W,ci~~ A11;11st 19, 1970 ''DOUBLE D•SCOUNI PLUS'' · , ··~ ; . ~ Tiff FOLLOWING IRMS All TYPICAL Of MIY·DAY LOW SHELF PRICU ON WHICH YOU ACTUALLr SAVI J WAYS. FIRST-tAOOA IN IASKIT llOULAI LOW IHIL• '"'" SAVll YOU MONIY. SECOND-MANU•ACTUllll' ••CIMOTIONAL ALLOW· ANCIS ARE PASllP OH TO YOU TO Al.Duel OUR SHELF PRIC E IVIN FUltTHIA. PLUS!! ILUI (NIP STAMPS -NO NHD TO DO WITHOUT ILUI CHIP STAMPS WHIN YOU SAVI AT 1.UOAIN BAIKIT. DRIVE '"'~.~: DETERGENT •••• (MA.Ill STOA.• f'llUCI u.~•o BARGAIN DIKOUNT BASKET STOile: PlllC• PRICE KEN·L·RATION BLUE LABEL DOG FOOD #I TALL CAN 5/1 00 17¢ 15~ -----;;--~~--,-------'---- GORDON'S 3~$1 ~~~~•~u 39¢ 35¢ CORONET CAT , .. , .. UTTER .... - HEAD & SHOULDIU SHAMPOO FA.MILT Stn 6,5 OZ. PLASTIC IOTT\I PEPSI COLA 5 '$1 4/89c 21~ ~ ·~oz. TUii ~ BUCKIYI BEER POP~~O~CANS 6/99' ROUBILOF $699 VODKA •;, GAL ANCIENT AGE $1098 KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON Yi Giii. KENTUCKY llAU QUART $4" KENTUCKY 16 Proof STRAIGHT BOURION """ '3" REG. $1 .29 • i .I\ ... SUNKIST ·s /$1 PURE CALIFORNIA VALENCI~ OL . ORANGE , JUICE , •••• CAL .IDA FRENCH FRIED POTAtOES 9 Ot. Box RINSO DETERGENT GIANT SI* 49' ~-4=.I REG. 85c SOFT WHITE $109 LIGHT ~ULBS AT ..... YOUR CHOICE OF 40/ 60, 75 OR 100 WATT TOTAL PRICE I YUBAN COFFEE eoz.$119 JAR PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY •iii· 20i ~1,_,22 & 23 PRICIS IUIJIC,T lTO ~..£ON HAND WE AC¢u.~ U.S.D.Ai ' llOOD 'COlll'ONS 59' With t+ih co11 , no 111i11l"'11"' put"••• r~vlrtd. U"'lt i ' lb1, ptr coupon "' coupon por cJifom1r. Void thtr S111!d1y, ,t.,1191111 21 . For 9t, of M~yonnai1e $J38 and 4 Ught Bulbs . . . . . If FAMILY SCOTT II tOILET /~ ---T-IS_s_u_E -~ • - 4 ROLL PACKS ~~:~ ..............mlf!llll.... ...... ... - SOFT SPREAD IMPERIAL MARGARINE I LB. 39' ----SUNSHINE COOLER COOKIES e CHHRY or L6MON 39' REG. 49c 10 OZ. BOX I WE GIVE llLUE CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PlACENTIA . '. ,1 • • ',,. ... WE GIVE BLUE CHIP , STAMPS 191h and Placenlia 710 W. Chapman • ! • I • • • • • I ' I I ' ' ' ' i ' ' • J . ' t • t • ' ' ' ' • • • • I i • l ' • I • •t • I • • • I ! ' .. :J.f DAILY PILOT , CALIFORNIA GROWN "FIRST DAY FRESH FROM FOSTER FARMS" ("""CUT UP PAN READY ~ 1 FRESH \\ !~1~~.~~ 69~ °' G> Doill!I $pWGt.s!'----.. ICE CREAM ~~~TY~!!!~~.~~~1111 . 79< IMIT. SOUR CREAM ARDEN PINT SIZE ... . ............................ . ---rn~fa1r Froztn Food.---... BANQUET ENTREES SUCED BEEF W/GRAVY, SUCED s TURKEY W/GRAVY, SAUSBURY STEAK W/GRAVY, BEEF STEW, CHICKEN 'N DUMPLINGS. 2 LB. PKG .............•.•........................... 09 MAYFRESH POTATOES • ' u .s.D.A. GRADED CHOICE " FRESH PICNIC STYLE ~ BON1ELEEBSS : ~I~ PORK : ~J ROASTS ~ ; '.ROAST ~· · 1 BONELESS CHUCK OR ' \ LEAN EASTERN PORKER . I SHOULDER CLOD 1 , I TOMATO JUl·CE SACRAMENTO 46-0Z.CAN lb. ' VETS ·'!:~.. , . DOG FOOD •' ALL FLAVORS 1-LB. CAN ' ~ CRISCO OIL ' ' I KL EE' TO W I JUMBO, DESIGNt PA CARNAT \ON INSTAN1 . MAYFAIR DETERGENT :...___--=~I ; BREAKfA!~' ~ ASSORTED 6-j:T. BOX All PURPOSE GIANT PKG.················-··········-······· .. -··· ~ I ~ mID)fair f ruits & Y~ttob&s SEEDL~S~ GRAPE "'t:'ll. TOMA TOES 1 · r LARGE· RED--SLICING ~ lb . ---------- SWEET AND JUICY s lbs . CUCUMBERS lONG GAlEN •... .. ·~ EAC CELERY CRISI' TENDER ........ . . .. • ....... EAC ·10' LETIUCE ~~.~~EA ............... . 29' ONIONS u.s.No.1 SPANISH ......................... 125' I ....... -""!'l~,.,...,.....,...,....,,,__.....,. _______ _.. ........ ,,....,......,_..._,....,.....~,,....,.,........,.,...,,..""""r••,y---..,~-~~~·~·~• .. -.. ·~ • • -... • -· --. --• • • -• • -' 1' ' ... -.... ' ~ • .. ' • • ' ' E 1 : LEAN . MEATY, BEEF ir SHORT . ' 1 ' ~.~: i . R'I BS ~~1111 ' U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE OR I 1 ' l I ' • • ~· j, I~ . ~ I • • I i .) . MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON . ' lb. t 1 . ' -~ . . . :Nt! ~~N~ .49! U~S.D.A. C.H.OICE or MAYFAIR BLUE RIBB N S.T.EER BEEF BONELESS . ROUND ROAST .. ou onOM., ........ ".;...u.1l.19 BONELESS ROUND STEAK FULL C ·--····-··"11.19 B.ELESS ROUND STEAK "'"'""""" _ ····--·-· "· s1.29 sl~' il AKS ON 61 ELESS WASTE FREE . Sll~LOIN TIP STEAKS BONELESS .......................... s1.49 WATERMELON RUMP ROAS T ____ .... : ..................... s1.19 11· l!iT ox -~ 11 ~y • • . BEEF SHANKS CENTER CUJ _, ____ ........... __ .. 59• BEEF STEW MEAT BONELESS CUB S ···--···---" 98' PORK sun ROAST SEMI BONELE s ............... to 65~ OREO COOJ(IES NABISCO 19,0Z. PKG. 49~ DOWJIY SOFTENER DEALP~CK 17-0Z. 3 ~ MAYFRESH 6 OZ. PKG. All MEAT BOLOGNA PICKLE, TASTY ouvE LOAF ...... ~ •.•..............•..• t -1.· !~~M.~!.~~~ .. -..... ~ .. 55c . I ~~~~!f .~~~~.~.~~-................ 69c AU. MEAT FRANKS 75c WILSON 1·18. PkG COOKED H'Al.1'"' :· ..................... 6 Ol' VIRGINIA 4-0Z. PKG .................. .......... ................ 5 C ~!.~~l~~S~~~~~G .......................... 45c I ~.~,~~1~,5,,~~.~·~~~ .. -............... 49c I BORDO GRAPEFRUI N56Cjb~~1N ....... 29' NESCAFE INSTANT CO FFEE 10 01. ' ' APPLE JUICE TR EE TOP 1/z Gal . I' ADVERTISED PRICES EF FEC~IVE 7 FULL DAYS THURSDAY, AUGUST 20 THRU AUGllST 26 1----m~fair ~iquors---....... , ZAROFS!_(Y VODKA .PERFECT FOR GIMLETS sa . . CHARCOAL FILTER!'~, l O·PROOF •.. QUA I • LAUDERS 'SCO fH-r.lit/1~~~.'l&I: au .. ,s5,99 STRAIGHT BOURBON :1'tlo'lff~'.°"--""" s3,99 MENORAH ISRAEL BRANDY i~~~_ll.99 COLD Duc.K "''"""'"""""""" "'"' · r1· 79 ~ DRY WI NE S :,~,";,:i,:'::;;,;;,--;;:;;:~-;;-s1°69 \ fi~ • PINI( (HAlllS. tu•GUNOY & RHIN(WflN flf-l)i • ---PREMIUM BEER OOIOENBMEWll-Ol.C.N 12 99 • · C,l~Of2•CANS ···~ ········~·~ • SAVI Ol PNOTOflllSHllCi Koo•cotOR Rou oMlorEo si.95 AND 11 •"••" SI.WEit Cot OR f't!INI$ !S•.n '+'AlUEI -·--·---~- Wtdllfkfa)', Autusl lCf, 1'l70 lll!!!iliiii-VIWABLI COUPON . SAVE 20c WITH THIS COUPON LARGE EGGS WITH THIS COUPON, UMIT 1 COUPON 'Et ADUlT CUSTqMUI. GOOO AUG. 20.AUG. 26, ~ VIWULI COUPON \ BLUE BONNET WHIPPED 1-LB. PKG. WITH THIS COUPON. WITH THIS COUPON. llMIT I COUF'Qr.I PER ADULT CU510MUl. YOU SAVE 20c WHEN YOU BUY 2 LIMIT 1 MAYFRESH BREAD WITH THIS COUPON. \IMll 1 COUPON PHI AOUll CUSIQMEf. GOOD ..t,UG. 20 AUG. 26.. . 1-LB. LOAF · ~ VAWABlE COUPON SAVE 20c WITH THIS COU PON COFFE E MATE 16-0Z. JAR WITH THIS COUPON. OAJLY PILOT 3/S :· • ' " r ,I :t • • • I • • • • • • I • I :I . it • . I • f. • • I DAllY PILOT WtdntsdaY, August lCJ, 1~70 Molasse~ Makes ... tile A}f/er!~ t:: Prize-winning· R_ecipe • First Entry Fares Best at Fair 1bese cookies are made by the easy drop method. CRISP MOLASSES COOKIES 1/3 cup light molasaes the bah er, drop several 1nches 1 large egg ., ' •wt,onto u..,.ed and floured Oo wax P'P'I" thoroughly coi>ltlt! s1ieet" Ball<>· 'lit ' I stir logether the nour, baking prehe\fed !~oven 1ti. l v, cups wuilted flour soda, sa1t and ~inger. In a tll lightly · •,broWDed ·\ ru;owld Pttrs. Sam B. Stroich of Combine crumbs, sui;:ar and boiler. Heat and stir over bq Fold Utis into whipped cream olate cake dtooraUOM. 1 teaspoon baking soda medium mixing bo\vt cream edgoS ,__ ·8,.to i ~~ i~ Costa Mesa, who bad never melted butter and press ml.I· {not bolling) water until until well combined. Mrs. Stroich had several ,,,, teaspoon salt the butter and sugar; beaf Let ptand ~ a u~e to submitted an entry before al lure into bottom and sides manhmallowa are melted. Fill cooled crust; freeze other entries_ 1n the baked \n the molasses, then the egg \ ~e finn · g · t 9 the Orange County Fair, walk-Remove from beat; cool, stir-firm (six hours or overnight). goods divlsia\ at the fair, in-% teaspoon ginger gradually stir in bie flour mix~ remO~ with 'la Wflfe inaA1 ed off tbll )19&1' with the of 9" pie plate and cool. ring every five minutes. Let stand at room tempera-eluding cooties and coffee & tablespoom . butter or ture. (Balter 'Wfil1 be verj spatula, Cool on wire race\ Grand Award• for the most Com bine mi I k and Combine liqueurs and add tunl about 10.JS minutes be-cake, and 8be intends to "cer-margarihe soft.) · Stote th a:, tigtl!ly·.coteltd tin outstanding de.ssert recipe. marshmallows in top of double to marshmallows; blend well. fore serving. Trim with choc-tainly en\er again," she said. 2/3 cup S\lgar Using level lab~s of: box. !\{skas about 3 ~· " '"Mile IIl Grasshopper Pie." • ------'--------'--'--'---=::....::.:="'--------,----'------==::....::.:=-----=::___::__:,::..,:.:'...:_'--::_,1.c.:_,_:__:,c_; _·~,.~,-;';.~~,-/>'-,c:-._-,, Not only wu this her firs! entry, but she had lo cook the pie filling on b e r neighbor's stove, when her own broke do~'Tl the day before the deadline. She calls the fluffy, light· green coloffii pie a .. feattinine type" dessert that she bas been mating over the past five years fer her bridge club and other women's cl u b gatherings. f''Jbe men really still prefer the solid fruit pies such as apple," she com- mented. The prii&-winning recipe, one she discovered in a cookbook called • ' F a m o u s Foods From Famous Places," is as follows: MILE Ill GRASSHOPPER PIE 1 cup chocolate wafers (about 20) ~~ cup sugtlt 2 to l t.blespoons melted butter 1/~ cup~ 6Yz CUp! (~ pound) mini marshmallows 1.4 cup creme de menthe 2 tablespoons white creme de cacao 4. cups whipping cream. whipped Travel Hit Travel thru aummer, fly into fall in this sleek skimmer. Be carefree! Knit creaseproof skimmer neck down in one piece -sleeves, too. Note lacy diamond yoke, border, sleeve. Pattern 7385 : NEW 1be1 1 ... 16 Included. FIFTY CENTS for each pat· tern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Handllng; otherwi~ third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks the Daily Pilot, 105 Needleeraft o.,it., Box 163, Old ~ Station, New York, N.Y, 10011. Print Name, Address, Zip, P a t l e r a Number. BlG 1970 Needlecraft Catalog -40 pages, 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Knit, crochet fashions. Quilt, em· broider, weave. Toys, gifts! Send 50 cents. Crabmeat Fi II ing Special for company! TOASTED CRABMEAT SANDWICHES 2 tablespoons mayOMaise 2 teaspoQns prepared mustard tin: teaspoons ml n c e d scallion <areen on!mU 1 can (7~ ounces) tendoo· free Alaska ldn& <:rabmeat 11. cup finely diced celery 3 tablespoons diced canned pimiento 11 thin slices bread Lettuce Sweet ghtrkha lll,i small mllfnll bawl, with a fork, beat together the mayoMaise, mwlard a n d scallion. Drain crabmeat and cut up claw meat into small but recogniuble pieces; add to mayoMalR mixture with ce1ery and pimiento; mix well. Toast and butter bread; make ' sandwiches of the brtad, crabmeat filling and lettuce. Serve with gherkins in small Jettuce cups. ).takes 4 scrv· lnp. YOU'LL DISCOVER AT lllE OIECKSTAND WHY ALBERTSON'S • EX RALEAN U.S. CHOICE UND CHUCK c LB . RIB END ,PORK .CHOPS LOIN-i:ND PORK ROA$T HOFFMAN Sl-\A~ '. HAMS ·.: ·LS. " ' Butt ~~rtior( 4'11b'. '. HAM STEAKS .......... .,. .... If' POT ROAST ,... ..... "' ... ·-·~ ,..,491 \st) CED Bli\CON ::::'~,~~ .. ·-·-_..7~ HAM ROASTS ~;,:. ___ . ... "t8• POT ROAST """"_"'_:___ .... 791 PORK SA!JSAGE l:;;,,'7o:;;.';;,:_.;._... 69! SAVES YOU MORE! Compare our total discount prices with an1 other supermarket In town. Run ypur own tHt ••• you11 be amazed, and pleased. But don't think that our lower prices have reduced lhe quality or our slock... We sllll carry the large variety of top quality products lhat we know you want ••• only now their prices are lower. So •hop Albertson's .. , and &aYll with discount prices . !PORK CHOPS<-c..oa.,. . . _,.. 791 CHUCK STEAK °"""'""'"'-'.-._.• 59• SLICE.D HA.LIBUT ....-,-.c.. ... : .. , .. :.•·•)I! PORK CHOPS c-"'""'·---·_J ~9c BEEF ROAST t;'i'.::!.~'.~ __ ;_,.. 98• fl~lE! OFliERCH "'"l'""~.i.-'.:·~~~· .. 1.'I' j . • • ' .... REGULA SffiE BONEhoSS CHOICE Chuck or BEmEF 93c STEAK lb. PORK 68 SPARE C RIBS I lb. HUNT'S HUNT'S TAil TOMATO Pork & Beans TIN NUTRITION ,OG, RICH ijKETCHUP 4 2·l/2 FOOD TINS 20oL Boule I c c c CHARCOAL t,;~ 10~ ~:c 58~ PEPSI-COLA :ci~~;s 59~ MARGARINE -· .............. 18 < Cascade ..,,..._., ... _·_ 79• Johnson's Klear W~ """·-89< HUNT'S ~~-~RTS .... ., .... 4/59• Peanut. Butt~r ,_ ... -._ 89< Johnson:s Jubilee ~.ax "~-64• OLIVES ..,.,..,. ...... -.... "" 3/1. Carnation Milk ,*"",,._ 18< Johnson s Spray Ju1ilee "'"" .89• ·~;~~·~~· In-Store Bakery DONUTS RICH FUDGE BROWNIES FRE SH AND CHEWY 5~0 " RAISED - ··.SUGARED or GLAZED Ranch Rolls ......... 29< Boxed Cookies .::4/1. RANCH BREAD ~ 3/1. ORANGE JUla . S=T 24 c 120,48 • . ALBERTSON'S REAL ICE CREAM 1{2GAl!ON FLAT CTN. ·9e ' I Swift's Popsicles ,,._, ............ _ 4/1 . Meat Pie.s ~~-----· ..,.. tat Potatoes ~;;-,::_, . ) .. ~; c HAIR SPRAY ,;:;:'i .. 59 U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP PEACHES FRESlrl ·RED LE 4F -. ': 2' BUTIER -SALAD BOWV LETTUCE ~ 25c· ' TOMATOES FRESH·JUICJ ' 25c JEWEL BRIGH[ . '-~ CHERRY,-BSK,. 1 t' _:;t . ., Italian Prunas ~':. ....... 2 .... 2 1 , . l Large Avocados 1ocA1 ........ 3 i.. • , DELICATESSEN WIENERS :::. .................... 65 • LUNCH MEATS ;';;.'.:;:,·;:_,, 3/89 < DRESSING ::;.:....'7-..:.. ........ ..._ssc DRESSING:,:t:= ____ ,,,_ 4S t SWISS CHHSE :;::;:,.-::c. .. -... '1" SHARP CHEESE ''"""'"'-'I" w..w.. ·····-· l> CHIPPED MEATS ;~:;:::;·.'"'-· 3/ 1. INES & ~IQUOR . . . " . .. , , · If HA~M '.S BEER ~;:;._" ..... :.: .... ~.~ I ~EY .\ARGO :::;:.:; ,., ........... .,~' DINK CHABLIS ""-"0~ IJ•' llJ/ Collo~ .. ~~i\-t•.-••~, , I t LPEN GLEN B:!~oo'"''°;'~ .. '.lit': . lr\N~.IENT AGE :"''°"'··-·····n,~", 1SMlRNOFF VODKA i::C:: .. ! 10'' · Bo~BON ..... _ .... ,_, . '3" 8ortlod.~......n,.5161 __ • ' R & WHISK.)M &l&.. . · srn 1 ' '"-'"" _ .. ,,,.. ~ ' ' ,. ' DOWNEY 471 MR. CLEAN tSo. 391 COUPONS ., adly Accept fd "1~.....,.. ~~ ..... ....- I La9una Becich-700 So. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar -3049 Coast Hwy. Fountain Valley-16042 .. ,.. .... -""'! .. ,""..::"· ------------------------~~-~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~-----.. ···---·-·---·-----· .. ~ ... ----.. --.. --- . -, .. ' ... ' \'J......,, ~t 19, 1970 DAILY PILOT . - ~··(#~,O rder of Indigestion N ee d n't Accom pan y Din-ing Out ,i . • . · Pnts wbeil dlnln1 out <rl*~clilldno have )'Oii fiuild 1 .,_f yolliht "No, .l:.t:.' ""8tt uo enoulh; ~:ui w1t1t. Y""' nnceri; • °"~ ·..im la that man's ~ ... I -npelled · lncldeat. of !bi ~· yoo alrMdY may tli ~ 4iclded to, 'Ii•• up .• ~ <llnilia . with yor ~· rather than face 1 ~ «'1t ofolndl,..uon'. f~,'.,.. )llrtllll ~ thit 4.tful· dllldNn to a ~~' -·t be tan-~to ·~,iitmare. . Mafl;""""" 'tonct to foraet l!iil -~ 'otil ts: 1 .whole n1W wm'kf t&~• ttb,od. That'I -'*"•.'children 1e ... up "'l'C.1rc· eid 11p w IJl!illnl ~., •.. \ ............ -.... "i --Of --~-=-­ilojml: Oth<r c1u..-en over-,.,r >nc1·.up1ore ·unda', over $1 #QUD4 every (Allie. · '1>fiiJD1 oui 'in··• • .-1aan1 ~· diii-~' prepara-tl\ili.. ll'oOl<n you start the ec-t!ltl ~ ·brief them. ~~'.~ ,....,_,, olJl!'ll' ~<JWllitt ~ of peOple ~.out. . · Alis>rtr • w , qµeslions the ddl&Wn may have -such U: · •1.you meiln stran1ers eat ~th )'.out · We re\ served1 like by "•·•lDald! We're not '81.ooe lb~ bathr~?" ; ·~y . ,..Uurant at home. Mate ep menus off!Uin& a ""'"'-tietW,..'-tivo or .U-~ Sil wl!b· Uw clilldr<!J to help Ulem chooH. Dad miilht pvt )\ii order to Mo{htr, who" aioks up the itoms In the lltdMn. Jual .... plioab,o -l~ dJlnl1nc of mlild. ·r ' -' ' Not. ptac:tloe · m I t t s per!ict. "" In an Worm•! ftltaua1aiii1.:.. a· sit-in ham:. li\lrier' _ mi\d,' e-cd!ee 111\0!) OI' I pliii{ pilace. . ' ·Now-'"' tlie · ectu>I steglna. Sti>ce pttlenct · ii not I virtue ol ,Chlldre!l, for your first rul trial don' "'1ect 1 resteuranl Iha! oped1Uuo In leltilr•ly i"6 ufd I he)! hour dinnera • . instud, select I resteufant that iped.U... In f1dUU. for -~ ... chllrs, hlib ajalni chlklren'• inenus abd ~. · .1 v·e n , i,attie.wannloi iimee). ,\)onskhr I buffet. Jter. !Oid' the -dilldnn lllwt. '!lien'..,. .a.11 ""'.remlin it'. ttit ~le wbile the other loadihllplala. A\loiit '111e •!enfplallon to ln- dlllCe In Ille elOli<:: You mllht -·Cblliese food end .. inlaid your children, but their qu.nlcn1 pout the wolle!' may ' lead to ef!lbarrassing l'lorntlltl. ' -· it ]lOSBlb.le, et to be sealed riuf washrooms and wlDddn. ~~'!'' ;tve ··-<:·h-i r_d re n oomethlnl to .W. al besides the face of, the mm\ ln the bOblh behlnd:·A'~• poUey alao makd .-1 •• If , I tiJlld rubbernecks too mµdi, he they loat denert prlyllq... . nm" llloiv • ·thild to tcan tn · · entlN 1menu. l;lmltlflll ddots ;!Jl'AY .make ( o r llin!il... liideclolon. . Al 1.lldf.<!'.-lbl!! sug- .-,, "AlioWr,,:I , cjllld~a •choice hetfetn two ·accePtiblt,d.irmer Mims. Wietu. cut t o si,.~ piecu for euier mlOeiul!lllly, or chopped ~. (~~_.,),'1ro pruri- ·:i.erry Pie "'1 • . . . • .Ji. Favorite nlal favorites of children." If y.u're having a cocktail before dinner, order ginger ale or a. Sblrley Temple roe the cblldren. And have tbe chlldryn'a ' drinks brougtll lo the Lilllie lmmedlalely. '11li• will keep the children oecupied in lddillon to making them fetl more ~-up. • • After ordering, suggest a walk to \he wasbn'JoD), A carefuJ wash.up aUowtng a chUd to enjoy .but not dest.roy soap dispensers, h o t -a l r dryers, etc., takes nme and gives youngsters a chance to release nervow energy. To make the Ume between ordering and service go faster, c.-m..1 ..................... ,... c.a .......... . A Brand New VONI · IN IL TOll.0 --,., 1MUNA NIU ftAIA try lo engage the children in a discussion abOut all lhe people v.-ho work Jn a restaurant to make the meal a success. You can point oot the bus boy. cook, cashier, hostess and tali: about their exact functions . Menu games also make the Ume fly. Find the longest word or the 51lortest word on the menu, Find aa many words as you can beginning wtth C. Older children like to play 20 questloos with ltema visible from your table. To help you relax-. there's the blessed quiet game. First child to talk ls a monkey j la.st one to talk gett an extra b. ITDlll C»B9 -.,.,.,. *Miii'& AM ........... * ...... *--*--*- BEEFROAm luSoAi CE~~~s.C ~ YowCllOic. • lsTUgS49,I *·-~ .... ,r. ... '1'! Ceattr c.t Cliuck = ss~ Fam1 Steaks ~ '1'! handful or mirua on the way out. l{ you've ordered something lhe dlUdren never have lrled, offer them a taste. But beware! If you start them on lobster, you may flod yourself with a lobster fanati c . , • and a budget strain on future eatlng~ut adventures. lf pos.sible, have t h e wallrese brlng the d1Jldren smaller pl.Ates and glasses, plus extra naplclna. Have her fill their glasses only hal!v.;ay. If you re811y want lo play It safe, bring big smocks or extra bibs from home. When the meal I.I finished , complimttlt the children on Foney, Jviq, Otchord· Sw..t ..• Sun..alush.d' wtiat they did well -evtn if 111 was only finishing all their chips. No matter what -keep your cool. By taking your chJJdren out to dinner time and lime .11gain you 'll discover to your .9urprise that your children are more in· teresting and more malur• than you swpeel. Fresh Cucumbers = 10:. Grea1 Beans =· 19'• Fancy Papayas ~ 35~ large Pineapple ::;;, 69~ • .~..a •. ---...... Cl."'"'-"""'"'"' ..... 6-PI.--.. :67" GmMOI POll'ilD TWIRLS CAKE A TASTY 'lltfAn VOHS • DIUOOUS ~4Sc !:E 35c I alb End Pork Chops :...~w.69' I CenterCutRibChops i!=.~~98' I RathSliceclBacon =~~.:".79« I Fresh Ground Chuck ','= 77 ~ Salad Dressing -r~:Ei.39~ 29« I lberta Peaches ""~i.~ 33' I Mushroom Sauce -~~ 10' I Toilet Bowl Cleaner :;; 39« I FllSH DOYllSOU =""Olli~. 'I': ~ ...... •19! ,_ -..i.. --~ ·-29' Fryer lreaits "'=1.."':" 65~ .Frrer Wiwls :'.:= .. w: ..... 39;. lest of Fryen ~ ~ 59~ loef U11ldes ::"' ...::t ::-;o;·;;;· 29' C·H·B SALAD OIL @D PEHi· COLA HOT DOG OR HAMIUllER BUNS ~@l'Jfl LIQUORI IEATU Rll IOYALmm WHISKEY -;~SCOTCH l•1 Ul·-•l Sna $1.IOI ~.t.o.!l!m...110" v~s PERFECTION Ft,esh Bread White, Wheat or So ndwich . ·1a I.OAF 25c MONTEREY JACK -cHEESE ~~! 89' Sn• 19r 11 Prune Juice ftNCY fA RMI 39< KLEENEX TOWELS oe~gn•r ~u111ro~ or Boutique .. . RO L CLOROX UQU.ID IUACH ~ Safe .•• It Sanilizes ~ VONS DnERGENT l'OWDlllD. OIAl(J' PICO •••.•••••• V-8 VEGETABLE JUICE """ llpe StrnMnlt1 :::': ...... ll' GiM'1 Cltff11 Plzlll ~":ii·········· W , ..... ,.,, ...... Pim ::i.~: ..... .. , .... , ........ Pina ::~ ....... . ..... .... , c.r... =.-:.:.~.~ ....• s.llltwy Sftlk ::.::: = ......... 7" Or•p .llkl :~=~.: ..... 22' ~'-:~~~ ... 2i39; - U t f llUI IMIL -IT• h~lll I UllMll. -U. ar. ... leefltllb-OI -., ........ . En,. Vlf1ts! ~~1.a .,,.,_., ....... 11.11 ===~~~-~.~'.~·= Y1111 S..dwldl Sprtt1d ::t 3~' Y1111WllllDrouln9'::'...~·49' llalilnnht111tos,=. ;:2t' • .,..,_lwfltMb 1.......,,.••···· ....... JIM • ,...._."" *' '60l.-. "·~ -.. ... M row-MltlMt,-.-...., ............... 1 .. ,.,,._,..., .. n. it.or. .................. ... 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springl'rJe. Huntington Beach Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Valley ------------~~--····"--~· ~· ...................... .-.....-... .............................. ~~A.&A. ............................................... .-.. __ ___ ·-· •+·+e-s · • +"te••-*+J"•+•• ••«••~AA•AA••d>.0 2 trt o e6 tf·tt 4 fi»•s c I ~~-~----. .,.. _________________ -- ;ljl O•IL V PILOT Wedntsday, A11911st }q, 1970 Wednesday, August 19, 1970 N PILOT -ADVERTISER G p·ck · of the Crop One-dish Meals -Mastered • Summer Produces Favorite SUmmer sailing time . . . Your on-board galley may a variety of other meats. SHIPBOARD GLOP l cup uncooked fine noodles and you're the cook ••. for be complete and well equip-Always Lake pne along, even 1 pound ground bee{ Season ground bee{ wlU1 salt Gal·ley · · Surely nothlna, excePt more, 2 tablespoons cornstarch thickens. Remove rrom heat; two ped, but refTigerator·freezer if you think you won't need l~ teaspoons salt &nd pepper. Saute onion until · r--~ One ol the big differences space is at a premiwn. You ls better than 11Q11 strawber-'{4 cup cold waler stir In lemon Julee and re-. in cooking at home and in learn lo reserve it for the them. You may stay out ~~ teaspoon pepper transparent in melled shorten· ries. Keep lhat in mlnd when 11,J cups partially crushed mainder of strawberries. Stir the good ship's galley ls that perishable essenUall and stock I o n g e r than you in· 2 tablespooo1 shortening ing. Add ground beef and cook you buy for two. One pint · lrtsb strawberries tD blend. ClUl. space is Umited wbile app&-canned goods at tended .•• or appetites may J small onion, sliced until pink color disappears. makes two one-cup servings, I tea.spoon lemon juice To gerve: place cake on tit.es are not You become the home ... ready to sail at the be blgger than even you sup-l can tomatoes (fifteen or Add remaining ingredients. but 1~ won~l .1be n e 8 r ~Y Combine sugar and corn· serving plate, fill center with muter at preparing one..dlsh lift of a breeze. po8ed. sixteen ounce!) Sur to n1i1. Cover and simmer enoug · · .no 1 you rea Y starch in sauce pa n . scoops of ice cream and top meals. And you learn to Among other canned goods There Ls another difference 1 can whole kernel com twenty n1inutes. Remove like fl'Hh strawberries. Gradually add water and with Strawberry Sauce. prepare double quanUUes of to have on hand ... it's a in fOO:d..ai sea. Seafaring food (eight ounces) cover; add more liquid if Strawberries are v er Y about half the strawberries. Garnish with fresh strawber-everythlng because hunger good idea to stock main dlsbt1 needs a suitable nam e . J can tomato sauce (tour necessary and continue to perishable. While you are Cook over mediun1 heat. sti r-ries, U desired. Makes B serv-pangs are pangier when ex-suc h as stew, hash , Ashore, it may be hamburger ounces) cook JO minutes. Makes !our -d-3~1lng subre yoGeu h1 uy enohugfh, ring constantly, until mixture ings. posed to wind and water. frankfurters, conied beef and stew ••• afloat, try this. I lla teaspoons chili powder one-cup l:iervlngs. on over uy. enoug or1 _~----'---------------...:.._ ______________________ :..._ _____ ...:.._ __ ...:.._ ____ c..__ _____ _ a day or two, lhen buy more. Avoid the mistake of Uiinking you can buy slightly green strawberries and let them ripen at home. They won 't do it. Strawberries are a !roll thal must be ripe when picked. Once of{ the vine, the only get soft, shrivel and spoil ... without getUng any sweeter or better flavored. Because they are s o perishable, strawbenies need special care at home. Even for overnight storage in the refrigerator, you should sort them for damage and spread ~ in one layer in a shallow container. FRESH STRAWBERRIES Wet berries are even more perishable than dry ones, so wash them only when ready to use. Then ... wa1h them first: removt caps afterward. You'll have the juiciest possi- ble strawberries. Strawberry Ice Cream Ring ls a show<iff dessert for com- pany ... with real fresh strawberry topping. STRA WBERR V ICE CREA.At RING One eight-or nine-inch ring shaped cake .... purchase, or make-it-youf'!(!lf ... us- ing a small yellow cake mix in a slx-and<ine-half cup ring mold .• One quart fresh strawberry Ice cream Fl\F.'!H STRA W BER R Y SAUCE' l/J cup sugar Super Swifty 9363 SIZES ,...... ~ 1lf ,...; ... 1lf .... -r ... Zip up and travel straight thru autumn In a SWlF'l'Y skimmer with the side dart shaping that's so figure flat-. terlng. Foc blends, cotton. Printed Pattern 9 3 6 3 : Women's Sires 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size 36 (bust 38) takes 3~ yards ~inch fabrlc. SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air J\iail and Special H and Ii n g ; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or mOT"e. ~nd lo l\1arlan Martin. the DAILY PILOT 442 Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th St ., New York. N.Y. 10011. Print NA!\.1E, ADDRESS with ZlP, SlZE 'and STYLE NU!\.IBER. Jelly Adds Real Treat This recipe gives exlra na.vor to a jellied dessert. JELLIED CHERRIES 1 package IS ounces) cherry- navor gelatin dessert t •); cups bolling waler 1~ cup dry red wine 1 cup pitted halved dark sweet cherries Into • &mall mIIln& bowl turn Lht gtlaUn dessert; add the boiling waler; st.lr to di.uolve gelatin. Stir In wine and cherncs Tum Into s i x ooe-half cup molds or custard cups. Chill until set. Turn out. Serve with Culltard Sauoo Makes e servings. ' ·-... 11scouNr· PR~c1s 1 SAVE .YOU MORE EVERYDAY bF lHE WEEKI Li qui~ ·11each W!Jlts Ma-1>-Whitsns Whites ••• Disinfects! • pl. J11 !~.~!!~s1.!ips lb. $J29 T ·Bones ~ SJ49 USDA Cholco Beef Steaks-.lpd And Tlimmed USDA Choice Beef Bone-In Center Cuts Bot11lm Rouad 99~ Steaks lb, Cragmont Soda Pop Skippy Dog Food Popular flawrs In PulHClll Cans! n.~"'111 12-az. '"' can !Jiteoullf Priee~ Chicken Flavor or Regu!ar ••• Nourishin&! • 11-aL CID Oiteo11nf PritU USDA Choice Beef Flavorful Blade Cuts. Ideal To Pot Roast, Deffclous Eating. lb. !!J!.15!!!.~~ins lb. $179 !,J!!,~~!E~!eRib lb. $J99 New Yorks $239 Picnic Shoulder Lean Butt c,~ Fresh Pork Roast Fresh Pork Steaks Fresh Spareribs ~::% ~:: Fresh lamb Chops lamb Rib Chops ~:h ~~~ Center 7-Bone Roasts USDA 69 Choice i.. 1 .. 79' O·Bone Roasts ritst.:'c1i:f~~'~.\'' 1• 79c Boneless Ro'asts usoA cho1co eeer Rolled & Tied C~uck Beef Rump Roasts us:C~: •• Boneless Roasts R~~~~~~::, lb. ~POTATOES '1 1 U.S. No; l C. 9,:,1 !~.:?~int ~~ Frying Or To Mtsh. A Most Yell81ile Vegetable! Cantalo. upes Great~T~~c~C~eam for a Refreshln1 Dessert Honeydew Melons Vin~R;r,n~1~oo! 49c . (ffllHI .•. 29c ) lll h large Tomatoes Seedless Grapes Vlnt•Rl't Ideal Slicina Siz&- Sandwich " Salad U.S. No. I Thompson Larae Size Hawaiian (H1ftU , • , 111~ 291) Guut 39c S.tkot 1b. 29c Whoto 4ftt. l11h 7· Pineapples Sweet Corn L"'P lho El11 "Pus Tho Salt & Butter- 11<1e's c:om To Fust on·· 6 "" 49c Pears "~:i11 ,. 251 Bell Peppers ~ .... r Cucumbers .... 101 Celery c~~:· s~~~, "'' 19c ---------· • Oranges v:i::.. 8 ~~ 984 Italian Prunes ,. 19' Peaches r,;.."?;., I• 29' Sunflower 1.~·~~ 39' Shoutde.r Cll!s , .. 1• 99c s12• SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS! Bowling Green Bourbon "ii:.~· '3'' Cold ·Brook Bourbon :-;:~ Q ... 1311 Tartan Royal Scotch ~ mtt s4 Tl Straight Bourbon w;~~,·· •i;·,~,~11811 Blended Whiskey 1'11C:'' ·~·::t'711 Winner's Cup Scotch :.,, ""' '4 11 Win1er's Cup RumGol~' ""' '3°. DISCOUNT NON-FOODS Ultra-Brite Whlt!r~:;if .. Jfll :~~ 73' ' Jerrens Lotion 111y"';~, 11!~ ·i~• 95' Purify Mouthwash ~1': 1:;t• 84' Style Hair Spray Hour After Hour llair Hair Remover Bright Side Shampoo Joh111n's Baby Oil . . D'-'"I Priced lie~ d«ant Jl>fL 59' ... lit •• 76' 4·n. . J-iL ... ... ~ ... 59' 59' COLORFUL MUMS large Salection ol s·199 ColO!s To Choose from. In ~Jnoh foil Wrapped Pot. Hoh DISCOUNT FROZEN FOODS Bel-air Green Beans ~~I :;-.:· 22; Mcp J · Dr' k As<"1'' •·•L ~o· ; u1ce m s fl8'oOS ... 11 Bel-air Peaches 1",'~ ~::~·· •:;;~ 29' Bel al'r Corn Whol• '''"''-''"'" "·•L sa· , • And Full·Flavored ,.,. Cream Pies Bel·air-Assorted Reidy to Serve l ·in. '" ·i • DISCOUNT DELICATESSEN Cottage Cheese 1.u~c~~ :.~. 33; Lucerne Salads ~:~ .:~!. 38' Coldbrook Margarine ;;::it ~':: 19' Lucerne Corn Tortillas •;;;~ 17' Longhorn Cheese ~~:; 1:1~L 93; DISCOUNT BAKERY BUYS! Angel Food Cake o::;T, F h D t ''"'' o.,., res On U S Plaln or S'l"'d frWl Biked Sosamt loaf Vienna Bread Cinnamon Rolls r""' !f>P• ...... 39; 11~, •• ,. 39; et 11 Jl>fL 33' le1 t , •• ,. Gil; ., • 1lf!I !- AFRICAN VIOLETS BJ00111in1 ~ant In $' 2 ' Assorted Colon. Wide HOk"'.. -'"lllllll'!"'~-...,...,,-:-~":""-..,...--.... :""'I':"!"'"~---: ..... ':"-:'~:-----:-. -:.~·.:--· ;,•7,•-;.·-:-.• 7'.-~·-:.:-· -:-.· ..,......., ... ,-,.-.-· -·-.·--.-. -~. .• ·.• ·•• ... -·------~~ ..........-•.. . .. ---.. ... ------~. --_. -... ... ·--• ~ -~ ---. .... ~ ... . .. , . ··········· ,., .. , ....... ····· ' Jt UI .. >k s. s. • ;1 to U' .. - c 69 69 89 89 99 I 21; f 01 291 fa' 271 I 33' 381 191 171 '3' • I N Wtdntsday, August 19, 1970 WtdMSd,.y, Aug usl 19, 1970 DAil Y PILOT :JIJ Today's Cooks Try Harder Where Grandma Made the Grade . . DEAR NAN: llcre Is the , lblck, Add 2 cc& yolU Ind way I make iny bolled dress-'t cup commerclal wklpped Ing and It 1.5 H sln1ple, bul type salad dttsslo.g. Be1t u.ntll It aurely makes poluto 111h1d smooth. I wually double thl• taate just like er and ma '1, lo so I ca.a k~p '°me la the a sauctpan combine 3 cable-refrigerator for 1andwlcbe1 1poons of flour, ~• teaspoon aod fresh gardeq tomatoes, salt and I teaspoon jar too. JEAN PIERCE, GALION, mustard. Stir in V. cup OlllO vinegar, blend 1111 smooth. Then add 1/a cup, ellch, or NAN'S NOTES: Have you 1ugar and water. Boll till ever tried adding a little bot- .Ued barbecue sauce to cooked vegetables? It hadn't occurred to me until I round myself getting awfully tired of gretn beana and green baby limas 'l\'lth nolhlng more than salt and pepper, no generous glob of butter which I consider the best sauce in the world. Just dreln the vegetables when almoat done, add the barbecue sauce and simmer Large · Popul~r ''AA'' Eggs Cigarettes Cream O' The Crop--(;tJaranteed Farm-Fresh! fteiUl&r or King Size UOO·MM's $3.251 ·I-doz. ctn. • 15 IJi1to1111I OittDllltl plus PritU Pneu chi. 111 ~ a bit. U you aren't calorie counting, a tablespoo11 or brown· sugar makes It just that much better. And ha ve }OU ever tried "bamboo braids"? U s I n g refrigerator biscuits cut each oqe into thirds. Roll and stretch into ~inch strips. Braid three strips together, pinching the ends finnly so they won't pop apart. Now whip an egg white lo 1 slUfneS!, blend ln a tablespoon of soy sauce. Brush on top or the biscuit braids and sprinkle vdth sesa me seed. That keeps lhe seeds sticking where they belong. Bake on a lightly greased pan at 425 somewhere between 9 and 12 minutes. DEAR NAN: I flnnlly found a recipe for those big soft Orange Juice Bet.Air Froze n Concentralt-Tops In Fla\'Or • 6·0Z, • can 1a 11r cookies l lll:e gra.admolber ued lo make aod wbkb you (an now nod In bakttles at tlmtt but I stiU have one problem. The bottont crust of the coolde1 I• a lltUe bard and tough when they cool. What am I doing w;rong? LL, GREENSBURG, IND. Probably using too much flour on the board when you roll out the dough lor cutting. Try rolling 1 it on granulated sugar irui:lead, just enough to keep the dough rrom sticking. Be sure your cookie Una art shiny. not darkened, or almost any cookie tends to bum on the bottom. With pie crusts it Is the reverse. They do a better job of bottom crust browning when the new Is worn off. Layer cakes call for shiny tins or, like the Lucerne Ice Milk finest Qualitt In 5 Assorted AIVOIS. ···: 1h·cal. ctn. Grade .'A' Whole Plump -And Meaty Full Shank Portio1t Farmer John or Luer' s FuOy Cookff:--;A Great Manor House-USDA Grade A Quality Cut-Up 35c Fryers lb. lb. Dinner Favorite! lb. Plump And Meaty. 20-oz. Min. Wt. ea. r,ied Chicken Ede~~:;n:: ~~~~ked •• 89' Sliced Bacon c~~;~lo~~· ~~':·I~::ked 11. 69' '!rkey Quarters .~~:ti:k:·::i l;:~. ,. 3f Full Butt Portion Ham ~:~~ "· 591 wrkey Drumsticks i:::'A .... 39' Center Cut Ham Slices ,. s1 2 ' Sterling F11nks ":::.;• ~: 51' All·M11t Fr1nk1 !:T;: .. ~~ BB• OSGu Mayer Wieners ;~: 11• LH's Sllctd MHll ..... :::: as• Lto's Smoked Him :::: 45• Chlcktn or Turkey ~r.~:::: 45• Leo's Cooked Ham Sjjud ::t ll' Fish C1kn r::..~1)...~i1' ·~-:: 31• Fish And Chips ~ :: It• Scallops <::~· ~ 71' R1th'1 l1con ~~~1t1~ ~ '1 .. Firmer John l1con~:!, ~l .. Roy1lluff1tl1con .,,. :0::11' 0 M 8 r~11vi,.81' snr 111r icon •·11. ,, .. MoCoy IHI Unklts ::;: II' IHI S1u11ge ~·Jr": =: •1• McCoy's IHI Bacon \If 11' - Sliced Pastrami ~l:}. ~:::a• Sliced Corned Int ,:'.'.';{. 51• C1n1dlln l1con .~:::"w.r.:U •1• h D kl • y G d A Sf G t H . Hormel Cure 81 . Dubuque s1 •• ••es uc 1ngs '"0 ' "· •• ourme am·'"''' •;0; •. w,,,.,, ''"'"' ,. ILJ Own Rtad1 • Srcman's Hickory Smo~ed resh Frver Livers 0~'~:~::;•d .• 69' Canned Ham '°'!1'~\'Ai~,!"" 5 ;~'; s4•• L. · · • Luer's QuJlity awaiian Punch Rollf RM Delicious And Refreshinz Now At A lDw-low Price. h 'AA' B ti lh .. J uno Churned Daily res u er fr001 fresh Cream. lot·l lr Choice of Pink °' R•iUllr. Golort11 rozen Lemonade aper Napkins ~mato Soup In Aswrted Colors. Stock Up T odaJ. C111pMll'a 8HtltJ America's fawrite Soup. Gmt With Sandwiciles At lunch· Time. . ., .... 35c ... . j.I~. 79' ''"· l·ll· 11' ... ,kr· 11' ol 10 I O!l·H· 12' ... • • omato Juice round Coffee S11r1"'1ftf1 lr11• Ex~a Ricil And flavortul. f~I of Essential Vitamin~ S1l1w1J Pr1°8r1un' Rich And Robust flav0<, for A Good Cup ol Coffee! 6·~:·39' ~-::· 7 6~ •'•. '·" ~ruly Fine Band Loti·on Truly Fllil , Hair Spray • "Creme R~st or Sllompoo--Your Clloite c , ..... DISCOUNT VEGETABLES Town ·House Peas G~,z, Co P Gardenslde Cream-rn Of eas Sl~e Caro (Abo Pini G B b ck & The ,.,.. reen eans '"'k -R•~ c,t ...... 191 ... ..... 171 "' ..... 251 ... MAYONNAISE & DRESSING NuMade Mayonnaise ~; 49' D • Mrs. Wria;hl's for S.llds •·•L 291 flSSIOgS lt11ian, Freoch, 1000 lsl1nd .,ti. Salad Dressing '~.~:" ~; 49- Salad Dressing Mix ~~~~ •••· 19' Sandwich Spread .~~. •:;:·· 49- COOKIES AND CRACKERS Minh mallow Chocolate Chip Soda Crackers Cookies From Sus1 Biker Cooli;les From Birsy Baker Melrose rr1Ui B•k~d ..... 37-••• ..... 391 ... •. ,., 291 '" PEANUT BUTTER & HONEY P t B tt '"' Rout •• ,. 1111 eanu U er Chuo~« Cream1 I" P t P Pe1nut Buttllr-'n 11 .. L 11• e er an Smoo~ °' Cruochy S~ll JH • Empress Clover Honey tl;:• 39' Miller's Tin Honey .~~':rtr !~~ 1121 DISCOUNT BABY FOOD Simil1c Ready-to-Feed '!;:• 55# Beeoh-Nut Strained ~:;~: .... 8' SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS s.o.s. Soap Pads C1Nns & •••. 45-Scou~ tf II Trash Can Liners He fly • ... 43; B11nd ... Dole Pineapple t;;":01c;~ t~~· 251 Nestea Ice Tea Mix •••. 79' ... Apple Cider or Julee. ..... 31' Town Hgu11 '" -- Prttn lff"tl'f• T.,1n.i t•nr WM,. At&o II li11.ll At LH•I ltfdt7 lleff1tt lhtt. cookies, they may be too brown on the bottom. DEAR NAN: We bave one of tbose old-f11hloDM corn drlen wbtrt . )'Oil put water ID tbe botlom pan ud 1et tbe wbole thlD& 011 tlte stove. We wtuld Ille to bow bolf to 10 about drylnl corn la H. MRS. DENVER KNISLEY, EDGERTON, OIDO I thought 1 knew a lot about antique cooking equipment but you've stumped me. I am sure a reader somewhere can help us. I am as curious as you are. DEAR NAN: Have yo1 ever llurd of lemo• cacwnbert? J Uve beard tut old tlmers made them •• ''cltro• preservu or marmalade." 11 till• trae? What are cbyotea? An: they tbe NrM a I LETS ASK THE COOK by ~Ill Wie1' potatoei? I read aboat them In a vere&abte cook book bdt It dotsa't e.plale wU.t they ore. CLARA PRZYBYLSKI, MADJM>N HEIGHTS, MICH. Maybe thlll Ls simply my day to be. behind the I-ball. You may be thlnklng of a citron·melon, a species of small round watermelon which is inedible when raw but is used for making preserves. I have no Idea where you would find any. 'true citron ls made from the thick, spongy rlnd of a lemon-like fruit ncept that It Is larger with a Jeq acid flavor. I can make like mart with chayole1. niey wouldn't be called "like potatoe1" 1lnce They are a member of the squaeh family. Orlglnating in Mexico, they are n o w cultivated In warmer areas of this country, but you doo't find them on the market very often. They chayote it about the size of an acorn aquash. tw a lrtfl'I 1kln and the meat ls falnUy tinged with sreen like a honeydew melon. Chayote ta1te1 a 1ood deal like other squuhes b u t becau.ee It ls ao finn you can cook l~ au &Orts of ways. Jt can be sllced like egcplant, C()lled with batter or com meal and fried ln deep fat. Or you can eut It in half, bake It like acorn squa1h, with or without stuffing. You can even boll it, 1eason It with salt and pepper and butter. That way it ii good terved. with almost any kind of curry. Young, tendtr chayote can be cooked without" peeling but . older ones art better If peeled very thinly. Any which way, you don't have to remove the seeds. Just as with any tum· mer 11quash the seeds cook tender. Nan Wiley gives you some quick dessert ideas ln her book1et "Glamour EaJY Angel Food Degertl." To obtain your copy send 1n cents and a k>ng it.amped, self-addreased envelope with your reque!t for It to Nan Wiley in care of the DAILY PILOT. Sunday Brunch Peachy Sunday brooch gains fla ir when Skillet Peaches are 1erv· ed alone with bacon. muffins and ocrambl<d egp. 8KJU.ET PEACHEll & mfldlum peaches 1 tablelpOOl\I butter 11, cup firmly packed l l1ht brown augar. Peel peaches, halve and pit. Jn a 10.lnch skillet over low heat melt the butter. Add peaches; sprinkle brown sugar Into pe1ch cavities. Simmer UllUI peaches are just cooked throo8!1· Serve bot. Mak,. I oervtni1. For Weekender Advertising Phone 6424321 .. I I +-r • • . l • • • . • ' ' • • • • • , • • • ~ • I ! ' • • . • - ~.~n:Sdc.J, Augusl 19, 197~ fRllO ll(f ANO 11.t.N H!ATANOlAT • ' ZIPPiE sftc BURRITOS ..... '7iB. t TOPDOG llANOHEATANOIAT HOTDOG 79' ON A STICK .. u . MOlllllt Pll10E l.ll PUU ~~~~~5 . . 69~B. DA.JC IMPOllllD DANISH ' ~~:-.~~~ ... 79' LUN CHEON MEA TS MANHA TIAN BRAND S·OZ. PKG. SL. COMBINATION LOAr PEPPEi! LOAF I EEFULAMI ALL MEAT BOLOGNA ALL BEEF BOLOGNA BARBECUE LOAF 1 )>UTCH LOAF COTTO SALAMI HEAD CH EESE · -tc-r• ' ~-· rl..,,..j ---. ~~'. 6 Har~c1wt1 Onlr Vtlu111n Sl4t lie~ (AtPINllY • 1J!NTING PlYMllNG •I'll ~IAllNG cONc•UI •• ~ MJJDNll RAPES LARGE EXTRA FANCY TH OMPSON SEEDLESS c Lf EARS :~!re~ / LITTLE ROCK BARTLETT / c , LB . ..A ' -. --... ·. · ...... -.- • U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR STATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF LB . rrLOT-ADVERT1SU JO U S.0 .A CHOICi 011 STA TIR lllOS, atT.lflED lllf 59( ROUND BONE ROAST ........... Lu. IONIUSS SHOVLOE• 89' • ROLLED ,..F ROAST .............. "· U.SDA CHOlCtots .. TlllROS.CtlTtfllOll(f 79c .. ''I''"' RIB ROA T L•, 97, ... OTH • 7TH '"LI. U.S.D.A.oiotctotsTATfl nos. • .. JflfDlllf 99c, RIB STEAll-5 •...•.. ·····················LB. UJDA.o:4oC!Ol:STATM lllOS CflibflfO I HI s 109 STEAKS ~.i~~NTIP ................. LI. U S..0.A.CMOICIOISTATlllROS.CflTlfl!Ollff $ 137 1 T-BONE STEAKS ................ LB U.S O.A. CHOICE 01 STATll llOS CflTIFllOlflf s 1 41 PORTERHOUS!E STEAH. ...... LB. USO.A CHOICIOISTATlllllOS ClllTlfllOllif $ 167 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ......... LB. Ft(SH • UAN • GIOUNO HOUlll Y 5 5 ( GROUND BEEF . ........ LB. fllli H•fJl:TllAUAN•fLAVOltJUl ' 87' ' GROUND ROUIPl'ID .... . . . ..... . LB. STATUllROS ROUMOORIRl~IC ET 89< CORNED BE~f' ···················· ... LB . PVRE•Ol.IWOWNCOUfi4TRYSTYll_., 39< PORK SAUSAGE BULK .................. LB. . MOWREll'S YOlllC~~J 1-Ll, lllG.Ofl 2.UI THICIC 67 ( SLICED BACON ..... ...... . .. LB. •• SUNSHINE CRACKERS-HONEY 3 . si KRAFT MIRACLE wH 1p ......... QUAR T s1· GRAHAMS ~o~~s KRAFTDR ESSING \£f~""·· ........ saz 41' ll1 · ··············· . SWISS CHEESE ~~;)!E'oAGED ........... 6 oz. 63' CHBSALADFRENCHORITALIANSTYLE 4 s1 JACK CHEESE ~~~F~g~i!WEY .... 60z.51' DRESSINGS ........ B~~i·ES TOMl\TO SAUCE oELMONTE ......... 2Z2Zs39' TOMATO JUICE oELMONJE ........ •6oz.37' YOURCHOICE:PORKll.BEANS-BARBECUEOROflLI 3 s1 Hl-HOCRACKERS suNSHIN[ .160z.45'" CHB BEANS . ~~~; KRAFTwH1Pr"~9 PARKAv .LB 4~ PETUNAALLFLAVORS . .~8 siMARGARINE MIRACll .......... LB 35 · CAT FOOD ........ '... ~~~~· GOCD·N~,.~'~'~"" 0 ~ 29' c TURKEY • HAM• SPANISH ~ · D10G··CFE00i .... w ...... 8 ~:~~ 51 H~;·~,~~~~1~1 ~~G~~~;~~ ., Ol ~~. BROWN 'AJAX -DEALPACKAGE . 72 CHILIW /BEA NSHoRMEL ......... 1soz 42' ONIONS DETERGENT GIANT c CHUNKTUNA·t;1"HNtTION ... "CAN33'. u.s.N0 2 .isw5HT ... PKG CRISCOSHORTENING ... 3LB ggc citilii:ouPE . s ~· 1 FANCY SOLID GREEN HEADS 5 C CABBAGE ............ LI. ~s. c SAN~WICH BAGS 3 3. SCOOPY VANILLA CUPS .. iz s 25' • BAGG I Es c NUCOA MARGARINE .......... .. LB 31' ................ PKGOF80 WHITEKINGSOAP ......... GIANr 73' LONGTENDERCRISPGREENRS 3 25' CUCUMB E ..... FOR --' Lo.w.-L°"' '?-.opt '?o.o.d f''li«4! c..t.lltolATION• 14-01 'KC .•• ~9, 39 •. FISH STICKS ...... . ····· . a.oz. c MlNUtt ••IO 11-01.U.N,, ••• s I ORANGE JUICE ·-·-··· . 4 ~;0N'; OUlfGIJlll•-OLl'KG. $I 59 BREADED SHRIMP ........ · I t.tOl'lfDNS ASSD•ltO 64C tA~HA!ION 3-COURSE DINNER ""'· --SOLE FILLETS "99' J.tlNf "~" 0' • 69' TNAtASll;!I s711 ESKIMO PIE PATTIES -· MORTON CHICKEN ···"'' ,(IW"NHOV~! •"';QI ~6 59' ClllN-'illON 99' ICE CREAM BON -BONS _ •. FISH STEAKS ___ "" fl ... Sll~ff•()fl\t(AI 69' IUllOS[YftD~ 33' ,BUTTER STEAKS .... "" CREAMED SPINACH ___ _ OH·IOY ftc CH EESE PIZZA ... .... . ••·•L 4., ,icTSWlnatT~. ""'. Hl.S .. CAllOn ' " VEGETABLES ···---··· .. "·OL 39' 'IN IA.{AJ,151.U([ 41 c JolA.•S~IUll.. 31' · BIRDS EYE ONIONS --M' CRINKLE CARROTS ,. "' O• ,Q 45' K•~I " 5 11 ' WAFFlES --"" SWEET PEAS --"~ ()l"_Y,U.<.t 2 29' l'M:'TSWfrT 2 43' WAFFL ES •• CUTCORN __ """ '*flswt:~t 77c ""ll•Tl)t<SASSI, 5 s1 GRAPEFRUIT JUICE _," POT PIES •" TAM ALE! SMUCKER'S 20-0Z. PRISIRVIS STRAWIERRY ..................... 71c APllCOT/PINEAPPll ........ 6 lc SOLS. ILACKIERRY ............ 69c ORANGEMARo¥AlADIE .... Slc ZIPPE ' 70Z ......... . ~1 FOR PRE-PRICED PACKAGE I 0 WATER SOFTENER ~~~E······ KING 51.08 PALMOLIVE ••'""" C LYSOL REG. OR PINE ................ 12oz 87' SOAP .. . KITIY KARE CAT LITIER 25 -LB. 51.19 W•R•d••mU. S. D A FoodSlamps;nou' aw• FABRIC SOF'TENER GOODWIN S 79' Los Angeles. Orange & R1vers1de County Stores DIET MARGARINE BONNfT ·~···~· ... -. lll 43' HALF GAL ................... . WHOLE TOMATOES HUNTS .. 280Z 33' ~~~1~3~~28~~!~~~ .. :: :: ~~ HUNT'S PORK & BEANS .. 2 1 s oz 33' HUNT'S CHILI BEANS ........ 215 '' oz 37' DRIVEDETERGENT ="'"'82' HUNT'SWHOLEAPRICOTS 1s,,oz 24" •• ·B COFFEE ~:LB. $1.73 87' BREEZE DETERGENT ··-. """87' HUNTS SPINACH 29' MARGARINE CH~~,t~ 52 ................ ········ l·LB 44 RINSO DETERGENT .............. '""' 79' ' ··········-····· ......... 27 -0Z. UNSALTED ............................ LB c ALL DETERGENT .. '·"" 77' AQUA-NET EDGE LIBBY RED FLUFFY ALL DETERGENT '""' 82' TALL CAN 99 c COLD WATER ALL O'OWO<e ""·'1.36 SALMON COLD WATER ALL uou•o .............. 01 75' ..................... . .. DISHWASHER ALL _ --·---'° """"42' HAIRSPIAY49c PROTlCTIVl89C .t.$ST SHAVl 11.o i •11o -01. BISCUITS :~li~~i~~·.L_~: ................. 2 8 oz 25' FABRIC SOFTENER \~,:(. "01 79' CHILI CON CARNE SUPERIORS OZ .. 45' DOVELIQUDIDDETEERGETNT .n.o> 559'9'. Dill HUNT'S TOMATO PUREE 3 LUXLJQUI DET RGEN -"°' MOOOl .. T YASILINI IAUH,..,noL 4 7 ·· ·29 oz. 7' WISKLIOUIDDETERGENT 77' ••. ~, 111" DENTURE C TOMATO JUICE HUNTs ............ 6 s•1 .oz 49' LIFEBUOY SOAP ~-_.a:.:~59' ::. 11' ··· 39' POWDER --=- BOB'S SALAD DRESSINGS :~~(( •• .. R••"'-""''""""' .. 49' toOuffott 1-0UHCI ....... 59' DAYTIME lS'S •....... 85c DAYTIME JO'S •... Sl.57 NEWBORN JO 'S ... S 1.37 OVERNIGHT 12'5 .... 85c 1111 Ch•p• .... ,,, .. "'"'" Gmo • PRICES EFFECTIVE 7-FULL OATS THURS.-WED ., AUG. 211-26 1522 W11h11il'Hltt 11..4., Wtthnil'lfltt , 107 W. Nintl1111tl1 St., Co1!11 Mt1• 2601 W. S1v1nl11ntlt St., S1nt1 An1 It 75 11..,tr St.111, Coil• Mti• 6162 E4in9•r '--"'·• Hu11tl119ton le•ch t•l71 "•d Hilt A••""'• Tu1tin 1•111 Mi111t A••nut, ~lttier ]4)0 W11t Li11col11 J1>•tnu1, A1"ht lll'I 1100 E•1I Collini A¥t11Ut, Or•n91 2610 Ecllng•t A•t•nut, Stnl• Ant 12)0 E. M,F11ddt11 A•t .. Stt1I~ An• 1110 Ntw,iort ll•d .. O~olt M,1~ 25b4 W, l totdw•v. A1111hti'" RICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW·LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP MPSt•'* ·LO ·LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE C 1 . , ,· ' . ' , I ,. Alpha 'Beta's Man in Blue says: LESTER 'LES' PATTON STORE MANAGER S-POINTS HUNTINGTON BEA j • I( CANTALOUPES PEAK ~F THE SEASON VINE RIPENED LA RGE SIZE STANDARD SWEET D..w. ' JUICY Di.count --------. ----BANANAS ., • I· I t~ ( ~ }' • " , r • " CENTRAL AMERICAN I . ' '/ • ' ( " ' ·o.-i GOLDEN RIPE GRAVENSTEIN APPLES 2 "' 29' CARROTS "'" cmo.... 1 O' WATERMELONS w"o" 5;, LARGE CELERY ''"'" 19' ITALIAN SQUASH "'"'"'"'" 19;, VALENCIA ORANGES 10 .'!, 97' LEMONS or LIMES """ '"'" 5' FRESH PIN EA PPLE "'" "'" 49' BROWN ONIONS TOTAL DISCOUNTS .EVERY DAY 11·x or 60 EfFERDENT TABLETS ~ r HA OCS COVER GIRL llPSTICK $0~'l ALl'Hi BETA 5TOR!5 DISllOUh'T CHUC>E l'll lCf •.:OVLR GtHL PWS THRl:t • J SHADES i.!ttll'ilrfo's~)N CREAM JM' 111 D.~... 4 OZ. A£ROSOL CAii ___ .J:.9¢ ""'"""' Dill DEDDORANI J.KU !' '.:OUrlT BCX HIKOBAN GUM Double Discount· DOUBLE SAVINGS l ook for AllJho ll•ta'••Ooubt. D.oc...,,,r. -thN or• •Kira SOVl'>QI <:,;er ond Obol/f '"II" la• d·tcc.mh, Mode PMS·b'e bv '•""""'a"' r>u•cn-s. ,. tn '"-"'"""111 poueo on ta V"" . ;:---I ~ HAWAIIAN PAPAYAS 3·' 1·3 l SWEET MELONS : ~;:.,,,, · :,~ \·f LE"UCE . "~' "" . "'"~ 1 " I •11tD l [Af •&lln'ER I r I V 1 ·BKf1 •Tl~· C Bunch Vegetable s:':;"''. · l • CUCUMBERS ""'' " ' . , • · LARGE BELL PEPt"l . S ' ' '...! ~ 1 SOLID CABBAGE : ;.;," :1' f BROWN MUStl ROOt.'S ;~. : i 1 ::o&:;:;~-'!.:.-t l .... TOTAL 01scou'NU" • -EVf.llT OAY-;, ~LPH~ Bl!P •llrACK Apple Buns .,, - r·Hr· -q;1p·. • L'l~ • ~ · RlfHA BETA Cookies ' ·', · .. .. ,. , ,=·~·--.. ' . PRE·S ' (~ .... ~ ' • • REDEEM FOOO SI AMPS IN ANY LOS ANGELES. OR AH Cf r"' r. N llll~~CllON GtlMllNttlD 01t l'OOll MOM.Y R(fVllOlD •$All i T.U COl.l(C fUI ON A~l Tltillf 1m· ~' • I.. ' I I ( . ,, II \ ) l;l ' . I' ' I ' - ~ . - ' • l J • • • ' • ' • • • • • • • - .. , , ' ' • r A1l'f P/L(jf ,, \ ~· ... ' ,, .. ,.. I ...,,.., ,J '"''-1 lD . J .l 1;, ,,, A,rM.AB(TA • OISC01'J'lf ;o l'AICl " Sic 49• \ES p9c 591 "" "' r ....:'! 4~ ~29' ' .... 2'k • / 2tc J3f 12' . 'IX i!t 25' llc :!~• -,, ~,, 26' ----'=::..::... ,, ' ~ii ea· ' "· 1'·(33' ,. µc 73' JO: 13• ""' '" . ' ·' 14' JC! .. . ' );! 10• . "Jlt 16• t.li p• ' 'Y-;'.lt"2~ •ii 29' • ''\•,.o.·· l.O.'J ~'lt'!'1""1 t3~ 1.~s ~~ p, fie ·; SPRtAO )!c 31' I " I I --------------------------~-----~---------w· -~---=-• •·-=~---~-~-~---.. -~--------~-~--e • -•..-...6..JaL.-.A._.-_._..._~-· • • • •._.e::.,._....#1 _.. ... ..._ ____ ___; I "!¥« ft "!!C i C 2' 'I( "C' i ~ 't' 'i f "e 'f + 't "t' • 'I( 't i '¥ 'f '¥' 'f j i • ¥ 1 I I • 'f .. > • '4 • , ¥ • .....--..... • " c ,. , ,.--.-,.--,. • * .., ...,......,... ...._.,,•~•~•r•-·~----_ -~·-------·---___ ~ r _ _ • .. 4! DAILY PILOT Wtdn<lda1, A,,u11 19, 1970 Taste of the Tropics \ Tour Taken Via Hawaii Is only a few hours ;jilt.I sides o( three I Inch round away when you get there in cake pans with shortening, us· the new 747, the most fantastic ing about 2 teaspoons for of planes. But tropical Island each; dust with flour. Prepare codkery ls no further away cake nUx <1ecording to lhan ydrlr kllchen. • package direction5: st i r Ftestt Grapefruit Tropical grated peel lnlo bauer. Pour Torte will set your table aglow I~ cups into each pau ; bake wtth color and sunshine like the v a c a t I o n islands at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 themselves. The torte featu res minutes. Cool 10 minules, then turn onto racks lo cool com· convenience foods -a plneap.. pletely. pie cake mis, cream cheese, When sec•ln .. c .... grapefruit, a dessert topping mix aOO ~ .... '6 fresll g r a p e f r u I 1 from reserve juice for use in Californla an<J Arizona. frosting. Spilt sections In half, The preparation is 50 siinplc lengthv.·ise, for very thl'} sec· and the results so terrific, lions. Place on paper towels that yoor friends will put you to drain: select JO to 12 of in lhe same class as the 747 lhe m~t perfect and rese"rve _ fantastic! for final garnish. Prepare frosting and begin assembly FR~ll GRAPEFRUIT by placing first cake layer, TROPICAL TORTE bottom side up, on plate. (Three I Inch layers) Spread with :Y4 cup frosting 1 package (2 layer) pineap. and top with layer or pie cake mix grapefruit . •Add second layer, PILOT -ADVERTISER 6 Food \\lh l1)ped Cre8n1 Cheese rrosting 2 envelopes (2 ounces each) de~ert topping mix I t2aspoon freshly grated crapcfruJl pee l I large pack age (8 ounce) trc:.iin cheese, softened 2 tabl1:spoons fresh I y squeezed grapefruil juice ~~ teaspoon green food col· oring Prepare both envelopes of topping mix together in small mh.:cr bowl ; follow packag' dire<.:tions, on1itting vanilla. Do not underbcat. Stir in gra1 . 00 peel; keep chilled. With same beaters. whip cream cheese unUI smooth : beat in grapefruit juice and food col- oring. Stir in a large spoonful or v.·hippcd lopping. lllen fold Jn remaining topping. Chill.un· tll ~ady to use. 2 teaspoons fresttly grated bottont side up, and repeal grapefruit peel proc~ss. Place final layer' top I Sou per' Taste 2 large California grapefruit, side up, and swirl remaining peeled, sectioned fros ting over _top and sides A tablesixion of canned ap- Whlpped Cream Chee s e of torte. Arrange selected plcsauce tn akes a tasty ad· Frosting grapefruit in o spiral design dition to a cup of condensed FRESH TROPICAL TORTE SETS TABLE AGLOW WITH COLOR Generously brush boltoms on top. Chill at leru.13 hours. green pea .soup. ~-c__:_~~~~~~~~~-'-~__:__~-'---'-~~:__~~~~~=--'---''---~~ SCOTTISH FARE MAKES MEALS EASY Pack a Hamper Enjoy Outdoor Menu When v.arm. baln1y su1n. mer days beckon you out of doors. cut your 11es to the kitchen sink and enioy a day in I.he open. Pack a hllmpcr for a meal under the sky wilhout cares of cooking . SCOTT JS JI PASTRIES Make a sturdy pastry, as .foc a 2·crust pie. Preheat skillet and brown I 1-'t lbs. chopped n1eat , I diced onion. Stir in a beaten egg, handful of chopped parsley. season with salt, papper. pinch dry mustard. Coot Roll pastry. cut inlo 3 or 4 inch circles. Place I tablespoon meal filling in center of each round . F"old over, press edges to seal. Brush tops with 1 egg beaten with J tablespoon water. Bake in ~ degrees oven until golden brown , about 1 ~ rninutes. Cool and wrap. MIXED VEGETABLE SALAD Combine your pick o f vegetables , and toss with die· ed onion, slrips of cheese, olives, French dressing. Or pack. vegetables separately in tiered carriers -green beans and mushrooms in one sec· lion,. carrots and pearl onions in another, German potato salad in a third. cucumbers in sour cream with dill season- ing in the fourth. Use oU and vinegar dressing in advance, add mayonnaise on the spot. CANTALOUPE SURPRISE Cut top of melon, remove seeds, fill with cubes or ham from a can Scoop out fruit for nibbling with ham. Interest Mushrooming When com1X1nY e om es there's ooe dish -stuffed inushrooms -that adds real iDtereit. to a main course. .SO here's an Italian-style version you ma y be interested to try. We found I.he reci1>e worked well and I h e mushrooms were deliciously flavored ITAIJAN.sTYLE STUf>'EO ft1USllHOO~tS ~' poood !about 15) medium · size fresh mushrooms 3 teaspoons ollvl' utl I tablespoon nunced onion ·~ cup finely cho pped salami •1, <:up fimly gr 1t ed P&nT1esan cheese I tabltspoun cat<.ilUp 2 table:;~ fine 110fl hread crumbs I lUtt>OOfl but1 ~ Rinse mushroom! u n d e r cold water and pal dry. llemove stems; chop enough stems to make 1/3 cup. Brush caps lightly with 2 teaspoons of the oil. In an 8-inch skillet heat re- maining l teaspoon oil : add chopped musttroom stems ard onion : cook gently u n I i I golden. Stir in s 1 I 1 m i , Pannesan and c1lehup. Spoon miJ:ture int.o m u 1 h r o o m cavities. In the skillet melt ttte bul· ler: mix in crumbs. Sprinkle. ovf!.r Lops of n1ushrooms. Arrange stuffed mushrooms In a shallow btlltlng pan. Bake in a preheated 425-degree oven untll hol through -6 to 8 minutes. Strve at once. Makes i or I servings. l • ..... -..... .,. ·-~·-~· .,. - PRICES EFFECTIVE 1-FUU DAYS THURSDAY · WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20 : 28 e ADO TAX TO TAXABLES NOW ! COMPARE PER MEASURE OF 'LIKE' ITEMS It's an addition to UN1PR1CE and another way to show you that 'only Ralphs has it all.' Price Per Measure is designed to help you save even more money .. just as we 've done by giving you ·your choice of stamps or a 1 Y,% discount, and 'one item-one low -' price. A red tag on more than 1,000 items in your store will tell you the price per unit of measure. We realize that price is only one of the standards you use to select your family's foods. We can't tell you things like which brand 'tas tes' better than another, beca use what tastes 'good' to one may not taste so ' good to another. But now we can let you compare a 24 oz . bottle of Wesson Oil for 53c with a 38 oz. bottle for 80c at a glance so that you can tell which is the best buy. A task that used to be all but impossib le. And still is ... every place but at Ralphs. ONLY AT RALPHS CAN YOU TELL JUST HOW MUCH EVERY OUNCE COUNTS COFFEE 6-DZ. CAN, FROZEN 01scoUN1'A 9' pRICE. ' 11' UN1PR1CE EXTRA FINE TINY PEAS ESH PACT, GRADE A, FROZEN, 10-DZ. 19fvc 4' UN 1PR1CE ICE MILK CUT GREEN BEANS ORFAENCHCUT 19' FRE~~=~~TA g.oz. SHERBET CHANGE. LIME g. BOYSENBERRY OR 51 AAW8(ARY, LEMON & PINt:APl'lE f,ALLON 59' CARlON ,, PINTS, ASSORTE0. ___ , ....... 17c REDDI WIP TOPPING v:.~~~TEND 59' STRAWBERRIES KE~~~~~!CED 27' FR. FRIED HALIBUTv~.~~'e"K'~~f'5 79' ~~.......,,~~ ~ ~ u ~-.-.-, MAS~::~EEF' SWISS STEAKS ~"79,~ S ENCER STEAKS ~~·$1~~ BREAKFAST STEAKS :~~·· $1~? LB. BRAISING BEEF "°s~~\:rs 89~. BONELESS ROAST SIR LOIN TIP $1 J,.9 ROTISSERIE ROAST 7·BONE ~· ROAST MEAT MASTER BEEF LB. f.1.H.L¥,~~9!""'-$2'! .f!~~t.tTJ.!!~--·s 1~! ~~~ ~ ~~ ~.~~·-·---''·~ HI ~.~,l.£.~.~~-~ TEA.~~ 98,! SWORDFISH ;~~~. 98~. SAND DABS ..... SH!. D.11.0JE AOV Ill. llJfFET PASTRAMI SUMMEAnME $109 SANDWICH FAVORITE. COOKED, BY-THE ·PIE:CE LS, TURKEY HINDQUARTERS POPPY BRANO FROZEN YOUNG TOM OLIVE OIL 39L~. SOFT DIET ~1ARGARIN[ we welcome FOOD SIAMP SHOPPERS MAXWELL HOUSE CANNED HAM $439 TROPICANA YU BAN PURE ORANGE JUICE l COFFEE BERTOLLI IMPERIAL 41 1 "' "" 87 1 "' $113 "" "' $252 C>N Ii L8, G<N \ OUART431 ...OL 79c I-LS 91 C ?·LB.CAN .. Sl 11 BTL. BTL. At,! !l-LB. CAN-$2..'1 2.t·OZ .................. $1.19 7'11.-0Z. ..... ~ .. -·-······SJ' '" PKG. ------_.___.._ _____ _ OAILV >!LOT 43 Conope Ci!n lerpie_ce -·Watch Guests Smile When Serving Cheese Time·con sumlng hors d'oeuvrts frequently aren't worth lhe extra preparaUon tlrne -unless yoo know the trick ol stretchlng your moat allurinc foods. When serving a multitude of gutsts. the boste.ss .should de vote the most kitchen tlme to a "centerpiece" food, such as 1t canape with a very distinctive flavor. When en- joying distinctive t a s t e s , guests usually sample two or three of the spotlighted r-.. then turn to c onsuming blander or more conventional foods Jn quantity. Time spent decorating Cot- tage Blue Canapes is well worth the effort, for your centerpiece food will last longer. Dtllghttully garnished, the spicy canapes will draw accolades from guests, but they wUI not become a meal. More likely, your guests will consume quantities of bolled, lemon-splashed shrimp, which HOSTESS'S CHARMS SPOTLIGHTED THROUGH BLU E CHEESE FARE required only mlnules of your ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. CELEBRATING OUI GRAND OPENING C Of OUI llAIO #£1 OMPTOlf STORE 4410 £. COIPJO# FRESH HEW CROP• MOUNTAIN GROWN ONIONS I SWEn, MILD 9c BROWN LB. D.IET -RITE COLA "fr';:.~~~" 59c .. GRAPEFRUIJ SECTIONs~~r.29' :WELCH'S GRAPE JELLY ~t:·59' ' ALCOA FOIL HE~!!.!~TY 59' CHICKEN CAT FOOD ~·~l'lm15' ~'~~~,l~!L.~.~.~C~T~ 35c ~L~~.~~~,~~E!.1~~~·-·-· 13c UN1PR1CE IN THE DELI -. ·"' r. ·~ j ~ POTATO, COLE SLAW, MACARONI 14·0Z. CTN. llCED BOLOGNA 59c ClORTOft'S FiatlTICKl,.1~Z,. fADZ-• <OOATON'S flllll OF.ul.E. UN1PR1CE COUPON AJAX DETERCENT 3-18., 1°0Z. LIMIT 1 BOX PER OOUPON LIMIT 1 COUPON PER CUSTOMER COUPON VALID AUGUST 20·2fi ~BAKERY BREAD 15~ 8UTIERMILK. HERDERS OR CRACKf.0 WHl!A T;'1)tot9,-tOAVES ANGEL FOOD LOAF .~.-45~ FRUIT STR UDEL -1:.~~:~:" 491 . LIQUOR UN IPR CE CREST TOOTHPASTE CHOOSE FROM Rl.GULAR OR MINT 5• FLAVORED, EXl RA lARGE, ti·OZ. TU8f .,- SESAMESTRE 01110111.t.l CAil .t.LIUM FROM COLUMlllA llliCOflOI, CONTAIHI 14 ,,.,. 9001l NllO s3•• COLOllH>l.f'OITEL. i.4.M YALU~ KITCHEN-TOWElS THICK THl"STV 'Tl!MtV, 29' ~s&ol'tTEO oe.SIGNS 399 V/i.L.Ul!.H••'""""·---··-- FABAICSOFlENER AEGULAR 000 FOOD DETERGENT NU·SOFT WHITE KING 'D' WflEMON 8tlTTtft, 1.oz..:'.1:.. __ ..... H ..... -... --lie GPATON'S &CALlOI' Clll lan.1.0Z.. fROL--• MOl'TS' APPLfSAUC£1 U.Ol..Mft,---lh SCHILLING'S HAM8llr1G!R SEASONING SA~ T, 3.0Z.-.. -·------2lc llllOIMA't 67' C:LfAHlll \' IOL\l&HT, 11-01-•·• M-OZ. "" $1" KEN·L RATION 171 15~·02'. '" 41QZ. BOX 58 1 -----------------·--------------·--------I time to prepare in bl.Iii.. Add to your centerpiece by serving the firat "rouDd" ol shrimp m tomato cups, c a 11 e d "Tomato Cocktails B I u e • ' ' Provide a laree bowl of shrlmp for cuesu to dip all evenlni !Oil( -and perhapO an additiona~ bowl of your favorite shrim'p uuce. OOM'AG&BLUE CANAl'ES CUt day-okl brtad In party shapes: circlts, triangles, rec- tangles, diamondJ. \Jse white bread, rye, and wheat. Spread on cottage-blue mixture then garnish sandwiches w i t h oriei:nal dest1ns made from grten arid black oUvu, plmen- ta. cbercy tomatoes, ,apers. julienne carrols or slriug beans -and whatever else your imagination suggeats. Designs can be sty 11 z·e d flowers (from sliced olive circles), or cherry tomato tulips, or abstract desigrui, perhaps dotted with capers. Cottage-blue spread: Simp- ly mix four parts small curd cottage cheese, creamed, with one part American b I u e cheese, crumbled, Blend well. Apply ·ga rnishes. After designs are COlnpleted, you can gWe the sandwiches, If desired, Glaze: Softe.n one packet unflavored gela~in In ooe-lourth cup cold water for lhrtt minutes. Add ooe and one-fourth cup hot bouillon. very lightly flavored. Set in refrigerator. When asp I c thickens slighUy, apply with spoon to design tops. Do not saturate bread. Keep in cool place, or refrigerate, until serving lime. TOMATO COCKTAIU BLUE Slice t<>ps off four large tomatoes. Scoop out interiors, reservin& membrane. Us e kitche n scissors t o cul 6-& points (depending upon sizeJ in tomato. Cbop left-over tomato bits and add , · along with well-drained membrane, to one-half pint sour cream. Sprinkle in one-fourth cup American blue cheese (about t ~~ ounces, crumbled). Blend well. Chill until servtni time. Assemble co cktai l s in sherbet or champagne 1lasses, starting with a ring ot fresh parsley at the bottom of each glass. Next, place tomato shell in glass and fill shell with the tomato filling. Place one shrimp on glass rim between each tomato point. (Shrimp should be cooked well ~ad of lime and chilled. Just before addMg to cocktail, squeeie fresh lemon over shrimp, if desired.) MINTED LEMONADE COOLS ALL HANDS Boaters Can Keep Cool With Thirst -quencher All aboard! It's boating aea!Kln .•. lhe time for fun in the sun, plenty of good food and cool drinks. No matter which waterway you travel, au deck hands will airee that Minted Lemonade la a great lhlrst-quencher on board. Naturally, it11 those western lemona that 1lve any beverage that lpecial fresh flavor on land or sea. Lemona are eapeclally economical now ac- cording to the United State1 Department of Agriculture. And remember to bring along the perfect fresh snack -juicy oranges for aailors young or not so young. MINTED LEMONADE 2 to 21/• cups 1u11r l cups water l tablespoon freshly eraled lemon peel J 1~ cups fresh ly squeezed lemon juice 1 llprig fresh mint, crushed 2 quarts cold water l California lemon, un- peeled, s I i c e d into cartwheels Boll 11ugar and 2 cupa: waler together for 5 minutea; cool Add lemon peel and juice: chill until ready to use. Com· bine ayrup with mint, cold water and lemon cartwheela. Stir briskly and pour into ice filled paper cup.1. Mak.es J quarts. Serves 12. You Can 't 'Beet' Soup Thi• dellc!OUJ cold soup Is 1 preUy pink colot. PO.W:i,~o f container ( \\ pint) .,..._ merdal sour cream J can (I pound) ahoealrlng bee ls I can (13% ounces) chlcken brolb, chflle<I and fat removed • Juice of J lar1e lemon 3 Uiblerpoons dark brown sugar J teaipoona finely arated onion, pulp and Ju'ce \<, teaspoon (or more) aalt White pepper to taste 111. lea.spoon dH1 Weed l~ cup finely diced pared cucumber lrsto a tall refrigerator <--. lainer (at least 11,1; quarts) turn the sour cream. With. a Iona-handle fork or spoon, gradually beat in the liquid from the beets unUI blended . Add beets and the remaining ingred\enls; mix wel l. Chill. Makes a. lltlle ovor I quart -4 to I servlnas. • DAJLV PILOT Wtdt1Hday, •u91ul Ill, 1970 ~_:;;:;;.:......::.:_ ___ _ WtdMldlJ, A119ust lfJ, 1970 N PILOT-AOVERTISER JJ ' ' . .. I '. • Weekly COUPON SAVER ··~oOK FROM THRIFTIMART!!! WIN 9 FBEEZEBS full of loo~ MB CANADA Montreal Yooatwn ASK OUI CHICICERS FOi YOUI WllKLY SAVEi BOOK Fl.lfJ. Of fl¥¥0! fOOOS WU.aFllEE 1 AIJt CAfW>A YJICATIOH 3rd WEEK COUPONS Efi'l!'ECTIVE NOW SAVE ON SMAU TOOTH· o 1 s .. BRUSHES • REG. 251; : '9 W/COUPON l l 15c 1 Off OFF ON ANY •·PAIC NO DEPOSIT BEVERAGES ' Soc OFF c:.· wh.1 .... ~"."": 20c Tender-lee Fine 1 Ou•litv Ham1 1 !Nol Sllc11) ON 10.LB. BAG RUSSETT POTATOES , -Earl11 Buck to School S ale! -..., WI DE or COLLEGE RULED FILLER PAPER 59c, OTHERS 300·Ct, CHARGE Pkg. · 98c GOINGi. GROUP OTHERS oc THEME BOOK .. . . .. .. ....... ~H·.~~~ 7 WEBSTER PAPERBACK OTHERS 9c DICTIONARY ... .. .. .. ... . . .. ...... ~H~:~~ 5 WITH a.oz. THERMOS BOTTLE THERMOS LUNCH KIT : F"SHION 0 1h ... s219 : STENO Ch .. ,. . : BOOK $2.98 : 0th : c1i.:~~39c I •'1<: IALL POINT GET TWO t9c: PENS FREE 1 I OOK 0111E1.s C NC BUY I PEN ]9<: j HTI• M.U 46 PENS OTHERS CHARGE 17c : COVERS CHA.ls~~ I SPICE. BEIGE, SUNTONE, COFFEE PANTY -HOSE SA~l~GS .::~:~~ 69c! ,.c;111t1·~12'1" TA.LL : $1 lJ Ot~1t1 u~'!e:~E ea 1 SHA.MPOO Ch••<J• 'i.rt ! 7·ar. B+I $1.5'1 PETER MAX -WITH POCKETS OTHER S PORTFOLIO ...... cH:,:0• BLUE CANVAS BINDER VINYL BINDER FASHION LIGHT OTHERS 3 CHARGE RING ......... $1.19 OTHERS ~ CHARGE RING ........... 89 o MAKE Up OTHERS . • CHARGE s9ss $10.95 MIRROR .................. . DELSEY -WHITE OR COLORS BATHROOM TISSUE Ii 4 ~~~t: 51 .~-~ -A. llO ,ROST Ffg~R 20TOll-AWAT J.m.tTO M'. • .....WILL.M.MOJWD. ....... IC.. .. l.DIJl.JI Gfa.Y. """br~t;'*" wiu.•-.-. WPT, I. IO'f. ti MO OCT. 1 -·AaCAUN. YAC.ATIOll -·-nN-• .. WlllAL ni....,.. o1 .......... r1 .. • 'I'~ MYM UCfflNI NIAHJ& ID..-•aaca•AN -!IP--•~-.., Pl ml • luXufious. hotill WITH TIJIS COUPON On All Purf,!hueS* DOUBLE BLUE CHIP STAMPS •EXCEPT OH A.UID OAll Y Pl ODUCTS, ALCOHOLIC IEVElAGES I TOBACCO COU~N SOOD THURS.·SUN., AUG. 20, 21 , 12, 13 ~ u.s.D.A. ''CHOICE'' ~TENDER AGED BEEF SALE BONELESS CHUCK ROAST ECONOMICAL 89C EASY TO IL SERVE • cLoi:i"0 RoAsT 95~ LEAN TENDER 89' STEW BHF....... lb FRESHLY c ... uGHT IROADBlll CENTER SllCES SWORDFISH ......... 98:. NEW SEASON OREGON S!LVEll. SALMON $149 STEAKS . .. .. .. . . . . . u . All PURPOSE BISQUICK MIX 40 -oz. 39c Pkg . CLUB OR $ ' "'"· f,;o .. ,·, •·11>-$1 79 ••P•" •-· tSC -.ouUlfl,>· ....... ,.,. • NllD HALllUJ ••.•.•• •kt. l.lri. N-iOay'• ,..,1• 91# 6ortoo 7..._ 91C -.ou1wn SHllM•..... •••. "' SCALLOP Cl lll'S .•••••••. C•rftf!ioo .. 01. 45C Gorton ..... SfC fl SH IJICltS .••....•.. ,.,. FISH C•ll•I • · • • .. · •.. •kt. •• ,.r1 w/l •-'••<• ,..,. 79C 1.... 11 .... 7tC SOU ..•.......••..•.• Pkt· JEAL Dl:UMSJIClS .•.• ,.,. l.upert 14·<11· $1 65 Cook'•-•eppw/PW. ••• $1 Of RllD K.t.llOrS ... Pkt· • VIAL SJIAIS ·······.lb. • ""' r.. · J~b. stc m 1u1-.11 ......... ·•••· RIND HILLS BROS COFFEE I ·lb. Tin 79c TAILS OFF STEAKS T-BO.NE 39 LI. ICONOMr curs I EEF f SHORT RIBS ... . ... 39111 LEAN IEEF CROSS RIBS ...... . . 65~ BO ILING ¢ BEEF .. .. .................... '. .. 29a SUNSHINE STATE-Frozen ORANGE JUICE 6 No~.:,~•k 9 ·9c Tins ---------------------------------······---~-----·-·-----------------------------------~ ··--------··--·· ···········--···-···-·-······---·············· THORO-FED MEATBALL BIRDS EYE FROZEN ; VEGETABLES i: SUNSHINE HONEY-I-lb. lk9. 39c GRAHAM CRACKERS ...... ' DOG FOOD 1s v.-01. $ Tin s CREAMED SPINACH, 9..0Z. PEA! & POTATOES w/CREAM !AUC!, c JANE ANDERSON-WHITE or WHEA.T 25c SLICED BREAD ............. ~;~i KIDNEY, HEART, CHICKEN , LIVER 00 . PEAS w/CREAM SAUCE, I-OZ. 1fc. PEA! w/ONIONS, CARROTS ~~-w/BROWN SUGAR, 10-01. ea WISHBONE ITALIAN-1·01. l tl. 33c SALAD DRESSING ............ . ....... ,. D1~li1..•at esse1i De11t. Tre1its ········· S 11r11111e r f_,iq1101· Specials ········They're ALL Iii Seaso1i ••• !····-·· SHARP OREGON CH,EDDAR CHEESE , . ·~llLLAMOOK -.....,.--.:..:• ,'!.~· CHUNKS 8 9~ SPRING BEER 1 1°6;c~R . 69c BOTTLES LONOON IRIDGE t O' DRY $329 GIN ""h AM0iilc4SN cHEEsE sPREAD ~~2~~1~0 59c sco,:c·.t .. $3~! LEO 'S-BEEF, PA STRAMI, CORNED BEEF iTAL IAN J.oz. 49f: w'lllsKEY .~3~! ::~~~ ' ~:: 36~. s PKG JANOV ''°'.....,"<" 46c ALAMI ........ · VODKA! CHICKIN, G"-ll LEO-SllClD : TVllCEY, HAM ';:~ 11 nALIAN SALAMI ............. ';:';. 89C : VIEN NA PURE BEEF PR ODUCTS, 12-01 . Pk9s. 69 C FULL $399 i POLISH SAUSAGE, K NOCKS o• FRANKS ....... .. QT. ! M°EL10i5c~s~:A ....... 1 .0·~ PLUMP Your Choice ~~~~ NECTARINES or WHITE PEACHES FIGS RED PLUMS 39f~ 19~ BUEFLL SIU ·10 c PRUE~PACK ' 25 c PEPPERS ............... .. TOMATOES ... . .. FANCY CALIFO RNIA GREEN GLOBE 12 c ARTICHOKES ~.. . . . . II Prices Efleclivo Thuriday lhru Sunday, Aug. 20, 21, 22, 23 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 130 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 585 8 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO I ,., .ia. ..... -- ACROSS co l'l'nS l Gath~ -49 Gr It & Kind of cit p osopher 10 Food 511 S its 14 Non•ittlan 51 A jusls 15 ·-Bene 52 -Tse· 111 lsratll l nf danc e SS ntoclostd 17 loops rer. 2 words 18 Quack: 58 tllod '20 Des ire I time 21 H1walh1n Ii& lo11&Ad and city Ntvjs 23 lil ounl1h1 •I Object of ridge worship 24 Obsoltlt 62 Mag's pro11ou11 nick.Aa"'e 2h Cooled &l Noun suffl t. 28 Certaii,. /&4 Stabs toast1rs ' 115 -woe• 30 loud IMrsh soimd DCtlN Jl lsraells' foes 1 Dar~ '32 Par1T1t's 2 Net l"Y parent 3 ~ewspaPtf Jli Homeless stctlon: pe1son: 2 words Slang 4 Id -: 37 Group of That Is 1nit11l1 5 TransfMS JI Negatl't't to •'lo~ rtS~1t f l 't'Hs:tl 3' Time' or dt : J 1• Rel~"" J word s r L!f! on 42 F1replacf stc. Ion 44 Search for , I Greek ltlttr c.onctaltd 9 P1trlotic. weapons 'l_loup: Abbr. .S Fragr ances 10 frenc.11 king ' .. 'ltlll'ltl!S1'0SEI> T'00111E THINKIN' '!WNP HEl\E! WWWSAMAmR, FEJJJ.. lOSIN' VER sruFn 1\IE oi: CREATIVE. l'l<L.1' Rl'(IN' lt1 ... ~IGHf!IT.AIN'T EnllCAL, 90T IU.HELPYAOIJT 211S TIM~ y - • MUT·T. 00 \IOU "THINK "THE MOUNTAIN AIR WILL. OISAG~EE WITH M_EJ PERKINS ly Cli1sttr Gould ' ii-WOULON'r llARE,'M'LOllE, IT WOUL.ON'T OAR.E l ly Al Smltli tp7J,&'W. - By Frank la9inskl \ MISS PEACH ll l tldgiog place JZ Ma ke a Sptl!Ch 13 0-.indltd 19 US cabinet minis~ 22 lnsUfa!Ke : Abbr, 25 Ha ve 211 Gossiping I ongul! 27 Htnry 's nitk11H11t 28 Peacock genus 21 CilJ i' A l11~ I JO Canadian 11ene1~I of 1812 32 Slettness 1/l'VJO 34 Pro- 35 Looli:s 11po1 )7 Fl11tler 40 llsdeed 41 -cross 42 Bent, fescue1 etc. fLOWl><S? 11M5 1ELL ME:mt.T 'TMT MAH AGMll N.WAYS MEAWS U'L AINER LJ 'L ABN ER has SAU Y IANANAS GORDO MOON MUI.LINS ANIMAL CRACKERS !IMAT~ 4A \l.»?!TllJG, oooor rr:s Al.I EssAc,> OOTHE Vlil"T()fS OF PATtEJ.la:. By John Mn11 ly Mell By Saunders and Ov•rf)Clrd 1 HAOA VERY 00T PAATIC'LAAL'r; HOMEY/ llHY DAY. Mtl(f/ 1-UH-TOCIKcutlMt'.TIClrl -DID""' r COl'YT<>-70" PR1NT• ly Al CaPP. ~J I ed by r(IOil. been o• ay ---- < TWI ltlANOf WOllO • MR.MUM ly Charffl lwttl ly Gus Arriole ly Ferd Johnson By RoCJll' Bolen ' ,• DENNIS THE MENAC.E s I ~ i • •• )3 Very soon: 3 words B<15'Sfl1UV . UNA~ARE OF THE OOl.JBTS TllOUBl.1"'6 /llS f /MC{E-A B EAMING 11/KE RINGS lff(l BELi. ' 'TONIGHT/• GUILT.' F TKERE'S frrlO SPECIAL OCCASION / ~..,,_-t l10P.' THAT'S NKJJr 11 ll 6 ·!· • • • - TI( SPECIAL OCCA'5K>N IS THAT THIS ISOWEDF A_ WOCt.E ~lfETIA:1E CF · LU(KY MYS FOR ,.___,..,l;Tuikffi AL"! By Charles M. Sc~ull • OF ~.1FT11~ 15 LAKE GENEVA IHCN IT~ -~ 6Cl'i.E iii CHEX8RES,.,ON ll<li' OTl1ER HAND, IF Tl11S 1511<£ ~LF OF AQA&A, Tl1EN. ·eousm~ ~ GOlt>51>,NMtr -- • -------------f----------------------------------- .· M DAILY ~!LOT Wtdn@sday, August 19, 1970 LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE STATION WAGON 54497 + TAX & LIC. Includes All This Equipment $ All Models To Choose From Most C1rs FUUY EQUIPPED FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING , power steering, cruise·o· matic transmission. AM /FM radio, tinted glass, big "429 4V 8 cyl" engine, trailer towing package, deluxe luggage racks. • T·lir•s •Jori••~• M11t1.,• G1lalit1 • fonl LTD's SAVE $$$ OVER 60 MAVERICKS AT DUNTON PRICE$ INCLUDING THE ALL NEW GRABBER ;~~··8·~-~~~ •• ?.~~.'.;.~! .;,,. , ... $ 309 3. ''68 Ford C11stom • d oor, \II, •u!o. +1•n1., f•ctorv air t ond ilioninq, . pow•r ~t•etin9, r1dil', h••+•r, wh ite"."111 ~r11 , whe•I co"'''· VVG95 I •• USED CAR BUYER '67 IMPALA ONDUT1' TOI' DOLLAR l'AIO 2 pr~ ~-8. ~· ~··~ sretring, radio, heof. er, whi1ewoll tir1s. l1c.·f'lC flll6. . '67 MUSTANG 2+2 V-8,' !>fl"e~. pow., sletrif$. radio, healer. lie, TRH 494, • E-200 $ Driver ond p,assenge~ s,~ts, f ~) 8x_25x1.S .. •-~· !ta. -,·p1yt1res, duarWi!'tfrn Mir~rs, rid1' .. vn door gloss, etc. (£24AHJS7996) AS. PILOT·ADVEl!TJSE~ %$ Fu ll Thunderbird equip nt including spetiol Brougham option, white s1 ewoll radial ply tire~ power side wil'ldows, tilt st ring wheel, air condi· tioning, tinted gloss. (OJ83N 8481) '6lLTD . .. $1 Cp1, V-8, outo. Irons .. lactttry oir tooditioning, power shttr~ rodio, wi.j11'wa~ tires, vinyl roof, whttl cov1rs..lic. TSH 781. '62 T-Bird \II tuto. Irani., fatlory 1ir, powar 1l•1•i\!9,.tt1dio, h••I••· IGF446 '66 MALIBU ': .. : .. $1 L.l~:· .. ~, v.a, ovro. tr9nL foc:IOfY air cond111onmg, P,Owv s).eettna,."!~· U '7 htottr, whifewoll tires. l ie. SBN 146. . ' 1 : • i ' 164'. ~ALCON WAGON $ 166 DODGE Dart Wgn.' . ; ·.· 6 cyl., caitomotic transmiuion. radio, beole<, Lit. SUU300. "66 MUSTANG Cpe.6cyl .. Sficlc shl't, radio, ti.aft(, SKM73'7 ! ' . '67 MustanCJ · Cpe., • 6 cyl. 1ticli:. r1dio, h11l1r. LGF662 ~ $CJ99 , '69 Buick Riviera . · V-8, auto. trnns .. foctory air tonditionin.g, poww steering, rodio, heater, whittwoU tires, vinyl lop. lie. ZNS 115. . ... ' '66 FORD F· ~. · . VI, •ltfom1tjc: .• 'tr,ri1mi11ion,,..f'tdio,;.~9•t•r,. cu1tom c•b. Cll60iSJ ' '64 FORD F-tqo · ... VI ~ •utomt lic h•n1mi 1.1ion.»-1lt~, h.1tl~r. I NI 143 2 I $ 9cj·c}! 1 ,-r. ;.; ~ 1 i\iJ.'l!VJ" . . . . CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! ......................................................................................... ~ t ~ t , f ,. , , , , , • , , t . • I • S,,-cTdft 100% nylon •111t pont tel. Elo11ic wal•t, '1iktt.d ~at• aol id color pont, Vorcr-neck Nriped top. Miwff, 1-l• • '-'., ...... .-,. ..... ,,.. "' acrylic plC1id1 ••• l11el11dl119 pleated ond -.. lt)-1 ... s1, .. 7.11. ~ ~·. lo.g ., • ..,. ac"' """"'dlgone ••• .+tit•, navy, b...wft, red, 9ree11 ••• er mock lllrtl• acrylic ahOft •feeve tllp·OVert, • • red/navy/white, ton/nut/brown, 1r.tn/bel9t/bl110, 34-40. 299 CtiARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL. PENNEY STOREI . '... . .... -';. -, .. .. .. --• ;.t l . • ~ ::l • I I I : ' . , 1,,. ·, ,_. .. ~ ... ,_ I • ' ... .,• • • .,. . lt...-y• Suppl1mMt ...... DAILY PILOT, w.. .... y, ~It, 1~: I • AM 1-'-c, 7· I 6 bJ.vMt/thittt 2 •J NI• tJ, NOW · fH AN 7·16 IJloWM/thlrlJ 2 •6 Nf.3.ff,HOW ... AH Mic blov .. t/dtlrtt 2 ,4 N8· 2.ff, HOW '-t Alf lh• tlrlm e tlrl Mede .. ~ tht ....._, Yff'. • • . ........ .., ..... WClllt .. , pk•ll, ... ..., • ,."' ....... A·ffllpe. lelfcl ooltr ... 11d plolde. 111 ...,.,.&..-_,.... ~ with .. ..,., ....... ,.,... ,,. .......... "'tt' ..,.. " ' AHS.611...,_ f4l , ....... ~ ... AMM~= .~ ........... / CHARGE THESE VAL.VE& AT YOUR LOCAL. ~ S'R>MI -· ---··--· ,... ~-l ·.. • ----• ~ i ! 'M-1!'9'' !''•·· ............ DAIL v PILOT, w•11d•r. Al.• "· ..,. ' Stotk up 011 lti• .. aoft, 100% co"°" cr.w Melia for boy1. Whit. wltti color ttflpe ..... 7.11 . 3 .. ,asc .... 11 Speclol buyl loy'a full fothlolled tteryllc ._. ... , ahltt, '"''i•h (NW ............... ....... S.11•, ttrlpet , , , S-M-L 1'' ~ ,_ ... ,.., .... ,,..... ,... ,..... .., .. lro11l119, W ....... ttyle, I• ...,, w ... , br .... ~11 ...... 11 .. 2 .. ~5 loy'a Pen• ,, .... cowol •loclls '" •O¥y or 1Mdlu111 oil~. Pre·tchool .1 ... 3-7. 2 .... •5 loy'a 100% Orlon• 11«Ytrc allpover with crtw or v. Hdt tfyllng. llH, ''""or ,.w, '''" 6· 11. 3•• CHARGE THESE V AL.UES AT YOVR LOCAL. PENNEY STORE I 1 I I • .. 11 " ~ I '· ... ~· r r• lu9la••• ..... ~L 'V PILOT .......... ,. A"t•• "' --· V..t Md t11n1c .. ,,. "" In oc•t.t• beitdff 1te;y11c. S•lect It.rt f,.111 ttHClrtff .... ,. I• • 1 ... 7.14, s•• Carol Eva111 cloe1 up a 1troppy pu111p for the young f0thioA crowd. i11tOrtly 1tyled In rich, grainy vinyl. Girl•' 11le1, 411 • lec•·fiHcMof « ..... -H •I If fll•l"r• '•"" ,,., .. M .... .._ ,., .. , tti. lfeni"t· SelMt ti.rt f,.,.. ... ,.y ,a.Ide, p rlnle •"111 Mtklt. 111. fobrk 100% ""°" """ • . • ,.ry.. .. r/ce1tten. s1 .. ,,..x 2 for$$ 2 fff $6 l'aea 7-14 ,_.ry \"Mt a. rlW»y M coblecf .. ')ht k ........ 7· 14'f.M.l) '" _,..., ...... --'•'-ti •-' .... ""'-· ... Cotte1n tllpa frott.d with llttl• bin of loce. White, co1t1fortobly cut with o djuatoble ttnlpt or bultt-up thci111den. Sise• 4 6X, 7-12. $1 CHARGE THl:SE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL. PENNEY ST-0RE I ·---------------· -· --- .... I I I i l i I ' ' I • • I ' 4 • • 1 ~--~---=--~·- r I r ' II Cosy bla11kets pemct for tfie dorMI Plald potMl'M '" WOf'lll pelye1ter/ "'1" ••• ,.ct,, gold or blve/gt'Mn. Moc1tlM wcllha'ble. 661190". 4•• S..-lt•)lt>VrMlfl Suiting weight tutvrl•ed Ta1la11 ' acetate/11yton ""'" .. D<•tat• trkot. Poll Wlll91111:~ ~ w wide. lhet Net to add a Jolt "•f color .. Gftf roo111. ,_,_. r.v11d "'I In rayo11 ahag, fringed olt _......._ O.ld, grff11, oro119• or reel. • 'T77 To Measure: A-~------ - - - ---- -..... --------... --~· ~ ~, I I ' ' I I I I I I I I I "' 8 -ODD =-==-o DOD - '---- - oo-oo: --- . --.. f . I I I ~-------=-=---==---====--------------· c=======================================_.., 1. MeaMn w4chtl ef IMlaltd drapery rod, ~ ...., ...... ~. 2. ~ ...... fiooM top of rOd (A) to lfl (I) w to floor (C), ~. Or, C01M fft for wr ... to-unchrttaftd IMCNUrlng ltooldef. j CHARGE THESE VALU&S AT YOUR LOCAL. PENNEY STOREI -· • • I I -# • _, ---.. P.wy1 Supfll•ment .. the DAILY PILOT, W.-.1dey, AupMt 19, 1t7e-1 Shoes for .. the ac.tlve family .. :from Penneys. Mtt•'•, Ny.' ond yo11ltt( f bo1ketboll _.."'· Air-cooled c.tton ortff'/ d1K.t:-4 ... ~..:.t1; uppers, 1MlcMd auction cup rubber outtol••· In block. 3'' .. Men'• te1111l1 oxfords .• Air cooled eoH"' •""Y duck • UPl"fl, c111h~ 1nt0lo, , orch wpport. In blocfl~ ( . • .... 6~·12 ·7'. 10)'\' ..... ,~ I 6f!'. ---------------· rw . , -------------- .. Sale 14•• .... 17.tl. 44"' Me11'1 Zippered · S..t CAniff ••• gr .. ftj\alocli ploid ~ 1¥H•eewiltt.vttW. ......_ , ... w ...... .,. .. c...n.r . .... 19.", NOW 1 S." '42H ............. .... .... -'·"· NOW 4." .-w ............... .... .... 6.91, NOWS." Sale 1599: ...... = ........... .. lleg. te, llOW12.ft 24'' Z1~ .... _ .. 11.g. ·l3.ft, NOW 11." -· - \ - ' ........ _,. ........ ...... Bold priate Md 1trlpH, solid c repe Wl9W9I Ind "*''' leno .. --.. Lon, point colw, 2 or 3 bullon euffs. =.:-6.98 S.'tlres $ 10toll 5 ..,. ................ .. Ortoft• act'yt6c In blue, olive cw brown. Siz• 10 to 11. . 5.98 -' ..,., ...... ,.,. ......... ... ........ of~/cot­'°"· Str~ or IOlidl In fMh-lon colors. Siz .. I to-11 ,.._enctlfim. 4.98 ..,.,,..,......_,v.·...__ .......... with ..... .eMd'l- .... .,1 .. grain saddle....., ...... F-..o,, COlofs. ~HM. .......... 1.50 tw · 2 .... IM. ......... 50 ........ ...., ..... with metal llnk1. 8towft In ltne 29 lo •. $fS Flare• ...._.,. Mel. Antique BrillWOOd grllin ..._ uppet'I. Men'1 boot with ltatfter sole, rubber heel; boys• boot with Pent~ composition sole and heel. ..,.. ... 9.99 3¥1 .. . .......... ·~to 11 15.99 .. , ....... ~ ..... of polyester/cotton. Flared leg stytfng. Sizes 21 to ae. A &sa ~'!.'!SV.~ ................ ......... .,In .... °°""· .... Of OOfd •tl'lp••· •iH• S·M·l· ~L 11S8 ................. of 1°"'• c°"°" lwilf in bful 1tris>ff or blue, Wftit• or brown totidt .• Siles 28 to 31. • -ssa ..... ,.,., .. , ...... ..eetlc ..... Meck• .. ...,..~for ~caret Fuhlon leg ae,ung In colorful "'9icle. 1ize1tto1I rsalHM. . .. .. .~ • ,too. I .